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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-26 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • • • .. , l • . ' ·. • .• "-•.• ·i-~ ; • '· .v ~ -• 1 '11iilllliiliiilllililllili!Wililili!!!iil!liii•' ........ ili .... ~ •••. j' ............ !lii!l"111lilll!l~'~ii111 .... ~~j'llili111~ ........ .-.i ... ~ ...... .. 1 9 .tllfls,, f}aft.g Out· Yale , -.• .. " ., .. ~ • ' ·1 ' •, . ' . .. .. . : . . . . ' ' ) . . ·• I ' .. I .-~ r ·v ·1n e ,. J • t • ' ' . ' . . ... . " .~ '1 . ' .. '., . ' . I ' . ' .. • '•I f Harry s ·Trumaa, j ••• ' : , • ' • ul. Lite .... i'inles . Oa.P.e_;llA, JJ B . " • : ! ~ ' •, ' r ' . D ., th: •£'t • . ' . 'y;' 1 s . m .... a:m . . 4 ... KANSAS · CITY (AP) -H a rr y S 'I'rumBh 1fled tod~, Conquered fmaJIY,by ~ , . . . . the ~ties of his .• yeen. · Presillent Nixon led 1he mourning for the nation's S3rd president, calling him "• flgllter wlio wa•beat when the going was ~t "· 'lbe ··President also ~ claim<; 'lllursday1 a" day ol natiOMI rnourujng aod ·On!ered ·flags at federal . . b\lildl!'U noWI! al.half stafj for 30 days. ·L~. B. J~lm.son., now the only s11rv1Yin'g·former ·president, lamented the pas.1ing of "!l 2Qth.century giant." .~'s wile =or ·53 'years, ai;Kl bit dauP,.W who sal' Jilin for a final lJl nilnules autstmbs·Dili,·were at home in nearbY · '1ldependehc:e ~~ d.eath came 8~~;~~a!~:"wi~' Truman's wishes, the funeral Thursday wlU be without the · pknoply,·accorded Other great statesmen. ' .. ~ ' .He Will be'bur!l!d Tl!ui:aday at l p.m. PST irl . the courtyArd of the Harry S Trumln lllemo<i.al Ubraiy, Truman'• proudest achievement in the 20 yean since he left the White House. Tru~ was the last of the great HARRY. S. l'R UMAN j 1884-1 972) ' World .war. Il figufes preceded In death .FLAG l'UEs AT HALF ~TAFF IN YARD oF·ritu~~.~:~-.o:~~-: .. :~: ·K.!.J_ Qurpris· e Parents . TlwMlnlromlndopondencol•'°"8d 1ill '...,., • •• · Urilted>Statesagaihst ·g1obalrommuoimi .. '. ~ .!)· " ' , ln-lbe Cold War Oiat followed World War · • · , 11. He ordi!~ use tJf the atomic bomb to T . . c H -!'l~d ,,... 'World , War . u , estended un-w· h H . l w dd" ruman ourage ~fl,~ ":,. -~~~ .. ~.::=:J . · i t . · ospira e ing . \ · • · .. : · • ... , .... , . ., ..... _.,.~fo.~-1~Jl!Pl!'l~~:.be&.811fthelr .. . . , 1 ihvitSidn oc ute IOUth. ' • F . ..411 • ,4 l.!J. ~ ..... '. : , "R~~lng the !"w,(breat lo· peace BENTON HAIUIOR, Mich. UJl'll;-In Y: • oes,~Jt. ~s ~a. N'M\1~1 --~~i~t~~a:~A~=~~=~~~~~ Clµ'iJJ~ ,~Il 'S'~~. ~m~' ' . ' ' , ' • . . . . . tensiM ol .aid -to. Greece and Turkey in nfnl"cTillilrt.\'r, J1i>l''Ci!"ll. Cl!ilf!i~leri"ancl. " • . • -• "' - -" : • · • 1947 -and •tbe 'Truman Doctrine' thus his second Wife were.married'for a 8eC"" . lly .U~i•ie,I ~ .' · (meMI llllY}~·•ver al)al"!! lhJl:"l'r\d .stitil~ .,as' crucial 'to'.tl)e delense of md Ume wbUe c;:i>amPlon l!8' lying In.• olllt<al ally and <!oe 11odi)" llaiJed Har· .as dtdl~ mil\l ll!lrit ~~'~'~ 1, . berty" Europe and the world,:' Nixon hospital ~· 'li s Tru!OIJll lS a.C<iniuo4,.ntoo Wbb ; "heildent Trwnlrt 'p"81ded over l!le"'°' • ' . . . ' .nd .h'·. " Leo bob hOnored the nation with bis oourage and ~y of this countiy durini one Of lttS r~~la , :t :aie'.M'.'aratiall ·plan. he Champion a ia er-wue, na, t d4ctalvenea"""l!lhl'Ulllntothehillhi'a -~ eru.;lievor ·Oincbfng •ln · be& .. tile •~ farslghtad and most 48,Gf~hxl!l"'bo~bad.beeftplannlngh\ l\lllbeal offlce •t a time of lnternatlobal the lace of crucial natlonat cboices his' .. genenl\!S act of \11tamau911a1 rebuilding renll'"Y lOt oome time, but on extended ~· declslona chantied the. ciorse ot'~ '. ,evfi imdertak<in. ',With , his cbara.. il)nes1 and money troubles preventad •Pmldenl Nixon "\id. "llirry-S events· throughout the world." tarlstlcally decl<lve •ct,Jcln In K9"'1. lie that. · 1'uman will "": remem'wed1'1dme ol· lei. Strom Thurmond (R.S.C.), who made poeslble th:; defense"of peace and So his five chUdren from a previou;f the most "'('~..,._,.~ In ~ ~ 'Democr1tlc pU-ty to 1110 for freedom' In Asia. marriage, and her four played Cuplc!i hlltory, who,.. tbe notPt ·--· ~Ins( Trumao .11aDillecrat 1.,, ~i1'>81ll\al..•ttrjbllled Truman's death auiprlsb)g them three days bef"! ~a crttl<ol ~ wllfl.IDll!pljoaal • 1i4i, .. id; "Bis \l<cialve leadmtup In lo the "complutly of ·organic fallur91 · Qirlstmas 'wtth ·Wemof!Jl plans -co~ Ylitarf and ~· Dir'-lo-' !he cracl~ yemr ol,'hll ·~·.w.s cf~lni ~ colla~'of Ille cardli>vll8Clllar pleie wttb 'flowen, cake and guest list~ '1!IY 4f0< .• Ctllft!*.\l~~ .111 • ..awllPlt .~~-=-· -~ , · . Berrien, Ganeral Hospital employes. , JarceL.~i'!'i!""\on tlii ~'lrlif "&illi~"fO 'iilD~~., ·, . ti •~•••Jtt\ .. ':litspi.,~·.~~~J,t.·~~ &.Ott'.k!tina. that --" fell•-rlihL" :. , , , : • : , ~!•~'.lt80 ,lj>dfy -llter' fighting Doy liUPilie-:''.~PTcllllitla'Mtifi. Vice Pl-·~ II'. "-Slld1 ce.iocratlc Gov. JQlm J. Gllllgm of lung congesllon at home for two weeu -<lay. '.'Bui !bey ha<\ lo l~t ua know·~ 0 Amciag tbl talenb t.Ut Harry TtuniM Obie aakl, •0 At •• moment .of great. na· and btd tieen 1n a COJIUl 'slm::e early o~ IO 'we COuld I gel a marriage bnlolbl lo the •-"1mcf wtre two in-t'9na1 pert! and triumph In the cltmlctlc Satur<14y, ·Earlier In his bo<pitalizatlon I ." • clJ!penaable qualiUO..ol 1-~r-• -..ollrqrld War U, be was llUddenly be appeared lo be ratt}'lng, but the com-MJ'I. Champion wwo a knee-length red lo/ibrtotne!ll Dd courqo. Tbe flgn on thrust Into the ofllce ol PteSldent and the blnatloo of respiratory problems, harden-d..,. for the cmmony. A shirt, tie and h" delk, 'The Dui:l Stopt Hert,' wu·no manne.:-In which thla: hUm.bJe man Own ed arteries and kidney dlaeue were too •port coat was placed over Champion'• Idle boost. Bue In 111 tlflk:e of "'81 Mlslourt mel thole aw!W cballenges aiid much for the old man. bosf!llal gown. . , _.-he -!oat the bumlll!l llilt shooldered -laT!ble burdenl . cqm-Ip .....,, yean be. had appeared frail • 'll\o. ~mplons were divorced In 11161 .. red him to mllll<111 aa 1lmply the • manded. Ille respec:t and allectlon of all and drawn, his weigllt down from 1 following an eight-year matTlage becau9C min from=·~· ,, Amerlc.ant',11._"' ,. _c .. ~. •-r . .• ,.pre~Ual 170~ powKll. He., long aao 'IJ l'the.usual troubles," Mrs. Champion ,,,,_. L)llldOn 9 . I~ Dmnoctetlc 581, HOnfy M. ~llCllClll tf 16aiid0ned his lll•l\>ng predl~lon for aid. , ~ •A IOtb "°tuey ;taot la sone. ,Few ISM COORAGlll. h(• ll •• 1s..1JUJ1UN•....., I) ''Bui wt. knew al-t from the start it ' r l I • .~. was a mistake. Neither of us found anyone else we lilted. I gueu we were always in love with each other," said Mil· Champion. It was Mrs. Champion'• e I .d e s t daughter, Sandra, 22, Who instigated the plot, collecting money from her natural slblil)is and stap brothers ""' siaten, ranging In age from 25 to 15. "She knows just how to. make her mother hapP)1," Mrs. Ouunplon aald. ctwnpk>n, widowed tn his first. mar· ~a~e, bas been in and out of the hospital ~·list'iprihg, suffering a back injury lo· ·a 'fall 'Ol1 a carpentry· job .and foor heart attacks. He has been out of work s1;.;e, the faU. His latest hospital stay bas been four ...... lcq, and docton SIY It Will' be at least a couple of more weeks before be'1 Able lo g~ home. Soviet Pact Delayed 'WAsmNGTON (AP ) -Conclusion of. '40 billion, 15-)'<!&r pact lo Import Soviet natural gaa Into the United Stites wllt be delayed until the spring whllc the Nixon admlnlltr1Uon reviews •helher It IJ netded. the Washington Post Aid loday. Truck.Skids, Rams Bank Ne~Dump Two boys ftre killed and two oilier -~ 1njured this ,,_mg """" tbel~ pj.np'a;.,t ...... -al control and r8o into a dirt embankment on Bonita Canyon Road neari MacArthur Boulevard in Irvine. The two dead children were thrown ff.om the truck as were a man in bis ear· ly 20s, another boy and a do'g. The man and injured boy were taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. The ex· tent of their injuries was not im- mediately known. Offlcer.R. E. Arnold said tbe group bad been unloading trash at Orange County's Bonita Canyon Dump just prior lo the 9:25 a.m. accident. "They were going between 40 and 50 miles per hour and the driver Jost it," the Irvine police officer said. "We think be may have had a blowout in the front left tire. A witness who saw the accident from far away said he saw something fly off the truck just before it bappened." The trucf:, described by Police as an older· mode), spun across the two.lane road after the impact and came to a halt facing in the opposite direction it had been moving at the. time of the crash. No other vehicles were involved tn the accident, police said. Ofllcer Arnold, a veteran trafnc in· vestlgator, said the one boy who survived the crash probably did so because his body was cushioned from the impact by an empty trash can. Syrian G11ns Crackle TEL A VIV (AP) -Syrian llJJU1U' fired a number · of shells today at an Israeli army patrol In the occupied Golan Heights. a military 1~kesman said. There were no casualties. It WH the flr!t Sylian sheUlhg reported on the Heights 1n 12 days. Oraage 'Weatllier Clear s~I• are what the weather people aee f0< Wedneldoy, wtth tmperatum In the upper 'IOI alDat!:, the coasl. Lows tonight In• the IOI. INSWE TGDAY ' Orange Covntu'1 zgn.73 btldQ- "1"°1(/<d a bigger"""- than 11•11 of the 1ta£c.11 other 57 countk1, b11Cklng lhc -I trend of ?"elvfng l.e11 cm locaL prop<rlT/ lo%. S'°'1/ on P• 9.' l..M...,. ..... ~ ti ,....,.... • ...... 1Nt ,......... n.2' .............. . ,... 1• ...... o.ty t ,,....,... 11 ..... ....,, DMtll ~ ' .,.. .....,. •n ................ T......... •1 '"""..... 1•tt 'nlMW'l •lf ...... ...,, -. ,.., .. ..... ' _.. ..... l>M ......... l4 ... .... .. ' I " . . . ~z DAILY PILOT s Tut<A.v, Dtambtr 2t., 1972 Stepped-tip Raids Hanoi Says U.S. 'Razing .Cities' PARIS \UPI I -The llarmi 'Jlt!CICI! dcl· egaUoo said U.S. \11ar planes, includ11'1g B52s, had stepped up the bombing of North VlcllUlm today with a view of Andes Crasli Survivors Ate Flesh SANTIAGO. Cht!c (AP l -Official sources confirmed todav that survivors of an Andes plane crash had eaten !he flesh of dead comrades to avoid ~larva· tion during a 69-0ay ordeal. The offiaia/ sources said 16 su rvivors. either players or boosters of an t:ruguayan rugby team, had made a solemn pact that they wou!d not discuss the matter until they returned to would make It collective statement. Montevideo, Uruguay, and then they Three have already returned to Montevideo. The other 13 have remained in Santiago to recover but plan to fly back to ~ontevide<i in a day or two. The plane had 45 persons aboard when it hit an Andes peak Oct. 13. By the end or October, 29 were dead. There had been rumors that those who survived might have eaten human flesh to live through the bitter mountain blizzards. but the reports could n o t be suLstantiatcd until today. The sources said that one of the young men, not identified, co mpareJ the group's decision to use the cadavers as •·similar to a heart transplant." His explanation : In a transplant opera. tion a heart is taken from a person at death to maintain another's life. and in the same manner portions of the bodies had been used to maintain the living. The sources said the survivors related that the detision to use the bodies or friends, and even relatives, was a col· Jective one agreed to by all. Earlier, the su rvivors told or having a good deal of food, because they had stocked up on candy and preserved fruit during a stop at Mendoza , Argentina. The young men said they found the "terrible mountain silence." the endless boredom and periods of depression the worst part of their experience. "We got up at 7, listened to the radio l1lnd melted water from snow," said Jose Luis lniciarte, 24. an agronomy student. "We also boiled I.he water with some lichen to make a sort o( soup which we used more and more as our provisions ran out." The men spent hours in group discussion on themes they would choose in advance. The discussions sometimes became group therapy sessions to bolster their nagging spirits and dispel attacks or depression. "razing to the ground" llanoi; ~laipbong and many otber populous towns. "Continuing to {'()Q\11).it crimes a,gainat the Vietname!e people, the Nixon Ad· minJstralion, in the night of Deo. !4 and as of. De<. lj), ha> mulUplled taids by B52's and various other ly1JtS of aircraft with a view of razing to tbe ground Hanoi, Haiphong a n d numerous other towns and populous areas of North Viet· nam." the delegatioo said. The delegation said in the first official North Vietnamese reaction to the re- sumed air war that the bombings must be halted if the United State.s wants to hold "serious" peace negotiations. The staten1ent said the first condition lo be met for such talks was for the United States to return to the situation before Dec. 18, the day on w~ch the latest U.S. air offensive was launched. "Defying vigorous condemnatl-On.s ol the Vietnamese people, of the world opin- ion and broad segments of American pub- lic opinion, the Nixon Administration per· sists in reneging on its pledge to stop bombings of Hanoi, abstalning from bombing above the 20th ParalJel and re- stricting bombings below the 20th Para!· lei lo create a favorabl e climate for ne- gotiations," the Hanoi delegatfoo sald. It was the first time Hanoi publicly mentiqned such an alleged undttstandlng to lirtM'tbe U.S. air war during the talks. The top-level secret negotiations betwren White HOUSe aide Henry A. Kissinger and Hanoi 's Le Due Tho ended In dead· lock Dec. 13, five days before President Nixon ordered the resumption of the air strikes. The Soviet news agency Tass reported from Hanoi today that American planes hit the suburbs of Hanoi at 1:05 p.m. in a raid that lasted an hour. Jt gave no report on casualties or damages. The Tass dispatch from the North Vietilamese capit.al also said U.S. planes on Monday bombed the Hanoi district of Haibatrung, Haiphong and other areas. On Sunday night, Tass said, American planes bombed densely populated areas ol the town of Thainguyen, 37 miles north of Hanoi, and Habac and Lanchon Prov-inces. Plumber Raises Ticklish Issue HAIFA, lsrnel (UPI) - A plumber who banged his head against a kitchen sink when a housewife tickled him has filed for cornpensation for wages lost as a result of a work accident, Israeli newspapef! reported Monday. The unidentified woman saJd she thought the torso sticklng out from under the sink was her husband's. FromPQel HARRY TRUMAN DEAD • • • loog. fast early morning walks, but made almost daily excursions on shooping trips with his wife, Bess, herself 87. Mrs. Truman received the sad news by telephone. A family spokesman, Randall Jessee, said she received it "with the same fortitude and calmness with which sh.! has faced all of this." Nixon proclaimed Thursday a national day of mourning, ordering flags lowered to half staff at federal building! for the next 30 days. The auditorium in the Truman Library, where the funeral services will be con· ducted, holds only 200 persons, and at· tendance will be by invltatlon only. Most foreign dignll-aries were expected to go to a memorial service in Washington's National Cathedral, rather than coming to rndependence. Tributes flowed in swiftly as word of ' DAILY PILOT ,....Or--.. COttt OAILY ,ILOT. wltfl wtlldll h. comoin.d ,,.. "-l"r"n&o It llUbtlilfled "' fll• ~ Gout f'Wll'11'"9 c.....,.,. kl»- ..... to:llOon1 ore llUlilbMd, Menf•'r' !ti""""" Frlll'OT. fer COii• M .... , H....-i IMCfl. Huritlntton ••acll/"8Un111n veu..,, LA11un• &NCI\, lrYl!lt/StdcU9b6dl and S4tn Cltmenlo/ a... '"*' C.pl11ronot. A 1ll'IQlt rt01oMI llCllltlon II PllblllMd S.h.lrdoYt ond Swnf1y .. Tllo ,rh::'"I wbll•lll"'IJ pltnl I• ot J» wnr .. , 5tr"1, C011l1 Mttl, Collfor'nlo, t2'a. Rob•rt N. Wood Pr.,.lffnt 01111 Ptii:illtllor Jo<~ JI:. C1o1tl•v Vice ~r ... kltnl Ond e-r•I Mentocr 1ltO!floJ Koovll f.cllW 1"o"''' A • .Mvrpliino Monqlng ~ttor Cf11rfff H .. Loot RichorJ '· N1fl Mtltlll'll #l\IC\ollng lcllloB -c.11 ""-"'t ,. Wfll •• .,. '"'"' """""' hltdll JUI "--' ~ ...... ,.. ~ 1..0.: m ,.,.," ..__ """'*'"' IMctl: 11'7$ l .OC.11 ~"' ... CllfNntil: ., ...,..._ •• Ctrnlflt Ill~ T .. 1,a11 l71.tl '41-4111 0 .............. 4'J.$i11 "'9 OltltSf .... """' ., u,.. .... 4tM4H ,.,... ...... or-.-c:-ry ~-1*1Ut ~ 1m. c>r-.. cwt ~1111'"9 ~ ... Ill'!" .-..., Ulwtr1!1•nt, ......,.., • -·-w .....,,IMl'Mntt """'"' ,,,.,, • . .... ~ ~· "*"' ,.,. .... .,........, . .....,, ...... dMt .......... cott. .... ~ llolllk"rlJiif10ll: 1W atrltr U.tl ,_."', ., _,, 11.1J lltlMtl,, Mflir.-Y tlliltWtllN RM "*"'""'· " the death was flashed around the world. "A 20th century giant Ls gooe," rormer President Lyndon B. Johnson said in a statement Wued at Austin, Tex. "Few men of aoy times ever shaped the world as did the man frun Independence. "President Truman prtsJded over the destiny of this country during one of Its most turbulent eras. Never flinching in the face of cruciaJ national choice!, hi! decisions changed the course of human events throughout the world." Queen Elizabeth II and Prime Minister / Edward S. Heath expressed their soJTOw to the American people in a wire to President Nixon , and lhe Br i t Is h monarch sent a private message to Mrs. Truman . Afissouri's Gov. Warren E. ltearnes said the state has "lost not only a great no.live son, but a man we shared with the rest of the world as one or its paramount leaders of the 20th Century. Mis~rl was proud to have given the world the services of President Truman at a time when his great strength was needed to win a war, establish peace and rebuild ravaged lands, and now we ask the world to'share our sorrow and our loss." The former president's body was removed to Carson Funeral Home in Independence. There will be a short funeral procession Wednesday morning from the home to the library, wbe.re the body will lie in state for 24 hours beg1in· ning at noon EST. Nation's T1·affic Death Toll 565 The nation's traffic dtath toll for the three-day Christmas weekend totaled 565. Thal is fewtr than the 614 who dlOO In 1971 and far below the reco rd toll of 720 killed over the three-day celebration in. 196S. The Nalional Safely Council tslimated that from 550 to 6SO persons would be kill· ed in lrafifc accident~ between 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 22 , and midnight~-25. The council c!ltimates lhat deaths dur- ing holiday periods run about 25 percent above those In which no holiday occun. Thus a total of Sfl~ for the weekend would mean there would have been about el deaths if no llolldny were involved. • Auto Theft ' I Ring-Leader '. Identified?· I l I • I Newport Beach pollc_e said today they know the identity of the leader of a Los t Angdes·oosed auto tbelt rln( that bas • been responsible for ateltdllng I O , Ponches in Newport &ac:h •lone ilnoe 1 Sept. L r Detective Ken SmJlh sald lnve!llgallon Jed police to a garage In Anahehn ltte 1a.st week that is the apparent open· t tlcnal headquarters of the ring which be f said involved as many at 10 perac:m at • one time. ' A raid at the sarase Tbunday olgbl turned up several tbousapd dpUan in ' auio parts bul neither the Bllltl leader, nor any of his assoc:Latet. Smith said he will ask the Orange County District Attorney for arrest w~~ for the ring leader and one ' other person today. ' A Crack in the Wall Newport Beach police arrested one ~ suspect. Gllbert Armenta, 19, or , Rosemead, early last weell: when they , assertedly spotted him early 1n the mom· • ing near the Oakwood G a r d e n apartments in 16th Street. West Berliners pass through checkpoint "Ober· baumbrucke" en route to East Berlin. Scene was repeated at several checkpoints along the Berlin Wa1.I early Christmas morning as ten.~s..:o_f_lh_o_u_s_an_d_• ____________________ --, of West Germans journeyed to East to spend Chlist· mas witb relatives. East Germans opened gates in latest expression of improved East.West relaUous. Two others Oed when police ap-• proached Annenta, Smith said. 1 The Porsches stolen earlier that night , were recovered in the parking lot of the , Orange Coast YMCA and another was t tecov'ered near the Anaheim garage on • La Palma Avenue. A flfth was found the 1 next day across the street from the • Oakwood. apartments. t Fire Units Quell Garage Blaze In Emerald Bay A $5,000 fire that gutted the garage of an Emerald Bay resldence delayed -but didn't cancel -the Chrlstmas celebra· lion of the occupants gathered inside the house. Sparks jwnping from an electrical unit or a freezer were blamed by county firemen tor starting the IO: 17 p.m. blaze al lite home of Mildred H. Dooley, :127 Emerald Bay. "We were mightily hles!ed," said Mrs. Dooley this morning. "lt looks like pretty serious damage to the garage, but everyone's safe. "We were just ready to sit down to OU'istma.s dinner -it was my son's birthday, too -when we smelled tbe smoke." Fino units from Emerald Bay, South Laguna and Laguna Hills -carrying a total of 35 men -arrived at the fire scene, but most of the fire-fighting was conducted by the Emerald Bay oquad. lt toot firemen more than 20 mtnutes to quell the Dames and an additional hour to clean up the scene. In addltton lo the IS,000 •irucluraf damage, fire officials estimated $1,700 in damage to cootents of the garage, in- cluding 1083 of a Volk.swagen sedan. "We were still able to have Christma! cake after the fire," Mrs. Dooley laughed this morning. "It's just a miracle the fire didn't spread inlo the hou!<." Baez Sang Yule Carols as U.S. Raid Hit Hanoi a Pain ' Navy W ar1is Against Tattoos SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Navy is lzying lo do away with lalloos. The message comes from Navy doctan who say the traditional need1ework is not only painful and hard to remove but also medically dangerous. The head of dermatology at San Diego Naval Hospital says CalUomia shoold sllut down tattoo parlors. "New York has already done it," says Capt. William Carson, M.D. "I am surprised that a state as ~ive as Galifomia has made no major move to stop it." He says "Mother" emblazoned oo a sailor's ann or an irldlscent huJ.a girl oo his chest can tum into a major allergic infection. There Ls also a rJSk of hepatitis from the needles. Navy and Marine Corps trainlng ce111.ers here are warning recruits about laltooing. Removal has become a common practice at the hospital. Carson says some sailors pay a ru«ul visit the morning after. "They often come in Ji&bt after they put them on and ask m to take them off," he says. '"Ibey do not seem to realize that a tattoo is a pennanent disfigiaatioo." The only way to reroove ooe, Carsoo says, is to take off the skin that bas been dyed. Doctors can u.se one o( three painful met.bods: rubbing a special salt on the tattoo uotil the skin and dye bleed away , leaving a scar; using • rotating sander or wire bnEh to scrape off the skin layers; or in the cue of smaller lattooo, simply slicing tlle -off surgically. Body of Unidentified Man Found in Seal Beach Police said the inveatlgation into the auto theft ring bepn about tbe !Int ot • September and bas been a joint effort among eight police departments and other agencies Including p o J l c e departments in Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, O"llll!e, Anaheim and Tustin ond the Oranie Couniy Sheriff's Olfice and Ille National Auto Theft Bureau. ·DetecUve Snrllh said that property recovered in the Anaheim garage., fn.- cluded. a Porsche engine, two Porsche transmission axles, six car covers, eight bucket seats, 29 Ure.s and wheel!, 17 Porsche or Volkswagen jacks, and several other items. He said the parts came from at least eight dillerenl ll41en Poncbes. Smith said the alleged leader of the aulo tbelt ring would hire u many operators u be needed for a particular job on a given nigbl. He said be u!ed as many u 10 in one particular operation -tbe theft of eight Ponches that were found stripped In the Irvine Ol'8D(e groves Sept. 17. Banks Hike Rate For Loans 14 % NEW YORK (AP) - A string of major commercial banks, including the coun- try's third and fourth larflest, followed the lead of lwo other , bii banb and boosted their prime lending ralel today from 5'4 to ' pen:ent. Chase Manhattan Bank, No. I ; Manufactur<n ll>nover Tnut Co., No. 4; The body of an unidentified young man , man was not tilled where be was found, Cbemlcal Bant and Marine Midland apparenUy dropped from a passing car, but bad apparenUy been dropped there Bank incr<ased the co::t of bomnring for was discovered early this morning on a from a vehicle. their most credit·worthy cuUomerr In ......... _ .. _ 00 outwA-' .. 1 ....... of bullet the face of the Nixon administration'& fr..way offramp in Seal Bellch. ·~• -· ~--.·~ campoign to ccnlrol lnflatlon by keeping Seal Beach Police said the youth was a wounds or other mark!: Indicating bow be the lid on bank interests rates. white male, about 18 to 22 years of age, died," IA. Gatti said. "lfe was dressed in "We are keenly aware of the federal with no Jdentification. burgandy trouter'S, a blue tanker jacket goven;uneot'a desire to moderate upward "A preliminary check by the coroner andhad medfum.fengtb hair. He could be rate pressures as a part of Its eHort lo shows he was dead about i&-72 hours," a Navy man." brine i.nflatlon under firmer control," a Seal Beach Lt. Lee Gaw reported. "We 1be Coroner's office began an autopsy. spokesman for Chase said. don't know the cause of death yet, or this morning to determlne the cause· ol "However, we believe that holding ln- where he might have been killed." death. The results were not yet known. terest rates at levels which are out of He was found by passing motorists Lt. GatU said the man'• aboea were lint: with the market generally would, TOKYO (UPI) -Japan's Commurult aboot ''~ a.m. on the 7th Streel olf· missing, but ft didn't aeem significant. over a period of llm~, cause distort-Jn party newspaper said today folk singer ramp at the junction of the San Diego "At the present we don't know bow he the now of credit, and contribute to the and antiwar activist Joan Baez sang and S.an Gabriel freeways in Sea1 Beach. died, or where," Lt. GitU said. "And we inflationary spiral by plactna abnmnally Christmas carols in the lobby of a Hanoi Lt. G;i:tti said It is apparent the dead don't know wbo be ta." heavy demands on banks." hotcl while antiaircraft guns thuridered 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ at raiding U.S warplanes on Christmas Eve. "Jn the lobby of the Honn Bin Hotel in· side the ci ty (Hanoi), Joan Baez and Prot Michael Allen of the American an· tiwar movement gathered a small meeting to observe Christmas," the neW!paper Akahata (Rell Banner) aald. "While Miss Baez was playing her guitar and singing. the rumble of an· tiaircraft fire and bomb explosions roUed through the building. Her companions en- couraged her with shouts of 'don't quit' and 'keep going.' " ''Miss Baez finished her songs in a blackout after the electric power Was turned off." \Va shlngton said, "Harey Truman was confronted with a series of tough, un- precedented decisions with nothlng leu than the future security of the free world at stake. He never shrank from those decl.sions, despite the hostile tn'flronment or those postwar yean. Ria courage, hb wl!dom and bi.s decisiveness ln thtit period shaped lbe !uture course of the Western world." President Nixon &190 saJd Of Truman, "R<Cogniiing the new thrtal lo .....,. that bad merged lrom lite ubet of war, he llood boldly againll JI wflh hl• er- tenskm of aid to Greece and Turkey tn 1947 -and the 'Truman Doctrine' thus established was crucial to the deltnte of llbe.rty In Europe s n d the world. In lsanchlng the Marshall plan, he began the most far·sighted and mott gentl'Otl! act of International rebuild.Ing ever undtrtaken, ' "With bJs char11cterisllcaUy decisiVc action in Korea, he made posslbla the deferue of peace and freedom in Alla." SESAME STREET • SESAME STI\EET IS ABOUT THE ONLY STREET IN THE HARBOR AREA THAT HASN'T HAD A CARPET INSTALLATION BY ALDEN'S. IN OUR FIFTEEN YEARS, WE HAVE C AR PETE D THOUSANDS OF HOMES IN COSTA MESA, NEWPORT BEACH, LAGUNA BEACH AND HUNTINGTON BEACH~ ONE JNEIGHBOR TELLS ANOTHER UNTIL WE HAVE WORKED IN EVERY HOME ON A BLOCK. TH f'ORMULA IS SIMPLE-WE TRY TO MAKE EACH CUSTOMER HAPPY. ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR-WE PROBABLY CARPETED HER HOME. (IF WE HAVEN'T, BRING HER IN WITH YOU.) ALDEN·'s CARPETS e DRAPES r~.1 s~=ll ' ~ . " J . ~ !Ill, -1'. ~~~ 011 I j • j . -·• '• ·. . . .. I' L _!.--= ~--· 't ~ ~- -·--. ' ---.-.. . -:::.,~ '" COSTA 'llL\ llllCI "" 1663 Plac•ntla Ave. COSTA MIS.to 646-4838 HOU~Si Mon. Thnt Thurs., t lo 5:30-PRI,. 9 lo 9 -SAT., 9'30 lo 5 • ' . • He Didn't Give a Damn About t11e • in the S By THOMAS KEEVIL 0.llY f"lllft •fltlr ' AS YOU PROBABLY know, the Sin Harry S Truman's name doesn't stand for an)'t.hing. His parents down in Lamar, M.o., just gave him a middle initial, not a middle name. Through his years in public office, Mr. Truman posed a daily style prob- lem for newspapermen: Should there be a period after lbe s (Harry S. Truman! or oo period (Harry S Truman)? Mr. Truman was in Orange County ln, I think, 1958 making fiery campaign speeches on behalf of Ad!Ji Ste- senson when I got the opportunity to ask his personal pro!· erence on this pressing journalistic issue. RE WAS rN the back seat ol a Cadillac limousine at the Orange County Airport and maldng hlmself readlb' available for questions on a wide variety of·topics. ' I thought it as good a time as any to clear up the K••v1t. matter of the period. "Mr. President," I said with my bead poked into the car, "do you prefer a period after the S in the middle of your name or do you want it left alone?" His eyes twinkled. "Son, I don't give a damn one way or the other. It doesn't stand ror anything and you can print it just any old way you want." THEN HE LEANED his bead back oo the cushion and smiled. "You know back in Washington, a lot of folks have had a lot of f\D'I wth that initial. 'l'bey like to run it together so it comes out Harryass. But that never bothered me either. Not so long as they voted my way." He turned his head toward me again and chewed on his lip with a slight ·took of pensiveness. "WELL IF I had a choice, I guess I'd rathet have it without the period. "But I still don't really give a damn." Interview concluded. School Board May Sell Land Parcel to lt,self By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL Of a. o.I" l'llet St.tt The Laguna Beach Board of Education soon may buy a piece of land that, in a ~me. ll already owns. 'Ibe board learned last week that the state Department of Education has given a priority basis to giving the district at least '8,000 for the purchase of land for an arcbeological lab. 'the parcel, just a stone's throw from 'Ibarston lntennediate School, is owned by the 'lbunton Foundation. '!bi Board of Education also is the board of directors of the Thurston Foun- dation, thoagh legally the two are separate entitles. , The proposal for ·the o u t d o o r archeological lab was tnade to the state after it announced a 8pe<:ial grant pro- iram to stimulate development of .en- vtronmenlal education. The sch o o I district would buy the land from the foundation . Money for the environmental fund has come from the sale of personalized license plates over the past two years. Laguna was not one of the first districts to get immediate funding of ~ts project, but it5 request stands atop a bsl James Folger Dies SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A memorial mass will be held today f o r James Athearn Folger Ill, president of lhe cof- fee company which bears the family name. Folger, '121 died In a hospital Friday after being admitted for treatment of a heart condition. Burial services will be privale. · of projects to be supported as further funds Oow in from the sale of the plates. Thurston instructor Ron Rodecker hopes to build a mock Indian vtllage en the land and prepare an archeolcgical d;g. ACC<lrding to Thomas D u g g e r , coordinator of state and federal projects for the school district, the parcel, at the corner of Park Avenue and Hidden Valley Drive, once was an Indian campsite. It also holds an unusual rock out· cropping, Dugger noted . Development of an Indian village is an amrual project cf Thurston students, but there has .never been-the oppcrtunity for any permanent study of the archeology and geology of the area. . Rodeck~ believes acquisition of the property !'Ill make this possible. Dugger and Rodecker consider the site a "natural" for teaching use since it it so close to tbe Thurston campus. • Dugger will ask the school boa~d Jan. 2 to approve submission of a revised pro- posal of the outdoor lab, to show the state that Laguna is still interested in having its project funded. PreliminarY approval cf the project was given by the board in November. lo a related matter last week, the board learned that three preliminary grant applications made to the Depart· ment of F.duc.ation will not be funded during the upcoming school year. The applications were for funding of a teacher counsellnf. program at Laguna Beach High Schoo , an envi.ronmeptal lab at Thurston and development of a learn- ing diagnostic program at Top of the World Elem<ntary School. The Department of Education, in its Jetter to the district. noted that it receiv- ed requests for 15 times the number of projects that can be .funded next year. U,IT ........ Bo, Bo, Bo ••• Bum Santa's well·worn stockings attest to his Christmas travels as he learis back and gives hls feel a rest upon his return to the North Polo. Alter bringing joy to tho children of tho world, St. Nick gets a well· deserved reot-untll next Christmas. • Tut5diy, 'Dfumbtr 2b, 1972 s OAJLV PILOT 3 '. Whale Watching Begins Darrell Taylor, principal of San Clemente Higb School, and student Chuck Rahl hold whale back· bone segment and rib to call attention to the whale-- watch cruises that get under way Jan. 6, 7 and 8 at Dana Harbor. The activity raises funds for tbe . DAILY I'll.OT Sllff ,...,_ school's parent-teacher-student association projects. The cruises leave at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. with guides to answer questions. Reservations may be made by calling 496-9566. Nixon Cost Goals Dashed WASHINGTON (AP).-New figures on the cost of living make it unlikely that President Nixon will achieve his goal of chopping the inflation rate below three percent for 1972. The report said real spendable weekly earnings went down by five-tenths of a percent from October to November. gent ec<inomic controls showed a 1.9 percent raise in the consumer index, the figure for the last nine months, when Phase 2 allowed some controlled in - creases, the index rose by 3.8 percent when computed at an annual rate. • Judge's Act Provokes Outrage NEW YORK (UPI) - A man accused ot shooting and critically wounding a police officer was freed for a secood time Atonday night by a criminal court judge whose original low bail was re- voked by another judge. The action by Judge Bruce Wright pro- voked an outraged reaction from public'.!' and police officials. Mayor John V. Llnd· say called Wright's action ··apparent judicial insensitivity." Joseph Grulolla, 50, of Queens was ac· cused oC wounding Patrolman Dennis Dowd, a plainclothes anlicrime squad officer, and a patron in a ~1anhattan restaurant during a !x>ldup early Friday. Dowd was reported in crillcal condition. but out of danger, with a wound of the abdomen early today. Grutolla, who was captured near the bar, maintained he was a victim of mis- taken identity. \Vright freed Grutolla Sunday on $5,000 bond or $500 cash bail. Wright posted the bail and was freed. But that bail was revoked Monday by Manhattan Criminal Court Judge Alferd Ii. Kleiman at re-- quest of a police department lawyer who said the suspect allegedly had threaten- ed to kill the arresting officer. Grutolla was then re-arrested at his home and brought into night court Mon- day. "Where Judge Kleiman discovered his jurisdiction is a mystery to me," Wright said angrily when Grutolla was brought before him. "If the di.strict attorney wished to change the bail, he should have gone to the state supreme court." Wright then reiMtated the low cash bail and ordered the suspect freed. Unusually high food prices f o r November helped drive the cost of living up by three-tenths of a percent, ~he Labor Department announced. T h e figures mean a net decline last month in an average weekly earnings of American workers. The actual increase in the cost of living was two percent, but a1J figures are ad- justed to meet seasonal price trends. The three-tenths of a percent rise adds up to an annual rate of 3.6 pereent. Until recent months, Nixon ad- ministration officials had stuck to their predictions that the three percent figure could be met. Rufus Reti~ent? Meat prices ~·ere a major factor in the increase in consumer food oosts ;•1hich usually decline in November. Food prices rose five-tenths of a percent. Nixon this week ordered an end to meat imports to help drive down the price of beef and lamb. Other unseasonable fluctuations in food price! included sharp bikes in the o::ost of vegetables and less than expected declines for commodities like pork, eggs and fresh fruif. ClOthing and residential gas bills w•re also up, the departmont said. Other items recording price increases in November included used and new cars, furniture, household supplies and new houses. Gasoline and tire prices declined and rents rose less sharply than before. Utility costs, especially natural gas, in- crea5'd t.Qo, along with a n o t h e r householder cost, mortgage interest rates. November marked the end of a year of Phase t. The department said during that year the consumer index rose by 3.5 pereenL.i For every dollar in consumer oost.s in 1967, lbe figure was $1.26 in November 1972. While the first three months of strin- Wishing · you a Three Cubs Born on. Cliristmas Morn Rufus, once tagged the reluctant lion, may never prompt the headlines of his famous predecessor Frazier, but his first feat couldn't have been better timed by a Hollywood talent agent. Officials at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills anoounced that lioness 1.ona, one of five wives Rufus assumed after Frazier's death last July, gave birth to three healthy cubs Christmas Eve and Christmas morning. Skeptics had to eat their words. Some doubted that tbe 15-year-old Rufus, near 70 in human terms, could replace the ag- ed, wobbling, tongue-dropping Frazier, who sired 33 cubs in 18 months. Rufus was tagged reluctant shortly after ,he arrived from a Kansas 1.00 and was released into the wild animal preserve. He gave little indication he was in· terested in Frazier's 'pride and often retreated to the familiar security 0£ the park's night shelter. But apparently he went into action im- mediately. The lioness' gestation period is 9$ to 105 days, making Christmas day about the earliest possible date for the birth of Rufus' first offspring at the park. ''HAPPY HOLIDAY''. • • Vestanna and Clyde Dick, Nina and the next generation, Jake, Richard and Vestanna Johnson llnme Of Tiie New Cir • , , "GeUe• Te11e•" from all three • generations I of Johnsons' Dome Of '!be. New Car • , , "G• .... l'Mdt" ·_.HARBOR BLVD~COSTA MESA • 64011830 ~· ' I ' . 4 DAIL V PilOl .. with Tom urphine Wh ere's the Good Ne ws? NOSING THE NEWS -Everybody seemed to be suffering the day·after- Christmas doldrums today. After all the turkey. gifts and happiness, you wake up on the 26th to discover the tired old world still has its troubles and woes. We awakened to find we have lost our 3lrd President of the United States. the man from Missouri , Harry S Truman. v.•ho succumbed at age 88. The war grinds on and more B-52s are lo st and that promise of just a few weeks past that "peace is at hand" seems dim in- deed today. Fire and destruction came on the home front with the winds of the desert. Indeed, things are so dismal that you scratch about the desk for something that might bring a little cheer to the local seene on this day after the Yuletide. All you find is a newsletter from Cong. John G. Schmitz, the former Republican from Tustin, who will be stepping down from his congressional seat come January. YOU FIGURE MAYBE John might of· fer a tip of the hat to something or somebody as he steps down in favor of Andy Hinshaw, the former Orange Coun- ty assessor who will assume our 35th District scat v"hen the 93rd Congress con- venes. You scan Cong. Schmitz' words and find a paragraph where he warns, "The past cannot be restored. This does not mean th.at we should swallow the 'liberal' cliches about values changing as times change. Right and wrong , good and evil are part of the world and will last as long as the world lasts ... " Then he adds later, "Knowing these things , and knowing -as should be ob- vious to any thinking perso n today - that our United Slates of America is in very deep trouble, we can look ahead with every reason to e1pect more troo- ble, though unable to predict accurately and comprehensively enough to say just what kind . 'Ibe major threats on the horizon tall Into three general categories: (1) tyranny imposed from within; (2) tyranny imposed from outalde by means of the military forces of international communism ; (3) Internal revolu tion. And all three, along wilh the multitudinous lesser evils now besetting or likely to beset us, endanger us primarily because of the fundamental weakening o( our na- tion by that ancient scourge of nations; moral decay ... " SO ANYWAY, THERE you have the crystal ball of ~ohn G. Schmitz. Evil is going to be with us always. We got t~~­ ny from without and tyranny from within and if that isn't bad enough, you still got the international Communist military forces to worry about. M.iJ: in a little internal revolution and spread over it a nice thick layer of moral decay and that's what we've all got to look forward to. Somehow, however, all this just doesn 't seem to be the way you'd like to .ap- proach 1973. You would like to take out your own personal crystal ball and .see an era of prosperty ahead . You want to en- vision a n·ation unified in understanding and motivated for the common good of all mankind. YOU WANT TO SEE peace replace war and love replace hate. If values do change, then indeed you would like to see a lot more value put on happiness. All of these things, of cour&e, come out of lbe crystal ball of some eternal op- timist as he looks forward to the New Year. The doom and gloom boys will always figure it's the: kind of fuuy thinking that wlll set us into trouble. . ' .. ' • • UPITtl ..... Plane Dmvned Insurgents Hold Philippine · Area MANILA I UPI) -The Ptiillppine government said today insurgents led by foreign-trained soldiers were in oontrol of some villages ln the increasingly tense southern Philippines. In their frankest admission of trouble In the aoutb al.nee martial law was pro- claimed Sept, 23, government spokesmen also announced ' -SECESSIONIST LEADERS h a v e established tratnlng camJ).' for insurgents on the big 90uthem island rJ Mindanao, :_Moslem ouU_aws, operating farther south in the SuJu Archipelago, were believed to have shot down their first Philippine Air Foree plane Christmas Eve. The C47 with a crew of seven was reported missing. Spokesmen said the C47, the ~ltary version of the OC3 , was ordered mto ac- tion after 100 anned rebels tried to over-- run the detachment. The spoke!i-men said at lea~t ~~en outlaws. including their leader. 1denhl1td as Hadji Jjucob, were slain in the ensuing battle. They did not report any govern- ment casuaJUes. Census Count Misses Many On Welfare LONE SOLDIER, GUARDING AGAINST LOOTERS, WALKS MANAGUA ST~E&T Problems of Health, Housing and Feeding Al~ Plague Nlcar,•::V_:_""_A_u_t_h_o_ro_h_•_• ______ _ -The Sulu outlaws had teamed up with subversives led by a known Filipino Maoist, and "thousands of civilian residents" had fied their homes to escape crossfire or being dragooned into dissi· dent bands. Infonnation Deportment Secretary NEW YORK (AP) -A city-com- missioned study has concluded that the 1970 U.S. census undercounted the number of welfare coses here by 39 per- cent, an error which could be costing lhe city some federal aid funds. NicaraguaMayNeed Guns To Drive Out Survivors MANAGUA (UPll -The government agreed today to consider using force to drive reluctant survivors of the Managua earthquake from their ruined city. A Latin Ame rican relief official sug- gested such action to remove survi vors from areas in dange r or epidemics and shortages of food and water. An official source said a Venezuelan relief official suggested what he called "gunpoint evacuation" at a meeting Monday night at the residence of Gen. Anastasio Somoza. the co mmander of the national guard and military strongman of Nicaragua. THE SUGGESTION came as authori- ties-and hundreds of foreign relief .work- ers-grappled with increasing problems of health, housing and feeding of resi- dents who survived the powerful earth- quake which shattered Managua late Saturday. Official sources said many inhabitants refused to leave their ruined homes, some of them beciiuse they did not want to leave the places where kinsmen died when the earthquake tore Managua apart. This, they said, inspired t h e Venezuelan suggestion to drive survivors out of tbe city. II remained impossible to deterffiine how many persons died when the earth- quake struck, but estimates ranged between 1,000 and 10,000. U.S. AMBASSADOR Turner B. Shelton said be "knew" at least 2,000 Pt!rsons died. The toll of injured ran into the thousands and many of the seriously hurt were nown to other Latin American countries for treatment. A huge in- ternational relief operation was launched, with funds and experts arriving from around the world. U.S. aircraft new in tons of emergency supplies. Female Sailor Finds Sea Life Isn't for Her SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI) -Life aboard ship with nearly 500 men isn't all it's cracked up to be, according to at least one Navy lass. Rebecca Johnson, 18, is one of 40 wo- men aboard the USS Sanctuary, the only co-ed ship in the Navy. "Things may change, bot at this time I don't feel I'd be suited for Navy life," Miss Johnson said while visiting }\er home during Christmas. She said she doesn't care much for the strict regulations. ·'They made restrictions in boot camp that if a guy talked to one of us he could be put in the brig for a month," Miss Johnson said. "But sometimes when no ooe was looking, they would walk by and try to act funny ." There were a few secrel boot camp romances but "about the only time a couple could see each other was in church or something Like that." At the end oC boot camp, Miss Johnson volunteered to serve on the oo,,pilal ship Sanctuary and was sent to Norfolk, Ve., for training as a ship's clerk. Francisco S. Tatad told newsmen "real secessionist movements" were using violent means to achieve their goal oo Mindanao, 450 miles south of Manila. HE SAID Wl:OLE the government .""Q!l- trolled the main towns of l'.tindanao "we are not in the same position in some bar- rios (villages)." Tat.ad said a meeting today between Pltilippine President Ferdinand E . Marcos and fonner Cotabato Province Gov. Udtog Matalam discovered "certain confidential information" confirming the existence of tralning camps in Mindanao under foreign trained soldiery." 11e declined to name the country or countries where the insurgent leaders were trained or disclose the number of training camps which he .said were ''mobile ." Matalam was the founder in 1968 of the Mindanao Independence M o v e m e n t (MIM ) which he described as a peaceful secessionist movement intended to draw attention to the need for social and economic advilncement of the Philii>- pines' minority Moslem population. TATAD SAID following his meeting with Malalam, President Marcos met with military leaders to assess the situa- tion in the Southern Philippines. The anned forces spokesman said the C47 was reported missing during a mission Christmas eve while dropping the nares to help a besieged eight-man government detachment on Tonquil island S30 miles south of Manila . Similar miscounts probably occurred in other cities, acoording to Edward Blum, vice president of the New York City. Randy Institute, which prepared the study that was released Monday. Blum said that a "very crude" estimate was that the city couJd be losing between $10 million and $40 millloo each year in federal revenue-sharing a.s a result of the error. It now gets just over $200 million a year. Dr. Bernard R. Gifford, president of the Institute, said that money from other census-based programs sponsored by Model Cities, the Office of Economic O~ portunity and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare also could be af. fected. The institute, a nonprofit organization that studies city problems, noted in its report that the census concluded tha t there were 291,000 welfare cases in New York City in 1968, for which the city paid out about $S20 million. The city Department or s o c I a I Services; however , recorded some 4n ,000 y,·elfare cases on ilS rolls and paid out more than $883 million in that year. The Rand study said the Census Bureau reported its figures without first check- ing them with the city . The report concluded that the un- dercount occurred eithe.r because the census takers did not find those on relief because of their mobility or because the people on welfare, perhaps out of em· barrassment, failed to report they were on ffiief. Steam Rollers Peril Natio.n's Hiswric Sites Army troops canled out mass burials. Ir----. but many bodies remained buried under tons of debris, .some of it piled 15 feet high in streets. The stench of death was so powerful it drove some rescuers back choking. Hl·FI STEREO DEONSTRATOR YEAR END CLEARANCE SALE! WASHINGTON (UPI) -James Biddle doesn't like to see America 's history paved over. Biddle is president of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a group devoted to working for the preservati<>n of historic structures which are ln danger of being swept away by _progress. . Writing In Travel Let5UT'e magazine, Biddle said that of 1,500 buildings listed by the federal government ln 1933 as hav- ing historical significance, nearly ha1f have been tom down. "We Americans must decide if we want to preserve what we have or if we just want to pave it over, high-rise it and fac- tory it," he said. "We've got to decide at what point your land cease! to be your land, at what point you must yield to overall planning." Among the architectural endangered species about which Biddle's group is coocerned are the foUowlng : -The U.S. Capitol. endangered by a proposal to extend the west front_, _the on1y remaining portion of the or1g1nal exterior. -Grand Central St.alion in New York, endangered by talk of a high-rise office building over the present station, which the group sayw would destroy its char- acter. -Potomac Park in Washington. site of the Lincoln and Jefferson memorial.s en- dangered by the propofled route of Inter· s~te 695. A man who piloted bombers in Europe during World War II said the devastation reminded him or war-destroyed cities. Gutted buildings jutted into the air and smouldering wreckage littered plazas and parks. "Many of the people won't leave," said Dr. Camilio Vigil. a !\.1anagua ph ysicia n and member of the U.N. World Health Organization (WHO). "It's because they do not feel the need to go and some do not have transporta- tion." DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of t!H! Dally Pilot is guarantffd M811d•1·Frkl..,: 1f YW • Ml hl'l'e '9Vr "'"r ., S:JO p.m., <•II •11111 ,.....,.. "" Will M ..... 119111 te 1fV. Clli. •r. Ilk... UIHll 7::111 •• !Tl. S•fvnlly 11111 Sulld1y• H .,... .. net l'Kll ... your qpy •Y f 1.m. Sahnlly, 1r I •.m. Simday, <Ill 11111 • <OPY wtll lie .....,..I " y1111. Ciiis IA lakMI 1111111 lt l .ll'I. ltltphones N1rtltwftt MUlltM!tt.11 SMdl MHf Or11111 C-ty Arnt ~ WltttfMMIW ... '42-4121 . 540-1 120 1111 C~ CQolltrlw •-II, 1111 J ... c;..,b ...... CMfMI ... illt, 5"'111 L..-, UfwlWI NllUll 491-4410 CLOSED JAN. ht SALi DAYS DEC. 26 11"11 Doc. 31 Oitlyl Lastest Model Demonstrators -New Factory Guarantees FROM OUR 5 SOUND ROOMS ALL MODELS PRICED TO SELL, SOME BELOW COST I Winds Ro~r Down Rockies DEMONSTRATORS THROUGHOUT THE STORE ARE MARKED DOWN FOR THIS CLEARANCE! Clear Skies From Calif or1iia w Central Plai1is Tenaperat11ref • atlantic music s tereo ADC e Att.c: e AA e len:Uey e D1tel e Oynoc.o GOtTOtd e Horm•ft·IC_.11 e JIL e Je1111•11 • Kou • kLH e Ln co • Maront• e Mchttosh • MmotK • ,.onmonlc e ,.lclterl119 • R•ctlli11•or Scott • Sh•twood e Sounllcr.ft•m•11 e Shurt • So11y e Sup•r•• e SAi e TIAC e Y~o e Wh•rf· dolo e WolloftHlt l'ICl'°IC: (0Alt Ml•M'lfAV Opett l:M O.lly, '°' l•t. IS.I ''"'· Producer Scott, 61, Succumbs LOS ANGELES (AP) - Robert Adrian Scott, a movie wr1ter-producer who o n c e served a/ year in prlaon for refusing to testify before the House Un·American AcliviUes C.Ommittee, is dead at 81. Scott recently underwent surgery for cancer and died 1'1onday af his suburban Sherman Oaks borne. Born In Arlington, N.J., and a graduate of Amherst College, Scott came t o CAllfomla in 1939 as a writer f<>r Metro-Oold~Mayer. Among his film credits a!I a producer were "Murder, My Sweet," "The Boy With the Green Hair" and "Crossfire." e Gattg Shootings LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two East Los Angeles youths were in custody today for in- vestigation of a t t e m p t e d ( BRIEFS ) murder and a third was being sought by sheriff's deputies following tbe wounding of two teen-agers by gunfire. Deputies speculated that the shootings were related to gang activity. Joey Contreas, 15, and Ven- tura Romula. 17, were shoot from a moving auto Monday as they walked near a street intersection, deputies said. Contreas was shot in the left hip, Romulo in the left ann. ePa~tsDle LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A 30-ye.ar-oJd woman shot her estranged husband to death and ho killed herself during a Christmas party for their two young daughters, sherifrs deputies said Monday. Deputies said the husband, Nayan Scarborough, 32, came visiting at his wile's small apartment Sunday night while a party for the girls was in progress. e Man Mbring LOS ANGELES (AP) -One of two men whose cabin cruiser went adrift and &truck rocks oll the oortheril tip o! San Clemente 1sland wu lisf<!d .. missln( by the Coast Guard. Searchers said Peter Flores, 47, was on a fishing trip wttb James Savage when their 40- foot boat lost power, drifted for two days, then struck the rocks and threw both men Into the sea. e Church Robkd FRESNO (UPI) -The little congrea:ation of a West Fresno Baptist chureh kept on singing a hymn while three young men robbed It during a Christmas Eve service. Police Wd about a dozen penons were present for the Oiurch of God service when three young men appeared at the rear of the church and shouted for everyone to keep their heads down. Kitty Hawk Crewmen Summoned SAN DIEGO (AP) -O.w- meo fmn the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk were summoned to the witness stand again Monday to try to li!lt an 18- year<>ld black saDor with numerou.! act..s of violence durtng a race riot at aea. The Navy la se<tlng a geo- eral court-martial, the most serious military justice proc- ess for ainnan apprentice Terry V. Avinger ol Philadel- phia. He la chartl"d with six counts of assault and two counts ol r1<ltlng, but b not accused ol starting the rlOl 'Ille pro-trial heOring before investigating olficer Lt. Cl!ldJ-. Don C. Elbert started 'lllun- day and wu recee!<d Friday when a cl\'lllan defense lawyer become tll. Artor the heiring. Capt. Rd>ert P. McKemie. C<lfMlander of N«th llland Naval Air Staticn. 'fl"lll decide whether to rte0mm~ a gtn· enl cour1-martial or a I e s s serlOUJ special COUJ"t..martl.Al for Avt111er- 'ltle final decl!km on a «tn· en! coort-m.ortlal ...ts with Capt. O.r1ea Merryman, ~ mand<r ol Flott Air Sari Diego, Sii o1 the 12 gov'1111N!!>t wt-. all white aewmon. tOlllJled Tllunday end linked Avln«er to four 911*'tte at- tacb on '"'1llel durt111t the six hourt of npunr aboord the comer Oct. 11-11. Two black crewmen were w1!Une to tes- ttl'y for the olelenoo. : · • Tutiday, Ott:t11lbtt 2b, 1972 DAJlY PILO T $ Fighting 'Interference' Docwrs Form First Private Physici"n Union in St.ate U,1 T.ittflOt. FIRE VICTIM LOOKS FOR VALUABLIS-THER1!-WEREN'T MANY LEFT High Winds Carried LA Bl•D to Elg~t Exponllve Home> •nd Ap•rtment SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Organi2en of the nation's first "two AFUIO doctors' unions say pbyslclans need t o unionize to combat third party ~ce with the wellare of their patients. "Both the AFUIO pbysi· clans' un1ons and the. private physicians' unions indicate more and more docton are objecting to third party in- terference from state, federal and Jocal govemmenlJ u well as insurance companies," said Dr. Jay Aiken, president of the newly formed Contra Costa Physicians Union Local 68.1. HE SAID THE union, based near here, b California's first AFL-CIO phyalcians group and the second officially an· nounced in the natkln. One wa& chartered in Las Vegas, Nev., last February, and groups in several olher states are now organizing, he said. ''We're mainly con~rned terning patient care without the Las Vegas AF'L-CIO phys1· themselves with a strong consulting the medical staff. ciaos' union said he does not pov.·er base if they're going to thlnk doctors alone would ha ve be able to negotiate ef· • • T JJ E 8 OAR O of the power to control third par· ferlive ly," Or. John Holmes of supervisors Is not in com· ty interference. lhe Las Vegas Physkians' mun icaUon with the patients "The physicians of thi s Unio n Local 675 said ln an in- or physicians who care for country need to a 11 g n terview. them, and I don't soe how they M _..11..,._1 can maie intelligent de<isions What do doctors recommend without that information," he ··~plaints about third par-~or patients 1·n min? ty interference 1n the rela· I• .1'14&.1.• • tlonshJp between doctors and • patU.nts have also been voiced Doctors all over the r.ountry dispense over 50,000,000 :r.;g::~s or other physi-of these tablets to their patients each year. At a conference of in-Thero are many rnedicatio111 a tors reoommend m0&t than any dependent doctors' unions in phy&ician or dentist can pre-other leading tableL San Francisco in October Dr. acribe for pain. Some are nar-Headache and dental pain ii Sanford Marcus o! the Unron colic, ma~Y. are available. only reliewd incredibly fast; minor of American Physicians warn-on.pruc.nplion. D~t there .1!1 one pains or arthritis are depend· ed against increasing govern-pain ~h4!ver, available ~1thout ubl y eased for hour1 : even the . 1n·escr1pt1on, doctors dispense nchc>~ and pains of colds and flu ment controls on medical aeuin and again ... Anacin . respond to Anacin. So the ten- care. Each year, doctors give over sion and depttt1Bion that can be "DoCtors could lose the 50,000,000 Anacin tablelll to caused by auch pain will be re- power to decide what is in the their patient. in pain. If doctors Jieved too. And millions take best Interest of ~ in their think enough about Anacin to Anacin without stomach upset. care," said Marcus, whose dispense all these ~blela, what When you're in pain, why ~•p claims 1.400 Northern better recommenda.t1on ':"n you don't you follow the practice or •--1-ask when you are In pain? so many dociora and take the Ca lfomla d O Ct Or s as You see, Anacin contains tablet a doctor might give you members. more of the pain nliever doc· in his own office. 'Tu.ke Anacin". Yule Blaze Strikes 12 HomesinJ,A SacramentoDMV Fire Still Out of Control SACRAMENTO !AP) -threatened with water damage. with administrative problems MARCUS SA:. J he would affecting the care of our pa· like to see the country's tienta rather than with fln an-300,000 physicians unite in a cial goals for oorselves," nationwide union. Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers LOS ANGELES (AP) - Firemen say sparks from wind-downed power lines -or sparks from a chimney - may have started a $230,000 Christmas Day fire which roared through a d o z e n homes in the city's Westwood section. Fire devastated the fifth noor of the $10 million state Department of Motor Vehicles building early today and records of 18 mi 11 ion California vehicles w e r e For more than eight hours starting late Christmas night, firemen battled names, heat and dense smoke. Aiken, the county hospital's However, the president of vice president, said in an in··----'--~---'--'---------------------- No injuries were reported from the blaze which routed at least a dozen famtiies from their homes on the holiday. Gusty Santa Ana winds hampered the more than 100 firemen who spent about two hours bringing the fires under control. Officers said two houses and two apartment buildings we.re destroyed and eight other houses were damaged. "We were lucky to just get out with no one getting hurt," said Leon Eisler whose home was destroyed. Elster said the fire consumed aU the wedding gifts of his oldest daughter who was married Saturday and has left on her honey- lllOOll. Firemen said many of the homes dsmaged had wood shingle roofs. 2 Soled<µl Inmates Found Dead SOLEDAD (AP) -Two Soledad Prison inmates have been stabbd to death and two others wounded in an incident a prison official says involved rival Mexican groups. Guards found the bleeding bodies in two central facility housing units Monday, said George Baker, Soledad in· formation officer. "This appeared to be a con-- tinuation of a s truggle between two rival Mexican factions, the New Familia and the Mexican Malia," Baker said in a statement. "lt ap- pears to be that members of both factions were hurt in the incident." THE FIRE was still out of control deep within the block· square building at dawn, a fire official said. A OMV of£icial, Erwin Cooper, said it probably would be a year before the building can be reoccupied. The fire spread to the top noqr of the sJx-story structure, built in 1963 a mile and a half from the Capitol, in the pre- dawn hours. Two building engineers and a fireman were hospitalized for treatment of smoke ln· balation. No serious injuries were reported. mE CAUSE was not im- mediately determined. There was no damage estimate at the scene, but buildin g manager Bob Drew said damage to utilities alone could run $250,000. The gutted fifth floor of the building housed the state Mi Ii tar y Depanment, in- cluding central d u p I i c a t e records for all the state's na- tional guardsmen. tervlew. He accused the contra Costa County Board of Supervisors of "essentially" malting all administrative decisions con- Christmas Baby Left At Motel MESA , Ariz. (AP) -A newborn boy Willi found aban- doned outside a motel room with a plastic bag over his head on Chrlstmas Day, police said. A little after dawn, Nonnan Freemantle, 64, mote I manager, said he checked the room after the man staying there left. "I heard the car drive out, because it was awfully noisy," he said. "I went to the room to fix it and beard the baby crytna: outside of the bathroom window. . "l went outside to see it, and I jull saw the plastic bag and heard It crylns." . ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE STARTS TODAY! STOP BY NOW FOR FIRST CHOICE. FABULOUS SELECTION OF SOFAS AND CHAIRS ALL SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCED. SPECIAL ORDERS FROM HENREDON, ROYAL COACH, & MARGE CARSON WILL BE ACCEPTED AT SALE PRICES. WOODMARK CHAIRS SALE PRICED SELECTED GROUPS FROM HENREDON, HERITAGE, AND DREXEL AND MANY OTHERS ALL REDUCED. LAMPS, PICTURES, & ACCESSORIES ALL SALE PRICED DREXEt.41ERITAG~ENREOON-W.OODMARK-KARASTAN INTERIORS WWDAYI a IATlllDAYS t :OO 19 StJD NIDAY 'TIL t :OO NEWPORT IEACH e 1n1 WESTCLIFfOl.. "42·2010 LA&UNA IEACH e 145 HORTH COAST HWY. 4'4-6111 TORRANCE e 1l'4f HAWTHOlNI ILVO. ,, .. ,," I OFF EVERY ITEM I EXCEPT FAIR TRADE ITEMS) 4 days-Dec. 27-28-29·30 GIRLS' JACKETS, COATS BOYS' 50crooff T·SHIR·TS 'I" YeluH Te $7.00 Yob. To $21. TOYS DRESSES SKIRTS, JUMPERS ALL THE TOYS VALS. TO $5 • $6. $8 IN OUR STORE! '2" 1/2 PRICE ly FctmcMi1 Mok• BOYS' FLARES BOYS' REG. $4.50 • $6 • $7 '2" ly ,_.n Maker Y•• To ~00 2300 MADOR BLVD. COSTA MESA HAllOI CINTIR " • • ' ' DJ\D,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE A Doubtful Service Gov. Reagan's new daily radio broadcastl.ng serv· ice has been less than warmly welcomed by the 70 or so news co rrespondents covering the Sacramento beat. The state "information service" strikes many as an unnocessarily costly attempt to improve the governor's image, play down embarrassing events around the capi· Lal and propagandize unimportant or self-serving items that, in the eyes of officialdom, were not getting suf· ficient coverage from the professional newsmen. Whatever the intent. the state's tape-recorded "press releases" are being fed to radio stations at a great rate and the new communications network has been expanded lo include satellite offices in Los An· geles and San Francisco -all at the expense of the taxpayer. , Government officials and journalists probably never will see eye to eye when it comes to deciding what constitutes adequate news coverage. But it does seem that with a large corps of correspondents, repre- senting all political shades1 on full·time duty in the state capital, the addition of "canned" news is super· fluous, especiaUy when the taxpayer is footing the bill. And radio stations that feed the canned news to their listeners are nothing more than unpaid propa· gandists for the government. Youth and Law With all due respect to 18-year-olds, many of whom exhibit at least1as__much maturity and balance as their elders, we pred:kftough sledding for a proposal to lower the age lirmt for law enforcement jobs. County Supervisor Robert Battin feels that a citizen old enough to vote should be qualified to help enfOrce the Jaw. He specifically mentioned Jobi with the Sber- iffs Department and the Harbor, lleacbel and Parb Distrlct, which would Include the Harbor Patrol Minimum age !or law en!on:enient posto cutrelllly is 21. The suggestion has been re!emd !or eveluatlon to the county personnel department and the 1droinls~ trative office·r. · , (f it should rec<!ive their blessing and ll>at or Bai. tin's fellow supervisors, the departments concerned would be well advised to consider aome TeJY rigid screening and training procedures to weed out youthful adventurers from responsible young cititetll applying for the positions. Supervisorial Harmony Striking an unusual note of harmony, Orange County's five supervisors startled the audience at their pre-holiday session by bursting Into song. The number was, uwe Wish You a Merry Christ.. mas," and listeners described the act as "not bad at all." The supervisors already had given themselves a Diet! Christmas gill in the shape of a $7,000 annual. pay raise. Extending the holiday spirit even further. they voted to give themselves this week off, aithough county offices remain open between the two long weekends. However, the supervisor's largesse threatens to catch up with them Jan. 2, when they will face a lengthy agenda, including all the items of business postponed from this week's cancelled session. The tune was nice, but paying the piper may be something else. JUSTICE AND MERCY-CHRISTMAS, 1972 News Attacks Ad Firm Seems to Have 'Inside' Line Repression, Not Ref°'rm ~YDNEY J.BARRI0 When l was a stringer for PM a thousand years ago, that excellent but eccentric New York newspaper used a "symbol system" for its stories. One symbol would signify "hard" news that came Crom a factual or official source; another symbol would signify "soft" news that represen· t e d somebody's viewpoint or specu· lation. . I think the time has come for new. papers generally lo adopt a universal "symbol system," so that readers will know what they are gelling, and where it is coming from. Un· der the present rKIQ..system, newspapers are often blamed for running stories that .later turn ou~ to be hall.true or untrue. SOME READERS even blame the newspaper for an erroneous weather report. "Your paper predicted rain yesterday, and It didn't," they will ac· cuse a newspaper -but it was the U.S. Weather Forecaster who predicted It; the newspaper merely transmitted h i s prediction. I think that every story of significance shoukl be "flagged" to call attention to iU source and its degree ol credibility. Is an official making a charge? Then let the flag irxl.icate that it is his charge, not the newspaper's. Is a correspondent engag· ing in a "think·piece," extrapolating from the known racts? Then Jet a flag in· dicate that the reader is getting one man's opinion only. If a sensational story Is breaking fast, Dear Gloomy Gus The New York man who inter· vened to wrestle a blind man who was trying to rape a woman on a busy street comer sbould get a medal for bravery. -A.R.V. Tiiis '""",.. reflKl'f ,.....,.. ....... .... ll-Mr11Y fMMo ., llilt II_.,... Sl'IMI rMH" ,... -,. O ...... r 0 ... Dell'r ,11.t. and no one yet knows all the facts, hang a cautiooary fiag on the story, alerting the reader to possible inaccuracies or ex· aggerations under pres.wre oC time. IF AN IMPORTANT accusation is made, and must be printed before a rebuttal can be formed, another Dag should tell the reader that only one side bu been presented -and not ne<essari- ly the paper's side. Retractioos, of course, should be given the same position and amount of space as the original story; and. sometimes, even more. Consumers of journalism have as much right to demand a "labeling" system on nem as on food or beverages; and, a1tbougb cumbersome, in the long run it would benefit the newspapers themselves. It ls simply too easy today to blame the medium for the ~ge, and to make all the media the whlpping·boys f~ our public sins of mendacity, duplicity, violence, and "managed" news events. UNTIL THE press begins lo take itself off the book -by in IOrDe way "grading" the credibility of news sourees -demagogues cl alt shades will persist in shifting the credibility burden from the culpable to the conveyor·belt itself. There will always be errors, excesses and subjective slants in news coverage, as long as humans are responsible for reporting -but the present virulent at- tack on the media is a disguised effort at repression, under the name of ref'onn. Draft Law Will Remain WASHINGTON -The last won 't have been heard ol the draft by a Jong shot - even though it legally ends oext June 30. °" Tbat•s only the date the 1nduction authority expires. The basic mllitary draft law will con- tinue on tbe statute books-and will do ao lndeflnltely until formally repealed by Co<igr!u. That Is nol In the canls ; there Js no intention to abolish this act. 'lb! aame applies totheSelect lve Service System , whicb alao wUl remain intact. It ii part ol the draft ilw and, llkt it. wW be operaUve but in a dormant ttate -tn what ls known technlally a.a a .. ....,.,.._ posture." The Selective strvfce qency, the director end some _,el will cootlnuo lo function. ONCE A \'EAR, they will cooduct a draft loClery in which monberl will be aelld<d for ..... hll call-up in the event al m emeqeaey. However, for such an lndlacdon. Cmsrea would have to pass .a .,, law autboriziDI ll -thus reac· llnllill the bale drill law.• 'l1lo .,_1 drift lolterl' likely will be llmlkd to Ill llllDben. ,_ youihl "10 f>e requlred lo toke ,.,,..i _,, and lie dualned. Should • mt'rd ::::::." artM: aod Coogress ........ • llley woold he the tint <Ailed up. Until Ihm, ibq con not OUY and go -their~ . PllETl'V MUat Ille ... e >10rrr·!roe \ outlook prevails for tbe slx-month period between now and June 30. There will be very rew if any draltees of lhose becoming eligibl< Jan. I. OC thole bom in 1953 and who have been asilgned lottery numbera, it is virtually certain none will be inducted bef'ore the stan of 1973 -when they CtaH lo be eligible. Of those wh> become eligible next year, only a rew thooJ&ttd nt the most, Pentagon m a n p owe r authorities estimate, will be drafted. Says Aaal!tant Oelt!ll!e Secretary Roger. Ktlley: • 1•w 'J'HER! lJ a call-up, It won't be very large. Not many will be summoned. If none arc drafted in the first quarter of the year, then tt'1 just about ccrtaln no ooe wlU he inducted in the second quarter -when that authority expires." If a draft I! ne<omry, it will total not more than J0.000 -at the most. So far , 8J'OWld 50,000 were lnduc\f.d this year. Present combined llmlgth ol tile annecl fo-Is 2.1 mllllon. Slill under COMldoratlon II a n!ductlon or this troop level for economy purposes. There Is considerable euppcrt for tbat by budaet-!14lanclng advoca1<1 In t h e !'resldenl'I inner COWl<lls. A cut In military llmlcth would do a iol lo ease !be Amly'I and Navy'• prol> loms to recruit an all -volWlteer "'111>- ll!hm<nl. Agency Reaps Government Harvest W ASlilNGTON -Since the Los Angeles managers of the giant J. Wa1ter Thompson advertising agency went to wort in the White House, the agency has increased its federal a C C 0 U D t S dramatically. Four years ago, the Thompson Jinn's fede ral business was limited lo a $160,000 contract to provide ·~counsel , advice and assistance" lo the Marines. This year, the company ahould collect more than 13.S millioo from the federal govemmeol. IT MAY BE MERELY a coincidence that President Nlxoo drew three of his top aides from the Thompson agency. His cbief ol staff, H. R. Haldeman, formerly merchandized ?·Up as the "Un-cola." Ap-- pointments secretary Dwight Qi.apin made bis mart. hawking bug killer and floor wax. And press secret.ary Ron Ziegler started as a Disneyland guide and later handled tbe Disneyland acoount for the Thompson agency. A number of J. Walter Thompson ex· ecutlves took time off to work for the Nixon campaign both in 1968 and 197'2. Most are back at the agency working on the new federal accounts. A few stayed in government The ACTION agency, for example, has three ex·1bompson hucksters -Ronald, Gerevas, who healb the public affairs branch; Nissen Davis, who oversees "special projects"; and Robert Orucken- miller, who is ln charge of the ad· vertising branch. At the Interior Department, Pamela Coe, a pretty, young advertising expert from J. Wa1ter Tbompson's New York of· flee , ls now advising Interior Secretary Bogen Morton. THERE'S NO EVIDENCE ol improper lnte"ention by these people to get corr trac:ta for their former flrm. M..., likely, government agencies ba\'e favored J, Walter 'lbompaoo In hope ol impr<SSlng the powerful 'lllampaoo trio In the White House. - The Food and Drug AdmlnistraUon, for instance, awarded the 1bompsoo agency a contract that should be worth around half-<1·millioo dollanl. The clrcwnstances were curious ii not downright 1usplclous. Each holiday season, the FDA sponsors a campaign to alert the public to dangerous toys. Last year, a slide show was prepared tha1 coot the taxpayer. about $600. But Ibis seuoo, lhe FDA bigwigs waited until late August, then asked 13 "qualified sources" to bid for the job. Five oompanies responded and J. Walter Thompson was awarded the contract far 1137,600. Federal procurement regulations re- quire civilian agencies to advertise for bids, or at least make a prompt, official announcement of an award on all deals exceeding $5,000. 1bere was no such announcement of the J. Walter Thxnpsm contract. An FDA spokesman explained that "wtlque and compelling" circumst.ances made it necessary to rush the deal. In other words. they wanted to get the toy safety campaign rolling in time for the Chrubnas ru!h. 11IE FDA FAILED to note, however, that lbe "oompelling" circumstances were created by its own tardiness. Oiris-, after all, comp at tile same time every year. '- For their 1137,600, the taxpayer. got a 14. minute color film starring baseb811 pi"tcher Tom Seaver and actor Arnold Stang; four t.elevi!ion com- mercial!; six radio commercials; and a press kit containing printed matter, photographs and a slide show. We contacted a production company, experienced. in government work, to find out whether the price was right. The company, after studying t be re- quirementll, said it could produce the same package lor $55,000 -less lb.an one-thin! what 'lllampaoo l<Ctived. The Thompson contract, furthennore, contained some bidden benefits. Not dlly did the firm bandle the to7 llafety pro- motion ; it also WOO the rigbb to do t\fO other public service advertising C8ID* peigns for FDA. Tbe fees will be negotiated later, but insiden expect the full contract to approacb l$00,llOO. THE MARINE CORPS, meattw~. has also increased its payments to J . Walter Thompson. Arter the Thompson lrlo mov· ed inlo !be )Vbjte HOljSe, the .~' jacked up their contract with the ad. vertlsing agency from IUI0,000 to 1270,000. In fiscal year !9'12, It hit $870,000. This year, the Marines have budgeted a whopping 13 million fer the Thompooo finn. F-: The J. Waller Tbompaoo agency, in response to OlU' inquiries, gave us a written statement. "Tbe estimate of $3.5 million" in goven:unent business. said tbe statement, "amounts to only foor·tenths ol one pera!llt of !be (egen· cy's) estimated worldwide billin.p .. in 1972. 'Ibe agency stressed that U "bas engaged in open, compe'lll!ve ~lddlllg ·ror - government business over the years" and that, in addition lo tbe successful Marine <»rps and FDA bids, it bad lost a bid for a IS mi11ioo PoSlal service contract. Other advertising agencies, tile state- ment claimed, bad a bigber wlwne ol federal business. Nixon 'Togetherness' Goes Abroad "Bring us together," the theme of Richard M. Nixon's 1968 victory statement, could serve equally well as the theme of his foreign policy in ltm. It has been a year of friendly approaches to old adversaries and, possibly, ol. the emergence of a new, post~d Wtir world order. President Nixon1s roreign policy i,n. ltlatives are predicated on the a. sumptlon that the era of Soviet-American global dominance has aome to a close. tn a rep>rt lo Congress last Feb. ·9, be stated: "The end ol bipolarity requires that tbe structure (of peace) must be bulU with tbe resources and concepts of many natlou -for only when natlons participate ln creating an lntemaUonal system do they contribute to lta vlQllty and accept Us validity." He added that "Our enmltles are not lmmutable, and we must be prepared reallsUcally to reoognlze and deal with their ca-" ThUJ It wu that tile Prosldenl traveled to Peldng In Febnlary and lo -in May. O! the latter trip, Fred Luchsinger wrote bl Swiu Review of World Affairs: "The rbelorlc of Joptheme11. . . .sug· gests that, with the declared lntenUon of the two powera lo secure peace, ln elrect ~--II" Georse ---, Dear a.cqe: My wife ta oo compulsively neat she ii driving mo balty. She """"' the tub conrtantly, empt tea osh!Taya when they 're almdy empty, omama ll the toothpaste tube isn't aqueaed neatly and when I It« a ring In tile tub alio ttally got domine.rlngl How can I 1et her over this bossy bltT · GE1TING MAD Dear Getting: Leave a ring in the shower -It wlil drive her null. (Rub a ll!Ue grime arvund the tile wall about walat high.) If that doesn't ·won, hon holes In the ashlraya. Give her enough shocks and •he'll 1but up. ( EDITORIAL RESEARCH J peace is secured and tbe 'era of con· frontatlon' bu finally ended." BUT MUCH rema1n1 to be done before Nixon can realize hit dream -"a world in wbicb leaden ol nations will aelUe their dlffer<n<ol by nqollatlon, not by force, and in wblcb they lNm lo live with their dlffenrnces IO that tbelr 9001 will not have to die for their dU· ferencea." A llUljor test will come next year, when the lOng-nalted Coofmnce Oii Security and Coopmtlon In Europe ope!IJ. Luaer le$ll alse ore In the ollillg. Tho • Jndirect negotiatioos between the United States and QJba on an antl-bijacking agreement afford one example. U some llOtt ol aca>nl Is Indeed reaclled, It could lead the way to a broader undentanding. Any such possibility seemed Ulltblnlcable only a rew months ago. President Nixon bu spelled out U.S. policy toward CUba on April 16, 1971: "Aa long as (Premier Fidel) Castro ls adopting an antagonistic, anti-American line, we are certainly not going to nonnallz.e our relatloas toward Castro." But now Castro bu softened bis posi· Uon, at least with respect to hijackers, and it might well be to this country'-: and Qlba's advantage to explore further . AJ llMd Corp. co•••ultant Edward Goozalc:i obwved in Fottlgn Allaln, "Soviet penetration into C'A1ba now appears lo be taking Ul new dimensions which could BritU;h Foibles Aired When the first tsaue ol Priwte Eye WU published In London In October 1961, few people believed that it woold last more tbao a few mootbs. SJnce then every other week -fortnightly, as lts roaders woold aay -It has looked sharp- ly at·the folblca ol United Klnldom polltl- daM, such venerable lnstJtutions 'aa P1D1cb, tile man In the otroet thealr<, mooey er lack ol tt, and other tal1•tl ol humor. THE B~T of the.le o!Iorll have been put unclU loll covers· for the bcnt!it ol tho American publlo. ....,..opbilel will la111h without ..... in dilco•ertnc The We and Times ol Private Eye, edited by Richard !qrams (Mc:Oraw·Hlll, ~). 1lue I• acqualnt"ll with ,..,..,1 prol> lem1 in the Jilht llttie kingdom will - •Ider ii no wond<r that the mn hu let on the Brll!ab Empire. AS INGRAMS noles in a foreword, for various reuons HPrtvete Eye'' became (THE B~KMAN) a rec;eptpcle ror all kinds of information which for one rea!JOll or IJ\Olbcr was being kept out of the papers. Bui not all our .~· were Fleet St. 'rejeeta,' pwecl on.to us by their dlsgnmUed au- thonl ••• Privato Eye has heoame more thab ..., balore a thorn In the flesh ol tile 1utbor!Uea. To the IHtldlel, cutrenlly bemuaed by the .....iJed Unde'lf'IUl1d Pftll and tile cull of RoV)llutlon and Pot. Private Eye may ...., hlddy.<fuddy.and old·fubioned. The authoriU,., Judging by tho number ol wrltl and the continuing boycott by Jhe dlstrtbuUon trade, take e dllftn111I view. There are dilturbinK slgna thal Prtvate Eye ls al INI balnc taken serlau1ly." CAROLlNE HARKLEROAD lead to her virtual satellization." A llmlted CUban·U.S. delente pr.sumaoly would help lo prevent this from hap- pening. MEANWHILE, the United States and Ctecboslovakia are trying to thaw out a rtlaUonsbip that has been fnnen since World War ll. OfficiaJs of the two coon. tries have said that fonnal talks on a new consular convention are to begin "very soon," a n d wW be foUowed by negotiations on scientific and cultural ex· changes as well as financial questions. Georg,e F. Kennan suggests, however, that U.S. foreigo policy In the 1111\la should aim for loftier Q:1>81t, 0 Tbe possibilities of American diplomacy are oot limited .... lo the coITeC!ion ol past mistakes, or the overcomlug of in- lllablllUes mulling from the heritage ol the past war and the great process of dccolonizationt" he recenUy wrote. He envislom -and perhaps NIXCli> does, too -a world in whlcb nation .. at.ates "recqpllz< a bigher and more unllled JM1ttem of oblij:atlons." OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Pubttlller • ThorJ'l(ll Keevil, £djto; 8arbarci K.,efbfch Editorial Page Editor • . Th~ cdltorlol '*~e of the DtilY PUot seek1 10 lntonn &nd t limu· late reatlen by 1>rt»enUng thtt newtpii>ff'• opinions ·~ oom• • mtntal')' un topic.· ot lnt~l and fllf:nlrlct.nce, b7 PT'QYldl.n1 a fonim for tho t'Xpreulon at oun rtadert' l.lt>1 nluri., and :hY pl'1!14l'ntlnri the dlvtl'ff vlewf!Ofnu of lnronncd o\>. 11e~'l ind 1pokesmeh on toplca . ot the da.r. TueJday, December 28, um f st of of e . . !Textbook • 'Sex Bias • • ·Attacked • 1 STANFORD (AP) -The horizons of girls 6 to 8 years ,bid already have been nar· -rowed by textbooks showing sexual stereotypes, says a Stanford University tesearcber. 1 '"lbere's a compiracy aut )liere aomewbere In the terl- book ind u stry," said :psychology department research uaislant Dr. Carol '.Jacklin, only half in jest. DR. JACWN, a self· deocrlbed feminist, recenUy completed a four-month study on sex bias in kindergarten through thlr.d-grade reading books. "Textbooks could be a ...,,.. of wldenlng children's horizons, but they are not, 11 Ille ~eclan!d. "It la not a ma~ ter of getting girls into masculine fields. It la a mat- ter of not llmltlng their IQizons." '!be study' funded by the Ford Foundatlon, focused upoo the ......... of four ma- jor publlsbm, Including the C a I i f omla state.approved series and other texts used ex- terudvely across the nation. DR. JACKLIN said she and two research assist.ants can- cluded from· ana1yiing more than m storiel in each, series thill the texts downgrade girls and women through stereotyp. ing. '!be reseorchen sajd they fOlDld that adult w om e n always were deplct..i Indoors -a-111 In the borne, sometimes leaching in a clusrQom or nursing in a bospilal. 'Jbere were no women doc- ton, bonlt lollers, avlaton or even at;orUeepera, they >t.Jded. '!he researcben said outside activities ... ..., nserved for the male and the storiea were devoid of actk\n until the male charac:ter entered. •'WE ARE SHOWN adull males outside the home, ac- complishing things," explained Dr. Jacklin, mother of two chlldren. •women are shown inside the home, never tn pro- f esslons, never. • • .solvlni ~·" To illustrate what she said were effects of s e x u a l stereotypes on youngsters, Ur. Jacklin cit..i a study finding Iha~ by the age of 8 lo 8, 75 percent of girls will say they want to be teachers or nurses when asked what they want lo be when they grow up. ConvmelY. boyl asked that questkl\ wm give no two oc- cupation• more than 10 per-cent o1 their choices, she ssld. THE RESEARCHER said the textbook writers -most of whom ,..... women -did not intend "to be nasty" or to hurt o.lher females, 11They have no commitment to conllder· the problems of sex-role steniotypes," she ex- plained. "'Ibey write about the world and maybe II Is a ses· rol~reotyped place." WE YflSll You ~Happy Ii Pnspns New Yur ... tr. tile Cmr If I • 873-3510 1147 L COAI T llW'L O~ONA DlL MA famoosm.aker belts $7-$8 values 4.99 ) Fashion contour styles in earth tones and pastels. Choose several to add spark to your ponts ond dress wardrobe. Come early for best choice, Many one of a kind. Personal Leather Goods 86 ,skapsby sehlaparelll 3 fqr 5.50 plus a bonus pair You usually ·pay 5.50 for three, now you get a gift pair, for a total of four! Young sh eer stretch pantyhose are made with an exclusive sheer stretch yarn that gives them extra wearability. In sun worship, coffee bean, honey blossom, definitely neutral , navy, witchcraft. Sizes petite/med ium, and medium/tall. Hosiery 3 ' ANAHEIM NEWPORT 4+t N. E1talW 17141 IJl-1121 47 F•thio11 l•l•twi 17141 ~•4_..1212 I I ( • famous maker ' . handbags .1.99-9.99' bangles . and sets 2.29-3.99 orig. $13-$25 Fabulous savings on famous maker handbags. Luxurious, soft styles for evening and doyweor. Great buy on embossed bangle bracelet and wedding band earring set, 3.99. Bangles, skinny to wide styles, plain and embossed. Decorated with scenic designs, ribbons, or medieval motifs. Many one of a kind, <o do come early! Handbags 37 m.oek turtleneck tops 5.99 reg. $8 A must for your wardrobe: the mock-turtleneck topper. Of easy core acrylic, with bock zipper, long sleeves. S-M-L, white and colors. Short doeve style also available. 3.9'1. Accessories 41 Choose several! 2.29-2.99. ' ' HUHTINQTON lfACH 111 Edi..., A'+'9flff 1714) t•2·JJJI OkANCi;f, MALL OF OR.ANGE 2100 N, l•tltit 5-*'"t f7141 ttl.1111 c1urros 100 L..1 C.rrltot M•ll C21J) 160°0411 SHOP 10 A.M. •o •:30 P.M. MONDAY Tij .. OUOH FRIDAY, SATU.,AY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to I 11.M. . j I I I ' • 01"1 T1~le l\1e 10 Envoy Richard T. Davis of \Vyon1ing gets a kiss from his wife, Jean, after he was sworn in U.S. ambassador to Po- land in Washington, D.C., ceremonies. ---·----- High ~ts Of Hospital U rider Fire WASHINGTON (UPI) The General Acclunting Office says the spiraling cost of medical care is partly due to poor govern1nent coordinatio n · of hospital construction. • The GAO cited as examples six cities which will have 4,000 more hospital beds by 1975 than they will need. They are Baltimore. Cincinatti, Denver. Jacksonville, Fla .• San Fran· cisco and Seattle. SEN. ABRAHAM A. Ribicoff. (D-O>nn.), said there is a "disgraceful failure " at an levels of government to coordinate h o s p i t a l con· struction. "The · study reveals a . disturbing pattern of over-con· ~ struction and under·utili7.ation which is out of step with ac- tual community needs and out • of line with what the average American can afford to pay," Ribicoff said. He sa id the GAO report revealed that the sharing of specialized services such as cobalt t her a p y , open-heart surgery and obstetrical services was so low that some ' units were "virtually un- needed" in terms of actual use. • .. r • •• Tllt1dlt', Dtc1mbtr 2'. 197:! Poleeats Easily Spotted BrwCost Goes Vp In Nigeria WASIHNGTON <UPI\ - Attention male a l 1 I in e passengers: The stewardess wtlJ now glve you the Putorius l"oetidus teat. -Do you wear a dry cleaner's pc;eudo-handkerchlcd in your breast pockt!t? -Does the talon of your zipper stick out? -Are your socks white or argyle. and prone lo hang around you r ankles~ jF 'mE ANSWER is yes you may not be the rakish airborne Remeo you would like to have the stewardess th.Ink you are. Rather. you may be just another Pulorim Foelldus. That"s a polecat. Ac<.'Ordlng to the A I r Transport Assoclatlon (ATA), a trade organitallon represen- ting major air l ines, stewardesses tend to classify male airline passengers 11 Polecats or Pussycats. One stewardess kept her profile in simple terms. A polecat is ''the loud- mouthed know-it-all," she said. ANlY111ER STEWARDESS told the ATA that her lyPiCal Polecat "always starts talking about all the alrlln .. he has flown and says he's a personal friend of the president of your own airlines.Ge n er a 11 y, L. M. Boyd Dictators Run Most of World Only one >M'Oman in 100 looks attractive from the back in pants. That's the claim of Antonio Canova del Castillo, a fashion designer of some prestige. It's his claim that history's most famous women, tbe ladies who ruined men, all wore bulky enormous gowns that concealed their fig- ures. WHEN the United Nations' charter was signed In 1945, just about half of the member coun- tries were democracies. Today, fewer than a thlrd are. Most of the world is run by dictators, sir. AMONG his several observations about married men, the great Balzac said, "'lbe majority of husbands re- mind me of an orangutan trying to play tbe violin." Ii . IN ivery 100 per90DS aged 18 or over, 7% are married, 12 are widowed or divorced, and 16 are single. PERSONAL NOTE -Where I live in the country the colfee tastes a lot better. This water well runs deep. Took a ball hour wallt yeslenlay afternooo down the old Jake rO<ld. With Molly, the pup. No car passed. A kid ooold ride a O¥istmas bike here. Now tbet winter feeding is on, the black cows, in.9olent and imperious, come up to the fence IO bellow. All right. ladles. pretty sooo. The goots bleat. The wind picks up. Think it's the wind that ma.kes the funny feeling oo the back of the neck, but maybe it's the faraway ripping noise, a chain saw somewhere. Names around here are like trite old trutM. Across the way, the Williams place. Down the road the Johnson place. ~ egg signs and stocket' calves. Hay for sale. Emltallon J.S mine own shotgun blast from the porch at sundown, no law against that. I like it here. GIR13 WITH GLASSES-Q. "In his claim that glasses tend to change a girl's personality completely, your Love and War man was all wet!" A. He me8Ilt martini glasses. Eyeglasses only tend to change a girl's personality slightly. Q. "WHEN did the U.S. Navy stop flogging sailors?'' A. About a dozen years before the Civil War. Q. 0 0F AU. the new babies, what proportion are born to unwed mothen?'.' A. Aboui seven out ci every 100. IT WAS IN Ult that some imaginative fellow attributed t.hRt widely known allergy to new mown hay, so termed it "hay fever." And It was In 1866 that the English physician Dr. Charles H. Blakeley proved pollen, not hay, to be its cause. Still, more than 100 years later, Ule hay fever mis- nomer sticks. Address mail to L. ltf. Boyd, P. 0. Boz 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. though, II luml °"I the airline be says be new from Spokane IO Seattle _, even Dy weal of the Mlsslsslppl. And Uutl alr!Jne pruldenl be knows so well actuall)' retired Hve yean ago." · Oth<r passengers who quality !or the Po 1 e c a t category are those who: -Want a double SCotch before takeoff. -Ask questiom like "how long do you think this plane wooJd floal If It should !And IO the t,ay?" -Fancy them selves Casanova when it comes to stewardesses. BUT STEWARDESSES agreed that Pussycat,, out- number Polecall "by aboUt 50 to 1." 1 The pussycat ls the passenger who never makes jokes about "flying to Cuba," fastens his seat belt without being reminded, and leaves the airliner's washroom "as neat as he found it," the ATA said. One stewardess says she can spot a Polecat "even before he opens rus mouth. "He invariably wears a drycleaner's pseudo- ha.ndkerclllef in hll suit breast pocket. His stockings are low around his ankles-either white or argyle. And the talon on his zipper sticks out." San Diego 4 Named Asks Rock To Posts Fest Curbs Four Newport Be a c b reskienla have been elected 1973 officers of the El Bandito Shrine Club, a group of Harbor SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Area residents under the City r.oonciJ. is being urged jurisdiction of Al Malaikab by a parent.teacher group not Temple of L<ls Angeles. to allow rock music concerts in ctty-operaled facilities with-Th<y are Dooald Weber' out proper law enforeement. president; James Glavas, vice Such events were termed president; W. John Hoskin, "conducive to the use of marl-aecretary and Pope Hilburn, juana, drugs and liquor as treasurer. well as the use of obscene and The ~member club is PORT HARCOURT, Nigeria !AP) -Inflation la catching up with young lovers ln this steamy West African port city. The bride price, which in- tending grooms must cus· tomarilY pay the g I r I ' s parents, bu ooared 10 11.IOO, according to one unhappy man. "TIUS ACT l!l inhuman." he wrote to a local newspaper, "I'm strongly appealing to the authorities and all patriotic elements to please come to Our rescue." Nlgqrian Jaw has frozen the coat of a bride at a $90 m&J:• !mum but aS the writer, J.N. Eye, 'told the newspaper, it ls "being openly flouted with im- punity." I ANTHONY SCHOOU HAllOI CINTll UM M .. wr Ct11ter Cotti M ... , C1lllH11ll ,.._ 17141 •7t•JJIJ vulgar language." open to Shrlners in the Harbor 1n1 s. 1rw11111tn1 st . ......i"" Cal. ""' Need extra money to cover your Christmas Shopping? With • Reterve Balance Aecot.mt at FlBt National Ifs there u soon as you write your check. You don"t have to ask anyone because the money has already been earmarked for your use, when Y04J wish. It's Just Uke being your own loan officer. As a matter of fact, we have a free booklet, .. How to Become Your Own Loan Officer." Write for your copy or, better yet, slop in at any office of First Nltlonal.Blnk. We'll explain Reserve Balance to )'OU and help you tlll out an appUcation. First National Bank OF ORANGE COUNTY Fir1t in Per1onal Banking &rvict Sinct: 1906 Area. For information, call n.: 17141 776-ltOO "WE WUL HOPE that lnl~H~os~l<i;·;n ;at~-;;~1~-...... ~~;;~;;;;~;;~;;~;;:;;;;:;:;;;;;:;;:;:;:;;;:;:;;:;:;:;:;::;:;;;;-the future the city would not enter into a contract for such • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • an activity until such Ume a! it becomes poss.Ible to enforce exisUng laws regarding the use and po!Session or mari- juana, drugs and alcohol," Ruth Jobnsoo of the 9lb ()is. trlct Calllomla Congress of Parents and Teachen tl>ld the coonctl. Mrs. Johnson's complalnt stemmed from a Nov. 12 con-cm at San Diego Stadium, home of the National Football League's San Diego Chargers, which allracled 50,000 peopl<. MAR UUANA SMOKING was rampant and unhampered by police, she said. "The smell and smoke was so intense that it irritated the eyes of those seated as tiigh as the press level," Mrs. Johnson said. The council asked the city manager and the stadium managers for a report on the matter. Bomb Rocks 'Not Hot' ALBUQUERQUE, N . M . (AP) -The Atomic Energy Commission says studies do not confirm reports that rocks from the southern New Mexico site of the first atomic bomb explosion might be dangerous- ly radioactive. 5 DAYS ONLY END-OF-YEAR TUES. THRU SAT he. JI tin he. JO. HURRY-BUY NOW SALE ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT WHITEWALLS·BLACKWALLBI CHROME SPOKE DISH RmICOFF SAID the total cost of health care has soared from $26 billion in 1960 to $75 billion last year and that the cost of hospitalization had gone '---------------------' An Albuquerque operations office spokesman said AEC tests indicate the rocks, known as trinitite. contain only a safe, minimal level of radia- WHEELS MAGS MAGS 4 ~ 5109 •LUI from $32 a day in 1960 to $91. The GAO report said the un- needed beds that would be available in 1975 totaled 136 in Baltimore. 300 in Cincinnati. 876 in Denver, 663 in Jackson· ville. 1,307 in the San Fran- cisco Bay area and 950 in 1 Seattle. Millionth Air Passenger ONTATIO (AP) A Dean Sudduth, SI, received the Downey businessman has been bounty, which had be e n showered with $500 worth of do nated by Ontario prizes and gifts as the businessmen, as he walked millionth passenger of 1972 at from an Air California night Ontario International Airport. from San J ose. tion. Dr. Charles Hyder of the Southv;est Research a n d Information Center had warn- ed that anyone having trinitile stones should contact local health service offices for in - formation on how to dispose of them. An excess of nursing-care < beds was expected to total , 1,47fi in Baltimore, 3,27'1 in 11::-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 • Denver, 518 in Jacksonville.Ir '6.967 in San Francisco and HAMS , 2,300 in Seattle. TJIE GAO auditors said • there would be no excess of .• nursing-care beds in Cln- ' cinnati, but expressed "110me ... reservations" about the validi- ty or state data. C The GAO said lbe siJ cities t: were selected because ol their t geographical distribution and ,.,. suggested the same situation t might be true in other 'metropolitan centers. \. Rlbicoff said the federal government must take the l blame for inadequately con- " trolling rederal aid under such programs u the Hlll·Burton ~ Act and Partnership f or < Health programs. State Cash Soars 26.6% SACRAMENTO (AP)-Call· forlMI ""' buying, drink· ing, smoking and betting on the borlel more. according to state tax rocelpts. Co ntroll e r Houston medical weight reduction ..... 1o .-it wn1 H••"' Y •• '1111r1 ....... ORDER NOW FOR NEW YEARS DAY e Roady to Seno with Honey .. Spice Gian e ldeol For loatl-No Preparation ••• • Imported ChHSn and Wines e Detlccrtes1ttt with Sondwlchts To Go Tha solo and practiul method for tho entire fam ily to lose weight ... under tho strict su perv ision of Medical Doctors. c.n for inform1tion Mond1y thru Frid1y t" •.m. to 5 p.m. Closed I to 2 p.m. LINDORA .. MEDICAL CLINIC 'f NEWPORT BEACH Pace Professional Bldg. 404 Westminster 645-3740 rioumoy reported t h a t C&li!Orn.11'• ca&b r e c e I p t 1 sincl July 1. the first five IDO!llhl of tllo !tm-73 rlocal year, wm. 211.t percent ahead ol a, .. , ago. The blpeat gain in cash Ntwpott _. hHIO ....... POIOdooo Sli-Ookl Woodlaod Hiik rece!PI WU from the pemnal MJ.a740 U..2N1 .,. ... 2'14 7ff.J10J J47·SM7 iacUi>o .... '!hlcll -ool· lected tbrougtt ' pa 7 r o 11 "-! '-• Wnt c:..t.. "91-°"""J• IA Hobro wttbhoidlng for the finl ume i..--.•'.'"'_,._. _____ 1•""-----------'•' ... -"'.1 ___ .. _....,. ___ _ OU )'Ht, • • 4~558 4~588 PLUS WUTI ••• NUTS ""' ••• CA.I'S 14'' x 6''-14'' x 7'' CHEV· FORD • PLYM. 14 "•17" FoN . Chow.· Plym. FORD· CHEV, 0 1'1.YM. FREE CHILD'S RACE JACKET ($12.95 Value) With the Purchase of Either 4 Goodyear Radials or •Used lires •Discontinued Design •Odds and Ends • New car changeovers •Whitewalls and Blackwal11 •Hundreds of tires to choome from 4 FOR 14800 + FlT $1 .71 P1r Tiro 645/14 Pow. Cush. NW. BIH'll Tuff Typo 4 POR 568'° + FOT $1. .. Pe• Tl" 695/14 Pow. Cut. PE. NW Blom1 4 POR 168'° + F~T $1.'5 Pe• Tl•e 700/lS Pow. Cu .. PE:. Ilk. 11..,,1 4 POR 588'° + FET $2.17 ,., Tl•• 070/15 ltally White Stripe 4 POR 58800 + PET $2.71 P•• Tl•e 071/11 Aw. 71 Ilk. Nyleft 4 POR 59800 + FIT $2.71 ... Tl•• 071/,S Cua. P.C. Poly Gl•1 Ilk. ll1m1 4 POR 599'° + FET $2.71 Pff Tl•• 471/15 Cui. row. Cui. Poly GI•• Wl\lte 11.,,, 4 P~R 5 11 ?'° + PET SJ.DI Pff Tl,.. H71/1S Cua. Pow. Cu1. l'oly Glas Whlto. (PIRITI) 4 POR 5 129'° + PET $Ut ... Tl•• L71/1S Cui. Pow. Cul. Poly Ola1 White llem1 , RnREADS ... , si.. 4 Po• 54600 + Slk ta. FET & 4 R.tr .. dabl1 Cellftft. 20.000 Mlle W••""l'Y GOOD/YEAR 3 WAYS TO CHARGE • Our Own CUttomer Credit Plan •=·~Charge '•• merlc1rd ' ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "S•rvlc•1 Performed By Our Service Specieli1t1.11 • Alignment e B••kes e Tu .. Up • Lubo and Oil e Monroe Sho<k1. YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. SERVING ORANGE COUNTY SINCE 1961 COSTA MESA 1596 NIWPORT BLVD. 548-.9383 MON. tlltW 11111. 7:1 .. 1110-UT. 7:1 .. Jt)O LAGUNA BEACH 482 OCEAN AVE. 49~·-6666-494·0333 MON ....... •11. M -IAT ... 1 For The Record De•th Notitt1 ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCUFF MORTUARY 4%7 E. 17th St., Costa ~1e1a -• BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 1'13-9450 Co1ta Mesa •4~24%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI 8-343! • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1705 Lagana Caayon Rd. 4M-t415 • PAC!f1C VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary 01pel 3500 Paclfle View Drive Newport Beecb, California 144-1700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7811 Bol .. Avt. Westminster stWSts • SMITHS' MORTUARY m Main SI. Huntington Beach - . . . .. . .. .. County Budget Hike Tops SACRAMENTO -Orance County's 1972-73 bud&et show- ed R bigger Increase tMn any of CaUfornia'a 57 other coun- ties. aceordlng to figures releaaed by State Controller Hugh Flournoy. The county alao bucked a stalewlde !rood In relylnc more on local property taxes to finance county government whne me1t Ca:llfonlla counties decreased reliance on local property tax. Wedding Dress Bring Burns Suit Thll year'• COW1t'S' budget ls sm million, accwdlng to ~~lournoy. That works out to a S30 million more than last year's, which Is a 12.3 percent increase. By way of comparison, nel&hborlng Loe Anceles Coun- ty's budget decreased •120 million Qver last year, or 4.5 percent. The largest pttcentage in· crease In the state was in Monq. County, where an '800.txlo hike In lM budget meant a 25 percent overall In- crease. Orange County managed its wboppina b u d g e t Increase while actually reducing the general purpose tax rate from '2.64 per $100 assessed valua- tion to $1.95. However, Co.unty Assessor Andrew Hinshaw had re- evaluated most county land ot an average 15 percent grtater vitlue. The result waa a net rtvenue 11:aln for the <.'Ounty despite the tax cut. The 1972-73 budget relies on local property taxes for S4.93 percent of Its revenue. Thif is a .48 percent increase over the 1971·72 budget figures . Statewide, 36 of S7 other counties decreased the percen- tage of thelr budgets coming from local property taxes . County Gives Okay To Improved Parking \ I •m •li9ible for benefits outlined in ,•.,.•rel of the question• and •n1wer1 you heve published. When the time comes how will I know I em gettin9 whet I am entitled to recei ... e and how will I 9at 1terted? by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON -. OAll Y PILOT 011e ef ew trol-4 Mprdiorl h •• d•ty 24 ktln • .. .,. Wktlh1 • few MIAllMI af fti. tlMe -.,. 1otfffe4 of lllffth •• .UllJH ttle rtipOMlbUlry of Mt.tu•rdl .. ye11r l11f9f•f. Wo l.t-ttle -1 •Hid ef tho Sec:lel Sec11rlry, 'tot.f'0111. Old At• P..Uo•, R911tMCI htitafltHt llM .....,_ ef tho ""til of • ,...... co.....-.4 liy ttt-. If 6oetti h u!iMlll lty - l•fllf'Y c•.....-..1 try lhrt• ., '""•' c.,.,....1" •• 90ftfrf "'"-... llC .... w. t.nhll ,... 111ec ..... at1 •• of ..... , .... 1 ... c1 •• , cl•IMI .. life IM11r•M• Pt"oc.eck. ......... hKe ....... oitd 011., e,,llf.oblo wld.-' Pfft.~11.,, SJ-.. -men· ritlrh _. ....,.... .,. c .. t•lltlr Mhlt N\'tMd tt ls11'r NCftMrf' "' .... ech'IMb .. flt.at ye11 .......... r-bw tllo11t: tfib 11 011r rnpoMlblllty tD yeu. If 'tM ....... • ......... ~ f11-.I Mf"Vk•. p'9cno wrl,. or c:oll . Who.tner poulbto, ~Htt!Mt wUI M wMl'94 .. ttih c:oh111111. Balt::-Bergeron Fuiieral ffoine COSTA M~SA CORONA d •i MAR 6-46·2424 2 LOCATIONS 673-9450 SANTA ANA - A woman who claims her boneymoon was spent in a San Francisco hospital recel\ti.ng treabnent for bums tnructed by her wed-- ding. drw has · sued the manufacturers of the bridal gown and the store that sold it for 1:110,000. ORANGE -New and i:n· proved parking areas for the county's Manchester Center facilities have been approved by the county Board of supervisors at more than twice the budget~ amount. prop'.lsed fire training center to bring the spending up to ~~.ooo. l~~~==~i:i~~~~~ii;;~ii~~;;;;;;;;.;.ii:::i~~iiiiiiiiii~~ Under the approved plan r Orange County Medical Center Mrs. Alleen Angel ztates in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that defective materials ·used in the lace, satin and cotton gown made by Gallina Bouquet Fashions and sold by Bullock's stores were responsible for her severe bums. Mrs. Angel states s b e bought the dress at Bullock's Dec. 18, 1971, and wore the gown at her wedding later that day. She aa.ld the materials in- ructed "bubbling burm" that forced b e r hospitallution when she arrived nt San Fran- cisco on her boneym®O trip. ORANGE COUNTY Race Horse Assessment Parking l!paces under the plan would increase fro.m the current 1,400 to 2,130. Joseph Smisek. Co u n t y building services director said only $215,000 was budgeted for the improvements. He said he could take an addit iona l $288,000 from other delayed project,, and $87,000 from the parking would jump from 610 spaces to 900. A smalle r area at the east end would ac- commodate 200 cars and the center area 1,030. The fina l plan calls for repaving, lighting curb ing and landscaping. The vote to approve was 3 l.Q 2 with SUpervisors David L. Baker and Robert W. Batti n in opposition. Oiange D11e 1----N F • =~~.:~~: HoNG·-KoNa warned today that leglalationll-:::,,,-,:-:::-::-:-'"~"°~"'..:'::•:;llOIS P'f.llMNEHT IN SANTA N-u.. reviling a a 11 es11 men t pro-"-"" t.1...-c..-...-SALE cedu .. s on racing animals Is 2 '°'su'"n .. s" s 135 off and runnin g. County As..essor J ack Redeve)opin!! _Vallerga reminded owners and ....., breeders in the coun ty that state taxation of race horses Is Group Formed now detenn1nec1 on a speeiauy 1--. ..... -., ......... ,.,. .... t lolll SAll •'9· .ow I 0...b"' r;oll •.•.. tt .. o.c,.., wo.i •••. t2 u 1 SUt ·Mo ... lt , ••••• If •2 Shalblll~ .,. •••• tJ N SAVI UP TO 5°"' o .. c ......... hlh. lpertcHt•, , ........ lrtt $Ilk Wool , •• •••,II 59 T~•.._ ........ 110 n • WI JIT ANY llZI •ANY ITTU CO,llD prepared fee basis. SANTA ANA - A com-That fee schedule, Vallerga ·••n ALT11.aT10N1 mission that would study said, Is enclosed with a fonn JOi'o"',:;'°n"' U:,::-,, ~ ~ ':l~~ :.t Ca·•-· ....... 9'2 .., I SMm •• ,, ••••••• \0 6 ' redevelopment posslbllllies for entitled "Annual Race Horse ~"' ' 01n .-J liiiii ~ tuNDAY 1 .. 1 !he downtown sector here will Tu Return" ,nd can be ob-,_ _,.,., ........ ,.._., 111.0211 ... ui.01t1 be given final coostderaUon by talned from his office , 144 N. '"1:::,c:=:... ... 1:,·. ~~ 114,!!_·,::;. AMA citv councllmen earlv in Broadway, Santa Ana, or by c..-.i.1•11t11~i...-1o1c1to.-1,.o.c.A,,,.... ' ' •·j Ing ,...,_ ........... 1-. ... .& h1 Sa..!Mrft C.HI' ..... u January. ~~;•~pbo;;•;;~834-1920~;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;;;;;;;::::::;;;;;;;;~ Plans Okayed 'Mlnlm11m S100 11911o"•l •O:c011nt Hop in your car and come as you are!· The Imp eria l fo lks are waiting for you! ln1>erial Bari< Costa Mesa Harbor Blvd . at Fair Drive (71 4) 979-1000 OI/}y Coast Qffers • 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club /\rt LlnkLetter The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every- thing you need from the finest closed-door show· rooms at substantial sav- ings -appliances, furni· ture, stereo equipment, sµo rtlns goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mOblle homes and motor· cycles at substantial sav- ings. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. also provid es big dis· counts on tickets to sport· ing and entertainment events ..• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership' require· ment for savers-$2,500 minimum balance. COast borrowers now receive as-- sociate memberships en· titling them to all outside referral services. Ask about joining at any COast office. MAIN OF'1CE'.:: 91h •Hlll, LOI Anpln• 623-1 3~1 Other offices WILSHIRE et QMMEJtC'I' l"l.&Cf: 3933 WllJhlre Blvd,. LA.• 388-126~ LA. CIVIC Ct:HTl:R: 2nd & Broa<twey • 62&1102 HUNTINGTON atACH: 91 Hu nllnelon C.nter • (714) 897·1047 SANTA MONICA: 718 Wilshire Blvd.• 393-0746 SANl"U>RO: 10th & Pacific • 831-2341 WEST COVINA: Eastlllnd Shopplna: Ctr,• 331·2201 !"A.NORA.MA CIM Chase & van Nuys !twl. • 892·1171 TA.RU.NA~ 18751 Ventura 81vd. • 345--861 4 LONQ ltACH~ 3rd & Locust • 437·7481 EA.I T LOS ANQ[L[S: Bth & Soto • 2£>6..4510 DIAMOND IAR: 328 S. Ol•mOnd hr• 1714) 59~7525 "TUSTIN: Urwin SQUilrf! Shop(>lna: Cir.• 1714) Bl2""6810 LA MIRADA: la Mlnld.1 ShoOPln& C!r. • (714) S22-6751 Dally Hours -9 AM to 4 PM All Offices, Except Civic Center, Open S.turd•JI gAMtolPM San Gabriel Office Open in& Solll This Week at at ROGER'S GARDENS 20% Off on Fa1nous Brown 'ordan Patio Furnishings now thru February Now you cen save on the entire molded al uminum rust.free lino ; order tho chain, tables, ch1 ises, seating groups end umbrella tebles you've been wanting! Choose from a wide rang e of colors and fabrics . Aho , • .,.. 20 ,.. on Tem iemi, Ka ilua a nd Rege nt II lines before the price increase in e1rly '73. Use your Ch ristma1 check. A1ast.crcl1arge, Ba11kaniericard or you r Roger's Account Vii PRICE SALE ON CHRISTMAS MERCHANDISE!! Unusual ornaments, candles, candleholders, music boxes, wall decor, elegant tree trims , place mots, Christmas linens. Many are one and two of o kind. All are in excellent condit ion ... we just don't hove the space to store them. You'll find them in our Patio Deportment. Be here early for best selection! COSTA MESA 2221 Fairview Road Phone 642-8686 MISSION VIEJO 24741. ChrlsantaDrlve Phone 837-7811 Open d•lly ucept Monday ALL 60 FASHION ISLAND STORES TIL 9:30 P.M . • ) • . . DAIL V PILOT s Tuesdq, Dtctmbtr 26, iq72 Ext1a $250 million dollar Income tax refund for Callfornia taxpayers. SACRAMENTO -Financial npert.I are now predicting a *250,000,000 state income tax refund will go to California t.u- payera. The windfall resulted from the State withholding too much money from Callfoni.fa taxpayers in 1972. Many of the same taxpayers are also ex· pected to reeeive Federal In· come Tu refunds for the same year. T ..... ... wour1ncome tax prepared free at Mlutual Savings. Make iyourappointment nowl The earlier you file the sooner you will receive your refund. Your income tax will be prepared by ""'"·"Jax of cA.merica•, one of the nation's leading income tax preparation firms. All returns strictly confidential. You can save the normal cost of an individually prepared income tax return; as much as $50 or more. The FREE personal income tax preparation at Mutual Savings is avail· able if you add to or open a Certificate Account for $41(XX) or more!" You will earn the highest interest in the nation on ' insured savings. !Sorry-·"' cannot provide this service for cot'porations1 part· nerships, business firms, estates or trusts.) Make your appointment now and receive free, an INCOME TAX ORGANIZER. Helps you in collecting the information you need to get your proper tax deductions and refunds. *Certificate Accouots cam ~for l year or more. 6% for 2 tD JO yeaxs with $5,t(X} minimum. ~ ~ ' I!' ~ ..4 I THE BIG M C-dol- MUTUAL SAVINGS and Loan Association 28e7 E. Cont HIQbway 3 blocklWeltof MacArthur Blvd. Phone: 675-5010 Mon.-Thur. 9AM-.4PM; Fri. 9AM-8PM • I u ... , ...... Balataclng Act A thin dime is enough to tilt this four-ton table, which floats on a film of compressed air surround- ing a stainless-steel bearing. The table is used at Honeywell's Aerospace Division in St. Petersburg, Fla. to simulate the weightless environment of space for the Skylab laboratory set for launch in April. 1973. Personal Tou~h Banks T esting New Service By JORN CUNNIFF "' • ...._. Wlillr NEW YORK As Americans become more af- Ouent they are confronted witb: a greater · number of deciSions about what to do with their money: spend it, save It, invest it, lend it. Where, when, why, bow? Insurers, brokers, bankers and others would love to sup- ·ply the answers, because to the man with the amwers goes the business. Few bankers are authorities l>n stocks. THE ORDINARY American with a little extra money and a lot of questions h a s , therefore, to search about for answers and then, somewhat futilel)r. hope he can integrate them into a meaningful, logical financlal program. But some headway Ls being made. A few brokerage houses now are looking toward the day when their personnel will be taken off comissloos and greatly upgraded in skills so that they will be able to serve as flnancial advisers. Insurance companjes too, foresee the day when the agent might fulflll that role. And some lawyers seek to be such broadly skilled p~ fessionals, although people of such abUlties usually can find wealthier clients. PERHAPS THE response with the greatest potential emanates from the com- mercial banks, ·many of which advertise themselves as "full service" banks and some of which offer 40 or more dif- ferent services. Some of these now are going in for the personal banking concept. A:s.1 one, the United Bank of benver, a pioneer, states: "You have a personal physi- cian, a personal attorney, maybe a personal stockbroker. Now you can have a personal banker." At United -and at Harris Bank & Trust, Chicago, and at North C3.rolina's largest, the Wachovia Bank. among others -a customer may be assign- ed his own banker, and it is this person to whom he goes with business of any kind. The personal banker bas undergone a training program and, while not an expert in all areas of finance, ha! some un- derstanding of them and knows who in the bank to ask for specialized advice. And , of course, he knows t h e customer's financial condition and goa~. WHILE THIS ls good news for the customer. who is often shunted from one department to another in large com- mercial banks, it ls paying im- mediate dividends for the banks too. United Bank, for example, found that penonal checking accounts rose 18.5 percent just a year after it bega,n its pro- gram in January 1970, but it measures even more benefits in the form of good will, payable in the future. "The key is identity," saya Richard Kirk, senior vice president. "When a customer realizes the bank does not consider him as just a string of digits, he is going to stick with you - and this can make the rela- tionship profitable for all." OTHER BANKS have been so fascinated by the concept that United Bank now runs conferences for other banks considering the switch. ln ad- dition, off)C}als ol more than 100 other banks have visited and others have written oc phoned. The obvious danger to the concept's future is that the personal banker might tend to view the customer as a pro- spect for the bank's many services rather than u a client to be aided -that he will emphasize sales at the el'.· pense of service. This, as many Americans have learned, is the weakeness and even the conflict in many broker-customer and agent- ·cµsto mer relationships. Eco-impact Reports Sparks Permit Rush LOS ANGELES (AP) - Anticipating a moratorium on the J"C¥1UJrement f o r en- vlronmenta1-impact reports for pr l vat e developments, builders began a rush !or building permits in October. Figures show that builders applied for a near·retord num· ber or permits that month. But they could find that !OUrteS of construction funds are drying _up. A SECURITY Pacific Na- Uonal Bank survey show• that $813 million worth of perm.ill were granted in October, com· pared to IM2 mllllon In September. Ando lndicalions are the trend is continuing. But aome building Industry !Ollrces say the projects may never get off the drawing boanls. ".Thi lendlng Institutions lhat control the purtt atrlngs of the Industry are clamping down until there Is more clarlflc•llon of both Prop. 20 ind the environmental impact requirements," o n e source said. "C8lifornla is Deadsvtlle, U.S.A., in the fmanclal com- munity." THE STATE Supreme Court ruled last September that private construction project& come under the same en- vironmental Impact restric- tions a! public projects. The legislature p a 1 s e d emergency legislation Dec. S to clarify the court decision and put off lt1 effect for 12 days while gu)delines are drawn up. "We're in business a 1 usual," aakl a spokesman tor Bank of America. "We haven't seen too much unreasonable withholding of b u I 1 d I n g permits or any great decline In our loan aottvlty. • BVT THE BANKER said he'd warned aome develope.ra lhat they might face rllb In proceeding with en- v l ronmentaUy questionable projecl1. "( Wall Street • • • 4 .,. .. 1 • •, • ·~ I • • J::.. • 'f'. .J. •i • • •"' • • • • • • • · · ;cpljay· s;;r.~fiel!o ;; m; ~~,.oq'tgf:l';: iJ~"l/l!!Pe.r.;; • •• • • • • •• • •• •• • • • • • • ••••• Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today · own stock. We couldn't prove it, of course, but it seems li~ely that the percentage is even greater here in the Or- ange Coast area ... and it's growing every day. That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud; years ago, to be the first news~per in Orange County to bring ' its readers "today's final stocks today'' via super high speed wire services. We're still doing it in 'every home- delivered edition and the service gets better . all the time. Wall Street's computers "talk to" computers in the DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate of more than 1,000 words per minute. It takes only 12 minutes to move the entire New York and American Stock Exchange reports from the ca n yon s of Wall Street to the typesetting machines of the DAILY PILOT right here on the Orange Coast. And when technology finds a way to beat that speed record, the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the first to use it to bring readers "today's action today." When it comes to financial news, the one that means business is the ' • ' - ' • -~··········• .. ,., .. -4·...-·~· .. •· . . . . ' . . . • • -• (f) ' > ' ' ' ' ' l , l ., l I • ! I I I I I .,. ·- I ' • ·. ,, 1 DAILY PILOT A 11 Ex-president Lo,,ed lf:olier" Politics Missouri 'Wild' Games His <Trick . Editor'.t No~ 'T1lt author of the folleu>t.ng artie~ u a , .. lTed AMO<> ia.tsCl,Pren,toriter·toho coveN!d Harrv S Th\maft throughout•hb l/<Ol'•·in the White House1 By TONV"VACCARO Auoc!ti.tal Preas Writer WASlllNGTOl;l .:..Pl'eliden~ politk;ian and paker player. That was Harry s Tnnnan. 'Ille man f'°"' Missouri loved to play poker m&re·Utln anyOne I ever met..And be llke!l to play. "wll~" galJl~ -~ames where the deuces or one-e.yed jacks were wjld, lllgl>loiv games, sev"""8td and ttiree-c:ard. .. ; ' ' Truman usually Jilayed for the sheer joy be got out ol the game. He got a big· ''°r l:!ck out ol'bhi!fmg semeooe oat ol a pilt than he did from winding up the win- ner. THE PRESIDENT also could he sym. pathetic to a ~· mw.y... Once, when the !ftsidentiaf party was at Key West, Fla., a young priest joined the reporters · one night in' the press room. 'Iba chaplainJ!oft ·more, than $30 be- cause ol. his uaianilllarity with the "wili'.I" games we bad,Jfarned from;tbe ~ The next afte~. at a reception, I lritroduced the priest to the fftS]dent and told Truman wl\01 had happened. .. ' won about 135 tbe second nJsl>l l relayed the won! to Truman. THE NEXT SUNDAY, the priest stood out.Ide the Navy chapel after conducting early Mass . He greet<d Truman u the president arrived for the later Protestant. service. "Here 's that autosfaph I promiaed you," the pr..ident said. The priest._. ed the envelope, then called me over. Inside was $35 in crisp, new bills. For all bis plain speaking, cuss words and ''give 'ern hell" reputatioo, Truman was a religious man. "I pray to God I can measure up to the task," )le told me as we rode together in bis newly provided White H o u s e limousine on April ll, 1945, tbe day after Franklin D. Roosevelt's death at Warm Springs, Ga. Later thal day, be told reporters: "I don't know if yoo newspapermen ever pray, but if you do, please pray for me now." Truman was a frienclly DUUJ, calling thousands of people by their fll'St names. He bad a quick temper but nevor held a grudge. WHEN MUSIC CRITIC Paul Hume ol the · Wasbingtm POO found fault with daughter Margaret's voice, he wrote tp Hwne that, if they ever met, "you.11 need a ·new nose and plenty of beefsteak and perhaps a supporW below." ' ~ I • U~T ......... HARRY S TRUMAN DISPLAYS BIG SMILE AND NEWSPAPER HEADLINE PREMATURELY ANNOUNClllG ·HIS DEFEAT IN'1948' "l'll tell you Wtiat, Father," the presi· dent saip. "You get back in that game tonight. l'll match 1 everything you win, and you can use the money to buy something you need for your altar.'" A little bit more experieneed, the priest After Truman left office, Hume wrote a column praising the president for ht. support of Wamingtoo's N.ati on a I Symphony Orehestra. Tnnnan wrote (See llAIUIY 8 TBUMAN,P ... 38) Vl'I T ........ ,. TRUMAN MEETS WITH GEN. MACARTHUR (RIGHT)-ON WAKE ISLAND IN 1950 ' -UPI~ FRANKtlN •ROOS1:'1ELT (LEFT) SHOWN WITH NEW VICE PRESIDENT IN 1944 UJll'T ........ TllE FORMER PRESIDENT JOINS WIFE. BESS, IN 1969 PHOTO .. TRUMAN CLASPS HANDS WITH CHURCHILL (LEl'T) ANO STALIN (RIGHT) AT 1945 POTSDAM ME ETING ""'' ........ " -' '> \ • l l f f ' ' •• . . Truman 'Did What He Had to Do' 8>' UWted Press lntmatJonal I IU.STORY WILL remember C. Marshall, whom Truman had Truman entered the senator- Tbt ablllties ot Harry S t.oo, th.It be rtfen'ed to the d appolnted Secretary of State. tat race 1·0 \M• and woo. lie Truman were aoythtng h.lt ger mu case u a "rtd her-made h w.i, common, Bul to hi1 countrymen ~--," that '"-..,.,... ..._1.-.. ,_ a speec il Harvard re-elected In 1940 despite d th Id he '"'5 u.::i -·~ -u~ Unlvenlty in which he outlined . • . an e wor came to steel IDdu.stry in an actioo which a plan for U.S. assistance In the ~1tter a~1tacks that called him a symbollze the potential, when the Supreme Court ru!ed'Wegal economic recovtry of Western stooge of-the Pendergast h!atory d_~L"t, of the and that he uncer~Y Europe. machine. common •uon. f~ed Gen. Dooglas llacArthur The "~ of pendence" during lhe Korean confllct. IT BEC.U1E known as tbe Truman's greatest fame be- molded Uie tny of the ln point of public ffactlon, Marshall Pinn. fore he became president arQl!e United states and ·the world the three dec1slona problbly A week later, Congress from hi• work 11 c~lnnan of with unprecedented decisions--were tbe moat unpopular tlinp 1dopted a resolution named for the Senate comnuttee on 'the atomic bombing of Japan he did durM.g the &even 1"11 the late Republican Sen. Arthur national defense. The group the Marahatl plan.. the Berll~ and nlne mobtha be served u N. Vandenberg of Michigan came to be called the Truman blockade airlift, the dispatch of J)r'e!ldent. But ·Truman never chief advocate of the blpa~ War Investigating Committee, U.S. troope: to. Korea-and publicly wavered In ibe beUtf foreign -policy. and It kept. a close watch on .many more. that Ule)' were the' right actl<IOI. The resolutloo empowered tbe war .~uct1on to guard against .. 1 DID -A b Truman al.Jo waa a poUticaJ United States to enter into prof1teer1ng ~d faulty Work· ., "n T ad to be Jeedes\ the devcted head of the military alliances with other manship. done, he once said. democratic party 'Wtl.Ue pret--free nations. In his final term of office, -~~~-~-~-·>:__tbe~~-U: ouldent ~~~-~~ spot=-... ' The economic restorative was Truman was forced to defend --=-------·--==-= ._....._ruucu .... ustlc ~ to be the forerunner of large-his administration against char- ........... -afterward. scale military aid in the '!es of corruption in tile Internal • • • ~·II eeer He rose &om precinct captain HARRY S TRUMAN building of a system or Revenue Bureau and tax .euell Trunacta In brawling Kansas City, h.Ydroi bomb :e 6nl collective security. division of the Justice Depart- , • '·I throuib county oflice and the J>ort -,enbll al · ut, 1 8 On April 4, 1949, the AUantlc ment. 0 ..... Ma.., Hff de• U.S. Senate to the most oUlce wth e R ~r ~i left Pact, establlshing the North He fired Attorney General J. cbloQ. important public office In the ' e USSt.arul ca..-up Atlantic · Treaty Organir.atim, Howard McGrath when Mc- UP'IT ......... -nation. He loved pollllcs and 00-niU: H~bom~, Looi th 1 wu signed in Washington bf Grath quarreled with Newbold ~~ played it well-so well in fact, nam>wmg 0 . e ·nuc ear the foreign ministers of U 1ittle Mluourlan wanted to be that he pulled one ' of the gap betw~ the Uruted Stat.ea oatlons. ~ remembered. greatest ui;-ts .in the nation'• :1joraus:8U:::, on:~ 0: of:! Harry S ~ was ~ T.,. u ma '' took LAUREN BACALL LISTENS AS TRUMAN PLAYS PIANO Fate permitted Truman to political history with his r~ world during the Truman fraMay 8, 1884, m 3'.1 unpretenhous one of his tear.st was slow to regain his strength. •n bl J h• ouWve most r th 'th election ln 1M8. . -me house 1n the little H ho ·t l' ed r h t onora e 0 ~ . o ose WI He was a colorful bll administration. There also wu southwestern Missouri town of j dlelal liekl . e w?s sp1 a iz or a s or ~horn he shared a P!ace in fi&U", too. He wore ~u c the fall of China to the Lamar. His parents, John and U 11fJS time m the summer of 1966 for Truman on the Presidency hisG toryull --Stalln,M--•~• ChuE~hill, de sooru ahirU on hia: vacau!ns ~ c.ommunlsts, a developmen~ for Martha Truman, gave hlm the fn office 0.1'er the a colon disorder. a e, ~wur, 1senhower K W Fl h wbid1 Truman was scorcbingly lett "S" lddl · Arthr'"· be 1 h' and even Thomas E De ey est. a., e played the blamed b his f er as a m e name 1n steel issue 1...., gan to sow 1s whom be defeated in· th ~:Ia piano, be wore steel-rimmed Y oes. b-ibute to his grandfathers, who • brisk gait, and the famed presidential elections in :oe of glasses, he spoke with a THE CHARGE that Tnunan were named Shipp and Solo-~ walking stic~ he was . a00:1s- tbe most stunning upsets in U mon. Morris, the man he had named tomed lo swmgtng so 1~.unt1ly I ND E PENDENCE, Mo. S. Utical hist . . When Truman was 4 rars tQ head the administration's became a cane on which he . (AP) -Before the birth of his Hpo .0dryth. '.ltrutnt1n tcrote • letter echile presl-old, the family, one o old "cleanup" campaign. leaned more and more heavily. first grandchild, Harry s e once sa1 at a man . American stock from Kentucky could have no better epitsph dent, tloeatettlng a mus I e critic ocltll moved to a 600-acre (arm ,,..; TRUMAN REFUSED to in-HE CONTINUED t•. make tban _one be sa"': insc~ibd on a htllllf 1aann fO'f" 1te••9 unlelntl to t"faelndependence, Mo. voke the Republican·sponsored pu~llc appearances, to Journey Truman sald he wanted none of his grandsons named after him. ~nuer grave m Arl1.0na. It Young n-uman lived a Taft-Hartley Labor Act, which a.t mtervals to New York to see S81d : •lllfJlng vofre of Ills daughter, Margat-et. normal farmboy life, perform-he abhorred, and acting under h~ daught~, Margar~t, Mrs. "It would be a handicap all .. Her~ lies Jack Williams; He Ing his chores and attending what he termed the 'inherent Clifton Darnel. and hls t~ his life," Tnmtan said: "The done bis damodest." . soh>oL powers" of the presidency era;ndso~. ~ to ~e ob~ Tnun trul peppery, Midwestern twang.I lost China became one of the blJr seized th t 1 ·n ' dehghl 1n daily visits to his worst thing in the ~Id is to an Y was a f!Uln of and he took long walks in the Issues of the 1952 presldenti&l BIS'l'WEEN CH 0 RES and e see mi s. . ofrice until the fall of 1966. have a president in t'he fami-Ind~pendence. It was bl! way early morning hours. campaign, which the Demo-school Truman learned to play . ~man. t~k on:e of ~15 worst Visits with the former ly." or life u we~ as his ~metown. . crats lost after 20 yeiars in the piano-at his mother's lnsis-JU~1clal h~k1ngs m office over president were limited tbereaf· He was vice president the HE HURLED invective at power tence-and became an acam.-the steel lSSue. Steel manage-te 1 t close f . nets nd On another o c c a s i o n , d~y that ~ln D. Roosevelt ~me of bis critics, once refer"' Aithxigb Truman was not the plished amateur musician. ment took the federal seizure. to tnd:~~e res.id~nets llv~ Truman said : died on April I~. 1945, ~nd r.u1I ~~ a columnist as ~ camidate that year, his admi-About the time he was lht Su~etne ~rt .. The . ~igh near the bi old house on found himself hold1n~ the. reins s.o.b. He wrote ~ letter wh1!e n!stration took the bnmt of the acquiring a taste for music, court. in an hist~r1c dec1s1on. Delaware S~t seldom saw of the mightiest nahon m the president, threaterung a music Republican onslaught But the Truman was thinking about re~rsed the president. th . f . hbo . world in ooe of the most ~ritic w_lth bodily hann for be-kldeot8ive war in K0rea-ttien military life as a career. He It was during 1950 that an eir a~ous neig r again. ctiUcal, periods In history. mg unkind to the singing voice neart 2'11 ears old-was sought entry to West Point but attempt was made pn Truman's Occasionally they would ~atch Trwn8o won re-elec.tion In of bis daughter, M~garet. ~y the m~r ca~e of the was turned down becau.se of life. a glimpse of 'I_'ruman entenng a Ittl1 def ea Ung f?ewey m what The music critic had hit Democratic downfall. poor eyesight. On the afternoon of Nov. 1 ~r or returning home after a roost call the hig&est pollUcal Truman where It hurt most-In At the end ol World War II, Since his parents could not Gri.selio , Toiresola and Oscar trip to the barber shop on the ~t ln history· his family· For Truman was 8 the penimu1a of K«ea wu afford to send him to college, Collazo, Puerto Rican revoJu-tow?\ squa~e, O!" ~haps an 1'nlmln was _the 33rd pres-devoted family man. and he jointly occupied by Soviet aIMI he went to work after lionaries who lived in New afternoon .ride with his wife or ldent of the United States ~nd would not tole;ate any asper-U.S. troop!. That portion of graduating from high echool. York, attemoted to shoot their an old friend. the ~ n.an '? hold the office. slons on ~Is wife, B.~s, whoi;n KoreB north of the 381.h parallel He worked for $3 per week In. a way Into Blair House, where Tn the spring of 1968, He aerYed until ~an. 20, ~953, he called The Boss, or 00 hi! became a Conununlst. satellite. drug ~tore. Then be worked 1n the president was living while ~ tbe day Gen. Dwight. D .. ELSeD-daughter. South Korea became a republlc the circulation . department of the White House was being ,.1 . ,, _ _. hower succeeded him m the And Truman, a Baptl!t, was under United NaUoos auspices. the Kansas City star, was repaired. • r 11 DI a n .... White H°'1k a religtou~ !118'1· He once said On June 25, 1950, a North Umekeeper for a con.st.ruction The attempt was thwarted by failed noticeably DURING ms YEARS of de-In a television inten:tew, after Korean army, well-tr~lned and gang, and worked as a bank police and Secret Service cisioo and <DLSequence, not ooly he had left tbe Whi~ House, equipped with RUSSl8.n tanks cler~ . ~uards in a wild shooting afrray tn recent gears. for the naUoo but the world as that rellgX>n bad IU5t.ained him and other modern weapons, His mllltary ambitions were on Pennsylvania Avenue. The ~ 't'll. he gave the order to drop in many of bis more difficult crossed the 38th parallel and not forgotten, ~ever. He oi:esident was unharmed, but a , UM omlc~bomb ha ed the periods. -beean a general assault agalmt enllsted in the National Gua,,rd. wh·te H r however, Truman s ~ealth im-at t tend . Truman was vice president the Republic of South Korea And when the United states I o.use po iceman was proved markedly. Thmnerl ron- war wUh Japan In the Pacific. on the tnmtlng ol April 1, Trwnan acted swlftl . . He entered World War I, he was killed ~ two others wounded siderably from his White House He gave the go-ahead for the 1945. At 7:09 that n!gbt, be WU used. his executive aJlhority commissicmed as a fll'Bt Ueuten* in the pistol battle. years aOO sometimes stooped, development of t~, hdyrogi:n prtsident, having been sworn in and did not aak Con for a ant and later became captain of . Both gunmen. who apened Truman by late 1968 had _ "NO MAN, IF he knows what it is all about, would want to be president. It is the most terrible job in the world as well as the most honorable.'' He also called the White House "the fmest prison in the world." When he returned t o Independence arter more than seven years as president, Truman declared that as a private citizen he would do nothing that would detract from the dignity befitting a former president. He turned down opportunities to cash 111: on the office, saying he did not want to do anything to capitalize on "the world's most hon<rabte off lee." He nfused to be drawn Into discussing foreign p o I i c y , s:iying that one man alone - the president -was qualified to comment. IN IUS MANY laJks to school children, Truman often dwelt on the importance or the presidency. "No man on earth can do that job as it should be dooe," he said once. "There isn't time. No one lmoWJ that bet- ter than t." He once told a Future Farmers of America con- vention: 'Nearly all the leaden and presidents of the United States got their start on the farm . Any one of you can be president. So you had better be ready." Truman was particularly anxious that the papen of all the presidents should be presenied for future genera- tions. An inscription engraved in marble above the cor- nerstone of the $1,750,000 Truman Library says in part: . ''THIS LIBRARY w i 11 belong to the people of the United States. My papers will be the property of the people and be accessible to them and this is u it sboukl be • • ... bom~, called Russia s ~lu.ff 1n at a hastily Improvised ceremo-declaration of war. fe"'orc1erect ________ fire . on the guards without resumed almost daily walks, Berlin _.oo ordered_ an a~lift to ny in the cabinet foom ef., the air, sea and ground suppon for~ wa"'!1ng, wer: shot down. although he ventured out alone keep the city suppli~ with food White House. the South Koreans. p r i e 11 fl s re• Torr1sola was killed and Collazo only rarely. and medicine despite a Soviet "Pray for me,'' he asked the He placed the a.ggl'MS!on wounded. He and Mrs. Ttuman made bl~kade."' dlff cult deci!kn newsmen. ' before the United Natiom for .. rtletl tJae Trai-Collazo later was sentenced successi\le springtime visits to s ~ 1 • actlon. RHlll ............. e u to death but Ttuman commuted Key West, Fla., in 1968 and Trumab ~id, was o~ ON IUS GIST birthday, ~y 8, • the sentence to life imprison-1969. Their daughter and her ~ .. tneo: Korea in a poli~ ltiS, he proclaimed victory THE DECISION of Korea bad Ideal. ment in 1952. a few months husband and the Truman Library Was Truman's Dream in Recent Years actioo that kept Communist over Germany, ~lng the war been made fllndamentally three_.... _ ~ ---.........., before he left office. grandsons joined them there. troopi -advanclni past the in Europe. But just 95 days years earlte.. ------38th pa~. after he had ,taken office, On March 12, 1K7, Truman Battery D, 129t11; Field Al'llllery, TRUM.\1'! RAD been unable to . But after that, ~n dld He pundated the Truman mankind entered a new era enunciated to O:>ngress a basic 35th Divis.loo. campaign m the 1954 congres-virtually all of h~ visiting In Doctrine ·to ~ Russia out or which outmoded the type of chanae in foreign policy. Returning from France, be 11lonal campaigns because of a lhe conflJlel! of his home. ~e Soutbem EurOpe, euppmted the warfare that bad defeated the nib was what has become held a major's commlaslon in hrush with death follow ing gall n~ber of important callersw!ibn Manhall Pran for keeping Nazi.a. known as the "Truman Doc-the reserve and later wu a bladder !tl1'fery that spring. He his late Y~ Ina-eased, t Russia out of Western Europe, 'Ibe Atomic Age wa11 born trtne." reserve colonel. underwent removal of his gall visits from Richard M. Nixon, presided at' lbe birth of the July 16 1945 with the explosion It meant specifically that bladder and appendix on June Lyndon B. Johnson, Hubert ~- United Nattom and was a key of an ~i~ent.al bomb on the instead of abstaining from ON. ~ %1, 1919, Truman 19, 1954. Complications set in Hum~ey, F.:<Jmund Muskie. mover in creation ol. the North desert at Alamogordo, N.M. It world politics In peacetime the b~ :' dill~ swe:; when he suffered a severe The vlSlt by N~oo, once ~ of Atlantic Truty QreanizaUon was christened with Truman's United Stetes became an adtve ea ' 85 ace, reaction to antibiotics and was Tr um ~ n's bitterest CTI cs . (NATO). decision to use the new weapon participant. daughter of one of the ?kl~ erltically il1 for a time. c~me, within two m~nths after Truman deviled the Point oo Japan in order ·to speed an 1be doctrine was enunciated and most. prominent families m Truman had fa11ed noticeably Nixon s ~uguratlon m 1969· Four plan Or te<:bnic.al asst&-end to Worki War II. on a specific issue of military the~~ re arded the Truman in recent years, possibly TRUMAN'S FIFTH bospitallz- tance to underdeveloped na-The United States heJd a aid to Greece am Turkey, marriage a.Jg Ideal 'lbe couple beginning with Injuries suffered atioo since leaving the White tions, serving not· only as monopoly on the ~apon, but strategic free world defense had cne chUd t.h~ir daughter in a fall in the bathroom of his House came in February, U169, commander-in-cliief of the U.S. Truman orfered to tum over Its anchors in the Eastern Mediter-Margaret wlX. was born i,; home ln October, 1964. The when a sudden attack of in- armed rorces, but as the chief aecrets to the world for coo.trol ranean. 1924 ' accident. · in which two ri b! testlnal nu forced a five-day executor of the nation's foreign UDder an in.ternatimal body-Greece wu under active wbne Truman was in the were fractured, brought hiJ stay at Research Hospital in policy. only, however, if there were military attack by Q)maumlst Army he had u.ved CCXL9idera-third hospital illness since Kansas City. Truman had enemies. He was "fool-proof" safeguards. rebel forces. Turkey w11. under hie money After tbe war be leaving the White House. Within a week following his the object of an assassination Russia rejected this condi· heavy erternal Q)mmunist aOO 8 frie~ F.c:ldie Jacobson Recovery from a hemia dismissal, however, Truman attempt' during his ~sidency. tion. ~e Working dillgenUy pressure. . pooled their resourcea and operation early in 196.1 was strolled two miles through the He had many critics who perfect an atomic weapon of Its The Commurust attacb were opened a haberdashery store in uneventful but friends said he streets or Independence. disagreed with him, quarreled own. On Seit· 23, 1949, Truman repulsed and the two countries Kan58ll City with him and ridiculed him at armounced to the world that the saved. Their business venture flou- tlmes. Soviets had succeeded. 1be Greek-Turkey ald action rished until the first post-war But nobody ever accused The following January, be was followed swiftly by two depression Then it railed Truman of not makin& deci-autoorized U.S. Iden.lilts to go profound sleJl8. Truman brt $15 ooo but paid ii sions. ahead with development of the On .June 5, 1947, Gen. Gecqe all back-the 'tasi payments being made after be becune a . U.S. senator. Thus, In l9'll, he faced the prospect of finding work or -...returning to the fann. But a friend from the Army, Jim Pendergast, thought perha~ his uncle coo.Jd help Truman. The uncle .... KaJll!aa City Democratic "bQ.ss" Tom Pen- dergast. , I NDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) -It was natural that a man with Harry. Tnunan's feeling for history would want to preserve the turbulent events of his presidential years -and take part in the recording. When Truman left office in 1~. his keenest wish was for a historical repo1itory to serve both scholar• and the general public. In 1957, his dream came true. He worked there almost dail until t966. The Trufuan Library was built with p rivately con- tributed funds and deeded to the government. It is in Slover Park, si~ blocks from the Truman home and less than a mile from the Jackson County courthouse where the :tlrd president of the United States got his political start. One wing was reserved ror Truman and his staff, who un- til then had worked In a downtown Kansas Oty build- ing. The former president usually was the fint one to at· rive in the morning . sometimes: ~ visitors at 6:30 or 7 a .m. He delighted in COOiing unannounc:od to the public portion and startling visitors with a tour that pro- vided touches oo other guide could provide. His unnagging interest was in greeting the young people who came singly or in busloads. He ¥.'as always notified when groups o f children were in the building and he would make it a Point to say a few words. Vll'IT ...... Pendergast did !Ind a job for Truman, as a county highway overseer. A year tater, Truman won election a!l a membl!!r of the county court -a county admJnistratlve body similar to county <OnUnllslon<!ra In other states. KENNEDY, JOHNSON, EISENHOWER AND TRUMAN AT FUNERAL FOR HOUSE SPEAKER RAYBURN • TRUMAN'S NEW job h a d nothing to do with juris- prudence but, nevtrtbelffS, he TRUMAN began studying law. For two • • • y .. n be attended l)lallt c1 .... s at tbe Kansas City Law School, (C..U.lltd ,..., P'I• 3A l where h1I dun Jatfr recaUecf l.f\Olher Jett« to the crlUc. This one was him a.a an outatandlng student. warm 11od frttndly. The Pendvsllt. pollUcal ma· Long after he rcttred to his home ln chine was Under conBtant tndependtnce, Mo., Truman lfflld: "I've attack for graft. But Truman's never had any per90nal tnemles -only Integrity wu never questioned. pollticeil enemies." liaving made h!J rtJC01d In He couldn 't understa.nd why politlcal the county court. Truman opponents took offense when tK-attack~ looked toward new fteldA. them, .. Pclltlcs i11 the greatest game on Pendergll!Sl sugge1ted th11t Tru· earth,'' be said once. tn "Missouri. we rnan seek •the Dtmocratlc cracked the whip and thundered at each nomination for U.S. senator. other and then went.out and hnd supper together." This pblloeophy was evident In his at- titude IOWll'd the Dtmocra!lc prtSiden- lial csndldateg In 19~ and 1960. • IN AUGUST 1eS1, Truman went to the De1nocratlc convention in Chicago to lead the unsucceaful nght for the notnlnatiOn of Gov. W. Averell Harriman of New York for the presidency. But the coo· venUon choee Adlai StevellllOD for the se- f.'OOd lime. I was the onlv 11ew1man with 'h'uman when he. Jen CbiCllgo to boa.rd a tn11n for homo. "The lltlbt II ovir in the party," he told me. "N'"ow we race the bis betde against the Republicans, and we wt.II win.'' I le also oppoe,ed the nomination of John F. Kennedy, then Q, In 19!0. "Scnatot,'' he asked in a speech before the ocm- vention, "are you certain that yoa are quite ready for the country or that the country is quite ready for )'OU tn the role of president ln 1961 ?" • . ' DAJL Y PILOT Tuesday, Dtctmbtr 26, 1'172 Gran 0 0 ' pen1ng., estern Great Savings Comes to Fashion lslan Join Our Celebration! Now through January 13 We're bringing that good Great Western feeling into the Newport area with the Grand Opening of our new office in Newport Center at 80 Fashion Island. It's the newest in Great Western's statewide network of 66 full-service savings offices, California's largest. And we're celebrating-until January 13-with a special gift for you, "GW" balloons for the children and refreshments for all. So please come in soon. You'll find we've made saving money just abo ut as easy as it can be . We're open every Saturday from 10 to 4. Our drive-up teller window is open every weekday evening until 7. And Great Western gives you the most. 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This Is probably the t>.W.1e11 day .~!' the 1~1.'bere ·are all of the tradiUonal cleafance sa)es, the white aalea, and lhls ls the clay many of the new promotlbna boClo-We know there will be people in the ........ It's the busiest day ol the year." Anon~ , • shopping season, re<ayers 1 saJa, along· with cliitstmas Eve's Ii.Bl minute cruoh. Jlut· the day'11lter CbrlstmlullJs. the 'moot Some people do come in to make ex· chang'e1, another retailer ~~. but most of the people who shop the day after Christmlls do it every year. Thooe who come to exchange, be added, usually end up buying at all the half price and clearance sales. PW'Chastnl for ,the Christmas aeason 'hectic day of the year. - begins as early as .June and orde:rs have ... It's a .madhouse," commented ooe ' ' " . .Behavior Angelic? , Dec .. 26 is the day the new advertis- ing campolgni begin. Most years th~ tinsel and other· decoraUons come down and the boll~y music is phased out. But thla year the Christmas mood, and the buying mood, will be kep) up until the first of the year in many "stores. "It can be chaotic," said, one man who must take down Christmas displays and put up the clearance sale displays. "Aside from all the exchanges, we have to put new items oo the shelves and take others off. "pm.stmas shopping is hard on a store. We have only a day or so to get things back in shape." One display man esplained that his department begins the 2'tb by selling up all the displays for the white sales and other "".eeklY promotions. "'Jben we have two 'weeks after Christmas to remove all of the holiday decotations. The store used to take decorations down even before Christmas. It mode for bed cuslomtt relatiom." Many stores have begun to put seasona.I items on sale a few days before Christmas. other.$ still have marked down Items a couple of weeks after the holiday. Leftovers are stored for another year. One veteran saleslady sighed heavily when I asked, "What's the . day after Chrisbqas lite?" Then abe· laughed and said, "You wouldn't believe it. People 8rt! crazy thf' day !"le< Christmas, just crazy. There are lines for everything. "We eani do anything fast enough. But there i.. ooe good thing about it. When it's over, all the other days are a v&cation by comparison;" · TluiT~ ·"is , ~~ .t..of " 'niOy lool"r llti!.l>8'.f:'iheSe ·Chrislmas orphanJ that!*' 'ai>e :t<iok born., Lined up against chicken' Wire'. fences on· s·awdust tots, they are ilri!d oUI, dl'OPl>ing their needles when you brush against them. "We ahnfyS haye· a ioi•.O!. ~ Id~ over," t8idth0 lioy"ilailh)g lwo·Piects of wooc1·~:ior·a ~:"We give a few away 18te 'Chrisbnas Eve,, blit by then they're pretty !ired-looking. We've had the lot Opeti sfi;ici! Dec. 1. "I'.Ye done this· rot-• three years now. ' H·arping Off Key Always makes me a little sad. I know there'll be some !ell .Ver. And I know somebody didn't have a tree. It's rea:lly too bad." ' Some nurseries, which ~ cut lrtts during the holidays, cut.their priCes tea· half or a third the last few days before Olristmas. Amlings Nunrery, Newport Beach, does. this and the leftovers are tossed onto a community bonfire sponso~ by the fire departme.nt. DEAR ANN LANDERS: We have two ughters, 15 and 18 years of age. They ~ attractive, well-behaved, f i n e students, and I am proud o! them. ' My husbanll's younger sister bad to get ~ed at the qe of 15 to a boy of aMlher race. The marriage was a dlsaster.,It ruined hla parents' lives and 11!-Y h111bal)d never forgave his sister. Now be b nutty on the subject of young Pris and so:. He says, "It's always the iiitl's faulL She is i:_esponsible for what happens to her body." ~From the time boys began to show up around our pbice (about three years ago ) my . husband has been asking our daughta 'QUelt.ioM like, "How far have you gone Wftb. that rellow? Has he ever tried to toqcll 100?" A few ~ya ago, for no reason, he lt_arted to iwarn them lhat if they ever got pn&JlllJ'lt be would throw them out of lbe bouse.1Last night he was waiting up for the oldeat girl who came in at mid- J\l&hl ( w1tch was well wilhln her c!itrfew). kept her up UJI 2 a.m. asking ~rsonal q ettlons. She wu ln tears this morning w!len the told me about It. "1!s lack ' oft confidence and· trust is f!\aking our daughters hate their father. Furthermore,: 1{ am a[raid he ls giving tllem an unhealthy attitude toward sea and mak!ng Uifim suspicious of all boys. Ile k~ harping on the !act that they are all after· ohly one thing. What can t do! -DISl'RAUGllT IN DES MOINES• •pEAR 'D.:·'Jteep tlte llne1 of 'com· -~~ L<t Ille girll kD01f Y"I (iaN lbtm. EJ:Plaln that the tragedy of W. llR«'• Ute \at twllled' their fat1ter11 ddnki... . . 11 yoo eo1i1c1 prevail apoa blm to get -· .. ""• \~ -Id be belplal. It ...... ,.... tllal .,.., ........i ls - wtlll °"' miiloot aDd be coold ... ..... pn1 .. ..,. llelp. l>EAR Al'jN LANDERS: I'm ln love 'filth a hfg~,~vel executive In this city. Re Is marMett ., we must meet secretly. Whenever he 1akes an overnight business {(Ip I mell blAI thm• W& °'*1't .... be .,.non theCll,.. plahe together. For flve years I've l:W!en spendiJtg evenings and nights with"lllm in hotel roofus. We can't 'eVen go out fOl' dinner. We must rely on room service. He writes me the most beautiful love letters I've ever read, but of course he cannot sign them. My rHpOnses must be sent to a private post-office box. He gives me cash for the plane tickets -and not a dime more. At Christmas and on my tiirtbday he gives me nice gifts. 1 always felt thl.s was fair unW a few days ago when I learned by accident that he buys his secretary gifts, too and they are much more costly than the gifts he bas bought me. I am very hurt. I believe the con- tribution I make to bis life is 1far more important than what she does for him. Am 1 right? Just answer this question. No morality lectures, please. - CLANDESTINE CLARISSA DEAR CLAN: I don't know what blr secretary ls coatrlbuUng to his life -abcl nelthef do you. It mlgb& be that 1he'1 making tome 1peclal ceotrlbatlon over and beyond the call ol dat)'. MOit - wbo cheat on their wtvu allo clteat .. their mllt...-. ' CONFIDENTIAL TO LIVING BY BREAD ALONE : Sorry1 but I don~ call that living. and it'a not even breed. It's crumbs from someone elae'r 1cm. See • lawyer and learn what your i1Ptl are. Yoar letter reminded me of the woman wbo conllnOed to btt bersell over the bead with a hammer because It felt IO good when abe stopped. Wloal ldod o! weddiq pet wltll IGdlJ'• -life slyksT Doet aoyWac pT .u. Lalller'I completely new ''Tbe Brlch'• Gtllde" telb ftlt'• rl&llt for &Qda1'1 wd- dngt. For 1%' ltnd • dollar :;::: a lolll, telf --,11ed, ........ "(11 __ ,....Rt) lo An~. Bo• 3MI, CW.op, JIL .... • Uojds lj:u!oefl' .. Coolil Mesa, gives away quite a few trees the day or so before Christmas Day. "W~'d rather give Typical s<:enes include an empty tree lot, 11 weary shopper, Mrs. Robert A. Speed. and 11 filled" parking lot. them away than take them to the dump Dec. 26," a spokesman said. One lot attendant, an old hand at the job, said many seasonal lots cut up the left overs for firewood, another popular business during colder weather. "We had one guy last year," another attendant said, "wbo came in Christmas Eve and bought all kinds of trees to give away hlmseU. Sald he thought they looked Jcnely on Onistmas Eve in the lot." On the Home Front Tbe k.lds are outside,·s~ or no sunshine, playing With y~erday.'s loot. Dad's back at work, leaving Mom to , BEA ANDtfsoN, Editor · cope with another week of Christmas vacation with the kids . Mom doesn'.t teer like cooking tonight. She 's exhausted from shopping and wrapping, and baking and keeping the kids in line for the week before Christmas. "l guess I get the after-Christmas blues," one young mother said. "All I want to do ls sleep. I don't want to cook dinner so we'll have tak~·hamburgers or chicken. I start counting the-'days till the kids are back in school. "As long as I'm getting. ready for the holiday, it's fun . I don't even mind the crowds. But don't ask me about the day afte;. Don't ask ." DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY LEE PAYNE . ~ ~~ -~ .. •, . .... .. ~. ... • .... ·, ... .,_~ • .. ... . ". .. -. .. .. ' ' ' ' • • • .. ' .. •. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~ -- r· In Making History Understanding Needed By LAURIE KASPER Of 11141 Dtlb ...... lltff '"llbtory does not malt• men and women. Men and women make history," says Toynbee In hi• History of CivUJuUon. 1n agreement wllh lhls statement ls Dr. Ro be rt Gordoo, dean or continuing education f o r PepperdlM University who spake during a recent workshop on "New Declalons for Women." But he adds th.et this means a pertan had better understand the Is- sues. And education -continuing education, of course -Is one way of doing this. lie envisions publishers ~ ducing text books in loose leaf form iinee now at least a part of each book ls out of date even before it comes off the press.· And new approaches and new ideas should con- Unually be interjected into education. he said. "Keep it open ended. Keep It loose leaf."' But knowledge is not enough, .tile educator Aid. Even tcientilll have llllld tile only solution to counterbalaoce the atom. ls In tile mJncb of young men and women who are sensltlve to value•. Leadership. he added reals In a free and lnquiri"8 mind. PROINVICIAL TlllNKJNG He also suggested educaUon should go beyood proYJndal thinking. unlea!hlng the lm· aginatlon to 101ve problems, and not be bound by tradition because "the future ls not a club we can resign from." It is a constantly changing time, he said "and we must get with It." Some who help others "get with it" are counselors and they dominated tl¥> first af· ternoon panel di>cusslon. Dorothy Berry, a marriage and family coumelor with the American lnaUIUJe of Family Relations, told the audience of women considering work that her job Is "very, very rewarding" but also "very emotionally tulng at times." Opportunities exist lo &0<lal service, c:hlld auldanoe cllnl<:s , private tnstltuuons 1 n d priva~ practlces. But, she noted. about 11111 people apply for a Callfomla license each month and there are more coun&elora ln S o u t h e r n callfomia alone than the rest of the United States. "But we're busy," ahe Jdded. 1bree years ago would have been a "great time" to talk or academic counseling, 11id Dr. Genevieve Sta.ck of Fullerton College but It is much rnore dlfficult to get a job now . VIBRATIONS COIJNI' However, she said, the at~ tributes of parapsychology are being recol!Jlhed. A3 ao ei<· ample, she told of three young women working In the area of COUNellng et the college although oooe had professional ~ or.' an advanced degree. "Vibrational pattetns" ol a perooo olt.n oulwelgh t he I r quallflcatlons. she explained. And, lhe 1111Qested, a mln.., sho<lld always bt made Into a plUJ boeaUKI 11evteytblllg In the world of parapsychology Is can you takef What the world gives you?'' Anotbtr .,.. of coun .. Ung comea In the health field. Nurses, In addllioo l o preventing Illness and taking care of the 8'ck, must be counselors to the peUents, ac- cording to Rita Andrade, a Los Angeles Cowlty dlltrlct director ror public health nursing and a graduate stu- dent In public admJnlstratlon. A fourth speaier In the panel spoke not on a career but how one might go about getting the educaUon needed for a career. "There are Jaws on the boob to !acilitale widows and children to get bock Into col- Jege and punue an active educaUonol program leading them to bigger things," e1- plained USMC Col. (n!t.) Wiiliam M. Roley. Horoscope: Taurus Use Care Party Cruise to Anywhere Charted The Mmes. George Jardine and Lee A. Solomon sample champagne in toast to Lldo Isle Woman 's Club safe and sane New Yea.r's Eve Party -Cruise to Anywhere. Jazz clarinetist Barney Bigard, Bill Grosnevor's five-piece dance band and trumpeter Col. John Henderson will be featured along with a rontinuous buffet beginning at 9 p.m. A Gross Error Is Net-Result By ERMA DOMBECK The whole family chipped in and bought a new word for my daughter for Christmas. We got the idea about a week ago when she came home from college. "How's school?" we asked at the airport. "Gross." "What do you think of your brother's hair?" 'Gross.'1 "Which luggage is }'t)Uf'S?" • "lbe gross one." On the way home, the traffic was gross, the movies gross, the wtather gross and every experience anyone sh are d "grossed her out." I sensed then it would only be a matter of time before I was picking lint off the refrigerator and losing control over my saliva. One night before dinner, I drew my husband aside. "Do you have a feeling our daughter has a one-word vocabulary?" "You do her a gross in- justice with your gross ex- aggeration," he said. ''See, yoo're doing it too!" "Gross is a per!ectly natural word," he explained. "A person has gross features , gross income, gross weight. You are too sensitive. Let's eat dlnner before it gets cold. I'll say gross ... GRACE!" By Christmas Eve, we were all climbing the walls. I sum- moned the family together: •;How about getting your sister a new word f o r Christmas." "Let's get her a whole gross of them," said her brother. "There should be et least AT WIT'S END ooe "llrd that we can put in a box to replace the one she has." "How about 'crwnmy?' " asked my husband. "This is Christmas. We can do better than that." "Okay, there's 'uncouth, odious, repulsive, wisightly, unseemly, coarse, boorish, flagrant, indecorous, iU-man- nered, unpolished. unkempt and uncultivated.'" "Why don't we wrap all of them up and she can take her pick." Parties, Speakers Set For Area Gatherings Mt. Carmel Employes will meet at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 27, in the Murdy Park Recreational Center, Huntington Beach. Baron are party chairman. Jr. Ebells This morning, she came into the kitchen, looked at me and said, -"You look nagrant in that old bathrobe." She's just trying to gro~ me out! Homework NEW YORK (UPI) -A U.S. Department of Agriculture study shows that husbands average about one- and-one-balf hours a day on yard care, car upkeep and chauffering c h i I d r e n - regardless or whether the wife is a full time homemaker or employed. Use Suds Plastic furniture -large or small -in your house? Do not use chemical cleaners, such as ammonia. Clean with soap and water suds, rinse and wipe dry, ' WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 27 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (M>rch 21-April 19): Circumstances tend to be such that your efforts are blocked. Key Is to wait. Timing Is or the utmost importance. There will be addltlonal openings. Don't try to force issues. Mate, partner h a s con- structivt suggestion . TAURUS (AprU 20-May 20): Study Aries message. Best course now is one that features diplomacy. Pace yourself.1 Remember recent health resolutions. Prepare . Check schedule. I.Jbra in- dividual may be bearer of good news. GEMINJ (May 21..June 20): Emotions dominate. Key is to ~ situation, events a n d persons in realistic light. Young ideas are featured. Romantic concerns a r e higbUghted. Member o! op- posite sex figures prominently. CANCER (June 21.July 22): One who supposedly knows financial situation could suf. fer setback. It's best now to be seU·reliant where assets are concerned. Protect your own interests. Attention c o u I d center on partnership, mar- riage. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ac- tions aimed at sparking a pro- ject could be premature. Key is to gain all necessary in- formation. Leave no 'loose ends. If you have questions - ask. Don't perm.It pride to block Jll"OS""S. Ari" could figure prorninen~y. Thirty.five member! of the Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church Guild. Newport Beach traveled to La Casa del la Cuna orphanage in Tijuana to deliver food , candy and clothing. Robert Solomon, chainnan of the state Jegislalive com- mittee, has been invited to spea k on the legislative goals or the association. The Junior Ebell Club of Newport Beach has chosen Joe Ronquillo, 115, as outstanding youth for the month of Decem· ber. AFTER XMAS SALE Guild .members toured the facility, which accommodates I<tl childrm and is run by 11 nuns . Donations of beans, flour , blankets, children's clothing, detergent and soap a r e welcomed by the guild for the orphanage. Retired The Southern Orange <;ounty Chapter ol the National Auociation of Retired Federal SEIICO BYC Balboa Yacht Club members will ring in the New Year with a toga party beginning at 7 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 31, in the clubhouse. Mr. and Mrs. Rudy The son of Mr. and Mrs. William Ronquillo of Costa l\Iesa is a member of the Harbor Area Boys Club and past president or the Keystone Club. Captain of the frosh. sophomore baseball team at Estancia High School, he hopes to go into professional baseball. MATERNITY CLEARANCE ~\)~RYs~ )~ (~ • - OFF -"""' .... _ MATl•NITY SHOPS , ~ off starts today! entire stock of Fall s Holiday Fashions ~ off sportswear, coats, suits dresses, lingerie • \ NEWPORT BEACH FASIUON ISLAND LA HABRA FAslllON SQUARE • semUlve to needs of family member. Someone wants to tell you something. Know it and really listen. PISCES (Fob. It-Mardi 20): Don't read thlnp i n I O ordinary statement.I. Those you care for may not be up to par. Know it and be patient. Rud between the lines but don't invent lines where none el.1st. You will comprehend. Wool & Acrylic PLAIDS Half ·Sizes SIZES 14 1/2 to 241/2 Greet '73 In ~ great, new long dres1, Romantic, 11lomQf'ou1, flattering. looking like that, how con you help having a good flmel BitOutlfully priced, too. from $25.00 Sunday Shopper? Pttll•tton I Huritl"tton IHth 0,... 12 ... s Slmilor .. IM.rdlanlllM In Stitck • ••••••••••••••••· SALE ................ ... Group of long d,.., .. , 4ra1tlcolly rt"duc.d ju1t In time for New Year'• partying. Spend your Chrl1t- mo1 loot on 1omethlng lp9Ciol for yourstlf at a very 1p.clal price. All 1art1 of lovely 91ltt.r to ' chOOM ftom. ··~ic~---···········-··············--·--· Nor'sHAl,F-SJZE SHOP COSTA HUNTINCJTON MISA BEACH 1 Ml NIWPORf 11..YD. 14 HUMTIN•TON CINTD INtffllef1MIMetJ ,.._ .. ..._.,_, •UwtTON-U4 o .. , .......... "'°'-:...,,. & "-W ....,., ,...,...,., 1 .. , • 1e1.1w s...1w •••lttlmerlc•rd • M•1tere1'4t..,e • f l I • • AMILER MUn AND JEFF ~ see, nus swrrc...i CUTS OFF "TlE El..ECTRIC IN "THE e/TIRE HOUSE FIGMENTS NANCY "THESE PEANUTS SHOULD LAST "THROUGH THE POUBLE FEATUR!! WITH TIE .'.JUICE OFFICAN NOW FIX "THIS OUl1..ST TDDAT'S CIDSSIDBD PUZZf 1 A CROSS 49 Ship IK1ion 1 Swindtll: Vw 50 PronouR' 5 Social group 51 S.nta- 10 "'Tak•·-1'' 53 Lecklefunit 14 tmmediltetif 55 "My Gl!I -" 15" Mati.emor• 56 Get1outof bNuttful the udt 18 Ship of 1482. 61 Mineral 17 Ughtluncl'I .Uiclte item:2worda S2 Wild 19 Okt 904Tle geranium pdening 64 Forett 20 Failed to 1nlm1ll remember 86 Actren - 21 lnturlflC4I: Moorhead Abbr. 6S l1ith GMlia 22 Fabltd min--fi1 Direction Hting ~t 68 PromiMe 10 23 Studies pay printed 89 lnrtrumant matter 25 C.-.IM. of • """ 26 Plrtl I role 30 Co«Hd fabfto ''"""""' units 34 Rah MOie 36 Important """"""" .... rt •Hidden -39 Expel1 on the .... 42 Acljecilw ..... G £.taMdlt" -... U>t61n f1111d1l\IW 45 Ftctltnawn by low 47 Tennfnltl DOWN t "C1n't .Und the -•· 2 Japanese r9Clptitele 3 Comedown heavily 4 Ol"lg jertltyt Dill. I FumitUf9 ·-8 Feminine n1m1 7 Rocket tu011 '~"" 8 Over:: Prefix 9 Amerieln Of Canltdlan footblll fCJlrl 10 Once--·: 2.4tim ... doy Yesterday'• Puzzle Solved; 11 Kindofwritet 41 Dicken'• 12 Unu11t11l chltKtef person: Sling 4e High tell, 13 Walk tt.rough tor one w atM" 41 Coen:lof\ 18 High rock 51 Lading of I 24 Pe~ stMp 2S WeU.tnd-52 C.itforhelp 2t> Hurts 53 Old Worid V 81ckbont duck 28 Auditing 54 f.looring procedures1 piece 2words 56 Examine 29 Tmnilword doMly 31 TrM 32 San- 33 Scatter 35 ''GotcMI" ~US Satellite 57 0Ylt': """"'" 58 P1Jt1nt 59 Adcflliontl a> Wlntlf ·-· 40 Sneaky vehlclt penon,: SllnQ 83 Born by Doug Wildey by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith MUTT, J: RlT TIE SWITCH IN ONLY A ""'°'"'"' TEBSE WEENSIE ~0>'1 UT"TLE lllTSO :C PEANUTS AccoMPANIEO 10 SPENCER FAR.MS 8'f A POL.ICE LIEUTEHA.HT, ROCKY SILVESTER. I l I ASKS TO SEE KIS WIFE! CAN !lCATTHIS EGG! by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller l • [!•"'''"" l DICK TRACY •cuRRENCV~ R098ERY IN l'llOOlll!SS AT 8'IM <'NO Nl>OCER.• DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY IANANAS GORDO . ·-. ANIMAL CRACKERS by Charles M. Schulz r-rI _OIO_NCll'__ -61'1E-l/CU"""""'l:'"'I I' LL SA 'i "~~ YOU DIDN'T! ~ ' " c::;-- ~· -l'U.. (jj!f" rr.- DAILY •ILOT J$ "'"' -- By Charles Barsotti by Ferd Johnson by ROCJer Bolen ---!!-~~!..!:!53.,...--":-~-!-~-~~1 ..... THE GIRLS 1t·U "Bo -I mllsed a bet not lwglng tile QPll .. U boslead of lbe titt." DENNIS THE MENACE • ' VEstf NICE, tlfJIHls.' I I I I JC DAILY PILOT US C's Woo d Embarrassed by Honors , LOS ANGELES IAPI -Richan! Wood would rather dlscuss the sinister plana of Southern California's "Bull Gan c ' ' • dehnse than the prospect of beeomlnc a '""' 0.-Umo fOOlbaU All·Arnerlcon. , Uoebacker Wood, slgnal~alller for the •,.,.Jan delen.e, dubbed the gang Bier-type "Bull GIU\g" by defensi\'e back Charles , Hinton, is the only sophomore on the A8soclated Press All-American first \team. lbus be has the chance of becoming , the first three-year All-American since Doak Walker, Southern hie 1 h od i st halfback of lhe late tll<Oe. Wood, from Elliabeth, N.J ., setnU em· banused by all tbe honon bestowed on him for 11 varsity sames. "Jt doesn't make any d!lference to me," he said aa lhe No. !-ranked Tro- jans, Il..O, prepare for their &.e &wl meeting with tlllrd-rated Ohio State, &-1~ on New Year's Day. "It's just a pres!ige thing. l'm just a player like anybody else. J don't want to be considered a superman or anything like that.'' One quickly got the Idea thal Wood wanted to drop the 1ubject, and who'd arsue wlth the 6-foot,2, 221)..pounder with raster feet than many fullbaci:17 Makin& All·American as a 10phon1ore, the 11-yeaMld saJd, "Juat meMs there will be a lot more preuure on me all around. I aee: a whole bunch ot things comlnir up but l won't talk about 'em now ... r Then what has the Bull Gang in mind ror Ohio state? "The Bull Gang wlll have a contract, a contract to shut •em out, '1 declared Wood, noUna that Southern Cal, which gave up only 10.I points per same, blank- ed only one foe, Oregon. "Ohio Stato I.I a pretty pbyotcal loam." assused Wood. "Woody K a y e s (BuckeytS coach) bas a -k mind -they lilt• lo 1'111!. They're a pretty good team." Southern Cal had the third best defense against.the ND ln the nation, aUowlng an e.verage of only 94.2 yards. Ohio State averaged 270.4 yarda ruahlng per game. 1.,- '"l'M most lmportanl thing la lo pul the ROie Bowl on top of our reguJar aeaeon," Wood uld. "I can'I win lhe aame. Wo all ha"' to win Ille pmo. It takea 110 per- cent (tom everybody." '!be 8-Bo"I 1ome "shouldn't ha•• any beer~ on the naUontl cham- plonsblp," He said, noting that t.be game la being l>lmd In 1171 aod the cham· pionshlp fs !or llnl when Soutllem cal was the nation'• only undefeated, i.mtled major university. "We still want to wln," be added. "I'd like to rnake it perfect." Troja1is Praised Ohio State Scout .Best. • Ill PASADENA (AP) -Esco Slirkklnen, then a nervous 22-year-old, jokes about It now -but his first scouting report was oo laughing matter 30 years ago. ·'"l'be only diagrams I had after the first quarter of the West Point-Columbia gan1e were my sweat drops," reminisced the McCall's Run Paces Norih To 17-10 Wi n MIAMI (APJ -Arizona speedster Bob 1.fcCall raced 13 ya rds for a touchdoY:n in the fourth quarter Monday night and gave the North All-stars a 17-10 victory over the South in the annual Shrine charity football game in the Orange Bowl. McCaU's run off the left side came on a ihlrd-down and-10 situation with the score tied IO.ID. The North had tied the score earlier in the quarter on a two-yard nin by Rufus Ferguson of Wisconsin, named outstanding player for his team . The South drove to the North two with a minute left in the ball game behind the passinl of Arkansas quarterback Joe F"erguson and running of Chuck Foreman of M1am.J, Fla. But Foreman, named outstanding player for the South committed his sec- ond key fumble or the quarter and Purdue's Greg Bingham fell on it at the three to end the threat. ~ North got one roore chance but Ferguson's fint PMS was intercepted by Bob Hero.~lian of Connecticut. The North got both of ila fourth-quarter scores through Rebel errors to tie the series at 12 victories apiece. There has been ooe tie. California delemive back Bi 11 Armstrong intercepted a pus by South quarterback Ferguson at the Rebel 37 and returned it to the 10. Rufus Ferguson carried four straight times to get the tle. The South came back with what a~ peared to be a premising drive only to have Foreman fumble at midfield and VWanova's Kevin Reilly recover for the Yankees. The North drove to lhe Sooth 11 where itJ drive stalled, but on a fourth-down field.goal try the South was oUslde and the North was given a first down at the 13. McCall went over three plays later. The South had taken a IQ.3 lead eartie.r in the game on an 18-yard touchdown pan by Joe Ferguson to flanker David KnlJht of William and Mary and a 23- yard field KORI by Alfred Reeoe of Ten- nessee State. Though more than 18,000 tickets were sold, less than 10,000 persons watched the same. KOii• ,., GUAlll;Ta1ts Horlfl 0 0 0 14-17 Swffl 0 7 ' 0-10 Nortl'I -FG Aeberls 71 SOulTI -KNftlt II NJ.I lt'Otl'I J, F--1 (ltttH .... , • lovlTI -FG "-n North -•· l'~u-2 r;un (ltobe!'IS kkkl Norllt _.~II U run IAoblrr1 •11;1tl ArhnMllcil -11.011 1"1,..1 dowtll Au..,..~.,.. .,..,,. ........ ReNnl Ylnll ·--· 1"111'1\D ... loll l"tillllllleH'lrdl STATISTKJ M«t~ Hutti 11 21 4 ·11' ,.,..,,, ''' 2• ~ ~ ll·i.l·J 2M ·l Ml 4'lJ ''° 1·1 l •U :).:IJ 'bikers Tangle )Vith Portland INGLEWOOD -The easiest wsy \o Kt a 1e a loslnC 1lre1 k it to pick on •w you've never tost to and that'• tllo .,.., tonlahl wben lhe Los Angeles ~ -die end of a two-game IOB!ng ..... lplnlt vlllllnrl Portland. Pertland't Trail Slazers have yet to n In U tries, however that could ....... wllh the poulblt IOllo of Jerry W. ml Happy llalnton In the starting fw Loi Angeles du• to infuriea. la at 8 o'clock. w.,t and Halnton the Lakers thllr.seoond otralgbt 11 home to Friday nl&hl, 111-110. The r.-. ""1 gone 76 1ameo without losing IWiD•-alhome. a. Anples condnuea to lead the '9dlk Dlvlalon by 51\ prau over Jee· .,,. pllee Goldel State. ' Business happy Finn. the man behind Ohio Stale football scouting for 20 seasons. Sarkkinen, his nm-down ·on Rose· Bowl opponent Sou.them California already in coach Woody Hayes' hands, relaxed tn the team's hotel headquarters during an off-day Chrlslmas. Sarkklnen, an All-America end in 1939 tor Ohio State, continued to renect on his first hectic assignment for the U.S. Coast Guard Academy. "I was complelely bamboozled," Sark· klnen said. "We were to play West Point the next week. They were using the T formatiOf!, and I was single wing orient· ed." So 'tl'hat did Sarkkinen tell the Coast Guard coaching statr. "1 had to be honest and adnilt I blew the assignment," he answered. "The worst thing I could have done would have been to fake it." ·The Anny team's Doc Bianchard and Glenn Davis stomped the CoaBl Guard, 'lZ-0, but Sarkkinen says, "Even after 30 years and what I know now about scout· ing, l couldn't have changed the outcome much." The native oI Fairport Harbor, Ohii>, has become such an accomplished college scout tbal Hayes maintains he's the 'best in the business. "He secs everything. H6 even sees things we don't get from our rilm ex· changes," the Buckeyes coach said of Sarkkinen, who doubles as a defensive end coach. "A scout has to watch a game entirely different from a fan," Sarkkinen said. "The ball is the worst enemy or a scout," he explained. "It draws you to ooe thing you don't want to follow. "A good scout can tell you what &ix men are doing on a single play. He must have peripheral vision," said Sarkkinen. Although he saw Southern cat only in a closing victory over Notre Dame, the Ohio State scout's respect for the TM> jans is eoonnous. "This has to be ranked with John Mc- Kay's finest," he &a)d, "the way the team handled Notre Dame, Arkansas, Miclt- igan State and UCLA, and was never pressed." Sarkkinen also spied on the great 1968 Southern cat team, led by O.J. Simpson, but contends, "A lot of Trojan starters in 1968 wouldn't be regulars this year." The Buckeyes resume practice today for their New Year's Day encounter with the unbeaten Trojans. BUCKEYES ON TOUR -Ohio State football coach Woody Hayes feeds a giraffe at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills as linebacker Bruce Elia (center) UPI T.._... and defensive !Acl<le Shad Williams look on. The Buckeyes went back to practice today after tour· ing the African wildlife preserve Monday. Defensive Battle Looms LSU, Vols Prepare fo r Bluebonnet Bowl HOUSTON (AP) -Louisiana State's Bert Jones, college football 's hottest quarterback prospect, and a pair of rock· ribbed defenses will be the star at· tractions in the 14th annual .A&tro- Bluebonnet Bowl Saturday night when the Tigers take on Tennessee in the Astrodome. Jones, the rifle-armed quarterback from Ruston, La.1 directed coach Charlie McClendon's Tigers to e 9-1·1 season, in· eluding a last seoond victory over Ole Miss with a scoring pass.,to Brad.Davis. Jones, who passed for 1 ,~ yards and 14 touchdowns this season, was judged the best pro quarterback prospect in the country in an Associated Press survey of pro talent scouts. Jones was the top vote getter among quarterbacks on the Heisman Trophy list. Fonner Fountain Valley High and Orange Coast College star Gary Val· buena is the backup quarterback for Ten- nessee's Volunteers. Tennessee will bring a 9-2 record into the 14th renewal with losses to Alabama and Auburn. Cotton Bowl-bound Alabama also provided the blot on LSU's record . After the all-important loss to the Crimson Tide, I.SU waa tied 3·3 by Florida. Both teams have potent orfepsive threats bui stellar defemea on both sides could tum the same lnto trench warfare. · .. 1 don't expect many points to be scored at all," said LSU defensive tackle John Wood. "To me, it's going to be a matter of three points, either way. With their defense outstanding as it Is -and I think we have an outstanding defense - that footbaH shouldn't be moving too much. It'll be won or lc>!t by the defense." Both teams arrived here today and headed immediately ror the Astrodome to begin workouts. Tennessee, in fact, had two workouts in the Dome. The Vols and Tl.gen, both Soo.theastem Conference powers, are coming off bowl victories in 1971. LSU improved its bowl record to 9-7·1 with a 33-15 victory over IO!f8 State in the Sun Bowl and Ten· nes,.. Odged Arkansas 14-13 In the Liber- ty Bowl for an a.10-0 bowl record. In the lll7t Astn>Bluebormet Bowl, Colorado overcame bolt University of Houston 29-17 before a standing room on. ly crowd of 54,720. Chris Dantin and Davis are LSU's leading rushers. Dantin bas 717 yards on 1~ carries and Davis bas 114 C8Jrles for 573 yards. LSU's loss to Alabama was a crushinl defeat, knocking it oot of the SEC title race, but McClendon said the Tigers still have something to fight for. "li we can beat Tennessee in the Astro-Blueboonet," he said, ''OUr seniors will have won more games than any senior class in the history of I.SU and that soes back all the way to 1893.11 JuBI u u;u bad to struule alter Ila loss to 'Barna, Tennessee also had to fight back after dropping its first two conference games to Alabama and Auburn. "We were close to greatness, real close," nid the Vols' youthful head coach Bill Battle. "We lOst to Auburn by four points and we lost to Alabama by seven. It really lboCked ua ·and kept ua from having a great se&l<ll. But, overall, I think it's been a real good year." Tennessee's offensive thrust is pro- vided by quarterback Con d re d g e Holloway, who completed 60 percent of his passes, and Haskel Stanbl~ who gained 890 yards rushing. MIA.MI, REDSKINS FA f ORED SUN D.A Y LAKE TAHOE (AP) -Harnl1'1 Tahoe Ra<ebool< wde tho MJamt Dolpblna and W11hlngton Rt<laklna favorit.. Monday to win their rospectlve Nallmal Football Leai\11 coofertnee champloMhlpo. The Doljllllaa wero lnotalltd 11 211 point favorlletl .,,., the PltlaburJb Steelera f0< tho American OJnf ...... Ullo. It'• Not a Full Nelsen The Rodlklnl were llatod u 3\!o polnta favorttea to defoat tbe Do!IU Cowboys In the Natlaoal Coi!ference. Wlnom ot Suni!ay'1 COltf ..... e Uile cl1shol will meet ill tllO Super Bowl Jon.14. New York Knicks forward Blll Bndle7 Oe!t) wres· Ues Don Adarns of the Detroit Ptatons for the bltll during Madison Square Garden action Monday. Look· • IJ:lg on la New York'• Wllll.t Reed. Ad111111 won th• wrestling match, but the Knlcks won t h e NBA game, 113-110 . . . . . . Skins Itch For Dallas .Showdo wn WASHINGTON (AP) -Santi Claus made his appearance at halftime at RP'K Stadium Sunday, but the was111n11on Red.skins think the goodlea are sun to come. , "Everybody on tbla club la Itching to play the Dallu Cowboya qalo," uld Redsltlns defensive tackle Bill Brwl1!ige • • Wsahlnlton defealed the Green JlaY Packen, IW, Sunday to ldvaoce lo the NaUonal FOOlball Ccolerence cham- pionship game qalost the Oowt>oys. Dallas qualllled for tbla -k·a UUe c~sb here by stoppln( San Fr9ncfoco, 30-ZI, Saturday. ·"'Ihil Js the way It should be," Brun- dige said, "htlid·to-bead now &o there Will be no SOtJr grapes. "Everybody reto1nizea Dallas and Washin1too as tbe best leams in the NFC. It's like the heavywelgbt cham- pionship. They can screw around, but everybody know~ It ¥iouJd 00!!1• down to a match between Frazier and All. We 'll have Larry Brown tbla Ume aod they'll have Roger Staubach. "It'll be Ille shootout at the O.K. Cor- ral, and may the best team wtn.11 The Cowboy .. Redskin! wlnnet will be tbe NFC entry In the Super Bowl, wllich wlll he held Jan. 14 in Loa Angeles. '!be G"'°° Bay victory WU Allen's ftnl playoff win ., an NFL bead coach. It was alao the first time an Allen-<08Ch- ed team had performed at home in a playolf contest. Understandably overjoyed with the out· come, Allen still remembers iour years ago. "l'm finally going to have an enjoyable Christmas," the W &!hingtoo coach said. "l TeJl}ember that Christmas moming in 1968. l woke up to a telepbOne ring. We were l().3-1 that year and I got the ue." U that was Allen's low point in bis can?er, Christmas of 1972 bu lo be the high point. Now comes Dallas, a team th& Redskins have already played lwlce this seuon. Washington woo the f1nt contest 24-20 ~ and lost to the Cowboys 34-24 at Dallas. "We felt all along thal we woold have to play Dallas," Allen said. "We know them. We played them twice this year. We know what we ~ve to do, and they know what we can do." Quarterback Billy Kilmer, whose 32- yard pass to Roy Jellerson was the lone touchdown in lhe Green Bay game and put the Redskins ahead to stay, said: "We're ready for Dallas. I don't look for a lot of shocks. We've just got to outhit Lbem." Did Official Rely on Tape To Make Call? OAKLAND (AP) -O.kland Ralders coach John Madd"' -his le6m'a Super il<>wl hopes dashed by a freak J.ut.mloole play -says he is convinced officials relied oo a vldeotape instant replay to make the game-deciding call NFL officials ruled that Raider Jack Tatwn bad deflected a pass Intended for Steelers receiver John Fuqua. thus al- lowing Franoo Hanis_ wbo """"'1 up with the beU, to run U yards for a toucbdown with five secoods left that gave the Steel· ers a 13--7 triumph in PJttsburgh Saturday. Madden said he is certain Tatmn nev- er made cootact with the ball and the pass should have been ruled lnoomptete because two consecutive offemive play- ers touched it. But he said be was even angrier at how the call was made. "The officials on the field told me they -·t know what happened aod they were going to check upstairs to see what it was," Madden said. '"The referee (Fred Swearingen) went in to use the dugout telepbmte and when he eame oot he call- ed it a touchdown." Madden said Swearingen called a press box equipped With closed circuit televts.- ion where top NFL ofll!:lals, Including executive di.rector Jim Ken!ll and super- visor of officials Art McNatly, w e re watching the firs~nlllnd AFC pla)'t'I! contest. Kensil aclcnowledged the phone call, but sald Swearingen me...ly wu Inform- ing thom of the decision. The m says ils offidals do not use vfdeolape to de- cide plays. '''Ibere wu no decision fnm the press box. and television replay wu not used in maktna: the decisior.tr" Kerwil " said. ''The referee wu simply clearing up a conruslng situation ... " .. He eould have done It much easier by jusl algnlllng a touchdown,'' Madden responded. Hundrecla ol fana awarmed onl<> the fi!ld lmmedJately arter Harris' nan, and the last five secondi of the aame were delayed far several mlnulel. f\,adden sa'd he saw McNally at the airport, and ;oho \old me thal ~ wu DO doubt Tatum touched the boll . Bui then I saw Jay Randolph of NBC tel .. v~\on and he tc?ld me there was no way to make a !lO'ltlve declalon off the TV ..._ play, n-are the films McNatb: &aw." Randolph Is a sportacasltr. Maddc aald he llJ>eDI Chrlatmu Eve stu<lylnR tile Rame ntma and WU sure that Totum had hit Fuq111 from behind so !bat tllo ball r1cocheled off tb6 Stoelen nicelvu tnto Hanis' armt. "BUI there WU DO way they wm going to call II any other way witb all thole PoOl>I• out ao tho fleld. Someboc!J wat14 bavo be<n killed." Moddtn said . Pittsburgh's Owner Tourneys Highlight Didn't See Big Play Hoop Play PITl'&BURCH (AP) -II 1tate of j0yoo1 frenzy after w11 the moat mlraculoua p!ay watching a ooe-Jr>-•mWion in Pltt•burKh Steelers hl3tory, touchdown play that gave and Art Rooney didn't ... it. Pittsburgh a U.7 playoff win The 71·year-old team owner over the Raiders and sent the ~. left his private box ln the wan-Steelers into the, American ing seconds Saturday with Football COnleren~ t J t I e Pittsburgh traUlng Oakland 7-t game agalmt Miami. and facing a seem Ing I y Faced with fourth-and·IO hopele&s fourth down situation . at the Stee1er 40-yard line, '1 "l figured we had lost, and I quarterback Terry Bradshaw wanted to get to the locker . had drilled a pass about 30 room early so I c o u I d yards downfield to Frencby pe:!'IOOally thank the players Fuqua. ' for the fine job they'd done all Raiders defensive back Jack ., season," said Rooney, who Tatum knocked the ball away waited four decades for the from Fuqua and it shot 10 ·' steelers' first divislOl'I Utle. yards.-baCkward, where Fran- " I was standing by the oo HarriJ made a shoestring elevator when ooe o{ the catch aod raced 42 yards for a stadium guards came tunning touchdown. at me yelling, 'You won It. . "I beard all the shouting and You won it,'" he added. "I cheering, but I sill wasn't asked him if be was kidding sure what happened," said and be screamed, 'No, no. Rooney. · Listen to the crowd\'" "I went down, to the locker· 'Jbe crowd was indeed in a room but the. only guys there For Tonight Los Al Entries Alamitos Results T1mt -~. Also r•11 -1111 ltlH'I. crttckll c111.,.,.., U11CM~. No 1eratc:~. were Bobby OeMarco (a trainer) and Marty Homa (club photographer)," he ad· ded. "They didn't know what had happened either. And I sajd, '11 we won, where are the players?' " Rooney Was unaware that hUQdred1 of ecstatic steelers fans had swarmed onto ~ field and that flve·secondJ re- mained on the clock. What's mon:, lhe Raiders were ve.bemenUy objecting to the touchdown, claiming that Tatum had not touched the . ball and that therefore it was an illegal pass, touched by two offensive receJvers. "We were .waiting in the locker room when we heard there was a question about whether the touchdown would count," Rooney recalled. "I was dying while w,e waited to find out," the veteran horseplayer added. "If was the longest wait of my life. I never bad to wait that long i.r a ~to finish ." Then Steelers punter Bobby Walden rushed jubilantly into the locker room with the news of victoey. tile touchdown had counted' and lhe Raiders game-ending pass had fallen incomplete. "Bobby w;:., all excited. and he gra~ and put his arms a me," Rooney said. " • fbe rest of the players came tunning in." Rooney rarely goes into the Steelers locker room after home victories and he was on- ly there Sa~y because be figured hb: team would Jose. "I stay out when they win because r think that's when the players and coach es deserve the attention and credit," Rooney saitl. "But I saw•som~thlng In there S{ltur- day that was really amazing. Chuck Noll (Steelers coach) and the players all came in, knelt down on the floor and said the Our Father together." Telegrams and phone calls of coogratulations poured in from across the country Saturday evening, including a call from one or Rooney's horse trainers at Laure I Racetrack in Maryland. "He said that when they an· nounced at the track that we'd won everybody started clap- ping and cheering," Rooney said. "He told me he'd never seen anything like It." Of course, Rooney d i d finally get to see t h e touchdown play dozens of times on television replays. "Jt's just as much fun every time I watch It," he declared . Holiday tournament basket· ball action on t'he prep level geta lrito hlgb gear Wednesday with four toumamenta in- volving Orange Coast area teams. Newport Harbor's Sailors are at the Glendale tourney, Costa Mesa and Estancia are in the Orange Hlgh tourney, Westmlnster, Fountain Valley and University are in the San- tiago High Invitational, and Mater Dei and San Clemente are involved in the Rancho Alamito.. Jnvitationa1. Newport's initial test ls at 4 p.m. against Santa h-fonica. Costa Mesa's streak Ing Mustang's (three straight wirl!) meet Foolhill at 5 p.m., followed by Estancia's clash with La Habra at 7, Westminster opens up the Santiago setup w:lth a 3:30 clash with Kennedy, roUowed by Fountain Valley and Bolsa Grande at 5 and Tustin and University at 7. · WtiONl!/DAY $1 ...... MrMW Glelldale VI LA Llncoll\ -l :XI p,m, Ne-1 w S.rrt• Motile• -~ p.m. Pa~ YI Mir• Coll• -5:30 p.rn. 8tll VI Cr...:.nta Valley -7 11.m. OtMt!! TWmtY Costa MeM VI F9othlH -J p,m. Ellancl• YI U Hal:H'• -1 11.m. Gardtn Grow VI S.Yann1 -l :XI P.m. ~I YI Orange -1:30 11.m. SHlia. TMnNY l<~YI .WM!mlml•r -l :lO.,,.m. Fountflll l/tlleV YI 8olsa Grlfld9 -t p.~ l:llS!lll YI V11lwnlt¥ -7 11.m. nllaoo VI Bu.na Park -1:30 p,m, Ra..mt Alamito. T•"""' El Ooradcl YI 81$hDll Go<tNn ILV) -3:30 i>.m. l.Mra YI Sall Clotmtrlhl -5 P.m, .V..1..-Del VI, ~ll -1 n.m. FtllfKho Alemltes )'I Exc911ior__.:30 11.m. Pro Cage, ••• wn.=s Conr.rt11C1 M I CM\lllloft w ' P'cl. Mllw<111kff " • ·'" Cl\lcffiO " " .Ill l<a11Q' City-Om1h1 " " .SU Derron " " ·"' Pacific DIYlt.lall Loi Ange~ " ' .111 Golde!> s1111 " " ·"' Pkoc'lllx " " .... S1artl• " " ... Porfllnd • 1!111...,. C•ftre11ee ,, ... AttHtlc OMsiM w ' .... 8M .. " ' .~ N-York • • .1$1 lh1ft1lo • u .rn Phlladelphl• ' ,, .... CN!raf DIYl"811 Bait!,,,_. lt .. ..,, Atlanta " " ..,, , __ .. " . ... Clevalalld ~ lltwltt ' u .251 P'-"ix ~Cll New Yortl lll. 110 Mllw•vkM 104, l<anMI C!tv-OrnaM 9t Portlalld 116. SNttlt 113 T~-PD<"Katld at Atotk's Ntw Vort: at bloll Balllmon at avttalo At1at1l1 al Clweland =ty-Omalll It Cllkl90 ~f ' .. 5"ttlt 11 Goldin State ••• .... w ' "" •• Caroll111 u " .... l<entucky " " .611 ' Virginia " " .513 •• M.mphls .. n ·"' • N~ Vorlc" " n .~71 •• Jaycees Tune Up For Circuit Play Junior college basketb4lll heads into lta ttna! week Of non-conference: action . with a trio of tournaments on tap for the three area teams: Thursday's Gamet 7 -Pasadena vs. Mt. San Jacinto 8:30 -Long Beach vs. San- la Barbara OCC's PU-ates battle rugged Compton in the opening salvo CoUege of Desert Tournament of the Santa Monica touma-4: 10 -Citrus vs . Glendale, ment Wedneaday at 7 o'clock. Ariz. If the Sues win they11 play 5:40 -Saddleback vs. LA again Thursday night against Harbor the Laney.scottsdale, Ariz. 7: 10 -El Camino vs. LA DAILY PILOT J 7 SUITS MADE TO MEASURE SECOND PAIR OF SLACKS FREE c ...... 1,.m ,,,.,. lM llM .. Nty ....,, -' ::·.~,.':"':::'o:...nu.51-30'°" •I rk .. '"' <Mk•. •• .... Ill~• s,.,. , .. ,, INlll ffS... llW 11~1 '""' i>t.... C)tl..-.... • J ...... ,., ~1. lf'J, OXFORD CUSTOM TAILOR victor. If occ loses, it'll Trade Tech retum Thursday afteroooo. J~8~:~45~~B:•:rs:to:w:_:v~s._Co'.':'.l~le~ge~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Golden West's Rustlers are,~ of Desert ~lso in action Wednesday, fac· mg Fullerton in a 7 o'clock tilt In the first round of the Rlv~rslde City C o 11 e g e tourney. Second round games are set for Friday. S ad d leback, meanwhile, tangles with LA Hatbor at 5:40 '11l.ursday in the College of lhe Desert tournament. If Saddleback's Gauchos win, they'll return at 7:10 Fri-daf night. If they lose, it's a 4:10 game Ffiday. Here are the pairings : Santa Monica Tournament (upper bracket) 3 -Laney vs. Scottsdale, Ariz. 7 -Orange Coast vs. Compton (lower bracket) 5 -Cerritos vs. Cal St.ate (LB) Frosh 9 -Santa Monica vs. Palomar. RJverslde Tournament Wedn"esday's Games 7 Golden West Fullerton 8:30 -Riverside vs . Bernardino Hockey I Wn• """ " .. . ott lndl•n• " .. ,,. """" " " .11• D11i.1 " " .•n S1n DltQO lS 1S .31S MOl'ld'ly'I lttlVlll No '""'" i.ehfdul&d. , ... , .. o ..... ~11111 ti D1ll<11 I IM ti 1<1ntvc;ky M-111111 at Vlah o.n ... r at Sin 01~0 Only Ill..,.. IC._U &cl. ""' '"' w ' T Ph G .. Molllrul " ' ' ~ ·~ .... ~ " ' , n '" N.Y, 1t1ng1:r1 ,, " , " ·~ l!lllflalo " " ' " ·~ """'" " " , n •M Ton>11lo " " ' " •• .. ~ • " ' " '" N.Y, ·~·""'"' ' " ' " y Wn• """-" " ' " ,. Mt"""°'1 " " ' ~ "' l'hlllM!Dhl• " " ' ~ •N LOI A,..t.s " " • ~ "' ....... 111• " " • ,. " Pit""",..,. " ... ' " '" ~t. Lonl1 " " • ~ ~ C1tllomla ' " ' " • ~lnl'!IY .. Gii-. '""le...., ~, T........,io 1 ~-"'""' 11: .. ._... ~. ().otMft 0 LM ... ,,.,_I.., $, C•ll-'111 ~ ()nlY O~--._. ....... .,,_, ...~ ..... !'J•mt1 N" n•m-........ .,!_ T~-1~'""• n.~"lff ,._,,..,•I ~· ~·-I ''"'' ...... ~ .. -.. ,. ""'•"'' •• ' '" '" •• ~ •V N '" '" "' '" ·~ .. ....... ,, .............. •"·----~ ... ... ---·· .......... ~ BIKE BACK TO SCHOOL WITH THESE GREAT l & G BUYS ••• Night Racing. 7:45 Mon.-sat. Now ltlru Feb. 12 • ' • " ., • • Record Set In Oil City Pi$tol Shoot One naUonal record was broken and another was tied at the monthly 2700 pistol shooting competition held at the Huntington Beach Police Department pistol range re- cently. John Johnson of La Habra broke tlle record for the 45 Caliber aggregate score, wllh a total of 882 points for so· round• of lhooilng. The total Is based on accuracy In slow, Urned, rapid-Ore and gallery course shooting and bettered the previous record by one point. Jobnson ollo iled the na- tkxtal record of .. in lite O.erall Grtnd Aggregate. The Grtnd Aggr<pte con111t, or l'IO ""'l)(la ol ohooUn& with .D, .31 1nd .45 c•liber plstolt, and I OC<n of Z7llO ii the hlgbeit -Ible. The llunilngton B e 1 c h matchel are held every third Sunday at the police range and are the only NRA registered Indoor matcl>e1 held West of the Mi11Wlppl . The . com• petition Is open to all. Frank Nabs Tournament Dudley li'rank of Balboa Jslaod dereated BW Hansen of Tustin %1-1%, 2HI to take the Cla.u A title of the Orange Coast YMCA Christmas handball toumanlent h e Id Dec.11-20. other class winners in the toumarotnt included Tom OWKUtt of Tustin In clua B, BID Fredricbon of Hunt!naton Beach tn C and Dive Picker· . Ing of Huntington Beach in D. Chandler defeated T<m Sheward of Huntington Be1ch In the f\nal1 21·20, 21-11, while Fredrickson stopped J I m Whitted of Newport Be•ch 21· II, I0-21 and 2t·ll and Picker· Ins defeated Terry Shinkle 21· la; 21·17. • I I • MOPPl'S GUN CLEANING llTS ti.Ke •f riRe .......... nc.s..st SALE 2" SAYllMTlllOUGlt MC.Jiii, ·n NR FOOTIAll llTS IKlvff> iotloMt. i"HT· poo0t, ..-: l•r111, 4t"tt1, O.r1•rs, R•i4en. Grnt .. 1 f., 9fH 7 ft 11 y•nl SALE 791 aTORE HOU Ra: MON. THRU PRI . 10 A.M. TO I P.M. •AT.aauN.1DA.M. TOtP.M . . LAMllADA IHl)l'PIHO CINTtllt 1.....-.. l ... , "'"-°"'-' I"~! 111·t1f1 OIANGI t••• fill. TUSTIN ,.._; QJ-1110 TUSTIN NIWPOflT AVI,. •t ,lfllT STLltt:IT l"tton.; U2·MH SANTAANA ))17 I . l•UITOL 1·r, It MtcAllllTHUlli PhoM~ 111>1)\7 NOW, 4 STOllS IN OIANGI COUNTY ' ' I I ! DAILY PILOT TONIGH1''S TV HIGHl ,IGHTS ABC 0 8:00 -Temperatures Rislng. Dr. Jerry Noland performs an unauthorized operation on a baseball pitcher on the same night Lhe hospital examiners tour the hospital. KCET Elil 8:00 -Christmas 1776. A vivid re<· creation or George Washington's Christmas Eve t:rossing of the Delaware River and subseque nt victories at the Battle of Trenton in the winter of 1776. CBS fl 9:30 -"A Death of Innocence." A tot>-1 fl ight lawyer defends a young girl against a nlur- der charge. Tisha Sterling , Arthur Kennedy, Shel-• ~ ley \Vinter, Ann Sothern. · ~ NBC O 10:000 -America -Inventing a Na-· tion. The fourth installment of the series tells how the Constitutional Convention in 1787 created a landmark in political developmen t and the forma- tion for a unified nation. .. KTLA O 11:30 -"Blue Ski es.'' Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire sing and dance in this 1946 mu- sical. . ' TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening DECEMBER 26 L<OBBO!Il!!J!ll"'"' i1l®l "'"' 0 Ponllltrm '1lle Ape" @ Gtt Snl•rt m Tiit flilrtstonts ID Gom1r Pyi. USMC EE Mi Duke Elllmo1 .. 1 m Hoc1J1POC1ie lod,. El:)Dn .. IE""""""' ,:30 (!) Kq111'1 Htron O Mtrlt: CCI (90) .. 1U~1 ol ~nrs• '•rt I (rel) ·~-JeNrey H~nttr. ()) CIS News W1!ttr Cloo~/11 ®'! Mm Cit1ftln Sl'low m AndJ Cirtff1t11 m liim1•'• 111.1111 fl!) Astrl111111)' I "Sun, 3" m Joann• Clfaoa Sflow tiE t.11 Club 6) Dlt42 PM EE .Uttle 1191:111 0 OO CIJ CB .UC T1111d1J Ml'rit: (C) (90) "Gid1et Gtb M1rrie:d" IR) (tom) '71-Mnnlt [11i1, Michael Bu1ns, Don Ameche, .loan Bennett'. C!dtel ind he1 lonatime fiance, Jell, m1t1Y and llO soontr 1r1 they Stttted In their ""<t horfl• than tht bride begins to rallJ her nelsllbors 111lnsl commltllitp COfllormlty. m tilth 'riffiR $bow fE Biii Moren' Joomal Ui) El Edlllcio dt Entrtmt !:OOO ~IDTlll Bold O!lts "A NI· lion of Human Pincushions" An KU· • punctu11 e•pen end 1dmitt1d Com· munist. demonsl11!1S the ltchnici111 1t Crair lnslitule O'lt1 ob~ ol 1n "old ru1rd" consemtl¥e doctor. Cart Rei11tr, Ja« Albtrtton., Lloyd Nolan and Jeff Corey ruest. m s.1111 to Ad\lt11tur1 m lfhlo fD Behind tht Untt EI:)Nowla ~JOO CIJ CIS l--: IC) (90) "A Dua of 1-IOet*I" (dr1) '71-Tisht Sttrllna. Shtllty Wlnt11s. Ann Sotllem, Arthu r Kennedy, A tnp- llifht llwytl is 1111111111 h)' Ill ldlllo couple to defend th1ir d1u1hter 1111lnst a murder chu1e. 10:00 or .. .,. rr.tt111 S1tow om-· tt) l latk Jo111111I @El ReVistl Musk.II B XEROX PRESENTS- *"AMERICA." Episode 4: Inventing A N1tion. Jefferson 1o Boone a ®I m A111riu ~1nwntin1 • Nation" In tilt lourttl inst1nment 7:30 IJ r11 w 1 Slawt Jou RIYln of his se1ies, Al!st1ir CooU tells auesu. how tht Conitlb.ltioftll Conwntlon O Pollet su,,_ "l.ldy X" Whtn In 1787 cnlted 1 llndm•rll: In po. th• city is terrorized bf 1 m•cl lilit1I development 1nd th• louncl•· bomber, IJ"Wltnas ,.ports lmpll· tlon for 1 unltltd Ntkm. e11t1 1 most unllkllly suspect. II 11 •ews e ....,..: ...., .., w.;-(dr1) o w Cll m 1111rt111. ••lbJ', M.D. 'U-8in1 Cn:lst:IJ, Barry Atqerald. (II) "Wt'll Walk Out ol Hert T0; (I) Te Tell tile Trwtll 11ttM(' "" ectiWI }'OllRI 1lrl must (I) f111f1J a..acs '11M Christ!MS 1cljust lo 1 lifllimt ln 1 whnlch•if Tree" fotlowln1 1 sarlolls 111n•~ fJ MDlilll $ Mwll: (2'111 ~ 0 loris Klrtott P1t11nb 59"' {dr1J '64--Curt .tu111ns, Patrl· ID SPECIAL-SAKE OF di N111. * HONESTY-David Ray S ~ ~am hosts Art Linkletter, «D n.t Slit Richard & Patti Roberts. ID (]) Dn&Nt (D 1 IJICIIL I f11 till Slkt ol H• fB U Melli• Odltl my Art Linkletter, Rich1rd 1nd Pit· fm Cifrw*bln "Union Rescue H RDbtrb join 11ost 01'1id Ill)'. Mb»on" fl1 S.Clllltnl IR tl Qelo tr;) Olllbltl R m ftl)'howe Ntw Toft "An Amtri· El:) "'auttl Ultld can Chrlttmas; Womlt 111<1 Music~ Gl) H ls 'Writtlw Burt Lant1ster hosts limes Ut1 lJ) Add1111s f1mlly Jones, Urwl1 lrti11, f rtdl PIYM t.1» EJ ()) Miudc (R) Cffol !urns 111 incl P1t1r Y1m:iw. 1boul !be "•r1!11 of 1 llOlllln ID llld1 s..bra ICIOl'fled'" wlltn sM slMb d1tln1 1 al) fntlwal MuiclM min who /ilttd M1 ud1 Jwfore she lJl Kifl&dalfl of l1M 5e1 m•rried W11te1. lD:JO 0 T1lk ttck 0 ~ m lon11111 "Flrsl Lm" m PlttkOlt Junctlw Jlml1 Clltwflrht ltll his fin! tMh (E OUtdoor $porbiltltl wfM.n he lal\1 ln low with Ille wile ll:Gll II 0 0 @D m aJ ..... of tilt 11N XhOohTllSltr, Ullftlrt (I)()) !Bil fft'n that her hll$1Und Is ins1nel)o ful· O Olt Stat ..,.IMll ous. @ Mlnl1I Dillon D rn I}) m T111pmturu Rlsln1 0 Mowle: •• "" fl'fll Fllldlfl" (R) "Oper1tiolr F1slb1ll" Dr. hfTJ (dr1) '63--MuJmlrrltn Scht!I. Kol1nd PtrfOl'IM Ill un1uthorilld m Tnrtll If Con•q11111CH 0ptt11lon to lttlp 1 J011n1 Nstblll d) Trw Adtlllhl,. ,llcher on !ht 111111 nllht thft hos· ti)'-""' T .. Arw:tMt, pitlt wmlnerJ tr• tourin1 the fD Hlhtr lllllb'lt1': ·w.kl!WI lloS9ff,ll with Df. c.unp1t1t!ll ll:l'5fDCh11M1\4 m .._. • ...,_ 11:JO G CIJ ca t.1t1 """': <t> "'"" I hnf ...... Oto Sb'1n1t TMl.p" (com) lnlrid ..,_ Cenfl BtrsNll 1nd Mil F1r11r stir. m 11e1w;1 •Ko11Uf• F•nr. 8 ll§I m )Db""' tmtn s11ow aw1sma ·1m Vivid rtcnatlon of g Mowlt: (CJ "II•• Slla" (mus) Georp W1llllnston'1 Cllt1stmn E'll '4&--fred Mttlrt, Bin& CrosbJ. crossln1 of 1111 0.llWlrt Ind tub· D Cf)(}) m Dkl Cawtt ttqutnt tktorils It the Blttlil or m To Tell the Tfltti Trenton 111 thl winter of tn&. ED llllMI .,.,.. ... """" -m--•-lli> -II_,,, "'* ·~ (211) ...,.., U:JOm_, .... _,_..,. (dra) 38-ffu-., lor•rt. ., .,_.,, (sd·fi) '56-Anlllonr Du· l;tll 8 C1J ...... ft#.Q (R) Riettdo ltr, ~n Shlw. "Moftttlbln ""' AIU P1rena, 1 l:ll (J)DllNen .. ltttJ 1uio rldq' 1nt1'1111/af J:JO D CIJ "'9n ..-. ~ i. a.in on t11t...,. to1 II M-MltM Slier. "FrltllltJ' &. of Htn1r1 most Import.Int road ..... • -r..,. n.. IN ltd,," ,_ "1111 ..,,._c1• Wednesday DAmME MOVIES l:IO • -.... y.c,• 11•1 ..... Dl\'ld fthrlfl, Mtritttt l1llfrta l:JO.""' """ ......... (bol) '38-Rllph hlltmy, JolilA Klftl. U (C) ""' ol"' -· I•"' '42-llttJ Qnilt, ~ Mft1.11t. S:OO ()) "IW .. 111 of Alcatrll"' c:.ct. (d11) '62-8~rt i.lllCl.Sllf, 91 "111 ,..... ti CtMdr" '65 -Comp1!11loll of ••fly comtdY hits. 4:JD a ...., ,114 ...... <ct11> ·41- .111111 Glrflold, Lill PM""'. CV lJIM •• lOAM htlnl S:JO D IC) .. It', • ht• Uft" {com) ·~~und Cnnn, Jillt RlchlfA MA Tlm;ES AT ALL THEATRES ! Deliuer•nce .. .IOHfO eooNUiH flUf Stwr'll"IO JON VOIGHT. aum AE't'NOLOS • PANAVISIQr.I• o!B} ECHNICOt.OA•. FrOTI VtOl'rer &os .• A w.t'net ~O()'lS ComNnv SHOWING NOW! AT ALL 4 SPECIAL THEATRES Kew "'611r ·--Ontm• M1itrffr w ... rl S.t. "YOU'LL Liila l •l O • MY MOTMIR" to '"'""Duk• :OOp.m "OA'""f.:~vlL 11.00 • MEN" aotri IRCfltrl lhffl• Scot! SIK)l ll.-11 ·.·~~::ji~~- .<.~ [ ::;:~ tlld~11111W•t )~ a.111r1 Wetll ;::,,' ·i:~.::.. I 'i':I ::rt':.: ? Jlft!U 01r11.... ··:·: lll'llllarlfte .... .;..,, ci:i:':-f ?.; ·~ Jl1t1L H~tt H1rtley ···< • ''TIMI New C~hlrlo111" lotMI "O..llnt" Boltl ltl Colw tRJ • "ll:Altt•OW ••IOGI" .:=:: "t UM 91Ktt Tep" ·~·· 91flllllC11trl (ll ·~~ Walt Disney FEATURE !tutoM; DEAN NANCY HARRY KEENAN GEORGE JONES • OLSON • MORGAN • WYNN • LINSEY ¢t~ .. ~~~-~!~!~~.'!.l.~.0!' ,,~ ... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : : ~Wattli}isney World i:;.'!;'":: Plus This • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • NOW SHOWING WaJc Disne}' featurctte At All 3 Edwards Cinemas -Matinees Daily Grea< Holiday Fu n Quiz Al~ Ill P~YJSIOH l>EU!Xf CClGfllPQ ~(PG1 CHAlLIS llOHSON ''THE MECHANIC" BARGAIN MATINEE WED., 1:00 P.M. FlEI WIJ!IUHMINn ADULT$ Sl .00-CHILD 71 t ---CtNfOOMl .'/ t.. ' "'I I 'l:,..ILJ' ---.... ' W•H Dh*IY'• ' StAOIUM I ..•. "SNOWBALi. IXll>Rltt" • "i!i~;;:::=::;:----"-A;P•ICAN~ll;;; .. ;;_" __ .,.. ... -·· 'l•···· -- 'l ''IOUNOl!R" -- -.. ... "l l Nl!ATM THI .. LANIT O' TMI~·~··~·~·~-.... ~======------:: .. ,JUDOa~Y 81!1.N" SIAD/UM ? . .. -· .... . ----··· . .. "THI RPINCIRI" SFAOIUM ·J .. ... -·-···-··· ~ --_,, ... "PITI! 'Ill TILLll" ... SIAOIUM ·I .',. "PLAY IT AeAtN, SAMH ... ~ ...... ............ Atj,s1e.11•1111;a1,•1f1!,1•itf.1'il''''t'fl'''''!tfJJ'il@ilml / ( \ ~ter Sophia James OToole. I.Oren and C'.oco dream Tue Impossible Dream in an Arthur Hiller Alm "Manori: ID Mancha' "SOUMDER" ~ .. rrill-r ---1111f JIU 1llT Il·At IN IUI HD llltlL ................. ...... ...., .. .-....... ts .. lrlr1l 11 lllllll • II ..._. -P...-,.....New Yorktt~- Men and Women of AllAges ... Train for exciting career in medical, dental fields . . Enroll Now! Call 635-3450 • MEDICAL ASSIST ANT 7 Moftth Prclgra111 • MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST 4 Month PN:lgram "1lJ. • DENT AL ASSISTANT ~ ; Moooh .,..,.,. UP!TIM! PlA.C!MfNT A.SSllTANC1 Southtm C.Ufoml1 Collet• of Aco.clltM ff,.._ NetlMOl AIM. efTtMt & TKll~leel klteR'9 1717 Soutll lrookhurtt, Anaheim • 63~0 7:00 ' 10:10 A•• "LAST· SUMMER" 1:01 4 ....i 111 S... MathlM,~ 2 P.M. . KIDS LIKE • . UNCLE LEN Has This Planet Been Visited? 81 JERRY BUCK "Von Daniken ls a romanUc are ancient drawlngS and HOLLYWOOD (AP) _Man schoJ1r who uses sclcntlflc sculptures deplctll\g strange has visited bis close!t neigh-melhods to investigate roman· beings wearina wha t appear bor, the moon, and sent u,... tic ideas," said Don Ringe, to be space suits, a 2,00G-year· manned probes to other plan~ who wrote the narration and old clay vue, ln a Bagdad la codirector ot the a~lai. hlch · I I ets. Is It po88lble that the ,....... museum. w is a so an e ec-eartb itself his bad visitors "WUEN HE wrote the book tric battery, and maps made rrom out lhert? he stretched a Sot of points by Turkish Adm. Piri Reis in r-nnan wrt•·r Erich ...... which we did not feel w&re the tat century A.O. which ~ K: yvu provabJe. 'Ibere Is no way we Von DWllken says show the Danlken, author of "Cllar1ots could realistically present earth as It would have a~ of the Goda?" has saJd, "I some of them io the~ public. -A.i h h claim that our forefathers ~ What we did was take what ~i!~~ 0::.0. astronau Ls lg celved vtsltors from the uni-we felt could be substantia· Opinions 00 the subject of verse in the remote past, even ted." Intelligent Ufe in the universe thoull)t I do not yet know who Tb ...... In U le th lb ... extr.te-trtal ,.. telii·· e 3'1Vft ves ga s e will be voiced by Dr. Wernher .,...,. thesis that ancient astronauts B f I h d f gences were or from which influenced the creation of such von raup, onner Y ea o planet they came. 11 the Space CenJ;er at Hwits· V nlk , heo d things as lhe huge Easter Is-ville, Ala.; Dr. Harold P. Klin on Da en s t ry an land stone heads, Stonehenge, of the Ames Researeb Center some of the evidence he offers the Egyptian pyramids 8J1d of the National Aeronautics ls examined in an NBC spe-the Mayan calendar. and Space Administration, and cial, "In Search of Ancient Among the evidence offered Dr. Carl Sagan, a director of the Mariner miplon exploring Mars. RINVE, %1, something of a romantic himself, aald, "From the evidence I'm convinced there is intelligent life In the universe and {bat they have visited us in the past -ii they're not here now. ''Th('re are myths through- out history that gods descend· ed fro1n the heavens in nam- ing chariots and gave people beneficial gifts of law and culture," he said. ''Then they returned to the skies and promised to return some day." Astronaul3," Friday, Jan. S. ==================:=::=::'! ~~~~~~~ • •• ;. ' • • ' . •• ·: DTHONY QUINN YAPHET IUJI 10 Now Showing SHOWING NOW! -MmtONY FRANCIOSA ~l:i":;. Produeed by RALPH SERPE and FOUAD SAID Ell«llllv• f'iodu.:«I ANTHONY QUINN and BARRY SHEAR Saeenplay by LUTHER DAVIS 8-d upon the now! byWAU..Y FERRIS I I -......_] DittlCted by BARRY SHEAR R-...:.-::.~ A~ll.MC.UA•/..llTOllS.llfC.Plt!lDUCTlOM lllltllll .... -<D.Oll ---------- ORANLE c:lm3> llHIVt IN 'J ~-Artl Frwy. ""'ChlpfNn 0ro...,.541.9011, ORANGE co.H IT! "SUPER BEAST" (R) •llEMIEIE ENGAGEMENT STEVE ~ SOUIHCOAST \E!' PL/\l/\1 3410 lklltOI Su.« Cost• M-.. • 546-2711 PLAZA#l CO.HIT "HICKEY & BOGGS" &HOW$1WllfiKlNo l:lo•S~JI\. 'IVla c:(i l~A\l\f ·~11: [tlffilWNA llATID (PG) MATINEES ~AILY UP BA'ftltiTHE 1111 ~D DUST MOP OfTHEYIAI • Co-Hill Gene Hockman "PRIME CUf' {~ DEL SHOWING NOW! DAILY 2,00. 3:55 5,50. 7:45 & 9,~5 WEDNESDAY NIGHT" ll•keWedneldlyntghtyournlghttoutoul At Del Taco, Wednffd•Y n'aht lt TKO Night You pt tlx tatty Del T.COI for Just $1.501 Thtl Wednesday, dme thru for'I flmlty all• mHI you won't forg•L At price• you'll f-.cl hlrd to bell. I NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA Bristol (Pallaadff) at 4th St. and Campus Newport F'iiy. TUSTIN Red Hill Near Sant• Ana Fwy. "An exquisite Swedish film! Max Von Sydow and Liv Ullmann are outstanding!" -Judith Crist, New York "A bursting, resonant film, 'The Emigrants' has reverberations." -The New Yorker "Stark Beauty!" -Ptayboy Max von Sydow Liv Ullmann The Ellligi.ants Teclri:ob'I'9"' .b~-A :,,.,,,,i F"""*"ri l\od.c1<>n· F.,,. W.,,,..,S...AW.,,,..,Conmnco1klno~-~ .-~.... · ·THE ONLY "I ·~:ORANGE COUNTY 'ENGAGEMENT : STARTS WEDNESDAY ·DECEMBER 27 Dehnlrance A .10HM IOONMM N.i1 SWrtng JON VOIGHT. sum NQ.OS • PANAVISIOO• • Tuesday, Dtctmbtr 26, 1972 , J!mn D101 j! 1 Jll(W,OltT llACH • Oil, 3·8a~o WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT t~~· 6~ i ...... ,, .. 1o1 ~ ....................... / "Pete•ft'Tillie" ......... 11 ..... ,.,,. •• _.~··-·· '"°''rwJ'~'"'' ,,. ... .,., __ • '!!!) Matlnee1 Daily Sun . thru Sat. 2 P.M. CIOMCll For CNht- Sttartt Wed, 12/Z7 "ROYAL HUNT 01' THE SUN .. l .. SONG OF NORWAY" IGJ ;;J--- S TA It n WEDNESDAY Woody Al&n's "IYIRYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTID TO KNOW AIOUT SIX'' llotollS c .. ,....., .. "HOW TO SUCCEED WITH SEX" I RJ WINNlROF . 6 ACADI MY AWARDS INCLUDING DAIL V PILOT J 9 LET tho SONthlno Int Watch Channel 30 NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES EXCLUSIVE \ ORANGE COUNTY ANTHONY QUINN I YAPHET KDTT0 l 3:20 · 5'40'· I · 10:1S NOW -EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY GENE KACKMAN ERNEST BORG NINE aro BUTIONS CAROL LYNEY NOW SHOWI NG ' I " . . . J ... OAR.V PILOT l-.-26,1972 For the Reeord Births Marriage ~ens e s No Fault Supporters Optimistic Capitol News Service SACRAMENTO -' ' No fa.ult" auto insurance died on the final day of the tm legislative session, but its backers -including state Consumer A f f a i r s Director Jolm Kehoe -see that as a lost batUe, not a lost war, and plan to renew the fight. Sen. Alfred Song ol Mon- terey Park and Assemblyman Jack Fent-On of Montebello, both DernQCrats, promise to lead the action again. Song placed the blame for the last-minute "no fault" death on a rellow Democrat, George Moscone of San Fran- c~ but credited him with "an honest opposit.ion based on his years of successful practice as an attorney." Then Song added , "He is dead wrong." But Song had even harsher words about the s t a t e ' s lawyers, saying a group of them had been unusccessful , "desperate and clumsy" in of- fering one senator $5.000, then sending an influential assemblyman a "campaign contribution" of $1 ,500 three weeks after the eleetion but just before committee con- sideration of the plan. The money was returned. Younger W ants Vo te Si mplified Capitol News Servlct SACREl\1ENTO -As At- torney Ci.'Jleriil Evelle J. Younger puts It, "Boy, was I wrong!" not once'but twice:. The state's top lawman owned ht misjudged the abili- ty of the C8llfornla voters to cope wJlh 1 Nov. 7 ballot car- rying a muJUtude of can· clidatu and 1-. lie says he lllll hopeo, however, ta ,come up with • plan lo otmplify the 11tote '1 d«tlooproc:e ..... Be alao coacede1 his deportment bu been tak ing too much lime In llllng briefs ln ...., that go lo apPOal, and rac:a a thr<Hnonth bodtJot or wort In connection wttll tltiim. "We .._i.e." said the at· ......,. .....,..i. "that .. .,.. me fJi the cnntrfltu1'trl to the * .. . and .,. laidltf mp& 'to chango," by )ll)o IW'D'iatl ol!lce procedum and hicrnlliw the llilfl aY1llable lot work on 1ppeaJ1. Dissol1itions Of Marriage • • ..... - PllBUC NOTIOll ' I ... . . The . Best o,f the Orange Coast's •• •40 MILES OF CHRISTMAS SMILES!) COmpetltlon Co-sponsored by Orange County Coast Association and DAII,Y PILOT . . . . ~ ' ·' ' ' ~hristmasville 1972' , Brigh\est spot along the Orange Coast this Christmas season ac- coromg to judges of the traditional "40 Miles of Christmas Smlles" competition, is Huntingtoo Harbour's blaze of lights which comp- lement each evening's boat·parade. The water-oriented commuil- ity was declared "Christmasville 1972," the place v;Jlere Christ· mas iS happening this year along lhe Orange Coast. , . ' . 'Best Resi~e' Specially built "Santa's Workshop" on front lawn at the home of Alan Quinn family, 6601 Limerick Ave., Huntington Beach, is focal point of masfiive decorating job which became a family project. Toys, ,ftuaner-up Virtually filling the cul-de-sac lot on which the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Castle is located (86171 Hudson River Circle, Fountain Valley), this dis- , play has everything. Nativity scene, Santa Claus, ,laird Place. Subtly lighted from inside, glowing figures of a Na· tlvlly 1eet1e are arranged in front lawn of ' Robert R. SwanS<ln family, 26701 Pepita Drive , Mission games, Santa's chair and snow on the ground are among elements of clever display the judges award- ed first place. clowns and reindeer, all cut out of plywood, cavort all over the lawn and up the side of the house. It's second place winner. Viejo. Judges were captivated by tapedLClirts1m1s inusic and understated -charm ol thei reJ.igious dl!- play; counterbalanced by oontemporary elements. · ' Turned On Front DAILY PILOT Stiff""""' Seal Beaeh Comme1·cial Winner To San Clemt1nte Diamond-like white lights fill the Christmas fairyland that is Eschbacb's new florist shop in Laguna Beach. Tall green Christmas trees surrounded by poin- settias and other blooms of the season fairly drip with ornaments. William F..schbach credits his.son, Jack, with designing the display. oilce the home of the South Coast News, the building at 305 Forest Avenue has been totally re- furbiShed inside and out. Second Place Cost;i Mesa Civic Center, more colorful than in any Christmas season since its construction, was award- ed. second place in commercial displays. Red old English letters spelling out "Peace on Earth, Good Commercial 'l'latrd ,, Twinkling lights in trees lin!Jtg. Marine DrWe SO! the mood 'for Christmas on )l&lboa Island. Judifl awarded tho area third place In commercial dll- i Will to Men ," are set off by multi-colored strings of lights; face of building has green and orange spot- lights; Fountain are night-lighted in various colors. play• for.itreet decoraUOfl• coupled with lndlvldual window arrangements of many merchllllta who hm custom.de!ligned scenes for \he -;on. • ' ! 1 I 0 I • . -. ' . . . . ' DAllY PILOT 22 DAILY PllOf Tur~a:t. Oectmbtr 26, 197~ Everyone Hos Something lhot Som eone Else Wonts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Tredo It With a Want Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results ----------- [ --... J~[ -f.... I~ [ _,,,.. !@=~·.... I~ I _,,,.. l~I -'"'.. I~ I _,,,_ Gener i i ~i#-Slllid ~ MDASSOCIATIS REALTORS 2828 EAST COo\ST HIGHWAY CORONA D£L MAR.CAUf, 644·7270 * Delightful condo the Bluffs • Ill JN THE NEW SECTION -This Beautifully decorated (completely upgraded) 3 bedroom, formal dining room. a fireplace. 21h baths, 2 patios plus a solarium, on the gorgeous greenbelt .. $62,500. * AUSTIN-SMITH , GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS 644-n70 TO ALL OF YOU FROM ALL OF US May Your Christmas be joyous And the New Year Your finest Thl" area's top professionals are at your service. Gener1I Gttner1l LIKE GOLF? LEASE-OPTION 7 Patio of this lovely condominium opens onto the El Niguel Country Ch~b course at the 7th green. Only 6 mos. old, 3 bdrms., 2 baths & gourmet kitchen, incl. refrigerator. May lease with or without opttion to buy. $41,750 or $350 monthly. The area's top professionals are at your service. 4 U"'11001: l-IUMI: THE GRAND DAME OF OUTRIGGER DR. This 3 bedroom Lusk.built home is in beauti· ful condition, with lovely wall coverings, pa· tios, a sunny breakfast nook, handsome din· ing room and owned by one of the nicest ladies in Newport Harbor. She has wonderful views on life -and her home has a ni ce view of the Pacific. UNl9Uf HOMES OF CORONA DEL MAit, 615·6000 A lbtlJl4) of .Morjot'9 Moho• U~l()Uf: ti()Mf:S REALTORS 4 ~·cu: li()Mf .NEAT, TIDY AND TARDYI 'fhis home's tinie is long overdue! Spic and span four bedrooms (it even smells cleari) with a pool and a canyon view to the rear and, a private beach to the fore. All us Real· tors agree this is one of the best buys on the current market. But what about you, where are you? Give it a go, at $69,000, or. UHl9UI HOMO Of COIONA OIL MAI, 6754000 A lbtf119 of G ...... MOON U~l()Uf: ti()Mf:S REALTORS CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 General Ge per al #2 HARBOR ISLAND Lovely 5 BR., 51'> baths, waterfront home. Lge. living rm. & famUy rm., just redecor· a.led. Pier, float and sandy beach. Beautiful yard w /lge. shade t.ree & swimming pool. General THE BLUFFS LINDA PLAN $51,500 Very popular alngle level 3 BR. 2 ba.; beamed ceil'1. End unit. 0\.-enlzed, priv. paLio w/maximum privacy. Nes.r by pool. OK>lcc early arel\ with lowest leasehold &: laXcs. . ~. -. General ASSUME 5.l/4 °/o °"'nt.'r may carry a 2nd Deed of Tl'Ual to 11..llow the new buyer to keep lh111 excellent Jn1ere1:t rale. WeU Main· talned flre8 of Huntington Btlach. 3 Bedrooms, 1%. Baths. 1',lreplact'. Move·ln Condltiou. $32,500. Ca I J Anytime, 646-«iffi. ROOM TO GROW $75,000. 6 UNITS '1 Trlplexe1 • 2 BR ca. 2 Bungaklw units & " • Studio units with garaps plu11 xt1'(l ptu'tting. GROSS INCOME $11,7fi0/)'r. Stand In line for th.isl ' ., ... Fairvt.w 6'461Jl1 (onytlftlO) · ·. !. HERITAGE REALTORS Newport Heights Everything Everybody Wants I 3 bedroom. 2 bath, 2 ~ place~. den, eJectrle kitchen, 2 car garage oft private alley. Sprinklers front A rear. Only $48,900. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR c ~~~Mlalu~~ 5 * * * * * * General General IOlll.\ I [ Ol \O\ R£A l T O RS · TAYLOR CO. 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 67S-6161 Bedrooms. 3 baths, tn.mily I ~;;;';~..,;,..,!!!!!..,;,,,,!!!!!~,;,,;~~..,.,;,;;,;;;,;;..1 --~~~YcM;---rm. ollice, many, many MERRY CHRISTMAS e FROM e !General General Sell Your xtru. Swimming pool + Lawnmower wad"'• pool l87,500. * Morry ChrltlmM * HARllO!' BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB Beautiful near·ne\v 4-bedroorn 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. View of area & golf course. Priced right at $119,000. ''Our 21th Vear'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 Son Joaquin Hiiis Rood NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 'rt114tiN-Slllill- ~ MDASSOCIATIS REALTORS 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWM CORONA D£L MAR. CAUf. 644-7270 NEWPORTS PRICE LEADER Where else can you buy a 1650 square foot split level 3 bedroom, 2 buth home \1·ith large niodern e I e e t r i c kitchen, inforntal a n d fonnal eating areas. l~e living room 11•ith hiRh ceil· ing11 and fireplace, lan.:e utility rooms, 3 car ~aragcs, tee land, sparklin~ PoOls, garden settings and private streets for only $32,900? Call l;;Gon;;:•;r;•;l;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;•;n;•;r•;l;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;,ll~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~\61>-1225. G•n·~~RBOR V:~: HILLS -MERRY CHRISTMAS from )}tittingham Realty AEAUOAS 3336 Via Lido Newport Beach 67>-0I23 Ken Brittingham Roger Brown Margaret Meier Virginia Nash Lee Schonek Best buy in area. lrnmac. 4 bdrm., 2 bath single story borne. Large patio, room for pool . Newly redeco rated, View of bay & ocean. Low lease. $65,000. BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR . Builders Loss ! Your Gain! 2-Story CLOSEOUT • ONE 1-l 0 M E ONLY! VACANT! Gorg"llus 2-SJ'ORY BARG A IN ! Crackling fireplace. Step 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 do!LwYnRHOOving roon) end FAM· ''l"""'~""'""'""'""""'""'"'!"""'~""'""""'""'""''""i M. 4 qu~n si~ 1General General bedrooms. Laundry. Builder says $36,50(! • BUT YOU 1---------i OFFER \VHAT YOU HAVE YOU BEEN --THINK. Hu...,· H'o th• last SPECTACULAR "'e · oall 645-03<l3. LOOKING AT OVER PRICED COASTLINE IOHl.\I I. Ol'IO\ PROPERTY? VIEW LOT -SO'xlOO' hltlslde R·l buildin.I{ 1-;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;; ;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;111 ynu have, look at this 4 suitC' above Bo OM I NG General Genertl /'{A I ·u,q; MERRY CHRISTMAS Of all l\ie people .,.,.(' WRnl lo .,.,<ish this to. cer tainly our clients cornc high 011 thc list. But, the leadership given u." by our executives deserve our most heartfelt thanks. So, to Ho1A1U'd Richards. our President, to Jack Back, our ' ·Mr . Everything" and to Matl La.Borde, our District r.tanager, we extend our best wishe!I for a glorious holiday sea.son. Colwell Properties, Inc. 3425 E. Coast Highway Corona del Mar PLACE ON TOP OF YOUR UST Move into this charmlng 4 bedroom, 2 bath home. Walldng distance to beautiful park. Bu i J t • I n kitchen with large eating area. Covered patio. Perfect for all your ent·ertalning needs. Shop early lor this one. Priced at $28,950. 847..GOl.O. Ol'fN 11L II • rT'S FUN 10 8E Na/ ~ ! Tak£! \Yee k e nds off. 3 Bedroom Home Ev~rything takt'n care of -& BfueHaven Pool including la~'tl. roof. outside enclosed patio, storage for painling. pool, recrt!alional camper & boat. New tile &: COM~ANY ptirk and green rolling hills. crpls. new paint inside & REALTORS This lovely condominium ouc. l.fove In today. $26,500. SlNC:E 1944 with cathedral c e i Ii n g 8 • Roy McCardle Realtor I 673-4400 three bedrooms, t h re e baths, one bedroom down 1810 New)')Ort Blvd., C.1'1. ======~~=ti can be a den for $34,800. 548-7129 1 Call 646-7171. i"'~""'~!!!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!!!"'I PRIVATE BEACH Spacious Three Bedroom Just Reduced I \'fli"<inl lot nn 60' or white. sandy beach. Lovelv bnv view; ei:claal•• neighborhood. Now 111 UW: time to build! $42,500, Bill Bents COLDWELL, BANKER Realtors 644-KJO 833-0100 550 Newport Center Dt. ELEGANT LIVING -L>over I Shores lovely spacious. ~ bedroom 3 bath, fonnnl din- lng room. With pool. This i11 a spectacular home to entertain Jn. A large MBR suite nlake!I for con1forlltLle llvini. $85,000. It l\'On't last. This home feature!! separale M th bl I -of story borne. All bwlt-in ay e e11 "II formal dining room and ~-Christmas be with you convertible den. Roomy 2 • this day and remain kltchl"n, heavy shake i'OOI, -I I with you throughout the new paint and drapes. Ex· 1 1 I 1 I c e llen t Santa Ana CGmftl Jear. c"'.'~'."m'E~b"itTHY . TRI. HARBOR c . A. c &L~~~ORTHY & co. --REALTORS--o 640-0020 w;,h to "''""'' lh<lr ap-----1 preciatlon to their many * BEACH SPECIAL SNUGGLE IN FRIENDS for making um FOR WINTER a GREAT y<ar. L<t u• "''' 3 BR. 2 ba., 2·'1ory. Hlih Thla 'COZ)' home has a beautUu1 family room with fireplace to keep you warm all winter Jong. And a kitchen that Is Ideal for the cook. Extra large formaJ dining room. This 4 bedroom home is priced at only $35.00J. 847-fiOJO. oPf_N Tll. ll • IT'S FUN 10 BE MCEI make 1973 a BETTER year beams. Needs some worlc, for you. but pr1ced r ight at $33,900. CAYWOOD REAL TY * 548-1290 * $37,500 -POOL Exqul!l.te home, 4 bedrooms, large t a m I l y room, fireplace, wallpaper ao- cents, Brk. 540-1720. I• bedroom with large living DANA POINT MARINA. --:::;-~=--,,----I MERRY room. Completely remodel-Fabulous whitewater ocean The Perfect NEWPORT DUPLEX 3 Bdrms. down, 2 up. Shag carpeting, frplc. In Jower. Nicely decorated upµ er unit; dlthwasher A built.Jn11. 166.000. H ls°"MAS ed kitchen, new 11 h a g view to South .• Can nevt"r C R 1 ea""" U:"""" ''"' • "' °"'tru""'· only 120,500 Remedy For To all our swimming . All for only for a future dream home. G friend• & C"'1omen $28,500 tot '""'· Fw more PETE BARRETT rowing Pains! COSTA MESA ~ ~ INVESTOR'S PARADISE • 5 Separate homes nestled in on this h<0g< loo. Gr'"t tax '.icll the old stufl buy the new st ult. General TARBELL 29S5 Harbor, Costa Mesa General Call: 673-366.1 67S-8886 Eves. associated · BROl(ERS-llE'AL TORS l 02S W lalboo 61J·J661 NINE UNrTS f'rom the staff infonnation call 847.$110. Need 4 bedrooms? This one COLDWELL, BANKER Ol'fNm1-11s FVN10BENtCE• -REALTOR-is the perfecl rnmily home. Re~Ne$wpo3644.ml2rt,Cen800te~ ! 11~1111tl ~ §,~~~~~o~]; Douglal!!I good access to 4 Bedrooms, 21'°" batha, Jarie ~ by the Fireplace freeways. At $35,00J it won't family room, "" el<anfng SPANISH TILE i. what you g<t when >"ll IH t. Call tod'Y for ap- shelter and p otentia l grow!h. Each uni! with separa!e garage, yard and laundry area. Lots of privacy, convenience anrf at· mosphere. CALL us for full details. As.king $76.500. CALL 540--11$1 Open Eva. --! " HERITAGE ~~n1,~. place, Swim Poof. & BALCONY step Inside thls beautiful trl· pointment to sre. 847~10. _.,... ,...., ltWcl home. Extra large oPENTllll • lt"SrUNroBE1V1CE1 ~Har~. o.~ Meta ~1~.if~S ~~;li~~~] ! ,. 1 • li~l'll\ll bel~w $;4°~~~.1 .. 1 I iiiiiii;;ii;iii&iifiiiiiii;iii;;;j 3 Car iiaraa;e. Cknc 10 can buy this 4 bedroom Out of town owner wishes . . REALTORS TARBELL M"RRY CHRISTu •s Marlnen School In a.y. !tome for lea than $2,000 fut sale • Sharp 5 BR, 3 .. """ ..... u.n tO:IAI coat. $49..SOO. Call BA home, carpeted and Fixer Upper • Three Units locRlc<l on large Easts\fl(' CO!l!n Mesa lot .,.,·ith roon1 for 3 more units. Investor's delight With loads of ?Jten· Ual. Home needs remodel· Ing, 90 bring your hammc~ and paint brush. Call us for comP.lete detall11. but hurry, won t last long. 546-Slm (Open E\res.I , -HERITAGE . . REALTORS MACNAB IRVINE To All Of You C:n!•t. -·-· E 84'1"'6010. newly paint~. Newport From All Of Us PETE BARR TI CWNTl<•·••Ft1HroBE110CE1 Rohl Com Beach. Rcdue<d to 149.ooo.i """""B!!'e"""•!'!,::OH~o'"me""!'!,.'""" CORBIN · MARTIN -REALTOR-! 11~1:11·~1 IRVIN8° TEMcE Call ~\',;'.'~~ME•oont. "MAY THE SPJR!T OF CHRISTMAS AI.. WAYS FILL YOUR HEART AND MAY THE NEW YEAR BRING PEACE TO LIVE AND GROW IN FAITH, LOVE AND HARMONY, EACH WITH THE OTHER." AND ONCE AGAI~ MAY WE PERSON- ALLY, FROM TH"' BOTTOM OF OUR HEARTS THANK OUR WONDERFUL FRIENDS AND CLJENTS IN THE NEW- PORT HARBOR AREA. RHltor1 644-7662 '42-529ll -·-··-'--· Spaclo111 ' an "°""'· Noor 646.3t1e 646 4543 For Christmas SEASON'S GREETINGS 3038 E. Collst Hwy. ----.-. -_... 1 l rennil courtt;. Large LR. Tilere IA a reuon Cot'ONI dtl Mar ~---~ J'1\, kltc:hen. l!l?ftted pool . 18 yean same locatk>n CO&ATS 4 UNITS ~ BEST BLUFFS CONDO f,!;I~ ~"ia:."M=-* Vacant and l'<Old,y r .. )!<>ti' WWlant1 ~2-«13$. (1!181. Noor ToYnl • Coun fn tnape c:llon . Larp 3 ' ' WALL.ACE Onnae. Bls 3 BR, 2 ba. rteolty O:Jmpaey bedroom, family ro 0 m REAL TORS ownt.r'a wltrpl + 3 2·8 lt Spacious & G'aciou1 formal dlnl.nr area unJt. -54M141--GEM 5 Bit, 3 b<th, ~.tor)'. FormAI Complote bttllt·ln a •• '4U2JS 644-62911 $27 250 (Open Evenm,1J l.610 w. Cout Hwy., NB. Oft Beaut1fttl SPAnlth Wed kltchtn. t>Mtgntd for family , '":":~!'!"!~"!!'!'~!'!!'!~~\ REALroRS 641-4623 entry. Wrouah t iron livt::f and "°''°"" <n· PASS JUDGEMENT Eatate 3 bedM>IS • den 1'WALK TO SHOPPING * SEASONS inRlrrnse. $53,500. Lois Fcan ~zOlnB· Quick JlQllCll100. aner tn1pectlng' this Nfttuni br1c:k flttplace, ex'. 1"" OS Pool l aul)dedt. 3 GREETINGS * M<H;200. IUl9l. C. A.. COLESWORTHY '!Ov.i, 3 BDRM Back Bay ll'a b<tho, 54<>-l'OO 1 ==== BR + olc or den ~ 360 1q South c .. st R••ltors & CO homer with t1J.um1H~le ~-r-• nancJna ' ...... , rf!tu' yard Uke to trade? Our Trader'11 Macnab -Irvine JOHN MACNAB -------._,.- [Irvine I IOI Dovw Dfln 141·1UI 1144 lllaGArthur 14'•120I Hfttport ... ch, C.Uf0f11fe tt•h ~~ e~I ro~Q ~!1_'W; 54,S.8.424 Co1t1 Meat 642..a22S MU200 640-0020 with ioti ol~u tret1. Only Plll'ftdlse column 11 ror yoot 8f7-t2J6 or 84U5«). O...Wed Ada ... 642·56'18 I!!!!!!!!!!!.,...,,.!!!!!!!!!!!!,.. W1tt11 alt result& , 642-M78 S28.500. BKR. 557-4130. ~ llarbor, Calla Meaa i5~1l~no~o.j5L•~l'Y~•~f~or~5;J;btt;d<f•~· ~!.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ •• . DAILY PI LOT 3 Dectmbtr \, 1972 DAILY PILOT -'" ·- ~I -...... I~ I -"''* I~ I ~ H~I , .. ~::~ I~ I -!~I ""-•·-l~ I-;,,-J~l ·OM•""""'"""' i~ ~ .. ;;;,boa;;;;;;l•;lt;n;d;;;;;;;~ Con~ Mali . 1 :,;rvliiii,,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;~iii:l ~C;ondom;;;;i;lnmlmum;;1;;;.;;;;;;C;an;;;d~o·m~l;nl~um;;1;;;;,,;;;;~1;Bmum1l~nenm;;iiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~~H~ou .... ·.~U~n~lu~r~n;.;;;~:llll~l~A~pt~.~U~nl~u~r~n.iliiiiliii~36S~~A~pt~.~U~n~l~u;m;.;;;;;;,;;36S~I --.. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; -;'°;r;;'";~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;;;'°;;;;;;;'°;;;';;;';;;•;;;l';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;'°;[:~o~~~jun~ityf.:~~200~-[icf .. ~-,~·?-M~·~-.. ~--~L-~~-~-~~!1~·Go~~n~•-r~•1l~~~~~~~~~~~-Go~~~-..,~~-,;-1~.---~--~~--~--.11 OLDER & clumnlng 3 Ur, Don't Pay RUTGERS MODEL • MUST SELL NOWll 111 ba, new crpt, ll'ttlbly Th La dlord Spacloua 3 bdrm. 2-sty. 500D "I· IL lood. ,.,.., oockt l. SH, ARP, CLEAN, 3 pointed. °"""'· 67l-l48S. • n townhouoe. on i.. land, with WALNUT SQUARE tse. & banq, rm. O"'""' BEDROOM. La r g e Corona def Mir ~ r=s t~f.'O~~r . !!;~ t1cinlC gtff'.nbelt loc. Im-Cty. nr. s.o. and Gutt:!. r:r. yard, children o.k. a loss? But have the easy mac. cond. Jh111 had lots of Frwy. Din rm. & t-«kt L $210. per mo. ~ no fee. VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. f •ENJOY THE GOOD LIFE! lil . h'-Id I tender, loving C4l'e both ln· Lge. piano bar.dune(' n. II . n.ait O:ncr!~ip 12 ~bed~~ C:n. side & ouL $53,500. HOLIDAY SPECIAL area sepatftted. 4 , ba.nq, "-"~'rlttla5gle, nc ors. domlnlum neur the beach. rm.·Pvt. enlr., rest. rms. & """'" Wtth private poolll and lante e red h·.11 cocktl. bar. Seat 60 in din.12'-B-R-.-.-fnutg-.-.-re-.-.-fO'p-lc-.-fncd- ree room. Just $1,LOO down rtn., 60 cock'll. ~a. 100 yard, garage, $225 all util find $230.00 1~r mm•th LAST CONDOMINIUMS banq. rm. old liq, lie. Owncc pd ,.._.750 P.1.T.J. 646-71TI. mw.;I sell l!n1ned. bccnWK' Qfl c""'-'-0~=·=--~= OPEN TIL 11. 1rs FUN ro BE NICE/ REALTY PHASE THREE other bw;. oul ot county. l.rg .. Vaca.nr-Oean. 2 Bit. I ~ A company with Vision Call for appt. days (2131 Patt<>. $14.>. 97• •••• Univ. Park Center, Irvine 879-9385-nlt" & wk ends. Rent·A·House ~ Call Anytime, 83.l--0820 • No Clos.Ing Cosh t213J 7~1108. H untington Beach OINce "°""' 8 AM to 6 PM e FrH UP11rldo Carpal NEWPORT BEACH • Immediate Possession Fountain Valley Turtl• Roe~ Broadmoor e $1000 Moves You In n~~ eC:~f::~ ~rm & IMMED. OCCUPANCY Furni1htd & Unfurnished Adult Living Dishwasher color coordinated appli ances • Plush shag carpet . mirrored wardrobe doors- indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar .. huge private fenced patio • plush landsca~ ing • brick Bar-EJ..Qucs • large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioning. 3101 So. Brl1tol St., Santa Ana 557.1200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT 1-------'----No. 4 plan. By owner. waterfront location. 35 Yr. New 3 Br $250. mo. 'jjj~P!if!ili!Mii'I OWNER, La Linda model, • 833-2389 Santa Ana Fwy. to Culver, right about 1.4 old company. Space avail. Dbl garage, dshwshr Bil, 2 BA. 3 car gar .. 1 sty, lfvlnt Terrace mUe to Walnut (1st road on left), left 1 mile tor boat sales & repairs. 334 Portland Clrcle, i-f.B. 11 ~) 360 Costa Mesa SMART STYLE lt'arbor View Hills, highly desirable loc. 4 BR, den & f()l"m. DR. VnnLult cover· lngs. Lush carpet. Serving bar to large putio. $79,50(). Gary Knox ''~I.DWELL. BANKER Realtor& ~2430 833-0700 550 Newport Center Dr. l)>tc, air, $43,000 968-8452· to "Walnut Square"; or San Diego Fwy. to BILL GRUNDY RLTR. 53"8188 -··- Huntington Btach OPEN DAILY 1_5 Culver, left about 3 miles to Walnut. right to 67~161 3 Block• 10 Boach Casa de Oro [;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. Big Canyon c.c. No U "Walnut Square" or call 714 /551-4041. LIQUOR LIC-On Sale New crpts, drps, 3 BR, form Condo I I ALL UTILITIES PAID $16 900 Hermitage Laue; Tues., rTypewriter repair/sales dln rm, dbl gar. m n ums Cnn1parc before you rent ' " C · ' "-ff ho t a~ ~ s H Bch Unfurn 320 Custom design1..-d , featuring: Wed., Thurs. ome 111. \..U ee s p, ertns . . . 4--> .,,d t., tg. . • . . . 1 BR CONDO, just right tor Make otter. 4 BR . HOLLAND Bus, Sales 536-8334 or 5.16-8188 1----------• Spacious kitchen v.•1!h Jll· ~de:x!ii::'" ~~ ~: % Complete. Better than new. tn6 Orange, CM ~170 2DR, ele'c bltin R/O, FA ht, Huntington Beach • ~r;:a11:~~~~ area drps like new, cherry kitch $1l5,000. Fee Land. Paul ~iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii;; Money to Loan 240 w/w crpts & drps, dbl gar, 2 BR. Condo. Crpts, drp5, • Jlon1e·like storage & din rm. Price alao inc QuCOickLDWELL BANKER fenced & landscaped. Xlnt frpl, patio. dbl gar. I'll'. • Private pa!ics refrig, wsht & dryr. Min Realtors ~2430 83.l-O'lOO 1st TD Loans Joe. $200/mo. Ac T: beach. Pool prlvL $215. • Closed garage \11/storagl' Sff>O dOwn. Paymts $113. 550 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach C.ondomintum1 962-4471 or 546-8103. ~64~>-_1~85~-'-·~-~---• Marhlc pulhnan pays all. Ideal for single for 1ale 160 6,, % INTEREST 3BR 2BA, clec RIO, FA ht, Newport Beech • King·sz Bdm1s person, close to shopping. Pen. Pt. Oceanfront '14 o w/w crpls & drps. dbl gar, 1--'--------e Pool -Barbcqu£.•s . sur· To see call. HURRYI Chance or a lifetime to pur· CONDO SPECIALISTS -2nd TD Loans [ncd. ldscpd. Xlnt Joe. BLUFFS . Bay!ront, outside rol!-nrled \.\'Ith J)!Ush land· So *.ofH•D..,.U 2 P&LDeEnXplus *new ll Beat Jan. Rufh chase this prlme · of all HAVE ONE TO SELL? WE $229/mo. ACT: ~not• unit. 3 BR, 2¥.i BA, frpl, srap1ng. oceanh'ont locations for the CAN DO IT! WANNA BUY 54&-8103. cust. decor, drps, c....,ts, Adul! li"ing at its best Low, -one floor house with ONE WE VE "~M Low O ~ . " ~Riood0~e:ie~~~ .bunt. A 531·5111 <=> 531·5111 ;~~~~·r~ ~1:~~~'0~1~~ ~~~ ~e:;i11T~~~~11:~ic! vA. ?FHA ~%. 2':3i& 4 "WEa8eUvT6~s"'~· v:.,t~~Pre~~ ~B;~~ ;f~;r:tiow~~ ~x i.s~ Li\R~~ ~~~ si90 ST1.500 Ba's. Sit in front or the the ocean & harbor en-BEDROOMS. IN ALL Sattler Mtg. Co. Marina High dist. $300 mo. Balboa Island. ~2. 365 \V. \\'ilson 6-12·1971 MORGAN REAL TY $15,750 3 BR 2 BA fireplace "'ith roses. Irvine trance. A rare listing at ~= 16°~E~.7 ·~~ 642•2171 54>0611 846-0136. Duplexes Furn. 345 WEEKLY-MONTHLY 613-6642 675-6459 S:!.e~.neW~~~o 8:~ns~=~ TCQJi~Li.~SJ'1~ $UO.~! realty, inc. 96&-44()5. Serving Harbor area Z1 yrs. 4bl~~. ~·pc>CJcrt~lu='. Newport Beach Executive Suites DUPLEX-BY OWNER and drapes T/O. Pretty Realtors 644-2430 833-0700 Income Property 166 2nd TRUST DEED LOANS $225. 548-1405. 2G80 Newport Blvd . 108 Larkspur, remodeled & tree-lined street. Take over 550 Newport Center Dr. JONES Will Buy Trust Deeds . =c.c,""'-.,,.----,,-,,... FURN lBR, 1 or couple pref, Costa Mesa ~-dy to mov" in. Shutters, the VA Joan. 1164 per mo. I ~"""""'!!~"'!'""""""""[ """':J'YINC. 4 • U Fanta1tic Tustin •BROKER 642--7491 * Si~les or Famihe~ -2 Br. 11811 36th St (off Balboa 642·2611 '"""' .. l' Aa:./'U., =,_:===-__.:;=-="-'-' 1_pr1v hOme has swim pool '2 • •• &Meautiful new kitchen, bath pays 811. Lagune Beach FSCIM6 $64;000 F.P. $6400 Down Mortgages Rant·A-H0use 979--8430 B~vd nr bch) $135,~water pd, STUDIOS & 1 BR'S • carpet. Open Sun 1-5. NEAR McFadden & Newport ' wmter lease. 67<>--1972 or e FREE Linens $66.500. 673·1658: 675-7616. OCEANFRONT cm> sn-e210 Freeway, terrltic iocation. 1 :~T~r~u~st~Dold~~·~~~2~60~1~1r~v~in~e~~:;;;::;~;;;[~'~all~o~wner~~2~13-~791H~~356=·~ e FREE ut1littes COMMUNITV 200t W.B.a-Blwd. 6'h years fresh. Gross In· --Duplexes Unfurn. 350 e Full Kitchen SHORECLIFFS IWaltors 545--0465 LGE. family home, ocean· ""'°'1a..th•Clllllolnili92860 come 7860 based upon 3 •'le"' e Heated Pool $69,g)(I Delivers view of ()pen Eves l'ront neighborhood. 5 BR., 3 bedroom {$210) 2 bed ($160) Housel for Rn II ,e ) i :~: ~ ~. ~1i%-':'::k :: i285 Balboa Island e Laundry Facilitib ocean & can)'OI'\ plus 2 BR, ba., H~ living rm. , 4 BEDROOMS After fixture expenses and 3 BR 2 ba 1325/375 • TV & m•'d ·-· avafi •-Id t It $19 750 /frpl --• d' loan paymonts •°"". "'~hn". ~iliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiliiiiimiliiio\ ' · ••• ·.··'' Ll'ITLE Isl · brand new ... ..... • uen, o er -c ean • we ' • w c. 01-uuu in rm. FAMILY ROOM . ..-~h,..h 3 BR. 2 ha. Atnum •••• $340 l So ba 2 B. 2 e Phone Service cared for expandable home. 2 BR. 2 BA. 1 yrs new. Lgetrall. well eqlocui~~ ~~~hen. uled cash spen ble w 1c 3 BR. 2 Ba. Atrium •..• $365 ower, nr · y. 1., I~=-,~~-_,,..,,....._,,.. Nothing comparable In \Jpgntded w/w crpts & cen y a""". ......,..rea· POOL ls 13.37 cash plus 8.34 equity Houses Furnish-' 300 4 BR. 2% ba .•••••••••• S425 Ba, pal~, gar. frplc, si c NEW apts for adults ol'lly. CdM. Bob Yorke drps, all elec bltin appl's, tion rm. Over 3,000 sq. ft. on buildup. Total return 21TI. 6 BR. 3 Ba. lam. rm ... $47S oven, dish/w. cust decor, Balconies, fireplaces, beam· COLDWEU., BANKER FA ht. JWal pr 1de .0 f . one level, surrounded by Cha.rmirlg custom bu i I t All this and a swimming Balboa Island drps, crpts, lse. $400 mo. cd ceilings, wood paneling, Realtors 644-2430 833--0700 ownership. one blk to major nice garden & patio areas. home on Peachtree Lane: pool too! 1;:;;;;;:~_:.;.=.;;...----1 Owner Box 255, Balboa carpeting, drapes. Reerea- 550 Newport Center Dr. shopping-see today. A very functional, well dining rm., large family Contact Richard Van Wert 2 BDRM cottage, partly furn, Island. Hon building with pool. I' planned home. Room tor nn., 2% baths. Modern bltn 645-4048 ~2 garage. Yrly $ 2 5 0. Balboa Peninsula I-Urn & unfurn. Bachelor & Colla Mew pool. $9'1,500. island kitchen, bltn. deep Couple only. 675-0471. 1 lxlrms. trom $135. 140 W. 1;:;;;;.:::c..;=.;.;;..-----* ~2800 * fr~ze. Beautifully decorated Elmore Company Lido Isle 2 BR, den, 2 oo., bltns, \Vilson {Just \Vest of New· All This For 962-4471 ( :=) 546-1103 .... ~ & landscaped & a covered Real Estate Div. dshwshr, wshr/dryer. '12 port Blvd.) $ 950 -¥: patiO beside a 11park!ing O W C WINTER RENTAL: Until "SINCE 1946.. blk bch & bay. $325 mo. yr. El Puerto Mesa Oleck into2~8 roomy 1100 $32,500 4 BR 2 BA ""¥? ~ ~~(. $52:. '46·241• This me~ns• the• o..:ner will i~ J?1~:73pe; !~ O~ni ~~i:;~=~~mP~I~~~ ~Pt ~~w~~~lS~r 1 BR's -$130 & UP 111, ft. 4 bedroom, 2 bath In Beautiful Colle1!;e Park ._._.....,.c-w 9"'-" carry a first T.D. on these BmeR,. dBARR<n &E'IT2 BAREAL$325:..eer Days 552-7000 Nights , ,c213=/863~--'1008=·-----Unfurn. & Furn. family room home with a near Harbor Sh o PP in .It .......... four stores in an Aloha Beta ,, i. 1Costa Mesa All UtllitlM Peld private office, room for ~::_r. ,..<:.f.t. Ji1\~h N1 FIND • • • a&AL ;\? shopplngll04"ooonter. ~13 • 2 ~ 0 * 642-5200 * Pool & Recreation campers, boats or whatever. d~:ri'~A'-FH'l or Y~~e~a.-n~ this b rt g ht 1 y de(.'Orated N••r Ne•p•rt P••I Oft Ice ~ss675-7225. as I'll'! price 3 BR. 2 ba. bonus rm .• , $400 LARGE 2 BR Duplex, cpts, 1959 Maple Ave .. CM A perfect home tor large it. New on market • better blt·in kitchen a pleasure to Dover Shores ~ ~ewport Beach 2 BR. 114 ba .••••.••.•• S225 drapes, bll·ins, washer , Also garages for rent family fnon,.._-1.._~e~ Ra1o:1 hutTY' cook in. Charming living I II ••11 WATERFRONT • PIER & 2 BR. 114 ba. Air Cond .. $265 dryts'.'·11¥.o""'. "A"~""~~e. No Huntington &each Street \..Ulll(l esa. y . room overlooking private . y• Ii~ ~~J"Tl FLOAT 3 BR formal din-2 BR. 2 Ba. •··••••••··· SJOO pe <J ~~ • $29,950. Call 613-8550Be NICE/ patio area 2 Bdrms 1 iew . 2 ·bat~ w/w crpt 3 BR. 2 ba ...•...•. $325/360 $195-New 2 Br Easts1de. $145 . $165 OFfNo/' IT'S FUN ro ! bath. Terrific location, .. ler-Unique custom built hOme, P.Y, .. 4,.· • . ~ r · dbl ~ Yearl~ 4 BR. 2 ba. Broadmoor $385 Crpts, drps, priv yrds. 292 Bachelor & 1 BR, patios, II Realtors 545--9491 .1. . all Ro w·1 3 BR, formal dinlng, family f • le"!., ''o.·ty. Fu•ni .. '--" el"JVI 4 BR. 2 ba, fam rm ... $400 E. lSth. 64&-0087, ~-1763. f,...lc's, priv. g•-•"' • I :iiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOi [ n 1c price -c n 1 -room, 3 car garage. Must ~ " • "''""" ...,.,,.. .,. .... ..,., OPEN EVES Iiams. $41,950. be seen to be appreciated. su1s101A1Y 01 TK! eot.wnL co. mo. Unfum. $450 mo. No i ed h•11 Huntington Beach Divided bath & lotll ot suo 000 TAX SHELTER pets. Pete Barrett Realty. r I closets. Rec hall, pool &. $995. MOVE IN 0 I,,,. ' i:a11 646-3255 50 UNITS 642-435.1. IMMED. OCCUPANCY !:1 \~;1"~';t ~~i Canyon View Vacant 2 BR. 2 BA, elec e~,,,, $639 M \VALK to Water on all. 1 Br Ne1v 3 Br ap(s $250. mo. Keel.son Ln. {1 b1k w. of d ruo: etrty livn rm wtbeaut REAL EST.'A:J'E 32 UNITS Bach $95. l Br dplx vu $12.1. nEALTY Dbl go....,,..,, dshwshr Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). CUte 3 bedroom. Ito o fir·to-ceil white brick fircpl. ft 2 Br h5e $175 Util pd I · ~ _, .. carpets, paneled I i v In 't w/w crpts & drps, lots of 1190 Glenncyre SI. $395 M Rent~A-Houie ni..7330 U~il ~;~;;_~t8j~ii)ne 334 PorU5'ft •Cl188rcle, H.B. 842-7848 fOOOl, Iarae fenced in ya.rd closet & cupboards. s yn 494.9473 549-0316 15% down. Westside C.M. .,._..,. -~fEN . Small beach hotel. 'w\th a canyon view. CUI-de· new. Xlnt low-priced below -FOR INVESTOR BACHELOR Unit, walk toi<O~tt~i~ce;,,;;ho~u;n~&~A~>~f~to;,;,6~P~'~' \iijj'/lj~f'l'~~~G::f:I Apls $85/mo. Rooms aac stttet. All this for mkt at $21500 FAMILY ••• • GOOD MGMENT wtr.,$95. AlsoOceanvudplxl! . DUPLEX 3 BR, 2 BA, newly $21.50/wk. 536-7056. $24.750. Call 646-7171. ' . • . , enjoyment is all yours Harbor Vi•w Homes Sale/Exchange Up. $125. Utll pd. on both. On Ma.)Clr green be It ,' painted. Bll·ins. Lrg fncd MOBILE home, 2 Br. 11ti ba. , OPf.N 1'L 11 ' rrs FUN roBE HICE/ I' in this delightful 3 bdrm., 3 Portofino Model w/pool. 3 6T3·5221, 673-7670, 645-2379 979-84:1}, Hanover model, 3 br, l% yard. Children & pets ok. sv.·im JJOOl, golf. Adult park, ' ' • ••71 ( -) ... •10• Bclrms., 2% ba's, J\.1any Houses Unfurn. 305 lease until Sept. Bus. H.B. Apt A. 962-9788 no pc s. . II ~ bath hornc. Beautiful dining Ownr/Brk ba. Cathedral ceil. For $190/mo. 17582 RolCllilne, t 536-1706 t , 96_._ ....... __.., • area for your entertaining upgrades. Very clean. Short INVESTORS ;...,.;-'-'--------1833-1010 ask for R.M, Can· ' WALK to water $45 mo. Al.o pleasure. Situated on large. escrow possible. $67,900. TWO 4.PLEXES. xlnt return, General non. Resid. 552-7835. Newport Beach $80 Kids ok. Both Utll pd. comer Jot, prestigious loca· Howard Wells 979-8430. ""UICK CASH tion. Call Bryan Mace. COLDWELL. BANKER only $47,500. each. $4750· L NI 1 NE.WLY decor -3 BR, 2 BA, ** 00 YOU WAN'T' ** T $52900 Realtors 644-2430 833-0700 do\vl'\. Call 842·1418. EASTBLUFF aguna gut Sivedish frpl. 1 blk ocean. L•gun• Bffch Home? Investment? Trade? Vour equity in 24 hours. Call . .A(J. 550 Newport Center Or. • PAm • Separate house, unusual YEARLY 10000 NEW 2..,.. 2 Yearly. Child ok. $250. ~~~\~Ur B~. poo831~ CALLror Im=· appointment. O 1,,-.,. w_IAUCu·~-' Jarg~ 4 bedroom or 3 & den. Ba. on Golf' Course. ""$Joo 642-8520. _ BACH nr bearh Sl.35-$155. Col e,~1 ~ HARBOR View H 0 mes , -Family ~m plus large mo. Call 675-200(!. I~~~~~~~~~~ tv. 1435 N. Coast • Open frplc, cust blt , c:pts.drps, •• :J'E Bl d HB formal d1n1ng room. Com-i~-~~~-----Eves. 6T:>--436'7, 494 -2508 bllns. EA~IDE. lo down, · .. ., . REAL EST.'A' popular Monaco 2 BR + 17171 Beach v ., . . cl M V d ~ o•• ,. 1 ed plete privacy with en osed eta er • I I • ~e,..ve"•~--,.-:--,----•~.500. u1~ht take 2 br den. All extras. mm · lndu1t·1·a1 Pr-rty 168 d 1ro l -~ Lo I • a-•·for Rent •• ~ "'-'6 U90 Glenneyre St. Occup. Fee land. Open 1·5 • -I"'.. rear an n Ytuus. ve Y ,.pir '"""""" 1 ,N-'-ow_,_po_r1_11aa __ ch ____ 1 ntobile horrre in local area 494-S47'J 549-0316 2024 Port Provence Pl. J.5: garden. Available December * IMMEDIATE Occupancy I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.·;;;;, 1,. OPEN HOUSE DAILY !!!!!!"'!'!~~~"!":':!'""~ * SAN DI EGO * 15. No pets. $475 per month. -3 BR, 2 ha, $250. Option 4 BR, 2 ba., 2 car encl 337 Magnolia St.. C.M. OPEN BEAM PRICED RIGHT! 644-6249; Eves, 644-0.196. Industrial bldg, $125,0'JO Dn. Cal 67'"=" "'°3688 posstble J Lockert Beatty II I I ,,.OJ<JO or.,....,.. · RI E. · 0~0_,,..,A, • Apts F 1 nri. park:g. w ndry. Avai. now . 2 Housel __ ,. 1 / . Big ocean view! 3 Bdrm., Duple'Xe11 near the ocean Total $506,000. Prime Ioc. S , G • tr. ves: ~· • urn. .-u 3 BR, 2 ba·furnisbed Stepll to f=.img, Jrg am rm \\' cir· 2 bath home with beautiful Milet Larson, Realtor 20,800 Sq. Ft. Triple net eason S rHl•ngs N I B h 1~ Both only $32,000 cular fireplace, 2 BR, lrg view of ocean & hills.. Lge. * 673·8563 * lease. Prine. only. Owners to our many landlords & ewpor eac Balboa Penlnsule ocean .. • ···" •• •· ···' ••J Xln't rentals or live In 1. !iv rm, newly redec profly, tel'\Mts, both present & 3 BR, 2 Ba •••• ··' •••• • S285 ("-nl th• o••--) 2 BR each. mature ldscpg, Ira cor Jot. living & fam ily rm. w/frplc. Newport Heights 640-0330. P. 0. Box 409, . W ill •-THE BLUFFS • ....,.,,. Wk Ir: Up On Ocean 2 BR, 1 Ba , Penin ••···· $250 n.<: "' uJ<;.L ... Attached 2 car garage. Nice Corona {lei Mar, Gal. 92625. prospective. e w = ., .. ., We Have Winter Rent.ab Private yanls, see first-at $26,900. patio areas. Easy-care land· closed Sat, sun & ~ton. Lovely Bach • l BR-Rooms Will -··· s··•·n•-428 Hamilton St.. then call: Leadership RE 8424466 ST LISTED I I Real Estate o T oe ~th ING J\.1aid Service· Pool· Util Pd i _., \uuo: \a sea.ping. A jewel at $49,950. JU pen ues.. c. ..., · CAREFREE LIV e Call 675-8740 e Also Oceanfronts AvalL ~64'°2~-l"OliO"oiC-f -"in"lero""'";=ed~·-,.-NEW ENGLAND COTl' AGE * 499-2800 * NEWPORT H E I G H T S . I --"E;.;x;.;<;;.h;.;a;;.n,,go;t ____ l_8_2 rested & ready to give you ... IN NEWPORT'S CALL: 673_3863 OCEAN View_ New custom ~ 3 BRs, cozy fam rm.. Sharp 3 BR. & large tam. our perso nal service thru A\VARD·\\1tNNING COZY spae 1 BR, close to home. 4BR, 2¥.:BA. Fam. & forml din rm.. adde d ·-~ ~ rm. w/stone fireplace. New Exchan9e Lm. COMMUN ITY ocean. Z13t943-~ or 14403 associated dining rm. Cpts, drps, modem bltins in kltch -OG ~ carpets. SUPER LOCA-UP ALA Rentals e 645-3900 * 3 BR, 2 Ba. trl·leve\ $350 ManecHa. La Mirada. lndscpd $52,000. 646-5516. w/breakfast nook. Perfect ._ eo. OONif Hwr: TION • near everything. LANDLORDS' * 3 BR, den. 2·s!y , , , . $400 I Bedroom, newly decorated BROKERS-REAL TORS 202S W Balboa 67l-l66) BY Owner. 3 er, 1 Ba, fncd house for antiques or early A1t1ota.=.'=C1W.1. Owner anxious. A low Four units near complete • * 4 BR, 2\' ba. vacant $-125 S165 yearly. yd, cov patio. $750 dn. American furniture. Bkr. $43,SOO. Bud Austin shopping area. Located in \l.'e Speclallze in Newport * 3 BR, 2 ba. View •.. $500 673-9591 $225/mo. $23,500. 833-U03, 962-55ll. Ocean View • $38,900 COLDWELL. BANKER Lennox. 10 minutes lo Beach e Corona <lei Mt.r e * 3 BR, 2\.2 ba. "New" S525 Corona del Mer eves 642-2312. REPOSSESSIONS Large 2-Sty. 4 BR & den on Realtors 644-2430833--0700 beaehf.>s. 5 minutes to L.A . & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· * 3 BR, 2¥.i ba., custom $525 --------- $29.50 Per Weck & Up. l BR, 2 BR & bachelors. Color TV. maid serv .. pool. The Me&a, 415 N. Nev.1>0rt Blvd., N.B . 64&-9681. F . f !lo d 1 tlo 11h Lots. Slidlng doors lrom •"'!'550"'!'N"e"wpo!!:'!rt~Ce!'!!n!!te!!'~°'"'!'·"' [ Ai1rport andH 1J1'~:..J pfe~ vice is FREE to You! T[j! Furn, avail. to $600 Mo, 2 BR., I BA. Uti\ Pd. $200 or 1n or:ma nan oca n ndeck Bl l&I d m nutes to o ,............. an• N v· • M ·ro Cpl of these F1!A & VA homes, ~~npt~ su kit ch.' 3!,~~. * * $32,950 * * Race Track. Owner will ex· NU.ViEw RENTALS Short or long term ~~i·s.\"1~rlyrow. ~13. . contact • .__ b · change. Price $51,00J. Call ""AS fy.,. I N drapes. No u.:tter uy 1n 4 BR + Maid's or guest rm. 673-4030 or 494-.u>1 ,:;.. ,C_o_s_l•_Mt_sa _____ _ KASAI A all the "village." Pecky paneling, shag carp. ~~MEN'l' OJVlSlON ; 1 - Real E1tate 962..4644 MISSION REALTY 494-0731 Most outstanding buy In :s 108ENICEI c:. t ~;_~ 111 .. £1' LARGE 1 BR. $145/mo. + 1'-Ai'¥IOUS Dean Garde n l·L;;ldo;;;;";M;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I ~ll~1Q:C~A.;°Pk!OP. oPEN nLll•" FUH ~ UfS \ .. : ..a!!JJ c::~il. ~~ &&sho~·~~~ Home •. ;A" Model w/pool.1 1 * 642-7491 * I ! (" rcnll}' El Camino. Apt]., c. f.1. $47,000. Owner. 968-4622 or LIDO l'SLE ~~.· ~1:11. 642-0844 BEST BUYS South Laguna 2414 Vista d('! Oro l~"i;;:...cw°"'K;.;c&~U~P~.-s"1-oo"l-o-,&~l 2 BR lower duplt-,: • 1 blk to besch. Yrly or winter $22.S or $250 mo. 130 -46th St. See Nov 24-26 or p h o n e. 213~-4215. Irvine Enjoy Lido way of Jlfe Ne-.1•port Be11ch . BR Apts. incl linens. dait)' I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I private beaches, lennis & JOS. Laguna V iew Lots r..t+IL\1 ANYTTl'olf, 1na.id !!('rv, 1J1il, ph. setv., NEW & NEAT club. 1. Charm. 3 BR. best on So. Coast Hlway. Fine * ~uick Cash * Corona del Mar --EASTBLUFF children & pct sect. 2376 SEACLIF~~ l'o1anor Apt a . Bnl'hcklr apt. Utll Pd. Sl48.50. Pool. l52S Placentia Avro. Ai<k about our dis- cuunt. 548-26f\2. 2 Oceanfront I-room aptJ. $90/$100 YTly, util lncl. 6T':rl241. d bu 1 toe. $71,500. 2. 4 BR. 2-story, ocean view. Steps to great ,,. ---------Seplll'ht c house, Un us 11 n I Newport Blvd., 541Hr755. Only d6 mdos. ol ' td l'&s big master suite $76,500. beach. A whole blk., develop Will buy )'UUr property. A!J 3 BR. 28A, BLTINS, lnr"<' 4 t)('dt'00111 or 3 & den. * $25 PER WEEK * alrea Y e co r a I e CbarlenE.' Whyte ho nd min! cash within T2 hrs, Coll KITCHEN & "' landscaped. All pleasure & • mes or co 0 urns. Fa1~1i1)' room plus largl' for· & Up. Pool & maid seivicl'. no work in this 3 bdnn., 2 <X>LDWEU., BANKER $286,500. Call George Grupe DlNING RM. mnl dining mom . Completf' Kitchens avail. Motel Tahiti bath highly upgradt!d, low Re~1Newpo~a!~e~ COLDWELL, BANKER ~~~..:6;;73-c.7507~~~~-I prlvnc·y 11 llh ,,r>1·lose<I rtar corntt 1-larbor & Victoria. mail'\t. hOme. $41,950. JWaltonN-·,!;!tC2430l ~ 2 BR. Frplc. Patio and front ynrrt11. l.ovt'ly NE\" 1 & 2 BR' rrom Sl!lO 10 The OCEANFRONT, 3· BR, 2 BA. !plc. call Bing, d A y B ~14Hl and eves. 6Th--2!H9 Apt. Unfurn. 365 550 .,..,....,,' en er"''• S.l95/mo. Ph : 548-812-t Rnrrl(•n. 1\vnll ahlc Decctnbc•r ·• 11 • * Choice * ~-~~------1 l' Nn Jlt.''~ Sfr.i per month $210. Nt. he1tch & shop ~. Nord comer lot. 5 B<lnns., Costa Mt11 (~~ll 613-si' or 54f,.3ll.lli!. • 1. f 1 4 0 --0IJ7E.. 20th St., CM, Ba Ibo• Pentnsula 3V. OOth11 + dln. rm. + .r.,, lge. sundeck. $79,500. -NICE 2 BR. crpt, stovl'. BEAUT FURN 2 Bil SITS up YOUNG cou~c '!anted lo * * * * .Hornem gatfl8E' k large. ya~. $17!'1. VIEW ... 2 Bedrooms, Util pd. Htd pool. Adlls, no rent a COZ)' l Br~ apt, on 2 BR +; 2 ha. Quiet end I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii 962..al51 ll!t & last plus deposit. Rc~P 2 Bat.h, den, yearly pel~. Al!IO 1 u n 1 u r n . thl' l)t:n., Sl~ mo. 673-017'1. ol the iiland. Lowest priced II married couple. See at 428 ,., lease of $375. Realtor, , "64::MI.=.· "'::::..· ·~~~~=~ Corona del Mar DAILY ~~~~~~1 Univ. Parle Center. 1rvlnc home on Lido. Mobile Homes Hllmllton St., 642--1060. 644-7270 i * SHADY ELMS • POOL * l-'----------1 ~.500 For Salt 125 11 •l 2 BDRM, new crpts, drps, •Adults Poolside $140 up ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, LIDO REAL TY . 111ove., lgc fHiccd y;u.>tt. • . e Chlhlren l'l('Xt block ltl'Ound Door. $350 pr. month 3377 Via Udo, NB 673-7300 Motor Home Rentals I ~;;;;;;iiii;;;;~;; I garage. $195. $100. S((:Unly OCEAN VICY.'. Cliff Dr .. 3 177 E 22nd St C~l 642·'.1645 plus apaclou• 1 bedrnom II dflposlt. Water pd. GT.\-7137 BR., 2 ba's.; dbl. garage; · ·· ' : u~talrs with private cn- Llnda Isle Buslnen or~. cnrp/drps. retrig. Bltn. STt:DIO npt furn , q u 1 et trance. S200 pr month. Both PILOT 0~~~1'°,w~M Why Are You Waiting? 1-IUJTY to see lhit lmmaculat.e I;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;; ORANGE COAST'S leading . arketplace 6 month old garden home ln l • c:Arefree Unive~lty Park. 3 Lind. Isle Lagoon BR. 2" oo. •·eoe. Just LuxurloUA ne\V 5 BR . $37,9oo. ··0tuck" LewUI w/1tcp-down !iv rm., 3 COLDWELL, BANKER trplcs., 2 wet bArs. FlnCllt Rcn_llors 644-2430 833-0700 t'Onstrucllon. A home for the 560 Newport Center Or. moat di8crlmlnatJng bu);tr. TIME FOR DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5678 --------· Eileen HudlOn COLJ>WEU.. BANKER Realton 6#-2430 833-<1100 550 Newport O.nltr Dr. =•wpol't Beach 3 Br.. 2 Ba In Harbor IU"'1!anda. 2 blkl from Marlnun Eltrn. 2l)!O Bmtl. 543-m:J Jly <>wncr. Call !or •J>PL SALES & LEASING · Opportunity 200 EASTSIDE 4 Br 2 Ba frpl oven & ra~. $300 Mo. liK". per!IOn, °'·1·r 50. 2191 Harbor unlta nMtt ta DIJt'k It tennis. tull service la.cllit)' bltl'\5, dshwhr, new ci-pt .~ <_!!}Al!A~l ltealty ~2414 Blvd, CM (:!Ct'088 from call Balll:'y 673-8550 A.qi. Da •Mot H EDUCATOR supply ltorf> Pfl,inl. Eocl dbl gar. _<;!_~Ml to NEWPORT snores 2 Br, den. K-Mart). SPACIOUS 2 BR. 2 Bath!I, nmar Or OfDeS Own. lU, So. Cat Plua area. achli.. No pets. &e-4220. 2 ua.. pool & club privl. Nr. Furn. Bach. & I Br. Ex· w/flplc. CdM Hla:h School $5,000/bit ofr. 557·1246. 2 DR. Priv. patio. G1u:~c. heh. $300, 646-2'll8. ceptlon•lly nice, 2110 A.l'ta. $27$ mo. Avail. now. 531-6800 FOR Sale or rent. S~t Trailer Park, Mill , lOOO Newport Blvd, CM. p 13. 8'x42'. , •wnloa, fumitutt. Adlt pk cloee tn C.M. 557'41Si or ~ Trel~r !Or .. 1. MOBILE HOME * 53$41915 Chuslfied ·Ads • , , 642-5678 TIME FOR Close to sehl~ A 11h0p ~· AVAIL Jan. 15th w/leMt. 3 Newport Blvd., C.M. Hal Plncbin rutt .. GT5--4392 = 6 4 2 -9 3 6• or ~. 9:-ar C:~~~= BAatELOR, utn pajd, $145 ~~. ~ri!~t!.. ~ ~: QUICK CASH aBR.crpu,drptt.lg•fenced LUXURY oceanlront-New r;&~cil.•~I~~· N• ~Hwy. 1325/mo. THROUGH A ~· Children & peta ok. ~· dT'm~rm. $450 FURN. Bachelor AptJ:. S1l5 2 l:ll!d~ each. s11tns. -9361. •yr y. &: Up No children or pcls. carpt!tl • drapes cbolee I 3 Br home. m . Eealsk!tl. 2 .\ 3 BR. -$275/$350 2129 Elden A.pt 1 CM. loci.lion Lea Pio DAILY PILOT N,.. ci'pto A freoahly pAfnted. Yeorl)I •• Wall< lo bl!tcl» '•••• monlh. 'ean S:.SSfJI RL~: "'Frp~l;'·,:D:;b::;~';ill'l:;.;r.=646-=27611~ Caywood Rtnfty 54&-Ll90 SU5 MO. -2 HD~ • WANT AD B -··-If -Neu._ .... 0... l BR 2\1 BA DUPLEX-Bit· MONTICELLO T!lwnhouBe 4 f: u • vu RO ~. ~ ICI· l'!oAA1A-mic. Bkr ~ ' • BR. 2 BA O.Udren oac. Club ft, 3 Br, 3 Ba hloclel. LelM IWlUUHU • • IN. W/w CJ1)U. Gtiqe. No 642·5678 • ""°"· C.n SIH299. $><> m-m, lllT->l09 wsn1 •d mul•• ... M2.o&18 ""'· 1111'1 rr1o. ~. I ' .( DAIL V PILOT I -··-I~ I -----1~ I ................ I~ [ --... -ll!J [ .............. 11'1 ON T£N ACnJo;s Apt1. furn .1unfurn. 1.-.:o._<ie F'ircplact I prlv. ~tlo!I. Pools T<'nnls Contnt'I Bkfst. 900 Sea. Ln.n, Cil:\1 &W-2611 IMacArlhur nr Coasr Hwy) 2 BR. Stove. refrig., frf!.lc, nu deror. \V/\V crpt'g. View. Adull!I, no pcL S225. to to 4, 322 Heliotropt>. Apt. 8, CdM Cost• M•w HARBOR GREENS Furnl1hed & Unfurnished From $130 to $215 mo Bachelors e I Bdrms 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrm1 1112 or 2 Full Baths t.1astcr size bedrooms "'/ PINECAEEK LIVES UP TO ITS NAME ... Over 500 tte&$ and 10 ttr1ama create • relaxing Mttlng. WoOd decl\s, two paUog, sliding gl1sa doors, bring th1 High Sierras lnl o your spacious 1· or 2·bedroom garden a~menl. From $185. DecOf"alor·line furniture packaQ4JS evellable. 2300 Fairview Ad. in Custa Mesa. Phone· S.Cf>-2300. HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST Spanish Country Estate Living 2 Acres. Beautiful park-like surroundings. Sunken Pool. Sparkllng Spanish ~"'ountalns . • Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining • Walk in Closets • Home-like Kitchens & Cabinets I BDRM. Unlurn. $185. Furn. $185. 2 BDRM. Unlurn. $185. Furn. ,215. TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, 1¥.>Ba., 1400 soj. ft. Unfurnished $200. ALL UTILITIES FREE Walle to Huntington Center Adults, No pets lA QUINTA HERMOSA 16211 Parkside Lane, H.B. 714: 847-5441 (4 blks. So. of San Diego Frwy. on Beach, 1 blk. W. on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane). high beam ceilings, large Apt. Unfurn. 365 A t U f 365 Jiving rooni w/gas or P · n urn. Apts., \1'ood burning fireplace. Cost• Me5I N 1 B ach Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Schools .and Instructions This variety of fine schoo'4 could introduce you to a new tomorrow. For further information regarding the Dally Schools and Instruction Oir•ctory CALL 642-5678, m. 325 Pilot ·-SEW-KNITS Convenirnt laundry 11rea I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~~;;:;;;;;;;; 1 · -.:•.;:w!po:::.':...;::•::;::::_ ___ I ;:::::;:-;;:;:;:------1 off kil chl'n. Enclosed pa-1 • ... Costa Mesa ;;;;;;;;;;;;;11 lios. · 2 s11•in1ming pools, ADULTS OCEAN nd Sa.Lula, rec1·ealion faclli· 1 & 2 Bedroom apartments a Under New G tles. Secutity gunrtl. No On the East side HARBOR VIEW Management arages for Rent 435 pets, Only l year old CASA VICTOR\.A NEED lo rent big sgl or dou· Mod I O IO II In nicely landscaped !Citing ''Where Congeniality l & 2 Br. Fw-n & Unfurn ble garage. Will pay $15 • 1 pen t 1 pm Swimming pool, built-ins Prevails'' Carpets, drapes, D/W, TV 010.. l yr in advance. 270t;I Pet•rson Way, CM carpcts & enclosed garages Elegant apartments designed ant. Pool etc. Come By & 644-8270. nt Harbor Blvd & Fro23oll>SEll60de. ,s•,o.~ ... by with a t.1aster's touch, su-Inquire about our t.1ove-ln Office Rental 440 ·~ pcrb house security, exclu-Al/o~'B.nl'f'. 525 Victoria St. Adams sive Versaillf'"s Club and at Harbor, CM. 642·8970. CORONA DEL MAR pool \\•ith unique Aqua bar, H 1· n. h 546-0370 DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Cond . F·rplc's . 3 Swim- COMPANY REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 fountains and for mal gar· un 1ngton uwlC Approx. 1210 sq. ft. office dens. All part of lhe South BRAND NEW space tailored lo your C • " design. Full seeurity bldK. oasl s unest apartmenl QUO VADIS 111 \V/arnple parking. community. ,..,._ 1 Bedroom/studios from $195 -Luxury Garden Apts. Ask for .... nristlne 2 &droom from $305 Bachelor, 1 & 2 BR's. BOYD REALTORS 6'f5...&~ ming Pools . llea.llh Spa · "'!";""''!""~""'"'!""':"'"~ Tennis Courls . Gau1e and Billiard Room. M\1odC'.ls~· open 9 A.M. ti~I dusk Htd ~lf.,a~u;it'Saunas 0!,~ wili8~~!ilT~t: Re .. reation Room & More! at $5 mo. Answering service How's Your Budget? Adults Only. No Pets available. 222 Forest Ave., I BR. F'rorn $160 J BR. & Df'n 1''ro1n $ll\5 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 liarbor Blvd., C.l'll. ( 714) 557-8020 RENTAL OFFICE OPEN 9:30 AM lo 5:30 P~1 Park-Like Surrounding QUIET OF.LUXE 1, 2 & :~ BR APTS Pvt Patios * I Itri Pool Nr. Shop'g * Adult~ only 1\lso !''urn BaL'h. Apt!! Martinique Apts. l7i7 Santa Ana Ave., Cftt J\.fgr Apt 113 646-S.542 Great, \\•hen you get your BRING IN THIS AD & Lacuna Beach, 494-9466. 111oney·s 1'/orlh at the Ven· ON THE BLUFFS ASK ABOUT FREE DESK space available $50 {k1m('. llandy location with AT NEWPORT DECEMBER RENT! mo. \Vill provide tumiture lots of nearby activities ro1· 18992 Florida St,. 847-9448 at $5 mo. Answering service the kids ... p!us play and From Newport Blvd. turn at (% blk. \V. or Gat1ield availa.bl.?. 17875 Beach Blvd. pool area. Inside: Hospital Rood ii block and Beach Blvd.) Huntington Beach. 642·4321. * 1500 square feet above PacUic Coast 1-Iwyl to 1'"""e"R-.,-;,-b;:;lk;:-:lo-:-:be:::a:cc:;:h.--;oS;:-hac:-g $27 & UP. Incl util. Sonic * 3 Bedrooms entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, crptg, drps, lndry fac. $135. !un1iture avail. 2333 E. * Big living room v.ith Newport B"ach. Ca. 92660. 202 l<lth St 536--0352. Coast Hwy., CdM. Inquire \'ours. '~:~!a$f95 ... a new TelephOne: cn<11 &15--0060 l BR. Adults. 1 blk lo beach. ~· Ph. 639-8351 or life at I '"'"'=c=-====== Shag crptg., drps, lndcy fac. · THE VENDOME PARK NEWPORT Sll\. 202 Hlh so., 53&-0352. PREo-rtcE o...-1cES: A~· port, cpt1, drps. air L'Ond, 1845 Anaheim A\enue APARTMENTS Laguna Beach ~b~1aint. Exec bldg. Call Mrs. Phillips 540-0781 th bay On e HEART of Lag•ma. 1 blk. 1617 WESTCLIFF - Huntin""on Beach Luxury apartn1en1 hvin" O\'• lo hl-aeh, 1 bdrin. apt., '""" 11 C 1 · -• •• . ..,, adult ""''' $174 f .uuu sq. · P, air COuu. crlooking the \Valer. Enjoy s. no "'" · um., Ample pkg, util, janitor. NEW APTS.! $1"':JO,OOO health spa, 7 swim-!:~furn. 494-0451 or Bawngardner #1().1. 541-5032 nting pools, 7 lit.hied ten· l;;:o':::':':':':;-;;::-:;:----Ule81iBJIU "'I HUNTINGTON nl• """'-"· pl"' mil" or Newpo't Beach OFFICE •• desk •pare N,. ~ bicycle trails, putting, shu!-f --~-------San Diego Freeway, Laguna TWO -2 Bdnn .••..... $185. BEACH neboa.rd, croquet. Junior l"s NigueL 8ll-1400 Beautiful apts. iv/private 2 Bedroom. $144 from $174.50 monthly; al!O 1 Li•~e 4 or 5 office Slliles. $315 patios, garagt>, pool, spa. All Utilities Paid and 2·bedroom plans and Admin!Prot \V/kitc:-h/balh Lush gardt>n setting. Adult!!, OVER 62 ??? 2-slory 1o1vn houses. Elec· 180 Rochester, Cl\f, 979-3988. no pet~:.~ ~st, C.Jl."i. RETIRED ??? iric kitchens, prtvale pa.":>s 400 SQ IT Newport BJvd, or balconies, carpeting. dra-b• center Costa Mesa. Carpet More Roo~Less Money Dil'petBuilt 1 and& °"'Re1ii:e5 peril's. SublerTanean park· 1g & A/C. 6424230. COME -a -al ga~-Co -ns · rrg. ing wl\h elevators. Optional """ • .,-'""'" vered Parking 'd J apt! Like living in a home G d • mai service. ust north of Busineu Rental 445 for $140/mo. 2 BR. 11:4, BA. ar en setting, Con· l''ashion Island 111 Jan1boree 2 prkg places, pr\v patios & venient to large shop-and San Joaquin Hills Road. OFFICE STORE rec areits, \\lilson Gardens, ping center. Telephone t714) 644-1900 f $140 N~vport & &y Center 2052 on Wilson St.. W. of Harbor No Pets. for re ntal infonnacion rom Newport Blvd., Ct.1. Util. • ,..,..16 the VlllA YORBA * 2 wEEKs FREE * ""· P•"•· &16-1252. ** 3 B,., IV2 i.... ** Vista del Mesa Oakwood Is $1 milllo" in Hoo SQ FT, N' San Dt<go Large, newly <.le('()r. encl 842-9622 ADULT GARDEN HOMES recreation. Swimming l'lwy at Cro"'n Valley on palio, bltns, crpt. drps, (Off San Di....,.. I-""""', So. on IRVINE AVE. AT MESA pools. Health clubs. fran1p. Laguna Niguel. Close to f'Vcrything. $li0 -"'¥ · .. ., S T · 831-1400 Beach Blvd., 1 btk. beyond Move in w/deposil.!I only aunas. ennis courts. mo. 880 Ccnrcr & .. C!tf. Cal! Ed' S• 4k E. 1 B $1°0 2 8'11 ' d I If I d aft 5:30 pm \\'kdys, :ill day ingcr to a • · to r. \Al Br. $200 1 1ar s. ndoor go driv-n ustrial Rental 450 wknd:-i. 642..s.'WO. Jl.Jalaga, tum rightl. DFay & .Night Sccur 8 ity, Pool, ing range. Sand Volleyball. 6 _ 0 SQ F EXTRA LARGE 1 BR $155. * ~fOVE IN TODAY * ountwns. Rec. lrtg. ""/ Whir!poo! Baths. And tots t • I. 3 phase pwr. $95. $139 A MO. exercise nn, billlards, col-'d 12.80 Sq. ft. 110 & D) pwr. Utils pd. Refrtlo!;, ranl(e, cpl, or TV. Ea. Apt. has dish-more. A res1 ent tennis Pvt. offiCE", plenty parking. drp!;, J~1cl Pool. ~falurc Spac. 2 & 3 Br. in 4-plex. \\'asher, re.frig, shag cpl, & pro and activities director C. ROBERT NATI'RESS, Adults. Jnfant ok, no pets. Several avail. AU. EX-lo n k S Rl C °'~ \v lk ho ' '8 • 1·RAS p 1 bldg prt pal or ec · 56-4855 who plans free unday tr., .M. U'ti01485 a 10 s l)S •• , • oo.rec .Kids Monrovia, ~-"'elcon1e. I-Tom $139. Set> Yearly·Bayfront brunches and barbecues. Rentals \'lanted 460 * S~lADY ELMS _ POOL * ?.1gr. 17371 Keel son "B"'. I 33 Lo& ',''a'•"'., 2w baunfurn. "a·h·. 'pP1.~s~ Starting as low as $140. SERIOUS, older s 1 u de n t • Adults Poolside Sl<IO up blk \V. of Beach Blvd. off ... ... '" S ingles, one and two-I ki I 1 "· •--• • ~ild-oo • .,,,., block Slater. ~7510 or !i-17-4260. & slip. i\1any ex1ras. Jn1med. oo ng or oa· or UQU1 • .... 11 • .... bedrooms, furnished and apt Near occ ··~-·· lTI E. 22nd St .. CM 642-3645 * FRESH AIR occupancy. · .,..,,-,~. Callo 673-""1 SJ3.8086 E"'· unfurnished. Sorry no 1 1~~~~~~~~ $140 up spa.c 2 br/3 br 1\'i ha "' lk tfld e... et M d I ..,.,..1, cpl/rlrp. bltn, plygrnd. u 3 blocks to Beach c 1 f ., or p s. o es •-1 N 1 °'" ~13 Lrg 2 & 3 BR. ~\pts. Ne"·ly open daily 10 to 7. 1996 Map e, o. · · .<l'ur.M decorated, w/w crpts. drps, 2Zl2 College, No. 5· ··646-1273 hllns, except relrig. $161 & Oakwood HAS MOVED TO THE CORNER OF FAIRVIEW & BAKER ACROSS FROM STATER BROS. MARKET Stin Offering The Most Experienced STRETCH I SEWING CLASSES Morning- and Evening 2975 FAIRVIEW ROAD COSTA MESA 540-3268 Business Careers SECRETARIAL Legal, Executive, Medical Secretary, grapher, Clerk-Typist, Receptionist. ACCOUNTING Bookkeeping, Accounting Clerk . DATA PROCESSING Keypunch, Keytape. Doy & Even ;ng Classes Approved Fo r Veterans Free Placement Assistance Extended Payme"t Plans 541 -2673 MTI BUSINESS COLLEGE 2100 N. Main St., Santa Ana 2BR, stove, relrig, crpts. $21:'1. No singles, no pets. drpe & util's. Atilt pk. 1 ~s.;.o;·.;1',C11;'1.;,-.,.:nc.-.=:-Garden Apartments Personals S30i ~------, $150/mo. 5 5 7 - 6 1 34 or I WALK TD BEACH I 839-52Qi. Newport Beactt .. HINDU SPDllTUALlST * lolt Md fCIUlld ........ _ --DAILV PILOT .,. worth training f0t • TRAVEL • ADVANCEMENT • SECURITY AIRUNE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Learn How You Can Qualify Call 543·6655 610 E. 17th St., S.nta _..... ' ACCREDITED SCHOOL SADOLEBACK LEARNING CENTER Enrichment Pr1191'am For PRE-SCHOOL CHILDREM Limited to 5 children per class Ahrnoon Reading Classes Ages 8 tfiru 12 Individualized Program of Instruction Diagnostic Testing & Evaluation Licensed Educational Psychologist All Credentialed Teachers 27601 ' Forbes Rd, Suite A Laguna Niguel 830-2800 Interested In A Real Estate Career? IN FQUR WEEKS PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM LICENSING PREPARATION FOR • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Employment Assist.ance For " Graduates With leading Brokers. ., • Day And Evening Classes • Broker R'ferral Program • $110.faH Course / For Information-Brochure Fr" Guest Lecture Newport, 325 No. (Old) Newport Blvd, 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON Real Estate EduCation Since 1964 ACADEMY REAL ESTATE CONTRACTING & iNSURANCE SCHOOLS GI-Master Charge & B of A NEW I It 2 BR's trom $170 !o Ne~' I ,i:, 2 Br, cpt/drps, FOR LEASE Irvine and 16th Let this arl change your1;·iiiiiiiiiiii SHKl. Nr. beach .~ shop·~. :~hlg .. 7 frpl. 316 161 h' Luxury Bayfront Ap!s. 645-0550• 642-8170 \vhole outlook on life for lhe f• 114 E. 20th SI., CM. -a · lG& 2 BRi.WS3:"Jll'lo S550 better Profe1sional advice Found (frff ads) 550 Lost SSS Ciirpet Service 54S--Oll7. 2 BR. bltin stove, pri patio, eorge I 1amson on life. Lie. Readings dally.f----------GardenJne I I I 1.:rpts & drapci;. S140. 1503 Realtor I~ 10 AM-10 PM. 492-9136. FOUND male German .. LosL SMALL GOLDEN JOHN'S Carpet 6: Upholstery BOB'S G"nn SPACIOUS, 2 Br studio. ;\labama, Apt. C. 536-8759. * 548-6570 * "-"* ,6' 492-9034, 312 No. El cam.ino Shepherd, blonde with dark ~· Lrg ll'H.lher oollar. Ori-Shampoo free Scot· le LAN n.n.r•Er.'ING w/w Clllt. drps. elec IJltns, . Real, San Clemente. markings. Vicinity Bois& & Neighborhooc;f o.f Hamilton Ii: c}Wuard (Soll Retardanta). DA-= .. 00.:h• ~~-• 11~ ba. Nr frwys & shoPl'I. 2 BR To\.\·nhouse, washer' Sprino-daJ l;I n ting t Harbor. Missmg several Degreasers & all color ... ,....,."-~ • ....,.nm~"J&I Nopeta.~893. dryt'r. Pafio, frplc, bltins, YES!! WE TAKE PETS!! PREGNANT? Thinking ·-c e, U on days. (xtra roe on pe.wg) brighteners Ir; 10 minute uvuie Induatrial ba I $1tl5 mo. 962-6846. 2 Weeks Free Ren! loo! Rooms 400 Abortion? Kno,v all the Beach. 8M-l620. Bill 64)-.4954 1 ~ Com,plexea. &SIDE 2 br, l ~i ' adu t Poo ----------''-' tacts !irsl! Call Ufe Line. Black and gold cocker/collie • . beach tor white carpets. ...ii-4299 altel' "--townhse. Encl patio, 140 2 BR. Studio. Patio, yard, I. Rec. Bldg, dshwhr. 24 hn 541 . "TACO", male Chihuahua, Save your money by aavill$t ...,..u. M lod Ln $165. 548--5986 or garage. $15lJ/mo. Infant ok, 2 BR. UJD. I BR. $160 $80. PER MO. Sharp 3 , -552'2 w1while markings, longhair, longhair black /b ine extra trips. Will cleB.11 FRONT )'d. lawn eerv. $JO 34~. · no pets. Avl. now. 342-4549. VISTA DEL l\1ESA 545-4855 BR Condo. with 2-24 yr PROBLEM ~nancy. Con-found v1c._Harbor & Wtbon. lost vk: Eueud & Si.ate~' livirte nn., dinimt nn. &:: mo.. back yds al •o 2 BR. r-1..s, drpg. blt-ins. LOVELY 2 BR apt -Bltns, SEAU.TFF ~lanor Apts. 1 old bachelors. 557·2189 fident, s Y m Path e Ii c Wearing silver choke chain. Vly. REWARD. 557--9339' · hall $15. Any nn. $7.50, weeding, yd cln up, ~ ~v ~... •· d 00 $150 BR. $143.50 Pool, ...._ts, ••• 5029 pregnancy counseUng. Abor-66-2407. · couch $10. Chair $.\. B yrs. trimming, hauling, 11•ree eat. Private patio. Garage . .........,. ~i96r:,·~7~ · · drps, blrns, garb. dl!!pl'~ or ~ · tion & adopUons ref. AP· FOUND in vicinity Se.II.Shore exp. la what counts. not ,962-0fil2;;;;;;;-·;c=:::;;::::--- ple prel'd. S48-571l. Placentia Ave. Ask about Hotels, Motels 410 CARE. 642-4436. 4 36\h West Newport baby ~ method. I do worlt myselt G•neral StrvlcH NEW 1 BR xtrs. lg, lg yd. No l Br, fi,Jlc, encl gar., ocean our dist'OUnl. 548-li82. PALM & CARD READlNGS Siamese kitten. Call and I I Good ref. 531-filDl. kids or pctg, oJdC?r people vw. 5-13-4640, !213J 573--0665. Apt WEEKLY rates· Waterbeds, Tella Put, Present Ir. Future identify 615-4073. Strvlc9 ... .....,. Cement 1 Concret• STUDENT will do artythlnc pref'd. &l&-9533. 11ft 5pm. F:·;n . or Unfum. 370 C.olor TV, Kitchens. 1 block f213) 694-1350 Fully lie. FOUND buff oolored f~e PATIO.PLANTERS anytime. RePtJn, yarden'.. NEW 3 BR. 11Ai ba. Condo. 2 BDRM deluxe apt, poolside ta beach. Newpcirt Be.ach ALCOHOLICS Anonymous she pberdJCollie VIClnlty .,.. Ing .t: boat ma.Int Rea& 1 Dbl. car gnrl(ge; carp., garrlen bungalow w/trplc. Cost• Mesa TraveLodge, 642-8252. Phona 542-72l? or writ~ Mi.saion Viejo. Approx. 5 or Antwerl"I Service/ All Concrete work. Brick, 6 h!!,ne 1 • 70 t. 1 . We driver, reta. ! drpg, bilns $200. 97!-1633. Adults, $210. 846-0059. ROOMS $18 wk up w/ kit. P.O. Box 1223. Coeta Mesa. 6 months. '86-1692. Equlp./Moblle Phones slumpstone wk. 894-3533. T.'~;;r.;;;;------ 2 BR. Adults, no pela. BAY 2 BlockJ beach • 2 BR, new Tl·tE EXCITING Pi wk up apts. Children & S\VINGING SJNCLES FOUND white main kitten, PATIOS. walks, driver. Saw, H1ufJn9 MEADOWS APTS. l'.87 W. crpta. ~ec., bltns. UHi PALM MESA APTS. pet ~fion. 2376 NeWpOrt Call Jim 2 tD 8 Pm v1einlty Je.ttenon SchOol, *DIVERT-A·MATtC break, remove & replace I ;:;:;::~:::--::::--::--1 Bay St .. CM. 64&-0073. Incl. $165. S36-9638. MINtrrES TO NPT. BCJI. Blvd. C.M. 548-9755. --;;=""530-~';:J;;12>7,,=· ::;·-jfilSa':jojta'if'Anaj;;;,;;541>-f,;' ~223;;;;;;!;-. C';;;:i;;, LA LINES ONLY JM/MO concrete. MS-8668 for elf. GET RlD O~ T Ji AT 2 BR unfurn. Crpts, drps, Lido Isle !'"URN. OR UNFURN. Guest Home 415 COUPLES PARTIES BLACK female part Cocker SAVE OVER $1500/YEAR CUSTOM CEMENT WORK ~~GH'n.Y TR.A.SU & range/own, refrla", No pet&. Unbt'llevably lare;e apts , Call Phil, 2 to 8 PM Spaniel • 12121 465 E. 18th ~~YCal.J!~ Hou 50 1M"o Drives, WALKS, patios. COLL. ~~ ~£U . SI40/mo. •t45f. UPSTAIRS 2BR. 2BA. crpts, hu.gc pool, Jacur.:i elect blt. m...33M C.M. * MoeJLE'°TElEPHoNES Pool decks. Don. &f2..SS14. iiHiAAmn;;.~c:;~:::,",;..,,..._::;.::::"'- DELUX !BR, d3:' ""cant, ~~'1e!!:~~~. no peta. ~~i ~~~t~~':· ~T,· 1.11.unn * Private Room * Social Clubs 535 Beautiful 1 yr. Female Ger-$1.25/Dayl 4/12 O..nnel Contractor co11a:G,~~faeby ~ adlt' no petJI, , lflO Eaat N n-h SINGLES From $150 for 1----'--..;.;.---=I man Shepherd. Blk/tan. Iii ~Comm Syste~ 919-llM JACK Ta··•--• o--lr 534-1146 or 1e ............ . 2111, 646-Ml16. ewport U91C I BEDR1'1. J."rvm $Ui0 Ambulatory Lady or Man 0on·1 Be Alone CdM llfff, 54-4-7!118. B b ltt1 ...... ,.. ·-v-~~ APT. 1 ~·t.~E~11• WESTCLrFF, 2 bdnn., 1~ 2 llEDRM. From Sllll Nl~ch~:~~. Foc;11~(:g~1~1! JI.lastly black cat, 10tne grey, 8 ys "' ~~'W'i!;, ~ ~7~· 9~ ~!z,u117. )'d~/lhnd> garage. pe • • >'· bn .. tmvnhouse. bll-ltlS, pvt, Unfurn Apt11 Avn.ll Frorn $10 .,,,,.. male. Red collar. Vic Pres-LlcenMd S.bysltter 0 11 · 1 · · Eat ·m-rm. 557 ....,eanup. $135. 645-0343. pnlioe, adu1t.a only, oo pets. to S15 l..ESS. * Call MS-4 1;.o.) * Discovery idio Dr., 0 1. 5'5-5492. 0a.y Cart Mo«htt aeeklng r• "9 · 2 Br. Twnbeft &8fdcn apt. Avail. Jan. 1. $2'l5 per ffiCI, You're ~I, they're under. "'!!"!'~~"'l:~ .... .,.~!l '7lji;.';.._~J"'=---=""3-J87::::.c:-3393ii FND Bk I: 9rjllte fnll kitten pent\Ment run time position PLANS.Hou R SKIPLOAOER A dump truck adults. Utll. pd., pool. From 1 :'S<S--':::153.1:=-· ,..-,,.-=-:--:--pt1ct'd! 1 &.1eaa Dr. ;;; Travel SIG vie WeAtclttf area. 642-1129. cirlrc tor one chtld. New Room Add'f'&n.. e w; d • • ~· O>ncrete, Upha14 $11). m E. 2llth. !WH761. 2 BR apt. \i block from 15 blks f~~ Blvd.I Rentals lo Share 430 I .!.L:.::!!.-----~'liaJiIANTMT<c\LIJd~l•~TTiall<d;JJ;;O'J:uii .. ;i,,,;j born thru four yeari°.Fenc. -567...om 557~ aa ,_, breakinf· S.'lllo. ~"r~~~~.: ~:..F's'r.-'i'~1~ PINECREEK ''. L8,"'11'~ ~...:· ="'l from Alricl. $4&-5U1. ~ .. ~ ,~-:i,·'~';'l; .!!_ardenlng ~ ~ ~ d~i l:':•:::"":::ool:::c-~...,caie'-:1"54H299=-•· -;;-:-675-00'JS. OYer1dsoo tall treet1 •nd 10 n:;i!, Js'cum~ me nn'. SET SAIL Lost 555 ~100::; w::k.de,yS:,. ~ 100>. Haw•llan Gardener. Hon"""""'I gradlrw. 847-• LAROE 2 Bdrm., 2 ~. 2 BR. \'earfy. t~/mo. ~ bou C!l'-bound •tttam11 wtth P.tale 38-35. 3 ml to UCI $98 TAHITI . MALE, Shcpbcrd·Husky, mi Edlnster, of1 of M~le. Complete garden 1 e rv . ous.ec ""Ing crpta, drpt. No .Pell. $1£6. blk to Ocean. Pat Io , :,:~~:::' ':!:~1~,;e~ + ~ltc. Unturn. at moment Crahd 3 Muted ScMoner, vie of 19th A. c::>t\nge. CM. Nr $() D'fleWl.,Y. 557....-1. K • ma I an I, 6 ~ 6-4676, Dedkated CIHnlnt 5t0--972'l C1trtt¥C. Adu1ta. no pett. ~paclou11 1-or 2-bedroom :'62-8=,,,m==:-:==-,,. crew A: gue81 sh. costa. i\nJ "Ottik". CaU 83+-6143 Carpet Service 60-1337. * WE DO EYERYTJ.llNO * 2 Br, 2 M, nr OCC, S.0. 6'r.J..8(1J8, tipl. From t16S. 23 00 ROOh 12MM8ARTE """'b '<IJ; sm1•. (212) 371-12.39 d&)'I or 4!tl'~1491 eves. S ._PROBLEM ~!EJt Rflh, Fltt ett. 646-283& •. ~ tltl.' mo. 516-0t69 or $300 Per Mo. 3 Br new F11JN1ew Rd, Cc!Jta MeM. se apt. Y an. ..,, WHITE toy poodle, Solt vie 1CK or DIRTY CARPET r•vf. a&tdcner. , n:e work, I John. l~d~u~pl~"'-~2~ba1':,.!;..,~l~Bllc .. ~-,.,••::-bc=h •. / ;P~h;-:-;:!;4$-:;':'"~2300":'". __ == ~~Y 1782 Ocean Way, It Orange &. Broadway, C.M. C.111 th~ Ce..rpct Doctor ~t11nlng, prunlrtg,l'~~~',?S· St:ll the old 1tuff Buy the riew rly renta. · 11•.r.J<Wi. --eilM . Se.II thl 01a alutt. Buy the Approx 7:30 Thu.rs eve. lkmand lhe be11t, 111cam cln "u:anup11. George, VW""""l>OiN· 1turr. CJ.a.ultled Ad• •.. 64.2-5678 &.-11 ldl!! Items ••. 64u.G7R Net'd a "Pad"? Pia.Cf! •n ad! ncw.1tuH. Plt!1u14~ call 548-0190. * f79.7846 * Sc!U idle Items ..• 642-567'1 I l DAILY PILOT l5 l'l-----J~ [ .. ........ 1[11] I , ".... l[iI] I ·--l[l] I ...... I IJ I ........ l~ ;;I ;; ... ;; .... ;;;;;J~;;/~liii·---· ~[§]~~1 1 ~1 _ ....... _ ..... ~-llB~1 ;;;;;;::: Hne~l;p;'~·;"'~""~·~M~A~'~"~'lHe::;;";;;W;:;•;:;"';:"";;':;;M::::::l;:':;:;;'l;;;Ol14e~1e~W~111~t~~~t;M~A~,~11:;• Hele Winltd, M A , 710 Ml-lllnMUI •1• Mu1lcol ln1trvmenl• m TV, Radio, HIFI, ~'-'·-----•-54_ Clw!lot, ......... ;;'. ----MACHINISTS .,!!,CUUR,l_ry' ~UARD PRIVATE """' mu" >'ENDER •tuJtana J<U)tar. Stereo 136 COLLIE PUPPIES 1rindowa. Ooors, t t c, BABYSlt'IEJt needed, Mon Both Day 6: Nlte lbltt oPtn-.._...,.. l i.u.c ....... it.act Mr. w:rtnce ftne a11 collectk>n. made in '&I. Xlnt oond. UNCLAIMED 01N1nwi lay. FOR CHRISTMAS llesid / oomm1L 97-&lG. thru Frt Pennantnt. Vic. lna'I 4 day 40 hr won wk Yord, SoC\lril;)' Sllpv. All llema SO'-' or lcN ol ap. W/hard cue, $100. 536-128.1 away, 1973, Quadn.aonlc AKC re!Jlatr:red coUle pupa. ~_..111. Beach A Ellla. H .B . Som9 ovttt'tme. Med to Jri Balboa l•Y Club ~bed vaJ~, C h In e • e Office Furniture/ componcnl •;-.~m. 18'.l watt ~l•lo and female, pk:lc~f· -• C1-t Clo1nl"9 84J.&289. Ille tn.ailntl """''-inter-1221 W. Clout Hwy., NB. llonne 12 tkcp bl"O"Nll Equ1·p. 914 f't!Ctlivtt, 8 tnck pl~r. 4 litter, '"" up. CalJ alt.et ....,..~A floor Cut 1 BABYSl'M'ER/Uve in, lit• ettinr lhort run ~dona. SECURITY GUARD =-ted f ~p l~~~ 'to~ --'--=------'-·I Quadraplex •pukers, It.es:. 6 p.m. _, l C:aU DiUcb ·53"l·W>.!. ' hsekeepifw, Mesa Verde APJlb; ln ~L Elder In. t.1Ulll be ttiorouaNY exp'd. lantern ..... ft:ku, baa $300. 31-f 209 Automatic Copier , $488, Now KOlna tor $3)9.95, 'IHOUSE OF CLE •N ~a~ da,y wk, CMon-F'J1> duattif'1, Inc., lllUl Dove It., Own unllarm. Apt + s.Jary. Pa1r ot alaned Jana ..... se 001• c ompJetely reooodltioned. under $8 monthly. USA ~ "' ... ~ N.8 . M&--0370 Ol' prlnl.11 14" Xi'· m. $-100 80-3711. Stereo FreiRht Uquidaton. GEru.tAN Shep Pupa:, AICC. rit~· wlndowi,&walll, BARGIRLS, lmmed open. MANAOIR TllAINIE SERVICE Station sa1mnan Sidney Yard 11eucape ll" x S£C. chn S8-S23. wood dwkl ~~1th St, Coeta P.tesa. ~1~1~: ~l: e: 0 n~ d~ in area, ' lnp, Tuadn, Ne w P 0 r t AND SALESMAN & 1necbank. Experienoe 15" n oo. Large modc.'tn oll SZ).{.(l. •tor cab $40. 867 W · ==~· ~~-=--Gorgeowi blk/tan, xlnt tem-HOUSEWORK Beach, Cott. Mela, days or rR!VINE PERSONN'B. for fut jp'OWing TUe A Home prefd.-Top pay & benetitJ, pa~nti $125. Many other ~h CM, Pierce, 64Z..$®8. STEREO, deluxe 1973 GlU"· perament, ihoU/wonned. 1 Own Trane .,,il!·1f, p<r• hr. ~._.. Grtn & Beer It. SERVICES~ Improvement Center. Na-Apply at She.U Station, 17th mi sc. terns of Ck>laonni:', Pl1noa/Organ1 826 ~:!':ion!r00.!'~~ftJ..~Je= Pt;\ or ahow Sl00..$250. ~ -·~ t1on .. ••-_"""llOD .. .........,.,... It lrvlne, N.B. glass, silver, ete. Must see ...,...15"' 561-2965. *n..,... w--..-· --·-·· --•-Call .... ~,,,,., ldr suspension speakf'l'S, 220 nfenance ~UTY OPERATOR• PEACE ON EARTH otters >dot opportunity for SITI'ER needed 2 to 4 hn to app.~te. D'IT"tlQ,)1 ORGAN HOBBY Watt AMtFM f\1 P x RESERVF. adorable Silky P'U~ TIME. APPLY -advanc.-ement. Eam1n&t daily, 5 days r,r week. 2 AFTER Ouistmu aale on reeelver, tape deck. Brand Puppy for ch r i 1 tma 11 . ••· cl~~; __ <(ldmpletet 3;7 E. ~to.ta Mesa GOODWILL TO MEN over $10,CMXI lit year. Phone Jdrll, a,eea S .l yn. Balboa all Shaklee products. 20<;~ ...__,1 bu -· •a tll new & &Ueran.teed, v.·u le(t Champ. bl. line. $150-$175. ~ e ....... ,. uw e A OU BUS boy needed,~ &e.1U8 or appl.Y al %lZ1 r1land area. 615-8830 or oU, vitamins, iood sup. ......,., Y ...... y «' • n un unclaimed. Now $ l 7 5 . 644-6178 local exper. buslneu, prefernd. Apply ln penon.. From The Afency Harbor Blvd., O.t.a Mell.. 673-$733. pllmt"nta, hou!ehold p1-o-YOU can p!Qy! Non-playcrx Terna. Credil dept . i.,: 2838. AUey West , 21(6 w. Octan That (en• litECHANJC . Salary + com· WAITRESS, dining room. duel!, coe.metics, toiletries welcome to attend frtt work 893-0501. LONG Haired Dachlhunda 3 P•lntlnt & Front, N.B. 6'rr>-tn4. mialon. SheU station. Hta:. Interview• 10 am-12 pm, for men, penonaJ care pro-~ia~~r Ti:1~~tt:~ch 1'A'°'M71°'F°'M~~St~....,--~--,~;v-~r mos 01~ ~~AKf }Papertt•nglnf CARPET installer, own 488 E. 11th Cat lrvine) 0 1 Bch. Aft 3 pm, MT-6600. San ta Ana Country Club, ~c~ t~by ~ts. 642-2851 w/2 Walnut cabinet SCHNAUZER-Min. A.KC rtg. ~ truck wJbelper, Ca.rpeteria. 642~1'70 MTST OPEn•TOR Newport Blvd btwn Bristol n ac . ee tor speakers, full size turntable, . U 1 CUSTOM PAINTING &6-3020, uk tor Guy. ~ Beautiful mode:;,ftioe of & Mesa. ~~~ =~ 49&-7841 Co.st Music Service v.•/v.'OOd base, disc cover fff!.1~it 6, 4~d. Reu. diter/Exter. Untum. lnter. C1ahler Trelnee IS THIS YOU' G t WANTED -Man with ex· . Newport Blvd. at Harbor needle, cover & cartridge or &MIC-price. Free color con-nu1 beautlf\11 ott1ce wa.ntt • ~ken·",:~ :8'net:-perlence on scope rtadlnji; to OLD le Peanut vending 1 ~~~-Co~•~ta~M--~~~-• 8 track. Reg. $189.95. Now ~l Jo.: Jl.T A ! .. E °}bennan tiultina le eat. Uc. IN. apa.rk:ltna: indtv. w/fliOOd start· $600. Fee Paid/AllO run dlagnosttc center. m a e h I n e a , 8 single *PIANOS*ORGANS* $99.95. USA Stereo Freight nschr.r, ~~ o d. Jon't be underbid. 60-6005. pel'IOn&lfly. Call pr u ' A cheerful outaolna lady whD Fee Jobi. Call Jan Pare, Theodore Roblfll Ford n1ac~nea, $20. ea. 3 triple 1-lammond, Wurlitzer, many Liquidators, 191 ~ 17lb St., l\ No Waatl~ 833-2700. DennlJ & Dennl1 can oompo11e A type htt 540-6055 Coastal Ptrt0nnel 642-0010 ntach1nes, $50 ea. A 11 others. Pre-seuon apecia11,,,.eo.=ta=M".,.~· ::-6'5--o-Ul2~-· --GREAT Dane Pup, lnt'l WALLPAP R * Pel"llOnnel A&ency of Irvine. own letters ln a chatty "• ' .......... H-~ Bl·~ ,_ .. t Jim •1 f machinet ln good working model close-outs. Piano &1PRIVATE "'"-y mu, t champ. blood line, A.KC rq, II en ~· call .,,... __ .. 2082 Michela:m Dr. en th u 1 I as t I c mannel', oeency, "'"" ""11111-n1., ...-. or 11 or ett order. 2 aquariums, $10. for .,.... ' $75. Alter 5 pm 962-5495 •-UUll,; ,... rnV" Pleasant, re I axe d at· CM. * WANTED man, 90me exp, both. l double bicycle rack, Organ ttntab. hfuney sav· sacrifice 23" Magnavox con· fiiM..1444 646-ln.t ~. nper AIP to join lDOlpilllTe in beautl1ul office Newspaper Caniera grave ya.rd &bl!t. Newport $250. Call Wed. 49'J--0594, ingoow-at·. are here right :~troi.lor ~utlluwUlh "'wa1nmoutet COU.lE Pups, AKC regis. 3 tw"IF Pdnting lso t reeiooa] ofc •ta.ft of major in Newport Center. We BOYS & GIRLS Center Texaco, '44-6755. San Clemente. males, l fem. Sable &. 'M:..:.. ' • roo I, corp: Good co. beoeffta. _, _ .... _ lady Well1'chs "us'tc c·,1y cabinet Looks & operates \\'h\te. 9 wks. 545-2536 ~ ct!U. 1nter/exter. Send resume to P.O. Box ~~er a ........... "' • non 10 yn and older. . WESTCUFF A LYLE HAIGH o~ oil M like new. Cost $750 Only ~ /Ina. F1'tt est. ~· 103fll,11~!'.,ta~, Calll 9'J711 ~~it~~ WGood. N~fl,,.·~_a_chtactareMr•.· PERSONNEL AGENCY ~x36t"°!, "Fallgo!~ r a1125m e South Coast Plaza ~ $275 Phone 644-6631. T~b:1~~m~~ine~ox Pups, 4 El« paintina, c.:ulnga or ca ..._._.1.. JOBS y•vu '-""' Our New Address a.. of 41'1 • scene · *PIANOS.ORGANS AMPIJFIER 550 watts, 6-11" 837-8070 • UDfurnllbed 1pec. COMPANION; active Cbi-111t-URG!:Nn.Y NEEDED Seay, Dallf Pilot, CM. January ht Going Out For BusineM speakt>rs, model no 455, • 546--7887 aft 6. Jan lady, must have car. e SecretariH • 642-4321 • 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. 64&-<lSlS, Best quality • prices_ serv.1;..,,...~~199~. ~~~~:= 8~~~ ~~ma]~~ Live in lovely Leisure Workl e ~ ~raton PART or f/Ume belp • A~ly 542"-llU ELEC. Typewriter, Smith Kav.•al-Steinway.BaJdwln, etc. ho . 1 "'" ~.9 •-A bU in Ke lucky ~--na p~-t cond Serl t s Is, papers, inc . .....,.....,., . •1V111e. uume reapowsl lty e So rt/ wrap penon, n ""'v · ~-,.... • P Player Pianos &: Rolls for a dear 79 yr old Aunt . e Blllin& Clerk Typist Chicken, 693 So. Coast WH00 WRIVEANTSATOCABW?RK? type, Jor the femlnlne Rentals ...•.. , We Buy-Sell l ''"to "ou J[J GERMAN SHEPHERDblacpup. • Ext •-·-U not bed·rldden. $351'.1 mo plut Irvine MIMGI Hwy, Lqwl& Beach. . woman! $100. 675-2733. Dally 10-6 Sun 12-5 " py, female, white !:. k. ' • er. n<.-... ......... ce -all expenees paid. Ref. Anaheim 533-2322 CHOOSE )'OUI' hours, work USED BICYCLES FIELD'S PIANOS ~-----..J <9H996 :e~~·ou:: erenee1. 494-10%1. NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Rul EfiRE£tate Salu ~--)'OW'leM lf, be )'OUfcanownbe All types * 642-1272 Costa J.Ieaa (TI4) ~3250 J Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 LliASA Apao puppie11. Dar-f~~'"F,~;.TR'T.iioi'"' -Tempo Tem= Help .......... en or women. •-~~==~==--ling 01 ired Rancho XT SPEC AL $1 ~ C~ ~~ onJ.y.:: ::,:.:. slightly handicapped.. Vts, * MAGNE:J'IC SIGNS * BUY a Player Piano!! Call Santa r~la1~ (tl. 756-34.14. ~1 Br. 1.Jc/lrui. 7'16-8788 ~ t ~ ' Jr. Draftsman ~ retired. A&e 21 to 70, sup-$10 Pair David T. Dupree, 2940 D * * \Vhlte young female cat P tch R or a ment. Sec'y/Recept, sh $560 Lic.nM Tr1lnlnv plement your income. Drive 645-2449 Crace La., CM . 504650. hsbrkn. Needs home. Cali SHERRY'S P<X>DLES · tier, I ' Ir The Cctta.a:e O:ittee Shop, Secretary $600 LlmltH Time Only ' a cab 6 hn or more a cta.Y. TALL Dark &: Hand!IOme (l l 538-9576. Large variety , all colors &. PATal PLASTERING 562 W. 19th St., C)f. Tax Secretary $575 Famous license course now Apply in ~n, Yellow Cab Miscellaneous Upright needs tuning, $170J~~~~~~~ sizes $2.5 & up. 5*284!1. j Free U COUNTER La.d:y, p/time. Aut. Bookkeeper $500 available thru Tarbell Com-~~~ ' 16th St., Costa Wanted 820 837-162'1 or 832-4>391 J: AIREDALE Puppie•, AKC, ,: .. ~~mate. = ~~.& "~ =~f~ La&. = ~~~:~~tlo~l ~~~~~~~~=~IPIUVAtt PARTY \YANTS p~~~ ~'::1edrpJ:;,u~sili I ~-"""*' champ. ~m. · Med.lcal Bek Ole $450 New or experlenced salc11 I TO BUY PIANO FOR deliver, like new. 536-2585. . AKC, Chihuahua&, show qual· S Wlcloaed. ff.50 DWVER.Y of DAILY Typiat •to $500 people. Openina;1 available. II""""} CASH lty, 6 ~·ks old. Immed. de. PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to NEWPORT O:unplete tralnin& Pf"OltQm. ..._.. V 835-2278 TV Radl HIF. livery. 494-274.2. 1:-'Sevm'* ~~. $15 neqpaper carrierL Re-Penonnel Aa9ncY Future nuuta1ement oppor· 1 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii;l~M~u~1:ic;;a~l_!l:n:•':;ru~m~..,=n~t~1=m= Stereo o, i, 836 Pets, General ISO BRIARD Pups, A.KC. lha&-W quires ttse use of a Station 133 Dove Dr~. N.B tunJtiea. Call Mr, Sloan at II 1---------ICROOMING &: Boarding, 10 gy, French sheep dogs. I PL~..£'l?oo ~AIR ~w...,.~or Van., 330Co~~~ ~: . ~, , • 832-M40TA. RIEL Appll•nc1s• ~ I02 LUDWlG double Bau Dnnn *** 21 " TV $25. yrs exp. Tender loving care. (%13) 696-7691 ot 698-9436. ' -~· -L set. Rogers chrome dyna-*** 23" TV M•. s·-~·· ••o -··. . * 642-3128 * UL I •·--3 T .,;;-~ ....., '"'··~ ......,..._.., DACHSHUND Puppies !.. . KENAIORE auto washer $00. son c .,.....,., om rrom~, Both xlnt cond. 979-1462 PAIR ch--'·ered rabbl1' $5. C '"·'-M/F •-• lnt/Alllr•ll-s Journeyman Lloo~ Af.a· GE auto w.,•-r $10. Ken· 5 '7"'"'ian "'-~bals. $525. · .,..;a. AK ' MUuatun!. • n.o::u "' DELICATESSEN -••"~ N•-t -•tJo ,. REAL TORS ·~ c n"":l'• = ''"' GERRARD Sl-95 w/Shure Chockored doe $3. Fre. or blk & tan ""°"· 5.1H7'11. uw....... ..,_. po... n. ..., more elec, dryor, wired for a .,....._.. ... , ""'t ·11on-~ ouo hr k Xlnt •-Be E -------~-M-44 cartridge, Xlnt cond. food. 546-9965 H 156 .r-era ..----· w • ....... mpany n-R. • TRAINEE 110, $40. Guam. &: del. NEW Armstrong e I e ct. 75 644-6.59 ="""'-'=='---~~ orHs , accurate. 20 years exp. Hostess/Cashier eD0_~:. Pal~ft!~0c~~-Lile, R. E. Broker A Developer, 546-8672 or 847-8115. iUitar + custom case. Best S 21 ,, ColLor TV, .... C•ts 852 REGISTERED Quarterhone lsfon Repair •wvnns, ••. 1.-cu1t nlUll, etc. will train &: sponaor for Rent Washers/Dryers around. Great git!:. Must ~ alomlnl Waftreues DAILY PILOT llcense. Call betwn 10 am & $2. Wk. Full maibt. sell, $125/bst ofr. M&-2440 Beautiful color. 979-4462 RED Persian male kitten. , =~~~.p 962-~· Xlnt I LOR TV Cal-Tronlcs . ""9 W. 20th, Costa Mesa I Call $10. 64&-<l4U Ask for LarTy Miller 3 pm, ~1124. * ·-,_ * * TENOR Sax $190. Clarinet SANSUI Tuner amp. &: 2 pr. Shot&, CF~l .. pa~ $40. e 642-4321 e ..,_....~ .,..,......._, Sell the old atutf. Buy the Must be over 21 A Experienced RECEPf/SEC'Y OVER 3» washer&, dryers, $85. Both excellent cond. ~·~eug~ ~enwood Claultied. Ads ... 642-5678 new stuff. JUNIOR Salesmen: 10-15. Be rl&bt hand gal to the pres. rtfrigerators from $39.95. Call 644-6591 Neal. jiilljjiiijjiijjjiijjjiiijj i __ ..... _ ... _ .. __.l[j] ;; 700 Apply In .Peraon HOCHMAN'$ DELIC,TESSEN A RESTAURANT Eam $2().$40 per y,~k id· or J"l!Se8J'Ch & development 545--0780. ting new customers for the tlnn. Start $550. Fe e LA~TE~~--~-,--------·---, DAILY Pll.OT. This ls not a PaJd/Also F Jobs. Call """""" ' w.........-11t newspaper route and doet Helen Hayes,ee5 4 O -6 O 5 5 , elec. dryer (220) A-1 o:>nd. not Include col1ectlnK or Coaatal Personnel Agency, $45 ea. 646-584.1. dellvttina. 'I'ransportatlon ii 2'7'!M> Harbor Blvd., CM LIKE new Maytag washer & provided. We work four RN S . .t bltt elec. dryer, $300. can houn after achool and 8 on uperv:isor. rue s · 96&-4743. LETS 428 E. l'lth Street Saturda,y. \Ve have openln21: Full or pltlme. Hy·Lond "C,__-,.-A...-----RAM• Costa Mesa for Fountain Valley It Soolh Home for ex c e p t lo n a I 1meras F.qual Oppor. Emplo)>er Hundngton Beach areas on-children, 9861 W. llth St., Equipment SWEIS ly. You must be oul of S.A. Call L. Russavage, AN DRIVER for Harbor area llChool by 3 PM to 531-8741. SLR Praktlca, internal lite '" l'OUte. Must have clear driv· ~cl~= ~nce.J SALES meter, 500th of second. 6 TJuble _ Millcy _ Bravo _ ing record. Apply In penon, ~·v.:n pr Io r I t y . Mos. old. S90 or belt oUer, allop -A\VAKE Newport Stat:Soners, 4 2 2 9 _,54&-0037_,.,,_·-----,=I n.. """"• 1 .. w1as1 nJght Birch, N.e . Aak 1or O>lin Lotol Sec'y Trno Ora119e County,F _u_rn_11u_re ...... ___ 1""1"01 was 90 bad they had to put West. • Fabuloua oppor. Super law Umited Travel ~ine in the popcorn to DRY Cleanin&: man a g er, ~ ~very special in-Bf~. A~atJy h !t";:~ Ji:eep people AWAKE. Orana:e Co. {beach cltie1J. trai in a!h~ will eel prices! Wed A Thurs, 9 , b W tecl Femal 702 MUst be exp'd It licl'd. Abl~ the~ you Call Lee P m-~f De1ire & bone11!t only re-to 4. 2403 Vl:sta Noboeza, an ' • to clean ~ ~ ~.,S't Denniaw& Dennis 'Penonnei ~~nt :._e ~~r NB. I at home? We resume to • • Alrency of Irvine, 2082 laleL Xlnt earnifti'.1. Com· s=o"F'°A.,-· "e"'E'°D::-. --,G"r-,-,-n-I , Nu r 1e 1, Irvine, Ca. 92664· Mlchelaon Dr. pany beneflts. Manqemeot nauphyde. Good condition. Jceepen. Cornpanloos. EXP'D Retail Siles, Full opportunity. · $75. 646-7395. up John, Time, permanent ~-LIFE INSURANCE :-2 °"e°'ENTW""'"'oo"==o.-ch-al.-n-, ~,u~.~501 !,;;::....:=------Apply In person. Coln Weit MANAGEMENT Call collect for each. Odd chairs 50c each. ,1 Newport StaUonen 4229 lntervft appt .. " -Help Wonted, M A F 710 Blrdt, NB. • -c~-0:--'-,,--,,,.--=-,---=-~ EXPER. Cable TV ,,_ 213/273-0361 •• ~-~ ~. Dini"• Ta' COUNTANT ..... \Ve ~ a dynamic '"''"'" .-ivv. ... 11" AC deraroond in• t a'l le r 1 Individual on the.way up! S EC RE T ARY·Execudve, le/6 chain, 2 leaves, $450. eavy In bbkpng, all taxes, de11red. Trainee considered. Ne'NpOl't Beacb Home Dynamic Newport C P A _C_all_642-0239=--·----- A CONYENIEWT 8t40PPING AND SEWING CUIDf FOR THf ~ONTHE GO. For 1n •d in Woman's World C1ll Mory Both 642·5678, ext. 330 Fashion PLUS! New Don Delights ' For 1n 1d in Wom1n'1 World C1ll Mory Both 642..5671, ext. 330 Cj)uick-Sew Trio Knit or Crochet ivldual, partneMihip, 6 4 2 -3260. Telel'f'O"Jpter. Office has wilque train· firm has stimulating poet· * * Hide-a·bed, good con- . Perm. ?Mition. Call Equal Oppor. Employer. Ing program leading to tlon open for intelligent, dltlon, $35. Call after 6, '\,ell~ r \\'rlte, WBS. Inc, 642-0212, FULL charle bookkeeper field manaaement. Ap. Cl't!ative, energetic woman 548-5056. I W. Ulth..St., Costa J\.1eu.. Nowport Beach are•. write •• ucant must have a min-w/manaaeinent a b l 11 t Y. ,.,_="_"-"=~.~-1 ---~= UTH RYAN AGENCY Newport. CM 64&-4ll5i 1 Beach, HB 847-9617 AiCCOUNTAN'T-Exp'd. 10 yr !Did tax office. 33% com- • 'm!ssk>n. 1-774-1818. UTECTURAL Drafter temporary, full or part fbne . S1art immed., houn exlble, may \\"Orie al home office. CaU 496-51.M ISTANT m......,. A IJP&intenance couple t or Tara:e complex ln Costa jMesa. Apt + Sa lary. 164....,.. ATTRACTIVE GIRL /time work, high pay, short hrs, ge.n'l cleaning. No heavy work. Musi drive. Apply U·l, R!ental Readier, 569 W. 19th, C.M. .-Must be able to m.anqe ._r ... -• Classlfied ad No. 497, Oa1l.Y lmwn 18 month• to 2 others dme. Salary open, Pilot, P . O. Box 1560, Colta )'earl aucceMful 11 f e call &t<rl333 GARAGE sale. Car, reftlg, Mela, Calli ~ sales experience. 2-3 -~~~-·~----lumber. l532'l Stanford Lli., Housekeeper f/tlme Year tn.Wna: proeram * Sec'y to TrHturer H.B. e 892-m59. ,__ H .,..., .,,_, will Include working with Control'9r to $675 I I For \.oUflV. DIP· ~· our nationwide Agency ~·s good skills I: aome ewe ry ~~ Manaaement team on all ability to work w/tlgurea. l·LAD;_;;..;.l;;.ES;..:._Diamo_. --.. --wa....;;lcl>.;.;;,11 H•ppy A S.i. Holldays Sec Our January lat ad 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM 642-1470 ---------~ phaaes of Agency Build· Fee Paid/ Also 'Fee Jobi 91/100 car never worn, Will ing. Position will require Helen Schaffer sell ;9 of aPJlrais value, some travel. Starting Personnel Agency $450. Appraisal av a i J . l81ary to $12,000 per 4262 Campus Drive, NB 645--5662. anum, plua: fringe bene--Suite B-4. 557-2711 ~";. •• ; ..... our quallfi· SECRET ARIES cat'°"" contact Barry * 100°/o FREE * Grenkow, Agency De-LU Relnder'1 Aamcy LADIES &old Peto bracelet (7 o:>lnl) 18 car iold mount- ing, Sacrif. $350. 64.>5662. Mi1C11l1naou1 •1• partment for confidentlaJ interview. 4500 Campus Dr. ,HEIRLOCM Glul Boxes 54&2118 Newport Beach mfr to )'OU. Made to order. l..owest Prlctt. West Coast Wood Speclaltle" 893-ISU. GE Mu11.pb00ic A M ~FM radio $20. 616-0818 Trader's Paradise /Sell 3 BDRM Mobile fdne. Alm 1 BDRM. Adult &>ark. 17th St., c.M. '10 Bu.ban.I ICdan WlfOll. 'fn.de lor T.D. • eefil66. pa:osr beaut. ·n El Dorado w/1Unrool; l\aJ everyt.hlna liie1. 'T3 1lccl\lt. E:xchana:e fl.800 ciqult,y tor amaller or !!1' 6U6llL DATSUN Nlaon Pa· Value U400. Will trade •il boolt of equtl VII• llt."1tone 53&M'I be!"" 5 ...... •'BR. l BA, Meta VenJ., 15,11110 oqulty. Trad• tor U10, T.D. or f J. Loelmt l!l<UY. n.a1 ..... Ev"''"'" -· l lines times dollars ·HA VE LOVELY >-...-, chat(!&U, Lake Arrowhead, $31.000 equity ........ for wUts or 1' J. Locll:ut Bc!atl.)', Rl!r. Eve•: 838-&J.ll 15~· RUNABOUT w/N.B. onshor. mootlt11 (36th St.) Val $3Xl. Alt0 ·es motor .oooter, Ile. •trffl. Y&L *· for clr. TV, erpt. ! !M0-3111 WILL trade '69 c.tnaro tor 1• tnnsp. caf . lull _ ... Alto 11$ M . Kan1u WMat ~ tor t .0.'1 or l . VaJu ms ac. 5415-2571 • I Keep a little girl busy dressing her 11 1,J" teen doll. Save n small furtuoc, crochc>t new smart f.a11hlo111 of fingering yarn. Pattern 7362: pant!!, hotpants, city You'll brla:hten up the 1horts, cape, potholder "'e51, 11eene In thl1 sunbunt-darttd tunic, dress, lona: dreu, parn.ult or dress with a ahnwl. gnctlul fencer's klok to It. SEVENTY·F'IVE CENTS Pull-on pants have eluUc tor each pattern -add 2S waist. ttntl tor each pattern tor Printed Pattern 9003: NEW Air MAU and Special Handt· MilSH' Sizes 8, lO, 12, 14, 18, Ing; olhetwlw thlrd-clua l&. Slr.e 12 (bust 34) pantsuit dellv«y will take three 3% yard• 4S.-lnch fabric. weeks or mare. Send to SEVENTY·nvE CEN'f8 Alice Brookl'I, lhe DAILY tor each pattern -edd ~ PILOT, 105, Neodlecr&fl cents for each patttm tor Dept .. Rox t8S, Old Chelllla Air Mail &nd Special Handt· Statk>n, New York. N.V. lnJr otherwise third<lau 10011. Print Name. AddreM, c1t.11wry will take lhfttr ZIPt Patkvll Namber. • \lleeks or tn(lltt. Send 10 N E E D L E CRArr 72! Mirian 7'11\ttln. the DAlL Y CrocMt. lorlt. etc. Free PILOT, +u, Patt.em Dept •• dtrectk>M, SOc. 232 Wm 18th St., New lnttlUtt Mllettmfl Bed York. N.Y. JOOU. Print Ba.i!lc, fancy knoll, pat· NA.ME., ADDRJ'..88 with tctN. $1.00. ZJ.r SIZE and STYLE l utAnt Crochet 1'0Gt ~ NtJMnr.:R Learn by plcturfsl Pat· SEE ~IORE Q u I c k tcm1. $1.00. f RRhlol\I and chootw! OM Oomplc!le JIMltant Gift lkMlk pattem tree h-om our -roore: than 100 rtft• -Sprlna:-Surnm(.'r CAIA\og. All 11 .00. """' Only 50< r.oo1~11!1 &~ Book -lNSI' ANT sEWlNG BOOK :~·~"1 R• Bnoll• • !Kk. ~ ~. wtar tomcnow. Boelk of 1J Prbo ... ,,....... INSTANT FA s HI 0 N ~lh Book I .. 11 Dtllerm. BOOK -Jtund~ o I 5(1('. ~fa£!!:_S1_·-~-­~...-.m QuDt Bonk t -Pul a little "loot" tn )'Otlr 50e. Levb-1tll ttm-e bluhlts ft'lt q.~ta tor Todq'• Uvtac -"burils". Call Oaaln.ct 15 beautlfU.I pattern1. !50!!'. s.o.e8'll. tt,Aea '8 ... ,(4 When ley winds blow. keep your dog warm in a r:1JrJ coat. 1'wo handsome ooats -kntt one In rib 1titch. crochet other In 1lfl&:\e crochet. Both M.ve vivkl o:>nll'alt banda, borders. Pattem 7435: dtrec- Uons, llhel 10, 12, 14, 16, 18 incl~. 8EVENTY·nv& a:Nn lor each pattern -add 25 cents lot each pattun f« Alr )!all and Special Hand!· trc; otherwise thtrd-cl.all ®livery wiU takt' three WMkl Of mote. Stnd ti> Allee Brooks, the DAILY PILOT, lOS, Needlecra.ft Dept .• Box 163, Old Che:IM:a $tatlon, Ne'v York, N.Y. 10011. Print N~ A.dd1"en. Zip, htten N•mber. N E E D L ECRAn' '7%! Crochet, lcnlt. etc. Fn!c dlrtttlont, 50c. b1tan1 Murame Boot. Buie, fancy knots, pat- tmui. $1.00. lMta•C Cndlott 80Clll: - l.ei\m by plclUtt1! Pat- ttrnt. $1 .00. Oion1piNll! IMtut Gift 9ool -more than lCO gttts Sl.00. .......... __ _ Sl.00. ti llfty •• 8oob . 50e. Root of lJ .Prhe .up.... 50<. Q.1111 lloolt: I -16 119th!!'ns. 50<. "''*"""' Qlllt .... • -50<. Qtlllb for :'fodat• Lhtirc . J!I beautlfttl patttm&. Sic. --------------------- ( • \ ·. DAILY PILOT T11tlda1, -26, l9n .... .._. ....... _ ........ ... ., ..... ..- r---_:_:_.__J,~ I _..,.. · I§] I ......... l§J _..,.... §] I _..... I§] I _,,,.. I§] I ........ ~ 1§1 I -·-l§J ( _...... l§l 961 ;.utos.;51;;;::910~~.; .. ; ... ~ .... ; .. ;.; .... ;:~"';j ~.~ .. ; ... ~.!!';";!'!;~L~m~I .._ u.. ... /lo ..... ~ ... ·-· """ loott/Morlno Autoo Wont.d BMW JA5UAR TOYOTA CA~C CHIYl.OuT j _ _JPORD~!_-.j .... ~~~~ '11 TOYOTA eoron., 1 dt, ·:.,,n~u ~ .69 CHEY. '1t MAYSIUCK !quip. 90<! · Ml HP Johnlon outbo&rd REWARD orta. · owner. 13,.700 miles. '> ..... """"' ....... .... •Ir ~ , '°=:=;:::::";;:;;=;if;, Xlnt cood. $1500 or otter. flee $.\100. 815-2190 da.)lt, BJ-.-. t dr, automatic ., VL>, #to...,. ,......... ...... ...... 1 • motor. """'~·· c:ondi!lon. . $115. Call: &llFl535 Vblit our "'°" bomet 1970 JAGUAR XJ6, Perfect. Boats, Powor 906 WILL PAY OYER 11· K•'"'" Cnb. ""'""'· <•> Kelly Blue Book 35 hp Johnlon outbrda. For late model, clean, eves or wk~ f62..C33, .......,.... C~y with ooatraaUna b&Ack •n• -'15 CADILLAC O.Vllle. new :"".o.J'."'t.!. ~G~ 1n ....... (ZVE239). 1-......::..::.:...:;.:..::;..;;..;.:.:-1!11 _v_o_U<._s_w_A_G_E_N_ I lifts, AM/fll, full ....... • on ...... •llJ83. ,1766 LOW mu .... 1963 Plr: G 2<,000 mU... Red. '""10. Cali 642-4391 or 642-1789. MAZDA ~~~-~~ wttnlller. $1000. 551-43&3. I II d ow m ••g• om• ... Boatt, Sall 909 tict, lmport1, truck1 or ISLANDER 2-l·ft. Sailboat. campers. Many extras. Call ~S.5784 Call and ask for Buyer lor •ppolnfm'"t. DAVI ROSS l'---r_.,_,'°"__,][i] PONTIAC 2408 Harbor Blvd. C•m rt S.le/Rent 920 Co1ta Meta 546-8017 po ' WE PAY TOP Slide In """"'" ~o:eper. CASH INSULATED. $295. 531-2304 Cycles, Bikes, Scooters for usl'd cars &: trucks, just 925 ca11 us for tree eslimates. 1-v""-,-AH-.-M-,n-, -End-.... -.1 GROTH CHEYROLn motorcycle trailer for sale. Like new. 833-8173. Ask for Sales Manager 3ffi HONDA Scrambler . Xlnt 18211 Beach Blvd. cond $245 or best olfer. Huntington Beach 675-6430 84"/>6087 Kl 9-3331 HONDA ·n. soo . 4. Still •n Cash For Clean crate. BARGAIN! Used Cars & 714-497-2249 or 494-2666 HONDA 3511 CL. 19n, &100 Trucks mi's, $500. H d Cho I I Call ;,51-4383 owar vro e ·11 YAMAHA 300 Enduro Newport Beach $525 or make ofter. MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree 54S--02.'i9 or eves. 645--0263 833-.0555 BONANZA 4 h.p. minibike, \VE PAY TOP OOLLAR like new. Can be street lie. FOR TOP USED CARS Real bargain! 673-5111. If your car is extra clean, ROY CARYl!R, Inc. * AT * 234 L. l7tb SL Costa ~teu StM444i Good select Ion of used BMW's CREVIER BMW Sales . Servlee . Leasing 208 \V. 1st SL, Santa Ana IU-3171 DATSUN NEWPORT DATSUN Now Opon '" NEWPORT BEACH 1000 W. Coaat Hwy. 645-6400 LAST • • • AUTOMATIC ROTARYS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY HUNTINGTON . BEACH MAZDA , RARE 1971 Mercede'll Bent: coupe roadster, auto trans, P/S, A/C, AM/FM radio, 2-tops. Xlnt rond. $8.<m. 962-3517 vw 1968 SUNROOF. :-:;.rcs=.~9i'' O{. $1066 S.o It, you 'll buy ill ~. ~~u~. v ":,.FM~,: bl;, ""' ·:.,,~ ~: s.o_,1,.._y:ftbvy • ..-!•.111 -· ~hVIJLIJ.mUYO • lr~ie:~·•. ~ 19'10=-vw=...;,,.,~P °'T=op'-"'eam~ .. -r.1 ""' UlOO. ,m.21ll0 <Jays, LUlll 1 RAMBLER Clean, nu tires. ruoo. Aft eves or wkenda 962-4283. 5 pm • &16-2Cll6, ....-. CAMARO ~ Hor!Jo,, C.M. 15411-9"J3 '61 RAMBLER waaon, -.61-CAMARO ___ s_cy_1_1_tic1t-1.:6 ~ c.~ .... ~s: '~6 FORD-$200 ' ~u:" d~ &:;, ~ 1970 VW BUi, fact air, tape deck, AM-FM ra.dk>, sun root, yellow. $1750. 493.-2879. VOLVO VOLVO '73's .wtt. $8$. Call alt 5, 13.000 ml, am/tm, pd top, .-.vs, auto, pwr. steerina 213/W-6291. --==-*"'13'>-='=2581=--=*==--I lU& rad< + all !&Ct. optinbL & . brakes, a1' rond. Needs RAMBLERS:;;=.:;:;;;;:..,C;;;2)-,1ll!l3=::.,,...,,,, CHEVROLET Fri ply. 6#-041, alt 6 pm. nunor work • , .... up. ru..., -· .$150 •• ' CONTINENT AL ";'-10"':.:ro ~. ·~ """'1-;1640"'-;;.-.=:----,.•• NEWLY palnlEd 1967 El """'"'' ... -r...-T-lllD Cammn. Top oond. Mag "CLASSIC Mutt lV". •59, IWi. map, . -· wide --1"'1'.-:---:::-ioij whls. 'SUI)). W I Ge m Mini interior ... Lo rmUet: tires, etc.~ Mu.at aee to &J>- cabhlgh ' Campe1' top o~ Rare. 2 New ti.rel, Water prec. ~ ~ 5:30. tlonaJ, Dayt: 6 H -2 46 5 ; pump. Needl call pipe. •ht "n Ford LTD, Hrdtp, fully HERE NOW! Nltes: 54&-5484. 1395 ...... It -eqU!p, JOnt c:ond. ~I~=~=------~ · • '61 CHEVY wgn nu tires 66-6TlO .::646--0648.=:=------Come in test Dnve brka • t>att•''" Top medwi CORVAIR . . JEEP I---"'.";...:.. __ TODAYI c:ond, nu molnr. s.e at 917 ___ . ----'71 Vega • W.18lhSt,CostaMesa$450. '63 CORVAIR Mo .... • ....... I--------2Dr I pd h.~. Ila •-~.... SCQU:I' tor sale, '64, Very ;;.-.'J.;.;..• ., .nao.uu, e '71 OJev. Townsman Wag. auto, R/H, new Urea., Sea-aood'cond •. Nu ttm (;)'M\.;1~). Full pwr + a1' oond JOn't mtat gm. Saorllk•, $185. 5'!>-2901 $ 1266 cond. Lo mi's. 613--1010. 645-1219. 1969 CHEVY Nova s. CJ•sn --Fl-R=EB-l=R-D--MUSTANG s.o It-You'll lluy I See It • You'U Buy It Nu llfts, $WI, alt Spm, ------~fa-!• ~°*'~2606~·~-==~~-FB •n EspPit 3S) PS/PB, ·~ ~~· :t~ Pl~ I.UN 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9300 '72 EL CAMINO, custom, Air, AM/FM Stereo Tape. ·5'&-7116. ., lact. Air, PS/PB, R&H, 36M Loaded, Clean, Sharp. A_utos __ ,_u_sec1 ____ 990_' w·w's, orlc owner, 497-199'S. ~~d (71$30004) ~(~FA) Pr. Like to ~! Our Trader'• 1900 Harbor, C.M. Dally Pilot Want Ads have :,'-"-" ~· 7."':C-7-"'i'-'~="··"""== Paradise column ls for you! BUICK ..,...... .aio.... Clauilied ,., ... 642-5618 s u .... s..,., 1 .. s bq<:ks. BUICK '67 Skylark, Power, &ir, Exe. mech cond; !lOtne body damage. $250 below Oassified Ads • . • '70 Honda 100 Dirt bike. Xln't iwe us first. cond Very lo nll's. $295. BAUER BUICK WE HAVE THE NEWEST OF DATSUNS IN INVENTORY FOR YOUR SELECTION MG book, S450. 673-5820. 1--------·119&9 BUICK RMera oom-54&-7326. 292.5 IWbor Blvd. -Costa Mesa 979-2500 1972 HONDA SL-70 IMPORTS WANTED Lo mi. Extra acct'!!. Best o(. fer over $310. 642-1563. Orange County's TOP$ BUYER ·72 YAA1AHA 250 Enduro. BIU. ~1AXF.:Y TOYOTA Perteet cond. Lots or ex-18881 Beach BJv .:. lras. 644-2163 H. Beach Ph. 847-8555 Motor Homes PRN Party wants low mile· Sale/ Rent 940 age good cond Sta. \Vagon. 1----------Lge motor, approx $2.000. ZT TRAVCO Cash. 494-6848. * DOLLARS for junked or wrecked ca.rs. 24 hours. 25' DISCOVERER 21'.J"-2"1' CONTINF"NTALS 20' PRIDE & JOYS VAN CONVEHSIJNS 494-1003 ext~. ::ales • Service • Rentals Autos, Imported 970 * Danmar Inc:. * .. -.. l180' Hnrbor Blvd., G.G. ALFA ROMEO 531-6800 Next to G.G. Datsun Alfa Romeo '68 MG Midget, good cond. $;l00 & lake over payments. 548-8579. MGB 1970 MGB-GT coupe. Wire whls, AM/FM radio. Like new. $1!e."i. 1855 Sheridan, Apt M-204 , N'pt Bcb. PORSCHE 'TI Pol'!ICbe Targa 911.S Extra Sharp! Must Sell. 642--01T7 5&&45 '66 Datsun Reis tr . ., """""' 912, ollve/blk. AJC, xlnt cone:!. See to ap-',~pd., Ra11 dio, !t,heater,1,..,tin. k· ~P""""'=.co'•:o-·'°6'H029'='~o;:·~-­!ng ye O\V wt coo ra.s g - black interior CROA727). TOYOTA pletely auto., c o m p I et e pwr., S/BIW & seats. 24,CO'.l ml. $2,700. 846--SJ.9J. '68 RIVIERA. LOADED. Pvt. party. Call after 6, ..,.,., '68 Buick Wildcat. Steel belted tires. $1400. 611H395 CADILLAC ' YOUR ONLY FACIURY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER Rent A Motor Home for your Vacation ~ * 839-4301 * ~ BEAUT. NU 23' & 25' Lifetimes Chrlsbnas open- ing still avail, pri pty, S.A. 838--0533. $766 See U, you'll b<ly ill TOYOTA'S J) llllli6 '73's _,YOTA Now at '72 Prices! Largest selection of Cadil- lacs in Orange County. Sales-Leasing. Q.Nabers • CadiHac: 2600 HARBOR BL. t'OSTA MESA 540-9100 Open Sonday ~<ithr~. TO OUR Best wishes for a Chri$tmas that's 19Il PACE ARROW 22'. Compl seU cont. Sleeps 6. ~ ~1ake offer. 962-2397. 1 ---1 ___,._. _.__. 196'.i Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 MANY MODELS DATSUN '70 . 510, Air, rac· &. COLORS ing suspen., etc. TI4-497·2249 Immediate QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT • • • both merry and bountiful-FRI ENDS! from all the folks at 1973 EL DORADO Mini Motorhome fo r Renl • 956-2764 • ! ---l§J 953 or 494-2666. JAGUAR 1963 Mark 10, $795 Delivery AT See It -You'll Buy It mTIMRE. FOR mMr WAIT .AD 642-5678 QUICK CASH lr.l6 """'"· C.M. 646-!WJ '49 DESOTO, 8 P8SB..,_~~· Autol, New 980 Autos, Mew Windsor '47, 8 pass Lemo, Sales Service running rond. 12SO. -,~.,. NOW ON DISPLAY THROUGH A ~~~~~iii :.!k~,_,.... 962 ;; ... __ '" __ '.'°"'Shop DAILY ·PILOT At Bauer Buick Opel, 1972 Sales Increased 246°/o Over 19TI. '69 FORD F-100 ;1!1rarf1 3Jmµnrtsl ~ •- Stick "'i1t, V~.<1UUP"" "'•If, !d -;_ wo.. -! WANT AD We cipprec:iate your ·conflclenc:e, and wewillc:onti-toofferyoutlle·IUl1J9St radio, low mil., < v435Jll1. ~ --,.....,....; 1 1 1 selection, with .the lowest possible prices to enable us to co_ntinae as . Or.g, Sn ;1, ~!~~tuy ui F~ '/!:~~·~,;:,;!'.;so, ,..,, 642-5678 Couflty's I est Buick· 0 .. ~ler. · ·' Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmponod 970 SPECIAL Yf AREND SAVJ"GS!" JlWl llllli6 -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.~t. 646-9303 '57 CHEVY PICK UP-$300 6 cyl, 3-speed. Good body, tire! fair. Firm. • 543-3691 • 1970 FORD 1 ton stake truck It Del Rey custom camper. 586-3928. REVrfAUZED 100% Ford '56 Pick-up. Great extras. $975. 644-4688. Vans· Available For Immediate Delivery New FORD V•n New CHEVY Von N-'73 MARK IV . Now 73 MONTE CARLO CORT FOX LEASING 2586 Nowport Blvd. Costa Mew 66-3661 '64 Ford Window Vtn 6 ')'I. 1tk. Ena & u; U, $495. s 1 '70 FOR.D SUper Van. Con- vctaion top, V-8, window1. Heavy duly equip. 61M.163. l95i lnt1 Metro van. Cutt. O:lnY. Moke c:atter or tl'ldt tor pd vw. 642-171& • DOT DATSUN DEAUN' DAYS! '72 CLEARANCE SALE ---------NEW DATSUN 1200 2°0001 SEDAN Stotw:larC ....,,_, tnc~ '*"91", dl'frl>Stw, ~II "' .. bulftOlr -di locking OOI tollll, J ~. "II •VMhm 1ran-. a...i MUdl mor• lr>eludln11 "VII" • mu" o.r •lloll. Strkll .t.171914.. CLEARANCE PRICE ---------DATSUN 510 WAGON f'llllY -.rlllll"d wltll AM '0019, ICllffY front 1fltc: llft*... """' 9'0SI. IUJ!ury IM.ket ....., whlfl wo:H tl•ll. Ltool' tlll ..... llllCU- 1"'9 Qlll". Strlol •fftOOf. CLEARANCE PRICE ---------DATSUN 510 4 Dr. Sedan f\lllY MIUIOOlll wrtlt outamclrk. "'-·• AM rodlO, .,...., """' dtK ltraut. ttn!M 11tta1, 111:.vr.,. 11vc•1t Mat .. Wiiii. well tlr"' Ww mlltoel tllKll!'M (ti!", $111"1111 1 )ol.ID1. J TO CH0051 ROM CLEARANCE $238670 PRICE ,.. 1973 Century CO AutOfl'leffc tr•M .. p-1tM'lllfJ, power ..... k••· fectory eir, wllit• li<I• w•ll•, ti11te4 tl•1.., deine wheel co"•r• plin flluch lftOfe. {]II 14<4]9) 1973 Electra Sport Coupe Full power, l11ch'4/119 pow•r •••h, p•wer wllwlow1, crul1• co11h'GI, fectory eir, po--'oor loc••· AM /FM plu1 ll'lt1cll 1nor1. IJH<4J77<401 $5485 or '131 24 t:...M;;:t. • ' ' . . Auto,..1tic tf•ll'-, ,_., 1t.eri119, pew.r br•kM,' fectory 1ir, ti11tM tM"-Yi11VI t.p, deluxe wt.e•I co .... rt plu1,f!luch "'or•. llCIO?ll 1 l $4523 or' 111 62 ~ M:;:, 1973 Riviera Sport Coupe . ' FvH pow•r, lltcl11di119 •e•h, wh1do••· t:;n1l1• co11trol, fect..-y •ir, p-.r deor loc• ... AM/FM tffl• plu• 111uch !!'lore. tJH'42111<41 ~ . .; ~ $5877 ;, '13.64 ' -~ M:;:t. Pevw•• .......... 1.1 ...... ,., ........... , ........ ,.. ................. ,., r..Hry ........ ,.. ~ .. -............. hi . . . • ............... ._.ta. I T ' ., I , , __ .. ' Today's Finl El>ll O N N.Y. Steeb I. ' ¥91,'. 65,. NP. 361, ~. SpcTIPNS, 28 PAGES ORAN&E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1972 TEN CENTS • Friends, Foes Remember Truman's Courage ~~ ·'. By~~ ... Poll)ioa\ ally.11111 !fit today balled Har- ry S Truman u a pnmoa~ man who bdriored 'tbl!:'nalloo' with_biJ ·courage ind declsinoea'wlitio tbruil·lnlo the nation'• blgliest ollk:e a\, a·uine o( tntema60nil peril. J:'realdent Ni.on: . said, ''.""1">' S Trurnan will ~ ·remembered: as one ol the t'l)Olt COUrageous PreS1<ients in our history, whp led.the. nation aiJd the world througti a 'crt!IC:al )\erlOd wli!rexceptlonal vision and ~etennlni>.tioii. Our ... pes. lo- ?:r .' * * day for a generation of peace rut in large meaaun OD the ftrm loundalions that be 1UL" . . Vice -Spiro T. Acnew aald, "Among tbo. lalentl that Harry 'l"ruman brought ·1o Ille ~ were two ln-dlspeota"" qualitlel of • · ,,..i 1eac1u -fort~ and t;OUl'lge. Tho sip OD his desk.i 'The Buck StoP,s Here, 1 wu no i!lle oo.t. But' In, an 'office of great power "" never loal tbe bumlDly that endeared him lo mllllon1 .u .simply the man .from MJsaouri." Former President Lyndon B. Johii!on said, "A 20tl> century giant ii gone. Few men of any times ._ shaped the world as did the man from Independence. "Prtsldent Truman presided over the destiny ol this country durinji one of Us most turbulent er. lllnchlng In Ille faee of cruclaJ choices, bis decisions changed , ''*"" of hwnan events throughout ld." Sen. Strom Thurmoiid (R-S.C.), who bolted the Democratic party to ru.n for president against Tru?r,.an as a Dixiecrat in 1948, said. "His decisive leadership in the crucial years of his presidency was an example in courage. He did DOt he1ilate lo make the dlllicult decisions lie felt were right." llemocralic Gov. Joho J .. Gilligan of mliQ said, "At a moment of great na- tional peril aod triumph In the climactic weeks of World War U, be wu suddenly thrust lnlo the office of protideot and the roamer in which this humble man from tdissourt met those 8wful challenges and shouldered those terrible burdens com- manded the respect and affection of all Americans." Democratic Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington said, "Harry Truman was confronted with a series of tough, un- precedented decisions with nothing less than the future security of the free world at stake. He never shrank from those decision.!, despite the hostile emrtromnent of those postwar years. His coutage, his wisdom and his decisiveness in that period shaped the future ·course of the Western world." President Nixon also said of Truman, "Recognizing the new thrtat to peace that had emerged from the ashes ol war, he stood boldly against it with his ex- tension of aid to Greece and Turkey in 1947 -and the 'Truman Doctrine' thus established was crucial to the defenR or . liberty in Europe a n d the world. In launching the Marshall plan. be began the most far-sighted and most generou.s act or international rebuilding uer undertaken. "With his characteristically declllve action in Korea, he made J)olslble tbe defense of peace and freedom In Alia." .arr rum an . , I , , Plumber. Ra#es I • 'l •• + Tic klish l~sue ' " " HAIFA, . 1...i.i' (UPj). - A pltimher who bongec! his head ag-· a tJtcben •.mt ·,m.n a ~e ~.bll!I ~ fjleil~<r compenutioo for wq:es lost as a result of "' wort accident., Israeli. ~ reported •Moallay. . -,,,. uilldenU!iod woman Said sbe . tbougllt, the, tono .Uck!Dg out fnxn. ~ the sink was her buaband's. . . l-4lb Wot.ker, ' ' , ' ·'F·m.ld Gets ltl·utt Cl.emente You iigster Receives Dog ' . . 'Todd Egglebin, I. and "Mwieca the Secood" sbt weeb · met for the first ' . ' . time Cbrlatmu Eve and it .was love at f1fst sJiht. For the.'~ Clement. yi>wipter that occasion In Costa Mesa niarked the end o/.a ~ ....ti for a replicement lo,a~ec! mUtt thaf WU taken from Todd's' dobntep and han&ed earfy last week .I\> the city'be8ch. "SW>!l'1 'was theilrst Dllht·ln a week that Todd· began , lo -a Utile hap-puless qaln,'' said the Conconlla School Not one ot the people asked for aDY money fur-their dogs, sbe added. ''It was fantastic!" The new pup, Todd said today, is an Australian shepherd female, just the sort of rouglHnd-tumble breed t h a t cbaracterlr.ed his pn:vious pet, which be bad named M:uneca (Spanlst for "doll"). Mrs., Eggleton bad promised her ,.. that he would have a· new dog hy Cbristmas morning, but efforts through the week 'lo find just the right .. place-mesn were ·m v1in. Found· G~~· · lbild, gtl\llu's -;thjl ~· . · -~·;~l:~ ·~ c-~ 111a llol:Yof --Ulrid<r~f,"lofle'! a'dqJ a. ' 1111"·-. "~ ho "~ Muneea'reoUw ·to~ bl~lr. ~ ..:i ;. • Of ~a;,n;/, .. 'l'ii<\f• . , , -.• .,,,. 41d\>'t .ioP'. ~ day; there Ill.at .. " '--·~.ljimdl'ed olfera frO!n peopte "•!Jo nm.ii .Jo. llv! Todd a llU.P for. ~tmas," a8id Mrs. Egleton. , . ' But ,.ith the DeW• pe~ Tlldd Insists, It's the nlll lhlaiJ • , "&bf• jlis& what I :wanted, and I nam- ed lier ·-just llke the first.one I had, .. be &aid, happily. An 0..:... CouatJ·"°"'lllfr Olurt jury . 11a1. -la~ leahilClail l.coul• Aptho!l)I Evaftltllsto lllillY ol perjuty chari.. ·flied alter he . ollmd •falae testtMonyi oo beludf of' a SID 'Clemente wOnion occlded ol diimken dilving: Hot Winds to Continue I Judge· Herbert 'Rerfands ' or de re d EVDgellJto1 44:, of, 'V\aita, to1re~'to'bls ·-Jan. • !Qr ~· The ana1y11 fa.,.. • -'blo ilite Iii*' term ofuploHyean. Th.rough. Next Two Da ys nie jury ·murned '"' verdict af1er listeOfnc 'fA>'·~ of telepliooe coo-Santa Alia winds are npecled lo cm-..,..,_ ~ Evang~. and Mn. Unue to bluster and bring balmy t.m- PllYl\ll WfQb, 4.!;ln wblch tlie defendant ~tuies lo Orqe Coonty for the ne1t rOpeijeltly aaked• for · dilles and at-t..O da)'!, ac,con11ng lo the National /IOmjlled to'dbcusa the wmiao'~JIJ"life. Weather Semce. Pollte Wb<>._ied~July 3 Wlhds pstlilg ,up·to 70 miles an hour said lae oflereid t.i.e .evkleDcei GO at least were reilorted over the Christmas r,,.. ooculona cludnC . • hearing Into weekend In Orange County' ripping down charps.oJ clnuWn driviDg •filed•agalnst Boys Killed As Ti:uck Crash es the aitracllve San Clemente )WOl'IWI· 1 EYangellalo had earll!:r ana)yred ~lood T drawn from Mn. \l'entz .. foUowing her ,,. WO hoOfitng by Sao·Clemept. pollce oo ·those clW'gea. . ·Polite aald the tocbnlclan lnoccurately -·that Mn. Wenb;"physlcal1J'- pe8rance and --.at the lime were nonnal ai>d that he atlmlpled lo lndlcale ihat she WU·not lnlolfcated. Drunken driving chargeo against Mn. Wentz were later dism1'1'd in South Orange County MUQIClpol Court. : Both the prooecutor and the defense ~wyer Involved In the municipal ~ actkla deole<I In Superior Court !bat mat dlsmilaat rosulled from Mn. Wenti' aoopei'atioo In the·cumnt trial. 'Laundry Blaz'e 'Loss $11 .(JOO '· Near Dump Area Two boys were killed and two other pel'llllllS 9"rtousl1 lnlure<I this morning when their pickup truck skidded out o! control and ran into a dirt embankment on Bonita canyon Roed near MacArthur Boulevard In Irvine. Tbe two dead children were thrown from the truck as were a man in bis ear- ly,3ls, another ho)""Ud a dot!· Tbe man and Injured hoy were taktn lo C,osta ?.lesa Memorial Hospital. The ex~ tent of their injuries was not lm- mediltelY known. Ofllcei R. E. Arnold aald the group had be<D unloading truh at· Orange County's llolttta Canyon °'l'"P just· prior . lo the t:Jt a.m. acckienL ."111ey,were lf0inl1-n 40 and liO lnuet·per hour 8n<(the driver loit U," the ." (See DfATHS, Pqe I) holiday decorations, leaving as many as 30,000 per!Ons wilbaut power, and lit· tering streets throughout the county with tree limbs. Orange Coast meteorologist .J . Sbtrman Oennj said the last comparable windstorm occurred in January, 1966, nearly seven years ago. Heaviest damage was reported in the Yorba Linda, Placentia, Tustin, and San- ta Ana areas, where winds coming out of the Santa Ana canyon blew at a steady 35 miles an hour. "Starting Christmas Eve, I'd say we bad 2,000 people out of power almost con- rtantJy," said Bob Beck, division manager of Southern CalUomia Edison Company. Blackouts ranged from just a few rnmutes to as much as four hours in can- yoos of the east county. Edison called out 300 workers, some coming from as far away a!I Santa Barbara and Santa Paula, for duty becin- ning at 6 p.m. Sunday. Beck said some crews worked continuously for 18 hours. "We were getting thousands of calls and we called out. every available man trying to restore service," Beck said. Scores of trees were reported down in (See WIND8, Page I) H•l'PflSTf'tl,,..n, Hb Ute •IMI Times On Piifles JJA, J 'I B .. _ HARRY S TRU MAN (1 884'1 972) PlannersExpected·to ·Hol-d Action on 234-unit Tract San Clemente planning commissioners Wednesday are expected to agree to yet another postp:>nement of action on a complex proposal for a 234-unit tract near San Clemente High School. The commission, still operating one member short, originally had expected a full' roster by Wednesday's meeting, but councilmen decided to hold oft a week in tbe!J: lntuviewa of 10 prospective ap. pUcants. The expected postponement o f Wo<lne!day'~ trad issue brought forth by the Landmark Financial Corporation of ·Balboa Island leaves the commission with one of the slimmest agendas in months. . Other Items scheduled on the list will include a zoning code change with a Ug'hter interpretation of building heights 'on 1\0pes · and ·a reiol'uUon setting up architectural standards for new projecls In commerclal and induatrtal zones. Councilmen have aet a ~ meeting next Tuesday night in the n1ayor's offices to interview each of the applicanta for the planning post left vacant by the reslgaaUon or local builder R a y McCaslin. Their formal meeting will take place a day later. If a selection ls mr de at that time, tbeo tbe new member can fill out tbe roster at the planning body's next session Jan. 12. 'Mle present four members have delayed some major actions until the new member can be found. Soviet P act Delayed WASHINGTON (AP) -Conclusion of a $40 bllUon, U-year pact to import Soviet natural gal!I Into the United states will be delayed until tile spring while 1he Nixon administration reviews whether it is needed, the Washiqton Post said today. A~des ·crash· Victims Ate Humans • (. . '. SANTIAGO, C1o11e (AP) ~ .Official -conllnned ~ that .....,,, ... ot l an Aacles plane cniab ball -the Detll of -..,,,,,. lo 1""4 ilirva. tton oiutl!IC • lf<lay ordeal. ~ The official IOUl"Ctll uld lt nrvlvon, · tllber · pltYtfl or ,-..,. ol an UnJ8UlYlll flllhy team, had made a IOlemn pacf !bat they wauld mt d11ou111 the matter until they --lo -· IJntpaJ, and then they tioold make a collecllve stotA!lnenL Tine have air<ady . returned to ~Tho tther J3 have ...... lned In Sontlo&o· to """"" but plan to fly bock to.Jloat.vldoo In a d11 or two. ~ •I < Tbe plane bad 1$ peraons aboard when ll bit an Andts peak Oct. 13 By the end cl Oclober 1 29 were dead. ' ,n.re hid.'-' rumors that'U-.who lurvlved might have eaten humsn f1Hh to Uve tloroogh the •bitter' mountain blizzards, bvt the reporta could n o t be auLatantiated until today. Tho ....,.,., said that one of the young men, not ldenUfled, comparo..i the arouP'• decision to use the cadaven a1 ••similar to a heart transplant." His exp1anaUon: In a tran1plant opera· Uon a bee.rt 11 taken from a peraon at death lo-maintain another'• Ille, and 1n Ille ..,.. manner portlans ol the boolles i had b<to uaed lo m1intain the living. The toUrc9I 11ld the turVtvon relalod that Ille dtclaloo. to ""' Ille IJddl,. ol fHends, and even relatives, wu a col- ~lve o11e ..,...i lo hy. all. · • • ' Earllor the aurvlvon lold ol having a good """1 ol food, because , they , had stocked up on caildy 'and P!"fWVed,frult · clur1ng a stop at Meridom,'Aiaentina. The · youog men sild diei fourid the "terrible .mountain .Uence," 1tbe endless boredom and per1otlt of depn:sakln the worst part of tilelr e'l"flence. · "We 1ot up at 7, listened to the radio and ~lted. water trom mow,,,. llfd; Jose Lull lnlclarte, 14, an agronomy atudeot• -· "We also bolled the water with, IOipe lichen to make a IOl"t of soup wbkh we used more and more as our provlsiont rao out." , 'Ille . .,.,, •pent houn ' In ltOUP dlaC.-... on themea they . would - In .,,.,... Tho dllclwlona -""" became 11f'OUP tbtrapy te11i0n1 to bOl!ler their Daatng 1plrlta and diipel attadiS of de-. Eoch evenln1 they prayed aloud top ther, with a dUle,.nt petalN1 leadiJoC the'prayers each. n11ht. ' Last week two of the yO(tng men walk· ed down 1 mountain and found a rancher·who lfOl help. ( ' . Nixon Hails Ex-chief As 'Fighter' KANSAS CITY (AP) -Harry S Truman died today, conquered finally by the infirmities of his 88 years. President Nixon Jed the mouruing for the nation's 33rd president, calling him "a fighter who was best when the going was toughest:" Tbe Pn!sident alao pro- d••"f'Mll ThmldaJ .• daJ. et ,,.,.., ----···-···~ .,.,..,.. -..... -"" 1114"1'-• ~ ·'II, Johr>IQI!, . DOW thf only lll(Ylvlni fonner presldmt, lamented the ~ of "a 20th cen"1fll pot." 'flV!nan's wile ol 53 years, and his daUcbter who pw him for a final ~ D\iDU'tel Christmas Day, were at home in nearby lndepeDdence when death came at 5:50 a.m. PST . In accordance with Truman's wishes, the !unUaJ Thursday will he without the panoply accorded other great statesmen. He will be burled Thursday at 1 p.m. PST ln Uie courtyard of the Harry S Truman Memorial Library, Truman 's proudest achievement in the :W yean since be left the White House. Truman was the last or the great World War U figures, preceded in death by Dwight D. Eisenhower, Winston Churchill and Josef Stalin • He was the president wbo set the United States against global communism in the Cold War that followed World War U. He ordered ue of the atomic bomb to end World War U, ei:tended tm- precedente:ct help to nations reslst~g Soviet domination, and ordered troops in- to Korea when Communists began their invasion of the !OUth. "Recognizing the new threat to peace that had emerged from the ashes of war, he stood boldly against It with his ex- tension of aid to Greece and Turkey in 1947 -and the 'Truman Doctrine' thus established was crucial to the ·defense of liberty In Europe and the world ,'" Nixon said, adding: "ln launching the Marshall plan, he began the most farsighted and most generous act of international rebuilding ever undertaken. With his charac- teristically decisive actloo In Korea, he made pos1ible the defense ol peace and rreedom in Asia ... The hospital attributed Truman'• death to lhe "complexity of organic failures causing a collapse Rf the cardio-vucular system." Truman entered Research Hospital (See TRUMAN, Pace I) ·Oraage Weadaer Cl~r akiel are whit the weather people ... for w-.y, wltb temper1111tt1 In the "PllOl'llll alallc the cout. Lowa tonight In the !Ga • INSm E TO.DAY Orange Co1mt~'• 1972-73 budg- rt thoccd a b to .o 1 t; ~nsc I Jhani4•V ·o/. Ulo' llll<i olh<r '5'1 1 .. ~..... lteloll!w. * -....i ln1MI o/ rllW11111 "" °" 1oco1 propcrtv '"-Stofy Oii Pag• Q. .... _ . (....... I -.... -,. -11 ---I I :::r .•. ,. ..,. ....... ...,, .. UialMrt ,, ,....... ... ,. --. -CIMMlt'r • .... ..,, ........... " 1'1114.... 1• -"'" -. ,. ....... ' ...,,,,., M ............ l>M --. DA.ll'r Pll01 __ ~"-':__ ___ _'.''-~~·_!!Doco~~11fH:j~-_!'Zl>~,21!:91':2 Quake Threat? AEC Dela:ys Plant Site Choice SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Gooloc repotta IDdlcallna active eartbquw faults m•r lle near a propoaed atomle energy plant site have caused the Atomic Energy Commission to derr1a11d more 1:1tudies. An AEC consultant reported }()('ating two deformed pieces ot ocean shore that could have been caused by faults in the Point Arena area, site of a proposed Pacific Gas & Electric Co. plant. Dr. Carl W~ntworth of the United SI.ates Geological &.lrvey, using aerial photos, alJO plotted an earthquake fault which angles through the proposed plant site. His partner, Or. Eli Silver, said his study of graphs and records indicated an active earthquake fault runs parallel to the roast about ID,000 feet offshore from the coastal A1endoclno County s.ite. Frank McKeown, head 0£ the USGS survey team, said the new data raises the possibility the site Is within the San Andera.s Fault zone despite opposite opin· ions in the past. The new data, presented lo the utility's officials in September. c o n t r a d i c t s earlier coilclusions by PG&E consultants that the terraces were not deformed. The company has begun further geological and seismic investigations expected to be finished in mid-February. The new problems could delay opera- Frotn Page l WINDS ... Huntington Beach. Fountain Vall'ty, Costa lo.fess , and Newport Beach. No 1na- jor damage was reported, however. The Orange County Harbors Depart- ment reported 17 wind-related incidents, mostly involving boats blown loose rrom their moomings, but nothing major. "It's the kind of thing you'd expect in the first major wind of the year," said Sgt. Ray Graham. In Laguna Beach wind damage was reported most serious in the Bluebird Canyon area. But a nine-foot by seven- !oot "'indow in the new county library building on Glenneyre Street \\'as shattered in a powerful gust about I p.m. SUnday. Santa Ana firemen \\'ere kept busy fighting t"'·o morning fires that were whipped by gusting winds. ln addition, a Tustin veterinary hospital was partially destroyed when three eucalyptus trees crasbed down on it. Damage estlmate was $60,000. From Pagel DEATHS ... Irvine police oUicer said. "We think he may have had a blowout in the front left tire. A witness who saw the accident from far away said he saw something fly off the truck just before it happened." The truck, described by police as an older model, !pun across the twtrlane road after the impact and came to a halt facing in the opposite direction it had been moving at the time or the crash. No other vehicles were involved in the accident, police said. Officer Arnold, a veteran traffic in- vestigator, said the one boy wbo survived the crash probably did so because his body was cushioned lrom the impact by an empty trash can. North Ireland Reported Quiet An uneasy calm settled over Northern Ireland today as a three-day Christmas cease-fire by Irish Republican Anny ter- rorists ended. The self-imposed truce by the na· tionali!t Provisional Wing of the lRA formally ended at midnight. More than 12 bourB later, the police and army said they bad recorded no incidents, although patrols remained on the alert. The cease-fire was marred by only oc- casional shooting, which officials said might have been Isolated incidents rather than IRA terrorl.sl activity. DAILY PILOT 'TN Of.,... CMll D"ll.Y 1"11.0T, wltn Mllcfl It c...W.,_ 1"" .._.,., __ II Jll,IDllthld 11Y tPle 0r9fl99 C*tlt '"""'~""' c-..,.. s..... nte .. U ... •rs ..,.iJsMd. Mtnd1y tfl ........ l"riti•Y, f9r C-11 Mne, NtwpOrt BMC~, M"'"tlntlM 8..cllll"-115" V•UllV, llQlll'l<I ...a, lruin.JS....lftKll ..... 511n (ltmef>tt/ SJfl Juan o.istr.ne. A •1"91• ,.,..1on11 Mtltlon k Ol/lllk1!eill Stl11rd1y1 and .5und•rt- TIM: ~1'11 Mlltll11'41 lllal'lt It •I D Wftl .. y &!rMI, C.te MM&, C•HtoMll, ""~ K•Dert N. w •• d .. , ......... ,.. ,.Vlllltl\tl' J1clt R. Curl•y Vkt P'rttllhnt Miii ~11 Mll\effl' tk1t1•1 IC1111il E•ti.t 11ieM•• A.. Mwrith1fl• Mwt~ ld'lttor Clitld.I H. Leo1 lJdio•r4 P. Nill ...... ,. .... .,,.... ..... bllitn .. C6t q fl Offk.- JOI N.nti ll C1Ml111 •••~ t 2472 0..- CMI• ~: »t W.:!.:T IMet .......,, 9"0l 1.'31 N Bewlt'll•t• ._.. __ ludl: 1'111 89Kfl ........ ,. ..__.hldl1 2D ........ AMM '"''' •• l714J "4MJl1 Cl•sWW A .... thl I t-41·1&11 S. a.--Al Dsf1c•m•l1l , •••••• 4tJ:-44:1t Cww1IM. 1tn, Or•• Cotll '°"'"""°" ~; Mt ,.... ••• •~,,u., .... ..,..,,., .,..,.. .... ......,"-" '""'" ....., -,....,... .. t:::' .... 111 ..,.. ---~ . ....... , ........ ,. .... c.t9 Mftil, ~~ lillllel'tMIMI lrf CA,.,llf SUJ ........,., W fllVll U,1J "*911\fJ Ml/QIT ...... "" ....... ......,.,.. -• Uon ol the plant from a 1971 IArlel dlte until "the early 1980I." said XJt Newton, the Orm'1 nuclear information ~ PG&E new• director La""'nce l\, McDonald added that tbcre are no pltnt 10 abandon the site. "Our appUcattons are still nctive and we're hoping to have lhem approved." But Sierra Club spokesman David E. Pesonen said the new findings indicate "greatly inereased'' danger that an earthquake 't\'OUld rupture the shield around the plant's DUClear core and cause a massive radio-acUve fallout "with catastrophic loss of lives and prop- erty ." Pesonen. \\'ho spearheaded the suc- cessful 196~ oppositioa to PG&.E's plan for a nuclear power plant at Bodega Head in Sonoma County. called for the firm to abandon its Point Arena site. Un identified Body Found On Freeivay The body of an unidentified young man, apparently dropped from a passing car. was discovered early this morning on a freeway offramp in Seal Beach. Seal Beach Police said the you th was a white male, about 18 to 22 years or age, with no identificalion. "A preliminary check by the coroner shows he was dead about 48-72 hours." Sea) Beach Lt. Lee Gatti reported. "We don't know the cause of death ye t, or where he might have been killed." He was found by passing motorists about 1:45 a.m. on the 7th Street off. ramp at the junction of the San Diego and San Gabriel freeways in Seal Beach. Lt. Gatti said it Is apparent the dead man was not killed where he was found, but had apparently been dropped there from a vehicle. "There are no outward signs of bullet wounds or other marks indicating how he died," Lt. Gatti said. "He was dressed in burgandy trousers, a blue tanker jacket and had medium-length hair. He could be a Navy man." The Cororier's o£fice began an autopsy this morning to determine the cause of death. The results were not yet known. Lt. Gatti said the man's shoes were missing, but it didn't seem significant. "At the present we don't know how he died, or where," Lt. Gatti said. "And we don't know who be is." Winners of Dana 'Hi-light' Boat F ete Reveawd Eight sail and power boats took top awards during the first annual "Holiday Hi-Lights" held at Dana Harbor, under the direction of the Dana Point Chamber of Comme'C<. Winners in the e.igbt categories rece.iv~ ed ·cash awards. merchandise and com- plimeintary clinners from restaurants at the harbor .. Winners are as follows: -Sweepstakes: "Mary Liz" owned by Charles Cromwell, San Clemente. -~1ost Unklue (Power): "Ric-San" owned by Samuel Becker, Covina. -Most Unique <Sail ): "Adastrina" owned by Michael Howell , Dana Point. -Most Humorous: "Mo-Maid" owned by Don Ho.ssack and Frank Harrison, Norco. -Sailboat over 30 feet : "La Dolce Vita·• owned by Leon Denhey, Dana Point. -Saltboat under 30 feet : "Cordelia11 owned by Ronald Swor, lrvine. -Special Powerboat ove r 30 feel: "Renegade" owned by Russell Von Peru, Riverside. 1 -Special Powerboat under 30 feet: "J\.fy Gal Sal" owned by Walter Clark, Santa Ana. Judges for the contest were Bertha Henry, president, San CI em en t e Chamber or Commerce; Raymond Pelo- so, general manager cl Laguna Niguel; John Gammel, vice mayor, San Juan Capistrano; Donald MacLean, director. lYlarine Studies Institute, Orange County Department of Education, and Lt. Har- ry Gage, asslstant harbor master, Dana Point. Walter W. Riesen Scrvi~es Thursday Funeral wviccs will be tanducted Thursday in Cypress for San Clemente retiree Walter We!tcott Riesen, 60, of 138 Avenlda Santa Margarita. ~1r. Riesen died Saturday. He leaves his widow, Georgll; a daughter, Joyce Nursemtnt of Alta Loma: allrother, E. 11. ruesen of COronl de! Mar. and a sister, Marguerite Lauritson of Las Vegas. The services will be held at Forest Lawn Memorial Park at 1:30 p.m. No Survivors Found SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP ) -No trace has been found of the 1.2 occupants or a twin· engine Frtneh p1ane that crashed in the eastern Caribbean on a night from Guadeloupe to St. Maarten; the U.S . Coast Guard says. The· plane, with 11 French p11ssengeN1 and the pilot •board, plwiged Into the sea ror no apparent reaaon Sunday night about four mlle!I from the airport on St. Murten, a Coast Gu11rd ipakei;man said. I Pope Dons Hard Hat \Vearing a miner's hard hat, Pope Paul VI talks \vith miners inside railroad tunnel being built near San- oreste, ltaly. The pontiff celebrated Christmas mid· night mass with the workers, who presented him \vith a Madonna and Child statuette made of st.one from the tunnel. Hanoi Says U.S. Intends To Raze Populated Cities From Page l TRUMAN ... three weeks ago today -a!ler fighting lung congestion at home for two wee.ks - and had been in a coma since early Saturday. Earlier In his hospitalization he appeared to be rallyinc, but the com· binatlon of respiratory problems, hard.Co- ed arteries and kidney dlsease were too much for the old man. PARIS (UPI) -The Hanoi peace del- egation said U.S. war planes, including B52s, had stepped up the bombing of North Vietnam today with a view of "razing to the ground" Hanoi, Haiphong and many other populous towns. "Continuing to commit crimes against the Vietnamese people, the Nixon Ad- ministration, in the night cf Dec. 24 and as of Dec. 26, has multiplied raids by B52's and various other types of aircraft with a view of razing to the ground Hanoi, Haiphong a n d numerous other towns and populous areas cf North Viet- nam," the delegation said. The delegaUon said in the first official North Vietnamese reaction to the re- sumed air war that the bombings must be halted U the United State! wants to hold "serious" peace negotiation!. The lllaltmenl said the flnt condition to bt met tw such talks was ror the United States to return to the lituatlon before Dec. 18, the day on which the latest U.S. air offensive Wa! launched. "Defying vigorous condemnations o( Valor Award Winner Killed HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -Macario Garcia, who received the nation's highest award for valor for heroism In World War U, bas been killed In an auto attldent. Garcia. 52, of Alief, Tes:., arid Myrtle Koonce, 48, of Houston died Christmas Eve in the crash near Sugar Land. Tex. Garcia, then an Anny staff sergeant, won the MedaJ or Honor after be •olunteered to dispose of two German macbinegun nests blocking his platoon's way in Gennany on Nov. 17, 1944. Although shot in the shoulder and fool, Garcia cleared the way by killing six Germans and capturing lour. Born in Mexico, Garcia became a U.S. citizen after leaving service with the rank of master sergeant. At the lime of his death be was a contact man for the Veterans Administration in this area. Nation's Traffic Death Toll 565 'I'he nation's trnl:ric death ton for the three-day Christmas weekend tota1ed sas. the Vietnamese people, of the wcrtd opin- ion and broad segments of American pub- lic opinion, the Nixon Administration per- sists in reneging on its pledge to stop bombings of Hanoi. abstaining fmm bombing above the 20th Parallel and re- stricting bombings below the 20th Paral- lel to create a favorable climate for n~ gotiations," the Hanoi delegation sald. It was the first time Haooi publicly mentioned such an alleged understanding to limit the U.S. air war during the talks. The top-level secret negoUations between White House aide Henry A. Kissinger and Hanoi's Le Due 'Tho ended in dead- lock Dec. 13, five days before President Nixon ordered the resumpUoo of the air strikes. The Soviet news agency Tass reported from Hanoi today that American planes blt the subu:rbe of Hanoi at 1:06 p.m. in a raid that lasted an hour. It gave no report on casualties or damages. The Tass dispatch from the North Vietnamese capital also said U.S. planes on Monday bombed the Hanoi district o£ Haibatrung, Haiphong and other areas. On SWlday night, Tass said, American µJanes bombed densely populated areas or the town Of Thainguyen, 37 miles north or Hanoi, and Habac and Lanchon Prov- inces. FromP.ageJ LAUNDRY ... businesses were imperiled for a time, firemen said, but damage was confined 1'> smoke, more than beat. Among those structures were the Paws 'n' Claws pet shop, where firemen took special precautions to save dozens or animals. Officials said the animals "coughed a lot" from the smoke, but none were kill· ed. One physlcians's office and the· offioo;, of radio station KAPX also had some smoke damage. ·· In recent years he bad appe~ frail and drawn, his weight down from a presidential 170 pounds. He loog ago abandoned his life-long predilection for Ion&, fast early morning walks, but made almost daily et:cursions on lbor?Ping trips with his wife, Bess, herself S7. Mrs. Truman received the sad DeW$ by telephone. A family spokesman, Randall Jessee, said she received it "'Vrith the same fortitude and calmness with which s:._ has faced all of this." Nixon proclaimed Tbursday a naUonaf day of mourning, ordering flags lowered to half staff at federal building! for the next 30 days. Tbe auditorium in the Truman IJbruy, whtre the fuoeral RrVioel will be CCO- ducted, bolds Oll]y 200 peroom, llld .~ tendance will be by invltation aoly. Most foreign dignitaries were expected to go to a memorlal service in Washington's National Cathedral, nther than coming to Independence. Tributes flowed In swiftly as word of the death was flasbed around the world. "A 20th century giant is gone," fonner President Lyndon B. Johnson said in a statement issued at Awtln, TeL "Few men of any times ever shaped the world as did the man from Independence. "Pmident Truman presided over tbe destiny of tbis country during one of its most turbulent eras. Never Oinchlng in the face of crucial national choice!, his decisions changed the course of human events throughout the world." Queen Elizabeth U and Prime Minister Edward S. Heath expressed their sorrow to the American people in a wire to President Nixon, and lhe B r i t i S h monarch sent a private message to Mrs. Truman. The former president's body was removed to Carson Funeral Home in Independence. There will be a short funeral procession Wednesday morning from the home to the library, where the body will lie ln state for 24. hours begin- ning al noon EST. SESAME STREET SESAME STREET IS ABOUT THE ONLY STREET IN THE HARBOR AREA THAT HASN 'T HAD A CARPET INSTALLATION BY ALDEN 'S. Saddleback Won't Lose State Aid Saddleback College In Mlaslon Viejo. doesn't expect to lose any state aid tn the. upcoming fiscal year even though Gov. Ronald Reagan has vetoed a $4% million community college relief bill. Saddleback n<elve1 only basic aid ($125 per student) from lbe st.le. V•IO of- lhe relief bill dealt a blow to foundation· aid, state grants that are offered only to older community college districts. For example. the established O>ast Community College District upects to lose $3 million in funds nert year ch}e to the veto of the bill. The new Saddleback 6 o mm u n 1 l '} College District. accordlng to Dr. Fred H. Brtmer, superlntendent-presklent, Is considered a high wealth d1.!ttlct anc:\, as such, cannot receive foundation aid. llowever, Bremer said Sadi:Dtbact sup- ported the bill because in future years the wealth of the district will de;creue and it will become eligible for foundation aid fuDds. State figures ~howiog the er!ects t.o districts say Saddleback .. will lose just about zero dollars" in the upcoming fiscal year, Bremer said. A separate provision of the bill Bremer noted, would have change the definitions of "student" uoder rundlng formulu. Now, a student takinf I"' !ban 10 Ulllts · is coosidered 1 part Ume enrollee, or "'a defined adult student." Senate Biil 95 that Reagan vetoed would have dropped this part-time category and allowed colleges to count students toking ltsa than 10 Onita as "!uD time" students. Thi! would have meant Increased aid from the state to the 9& community col· lege districts of California. Bremer said this provlllon of the blll also would not cause problems for the burgeoning junior colleges. Banks , Hike Rate For Loans J,l,a, % NEW YORK (AP) -A otrtng ol majot commertiaf banks, lnc:ludlng the coun- ln''• thin! and foorth largeat, followed lbe Jead of two ether big banb and l>oo.!ted their prime lendin& rates today from s~ to 6 percent. Oiase MaoheUan Bank, No. S; Manufacturers Hanover Tnllt Co., No. 4: - Chemical Bank aod -Mldland Bank lncruled the Coct of banw1n( far. their most credl~wortby .-..,.. ID tbe face cf the Nixon admlniatration'•' campaign to control lnflatloo by lleepq the lid on bant Interests rates. _ "We are keenly aware of the federal, government'• desire to moderate upwardi rate pressures u a part of 'ltl effort to brin& inflation under finner CIOlltrol,'' a spokeunan for Cbue said. "However, we believe that holding: ir>- terest rates at levels which are out ol line wilb the market poerally wquld, over a period ol time, cauae dllt.orUorill iii the Dow of credit, and contribute to the inflationary l]liral by placing aboormally heavy demands 00 banks ... Services Scheduled For Mrs. Symington • WASHINGTON (AP) -A memortar service will be held Thursday for Evelyn Wadsworth Syminfton, wlfe of U.S. Sen. Stuart Symington llld mother of Rep. James Symington of Missour~ who died Sunday of a heart attack.. , She was stricken after returning from the Washl11gton Redskins-Green Bay Packers National Football Conference' playoff game: That is fewer than the et• who died In 1971 and far below the record toll of 720 killed over the three-day celebration In 1965. The National Safety Council estimated that from 550 to 650 persons would be klll· ed in trafifc accidents between 6 p.m. Friday, Dee. 22, and midnight Dee. 25. IN OUR FIFTEEN YEARS, WE HAVE C AR PETE D THOUSANDS OF HOMES IN COSTA MESA, NEWPORT BEACH, LAGUNA BEACH AND HUNTINGTON BEACH. ONE !NEIGHBOR TELLS ANOTHER UNTIL WE HAVE WORKED IN EVERY HOME ON A BLOCK. ALDEN'S The councll estimates that deaths dur· ing holiday periods run about ZS percent above those 1n which no holiday occun. Thu!I a total of 565 for lbe weekend would mean there would have been about 4S2 deaths JI no holiday were involved. Rites Set Wednesday For Mis. Ruth Wells Funeral 8Cl'Vle<1 for Mn. Ruth we1i. of San Clemente will be held Ln Costa Mesa Wedn•sday eltemoon. Mn. Wallo , 84, died Saturday after a long lllnt!ss. Mrs. Wells, of 183 Avwlda Santa Margarita, leaves e niece, 'M r a . CharUece Renaldl of Santa llnJ. Services will be held al s p.m. In BeU Broadwar Mortuarjl, Costa Mesa, and burial wlll foll ow In F'orest LJ.wn, Glendale. TH FORMULA IS SIMPLE-WE TRY TO MAKE EACH CUSTOMER HAPPY. ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR-WE PROBABLY CARPETED HER HOME. (IF we HAVEN'T, BRING HEii iN WITH YOU.) CARPETS e DRAPES IM con.1. MBA lfNCI lflJ 1663 Plec111tla Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Th l'll'un .. ' to 5:30 -,.,_ ' to 9 -SAT., "so to 5 • • • •• J 0 D.\ll Y PILOT SC Tvtsday, DtcetnW 26, ltn Ext1a $250 mllllon dollar Income tax ~efund .for Callfomla taxpayers. • SACRAMENTO -Financial el!J>Ort. are now predietfnt a '260.000,000 state Income tu muod wm ro to California tu· P<Y•n. The windfall resulted from Ibo Stata wilhlloldfng too much mooey from Calilomla tupayen in 1972. Mur of tho 1am• taxpayer• are alto ex• peeled to -ive Fedonl i.. tome'IU refunds for tbe um• ,_. ... ... waur·1ncome tax prepared free at Wutual Savings. Make90Urappointmentnowl The earlier you file the sooner you will receive your refund. Your income tax will be prepared by -'Kr. °liac or ~-·,one of the nation's leading iacome tax prqiaration firms. All returns strictly confidential. You can save the normal cost of an individually prepared income tu return; as much as $50 or more. The FREE personal income tax preparation at Murual Savings is avail· able if you add to or open a Certificate Account for $4,000 or more!You will earn the highest interest in the nation on insured savings. {Sorry-we cannot provide ihis servicefor corporations, part· nerships, business firms, estates or trusts.) Malec your appointment now and • receive free, an INCOME TAX ORGANIZER. Helps you.in collecting the infonnation you need to get your proper tax deductions and Idunds. • 'CertlficataAocounta eanr ~ b 1 year or more. 6" b 2 to W JCU1 with SS,CXXJ minimum. -..... MUTUAL SAVINGS andlconAllocllllon 2887 E. co.t HIQhwly 3-.-.olM«:MhurBlvd. Pllont: 075-G010 Mon.·TllUt 9AM-4PM; Fri. 8AM.OPM " Balancing Aet ' Los ANGELES (AP ) - Anticipating a moratortum on th<i requlrtmtnt r o r en- vlrmmenW Impact "'ports for pr I v a t e developments, bullden began a rush for bulldlng permits in October. • " Flgutts show that bulJclen applJed for 1 ne1r·record num- ber of pennlll lhat month. But they could find that llOUr<tl of eollltruction funds ""' drying up. A l!CCUlllTY Pacific Na· Uonal )lank·survey shows tbsl lat! mlnloo wort1i of permill .,.. .,......i In October, ..... pored lo l(jll mlillon In Sepleinber. And lndl<allon1 are the trend la cooUnulng. But some buUdlnc lndUstr)' llOlll<Q say the projects may -fet oil the dr•wtna boards. ''Ille lendlni inlll\uUons !bat OOllln>I the puree llrtnp of the Industry .,.. c:1&mpln1 down wilU there la more clartfkatlon of both Prop. IO and the environm~W lmpoct • I •• COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST • ' • 1' • I I For The Record Marriage Licenses AUFF-MOHtOYA -AOC..! -·· 3'\ lt-11• Ever"I 1,.lr<;J•j -t•ln f 11'1' ~ Ru111, tt, 1111 P1lm""'9QCI Ori¥•· G1rot11 Gr1vt. WAMPLEllt·~tlEY -c;.,,ld R-1 It. 29f , H II a...c:11 _. lj..,, ,,,.r.~~r.r.= J ....... ~r k Hlt'l_llfwtCllll • IA R-¥£RIU\.L -ltiitrt CNorlH, , W I I rl .... , A.ol ANll9~ _,..:r;r.O.! AM, 11, itJi $1•ma.\'w..O. "Irvin., C tft U IC. $HAHK·THOMASU0N -Mic J1mit1, lO. ttl\o\ Cr.,.111 1albo9 llilnd Ind s.ind r1 Jo. ,,, I tlf . It.. ... ...... San! ........ D 1tTlti.~·\llNES -t~rold laMlt, 2•, •~·• w ......... Aol. .1 "°""'lln \tflltv •"'1 '.~~r• MM, .. .,.., Into ..... ~ Wtfl""MolfH". DAl(L, Y-WEIS1fr1JElll -koll Mwll, It, ~ N. r .. .¥1. A,nMtlm lftlt J1,1ll* "=-ii\ l!'JO .-•rk N-.....r'I, Ml. 2117, N •.1~11. H~I! lAHI. -Nov. •· '"'°""'' W •• , fMI Kty, 4', bolh of H1,N1ll"9lon HU ~!SON-MOUSER -NOY.•· ltelllfl "a.;,;,ff~ Ct;!::~.' •!Id Gltctn. 4$. ot eAltNEUMAUGMNESIY -Nov. 4. ~llU1m, •7. ol E.condlOo. Pct \llvl1n I ..,., •• 1, o1 ost1 ,..,..._ e 1.~IS.SINGl.l!<;,!ON -NOY. 4, Wt•· rel\ C:oltmM,_ :W1 of t=:l:;to"• tl'ld ""! Mtrle. Jr or Mufti 5Hcl'I. GltE Nl!·SUGAlfMAN -"'°'."'J $, AIY'" ' " 6'. of lot A._in. tnd PtK1Un1 ffl'M:ft, II, of I.MUM a..cfl. EStltAOA·TOOO -NOV. 6, ltobM lt-ld1 24 -"" 1(1vln Sl.i~, 21, bolt! or C.osll MtM. Efl(MEl:.MAltTIN N01'., 6, l."11 lf':rt, 1, •'Id Sl'llrltv""'"M ...... boll'I of ~!JI . , WIL$0N·MALEY -Nov. 6, ~. •1, •f'ld M1rlllt Ellttbtlll. Jf, boll'I o1 Munll"l!ton ett~h. IAL.AVITCH-t.INO -N6v. 7, Ptul, Jr .. ~. of MVl'lllfllltotl etach, •ftd CVl\Thlt L., 18. of eueM P1rlt. GMIO-TEltltl!L~ -Nov. I , l1rt A .. 7', ~'ms.Oonitrw 11nt, n. bolli of Ucivn• PtCCAltD-l!Cl(MEIER -NQY. I, Clonoll:! L , oi6. 111d W1\m.1, .fl, boll'I or (qs,11 '.\HI. \llCKElt~·WlfOtl.Elt -Nov. 10, elllr. 30, '""' Lindt Elltabell'I, 21. botll of ~OSll M .... Ml T-Mlft! -NOv. 10. Fr1nkoln °'"" ,, 11. ,_,,,,lid N1ncv A11n, n, both of Wnt,.,lm!tr. SPIEll(Elt-LASSITER -Nov. 10, J....,. 11:'*"'1, 3S, ol Huntlnc!ton eN<fl, •l'ld la\11'1 """· 26, of Lonq IHCh. Death l\'otlces ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY U'7 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa -• BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar f7S.MSO Co1ta Mesa "'-!4%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTIJARY llt Broadway, Co1tl Meta UU<ll • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17'5 t.pu C.ayon Rd. ffU41S • PAC!FIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK CemettrJ Mortuary Cllapel UM Psiclf1c Vle1I' Drfve Newport BeKb, Callrornl1 Nl-r700 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME W1 Bo111 Ave. Wetlmhulttll311t5 • , SMITBS'MORTIJARY GT Mall St. Hatt.,... Beacb - - County Budget Hike Tops SACRAMENTO -Oranae County's I9n·73 budget show· eel a bigger increast than any of California's 57 other coun. ties. according to rlgures rtleased by $Late Controller Hugh Flournoy. The county also bucked a !latewlde trend in relying more on local property taxes to finance county government while most California counties decreased reliance on local property tax. Wedding Dress Burns Bring Suit SANTA ANA -A woman who claims her honeymoon was spent in e San Francisco hospital receiving treatment for bums inflicted by her wed· ding dress hes sued the manufacturers of the bridRI gown and the store that sold it ror $210,000. Mrs. Aileen Angel states in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that defective materials used In the lace. satin and cotton gown made by Ga llina BQuquet Fashions and sold by Bullock's stores were responsible for her severe burns. Mrs. Angel states s h e bought the dress at Bullock's Dec. 18, 1971, and wore the gown Rl her wedding later that day. She said the materials in- flicted "bubbling burns" that forced h e r hospitalitation when she arrived nt San Fran- cisco on her honeymoon trip. This year 's county budget Is $27S mUUon, according to Flour My. That worU out to a $30 million more than tut year's, wtuch is a 12.3 percent increase. By way of comparison, neighboring l.Mi Angeles Coun· ty 's budget decreased $120 mllUon over last year, or 4.$ percent. The largest percentage in· crease in the state was in ORANGE COUNTY Race Horse Assessment ~lono County , where an !800.000 hike In the budget meant a is ptrt'tnt overaJI ln- ettase. Orange County managed Us whopping b u d g e t tncrease while actually rtduclng the general purpose tax rat.e from $2.04 per $100 assessed valua- tion to $1.95. However, County Assessor Andrew Hlnshaw had re· evaluated most county land at an averaae 15 percent great.er value. The rHU!t wat a net revenue gain for tbe county despite the tex cut. The 1972-73 budget relies on local property taxes for M.93 percent of lts revenue . This is a .48 percent increase over the 1971·72 budget figures. Statewide. 311 of 57 other counties decreased the percer>- tage or their budget! coming from local property taxes. County Gives Okay To Improved Parking ORANGE -New and i!ll- proved parking areas for the county's Manchester Center facilities have been approved by the county Board of Supervisors at more than twice the budgeted amount . Parking spaces under the plan would increase from the current 1,400 to 2,130. Joseph Smisek , county building services director said only $215,000 was budgeted for the improvements. He said he could take an additio n al $288,000 from other delayed projects and $87.000 from the proP'J.Sed fire training ce'ter to bring the spending up to $590,000. Under the approved plan Orange Cou nty Medical Center parking would jump from 610 spaces to 900. A smaJler area at the east end would ac- commodate 200 cars and the center area l.D.10. The final plan calls for repaving, lighting curbing and landscaping. The vote to approve was 3 tQ 2 with Supervisors David L. Baker and Robert W. Battin in opposition. Change Due 1----N , ., .:..~~ =g:-r::y ~:~ HONG -KONG warned today that legislation 1 1 -,,-.-:-c-.~C=U~ST=O=M~T~A:;llOIS P'EIM.ANfNT IN SANTA ANA revi sing assessment pro-"-I r.1-c.. ... -SALE cedures on racing anJmals is 2 ""'su"'1T"s1t S 135 off and running. ~ __ , • ""''""'.i-County Assessor J a c k R d I • Vallerga re.minded owners and '"ll &Alf a.,. "°"'I e eve Op.1ng breeders In the county that :".:' ~!.·::;:~ !: SAVI UP TO 5°'4> Oft(•t•M ... hhs, Spertc_..1, Slocb, ltWt• •WI PIT ANY SIZI state taxation of race horses ts 111• -1r · · · · · .19 •2 G F d Str.orbll~ ••••••. •5 .. roup. orme OOW determined on 8 specially l!I• W .......... U I• --~ f ~~ . c...--. ....... '2 " • AHY STTU COlllD pret-1""' ee 1MSIS. tv•-........ 110 7e SANTA ANA -A rom-That fee schedule, Vallerga "1"' ••••·••·•••10 6 _...,. -"' .. & '-'tr = 8H DAllT ~· • na ALTUATIONS mission that would study said, is enclosed with a form "°° f11111r 1Mr01Tu • IAT .... redevelopment possibilities ror entitled "Annual Race Horse W001.111s • r111n 1UMo•T ,.., ~he downtown sector here will Tax Return" and can be o~ ,_ .,,._,..,_,., ""-t33.o211 -U3.01tl his ff, N 1Ult MACASTHIJll ai.n. -tl.llTI 4Q • IAHTA AHA be given final consideration by talned from · o ice, 144 . f ,,ft., °"-"'~'"' '"""· _ '°"' o1tto , __ ,_ city councilmen early in Broadway, Santa Ana, or by c.-•,. ,,, '°""""" ...._ 111.1,. -'" o.c. Ar_, fl1•t -.............. •-& l•~~t;.IH . ._,H January. _'.'.te'.'.'le'l'p ... hon~in~g~8.14-39211'.:'.:'.:::'.:.' ___ '..'::===============~==~ Plans Okayed "Ml~lmum 1100 ~,.on.i 1cooun1 Hop in your car and come as you are! The Imperial folks are waiting for you! ln1>erial Bene Co.ta Me1a Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive (714) 97~1000 OI/fy Coast Qffers • 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art Llnklett1r 'Ille lllllders Club: A new way to beat inflatlon. Its membership card permits )'OU to buy nearly every- thing )'OU need from the finest closed-Ooor show- rooms at substantial sav- ings -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the ''fleet" pr1ce and mOblle homes and motor· cycles at substantlal Sl\l- lngs. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5. 13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%·6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts" withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. also provides big dis- counts on tickets to sport- ing and entertainment events ••. plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership requi re- ment for savers-$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as-- soclate memberships en- titling them to all outside referral serYices. Ask about jofning at iiny Coast office . MAIN OfFICl: 9th & Hiii, Los Anpln •623-1 351 other offices WILSHllt[ 8t QRAMOCY "-ACE: 3933 WllShlre Blvd., LA.• 388-1265 LA. Cl\llC CENlEt:: 21'ld & Bro.<tw1y • 6~1102 HUNTINCITON •EACH: 91 Hunl\nlJlon Center • .(714) 897-1041 SANTA MONICA: 718 W11"11re Bl't'd. • 39J.<1746 SAN PC>fl:O: 10th & Pacific • 831.:l341 wtSTCO\llNA: Eastltlnd ShOpplne: Ctr.• 331·2201 l"ANORAMA CITYI Chi• & \Ian N"YS 9twd. • 1192-1171 TARZANA: 18751 \11ntura Blvd.• 345-8614 l.ONQ 9!ACH: 3rd & LOCUll • 437·7481 £AST LOS Af'fQl[Ltl: 8th & SOio • 266-4510 DIAMOND IAlt: 328 s. Ol1mond Bar • 1714) 5115-7525 TUSTIN: lirwin Squ.re Sh0ppln1 Ctr.• {714) 832-6810 lA MIRADA: La Mlrad1 Shopping Ctr.• (714) 522-6751 Daily Hours-9AM to4 PM All Offices, Except Civk: Center, Open S.turdays 9AMtolPM San Gabflel Olf<I Open~& Soon . ~ . I •m •llglble for benefits outlined In s•veral of the questions •nd an1w•n you ha.,e pubU1had. When the time comes how w111 I kl\ow I am 9ettin9 wh•t I am entltl•d to rece/Ye and how wlll I 9et 1tarted7 by EUG~NE 0. BERGERON DAILY PILOT 0.. .t .. ,,... ,_,,,.,.,,., .. 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Balt:•Bergeron Funeral Home COSTA MW 2 LOCATIONS CORONA dtl MAR 646.2424 673-9450 This Week at ' at ROGER'S GARDENS 20% Off on Famous Brotvn Jordan Patio Furnishings now thru February I Now you can save on the entire molded al uminum rust.free line; order the chairs, tables, chaises, seatin9 9roups and umbrella tables you 've been wanting! Choo1• from a wide range of colors and fabrics. Al10 s•ve 20 i'. on Tam i•mi, Keilu• •nd Regent II lines before the price increase in early '73. Use your Christmas clieck, Mastercharge, Bankamericard or your Roger's Account Y2 PRICE SALE ON CHRISTMAS MERCHANDISE!! Unusual ornaments, candles, candleholders, music boxes, wall decor, elegant tree trims, place mats, Christmas linens. Many are one ind two of a kind. All are in excellent condition ... we just don't hov e tho space to store them. You 'll find them in our Patio Department. Be here early for best selection! COSTA MESA 2221 falrvlaw Road Phone 642-8686 MISSION VIEJO 24741 Chrisanta Drive Phone 837-7811 o,,.n dally Hcept Monday .ALL 60 FASHION ISLAND STO·RES OPE·N TONIGHT UNTl.L 9:30 P .. M . . ' i ! ~ l ·l . ;u . . . ' .. · NEW YORK (AP) -StoCt•mar~ct1 .£'" ,enlly cban&~ !IWI ~. but a f C • back Into. ·~ ~.df•ff 11'1dck bad nepl • 111.m 'lower for most of Jut WMk. · • Tbe' Dow Jonee ........ tll• to llldiillrlal ltocb •• ~· -iw-y...i. 1• .... Aed ... ~?::;~Ii'.~"~~.::~: I i; r.,; ~" ' ~ !la -'Ill ~.:::·:·;;; \ ... ~ ... -~· .... ::::. ;."' •• ,.,.11 -...... -N ..1·•·· ... 1 -... .. "'" •... .-.. • • , -. it-Yerk ,.... l'el••J•• .... ·-~ ·~· lfi -,,.,, .. , ........ .. 'firllii ,.. .............. I "~I r"" ~ ............... " Clrt ......... , ... , .. , I m"'i''"'"''''"""' "' .................... . . ' ".... .. ............ .. ... ................... 1 1 1 ,. .. , ................ .. . . IC DAILY Pl~OT JJ • Ex-president Lo.,ed Poll·er~ .Polidcs ~ ' ' '•I • Tvtldly, °"""bor 26, 1972 DAILY PILOT !\ J l TRUMAN MEETS WITH GEN. MACARTHUR IR IGHT)·ON WAKE ISLAND IN 1950 Ul"I T..._ft' ' • .. " :Missouri ~Wild' ' . . Games His Trick ' . E(lit0r'1 .Note: Th~ authOf' of tht: · f~Umoint1 artfcZ. ii o retired Anoe· ia!'a.~ualun'iter •who cOVCf'¢ Herry S "-tli<mlghollt hi& 1fet!T• in the White Hotde .. By TONY VACCARO 'Atiodated Press Writer WASH!NGTON -Presiden~ pOOUcian and, Poler player. That was Harry s Tnitqan. The man from M1S!Ollri loved to play pokei mere thin anyone·rever met . And be blied to play,"wlld" game!·-games where the cleuees0orl one:.eyed jacJi:s were wtld~ Ngb-low ,games, seven:card and three'<lard. Trurruin usually played !or the sheer joy he got ot.1t.OC the game. He got a big- 8"1" kick out o! blul!ing _ .... out o! a pot than he dld from )Vindlng up 1be win-ner. THE PRESIDENT a!So cOO!a be sym- patbelic to a J.,..,., OOwe.er. ' . Onct, wbeh the 'JO'e6idential party w .. at Key west, Fla., a young priest joined the rePorters one night in the press ~-~ c;hapl!Un lost more lliap • 13() be- muse o/ l*1 Wllamiliarity with lbe "wild" games we had learned from tJie ix:ee-. . . 'rbe next afternoon, at a .recepllon, I ,Introduced.the.priest to the treSidellt and . to~ Truman ·wbat had .happened. ' 'I'll tell you what, Father," the presi- .dent said. ''You get back in that game · .tonight. J'll mat.ch everything you win, and you can use· the ~ooey , to buy something you need for you.r ·attar." A little bit more expj,rjencecl, the priest ''°" about m the oecond night. I relayed the ...ro lo numan. THE NEXT SUNDAY, the -priest stood outside the Navy cliapel alter conducting ·ear!y0M1SJ. He greeted Truman M the president arrived ror the later Protestant service. "Here's that autograph I promised yoti," the. president said. The priest._ ed the envelope, then called me over. Inside was $35 in crisp, new bills. For all his plain speaking,. cuss words and .. give . ·~m hell" reputation, Truman was ,a religious man. , .. I pray to God I can metisure up to the task " be told me as we rode 1ogelber bl his 'newly provided ·white Houf.~ limousine Oil April 13, llMS, tbe day alltf Franklin D. Roosevelt's death at Wann Springs, Ga. Later tbat day, be told reporters: ''.! don't know if you ne\fSpawmen ever pray, but il you do, please pray for me now." Tnunan was a biendly man, caililJc thousanqs of people by their first n~ He had a quick temper but never held a grudge. WHEN MUSIC CJtmC Paul Hume ol the Washingtoo Post found f•ull wilb daitghter fifargaret's voice, he wrote io Hume that. if they ever met, "you'll oet9 a new nose and plenty of beefsteak and perhaps a supporter below." After Truman left olfice, Hume wrote a col'"11n praising the presid.,. for hi> ·support of Waobingtoo's Natton a) Symphony Qrcliestra. Truman wrote (S.. llAlll\Y S TRUMAN, Pl&' 38) ' • t • ' ' ' FRANKLIN .ROOSEvELT !LEFT) SHOWN WITH NEW VICE PRESIDENT IN 1944 UPI T• ......... . ' ' WIT.._..... 1"I loOllMIR PRESIDENT JOINS WIFE, BESS, IN 1969 PHOTO TRUMAN CLASPS HANDs-wint'CNUllQflliL (LffiTJ AND STALIN.CRlqHT)-AT 194$. POTSDAM MEETING 1 • c '· lit re OU w of d di fo of ( t t c a e t • ' ' . .. .. T r uman 'Did What He Had t o Do ' By Uniled Prtt1 I~ l W!TORY WD..L mnember C. Marshall, whom Ttwnan had Truman enttffil the smat. The ablllu.. ol Harry 8 too, that he ..temd to the At'. appointed Secretary ol St.au. ta! ra-In I"" ••• won u. Truman were anythJ.n,g but ger Hill ~ u 1 ;'red bu-mad b Ha ard "" N'I •uu • no common. But to "• -m-· "••," that he --,. •••• ·~ • a •pee< at rv · n><lected In 1940 despiU nd """"' -z·-· • ..._ -<;> aMN u1111;1 University ln wbidl be outlined . ' a the worSd he came to 1toe11odU1try In an ldicXI which 1 plan ror U.S. asaistance In the ~1tter a~~scks that caned hlm a symbolize the potenUal, when the SUpreme Court ruled Wep.I, economic recovery of Western stooge of the Penderaast history demanda II, of tho and that he unceremonioualy E chi common man. l1red Gen. ~glaa MacArthur urope. 11.1a ne. The ••man of lndepeodeoce" during the Korean eonlllct. IT BEC.UIE known aa the Truman's greatest fame be- molded the desllny of the In potot ol publlc reaction, Marshall Plan. fore he became president •- Unlted states and .the world the Uni dedslOns problbly A week later, Congrtss from bis work u ~rman ol with uni:ncedented declatona-ftl'e the most unpopular Ui.np adopted a resolution named for the Senate comnuttee on 1be atomic bombing of Japan, he dld durina the .even yean the late Republican Sen. Arthur national defense. The group the Manball plan, the Berlin and nlne months be served u N. Vandenberg of Michigan came to be called the Tnunan blockade airlift, lhe dlJpatcl!. of president. But Truman Dever chief advocate oI the bipartis~ War lnvestlgating Committee , U.S. troopt to Koru-end publlcly wavered tn the belief foreign policy. and it kept a close watch on many mc,re. that tbey were the right actlcm. The resolutk>n empowered the war production to guard againsL .. . Truman aL9o wu a political United States to enter into profiteering and faulty WOJ'k· 1 ,,DID WHAT bad to ho leedeo., the devoled bead ol the milltary aillances with other manship. ~t ~ ~ ;:1yd. ••-fiery, ~Uc1,_ pertel.a!. ~~ tree natio~. In his final term of office, wic IUQll nnu .. uu .. ...,................. The economic restorative wlis Truman was forced to defend ~ out occaslooal caustic obee!'ver to be the forerunner of large-his administ.ralien against char- -afterward. scale military. aid in the ~es of corruption in the Internal • • • .. hd,, effr He rose from precinct captain HARRY S TRUMAN building of a system of Revenue Bureau and tax aeeueel TrutMan ln brawling Kansas Clty, ~ bomb B nl oo:llective security. division of the Justice Depart- , through county office and the en · ut, 0 Y a On April 4, 1949, the AUanUc ment. 0 ttOt Making de· ~.S. Senate to the moat while aft~r . Truman left Pact, establishing the North He fired Attorney General J. els..... 1mJ?Mtanl public office in the ~~ ~~::::S:S caught up AllanU.c Tr~ty Or~anizaUoo, Howard McGrath when Mc· nation. He loved pollUcs and This . ' i th .• _1 was signed 111 Washington by Grath quarreled with Newbold ~ played it well-8o weQ in f&Oti IWTOWlng O . e n111,;1.e&r the roreign ministers ol 12 }ittle Missourian wanted to be that he pulled one ' of the PP between .the Uruted States nations. ~ 'remembered. greatest upsets in the nation's and RuasJa was only one of the Harry S Truman was boni. T r uman took • •• • T-, -26, 1972 Mil Y PILOT • J J LAUREN BACALL LfSTENS AS TRUMAN PLAYS PIANO 'll'IT ....... 1111< 1 hlsto wt .. ,_ major setbacks to the free M 8 1~, . . Fate permitted Truman to po a ry th w.:i re-world ' during the Truman ay , OOT, m ~unpretentious one Of lab tCOrst was slow to regain his strength. 'H bl J b!' outlive most of those with election in lM8. admlnistratlon. There also WllS frame house .1" the liUJe j ...,_,_. l'-k,J ~e w~s hos pitalized (or a short onora e 0 whom be aharecl a place in f' He-was a colorful public the fall or China to the Lasouthwest'-:'11 Missouri town of U••'C"I.. n.: •ftfl• time 1n lhe summer or 1966 foe hist -Stalin Ch hill d 1gure, too. He wore gaudy . mar. His parents, John and ory ' ur~ • e soorts shirts on his vacations in C.Ommurusts, a development for Martha Trwnan gave him the In otffee over t he a colon disorder. Gaulle, MacArthur, Eisenhower Key West, Fla., he played the which Trutt'U!n was scorcbingly letter "S" as a middle name in •tee& it•ue. Arthritis began to slow his ::::vi: ::::: i~· ~~;ra piano, he wore steel-rimmed blamed by his roes. tribute to his grandfathers, who brisk gait, and the famed presklenllal elections in one of glasses, he spoke with a THE CH~RGE that Truman were named Shipp and Solo-~ walking stic~ ~e was . acc1:15· Truman on tlie Presidency the most ltwming upsets in u. Jn?n. Morris, the man he had named tomed to swmg1ng so 1,aw1hly s political hi!to Nhen Truman was 4 years tQ head the administration's became a cane on which he ·He once said ryih l '.INm.ea tcrot e • letter w hile pre.f. old, the family, one of old "cleanup" campaign. leaned more and more heavily. a a man d L.-American stock from Kentucky could have no better epitaph ent, tRC"•tenlng a m Us i c eritle eoltla moved to a 600-acre farm ne~ TRUMAN REFUSED to in-HE CONTINUED to make than one he sa~ imcrlbd on a ltodlly Jaann for f) e l ng •nklncl ta the Independence, Mo. voke the Republican·sponsored pu~llc appearances, to journey fr~ntler 1rave m Arizona. It Young Truman lived a Taft-Hartley Labor Act, which a.t mtervals to New York to see 1 N D E PENDENCE, Mo. (AP) -Before the birth of his lin;t grandchild, Harry S Truman said he wanted none of bis grandsons named after him. said' singing tJOiee of lib daughter, /tfarg..-et. normal farmboy !Ke, perform-he abhorred, and acting under h~ daught&, Margac~t, Mrs. '·Here lies J ack Williams ; He -....------------____ Ing his chores and attending what he termed the 'inherent Clilton Darnel, and his three his life," Truman said: "'lbe done hiJ damndest." ---~~-----~school powers" of the presidency grancbons, and to take obvious "lt would be a handicap all Truman truJ f peppery, Mldwestern twang,, lost China became one of the big · seized the steel mills ' delight in daily visits to his worst thing in the world is to •·•e--'·-Y11was ah~ 0 and he took long walkli: in the issues of the 1952 presidential BETWEEN C B 0 R ES and Tru took f ·h. office until the fall or 1966. have a nrosident in lhe fami-t.uu ,,......,.,....,. was IS way I morni hour · which b DerDI> school Truman 1 arned t 1 man one o IS worst . . . r· ~ of life as well as his hometown. ear y ng s. :!"ts~t after ~ e the iano-at his ~ther'so J:sf:, judicial lickings in oftice over V15its with f.!te former ly." Re was vice president the HE HURU:D invective at years 1n t p d becam thl! steel iswe. Steel manage-president were llmi~ thereaf-On another o c c a s i o n , d~y that Franklin 0. Roosevelt S!>me of bis critics, once refer--po~ugh Truman was not the p~~ amateur ;us~ia~ ment too.k the federal seizure to~:. on~ to close .J"endsli ~nd Truman said : died on April 12, 1945, and rmg to a columnist as an ndid th . About the tim h tht Supr·eme Court The high epe ence resJ. ents ving found himself holding the reins "s.o.,b." He wrote~ letter whi!e ~trat!:: U:~ J:~::; acqu.irlng a taste e fore m~s court, in an historic decision, near the big old house on of the mightiest nation in-the p~den.t, ~tenmg a music Republican onslaught But the Truman was thinking aboui reversed the president. Del.aware Stree:t seldom. saw wor!d ln one of the most cntic with bodily ha"!1 for !>e" indecisive war in ~ea-then military life as a career. He It was during 1950 that an the1r fa?1ous neighbor agam. critical periods in history. lng ~kind to the singmg voice nearly 21ii ears old-sought entry to West Point but attempt was made on Truman's Occas1onally they would cat.ch Truman woo re..e.lection In of his daughter, Margaret. probably the Y. i:! was turned down beca~ of life a glimpse of Truman entering a lN&. defeeting Dewey in .what The mus\c ~ritie had ~t Democratic d=~f"use 0 poor eyesight. On the afternoon of Nov. 1 ~ or returning borne after a most call the biggest Political ~n. where it hurt most-m At the end ol World War II, Since his parents could not Griselio Torresola and Oscar trip to the barber shop on the upset ln hlltory. his family. For Truman was 8 the penlnsula of Korea wu afford to send him to college, C.Ollazo Puerto rucan revolu-town square, ~ P".fha~ an . Truman was .the 33rd pres-devoted family man, and he jointly occupied by Soviet aod he went to work after tionari~s who li ved in New afternoon .ride WJth bis wi.fe or 1dent of the Uruted States ~Dd ~uld not . tole:ate any asper-U.S. troops . That portion of graduating Crom high school. York, attemoted to shoot their an old fnend. . tbe 32nd ,11.an ~ bold the office. Slons on ~.1s wife, ~· who~ Korea oorth of the 38th paraDel He worked ror $3 per week in a way . into Blair Hoose. where In the spn.ng of 1968, lie aerYed \DJtil ~an. 20, ~95.1, he called The Boss, or on his became a C.Ommunist satellite. drug store. Then be worked in the president was living while ~ tbe day Gen. Dwight D. Ei.sen-daughter· South Korea became a republic the circulation department of the White House was being OO.:er succeeded him in the An~ '.ft'Uman, a Baptist, w~ under United Nat.ions auspices. the Kansas City Star, was repaired. T r u na fl n had ~ HoUle.. a religK>US man_. He .once S8ld On June 15, 1950, a North timekeeper for a constroction The attempt was thwarted by faile d notkeably DURING D YEARS ol de-ln a television interview. after K~ annr, well-trained and gang, and worked as a bank police and Secret Service ~and consequence, not only he had left the Whit~ H~, eqwpped with Russian tanks clerk. . ~uarda.io a wild shooUng affray i n recent ve--•· f9r the n1Uon but the world as that rellglon had sustained him and other modern weapons, HU military mnbi.tionl were on Pennsylvania Avenue . The ~ well, be ,.Ve the order to drop in many of his more difficult croseed the 38th paralleJ and not forgotten. •~ever .. He nresident was unbanned, but a however Tnunan's health im- tbe atomk bomb that ended the periods. . . began a general assault against enlisted In tbe Na~nal Guard. White House policeman was • .... , ___ .a ,.. J '--he Padli Truman waa vice pnosidenl Ibo Republlc of South Kor... And 'lll>en Ibo !Jniled States k'lled and two othe ded proved markedly .. uwu= con-~r Ww.u lpw1 In t ic. on the morning (Jf April l , Truman acted swiltl He entered World War J, he was . i . rs woun siderably Crom his White House He gave tbe go-ahead for the 1945. At 7:09 that night. he was u.ted bis executive aJtiiority COllUllbsloned as a first lieuten-m the pistol battle. years am smnetimes stooped, :v:op:f!t ~~:·s bi~ge~ president, having been llfOl'D i.n and did oot ask Congress for a ant and later became captain of f' Both gunmenh , wrdho openth ed Truman by late .1968 had . uNo MAN, IF he knows wbal it is all about, would want to be president. It is the most te1Tible job in the world as well as the most honorable.'' He also cal\ed the White House "the finest prison in the world." When he returned t o lndependence after more than seven years as president, Truman declared that a1 a private citizen be would do nothing that would detract from the dignity befitting a fotmtr ',resident. He turned down opport1.mi\\ea \o cub in on the office, !laying he did not want to do anything to capitaJlie on "the world's most horxrable office." He refused to be drawn into discussing foreign po 1 i c y , saying that one man alone - the president -was qualified to comment. IN ms MANY talks to school children, Truman ofteo dwell on the importance of the presidency. "No man on earth can do that job as it should be done," he said once. ''There isn't time. No one knows that })et.. ter than I." He once told a Future Farmers of America con· vention: 'Nearly all t be leaden and presidena of the United States got their start on the farm. A!ly one of you can be president. So you had better be ready." Truman was particularly anxious that the papers ol ail the presidents should be preserved for future geneni'- tions. An inscription engraved in marble above the cor'- nerstone of the $1,750,000 Truman Library says in part; • UlfBIB LIB11Al\Y w l \ \ bekmg to tho people ol the United Statea. My papers will he the property of the people and be accessible to them and this ls .. lt sboukl be • • • " ' . . at a hastily improvised ceremo-declaraUoo of war. He ordered ------~ -Ire . on t e gua s w1 out resumed almost daily walks, Berlin and. ordered an 8:"'1ift to ny in the cabinet room of the air aea and ground support for ----------.-.----warning, were shot down . although he ventured out alone ~ the e1ty supplied with food Wlllte House. , t.be' South Koream. . F r I e • *' • re• Torrisola was killed and Collazo only rarely. and ~~ despite a Soviet "Pray for me, 0 he asked the He placed the aggressJon wounded. He and Mrs. Truman made bl~~ di!flCUl dedskln newsmen. before tbe United Natkrls for ,.r.Jell t.lte Tni-Collazo later W3S sentenced successive .springtime visits ti' , • t ' . action. ....... rriage as to death but Truman commuted Key West, Fla., in 1988 and 'IhDnao illd, wts O~g ON BIS SIST b1~ay, May 8, the sentence to life imprison-1969. Their daughter and her troops,,lntd Korea In a <police IMS, be proclaimed victory THE DECJs:ION of Korea had Weal. ment in 1952, a few months husband and the Truman Library Was Tr11man's Dream in Recent Years , = tliat kept Communist over Germany, ending the war been made fundamentally tJree ..-. _ _ _ ~ _ -........ before he left office. grandsons joined them there. fJ'Olli. advanctnC past the In Europe. But Just 95 days yeara earlie.-. ------. 31th parallel. alter he had taken office, On lllarch 12, !Kl, Truman Battery D, •29th Flekl Artillery, TRUMAN RAD been tmable to But alter that,.~ did lie ffWDCl_ated thl Truman mankind entered a new era enund.ated to Congress a basic 35th Division. campaign in the 1954 congr& virtually. all of his vtslting In QoctriJie to keep R..si. oot ol which outmoded the type of change In foreign policy. Returning from France, bo siooal campaigns because or a the conllIJe'! of his home. 'Ille S9Jitbern -. 1Upporled tbt warfare that bad defeated the 'Ibis was what ba!I become held a major's comm1Bs1on Jn tirush with death following gall ~her of un~t callers lnh Marshall Pt.an' for keeping Naz.is. known as the "Truman Doc-the reserve and later was a bl adder surgery that spring. He h!3. late Y~ m<reased, .wit RU.ss!a out of Western Europe, The Atomic Age was born trine." ~e colonel. underwent removal of his gall v1s1ts from. IUcbard M. Nixon, pieskted at the birth of the JUly 16, IMS, with the explosion It meant specifically that bladder and appendix on June Lyndon B. Johnson, Hubert ~· United Natlom and was a key ol an experimental bomb on the lruitead of abstain.Ing from ON J1JNE 21, 1919, Truman 19, Ul54. C.Omplicalions set In Hum~e,:,-, ~wxl Muskif.!. mover tn creation of the Nort.b delert at Alamogordo, N.M. It world politics Jn peacetime, the married his childhood sweez. when he suffered a severe The visit br N~on, once m:ie of Atlantic Treaty Organization was christened with Truman's United Stat.es became an active heart, Bess Wallace, the reaction to antibiotics and was Tr um~ n s bitterest cntiC!, (NATO). decision to use the new weapon participant. daughter of one of the oldest critically ill for 8 time. ~,within two. months after Truman devised the Point on Jape.n in order to speed an 'lbe doctrine was enunciated and most prominent fam!Ues in Truman had failed noticeably Nuon 8 inauguration In 1969· Four plan of. technlcal asst. end to World War ll. on a specific is.we of military the Fri~ r arcled the Truman in reoent ye~, possibly TRUMAN'S FIFTH bospitaliz... lance to underdeveloped na· The United States held a aid to Greece and Turkey, marriage : Ideal The couple beginning with lnJuries suffered ation since leaving the WhJte lions, serving not only as monopoly on the weapon, but strategic free wwld defense had ooe child ~ daughter in a fall in the bathroom of his Hoose came in February, 1989, commander-ln-chief of the U.S. Truman offered to tum over Ill anchors in the Eastern Mediter· Margaret 'W'hO was born izi home In October, 1964. The when a sudden attack of ln- armed fo~. but u the ~hlef aecrets to the world for control ranean. 1924 ' accident, in wtllch two ribs testinal nu foreed a five-day executor of the nation's foreign under an international body-Greece waa under active whue Truman was In the were fractured, brought his stay at Research Hospital in policy. only, however, if there were military attack by Communirt Arm he bad saved ron.sidera-third hospital illness since Kansas City. Truman bad enemies. ~e 1!8s "fool·J>rOOf" ~feguards. . rebel forces. Turkey was ~ ble ~y. After the war, be leaving the White House. .wit.bin a week following his tl1e object. of an, assa~ation . Russia rejected this coodi-heavy external Communist and 8 friend, Eddie Jacobson, Recovery from a hernia di.vrussal, ho~ever, Truman attempt, during his ~1dency. hon, while working dWgenUy to pressure. . pooled t h e I r resources and operation early in 196.1 was strolled two miles through the H'~ had htlny cr1t1cs who perfect an atomic weapon of Its The Communist attacks were opened 8 haberdashery store In uneventful but friends said he streets of Independence. dltagreed with hlm, quarreled own. On Bepl. 23, 1949, Truman repulsed and the two countries Kansas City wUh him and ridiculed him at announced to the world that the saved. Their business venture fiou- tiilies. Sovleu had ~. '!be Greek-Turk~y aid ectkln rahed until tho first post-war ~ut nobody evtr accused 'Ille following January, he was followed swilt.cy by two depression Then it failed · TNman of not making deei-authorized U.S. sc:lentlsll to go profound steps. Truman Jod $15 ooo but paid 1i sJons, ahead wlth deveJwment of the On June ;, 1947, Gen. George all hack-the 'tasi paymenb I· being made after be became a U.S. senator. Thus, in 1921. he faced the prospect of finding work or returning to the farm. But a friend from the Anny, Jlm PenderP.,t, thought pel'hapo hi, uncle could help Truman. The uncle ·was Kansas ctty DtmocraUc "bQn" Tom Pen- cleJ'flsl. • 1 N D E PENDENCE, Mo. (AP) -It was natural that a man witb Harry Truman's feeling for history would want to preserve the turbulent events of his presidential years -and take part in the recording. When Truman left office in 1953, his keenest wish was for a historical repository to serve both scholars and the general publlc. In 1957, his dream came true. He worked there almost dally until 11168. The Truman Library was built with pri Va tel y con- tributed funds and deeded to the government. It ls ln Slovtt Park, six blocks from the Truman home and less than a mile from the Jackson County courthouse where the 33rd president of. the United States got his political start. One wing was reserved for Truman and his staU, who un- til then had worked in a downtown Kansas ctty build· ing. The fonner president usually was the tint one to ar- rive in the morning, '°'""limes ~ vtslton II 6,30 or 7 a.m. He delighted In ccning -to Ibo publlc ponJon and ltartllng vlslton with a -that pro-vided touches 00 other guide could provide. His unDagging interest was In greeting the )'OOJlg people who came singly or in busloads. He was always notified when groups o f childrtn were in the building and he would make It a point to say a few words. ...._ Pendergast did find a job for Truman, as a county hlghw1y overseer. A year later, Truman WQl'l tJecUon as a member of tho coonty caurt -a county administrative body simllar to county commlaatoners In other states. KENNEDY, JOHNSON, EISENHOWER ANO TRUMAN AT FUNERAL f OR HOUS E SPEAKER RAYllURN .. ,_ TRUMAN WITH IKE EN ltOUTI TO LATTI R'S INAUGURATION TRUMAN'S NEW job h a d nothing to do with Juris- prudence but, nevertheless, he TRUMAN .. began studying law. For two • yeera be attended oliht cluses at the Kansas Clt7 Low School Cc.atliooed fnim Pqe IAJ where hla: dtan later recalled another lett« to the critic. Thll one was him as an outstanding student. WBrm and friendly. The Pendergast poUtlcJI ma-Long after he retlred to his home ln chine was uodtt constint Iodtpmderice, Mo .. TnimM eald : "I've attack for graft. But Truman's ne~tr had any penonal ~mles -only inttgrlty was never quotloood. politlclll enemies." Ha.vJng made hit ~ In He couldn't undttStand why political the county court. Trumftn opponenta took offente when he attacked kHlk~ toward new rtelda. them. "Polltlcs 11 the frealtst game Qn Pendergast suggested thrit Ttu-earth," be saJd once. In "Mlnouri, we man seek the Democrat~ crRCked the whip and thundered at each nomination for U.S. Minator. other and then went out and had supper tof!:el Mr.'· This phllooophy was evident In bis .~ lilude toward the Democratic prukfen. tial candidates ln 1956 and 1980. , IN AUGUST ltSI. Truman went to the Dl'mocrat.lc convention in ChlcaRo to lead tht unsucce$tfuJ fight for the nomination of Gov. W. Averell Harriman of New York for the prt:.ldency. But the con- vention cho!te Adlai Sieve.MOil for lbe se- <.'Ond lime. t was the only new1mJn With Truman when he left Chicago to board a tJ-aln for home. "'Iba fillbt II owr In the [IOlt)'." he told me. "~ow we face the bll battle 1galnst the Repubticana, and we wtn wln." He also oppottd tbo -i11>t1oo ol John F. K•lllledy, then 43, In tll!O. "Senotor," he asked ln • speech btfore the con- v"l'llon, "are you certain that you .,. quit• ready for the country or that Ibo country II quite m<IY for you In Ibo role or pl'l!Sldent tn 1961!" ., J DAILY PILOT. Tllfld.,. Df<emb<r 26. 1972 • Gran Opening! es.tern Great Savings Comes to Fashion lsl,an Join Our Celebration! Now through -January 13 We're bringing th.at good Great Western feeling into the Newport area with the Grand Opening of our new office in Newport Center at 80 Fashion Island. It's the newest in Great Western's statewide network of 66 full-service savings offices, California's largest. And we're celebrating-until January 13-with a special gift for you, "GW" balloons for the children and refreshments for all. So please come in soon. You'll find we've made saving money just about as easy as it can be. We're open every Saturday from 10 to 4. Our drive-up teller window is open every weekday evening until 7. And Great Western gives you the most. 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FREE CHECK•A-MONTH P[;ANS ($5000 or more) PLUS FREE SAVE-BY-MAIL SERVICE ' • .~ -lllAND • ~ ; ,. /j Ii • I ' •• ·- 7 j Lag1111a Bea~h ' EDITION Today's Flaal N.Y. Stoeks ~· * * ';,* voe. '6li, NO. 161 , 2 SECTIO,NS. 28 PAGES ORAf:.jGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1972 TEN CENTS Friends, Foes .Remember Truman's Courage By_ .. ..,.. Pollllcal ally Ind foe today bailed liar· ry S Truman u 1 OM"'4111 man wbO "°""""''the ~tloa with bil -se and decisiv~ wjlen lhruol lll1D the•natloa's highest office at 1 Uuie ol lnternotlonal peril. . President Nixon said, •'Harry s Truman will be remem~ u one of the mosl courag.... prosldalts In our history, who led the nation and the world throqh a crlUcal period with m:eptlonal viJton and determlnatlOil. Our hopes to- '* ea Fire Gut,s Structure Near Bay A 1$,000 lire that gutted the garage of an Emeriid Bay ftSidence deYyed -but dldb't """"°' -the Cl>rlstmu celebra-tlori of the OCCU]iants gatbettd Inside the home. d4y for a generation of peace rest in large ~ on the Orm foundations ~ that be laid ... Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said, "Among the taleqta that llarry Truman brtugbt to the -..,. were two ln- ·dlspensahle quafitlel of a·grut leader - fortbrigbtness and courage. '!be 1lgn on his desk, ~ Buck Stops Here,' was no idle boast. But lo an office of great power he never !Ost the humility that endeared him to millions as simply the man from Missouri. 11 F9rmer President Lyndon B. Johnson * ' a said, "A zotb century giant is gone. Few men of any times ever sb,aped the world as did the man from Independence. ''President Truman preaided over the destiny of this country during one of its most. tiirbUtent eras. Never fllnchlng tn the· face of crucial national choices, his decisions changed the courSe of human events throughout the world." Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.), who bolted the Democratic party to run for president against Truman as a DWecrat io 1943, said, "His decisive leadership in es ~ Jmnpin& fl1Jln .. olectrlcal unit of ' I ......... --., !lllli\Y firtnien "tar slartJn& tJia }O: IT .,:in.· blne at the. borne of ~ H. lSoolq, 111 .. ' ~ ....... ~ .... ~~ . ~thl•-1dnc· 0 n -domae~ lo the ....... bot everyone'a safe. · "We 'if ere .Jus:t ready to . lit down to ctirlstmal dimier -lt w~ my' aon's birtbday, loo -when w.e smelled the smoke." Fire unila from Emerald Bay, South Laguna ind Laguna Hilla -CU1'l'inl a total of 35 men -arrlvecl 1t tJie fire scene, but moo\ d the ~ waa condUCted by the 'Emerald Boy aquad. (See BLAZE, Pap Z) Jewelry Worth $20,000 Stolen (n Laguna Beach Theft of more than $20,000 worth of gems, jewelry ind minerals from the shop ol. a custom jeweler was reported Monday to Laguna lleacli plllce. Ei:a~ loss In the crime ii pending an accounting and ~aluatloo o( numerous loose atonea by oW!jer !Ucliard Jones, 31, who Uves above the abop. at 1111 Glelln· .,,.. 'I1lt store wu entered· aomeUme between Sunday and Monday, Laguna Beach police said. Oflicens said entry waa made by prylnll open a window and then cutting steel bars iuardJng the shop. Jones told omc.n be had been away from -the ...idence 1mlli late Sunday nigllt, and d1soovered the tbelt mid-~ Monday when he went -lrs. The jeweler apeclallzes in antique jewelry, art objects and CW1lommade wwb. Banks Hike Rate For Loans 14 % Do\ll Y l"IL01'' t:Mff """' DEBRIS CLUTTERS ROADWAY AFTER DEATH CRASH IN IRVINE For Two Boys. 1 Deadly Post·Chri1tm11 Trip to the Dump Two Boys l(ill~d in Irvine ' As Pickup Truck Crashes Two boys were killed and two other persons seriously injured this morning when their pickup truck !kidded out of control and ran into a dirt embankment on Bonita Canyon Road near MacArthur Boulevard in !rvlne. 1be two dead children were thrown from the truck as were a man In his ear- ly 20s, another boy and a dog. The mari and injured boy were taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. The ex- tenr of their injuries was not im· mediately known. Qfficer R. E. Arnold sakl the group had been unloading trash at Orange County's Bonita Canyon Dtimp just prior to the 9:25 a.m. acr:ldent. .. They~ wel'tl going between .to and 50 miles per hour and the driver lost It," the Irvine police officer said. "We think he may bave had a blowout in the froot left tire. A witness who saw the accident from far away said he saw something fly ofl the truck just before it happened." The truck, described by police as an older model, spun across the tw<Hane road after the impact and came to a bait facing in the opposite direction It had been moving at the time of the crash. No other vehicles were involved in the accident, police said. Officer Arnold, a veteran traffic ln· vestige tor, said the one boy who survived the crash probably did so because his body was cushioned from the impact by an erppty trash can. the crucial years of his presidency was an example in courage. He did not hesitate to make the dllllcult decisions he felt were right." Democratic Gov. John J. Gilligan ol Qblo said, "At a ~t-of great ~ tlooal peril and trtumjlh in the climactic weeks of World War n, he, was suddenJy thrust Into the office ()I pmldent and the manner in which this bumble man from M1ssour1 met those a_wful cballenges and shouldered those terrible burdens com- manded the respect and affection of all Americans." arr Nixon Hails Ex-chief As 'Fighter' KANSAS CfTV (AP) -H a rr y S Truman died today, conquered finally by the infirmities of bis 88 years. fTes.i4ent .Nixon led the mourning for lhe naUon's 33rd president, calling him "a fighter who was best when the going was toughest." ~ Pmident also Pr\>' claiined Tblntay a dil ot lllli\lOill ·~"--~red~..;;.. "'.ledoial halldlbP ~ afball J w ...,,.. I,,-B. • -, llOW the-oOl1 'ounl.tn(-· -.--·lbe paasflll'"' •• -.'\llllllY gtaftl" . ~'I ..Ue II 53 .yean, and his daughter who saw him for a final 20 minutes Christmas Day, were at home in nearby Independence when death came at 5:50 a.m. PST. In accordance with Truman's wishes, the funeral ThUtsday will be without the panoply accorded olher great statesmen. He will be buried Thursday at 1 p.m. PST in the courtyard of the Harry S Truman Memorial Library, Trwnan's proudest achievement in the 20 yean since he lei! the White House. Truman was the wt of the great World War II figures, proceded in dea1h by Dwight D. Eisenhower, Winston Churchill and Josef Slatin. He was the president who set the United States against global communism tn the Cold War that followed World War II. He ordered use of the atomic bomb to end World War ll, extended un- precedented help to nations resisting Soviet dominatlon, and ordered troops in· to Korea when Comnumists began their invask>n of the south. "Recognizing the new threat to peace that had emerged from the ashes of war, he stood boldly against it with his ex- tension of aid to Greece and Turkey in 1947 -and the 'Truman Doctrine' thus established was crucial to the defense or liberty ln Europe and lhe world," Nixon said, adding: "In 18WlCbing the Marshall plan, he began the most farsight~ and most generowi act of international rebuilding ever \D'ldertaken. With his charac- teristically decisive action in Korea, be made possible tile defeme of peace and freedom in Alia." The hospital attributed Truman's death to the "complellily o! organic !allures causing a collapse of tbe canlio-vasc:Ular system." Truman entered Research Hospital (See TRUMAN, Page %) Dar.,, S Truman, Du Life alld Time• On Pqe• llA, JIB -Democratic Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Wuhingtan · said, "Harry Truman was confronted with a series of tough, un- precedented decisions with nothing less than the future aecurtty of the free world at stake. l:le never ~ from , those declaiohl, despite the bostlle envlromnent of those postwar years. His courage, bis wisdom and his decisiveness in that period shaped the future course of the Western world." President Nixon also said of Truman, "Recognizing the new threat to peace * ' * that had emerged from the ashes of we, he stood boldly agalmt It with his .. _ tension of aid to Greece and Turkey in 1947 -and lhe 'Truman Doctrine' tht1s established was crucial to the defense of li~rty in Europe a n d the world. Ia lawiching the Marshall plan, be' began the most far-sighted and most generous act of international rebuilding ever undertaken. "With his cha racteristically decisive action ln Korea, he made · possible the defense of peace and freedom ·ln Alia." rum an HARRY S TRUMAN {1884-1972) ' Bess Truman Kep _t Vigil During 22-day Illness KANSAS CfTV, Mo. (UPfl -Her face lined with weariness, Bess Truman kept a Christmas Day vigil by the bedside of former President Harry S Truman -the childhood sweetheart she manied more than a hall-century ago. Mrs. Truman, 87, was joined in her sad watch Monday night by their daughter, Margaret Truman Daniel. Both women then returned home to the family home at nearby IndepeDdence. Mrs. Daniel flew to Kansas City from New York when doctors said Truman could die within hours. The 11 hour, 25 minute vigU by Mrs. Truman was one of. the longest since her husband's hospltallzaUon for Jung in- fection Dec. S. She has beer. at Truman's bedside for all but one of his 2% days in the hospital. Mrs. Daniel arrived by commercial jet a few hours before midnight and was whisked to tbe hospital by Secret Service agents. She entered through a side door without speaking to reporters and joined Bess in Truman's room . They left 15 minutes later ror the Truman home. The visit marked the second time Mrs. Daniel has flown to her 88-year-old father's bedside during his current ll'4 ness. On Dec. 6, the day after Truman was hospitalized, Mrs. Daniel flew to Kansas City on a jet provided by the White House. When her father rallied last week, she returned to New York \o spend Cbristnw with her family . Truman's illness has not been easy on Bfss, who met her husband in Sunday School at Independence, when she was 5 !See BESS, Pqe %1 Oraage • NEWIYORK (AP) -A strinll o! major commercial blnka, Including the coun- try'• thtld and fourth largest, IDl!owed the lead ol two other blC banks and boooted thelr prime lendinl ratea today from 5l< to I' pemnt, Chuo Manhattan -· No. S; Manulocturm ~ Tnllt 0.., 'No. I; Andes Crash · Victims Ate Humans Clear skies are what the weather people see for Wednetdly, with temperatures In the upper 711'1long the coaat. Lowl tonight In the 508. Cllemlc:al -.... -'Uldland -lnciwad tbe co:.t., ....... for thelr mOot credlt......UW a-. In !he lace of tbe Ni... ·-a11on·1 canipolan to CGlllrol lnllallan by IMepiltc the lid oa -"'-rateo. 0 Wt1.,. keenly • .,.,. ~ .... f~at JOVemmenl'I delln to moderate llDward rate prea111rea aa I ~ d Ila e!Cort lo i:.-1ne lnflaUon under finri1r control/' ~ spokesman lor Clllle said. · • "However, we believe lhlt holdlna In- terest rale1 at levtll wbtcb are out al! line wtth the m1rket ~ would, C1Ver a p1rlod or time , .... diltGrUonl in the flow of credit, and eoatrlbute lo tho Inflationary lplral by pl11C1111 lbnonnally heavy demands on banka.1' .. SAN'11AGO, Chile (AP) -O!llctal IOW'ctl conllrmed todat that IOrvlvors of an Andes plane craah had eaten the flesh of dead comradea lo avoid llarv•· UO!> during a -Y ordeal. The ofllclal IOU-aald 18 111rvtvors, either pl01V9 or boootel'I of an Uruguayan rugby team, bad made a aolemn pact that they would not dlseuss the matter until they returned to M-vtdeo, Uniguay, and then they would make a tollC!Ctlve statement. Thtte have already returned to Mocrtevldeo-The other II have remained In Santlqo io recover but plan to Ry -to M'ontevldeo in a day or 1wo. , 11w: plane had 4i5 ptnons aboard when It hit an Andel peak OcL LI. By the end Of October, 29 wtre dtad. There had been nimon tl\al't1-who survived might haye e•\ell !lliman Desb' tq live through the bitter• mounllln bl1%Unll, but the reporla could n o t be sul...9tanllaled until today. The aources said that one of the youn1 men, not ldentiOed, compareJ tho group's dttl!lon to use the ctidavers aa "similar to a heart transplant." ' His explanation: In a traruJplant opera- Uon a heart is taken fl'om a penon at death to malnt.iln snother'a Ille, and' In the same manner portions ol 1he bodlea " bad been used lo maintain the living. The 10UrCe1 said the survtvora rtlated that tlle declalon to -. the bodies of friends, and even relattvet, was a col· lectlvo one agreed to by all Earlier. the ourvlvon told of having a loocl deal of lood1 beca..e tlley had stocked up on candy and pteoerved &ult durlnl a 1119P at Mendola, Argcnllna. The young men aald !hey found the "terrible mountain sl1ence1:·_ the endl~ss boredom and perloda of ...,ress1on the wont part.of their experlOll<e. ·•we aot up at 7, Jlltened to the radto and melttd waler inn IOOW," aald J- Lull lntdarle, 21. Ill _., lludenl. l •• "We alao bolled the water with aome llchtn to make 1 sort of IOUP wbJcb we used more and more u our provisions ran out.'' The men •pent bourt In ....,p dlacuulon on themet they would choole in 1dv1nce. The dlacusalonl aomeUm .. became l""P therapy aesslona to llolster their nagg1111 aplrlta and dtapel atlacb of depreulon . Each evening they prayed aloud toeether, with a dlffmnt pcrt011 leadinl I.he prayers each night. Lail week two of the yOUJ\I men walk· eel down the mountain and IOU..S 1 rancher who lfOl help. ' • INSmETODAY Orange Cou11tw'• 1912·13 budg· et •howed " b i g g 1 r fncrta1« Jhan on11 of tM 1tate>1 othn 57 COMll!IU, "1o<kfllQ ;IM. g<n<ral tt"'4 of rtiplq l<n OJI local prOJ><rtw to<. Storti on Pogo 9. AM LMM1W1 IJ ..,..,.. ll•tt H•I ..... Newt • --. .... 1 .. ,, ... ,_....... ,..11 .,...,....... 11 -"'" -. ............ ,,.1. --. l I OAILV PILOT LI IM.IL Y PILOT Slaff P1Nllo FIREMEN MOP UP AFTER EMERALO BAY GARAGE FIRE THAT DID $5,000 ~AMAGE Blize 0.1 .. yed Christm11s Dinner But F1ml ly Proceeded Thankful No One Was ln1ured From Page J BLAZ E ... Jt took firemen more than 20 minutes ta quell the flames and an additiona l hour to clean up the scene. In addition to the $5,000 structural damage, fire officials estimated $1 ,700 in damage to contents of the garage, in· eluding loss of a Volkswagen sedan. "We were still able to have Christmas cake after the fire," Mrs. Dooley laughed this morning. "It's just a miracle lhe fire didn't spread into the house." Hanoi Says U.S. Intends To Raze Populated Cities PARIS (UPil -The Hanoi peace del· egation said U.S. war planes, including B52s, had stepped up the bombing or North Vietnam today with a view of "razing to the ground" Hanoi, Haiphong and many other populous towns. Body of Unidentified Man - Found in Seal Beach "Continuing to commit crimes against the Vietnamese people, lbe Nixon Ad· ministration, in the night of Dec. 24 and as of Dec. 26, has muJtiplied raids by B52's and various other types of aircraft 'vith a view of razing to the ground Hanoi, Haiphong and numerous other towns and pOpulous areas of North Viet· nam," the delegatioo said 'Ibe delegation said in the fim official North Vietnamese reactioo to the re. swned air war that the bombings must be halted if the United States wants to bold "serious" peace negotiatioos. The statement said the first condition to be met for such I.alb was for the United states l<l return l<l tile llltuatton belon Dec. II, the cloy on wbicb the latest U.S. air offensive wu launched. I 'l'blll..., Q( D w""ef\W 'JCUC 1lla!l, ·~ dropptcl lnnn a ~ car, was discovered early tbiJ marniIJg oo a (reeway offramp In S<al Beach. Seal Beach Police said the .youth was a white maie, about 1s to 22 Years or aee, with no identification. "A preliminary check by the coroner shows he was dead about 48-72 hours," S<al Beach LI. Lee Gatti reported. "We don't know the cause of death yet, or where he might have been killed." He was found by passing motorists about 1:45 a.m. on the 7th Street off- ramp at the junction of the San Diego Nation's Traffic Death Toll 565 The nation's trarfic death toll for the three-day Christmas weekend totaled 565. That is fewer than the 614 who died in 1971 and far below the record loll of 72-0 killed over the three-day celebration in 1965. The National S:1fety Council estimated that from 550 to 650 persons would be kill· ed in trafilc accidents between 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 22, and midnight Dec. 25. The council estimates that deaths dur· ing holiday periods run about 25 percent above those in which no holiday occurs . Thus a total of 565 for the weekend would mean there would have been about 452 death! if no holida y were involved . OIAN•I COAST La DAILY PILOT TM °'*'M C..t C».ILY PILOT, w11h Wllldl h ~ 1tlt-H-Pren, ~ publlllled by ,.,. ~ Co..t Publl1111"9 COf'lll*IY. s.,,... Nlo 9dllloN •r• pvblll.hecl, Mond1y ll'n\IVll P'rlllwy, tor Coll• Mes•. N-..orl Betclrl, Hunllnei... 8MCl'l/P-lll" '11lley, L .......... 9ekll. lrvlne/5'0dlllbllc~ •1>11 s~,. Ct.me<1111 Sfl" Ju8fl C1pl1tr•110. A. 11,.ole reo1~1 ldlllDIO 15 pubtli.lled lelun:t1y1 •1>11 Su""•~,. ,,... ... IM:IPlll publlitlli'IO pltnl t1 11 :JJO ~I 9•)' Str"Mt, CO.ta MHI, C1llt~"l1. t267t. Rokrt N. w, .. d ,., • .._ Wiii Pllbll,~tr J•ck k. C111l1y \Ike ""•ldlnl W 0-.1 MAMOll' Ttt1M11 K11.,il 1!411Dr TN11111 A. M1rplril1111 ...,.,,. l!flhlr c:a..f• H. IAN liclri1N I, Nill AM....., M9Ml"'9 ••I'°"' ---222 FoN1t A'l'Mlll M.1n .. , Mtlre11: P.O .... •••· t2•s2 --....... _MIMI D Wiit .. )' Sir.t teldll »» ,....,.... ~ 'C ~I l7'1S a.-dl ...,._.,,111 ....... ........... ~·"· 1111 4 t ,. enc• M2..c2:11 Cl OW Uua; .... '42·U71 ...... .._. Al ::•1ua•": 1 l:q;a Fl 4f .. 466 if ttft, Ot'..... CM1t ""'411111111 Mt ....,, .,.,.... lttwfNf!Olll. ..... ., """"'""""" Mttlll ., ,..,...._.. .,.,.., ~ .. , ,.,. ........ -.............. __ .. w .. -..... i.--........., ... .,., Ofl'llr 12 • .S • !Ml t),l,, "*'"'"'' mlllflrt ... fnll'llMY. " Ind ---ays In Seal Bead>. Lt. Gatti said tt \s appal'el1t the dead man was not tilled where be wrui fouOO, bl!I had •Pll<!""UY been dropped ~ from a vehicle. "There are no outward signs of bullet wounds or other marks Indicating how he died," Lt. Gatti said. "He was dressed in burgandy trousers, a blue lanker j~et and bad medlum·length hair. He could be a Navy man." The Coroner's office began an autopsy this morning to determine the cause of death. The results were oot yet known . Lt. Gatti said the man's shoes were mlssing, but it didn't seem significant. "At the present we don't know how he died, or where,'' Lt. Gatti saMI. "And we don't know who he is.'' FromPageJ DEATHS ... and he was 6. Lines of weariness groove her face and her walk is slow due to arthritis in her legs. After helpin g her through the hospital lobby decorated with Chri stmas trees, family friend and chauffeur Mike \Vestwood paced the corridors. When asked about Truman's health, he would only shake his head. Randall Jesse, a personal friend of the family, said: .. She's one of the great lad ies of the world." No Survivors Found SAN J UAN, P.R. (AP) -No trace has been found or the 12 occupants of a twin· engine French plane that crashed in the eastern Caribbean on a night from Guadeloupe to St. Maarten, the U.S. Coast Guard says. The pl ane, wilh II French passengers and the pilot aboard, plunged into the sea for no apparent reason Sunday night about four miles rrom the airport oo St . Maarten, a Coast Guard spokesman said. "llefylng vigorous condemnaliom al lhe Vietna.-people, al the world opin- ion and broad segments of American pub- lic opinion, the Nixon Administration per- sists in reneging on its pledge to stop bombings of Hanoi, abstaining from bombing above the 20th Parallel and re- stricting bombings be.low the 20th Paral- lel to create ·a favo rable climate for ne- gotiations," the Hanoi deleg1tion said. It was the first time Hanoi publicly mentioned such an alleged understanding to limit the U.S. air war during the talks. The to~level secret negotiations between White Beuse aide Henry A. Kissinger and Hanoi's Le Due Tho ended in dead+ lock Dec. 13, five days before President Nixon ordered the resumpUon of the air sbikes. The Soviet news agency Tass reported from Hanoi today that American planes hit the suburbs of Hanoi at 1 :05 p.m. in a raid that lasted 8n hour. lt gave no report on casualties or damages. The Tass dispatdl from the North Vieb:lamese capital also said U.S. planes on Monday bombed the Hanoi diJtrict of Haibatrung, Haiphong and other areas. On Sunday night, Tass said, American planes bombed demely populated areas or the town Of Thainguyen, 'II miles north of Hanoi, and Habac and Lanchon Prov- inces. Left Turns Cut Off Onto Laguna Avenue No left turns may be made from South Coast Highway sbouthbound Janes onto aguna Avenue near lbe downtown post office taday through a iO<laY trial period. The intersection ls marked with red cones and a no left tum sign and bar· ricade. The ban is temporary, but may be made permanent later. Action was taken ta improve traffic Dow along Coast Highway. Todd Gets Mutt Clernent;e Y oungst;er Receives Dog Todd Eggleton, 8. and "Muneca the Seeond", six weeks, met for the rm time Christmas Eve and It was love at first sight. For the San Clemente youngster that occasion in Costa Mesa marked the end of a weekl ong search for a replacement to a beloved mutt that was taken !rom Todd 's doorstep and hanged early lut week in the city ~ach. "Sunday was the fi rst night In a week th<lt Todd began to show a little hap- piness aga in,'' 1ald the Concordia School third grader's mother thla morning. The Eggleton phone11 started ringing rar\y Saturday morning u DAILY PILOT readers came acros the story or Todd's tragedy. "The calls didn't stop all dly; there musl have been a hundred offers from people who wan1~ to give Todd 1 pup for Chris1mas," said Mrs. Eggleton. Not one of the people asked for any money lot their dogs, she added. "It was fantastic !" The new pup, ~Todd said today, ls an Australian shepherd female, ju1t tbe sort of rougb-ancl-tumble breed t b 1 t characlerized bia ~t.,"'!:iJ:'l· which be had nan>«! Muneca ( for "doll"). Mrs. Eplelon had promlled her oon that be woukl have a new dol by Chrillmaa morning, bUt efforll throu1h the week lo find W•t the rli)lt replace- ment were 1n v1ln. One Labrador puppy la!ted a day. lie fell rrom grace wh3n he chewed Muneca'• .c:ollar to blt1 . Bui with the new pet, Todd lnallh, lt'a the real thine. "She'• jU1t what I wanted, and 1 nam· ed her Munoca, just lib the first one I had." he aald, happily. •, Sadaleback Won't Lose -Stare AUl Saddleback College In Mission Viejo doesn'I expect to lose any state ah! 1n the up<.'Omlng flscal year even though Gov. Ronald Reagan has vetoed a $42 million community college relief bill. Saddleback receives only basic aid ($12S per student) from the state. Veto of the retlef bill dealt a blow lo foundation aid . state grants that are offered only to older com munity college districts. For example, the established Coast Community College District es:pects to lose $3 million in funds next. yea r due to the veto of the bill. The new Saddleback C o m m u n it y College District, according to Dr. Fred H. Bremer, superintendent·president, js considered a high wealth district and, as such, cannot receive foundation aid. However, Bremer said Saddleback sup- ported the bill because in future years the wealth of the district will decrease and it will become eligible for foundation aid funds. ' I ........ State figures showing the effects to districts say Saddleback "will lose just about zero dollars" in the upcoming fiscal year, Bremer said. 1971 Truman Portrait A separate provision o( the bill, Bremer poted, would have change the definiti ons of "student" under funding rormulas. Now. a student taking less than 10 units is considered a part time-enrollee, or "a defined adult student." Thomas Hart Benton painted this portrait of Mr. Truman. "The old 1nan looks better as an old man than be did as a young man," said Benton. "You get that rat off of him and you see that cblcken-hawk face and also his sensitivity. You would never think of Harry Truman as being sensitive. but he is-when he's not fat and bothered with all the defenses a pol itician has to put up with. You didn't ever see lhe real man. You saw only the mask." . Senate Bill 95 that Reagan vetoed would have dropped this part·time category and allowed colleges to count students taking less than 10 units as "full time" students. This would have meant increased aid from the state to the 91 community col- lege dislflcts of Callfomla. Laguna Records Fifteen . Bremer said this provision of the bill also would not cause problems for the burgeoning junior colleges. HolUlay Auto AccUlents Plumber Raises Ticklish Issue HAIFA, Israel (UPI) -A plumber wbo banged bis bead agalllsl a kilcben aink ....., a bouaewife ttclded him bas filed for compeosaUm for wages lost as a result of • wort acdclmt. lsnt<li newspopers reporled Mooday. The unidentllled ....... llald .... lhaugbt the --· oat mm. under the sJnk WU ber biJsband's. Fifteen traffic accidents, six of them involving injuries, marred the holiday weekend In Laguna Beach. Most of the colllsions lnvolved only mi· nor Injuries, aod parties taken to South Coast Community ll""Pllal for emergen· cy care, had been released by taday. An accident at South Coast Highway near Nyes Place Friday Injured Rober! B. Kronman, 107 Monarch Bay. Kromnan's vehicle, northbound on COast Highway, collided with a car driven by J. Paul Boney of 3tllOI S. COast Highway, Sooth Laguna as It pulled out from Cardinal Place ~ for the ..tuihboulid 1 ..... . . ,...._P .. el HARRY TRUMAN DEAD • • • three weeks ago loday -alter fighting lung cong'5lloo at home for two -ks - and had been in a coma since early Salurday. Earlier In bis hospilalizattoo he appeared lo be raffying, but the com- bination of reaptralory problems, harden- ed art<rles and kidney dlaeue ....... too much for the old man. In recent yean he had appeared !rail and drawn, bis weight down from a presldenUal 170 pounds. He loog ago abandooed bis ll!Hoog p!<dilection for loni;, fast early morning walks, but made almost daily excuraions on &bru;lping trips with his wife, Bess, ber9elf 87. Mrs. Truman received the sad news by telephone. A family spokesman, Randall Jessee, said she received it "with the same fortitude and calmness with which i::,_ has faced all of this." Nixon proclaimed Thursday a national day of mourning, ordering flags lowered lo half stall at federal buildings for the nert 30 days. The audlloriinn In the Truman Library, where the funeral services will be con· ducted, holds ooly !:tlO penoos, and at- tendaoce will be by lnvitatloa ooly. !dost foreign dignitaries wm expected to go to a memorial service in Wasbingtoo's Natlooal Cathedral, rather than coming lo lndependence. Tributes fiowed In swllUy as word of the death was flashed arouod the world. "A 20tb century giant 11 pe," former President Lyndon B. Johnson said In a statement issued at Austln, Tex. "Few men of any times ever shaped the world as did the man from Iodependence. "President Truman presided over the destiny of this country during one of its most turbulent eras. Never flinching in the face of cn.iclal national choices, his decisions changed the coune of bwnan events throughout the world.'' SESAME STREET ~ SESAME STREET IS ABOUT THE ONLY STREET IN THE HARBOR AREA THAT HASN'T HAD A CARPET INSTALLATION BY ALDEN'S. A hit and run accident occurred at Broadway and Beach Saturday and in· volved a car drlyen by an Anaheim man. Raymond Maloney, slruck by another vehicle that bad polled onto Broadway from Beach. Officers said today witnesses said five persons in the car got out, looked at ltfaloney's car, then got back in their own car and drove off. When officers went to the Laguna ad- dress listed oo the vehicle's registration, they said they found a woman injured with facial cuts aod called le< '"' am- bulance. Brosh. Fire Qnelled By Laguna Firemen A small brush fire In the vicinity of Morningside Drive and Morningside Place was quickly e'xtinluished saturda.)C by the Laguna Beach Fire Deportment. Firemen aaid there wa: no evidence. !or the cauae of the fire, but that sznal~ ,children had been seen there earlier. An. oven fire Quistmas Eve at 1249 Ocean- front was eitingui&bed by the residents of the home just prior to the arrival o( firemen. $455 in Equipment Stolen in Laguna Tools and power equipment .all.led at $455 were reported stolen Sunday from a· warehouse at 357 Canyon Acres Drive! , Laguna Beach. " R, W. Wheeler, of 471 Shadow Lane." Laguna beach, told officen lhe theft OC· curred sometime between the middle ot; the month and Sunday. The rear door to" the building bad been forced open. IN OUR AFTEEN YEARS, WE HAVE C ARP ET E D THOUSANDS OF HOMES IN COSTA MESA, NEWPORT BEACH , LAGUNA BEACH AND HUNTINGTON BEACH. ONE !NEIGHBOR TELLS ANOTHER UNTIL WE HAVE WORKED IN EVERY HOME ON A BLOCK • ALDEN'S TH FORMULA IS SIMPLE-WE TRY TO MAKE EACH CUSfiOMER HAPPY. ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR-WE PROBABLY CARPETED HER HOME. (IF WE HAVEN'T, BRING HER IN WITH YOU.) CARPETS e DRAPES ' 1663 Placentia Ave • COSTA MISA 646-4831 HOURS: Mon. Thru n....., t to S:JO-PRI., t to 9-SAT,, 9t30 to 5 ·- I ' \ I l l I I 1 '17 • ·satldleha~k Today's F l nal EDITION N.Y. St.eeks ~· * .VOC:. 65,. NO.· 361, 2 SECTIPNS., 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA· TUES DAY, DECEMBER 26, 1972 TEN CENTS ' . Friends, Foes Remember Truman's Courage By AMOClaled Pr .. 1 Political ally and foe foclay hailed Har- ry S Truman as a common man who · honored the. nation' with his courage and decisiveness· when thrust into tbe·natloo's highest off»iee at a time of international peril. President Nixon slid, "Hatty' S Truman Will• be 'l'emembered as one' of the most coura&eous preSidents in our history, Whb led the ll!lliOll and the world through ,a crittcil ~ with exceptlonal vWon and detenruiiation. Our hopes to-, ea day for a generation of peace rest In large measure on -the finn foundiUons that he laid ... Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said, ".Among the taJenta that Harry Truman brought to the presidency .... -... dispensable qualities of • great leader - forthrightness abd~courage. The ~ on · his desk, 'The Buck Stops Here,' waS no Idle bout. But in an om.. of great power he never Jost the bumillty that endemd him to mllllons as simply the man from Mlsaowi ... F~rmer Presldent Lyndon B. Jo~n ' ~Y'P&OT ......... . ' . DEBRIS CLUTTERS ROADWAY A~TER DEA'rH C~H IN''IRVINE ,F0r Two Boys, a,Qoaclly Post.Chri1tma& Trip to the•D'ump Two Boys ~ed in lrvin·-- As Pickup Truck Crashes Two boys were killed and two other persons seriously injured this morning when their pickup truc"k ekldded oot ol control and ran Into a dirt embankment on Bonita Canyon Road near MacArthur Boulevard In Irvine. The t\fo dead children were thrown from the truck as were a man in bis ear- ly 20s, another boy and a dog. The man and injured boy were taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. The ex- tent or their lnjUries was not im· mediately known. Ofllcer R. E. Arnold sakl'lhe group had been unloading trash at Orange County's Bonita Canyon Dump just prior to the 9:25 a.m: acclderit. ' Irvine police officer said. "We think· be may have bad a b1owout, in the front left • Ure. A witness who saw the accident from far away said he saw somelhlng Oy off the truck Just.before It happeoed." The truck, described by police as an older model, spun· across the-two-lane road after the impac;t and came to a halt facing · in the opposite direction It had been moving at the.tiqie or the crash. No other vehicles were involved in the are!dent, police said. O!ficer Arnold, a veteran traffic in· vettlgator, said the one boy who survived the crash probably did so because his body was cushioned from lhe lmpact by ·an empty trash can. sali:l, "A 20th century giant la gone. Few men ot any Um.es ever abaped the world as did the man from lnde;pendence. "PreSident ·Truman prealded over the destiny of this country during one .of its most turbulent eras. Never Wnching in the lace of cnJclal oatlooil choices, bis declslom changed the course of buman events thrOugboot the world." ' Sen. Strom 1burmond (R-S.C.), wbo bolted the Democratic party to run for ,..president against Tniman u a Dlxlecrat in 1948, said, "His decisive leadership in Earthquake Study Seen For Irvine By JOHN ZALLER Of .... EMlllY , ......... Irvine cound!men probably will be ask· ed to authorize a •.ooo to $9;000 earth- .quake study for · use in drafting the city's new Ge~al. Plan. R. Dale Beland, represe.ntipg the con- . llU!ling flnn of Wilsey aM llapi; said to- 41y that pnlJmlurj lov~. dlcate the city ... na1. not •tr'l 1t :? D • ~ ....,_:_. :...~~ I •··a.Dt:nJ'are ...... Down area and Ibey should be lal:en ac- count In pla~t Beland said. "Hopthdiy we could e n c o JI r a g e building in the •areas that are most seivnicaDy 90UDd. although you can build allllOll anyplace il the proper precau· lions are taken," he said. Beland alao·sald ttie.. ts "mo"' danger than JOU would upect" from llquefac- tioo, a soil condition that can make almost any ·type-of construction hazaidous t.mder certain conditions. "'.l'here ls a layer of sanely soil that has: low cohe1iveness and ir shaken, can become liquid-like," be .said. Again, be stressed, the danger is not critical, but areas subject to liquefaction should be charted. one area that bas already completed an earthquake study Is UC Irvine. A 1968 report located a fault nmoing east-west through the ceiiter of campus and caused the relocation of plans ror the Social Sciences building. "It's probably not a big fault at all by normal standanb," said UCI planner Glenn Uematsu, "but for our campus, it's certainly lmportant." He said the rault is believed to run from the athletic fields, under the fine arts complex, and over to the front or the Social Sciences building. Uematsu said no problems: have been caused by the fault because the University found out a bout it in Ume. "The danger in Irvine is probably oo greater than it is anywhere else in Southern CalUomla," said William Edg- ington, a state geologist studying the area around Irvine. "But It is our feeling that the danger is: real enough that it ought to be taken into consideration." He said the' danger rrom liquefaction is present In much of central Orange Coun- ty. "Actual.Jy, it presents a more im- mediate problem than any minor or in- active fault," ht s:akl, "because If the San Andreu or lnglc\l()O(j-Newport fault slipped, it could shake up the weak aoll and turn ·u briefly Into a material similar lo qulcksaod. And that wouldn't support (See QUAKE, Page %) lhe crucial years of his presidency was an example In courage. He did not hesitate to make the difficult decisions he felt were right." Democratic Gov. John J. Gilligan of Oh.lo said, "Ai a moment .of great na- tional peril and triumph in the climactic w~ of ·world, War ll, be was suddenly ~I into the offlce·of presldeot and the manner lo which this humble man from Mislouri met those awful !challenges and shouldered those terrible burdens com- m'1lded the .respect and affection of all A'.meric&M." Democratic Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washingt(ln said, "Harry Truman was con!ronted with a series of tough, un- precedented decisions with nothing less than the future security of the free world at stake. He never shrank rrom those decisions, despite the hostile environment of ~se postwar years. His courage, his wisdom and his: decisiveness in that period shaped the future coom ol the Western world." President Nixor. also said of Truman, "Recognizing the new threat to peace that had emerged from the ashes or war, he stood boldly against it with ·his ex- tension of aid to Greece and Turkey in 1947 -and the 'Truman Doctrine' thus established was crucial to the defense of liberty in Europe a n d lhe world. In launching the Marshall plan: be ,bq:an the most far-sighted and most s:enerous: act of International rebuilding ever undertaken. "With his characteristically decisive action in Korea, he made possible the defense or peace and freedom in Asia." arr rum an ··-HARRY S TRUMAN I 1884-1 972) Auto Strikes Ambulance On Mesa Street; 6 Hurt By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of tM OllllY Pllet .._,, Six persons were injured in a mid· morning collision when an ambulance carrying a heart attack victhn was struck broadside in a busy Costa Mesa intersection sending the emergency unit crashing into a nearby police car. Walter Goddictson, M, 494 E. Costa Mesa St. was (i!Cefving resuscitation rrom a Costa Mesa fireman and a Seal's Ambulance Service attendant when the emergency vehicle, just a block from Costa Mesa Memorial Hotpltal, was struck. H•"flSTr•-•11, Bl• Life u• '.l'lmea Ote P .. es IIA, 118 The accident occurred shortly before 10 a.m. at the intersection of Victoria Avenue and Newport Boulevard. Goddickson was dead on arrival at Memorial Hospital. Hospital officials said, however, his death appeared to have been caused by an apparent heart attack and not lbe accident Itself. Most seriously injured ln the spec- tacular collision was Gregory Poindexter, 20, 384 E. Costa Mesa St., who suffered head injuries, according to a spokesman at Hoag Memorial Hospital in, Newport Beach. Receiv ing treatment at Hoag for muJIJ. pie laceratiOfl.!I and other injuries .:!re Irene and Gravico Rodrtguez, 140 Del Mar Ave., Costa Mesa, the occupants or the late model sedan which coWded with the ambulance. . It was: not lmmiedately known who of IS.. AMBULANCE, Page 21 Nixon Hails Ex-chief ·As 'Fighter' KANSAS CITY (AP) -Harry S Truman died today, conquered finally by the Infirmities of his 88 years: President Nixon led the mourning for the naUon's 33t'd president, calling him "a fighter who was best when the going was toughest." The Presid~t also pro- claimed 1bursday a day of national moumlng and orde..d llap at federal l)iiilldlqp: ~ at half Slaff fot IO di,ys. L,.... B. ~ now 1ho. only WI •Milg farmer pnaldel{i la..e.Toil the' pass!llJ ol "l llllll -.ry giant." Tnlrilan'•, wife ol 5.1 years, and his: da~ who saw him for • final %0 minutes Cbriltmas Day, were at borne in nearbf Independence when death came at 5:50 a.m. PST. In accordance with Truman's wishes, the ll:neral 1bursday will be without the panoply accorded other great statesmen. He will be burled Thursday at 1 p.m. PST In the courtyard of the Harry S Truman Memorial Ubrary, Truman's proudest achievement in the 20 years since be left the White House. Truman was the last of the great World War II figures, preceded in death by Dwight D. Eisenhower, Wimt.On Churcblll and Josef Stalin. He was the president who set the United States against global communism ln the Cold War that followed World War IL He ordered use ol the atomic bomb to end World War ll, extended UP.. precedented help to nations resisting Soviet domination, and ordered troops in- to Korea when Communisll began their invasion of the south. ''Recognizing the new threat to peace that had emerged from lhe a.shes of war, he stood boldly against it With bis ex- tension of aid to Greece and TUrkey in 1947 -and the 'Truman Doctrine' thus established was crpciaJ to the defense of liberty in Europe Md the world ," Nixon said, adding : "In launching the ManhaII plan, he began the .most farsighted and most generous: act of intemaUonal rebuilding ever undertaken. With his charac- terifll"ally decWve action bt Korea , be made poqible the defense nl peace and freedom in Asia." The ·boepltal attributed Truman's death to the "complexity of organic failures causing a collapse of the cardio-vas:cular system." Truman entered Research Hospit.al (See TRUMAN, Page%) Oraage Cea st Welltller "They we.. going between 40 and· lO miles per hour and the driver lost lt, 11 the ' Andes Crash Victi·ms Ate Humans Clear sktea are what the weather • people ... fa< Wednoodoy, with temperatures In the upper. 7DI along the coast. Loon tonlcbl In ttie IOI. Plumber Raises . ' Tic klish lsiue HA'ff'A, Imel (UPI) -"A plumber wbo blnse<f hit beed against a ldlcben oink when • houaewUe tickled him lw filed lor compentailon !or ,..., loot u 1 ret11lt of a work ~!moll .. ~ "'J)O<led • The IDlklenlllled -llld .... tbougflt the• lnrao tddlall 01Hm11 ...,. the llnlt .... her-.. SANTIAGO, ChOo (AP) -Ofllclal aources conflnned today that """"'°" of an Andea plane cruh bad eaten the flesh of dead comrades to avoid slarva· uOn during a !May O?l!e•I. . : · The official -u!d II surviVOfl, tither pl'"'" cw booolen of an lJruguayan t'ucby twn, had made a aolemn pact that Ibey would not discuJs the matter until Ibey "'turned to M-1deo, 1)-, and then they would make a collectl•e statement. 'l'bnie hive already "'turned to -·ldoo. 'l'llt•other ll have rtmalnod.. In 81n11Uo to nco-but plan to fly bocl: to !il_.., In a clay Ol'I .... The plane b.ad 45 peraoos aboard when It bli an Andea peak Oct. 13. Sy the end of October} 29.were dead. 'Ille o had been rumon Iha! )J>ose !(ho surilved·.m1a11t hive e1ten ~an flab to live through the hiltel mountain bllmrdll, but the "'port.s could n o I be eul.stantlalcd untU today. The aources aald that one of the row!« mtn, not ldenUf1ed, comparew. the group'• declslon to 'Use the cadaven u "llmllar to a belrt tranlplant." Hb uplanatlon: In a transplant opera. lion a heart la taken from a pel10D at dtaib lo ,.in\aln another'• l~e, and ID the -........ pcnlonl cl the bodies bad beenlJaed to maintsin the living. The IOUl'Cel aatd the survivors related that ihe ileclslon lo use the bodl.. of fr~. and even relatives:, was a col· le<tlvo one· agreed to by au. Earlier, the 1UtVlvon told of having a good deal of food, because they hed atocked .up on condy and preserved lrull during 11top •I Mendoza, Argentina. Tile yOU!lg' meo aald they found the "terrible mountain allence,'' the endless bnndom . and periods of clepreoaloo the wont part of lhelr e1perlMCt. "We pt up at '11 listened to the radio ...t melted nler D'om mow,'' llld Joie L<lll lllk:larte, 14, an -lludent. . .. • ( • "We also bolled lhe water with aomc lichen to make a sort of aoup whkh we used more and more as our provl.alons ran out" The men. .1pent hours In group dlscuulon oo thepies they would c1- ln advanct. The dllcusaions aomtttm beceme group theiapy ~-to bolster their aagglna lpirlts and dlJpe1 atilcb of dtpressfoo. Eocb evenlnl they prayed aloud toplher, with a dUlerent peraon leadJnc lhe prayera each night. Lui w .. k two of !be JOUng men walk· ed down the mountain and found a rancher who (01 help. ( I INSl))E TODAY Orono• Covntr'• 1972·73 budo· et showed a b,.i o o er incre<Ua than an~ of tM 1tate:'1 ott&M S7 coun«et, buck"'° the gencro.J tr..,d of TClrmtl l<u °" !O<D! J)Tr>J><TIN . tu. SIOfV on l'oga 9. ..""" ...,. i ' -~ 11 c......... J ...... "'" c........-................. . C..... 11 --~ f C1 s I IJ ,_,. ~· .... ....... t ................ ....... "-' t T....._ • SS[TI !Iii -.ft n.... .. " ..... 1941...... • =IMJ~ .: =-:.:-l).'2 I 2 OAIL V PILOT IS Todd Gets Mutt Cle1nente Youngster Receives Dog Todd EgglelOn, 8, and "Muneca Ille Secood", &Is woeb, met foe the first time Christmas Eve and It was love et first sight F&r the San Clemente youngster thal occasion in Costa Mesa marked the end or a weektong search for a replaceinenl to a beloved mutt that was taken from Todd's doorstep and hanged early last week in the city beach. "Sunday was the first night in a week that Todd began to show a little baJ> piness again," said the Concordia School third grader's mother this morning. The Eggleton phones started ringing early Saturday morning as DAILY PILOT readers came acros the story o! Todd's tragedy. "The calls didn't stop all day; ther...: 111ust have been a hundred offers fron1 people who wanted to give Todd a pup for Christmas," said ~irs. Eggleton. Not one of the people asked for any money for their dogs. she added. "It was fantastic'." Fro• Pqe I QU _Uffi ... buildings ve~· well ·· Beland said bis ftrm. which is 1.100er cootract to prepare t h e city's gmtral plan. '>ll·ould probably recommend to tht council that a general earthquake ~ be undertaken. AMBULANCE • • the tQ.'o was dri\ing the vehicle . Costa Mesa fireman Phillip Worsham. 29. of 2332 Elden St., Costa ?.lesa. is also hospitalized at Hoag with multiple in- juries. The ambulance driver. 22-year-<>ld Richard Sprague, was listed in satisfac- tory cood.ition at Costa Mesa t.1emorial Hospital. Costa 11-1esa police patrolman Paul Alexander was listed in good condition at Brislol Parle Medical Center. According to a Costa Mesa Fire Department spokesman, a call wa s received at 9:32 a.m. to go to God- dlcbcm's residence and otter medical aid. After providing initial first aid, God- dicUoo was pl.aced in the Seal's Ambulance wbJch was travelling west· bound on Victoria when the collision with the Rodrtguez vehicle occurred. ""' -----">'-Into Ille olr, OOCO!dbi& In h!'IJ" Jiftk, a service station attendant near the in· l"'SOCtlon and landed on the hood of Patrolman Alexander's car. The ambulance finally came to rest on its side. It took several minutes for police and firemen lo free lhe trapped victims, aceording to witnesses. Numerous units of the California Hlgbway Patrol and the Costa Mesa Police Department were needed to route traffic through tbe busy intersection. Nation's Traffic Death Toll 565 The nation 's traffic death toll for the three-day Christma s weekend totaled 585. That is fewer than the 614 who died in 1971 and far below the record toll o( 720 killed over the three-day celebration in 1915. The National Safety Council estimated that from 550 to &50 persons would be kill· ed in trafilc accidents betwe(!n 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 22, and midnight Dec. 25. The council estimates that deaths dur· in,g holiday perlod5 run about 2S percent above: those in which no holiday occurs. Thus a total of 56S for the weekend would mean there would have been about 4~ deaths if no holiday were involved. The new pup, Todd sa1d today, is an Au.rtralian abepbetd female, just the IOll of ~twnblt b....s that dJaracterlzed bl! pn!Vloua pet, -M bad named lluneea (Spanial ror "doll"). Mrs. Egglellln bad promised Iler son that he would have a new dog by Christmas morning, but effort& througb the week to (ind just the right replace- ntent '>ll'ere in vain. One Labrador puppy lasted a day. He felt from grace "·h.m he chewed Muneca·s coUar to bits. But wllh the new pet, Todd insists, it's the real thing. "She's just what I wanted , and 1 nam- ed her r-.tuneca, just like the first one I had," he said, happily. Porsche Auto Theft Leader Identified? Ne"A-port Beach poli~ said today they lmo'>ll· the idenUIY of Ille-leader of a Los ,\ngeles-based a 0 uto theft ring that has been responsible for steadling 2 0 Porsches i.n Nevqx>t1 Beach alone since 5'P'-I. Det«1i\"'e Ken Smith said investigation k.Q pobct> to a garage in Anaheim late IN w.wk that is tht apparent opera- t..«:.3.1 headquarters of the ring "'·hich he ~ 11!\"0l\·ed as many as 10 persons at UDt" time. A raid at the garage Thunday nigbl rumed up -lbousand dollars in """' paru lxrt oeilber the gang leader oor any of bis as:sociates. Smith said be will ask lhe Orange County District Attorney for arrest Wamltlts for the ring leader and one other persoo today. . Newport Beach police arrested ooe suspect, Gil bert Armenta, It, of Rosemead. early last week when they assertedly spotted him early in the morn- ing near the Oakwood G a r d e n apartments in 16th Street. Tvio others fled when police ap- proached Annenta, Smith said. The Pondles sllllen earlier that night were recovered in the parking lot of the Orange Coaat YMCA and another was recovered near the Anaheim garage oo La Palma A venue. A fifth was fOlllld the next day across the street from the Oakwood apartments. Police ,aaJd the lnyestigallon Jnlll the auto tbell rintt .. about the !Int of ...._&lilt.ol>ema-elli>rt among eight police departments and other agenciet includiq p o I I c e departments In Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Orange, Anaheim and Tustin and the Orange County Sheriffs Office and tbe National Auto Theft Bureau. DetecUve Smilb said Iba! property , recovered in the Anaheim garage in- cluded a Porsche engine, two Porsche transmission ulea, slx car coven, eight bucket seats, 29 tires and wheels, 17 Porsche or Volkswagen jacks, and several other items. He said the parts came from at least eight different stolen Porscbes. Smith said the alleged leader of the auto theft ring would hire as many operators as he needed for a particular job on a given night. He said he used as many as 10 in one particular operation - the theft or eight Porsches thal were found stripped in the Irvine orange groves Sept. 17. Northern Japan Area Hit by Earthquake TOKYO (U PI ! - A mild earthquake jolted northem Japan today. The government's meteorological agency said the quake had an intensity of 2 on the Japanese scale of 7 in Tsukidate, Miyagi Prefecture. and of I in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture. about 150 miles north of Tokyo. Sadtlleback Won't Lose Stam Aid Saddlebacl< College In Mission Viejo doeai'I expect io lose any stale aid In the upcomlng fiscal year even lhou.gh Gov. Ronald Reqan baa vetoed a JU million community college relief bUl. Soddlebact rec.Ives only basic aid 11U5 per student) from lhe !tale. Velo of the relier bill dealt a blow to founda tion aid, state grants that are offered only to older community college districts. For example, the establisbod Coast Community College Distr1ct erpec:ts Ill lose 13 miUlon_ In funds nexl year due Ill the veto of the bill. The new Saddleback C o m mu n t t y College District, ll<OOld1ng to Dr. Fred H. Bremer, superintendent-president, Is cormdetod a high weallb dlstrlct and. as suc.il. cannot receive fotmdatibn ai<l.- llo......-, -·said Saddlebact - ported the bill because In future run the -Jib of the district will decrease and ii will become eligible for foundation aid fu nds. Sl.'.lte figures showing the effects to districts say Saddleback "will lose just about tero dollars" in the up<:.'OJlling fiscal year, Bremer sakl. A separate provision of the bill. Bremer DOted, would have change the definitions of "student " under funding formulas. Nol''. a student taking less than 10 units is considered a part time enrollee. or "a def.int>d adu ll student.·• Senate Bill 95 that Reagan \1etoed \\'OIJJd have dropped this part-time category and allowed colleges to count slud<nts la1'.lng less than 10 units as "full time" students . Thi.! would have meant Increased aid from the state lo the 91 eommunjty col· lege districts of Califomia. Bmner said this provblon of the bili also would not cause problems for the burgeoning junior colleges. Banks Hike Rate For Loans 1,4 % NEW YORK (AP) -A airing of major commertial banb, including the coun- try's 1biJU and fourth tarseat, followed the lead ol 1... other bli banb and 1-1«! their prime lend1ng ntes today from 511 to I percent. Chase Manhattan Bank, No. 3; MJUlulactuttrs Hanover 'l'nlst Co., No. 4; Cbemical Bink and Mlr1ne ltidland --·the oO:t of bom>ii1DC !or their' 1lllCllt ~ ct•Pmwn m the face ol the -odm1nlstratioo's "':il':lp Ill o;ootnif Jnllatloa by u.p.g the d 00 bank Interests ra1es. "We are keenly aware of the federal government 'a desire to moderate upward rate pressures as a part of Ila effort to bring lnllatlon under firmer ooalrol," a spokesman for Cha5e said. "However, we believe that boldinc in- terest. rates at ltveJ.s·;irhk:b are out of line -the market _.ny -1d. over a period of time, CIUlt d1ltorticu in the flow or credit, and c<ntrlbute to the inflationary 11Piral by plldnc alioonnally heavy demands on banb. '' 1971 Tn11nan Portrait Thomas Hart Benion painted this portrait of Mr. Truman. "The old ma n looks better as an old man than he did as a young man,11 said Be nton. "'You get that fat off of him and you see that chicken~bawk face and also his sensitivity. You would never think of Harry Truman as being sensitive, but he is-when he's not fat and bothered with all the defenses a poJitician has to eut up with. You didn't ever see the real man. You saw only the mask .' Bess Truman Kept Vigil During 22-day Illness KANSAS Cfl'Y, Mo. !UPI) -Her face lined with weariness, Bess Truman kept a Ch ristmas Day vigil by the bedside of former President Harry S Truman -the childhood sweetheart she married more than a half-century ago. Mrs. Truman, 87, was joined in her sad watch Monday night by their daughter, Margaret Truman Daniel. Both women then retmned borne Ill the family home at nearby Independence. Mn. Daniel fltw to Kansas City from New York when docton said Truman could die wllbln hours. . '!be 1,1 hour, 15 minute vigil by Mrs. Truman waa ODe of the loogest llnce be< busbml's hospitalization for lung to- lectton ~· 6. She bu bee!. at TrumAn's bedUdo tor all lxrt noe of bis 1:1 days In the~ Mrs. Daniel anived by commercial jet a few hours before midnight and was whlskod to the holpltal by Seer<! Servke agents. She entered through a side door wllboul speaking to reportm and joined Bess In TrwnAn '• room. They left 15 mtnules taler for the 'f'ruman home. The Viall morked the second time Mn. Daniel baa Down Ill lier .. )'UNlld falher'a bedside durln& bla cumnt W-ness. On Dec. I, !be day after Truman was holpllalized, Mn. llonld Dew to Kansaa City oo a jet provided by the White Hooae. Wbeo lier father nllled Wt week, abe "turned In New York to spend Cllr11tnias wllb Iler family. Truman's Illness bu not been euy on Bess, who met her husband 1D &mda:y Schon! at JndeJ)Olldeoce, -lbe WU I and he WU I. l.iMo of-U....,..,. her face1-4 llor·walk II slow dllt to arthritis In h« !es•· Aller belplnf her ~ the bolpllll lobby de<arat..r wllb ~ jiW· family 'lriMcl and ' cbailffeur Mtb Westwood paced the corrldon. Whan asked about Truman's beatlb, Ila wou1a only shake hl1 head. Randall Jesse, a perlOIW1 !rtond of !be family, aa.ld: "Sbe:'a one: of the put ladlts of the world." • Key West 1 • t ' Recalls I ' -. I \ Truman ' I I ' ~y WEST, Fla. CAP) -Tbe deelb J, former President Harry S Truma~ reminded America's soutberrunost city oh lhe days when he strolled Its quaint streets and rtlaxed over Poker In the Ut .. tie Whtie House. Tiiey never could get h1m Ill like Keyt Wesl'i world·funous deep sea flshina:. Truman . who was 18 when he died' Tuesday in Kansas City, Mo., made 11 working vblts to Key Wtst between November UMS and March 1952. He con-. tlnued to vacation in Key West after he left the While House, and made hls last trip to the Keys in Ul69, One Key West resident who rtmembers Truman well ls Margaret Foresman. managing edllllr of the Key West Cllizen newspaper, who first met the former president In 1951. "He was alnya very happy and friendly here," she said. "I remember ooce I wanted our four kids to see him, so 1 dro•e them down and parited the car by Ute ... w.n aome distance away. President Truman opol- ted us and came over to sake hands with !be boys and pal the baby on the head. "He always liked his early morning walks around town. People here tend to Jeave somebody like that alone. Nobody would run up and ut blm for an autograph, or anything,'' abe said. "I lblnk the people beN! liked blm so well because he was the kind of guy wbo looked you right in the eye when he talk- ed to you," John Spottswood a close friend of Truman's in Key West, said. "And it didn't ma lier wbelber !bat talk lasted a minute o;o an hour, you knew he was giving hls full attention to you the whole time." Earl Adams, Key West's court clerk and a local ltlalorlan, aald Tnlman -1d arrive from Waahlngtoo and wllbln an hour have changed loll> a sport& llhlrt worn outside his slacka and a pllb ltelmel Ill pn>lect bla bead from the aubttoplcal IUD. Sometimes be wore a toni-bilied flahlJti cap In place of the -et. Adams aald, lxrt Ito nover enjoyed flaltlntr, Adams utd Tnlman wu coueil ooto a deep.a fllhllll boat only twice. Bis aulde -the l•!e "Bra" Sanden. famed as Entest Hemtngway•a cuJde, but Truman decided he'd lll1ct to nrtmmlng, wbk:h be performed wtlb an odd ovorbaod -. be called "tbe M1awri Cl'lwl." Friends In Key West uy Truman's favortte rec:reatklll was penny.ante DOker wllb clole friends, but be allo )ov.d pracl1coJ ]om. Advtaer Oarl< Cl1llonl ooce WU pr!IUll-IY dllol01lu Ill .. _ a~ mappir be'a e1uabt on a trip --loci-.--• .,...,., 'VecDro 11illPl*I 1nanU Ill advertlllna card tram • local reotaurant, Adami tald. Ill ~~1~~·:~1:.::; later "dJtcoftrtd" It, lea\linc the ftd.. laced Cllfford bealetlly tlm1lltl ...... !bat he'd bou(ltt Ille lfall. David Rubinoff, Violinist, Weds * * * ............ 1 COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Violinist HARRY Tl\,UMAN DEAD ••• and compo.wr David Rubinoff and North Ireland Darlene Azar Smtih of suburl>an Colum· three week& •go today -after flabUq wllb bl! wife, Bess, heraelf 17. bus were married here in a brief civU lung caogesUon at home for two weett -Mrs. Truman received the aad DeWI by o and bad been In a coma a1nce early telephone. A family spokellllan, llanda1l erem ny · J...... aald -•--•~ 11 "with the R d Q • He Is~ she la .~·115 Saturday. Earlier In bl! bocpllelluUon M~ ·--·~ eporte-Ulet '"' ~ -aa-fortllude and calmnesa with whlcb The two "portedly met when Rublnolf he appeared to be rallying, bu! the com-"~ appeart(t for a c::oaOert here nine months binBHon of re:splratory problems, harden-c~.~ has faced all of thlt ... By Tiie A-,_ ago. ed arleriea and ldclney diJeue ...,,, IOo Nil<oo pn>clalmed Tbunday a nallooBI All uneasy calm setUed ._ Norlbern salurday's marriage wu the -d much for the old man. day of mourning, orderin( Dap lowered 1relaod today as a three-day Ouistm.as for Rubinoff, a wldower, and the third for In recent years he bad appeared frail to half staff at federal buildings for tbe cease-fire by Irish Republican Army ter· Mrt. Smith, who was ooee dJvorced and and drawn, his weight down from a nert 30 days. rorists ended. onoe Widowed. She la the mother of elght presidential 170 pounds. He long aao Tbe auditorium in the Truman llbrary, The self-imposed truce by tbe na-chJldrtn. abandoned his Ille-long predilection for wbue the funeral service• will be ClCfto tionalist Provisional Wing of the IRA The 1\Ubi.noffs said they will Uve ln the lollf;, fut early morning walka, but made ducted, boldt Mly 200 penons, and at· formally ended at midnight. More than Columbul area. almost daily excursions oa shoopiug trips tendance will be by invitation only. 12 hours later, the police and anny said 1..:;;;;;;;;;;;;====;;:=;;:;;:;;;;;~~~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;;:;;:;;:;;~:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;~;;;:; they bad recorded no lncklenle, allhough I patrols remained on the alert. The cease-fire wu marred by only oc· casional shooting, which officials said might have been Isolated lncldenta rather than IRA terrorist activity. SESAME STREET OUN•• cour DAILY PILOT " Hot Winds to Continue Tll9 Of"Mlm ~DAILY I'll.OT, wllfl Wlllcll .. ~ ""' Mlwt-l'rwu, ll MlltMd by -or..,. an lt#iahWll COfnlWll'ly. hi»-.-~ .,.. ,,.,.,... ~r llW"'4ll fl'~. ... Clill• Me$.t, ~ kid\, 11111,;tull • l<HioV""-uoln V11i..,. L~ e.o.. ........,,...leMO .... ~" ow.-,.. S.. J-C.•tr-. A M>Qolt! '""1o ... 1 ... , .... it PllOflsMlll S."""'•ys ..,.. Sundt yi. ,... ,,..... ~lflit pltl'lt Is ., la .,...,., ..,, $.,...., c ... ,, Mew. CtlifwllJ•, rnM. ltoHrf H. w,,4 ..... ~.,.,,,... ........ J•c.lt R. C.iey Y'Ki ........... ar9 o..r.1~ , ... "'.' KHYil ..... l'MM•• A. ,.,,, .. ;,.. MWll1 C l5lftw a...., H. LMt l iith•nl P. N"ll ........... , .... E41tln - Through Next Two Days Santa Ana winds are expec ted to con· tinue to bluster and bring balmy tern · peratures to Orange County for the next l'>ll'O days. according to the National Vii eathcr Service. Y.'inds gusting up to 70 miles an hour wert. rt!ported over the Christmas ""'ttkend in Orange County. ripping down holiday decorallon!i, leaving as many u 30.000 penoioos wllhout power, and lit- tering streets throughout lbe courity with trtt limbs. Orange Coast metrorologist .J • Sherman Denny said the last comparable windstorm OttUmd tn January, 19&81 nearly seven ytars ago. Htavielt damage was reported In the Yorba Unda , Placentia, Tustin, and San- ta Ana areas. •here winds coming out of the S.nt.a Ana canyoo blew at a ateldy 35 milts an hour. "Startlnc Christmas Eve, I'd aay we had 2,000 people out of power almost con- stanUy." !aid Bob Beck, dlvlsion ~er or Soothern CAllfomla Edison Company_ Blackout.a ranged from Jwt 1 few minutes lo u much as four houra In can-. yons of lhe ean cow:ity. Edison called out 300 worken, aome (Ollling from 1s fa.r away '' Santa Barbara and Santa Paula, tor duty begin· ning at 6 p.m. Sunday. Beck sald aome crews worked continuously for 14 hours . ''We were gettlna: thousand1 of calls and we called out evtry avallable man trying to restore serv\ct," Beck said. Scores of trees were rtported down in l~lUIUngton Beach. Fountain Valley ~sta Mesa, arn:I Newport &ach, No ma~ JOr damage was reported, bowtlver. Tbe Orange County Harbors depart. ment reported 17 wind-rtlatcd tncldenta, niMtly Involving boats blown loo!e from lhelr moomings, but nothing major. "It'• lhe kind of thtnf you'd uptCt In the nm major wind o the year," 11ld Sgt. !lay Graham. In Laguna Beach wlnd damage wu reponed m0&t serious ln the Bluebird Canyon area. But a nln•foot by aeven· foot window In the new count1 Jlbrtf1 buUdlng on Olenneyre Slrte:t wu shatlertd 1n a powerful gust about l p.m. Sunday. SMt.a A.na firemen 1'1ere kept bul}' fiKhUng two momtng ftru that were w~lpped by gu1Ung wlndl. In addlliorl. a 1\mlD veterinary hoapllel wu partJaJJy deltroyed whm thrtt eucalyptus trees crashed down an it. Damage estimate waa '60.000 . • SESAME ST!tEET IS ABOUT THE ONLY STREET IN THE HARBOR AREA THAT HASN'T. HAD A CARPET INSTALLATION BY ALDEN'S. ., IN OUR FIFTEEN YEARS, WE HAVE C AR PETE D THOUSANDS OF HOMES IN COSTA MESA, NEWPORT BEACH, LAGUNA BEACH AND HUNTINGTON BEACH. ONE ~EIGHBOR TELLS ANOTHER UNTIL WE HAVE WORKED IN EVERY HOME ON A BLOCK. TH FORMULA IS SIMPL&-WE TRY TO MAKE EACH CUSTOMER HAPPY. ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR-WE PROBABLY CARPETED HER HOME. {IF. WE HAVEN'T, BRING HER IN WITH YOU.) ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES l_'tl.'f•,, ~ --, , L-" :~ j~t ( UI ! 111 j I· ~ ·• ·---, I I -. ·c . ..,.. IN COSTA Mll4 "NCI ltl1 -·. ~-· . • ---. ' - • 1663 Placentla Ave. COSTA MllA '4"4131 HOURS; Man. Thrv ThUtt., t lo 51JO-PRI,. t lo 9-SAT. 9:30 to S • • ' • H-.ntiJlll&on Beaeh Fountain Valley • Today's Final N.Y. St.ockw .VOL. 65, NO. 361, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORAN$£ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1972 TEN CENTS .. Friends, Foes Remember Truman's Courage By AllOdatod Pnu Polillal ally and foe today bailed Har- ry S Truman as a common man who honored the nation with bis courage and declJI...,... wbeo1 thrust Into the oatloo'a hlgheat office at a time o! lntematlolial peril . President Nlion uld, "Harry S Tnunao will l>o ...,..mbered u one of the most coura,eous presidents In our history, who led tbe nation and the world through a critical period with exceptional vision and detennlnaUon. Our hopes ~ Man's Body Discovered On Offramp 'Ibe body of an tmldentlfied young man, apparenUy dropped from a passing car, was discovered early this morning on. a freeway offramp in Seal Beach. Seal Beach Police said the youth was a white male, -a to 12 yean of ,age, with DO. ldealification. "A prellJniolrJ' .... ..,. lllt-- ~ be -_4-:1 .... 'll boon,~ Seal --LI. ~ Golll. .--teoL ... doo'!.taow !be ..... al cio8th ;yet, .. whero be mtpl have ...,. tuied. • He was found by passing motorists abOut 1:"5 a.m. on the 7th stnet off- ramp at the junclioo al the Sali Dlqo llld Sali Gabriel freeways ht Seal Beach. Lt. Gatti said ~ la apparent the dead man was not k1Ded where be wu found. but bad apparenUy been dropped Ibero from a vehicle. ''There are no outward sigm of bullet wounds oc other marks lndlcatiq how be died," Lt. Gatti said. "He was dreaed In burgaody ln>Ul<rl, a blue tanker jad<et and had medium4engtb hair. He could be a Nllvy man." The Coroner'• office began an autopsy this morning to cle\<nDlnO the ca-of death. The results w.... DOI yet known. Lt. Gatu said the man's shoes were missing, but it didn't seem slgnlfant. "At the present we don't know bow he died, or where, .. Lt. Gatti said ... And we don 't know who be is." Two Women Roh Service Station In Westminster Two YOlllli women are belni soucbl by Westminster pollce today as 8U8pOCIJ in jhe $100 gunpoint robbery of a service 1taUoa attendanL Station attendant G«>rge Henry 11, told police he waa on duty aJon, Sah:ntay D.iaht when the stickup occurred. flenry said be was counting the day's r<eeipls from the Economy Sell Service station at Westminster Boulevard and Magnolia Street \vben tbe two women ~ame into the 1tatton office. \ According lo'lbe ·attend .. ~ they iabd to uoe the mt robm but be told tbem\l>e Was closlnl and they would hive to ,go acro11 thl street to another ota~_:__; Henry ,.l.d they left and rewrneo a short While later. One d. them . W I I Inned with a rovoi-and'tbe other toot the manoy lie tiad been counting. Henry Ald they Oed on foot. Plumber Raisu Ticklish Issue • HAIFA, J.,..i (UPI) -A plumber who banged bit - ., .... , • kitchen •int -• hou,.wlfe tic:lded him boo flied for 'compenaalloo for WactS lost u a result of a work: ~ newspapers reported • • The unidentified _.. aid 1111 ihouchl the lorlo llfddnl oat -under the 1lnk wu ber ..,...,_,L • ; d., for a . generation of peace rest in large measure on the linn fO\!Ddatlons that be laid ... Vice ~t Splrn T. Apew said, "Amonc tho 1o1en1o t11o1 Harry Truman brought IO die ,,_,.,. WWI two 111- dl-Pble qualJIJoo ti .a -I leader - lorllrllblMa llld counp. 'Ille """ .. his deat, .,..._Buck ltopl.lfere1' Wal no icl!e bout. But In an olllce of great . power be never loot Ille bwnillly that eodeaftd him IO mlJlloaa u simply the man, fnlm "Vssourl." Fonner President Lyndon B. Johnson a said, "A 20th century giant ls gone. Few meo of any times ever shaped the world as did the man from Independence. "President Tnunao presided over the destiny of this country during one o! Its most. turbulent eras. Never fllnchlng in the face ot crucial naUopal cbok:es, b1s deciaions changed tbe coum of bwnan events throughout the world." Sen. Strom Thurmond (fl.S.C.), who bolted the Democratic party to run for president against Truman as a Dixiecrat ln 1948, said,. "His decisive Jeadenhlp in ' Todd Gets Mnit Clernente Youngster Receives Dog Todd Eggleton, 8, and "Muneea the Second", six weeks, met for the first time Christmas Eve and it was love at first sight. For the San Clemente youngster that occulon ln Cc.'wta Me~ marked the end of a weeklong search fdr a replacement to a beloved mutt that was taken from Todd's doorstep and banged early last week in the city bo""11. "Sun$y w~ the flrst,nigbt in a week tbal Todd hefan to show a litUe hap- piness again,' laid the Concordia School third giader'•molhlr this inonlinJ· The t:aletm .~ -tinging eariY ~ ~ • 0..W..Y Pllbl' ..... -..... Ille a!orf·ol Todd's l!'*gecly. .o: ..,,,.. -dllD't,lloP all dq; *"" 1111111 ba,. -,. .....,. ·alfera {rom people who WUlad Ill live Todd a pup for Christmas," said Mn. EuJeton. - Not one of the people asked for any money for their dogs, she added. "It was fantastic !" The new pup, Todd said today, is an Australian shepherd female, just the sort of rougb-and-tumble breed t b a I characterized his previous pet, which be bad named Muneca (Spanlst for "doll"). Mrs. Eggleton bad promised her son that be would have a new dog by Christmas morning, but efforts through the week to find just the rigbl r<place- ment were in vain. one Labrador puppy lasted a day. He ,fell__ --.11.... he -Muneca'.s collar to bill. • Bui wil!l 'lbe new pet, TOM lnlls\I; It's tbe real thing. 11She11 jut wbat1 wanted, and I nam- ed her Mllneca, Just like the first one f had," he said, happily. Two Boys Killed in Irvine As Pi,ckup Truck Crashe s Two ~ were killed and two other persons seriously injured this morning when their piq truck !kidded out of control and nm IDIO a dirt emhanbneol on Bonita Canyon' Road near MacArthur Boulevard to Irvine. The two dead chlldren were thrown from the truck aa were a man in his ear- ly 20s, anolher boy and a dog. The man and Injured boy were taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. The .ex· tent' of tbelr tQJurles was not im- mediately known. Officer R. E. Arnold uld the group had been unloading trash at Orange county's Bonita CaJeyOll Dwnp just prior IO tbe 9:25 a.m. accident. "They were goti>g betw,.. 40 and 50 miles per hour and the driYer k>st It," the Irvine police officer said. "We tblnk be may have bad a blowoUI In the front Jell tire. A witness -· saw U.. accident from far away said hi saw 10metlJng fJy oil the truck just bolon II bappeoed," The lruci<, delcribed hY' P,lice u an older model, apun ·across the IW<>lane road after the im~ 1nd came to a halt facing In the opposite direction ft had been moving at the time of the crash. No other vehicles were involved in the accldenl, police said. Officer Arnold, a veteran traffic in- vestigator, said the one boy who survived the crash probably did ao because bis body was cushioned from the Impact by an empty trash can. Yule Tree Fire Damage $8 ,000 A blaze Ignited by a Christmas tree to- day caused about $11CXM> damage to a Huntington Beach home. Huntington Beach Fire Capt. James Vincent said the fire broke out at 5651 Terrier Lane, around 10:30 a.m. and was under control within three minutes after the firem~ arrived. Vincent said there was structural damage to the living room and kitchen and smoke damage throughout the home. No one was injured. the crucial yean of his presidency was an example in courage. lie did not hesitate to ll!al<e the dll!icull dect..ions he felt we;re right." Democratic Gov. John J. Gilligan or Ohio said, "At a moment of great na- tional porll llld triumph Jn the climactic weeks of World War n , be waS suddenly thrust Into the. ofllce al president and the manner in which this bumble man from Misaociri met U-awful cballenges and shouldered those terrible burdens com- mailded the respect and affection of all Americans." arr I Nixon Hails Ex-chief As 'Fighter' KANSAS CITY (AP) -Harry S Truman died today, conquered finally by ~ infirmities of his 88 years. President Nixon Jed the mourning for the naHOO's 33rd ~ident, calling him "a flghter who was best when the going B•f'l'.W S l'rtl-•1 . • • Bb-Ufe _. Tllleea O.P .. es3,IJA,J l 8 -----'----""--.-. ~WW was IOughest." The President also pro- claimed Thursday a day of national rn9umlng and ordered flags at federal buildings Down at half stall for 30 days. Lyndon B. Johnson, now the only surviving fonner president, lamented the passing of "a 20th century giant." Truman's wife of 53 years, and bis daughter who saw him for a final 20 minutes Ouistmas Day, were at home ln nearby Indepeodence when death came at 5:50 a.m. PST. In accordance with Tnmlan'1 wishes, the funeral Thursday will be without the panoply accorded other great statesmen. Ho will he burled Thursday at I p.m. PST In the courtyard or the Harry s Truman Memorial Library, Truman's proudest achievement iD the 20 years since he lift the White Hotlse. Truman was the rut of the great World War Il figures, preceded ln death by Dwight D. Eisenhower, Winston Churcilill and Josef Stelin. He was the president who set the United St.ates agtriinst global communism in the Gold War lhat followed World War n. He ordered use of the atomic bomb to end World War 11, extended un- precedented help to nations resisting Soviet domination, and ordered troops in- to Korea when Communists began their invasion of the south. "Recognizing the new threat to peace that had emerged from the ashes of war, be stood boldly against it with bis ex- tension of aid to Greece and Turkey In 1947 -and the 'Truman Doctrine' thus established was crucial to the defense of liberty in Europe and the world," 'Nixon said, adding: "In launching the Marshall plan, he began the most farsighted and most kenerous act of international rebuilding (See TRUMAN, Pap I) Cannibali$••• Confir111ed Andes Air Crash Survivor s Tell Grisl y Stor y SANTIAGO, Chile (>'J') .,.. Official IO· u... through Ille bitter mountain ......,.. confirmed !Oday that ourvtvon blizzards, but the re~ oould n o t be al an Andel plane crash had eaten the sul.stanlialed until today. llelh al dead comradea IO avokl atarva-The eources said lhit ooe of the )'OODI lio!I durtna a 11-diy ordeal. men, not · ldenllfled,' compm.; tbo The offktal llOUfc. Wd· lt IUl'Yiwn, group'e decWon to UM the Cid.avers u ellhs playen or boooten di an "almllar IO a heart "-1aot." l!"'lll*YOD n'lbf tolm, had made a HJa explanatkJn: Jn a transplant O~ _.,. poc1 that tho)' wou1c1 no1 -u.o • bear! 1a tatm """ •, -at tbt mauer antll ' tho)' -IO '· death to malntsln _.., IU1, llld ht -ldoo, ~. and tboo they tbo same manner port1<es al the bolllet ~-1 oallectift llatemenl. had been,uaed IO malntaht tho Uvin(. ,_ -1llnady reWoi"" IO The ......,.. Pid the ~ Niated -. 'Illa -u bave rtmaloed that the declsioo to uae the 11om.. of In -... IO -but plan IO fly fri<nda, and ....... 1a11v .. , WU • col-l.ff !At ~ ID • day or t.... lectlve one agmd to bi' all. 'Ille [Ila. 11111 41 Jll!aa aboonf -Eatller, the aurvlvon !Old al bavln1 a k bit an -peoa Oct. U. By Ibo eod pd c1eai o! food, boc&Ull tbq liad al~.•...., deld. llOCked up on candy and -• !nllt '1)ol't liod "--!bat -wbo duriftl • llOp at Mondou, Araenllna. Mtftid illlllll i... 111en -.. llolll Tbe ,..., ..... ulil !liq .,... Illa ' . . • "terri~ mountain silence " the endlets bottdom and perioda •f dopraaion Ibo wont part of their experience. . "We lot up at 7, 1lotaied IO Iba radio and melted water ftam lnOW," llkl Joie IAIDJnJctam,M,an-- "We allo bolkd Ille waler wltli, -flcheo to make a llOrl of llOUP whlc:b we uaed more llld more u our ,...tlilm nn out." • '!ht -•P,elll' houn In -~ .. t-Jhey·--ln iidvance.•The ~ --became .,,.,p therapy -lom to bolalor their flllalnl tpirill and ..... ·-al deorellloo. Each ovenfng tbe7 pr.,..i aloud toptbor, wit!> •. dlllef!!ill --.. tho _ ... oildt nllllL ' Lui. ,eek two ol lhe ,.... -Wiit· od_tba_ ......... -wbo IOI belp. • • Democratic Sen. Henry M. Jackson of· Washington said, "Harry Truman was confronted with a series of tough, un- precedented decllions with nothing l~ than the future security of the free world at stake. He never shrank from those decisions, despite the hostile environment of those postwar years. His courage, bis wisdom and bis decisiveness In that period shaped the future course of the Western world." President Nixon also said of Truman, ..-Recognizing the new threat to peace that had emerged from the ashes ol war, he stood boldJy against it with hJJ u:- tension of aid to Greece and Turkey in 1947 -and the 'Tnunao Doctrine' thus established was crucial to the defense of liberty in Europe a n d the world. In launching the Marshall plan, be began the· most far-sighted and most £el'l(tl'OU! act of international rebuilding · ever undertaken. "With his characteristically decisive action in Korea, he made J)06111hle the defense of peace and freedom in Asia." rum an ··-HARRY S TRUMAN ( 1884-1972) Hot Winds to Continue Through. Next Two Days Santa Ana winds are expected to con· tinue to bluster and bring balmy te m- peratures to Orange County for the next two days. accordlng to the National Weather Service. Winds gusting up to 70 miles an hour were reported over the Chrl!tmas weekend in Orange County, ripping down holiday decoratlom, leaving as many as 30,000 per900! without power, and lit- tering streets throughout the county with tree limbs. Orange Coast meteorologist J . Sherman Denny said the last comparable windstorm occurred in January, 1966, nearly seven years a10. Heaviest damage was reported in lhe Yorba Linda, Placentia, Tu.stln. and San- ta Ana areas, where winds coming out of the Santa Ana canyon blew at a steady 35 miles an holJ?. "Starting Christmas Eve, I'd say we had 2,000 people out of power almost con- stantly," said Bob Beck, division manager of Soulbem CallfomJa Edison Company. Blackootl ranged from Just a few mlnutes to •• mueh as four hours in can-yons of the eaat county. F.dlson c1Ued out JOO workm, some comln& from u far away as Santa Barbara and Santa Paula, !fl! duly begin- ning at I p.m. Sunday. Bock oald oome Cl<WI worked contlnuouaJy for !l houn. "We were cettlo& thOUNodl of calls aod we called out ever)' 1vlilable man l'l'loc IO Mtoit oel'Yice," 8edt ad!. Seo ... of ir... ..... ~ down ht t • Huntington Beach, F0W1tain Valley, Costa P.tesa, and Newport Beach. No ma· jor damage was reported, however. The Orange County Harbors Depart- ment reported 17 wind-related incidents, mostly involving boats blown loose from their moornings, but nothing major. "It's the kind of thing you 'd expect in the fint major wind of the year," said Sgt. Ray Graham. In Laguna Beach wind damage was reported most teriOUJ in the Bluebird C&nyon area. But a nine-foot by lt\len- foot window in the new county library building on Glenneyre Street was shattered In a powerful gust about 1 p.m. Sunday. Orange CNet Weadter Clear skies are whl« the weather people ~ for Wedneodt,y, with temperatures lb the upper '191 along the CONI. Lowa tDnfc)lt In the IGI. INSm E T88A'Y Onn•g• Countr'11172-73 btidg. et thOtDed a b t o p t,. incrtc11 t11o11 on~ of tho ,_,, otlltr 57 COV!llO!•, blA<klllg "" QflltT'Gl trend of rtl!llng r.a °" loall ;:; 1111 ;er: ': :~ =-- - . : ~---....,~ ,,... ' ........... " . ... . . !·~·~,, ........ , ,..., = --.... . ........ '~--- "" -· M --4 ·-f • • I 2 DAILY PILOT LA Police Raid l',....PqeJ l Car Theft Ring Leader Known TRUMAN .•. ever ,lllldertatea .. with bla chtl'll<" terlSU•aUy declllve atllon in Kore•, .._ made pooslble the delens. or peace and freedom bl Alla. H The bolpllaI attributed Thim .. • doat~ to the "complulty of organic flllur6• eausin, a collapte of tht canilo-vucular system." Newport Beach police su1d toclfty ttwy know the identity of the leader of a Los Angeles-based auto theft ring that h~~s been responsible for steadl1ng 2 O Por!Ches in Ne~·Port Beach alollt" ~ince Sept. I. Detective Ken Sm11h s:ild 1n \·es1ig::i.tion led police lo a garage in :\nRhttm l:ite last \\'eek that is thr apparent opcr:l· tional headquarters of tht! ring ""hi ch ~ said involved as man y as 10 persons al one time. A raid at the garage ThursdJy night turned up several thousand dollars in auto parts but neither the gang leader oor any of his assocw.tes. Smith said he will ask the Orange County District Attorney for arrest India Leader Of Revol11tio11 Dead at 94 i\fADRAS. India t L'PI 1 -Cha krav arth1 Rajagopalachari. the lase go\'ernor- general of India and an influential leader 1n his coon1y·s strugg le fo r independence from Britain, died Christmas Day. He ~·as 9l. He was govemor·genera.I for two years until he resigned in 1950. He was the only Indian to bold the post. 1be ca:JSe of death was not announced, but Rajagopa.lachari entered a hospital eight days ago for treatment of uremia. The central governi.nent in New Delhi declattd a one-week period of mourning and announced he would receive a state funeral today. Prime Atini.:ster Indira Gandhi called Rajopalachari's death a national loss. Born of a Brabmin family in J\tadras, be fought for the rights of the low caste Hindus called the untouchables. When the ruling Congress party under the leacbership of Jawaharlal Nehru, the flnt pime minister and father of Mrs. Gandhi, advocated nationalization of im- "P or t a n t industries, RaJagopalachari b<oke aW>)' from the party and founded the oppoillNcm. Swatantn party, wb.\cb advocates fr<e enterprise. Nation's Traffic Death Toll 565 The nation's traffic death toll for the three-day Christmas weekend. tota1ed 565. That Is fewer tllan the 614 wOO died in 1971 and far below the record toll of 720 killed over the three-day celebration in 196S. 1be National Safety Council estimated that from 550 lo 650 persons Y:ould be kill· ed in trafifc accidents between 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 22, and midnight Dec. 25. The council estimates that deaths dur- ing holiday periods run about 25 percent above those in which no holiday occurs. Thus a total of 56S for the weekend would mean there would have been about 452 deaths if no holiday were involved. Blood1nohile to Open A Red Cross bloodmobile \\'ill be open for blood donations from the public from 2:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Jan. 29 at the ri1lurdy Park Community Center. at the corner of Warner and Golden West avenues, Hun- tington Beach. OUN•• com •• DAILY PILOT 'fti. °'*'41 toe.I c.AIL'I' f'ILOT wlih wlllcll II ~ "" N-·f'reM, If Jlvbllllltd Dr h Orlllll9 CtiMr f'11bll~ll'lll ComtNny. ~­ rtM edhloN •re l*bllsMoa, Motldlly 111«N9ro llrNe'(, fw <:Mia M.,1, 1'1~ Be.en, HW!tl""* 119'(11/P:oun!eln Vlll1¥, L1111111 •-11, lrvNIS1dllt.ti.c:t 1nd s~n C1trrent~/ a6.i JllM C.Plsnrwt. A Jl"Qll tefjlDn~I .tllkln It pvotllllall '''""''.,' •rel S.Und1y1, TM "'lnc""I Pllbllllllrtg Pl•nl i. 11 llD Wflst a.y $lr9e!, 0$11 ,M111. C1lltor"J1, f1j14, Rolt.rt N. W11d f'rlllcHftt ~ f'un111~er J•,li: l, C11rlay Vlce•"-tdW!f tn4 0.Mrll MW~ n.m•• ic •• .,a EtlllOt Tlto1111•• A. Mvrpltine ~ ... ldllol' Qwfet H. La.. •ic.lr1ard P. Nari M llttflt Mllftal ... llllMl'l ,.,,, c • .,111. .,... 0-.... C-.r Editor ......... AIMlllOfft~ 17171 •••ch loulo••rd ...... ~•i P.O. loit 7,0, •2641 .,_ °"""' ~ ~· ttJ !'Or"' ... _ CMlill ~f UI \ltd .. ,. Slrftl ' tt-1 .. dill 3ilR ,._,...., S.UIW•rd i1911 t......,1111 m "°'"' El C1rtllrol ll .. 1 T .. a,la11 17141 442-4111 Cle 1"'4 A'""""" '42•S671 ..... ,..,. 0,.. c-ty "'"'-'"" l'llt·12H 1m,. Or.,.. CNJI ltlllllitfll ... ,.. """' .., .. , lllWll•'"'"· f'IM"" .,, """''""*'It flto"tlfl ............ .."*" 1111(111 "'. ... ., ..,,... ......... = ... ~Mid .i C"•I• MIU. C-iliio........ 1W Ctll'rltr U,tS , ~ 1Jr tM# N. I "'lftfll"'I mlli,.,.,. ·---""" a.u """"""· "':lrrants for the ring lfader and one oiher person today. ~l'"'port Beach police-arrested one ~u:.pect. Gilbert Arn1enta , 19, of RO&'mt>ad. tarly last wtek when lhey .l:iSertcdlr spott t'd him early tn the mom· 1ng nea r the 0ak¥,.ood Garden apannH·nt.s Ui I61h Street. Tv.o others fled 1\hen police ::-ip- J>l\ld\'h«l Arnlenla, Smith said. Thr Porsches stolen earlier that night v.('rl' rero1ert"'d in rhc pa rking lot of 1he o range Co.'lsl Y~IC . ..\ and another was reco\ ered near the Anaheim garage on W Palma A1·enue. A fifth v.·as found the nc.1.:t day across the street from the Oak1,·ood apartmenls. Truman entered Raearcb H,.pllal Utree weeks ago today -after flgbtlnf lung congestion at home for two weeka - and had beeo ln a coma iince early Satuniay. EJrller In hla hospltallzaUon be appeareit to be rallying, but lhe com- bination of ™Plratory problemJ, harden· ed ll1ttlts and kidney dise.,. were loo much for the old man. In recent years he had appeared frail aod drawn, his weight down from a presidential 170 pounds. He long ago abandoned bis lil~loog predilection for IOOI;, fast early morning walks, but made almost daily excunlons on ~ing trips with hit wile, Besa, hentll 87. Mrs. Truman received the ud news by telephone. A lamlly spoktsman1 Randall Jessee, said she received It 'with the · same fortitude and, calmoeu with which r:._ bu faced all of thll." Polire said the investigation into the au fo theft ring began about the first of St'ptember and has been a joinl effort among t:ight police departments and othe r agencies including po 1 ice dt'partments in Costa J\!esa, Santa Ana. Oro nge. Anaheim and Tuslin and the ()range County Sheriffs Office and the :\alional .-\uto Theft Bureau. Pope Dons Bard Bat UPI Tl ....... Nixon proclaimed Tlwtsda.y a national day of ll)Ollmin8. ordering nass lowered to ball staff at lederll buildings for !be next 30. day•. The auditorium in the Truman Library, where the funeral services wUI be con- ducted, holds only 200 persons, and at- tendance will be by invitaUoa only. Df'tt'ct1ve Smith said that property recovered in the Anaheim garage 1n- cluded .i Porsche cngme, l\\'O Porsche . 1r;,nsmiss ion axle s. six car covers. eight bucket seats. 29 tires and v.·heels. Ii' Porsche or Volksv.·agen jacks, ~nd se\ era! other items. \Vearing a miner 's hard hat, Pope Paul VI talks with 1niners inside railroad tunnel being built near San- oreste. Italy. The pontiff celebrated Christmas mid- night mass with the workers, who presented him \vith a Madonna and Child statuette made of stone from the tunnel. Most foreign dignitaries were expected to go to a memorial service in Washington's National Cathedral, rather tban C0111ing to In~. Girl N ourislied Througli Tube; Intestines Gone • ROCKAWAY, N.J. (t;PI) -Jan Ann \\'esterink tasted a few pieces of meat, a mouthfu1 of potatoes and a blob of Je!Jo. But the blonde 11-year-old's real Christmas dinner ca.me through a tube. An operation to save her life at the Medical CoUege of Virginia Nov. 16 left Jan Ann without any intestines, the last stages in the digestive process. Doctors had found a blockage and &be was flown to Ricbmmd, Va ., for the operation re- moving both intestines. Although she can chew and swallow small bits of meat and other solid foods. they don't do her any good. Her nourish- ment consisl! of special fluids fed intra- venously thraugb a tube attached to a portable batlery operated pump. ---$4Dperda,. "I don't know how we're going to pay that," Westeftnt said after drlvJng Jan Ann home from Richmond for Christmas. "That's $280 a week." He said Jan Ann ·s problem is so rare that there are no foundations from which he can readily get funds to pay for the _fluids she needs to live. "I am going to find out what I can do about it," he said. "Maybe the govern- ment will help, maybe the weliare people." "I feel rme," Jan Ann said. She said the pump doesn't bother her too much but "I don 't like carrying it. It's heavy.'; \Vesterink said the pwnp measures teven by , three inches and is very compact. ' If \\'e \\'ant to take her shopping -v.•e can hook up the batteries," he said . He said she wiU go back lo school aft.er a Jan. 3 checkup in Richmond. . \Vhen doclors at St. Clair's Hospital d~scovered the blockag e in her inte&· lines_. they gave Jan Ann little chance to survive. ··A normal person would ha ve died on the table," Westerink said at the 1in1e. No1v. ''This v.•as the !>est Christmas I've ever had." \Vesterink said. Painter to Give Beach De1nonstration \\'atercolorist Claire Jones wil l give a free demonstration of dry -bru sh watercolor Jan. 8 at lhe Huntington Beach Re<:reation Center. The show is sponsored by the Hun- tington Beach Art League and will be-gin at 7:30 p.m. The recreation cenler is located at 17th Street and Orange Avenue. a Vessels Search For Survivors Of Wrecked Ship JUNEAU, Alaska (UPI) -Seareh vessels criss-crossed the stormy Gui{ of Alaska today searching for survivors amidst the floating debris of a Liberian cargo ship that carried 33 Korean crewmen. Navy C!30 aircraft spotted an oil slick. some deb rls and all four capsiled lifeboats of the built carrier Pac.rover ?o.tonday in heavy seas 750 miles south of Kodiak Island. . One search plane remained at the scene during the night, along with two commercial vessels. Two Coast Guard cutters and the Canadian weather ship Quadra were en route. "We're still continuing an intensive search in the area," a Coast Guard spokesman said. "We're looking f o r survivors or Hferafts.'' 'Ibo Liberian registered IJ,000-too s~ip radioed it was sinkin1 Sanday and crewmen who managed to get aboard a Uferajt would ltave faced, windwl!ipped seu of up lo M feet. "They were all personal friends. I cer- tainly feel sorry about that," said C. E. Bowman, an engineer for Lasco Shipping Co., and managing agent for tbe vessel. "Structurally she was in fine con- dition," Brown said in Portland, Ore. ·•1 was quite surprised 1' bear sbe bad gone down .'' : . Va lor Award Winner Killed HOUSTON, Tei:. (AP) -Macarlo Garcia, who received the nation's highest award for vaJor for heroism in World War II, baa tieen killed in an auto aceidelit. Garcia, 52, of Allef, Tex., and J\fyrtle Koonce, 48, of Houston dJed Christmas Eve in the crash near Sugar Land. Tex. Garcia, then an Army staff sergeant. won the Medal of Honor after he volunteered to dispose of two German machinegun nest!' blocking his platoon's way in Germany on Nov. 17, 1944. Although shot in the shoulder and foot, Garcia cleared the way by killlng six Germans and capturing four. Born ln Mexico, Garcia became a U.S. citizen after leaving service with the rank of master sergeant At the Ume of his death he was a contact man for the Veterans Administration in thi! area. Pain Navy Wnrns Against Tattoos s_AN DIEGO (AP) -The Navy Is trying to do away with tattoos. . 1 he mes.sage comes from Navy doctors who say the tradJtionaJ needlework is not only painfuJ and hard to remove but also medically dangerous. The head or dermatology 11t San D:lego Naval Hospital says California should shut do"n tattoo parlors. "~ew York has already done It," says C8pt. William canon, M.0 , 0 1 am su111nsed that a state as progrtsslve as Ca!Uomla hu made no major move 10 slop it." He says "Mother" emblazoned on a sallor's ann or an. iridltceot hula girl on hi~ chest <'In tum Into a major 11lerglc infedlon, 'lbU9 1ts allo a risk of hepatitis from IM needles. N8vy •nd ~larlne Corps tntlning cent.era here are waralng recniltl about tattooing. Re~ova/ has become a common practke at the b0tp1tat. Carson says som~ sailors pay 11 rueful visit tbe morning after. ' .: ··rney ofltn come in right after they put them on and aak us to take them off , h~ s.ay1. ''Tbcy do not 8eera lo rcallu that a tflttoo la a permanent dlstlfuratlon.'' The only •ay to remove ooe, Cart0n says, ls to take on the 1\ln Utafhas been dyed. ' • Doc10n .,.. ute one of three Jll\llfld mctbod1: rubbing a ~ll lllt on the tattoo until .tbe: •kin and dye bleed away. lcavlng 11 scar; Ullng a rotaUng sandtt (It WIJ"e brush to scrape off lhe akln layera; or In the ca11 of anallt:r lattoos, simply 11lcin& the 1kln off surtt<•lly. • Auto Strikes Ambulance On Mesa Street; 6 Hurt By FREDERICK SCBOElllEBL Of .... Mfr , .... 1'9ff Six persons Well? injured in a mid· morning collision when an ambulance carrying a heart attack victim was struck broadside in a busy Costa Mesa inlersection sending the emergency unit crashing into a nearby police car. Walter Goddicicson, 64, 49t E . Costa Mesa St was receiving resuscitation from a Costa Mesa fireman and a Seal's Ambulance Service attendant when the · emergency vehicle, just a block from Costa lites.a Memorial Hospilal, was struck. The accident occurred shortly before 10 a.m. at the intersection of Victoria Avenue and Newport BwJ~ Goddicbon was dead oo arrival at Memorial Hospital. Hoopital olficlala said. however, his death appeared to Baez Sang Yule . Carols as U.S. Raid Hit Hanoi TOKYO (UPI) -Japan's ComnumJ.t party newspaper said today folk singer and antiwar activist Joan Baez sang Christmas carols in the lobby of a Hanoi hotel while antiaircraft cum thundered at raiding U.S warplanes oo ChristmU Eve. "In the lobby of the Hoan Bin Hotel in-• side the city (Hanoi), Joan Biez and Prof. Michael Allen of the American an- tiwar movement gathered a small meeting to Gbsierve Cbristmu," the newspaper Atabata -(Red Banner) lllld. "WhDe Mile -WU playing her iuHar .and alngtnc, the rumble of an- Uaireraft fire and l\Omb e11>loslom rolled through the bulkllng. Her companions en- oouraged her with ebouts of 'don't quit' and 'keep going.' " "Miss Baez finished her songs in a blackout after the electric power was turned oil." have been caused hy an apparent heart attack and not the accident it.sell. 1.fost seriously injured in the spec- tacular collision wu Gregory Poinder.er, 20, 384 E . Costa Mesa St., who suffered head injuries, according to a spokesman at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. Receiving treabnent at Hoag for muJU- ple laceraUons and other injur:ie.s are Irene and Gravtco Rodriguez, 140 Del A.far Ave., Costa Mesa, the occupants of the late model >edan which collkled with the ambulance. It was not Jmm.ledatel1 known who of the two was driving lbe vehicle. Costa Meaa llreman Pbllllp Wor!bam, 29, of zm Elden St., Costa Mesa, la also bolpitalilod at Hoag wl!h mu!Uple in- juries. Tl?e ~aqce driver, ~year-old ruclian1 Sprasue, wu Ila!ed in 11llllac- tory condlUoo al Costa M.,. Memorial Hospital Costa Mesa police patrolman Paul Alexander was listed in good condition at BriatoJ Park Medical Center. Ac:<onllng to a Costa Mesa Fire Department t!pOl<eaman, a call was received at 9:32 a.m. to go to God- dicksoo's residence and offer medical aid. Alter provlding ln!Ull lint ald, God- dicbon was placed in the Seal's Ambulance which was travelling west- bound on Victoria when the collision with the Rodrigue> vehicle occurred. The ambulance wu partially launched Into the llr, Jc:<onllng to Jerry Jorelt, a .service station attendant near the in- ltnect.loo and landed "' the hood of Patrolman Alezander'1 car. The ambulance finally came to rest on its side. It took 1ever1l minute& for poUce and llremeo to free the trapped victims, according to witnesses. Numeroua uni.ta of the California Highway Patrol and the COila Mesa Police Department we.re needed to route traffic through the busy lntenectlon. SESAME STREET SESAME STREET IS ABOUT THE ONLY STREET IN THE HARBOR AREA THAT HASN'T HAD A CARPET INSTALLATION BY ALDEN'S. Tributes flowed in swlfUy as word of the death was flashed around the workt. "'A 20th century giant is gone," former President Lyndon 8 . Johnson said in a statement issued at Austin, Tei:. "Few men of any times ever l!lhaped lhe world as did the man trom Independence. "President Truman presided over the destiny of this country durlni one of Its most turbulent eru. Never Dincblng in the face of crucial natlooal choices, his decisk>ps cbanged the course of human events lhroua:bout the world." Queen Elizabeth II and Prime Minister Edward S. Heath expreased ~ sorrow to the American people ln a wire to President Nlton, and the B ti ti ~ h monarch sent a private message to 'Mrs. n-uman. Miuourt's Gov. Warren E. Hearnes said the state has "lost not only" a great n&Uve son, but a man we shared with the rest of the world as one of its paramount leaden of the 1.0th Century. Missouri was proud to have given the world the services of President Trwnan at a time when his ,_ ltr<ngth was needed to win a war, establish peace and rebuUd ravaged lands, and oow we ask the world to share our sorrow and our Joss.•• ~. ' . Banks, Hi'lre Rare ·~ " , For Loa1is 14 % NEV( YORK (AP) - A string of major commercial banks, including the coun- try's third and fourth largest, followed the lead of two other big banks and boosted their prime lending rates today Crom w. to ' percent. Chase Manhattan Bank, No. 3; Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co •• No. 4: Cbemlcal Bank and Marine Midland Bink lncreued the co.t of borrowing for their most credit-worthy customers in the face of the Ni.I.on administra"tion's carupolgn to cootrol inOatlon by 11.<eplng the lid on bank interests rates. "We are keenly 11ware of the federal govtmment'1 desire to moder1t.e upward rate pressures u a part of lts effort to brin8' inOatlon under firmer oontro~" a apokellllllD for Chase 11ld. "However, we believe that holding in- tereat rates at levela wblch are out of line with the muket generally would, over a period of time, cause distortlons in the flow of credit, and contribute to the inflationary spiral by placing abnormally hea\f)' demands on banks." IN OUR FIFTEEN YEARS, WE HAVE C A R PETE D THOUSANDS OF HOMES IN COSTA MESA , NEWPORT BEACH, LAGUf'4A BEACH AND HUNTINGTON BEACH.· ONE !NEIGHBOR TEUS ANOTHER UNTIL WE HAVE WORKED IN EVERY HOME ON A BLOCK. ALDEN'S TH FORMULA IS stMPL&-WE TRY TO MAKE EACH CUSTOMER HAPPY. ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR-WE PROBABLY. CARPETED HER HOME. (IF WE HAVEN'T, BRING HER IN WITH YOU.) ·cARP.-rs ~ DRAPES • 1663 l'locentla Awo • COST.A MIS.A 64M831 HOUIUc Mon. Thru Thun.. f lo WO-,Rt. 9 lo 9-SAT., 9:30 to S I • • He Didn't Give a Damn • About the . With the S By THOMAS KEEVJL ~lly l"lltl ...... AS YOU PROBABLY know, the S In Hany S Truman's name doesn't stand for~· · His parents down in Lamar, Mo., just gave him a middle inlUal, not a · name. Tbrou hil years In public office, Mr. Truman posed a daUy style prob- lem for newspapermen : ~ there be a period after the S (Harry S. Truman) or no period (Harry S :l'ruman)?' ...... Mr, Truman WU in Orange Coon!)> 'IQ,, I thlnfc, ll!M maling fiery campaign spoecbea on behalf ol f.dlai Ste- . senson when I got the opportuitlty to ask his pe~al pref- erer:ice on this pressing Journal~c l~. • HE WAS IN the back 3'.at qt a C&dll.Jaic limousine at the Orange County Airport and making, himself readily availa~le for questions on a wide variety ~f topics. I thought it as good a Ume as any to clear up the maUer of the period. "Mr. Preside'nt," I said with my head poked into the car, "do you prefer a period after the Sin the middle.of You.t,..Q&me or do you want it-left alone?" Hi& eyes twinkled. "Son, I don't give a damn one way or the other. It , ~sn't stand for anything and you can print it just any old way you want." THEN HE LEANED his head back oo the cushion and smll!'I, "You know back in Washington, a lot of folks have had a lot of fW1 will that m.ttJal. 'Ibey 1ike to nm it together so it comes out Harryass. But that never bothered me either: Not so long as they voted my way." He turned his head toward me again and chewed on his lip with a slight look of ponslvenw. "WELL IF I had a choice, I guess I'd ralher have it without the period. · "But LsWI don't really give a damn." Jnterview concluded. BOmla Halt Demanded Reds Clai1n U.S. Out • To 'Raze' Viet Towns PARIS (UPI) -The Hanoi peace del· eptjon said U.S. war planes, Including BSll,. hid steppecl , '!" the bomhiIJi of Nod!> Vietnam " tW.1 'lilill1 •• "Ii ... ,., '°rUlllC IA> the ground" Hanoi, Haiphong 1(11\f "'""1 -populous towns. . "·;1 ''Continuing to commit crimes againSt Ille Vietnamese people. the N-Ad· , I -tklll. In the night of Dec. 24 and .. , u 'of Dec. 211, has. multlpliM raids by e*i and various other types of aln:raft wllh a view of razing IA> the ground Hanoi, Halphon& •·n d numerous other towno and pop\IJous areas of' North Viet- nam," the ilelegltlon said. The delegation said In the lint official Nor\b vi.tna..... reaction to the re-IUID!id•alr war tbot the bo""*8J must be tia1led If. the Ullited States waots IA> boirt ~·ieriaui" JJe1Ct DelQtia.Uona. The lliitement'la!d the lint condftloo "" be met for such taJb WU far the Unltlijl 5lalel to return to the situation . Jtel<d111l.c-11, tbe my on wbicll the·latest UJt air olftmivt WU launched. · ••Difybw vtconus condemnations of the ·VJetu._ people, ol the world Ojlin- !On ..a liroed aqments.C>f American pub- lic opinion, the Nixon AdmlnlitraUoo per· slsts in reneging on its pledge to stop bombings of Hanoi, abstaining from bombil;g "abovi'the IGtb Parallel ud·* strictlng -bings helow the 20th P,aral-1~ \o'crea~ ~Javoratile c11mate '?r ne- gwatlol>s," the H.ino1 deiepUoo i&ld. It was the first time Hanoi pu\,llcly mentlooed suq, ao ,iieged undmtaj.dtng to ltnUt the U.S. air ward~ the taJb. The toJ>'level oecret -tlations between White Hoose aide Henry A. Klsllnger and Hanoi's Le Due Tho ended in 'llead- Iock Dec. 13, Ove days. before l'reiident • • Nixon onferecfthe resumpUoo of the air strikes. The Soviet news agency Tass repi>rted from Hanoi today that American planes hit the suburbs of Hanoi at 1:05 p.m. in a raid that luted an ~· It gav~e no report 1 on caau.altiel or dama&es· The Tu! diopatth from the North VietnameM copltal illao aalcl U.S. pfaaes Oil Monday bombed the Hanoi diatrict ol Halbatnm&, Haiphong and other ...... On Sunday night, T ... "said, American planes -bed densely populated areas ol the town of 'l'hllngeyen, fl mUea north of Hanoi, and Habac 8ncl Lanchon, Prov- inces. •J9'1J TrtlltMln Portrait t t Thom11 Hart Benton painted Ibis portrait of Mr. Truman. "The old man looks better aa an old man than he did as a young man/' Aid ' Benton. "You gel that fat off or him and you ... lb11 Cblcken-h1wk 1 (ace and also his sensitivity. You would never think of Harry Ti:u1111n ~ u being oenaltlve, but he ls-when he's not fat and bothered wllb • all the def en ... a poUUclan has to f."I up with. You didn't ever lff lllie~ 111u. You 11wonlylllellll&' ' H Bess Kep1 Long Vigil KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Her face lined wttb weariness, S... Truman kept a Chrl.ttmu Day vlgll by the bedside of fonntr President Harry S Tnunan -the ·ehl~ ,_!heart she married more than • ltalkoabjry .... )Ira. Truinu, '1, -joined In ber sad wai<h Monday night by their daughLer, llarpret Truman Daniel. Both women then retunild home lo tbe family hoine at nearby lodepe-. Mn. Danlel flew to Kansai 1(:ity from New York wilOD doctorl aald Truman could die within hpurl. Tbe 11 hour, 26 minute "li&il by Mrs. Truman was one of the longest slnce her husband's bospitalir.atklr, for lung ln- ledlon .Dec. 5. She has heei. at Truman's bed1M:le for all but one of bis 22 days in the hospital Mrs, Daniel anived by commercial jet a few boun befoi'e midnight and was whisked to the bospiW by Secret Service agents. She entered through a skle door without speaking to reporters and joined Bas in Truman's room. They left 15 minutes later for the l'ruman homo. The visit milked the second time Mrs. Danlef has flown to ber !&-year-old fatber'• hedalde durlna hil eun.nt ill· ...,, On Dec. t, the clay after Truman w" bospttalizad, Mn. Donld Oew to Kanul City Oii • Jel P"'vided by the White House. Wben her father rallied last •eek, abe returned to New York to speod Christmu with her family. Trurnao'a lllntu ba1 not been easy on Beu, wbo met ber husbaod In Sunday Schoof at Independence, when she was 5 and he was 4. Linea of weariness groove her face and her walk la slow due to arthrtU1 In ber legs: • After helping bet through the hospital lobby decorated wllh ChriBtmu trees, family lfieod and chauffeur Mike Westwood paced the corridors. When asked about Truman's health, be would only shake his bead. Randall Jesse, a persorul friend of the family, aald: "She's one of the great ·tadies of the world." * * * * * * Truman's Key West .Visits Recalled by Townspeople DAILY PILOT ~ KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) -The death of "And it didn't matter whether that talk former President Harry S Trwnan lasted a minute o: an hour, you knew he reminded America's soutbernmost city of was giving bis full attention to you the Ul"I~ BESS TRUMAN, MARGARET TRUMAN DANIEL LEAVE FAMILY HOME Wife and qtiughter Mike Sad Trip to Fun1r1I Home To,.ther the days when be strolled its quaint whole time." streets and relaxed over poker in the Lit-Earl Adams, Key West's court clerk tie WbJte House. and a local historian, said Truman would They never could get him to like Key arrive from Washington and within an West's world-famous deep sea flsbing. hour have changed into a sports shirt Quake Threat? Truman, who was 88 when be died worn outside bis slacks and a pith helmet Tuesday in Kansas City, Mo., made 11 to protect bis head from the subtropical AEC Delays Pinnt Site Choice working visits to Key West betwe:en sun. SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -(;e)logy earlier conclusioM by PG&E consultants November 1946 and March 1952. He con-Sometimes he wore a long-billed reports indicating active earthquake that the terraces were not deformed. The tinuedbetoWbivacatHion ln Kandey Wesdt ahlsfter1Ahe fishing cap in place of the helmet, Adams faults may lie near a pro~ atomic company has begun further geological ltrleft t th Kte :5~969 ma e a.cast sald, but he neVer enjoyed fishing. energy plant site have caused the Atomic and seismic investigations expected to be P to e eys · Adams said Truman was cou:ed onto a Energy Commission to demand more finished In mid-February. One Key Wefesl t. resMldent who1 rFemembers deep-sea fishing boat only twice. His studies. The new problems could delay opera-Tr~ ~to LS f U:-~re we:h~ guide was the late "Bra" Sande·n, famed An AEC consultant reported locating tion or the plant rrom a urn target date managmg r o ey 1 as Ernest Hemingway's guide, but two defonned pieces of ocean shore that until "the early 1980s," said Kit Newton, newsdpaper • ~~ fll'st met the former Truman decided he'd stick to swimming, could have been caused by faults in the the firm 's nuclear information specialist. presi ent in ~ · which be performed with an O<!d Point Arena area, site of a proposed PG&E news director Lawrence R. "He was always very happy and overhand stroke be called "the Missouri Pacific Gas & Electric Co. plant. McDonald added that there are no plans friendly here," she said. crawl." Dr. Carl Wentworth of the United to abandon the site. "Our applications "I remember once I wanted our four Friends in Key West say Truman's States Geological Survey, using aerial are still active and we're hoping to have kids to see him, so I drove them down favorite recreation was penny.ante Poker photos, also plotted an earthquake fault them •wroved." and parked the car by the seawall aome with ck>Se friends, but be also loved which angles through the proposed plant But Sierra Club spokesman David E. distance away. President Truman spot· practical jokes. site Pesonen said the new findings indicate tedthe "'00 and and came theoverbalob sakethebandsbea:1th Adviser Clark Clifford once was proud-His partner, Dr. Eli Silver, said his "greatly increased" danger that an ys pat Yon u. ly displaying to newsmen. a bJJ_ mutton study of graphs and records indicated an earthquake would rupture the shield "He · a1ways. liked his early morning snapper he'd caught on a fishing trip active earthquake fault runs parallel to around . the plant's nuciear core and walks around town. People here tend to when Aasociated Press -reparter Ernest the coast about 10,<XX> feet offshore from cause a massive radio-active fallout leave somebody lite that alone. Nobody "Tony" Vaccaro . slii>Ped Trµm.an an the coastal Mendocino County site. "with cat.a.strophic losa of lives and prop- woufd nm up and .. k him for an adv!I:!l!illl,card fiom a local ief~ant, Frank McKeown, hood of the USGS erty" autograph, or anything," abe said. Adanil aa.ia. survey team, aaid the new data r~s P~. who spur~ the auc- "I ~ the pecple bore liked him so Truman· palmed the card, Blipped it In-the poHlbillty the •ltc .ls within the San cessful !9&4 opposition to PGl<E'a plan well ltecailse t,, -.tie .khtd'<ll guy ·wbo to the fish's mouth and a few minutes Anderu Fault zooe delplte ._lte opm- looted you rtghfln the eye when be talk-later udls(!!IJIN.~!t'._i!,_'leaviJlg '\be led-Ions lit the 0ast. for a nuclear power plant at Bodega ed to you," Jolm SPottswood a close faced citfford heatedly denying charges Tbe new aata, presented to the uUlity's Head in Sono>J11 Collnty, called for the friend of Truman's In Key Wea~· said. that he'd bought the !Wt. officials In September, contra d I c I• firm to abandon Its Point Arena site. iiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiii Wishing you a ''HAPPY HOLIDAY''. • • Vestanna and Clyde Die~ Nina and the next generation, Jake, Richard and Vestanna Johnson / .... fll ftl ""' c:. ••• ••••• re•••• from all three • • generations of Johnsons' "Or i$0~1r.arotl'lae~ -llAllllMI ILVD. COll'A llllllA ' • Btrne or The Plnr ear ••• "Cfe1111.. I'• ••ela" I l 1 .j DAILY PILOT Tutsd>J, -26, 1972 Josi ~ Coasting,~ J with Tom arphiae ., :•11: •• Where's the Good News? NOSING THE NEWS -Everybody seemed to be suffering .the day.after· Christmas doldnun.!!I today. After all the turkey, gifts and happiness, you wake up on the 26th to discover the tired old world still has lts troubles and woes. We awakened to find we have lost our 33rd President of the United States, the man from Missouri , Harry S Truman, who succumbed at age 88. The war grinds on and more B-52s are lost and that promise or just a few weeks past that "peace is at hand " seems dim in- deed today. Fire and destruction ca me on the home front with the \Yinds of the desert. Indeed, things are so dismal that you scratch about the desk for something that might bring a lit tle chee r to the local scene on this day after the Yuletide. Ail you find is a newsletter from Cong. John G. Schmitz, the former Republi can from Tustin, who will be stepping down from his congressional seat come January. YOU FIGURE MA VBE John might of- fer a tip of the hat to something or somebody ~ he steps down in favor of Andy Hinshaw, the former Orange Coun- ty assessor who will assume our 35th District seat when the 93rd Congress con- venes. You scan Cong. Schmitz' words and find a paragraph where he wams, "The past cannot be restored. Th is does not mean that we should swallow the 'liberal' cliches about values changing as times change. Right and wrong, good and evil are part ar the warld and will last as long as the world lasts ... " Then he adds later, "Koowing these things, and knowing -as sbouJd be o~ , vious to any thinking person today - that our United States of America is in very deep trouble, we can look ahead 'With every reason to expect more trou- ble, though unable to predict aceurateiy and --vtiy 9*>&b ... '"I' jult what kind. The ma}or threats on t).e harizon faU into three general categories: "(1) tyranny imposed from within; (2) tyranny imposed from outaide by means of the military forces af international communism; (3) internal revolution. And all three, along with the multitudinous lesser evils now besetting or likely to beset us, endanger us primarily because of the fundamental weakening af oor na- tion by that ancient scourge of nations; moral decay ... " SO ANYWAY, THERE you have the cryst.al ball of John G. Schmitz. Evil is goina to be with us always. We got tyran- ny from without and tyran ny from wlthln and lf that Isn't bad enough, you still got lhe international Communist military forces to worry a'bout. Mix in a little internal revolution and spread over it a nice thick layer of mora l decay and that 's what we've all got to look forward to. Somehow, however, all this just doesn't seem to be the wa y you'd like to ap- proach 1973. You would like to take out your own personal crystal ball and see an era or prosperty ahead. You want to en- vision a nation unified in understanding and motivated for the common good of all mankind. YOU WANT TO SEE peace replace war and Jove replace hate. If values do change, then indeed you would like to see a lat more value put on happineSJ. • All of these things, of course, come out of the crystal ball of some eternal op- thnlst as he looks forward to the New Year. The doom and gloom boys will always figta't it's the kind of fuuy thin.king that will get us into lrouble . UPI TtltpfMl't Platte Dow1aed Insurgents Hold • Philippine Area MANILA (UPI) -Tbe Philippine government said today Insurgents led by forelgn-tralned soldiers were in control Of some villages In the increasingly tense southern Phl1ipplne1. In tbelr frankest admission of trouble in the soulb slnce martial law was pro- claimed Sept. 2.1, government spokesmen also annoonced: -SECWIONIST LEADERS b a v e established training camps for tn.surgents on the big southern Island ol Mindanao. -Moslem ouUaws, operating farther south in the Sulu Archipelago, were believed to have shot down their first Phillpplne Air Force plane Christmas Eve. The C4T with a crew of seven was reported misslog. Spokesmen said the C47. the military venion of the DO, was ordered lnta ac- UOn after 100 anned rebels tried to over- run the detachment. 1be spokesmen said at least seven ouUaws, including Uielr leader, Jdenli~ed as Hadji Jjucob, were slain in the ensuing battle. They did not report any gavero- ment casualties. Census Count Misses Ma~y On Welfare LONE SOLOIER, GUAROING AGAINST LOOTERS, WALKS MANAGUA STREET -The Sulu outlaws had teamed up with subversives led by a known FU!plno Maoist, and "thousands of civilian residents" had fied their homes to escape crossfire or belog dragooned into dissi- dent bands. NEW YORK (APl -A clly-C<>m- missioned study has concluded that the 1970 U.S. census undercounted the number of weUare cases here by 39 per- cent, an error which could be costing the city some federal aid funds. Problems of Health, Housing and Feeding Also Plague Nlcar~•g,,_u_•_A_u_tho_•_lt_i•_• ________ _ Information Department Secretary Francisco S. Tatad told newsmen "real secessionist movements" were using violent means to achieve their goal oo llindanao, 450 miles south of Manila. NicaraguaMayNeed Guns To Drive Out Survivors MANAGUA (UPI) -The government agreed today to consider using force to drive reluctant survivors of the Managua earthquake from their ruined cit~. A Latin American relief affic1al sug- gested such action to remo~e su_rvlvors from areas in danger of ep1dem1cs and shortages of food and water. An official source said a Venezuelan relief official suggested what he called "gunpoint evacuation" at a meeting Monday night at the residence of Gen. Anastasio Somoza, the commander of the national guard and military strongman of Nicaragua. THE SUGGUl'ION came as authori- ties-and bundreds of foreign relief work- ers-grappled with increasin_g problem_s of health. housing and feeding of res1- dents who survived the powerful earth- quake which shattered Managua late Saturday. Offjcial sources said many inhabitants refused to leave their ruined homes, same of them because they did not want to leave the places where kinsmen died when tbe earthquake tore Managua apart. This, tbey said, inspired t h e Venezuelan suggestion to drive survivors out of the city. It remained impossible to determine how many perS()ns died when the earth- quake struck, but estimates ranged between 1,000 and 10,000. U.S. AMBASSADOR Turner B. Shelton said be "knew" at least 2,000 persons died. The toll of injured ran into the thousands and many of the seriously hurt were Down to other Latin American countries for treatment. A huge in- temaUonal relief operation was launched, with· funds: and experts arriving from around the world. U.S. aircraft flew in tons of emergency supplies. Female Sailor Fin.ds Sea Life Isn't for Her SEATTLE, w ... h. (UPI) -Lile aboard ship with nearly 500 men isn't all it's cracked {Jp to be, according to at least one Navy lass. Rebecca Johnson , 18, is ooe of 40 wo- men aboard the USS Sanctuary, the only co-ed shJp in the Navy. "Things may change, but at this time I doo't feel I'd be suited for Navy li!e," Miss Johnson sakt while visiting her home during Christmas. She said she doesn 't Cffre much for the strid regulations. "They made restrictiOM in boot camp that if a guy talked to one of us be could be put in the brig for a mootb," Misa Johnson said. "But sometimes when no one was looking, they would walk by and try to act runny." There were a few secret boot camp romances but "about the only time a couple could see each other was in church or something like that." At the end ol lxlot camp, Miss Johnson volWlteered to serve oo the bo!pital ship Sanctuary and was lellt to Norfdt, Va., for trainlog as a ship's clerk. HE SAID WHILE the government .xin- trolted the main towns of Mindanao "we are not in the same position in some bar- rios (villages)." Tatad said a meeting today between Philippine President Ferdinand E . Marcos and fonner Cotabato Province Gav. ·Udtog Matalam discovered "certain confidential informaUon" confinning the existence of training camps in Mindanao under foreign trained soldiery." He declined to name the country or countries where the insurgent leaders were trained or disclose the number of training camps which he said were ''mobile_." hla1'lam was the founder in 1968 of the Mindanao Independence M o v e m e n t (MJM) which he described as a peaceful secessionist movement intended to draw attention to the need for social and economic advancement of the Phill~ pines' minority Moslem population. TATAD SAID following his meeting with Matalam, President hlarcos met with military leaders to assess the situa· tion in the Southern Philippines. ~ armed forces spokesman said the C47 was reported missing during a mission Otristmas eve while dropping the flares to help a besieged i!ight-man government detachment on Tonquil islan~ 630 miles south of Manila. ------~~ Similar miscounts probably occurred in atber cities. according to Edward Blum, vice president of the New York City- Randy lnslitute, which prepared U.. study that was releued Monday. Blum said that a "very crude" estimate was that the city could be IOlin. between $10 million and $40 million each year in federal revenue-aharing as • result of the error. It now gets just over $200 million a year. Dr. Bernard R. GU!ord, president ol the institute. said that money from other census-based Prosrants spoll!Ored by Model Cities, the Office of Economic Op- portunity and the Department of Health. Education and Welfare also could be af- fected. The institute, a nonprofit organization that studies city problems, noted in its report Iha! the census concluded that there were 291 ,000 welfare cases in New York City ln 1968, for which lhe city paid out about $520 million. The city Department of S o c l a I Services, however' recorded some m ,000 ' "'elf are cases on its rolls and paid out , more than $883 million in that year. The Rand study said the Census Bureau reported its figutts without first check· ing them with the city. The report concluded that the un- dercount accurred either because the census takers did not fmd !hose on r<lld bec;w,e of their mobility or became the people on wtlfan, perhaps out of em- barrassment, failed kl report they were oo,-relief. Steam Rollers 'Peril Nation's Hiswric Sites Army troops carried aut mass burials, ,,.--.,. ... but many bodies remained burled under 11 Hl·FI STEREO DEONSTRATOR YEAR END. CLEARANCE SALE! WASHINGTON (UPI) -James Biddle doesn't like to see America's history paved over. Biddle is president af the National Trust for Historic Preservation, a group devoted to working for the preservation of historic structures which are in danger of being nrept away by proj(r<98. . Writing in Travel Leisure magwne, Biddle said that of 1,500 buildings listed by the federal government in 1933 as hav- ing historical significance, nearly ha.If have been torn down. "We Americans must decide if we want to preserve what we have er if we jW!t want to pave it over, li1b-rise It and fac- tory it," he said. "We've got to decide at what point your land ceases to be your land , at what point you must yield to overall planning." Among the architectural endangered species about which Biddle's group is concemed are the following: -The U.S. Capitol, endange~ by a proposal to extend the west front , the only remaining portion af the original exterior. -Grand Central Station in New York, endangered by talk «. a high-rile office building over the present stat.ion, which the group says would destroy Its char- acter. -Potomac Park in Washington. 1ite of the Lincoln and Jefferaon memorials en· dangettd by U.. propooed roul< of Inter- stal< !SS. tons ,af debris, some af It piled 15 feet high in streets. The stench of death was .5(1 powerful it drove some rescue.rs back choking. ' A man who piloted bombers in Europe during World War II said the devastation reminded him of war-destroyed cities. Gutted buildings jutted into the air and smouldering wreckage littered plazas and perks. "Many of the people won't leave," said Dr. Camilio Vigil, a hfanagua physician and member of the U.N. World Health Organization (WHO). "It's because they do not feel the need to go and some do not have transporta- tion." DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE O!livery of Ult Dally Piiot is guarantttd MNOd•r·l'l'WIYt If '" • Ml tine ~ IN'Ptr •Y l :M I'·"'-• (111 .... .,..,. ""' Wiii "' ...,.., te JOV, C•ll• '" l"M Ufttll 7;JD p.m, hlvfoihY tlNll Sllllllty: ll ""' ff llM f"Ktl""' YM• wn "" t 1.m. Sa,..,..y, « • '·'"· lllMty, un afllll 1 """' wtN be INwtllt te yw. Callt '" ltk.., witM 11 '·"'· Teltphones ,..,,,._, M•lllltM &fMll MM! OrHff C-ty A"'• ··· MZ~J21 tM WWIMMtwt ...... ·540-1110 IHC........C~·---· Mii J-C9'6'h _, OM4I """"· SMltl Llf9M. Lft9U "'... 492.-4421 CLOUD JAN. ht SALE DAYS DEC. 26 .... Dec. 11 Oiolyl Lastest Model Demonstrators -New Factory Guarantees FROM OUR 5 SOUND ROOMS ALL MODELS PRICED TO SELL, SOME BELOW COST ! _y_ . Winds Roar Down Rockies· DEMONSTRATORS THROUGHOUT THE STORE ARE MARKED DOWN FOR THIS CLEARANCE! Clear Skies From California to Central Plai1ts • atlantic music stereo ADC e Altec • AR e '-n:lhry e DMI e Oyuto Gmwd e Hann••·k_.. e JIL e J.M&n e kost e ICLH e l t ftco • M.,.b e MchttMh e Mttfottc e 'alMllOftlc: • Plck.,ln9 • R.ctllhtHr Scott e Shrwootf e S.....crttfttm•fl e Sllwr• • Sony e Stiperex e SAi e TIAC e Yet• e Whorf· dot• e Woflttteok '"""''~ ""'CllllC CDAJT M\9HWAV Ol"ft IJ.f O.Uy, , ... ••t, 11-1 Sltlft, I ' , I I ' ( I ) Dr.a Coast Teday's Fl•al EDITION N.Y. ~toeks . ' • ORAN" COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA Y, DECEMBER 26, 1972 VO~. 65, NO. 36 1, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • N TEN CENTS I Friend·s, Foe,s Remember Truman's Courage ByAl-ioledPrtu PoliUcal ally aod foe today balled liar· ry S Truman a1 • common man' Who -.ct the nation wttb bis courlce ud dedll-when tbrust ·1o1o !be nation'• blghesl o!llce at a time ol interoaUonal peril. " ~I ~lxoo said, "Harry S Truman will be remembered u one ol !be P10SI courageous presldeJiU in our hlstoey, who led tbe natkln and !be wodd through a• critical period wllb excepliolial vision and determination. Out hopes to- ea U.S. Spent Millwns In Newport The federal ,...,,._t pouJOd more tbao • lllll1ton into the Newport - -cUil(-the 1111 llscal ,..., ..,. c:ordtnc 16 a 1U.S. .......... -I -!ut--' The ac-left cit)' off t cl a I 1 bewildend, Ji 11111 ....... "It'• bard to be11eoo llloJ'ft -' that mudl In tllla ~ ol ..,itallam1" aald a11.w-,er 11..,..n. WlJID. " 1s It .u-.1· • . '. 11 11&uno out to about n.-• mrJ man; -and dllld llvtoi 111111-. _ _.... . -.......... ~,,. ' ' Moot o! the m011ty didn~ go to people, however. The Department ol Delellse, the bl&· geet SIJ<Oder, laid out • millloo, more tbao • million in military Ollllncls. Moot ol that ~ -to Pblk:o-Ford's Aenmutrontc l>ivilkm oo Ford !toad, but olfictall there were oot anllable lot COllllllelll. H.pe. Tolil ComplllY and Oolltlll Rldlo ·Co«npony alsoilkely received ___ _ About $1.7 mtJliCln -lo mililal'J -P*f aOd ctYilllin jiay. Another major •cbdn&, just -fl milliao, WU laid out Jn -1 .ecurllJ paymenla to !be ctty'a elderly llld dtlabl· ed. -Ho•evtr, more then SS mlilion ID. U.S. Dep8rtment (Jf Agriculture !mMll were paid out in the 'form of food 118mll' to Newport lleach mldents. That aame clepartmeolJJ:e about $111,000 to · the NeWporl School District !or hot lundieo. • The etty got aeveril milllOn dOllars that 1oca1 om.cta11 .&Y'tbot -~ .... know.....about. ... For laitaoce, the nport aald !be Qepartmeet ol the -sPeot ti.I dlillion Jn ou!door reciullan uSlslaDce In Newport Beach while !be Geoeral T (See SPENDING, P'ap I) Nation's Traffic Death Toll 565 The naUon'• traffic deatb toll for the three-day Christmsa weeteod IQtaled 51$. That ls fewer than the &14 who died ln 1'71 and far below the record toll of 720 killed over the three-da1 celebraboo in 19&5. The Natlonal Safety Council estimated that lrolll,560 to ll50 -would be tlll· ed. in lrififc ace~ts her.tel I , p.m. Friday, !i*· 12, ud ntkjn11111 Doc. S. The co1met1 esl!malff that deolbt dlr· log holldt)' per)ods run about 25 ~ above tbOle lit 1'lddl oll ~ _.., 'l'bul a tolllAI 111 !or 1111-..a -' mean there -111 .. -about 02 . deatha 11 no liollday wen 11m>lnd. • . - Pl~~berR~• Tie kfuh l11ue HAlF A, Israel (vPI) -A plumber who b•Ultled ht1 head a1alM1 a klltben llnlt when a -lie J!!;ldH ID ""' lllOd !or compensatiOn for wapt loll as a result of a work ...,....., llrMll newopapers report<!d llo!ldl1· The unldeaUlled - -ilhe thought !be tono ltlcklll& oot nun Wider .the slal; WU S llill• l'I. ~· l ' . day for a genentlo~ or peace rest In said, .. A 20th century giant is gone . Few large measure on the firm foundations men .of. any times ever lhaped the w.orld that be laid." u dlil Ille man from lndepenclence. \lice Presidelll Spiro T. Agn.w said, "-.it TnDiwi ""'"""' ... over the "Among the talem. lhal Harry Truman .--lirouchl to the predleney ·were two •!>. ~y ol llllJ _oountry 4urin8 one. of lls dlapeoaable qualltiu-ol a great ie.der ~ P10SI tuibWenl. eraa. Nev.r llli1cblng in f!ll'lhrilhtnesa ud -.,e. Tbe llgn "1 the i... of crucial "'1J<ibal ·cbcilces, his his des!<, 'nle 1!111$ ..., Here,~ wss no decllllJoo ;:hanged the. course .of bul!lan idle bout. But.., an omc. ,or ll'eal eveilll llllouihout the world." pawer be never lost the lwmillty that Seo.-'llnmi Tburmond (R.S.C.), wbo endel!'Od him to millloos as simply lllo bolted !be l)emQcratJc party lo nJll for man from MiDOur1." ' , ·• p,ieaident. aaalns{ Trum.IU) as a Dixiecrat Former President L)'ndon B~ Johf190fl ... m.;1~, said,.'" His declsive, lea~rshlf:.. in -* . "k: ~ • . -,._ .r • ' . -' " a . es • ' .-• ' _, •A • ' . ~ the cruclal years of hi• presidency was an example in courage. He did oot ·hesitate to matt the dllficult decisions he ·felt were ·right." · ·Democratic Gov. John J. Gilligan o! Ohio said, ·~At a moment of great na- tional peril and triumph in the climactic week! of Worki Wat II, be was ~enly thrust Into the o!llce ol presldeot aod the manoe:-ln which this bumble man from Missouri met those aw!ul ~enges aod shouldered those terrible burdens com- manded the respect and affection of all Americans." ' arr Nixon Hails Ex.chief As ~Fighter' KANSAS CITY (AP) -H a u y S Truman died today, conquered linally by the infirmities of his 18 years. Presidetlt Nixon Jed the mourning ror the nattoft•s 33n:I. president, calling him Democratic Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington said, .. Harry Truman was confronted with a Hries of tough, uo- precedeoted decisions with nothing less than the future security of the free world at stake. He never shrank from those decisions, despite the hosWe environment of those postwar years. His courage, his wisdom , and hl5 decisiveness in that period shaped the future course of the Western world." President Nixor. also said of Truman, "Recognizing the new threat to peace that had emerged from the ashtt of war, he stood boldly against it with his u:- tension of aid to Greece and Turkey in 1947 -and the 'Truman Doctrine' thus established was crucial to the defense of liberty in Europe a n d the .world. Jn launching the MarSball pJan, be_J>ega,n the most far·sighted and most generous act of international rebuilding ever undertaken . . "With his characteristically deciaive action in Korea, he made possible the defense of peace and freedom in Aala." rum an f ,"•.fllhter wbo was best when ' the going • -· --------· ---...... ·J.'-.'r~ " ........... ~ .. ~4TI~am.-• , , . .,,. ····o£ P•1 i'i,, J i.t.,"D a . • ... 4 • -r , 't-• 1 , ' 1Dt.1LY-Pfwf.lt.tr:....._ DllRIS _twTrERS ROAD\,'l(A'f A~riR' o·EATH ciu(sH'IN IRVIN E . • F ... Two· BOya, 1"l>Ncll'y Poot.Chtlotmao, T<lp to tho Dump . c. • • ' Two 6oys. Killed -in :Wvinc As Pip~up Trp.~k . Cr~shes· -' l . -lent~ o! tbOir ·injuries was ·not Im· tnefiiately known. I Two boys were ··-lod Jwo""otber perioos aerloosly Injured Ibis momln« wben their pickup huek skidded out o1 control and;ran into a dirt embankment on Bonita Canyon Road near MacArthur Boulevard fn Irvine. Officer R. E. Arnold said the group·hld been unloading trash at Orange Counfy.'s 1 Booita Canyon Dump just . prior to .!be • 9:25 a.m. accident. ' The two dead children were thrown from the truck as were a nwfin his ear- ly 20s. another boy aod a dog. , TM man and injured boy were taken to Costa Mesi Memotja1 Hospitaf. ',Tbe ex- "They were going between 40 and SO · mOes per hour and the ttrtver lost it," the !rvloe po~ oUl<er sala. "We tblnk he may llave had a blowout in the front lefc ·(See DEATH, Page •I). was .toughest." The Prelldent also pro- cf•"""" ""'uraday a day o! national 1-1-· fi ~ .. -inoo¢ling and ·o,,.,red flags at lederal l>utli1lOas ~·at hall staff !or 30 daya. Lyndon B. J-. now the only 'u.tvtnc 1..-r Pftlldtnt, lamented tbe ~of "a JOth century giant." Truman•s wtie of 53 years, and hls daqpter Who saw him for a final 3> mhlUtes ~stuiu Day, were at borne in nearby lllclepeodeace when deatb csme at 5:50 a.m. PST. 'ID accordance with Truman's Wishes, the li:neral Ttiunday will !ie wtljlout the paaoply accorded~otlier ireat statesmen. 'He' will be .buried Tlmlday at 1 p.m. PST in the COW'iYU!I o1 the Harry s Tritman Memorial Library, Tnlman's pi-oudest achiev~t in the 20 years sinCe he left the White House. Truman was the last of the great World War U fipres, preceded in death by Dw:i&bt D. EttenboWer, Winston Cliurchill and Jose! Stalin. He was .the preal.dent Who set the U4!ted States against global eommunlsm in ~ Cold War that-followed World War 11. He orcJered use of tbe atomic bomb 19 end World War U, extended un- p"""'1ented belp to naUom resisting Soviet dOlnlnatloo, l,Jld ordered l1oops In- to Korea wben1Comrnun.Lrts began their . inves1on of tl»e IOUtbr ' ·~11 !be new threat to peace that bad eruei:ged from the ashes of war, be atood boldly ag'1nst II wttb bis ex· le!isloa ol aid to Greece and Turkey .tn 1M7 -and ,the 'Truman Doctrine' thus .. tablllbed wu et!ictal·to the defense of liberty 111 El'l"P" and !be world," Nlroo said, adding : "In launching the Manball plan, he began the moet farsighted and most .,~.nerous act of international rebuilding !See Tl\IJMAN, p_,e Z1 Cannibalism· Co.nfir111ed •' Andel Air Crash Survivors ,Tell Grisly Sto ry ' . ' . SANTIAGO, Chile. (AP) ;.,!. Ollklal. ta .Jive : ttirouc~ ~the' bitter lnounl1in .......,. con!lrmed today that survlvon bllzzanb, hut !be hJ>\1111, ~-not be ol an• Nides, plane crash hid eaten the su!.Sllnllated untll today. • f1elh ol dead comradea to avoid 1tsrva-The sources said that ooe of the young tioD during a 99-da f oide&J. : ·' • · ' Men; · not · 'Wenunect,' t.ompare..i the nie of!tClal ""'"°' 'asl\f IJ ll!fl'lvon, ' • f..'?•P'• cleclllOf\ to • use tbe ctdavers as eftler pfayen Of 1¥>o8Lera or ID • 'ftmUlr to I belft. transplant~' t'tUluayan rugby ·lMm, had made 1• ' 1lls explanation : In a !ranspllinl opera- aolemn pact !bet tJier 1'0cld· not -... lion a bo!art It taken from 1' -~-al !be mailer untll they returned to death to lNlntapi ~·1 lit., aod In Morltevtdeo, \Jruguay, and then they the ,.me manner J>O<'IJoiD 1t"tbe bodies · would make • collecUve •latemenl. had been uaed lo mlliitaln b .. U<Jng. Three have already returned to The llOUl'tes said the IUJ'Vhfors related Montevideo. Tbe other I.I hive remained that the dect.sioo to use the bodlel of la Santlaeo 10 recover but P'an to ny friends1 and even relaUvea, was 1 col· back to Montevkleo in 1 day or two. lectlve one agreed to by alt The plane hacl 45 pe_,. aboard wlien Earlier. the llUl'Vlvora told of hjl~tng a It hit an AndM peak Oct. 13. By the end good deal of ·food, because they had ol October, »· wtrt dNd. otocked up on candy and ,,,........i llUll Me llliil 1-l rulnon that -wltD 1 ........ a llO!) al Mendou, A~. ourv!ved ~ hive eatm lluman nesh The young -,.Id Ibey I the "terfible mountatn silence," ·the endlell bor<dom and. __ of ~ the wont pok ol ihe1r etpetlence. , ' "Wi iot up ar 7, llatehed to !be ndio and melted water from snow," NJd Joie Luis lnlctai10, M, an ' 1Ci<>tto11t7 student. "We also !lolled 'tbe water wtth ttSme fleJ)to to matt a IOl't of aoup Which we u8eil more and mon u ""' pnMsloM i:an out." Tbe -.pOnt hOun Jn ' '"""' dlacuaalon °I' ther\ltt tboY -Ud ,,_. ln .ffvance.t.. The dlilculaJonl 10meUmt1 became aroup tbenpy -to bolster their flacllna optllta and dtlpel auacil of doPrtlllOrh Each evening tbly prayad aloud tol"ther. with • dff!erer1t -!eadlnl Ibo 1"Yt'I each o(gltt .. Lu\ weelt two d Ibo 1'llDI men nil· ed down the mounllln alld !ound . a ~·~her who IOI help. HARRY S ,lRUMAN (1884-1972) Hot Winds to Continue ,Th':ough Next T wo Days Santa Ana winds are expectad to con- tinue to bluster and bring balmy tem· peratures to Orange County for the next two day1, iccording to the National Weather Service. Wlndl gusting up to 70 miles an hour were reported over the Qui1tmu .weekend lo Orange l;ounty, ripping down holiday 6'00rations, leaving as many as 30,000 pe~ without power, and Ut- tering llre.ts,tbroogbout the county with tree limbs. Orange Coast meteorologist .I . Sherman Denny said the last comparable windstorm occurred in January, 1900, nearly seven years aeo. Heaviest damage was reported in lhe Yorba Llnda, Placentia , Tustin. and San- ta Ana areas, where winds coming out of the Santa Ana canyon blew al a steady 35 miJes an hour, "Starting Christmas Eve, I'd say we had 2,~ people out of power almolt con- stantly," aald Bob Beck, dlmton manager o! SOuthem Calllor!lla Edison Company. Blackouts ran1ed from just a few mlnutes to as much u four boun in can- Doryman Nahoo,J In Knife Attack Pollco jalled a 39-f<ll'<>ld dorymao !rom Cotto Meaa Monci.y alter he alle1· edly tried to atab his glrl!rlend with a Oablne knl!e dtJrin11 a Cbrtatm>1 nJeht argument. Booted oe IUIPtclon o! -Wt with a d8dly weapon wu John Malc:olm MacDonald ol la! Center St. Coeta !loN poll<e aald the woman, Mary Bobo BMJacqu•, abo 3', wu not iJtjunMI 111 !bl lndckrll, 1l1t1c1t -place al the center -a<tlrtu. yons of the east county. Edison called out 300 workers, some coming from as far a\V•Y as Santa Barbara and Santa Paula, !or duly be!lln· ning at 6 p.m. &Inda)'. Beck said IOme crews worked continuously for 111 hours. "We wer:e gettinc_ .. lbousands of calls anC! we called oat eVtry lvailable man trying to'rutott .m~," Beek aald. Scores of trffl were reported down in Huntington 8-11. r-laln Valley. Costa Mesa, aod Ntwport Beach. No ma· jor damq:e was reported, however. The Orange County Harbors Dtpart- ment reported 1'1 wind-related lriddent5, mostly involving boata blown loose from (See W!Nbs, Page ll -1t'•adler Clear llil• are·wtat the weather people ... tor w~. wtth temporaturea 10 the upjllr "" along the coast. Lowa ~I lo the 50s. iNSIDE TODAY ' O.Ongt C"""'11'1 lff2·73 budg. t& 1ho10td a b i SI o t t inctto!i! than anw of the •tote'• other 57 counlfla, bu<klll1(' Ill• g.,,...l tr••d •r f'flV!"ll ,.,, 01I tocol PrOJ>ffl~ to>. SloY!/ on Pogt P. ...... _ -E I I ..... " " --Neftttl • ....... ,.... 4 ... , ....... ,, ·-... M-1' ...... "'_. t ....... lllFI M ... LMilM's 1J -.... --. .,....,. c...... ' ..... i.11 • .... ,....... , .. 11 -M -.... -. __.. ........ , ..... --. 2 DAILY PllDI N T ~. Dtc:trnDtr 2ft, lm --- So1ne Grincli Stole Holiday GREENWICH. N.Y. (UPI) - Wallar lllJll. bll WU. ..i tllelt lour cNldten .,..,. -)Ult beli>nl midnight Cbr1Jtma.s Eve lo find thoir front door had beell for<Oll open. All the preKnts had been stolen from under the Christmas tree. When they looked in t h e refrtgerator, they saw that e\'tn tbe family turkey had been taken. Unidentified Body Found On Freeway . The body of an unidenUfied young man., appareotly dropped from a puslng car, was discovered early this morning on a freeway offramp in Seal Beach. Seal Beach Polioe said the youth was a white male, about 18 to 22 years of age, with no identification. "A preliminary check by the coroner sho~·s he v.·as dead about 48-72 hours," Seal Beach Lt. Lee Gatti reported. "\Ve don't know 'the cause of death yet, or where he might have been killed." He was found by passing motorists about 1:'5 a.m. on the 7th Street off. ramp at the jtmeUon of the San Diego and San Gabriel freeways in Seal Beach. Lt. Gatti said It is apparent the dead man was oot tilled where he was found. but had apparenlly been dropped there from a vehicle. "There are no outward signs of bullet "1JUDds or olher marb lndlcatlng bow he died," Lt. Gatti said. "He WU dressed in burgandy trousers, a blue tanker jacket and had medium-length hair. He could be a Navy man.'' 'Jbe Coroner's office began an autopsy this morn1n,g to determine tbe cause of death. The results were not yet known. Ll Gatti said the man's shoes were missing, but it didn't seem significant. "At the present we don't know how he died, or where," Lt. Gatti said. "And we don\ know who he is." Mary A. Johnson \Rites Wednesday Fuoeral oemc.s wlll be held Wednes- day !er Mary A. Jolmloo, a Joort1me Ooaa MMa r n n' r.1* ..-'*1 SualiaJ •\ the ace ot •· '" "'' -· Jolnon lived In Co.ta: Mesa for 5f yun. She wu a relfstered nurse and formerly worked in private homes and out of the Orange County Medical Center. -· Jolmaoo resldOll at 11175 Harbor Blvd., Apt. 4 and leaves a daughter, Laura Miner of Costa Mesa; a brother, lflnm Wright of Mlnneaota; and ooe graodoon. Mau of the Resurrection wru be celelnted at 9 a.m. Wednesday at St. JOICblm'I Cathollc Orurch. Burial Will follow at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery m Orange. Mesan Injured In Auto Crash Rosita Lopez. 36, or 2..114 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa, was taken to Hoag lltemorial Hospital this morn ing for treatment of injuries sustained when her auto collided with another at the inter· section of Dover Drive and 16th Street , in Newport Beach. Police said the Lopez auto was south- bound on Dover Drive when a northbound car driven by Carol Etzkorn, 23, of L<lng Beach, apparently made a left tum into her path. .Hospital officials said the Lopez y,·o- man wu being treated for facial and neck injuries. The other driver refused treat· menL Poljce .,. lnvestlgatlng the accident. OUM•I COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiit or.ee OMlt 0.UL Y ~!\.Ol, wlfll wr11ctt • .......... "'-"~"''-Ii ~ 11Y .. ~ ~ P'WIM!ttilno CO!np911Y. S..- ... ---... ..,,... #Mrlday tllf'au;fl PtWty, flf catt MM, Mewiiort tMul, , ... .,....... lffctlll'tM .. lft .... u..,, ~ -..ell, lnfnt/S...ltllldl .,.. 5-n °'"""t'I a. JWfl c.tlitr-A •"'Ole tttillllfltl Ml!IWI i. ,ulltlttled llhirtMys •I'd SlllllM~l. TIM '""''"' ~tno 11\flll 11 •t ~ Wbt .., *'-!, ~ MeM, C.lll•m1-, ""'· ••i..rt N. w,,4 ,., ........... Pvllll&ller J•ck R. C.rlty Wit......., .... 0...1 MMliMI" Tit--1 K~I -U.... A. M•r,hlu ......... !tor L ,_ .,.,. ........ Mdlt City "l.,_ ... ,.. ..... OM. JUJ Hew,..t a..1..,.,.i ..... ~t P.O. I•• 1111, '2661 °""' °""'" C.-.... I -'#Mt hf S"tlf ~._.,.1m1" .... tA-.. =, '"""' -..cl'l1 JM ltK'I.......,.... OWw•a • ""'1fl Ill CtmlM lt•I .,....,, ••• ,,, •• M~>n a rrw MMrll .. 641<1•11 fi mt. er.. c-1 .... """" ... ..... ......... '""""'"'--...,.,. ... .,,.........,... .... llfLJI .......... Wf!lllllt. ..... ... ..-i ., ..,.,,. ....,. M="w"--.. ::1:1.~,..::: --· LA Police Raid • ' Car Theft Ring ' Leader Known • • Newport Beach police said today they kriow the tdentlty of the leader of a Los Angeles-based auto theft ring lhal h3s been responsible for steadling 2 O Porsches in Newport Beach alone Wice Sept. L Detective Ken Smith said investigation led police to a garage in Anaheim late last y,·eek that is the! apparent opera- Front Page I SPENDING ... Services Adminbtration spent $2-49,000. Even agencies like the Farm Credit Administration got into ·t1te acl The report says that government agency spent aU o! 1210 ln Newport Beach last year. And, believe it or not, the Tennessee Valley Authority (TV A) paid $4,700 for someone or something. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) shelled out near- ly $54.000 while the Office of Economic Opportunity. which published the reporl listing all the figures, itself spent $161.000 for "program development." The Veterans' /\dministralion paid $2.7 miltiin to disability pensions, bur ial awards, readjustment training and other items. The Railroad Retirement Boord spent $144,000 as part of its social insurance program for railroad workers. The Small Business Administration's financial a~istance program helped local busineses with $691,000 and the "progress of the arts" was helped with $6.000 Crom the National Foundation on Arts and Humanities. The Treasury Department paid out nearly $1.4 million in claims and "in- terest on the public debt." The Environmental Protection Agency spent $77,000. presumably In !Is local pollution investigations, while t h e Department of Justice said It gave Chier 8. James Glavas' police department $481 in Jaw enforcement assistance. The report did not say how much money the government collected from Newport Beacb taxpayers. llonal headquarters of the ring which he said Involved as many as IO persons at ooe Ume. A raid al ~ garage Thursday nigbt tunlCd up several thousand dollar& ID aulO pa.rt.s but neither the gang leader nor any of bis associates. Smith said he will ask the Orange County District Attorney for arrest 'ft'arrants for the ring leader and nne other pel'SU) today. Newpon Beach police arrested ooe suspect, Gilbert Am\enla, 19, of Rosemead, early last week. when they asserttdly spotted him early ln the morn- ing near the Oakwood G a r d e n apartments in 16th Street. Two others flOll when police ap- proached Armenta, SmJth said. The Porscbes stolen ear.lier that nl1ht were recovered in the parking lot of the Orange Coast YMCA and anolber was recovered near the Anaheim garage on La Palina Avenue. A fifth was found the next day across the street from the Oakwood apartments. Police said the investigation Into the auto theft ring began about the first of September and has been a joint effort among eight police departq>ents and other agep.cies including p o I i c e departments tn Costa Mesa, Santa Ana . Orange. Anaheim and Tustin and" the Orange County Sheriff's OffiC! and the National Auto Theft Bureau. Detective Smith said that property recovered in the Anaheim garage in· eluded a Porsche engthe, two Porsche transmission axles, sil car covers, etcht bucket seats, 29 tires and w~. 17 Porsche or Volkswagen jacks, and several other items. He said the parts came from at least eight different stolen Porsches. Sm.Ith said the alle~ed leader of the auto theft ring would hire as many operatorrs t1s'he needed for a particular job on a given night . H~ said he used as many as 10 in one particular operation -the 11,M!ft or eight Porsclles that were foupd stripped in !be Irvine orange groves Sept. 17. Smith said he thinks the investigation has "put a stop to the rash of Porsche thefts that have been plaguing Orange County for tbe past few months." • . , ' 4 Dot.ILY PILOT ..... ,_.. CRASH AFTE~TH:'RESUSCITATOR FROM AMBULANCE IN STRllT Emorgeo<y Equl~nt L Being u..ct •I Tlmo of Accident Auto Strikes Ambulance On Mesa Street; 6 Hurt By FREDERICK SCBOEMEHL • 01 ... 0."7 ,,.., ..... Six persons were injured in ~ mid· morning collision when an ambulance carrying a heart attack victim w~s struck broadside in a busy Costa Mesa intersection seodlng the emergency imlt crashing into a nearby police car, · Walter GoddicUon, &I, 491 E. Costa Mesa SI. was recelvlrlg resu.scitation from a Costa Meaa fireman and a Sell'• Ambulance Service attendant when the emergency vetllcle, just a block from Costa Mesa Memorial Hospit.al1 was sltuclt. Tbe eccldent occurred shortly before 10 a.m. at the lntenectfoo of VlcJorla Mtnue and lie,wport Boulevard. ....... r .. .,1 TR~ ... , ' I I I ·' •ver UD<lel)Okm. Wllh his cbaraq i.rlltl•ally declllve ldlon In ·KOf'M, he made polllble the de/..,.. of peace ancl ,,_ID Alla." I ,,,. bol!l'"1 lllrillulod Trun>ID'I s to the "complulty of organic fan causing a collapse ol. tbe cardio-vascul1 1 l)'stem." Truman entered Research Hospi ta} u.,.. ween ago today -after flghtJn\ Jung eongesUon al home for two weeks ~ and had been in a comJ sloce earlf Saturday. Earlier in hla hospltal.lutlorl he appeared lo be rallylnf, but the com! blnltion of respiratory problems, harden- ed lrtelies and lddney dlseaoe were Jod much for the old man. . In recent years he had appeared frail and drawn, his weight down from a presidentiaJ 170 pounds. He long ago abandoned his lif~JOng predilection for 1on4:, fast early morning walb, but made almost dally excunlonJ on lho{>pln1 trips with bll wUe, Ilea, he.,,.Jf ,,_. Mn. Truman received the .ad De.WI by telepbone. A family opoWmln, llandJll JesRe, said she rectlved it "with the same -fortitude and calmness with which [:.w haa faced all of tbil. .. Nixon proclaimed Thursday a national day of mounting, ordering Dap lowered lo hall ataff at federal biilldllli• far the next 30 days. The auditorium in the Truman Library, \vbere the funeral services will be con· ducted, holds onJy 200 persons, and at- lendance will be by invltaUoo only. Most foreign dignitaries were expected to go to a memori1l service in Washin&ton'1 NaUonll Cathedral, nther than oomin& to ~dellce. . Tributes flowed in ...UU, as won! of Ille deoth WU Dulled around the world. "A 20tb century giant is gone," fonner President Lyndon B. J obnaoo said In a statement issued at Austin, Tex. "Few men of any times ever ahaped the worb1 as did the man Inion lndepeodenoe. "President Truman pttslded over the destiny of Ibis oountey durln& ooe of Us most turllulent enl. N.,... fllDcblng In the f11<e of crud.al naUonal cllolces, bi> decisions changed the course of human events throughout the world." Queen Eliubeth U and Prlme.Mlnlller Edward S. Het1tb expreaed thetr sorrow to the American people in a wlre to President Nixon, and the. B r I t I s h monarch sent a private message to Mrs. Truman. Veto Seen as No Threat From Pagel WINDS .•. Goddickaoo wll dead oa antval at Memorial Hospllal. lloopllal offldals said, however, bll deoth appearod lo have been Clllled by an _...i heart attack and DOI the ICddeol ll1ell. -ser1oual1 fnflnd In Ille --tacular colllJloo WU G"COry l'oloder.er. Mllsow1'1 Gov. Warren E. Heames sakl the state hu "lolt not only a great n&tlve son, but a man we shared with the rest of the world as one of its paramount lelden ol the lltb Century. MJ.-rl was pn>Ud lo bave J!mi the world the aervicet or Prelldent Trumlll at-a time wbm bll pa\ llrelilth WU needed to win a war, establish peace IDd rebuild rangOll landa, ..i aow we uk Ille world to share our aorrow and our loss." . . ' . \.f ..• tbtlr -1nga, but nothing major. _.,1\'IS ltilJ. of thlng yw'd espec1. in the first major wind of the year," 1aki Sgt. Ray Grabam. To . Saddlehack Sta~.!id :~ IQ,,111 E,.~ -81., .•bo -bald lllJ1lrlos, oc<ordinc lo a ..,.._. ~ ~ """1~ In~~ -;i.. ir...t . .t! ~ ~ \l;!il!!l- le la<orati-..i ' i.ibit 1nJurlet Aro t... .and Gnvlco llOcfrtauei, 140 Del Mf1' Ave., Colla -· 'the <>Ccuponll Of thi! late modi! oedan wlllcb collided with tlleambulanCe.' Banks Hike Rat,e In Laguna Beach wind damage was reported most serious in the Bluebird Canyon area. But a nine-foot by seven· foot window in the new county library building on Glenneyre Street was shattered in a powerful gust about I p.m. Sunday. Restrain Order Granted in Coast Stitchery Case An Orange County Superior Court judge has granted a restraining order to a Newport Beach needlework specialist "'ho claims that a competitor posed as a newspaper reporter to filch her top secret stitchery pillow designs. Judge Jame! F. Judge Intervened in the $9.00> pillow fight and ordered plain"' tiff Eleanor Laraway, proprietor of Laraway's Specialty Shoppe, 313 Marine Drive. Balboa Island, and defendants Violet Weber and Alice Peterson to return lo his courtroom Jan. 4. f\.1rs. Peterson and Mrs. Weber arc identified in the Laraway lawsuit as the operatorrs of 'Mle Needleworken, 3011 Villa Way, Newport Beach. Mn. Weber is further identified a! the woman who got the Laraway designs by posing as a feature writer for a Loa: Angeles newapaper. Judge Judge's order prevents the defendants from marketln1 what Mn. Laraway de!Crlbe5 as her "ortglnol ~ign stitchery pillows'' ~ndin1 further court action on the '.ss1.1t'. It~s a " Saddleback College in Mission Viejo doesn't expect to lose any state aid in the upcoming fiscal year even though Gov. Ronald Reagan has vetoed a $42 million commufl!ty college rellef bill Saddleback receives only basic aid ($125 per !ludent) from the state. Veto of the relief bill dealt a blow to foundation aid, al.ate grants that are offered only to older community college districts. For ti:ample, the eatablltbed Coast Community College Dlltr1ct expects to Jose '3 mllllon in funds next year due to the veto of the bUl. The new Saddleback Community College District, acconlln.1 lo· ,Dr. FrOll H. Bremer, superintende!!t~t, 11 considered a high wealljl dl.trlci' and, ., such, cannot recei"· ~obndatiOn aid. -· From~ .. .,J DEATHS .' .. .. tire. A witness who saw the accident from far away said he saw !Omet.t.ing' n~ off the truck just.before it happened." 'Mle truck, described by plo1ice as an older model, spun across the two-line road after the Impact and came lo a halt facing In the opposite dlroctlon It had betn moving at the ttme of the crash. No other vehicles: were iuvolved in the accident. )!OllC. Bald. Ofllcef Aloold, a veterao tra1Dc ln- vestlp1or. ll1Cl'the one boy who survived the crub problbly did ao because hi• body wu eutltloned from the lmpacl by an elD\'t7 truh can. ft-_• ruin NHvy Warns Against Tattoos SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Navy ls trying lo do away with talloos. The measige comes ft1lm Navy doctors w1lo say the trad!ttonal neeiUeworlr: is not only painflll and bard to n!move btit also tned icaUy dangerous. The head of dermalolcv at san Diego .Naval · Hoapllal 1ays Califor:nia ohould abut down talloo parlors. . "New York has already done U,11 uys Capt. WUUam Canoo, M.D. ••1 am surprised thal a state as progressive as Call!omJa bu JD.Ide no major move to stop It." ..., . He aay1 "llfother" emblaioned oo a sailor's arm or aft l~ Judi 1lrl on his cheat can tum into a major allergic infectJoo. 'Ibere 1.1 lb!> a risk ol hepatiUs from the needle,;. , · · Navy and Marine Co'J>ll trainlna centtn here are wll'lllllJ .....i11 abollt tattooing. r "' Removal ha1 become a common practice 1t tbe hospital ClrlOll 11y1 some Nilors pay a rueful vlslt the momtns after . RThe.y often come ln rt1ht lfter they put them on and aal 1'I ' ~ them off,"beffl)'t. .: . ' "They do not !Cem to re1llze that a tattoo ls a ·permanttd~aUon.' Tbe only W&:f lo remove~. Ca...n says, ls lo Jake off !he ,,Jn.ihafhal been dy-· • • • -' •· •-"' ' .L Doctors con uoe one •f llne'liolnful methods> rubbint a 'Pldlt.-• we tattoo unW the skin and d)'I bleed away, leaving • scar: ._ I rot*>& tander or wire bruoh lo tcrlpe olf the okin layera; or lo !ill caa ol .....Oer tallool, limply-· the lklzl "'' auratcally. ) , I . -· However, Bremer'said ¥e:bact ay~ !JOM! the bill because In. fl!!!"" yan the wealth of the dllllict wlll ~ and 11 will become eligible ~r foundatlnn aid funds, • Stale figures ll>owlng u\e effecll lo districts ,aay Saddleback "will looe just about zero dollan"~ in the upiCOminC fiscal year, Bremer said. A oepante provlllon of the blll, Bremer noted, woukl have clwlle tbt definlUons' of 0 student" under lmdbig formulas. Now, a llludent taldoi 1"" than 10 unill is considertd a part time enrollee. or 0 a de~ adult atudent." Senotfe BUI '!tilliil' Reagan v,toed would have ·· ~ th.ls part-thne categorx and ~colleges to count 1Wdents taltlnl J~ lo unils u "tun ·tttnll" student.I. ~ .. " This would have ~nt incftued aid , frol{I the slate to ~... community col~ lege districts or cantofnia. · Btemer said thli~·#fyvision of the blD al!O ~ould not~ ·problems for the burCeonlng junkif'..~Ufge9. ~ It wu DOI lnlmledat.el)I known 'Ibo of the two wu dr1vlnc Ille vehicle. Costa Mesi flnlmall Pblllll> Wonbam, 29, of WI Elden SL, Colla r.laa; la alto hoapltalllod at llOac with mulllple fl> jw\es. Tbe amt.Jt1nce· driver, zt..)'elMld !Ucbard Spracue, w11 l(llcd ID lltlafac. lory coadltloa II COiia --1 l!Dol>ltal COiia , .. _. polloo ...-Paul A1e1•ndir w• lilted 1D pod eondllklD at Brlltol Part_Medloal CenW. According lo I COiia Mesa Fire Department spokesman, a call WU received .at 9:33 Lm. to .ao to God- dlcbon'• residence and olfer medical aid.· After providing iniUal first aid, God- dickson was placed in the Seal's Ambulance which was travelling west- bound on Victoria wben the colllllon with the Rodriguei vehicle occurred. SESAME STREET , SESAME ST'REET IS ABOUT THE ONl Y STREET JN THE HARBOR AREA THAT:HASN'T, HAD A CARPET INSl ALLATION BY ALDEN'S. . ,, For Loans 14 % NEW YORK (AP) -A •Iring of major cozr.merclal banu, lnclutlln1 the C01J11- try'1 thlnf and fourth largest, followOll the Jud· ol two other bl1 banks and boolled their prime lending ratet toQ)' from &% lo I percenL Cbue Manhattan Bank, No. 3; Manufacturen Hanover Tniat Co .. No.'' O>emlcal Bank and ~ )lfdland Bank lnc:reued the co. t of bormrlnc for their DIOll mdft-wort111 -in Ille face of the Nlloo admlnlmaUoo'o <*"\f:lp to coolrol lnllatlon by keeping tho mblal:ln-ntaa. "We aro koenly aware ol the federal government'• desire to moder1te.upnrd l'lle _.... u a part al 111 e!lort lo brine lnflaUoo under ftrmer coatrol," • spol<elmlll for Chase uJd. "However, we believe that boldlq in- terest ratu at level.I which ve out ci l1"e with the market ,...n11y would, over a period of time, cause dlltortlons tn the now ol credit, aod contribute lo the lnllatlonar)I oplral by plocln1 abnormally heavy demands on banks." " • '\ IN OUR FIFTEEN YEA~S. we . HAVE . CARPETED THOUSA~DS';OF HOMES IN ; COSTA MESA, NEWPORT BEACH, LAGUNA · , BEACH AND HUNTINGTON Bef,CH. ONE- JNEIGHBOR TEUS ANOTHER UNTIL we• HAVE WORKED IN EVERY HOME oN A BLOCK. .·ALDEN'S • TH FORMULA IS SIMPLE-WE TRY TO MAKE EACH CUSTOMER HAPPY. ASK YqU1t NEIGHBOR-WE PROBABLY CARl'Era> HER •. ·:; HOME. (IF WE HAVEN'T, BRING HER IN WITH YOU.) CARPrfS e 'bRAPES , ,. cotTA MllA lfNCI ltl1 . 166! Placelltla 'A••· COSTA MISA 64M131 HOUltl: Mon. Thru Thurt., 9 lo 500 -Pill, 9 to 9 -SAT• "'° to S • '. ' 7 , • 1 . ora~ge (;oa.t EO•lilON -. , Today"s Final N.Y. Steeks ' '¢>L. 65, NO. 361, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGE~ ~COUNT¥. CALIFORNIA . TUESDAY, DECEMBER . 26, 1972 c TEN CENTS . . • • Friend·s, Fqes -ll.ememher Truman's Courage By Al,..lalocl PreQ ' Political ally and foe today baUed ffii-- r)' S~asaC011111mmanwllo ' bqno<'ed Ille natlGo with bis -and dedli•-wben lhnlll lnlo Ibo nation'• hi8besl olllce II .I tlmO of lniemlllmlll peril. l'mldel/I • Nixon said,, "Harry S Truman will be remembered u one of \he most courageous pres.liient! 1n our. history, who led the nation and the world through a critical period with exceptjonal vision and d~terminaUon. Our hopes to- \ ea ' Air Crash Survivors Ate Flesh SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Offdll """""" coof1rmed todly !bat survivors of an Andes plane· cralll had ellon the flesh of dead comrades to avoid lllarvo- lion durJnc a -Y ord..I. doy for a _,t of ~ rest In 1.,.. -.. ·oo l;b. firm foundatlolio that be -~· Prell-T.' Apew .. ~ Ibo tlill ~ ~ hraagbl .. Ille ...... two Jn. dl!PenNllle ol aim> !elder -· fortbrlgblneso and(-. 'l'be sign .. bis desk. '11te Buck Stops Here,• was no lcDe boait. .But th. an 'off!Ce of greai power be never Jost the humility that endeared him to muuon.s as simply the man. ttom Missouri." · . Former Presid~\it Lyndon B. Johnson * j * * , ' , I •, J said, i., IO!h '*ltur)> l)ul la ,.ne. Few men ol any lll!lOI enr llllJlld Ibo· WO<)d as ~ the man ~ tillllhpendence. • . "~ ~·--mr·llle destiny "' couatri',....., -ol Ila .--•turJ>oliot ..... -., ....... lo1 th&. .... ...,, crucill .. -cbok:oo. bla. declslooa,cl>qed, \he <qqn!e of -•IVetlfl throqbout the World, 11 Sen. Slro!!t '"""'1hond• (R-S.C.), who bqlted the Democ;ratlc party to run for P:resldent aga1niit Truman ,as a Dixiecrat iq 1948, said, "tlis decisi\t'e leadership iR . - -.es the crucial years of his presidency was an example in courage. He did not bealtate to• make Ibo difficult decisio:ls he felt were right." Democratic Gov. John J . Gilligan of ObkJ said, "At a moment of great oa.. Uonal peril and triumph In the climactic weeks ot World War n, be was suddenly thrust Into the office of president and the manne: bi which thi9 bumble man from Missouri met· tho!e awful challenges and shouldered those ten'lble burdens com· PlfUMied the .. respect and affection of all Americans.'' arr NiXon Hails · Ex-chief As 'Fighter' KANSAS CITY (AP ) -Harry S Truman died today, conquered finally by the iQfirmities of his 18 years. r President wiIOn led the ·mourning: for y ~ nation's· S3rd pi:esident, calling him •1• fighter who ,was best when the going . Democratic Sen. Herfry M. Jackson of .. Washington said, "Hairy Truman was COl)lronted with a series of toush, un- precedented decisions with nothing less than the future security of the rr.e world at stake~ He never shrank from those decisions, despite the bosUle environment of ·those postwar years. His courage, bis wisdom and bis deciaiveness in that period shaped the future courSe of the Western world." President Nixor. also said or Truman, "Recognizing the new threat to peace that had emerged from the ashes of war, he stood boldly against it wilh his ex· tension of aid to Greece and Turkey in 1947 -and the 'Truman Doctrine' thus established was crucial to the defense of liberty in Europe a n d the world. In launching the Marshall plan, he began the most far·sighted and p\O!t generous act of international i;_ebuilding ever undertaken . • "With his cha racteristically decisive ~action •in Korea, he made possible the defense o! peace and freedom in ASia ." rum an The olftclal pources Aid 11 anlvuu. either playeri e< -.. . ti • l!Mll\llyllll rualrJ -. 11111 ..... solemn pact that the? -not dloculs· _ the IDllltr lllllil~Jllr NI ' ... ID lll~. ~; .... !Mr.: trould make a collectin Ill..-, · -i.-..... t.1•.~; .. '., •lfUf~...ar-t-• P•w:i: S,'IJ.t, Illl • . Throe bave llrNdy rllinM lo MonleYideo. The other u have r.malned in Santiago to recover but plan to 1fly back to Montevideo in a day or two. The plane had '5 persoM aboard wbeo It bit an Andes peak Oct. 13. By Ibo end ol October, Z9 were dead. • There had beeo rumors that lhooe who survived mi8ht bave ealal humln flelb to live through . the bitter mowrtaln · blizzards, but tbe reports could n o I he sµl.JtanUated unUI today. The sources said that ·one of the )'Wl;ll men, not Identified, com~ the group's decision to use. th& cadavers aa "1lmUar to a heart transplant." .ffls explanaUon: In a transplant opera. tiop,, a · heart is taken from a penon at death to maintain another's Ufe , and in tbe same manner portions Of the bodies bad been used to maintain the living. The soutces said 1he survivors related that the decision to use· tbe bodies of friends, and even relatives, was a col- lective one agreed to by all. · ~rller, the survivors tqld of \laving a good deal of food, be<ause they had ·atocked up on candy and preserved fruit during a stop at Mendou, ArgenUna. 'The 7,0lllli men said they fouad the "feiflh e mountain silence/' the endless bottdom and periods cf il•pre!lloo the wOnt par\ of their ~ ..... ~ewspaper Says Howard Hughes Flew to Florida FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) Biiiionaire Howard Hughes. fiew to Fort 14Iderdale in bis private jet &inday a,fier spepdlng a~ night in his llmousi~e Otitside an eartbquake-battere4 hotel tn Mlna.gua, Nicaragua , the Miami News sajd today. , ' .. Jill' ne-r said u· bad leanied that the we1ithy myotery man was e1rrlod .bodily from the lnleM:onllneotal ~ .Mina ... by --·Ille devutated the city early Sll\lrdly. He llJ>'OI the night IDd -of )11,e ... t dly In ~ Mercedes Jlem auto In the holel porllnc lot, the Nowt aid, then fle'\' to Fort ~ where be cle1recl cuotoms. The newspoper aid Hu..... and bis party apparattly flew on to 1n 1111- dl!closed iocolion In Ibo United State• be<ause a lorelcn llJcht plan wu not 111- ed for his lircrlfL c;.n. Anastulo Somou, Nleorquan atroniman1 aaid Hughes waa not injured and left because 110~ hotel WU not . livable u power, l\cht and water wtDt ·out " " H~ghei flew to lllanq111 lut f'ehrlllry -from the Bahama, where be bad apent some ii montbl In -· eo reportedly lclt Ille Bahamas -tbe Bahamian goYemment tntended t .o deport ...... 'of bia -lor lltlln( to have pn>per woRlq _.. I • • was toupest:" The President also pro-clalniel! Tbu~y a day of na~I ~ and ordered nags at federal buildings flown '8t balf staff for 30 days: LY,l1don. B. Jobnson, now the only ~ ton\ier pmi4ent, lameoted the ........ of :'a 20th century giant." Tnadla't wife of 53 yean, and hls ~ ~• saw him for a final 2.0 mlbUlea a.;,tmas Day, were at borne in · nOarllf IJileliendence wbeo death came at 5.:50 a~m. PST. In a~ with 'Frurpan's wishes, the tUneru ,'!lnlnday will. be without the papqp~ &ccordect' other ~at sta'tesmeQ. a. will be burled ThUrs\Jay at I p.m. . .. .... . . _... . . ' ... . . f'.. • -i ..... ,. , J ""' ;ft ~ • .. -• . f. ... ., •-"' ' .... y"9Af ........... PST hi the courtyard o( tbe Harry S Truman Memorial Library, Truman's proudest achievement in the 20 years since be left tbe White House. DfllRIS CLUTTU S 'RCJATJWAY AFT~R 'illATH!c 1tli1{ IN ltyiNE ' F0<,T1"0 lliyt, • Deodly Post-ChrlstmU Trip !O Ifie Dump Trumao W'8 Ibo last of !bf great World War n ·tigures, preceded m death tiy Dwight D. Eisenhower, Winston Churchill and Josef Stalin. • J -• . 2-·Mes ans JW);ed;. 2-Ilu:rt· In T~uck C~a$l} in -ifrln~ ' . • • \ l ' ; He was the president who set the United States against global· communism In the Cold War that foUowe(i, World War n . He ordered use of the atomJc bomb to end World War n, extended un· f pre<eden\od help to naUcm rtlilUng Soviet dominl)loo, and ordered troops In- • lo Ko!'tl' wbeo Ccmmunist.s began their in-. of the IOUtb. . -. . . ~ t ' • •' ' "Recognizing the new threat to peace that.had emerged from. the asbet of war, he •"""1 bolc!lY against It With bis ex-~ of aid to Greece and Tllrtey In l.M7 -and ·Ibo 'Truman Doctrlno' thus establiabed was cruclal to the defense of liberty in Europe and the world, 11 NllOD said, adding: TWo young Cotta· Mesa boys were kill- ' ed and their f4tber and aoolher brother critically injured this morning when their plckup truck skidded out of conlrol ,00 slammed into a Girt einbankment on Bonita Canyon Road . near Ma~~ur Boulevard in lrYine. Both David, ' and 'Ih>mas Facemyer Jr., io .. died when they were thrown cleat "They were going -between to and !IO mlles per hour when the driver lost it,'' said Irvine police officer R. E. "Pop'~ Arnold. He idded that a w(tnesa to the iceident saw tomethillg fiy off the pickup shortly before the accident occurred. The truck, described by polict as an • Old rooOel, spu6 across tbe two-lane road and caillj! to ~ rlgbl -up after roll· IDll over. When tt stopped, It laced In lhe (Ste 'DBATllB, Page Ii "In laund>lllg the Manhall pl8J!. be began the most farsighted and px>st Lenerous act of international rebuilding (See TRUMAN, Page t) of the pickup d~ the moment ol Im- pact. Their (a~, 1'Klmas Facemyer Sr. and another boy, Shane, were rushed by ambulance 'o c.osta-Mesa Memorial >. n..,,-1"'1. · • . • ~ li:acemyors, all raldenll·OI ili9 W. " Todcl Gets Mutt = St,;bad been ~-lrash at : • .· •. . l\111 ~~~'~ :'~.°""'.p •. Clerneme Youngster Receives Dog :rramc lnve1Upton ..e .UU uneertaiD ~ l · · what caused Ibo ICdWtt bUl ~· a ' ' lilo,....t In Ille left frooi t~ of Ibo p!Ckup • Todd Jlcl\eim.; !t, and "MlmOoo the Not one of the PfOJ>le Wed for any may have been lnvclved. Second", .Jtt -u. met for Ibo first "-1 for lbelr dop, lhe ldded .. ").;; , time Cbrlitma1 Eve and tt waf'lo\te at ••tt wu tantalUC I" ' , I lint alghL • The ntw .pap,. Todd said today, Is an P· z b Rais . . , , ~Ibo s.. ,ci""'""1e YOllD(l•tu thal U fn e..! e• " \n,l:Gita Mell '•Dirked tbe end • Auatrlllu liloplMnl I-le, jusl the sort r <> ' or I W..ldoD( oeartb for I repl-1 of ~ble -I b I I Ticklisli Issrre ' HAIFA, lsroel (UPI) A plumber who benild blo Mid eplnlt I kitdom link .,,.. I -e llckled him flas tiled for ---for -loo( U I rault of I wofl< ~11 imeli .. __ NPOrted -· 'l'be unldentilled -Al4 sba lhoucllt the -lt1<klnl out from -Ibo lloll -bet lillbmd'L! , ·!!~,_helovec! mull tl!lt wu.taken11Tom charocterlzed .1111 JltO!loul pet, which he IVCIO'I doorltep and ~ 11rl7 Jul had Dlmld ........ (lipOnlll: for "doll"). ' ..,... In the city hel<b. · ' · Mn. Eglaton had promiled her 100 "Simdoy wu Ibo flral night in L -that be -.Id hlye • new clotJ by _ that Todd ~ to shoW I liltle bap-Qrillma1 moml"I. but eftorts tblough ·pineas opln; 1114 the l::oncordil SCboOI the wee• lo And -just Ibo rllht<nplaco- lhlrd J1rliler'1 mother thla morning. ment ,,.,. In Yailt . The Epleton ~ atlrted r1D11n1 One whrldor puppy iaJled 1 doy. He early Seturday monilng u DAILY fell from gnce wb.n be chewed PILOT readers came aeros the 1tory of Muneca11 collar to blta. Todd's tragedy. •· liq( with the new pe~ Todd lnslsta, 11'1 "The calls didn't atop an day ; ther\o the r.~ thing. must bave been a hundrtd 0Uer1 from "She'• just wbal t wanlocl , and I 11111>-D<Oole who. winled to sin Todd 1 pup Id her Munecl, JUll lllro Ibo 11n1 ..,. f !or 'Cbr11imas," llld Mra EUJrton. had." hi said, \apptly. . ' ' HARRlf S TRUMAN fl 884-1912) -Hot Winds to Continue Through Next Two Days Santa Ana winds are expected to con- tinue to bluster and brbtg balmy tern· peratures to Orange County for the next two days, according to the National Weather Service. Wlnda gusting up to 70 miles an hour were reported over the Christmas weekend In Orange County, ripping down holiday deco91tions, leaYlng as nflny as 30,000 persons without power, and tit· tering streets throughout the county with tree llmbs. Orange Coast meteorologist .I . · Sherman Denny said the last comparable windstonn occurred in Jan uary, 1966, nearly seven years ago. Heaviest .damage was reported In lhc Yorba Unda, Placentia. TUsUn, and San- ta Ana areas, where winds coming out ot the Santa Ana canyon blew at a steady 35 mlies an hour. "Starting Christmas Eve, I'd say we had 2,CKM> people out of power almolt coo~ flaDUy," said Bob Beck, dMslon tnanager of Southern Cllliomla Edlloo Company. ! Blockoula raDlled from jmt I few mlnutet to 11 much as fwr boun in cao- Doryman Nabbed In Knife Attack Police jailed 1 5-yeat'Old Cloryman trvm Cotta M ... Mondly ottar he 111q: edly tried to stab bJa strlfnend With I flshlD( knife durin1 a Cbrlstmu alcht •rrummt. Booted Oii IUlplcioo of Ullult with I deadly ftlpoll Wll Joilo Mllcolrn MICllonald of .. C.Oler St, Cotta Mell police sold Ibo llllmln, Muy -Bri'tllcqua, .... a, -DOI ir>Jur<d ID Ille -~ which too1r pilCO ll Ibo Cen4er Sl(oel lddresa. yons of the east county. F.dison calfed out 300 worken, some coming from as far away u Santa Barbara and Santa Paula, tor duty begin- ning at 6 p.m. Sunday. Beck said some crews worked continuously for 11 bourl. "Wp , were ieltlng ~ of calls and we called ou~ every available man trying: to restore terVlce,'' Bect.&aid. Scores of trees were ft!ported down in Huntington Beacll, Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa, and Newport Beaeh. No ma- jor damage was reported.1 howeY!r. The Orange County Harbors Depart- ment reported 17 wind-related incidents. mostly involving boats blown loose from (See WINDS, Page Zl Orange C-t • Weat!aer a .. r -are whit the .... tber people ... for w-,.; with , teinperatures in Ibo QPper 'llltllong the coast. Lowa kllllahl in the OGI. ' ~smE TOOA'l' . . . ' . Oronpe c .. ntr'1197f.78 bwda- et tllowcd a b 'Q g t r ffta'ICIH than an11 of Ute nate'J other S1 countif1, boc1c+ng 1M -rol trend of reltolroa ldl on lo<nl propertr ..._ Stor)I on P,. Q. l..M. ..,.. • ... L.-.. ,. c....... • ...... "'" c ....... ----• ~ ~· _ __, . =~ .... : ::-...... :~: ..... • ,..,_ 11 !!iiliiO•·-· 1.... ,._. ... ....... lt-11 ._. • ..... ._,, . _.. ....... ... llW $1 1• ....... • DAILY PILOT c Valor Atoord Winner Killed HOUSTON , Tu. (AP) -Macarlo Gln:t1, .... rtcetttd the n1Uoa'1 hlClleli 1wml fer valo< for heroism lo World W1r ll. bat been killed In 11n auto accident. Garcia, 52, or Alief, Tex., and Myrtle Koonce, 48, of ltouston died Chrlstmu Eve in the crash near Sugar Land, Tex. Garcia, then an Army !tiff sergeant, won the Afedal of llonor after he volunteered to dispose of two Gennan machinegun nests blocking his platoon's way io Gtnnany on Nov. 17 , 1M4.. Although shot in the aboolder and foot, Garcia cleared the way by killlng six Germans and capturing four. Born in Mexico, Carcia became a U.S. citizen after leaving service with the rank of master sergeant. At the time of his death be was a contact man for the Veterans Administration in this area. V.S. Spent $90 Million In Newport The federal government poured more than $90 million into the Newport Beach economy during the 197! fiscal year, ac- cording to a U.S. sptnding document issued last week. 1be figul'e!I left city o f f i c i a l s bewildered, if not blushing. "It's bard to belleve they've spent that much In this bastion of capitalism.• sald City Manager Robert L. Wynn. "Where ;,, it all going?" It figures out to about $1,800 for every man, woman and child living in the com- munity. Most of the money didn't go to people, however. The Department of Defense, the big- gest spender. laid out $69 million, more than '8S million in military contracts. Most of tba,t presumably went to Philco-Ford's Aeronutronlc Division on Ford Road, but officials there were not available for comment. Hughes Tool Company and Collins &ldio Company also lileJy received substantial contracil!I. About Jl.7 millloo wei» to military retirement pay and dvlllan pay. Another major cbunl<, juat aver fl milJklll, WU laid out Jn aoctal security payments to the dty'1 elderly and dlaabl· ed. lloweftr, more than I& mllllon In U.S. ~\ ol Agriculture -..... paid out In the fonn of food stamps to Newport Beach residents. '!bat llllJlle de!l8"-'t gave about $80,000 to the llewport,Meaa Scbool DiJtrld for hol lunches. Tho d ty got several mllllon dollars that local Officials say they didn't even know about. For lnltance, the report saJd the Department of the Interior spent 11.3 mUlloD In outdoor recreaUon assiatanct in Neyport Beach while the General Servtcos Admlnlltratlon spent '2(9,000. Evm ogmdes like the F1rm Credit AdmlnlstraUoo got Into the act. The report aays that government agency •pent all of 1210 In Newport Beach last year. And, believe tt or not, the Tennesste Valley Authority (TVA) paid $4,700 for someone or something. From Pagel WINDS ... their moomings, but nothing major. "lt'1 the kind of thing you'd expect in the first ma)or wind of the year," said Sgt. Ray Graham. In Laguna Beacti wind damage v.•as reported most serious in the Bluebird Can)'OO area. But a nine-foot by !eVen- foot window ln the new county library buUdln& on Glenneyre Street w .. shlt&ered in a powerful gust about S p.m. Sundl1· 0-ICOAIT CM DAILY PILOT Tiie °"'91 C.lt DAILY l"ll.OT, Wltll ...tlkh i. ~ ... ,........,_, " Ml ......... ... °""""' c.... hlllltfllnt ~ ....... ,... ..,,. 11'9 ........ ""-tty ~ P!'Nly, ,_,. CMt1t MIM, M....-t llfldl, IMU.0"'811 119dl/.P:_,tl,. V•llly, WtvN hid!, lnt'-1~ 11111 San '"""""'' 1111 J11111to c:.tl"-A 1l119i. "911NI , lll!IM hi ...OUtlMd "'"""'Ir& '"" Sundl\'$. Tiie ,,1nc1,.1 ,WU ... ~ pllnl 11 II llll w"' llf ,,.._,, Cotti ,,....., C1llforrlll, ntliL .offrl H •. W1 0J l"rftldiftt IM ''*I"'"" J 1cil «. c.ri1y Vb ............ Genni MMltlr" '11rle.11 KHYU -'Tltnlu A. M•r,.hl111 M'ld' ...... ca.e.. H. t...e Ric••nl '· Hilt .........,M ., ...... ---JJI Witt a.y Streit M•JIMt A'41,..., P.O •••• 1160, •2•2• --....,.,. 8-dtr a.._,.,, a.Mw~ L.lt9lll hMlll., ,.,..., ... _ MtiM...-.... : ,,.,, tlitCll ....,...,..,. SM ctii!Mlltot RS "9rtfl 11 QllNlll 11914 "'"'''' (7141 ... , ... ,,, Ct 'll:a• M•ff 111 Ml•NJI ~. ""' ~ °'"' """""'"" ~. ... ..... .... J/hllfnt ..... ......... ....... .,. .................. """' ,,., .. . ......... "'"""' .,."' ,,.. ......... ...,,. ...... ..... er. .... 1111 .. Cetfl .... 01111 .. ~-., Cltriw .... ~"' ,,.... d.11 ,....,,.,,, ,.,111twy -·-.... INfltfllY. t .. LA Police Raid Car Theft Ring Leader Known Newport Beach. police said today they know the identity of the leader of a ~ Angeles-based auto theft ring that has been rtsponsible for steadling 2 0 Portehe! in Newport Beach alone since Sept 1. Detective Ken Smith said investigation led police to a garage in Anaheim late last week that is the apparent opera- liooaJ headquarters or the ring which he said involved as many as IO persons at one time. A raid at the aarage Thursday night turned up several thousand dollars in auto parts but neither the gang leader nor any of bis associates. Smith sald be wUI ask the Orange CoUDty Dbtr1ct Attorney for arrest warrants f'or the ring leader and one other pel'90n today. Newport Beach poli ce an-ested one suspect, Gilbert Armenta, 19, or Rosemead, early last week when they assertedly spotted him early in the morn- ing near the Oakwood G a r d e n apartments in 16th Street. Two others fled when police ap- F remPage l TRUMA N ... ever undertaken. \l/ith his charac- teristi .. ally decisive action in Korea, he made possible the defen5e of peace and freedom jn Asia." The hospital attributed Truman's death to the "complexity of organic failures call.!ing a collapse or the cafdio.vascu1ar system." Truman entered Research Hospital three weeks ago today -after fighting lung congestion at home for two week! - and had been in a coma since ear1y Saturday. Earlier In his hospitalization be appeared to be raUying, but the com· blnation of respiratory problems, harden- ed arteries and kidney disease were too much for the old man. In ricent yean he had appeared frail and drawn, his weight down from a pttsideotial 170 pounds. He long ago abandaaed. his life-long predilection for lcq, fut ea:rJy morning walks, but made almost dally ei:curaioos on &bopping trips with bis wile, Bess, hersell 87. Mn. Truman received the sad news by telephone. A ,famUy spokesman, Randall J.,see, saJd die received It "with the same fortlWdo and Cllmoess with which a!. .. baa faced. an of thls ... Nlxo~ proclaimed Thursday a oattooal day of mourning, ordering flagi lowered to ball stall at federal buUdings for the next 30 days. The auditorium in the Truman Library, where 4he funeral services will be con· ducted , bolds only 200 persons, and at- tendance will be by Invitation only. Most foreign dignitaries were expected to &o to a memorial service in Washington's National "cathedral, rather than coming to Independence. Tributes fiowed In swiftly as word of the death wu flashed around the world, "A 20th centqry 'llant ls gone," former Pres14ent Lyo4on ll. Johnaon said In a statement lasued at Austin, Tex. "Few men of any times ever shaped the world as did the man from Independence. "President Tniman presided over the destiny of this country during one of its most turbuJent eras. Never flinching in the face of crucial natiooal choices his decisions changed the course of huffian events throughout the world." Queen Elizabeth TI and Prime Minister Edward S. Heath expressed ~heir sorrow to the American people in a wire 10 President Nixon, and the British monarch sent a private message to Mrs. Truman. 1'1issouri 's Gov. Warren E. Hearncs said the state has "lost not only a great native son, but a man we shared with the rest of the world as one of its paramount leaders of the 20th Century. Missouri was proud to have given the world the sel'\li.ces of President Truman at a time w~ his great 1trength was needed to win a war, establish peace and rebuild ravaged lands, and now we 31k the world to share our sorrow and our loss." One-car Cra sh Injures Mesan A 49-year-oto Costa Mesa woman ,vas hospitalized Mondoy when s~ lost con· trol ol her car end struck a utOlty pale. Polloe say 1'-1rs. Betty Mae White, 1971 Church St., 1va1 taken to Hoaa Memorial Ho«pltal with a fractured wrist, a cut on her chin and possible back IJ'ljurle1 , following the JO p.m. aecklent. She Waa reported In &atitfactory coodltion4oclay. The COl!islo!I occurred when Mn. ·WllJte made a !Uddtn lane change on Orange Avenue near Merrill Place and lost con- trol of her car, ofOcen said. F romPa9el DEATHS ... opposite dlrectk>n of travel. No other vehicles were Involved ln the accident, poUce 111d. _ Officer Arnold. a veteran patrolman, said the one boy who ourvtved may have . been spared from lmmedlale dtltb ' because hia body was cushioned· from the Impact by an empty trash can. l'oll<:e said a do& which bad ac- rompanled the family on the troglc outing was also kUled In the crub. proached Armenta, Smith said. The Porsches stolen earlier that night were recovered in the parking lot of the Orange Coast YMCA and aoother was recovered near the Anaheim aarage on La Palma Avenue. A fifth wu found the next day across the street from the Oakwood apartments. Police said the investigation into the auto theft ring began about the first of September and has been a joint effort among eight police departments and other agencies including p o I i c e departments in Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Orange, Anaheim and Tuatln and the Orange County Sberiff's Office and the National Auto Theft Bureau. Detective Smith said that property recovered ln the Anaheim garage irr eluded a Po1'Che engine, two Porsche transmission Ules, silc car coven, eight buckei seats, 29 tires and wheels, 17 Porsche or Volkswagen jacks, and several other items. He said the parts came from at least eight different sto1en Porscbes. Smith said the alleged leader of the auto theft ring would hire as many operators as he needed for a particular job on a given nigbt. He said he used as many as to ln one particular operation -the theft of eight Porsches that were fOWld stripped in lbe Irvine orange grov es Sept. 17. Smith said he thinks the investigation has "put a stop to the rash of Porsche thefts that have been plaguing Orange County for the past few months." Girl Nourished Throu gh, Tube ; Int estin es Gon e ROCKAWAY, N.J. (UPI) -Jan Ann \Vesterink tasted a few pieces of meat. a mouthful of potatoes and a blob or Jello. But the blor>de 11-year-oid's real Christmas dinner came through 1 tube. An operation to save her life at the Medical C.OlJege of Virginia Nov, 16 left Jan Ann without any intestines, the last stages tn the digestive process.. Doctors had found a blockage and she w .. nown to Richmond, Va., for the cpetaUon ~ movin' -both intestines. Althciugb she can 'chew encl awallow small bits of meat and other iOlld foods, they·don't do !\er any good. ·Her llOUri!b- ment cons~ tf 1pecial Ouidl &Iii intra· venously through a tube ·attached to a portable battery operated pump. The fiulds cost 140 per day. "l don't know bow we're going to pay that," Westerink said after driving Jan AM borne from Richmond for Christmas. "That's $280 a week.", He said Jan Ann's problem l! so rare that there are no foundationa from which. he can readily get funds to pay for the fluids she needs to live. "l am going to find out wbal 1 can do about lt ," he said. "Maybe the govern- ment wilt help, maybe the welfare people." "I feel flue," Jan Ann said. She said the pump doesn't bother her too much, but "1 don't like carrying it. It's heavy.'' Westerink said the pump m~ seven by three lnche> and b very compact. Baez Sang Yule Cal'ols as U.S. Raid Hit Hanoi TOKYO (UPI) -Japan's C.ommuni.st party newspaper said today fotk singer and antiwar activist Joan Baez sang Christmas carols in the lobby of a Hanoi hotel wblle antialrcraft guns thundered at raJdiDg U.S warplanes on Cbrlstma1 Eve. "In the loj>by of the Hoan Bin Hotel In- side the clty (Hanoi), Joan Baez and Prof. MJcbael Allen of the American &n: tlwar movement a:athered a small meeting to observe Chrlstmu," the newspaper Akabat.a (Red Banner) sakl. "While Mils Baea wu playing her gull.Ir aDd 1lnglng, the rumble of an. tialrcra(t fire and bomb explosions rolled th rough the building. Her companions en- cou~ged her with shouts of 'don't quit' and. 'keep eolug.' " "Miss· Baez finished her songs In a blackout· aCttr the ~ectrlc power WRJ turned oU." Holida y Rapist Sought by Police Cosio Mesa police todly "" looking for a scraggly bearded .te<illger they believe raped a 24-year~td deptttment store employ. on Cbrutmai Doly. Tho r~ victim to14 1nv .. 11gatln1 of· llcers lh< 1'" 1p()l'Olcho4 by the youth around ·1:30 1.m. as ~ was removlnc .some pacbcea from W.car. Under Olrtat of a knlte,)e thtn forced her to a vacant lot .tn ·u.i eoo b*k of C.oltal Street where !,;_lrf:ld to force his al(ecilons on her. ~wJ:m:I~ tbe woman refused, he threatened to barm, her with tbe weapon, aooordlng to • pcili.. report. The youth, described u 111' fdt tall. sl<Mer, with 1houlder ltnlth hllr and 1 t....s.y 1tubble, Oed Iller lnstructln1 his vlctlJn to lie sUll for 11 leut IO - • OAIL."t PILOT ....... W ............... POLICE DIRICT 1'-A'fl'IC, INTERVIEW WITNESSES AFTER CRASH THIS MORNING ' ' Coll lllon 1t VlctOrla Street and N.wport Boulev•rd JnvolY•• Auto, Ambulance, Poll~ Car Ambu"lance ,. Car Crash; 6 Hurt in Mesa By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL ' Of tlle o.ltr ll'IW St9ff ,,,. Six persons were lnjure'd in a mi<f. morning colli.s.ion when an ambalance carrying a heart attack victlm wu struck broadside In 1 bu.sy Colt.a Mesa iniersection sendlni the emerseney un1t crashing into a nearby police car. Walter G<lddicksoo, 64, 491 E. Colt.a Mesa St. was receiving resuscltaUon from a Costa Mesa fireman and a Seal'• Ambulance Service attendant wbfp tbe emergency vehicle, just a bJoct from C-Osta Mesa Memorial iJolpital, wu struck. ' The accident oooumd llhortly J>ef<n 10 a.m. at the ln~Clll • of Victoria Avenue and Newport ltoulevml. Goddlcbon wu dead ca arrival at Memorial Hospital. HoopllaJ oflldals said, boftver, hll delth 'ajlpelred to have hem ciouled by ID -fial hwl attack ml not the ICCldeot -· Most oer1oua1J lojurM In the II*" tacullr-eoll)l!on wu a_,. ~i.... 211. 314 E. ca.ta -St., .... -ed head lnjurtel, ~ ip.;. ......... at lloai ¥emadll llalpllll Ja Ne'l!l!Ol1 Beach. . . r . i • Recelvlog troatmmt at i!olg, lor 111)11~· pie laoerallons and Olber ilijurleo. ore Irene and Grav!co ~ H•i Del Mar Ave., c:osta MeSI, the ooeupu.ta of the late model sedan wbicb col1~ with CRASH 'AI'TIRMATH:'Rl!SUSCITATOR fROM AMBULANCE IN STREET 1_,,.ncy llqvlpmonf W11 Being Used It Time of Accident the. ~anct. , ~ 11 -DOI lmmledai.ty bfwn who of the two wu m1vi"8 the vtbicle. • Colt.a M ... ~ PlllllJp Wmbam, 29, of 2332 Elden st:, COolo lieu, lo alao bospltallud 11 llolg with mulUple In- juries. ~ ' Tbe· ambulance driver, 22-)1j1Mld Richard Spl'l(Ut, WU lilted In lllllfac- tory ocridlt.ioo at Cotta Mesa MilnorLal; Hospital . Body of Unidentified Man Found in :Seal Beach Cosio Mea polleo patrolmaii Paul Ale~ WU lilted In good -at Britto! !'¢ Medkal OOllter. ' Accori!liig tQ 1 -c..ta Mesa Flit ~ .~. a call was recetved at 9·11. •·!!'· to go to God- dlcli!on's ... ~ and offer medical aid. . Tho body of'an unldentlfied young men, apparei!ly dmpped 1"'m I paalnc c2r, was discovered early this morning on a freeway offramp in 'Seal Beach. Seal Beach Police ta.id the youth was11 white male, &bout 18 to 22 years of age, with no identUicaUon. "A preliminary check by the coroner Arter providing iniUal first aid. God, dick.son was placed . in the kal's Ambulance which was travelling 1 west, bound on Victoria when the colllsiOs/t with, lhows he was dead about '8s72 hours," the Rodriguez vehicle occurred. \ Se.al Beach Lt. Lee Gatti reported. "We SESAME STREET SESAME STI\EET IS ABOUT THE ,tONL Y STREET IN THE HARBOR AkEA THAT HASN1' HAD A CARPET INSTALLATION BY ALDEN'S. don't know the cause of death yet, or where be nUght have been tflled:" ' He was found by passing motOri.rts : about l :•s a.m. on the 7th street off,, ramp at the junction of the san Diego and San·Gabriel freeways in Seal Beach. • Lt. Gatti said It Is apparent {he dead 1 I man was not killed where he was found, but had apparently been dropped there from a vehicle . IN OUR FIFTEEN YEARS, WE HAVE C ARP ET ED THOUSANDS OF HOMES IN COSTA MESA, NEWPORT BEACH, LAGU~A BEACH AND HUNTINGTON BEACH. ONE ' !NEIGHBOR TELLS ANOTHER UNTIL WE HAVE WORKED IN EVERY HOME •ON A BLOCK. ALDEN'S I TH FQllMULA is SIMPLE-WE TRY· T(\ MAKE EACH CUSTOMER HAPPY. ASK YOUlt NEIGHBOR-WE PROBAB~Y CARPETED HER HOMt llP WEH 0 AVEN'T, BRING H£R1N WITH 'you.1 • CARPETS • DRAPES 1 1663 Ploc:entla Ave. COSTA MBSA 646-4838 HOUISt Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5'30 '-Flll., 9 to 9-SAT., 9:30 to 5 • • ' l I 7