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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-28 - Orange Coast Pilot7 • • • • • • ) • . / ~rs ano1 ll.s.,• London Enabassy . . . . -~Peri#ll Hughes Privacy ~ -... ~ • . . . • • • . ·•· .. • • • •· • Simple Rites · '1eld · f0:r Mr. Truman 2 Catlwlics OK ' ·: Surv.i,vql. ,Acts NEW YtBIX .(AP) -T!oo llOain • -...........__ • tbot the ... ~-. ' . plane cruh ourv1-..1a °'" -who ale lllall ol 4-1 =p•""' I to keep~ 11fCW J --111'·" • "A -Is ....... lo eat : d~ bumln flelb If ke Is no : feulble :lltetnatlve -for survlVal," ' Mer, Au!lln VauP,ali and ~ Rev. • · WIIliOm Smith wrote In a _.. on the oubject. The priests ....... t b.~ ln- terprotatiCNt of Catholic prloclpals as spokesmen for the Roman Catholic Arcbdtocae ol. New'Yort. Hughe$' ~ " • -:"1"" !' ,_ .P.rimrv~ . -~-J • i Threatened WNDON (AP) -The U.S. Embassy today thrNieMd the privacy of hermit billlonalre Howard R. Hu!lfles, boled up on the top floor of a hmlrloul London hotel. . An embassy spokesman aid Ibo rl· 1'!'f.-old American tyooon'a pe_.t 6· plied oome time ago and be -r...,..i H. o Bi ped wllhtn.41 bours tr the em'-1-r ~,·.t· ano1 p ~~~.:i:;11,:.r,..a~.-aa1dthe spot~. "be-will 'have to call B H . . ~. 1111 la Ille -1 application If Y e_aviest form and . pay a $12 f~. That's what every American traveling without a paaport ~· to do, and it will be the -TT s Bomb• aame for Mr. Hughes." ~. • 1 n g It the embassy enforce! that regula-" ---0 tlon, it will be the fint time in memory -SAIGON IUPI) -Swedish diplomatic that the U.S. ·goV.mment has treated • '-'rts said Amerlcmt'1352s and fighter-11 .......... crllnary citiuo. ~ ~ he lie bu tieer' living for months In J>omben hit Haool at noon today In t Manoaua, tlie capital ol Nicaragua, ap- 'lieavlest daytigbl boimbardmenl -Of• the pa,..Uy witfiout any qliestlon being nl> war. ed about bis passpxt. He n~ In and out i. The Sovie~news .qency Tass reported o1 the Unltad Sta tea after the Mrtbqual:e itl>at oalta ~Qf the North Vlelnamese tut wee-drove him frOm Managua, ' , ~ ' . . , ' ' . .,. ·( I ! ·: .. .' eapital bido-"oraaed from the face ailil apparU]y no ob)«tkiii •• made to :=::::;=,-..-::::: ~ the eartb-" --bis not hlvinc a P.IDflOl't. And the efu. . -"' DAn.-T f"fL.OT """ """ ., There wera hints In the government· busy 1011gbt to ex(iadite bio admlifllon ;o :::;:::-. ~$ 1( A1tsoN? PAlt ~ li.'EMENTE'S PR.SiJ>l!l!ITJAL Hl!totn'S RAZED llY FIRE ... trolled-pro11 In Sillgoo that the North Britain by le1llq lllo Home Office that =.-:---= P.I<-Ware Ha...........,byJ:ow Water Prassure ind Mild.Sarita' Ana Wlnd'During Bl•ze "1ielnameie mlght have had "'°"lb and be"" coming '!lthol!t a 9alld puoport. ~~::-·~ __ ·: :;;:...-:.cc •• -~·~'~-------- that the raida-mJchl be ballad ...... the Brftlsb lmmJjp'allan nilea allow the ad-• ~ 7 C. Ioth paraue1 1n the -1 few .,. 1n m1iaiOO o1 1~ w1-· PusP<>rts Near--•-·e-..... m-e "onler to resume the peace talta In Parla, 10 Jq as • carry doclimet\ls .tc-.:&A ,.. .. . Fann Workers' But the Commw1Jst' Vletnamose in o.tahlllhlnl their tlty and·nadoaallty. ·-. l'ui• wm stlll IAUlnl. 'dell,ant. Sourcescloaeto·ll\Jgbet'aaldlieplanned -· .ltatemenls. • . ., ., In Britain fOt lix months, -ill)y Cle te n 1 .:... t ·~_ ... Strike Involves ,The u.s eo-..i reported • ..-.. lonco!'· A Home Olfie spokeoman said • men -. evewpmen . ,~rlcall 1osse1 ol ~ and -Iii the be i<ialcl remain .'tu long u It ·suits -, ' -• . -l . . . , ' . , niautve aerial auault tNt W "nO word him.".-1_ · -.Baitle of Sound J111t today's IJomliing act1ftlliil: U,8. Soffi'e 80Ul'Cel Jll\!dlcted tbot Laborite ' '" ' fl.lat')' IOUrCOl,Nld·Stiltea iplnat the loei ·oJ, the .c:-,.· .. ~t·· ·D...: . A ,_ · s· .-ted ~"to~:::~ ~i::.:~11vlng jlr!l:eo~ · v _u T_ns. __ ; f$QR : -~pee _ ,;Mid thert wero Ulree llanol'ralcla today. tmtmmt to Hucbea beca-'ol b1a BRAWLEY (AP) -United Fann Workers Wlion members are picketing D'Arrlgo Brotliers or CallfornJa leltuce •& 'n>e aJIDDland ~the 1 ... ol two -1th. . .; .iOiiN 'Vii.TiRzA .~re 11531 and the abootlng down of .a ·illllbea and hll ~ landed at • _ '!! .,._.. - -_ , ollyGl'eeOGlanl.-..bellc:optor.over GatorictAlfportJOmlllo-olLondon A ~lnl !!"'~to be set Iii' orth Vietnam, bi'lnalni .. to ·1' ·the llhortJy after mldnilbl -ay. They anonlst1 swept through six partlal)y· "'8nber of the !kill&n afra•••lc • ' · (See JIUG-..... I) com"'eted residences 'in tbe Preoldential 6omben loll hi the' al' war !hit i;; .. · ' · -' ·· -Het{b1s development In San Clemente .~a:!w~-'tafJ.:.iE~ .. -MA.-N,' 65, 'PtANs :=rd::~i;iic:.u=.~ ~TO:"::..~.:r..-m:. ro"}i,~i~-; E i"'"'ON .::...;,u~i:~-p~~ a'::. ,HllOI \l'-.Y· A IJunp .... flliort . ~a,. ,If' i , fled Uploalon reddened the skies In the ,}alil . u;.. 11521 were lbot -bJ · , ,...,_ ,.,,_ (UPI) ftlJe most ,..ly portI,it o( the city and tlrow , ~· . .f' • ---. "'"' • , crowds of llchta..n wbo clogged the , !'!'be ·l!Grth Vie-4elePtlill! ID ...., bll qe• are ..,....., New Yuro •lndlna -lelidlng to tbe tract. Pllrls -a tljledal -todlt Ur ID"""' of1htlt tele9tsloD .W. Biid· A mlldJlonla Ana wind condition and ,aa'ytq tbe..Amertcm ·-.... ....... ~ •• bot* to ba llvllll ill a -bany -... a lane fire bydi'.ant • ed-olllanolandllllaNwwftlttho, crie • ~· 11,'llMoot G ...... I*'id' ...... ~utheybat• ·force ~ an ear)hquolio, illllng ~'.....'._ -••-uJ ,tied to.., Ille ~'blaze from "tbOullnds" .t -le. · .......... ,.... lo "-an ..,. t Oii "Pl ...... lo* ltnlcture• neartiy. ~ It said Nortl> Vietnamese ....... 8bot the peot ol G1111d T-either NeW ~ tn. i11act ' bad to ration llle ;4owi1 71 u.s. aircraft, lnclDtial II 11121, Ym'I Evt or New v-·· Day. w-=; It at· .. -Uma to the "'lit nine d111-'!be dlmb will be b1a elgbth !'Ith -Dlacad o1 the varfooa '> 'l'lle U.S. ComNad aid Ibo P1ntaaon · ~ ol Iii National Oulc!Oor 1w lo 0.. •ol!>IJe lzytlran~ At ga>11111nwta¥1111'dlllitptoill9lllaa ~ _.-(NOl.'I). The group 'OllO point the water 1ave out altogether artaa ... 1n-.i M.U. .......... ' bal nacliad the peot oa)y In 1111. for a few -!.it bJ that time the (lleo ~ ~ •> . fire .... DH"1 Clllllalned. '· • , The fire wu the second serlout In- -eideot ti>. lato-jila<e..ln the ~ project • thia week. • " ,· ' .. fields llm!.ln a U....-k-old strike that li8s I~ '4"el ~ aound equipment. Jmperia! County sheriff's depuUes said Earlie-: In the week Developer Jolm Wedneeday both aides have brought Dou~r. reported the theft Of $1,500 !nu•--· • to the n tds' In p from the. C0111truction lite. -.--en • · As be ..ntcbed the-firemen '~ While picketers with b a t t e r y . r u n tlle blue Wedoesday Douglass angrily in-.. meeaphonea e:short the worten to leave slated th&.t the.re was "no pos&lble ,Vay" · the field, the crowen' .0000 truck tries that '° Jarge a ~ cOuld have ~ io drown fhem. out wt.th Mexican music. (t!oo BLAZE,' Page I) "The labor dispute ceuJd be delcribed . . . as a hatUe of aound1," a deputy laid. City ' Ai.Cle 'Gel8 Fin'e About 200 wilo1i members are on r• .. _. • • ~ 1 , llrlte. A judge ha limited lbe number of SAN ,llAF.AEL (AP) -The Marin picket• to 15 at HCh o1 tbm ftelcla O>unty counoel, {louglas J. Maloney, b11 northwest of here. Pleaded autlll' )n Marin Municipal Court Tha strike began' after negotl1tlon1 to a.dlarge.ol*"'>lL driving and wu fin-betoeen D'Arrtcoand the AFL-CIO union eel ACll and lb• a )'di''• IUDUJW')' pro-over renewal ol a ttM>year contract botlon. Mdnlclpot C:Ourt Judge Robert A._ broke down. Last monlh the. company Spiallmen lnaled the sentence 6lld also laid oil all union memben at fields In -..i llilloaey'a driver's license to be Firebaugh, Calif .. •nd_ E!Of1 Arl1. after mtricted for business use only for the contract talks aeaaiocua, a union , nest fO dayl. spokeaioan Aid . \ 250 Friends Pr~sent;No Eulogy Said INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (AP) -Alter simple ftmeral services devoid of eulogy, former Preoldent Harry S Truman was to be buried today In the courtyard of the Truman Ubrary in the presence of his closest friends. The people of Independence -and some who traveled hundreds of miles - still were streaming put the bier where Truman was lying In state when the doors closed. (Addltlooal pictUl'eS, Page 5). Maj. Ron David of the 5th Anny, whlch is bandllng the state funeral, said of. ficers estimated 75,000 bad seen the cof4 fin at 9:26 a.m. (PST), wben the last man - a Catholic priest from Chicago - went through with two young friends. The lobby had been open lo the public conUnuously since 1 p.m. Wedoeaday. Mn. Truman, -·ltad been secluded In her grief In the house Ibey shared for 53 years, bad a restful nigh~ a family spokesman said. "Sbe Is making family decialons and participating In the list-minute thinp that come before any family funeral," be added . The 87-year-old widow was to be at the final rite, beginning with a '5-minute service at noon . Only 250 guests were invited, a few with national renown, but mostly the peo- ple Truman knew most inUmately in his 88 years. The last events were in keeping with the unpretentlout 11>lemnlty that bas mm;ked the daya since Truman's death Tuesday after a S.weeka illness. Sens. Ednnmd Muskie of M-, (~ TRUMAN, Pap ZI Orange Weadler ft'R be llUDl)Y on Friday, but Ille temperature will be a little nJppy, due to the PacUJc Northwett cold froot moving Into tile .,..., m,IvJ of !O are upected, with ovemlgbt lows in the 408. INSIDE TODAY Tiie Aarfctdl!lre D<par-..t ha.I G?mounctd the beginning of a 1tcO!td major roimd lit Ille great tDicnle wor. Hot d-Of1 fol><I· ing and CO!ltent Ttfonft lo the object of tM court ordn. See story an Page 5. L.M. lk'tf • AM ~ fJ C1.,._.llo , ,... lJ.19 c .......................... ~ " .,,.... Qllliliity t ow..... '' .... ».a OW-.._.... t T......_ 11 .-..wt .... ' TtlelMn ,,.,, ............... ,,.,, ....... . .... It ............ 1>11 _...1tc111 ". }I WWllll ..... w f DAILY PILOT s B...,kok Drctna Hostages Spared In Agreement BANGKOK (UPI) -Four Palestinlan guerrillas seized the Israeli embassy to- day and threatened to b\ow It up along with six hostages unless Israel released 36 Palestinian prisoners. But tonight they agreod lo free the hostages in return for safe conduct from. 'lbailand. Air Chief ManhAl Dawee Chulasapya annouoed the guerrilla decision to accept safe conduct and a police official said that, in return, the guerrillas agreed to release the ail< laraells bold IMlde the embassy building more than 10 hours under a threat of death. Tawl would also make the trip, and that the g11enillas would be allowed to keep their weapons. Police officials said &11'8.Dgements ~·ere being made tor a special flJgbt to take the guerrillas out cl lbe country. They said the most likely desUnaUoo waa Cairo. Oawee made the announcement Jn the floodlit street in front of the embassy "1d lhen after further consultations in a tem- porary command post across the street, be, O!artcbal and lbe Egyptian lllJ. bassador returned to the embassy buildine. With them they carried two bot- tJes of liquor. • -. ,.,.. .. Pflflfl 1 HUGHES ..• .,..,. beld up lot at -!lalf an boour while olllclala checked tho m)'llerloul billionaire'• fdeolity. After eonslderable telepbonin(, he waa allowed to enter the ClOllllz7. ,_ curtalDod ,llolb ~ bRulbt tho pany lo tho nlllMIOl'1 lltn at Ille !'vi:, o..iooldll1 Hyde Part, and lluihet moved Into tho ,...1 wJni on tho ..., iloot, 'll 1uoo· a day. fte.. wing was 9Uled off, IDd an In-system waa lmtolled at tho mabl door. Police wllb walkJe.talkles patrolled Ille -below. and g..-11141!J1ed all door< to lbe wine. ' Evon Illa llrHlcapo door< ""',tealed lo ...., ..i tlle~llm ol •••-and pbotota' zptsN crowded tbe lobby. A .,_.,, woman vacuuming the e<>r· ridor wu escorted everywhere by two guard>. An Engll!h vi>lce chaUenged all visitors over the intercom and sald : "I'm from RotbschUds. Go.a.Way." Dawte made no men.lion of lbe ho.stages when he emezged with Egyptian ambass&dor MUJtaffa El Tawi from the embassy after a face-to-face meeting wilb the (Uenillaa but the Police official said the hostages wauld be !reed. The IUerrillaJ identified tbemaelves as the Black September Organhatloo which carried out tbe massacre of Israeli athletes at the MWlich Olympics and said it was responsible for the malsacre at the Lod International airport in Tel Avtv in which Japanese gunmen shot and kill- ed a score of persons. . ::.. • .. .... .., , ' 1 UP*T .......... PEOPLE WAIT IN EARLY MORHING LINl'.TC).:.VllW HARWTRUMAN'S CASKET Tho Formor PrliWent Wiil Bo ~ltd,ff;:T._n Ubrar,y.Courtyerd Amngemait. far lfucbos' visit appar- ently were made by N.M. l\OlblcllUd Ii Sou, tho l4idglr...-."Dle- ol Ille -. -"1>'Jliill*iM"<l• r .. fuse<! to --on ~>Mrival, btll busineu dtcl& ••nicr liO &me lo cheCt tnvestiiMOt (l!OO~ tbe ex-panding ~~ . l'olarket, Dawee, a ranldna member of the military controlled government, entered the-Embassy with the Egyptian am- bassador and won the guerrilla promise IO leave the country. He said he and Deputy Foreign Minister Chartchai Chunahawan would accompany the guerrillas when they left Thailand. Other of£icials said that El Pair Captured Mter Escaping Sherif f's Van Two men who kicked out the rear door of the sheriff's jail van Wednesday in Santa Ana were overpowered and recap- tured after a hriel struggle with pursuing deputies. Orange County sheriff's officers iden- tified the pair as William Joseph Cormier, 20, Room 302 Hacienda Hotel, Laguna Beach and Jerome Vernon Bn>OU, 21, Pau!Jbo, Waalt Officers said both men will be charged wit.h felony escape pending approval by I.be district attorney's oflice of the new allegations. Jail deputies said Cormier and Brooks were en route to the county courthouse from the Jail when they made the~ escape bid. From Pqe l BOMBING •.. ped their bombt only OD military lar&els. lbe only reports of wbat actually was ha-"'tl In the groateat aerial uaault of the war came from Communist nt'h agencies and neutral diplomats in Hanoi. 1be Hungarian news agency MTI re)JOrled today that a blazing BS2 shot down over Hanoi Wectne.day crashed near the presldenUal palace and that several crermen died In lbe n....... lt sald the wreckage demolished a few buildings but no Vietnamese were tilled. President Nguym Vao Thieu met for an hour and 45 minutes today with U.S. Amba1sador EDswortb Bunter and Gen. Fr<deticli: C. Weyand, the Anierican commander in Vietnam, presumably to dilcuss the U.S. bombing operatiom a1ainat North Vleln8Jll. nn Song, the' dally newspaper cl....i lo 'lbleu, aald that 'lbleu, Bunker and Weyand met "amid 1WDOl> that the U.S. will stop bombln1 areaa above the 20lb Parallel In the nut lew days In order lo resume the talks in Pari!I." The newspape.r quoted a "reliable source." Beca~ of Commtmlst protests about the full-scale bombing of North Vietnam and an American request for a holiday break, the four parties at the Paris peace talks scheduled no meeting today. It was the first miss in the talks in two monlha. The meeting is usually held every Tbunday and '° far there have been 1'11 ~ions •ln<e the talb began in 111611. They lhreateoed deaUt to the Israeli• inside if their demaodl for release of guerrillas held prisoner in· Israel were not met hy 8 a.m. Friday (S p.m. PST Wday). "For the sake of the king and Thailand they have agreed to leave the country," said Dawee who is agriculture minister and an influential member of the govern-ment. Israeli Prime Mini!ter Go1da Meir held an hour-long emergency cabinet session in Tel Aviv to discuss the altuation. Her government has never yielded to Pales- tinian demands when Israeli hostages were seized in th! pasl "We will not take any violent action if it is not necessary," a Thai official told reporters. "We don't want bloodshed or any harm to come to the six people who are being held 8.1 bostges." The four guerrillas, two of them wear- ing dark business suits ..nd the other two in short jackets, climbed a si.1-foot wall in front of tbe embassy shortly before noon. They gestured a local emptoye out of the .compound with their automatic weapons and charged inside the building. From Page l BLAZE .•. touched off by accident. The burned units were in the IJ'lminll stages and no electricity was on at the time. . lronlcally, WedJleaday was the lint nlgbt that a lull-time oecurlty guaril WU on duty at tbe OOIJllructloo site. '!'be alalJl1 wu p1-d in by several -shortly befono 7 p.m. and volunteers were dispatched Immediately. 'llleJr 'lirst .. efforts ... rei<b 1he ' blue, however, were stalled because of a JOCk. ed gate on a back road. Se<urlty penonnel finall3 opened the gate. "It was a fire storm by the time we could get to it," said Fireman James Dahl, after the blue ·subsided. "Sooie of us started bitting tbe shake roofs of these nearby structures to keep tbe flre lrom spreadin1," be added. They lllClCeeded, but lbe ooe duster of houses WU turned lo aabea. Residents in nearby nelgbborboods watched In alarm u tbe pint &low began to rise in ~ Uy. · Among them -San Clemente Mayor Arthur Holmes. He and Police Patrol IL Raymond Hartman jumped In a car and sped lo "the fireacene. "I ltnew It was a bl1 one and I ftcured Ibey could .,. all tho bdp 1hey could get," Hartman said. - He and the mayor, bolb wearing 1treet clothes, manned tbe noizles for a hall- bour. The episode left both men aodden. "It'1 the first time I've ever done such a tblng," Holmes II.Id, b1s voice ,hoarse from a cold. Fl'Olll Pqe l TRUMAN .•• Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota and Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri ac. cepted Invitations. After lbe funeral, the library wilb fla dattling display of gifts Truman received in the nearly eight years of his preliden- cy, will be dosed until after New Year'• Day. As the nation began a day of mourning proclaimed by President N l x o n , thou.sandJ still were in line to put by the catafalque in the marble lobby or the library. Some wai~ hours for the one- minute glimpse of the coffin. They lined up on the drives leading lo the l\illside building before milltary pallbearers, in slow-motion precision, placed the coffm on a calafaJque draped in black silk. The people waited patieaUy while Richard M. Nixon and Lyndon B. Johnson bad separate, private moments at the coffin of the man wbo preceded them in the natJon•s hJgbestoffice. Once the doors were opened, people of all ages streamed past the mahogany coffin in eloquent, silent tribute. They moved lhrougb at the rate of ne.rly Z,000 per hour. Margaret Truman Dan1eJ, her husband, Clifton, and their four boys were at the brief ceremonies that precoded the lying. In-state. So were 60 otben who had 'been pvt of Trum8n•s 1Pi:ditiiJft1fe•w.0·8UCb • tho lamlly maid, a Jonc-dlbe gun! and -Conway, who for matl1 J<8n WU Truman's secretarj~ , , Shaw.n M. :BP.dges Dies of Illness; Services Friday . Memorlal l\meral aervicea are set Fr~ day lot Mrs. Shawn Mc BrJdiea, :Ill, member of a Southern callfomla news media family, wbo died Wedneaday lollowlng a brief lllneas. Rllet will be at 2 p.m. In st. ~·· Lutheran Churcb, illb and Parton 1treeta, Santa Ana. A Mlsaion Viejo -4 Mrs. Brldgeo """"'"'1bed Wednesday afternoon In Mlaalon Community Bolpllal, apparently due to complications from a blood dlaeaaa. Survivors Include her father, Herold Andersen, DAILY PILOT ............ room auperlntendent and her mother, Evelyn Andersen, abo ol Ille compoolnc room staff, who live 1n &ant.a Ana. Sbe leaves abo a brother, lJoo, USC sports lolonnallon director; 'her hulbucl John A. Bridges and two 11111811 cblldren. ~al 81T811gemenla are bein( halJdl. ed by Brdwn Colonlal' MortuarY, Santa Ana, where officials said today the full list of Mn:. Bridges' .aurvivora hid mt yet bef.n eofhpleted. ~-' ,. " Fire Cblel Burl 118.-k, captain Don Hodgaon and three police detectlve!I went to the site of the fire tbl! ~ to launch an anon investigation. OUMM CGAn ar No details of that probe were im- <s , mediately available. ' , WitneMes -among them Assistant ~'tl;"\'f W"'ll ·: _ ~:,.Cb.:~ts~~-; = ,,_ ~ C»M~n.v ,,LOT,....,....,. blast.4 momeots before the Bre wats ~first Attorney Disbarred SAN FilANfYlSCO (AP) -An altomQ. given a Jail sentence ttds montb tor brlbi- lol a wltneSi was disbarred 1Verlnesday by .tho. Callt>mia Saprell1e . Court; Michlel. Hanley bad boeh.._.,... tO from six montha to 10 years after lii "COl'llMl!!!!f ... "'•'*-11 •lllld.,, "notklea. · .. , ""°'-co.. l'!'!!'IJ'" -· _.,, -Jrlie.Dlaie wu the 1'teat in:t ljJt ol IOI· ~11:; ez.rt.J.k ... = ~ batk'i~iniMJarge rftldenltalpf'QJe¢ HtlntlflttM"~11'CMitl'lh vat1n ~-~ehleu.lar acceu1o Jbe tract ove.r1ook-~ trvlM/SNdllNdl w s." CMmtttW ~;. ing 1be \\'.C3tern Wbl.te House hll,..ciOild .... ,.. etPll•~. A. ....... """"" ~ • .. storrm ot:-controversy l!.nd .. remalils llll'ltlM .. ,u1111111td ie1vrlr,. .... ~ unresolved. • TM ,..~I Pllbl!IMrll """' 111 •I a WW lay '"-'· C.•• """'· .CllroNlll. 126M. ~ guilty lo payiilg: I· murder eyi. wi~ llfJO lo leavt '°'!n :iutj!>g bls _ cll"!IV• prelJmJnary ~inll-~: :: . -Ro\1rt N. W19' .. tBICl9111 _. hblllfW J1e~ lit. C11rl•Y Viet ,,..letlll Ind 0-.-M MM11W •- '1110111:~· ·- lllofllff A. lt11t,W"• M•i...-.•Nr ai.11., H. t.... li1)t.rl P. NI.II ..... ni~... ·--a.. Mell .. w.:".;:r .,,., .....,.,. had!: nu N lllfk••• t..1911111 ltlktl: m ~t ".,... ............. '-ct!: '"" ........... '" ~ .. '*191 • c.lftlrll ..... Tll1pt t 1714) '41-4U1 a...., Mt••" 1 1 '°"'11 .. ,.. c.....""" ...... w,.. ... 492-MJt ,,_~Or--ee.ry -......... ....,Ut ~. tm, ~ CU.I l'Wiltllllll ~. ... lltwt ......... lht!rt ..... -..r.1 """"" ... ........IM!MMs "91'1'111 .., -,.......... •ttl!evt ~· ,.,. ...... ., .,,.....,. ""*'· ..... dllt "'"''" HN It CMI• ~. Q'""'"'le. ~Jroft 1¥ own... a.M .,....., • 1¥1111 Q,11 '""'"""' Mli11wr ..,...,ltlw CIM "'*'llllt'. ~~if is ··J'=1~,~pe .. ed B~y, 7, DisapPe~;ed"3if,ee~.:Ago -MERCSD (AP ) -Clrlstmal tame and wtn1 at tile ~home lleN bl! ~al poWg01 left for Ste.it llllU are unoplM!. • 7"-·s.._ s1ayner, 1, dlaa_...s "1lhoul a trace .., bis Wll-h61ne 1rom -mor.thanthroeweeuqo . Tl!AllS WELL IN DELBJRT Stayner•, eyco whon he speab o1 bis ICl!'I dlaappearance, "He wu tut -by a gaa station .,.,p1oye about tbtee bloc:ko lrom our home. We )1111 don't know wllat hap)IOfted In blm after that," Stayner uld in an interview. DRESSED IN BLUE JEANS, bootl and a belvy coa4 Stevlt laJW ....... home at bl1 appointed how' Dec, I and IUbeeq\lent pbone calla ad )'alka dirtm tile llreellaUed to tum up hla Wheruboub. ' • • , • The temperature in tldl ceotral ian J-1a VaU.,, city lbD ti1iJit dropped to tho low Illa as It did for a week thereafter, Alllborltles lur that If the boy waa bljured, he may have been a vldlm ol UJlOIUlt • f > ' - -~· ....... -·r . "' -BalJr Ret!alled Newpq_r.t Man .Jlememb~ra Truman --• -• . ·-. " By L. PEIEA ICRIEG Of "'! °"" ..... u.tt Everyone wbo ever met limy S Truman bQ a alory •be.rt blm. David ll!alloy of lJllle>-Bolboa Island ii one ol them. Retired now, Malloy was a mortician in Los Angeles and was fairly big in Republican circles. One of his boihbi.es was staging production shows in places like Hollywood Bowl. • tt waa in the heat of th~ 1948 election campalgn that Ma11oy, 69 and reUred now, was head of the entertainment com- mittee for a nlly at the Hollywood Bowl for GOP candidate Tom Dewey. "It was a tremendous success,'' Malloy recalls. "We really packed them in." So •uccesslul it was, the next day Malloy got a phone call. "Dick DU:on of 20th Century Fox called me frantically," Malloy recalJed. "He told me the Democrats bad just found out Truman WU coming in for I rally at Gilmore Stadium in three days." "We don't have any stars, no bands, no mules or donkeys, nothln,g," Dixon told him. "What the bell do you want me ·to do .abw~ II," Malloy nnwnben llil·e:ract ~beam, you .. put .. ~ at Gllmcn stadlum," WU the reply. Malloy ,qJ<f be cooldn't '"""" ldl ~ lrlend &pd lbree ' day1 lat<r. lb... w ... mUIW'lllid wt •iitll"jlttttY' l!llfi'lild 'dliDJtarl04 and"aTlllOit' a·liill1io6!0 !"' band to ireel HST, · "It wun't as IUcceaful 11 the Republican rally," ~ &ay1, "but everybody had a good time." Malloy said he got to meet the Prosi· dent, •and he'll never foriet H. "It was a great 2'.e&sure," be sai4. "I talked with him for a tpne and be in- troduced me to blJ wlfe, saying, "I want you to meet Bess Truman." Malloy said he never voled for Truman but he liked him more than Dewey. "When I met Dewey he was very personable, but he WU mote aJOOf, COid- er. Whereas Truman wu a personable and wann person. f was one of his ad- mirers," Malloy said. "He seemed to fit right in with the environment there, the pe<>ple." Malloy said while be liked Truman, he was sure Dewey would beat him at the )JOiis. "I wa s gullible like so many other peo- ple," Afalloy said. "I didn't think he bad a cha.nee." Scientist to Resign Position in Pentagon WASlll!iGTON (AP) -The • Pen· tqon'1 top scieqtlst and weapom apert, Dr. John s. Foster Jr., la expeded to resign within a re.., weeks'p the Washington Post reported ·tod.,.."' ostb- ha1 occupie<I' bl• ·Od-Depmtmenl )JOSI ain<;t 196$, amt bas.,be<n a..centnl liiure in the ~evelopment o I sophisticated weapons. i n c I u d i n g missiles, warheads and bombers. .)l.J. 9al'l'flll JANUARY whic\1 !!!lliin-jOIJll Jan~. 1. "He ftli been Wa mUi!ig a temPoo,ry ham In or some til!J.o,~l,-tb · ~."a soor<e ck19e to Hilgbes" told tile London Times. "Mr. Hughes looks on Britain as an Engli.sb-speaking country with good communicaUoos, relatively free o f bureaucracy and somewhere that can af. l~blm aome privacy." l!u(lio! .... td , wt bis British fn!erest• t••>Jil;dlii • • • -~ . -~ .. ~ ~ --.Schrnitz .. Pio~1µn To Be Re-aired On Channel 50 Congressman John Schmit> will discuss his plans for the immediate future in a taped interview to be re-aired tonight at 8 o'clock on KOCE-TV, Channel 50. Schmib was defeated in .hil primary bid !or ttnomlnallon u the Republican candidate in the 15th District by Orange County Assetaor Andrew J. Himbaw. He wu later defeated as the presidential candidate of the American Independent Party. Three Orange County newsmen will In- terview lhe lame duck congressman on "Focus Qrance County" hotted by Jim Cooper. They are Jim Dean, eieartlve editor of the Register, Tbomu Keevil, editor of the DAILY" PILOT and llonnl Sftly•, -tfOllttcaJ writer" for ··111e Los Angeles Times. " The l'l<ll?8ll' WU also abown .~ 18 and it. ·•·· ~ J~. • • • ' RetJ. ,~atellite Up· .. . MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Uolon launched on Wednesday another Cio8mos satellite, the Mlst in the secret series. ' Begins Toclayl ~ ... lial Savings ThJoughout the Store DHXD. SOl'A .... 179.00 DUXIL LOVISIAT ..... 171.00 489 319 15 to 25% SAVINGS on Several Bedroom, Dining Room and Occasional Collections by ..• DREXEL a..i HERITAGE H.J .. GA~~ETf fURN,fJURE 'ROHSSIONAL , . INTWOA DESllONIU Optft Mon,. ti.ur1. A hi. Eve ... ' 2111 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MEV., CALIF • • ' c ' I thursda,, ~r ~6, 1972 s DAIL V PILOT 3 Capo Beac,h Loses Property to Two N eighbor·s Uy JACK BROBACK Of ~ ~ ...... IMilf Capistrano 'Beach resldenlS lost two more battles Wednesday against what they call the <'Olltlnual •rodln& ol their community by adJolnlng dtltt. In the fint action, the LoCll Agency Formatlan Commission approved an- nuaUon of 65 acres to San Juan C.plstrano. Tbe property Is located oa Ibo eut i!lcto ol' Del l)Napo ~t, a • 1 l'! .. llon' to s.n CJ\Oltf tc, localjid aoulh BIU4 Fin Del~. • · • • ol the 8IJ1 Jlltgo P,...way .on ~. w91!t II Ji owned by C. Micabd Inc., 36 end of the clty. acres, and Noboni Jwata, 28 act"es. It tocl~ lf;ntaUv,ly "as an addltiona~ waa part ot a lqer ~ 1'1)'<11' 111. att"! bl a pock<! be\ween ~ city and • Homtslad ...,...u .. ol 213 aem wbldl the'~ annent!Gn. - was turned doWll by tho' liAFC lwo '.Ille "'•ere llJUltxatlon wu n;q1!tSted monU.. ago. • ' • by the Rolltrt H. Gnmt corp. anl! •i>-~ ......i adlon' CCJJceftild Ill acril --~ tiJ the dty. N'elthet the property · wblcli tllO <Oinll1!Joloft appi'tvW for ..,. °"1\en ~ the city iltdlcot.d ahy' ln<tr- DAIL 't ,ILOT ltltff ...... FLEDGLING MUNICIPAL AMBULANCE SERVICE IN SAN CLEMENTE ROLLED 500 TIMES Fir•l"!'Mn Jim Dahl , left, and PhH Feyerabend Check Emer~cy Equipment County Gets $530,116 For Collecting Money Orange County's efforts to collect sup- port money from absent fathers saves the state money and the county bas re- ceived ·SS30,ltl I.a the past yw u eom- perwation. Payments to counties have more than doubled Jn the year Jn which the program bas been tn operation, according to State Welfare Difec~r : ltiben · B. Garleion. The total paid in 12 mbnth.s is $4.7 million . Orange County ranks second in the Wreckage of Jet Spotted on. Hill SARANAC LAKE, N.Y. (AP) -The wreckage of a small four-engine jet with three persons aboard was spotted on a I hillside four ml.Its west OJ. lhe.~pctrt in this AdiroodMlo'Mountiibi ro1111Riillilt t .. day, Civil A~ir Patrol spokesmen said . The pilot, Robert Brown of Burbank, was attempting ~-qaoo~al· t6e "iirl>ort Wednesday nighl i1ieD ht lost railio con· tact wilb the &rolJDd. Passenger identities were n o t available. The 10-seat Lockheed Jetstar was owned by the Fluor Corp. of Burbank, authorities said . Slaot· as . Loi>ter state in receipt of Support Enforcement Incentive Fund (SEIF) payments, ac- cording to W.ejfare Oimctot Granville Peoples. Since the proghiln begab, ·tos Angeles has received $671.IXMl; San Diego, $413,964; San Bemardlno, $1.88,158 and Jjj~~.$lV:,i06.. . " The SEfF program is desicned to en- courage child support activities by district attorneys by making the ct1l· lection effort self supporting. The counties are paid an amount equal to 75 percent of lhe non-federal funds saved by getUng suµport from absent parents, a return of about 37.5-cents on every dollar collected. Carleson saJd be was pleased that so many counties, 56 of the 58, have joined the program and partiC\Jlarly that So many of them have used the money to beef up tj)elr district attorney staffs to force ~bs"ent parebt.t to hooor their le~I and moral obllg8Uoft to ""support their children . Only San Ben.ito and tiny Alpine county have not received SEIF funds, Carleson said. For Orange County, the payments amounted to almost $40 for every Aid to Families with Dependent Children case in the past year, Peoples said. Artists Protest Museum Ouster Of 'Undershorts' DETROIT (UPT) -When "Wamba," a series of five photographs depicting a se- quence of a man pulling down his un· de¢x>rls, w~nt on , exhibition at the Detroit Imtitute of' Ami pattons1.com- plained enough to get the pictures removed. And now, area artists are threatening to pull ltiefr creations from the display . The protests by artists in support or the showing or lhe entry by Bill Butt, a Dearborn photographer, came on the heels or a suit filed in Wayne Circuit Court to force the museum to put the photos back on display. Another entry -one which shows the inside of a public men's room -was also taken out of the museum when protests mounted. The two entries were among 20 prize winnars at the 59tb annual Exhibition of Michigan Artists, which will run through Jan. 28. MOVIE WATCHER GOT MESS AGE 'LOUGHBOROUGH, England !UPI) - After watching a fLlm titled "Guess Who's Slttping Wfth Us Tonight," Arthur Smith, 82, dozed off and spent the night locked· in the ·movie ~· police said. Small boy cries out ln pain •s he is given medJcal assl&tance alter be was sh6t as suspected looter ln Managua, Nicaragua. Shoot fo kill orders have been illued against IOOW. ln eartbquake-<lestroyed cen· ter city. See stA>ry, Page 5. I .. t Jn the additional land. The city d1d prtsent a map sbowlna that there are only nine registered voters in the pocket area which would allow it to 1 be IDMled without an election . )jOor 1DDe1ations were vigorously o~ posed by Clplstrano Beach midents and llE San Juan Capistrano merger waa elso apposed by Dana Point property owners. Al.to obJecl.ing was tbe San Juan Capistrano School District which said developrncnl would overload facilities The San Juan Ca pistrano City Council approved the anne.xatJon but did not speak for it. City ti!9R81er Donald Weidner appeared only to answer ques· lions. C.l\1. Jones, representing C. Michael, said only 168 single family homes were planned for the 36 acres although the developer had county plaMing com- mission appro .:il for l.."9 units. He uld four acrei adjoining the Oood control channel in San Juan Creek. and the part oC the acreage nearest the Capistrano Airport v•ould be dedicated to the city for a park. Ron Buller, president of the Clpistnoo Beach Community As.!JOCl.atioo objected to the high density development ol prop- ery in San Juan Capistrano. Clemente't 1st Year He was joined. by Dick Goffron . of the Capistrano Estates H o m e ow n e r s Association who had little good to say about the city. He pointed out that it had contracted with the county for police, (irt' and building department servie$ and said that the city planning department was poor and that the 11 square miles ol the city were largely undeveloped. -· C~~y .An:ihulances . ~ Calle·d Adequate Chloe Luke of Capistrano Beach said the annexation would continue the wedge forming to divide the proposed combined city of Dana Point and C3pistrano Beach. The San Clemente aMexation was op· posed by residehts wilh property on Camino Capistrano directly solltbeast of the proposed development. ... By JOHN VALTERZA Of ltlt Dl llY 'llol lt1tf A little more than a year ago San Clemente's only private ambulance service left town amid controversy, leav- ing the city with a red station wagon and two full-time firemen to fill the gap. And in parting shots leveled before city counCilmen, the operator of the private firm insisted. that firemen, police officers and lifeguards were incapable or doing an adequate job. · It was meant as pure criticism; the city tOok it as a challenge. The station wagon worked for a few weeks after that. Then the city borrowed a spare van- type ambulance from a private rum in Los Angeles. A few weeks la ter, ct1uncilmen bought the rig outright. It has been in use ever since, and this year akine it has rolled on nearly 500 separate calls -at an average of 40 a month. The "experts" were wrong. City Manager Kennettt Carr, Public Safety Director Clifford Murray -even citizens who have called for lhe service -praise the operation. Since !ls hectic conception, the opera- tion has been boned into a smooth system where police officers do the driv· ing and firemen do tbe first aid io LIJe back. One officer, possessing the distinct honor of having once run the Iongest-liv- ed ambulance service in San Clemente, does all the first-aid training for police and f~e J>!lrsoonel. Besidel .. the dozens of hours. 0( in- •structlOn•from ,UMtt·rnan, · BobbY Scruft6, many of lhe "ambulance workers" also do some on-~job training at local hospital emergency rooma. Response times have been cut in half, because, in • the old days, firtmen g"ehefaDY : sum.mooed to i;iVe ·aid ~first drove lo a location, then would have to ask for an ambulance, then wait. Under the city system, the firemen drive the ambulance lmmediately. The shift means that, in the central portions of the city, the response times Secrecy Shrouds ITT Kidnap Case BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Secrecy sur- rounded the movements between the kid- napers of Italian executive Vincenw Russo and his employers. the Standard company o!fitlals said today. Sources at Standard Electric, a subsid· iary of International Telephone and Tele- graph (m ), aald the kidnapers, wt>o did not Identify themselves as part of any ex- tremist group, asked for a ransom but the comi>any refused to disclose the amount or any details. Russo. 41 , the flnn's production manager, was seized Wednesday by 12 men as he drove to work . End of Year UP d '!I rarely exceed three minutes . The trip to the new hospital nearby takes three minutes more. Often, in the old days, the total time averaged 20 minutes or more . lbere are some limitations, however. The city only serves emergency calls. The rest of the ambulance business re- mains in the private sector. Private firms also continue to respond to emergencies in the city if bacic;up units are needed. Firemen, whose job is characterized by long dry spells between calls, find some auxiliary advantages. "We have sometimes four calls a day, and it keeps us on our toes. "Let's face it. All of us need to keep our skills sharp, and running the am* bulance is a good way of doing it," said fireman Jim Dahl. How does the average citizen react to the new system? In .the past year, the city has received dozens of letters of praise from patients or their families. Most of the letters come along with checks to pay the bill -a flat $25-per- person levy with no extras. "We get cookies. candy, ca rds, letters ... all sorts of nice things from people ~·e've helped ," Dahl said this week. Invariably, the praise points to the staf~:s "kindness, compassion, gentleness One San Clemente retiree whose wife recently suffered a broken hip wrote the city this week : "I'm amazed at the quickness of the response ... the crew gave every con- sideration to the patient's comfort and even to my own somewhat distraught condition. ' "It's a fine servit'e, no matter what the cost." And thus far, the cost -to San Clemente's taxpayers -has been minimal. The city hired no additional workers for the service. The tab to taxpayers has been about $5,000. ~trs. Luke argued largely against in· eluding the 30 acres not proposed. She said she W,ubtecl that there were less than 12 registered voters in the area which would require an election. ''You can't trust anything San Clemente says," she charged . "I have battled them for 26 years and I know." Mrs. Rosalind Warfield joined her charging, "You are gradually forcing us into San Clemente against our wishes. Why does the commission always oppose Capistrano Beach people?" The residents got unexpected support from Robert Hennessey of tbe Orange County Fire Department who challenged San Clemente's claim to equal or better service. "Our Doheny station is but two mi\eS rrom the property and the city statiod is three and three-fourths miles away. He admilted that mutual aid was rendered if requested. Both annexations were approved by 3-1 commission votes with Jrs. Ree Burnap of Fullerton opposing each time. Apollo Spaceman P r edicts Probe To Go to Mars JERUSALEM (UPI) -James Irwin, Apollo 15 astronaut, predicts spacemen will go to Mars before they return to the moon. "I believe men will ~o farther than the moon. probably to Mars, before we go back to the moon," he told a news con* ference here Wednesday. The recftlUy concluded Apollo 17 mission was the fmal moon ffight in the U.S. Apollo series. Irwin was Jn Israel with choirs from Texas, Arkansas and Georgia for holiday concerts. Irwin, who went to the moon aboard A'f>ollo 15, resigned as an astronaut to lead a religious group he founded called Hig h Flight. Vulnerable Pvt. Achilles Has Bad-Heel! ITHACA, N.Y. (AP ) -What do you do when your name is Achilles and you report to sick bay with a sore heel ? If you're' a Marine recru.it, like Daniel L. Achilles of Ithaca , your first problem is to convince the sergeant at the dispensary that it's no joke. Then -like the Grecian hero -you bo>v out of the military scene. Pvt. Achilles enlisted in the Marine Corps in October and recently had to report to lhe dispensary at Parris Island, S.C. where he was in training. Luckier than his Grecian namesake, SALi I NDS UTUIDAT, DIC. JO ~hose vu lnerable heel removed him from the ranks of mortals forever , Pvt. Achilles is re<:uperating at home from a case of stress rracture, involving minor injuries of the heel . "Maybe this is something to do with lhe name of the island." the 17-year-old private was reported as saying tn a W.arine Corps publication, referring to the Trojan Paris who felled the Greekl hero with an arrow. So. Pvt. Achilles ls visiting with his buddies In Ithaca. as the Greek Acbille.s used to do in Ithaca, Greece. e Z NITH " e MOTOROLA e RCA TELEVISIONS IN STOCK OVER COST YOU WILL NIVER BUY A NEW COLOR TV FOR LESS Low Prices are born here, raised elsewhere! 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. • C•llrarnl1'1 L•rgett Cnaptir•tlve 8uvln9 Groun W1th Th• 90 DAY CASH , WITH A,..IOYfD C"IDIT Vel·•1ne 8•rylnq r-~ ••"'II Power of 11 V St or.-: ......... 8M tAl'l9 ) ........ , .... IMC. l . .,. Downtown Costa Mesa Pho~e 543-77CB ' I .. I • I f DAILY '1lOT '"""*'· -28, 1972 wiClt Te• laiae Prop. 20 Boon -to Lawyers OFF AND RUNNING DEPT. -You have to look with a certain degree of whimsy at one of tile earliest legal rul- inls handed down just this week on' the erfett of Prop. 20, the coastline control measure. II'bat ruling was that Pro.p. 20 doesn 't h3ve any effect -at least not yet. You remember Prop. 2G, don't you? 'I'Ut was the one on last November's b&llot !hat was billed by proponents as a measure to protect our coaslline from outrageous developments by people who build 'things. Well, there were some of us that gave f1op. %0 the old fish eye because among at.her things, it decreed the creation of seven! ngional commiA,loru: and one big statewide commission that would rule on what could or couldn't be built along our coastline. SOME OF US fish-eyed types could en· vision a whole new layer of government coming our way. Anybow, there v.·as no chance lhat Prop. 20 would get defeated. People could lqok around and find enooah outragtous coastal developments to convince them to pa!! It no matter how awful It might be. So the people did. Now It is law. 'When you get something like this into lqw, it usually means that the new law is subject to interpretation. You know, the worm are there, but wbet do the words really mean? ln\e:rpretaUoos are left to the courts. SO IT WAS 11lAT this v.·eek a group or folks up on the Palos Verdes Peninsula, known as the Portuguese Bend Defense CbmnUttee, brought suit in an effort to halt ·an apartment project. Policerrwn Slwt Dmvn In Detroit . DETROIT (UPI) -One plainclothes policeman was killed and another crltlcally wounded Wednesday night in a shooting llnked to one earlier th.is month In ~·hich four officers -members of the same conttO\letsial undercover unit - \\'ere wounded. Police named two men wanted in the earller lncldent as su!peds in Wl\dJ>,.. day's shootout The shooting occurred on Detroit's Northwest Side in a neig hborl\oOd where they were investigating a tip involvtng a robbery and shoollng suspect, police spokesmen said, They spotted their assailants lurking ln a shadow between two homes. GUNFmE started as they approached the two men and the o(ficers got off one shot themselves before fallin6J polite sa id. Homicide ofrlcers ruled out the possibility of a "set-up." The o(ficers Involved were memben of a controversial undereover police unit called STRESS -"Stop the Robberies- Enjoy Safe Streets." On Dec. 4, four STRESS officers were shot and wounded by gunmen bellaved to be riding shotgun for a narcotics runner. Two of the men charged in that abooting -John P. Boyd Jr., 23. and Haywood Brov.'Y\, 18, both of Detroit -al!O were sought in the latest Incident. K i 11 e d Wednesday was patro1man Robert BradCnrd Jr., 25, a 4'6:·year police veteran. He was the sixth policeman killed in Detroit this year and the second STRESS officer. Bradford's partner, patrolman Robert Dooley, 28, another 4 ~year veteran was hospitaJiz. ed in critical condition. POLICE THEN swanned on the area. scouring streets' and alleys with the aid of a searchlight beaming from a Police helicopter. DAILY l'ILOY DELIVERY SERVICE D!ll'ltl'J' of tht Daffy Pilo t ii 9Uifil'lttfd ,.,,..... ........... ": " '" .. .... h••• v-......... &f J1)11 ,. .... , c•ll ln<I' l'""' tt'y Will •• .......,,. i. ,..., c11i. ••• ,,_ .. ""'~ J:Jlt ,. .... 51horNl' ·~ ......,.., If .,.,, ff -rectl>·• .,_ ,..... .., , '""-... ,.,.,,.,, ......... . ......,,.,& ........ .-.¥> will -.......,, ,. The PBDC clal.med aDd userted Qlal the apartment 'IP'miR: ~dn't gri.r ..;__ started In Ume a1111 • stiOO!il 'have seti ~ halted wben Prop.20 paS1e4 on Nov. 7. A temporary injunction shut down con- struction Nov. 22. It's been that W1Y ever sfnce. • Y";'· r-111 •~.l£!'.!!£:.!'!I. ti 1.111. -. ·~· ' . -. ' .. ···--' Wleks Israel Seals Off Heights ; Border Calm By UniUd Press lnterDatlonal Israeli troops sealed off the Golan Heights to civilian traffic early today In the wake of air strikes Wednesday against three targeta in Syria. But military spokesmen in Tel Avlv &aid the situation along the border was calm. "It's quiet up there now ," a spokesman said. '.'Nothing is happening. There nally is nothing. It's just silence.'' The spokesman said the HelghtJ was closed after the strikes by Israeli planes but because or the calm situation, authorities might open the area later to- day. Military authorities closed lhe Heights to everything except military traffic and \'ehicles driven by local residents -as they u.sually do as a precautionary when there is a fiareup on the Syrian frontier. To prevent any civilian traflic into the southern part ol the Helgllts, two 11<>1dlen slood before two red and black iron cross- es dragged into the narrow asphalt road. "The area is closed because it is da ngerous here," said one of the soldJers. THE CLOSING of the Heights, OC· cupled by Israel since the Middle East war in 1967, came after Israeli jels loos- ed what authorities called retaliation for recent Arab guerrilla attacks from Syria . lsraeli 9Uicials said the warplanes hit ·,. tY.'O fron~~e Syrian army bases and a guerrilla camp %5 miles lnslde $Yria in the first such raids in fi~ weeks. But ~ Israeli command denled a Syrian ~pOrt that villages were bombed. Israeli· officials said pilots reported makiuir''good htts." Now, howtver, Superior Court Judge David Thomas up in LA ruJed that no, Prop. 20 didn't take effect Nov. 7 and ac- tually won't be in buainess unUI Feb. 1. So now you have one Judge's opuuon: Survivors Ho1ne Don't bet It will end here . IT IS ENTIRELY possible that the Portuguese Bend Defense Committee, at the urging of its attorneys, can appeal to a higher court. And eppea.I and appeal and appeal. We can anticipate simil ar projects will be chii..Uenged along our very own Orange Coast. We can expect similar citizens d• rense groups Uke the PBDC to spring up. We may get the Newport Beach Nuisance Knockers. The Huntington B e a c h Headhunten. The San Juan Caplstrano Comtructlon Killers. The Costa Mesa Controllers. The Laguna Beach Don't Build Anything Here Commtttee for Preservation of Rural Roads and Eradication of Sidewalks. The Irvine T~ day, Tomorrow and Forever Ranchlands and Don't Cut Any Trees Citizens' United. The latter two communities have long bffn noted for many committees with rather lengthy titles. ANYWAY, AS Prop. 20'1 coastal pro- t<ction ll)'ltem grinds through the ..... and federal cowu on waves of laWIUltJ. counlemlltt. rt1tra1nin8 orders and ·~ petl1, you can ftaure that people ln the construcUon and development dodge may be left wllii lltUo to de but 1tt about and Rhuffle tbeir legal papers. For the i.W,,m, however. bua:inest will be boomln&. 19 Died in Bus Crasli on Bridge AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Tw<I hundred persons 1tood at lbe airport without speakll\g. The chartered jet they had come to meet taxied to a stop near the group, and Ille door popped open. The first peNJOn ()ff the airplane was Kathy Webb, a teenager who was carried to a waiting stretcher. A woman stepped through the crowd and grasped the hand or the injured girl offered through a bloodstained sleeve of her blue rahlcoat. The girl wept. "I'm all rlabt, Mother. But don 't go away. Just don't go away." sbe said. A man unloaded a cardboard box and burlap sack next. It contained purses, wallets, watches, and other valuables that belonaed to the 19 persons, most of them teenaaen, who were killed Tuesday night in a bus cruh in New Mexico. The plane carrying survivors back to their AusUn OOme1 arrived \Yednesday even· ing. THE ont:ER survivors of the trip came off the plane next, each one smothered in hugs by tearf~ents and patted on the back by brot~ sisters and friends . Fifteen pe110ns wert injured ill the crash, but some of them had to stay ht-hind in New Mexico hospitals. hurt loo badly to travel. · The two buses carried 32 persons each from Austin to a religious retreat ill the mountains <1f New Mixlco when one struck a catUe truck that had jackknifed on a narrow bridge near Fort Sumner. The other bus bad passed the truck before the crasb and wu not in volved in the wreck . MOST OF THE 40 peNIOR! on the airplane that arrived Wednesday were oo the bus not involved ln the crash, In· eluding its driver, John Roberts, a member of the sponsoring Woodlawn Baptist Church. "Everything looked like a normal traf· fie situation," Roberts aa.ld. "There was a narrow bridge warning, but it was IO close to lhe bridge that by the time I had my foot oU the accelerator, I was across it. "It ~·as suicide bridge, yc.iu mlghi say." Alie< the crash tbe Nevr M~co lflghway Department said tlle bridp 11 mUea east of Fort Sumner wu "critically deficient In foundation, surface, •fet)' and capacity." Jack Frost ·Nips Soulh ' Flash Flood W tJ.r.nings i11 Effect in Central Arizona I NAflCMAl WIAtMll Mlvt(t Hllt(AU .. , .. IP a..q,.71 "" Canada's Pear·son Dies . Ex-Prime Minister Set Vp Suez . Cease-fire . OTTAWA (UPI) -1.aW B. Ptanoo, """"1of!d mo•e to oblala I <'tlllollre la lormor Canadian prime mlnlJler no the Slltl colill Id which Fl'IDCO and Bri- won the Nobel Peace Prlzo lor belolO& tala bad llltorvtned Id the lmeU.£'.in> alT8lJ4!e 1 ce....ii,. in the, ID!f s..i Uan oonfllct and a major -'<! ccolllct crlsb, lull died at the age ol 'I'S. • tbteltened to explode • 0.. P. M. Burt.a. Pea..-'• prlHle OD Nov. I, 1IM, -weni before phJ<Jclan, ,.rly Wedneldo1 bad ..,.. the U.N. G.Mnl Auembly ud pr_..r linned that Pearsoo bad C9JICel" ol Jbe a ...... nre lo the MJddle Eut to be Jivor. Time ol death wu 1:40 p.m. followed by a ouperWied pollco i.... ID (PST). the am. Pearloo'• b..ilh had --'l'ollowlo( h1I spoedJ. -... ..... •Ince lhe ...... , ol ltml -be bid • port from lhe U1iliod ~ ...... bad cancerous eye ........S. lie bad -ID -cmtlcltrlnc a r•iloti. ol 111 ewa Florida oo vacatloo but wu nllbed .,_ caWoa fer the wltlidnldl ol U., ~ Oirtatma1 Eve. lie lapaed lolo a -and Preodl fnlm lllO (loiel. fte flJjlOlutiGD Wednesday momlng. -pe....t &7 .. by lhe IJldle4 Natlcm .At hl• bedside --he died were""ll& ud wllhlo two -U.!I. lnq1o - wiclcw, MU)'Oll, llJd hll 1C10 lllld Cooocli•o ......, wva m lhe.llU& daughter. Gto11r<1 and Pat. . PeUIOO 1ri11 lie ID stala,11> lhe nitimda · 'l'llE (.'£ASg.pDtg did DOI end lhe in tbe centor blcdc ol canoda'• porlla-hootilltltl bat.JI !Ile! 11qy-.,:o11 tmie, m<Ot lllllldlog. A luD stale luntnl WU and wben Gumm Jilin, cllllrmm ol ilie plannod, but llnal arrangemOnll wen not Nobel Prize Committoo, pr• a• n t • d immediately announced. lie WU to be Jo. Pe.lnort'I pe..,. award, be told Ptanort terred In a flO plot he purdlUed In the ha bad ",.wd the world." late l!MOl In ~bee'• Gatintau llilll. Pearaoo served u prime mlnlster lrom 11111 1111t11 11118, wben be wu replaced bf "THE L088 OF tbe Rl Hon. Lestor B. -Jbe airr.nt Clnadlan leader, P!em Pea.nm la a grtat cioe, for men like b1m Trudelu. appear rarely," aald Pr!mo Minister By the end ol bis term, C8nada had a Pierre E. Trudeau. "He wu a man of national pensioQ program, an ualltance ability and good will no wwted the plan to lunnel well... mooey through tbe greater part ol bis llfe to mfke the world p<Ovlnc<I, a (Ultlllteed 11111ual Income a better place lor olben." 10< old-age pensloom, a unlted armed In 1968, Pearaon penonally directed a forces, capital pm!Wnent wu ten- Singer Accuses Knoxville KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Soul alnior James Brwn bU accused the City ol Knuvtlle and 111 police ~ ol racion, even though Mayor Kyle Testerman oni....t disorderly oonducl diarpl agalDst the entertainer dropped. Although directing the city's law dtpor-to IUtpend the ~ ol charges against Brown in connection with a melee with pol.lee two weeks ago, Testennan said Wodnesday that Brown had uhibited ung"1Uemanly conduct for the sake ol publicity. Brown responded later wllll a seven-miJnlte statement oo his Knoxville radio station In which be said, " ..• You're dealing withJ'&(tsm in Knoxville.'' Two pollceme.n were injured in the scutne with Brown and two aides out· side Memorial Colileum. Police say Brown and his aides attacked them after . failing to be«! crdtra to deer the ares. Brown claiml be was attacked by the officers. UPI,.... DIPLOMAT DIES AT 75 Leat.r Bowlff Pelnon laUvely abollabed and the foundatlcnl bad been laid !or a bUJngual public service. When French President Cb a r I 11 De Gaulle came to E~ fl in """1treol and shouted "Vive le Quebec Libre (LOllC Uve Frte Quebec)!" Pearson went Cl? television to call the gesture a prov- ocation to separatist elements and De Gaulle cut h.ls visit short aod went back to France. Born in Newtoobrook, Qntario, on April 23, 1897, the son of a Methodist preacher, Pearson served ln World War l and then returned to Canada where a rich uncle got him a· job as a saU1ag6-stuft'er at a meat-pacldng plant. He soon left lo become a lecturer in history and a part- Ume football coach at the University ol Tonlato. MEN'S WEAR SALE Here It Isl Our store wide sale. Premier Hoelscher 9uallty men's wear .reduced up to 50°/o for Immediate de9-ancel Not everphi119 Is on sale of course, but the selection 15 wide, varied and handsome. Just ·ask any of our ·cntwn! Not aA price levels In all sizes. DRESS SHIRTS Most ....... ...ur. ,., •• ,,_ ,....ka. Ro9ulerly '8.50. J0.00 Short sl••v• ...................... 4.H Long sleeve ···········-····-·-·l.H KNIT SPORT SHIRTS too .. c.n...-- •• ,_ T• U .•.•••.•..••• 5.99 SPORT SHIRTS -·--·i....- • ... Te 111, ,, •••••• ,,, 6.99 I WASH 'PANTS M ........... '-"'''-"""" WMtU..JWI ........, '"· ............ 5.99 UNDERWEAR Bri efs I T·S~lrto ••. ---2/JM lo••r 1hort1 ······-·······-.J/l.Jt SWIA11U. wool ' R19ularly $12,'5 ··-···-·······'·" • SOC11S ,value• lo J .50 •.. .J/'LH TllS, v•lue1 to 6.00 .••.... _ . .J,ft LOS AHOILIS _ _, l'ASADINA.. _ _, w..... It Asc 44 --llUI 617.alf ,, .... c,, ...... ••••••• 11111- HUNTINGTON llACH HOIUCHll'I Y 1 t : ••h n ........ c.... COSTA MESA HOILICHU'S JJJJ ...... It. -·-· 1n4> ttt.JJ)4 ---ln411MMl4t Famous Makers Vast Selection $ 75. Suits .. $145. Suits • • 49. 89. $ 65. Coats •• 39. $ 17. Slacks • 9. $ 95. Suits .. .. .. .. .. .. '9.oo $100. Sulla . ... .. . • . .. .. n.oo $JU. Suits ............ 104.00 $165. Sulh ............ 12'.oo $ 65, Co.ts .. .. . . . . . . . 4'.oo $ 75. Coota . .. . .. .. .. . 54.00 $ 80. Coal• .. .. .. .. .. . 61.00 $100 •. Coats .. .. .. .. .. . 74.oo $ 17.50 Slaclca .. .. . .. . 1'.'5 $ u .oo Slaclca ... , .. . . 14.'5 s,..c111 ctfflt ••c•u11h •v•ll•tl •• or l•11kAm•rlc•MI & M11ter Ch•rt .. Jm lrl1lol SI. 5"""' Cooot Piasa ~""' -· \ ALHAMIRA % MOii.iC .... " ••• • •• ---- ANAHllM HOIUCHll'S ¥• ... M•lfl 447 Nd Llerti A1 .. 111lt C.... 17141 71WJ91 ....... I 11111 ... ..,.. I \ - RIVERSIDE .. __ JQ.I iiklla -..,_. ........ ln41 .., • .,.. -. Th""41ay, o...mber 2s. 1m DAILY PILOT /S ,, .NY Police No Epi.demic Expected in Nicaragua \ 'C t' I orru p MANACUA, NI car. g u. run Nicaragua lor 15 yeal'I, loragtra .... combing the tho miracle ol U.aling 2,fll)O I (AP) -Foreign docton aay &aid In a statement broo!lcut ruins W'litr thla week had lnlul'fd In lhrff clays and IOO Knapp enough medical peraonnel and hourly that looters were being largely d I a a pp e a r • d by Nlcoiaguam have a I r • ad y -arrested and some had been Wedntlday. fOUDd new bomes In other Cen- . aupplles are on hand to ward shot. Somoza appealed for pa-tral American countries," he 1 WASHINGTON (AP) 0". any typhoid or typhus "We have jailed and ~ tience and said the numerous aaid. i Knapp Comm J LI Jon ii>-epidemic in the earthquake--abJy. will shoot all those problena left by the quake The latest offlclal eaUmatec vestigathtg alleged mlsconduct devaNfed N 1 c a r a g u a n caught in the act of looting," would be solved. of cuua1tiea rrom the quake 11, by city poii<e said today CW• 'ta] be laid. 3 -• 000 de d and t ruptk>n in the department wu capi -,......,...,, 1 up o, widespread and !ncludecl the "There Is no epidemic fn llut the roaming packs ol "WE HA VE ae<0mpiished 20,000 seriously Injured. ' UPI,-....-. A sign in Independence, Mo. demonstrates nation 's grief, Oen) as Harry S Truman's daughter, Mrs. lilarg~t Truman Dlljiel (right) and Army escort, Lt. Gen. Patrick Cassidy, watch the former presi· dent's casket being loaded into· a hearse: A simple funeral was held today. Wienie War Begins Meat Labeling Misl~adi'!'g· to Consumer acceptance of gratu.itiu. wide Managua today," said Dr. invol vement in drug traffic Juan Jose Chiari of Panama. and stealing from the clead. "We are probably going · to z The commiasloo in COO· avoid outbreak o f eluding its two-VPar iJt. an vestigation ol the'¥ depart· diseases." ment, said in its final 231-page report that corruption was systematic and had spread through the ranks from the cop on the beat to the chief In- spector's office. Thorough lndllference to corruption or active involve- ment, tbe report eald poUoe: allowed to flourish a well· coordinated and profitable system of payoffs and shak~ downs jnvQlving P.rostilutes, Mafia henchmen, loan sharks, bookies and heroin pusben. eDemetlon U.S. RELIEF officials ex- pressed satisfaction with the arrival of tons of grain, flour and powdered milk.. Nicaraguan·offlcil}ls said more trucks w~ needed to get the food to 19 dl!tribution points set up ooUllde \be city to draw persons: away from the ruins. They laid 1Uj>plles were pli- ed up at the airport and even in the front yard of Gen. Anastao~ &jmoza, the ooun-try's ruler. Lt. Col. Frank Simona, in charge ol the U.S. relief II* gram, praLSed the f o o d distribution plan set up by SOmoza. WASHINGTON (AP( Gordon Rule, the Navy cost- monitor wHo was demoted after criticizing the President, has been denied a meeting with Navy Secretary John ''WE WOVW have had the Warner and has been told to wne problems if this hap. pursue any protest with the pened in any COWllry in the admiral who ordered the world," he said. ' ' Th e demotion. Nicaraguans are doing a Rule was turned aside marvelous job." Wednesday when he sought a Maj. Dennis Bulger, com- meeting with Warner to mander of the u~s. 518th Com- discuss the demotion. bat Engineer Co., s a i d Instead, Warner ordered although many of the city's that Rule must go through water lines had been ruptured "channels" and lodge any ~ and some or the cisterns test with Adm. Isaac Kidd who around the city had been wants Rule shWlted to a cracked by the quake Satur- backwater job. day, some 2{l million gallons a • Da--•e Suit clay coold sWI be provided !or ---. the greater Managua area. NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A He said about 78,000 gailona federal judge has ordered a was brought into the city 41.5 million damage suit filed Wednesday, "enough to pro- apinst Undersecretary of vide each person with haU a State<leslgnate William J. gallon." w ASHINGTON (UPI) -came three years ago. In 1969, Ii~. snouts and spleens in Casey and others. This indicated that about nderi t officials ended a long disnute frankfurters and other cooked "Some or the things the 150,000 persons -or half the Surre ng ocons um er ,.~ d' did · · bl by ordering a 30 percent fat sausages bearing ordinary 1rect.ors are mconce1va e normal population -were still pressure and 8 court order. content limit on hot dOp and labeling. If byproducts are us-to me," U.S. District COurt in the city despite orders to the Agriculture Department other cooked sausage pro-ed in something that k>oks like J u d g e H e r b e r t W · everyone to evacuate the area. bu announced plaoa for a ducts. • a hot dog, the product would Ouistenberry. said Wednesday Authorities continued to ap- JeCODd major round of label-Now, ofncials say new pro-have to be labeled "imitation" in orderU:ig the suit in con-peal at frtlqU.ent intervals for log and caotent reform ror hot posals whlcb may take effect in letters as large as those nection with the pending evacuation, but many ob- do early next year wUt junk cur-used for the word "frankfur-r e 0 r g a n I z a t I o n under viously were ignoring the ef- gs. rent rules under which a hot ter.'' ban~ r up t c y laws of fort. THE FIRST ste fu dog contaifting w e-t e·r Mu1tiponics, Inc. . P resj)OllSe ,...eete""Jl Oll<l·!!J(\11,11 Ill!••~ t TIIE NEW PLAN w""1d set Casey was a boanl member R&SIDENTS WERE warned to rising comptah'l:tt ·over· one ... Can sun · be-·· fabfled · 1•air' "up twO' name categotfh' fl)r · •of the ftrm, which own 43,~., to avoid an area of 450 blocb ol the naUoo< .. ~\lfrite,loqcls~ '1Mat." &i"81et1111 .. urt>tMlio""'l!!"*~rs. U>o~ ~-~• ... 4-,i•rm J..i In ; 1n 11\t. ~.bit -sector lhat •. _ ruled the "all meat" wording oOO'sifuilar ~"'ked:a&usage: ~iarta. Al Is s 1-s·i ( p ~~, , was designated an epidemic was misleading to consumers. -Category C1i1e would COD-Ark.ansas •and Florida. It filed zone Doctors said the title Kid N~ ·:-i ~·..: taln on1y "skeletal muscle for 1::6fganization in 1971. was -precauUonary and did not S , ; ALSO REPEALED would be meat." iocludtng up to 15 per· • St1...,ill0r Indicate presence ol a D • 011]y Coast Qffers • 63Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Effective Annual MAINOfTIU: Earnings 9th .. Hiii, Loi Anplet • 523-1351 5.00%-5.13%. 00..r offlceS WIUHlllll .. GltAMdCY PUC!: Passbook. No Minimum. 3933 Wllifiir. BIYd .. LA.• 388-1255 5.75%-5.92% LA. CIYtc COf'IDtl 2nd• &rc.dWay • 626-1102 One Year Certificate HUHTIN8TON MACH: $1,000 Minimum. lll Huotlniton Ctnt... • 6.00%-6.18% (71-4) 8ll7-1047 UHTA MOfUC:A: Two to AWi Y9llt Certificates 711 Wll5hife BIYd. • :Jtl.0146 $5,000 Minimum. ... ....... Up to 90 days loss of 10th " Pactrlc • 1314341 interest on amounts WUTCOVINA: withdrawn before maturity Eaatllnd ShoppTnc Ctr.• 331-2201 oo all certificate accounts. PAflOllAMA crrn ChaM" V•n Nuys 81Yd •• 892-tln Art L1•1etter also provides big dis-TAlllZANA: 117"1 V..,tutli Blvd.. • 345-1614 Tho lllllden Club: A new counts on tickets to sport-LONG BEACH: ·way to beat inflation. Its ing and entertainment 3ra & Locust • 437·7481 rnembenhlp card permits events ••• plus a whole EA.IT LOS ANG!ln: you to bUy nearly rmry-list of free services: safe 8th & &oto • 266-elO thing you need from the deposit boxes, money or-DIAMOND Ult: 328 s. oi.rnooo hr• finest closed-door how-ders, travelers checks, 171-4) 95-7525 .-is at substantial sav-and notary services • rum"' lngs -appliances, fuml· Membership require-Lflrwln SQU11111 s~ns ctr.• 111•> m.a10 ture, stereo equipment, ment for savers -$2,500 LA MIRADA: sporting goods, draperies minimum balance. Coast u Ml~d.1 s~r11 Ctr. • and much, much more. borrowers now receive as. (714) 522-6751 You can even buy cars soclate memberships en-DallyHoun-OAMto4Pll at the "fleet" price and titllng them to all outside All Offlca, b'"lll Civic mOblle homes and motor· referral services. Ask Center, Open '°""""" cycles at subst.antlal sav-about joining at any Coast IAMtolPM lnss. The inside~ Club office. Sin Gobrlel Dfflct Opoolq !oll f ' ,, ' .. ,, " "' .. ' " • " 'Bu yin r! rules allowing a bot dog con-cent poultry, plus necessary SAN JUAN P.R. (UPI) -I epidemi< .... , ' "' , "'" .... .~ll¥fllllllEllLl.IQIUIOUMS talning up to 3.5 percent DOD-processing ingredients such. as The U.S. ~ Guard today " -~SO~mo~·~,.~·-w:":booe~~l~am~ity~·~ba'!!lr~:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:;::=:=~:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~~· fat dry milk to be labeled water, sweeteners and curing began a search for five crew • Adve~iiig? ' simply "fr8;1lkfurt~~· agents. members of a cargo vessel In a companion step, whkh --Category Two cou ld con· whose sixth aewman wu had been disclosed earlier, the lain the same Ingredients as found Wednesday drifting in a department said its new hot the first grouPt but also could lifeboat oCf the island of WASHINGTON (vPJ) -A dog reform plan would also contain limited amounts of Martinique suffering f r om Federal Trade Q>mmlulon ban the use of meat and binders such as nonfat dry severe elhaustlon and nearly (FI'C) eiamlner believes that __:_po_u_lt_:ryc_b..:y.:.pr_od_uc_Js_s_u_ch_a_s_m_llk_or_so.:_y_:p_ro_t_el_n. _____ lncohere ___ n_t. ______ 1 by the time children reach the age otelght they are skeptical about the truth of television commercials. ~.;;~~ aaymond J , Lyncb, an FTC ·1':" admlnlatraUV...-laW' J ad.&~, made.tlie poflJ! ~~:; ~ ' dl!llllatot .tlllrl• .tlllr 11111 • ®: !Tf''Coril~falllokiog eon,. ' ~~~ pany otRye, N.Y •• and IU..oll- vertialng firm , Ted Ba~ Ind ~ Co. ol New York Clly, made • lli X•, faJse nutritional claims for ~» Wonder Bread and Ho1tess i~J snack cakes. ~~ ~-.. ~ The detjsioo may be ap-.:..::~ pealed. ~~ Lynch '1-d ~' tltal · 1':,<; Wonder Bread commercials ·'" "espioit a chllcflr up!rallons , for rapid and 'healthy ll"'wth and the emoUonal concern of . parents for tbeae ends." He ,. ~ .said there was no ·'beslJ ror ~* ordering Continental Baking to ~ buy correctlve advertlalng. I Lynch said studies had •, shown that even by the age of :;: -:. five to seven there were ·~ substantial 'number s of ~ children who are skepUcal ~~ abOut television commerclala. {~ 0 Tbe potenUal for literal »~ belief or OOofuslon that --~ occur in 10me young children · decreues with. age to 1 point \:: around eighl wJtere chlldreo ~:~ generally extrlblt a clear, con-~Ii i istenl 8Dd w!clespread ,,.... lion that tele"1slon .com· "· tnercial• cannot be taken -... ~ .. literally true," Lynch said. ~::'.~':'. ~:·~. I ~ ~l " the ' . -am i !t~§,§1tf Y 4 DAYS O.NL Y! ANY KODACHROME ROLL or Exp. SLIDES Redemlble ii "lM£ TIEASURT OFFER GOOD-DEC. 28th thru DEC. 31st DEVELOPED AND PRINTED \ , • . . . ~Our Anniversaryl Always the Start of Something Big • 1/.,-llap "Mill•1utla .. ,,.,,.,. T•~le,, 11 .. ,, .. ,.. ••• H•1· 109, Mt. 109. The Biggar Sale of '73! HERE . AND NOW! .. · SAVl·NGS TO 30% and more! .. 1 ... In the Biggar Quality All Selected from Our Regular Stock • Henredon • Heritage -_Drexel • Biggar's Custom Sofas ·& Chairs ,,,, ••• AIH•, •• , .... ,. FOR IVIRY LIVING PURl'OSEf DINING RooM CARPETING BIDROOM UVING ROOM BIDDING ACCESSORIES ~ "°'" ,, -,,-. r---:::;::;:~NOW AT All 3 STORES•---.----. 'ASADENA • .. f,COl<l~ADOILVD. (21l) 792-6136 POMONA •!ML HOlTAVL 171<J 629-l0l6 SANT A ANA • 1111 N, MAIN ST. l (714) 547-1621 . ltOOAl'S OWN auoon AOCOUNTs-uHIAMHtCARO-MAITll OIAIOI I' . . . • . .. • " ' ' ' " • I - I DAD.y PILOT EDl'ruBIAL PA.GE Fire Pro·tection .Need • Now lhat the check hat arrtved and I.be $57,000 ln rt>Vellue.aharing cash Is in lhe city of San Clemente's bank ~ 1t ilt •P to the city councilmen to detu- mine where !lie casb sbould go. . . Essentiall~ however, I.bey already hue made a promise thaflindJ them -a north-area fire substation. The (acility -proposed to be a quietly-built sta- tion using portable buildings -would serve u a res- cue· and ft.rNttack lllatlon and in tbe fl?St few yean a small "squad" pumpef' 1"9,uld '118 the bnly ri>lll,ng stock. The proposal has hid' a top.priority label for years, but '° far the only :~ oet" ~~ bu' bee9 for I.be trud 'alld.a Utile extra to ~p ~.lbh .!)\ll!Cllngs. The north section .la the ·i.:st.est.growing in the city, it• buildings tbe ll)ool expensive. And the fire inlul;lllte ratBs are highest as well. Councilmen en>OM to .deal with lbe n~ l!undle of ·<Ult·~~-• xt~rr,-tb. ". • ,,..,-.w., llUUltn.UlWl ne mo• .. · l , -.. .... . ~ ... They "!'o.u}d keel' lire'proteetlo~ /11 mind. --- CQuncil ~p Box 'Marathon city councU meetings are something of-a running joke in Laguna Beach -the Jut meeting ended at 3 o'clock in the morning. But the tedious session$ ai:e reajly,no laughing mat- ter. They affect the city's eflicie\lcy .. One reaaon for lhe long meetillgs is the permitting of extended citizen preoentaUQm. 'Most recently, a spokesman took 50 minutes, to read and aslr; questions from a five-page, legal-cize, single-spaced typewritten statement -a statement given to the oouncll two weeks before. ' citizen putlcl~n fQl• ,the miclerlng of 1wponllve de- cisions. · .. ., ::.. It u wrong for lnjll~.!O !J!Pe the Cittpiuncn cbamberl a persbnal IOlp bolt, ~g !be bWin.., of olher citizens and tiring tbe eouncll .De4111uslt:· • It II time that ~ be pjllQld on .peaters wbo come before !be council, as la done'll> many other eom· munities. It is I.be responslblllfy ~ ... ·to lnm!re that individual& do not mono~· fho city council'• time. ~.. ,.. • Spirit f o1i'. ! f.ia~~gh '?" .. ~ -• ~ .. ~ W!lit.h less lhan a ,.et~· to go, ~ts and staff at Dan~, iii, lllgh ~~e wor~ bard to prepare lhe \iliJque campua <u::the openlqj clay«>f cla,aes next Tuesday. "'.'iJf ' .. >::.~ Already exciting architecture and lnterlnr decor of the '4 milJ!on campus have spurred heavy school spirit. Band boosters are busy raising funds, the school newspaper has published its first edition ind Dana Hills' student government is active. All the preparations were made duriiig the double sessions at San Clemente High. ~sidents of lhe \listrict. pwe tiiemseNes a visit to the marvelous campu; built ~der one roof -high on a knoll at the end of Street cif the Golden Lantern. Few ·high school campuses in lhe nation have sucb an environment. . . • I • .i • • • • ~ • • ! ' • • "'"#=_,..... • ' ' -• , i I • • ' ' .. • • I I • • -.. ' '· "' ..... ... , . , , .l,i'.rJr~'l. • • . , . "' • " • .I ,, Major Items such u assessment districts, proposed city ordinances, and zoning controls may require Ienglhy ilefore the critics copipl~ of the 'splendor, they should be reminded that the ~ool's costs were well below the stiff limits set by the state-aid aulhoritieo. The costs were well woith it. "Peaoo iS'at hand." -Hemy·KissiDg8r $ • ~. . ·.~ ' Readers Heap Criticism on Trustees, Report.er• · . Sparks Still ,Fly aft~r .. 'L;gu~a . ·~hool Biiitd .. To the Edi tor: disregarding this truth, these officials minority. 'lllere are too llll!llY ·of us who -H all ._ ~ ;,b.; tbooiaJll, men! of people's lnneo poi.titails. shirked a responsibility that lies' at the are awake now and ready to reestablish [ ) ·~-of UI who_...___._. tbt recall were U any one felt any earth tremors last -'< after Laguna's school board meeting, It had to be Patrick Henry, not just tumlng over in his grave -be must have been having oonvullllons! very basis of any representative govern-· OW' rfgbt to educate our children witb· the :-:-' dlcals. -~~---• ::.._ ... 1 __ ,_ IN UGflT of thfs, it is natural in our hey ·-MAILBOX wera can-w--~·~ --unity ~ ... 'to ,_,, ... Uv•·· a men!. Until t ~ve Ille com:age to betlA!r and newer teclmiques· developed are. Captain Linke and ""-Glllellt are ~·· •~ -~ •• .... change their attitudes and principles, J by outstaodlng educators of national "true beUeverr", ccmvlndid d. .tW .. tDUJc creauve life and be actively engaged in shall have little respect for them as recogniUon like Dr. Wm. Ullom. _ _ "'"""'tnea ol their Ml"---adll.mechoda: l!XlftSSinlt oune!vea. I really wonder Jf New York HarbGr nearly had a tidal wave, it must have been becauae the la_dy wbo grace. that = into the U.S. public servants. 'Ille kind of educatiorull thinklll ''"" ...,......,..., · how people can mUllA!r lhe forbearance Ml~ SCl!.l/~N!-EBER i'r by Ille preaeo\,.JDOJill'ilv rr from r...S..-1 ore W<lcom<. stopan'\ ~~ tolnlo-~, Jrill lo ~ against the lradltiOOJ1 of this com- . ; ~ ·--c,!~ ·~oil~< ,~fl"<' Illy wnter11hou/4 CO#WJI t11<1r ~Is~ lot ~.· i..-. ~~ur,ty'al S .feolioa~ ~aUon ol tho e1 in 300 tDOf'dl or le11. TM ui ua~ ~lie"' Arftt!ct B . """ ht to COtld<nle !<teer. to /II ipace AUUW>Y hllti;' • ..1.1~ l!Uny ·~J!iw "te.llw 9f us ed for the young people of ly or tllmmall libel fl r"'"1<Ci AU drasllc radical , of ~ ~ wlicfare 111!1'""'··-~~...i. polen- must have nearly ber torch. THE FRENCH ~ who ao admired cur "yen" for libeity, would have been tn • state of shock and possibly SUiJested that 1f tbe above lady was oo kqer ... an1ng1o1 to this COWltry that •be be plaoed where liberty and justice for all wu stlll ....1IJ striving for. ll la time that the <dltors or the Daily •those of )'OUr ll<Q-tances.'Tbe day l<tttn mUlt mcludt ~ atld c:mlocieDUOUs mm 'wjip """' ~... ~..'or creaUvtO:.~t.~•I! in -ea<;b o! ofilljo·.McGulfey reader la past, the days malling oddreu, bat ..,,.., -be tktna'I -and • ·!Nii~~,¥.,•, IUUUI we -~ ~to Pilot told their readers the full story or =·ha ended and lbe wlthh<ld .,. f'<qxul if n/fldetll ta! suppl•t'lo -.. • ......... tti:.J'liiE ,-. . ..,...,,.. ,.. , lo,"QUT" arliitic what ts taking place in tbe Laguna Beach 0 of v~ ..,..;tom com-""""' fl oppom1l P0<11V will !IOI. be will . be nen! ·~~Ji~~iet::bortllge 114,.•~M lp;....twu.. .'19. .,.UZ.O scbool tempest. m !lily a few de<ades ago. publish<d. .....,.. and 1 : -~~ ~-1-ln artist --~~,l\!l!l.on-Your contributing writers, and persons Otft""'<"ie.'•J~ • ..........,.. • -.._.t_ I' ·' Vl?Mmenl res(lOnsible lor the reporting of lhe facts, comrif'~~thbetheed~~ted on levels :!:"' ~~,!"~ c,· · l}"oL t:,,·.~ -.-, .., As shocklbg and unbelievable os what took place on this scbool boanl, was to realize that two retired servicemen sat on that bollrd and that one Air Forte man and the other Navy, after fighllog llltltr and his philosophy, woUld datt Jo uae Nu! tactics oo We, the Amert* people. 'lllJs they dld by llling our three top school administrators, despllA! the plees, the grumbllnl' and prot~ ol teachers, pupils, parent.I and ~ ln- temted in education. 'Ibey alto miaed • to lit .. any reason for their dlcta)Ol'lal actkma. ., have takethan it upoo themselvdees to take a THE ONE. SIDED ... 11 ........ :_ ·• ,.... isni in our acbooll' 'fb!ie. •• ~ .. ~ ...-), If WE.CAN bea:ln to liVfl GUI' )iv.ea with position t favors one si over the VOTERS , ~wi-uuu Ul ""' . • • -?-...... ~ ""'' a 'feellng of ridmesa Jnd tuUDesl ol crea-other. They have not ttported ln an un· WHO were shamed out of "News" that your writtn generate in do not give 1'ftl9DI .fOr their mtiool. \iOn, all our ef£orts .. 1rill 'oafurally be biased marup. Tbe stories of lalA! belong_ voting for the re<alt woold do ,';"'ll lo selective lol<rviews, lhelrt:ltlpret.lllons wboldo not lavor doe ..._ In alJow. towa'd liarmoo.Y and'happiness Lei us on the editqtlal.pagea they are so clearly ren;iember the false prolDJleS,,,_of . no ftr-of activist •'minority om In a I e d ing Dr. Ullom ·to get a falr evaluaUOn. restore Laguna's creative beaut}. biased.""-•·-nott,;Po-rting all of 'lhe . ing' '° generousl,y voiced auring· the who hove their miolls made up belore OB"""·'-< !sets "';< .-' · campaign by Mrs. Glllejle; "'member meetings, and -omlallon of the people ..,.et_ these are Ille one to R · .. ,..- WlTll AU this In mind, I commence lo wmder ii our dtlzem ever dld pulh lbe tu overboard because oar rights were infringed on. Whal la happening to our land ol lbe free? EIJNOR DAVIS ,.....,,rated . • the biased text books recommended by other tlian the activist liberal rDonok>g teach our cJ:d}dren. about Ainericanllln?. m05E PERSONS who conducted Capt. Linke, and 50 apUy described by cooslslenlly flls the ....-! reporting We -and ib!lr -that this com- themselves 90 Immaturely at the school him at one public gatherin1 as "Jolm policy that has laughingly brouPl your munity.wlD wte Uiem out the ftra1 real boanl meeting last Monday night cannot Bir<b" books; and remember that the paper the Utle of lhe "Daily Plot". chance Ibey have _ jull ., lhe .publJt. ~ly.-~end what · has taken Sl>boequent firing 01 l\lree of· the t ... st 'lllJs la!<ing Ucemt for ;fraud lit .Ille voted Jolm Schm!'i'. a1ii1 Mu Rafferty jllliiO. • - . edllca_tors !"the =I!!' was ·uqd~ publlt~I !rust is,llli ·~that out of ·olllce ~·people reallUd --· L !Ila! ltloid.Js IM'.daly elected" ~ -~ evilu..,: 'lldtl.·tCect tbe..,.._~ wide pulille' ' ' really radlcll thejl l,..,.,•1Jit1""'"'8tety, poliey lilaking'body dour sclioot system, c.wu.-'lil spite or a lloii' H M at minl!tnttion crit!E!lms for my -and ~0toun.-11y1 we not the superintendent. The supe.rln-the polls. media. Cootinued lrTHpODsibJJity «l the must live with ~~ilrr,att ion:al tendenl is solely responsible to the board. Nezt spring three openings will be !ill-part of Ille pr'8I in Ignoring the llOVtfal decisions and undjiaaing turmoil lo the· 2. 'lbe present school board has been ed on the Laguna Beach school botrd. I sides to every story and then labelln& meantime. ; · . .. • • elected by a majority of the voters of ask you all to eumine the reason why these dlstortiOlll as "news" rtpK1JDI, 1 ; •, "~ this community, who support their ac-we should allow our youth to be educated will bring on con~ to , prvtfl!Ct tbe · 'l 'J.,,,.. TIUED to~people Wore but tion, as evidenced by the failure of the in a manner ordained by people ol que. publlc from news diltortkm, Just u lt tOO many people , io beHeve IO recall ~ttempt. lt does not matter how tiooable motivc.s. I pray that puents bas for commercial a d v e r t 111 n I ; · • much ftl at . Now tbe children 1maD lbet lhe majority was; It was lbe everywhere will teach their offap:tng lo ideological ad.ertlalnc lball not -must poy -and~ -belier. ·I decision of · Ille majority of lhooe who appreciate and respect their te-rs to be gi..n Ille protection ~· ••Jllfl.liope the nal~, jood-beorted people ~ lbe Editor: cared enough lo vote. and educators, their job is of~ under freedoms of a J'Oll)Olllible ""'"" . • 11!» juat dldb'I thl'fli GlllellA! and Linke I camo away from lhe Laguna School thankless and unrewarded but remains Irresponsibility In any _. pnii....., 1'i>oJd, fin! Ullom liill· ~ to tlle on.er Boon! Jme1Jng De<:. 11 fee!ini; frustrated, DR. UILOM bu tried to c~cumvent -'he .most Important 'lhfluence thi!r ' m-bringi an !ls awn c0ntrols ki;! -· Oie' ••w.tnlnp we hl.t' .... ,,... ........ ·,,_ ·-and de--' 'lllJs letter Is an the electorate by op(lOSing the ochool counter outside Ille home. The Im-loss of freedom which~• be sulltred'"' ~ lhe boant m.iority, ""'Picion, ~ of the..r~Unp. boanl, and blos tried to establish himoell portance of the school board in that Ille Innocent as well u '\i; guilty. ., tensloo, COlllOl'bip•Oncl dlctatorlsi rule be 'l'ht lDddent during thll partlcular in a position of dictating to his employer respect ill obvious. BERNARD F SYFAN rampant in Lagun:j ~Li:';"\.,._ ft< imelilfl thal affecl<jl,!PO ,DIOll -)be on matters loo! educaUonal Policy. His , (/oodbye and good luck, Dr. Ullom, . I •tr\ a teacher\n G' ~·a.ill cantrontatlon of Dr. Bess .ttb the zna.. position ii ~ ldministrate the policy and by the way, thanks for everyWng. ·•' t ~ ............. am living in Lagma Beach 9C> tblt my jority bloc et Ille Boml. ·ID tbe DIOll cleor established by lhe board. He has railed to MRS. THOMAS L. CUTKOllP .Tr119ie Mlatallle son can get the ~ of ~~-vati .. 8lld llUCdact tanguaae pooalble Dr. Reos do so, and has been fired. He has not PJ0fl111111" ' med 1be Boan! to state the "'8llCilis why performed to tbe 1tandards establlobed '... To the Editor: :" • l\IA1ILYS E. N~N hi> CGl!tract was not beinl renewed. Tbls by the boanl.11 ls as simple as tha~ , , 111-"atl"e ,. t , Without quesllanlil( the autllor!ty or , man, ..-clevotlon to the Lapna ' Dr. Ullom may be considered in-motives of the 'll'l'lrllI of tbe ,ll!ti\lll of ~ .. ;· ' . " · ~ ad>oals bal never been questiooed, novstlve In Illa educational methods, but To tbe Editor: Education I can oilly nlgmd their aC!ioo' Rel,.,.. ,l:Q•li•;. dl1m ted a ltralabl annrer. None(/,. tbe the ~)' tA. tbe electorate wants niat wa.s a very tnno91Uve lttter from in releulni Dr. Ullom u a tragic . . ... , . tine majority memben had the """'11ge studenta lo graduate !nm our syatem Marshall Hout.I (Mallhos, Nov. 29) about mistate ro.. Laguna Beach. To tbe Editor: · . , • · ·:" to mne a direcl response. Tbla forced who can compete on equal f!)ollng In how recall ele<llons are not democradc. Many oenllmentl; Of•pUI; l?::\'.'~ al!d. Dr Heu to npeat his request a oecond their .._ fiotdlll end-1!1\'e do I'°'! "·He 1hould do ll>Olber·-allout llow ..., 1 . HAVING -r;d with Dr. Ullom u a future have -~ m 1 '~· ti.ie and finally a third have a~ manual tratnln« for our · secret proceedlnp ol tile ~ C!>mtbei; momber ol Ille achoo! ~ 1or ....... beatl u I n!lecl'iilb·'tbe~qllllll)I ' Gltr ' ' · "~ ·1~\1tlldenta.1M di' not .,..vtdoltlierit•'Wlllr "161711! Ctlllury England•wt.r• neCe1su7 : •l!Ye~ I llliow'Imli''IO jj0i1 man of lives hen in 1.al\iO• I would llM lo ,VAGUELY underotandlng the adequateacademicektllstocompetesuo-to preserve Engllab democracy. llll8IUpUIOll !niocrtty, 1n1o1Jec1 aod share with JOU I"'?.. "·"1!11.!'611''"9l julllflcallon d Dr. Hell' plea, lllr. cwlUlly In higher education. Our blgh courage. M8Jbe the)> can find a man of backln>Wld of. fsni!lt11)111 ~· bi II* Tbomu ....tUllly 11ve a repfy. He loid_ , ~ II ecolfed al by netgbbori111 -THE MERE fact that a few dlssrs, ,!!!/lllP!fabl• quallliea • IOOIC'lllc9 -hope that I ~ l!lliiO Jio'lla wlio Dr. Heu lhatY'" ll!Ue WJI' ,.,...,. a .. ~ achoolt. • ... • ~·· left for the New World at the samll ·~~gll I doubt It. llut 'r1 lltiii'fhihilt fi'll ' •lhllhl $onetJt front;~ 'l'lJ!t!t,llloo,, • mattor d OCOllOllilta' (author's ~ · •'iti ele<tora~haa tven a ""1e f 'tii!i-' \be'S!ar Chambez wtt 4isptDSiiig' ' 1*olble ever tol¥,._1'1io will pv .. 1, ,,_, d..ir' ', -: ' ., ,phuls)." He OXl>lafned hi> •tat~' 'ftdtftce to the . II hu •Rpn>YI,<\ lo ...,..1 8lld wlthot!I evldeoce l!"!Y ,M~or-... ·tt1a--•od·bla· , ... 011AND110, ...... n.:ai'1tePJt00111- lurtbal' by ~t theft wu o q~. thoir.adlon. Pe P. in !Uwre ·e~. ".pro ... that 1 (yvu can'\ keep e....YliodY -Wl>Qle Ille-to-al poopieof· ·~to IA&una In 1•, abf·Diy r.mfb'l!P tlon wlletber . "°ffDolt w<n ~ ·;.Ifie dectorate l"'pudlata tl>e C)l!Tent • bapJll'., 8lld I) eomellM yoo ·havO' to 1-na lleac!1 a dJtt llUl W<iil:~ · _..., ·<nlltaleed I aumaier, ~bin han ablte a fair return tlii"aalary Dr. lltati llOatd'. Hom , Iii lbe ~tlme. !!>t ~democracy In -to save It -l•never knilt'W M;'l!Jll ~·..-ib "1135. I pel'IOOallJ ' 9' ~ WU recelvlna'.'~!te'1(t ltUtd thtl ya~, .' &al\! has rdjlCJndid lo lhe'8eslte 6!'th6 . I Wolj)d alii> Uke f6 lee 'Mr. ll~'s and ·1Ucb ureie..,' :tA[JiUI lit · ~ bore llnco ' • 't!Nl:I .._ .. ~l,' r f\!ll llke laitab.l!ii , rilaJOrlty ol votott• (no ' tllalter how' · l.:vleft some or \he boob on ~pt cOillldered b1-GI , 11 yurfy.~ '~ve alto over my, a 8lld "'7lnC at lllO iame time. lllr. amal!). · · ' Linke'• book fist At !wt one e.rv....a were. ever divided .1>y ,~ ·..,. .if.ell foodnetl I~-1(0: 'l1lomu; u ..U u lllrs. Gillette and · · 11\it la a democratic sodely. The the abollllon,jlf 'publlo edllcatlon w!kb .,;Jlo!ira or -the devoted to U.. -llowtV<r, esperimOatl I ii 'p!ty- C.pl. Llnlte, I! they have any lntclllflenco majority sllll rulea. · ..,. might lblnk--a very taio.at1ve ,,<lltlrld, I think ,..:d find lbel he llpelll alcal -tal •-oa.lo lllls al all. mull have coocrete ......,., why DONALD B. KNAPP idea in the United States of America. nine yoan workina al u bourly rate that -not to id•~ 'l'lriftl Ibey did not renaw Dr. Heu' COl!lrad. A a bor boy In a market would hardly -I mental #lltude ""~ .f, termmallooltaveryoerloulmau.r,and BVT,IAMaurethatlllr.Houtacanu-recard wllh envy. dennlninl many .. pecta _..,.., • It -be based on umeaot...i, Pffple Deeeh,e• plain -all t1gbVlblnklni bellevon 1n munlty. · · · '>perllope" ....., lib Ille one broogi>l up democra<J hive 11111)'1 known that !hare roonALL CO#bea an fired when Mor ... er, U W - bJ Mr. -· 1"edore, I ... only To lhe Editor: will be a brtchler -· ... once .. atop they -...... -. II'•~ a ~ mictal ID =~1\'".;:! ;":~ \r.t ~::'"~~,..:= J"~ f'.:.=·•~llo ~~-~•pub Ile i IA~ ~-&Jltti e..,.. =-U 11-boanJ momben at lllla ,..q. '. ldioOI boon! '\!arina tbe recent recall llappy i;, Yeu. ,__ ~--In. ltJt....... ·· arfllm 1or '. · Ii r -•1-lhal "· -·-,.,.... e~_.....,_ In IO do'"•, --· • WJLL1AM M. W1LCOJCE11 -ID a Wiit ~ pldleoajAllcal ,Iii ... --~-·-· -~ ,,.,,.._., .... A tank-tlil .... .. --ty'I We, aod Mn. Gillette were plaeed In a board memben expotted themlelns u • . IN I am llU'O I El . oC .,....... poolllon by ID openly llOlllJe put ef ~ ~y kilo'!'! minorllll '' • J-.alda the fad that lo ......,., but lholr reapooalbill!)-u whldl bli a bal>it of movtoc Into ltdlci6I • • ~-.---' •• La In lhe ea . ""'llll'Y pulJIJe ollldalB n• not lo pro40CI bollnb and commun1t1 _,,.,..,.111 To Iba EdlJGr. Jlffl ltM'-'«.. a:f':t lhey lhi•ftll!alll ~in -but lo -tbe Jec!Uate bodies wliile YOten are aslaep at tbe 11tls letter 11 lo .,..1eo11o the Lo&uno ~ · , • bulldlna an =.., "lltd ~· ~"Dr. --tori..•.... ........ Piiot'• "-~". wlllch lapi , Tl> Ille Editor• • • ' . " '·'minded .~~ lo "'QOI' dleact a well as tbe ...,...1 DUbUe Iba over Into lls aelecllveiy biased "News Now tbat Dr. Ullom, Dr. llHa and Dr. ettatlvity. Lqu l!>eltfeh; II ln- To the Edltilr: Our do« is, dead. He Wll' a good dog • greol witli children and a watch dog for not.only us:bUI ·oor.hilinedlate netlJlbon, W..1 }He wandered.1 ~ai1onallf • but De"!f' ~.•P~•e:or anything. But he , wandered bii!tl"lilO ~ - be •WU -Y\'*-"·bJ one of °"'-'""il!bl>on:•>E\'Ol}'OllOJ've lalRd lo •"Y!. "1-lblei Not .ln this nice nelihbarhood!i'"But yea,-btre! 1 receiv- ed a; """""' "'11 from · 8JlOlbe< of our neipbara.-,l!ls doc bad olied'lhlt day. in- tentionally poisoned! How. many more phone calls will I receive? '' 'WHAT WOULD YO!Jr dJlld or granC!chlld dt{if ·hO found -meat on YOOf l>ack porch? Pick II up? Put H Into hiti 1~oulh?? Maybe, ma• _not, C8n you late the cjlailc<? Mlill 'ilie Jfefghborbood chlldren be kejil·~ bi'thelf'lanes betause a -·ltOIM•.,..T 'lllls IYJW-.t Jndd•t' ttOa hlpjldle(\ in !hit San ·aem..w ·~ before. WUI It blppeit'~f. " ' ' · ~ we· tiave 'lo . ...u aritll ... chlld 11 kUWd? ,,, , . ••TOM ml LYllIWYOUNGEllMAN r ... 11• .... . ,. , JI 1 , •1•· • ..auM1•1(0AST • · -.. DAIL Y PILOT ---,,. . . 1°'ltobla<I tltll ~ 111 <JSlllllY WW. J II.A VE nowa for , tbal Stlldea". -hava bem ,_ ,_.effteo, I~ 1 pltlff'Of 11nd 'fW ~ ' ( .. t ·1~ . ' ' • • ' 'DO I " I Flournoy ··Eyes '74 I . !EJection • ' \ .,", .. . ' ' - CAL181A ' Pregnancy ,, Thw1dtl, Dectmbtt 28, 1972 DAILY PILOT 10ff -:road--'Renwves. A•tl&orit1' .. ' . Governor Vetoes Teen Device Bill ' Where To Go Looltlng for llOm<Wh«e to go, oometbing to .dol No ooo gives you better tipo than the WEEJU:NDER. 11'1. publlsb- ed every Friday In the DAI· LY PILOT. you can call your own. " ' ' I "' "' .• I.! . . .. . .. ., . " " .. '" ·1 I .. ., . ,, ' " , osla esa's . ' Deal ·a11k. .I ' "0 •"i ' " I I " l: • ••' ·• , ' ' ··~-' ' •"~ I',.. .-~ • .-,• l ~··· . ..,. ~ . C!lit be a winner. Look ot lho bit pl'IMs we'1'11·glvlng -•Y durlng·-Grond Opening. <;: • • ... Yeu con._r _ ifid,y0v're In· tho rv11nlng for oll .lho.pl'llff·li1hd .r• ; • • ( here. Drowlnp wlll M'helcl•from now lftltll J•l)Uory '2111h, 1973, Got y¥,"'.entry,1" ··~ spon •&possible. Forms av1llatile now at The Bank of Cosio Mon-· · · · · . 'l -. " '' I . • '" ... WIN two ton-1pood Schwinn blcyclo1 (twowlnnon). Both blkn Miidiy built for yoor1 of troubi.t .... rldlng. WIN pHHI good ot ony Edword1 Clnomo Contor th.....,.i-t 1971 S.. oll tho bost'fllms of tho yeor. ., . ' ,,,.,, ' ' ~· WIN 4 reHrwcl Hitt to the Tourn1mitnt of ROHS.~~, .. Md 4 tickets le lho 1973 R-...... llimo: Complete with cWoUffourocl.Codllloc I~ mwilno for lho ontl1'11 ,,•nd gourmtl picnic I~ for 4:,H.-..d be- tween tho pjlrodo ond tfli·pm.. Now Yoor'"Doy 1973 con bo -·of ·, . WIN o to...ioy H.wollon trip for two -Including tronsportott.J on Wostern Airliner. 5 doys ot lho lovely Outrl-Hott! on Woldld Beach, plus visits· to ICMNI, Maui, and Hiio, Hawaii. A meftworffte trip for our lucky winner. I l>, · • \ • 1 '' • • • . , "'I tho most b~ttllitl.~'1• of Y!DU• Ille If yeu'~.tho lucky winner. \'J 1 ,. • .. ' . • T.lie people of Costa . Mesa and their nelghbon have a new bank ".""" . Jlle'"IM:'tt ~~ Mesci: It's the · •nlY locql, lndep,endetit. · fllll-MrYice 'btinlc in' the city • .) .. , ... v ~....,, ... ' • 'I.I' • ~ .. , .. .MODlaN. IDIAS. .oi,!l.rAIHl~NID', SllvlcL . :%:··· .. eept.' ........... , ... ... '· ............... ~ .... .... ..... ' ....... ·iftww ••• , ••••••••• l•l ................ _ .. .,., ....... . ,....,.. ............... ..... . ~Ct.et: ...... ,....,,, • ..,. ....... .,. ... ____ _ -w .., ..., ......... ,... ...,.-·-·---........ _......, .. __ l " " . • . ' ' MAKE l'tlllNDS WITH YOUR • IANL Nsk•Wf.r~ ... wtlttt• ..._. Pea l~tMI ,,.,. .......... .. ...,, ................ '"' "' ... efC.. ................. ,.. .. ,. ... ,.. .... , ............ ... ....... ,.. ...., ........ ,. -... ................... rtr • .. . ' ·we:,. w. .. ._'"' ~''~'•&,.._ 40; !12•'" 'I'"·'-·~· .. , ... .... ....... t:Jt .. 1:tt ............ ..... --"--·-.. ~ .. ~loolt __ ..,..,... ..... ... ....... ~;BAl\IK eJF COSTA .1\1\ESA C0111er of Hw bor Blvd. and Baker (714) 979-4200 . ___ u _,,,.,._,.,., -fllC • I DlllQVU1,......,. a.a.. ... ·~•lrM•• .. tM Met41 JMt •• c..4.y, "1••-cMln!l111 •f ti!. .... ", Cll1flM Crffttft+ ... f . J111111 ,.,,. Y. ''"''""' ~ I. S.ltt.. OfPICllSt , .... v. M.,.. ... """"t _, dtW ........,.; J• w. ~·ht.. .1, •• ,....J4pt ... & .... ~,I K~n•• F.wl.,, ¥1C••,,..14*••: c1.,. s-•--kt .......... nc .. ~ •• r. • ~ ( , . ... •• ., . ·' " " ' .. • DAJLY PILOT Thunday, ~ 28, iq72 SF Sheriff Has Distaff Attorney ... SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The newly appointed San FranciSC() sheriff's attbrney says she is no outsider to prisons and their problems· Carol Ruth Silv:!r, apr,tnted fJ: to the prevlously all-ma e posi-~ tlon, said in addition to her ex· tensive rontact as a law yer , y:ith prison inmates. she was personally behind bars for 40 diyS one time. ··ALL THE YEARS of my practi~ have been spent in civil rights and poverty law ," the 34-year-o ld lawyer said in an intervie~·. , .. And I have an insider's u"t T.......,. view of jails because I was put SHERIFF ATTORNEY in one during the 1961 freedom march in Mississippi." C•rol Ruth 511Yfl' Unions Set Reward $20,000 Offered for Killer of Official,, SACIV>MENTO (AP) -A $20,000 reward, believed the largeJt ever posted in the sacramento area, Is being of- fered for information leading to the conviction of the killer of two labor union officials. The reward, put up by three unions and the Sacramento Bee, was announced Wed- nesday at a news conference. S ACRAMENTO COUNTY Sheriff Duane Lowe sald there had been "no spectac.'Ular developments" in the in· vestlgaUon of the slayings. He saJd there could have been ''innumerable motives·" The vict1ms were Roger Eltar, 34, international representative of the Sta· lionary Engineers Union. and John Duncan, 31, business agent of Local 39. Their bodies were found llec. I, the manllng after they went to keep a rendezvous wJtb an wddentlfied man pol- ~ as a worker who wanted uruon representation. OFFICERS HAVE said the killings were eppare!\tl,Y done by a professional "hit man." Union officials speculated immediately afterward that they may have been connected with the eUorla by the two men to org.WU workers in Nevada. HE SAID llOl1I Tldlnll were frequently in Nevada, and then: was no ~uon the killer would have to do hil work in Sacramento. Twombley said the fatal rendezvous had been a!Tlmged during 10 days of telephone cootacts. 1be reward consists of 15,000 contrlbullons by the Bee's Secret Witness program, the. Operating E n g-1 n e e t s International Union, Local 39, and the Soulhem caJllornia Council or Labor<rs. But J. J. Twombley of San THE BEE HAS l86 OOO . Francisco, Western regional rewards ted for M uDsoiv: dir~tor of the International crlmea. pos Uruon of Operating.Englneen, · 1..4Jwe said 1Us en lire told reporters Wedneoday, "It . homicide squad had been Is hard for me to believe" the detailed to the slaytngs, and slaying COUid be related to that "a lllll1lber of )eads" were organlzlni efforts. being punued . Rites HeM For Sl.ain Nurse, 22 1 . . WINTHROP, Millie (AP) - A funeral aervlce WU held here Wedne9day for Diana Sylvester, a 2Z-ye.ar-otd:,nurae stabbed ajld choked to,dulh In her San Francisco aplr!ment. Her family bas lived three years in thlS central Maine community, THE NUDE BODY of Mlsa Sylvester. an attractive blonde who was a nurse at the UC Medical Ctnter, was found over the weekend after a neighbor alerted police. ='told poll<e she heard and went to the opened door, but I young bearded man slammed It shut. TILE PRICES REDUCED TO CLEAR Inventory is a big job when you have more than 80 stores and 4 central warehouses! Help us clear our shelves so we'll have less to count -and save on your next tile project. ~}.!!~J!,~~E,!,~1,~~~'" .. , •. 15' COIK WALL TILE Poc:kag• of fovr 12k12 in. tiln .. , . S~~!~!~t~ !~.~!bl1I lox of 60 1q. ft. TO !.~,~~~.~~!!,~~" f,!~E . ,. "· 7~ ~~~!~~~ .. u.~.I~~!~!'.1~~.48' ~!~~~T_!!~,!!_~E,;, ..... : .. 3 88 !~~~!J.!~!5,A~~MoMy ... 13' ~.:;~!~.,!~?.!!!!!~., ~~9 8 ( 57' !!!!'J!!:~l~!~~~ ..... 189 , SALE PRICES GOOD ONE WEEK ONLY! ... • ,,r: ,.,,. ' COLOR ·o 1t••t0• TILE c: CIJtnt '-•10-, ·- •• ~~.!!t&.!!!'.;~~~ ... 1 •8 AIEE INSTRUCTIONS! FREE USE OF TOOLS! FULL REFUND ON AU LEFTOVER TILE! • • COSTA MESA -2221 Harbor Blvd. 645-1126 STORI HOUU OPEN SUNDAY 11 a.m. • 5 p.m. MON •• FRI. 8 a.m. • 9 p.m. . TUES.· WED. ·THURS.· SAT. 8 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. PLENTY OF FREE PARKING ! Exl• a $250 ml I I Ion dollar lneoa1te tax refund fof Callfomla taxpayers. SACllAl!ENTO -Financial upertl are now predicting a '260,000,000 state income tax relundwillro to California tu- ll'Yera. Tbe windfall resulted from the State withholding too much moner froift California tupayen fn 1972. M1111 of tho same taxpayer• are al10 ex- pected to receive Federal Jn- oome Tu refl.lnd1 for the am• year. ~rincOlne tax pNparecl free at Wutual Savings. Make 90Urappointment nowl The earlier you file the sooner you will receive your refund. Your income tax will be prepared by c:-lfr. 'TU: of ~.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 Accountfoi: $4,000 or more~You will cam the hl~~f interest in the nation on insured'l&vfngs .. (Sorry-we cannot proviae't!il8service for corporations, part· ncrshipS; bUsiness firms, estates or trusts.) Make yotir 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. "Certlliate Accounts earn 5!06 fur I ,..r or more. 6% for 2 10 10 years with $5,IXXI minimum. • f G ' • • Clouston's Sia • . ymg Trial Set SANTA ANA -Herman Leo Clouaton hu been ordered to face tr~ Feb. 2t on chargM that he shot and killed • Buena Park detective -an •lleged llaylnc that 1parked a five-day manhunt in Orance and Loa Aneeles CounUes three mon~ ago. Orange County Sup er lo r Court Judge William Murray aet the trial date and ordered Clouston, S7, Anaheim, return- ed to hit courtroom J•n. a JOf a bearing into the derendant'a demand for a change ol venue. Clouston contends through his lawyer that publlcity stem· ming from the klu6ig of detec- Uve Darrell "Bud" Cate and U>e subsequent m a n b u n t makes it imJX>ssible for him to receive a fair trial in this area. It II. alleged th1t CIO\ISlon 1hot and killed Cate while the olfletr ... queotlonlng him about his. possible role ln a reported sex offen se. Kld- n&l'in& charges were added to the milrder count 'w he n ~ allegedly used a Buena Park man as boltage durinl the five-day chase. DMV Cuts Extra Hour Fo~·The· Record Ml 7 IRZ ARBUCKLE I< SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 4.1'1 E. 17111 S.., c..ta Meu ...... • '-A\.o BALTZ-BERGE'""" 1'11NE11AL BOMfl CoroAdoi Mir ~ CotlaMna -' . BELL BROADWL ' MORTUARY llt Broad,...,,, Cotta LI 84411 • McCORMIClt LAGUNA. BEACH MOll"'AllY • 1111 La.-Canyon Rd. -u • PA.CIFIC YIEW MEMORIAL PARK ClelllOCa'l' Mortllll)' a.,.i •-wwnrive N...,....-,Cllllo-• ....me -· PRKFAMJLY COLONIAL rtJNSllAL HOME '1111 Bol1a A ... Well10fllll<f m llZI . • • SMITHS' MORTUARY 1%1 Malo SI. Uuntlnste• Beacll UM1n .. 4 Plead Guilty In Bogus Scheme authorities said, ju.st as they were getting ready to run off the ph;p' money o,rden. ORANGE COUNTY Two other men indicted, William J . Ryland, 49, and Charles Caube~ 42, both of Los Angeles, face trial next Wednesd1y. I 6.00.16 '15" 7.50116 ... '28" 6.70.15 •19•~ l .DD1t6.l :.•34u · i.ohll •22.. 1.71116.S •. 036"' 7.00116. •24•• 1D.D011U. '44" 12.oox1•;s '49 .. I Rape Trial Date Set I l/NlllO)"A.L OltJG. EQl/tP·•f3 CAltS '1895 ..... ,, ' A78'13 t.~.+i.to f.,ol.b. ,_ · E78/l4' •••••• •:JJ•• P'18/14 •••••• •33•• 678/14.; ••.• •34•• ' . ff78/f4 .••.•• •31"• 678/15 ••••.• •35•• 878/15 •..••• •37 .. L78/J5 .••... '4390 COSTA MESA H05 H1tMr llvd. I~ ti &Ml.tr I "',....) 171•) ..,_ fR70/14 ... '32" fR70/14 ••• '34" GR70/14 ... '37" ffR70/14 ... '39" fR70/l·S ... '34" GR70/I~ ... '37" HR70/15 ... '39" IR70/IS •.• 144" GARDEN GROVE 14040 lreokhunt ''''"' If w .. tnilMltr 6 l"'*llllnll (714) 5304200 fhind.lly , Otctmber 28, 1CJ72 No matte r how you look at It, your checking account Is a loss. Your money just lies there, not earning a dime for anyone but the bank. Then, when you write a check, the bank lacks on a service charge for the privllege. They get you coming or going. About the only good th ing about a checking account Is that It beats walkfng all over town to pay your bUls. • Well, so does PaySaver, Avco Savlngt new blll-paylng_ say.. Jngs account. And, it beats your checking account In the bargaln. First of all, It pays your bills. Any bill anywhere. Plus, It pays you interest like a savings account Five per cent per annum, compounded daily, paid quarterly (current annual rate). With PaySaver, you just give us a Uat of whom you want paid what when, and we do an the rest. Including licking the stamps and mailing the envelopes. Sure, there's a nominal service dlarge, but e'tlen that's eliminated if you keep your balance high enough (re-' member, this is a savings account). 11 you pay your bills, there are a lot of good reasons why you should consider opening a PaySa'tler account Come In to one or our offices and we'll give you _more detalls. And give you a Free :J2·page Money Management Gulde, too, wh lle the supply lasts. No strings attached. DAILY PILOT It -·i---.-..---""''#}.~- 6.S .. 13 2 f., 19"" 1.76 S.00-15 2 ,_. ,~ 1.40 S.20.IS 2 ,_. J(IR I.SS S.20-14 1 lw llJR 1.50 LA HABRA 1000 Whl"lw llvll. (ct..-II WlllttW I l .. dll ,, ... ,... ,, BUENA PARK 2962 Lincoln llY4. (tffllH If Ll..citll\ .. KlltttJ 1114) 12 .. ssso I ' Coata Mesa-3310 Bristol Street MARKC. BLOOME SNOWCHAllS AU Popular Sise•! .. / 714 ) (639-4321 ' 1. h11ttU MW ~!Mitt! li1th1! 11t 111 4 wlitth 2. Rtk hi 1114 wlittl crll•4tr1 , 1. 1.,,,11: fr11t wlittl ...... ,.,, ; .. '""' & •K\!•1 111 411,, •• J. ''"' & .... llH• & ct.eek .....,..., ~'-1te• :i.6t>xJ!i 6 .o'iO:c 13 Al , .•. ,, .. U.S. Cars •. l•tHCt"-ktn"'nt 1R4 litlll -·· .,,1 ... , ...... 1.Jn 1rW-.ll ~r•k• ..... •. '''"'' .,.., ,,.... '"" t . ''" ellj••hMtttl ,.,. lift 1f I 11., , ....... ,,.,....., ,, 1 ' • • DAil.¥ PILOT Tllursday, Oeetmber 28, 1972 Famll11 Circus 1>11 Bil Ke11ne Elderly Get Tax Relwf; Gas Price Hikes Advised Exchanges Handled Witli Growl IZ-2.8 ,.., ...... _ >-IT•-, .... ~ "Do I ho¥e 10 thank Aunt Nancy for the archery set? It'' broken already." Nixon Admired Most for 4th Year From Wire Services President Richard r.t. Nlxoo, ror the fourth consecutive )ear, is !he man Americans n1os1 admire in the world loday, follawed by the Rev. Billy Graham and Harry S Truman. the Gallup Poll has indicated. The poll "·as conducted Dec . 8-11 a11cl included intervie\l'S Tom Hayden, who was held up and questioned for nearly an hour by immigration officers "'hen be arrived with the act- ress at He!thrO\V Airport. Miss' Fonda. who looked angry before boarding a plane for Beston. sJid: •·u is a tendency to smugness on the parl of the British officials. There may have been some sign of courtesy but the ( J smugness was unbelievable." PEOPLE The couple came to London ~--------~fter the star finished filming "~th 1,008 persons 18 or older at 300 sele<:led Io ca ! it i es across the nation. A newcomer to the list was Dr. Henry Kissloger. Nixon's foreign affairs ad\'iser, who placed fourth. In fifth place was Sen. Edward Kennedy, followed by George Wallace. Spil'o Agnew and Pope Paul Vl Other newcomers to the list \\'ere George 1\.1cGovern, ninth, and Willy Brandt, 10th. * Film Star Jue Fonda, who came to Britain to protest the Vietnam war, cut short her stay and new out in a huff protesting the ~smugness" of British otficiab. With Miss Failda was riance Ibsen's ,;A Doll's !louse" at Roros in Nonvay. * "Offer everybody a drink on me," jazz m an John Provenzano said in one of his lasl letters lo his family. The veteran clarinetist died in New Orleans at 75. Known as Johnny Zano when he helped export jazz upriver to Chicago in 1918, his career spanned the early years of the 20th century. In a note written lo his family shortly before his death, Provenzano asked: "Give me a nice funeral. Lots af flawers. Buy a few bottles af New 0 r I e a n s whiskey and otter everybody a drink on me. That's it. See you later." SACRAMENTO (AP! - California senior citizens won $684 .000 In property tax relief under a bill signed by Gov. ltonald Reagan. The measure provides up to $500 in property tax aid to recipients of California's Old (CONSUMER) Age Security IOAS) benefits. They mu.st pay lh\! first $180 of their annual property taxes bero re becoming eligible. Reagan said the measure provides OAS recipients with approximately the same J>ro' perty tax relief a 1 r e a d y received by recipients or California Senior C i t i z e n s Property Tax Assistance. e lllke Urged LOS ANGELES !AP\ Price increases of up to 18 percent have been rccom- mendt..'tl by a federal examiner for natural gas produced in the Permian Basin of Texas and New Mexico, an area sup- plying a major share of California's nahu-al gas needs. A spokesman for Pacific Lighting Corp. said the impact on consumers of natural gas in Southern California probably will be minimal, because the gas consun1ed here is prn- duced under already existing contracts. Pacific Lighting is the parent company or Southern Califarnia Gas Co., which serves three million residen- tial, commercial a n d in- dustrial customers in Southern and Central California. eBUl Vetoed SACRAMENTO !AP) Gov. Ron ald Reagan has vetoed legislation that would have allowed establishment of a pooling program a n d guaranteed minimum price for manufacturing grade milk. The measure was authorecl by Assemblyman Frank Murphy, a Santa Cruz Republican. "There has r.ol been suf. ficient showing of a com- pelling need to support the ex- tension of a guar.anteed price for manufacturing g r a d c milk," Reagan said. "I do not believe that the best interests af the consumer or producer would be served by the Imposition of mandated prices at this time," Reagan added. January t\11t1D ()///~ MEN'S SHOP OPEN NEW YEARS DAY Open Sun. 10 to 3 Weekdays 9 to 5 Alpaca Two-ply Imported SWEATERS $21 Reg. 32.50. All Colors "-t et' SHrt S1"•• Y•l•11r SPORT SHIRTS 22.50 ond 24.50 WHhoble Arne! $1450 SPORT SHIRTS #~ MENS' SHOP SLACKS Double Knit Reg. to 26.50. $14 SPORT SHIRTS 1/2 PRICE e Dff ~ 9te., p.,. SIDI & Poly•fef IECKWARE •.:-•. :." s31& ~O::.s 1 / 2 Price tH¥. C••msr1 r.11-0.. s19 SWEATERS ~:~o NEW'°Rl I EACH 1107 J•rt1bor•• ltlt. -Phone: 644-0llO 1.0CATED AT T'HE NEWPOllTEll INN \I .. 'r'9'11' •1llllAl'lltf1<1,. ff' MHlll' Gllar ... Amt* ,1rt111t e Control# Sel SACRAMENTO I AP! Tighter control of travel pro- moters is provided in a bill signed in to law by Gov. Ronald Reagan. The measure requires travel promoters to hold 90 percent of most t r a v c I services is paid. ~lowever, it exempts t r a v e I companil's with a net worth of at leasl $1 millian. Travel promoters also art required to file detailed m. formation with the State Department af Consumer Ar- 1\"\\ f.~D fairs regarding their opera- tions. t\eat•"'' . TV • STEREO • APPLIANCES ' PRICES CHOPPED~O THE BONE ••• SAVE PLENTY! MANY ONE-OF-A-KIND • FLOOR SAMPLES • DEMOS FRIGIDAIRE CLEARANCE! washers • dryers • dishwashers • microwave ovens refrigerators, 2-doors • 3-doors • side-by-sides now at fantastic low prices ••• limited quantities and colors ••• floor demos ••• 1many one-of-a-kind, hurry! LISTiD IS ONLY ONE Of' THE TERRIFIC MONEY-SAYERS YOU'LL FIND: * FRIGIDAIRE in-ACTION WASHER, ••G FAMILY 11%116 LB. CAPACm '19995 PERMA-PRESS CARE-UMmD QUANTmU ............ NOW ONLY HURRY! DON'T MISS IT! Portable TV's, Consoles, Stereos ••• ~II Drastically Redµced To Clear Fast! Here is A Sample Of Terrific Savings: *RCA 23'' DIAGONAL TV, SOLID STATE, BEAUTIFULLY STYLED CONSOLE, O~.E QNLY $57995 WAS s77995 · · · · • · • · • · · :NOW ONLY · . .. RCA 17" D.IAG. PORTABLE TV, ACCRUCOLOR .•.•.•... PRICE CUT TQ $349'5 MANY MORE NOW PRICID AT DRRIFIC SAVINGS! BE HERE EARi Y FOR BEST CHOICE ••• MANY ARE ONE ONI YI ' 25 Years of lntegrlt11 & DependabfHt• COSTA MESA EL TORO HUNTINGTON BEAC!1 Harbor Area Soddlebock Valley fountain Valley 411 L hff'"9etltk It. II,_ a4, .. ,,,_...., tr..k'"'"t • 0 ...... '411 , hlt)o ........ 10·• f!041•t •• '-"·•11) , .... , •• Lvc•y Mitt.) • BE Delly 10.t, hit. 10·' r>on1 10-•, s.t. 10.t 646-1684 837-3830 962-5528 RADIO DISPATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV I. APPLIANCE SERVICE PHONE 548-3437 ., ' " ·' .. I ' ' • ander man dictm lot' bi co charg dants mass peno l I I I ·111il1 ( H ·,. re, you iove me ·now. sewn et.bin&? , '. B Phil lnt•~ndl ., fMts.·J;J~ Terdt. f ' t'.. • . . . rSµ~pect ~Guilty I } I . ' ' Iu:rt\'JP h~h-deathl · , I .j L l • SAN , BllillNAl\!Ji!j( (AP) • UNDEI! Q1J1!3T10NING by -'Roojlld w. Beaty, who was prooecutlon 8!icl defeme 41-r,,.a ftml custody I a 1 t ' tomeys, Beaty adinitted that he took part In planning. tbe I October In.an ambush that loll Oct. 6 ambush and his subse- one of hla llblDo ~ guards gue11t escape. · d·d·"'J'\ ,UW olbef ~. Eleven m em be rs ol ~plaa .. l ·plltYtomurder. Venceremos, a Maoist 9eatj; )t. .,. .. ·~ ~tton II) the San Fr'!ll; Wfdneiillr'l)':tD i:~'t-' '\lts· . dlOo area; bste been amoted ~San~ Jp oo.-tton With the eSCBR"· ~ .Odlll Judp'Etntil llh6 . prooeeuttoo - P. Fog,. ' · that Beaty became aaaoclated with the Venccremos whlJe in prison, and that s e v e r a 1 Grand Jury :::.~':~~~~~P ~ Critici zes Count y DA . AN ESCAPE charge• agalllst Beaty .... dropped after tbe guilty plea. One condition under wbiCb Beaty pleaded guilly was that the arrangements for his future custody be kept secret. A j~ spolt"f!JID, =:~~Id "HE IUS'EVERY reuon to \ . 'Device' Sales Up COALVILLE, EaaJand (UPI) -Salea of con- traceptlvei hive rllen 300 pereent lfDce the Family PJannln& Alloctatioo, a blrlb control edvloe agen- cy, dllplayad In !ta front window • Chrlst:nu tree decorated w I t b coo-traceptives. MODESl'O (AP) -The Stutlslaus County Grand Jury ha! lsstred a yelll'<lld report criticizing Dist. Atty. Alex· ander M. Wolfe on gt'OU?1<h be manufactured m a s s in- dictments lo obtsln publicity fot bimseU. 'Two Instances were cited Wednesday in the annual report -one involving 316 corporation code violation charges against two defen- dants, the other Involving a mass indictment of 1 2 9 persons on drug charges. he alra14 or his life, like any e~emy o1 tbe peopte... I& -· 'The ambush took place~ ..... road n~ Chino aa ~tf1 "' . under guard, WN. belDg falten to a pretrial ~ on a previous escape charger. · A car carl'ylng several persons ran the prison car off the road, and one occupant shot one guard fatally and wounded another. Beaty W"'8 recaptured Dec. 10 in San Francisco. Several otber poisons charg· "While tbe grand jury b available to the distrkt at.. lomey for cases brought to It at bis discretion, it Is not in-ed In the case will he .,.. tended lo he used as a pubUcl-raigned FridaY ty vehicle ~ enhance Ills , · pu\>"C image," the t<pOrl said. '?HE REPORT said tbe druC1;, J udge N SDJ~ caAes could have ~ pro: retied jndlvl<IU'llli'. .Jm.1"84 ol SACRAMEN:;J'O (AP) -Ap- in a mu.,~ torilied'~ o~ potntment or llobelt M. Olson coii>e of tOOse lndlclinenis "a ol l\fcadia to the llOs Angeles recMd not too imnresslve in County superior Court bench itsi.1111nN11M:," .r~..--·-; was announced bJ 19"ov. • ...--7' · ' · 'Ronald; Reagal\. The · ~ · -"old. ReP,Jbll~n attorney su~ ceeds Maurice T. Leader, ,who ' reti1'cl. ' ' . " I ,;'our'wnli ·~ol. 'I· • , JJt..WITH THE NIWll . ' .. •• I 'Mililfnum S100 ~I 1eoounl "( .. , .. ~ .~ . ~op in yciur ~arahd come s you are;~ , . he Imperial · l ~lks are railing for you I , { .. . -y rERRY GaANT a.Ph ~ ~ ' ' ' l:h!J pop.tlar exor-ion it ~ hei.rd often at'tbls ~of yean and we' c6Caldntt help thtnidng how well tt collk!' a'pply to the medicine chat. ;inr-)'i>ur home. Father time ·Ml a way of belna a ·~ f.94 there are thing on the lhelf that. you should exam· tne and periodically replace. In addition partially uaed -· Jl'Oducls ond old pre-scttptlan medicines al!i>Ull not. be pennl~ted t.o accum.u• late. , Start ort thiJ coming New Year with a •pedal reeolu· tlon to1 clear out the place where :you usually •tore medicine producti: It's one way ol &t!ttlnC ott to a aood hct.l thy start. lri 1973. ... • - DAILY PILOf J ~ Council Panel Cited for Brown Act Hijack Costa SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -rt will cost $1.1 rnllllao ID fLI million for antt.liljacl: IOCUfltJ to meet new federal ru1a 1& the San Franc:t.c:o ln1'rna- lional Airport, the alrporl oommissfon bu been told. Airport diJ:,ector Jama K. Carr said It will cost ti>al much, to "rent" 80 to l!O ltier- lff's deputies from San Mateo County to beef up the guard force. ESCONDIDO (AP) -A judge bs1 ruled that a com· mittee appolntod by t he Eacoodido City Oooncil vlolat;. ed state law when lt blrred the press an4 public from a meeting. The IUitoWat brooght by the -,, ..... Advocate, which oontended that a July 19 meeting or a special cabl• I • televi1ion rate study com- tnlttee violated tha state's Brown Act agaln1t &eeret meetings of legislative bodies. CARLTON R. APPLEBY, publisher ol tbe news· paper, a at d Wedneaday detaJll of the dect!lon are ltlll being IOO<ked out among Superior Coort Judge William Macomber and attorn~ys for bol.h aides. "But I think it's prttty well speUed out that any com- mittee formed in this manner in the future is going to have lo he open lo the Pl"" and public," Appleby said. The council appointed the six-member committee. made up of the mayor, c It y manager, finance director and Clbillon crpbil stemw- thtte private c:ltlulll, In J une lo consider • roq-1 by EIOOlldldo C.ble Television for a rate Jncreue. THE GROUP'S llrst two meetqa were open to the public, but after conferring with the city attorney, it clos- ed the third m<etln~ and denied admJttance to a l1mes- Advocate reporter. " " ! h. ! 'l Anchor .Hocking ARLINGTON :~:..~.~~ ............... 2.20 ~~i~l:'.".' .................... 2.19 ::,:. ~.~~~ .... : ........... 2.19 Punch Bowl Boz.Beer/Wine 2 2ft1 4 glaSeeS for ....................... .. ANO OONT FORGET THE 1!AA NECESSITIES: •Ho,.d'oeuvrolorl<>.selofS .............. 1AS • Heavy-dujywlngcorl<.crew ............... 1.84 • -..;,-........................... 1.20 • Ooubli jlggef.... .............. ......... ...... ~ •Oomobol11ellO<"W ......................... ~ 26 Pieces 4.99 .................... _. .................. . ll-.,.ii¥i:i::'r> ::::::::::@ • • Bank YOU Od YOUR OOC!OR cAN PllONE US whon you nl'edia delivery. Wt wlU Of. llv.r 1 promptly witf¥?l.tl •• tro charn:-A 'oKt ma!IY J>e®t• 1"111 on tfti fof 'thefr hn.lth needs . We welcome reqUNtl for ct.llwt)' .. rvtee and charge accotlntl. PARK LI DO PllAllMACY 1 " I • OUMADA ..ul'. llOOOetnwdlt.•WOOIUU""112l509._,.-. •• m .... Ul)WSI. •IAITAAllA 5t.C..."9•• \. • lOllAIKI _... .... llnttDrlt • U.llWOOD C.... St .i Pnlalftt IM. Coate Mesa H borBlvd. at Fair Drive (714)979-1000 • U l H ..... alRMtl ...... rt ..... ..,..,._ ,,.. Dollvwy '"t 9 lllU PAii ...... orwttU*.. •OUHI Cwfe!ICtMM• ~-' ' ' I ...... ,,. r•t1J11•t1•1S1...,,t ,.1 , r DAILY PILOT . B"8g Mother Lois Douglas, mother of seven children, is only one of many women who show up for work at the IBM facility in Rochester, Minn. But she's the only one who totes ~ tool bag. She ts. the first woman customer engineer in the Midwest for the nrm and the second typewriter repairwoman in lhe divisio n. SS.T Project Hearing Missing Witness WASHINGTON (UPI) - Administration w I t n e s s es scheduled to testify on pos- sible resumption of t h e supersonic transport SST pro- ject backed out at the last minute, Sen· William Prox· mire, (D-Wis.), announced. Proxmire, who helped kill the $4 billion SST program in Congress, anoounced t h e ~!"'!. Tu~_a;'.d COlliiJft!lliUDUr 8\IDCUllllllllllllB bepn bearing> to prob e ·=u.:!'.l!!I!· 111!' .. tt• • m>i'fellL 'I "WHAT IS ''r·R E ~ inistraUon t:r1ina: to. bide?" Promlire asked. "If nothing is planned, why doni they come lonrard and say so?" Pronnire said Secor D. Browne, chairman of the ClvU Aeronautics Board. reportec! he had "a Jong-standing family commitment" and would not be able to appear at Wed- neoday's hearlntl• before the Joint Ecommic's Prtorities and Economy in Government subcommittee. United Air Lines and Pan American World Airways. Boeing had the original con- tract to build the heavily government funded SST. But when Congress killed the pro- gram, Boeing disbanded its SST work force and the government sold its mockup of the 1,880 mile-an ·hou r passenger jeUiner to a businesmian who plans to use JI .............. -~r .... ~ ..... ';r~ "t:~"-·-:- ~-d trY lo revive Ille pro'gram _: lo get the Unjted· 'States Into competition wiUi a com- par ab I e · B·rl1li!h-French aircraft now being testflowo and scheduled for commercial service in 1975. "We have ·no program to revive the SST, and we have submitted nothing on the ·SST to the Ofllce pf ·M1Mjement and Budget.''· Vjipe said, ad· ding tt would-: '!require a Hurculeao effort,. to take .any action this year ... ' • Corporate Profit Margin Change Seen WASHINGTON (AP) -11Jib government eoooomlc of- Dclals sald the Nlxon ad- ministratlon '1 restraints on corporate profit margins pro- l>ably will be modilied when a new wage-price control system la adopted next year. A high Cos\ of LMng Coull- cil source told reporters Wednesdoy that while Pru!-than au)'lh1nl else In his con- dent Nixon bas yel to mal<e up JU!tallon> no P h a a e J his mind 'lbool the rule, It ecooomlc controls. can't be left the way tt ls. In a day crammed with 'l'r<alW')' SecrotMy George .-iomlce .... ., N t 1 ~· • 1 P. Shull! later reinfor<ed that Cooncil of Ec:ooomlc Adrilerl stalem.en~ telling newsmen at reported at a news coolerence a separate briefing that he bU that 1973 ohould aee 1 "rapid encountered inore complaiJita 4 expans.ion ~ a• reduced rate about tbe profit-margin rule o1 ·tnnation." While this WU Pini tJll, the !lode · dellclt of '5.1 bllllon, Commer<o Departmail ...,.i ae-..Jly adjulled; for tl>e I gloomy roparl oa Ille 111-Int II DWllltha of It'll, eullJ ternatlooal economic ._,., J makl"i ii the wot.I ,.., ill The Milon'• trade ~ U. oalloll'• hUtory ta trade value of IDlj>Ol'la mlnul 11-with other -· Tllo porta--......i In 1'fo,_ber , dellclt for oil ol lffl WU to a total of '$11U llllllloa; the obOllt 11 billion. report said. The rapid eX]>llllloo ol Illa This left the nalloa wllh 1 U.S. economy II ,.,. ol 1111111 All Stores Celebrate Grand Openl119 -of o .. New Store, 3325 lristol at MacArth•r lhd., Santa Ano COST• MEU.-Ul E. 17111 SI. COSTA MESA-t• H1.-r BM. II wa-SI, SANTA AHA.-ltM W. 1!111 ...... Hd &liMtl $1, 7,. Pack of 80 · Paper Plates ......... s.-u,. 58~ 49• Pack of 50 ~~~~up•35c ~ .. , ....... $2'° ,,, .. , Gotham 'Gold Stripe' Agilon PantyHose DISOHftt Prl11 66c ···and ~much more\ , -Good ..... hooolof ... ~ Rene loudMlrd ~t•s - Cha-.pagne S.cotch or Cold Du Wlal11kf Flftlo hllH Dominion Rare •••• rt .. Canadian Whisky _ ...... -Fiftlo Gollff .ils4~J9 lktillm-. Straight "~ h- leurben 359 11!.W .# """-"" tr...'.'";···;;,.... Fine Quality Harkoff Vodka C...1111~ ' . ATMfty_.-.._. .................. _ ..... ...,_ ............. -·- MUMTIH'T'OM •ACN-41ut l9ldl ..... It AfWIM NU .. Tl ... TOM •UCl!I .. WlfMI' " Poharold 'II' ~~ Col ..... FI .. . ' Popul Or Pofl1rold S2'4 ~ Shoolft' flh for ---toldrlQ fvt. 8 ~ """· · Reg. '9" VillJ~ Floral Cower ... '9•· 24111C11Rn ~$6~ '2" Precisfo• Made Scissors & Shean • ~.~~!:':r· a:=-$148 ~ • 7" HG!r Thinning x..... .... Barber Sd-. ... .... ~~·5'" s.5::;t •. ., .,.. • , .. o..w . . ~".I~:~·' '11'7 594 Popular She · Fumace Filters • 14x 25 x l ,. •16x 15x:l" • 20x 2S x 1" ;.!!~·· 39c Tei, quollty fur"o<• fl!Mn fl"Ol'l'I Ow1n1 Co r" 1 n o Fit.rjloll. c.ld ·-"-.. 1ou 69:. Stuart Hall Proxmire said Transporta- tion Secretary John A. Volpe and federal Administrator Jotm H. Schaffer agreed to send representatives, then sent word their agencies were "In transition" and could not ~ anyone. Both men are leaviag their posts. A utomakers Moel 'Put On'a' n.-1-_,,.., " Talt1ets&Enwelopes ., PROXMIRE SAID he was disappointed that two aircraft manufacturers and t w o alrilnes that could ftguro in any possible revival ol the ssr program had refused to testify at the hearings -tdentifyjng them .. the Boeing Co., McOOllnell Douglas C o r p • , Four State Banks Hike Lend Rate . . ... '·' TeURecdrd. Sales Year DETROIT (AP) -The four major American automakers have reported record sales. of 256,NS cars -for m l d - December, up more than 76,000 vehicles ftom the same period a year ago. The automakers bad one more .selling day this year to reach their record sales .. General Motors' aales rate of 14,22$· vehlclea a day was an inc:riase of 20 p e r c e.n t · Cllryslet's average ol (1183 vehicles a day was up 40 per- cent Crom last year, and American Motor1' 881 units a di!' represented a 7 percent SAN FRANCJSCO (AP) -. pin. . Four Calltornia banks baYe Joni Motor Co. .did not •nnounced they are increatln& nport flnal flgurea, b u t their base lending rate to • ·.estimated a sale1 Jncruse of perc.nt from S% pereenl ~,,percent •. with •bout 8,478 uc.uVer»U per dly. Bank of Amerlc:a "" the ;. GM !lpOkesman sald " lint to report the ~ percent oellent salerra&et provfded ':,; lncrelae, effecUve Io d a Yid nceUent 1prfnlt>oml 1 which bank offk:ials • . tinued sales ln rm " or ~ lollowtd 1lmllar moves by Tb 1 b th, :__, Eutem banks e vo ume ;y e C1IU 0 · nouncl the year II upected to reach . • The other banis an ng about 9.2 l!llllion, Aa of Dec. ~ rate raises are Wells 19 reported .-lea had tea heel lrarp B>nkj Bank o f I m OOO c CaUfornia and U n I t e d ' 1 vehlclrts. ealtlointa Bll!k. · : erocter Bank 1ald the hike I rvine Firm was under consideration. Jolm F. Holman, Wells G F•rao executive vi"' president els Contract StMewooil ...... Whisky Fiflt j,.,;•3" • •1• ~-: Priatod ... p ..... ,. __ .... 1~ Aaylk' ~ '1" ..... Pil•• Choo11 fr1m 'Army Sutii"-'• y,.. dt.a. 'lllul J-.', 'Nb ..... ,,,. & 2:' 89c ,'Aho)"~ so~ tobi.ts ~-.int"'" ' • .,,. , ... Sia '""" ............ .. • 1ronshe.ot1 •• .. u , ' • " , •nd aenior loan officer, aaid 1111 -mlected 1 morked Iner-In lhort term money t4n ''"'Pleated AllfltiMSatl1 Dra,.orios The 0epar1men1 ,, qeren.. 11-kets r1How C.111 a.th Towels bu announced that Barry L 4etM'',.tM'•jr ..... 42 • 35" ''''' hck ef u..r s.n ..., ., ""'"' • 1 Miller £nsinetring Inc ot , ~ bfll"1 for.,._. s3•• 1 !~~~t:r!nt!:.~ $499 ::.:.'~':.0'!':;; 2 89' =:':~:OC:~ 97 ~\_PolJ.•~·~c!:d $ " I ratos. "Loan demand bas been otrq at Wells Fargo, roflecl. ., th6 VlflOr'OuO -In baa!Mu ac:tlvity at au levcil of the economy/' Holman said In a statement. ' Jrvinehasbeen awa~ed1,$l.· ~"',..:..-= ,......, c:•l•r.a wfth 9;:'.::.!~ ~ ~.,,_,,..,••lidt. C wse.y1iu.~fftt 444 ... :, , million contract from lhe U.S. telklfMlrl•~"'"'* ~~ ~ ~ 11 .. , y....., & 1 Ml!ccitnwtdito""lt)"OUI' ~1 • Anny. '~. hcwM.... ;ht;' ~· Tlllt Mu-ltt ·Colar ... !""~ • ..,,.. .... _....,.. j R.17 ...... ...... ·~211#0 ........ ,,. ..... "h!*"l r., ..... ' The conuact cslis f M tht ...................................................................................................................................... ..;. ...... ,.. ...... ..,,,. m anu f acture or 20mm -.,,., cartricta:e metallic bell Hnks. •Afl ' \ -"''" bi'lo 11 J' ·11• "rjj. • •fir '"" " y d t ,· Designer Jan. Everett models a ·bikini ,as . ~ .• ' ~ J _ iJs,1 dotsign~r, Gwen . Wjll\a~ • • .. , I \ . m*~ app 118ftr. Ab·""'~· -•~~1 Digs New · Line By JO OLSON Of Hit D.il'I l"lllt SllH Anyone who starts giving fashion shows at the age of 3 must really dig clothes. The creator of the new Dig It line of beach and casual wear was that 3-year- old once upon a Hine, and now she's lhe first to admit that she's wild about clothes. ' I Gwen Williams, a Coata Mesa .res~nt. began her fa.shlon career in Salt Lake Cl-· ty by giving fashion and dance shows for the neighborhood children. The.+ garments and costumes, made by Gwen, -were Dour sacks and grocery bags, trimmed wtlh Christmu decoratioM. As an older child she would skiP the movies and save her alkiwance to buy clothes. At 17 she graduated ftom the John Robert Powers School w~h a teaching ' credential and started instructing in both modeling JM dancing. ' BIG SHOW After moving to Phoenix with her hus- band, Harlan, and sons Bryce and Scott, now 18 and 14, she "worked modeling quite heavily, doing big shows during market week and restaurant shows. The more I worked with fashion the more I liked it." When the Williams family came to Costa Mesa five years ago, Gwen ac- cepted the position of fashion coordinator for South Coast Plaza Merchants Assn., which she held for two years. "Tha 's what spurred me into design· ing. It was so extiting," she 'said bub- bling. "Then I opened my own boutique three years ago." She started designing swim suits and ••kicky little cover-ups" to go in her sec- ond shop near the Huntington Beach pier, putting a tiny shovel on each gar- ment to mark it as a "Dig It" fashion. ..An ex~ve ln the fashion industry saw her Une, liked it, and a1Tanged a showing in the Ambassador flotel in Los Angeles, and orders began to come in quickly when buyers also "dug" her bright Ideas. 'HARD WORK Typical of most young businesses, Dig It required personal contacts and lots of hard work on the part of its owner to get it Qff the ground the first year. "I did a lot of selling myself last year, but I found out in dolnc It wtW women want," Gwen sald. '"I've trkd to tb1nk of every girl, every woman. "I know lbe lr probltml tllrou;h !#ting fer fashion shows. I delign for Uie pre- teem, average girls, large girls and the extra-large. And for women who have stretch marks and those who don't want such brief bikinis. ' "I design my line with the young teenager, the housewife, elegante and secretary ·in mind. .. Her line now includes revenible swim suits, one-size suits that stretch, 1oog and short baiter dr..._,, paJa;w paiill, tank tops and other, Uems. • , FABRIC V ARlETY ·She uses seersucker, Spaodei, Cl'\Wled fabrics and basic acrylics to matcb the personalities and life styles1 of ber customers. Ideas come' from 1<atchina 'people and sludying tjlagazines, Including the ltallan and French editiom of Vogue. ".MOit im- portant, Gwen "always keeps tbe fit in mind and .what it's going to do 'fur girls. You put out garments ~ way they Will be received. "I seem to have a second sense about what is going to be in before It is. Somebody up there is helping me! "I · like ·clothes· because I uilnk they reflect a person's personality, I've thought of everyone. I've done what ~ pie want. This is what has been lacking in the fashion industry. This year they're really making us look like women." KOOKY LOOK Gwen herself likes bolh feminine and "kooky" clotheJ and tends to wear something more far-out when she com·· mentates fashion shows. She oil paints, plays golf with her hus- band, watches her sons play football at Estancia High School and is constanUy redecorating her Mesa Verde home. Everything is done with a sense of ex- citement, .however , and this is Gwen Williams' real trademark. "I have a zest for living that won't quit. I wake up every day wondering what I'm going to do that day." In a serious moment she reflects on . her contributionS to mankind. By offering clothe~ to women that make them feel and look their best, she feels she ls ad- ding happiness to the world . "l'm still serving people. It gets back to that." " . . . . ... ~·~., J ' sh"d.WI -fh"e ma!clii~g pal n :~·: • l . I ' " Stony Silence Truth T oo -:Cutti ·ng . °'AR Ali!I 4NJlERS: Mom 's n>UDier sisteti died a few months ago """ .... --in tho fa¢Jly 'pOit, : 'l1lil ·dear awrt never married ·anc1 f!tvef. revealed ber age. She looked very youthflll and waa oo proud of her good loob./1.Ut yur this darlJnc "oman !Ook- a 'wonderful new job and gave her age as l(J. years younger than she actually was. Now the stone cutter wants to know what uiyut on the grave marker as the date of bu blr1h. Whal should ,i.iom say? ~e of the problem1 Js that Mom aod bft sister were• actually five years apart. Uc, my mcm gfvea the -age my awi:l ~imed, there will be, f6r all eternity, 15 y~n differenc!e l>etween them . · ,r1ease, put your brai\ns In our beads to- day. -NEED AN ANSWEJl ~EAR NEED: Tell the 1toae cutter to ftrotd only tile date of her death. It 11 Ml -.ua1 that lbe blrl~.dale toe on tile niuter. _. ~EAR ANN LANDERS: I wrote to you eral weeks ago aboui a problem I wM vlng wllh'a glll. I ·had asked ber to me although ~ .was only IS. (l 22.) was the most mature aod sens1ble oI 18 ·l'd e~tmet.-htold me she ftir.me bllf.• wurnot ready'to ·down. I wu c!Oeply' hurt and asked what to do. -, - our advice was to cool it and stop tiring her, Theio you suggeated that take out ctf\er glrll and enCOU(age her l dale otbtr. lellows. , Jt Was hard for rneto take that.advice t I did. I am wdlltlg ·lo -k you, once I've taken the heel olf she has e ritutb mqre ....,....,. llMI I !eel ot, ""'1ldeoce I nmr, hid befono. realize MW 'tbal a IIUJ' can bt too icltous, too adorina n maybe even ue a pes1 of himlell. ' sWl -··-DllrTYlnf her even. 1Y, but r Nlllle .-1t -~ ICllllelhlng t wUl hive to evolve over' a per\od of . I am writing to thank you !or your lee. U helped tremendously. 1 feel !or -le who 1slt your CJl)lnlon then i,,,....11. -iAMPA ,Rllll'ID EAR l'IIIEND: Y--pvH me • OllPOl'talty to 41)' ··~ •1•tn tpt tnoe to.. iloen1 lOll JOI 6ti th ~Old lite 1 ...,. el 1eoee pt1111<r. It mist -~ 1/!l ~I--' ' ' dl¥elc»P ... ~' one.dly<at a time. t. 1 _paa1M love 1 relatloublp, eacll .0.... Ille i>ltlor lr«dom ud brealblng space. Tbere are no demands and no uJttmatwmB. No one reels threatened or nfl'oated. Yoar new appr:oacll ts macb . . ..,, ' . . • DJer'tl matare ud Pm sure tbe girl views ,)'Oil /il a. •11Stly 411/erent II g h I. Ooil,.adoa, oa irowlnc ap. • DEMt ANN LANDERS: Recently a worllm\ wrote lo you and described what a terrible t.i}ne she· had &fvlng birth to ' her baby. ""husband was pl1ying pulcer aod refused to leave the game because 0 .lte was stuck." • ~ 'Sbe went on to say that no man In the world woold go U1ro1JCb labor pains the second time, and she slated categorically tblt -.,. more ltoical than m~ thiHbey stand up under clUms bttter, •net are wltboul queotioo the llllP<rlo< .... I im I huilllnd . 'llllo -1d llldiY go lbrnugh a ~'Ind lhe lallor rather tl)an ·put 1117 wila lbrnugh It, apln, rf1 Not becauae I Wini to opue her tho , bul• because I want to opare 11111< !he t6hure of beariJll boli lousy sbe !eels lbe wbole nJloe -Ills and bow much she sul!ered Ill Ill; labor room. OUr iiltle boy is °"" years old MW and Ne'. is ltill tajk!rig about Il Lately si. haa been pel!ering me to· get her Pftlllint tpiD and I hate lo tlltU of II. . Whit. Jboukt I do?! -RE Cl'ANT DIWlOff 1 . DIWI .DIUG:,Aw, p ,a Mlle tloo Jtlrl lllppJ. UJllll 1" Cl!' Ill -Iii ... It..-tflo ...,..., M wll k ever..._ I Even ti drinktnc fl 111e· "ln" thlnl tn your ,crowd, It needi'I Cl'DWd you oat • ...-m the rad1 lrom Am Landen' boaltlel, "Booze and You -For .TeOnageh Otily." Semi IG cent.I ln coin and a ~1 oeU.addN!..00, 1tamped tavtlope to uie DAILYl'ILM' wttll YOW' roq-. r . " . _pants· and h~lter top . , . · ' Dally Pilot Photos ''. . · By Patrick O'Do<W\otl ' . . : { . ( A split skirt is fine for summer wear, says Jenice Eddy (left). Above , Jamey Hundley shows a popular paisley print halter dreu. Both were designed by Gwen. ., ) OAlLV PILOT 1-.,, °"'"'"' 28, 1172 Daze Numbered Her Car Pool Doesn't . ' .~ ,_ Go Down Memory Lane By ERMA BO~flECK The more I watch ~eleviaiOJl. the more I realize that something is wrona: wtlh my memory. I've seen Mannix io &riirn a dark alley, roll over some old ( bum and say, "Barney, you know 1 punk by tbe name of : Al Ripper?" The drunk nods sleepily, "I heard of him." "Where is he?" asks Man- nix. 7be bum wipes bis dry 1 moU~ and saySi, "Last t!me I 1 heard he was living at 381?5 E. AT WIT'S END match the boys with their houses who ,Ji•t qhin two blocks or me. the neat training wheels on your garbage cans'?" "No, that's Stan. He rouldn't come tonight. I'm the one with the driveway that scrapes the bottom of your car when the back seat is full.'' "Do you live oext to the Martins?" "We used to but they moved a couple of years ago." "What's that number again." l asked squinting in the darkness. "It's 143. Here it ls," he said jumping from the car. ''But that says 2091." "It used to be that but the . city gave us new numbers. It's ' Scabb Drive, Apa.t;tment 15-B in lhe rear, but try a bar on the east side\ at ~ W. Seneca, ,9 oi\e-way street run- ning north· and :eouth between Rogge and Snell Boulevard.'' The other night I stopped the car at the gym after baske~ pracUce and six boys bopped in and chattered for the next five miles. Finally J yelled. "Come on, guys, where do you live?" "20 East l95t.b streel" "The center house in the cul-de-sac at 143 Ever I y Drive." really 1'3." t While he is giving the zip code, Mannix pushes his face back into the ground and without so much as writing down a number, gets in the car and speeds to the exact address. I've been a car pool hack for 15 years and I still can't "I'm staying all night at Ted's at the corner of Willougby and Spronk." "You passed my house 15 minutes ago." "Hold it!" I said, stopping the Car. "Are you the one with FREE PATTERN THE SHOE TREE ' GREATEST "And" you live at 195 East 20th Street. .. "No, 20 East 195th Street. lt's the house with the porch ligh t burnt out." Three hours later, I turn around wearily to see one kid left. "Don't make trouble. Where do you belong" "I go home with you. I'm your son." At my silence he said, "You make a left at the drugstore and it's the house with our last name on the mailbox." No one loves a smart-mouth. ' ... ~. MRS. GRACEWSKI Pledges .. ~,• Recited FANTASTIC PRICES .. FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK • LARGE SELECTION ITAUAN & SPANISH SHOES AND BOOTS l/2 OFF JOYCE • CARESSA • FRANCESCO GRACEWSKI· KOEH LER Suzanne Beatrice Koehler became the bride of Alan stephen Gracewsk.i d u r i n g double ring ceremonies co~ ducted in the "Red Hill Lutheran Church, Tustin. The . Rev. George J . Busdledt} performed t b e nuptials for the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Koehler of Newport Beach and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Stepheri • s. Gracewski of East Lyme, Conn. Glad Tidings Delivered With , Strings Attached . . '• ·/ ' . ,. -. ' . By P,1<(1!:, ~~ I I stra.ig)!L Didn't SOii)• Of,!<opr . 1>!1• ,tjiat ~ stop~ to ... WASIIlNGTON (uPI) --dtt1.ft'hd.s cards tra~el "1ehl"" wli':.t was happening. i En t red . f . d across the country faster than Rogers grabbed my arln COWie my r 1en the ones sent to your · " · · Rogers on a street corner, or neighbors were delivered'" eland. saJ~, Why 15 this mo . . . · osing tn on us?" maybe tt was m the middle of "I didn't follow up every "Th · · · · sed " th bl k f d ft · 1 ., n. 1. d e1r cur1os1ty 13 aroo , e oc , a ew ays a er si nge one, 1wgers rep ie . I sai·d "T"'s · th fir t 1· Chr. t A ked ho h "b t . l . . iu is e s ime is mas. s w t e u 18 gener~ my in-town they've ever heard anyone holidays were treating him. cards were delivered the next lauding the mailman." "Peachy keeno!" exclaimed d~y . aod the out~f-towners Ro .d "It' fr . . within three or four days. It gers sat . . s a ee Rogers, who is not ordinarily was a super job of moving the coun_try .. If I .think the postal given to superlatives. "Thanks mail." ~rv~ce is do~g a good job, to the U.S. Postal Service." A little old lady in tennis Im J~t.as entitled to exp~ "~to wbaaat?" I said, shoes stepped out of the my opwon as anyone else . scarcely believing my tired crowd and shook her umbrella "Right," I said. "But maybe at Rogers. you had better smile when you old ears. "What are you?" s be say it." "To the Postal Service," demanded. "Some kind of a Rogers repeated. "They really un-American nut?" · came ~gb for mt this A,o ominous murmur arose · year. Delivered. all my cards fropi lhe rm of the _ assemblage, .whlcll now in- and packages in a trice and in c 1.u de d several c\ o z en near mint condition. Took all pedestrians as well as ·the oc- tbe worry out of Christmas cupants or three cabs and a • Time Running Out Young David Compa1111 lm't """ wb&t dindion •7s will ta¥ but Father Thne, otherwiae knoWI\ .S Staff Commodore Johll Hoo\en, tries to ch e er him up for the Bahia Oorlnlhlan Yacht Club New Year's Eve party. The dining sod dancing will star\ with cocldall hour at 7 p,m. and. hopefully, Baby New Year will be In better spirits by the be- wttdllng hour. -Bros.~n . H 0 LID A Y SP-EC I AL S WHITE SHRIMP "~ :~"' 2.2&tt · llUN• • · CRIBIUT BLOCKS ...... 4,2&tt: iiRWEifSiiiiMP' ·• ... 2.&0tt ....... '---ooom SHRIMP •DAIL SAUCE ·11om ALBACORE 2.211i. .• ~. 2.29 u. •. 2IOO ltf•Y . .tt• ._ N•Jport Beech . " •'iJ4ti¥• 14Hft' -· t'f ~ ...... ; •·•lMI - • / Reg. $21 • $26 ........... ~14. 90 Miss Mary Lee stammeyer ;was the maid of honor and Gordon D. Marsh was the best man. The bride is a gr'aduate of Newport Harbor High SchOoI, attended Orange Coast CoQ.ege and i.s a graduate of the nurs- ing program at Golden West College. mailing.'' ________ JJll"~~~~~~J~ I sol<!, "Do you m<an to tell1 _ AMALFI R~. $26 • $39 $20. 90 3410 VIA UDO • NEWPORT BEACH • Phone: 673-5521 Her husband is a graduate ol New Loodoo Hlgb School, Conn. and 'of the Coast Guard Academy. He is staUobed aboard the Mellon in Honolulu where they will make their home. REAL SALE ~~ REAL SAVINGS THESE FABRICS COMPRISE OUR ACTUAL STOCK WJTH f(O EXAGGERATED OR FICmti>us REDUCTIONS THURSDAY THROUGH SUNDAY, DECEMBER 31 OPEN 'TIL 4 P.M. SUNDAY me Christmas went by without "the Post Office either misplac- ing some of yc)ur packages or .smashing their contents?" "No damages, no losses, no delays," Rogers ~ "Despite the tremeridoua volume of mall the 1 pj>&tal 1 service must move during the Yuletide, ·averytltlng I lel)t or nceived was bandied with care and ·dlspatcll. And tlult includes some parcels that were poorly packed, im· properly labeled a n d in· securely wrapped." By thiJ I~ 'lllla!l group oJ by~ llad d>eg\lo to gather.. ' ,.. . · . "Hey, SmJtty," one passerby called to lootbet "ll'here'• a guy over 'ufere j,rai.1ng the pos1al service." I said, "Now Jet me get ~ SAi£ , -f Blousu1 ,., Turtlenecks Sw~•ters NEWPORT FABRIC SHOWCASE NOW! tFOIMllLY ITHTCH & SIWI THE SECOND GLANCE 2121 WHlcllff (17th & frvint -By Coco's) 645.5120 ltM w ... 0...., ,_, If L.;E:::.J ._ __________ •N•'-"';.po•rt-Bt•a•ch----------....lf . 11o.,.,, t"r,.. ri..1 • ----- .. - • -,... • I • Ttlursdty, Decembtr 28, 1~72 DAILY PILOT J 5 Abused ChilaJ V·ictim of the Law BOUTIQUE Cl4EANERS By ALLISON DEERR Ot tM Dtlttw "IM lllft Too often. the physically or sexually abused child gets lost In the 1huCne of du e process of low. Psychiatric social worker Miriam Spear, wh~ Is With Chlldren's Protectlv@ Services, traced several oow1 cases through the legal system in Il- lustration to a group of UCI Alumnl A.saociatloo members at the la!t of three lectures on child abuse. A constant reminder that the subject of the discussion was children, most of them toddlers and younger, was a large color photograph of a lS- moo!Hld hoy. . The infant was a mo.ss or brulael and tad suffered skull fractures , rq,Llltiple broken ribs as well as sexual .abuse. · P!Joloiraphs of other children were just as graphic. , ABUSIVE ' 'Mrs. Spear said that when an abusive situation i s suspected by medic a I authorities, 'J'eporte must be made and two copie1 rued with the probation depart- ment, one at the medical laclllty aod one with the police department. The child it lheo pl.aced in protective custody ln a faclll\y like the Albert Sitton Home and a petition to remove the child from the custody of the parents follows. ''There have been cases," Mn. Spear said, '"where both parties, husband and wife, have blamed the abuse on the other. Nol wonting to proo- ecute an innocent party, the judge lets both go free, and the child is . sent home wlth them. This 'happens repeated- ly. "And with two parents in a court . battle over the child, what · chance j,s ,there of the child going beck to the happy home?"· · · PROBLEMS An Orange COunty depuly district attorney explained that when his office gets to a • c ...... poclally wbeo deotb 11 Involved, the evidence la ll to llO days old. Man,y other faotors figure In, he added. Tbelo lJ ofl<n a reluctance to teatl(y. In spite of the abusive 1ttu1tion, the wife wantl the bread-winner at home. Physicians are often reluc- tant to cooperate because of delays and contlnuancea. The depuly D.A. said that the doc- tors will change t b' e I r schedule& to be in court, not appear that day and have to change their schedules again and 81Jain· Eventually, tbey won 't want to get involved, and the child abuser goes free or is let off with a light eeotence and no psychiatric treatment. In some cases the wile can be made to t.stffy agal¢ her husband, but In D'IOBl cases she cannot, And she is often the only good witness. EVIDENCE Police don't always take goocl phot4craplu at the Ume of the abule. Two months Jater who bows If lhe black- and·blue marks elbted, he .. Id. "llqw """ • poli<e olfl<:er remember where and If there werebruiselaftertNtmuch time?" The jury can call!e prob- lema, be added. Often jurors have been known to lie when asked Jf they or anyone they know has been accused Of or convicted of abuse or related crlrnfs. Later, the court discovers they've lied. In many abusive situations, when the child Is called oo to lestify, the victim's statements will be lncooslstent. He added that you must be very careful not to put words into the child's mouth. '4Children often say what they think you want them to say," he el'plalned. "Often a child will go completely bl.a.flk on · the-stand and n o t remember a thin¥,·" He said that 'the biggest thing we bave to fight is the All'QA-·-POI PAITICIKAI LUe usual 'Was II rtally an ao-everyone involved ans ... rable Warner-Dale (:eater cklelll1 quesUon." Parents will to a single individual or body. Corn.r of W•mer & Sprlftid-Te, Huntlf.t• 8Ncfl say the cltild lJ abnormally ac-"We don't want the abuser 842 2050 uve oc clumsy, tun.1 a lot, or punished," Mra. Spear nld ot1~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~===~~r falls often. The eourt must . her agency, "we want html; prove that the Injuries are too mated. We want the cblld numerous and in the wrong \a.ken out of a potentially locations to be accidental. abusive situation as soon as possible." PREVENTION Another problem, be said, is Mrs. Spear noted casea tha t people with these kinds of · where children have been problems are not dealt 'with abused (and even killed ) by a when the problem is less parent before they w e r e serious. He cited the case of reported, convicted and the one man who began by ihow-ehildren removed from the Ing pictures of a partlally-tllf-home. dreS9ed dancer to children. He · Other cases have resulted In progressed from that to ex-the abuser disappearing with fLICID TO ORDI• ..... ''·" -IXl'll"H 1/W , ClPlCOU $1.8 11111• u,.. ... CNa. O«'ll'IU ...... llt ow ..... CHOCOLATE CAKE ..... .... ... . .... n• Ing h'-nn'' ... f,.,....o .. e tbe young victim and never ~ ----~~ ----glrla. being -u from again. By the sixth time be wu What can be dooe! From 1 fl C'I\. /J. ITALIAN DELI e BAKEllY picked up, his offense was private cltiien's a ng 1 e • ol..ucci eL.Jeli RESTAURANT Ml•••• molestation of a four-year~ld reporting pcmible aboses to 1911Adams1t Magnolia, Huntlnfton a..ch, nelghbor girl. He was treated the authorities may be the OAe ., "" ..,...., Dlilt'o,.,..._ i. c•....,__ ftl# .. ..,._"""' ,, .,.." for sb: months and released, best preventative medicine. New Hours Starting January lit-'73 the attorney 6flld· • 1 W, IM,:JI: Fri. 1 .. t: S... IM: a-4 ......, Mrs. spear and the deputy:--------~~~=~,.,.,,..~~~~~~~~~~~ district attorney agreed that the best interest of the child would be served by having Horoscd-pe: Scorpio Exhibits Aura you are FRIDAY progressive concepls, yet DECEMBER 29 aware and sympathetic. Sagt~ , tartus can be envious of Leo, By SYDNEY OMARR _ drawn to Virgo, phy&icalfy at: Sagittarius can be, at one tracted to Aries and in trouble and the same Ume, ope~ with Pisces and Gemini. Some minded, stubborn, closed lo famous persona born under -~P~t.~~ ' ' I -..~~~>-c~r-<l"""'-'~ To aVoid disappointment, prosptictive brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De- partment one wee~ before. the wedding. Pict'ures received after that time will not be used. For engagement anooun~ements it is imperative that the story,. alao accompanied by a black and white glossy .picture, be sub- initted six weeks or more before the wedding date. It deadline is not met, '.Only a SW<!' wijl used. r r· \ • • • ; T.,..l!e!P fill requirements-lj_n.,.botb weit- ding alld engagement sto~es, forms a5 available In all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answ.~ bY W0men's Section staff members at 642-4321 . Sagittarius t n c I u de Ell Wallach, Flip· Wllaon and. Johnny Bench. ' ARIES (March ti-April 19)' Dig deep for facts. Don't ac- cept superficial tnfonnation. Qne. you respect may not be giving you all necessary in- formation. Key is to get an ac- counting.· Be ·fair but firm . Doo'l live in a wonderland. TAURUS (April 26-May 20) o Lie low. Let mete, partner show the w&y. ;Be a careful observer. Qbtaib · hint from A r I e 1 • message·. Caprlconi ind!Vldual makes wav.._ Mllnlaln balance and humor. Avoid · panic. If quiet within, you obtaJn aliswers. GEMINI (May 21-June 20)' Finish rather than begin - compl~te assignment. Accent is on work, health, basic issues. Ariel l! in picture. You find out thlngs -what was a mystry can be clarified. Mem- bir of opposite sex plays pro- mlnent role. CANCER (June 21-July 22)' Dance to your own tune. Ex- 'press feelings. Make changes. Deal with loved ones -and deal with your own emotions. Stop playing games. Find niche. Adhere to style. Bring forth creative resources. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)o Trust hunch. Follow througho Give full play to inti.ztttive in- tellect. One who taught you in past could make. reappeamce. A~-la lik•ly to be in pic- ture. Accent is on home, pro- perly, basic securlly. VIRGO (Aug. U-Sept. 22): Spotlight la on hoW you relate to brothers, sisters, other close relattves.. Spread in- nuence and broaden boriwns. Forces tend to be scattered. Don't attempt to pu,Sh across specific program. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' Money is emphasized. How to Two New Classes OCC Caters to Women class the first session and students may sign up for the Friday class during regular college registration Jan. 3-26. budget, spend, get the most from assets -these are blgbllghled. Clleck . details Study fine print. Read between the linea. Lot", Scorpio pen!OllS are in picture. Be thorough. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2l)o Lunar cycle is such that you can succesafully take in- itiative. Be independent, con- fident. You give of.f dynamic aura. You can sell anything. Wear bright, attention-getting colors. Emerge from emo- tldnal shell. SAGnTARIUS . (Nov. 22' Dec. 21): Accent is oo what ii likely to occur behind scenes. Secrets are h lg hli g ht ed1• Skeletons could rattle. Solve ' family di I em tn a ·. Be diplomatic, mature. Make C01'- clliatory gesture. You'll be happier as resUlt. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent is on friends, lloPes. special desires. Money from occupational efforts is featured. One who takes special action does bave yoor best lntemt at heart. Koow it and respond 1ccordlngty. Two classes of special hr terest to women have been ad- ded to the Orange Coast College Evening Co 11 e g e schedule for the s pr i n g semester. ;::::;================o===.1. Beginning knitting will be A new class entitled Cater· ing and Party Foods will be given 'lbursdays from 9 a.m. to noon in the Conununlty C h u r ch C on gregatioo.al, Corona del Mar, and Thursday evenings from 7 to 10 in Room 323, Estaocllj High School. Registration for the morning class will take place during the first class session. AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb. 18)' Review ('?al. Study am· bit.ions. Strive to better rela- tions w i t h professional superior. Capricorn plays im- p()rtant role. Don't p I 1 y games. Your destination is In sight. Know It and act like you know it. PISCES (Febc 1!1-March 20)' Good lunar aspect now coin- cides with long journeys, plans for future, philosophy and educaUon. One who mlll<es promiBes should be put to test. Take nothing for granted. Get facts. \ • ECONOMY zig-zag sewing machine. Zig-zag, sj r,lght forward and reverse stitches. Hinged presser foot fo'r sewing over heavy seams. Model 177 SALE 5800 carrying case .;.:a. FASHION MATE• zig-zag sewing machine with carrying case. Has exclusive Sing~fl'Qnt droprirrbol:>bin. Sews forward and reverse straight slitchuand zig ... ng. Model 257/575 . SALE790° SAVE $20.00 . FASHION MATE zig-zag sewing machine. Has ~elusive Sino§!' front drop-In bobbin. Sews straight end 1lg·zag 1lltches. Bulll·ln bllndstilch. Model 252 SALE 89°° COlrying caie ext1a. • SAVE $20.95 llt'IQtr nit a Ctt<l i1 Plan to th YQur budget Many Dta1tr1 altO oHtratlrtc:Uvecredlt ttm.. •A f'""'*" al THE llffGEA COMP A HY. -· OttAMtl 21 $1\tf! ...... "Tht Cl!r' c.m... -, .. •=w• "" °'-,~ •.. offered from 9 a.m. to noon Thursdays in the spa of Park Newport Apartments and from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Fridays in Room 12 of the OCC Art Center. Regisb"ation for the Th~ day class will take place in FABRIFIC AFTER CHRISTMAS CLEARANCE . . PRICES GOOD . T"URS. THRU IAT. . DOUBLE . KNITS 100% POL Yl5TER TOTAL 'PIRFORMANCll MaCHINE WASH & DllY -NO llON ..... WIDI ON IOLTS -NANDSOMI COLOIS IN A WIDE CHOICI OF STITCHU. 199 YD. --------------------MDALLIC BONDED . ,,eifoct ~ Holl•r·w .. 60" -Ow ...,. 1·99 YD. LOOP llNIT CREPE DON'T MISS lHIS DCITIH IAl..iN SPORTSWIAR VELVET W•'v• Reducad The 'Price Trfm1ndou1 S•lection 45" Wide On Bolts 244 YD. ... ...... _____ _ CORDUROY ....... -100~ CetM ., ...... ~· ,, 011 41" WIM lli10;i::1l:9:-;9;M:;D.~=r--::::-:~::n~.=:- ! Now 111 C-. Mita • 141 W. 1 fill at l'lllcentla (Olll Mau • ...... 645-102 °""' SutlRy 12 'Ill S ( eoYdially invited lo our fine a .rt anetion • this w edlelid .. al ,the broadway. huntington bea~h erlglaals by Dall, Pleasse, Lautree, ChagaD, Mire, Bragg, Kelly, Sheenberg, Degas, Amea and maay others .. Beginning Friday evening, December 29th, al 7:30 and again at 1:30 and 3:30 on Saturday and Sunday afternoons, December 30th end · 31st ..• this distinguished collection will be auctioned. Included ore 250 master graphics, et~hings, watercolors. and oils ... each custom frarn- ed to compliment the character of the subject and artist's style. Furniture ~allery A custom fr•med graphics will be gi>en away at e1ch •uclion -no ·bid is nectssory to be eligible for this drawing . HUNTINGTON IEACH 1111 lOINGEA AVI. 17141 lt2.)JJI ' JC DAILY PILOT MUTI AND JEFF WCll, I CIOH'T KJCJW, AMBliR'- 1 DON'T USU<IU.Y -.'PRllSON GIG.SI YOU MEAN SURE! ITS A Yoo ACTUALLY NEWR:lRMoF LIKE TRICK EXCITEMENT CIGAR5? FOR ME! FIGMENTS I~OO wrrn ALL mis l.EFTOVfR CHllE ~ NANCY -.......... ___ _ ., .. ,,. ___ _ TODAY'S CIGSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS 44 Ouart9fback, , G+n --· p~ 8 Spru: Sieng •5 Ort:hestrate 10 e..,ond: 1.1 Bnebllll Preli• 1traagem 14 Definitely not 48 former approved French 15 Diva'aso1o moneyof 16 Whill!ing •CC<M.1nt swan 49 Group 17 Spiritlen: 50 ENu'1 wlfe ArcMic 5"' Lo¥erofthe 18 lnsolalion slopes: 2 20 fortified word1 place 57 Spanish city 21 Theater 58 Ceu1moni1I section 111ff 22 Elpect1tion1 59 Preposition . 60 Paavo ---: 23 Mouritain Finniah lake 25 Ten• 27 Fully developed 30 Roy1J d!Qnity 31 Tum IWIV 32 Christm11 £vecelier 33 Altlf - 36 Equine cofor 37 VlfY good time 38 Chew pertlllentty 38 AbtlfllCI ..... trensaetion1 41 Cltyof Mon11na 42 Afrfc1n 1nt1lopes 11tl'tl111 61 Elluded llP 62 New1 •gency 63 •·. ----•• Born .. DOWN 1 Pilll'ce 2 Holy rMn 3 Nigdn net iv• 4 Point of·· 5 Received 6 Wit• container 1 ln --- 8 Evangelist's conc11n 9 Owns 10 Gloomy 11 1ntorm11I rn1rr!age1 12 Sou111nir Ve1terd1y'1 Puule Sotved: 13 Take ·-··< Nop 19 Actr1H -- 8ar1 21 A prior time: Prtifl• 24 Man's niCknenw 25 Trees 2$ Met"it: Informal 'II Fttmale animal 28 River of England 29 T 1blew1r1 i1ern1:2 wOfds 30 Miki 011ths 32 Tool 34 Means of entrenca 35 IOU signer 37 Compotltion I 38 King ol Sweden AO PISl!lglWl\'9 41 P1ohibit "43 Applied flt to 44 Ale IOUrce; lnlorm•t 45 As genthl h 4G Ops>onent 47 Juliu1--: Golfer 49 N.Y. lrttlletic group 51 S~nd1I: Slang 52 ----m11t1T" 53 Coiffeur'• concern 55 Sm111! 11iolin 56 -··nutshell 57 Collection: SuffiK PEANUTS b by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith WOW! I GOT A BIG BANG OUT OF THATOl'IE! by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller ' JUDGE PARKER SHE DR.OVE OUT A LltTl.E Wl-41LE AGO, MISS SP£NC£R ••• SAID SHE WAS 601H6 ~ • INTO TOWN/ MISS PEACH 1.'M FR'OM THli je.i-100L PAPi~, Milt. GR'IMMJ$ ... 1'0 LJI(!. TO INTeRV1 ew you IN 1'.E&-.UP TO I! OUR NAfU"AL i HIS,..ORY t-ROOM ... ~ .. , .. , ...) .. -.. ... 1 • l PR.EF!R TMJS !~/&IT ON P"f- HtS'fC"IC MAN I l'M FAS£1NAT'D •'I CW· MAG NUN . ., 1'11 .. TO<>WN ... ALL. TMAi SOltf OF '0-llNG-. 1'T"'S MY F~VOl'IT& NAiUlfA&.. HISfo~y S'fUpY .. ! DICK TRACY " DOOLEY'S WORLD A/J. l'lu.GD UPI SALLY BANANAS ~ile rt!ile GORDO IF :!. CAtJl'r 60l!f 5.LHP M'ISY ta>!! MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS .. -----· NOT AT.AU!! I by Harold Le Dou LYNN DIPH1T SAY THAHK!J ... &UT ANYTHtH6 A&OUT KNOWINC7 LYNN, LEAVING, MR. SHE· WON'T er SILVESTER! I OON'T RETURHIN6! UNDfRSTAMt> \Tl YOU'RE WELCOME TO WAIT UH'TIL 5Hf RETURNS! by Mell by Roter lrCldfleld rt j~ile --.-~ .. ' !!. ' by Ferd Johnson ·-v-· ~ .. ____ .. "!..~/ THE GllU ''<*, I'm alwaya bay wltcldag ~, pl.a~ brkl1e or lltopplng -after aU, I feel we were ,.t OD tau earth to se.rve 10me useful purpose." DENNIS THE MENACE ' I ' ' - •-1i11 ·' ' • ' ' 7:IO ,, ,i TONIGHT'S ·TV ·IDGffi ,IGBTS ' ' ' KTLA • 7:30 -"Going My Way." Bing Crosby, Batry ntsgerald. CBS • 8:00 -WhaW/er, Happened lo ·~2. All innooaUvo look at top n'wa stories o! 1972 featur- ing Walter Cron kl le and group of junior high school studenll!. NBC U 8:00 -Flip WU.on. Guest.. are Petula Clark, Redd Foxx and Roy Clark. ABC G 9:00-H~al\b and the American Woman. Program, narrated by Patrlcfa Neal, focuses on a)'U)ptoms o( cancer, heart disease, death in child· birth, etc. TV DAILY LOG " " ,·'·~ • "Thuisday MN • .. 'ng Di:cE:1~21 . ,'(' ' " " ' ......... -<Jl•- t:OO.((J llHCWI LT, (,I) Yl*ll Kevin ttooa.~so• of 'ICW •a:llJt Ho.a, ""' tM till• rolli elf''• _.., "'°°""11111Catift younptll' Wl(tJll ...... llWllWIUlllCJ' Until ile -I fU/'JIOM t( Jlis lifl with fM . ..., of 1111 ptfelpthe lf1lldmOCl'ltr, -lldfnt..... &roctfl Ind 1t1 old, OM-t)'ld Ntl·starwd •l\ty cat. ..... ,,."The Courbfllp'" Cll *"--... -·-""-··-f.1-·-'12' ........ "' -·--·--1:31 ciJli;p;•- ·-' Cll).,., ,_ ,,.... (eor'll) ... ._... Lulld, Dlt111 l,rrll. (l)Cl&_W_C_ 111 ""'--m .... -·-·-ID Altff11.,.1 "Sun.3" 111---G T•••sWl:lillllcll ........ ..... -i:Gt•w••-·---{)) ... •Chai e' • ~=~: ..,;· ~ ~1.~~ .. ·--· .. l!l 1'11 Clll Cl'• ' ea--.... ••• ·-- e 111 m •-t•1 "'"' .... IP Sillbf' CMtf lrOflStdt'tlkltS I coe1rst In protnalon1I do&: tr1lnin1 """' pm!Mly tffidtnt fUlrd clop f1il to •tuck. Polk:9 tnwsti11tlon MHs ti 1 tonMt K·I C«ps tral11- 1r, Taaw (lve1t lo SvtlltOll): D •Istol·Myon ptuents • * LIFE. HEAL.TH AND ' ntE AMERICAN WOMAN , D C1l@ ED!IQWil 11'1 1 ........... .-.... ..... ·(R) ktrtu P1lricl1 NeM is 111-e1111r1 n1rritor for this proaram wlllfh1fo. c11Sts on th• sym~toms of ClnCll, 1111rt diMUe, d11111 in ctindblrtll. m1t1op1use, hypertensiOll ind slli· cldl1 dtprmlok. ..... ··--=- t; ..... letitl; ·- Dancers From Bali Open First Tour in 15 Y ears NEW YORK (APi -The Dancera and Musicians of Bali haYO opened their Uni United States tOur in 15 years at the City Center. Tbl8 ts a colorful troupe, and formalism, back-turned fingers and undulating arms are the special marks of these dancers. The evening does n o t beOome ,.peUtlous because of the change In mood oL what is being depicted. A temple offering dance will be followed by a courtship 'dance 'wh1ch then will be follow;,.i by •onl<thlng with ferocity of movement. Tllo IOOKh opH ••• 3:30 & 7:00 P·"'· CHANNl!L 30 The stage at Tuesday night's opening was set wllh • low red wall across the back and a center stairway where daocers enter and exist. A 3G-plece orchestra was seated at either fide o( the stage. Dancers are both men and women-though \he part of two brothers may be taken by two women -and the women wear sarong tops. long wrap- ped skirts and elaborate hea~ dresses made partially or flowers. 1be dancers' band! are in- teresting. The fingers quiver and flutter, alwayS, of cour$e, curved back. F a c i a 1 ex· press ions are many. Most of tbe dancea are for only a few dancers so the movement can be watched clearly. The music ·is almost hypnotic, with the prominent notes coming from metallophones, metal keys NATJofliAL GENERAL· THEATRES EXCLUSIVE ORANGECOU8TY lllTllOIY QUiii · YAPllET llUI 10 ·:w- _"HiCKY I ~s· " ·--· I 3:20·5:4G·l·I0.1S . 110W. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY GENE HACKMAN ElNfST SORGNINE RED BUTIONS CAROL LYNEY PUCISELY AT lllllllCIT YOUI SHIP WfLt IE STIOCI n A H l'OO'F TIDAL WAVE. IF TOU'IE LUCIT TOU JUT IE 011£ or m ' WBO SUIVJVE! TUT'I m WAY IT WP- ., ~ AT mM1111'! Ol llEW tlll'I m II . , ... . \ C<Miill ' Gene Hockman "PRIME cur· 1•1 II ~d ;- MATUllES SAT.,SUN. &MON, ' DAILY 2:00. 3:55 S:SO • 7:45 & 9~5 .......... .._ .. ,.., ............ ,y ........ _. ,.... ......... ,...,. ....... .., ..... ,......,.. ... ..... And for rtal fun, read 8.,....,1 AHi Ill th1 DAILY PILOT Su11dav eomkl. ' \. over a bronze frame whicli holds vertical bamboo tubes. The tour, which wUI have nine matinees and seven even- ings Jn New York, wUI con· tlnue through Feb. 2, ln Cam· bridge, Ma.!s., Mont re a I , Washington, Princeton, N. J., Calif orn I a. Sacramento, Fresno, Berkeley, San Fran- cisco, Los Angeles -and Den- ver. Bond Film Top Draw In England LONDON (AP) -The latest James Bond film "Diamonds Are Forever," and "The God· father " were lhe biggest money makers at British mo- tion picture theaters in 1972. A survey by t h e en· tertainment industry paper, Cinema-TV Today, showed that "Diamonds Are Forever" had the best box office take, with "The Godfather" second. No earning figures we~ given since they are confidential . The trade papers noted that "The Godfather." unlike the widely-distributed Bond film . had been shown ror less than hair a year in Britain and at.. only a limited number of places . .. The musical "Fiddler on the Roof' and Walt Disney's "Bedk:nobs and Broomsticks" tied for third. Tim Holt Has Ca11cer ......... ,,.,,,, .... ~ Ch•. Ml·I01 1, OAA-CO-Hill "SUPll llAST" (I) DAILY PILOT NEVER! Clara Grich refuses tea she suspects is drugged in scene from "Angel Street," scheduled to open next week. Pfaying maid is Alvetta Kay. Lorig Beach Schedules Tense Play SHOWING NOWI --------· ·-. fu '.) .1ltlltl 1,0 1\SI ~-~l ,\/,\ I I *"10 8t'lltOI S1!'99t Com Miit ..... 2711 PLAV. #1 CO.HIT "HICKEY I. BOGGS" $ttOWI tlilii'-'''°"" *"~ , .. "SOUHDER" " ... rrillm1EnM1at-mEmm .,.,, ••-a llll ---. n. ....... ........ ..... ...,. ___ .... ........ . ...... - -P.ullne 11 ..... l't9w Yori<., Magulne l •rllr• ~tr.IUIMI ' l )'N O'Hall ''WHAT'S UI" • DOCf" IOI .... "' hi .. ,.. ''THE PAl:TY" (POJ • .,.. '" c.tlt'l H.W OWWI 2flCI WMllCI 0-.t lwtt "TH• MIW CSNTUlllOHS" 6 "D&ALINe" ....... Celtrl ,., TECltUlOIOJI ' '' ,..., "tlll~ '"'" > 1lf.M• ct., ••• ttPI .... --- ..... _ ....... ~ ----·---....°"""""..... °""'-·MMlf} 2,,d Diwey Hill AFRICAN LION SHOWtNS HOWi ' ' ·;_ 1 ' • ' J r < ' I . I l .. . . • s-ti. ""' Frwy. ,..,cMp,,.1t 0r.,... . 551-7022 CO-HIT! FRENZY (R) ---· '' .. , .. ; ... - SM• AM ,,..,, '*' Chlpfnlf'I °'9••147·9011, • ORANGE CO-HITI "SllPER BEAS T" (ti)': 1!IP ••••• afluilW --------- ' I~ :'.>JUT ~ COAST I ... C1'EM• 1 SMlll CMlf VlllfM hnt1 AIM l•M• EXTRA I ~ARE DEVILS SHOWING NOW! 3'10 8'"111t ...... Cott•~• 541-2711 PlAZA # 1 CO.HJT "NICKEY & BOGGS" ~5~ ... ·~ 1;..-,,1111, Lat~st . Bmad Producer Harry 5allllnan (R) talks with newest James Bond, British Ac.tor Roger Moore , on location in New Orleans. The latest movie is titled, "UVe and Let Live.'' · ' J • Suffering Artis~~I .Mo~es:~ .._ ... ; Builds Ships for . a;t S~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ken Je<\I dtstroytd,1': he · ~. • au~ blf' iblllf ..._. never Rucktr . JJ a1 llllflerlng artist. "Actually, lt doesn't )>othtr lor&olieo. Rucker and '.4s 111re He works nard for three 1' tbro h buildln months building d • t a 11 e d me once m ug '· T(81ci) 1!'!\ lhllll .. -qaln mlJJloture bqets , aJld then them." . • an\! .fob ol\ teleYl.io., 1iate aomeone b'°""9 them u}. The one exet:phoo wu "¥" 1,,. _ ~ "Rigger" Rucker, as be is & built a 1lx-foot model for shoWa.. : r known erwnd the movie "~ Battle of Mid~ay1" "l f' ol'VE-·SE.EN ~ ~town atudios, bas ~ullt model! f0r "1>!'ked four· monthJ on. the , ... 'f' .. tfu'eedosen ijollywood movies, &hip,'' he said, ':and ftU lo demol.ltber1 any ·1!~-., of onJY •to see tliem go down In a,1"1::0Y:::•:.:w:::l=th:::h:::•:::r._"_c·-''._:·_·_· _u:::°'!+::;::ic."..:ll"=..o~:::ld:::.·c....-' _. __ movie studlo ,t.an.t. i The st11dipl have never ,• t (, • Ktven Bucker much publicity, • because they .clo not want the Jl"ti!ic to )tnq,r that sea batUes are· done .In miniature. "People don't want to know they are watchlng a fake," said RdcMr, wbo now teaches wood carviog at Pasadena City Q)IJ .... •Jt tills their Ill> of going Jo the movies." BUT ONLY MODELS are U!ed, , he 8ai~. because "the Navy doe.iifl',t1.bave 1pare ships tor tl]:e movies to scuttle." RUc)ter bas built minatures for sueh pk;tures as 0 Sub Chaser, 1' "AfutJny on the Bou·n,ty ,'' ''Horatio H Q r n blower " "Guadalcal biary" and ·,\The Battle -of .. Irving Berlin's Piano Given to Smithsonian Sam Yorty Plays Part · Midway." " World War n gave Rucker nwm'Ous OpiirtunitJes to turn I out hll products. "They meiLe so rilany war pictures ~was always busy," he aald. ..I sold some of my ships lo. $2,000, WASHINGTON !AP) Songwriter Irving Berlin has given a holiday gift to the Smithsonian lnstitulion : the old upright piano on which he created such memorable tunes as "White Christmas" and "Easter Parade." PACIFIC DRIVE-INS S•nDi•gof...,., at l rooU"""' !So.) 962·2(11 I Al llA STlllSAND UP THE SANDBOX II) p1,,. • 11•1 MACIMAI PRIM!CUT (R) _ ........ (1.)IOl,..CHl llJ--CHI J.) MAllllrKllT 7 l •l ..... ....... ...,..,.... DIUYHAllCI (I) + TAU TMl-'T I 11111 ... ,_,,..,,_ "A center of history. culture and knowledge ,'.' he said of the Smithsonian in announcing the gift. "That's the proper place for it now that I'm no longer writing songs." · The scaflred mahOgany piano was made by · Weser Brothers ot New Yotk City and is fitted with a .special mechanism called a transpos- ing keyboard, which opera~s like the clutch of a car and shifts the keyboard to the right or left into a djffe(ent musical key. Berlin, now 84, was born in Russia, the son of a ·Jewish cantor. He was taken ·to New York as a child and grew up the lower East Side. AIM INl --"THE MECHANIC" WIN A 10 SP ED BICYC LE SATURDAY NIGHT ~"llll!!l!~FREE In Movie LOS ANGELES (AP) Mayor Sam Yorty has tumed actor for a bit part in a movje being filmed for ' televisloo . But the job did not .,.q . fir hlm to memorir.e-any lineS. ' . '. Yorty was hired to play a role he is familiar with ~ ~ mayor of a large u;s. city'~ ai1d one which is se~ as thf site of a beauty page).nt. On u.i set of •'ThO ,Gre~t American Beauty c0ntesl'' at a hotel, the mayor satd~i>I hii' work: "I do it every bhee ih8 while. It's nothing new.'f ~ Then he took his ~ before the cameras ancl'!ld lib- bed mpooses as girls playini beauty contestants were in;.· troduced by actor Ro.bert Cummings. I • ' ., "IT IS A SURPASSING PIECE "The kind of l!IQVie HlilllWOOd OF FILMMAKING P,NO A so often strives for and rarely POWERFUL RECAPTURING OF makes -that big, ·~r A GREAT TIDE IN ~!STORY·!" 'family pi cture witl!.a h~&il : -Chorin""'1i~LA~;i., . aM~ml~ !" . ~ '.r f -P~~tl.~11~:t.o1eil MaX vonsY,dow. L1v Ullm8nn The :~•> ll ~ bv P, 'lOel ad B"'ljo fonlnH"'"' o ro..I bj VI.hi Mcbe!gPiM.c.Jby llrg< "'1WDl..:1ed bv ):n .... TeclwEob' ·Eogl.n oib•lol·A s....< Fimbiri f'iocicrloo· fQ> . "'°""' llooo.A'Ndr«Comltltw:a1""~ -ll'!IJ : •• THBO,..LY' • •PRANGECOUl>iJ"Y ' ENGAGfiMEN>'r 1 , . ~·--W'll:Q ..... ,. • ' MA'rl.NEES'DAILY'' RVCXEJt: IS hardly e•er upset when his ships are blown up, "People want to know how I can stand to see my art ot>. JI.ope Hits S\ngspore SINGA,l'ORE (AP) -Bob Hope ~vulled 4,000 sailors and ~ aboard the car· rler MidwaY; but bis lightly clad .lrouPJ! of beauties brouiht the loudest response. "A<;tually l did the 'Road to Siniapare' with Bing and I've wattied 2Z ~rs lo come bade heii! to apoiogtze," Hope said W--1y, '.l'llo: "'*" was from the ~..rove other sbipo In ._.,leave. 1 •.. ( .. (lie Ith "trtJiiii1*1 iii· iii[ Oil lJope'~ . bJif~= Baf in tbe 1 Philippines and Anderson! Alr Force Base on Guam betore going home. "Man, it was pretty good of ~ .. ~ .came out here and , 1 spepd Cbrlstmas with a bunch of dµdes ," said Cpl. Rick caroer, .,. llarine helicopter crewman from Cleveland, oU the amphibi:ous ship Inchon. A friend Jrom the same ship, Sgt. Dan Lewicki of Boston, Said~ "It wM first come fll"st '!!!~~ 1'8IL Gufl were of· 1...,. • up 1o ID for my tldll!t:" f • ·' Thtslsalit. • .. " . ,., .. ' , .. ,., ·~· '·i ·c • • ' • • • • • • • • • • I '•i'J )-- ,. ' v-• DAILY PILOT 'Gra11ny' fights to Do Role ~ . .. . . ~~ l ~·aCI= Oq Broadway-Stops Show ·--C,~fCll~i JI " I ' _t .I-· ---.. $UUl/IM I .. -· ..• ,. --- -.. "'IOUNMll., By EVE SBARBUTI' NEW YORK (AP) $/AU/UM ? . .. -· ..... -.... ''laNIATH TMS l"U.NST 0" THI Arll" Everybody'• "Granny" ia a tiny lady, just over five feet tall, with twtnkling blue eyes and blonde hair turning gray. -- -.. SIADIUM·J .. -.... -----.. $/AU/UM J .. -.... ._. v-- "McllHen is ••mlous. The llreathless, hairb!IHth fli&bt and the clashes with croots Hd ceps · are beautifully UICUtetl ~ Sa• P~cki1pah. "JUDOa llOY • ....,. .. ... "THI lllYIJfCllll$" "l"l'TI ~ Tll.Ll l " ... "l"L.AY IT AGAIN, SAM" AdmJrers stop her on the alfett for autographs and when she called a department store recently to inquire about a late delivery, the store rep1 esenta.Uve s a l d "Your ' "The sh11rpest, gentlest, funnl· est fl fm of th"• year -Barbra Streiilitod tmt'lts as charnlintl, deli!'litful, t•deariilg a•d boa•· tiful. This Is a far funnier film tha•,•What's Up Doc .' Here is ·the ulf irnate woman's 1t,icture.'' ·INGENUE '<On• of the 10 best pictures of ht'ytar. Thonk1 to Paul Zin· ~el's.lncisively funny scre.en· pl8y •nd a tremendously behev· ablt•tir"d to.,ching performance by Barbra Streisand, 'Up the Sandllox' is one of the most out· spoken, outrageous and imag .. shattering film experiences in years.'' -PETER TRAVERS, Readers Digesc (Edu) PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY RUN 2nd TOP AnRACTION M~~~IN . ,;PRIME CUT" GENE HACKMAN "THl,GllTAWAY . is 'Bonnie and Clyde' brlltht •P to date a~d enh~ened 11th tbe sp1e1Jcular actiea ~ences fro• Bullitt .. lculely '""mef1I Hd intelSl!y 01citi111 sl••-b•lll mo"'. Mc· llntt '"' lbcG11w 1.-.te as MCb electricill as ant of ~AUi. Newswij"'P1lfll' fabletl SClttl te,.s If tile ast." ,::" .. '= ' bOlrd notblng. I just - -elae had aotten the W•••• At P•c:ilic:'t Hiw•v Jt Drl••·hl - Y•11 C•11 S-It H.r•I Wood., All•11'1 I :....tcfUl&J~ ' I ·---1 PITTR S!UDS · llOUllE IWlll part. But OOcO day tlb e telephone rang and a Yqice saJd, 11;fello, Gninny!' and it was Paul Henning. We finish· 7:00 Ir lt:SI ed the p11•.t, )lut then we had "LA•S .. T .. IYRTlHIN• YOU A(WAft WANTID TO UoW AIOUT Sir "'HOW TO SUCCUD ~ . ., to wait to see if it would be ooid. SUMMER" "I was booked Into Seattle WlTM SIX" ~ Olli• F111111 ClillClit Ptils •111 for two weeb with my 1 nlght, [I~~;;'";'::;::;" ... ;;;;';";' ;;d~~!"!!!"!!!"!!!"!!!"!!!"!!!!!~!==~======~ clb l and( ''-·! S-.M ...... -ZP.M, u ac , was .90 "'"" could have walked under a ScotUe dog. Then Paul called and said, 'Claee.r up! It's been sold. We go tQ work lo July!' I was so happy l 'wel'lt to Honolulu until Um.e , to go to ENTERTAllllNT work. "But mt!ling really comes easy," Miss Ryan added. voice ls fanilliar. Are you wbo At age 11, she ·made her I think you are?" show bit debut ii an amateur "Yes. I am," replied Irene talent show in Sah Franclsco. R I Her Irish mother always said yan ° the distinctive voice. that if she ever enco.untered "Now wUI you send over my the devil, it would be package?" backstage, 90 Irene's family A show business veteran didn't ezactl.v encourage in- who delighted t e 1 e vision volvement tn theater. A vleWers tor nlne years as neighbor toot her to the talent "Granny" in "The Beverly show. Hillbillies" serial, Miss Ryan "I remember the pink silk ls making her fll'St appearance dress I wore. '1bose were the on the Broadway stages this days when the audience threw year. She dQesn't disck>se her tomatoes, eggs and stuff if age but it ~ generally thought they didn't like you And if the to be above 80, and ' she ls o~rator ti, the show didn't regularly stopping the show as like you , there was the hook. I the grandmother in "Pippin," was scared. But the neighbor a musical comedy. said I'd be fine lf I sang loud. She frankly admits she I did, and I've been singing -DEAN NANCY HARRY KEENAN· tlfll&E JONES·· Ol.SON • MORGAN· WYNN • LINSEY • • • • • • • • • • • • •-, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ALSO FROM · lhtl +w Ii) w ,.,.. · • n:c11MC«011•• WALT DISNEY .. ~ alt lsney orld ::::::::·~ ... AFRICAN LIOW' • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CONTINUOUS DAILY MATINEES THRU MON. JAN. 1 AT All 3 EDWARDS CINEMAS IN MISSION VIEJO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO SAii 01((.,0 rvn •T ' ... ,,, .. l'"UH .. (1f F ~ ll '0..0'!'10 wasn't first choice for her loud ever since," s h e part. "It was written for a remembered. 1----------------------------- great fat woman," said the 98-Vaudeville was another life. pound actress:. "We sometimes did two But she charmed producer towns a week, but we were Stuart Ostrow and director-young and it didn't matter to choreographer Bob F o s a e . us. I could sleep on twQ chairs. They agreed that she was the Vaudeville was wonderful in best· "Bertha" they tried out the early days, but we went in ~ix Jl'IOOths of c11:slln'f. from two shows a day to "WieD, I bad to fight tor the three. ftlUr and flnllv six 'GraJlllv' role, too," Miss Rvan shows at ~ beginning of the said. "The:v told mv &'l"ent I depression. wu too yoong. But I had "That was bard a n d worked with the script writer, tiresome. but then we went in- Paul Henning. before, on the to radio, pictures fl n d Dennis Day Sho.w, so I went television. It's moved SQ fast up and read for him. It was that I can't believe I've been the first time I ever had to through it all,'' Miss Ryan ad- close a script from laughing." ded. Despite her comparative Hesitant about leaving her youth -"I told 'em if they California home for New York had anybody older they'd during the run of "Plpplp," never make it up at 5 a.m. for Miss Ryan is nonethefesa fllmmg" -Miss Ryan tested pleased with 'her Broadway with lour ot!>er women. They debut.; r o ,a scene against., •• /put pl •T~e ~ who .as . :Jril"Jootln&'f*. ~~· and afl ~til-."1t"l· went thlO "As smooth and entertaining as 'Butch Cassidy', what with Newman providing dandy bravu ra performance. It's all very movie· movie with even that happy end- ing we schmaltz lovers love so well. ....,;•c•••"••- "A truly topnotch comic performance by Paul Newman. A good time is what JOU will have. '""'"''"'"'·""''"'-[pilll\ ~ ilJMJ® IN THE LIFE AND TIMES OF ~· •• tested against hundreds o!, , flJIO~an\od II' I )'OU!llflOO!llll& "'* "'°'1~1 hit,·Ul ·~'left. exha~ed, to iif ::.~r ~,.. slow'fl / " If this .,....s~ ai'!"t "'true ... MATINHS pAtLT ; r I' ~. lftfJij!~I I ALI , (POl .PREMIERE ORANGE couNT'tl ENGAGEMENT PLUS· LEE MARVIN GENE HACKMAN ""lliit CUT" '1 go home, the cameraman HoDjrwood. Lots of people grabbed me and said. 'Go on weren't working. And ~ was home. It's in the bag.' " almo.st sure this s!J>w Would "But for three weeks I be a Wt .... Huntington Stage 'Heaven Can Wait' Plnyers Selected Dlftctor Stuart Elliot has and Lois Farah. Also in the announced the cast for his up cast are Greg Feuerborn. Bill coming Huntington Be 8 ch Williams, Don Van Sickie. Playhouse production 0 f Sam Verdecla, Liz Snyder and Barbara George. "Heaven Can Wait." Delores Harrington will do Playing the role of Joe backstage duty as s t a g e Pendleton, the young boxer manager while Burt Har~ whose soul is taken from his ington will lead a technicaJ body during an airplane crash, crew consisting nf Gregory wW be Tim Adams. Mr. and Daniel Cheatham and JOrdan and the bumbling Mite ~. Set designer is angel· ?013," who attempt to pot lcOrrf )V..aird, Lou run.. ls hia .ouI back into another In charlli <t IJl'Oll8 ahd John body, are pla)'ed by Nick Mose Phillips ls producing the show. and Jim Grbmley, respeo. •'BeiV"eD Can Wait" will Uvely. open Jan. 2 for a five week· The part of Mu Levine, the end ruq, and will he oerfonn- fight promoter, will be done ed OD ;Friday and Saturdl.y by Sam Brandon. The female eveninp at 1:30 at the Barn, leads o( Betty and Julia will l110 N. Main Street, Hunt.- be p)a~ by Donna ~ 1114.-Beacb. f . it shoulda been. q tr PAUl NE'NMAN '" A. ffiST ARTISTS~ A. JOHN HUSTON fh "Tt-te llfE /IJ¥J TMS Of .l.DGE ~ Guest Stats JACOUE~E BISSET • TAB lf..INTER · ,.a..fN HUSl<l\I · STPC'f t<EA0-1 • AOOO'f' McOOMA.U. ANTHONY PERKINS· VICTORIA Pft!NCl>AL · ANTHONY ZER8E and AVA GAAONER •Uy UnglTy Musle ~tr'CI Qlnductedbif~ JARRE ·Song "Matmelede. ~Wiii Hotwr" lyricsbifMARl.YNnf ALAN BfRGMAN • SiliQ t, N¥:1'r Wll.UJWS · An ~~ bt JCll*I MU.IS • Pla:lacl 1J1 JOHN Fa!IEIU~ Q.fected by JCHI HUSTCN • ~VISOY'· TEOM:Ol.OR9 A Nalional G.ilfl!Pk:t\nl~a 1 -.,,,,w.o_..,.~,.._..,. ....,.., """""=I [PG(l!l!li'lll!!!l.-':[ SHOWING NOW AT All 3 T~~TRES 2nd GREAT WEEK "A RED HOT SMASH I" ·--........ MAX VON SYDON LIV ULLMANN RATIO IPG) MATINllS DIJLT °'"'* •639-7860 ~ta /......n(l p, ... ._. -'SOlN>ER o,t.ILY PILOT T-, -28, 1972 l..•ltl. Botd Mickey. Mouse . Early Failure • Loi ol di« in ancien( Egypt were right-lianded. but all modem <lice '"" le!\-handed. A }>Oll<e deleclive lold me thll. Opposite sldel of. honest dice total seveo. as )'OU know. Whal few lalow i. that the coumao.docltwise coont , ol tile numbe!<d sideo oo di« makes them left-handed. TOOK ABOIJT !3,000 men to build 133 miles ol rail- way between Callao and Qroya ln Peru. But lha\'1 not Iha point. The pOini la about \l,000 ol lbem died on lbe project. '!bat !:I-year engineering job, finished in 1893, was the deadliest in modern history. , YES, A DRIVER in th>, Soviet unl:on is iranted a license, iliewise. Thtte punches fur variou.! automotive infractk>ns on said license means au- tDmatic suspensfoo of same for Six months. Alreadt men- ti<med lhat drlilinj a dirty car · u-io (<larded as an automotive infraction. THE CRYING SCENE -Q. "Wllllt does an actress do when she is supposed to cry in a scene but can 't?" A. Breaks an ammonia capsule under her nose. Hid-· den in a hankerchief· maybe. Q. "HOW OFTEN do you find a man-iage in which the wife is more than 10 years older than the husband?" A. Figure about one marriage in every 100 around here. NO STRUGGLING cartoonist should forget that even Mickey Mouse was a failure at-first. ln 1927, when Walt Disney introduced Mickey in the silent cartoons "Plane Crazy" and •iqalloping Gaucho/' he fiopped. It wasn't until the sound boys put a voice to Mickey in "Steamboat Willie" that the mouse started to roar, as it w~. BEST YEAR -Ask an elderly bachelor and spinster \Vhich was the happiest year of ,their lives, and they'll name some time before age 25. Put the same query to an elderly husband and wife, and they'll tell you some year between ages 25 and 45. The survey-takers have proved this, repeatedly. Still, l don't undemarul it. So lar, Iha happiest year of my life is this yeilr. Little too personal, that comment . But the not.ion seems out of joint tbat the best year cX life was some year a long time ago. If it doesn't gel better, we're doing something wrong, no? Think so. NAMES -What, you still Ji.ave a tough time remerii- bering Ule names of casual acquaintances? Solve that. As you meet them, ask each what said party's name means. . . YOU CAN BUY a tarantula for $5. And train it. To run up one sleeve, romp acro!!IS your sOOulders. and run down the other sleeve. Playful little beast. Yes, it's true, you can teach a tarantula to love you, although maybe not deeply. Addrets mail to L . M. Boyd, P. 0. Bo:r 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. 'th." Smi~l'iiy'~ . , . ·--. ; . . . F!lltiny -w~ekJY:'' ·• ... ,,.,_., ,., .. ··- • 1 • • ·i ... 1; .... _ft·---r• .. '/ You Cat's Jlid•• Enemies In this week's FAMILY WEEKLY cover featu(e, na- tionally known pet authority' f'elicia Ames warns cat owners about a growing list of familiar sub- static:eS that tan .be toxic to pets~ Miss I.Imes draws . upon r"eeent veterina,.Y res~earch to compile a list of more common pe5tici~0s, ordin~ry household supPties, ln~ect.sand reJit~es. medicines, and even .h!)useplanls t11at·endangera Clrt's health. She sug- gests some Simple pr...a.utions for · p~~lng t.ibby against polsonlng:and' sound advice to fol- low should he &!'.exposed to any of these venoms. e THE REAL PAUL LYNDE-Everything in real life isn't funny for ufunnyman " Paul Lynde as revealed In Peer J . Oppenheimer's Star Chat with one of the season's most popular TV laugh g'etters. e MEN'S BEAUTY BOOM-They call them lubri- cants, bronzers, pickups, after~shampoo controls and o\ber eupbernlstlo• things, but io mailer how ybu pack6Je it; jt's still '"beauty aids" for men. And the list ia growing longer .every day. Read about the national trend and the salons and proGnCll it has . spawned. All Coming Sunday With The ! DAILY PILOT I & .... • .. ... l EPA Orders· Lead-free (!as by WASHINGTON (AP) -The En v I ronmental Prot.edlon Agency has issued regulations requiring most l81 ·staUons io make lead-free 1 a s o 11 n e available by mld-1974. Jlut E P A Adminiltrator WUllam D. Ruckel sh 11.1 s Wedne.sday JX1t off tbe adop- tion of a phased reduction of lead in all gasoJme grades. AS PROPOSED laat February, Ruck els h aus dlrected that major gas sia· tions must offer at least one grade of gasoline or .91 octane Patio Lamp and Shade e Co1'1'1pl1t1 with 6-ft. cotd e Cltmp1 on •nywh1r• you n1.d light 199 Glidden Spred Satin Latex WaH Paint e Co••" beautifully, witho11t le1vin9 ltp mtrb e Wa1habl1, 10 convtni1nt t'rtd u1 9oocl loo•ing e Ea1v to 1pply. Gr11t 'olor1, too! 5!!. .... '·'' ' Manzanita ' Stump Set e Grecef11I, twl1tH net11rel e Stump, pell eitd Lur11•'· Send, embe, li:it e11d conne,tor Black & Decker · 3/8 Inch Orin e Extr •-c•pecitv low co1t drill e Do11bJo reduction goen for fu ll torquo • Model 7100 9" or bette< contaJninJ no more n>ad aun uae !tided 81'911.. dl<alld ,thl\lesd emJttet rrom than 0.116 lfllm& of lead lier and a teCOl)d aet o~rqula11ons utorftobill!I ll)laht -, a gallon by July I, 1974. was pt0p0oed last F<bruary to heolth~. The leod-lree Juollnt must. reduc. the \eed cootenl In all a!Jo be !ree o! phospllorous, rem.ainln1 lflldes o! gasoline me ~ llTllDIES, wlti<b , but the pnospnorous limit was begipolng J';;. ;:~ rw:~ aj 111 11 a r conclua~1, cut In half from February'• Instead, u us ,atr found that ''col'llWtrable nwo.,· proposal. to a maximum or D04BIOed Wednesday th• lien ol urbon 'ftlidentl have 0.11116 lfllm• pel" gallon. pb8led reduction Is being re-al*>ormally elevated blood Rucl<elohaus concluded· thal propooed to allow further tti> leed levels 'iesultlng from ' ex' lead-free gawUne is necessary cussloo and its ~ start-~ssl°'e expowre to. ~-for 197~model cars which . • must • h.a v e antlpollut!Ott Ing Ha~ was JJOStpooed "\'" •iJ'onn\enlal lead principally devices thal would bO ruined yeor lo Jan. I, 1975. throogh !ood, \Oler, paint; air, by lead. RuckelsbAua e>plalited that and 'dust..· • · new &Ndies liave replaced tbe . 11Efnllilion1 from motor · BVT OTHER CARS on the pre.vi-Ous studies which JR\ vehicles Using leaded gasoline . . . . ; . ~ -'9r 01er 10 percent Ille 1\11111 emltled Into Utt ;..,;...,;:.:.. " ............ ,. . II bU big been known lead, ablarbod In ··-~ ~· C011ld cause ....iaus Di; -· -~ re!ontltion dealll, BUI tlitre ha,I been l\s> coaclualvo evidence lo link ~ lead In city air directly w~ hUUWI Ulnmes • "•" . ' . ~ .. : THE RE-PROPOSED phaiit:. out wi>\WI limit ga.soUne le!Jf: Ju .. l , !fl~; 1.7 a!te< &:~· 1976; l .5 a year lateri 11111 1:$: atter Jan-. 1, 1m. 4!°~ ... .HAPPl .-NEW :·~llAR! · -•START THE:fEA. llGllT WITI Mil(tACIUI SAVllGSI . " "f.,.' ... , ,.,,. ~. o .PEN . Die~ .. 31--9.s _ -·cLo$ED JAN~ 1 . . ~" .~:.c . ... Sjndlustn ~~· •--111 red 011tY .•· Double tfl1 in111l•t:I011 '\If i ordin1ry cwb tonn•,for i1 11nbr•tk•b!1 1/2 OFF SAtE e Gr•tt f1>r t;fcJri111 'Ot b•thtCIJOl'ft e R11i•h 9rt•••, moi1hl,.., ~ 1t11.n. e~ Soft-t~11n, •••'I' cl11n finid1 PRICIS GOOD THRU JAN. JN CHRISTMAS LIGHTS, AND DECORATIONS -' Stock up now! Sy plennin9 fo r h••t yMr, you c•n s•v• 50 r. on shimmering Christmas decorations, lights ind ' replacement bulb1. There's 1till a 9raat 1alaction if you hurry! - Black Stanley Folding Screen Utility K!lif e e lOVz" high, e l•iCM' 1herp, weigh1 only v•t ••'• ., • 9 lb1. li:111fe ll•cli: fi11bh. e Cuh •••rvthi119 Ir••• hendle1 f•-P•P•r tii ple1tlc1 8.'!!1 All pl.lrpot• tocaf 99t .... Black & o.Cker Men's ilr w .. ·s Jig Saw Cotton Garden Glotas e M1li:o1 1tr•ly1tt• e Stiircly whjt• cunoff1 1cro I ,.,.." cutt . e Protoetlon for e fo, wood, 9•tdo11 work, rnotol Or pelnflng, wood· {:!•utic w•rk1ng, ok. e ith on• blodo /11 1t1on'1 or e Modol 7110 womon'• tlH1 9'9 29C ... ' ~ Imperial Ill llishmaster e Stt•P9•· wt•M• incl ri1u11 • di•hti•, pota trld p1n1 • s.r. 11111 Mftitary, with • 1.tr• cl .. t11iJ19 po- • Fih,tY ~itk"· CClflll~ with !"'Pftt. irtJh1H.ti°" ~it I -• ~:~· ( ·''~9 ' ' • Sh•'""' . • , b~1, drill .; bm, lew11 mowtir b1He1, •tc. .... Hel'tdy I~ 10 . ' '°"1•11\' 111•1 . .. . . • Aiccuroto, • Mocfol 7900 2688 .~~ e No "'"' toilet hondlo llff'-. e Fm ony tollri '" e T~oubl•~fr-t. ' ' . e ln1toll1 i11 <! ' '• , , '"""~~· .. ' ' ' ·1'1'~ • ' Conwoleotl, locatH .•. !01y To •-ht 2666 HARBOR •LVD. -IN COSTA MESA. PtfONE 546-7080 HOUU1 WHKDA VS 9 TO 9 ' . SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 TO 6 PM • • • s. te t i· I ·~ . "' { • --... ·--.. -- T-111. De«-28, 1972 OAILY l'ILOT JJ Wimbledon Champ T akes Res t; Lauds L~~ver · llJ BOWAlll> I. IUNl>Y °' .. ..,.,.,, .... Wlm-11 Ibo !>'-l<Ju-1 ho ever -. Rod La~ lo rucly lo come "" lll'onil7 In Im at ·-thoqh be U be jQlolnc Ibo World Qi111npbl Ten- ' cln>ult nm yeer, .,.rybody II •Yins too muc:ll""""' ~ di11· n-.,. Ibo utute -rvatloas ol :lmbledon'j deferidlnc tonn\I cl\ampion Stan Smtih u be villted In the Newport Beach aru thll -k /or Ibo holiday teasoa. Smtih'• perenll, Ken and Rhoda Smith, moved In Newport Beach oevtral moolhl ago 4'tbouib Stan calla llllton Head1 s.c .• hll -alter leamlnr" lhe -.. tennis In Putdeaa and at ihe Unlvenlty ol Soulhem Ctlllomla. * * * Pro Game :Makes Big tAdvances j• I I \Stan 111\illh lw -playing big-time 'lelmta lor Ibo pllt -or five years. , \Hu be noted • big dlllerenoe _In tbe pme.d\rlni tbal tlmef l '°'"lblre'1·aD Uae dlffetence that there II iww ... nlCbl tDd dty ." he .,.. "'Ille pme wU VerJ slow five ,.a.n .., noa It's a wide open ev• ~l'\_'m fOlnl In join World alam. --tblt -alone wtlh -"'1lier .playen who ha ... 't 1-there I btilire. 'l'llore will be M d .,. lplil into ,m IP!Jl!PI and only •-II w!ll be ...... c:oolracl," be -, .Smllh II in a group thal allo lndlMdes ~ l-aver .ol Corona del Mar, Roy ipnenoo.ol Newport Beach, hll-clQUbles .p.rl!ier • Bob Lui& and 11ther lop Daines. Thll -11 known .. <lr'OUp ,.. Tllo7 llart In Miami ~ Jl1a. on ... 1$ and -iar a-lour ~ 'nlo rest of thO year tliey mova .... atbm' b:larnament acUon. ~ opeclal -will be beld In lbe lop l>la1en from each -. fDcfudln1 a shigles competition 'for lbe lop elgbl players from each at ·'.lllllm Held. dooblel competition Ida place In for tbe best four-and tbe cllmu II in DoUu who11,lllJ lnp ..,.. ployen -·~ lhY· . 'lo :IDlll'l -In --be llarted pla)'lns? "Tllilire'1 1t IMlt twice the lDttrtlt . 11 llo~ only lbe Idell but lhe fdulb · !lll that .,. playing now,"• be Sl)'I. W1lat are the reuons for the change 1 "There are l!e\'eral reasons. First, I d say the succea of the pros and the amoqnt of money generated in the ,-.ne. ''Then the physical fllness aspect bas enter In. This started in the John F. Kennedy era. , "Doctors are recomrbendin& that older (POOPI• partlctpote ill sport., to keep their rates down. "And businessmeo have found thal y don't have the tlme te play golf or four times a week and bitve llurned In temls, a game tbey can play In """;l<r period ol lllld oo a "8Ular Hu Smllh ever ~about qulttlng pme wtlh aU Ifie fl<essurea tl· ln big lime teanll! "I gueea tvtry year the guys, at 10me Int feel Ibey lbould give It up. Thll yoar I haven~ fell Iha! •ar· But I'm• o1 playlns right oow and would like take two or three JDGDtbl off. "I began pla~in Febn!1r7'· and 39 ol lhe ;f lllg 48 weeks and t'a a lot bl ." How does be look al ,pllylng for lhe vii Cup team where 'only preslfge II ultimate reward? "i lllarted with tbe Davll cug::m in • tbe year we '"'" It hack Ml- .. llaaically, lt'a an opportunity to y !or your country and J've ,alwaya a supporter of that klei." ' ~P Net Pros ~lti'111 f Laver, Stan Smith, Roy Emenon, Addison. • t'a the all...tar lineup for a practice koul 11 lhe Newport Beach Tennis on lhe Eaal Bluff Saturday morning ·ll:IO with the action open to the public ol chal'I•· •. ver repruent. the Newport Beach on the World Champions Tennis tour II a relldenl ol Corona del Mar. th, the Wimbledon ehamoloo 1111 and the man wbo led the 11.s. tio 1 def.,... ol the Davis Cup In II ~ for Ibo' bollclays. Re" 11 1111 ~ ""° Uva -lbe ~ flcilltJ. ,. f -• Ind t ~ ": "..::r.l ftt CJn tour. .......... ._-~ .. I nflia.nt ol lhe llOI (Newport ), II• Allllle Davlf'CUp Ital' who · be pllJlol on Ibo wcr tour 11111 . . ' ' four ol lbe ~ ... "'°"" fl>. ~llcolJly Md wUI bl lttvtns !or tbe WGT tour -Int In Mtlml ..{an. 11 Jn the lmmldllte lutln. You...-. ... W'led In w!i-the workcw 1111$7 bJ club pneral manager Adre· ~. It WU oo !ht lboulders ol -(21) 5mfth thal Iba U.S. placed the ,....tat r-lbHlt7 o1 defeadlng \!10 Davll CUp ~poptnllRoawlla llalllllll- mer. He came throuah with flying colon w1MJnc both ol bfa •tnsles m11d!ea Ud team!nl( wllh Eric Vanl)lllm ol San Mateo ID~. 111o U.S. woo, S-i, with Smith ntntnc -viotortel, I ' "'lbei't wq a lltUe preuure on mt," he admlll. "Bui that doublea match wllh Eric wu the best one we ever played ii=·~ proud ol lhe Wimbledon tiUo even lhouib he won lhe U.S. Open a year qo at ll'orest Hilla. "Wlmbledoo II lhe blggell llDgle l«mia •-ID lhe world.'' be u11. 'nladay Sim vlll!Ald tho Newport Betdi Teonll Qub ud talked wllh Lavar who waa woridq oat 1t !be time. "It really ...m, Uke be haa hll pro- blem ""'lved ud II .bad< In good shape plzyllcally,.'' Smith says. 1 "II wUI be good In '°' blm hack In lnp 1hape -thal II, excepl when 1 actµally have In play him ID a match. H!>pefully, be won't play hll best aplasl me," he says facellOlll!y. 11He~1 gatac to be the man to beat on the circuit," Smltb u11 of Laver, show-- Ing grut reopect.' "lie probably Is lhe best tennil player that ever played the game tDd haa -aU ol lhe major tournamefttl a oumber ol timea. "I ta1ktd wllh bim lhll DlOl'llJnc. I don't think he will Ir)' to play In every ma)or event any more. Ht'I M now so be baa In be mon! careful than I do. "Even ao, ! hope to s<e lhe schedule worked out llO I can take time to play wllh lhe Davll Cup W.m again this year. 1 hope I can cut down on the number Of tournaments, too." Smith, like 'many ol the other tennis stan of international repute, has had his troubles wjlh physlcaJ aliments. "The last two years I have had a shoulder problem for a couple of months early in the season. It ls more like ten- dlonitls. And once you injure a tendon, you irritate It more and more mJtil it finaUy goes away." Tbe lDjury isn't serious enough to DAILY PR.OT l'HOTD llY ·~ KMflllf' STAN SMITH BLASTS OUT Of A SAND TRAP AS FATHER KEN LOOKS ON AT IRVINE COAST CC. Sports in Brief OCC Poloists Wiµ Big; .Kings Bag 4-1 Victory SAN JUAN, P,.R. -Orange eoam College's A team bUbtd two opponents In lhe ~ mate"°' ol lhe U.S. oallonal water polo dlamplooshlpa here wec1n ... day .. Coach ' Jack Fullerton's OC::C A team routed Puerto Rico'• B team, 22-2, and tben ·wblj>ped Lo-Moreland, Pa., If.I. Orange Coast's B teem fell to lhe Puerto Rico A equad, IU, In Ila only game. Tbe New Yori< Alblellc Club, seeded No. I ID lhe tourney, whipped the trOivmi!Y of Mlnoe>Ota, IH, and clol>- bend Ibo Puerto Rlcao B team, p.a. 'In Olh9,-gmnes, San 'JOM Stoll tripped Lonr Moreland, lt-3, and Puerto Rico'• A IQU&d-di>wned Mlnnesola, IM. Howell Celebra tes . lllGbEll'OOO -Harry Howell'•· IOth blrtbday is toda.1 and he aays "l guess a guy my·age II ou-1 to lake It euy.'' But 'the LoS Angelea K l n g 1 • def-• saya despite the special day .. I'D ltlll'be practicing." and with an on-side kick whlch gave the North the hall. Newcombe Triumphs MEl.BOURNE, Australia -Second· seeded John NewCombe of Australia ad- vanced to tl>e quarterfinals of the 153,000 Australian Open tennis championships . Wednesday. Newcombe, the former Wimbledon champion and Australia's chief hope here. toooed Georga Goven of France 6-1, 6-3, 6-3. Bruins in Finals MIAW -UCLA defeated Cornell, HI, Jnd St. Louis beal Howard, :1-1, in llllddeo death overtime Wedoesday night , ad- voocfng. In the ~ of the NCAA ooccer tournament. Feueha Wolde-Emanu<I' ol Elhlopla ~ for' UCLA on a right anal• shot. OM Couo<:e made ·lhe sudden death goal fi>r St. Lollis, a· bead shot with 1:23 to go in • tbe fin! overtime. Dennla Radican bed lhe other St. Louis goal. !an Bain acored for Howard. UCLA tDd St. Louis meet !or the championship Friday nlgbl in the Orange Bo'll. Lakers ·Hurting Without Happy; Hoµston Rolls LOS ANGELES (AP) -Earlier lhll season the Los Angeles Lalrers said they lhooghl deplh was one ol lheir slrong suits as they sought a second straight Na~ lional Basketball AssoclaUoo champion- ship. ff so, it waa not apparent Wednesday night. . With their two sllrting forwan!s bolh out Of action, the La.ken suffered their worst l~ of the year, a IOUDd 135-lot thrashin& at lhe hands ol lhe Rocket. in Houston. · Happy Hairston baa not played lllnce ha twisted a knee against Chicago Dec, U and Jim McMilllan pulled a gmn mU5cle Tuesday night in the Latera' gaJQe w:ith Portland. Hainlon's injured right knee, original- ly diagoosed u a atrain, may be more ser\olJSly damaged and surgery may be required. He bas misled every game since Dec. U but It waJ thought oo """ l"!'Y woold be needed and lbel lhe 6-foot.. 7 forward woold be bock after.,... Ml. LM ~IN') ........ c0•MI. • P T T Ir~ 3 M t Mllrlll )I '·I ii C"-mber!ell'I S t·f 12 McWlltlem t 0.1 4 CllUflls I 24 ( ~y I +4 • Erlckton lo H \ f Moor't 1 2·2 4 Goadrldl 16 W 11 MllrCllly 1 w If Gr•nt I W • N_.1111 11 24. ,.. Price I H 2 0.SmJlh 4 W 11 '":T t 2·2 I Tlmllno'tktl I ".I 20 w.. 1 u 21 w~11ctr 10 )..j 2l TOll!t '1 22·21 104 Tof1l1 5' U30 U6 Ll:IJ Ai;vtifl 21 22 JO ti -104 ti-tori » 'f1 32 ... -1)6 '°"ltd out -Loi A::r.ltt, Prlu. Tf(l!ntc.11 loull -1111..,, Ho!nlOl'I cqi,tll Wlnter'I Alll!ManU .~t,17S. I mat. lllm lhlnk ol -~ bowevor, avta thoolgh be 1pp11n lo havo lhe Ideal place to lltUe down. "[ have I tlttlo vWa II s.. Pinet Plan- laUoo In Hilla! Head," he 1111 ..,. lhusluUcaliy-'"l'bere are three coif courses, a &enftlt Court.a, a beach and a hatbor and a bird aaoctuary among other things of. a recreatkJnal nature/' he saya. rt II located on Ille Atlaotlc Ocean and S!Jlllh 11 the pllylng pro OUl ol lhe tenols club there. lte besan hll tonnil caroer In Pasadena where bis father wu a coach for more than IO years 11 Puadeoa City College. How did be happen lo set involved in I . ' emut. "I &tarted when I waa about U or 13," he recalls. "I really became lalerested In it -f .... 11 and -lllCQ '"'°""' to win lbe national JW\lor Utle when I WU l~" \ He continued hll e4JcatfGa II USC ..t • pined a degree In !lnlnce. A~ tho preaent lime he Is ..-lafAld wflh I aolt drink -pan,y In puhllc relatfonl ' work. But riahl now be Is taklna • vacalloo • from tennis and baa been 1or t))e paat r three weeb. He will lry bll hand oo lhe 11 -.ta at Newport Beach Tmntl Club Sat- urday with Laver but doem' flpre lo lake ap lhe game aer!Olllly qaio uolll , the middle ol Jaouary, He'• more interested ia ~ I> on 1 lhe goU courae -days,lllMI la IlalDg up matches oo Oraqe Coat._ llDU I II !be preeeol time. I Six P layers Ailing Flu Bug Strikes USC Grid Team PASADENA (AP) -Virus bugs which have whipped the Oh1o State center now are on the attack against the Southern Califomla Trojan&. "Siz of our youngaten have the virus or Ou," said coach John McKay. "We think all will be fine by game time. It's just a bug that's going around." Earlier in the week, starting sophomore center Steve Myers of the Buckeyes w:as rewf.ed out of the Rose Bowl game because of a virus attack, To~ney Next For Anteaters After Eas y W'in By HOWARD L HANDY Of .... D9ffll """' lteff It was the near-perfect haJf in the estimation of coach nm 'rut as his UC Irvine Anteaters )?asketball team opened a wide. gap In the opening 20 minutes Wednesday nlghl lo band visitlog North Park College of OUeaeo a 74-+t defeat in Ora-Hall. ' ·~ ~ the ,,.,.i cms!stent -w. have plfY<d foi'IO ~Y.Tift•· plained. "~ ~ "1.r our defenae got together add we liilly made to.> turnovers in that first half." Tlit was eq>lalnlng tbe UCI early ad- vantage that went to as many as Z5 point. (40-15) J.ust prior lo Ibo in· termi.sslon. The sagging zone defense completely slymled the inside shooting ol the visiting Vlklngs and forced outside shots from more than 20 feet In most in- stances. ·Ilu!ll>g ooe period of lhe hall, tbe VI· kings failed to score for seven minutes as the Anteaters pbsted 16. It was an ad- ditional minute that the Vlkes were held without a field goal UCI Is ailing phy!i<:aUy, howevar, and llred in !be aecood hall u North Put surged hack lo close the gap to 10 poinlll on several" occasions but never any closer. Dave Baker rollnquiahed bis· llarting role to Richard Clark after a. three-day bout wilh broodliUs and"Hartan he! waa hampered by lhe nu. Scotl Main•son still isn't at full atre:ngth from his recent boul with bronehllls. Peet sprained an aokle In. !be oec:ond half to further complicate matters for UliJ weekend's UCI Invitational touma-- menl thal begins Friday nJihl at 7 wtlh Cal Slat. (Fallerton) I ladng cs (Northrldge). UCI bolts Humboldt SUl!e at 9, "We are,.01 in tbe best physfcal con- dition," Tift sa.ld bluntly. "We have bad a problem with injuries and sickness this year. When they increased the tempo in the second hall, our kicb began to tire." Eugeoe Prolll ol North Park was hll!h point man for the game with 22 while Jerry Maru hit tt for the Anteaters. But the big surprise was the lack oC scoring by North Park star Keith MCOonald who came Into lhe game with a JS.3 average. He waa held to three at· tempt! ,,.m lhe floor in tbe first hall and only a pair ol free lhrowl made. He had n ooinll for lhe game. UC Im. (Jiii) 1ttr91 ,_. IHI '! ... .. .. ..... 9H:• t J ft Oel.. 'l ·' ~ I• Mar•t & 7 2 t• l'nlltl It t I JI: M..-1 I t 16 C.mp!Mtl J 0 I 6 PHt 1 0 2 14 Olwldowlc I J I 1 f!:UOt<lkli t I 4 I Mc:Oon91d 4 l 4 11 Clwk lll4H'l'len 0 1 21 ISll!ld'I I I • H•~ll'llr' 0 t I 0 Pa111Mn t 0 1 t o.w,.y 1 I t J Tlllal1 2' 16 21 74 Ttl•ll 2S 14 D 6" H11n1mt1 UC lrvlM .... ,,_ described by Obfo State doclon ar prob- ably mooooucleosls. However, coach Woody Hayee talc! there was no lndicaUon that any clher ol his Ohio Stale playen was affected by the ailmeol. McKay said Wednesday llnehackers Ken Gray, Ray Rodrigua, Kevin Bruce and AD-American Richard Wood plU5 running hack Rod McNeUI and defensive end Jeff W'mans ...,.. all ailing. "They'll all be fine/' McKay op- timistically told newsmen . He al.so said be didn't know of any other father·son coaching and playing combination ever to bave been in a bowl picture. McKay's son, J .K., Is a wide receiver for the undefeated and No. 1 ranked Tro- jans. McKay reiterated thal lhll team, which meets the Buckeyes ln the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day, is the best be has had in more than a decade of coaching at USC. Asked his opinioo of Obfo Slllte, McKay declared: "Woody Hayes said his team in 1968 had the most talent he ever had. This team looks just as good to IDe." The 1961 team, playing In the Jan. I, 1969 R<tse Bowl game, whipped Southern California 27-11 . McKa7 Wiii aaked ,.ey hll team passed mote hi the earller pmes lllld ran more later In the ....... ,.We atill will pua a . tot." be said In evading tbe ~-"We try to keep a balanced attack, a diversified attack." Then, on lhe ques\}on ol defense, be declared, "If our defenae doelo~ play better tha.n ft played against Noire Dame then our defense will get us in trouble.•• ·use beat Noire Dame, 45-23, but not \01tll after the Irbb came within two polnll ol tying the game at ZHJI. "I'm positive Ohio State will move the ball apinst UI," ueerted McKay. ..I watched Notre Dame move apinst us and ObJo Stale Ill better. They will move even U Woody Hayeo bu tq carry lhe b&D." Tbe 59-yeaNJld Hayes -~ football since 1113$ when be !Aid from IJenlsoo Uolvenlty where played tac:kle for throe yean. McKay termed ~ loflke Ille aa !be Trojan&' moot valuoble pl: for lhe Il<tse Bowl yet be wouldo'I Jctooe whether hla early game plan II pualng or handJog ()If In one ol hll bevy ol awilt runners. Trojans Stopped By La Salle Five PIIlLADEU'llIA (AP) -La Sllle raUled !nm a -Int deficit ud d&o feated Sooll>em Callfornla, '17-71, In the !Int round ol !be Quaker City bea'"'ball loumameot Wedoeeday. USC met Prlncelm In a ._,, bnlct<t game thia mornlntl. La Salle atayed ....... terms wllh the lall Southern c.Ilfomla loom for ..- ol tbe !Int bell but !ell belllnd I0-11 Jmt before hall time. Joe DiO:lcco, Jbn 0 awhd Ind Bobby Jooeo rallied the Explonn I'*> • ~ lead mldwa7 lbroaCh ... -bllf and La Salle -...... ap!n behind. Tbe lrmdlng 'l'lqj-. manqed tleo II 11Z and M but !!ml Crawford bit four points and -ud Stove Wiley dunked ""' free llrowr aptec:e for a .,,_ M lead. La Salle ,_ la oow 6-2 for lie -while SOutbem C.f II I.I. Holfeg, playing ht. Zlst year in lhe Na, tlonal ~ey League, says he aUll en- joy• the game and conceded he was pleated te ocore a goal In Lo.s Angeles' 4- 1 Vlc10rr over the New Yori< blanden Wednesday olght. South in Victory )llO!n'qoMERY, Ala. -Don strock or VP!, ""° ,-more yatdage lhan any olber C9fltp beck lhlt yeor, led the $1ia111'1o "I JMS Ytclnly ovw tht Norlll ~ •........ 1 '*"' In i-. lblNll l!ldMlny c:dJetfli loollliall .... -.1 be hid a lol ol bofp from Iba d<ifeme. ·It's Incentive Bowl for Texas, 'Barna Def-llact Ken Pham 0 f Mlalafppl a.te put lhe Gl'l)'I in ,front l• flwl a -.te alter lhe pme boon. Pharel ~c91td I -from fon7 Adami ol Utah Stlte ud ran M back M yard1 f<ir a· touchdown. He Intercepted -.. halt the 'Y ..... Jn lhe fourth qlllrler. Tiie Blue an-o1111 """"' caqhl ap •lthoulh they f4ot lhe -by mprlle wltb 11111 darlnl loar1IH!own.Plays, wblch nonNJJ,y MIUlil ha" caned !or ponls., ,DAUM (~) -Yoo·ltjfihl c:oll the 17th OoUm lint ~ bej~ fourth-. raoWd Alahama Ind eeventh-nmked Tu:u tht HlncenttTe bowl!' 'Illa New Year'1 Day same - !be """"' ol !be -ast and louthwelt con1.....,... ollera a mile-tone list ., !UIOOll for victory. For cme thin(, Alablnfa coach Paul !)ear B111Dt bu never beaten a Darrell lloyal...,-tam. Tbe proud &ar II 0.:1-1 aplnot Royal<OIChed teams . Alabtma. Jn tact, h~ MWr beaten Tuu. II lit N-1 qainst the Loogbom1 -11JroaP Ille yean. I ' The Climlon Tide a1ao lost In its last c.tton Bowl appeOl'IDoe -1:1-17 lo Tuar A&M lo IM7. " And )ut but DOI least, the 'Dama player1 figure Ibey have somelblng te pme alter Aubum'a come-from·beblnd !Ml vlcloc7 over Alabama in lhe !lat 1ame of the regular eeason. In !act, the IOA to Auburn may be the create~t IPW' to the Alabama team which boaalll a llH record. HWe know we}'a got to rutore a Uttle pride," d1I Alabama qu•rterbaqt TtrlY Davll. "I think lhe gama 11 .. u will moUvale tvaryboa)'rll was uobellaveable the WIJ Wt bit that Auburn game. We'fe got aomelhing In prvvo oow." A vlctor7 over Tuu -1d g1,. Alabeq111 NI oulaide lbot at the ntUooal championship, dedded In I poll of wrlten alter lhe bowl aamu. Ahead o! 'Barna In lhe ranklnP ire Solllhem Callfom11, Oklahoma and Ohio Slate. Te:xaa would love a victory ovtr Alsbama to climb In lhe naUooal 111nk· 1ng1 and al!IO halt a two-year loslng &kid in the Oottoo Bowl Claaalc In whlClt lhe 'Hornt have been the host lhe lul Ove yiars. HWe're hunn ror a Cotton Bowl vie-' tory -that'• for 1Utt," a,. RaJa1 Uoder Royal, Tuai ltuna an M In tho Cottoo Bowl and a 'flctory-bop blm ·-lhe --man:. A CGtloo Bowl olllda1 Oel !be -!or the Tu..Alablml maid! -be aafd: 11bcn'1 no aec:nt the BMr would dearly """'In beat -•• 11111'•""' he -led to -here IDlttld ol pl1)'1n& Nebl'aab. again in tho ~ Bowl. • "Also, be Jllll mJchl have 1 bolter chanct ol beatlnl Tull than NtbnlaU, altholJ«h tbe LOftaboraa bava '"'"""*' lremOndoualy over tho llal hall II 1111 ' lealOll." l Estancia Upsets La Habra, 65-6~ ... By ROGER c..,iw;oN Ot1 h D41t1Y Plflill lhH Estancia High's Eagle• posted the upset of the prep basketball tournament trail Wednt&day nlgbt with a •tartling 65- 62 triumph over Oratlie County's No. 2 rated team, La Habra. tn the opening round of the eighth annual Orange lnvlta· tlonal. win I've been uaoclated wiLb at F.stan- cla," and credited the outst.ndtna play of Todd Colllns and Mite Magner u tbe major factor In the upeet. 25 turnoven. But deaJ>lte t)le m11cueo and SI -I acc(lney , .... the field (:17 o( 71), La Habra appe~ lo hove cainoll c<111trol lo the fourth quarter when cooch Tes wama: crew look the lead at 51"48 with 7:01 IO go. ollemlve foul and ll~)'ll<lr connected on• pair o/ cniclal free -· '""t made It o,lltw!lli It """'1Jds lclt. Another La Habra tolmoter ·and Bob Madden Iced It with twe mon gratla lhota with 4.1 -le(t. ESTANCIA'S Mil<lE MAGNER (3 1), TODD COLLINS BATTLE LA HABRA. In Santiago Tourtiey The upset puls coach Dave c.arJLsle's Estancia quintet Into the sem.Iflna1s against Irvine League rival Costa "fesa tonight in a 7 o'clock test at Orange High. Carlisle called the vlclcry, "The be>t MV, Vikes Post Cage Victories Mission Viejo and Marina advanced. whJle Edison was eliminated and Newport dropped into the losers' bracket as area teams competed in a host Gf ~).. day basketball toumamenta Wednes<loy. Mission Viejo whipped Brea 81-59 In the Brea Toumament. and With a ...,,..i round bye advanced to Friday's cbam- ,pionship game, while Marina was a see. and round winner in the Covina Touma... ment1 M-31 ~·~ Edgewood. On the losin~ side, Edison fell to Warren 81-70 to dropi , out or the Ventura Tournament, and _ Newport bowed UI Santa Monica SS.SO In' the Glendale Tournament's opening round. • The return of /injured forward GU Normandie and the bot shooting of ~rd Mike Bowen bigbljgbted the Mission \'le. jo victory. Jn liis lint game since'frao- turing bones in bis foot in a pre-eeuoo miWrp, Nonnaod.ie scored 18 points, most of them on outside jwnpera,.and shot 4.1 percent lor the nlllJ!I." , ,Edison, meanwhile was ~~ .iµ- fQUls in its loss to Warren. 'l15e'Chii.hen nAd an unbelievable 36 fOUla "oe.llec[ on them In the game, and saw Wamn caab in on 33 free throws to win. 1• Coach Dave Mobs' team had UI play the final 1:30 of the game with only four F o Vall T players after sis men ·fouled out. There ounta1n ey op s ;,:.::topf:m~sia:i~:. opening round contest at the Covina B ls G d 49 3 7 tournament. The Viitnp, paced by the o -a ran e, · ;~=.idin~~:=ed °'. :;t..-:: · to-man def~ and~ f!:eo, of· -.. '-fe-1.ln ~ UI ~- By p~ ~BELL _a·"'"*"_ l~Jead before the Ba~ call-'aiamot;~ l -__ --ou.,~s,,. _ ~~~p. ., •»•J.'•ililif ' .IJ!li Using its "'pe'"11-'ileight to gooc!.'1!1 i-¥~'°'!11'"10 contest _a,_·~-'. 'Tte· -the bat m· vantage, dehberateJ"ounta~ Vailey'WgJr '• ~ VaJJey"'¥d ii consecut,lvt pblntJ ~ '!: anror gua y·1 School eaaed lllto the seniiflnals o!.the "' take a 16-10 -lint.quarter lead. The ""--1 .r.::i:::; 'lb 11 '"" • the Santiago Tournament Wednesday with a . a scuuu '~'" WI .~ • 49-37 win over Botsa Grande. spurt was a virtual <00e-man operatJOn by game. . . . . ~ win moves the Barons into &-S junior forward Tim Hill, who scored Th: Vikings, ahea~ by eight at tonight's semifinal game with Kennedy, a eight of the 12 points. halftime, ~ away m the second 1'1.alf 50-40 winner over Westminster earlier The B be the second quarter on the basis of a full court press which Prior Jo Wedneaday'1 play Eotancla was M for the year with wtn1 over Unlvenity, Laguna Beach and Sad· dleblck. ' La Habra owned• 9-1 mork with the only setback to highly regarded Daniel Murploy High. A plaguing lull-court """" press lbat develof.."'! Into a collapslng zooe made La J{abra s fC!al"ed offense appear common as the Iooing ffighlandent were guilty o! Bui Eatancla re!Uaed to fold, aot ., 1r .. throw fn>m Scott Gayner and a boicket from Colllna aod It was 51·all. It waa tied qatn at 113. 15, 57 and It before Cclltna whlppad In a fouMooler lflth a nice awt from Magner with 1:25 left. Then a missed shot by La Habra, 1111 Estancia -12 of eo ff9111 tho· Hejd for 36.7 pe~t. ' La Habra 1tandout Paol IDll fouled out with 3:al remaining." ........... I l f ' '• t I) """"'~ 10112'~ lltt•~it ..... tlt11 T ... 19 HlttOU ............... ~!Midi 1• " 1, II _.., la H1W1 •· M It l7 •17-6l Wednesda 1be game will be at 7 arons gan forced many Edgewood turnovers. 'clock y. as they ended the first, cutscoring the Newport, meanwhile suffered ball 0 The · me waa in doubt cnly during one Matadors 8-2 to take a 24-12 lead and ~g problems against a Santa COSTA MESA'S MIKE BERRY (54) SCORES PAST FOOTHILL PLAYERS IN 6t~·ROMP. stre~a The Matadors, uaing effective maintained the Point spread through the Mcnica full ~ press and the Vikings shooting and ball haodling to beat Fowr remainder of the quarter. pulled away m ~ ~d hall. In Rancho T~urney ta.in Valley's 1-2-2 z.on.e defense, raced to Bolsa Grande slowed the D1tNO down In " n,. ., S/lotlOt o ' 2 ' r-9 -LoMer J016~ 1102 Lions Drop 5040 Tilt To Kenned y It looked like a perfect setup for Westminster High School's basketball team Wednesdey night · tn the Santiago Tournament. but it wasn't to be £or the Lions. · · Westminster was playing a strong Ken- nedy team. e controversial, 83-76 overtime. winner over the Lions in the Westminster-Marina tournament earlier this year, and Westminster st-euled to have a golden chance to euct a measure of revenge. But the LionS". who have won just once this year, came ool on tbt short end of a -""°'" and played Botsa Grande to-day ac l :JO p.m. In the c:omolaUCln -In the first game, the score wu tied at the second half, holding Fountain Valley "'°'" ''' :i 2:1 :;:,~'!· J o ' ' .. Fk-l319 •1'11100, to 11 points but sconng just sit. ,.,,,."" ' o ' 12 'fOMts 21 22 1s "' ............... The Matadors narrowed the margin in M•rlM ·•f '' 11 is 11 -u the fmal stanza, but by tbat time coach E~ ·M '1 11 ' 1 -sr "·d I ed F •~:-,. .. 11.rrtso1 Dave Brown l.ld c ear ounwuu f9 ff,, Ip ~111-s l I ' ' V ll ' '----1.. O'F'ltl'>tr1y ' 5 2 ll $Otn9r1 1 1 0 .J a ey I Ul;:UPWL Alrmtn • 0 5 16 WOOIN_,_ 0 l 0 l With no starter under 6-3, the Baroru ~"':' : g ~ : "'T'!:'.1t 1! 1~ ,: ,: continually forced Bclsa. Grande playen N9WJlllf1 ~ 1ty ~o u 1, _ 50 into turnovers as they tried to pass the '"'"'• M11111ui 10 15 10 u -.M ball over Fountain Valley's zone. !di. <•u ft fl "' fp P•w"""o 1 S l 1 Reserves played well for the Barons, z1r1191 ' 1 ' ' wlndlel1 ,, 1 .J 13 Wey llOlFord 14520 as Brown pulled both starting guards and T.,.is 1 1 2 3 ""°".i' o 2 s 2 Wllllll'I 5)5130.WIGI 002 0 center Scott Reider for much ol the sec-'fully o o s o Tottl• u u ,. 11 Ofld period. Edltot1 ~ W °"1~1 20 It -II Reider, the 6-11 cent.er, could manage W1rr111 20 21 12 21 -10 just eight points and was not a factor re-MltiklA \lle!O 1t11 1r11 c"' bounding despite Bolsa Grande's lack or F~ ': ~ ~ :: Dlllllnt , ~ ~ ';: height -no starter over 6-2. Hill was the Nllf'lnMll• ' o 1 11 C•'11tf!f8r 1 o s 4 leading aco~er with 17. :=:11 1~ .: ~ ~ ~ : ! ~ ~ H•llrol 2 O 2 4 Wl<"-tt 2 0 I ' M•llll'W 201 4$HtNI 021 t Hoy1I 0011Wfll..,.I 1012 Thomft 0 0 I 0 ltoJ!klN l. 0 I 2 ""'' 001 0 ' Tollls M lJ 14 11 Toi.It 2( II 2D '1' _.,_ Mlt1IOrl Vltlo 10 • %1 1• -II e...., t 11 It 22-St ,_tlln VelieY 14fl ? It .. I! T. A.Simi 0 0 I 0 111 H1llleld 1102 0 ' ' Sfflllwdil l ' • •g11 Aobucl !' ( I I IC.ndrlclt 1 J T011l1 U 1 1 f'I k9rl .... (NI"'" =ll~~IW :a.1: 1l 1t::f> • Monarchs Sail Along; ' . I" • . ' San Clemente Topple([ A-later Oei breezed past Magoolia 'n-59 while San Clemente fell to Loara 69-46 in opening round play of the Rancho Alamitos Tournament Wednesday night. Mater Dei was scheduled to play Rancho Alamito9 tonight at 8:30 in a. semifinal round game, while Sen Clemente faCi!CI Bishop Gorman of Las Vegas in a game played tJi1s afternoon. Coach Jerry Tardie's Mater Dei lttonarchs cruised to Its win o•er Magnolia behind the usual inside scoring work of George Herold and Gregg,Green. The Monarchs took control early in the game as 1.1agnolia turned the ball over repeatedly, and were never seriously pres..ed. G?"" hit for 23 polirls, wblle Herold an~JobniMunt ilso lll-"el'e ln dou- ble for tho lfonorcbs. ' The Saxons employed a tight man-to- man defense to good edrintage, and forward lGrk Parge picked apart a San Clemente 1-3-l zone· f<r a game leading 22 points. Forward Blll Kenney was the Mly Triton to reach doubte.figlris, totallila'i;t · in the game. ..., In other games at the tournament, El Dorado bested Bi.shop Gonnan t6./66;.and Rancho Alamltos atopped Exceillor 71-67. . , Laguna .§t~~ . Bears, 73-59 72 when Kennedy'o Matt l'Orter fired a delpentlon llaW-caurt shot at !be bmz.er. Center Mlke Liso atuck bis hand up througb the net maklnil a futile Jtnlb at the ball -a tedlllcaf foul according to the rule boot. Slow Down Effort Fails; -.;.r,.,,,· ' vlctory _, ·the seventh of. the ., ~for Mater ~apinst five Joasea. I ' ~ Clemente; m0a'n1oriille slipped u. u bli lht .,,_ wltlt Hi defeat. A com- BIG BEAR. LAKE -Laguna Beed< High'• basketball !Mm cashed In from the free throw line UI trip Big Bear 73- 511 iD noo-league a.ctlon ·bere Wednesday. '!be call .... llO( made, deoplte the pro- tests ol WestllllnlUr coach DooU! Stockham, and Kennedy ran away wit& the game dwing the overthne period. Wedndday's game was almllar. Ken- nedy jumped oot to a 27-2t halltlme lead and increased Uie marllln to 41-27 after three quarten btfore the Uons made a run. w;th 5,119 left lo ploy, Gary Andre"' bruJght the Uona UI within seven, 41~, but after that Kennedy put the clamps on Westntimter11 offmae. The Liem, iD fl<!, <Ould """'" just ... lleld goal and two free throws ID Ibo fllll1 SI\ mtnutaa o/ play. The nonnally hlrJ>«orlllg -. ... lttld "' juot eliht points by the lrtsb, lwo lleld gooll aod ,...,. free throwt. Bu& Div. Wtltb, ti. ,.. junior forward, aontJ1bulad 19 pololl on nlno field ptla and a free lllto!r, 1t11 eecond hta11ett polDt Iola! for !be .....,,, ~ Jfil)r 1 f ,Jj ~:Jr"' .1 u ,: 'I:: T -· 1-·~ ~ ersity LQses, 3 7 -20 , . i•, t University 'fligh School went to a stall offeme Wedflesday' night in an effOrt to slow down a Wlet Tustin team, but the strategy.resulted in nothin& more than a low score as Tusll.Q earned n 37-ZO win in tbC fio:tt round of the SMU•llO Tourna-ment.• .. · • Unl"1nltJ fl>Ot only ::r -lbol> ti1rouih rour QU8lten of basketball, and 13 or tbooe came In the fourth period. when 'l'ltltin held a :tl-t 3 lead. · nie Trojans dld not taka thelr first abol Uriil1 twe minutes had elapsed In the ftl'rl quarter, Bod dJd DOI lel a basket untll throe mlnut., lat.r wll<it Jeff Styen ICOttd on .t layup . The strategy worked for one quarter as University held on to 1 &.a lead, But ,.,,.tin outocored the TroJam 10.1 In the second half to take a lead it neVer pve up. . Trailing 13-7 going iDU. the third period, Universlly continued to stall the ball, even after the Tillers had powed In lhree quick ba1ket1 In aueceulon. The 'frojan1 did nol ICOre In that ' period until Larry Witt hit a t.ree' throw With 3:27 left to play. J University, which plays Buena"P,ark to- day at s in the consolation bracl(tt, con- ijnued its stall during the tbitd ptrlod r and part way into the fourth. ' • But with lhe Tillers ocortn1 ~eta ao( !fie Trb)ana tumtng the baU CIVer. Unfverslty went into its normal game mfdway through the quarter and the coo· test .. tiled. Witt was the lelldinJ tcorer for Unl..,.. 1lty wttb just eight pomts, and no one elae scored more than four for the nojam, who IOft their alxtb 1traigh1 game. Leiding TusUn "WU &-& center Don Danlcl with 15 points and forward John Ormasa with t4 polnll. Thole two, plut &. 4 Oave Trotter, controlled the rebounding ag1lnst University. i~tI11 t~ NM 111 :·,: '""' 7 /.J.~ .Ee. " .1,! I ¥:!mr'""' I 1~ 1l 1!:fi bination of full aiid 6aif court ~ by L<>ara kept the "1tons' offense oU bal· •nee most of the •game'. and the SwN took advantage of tumoVen. · J.fter sprinting lo a )2 point ,bulge In the , opening mlqutes the two tellms played even for the second two petioru a) Loara coach 'Tom Voj&tt went to bis l>enc~- MIMr al1tJ '• * M.!!u. Ut) . ~, •• ,,... ftlfflf'_f» Hftld ' I ' to ..._,i. 5 '1 J ft c;,.._, 11 ( 2 N ilteldel.,. 3 ' 3 XI ~rllr1dal• ' I I I COltl 5 2 5 12 Acllll'lt •lllJFlood 10J• Smlt1\ 2t ,1 411:otw 2 2• 6 McC.llfhW J 0 I 6 Dllfln I 7 2 ' °'*" 1fJ 2111111 011 I It,..._.. )llJMooN 1011 DllllMy 1 I t J Mlm•Y t 2 0 Tolell KIM,... l I 3 7 J1 11 ti 1t TOl•ll 20 tt • # _.,_ Mllw DI! -·· ._. ,., 11 1l 20 19 -7' 1.J l4 1J ,,_,, ftltllftJ .. ,.._.., .. ) l"'ef9I 11 0 2 t2 ~ w•lfi... $ 1 I Ii F~n l'l'f'!\11 J 0 .• 6 ICllOI• ~ 412fYOdlf ~ ' I 2 t Holfmtn c.Mr~ 111 JtM.n H'ICllolMill 1 I I I WlllW Oltlll OIOl'M'lllt lrtf 1011 .. ,,.,, •• -, lJ I 0 I I ' 0 J • ' t I I 11 0 I 6 I 1 1 1 0 2 0 t 0 1 2 1 Htldln I 0 0 t 'J'011i. n J ,, ff To111t lt t 17 M ...... tr "'""" 1.Mrl 11 1( lf It -,. IMI Cltmt11t9 6 IJ 16 11 -4' ~ ... The Artlsta hit on 25 · ol 31 ;free tbt:ows incltldini 11 of 13 ln a ll·f!Oll\I ......i quarter outbw'lt Which aa.,-tl)em come fn>m two poln!A behlod u. ti pofnto ahead at the )liltf. The Art!Jta, wit~ hefty cealar Norm Bedell and M transfer Tom Anderson showing the way, "'!nlnated the i'ello<Jnd. ing in the game a~· e.lso took Jetvantaie with a 'full courti .Preas throu&fiout the game. , • After !be second 9uarter ootbunt La· gtina m1lntainoll lfi lead and a Beers' outburst for 21 polilll IP the lloal quarter was too little and Coo Ilt,. ~ Bucb bu now• won flvt ea.mes iD .. ro;w en route UI a 7~ l'l!Ci>id, Big Bear )I M alter the losa. t The Art1111 flnla!ood tht game with tholr mott lialanced aoodl!f attaclt bf !be . 3e8IOD as· alx playen manopd to'wet In double Oguroo. Badell was Ibo !Oader with 15 markull, •nd Dave Kleae1btcli 1 tallied 13 ..• "•r • 4 t 10 I • 0 t 0 1 t , •• l 0 t4Ult n t• 1•-n .. u-" Mesa Buries Foe, ()~;.39, -.. ·Tourney " , . .. By Fllib fwDGEllS Of .. Otll't ........... Coitl Mesa . lljgh'1 red-ho! M-np lwOpt aaide FootbiU's Xnlgbtl In opening nitlticl.play of the eighth annual Orange Optlnilit Invitational bolltetball loumey, 62.a,-Wadneaday n!ght. · Tbe'v!CU.ry aets· ¢oacb Bob 59.....,..•, M~s up with a ~Is match wll6Ji),tart Emncla ·ln lhO 7 o'clock gafni'forught. • ; ... , ! ' ~", For Costa M-.and ~. \Orught'a battla · is a n.iiatdl ol ' ~ ..,,. so{al)o\I champloo.thlp ftnaia at the re- --Clemente lllch -lnvltatlanal. In ~t ooe It \f8S Costa Mm oo !Dp, 474~ with Mika Betry reading the wa1 rt!\ )4 points. It ..... the fourth straight conquest for Mesa and It hl>1ughl the Mllstanp'rocord up to .!00 at H .': · M,.. broke.on top at M, lost lhO lead mo~lar11y,JD, Ibo~ q\l&fltr, and then fljlahed to an ......,,,ountable 4.1-2' advaatMe with .1:0. 'left ln thO third quartel -.,· ease l"oolhtll Into Ibo oon- sol•tlon "' .... -i...et. "· ••• ~-. ....... , ..... ~·· .,,., bro!!~ II opeo' al Ibo outlet of the''-·~, anct the two most -lble'(lll:•tb& ~I .,.re Betry and ,John Cwnnilila. • ' · - ~ tbe ..._ tllol tr~ for oe"!'O.ol/taolve ~'Ind put the ball liectc up and In 1111 boop.19< cniclal poinli ~ lrt the end It •u Berry with 21 -ten and ~!no with jl to lead the llljla111' _... list. • .. MIU hit 25 of It f~ Ibo 11eld tor C. f PJic;o:t a' dlll~ ~ for• Footblll, Wfilch torutect.d on only I! 0('51 "1>ola for an Icy IU ~ . .qolnoj II~ , dtfet11e. t ...... ,In !ite .......t ball Footb\l!~rs necb!d on four of 21 Imm fklclr. ' ~ •r.: •' C...:.. Ii f ~~ ' ''/<• J """" ""' ...,., I t•lt4MC( ti lll'9Wfllnl 0 0 4 I c..r I I 4 ClllJlft'IWli flllt ~ :.,., Nleltlnl~ llO!D9y l 1 1 41 C!Ullflli.. 142 , ___ :'W ; ••• ' ,..., I I 0 , ~''11 " 4 I &flleuir lli•-·•~1 1{112 ~ 10l1HMMll" !OJ 4 lip OOJ O _,_. 001 I lft ,\1J IOIJ /~t1t 0111 Ot•ff U It II 'r911ll I• ti 20 • lair• .,. ,...,...... 0.lf MeM -1 11 1 J II 11-tl ,-OMllOI I II I ,., 1 - ., .r. • ' ' • ' • ., Alamitos • Racing 12 County Gridders Earn CIF Honors Entries Prep, JC, College Basketball A dozen Orange County foot- ball ploy.,.. earned All.cJF AAA division rococnt!IOQ u .. 1ected ill' tile Un I to d Savings-Helms Alhlellc Foul> daUon board. Leading the parade from Orange County are La Habni'a Ruedy Contreras and Ken· nedy's Mitch Kahn. Robert llertel, the quarterback who led Los Altos High to the CIF championship, was named player of the year. AJamitos Racing Results FREE SUPER BOWL TICKETS IL.A c ... , I -.... 141 4TisWIT• J ,,.._. ~ AM,..,._Ttlfll. ...._ ~~.~ ......... ciu. • -Or..,-.... Mari• ,,_ ·-........ U.Attw lr. I _ (eMrw8I. Lt "*' Ir. I -T rwlMu, w..t Coo1111e Sr, •-~.er... Sr. E -SMMr, lM AJM. Sr. II -0.IW.ttll. lurf"llU8b If". T -Edi, Crnol Ir. T ~ ...,..._..,.-"-IEdfWOOd Sr. •-K-.. • ......, Ir. G -M«L~lll, c1-1 Sr. C -Domlnoutt..S""" Marie Sr. l B -Mvrt, letlll Mlrlt Sr. LI -Murpfiy, A~1tl0pt VtllW St, la -Glldmundloll. Tl!Duwnd 01kt s.- 1( -H•~ W1rren Jr. -·-• -~. MDrw"o\>~ Sr. 8 -~L~ Jr. • -(,,_....,, ~nd Sr. 8 -ltltU!et", CIW-1 ~. I -Sl)foul, Lot All• Jr. E -WtlMI, LM Attcit Sr. I -Ar11Mlk,, • .....,. Sr. T -"G.,.rrwo. $wr• Sr. T -R•~• Lyn"IOOll Sr. G -Prvitt, T'*"-"ld 0.111 Sr. o -_.,.,., L4t Altqot Sr. c -Mc111.ety, ~· Sr. Ul -Good•fl, PomeM Sr. L9 -Prvnk, R-'"'d Sr. L.• -T•IMIH, ................... Sr. ~T .. 11'1 • -W•lker, •"'1Millk Sr. 9 -HOwM, H1wthclr1111 Sr. ·-, ...... °" .................. Sr. • -c,_.,., u H•W• .......... sr, • -MlkUI-PKlllUI .......... sr. I! -Pl"Mdt. Ot..... Sr. E -lkdno. SI.~ Jr. T -,,,_...,for!>, W.1 C0\111\1 Sr. T -Wl19M. u .. ...,, sr. 9-C ........ ""'...... Sr. G -Qui-., 8L•lr Sr. c -Scr-nl•ub. Cl1rtm011I Sr. L9 -k11t1vl•rczyk, Simi \talttV Sr. Lii -IC.HI?, C•tw'llto Sr. L.• -HlrrlS. £1 ~ Sr. --- ·-- OIL FILTER lVREN8f OIL s~S\W: Yw """" 29~ CARBURETOR AIR CLEANER 1!l C9 ~ -~. 1 AMP IATIEIY CHAR!iEl For 6 &. 1~ Volt .,,_ 5'' FULL ACROSS FLOOR MATS. Ftt. Molt 0-••l~Cn Al1ortM ""•• 179 Checking GaJs'GoH An obbreflated acbedule of eveatl took plaoe for women gollen In the Orange Coast area during the Christmas boUday period . At El Niguel Country Club, Dot Egan woo Ille A Oigbt top spot ln a Jo.w gross tourney with a 93 with Nelle Townsend second at '1. In B flight It was Bionda Yount first at 91 •with Sue Foley secood at 98. Marge Rossen and Margaret Sibbert tied for top honors in C flight with identical 100. but Mrs. Rossen won when they mak!bed cards. Jane Terhell won the D flight with 114 with Martha Urguhart second ot 117. BfgCan11on Members of the Big Canyon Country Club women's club staged a Christmas nine hole Tijuana tournament this week . In this type ot tournament, each member of the foursome is allowed to bring her tee shot up to the longest drive of lhe group. When all reach the green, the easiest putt is the one the foursome uses. GALVANIZED OIL DRAIN PAN ...... • ~ GRAND PRIX OIL.FILTER 99~ ONE GAL ON GAS CAN ~ 99c SET FEIGHT . REBUILT SPARK PLUGS 99!n NYL N FOAM SEAT COVERS ........ 399 Color• For Soll4, $f!Bt Or , u,. Ducbts..ts 15 FOOT TROUBLE LIGHT ' . "' TOW1dly, °""'1bef 28, 1 •n DAILY PflOT 2:J Rust"lers Fall w Fullerton; Dana Hills In Action Pirat,es Edged by Compton 0.na llW1 Hlift's Dof!*lnl g~t ltwilr flnal non-league basketball re.I of the 11'11-73 came off the bench to score season tonight when Elsloore four basket..s in the Compton JI lgh provide& the opposition streak which paved lhe way at San Clemente High. Orange Coast and Golden West colleges were bolh open- ing round losers in tournament basketball play Wednesday, Golden West feU to Fullerton, 84-72, in the Riverside Tourna- ment. while Orange Coast was defeated by Compton, 69-&0, in the Santa Monica tourney. Fullerton was In command throughout a g a i n s t the Rustlers as the Hornets notch· ed their ninth win in 12 outings while Golden West fell to &-8 on the year. The Rustlers are off today but race San Bemardlno Fri· day at 4:30 p.m. in a con- solation game. In. other Mt round games of the tourna- ment tonight Mt. San Jacinto (6-5) was scheduled to face Pasadena (13-1) and Long Beach CC ( IG-3) was slated to take on .'Santa Barbara (8--0). Riverside b I it z e d San Bernardino, 102-76, Wednesday night. Forward Jeff Hutton was the big man for Jl\illerton in the game. pouring in ZS polnt.1 for the winner s. Meanwhile, Olmptoo used Its huge front line to wear down Orange Coast and rmally pull away in the final six minutes of the game. The Tartars' huge front line, which stands l-0, 6-8 and M keyed a late game fast break which overcame a 57-54 Orange Coast lead with 6: 10 left to play. Guard Berry Pat le r son Pro Scores for the win. Tipoff is set for 8 o'clock Orange Coast showed a balanced scoring attack, (our and it's a rematch o! the players finishing In doublo Dolphins' rirst-ever game. figures and stay~ close with Elsinore roughed up coach the powerful T a r t a r s Tony Stillson 's senior less throughout the first hair and Dana Hills qu intet earlier, 63· the first 14 minutes of the sec-39, and did not allow any ~e Pirates, now 7.7, faced Dolphins player in double Scottsdale, Ariz. th Is af.,_l_ig_u_res~'-------­ ternoon. o.IM W11t lnl =~;"~* ?, ~i' ~ 1(111 ~ '?i."~/.,, ~ ] IC~o ~ t l ~r-:i.i.wstl 0 a ',• PllllOY 2 I Yf~ts ~ 1~ 1} Ot .... Cusl Utl ~"'""' Miiier I J 1 ' J. Sevmour 1 o • 1~ f"'"k • 1 } 10 '=:'M ~ l ~ lt =.~ r.....-~ o l ~ Tot11, 26 t l6 60 H.iin1rne: eom111o11 :u, occ 27 SA VE 3K· 50% AUTO PARTS • CHECKER AUTO DUPONT CHEMICAL I - - CHECKER ANTl·FREEZE159 ProtKf'I r-c. F~WW.'a eou... GAL. ...... --·--. .e::.· __J_ _'i (F~ly .wolt,.) MOTOR CRAFT TUNE-UP KIT 6 Crl"*' I Cyl""'-R .. laW S?J 6~ ~ HERCULES HEAVY DUTY LIFETIME GUARANTEE SHOCK ABSORBERS O..•Mi 'For n. Lil.ti.. OfY•C.- S??. •. 1!? ., 4 ~c• SPEC ALS DUPONT FAST FLUSH R-• Rnt, <irM•• & s.ollr DUPO~T SEALER Pi....t.Ol'Stops Mott c-C...."'9 .,._ ...... DUPONT Al'ITl·RUST Protect• Coollng Sy.t-. ~ Hcn1111I R111t l*k:ioitMW.tetP_, DUPONT HIGH PERFORllANCE BRAltE FLUID for 0t... &. DIK BtGkiH ,.....0-E.-.UF ...... A.tuMllOlll DUPONT GAS BOOSTJll BulM•-~Polf..-n 5 PIECE WOOD HANDLE SC REW DRlVER SET .5 Wi:.t p_,..1 .. SJ.1:11.,_ 4" PllUU,. 1" . ....4"__. .. _ 1.5116" .......... 199 HERCULES LEVEL LIFTS KMfHI v-RW.._. ""·-t.o.l Lowf "'"-" l'ritA• u, 111 m.OOBMI ·-10tt GENERATORS 10!?. PRICES EFfECTIYE THRU JANUARY 3, 1973 CLOSED MONDAY & TUESDAY FOR FORD, CHEVROLET, CMC &. 11'4TERHAT IOHAI.. fll•lll'Ote• '"" u .. Of Jac:li• Or Hw••• An9IHhr•h1e- Poal1I"' Trvtl• 19.!? ( ·= :> 12 FOOT STEEL TOW CHAIN 119 % TON RATCHET HOIST· PULLERS 1499 ...._,, c.i. a- "-• ,_ ._. .... , .,,.,.,, "·" ' ALTERNATORS t lT• aXCIAHGI --C.• 16!9 PRECISION ALTIMETER Fr°'" 0-1.SOO Feit Al11rr1 S.a L•vel •• , 2 1/8"' fasy R•od Slack fac1 Fil• All Cart &. Pic:~..ip1 Eo•y To ·~a.. 10~J "' LIFETIME GUARANTEE GLASS PACK MUFFLER STA •• fERS ""'''• ... 12 !! A-wk ... Motor• ,....,._., HI""' ........... ' ..... T• a. •tt-A.., -11.C:..lot .... _ ... __ ........ , . ..,, HARBOR TRAVEL PHONI l 11 EAST 19th STREn; COSTA MESA 645•8264 JUST OFF NEWPORT .ILVD. -BEHIND MESA THEATRE STORI HOURS : Dolly 9 to 9 S•Jlay 9 to 6 '' 0,. BAHKAMERIWD 1.1fr .. ,, J441'ft.&.Wer.N..,.,.._. l?S.1111 ' ........ '' ... J;I DAIL V PILOT ANIMA •:t41.,...,. Governor OKs Bill e Miik Upped SACRAME NTO IAPI -A one-cent boost in the minimum price of a half-gallon of mUk will be imposed in many N o r t h e r n California com- munities effective Jan. l, State Department Agriculture reports. the of The announcement also said lhe price will climb one-ball cent per quart at the same time. The price increase, which officials said has.already bei:n approved by the federal Price Commission. stems f r o m hearings beld Nov. 21 in Sacramento. e s rhool s .. it LOS ANGELES (AP) - A $500,000 damage suit bas been fl.Jed in Superior Court by the parents of' a 17-ye.ar-old stu- dent who suffered a skull frac. ture in a schoolyard fight and died March 7. Frantjsco and Esther Silva said ln the court action lhat ochool off1dalo and govemmmt units w e re ne,Jigent in supervising the Garfield High School campus where their .son, Francisco SilYa Jr., attended school. A JS.yeaN>1d boy sinci! has been charged with murder as a juvenile offender in Silva's death. Named defendants are Los Angeles County, the city of Los Angeles and the Los Angeles Unified S c h o o I District. e Potcer Blkerl RENO, N•v. (AP) -Tho Sim'a. Pacific Power Co. bas announced that its Sl,000 CalHornia customers will pay more for electricity sttrtlng Jan. 13 under a CalUomia Public Utilities Commission order. Utility Vice President Ralph P. Coomer said the higher rates are expected to generate about $-t0,000 in new ,...,,..,., Dlc<mbrr 29, 1971 PUBUC NOrlCll PV81JC NOTICB PUJIUO~ , • b .. F • •• •• ., r ., ' r • • • •• • •• TllUrtday, Dtctinbtr 28, 1972 CAJLY PIL01 Statement Guidelines Announced '72 Good Year for Fire-fighters SACRAMENTO (AP) - Interim CUld•llneo for tm- plemtntlng Callfomla'1 ..,. envinlnmental Impact I 1 w l>ave been announc.d by State R-.rce. Dlre<tar Norman Llvermore Jr. The draft guldell.., will he the 1ubject of two Jlllbllc heir· lnga next monlh, but will be blndJna meantime on 111 public agencies, Uvermore said. They were prepam In con- formity with a law enoctod this month which impote1 a 120-day moratorium on en- forcement of a state 9Jpreme Court ruling I h a t en- vlronmeotal Impact ~porti are r<quired for .private coo- (,--EC-0-LO_G_Y_) stroctlon projects. Previously the Reagan administration ruled they w~ required only for public project1. es11u1a a111 SACRAMENTO (Al>) - • a, TBOMAS D. l!l.lAll .. ARNOU> FRIEDMAN Alter tho helllah autumn of 1'10, tAt put two yean bave been "almost mlraculou1.'' That's the oonlel1IUI of Soutbom C.Ulomla f I r e fighters, who l>ad a rolaUvely • easY Wne al It during Uie summers of 1911 and 1'12. But the firemen ba¥e111t forgotten 111'/0, when brush and • !Ottlt fires ltlllod II pmont and caused '250 m 1111 D n damage in Venturi, Los Anieles, San Jlemardlno and San Diet!• CounU.s. IN FACT, they expoct fairly frequent repotltlons, though not 1 quite aa maulve as the 1970 boloCaust in which lit&O se~ate flrel dUring a one- month period bUmed eoo.ooo acrtl!, destroying 885 homes . 1'1'bese kinds of multiple- disc:ist:er situations h a pp e n every three or four yean:," sa)'S one top official. And now, more than two years .after the latest major ~-" of fires, the Southland's · Jeadlng flre.fighUng agencle• ari finally getting together Jo devise new w a ya of cooporatillg and s h a rt n g resources. Agencies Find New Ways of Sharing "f"f L. Petti.a of San BefDIJ'dino much of the open space In AND 11IE benefit1 may not County jolnUy pusilt6 leglsla-Soutbem California. he limited lo lli;es alone. t1on through Cong re 11 The state's forestry division "I fA•• the spinoff from th'• establiahina: lhe project wU.h protect. h u n d r e d 1 ot cu 1 '80f,000 ln funding for the flnt lhoillanda more lcrf'8 under ln temu of any major dlaaster three years. contracts with moat Southland wW be lfe&l," says Stan Hirsch says he expeet1 the counties. Barlow, au!Jlant chief of the program'• total cost to be $10 Los Angeles County Fire to f.15 million "by the time all 11WBAT WE must do Is Department. "We'll be able...to the equipment is developed develop some sort of useable call on the same resources - I~ all the computer pro-men, food and equipment -in ar1ms are set." ( llOUTllDlllrocusOODOUl.l) Clther disasters like earth· He justified the anticipated quakes and floods." la.rgt expense by exprtssing But the overall project is the hope that it will "pay for primarily aimed at fires . it.wlf In the first major criJLs common language," Hirsch And onct the flrst phase - wbereltisemploytd.u added. "Just to de ve lop coordination -is taken care training procedure1 and of, the emphasis will shift to JUST NOW at.artinC worlr: on training manuals and test dev,loping new flte.flghtlng the . proeram, the five fire them in slmull.ted crisis altua· equipment. aa:encles are meeting rtgular-tlOm Vt'ill take three years. ly In the Initial phase, setting Hopefully, we won't have to ONE ASPECT of this is up the structure of the planned wait that Jong to get some already taking shape. The network. benefits from this work." Aeroapace Corp. of El Segundo war-related technoJoey Nd bttn Ultd. "All Hrtai fire fllhtinl DOW stops at nl1ht," UYI ID Aerospace Corp. 1pokeeman. "But fighting certainly doem't at.op at dark in a war." TUE FIRM now propose1 usln1 the same aort of 1nfra- r~ acanning device• that are placed in most warplane•. They would give a televl.alon picture of nighttime fires , showing pllots where lo dump their name retardants just as they l>ave helped fighter pilots and bombardien la Sou~ast Asia. • "By putting Olle 0 fthese In the cockpit," the company , spoktsman 1ald., "you enable the plane Jo fly through smote, haze and darkness." New Allowance AJong with the F o re s t Coming up with a common and San Bernardino, a Service , those involved are the language wiU take a full year defense-oriented firm similar Capitol News Suvtce state Division of Forestry, the by lt9elf, be said. to Senta l\1onica's Rand Corp., SACRAMENTO -The State fire departments of Los B,ut once this is done and on· bas received a s e par a t e Angeles and Ventura counties ce a complete inventory of $300,000 federal contract to Board of Control has in· and the Los Angeles City Fire Southern Califomla f Ire. devise ways of using Vietnam creased the amount of money Department. fighting resource! is made and war technology in fire which will be paid to. Cor· ~ • Forest Strvice i s · fed into a Forest Service oom· fighting . rectional officer' througb the Gov. Ronald Roagan l)as slgn- od Allombly blU :1341 by ~~s,'c;"lNi~'!':; c~:s.1: Derrlere Dutfl reaponilble for protecting the puter, commanders will know Ila system design specialists recenUy authorized uniform v11t acreage of the Los exactly what is available to contend that federal flre-maintenance allowance. The Padres, San Bernardino, them and where the resources fighting efforts have been new allowance will be $150. Angeles and Cleveland na-are in a large«ale emergen-much less effective than they Earlier Nies called for PIY· SOU TllE1\N California's UonaJ forests, which cover cy. could have been if modern ment of $101. · five largest fire-fighting agen-l.w-,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;-.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiOiiiiiii._..., ______ ..,._iiiiiiiiiiii-.lb-.0 cies are joining· together on a f e d erally·funded, five-year Barbar1 ), which aut.borizes Connie Bourne of Sacrame'nto Watches Myra the the Governor to adopt a state Monster as the $8,000 machine; designed to resen1-program. contingency plan for oil spills. ble a woman's posterior, tosses and turns on water· The bill al1<> authorizes the beds. The state is using it to ensure that waterbeds No similar project has been undertaken before, fire of· ficials say, because neither local agencies nor the state u1e of volunteer workers for measure up to new standards, effective Jan. 1. cleaning up oil spills and pro-----'--------------vkles workmen 's com· penoatloo for them. Tht coat of such cleanup operations would come from the stale Water Quality Con- ttot FUnd, but the spiller would bo liable for the "'"" or the cleanup ln addition to other liabll!Ues. e <:etttrola Set SACRAMENTO CAPJ Because of recent atom\8 in the San Joaquin Valley, an emergency regulation h a s been approved to change the beginning of the pl();W-down period for plnlr: bollworm eon· lrol, State Airicullure Dlroc· lor C. B. Chrlstenseo report.. 'He annowtced that the new period will be March 1 through Marth IS. Aotua1 admlnlstratlQn of the -date will be up lo qrtcuJtural commtsslonors In Fre""I. ·Kin.SS• Kem, San Ballfo'. ' Tliiare, Madera uc1 Merced countles, ChrlJtenaen said. e.Deer Trapped SACRAMENTO (AP) About 65 deer bave been trap- ped In six months In a dry 3Cf. mile leCliQn of a canal In the Central Valley Project, authorities report. Oflicla.la: of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation said they wlU meei next month with the Ca1llonta Department of Fish and Game to dilcusa a possi~ ble remedy. The canal,"hlch contains no water ye~ Is part or the Folsom South Cina! of the ISOk>il1lon Auburn • Foloorn South unit of the project. It -rr..n CaJif«nla lO to ltancho s.co. e Stt141" Deltl.,ed RENO, Nev. (AP) -The complex nature of Siena Nevada storms LI delaylng & twq.ye&N>ld study aimed at increasing wlnterUme snows In the Ttuck ... Tahoe and Canon River blsln&. Patrick Squirts, director of the Pyramid Lake Weatber Modlflcatloo Ptlol Prol<cl at tbo Delort -!cl! l~lule hen!, said lclentistl &l'tl m~ plod by a lack of un- dorstandillg about how the storms operate. DenwcratS Set and federal governments con- sidered the problem o f regional scope. Consequently, they !bowed no great interest in a Southern California·wide commitment to advance planning f o r emergency a c t 1 o n and establlahing a coordinated flr&fi_ghtlng system. For State .Figh.t C.pltol n.... Servtce SACRAMENTO -Look for a fight to break out here oext month when the state's Democrats bold their con- venUon, with the party's lert wing batlling to retain control in the face of NOYember's defeat at the polls. ALSO, THE autumn of 1979 56 million to 29 million. or marked the first time ln re- 61 percent to 38 percent. cent yean that major fires McGovern did better in have broken out simultaneously in w i d e I y California ; the President's sepirated areas of the Golden State margin was 4.5 Southland, attracting the in· million to 3.4 million, 56 per· terest of all three levels of cent to 42 percent. But government. Democrat!! have a registration Those blazes drove home the margin of something like point that brush and forest three to two over Republicam. fires sometimes necessitate a Burton was a McGovern region.wide defense, not just ba~er abnost from the begin· actioo by individual _agencies NEWS ·#'.,#:'!£.~, -: . :; , O\Jlr worijp,gJogether on !be • ''i1•ri"J.i..,-.1., ,;. • ..µong with fellow ·~ll'~ .JPllf" of __ tbe1 ~t to,~t • 1 ~. , >4 ' cisfo Assemblyman W't'W'l'e un~ a;a:e . ,.,.es. ;" .. n. issue will be 1electiop0q! • 8r;twn .,,.i ranii ' i'.l'!t4~!: ·~~\;lay tli!i!gs ~-'llqll~ . a chairman of the ii8te 'ceil''!'iir~anlur Dolores _H•u e r;t a ~~-mi:'~tf~ tral Committee. .Burton co c b a 1 red the · . .. · s Mod, lib and 11 k ab I e McGovern c a m pa I g n in Service, whenever all our Assemblyman John Burton, a California. The Dakotan took ~esour~ are ,thrown together San FranclJcan, b a s an-some 45 percent of the winner· in a ~.!Ii&, we ve got real pro- noune!d: he will seek lhe chair take-all primary vote. all but blems. held by Los Angeles attorney cinching the nomination at Charles Manatt. State law re-Miaml Beach. HIRSCH, WHO Is directing the new project from the Forest Service's Riverside Flre Laboratory, said in an in· terview lhat Southern California's fire fighters hive never-been able to agree on quJ~ lhe next cbatnnan to be 'lbe execu.Uve committee from the northern end of the resolution vote looks like the state. leaders of that other 55 per· BURTON IS NOT the only Northern calllorniml aftu the job, however, and his plans have run Into opoosition from the party's a~te. ues:utive comm.tttee. By a 26 to 22 vote, It rec<!11Uy adoptod a resolu· lion that. if the convention goes along, would bar office holders from the ch.olrmanship. And Burton is the only office bolder in the rw\ning. Burton's initial reaction was not-very-convincing, • ' I ' m dlsappolnted." 'lben he added he would go after the post anvway. The resolution, obviou.sly aimed at the statehouse leader, is seen as a reaction to tbe unsuocessful presidential candidacy of South Dakota Sen. George McGovern. NA noNWIDE, President Nb.on.'• margin was cent art trying to regain con· trol of their party. 01 DON'T KNOW if they can such seem.i.ng1y simple m1t- make I•· stick," was Burton's ters as radio frequencies and !ermine>'·-. ~rvaUon, adding that he IUISJ" didn't '<attend the i;ommittee "When we ask another agen- mqeting and doesn't know the cy for a 'fire boss,' we may f'61!SOD I.be committee adopted get someone with completely the resolutlon . diilerent capabilities t h a n Burton noted the committee What we have in mind," he vo\e was close, that the said. members voting on the resotu-"Some places call t he tion much less those who equivalent of our fire boss a voted !Qr It, are a minority of 'battalion chief,' while other1 the enUre committee and tbat don't know exactly what our t~ committee Is a niinority of . teim means . There is also no tndee who'll be voting when central data bank where we the state's Democrats meet in can keep track of t h I!: the capital in late January. resourees available at a given '1'1'hert are 170 membet!I o~ time." the edcUtive committee/ Burton sa1d , "and only 28 favored this resolution. "When the party holds Its conventkm, there will be 10mttbin1 llke another 500 or so Democrats voting.·• AFTER learning of the in- efiicieocy these p r o b 1 e m s caused in the 1970 disaster, Callfotrua's. senior aenator, Democrat Alan Cranaton, and RA!publican Congressman J.,... Polyga1ny? More Love • I D i .. 'Mormon Traitor' Says Many Ilave 2 Wives in Utah SALT LAKE CITY (AP·) -'Iba lltt<r of Christma!I was strewn abollt tt>e Uvtng room, and a 20-mooliHlld blolldhafr<d boy SllOO'lOd on tbe couch. It was a typical airtstmu _,. In an atypical Amertcan famlb' .ettina. For the boy'1 latbor, a 45-yooMld con- tractor, belleve1 in polyeamy and lives wllh two wive!!. nm MAN, WHO asked not to be I~ tlfied, has become known here u "Mr. BtoWD'' after be 1ppe&red on a w.levilioo program several weeks ago. He cl1kned hundreds ol people are Jiving tn polygamy In Utah. Brown A)'I Olrlltmu would be a bot· ter aeuon lf there were m o r e polygamous famm ... "Plural marr1ap maba bolter wl!ff, better sweetheart& lncf, better motberl, and better huabandl," he 11)'1. ' "I GUESS Tll!lll'S a lltUe more love In a polylllllOllS (1mu1 - there are more people lnvol18d," be 1d· clod. nte man uyo ht ba• 1 lhlrd Wiie who no longer l'OCOflllluJ tho marrtap and a ' total of 17 chlldren, .. som, of them from his wives' previOua marriages. Only two cbUdreu were home this momlng In tho Sall tau City homo, one by each of hls two "'ves,1 who are in their '°'· A .. YEAfl.-OLD bo7 ~layed in the bedroom with his Christmas toys. The other chUdrtn have grown and II vc el..whert. Brown was born a member of the Church of Jesus ait~t of Latter-day Saints (Mormon) ancl both he and hi.I wives say they coftst~r themselve!I · faithful to tnte M""'l"!' principles. However, bl! ancf.hla'. wtv~ have been u· communlcalod ,_ tho church., Polytamy WU part ol MOMTIOll doo- trlno tmtjl l ft<ferol 11/w WU pusad ... 1n11 ·ff In •!11111'. n, Church lssuod a milllfeaiO reJOd/111 ~y and now ext:amnu111je1te1 poly1lllilsU. Brown, wbo wu eacommunlcated whin be manioc! 1111-wife , said he ~ not .. 1 ..... tbe marufesto came from God ...... , • , ' , BROWN SW MANY ol hi s Mormon _, nolshbon lhlht he'• a tra!Jor, bol the oelgbborhood 'ieems Jo accopt him and· his llinlly.' '"1ey llve ·1n a modem eJn. <leltlock · home on a quiet reald>ntlal 'atrttt.' A yoon; man lrtm across the llreol •tops In lo "tum a borrowed huntin1 rl· ne. The youlb exchange& creotlnga with both wtves. An eldorly Catholic woman stoppod by Jo ask ~ Brown ·too1d take her lo tho otmett!'Y to vtalt her late husband'• grave. -UJ'd lllt'e rathtr have a 1ood DObiiamlst fimlly in the neighborhood {beQ:"" ont where the hlllband ls always tlqlliioc anJUDil With otbtt .......... she said. . LATEa, ONE or THE "'"' volun-IHttd IO drlva bOr lo the ca1MW7. · ' Brown 111)'1 :he baa had no trouble with tho law but upt<ta he ml&hl bav, lo 10 lo pdian IOine <lay. "The tbteet Of l!'laOll would not stop nle from Uvinf thll law," ho 11)'1. "The patrlarchl ol 1 the Old Testament pr,.. . Uced 14 beca111< It Is God 's way." ' Who Wants to Read About . San Francisco?? Just about everybody, the way Herb Caen tells it. San Fran· cisco is his town. He's written about it for 22 years and has had a loyal followinCJ of readers from all over for just as Ion CJ. . . ' . ' ' • •• • • ' • # • -• " " , .. -"'··~' t-· .,,. • ' . ... • . =. He · has the knack of ·~airing' a wisp of fog, a chance phras•· overheard In an elevator, a happy child oft a cable c•r or family in distress and giving each circumstance the ma CJ i c ' touch that makes the reader an understanding eyewitness of the day's happenings. Both fellow newsmen and readers agree he makes almost any incident· ·a personal experience. Caen is admittedly in love with San Francisco and readers are admittedly in love with Caen's column these: with gems like l••l lhlnk, """' lhot 18·)/<0r-01"' art aUo10td to vou. we covld have a J 9'-vcaM!d fMl/01" and o ZO-v••r-old poll« chi<f. Hello, Bob Orbe•' "l goto bump- er 1trip for mu Volklt.oagen reed- ing 'Help Saw the Redwoodl oJ Collf"""'4, Oregon a!ld Wosh- tngto-n• and it tord.PJH!d cround twice." Herb • IS Caen Page Comment • Now the11'w gone too fart On 20th Ave. fn the Sun.set Swndau, Nick Geracimo1 tpOtud a dgn o•llid< a """" ....,ung •c;.,. age Sale-Up1!ai11" , .. Long .sentence owrhtmd at Del Mont< Beoch Club, "I joined JO maftu club.I to get a che<lp char- l<r fJjght lo E•rOJ>f that bv IM time I fiullll went ft co.rt me $150 mort tho• If l'd jwt 0""' down and bouo'-t a ticket." one big reason for reading the every Saturday Jn the • . .. ) ' DAILY l'ILOT Everyone Hai Something lhat So meone Else Wants Gener•I General • . ' PIC K A PAIR OF $ MAKERS Ground broken! 1\vo duplex.es • r{e~rt. Heights location!, ~o duplefes,'pde-by-side; great inveStment potential . Botti duplexes have two-3 Bedroom, 2 bath units -First Ume offered ! At $66,500. pe:r l ;Review the Unique Investment Analysis1 • 1 • _ ..... General Gener ii ~-~ ~ •assar:ims REALTORS 2828 £ASI' <XWITHIGHWAY· CORONA DEL MAR.CALIF. GOMral .644·7270 * BIG CANYON YIE\¥1 Sltr ·• Deligh tful condo Finest view. location, with over. 18,000 You Can Sell It, Fincl ~ , Trade It With 11 Want :Alt 0..-ol C:.... do! "'-r Huntlng!on llMch c;Ol'OllCI Oel Mar • SHOR•CLlflflS $21,000. ; 1 ~-and ·-16$,900 Q!liy<lO ._. ""'"'-of 3 Loi BR, hnl dlo rm, lam • Located on the ocee.n ~ ot ~ J,,. ~:.-•.>BR.. nn, bl!ln elec Rio, plenty the hl&hwa,y on u 1111 t cltM ~ wtl ot ~. w/w crpta l "' wide 1Qt. -t... ~ ~~-. ih1"o FA ht, 8 m -. lrg • _. 2 bath hoQi;' .... 'ilt. • '"t:'°pla 1 D «IOl/&ar, !loinpl 1hc<! & ld· 1'<:=-r~ Y BAl'(lll:lt;' ·~· !'<1m•• 1.,g than !rit• "lcelli!ot -~ -rent ,W'lq.tl!ICI. "'" xtnt 10e Juat -Ill ' ,._,, __ ..,, .on i\Al ~ •• walk to cooditloo ,.,.... ' -;· , ...... i -~ •• F·gt~~~=.~l ilL~ ' l • Calli ..... "'*1 ~·,1::=•••~•:m ' Ideal .setttrw Iott the cbatJi1)f• : .•r. Lari• bdrnuo wl\h Jots $ $"(.$, -~'"$ 1 of •""""· 1-rioof -· c!A'.l'E CASR W• 1 Fantaa~.kltCben wll\ wlll 1ell .... >*~;'fi or em ttullt·lns tncludioc dish-auarameii":PQW' 'b' be-! in the Bluffs , s( rt Qf useful land. $59,500 . • The area's top professionals 6711: l)ftM JN THE NEW SECTION -This Beautifully are at your sel'Yioe. iJ;°'JUVV decQrated (completely upgraded) 3 bedroom, · formal dining room , a fireplace, 21h baths, .,.,..,. Mocjaa Jn, eve!')" • fore n.,.;IJii ciao. fur I lifeld' V...... ~ll)'Fl!A. s.Ileraadf.,UA.(!8" ~ •mmecJ;.,. p'p.0 f p .,., e n I. . UNl9 UI HOM O OF NIWPOIT 11.4CH, 645-6500, . ._ ... ,,_._ ~J:~:it p.l~~ .. ~. ~~~~~~~'.. ~~ -~~. ~~~~~ J.Aveb-'4 .bedftiom ~--de-..... .. 968-4456.~ ,. ,:-:{:_,.. ·, * ~~~ ~~· UPlli!l()U(: fi()M(:§ AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES Gonoral Genoral attL ,,e_m{' 1 Roalton 5'>-0l60 ' .....-;~ ii REALTORS "R.;;E<-A'-=L T,:,O~· :..:R.:.S ____ ...,,._-,, __ _:6:..:4.:.4 .:.:n::7.:o·1 1-----------------, 1733 WeafcUlt,•Dr., N.Jf. Opon Evos. ' . : , ~c;.n!!!!!!.,l!!!!.1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Ge!!!!!!...,.!!!!l!·!!!I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ···Gener•I Gonor•I * T*AY*LOR* co* * ~ "¥:.~#Yi#' ~~ !f; ... 4 n BAYCREST BEAUTY -POOL ofi11Ja ..96l . . . • ~!!'°'?1~.',;..i.1mma~ hli'.i.'i!~r;~. ·~$~:::;:1 A line home in a line area, center of New-PRESTIGE WATERFRO NT HOMES <irapeo, 11 block ID' bll)'. 1 --1n local area e¥ li/l<slu-: 1rg '"" area, ,, port beautiful. Behind wrought iron gates, LIOO ISLE FAMILY HOME blocl< to ocean ..• "'·900. OPEN HOUSE DAILY ~,pool,,$33,950. 10% I! you enter an Italian marble entry, bringing SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Spacious 41h bedroom 3 bath home wjth ga~ Newport Beach. 33T ·Mqnoliao St., C.M. "'dowD ..nh • · •' you to a sunken living room & a cozy· fire-to storage area {or your boat. Immaculate PETE BARRETI 2 ~. 1'19!1 !.J' 53 Linda Isle Drive th h Both I place area, just the thing lot these cool Elegant 5 bdrm., 4v, baths; on lagoon. New roug out. Lovely private patio for lamjly -REALTOR.,..-, _. ,...::: i:,..~ l. UM 1_1 HL nights. 1i-1any amenities that we can show carpets, drapes & wallpaper. Lge. attic stor· fun. 40' Lot, street to strada. Near gOod 642-5200 (Rent~ ether') 2 BR each. p -.... Nr :: you when you make an app't. to view. Oller· age area; 4 frplcs. & lge . .slip .... ,212,000 beach. Owner will help finance, '791'~. ~ PrlYate' YVds. aee first-at ,: ed at $81,000. "Our 27th Yoar" 4'8::Homll\llll:St., then call: .$.2 750 'I For Complolw lnfi>rmation WESLEY N · * SEASONS ·~tO!lll u lnte....,ed. ill , • 1 CORBIN.MARTIN On All Homos & Lois, PIHH Call: • TAYLOR CO., Realtors . i-.. a Jlo.,cloan, Wrp, J BR, 2 BA, like new lb .. I 2111 Son JO!lquin Hills Road ' GREETINGS• W .,....__'down. $31> c"''" tll• enocy, Clean aa I BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR NEWPORT CENTER, N.B; · 644-4910 South Coos! RNlters .J!IT!, £oll Jim Broome to-a pin, ~ly painted. Doh-I REALTORS 644-7662 341 B•ytlde Dr., Sult• I, N.B. 67U161 General General 54s-1424 Cos)i--.:Mtl8-~ewport . Mesa Rlty. :uS:r 1=·· o:i~r ~'. ~j GenffO! Gener1I TRADITIONAL FAST NEWPORT Spacious Baek Boy homo · $75 000 with tw"ping bay POSSESSION 6 UNtTS ~"~ ~ 7•;".:;1~: HEIGHTS , e':t.oo~~~ ~°:.ied O.K. ! homo ov•"-Moadow· NEIGHBORHOOD family room with 2 Triplexes • 2 BR ea. Goll --• $49,900 2 Bungalow units&: 4 . lark . . ~· Heated Two" Individual Hon1es. One slauu-up wet bar S d. pool with Jacuzu. So. clean ,., 2 Bedroom• 0 1 n ,. n g Heavy shake roof Own .... ""• ~ · I tu 10 units with garagos -.. tod Wood ·di 1 aded ... ve.,, aruoous o you can ~-t move m ay Room Firepl ' 1 .... Baths st ng, e glas.!1 move to Northern Ca.Jlf. and plus xtra parking. and have a party tonight. A The ~ther Is ~~m i &. iots of Charm! may offer early occupancy GROS.S INCOME Sll,760/yr. year round &ift for the Bath. Bolh m· --U•nt ,'._ . Large enclosed patio ol "''" be tiful 4 ...... ~ &and in line for this! ......... .. v..iu-h h ed --" ~-.. au UCUluum , whole lamlly. Just $39,750. dition inside and out. wit eat •w•m~lng pool tri-~eJ... hornc, featuring 10% down. Call 842-2535. .E.J>ooeb Ground to build 4'rd-owners are rnoVJng & z:~~~ ',, -·· Nt:'°rt OPEH.nL,•rr'SFUrl10BENICE/_ ~ltio~ Unlt; $56,~. Cali wantac~ ~ ~~ .. ,~: -; -... -.. -,-.,,fy-r, i if_ES_"m1'i.:-c.....-,_· orated~· --r_·~'tua1-" i: .n .F..;;;.v!!W'-I m.!!i '" ~-~ ~ • , <•1:UNrr5? .,, , on large, . "om. lot near .' -~M6 ear.t- be"ach )nd C>oPPlnr. ,Plblse a/· o.=;======= tw;pori ""rfelghts. All are 2 phone 546-231'.., addi~ •l\ytimoJ FURNISHED Bedroom. 0ne Unit i• Extra lnfo. ,,. 4t1e oa.lld One bas a f1re- OPEN nt ' • "t FUN ro « MCE1 Townehouse place. Prime Rental Area. ' 16111 E:::H~gR~D 2v~~~:g,~~,J;~ li:;m~:.'f:_:~ Ideal family home with 4 area... 3 bedroom. FAMILY I~ h Uqaidatin"' bedrooms, iar&• family ROOM! 2 """'Palos Vmles :::_o .· .•. ':I J'QPm with fireplace fonnal fireplace. Vaulted ceillnga. .. ·-· -1.09 Acres dining aru1 3 baftul'. """" COMPLETELY FURN- $9950 D I choice location on quiet cul· ISHED at this LOW, LOW :wuitlw:r °' ntr CQ\.WIU. co. OWn. de-sac, c:to8e to Ac:bools PRICE! OLYMPIC SIZE Custom bWI! 4 bedroom . 5 shoppfug. beaCh _ and greai comm. pool. Flatting ~ bath. Secluded LA R G E neighbora, too! Pricl'd to Extttmely anxk>us -try 10?'~ GUEST HOME! Profeaion-&ell qiudd~ at $40,900. down! call toaa,-6§-0303. al TENNIS COURT! All lo-Please phone 546-23U tor caied on 1.00 acres of prime info. R-1 land. O\.\ne.r is JiqUidat-OPfNflL9•fnFON10BENICEJ ing this property. TAKE ' ADVANTAGE! $9,950 BUYS ·SEU.ER PAYS BUYER'S COSTS! Act no"' . call &l.'>-0303. I OK I\ I I Ill \II \ • ' A 1 " Just Red.uced • Rxer Upper • 11wee Units ' I I located on la1'2e Eutsidl' Costa Meu. · lof wlth room for 3 more units, l.nvertar's delight with loads of puten- tial. Home needl remodel-ing, .. bring ,.... .....,.,, and paint bruih.. ~ us lDr com~e de.Laila, but hurry, won t last lone. 546-5880 (Dpon Ey ... ) I fl!(!\ I I OI \II\ Super Is The Word! BACK BAY t Macnab=lrvine """'" Comp&nJ' NEWLY LISTEOI Spaci<Ma 4 BR, den. Quiet cu.I-de-sac street. Large FIVE UNrrs EASTSIDE COSTA MESA 1 . A HERITAGE REALTORS ELEGANT LM NG -Dover Shores lovely spe.cious, 4 bedroom 3 bath, formal din- ing room. With pool. This ill a spectacular homl' to entertain in. A large r..mR ailte makes ror com fortable ll'!lng. $85,IXXI. It y.1)f]'t lasL · • .. HER ITAGE ~REAil TEP.S kitchen & FR. Patk>. Sep-Ol'£H TIL' • rrt RJH 70 BE l#CEI arate muter suite. Immed- iate ~ion. Jane Frazee .. -~-~ !!!!!------1 3 ~ 2""" .. ldldt 642-8235. (U23) -~T' RlALfOF<S Macnab-Irvine• Vacant ~EREAL ~~fATERS 1 ,.,,,.., -· 1ft>pl " enclo9!d Mtlii <l>mpletely i~~!!~~~~~I Moye in 'by Jan 1 =:~ft t':I..: 64U2!5 · . . H4J200 NEW ,WITH Real D<:corato r our Chr~1ntaa ue•• u. s% down. flnaoclnB u.1 C 1 , OCEAN• VIEW · '-I,.., In your new -· avaU. 131.500. ..,.. Or • , New 19ar's Bonus! Beaut1tu14 bedroom( tbath GINNY MORRJOON Comei lot 'rUUy· lm~· Here1. ~ chance to see if»re.iJigtt~abonuswith home with idded on ·en· * ,' ~ frontlnl:~·two•treet1..214 ~r Cu!tom view ,home le": Ji closed patio. Fanta!Uc en-• * *• ~. ft on Baken b 1015 ·It. being constrilcted & n d ,&flllh · ~ ~· borne tertatnment-Have a great ·•r.11111~~ -Dt5 Mela (it., T2l 4q ft )' P~me d Yet choo8e )'001' OW'l'I color decor. · bemwm., 3 .:,.~~m~a~ Cll[ialmas. can ~ ~ ~~Vmte Dr. Eut. o~ent ~a·~ Coeta ,;,._~ 1,800 to 2.~.8<J, ft . of luxury prqe. Call ~an ap-Price $27,SOO. Af1 te~. ~ • ft Costa Mesa NW N~ Fwy on ,;net with spacklUI ~-8;nd polntment to\et! Pric@d 842,.2SJS. ,,. *** !5$7...WO Ott Mp PresentJf a>ned S baths, rana1.na: ln pnce $51.890. ~I 1t~!O.. -al OP(N l' •,P'S ™" 10 BE .i.tci-1 ' (Open Even1nga) -M·l Couid , be C-1 , PtiCe from $1-1.000 to~~· Floor OPENTILt •IT fl $57,5ol:t. Call1 ~160() , P.lanrls and arch!-t~fur,al ten- OCEAN VIEW -New custom !erred. Low down. CALL S.I 'Your c d 1 U-home 4 'Bf. 211'. ea, 1am ~ 968-14l6. -; Lawnmowe'r orona • m11r den nn, epts. d r a Pe s ••. ',·.'. SOUTH OF boda<:pd, "2.tlOO. 646-5516. Take weekends off. Every- thing token care of " lnch>d-HIGHWAY $35, 950 J IR 2 IA ing lawn, roof, outside paint-N~ on thl.a home. ,i ~ ;:!~ =~·~r~ ~.';': OLD CORONA . ....,,. dota11. ~~ ank;: REPOSSESSIONS . lovely condominium with DEL MAR' dttP &hag carpeta thruout For lnlormaUon and location · cathedral ceilings, three alao matciling drapes'. or these FHA I: VA homes, ' bedrooms, three baths one Channing ol.der 2 story home Beauti.M kitchen in every contact - bedroom ~ can be a "" rear of nvor-aiud R-2 ...,eel. N.., ltvlno eou,., KASABIAN den tor S:W,8QO_. CaU 646-1ln. lot-Walking d~W Bil _ _. -'--' .-..1--·~ t to OPEHTIL,·IT'S F""10l¥HICEI' CoronaBeachand&U·~ ~;;._~-~ulG.lae Rul Ett•te "2••tt •• lnB· Priced at lSj:'.('000~. ';.'~'~-""I MERIDITH ~-~---• won't last Jong. ..-....~ r an opportunitv to see. JJell our beautiful borne, 4 v BR, 211 bu. GaJ..,, model EASTSIDE' :uttrr! 4 BR. l" BA, All Electric, 96>-1722. FAl!-TOUS Dean Garden Home, "A'" fl.lode! w/pool. I $47,<m. Owner. 968-4622 642--0844 See these immaculate · 9 houses + 1 gar apt, w/tront & rear yards. co P Pe r ~ frple, blJ~, many extras. I I plumbing thro.-oot. Open SMART STYLE ' 5 min to tie.rf!or, $37,SOO., 1;;';;v;;M;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 beam ceilings A: Iota of pan.. Harbor View HUit, highly 3S82 fllg Qlr, 49&-5335. •Una on nearly a full actt. dealrable loc:. '4 BR. !Ion" Eilt lluff"_ VIEW LOCATION ~ good return on in-fonn. DR. VanLuit cover-lor thls 3· bdrm., 2 ba. home, vestment. Best on mmet in lngg. Lush carpet Serving YOU'LL LIKE • • • u~ shag carpettrw, , best area. $1.SSO monthly bar to large patio. fl9,500. . .. this one! lmmac. cond.. Unted windows and paneled Income. Call for appoint-Gary Knox 3 BR., 2 baths; family rm., family room. $53,500. : ' ment NOW! Re~~-.a~ ~at ":;,,~iioo."'°""'t In ~reel L ·11 I 550 Newport Centor D•*· ..,lu~~l~ ... R .. 6~0 • • .... . 'Real!Qn 64&-ml S. *f DUPLEX Huntington llMch Realty a>c Wktcliff onve ·0 Hwy.~ADen,Plusnew rl A...cofttPMttWltt11'(Ision . Opop 'till 9')'M • 2 BR. DOW 'belnB bull!. A -SPANISH-Univ. Parl< c .. ttt """" -real good deal IOf -Gall ~e. ~ Rob... \;.;l~y . MORGi 'ti":IAL Tv . TRI-LEVEL'. O-....nijjlJ.ii .. 6 PM 2154, Vel•sco 673-6642 67s.64.St Xtra 111: cul-d@.aac iot w/ Costa -·· DUPLEX BY OWN block '"""'· Spanilh """" Why Aro y.., Wi ltlne You are the winner or • ER thruoot, ankle deep Mag Hurey to see thll Lrnmaculat 2 tickets to the ~ Larkspur, ~lecJ.-'&: crpta. fonnl, din!~, sep. 6 month old garden home la Sports, V•cation & ready to move ln. Shutters, fam. rm, many more xtru. c:arelree Unlventty Part. R-rootlonol V·•t'clo beautiful new k:Ucf1en, bath Clo&e to beach A: shopping. BR., 2~ be. Fee. J -.... I: carpet Open Sun 1-5. CALL~ $37,900. "On>Ck" Lewia Show 166.SOO. 613-16$8; "5-7616. ·~ COLD~ BANKER Anohoi~t ~:..vontion ENJQ.Y Ttt.E · . · -· !!e~~<J"i>ort'~ 0r. Contor GOOD UF£! !!!' ~"" January 5-14 , You're the kin& ot''all 'Yoti . ·Turtt.. . Please call 642-$78, ext. 314 6111'Vl'Y! And that's the OPEN BEAM No. 4 plan. By o between .P &:..15'·pm ft> claim WHOLE THING! You'll (eel4n&, ,lri tam rm w/clr,., gp..~ your tlcketa.1 lNortfl County ·own the land and14000 sq, ft. cular ftttplace, 2' BR;' lrg QUI K CAS toU-ftte number ii '540-.lZll) o1 luxurious 1.Mrw space In-liv nn, ne.wlY redec profly, • '* . ... ~::. 5 !8:: $:~ ld8cpg, 1r1 ~ ~,t. THROld'"'H. LAGUNA you simply must aee. A i.ad.n.ip RE 842-4466 U '11 Hlli 'TOP oomblna-of •teps and NEW ENGLAND CO'M'Aqr;, s-. brand now ...... ~;a~c.1:"'~-:: ·~mi:i:, ~ ta:'.:!~ DAILY PILO bedroom home with • ~ • tee what $298,500 will buy. •• ta.slic view. Sharp CWilom Ol'fNTH. •• IT'S RM ro• MC:i6I -~bUIJUI k. in~ ·w· ANT"AD carpettna '" two stortea Ud hoU91! tor an~ or early " a \'.Jry low loan ee. Call •~.... ,._. .. _ Bia ~-, •• •' ' '.~ ~n •WW•W<o • 642-5671 l b Sell idlJ!: Items . . . 642-5678 licm. ~S©\\.,(\ ~.(~.:h"C ri.1'¥ IUUIQIAll'I' OJnftCO\,'Wft,l.CQ.\ ~ ~).. "' P(/9\!J '• The Purr/• with the Built-In Chuck/• * BEACH SPECIAL JNVEsl'MENT otviSION d• "P avaUable, ,in, °"' OflOI ni..t • frJ> FUN 10 •NICE.I ottlce. RMI 3 BR. 2 ba., .... ...,,. !Jlgh ~ I BIG ~~. Macnab -lrv1mi P.RIVAfE BEACH ~l~~~~ie~~· IMlillffi ~~~~~I~~. 9-B_R •. "" i:"+!..fo!Aal~DTR!t_1*.11~; NEWPORT ISLAND Vacaot lot on 00' or white. "':"1..-_ .-•=-·~·""""!~' :JK. ta. .... "-v • """"" beach. Lovely bay * ,...1290 * 8 UNRS Opon 'till 9 PM landscaped . Bn>ad-DUPL !X ~~ v le-w; t.Xe l u al v e SOii ..... OF moor Plan·4. Jac:k Howell Pride of owno'!!'\J!: l·oorm, ntli)tOO.hoot!. Now I• the '!''" $ MONl.Y MAKERS PENINS\ILA PT. 61U200. cu~ , 1 ba. ... unit. -.... 1!nii1 to btiu•I $42,!illO. sm HIGHWAY c'J~ ~;.631 =·Evea. ~'to~1 BANKER $6:~~~t1':n~:".e1iu:; A:.~ve:~· fu,~;;'1·e! '461416 ij!JIJ),(. associated t • I ' • f I', ' ! I•<, • ~ ' t • ~' ' ll<altnrs "'4-2430 Jm..0'100 OLD COIONA exchal>JJ• for tax ........ clooetl !!Olio. ' car ...... " Mo New)li>rt Cent ... Do-. DEL .... .... L.A. lo<otlon In .... ol ..,,_ ...... ,. II Blk. to .a.ms ... ·~ ,___ - M-1 ZONING -Man d<Yek>pm .... Call "" ....... "9,500. • . fttrther ln!o. Call: 673-3663 8'1M0211 Eve• WTSIDE REl'O' I ChRrmlna oldrt 2 1tory home on rear o( ownlud R-2 tot. Walking dlattr.nct to BIJ: Corona -and .. -pJna. Prlcod .. $51.tlOO. Th~ one won't laet kJtte. Call now for tSJPOlntmcnt to lff, 6'!J.!lllO. Ol'EHnL9 • • I . ' .. CALL ANYTIME 6*-3'211 141 450 -... ......... tl!lt -..~ 1-fl)Yt('M1ent re~ion assoc iated £-"" w • reQall with 3 bed~ 2 bl.thl, · 18 ~t.rt same ioc&Uon L •nd J1t1e y~rd for ooi, $10» 8f'f""fp~ Jf•\c'l'°':. :J1~ W a.,1:,,'' 'IJ Lachenmye '-/, I• ** $32,'51 ** --Total f>l>'lllfntl Olt1Y IZ23 ptl' mootht ' , -. . ' . . . -. ' BR + Maid's °":1-"0 rm. 13 UNITS MOit ootata ~ 2JM,1 WH!clltt Orf,. -p&nel~ . ·-1-l*'ITtl Xlnt locaUon, annual lncQme N' t HU:. Better ! Opell '011. 9 PM 1:13.lOO. Art-· I alLBOA IAY p oP. HOUSE llWltlna' Watch ·thl' Want ad "'oult. • , ~ * 642-74'1 * OPEN HOUSE oolunui. ,, -....._ .... • 1 .. ~~s't;,ffi$ '"""s iii' f I' I' I' I' r I ~ ¥'lF,'~SW{~ tETri•s ro I I I I I J I SC~M·LETS ANSWERS I .. _ ~l,MJIF!~ATION •oo . I , .. ·- • • JQIN THE . Jltt.lRS CIRtlE~ . "· ' ... .. . . -... 'Wi'RE SAYING 'SPACE FOR ,_ ' ' ·vou ••• ••• I' • • j ' 11 • ,, • • .,!f/-:.i'' I ,, ' • ~ If you sell e service end don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're ·dC?ing ~sjn•~s .the herd _w~y. !~·i~~iee1>irectory (,cleuific:~ons 600-699 in the classified ad ' I • ;,f ~ -.. section deiiy) · gives you en edvantege. you g&l'ithrough no other advertising medium. It reaches customers, who ere reedy. to. b~y. Be lhere when your prospecta; cor11e into the , ' market looking fo r-the servicet•you lia~a to "1 j I , sell. If ~ur ,ervice isn't listed, we.'11 'stert e ' category just for you. .. ' • . ' Pick up th' pjlone right now ,end r~serve your_ • space in the "Sellers Circle" ••• . .. I , t ~ '5, • ~ " . .. ..... You~ .D1irect (t.iQ~e ·to ~ir.nlHy :;:1t,S..-:1.t~ ' . f . • • • • .-., . -. . ' . ' ~ l~iiiiiiiiiii .. iiii .. iiiiiiii~JI eiiiiill ~I ;;· ;-z-; .. ~;::."; .. ~I ~;:•.I ---·---~ ~~#'!!:.•_iii!_;&~ I ;u_•_.* 1 • 1 .,..•' .. "'•. -.... IMooe ,...._ "'-·11rt Hoitlll• RMI E-W-IN l!owo• Unfum. JIS -~-.. --· -.• ,. :=; -LIJU"! lleldt OPEN DAILY 1-5 JUST LISTEDll * tj)ulcll CCIII! *Cotto Mou m1 . 1 BR. Ovor 1.,..,.. IMMID. OCCUf'ANCY 11i1r °'-' C.C. No 11 NEWPO!n' HE l G H T S . WW bllY )'Ollf -· All SHARP 3 BDRM 2 No. •nd. Nr. boacll. CblJd/ New S Br apto. CIO. mo. 1 lknnlt.., La.ne~ ~. ~,,BR. ... 1arse' tam. ct.lb wltbia 7J bra. Call Bath Me I a v.irde pet Wf'lcome! Dbl pnp, tkb'tftlhr Wed., . Thun. Corne in' nn.. w/sr.one ttreplace. New home Close to schools S175 . Util Pd. 1 BR. Frple. 33t Portla.nd Cltele. H.B. M.ake oUer, 4 BR. carpell. SUPER LOCA· mt • View! Victoria Beach. ""'1• Comp! .... Better Iii!"\ ~· TION • near ............. & park, $265. per mo. $195 • 2 BR. Ap<. Huge cleok. in5.0C*. Vee Land, PaDf Owbe!' ~-A low I including gardener. Gorveoua ocean view! DUPLEX 3 . t BA. ""'1 ~ • ~,.;..~,;:f.L~KER Call LARRY 546-5881) NU~VIEW RENTALS J1"11ltod. 1111-lno. Lit fJlcd Bealton 6#-~ ~'ml: 6#-2Uf833--0700 2 BEDRM HOUSE, crpts, 673-4030 or 494-3248 ya'td. Oilldren A~ . jpowponc.n..r; ,-, S.:"~::~•tcror. . BJW=1NC. ~=~Tu:.q:"1~ ~1~.':.9~2S:,2 !!'~~ •· HURRY.I • -Roy McC•rdle RHllor Ba. on Goll Coone. l300 IHt Jan"°lfush 1310 Newport Blvd., C.M. ,,.,. !lall-. NEWLY deo!<-3BR, :1'84, J:Dw, one 1loor houae with 10 S, L-• Vlow Lots [ J[i] 541-7729 Nowport llooc:h SWedloh ~ ~ ,hlk •"'"'"· privacy. 95 ft. lot could. be a On >So. ()Jut Hiway, Fine _ fNncW e QUIET Retreat' l Br Se Yearly, d ok. $250 • sardener'• deli£hL 3'BR 2 ocean. view. step.1 fo ireat -· • I!· JHE Bl'lft't' \'~-~~~· ~~~~~~ 'Ba'•· Sit in' b-Ont ot ihe beach. A whole blk., develop hOl.l.R. Lr& yard, NICE! $93. urr., fireplace .;tth row. 1rv1ne bOlneS or condomlrrlums. Business ALA !ent•ta • 6454900 riii1 ·T~tr~ ~iv~~pe T ~unity • 200 e m:i YEAR'S l!onuo! 2 C~RE~R~~~~ .... _-_· ___ '·---~!~ Realtor. .~-~ m.flUI ReiUOn ~ 833-mOO • -Br, £r\cl Kat7 Yant I.or ldda. AWAftD..WINNING 550 N~fent.,. Pt·'' , .. 'Jlo\o-Ce>\W Dr. , NEWPORT IEACH $135. COMMUNITY W-! MBrlne Con-Firm ALA Rontols • 645-3900 * 3 BR, 2 Ba. tri·lovel l3'0 Ap11. fum. L~1"!11Cll!{;r~ · Finest equip!"en_t & A'M'RAC 4 BR, 2 BA. bltnl, * 3 BR, den, 2-sty •••· $400 [::::!~:..;..::::.:=.. __ ....;::;;;::1 _ waterfront locat10D. 35 Yr. dthwhr new •ha& crpt * 4 BR, 2~ ba. vacant $425 lllbot ldend CftUll. LETE --111 '1 ) old oom...,,.. Space avail. lhru--Ou\. trpl '"' """' * 3 BR.2 ba. View •••• $500 -""' '~ for boe.t aalet 6' repairs. ~-!lo • ·-M •'bl ~-<;lolle * 3 BR, 21L ba. "New,'' S525 1 BR.. l -. ri~ MO ... chann' I: privacy la BILL GRUNDY RL TR. ,;; ai;hh."'rfu"Pe_u. If~. * 3 BR, 2% ba., custom $525 willter & ~UTl:L'Po. No ,youra with this ·2 bdrm.. 675-6161 NICE 2 BR. crpt, atol>'W!, Furn, avail. to $600 Mo. pets,*** 6'15-lSU, 1 =~~~ntnd!iic!t~~ Mobile Homes LIQUOR LIC-On Sale garage & tarae yard. $175. , Short ar &ont term B.llbcta .,....nsul• .. ~~ o( i.~lute peace. Foe Sale-125 Ty~Writer repair/sales lilt & last plus depoalt. !U!sp $)., ~ ~IMng roOm. Delight(ul CoUee shop, terms .. ,. married~-See at@!~ -~{.~ 2 Braro new, luxuriously ~ bright kltoh•n. cau &n Matar Home Rentals HOLLAND Bus. Sal.. Hamilton St., w-1000. &.. 1~' ~ ~ ~.,,,","'!'~~' \Wllam,o. 1'1·""'· • . ITI6 or.,,. .. CM ...,..170 2 BDRMI ..... """· ...... ' ·~t $;·.',' -· •-M« vrly • --' ,,..., SA'ES .. LEASING '"'"· ge ''"""' yard, " 'i -· E ~ • -· • . ~.,._ Ji ' ~ EDUCATOR supply store-garage. fUIS. $100. security ;6:::'B-=2162.=~· --~~--1 , ~ .,,, -full"~ {Aolllfy Own. Ill, So. C•t Plaza area. d•posit. Walor pd. 61l-T131 ~'j rea ly e 125 Wk" Up On Oc:eon . "" . NII.I/ Danmar Matar Home• $5,000/bot otr. 551-1246. or 646-81111. -Lovely -• l BJ!..-• REAL ESTATE •Money to Loan 240 2 BR. Prlv. paUo. G·~•e. 2414 Vista d•I Oro Maid SeM<e ·Pool· Utll Pd I st ~-Newport Beach e CaD ~· •· 494-941: G•~ ~. 531-6800 1st TD Loan's' ~mo"' ~l";-t,:':'p':; rM-1133 ANYTIME cozy. .~l !IR. -to , PRICED RIGHTI 8'x42', awnil;I&', turrUture. 51H99'l. Slw~t~ :&~t. ocean. 2Ul!M:Hml or l4«13 Bl& .ocean vlrii! 3 Bdiom., Adlt pk ~n ' C.M. 6* % INTEREST 3te~1 :::· f"Pa, dra~ SD> . 2 BR. 2 BA. mtna. 1 M::::~La ::'f6 to , 2 bath home with beau~ 557-6134 or 2nd TD Loans ·--.n .... ....., .. ii.~· Crpts, drps. Garage. Patio. ocean. Spotleqly clean. view o! ocean l hlll1. ~e. pe~. ~~· ~~. 1225 . 3 BR. Newport HglL 67Hl91. , living & famil)t rm. w/~lc. ~ 3 Br home. $23.5. Easlalde. Garqe. Work.shop. Yard. 2131 • ~~~!.~·= ~'::·· I ~weraBurTO~s~· '::lc~~~y~~ ·~~Ji'ew RENTALS coroN .. Mer scaplng. A jewel at $49,950. MONTICELLO T-·-•-·-< _ -~ or 494-324S BACH. Singl male. no pets, * ~2800 * Sattler Mtg. Co. uwaulUWIC v•...-.u..... $ll5 lncld utilt. 514 B = Conclomirihlml 642-2171 ~11 ~t~Cai"!"~·0ub Se EtASboTBLUUFF I Martaold, lower ...... , for sale 160 Serving Harbor area 21 yrs.1 2 BR.,,~ .. ;..,.. area ,_,,1c fncd para e use, nus u a ;675-613'1==::.· ---~~=I l-..::!:c..:=:._ ___ .::;::12,..;;;-TRTirUiisr<i"oocF:FiF:iil1tLOMANNSS ·-M ~.-.......... ~l'ati utU large4bedtoomor 3 &den. 2 BR., l BA. Utn Pd. p.:. :,.~=::. SPACIOUS 2 story 2BR. 1% Will Buy~ Deeds Pd,uS@..5700'.~' ._, Family room plus large for-mo. Yearly. Kuried Cpl. _._.....,...o.-BA. Bit-Ins, frplc. Separate * BROKER 642-1491 * ' -V -Cl 2 BR. mprlal dinlnglthroom.,~plete Refs. Av! now. 6'15-3fI13. garage. Pool, recreation ....... . acant ean. vacy w enc~ rear Ocean View -$31,900 room, laundry facilities. , Patio. $145. , and front yards. Lovely Cotti Meu. Large 2-Sty. 4 BR_ & den on Quiet adult& on1)'.. N 0 I l~ Rent·A-HauM 979-8430 garden. Available December ;:.;:;;;;:...;;;;;;;;;;... ____ , 11,9· lots. Sliding d9ora from childmn ov(!t"15. 2400' Elden, ..... for hit e Dana Point 15. No pets. $4.75 per month. Casa • Oro den to sundeck. BJtn., island C.M. 963--21.$'7. '2'J,900. ,. . Call 673-65611 or 546-3688. AIL!tJi'ILrJ'IES' PAID t Y~ kitch. · Carpetblg, Income Property · 166 . A'ITRACTtVE,,large 2 bdrm, Compare before you rent !f1 the .. ~Tiai~~~er .buy in , Hou ... Furnished 300 trplc, lalmdr)'~ mo. VIEW ••• 2 Bedrooms, Custom de~, featurlna: MISSION REALTY 494-M.il 4 • U Fanta::~Tilstln Aval!. Jan. 5. . 2 Bath, den, yearly e Spacious kitchen with fn. $64,000 F.P. · · Down Cotto Mow H ti •---h lease of $375. Realtor, direct Uibttn& Lido Is.. NEAR Mcfadden. & NeWl?Ort CLEAN 1 BR. Responsible un nFon ~ 644-7270 • Separate dln'' area 1-;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;; I Freeway, terrific locahon. adu1ts, 00 pets $110. plus e Home-like Jtorap Ii 6% years fresh. Gross In· utlUties. 412" Hamilton IMMED. OCCUPANCY OCEAN v•--· C1Jtt Dr 3 e Private petk>s come 1860 based upon 3 CM 711 N 3 B • .,,.,, ... w. " • Closed &81'8&e w/atonee ·~-<1210) 2 bed ($160! · · "' r ......... mo. BR., 2 ba's.; dbl. garage; e Marble pUilman ~uum Dbl garage, dshwshr """"'id--~ Blt in v 1_,. n.a--After fixture expenses and lagun1 Buch 334 Portland Circle H.B. .._., .,..... ..... 06• -• • ......,-n °"'" .. loan paymenta $868. Sched-536-llll • oven &: range. $300 Mo. )je, • Pool -Barbeque1 • sur-u1ed cash spendable whlch $125 . UTIL Pd. Nice Bach. GRAHAM Realty 646-2414 rOOnded with plush land- is 13.37 cub plus 8.34 equity nr. beach. No. end. Garage. AVAIL. Jan. 15th w/lease. 3 SCB.Pini'. buildup. Total return nn. $160 • trrIL Pd. So. Lagw1a. 3 Blocks to Beach BR. 2 BA,, pool a: tennis Adult living at ill belt All thia and a swimming 1 BR. Woodsey setting. New crpts, drps, 3 BR, form privp. Near beach. 548-ml LARGE 1 BR $190 pool too! $300 • 3 BR. Oceanfront. din rm, dbl gar. S@-:l&l!O. Nq Pets Contact Richard Van Wert Frplc. ~ deck. Winter. 325 2nd St., Hta:-Bch. NEWPORT Shores 2 Br den, 365 W. Wilton 6Cl9Tl 645-4048 NU-VIEW RENTA,L~ 536-'334 or 530-8188 2 BL pool A club prtvj. Nr. WEEKLYOMONTttLY ... 673-40:I> or . ~ g~o . .FA J;it, bch. ,$300. &16-2218. • ••••tttw ...._ . ~ !11!¥ic:llJ!!2 .. C · flF..:..,~ 1 LUXU~l\Y , oce~~ew • 21'1! 'r:lojoport;W ·~. tt--:.d--" ~· 1 ~tl~anumticr'.i'~ 1450 , :Coe• ,_,...1 .. WATERFRQ.tfti,}t 1PIER & 1 .;;:·•~~ : A T: ~yriy.~~~. f '6»lt ,, ·FLOAT -3 BR, formal~ ~IJ. Oi(~. 2 & 3 ~ • pf ~ 111 oo '"" lm. 2 baths, w/w orpt., 3BR 2BA. elec: R/O, FA ht, Yearly w.ltt to bea<1i ST.IJDIOS·& ·1 lllt'S income ~ . ell Sharp firepl., dbl garage. Yearly w/w Cl']>(a & drpt, dbl gar, Caywood Reatry MB-1290 • FREE 1Jnens 10 units, outstanding 6 lease only. Furnished $500 fncd. ldscpd. Xlnt Ioc. . e FREE Utllltin b e a c h s I d e apartments, mo. Unfurn. $450 mo. No $2'l9/mo. AGT: 962-44n or BEAtrr YU eoU crse, 2300 sqi e FUU Kttcben LlnU .,,.. unique combination or 9 pea. Pete Barrett Realfy. 546-8103. rt. 3 ~ 3 Ba model. Lease • Heated POOi li;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;I rentals, large commercial MZ-1353. 3 BDRM 2 Ba Crpts drp $545. -1305, !167-BtOO • LaundJ')'.F.Cllltia I' store and othen. caJI BACHELDR Unit, walk to bit-ins. 'oose 'to ~p'g ~ NEW OIANNEL 2 BR. lge e ~·a maid serv avail Linde Isle LlfGO'I 675-122>. wtr., $95. Also Oceanvu dplx schls. $275/mo. 841_2312• patio, dock avail. Gar. • Phdni Seryice ~Iv 5 rn:!. R 3 $125. Utll pd. on both. Sing;Ies or Families -2 Br. Adults. $275, yrly. ~21.24. · for adulll onJy !rplcs., 2 "" ban. n....t I I 9!9-M30. 305 _pnv ~He. hu ,wim9,_~1.__ ConclotUnfum.mlnlum1 _ ~=.. ~ ..,.: --A home for the r;~ta•• 1--------Rent--OUM 1N430 -· .. -..-=.,~Un& beyer. I . . ~. 1::.::r.::.:...-----1.;lrv;;i;;n;;•;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Huntington S.:.Ch ~--~ COLDWELLi BANKER 'u1sio1A1T °' rkt:COLwru.co. I 2 BR Condo Crpta, drps, Furn A 1lldum. Bwts'1r ~ Reaitan fH:-2«.10 m--0700 TAX SHELTER 3 BR. 2 ba. bonus rm .. $400 • tl ·dbl . 1 bdmia. from SJ,15: t• W. 550 Newpirt Center Dr. 2 BR. 1%. ba. S225 frpl, pa o, gar, nr. Wllloa (Just Wat al New· ~~P!;!j~~~~~I 50 UNITS 2BR.1\0ba.AlrCond. 1265 ~cl>. Pool prlvt $215. port Blvd.) New-' llMdl• 1639 M 2 BR.' Ba. , l300 &<;-1851. ~-!:::"-"l A:::;::I.:.-__ , -b-..,-"=--.. 1 ~ 32 UNITS -* Aplo. 3 BR. 2 ba. 1325/3"1/375 Loguno llNch "-~ -s -4 IEDiOOMS $395 M * 145•0111 * 4 B_R. 2 ba. -dmoor l3ll!i -----ffi"· ;,'· ~ t "'.'1&f; FAMIL·Y R~M 15% d\>Wn. Wost.tde C.M. '·· 4 BR. 2 l>a, lam rm llOO WATEIITTlONT-vtew. ~ 5'&-0131;' , e • ...,.., FOR INVESTOR ... w.11t•COST•MHA ' ed h II 2 Br., 2 ba.-rnn. . POOL GOOO MGMENT 8 r •1 ~~~atDror •• t,.k. 1485 mo. 530 2 'BDR apt 'IUll ·or --of ~ ··-·-·--- Sale/Exchanee Up. These Are Just A Few to aeR all m Qst,: St. Apt Charmin& custom built 673-5221, 673-1670, 645-23'79 OU.r MANY *RENTALS . . . Duplexes Unfum. 350 B C.W. home on Peachtree Lane; Ownr/Brk -"''=·::·:..,. ____ ....._ dining nn., large family INVESTORS $100 . COZY Frplc! 1 BR. REALTY . 81lboa Peninsula *·SHADY llJilS ·POOL* rm., 2% ba,ths. Modern bltn Blt·ins Crpts drps huge A Company With Vision e Adu)l1 Poolside $141). up Wand kitchen, bltn. deep TWO 4-PLEXES, x:lnt return, yrd ' ' ' Univ. Park Centi:r, lrvlne 2 BR, den, 2 ba, bltna, e Q)lldren next blodr: 1 freeze. Beautifully decorated only $47,500. each. $4750. ' * Call Anytime, 833-0SaJ d11bwshr, wahr/dryer. ~ 177 E. 22nd St., CM 803546. :.~::r: ~ a1=~= dow.n. Call =8 .• $~~ .GVAC~ f& Rklead,.! t2 Office holln 8 AM to 6 PM ~:~ ~AE.bay~ ~~ Fum~~'l...:·-· ~.:._Br •• •lxlt• I $52 500 WAUCll . ar. r or s pe , Apt A (dwnstn), 536-35lB or cept"""" "-· ., r.°Li. ~.. 646·J414 .... _. * 2 BR . .2 Ba. Alr/cond ... $260 2131863-1008. Newport ., C.M. \;J' $145 -PRIVA1'E Cottage nr 3 BR. 2 Ba. alr/cond ... $280 • 91_4 /4 ,__ inn Beach Blvd.,. H.B. ocean. Yard. Kids/pets ok. 3 SR. 2 ba .....•.....• $325 Costi Meta BEA11l"FUIUI 2JIR '115 up _,........ TRI-Plex 2 Br, sharp units * 4 BR. 2% ba ........... $425 Utll pd., Htd P.CJOl. Adlts. Do RIALTY W-aide. $44,&X>. Low down $160 • OOLUIOUSE! 2 Br. 6 BR. 3 Ba. lam. rm.•• $475 LARGE l BR Duplex, cpta, "pe_b_._60-~~9520~·-----l Ne•r Ke..,.rt P••t orrke d $10 000 ~·1 drapes, bll·lnll, washer, 1 BR. ll«l " "K • ·-. or tra e up • eq. ....... Encl gar Fncd yard for ~ · dryer, yard A: aarace. No •~ ........... Dovt!I' Shores Jim Broome to!Jay, Newport kids/pet. . ts $ln. 64&-2385 Adults only. 1993 Omrdt. st Mosa Rllf, 64Hru. * pe . . 51H633. . • Yl~w • Lots for S.!e 170 l2<0 '. SPACIOUS • Br. ... I BR ........ J:tlo. P,.L SHARP! Bao ...... Ull1 pd. Uninue ' C~m built borne, -Ba. Pool !'aul.17 cpta. Fam couple. $1'5. 0 Cbildftn. $145 mo, $50 cleanbls W , . ..., * * * ''" --,. . M&-8835. Nr. OCX:-A: Ila. 551-'N 3 Bdnn, formal dining, fam-, oq. Pet. .. --N 2 Br Eutakle Uy room, 3 oar garage. ltllftdy Seton • LANDLORDS I , "SINCE 1946.. ~ ew · FURN BachOlor ApOo. J115 M08t bo ...,, to bo ap. 110 'ropu FREJi: REN'l'AL SERVICE Crpt.. Mps, prlv yn!L 29'J It Up. NO """""" or pots. predated. $110,ooo. CAIL Bolboii 111.nd . B.EACON RENTALS ~~1~~~~~ E. 18th. 64HOl7, -lm. 1129 Etcltn Apt"l, Of. Y;u.,. !be"""'" ot , * 6U-0111 * O.y1 552-7900 Nlflhll Huntl""°" llMdl NICE 1It1-tw trollm llO" 2 ficl<•is to the EASTBLUFF 3 BDRM., 2 BA. newly up. Mature lldlts. Cldld *- Sports,, V.cation & Separate house, W1u.sual Sell the old stutt. Buy the painted, children i: pN ok. ~1& ,. t . ' l\_ecreetloMI ,Vehicle large 4 bedroom or 3 & den. new stuff_ '190 mo. !ID-9188. Need a "Pad"f Place ln'ld! i , Show., FamUy room plus large z:::=:=:====;;.!E,;:;;;:=:;;,===.=;;;,,:;;;;:;:=:;;:;;::;.1 ,W ..J. .. v1e' . .,, llfa1'••, at the tonnal dining room. Com· Jta,_,_ "!'9' . Antthelm Convention plete privacy with enclosed ;ti;' Porioflno •Moclel w/pool. 3 cen .. r n!arandfrontyards.Lovely ST' .... R G ... ,...E._ ... ~ .. Bdmu., ·21> ba'& Maw January i;.14 garden. Available De<ember -'1 .ra..IU A'-'1' ~-.~tt-tSho900.rt P lease ·caU1~·56'73, ext 314 15. No peU, $-475 per m(!nlh. ~ ' v8: ~t ~~ ~ ·~-lJ.. ~. • ·""''· • between 't I: S pm to claim Call 613-6568 or MG.3688. ,..._, uw -"'' -' 'HoWeid · ' Cou A«ercllnt kl fM $,.,._ t'Ql.OW>:Ll., BANKER r.Jl'.'~k,:!~~"/lh .... ~~ LANDLORDS! To dewlop '"""'II< fOr F•lday, I Realfon ' 44+-2'30 83)11100 ""' * • We S ........ lalize in Newport raWOfds~~to.....-. 550 NewpQrt Ce,nteri)r. ~ 'Be:ach9 Corona de! Mt.i' e ofyourZodiocbirtht9\ IRING THE KIDS Real Est•te W•nted 114 a La&una. our Rental .ser. !l:w ~= ':!= 1 • OCf· ,.,_ ...... '---AL-. ~arming 5 58' SAILING Yacht for va• '\Ike ta FREE to You! Try 3Yow 33k .:IA lfOJ',tl 1,,.._ u1e ~· ...a 1.~ h Nu-View! '°"*' 3'Y-6'.C... BR. 3 ba .. ._~~Sotmaldin-~tabl;"'llieor ~n~ui NU·VIEW RENTALS :=. il~::: :1=- iq. Used DnCK accents. Auxillar)l' rNtt built: Twtn 673-4030 or 4*1248 ?St.wot 37 ~ ''""'-: MM delael, aoto pUot, 1oran. hot Corona del Mar tr..,. 31 "' "~ lC18 w. dr.:it\11.W)''J .!"8".-water, etc. 'Ow~n•1 rs ,;=.. :~ ~: ...... REALTORS ~ stateroom, hi a.Ion~ ey, S250, -2 BR, trplc, no .pelt. 11W111 Al~ 71 HM IWIBO~ HOMES din area on cleek-, 2 d .I: 2 C17 POINSETnA, Ca 11 Jz=. :~· • Jil:t , 2111',+ .... -. :::..:i-::.u-~. 'Zl :-c.-:-=,,·....------1 '1!~.: ::=.... ~== Ma Lird. -flWt '"'""°" mired. Lft'• excbaJWe tiill Coste Mna 'T• '6s..d ?•You Pl. Mt ••1t1< Cl!8CI. ~lal'l, 0.-~Ultj ~ 2_8..;.R.c...1..;BA..;.;...-1""--l~lv-rm-.1 "l:. ,,,... "'"' a BR. I BA In -~Ave.,,.,.,,,..., C>lll. Dlntnc area. F...,.., yard. II.... #~ l;~ ~ 2 bllcl troni 90221 No ...,~ $1M. <7)-2918. .. T~ »-IO- u------t · i ~ llt;llw•'llt .,....._ -~ ~. -_., ' CASH for >-' 8lblnd In l Br 2 ba, cl-·•·-st12 22C"'",. "'., .... ,,·. c.,~ ror-,..,.,, .....,. oa'1i\ent1 ol<. IO, _.. ·.-1., M Ave i'295." Call 22 ,, ·-Ou--GleG<eall ialos ptao, Aalt lor Jim ~ · ·"H!"'I ,.,_ ,.,_ .. Y ... ... ~ RN.I.tar Broome, N~ Mesa , :-::: lST• 55...., 15,~-~-=~ IO'}IM!l!l '/I RI!>'. 8'Hlll. 3 Bl\, hH, <rptd'-l..1hn>c>uL ,... 5'11 °' Vactnd9 COil moneyJ lt$nt Like to ~t OUr Tndftr'll = rum. fa"• Call ab ~=-I ,... -· ........ -"'"""""''"lor-~~"==_,,=,-,.I "''"" =~·1 I -···--~Pllol 51-5dQotor5-SllARPtBDRM -AllbltiN 'iOI~ .. • lfDI ,~ ClUllfted Ad. $etl ~ lttm.1 A .. WUll Ml .. a ..... tn. • Quiet cul-dHOC • Avail ____ ,!!~~!::~~\Sll;::~::::::~===~===~===:!!,. __ .J ,_, ~d -"""'' -1/1'1!10~AG'l', 51>-llSI. • J _ ..... •• I I Tl••tda1. -28, 197Z VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS 1 & 1 BEDROOM APT. Fumlshod & Unlurnfshod Adult Llvlnv Dlahw•aher color coordinated appliances Plush shu& carpel . mirrored wardrobe doors· Indirect lfghllng In kitchen . breakla•t bar • huge private fenced patio . plush la ndscap- ing • brick Bar-8-Ques • large heated pools ·&lanai. Air conditioning. 3101 So. Br istol St., S•nt• Ari• s.!7-l200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT ~-------___ __._ ___ ~--- i:A;,;P;:.l;.:s._F:...u:.:r..:n;:.. ___ ..:340:.:.: Apt. Unfurn. 365 Cotti Mesa Corona del Mar ~ ~Llot;;;-;;;-;;;,;[g]~l ~[ -~...i~-~' ;;i Office Rental 440 Found (frto ods) 550 Corpol Setvlce - Ill 1617 WESTCLIFF MJNIATUJU: Greyhound vk. SICK' OF DIRTY CAftl'Er j' 12(W) 1q. tt. Cpt, air cood. lAa\lna Hilla. Call to Wknl· can tlM ~~!«!'ctn Ample okll. uU~ jsnltor. Uy -· Demand the -~ -· Bawnaardner • 104. Ml·5'll2 BIRD found v 1 c I • I 1 > * 97'-7U6 * Huntl......, BHch Huntl~ llMch • HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST· Spanisfl CountJy Estate llYlng % Acres. Beautllul park·llke sunoW>dings. Sunken Pool. Sparkling SpanjJb Fountains. • Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining • Walk In CloselJ • Home-like Kitchens & Cabinets I BDRM. Unturn. $165. Furn. $185. 2 BDRM. Unlurn. $165. Furn. $215. TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, l ~Ba., 1400 sq. It. · Unfurnished $200. ALL UTILITIES FREE Walk to Huntington Center Adults, No pelJ LA QUINTA Hl'RWISA 16211 Porksldo L•no, H.B. U"' 170. DeM ..... $40. I l ldtnlll,Y, 6'HIJ30. w/kllch /bath . CM. FOUND' Wallet • owner PATIOS.PLANTERS -· klent!l)'. Vic. N.B. m-ms. All ()Qnerele wort. Brick, Busl-ltont•I 441 11um-wk. 894-3!33. OFFICE STORl I.Mt 555 P:.~~=-. dri""'~~ Newport A Bil)' Cctnter 2052 H'ELPJ LoBt A la 11 k a n concrete. ~ for cat. 1 Newport Blvd., CM.. Util. MaJemute. Loob Ii kc CUSTOM CEMENT WORK: pd. Pkna. MS.1252. Jlu&ky. fimalc. Brown I: Drlvell, WALKS, patioa. \ lndu•trl1I Rental 450 white. Green eyea. 4 mos. Pool decks Don. 643-8514. ' 1--~-------1 W1 vie 181h & Orange, · ·' RENT Mt 1125 ft. C .M . 12/22 . Ch ild . , sq. .._ ...... _ .. aa~ed. Pia. f'l.'\urn C-on:;:;t,;.•;;•<l;;;.:o::.r _____ ,r ' $140/mo. 1300 J..oean Ave, wvou:u-· •• _ CAf. 6i5-5116. to 1.S7 l8th St., CM. 55'1..(J;1l JACK Taulane -Rt.pair ·~ !-"=-"'~=----.-or M&o-2759. remod.. atid!t. 20 yrs. exp. \ Rentals \~•nted 4'0 LOS"J': ~ Grown an, ~r Uc"d. M)' W1;1 C.o. ~1-00SS.· l 1-----------l itnped male cat, ~ , PROFESSIONAL laraJly. 3 "'1 lloa roUar. Vic. ol home Draltl"I adultJ, need aublet rum. addrftl, :1)32 H.u'dlna Way, ;;;..;'°"""''------ houM! from owner. Write Cll., 833-2100 da>'L Ml~ PLANS-Howft Remo d • Clusitted Ad No.~. Da1J)' ·ews. REWMO! Roam Addi&n.. $50 ai Pijot, Box 1560, o.t& Mell, SIAMESE w/blue sapphire S67.os26 567·• t CA 9201. 'collar, nametag Chi Chi , I 3 Br. F.dilon Hl area. X1nt new hm m Av e. de La Gerclenlne I El Puerto Mesa 1 BR's -$130 & UP Unfurn. & Furn, All Utilities Paid Pool & Rt'<·n •atlnn 1959 Mapll· /\'\!., CM ., Also garl\i;:e& for n.•nt !WACIOUS 2 BR. 2 Bath!!; w/fl"plc. Cdl!I High School arell. $275 Mo. Avail now! Hal Pinch1n Rltr. 675-4~ LGE. 3 BR, 2 ba, frplc, crpt.s, drpt, bltns. Bay view. S. ot Hwy . $3 25/mo . "'"40!8 . r lHl!CREEK Llvtl UP TO ITS NAMI ••. 714: 847:5441 rets. $alO by Feb. L Call Estrella, SC 482-1483 eve/ 91)8.f,860, wknd. Day, ooUect 640-1080, !~~~~~~~~~~! Reward. EXP. Hawallan Gardener. Complete prden a er v ~ LARGE I BR $145/mo. + dep. Carport & la undry facil . Nr. frA'Y & 1hop'g. 998 El Camino, Apt l, C.M. 546-0451. Over 500 tree• 1nC1 10 1tr1am1 cre1te a re1ulno setting. Wood dKit., l'lllo p1Uot, tlldlng glass d00f1, brtng the High Si8rr11 lnto your 1peclous 1-or 2-bedroom garden apartment From $165. Oecon1t01-llne furnflure package• aveilable. (4 blks. So. o( San Diego Frwy. on Beach, l blk. W. on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane). I~ ] ~ .. ~. s'"u"SIE"""'"'Wbl=::,.,-,,..,.=,.,p.,n:ooc1:::;;l::•. ~ d len1l. Dec 23rd, vie 23rd St. . • . CM. Neeruc special diet &. KRmala n l , 64&..4676, 642-1337. ' PROBLEM SOLVER Prof. iiarcte.ner. TM work, thmoln&: l'""'ina. shaplna. Clell.llUpl. GeoJ'le, 646-5893. 2300 Fe!rvlew Rd. in Coatll M111a. Phone: ~5-2300. .::;;;;;;;;;;;;; ••• 1 medication. Reward offc>red. $35 WK & UP. Studio & 1 BR Apt~. incl linens, daily maid serv, util, ph. serv .. children & pet sect. 2316 Newport Blvd., 548-9755. Cost• Mi111 * $15 p E R w EEK * I ;;i;iii;;;;;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I &: Up. Pool &. maid !IE'tvice . Kit<"hens avail. :\lolel Tahiti oom cr HarOOr .i Vicloria. Huntington Buch S-145 • $165 Bllchelnr & 1 BR, patios, frplr'.;, priv. garages · Divided bath & lots of clo~ts. Rec hall. pool & pool table11, sauna baths. See for yourself. 1'1301 Keelson I.Ji. (1 blk W. ot Beach. 1 blk N. of Slater). 842--7848 ?i1EN . Small beach hotel. Apts $85/mo. Rooms $11.50/y,•k, 53&-7056. WALK lo wa.ter S45 mo. Also $80 Kids ok. Both UUI pd. 979-84Xl. Laguna BHch DIGS for bachelor. Comb liv·slP<'pini;:-rm + own kitc~n .~ Mth. Pvt en.. trance & patio. Vacant Dec 29. S135. lst & la!l. 497~1838. BACl·I nr beal"h $135-$155."Cpl tv. 1435 N. Coaat -Open E\'6. 675-4367, 4 9 4 -2 5 0 8 .... Lido Isl• cozy Udo Isle bay view ha.ch. apt. cpt, frl>le-15 ft to beach. Reaf)Of1Slble adult only Jl95· Utll inc. yrly. Evening aft 6 & wtcnds. 673-1704. Newport - 4 BR, 2 ba.. 2 car encl parlt'E!· 11 lndry. Avail. now. 3 BR, 2 bB-furnished Stepe to ocean . . .... , .. . • . . . $215 3 BR, 2 Ba . . . • . • • • • • • $285 2 BR. I &, Pcnin •..•.• $250 We Have Winter Rentala Will Take Student& Abo Oceanfronts Avail. CAIJ.: m-- associated BRO KERS-WtAl lOllS 101 ~ w earboa 6 r J-)661 HARBOR GREENS Pumlshod & Unfurnished From $130 to $215 mo Bi1ch•lors e 1 Bdrm• 2 Bdrm• • 3 Bdrm• I 1f.a or 2 Full Bi1ths Master size bedroofllll v.: I high beam ceilings, large living room w/gas or wood burning fireplace. Convenient laundry area oft kitchen. Enclosed pa- tioa. 2 swimming pools. sauna. recreation faclll· ties. St-curity guard. No ..... M..iols Open 10 Ill 7 pm 2700 P•terson Wi1y, CM nr Hi1rbor Blvd & Adoms 546-0370 DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Cond • Frplc'1 • 3 Swim· ming Pools • Health Spa • Tennis Courts · Game and Billiard Room. 1 BR. From $160 l BR. A: Den From $185 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.~1. <n•1 S57..so20 RENTAL OFF ICE OPEN 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM Time To Stop Up Your apartment In a French Country Garden • yet near shopping and activitll'S. Jmpeccab!y mo naged, personnl private. T w o bedrooms, den, 2 balh.•. palio, picture·book kitchf'n. F'iN'pillCC asu: Ofh(!r Pllll4C!I. ~~ron1 $195. arlull section. THE VENDOME SUBLET Psrk Newp o rl. Furn. studln apt. Prefer slnglP frm;1 ll' or older couple. Avail. Jan 15th. t84;J Anaheim Avenue 644-7433. Call Mtll. Phillips 540-0781 129.c;i-Por w .. k & Up. l BR. $I lS. 2 BR & bacheklrs. Color TV, mair1 Sf'IV., P""!. The Mesa, GIGhNTIC 1 BDRM. 415 N. Ne\.\'POrl Blvd., N.B. You Bet it's underpricedl 646-'681. That's why Ulla apt won't 2 BR lower dupll".'t • 1 blk to last tong. Cpts, drpa, stove beach. Yrly or winier $22:5 & rerrlg. Lots ol green lawn. or $250 mo. 1'.lO 46th SL See Cover'd i::arages, Adu1t1, no Nov 24-2'1 or pho n e pets, ~ Fullerton Ave, (] 2131285411:1. Blk E. of Newport Blvd. &: SEACLIFF MMDT Apt !I. 1 Blk So. of Bay, C.M.) Bachelor apt. Util Pd. 642-8690. - $148.50. Pl)Ol. t525 Placentia -New Duplex-Aw. Ask about our dis-count . ."l-18-2682. • 2 B<lnn, 2t BA ...... s 1 129595. e 3 Bdrm. BA...... . 2 Oceanfront 1-room apts. on.. · pt -11100 .·~y. utU incl. ~ut.. 11pac10W ll s ...., ·'" Fenced yards, patios and 615-00. quleJ privacy. Adult1, no. OCEANrnoNT. 3 BR. 2 BA, pe1&. 642-4.'UT. fplc. Call Btng, d ll Y • 2IM(l Fullerton St. Cat Bay) t)S...1491 and eves. ~29(9 $140 up iipac 2 br/3 br 11,i. ba BACH. $125; oceanfront: pool, cpt/drp, blUt, plygml. Wlnter or yrly. No lee 1996 ~pie, No. 1 ... &U-3813 ABBEY REALTY 60-3850 2212 ~.No. 5 ... 646-ml BACHELORE'M'E, a m a I 1 , 1BDR?i'l. no chlldren or pet&. klc!al for 1 Kiri. Sffch 1 blk. Lrg pvt yd. nr 18th St ahOp. noo. yr1y. ~z""=-_ _ p1no. ~ ~Unfurn. 365 LARGE 2 BR, crpts, drps, nr. Estancia HI school. B•lboo Island Older ,,...1·•. ll3>. 613-8145. 2 Br upPl!':r on Marine Ave. 3 l~Br Untum---:-Util D&ld:-$13$.. yr1 olrf. Step11 to beach. 820 (\·riter ~· $325/mo yrly. m-341'1 days can • only. * DELUXE' 1 6 2 BR. Clolle Coronl del Mir gar. Bltna. Shag crpt Nr. So. CoM Plau. 545-2321. LOVELY 2 br unturn. 11.pt. drpe .\ ne'W Cllrpet. Main noor. 540--0729. P•rk·Lik• Surrounding QUll'T DELUXE l, 2 & 3 BH. APTS Pvt Patios * lltd Pool Nr. Shop'g * Adults only Also Furn Bach. Apts Martinique Apts. 1777 Santa Ana Ave., C.\t Hgr Apt 113 646-5542 ** 3 Br., 1V:i ba. ** Lar&c>, newly dc>eor. encl patio, bltns, crpt, drps, Close to cverythlna:. S170 mo. 880 Center St., CM. CaJJ a.ft 5: 30 pm wkdys, all day wknds, 642-8340. EXTRA LARGE 1 BR $15.J. UUls pd. Refrig, ranjte, cpl, drps, Htd Pool. Mature Adults. Infant ok, no pets. \\'alk to sbops. l SS 7 Monrovia, 645-4267 . $105 - 2 BR. Gar. Stove. Retrtg. Couple 1 child ok. or c;>lder penon. No pets. $50 clean dep. Ref's I"e:q'd. 541r7237. * SHADY ELMS • POOL * • Adull3 Poolside $140 up • Children next block 177 E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 2BR. stove, refrig, crpts, drps & utll's. Adlt pk. $150/mo. 557-6134 or '3>-50IJS. NEW 1 & 2 BR's from Sl'1tl to $190. Nr. beach & sho p'g. 114 E. 20th St., 0.1. 548--0137. SPACIOUS, 2 Br sludio, wtw crpt, drps, elec bltns, 1~ ba. Nr hwya & ahops. No peta. 545-489300._~= 2 BR. Adults, no pels. BAY MEADOWS APTS, 381 W. Bay St., CM. 646-0073. Huntington Beach NEW APTS.! HUNTINGTON BEACH 2 Bedroom, $144 All UllllllH Paid OVER 62 ??? RETIRED ??? Carpet and Drapes Bullt-iru & Retlig. Covered Parking Garden settlnv. COfto. venlent to l•rge shop- ping center. No Peta. the VILLA YORBA 141·9'22 (Off San Diego !"Ny, So. on Beach Blvd., l bUc. beyond Edinger to Stark, E. to Malaga. tum right). * l\t0VF. IN TODAY * $139 A MO. Spa.c. 2 & 3 Br. in 4-ple;11. St>vt>nt! avail. ALL EX· 'l'RAS. Pool, rec bldi.;. Kids 'veJ .. :onll". 1'"rom $139, Set> M~. 1737 1 Keel10n "B". 1 blk \\'. "( llf.ach Blvd. off Slaler. 968·7510 or K-47~. *FRESH AIR Walk J block& to Be11.ch Lri: 2 & 3 BR. Ap11. Newly decclraled, w/w crpta, drps, bltns, e'<cept refrlg. $161 &: $235. No li.ngles, no pets. SJ8-.17U. l Br .. crpt, drps, s1nv, re!rlg. ~ ml. north of J.luatl~ Util prf., pool, adltll. 1884 Beach $140 ' BR Bltn1 f.tonrovla. 548~. · · · ' ON TEN ACR.£$ Apts. f\.am./W\f\lrn. l.eaH FU.place I jlriv. ..llOt. Pools TeMll Contnt'l Bkflt, 900 Sea Lan, CdM 6'4·2$11 <MacArthur nr O::lut Hwy) ==-erpt11, ~J pool, pl11.y yll.rd. LRG. 2 Br., Palk>. nt. shop-L.ndry raw &: CllfPOrtS. Cpl Pln¥. adulb In triplex &-2 am! children ok. No 642-37$4 ..... Cell ~··-~-' BR unlurn. Crpt11, drps, f..plex. 1 ea:--c:rp1.1, drp11. range/oven, retrlg. No pets. wuher, deyer, fenced yard, $140/mo. 988-1455. Nr WaJTltt A Beach Blvd. 2 th MONTICELLO T<>wnholl,. 4 ms mo. ~n.22. ROOMY J Btdroom, ba , gt'OllJ1d Goar. $350 pr. monlh BR, 2 BA. Cbllclren ok. Club 2 Blockt beach ~ 2 BR. new plut rpadout t bedroom It Pool•. C&lJ 54H299. Cf1IU. redtc., bltna. UUI upecatn wUb Jll'ffttt en-LARGE 2 Bdrm.. 2 Ba, lncl. '165. ~. -----·- trance. S2JO pr month. Bot.h crpU, d~. No pets. $165. 2 BDRM deluxe apt, pooll\de unlu rwt:t to Dar'k a tennlt, S4CH722 1ankn buf\ealow w/trplc. coll Balley m.«550 "!'· 3 Br. 2 1-, nr OCC, S.D. i\dulls, $21~ -· 3 Bit. 211 BA. DUPU!:X. Bl• l'rwy. 11«1 mo. "'6-<ll69 or 2 BR. Stlldlo. Pillo, yald, !nl. W/w c:rpta. Gu'Qe. Ho 56-9491 Johrl. a:~.,e. $150/mo. li:itant ._ pets. 60'Ni In.. 6'U'ill8. ATl'RACTIVE new l BR. 1 oo pe:U. A\'I. now. KM549. DUPLEX 2 BR, I BA. PllO. BA. adlll, no pels. ll3S. ll'10 2 BDltM <lelux~ ~ pool- mo. (U Goldenrod. CaD Wallace. 5Ct-Oll04. p.rden bunplow w/frplc. 61UOU N...t a "Pad"t Place an adl Adulls. 1210. 8'H2SIJ, Need l "Pad"? P1Ace an adt Call 60-am. WMI ad rHUltl •.. Ml.$78 • UPSTAIRS 2BR, 2BA, crplJ, drps, frplc, Adlts, no pcta, $215 leur, 613-3824. Newport B.ach ---- Apt. Unfurn. Newport Buch 365 ,.. Day&, Chert Henry ~2518 Auto Tr1n1eert•tlon 525 or a.fl 5 pin, 60-3461. II Jlti) ··-~ * '* * BEAUT. black &: I an ---L WI German Shepherd female. • • • '--------' Junn emers Owner h e a r t bro lt e n I Tony Meffei 2113 Federal Ave. RE\VARD! 15501 Pasadena, 25402 Grissom Rd. Rooms 400 Cotta M.w Apt 24, Tustin. 63H300. Laguni1 Hills 1----------You are Ule winner oJ HP.WARD! Sm. muepo1.n1 You are the winner or SLPG rm., m oook'g, for S 2 tlck.eVt1 to lhlone Siamese fem, w/darlr pink 2 tickets to lhe non-drnkg, no n . s m k a ports, i1cat & Milar ti1."l!.ppea1't'd from Sports, V•ci1tlon & emply'd older person. By Recr11tJon1I Vehlcle home 12/21 ul 11 2 I R I I V h• I mo. only. $45. 1543 Orange, Show llighland Dr, NB. &46-IU9 BOB'S GARn~lNG & LANDSCAPING • Realdential I CMnmerclal ltvtne lndllltrlal Complex-. l15'1-G9--FRONT yd. lawn ....,. llO mo., blck )'ds al a o , weedln&. )'d cln up. tree trimming, baullng. Free Ht. -· ecreet ona • IC e c.11,t. at the \VHITE short·haired dog w/ Show $80. PER MO. Share 3 Anaheim Convention black head, tall & spots, 1.;;G.;;on;;.:.:••;.;•:;;l_S.;;.:.:rv..;.;l<;;.•:;;s;..... __ 1 Ani1hei~t ch:nvention BR Condo. wi th 2-24 yr Center vie. C&P· Bch. Reward. old bachelors. 557-2189 January 5-14 _~496-;:;;:l~180:e:..· --=--.,,.--.,., Center or 53&-5029. Please call &12-5678, ext. 314 LOsr orange &. white male January S.14 .-c,,-,,-=:,-=-;;.,.-,="'7· between 9 & 5 pm to claim striped cat. ''Sam". Vic: Please call 642-~. ext. 314 LAG 8. Nice studio BR It your tickets. !North County Brookhunt I: Ellis, F. V. between 9 & 5 pm to claim BA, nr town, pvt entr., 11. toll·frtt nuinbcr ia 541).ll'JO) Reward! 968-&ln. your tickets. !North County oook. w/refr. Wo rk In K * • * LOST larp cat, blk & grey toll·lree number is 541).1220) pereons, m pets. $ll5. mo. stripe white feet lh.""Oat ..\ • * • 494-29'll, 497-1064. ~·ch Vk s.n'Juan Ter- YES!! WE TAKE PETS!! LOVELY furn bdrm. priv., ll•J 1nce. Reward. C&ll 493-3138. 2 Weeks Fl'ee Rent too! entr & bath, tv, gar , . Ptnonats . LOST· Dt.-c 2l, 4 mo hUh Pool, Rec. Bldg, dahwhr. sultable for bus. ma n s.ttU, Fem. red collar. Vic 2 BR. $200. 1 BR. $160 64H354. !thalinlar &: PlactntlA, C.M. VISTA DEL MESA 545-4855 LOVELY rm, pri ba. &: ent. Personals 530 Reward, MS--2932 • • • Jan Price 2"11 lot PalmH Coplllrano BHch You are the winner of 2 lickeb lo the Sports, V i1cation &. Rtc:re•tkln•I Vehicle Show at the Ani1heim Convention Center January f>.14 BEACH AREA: 1121314 patlo. Emply'd penon. $!l) LOS!': all gray r e m OCEAN and BR's. Yrly. Also bouse. No mo. M9-3612, 530-6275. * HIN~U SPIH.mJALlS'I' * Penilan Cat. Vic. Seuho~ lee Let this ad change your &: 51Mt N e Child' t Pleasl!' call 642·5618, ext. 314 bet"·~n 9 & 5 pm to claim your ticket3. CNoilh County f toll·frt'C number is 540.122()) 1 HARBOR VIEW A _e_e_EY __ R_EA_L_TY __ 6'~2--~3850~ Hotels, Motels 410 whol• outlook on life for the • · · ' "'· better Profey)onal adviee ;c,"*""'46.,,._=:c"-·-~~"7."--''Wh•r• Con91ni1lity Apts., WEEKLY rate•· Walerbed11, on JiJe. Lie. ReadiJCI d&UY. SM. white male Poodle Y.-ear- Prevails" Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Color TV, Kitchens. 1 block 10 Mt.JO PM. 492-9136. Ing red ;lewl1ed collar & flea • • • STUDENT wiU do anything, ; anythne. Repairs, garden. ing & boat maint. Reu. hol'le!lt, sale driv(!r, refs. 675-1701 . Elegant apartments designed to beach. Newport Beach 492-9034, 312 No. El camJoo collar. Approx 5 I b s. with a Mruiter's touch, su· Cost• MeN TraveLodge, 642-8252. Real, San Clemente. ''&au". ~'8td. 979-8(25. perb house security, exclu·l----------IROOMS $18 wk up w/ kit. PREGNANT? Think ing SCOTTY, mixed color. Nr slve Versailles Club and THE EXCITING $30 wk up apls. Children & Abort.ion? Knov.• all the Cl'ellvlew Sehl, Talbert & pool with unique Aquabar, PALM MESA ARTS. pet &ecUon. 2376 Newport facts first! Call Lile Line, Beach. No .oolJ.ar. 842-4170. fountains and formal gar· MINUTES TO NPT. BCH. Blvd. C.M. 54&-9"lS.5. 24 hni, 541-552'1 GERMAN Shrpherd, 10 i..o, HANDYl\tAN -All kinda of work, small jobs a specialty. 979'-4636. 546-9'72S. ' dens. All part Of t.h e South FUR.i'l'. OR UNFURN. PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-answcfl to "Eric", lost W. Coast's finest apartment Unbelievably lare:e apts, Guest Home 415 fidenl, s y m p at h e t I c Dcle, CM &&5-68118. community. huge pool, Jacuz:i elect bit·[;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 51:regnancy COW'llellng. Ah:Jr. LOSI': White Toy Poodle, 1 Bedroom/studios from $195 ins, &hag crpts, drps, sauna , • • tion & adopUonl rel AP· Vlc. Ora¥-" Broadway, M~el= T.>:. ~ulk ¥~~~ m pe~ :1~ . *. Prlv~trRT~/ * : p~.&~· READINGS ~P~=-:~ ~v1:!~. H•ullnv HAUUNO &: cleanuP. by ~ college t1'tudent. itt trk.: ~~846 or ~64. 2 BEDRM; From $180 Ambulatory t.adY or Man I T'ella Past, 'Present " F'Ututt ty of. Wet&cliH &: Dovtt ~ Untum Apti A·..-ail From SlO Good, nutritious. Food. 1213) 69!-1350 Fully Uc. Shore-I.' 6*-9045. ~ to $15 LESS. Nice, cheerful alrnospt\erc. ALC0110LICS Anon,ymous. t.AOY'S amall irold watch GEN. Hauling. Tree/shrub trim. Gar A yd cleanup. Est. m-2303, MT--t!KM. ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT From Newport Blvd., turn st l·lospilal Ro<id t 1 block above Pacific Coast Hwy) to entrance. !)()() Cagney Lane, Ne1vport B ·ach, Ca. 92860. Telephone: 1714) 615-0060 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on the bay LU.'<Ury apartr.icnt living ov- c>rlooking the water. Enjoy $750,000 health spa, 7 swim· ming pools, 7 lli hied f(!n· ni.s courts. plus miles of bicycle trails. putting, &huf· fleboard, croquet. Junior l's Crom $174.50 monthly; al3o 1 and 2·bedroom plruu and 2-story town holl5es. Elcc· Irie kitchens, privaie pa. 1s or balconies, carpclin&, dra· peries. Subterra11ean park· 1ng with elevators. Optional n11tid service. Just north of Fashion Island at Jamborf!(' and San Joaquin llills Road. ·relephonc 171111 644-1900 for rental inlorn1atlon Yei1rly·Bayfront 3 Lovely new unturn. apla. 3 & 2 BR., 2 ba. each. Pier ,\slip. Many extra.&. lmmed. occupancy. Call : 61J.366.1 673-(K)ll6 Eves. associated BP O l<.E ~S -Af Al TORS 101'> '/ii Balbaa &l l •J&6)' * 2 WE.EKS FREE * Vista del Mesa AOUL1' GARDE.i'l HOMES Il\VlNt: AVE. AT MESA Move In w/depo1lla only 1 Br. $160 2 Br. $200 Dt,y A Night Sccutil)', Pool, Foun!alnt. Rtt. Bldg. w, excirchte nn, blllillrdti, col· qr TV. Ea. Apt. l1u1 dlll11· wuhcr\_retrig, shag cpl, 6: prt pat11> or deek. 54>48S5 FOR LEASE Luxury Baylront Apt11. 1 ' 2 BR.s. $."50 10 S550 Georg• Wllllomton R•altor * 5-48-4570 * SEACLITF' Manor Apts. l Bil. 11<3.50 Pool, Cl'pll, drpt, bltna, l'A.rb. displ. 1525 Pla0111ntiA Ave. Ask about our dltcount. M&-2682. WESTCUFF, 3 bdrm., 1\1 ba'.L townhou8c, bll·lna, pvt. paU01, adultt only, no pot&. Avail. Jan. L 1225 pa mo. 548--1533. i UR. Yearly. SUS/mo. \ii bile to Ocelln. PI t Io. = AduJtt. no pell. POO Per Mo. 3 Bl" new tlUpll!l<, 2 bL I 8lk lo bch. Yrl)' ttni.J. ~. You're right. they're under· • Call ~7'53 * Phone 542-7211 or write wtdlamonds at both end!: of priced! 15611.tesa Dr. P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. strap. 673--0379 SKIPWADER .1: dump tnd \\'Ork. Concrete, UPhalt. sawing, breaking. 846-7110.~ YARD, garaa;e cleanui&· Remove trees, dirt, tyy. Drtvewya, gn.dlng. 847-2'1& (5 b~ fro5.ii'~port Blvd. I SWlN~ING SINGLES Sm. brown A: wht Beagle-. Rent•I• to Share 430 call Jun, 2 to 8 p.m. type doa: lolst ln College Pk. Under New ---'-------1-=="'539-~3~122~=~-Reward. !161-1.Di aft s pm. Man19ement * * * COUPLES PARTIES LDST· Dachabund·med me CASA VlCTORIA Mrs. J. H. Robson Call P~~~!,J~ 8 PM te~e. brn. vie Coll~ Hi:>usecle/ltnlng 1 & 2 Br. Furn & Unfurn 221 GeMvi1 ......--"'1'n Pk 54.7-'J'MI Carpets, drapes, D/W, TV Huntl.-ton Beach Socii1I Clubs ID . area, , W 0 MAN wants ....0 ant. Pool etc. Come By &. ··• washing, kitchens, be.thl, r Inquire about our Move·ln You are the winner ol Don't Be Alone I ---· I~ apts &.: houses. 64&-9974 AllowailC!i!. 525 Victoria SL 2 Ucket11 to the For thl!' Holkla_}'ll! 6 am-B pm. at Harbor, CM. 642-8970. Sports, V•ci1tlon l DISCOVER ME.SA Cleaning, carpet11 H 1 n-·-h Recre•tional Vehicle Discovery wlndowa, floors e t c unt ngton ~ Show Rcsld /comm'!. ' 551..e1a: BRAND NEW at the ~:~~ 213-387·:1.j-· •-•.:.Y_•_ltt_l_"I::_____ "8--011. QUO VADIS 111 Arlahoim con .. nllon Llco1u..i B•byslltOt" l)odlcotod ClMnlnv - Luxury Garden Apts. Center Day Ca.re k other SO<!kln&: * WE DO EVERYTHING B&chelor..i.!ai: 2 BR's. January ~14 permanent tun lime poaiUon Refs. Free est. ~2.839. FRUM $135 Pleue call 642-5678, ext. 314 SET SAIL caring for one child. New J APAN&tt lad)' would like Htd Pool.Jacuzzi-Saunas between 9 & 5 pm to claim TAHITI born thru four years.Fenc-houBecleanlna:. T;.:~· Re .reation Room & More! your tickets. (No_rth County Grand 3 ~lasted Schooner, ed yard & two playmates. must be provided. Adults Only . No Pets toU·lree number is 541).1220) crew & guest sh 0031.1 Breakfast, lunch A: snack HOUSE OF CLl!AN IMMEDIATE • • • '1239 , Included. Week """ °"" OCCUPANCY LUXURY 2BR In Parlcwl!st l 2ll) 371-$25 per week. So. of floor, windowt, ctpt, "a.Ill, 18992 Florida St. Complex, Irvine. Tennis, 3 ~i~r~ ... ~r 55~:lla. __! yrs. In attl\. '42'6834. blk pools, ,laeuzd-exerche rm. -... EXP Hou9ecln.nina $150. 111' · w. ot Garlleld Male 28-35. 3 mi to UCl S!M1 NEW YEAR'S !VE-Own cat. g bra. at least. and Beach Blvd.l --ms + 1 ~ rl<.'C. Unfu1·n. at n!O" 1 !al Baby ... lttiJw * 1r1.r * HUNTINGTON Ga r den a ment. 5.52-8720 Lott Ind~ " _ _cl.:;l•:;c•c:l._;Bch=:..· .oc536o;..;·l29=7--Pelntlna A Apts. Heil at Bola Chica. R E'AITTIFUL Oceanfront. l~iiiiiiiiiiiiii . i.· Pi1n;:;h•"1l"I 846-ll23. Compare -See Catalina View. Fem a I e .lrpenfer "-what yoo're mlJJslng. Fr. I Sl.3CrS260 !ihare 2Br. upper apt. m-Found (fAe ids) 550 AU. t}'Pt1! of carpentry Bia: CUSTOM PAINTING' ' med. avail. NB. 613-0017. _..._.. 1:uld Small lnter/Exter. Unturn. inter. 1 BR. Adu.Ila. 1 blk to beach. 2 BR Apt, San Clemente. SMALL black male dog 53fr-1648 spec. prica. F'J'ff color ~ Shag crptg .. drps, lndry fac. J\1aJe 30-40 StOO. Mo w/wht markings, longhair, • aultin& & esl. Llc. Ins. $135. 202 14th St., 53&-0352. 492.7283, a.tt 6 PM. found on 17th St., nr Pan.. C1rpet Service Won't be underbid. ~ DELUXE, Apt -prtv. patio. ==~,-,,'~~~~~'' cake House, C.M. New York -Music, 6 pool• sauna, tennis BEAl.M'. 4 BR, 2 be. h~ In F. dog lie. G4:l-2'».I. JOKN'S Carpet • Upholstcfl' ANo Wutlng 1 mn s · p 1 1 d Vly. Need yng adults to Ori-Shampoo fr e c &.'Ol· * W LLPAPIR * ,.....,.,. pacMIUI 0 0 1 e share rent. 968-4910. YOUNG female Be a r I e • chguard tSoil RetlU'danta). When )'OU call "Mac" 1 Bungalow Sl50. 84&--0259. G 1 R 1 ••s brown, white & black, ..-ear-l>egreaRrs A: .u color S4.S-lff4 MS.Int Newport BHch •r•ges or an -'ing harne1s, found vie bri1thteners a 10 minute 1---"---'-----INEW atorage aa--i. 3 Brtstol &: M a c Art h u .r . bleach for whllc carpetl!I, INT a EXT palntlna. PIP'P' 111ze11, fcrr mobU~~. 540-7391. Save yuur money br aavll\ll' han:'fung, natural w oois hoe.ts & misc. ~ FOUND: Young black male 1ne_ extra trips. WUl clean finl11 ng. 548-7903 ' Live big from $140 011kwood ·fs $1 m!lllon In recreation. Swimm ing pools. Health clubs. Saunas. Tennis courts. Bllllards. lrn:toor golf drlv· Ing range. Sand Volleyball. Whlrlpool Baths. And Iola more. A resident tennis pro and activities director who plans frEie Sunday brunches and barbecue1. Starting as low as $140. Slnglea, one and two· bedto0m1, fUmlthed and unfurnished. Sorry no chlldren or pets. Models open dally 10 lo 7. 0.kwood Garden A!)9t'mMnt1 Newport St1oh hVlne 9"d 14th 114~· 114.M170 &M-1061 dog w/brown markings; llYlng nn., dlnln~ nn. .I: INT. A: Exter. At-cooa. C'llU. Olli R 1 440 vie Mesa dci_ Mar Costa ha11 $15. Any nn. 17.50, inga sprayed. Lie.. Int. ce enta MeSa. Call & identity. couch $10. Chair $5. 1'1 yrs. Local rel!. 64Hl809, ChUtlc. COR<>HA DIL MAR 567-8431 alter 6 PM. ::~~ Iw~t woc:n~'fr'. -EXT SPICfAL $1" • Ajlpl'(IX'. lJX) IQ· tL Ottice FND: male m!Jced Germanl~Good;:;;;;";:;l.;531;:-<l:l;;•;:l·===~=l:B;;•;;· ;;Uc/lnl;:;;::·;;T7;::;""!!!;::;;;;:i' 5pace t.alklre<I lo your Shepherd wired, ooUar vie. dosign. l"l.IJJ. teCUtlt;v bl<Ur;. Pico Ave. San aemente. wl amrle parkinl'. 4~7284 or 49&-"'-3487"CC-'---,-ll Ask tor Chilatlne FOUND )'OW18 J em a I e BOYD Jt&U.TORS-6'7$·!'i!l30 Dachshund wearlna choker DEm< •Pl4't available $50 chain. 54&-8251. nio. \VUI .P,l'OVlde tumiture FOUND; Irbti Setter, Fen. at SS mo , Anlwtttna terVk» approx 3 tllOlll, Placentia in available.' 222 Fore1t Ave., COita Mesa. 551-332'1. L&luna Btacti, 494-94616. _ FND: Girls blke Npt }i(!lghts DESK ll*Ce available $!IO area call In I d c n t l f y mo. Will provld~ tu.miture 543-9702. Tra~er's Paradise lines times dollars at $5 mo, Answering tervlce c==ERM'=""A°'N'"""'S.,-h-o-r""'t'"'b-a,..l'"r-e-d'll avall&bl.!. 17815 Bcaeh Blvd. Pointer ~ mate found tn 11untlnaton -84!a.ch. 60-4321. Ht& ech are•. 847.:ot41. · $27 & UP. ?ncl· uor. some FO~UN~D~::;'B~l~ac~k1pu~ppy~.:vk:~-I\.----------------~ furniture a Vall. 2333 E. ·Mesa 001 Mar Costa Meaa Cout )IW)'., CdM. DMNb'e Ca.JI Ir: klcnttly'. 54().3fi03. . ORANGE Co. Mount&ln Suite H. Ph. &::J9.33S1 'or R.anch I Acrfq:e. Jdefll 6"15-644(, FOUND Tortoillethell ~~ vtc l)'fldleadon, apa, Cburch, PROFESSIONAL Suite read)' =.,:: iD Calta JleM. froatler IOWll. <'f'rade tor to ao. Reil at SoUa Ctdca, f'JCK holne, dwrf,? ~1 H.B. 1213/mo. 84&-1323. rouND -.. !, .male! MOV111G 10 Canad•. '[tado DESK SPACE \~ JX'Udat ?Mu ·Verd• are&. (,;&II ana A·l 161 Oldt Luxuey Sldt.n, =l•~.~14. leh. asa. Ps::tm-:!; Setter vie. ~4.= =t,.1~si~; «lO SQ rr N...,,.rt Blvd, &moratd Day, no Too 9oOk dll. 1141-llDI. C'C!ntl'I' Cotta Mesa. Carpet Marftt. ~. S Br, J Ba, Bot.ut crnr vtew 6 A/C. 642-4230. LARGE t!att ca~ lo"! hair, -O>ndo I Unit, crp!, dr!>s. air Put a little "loaf' In yOUr v1cln\ty Oranf(e Ave., Cocta cnnd. L..H. (not Lel1Ure W) Levt...-.cU tho.e b.1.ubles for Mclll. 646--2277. l:mD. F.q, Trd tor 3 Br hie "buck1". Call ' Claal10ed nm Bk A white hn1 kttten apt, CM atta. 561.oftO. MOVING to Canada - 4 ·man emtt11ency auto mallc lntlatlble Ute raft w saU, tor Igo Avon or liar. 548-3109. SOtml U..y 3 BR rtl dence, nC1Wly lealed at ""'· \VW trade $9,0W fnr O.C. fnc.'ome or r A.Rent, 132-4.113 ~. vie Weatc!llt atta, 642-1129.1•••••••••••••••••111! - l 1 .... -.. ............ ____ _.. ____ _ --• n T7 lfEIID help at Mme! W~ have Aides, Nu r ae •, Jfowiekttpera, Companlorw, Jfome"'l.akers, U p j o h n , 547.-i. DELICATESSEN Hostess/ Ccishler Wciltreues • D,U ~on ,: lldi~COllllter ,, ..la ,. .... ,,. .. • "'"'' bo -.21 a E~rloneod ' "r, Apply h'I Pu..i ~OCHMAN'S DELICAT•SS•N a ~" ll!ISTAURANT 'l'""·''· .~ GS E, )1th St,..f Colla Mna ~·~ • TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THRC>UGH A DAILY PILOT. WANT AD '41-5611· . . . .. " • DAILY rlLDT .t9 14' Aluminum fishing boat- Oan, anchor, flooring. Uk<! ne"" $200. 640-1856. Boats/Mlirine Equip. 12 rt. Alu mlnum Flat Bollom "Jon" Boat. Wizard 7~ hp. -$200. Orange -~92&1. afll'r 5 p.m. For •n •d In Woman's World C•U Mory Beth 642-5678, oxt. 330 A119led Flattery Afghan of Flowers 7120 ~~s ... ~ ------------- .. DAILY PILOT r-..-21.1m Tt 0111 11 HERE NOW FULL PRICE BILL BARRY GMC0 PONTIAC·FIAT 940 1st Showing new 4 Star mini home from 4 Star Camper. One of the oldest Recreational Builders introduces a 20' Motor Home Now FORD Von New CHEVY Van New 73 MARK IV New 73 MONTE CARLO CORT FOX LEASING t sleeps 6. Rear dinette with big 6 cubic foot refrig. erator standard. f\.1ore water capacity, larger holding tank & 50 gal gas lank, standard. All this on a Brand new ·n Dodge 3Ei0, V-8, power chassis with pow. er steering, power brakes, 2586 Newport Blvd. a.Ir cond., automatlc tran~ Cotta Meta mlssk>n and Dual Wheels. 645-3661 (No sAfi~5soo .!!!!!!!!!R ..... EW .......... AR ..... D!!!91 FULL PRICE Introductory Offer BILL BARRY GMC-PONTIAC·FIAT (ht St., At S.A. Fh1y.J 2>00 E. ht St., Santa Ana 558-1000 WILL PAY OVER KePy Blue Booli For late model, clHrt, low· mileage domes- tics, Jmports, trucks or c•mper1. NEWPORT DATSUN Now Opon Ir NEWPORT BEACH 1000 W. Coast Hwy. 645-6400 WE HAVE THE NEWEST OF DATSUNS IN INVENTORY FOR YOUR SELECTION Ca11 and Mk for Blf.Y\"r DAYE ROSS '69 DATSUN '67 DODGE 1cw-Sportsman Sundial camper A: tenl. VB, auto- matic, PS, extra cleM: win. ter lf}>eclal (VTS890J. WAGON PONTIAC Original Inside 4 Out, Radio, .. Wllh Tape P~, Root 2408 Harbor Blvd. Rack, New Tlr.., 5-Ili>on, SAVE SSS HOWARD Chevrolet N-t 11 .. ch acArthur Blvd ~ Jamboree ~SS Z7'TRAVOO :a· DISCOVERER 20'·22' CONTINF'NTALS 31' PRIDE A: JOYS VAN CONVERSI3NS :alts e Service e Rental• Danmar Inc. * Costa Mesa 546-8017 YN\V744. WE PAY TOP S1195 CASH f~~l for "-"'<! can A trucks. Jusi'~ ...:."i:i:".=o caU us for free eBtimafMi. GROTH CHEVROLET '69 DATSUN Ila. wgn .. new Radial tires, &m/bn ~ luggage rack. Sl , 150. Ask fol' Sa.Jes Manager 846-1852. 18211 Beach Blvd. 1''66""'o"'A'=TSUN°'="""'a-~""'•_l_er-.,.$495.= 1380) ~..S:vd., C.G. Huntlngtori Beach or beat otter. uhl 'l(>Odl Nat to G.G. Dat8Wl 8f7«187 Kl 9-333l 30-UO?. IMPORTS WANTED ·~.:;:;;--':;;Z"'-;fm_m_..W.-,,-la,-.-,Low,..- Rmt A Motor Home Orunae County'• milea. Make offer. 645-3880 for -VKOtlon WP l BUYER °' ~ -r-· BILL MAXF:Y roYOTA 1-"--""""'~'C"'~;,· -==- -I '.t 18881 Beach Blv :. '68 DATSUN UT. NU 23' 4 25' H 0 • Ph .. ":iiiiii,;;.. · ~ach · ~i.-SEDAN I ' ~ opeo. WE PAY WP 00\J.AR -Mill Avail, .-1 pt;y, S.A. FOR TOP USED CARS Alr-CondiUODf'd, Automatic l~-~~~5~~~~ u )'OW' car ii extra clean, Ttan1mlulon, RadJo, WIC. , Parts Mt tee 111 nnt. 163. -··I .~ •• ~ S ~ BAUER BUICK $109$ --• yo~nl 2925 H.-81"1!. Good 1luv 1"11 --~·.,oo"""'~ co.v_ ... M... ~ [~i :n... J -Muf!lft' Mon --· ~"1 jijijlllll Pilot Want Ads ha .. t\; ... ~.~~ ,.-=-.wi:zr.-. bup11!! p!O!!: ' > _!l0!!!••!!!UI!!!led!,!A4~.,___:__,I~.==:::;:.::;::::::;::::=!. J ,, At Bauer Buick Opel,_ 1972 Sales Increased 24&°k 10ver 1971. We appr'Klate yaur cojil'lde•ce• Cllld )IW'!I wi11 continue to offer yau the la"Jftt selection, with the ~t pci.ible 'prices to -W. •to contl•ue as Oranqe County's 1-rst lllldl • Opel De .. 1r. 1 , ' _ SPECIAL . YEAREND SAVINGS! 1973 Opel ,.mta Sport caupe 1973 BUick Le saJle Sport Coupe . - A11tOM11tfc tr•ri1., po_, 1tMrlt19, ,-wer br•lin. fact_, air, tintad ti~••• Yin vf top. dall!MI whMI CO'f'tn pin 1111,1ch rno''· C JC I Olll I) 4 speed ty11crOM11h tr111t., 1t01ftt tli1f; lw1k•1, whit. 1141 walls.,. tht+.il willikhl1~, .Jtoo '' e&ti•, fvlly recllnlfllf ~clret •••b, pit,. 111uch "'°''· •771111 $4523 .. '111•2 $2458 • '6895 ~=-M::. . LeaM-! Ivy .......... .,., 1973 Riviera Sport Coupe 197.3· Elecbi Sport Coupe ·-' .. ,, • Fvlt JO'!'''• l11clvdi11t 111h, window.. Crui11 control, f11tory 1lr, powtr 4101 l1ck1, AM /FM rad It pliu ll'luch "''''· C JH421I241 1 • ' , $5877 • $1364~ r:..M::. u.,..,. luy v "-'--.., ., .. ._.. • 1.111 .._ e ..... ..,.. ,.....,_pt r ff._.. • •l•••:N .._....,.,. ....... ,.. . ....,. • • ff .. ., .. Ii ass••• 1111.-•• , ... ,,. . I .,._. ,_ ,.,.. ,..... ,,_.. cw ti -. All "1c• • Nt hlclWllle ba & Meo ' · .,... ftMM.lftl rnlt.ltla,. .._ ..... ,.,,,.,.nta, with na ,a,_.n'..ru_P• Ith.,..,.... te ltuy7J 11(.ft;ryw,..,,_... qr. Wewtll +•k•c•N .tthat.W ....... , -~ ..... I IfB~lli IE II& I, - ... t ( I ' I I ' . 7 " ., r ' ' ' ( • ' 7 \ \ ' . .. • I n 1 . ( . • • • ' ·-••• ' San CleD1enie C~pi11i~ DO EDITION Yoar Be eMwll Dally Papet • VOL 65, NO. 363, 3 SECTIONS; 30 PAGES • ORANG& COUNTY, CALlFORNIA TEN CEl\ITS ;Simple Service Held. for President Trumaµ • • ~ INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (Al!) -Allu ..U.ple !uneral 8tr.ices devoid o! euJosy, former PtesldeJ>t Harry S Truman w .. to be burled today In the courtyard or the Truman Library In the pr.,.nce of his si-rrien<b. 111e .people 0r Independence -and some who traveled hundred3 of miles - stlll 1were streaming past the bier where. 'l'r1m!an waa lying in state wheo the doors closed. (AddlUooal pictures, Page 6). . M~j. Ron David o! the $th Army, which • ire 'A~ Erased' Is bandlDll the llale lllierll, said of. ficers estjmeted '15,1111' hid aeen tbe cof- fin at 9,31 un. (PST), when the last man -• catholic priest from Chicago - went throuO with two young friends. 11le lobby Md beeo open to the public contlmM>usly since 1 p.m. Wednelday. • Mrs. Truman, wbo bad been 10Cluded in ber grief in the bouot they shared !or ii3 yeara, bad a reallul night, a lamlly spotaman1 said. "She is making !amlly decisions and participating in the las~minute thing.s Hanoi Smashed ~In -Huge Attack SAIGON (UPI) -Swedish diplomatic reporls said Amertcsn l152s and figbter- bombers hit Hanoi at nooo today in the Ji<.,1vitst dayllgbt bombardment or the ·war. • • ~ Soviet news agency Tass reported that parts of the North Vietnamese capital· had been "erased from the face o/ the earth ... Pnkstinitms , . -Say ·They'll Tbei'e were hints in the govemment- cootrolled press in SaigGD. that the Nortb Vietnamese might have ~ enouch and llilf lllii;.i.io ·..,..·· ..... -. the • . 20tli ~ bi ti. DOJI • few da1! In • .mier ,_ the -ta!blin'i>iiis. But 0 the . Cd11111111il111 YielnamHe In · Parta were llllll issuing de 11 ant Release Six BANGKOK (UPI) -Four Palestlnisn guerrillas seized the Israeli embassy to- day and lhreslened to blow it up along with siJ: hostages unless Israel released 3!0Palestlniln prisoners. ~ But tonlgbl they agreed to free the hostages In .. 1urn !or safe conduct from 'l'bailand. <> Air Chief Marshal Dawee Cbulasapys mmouned the guerrilla decision to accept "Ille conduct and a police o!licial said tliat. In l'elurn, the guerrillas agreed to 'l<le8se the six Israelis beld Inside the ,lt!Dbassy building more than 10 hours 1'!'!" • threst of death. 1 Dawee made no menUOn 'ol the tag .. when be emerged with Egyptian J.fnba.ssador Mustaffa El Tawi from the 1,AfDbassy after a face-to-face meeting with the gUerrillas but the poli"'! official • ,said the boltages would be freed. )J Dawee, a ranking member of the mi!ltacy coolrolled govmunerlt, 'edtered · !!le Embassy wltli the Egyptian am- illassador and ·woo the guerrilla promise to leave the co.mtry:. -• He said be and Deputy Foreign ¥1nJs!er Otartd>al Chunabawan would accompany the guerrillas wben they left 1balland. Other olliclsll said tbat. El 'tawt would alao make the trip, ml that .!he guerrillas woold be allowed to lo!ep .• their '!'espooa. ,. Police officials said ~~n:ients , ,were being made for • special flight to lake the guerrilJaa out or the oounlry. 'They said the mool URly destlnatlan .... "Cairo. ' •ta~~~' eonimand reporled grown,g Amepcsn losses qi planes and inen in the masslve aerial assault but bad no word OD today's bombing acUvJUes. U.S . rrJlitacy ""1l'Cei Said strikes agalhst the Hanoi'Halpbong Industrial beartiand con- tinued today a'n d OlllJnunlst nport& said there we.. tht<e Hanoi raids loday. . '!be command reported the loas or two more B52s aod the shooting down of a Jolly Green Giant re9CUe bel1copter over North Vielnam, bringing to 14 the number llf the '8-millioq strategic bombers lost in the air war tbat began Dec. 18. Hanoi Radio said a Nortb Vielnamese Air Force plane, preaun•N)' a MIG, abot down a Bii some 111 miles -or Hanoi Wednesday. A Hungarian report lllid three B52ls .were shot down by . fiibter-planes. 'Ibe NOrth Vietnamese delegation in Pafls issued a. special statement today ·saying the American attacks have ravag- ed areas of Hanoi and Haipboog with the force of an earthquake, k i 11 i n g "thousands" of people. )t said North Vielnamese gunners shot down 71 U.S. aircraft', Including 31 B62s, 1n nine daya. '!be U.S. QmrNnd and the Pentagon gave n.o ~of any damlP to dvillan areas and insis1ed thet the ptaaes drop- ped ~ -only ... milltacy taqets. Tbe only repoN of what adUally was happening id the -oerlal aasault of I.be war came fnm COmmunist news agencies and oeu'tral diplomats in Hanoi . _ that come be!°" any·lamlly funeral," be added. '!!le 87·ye&r-old Widow WU to be al the f1na( rite, beginning 'With • 6mlnute service ·e.t noon. · , · . . Ooly l!l!I guesjo .,..,. invited, a few with Nlkrial renown, but mootly the peo. pie Truman knew ml>St Intimately In b11 18 years. ....., The last evehts were ln keeping with the unpretentious solemnity that bas mllrked the days since Tru~'s"°81.dtf Tuesday after a &-weeks· illness. Sens. Edmund Muskie ol Maine, Hubert HwilpHrey o/ Mmnesola and "l'bomas F. Eagleton of Missouri ac· cej!led lnvilallons. . Allor the funeral , the library wilh ils daallq display.of gills Truman ..ceived ln-the nearly eJght years of liis presiden- cy) will be closed Wltll •atter~New Year's !lily .. As the natioo began a dsy or· mournlllg ~la~ed by ~esi4~~t N i x o n , lbou.undil lll1ll were In line to ,pass by the cntaratque in Ille msrbl~ 0 lobbY' or the ,. ~· • ••• 1 library.,So11J8:oaited 'h<\W'S~or the .... pi!nute gihnpse or the coffin. They U.ed up nn the.drives leading to· tbe hlllsjde . bJllldiJ>g ' before uillltacy pallbearers, in alow-motion precilion, plae<d the i:olfui on a catafalque draped in blaclt lilt: · The 1peop1" waited patienily whlle Richard M.. !Nlxoo and .Lyndon B. Johnson had"aeparate, priva\6-moments at the coffln ol the• man wboi .preceded them· in .the qailon's-hlghest office, ' I ' ' ,' ' ·H.ughes' ·Pt ivacy .. -~Ii , Peril ~ ) . lJ..S. Lon4on Embas sy _Says His _ P~spor~ Expired ... ' -LONDOW,(~) -T!>e · U.S. Embassy today threatened, !he pr!vacy or hermit bllllonalre Howard1 R.~Hughes, holed up on the top. floor 1 of "a IuXurious London bole!. An embepy· sjohsman' said the f'{I. , year-old A.Merican tycoon's Passport ex- pired some time ago and be' must report within 48 hours It. the embass'y consular office to apply for a new one. "As far as we're concerned," said the spoteanan, "be will rove to' call personally, fill in the usual application form and pB:Y a $12 fee . That's 'what eYery American travel~ ~tbQut a , pauport has to do, and II will be the same for .Mr. Hughes." 1 U the embassy en!ortes that reguta. , Uon, it will be the first time ln memory fbat tJie U.S. goveinritent bas treated Hughes as an ordinary citizen. Brllish immigration ryles allOw the ad--, mission of foreigners without passports so long as they carry d~uments establishing their Identity amr nationality . Sources clOse to' Hughes said be planne4 · to stay in Britain for six months, poo.'!ibly longer. A Home Office spokesman said be could ' rem'ain "as .'long as it suit.S him." Some sources predicted , that Laborlt.e toes· of the Conservative government's tdigti ·new anticolored· hiun;gration laws would accuse it of giving preferenUal treatment · to Hughes because of· his WeOllb. . . Hughes and his entourage landed at ,Gatwick Airport 30 miles south Qf London sbortly alter midnilbl Wedne!day, They were-held up ·for at'lea:st half an boour while officials ·checlred the m)'81ertoos billionaire's Identity. After · considerable (See HUGHES, Page ll Once the doors w ... opened, people of aJJ ages llreamed past the J!l&liopny coffin in eloquent, anent tritiule. 'lbey moved through at the ·,ate of nearly 2,000 per bour. • Margaret Tr\mWl Danltl, her' bulb8'>1 .• Clifton, and their four boys were at the brief ceremonies that preceded lheJyiog- in-state. So were 60 others who bad bef.fl par:t of Truman's unofficial JJfe -such as the family maid, a long~ JIU8rd and Rose ConwlQ', who for ~y years was Trilman's secretary. ' " .$250.;060 Loss; Arson · Suspected By JOHN VAL TERZA Of • .,..., ..... 119" A roaring fire believed to be set by arsonists swept through six parUally- completed residences in the Pt<sidential Heights development in San Clemente . Wedriesdaf evening, causin&: damages which could.go as high as ~!!!O· ni. fut-moving lirO WniCn · -. ..U..-said wu ~ by a mu!· fled eXploeioo ...ideoed the . skies )n Ibo ~· J>Odi'"1 or ~ cily ..i draw crowdi « sigl>tieers wbo clGUed the ....... !lll<elS leading to the ltacl. A mBd Santa Ana wind condition and heavy llrains oo a lane fire bydranl bam- peled volunteer fireligtllers aa they hot· tied to keep the roaring bliize from spreading to other structures nearbY.. Firemen, In effect, had to ration the water, "directing It at various times to the most strategically placed of the various hoses attached to the single ~t. At one point the water gave out altogether for a few minutes but by that time the fire was nearly contained. 'lbe fire was the secoDd aeriObS in- cident to take place in the large project this week. Earlier in tbe wiek Developer John Douglass Jr. reported the theft or fl,IOO in plywood from the constructioo Ille. As be watched the firemen exlinlulsb the blue Wednesday 0ouctass angrily il>- sisted that there Was ••no posiible way" that so large a blaze could have been touched off by accident. The burned units were in the fnunia& stages and no electricity was <Jn 1t'tbe time. Jronicslly, Wednesday wsa the first night that a full·time aecurity"'IWlfd.was on duty at the constructioo lite, • The alarm was ptioned in by IJ!Vll"8l persons shortly before 7 p.m. and volunteers were dispatched lmmedl•tely. Their first efforts to reaeh tbe blue, however, were stalled beclue ol. a lock· (See BLAZE, Page I) · . I I Oraage Police Discover I~entity-N~t Slaying' Moiive . lie baa been living for months In Managua, t}\e capital of Nicaragua, ap- pa"8ily wilbout sny question being raJs. '"-ed about bi1 p..poit. He new in and out of the 'United ·51a1es alter the earthquake last weQend. 'drove btm from Managua, ncl 1~ no objection was made to 11111 llOI havirll! a 'paasPQrl '/ind' the em· boll1 soualrt i;;' aspedile bis admllllion to Brllaln by ~ the Home Ollice lbat be was coming wlthoul a valid ~. w ......... It'll be sunny on Friday, but the tempeniture wUI be a little nippy, due to the Paclfic Northwest cold front moving Into the ..... Hiebs of 60 are Ollpectad, wllb overnight ' Iowa In the 409. · INSWE TODi\ 'Y · T1"' Agriculture IJ<pcrtm«ftl Ml announced U.. beginning o/ a 1econd major rovnd m the great iM,nl• war. Hol dog tohe~ big -COfttcftl rt/OTflt .. lh• object of the courC ordfr. Set lfMV on Page 5. ~ •, ·--e;_.. } '' r g:•,j:Mu~· ~ ........ ,. ' ............... 17·1t •"'-11 , .... ,.... 11 -LMMs ti ..... ,,,,, ---.. --. .,...,. It-ti Y.intilllt l1 ~ • 11-tf -. ._.. ..... u-11 --.. ' Seal Besch police have ldenUfied the 'dead Marine found In their dty Tueaday a Ed Moore, 18, ot Kentucty, who had been AWOL from Camp Pendleton since Friday. lbre's body 11u -ed early 'l\Jeaday se: the 7tb Street off. ral!JP at of the San lllego and San Ga~ ys in Seal Besch. . 'Ille • ~ County Coroner said M00t< -llrangled --ume Salurdsy night bJ .... type or "mechanical __ .. 8ea1 lleach ' Police set John A""1! said m eould not give !urtber details on the lllllllod of 1tr"""'latioo at Ibis ilme. 1111. Av~ "* In~ IUB do not lmow ~ lloor.t '"''~or 1'!1Y. His 'bodY bad·~ been dumped on the Seal -olfnimp, At the time he ,,. lound, Moore WI• wearing '"1J1U11dY lroulen, a pulkver swealer l!ld a blue tanker Jacket, with an American and a confederate Ila& stit¢1ed .. Iha --• Anyone with in!onnation on Moore ls asked to contact Sgl. Aver}'I at the Seal Beach Police Deporlmeilt. I MAN, 65, PLANS T O SCA LE TETOfi . LANDER, Wyo, {UPI) -While •!JIOst · 11".ert bl& qe are spending Mew Yur'a 1 day 1n front or their tol<vtsion .. ts, ~~it ~ 11, hopes to bt Hvinl' in a ""'"' I , ca ... cm ,,~,, 11,'llMoot Gfand -~-~ ljl mal<e on aasaull on tile pealt of ~..... T-elber New Year'1 Eve Of 11eW Year .. Day. " Tbe cllmb ill)! be his elgl>th With I =let ol hla Natlciaal Ollldoor ~ ...... ~NOLS). ,,,. 1""4i ' baa -!lwpealt ooly In> Ia 1. .'I .., MtLY f'l&AY ........ '· MAYOR /AANS ,A~' DURINO-Bµzl THAT" C!OULp RUN TO A $250,0GO Lots ~ .. ._ • ~ , '1fathl'.Plti1TbM'l've!V.rDone-SVd\-1 TM•• S.W ArtMw Hll..,.. . ... ' . •( I • . ..,.._ ' OAILV PILOT SC """"''" -.. 1972 Veeational Educat .... District Invited To Join Program The Capistrano-Laguna Regional Oc· cupational Program (ROP) board of trustees has agreed to invite the new SaddJeback Valley School District to joi.n its vocational education organization. Jury Indicts Parents; Son Was Beaten CHICAGO (UPt) -Severryear-old Johnny Lindquist died last August aft er lying In a coma for 34 days from a beating allegedly inflicted at hom e because he asked to be allowed to return to his foster parents. On Wednesday, a Cook County grand jury indicted his parents, William and Irene Lindquist, on charges of murder. While Johnny lay in the ooma, his foster parents, Robert and Florence Karvanek of Tigerton, Wl!., were at his bedside, and their attorneys waged court battles in efforts to E;ain custody of the child. But Johnny, whose story attracted na- tional attention, never regained con· sciousness. "I said in Chicago, it will all come out," Karvanei: said from his Tigerton home after bearing of tbe murder in- dictments Wednesday. "Jf they have to be punished , that's it . . . I don't know. We're still not seltled here, oot over Johnny yet. We had bought him presents for Christmas. It wu a dull Chrlstma,, just thinking about Johnny." Johnny turned 7 shortly before hi s death Aug. 31, and the Karvaneks were there with cake and presents, but he never knew it. '!be grand jury returned the Indictment after reportedly hearing testimony from neighbors that oo ooe occasion Mrs. Lindquist slammed the boy's bead into a door repeatedly and beat him on the back with a broom.stick in forcing him to Jineel. 11 waa ctwsed that alle beat him to the floor July 281 and witnesses aaid Johnny waa loroed to kpeel for eJgbt boon and wu refused water. Allo, on July 28, her husband allegedly boat the boy becaUle Jolmny WU UDhap- 'f1 about leavtna 1111 footer partnta. Lllldqutat bu been beld In Jail since the beatin,g. His wife wu muted after tbe indictment& were returned Wednelday. Shawn M. Bridges Dies of Illness; Services Friday Memorial funeral aervlees are set Fri~ day for Mrs. Shawn M. Bridges, 26, member of a Southern California news media family, who died Wednesday followin& a brief illness. Rites will be at 2 p.m. in St. Peter's Lutheran Cburcb, 15th and Parton -· Santa Ana. A Million Viejo reslden~ Mrs. Bridges Saddleback Is one or three new unified districts formed last June from portions of lhe outgoing San Joaquin and Tustin Union High School Districts. It will take over operation of IChoolB In Miss.ion Viejo, El Toro, Lquna Hills and Traboco July l , 1973. That lll"el, through the Tustin Union District, ha! been af- filiated with tne Coastline ROP, which also serves Santa Ana, Tustin, and the Newport-?desa area. Coastline ROP has its office in Costa ~tesa. Jerry Copeland, coordlnator of the Capistrano.Laguna ROP said Its offices in Capistrano Beach, would be closer to Saddleback Unified .. Saddlebflck District board chairman Chester Briner said recently that the new trustees must decide before July 1 if they want to keep the Coastllne affiliation, or join Capistrano ROP or some other voca- tional education plan. Copeland said a copy of the 1971·72 year-end report, preliminary im..73 budget and a schedule of classes from the Capo-Laguna ROP have been sent to Sad- dleback trustees for study. The Capistrano ROP which bas tripled in siz.e in the put year, orfen courses not found in other ROP areas and bas the smallest cost per student of any ROP in the state, Copeland said. Saddleback trustees have shown an In· terest in expanding vocational classes at Mission Viejo Hig'.1 School after the take- over Ju1y 1. They also recently approved plana for a new high school in El Toro which Jnc:ludes a eeparate vocational "World of Werk" building. Suspect Indicted In Gun Assault On Tustin Officer A Dllll 8CCllled of shooting a Tustin patrolman In the .stomach alter being challenged by the Officer and a sherllf'1 deputy WU lndlcted Wednetda7 by the Orant• County G<and Jury on ctiarges of aasault with a deadly weapon on police officen. It II upected that Gary Wllllam Jolmaon, 17, TusUn will be arraigned Fri· day in SUperlor Court to answer to cbarpa Initially llled Dec. I aborlly Iller the ........ "" of Tustin patrolman WalclrmKorp,17. Karp wu one o1 two Tultln patrolmen sent to a loW home In,..,_ to pleas f0< belp !>om a resident who &aid Johmon had llred 11eVeral ahota through her bltllroom.wtndow In a bid to gain en- try to the premisel. Two sheriff's deputies picked up the call and Joined the Tustin olflcen In the investilation. A man tdentlfled as Jobmon then 1bot Karp In the stomach and deputy Tim Stewart wu sbol In the face by Karp'• gun when the weapon discharged as the wounded officer fell. Stewart bas recovered from what waa described as a minor wound. Karp ls now at home recuperating from more serious wounds that called for emergency surgery at a local hospital. Johnson is recovering tn Orange County Medical Center Crom wounds in the band and knee inflicted when lawmen sup- porting K8rp and Stewart opened fire on him . • ... ,_ Big Christmas Present Frances, an 18·month-old St. Bernard presented owners Mr. and Mrs. Albert Smith of Bangor, M!llne, with pups. a memorable Christmas present.-17 Airport Traffic Over Millinn Mark for Year Pa.wnger tralllc at Orange County Airport already bas e.xceeded the one mllllon mark for mz, airport olllclala rovuled Wedneaday. P1saenger1 using Air Ca 11 for n I a, Husbes Airwest, and Golden We1t Airlines through November to t a 1 e d 1,1124,8'18. Tba figure 11 17 per<ent or 1J0,9M1 more than the 873,814 handled Ft'Ollt P,,.e I . during the oanio U·lllCJlllh period In Im. Airport olllda1a predk:t an addllloaol lll0,000 will crowd tltroueb the tmnlna1 bulJdlnlf before the end ol the year. Air carp II also much gruter tbta year, with a II peroent 1-over 1971, reported to date. The llmlt.cl faclllUea In the terminal have led to establlabment of additional pu-er ptas II tho llOUth airport end ol the termlna1 and lpecta1 air ..,.., bandllnl fadlillel, olrport olllcla1I noted. the cargo 11 proc••ed in two c:oo-- verted lwlcar1 away in._n the term!na1 b11Udln1. HUGHES ••• Wb1le the llmllad -In tM h1lldl11: may have had a nec1Uve e!lect on a1rline telephoning, he waa allowed to enter the pu...,en, It bu been 1 -to Jet cowitry. lllgbl opponeats, who fear explltllon or Four curtained Rol1I Royceo brou8hl the terminal wookl lead to more jet lraf. the party to the nlnHtory Inn at the lie. Park, overlooklni HJ<le Pork, and '!be County Boan! o1 ~ has H\lll>ol moved Into the -i wtoa 111 the tw1oe reluled -In tho termlna1 to top.floor, at 12,500 I day. -appvved by the c Iv II Tiie wing WU &ealed oil, and an Aeronontleo iloarll. Botll Oontlnental lnl«<lO!n l)'llem wu tnotalled 1t the Alrllnlo llld --do -bave \ Alert Officer Arrests Theft, Drug Su~pect A young San Clemente resident lacing drug and tbeR charges found out Wednesday afternoon that It's a small world . The aeries or incidents that fmaDy led to the arrest of Kenneth Kimball Gove, 19, started In Coota ,..,. 'l'ueldly nighL Police there flsUed 1 genenl broadcall for a stolen Gennan sportscar, taken from a cocktail lomlge parking lol On Wednesday Iii.moon, S a n Clemente paln>lman Rob tllarlt"" was at a local larelgn cor repo1r ihop Inquiring about wort on 1111 car. He assertedly overheard offers to mechanics by a young man who wanted to oell the German car ported oullide. 'fbe patrolman then glanced at the llcenae plate. The llcenae number rana a bell. Then be arrested Gove, who gave the San Clemente Motel as bis addreit. subsequent cbeclts of the Clf and the !Upecl allegedly revealed DIOn! than Sl,000 worth ol powder IUlpeCted to be cocalrte and 1 bypodennlc IJliltCe. Gove wu booked on chlrgeS of auto theft and poll!Mlkll ol drup. ~:rfhe =. ::..:--== :::: :w ~:=riu:-i::: manned all doors to the wing. Orante County. Red S lli U Even the llrHlcapa c1oon ...,. ...iec1 'llie terminal wu .,....i 1n 1tr1 wben ate te p to keep out the pbalani 11( newsmen and ~-cig."!'lrport~ 'ft":u thedel~ MOSCOW (AP) -Tbe Soviet Union pbotograpbero who crowded the lobby. -• ....- l'NMPflfl#ll BLAZE ••. eel sate an 1 blcl ... c1. k<urlty paraoane1 llnally opened tho gato. "It 1'11 I lire llOlm by tho time WI cauld pt 'to It," llld Flnmm J..,. Oal>I; -tile -........ : "Some ot us starild bitting the shalle rooll of these neat1>J llnlctum to keoi> tbe fire from sprudinl," be added. '!'bey IUeoeeded, but the one duster of house.a was turned to ubea. 1 Rolldeni. In ncarby"'oeiahborboods watched In alann as the plftlt ilow began to rise In the sky. A""'°' them was San Clemente MIJW Artburlio1Jn8. He and Pollce Pain>! Lt. Raymond Hartmap Jumped In a car and llped to the fire scene. "I !mew It wu a big one and I fig-d they could use an the help they could get," Hartman llld. He and tho mayor, both -ring str .. t clothes, manned tho llOalel for a balf· hour. The epllode·jeft both men ticidden. "It's the flnt U~!'ve -dol!e such a tbJni," -~ 1tlJ tokie ·hoarso from I cold •• Fire <lllef Burl H ........ Gtploln Don llodgaon and-polJ<e dellCtlfel went to t&e lite of tho fire thtt. blornlng to launch an """' lnves\isaUon. No details ot that p.;.bi: w.re Im· medlately available...-~ wiine..e. -among them A..sistant Po~ce Chief Stan Matchelt -reported bearing what sounded like a mulOed blast moments before the fire was first noticed. 'llie blue ll'U the latest in a Us! o1,.t. backs In tho largo nlidmtlal pn>jecl. Veblcular aocea to tho tract .....io.J<· Ing the We&ttm White i!OuseWcausO<I storms of cootroversy. aiid remaihs unresolved. · ~ · Inside, they foof hostige the 1sraeu •mbes1Nlor to CambcJCllai, tltree -melh- ben " the llanpot c11p1oma11c ma aa<1 hro wives of the diplomats. Alts the guenillu bunt Into the .... bassy, thol.Y blq a ...... white and red Palestin!an flag from a secood floor win- dow. When police arrived and tried IUISUC· cesslully to enltr, the guerrUlas broke a window and toued out two sheets of paper demanding tbe release of tbe prisoners. 2 Catholics OK Survival Acts NEW YORK (AP) -Two Roman Catholic theologians say thit the plane cra,,b survivors in the Andes {( who ate nesh of dead companions:11 to ~eep alive "acted ju!lifia"'y." • ' A -II permlt1od to ell~ -lumon llelh If there II DO feuitR 3JtemaUve for survival," Mqr. Anltln VaucJ>an 11111 the Rev. Wllllam Smith ..-ID a paps on ' the 811bject. .,. Tbe priests wrole t h e In- terpretation o! Catholic prlnclpala ' as spokesmen for the Roman n Catholic Arcbdiocese of_ New York. A cleanln& woman •acwmlni tho CCI' eel to handle about 1,000 pa._en a launched on Wednesday onotber CoSrnos rldor wu escorted everywbere by two l-m=ontb=·-----------..:18::1::elli::'tt=·:...::the::...:5fu=t:...::ln:..the=..:.aecr::::•::t.:.llerl= .. =· :..· ~===========:;-' guards. An English voice challenged all _ • visitors over the intercom and said: "I'm ' from Rotbscbllds. Go away." Arrangement& for Huchea' vtait oppar· ently were made by N.M. llothad1Jld & Sons, the London banker!. The chairman o! lbe bank, Edmund de llothscblld, ,.., fused to comment on Jiugbea' arrival, hut business circles assumed he came to check lnveatment prospect.a tn the, ex· pandlfli European Common Market, which Britain joins Jan . 1. .JJ.J. garHll JANUARY ,. ...... Today! Substantial Savings Throughout the Store IUCCWDbed Wednelday afternoon in Miiiion Community Hospital, apparently due to complications from a blood dlaeue. Survivors include her father, Herold Andenen, DAILY PILOT composing room superintendent and her mother, Evezyn Andenen, a1ao of the composing room staff, who live in Santa Ana. Sbe leaves allo a brother, Don. USC sportl information director; her husband John A. Bridgea and two llllall cblldren. Laguna Drug Suspect Captured in Altadena 15 to 25% SAVINGS on Several Bedroom, Dining Room and Occasional Collections by •.. J'uneraJ arrangements are being hand.I· eel by Brown Colonial Mortuary, Santa Ana, where officlatt uld today the full lilt of Mrl. Bridges' survivors had not yet been completed. IC DAILY PILOT ' 'IM OrwW11 ca.t Dltll.V IJll.OT, W1111 •ia. ........................ If lllllMWwl /J1f .. Or-.ee Clett ,.....,.. ~. """ ......... .,. ................ ,.~ ,.,..,, fir Qilt. 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A suspect In the Laguna Beach drug· ging and robbery of a Santa Ana man was In police custody today a!ter being picked up Wednesday by Calilomia Highway Patrol officers in Altaderia. Laguna Beach police identified the man as James C. Kindell, 28. of Key West, Fla. and held him In Laguna Beach city Jail today. No ball has been aet. He was booked on susplcion of robbery and grand theft auto. Kindell WU apprehended by the CllP at about 4:19 a.m. Wed.J>esday on a surface street, on 5U1Plck>i'l of drlvtng un. der the Influence o! an Intoxicant, Sgt. R. Schmitz Program To Be Re-aired On Channel 50 Congressman John Schmitz will discuss h!J plans !or the !mmedilte Mure In a tsped Interview to be re-alrtd toolght at a o'clock oa KOCE-1V, C'bannel $0. SchmJtz waa defeated ln his primary bid for nmomlnatlon as the Republican candidate In tho 15th Dtltrict by Orange County -r Andrew J. Hlnahaw. He wu later dlCeatecl u the presldenual candldall of the American Independent Party. Three Oran&• County newl111tll wilt In- terview the lame duck COll!IT<llllWI on "Focu.o Orange County" hosted by Jim C4oper. They are Jim Dean, execuUve editor of the Redster, Thomas Keevll , editor of the/DAILY Pllhr and Howard Seelye, _poll lea! writer for the Lo~ Angele1 Time._ The program w1s atao shown Dec. 1a and II. ) • W. Bullock, Los Angeles County Sberlll'1 deputy said. Laguna Beach officers aakl Kindell was driving the car allegedly taken from tbt victim of the drugging early Wednesday morning. Peter Haigh, 38, of Santa Ana WU !ound lying seml-<ansclous oa the Door of a CUit Hotel room by the..._. Ha1ib was l1lJbed to the lnlemlVI """' 111111 It South c.ut Community ilolPlll • : lie told oltlcerl be!IM bllllata1Aalm& bar"and jpu approaolle\I by two mm and Invited to a "party" 11 the ho&lloOm. When be enltred the room, Halgb told police, be wu given 1 lllfll drink, llld 1!ter !hat 1111 memory II blank. • His car was found to" be milalnl and police listed the Incident u rol>bory. Citizen of Year Choices Sought In San Clemente San Clemente Chamber of Commerce Manager Robert Evans appealed today for more nomlnaUCIDI for the next 11Qtl7.en of the Year" bt the city. The deadline !or the 111111est1on1 II Friday ol --"-Thu.I !ar, Ev1n1 &aid, the chamber hu received .. Ollly a b1Ddfu111 of nomJ.na... tlonl. Tbe lC<'Otade 11 sranled each yur to the city'• lop cldzen and nomlnollons by letter con be accepted lrODI local ,...Pl or lndlvlduall. Seledlon of the clllzen will be made by a panel of past wlnnen of lhfl honor. The latest wiMer wW be announced and honortd .at the chamber'• annual banquet next month. DllXIL SOM llf. 17'.00 DUXIL LOYUIAT .... 37MO 489 319 H.J.GAl\l\tfT fURNflll ·RE PROflSSIONAL INTl~OR OUl&NEU Op•" Mo·n,. Thurt. I Fri. Evos.. 2211 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. DREXEL..,.. HERITAGE I ' ' I l I I I I \ I l • .. ' • • • • " ., • " • ' • ' l • r • Lag1111,a Beaeh • EDITION • -= Dally Paper YoarBe metewa VOL 65 ; NO. 363, l SECTIONS, JO PA&ES • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 19n -j_ • TEN CENTS ' · $aigo:r1 Hints ·at Bomb. Halt; Reds Adamant ,. , SAIGON (UPI) -Swedish diplomatic reports said American J!51s and fijlhlel' bQmben bit Hanoi at moo tqdor m !tie 1 •viest daylight bombardment o! !lie ,wr. ; 'Ille Soviet oews agency Tass ~ , that J>&rls o! tile .North Vietnamese caplbll had been "etased !rom the lace I of. the earth. U • ~ - _.,..,. hints in the '.gc>Vemmeo~ ~trolled p,... in 5eigon' that the•North VletnameJe mlibt have had enouch' ana I thal the.raid! migbl be baJ!"ll above the ~ parillel Iii tile next few days: ID r lo reslnne tile ~ce talks in· Parb, . . ' •' I . - But' tile COmmunlll Vielnameae In Parts wve,.. atlll , Issuing de II ant stalemeots. The u.s -1'J!POrlOd '"'wing Amerlcan.loaea ol plaoea and men In 1116 musive '-ial uuult but ,bad DO word on · 1od4y'1 bon!blDg acllTltta. U.S. rr.jlltuy ·....,,.. said llrika qalnst Uie il8nol-lla!pboag lodmUial heartland ...,. tiDilld todl)' a a'd' """'"'mis! nportl said there...,. throe Hanoi nlda today. Tbe command reported tile Joa ol two more B52s and ~the shooting down of a Jolly Green Giant rescue helicopter over North Vietnam, bringing to 14 the .. .. ·ruman • • • Guerrillas Take Site In Bangkok BANGKOK (UPI) -Four Palestlnlan guonina. aebed the !Inell embassy to- day and threotened to blow It up along 'lildl u liai&qes ...... Janel re~ • Poleslhd• prlaim. .l!lrt ~ 11111 qr<ed to free __ ~ ........ la nlun lor ale --,.. -I Mr ?!1! lllrlbal Dawee Cl!ula•PJll ·-Ibo guerrtlla -to aaoellt Ure cOOcluct and a police official aid tliat, ID return, the guerrlll11 qreed to relwe the s1x 11rae111 held 1n111c1e ·the embassy building more than IO houri °""' Y "'°" ... ,.... under a threat oI Cleath. EYES MARCH RITUl!-N Fire Chief LaHIMr una's Chief nawee made no mention of the bootages when be emerged with F.gy]illan BII'beP ..... MUllalfa El Tawi from the embuay alt« a fa.,..io-i-meeting with tile gaerrlllas but the police ofllcW said tile hostages would II!' freed. Dawee, a ranking member of the mjlttary coatrvlled ,..emmeot, •'11"1 tile En\bMsy with tho F.gypulD am- -and .... the guerrilla 'pronllle to leave the country. He said ,be and Deputy For<lga :eco·vers, Sees il:areh ReJum Minister Chartctlal Chuaal>awan would • ~ ' aC<O!Dpany the guertillas when they left • v,Laguna Beach Fire Chief James 'lbailand. Other olllcials Slid that El iiottmer, recovering at borne a!ler col· Tawi would also mike tile trip, and that J4psing 1n the Fire llflJertmeot head-tile gilemDu would be allom to keep ·..,.ners in mid-August illicJ Wedne9day tbe~i1:8i:;~ials said arrangements ~had sullered "• oomplete nervous and were being made !or a special fiigh! to llfiysical b~:'' take the guerrillas out of the country. , Tbe cblel said be bad .been given a Tbey said the lllOll Ukely d"'1lnltlon was I ~et date ol Mardi by hb doctor for. a ea:.;. .. made 'the .-mcement In the ~ble return to work. • ' !loodllt street in !tuat bl 1116 embassy and · ~f.~ii was just pneral overwork. We then after further conauJtatioos ln a tem-,j.,. rtgbt In tile mlddle o! the budget," porary command post acrooa the atreet, J>timer said. be, Chartcbal and the , Eppllaa sm- lHe aaid It wu po!!ible that the doctor hassador returned to the emhally ' could find that be would not be able to bulldlnC· With them they csrrted two hot- retum to lire service work beeause of bis ties al liquor· . ~ Tbe guerr1llas ldeattfltd lbemlelves 11 "'"81th. He has been a fireman--....., the Black ....... ~ ... r r...-•··Uoo wblch than I7 years, and came to Lap>I In -.....-v•o- : I January 1970, carried out the mwerre ol Israeli " Tllo chitl's statement -the first athletes at tile Momlch.Olym~ and said sp,cillcallyJ,:l for hll col1-He had lt 11as,r_.ible·for the ~ at 'l>ii" 1-1 for 111 uttiided J!eriod• the IAxl ~tioo81 a!J1>ort In Tel Aviv r llDd II at bome DOW. • • \ In ~Ja_.., gurunea shot and kill· Latimer bu '<Cllltlnued to drtt • ed a score o! pel'IQOS. • '., inoathly salary of $1,IGll paid partially j,y Tbey threoteaed, death ,lo lbe, Israeµs , 1116 city and portly by the llalt com-inside U their demaadl for release o! ·'pensAtion insurance ftmd. . guerrUlaa held priaoner in Israel were ; Battalion fire cbltls Charley Kuhn IDd not met by B a,m. Friday (I p,m, PST !Jlvld TompklM have directed the today ), >-rental ope~tlon SIQce ~timer Large Numbers Flock to Sands Tbe lire cblef sald'be follows a pro- • lfllm o! physical coodllionlng wblcb In- • dudes golf and dally walks. Latimer. ta, , qJd be lost 35 pounds following tile ,In- • qtent, bul has gained hack six. MAN, 65, PLANS , I Of ~guna Beach " T O SCA.LE TETON w ..... -Ilda !lelll .. atimlled ,4,000 _.. to Lquna beac:lieo w-. day, a •iwc 'aO'ffd" tor wtater leaian ilClOOtdlllC lo Bruce Baled, Laguna Belch U/epard captain. No rescueo or ln- cld<ftll wn,........ .. • '• LANDER, Wyo. (UPI) -Wblle ll10ll Jr4'0 hla ece are apeodln1 New Year'• <!Y tn ltont,GI !¥Ir lelevlllon oeta, PQ • Petsoldl, II, hopfs to be Uviol In a molf ,, • caV. on willck,..pt, 13,i.foot Grand t Tetm. Potsoldt 111""9 to make aa amult Oii tlie ~k ol Grand Ttton ellller New Year a Eve or New Year'• Dly. " • '!be ·-wW be bll eliblb with II'._ ol his National ~ " t.eaderlillp Scbool (NOLS). Tho ...., bM ,_ 1116 peak onl)'.ID 1119. ; ,Bolrd au! llllt -low 1!der ha .. pcouiP!ed • rull ol tide pool oeardlen lll!d llunla(I to HI out acrou Lquna'1 plctunoque rock oataopplngs. It II unlPllJI to take tidepool ope ...... ol .., kind from the ...u il!IWll&iw ..... lhe Lqwia coasillae. A lllldne wUcRlfe retWl:e e 1 lends -Ooran1 del Mu to ihe Dohen1 lllata -.-..i. -oi the 18-mllllon ljra!qlc boml>on !oat Ill~-air "" lhlt bepa Dec. !lo . Hanoi Radio said. --Air Force plw, j#*M+MIJ a lllG, lbot dowa a BD .... 'JI mi1el ... tsllt.-tf ~ W-oy. A~ ,._t. llUI .tine -·-iliOI -by ~~.delecalioaln PutL laued a lpOCjal· ll8temenl IOdl:Y 11y!Dg the' ArilerlcaD atlacki have ravag· ed areas o! HIDOi and Haiphong with the force ol an earthqliake, kl ll l·ng "thousands" of people. 0 I 0 •• 11 said North V"ielnlmese .,moers shot down 71 U,S. airctalt, lnchiding 31 B52s, br~ c11111- , 'The u:s. 'Command ana·tJlo, r.nwinn ,f/!'VO DO ..p,n, ol 11!1 dlmqe lo elvilian ·-lilcl -tblt tile ~&'Op­;.ci lbolr 'baonlio aoly oii mlll!a!Y targets. 'l'llp GOIT -o1 what aclUny wu 'Thcl!! ·lbe 'lliiVett ~ 1111u1t of ~came ,from Connnunllt 11tws sgenctes lll!d oealral diplomats iii Hanoi. 'lbe Hungarian news agency MTI , rejJortad today that a bl-g B52 sbot . down over 'Hanoi Wednesday crashed , near the presidential palace and that se\'eral crewmen died in the Dames. It said the wreckage demolished a few buildingi but no Vietnamese were kill~./ Preaident }iguyen Van·Thieu met Jor an hour and 45 minutes !Oday with U,S. Ambassador Elllworth Bunker and Gen. Frederick C. , Weyand, the American commander in Vietnam, presumably to discWls the ,u.s. bombing operations agairult North Vietnam. Tin Song, I~ daily newspaper closest to Thieu, s~~ that Thieu , Bunker and Weyand met• ·amid rumors that the U.S. ur1e •• ., . . .' , • • ' r _, ·' ·~. . . • "''"',,_... PEOPU WAIT IN,l~'Y'MiQRNINO' LIN,E TO·VIEW'HARRY'TRUMAN'S CASKET "fht Foo !Mr Pt 41~ant· Later Wo,s , Buriocl-ln Truman, Llbrory eo...tyaril H nrl.: . ' D ''''• . . • p · •1' ,, . n8;n~s ;1 : • .FJ!IV-ac:y : in: :er1 ... . . \ , U.S. io~p, Etnbassy :Sa ys His Passpo;t Expired • I i.oNDON (AP) ~.Tbe U,S. Embassy· today threatened ·the )lrivaoy of bennlt btllloaalno llllworil R. l!ughes, holed up on the top floor of a-1~ London hotel. • An embassy spqkesman said the 67· year-old American tycoon's passport ex- pired IDllle,time ''° and,be·must report within '8 hours k the embassy consular office to apply for a new ooe. "As far as we're coocemed," said the spokesman, "be will have to call pel'IOllally, ftll In tile u.sual application form and pay a $12 fee. That's what every American traveling without a pusport bu to do, and tt will be tile same for Mr. Hughes."· If the embassy enforces that regula- Ucin, It 'will be the fin! time In memory . that tlle .U.S, pemmeni bas ·lreated Hughes u an ardlnary citizen. He hM· boen . ll'!lntl. ldr months 1n Managua, 'the caplbll of Nicaragua, ap- wenUy without-any question ~ rai .. eCl ,abOut hla P8UPc>rt. He flew.hi and out of the UnlteG States alter the j!ii>thquake last weekend ~ve him from Managua, and apparently no objection was made to his oot having a pasaport, And the em- bassy 800ilrt to ex]!edite bis admission to Brlblln by 1em.,, tbe Home Olllce that be WU OOming witbOut & Valid ~, l!riU•h lmmigritlon rules' allow the afl. mlaston of f.,.lgnen Without PlllJ>Orll IO long U they carry documents estal>ltlhiDg htr ldeottty and Dltioaallty. Sourees·ctooe to Hughes laid be planned to ala)' in Britain !or ltx -.~y . ' longer. A Home Office spokesman said be could remain "as long as it suits him." Some sources predicted that Laborite foes Of the Conservative government's tough new anticolored immigration laws would accuse it of giving preferential treatment to Hughes because of his weelth. Hughes and bis entourage landed at Gatwick Airport 30 miles south of London sbortly after midnight Wednesday, They were held up for at least half an boour while ollJciah checked the mysteriou• bllliooaire's Identity. After considerable telephoning, be was allowed to enter the COUDlry. Newport-Balboa Phone Link Cut, Service Out ' Four curtained Rolll Royces brought !be party to tbe nlDMtory Inn at the Park. overlooking Hyde Part, and Hughes moved Into tile w"t wing OD tile top Door, at IS,500 a day, The wing was sealed off, and an (See HUG~ Page 11 Drugging Case Suspect Nabbed In Altadena A construction worker drilled through a telephone tnmlt line about B a,m, today and severed m o s t communiCIUons bet,.... the Newport Beach-Balboa orea and outside communities. Telephone MrVice to Laguna Beach, Hfllllinlton Beach and Costa llaa WU -. A Padllc Telephone o!flclal said It -be al -1.p.m.. bel<n·~ WU rtitarfld. .. _ .. sernd by the Balboo ~ ~~shut off-the ...... wwld." said lllllllm J!olU, ~ .... -I ~· !or the Ml?i' -aepeAJ. 11 t wu1 u. •N.Ucll cord, tb6 min Ile to Ille Balboo ofDce.. People CMI maka -...._._ calls, but It'• clofloilO touch. •• -~ N...,... llloeb pGlke ..t·llre dofor\· mllll w tis• wve ..,. ... 1' .IOIDt .............. ~ dr1 ti•"! -~-" whether or not it was receiving all in- coming calls. ,Police said It was very difficult for them to make outgoing calil. The Balboo olllce ' cable that WU A IUlpeCt ID tile LaguDI Beach drug- -......,. 1116 entire panlaoula, ging and robbery of 1 S..11 ADI man Ba\boO -. Lido Ille, parts o! °"""" wu In pollce Clllil>dy today alter being def Mar, .. ather ltclloDs ol Newport picked op 'ft'edntsday by Call!ornla -. wwwdllc lo llolts. HJgh p~ -In Al!adena A --.. ,~ usillg a -"'1 ·~ -~ , -lo mMo aou lelll OD the -LquDI Bead! poUct ldentllled the lkla <f 11io -Brt4&• ._ Ille man u J-C. KIDdtll, II, ol Key Padflo·Coool lllPwlY cul t1nuCb Iba Woot~. and bold blm tn LquDI Beach • -a.ii .. ll!lo Ibo trunlt line, accordil1ll CJI>\ lodoy • No boll Jaos been IOI. He lo hllli IN eompany spokeaman Ar\ WU ed 00 upldon ol robbery and Lea'f\11: I srand llwft auto. lie 11111 tile It-loot deep bole had lllled Klndell wa _.....,. by the CllP --1114 that WU ...,.ing•proJ>.• Ii -4:MI 1.m. _....,. on • _.In ~tile line. sur'-.., an• ip'wm otdrlvloc 111>- 0oa!i>oni olllCJala said Ihm -m der 1116 -of M l1AHidconl, lllt-R. ~ lo -.. the --of w. au-. Loo""""" County -· --dclad. Tbey ui>l~ lhlt o!elllll' • • -· t ... :&ri ... lt!!'l<olwlna;CiitU'-Ltpo .. ~.~~t<Wwu ~'!'f;*"-:;.'!9 ~~ i,;.. ~~,-the • "' ,, I' will stop bombing areas above the 20th Parallel in the next few days in order to resume the t.alks in Paria." The newspaper quoted a "rtliable source." Beca~f Comm1mist pnMltl *It the full. e bomblaa of __ and an rican ""I-!or • boliday break, the four parties at the Parisi peace talks schedµled oo meeting today. !t wa• the first miSI' In tile bllb ID two months. · 1be meeting is usually held every Thursday and so far there. have •n 171 sessions since the talks began in 1989. • a1n Ex-leader's Requests Followed • INDEPENDENCE, Mo, (UPI) America said goodbye today to Harry S Truman, a commoo tnan ol !be people and their 33rd President. Tbe funeral wu simple and dignllied, fittllig for a gentleman who called ~ a "meat and potatoesu man • The uMan of Independence" was IJuri!!d ,In the ground be loved - ln the courtyard by the ,_ gmlen; ol 1116 Truman Library In his hometown, Bess Truman, bll aging widow and belp!Jlaie lrir 'mort than baU a cenilry, WU there, muotering all tile strength lhe could, to bid a llaal fareweli, Sbe will be 88 Feb. I3. Trwnan died Tuesday in bls last battle -22 daya ol fighting age and dl!ease in Researeb Hospital in Kansas City, Ht !ell 467 days short of bll dream -ll'(ing to age 90. · There were !Oldien, statesmen, lamily and friends at the private rites to booor the touib little man who made 101Dt of mankind's most awelOIDe deciak:m. Tbe dougbboyo who .served under "Captain Harry" durlng World War I in Battery D stood with tile atlHest mllltary posture' that age would' allow. TNman beli-!fiat man provided his o clignlty, and, beeauoe ol Iha~ hll !uae w11 embelliahed aoly wtth quiet m' 1 fiourl!hes, tapo from • lone bugler a 21-gun salute. There were oo eulogi • Tbe"' was only prayer. "MOO rcifu1 Father, who bas been pleased take unto lbysel! the soul of Thy serv I, Harry, grant to"' who .. still in pilgrimage, and who wallt as yet by faith, that having served Thee with coristaney on earth, we may be join- ed hereafter with 11ly blessed saints ln glory everlasting," said the Rev. J'otm E. Lembcke, Jr,, putor ol theladependeace Trinity Episcopal Owrcb, , Before the funeral and b u r I a I , thousands of mourners -rich and poor, famous and unknown, wotkers wurin& overalls and aprons and men and WCllDllJ. carrying babies -filed slowly llDd silently by bll mabopay calket. The plain people ...... the ..,.. 'l'hlmln loved. He was barn • yean qo and raised In the !arm besrtland ol Amorlca. His mother uaed to bout: "HlnJ' can (See TRUMAN, Pap I) Orange ........... 1111 be suney an Flidoy, but the temperature wW be a mu. DIPDY, due to tho Pac:tflt -GOid front moving Into lbe ..... lllPo .,.,.,.,~-.. ... low1 In the 4tla. INSIDE 'n»9-'Y The Agric111111rc llfporlolml ll<lf .......,,..d llM ""111oa""" of • "'°"" -1or rmnod ... llM grff,I '°""'" -· Hpt dot lok~ big -.....,.,.,. ,,.,_ " Ille olJj<d of llM COllTI order, SH 'loTJI Oii l'ooc s. J...... • -~ ,. ~ , ..... n." ...... "U =-='·-i oua• "_...:if ....... ',.... ..... .,... ................. . -... !:!. ,.,... __. • -.. __ .... '..... v .,..._ ... I Federal Report County Murder Rate Tops U.S.'s Murder filing> In Orange County during 1972 ran at more thin double the allega· lions recorded during 1971 but they are not indicat ive of the national trend, U.S. Atty. Gen. Rk:hard Kleindlenst's latest analysi s reveals. Continuation School Has 24 Student,s Continuation School - a place ror youn gsters who might otherwise be high school dropouts - is featured th.is month in the monthly report of the Laguna Beach Board of Education. This year, 24 students attend the con- tinuation classes in a two--roonl tern· porary classroom complex .at the north campus of the high school. The students are there for truancy, smoking and other behavior violatioll!. Some just can't hack the regu1ar high school program. Others fell too far behind in the regular studies. Coo- OnuaUon School Is a place where they can work at their own pace. The ground rules at the school, says direc tor Jerry Fair, are simple. "We de- mand that students treat everyone with courtesy, attend classes every day, be prompt and busily engaged in studies and projects.'' Fair handles most of the coonseJing and teaches English and science. Brian Yeadle teaches social studies. Arts and crafts instruction ls taught by Holly Golfos. Tbe primary goal of the school, says Fiar, is to give each student individual attention, motivate him and try to work out the problems which brought them to ContinuatiOn School. The State Education Code requires that all unified school districts establish a continuation school. Laguna 's program is in its fourth year. The law limits the age of students to those 16 and older. Laguna offer& "op- portunity classes" for younger students, on much the same basis u Continuation Sd>oo1. Fair's aUtude toward the school ..necu how hla students feel. They have grut pride In the &Choo!, he notes, and there ha!: been an excellent raPP."rt between the l1udenla and teaCherl. Shawn M. Bridges Dies of Illness; Services Friday Memorial funeral servlcts are set Fri- day for Mrs. Shawn M. Bridges, 26, member of a Southern California news media family, who died Wednesday following a brief illness. Rites will be at 2 p.m. in st. Peter's Lutheran Cburcb, 15th and Parton streets, Santa Ana. A Mission Viejo resident, Mrs. Brklges succumbed Wednesday afternoon in Mission Community Hospital, apparenUy due to complications from a blood disease. Survivors Include her father, Herold Andenen, DAILY PILOT composing room superintendent and her mother, Evelyn Andersen, also of the composing room staff, who live ln Santa Ana. She leaves also a brother, Don, USC sports information direct.or; her husband John A. Bridges and two rnall children. Funeral arrangement.a are being handl- ed by Brown Colonial Mortuary, Santa Ana, where officials said today the full lilt of Mn. Bridges' survivors had not yet been !»Mpieted. OIAHI COAST &.I DAILY PILOT • Serious ' crime, his January-September survey indicates, increased by 1 percent in the first nine months of 1972 -the smallest such gain since the office first released statis tics in 1960. The 1971 tally in serious crime was six percent above the total record for the previous year. the report states. KJeindienst's report slate!I that 8.1 ma- jor American cities actually recorded decreases in serious crime during the first nine mon ths of 1972. J\1urder and rape were the two serk>U! crimes that ran above the one percent in- crease level, the report states, with only four Southern California cities -amqng them Huntington Beach -recording a decrease in killings . Santa Ana and Garden Grove were among Southland communities showing increases in murders. And Santa Ana, the report states, was the only surveyed community to record a decrease in · rapes. Classified as serious crime are: murder, non-negligent manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery. a g g r av a te d assault, burglary, breaking and entering. larceny of $50 or over and auto theft. Trends revealed by the Kl eindienst survey included: -Violent crime increased 3 percent during the first nine months of 19?2, com- pared with a 10 percent increase for the same period in 1971. -Property crime3 showed no increase. They were up 6 percent in 1971. -Citie with 100,000 or more inhabitants reported a 3 percent decrease in serious crime with crime in suburban areas climbing by 4 percent. Suburban area crime was up by 11 percent in 1m. -Crime in rural areas increased by 6 percent during the first nine months o! im. Schmitz Program To Be Re-aired On Channel 50 Collgr<s."1lan John Schmitz will discuss his plans for the lmmedlate future In a taped lsiteniew ID be re-aired tonlpt at 8 o'cloct cm KOCE-TV, Channel 50. Schmitz ·was defeated In his primary bid for renomination as the Republican candldate In the Alb Dlslrict by Orange Colp!ty Asaeaaar Andrew J. Hinshaw. He waa later defeated as the pr~ candldate ol the American IDdepen~t Party. Three Orange County newsmen will in- terview the Jame duct congressman on "Focus Orange County" hosted by Jim Cooper. They are Jim Dean, executive editor of tbe Register, Thomas Keevil , editor of the DAILY PILOT and Howard Seelye, political writer for the Los Angeles Times. The program was also shown Dec. 18 and 21. Pair Captured M ter Escaping Sheriff's Van Two men who kicked out the rear door of the sheriff's jail van Wednesday in Santa Ana were overpowered and recap- tured after a brief struggle with pursuing deputies. Orange County sheriff's officers iden- tified the pair as William Joseph Cormier, 20, Room 302 Hacienda Hotel , Laguna Beach and Jerome Vernon Brooks, 21 , Paulsbo, Wash. . Officers said both men will be charged wtth felony escape pending approval by lbe district attorney's office of the new allegations. Jail deputies said Conn ier and Brooka were en route to the county courthouse from the jail when they made the~ escape bid. Se rvice Curbed For Bookmobile Bookmobile service originally set for Tuesday while the Laguna Beach county branch library moves lnto new quarte.n, bas been cancelled due to street repair near the library building. Library patrons may check out book s at Dana Point and Mission Viel<> brMdl libraries while the Laguna branch Is moving, Cliff Cave, librarian, aald. The new library wUl open January 12. ........ P .. el HUGHES ... Intercom aystem "'' Instilled at the main door. Police with walkJe-\alkles patrolled the streets below. and (Uarda manntd all doors to the wing. Even the flrMSCape doon wtrt sealed to keep out the l)hllan:1 of ne~n and photographers who crowded the !Obby. A cletnb)g woman vacuuming the cor· ridor was escor\ed everywhere by two (Uards. An E!tgllah voice challenged all Vt.Hort over the lntertom and said : "f'm from RothlcbDdl. Go away," ' --r-• ~ _ • DAILY PILOT ..... ,..... -- .......... ,,1 TRUMAN ••• • a • , plow tbe straJ&hleat !arrow of com In Mlssourf." He became the people.11 aervant, 1s U-8. aeaator, vlee .. eoidml ond thcit eblef -· HJa otnlabl -talk mid !Inn -Ill the Wblte 1-led If. Lbenlckhame, "Give 'Em Hell Harry." • But of that, the lltU. man In the wlro-' rimmed spectacles Mid: "I never gave anybody bell. I just 1ave •em the iiiM and they thoucht lt was hell." · In deltrenee to the tuoerel and a eta, of mourning proclaimed by Pmident Nixon, there WIS 00 mall delivtry and the New York and American atock u -chan&ea ,..,. doled. A memorial .. rvtce Is planned Jan. 5 In WUllJngton's Natlooal C.iliednl u a final gtsllllO lo the lOUi~ little Mls9ourian, and the 30-day mourning period declared by NW.. ends Jan. :M. President Nixon and former President John>on paid the IT Jut .reapects Wedad· day while the hody 1Jiy In stale In a closed co!fin. NllCIJ laid 1 wreath o! carnations at the ~t. TnJman WI" bUrlocl 111 hit t0>0rite dark bloe pJn.sttfPed .aQlt. ~ lie ·...,.. the lamed wire--P,. , j.t . !ht funeral, his Cllket w~ ~-w.llb red camatioos, hla f1~l_IO Oower. WAS IT ARSON? PART OF SAN CLEMENTE'S PRS,SIDENTIA HEIGHTS RAZEO BY FIRE Firemen Were Hampered by low W•ter Pr't llUf"l Ind Miid S•nt1 An1 Wind During Bl•z• At the burial tlie Amerlciii M a19C! '!'IS drapj;d 00 the ,~rill, prectjely and Lt. Gen. ·.:tr, ' .!'\ Cassidy, the -COD!l"I , ove It to Mrs. 'l'nlmaa 'wttll.-·...infs:"' "Tbls flag is presented to you on behalf of a grateful nation as a token of ap- preciation for the honorable and faithful service rendered by your loved ooe." Jan. 8 Scheduled -' F or Registration I n Laguna Class Registratioo for winter recreation pro- grams of the city of Laguna Beach will begin Jan. 8 at the department offictf, 175 N. Coast Higbway. Class schedules and details are available from the Recreation Depart- ment. A winter recreation program will be available at the department frlday. Winter sports activities include three men 's basketball leagues, two boys' leagues and three girls' leagues. Play begin! in January. High school gyms wlll be open from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays for basketball. Volleyball activities will be held at the Laguna Beach Higb School gyms, I ID 9:30 p.m. Monda)'3 for men; from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Tuesdays Jar W<ID<ll and fl'om 6:30 to10 p.m. Tbunda)'s!orcoed teuns. Recreation department club actlvlUes will Include spoosoralUp aQC1 c o - spoolOl'Sbip of , ~ . with 1 t If e Lagunaties (Senlo< Citilen's Club), the Laguna Beach GoU As3oclatioo, the Laguna ulle•cli Folkdan<rn, Girls' !lh!j of Laguna lleach, • ti/iuna~"Be.c1t' Lawn Bowlers' Club, Laguna Beach Shu!llel>oard Club and the Laguna Beach Tennis Association. Cul iural classes will lncldile Mllcnune taught by Mary Worniald; Crewel Embroidery by Conni• Rosi; 'Jazz Dance and Adult ean.t by Jlli S...et; Beginning and lntennediate Children's Ballet, Children's Creative Dance, Women's Dance and Exercise by Margaret CObbS; Crocheting by Mignon Cottington; Food Garnishing by Bruce Baird; Knit Sewing by Julia Settle; Guitar by Tricia Oark; All·Media Painting by Nellie Allan; o.:.an Navigation by Ken Hanf; Tennis by Alex Ott; Snow Skilllg and Girls' Gym- nastics bf Mary Carey. ROP Invites Valley District Into Program The Cap~ll'ano-Laguna Regional Oc· cupational Program (ROP) board o'f trustees bu agreed to j.nvite lhe new Saddleback Valley School District to jnln ils vocational education organization. Saddleback is one of three new unified districta fonned last June from partloos or the outgoing San Joaqllin and Tustin Union Hlgb School Districts. It will take over operation of acboola in Mias.ion Viejo, Et Toro, Laguna Hllll and Trabuco July 1, 1973. That area, through the Tustin Union District, baa been 1f- !Ulated with the CoaaWne ROI', which also series Santa Aila~ Tustin, Ind the ' Newpod-kesa ·area. Coastline ROP bas Its olllce to Costs" Mesa. Jerry COpeland, coordinator of the' CapiJtranO-Laguna ROP aaid its of~1 ' In Gapistrano-Beach, Would be closer to Saddleback Unified. Saddleback District board cb.atnnan Chester Briner said recenUy that the new • trustees must decide before July 1 if they want to keep the Coastline affiliation, or join Capistrano ROP or some other voca· 1iona1 ebucaUon plan. Copeland said a copy or the 11171-72 yeaNnd ..,,...i, preliminary 11112-73 budget and a schedule of classes from the Capo.Laguna ROP bave been Rnt to Sad- dleback trustees for litudy. The Capistrano ROP wltlcb bas tripled In stz.e Jn the past year, olln rourses not found in other ROP arua and has the smallest cost per student of any ROP ln the state, Copeland sakl. -l Saddleback trustees have shown an ln- lerest ln expanding vocational claues at Misslon Vle}o Hig:' School after tbe take- over July t. They also ~Uy approved plans for a new high IChool in El Toro wh!ch Includes a sep8rlte vocational "World of Work" builill.na'. . Red Satellite Up M05COW (AP) -The Soviet Union launched on Wtdneaday another CoBmotl 111ellite. the Mist In the ·-sen ... • • Clement£ D~elo.p.ment Burns; Arson Suspected By JORN VALTERZA Of ............... A roaring fire believed ID be set by arsonists swept through six partially- completed residences in the PreaidentiaJ Heights development in Sao Clemente Wednesday evening, causing damages which could go as hjgb as $250,000. The fast-moving fire which some witnesses said was preceded by a muf- ned explosion reddened the skies in the · southerly portion of the city and drew crowds o! sightaeen who clogged the winding streets leading to the tract. A mild Santa Ana wind coadition and heavy strains oa a -fire bydrint ham- pered volun-!ir.ligbten as they ha~ Ued to keep the n>ering blaze from spreadln& to other -.... nearby. Firemen, In effect, bad to ration the ·-· dittctlna II at nrious lim<s to the w ltr1l!etll<!lllJ ~ ol.Jhe.Ylrilm i.-•ttaclie!l t0 the lincle bydnnl At one paint the water gave out altogether for a few mln'*" but by that -·tho fire was nearly cmtalned. The fire waa the aecood serious Jn. cldent to take place In the large projed tbts l!Oelc. Earlttt In the week Developer Jolla Uouglass Jr. reported the theft ol '1.500 In pll'WOOd from the coostruction site. A> be watclled the firemen exthiguish the blaze Wednesday Douglass angrily in- sisted that there wu 0 no possible way" that so large a blaze could have been touched off by accident. The burned units were in the framinJc stages and no electricity was on at the time. · Ironically, Wednesday was the first night that a full·time security guard was on duty at the constructioo site. The alann was phoned. In by severa1 persons shortly before 7 p.m. and volunteers were dispatched Immediately. Their first efforts to reach the blaze, however, were stalled because of a lock• ed gate oo a back road. Security penonnel finally opened the gate. "It was a fire storm by the time we couJd get to it," said Fireman James Dahl, Blier the blaze subsided. "Some o[ us started. hlttjnc the !hake roofs o! these 11e1ri>y alNctures to keep the fire from spreading," be added. 1'w:r suoooeded, but the ..,. duster of houses WIS turned to ubea. Residents In nearby J!<)g)i- watcbed In alann ... the pink g)ow,bqan to rise in the sky. AmOug them was san Clemente ?tlB.yor Arthur Holmes. He and Police Patrol U. Raymond Hartman jumped in a car and sped to the fire scene. .JJ.J. <Ja,,..u JANUARY ~~1:' CAUGHT.~-: •• I I victim of the clrualDi early lledneaday; morning. ' Peter Halg)i, :II, ol Santa Am -• found lying aemk:olllclous on the floor ol a Clift Hotel room by the ........ HaJ&h waa niliMd to the 1n-.. care 111111 at South Cout .~llf lbpltal. He told olllcen be bad -al I Lquaa bar and wu approoched by two mm and irlvlted to a "puty" at tbe hotel room. - Wlien be entered the room, Ilal&b told Police, be was given 1 large drtnk1 and alter that hla memory la blank. His CIT Wll found to ba mlainlt and police listed the Incident u robbery. Laguna Dancers Resume Schedule ~ile~~=r:.= will ,_ at V:lfl>jl.m. W...., at tbe Lqlma Bead> lllib Sdlool ' Girt'~ Gym ~• --holld4ir lnlt-'11ie -·a "llflar Wednelda, pro-ll'IQI' tntllll dancing and Intermediate inllr1lctloa by memben. G-vlatts are !ree and ngulaT atieadlnce la 15 cents a sealoo. Followtng Swidaya at 7:30 p.m. Ibo, Fo!kdancors offer beglnnen lnatructlon Bl the Girl's Gym. A SQ.cent donaUoa Is requested. Instructor ii C&rol Brand. ........ Tod_,I Substantial Savings .Throughout the Store llRlllL SOl'A 1.,. 17'.00 llux& LOVUIAT 1.,. 375.00 489 319 15 to 25% SAVINGS on Several Bedroom, Dining Room and Occasional Collections by ... DREXEL..,., HERITAGE H.J.GARRETf fURNtpJRE PROFlSS IONAl INTEAIOR DESl&NHS ' Opell Mon .. nun .• Fri. .ev .... 221 g HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA. CALIF. • • • • " • • .. .. .. 7 ' . -. EDITION • D ally Paper ' ·VOC. 65, NO. 363, 3 SECTl~S, 14 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1972 TEN CENTS "--· ....;.. -. ~. CO_ijlpiit~r May Play Key Role in Irvine Plan • 0 The value pf the computer," he ex- plalns, "Is that afttt It bu made Ill lliilys.la, citlJens will have a very clear -of just what -... lnwlved .ia ~g one alternative over m- other." ''Trlie .a.a" ii Indeed a key word in thewbolOprooea. .. ·~ ... ""'""~. and dlsad-...._ jn 1111 lltemative," HplllDI llllo Jlel8od, a ftlftiOl!laUve for die Olll-.C firm ·of Wllsef-..d Ham 1l!of will be drafltag tbe city's genel'lll plan. 0 After 'computer analysis, they·!hould stand out clearly," Beland said. For example, In deciding tbe route for a particular road, the computer will be able In print out quickly the cosls ·and the tralllc elfec!lveness ,"fit • building on 1everal altemaliVe routeJ. Thul, JI the city must decide wbetber to ~ a marsh, oo the· one balld, or pay lo·rerou&e the road, on the other, it will have in band fairly accurate figures 0111wbat the increased·®Sts will be. . "The computer is not a magical answer-machine," Beland c a u t lo n s • "Subjective deelsions, Involving values a cor;nputer cannot q\WIUfY, will still have to be made. But the decisions can be made on the basis of a sound an- derstanding of the alternatives." For much ol the general ~. the com- puter will be analyilng problems more complex than road pla<ement. Each parcel of land in the city will be rated for soil st•bility, avllilflbility of water, power, and sewage, nearness to freeways or major highways, and ter· rain. Likewise, any a d v e r s e en· vironmental impacts that would result from construction will be charted for each piece of Jand. On the basis, all land will be given a numerical ratJng on its suitability for high density, commercial, or aingle fami- ly home development. This information could be used In the loilowlng way: Suppose, for example, there were only limited· acreage in lhe city suitable for commerciaJ development. and part of it fell Jn an are.a planned for open space greenbelt. portant, planners would have at their fingertips exact figures on where the greenbelt could be reloe?ated if com- mercial use were favored, or where the commercial development could be ZOlled JI they stuck to the greenbelt "These are decisions to be made by policy-makers, such u dti.Jen advisory groups, and not just by technicians,'' aald Mayor Fischbach. Although memberahlp oo the dtlsen advisory groups has not yet been set, Fischbach seid be hopes general plan decisions can be made at meetings similar to "public rap sessions." · Tr·uman Buried Funeral Simple-As He Reque_sted INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (UPI) - America aaid goodbye today to Hany S Truman, a CGmmOO ·man of the people aed tbeir 33rd• President. IJlle. funerll was simple and dignilied, fitting fpr a· gentleman who called himself 1 "meat ·and potatoes" man. • The ".Man· of Independence" was buried In the 'growxl be loved -In the -!)Old by u.. .... garden of tbe -Lllnry In bis hometown. Be9s TMaan, bis aging widow and * * * he!J:or:'late for more than half a century, was there, mustering all the strength she could, to bid a final farewell She will be 88 Feb. ,13. Truman died Tuesday In his last battle -22 days of fighting age and disease in Research Hospital in Kal18&S City. He fell 461 days short of bis dream -liviljg to age 90. (Related pictures, Page 5). There were aoldien, statesmen, family and friends at the private rit~ to honor the tough litUe 'man who made some of mankind's most awesome decisions. Tbe doughboys who served under "Captain Harry" during World War I In Battery D stood with the stiffest military posture t.bfit age would allow. Truman believed that man provided his own dignity, and, because of that, his funeral was embellished only with quiet military flourishes, taps fn:m a lone bugler and a 2l·gun salute. There were (See TRUMAN, Page !) Bess ·Saved· Irvine's l ·st Year Gets . ' . . ' . ~f· ·. ·: i'31'f:~h · .. ~ Salute by Daily Pilot F oi •C:o. r.v;;;.o.·fl •. ~. . Q .l'I':' ~ One,... aao .lodll' ...... c1ay t11at rolling rsnchlands and acallered liou.ing -ID die -. aect<r of the Orange Coast ollicialJ,y went 'into~ as the city of Irvine. . --• t ~ ' . ·: ,' ' tt• r+ •. 'fowlnave 0 learnod to ap~irte;~ctators who 'st<ip to, Re-them. 'Bley hustler •lapidlf tow&rd visitors, seeiing fQ.O<I. ; ljU!~i;;NDENCE, Mo. (UP!} -Har- ry s TrjlmllL l!nMillit bis btide ,home to the house !Iii J;>ehtware· Streei more than hall a century aao., W!$eSday, Bess 'l'ruman lifted'a _. ln an upstairs wln-':k>w and ' wa\cbed ~r ·cb.itdhood swee~rt""' by for tbe last,Ume. In a .,.d a[\d slqw ~ a gleam- ing ·black ~ corrted the body of the 113-ye&N!ld loi'Jl1er )'/"lsldent ~t the I .. rorm house. Tbe cortege .of mourners w~ aloog • 15-block route Truman often walked when he was able. Mrs. Truman, 87, did not attend the lyin~·in-state certmonles ·that_ began wheil the bearae, '°'ched the Harry S Tluman Library a mile away. Randall LONDON (AP) Tiie u;s. .,.,1--.<>llice ,to~ lor,al!'w,~· . • Souttes close to Hugbes said he ~lanned Jessee, a family friend, saldjihe,planned ~,~_, the, pml<)' of .. • Ail, !Or:ia wo"" ...,..moci:• ,said the to lta1, In Br1¥1 lor ob:'-· pllllibly to save ber strencth for today's lunerll. blllo&ilre: Howard R. u.......... holed'-.. Jo'nger: 1. Home Office spokesman~ said Mrs. Truman saw her husband of 53 the top floor cl a~ ~ spokesman, "he .will hove to call be could remain "as long as· it ~ts years for the last time Tuesday. Leaning :L.,, ,. , . ~. flll. In the WlDll applicatioo bim." on the arm of ber dl1/ibter, Margaret ;;:;;: _..__ -~ aid Jbe. 1'1: .fllml add )la.Y a $12 !.-.. That's what Some soureex ·pri!dicted that I;ahorite Daniel, she walked bilo the room ·at the ..-.......:'Ai;ri~ tjcOOo•s PiKPort ex· \ every American' travelmg ~tbout a foes of the Coqservative government's George C. Caraon Funeral Home to be pjj;iiOme Ume ago and be IDUlt rePorl ·1 -poi:! bu to t,~!"1 it will be the. louih new anlicolnred in!JD!gration laws witb Truman belore his eaaket was seal· thin 41··bqun: tr !be embuly lcdbslilar T :-:~U:, enforces that regliJa-would accuse it ,. o(. giVirlg preferential edSbe last saw Truman alive at the end "f.. ;t I ' uon,.,.it ,will tie the first time in memory treatment to Hughe! because of bis of a 12-hour vigil Christmas Day, a short '~' J elis Ir _1..i . · I that.~,IP.S.,.1<¥ernment has tr~ted wslth. time belore bis death In Research 1 8r-8 . llelll • . · Huglies•as an ordinary "citizen. Jfughes and bis entourage landed at Hospital • , , • lie bu · been u.q for moo tbs In Gatwick Airport 30 miles oouth of Loi>don At the library Wedneaday, Mrs. Daniel .B , • 'Managua, !be Glqlltal, ol Nicaragtiil, ap. lbortJy alter midnight Wednelday. Tbey walked at the bead of the mourners as Y T.ttrol'lSls ~Y -1111 quettioa,belnl raiJ. were held up !9r at least ball.an hoOur they filed In to view Truman's camt ' • ~ ed ·-bill -1. Ho flew In and out wblle officials cheeked ·the myst«lows lying on black velvet draped over a "' .... • • ... .. cl. tbe United States after tbe earthquake · billionaire's identity. After c:oruider•ble catafalque set up in the library'• lobby. ..lt Thai Facility · -~~.~~in:..~ telephoaing, he was allowed to entef the Behind her walked her husband, CIJI. -_._..,... Y -r---country. ~ ton,•wbo held the bands of Truman's two ' fl . . 1 bit -not baViog ~ And ille em-Four curtained Rolls Royces brought youngest grandsooa, Thomas Washlnkton . ANG KOK (UPI) -F\11"".'PaJM!lbfln . baay aoughh,to Ida adnilsll<>!! IO t~.e party lo the nine-s\ory Inn aL the Daniel, 6, and Harrilon Gates Daniel, 10. 11 seiled the Israeli •t.'111' lo-BrllalO by tell,iai .. -Office-that 'Park, overlooking Hyde Park, 'nd Tbe two older boys, Clifton Truman City-did not come eas1ly for Irvine, There were notable battles belore Orange County 's Local' Agency Formation Ccnunlsaion and the Board of Super- vlaors. There was oppooltlon from the city of Santo Ana. The citizen groups of Irvine and the citizen leAdersbip, however, prevailed. Today, the DAILY Pllm publishes a -ial section of stories aed photographs commemorating Irvine's first yeer as Orange County's newe9I city. Fer a loot at Irvine cityhood, see specill aectJon pages 20 A, B, C aed D. • Saigon Hints at Pause In Bombing of Vietnam SAIUON (UPI) -Swedisb diplomatic repOrts said American 8521 and fighter· bombers hit Hanoi at noon today in the heaviest daylight bombardment of the war. 'Ibe Soviet news agency Tass reported _µiat par"LI of the North Vietnamese capital had been "erased from the face of the earth." There were hints In the government· controlled press In Saigon that the North Vielnamese might ba .. had enough-aed that the rllda might be baited above the 20th parallel in the next few days in order to resume the peace talks In Paris. But the Comnun~ist Vietnamese in Paris were still i.ssulng de f l a n t statement& Air Foree plane, presumably a MIG, shot down a B52 some 70 miles southwest of Hanoi Wednesday. A Hungarian roport said three B52s were shot down by fighter-planes. The North Vietnamese delegaUon in Paris issued a special statement todly saying the American attacks have nvag-- ed areas ol llanoi and llal~ wilh the force of an earthquake, t 1111 n g "tboll!ands" of people, It said North Vietnamese gunners shot down 71 U.S. aircraft, Including 31.1112s, . in nine days. . The U.S. Command and the Pen'- gave no reports of any damage to civilian. areas and Insisted that the planes drop- ped their bombl only on mllltory tarpta. and thiealeDe<t to.lilfW.11 a.lbw he .-~ Without a •llld pa'8pOrl. Hughes moved Into .the west wing on tbe Daniel, 15, and William Wallaee Daniel, -ob: holtages unJes .... ni.-a " ·llfitlsb lnimlgratlon rulea ~ow tbe ad-top !locir, at $2,500 a day. ' 13, walked behind. ~lniM ~ • mlssloo of foreigners witboUt ·~ The wing was sealed of!, and an Mrs. Daniel, her face drawn with sor- Tbe U.S Ccmmand reported growing American loues of planes and men In the massive aerial assault but bad no word on today 'i bombing acUvlties. U.S. nJlitary sources said strikea qllmt the Haool·llal~ lndustrtal helrt1and con- tinued today I D d Ccmmunlat reports aaid there were three llano! rllds loday. Tbe only reporU of Whit ldullly WU happening In the greatell -'"I -or the war came from COmm1mlst DIWI ;, ~~~;..~~;;:,: .. ~~.;;t:.~a..J~.=~~ "'~~~.::.n::i at the =p~.~~.b':l':edbal:~l~'\,":,ck! . ... ,, II ade£ M..-i nffee a I • -" ' • ' library and to the catafalque showing Ut-.. tbe~-~:i: s :.....J..Jleb k A 'A k d u's::=~~~ri:~ COllduc\ .iDd .• JIOl!<ol. (l,U,U, ac r ea s e and !he trip baclc lo !he fBmlly 'home. ~~! t=rt.~ ~: . , · · Onee inside, she dabbed 90fUy at her WllC .,.., -eyes with a handkerchief she took from , •""MY bulldlDa 'mors tbaa .10 houri the pocket of her high-necked black coat. """'a threlt'ol-4eath.. ·, ' rJ1. J · • ROP p • Later, Mrs. Daniel and her husband '' lJ8wee made "°' mentli>n ~~1~ :l 0 oin rogram greeted former President [;yndoit B. ·-lilot.,.Swbill lleAfaerwed WUh ...;,....,., . '. Johnson and bis family at the home the -bas11•IM Mustiffa El T1"1 from tbe · , way Truman and Bess used to greet llll>UIY. afttt a flce'fo.f .... 8*llnl , · I 'ends Tbe oommand nported tbo loa of two more B52s and the shootin& down of a Jolly Green Giant rescue bellcopter over North Vielnsm, bringing to 14 the number of the $8-mUUon ltr1tegic bombers lost in the air war that begin De<. 18. Hanci Radio aaid 1 North Vietnamese -th< guerrtllaa but the Q-Olllcial . Tbe, C.J>!ltrano-1-Regiooal Oc· Chester Briner said reeenily that the kw n Tbey. walked to the !root gaU. aed lild tba boatagea -ictbe . . cupa-......... (ROP) board of trusteea must decida befoce July I JI they greeted the Johnsons. Mrs. Jobnoon hug· 5 w omen Na med ·l>awee, • ranldnc ,_i-ol tbo , t-)1U lllnld to Invite ihe new want lo keep the Coaltlln> alftllatton, or ged and tiued TNman's daughter. Mra. l)ll!W)' controlled _aa....,t, ~~ Slddlebock Vlilo:t School Dlatl1ct lo joia join C.pi.!tra!"' ROP or aome other voe•· Daniel wllRd to the Johnsdn'• car aed ~ . I <Seo 'l'ERBOll. l'lll It I . Its .~ -.uon '!"Pnlsation. 'uona1 education plan1,: ; , • ln<ito1t.aollnlod?1 ~augbi.ni • ...i, their· To l rv:ne· 1:'. ... r."t ·• t · . , -II one of'three new unJIJed Copeland said a. copy '*· 11* >lflt·~ 1. ·~·)nai<ll the-.. ., " l!l'I~ -·· • . : • -*Jl1ed la1t JUne from portions year-end report, •J!rellmlnaey 'l'1'-'lf ' ........... 1 and Mrs. Nixon arrived a , Beere ti s• ol 1111 .,...ing San Jooquln •gd Tustlh budletlllll11chedwaolc:W!el'l10dlllie sbdrt"';ii; alter the Jobnions lelt The , Five women hive beal appointed lo · · . a OD ~~UJ>8,. JI• 11!1111 Sd>ool Districts'. Capo-1-11& ROP have been.senfto 11'-Nixons' visit was brief IJ'he-Na..;' bd. Irvine's )'treel"!l'lllnl commit'" by '' l : ; 1· "• . a• <ivoroperatlonofscl>oolsln dieba<ktruateeslorstud)o. , ~ '• • MayorWIWamFl>cl>-EJrtend,ed by a'tme -VleJo, El Toro, Laguna Hills and " The C.piatrano RQP wblch hu trti>le<l :-. did not ittend.todly:J.pr!Vlt&. :rh• commltteO will be°' chlrfled' wlib ri , Trlbuco luly_ I, It'll. That area, tbrough m atze In the past ~. olfen, ..,,._ • • · . , formulating a dty palJcy on 11ree1-o1m- "T110lrtlneRocreltionD1, ~ 1 lhu"tl>e 'lilailn U!ion District, hu been al· notfGuodlDolberROP'FOU•l•M>Utl>e lag. deleimJnlni whit aubjecja are ri-ID ..-fl die ....,._ fllllted with tlll Oo11t1tn1 ROP, wbicb lllllllelt -per Rudent di lily ROPp n General •SuccuriJbS', suitable !or -nomes, 1 n d ; !Ill perJod of· youth batl#l"'D .....,. ~.:r' 111ota Anl, TmtiD, aJ1d tbo • thes.°J:' Qipolond uld. • , • coord!..,.llnl <!lty ond,«,••llll' numbering t~ Joli. I , -II -1ru. bock trusteea hive lhown an in-·• • system" 1 cltf 11 now funning ~ for Coutllne ROP hi• tt.o olllct in Coota tereat in expanding vocational c~ 11 MURFREESBORO, Tenn. '(AP) -,,_ ..-.111 the. ~It.. aro: , bal'i and sJi'ls olOd a lo 14.. • -·Jorry COpe11nd, coordinator of the Mlalon Viejo Big:, Sohool llter the tik" l\~Jn!IPW· Gen 1.C!IY!oflJ.L. '81~~. 79, Hclon Qerl1blrd .ol UJe ¢>1ooy, Blroora , tratJon 1arm1 .. 1vallable at Ille ~ROP aaid ils olficel over July I. Tbey also rec.ntly apwoved w)>o ·~ • .,,.Alli~; a,lrl~ in Dbbn>w of U-ty Plrk, 'Shirley .. ~Uon olftce, Rocml IM ID die -In c.pillrano , would be closer to plane !or 1 new high tcll001 In l!ll Toro· inil!Mdltrloil Werk! War'U, dltd Tuesday. Hardy of Turtle.Rook, Arlene Johnaon of lf\l*n Oeqter, .. -.....--. lllddleback Un • ' which inelodt! a 1tpar11e vocallonal lie WIS a World War l ace wiib five the IWlcb, and Ada-Kerr of Unlvenlly at ll1Y at lrvllle'I ~ *"'--, -_ Dlstrtct board chairman "World/ol Work" bullding. Otl11Wl planea to bis cftdil • Park • . ' • • " agenclet and neutral diplomals In -· !See BOMBING, Piiie I) Oruge lt'e adler It'll be sunny Oft 1'rtday, but ibe tempen-will be 1 Biiie nippy. due to the PacllJc ~ cold front moving Into tbo ..... HIFt of tiO are expected, wlib O'l9l1dPt low1lnibe40L INSIDE TODAY T"' .t . ,.,,.~=-:: • ••"""' ""''°" n>1md .. lAc great '°"1Uc t00r. Hot dog lobe~ Ing o!ld _, ,.,.,... la die objtel Of tM <Oll<i ........ 8n •fol'!/ on l'a(lf 5. L.M...... . -' ---.. Cl-•R 1t --. ............. ' ::::· IRI tP.: I... I 11 .. .._ .. -..... ........ ~ .. Ii--....:· " 1"': -du --.. I ' OAJLY PILOT IS Tlwrtdlr, OftttAll' ~ 1911 Federal Report County Murder 2 Catholicl OK Survival Act.B NEW YORlt (APJ ,-Two llGon Clllbollc tbeoloPno uy diet 1111 "Pl* .... llll'YMn ta 1llo ..... wllo 111 lllob of 1leld -=.._ to ~p Ill•• "aa.d ~: 3· Rate Tops U.S.'s "A \>traon II oermltlod te eat dead human nes1i If there ls no feasible :ilternative for survtval," Msgr. Austin Vaughan and the Rev. William Smith wrote in a paper on the subject. 1-!urder filings ln Orange County during 1972 ran at more than double the allega- tl~ recorded during 1971 bul they are not indicative of the national trend, U.S. Atty. Gen. Richard Klelndienst's latest analysis reveals. Serious crime. his January-September survey indicates. Increased by I perctnt in lbe first rune months of 197? -the smallest such gain s.ince the office first released statistics in 1960. The 1971 tally in serious crime was six percent above the total record for the O'Neill Park Being Filled By Campers Outcloor~riented vacationers planning on a five-day v.·eekend were already set- ting up campsites in O'Neill Park in Trabuco Canyon today. With today declared a national day of mourning for the late President Harty S Truman and Monday a holiday for New Year's Day. many winter campers decid· ed to take Friday off too, a county park official reported today. . A large crowd of campers is expected at the mountain area park this weekeod if fa ir weather holds. O'Neill Park Is open for camping at $2 a night per vehicle 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Picn.Jcking-only co.sts 50 cents a day. There are no individual campsites and no camping equipment requirements. &me persons come with fancy mobile trailers, others with only sleeping bags. How many campers art let in depends on bow close they camp together. A county park official said his only ad· vice to the hardy campers would be "dress warm," but also cautioned that no open flrel are allowed and smoking is forbidden in some areas. Recent Santa Ana winds have dried out the woodsy area so that fires are a danger. Campers are encourqed·to check wttb ~te department of forestry officials at ,Ii., park before llghtin& any fires. Even the mo1t expertecced campen forget to bring tbinp like llgbtor fluid and salt and pepper. tbe park spokesman said. There are no supply facilities within the park, but !mall grocery stores are nearby in Trabuco Canycn Shawn M. Bridges Dies of Illness; Services Friday Memorial funeral services are set Fri· day for Mrs. Shawn M. Bridges, 26, member of 1 Southern Calilomll new1 media famlly, who dled Wednesday following a brief illness. Rites will be at 2 p.m. in st. Peter's Lutheran Church, 15th and Parton streets, Santa Ana. A Ml5slon V~jo resident, Mrs. Bridges succumbed Wednesday afternoon in Mission CommUPity Hospital, apparently dae W ~pUcallona from a blood disease. Sur\livors include her father, lierold Andersen, DAILY PILOT composing room superintendent and her mother, Evelyn Andersen , also of the composing room staff, who live ln Santa Ana. She leavn 1llo 1 brother, Don, USC sporta lnformaUon director ; her husband John A. Brtdgeo and two small chlldnn. Funeral arrangement.I are being handl- ed by Brown Colonial Mortuary, Santa Ana, "here officlall said today the full list of Mn. Bridges' survivor• had not yet been ~mpleted. OIAIMI COAIT IS ' DAILY PILOT previous year. the report state.s. Klelndlenst~s report states that 8.1 ma· jor American cities actually recorded decreases in serio111 crime during the firs t nine months of im. Murder and npe were the two serious crimes that ran above the one ~ent in- crease level, the report states, with only four Southern California cities -among them Huntington Beach -recording a decrease in killings . Santa Ana and Garden Grove were among Southland communlUes showing increases in murders. And Santa Ana, lhe report states, was the only surveyed community to rec<ird a dettease in rapes. Classified as serious crime are: murder, non-negligent manslaughter, forcible rape. robbery , a g g r a v a t e d assault, burglary, breaking and enterlng, larceny of $50 or over and auto theft. Trends revealed by the Kleindienst survey included : -Violent crime increased 3 percent dur ing the first nine months of 1972, C{lm· pared with a IO percent increase for the same period in 1971. -Property crimes showed no increase. They were up 6 percent in 1971. The priests wrote l h e ln- terpretaUon of C&tholic prindpels as spokesmen for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York. From Pagel . . TRUMAN ..• no eulogies. There wu only prayer. "Most mercltul Father, who has been pleased to take unto Thyself the soul of Thy servant, Harry, grant to us who are still in our pilgrimage, and who walk as yet by faith, that having served Thee with constancy on earth, we may be join- ed hereafter with Thy bleS!led saints In glory everlasting," said the Rev . John E. Lembcke, Jr., pastor of the Independence Trinity Episcopal Church. Before the funeral and b u r i a I , thous.ands of mourners -rich and poor, famous and unknown, workers wearing overalll and aprons and men and women -Citie with 100,000 or more inhabitants reported a 3 percent decrease in serious crime with crime in suburban areas climbing by 4 percent. Suburban area crime was up by l l percent in 1971. • carrying babies -fUed slowly and silently by his mahogany casket. -Crime in rural areas increased by 6 percent during lhe first nine months of 1!172. Frent Pqe l BOMBING ... The Hungarian news agency MT1 reported today that a blazing 11>2 shot down over Hanoi Wednesday crashed near the preJidentlal palaoe and that several crewmen died in the flames . It said the wreckage demolished a few buildings but DO Vietnamese were killed. President Nguyen Van Thieu met for an hour and 45 minutes today with U.S. AmbHaador Ellsworth Bunker llDd Gen. Frederldt C. Weyand. tbe American commander in Vietnam, presumably to discuss the U.S. bombing operatioos against North Vietnam. Tin Soni, tbe dally ne..wspaper clollest to 'lbieu, said that Thieu, Bunker and Weyand met ''amid rumors that the U.S. will stop bombing areas above the 20th Parallel 1n the out few d1y1 in order to resume the talks ln Parla." The newspaper quoted a "reliable source." Because of Communist protests about the full·acale bombini of North Vietnam and an American request for a holida y break, the four parties at the Paris peace talks scheduled no meeting today. It waa the tint miss 1n the talks in two mooths. 'n>e meeting ts usually held every Thursday and so far there have been 171 sessiona since the talks began m 1969. From Pagel HUGHES ..• main door. Police with walkie-talkies patrolled the streets below, and guards manned all doors to the wing. Even the fltt-escape doors wen sealed to keep out the phalanx of oewsmen and photographers who crowded tbe lobby. A cleaning woman vacuuming the cor· rldor waa escorted everywhere by two guard.1. An English voice challenged all visitors over the intercom and u.td : "I'm from Rothschilds. Go away." DMV Back on Feet SACRAMENTO IAPI -Detplte tbe blaze in Its oUice building, the State Deeartment of P.1otor Vehlcles will C{ln- llnue to operate almost normally and there WW be no regi!tration deadline eJ· tension, OMV chief Bob Qnena uys. "We saved our record.! and therefore wlD continue to conduct our 1ctlvttles ln an almost routine manner," Cozens aald Wedneoclay. The plain people were the ooes Truman loved. He was born 88 years ago and ra1Jed in tbe farm heartland of Am<rica. His mother used to boast: 0 Harry can plow the straightest furrow of com in Missouri." He became the people's servant, as U.S. senator, vice president and tbeir chief uecutive. His strai&bt talk and finn manner in the White House led to the nickbame, "Give 'Em Hell Harry." But of that, tbe lilUe man in tbe wire- rimmed spectacles said: "I never gave anybody bell I just gave 'em tbe truth and they tbougbt It WU bell." Jn deference to lb! fulleral aod a day of moumlng proclaimed by President Ni.loo, there was no mail delivery and the New York and American stock ex- changes were closed. A memorial service 11 plmmed Jao. 5 in Washin;tco11 Natiooll Catbedral U a final ge!lure to tbe tough little Missourian, and tbe 30-<lay moumlng period declared by Ni:J:on ends Jan. 24. Presldenl Nlxcm and former Pftlldent Johoaoo Jllkl their 1ut reopects w- day while t6e body lay in state in a closed coffin. Nixon laid a wreath of camaUona at the catet. Truman was burled ill bis favorttt dark blue pilHtriped suil And he wore the Ironed wire-rimmed iJasaes. At the funeral, hls casket wu covered with red carnations, hil favorite flower. At the burial, tbe American fia& that also was draped on the cofflll, wu folded predsefy llDd U . Gen. Patrick F. Cassidy, tbe escort commander, 1ave It to Mro. Truman with tbelO wonll: "Tbls Oag II preaenttd to you OD behalf of a grateful nation as a token of ap- predatloll for tbe booorable and faithful service rendered by your loved one." Schmitz Program To Be Re-aired On Channel 50 Congressman Jolm Scbmlti will d1'alu his planJ tor the immediate future In a taped interview to be rwlred tonlgbt at 8 o"cloclt on KQCE.TV, Channel 50. SCbmlti was defeated in hl1 primary bid for renomination es the Republican candidate In tbe 3Stb Dtltr1~ •• ~Y,Oran1e County Alleasor Androw J, """""'" He w11 later defeated u tbe pretldtntlal candidate of the American Jnclependeot Party. Three Orange County new11men wW In- terview the lame duck congreaman on "FOCll.I ()range Comity" bolted by Jim Cooper. Tbey .,. Jim Dean, execuUye edltor of tbe Rel\ttor. Tbomu KeeYtl. editor of tbe DAIL y PfLOI' and -Howard Seelye; pol!Ucal writer Ii>< the Loi Angelff Times. • Tbe Jirogtam WH a1Jo ljiown Dec. II and 21. Airport Traffic Over Million Mark for Year Passenger traffic at Orange County Airport alrtac:ty ba1 exceeded the one million mark for 1972, airport official! revealed Wedn'-lday. Passengers using Air C a I \ r o r n I a , Hughes Alrwest, and Golden Wtst Alrllnel through November t o t a I e d 1,024,808. This (lgure Is 17 percent or 150,994, more than the 873,824 handled during the ume ll·montb ptrlod in 1971. Airport oUlcJals predict in additional 100,000 will croW<I throu~h th< terminal bu.lldtna before the end of the year. Alr cargo Is alM much greater this year, wlt.b a 28 percent lncreue over 1971, reported to date. Tht Umtted faellltit1 In tht terminal have led to e1tabllBhmtnt or additional pa1sen1er 1ate1 at the south airport end or the ttnnlnnl and spttlal alr carao handling facllltie1, airport offlclah; noted. The cargo ii proceued in two con- verted bafl&lfl 8W8)' from I.he ttrminal bulidlng. While the Umlted spa<O bl tbe bulldln& may have hid • naaattve effect on airllne p.....,gcrs, It 1111 been a booa to jtt night opponents. who fear upantlon of 111< lerminai would load to more jet traf· lie. Tbe County Boord of Supel"lllOl'I bu twke ttfusOd apace In the terminal to airline• approved by the CI v II Aeronautics Board. Both Coatlnental Airlines llDd A<ronaval iJO' Mulco ha•e been denied airport cobntet tpece aftd have not pushed plant for rulbta from Orange County. '!be terminal wu ~ In 1917 when propeller driven alrcrall 1'11'1 the only Oheo u11n1 thl airport and It wu de11Cn- ed to haftdle about e,ooo pa....,era a month. Top Law1nan Det.ective Has a Gopd Rap ' ()le DOlatloo on DtttcUw Wall .,...., ~job-II sh: Jl!Ofl U a Cllllomla Air Nallooal Guan! -I ...,..,. and another fl memberahlp In the CO.la Mesa Police Department Speaker'• Bureau. To be In peroonnel you have to know bow to deal with people. To be ln a speaker's bureau. you have to set a message across. He's good at both, a<a11<llng to tbe Costa Mesa Crime Pn11t11llon ()om. mitt.., wMch bu plclted the Mislloll Viejo resident u ttl Officer for the Month of December. A sevm-year veteran of the regular force -be became a relll'Vt .officer two years .earlier -Detective S l 1 •er speclallu3 in dealln& with j\Wenlle of. lenden. Back in the by..,.. Ila)'> of law eo- forcoment, tbe old otreel cot"ller cop wtio knew every ltld ID lolm aornetimel r-to pb)'llell puiil-U a mtthod of making mllereanll mend tbelr WIO)'I. So(Wpoken and youthlUl in ap-l'""ance, the Detecllve wbo deals with iuveolle1 philolnplllleo "!hal you-can gel bettor resulll with a low well-ebosen words than well·adrnlnlltered wa[lops. He cites the case 18 months Bg(> of a ,m.n band of klda aged • to 1J .called Tllo Rebels, ..... ,,... estaNlsbhw ·a nefgllborhood r<putatlon for pllflljng candy and 111111 or otber IUCb n!lntel ittml. • "J\Jll anall -·• . • but It WU slartlni llDd thll 11 tbe llme to stop It," he explained. -lletecllYe Sil.,.. called a llille ti>eellnC in the ICbool prlnclpal'1 ol!lce. ID-lrvduced hl™1I and aller .,.,,__IOI well-ocqualnted IO Ibey could -eoch other Tiie Rebels surrendered. He IOld tbem OD tbe ldeo of using tbelr spore tlme llDd talents al plc1t1ft« up things to form ao ecoloCY Club llDd '111111- lltter league that qulc1tly became an·e1· elusive CllDplll orpnlzallon. School officials keeping .. eye .. -sludenll' behavior found Ibey aot better grades, developed h!gber p e r 1 o n a l esteem llDd actually lmplnd other students. Detecllve Sil..,. Um In -V1tJo wltb wife Sandy, dauihtor Wendy, ll, '°" Mart, I, but lllll mon&(" -for c:on-tiJWlnC Gold4p Wm Co1Je1<. fQ!loe Sd-enoe lludlOI and EID Lodp aetlvlllea. Tbe family enjoys compirc out but when tbe klda are a btl older Wall Clll ID- dulp lllll --bobby. Tbe famll.J tbetl will have a tour.me for brld&e. • Busing ChaJJenge SACRAMENTO (AP) -A legal challenge brought by tbe NAACP against Prop. 21, the antibuslng initiative, was under submission today h. Sacrammto Superior Court. Judge J""ph a . Babblch gave no lndlcatlon Wednelday when be would rule on the case after bearing argume.nta. SEES GOOD IN KIDS Detectl .. sn .. r Irvine C·ouncil Spurns Pay Hikes For Top Ai.des lmoe eoancllmen ban denied loor percent ply -to tbe city'• alx top ldmlJllNaton wblle •Jlll'Ol'lnc -of from four lo JU percent for other d1J emp1oyu. Tbe actloo WU taken OD a H -wtlh MAyor WWlam Fllcbbach dluenllll& at Jut week'• eotmcll mee1111&, n-clOnled -... ,. City Mana&tr Wllllam Wollett Jr., and tbt clty'1 !Mt lopde~- Tbe action wu taken at tbe W1ina of cnunclJmon Henry ~. wllo lald he understood that tbe COUDCll WU to evaluate ead> ol lte lop -ton individually, "I'm DOI u~ theM people....,,.,.. UUed to l'lllOI, ' uld Hmry Qulcley. "But I thought ,.. """ aomr to op- proach each cue OD tbe bull fl a perfonnaoce evaluation." Actln& City Monagtr Piii! Brady ex- plalned that -for all ......,.., In- cluding tbe '"' top -..... in181C!ed QOt as merit lnc:re&IM, but u colt ol·liv~ ing increases. Red Satellite Up MOSCOW (API -Tbe So\'lel Union launched on Wednesday another Colmol satellite, the Mist ln the secret series. .JJ.J. {]al'Ntl JANUARY lf'l••P .. el TERROR ... tbe Embassy with tbe EgypUan am· bauador llDd woo the guerTllla promiliC to leave the comtry. He """' bl and lloptll1 ~ -Cllltldlal a.11•-would acCompany the gumillu when tbey left '111alland. Other officials ,.Id that El Tawl would alao mate the trip. and that tbe llJtl'rlllas would be allowed to keep their weapMs. Police officials said arrangunents were be.Ing made for a special nt1bt to take tbe auerrtllu oot of tbe countey. Tiiey said tbe moat Ukely delllaatloft WU Calro. I>awee made the 1nnouncement In the Ooodlit llreC In !root of the embassy and then alter fUrther ooosultatJcms in a tem- porary commlllld poet ac.... tbe 1tree1. he, OW1chal aod tbe EcYPUan am· basaador returned to the emba.uy buildllll. With them' Ibey ~arrted two bot· u .. of llqvqr. ' Tbe auerrtJlu tdentt!ted thei111ol•eo u tbe Bladt ~r Qqanl&atlm whlch cirrled out lht .maulCA o1 !1t..U 1thlett1 II 1111 MUllldl ~ ilDd said it was ftlP"'lbJ1 ltor the 'mtlUcre at tbe Lod Jntimalkiul airport .ln'·'l'.l Aylv in whldt J~ "'° ...., )ill· ed ........ of-~ -r:- Tbey tltrea!Oiied ~ .. tli 14' the f11raell1 inside II· jhelr• ~'for -rd-of guerrtllu held prllooer In !arael were not met by I a.m. Friday (5 p.m. PST ~ tbe -of tbe klq llDd Thaillllld Ibey have qreed to leave the COWllry,"' said Ila-wllo ll qrlcallin -and an lnflwnUal nwnber o11111.....,.. meaL ~ la'aell Prlllit lillDll¥ !loldo Jt.ir held .. bouMoac -CUlail' -in Tel Am lo -ifit aliaallaa. Ber ..,, .. _ ........ Jlllded .,.. ------..... -la 1111 put. ·"We will DOI lab 1111 -adloo If II 11 DOI ...,.Hry,~ a Tbal -told uporteis. "We don't wlDt bJoodAhed or lny harm to cotDo to tbo liJi people who &19 lielnl held ......... Tbt t..11" guerrOlu, two of -....... Ing darl: -IJulflJ.Dd 1111 oilier two in abort jacltela, cllmbed a alx·iool wall ID frool of the mnblay sborlly before 11000. Tiiey patund a local .employe out of tbo -OOUlld wHll lllelr automatle .... _ ond charled 1nalde tbe bulldlni· Harbor ,Di.strict Couru Closed n you """ ICbecMed for ,.... dlJ In court today you can. ten II to tbo Judie, l"IY your lrafl!c tlcRI -or --OD Friday. ilatllor Jlldt<ta1 Dlllrlcl Comt WU cloeed today ln"DIOUnllJC for ~t Harry s Truman, ihllB postponing all ac- th>lty ael for today unUl Friday'• calen- dar Piao lo come early and expect to slay late, however, became tbe action does not pootj>OllO anything on tbe court calen· dar for Friday, which ts one of ltl bullesl day~ f ....... Totlayl Substantial Savings Througltout tht Store HDIL SOM .... 17'.00 DlllCIL LOVlllAT .... 17LOO 489 319 15 to 25% SAVINGS on Several Bedrpom, Dining Room and Occasional Collections by .•. DREXn a..i HERITAGE H.J.GARREfT fURNr[URE PIOmSlO!'IAL IHIWOl DlSl$NW Open M'"' .. Thun. • Fri. 1-1 ... • 2211 HARIOR tLVO. COST A MIM. CAL If. . ' I ' • ·Irvine Anniversary ' ~ II celebraUng !ta lnltlal blrlbday thl& week u It complelel lta tint year of eldltence as Orange Coullty'J :Miili <;lty. ' Tbe year 11111 paued bu been a hectic. one. but not wtlboat accompHohmenta. llec:ted amid charges that It e<>uld be &imply a rub- ber llWDP' for the dty's major landholder, the Irvine Company, the dty iovvument hu forged an admirable re<ord for tough-mmci.d bolt fair lacllipeDdence. Faced with the aweeome tut Of cre1Ung a new dty pl'ldlca1ly from l<l'atch, the dty C<>DDcil ·bas pr .. .-..!. calltl~. Wllely, It has made plallnlng !ta top J>r!orjtr.. md •lri !ta planning It bu been canfw to In· volve citizen advllory pailela at every level. Now the city ~ ready to adopt Interim land """ DOllcles, and within 12 months It lhould have a fu11·1lodged Wlffll plan. ' ~ the city mo .. 1 lbead with theae lmPot'tant proj- edl, the year lbead will be u ~t u !he ~ just e<>mpleled. But.a aollnd start bu beeli made, and of thll the city can be proud. Deserve Fair Share The mechanics of acblevlng the unification of scbcol dlstricta oka,..i by voten In lrvlne, Tustin and Saddl& boclt Valley Jut June seem to grow more complicated day by.day .. With the new year looming shead, the three new ~c;ts ·wlll l!•ve sh: buay months before they becoll)e fully official July 1, 1973. Beginning in January, ad· mlnlstntive personnel from the aoon·to-be defunct San Joaquin, Tustin Union aod Trabuco School Districta will let It be -.own Wbere'tbey wish to be assigned. But shaping .up-now u a poeolble baWeground for future hard feelings ts the q.-tlon of a fair apportion· ment of real properly from the old di.ttrtcts to the new. Saddleback Valley truatea -tly agreed. to send a letter 'io the outgoing districts hinting at, but not openly uklng tor, a catllogulng <Ii equipment In the schbols. Buicilly, they want the same amount of library booka and carpeting In Missio& Viejo schools as in Irvine. Both Tustin Union and San Joa!l,uln have hired an appraiser to detennine·the value of the dlltrict's person· al equipment for equal apportionment. A professional appraisal will be required to do the woe for real prop- erly. But It is doubtful wM!her any ippralsal and sub- sequent apportionment can be fair to iny Of' the districts If the standard adopted with unification -the IU70· 71 tax valuationa of the districts -ls not changed. Using ·a tw .. year-old assessed ~uation to dete.· mine the split of real property In the fastgrowing south county area ls unreakonable. · The 1971).71 assessed valuation In the areas now known as the ~ew districts was set as ~e a:&~rtion­ment factor dunng formation of the plan for u · ·cation laat spring, despite protests by aome Irvine representa-tives. ~ments in lrvlne and in the Saddleback Val· ley have risen greatly since the 1971). 71 year and resi· dents In thooe areas have contributed proportionally more to the outgoing districts as a result. · The county department of education and the county e<>unael's office would be well advised to start the legal stepi to change this figure to the closest asaessed valu· ation year to. JlJ-!y 1, 1973, for everyone's benefit. The new achoo! districts deserve to get back their share of what they put in. ''.Peace is at hand." -Henry KissiIJgei'. SI Proximity Influences Judgment Dear Gloomy Gus · Bird Deserves Equal Time, sa,,s Reader Add -Stork Theory to ·.Textbooks? (SmNEY J.HARIU~ ftaqlClllLlrle: Five people killed In an accldenl 50 miles away from m .. """ mere news lmportaoce than llGO tilled In .. acddenl 5,IGO milel away-• If pniDmlty and gqr1pey were Ille detmnlnants 9' -~ • • • u IS not 111e llnanclally·-politj. icon who -the -...... to llOC!· elf, bul the Intellec- tually -: not the one who lltea1s moaey from the -pie'• pocket, bul the me who speaks one way and acts BllO~ er, thus betraylnc the public's ballc --• • • We tend to v~te 11men of actlOn," but the Intelligent man of action kQows better; when Nopolean met GoeUIO-al Weimar, It -Ille -•.Of clalmed, "What a man!" about the scholar, and not th-. alher way around. • • • An occoslooal amile illumlnales Ille ~: • perpetual smile la mo.. likely to be an hystertcal defense against despair. CON811RVA11VES are much more realiltJc than llberall about the way meo will bellmo In ordinary times, but far less imaglnaU.. about the way they will behave In airaordinary times; thus, COlllel'Vatlw regimea are successful only durinl poriodo of relaUve tranquility, bu1 America oeems to provide much faster Oiristmas dellveiy to Hanoi than to Managua, Nicaragua. -A.R.V. .....,., ............ ,.,.... ,... ... ....,. . ,... .... .,.., ~· To the Editor' Jn view of the recent discussion regardiiw the revisioo\OI the elemenlary ""'°°I !¢ence bookl to .Include the 'l!e<lal creation lh<ory, I ~ty pro- pose that we ought to also phsent the stork theory, in our etplanation! of bow babies get here. AFTER ALL we have .J:tt> way of prov· ing· that the stork theory Is fals<, Storks a.re pretty fast biids."l'he cmes wbo give.-. • -.i ~ _.us babies jlrobcibty can fly so fast that are euily dethrOOl!!l·ill times of crisis. they can f\y in the hospital """'°"· hand Em.... ll'liCIOUsitY crea!M more the baby to the doctor, and Oy out again, ·-than Indifference and skep-so fast that nobody knows wbat happens. t1cilm combined. , Also the storks that give us babies may • • • have poWers we doo't know about. Maybe 'Ibe cblef re.uon for devtloping as we they can tum them&elves invisible whim grow older, and dlsburdeoing ounelves bringing the &ables into the hospital so of Immature faults, is that with age we that we would never know about them. acquire a new crop of faults, and f\ObodY can 'cope with both kinds at the same timO. . , . When ........ , .. Is hold ·eJJOlllh to ..... fide to ............. that obe and her husband "are ute brother and lister," I wonder which is which. WE CAN OFTEN endlft an extra pouod ol pain far more easJly than we can auff~ tbe wtthdrawal of an ounce of .--....' t ... ~ .• • ... i 'r& reaJ irony in today's "humor of protest" bas been neaUy summed up by Dicll; Gregory, when be observed: "When I left St. LoulJ, I wu making n .. dollars a nigbl Now I'm getting $5,000 a week - for saying_ the same things out loud I us- ed· to say under my breath!" • • • Of all tbe ledentary games ever devis- ed by man, chess la the one most closely allied to monotnf,llia and alcoholism -in that, u allowed to flourish unchecked, it · will rutbleu!y drive out every other motive and punuit; every chess clJam. ploo Is, first ol all, a fanatic. THE THEORY of the stork is a lot easier for children to accept than ... t proposed by science. Fw chiidll!n it may seem eztremely shoctlor that they ""' tuaUy come out of their mothers. What a terrible thOughtl The"" stork is a far healthier thing to teach. U they are gobli to be persistent about teaching the scientific theories I suppose we can g1'e them equaj time but by all means let the chiidre .. know about the stork theory too. Clll1!lren lril all too often gi,.,, only one sido cl an -nt. SHELLEY WALSll Groaeth •nd Greell To the Editor: I take parUcular exceptioo to Gilbert W. Ferguson's contention (Mailbox, Dec. 17) that the rampant growth of Orange County should not, and In fact cannot, be coottolled. Future of ,Capitalism I NOTE that Mr. Ferguson is a run- time, paid director of the Council for En- vironment, Employment, EcooolllY and Development (CEEED), which ora:an.iza- tion Is dedicated to the financial interests of a coalition of construction unions, con- tractors, landowners and developers. Thwi: constituted, I question Its objectiv- ity in evaluating what Orange County's future should be. Writes John G. Gurley, pro!eooor ol ecooomlcs at Stanford Unlvtrsity, In "Tbe ,Future "-~ CQltaliml." ''MJr main conclilslon la that there are some powerful adverse forces operating against U.S. capitalism, which over the oezt few decades will create ID In: creulDgly unfavorable envinmmeut, domeslically llld intematlooally, for U.S. _.ie proflt,maklng . Tblll clet.eriontlng environment d e r I v e 1 pdmar!Jy !roll\ tbe cootlnuaoce of revolutionary movtmeols qalnat In: tematlooal capttaliml, from tbe In' tenalflcatioo ol rtvalriu ._ leadilli capttaltll sta!M for Investment oulletl, trade advaataipa, and ·aqcea to nw materlall, aod from labor'• growjng ability to exert pressure oo capital'• shire of the Dltional tncome." ll01IEVEll, tbeae ldverae fOn:tl agalnlt capltalllm are far from being ur.._.i. 'llltenlatlonal captta!ID; led by the Unt!A!d Stl!M, la I poftrfUt lorCll In Ille world llld llt capable ol many ..,.. '1ctorla agalnat ~ proletariao movements. ·Still, my Jucflmenl la . that, oo botance, the tide la .-Inc qainst eaoitallsm 00 I -hull." --r.u tllll la ao, Ille ._.. of the capltllill clul It -likely to be I call IOI' lilcrealed St1te lntemlltloa In !lie ~ Ufa of !be natioa ••• we caa espect Stile -!loo to be lnlemllled for Ille (lurP*t ol lllhtenlnl the boodl of labor diactpllne It -· mobilblQa national ,_.,.,.. 1Pinst mol•-..Y ac11vity abtold, and deleodlnl U.S. capttalilll' lntereota In 1n ~ compelltlva and hostile envirunnml of ' EDITORIAL ,RESEARCH global capitalism. • . .capitalllm wij! survive 111 an increuinitly ttate-direcle<I mooopoly capitalism. Bui many elements or democracy Wiii not." Robert L. Hellbroner, -"Capilallam Alive or Dead," writes: "lla!I lll)'OllO In the 1930s been told that the U.S. Grou National Product, In the early lll'IOs would ourpau a !rlllion dollon -"1fect1ve\y doubling the real per .,.Pia -wllhfD the lil"'1J!ID of the majority of the -latlon then alivt -I am 111te he _,Id bave felt safe In pndicllni for the Unt!A!d States an era of unpreceden!A!d IOclal pelCO and Pc!will. Vet that .-moua economic chUge bu tal<eo place and 90Clal llarmony bu not ...Wied .• "I TIONlt It II fair to say tblt amoog the.,.,. evldeoca ol IOclal unmt -the drui culture, the cry for participator)' democrlcJ. tbe alleoatioa ol, ltlMllnts, - the ..,. ""'°' morallty, the retroat ,. the Ille ol the CODU1111D8 -,_ II cdt- gental !'ith or llQlllOt'live of tao at;. utudel and beblvlo\o patterna .., """"' capltalilm bu tl'ldltlooalll' nll<d. II It piulble, In Oiiier words, that we stand, al . the lhn!lhold of 1n era In which dcep- -IA!d ~ In llfewaya will un- dermine capltaliml In a ......,. 11 fatal 11 tbe moot drlmaUc! pn>letarilJI l'eV9Ju- tlon might do, although pert>aps lW npldly or romanUcally." There are those of us (to use Mr. Fer-- guson's favorite and oft--repeated appela- tion "Henny Pennys") who loot beyood immediate economics, and are more sensitive to the demonstrated results of a strictly ,Profit-oriented growth policy: eecala~ air-and water pollution, atifl· ing traffic congestion, rapidly shrink· IDi open .. pace. In short, the contlnubli degradatloo of our quality of life. CONSIDERING CEEED'S ahoJ't..siabt· ed, ecwom.ic bias, I suagest that iI ls rnl>named. More appropriate would be Gn>Up fo• Rape of the EnViromnent throulth Endless Devel-en! (GREED). AnG a Happy Henny Peruiy to you, 1'4r. Ferguson. ROBERT D. RIES W•r Critfe• To the Editor: Now that the peace talks have frozen .----B11 George---, I>eor George: Don't·you ever get problems you bonestly can't answer? • TED Dear Ted' v.,, quite often I get quutlons I honelUy can't onswer. f Just go Mead and lllllffl them anyhow .•. I fifUl't! lt'1 •better tu lie a little than lo bav1 to lcnock oU thJt acl- vlce racket and go bacl< to wort In the aawmlll. < ( MAILBOX ) Letters trom readen arc toelcomt'. · l(ormally writers ahould convey their mea:sooes in 300 words C1'f less. The right to condeme letter• to fit space Or ' elimtnate libel is rese1'Vtd. All letters must include Jignature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if iufficWnt reason U apparent. Poetry will not bt published. over and the U.S.A. bas resumed an all· out effort in bombing our enemy -North Vietnam, I wondered wbo would be the first to criticize that. adktn and softsell the ever-s<>rlghteous 1Nirlll, the haloed ruJera in Hanoi. • I JUST witnessed• it about a hail hour ago bY one very famous news com. mentator by the name of David Brinkley. I did not know that be was in on all the secret peace talks in Paris along with Kissinger and the envoys of. Nbrtlr Viet· nam. As a matter ol faCt1 I am positive that Mr. Brinkley di4 Dot lit in Ill· vea ooe of those secret jiace tails. , ·· • HOWEVER, I just beard him mouth oil agaiM our dedsim to resume the bombing against our enemy and aide in with them as though we were a barbaric nation. If only people like Mr. Brinkley and the Jane Fondu would keep out Of the af. fairs of our state, thla· war would be over a lot quicker. GRANT HIJll)JNG PIUWPS mris r .. •11r To the Editor: Reference to Count Marco ·article of Sunday, Dec. 17: "Are Girls Born Pushy or Taught by Mother?" It is rather curious that in t!lls era. of =::.~~~~~.tie~ alone is employed by a newspaper to write. Tllill PAllTICIJLAR article exbtblls, as do all Count lolaroo's, pnojudlce, faulty lugic and reoaonlng, ma.so generallza. lions, and unquestlonahly d I 1p11 y 1 Marco 's anlmoslty toward the female g!llder. . MattO "'8Ullles that the trait be men to Is the undesirable ooe of "puahioeu." lie obviously feels so threatened by the very dealrable trait of agiulivenesa and direction In a female that he must apply the milnomer of "pushy." I CERTAINLY hope that Count Marco has not had the opportunity to father a child, whether it' be an irratiooal, overbearing male ae in.secure in bis role as Marco, or a wea.t, dependent female deprived by her tal&er of her natural right to aspire. Wilen I first ·rell!I· Cc/UPI /IJl.arco's .col· umn, I naturally liSsuined tJi¥ Ir had been mliplllced 11\d beiMged with the comics. I later realized that Marco ls ~ tually serious about hJJ raviogs,·and Ule sad, sad part is that he really seems to bell eve in his lheory's validity. request of our pseu*ally "great" Bri- tain. · S.G. UNDINE Car Wash Tltelts To the Editor: · Understanding that the car wash emp'1oyees of th..: local car washes are oot paid the btgilest wages possible and usually after a short tinie must move on to bOtter paying Jobe, I can justify the IF MARCO feels that the maie should half·hearuileffurl they put !!!Jo cl""!llnc, be "boss" that "~'• the way mar-~ a, vacuwning' ahd wubing-cani; but WMt I riage ~d be," tit bal more t)lal) a Ji} 4o .not undei:m,!'d Is •hr .... clllt!ens tie to learn about tojlay'• -· He also ba~ Jo strlji OUI' • .-Of _,, Item needs to learn !hit a male 'loes not loos<l therein befoie turning it w« to become a boss or Iea\ler JllOl'OlY by then!. virtue or a zipper; in the frmt of bis I RECENTi.\' hBd /ny cat waslted, took. all the pactaces I bad in my front seat and back aeati with me. but left two or tbtee itemJ ia the glove box. My rnistal::e, the glove box-aud•tnmk are not a safe place because yOIJ turn your auto ovea to tbeae attendants with 'f'Nr keys (whlch open glove boxes and trunks) and at the end of the MISh cycle and ~pon reI,as\ng my picl: .up ticket · to the at· tendmit, I got. in and my. camera was milJl!ing hom· the gkwe box. lrouSers. f I suggest that )tul' now-r-wooid be less of a .WS rag If you would rid yourself and the literate public of the bane of "C.ount Marco." . M$. sl)&N J. SCllAllLEIN ZerO .Jolls To the Editor: News beadllne: 0 ZERO GROWTH · SEEN." 'Taint necessarily so, man, because, with all tbele dlldes coming into the oountry with immlgrltkln visas, the future headline may read: 0 ZERO JOBS SEEN.'' Jl'OllElGNERS AJIE,ac!JiD, their brass to come her< <11 Ill,)'' pnten aod Ulen stly here. Note tlle Qlb&Ds wbo are tired of Castro and want to sate the ball out! But we need more people. like we need a hole In the head, and ...., ol us have r.ist that when we welcome more im- migrants. · A good sample of the·'!""""ted peoi>Je coming to our ~ i; fouod m san Francisco where .,young ai.mese un- migrallts have organlud 1 ~'t\J'Pe TONG that.ii preying upon builiieoiiiiin. while in other parts of the land trouble- making "refugees'' are watited in their ,.native country for treason and for doing the oame disruptive ' thirlgs they are doing bere with absoiQte unpunlty, 'THE FAMILWt. wbine 11\1.t plc;k:flld: shovel jockeys are still -ied to "tiiltld America" ii a slct excuse ror the lnflus of people coming bere for Jobi. The peo- ple horn """'· -illy blllckl and i... dlaDI, are far more cleaervhli ol jobs than newcomers. Agree? Tile -111kln esploaloa ... , be a dud, thankl to birth -...1. bul the Jm. ml8ratioo ....,.... . compounds the crime and .-.ploymmt In our coo- p!A!d dltes. We qatlllOI lonl support I pyramiding' -'41Uon, 1el the Jm. ml8ratlon lllt>lrlmen~ airea4Y accused of ohady dolnp, ~ tllll moctlnC carnival '°""' . Added note to this ba\'111111&: Tile Unltt!d States will IDllll ldmit 1,oot "ttfuaees" from tlpnda, Alricl, al lbe Inaurance, both auto and homeowners, doea not cover this, tbe owner and manager of the car -wsb claim m legal obilgillon because Of their "not respoos~ ble for Jost artlclef,,..li&fl, this waa not a lost article ti. W'5 stolen. It is a rldlculous and sad situation when you. cari't ev.en trust thell!I at· teridants for !be t5 minute> it tales to complete .Your a,uto. ~creed to wort for low wages, thla puts teb!platl<lr! in their way and yet the costomer II in no way legally protected from the lhlevery. MRS. DEANNA Ti\TVM s ... ,. 'Stul' To the &Ulm': . Let'• "° ..methib,dufnt nu1 yell'. The c.ommunisUc thot -there ls no Goll: that'• shocl:Jt1g to .our American ChrlsUan beliefs. But we are fast becom- inll'antl.Jesu3' birthday. , 'l'bts Santa Claus portl'll'al Is. a ud, aad Christmas .lhemt,. Litl)e, childn!o are misled. How much more tflecllve~· ir.y' the Chrtat child,. (not creed) but the fact that I .,.i cit was put, oa earth to live us a me.up Crom ~ £n such a w•y as we, all mo· under- stand. Ins&ead we d1JPlQ . a mytbica1 person called Santa e1a,111;· lfviDll and giving preseo)s : to flirlhoi' Cllltom ol raising business sales. Let'• ask ourselvea -are we anu. J..Us, who expreaoeil the QJrbt! We can ao to the mooo, fly tbrootih the air; but making .... moh! ~~,.'!"llnl polluting our wafu~~ DA ILY PILOT Crime and Punislinient When mora than two thirdl of the voterp In the -elactloil 'IP'· ~ ~.., 17, Ibey did -·· than relnatate all Call~ -ralltlng to Ille dealh peollty. They allo placed upon the lecltlature ~he ra\)Ollliblllty of spelllng oot the crimes that m1ndate that penal!~. THIS AcrION Is necessary In order to bt'lna California Liw1 In coolonnlty with )ht Unlttd States Supreme <btrt'1 find. Ing that the de.Ith penalty 11 cru<I and unuSUll punlahmcnt -and tltmfm W>- const!Mlooal -u -1pptled ID \11(1111 atalel. Tbe c.urt did ... bin tbe ~ par 1t; It relli:fctd !'° •"!"11111"- B!llllNTL\U.Y, Jiit di!ldl ~now nut be n...-..7, Nt ,_, « Judae can haYe the dll ~ fl .entenclns -• penoo to Illa impl!Mllll'l!I or to delth. ~ clearly lllllUllled crtmes will carry I mandatory death leD!en(e, and It la now the Mil •k!fl>!IJIY ol the Ieslalature to dotftlno 'fhll crlmel ahaU be Included In tbll C.Jecory. ~ ..-. llenlcO • • • \ ' OAJLV PILOT S , NY Police No Epidemic Expected in Nicaragua ·'C ,., . orrupr. MANAGUA, Nlcaraaua nm Nlcar ..... for &I ytart, fore&en *ll combing the !hi mlrecle ol U.atlng 2,00ll ! (AP! _ y0,.1p doc1ott ny aaJd In a tl&tement broldcut ruins ear11tr this Wffk bad lrUurod In three days and ioo ; Knap P ellOll(h medical penoonel and llourl)' tllal -w'tre being largely d l•s a pp e are d by Nlcara111ans have a I read y .c -amatod llld aome had been Wedneaday. fOUllcl new homes In otbtr Cen·r swpplle1 are oo .baod to ward shot. Somoza appeaJed for pa· trll American countries/' be UPIT ....... Tnitnan Remembered A sign in Independence, Mo. demonstrates nation's grief. Oe!tl as Harry S Truman's daughter, Mrs. Margaret Truman Daniel (right) and Army escort, Lt Gen. Patrick Cassidy, watch the former presi- dent's casket being loaded into a hearse. A sunple funeral was held U>day . WASIUNGTON IAP) Knapp Commission ln- vestlgatlng aJJoeed misconduct by city poll« said today cor- ruption In the department was widespread and Included the acceptance of gratuities, wide lnvoivemeot in drug traffic and stealJng from the dead. z The commJssloo in con- cluding Its two-year in- vestigation of the depart· ment, said in its final 28l·page report that c<llTllpllon ..... systematic and had spread through the tanks from the cop on tbe beat to lbe chief In- spector's ol'.flce. Thorough indifference to corruption or active involv& ment, the report said police allowed to nourish a well· coordinated and profitable system of payoffs and shake- downs involving prostitutes, Mafia henchmen, loan sharks, bookies and heroin pusher.i. e»emotlon WASllINGTON (AP( - Gordon Rule, the Navy COit· monitor who was demoted after a-iticizing the President, has he<:n deoled a meeting with Navy Secretary John Warner and hM been told to pursue any protest with the admiral wbo ordered the demotion. Rule was turned aside Wednesday when he sought a meeting with Warner to discuss the demotJon. Imtead, Warner ordered that Rule must go throogh Wienie War Begins "channels" and lodge any pro. test with Adm. Isaac Kidd who wants Rule shunted lo a backwater job. e Dalllefle Stclt NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A Meat Labeling Misleading to Consumer federal Judge bas ordered a fU milllon damage suit filed against UndersecTelary of State-<leslinate William J. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Surrendering to c o n s u m e r pressure and a court order, the Agriculture Department has announced plans for a second major ro<md ol label- ing and content refonn for bot dogs. TKE FIRSI' step fn resPonse to rising complaints over one of the nation's favorite foods came three years ago. In 1969, lips, snouts and spleens in Casey and others. officials ended a long dispute frankfurters and other cooked "Some of the things the by ordering a 30 percent fat sausages bearing ordinary directors did are inconceivable content limit on hot dog;s and labeling. If byproducts are us.. to me," U.S. District Court other cooked sausage pro-ed in something that looks like J u d I e H e r b e r t W . ducts. a hot dog, the product would Oiristenberry said Wednesday Now, officials say new pro-have to be labe1ed "imitation" in ordering the suit in coo. pooals which may take effect in letters as large as those nection with the pending early ne:it year Will junk cur~ used for the word "frankfur.. re or g a n I z a l i o n under rent rules under which a bot ter." bankruptcy Jaws or dog containing w a t e r , Mu!Uponlcs, Inc. sweeteners and curing agents THE NEW PLAN would set Cuey was a board member can still be labeled "all up two name categories for of the firm, wlUch owns 43,000 meat." A federal court bad frankfurters, bologna and 8a'eJ ol. fann land in ruled the "all meat" wording other similar cooked sausage: Louisiana, Mi 11IssIpp1, was misleading to consumers. -Category One would COO.· Arkansas·and Florida. tt filed Ki..J _ Nol tain only "skeletal muscle !•or 's"':~".'.'!8~ in 1971. U!t ALSO REPEALED would be meat," including up to 15 per· ... ~vv• rules allowing a hot dog con-cent poultry, plus nece.osory SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP!) 'Buym" g' TV taining up lo 3.5 percenl non-procesaing in(redienls such as The u.s. Coast Guard today fat dry milk to be labeled water, sweetenen and curing began a search for five crew simply "lrankfurttt." agents. members of a cargo vesseJ Ad _..:c • ? ln a companion step, which -Category Two could con· whose sixth aewman was VCI ueffig o had he<:n di>clooed earlier, the lain the same lngredlenU " !oond Wednetday drifting in a department said Its new hot the first group, but also oould lifeboat off the island of WASHINGTON (UPI) -A dog reform pl.an would al!o contain limited amounts of Martinique suffering from Federal Trade Commllafon ban the use of meat aod binders such as nonfat dry severe exhaustion and nearly (FTC) examiner -that -'--poul-try-'---_bypr:_:_od_uc_ts_s_ue_h_as __ mil_._k_oc_so-'-y-'-protem_--·-____ -. ___ t_. ------ by the Ume cbildrtn ruch the age of elgbt they are akeptlcal about the truth ol televlJlon commerdala. Raymood J . Lynch, on Fl'C admtnilltraUve law J u d g e • made the point W-ednolday In dl1mlssin1 charges that the m Continental Bating Com- pany of Rye, N.Y .. and !is ad· vertutng firm, Ted Bates and Co. of New York Ctty, made false nutriUonal clalma for Wonder Bread and Hostess snack cakes. 'The decision may be a~ pealed. Lynch lltard chargea that Wonder Bread commercials .. exploit a ,child's aspirallons for rapid and healthy growth and the emotional concern of parentl for tbe.se ends." He l8kl there W8I no basis for onlerlna Continental Baking lo buy comctlve lldvertlalna. Lynch aaJd studlea bad shown that even by the age of five to seven there were aubltanlill n. u m b er s of c:hUclren who ani ll<epllcal 1boUt televlslcn commercial•. I "The potential lot literal I be)1el or contusloo that doe1 1 oocur Jn aome )'Ollllll cbildren I! clecrtl* wilh age lo a point ........ el(ht wliorw children I f-11y ishlblt a dear. con-als1onl and wtdelprelld !'NC• 1 tJon that televlalon com-l nwdllt canilot be taken aa I Utetally trot," Lynch aald. ' the f~if ~.§,§~!Y 4DAYSONLY! ANY KODACllROME ROLL DEVELOPED AND PRINTED CAMERA DEPARTMENT •tWAI' •W 11111 ~II. • W....w 'nu U!illt ~ .. lht. • llVftSlll 1520 T)Mr • SAJllA A#A MW ... lt •fOIUM:l ..... lllllllrdlWll •l.AllWtotCW-SI.•,.,.._"'-•M .... PAll 9-ll •an.t•PI •Ol.U.10.... .... Mlll._.!W .... ... ...... I ,, off any ~hold or typhut ''We hive JaUed and prob-Uence and aald the numuou1 aald. epidemic ID 1be "rthquake-ably will oboot all thole problems left by the quake The latest ofllclal ettlmat devastated N 1 car a 1 u a n cauabt in. the act of iooUna/' woukl be· aolved. of casualiles from. tht quake capital. , be aald. l,OOM,000 • dead and up tq; "Theni is no epidemic In Bui the roaming pacl<I of "WE RAVE accomplllbed 20,000 aerlously Injured. ,. Managua today ," aald Dr. 11 Juan Jose Chlarl Qf P~ "We are probably fO!na to avoid an outbreak of diseases." U.S. R£LIEF officlala ex· pressed saUsfactk>n with the arrival of tons of grain, flour and powdered milk. Nicaraguan officials said more trucks were needed to get the food to 19 dlstrlbuUon polnta set up outsJde the city to draw peraons away from tht rulns. They said supplies were pll· ed. up at the airport and even Jn the front yard of Cen. Anastasi<> Somoza, the coun- try's ru1er. Lt. Col. Frank Simona, Jn charge of the U.S. relief ~ gram, ft'alsed tbe f o o d dlstribuUon plan set up by Somoza. 4'WE WOULD have bad the same problems U this hap- pened in any country In tbe world," he said. ' ' The Nicaraguans are doing a marvelous job." Maj. Dennis Bulger, com· mander of the U.S. 518lh Cozn.. bat Englneu Co., 1 a I d although many of the city's water lines had been ruptured and some of the cisterns around the ·dty had been cracked by the quake Satur· day, some 20 million gallons a day could still be provided for the greater Managua area. He said about 78,000 gallons was brought into the dty Wednt!day, "enough lo pro- vide each person with half a gallon." This indicated that about 150,000 persons -or half the normal population -were aUU In the dty despi)e onlera to everyone to evacuate the area. Authorities continued to ap- peal at frequent intervals for evacuation, but many ob-vtously were Ignoring the ef- fort. RESIDENTS WERE warned to avoid an area of 450 blocka in tbe banle1t bit sector that was designated an epidemic zone. Doctors llald the Ut!e wu precautlonary and did not indicate preseoce or a n 011!y Coast Qffors • 6%Guaranteed Cert'ificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club 'Illa lnllden Cloh: A new wry to beat Inflation. Its membership card permits ~ to b<Jy nearly <Nery· thing ~ neod from the flnest closec!<Xx>t show- rooms at substantial say.. lngs -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipment, spc>rtfng goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet'' price and m6bile homes and motor· cycles at substantial sav· lngs. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% ~No Mlnlmufn. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% TWo to Five Ve" Certlllcale$ $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of Interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certlfleate accoonts. elso provides big dis· counts on tickets to sport· Jng and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free -services: safe deposit bol<os, money or. ders, travelers checks, and riotary ser<lcea. Membership require· ment for savers-$2,!IOO minimum balance. Coast bonowers now receive as- sociate memberships en- titling them to all outside referral services. Aak about joining at any Coast office. ..... OP1'ICll ltll 6 Hill, Loi ~let• 6313!51 Othor-Wll.Mtntf lit OUMIRCY PUCf~ 3933 WHlhltl BMS., LA.• S86o12i!S LA. CMC elMlllb 2nd lo Bl'QW!way • 62$-1102 KUNTU .. TON HACH: 91 Huntlnaton C.ntw • tn4) 897·1047 UNl'A »ONICAJ 718 Wllshlr• Blvd.• 393-0146 --1~ 6PacHlc•131-2341 --EMt.land stlOPPllll ctr •• !31.mt PAMOMMA Cm': ChaM .. V•n N\o!Y* Btitd.. 192.11n .......... l875t Ventur1i l!ltvd. • 345-1614 t.oNQ IU.Cff: JrCI 6 l.CQl9l • 437·7481 UST LOI Mlill.bt 8th .. SOb). 266-4510 DIAMOftO MRl: 328 s. Dlllmond Bar • (714) 695-7525 1\ISTnO t.arwln Squire ShopplnsCtr.• (714) 832~10 U. MtltADA: la Ml,.da ShoPPln& Ctr.• (714) W..fj751 Doty "°""-t AM ll>4 Pll All"'"-. bcopl CMc: c..w. Open~ 9AM to 11'11 Sin Gohrlol Offlct Oponloc ir. COAST FEDERAL SAVINGS • i • • • • ' • .... • J ,; • ,. ' " ,. epidemic. __::s.~moza~~·~w~OO..~~f~amll~y~ha~•~:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;""=~' Our Anniversary! Always the Start of Something Big JJ•rilcp "Mill•ftl&J9,. 1.-MI' T•t'-. JI" "I.-, .. H•I· 209, Sot. 109. The Biggar Sale of '731 HERE 4ND NOW! SAVINGS TO 30% and more! In the Biggar Quality All Selected from Our Regular Stock • Henredon • Heritage • Drexel • Biggar's Custom Sofas '& Chairs "'' • • • .,,,, Altc6 Alar• FOR EVERY UVINO PURPOSE! DINING IOOM IEDROOM UVINO ROOM CARl'ITING BEDDING ACCESSORllS """' ,,_, ,. Mn C•~;,,_ ,---:::::?~NOW AT AU 3 STORES·--------. P.ASAl>ENA •AOL COlOltADO llVO. (113) 792 .. tl6 l'OMONA •1IOL HOLT AVL -171~ 629-3026 SANTAANA •1111N.MAINST. (714) !<7-16Z1 . ltOOo\1'1 OWN IUOOft ~AfrMAMlltCAlo-.MUTU otAIOI , ' • ' \ . . . -. . . . :o DAll Y PILOT ,. ' -.. • Thlwsdiy, °""°""' 28, 1972 .. . . . . ... • • l ' " ~ • 1 . ...... -' . . ~ .... Seeks M9del Urban Image Irvine . . .. ,-. :J'.. ' ty county clerk swears in the first members ~'e Irvine City Council shortly after 5 p.m. on ; 28, 1971 . Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor was ~· • first to receive oath of office. Awaiting their oaths are, (from left), John Burton, William Fischbach, Henry Quigley and E. Ray Quigley Jr. IRYINE COUNCIL SELECTS FIRST CITY MANAGER William Woollett, Jr. Guides Infant City THE CITYHOOO CAMPAIGN Button Was Prophecy ' NOSHA KE SEALS THE BARGAIN -On Sept. 1971 , Orange . County Board of Supervisots eed to se t the election date which led to in cor· ~ation <>I the cily of Irvine. Board Chairman .Ron- DAILY ~!LOT St.ti',..... aJd Caspers and future councilman John Burton shake on the bargain. Cityhood supporters appear- ing before county supervisors (below) express their elation, • .Begins 2nd Year of Growth By GEORGE LEIDAL OI .. DallY Plltf Ji.ff On Dec. 21, 1971, the world's only ma. )or new town development with a locally electetfcity government WI! bor Five persons selected from a · 35 cand.idates only a week earller we sworn into office as the first council of tht new city of Irvine. The five, average age 33, elected a 31· year~ld m,ayor -William M. Fischbach -to lead the new -govehun~l of a city of 16,000 people spread a<;rOSS 11,1)) . acres. AT THAT mornent, the promise of a s.a,ooo-acre city With a ball a million peo- ple living in It bY the year 2,000 descr~·bed by Irvine Culnpany planners as t largest master · planned city in b America, was a question mark. Coun- cilmen addressed· themselves fint to the tasll: of creatiii& a ~ponaive qity govern· ment. 1 J," . The.IS.month .drive lo incorporate a ci· ty before neighboring cities ripped off valuable Industrial tax base through piecemeal rumexations led to the historic first council meeting. John BUrton, who successfully led the Council of Com- munities of Irvine through the maze of . legal requirements and battles with cowr ty officials over the citybood election, was among the five chosen to serve on the first City Council. ' . ' Irvine's 6,600 voters selected another who had worked with CCI in laying the groundwork for ~ new city to continue. to serve Its resi<JePts as a cwncllman - E. Ray Quigley Jr., 38, of Turtle Rock. Save Tlaose Trees ••• Voters, who generally avoided slated candidates, nevertheless backed three of four persons endorsed by an en- vironmental action organ11\8Uon, Irvine Tomorrow. 1, • , Shortly aftl\I' cilyhood visited lhe open spaces of Irvine, the City Council mov'ed lo curb any action fl¥ developers wbicll would destroy trees native to the region. Irvine was first city tn Orange County to adopt an anti-tree-chopping or<linanl>!. OF THESE, Mayor Wllllam ~ polled lhe most votes -leadlq .U five councilmen. The vote returns gave rise to !!peculation residbts feared lrvi~ Company domlnatloo ol lht oouncil and favored rather a balanced team d. city have taken many small steps toward aeilning Irvine will be the unique place ita founding fathers -and one mother - hope it will lie- policymakers. . , AMONG these accomplishments have With Fiachbach, Cowictlman Hemy been: Quigley, 31, of the Ranch, aod QM1n. CtM:Uon 61. a ayrtem of citizen ad- cilwoman Gabrielle P.ryor, alao 31, of v1aory Committees to study and report to University, Part, were elected to the the council on aMighed tasks ranglng council by large vote marglm. f1om btke 1fails1o public safely. Together, the three', It lint fanned a -Enadment, OOrlng the councll's flrst distinctly recognizable eD'firafmlffttllly meeting, 'Of en 'urgency law "protecting protecUve majority. Bl the year slDci.-.tbe city's ·~Jc tucalyptus windows that first meeting, that distinction )lfa. and anr tDAtUfe trfe from being cut 'mell.owed on some, 1-es, hardened on ·~wp, exctpt when a City permit is others. Within a matter of monpur. 3 to 2 issued. split votes were a rarity. -Regulation, by means of the con- Fears Gf any , who may have believed diUona.1 use permit process, the deslgn the city's flrst ~ii would attempt to and location of gasoline scrvl~ statJons. halt any further development of the city -Improvement of the city wall ~net were allayed when c o u n c 11 m e n streetscape requirements by means of a unanimously voted to protect the city's detailed design ordinance. future growth optiona and launched the -Preparation of a policy plan base successful 8.200-acre annexatWn. for the ultimate' clty aener.al plan drawn The "Frasier" annexation, so named Crom recommendatlort1 of citizen com· because it brought Lion Country Safari mittees, developers and staff. and another future industrial complex 'in- to the now 41·square mile city, made fw1her history. The anneuilon was !he first in the state to realile the intent er the Knox-Nisbet Ac~~w desi~ed lo encourage orderly h of cities and preclude piecemeal 8#1 ations. THE ADDfTION, enlarging the city to cover 26,400 aeres, also made Irvine the largest in Orange County, outstripping Anaheim by•five square miles. The movft protected the tax base for the future cJty and the 6,000 acres of prime J'l;lklentlal hillside land. NotabiY, the unanimous action derrionstr&ted that all councilmen share the hope that Irvine wtll bec«ne a truJy model urban environment. Th.It hope continues as the city launc&es lts first general plan effort with a direction to the city's planning COO· sultants to seek a plan program which provJdcs ror a "model urban en· vironmenl ''. ln its first year', however, councilmen -PROVISION of an "instant" Police force trained officers from tht ranks of the Costa Mesa Police Department which is providing public safety services under a two-year contract recommended by citizens. -Attraction of a nucleus city stalf in all but two areas -public works and public safety of fi.ve proposed for the new city. Planning, administrative services and human enhancement departments have been functioning nearly six mOnths. -Provision of an. al~·year recreatlon program which sprang from a SUJRlller program begun by citir:en volunt·eers and city staff and included tbe city's first regular ~ service. The year was not without Its con· troversles, however. The debate raged for 8 time over ex- cessive commercial development in the once · industrially planned. ·areas near · Oninl• County Airport.' Equitable treat- ment for ·a11 commertially zoned ·pavce.Js. notably the 50 acres 1o be developed by Douglas Development Company emerged from that debate. RIGHTS OF property owners vs. the health, safety and welfare of futW'e city residents became a heated issue in lengthy bearinp before bolb planning commission and city counciJ. Rinker Development Company ultimately lost !ta bid for residential zoning on a 70-acre parcel near El • Toro Marine Corps Air Station, because the property is affected by jet noise from thO military base. -Provision of a complete range of flool.. ing opportunities, atrPort area ~ both on streets arid Iii -the air, planning for alternatives to reliance 911 the automobile and fiood Md seismJc safety continue to be unresolved issues. Revitalized citizen advisory bodies may be expected to tackle these in the coming year as councilmen weigh a new ap- pointment proposal by Mayor Fischbach. THE CITY'S planning commission, born last February amidst a spUt of opin- ion over ils numben and ways of ap- pointing commissioners, may be ex- pected to be .-.ututed. The ~. which limped along for six months with no planning director commissioners could call their own, and !aced review of a hoft of rezon1np ap- proved only days before iricorporatlon, ended the city's fl1'St year with increased confidence. The logjam of tract approvals eracted in October and November and ~Ion of a lengthy revision of the I r v 1 o e Ind1:1strial, Complex zoning and final review of µte sJ1.month Policy plan effort gave sign progress would be lea Crustrating in coming months. Ft-om 'its ·start ln rented meeting quarters in science lecture ball at UC Irvine to its iocation ih 4.500 square feet or offices in Uiwn Center across the street, city goVemment In Irvine bu been established. l<Tom all appearances, it. will be here for many more ytan. TALE OP THi IA\.LOT BOX -Irvine cllYHood proponeoi. gathered al the Alrporter Inn on lhe night of Die. 21,. 1971 , " electloq returns began coming In oa lht lncorpqraUoo llS!le. la the end, Or .... Cllftt.7'1 city, eo>bndat 18,000 acres 3,224 for allyhood and 1,515 agalnsl A ltreGI 70.5 percent of Irvine'• registered voi.-. tu.hltd out to determine the issue. One wee~ '!alef, ~ one year ago today, the new ctty or ttvine oll1ctally went In to buslneu. 1 and U ,000 clt ·was formed. flte vote wu • ' ' • I \ 1 ' . ' ' : • ' . ,. ' i • • ' . ' ~v,. f ' ' MllYPllOTI ........... City's First Aide Anita Schandel, 35, of Uruversity Park, became the new city or Irvine's first permanent employe. 'She served as secretary to William \Vollett, Jr. wlto was at the time the city's administrative consultant and who went on to become first city manager. Irvine Gets Men in Blue ·Magician To Teach In El Toro , A apedal clasa in magic will be taugh\ by a professional "slia:bt of hand" artlsi at the Saddlebact Valley' YMCA In El Toro beginning Jan. 15 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. for four weeks. Bob Tribulas, a professional magician who recently moved to Oran&e County, wlll head the course open to anyone ll y-d or older: It will be held at>lhe Y aervlce centtr at 1313t ~Ave. At least to P,Onoos llllllt sJgn up for the class for it to continlle. Participants will he abown by Tribulu how iO change h separate fOpes'ln~o one long one, vanish a piece of clotb, do coin tricks, change a one dollar blll into a five dollar bill "and much more," a Y~l· CA official said. The Saddleback YMCA also ii handling party and banquet engagements for Tribulas. For information on that or on the class, call the Y at 830-YMCA. Membership in the Saddlebact YMCA is open to resi.dents of Irvine, Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel, Mi!Sion Viejo, El Toro and Lake Forest. On Sept. 1, 1972, the new city of Irvine got its own police force in form of officers assigned from the city of Costa Mesa on a contract · arr31J,gement ~ tween city councils. Here, . Officer Robert Kredel takes first police rO.,ort at Rancho 'San Joaquin Golf Course where illegal sbootirig of 4oves bad been suspected. , • CONGRATULATIONS To Our Growing Neighbor THE CITY OF IRVtN.E ' • America's .Most ExGiting Fashion Center I OAlt.Y .PjUlT DR. HIDEYA GAMo, UC IRVINE PROFE5'(>R, SEElil WITH LASER I~ HIS LAd°A'T~'-""°"" Ha 5hocii. at th. Moon In Connection With Scientific Miiitary R-rch • •• He'll Shoot the Moon Irvine Prof Builds Lasers for Researcli, Military On a clear dart night this winter, Or. Hideya Garno of UC Irvine will climb up to-his 'llintb-story lab and station himself patiently beneath a SO.inch oblong hole in the roof. . Dr. Garno will move, even brealtJe, as llttle as possible, because fluctuations in air currents or temperatures could upset the accuracy of his experiment. When the moon rises into his view - Dr. Gamo will choose a night when this occura about midnight -he will ·warm _\IJJ one of the many lasers be bas built at UCI. And when the moon is squarely ~thin view, Or. Garno will attempt to shoot ·11 with a beam or taaer light. • "N<mllNG WIU. ,.ally happeo oo the moon," be explains. "I'm .only doibg this for practice. Later I hope to bit mott di!· ficuk taraets Uke plants and sa~ites." Target practi~ might_ seem. like a natµral pastime Jot. a scientist .supported by 1120,QOO In federal ,grants,-excepl that Dr'. Garno has a very peacefW purpose in , mind. someday be hopes to train his lasers on stars so far from ~ that, traveling at · the speed of light, it would take man several.million years to reach them. Co • , • • such stars, from their remote cOrners of the universe, emit laser light of their own, and if Dr. Garno can aim precisely at one of them with a laser from earth, the two light beams would tend'to cancel each other out. From this, Dr. Gamo believes, a wealth of inlonnation could come. "SINCE IT wouldn't be p,.cUcal to visit these stars and since we couldn!t get very close apyway, this may be the best way to find out about them," the Japanese born scientist says. ~ Right now, Dr. Gamo's cares are more down to earth. He's beeo abooting laser beams through a window in bis lab at a reflector mirror on a hill S,000 feet away. "But the Irvine Company graus catUe over there at tbls time of year, and they don't lite the Idea ol havin( jbeir "°"" lllt wilb lal!!gl. Of ~ ~. IMers ·....Wdh burl tiien.. but people teOcl'lo be afraid of. 11..ers u n ~"··~-any circumstaDces. r• ' THE RESULT is that Dr. Garno is now wit.bout targeta 'to shoot at , except for the moon. The short-range purpose o( Dr. Gamo's I r • . ' • -work is intended to be of immedJ; value to the Air Forte. A major limltatlon or aerial naJssance is that light waves travel' throogh the atmosphere tend to ' , jumbled or S!;l'•mbled. This Is ca~ ' temperature OuctuaUons, smog; · natural gases in the air. ~ Dr. Gamo's aim right now is to lea ~ow ~ ~scramble light, to return _it 1 ~ Its original pattern after it Jias ~ distorted. ~ :' It's similar to trying to produce ' sharp photograph from a very • (1\i;.1 negative. J\: § ' ll '"l'M INl'ERESTED In this beca~ lasers trav.ollng millions of miles t!ir<"* apace become dlston.d and I iieed., tnow bow to mate them apln," Dr. Gamo SQS. '"l'be;Air , ~ want,.toJie ,file~ ... clearly fnkn v fM •-:•Y \.hat thi'enemy ls ililla£:.·;.o:~ Tiie tht<Wtleal J>!oblerrflS tbe~ both caaes, be yy1, which a11o ... ' Illl!ic do basic acleoce research and :at'"" .am. time qualify for military fwii!Qg. Dr. Garno, 48, lives in Corclpa del:.Mar with bis wife and two children. .. .. ' ' .· .~ . '•, ' " . • ' . .. , • .. ~ ...... ' .. ~., ' ~. " ' '· . · ..... ' ,, " " ,'l\l ;. . """ .. , ' t'.1'.J "' "' I I I . ,. DAILY PILOT Sl•ff P'llo'- Irvine Ranch Goes for Citylwod . I On April 26, 1971, Irvine Company Pre=Wil· in the cityhood drive. Witnessing Mason's signing liam R. M!Ht>~put,hlJ ~ire o•'in lion ate ,aen to iillht), Davi'Smlth Bet.sy Cousins, Barr petltiom ~ 'Ula. Irvine C0mp111y larg-FletCber and John Bur)On, chairman of the Council est lalldowner in the propooed city, tavored the of Communities of Irvine (CCI). move for municipal government 11'1'*S a key move · .,, ·\-t. •"f'. ... l . ···· : . .... : ..... • ·----- . . . DAILY PILOT ls.ff,... Historic First Irvine Council Sessiota . . ' ., Exactly one year ago today on Dec. 28 , 1971, this is how the brind~new Irvine City COOnci,1 looked as it went into initial session in cham bers rented from UC, Irvi ne. Note chalked sign of cityhood. At left, attorney H. Rodger Howell advises~councilmen on \ procedures as Mrs. Norissa Brandt served as act .. ing city clerk. Councilmen Oeft to right) are E. Ray Quigley, Jr., Henry Quigley, Mayor William Fisch· bach, John Bwton and Mrs. Gabrielle Pryor. • • 1• 1 : ! ......... r __ .,,_v_o.., . .---1 i ..... : . Greetings . . . I • ' .. TUSTIN • llCAI cp5T4 .. Ml54 ..... ~ --· .. _,, IRVINE ·~~ ··Bow Irvine Grew · -~~·Map on right indicates bow the new city of Irvine looked upon incorporallons with stars indicating ·-home oubdiyisions and .tar in croosbattjl the Irvine Industrial Complex. SrnaHer map indicates how Frasier Annexation mushroomed new .Sty to 26,400 acres with dotted line indicating ''zone of influ· ence" where future growth may occur. Pride Displayed , · .,. . .'°""" O.U..J~·~ .... . , . . . . . . . '" Saddleback Registration Set Jan. 2 Late registration for winter quarter classes at Saddleback College will be t.$ken during the first week of classes Jan. 2 through 5, college officials ilafe announced . • Students at the Mission Vie- jo cominunitY college campus are currently on holiday vaca- tions until.classes resume next week. . ~ , College • dlices at 28000 'Marguerite Parkway are open every weekday except New Year's Dar. until then . ' . Shortly after the new city or lrvint! a~opted it.s Latin motto, Angulus Ridel, special Irvine license plate frames started appearing all over the new munici- pality. Julie Gardner, 12, and Councilman Henry Quigley were among first to get a new Irvine frame in!talled. . The ,:winlei; quarter extends lhroljgh Mareh 19. More than 275.. d8sses ire being offered at the college during the day this coming quarter and more than 120 classes in the evening program. Firm Claims Energy , Field Find in State LOS ANGELES (AP) - Magma Energy, Inc. says it discOvered age o the rm a I energy field Jn Northern Gallfomia which cou1d produce huge quantities o( bot waler ror use in genetating· elec- tricity. ~ '' The Los Ange1es·ba5ed com- pany said Wednesd1y it com- pleted Its first well at a depth of 4,5J5 feet in Callfo.ml1'1 Surprise Valley, 120 miles northwest of Reno, Nev. "PRELIMINARY F l N - DINGS Indicate the field con· talns an abundant eupply of subterranean water with !Ugh ternperaiure. practical for energy g....,.ation by the CU11· pany'1 Magmamu PoWtt pro- Cf!llS," the announcement said. Magma Energy . a subsidiary of ·Magma Power C.o., said te11tlng of the Surprist Valley well and fu~ drilling will be un- dertaken next spring. MAGMA POWER supplies l'.aciflc Gas and Electric Co. ·with steam for generating electricity from wells in tbe Big Geyser district. 80 miles north of San FraocJoco. The Big . Geyser wells ac- count for production of 400,000 kilowatts of electricity , a Magma Power spokesman said. THE l\IAGMA firm and San Diego Gas and Electric Co. are engaged in a geo,thermal program in Southern Callfomla's Imperial Valley, where five wella are being· dr\llcd. the spokesman said. WE SALUTE THE CITY OF IRVINE ON THEIR 1st BIRTHDAY COMPLETE FAMILY SHOE STORE ... Mon, Women I Children 54 FASHION ISLAND e Nl!WPDRT CENTER ' • To ·The '.Sparklin·g Nf~ City of· Irvine , . , I F om The Merchants of .Fashion I , I , ' . •) • l .; .... • ' and . ' ~ Je DAILY PILOT • Thll'SdQ, Dtttmbef 28, 1972 ... ' '. ' CITY OF CALIFORNIA. 1972 IRVINE TOWN CENTER IN THE HUB OF THE NEW CITY OF IRVINE ON CAMPUS DRIVE EAST OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IRVINE Westeliff Plaza Bom In '63 •.. The First Of These Many Attractive And Convenient· Centers 24 DISTINCTIVE SHOPS AT 17th AND IRYINE AYE. IN NEWPORT BEACH •• 0 UNIVERSITY PARK tENIER ON CULVER DRIVE AT MICHELSON IN THE CITY QF IRVINE GROWING WITH THE •-'I COMMUNITY " \ EASTBLUFF. VILLAGE CENTER ON EASTBLUFF DRIVE NEAR CORONA DEL 'MAR" HI 7 SHOPS AND MORE COMING VERY SOON BAYSIDE CENTER ON BAYSIDE DRIVE ND JAMBOR&E ROAD AT THE BALBOA ISLAND BRIDGE 14 DELIGHTFUL SHOPS • ' • •.:; ' I '• • • ' , .. ,.,. • • I • .• • .. • ' . . PROGRESS IS ACTION ••• AS DEMONSTRATED DURING THE FIRST YEAR OF THE CITY OF IRVINE ••• BY PULLING TOOITHIR, .. A COMMUNITY CAN ESTABLISH .AN EXCITING FUTURE FOR THIM. SELVES, THEIR CHILDREN, AND COMING GENERATIONS ••• THllE Mot)ERN SHOPPING "CENTIRS Wj40 HAVE· HELPED CONTRIBUTE TO THAT PROGRli,_SS, SALUTE .THE CITY OF IRVINE ON THllR FIRST ANNIVl!RSARY .•• , • • -. , .. , THE NEW&ST . IN THE CITY •OF -11!-VINE ' . t . WALNUT . Yiu.AGE, ·CENTER -ON CULVlll DRIVE .. AT THE S/'NTA AHA FREEWAY MANY FINE SHOPS AND MOR \C~ING ___ ... • • • • • ' , 1 ' l i • ' • ·1 ;11 "' :- .'t~ '.q ·. • • . , L "• HARBOR . l • • ~ VIEW CENTER;" . -" .. IS DISCRIMINATING"sHOPS. ' ·Of:I SAN J~QUIN ffl!'LS .RoAo · • EAST OF MACARTH~'-BLVD. ·' AND FASHION 11S1.-~NP., WORTH YOUR "' • VISIT . : . '\. .•. ' • . it ~ ' •\ , ., f ,..,. 1!') Jr, ,. I r :n: , .. .. . .... , • .a;~ .111,.. •• 3, .,_, I IL-• A,• 1 I I : I . I ! -t'YJIJ • ' .. , • . I b9·.I 1h11 ... lA , ~ m''/ . \"'.)~ • . .,,,. v t't·~ ... t'~I I I i ( ' " Buniingion Beaeh Feantain Valley VOL. 65, NO. 363, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PA~ES ORAN6E COUNTY, CALI FORNIA- - Dally Paper THURSDA)'. ·DECEMBER 28, 1972 TEN CENTS Fur MOy Fly at· Council Meet--Pllt • By TERRY COVILLE' ................. Huntington. Beach city councllmen may tangle with cat !oven ~ night when they lnspect-1 new animal .control law wlCb tncfulSe& a mandator)' '5 cat llcensir ,. "' limit the freedom of cats, bUt the pro- -4 ~ doea DOI speciflCally do ~{'-cl•• the animal cmtrol officer lbe _,. to plct up alray cats and ~ o! them alter five days: Tbere ia 1 rectuctlon in cost -to $2.50 -for cats whlch have been spayed or neutered, bul the owner· must prove such aclJoo bas -talren. money lo the agency responsible for aNmal control. In the past, the city kept 10 percent Of the lJceose revenue. A few other code provisions have been strengthened. No resident Ls allowed to keep more than 10 fowl (chickens, ducks, geese, turkeys, doves, pij:eons, etc.) at ooe loca· Uon. WUd animals, birds of prey aod dangerous reptiles can ool ·be let hoe In the cily. .: 'Ibo city plans lo ~ •. JllllldOlory cat lleense f0> the finl llnie in an. effort to -..i the town'lfelliie JIOllU!aUO.. 'Ibo eat Jaw WU ~ by COW>- ""-• and has -wrl-by the city attorney, . CoUncilmen "&l8o W"'!ted-to 'l'be -<Oalnll olflcer, u be has the DIDIO, -llOtily the cal, or dog, OWDll' In wrtllne or by pbooo. • Councilmen will discuss the com· pnbensive aoJmaJ C<IO!rol law during the 7 p.m. meeling, Tuesday, Tbey -I 'Neaday because Monday ts· a bollday: Parts of the old animal control law have been rewritten becaUBe the city doe• not plan to 'renew the CGDtract of the Huntington Beacb Humane SOCiety when it expires in February. Residents are not allowed to keep wild animals (lions, Ugers, bears, rblnoi, etc.) without obtaining a special permit which costs $20. The same applies to birds of prey (falcons, hawks, etc.) and dangerous reptiles. The city admlnlst(;ltor can lllUe a special permit to educaliooal or youth- oriented groups to maintain large domestic animals (sheep, cattle, etc.) for educaliooal pilrposes. Va_lley Police Fire Volley At Fleeing Man H -ed, Ibo city will require ao ~-u will be the ......... the n.,..,.. now required for clogs, with the deadline *Ii-April I. . '!be mrrttten lllllmal control law a1ao boosts Ibo current dog n ..... fee from I& to '7 JleT year. 11 also gives all liceme ' . &itan' Beach Compiny. The · d..C· Center , "-Jex• I peeled .to -next lall,There are JIO·current pw11 lo pllaM ·~ thfi n.blel. . 4 Palestine Terrorists Hold Israeli Hostnges Fountain Valley police fired four llbots at a burglary suspect in a coafroatation BANGKOK (UPJ) -Four PIJestln:ian Dawee made no mention of the Wednesday ~t lhll eoded an hour .and gpelTillu seif<d the Israeli embassy to-hostages when be emerged wilh F.gyptlan a half later with .thr!:e' men under arrest. dly and threatened· to blow it up alcng ambassador Mustaffa El Tawt from the Officers Leon Pepka and Jim 1Worrell !1'l~~ Wllesa illl'ael releaaed e,mbassy alter a lace-to-face mee~ said Ibey believed Jesus Marla Luju, :a, ~ '~ •prbooethey -~ to 1_ the. with the guerrillas but tbe police olli · Of •-~ was armed !'lib a•--'-"" -..,_ ·~ said the•bostages would be !teed. w~~~me Out of a newt.1 ~ holtApl in return for safe conduct from Oawee, a ranking member of the apartment .near san Mateo Street and ta ~ . · military oontrolled government, entered Alameda Avenue. Air Chief Marsbol Dawee Chuluapya the Embassy with tbe Egyptiao am· t1ia1i'° .:'.::"~ere:':!.i':{"'~~ • ::;:-'.,...:: ~ po'\f.!'l:ffi~ta';~ .~:': i:ct.=~ile guerrilla promise so Worrell fired a shot willch mliaed Jlo'. . ~t. In retum, the guerrillas agreed to He said be and· Deputy Foreign reh!ase the !h:4lsr&elis held inside 'the M'•'"'" ~--~-1 Ch aha ould jan. , , ~ ""!"""'r ~'lKI un wan w When the suspect started nllllin(, -...y . . more lhan 10 liours llCOOIJIPOllY the guerrillas when they left Pepka ordered him to halt and when be 'm>der a'111ttat · death. ' 'lbaitand. Other offiolals said that El failed to do '°• the officer sald'he llrld Tawi would also make the trip, aod that three addittooal shots wblch also missed. the guerrillas would be allowed to keep The incldent· !tarted at a•t .11~•· Argentine smn· ·g their weapons. p.m. when P<pka heard a window being • . Police officials said arrangements lllWhe!I tn the unoccupied apartment were being made for a special lllgbt to complu. · N~D · A • l take the guerrillas out of the couotry. He was jointd bY Worrell and, wllh the . ~;._ ppoln ee They said the most llkely destination was aid of a. spotllgbt, the ~w• olli<en aaJ<I, '' : • · • • C.U.. they 11w three men inside one ol 'llie. ~ '(~)".-lf.ll1fam. P. ~ee made the announcement tn the apartments. I" Cltinebtl, ~Pfelldent NI.Job's cbaa for' · t street in foxlt of the embassy and ' At lhlt point, U.jao walbd outsi4e the deJ>!ll7 _.lar1'..<JI Dofeaoe, r. being lhea alter further <oosultaUoos tn a tem- apartment, the officen said. i -~ for libel by U A r g e n"'i i n e prnry comm~ post across the street, When be fled, be was 'punlied, tdWard" baslneunuul ·.' who belped lhe Tuaa be, Cbartcibai mid the Egyptian am--SlrOet by Wanoll •·~ ·ol!iqan'1 lleilcO Ille:. 11111 up .... ·of tlie bossador returned to the embassy sigbt of him. , 'latgea oU'dHll!ng contracts in'btstory. building. With them· they carried two bot· Meanwblle, Peplui'bacl talrOn ~ah:• · · Aa\Qnio , Ir .• J?iaz •filed the · flknllllon ties of liquor. two companloni ililo 'cuslocly. :nie,;.-_ '.,lidt iCilM!if the mujttnalloOal eotpocailoo The guerrillas Identified lhemsel.., as tdenttlled aa Mlcbael )lay MerTltt 20, . ~nd 1\1 .board pi;etidebt, Clements, 55, the Black September Organisation which Long Beacb, and ~.Edwin iiiiruiti, ~Y-. carried out the musacre of Israeli SI, Cerrilos. Diu, wbooe lilteresta Include news atNetes at the Munich Olympics and laid A mauive "9earcb for the mldb:te communiC(:ltlons ~ in So u t b lt wu respoosjble for the massacre at ·suspect was lamiched, \18ina ·ou tllty ~lea, sa:ld Clementi made "grossly the Lod lntematkmal airport in Tel Aviv Fountain Valley olftcen a1oag Wllh 'of-defamalOl'J'" llatem,... about Diaz dur· tn whlcb Japanese gunmen sbot aod.klll· ficen from Hunttngtoo Beach the Hun-In& a news coolerence Dec. II in Dallas. · (See TERROR, Page !) · Ungtoo Beach police ~ and (See BURGLARS, Pap I) .. Draftees Get a City officials have said Ibey plan to hlrt a privl!ite agency, California Animal Control, as the city's new official dog (and cal) catcher. Most of the la'R!: are standard throughout California, e:rcept !or the cat license which has been tried In a limlted number of towm, city officials say, Tru1nan Buried Funeral Simple-As He Requested INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (UP!) - America said goodbye today to Harry S Truman,· a: common man of the· people and their 33rd President. The funeral was simple and di,gnifled, fiUlng for a gentleman who called bUmelf a "meat and potatoes" man. The "Man of Independence" was buried In lbe ground be loved -tn the courtyard hy the rose garden of the Truman Ubrary in his hometown. Bess 'l'ruman, his aglng widow and helpmate for more thao hall a century, waa there, mustering all•tbe strength she could, to bid a final I~. She will be 18 Feb. 13. . Truman died Tuesday tn his last battle -:a days of fighting age and disease In ~ Holpital in KaJJSas City. He fell 467 daJ!I sborl of his i!ream -living lo age IO. (Related pictures, Page 5). Tbere .'were ooldfurs, slatesmecc, lamily-"""J!Jot!:. #·lhe :rivajo 'rilao to honor ....._.asfnt!:W .i mutfnd'a molt ·lltlOIDe declikm.. · 1PI' · dw'tbbo)I who r~ under ~·C.ptaia s;.,•,olmlng Wirld War I la Battery D llood wlth,tbe lllffelt mUllary posture lhlt age woold allow. 'ln¥Mn believed tbat mao provided his cwn dignity, and, because of that, bis funeral was embelllJbed Clllly with quiet military lloorishel, tal" from a lone bugler and a 21-gun salute. There were no eulogl ... There was ooly prayer. "Most merciful Father, who bas been pleased to take· unto Tbyseif the soul of Thy servant, Harry. grant t.o us whc are still ln our: plJDim,age, and who walk as yet by faith, -that bavtng served Thee wlth constancy on earth, we may be join- ed hereafter wilh Thy blessed saints in glory ever1uting," uJd \be Rev. John E. Lembcke, Jr., pastor of the Independence Trinity Episcopal Churcb. Before the funeral and b u r i a 1 , thousands of mourners -rich and poor, famous and unknown, workers wearin~ overalls and aprons and men and women carrying babies -filed slowly aod silently by his mabocaoy cuUt. The plain people wen the ones Truman Joved: He was born 88 years ago and railed tn the farm bearllan\I of America. His mother used to boast: "Harry can plow the straightest furrow cf com in Missouri.'' He became the people's servant, as MAN, 65, PLANS TO SCA LE TETON LANDER, Wyo. (UPI) -While most rr.en his age are speodlng New Year's day in front of their television sets, Paul J>el>oidl, 65, bope1 to be llvinll In a lllOW cave on wind-JWept, 13,766-foot Grand Tetoo. PeUoldt plans to mab an assault on the peak of Grand Teton either New Year's Eve or New Year's Day. The climb will be his eighth with graduates of his National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS). The group has reached the peak only In 1919. Break U.S. senator, vice president and their , chief ezeculive. His straight talk and firm manner in the White House led to the niclthame, "Give 'Em Hell Harry." But of that, the little man in tbe wire- rimmed spectacles said: "I never gave anybody bell. I just gave 'em the truth and they thought it was hell." In deference to the funeral and a day of mourning proclaimed by Prelldent Nixon, there was no mall delivery and the New York and American stock es~ changes were closed. A memorial service is planned Jan. S in Washington'• Naticnal Cathedral as a final gesture to the tougb UtUe Missourian, and the 30-day mourning (Ste TRUMAN, Page !) Da,light Bombardnient Saigoq Hints Bomb End r:t;~ SI~ ~~s on Peace SAIG-ON (UPI) -Swedish dlplomatic reporto 'llid Ameli<U B&ls IOI flihter- -'bit Hanal at 'DOOa loday ii the heaviest dayllgb• bi>mbardrl>ent ol the war. The Sovjet news ageney Tau reported lhat parts of the North Vietnam.,. capital had been "erased from the face of the earth, II There were hints In the govemment- controlled press In Saigon tbat the Norlh Vietnamese might have bad enough and that the ralda might be halted above the 20th parallel in the next few days in order to resume the peace talks in Paris. But the Communist Vietnamese in Paris were still issuing d e f i a n t statements. Tbe U.S Command reported growing American losses of planes and men in the massive aerial assault but bad no word on today'• bombing actlviUes. U.S. rr.Uitary sources said strikeS against the Hanoi-Haiphong Industrial heartland con- tinued today a n d Communist reports said there were three Hanoi raida today. The command reported the loss of two more BSZs and the . shooting down of a Jelly Green Giant resci.tt helicopter ever Norlh Vietnam, bringing to 14 the number of the _.million strategic bombers loat in the air war that began Dec. 18. Hanoi Radio said a North Vietnamese Alr Force plane, presumably a MlG, shot down a 852 some 70 miles southwest of Hanoi Wednesday. A Hungarian repcrt said three BS1.1 were shot down by lighter-~. The North Vietnamese delegation in Paris issued a special statement today saying the American .attacks have ravag- ed areas of Hanoi aod Haiphong wilh the Police Discover Identity-Not Slaying Motive Seal Biacb Police have identified the dead Marine found tn their city 'l\cesday as F.d Moore, 20, of Kentucky, who had been AWOL from Camp Pendleton since Friday. force of an earthquake, k i I I i n g ''thousands'' (If people. it said !loi1ll v~ Immen shot down 71 U.S. ain:rafl, lncludlng II B$2s, in nine days. The U.S. COmmaod and the """tagoo gave no repom of any damage to civilian areas and insisted that the plants d~ ped tlieir bombs Oilly "' milltary targets. The only reports of what actually was happening tn the greatest aertsl aaault of the war came from C4mmunlgt news agencies and neutral diplomats in Hanoi. Tbe Hungarian news agency MTI reported today that a billing 1!52 sbot down over Hanoi Wedne9day crashed near the presidenUal paJace and that several crewmen died in the flames. It , said the wreckage demolished a few buildings but no Vietnamese were killed. President Nguyen Van 11lieu met for (See BOMBING, Pap I) Weather Expert Tells Burglary In Huntington Huntington Beach1s MOfficlaJ weather historian Wednesday otgbt reported the loss of '500 worth of coins and gold rings. J. Sherman Denny, who has kept rain- fall and temperature readings: for Hwr ttngtoo Beach for the past 41 years, discovered the theft of the Items after retumlng fn:m an outing with frienda at about 9: 15 p.m. He told police thieves apparently bad gone lhrouib bis house and bod taUn a coin collection aod 1 collection of about 30 gold rings. . Deony's Siamese cat was a1JO ~ cntsstng, bUt olflcen located the pet later a few bloctcs from the Denny bocno. Ceaat Weadoer 2 Catholics ·oK· Survival Acts · · Day of Mourning Cancels Induction: of 300 You ths Moore's body was dbcovered early Tuesday lltOl'Olnl "' the 7th Slroet off· ramp at tho Jimcllon al the Son Diego and Son Gabriel l'reeway1 In Seal Buch. The Orange Cowlty C&nJner 111<1 - It'll be lllMY on Frldoy bat the temperature wlU be a ut'tit n:Jppy, due to the Pacific -Oiild !root movtnc Into tbe area. 1111!11 ol. 60 are upected, whb ~ lows in the 40I. NEWYORK(AP)-Twollaman • catholic lheologlaos say that 1111 • I • p1ane.......i, aurvh>orr In Ille Andel who ate ftealf ol dead com~ to keep alive 11acted just1f1Qly." "A penon b permlttod to .. 1 d .. d human nosh II there II no feasible ::altematlve for llD"'riftl," Mlfr. AUll!n Vaugbu ad tbe ftey, Wllllam Smtih wrote In a -cm the IUbjecl. The prleats wrote t h e fn. terpretatlon of catholle ~ as spoilesmen lor the - • Caibolk: Arcbdloceoe of -Y.t. • llJ TOii llAllLEY . n-teloJl'll1I'. ..... the draft • ., ---' boatdl thlt loductlbos planned for todl1 ""1 fooal driolloel.' wllll llopeo tbat bava --• .Bui ~ II Olio made _,... *' of ~ lor lormer Clear in \lie' -communication !hat -Harry 8 Tn,unan mJilbt mean any local _, allected have ~ owllch· the deelll of plam for lhelr military ed to wllot Barnett coiled the "eneoded .. m<e bad -bury -bopeo, • . priority" .... p. I lepl ilde ol the Loi Alcplto Selective 'lllat -cU be called up at1 lll1 -°"""'-llid IOdoy. lime llotHeu --and April l. And "I clao1 1D19W bow 1111111' al the more repor1I lllml W~ !hat nobody I.I •Ila JtlO 4rafteel ldenlllled h Y bolnf callld 11P for J-..ry do DOI mean WlllllnclOn lived in lhe [Go Ancele>-that -will Ill Ill Ille 111••• )D ~ CoomtlM -·" •ttomeJ Jack Feb""'l' ., ~ -..u, oald. -Aki. "Bal lhe7' bad ~ 1IOI ~ J, Qom, illllU(t Sell ol!Yt nad ... macb Into Ibo .......,,. tbelr -..,_ In "............ urllar dnft -baYe .-...... .. -local dnft -1111\ today • ·~ • • • 7 , Jofoore WU flranai<d -lohirdoy -· ....... da3'· thlo•:ieor for m. ntgbt by ..... IYPf ol "mechanical duadon tf • .,... means. II "Bot tbe ..,. lo -... ...... Seal --"" Jolin Aferyt --M a -day ol "'°""" Nkl be could noi II~ lltrther detalU OD !nl," -llid. '-n-mmiwlll -the-ol ltranplatlca at tlclo tbno. be clalM u ·-~IOI.,. Bit A~ Ulld ............ atfll clo Jult .. 4lillbla. _.,. na1lnow --. -•1111o.r ... ..ey . Jla~ ,.. advtoed al croabl'1 HI.I bodJ bad·-·-clmnpecl on ,_ied ,.,. tbet .. _ JUI. tho "" -...... lertac~-the-beft..,. At--be-...... Noorewu b' to'-' lbe •--to pl ao-_... ........, bl t 11, a pulkver o..--... -. , ---·.-.-~wllh ---• ~ alCI •<Iii It aw flag ... _ ' . . ........ = "I "'L' •---.·11t-Ulld, ~.with illtot.111111w• • -.11 "i. lei -_, M -""dan1-' 1 •-to coalacl BIL .A..,. 11 Ille Seal flood" ····~····., 8udl,..... ~ '· . •• INSmETODAY Thc·~lu...-~ ""' -the llfolnllffig ., • seca!ld """°' ""'nd Ito tM Jll''"I --· llol dog lok~ Ing a!ld _, "'°"" u tM obi«< of tM -rt ordct, See •IOrll ... Pag4 s. ......... , :... ......... u r-=,-: ~ 1-. "'4l Q • , --r••..:.·--'' -. ..... ~~-"" . -" -·· ..... µ, ,. ...... ... • l ' Z OAILY PILOT H UPI,....... l'lali• Troop• Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird will spend New Year's weekend on a 'farewell visit' to troops in Hawaii, the Penta- gon announced. O'Neill Park Being Filled By Campers Outdoor-oriented vacationers planning on a five-day weekend were already set- ting up campsites in O'Neill Park in Trabuco Canyon today. With today declared a naUooal day of mourning for the late President Harry S Truman and Monday a holiday for New Year's Day, many winter campers decid- ed to take Friday off too, a county park official reported today. A large crowd of campers is expected at the mountain area park this weekend if fa ir weather holds. O'Neill Park is open for camping at $2 a night per vehicle M boon a day, seven days a week. Picnicking-«tly costs 50 cents a day. There are no indiVidual campsites and no camping equip:nent requirements. Some penons come With fancy mobile trailers, others with only sleeping bags. How many campers are let tn depends on how close they camp together. A COlDlty park official said his only ad- vice to the hardy campers would be "drea wann," but aim caUtiooed tbat no open fires are allowed and smoking is forbidden in some areas. Recent Santa Ana winds have dried out the woodsy area so that fires are a danger. Campers are encouraged to check with state department of forestry officials at the park before lighting any loo. Even the most u:perie..ced campers fqet lo bring 1hings like lighter Owd and salt and pepper, tbe park spokesman said. There are oo supply facilities within the park, but small grocery stores are nearby in Trabuco Canyon. American Eagle Leads Greybeard HOBART, Tasmania CAP) -American Eagle, skippered by Ted Turner o{ At· Janta, appeared certain today of finish- ing first in the 630-mile Sydney to Ho- bart yacht race . American Eagle WU well abead o( ber main rival in the field of 79 yachts, Greybeard of canada, and was expected to flnilb lite FrJday well ahead of the ract record of lhree days, three hours and 46 minutes. Greybeard was more than 10 miles behlnd 'Mlu1'day but it was unlikely American Eagle would increase her lead muclt more bee.a~ better breezes were expecl<d during the night. OIAJN.I COAST NI ' DAILY PILOT ( , Bess Rested Slie Saved Her Strength INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (UPO -llM- ry s Tniman btooibt bis bride -lo Ille boo... on Delaware Street ...,. tlWi half a C<Otury "CO· Wedneodly, Bea Truman lifted 1 lhade in an upstairs win- dow and watched her cbll dbood sweethei1rt pass by for the last time. tn a sad and slow processkm, a gleam- ing blatl" hearse carried the body of the 88-year-old former President past the 14- room bouae. Tbe cortege of moumen wound atone a 15'-block. route Truman often waited when he was able. Mrs. Truman, t/l, did not attend the lying-in-state ceremonies that began when tbe hearse reached the Harry S Truman Library a mile away. Randall Jessee, a family friend . said she planned to save ber strength for today's funeral. Mrs. Truman saw her husband of 53 years for the last time Tuesday. Leaning on the arm of her daughter, Margaret Daniel, she walked ialo 1he room al lhe George C. Canon Funeral Home lo he wi lb Truman be.fore hl3 casket was seal- ed. I She last saw Truman alive at the eod of a U-bour vigil Chri.!tme Day, a short time before bis death in 'Research Hospital. Al the library \Vednesday, Mrs. Dani.el "'alked at the head of the mourners as they filed in .lo view Truman's casket lying on black velvet draped over a catafalque set up in the Ubrary'a lobby. Behind her walked her husband, Clif- ton. who held the bands of Truman's two youngest graod9ons1 Thomas Washiniton Daniel. 6, and Harrison Gates Daniel, 10. The two older boys, Clifton Truman Daniel, JS, and William Wallace Daniel, 13, walked bthlnd. Mrs. Daniel, her face drawn with sor- row and her bloode hair pulled back in simple style, walked erectly into the library and lo Ille catafalque showing lit- Ue outward evidence Of ti.. ·grief. She saved her tears for the fimoasme and the trip back lo 1he fom!ly home. Once inside, she dabbed ooftly al her eyes with a handkerchiel she took from the pocket of her high-necked black coal Later, Mrs. Daniel and her husband greeted fonner President Lyndon B. Johnson and his family at the home the way Truman and Bess used 1o greet friends, They walked to the front gate and greeted the Jobnsons. Mrs. Johnson hug- Suspect Indicted In Gun Assault On Tustin Officer A man a~ ol ~ a Tustin patrolman Ill !He ilomadi an.r being cha1lenged by the officer and a sheriff's deputy wu indicted Wednesday by the Orihge County. Grand Jury on charges of assault with a deadly weapon on pol.ice officers. II is expeclld lhat Gary William Johnson, 37, Tustin will be arraigned Fri- day in Superior Court to answer to charges lntllally med Dec. 6 shortly afler the wounding of Tustin patrolman Waldron Karp, %7. Karp was one of two Tustin patrolmen sent 1o a local home in response to pleas for help from a resident who said Johnson had fired several shots through her bathroom window in a bid to gain en- try to the premises. Two sherlfrs deputies picked up the call and joined the Tustin officers in the investigation. A man identified as Johnson then shot Karp In the stomach and deputy Tim Stewart was shot in the face by Karp's gun when the weapon discharged as the wounded officer fell. Stewart has rte0vered from what was described as a minor wound. Karp is now at borne recupe rating from more serious wounds that called for emergency surgery at a loc:ll hospital. Johnson is recovering in Orange County Medical c.enter from wounds In the hand and knee Inflicted. when lawmen sup- porting Karp and Stewart opened Ort on him. Witriess C1nims Officer Beaten SAN DIEGO (AP) -A defense witness for a black sailor accused o f participating in a race riot aboard the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk says he saw a group cf white crewmen beating the ship's bla ck executive officer the night the fracas broke out. The testimony ended a pretrial hearing Wednesday. The Maring officer, Lt. Cmdr. Don E. Eibert, l!J reviewing the testimony and evidence and will rtcom- mend to higher Navy legal officers whether Airman Appren. Terry V. Aving- er abould face a court-martial. i\vinger is chatied with six count.a or riotiog and two of as5ault. Avinger, 11, ol Phlladelpbl1 look the stand in hia own defense Wedneaday and said be ia innocent. He did not testify under oath and, therefore, was not 1u~ ject lo C10IHW!llnltlon. Front Page l BURGLARS. •• Westmlnller police dot•· Sgl. Carl Lawrtnee found the suopt<ll' car near the 1partment comp!Q: and ar· rested LlljM without further locident at aboUt 11:.S a.m. when the sutpect lrted lo get lolA> lbe auto. At the time of his arrest, Lujao was not armed, o<Ocen 11ld. Police .,Id the lrto 11 being held AL Otonge Counly Jail on IU!Jllclon of buril11Y. led llld -Truman'• da~. l"'-Dealel n1lted lo Ille -I Cir Md ..... Jolllliiol'I ~ llld lbelr bu.<hlndl lnalde the -PmJdoort llld Mn. N-arrived a short time after the Jo-left. 'l1ie Nlxons' visit was brief. The Nlxoos and Johnsons did not atlelld loday's prlvale funtral. """" P .. e l TRUMAN ... period declared by Nixon ends Jan. 24. President Nixon and former Preslderlt Johnson patd lhetr last respects Wednes- day while the body lay in state in a closed coffin. Nixon laid a v.·reath oI ca rnations at the casket. Truman was buried in bis favorite dark blue pln-strip<d !Iii~ Aile! be -.. tbe f&med wire-rimmed glasses. Al 1he funeral, bbl casket was cov-ered with red camatloos, bJs fa vorite Dower. Al the bwial, the· American Oag thal also was draped on the coffin, wu folded precisely and Lt. Gen. Patrick F. Cassidy, the escort commander, gave it to Mrs. Truman with these words : "Tbis flag is presented to you on be.half or a ifateful nation as 1 token or al>" pr<dalion for the booorable and fallhful service rendered by your loved one.'' Valley District Mentally Gifted Program Lauded 'Ille Fountain Valley School Dllllict's program for mentally gifted students bas been selected by Ille slate Department of EducaUon as a model project, ac<ordlng lo Fountain Valley Superintendetrt Mll:e Brick. Selection of the Fountain VaUey pn>- gram means that it will be med ihroogboul lhe •lalo lo aid other - tary district. in -~lsblng program. for bright students. The Fountain Valley program, lo use for four years, involves testing, ide:D- lification and special ICbolastlc pro- grarru: for mentally gifted mlnon. 'l1ie students who parttclpalo -Brick say.s about 10 percent ol the district'• students-IDUlt aoom US.or.,,._. on a Slanfonl-Binet IQ 1<st. With parental approval, tbeoe cblldN!n are given a program of apeclal in· structioo within the framewart of lbetr regular classroom activities. Each of the district's 17 ICboola offers three programs for bright studenta, hu- ed on the grade level of the students and geared to their particular age group. In order lo oUset the'<osl of Ille special instruction, Ille state pays 11111 per child each year to the district. Brick pointed out that the di.strict an- nually surveys the parents and teachers involved in the program to test It.I ef-fectiveness . Ftom P.,,e I TERROR ••• ed a score of peJ'SOD!. They threatened death lo 1he Israelis inside If their demandl for re1eue of guerrillas held prisoner In Israel were not met by 8 a.m. Friday (S p.m. PST loday). "For the sake of the king and 'nl.ailand they have agreed to leave the country " said Dawee who ia agriculture mlnls~ and an influential member ol the govern- ment Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir held an hour-long emergency cabinet session in Tel Aviv to dl5CU.SS tbe situation. Her government baa never yielded to Pa1es- tlnlan demands when !mlell hostlgea were seized in the past, "We will not take any violent action if it Is not neces1ary," a Thal official told reporters. "We don't want bloodshed or · any harm to come to the six people who are being held as hootges." The four guerrillas, two or tbem wear- ing dark business suits ..nd the other two In short J•ckeU:, climbed 1 alx..foot lPall in front of the embassy ahortl,J btfcn noon. They gestured a local employe out of the compound with their automatic weapons and charged inside the buUdlng. From PGIJe l BOMBING ... an hour and 45 minutes today with U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen. F-rlck C. Weyand, tbe AmertClll commander in Vietnam, presumably to dlscusa the U.S. bombing operaUon1 ogall\ll North Vietnam. Tin Song, Ille daily new1p1per cloeeat to Thieu, said that Thttu, Bunker and Weyillld met "aml<t rumot1 that the U.S. wlll •lop bombing artu 1bove the 20th P1rallel In Ute nest few days in order to res\.lme the talks ln Parts." The newspaper quoted 1 "reliable aouroe." Beeause of COmmunilt proteltl about Ille full-1<1le bombin1 Of North Vlelnam and an American request for • holiday break, the four partitt at the Paris pe.1~ talks sctieduled no mtetlnJ loday. It was the flrtt mlu In the talD ln two months. 1be meeUng Is usually •held evel'J Thur$d11y and IJO far there hive betn 171 .... 1on1 since lhe talkl began 111. lllM. \ Big £11ris¢mas Present Frances, an 18-month-old St. Bernard presented owners Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sm it h of Bangor, Maine, with a memorable Christmas present-17 pups. ·~Newport-It.1lboa Phone Link Cut, $ervice Out A construction ·-• drillal throu&b a ~ trunlt U.. abool I Lm. today and severed mo• t canrmmiclUons betfteo the N~ lloocb-Balbol area and outside c:ommunftiel. Telepbooe service lo Laguna Beach, Huntington Beach llld Costa Mesa was affected. . A Padllc Te~ olflcial said it would he al least S p.111-belin serYlce WU restored. . "" "Residents served ;,y the Balboa-offloe are virtually shut off fnlui the outside world," said WWiam Boi1J, diJlrtcf con- Angels Murder Case to Jury OAXLAND (A~) -Al!uPerlor Court fllr1 wa "lo resume a~ tbda1 in 1he trial ol foor Hell's Angel.s accuoed of the murder of a narcotics courier whose body waa found in the bathtub.of a burDJng Oakland home. The case went to the jury late W- day after prooeculor Donald P. Whyte argued that informer Richard Jvaldi sup- plied sufficient evidence to convict Hell's Angels leader Ralph "Sonny" Barger, 34, in the May 21 death of Servio Agero, 29, of Allen, Tex. s1nlctlon -">leDdeot !er t•e telepboae <mlfili11. "It WU the ll!llbillcal eord, t1!e 1111Jn Ue to the Balboo office. Peo~· .,_. mike aome OUl&Oinl clil>, but lt'a cioa- tougb." Newport lleacb police and On depart- ment services ,.... allected lo oome degree, police aaid. A apok-an llld thO department bad no .,,.., of !mowing whether or not it was recel"lng all b coming cali5. Police aald It ns nry dllOcult for them lo make outgoing callL The Balboa olflce coble that WU severed M'Vet the eatlte pen••Jl1, Balboa i..w.ci.Lldo IJle, parts of car.... del Mar, IDd other -of llewporl Beach, according lo Bolla. ' A construction -Ullng a power auger to make soil tests on the northeast side of Ille Arches Bridge over 1he Pacific Coast Highway cut tbnlagb Ille conduit and ialo the tnmr llbl, ICCOl!lllll lo telephone company spolr<mian Art Leavjtt, . ( :. I • Ile. aala the If.fool deep bole bod llllecl with waler and that wu caUllng prob- lems in repairing the lioe. Company officials said there was no way to determine the uact number or custo,mera affected. They exp~ lb1t some direct service betwen Coate Mesa and Laguna" Beach was also served by that trunk line. JJ.J.(}atWH JANUARY Pair Captured After Escaping Sheriff's Van Two men who tlc&ed oat the roar door ol the -· Jill ... 11'edneaclay fn 5lala Ana were overpowered IDd """I> tured after I brief llruJllt wlib pul'IUJng depuliea. Orange County lhertll's offlcerl Iden- tilled the patr u William Joseph Cormier, 21), llqom aot ,ffoclenda ,Hotel, Laauna BeaCb and Jerome Vernon Broob, 21, Paulabo, Wu!. OUlc:en said both -will be charged with !elmy e9Clpe pending approval by the d.Lstrtct attorney's office of the new allegations. Jail deputlea said Cormier IDd - were en route to the county courthouse from the jail when Ibey made their escape bid. DMV Back on feet 'SACRAMENTO (Al') -Dpplte the blOe" fn Its' olllOO ~. 'llie 'Slate lleplltmeot of -VelJJd<s will con- tinue lo operate almosl nonnally and there will he no registralioo deadline u- t<!ISlon, OMV chief Bob Qizeos says. "We saved our records and·tbete{oft·will continue to conduct our activlUes in an almost routine manner," O>zens Rid Wednesday. ' ....... Toclayl Substantial Savings Throughout the Store DlmL SOFA .... 17'.00 Dl_IXIL LOYlsi+T hf-!71,00 I 489 319 15 to 25% SAYINGS on Several Bedroom, Dining Room and Occasional Collections by ... 2211 HARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALI F. DREXEL•"" HERITAGE ' ' ( I ' l I I ' . '... ... - H DAILY PILOT 3 llughes May Be Forced Out Into Open LONDON (AP) -The U.S. Embusy today threatened the privacy of hormlt billlonal"' Howard R. lluJbu, h>/led up on the top floor of a luxurious L«ldon hOtel. ' An ·embeuy 11POk01111111 Mid the 17. ye&Ml~ ~-tycoon~~ R· pired IUlle time ago and be mUSI ttport "ltbitl 18 boura It Ibo. eml>uly ....W.r office to •P\'1y for a llOJ' QllO. • ''M f~.u we're~·~ 111d tbe >00kesman • "be ww ll3ve ' to call peroonauy,'nlt Ill the uaual appllcetlon fonn and pay a SlZ fee. That'• what every American traveling · without a pusport bas to do, Ind It will be the lllll1lO for Mr. HucJia." II the eml>wy enlon:08 that reauJ1· Uon, It will be the Ont Umi In memory that the U.S. covemment baa treated Hughu 11 an ~ary citizen. ~ has lieen living for months In Managua, the capl\01 cil Nlcarqua, ap. parently without any qL'!lt'°'1 being ral&- ed about hit passport. He 0"". In, Md "'t of the Volled States alter the e~uake last weekend drove hlm trom MWaua . and apparenUy no objection wu made to his not having a passport And the em· bassy sought to expedite hls admilsion to Brllaln by l<lllng the Home Olfloe that he was c0mlng without a valid paaport. Brll~h lmmliratlon rult1 allow the ad· misalon of foreigners without pauports so long as• · lbey carry docwnenta establishing their Identity Md naUonallty. Sources close to 'Hqgbes said he plaMed to ally in Britain for 1lx moo!M, poealbly · longer. A Home Office spokesman aald he conld remain •·as long as it suits him." . . Some sources predicted that Labonte foes of the Conservative government's tough new anticolored imm1grallon •ia,ws would accuse lt of glYing preferential treatment l() llughes because or bis wealth. Hughes and his entourage landed at Gatwick Airport 30 miles south of London shortly after mldnlaht Wednesday . They were held up for at least hall an boour wh ile officials checked the mysterious billionaire's Identity. After considerable telephoning, he was 'Ullow.ed to enter the country. Four curtained Rolls Royces brought the party to the nioe·story lnn at the Park, oYerlooking Hyde Park, and Hughes moved into the OA'est wing on the top floor , at $2.500 a day. The wing was sealed off, and an intercom system was in.stalled at I.he main door. Police with walkie-talkies patrolled the streets below, and guards manned all doors to the wing. Even the Ure-escape doors were sealed to keep out the phalanx of newsmen and phot.ographers who crowded the lobby. A cleaning woman vacuuming the c<>r· ridor was escorted eYerywhere by two guards, An Engllsh voice challerl.led all visitoni over the inte rcom and said: "I'm from Rothischilds. Go away ." Arrangement.s £or Hughes' Yisit app.ar· ently were made by N.M. Rothschild & Sons. the London bankers. The chainnan or the bank, Edmund de Rothschild, re- luoed to comment on Hughes' arrival, but business circlet assumed he came to check Investment ~ts In the u~ pandi.og European Common· Marut1 which Britain jolns Jan. l. "He has beeo thinking of maldnl 1 temporary home In Britain for tome time, and a six-month stay ts planned,,. a source close to Hughes" told lbe London Times. "Mr. Hughes lookl on Britain as an English-spea king country with good communicalions, relaljvely free or bureaucracy and somewhere that can af· rord him some privacy." Hughes sold out his British interests t~·o months ago. Fire Engulfs Homes • Ill Clemente Federal Report County Murd.er Rate Tops U.S.'s Murder fiUngs in Orange County during 1972 ran at more than double the allega. lions recorded during 1971 but they are not indicatiYe of the national trend, U.S. Atty. Gen. RJchard Klelndienst's latest iviatysls reveals. Serious crime, his Janua:y·September survey indicates, increased by 1 percent in the first nine months of 1972 -the smallest such gain since the office first Airport Has Over Million Passengers Passenger traffic at Orange County Airport already bas exceeded the one million mark for 1912, airport officials revealed Wednesday. PasSen/ers \ifing Air cat If 0 r Di a I Hughes Airwest, and ... G019eu "°est Airlines through November t o t a I e d 1,024,0. This figure i.11 17 percent or 150,SA, more than the 873,82-4 handled during the same ll·inonth period in 1971 . Airport officials predict an additional 100,000 will crowd through the tenninal building before the end of the year. Air cargo is also much greater this year, with a 261 percent increase over 1971, reported.to date. The llml~ fOclllUes in tbe terminal have led to e!tablishment of additional passenger gates at the south· airpon. end of the tennlna\ and special air cargo handling facilities, airport offici&ls noted. The cargo ta ~ in two e<>Ii- verted hangars away from the terminal building. While the limited space in the building may have had a negative eUect on airline passengenr It bas been a boon to jet night opponents, who fear expansion of the terminal would lead to more jet traf· tic. The County Board of supervisors has twice rtfused space Jn the terminal to airlines approved by the C i v i I Aeronautics Board, Both Continental Airlines and Aeronaves de Mexico haYe been denled airport counter space and have not pU&hed plans for nights from Orange County. I The tennlnal was oPentd ln 1987 when bropeller driven aircraft were the only bnes using the airport and It was design-id lo haodle at.Jut 6,000 passengers a month. MOYIE WATCHER ' r;oT MESSA.(;-'E ~ LOUGHBOROUGH, England (UPI) - After watching a mm tltled "Guess Who's Sleeping.With Us Tonight," Arthur Smith, 62, dozed oH and spent the night ocked in the movie houre, pOUce sakl. released statistics in 1960. The 1971 tally in serious crime was six percent above the total record for the previous year, the report states. Kleindienst's report states that 83 ma- jor American cities actually recorded decreases in serious crime during the first nine months of zm. Murder and rape were the two serious crimes that ran above the one percent in- crease level, the report states, with only four Southern California cities -amorig them Huntington Beach -recording a decrease in killings. Santa Ana ana Garden Grove were among Southland communities showing increases in murders. And Santa Ana, the report states, was the only surveyed community to record a decrease in rapes. Classified as serious . crime are: murder, non-negligent manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery, a g gr a v ate d assault, burglary, breaking Md eni-g. larceny of ~ or OYer' and auto the'ft. Trends r.vealed by the Kleincllenst survey ·itlcluded: -Violent crime increased 3 percent during the first nine months of 197'.2.'..COm· pared with a 10 petoont increase for the same period ln 1971. -Property crimes showed no increase. They were up 6 percent in 1971. -Citie with 100,000 or more inhabitants reported a 3 percent decrease Jn serious crime with crime in 111burban areas climbing by 4 percent. Suburban area crime was up by 11 pe.rceot in 1971. -crtme in rural areas increased by 6 perceat during thll first nine months of 1972. Artists Protest Museum Ouster Of 'Undershorts' DETROIT (UPI) -When "Wamba," a aeries of five Photographs depicting a se- quence· of a man pulling down his un· dershorts, 1 went on exhibition at the Detroit Institute of Arts, patrons com·· plained enough to get the picturef removed. ' And now, area artists are threatening to pull their creatiou from the display. , The protests by artists in support of lbe showing of lbe entry by BUI Butt, a Deatboro photographer, came on the heils of a suit filed in Wayne Cireu.it Court to force lbe museum to put the pboloo back on dJ.jplay. Another entry -one which shows the inside of a public men's room -was also taken out of the museum when protests mounted. The two entries were among :W prize winners at the 59th annual Exhibition of Michigan Artists, which will run through Jan. 28. DAILY ~ILOT Slaff l"ttott WAS IT ARSON? PART OF SAN CLEMENTE'S PRESIDENTIAL HEIGHTS RAZED BY FIRE Fireme!' Were Hampered by Low Water Pressure and Mild Santa Ana Wind During Blaze County Gets $530,116 For Collecting Money Payments to counties have more than doubled in the year in which the program has been· in operation, according to State Welfare Director Robert B. Carleson . Tt.e tota1 paid in 12 months is $4.7 million. Orange County ranks second in the state in receipt of support Enforcement Orange County's efforts to collect sup- port money from absent fathers saves the state money and the county has re- ceived $$30,116 in the past year as com· Incentive Fund (SEIF) payments, ac- pensation. Schmitz Program To Be Re-aii·ed On Channel 50 Congressman John Schmitz will discuss "his plans for the ,immediate future in a taped interview to be re-aired tonlght at a o'clock on KOCE-TV, Channel 50. Schmitz was defeated In his primary bid for renomination as the Republican candidate in the 35th District by Orange County AMeSSOr Andrew J . Hinshaw. He was later defeated as the presldcitial candidate of the American lcdependent Parly. cording to WeUare Director GranYille Peoples. Since the program began, Los Angeles has rea!ived $671,000 ; San Diego, $413,964; San Bernardino, $288,158 and Riverside, $192,606. fflle SEIF program is designed to en- courage child support activities by district attorneys by making lbe col· lection effort self supporting. The counties are paid an amount equal to 75 percent of lhe non-federal funds saved by gelling su.iport from absent parents, a re tum ol about 37 .!k:'ents on every dollar collected. Carleson said he was pleased that so many counties, 56 of the 58, ha ve joined the program and partlrularly that so many of them have used the money to beef up their district attorney staffs to force absent parents to honor their legal and moral obligation to support their children . Only San Benito and tiny Alpine county have not received SEIF funds, Carleson said. For Orange County, the payments amounted to almost $40 £or every Aid to Families with Dependent Children case in the past year, Peoples said. Shawu M. Bridg~s Dies of Illness; Services Friday Memorial funeral services are set Fri· day for Mrs. Shawn M. Bridges, 26, member of a Southern California news media family, who died Wednesday following a brief illness. Rites will be at 1 p.m. in St. Peter's Lutheran Church, 15th and Parton sli eel&, Santa Ana. A Mission Viejo resident, Mrs. Bridges succumbed Wednesday afternoon in Mission Community Hospital, apparently due to complications from a blood disease, SurviYors include her father, Herold Andersen, DAILY PILOT composing room superintendent and her mother, Evelyn Andersen, also or the composing room staff. who live in Santa Ana . She leaves also a brother, Don, USC sports information director; her husband John A. Bridges and two small children. Funeral arrangements are being hand.I· ed by Brown Colonial Mortuary, Santa Ana , where officials said today the full list of Mrs. Bridges' survivors had not yet been completed. SALi INOS IATUaDAY, DIC. 30 Arson Eyed ln $250,000 Holocaust By JOHN VAL TERZA Of ,,. o.11¥ , .... Steff A roaring fire believed lo be set by arsonists swept through six partially· completed residences in the Presidential Heights development in San Clemente Wednesday evening, causing damages which could go as high as $250,000. The · fast·moYing fire which some witnesses said was preceded by a mu(.~ ned explosion reddened the skies in the "b southerly portion of the . city and drew crowd s of sightseers who clogged the winding streets leading to the tract. A mild Santa Ana wind ·condition and heavy strains on a lone fire hydrant ham· pered yo\unteer firefighters as they bat· tied to keep the roaring blaz..e from spreading to other structures nearby,. Firemen, in effect, had to ration the water, directing it at various timeB to lhe most strategically placed of the various hoses attS.ched to the single hydrant. At one point the water gave out altogether for a few minutes but by that time the fire was nearly contained. The fire was the second serious in· cident to take place in lbe lai-ge project this week. Earlier in the week Developer John 1Jou11Jass Jr. reponed tbe thefl ol $1,500 in plywood from the construction site. As he watched the flremen extinguish the blaze Wednesday Douglass angrily in- sisted that there was "no possible way" that so large a blaze could have been touched off by accident. The burned units were in the framin~ stages and no electricity was on at the time. · Ironically, Wednesday was the first night that a full·lirrie security guard was on duty at the construction site. The alarm was phoned in by several persons shortly before 7 p.m. and volunteers were dispatched immediately. '11lelr first efforts to reach the blaze, however, were stalled because of a lock· ed gate on a back road. Security personnel finally opened lbe gate. "It was a fire storm by the time we could get to it," said Fireman James Dahl , after the blaze subsided . "Some of us started hitUng tbt: shake roofs of these nearby structures to keep the fire from spreading." he added. They suceeeded, but the one cluster of houses was turned to ashes. Residents in nearby neighborhoods watched in alarm as the pink glow began to rise In the sky. Among them was San Clemente Mayor Arthur Holmes. He and Police Patrol Lt. Raymond Hartman jumped in a car and sped to the fire scene. Three Orange County newsmen will in- terview the lame duck congressman on "Focus Orange County" hosted by Jim Cooper. They are Jim Dean, executlYe editor of the Register, Thomas KeevU, editor of the DAILY PIUYI' and Howard Seelye, political writer for the Los Aogeles Tim es. all e ZENITH :Countian .Recalls Truman e MOTOROLA e RCA I ' ' Bal Isle Man Organized Rally for Ex-president By L PETER KRIEG OfAt ... "' ...... SM* ' • ~ Everyone 1 who ever met Harry S Truman has a story aboUt hJm. David Malloy of Ll.ttle BaJboa Island Is one of tliem. Retired now, Malloy was a mortician in 1"' Angeles and waa fairly big In ~publican circles. One of hit hobblu was staging production shows In plactS like HollY..ood Bowl. It was ln the heat of the 1M8 election campaign that Malloy, 69 and retired npw, was head of the ente.ttalnmen( com· miltee for a rany al the Hollywood Bowl for GOP candidate Tom Dewey. "lt was a tremendous tuccest," Malloy recalls. "We really packed them In.•• So succwful It w11, the next day lllalloy got 1 t>flone call. "Dick Dinln of 20th Century Fox called me frantk:aU,," Malloy rttalled. "He told me the Democrats had just found out Truman WU coming ln for a rally at Gilmore .atadium In three days." "We doni have any stars, no bands, no mules or donkeys, oothing," DiJon told hJm. / "Whal the bell do you want mt to dO aboul It_," Malloy ttmembers his euct "'"""'· "I'm begging you to put on "mething at Gilmore Stadium," waa the reply. Malloy· said he couldn't refuse hi• good friend and thrte days later, there were mule11 and . bands and pretty girls and dlgnijartes and almost a full hou&e on hand to g,...t HST. .. tt wasn't as succeaalul u tbe Republlcan rally," Malloy says, "but OV"!)'bOOY had a good ,Umt." .J ' .. Malloy said he got to m .. 1 the Pre.II· dent, and he'll never forget It. "It was a great pleasure," be said. "I lalJ<ed with blm for a lime Md he ln- troctuoed me to his wife, s.aylng, "l want •you to meet Besa Truman." Malloy said be never voted for Truman but be liked him more than Dewey. 0 When I met Dewey he was very pef'9008ble, but he wa1 more 'alool, cold- er. Where11s TNman Wtl! a peraooable and wann person, t wu: one or hlJ •d· miren," Malloy said. "lie seemed to flt ·rt1ht in• with lbe envi11>nmenl 1-. the people." Malloy said while he llkl!d Truman, he was :rurt Dewey wotild beat him al the poll1. "I WU gullible Uk•" many other peo- plt,11 Malloy 11kl. 0 1 didn't think he had • cbanct." w ·~ TE.LEVISIONS IN STOCK OVER COST YOU WILL NIVER BUY A NIW COLOR TV FOR LESS Low Prices are born here, raised elsewhere! f"'2 Mombor of U t•llloml•'• 1.1..,..1 CASH m C-rotlw Buylnt WITH 4,..ono G<oup With Tho CllDIT Votu.,. Buying ~ r '•r•••llA• Power of 110 Storet~ ~ .-.-...... iiii 90 DAY 1815 NEWPORT Bl~ Downtown CW Mesa -P1ione 548-mB ..... lllilllllll .... .- • l I • , Thundal, -28, 1972 wtda Tom hiae Prop. 20 Boon -to Lawyers OFF AND RUNNING DEPT. -You have lo look with a certain degree of whimsy at one of the earliest legal ~ ings handed dov.'T\ just this wetk on the effect of Pr.op. 20, the coastline control measure. That ruling was tbat Prop. 20 doesn't have any effect -at least not yet. i You remember Prop. 20, don't you? That was the one on last November's ballot that was billed by proponents as a measure to protect our coastline from outrageous development s by people v:ho build things. \Veil , there were some of us that gave Prop. 2Q the old fi sh eye because among other 1hings. it decreed the creation of several regional commissions and one big statewide commission that .. -ould ru le on wh.at could or couldn't be built ak>ng our coastl ine. SOME OF US fis~yed types could en- vision s whole new layer of government coming our way. Anyhow, there ~·a.s no chance that Prop. 20 would get defeated. People could loot a.round and ftnd enough outrageous coastal developments to convince them to pass it no matter how awful it might be. So the people did. Now it is la.,.. When you get something like this into law. it usually means that the new law is subject to interpretation. You kncnr. the ~·Ol"d! are there, Wt what do the words really mean? ' Interpretations are left to the courts. SO rr WAS THAT this week a group of folks up oo the Pales Verdes Peninsula, known sa the Portugue5e Beod Defense Committee, brou&bt suit in an effort lo ball .. aportment project. The PBDC claimed and usested that the apartment complex hadn' got started In time and should 11a.. been ball<d when Prop. llll ~an Nor. 7, A temporary Injunction •lwt down con- strucUon Nov. 22. It's been that way ever lince. Now, however, Superior Court Judge David 1bomas up in LA ruled that no. Prop. 20 didn't take effect Nov. 7 and ac- tually won't be in business until Feb. 1. So now you have one judge's opinion. Don't bet it wUI end here. rr JS ENTIR.ELY possible that the Portuguese. Bend Defense Committee, at the urging of its attorneys, can appeal to a higher court. And appeal and appeal and appea l. We can anticipate similar projects v.i \l be challenged along our very own Orange Coast. We can expect similar citizens de- fense groups like the PBDC to spring up. We may get the Newport Beach Nuisance Knockers. The Huntington Be a c h Headhunt.n. The San Juan Capistrano Construction Klllen. The Costa Mesa Ccntrollen. The Laguna Beach Don't Build Anything Here Committee for Preservatkm of Rural Roads and Eradication of Sidewalks. 1be Irvine ~ day, Tomorrow and Forever Ranchlands and Don't Cut Any Trees Citizens' United. The latter two communities have long been noted for many committees with rather lengthy titles. ANYWAY, AS Prop. 20's coastal pr .. tectJoa l)'aU!m grinds tbrou&h the ..... and federal courtl on wavea of laWIUit!, count<rlUlts, restraining orden and IJ> peals, you can figure that people In the conotructloo and development clodp may be left wltb lltUe to do but all about and lbulfie tl>tlr legal papers. For the lawyers, however. bulineu will be booming. Policemen Slwt Dawn In Detroit DETROIT (UPI) -One plalnclothee poUceman was killed and another critically woundfld Wednesday night in a shootlnt linked to one earlier thl.s month in which four offleers -memben of tbe same controvenial undercover unit - were \\'Ollnded. Ptilice named two men wanted in the earlier incident as ~s in \Veclnes· day's shootout. The lhooting OCCWTed on Detroit's Northwest Side in a neighbor hood where they were tnvestigaUng a tip invo lving a robbery and shoo1ing suspect. police spokesmen said. They spotted their assailants lurking in a shadow bel\veen two homes. GllNFll\E lltarted es they approached the two men and the ofneers got off one shot themselves before falHna . police said. Homicide officers ruled out the possibility of a "set-up." 'lbe officers involved were members of a controvers.Ial undercover police unit called ~ -"Stop the Robberies- Enjoy Sale Streets." On Dec. 4, four s~ officers wett shot and wounded by gunmen believed to be riding shotgun for a narcotics runner. Two' ol lhe men charged in that shooting -John P. Boyd Jr., %3, and Haywood Brown, 18, both of. Detroit -al9o were sought In the latest Incident. Ki 11 e d Wedneeday WU patrolman Robert Bndf<>M Jr., Z5, a 41>-year police veteran. He was the sixth policeman killed In Deln>lt this YW' and the aecood STRESS olllcer. Bradl<>M's partner, patrolman Robert Dooley, :a, aoolher 41>-year "'""'" was hoopilalU-ed In criticll cmclitlon. POLICE THEN swamted on the area, scouring lltreets and alle)'I with the aid of a searchlight' beaming from a police helicopter. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtfi'ftf'Y of tllt Daily Pi\ol 1\ quManlt td -•r·,~: II -... _. "'r' -"""r.., 1:• ....._, ull .... -..,., •~I ............ ,...Uh_, __ _ ,, ........ ,..,_, ..,. ,......,.! If .,.. • -.I r01tt\,... .,_ C.,,. 9f I L ... S.IWll•f• .,. • •·"'· ~., ...... oon ..... ~ .. "'"'~-... ~ ... ,. ..... .. Teifphann 1flc:Jca • . .. 'Where haw )'Ill.I betln7' Israel Seals Off Heights; Border Calm By Ulllted Prell IJlternatlhaJ Israeli uoops sealed off the Golan Helgbts to civilian traffic early today In tbe wake of air strikes Wedneaday against three torgelJ In . Syria. Birt military spokemttn In Tel Aviv said the situation. along the border was calm. "It's quiet up there now," a spokesman said. "Nothing la happening. There really is noUWlg. It's just silence." The_ l<pok>man said the lfeil!>ts was closed alter the •trikes by laraell planes but because of the calm situatioa, autborltles might open the area later to- day. Military autborltits cJooed the Heights to everytblnJ escepl military lrafllc and veblcles driven by local realdenla -as they U1111slly do 11 a pn>eautionary when tbere la a flareup m the Syrian frontier. To prevent any clvtlian lrafllc Into the southern part of tbe ffel«b!s, two eoldiers stood before two red and black iron crou- es dragged Into the naitow upbalt .,,.d. "'lbe area is closed becaUJe it iS dangerous here," said one ,of the soldiers. THE CLOSING of the Heights, oc- cupied by Israel si.nc! the Middle East war in 1967, came after Israeli jets loos- ed what authorities called retalia4on for recent Arab guerrilla attacka from Syria. Israeli olficials said the warplanes htt two fronlline Syrian army hues and a guerrilla camp 25 miles inside Syria in the first such raids in five weeks. But the Israeli command denied a Syrian report that villages were bombed. Israeli officials said pilots reported malting "good bits." Survivors Ho111e 19 Died in Bus Crash on B,ridge AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Two hundred persons stood at the airport without speaking. Tbe chartered jet they bad come to meet taxied to a slop near the group, and the door popped open. The first person off the airplane was Kathy Webb, a teenager who was carried to a waiting stretcher. A woman stepped through the crowd and grasped the band of the injured girl o£fered through a bloodstained sleeve of her blue raincoat. The girl wept. "I'm all right, Mother. But don't go away. Just don't go away," she aaid. A man unloaded a cardboard box and burlap sack next. It contained purses, wallets, watches, and other valuables that belonged to the 19 persons, mo1t of them teenq;en, who were kllled Tuesday night tn a but crash in New Mexico. Tbe plane carrying survivon back lo their Austin homes arrived Wednesday even· ing. mE OTIIER survivors or the trip came off the plao.e ne1t, each one smothered ln hugs by tearful par!nts and patted on the back by brothera, 1iJten and friends. Flfteen persons were btjured in the erasb, but some of them had to stay behind in New Mexico hospitals. hurt too badly to travel. The two buses carried 32 penons each from Austin to a religious retreat In the mountains of New Me:zico when one struck a catUe truck that had jackknifed on a narrow bridge near Fort Sumner. The other bus bad paased the truck before the crash and wu not involved in the wreck. MOST OF TIIE 4-0 person! on the airplane that arrived Wednesday were on the bus not involved in the crash, ip.. eluding it! driver, John Roberts, a member of the sponsoring Woodlawn Baptist Cburch. "Everything looked like a nonnal traf· fie situaUon," Roberts said. "There wu a narrow bridge warning, but It was ao close to the bridge that by the time I had my foot off the accelerator, I was acrou it. "It was suicide bridge, you mlgbt aay." After the crash the New Mes.ico Highway Department said the bridge II mlle1 eut of Fort Sumner wu "crlUcally deficient in foundation, surface, safety and capacity." Canada's Pear·son Dies Ex-Prime Minister Set Up Suez . Ceaae-fire . (JITAWA (UPI) -Lester 8 . Peanoa, lonner c:anadlon prime minister who woo the Nobel Peace Prize !or helping arran1e a ceue-ll~ in the lt5e 8uei, crisis, bu died at the age ol 75. Dr. P. M. Burton, Pearson's pr!V1te physician, early Wednesday hid con- firmed that Peanon hid cancer of the liver. Tlme of death wu l :to p.m. (PST). -·· healtb had been U!l<eltaln since lhe summer of 1970 when be bad a cancerous eye removed. He bad beeo in Florida on vacation but was rushed Mme Christmas Eve. He lapsed into a coma Wednesday mornln&. At bis bedalde wllen·---he---di~.ed~-w-ere-~hi1'" widow, MaryM. and his son and daughter, Geoffrey and Pat. Pearson will lie in state in the rotunda in the ceoU!r block of. c:anada'I parU. ment bulldln.I. A 11111 lllte llmeral wu planoed, but final anmipments were Doi Immediately anllOOllCed. He WU to be in- terred In a ftO plot be purchued In the late lll!Os In Quebec's Gatlnelu HUis. "THE L(J6S OF the RI. Boo. Lester B. Peanoa ls a great one, for men like him appear rarely," said · Prime Minister Pien-e E. Trudeau. "He was a man of ability and good' will who worl<ed the greater part of his Ille to mate the world 1 bettell't place for otben." In 19511, Pearson persooaJJy directed a ' 1ucceuful movt to oblall 1 ~In the SUll crill1 lo wbkll ,.,_ and Br\. taln hid In-In the lal'lell·EIYP' llan COllfllct IDd • mojor world conlllct threolett<d to esplode. <In NoY. 1, IM, Pell'IOll went before the U.N. Genen1 Allembly lllld ~ a ...... lire In \he Middle !'Ail lo bt loUOwed by • "1)ltrvllod police -In the area. Following his speech. Ptll'IOll gol IUp- port from the United SI.Ilea, which bid boon oot»ldering a molutlon o! Ito oom Cllllna for the witlldnW~ of the BrttlJh ·lllld Jl'ftiic!I fnlm the 6uti. Tho ...... was possed 5NI by the Untt.d Nations_ and within two wetb· u.~. ~ wltb Clnad1an contlngeola --In the SU... 111E CEASE-FIRE did not end the hosWIUes but It did buy coollng off time, and when Gunnar Jabll, chairman of the Nobel Prize Committee, p t e 1 e n t e d Pearson's peace award, he told Peanon he had "saved the world." Pearson served u prlme minister from 1963 until 1968, when he waa replaced, by .the current Canadian If.Ider, Pierre Trudeau. · By the end of his term, Csnada \ad a national pension program, an assistance plan to fwmel wellare money through the provinces, a guaranteed armual lnoome for old-age pensioners, a tmlted armed forces, capital punishment was ten· Singer Accuses Knoxville KNOXVlll.E, Tenn. (AP) -Soo1 singer Jamea Brown bu acclaed the City of Kno>vtlle lllld Ill police department of -even thouih ~ Kyle Test<nnan ordered dladerly conduct dJarreoqai!lll lbe <111'Nlner tbOl'jled. AJtboucb dbedhJc the city's low department to llUSpelltl lbe proaecutlllll of chal1fOI aplnst Brown In oonnectlon with a melee with police two -ago, Telterman ald Wedneeday that Brown bad exhlhil<d ungentlemanly cooduct for the -of publlclty. Brown ._.ied Jaler will! a seveJ>mlnute statement Oil bis KnolV1lle radio lllllon ID wbicb be sald, " ... You're dealing with 1'lclsm In KnoJMlle." Two polkemtn were Injured In tile scuflle with Brown and two aldea out· side Memorial Coiiaellm. Police '"Y Brown and his aides attacked them aft« falllng to heed or<len to cleor Ille area. Brown claims he was attlcked by the olllcen. DIPLOMAT DIES AT 75 Leifer BowlM PHrlOft tatlvely abolished and the foundatiOn! had been laid for a bilingual public service. Wben French Prelident c b a r l e • Ile Gsulle came lb Elpo 67 In MGGlrell and shouted "Vive le Quebec Libre (Lal& Live P'ree Quebec)!" Pnanon .... t oo televtslm to call the gesturo a pm- ocation to oepantlat elements and Ile Gaulle ml bis v!Jlt sbort and -1 back to France. Born ID Newtmbroot. Clntlrlo;m April 23, 11197, the am of a Metbodial p.-r, Pearson served in World War 1 and then returned to Canada where a rich uncle got him a job u a saU1age-stuffer at a meat-packing plant. He _, left to become a lectilrer tn history and a part- time football coach at the University of Torooto. MEN'S WEAR SALE Here it is! Our store wide sale. PNniler Hoelscller 91111lity men's wear red11Ced up to 50°/o for immediate clecnncel Not everythl119 Is on sale of coune, but the Mlectioft is wl•, varied and handsome. Just aslt any of ow c•st-wsl Not aA prlc:e levels in aD sizes. DRESS SHIRTS ~olt._... ..... hr111• , .... ,,.au. Re9,luly $8.50· I 0.00 Short sl••v• ...................... 4.ff Long sleeve ........................ 5.9' KNrT SPORT SHIRTS 100~ c.tt-. 5'9ft """" Y•IMS T• SI .••.•••••••. , 5. 99 SPORT SHIRTS -•s.No ..... ..... - ·-•• $11 ............ 6.99 WASH PANTS M ......... .._ ,...,,_...,. W ... I'-Jo.JI ..., ..... Sil ............. 5,99 Famous Maken Vast Selection $ 75. Suits . . 49. $145. Suits •• 89. $ 65. Coats •• 39. $ 17. Slacks . 9. $ 95. Suits .. .. .. .. .. .. 69.00 $100. Suits .... :.. .. .. . n.oo $1'5. Suits ............ 104.00 $165. Suits ............ 129.00 $ 65.'Coots .. .. .. .. .. . 49.QO s 75. c ... 11 .. .. • .. .. .. sc.oo $ "· Coats .. .. .. .. . .. 61.QO $100. Co•ls .. .. .. .. .. . 74.QO $ 27.50 Slacks .. .. .. .. 19.95 $ ts.DO Slacka .. .. .. .. 24.95 s,.,1.1 cttdlt •cceu1 ....... 11.bl •• or l111kA'"ttlcar4 I Merl•r ct.1~•· Jack Frost Nips South UNDERWEAR Briefs & T .Shirts ............ 2/2.n Boxer shorts .................... 2/3.29 I Flash Flood Warnings in Effect in Central Arizona Temperatures ""'f .. Allllfl'f ,\I 'i· . ·~ • •• I I MAflONAl WlAIMll Ml'nr.I tOO(liA .. ,,_ IU •~tt ... )1' ..... \ Sun, itr'non. Tldea TMUltlOA'r Ste ..... lllfll . . . . . . J:'! 11.m. 1,f *OllG ~ • f :W p,11\. 1.0 f'lllOAV Plrl! 1110!! . -!'6 ,,,.,_ f,l f'l"t lfl'IO' U ·U 11.m, 0.7 5IQlld """ 6:'1 !),"to 3.1 ~ 1"« lO:• P·"" 1.3 ... ,,_ f 'M I.I'll. Jm 4!'1 ....... ~ ..... ' ·Q ...... tl'tl 11:" •. (l'I. SWIA TIU, wool R•9,lorly fl 2.95 ................ 9.9' SOC:KS .valuH to 1.50 .... 3/2.9' TIU. .. 10" to 6.00 ........ -.2.H LOS ANOILIS PASADENA HOIUCHll'I _ .. w..... ......... 611 I• C-111: .. 11¥4. --tltJI 617 .. llf HUNTINGTON IEACH NOILICHlft Y•••r••tt 77 " .......... C.t.f . -··-17141 na..1174 ••••••• tt1JJ 7tMJ61 COSTA MISA HOILICHll'S IJll ....... If, ............. t7J•I ........ Jm a.11te1 St. South~ Pluo c .. 1.-. OLINDA.LI ALHAMBRA % llOIUCHll'S HOIUCHR, IM:~ ···•::-:Ill...,. ............ ,. ............... --fJIJ) l42•117J ANAHllM HOIUCHll'S .. ,.,., .. ,,.,._,. • ..,,. 447...,.. LMrw ·--cn41 nwtt1 . ........ tlf>I Ht-4114 ORANGE HOILSCHR'I 2104 N. 0......, Mall 14otlol-17141 ftl-22,, ' RIVERSIDI ....... o .... JIJI ........... -· (1141 ..,..,., " - •• f 8 •AD·Y PO.OT EIMTOBIAL PAGE A Strong City 'f eam . ' . New l9ldera 1n,a city often like lo develop tbetr own supporting cut. It makes city govenunent !Wlcllon more amootbly when tho boas bas . key personnel be knows and can depend on. Huntington Beach Admln!Mtralor David Rowlands Is starting to round out bla own crew ol. key assistants alter leu than a year at bl.I post. Two significant appointnfents have been· made In the past two montba. P'irst, John Bebnns was hired away from the city of Fresno to bead the building d~ partllieat. Belirens comea to town wit.hi m armloa\l '11 credits in both bullcl!na and. planning. . In another significant action, RowlaJida m o v e d Richard Harlow up. from llSll!ant planninf director to become one of the idmlnlstrator'a lwo executive aaist· ants. Harlow'a field will be advance planning, an area In which be ts OOlllidered one of the" city's bUI. • Rowlan\11 hu allO tept Floyd "Bud" Belalto as bla olber oncullve esllllaD!. llellbO lmwa tb9 daf·to<lay operationsd ol tbe cltY .better tban any other man In city l!all, an tbat will•be bis responsibility. The new lineup II a promlslDg one for city govern• moot to 1878. · Recreation Center Construction on a badly needed recreation center In Fowitain Valley may be Wider way in 1973 If the city can acquire 53 acres In Mlle Square Park from the fed· era! government. If the granl to the l!ureau of Outdoor Recreation (BOR) IM }PProved, the'clty·bopea lo build i $1.23 million complex com~le with baaeball dtsmonds, bandi.11., ooqrlt, basket courts and olher facllitiee. City officl•ls previoualy bad exanilited a plan lo build two complexes, one adjacent to Fountain Valley High School and tbe j)tbef ·on. a smaller site In Mlle Square Park. The combined faclllty at )(lie Square Park however, appears to be the best propolltlon llillce the city will save about $23,000 In development com and additional funds tn later maintenance expenses. • 1 It will be a bright year indeed If the BOR sees the value of the project. Ethics Code Protects Don Bonfa, city attorney for HWltington Beach, tends to &eoU at a c<tde of ethics foF councilmen, com- mlssloners and department beads. They don't really have theforceo!law,bepolntsoul ' Bonfa Probably. Is pgbt, from a legal vieWp.int. Nevertheless, I~ was a wise move on the part of the city COWlcil to order the writing of such a code. Even If it lslt't absolute law, a code of ethics, clearly defining the limits on public officials, bangs something of a moral sword over their heads. f!ie code was requested by members of the HOME Coun~, a mutual association of individual home owners assoetations. HOME CoWlcil leaders explained the r~ que~t IS not an indication of wrongdoing now but a pro- lecllon ag'alnst the future. ' The Inclusion of department beads in the ethics code was also a good ~aye. Anaheim's current problem with Its city manage11 indicates a need for such action · If a code. sets out tough standards f6r conflict· of Interest Situations and public behavior it will be well worth its writing. · · ' -. "Peace is at hand.''. -Henry Kissiiiger H • " ' Proximity Influences ' Judgment Dear Gloomy Gus Bird Deserves Eqt1al Time, Safi• JteGder Add Stork Theory to . Textbooks? (smNEYJ.~ It's nice to see Rep. Craig Hosmer opening up ao office in ·the F- tain Valley area. Thal way, • llJe flood comes, he'll lnilw it came and gel us some emergency relief funds. To the Editor: In· vle.w of the reoellt-discussion ( ) tegilr<ling the revision of the elemootary ' MAILBOX scbooL &clence ·boob lo .Include. the.till, special creation theory, I sio:?erelf·pro. " pose that we ought to also pfesent the ....._ _________ _, lhapuotl.up: ~.M. stork theot'Y, in our expla.Dations of how babies get here. Letters trom readers are welcome. Normally writcn should convey their mes~ges in 3QO words or less. The right to c1J11deme l<tteri lo fit rpa<:e .,.. ellmillal< Ub<I u ,.,.,,,..i. AU 1itur1 must includt ligMture and mailing addreu, but natnt'S mGU be withheld on r11111<11 if iufjicitflt reason ts appm-ent Poetry 1Dill Mt be publuhed. Five peOple tilled In ao ll<ddenl llO niles away from • n •o• more new1 ~ tl>ln Ill kllled ID an -l,OllO miles any-• II pn"'1mlly aod _.p11y ...... u. --ol lllilwl wwtb. • • • It la not the !IDanciallJ> -poUtJ. Icon wbo -Ille -harm to IOCI· ety. but Ille 1Dtelleo-iual11 dilboneal; nol lbe one who aleala ,...,.y from Ille peo- ~e·s poc:kel, but the .., wbo speaks one way llld acts ano~ ,.. • t1ws betraying the public's basic -· --ra ............ -• lllth .... "' ..... ............. .... ........ are euiJy ~ ot criab. Exbeme crutel more lllbelle..,s, than ereoce and akep- Udam combined. • • • The cltlef reason for ctev.loping as we grow older, end disburdettlng ourselves of immature faulta, is that with qe we acquire a new crop ot faults, and nobody can cope with both kinds at the same time. . . ~ . When a .. .ii 1lo1d ..... lo ·-fide to ~ tbal . ...., and her busband "se Ute brattier and sitter," I '"'1lder which Is which. AFTER ALL we have oo WI! ol prov· Ing that Ille -thelry ·la falst., Stora • are )lreltr, fut -. 'lbol-wllo g!ff· us babies 'l"Obably can Cy so. fast that they can fly in the hospital wiDlllilr, band the bol>y to Ille doctor, end ny out again, so fast tbal nobody -what happens, AIJo the storks that give us babies may bave..pqwers we don't tnow about. Maybe they can tum themselves invisible when bringing Ille babiea Into the hospital so that we would never know about them. THE THEORY of the stork is a lot easier for children tQ.accept thap that proposf:d:lJr science. -c:bildren It may -m ~ abodilng that Ibey ac-tually come out ot thelSmothers. What a terrible thought! The stork is a far healthier thing to l<ach. We tend to venerate 1'men of aedce," WE CAN OFTEN endure · an eztra IUt ·~ In'·"'~ pound ol ~ far more wllf tl>ln we • • • If Ibey are going to be persistent about ' teaching the scientific theories I suppose we can give them equal Ume but by all meaea let Ult cllildren-lalow abc!lt Ille llorlt ~. too. Cl>ililrm -all too ofteo given only one side ot an argument. -..... -. man of -knows can auller the -Wal ol an ounce of >el!": -Napoleon met ~ 11, "'W'""' pliillit't.~ Weanar, It .. the CGDqllll• 1rhb n.. · · ...-• • ' :laimed, "What a 1D1D!" about the 'I'be real Irony in today's 11bumor of SHELLEY WALSH ~bolar, and not tho other way around. proleal" has been neatly summed up by • • • Diet Gregory, wbeo be observed: 0 Wben An occollooal llmlle illum"";I• Ille 1 left St Louis, I wu making five dollars ieraonali(1; a perpeluaJ smile 11 more a night. Now I'm gelling 16,0llO a week -Grotetlt 8INI Greed To Ille Editor: ikely ,to bt an byslerical defenae qalnst for saying the same thlnp ou~ loud I us· lespoir. ed to say undtr my breath! n CONSERVATIVES are much more :eallalic tben llbenll about the way men .m beltaft In ordinary times, but far less mactnative about 'the ·way they will Jebave 111. utraordlnary times; tlws, :onservatm ,...-are auccess!ul only luring perlodl of relative tranquility, but • • • OI all the aedentary games ever devis- ed by mao, chess ls.the one .-1 closely allied to mooomania and alcoholism -in that, if aiiowod to flourish wtdtecked, it will ruthlessJy drive out every other motive and purwit; every clless cham· pion is, first of all, a fanaUc. I take particular exception to Gilbert W. Ferguson's con.tenUon (Mailbox; Dec. 17) that the rampant growth of Orange Co1D1ty ahould not, end In fact cannot, be controlled. Future. of Capitalism I NOTE that Mr. Ferguson is a full· time, paid director of the Council for En- vironment, Employment, Economy and Development (CEEED), which orgapiza.- tlon Is dedicated to the flnaoctaJ inleiesll ol. a coalition of coostriaction wtlOOI, ~ tractors, landowners and developen. ThuS consutuled; r questioa Ill objedtv· ity In evaluating what Orange O>unty'1 Wrilel Joltn G. Gurley, prof-ol' !COllOl1llct It Stanford Unlvenlty, In "'!be ,._ GI '-!CID Clpltallam!' fllture should be, [ EDITORIAL J There are lhooe ot us (to use Mr.""" , gusoo's favorite llld oft..repeated appefa-tloa "Hermy Pennys") wbo look be,...i RESEARCH immediate economics, end are moro _ sensitive to .th• demoostraled results ot lobal:-:-,...-,,1..,,..---....,..,...-a strictly profit-oriented growth policy: g Clf talism. • • .copilailsm will e3c&latlng air and water pollution, stifl· survive as an lncreaslngly alate-dtrected ing traffic ......,,.,eaUon, rapidly shrink· monop>Jy capitalism. But many elements ·-of democracy will not." Ing ope!HplC•" In short, the continuing Ro~ L Hellbroner, _ "Capitalism degradation of our quality of life. Alive or Dead,'' writes: , "Had anyooe In Ille 1930s been lnld wt CONSIDERING CEEED'S short-sigh~ the U:S. GnlSS Natioaai Prodqct in the ed, economic hiaa, I suggest that it ts eorly 1ms would l!lllJl8SS ,. trillion mis-named. More appropriate would be doilan _ eHectively douh1jna the real Group for Rape o! tbe Environment P.-coplts incm>e within tho.~ of thtouah Endless Developll\<nl (GREED). Ille najortly ol the -·••tion then alive And a Happy Benny P<nny to you, Mr. over and the U.S.A. has resumed an atl- out effort in bombing our enemy -North Vietnam, I wondered who wouJd be the first to criticize that action and soflse.l.1 Ille ever~ North, the haloed riders in Hanoi. , I JUST witnessed it about a ball hour ago by one very famous news com- mectator by the name of David Brinkley. I did not know that be was in on a11 the secret peace talks in Paris along with Kissinger and Ille envoys ol North Viet· nun. As a ~tter. ~ fad. I am poslUv,e that Mr· Bri!>ldey· di4 aol/>!f In oa ...., one al those secret p<ace'talb. HOWEVER, I Just beard him mouth off against our deciaion to resume ·the bombing against opr enemy and side in with them as though we wero a llarbo(iC nation. If only people like Mr. Bri!>ldey end the Jaoe Foodas woo1d ~ out ol the af- fairs of our state, this war would be ovet ' a lot quicker. GRANT llAROING PHILLIPS To the Editor : Reference to Coont Marco ll'licle ol Sunday, Dec. t7: "Are Girls I!orn Plllby or Taught by Mother?" It ls rather curiGul that In this tra ot lnlonnalloo end enllcld..,_ thal a person such as "Count Mareo" exists, let alone Is employed by a ne-to write. TllI8 PAllTICIJL\R dHlcle exblblll, as· do all Coon! Marco'I, prejlldlce, laulf.Y luglc and rea10Dln1, mass KfM:rallza· tions, and unquestionably d I 1 p I a y s Marco's animosity toward the female gender. • Marco assumes that the trait he refers to la the undeslnble -ol :•pwllinW." He obvloualy feds oo lhreat<ned by the very desirable trait of aggre11ivenesa end direction In a female that be must apply the -r ol ''pushy." child, whether it be an irrational, overbearing male as insecure in his role as Marco, or a weak, dependent female deprived by her father of her natural · right to aspire. request of our pseudo-ally "great" Bri· ta in. S.G, UNDINE Car Wah Thefts When I fU'St read Count Marco's col· umn, I naturally aimuned that it had been misplaced and belonged with the To the Editor : comics. I later reall:.ed that Marco is ac-Understanding that the car wash tually serious abou~ 11ils ravings, and the emplOyees of .th.! Joca1 car wasbeS· are sad. sad part ts. lh1il be ~Y seems to not paid !\>< ljigbei\ '!ag¥ possible end believe m bis theol'1.'s Va!i<!ill'· , , • usua1lY atpg,~ ~J lime inUSI l)lOYe on ta l>jlter pa! ol!S: I ',can·~ the IF l\IAl\00 feels>that the male should half·beartejj . •\'1'111i1.lllll.J'!!(Unfil&, be "boss." that '"1at's ,\fie waf mar.·.' VleRUll'lln(. WaShfrlt'Cllh'; ~I riage should be1'' be bas'JDll'e tban·a ·ui.-... do, not W1Clersta.od Ja why .n ~ tie to learn about today's ......... He allo have to sttlp ~ ll$il al-every lrem needs to learn that' a male floes not loose therein· before turning it over to become a boos or leader mm!y by them. virtue of a zipper in the front of bis trousers. I suggest that your newspaper would be lea of a aemt rag if you would rid yourself and the literate public of the bane of "Count Marco." MS. SUSAN J. SCHABLEIN Zero lo'6• To Ille Editor: , News headline: "zERO GROWTH SEEN.11 'TaiDt necessarily so, man, because, with, all • dadel ooming Into Ille OOW1try with lnUnlgratiori•visas, the future beadllne may read: '"ZERO JOBS SEEN." FOREIGNERS ARE adtin' tbeir brass to -here oo uy pretut ""4' then stay here. Note the Cubans who e1o:ure<1 of CUtro and want to gate the hall out! But we need tnQre people llk'"e· we need a bole 1il the head, and some of UI have jult~tbat when we welcome more im· migrallta. - I RECENTLY had my car washed, took all ~ pac~ag~ r ~d in my front seat and ~c.t ~t w~tb me, but left two or three tttims 1tJ U>e gklve bo1. My mistake, the ~e' box and 'tniok are not a safe place use )l'oa turn your auto ove~ to ~ alteJl!::lant3 with yoor teys (which open glove boxes and tnmtsl and at the end of the wub cycle and upon releasing mr .Jilc~ up Uc~el 'to the at. tendant, f tot In and my camera ·wu missing from the glove box. Insurance, botb auto and bomeownen, does not cOver this,_ the owner ·and manager of the car Wiilh claim no legal obiipUon because of their "not ...._i. ble for lost artiCleS" sign, this Wu not a lost article tt·'was stolen. It Is a ridicuio1ll and ,sad, sttuatlon when you. caa't even trust tbeae at .. tendants for the 15~ minutea n takes to complete your auto. Forced, to ....:>rt for low wages, Ibis puts' temptalloo In their way an4 yet the customer is in no way legally protected from the tblevery. MRS, DEANNA TATUM Santa 'Safi' A good sample of the unwanted people ' coming, to our shores is found in San Frand!co where young O!jnese lm· migrants have organized ~· Mafio.type To the F.dJ~· • • - TONG that is preying upon -· • -. · • f ' whUe in other parll' of the land trouble-Let s do something aif erent next year. -'""" ,._, .. ·~ in "'·Ir 111< Coflm>unistlc . Ibo! -.Jhere ls no .. __.. n:augees are wani.uu. -.iwc r God· ·that's' shocking-to Ot1f. American naUve OOWl!ry for ~ and for doing Chrisuan heftels. But Ire are wl lied>m- tbe aame disrupt!~ lhiap they are Ing anthle.su;• birthday ' doing hero with abooluto.ID>puni(1. Tbis Sonta 't:lllU' pc)drsnl Is a Ad, • sad Chrisllflaa -· IJIUe d!illlron are TllE FAMILIAR lrti1ae Illa! pick-and-misled. How much more ef-lo por-obovel jodle)'I aro llill oeeded to "huild tray the Ollis!· Chlld,' (nbt re!Jglous AJPerlca" ii 1 sick exCllll! for Ille influx CJ<ed) but the fact that a roal dilld wu of people ,comin& here for joba. 'lbe peo-,put .on earth to give ws a messqe from ple. born bete, notably blaeks and In-God,1in such a way as we aU can under- dians, are far more cleservlnf ol jobs otand. Instead we display ·I JQY1hlcal than ........,.... Agree! penon called Senta Claus, .giving and The population elqllo8ion may be a dud, giving p.......,: to furthet., cuatom ot thanU to birth control, but the Im-raising businells aaleL migralloo explolloo oomJ)Ollll(la the Let's •sit ·ourseivu -ate we anU· crime and Wlemployment ln our con-Jesus. who expressed the ,Quist! We &elled dtles. we cannot 100g-support a can go to the .moon, (Jy lhmlCb tbe air; ---~1.... I lion -·~ rm but making even more apeed toward ..,,.._.... popu 1 • ,.. ~ · polluting our W'!_ ol (thlnkloal !Ue. · mtcrotton Department, alroady accused wAMA, E SO!OllAKER ol -y doings, keeps this mocking camlval ..,Ing. "My main ooncl-is that Ibero aro oome powerful adverse fon:es operating agailllt U.S. capitaliam, wbicb over the 11ert few deca°'5 wUl create an tn. creasingly unfavorable envimlment, domestically end totemaUonally, !or U.S. !lDrpol'llte p r o f t t m a t I n g • 'lbls ::leterlorating environment d e r I v e s i>fimartlY from the continuance of revolutlopary movemeots qainsl Jn. lemaUonal capitalism, fnnn the Jn. i.nstflcalloo of rivairlet among leading capitalllt states for 1n--.1 outlets, trade advan&agea, and acceu to raw materials, and from labor'• &tOWinl 1biilty to exert _.,. on copltal'o ~,. ol the noti<llal income." .....-Ferguaon. -) 11111 """ be wwld illlft felt ufe in , ROBERT D. RIES predlcllna I« the United Stales an era ol AddOd note to thlJ ~' The f CERTAINLY hope that Count l\larCO United Stales will -ldmlt l,lliO bas not bad the opportunity In father a "ftfupe4" from Ugaadi, Afri<I, ·ot Ille • ~led IOdai place and goodwllJ: . Yel that_,,,...~ dJanCe bu IWn ~ and IOdal bannooj' baa DOI ft!IUlted." Ww CrUla To Ille Editor: Now tbal the peaoe talks have frozen Crime and Punishment Thoma.s Ketvil, EdUor Barbcr,'Kmbich ~·1 TlllNI'. lt is !alt to say that - Ille --ol ---tile clrul Culture, Ille CTI for ptrtidpotory -..or. Ille al-,.,, -ts, Ille new0..uat -.uty, the rotrut ts Ille ltfe ol Ille commune -mie la coo- 1t11ill with or _.uve ol ~ II· Ullldea onct--vlor ptlterna m wllldt capitallam bu trodltlonaily ..-S. It i. poalltll, In other -.. that w llllld al the th.-ol mt era ID wbldt doep- •ted ~ tn UftWRji 1'ill an- -"'l'iJaillm ID I -U fatal u tho 1llOlt dr91naUc proletarlao mo11'- tloo mlaht do, al~ perlllpt .... , npkll)' ot romot1llcafJy. \ I ,_ ___ ....... ,.,., --~ Dtar Georp: Dan'f'JOU ever cet orobll!IDI )'Od -yCID'taonrerl TED Iloar Tld: Y•, quite ollen I lel qtltl!IOlll I bonelil)i can't a1111Jtr. I · just go -aad -them anyhow • • . 1 0..... lt'I baiter to Ila a Uttlo lhb lo i... .. -oll lhll ad-vict nckel and ao beclt to -k In theoawmlll. ' ' When more lhan two thirdl ol the volerl In the N....,ber e-ap- proved PropaalUoo 17, Ibey dld more than roinltate an Ollilol'llia llltula rtlaUnl to Iha deatb pellllty. 11t<y a!IO piac:ed upon Ille ltsl*lltur. the ruponslbiiJty ol spelling out the crimes that mandale that penalty. Tlllll .\Cl'ION Is oeceasal'Y In order to brlnl calKonla. laws to confomill1 with the lillitect Sista Supreme Court's lind-tnc Iba! the dolth penalty is cruel llld unusual )Jllllllllment -IJlcl thett!ore un- 1 COllllitutlonll -u -·~ In-moot states. Tba Collrl did l!Gt ban tllo penllty per •; 11 mtrlcted Ila appllcalloo. a8ENTIALLY, Ult --111 now mllll be mandal«J. No !Irr or Judge can have tha dloontloo. at lialoaclng a -to Ille tmpr-or to death. Certain clearly lllPalated ·-will carry• Dllllc\llor1 death ... -. and lt la now tho "'II o lliblUIJ o1 the iegts!Mture to ~ ,.... a1mM &ball be Indu4'!\ In lbat cotopy. Calll...aFtolarellenke ~ ' Editorial Page Edi"" ™ tdltt)rlftl l*f,:e 'or \M 0.11.Y Pllitit Mtk!I 10 \nlOhh """ t tlmu-·~lo rct*'1'1 1 .bY fll'f'lt'n\k'if thll 1 ~·wp111ptr'1 opln)oJu: and t'Om• rrtfnlM')' on tobk-1 or lntcrt.'lt llncl ~.anlflctnlt'f', _., l""'·idlnJ " forum tor tlw. ""' kin of. ""-~· nplnlons1 ""' bJ' 1•~nc the .,. ...... \'ltWtiol .... o1 Info"""' ob-• M'n-'tf't and ~n oh tepic:. ol the ..... ·Thursday; December 28, tm . - • . ' \ 1.11'1 T ........ Of Truman Reme1nbered A sign in Independence, Mo. demonstrates nation 's grief, (left) as Harry S Truman's daughter, Mrs. Margaret Truman Daniel (right) and Army escort, LL Gen. Patrick Cassidy, watch the former presi· dent's cask..t being loaded into a hearoe. A simple funeral was held today. Wienie ,War Begins Meat Labeling Misleadi1ig to Consumer WASl-JINGTON (UPI) - SUrrendering to c o n s u m e r pressure and a court order, the Agriculture Department has announced plans for a second major round of label· ing and content reform for bot dogs. THE FIRST step in response to ri>ing «>mplalnts ....... of the nation's favorite !oods came three years ago. ln 1969. officials ended a long dispute by ordering a 30 percent fat content limit on hot dogs and other cooked sausage P* ducts . Now, officials say new pro. posals which may take effect early next year wiD junk cur- reDt rules under whlcb a hot dog contaJning w a t e r , sweeteners &¢ curing agenl!I can still be labeled "all meat." A federal <OUrl had ruled the "all meat'' wording was misleading to consumers. Kids Not AL'iO REPEALED would be rules allowing a hot dog con-'B uym' g' TV tainlng up to 3.S percent non-fat dry milk to be labeled simply "frankfurter.'' Advertis• m' g? . In a companion step, which • had been diJclosed earlier, the department said lls new hot WASHINGTON (UPI) -A dog r<form plan would also Federal Trade Commission ban the UJe of meat and (Fl'Cl eumlner believes that poultry byprodU<:ts sueh ., by the lime -reach the qe o1 elgbt !hay ..,. skeptlcal iboot the truth o1 television corrunon:tals. lips, snouts and spleens in frankfurters and other cooked sausages bearing ordinary labeling. If bYJ>f'Oducts are us- ed In something that looks like a hot dog, the product would have to bt labeled "lmilation" ill letters as large as those used for the word "frankfur· ter." T1IE NEW PLAN WQ\lld sel up two name categories for lrankfurters. bo1"11na and other similar cooked sausage: --Oltegory 'One 1"lUld """' taio only "skeletal muscle mea~" incl-g up to IS per- cent poultry, phis necessary processing ingredient.!! such as water, sweeteners and curing agents. -Category Two couJd con· t.ain the same ingredients as the !Int group, but also could contain limited amount.. of binders such as nonfat dry milk or soy protein. the • OAJL Y PILOT $ NY Police No Epidemic Expected i-,i Nicaragua 'Corrupt' MANAGUA, Nicaragua nm Nlcanllua for Sl )'elfO, rorogen -·combing the =-or treatlng'1.000 (AP) _ Fore!IPI doctors aay said lo a llltellllnl bn>adcut ruln1 earlier thll weelt bad ln lo three da)'I and lOO K _,.., modlcal peroonnel and hollrly that 1ooter1 Wll't beloi luJely d 11 a pp e are d by acuau have a l re • d y -napp e,.,..... ....,led and """' bad been Wedn<ldiy. , f-new homes in other Cen-1t1pplie1 ll't oa hand to ward abot. Somou appealed for pa· tr11 American countrle11" he i WAS!JTNGTON (AP) KnapP Comml11ion in- vestigating aUeged mlsoonduct by clly police said today cor- ruption in the department was widespread and included the acceptance of gratuJtJes, wide involvement in drug tratnc and stealing from the dead. off l1IY typllold or typb111 "We ba,. Ja1led and prob-U.nco and said• Ibo nlilnerou& uld. ' epidemic lo the wtbquake-ab(y wtl1 shoot au -~ left by the quake The latest o!flclal etllmate • devutated l c a r 1 g u a D cauaht in the act of looting." would be solved. , ~f cuuallles ~m the quake Ls capllal. . he uld. ' • S,OOM1000 dud and up to "Tbere Is no epidemic ln Bui the rooming plCD o1 "WE RAVI! iccompllshed 20,000 Hrlou.oly Jrijurecl. 1t!anagua today,'' said Dr. "'" Juan Jose Cb.lari of P~. "We are probably 8"inl to avoid an outbrtak o r z The oommisslon in con- cluding its two-year (n.. vestigation or the depart· diseases." ment. 'said in its final 281-page . rePort that corruption was l U.S. ~F .officials ex· systematic and had spread pressed salisCactton with the through the ranks from the arrival of toru: of grain, flour coponthebeattothechieCin-and powdered milk. spector's office . NM:araguan officials said more Thorough iodlfference 10 trucb were nteded to get the corTUption or active involve-food to 19 distribution points ment, the report said pol.lee set up outaide the clty to draw allowed to Douris.b a well-penons away bun the ruina. coordinated and profitable They said supplies ~ p!J- system ~f pa)')lls and ~bake-ed up at the airport and even downs mvolving prostitutes, in the front yard o1 Gen. Mafia henchmen. loan shark.<, An ta-' ·Somoza ... bookies aod •--· -·-~-as &O ' "~ COUJl-uavm ....-.~.... try's niler. e Denaotlott LL Col Frank Simons, In WASllfflGTON (AP( charge of the U.S. reliel pro. Gordon Rule, the Navy co.!t· gram, praised the food monitor who was demoted dist ribution plan set up by alter criticizing the President, Somoza. has been denied a meeting witb. Navy Secrelary John Warner and h:aJ been told to pw-sue any protest with the admiral who ordered the demotion. Rule was turned aside Wednesday when be sought a meeting with Warner to discus.s the demotion. lmtea.d, Warner ordered that Rule mu.rt go throogh "channels" and lodge any pro- test with Adm. Isaac Kidd who wants Rule shunted to a bactwale< job- ....... ,es.u NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A federal judge has ordered a SLS millloo damage suit filed agallist Undersecr.tary of Stale-<lesiinate William J. Casey and' others. "Some of the things the directors did anti inconceivable to me," U.S. l>i.strict Court Judge Herbert ·w. CJnistenberry said Wedne9'ay in ordering the suit in con- nection with the pending reorganization under bankruptcy laws of Multiponlcs, !De. Casey wu a boanf member of the firm, whlcb ..... fl,000 ,..... ol farm land l n Locli.PaN, Misslsalppl, Arlwmt Cid Flori4a. II filed for ~lion in 1971. es • ..m-.. SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP!) 'Ille U.S. Coast Guard today began a search for five crew members of a cargo vessel wtiose sixttl aewman was ~·WE WOULD have had the same probJe1n.1 if this hap- pened in any c:o1mtry in the world," he said. ''The Nicaraguans are doing a marvelous job.'' Maj. Denoia Bulger, com- mander of the U.S. Slath Com- bat Engineer Co., a a 1 d although many of the city's water Jines had been ruptured and some of the ciSterns around the city had been cracked by the quake Satur- day, 90me 20 million galloos a clay coold still be provided for the greater ~tanagua area. lie saJd •bout '18,000 gallons was brouiht into the city Wednesday, "enoug!I to pro- vide each person with half ... gallon." This lncllcated that about 150,000 persons -or half the normal population -were still in the city despite orders to everyone to evacuate the area. Authorities contin ued to ap- peal at frequent intervals for evacuation, but· many ol>- viomly Wi!re ignoring the ef· fort. RESIDENTS WERE warned to avoid an area of 450 bJocks in the bardetl bit sector that wu <feslenlited an epldemlc ..... l}odol'I Mid lk tllje was precautionary and dJd not lndieate pme:nce of a n epidemic. Somoza, wbooe family has • Ot/}y Coast Qffors • 63GuaranteedCertificates • saturday.SelYice ·The Insiders Club TllelnlldenctuboA nfN# wo:y to beat Inflation, Its membership card permits you to buy neorly !Ner'/- tlllng you need from the finest closed-door show- rooms at substantial sav· ings -appliances, fumi· ture, stereo eQllipment, SPortfng goods, draperies .and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mcib!Je homes and motor- cycles at substantial ...,_ lngs_ The Insiders Club Effective Annual · Eamlnp 5.00%-5.13%. Passbook. No Mlnlnun.. . . 5.75%-5.92% One Year CerUficat• $1,000 MlnllJ!\l!ll. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year certlflcates $S,OOO Mlnlmbm. Up to 90 d"l'S Joss of Interest on amounts wlthdnown hefonl maturity on ail certificate ac:countg. also provides bla d is- <XJUn1s on tlcketS \o sport- ing and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free services: sale deposit boxes,· money or- ders, traveler.$ c;:hecks, and notary services. Membership require - ment for savers-$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as· SC>Clate memberships en. titllna them to all outside referral services. Ask about Jolnln1 at any Coaot office. ' " --9th t.Hlll,t.a.A ..... •m.1351 'Other otOc•• WIUtftftl lt'MAMlltCY PUCl1 393S Wlllhln Blvd., L.A.• 3&5-1265 LA. crvtc CENTUI' 2nd• e~ · 626-11in H~NACHI 91 fiunllnlton Cent•• (714) 897.:J.04? ff:"~-=~ .. 393-<1746 --lOU) Ii PKHJc • Bll-2341 ~-flllUand ShOpplfW Qr,• SSl~l .._am ChaM &. 'On NU)'ll lltvd. • 192--lln T-117!51 Venturi llYd •• S4$.N14 ........... :lrd. Locult. 437.7411 nrr.ue ANHl.Dll Ith • Soto. 216-4510 ·--328 S.·Dllmond Bir• (714) 095-7525 """'"' i..rw111 So\are ShoWlnt ctr.• (714) 8JUl10 · U. MIRADA: Lm Mir.di! Shol)plfll ctr. • (714).!2M7!51 DaltJHou"-tAM1o4N ~:"""· Ela:ot>t CMc .-........,. 9Mlto1PM Sari Glbriel Olftca Openill S. COAST FEOEPl\L SAVINGS . . . . found WO\Jne!lday ckiltlng ln a lifeboat off the istsnd ol Martinique suffering from severe exhaustion and nearly incoherent. Our Anniversar-yl Always the Start of So~thing Big ' . ' 11.rtr.,. •MUl•NUo" 1 " ' .-' " Raymond J. Lynch, an Fl'C aam&mtn.Uve law J u d g e , made the point Wedneoday in dlsndalng charges that the m Cootinentat Baktl1g Com- pany ol Rye, N.Y., and its ad- vertisini firm, Ted Bates and Co. of New York City, made faJse nutritional clalm1 for Wonder Bread and Hostess Snack cakes. 4 DAYS ·ONL Y! 1-p T•W., ti" 'fMl'f • • • n.,. :Z09, S.N 109. The ' Biggar The decialon may be ap- pealed. Lynch heard charges that Wonder, Bread OOD'Uhercials "exploit a cllild's atpiraUons '!or rapid and boalthy growth tand the emotional concern of tparlnts for thete ends." He 11.kl there Wai no bes1J for --, Cootiaenlal Baking to ! boiy cornctl'<' adve1blng. It Lynch sa1i1 lludJes bad ~ that even by the age of · ve to seven there were 19.lblrtanlial n \I m b e r 1 of 1chlldren who are skepUcal 1about televi!lon commercials. :· ''The potential for literal 1;t..lief or coo!Ullon that d.,., l~r in eome young children ~~ecrea•a ~th. age to a paint 1~round elilt ll'here children 1ifenera.Uy ~bJt a clear, con· l~.iltent and wldespttad rtac· ' llflOll tiulll televillon .,, ... 11;Dercflll ·Clnnc>I be taken u 1l~teraDy live, .. ~di oald. I Bmm MOVIES or 20 Exp. SLIDES ANY KOOACOLOR ROLL UP TO 12 EXPOSURES DEVELOPED AND PRINTED CAMERA DEPARTMENT • .IAlf.OA •au !IOD CatliWlltl:ll It • WOllUH •"11 ll!iOO Yk111'y IM. • l1Yll$10I 3S10 11* • ll•TA AMA --...,.. $L • rottAICI~ .. ~ •LAllWO 00 Cll1llll St IHhrtfNJ!lll ..... llllNiA , ...... -~ •OIAJlll Q .... ""'llt• ....... W ~ ' .... .. ....... 1 I I I' / , " ; I Sale of ·'·73! HERE . 4"0 NOW! .. .SAVINGS TO 30% and · more! In the Biggar Quality All Selected from Ou r Regular Stock • Henredo_n • Heritage • Drexel • Biggar's C~stom 'Sofas ·& Chqirs rt.• ••• att•, MNA "''' FOR EVERY UVlNG•PUltl'OSll DINING ROOM llDROO!i\ U~NG ROOM CARP'ITING llDDING AC~SSORllS I,..""'-,. ...,n ,,~,,._; ,.---:::;;:~NOW AT AU 3 STORES-.-•'---- tASADfNA '"'f.CPlOAADO ILVD. 1213) '91"6136 POMONA •1'0f.HOlTAVL • . !71'!) 629-3026 SANTAANA •111tN.MAINST. , (714) S•7'16l1 •• llOOAl'S OWN IUDOIT AC'COUNTS-IANKAMlttCAIO-MASTll CHAllt' ( I \ --·- - VOL }5, NO. 36), J SECrlONS, JI)" PAeES 0AANeE ~. CAl,:JFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, lffl " TEN CENTS Ally Says ; B52.Raids ' • End Soon . ! ' ~ .• I 1 SAIGON (UPI) -Swedllll dlplomlt:lc fJporU I.id Aineiican ... 1111!1 nl!!tei.- -bll llanol at ,_ today la tlie beavt.et daylight bombardmeol ol tbO war. 1!>e Soviet -agency Tui MQ!led · tbat parts ot the North VJetn•mese 'oJlpllal bad been "erue4 .from tha.iac. QI.the earth:" · ·'llltte~were ·l!ina" In tjle ~­ c:oolrolled· -Ill' Salaai 111at·tbe :Nortll VlelnaJ!leR'1111cht' hm! hid eaoqh and that the -mlgbt ·be.l\alted ·-the 2llth panllel In Iha -• '""-djlp .ID ohler,to resume the poace·tall:I ta·Pa11s. . But the Communllt Vie...,_ ta Pam .:were lllll tuulDjJ • d ~ft a;n.t s~tementi. 1 , -.1.. ~ !. 1be. u.s Command reported ll'O~ --klil9M ol planOa llld -·tt.lbe --i.J ....Wt but· bad DO -op , today's bombing . llCtitltiM. , U.S. llJlitify -lllid -.,.iDat the llanoi'Halpbong lndu.trial heartland -Gnued today a D d Qmmu1nftrt· reports uli! there were ttu.e HaDcit raids tl>tfa1. ' 1be .......... reporled Ille Joa ol two .,... B$2s and the l!hooting c1o ... ol .. ~oDy Green Gillnl ..SC.. ~ e..r North Vietnam; bringing to u ·tbO mmber of the l8-inllllon· --ogle _, lost In the air ..... :thtll began Dec. ll. . -·· ,. : -Radio sald·a North Vie~ Air" Fotte plane, presumably a 141G, oliOI· down aJ!S2 oome ,70 mllea south.,_ ol Huol Wectneaday. A Hungarian 1tpOrt aid three B$2s were 111iot .-. ,11y llpler-plaaes. The North Vietnamese deJecaUon io 1'8rb iJsued a special stateineof fodaY saying the American attacb have ravagr ed.areu of Hanoi ancl,~pboag with Ille force Or an • earthqUlit:e, ~11"11 D"f "thouolmds" ol Jll!Ol>je. ·- • , DAA.Y PtLOr ·911ff ,... Sl91Cea. "" ' • .,,_ J ~ ' I ' ctaDe rlghts·cement trUck which tipped over about 1:30 p.m. Wednes- day at ,lnlersectlon•.of MacArthur Boulev&l'd and San •Joa9uin· Hills ~Road >in:ffew.Porl~.Police-said the driver, Gary D. Pierce, 26, of 3116 ~ .. St . ._ eo.ta Mesa, suff~red minor. ihjuiies, but dOclinec! hospital: ~t. The accident occ~; o~ic., • saia, all 'Pierce ""I" :.UaijDg ·.a rl(l!t. IUut onto San JoaqUln ·Hills~ Road fr,om south-, )Otuid lalles .ot jl!Jl:Art,hur Boulevard. ' .. · • - Truman Buried Fu~ral Simple-As lie Requested · INDEPENDENCE, MD. (UPll - America said CtJ!>Clbl'e today to Harry s Tnunan, a cbaiinon p:ian ol the people and the" 33rd Presldelit. · Th<i ~ .... simple aD<I• dlinlfled, fitlbig for a gentleman l!bO called blrnlett a •:nieot and po\atoel" mail. The "Mari~ of Inde~" Wlll burled In the g1"QUnd he Js>ved -In the cqortyard by the rose garden • ol "IJ!O· Trllnian Ubr8ry 1n bis hometoWD. • Beal Truman, bJ/ aging wldOw· and be1pmate for more than ball~ ceotury, was there, m..wlng all the lltrength she oould, to bid a llnal farewell. she will be . 88 Eel>. 13. , . . Truman· died Tueaday In bis last batlle -22 day! ol .flshtlng age and disease In Researeb Hoopital In Kansai City. He fell 467 days sbon of bis dream -llviog lo age 90. (Related pictures, Page 5).· There were aoldierr, statesmeh, family and friends at ·the 'private rites to OOoor the tough litUe man wbo °""" some ol mankind's most awesome decllionl. The dougbboys wbo aen<d mder "Captain Harry" during World War I In Battery D stood with the stlfleol mllltary posture that age would allow. Truman believed that man prorided bis own dignlJy, and, bocauae ol Iha~ bis funeral was embellished only with quiet mllilary. flourlsbea, lapo from a kme bugler and a 11-giin aalule. "ll•.,. lfer9 (See TRUMAN, Pqe· I) Pakstinians Say They~ll Release Six Wrong Nu111ber Newport Pho11e Line Cut A constructlon worker drilled tbrou6'h a telephone· tnmlc line about I a.m •• tgjlay BANGKOK (UPI) -Four Pale!jinllm and 1evered mo s t communications guentllas sel7.ed the Israeli ·~ to-between the Newport Beach-Balboa area day· llld threatened 1o. blow It up a)oag and outside ·communities. with III hostages unless IStael released Telephone service ·lo Laguna Beicb, 36 Palestinian P~· . Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa was But toolgbt the a l!elb to free the alleded. . ~ gr , . A Pacific Telephone olficlal uid II hqatages in .retµm for ;safe por;iduct from would be at least 5 p.m. before service 'lballand-,. was restored. Air llhlef MJrsba1 Dowee• €11uJasapya "Resldeoll served ;,y the Balboa office .-, , 'the . ......, .. _.a deCll.· • ·liiit IO'_mpt .,. vlrlually shut oil from the ootsiile e'""':!•-"!'J •. world," said William Boltz, districl con- safe conduet and a, po~ official sald struction superintendent for t be that, In' return, the ~· aif.eed to . lele""'1ne company. . release· the · III IaraellS Wi .lnilde the "It was.the umbilical cord, the main en>W.v)I: building'. more thaA 1D' bolirs tie .to the Balboa office. People can make .-, •• Uu'Oi~ or· deilh. some outgoing calli, but tt's doggone ' I?a~ made nq ~~ of ''the. tough." . ho$.C@ wben be cm.elft!I ~ Newport Beach police and fire depart- amba,..OOr llJllllal!a;El .T'1!11frGlJl itbe menh -ll!rvkea were alhicted to ljlm& ~-altaf a -Jo.lace, ~ ~police lllid. A spoJwh!an tald.tllii whether or not lt was receiving all in- coming calli. Police said lt was very dJfflcult tor them to make outgoing calli. The Balboa office cable that wu severed aerves the enUre pentna&l1, Balboa laland, Lido !ale, parts ol Corona del Illar, and other sections ol Newport Beach, ac<ordlng to Boltz. . A construction worker using a power auger to make soil tests on the northeast side of the Arches Bridge over the Paclllc Coasl Highway cul througb Ille conduit and Into the trunk line, according to telephone company spokHm.an Art Leavitt. He said the' 14-loot deep bole bad filled with water and' that was caualng prob- lemw In ~ the line. Company officials said there Was no way to determine the euct num?er of customers affected. They explalned that some direct service bet'lfMll Coita ·~ and Laguna Beach was also ""ed by that trunk line. It Aid NGrtb ~ P-s lhol dOwn ·n U.S. lln:ralt,~ H Bas, \Tilb .the guerrjllu. bl\I the fllllk""..pll;cJal, ~t bad no w~y of lmowlnC. 'I. ~~.-; befrlMd,.:..,-.' ·-·"I"•'¥ f •~· '••.-~ · Iio~; , ,_ _. -· . .;., :f.l <' -~·'"= -'e"'ilWiif.\ Cizmp· ers In nine days. • • • The U.S. CommW al tlli ~ ...... -ol ;.,y-.,. tO Ctrillan : .it --" ..... l8d -that *drop; ped their bombl ooly ... m..u. 'Ille Gilly _.,, ...... .. .. ~lntheare•--­of "the war came from C)ntmunllt DeWI ageocieo llld neutral dipl-1 ta -. lleeord ·for SoUFce Case 1be Hangarilln newt . o8fiiq M'l'I reported today that a blulnc BU lbot down over Hanoi Wednesday -crubid near Ille p~al palace -Ud that several crewmen a1ed in the ftames. It uid the wreckage clemolJabed a ffW LOS ANG= (AP) -William Farr Other repoi:ters_ bave laced jAll lerml lpllJt bia,Slll 'llay .Jn jail today, marking io ""'"t years, over relateil issu<(s.· but what •~ defeose ~tee said', is the aone·served more than 30 da)'8, the CX>lf1.. ~ _, aerwd bY'I U.S. newsman 'mlttee wa. . for ·~~ hia..llOW'Cll. In a recent case,. Newark, N:J. • '.Ille· ....mriltiee lllld the ooly longer DtWlllllD Peter Bridge was. jailed for 20 (See BOMBING, Pap 11 n!latOd '10nn ca ,ftoord ,... ·that of days Jor _refusing lo answer q-ol P. O>Jonjal llOJl'.!P.'per poblisber Jobn Peter a grand Jury· . O]i"''°' ·n;"""-"Cr. ~ ""°'iel'Yed -.,._,,.. Gii libel ' ID 11161, new~wyman.Vt Murphy, now of '-'V' ~ •' -I a..,; befm blill!f ... ;i. the 1 1lle San Diego Uljlon, serve11'20 days In a • • · • 1'11111. --• • Dfnver jail for--relusing to ..Veal ~ ldenti" ty N t tm'~ ... -. tm.,.;...i by Superior H11<oUa1 nem sources. • . -~ Coo;1",Jodp. Clmles H. .Older, Is In-Fan', 311, Who was found m civil cm- • ~-·The newsman's attorney tempt by Older, bat been kept m virtual $laym• g Moti"ve IMir-'aald 11 'ls "tantamount to 1ue ilJl.· 1so1at1tm s1oce .he ..... Jalled N~v. 17. . JrP-f" ., Stale law prvvides· that, civil pnsoners ' ~,.;,'F,.J.s aentence are pending .-.mingle with. erimiDaJ prlsooefS, "Sear Beach )IOllce have .ld<Dliflad.the Jn,ilafe ..a kidei'aLpourta, but there bas llld Farr ii Ille ooJy,avll,pr\SOner m the dlird Marine found In Uielt dty Tileoday bOeo n0 lndtcl\tbi of wben those couits LOs Angeles Counly Jail ~Ed Moore, 20, of Kentucl;y, wbo bad wl!f.ni1';,~·i.s,lald )le1l 'keep Farr Fllda AWOL from Clllllp Pendletol> iinCe . In 2nsog, u¢tl tli!o r--. reveals Wbo· y. • ga .. ·ldin-~'fora llo'Y wrlll<D Jloore•a body W81 dlsco>ered early dllril!g"lhe._ ._, murder lriaL Tuilday morning m th& 7th' Slrael off' Faa::<:liatr 111i1 U woidd vlohite bit pro- romp at the.jmctlonolthe Sail Dlqoand fs;:-1o,lell.·He bot said that Saa Gabrlel>Y?.eways In Seal Beach, ~ ·1mo1ve<1 -Iii ti!* cue It oot 3be Orange County Coroner-lllid _, ·II(_'-. but aloo the Moote wu strangled oometlme Saturday; oullll<!I rlght to ·-.llr(onnallon wblcb nlibt ]!Y sonie tyP.< ·o1 ''m~ · Colt/ tie. olJ!allled • aoly lllrougb secret means. , IOW't:el Seal Beach Police Sgt. Jobn • Altryf" . . ~ said be Could not live furtlM!r details 00 ~ ., • • 1 • · the!fl~= ~.,.=.~~~ ~ire 'KiJl)1 .. indian == ~~:.=i,--:.., ~: . 1 SiJIL,\'.Al.Li;Y~!AP.)·~ A y.--oJd Dr the Seal Beaclr o!fnmp. _ . • "-• . die 1iOr wu • . ~ death and bis ' M the time he -found --. -· -a:nd •tJ>io"·-e Injured wearing burgundy trouter.; a .,.u..._: l'•i'•Y •lie!'' (rstove !\tel lgntled, swetler and a blue lanker ·jacket wtlb -.C.tbetr tent on fire, authorities uld. ~n ~an and • confederate a.a KDllMI wa -Etlnr;I '~ Jr. 'Rll Slll<lbed on the bacl:. • -lla!e1 .JOMller Ll-im,. 3, WU ICrioul!Y ~ with Information on Mqore la burli<!!I. • w . ashil to contact Sgt. A""l'I at thi, Seal • . American Eagl-e Leruf-8 Greybeard HOBART, Tasmania CAP) -American Ead,e, skippered by Ted Tumor of A~ lanl8., appeared certain today of fini.sb. Ing first In the 830-mlle Sydney to lic>- bart yacht race. AmeriCIJI Eagle was well ahead of her main rival In the field ol 79 yacb!S, Greybeard of Canada, and was upected to -· late Friday well ahead ol the r ... ftOOrd of tbreo days, tbree bours and II minutes. Gre)'.tieard was·. more than 10 miles belilnd "'l'bunday but it was unlikely American 'Eagle WOlild Increase her lead much man became better breezes were expec_ted'durlng the,nJibt. ba-..::., Ille _.ma promise -• . to lelte tbl . ... 1 He · lllid be aDd IJePUfy Foreign Minister Cbartcbal Onmabawan would accompany the ~u when. they Jelt Tballind-.Olber <illlclal• tald1 th8t El Tawi would allO make the trip, and that the guerrillas would ,be allowed to keep Enjoy Five-day Weekend thelrweapoaa. . • ' Police ollli:ials • said . ts were •being, IJl8jfe .for a·.~ lo lake Uie ~as out ol lbe • COUlllry. They lllid·the moot likely destination was ca1ro. . . D,awee made·the·announceirient in the floodlit street In front ol. llie elhbassy and then alter lidthe~ -.lallant In· a. lem· Porary command1 post. acro!is ·the street, he, Chartcbal and the "F,gyptian am- bassador . returned to the embassy building. With them they carried two bot· ties of liquor. Outdoor-oriented vacationers planning on a five-day weekend were already eet· ting up campsites In O'Nelll Park In Trabuco Canyon today. With today declared a national day o! mourning for the late President Harry. S Truman and· Monday a holiday for ·New Suspect Indicted In Gun Assault The guerrillas ldeotllled•tbemlelves "'I the Blacl: Septeinber'otg8nlzlttioh "wblcli carried out the massacre of l!iraeli ' athletes at the Munich Olympics and said On Tustin Officer It was ~ible for the-massacre at the Lod Intematiooal airport In Tel Aviv in which Japanese gi.mmen !bot and kill- ed a scpre of, persons, They threatened death to the Israelis in!.ide ·if their demands for release of guerrillas beld prisoner In lane! were not met by I a.m. Friday (5 p.m. PST today). "For the sake of the king and Thailand they have agreed to leave 'the country, .. said Dawee wbo Is agriculture minister and an influenUal member of the govern- ment. Israeli Prime Mlnlster Golda Meir beJd an hour-Jong emµ-geney cabinet session In Tel Aviv to dtscuas the•altuatlon. Her government bas never yielded to Pale> linlan demands wben llraell bollajjes were .seiZed in.the past. "We will not \ate any violent action if It J1 not necessary," a Thal.official. told reporters. "Wt don't want bloodshed or any harm to1 come to the siz people wbo are being held.at boqes." A man accused of shooting a TUstin patrolman in the stomach after being challenged by the officer and a sberitf't deputy was Indicted Wednesday by the Orange CounJy Grand Jury on charges of assault with a deadly weapon on police officers. It Is expected that Gary William Johnson, 37, TIUtln will be arraigned Fri- day in Superior Court to answer to charges Initially !lied Dec. I abortly alter the woondlng of Tuslln patrolman Waldron Karp, 17. Karp was One of two Tustin patrolmen went to a local home In re9JlOOIO to pleas lor help from a nstdent who said Johnson had fired several shots through ber bathroom window In a bid to gain en- try to the premises. Year's Day, many winter campers decid- ed to take Friday' off too, a county park official reported today. ·A large crowd of campers ls eipected at the mountain area park this weekend il !air weather bolda. O'Neill Park Is open lor camping at '2 a night per vehicle 24 boon a day, aeven days a week. Plcnlcking-ooly CQll!S IO cents a day. 1bere are no Individual campoltet and no camping equlpnent requlremenll. Some persons come with fancy mobile ll"ailen, others w\jb ooly aleeplng bap. How many campers are let in depeudl OD how close they camp together. A county pork ofllclal said his only ad- vice to lbe hardy campen would be "dress warm," but alJO cautklned that no open flres are allowed ud mnotmg is forbidden in some areas. Recent Santa Aoa winds have dried oot the woodsy area ao that flrel are a danger. Campers are encouraged to check with state department ol forestry olllclala at the park before llgbtlnc any nm. Even the JD01t uperie..oed camperw forget lo brln& thlnp like lr,hler ftuld and salt and pepper, the perk tpOkOllDID said. There are no supply facWUel wtthta the park, but small grocery ......... nearby In Tr•buco Canyon. 0r .. ,. t·Drafiees Gei a . Break . . ' ~ B-.b PoUce Department. . -~· '. . ·. ·: "" "' . ' ~ Catliozks ,OK:. Two sherlll's deputies plcl:ed up the call and joined the Tustin ofllce1'I In the lnvtsUgaUon. A man kltntlfled as Johnson then shot Karp In the lllomacb and deputy Tim Stewart wa1 shot in the face try Karp's gun when the weapon di!cbarged u the wounded olll~ fell. Stewan bas recovered from what was described as a minor woond. Karp It -at home recuperating from more terious wounda that called for ttnergeocy 1urgery at a loclil hoopltal. • 1t'eadMlr It'll be 11W1DY on Friday, but'the lempera-will be a little nlppy, due lo the Pacific North-cold front mavlnc Into the area. lllllo ol llO are Hpeeted, with °"""1111 lows In the 40I. - I.: • • I I Survival Acts . · : I . • 1 NEW"YORK (APl-Two- (:atbollc lheologl8ol 18Y tbat'the ~ craah survivors ln -tllO Andel .·. ftio ate Ollh ol deod """"""°"' f.~1Uve"acted~." · ' "A penon ii oermlttod to eol dead human lletth II then II 111 • leaalble "1temallve for llll'Wl!al, • l;bar. A-Vonaban and Iba -, • W1lltam -wrote ta • po ...... Ille tllbjed. 'l1le prlooll -t b• IJo. ~ ol Cit!Jollc p&dpoll u ..,.._ for ... --COllJollc~of'llewYtn. .. • • ·, '.o I l)ay of Mourning Cancels Induction of 300 Youths ; • I . t ' .. ... 1llM BARLEY 'TholO ·teJegrama , advL!e the dralt ...... ..._.,,.. ,... • boards tbat lDductiOn8 planned for today tAl!l':· laml ltafteet ~ hopes t0al havfbebi 'oanc<iled.'liut It la alto mad. todaJ'• ""1 ol mourning !or lom>et clear In the aame communtcaUon· that Pl..,.IM lllrry•S Tnanln m1'bl mean ony local mm affectad bave beeo nitcl>- tlle ......, ol plant for their military ed to wtiar-c:olled.the "ulencled -'ball l>elWr l\oW' tWe 'bj>pa: a pr(orify" .....,. . · 1'IPI: aWet.:.%1:°' M•ll .. 8olecli,. , ' '.1'-1 ....., ..., be ~allejl llJI at any ~ • .,rd ~. • tlllie blloOWi ,_ antt 'Apt!I ll And "I 'doa't ....,. llow muoy ol the more ~ """' WasbJniton that nobody la , -• ......... lilln*-bJ ...... -... lot January ... not .... ~~';,'=.:;..' .~~ ::.r,·;;:~~::::111 -aild. 'll!iit tlloy bad ....... not ~ J. Qooln, ~ty .. nod,...,...,. ........ .......,. 111e1r llerftco -1n w~ .... u .. d!WI ........... .-tttl." --·---·111at today ' ' Jolmloll It ............ In Orqe County Medi<& Center lrom -Jn the bond and !<nee Inflicted when lawmen sup- ponlng Karp and Stewart opet>ed fire on hlm. Fisherman Sought • - INSWE TOD-'Y 1LA.a.t r • -·' 't ........ tNI rr-. : --' --. -"" .... •• ' ,,.,, " .. ' ............ , -.... --.. --' - --" -..... -. ------.. I Visits Troop• Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird will spend New Year's weekend on a 'farewell visit' to troops in HaWail, the Penta· goo. announced. J ury Indicts Parents; Son Was Beaten CHICAGO (UPI) -Seven-year..old Johnny Lindquist died last August after lying in a coma for S4 days from a beating allegedly inflicted at home because he asked to be allowed to return to bis foster parents. On Wednesday, a Cook County grand jury indicted bil pamia, William and Irene Lindquist, on charges of murder. While Johnny Jay Jo the coma. his foster parents, Robert and F1orence Karvanek of Tigerton, Wis., were at his bedside , and tht.lr attorneys waged court baWes Jn eHorts to gain ctistody of the child. But Johnny, whose story attracted na- Uooal attention, never regalned con- oclousnesa. "I said in Chicago, it will all come out," Karvanek said from his ngerton borne alter bearing of the munlu Jn. dlctmeota Wednesday. 0 U they have to be punisbed, that's it •.. I don' know. We're sUll not aettled hen, not over Johnny yel We hid bought blm presents for Qnistmas. It was a dull Chrlstm,.. just thinking about Johnny." Johnny turned 7 shortly befo,. hia death Aug. SI , and the Karvaneb were there with cake and present•, but be never knew it. The grand jury returned the Indictment alter reportedly bearillg testimony from ne1gbbors that oo one occasion Mn. Lindquist slammed the boy's bead into a door repeated1y and beat him on the back with a broomstick in forcing him to tneel. It was charged that 1be beat him to the floor July 28, and witnesses 1ald Johnny was forced to kneel for eight bouts and was refused water. • Alao, on July 28, her husband allegedly beat the boy bf!:call3e Johnny WU unhap- py about leaving bit foster parent&. Lindquist has been held ln jail since the 'otaUng. His wife was arrested after I.he indictments were returned Wedne5day. Newport Aide Nained To Santa Ana Post Form~r Newport Beach plarmlng aide Cbarlea C. Zimmerman bas been ap- polnl"1 ~r of planning for the City of Santa Ana. He bu served as acting director since September. Zbnmerman, 34, replaces the county seat'• former planning chief, Herbert WltWld, who resigned to take a similar post ln Yuba City. Zimmerman'• saJary wm be '11,a4 per ,..r. OUN•I COAST ,. DAILY PILOT 'nit ar..., c..t ~11.'I' ,,I.OT, ... ... "_..... ........ , .............. '1 -or.. Ollll P'llllfhfllnl ~ . ..,.. ntl llltltllNI ........... ,..,. ~ ''*"· "" ca• ....,, '"""*' IMKll. tt111U14ll1 .......,,Olllllltlrl Yeti.y, L..leUMo / ..ca. l....,Seddllbldl 9Mli IM (M1a .... ,_ JllM ~ A .... ,..._, ...,... ....... ~-~ I ) f'llt prfildpel P' I F f; ... '*'" ta et aJO Wal .. ., .,,.. ~ ..... CllllOr'ftll. ,.... •oHttH.W"4 ""-..... ,.....,... Jetlt 11:. c.,,..., 'f"lot ~ .... a,.,... ........ n.... •• Kffril ·-n.... •• A, M.,WM ,........MIW L '"" K.t,. ....,,. IOldl Ctly WdtW ........... ~ 11)1 N._.,.,t ....... "' M .... AMm11 P.O. 101 1171, f2U,J --Qelli ... I -'#Mt..,~ ...... ...,.., m Jfwllt AWllW ........ .. ...,..., '"" ~ .._...,.,. ... ----·Jc-....... t:11 4 1 r• enc» 64MU1 a S r 1 M aa;rt I a '4W 611 ........ C...I ,_. ... .................... ...... ~ llf¥WI__... ..... ;iiAll' ""'*" ..... ,.,. ............. ffi:j'~~:. :F: Be B est e d She Saved Her Strengtli INDEPENDENCS, 111 .. (UPI) -Ila!' r1 s -..... JU IM:ldo ~to tlie -"'Delann .... _ W balf a C0Dt"'7 .... , ., ... ~ .. - Truman llftod a .... ID Ml opllolis '1111>- dow and watched her c b ti d b o o d sweetheart pass by for the Jut time. ln a sad and slow procaakln, a gleam- ing black hearse canied the body of the 88-year-old former President past tbe l~ room house. The comge of mourners woond aloog • JS.block ..... Truman often walked when he wa1 able. Mrs. Truman, 87, did not attend the lying-in-state ceremonies that began when tbe hearse reached the Harry S Truman Ubrary a mile away. Randall Jessee, a family friend, sald she planned to save her strenith for today's funeral. Mrs. Truman saw her husband of 53 years for the last time Tuesday. Leaning on the ann of her daughter, Mariaret Daniel, she walked into the room at tbe G<orwe c. Canon Funeral Bolne to be v.·ith Tnunan before bis casket wu tea.l- ed. She last saw. Truman alive at Uie end of a U.bour Y1iJ1 O>rlstm'u Doy, a short time before his death in Releardl Hospital. At the library Wednesday, Mn. Daniel 'W-alted at the head of the moumen as tbey filed' In to view Truman's casket lying oo black velve't draped over a catafalque set up in the library's lobby. Behind her walked her husband, Clif. ton, who held the bands o( Truman'& two y....,..t grandsom, Thomas WMl!inglon Daniel, I , and Barrlbl Galea llmPel, to. '!be two older boys, Cl~ton Truman Daniel, IS, and William Wallace Daniel, 1.1, walked behind. Mrs. Danie.I, tier face drawn with sor- row and her hi<lDd< balr pulled ~ck Jn simple style, walked erecUy into the library and to the catafalque lhowing llt- Ue outwanl evidence of her iuld. She saved her tears for the limousine and the trip back to the family home. ~ lmlde, abe dabbed aoltly at her eyes with a handkerchief she toot from the pocket of her higb-oecked black coat. Later, Mrs. Daniel and her husband greeted former President Lyndon B. Johnson and bil family at the home the way Truman and Bess used to greet friends. They walked to the hoot gate and greeted the Joboaoni. Mrs. Johnson bug- Newport 'Closes Offices, Joins Day of Mourning Newport Beach did observe the na- tJonal day of mourning for Harry S Truman today. C!.ty otOces were c1osed wtth the ex· ception of police and fire emergeocy services and refuse collections, which proceeded on schedule. Tbe decision to close down didn't come easily, however. City Manager Robert L. Wynn ""°'t able to reach vacationing Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis Wltil about 3 p.m. Wynn does not have the authority to declare special holldaya. only the mayor and vice mayor do. Originally, Wynn had said the city Of· fire! would remain oper:t but when he found that most other governmental agendes ln the state WeJ1! closing, be asked the mayor for the special declara- tion. Wynn said if the decision had been bis, he 'd probably have kept right on work· ing. "What'1 what Harry Truman would have wanted -and done," Wynn said. Emm a R. Hicks, Former Mesa Resident, Dies Emma Rehme Hicks, fonner Costa Mesa resident for most of the past 41 years, died Tuesday at the age or 63. Mn. Hicks was a native of Kansas and attended Santa Ana High School after her family moved to thtir home on 18th Street ln 1927. Her father, Fred Rehme, owned and operated the Highway Garage, a combinatioD machine shop, garage and service station near the June-. Uon of Harbor Boulevard and Broadway. Mrs. Hlck.s lived In Seattle for several years and later operated an antique shop at the tamily home for live years during the 1960&. She maved in 1969 to Hesperia, Calif. led and k!'IOOll -·a ........... 11!1, t>oolel--lo the _ .. -... W~'14llllflllwa•­-aa& llllicit ti. ..... ~t and ""*· -JlltNtl • lbort tbM alter ' the ~ IOft. 'nlo Nixons' visit was brief. The N1aou and Job.moos did not attend today'• prtv1te tuneral. fi'rotll P ""9 I TRUMAN ••• no eu1ogies. There was on1y prayer. "Most mercl!uJ Father, who bas bten plwed lo take unto Tbyaelf Ibo sooJ of Thy servant, Harry. srant to ua who are still in our pilgrimage, and who walk as yet by faith, -that having served Thee with constancy on earth. we m.ay be )oln- ed berealter with 'l'lly, blMaed aalnta In glory everlastlog," sa1d tbt' Rev. JobD ~-· • Lembcke; Jr., pastor of. the li>dependenc• Trinity Epl!copal ailirdi. Belpre the luoeral and bu r'I a I , tlnlaands ol moumen-rtch and poor, fimous and \Ulknown, workers ,._~~ overalls and aprolll and men and -carrying babies -filed slowly and silently by his mabOgany caaat. The plaln people were the ooe1 T?uman loved. Be was born llt yean ago and ral.led in fbe farm heartland of America. llis mother used to boast: "Harry can plow the straightest furrow of corn ia Missouri.'' . He became the people11 aervant, as U.S. aenator, Vice president and their chief esecutlve. lfu atnl&bt talk and firm manoer In tho \Vhite House led to the rllckhame, "Give 'Em Rell Harry~ .. But of that, the little man in the w~ rimmed ,opectacles said: "I oever gave anybody bell. I just 1ave 'em the truth and they thought It was bell." Ill deference to the luoeral and a day of moumlna proclaimed by President NWxt, there wa1 no mall delivery and the Ne• Yori: and American -1< tt· changes were clooed. A memorial service a planned Jan. 5 In Washington's Natiooal Cathedral u a final gestur< to Ibo loOib little -· and tho »<lay iDourDlng period declared by Nison ends Jan. 2'. Prealdent' Nlxoo ucI fwmer Pmldellt Joh1181111 polcJ their laal ,_:la :w- day whlfe the body lay Jn ltate In a closed collln. Nlxoo !aid a wreath of carnations at the cubt. Truman waa buried In bil favorite dark blue piJHtrlped aull And be wore the fomed wire-rimmed glaases. At the funeral, bis casket was covered with red camatioo!, bD favorite flower. At the burial, the American flaa that also was draped on the coffin, was lolded preclsely and LI. Gen. Patrtd: F. Cassidy, the escort commander, gave it to Mrs. Truman with --U: "Tbls liar II presented to you on behall of a gratelul natloo u a token ot ap- preciation for the honorable and faithfUI service rendered by your loved one." Harbor District Co urts Closed U you were llCbeduled for your day In court today you can tell It to the judge, pay your trafflc ticket -or whatever - on Friday. Harbor Judicial Dllllrict Coor! .... closed today Jn moum1og for President Harry S Truman, thus po.!tpoolng all ac- tivity set for today unto Friday's· calen- dar P1an to come early and expect to stay late . however, because the action doe! not postpone anything on the court calen- dar for Friday, which la one of lta bul1est days. .f'ron1Pqe l BOMBING •.• buildings but no Vietnamese were killed. President Nguyen Van Thieu met for an hour and .\$ minutes today with U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen . Frederick C. Weyand, the American commander In Vietnam, presumably to dilCUSI the U.S. bombing operations against North Vietnam. Tin Son&, the daily newapaper closest to Thieu, said that Th.ieu1 Bunker and Weyand met "amid rwnon that the U.S. wlll stop bombing lrtll above the 20th Parallel in the next few days !(>. order to resume the talks in Parts." The newspaper quoted a "reliable source." Becaute of Communllt protests about the full.scale bombing of North Vietnam and an American reque11t for a holiday break, the four partlea at the Par111 peace talks scheduled no meeting today. It was the first miss In the talb ln two months. Big Clarist111u Present Frances, an 18-tnot!.lh-old St. Bernard presented owners" Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sm Ith of Bangor, Maine, ,.ith a memorable ClnUtmu present.-17 pups. Farm Workers' " . Strike Involves . -. Battle o.f .Sound BRAWLEY (AP) -UDlted .Form w..-ten union meinlJera are plcketlna D' ArrillO Brothen of. calllomia lettuce fielda I>m In a three-t-dd otrll<e that ha.I Included a dtJel of llOllDd equipment. lmpeital County •berlll'• dejllillel.saJd Wednesday both a1diol hive 1ircught loump0uer1 lo tho 'ftelaa: • • • Wblle ptcketen 'Wtth ti a t t ·e r 'I r. r u n "1"Pphonea elhoit the ioiUn IO leave the Oald, Iha powas' -lnlcl:"1rla to droWn tbein out with MOilCao music. "The tabor dUpuli cooitd be d.!icribed as a battle of aounds," a deputy aaid. About 200 unlon members are on strike. A judge bas limited the number of. picket. to 25 at each of three fields · northwest of here.• The atrtte began alter negotiations between D'Anigo and the AFL-CIO union Over renewal ot a n,o.year contract broke down. La,i month the company laid oU all union membe.n at fields in Firebaugh, Calif. and Eloy, AN. after contract talks deadlocked, a union spokeSman said. Red Satellite Up ~MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union launched oo Wednesday another Coamos satellite, tht 54tst in the secret series. Druggi1ig Cas~ Suspect '{Va_bbed lnA~na . ' ,. A ampect In tbe Lquial BMcb dnlg· Pll lllld .robbary CJl • ._ Ana man . .... In poUco Cllltodjl today """" being plcted' up W-.Y,1 by Cllibnla llJilnray Patroi .al!!cert ID Altodena. LagmJa -poUbo -.lderitllled ~ man u Jamee!C. 1!1DdeJl, 21, of Key Weal, Fla! 111<1'.lield blm In i.quba Beach c!IY jaJl today. llo'boU boo beeo ael He ,,.. bociied on 1tJ1P1c!o11 o! robbery and arand tbell -' .1 • KindeII WU oJiprebended bf Ibo CllP at about 4:10 a.m. Wednesday on a surface street, oo 11115Pic,kal of ~ ,... der the influence of an blto'1ctinl, Sgt. R. W. Bullock, Loo Angeles County Shertll'a deputy said. . . Laguna Beach ol!lcors said Klndell was driving the car allqedly taken from the victim of the drugging early Wednelday morning. Peter Haigh, 111, ol Santa Ana WU loond lying eeml-<OllllC!OUI on the floor of a Clift llotel room by the ...,__ Haigh was :ushed to the intensive care unit at South COa.st Community Boopltal. He told ofllefn be bad been at• J..acunl bar aiid wu approached by two men and 'l1'vited to a "party" at the hotel room. When be entered the room, Haigh told police, he was given a large drink, µid alter that his memory a blank. His car was fOWMi to be mlalng and police listed the incident as robbery. Pair Captured After Escaping Sheriff's Van . TWo men who klcl:ed out the l'W" door ol the 1berlll'1 jall van W..._y In Santa Ana were overpowered and recap- turecl after a br1ef lltnlggle with punulng ~ Orange Couoty aberilf's ofllcen Jden. Ufled the pair aa wm1am-Joaeph c.nnier, 20, Room !!02 Hacienda Hotel, LajiJna Beach and Jerome Vernon Broou, 11, Pauhbo, w~. Ofllcers aaid both men will be charged with fel0oy eacaP. peodlng •pproval by tho dlstr~ attorney'• oUlce of Ibo new allegaUd.· Jall depudeo aaid Cormier and Broob wm to route to the county courtboule from the jail when they made their ellC8j)e bid. DMV Back on Feet SACRAMENTO (AP) -Daplte Ibo blue in tta olficO buf)c!Jne, the Slate Department of Motor Vehlclte will coo- tlnue to. opente almoll normally and Ibero will be 00 ~tion ~ ... tenalob, DMV chief Bob C..... says. "We saved our records anci'tberefore wm contimle to cooduct our octlvltles In ao almost rwttne manner," c.ozem said Wedne!day. .JJ.J. qatWtt JANUA.RY ' ....... Todayl Substantial Savings Throughout the Store ·15 to 25% SAVINGS on Sever9I Bedroom, Dining Room and Occasional Collections by ••. DREXEL ... d HERITAGE She letves her husband, John. of the family home in Hesperia ; a daughter, Donna Powers of Orange; a son, George Hickll of Balboa Island ; a brother, Elmer Retune: of Hesperia; a slster, Meta 7.erlaut of Santa Ana; and one grand· daughter. FWW!ral services will be he.Id in Vlc-- torville. The meeling ls u.sually beld every · Thursday and so far there have been 171 sesslona since the talks began m Ul69. MAN, 65, PLANS T O SCALE TETON LANDER. Wyo. (UPtl -While ~t men hls age are spending New Year's day ln frool of their televlslon sets, Paul Petr.oldt, 16, hopes to be livln&: in • snow cave on wlnd·1wept, 13, 1e&-rooa Or11nd reton. J Petzoldt plans to make an 1S11ult-"6n the peak of Grand Telon either New Year'a &ve or New Ytar'I Day. 111e c!Jmb will be his elibth with graduate• of his NaUonal Outdoor Leaderahlp SCbool (NOLS). The group ha1 reached the peak only ln 1969. Angels Murder Case to J ury OA!\LAND (AP) -A Superior Court jury was to resume deliberations today in the trial of lour Hell's Angela accused of I.he murder of a narcoUca COU.rier whose body was found In the bathtub of a bumlng Oakland home . The ca,. went to the Jury l1U! Wtdn,. doy arter proeecutor Donald P. Whyte 1rgued that informer Richard Jva1d.l 'u~ plied sufficient evtdt1nce to convk:t Hell's Angeli leader Ralph ''Sonny" Barge.r, M1 In the May 21 d'8th ol Servlo Aaero, 29, of Allen, 1'e1. A. DllXll. SOPA ... 17f.00 DUXIL LO-T ... J71.00 489 319 ' HaJ.GAl\l\ETf fURNrpJRE 'ROl'ISSIONAL O,•• Mo•, Ull HARBOR ILVD. lNTIAfOl gu!INUS Thun. a frl Ev... COSTA MESA. CAL!f. • ' ·Bal'·s Growing Pains Time bil tab!> Ill toll on <tbe llalboa hllllnea di> Vici. • So ban the tlmel. Once the center Ill a ~ village where young and old llocUd ID the 1ummu and-'~ to help It pros- per -during the Hit of the ·year u well, Balboa may hlYe ...,n Ill best days. : • There are thooie who 1111ggeat It llhould be made lo fade away. · They point to vacant lllorelronll and the attitude of many residents ·~ foslalng tourism. They pro-J"'M. to replace the color llid charm of Balboa with , DCIWl;_DI, projects. . • . Sometime soon the Newpotl Belch city council la l(O(ng to bave to make a decillon that may forever d .. tine what many people atlll lhlDt la a unique lltUe comer of the world. " The council made that declolcm once. And they made It badly. They told a deYeloper be~ tear down the Fun Zone toe~ 47 ~111111. • But the courts told them lo take a second loot, thla Ume with in envfronmental Impact statement be- fore them. Councilmen hadn't considered the Impact of the · project OD the environment the first Ume around. wJMn It came before them last week, for whatever reuona, they aaw things differenUy. They tol4 the JAK Con· llrllctlon Company to go back and \J'Y to flrid !ome com· merclal uoe for the property. , , But they also saia 11·.none Is to be fQund, then a · lOW111" den.tty bouslng project would be considered. JAK Conllructlon Company not long ago bought that property -before they bad their lone change - md paid" a nported '800,000 for about J.2 acrea of bay· fro9£ that Is l1lmlW1ded on three sides bY ~vlng commercial uau. . With that kind of lnv-ent, and knowing full wen that luxury condomlrilums would most likely bring them the blgpat prollt,-!1<11·cerlllnl1 quecllon1ble bow bard JAK !Ill ~It for new ccaimerdal 111111. 1 We dOubt •rioutlY' Ille' -4d even make the offer that the ~nt Fun Zone rlcle and game operators aay they want -Jong-term leue1 ao Ibey can Invest lo renovate. It even II doubtfUl If the present tenants could attord the leaaea If they were off!ft'ed. Stlll, •Newport Beach ls pµrportedly the fourth great· est tourist attraction In all of California (ranking be- hind Dianeyland, Knott'• Berry Parm and golfing) and it aeems with thoae mllllono of vlsltors 'eoch year, there ougllt to be something they'd want lo come to Balboa !or. . . There are thooe who are convinced Balboa can be reborn, perhaps with lees tinsel, for that Is not what people want today. · Phil Tozer thinks so .. He's investing big money in remodeling the entire Balboa Pavilion. Tbouaands were spent decorating Ind outfitting a new restaurant across from the Balbol Inn earlier this year. · • · ';l'bere are thQae who have the faith and ·the courage ·to help preserve this very ~eal asset to the preaent cbar- acU!r of Newport Beach. · · Enter now..t_.our city fathers. They, too, have a J'91POnsibillty. vnen described as an awesome power, they have the authority to tell a person what he can do with bis property. . It Is the use of that authority with discretion that establishes land use patlerns throughout the city .. With· in the bounds of fairness and the law, they must con· cern themselves with bow the city develops and · re- develops. They have a general plan in the works now. The city councilmen would be making a mistake not to use the ..,..nd chance they h~ve with this property. We feel strongly the new general plan could set the stage for a revitalization of Balboa. ·The city council aholild use the plan to that end. "Peace is at hand." -Henry KiBsinger N I 'Proximity lnflriences Judgment Dear Glo'omy Gus . Bird Deserves Eqtlfll Time, Says Reader Add Stork Theory to Textbooks? ~ fnm J.HARIU~ • . 1'oqWs 11 LuJo: Five people killed In an accldenl !Cl mUes away from ua ._.,. imn news Importance than .. tilled In .. -S.oot miles away-u H ... xlmlly and gqraphy were the ~ cl human worth. • • • 1111 not the flnlnci•lly-dl-politi; Icon who doel.tbe -borm lo IOCI· elY. but the lntellec- tua117 -; not tile ... who ateal.s mmiey from the peo- ple'• pocket, but tile one who apeaks one way and acts aIJOtb.. er, thUI betraying tile }Jllblic's baste lni.rest. • • • We tend to venerate "men ol. "IC'tlan," but the Intelligent moo of aclicll bowl bettef; when Napolooa met Goolloo · 11 Weimar, It _, 1118 ..._., wllo s- claimed, "What a man!" about the l!Cbolar, ID!f DOI lb-. olb<r way around. • • • An OC<MioMI smile lllumlnatel the penonlllty; a perpetual smile Is more likely to be an h)'!terlcal defeose agaln51 delpolr. CONUllVATIVES are much more realistic thin liberals about the way men will beba .. In ordinary times, but for less tmalJlnath'e about the way they will behove In extraordinary tlm.,: thus, conaervaUYe regimes are successful oo1y during periods of relaUve tranqulllty, but America ....., lo provide much faster Cl!rlMmas delivery to' Hanoi than lo Managua, Nicaragua. -A.R.V. ...................... .,_ ................. Diii! ...... . To the Editor: In, view of the recent discuaslon ri!gardlbg the revision of tbe elementary scOOol iclence bookl lo. ""11ude t1'e , ~ creitlon theory, I sljicerely pro- pooe that we ooght to also present lbe stork theory, in our explanations of how babies get here. AFTER ALL we have no way of prov- ing that the ~ theory .ls'faise. Storks are pretty fast bird!. The ooes wtiolgive us babies probatfty can fly oo fut that are euily delllruled m times cl crisia. Ibey can ny In the hospital window, band Eztreme rel~ """'tel more the baby lo the doctor, and lly oot again, tmbelleftn Iba lndll!'erenco Ind skep-so fut that nobody knows wbat happens • 11ci1m '*"bined. , !!so the storks that gi.ve wr•j>ables may • • • have pqwen .1f.'! don't know about. Maybe The chief ~ for developing as we they .can tum ' thetUelves invisible when grow older, and dllbuMening ourselves bringlnc the babies Into the hospital so of Immature faUlts, la that wttb age we that we would never know about them. acquire a new crop of faults , and nobody can cope with both kinds at the same lime. • • • Wben • -is bold uouP lo coo-' 'fide lo .....,bda,_ Iba\ Ille abd ber )iusbend 0 ft lite brother.and llltet," I wooder which Is which. llE CAN OJITEN endure •an enra pound. ol poln far more Ulll1 than we ,.,. llllfer !lie wllbdrawal of an oonce of ec • ., J] slftJ • • • 'Jbe real trooy in today's '1bumor of protell" hll been neaUy summed up by Diet Gregory, when be obo«ved: "When I left st. IAuls, I was making five dollars a night. Now I'm getting 15.000 a week - lbr saying the lll!M lblnp out loud I us- ed to say llllCler my breath!" • • • Of all the ~ gameo ever devl .. ed by man, cbea ls the one most closely allied to monQmanla and alc:obollsm -In that, If allowecf tO Dourish unchecked, It will ruthlessly drive out every other motlve and punultj every chess cham4 pion is, first of all, a fanatic. • THE 111EORY o( 'the stork is a lot easier for children to accept than tliat propoted by science. FO< children It may """"' 'utremely sbocklnl that Ibey ac- tually ~ out of their ipotbers. Wba~ a terrible thought! The stork is a far healthier thing to teach. If Ibey are going to be persistent about ·teaching the aclellllftc theories I 111ppooe we can g!Ve them equal time t?ut l!Y all means let the childr<n lolow abotit the llork tlieory too. Chllchn are all too often given only one side d an _.i. SHELLEY WALSH Groteth and Greell To the Editor: I take particular ei:oeption to Gilbert W. Ferguson's contenUon (Mailbo<; Dee. 17) that the rampant growth of Orange County llhould not, and In fact cannot, be cootrolled. · ,. ~uture of Capit.alism I NOTE that Mr. Ferguson la a full· time, paid director of the Councll for En- vironment, Employment, Ecooomy and Development (CEEED), which organiza- tion is dedicated to the financial interests of a coalition of constructlon unions, con- tractors, landowners and developers. Tbus CX!l!Stituted. I question Its objectiv· lty In evaluating wbat Orange County's future llhould be. Wr!tel Jolm G. Gurley, prol..,.r of ecooomks at Stanford University, in '"Ibe Flltule of American Clpitalllm." • .,., main conclusion Is that ther< ar< som& powerful adverse forces operatlng against U.S. capitalism, which o-.er the next few decades will create an ln- creuJngly unfavorable environment, domestically and internationally, for U.S. corporate profltmaking . Thia deteriorating • environment d er l v es prlmarily from the continuance of revolulionary movements against ~ tematlonal capitalism, from the lit-' lellllllcatlon of rlvalrlel among leading capitalist states for inveatmeot ouQets, trade adVantages, and access to raw materials, aod from labor's growing •bWty to exe'rt presSure on ®pita!'• share of lhe n1ttooa1 tncome.11 BowtvEii. these adverse forces agallllt copitalilm ar< far from belna unopposed. Internattonal c>pit•lilln, led J11 lbe Untt..i Statea. II a Poftl'M lorco m 1be -Id and Is eepeble ol 1111D1 .,.... ric:lorles agalnlt -id proletarian -II. SltU, rey judgment Is that, on bolallce, lhe llde II l1Jllllini .,.1n11 copllllllln. on a wwldWlcirbali." "If Ibis Is ... Ille ........ of the copllallst clul Is -llbfy lo be • CiD fa< lncr .. ~d Stale Intervention In lbe ..,._1c Ille of the netlon .•. "" con expect State lnlerfttltloo lo be ln-flod for tie pu-"' uptenlna lbe -o1 tar dllclplino •I lmie, mobUillnl nellaul .-ircea agallllt molutiomry 1C1M11 -. ond do~ U.S. coplllflsll' lntel'llll In ID incrOutngly <OlllpellUve and boltlle -ol ( EDITORIAL RESEARCH J global capitalism. . . .copltallsm will survive 11 m Increasingly llate-dirOcted monopoly capitalism. But many elements of democracy will not.'' ~rt L. Rellbnloer, -"Capllallsm AlNe or Dead," writes: • "Had.anyone ln·tbe 193118 ~told that the .U.S. Gross Nattonal Product In tllO early !WO.. jVOOld su...,... a trillion ·dollars -eHectlvely doubU.. ,the real per capita -within lbe l~ of the mejonty ol lbe population then an .. -I am """ be would bl., !tit ale In ~for the United Stalel 111 era of ~ !!Oclal JIOIOO Ind goodwill. Yet that enonnous·eoonomlc cbaniJ• bl• Jak"1 pla<:e and !!Oclal harmony bu nol resulted.'' "I 'lmNit 11 is fair lo 11y thlt amoag the ... ·-ol !!Oclal unreol -the drug culture. the cry for porltclpolory cfemoc:no)>, lbe llllle"!lon ol _.., the -.... morollb', the -t • the life ol lbil _,,,,.. -1llOe II - pdll wllf! et IUllPOrliYI ol ~ "" ----vror pollMM., -capttalism bu trodltlolllUy r<llod. II Is pl>IOtble, In --.. lbet ... -'ll the lbmholcl ol on era In, Whidl deet>-111&1$1 .. _ In 1111..,. wtD .... dem1ine capttalism In I ,._ II fltal 11 lbe lllOll clltinallc lftleWI .. -tJon mlCbl do, .. ~ porbapo 1 ... n(lid11 ......... uca11y. • There are those of wi (to use Mr. Fer-. gusoo's favorite and oft-repeated appela- tlon "llenny Pennys") wbo look beyond lmmediate economics, and are more aensitive to the demonstrated resu1ts of a llrlcUy pront .. nented growth policy: escalating air Ind water pollullon, still· h!g traffic coogestion, rapidly shrink· ing open-!J)ace. In sbort, the continuing degradation of our quality of Ute. I CONSIDERING CEEEP'S sbort·sl1ht· ed, ecooomic bias, I suggest that it ls rnJs-named. More appropriate would be Group for Rape of the Environment through Endless Development (GREE;ll). And ' Happy Henny Penny to you, Mr. Ferguson. ROBERT D. RIES, War C'riClu To the Editor: Now that the peace talb have frozen .---811 Geotje --~ Dear George: Don~ )'Oil ...,. get problems yoo llloeatly can't answer? TED Dear Ted: ~quite often I get questlooo I 1 con'! answer. I just p -and -them anyhow ... I flaure It's better to lie a llllfe lllln lo .... lo -. all lbio 611- vfce r10kel and go back lo -k In the 11wmlll. A, I MAILBOX Letters from reader• are tae!come. Normall11 writers should convey their messages in SOO word.a or less. The right to cond..,e Jell<n to fit space . or eliminate libel ii t'estrVed.. AU letters must include lignature and mailing address. but ~' mar be withheld on requert if iutficUnt reason is apparent. Poetry will not be publiJhed. over and the U.S.A. bas resumed an all- out effort ln bombing our enemy -North Vietnam, I wondered who would be the first lo criticize that acllGn and softsell Ibo ever-so-righteous North. the baloed rulers In HanOl. I JUST witnesled ii about a ball hour ago by one very famous news com- mentator by the lllllllfl of David Brlntley. 1 did not know that be was to on all the secret peace talks In Paris along with Kissinger and the envoy11 ol North Viet· nam. Al a matter of fai;t. I am posiUve that Mr. Brlntley did noi,:~ln 111 even one ol those secret peaoe BOWEVER, I just beard him mouth off against our decision to resume the bombing agaln51 oor enemy Ind side In with them as though we were a barbaric nation. If only people like Mr. Brinkley and Ibo Jane Foodas would keep out of the af. fain ol our llate, thll wor would be over a lot quicker. GRANT HARDING PlllWPS Girls PuJa117' To the Editor: Reference to Count Marco article ol Sunday, Dee. 17: "Are Gtrll ~Pushy or Tauabt by Mother?" It is · rather eurlous that in thlJ era of Information Ind enllgbtaunent that a per900 IUCb as "Count Marco" txlsts, let alone Is employed by a ne-per to write. THIS PARTICULAR artlcle uhlblts, as do all Count. !Ian»'•• .P"judlce• faulty logic and "'aiming, mus generallza- Uons, and UllqllOlllonably d l 1 p lo y • Man:o'1 aolmoslty toword the femal e gender. f Marco assumes that the tnlt he refers to ts ·the uodeslrable. OOI el "pnehlnen." lie obyjouaJy feels' 10 UU'eataied liy t_he very desirable tnll of ~­ arul direction In '1 female that be must awty the mtsnomer o1 "pualljl." I CERTAINLY hope that Count Marco has not had tbe opportunity to father a child whether it -be an irrational, overbearing male as insecure in his role as Marco, or a weak. dependent female deprived by her father of her natural right lo aspire. When I first read Count Marco's col· umn I naturally assumed 11\al it bad bed mlspll!ced and belonged witb tile comics. J•later realir.ed that Marco is ac- tually serious about bis ravings, and the sad, sad part Is that he really ,..ms to believe in biJ theory's validity. IF MARCO feels tllat tile male ·should be "boss" that "'lbat's the way mar- riage ~d be," be hp more than a lit- tle to learn-about today's woman. He also need! to learn that a male 1oes not. beoome a boss or leader merely by virtue of a zipper "In the front of his trousen. I suggest that your newspaper . would be less of a sexist rag lf. you would rid yourseU and the literate public of tbt bane of "Count Marco." MS. SUSAN J . SCHABLEIN Zel'O ... ,,. To the F.dltor: News l>Ndllne: "ZERO GROWTH SEEN." 'Taint necessarily IO, man, be<ause, with all these dudes comiog into the country with lmmlgnltlon visas, the future headline may read: "ZERO JOBS SEEN." f'OREIGNERS AllE achin' their br&M to come here cm. any pretext and then stay hero. Noto the CUbans wbi> are tired ol Castro and want to gate the bail out! But we need more people like we need a boJe tn the bead, and aome of us have just that when we welcome more ~ migrants. A good sample of the unwanted people coming to our shores ls found in San Franclsco where young Chinese Im- migrants have organized a Mafia-type TONG that Is preying upon l>lslnessmen, while ln other parts of the land trouble- matlng "refugees" are wanted in their naUve country for treason and for doing the lllJllO disruptive lblngo they are doing bere with absolute Impunity. THE FAMILIAR wbloe that plck·and- shovel jockeys are still needed. to "build America" is a sick excuse for the influx of people coming here for jobs. The peo- ple born here, notably bllckl Ind In- dians, are for more deserving ol jobs than newcomers. Agree? Tbe -1-tlon e:qilo81on may be a dud, thanks to birth control, but the Im- migration exptoalon «>mpoonds the crtme and unemployment in our coo- gested ·clttes. We cannot long support a pyramiding -1-iloo. yet lhe lm- mlgratloo Department, already accused of lbady dolngo, keep!! this mockft!g carnlval going. Added note lo 11>11 blranguo: Tbe Unltl!d States will ._ ldlnlt 1,000 . 11nfugee.•• from uaanc.ta, Africa, at the Crime and Punishment When mora than two thlrdl ol Ibo voterl In the November -~ proved Propolitloa 171 tl!e7 did cat (ban r<lllllato all Cillfomla -rohitlnf lo the delth penalty. Tiii)' .... pll<:ed upon 'the tecislaturo t -e fll(IONlblllty ol ope11lng out the ·- lbet -that penalty. THIS AcnON Is n<eessarY In order lo brtnl Callfom1I lsw1 In conlmnll1 wltll Ibo llntted States supreme OOUrt'• find.. Ina thet the delth penalty is cruel and 1muwal punlsllment -and 1bert1ore un- .,...ututloool -u now appllied In moot llotol. n. c.urt cllcl DOI boll the penelty per 1e; It reotrlcted Ill 1ppllcltlon.. ESSENTIALLY. Ibo deeth penelty now m\111 be nwidetor1. NO. jury or Jud&• CAO lllve the -ol iOnlenclni a peroon lo Ille lrnpr!so1.,ltlll or lo death. cm.In clearly ll1Du1oted crlmel will C8ITf a mondltor1 dootll -.,., nd it Jo now tlJo ~lllJ cit. the ltclll•ture to -what crlmel lhall be Included In tlllt cetecory. Cl!lllonlA -· - I request or our pseudo-ally "great" Brl· tain. S.G. UNDIN& Car Waslo TMIU To the Editor: Uoderstanding that the car wash employees of th~ local car washes are not paid the highest wages possible and usually after a short lime must move on to better pa)'lng jobs, I can justify the ball-hearted effort Ibey put Into cleanln1. vacuuming and washing cars; but what I do not understand i!1 why· we citizens have to strip our auWI al. every item loose therein before tuming it over to them. . " I RECENT!. Y bad my cor woshed, took all the packages I bad in my front seat apd bact~seat. with me, but Wt two or three items . in the glove boL My mistake, the glove box and trtmk are not a safe place because you .tum1your auto ove1 to these attendants with your keys (whlcb open glove 'boxes and trunks) and at· the end of the wash cycle and upon releasing my pie~ up ticke\ to tbe at- tendant, I got .. in and my came,ra was mis!fng Crom the.' glove box. Insurance, both auto and homeowners, doe:i . not cover -tbi,J, the owner and manager of the car wash claim no legal obligation because of their ''not responsl-- ble for lost articles\' sign, Ulil was not a lost article it was stolen. It is a ridlcul~ and sad altuatlon when you can't even trust these at- tendants for tbe 15 mlmrtes tt takel) to complete )'.OUf' aut.c . Forced to wort for low wages; thfs puts temptation in thetr way and yet the customer 11 ln no way legally protected from the thle\tery. MRS. DEANNA TATUM Santa 'Sall' To the F.ditor : . Let's do something •dlfferent next year. The Communistic lbot -there ii no God; that's sbockl'ng to our American C'hristian beUef.s. Bu.t we are fut becom- ing anti-Jesus' bi.rtbday. • Tbis Santa Claus porlrlyal Is 1 sad, sad Christmas \heme· Little children att misled How much more effective to por- tray tile Christ child. (not r<llgloul crOed) but the fael that a r<al child wu put on earth to give us a message tram God, in such a way as we all can tJDdel'.. stand. Instead we disP~ a mythical person called Santa Claus, giving and giving pre>ents: to further custom ol raisin~ business sales. Let s ask ourselves -are we anCJ- Jesus: who exp........i the Chrllt? We can go to th• moon, Dy lllrou&h Ibo-alt; but making even more !!peed towud pol.luting our way of (thinking) Ille. ... IDAMAE SCHOMAKER ' ORAHOI COAIT DAILY PILOT ~o9ir•.'It'. W•fdl f"t!"m Thomat Ke1cU1 ldUot" Barbaro l'rflblda Editorial P~ Editor \, Tra1tnan Remembered A sign in lndependence, Mo. demonstrates nation's grief, Oeft) as Harry S Truman's d.oughter, Mrs. Margaret Truman Daniel (right) end Army escort, Lt. Gen. Patrick Cas&dy, watch the former presi- dent's casket being loaded into a hearse. A Simple funeral was held today. T~undiY. -28, 1m DAILY PILOT $ NY Police No EpUlemic E~pecwd in Nicaragua !.: 'C t' orru p MANAGUA, JI I car a ( u 1 n111 Nic1nCU1 for 11$ yeora, laralft -eomllinl !he Ibo -ol treolloi S,000 : (AP) -Fore\(11 -· 1111 1114 Ill I llllen!tnl -nllnl -uer lh1o . weti hid l'lllro4 In lino ~ IOd IOO : Knap P enouib medlcll penoone1 11111 hourl1 tllot looion wwe llelac WieJ1 d 11 • pp I 1 r 1 d by Nleoncuw have 1 I re 1 d Y:: -omoied 11111 11XM bid been 1'-Y· ,_ -homel In other C.S1' • aupplleo ore oo hand to 1111'4 aid. Somoza oppeoled tor Pl• trll Amortcen counlrlee," I>& : WASIDNGTON (AP) Knapp Commission in- vestigating alleged m.laconduct by city Police sald today cor- Nption in the department was widespread and included the acceptance of gratuities wide involvement in drug b-affic and stealing from the dead . orl any lypbold or typllua "We hive lolled end prob-Uence end llld the numeroua Ille!. : epidemic In the earthquak.. ably will shoot all thole problems left by Iha quake Thi lat.It ofllclal eatlmlta; : devutalA!d N l c or a I u 1 D cauChl 111 the act of loollnco" would be IOlftd> · ol eU11ltle1 lrom the quab la • capital. be alld. 3,00M,llllo' dead ud up to' ; '"lller< 1a no epldemlc In ,Bui the roaming pock.I or "Wiii HAVE accompllilbed S0,000 Mrioualy lll)un'd. Managua today," Aid Dr. . : z 1be commission in Con- cluding its two-year in· Juan Jose Chiarl of Panama .. 1111'!!!!1!!""'========================~ "We are probably golnf to avoid an outbreak of vestigation of the depart-diseases." ment, said In its flnal 281-page • U.S. RELIEF official& ex· pres1ed aaUsfactloo with the arrival of tons of grain, flour and powdered milk. Nicaraguan officials said more truckl were needed to get the food to 19 dlatrlbutloo polnla set up outside the city to draw penons away from the ruins. report that conuption wu systematic and bad spread through the ranb from the cop oil the beat to the chief In· spector's office. Thorough indifference to corruption or active involve- ment, the report said police allowed to flourish a well· coordinated and profitable . system of payoffs and shake- downs involving prostitutes, Mafia henchmen, k>an sharks, bookies and heroin pushers. e Demotion WASHINGTON I AP( They 1aid supplies were pil- ed up at the airport and even. In the front yord or Gen. Anastasio Somoza, the coun- try's ruler. Lt. COi. Fronk Simona, In charge of the U.S. ft:lief pro- gram, praised the f o o d distribution plan set up by Somou. Gordon Rule, the Navy cost- monitor who was demoted after criticizing the Presldent, has been. denied a meeting with Navy Secretary John 4"WE WOUW )lave had the Warner and has been told to same problems U this hap. pursue any protest with the pened in any country in the admiral who ordered the world," he said. • • T he demotion. Nlcaraguans are doing a Rule was turned aside marvelous job." Wednesday when he sought a MaJ . I>enni. Bulger, com· meeting with Warner to mander of the U.S. 511th COm- discuss the demotion. bat Engineer Co., I a i d Instead, Warner ordert'd . although many of the city's lhat Rule mu.st. go through water lines had been ruptured - Otlly Coast Qffors • 6%Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-~.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Veer Certlflcate · $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Ave Year Clrtlflcata "'000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss r:I Interest on amcurts withdrMn before malurl~ on an c:ertffk:ate ICCOUl'lt:S. ..... _ tth•HllitLOl ......... •fD.1351 ... ,,, ...... WIUHIMM~ PUoCl'I 3933 Wlllhh'll Blvd.,'-\..• 1118-1265 L.A. CMC CDfTllll 2nd. 8r'ClldWQ'. 626-1102 HUMTI"9TON MACHI 111 Hwitlt111on center• 1714) 1197.;i,047 -·---711 Wlllhlt9 81¥d. • 3"4746 --10th• PldftO • Ul...zMl war-~~ar.•u1.m1 PAHOIWlll• ems ChaM •van NllY9 8f'ld. • 892·11n . . " ,, Wienie War Begins "channels" and lodge any pro-and some of tbe cisterns test with Adm. Isaac Kidd who around the ctty bad been wants Rule shunted. to a cracked by the quake Satur- backwater job. day, some 20 million gallons a • Da..a•e Sult ./day could still be provided ror ···-D the greater Managua area. Tbo !ftll!lers Clullc A new W<1f to beat Inflation. Its membershlp'card permits you to buy nearly rwery- thlng you need from the finest closed<loor show- rooms at substantial sav- ings -eppliances, fumi.. ture. stereo equipment, spOltlng goods, draperies "tal}d much, much more. 1110 provldH bl1 di•· counts on tickets to sport. Ing and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free services: safe depOlit boxes, money or· der1, travelers checks, and notary services. ·-187$1 Vtntunll l!ll'ld. • 545-Ml4 ............. 3rd .. LocUll • "'7·7411 UITUll~DI 8th • soto'. 2&5-4510 _ .... NEW ORLEANS (AP) -,A He said about 71,000 gallons Meat Labeling Misleading w Consumer federal Judge has ordered. a was brought into the city $1.5 million damage suit filed Wednesday, "enough to pro- again.st Undersecretary of vlde Heh person with half a Stale-designate William J. gallon." WASHINGTON (UPI) - Surrendering to c o n 1 u m e r preaaure and a court order, the Agriculture Department has announced plans for a second mojor round ol label· lng and content reform for bot dogs. THE FIRST step in responae to riling complaint. over one of the nation's t.vortte fooc!J Kids Not , came three years ago. In 1969, Officials ended a Jong dispute by ordering a 30 percent fat content llmit on hot dogs and other cooked sawiage pro- ducts. Now1 officials say new pro- po<als which may take errect early next year will junk cur-- rent rules wxier which a bot dog containing w a t e r , sweeteners and curing agents can still be labeled "all meat." A federal court had ruled the "all meat" wording was misleading to consumers. lips, snout.s and spleens in frankfurters and other cooked sausages bearlng ordinary labeling. If byproducts are us- ed in something that looks like a hot dog, the product would have to be labeled "itnitation" in letters as large as those used for lhe word "frankfur· ter." Casey and others. This indicated that . about "Some of the things the 150,000 persons -or half the directors did are inconceivable normal population -were still to me," U.S. District Court in the city despite orders to J u d g e H e r b e r t W . everyone to evacuate the area. Olristenberry said Wednesday Authorities continued to aP.. in ordering the suit in oon-peal at frequent int.ervals for nation with the pending evacuation, but many o~ r e o r g a n i z a t i o n under viously were ignoring the ef· bankruptcy laws of fort. Multiponics, Inc. THE NEW PLAN would set casey was a board member up two name categories for of the firm, which ownA.43,000 frankfurters, bologna and acres of farm land I n other similar cooked sausage: Louisiana, M I s s 1 s a I p p I , -Category One wouJd con-Arkansas and Florida . It filed tatn only 0 skeletal muscle for reorganization 1n 1971. ALSO REPEALED would be meat," lncl-g up to 15 per· e Surrivor RESIDENTS WERE worned to avoJd an area of 450 block.s In the hardest bit aeetor that was desiJnated. an epidemic zone. Doctors said tbe title WU precautiooary and didQot lndlcate presence of an epldemle. You can even buy cars et the "fleet'' price and m0blle homes and motor• cycles at ~ubst&ntlal sav· -lnp. The insiders Club Membership require- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive a. soclate memberships en- titling them to all outside referral services. Ask about joining at any Coast office. 328 s. Dlilmond .. r • (714)5"-7525 TUml* Urwin SqU11111 Shopplns ctr.• (714) 132-MlO LA MIMDAI la Mltwda Sh®Dl111Ctr.• • (714) 522-67$1 - Dolly __ , .......... All qmo.. l:xees>I c""' ConW,OpM_.,. . 9AlllolPM Sin -Offico Oponiw ... rules allowing a hot dog con· cent poultry, plus necessary SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI) 'Bu' ym' g' TV talning up to 3.5 percent non-processing ingredients such as The u.s. Coast Guard today fat dry milk to be labeled water, rweeteners and curing began a search for five crew simply "frankfurter." ageht!. members of a cargo vessel Somoza, whose family has Ad rtis• • ? In a companion step, whl~h -category Two could con-whose ai.xtb crewman was Ve mg• had been disclosed earlier, the lain tne aame inl!"edients as found Wedheaday drifting In a department said Its new hot the first group, but also could lifeboat off the Island of WASHINGTON (UPI ) -A doe reform plan would also contain llmited amounts of Martinique suffering from Federal Trade Qimml.asion ban the use of meat and binders such as nonfat dry severe exhaustion and nearly (FTC) eumlnerbtlleveathat ~po_u1_1ry~_bY_P_•odu~c_la~•-ucb~_a_•~m-ll_k_o_r _so_y_pro~te_in_.~~~~lncober~~'-"t_.~~~~~- by the time cbfldren reach the age of eight they are skeptical about the truth of telev111on commen:tala. Rly .. md J. Lynell, an Fl'C admhllatraUve la" J u d g e , made the point Wedneaday In dlamlsslng charget that tbe ITl' Cootlnelltal Baklni Com- PIDY of Rye, N.Y., and Ill ad- venlalng firm, Ted Batee and Co. of New York City, made falle nutr!Uonal clairnJ ·for Wonder Bread and HoatesJ 1nack cakes. The decision may be ap- pealed. Lynch beord charges that Wonder Bread eommerclals "u:plolt a child's agpiraUOna tor ropkl and healthy ~ end the ernotioDll cooeem or porent. lot lbeaa anda." He 11kl Ibero 1IU no buls tor ordering ~tat -· to I buy COmctl" ldvertlaJng. Lynch alld atudles hid llbown that e""1 by the age of ftvt to 1even there wen subltantlal D u m b 1 r 1 of children wbd ore akeptlcll ' about televillon commerctall. ' ''The poleritlal lot literal , bellel or confualoG that does oocur in 10me youne chlldren 1 ·de<:reuel with IP to a point I lr'OUltd elcht •htrt ehlldren II pntrallf ahlblt a clear, con- 11.-end wklespreld t'llc- 11 ti.:.i that lelevialon com· 11 ...W.•eennot be taken as i! 1JMera1ly 'true," Lynch said. the 4DAYSONLY! ANY KODACHROME ROLL Bmm MOVIES or 20 Exp. SLIDES L--::::;:;;;;;1 ANY KODACOLOR llOLL UP TO 12 EXPOSURES DEVELOPED AND PRINTED ' CAMERA DEPARTMENT • •• ,, ... , JhW ll'.IO Cllmwd SL • WOOMA• nu u• Yk1try II~. "llVlllllJ J~il:O ,,.. •I.UTA,, .. :!900 blll ~SI. • TOllAICI S4p11• 111111 ....... •LAllWO OI etr.SI. a 00..-K • HINA PAii lllcl ..i 0r..,_,. •ffMlflkW!btMlllf ..... - ,, Our Anniversaryl Always .the Start of Something Big ''''''",. ""''"'"""" .. 1,.,.._,. 1••'4 JI",,_ ... N~1. 109, S.I. J09. The Biggar Sale of '731 HERE . AND NOW! .SAVINGS TO 30% and more! In the Biggar Quality All Selected from Our Regular Stock • Henredon • Heritage • Drexel • Biggar's Custom ·sofas ·& Chairs ,,., ...• "., ....... ,. KlR EVERY LIVING ,URl'OSll DINING ROOM HDROOM LIVING ROOM CAR,l'ITINO llDDl.NO ACCISSORllS ...... ,,.,.. .. ..,. <•~CllM ,.----:::::;::;-.;NOW AT AU S STORIS·".".'"".'-....,...--~ASADENA , .. ,, COlOaADO ILVD, (213) 1'2-6136 POMONA •111 L HOLT AVI. C11"J 629-lOlli SAN'TA ANA •1111N.~tNIT • • (714) 547-1621 • llffA .. I ~ IUDCMT ACCOUNn-IAHICAMlltCAtD-MAITll CHAROI • ,, • 7 ;,..,...___ . . ... -- , , OraDge (;oast YearBeaetewll EDITION Dally Pa.ff' . *- VOL 66, N.0·! 301, ~ SECJ'lONS, JO PAGES OUN&E CdUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1972 c Truman Buried Funeral Simple-As He ·Requested INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (UPI) - America said goodbye today to Harrjr S Truman, a common man of. the people and their 33rd Pt<sldent. Tho funeral wu 1lmple and dlgnille4, fitting lor a · •enUeman whi/ called himself a "meat ind potatoes" man. The "Man or Independence" was buried in the ground be loved -in the courtyard by the roae garden or the 'fi:uman )Jbrary in bis homeiown. Bess Trumap, bis aglllg widow aod he1pmate for more than half a .century, WaJ there, mustering ail the strength abe could, to bid a final fmwell. Sb& will be 811 Feb. 13. ·Truman died Tuesday in bis last battle -22 days of fighting age and disease in Research Hospital in Kansas City. He fell 467 days short of bis dream -livlng to age 90. (Related pictures, Page 5). There were soldiers, statesmen, family and friends at the private rites to honor the tough little man who made some of mankind 's most awesome declskJnl. The doughboys who ..... ed - "Captain Harry" during World Wu I in Battery D stood with the ltilfest military posture that age wOuld allow. Trumsn believed lbs! man provided his own dignity, and, because of that, his funeral was embellisbed only with Quiet military flourishes, taps from • looe bugler and a 21-gun salute. There were (See TRUMAN, Page II Pale.stinians Da1liglat BonafJardment ' . Say They'll Release S·ix Saigon Hints Bomb End . llllLLETlN To Spur Talks on Peace Dit.ILY PltOT ...... Rber.i ~ HOMEOWNER GEORGE."MILLER STANDS IN WINDOW HIT BY'NOYICE MOTORCYCLIST 14-yMl'<Old L-• Control·ol Mochlno, S.rlOUtly Injured In eo.ia---.. Accldont Costa Mesa Boy ''Hits Buildirig On Motorcycle New.port-Balboa Plwne Link Cu·t, Service Out· BANGKOK, -(AP) -FOGI' MM-Bladt -terroilstl -SAIGON (UPI) -Swedish diplomatic letiOd .tr.I bnell .Em(\u•i' beld poUCe reports tald American B52s and fighter- at boy • ~y, _,..nfy llocldq out bombers hit Hanoi at nocin today in the on n lll'f!etPell to releue tbe1r sb: heaviest daylight bombardment of the .....__ ..... llldOo ......... tbefr 15th .............. ·~"'a" 1 -war. how. -The Soviet news agency Tass reported BANGKOK (UPI) _ Four Palestinian lbst parts of the North Vietnamese guerrillas lelf.ed the Israeli embassy· ti> ~rpJ!:l~.~ "erased from the face day and thieate.ned to blow lt up along There weft! hints in p.e government· with six hostages unlesa IBrael released controlled pres! In Saigon that the North 36 Palestinim ~rs:" Vietnamese might have bad enough and But loolgbl, Ibey agreed to free the that the raids might be baited above the boltaaes m.retara for safe conduct from 20th parallel in the next few days in A O>sta Mesa boy trying out a bor.--._n--.... ·< • order to ~e the peace talks lo Paris. ' A coDStruction Worker drilled"tbrough a whether or not it w.as receiving all in-41~ Bnt the Conunubist Vietnamese ih rowed motorcyde suffered major In-· • jur'·· w~---•·y when he '·"~·to~.. tel'l'hoOe. trunk line about 6 a.m_.·todsy . comlog_ ~.. . . Ai1' QJief Manbal Dawee -~a Paris were still Issuing de II an I ~ ~ .,...... """'" and severed t -Police d t dilllcult r anllliolied tliil penllla ~ to accept statements. aturnbihlsneigh~baod,-,..-•, bet111m!M~~-lhemto=~·-i or .~-.:·pol~ll!!-.. '""'. y.s,~~'!'f'"",•·:J::i~ JawnandllJ)lllhedin&oaboue... _.1 ,.t 1 -~. l.·';!le'~-'I • wu 1i.ftC':li ~'iiifeed• PeterW.Hr:iH,o(WJJdawww Neplloae iervice1tr°Llil!!O Beadl, ae•ired --·l!iii '~~lii'aar,-li'M $1P~'Jli ·• ~-iw-vt ~~· :i!"'b: llld 111e"'!'!l:.:"'t1T:: · lilinfiCim a.di ..i c.u ..... --~ ~ 111e. parts 01 c..m;; ..,.;., ""™,. -lliia 10 ...... '!'llliur ...._said -·::..i u. a brick . planter and I -ol the -. del Mal', ""'otber sections of Newport -I tlnol ti ---~llaipl>mg -iieoitiiiid'coo- resld<nce. = A PacHlc Tolepbone olflclal said · ti. Beach, f«ordlng tn Boltz. Dae .,... ao meotion of the linued toda1 • n d Oxnijmloi reportl Olflclals at --Mmmrlal ....... e, wbeii be ·~~ed with "--Usn ssld there were-three Hanoi raids today. Hoopllal said today the youth wu in would be at leall 5 p.m. before serv!CI! A COOl!ruction _worker using a power --. -• .,.,, Tho command reported the Joa of two serious condition . fol\owinc llll'Ctl'Y waa restored. auger to make toil ~sts on the nortbealt ambassador Muatalla El Tawi from the more B52s and the sbootlQ& down of a perforrtled.., bis chest Jle<beoday night. "Resldenil lelVed "Y the Balboa oflico side of the Ar~ Bridge over tlie embatsy after 1 face-to-fllce meeting Jolly•Green Giant rescue helicopter over Damage to the George Miller residence are v111ually shut off 1rom the ootsidl Pacific ·lloast, Highway cut through tho with the gueMillaa but the police olliclal North Vielnsm, hringlllg . to I{ the at 3140 Jeffer80!' Ave., w~ moderate, world," said Wllllam Boltz, district .,.... concjyjl and™'> the trunk line, accon!lng ssld the boataces would be freed. number ol ·the l8:mllliOO -teglc according to accident ~ struclion su~-tendent -I I h to telephone oompany spokesman Art Dawee, i ranking member of the l>Qmbera lost in the air -that bqan They said young lluegle, not llcemed to ..-·~ or • LeaViU. Dec. 18. drive a motor vehi.cle, bad taken the ~phone company. .He said the l~fQot deep hole had filled military controlled govenuneot, entered Hanoi Radio said a North· Vietnamese sport cycle with his friend'• permlaoloo. 11 wu the umblllcal oord, the mabi with water and that wu causing pro!> the Embassy with the Egyptian am-Air Force plane, presumably a MIG , lhol Police said the -'riCtlm. wu eutbound tie to the Balboa offK?e. People can make lems ,In repairing the line. bassador and won the guerrilla ·promise down a B52 aome 70 miles aouUnrest of on r.oncord street approachlnl Jeffenon 'IOme ,?"taoinl call.s, but it's doggone C.Ompany. officials said there Wu no to leave tpe. country Hanoi Wednelday. A HlDlgarlan report Avenue - a :r-1ype ~loo -when IOugll .• ~· • w1y to 4etermlne the exact number of Ho • ssld · he and Deputy Foreign lf!~ter~plane~ were sbot down by lie was unable to negouate the complete l[(Owport lleach .poUce and fire depart-customers affected. They explained lbsl Minister Cbartchal· Cbunahawan would .,. · tUrn. meat ser\rices were affected to some some 4irect service between Costa 'Mesa • --•-ed bike i·umped tho curb, degree, police sal_d. A spokesman said the and ' ·-·.·· Beach was also served by accompany the guerrlllaa when Ibey. left •~ ~·•• ....... ~ had .._.,... Tballand. Other olllcisls· taid lbst El W<eened acroos tho lawn and Into the _,.... ~t 00 way ol knowing that trunk line. Tawi would aiso mate the•lrlp, and lhst 'aide of the mldence. • the guerriila.s would be allowed to keep w ~uspect Indicted ·O'Neill Park Campers Jn Gun Ass~ult • . . • 'On Tustin Ofiicer En1oy Five-day weekend . . . . 1 A man accused ro! shoot'nc a Tustin 1[3trolman .in ,tho -alter being ,c:baDenged by the ~ aad • ~·· deputy was 'bllcled iVrii!li11 by lhe Orange Cotmty Grand Jury on charges ol assault with a dead1y weapon on police of ricers. _ u 1s e>pected that Gary wuuam .Johnson, 37, Tustin will be arraJcmd.l'ri- day ·in Superior COUrt to ,_. to . •harze• initially filed Dec. 6 .-., aller lhe wounding of TuatiD' .....,.... Waldron Karp, rt. · • Karp wa1 one ol two Tllllin petrolmen ·oen~ to a local home In res-to ,._. for help lrom a resld<nl wtlo 1114 Joboaon had !ired ... ora1 olJot> llli aocti "her bathroom -·in 1 hill to pin.,. t1'y to the premlaeo. • 'Two aberl!Ps depuUes picked up• the Call and joined the Tusllil -In the '1bvet~gation. A man identlfted'. as . Outdoor-oriented ~ plaoning trailers, others with onlf. sleeping bags. on a fwe-dax_ •eekmd wre already aet. How many campers are t ln depends oo ling '!P cOlllPliltl In· O'Neill Part !Ji how close Ibey camp together. Trabaoo C>IQlll today. ' A county psrl official said bis only ad. Wllb today declored-a national day ol Vice to the !lanty campers would be """'DllC !or tho late Prosldenl ffllT)' S "dress warm," but.alt0 cautioned that no Tnlman and Monday a b6lldly !or New open r...,, are allowed and smokin11 Is Year's Day, maoy wlnter~clecld· forbidden in some areas. ed to toke Friday off too psrk · · Receot Santa Aria winds have dried out cillicll!l .reportei! today, " the woodsy • area so that fires are a • /)I large. crowd ol campers Is expacted . daoger. at the mountain area park .Ibis weekend Campen are eocouraged to check with ii fah'.-lher holds. stat• depor11n<Dt of fclrestry officials at O'll.tll Park ii open fa< camplng atlZ the part,helare llgllting·any ·11res. a 11fsbt per veblcle 24 bDurs a day;)eveo Even Ille most expem •. ced campers 4Qi r ~ ·~y ·cgats ·50 lilrlel to bring things like lighter fluid 1 -·• day. •. and oalt and pepper, the perk spokesman 'l'lllle are no'lndlvldiial csmpsil<!I and tald. Tbm are no supply facllllles within DO ounping equipment ~jl. · the park, but amall _...,. stores aro SOme .....-· come wllli fancy JDObll~ neart>y In TrabUco Cauyoo. . . their weapons. Police officials said ~~tt were being made for a special flight to like the. guerrillas out or the country. They said the most likely destination was Cairo. • 2 Catholics OK Survival Acts NEW YORK (AP) -T.wo Roman Catholic theologians HY that the plane cruh survivors ln 'the Andes who ate fle11h of dead companions to keep alive "acted justifiably." "A person II permitted to est dead human ne!h if tbere is no feasible :il~tive for survival," Msgr. Austin-Vaughan and the Rev. William Smith wrote in I paper OD the subject. The prleltl wrote I b e iJ>. terpretltioll of Catholic principals as 1 &p0ke1men for the Roman Catholic An:bdlocese of New YOrk. Police Discover Identity-Not Slaying Motive Seal Beach police have identified thi! dead Marine found in their city Tuesday as Ed Moore, 20, of Kentucky, who had been AWOL from Camp Pendleton since Friday. Moore's body was dl!covered early Tuesday morning m the 7lb sir.et olJ- ramp at the junctinn ol the San Diego and San Gabrriel Freeways in Seal Beach. The Orange County Coroner 1aid Moore was 1trangled sometime Saturday night by some type of "mechanlcal means." Seal Beach Police Sgt. John Averyl said he' could not give further details on the method of strangulation 1t thLs tlme. Sgt. A .. ryt said lnvesUg1tor1 still do not know where Moore was killed or why. His body had apparenUy been dumi>ed OD the Seal Beach offramp. At the time he was found, Moore was wearing burgundy trOuaer1, 1 pull-over .swei.ter and a blue tanker jacket, with an American and a confederate flag sUlcbed on the back. ' 'JOhnaon then shot Karp. in the llOUlacb tfnd cJeputy Tlm Stewart. was shot in the face by Karp's gun when lhe weapon discharged as the wounded otncer !ell. Draftees Get a B~eak Anyone with information on Moore Is asked to cont.ct Sgt. Averyt al the Seal Beach PoUce Department. Stewart has recovered from what was deacribed as a minor Wound. Karp ta now at hbme recuperating fTom more llrious f woundl that called for •emqeney surgery 1t a loc:tl hospital. r Johnlon'i!I recovering in Oranee County Medici! Center from wounds in !lit band ;nd ~ ·Inflicted when lawmen ...,_ i:;::1og Karp and. ~tewart apened 8te on .. . , . ·:fjsherman Sought SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Two <:.r Guard cutters aearched durtns the alclit lor an Oregon man repooted """' 1 o\terbanrd from the fllh1l'I& v-1 Dorothy L In rough .... aboUI rr mllel west of Point aeyes. Tho Coat Guanl ldentWed the miMllll man 11 -·F. Harbour, 29, of Powell Butte. Dq,:. of Mo-µrning Cancels l1uluctio1i of 300 Youths · :r.,. TOM BAJILEY n-telegraw ad•ile the dralt ;.:.:-~-"-"~.-•:i::-....,... that boards that lnducUons plsoned !or today ..., ,..,_ ...-have -conceUa But U la IJso.mad« IOdoT• dr! lJI _,.ing lot former dear in Ibo ...,., communication that Pa...-i lfllly S Truman mlgllt me111 any Ja<ll ...,. lflected baVe been twitch- (). doatll .i. ~ for their mllltlrY' od 1o "* -t coiled the "Ulended amtce bad better bar1 time ·lio)ies, .• • priority" po6p. , 1.,.i lldl al the Lot Anlelel Selective Tbet -can be called up •1 ony s.mo. COmmlMlon said °lodly. llmt liltoem l19W! aad Apr\! J. And "I don't know how !lllllJI ol the more ~ ,_ Wdjlqtdn that nobody ii than 3llO drallees ld<otWed by !>ehla clllod up lor January do not mean Waahlnston lived in the Los Angelea-that drtn-will not pt tho -· in 0.:.,,.. Ooundel -·" attorney J.ack Febnlry or Mardi, IJlrntlt tsld.. Bamotl 9l1d. "But they bid beti,.. not ) DaoW J, 'ClvalD, ~ ,Seloctl•e ..rood too much Into the teiear•m• their -diftclor ln w......._ earllar draft. boards hlva n!«l•ed." advlaed local droll boonll !J!ot todi)' - ( . • ,...Id be the laat day th~ year for In- duction of dr1lteet. "But tbe ""' In these catc• covers such e¥eDtt u a natlcii11 day of moam- lnt, 'j'Blrndt • Nld. 11Tbese men will DOW ' be clu...i • Oltmded priority and art )Ult u ell&ible 11 ever.1 ' Barnell WU ·ad<tlaed or Crooin'I ,.;.n..i ... ...,,t that draftee> IUI· . lerinl flltdlblp ln>m the switch ha .. °"' ly to r<pOt1 the clrcumstlllcel to get ac- Uon from the draft board. -'I Ill.El! 1.t C(Mdd bAppen," he uld, "biat ltt .. 117 th11 -""don't expect a lloid' of ll)llllklotRll11." American Eagle Leads Greybeard HOBART, T-lo (AP) ,-American Eagle, •kl~ by Ted Turner or A~ lanll, appeued certain today ol fiaill>. 1ng nr.t tn 1111 ao -'lo Sydney 'to Ho- bart ylcbt fll!e. American Eqle WU well ahe1d of htt main . rival ln the 6tld of 71 ytchts, Greytieard ol Canada, and wu upec:ted to lq!illb late Friday ,..11 lbead ol tho rsce record ol ISM days, three houri and ff mlnulel. Greybea(d was more tbsn 10 milts behind 'l'J1urlday bill K wa1 unllkt ly Am<rlcan ~ would lncmle her le1d mucb more becaue better tne:lel wett upected durlnc the nllbt. 'Ibe North Vietnamese delegation in Paris issued a spec1,1 statement today saying the American attacks have ravag- ed areas of Hanoi and Haiphong with the force of an earthquake, k 111 i n g "thousands" of people. It said North Vietnamese gunnen shot down 71 U.S. aircraft, including 31 B52.s, in nine days. -The U.S. Command and the Pontagon gave no reports of any damage to civilian areas and insl!ted that the' planes drop- ped their bombs only OD mllltary target.. 1be oD.ly reports of what actually was happening in the greatest aerial assault of tbe war came from Communist news agencies and neutral diplomat!' in HanoL Newsman Farr Marks 31st Day In County Jail LOS ANGELES (AP) -William Farr spent bis 31st day In Jail today, marting wbat bis defense committee ssld Is the longest term served by a U.S. newsman for refusing to reveal bis aMU'CeS. The committee saJd the only langer related term on record was that of C.Olonial newspaper publisher John Peter Zenger, who served nine months on libel charges belon! being acquitted ID the 1700s • Farr's :sentence, Imposed by Superior Court Judge Charles IL Older, la ii> determinate. The newsman's attorney has said it is "tantamount to life im- prisonment." Appeals ol Farr'• sentence are pending in state snd federal courts, but there has been no indication ol when those courts will rule. Older has said he'll keep Farr ln prison until the reporter reveals wbo gave him information (or 1 story written during the Charles Manson murder trial. Farr has said it would violate bis pro- fessional ethics to tell . He has Aid that the principle involved Jn bis cue is not only freedom of press, but aiso the pubUc's right to know lnlormatloo wblcb can be obtained onJy t.brougb teeret sources. Other reporten have faced Jail terms in recent years over related issues, but none served more than 30 days, the. com. mittee said. ln a recent cue, Newart,• N.J. newsman Peter Bridge was jailed for 20 days ror re fusing to answer questiooa of a grand jury. Oraa1e we.-.er It'll be .._ .. P'rlday, but tbi temperature wm be • utt1e Dippy, due to the Padllc North-<Old front moving Into the aru. BIPt ol IO are ezpec:ted, wltlt .,...,,.... lows In Ibo 40ll. INSmE TOD-' 1( Tia. Agrlcvltun ~I h4s anMunccd ii.. ~111"0 of • ·-fllOjor ""'"" in ... , grrol Wide 1D0r. Hol <fog lal>tl-lng ....... ,.,., ,., ..... it Ille objrcl of tM OOt<rl ...S... S.• 1tot11 an Po11< S. ...... _ . a: ~ -M --. ............. ' .......... ,.,.,, ,.... . . -" ' 1 _._ .. ----.. --. --T~ tJ -""' --. --· .. --.. I SEES GOOD IN KIDS 0.toctlvo Sliver ' T op Lawma11 Can Ca rry A Good Ra11 One notation on Detective Walt Silver's professional job resume is six years as a C3lifornia Air National Guard personnel sergeant and another is membership in the Costa Mesa Police Department Speaker's Bureau. To be in personnel you have to know bow to deal with people. To be in a speaker 's. bureau, you have to get a message across. He's good at both, according to the Costa Mesa Crime Prevention Com· mittee, which has picked the Mission Viejo resident as its Officer for the Month of December. A seven-year veteran of the regular force -he became a reserve officer two years earlier -Detective s i 1 v e r specializes in dealing with juvenile of- fenders. Back in the by-gone days of law en. forcement, the old street corner oop who knew every kid In town aometimes rearted. to pbyllcal pmlshment u a method of making ml!creants mend their ways. Solt..poten ml youthful In ap- pearance, the Detective who deal.5 with juveniles phiJoaopbiJea: that you can get better results with 1 few well~sen words than well-admlnlstered wallops. He cites tbe case 11 months ago of a small band of kids aged a to 12 called The Rebels, who were establishing a neighborhood reputallon !or pilfering candy and gum or other such market items. >4 Just small stuff , . , but tt WBS startinL= this ls the time to stop It," be e>P ' Detective Silver called a little meeting In the acbool principal'• office, in- troduced himself and after everyone got well-ocquainted ao they could trust each other 1be Rebels surrendered. He sold them oo the idea of using their spare lime and talents at picking up things to form an ecology club and anti· litter league that quickly became an ex- clusive campw: organlu.Uoll. School officials keeping an eye on thes? students' behavior fOund they got better grades, developed higher p e r s o n a I esteem and actually inspired other students. Detective Silver lives in Mission Viejo with wile Sandy, daughttt Wendy, II, aon Mark I, but still manages time for con- tinuml Goldell West Colleg'-Police Sci· tnce studies and Elks Lodge activities. 'MM! family enjoys camping out but when the kids are a bit older Walt can in- dulge stUl another favorite hobby. The family then will have a foursome for bridge. OUllH COAIT ... DAILY PILOT B ess B ested " She Saved Her Strengtli.. INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (UPI) -1111' ry s Trum111 brouiht Illa bride bome to the -on Delaware street more tban haU a cen11U7 ap. Wedneoday, lieu Truman Ufted 1 shade In an upstaln wm. dow and watched her cblldhood sweetheart pass by for the last time. In a sad and slow procession. a gleam- ing black hearse carried the body of the 88-year-old former President past the 14· room house. 1be cortege of mourners wound along a 15-block route Truman often walked when he was able. Mrs. Truman, 87, did not attend the lying·in·state ceremonies that began when the hearse reached 1he Harry S Truman Library a mlle away. Randall Jessee, a family friend. said she planned to save ber strength for today 's funeral Mrs. TNman saw her husband of 53 years for the last time Tuesday. Leaning on the ann of her daughter, ~1argaret Daniel, she walked into the room at tbe C.Orge c: Carson !)meraJ Home to be with Tniman before hls casket was seal- ed. She last saw Truman alive at the end of a 13-bour vigil Christmas Day, a short time before his death in Research Hospital. At the library Wednesday, Mrs. Daniel 'valked ai the head of the mourners as they filed in to view Truman's casket lying oo black velve t draped over a catafalque set up in the library's lobby. Behind her walked her ht$ban d, Clif· too, wh:I beld tbe hands of Tnunao'a two youngest grandsoos, Thomas Wa"11ngton Daniel, 6, and Han-ison Gates Daniel, 10. The two older boys, Clifton Truman Daniel, 15, and William Wallace Daniel, 13, walked behind. Mrs. Daniel, her face drawn with sor- row and her blonde hair pulled back in simple style, walked erectly into the library and to the catafalque abowing Ht· Ue outward evidence of her frief. She saved ber tears for the limousine and the trip back to the family home. Oo<:e inside, she dabbed softly al ber eyes with a handkerchief she took from the pocket ol her hi~h-necked black coal. Later, Mrs. Daruel and her husband greeted fonner President Lyndon B. Johnson and his family at the borne the way Truman and Bess used to greet friends. They walked to the front gate and gueted the Johnaons. Mrs. Johnaoo bug· ged and kissed Truman's daughter. Mrs. Daniel walked to the JobMon 's car and Emma R. Hicks, Former Mesa Resident, Dies Emma RehJne Hicks, former Costa Mesa mident for most of the past 41 ye ars, died Tuesday at the age of 63. Mrs. Hicks was a native of Kansas and attended Santa Ana High School alter her family moved to their home on 18th Street in 1927. Her father, Fred Rehme, owned and operated the Highway Garage, a combination machine ahop, garage and serviCi! station near the junc- tion of Harbor Boulevard and Broadway. Mrs. Hicks lived in SeatUe for several years end later operated an antique shop at the family home for five years during the 1960s. Sbe moved in 11189 to Hesperia, Calif. She leaves her husband, John, of the famil y home in Hesperia ; a daughter, Donna Powers of Orange; a M>D, George Hicks of Balboa Island; a brother, Elmer Rehme of Hesperia; a sister, Meta Zerlaut of Santa Ana; and one grand- daughter. Funeral services will be held in Vic- torville. Pair Captured ' After Escap ing Sherifrs Van Two men who kicked out the rear door of the sherifrs jall van Wednesday in Santa ADa were overpowered and recap- tured after a brief struggle wilh pursuing deputies. Orange County sberlU'a ol!lcera Iden- tified the pair as William Joseph CormJ.er, 20, Room 302 Hac1enda H~, Laguna Beach and Jerome Vernon Brooks, 21, Paulsbo, Waah. Officers said bolh men will be charged with felony escape pending approval by the district attorney's office of the new allegations. Jail deputies said Cormier and Brooks were en route to the countY courthouse from the jaU when t~y made the ir escape bki. Harbor District Courts Clo sed If you ,..... ocbeduled !or your day In court todly )'OU c•n ten tt to the judge, pay your trafflc ticket -or whatever - on FrJd19. lllrbor Judicial Dtalrlcl Court WH closed today In mQUmlni for President Harry s T\iunan, thus pool~ all BC· livlty Mt for today untlt 'Friday I calen· dar Plan to come early aDd e1pect to stay late, however, becauM the acUon does not postpone anytblna on the court calen· dar tor Friday, whicli 1& one of Ill bu.slu t days. ' . lnVllod Jalmllil'a dtupl.,. aed their buabondt -Illa -P ....... 1 Ud .... ·!Ml ur(nd a abort lime. alW the ....... I~, The Nlxona' visit wu b<!tl. 'lllt Nlum md John.eons did not attend today's private funeral. Frot1tP ... J T RUMAN ••• no eulogies. There wu only prayer. "Most merciful Father, who has been pleased to lake unto ThyseU the soul of Thy servant, Hany, grant to us who are still in our pilgrimage, and who walk as yet by faith, that having lerv<d Thee with constancy on earth, we ma1 be join- ed hereafter with Thy bfessed saints In glory everlasting," said the,Jley. John E, Lembcke, Jr., pastor of the llldependence Trtnlly Episcopal Cburcb. ' Before the-fUneraJ aod bu r I a J , thousands. of mourners -rich and poor, · famous and unknown1 work~?\ wearing overall! and aprons and ~ anti ,,omen carrying babies -flied slowly· atlfJ, silently by hi! mahogany casket. , The plain people were the ooes Truman loved. ile was ·born 88 Years ago and raised in: the fann heartland of A~,erica. His mother used to boSst: "Ha~ can plow the straightest furrow of com in Missouri." He became the people's servant, as U.S. senator, vice president and their chief executive. His straight talk and firm manner in the White House Jed to the nickhame, "Give 'Em Hell Harry." But of that, the little man in the wire- rimmed spectacles said: "I never gave anybody bell. I just gave 'em the truth and they tbougbt it was bell." In deference to the funeral and a day of mourning proclaimed by President Nixon, there was no mall delivery and the New York and American stock ei:- chang.S were closed. A memorial serviceJs ~Jan. 5 in WaabfDalOn's National" calb<!draI :u a final . geifUre lo the : 1olJill, llllle Mluourlan, aJid the ~ moumlng period declared by Nino 6i4s Jan. 21: Presldebt NUoo and> tonnu 1'rulcleot JohlllOll paid their last re'Pidl w- day while the body lay. la ,at.ate .Jil a closed coffin. Nimn laid a wreath of carnations at the Casket. Truman was buried in bis fawrite dark blue pin-striped suit. And be wore the !&med wire-rimmed gla!seo. Al the fWJeral, bis casket was covered with red carnations, bis favorite flower . Al the burial, the American !llJ! that also was draped on tbe coffin,·~ Iolded precisely and LI. Gen. Patrid< F. cauidy, the escort commander, gave it to Mrs. Truman with these words: "This flag ls presented to 1!>11"" bel1aJI of a grateful nation as a ~ of 8P"' preeiation for the ·bonet.ble and faJtbtUJ service rendered by your loved one." Alert Officer Arrests Theft, Drug Suspect A young San Clemente resident lacing drug ml lbeH charg., found out \Vednesday afternoon that It's a small world. 'Ibe series of incidents that finally Jed to the arrest of Kenneth Kimball Gove, 19, atarted in Coota Mesu Tuesday nlgbl. Police there issued a general broadcast for a stolen German sport.scar, taken from a oocktall lounge parking lol On Wedneaday afternoon , S 1 n Clemente patrolman Rob Charlton was at a local foreign car repair shop inquiring about work on his car. He assertedly overheard offers to mechanics by a young man who wanted to sell tbe Gentian car parked outside. The patrohnan tben glanced at the license plate. The license munber rang a bell. Then he arrested Gove, who gave the San Clemente Motel aa hia addre11. Subsequent checks of the car and the supect allegedly revealed more than 11,000 worth of powder suspected lo be cocame and a leypodennlc syringe. Gove was booked on char1e5 of auto theft and possession of drup. Angels Murder Case to Jury OAKLAND (AP) -A SUperlor Court Jury was to resume deliberations today 1n the trial of rour Hell's Angels accused of the murder of a narcotics courier whose body was found in the bathtub of i ' burning Oakland home. The case went to the jury late Wednc. doy alter -"tor Donald P. Whyte- argued that Wormer Richard Ivaldl sup. piled suUlclent evideoce to omvtct Hell'• Angels leader Ralph HSonnf' Barger, S4, ln the May 21 death of Semo Agero, 29, of Allen, Tex. Newport Aide Named To Santa Ana Post Former Newport Beach plaMlna aide Charles C. Zimmerman bu beeon ap- pointed director of plannh11 for the City of Santa Ana. Ile hu aerved u acUng director sine> S.ptembtr. Zimmerman, 34, rtplattt the county seal's former planntoa chief, Herbert Wieland, who reatped to take a atmllar po1t In Yuba Clly. Zimmerman'& salary wtll be 12t,!24 POI' yar, S1*isken Vp er.De rights cement truck whlcb tipped over about 1:30 p.m. ~edn .. day at intersection of ~ur iloulevard and San Jotgwn Hills Ro.ad in Newport BeaCh. 1'oli~ aai4 \l)e .<!river, Gary D. Pierce, 26, of 3116 Samoa st., Com Mesa; suffered minor Injuries, bUt dec1lned hosplW treatment. Tile accident occurred, officer said, as Pierce wu making a r!ght'"turn onto San Joaquin Hills Road from south· bound lanes of MaCJ\fthyrJloulevard. Strike Involves • Battte of So~d BRAWLEY (AP) -United Farm Workers union members art picketing D'Arrigo Brothers of California lettuce field.I here in a three-week-old strike that has included a 'duel of sound equipment. Imperial County sberill's deputies said Wednesday both sides have brought loodspe&kera lo the fielets. While picketers wl.tb b a t t e r y -r u n megaphones exhort tbe workers to leave the J:':; the ~wers· llPW!d truck fAt8 to --them ool With Mul'cb. music. "The labor dispute could be described as a battle of s~unds," a deputy said. About 200 union members are on strtke. A judge bas limited the number of pickets to 25 at each of three fields northwest of here. Drugging Case Suspect Nabbed A suspect in the Laguna Beach jfrug- glng and robbery of a Sanla Alla man wu in police custody today after bt.ing picked up Wedneoday by Californla Hl&hway Patrol o!flcen In Altadma. Laguna Beach police ldenlll!ed Ibo man aa Jaroes C. Kindell, II, of Key West, Fla. ml held him lD Laa-!leoch city jail foday. No bi111 bu -i10!. Be was booked on suspicion of robbery and gnnd tbefl auto. . ' Kindell was apprehended by the CHP at about 4: 10 a.m. Weclaeiday on a surlace street, on suspicion of driving un- der the influence of an intoi:icant, Sgt. R. W._ Bullock, Los Angeles County Sberiff'1 ~eputy said. ..JJ.J. Qarrell JANUARY Parents lnMur~r CHICAGO (UPI) -Sev ... yelM>ld Johnny Llndqulll died lut Au111st atter Jying in a coma for st days from • beallNI allectdly lnntcted at home becluae be uUd lo be allowed to return to his foster parents. On Wednesday, a Cook Count~ IP'•nd jury Indicted Illa parenll, Wllll1m and Irene Lindqutsl, OD cllarlet of murder. While Jol1nn7 lay In the ooma, his foster parenll,. Robert. and Florence Karvanek of Tigerton, Wis., were al his bedside, and their attorneys waged court baW.s In efforts to gain custody of the cblld. But Johnny, whose atory 1tlracted .,.. UODal ~ allenlloo, .never regaJnett con- scloUsoess. ~ "I said In Chicago, It will all, come ool " Karvanek 111d trom bis Tlr>rlol1 i..,;,. Iller ~ of the lll1lnler in- dictments Wliclneoday. "If they have to be punished, that's II •• , I .doll' know. We're sllll DOI ..Wed bm, not over Jobmly Jet. We bad bought him lftMllls tor QlrlllmU, It WU a cfull airtstmu jllll thinking about Joblmy." Johnny turned ? abor1ly before Illa death Alla. SI, and the Karvand:I were "tbon with caka and prtaenls, bql be neverl<Dewlt.· 'l1>e grind,jury ~ tbe·lndldmall -fei!ortedly belrq Jeltlmooy flom netchbori that OD ooe occuloo Mn. Lindqu1lt slammed the boy's bnd Imo a door ~ml beat him on the back with a broomllldl: lD lorcinc him to kneel. the It w11 d!arged that she beat him lo floor July 21, and wttneaaes aald Johnny wu forced to kneel !or eight boors aJid was refused water. Also, on July 28, her husband allegedly beal the boy because Johnny was unhap- py about leaving Illa loller pareoll. Llndqulsfhu been-beld In jall since the beating. His wlle waa arrested a!ttt the indictmento were reblrlled Wedneslay. $65,000 Blaze At Fallbrook FALLBllOOK (AP) -A n.. bas damlled two -and .. alllce ml ·~ aD ---ol Fallbl:oolc tleuientary llcbool, lilerlll', deputies lald. Oflltorr ..tlmoted damap at '81;000. All 'lnvesllptlm 111111der way. 'lbe blue .tartad Tuaday night In the scbciol's admlnlllnUve office ml apread lo 'the adjacent clalltooml, San Dl<IO County deputies aald. All three rooms were ablaze when Jlrtmen arrived. Nt ooe wu tnJured. .f ... Ins , ... .,. Substanfial Savings Throughout the Store Dam L SOFA Re9. 57t.OO DHXIL LOYUEA T lat· 375.00 489 319 . 15 to 25% SAVINGS on Several Bedroom, Dining Room and Occasional Collections by ... DREXEL and HERITAGE H.J.GARRElT fURNf[lJRE PaOFESSIONAL INTERIOl DES1$NW • Opeft Mo"·• Thun. & fTi. Eves. 2211 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. ' ' • n " ,, ' , • • I • • I , Gag Rule Should Go ~~~ . • • • The Colla Mua City Coundl lbould move Into 1m by oonectlng an W-concelved municipal law that coalll -if allowed to etay oa the boob -shroud mucll J>Qbllc -In· a cloak of secrecy. \ council cleemJ it proper. No otbar city along the.Orange Coast restrlcta the public'• right to kllow with a similar !.'1&"•=..>· • . I I I I I The meuure In questton iB the IO'Called 'Procedural Ordlliance wblch, In e!faet, iB little more than a gag rule • SborUf lfler the gag rui. wu adopted Into law, several councilmen expreued amuement at what they had actually clone. ADOtber couocllman admitted that he had not read the ordl•-before '°ting on If. And at ~ two councllmen lndlated they would work to- ward removing objectioaable portlou of the ordlnan~. Now, however tllelr real towanl taking coi:rective actton appears to bO'wanlng with~ passage of time. The two most noxious ilectlons of the gag rule In- volve the Imposition of at.olule _,. when the coun- cil cholM to meet belllnd cloeed doors. and a provillon that can keep communlcat!Ons to th• council oecrel In California. the public iB proteeted from · secret council IDeetin(S by the Ralp~ )!. Brown .Act which makes It unlawful for puhllc:bodl~ .to meet clan~ely except on· matlera pe"rtalnlng to personnel or possible lawsuits. !di other public buS!ness musl be discussed In ptibllc. · • Few violations of the law have been credited to Cort.a Mesa dty government In the past. Violations In Colla .M-and elsewhere have usually been discovered WJ!en one or more public ottlclals have· divulgell that bUsln.., other than that allowed by law was discussed In· secnl . . · . Now, with the new gag rule, councilmen could be guilty of a misdemeanor If they dlvulg~,, any business· tarried on beblnd clOled doora. Thus aII a'mds of illegal tunes may be aecretly ,hummed In executive seesions and the participants themselves \>c)und by ordinance not to dlvulje such breaking of the law. ~ MCOnd aection of the Jaw keeps communlca- Uons by the public to Its elaeted repre&entatlves oecret and allowa releue of public Information only if the . statute: • The sum total of this carelealy ldopted ordinance is Pllblic )oss of communication and a new' threat of oecret business at city hall. Costa Meu dty councilmen would do well to Im· mediately rescind the gag rule for a fresh start In good government during the new year. Funds for the Fair Pro6pects for a rejuvlnated Orange County Fair increased significantly last week with the lair board's decision to sell S3 acret of unused fair property as surplus • The vacant parcel. lying near the picnic area on Arlington Avenue and Fairview Road hun't been used since the fair took over the old Santa Ana Army .Air· base and there are no plans for it.. future use. But the '1,5 million the lair expects to receive from , • the sale is something it can put to excellent use. It will go a long way toward major' improvements in some of' the. old fair buildings and generally giving the 82- yeal'Old institution a bright new Image. . Fair Manager Jim Porterfield says some of the bt!ll<lmgs do not meet current fire regulations. Some are leftover barracks and aged beyond use. Both have the effect of hampering potential year-round rentals grounds use . About '800,000 of the money ls planned for con- version of the sports and recreation building Into a theater-type convention center. •All of the proposed spending plans appear to In- sure ·t1!at the fair will live to see at least JOO. At tlie same ti!ne, Cort.a Mesa has a vital stake In making sure the uses for which the surplus lair grounds land Is sold are an asset to the city as well as to the fair board treasury. I c ' • · ''.Peace is at hand.;, -Henry Kissinger Proximity Influences Jwlgment Dear Gloomy Gus Bird .. Deserves Equal Time, Says Reader 1'1 ..... M IMSei Five people killed Jn an llCcidenl 50 miles away from us a.DDel mare nm lm)IGrllDCe than IOI k!lled In an -~.lilll miles awoy-as If .. ~ and ~worth.. were the detaniJ1•11t1 of • • • II ls not Iha !Jnandally .. _ pol!ll- "'"" who -the -harm to oocl-elJ, but the Jnte!leo- tually -; not the --steals money from the peo- ple'• pactet, but the ... who speaks -way and acts anotb- er, tbus betrl'Jinc the public'• basic Jni.r.at. • • • We tend to venerate 11men of aetkm," but t1ia inte!IJCenl man ol action bows better; -NnaBn --al Weimar, It WU the ....... Wili! U.• clalmecl, "What a mant•• about the scbolar, and not tb; other Wl!f around. • • • • An occuional smile illumlnatea the penon111ty; a perpetual smile Is more likely to be an hysterical defense against despair. OONBBBV ATIVES are much more rea1lstlc than llberall about the way men will -ft in ordinary times, but far less imastnattve about the way they will -.. Jn extraordinary times; tbus, conserv1tlve regim<I are successful only during periods of relative tranqulllty, but t Hao commerdallsm ol Christmas ha Coot& Mesa reacbell Its epito-• me'r?? Church sponlOtt!d .. live" caroling cdminC from an amp!JIJed record player on a plc"'1p ~ while cootribntjons are IOl!clted at tbe door by children. -A.RB. ,,. ............................ ... .. .. -.. .... . -..... ,.... .. ,.... ........... ...., ...... • are eully-Jll times ol crisis. Ertreme reU&rom:ttY createl more onbelleven tban-lndltterence ml-1kep- ticlsm combined. • • • 'lllo cb!el reuon for developing as we grow older, and dlsburdening ourselves of immature faults, Is that with age we acquire a new crop of faults, and nobody can cope with both kinds at the same time. • • ' r Wiien-• ........ la bold ~ to ..... fide to .... ..w.-that she and her . lllsband T."~~ and aister,1' I wonder wblcb Is wblcb. WE CAN OI1TEN endure an extra !lC'llld ol po1n far -· eully than we can suffer the withdrawal of l.n ounce of .... ~ plemlre. .. " . . . 'lllo real Jrooy Jn today's "humor of prateat" bas been neaUy summed up by Dick Gregory, when be observed: ''When I left St. Louis, I was making five dollars a nJgbt. Now I'm getting '5,000 a week - for aaYtna the aame things out loud I us- ed to say under my breatbl" • • • • Of all the aedentary games ever devis- ed by man, chess is the one moot closely aUled to mononwila and aleobo!lsm -In that, if al!oftd to flourish unchecked, it '!Ui ruthielliy drive out evory other motive and punult; every chess cham- pion is, first ol all, a fanatic. Future of Capitalism Writes ~ G. Gurley, profesaor of economk:I 1t Stanford University. In . .,,,. ,._..,, _ ~" Add Stork Theory · to Textbooks,? To the Editor, In • view of the recent ~on regan!ing. the revision of the eleniealiiry l!Cbool icience books· to lnc!llde • the spedal .creatton theory; I ~Yr pro- pose that we ought to also present the stork theory, in our explanations of how babies get here. AFTER AIL we have no. way of prov· log that the stork u-y.1s faloo. Slorlls- are pretty fut birds. 'Ille _,,.bo give uo 'bableil •proJioh!y can· fly 111 fut that they can IJy in the hospital window. band tht baby to the doctor, and fly out again, so Int that nobody tnOW. What happens. ~.the st«ks that give us babies may have powers we.~'t know about. Maybe they can turn themselves invisible when bringing the batiies into the hospital so that we wOWd never know about them. THE THEORY of the stork is 1 lot ~er for children to accept than ,that proposed by science. P'cir children it may seem estremely abocktng that they ac- tually come out ol tbeJr JDOlbm. What a terrible thought! 'lllo -t Is a far healthier thing to teach. If they are going tO be peralstent about teaching the IClentJllc tlleories I suppooe we can give them equal time but by all means let the childniol !mow about the -theory too. Olldrm .... all too often given only one slile d ao argmnent. ' SHELLEY WALSH No Are Trop • To the Editor: Evidently the remark& made by E. B in Gloomy Gus (PILOT Dec. 20) """'Jn. spired by Alvin P!nkley's erroneous vaPorillng on the same subject in the Pnm a few days ago. WE IN BETHEL Towers do not need to "weed out" the smokers amoac our fellow tenants. There Is no danger of fire in this "fire trap," (of course unlea the smoker wants to burn his own belong- ings)' Any fire that hp occurred In this building, and them have been three to my .knowledge, have all been confined to the tenant's apartment, witb no injury and little discomfort to the other tenonls. ( MAILBOX ) Lttter1 from readef'1 are we!cofM. Nonnally writers thou.Id convey their tMNGge1 m 300 words or leu. The rigftt lo condense letten lo flt space or. eliminate libel ii reff'f'Oed. AU le,tters mUlt include rignature and mailing addrtu, but tiamt• may bf wlthlu!ld on «qUul If mfflcfnd reaaon tr apparent. Pot~ 1DiU not bf published. over and the U.S.A. has resumed an all- out effort in bombing our enemy -North Vietnam, I wondered who would be the first to criticize tblit action and softstll the ev......,.rlghteous llo<tb, the haloed rulers in HanoL I JUST witnessed H about a ball hour ago by one very famous news com- mentator by the name of David Brinkley. I did not know that be was in on all the secret peace talks in Paria along with Kisslnger and the envoys ol N<irib Viel· nam. As a matter of f.ect, I am po&itive that Mr. Brinkley dld not'ait In an·om> one of those secret peace talts. BOWEVER, I Just beard him mouth oil against our decision to resume the bombing against our eoemy IDd side in with them as though we we?J'•·~c nation. If only people l!ie ldr. lldnldey IDd tile Jane Foodas would keep out· of the af-faln of our state, this war nld be _. a lot quicker. GRANT HARDING PHILLIPS Glrb Pu1t9r To the Editor: Reference to, COunt Ma"'° art!Ct. of Sunday, 'iiec. 17: "Are Gltls Dom Pushy or Tau.gbt by Mother?" It Is rather curious tbat in th1a F" of informatl«> and enllgbteomenl that a ~ IUCb u "Cocmt Marco" exists, let alooe ls employed by a new'l"'per to write. child; whether it b6 an Irrational, overbearing male as 1ilsecuri!: in bis role as Marco, or a weak, dependent female deprived by her father of her natura1 right to aspire. requ~st of our pseude>-ally "great" Brl- tal~. '. .S.G. UNDINE When I fll'SI read COunt Marco's col· umn, I naturally 1essum_ed· that 'It had been misplaced aQd belonged witb the To the Editor: comics. I later realized that Marco ii ac-\loderstanding that tbe car wash tually serious about bis ravings and the employees of . ti>.! local car wuhes are sad, sad part Is lllat be nally ·...,,,. to not paid u.;, bigljest w~1es possib!e and believe in bis tbe<i!y•s validlly. ; . , usually ~~!J!/'o't.ttme tn!JSl moye on " ' ' . ' .. to better pa,..,..jOqo, ! ~Ill jtptifY the IF MARCO feeli that the male should hall-beaJ'\e<!J!i.to;!.~pu:t'mtcrclealling, be 1'boa," that ~t's 1be w(J"' ~ "V.acuuming cats; but Wbf& I rtagesbouldbe,"iij.:llol_...,.l'ttil:. do ,)¥>1 ~~/ls .l!lll··'" cJtlsens lle to learn about tOda)''swoman. He-also have to~.SffllJ .. ~1 Jluior . ot~_,,ttem needil to Jeam 11!8~ a male 1oes 1"1 loose therein before fultiJ!lg It Ol(er ,to become a boss or· leader 'merely by them. virtue of a zipper in the front of bis ; • ~ I.- I RECEN'll-Y had my (ar washed, took .all tJie l!ackiges I )\ad in my front seat .and back &eat with me; but left two or three 'lterfls .. in the glove box. My mUltaket the' gloYe 'box and t.runt are no& a safe plaee f)ecause you turn your auto ovei .to these attendants with :Your keys (which ~"llove bo1.e! andliunb) and at the end of the wash cycle and upon releasing' my pie~ ilp ·Ucket to the at- teriafnt. I g6t in and rrry c_., was milling lri>m the glove box. trousen. I suggest that your newspaper would be less of a 1e>ist rag if you, woold tld )'ourself and the literate public of the bane of "Count Marco." MS. sus;v; J. SCllABLEIN . Zero lofl• To the Editor: News beadlill'I! "ZER() GROWTH SEEN." "Tliiit !necessarily so, man, -· wltb all -dudes coming into the· country wltb ilmmlgTIUon vtsas, tbe future beadllne miy read: "mRO JOBS SEEN." FOllEIGNERB ilE achin' their brass .Jo. come here on any pretext IDd then stay here. Note tlie'CObau -.,. ttred ol-Castro .IJld want to g1te the ball out! But we neec1·more ,people nu we1 neei:l a bOle Jn !lie bead,,aod ...,.. of us have jut, that when We welcome more im-'1".t=· sample of the>-an!Od people cdminC to our shores b foulld in ~ Frai\ClJOO where young Chinese im· migrants have organbod a Mafia-type . TONG that Is preying upon busJni'I,...., while in other parts of the land trouble- ~ "refugees" are wanted. in their naUv.e country for tre880D and for doing the same dimJptlve tbinp they are dO!ng here with aboolute tmpunity. lpljlrance, botb auto •aod bopleownm. does not cover this, lbe ' owner and manger of the air was!i daim no 1epl oblilation because of lheir "not respomJ.. ble ftr lost articles" sign, rtbil ns not a lost arUcle 1t wu siolu. , It. is a ridiculous and ' -1 8ltuation when you can't even troat ~ at~ tendanls !or the 15 minutea i1 takes to C9019lete your au\o. F91"<*1 1to wort for low wageo, this . pub ·lemiJ!atl«> Jn tbeJr way and yet the customer ls in no way legaJly protected from the thievery. MRS. DEAIDIA TATUM .. Mualeal Gift To the Editor: , ,, ~~ A ~t big note •or heartfelt thanks and appreciation to Estancia High Music Department ·and able c:omtuctor G<!rald Ol&en Im: brln&lng to. lhe public the beautilul presentatiGcl o( " E 1 I j a b " reconUy. Whal a llirill· Ii wu to hMr t~ fresh youthful volcol of the bea)lliful eupest ypwig people who sang from thelt. hearts as tj>ey gave tbls .mllsicaLq.r..tmas 1~t 10,'!' all It was a , I "My main ooaclwdon II tliat there are ...,,. powerful adverse forces _.ting 1galnst U.S. capitaflam, wblch over the nell few decadea will create an in- creulqly unfavorable eovJmunenl. domesUcaJly and intemaUonaDy, for U.S. corpora~ profitmak!ng . This deteriorating envlrclnment de r.i v es primart!y from tlje continuance of revolutionary movements against ·~ ~matlonal csp!tallam, from the in- teoalflcatlon of riv~ among leadlng capltaliat states lor invatment ouUets, trade adva:n~1es1 ~ access to raw materlala, arid froin labor'• arowing 1bll!!y to exert pressure on CAP.Ital's lblre of the natlooW Income." EDITORIAL RESEARCH S)oba1 capitalism. • , .capt wUI survive 11 an Jncreutngly atate<lireCled mooopo!y capitalism, But many e!emenls of dem()cracy will not." Bethel Towers Is as ~Y flreprool as a "high rise" or any other buildinc can be made. Would suggest that PIYley and E.B. ~t a lltUe first band knowledge m tbe subject . , HARRY T. GOULE, A charter member tenant. 11118 PARUCUL.U\ artJcle ezblblts, .. do all Count Maroo's, prejUd!ce. faulty l..glc and re•-lng. mass _...- lions, IDd -1Jonably d II p l,a y s Marco's animosity toward the female gender. THE FAMILIAll •wttlne· that plclt-and- shove! jockeys are stlll ·-W to ·"bulk! America'' ls a 1iCkG.C111e for the~ of people coming here !or Jobe,, Tbe_j)OO' pie born here, ~ l!locU ~ In- i!Janaj, are far -. deserVing ol jobl tUn newcamen. Agreef attini 1J!ll'ld1lclion iO the great Ul4nded • Pl"'C,f&lll , ol· musical olfertnp wblc:a,,~·· , comes our way a\ tJU&seaaan of'tbe.~ ·' "L HOWEVER, tbele advene forcet ~"'::...t~:.,:,f~~ ~ by Iha United Slatea, ts I ~ -In Iha -Id and ls capoble ol many more -ap1nat wmd proletlrilll ,__ SUll. my judcmeat ls tbat, Oil balance, the tide ls l'llllllinl .... cap1lllllm Oii il -.... " "II tbls ls IO, t1ia ,_ of Iha capltalbt clala ii -llkely to be • coll tor Jncreuod State Jntervmtion In Iii -le llle ol Ille nation ••• we cae expect State intemntldh to be InteNll!od !or tho pu._ ol tJcblenlnl the bands of !Iller dllcipl!ne •l bqme, mobllislnc .. .--llplnlt -ry ..uvtty -· ·m1 ~ U.S. .capttalllta' lntenltl tn In Iner '' 1 rclJ cx.npetlttve Ind boll.Ue' en•h••• ?•of. Robert L. Hellbroaer, -"C.pltallam Alive or Dead," writes: "Had anyone in the 1930s been told that U.. U.S. Groa National Product In the ~Iy lll'ros would surpass a triUlon dollars -effeellve!y doubling the real per capite Income within !he llf-of llie majority of t1ia populat)on then '""" -I am "''" ho wwld have felt aafe lo Pftdlctlng for the United States an era of im~ted oocW peace and podwlll. Yet that' enonnous economic change bas taken pllCe and oocill harmony bas not reaulted." "I TlllN![ It is fair lo SSJ thal among tbe new ..-ol oocW unrest -t1ia dnll culture, the ay for participatory clemocncJ, tbe a!Jena!loa ol ,lludents, !be new ~ morallty, tbe retreat to tbo ble ol t1ia commune -...,. Is cm- patal !l'llh or supportive of -11- titudes and behavior patterns '"' wtilc!i capital~ bas tradlUon1Uy rolled. It ii peoalble, In other wonla. tbat we atand.al tlll! thniohold ol 1n era in wblch deep- ... 1oc1 ~ In lil••l'JI will .... • dennlM CIPltalilm. 1n a manner aa r1ttl u the moo! drama proletarian ......... tJon might do, al~ perhaps !us rapidly or Jlllllantlca1ly. ' ' War Critic• To tJJ_e Editor: NQW that the peace talks have frozen ~--B11 6eo1'9e ---· Dear George: Don't you ever get problems you bonestly can't answer? TED Dear Ted' Yes, q..U. often I get quesUons I hooeltly can't answer. I just go ahead and answer them anyhow ... I figure Jt'a better to lie 1 little tban to have to knock oil thla ad- vice racket and go back to -k in the sawmUI. , Dear George: Do you have a staff ol experts to llolp wltb your answers! Really! CURIOUS 'Dear OJrlous 111 bad a staff of esperts, would I be tel!Jng peqple to touch their -. wltb their toes 18 U-I d1y for flabby toes! , Marco assumes that the trait be refers to ls the undesirable ·one ol "~" He obviously feels so tbreslened by tbe very desirable trait of auruolveness and dJrectloo in a female that be must 1pp})! the misoome• of ''pusbJ." I CERTAINLY hope tbat Count )Jarco bas not bad the opportw11ty to lather a The popuJaUOD expl11lc111.may be a dud, thank& to birth '*ltrol, but the Im- Dllgratlon e~ compounds the crime and UDelllfllyment in our con· ..-le\! c!Ut1. "'.• caanot · Jong support a Pl'.l'mldlhg popul1ilon, yet the 1m- m1111111«> Dt~, a!ieady 1ccused of shady dobip; llftp8 this mocking c1mtvll going'. Added no~ to tbla banmgue : The Unitt<I Stalel Will _, admit 1.000 "refuceea" frtnn lJ' .... Africa, at the Crime and Punishment Wheo more than two UU... ol the voters in tht November -.,. -od ~ .. 17, tbe1'dld -.. than ~ all ea.-- n!atlnC to tht dtatb ~w1!'1 a1IO placed upon the I t H 1 l'tl}>Ollalbll!ty ol spelling out tbe Crimes that mandate that penalty. THIS AcrtON is necessary ill order to brine Calllomla IRWS In conlorm!lf :irJjb lhe UDlted SJates SOpreme Court'• l!nd-lnt that tbe death penalty la ..,,.t and unuaual punishment -am! tbiJ<lcre ..,_ • ....Ulullanal -" -applied In most lfateo. The COWi flit not bon"tbe -111 per .. ; u ratrtctOd' lta lqllllJclllcm. ~Y,0 dio deotb penalty now muot be mat>dl!M!1· ~ lul'Y or Jude• can hive the ~ of Nritenctoa a penon to Ille lmll'"-...t or to death. Certain cle1rly llllllUlfltell crln\es will W1Y a mandatorJ tleatJi ..,ten®, and it ls now tbe -lllbUlty of the Je1Wature to ~ what crl(llOS 1haU be Jpcluded In thal category. Cdlti1lla -· servi .. ' Always .well ._.ted by ·Mr. Colyar ' a~ the orgl!l and Misa,Olll>o 1,l lbe piano, tbl. produc)I«> .. a. well received by the KT!'tefu! audience malty of wbqm perhaps bad not beanj ,this onotorlo previously, ThMk yoo again. Estipcja lllgb, for giv- ing to us this spiritual enrichmeot at this Christmas aeasoo. MRS. W. E. COFF:f4AN OIANOI CO:UT DAILY PILOT i • llob••t II'. WeC<I, ~ • T"°""" Kt«n~ Editor r • I • NY Police 'Corrupt' -Knapp WASHINGTON !AP) Knapp Comm is1 ion in- -lgaUng aUeged mJJCOnduct by city palic:e aaJd today cor· ruptlon In the department wu widespread and loclodod the acc<ptancc of grttultlto, wide involvement in drug traffic and stealing from the dead. z The commission ln con- cluding it.s two-year in- v&tigation of the depart- ment , said in tts fmaJ 2&1-page rePl)l1. that comiption was IJ'~atic and had apread • UUOOgh the ranks from the ' cop on the bell to the chief in- spector's offtot. Thorough indifference to oomipUon or active involve- ment, the report said police allowed to tJouruh a ~­ coordinated and profitable system of payoffs and shake- downs involving prostitutes, Maria henchmen, Joan sharks, bookies and heroin pushers. eDemotlolt A s1ill In Independence, Mo. demonstratu nation's ·,et. nett) u Harry S Trumln's daughter, Mrr. 11"81 Truman Danie! (rleht) and Army escort, n. Patrick Cassidy, watch the former presi· dent's ~ belllg loaded Into a hearse. A simple funeral wu held today. WASHINGTON (AP( Gordon Rult:, the Navy eo&t. monitor who was demoted alter criticWng the Pres!dent. has been denied a meeting with Navy Secretary John Werner and hat been told to pursue any prote.t with the _..al who ordered the demotion. RWe was turned aaLde Wednesday when be IOUCht a meeting with Warner to discuss the demotion. Instead, Warner . onlerod that Rule must go through Wienie War ~egins "channels" and lodge any pro- test with Adm. Isaac Kidd who wants Rule shunted to a backwater job. e Dtnn.ge S•lt NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A Meat Labeling Misleading to Con8umer federal !lldae. has ordered a fl.I miJllon ·-damage llllt IUed qain..t Undersecmary O'f State-<lesianate William J. Casey anO others. WASHINGTON (UPI) - SUrreodertna: to c o n 1 u m e r ~ and a court order, the Agrtcul!utt Department has armounced plans for a secood major n>Und ol label· ing and cootent reform for hot dogs. came three years ago. Io 1969, officials ~ a long dispute by orderinl a !O percent lot content limit on bot does and olher cooked sausage pro-- ducts. Now, of!k:iall say new· pro- posals whlcb may take effect early nut year will junk cur- rent rules under which a 1 hot THE nRST step In ...._ dog conta!nlni w a t • r • . 1Weetener1 and curing agents to rlslni complaints over one ean still be labeled "all of the nation's favorite foods meat." A federal court had ruled the "all meat" wording i was misleading to consumera. lips, snouts and spleens in frankfurters and other cooked uuaagea bearing ordinary labeling. U byproducts are u.. ed In IOl!ltthlnJ that looks like a hot dog, tho product would have to be labeled "imitation" In letters a.t farge as tbost used for the wtird "frankfur· ter." "Some of the things the directors did are tnconcelv11ble to me," U.S. Dls1rlct Coar! Judee Herbert W. <llr18ttnhen1 aaJd Wednesday in ordering the suit in con- nection with the poodlng reorgan i zation under ba n kruptcy Jaws of MuJUpanlcs, Inc. THE NEW PLAN would O!!t Caoey wal a boanl member up two name ·categories for or the firm, wbldl owns "1,000 fraokfurters, ~logna and acres of · fann land 1 n other similar cooked sausage: Louisiana, M l a 1 l 111 p pl , --OltelOfY dne wauld -,AfJcanaas and Florida. 11 llled ta!n ouJy "skeletal mUJCle for rearpnlJallon in If/I. ALSO REPEALED would be meat," lncllldln! up to 15 per· • Surt!leor • ru1 .. allowing a bot dog eo.,. ctn! poultry, pus necemry SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI) Kids Not' 'Buym•· g' TV talnlnJ up 1o s.s -t -pn>ceaing tncrodl-such as The u.s. Coast Guan! today fat dry muk to be labeled water, sweeteners and curing bepn a searcl! for five crew almply "frankfurter ." agent!. menibers of a cargo vellel Advertising? ti! i!:=:!i ':'u:.": ~g:Z.. Tw~=tseo: l'!: w::.S.~= i:': department Bald Its new bot the ftnt group, but alto eouJd Ufeboot off the 1&land of WASlllNGToN (UPI) -;\ dog reform plan WO<lld also contain limited amounts of Martinique suffering from Ftderll Trade Commiulon ban the use or meat and binders such as nonfat dry severe exhaustion and JI.early (FTC) euml ... belleva the! 1 _pou1_1ry __ byproduct.o ______ such __ ., __ mU_k_or_so_y_pro_te_in_. ____ i_ncobet __ ..,_''"------I by theotlme cblldren noch tbt age of Wiii they are wpllcal about the truth of -~j_ ~JDCh, 111 FTC ~Uve Ill' judre, m..i. the po1111 w--.1 in dlsmllob>c -... thal tbt lTI' c.atlnmlll -.. Com- pany ot R1!, li.Y., llld"lts Id' vertllli>c Jinn, Ted llatal ...i Co. of N.., Yori: Qty, made falae -dllml (or Wonder Bread llld lloltea snackoalles. The dtdllon ma, be ap-'·· -··ed. f.iz .....-.... <;·""' w':Z = ·~: ~I:_;\ "exploit a cbild'• uptl'ltlonl • . for rapid and btallhJ rrowth 'and the emotloaal ......... of 1porents for -_, He •aid there wiu: no ,_. for I !ordering Conu.ital ~ to .. lbuy eornctlve ad""11ahte. I Lynch sat4 I -bed i 1hown that even by the age of · ftve to NWn · J.bire wen 1 11Ublta1Jllll n um b e r 1 of 1clillcll<n Wllo :are ·uepllcal 1 abouc t.Ievtston """""""'lall. , , "The poleDlll1 for Ut.ral !belle! or ~ thet - occur In -70llllC -idecrU* 1'1111 ... to • llOlpt liuoW>d elc!ll Wbon chlldftn tlenerally ltldbll a dear, con-; .. I alstent and wldelpnad rue-· , 'tlon Iha\ -· ..... ili tmen:1a11 cannot bep taken u W, 11Jtenlly true." Lyndb said. ~~~ II •. HIWYIMt'I I! ~. ' I r ' 0 ~ .. »;.:! ~:-:; I i{i rxx :·.·:· ... the 4DAYSONLY! ANY KODACHROME ROLL Bm111 MOVIES or 20 Exp. SLIDES DEVELOPED AND PRINTED CAMERA DEPARTMENT • tlAIAN ..... -~ k • WMMA• 1111.1 U500 ~ M • tl'tllUll J~ 1)ltl • IAlfTA A•A -...... It. •lOIUIQ' .............. •U.llWO 00 c... $1.11111 Parlftllll{ '"-• n••• PAii IHe~ Jl'lf °"""*"' ....... 0..""' ""'"" ..... - DAILY PILOT S \. No Epidemic Ex-pecwd in Nicaragua • . t I MANAGUA, N I \,I r I 'u a run Nloorapa for • years, longen -C,,mbln1 ~ (AP ) -F ... lp doctofl oay uJd In I olltomm\t broldcut rulno -11111 ...U 1'ad enough medical pel"IOlllld Uc! houli1 that looten were bllllc 111,rcelJ d l t a pp e a r e d by a,.,.i.d and oome bad -w.a.old~. 3upplies are on hand to ward llbot. Somoza appealed let pa- orr any typhoid or typhus "We have~ and pro!; ll•D<* and 1ald the nu m...., epldemlc in the carthqUO.. •b!Y will an thole probliems left by the quake dcvu\alo\I ' Nl cararu an oaUf)lt ID the act of Iootlbc," ioouid ba IOIVld. the mtra<:W of treaHnf 2,oofi lAlri In ...... day> and 500 Nb.rquana have a 1 r e a d Y. f....t..., 11omcs in other Cen' tra1 Amerlcan countrlu." he laid. The lat<st olllclal tltlm capital. lie aald. "There la no epidemic , 19 . But tbe roaming Pleb of Managua toclly/' Wd. ,Dr. f·' . ol COlll&IU.• !Mn the quake 1,00IM,000 · deacL and up 1 J0,000 serlolllly l$nd. • ' . . Juan Jose Clllarl of P-..., 1!111!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!=1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!1!!!=;! "We are probably IOlnl to avoid an outbreak o f diseases." U.S. RELIEF offlCIBll el· presl<d aatlllactlon wltll the arrival of tom of grain, flour a·nd powdered mtlk . Nicara&Uan ollldal11ald more trucb were .-to set the food to II dlslrlblltloo points aet up oolsldt the city lo draw peraon1 away tqm the ruinl. They oak! auppllea·,.... pU· ~ up at the airport and -in the front yard ol Giii. Anastaalo sc.tma, the CX11.aD- try'1 ruler. Lt. . Col. Frank -· tn charge of tbt U .8. relief pro. gram, pra!Jed Ille I o o d dlstrlbullon plan aet up by SOmoza. "WE WOOLD have bad the same problems ii tllla hap- pened Jn any COUDl!y In the world," he aid. 1 • T b e Nicaragua.DI are dolna a marvek!UI Job.'' Maj. Dennis Bulpr; com- mander of the U.S. 11'1h Com- bat Enilnoel' Co., 11 ld althoog)i many of the city's water lines had been ruptured and some of the cisterrui an>und the dty bad been cracked by the quake Satur- day, some 20 million gallons a day eould still be provided for the greater Managua area. He ¥Jd about 71,000 pllons Wll broucbt into the city W:-y. "enourh lo pro. vlCte each person with ball a gallon." This Indicated that about 150,000 pem:ms -or half the normal population -were still In the city deaptte -lo everyone to evacu1ite the area. Authorities continued to •J>- peal at frequent Intervals for evacuation, but m&n1 ob- viously were ignoring the ef- fort. RESIDENTS WERE warned to avoid an area of UC> blockl in the hardfft bit ae<tor that was dealpted an epidemic :r.one. DocWa said the Utle waa precautlonar)' and did DOI Jndlcal<! presmce Of a D epldemlc. ' Somou, -lamlly ba• OttJy Coast Qifers • 6%Guaranteed Certificates • $aturday Se_rvice ·The Insiders Club 1loo lnalden Club: A new way to beat Inflation. Its membership card pennlta you to bUy nearly fNfJt'/- 1111111 you need 1rom the finest ciOse<kloOr .- rooms at substantial sav- ings -appliances, tum~ ture, stereo equipment, IPOl'ltna 1100¢1, draperies . and much, much more. You can ...,, buy cert at the "fleet" price ond m6blle hem• """ motor· cycles at subatlntlll _. lnp. The ln•lders Club Effective Annual umtnp 5.0Q%.ll.13%. PM-. No Minimum, 5.75%-5.92% 0!1e Yw Corttflcate • $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6,18% Two lo l'1'e Y-c..tJflcatol $8.000 Minimum. Up to 90 days Iola Of intttMt on amounts wllhdtlwn before maturfty on all Olltllflcatoaccounts. alao provide• b11 dis- counts on Uckets to sport- 1ng and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free llN!cet: safe depoolt ~ money or- ders1 ttav1lers checks, and notMY Mrvlces. M1mbtr1hlp require- ment for ---$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate membo,.hlps en: . titlln1 them to all outside referral services. A1k about Jolnln11t any COest olllce. ............ IU'l A HIU, Loi..,...• UW.351 =rt.'::MVtMf PLACEJ »as Wlllhift •W. L.A. ' 1119-1265 U. CMC CINlUI 2nd&. Broedwly • 62W102 HUMTlf'M'ff* IMC* .. _ ....... (71.4) 117.:}.047 IANTA MON1eA1 711 WMlhlr• •Nd.. SM746 =:=.a. &S14341 --lallnd 1t10pp1rcctr. •:Ill~ _..,.,. Chai!' AV~ NU)'l lfvd. • 112-1171 ,..,...... 18751 Yanttltll llM:I •• 34H814 ""'" ...... sra & Locust• 437.7411 ......... _ .. 8th"'*• llM810 ...__ 321 s. Dllimond Bir• (714) 591-7125 TU,_ L..rwin ~,.. Shopplnf ctr.• (714) 832-alO lAM-l.11 MlrMI IMColN; Ctr.• 1714) 522~5i . -. 11ou,---1A111D4N All-r-,.tCMe c.ntar,Clpoft-·. tAlllOlPll Son -Olficl Oi-ill ... r------------:-----""'·. I Our Anniversaryl Always .the Start of Something Big llttrll•P "'MUl..,.'9" L .. , T•W.. JI., .qMIW , • , R•I• 1ttt, S.!. 109. The Biggar. Sale of '73! HERE . AND IOW !· .SAVINGS TO 30% and -more r In the Biggar Quality All Selected from Our Regular Stock • Henredon • Herit~ge • Drexel . • Biggar's C"stom ·sofas ·a Chairs "'' ••• AIH~ AlwA .. ,. POR IVERY UVINO l'URl'OSl!i DINING ROOM !lfDROOM • UVINO ROOM CARl'ITINO llllOINQ ACCISSORl!S ' ..., ,,._ te ..,,,. cri~d•• NOW AT AU 3 STORl!S r---==~-1\ P.ASADENA .-... -t""t:Ol-Olt-ADO-t-l-VD-.-. ' 12131792-6136 POMONA • 16' t HOLT AVE. V14.J 129·JOl6 SANT A ANA • 1110 N, MAIN ST. . (71•1 >17-1 621 • llGO.VSOWN IYDOIT liCCOUHTS-.IAHkAMlltCA•D-MASTI• C'HUOI ,, d ~ •• • ·1 , .r, • j ' •I • . . ' '· " • .t • • ! . ' , , . ( • ' • ' I I I