HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-02 - Orange Coast Pilott •
San Clemente Today's Final •
(;a EDITION N.Y. Stocks
VOL 66, NO. 2, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1973 TEN CENTS
• "--rrors
Not So Rosy
Winds Turn Off
' .
TV • Ill Clemente
~eanup continued along the Southern
Orange Coast today in the wake or the
year's most severe windstonn but no one
t'QU]d repair one maddening problem·
wllich hit early New Year's morning in
* * * Winds Sink
Two Boats
At Catali11ii
San Clemente.
Hundreds of residents set to watch the
Tournament ol Roses Parade found no
pictyre on their television tubes after the
high winds caused a power blackout in
the industrial section of the city.
The outage immediately knocked off a
cable television booster station and sets
all over town were without a picture.
•'· Police received score! of calls: from
angry residents. Spokesmen from the
local cable service said their aides were
swamped with nearly 200 calls at the
start of the outage.
Service was restored , however, by
about 10 a.m. to .most areas. Besid~s adding to the Ne w Year's
morning hangover, the winds caused city
crews in San Clemente to go to work as
trees and branches fell over a wide area.
One large eucalyptus toppled in the golf
course area.
Dozens of limbs were lorn from other
trees in the coastal area. Bae% in Hanoi Uf'I T~,_
7
Punishing blasts of wind sweeping
from inl~nd to Catalina Island failed to
return a.!!I predicted Mondciy night. after
turning Avalon Harbor into a
~htmarish whirlpool of Juxury~yachts •
and houseboats Sunday.
New Year's day at Dana Harbor was
""ithout incident but !ht: day before. as
the Santa Anas started to build ,
patrolmen were kept busy.
Fo_Jksinger Joan Baez Oeft) tal~s to unidentified U.S. Hanoi. Three antiwar activists accompanied ~tiss
pnsoners during a recent vi sit to a POW camp near Baez during her· two-week visit to the capital. Damage to a variety of vessels in·
volved-four sailboats including a 57-foot
ketth and a houseboat -.will tot.al
$200,000 or more, according to
authorities.
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Several perSons were injured -none
seriously -8! they fought to batten down the batches and .... their boats
from <!estruction by the fl).mlle·per·bour S4nta Ana winds.
At Qne point last Sunday. patrolmen
said, a single blast of wind capsi7.ed
several sailboats all at once near the
harbor entrance.
Rescuing patrolmen ploclted II persons
from the water and helped right the
vessels. No one was injured.
~· Mou11tai!!f..i~r-.-.....i::...,,~W Year.~e Traffic Toll
Saved; ut Girl
fl repeat performance was predicted
for Monday night by weathermen but
thankful Avalon residents missed out.
HThe winds didn't arrive .,__and all we
have • now is cleanup w1>rk." said a
spokesman for the Los Angeles County
Sheriff's station at Avalon.
Slashing swells peaking at 10 feet pum-
melled the harbor at the height or the
New Year's Day l!m windstorm. sinking
two of the large sailboats and damaging
others.
·Several were pounded against the
seawall, while still more broke loose
from their moorings but were taken in
toW before they could be damaged.
· ·lnvestrgators -sainwo of llie beached
boats were being broken to bits by the
pounding waves.
Others merely washed up on the strand
and were left lying at relatively awkwan1
but safe angles as the high tide of the
nlibl receded.
A strange flotilla including lpOre than
~ -batf tht--remaining ~~sels0 moored in
Avhlon Harbor plowed through the !Wells
behind the Coast Guard cutter Point
EVans.
They and their skippers spent the night
Jn a sheltered cove off Silver Point.
Protest Session
On Soutl1 Coast . . .. .
S_ervices Slated
South Coast area residents alarmed at
whit they term poor performance at the
county government level have scheduled
a meeting Jan. IS to see if a South Coast
"coordinating council" cou1d be
established.
Paul Sayre, a Dana Point resident, az\.
nounced plans for the 7:30 p.m. meeting
at Marco Forster Juni6r High Schoo! and
said he and others who drafted the idea
have issued an open invitaj.ion to
reoldent. and orglllizatlono from Laguna< NJ&uel to Capistrano Beach.
"We hope that every organization of -
homeowners and others ln the county
area attend this session.
''What we are lrying to do • is come
together as one to begi.11 seeking
representation for the sooth couoty
area,'' be aakt.
Flames Wreek Cafe;
Companion-Dies
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz . (APJ A Tnm1an's Papers
Given to Public~
Will Released
helicopter crew plucked a stranded hiker
from the slopes of snow-s wept llum-
phrcys Peak today but reported that a
second died after two nights in subzero
v.ea ther.
The Coconino County sherifrs office
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. -Harry S identified the victim as Allison Clay, 17,
Truman's "''ill, released today as public of Scottsdale. '
record, gives nearly all the former Officials reported that her companiion.
President's papers to the people of the 24-year-"1"' Clint Miller, was in poor con·
United States, barring some personal ditioo from exposure and frostbite.
-not8. -·--: '---.--· ------11e-v.·as flown directly lo Phoenix,
The 22-page l'rUI was signed by TrJnnan about ISO miles to the th J~n. 14, 1959, ·and also designates that his T:ie 1.,.,.0 were in a :-l'e~e~r's Eve hik-
w1dow, Bess, shall receive all of ing party ""·hich scaled the 13,IXM}.foot
Truman·s personal 'belongings remaining rr t<iin. part of the San Francisco
in the couple's home on North De laware Peaks ""·hich tov.•er above this northern
S.Lreet in Independence. _!\.rizona city. .
Truman Wed a week ago Jollo:wing a _four co~~ns hi~g_ ~ut ~l<;nd:i·•
long illness and was buried Thursday. and reporlea the tv.·o m1ss1ng. n at·
The will stipulated that the hundreds or tempt lo reach the two late ~1onday fail·
thousands of presidential papers be kept ed. Three were treated for frostbite and
at the Harry S Truman L I b r a r y in the fourth aided the se~:-:h.
Independence "subject to the right of the Wmds reached 80 ~Jles an hour Mon-
archivist of tl'f United Slates'' to move day. temperatures dipped to 10 degrees
the papers. belov; "ero ovemi:~t .. 11u th:?re were five
Certain papers. "strictly related to fee_t "of snow on the ground, searchers
busioess and personal affairs," will ~ said. .
given to ~1rs. Truman, and the executors The helicopter crew from IAike Air
of the will are given aulhority to withhold F;;i:ce r-~.'.:e jo•ncrl th · ""1rch as c>' 11 ;o
other papers from the nation. .. the
Giving the papers to the nation fulfills see::_.
a promise Tnqnan made years ago that . On~ s;iryivor. Ri~ Hufqagel, -.· of
he would give the papers to the country if ScotlSdale, said the six, all mtrr • of
the U.S. government would maintain the the Arizona Mounlairleering Club. l·e~an
Truman Library, which was dedicated in the climb in good weather Suildhy. :;,f-
1957, and built by public contribution. ternoon. ·
The will also stipulated that a single "Then it became windy and cold.·· r.e
slab shall cover the graves of both said from bis bed at Flngstalf Cc.m-
Truman and Mrs. Truman, who will be munity Hospital where he was treated
88 on Feb. 13. (See RESCUE, Page I)
Executors are given authority to decide
if an 6be.Jisk shouIC: be at the head of the
graves.
1be inscriptions for the graves are con-
tained in a cOOicil to the will dated Oct.
(See TRUMAN, Page %1
Boy Held After
Car Theft, Chase
' A 15-~ar~ld San Clemente youth was
arrested before dawn New Year's day
alter_l!e aaertedl)' alole h~ brolher"s
Cir, !hen led police on a hlt!Hpoed chase
through UH! center' of town.
Nixon .Urges
Quake Funds
$ 000 Officers said the lncldent began after S Damage .at 20, a.m. Monday~ youth.ran 1 llop tip
.J.;_ . and.11rayed l*lfoe to lane In the~.
C.all!t ot 1 Cite which did an estimated modtl car. . :r · i>J..,_~
m ,ooo 1 .. • ~foio~ caro ,sty Mon·=~ P'ir."~"''°"·BI,~ day mortfl!tg'ta !!lll"u!idtr fn~•B•lion. · ~ ?ol"'o~1illr tlie~
the Orange C.OUnty Flrt Departil'lent C!rl ver sptd off onct igain.
rtported todlJ. Tile youth rammed one parked car
Fire broke out at 4:26 a.m. in Ginger's during I.ht Incident. but was uninjured.
Thlrll .. Bar at m12 Del Prado Road . Offl«n nnany l1lCCe<dld td' •"'9Pins
Fftmen-foqhl--lhe-bt&ze-for-half-tn ----1.be_car 11 the dt:J llmlts and llftsted_tbt
hour, , foulh. •
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Claims 3 Lives in County
A Los Angeles man was killed and two
others injured ~1onday "-hen his car went
out of control on the San Diego Freeway
near the El Camino offramp in San
Clemente.
John Tappan, 40, died at San Clemente
General Hospital of massive head in-
juries. the Orange County Corooer·s of·
tracing the license number of the small
foreign car. Patrolmen ,added that they
found several different names on iden-
lification in lhc car. "It's been a real
headache finding out everyone's correct
name," a patrolman said.
T""-o other persons died over the New
Year's weekend from :lrev1ous accident
injuries..
flee reported. Henry DeLancey, ~. of 10797 Los
A woman and a r<>ung girl suffered Jardines, Fountain \'alley. died at Foun-
major inju rie§ in the crash, but high"·ay toln Valley Community 11os pital Satur-
patrolmen this morning said iden-day. He was injured Dec. i.3 while riding
tlfication of the tv•o was not certain. his bicycle along Edinger Avenue. east of
They said the woman v.·as believed to Brookhurst Street in Fountain Valley.
be Evon A. Grayson. age unknown. of Everett Fowler. 84. of 3929 W. 5th SL.
Lm Angeles. The baby was identified Santa Ana. died Sunday at Palm Harbor
only as "Baby Jane." Both -are in serious Hospital of injuries received Dec. 19 in
condition al San Clemente General r:a rden Grove, He was a passenger in a
Hospital. car whil'h veered off Har bor Boulevard
Officers at the scene established a ten"-' just south of Garden Gr'ove Boulevard
-tatIVe-ldellUflcfrtlon oithe deaa-man by -=--and struck a parking lot sign.
Top Liberal on State
Supreme Court Dies
BERK EL. . 1-Jl'.
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the state's fa ir housing~laws. had v.·on
rfea rly a 2-1 majority in the 1964 election.
Peters said the me asure den ied to
blacks seeking housing the equal pro-
tection guaranteed by the 14th Amend ·
menl to the U.S. Constitution. The
decision was upheld by the U.S. Supreme
Court by its refusal to hear an appeal or
the case.
The May, 1971 court decision outlawing
the han against female bartenders was
cti lled "the most advanced opinion to
date on women 's rights," hy 1-ferma Kay ,
a female professor of family law at L.he uc B<rutey.
Loretta Dobbin
Services Held
)
Pentagon's
De11ials
Reversed
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon
acknowledged today that.,a North Viet·
namese hospital and an airport normally
used by civilian. planes nea r Ha noi ap-
parently suffered "some limited ac-
cidental damage" during intensive U.S.
bombing raids.
But Jerry W. Fricdheim. the Pen-
tagon's top spokesman. suggested that
the damage could have been caused
either by U.S. bombs or by Nqrth Viet-
namese antiaircraft explosives,
Nonetheless, Frledheim's acknowledg·
ment was at least a partial reversal of
his denials last week that U.S. bombs
struck a North Vietnamese hospital.
Those claims had been made by North
Vietnam.
"It appears that some limited .ac-
cidental damage has occurred to some
fa cilities at Gia Lam airport and at a
hospital the enemy rails Bae 1'.1ai,"
Friedheim said in a statement read at a
news briefing.
"Tilc exact extent of this damage is
uncertain. as is its cause.
"Our infor1nation does not sq uare '"ith
Haooi's propaganda claims of massive
destruction at these siles."
Fried.helm restated what he said 1s
U.S. policy to target only military ob-
jectives in North Vietnam.
However , he said, "We know , and have
said many times, that from lime to time
accidental damage to other than military
targets occur, someUmes involving
United Statp ordnance or aircraft and
sometimes involving North Vietnamese
ordnance or aircraft."
He expressed regret C<Jncemlng "any
such accidental damage from whatever
source."
Friedheim said the Bae h1al hospital
and the Gia La m airfield 'A'Cre struck
'during U.S. bombing attacks against
mili1ary targets "'•thin several hundrt'd
ya rds of them .
··These two sites were in close prox·
imity to military targets," he said. "We
have no knowledge of "''hat caused the
damage. It0 could have ~neither side.''
He said the Bae Mai military complex
co mprises an airport. storage and
v.·arehouse facilities. and a petroleum
products depot .
He indicated that the Gia Lam railroad
yards were the objectives o( bombs
tA·hich struck the airport used by Soviet
and otht'r civilian air transports.
lf owever, he said some MIG jet fighters
were hit at Gia Lam. along wilh the con-
·(See 80~1BJNG, J>age %1
U.S. RESUMES
VIET BOMBING
SAIGON CAP) -U.S. bombers at·
tacked the Southern Panhandle of North
Vietnam today, breaking a 36-hour stop
in the air strikes for the New Year·s holi-
day.
The t '.S. C.Ommand an nounced that the
bombing halt remained In effect in North
Vietnam above the 20th parallel. an are.a
that includes the major cities of ~lanoi
and Ha iphong.
. For reasons of security, the command
said no other details of the strikes would
be made available.
Orange Coast
Weather
Some increased cloudiness oo
WL'<fnesday. accord Ing to the
""Tatherlady. with slightly cooler
temperatures. Highs of 57 are ex-
pected at the beachet. rising to fi7
Inland. Lows in the upper 305 to
low 4Cls with local fn>IL
JNSmE TODAY
Prt1ide-nt Nizcni showed up
hrighl and early on New Yea r's
Day at rn, Oval Offlct fn Wash·
htgton, D.C. t urning t>tt door·
k n ob, ht discovered hfmaet/
rocktd out of hu oton of/Ice .
See story an Pagt 4.
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% DAIL V PILOT SC 1""414y, ......., 2, l97J
Technical Talks •
U .8., N. Viets
1 Hunting~n
Fire Kills •
Resume Meeting Dairyman
PARIS (AP) -U.S. and North Viet·
namese technical experts sat down
together today for the first time since
Dec. Z3 to work ou t details of an cventu·
al Victne1mese cease-fi re.
The techn ical !JlL'Ctlngs had been
suspended because of North Vietnamese
protesla: over American bomblng of .tbe
north. Tbeir resumption marked the first
step in resumpt ion of the suspended full·
scale secret negotiations, due to begin
again next P.·londny. after a three.\.\·eck
hiatus.
Peace Talks '
Spur Early
Stock Prices
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market
prices spurted ahead in the first half.
hour's trading today.
The Dow Jones average ar · 30 in·
dwitrlals at II a.m. PST was up 10.16 to
1030.18.
Advances topped declines on the New
E'York Stock Exchange by nearly 5 to 1.
"The market is responding to the news
that biib-level peace lal.ks are to be
resumed next week in Paris," said
NewtoD Zinger, analyst with E. F. Hutton
Co. Inc.
Ahbougb ear1y year reinvestment de-
mand was al5o a factor, be said, the up-
turn was primarily due to the peace
news.
Gtneral Investor optimism for 1913's
economic prospects gave the market an
underlying posllive tone, broken added.
Autos, which have been reporting
hi1her sales. were up, with General
Motors ahead J l{, to 82~ and Chrysler up * to 41%. Blu~hips were active and strong, as
American Telephone tack«! on % to 53%
and General Electric rose I~ to 74%.
On the American Stock Exchange,
Champion Home Builders wu active and
up~ to 14%.
1be Big Board index at 9 a.m. PST was
'5.05, up 0.57, while the American Stock
Exchange price-cbange index stood at
2U31 up 0.17.
Plagued Miami
Airport Takes
On Third Crisis
MIAMI (UPI) -A chartered am·
phlblous plane with 17 p<l'!ODS aboard
made a belly landing in a shower of
sparkl at Miami International Airport to-
day aner developing l•ndlng gear trou-ble. --..---
'I1lt Federal Aviation Administration
said none of the 15 passengers and two
crewmen wu injured. lt was the thlrd
aJrllner incident here in less thao a
month.
A spokesman Jor Chalk's Airlines said
the plane, a Grumman Mallard, was en
route from Bimini Island In the Bahamas
to the company's Biscayne bayslde
operaUori on nearby Wilson Island. But ·
it wu diverted to Miami when the
malfunction was discovered.
''The plane had landing gear trouble
and the pi lot knew it before he landed."
an airport tower spokesman said. "He
r~uested an emergency landing and we
had emergency equipment a:tanding by."
The tower said the plane skidded along
the runway for nearly 1,000 feet in a
shower of spark! before coming to a safe
stop.
The spokesman said there was no fire
and the runway was not roamed.
DAILY PILOT
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Nguyen Co Thach, North Viclnnmesc
deputy foreign rn i n i s t e r . nnd
William Sullivan. deputy a.ssistunt
secretary of state for Southeast Asaln <if·
fairs. headed the two delegations. They
met at a villa in suburban Cholsy-Le--Roi.
near the headquarters of tho North Viet·
namese delegation to the /is peace
talks.
Tbe technical meetings are. an offshoot
of the top-level peace negotiations lrd by
l~cnry A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho, a
member of the llanoi Politiburo.
President Georges Pompidou said
"real precise di fficulties , hard to
overcome'' remain to be faced in the
negotiations. "-
But the French presidtnt added that he
h~,>ed this time the talks will succeed.
DAILY PILOT Slflt f'tllto
The body of a 63-year-old Huntington
Beach dalrf worku was found Monday
morning in tbe ruins of a one bedroom
house which was gutted by a flrt late
New Year's Eve.
Huntingtoll Beach Fire Mar1hal Jim
Garspach aald fodaj Cecil •iCurly'' .
Anderson apaprenUy fe.11 asleep in a
chair about 11:30 p.m. SUnday, while
smoking a ciagarette.
1bc house, which was in the back of
Ed's Dair}', 16583 Balsa Chica Road, was
enveloped in flames before it was seen
by a teenage girl who also lives On the
dairy property.
The fire department Will called im-
mediately. Huntington Be.a.ch Police Of.
ficer Richard Cooper also spotted the
blaze while on patrol. .,, Sp ea kin g to representatives of
journalists' assoc iations greetidti him for
the new year, Pompidou said: "The
simple fact that negotiations resume is
very important."
M the While House linked the U.S
bombirig policy to peace negotiations,
President Nixon awaited today the return
of Henry Kissi nger for consultations
before the Paris negotiations resume
next Monday.
HARBOR PATROLMEN SCRAMBLE AFTER YACHTS, OOCK BLOWN FREE BY HIGH WINDS
Sect1on of Dock, With 801ts, Flo1t1 Down 8 1l l1le Channel, Snags in Offshore Moorings
Cooper was told that Anderson might
be in the -house and tried to enter t~e
burni ng building but was blocked by in-
tense heat and smoke.
The fire spread to two house trailers
and a bus by the time the fire depart·
merrt ar,rived two minutes after notlfica.
lion.
Nixon 's assistant for National Security
AUairs had been vacationing at Palm
Springs, and a White House spokesman
said be is to return to Wasbjngton late
this afternoon.
The spokesman, deputy press secretary
Gerald L. Warren, said Nixon and Kiss-
inger would begin late today a series or
meetings to prepare the U.S. stance
when Kissinger's talks with North Viet·
nam's le Due Tho reopen.
Raging Winds.Blow Away
Section of Newport Docl{
Marine's Slaying
Still a Mys tery
Seal Beach police have not yet solved
the mystery surrounding t_~e apparent .
slaying of a Cam p Pendleton Marine,
whose body was found on a freeway off-
ramp last Tuesday.
The two other dwellings were unoc-
cupied at the time of the Ure, acrording
to Gerspach. •
Firemen battled the flames £or about
15 minutes before the firt W8! under con-
trol, preventing It from spreading to hay
stacks and other buildings on the pro~
erty.
Fire officials estimated damage to the
dairy to be about $5,000.
Tte White House announced Saturday
the scheduled resumption of the Paris
talks after Nixon baited massive born)>.
ing of North Vietnam above the 20th
parallel. The bombing had been resumed
Dec. 18 after a two-month !llspension.
Press Secretary Ronald L. Zlegle·r said
the object was to thwart a Communist
b1..ild-up. · ·
Today. responding to newsmen's ques-
tions. Warren tied the bombing policy
dir· ~Uy to negotiations.
"If you look. you "'ill find that ~·hen
serious negoti ations were P.nlercd into
there was a discontinuation of bombing
above the 20th parallel." he ~id in
reference to the bombing ' suspension
which ended Dec. 18.
\Varren referred also to his statement
on Saturday that the current bombing
suspension "would remain in ·effect as
long as serious negotiations ~·ere under
·way."
From Page 1
BOMBING. ••
trol tower.
Friedheim said information that
damage had been inOicted on the hospital
came to h.im after his denial Dec. 'l1 and
bis reiteration of the denial Dec. 29.
He declined to say how this later in·
formation was obt..ained, although he in-
dicated it came from lJ.S. aerial recon-
naissance photograpl)y.
A number or American peace activisls
visiting in Hanoi during the intensive
U.S. bombings starting Dec. 18 have sup-
ported the Hanoi government's claims or
severe damage to the city, including
civilian structures.
Friedheim said, under questioning, that
to his knowledge none of these U.S.
citizens had been interviewed by U .. S. of-
ficials to get their stories first-hand .
From Page 'l
TRUMAN ...
23. 1961. Under the terms of the will
Truman 's inscription will read: ·
"Harry S. ("'ith period) Truman
Born J\1ay S. 1884
Lamar. J\·fi ssouri
J\1arried June 28. 1919
Daughter Born February 17. 1924
County Judge Eastern District
Jackson County
January I. 1925
Powerful winds Monday tore loose a
huge section of dock from Bayside
Marina in Newport Harbor ahd sent it
and 20 boats drifting dOwn the Balboa
Island Channel.
"By the time we got to the scene, the
entire ~foot pie..:e had broken away
from the bulkhead and drifted into mid·
channel,"· said Orange County Harbor
Patrol Sgt. Ray Graham.
•·tt lodged in the offshore moorings
about JOO feet down-channel from its
regular spot at Bayside t.1rina." he sairl.
Graham said four harbor patrol vessels
and a number of heavy commercial
salvage barges were called into action
and a number of Balboa Island residen1s
rowed out to the drifting dock to lend a
hand.
'·One by one \\'e moved each of the
boats lit'.'d ) to 1he doc k to other an·
chorages," Graham said . "We also ~
so me oJ the boat anchors to try to
stabilize the dock." ·
"One by one we moved each or the
morning threatened to break up the
Graham said the SO.mile-per-hour
winds whistling down the channel that
docks even more and gend the wreakage
through the moorings onto Balboa Island.
''But finally the winij died down a bit
and once we got the boats moved it
stayed pretty stable," he said.
Graham said none of the boats attached
to the dock , which Included power and
sailboats ranging from 20 to 45 feet long.
v.·as badly damaged nor were any of the
moored boats that were struck by the
dock.
"\Ve "'Otked for more than live hours
trying to secure lhe .doclt_and boats."
Graham said. "I can ·t sa:Y enough for the
great help we got from hard·working
citizens."
Graham said he could not estimate the
amount of damage to the docks but did
say it was miraculous more d3.ma ge
\Ii' a Sn 't done to the boats.
"I would say the value of those boats
v.•as well into the hundreds of thousands
dollarS," be said.
Graham sa id the problems or rescuing
_ tbe boats and securing the floating dock
were compounded when the wlnd5'
threatened to break off more sections of
the dock still attached to the bulkhead.
"But the boat owners and people
onshore used their own boat anchors and
ropes to tie the docks firmly ," he said.
"Otherv.·ise we would have bad real
problems."
Graham said the piece of dock was still
lodged among the m09rings this morning
Prom Page 1
RESCUE. • • Presiding Judge Jackson County
January I, 1927 -January I. 1935
United· States Senator. ?\1issou ri l e: fr: '. I f(CL
January J, 193S-January 12, 1945 "Two of our three tents collapsed. The
Vice-President, United States January wind and snow caved in the tents . All six
20, to April 12. 1945 of us got in one tent. There were three
President. 'United States April 12, sleeping bags ror six people so we
1945-.January 20. 1953 couldn't zip them up properly .''
A silnilar, but· shorter, inscription is On ~tonday morning, he said . Miller
provided for Bcss 's grave. and Miss Clay were unable to walk,.and
Basically, the personal estate of the alt the gear wa s frozen.
former Presiden t is divided equally "We left lhem four to fi ve days food .
betv.·ee n his v.·1dov.· and his daughter. three sleeping bags and the ripped-up
~tar~aret Trurnan Daniel. But there are tent that they could close "'ith only t~·o
others remC'n1bered. inside it. Then we biked out to get help."
A pint ur Jhe Truman's land in Snow and ice stonns choked a large
C.rand\'1ew, J\1o .. where Truman wa!'I portion or the western hair of the nation
raised. "'as gi ven to the Grandview today, prompting authorilles in some
Lodge 618 nr lhc ~t11sons. to which areas to close highways aQd streets.
Tn1man belonJ!:ed. The ~1inler storm dumped an nverage
A !rust fund of an undctennlned of fi\•e inches of snow on a large portion
amount wa!i ~t :t~ide to give Bess of New Mexico. Silver City reported six
Truman An income for hfe. inches, Berning, five and Tucumcari.
Truman a·il!l'd $1.000 to e:ich of his fo'ur.
eight nephews and niN eS, iocluding four Bi11bee , Ariz.. received six lnChes of
nt>phews and fine nie<'e of the Truman's snow and Sien-a Vist11·Aril., live. inches.
and one nephew 11nd two nlccts of Bess's Cold wave warnings have been posted
side of the family. for parU of Montana and Norlh Dakota
A total of 15 great·nlec!f:s 1tnd nephews while cold wave w.atcbea were ln effect
were given SSOO. but o 16th, John Ross for parts of South Dakofa and Wyoming.
Truman, received only SS. John IWlt is A Jnteratate 80. a major east-west route
member of F. Let Bailey's law firm and across southern Wyoming, .was cloM!d for
waa • <1<1111,. lltorn<y In the trial or the fifth stra1ght day-11• 1 JOO.mt!•
Capt. Ernest Med ina. strelch because blowln1 anow cut vlsl~Ul·
ROie Co.1"11· Trulhan'1 long-time ty. Traffic was switched to &lower
ptnOnll JeCl'tLlr)' Since his Whlte House alternate routes. ,..,... ..., l!Vtll 11.llllO. , Wlntor storm wat.cheS.llere lsNtd for
that •ai tlO '"mi11tb1lftlde "'01-... llthmrl'~ portloM
Tnanan'11Jtrr. Mary Jane, In the will. of Nevada and Utah .
but commerical crews were consulting
with the Irvine Company. which owns the
dock, to rind the best way to salvage it.
Graham said the only other wind-
related incident occurr~ just before the
dock brokt-loose when two 4S.foot
saUboats were reported stranded six
miles oil Newport Pier.
Sgt. John Aver)1 said this morning
police still do not know why the Marine,
Ed t.toore, 20. of Kentucky, was killed or
OA·here he was killed .
Anderson ·had worked for the dairy,
which is owned by the Gonsalves family,
for 14 years. Many of the emploYes there
lived on the property in sma11 houses
similar to Anderson's.
He is survived by a brother Gar~, of
Huntington Beach, and a son and
daughter believed to be In Arkansas.
Funer~I arrangements are pending.
·Our First Clearance Sale in 3 Years • • •
•""' ~rk• S11t ,,1c:, ... Prkt 5111 llriC-9 ,., 1411, Yo. ,., Ml· ycl. ,.,. Joll. Yo. ,,. 14, yd... l111t111tO ........ lflllllltd Celor 1n1l1llltd ~-ytil. httlllt.I ""' NYLON SHAGS NYLON SCULPTURED
7.95 JO S.50 Orang• 6.95 22 1\ 4.95 Gold
8.95 JO 5.95 Olive 7.95 62 5.95 Blua & gr•en
7.95 H I\ 5.95 Green tone1 7.95 33 5.95 Beiga
7.9~ 25 6.50 Olive & Gold 7.95 471\ 5.95 Gold
8,95 5~1/1 5.95 Red & Black 8.50 33 . 5.95 Gray-graan
7.95 27 1/) 5.95 Burnished Gold 8.95 29 6.SO Roy•I blua
8.50 28 6.50 Yellow beige ..
7.95 91 1/l 6.50 OJi.,e-gold NYLON COMMERCIAL 7.95 271/J 6.50 Green lwead
8.95 29 1/1 6.95 Beige tweed 8.95 17 1\ 5.95 Gold twead 8.95 107 6.95 Red, White, Blua 7.95 25 1/1 5.95 Candy-strip• 8.95 26 1\ 6.95 Beige tweed 8.95 ]]l/l 6.50 Blue graan twa•d 9.95 52 6.95 Medium green 8.95 2J 6.50 Gra•n twead 10.95 40 7.50 Olive tweed 8.95 77 1/1 6.50 Graan twaad 8.95 49 7.50 Green tweed 9.95 28 1/J 7.SO Burni1h1d goJd twead 9.50 59 1/J 7.50 Gold 9.95 J8 7.50 Baig• & .brown tw,ad 9.95 281/l 7.50 Yetlow Gold
10.95 44 7.50 Green tweed ACRYLIC 9.95 71 7.50 Yellow & Whit a COMMERCIAL
9.50 70 1\ 7.95 Ore nge fweed I 1.95 62 5.95 9.95 JO II 7.95 Burn ishe d gold Blue & •m•r1ld
11.95 45 5.95 Pink & orang• 10.95 59 7.95 Brown & Black
10.95 24 7.95 Green tweed
9.50 50 1\ 7.95 Green & Olive ACRYLIC PLUSH
10.95 28 7.95 Blue & Green I l .95 43 \\ 8.95 Gold
PLUSH SHAGS .
ACRYLIC AXMINISTER FLORAL 12.95 I 09 1/i 7.95 Tomato Orang•
I 0.95 44 7.95 Beige +ones ll.9 5 47 9.95 Blu•, graan, aqua on
I 0.95 2J \\ 8.SO Beige tweed beiga background
10.95 168 8.95 l ight grey-green
I 1.50 2~ 1/1 8.95 Oliv• tones KODEL PLUSH 10.95 l I 8.95 Apple green
10.95 5 l l/J 8.95 Gold 10.95 26\'i S.95 U9ht gold
I I .95 <41 1/) 8.95 Green 10.95 24 6.50 Golden baiga
I 2.95 25 9.50 Green tweed 10.95 '40 */J "6.95 Gold I 1,95 271/1 9.50 Burnf 9range
11.95 27 9.5o· · Gr4!e WOOL COMMERCIAL I 1.95 23 1/J 9.50 Me ium blue
11 .95 38 1/J 9.50 T effy 14.50 12.95 24 \\ 9.95 Gold & Green 35 1/, 5.95 Rad & graan twa•d
I 2.95 45 9.95 l ight cu stom blue 14.50 33 5.95 Rod I gold !wood IJ.50 28 9.95 Green & Wh itt 14.50 J l II 9.95 Ro se WOOL PLUSH I J.95 22 1\ 10.95 Green, gold, & beiga 14~0 31 ¥1 11 .95 Beig1 & Grean 16.95 24 6.95 Bo)!o
All ptic•1 are in1 lallad and includes 44 or. sponga rubb•r padding.
Dozens of remnants a~so priced for clearance
DRAPERIES-162 S~TS OF UAOY·MAOI IN ASSORTIO SIUS ... $6,50 ,. $17,SO
Everything subject to prior salt.
AI~DEN'S
CARPET.S e..DRAPES . _,_ .
1 •6l ~entia Ave.
•• Cp~TA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs.. 9 lo 5:30 ~FRI., 9 to 9-SAT, 9:30 to 5
I
(
• I
•
I
I
llJ DAlLY PILOT SC T111!Sda7 J111tU<t'l 2 lt7J
Pe1•plexi1a9 S11h,iect • COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST OVER THE COUNTER
Productivity Set .... ...
,,..,-llMIO Mltlt lAJW LIU ( ... -... , a llMllJ Ml• i.-L1al CN -... ..... tllilll ... ltw Litt, ...
\
AmJ .... , 10 .!i I). fl.I• &)11 • mE DI l'O l ~ "" St • .,oo.n t+ )!) JO 11,. ' , .... ,_ .. ,: L M ollr1 1" ~ ~ ~I .. ... :~s:J ,~n ru~1"'·~"?-~:~"·'f!H 2111 ,~\.ltt1 ·, rr.!if1ll J-"lf: 11!.l;,·;l;~=::;:f'l U . ~~i •.
T-. CM.lltlt!OM "Ct/IT 14 .. t, lOX'tth J:1 U lllcll•Yl! '"l '"""'f:•rll S»t .. !lo~l.. :0.t-• mwf J:i$ J 11 ~' ~t:•i: !tyie~ 1"10 I'• t ,.\o~rDIJ"-.... ,
Foi· 1973 'Tl1eme'
Ml!IDlllG.,.,ltlt~DeTIMlr~"1W'ol l.Nw\Ct•) M 11.IV•I !li"' ......... f1tolJ11M ~ of l •O!'!'!OPf~ I ~\' \1-1 A (g111 1J •1111110'\•\I • IJC.0-1/JIO ft Un'• IOtWIJAUQCl~ol ''"'s ri'L~ lrl\MI (oai l''•l>"i.llttoecl • ~ IA"'·•r1111 l)t t \t 1•1·~--wlii~• "I • .... Mlnt(•O JI\• n • rltki1F..ip' I ' ·11 ~I/In • I ~~! ltl'rl 1YJ n. -.t """T6T v.1 ltt, .. .,, t -\t r;., 1 n I' " t\~ • no11t1 ~ 1 14:111•· .• ''-'·~or ro 1~ 10 l '• ~··~1 • .,. 111<1• •ftll 1 .. , wr:' SC •• ~lltkl n ~\~ ·-(4. f ~a All'l'N•' •o I )1 l'l'\1 lfu '112 ~ • WI ,.. • • • • llAI~ I po.i; '-lO I ~ >011,. '" • !CO l,, ,. I so. " • ...
ouotto ~ °""..,.. •Oii J . to \'!Matft Frt... i:i!R.0-11'111 ·~il'i\"'Wtr11• In '1!1 16W. l!J6 W1 ~I • ameYI" ~I I I AOI 6t.lll" ~l ~~ IB!1 •i1•11• rnot 11 5' 1• JOh "' •1 • <_1., -.11r1 oo .. ..i u.... •'I M•ul llMI l~ Ii • siov-"' i'oWlt 1>1 1 1 (lh -~ ~ j _44 tt 1 -.. ~ • .. ""''' 1 a u IO'l "' .i o&> •-11 rotMtr IO lo ti ,, .. }) : , [€ OI,.., .. of Ifft .lilt I .. ~mcll. 6' •1 lief' W 1 3 Allllllllll ..I. t I\, 1 loot \1 wOU n ~ • illl ~ • t t. n"T ~ J 1 I iS, U l)\,• lo l(,_r I XI l• 9' 11\\ • ,
By JOHN CUNNIPI'
AP BVSIN~'SS ANALYST
NEl\1 YORK -In Uie years
1"6 to 1970 the average hours
worked per emplnye declined
bv about one-hnlf percent a
year yet \be outpul of
workers rose 2 5 pereent a
year JA?s.s work more output
A$ a result of th1s greater
productkm the standard of
llvtng rose ln the same pt?riod
by about 2 percent a }Car And
the nse would have been
greater except Uuu employers
and empioyees opted for m ore
leisure time
0£SPITE TlllS evidence
~ho\\l ng producU\lty as the
kt>) •o the malt!rlnll) fuller
hfr R g1e:it deal of m1sw1
d('r!tnnding extSl!'. Son1e peo
11le ha\IO tven 1n\ertcd the
m eaning The\ lh1nk 1! Ill<' ins
more \\ork for no greater
re\\ard
This might seem surpr1s1ng
until \OU learn that even some
of the experts a r en l as
thoroughly informed as they
would hke t o be Even the
Commerce Department calls
11 one of the economy s most
perplexing subjects
It 1s also one of the most im
portant because not only does
1t contain 1he formula for
modem creature comforts bul
11 is the key 10 maintenance of
the countr) s 1nternat1onal
compet1l1ve position
In the years 1965-1970 the
incr ease 1 n manufacturing
p roduc t1v1tv or output per
) f1'4(f:..:: It Jg; ol).._ ..-i.. y ~ti t~I~ S.m";~' l,1., ~ :=111~ 1ls 11 n1~ IJ~ J1:-f ~: ='1r ~11,I ,, 1 1
,,: O '• I It ~ \1 .::111~ •• r: II ~ ~11~ !I~': Jj'~-1 llv~ In .. ll_LI i.,'.!_ 1' 1 ''
ctonot lllCIOllM El ft Ja·Jt~.Wod:.. q\ ,.,,, •• ,. "' ... lilMf'l11I011t• t 1 1111sw..w•.,t\ :::xlra'''• ~· r nCll)lf ~· !'I'• .-.1s,-<1 l.lotlfdtlO!O l .. )00.:w.. Us 1..-• ... ,.11 ..... 11.uo ~rll I" o 1 ,.~'"In \, ... m~· "~" ""'"'"'•« '° ~ ",,.)CK, ,u •• 1~ -~ ;.oe l l'·'l.' i~'l ,', -~,, , ~ 1,01· tt~ ~ .... •t•,z:-0,1. .. I 1,1 ~ ~· ll ... rate1nJOmeotucrcoun·CIOwll Of (OINl'l ... fOll 11~1.;~Mtfld I" Hr \1 1n!!ln fl'» AMPlnc "'° S.llt•U• .... U•..,...._.11 nAM11...,4s \':' 1f fll .... 11. ,., ,,,.. ,-81 ~ •• "
.illll 11111 00 llOI fOll t.10 •It. ftV. ,,,.vtr r 1.; 1(\11 ~·,,• 'o >,;2 ,_. AIMCoJI ;\& 1• •l 1\-1 I' I lj 'I :::•ri ~ 1 Jr1 'tJl. Bl't lti~'~ ~~ ~ nem II I• 17' 111: jl_\~ 1 la•MI J• n ~ • ll ; )1 • lflCI ID<t"'"! l(l\jlll N1><tt !O, I~ Mkflcl C j ~1 flCI n 'f ... _. CP l1t "' 4l1 j'-'1 , i ~1,IK ! .0 M ti• roi. J'••I I.Alf~ I ff ' l l I ._ lt11tMCll«!a I p-16 0 1•,, M~I In 1l• • ti COll'\O 1~• 11..! AtnftO Cop .; IT 14'>. 11\o I I\ lt.. :;1 3 :1.1 j 11\ ,~ 1o. n t;f ~~ J Jlo , 1, LH•110 2t II 141 t o Io I
STATED ANOTHER 1.1:cf'tfl1~~~riJi :/;~;' Ji ,j 1 lf"~ ~ -T i~..; \; ':': /~ u~; If ~ :~:~11>1 1 3 ' l' ':~: 'f:: '! 1' 1" Oll~I 1'-YJ 11 '~ J ~ ~~ ll ':j 1' ~ 110:1 1 f! \~ lfl f;'! ft:: i;.~ ! Lt::w.0( 7., t ~ 1ll11, f~~ l~-!~ ~:
ed 1\I) llrio.y rl•t1e n on M11111ll1t1~!1,o,1,~,1::f:1D1~ll""''"i1r:••\• M•j •~•41\0 011J-00l ~~ 11 ,...,1~11 11,, nl~ tit lUl•'•ifl.tJt•.• ... -<•IJ J'l lJ o >J •J•-• WhUe the Unit States still Oectnlfwr 79 ,,n !5o '°"' 10111 ti .. MM o... .. • ~. w 1c1 ;ti.lo l 1 ""'" 111 1'tl 1 it , s , s1 ,~ on "<'ii' 5 1t 1 lh' , ~· , 1n1»\t 01 J 1 19 ,. n • u.111ro1,. w ~ l' •, .. , u -k •WAM! !flan .... 11,,1 \1 ~,ll:~o, ,",'i'~t~ml: ll 11A.tl<KOn1:1111) JI01tl0 lt,tt>4 • Of\~N(;JO 10.. \'I -o t11Ma IOO u SlU •'l•d'o .. l-••N IOI' 9lro l~lo 1'Cl 1 I produced more per wor er "{1.1111111 l',,. a c1c:o t...,..... , .. ~ UP n~, J.11.a ""'-Nit HD 1 11 ,, >ti. 19 ,. ,.._ Oll"I'\ ,..,. n 1ff ,1 ,, n MU11 1 JI to .. "'• ., • .. L ... ,_ .., " tt1. 11 •1 11.
nd el I I AF ... Pni1 , ... 11•. 1lr LM n • , ..... MtOul p lt\.. •• fl•" YI ll~· 11!ii AllCor11 ate II I • • • 1+ l>llP pl .; l f . J 'I' J ' • Miii "" "• • I 0 IOI 'tt '~ l .... Pl c '° ' la 1 • 1$ ll ' a rte ved g reater oupu A1tr-fr1 1" I" ,1't,,,.. e.o.1,, • ~MOOr• • ,. c.o ..,A1111 c 11* n , s3 ~1 13 (lolr•, , tl' !'\ 1 .1, -'f.311 11 ••1 •7'• I''' •• 1 Lll'l'lv11 r"° ,4 , 1 ..
lor I'. ln"•stm"•l '·ll••r Allco LNI ' t ~!hi W'1F 1'1• -,{, "'-..," .. B' • ", ~~:w "I l ... _,kl It 16 ·~ lit. 11'11 II'\-"' 11'11 Alt l~ t • I. ,. ,. ~. llMo!ol )I.. , Joi l'... ,.,. It"'"' Id t tl 11. 11 . I ,__ ." =· UV "llr.: lilv 4"" '•"' 0 lfl( 1n.n (\MO ll ,, AM<"i, Jlo RI s•" 1• lj' ... "c ... 160 II t »r• lll-11 30'• ..-.MarrJ J )j 11... '· ." ... ' CP' )I Ito l/lo llo I
foreign COmpelltOt'S mad C Al .-t l!'.o ) t 111) l<l~ko' 114 ltl\ ~:ell r 1~~ 1f ~ ~:~· ri\lo ~! ~ Af/1£0£,1 Ji II 1? n ' n•\ l 't"-~ ~·')!~ 1~ ~, ~": ~ , l\ ~~ 1 63 1J l4 '!JO : r/1, ft ~ ,: t:':°Fo C~ 11 ti :~! flr'! ~!":. id I Allltd T.i 2t•J1,,.Fll JI ~~ ll"'-1l1 M11°bo• I I ~' W• I' Uu-AM< P It I W t.•~• t\0 .. 1.'J CoPJJI 1 Jf.i l)\.o 11:' Rtlr•n 14 t,, 1•o 'f1.-,L••jnt: IM t 1)1, 1 • 1¥'~i @llOrnlOUS stres In COSllll:"lclnGH ........ ~t&..,.lfloot'JO.,H•r:tl•:N 1.! .i! '*111 ,~,,.,.A,.LCo.o lJ 11111.11 ,, ... ,Ol<U (orp 7 10 '• .,....:~•1 "5ki ... 1 .. s2. ltlP o »'•lit \L•v t•••OJI ,·i:::•I •' ,,,_~,. I•• gap •,•.,•, ..,,., », n,. ',!',,., er .~l't 11~,t !'!'','"< 11 14 1 Pt• 1 • I iii ""Lir, 1 0. ~ 20 If llO '"' \ MIC• t>l1 , •1 ' 61!ol. ' -.J t\ n 91 .. 1 IN t: 41, ,,, , , ,_J ... Ltv 11 ""'" lt Sl 2t \ li"i ,.,_._ • u.-. ~ ).,, '\ " E ... l} i11i m• Oro 'I 'I A~ '~ 11 ,. I 7'1 I ~ ~. 111t1t1 2 &M 2 ,. 1•• l' \' , 1, 1 I! l.O 1J )10 »'•XI 1 ~ •• LFf' C.o•Pll •t Jl.o Jo, f'" , II •• for -·'"ns • u" 11 as A<n [•o• M • 6!'o S:rlt.el'I R •1\ ,H, Nat Llbtv ~ w. w EISY 1 "' 1 lo. RA v l n 14 15' lS.. 1sn. JU ... ti Of'\11~1 11 ,1 llJ •»· s SI-.. • TE DI 1 l , t i• •It.. •I ·-• '-IOil7YO J 7(1 10 IU llto '1 '\I+ • "' ,........., .. ""' S:~I ltolt,S:roi l'Oif to tl'NI f>l'9111 11 1 11~1 .,.1-. !• .. .V<e~ 1' \7 11 let 13'111 IJ\4-~\ I IOkl IJ 1oi ll o 1JJ.O ll ;-1Fll.r I, 11QO lllt It•, 1,,.._ 1 1.toey Mehl ~. f' I ,,..,. th"~" that Amen"ans ar" "'"'Fu"' l "11*' 1•-.j\.Hts.c •• 1 11 tr• •11'611,.•c o '° n 7G 2,., m. !1U-\ on110i1 H~ u IOS ·~·<I.I 00 ,~, 11,1p11~ 'ii! ,04 l!" '!•• ,,uttrtve 'l'O• 11 »•, n ._,... " .. Nn Gr• 1 ... n, •1fi;"' 19ft '-NllTCe j••1.I. ornciG•1• lll1 .... rt1l~E11f!l lO {l!ltlo1t It~•·~ Olfptl •)l.tlot )lo...+! n Tltt It t t~o "'l.4 •tL""~L" ~ 1 ll'tlllil\"-+1
''OLll" to hear a Jot about pro-"m T'6fw )t '° 1' n~ 1' ?JU WE:1111 GE 6' • "" l1nt11v I tl~ l'\) 4nr S l t 11 tl !•lo 23'1 , .... 1 "9 Ol'll Sn 00 11 !j 1S l) IS I told 2' :I' lS t 1 II l ,, tltotr pt t , 1 It 0 lt lt "~' .+ ,
... ... ·~Cl 'I '... Aulm •1 ' NJ Ital G ,, ll"!o 10 Rfth ,, , ... '"' llet• "° 10 ., 11 70) II ., °"' Ttl ... ti ))I ?S \ n•• 1lliti .... lar l'O II I 111\ II l,~, ' ICIG MvJ ' 11 '°' ,.., 3t"' )f1Ji T l o ductlv1tv In 1973 espec1ally 1f An........ ) "' Sf'\ lllE•I ,,., • t Nkolfl Ill '°"' 11\o S!•ll Hm llO 1n~ A•l•11• 0 '' " 11• l. lU>~ • COll!rl 01t1 II l.J •1 • ti •• I ... 1 '"""'" .. ll " f' ., ' l?l t "L1!5Mv 1 1100 " tt tt ""~Ill I" ,l , A •H.I• 1Sl1 -~, NJ9/M!ft ... '8 • ""'" Sll(l .. '" I••• '"' •• 1 .... Ill•~ 27 1Dl4 I • 111. !Po-\\ c ... Dtpt "' 1•n M • )lo )t \-t I ~ •,.!K ..., 11 .. ~ ,,...{ ... L fly f U n ~ 1'f) " ) 111\ ,.... -lhe Ad\ ertis1ng Council goes A•ct Eou .,i, 'I cl Mt<! I , '" Nlth ... II .. ' •• sr~ H Alf' '! .. A"J>CO Sii 1 11 U'f ,, • \'1• 141•+ '• COllWO I tO t I )O\oo JO'di lO. -• ,.-Wllf , n 111'1 l I !OS lt!S • • llf'l(N!I I Ot I• 103 ... ' '31\ W\ t'
I Allll M>"1 l••' E I'd 11\Jt NOlncl Co ui,74\')S!e1\N SI n:,:••mpl 110 S ll\.'J 1 ll\1..-l..KoOl<Un 50 I G U•o 1,,11,~ 11 Hl!otr 1)$ 11 fl ;M» J1o loLll\cN1te1 l • too""' toV. 1
throu1h With a contemp ated ""llW Hr 1? T.I ...... (ft 11'• 11\t Northtr ... ,. ' !i:E•rl II SI I 1.. u """'"'' 11.o '''° M " " 1c:-l"<f "' u 211 17 ) :u: .. }I .,_ '"' I lhj 1 .. • '! ., I lonll (OfP 71 (J • .. I . •' I • 'J" II d I Arvld1 to10 rtollSt l•\\l•°'NOCrNG ll olJ"' ull'\CTv l>o1 •rrt11(~ 11 4ltl•V.'-"~~l•'•c-L•OIJl}6 lll't-~1fri.79>,., tllYPll:tll 1 1t>l l ti\$ otlll"Cvpl• lllY\«lh~lo
I 1rml lOfl 3 Clmpagn Ano C~ l.\(o 11\o rnMI P I\~• 11:?'1 Hwt Enci '1 1 •l ' I F<;I j!• ,·.~ 4rmCol 31 J}QO S. ~$\lo S~-,-1 C-1• 11d 11 70 1• 1 It, It ,.,. 0 lni-rt .Ii! * 111a• , la\iot •tllllCY "' 1 '° 10 o ~ -··1 • he ~ .. A.If Gs l! lS .. 16 r•v AIN 11 11" N..., HI(; 11 0 1 •• 5~,,_,. E;I I ., •• \nn•IR I 60 I 11 •ill. }.I.I~ Yo ,_ C-.., .... .,.. -t><I Sin Sol I) t1 :M '' ~ •' ''' '•• ' •-\mOllg t pojeCts io ""' A~~ T•ll IS • hit ·uucJf"' \'• I • No!D Cm 1t XI sv .... r C11 10 211 .. ••o Co '°' 11 1, lt\\o 11 1 II •• "'cao;..r .0. 19 II ;&., iO • 501 • "14 l•~· • 1 t :-,w: l !~ ~ 4 LOI':°,,:/'" 11~ \ • It 1~~ ~. tickl.vlbv thcNation:i.ICom ll1l<1 -'lo s-o-,' ~ ,,,~·NwPnS v ?lo7• suoeFd IJ I' ~~"1"1"11 •~' """ "'41'11.-'ccrxilltenot 4 1&. Ii 1~11 i,e1;ro.il11 Od l1 :it,.,. .,1 ,_1111 11 ..il401•,•l 4-.,,
'-'l J llill4t'l e 11'o 11 ' •II F11~ ~\ ~ • NO~ .. u <"a SI ' St .. T11> p OCI 1~ I ~· •1.tol OU t XI " N J11i 111. ''~-'(OPNSll I,. I SI XI 2'1. ,. \ (: r.Vi' ,,,..., 7l n1 l2 • JI ... ,,~ t • LOMji•"'I 11 1• I JJ~ 11 , :a;; mlSSIOrl On PfodUCli\ lly IS the =;:~~i~ u~ ~;,~~\~,,...eel ~ ]~t. : ,~ l;,."!~~ ~t .l\, I~ T tllY Cro 1 1 ~ IHl>t: l!lr•w II I~ \~l<. ,;, 1{°~ ._ Corn C. J 1 •J 11 ll• JI] 11l I , ~ It 't I 'f 14 111 '5 • .. tS + o LomM l Md I) )t SJ 51 1 52 .._
CO=ll•n" Of a •umm•ry of the 1'11vt"1 11 no,o "l•u1on ?• '" Othr. l.P• Ul{ 11'~ lam1>1~ 1\il 111\'I !! v;:~ .!,; 11 , ll\: 31 ' ]'1'1, : (~°"'111 1,tso I• 1• '9 • 2t,•1 211',l !~ f;_~or J~ 1,1 ',.' , !f,_ !! . ,, LOl\OOll Mio !7 7• ll't tJ IJ:i.t. T't., •••!" "' " '"•kin Co •O , '' lo·ll-"' 'l • 8::' • M >> '' '-r '' 1~1 om SJ ,1 t o • '> ' ...,.., •• ',.-LOM S Incl ·1 !l .O 1''4 tlU '''•·' ~. b ., ..•• • TtYI"' w u • ll•• A11ec ''·"~ 1 I • I ox 6 0 • " •• ,, l lt \ 31 I • INJCNI .. H » u l:!I • 'G ' entlN!SU)CCt A•tlll l:i •< •<>•Mll"w T I ! 1 1• ~ferA ~ •'•TteumP ""11•••" ...... t 11U•U U0 ... 11.. ,.. GI-I ~ll U!ltftt t+, ... t .. ont 1.0" ll·~ .. )flo lt\1 .,,\0 'l ati Mio •• 'I""'" 1"'1u ..,., n. g11<1e Co I] ,, 1ra lll llllcMI ',... t ,,, 2Hi jl ~ 1114~ • CPCln!I I /1 11 91 ]l ]J 11' GI-Un Ml 14 J1 ll ll ' LMOIL! I 4f I! 11' 1)11 11 §"-. Eventhose 1nvOl\ed hkelvB nl'>•mlql•Ml)f'.,,.. :Vll 1vmpB l•19 ftoii•1 j"•ltAuC:1'£lill 't'1JI~' 1•\ Cenec1~a 1 s111 °1 n, o1c1w.it(it 19•1, 24 .-'LIL ollt:t lO 1J01011a11 .1 Akflr 1 ' .. .,,.\ ! '•' O<nall1N 7S l ?i 1 Ttntllln C 1 lf ~ttf'Fl~'5• 193 91 1 •' 7 ICr!!dll ~ I&' lilt ll' jl•-' rloi l !G !10H•l 111:~:t lllp.fJ.IJ /10101 1 10~1! ?--\• 1v1ll agree that the countryn110M1a l' J• ... >0P"" 11 v. !'lll"!(I •~ :t> J l•• co11 tt ,.,11 1 Min :?~ nl/11 TP,11 ~C•oc••1 u 10 11n .i1 1 • • ~ ... u 11 136011 ,,1 31 ;._ .. L1Lp!1~0., 1•1.tt .. .+1'-A"OI~ 1'11(1 ,. > ""., o I > 0~1 St.111 • 1 11,.11'1 llr 11*• 11 • .... Acfl tDI '"o lllllO S' SJ , 1-4 >, CrOl'nn k to ti ,.. 11 • II ' 11 ~ )~ If I 211, 11 .. 11' LIL DIE 'l,I tl'° 59 o SI\ l' should ha\ e been COnC'erned 11 ~Mo 1 '' t" "v~ c ' '-11 •Ort ,.,.,,. 11 • 1, • T~''"' " J • • "'Re 01 11 s! 51 ~, 31 ~ '•I' ou1tH !:I ;1 17 11 16"• l' f • w d 11t ,, , 79 1"• 1 t. .\l ,~ 1 ~ Lor11 Co• 111o1 ,.. s ,,,. r ~
nlu"h earl•er but unt •I "''~"""' 1~ 1~• •v•t•r r :!'>' )'!~O•mgr.t 1?.U .. T~,mo 4' S1 A!IAc~ll,,, 1J1 131 137 C•()'.vn(n<~!! 1tl71 o1to '~ ''l"'IWlttl l~W!~:»l.')~I L1L•m1E,l?6 lJ0 .;•1 &:111 1+ " fl "'"'° 1"' '" ,,.,,,, ~v• '\ , l'lfltr T P ii 11 ~ l rt1ny :..11•1 l! Atlea Con 91 111 1 \ 71, 2 • l(rWl'l ll 1 'l'O t 1'1 1' 1' • r> ~ • ran y .01' OU l!~+ 10 "1PtcCo wl •11 11'• 26 7•,'" It 1 tl t B ..:••" '• ""'"'""' '"~Ov••NA 1,,,,.,.,,oc1c '~ATOl r1711\61,0 91..t . ,cw,.l)f l ?O 10.., f:• ~I rlndUto l 1 t\t'•LouC.a1 1IOJ• 1.>t•,Jel't)6~h rca1vey recen Y I \VaS ft 1, 01 11a '"' .. ..,.. 1n 11 t"\i1ec"" ,'~ 11 t11n 1~ l~ Autom"otr"1s 60 ti>,'° t0 _,,c1s Cp '° u u Jt JP :19 , '> r•ll4lvi+t1 ry ,..,, Jll'o ,~~,v 'c t0, 14 1~ ,,._ tl"-t1\• S>mpJy assumed lhRI the r "I \'1 Sv ,_ 7• J n 8 W II 1 1i., P1t11! &r ' 1\ '> Tl)ro Co l6 )6' .... IO'T'! l..O~ 14 lot I 1 .. I o-CvlHw n JO 70 4 11'. IJ\o IS , ... o r•ntW 1 'I t 1' Ul\ .i] .i]I~ '.. O<P ~ '" t'\l "'6+ loo
...... B ~ JI ]1U !nl s ... cni Paten• ••l u !°"'II Mf •• u.~ A~• (o<P 10 lH 16 lS. n. 1\ Cumrru ... ll ~ St't se . Sf . -\ ••VD' I ft II IC1 14~ ml 7• ..... , LTV Coll A ' 11 II 11 • '• United S tates would rem.lln C1t1M Ml ni ,,. P-.; Lu ... 35 :16 •11 c.01 j• 6 .... ..., c • '° ' 1 l •-le""" Orvq io 1J '"" tl, tlil.• 1• AMQ ,,1a '' 11 l'~ n J111.+ 1.tL~tir•101 o 11 1u ... u l' ., .. .l""
115>11t 1 "!1< n A\17'1P•So8d ~,t TnGa•Pl•l7\~Y<Oiifi'JO n4'••j ·~·~••C""'H Wr! .. 761T.l~l1 31 1j o•IUI'; "!!l!'lf't lll(t.y$50Q;I to1t•11t•1•a1\, !he most prodUC!JVe C1nnon II !n S.. I T' 1' Pl!'I OcOI ii :~• T tmc<> JI ')l~b !~"Pd 70 h~ 161 u , 41 , 1,
1
Curt111Wr A 10 1 41 401, 41 I • '"Ir I 1 t ' 1 l \\+ \ LUC"t>YS JOQ l) t0 lt-\1 II t • •+ l!o 11111•,•~r"r"" •'•P•ulRe ,•,•lrko,Pro•7i• "...,vlifll(,Ocl31 JS (• q ,11, Cu!lerH121111 41q,._.i,a~.+1~!NJ'ft~\ 11!" ~ -'-l~LUCllOwltll !t .Ol'O"lt'"201~-t l'I fin T..,.to 4 o , ·~n...., ~1 , ... o 1 P•ulev P • T kli r I J' )t .-.vMI ll'J 10 '\ U 1 11 U'> , (yd1111s(p l 'A Q '2~o 11 71 •-• IWl'h1 ll 11 ~·.+~ll Lllktm l)<I IJ S.j )l)l\ 7f\li ~ o;, ST RTING FRO'' d far>! s-A • 6 •... """ ~t 1• • l' p.,,,u, ~ f ~' z-Cit.er ',1 ' II>.. AVOtll'd , l! 61 HG 111 lU ',,. ... (ypr..,, M' I 10 31 11 »'• .»'• t lo 'w*",.' u.. • Q '" '"' f L v 0 Corp " » • • j • • l " A groun r~olnt lo '~ '' '-m w11 • ~ ~vt•• C•• '<II.ii '""°"' l'l..A.l!1t01 .itJ ~1 • tl• l}• I -DO-Ji'"' I It 11 '' ... Ll"l.t Tg''" 101 t, tlli 1\ I I k J nd '''" B n 11'.11:\ ~·-l :o,; li •v N Sv " U11 "4<G I • • '' •·-c, " " •1 .., 60'°" ti'•+ ~ •l llll'I /fl 1 1~ ~ ,~ ... ,_, .... -Yo , !• >• >> \'j • e\le SO 10 Spe3 apan 3 ~ i , .. P,n•G'J~W"<'•" !!., 0u> .,."..~,' e'~ .. '"•o••w • ",,-,,, ~ ,,,,c,-,.·_, '' >> ,-,, ''' '''' ''"•-' tft .i. .. t,~O ',', .., ;.r ..., .. ,~ •. D ' ' , <"Ill N "' l 1
•• •I S:cl _ .. "" S ,._ ., ""' "' ,. 11 71 .._.., ·~ " .,. • > 0 ,",, '••' lo'• >,•,,,_ ,, LyllCflS~ 00 12 Jl.._U ~ II I r.+11, Europe budl nev. 1ndustr1al ,.~ VIP~ 1' 7 • '""'"" ' "::." .,_I WI " n ts f~ l • ) u BKl\e l(lcl 1 111 10 ••• 10 • OallCtt I Joe 11 •I :it. ... • lt--1'1 ··-• -.. ~ ..... p ~" " • ~ ' o •• M"M ' :Ill Univ S:d1 II , It 'l•••· Ill M ,, ... lJ w~ JI ... Oert In lOQ 10 ti !<"'• ~\to ~·I • I ~aUlf' wi,. • •I I'\ •'!.. ,... MK.A,, OSl'I It 10 . 10 .......... cconomlC'S out of the de\ as ta .-~•"<" • "' 1• P•• ot , ~ u1 Ptn p 11 231, l•kt•O 1 7'I 11 s1 7tl i ,,. • XJ '1• o •• 11no 1)1 1 ,. .1.o • JO'• ~. 1 '• "'"'" ,51'1 •tt 14{, 1y, 11 , .. 1 MM;Oo11J4 ,1 ,1 , ,, .. ; ... '"""' I • ,, " VO r • :" Pelll C.ro 1J ... I• Vanct Sn I I ... •nll(;•• I '6 11 •l JO . -a JO l~w.o I u I •I 10 . It tt . ~ ' wr~I Okl II ) ta .. 1014 10 • ' Meckt ..lGt 17 St 111· IJ It t'~ lion or \\lorld War II They ·-1 II I If) 11) .... ~ T~ 1 "' P'Vln Inc '~ ...... ~ SPo<• 11. 1~ llllG• DI. 1 1100 •• ~ ti 'IV<l~Cpl I 1100" l1 " -1 utl •1110 ,, lf'J :t' 'St' :-t!'•. Mai;:Mll1" ol II lH 11 ° I,..' \p n ~ • d d I b Id h Id (flrl• 5K I" ..,.. "" Pl11 .. rtn u," V•ll'I ~ti It Hl\ lll~nC1I 1 l.I l '' 11 1 1• 'iO•yllnln 1• 11 111 11 • tt' 11 , ... " f \ 13 11,, h-o : ~ fi' McM of 110 ) 29 , lf14-'• t~e~ 1 c~ee:l~ ~r:th1~ge ~e..-. ~:· 1 u :
1! ·'~,, !:1 ~,~~:: "; :~~· .. ~ !.~ ~ \ ~~..!,':" 2~ ti ~!~!a 1~ ~ ;~ ~: rt ' ~ ' -;:1g::~"L~ 1 ~~~11 1 11"n 11 '1 /6 'n ~.' ... 1 "~ J f~ tt 1;:: 1;:: ,;J! ~ ~Ys:R1H~ 1,', 1il ~\· rti. t'l)!! l;
l•\o P •I <~ n WtlObrn 9 1C ••n<1•P nt 7 1 10 ~ .. l 0.PLpt 1 IO /XI lllol 1114 ICI .o • HR •I ·~ l) hO\ 1lto lt"'tol.I • \lleO SoUlft ~ ) 1 J't \\ ••Ill th• latest technology ,., ... "'1 ,.. ' ""·~ ,. ' Po•t 1,,,,. :r • '"• w Rt&i:1e I • H • •n .. o NV 7 • .... ,. ,, .... 'l0t1" I< x.o 1 1 1 11 • 11 1r, H• lu11s1u 1 04 11 •• n •· '''· n , , ,, Neo..:C11 JJ u 11 '°'' 7G•t 1'»-1, "' r1.,.,. (' n ' 1 1"• "'" '" r 1 ' 1' "" •v In I I~ Wuw!• 7 o I 81n~ Vf !IO U •~ l"I ' " Dttr• 1 Cl 11 ~I ti , "'• u U-1 j U. "O "'" .. MectN~ I 20 Jt U1 11~ JJ • '° h d -..t<""'•'l• '"'"" .,,..,,.. 'Jl o!Gi:>I! 1•,Wt\lltlV I} l\.loll.1n~Tr0f}l1 •i ,• '°'"''•J o i ~OtlP&LllJl~ 1~11 16o l.~l \o U~S"" IU06l ~&IJ 41 '°l 1 11\iJt ' It ~as I IS a vers1tv turn~1 r,.,,..r1 P v 1 .., ,.1 ,• , , , -011 • 17 • 1", ._ , ,, "' .... uo "°" iov, ~ ..._ .., Maliol'v " 11 11 11 XI\\ ll • " .. (A ,, Wl\te '-11 ' ••• ar...-r 1 11 JI 31 O!I Mnt I 10 17 7l • • u111 M 10 '°' 11• ,. ll"'-I'\ MaloneH ..)1 7t 1 3" "'' s.i .. h lo ad"antage that propelled ,.~'"""'" 0ut>hl' ' 1 • Wtot> Re •' • o Aftt 1CR n SJ ' ' • o.rqAi so'' lSO t 1'1 •s•1 ..-11 ull w,., ''' ,_ ,, Mallfllncl ~· , 1 111, 16i , ,.,._" • r n•• Cn " "'°"' l• I , Wt101 Wt l9 ID l\1alc In •0 1J • • '' 1
' Oflt@C lnl'I 1 J' \0 t VI tO 'I !W1 ~ l , 11 ,, 0 .r• ,;; r: Mll"llOW j; 11 lO JI 1 ,.t, j'1>.-t I them even further tnto the r"' ''" P 1" Pu ~ C&o ~1, \ , we dt•n ,\, s • 111.in 01 1 1100 lO JO "' 0t1ror>1 '" • '° n1 n ~ 111.' , G~llon 11111,1 '1 1,, 11, 1,,... ,. M11t Hn ,_,. 11 l'K l6 3S ., ,,~.,.
technological world and helped ~!~v 1 ~.0.1 ;:~ ~~:,, c u ' 1
]' ~:~ ~ ·~..; 1~~ ::;:!~ p~ 1t l; l~!! t!i; U: ~· ~~..': ~~ -~ ~ t: "li ~ . • 1 'H1~1iw 1 D u-H1 N~" ~ ?o~+ '• ~!!'~~Oii ~ ~4 ;1 ~ , tt~ ~l:+1t\
narrow the tremendous lead ~:·! ~.~ ~ i'~ 1 ~:ti. ~~ ,: ~ 1;;: =:~'!c1~~ r, 't~ 1~~ ~ ll ?: •... ~;~:1";.1 ~ 7J ! _::·-61.: u 1-~ .: ~:111bf,.' 1 os ,; 13' 10 ,..0,, 1,1 ~:;1 \\ ~:~t~t 1:: :~ !:! ~~ ~~~~ ~ !t man hour began shpp1ng and
averaged out tc only I 9 per
cent compared with up to 14
percent 1n J apa n and trip.le the
the U led Stat b d bu Jt DAM ~~ 1° ?" Wlll~m I 11 1 1J\o <IA•I~ l 11 " ?fl\ 1" 1 ' 0tS01ol11 j(I I! 11 \6 16 1~ Hlnt~llll 50 50 4' 11 , 17'.4 17\~ M•rCW of 1 1S !.fl ~I u ... nt e5 a I Up II" l o 1'Y/n~P~T 3' ~•11Nrlrwu~79 1!.tl~VI lot' ti~1E1:1k1'°10 )')70 •l'O i 701+\t!tmdCp4(1 1J 11Slfl,1l il4!•>-~Ml'''"~l7IJO 'l~l ,,,~ l'li-., And that lead_.nttnues to"••11\1 1' ; ,~'11.Wl\C.PLT 20 •-21l'"1•1Fo• ~··1 111 ,. t> '' ~0e1en1 •11 1'\0 !I• ''1 11~ut-'l ... ::::loo'""§" .!i1\i:.1"'•ll'•-' i,o.aMl<llMI, 1 ,, 311\ + ~
.. ~ ~ ~., 1~ , s: , ri 1r,i ... ~~~~. "61 :~·~ )t~ ::~t:o ~ ~· ~i ~~ 1 :1 '• !! ; 1 OetE ol TM 110 103 1 101 101 -J ~1 ...:CH I~ 111' 1f•\ 11\l llli + 1 Ni rioiil 11 'II 3• ••U •• 44\\-I\~
gro"smallcr ,...~ 1"1 • ~ ,1 • !~"L~bt • 10 ""'""' AOaU ,,11,,,1 ,,,.,_,~1E,o\"','i>> 1Jo100 no 100 1-1 H1 o1 ,, r,i1" l''·-·~··rn1 1toi.~ 10.•'"''s1.1f\t'•l ' I d the p OO"CtlVlt (I c )7' 30 i 19 ..,, cn1 Ulh lO 7 JI "_, .. r Jfd 11M ' l • ....,,. r P I 11 • 11 • 11 • +-• •fVll 3S i: i: • l Ml 11...c '° 71 4 Sf" " t n SO I ,. Y ~ t lltltoJlt! 50 \! Ill 11 Ill ! ,. 1 0111 F ~ St 11 5 1• I~ I• 'o--o lia•~urfll I 13 i S ''1 l'~ ~ o .... pn Cern 11 '11 1 \Oli + ~
comm1s.s1on 1s now probing 1n .,.1,,..,. , ?G 1 4 ~ ,..,,, r>, Ola 1"11 1 to 11 163 " JJ '> TI•\+ 1• ~··~.Ji 1f 1; '' 10 t • •• M1rr!ot1 co \1 111 11 \ 'U\"I lf\'1 '' PUBLIC NOTIC E ·-SU~EltOll COUllT 011' THE STATE Oil' CALll'OllNIA 11'011
THE COUNTY 0 ' OllANOE
N• A 1Jf71 NOT IC E 011' HEAlllNG OF ~ETIT ION
• 1'011 ~llO•ATE OF Will ANO 1'01 lliTTEltS TESTAMENTAllY
Es l!t ol .ARTHUR 0 BERMUDEZ
1lr.o ~no'/W\ I~ A 0 BERMUDEZ
OPC,lsed NOTICE 15 HEREllV GIVEN "'~I R"CHEL BERMUDEZ h.ti I !rd ~ ,111
1 p.rtlt!on for P•oboo" 1t w It 111<1 1->r t••u&llCI ol L• trr< T'\t'"'~"""Y o ~~1 port\! cner r,1.rence lo Wlllcll ls m&Oe lo• 1 !url'he• oar! cul1r1 •ncl IM! lt>r rim~ ~<Yl l
plat' ol Ma•l"!I 1111 ume tlll~ bfff\ "''
10 Janu.trv 16 1'13 • 9 00 I m 11 l'llf
court oom of Df:Plfl'T'f'll NO l ot ulo:I court 11 100 Clv.c Ctn•er O Iv' Wt ! 111
Ille Cl!y nt ~nil! Ana (~I tQtn ii j
DllleO OtCt"lM• 2' 1'71. Will .... M E ~1 JO~N
cou11tv Cle<'t 1'1.UNKETT & 1'1.Ul'OlllETT
tU on ... SI , 0 lo• Ht Hunlontlot1 ll•Kh Cal I tt•41
Tll 0141 SU-JO:M A!letrnty' lor 1'1111 OM,
Publl1111!1 O 1oqe C<>11! 01 y P lo•
J1nu.trv 2 l ' 191·''----lS96 n \
PUBLIC NOTICE . ,,,.,
SUJIERIOR COUlt T 011' TME
STATE 011' CALlll'ORl'OllA FOR
Mo A-1M11 TME COUNTY 01' ORANGE I
NOTICE 01' MEARING 01' ~ETITION
l'OR ~ROIATE OF Will AND FOR La-TTERS TESTAMENTAR Y
E1llll of HERll H "U~llURN 1!" ~M>Wn 11 HEltllERT H AU~BUll:H 1"'1 11 HERBERT HARR IS AUSllURH
Ol!'ct•l40 HOTICE IS HERE8Y GIVEN 11111
LOUISA P AOUl"R twi I lta ht1tl11 I
pe!Uloll for Pr~ e ot Wiil ino' •~ b~ulMI of Lettf s Tt$11m..,,11 y to lfl~I
pttlllot>er rl'iuence 10 wnkfl I• ml<M! lo I
lurtlltr Pl ll(ula,.. •ncl 1111! Ille I "'' M\d
pl1ct of hff•lllQ Ille 1<1me hes bttn "'I for J•nu.trv It 1'11 11 t Oil • m n tilt' CDllrlr~ of 0~r1meol NO 3 of ,. cl courr •I 100 Civic c..,1,. Orl...e Wes• P
IM cnv ol Sint& ""• Cit rornl• t 0~1e0 OtctmDrr 29 nn
WILLIAM E SI JOHN
cwntv c.11 k l"LUNl(l:TT & JILUNt<ETT '17 014•• Awn111 P O ao• u•
Nlmlkltlln •11ch Cl111 tJ«I Ttl (114) SM JD:IO
Allonie,1 fw petUIOlll• Putillshl!I 0 lnQf C011! Da ly I' o
J&llUI y 1 ;J: 9 lt13 151111
• PUBLIC ~OTICE
• ltMS SUl'ERIOR COURT 011' THE
$TATE 01' CALIFORl't!A 11'0'1;
TME COU NTY OF ORANGE
No A-15Mt NOTIC E 01' MEARING 011' PETITION
FOR l'ROIATE OF Wll.1. AND FOR
LETTERS TE:ITAMENTARY E•ll!t of OOROTHV MARGARET LEE
•l•o kl'IOWI\ "' OOllOTWY LEE incl ii!. OOll:OTHV M LEE ~11$otd NOTICE IS "IEREllV GIVEN tl\a!
1 OOROTHV J (ANEOV 1111 ! IN ,.,....l'i,, ~
p.rtll]Oll lot' Pr-re ol W II Incl !or
n w11C' o• Lent • Tt"1menl1ry to l"r perl!l-r ettrence 10 wl'lltll !• m1cle !or
1urt1111r per! cull" """ 1,..1 "" time I"" pl.Ke of tie1rlng !lie u""' 1115 bnn 1e1
far J111111~1ry 16 191J ~t 9 00 ~ 'Tl " "n couf! oom of ~parlmenr Na l ot 'a a
(0."I 11 1tlO Civic Cenltr Or~ve WtJt 111
Ille City of &ilnla Alla C•t!lo<l'fll
O.ttl'!I Otttmbe 2' ltn W Ll<TAM E 51 JOHN
(GUiii'/ ( l•-Jll.UHl(ITT & ~LUNKITT ,u 011 ... ,. ... _ ~ o llO• 1•' Hllfll(llftM lwc:ll, CllLI tl•q
Ttl rno J».JUI
•'"'"'''' .... ,.1111011W Puttllalle<t Ot•~ Cat\! Cally Pl ot
J1nut•Y 1 l f 1'1J 3SSI 11
l\tl~al• JO<! I) ' 1l 0 1J \ 11 ~ 01•"' ~llm I 11 170 ?1 ?0\1 1n o-tO 1'~:1,;' \ 2• \ tl 1l O+l'lt f•~l'IF 1 II f • U 3A ~ 3,\ \ SAAt h tO some Of !hC' m)Stert('S Of -•llH VI• )'I ]n V.l o 11 'o •< l-"' 01Sllmpl 1 ,_. )l)•o lOAi 30\lo-14 ~·r I "to 11 ~\') 1~0 ._...., ... 11; Mlrfl~ .... I 00 }J 1 1~11 1&\t. 10* .. >II
I S f D • k I d ,,...,1,co1a14 ,,.,. ''•1JJ~ .. ,,01,s,.01 110 1}11>,.11 •11 ,+ 'H:~!ff.~PJ 11~ ~11 Y, ID;"~~-,,,~,, ... ,1,1 • 1llt\•Uli1t +I.\. that characler1st1c \.\C cal 0 t rin n ustry 11.,,,.,16f'e IOtYI •• .. ,_,.glc!l"r.01091 1i.;1r,11 on )+•Ha...:llriJi l• 1,3.1,' 4 ~+\~"'41Cllll 5010 •~l611!~,,J"t ......
,\mer1can knO" hOW wtlh the 'ltn<I! o! l I' 11 71 > 1' ~ \.\ leoatd '°" JI 7641 ' 1 11 47 ' MIVtf Alb 1 10 l I""' 11:: 1 + -' 'l"t.C,,,.,. '1(1 .ot to'I ,.\, S • .sa•o..1.11~ ' .. 'I•" r~ I to lo 1 • l I > IG!ofqo ..0 10 3' ilto 17 t llUo~ • Hf,1tlllt1t 1 d"' I\, i lo MllllOI" 11 1't 1)1 )1 I\ M 'o tll't-"" dd•• I th I I I "•"'"""' 7 1110 1' '\I 3' DIGlo or N 1 J! l1 JI H A ""'llltl lil ~ ll o--1 •n-11• wl I l:\, )'7 ~ 3t¥t-~ ii cu nOIOn a I I IS l\•~rni10 •1>,1• 1 '-EIQlletE<1otlt 7Xl t)•,tf>ttl • J Mlfl'fit lf.~, ~.:: 1._tl~,.,,_F,..11 11~ •t'o1t\'l ll\."I--...
u nderstood it can be better 111-c..,,1 ' 110 St s• 1• t 111 "Oh '° 9 l'1 lP • 10 • 10 • HR:•• 1o111 ," 1 • 14 , 1'""'1 1""' " ,, ,. ,,..~ ,n __ , •• E F . s l '\""""'' ~c ne I , • OHlna_ptA J l,. ?fl .,. I \ Htlll H l I • ... 40\o+ ... "~·· E ,, ... ,. ~·' ,~, '11 ·-apphe<i yes oreign a es lie ~·y Piia II 7•1 ,,.~ n ' ,, • 01!100>( llk;r n • 11 )61, 11 Ht _.. • 17 I I mt-" U•ft~ ·~ ~ , .. , u l '"" 11 n Sii l 10 11 ~ )t 1 '1' 1v, I 01..n.tY!f/ 7' .. Uf 14" 1/1 \ 1..-1 1h Ml'i..,. furl 6.S • ~ p 1 t , '41Y O!o 1 fl) u llt YI>\ ""' "'\'I-lli \Vhat makes one man work 1e Q 1 1r><1 )' ;, 1.0 I• si SJ • o '""•N wi Ill IW\ 1 t ' u1 ,.., J • Htli..1111 ..a iJ u "'"° ... l9"lo. \o ... ,,. ,,.. '' ,~ ' ll\"11 -~"" ~ ''
I lll~tl'-0 lo i i 125 1 0 • 0) 1 U..O I OIU.l()OI 060 16 (J lit~ ti• H --• "1-'f'!'llPr .SO I ff IS• 15 ~1+ 11 ·~"'-l'N 1(1 1~1 • " • l""o ,,.... '
bl than another" 8, Lf ROY l'OP'''---11 r11La" n 1 1~ 16 it , ~. • ... 01...,.s!fcl In n l\o 1, l • Html.., C•• 1 ~ :l'o ~+.,, '"A 1~ •• , ., ., ""'I '"""-11 harder more c realtve y more llll• r Jn .,. 11 3' 11 11~ 1111 ~ , 01.111~ •• 10 JS u f'J .a "' 1 1 Htlm "•rM 1 1 Jlli Jt ~ •+ ~ "~v"' 1 211• 11 11• •1 ~ 11 •t ~~ l'
\Vhat IS the re lationship ~ BllllBl'I! II lJ 10 ll1 ll )} O•Pf'DC>f" n ,, 10 u ~ ,. •• ·-I ::--cw 11 •• )I 1l . n1< 111-o ! ~ ;r ("" I ,.. • "" ..... ""I• -\.I. .. respons1 ~ Co drinks rono"C'd G t JO(' Blo-~HR ,, Ji 1U II 11 11 o-\>IOvMo 111<1 II 1)1 "",. .,., Hrm In ] .... ll 1t., I\, \•• • tf'""d .. 11 ~· 7l ,,\ti""'
UPlflus1n 'i \\rllcr 1\hen:·\cr he 11nnt lu~'\C{'llotit>leBr~\ I •9 t , ,, ,, .. •Dorl'ltMtllA 17 e .. u• ,, H= .. n 1u'ii:"''' u"' I 'url') ..... ~11 •1 1\/f)o l'll 711')'1 l\.l:e<'n Job sa11sfact1on and ll!loena c ao '' on,.. ~. u. r,IOo"'Fa .t.ld IDl to •• '1 'ilJ ' P JO ~~ • ~ 1.i1 Ill "-Id .... ,, "~ ,,, '~'• 1u,_,
h I N~\V \ORK The f said BohtC 1911 ... , n . ll 1 ll I 00<\LuJ I&<:! 11 11) 1c. ~' 10 'Hwfl~cll l2 y. ' .... Ii ..._rl)<ll) -II ,,, )Co:!'! ,~ .... prodUCllVlt) ') \\I a( roes prO SO I l!\o"'ll lnclUI I I • I o 1 ()()Olt>rUY '8 U Il l 21 l J1 't 11 1 • •o Hr.on Hn r J1 U l >o I! > :!\:'+ b 0 r: , .. I ~ 1• Ml II< 411 #fl -
and COn do UnlOns Play' drink industry one of !ht' l'C (Ola no>• ,, 'I 23 800j>.MO '* • ?•1• 11 IOor' CP .n 11 IJ 11 1, • 1, • HM'N ll'ICltn 16 ~ 4 .. ~ • ¥tYr +o " 1• 14 14,.. ,,,,. '' \~ • ~ '>n f ln t.oro1n 11 I l'1 ll 11 ll~o-• Owr Oll~~r 41 9 11 o 16 16 ~ • >loblrt M!! 2' SI ~ n~· jl .,.G"'llDI I 111 It H • ~ • .._ 211 J 1 ~lanane1nent' Cap1tal1 f 1~test "ro 11.1n" bu~ ""~sts r. 1 d 1 IBor<:r w 1 J o " 11 • l6 -D<><••Y 10 1 10 n 11 • 11 HOf'f'fleO' t U }4 1i1•' 1;, lil -,, NcG .., 0 11 ,. ''" ... • ..... 1•
b b ,._ COUlllrteS u Uf f"' S:JI n lio<,.Wn~ •~ ;1 1 .. } • ~ • OowrCo .IJ 19 I SS j.11 , SS 1 lioll Ele<.!11 t , ~ m' ... t t ll rtlQ ..WO It §(N •
throughout lhe free "orld IS l!lo• Eel ' .. 11 99 :19 ll • ]'9 .j. \ 'I Dow c" I Ml 1• 19~ !~I • IOI • "" ' ,, Hof_ I.fins 11 41 : 4fl) J'f' .... tit~;·e lOd 10 1 It\\ lt\I m··· '.
dnn''n•tcd by , ,,, C r the Jast re" )('tlr') \lo(' h3\ e Bo\l(ol I !I 1100 1\1 116 111 •l 0 P F ll'l(p il Sl.o S•o ! • \Holle!~ t 10ll ll, 42,,, ~-1 ~ MC:lt•n &0 , 1 '1 ll O '» I.Ii ~ LEST ANYO~E harbor the
notion that product1,1ty is
raised bv pushing the "orkt r
harder let him know that it
produces the opposite a
lowering The answer lies 1n
properly re!at1n~ man and
capita l to technologv
Fina11ce
Briefs
9 Weyerl11111ser
I OS A'GE"~S
\\ f'\f'rh:1euser Co a gia;it
11n1ber Cfl nglomerate faces a
S500 m1l11on suit for alleged
res traint o( trade accorchng
tc 11n attorney for Caldom1a
Tune Petroleum inc
AJf1 ed Fade~ the attorney
s<1 1d the su it was filed here
r\o" 6 1n U S D1str1cl Court
alleging that the prices of
r a1v-11n1ber 1n Washmgton are
being co nt r olle d by
\\leyer hacuser
9 Collon J,oss
SAN ~t \TEO -The Council
o f Cailfor1a Gro\\er::. says re
rent heavv rains have been a
boon to water storage and
grassJand~ but have caused
sever al losses for cotton
gro~e1 s and many vegetable
producer s
i'\ormallv lhe entire cotton
crolf \\OUid have been hanes
fed 1n early November the
'ounctl said but bet\.\~n
JO 000 and 20 000 acres 1n the
central San Joaquin Valley
still have not been picked
equivalent to about 15 percent
of the crop
" n i can llN "' ~ I• • 11'-t I 11-tt-~, Or•VOC I j(I II 70 'l ~ U• 11 Kofly,W KIO II ' II'• 14'1• "" .. I' Mel.OU!!\ !II l6 ·~ n !"" ! ~
br 'nds expanded our marketing b) 11r1111A r 1 ' •n e . n•; •o,1!-l.o gr•-• 1<0 11 10 •1 .,, ,,, .... li-rk .«Ill 101 l!:i H '!otMc~eu 70 t '° 14l~ .i~. 4 .. ,.. •
Broc1ll'IJ.,oll 19 i.-, St l•.~q ,nof 1 20 •1• "'' ,,,._ ,Honyw 1Cli •06 1 l I ·i~NIMO CO 6(11~ Ii.I 1!• I! 11••..,
A case 111 point is Ro) al franchising into J a pan 3;: ~ 111 ~ 11 19: :: • :: ~~ ~ g~:!:i'" f~~ J1 g~· ;,~ ~t1.+ ~ te';'.!".. 11?: 1 ~ lU , H 1 t M••~• 11~ 11 l1 ~l, 4~1 \ ;., "l' C C I • d b I I Ph d 11•11""'1 Od 11 3'< } U • U)1 Orw\IWCp 1 1 ..o !Stii 1!1-1)0\-'ii HOJ;l'ri1 "" 11 'fl ~' ~ l:t ~'l.-1 Cn<P 1, 1 J • 10 ,,~ 10• ro~n 0 a or1g1na.e r a Austra 13 t ](! 1!1ppints an hr!XI H&I 10 1• " 0 • 4Hlo 4 •+ .. Ovl!1 p , "° 1l '' f] n . n 1-'"'111111" A " fl! r.~ Mel "°" ,, JI 61 If • l'" ' compony in Columbus Ga !OW"f'"llptJ '' ni. 11. 12.!1 Oute o11 1Q 11011 1v.111 111 Hoa! 'Ill ,. ~ 1 "I r• loOll ~. 1\1" 111 .... 110 Austria and ha\ C pu~hcd lfltO roc l GI 17 t 10 V• U~o !!~ ~ Ouk1 DI S 'lO 110 laT\li 101i., 101\J 11 , HOUO~l~ll t.:'I \2 n .•. ~ =~s11. 1S 7l 1 U l!!H~+l• QulsidetheU111te-fS1siteS JIS llrUnGsl 11 7 625 11 ",,. ,.o.0 .. ,llf 1&0 rl00 104Vi10•i,10tv.•v,i!E·· 0 ,', -•,1~1f1.,•>~ nM<l•t-111 '1 1SI 111, ·~ +• Canada e ow" c.,.,, u 11 ll"o 11•-11..-.. \Ill pr 6t. 1 ~ f9 '9 , \o -., l ,....rtalt~ 1'0 n t XI• »~•
known JUSt as RC Colri BrG ouc 11 11 l! JJ l l'• 3J ._, gUlle' 1 .01 OJ 11 16~~ 111o1, /6\0+ ou•F~ ~" 11 ' l~ /;,' M•" IL¥ S 1. Jl'l l2~. )1~11 lq;:~11\ Brn5~ o XI 11 1 1~• n ' 11 •t "' uola11 C.p Jt •I 1•, ll , 'l'! h ~"jl 1• 1t11 1 •Viti MettPI ) 20 10f ""' MV. -t i"" RC 1! the sam e 1n anv FOR"IGN 11rFe1r 1 oe o 1•• 11 . Jt ... ».., 1;-r ou~"' s •Sci n 1Jt l~' 119 , 11 All .. ,~ 1 , .z. Sl\t s v, "'-• Mt11bl n n , 1 ,'," , • ~ 1 THIS ,.., rxoans1nneul'\1~ 74 11 1 4 1n, 36 • J11,t-ouPnP1 4 • "10, ro XJ • ~ '"" Sj•· ~ r;;.-~Mtttt .lil'l!ll ', • .., •• ~ ...
angual!;t' hke our comn" 1tnr is only part of a recent come-ft1><uiv11E :OXi 1 : ~. ~: ll1 •• ouP,, t' 3"1 1 !••· ~~0 5111_ ,, Ho ~ t n 1 :sv, ~l., t!!Z:•.,,. M 0 M tnc u l: iJ, J1~ l,t• ::
Coca Cola explains Prt!SI b k I r R I Cro lvd<I Co '° l ~ • ' 16\o 16 ~= : 8::'." ol 1,i: 11 .~ l1'• ~1'0 I~"' t "'How•tdJ , lJ! ).II.; ». R = I "'.e:'ool 7~ ,. :'!& " • tt " +1
dC'nt \V1Jham C DurkC'e T~~ r!~r~n;r "a~y~Ht SO~~ a::i1;~ 111'..J ff 1&/ ,' r~ • g -I ' 8~"/n~ Jt/ IS 'l'01i': 112! 'n1' + '~'i'1~ 11 ~ ~.~ !£: ~t }: :1i~1113 'fo 12 lll ~ • ~,; n~I~
TRUT.JI TO TELi fe" or
lhe American sort drink com
pan1es ha\ e bothnrcd to fu?:ure
out "h~ !hf'rf' :irP nn foreign
grants 1n lhC' bU'iilfl<'~s e\etl
thoui;h thert! :irp plPnt\ of
strnng n:itional w fl rlnnks
An economist undoubtedlv
~uld $?1Vf' two rl'<isons for the
g lobal rto...-.1""'lt:."f' of .4.'llf'~v·an
sort drink brand'> First the
hu~e size of the ArPer1can
dnme~t1c n1arket \\ h 1 ch
ft11orrd the tle1elop!T'ent of
I 1c; !Xl" r rful comoan1es and
~econd the proh1b1tlon er~ in
the 1920s and earh 1930s
Proh1blt1on halted the legal
sale or beer and wrnes ::nd
caused the soft drink 1ndustrv
to boom while abroad bee,.s
and "'"es continued to hold
first plare
By the time proh1b1! n" "nd
ed 1 he Anler1can soft d r ink
maker s \\ere so far ahead of
those 1n the re~t of the world
there was no ch1tnce for 1hem
to catch up
f Bl.Ill P1 6(1 t I • 1 • I • • ~OY..CD Am )/ 7 1, ~ • Hu~H .., /I ) 9 'f:I tt'I-" Ml<~ Gii 1 11 JO IS lS ._ • \\hat harder than other SO I Bu! ~·o 1 x. 1 1 11 • 1e1 11 • '• -E •-Hun1 Ch ,, 1 1 11 ' 1,.,,• ,,..~ Mien~ luo l t • u • li'• U\• ~ Bulov•W 60 ' )S I~ Ut, \I -1 E.olt P 9j II !0 1'~• U 11 .. I , liulll)rl )Gd 7 21 l7 ' ,. +l\\o Mlc,O<:ll «kl 10 l'l 1 .. , •'•'~ ~ •• , .... "' drink makers two years ago 8un1i 11: 01d 11 :.1 1~ • ' • o • • • E•acoe JOQ t 9'1 1 it , u, t ._ >l u'Kll ''• ,1 70 li• l!.~ ~ Mkl c 11 ,. \) ~1 l' .. • t
h th f d I I 8u11R of • 9 ll lJ ,", -.~ E!M•.en'I ... r I• so. 27 .. n ~ 2n...-1 • "lVdm'll 11d 11 '° I~ 14 ~ IP(f .; lrllkllooU 1 10 • i..-1,,' ',"',,, ~r=: ... i• \\ en e e era govemmen 11ur1 111 1 .o n rn1 ll • J7 • • -. ••' ••" l• 11 '' 11 • 12 n _ ,1 _1 .__ MloMt 1 )lG 11 41 • "'I
I ped h b th f llu I No 1 II t0 .ot 1&•1 41o-1 • 1'1Ulll II) 11 I 11 • ill\ 11, kit"'° JI I 16 1J 20 ~ )j\a 35 _ \ lrl\ldJlon 10 h J) I) t U l U':'f+ '4 sap t e an on e use 0 llu IN of !~ ' • I . I • "'~KOCI I CIS• •9 '101 1 .... l" Ut\o In. ldfff91t 10 1' .. '''"' ,,..., 1,...,:: .. Mlle•LP 11 • J.' •• "'• ~"' 5'~1 •
I mat S as an arl"•c•ol Bur~vc I? 1 ~ l\ l~ l! Ea ~Co I • 11 111 •lloo .AG ~ •-1flof '" \ r 11 ll ll ••111onllr ~ n '° 3&14 2t"1 ~. ,, cvca e u Bu•o~• i..o 50 7ll7l ,J1t. JJ Et"1""' .n lo 10 lt • "'• Jti., a,..1Tov 'I I! 111 11 1004. 11 ... ,, Mi11nMM '6 '' 1•1 160 ~v, M\; " s"cetener 11u1fl Uni• _,•,_1 • "' I• • £:(~<1J11 I•• s1 M .;1 .. "' ... .O"o-, 111c,n111 n i t "2' 1n ... 1111;! 'o MlllllPL 1l6 1 It~ ··"• ,1 ', F.c ~o NC 1• l! IS lt~, Jl'h ~ ' l .. ,."at' l ~ 10 ~r~ SN .I.To l MIUllEO 3' 13 It ~~ ... • he~ri!1 ~ro~;::, ~~~ g:~!1.~ ~E:~~~~ I~ ~l ~: ~: rJ,, -:if'.ltl"c.A:: ~r, ~ tt ~ 1i:: :: :~1
• ;::f;£'i: !ii '' ,f~ ~~ r~ a~ ~ ~,.:...~v ~ l :~ ?I tt:: it . it:-;~
be\erage market and hid 25 !l'ir'F'i,,°'Z'~ 11, '{ j , Ji.. s _._ • 1 D•I• sv• si 1s w . }4 , 56.., Jt, 11 Pw,.,, , 19 1 000 ,sf' " • s~ 1-1• """° Puos 1, u J~. lri.Z }!:: h n M Mf l l I! lO ... l~~ Ir.\ \ ~ '"'•-: IOI 1 • 5 ) !I I lmotr1al (I' !I Jt/1 111, U ... ~ •o Mo&llOl 1IO II ':, lO I JO )0 •'It per'enl Of lt'ii ,,,,., Ill its .·.·,. -~ ,, , ... ' ••• i ''"° ! I I~ I' >'t 'IN ... (p ll'o 11 11' •I.I. •i.i. .... 1, ..... .oMco l 10 n ' ,,,. 12 "'13'l-• ' ,. ,_ .u )!t JS 1-o ~In Nill 3' S t S1 S',-t ll'ltO'l'lt C•P I t\lo 9So ~t..,,Mol'I-01 7, ' D •1
C'\ClamateSS\\('f'!"f'"d n1et ::.".o,,•1,"', 1: 1,~ ',1, rr. ,lt.••· ;1• ~"°II lJ 11 t 101.o J1,,1 l'r(ln lib .n 10" 10~ 1•·~ .... ~Rbl. :: H\4. lr ,....,.:.~ ..,. 15 S l t I.ON 1 I )GJ J :IO t a~ 4 lnOliH<I 10 • " 16, ~ 1,\/i.._ ,._ lrl\ohtl (.ara 20 -lll!' R'I Cola 'n 196' So the •n•• 0.70 • S'I s~t sVJ• 0Eh•&Cp11110 1'lJ•ll' •-.1n<t(;1•••1 1r 1116'41i1\lt t1~ Mo1vocaat •H11 •,·,.Il _U c •11P1c '6d II Ill 110 • ,, i::.,,...EI '· )4 ... '°' ' '•tndM8' Iii 11(1111]\0l&ll.l.1°""' Mon1rd! '° 112 I) n . .. , 1 ,.1 .. rnates ban hurl hsird •,•,•,• ,•, ,•,•,o .11 ,.1• ,',4'• u • 1"~ I EmE1 1>1 '° •• 'I"' ""'' ._.,\ 1•, ndPwL 1 6J n , ,.1, 19 ,. MOfl<>11••"'-14 s• 11 • lJ,: 1 ~ .... '" 61 •1 ._, lem,.,..t.Jr l' ~ 1,1 "1 60 t' 1'• lll<luNlfl "u ll '°"' Je>t ,....... "'Mori•OIA .II) 11 1,,•1 ,,., -<ll sardDurkee •,o,,••,,•,'.,'~,, •,,••,,1n.1\2"'\~ 1 10.,..r~l11 l" I'•• 11.1.1 1•1 .1,.,,R~'Oll17 1•1U 65~«1't-'""Ol'I""' 19016 ~11•,.~,.s'"" ~ n • 11 ... , Emllr1 t 7Qci II 7~ Yo!, 31lo J' I 1 R,. jl..S 4 41\> ... ,l,,.,.._ MClll~ 1 1 ""l " I-" But now Rn,;il rm\1n has 111111 '' 11 n ~ n 'l.1'• ... vt EMI Lt '"' it 10 ••\ 1"t ,1. 11 r::flc..,1 60 16 l ui Zl•i 4.""4 ' Morit k 1 •1 11 101 J7 • u" tt-1-
onl\ 1() ocrccnl of 1t.:: S:ll('S 1n :~JF~P" Jl 10 '1?f rl , t~ . l~J h ~'1,1~~~~111 "son !lo I! \ 2r1• ·: • • 1"1•11d 511 2 !1 61 ~ J) ) I)'-. ~ Motil r I 7' lll ,,3: ~r: ~Is~ u..:: ), aroPL I Sl t l~l 30. ri,. ,.. ~Ir O:>!A 1 I '" ' • ·-i. lnMOtll '"'"' t 0• I "<I ,... ..... ,.,,.,,,v 1 ~ l I lit.. 1 II I ...
)011 Cl?ll'r " he \ P ! '1 u e S troTtc IO U it 7''1 n C "4E~ F "' ; I ' 10 1: ' l:li 1: ' ' 1111 lco ( IG IJ l8 U lo ) 1" >-~ MOO<'I IAc,C \1 ti 101 , 106 101 ,)
< 'f ........... 1.rc 1711 111 ,.,, 110 71'\ .. " E<nPl•t G&I j 1.l li'l 16~ !'"' .. :~~vgtDP1~J t ~1 ~~ ~ .. ~,.:!\ .. =~~~1;1 1 (} 10 • 1'> , .. ,~~;,:: SY.eelenr~h·-,. 1rColJ 110:>&~.,. ~-·El'!Otlhd "°11 11111i...11 '"'"~'nhtll'IY • 16l3'dO ~t1 . MQrMEIP•'ll '"'' l1 •y·1 h d s a Durkee satd •rGn 1 nc1 ,. II. 11\~ 17"'--E:'IQlt llf ,,. 1165 lU 16S 11' llJI In y '°" 11 l6 1' 11'1o It ..._ ~ MO•MSh IS 10 ,, 11 • ll .. 1 ~ ••
C arlO an Ug r 1rl wt "°~ 16 il P,1,1, i~~ i~•t • ,Z ~::~i:ll S: n ~; !~!l S~ ~ ,~w... u ln~i~ ,1..21 l• 1,,3 SU\ .SIU. 11~-~ ~~o1J,i11d 1~0 •~ .f,!:; ri'?\' ~•I 1
!he company 1s 11fepared if at .'!1:f,!',:g ~f 166 i"• .,.1, •t·. 1 Eriulmr ::wo 1 ,1 70 n• 10 11l!rli\1 .to 1 o '9 tt 1o " -i ,.,,_ 11 1 ~11,, , 1 -1\
tenllllS 10 han SRcchartn sue ·~ T°"to'~ • n :·: :~ !t' ._ .~ ~~'1'~ \~ '~ ~'! r. ! 1i"' t ·~ Li,~vorc~a r, ~111 i~ t,.~;~ ~rr.: \ l6 ~\ I~ n . t .... ~'fi1~
C('('d -\\ e \\ f'!l t be hurt l,',.~'!.C,•.P .~.· ,•,o k ~1., ~i.~ ll ~ : ~s~~~ 11~ l~' 1;: 1~ • ~ ~r·= \. l11flt• v I .0 ll 1SI .,ll'U •• .i)I ~ ~Ji.!:., 't ~l l6 1' : p I .. M
'1" In ·~ I •1 • IQ ' ,1 •• ~ EWIU Int JO ' • 10 t• 10 ll"IHOIG "" ?1 \j I I~ 151, ...... MUflfcl pl 40 ,. • 'h~ ' a el•lllOI'' 5 S7 ~l/j S6 . E ' ! 1 JO I • S>. n ,..,,,, 11<1 5 71 (IJ) .... ...,~ \'o I~· • , ~' 2'. '9"o• ••
fl'l(O In 20 11 111 "'' n • 11'•-·~ E:~: ~f i.. ' l j~ • SS • j1! • :· l!ll ll'IOJI• of I I) 11•. u ~ .. ~::!" l 11 " n ni. ~·" • e111e• Ccr" Jl 111 7!1' 11 ... ,. ...... '' E < "'"" ' ' ' 1 lnMlllCI! 40 IJ n6 lit .., 111, ,~ ... • "'"~ ~ lO •• 61 il • t tnHud J S?~ •U ,, ... 11 ~ ,. .... 0 fter n-... 21 1'.l ., I •• 1 .. 11 M/l!ll'ICI 11 t''o 1.U o -tlMur j 1J l"l o 11 ... tlo.
ti'! lltl 1 !i6 10 14 141' 71 1' 'o--' Etll'l'I CP llO I 11 31 ' )l ' ]l\, • I\ ll'llM~lll 1\li U 'l:I :ll 32 ... ll '>-\~ Mvr~ 1 ll 19 'o I~ I t ·~
.Ew Yo.• ov·•' -, ..... _ ~ ••• enllLDI ' ) 1!0 61 61 11 E!l~v10:, 1 IO n """ '6 ""''. '•l111t1 NIU.ti L JI II on ) Z'~1 ) ,,... Mui tj.d I) '° 19'1 11 • ,,., •• " ~ "''~-.. ,. nn PS 110 II )7 II) 11 11 -" .... , ... Xlo II I' ,,,, ,,,,. 11 ••• lnl P111 ,,,, JO 111 l?'.\ •I • 'l '>-•• M....... IOd _,,. .,._ f"!ttl Ol'I !!'It N,.... VO<• Sloe:-E•tll•n"• tnL1£ \ O' 1' 24 )11 fl• '' o--•(Ill 0 ICI 15 <l 71 ~ 20\o 11 1 .. 1•11"1 PH of' rJ(I •l 61 fl Jill 1J 61 60 ~ 6(1 n .~ l\ Sale' Mel nMPw I U 11 71 181• ll"'o 11;.,, E,•1nclc•, !., ,11 1'1 I/ 16> 1 14 •-l4 Int Jlt(tllll ' JP If I~ 111 ~ ~ ~·ok"'::tfl l fl lJ lS ., 1 61\ro ,.._ '1 PE IMtlHIQllLOW Ll,I Cl'IO 1 ... •sw Joe 11 lSI n ~l 5''>+1, ••Oii ...... l 410 .. \I , •• T ~'"'t&T ,,. 16 1'11~'· .,. ... 1t..,_•\N1.,....c S111 I }it 1 s . ff~!+"' ''.'.-,•,,";;c-,,0 70•o~•.~',''°',.•.JI,>, •l'll 14't j7•+1•, -F'F-1 1Tpl1<11) .CO '1102...,ICtt) N! .... 1•11'11116 I J•ll'1 ~ Anblllll. <V ~· Tel ... Ul ,, 73,., 4 ·-• i'berQe '° 11 ~1 I•'• 1•. ,,,, • 1 'tf olJ ~ 1 01 '!01 !O .;. ,, NI ,.. 9lol l • • 21)"41 ...... ., ACFtnclJ001' 6td "'\d•_._,,l''ro 401!0 1'31!1\IS •l!..,;.-.Fatror 60!IJ6 3J700 ~·'° I TTp111:1 1100 ~·.~~ N"~~ ')10 ~11"i U 11 -14 Acn-~lv !O 11 n. 17. I•. 11 ,... ,, ..... •l I~ u ?1 . "" n • "F•l•Cl'I C•<n lot •71 \J>\ 11 . !) -1'1 I "l'N J S4 1• I) 1i ·-• H1: .~~ '° IO' J1\.. JI. u••'"" Ac"'IM• 1-a '° 31 1i J~ I 71 ~1 I tt•n1A JIG 11 110 :i.t• 3-1 ).! ·-\o F•lfloO Xlcl 1 •I 10 ... t. 10 '• ra. "'° ' ... fl' 11•1 Nf :Wm JI ~ l , ... tJl~ 11\<l .. lor TJIE ENGfTSlf Seht\COpeS"<lE •"109<I JIU 141 " lltOt>rnl~c 16 11 J'll. 1•'-•"•l•ml' 50 1 ,.,, 14o l ~. I 11111u1f1-.1sn 1l01••7••'•• 1N1 ftvl.tO, '1 I 11 -llo
Ad M l!lt 21'.1 UG ,, 1 . "' 11 ... I l>a<:lbUrn llf l ' • 1. ,~ .. \ "'•l1t8r 100 ~I s•. ! ~\o. %\ llllt Ulll t • 39\• w Silo 1, Nt!Ol!.111 .. " 14' ~· '!. , ..... ., romn:1n) 1~ about the ')nlv 1m Ae1c1r!1s 611 1~ 131 SI l3 • 3• -1 ""'r1n1 14 I• no n "'' 21 • ,.. F•rn '"" .o 10 " i i-. u • ll"' 1 lr"'1u11 011 1 "' u T :ro 11 IN of'' , ~ 1 • 1 • l"' ,. Aclmlr1t (plO 71 11>11 1 l,, (!'In ~110 10011' 73 '' + l"tl!tt 111 II JO U1 11'0 ,,, ,,,..,.,llK• 1 10 • '°""'' N >• '•NrtF:.J'l to t j/ 11, 17~ llo-"11 p Cf r I JI n t non 1\'lll'r1r:in In A .. ~~Lt , QI IJ l .11 ,. 1l'o 16 L] • (nmSo I l~ 14 .. " ' •1 01 ·-t • Wsl Ft,, \j ll. " • 14 . \.<••-• llll .. Dt_(pl s u 1:l ... 't" Natt !J.e,, ..Ill 1 ' 11 .. n~. ]fl-'
he f A\t,..ll ot J ' !flo JI ss• .... • 1lr•r1r NV , 11 11" J.~. 3:1\41 U" '1 l'•T•h .JO\ w ll • 11• n 0 ••• lntPOIG JOcl '' 11 ,, , ,, • 14 -• NII Gvp 1 Ii! 10 1~1 , • \" "'~' • lemalH>nal operator In I SO t Aoulort co JS n n , 11 n 1• 1111s=-o "" 61 '1'• il•o ti + •• FfOdt 1 IO t&J l•J 3SI.. 1.; ~ lS , t11hr ar ,.,~ , 19 n i. u , n• , Ntll1""' JOd n ,.,, 11 • n o n ~1
dr'nk lndu'trv •nd <'-~\l"'"llleS AH,.111 t~co lO '!ti f'o 110 I .. \ ll1i.eMll11 2 1J m S1 1t • ~ o• • FeortCo l.lC t 11 J1 , U I) 71 l 111,,,,.. 1 iJ 10 1CI It'\ 11ro lt ... Ne• IMI o~ u " • l 4 41 • ~· "•" 'lr Pr020ll 7• l!'l!~~~ .. \O •l ollt,..,.,0011 "'&l t6S 61')~1 S:~!No1IO U l6l01.., 301-l111>t Jllll S1' II 7 1'0 1~ loo N•!l"oolfO l to'"',,,._,
'' ~r1cll) Ill the h1<>her priced .... lrtOltl( to 10 )1) II l). ,,, ... ' ~t<kr M I 1•1 .? ,•, ' •,• .. • .. ,....,_,,_ \.o FdNllMI )6 10 SIO 10'• 1'0 10 lnlrtllf>f Ull 11 " 11 • !Clo 11>1 . "'I Ntl 11!111 I It i'I' 'l ,'! T "1 ~ A J lndu$1., ' 11 llo l • , ' "rltof• lO • ,. l I •• '•FM P8otr I 11 ,, 1~ ''. n -• IO'Ml ll•tl p 11 u 3" • n•o ,.. • f ) NP !' I 10• ' ' ' ) \'o ' 4 field "k1on•ln 11 11 n JO • XI • lG • C111mttn IO 11 dO fl'• f!J!. 11 "lo;-"' FdPt>lll 1 JO 5 n t It " -, 1-• 11 1 10 1 31 llto 11-. 1rn0 Nat ..-Y ro 1 f 11 &-'· l6 '-,....,~ ~ AlaGas I 0 9 1 1" l•o 16 1 .. Cf\mNV 1118 11 Xlt ~ !7"1< ~+l~'FdPllOl II} 110') 1' 21 71 -llG 1.ll t ll XI M ... "'•-\Nt ~ltnd 1! S2 '! ll'o l• ~0 ',
Ncarlv all the big American Al•~· Intl! lt N ~1 ' )& ~ 36'1>+ '!"" CP I IO ,, ' u • :u II 3'1H-,. Ftd Skm lO 11 ]• I 10 • ·~ 1.WtPL IM 10 ,. 14"11 7•1'1 , ... , ..... "'''!''' till ,I ' ,1 56"• s:m' -~ k .AU!ltr!OC. l1 1" 6< l't I•~> 7" • .. h 11~~ 0 :id 11 lit 49'b '6 Wl.t +l>'t S:edO~I I (;I 1l x110 S6 ~S 1 5' 'l l IO'WIP5 l.J;j t 11 11 ]I 11 ,.._ i., Ntl 1H! 7 t I HJ •I .Ol'o 1
soft drink ma r:rs operate "lbtr''"' .u u u u~. 11'4 1~ .... 1.. ~Vi~ 1 ~41 11 1°1 •ii• ''~ ''lf7 ~ Fed ()ewo(a )I 2s '"" 1v, •~ ""l"Cft HOto 11 s1 ,., t11i ,., 1"1-.,. NatT .. "°" 1l # ,{"" ,/~'<'I 1 ~-.,.
syrup plants and franchise !l~:"s~ _: 1
1J ,ro ~~ :-. ?W ~~1/i~ "'i~1~1~ c•o 't ,~i J"' ,:.£! ~ ~r~~ :: 1'l 1f~ ~~ :~ •. tt, .. 1._ 1r.~ ~~p ~ ;: in tt: ~11 tt •. -1 ~ ~~¥~!.WIG~~ 101 ~.: ff.~ "ffi1';::1~.
bolllers and S\ rup makers Alcon LIJ u 11 61 J1v, J6 • 37 1 ,., P o , 11 16 06 ,1 ""+ \lo ~1c1 ,.,,, 't&o ., •S 1s'\ ~ J1 ._ .. 111' cs a• 1 l 11s "' "' ~ 1 Nto'll."', ll , , • .. ,, "le•tn 30d J9 •16 t•o t'\ t, r l'I fl nlVfT' / • s:i.:iun J l'OQ 10 I 66 , •4 '6 + ~ -J J-"'Y ..-w 1 i \
arourd the 'A Or Id Thev got .t.11 .... mL lt<I "' ,. 14~o " • "".. hlR • (! UP "'' 16 ~··t '• FletdMI , 11'1 1 • ,, '> " • '~ J1<nts " )"/ JS JI ,,,, ?S l!• .... 'i"l" Pw "' ' • ' ··-._ • AllecJCp 'l'ICI 13 7S 14~• IJ>\ 11:\11-·~111 Rici NW I 16\lo ,. ?6"io ... FlllrlCO 1 •0 I~ ' n'li 11. ,, • t !'• J1nJI~ 60 IC I~ 1•1, lt'I ,, • N 11<1!:1 l 11 ·~ J. 31 ~ '.111 \'t-• Started lfl the lflte m at!OD!l Al '°htL'(I 1 le II '9 2•"4 29\ro~ " llockF ~ l 6 3! I 1 t _,. t"o+ ~ F!fl(I FtO SI t I )0 1114 1t11'. 21 >•I~ Jtptn !old 211 IST.o lSI\ l ! 0-•t N oT ~ 1 'J, ~ l lO •> 11 ,..
market during \\orld Var II •,,1!! LVClllf•, 1 ,, ~ ,','•"• ,•,1 ~ ,11.,_1 ~~·c.'e•.:t ': 1r 1r,: 1:::-t..: s:1r•11Dfl .. 11 ,,, ,.s,. 111~ 1!1•1 1 J.i1pro1 t1 2, ,.s ,,. 61 ,o;, -1 11!~::::,1 1 ~ :1 11~ ,. ~ J!, 1f\-• "'p ..., 41 11 -" 60 • Ft!C~1rtr Sl l! 1'01 Fl 2'1t ':Ill • •1 J CnP~ t.)f 1ll0 lU j14 lh l JO l'O, 10'~ when AmerJcan !Wft drinks .t.!1111 Grp ti 11 .q lt•1 11 .. It .. H\ ~~::r pl ' 10 'I ~~ ~·z ~ .. I\\ l'ttCl'tlc I '' 11 " ti" ''"" ,, • " J C.nP~ I.I) J)O 10• • 04 .. 10•1• I ~~~~ l~ , ~ n•I 1'· 1· . .... mc1c11 110u J00.~·7'"'"""'!"1""~' 112 ec~,," ·~··\F1llrl\fll)"'dll 69711'16"''7'• I JIWOICl.U15 us.;,53 ii1:.-1'!NV!DlltO I l v.1~1,1 ~. especlall) '··la 11 a v o' e d AUclMn 'So 11 at~ 11'\\ ,,,, ·~ .. _, , -'" ,, , ,,_ ,, ._ b F1NBos 1" n 21 •s~ 4514 •;11 Jkl'IWan !• n 110 ;11 l' •1 11, NV t.of .... 1 5 • ,,.._
M./ AllOMI!!< .11 il lS n l 7) I 11 . l!IM1a '.id' 10 l•j 7:1'1 73 ~ 11' ·; FslN(ll l j' 'J l•• ,,., IA ' ~ ~ JlmWtl!f!f ' ''°° 11\.1 l 'l~~ '•1N1~Mc !';6 t ti , .... I .. .. Ir===============;: Al10Pr0d 61 11 10, 20 11"'1 '°"'!',• In &ell j.lO II 4 t1l'o 71., ,7v.':: , FatNISl lSI\ ""° )I 1 '• JlniWpl 160 1\ V )1\, 3 I NltMDI lto 1].IO ll ~ .. ) I I
jlofl ldP1of l "' -~ .. • "Gt1 6' J :JO 11"1 ,, • 1S -• f'11NSl!I•" 7 10 • l •'• s.i l•1•.. • Jlr<IW•Url ' 7 tJl ,,,, ,,.. Nlt MCll 'I! 110 6' • "" .. ~ Allltc!Sll~l5 '1lt Jl'o~'~-t-\.o~C nG ol t)ll r.)'IQ!! 1t1 IS FiP.Co11il1 lJ~1\o!1l ~:1 ''I J11111~ t la t'IJ6'o7~•1•1t HliMtot ljl !10701701 •~•1 LID 0 NFWP Oot
BEACH
1H1'V •"'CI '0 UOO l\1 I
•'I ~lSG
AllltOS!gf j IJ'l!olll 6IJ --:nc11GElll ' 1100.sa s Sl'I F1Plrl\!J llOU ,.,s i Jol'lnMvl1911 111n ... ~1 .12 ... 1 NeMDI ' 1000I02'-lOP1I
.-.11c1 Suomkl 1'CI "" S '" '1• I! ..C.Eof 1 t.O 65'• 1.1 1 'l )-\'> f'\tUR!E t1 U H IJ Ii '' l'"' ' JOlln J~ lG• ti Ill UC ll '"' l Nleo s 1 100 ' H , 11" ' "lllsCll 70d 1' llt "' 11• 11 1 • lnMl!t loO J .,, Uo ..-S:1N1I~ U 1~ l't 14\ .i 'JoN!S..c IOIS SI ~\ S• l6o •Nl.lrdutl I 11;?ti1"'1 1' 1!)'~ AllrAutol!U 114 I• 14~~ ITS:llC.12 f U!" ...... + •F1!Wlt(I M 1l JIO'o •O • '.1. 1 JOflLllCll"l0 11 \lit lf ,,.•,_J ~Ll C" .;Gc!l'O ,_.,..-,!l lSI • Alnlle Pl .Jl I I 11 l H ~ 11 > • • 11 ... 1~• J 20 U ,.1 ... ~1'1 ~,.._ '°' FIKll .. M •• 16 d .... ,", .. ' if '4 Jot>nl Stl 1 II It II'• II ~ 11'4.' '• Noo-'°"W' ! 11 ti1 lllito 11 11•1 I Alto.t 1.IOl• »I Si SO• li l''I Ill t tdo 1' t' J6"o JI.• ~\o"" oF>lhrF X.. 1l 101 111• -. I 'J~ 1.JOs -,1 • !'9 1 ~·. 2'o •rtor!l..C liO'll 1 '~ 111\ l?\l A .... 1su 1 '° 10 , ,. \ .... ,. \• ~ f!¥ ll"V .JI • 11S lii 1$1<, lt • Fi...,rS< 16 11 ,, II'' 11 11'• ... '°'""' .h It )l ll . ,.. 31 .. r.. Norri.I \a.i ll 1 ,,1/i ., ~ '1' ..
A-rec: 1..)0 I 11 iJ 11•1 15 • l'I 11¥ lllV t>1 J..; ,,1~ 19 1 ,, + 0 i='lem nci )() \I 1:\8 U -K IC-N .... Ml 1 •Sci o ti )4 ~ .}.;l o -
THERE ARE OVER
2000 USED CARS
FOR SALE
WORLD PREMIERE
ENGAGEMENT I
THE HAPPY
HOLIDAY HIT I
... mbK 111 lf 7l 13 ~ 11'1 Ill\ -II\ lh I"" wt\ 14) ,.. 4 , t\',l , F1H1E11t U n Id ''\Ii ?', ' .,, , JWN"O I 40 I• 104 37'0 lJlo )Ito 1 NA (CMI .0 h J U•• 11 ~ ~-' l
.... Hutlll ) lttl tt \lE+t\•11¥\pl'IJI l"')3f1"1)2~-·Flll'lll<o•tC110 61 1S1"J41·H-l(•li.erAl'°lJ .. ,,,,,," 1i .... NAmJ1~11111 11)4 ,1" ,., ...,......trFI ..a V li ~ • !i,. 0 +11• l!Y Stortt li &U .,._ t"+ 'S:lll'ltio; ol 4 1 rlOC ll 71 lltt~I !>I •, -' "'~' It, W 1 N,,... Rk !.60 l to Hl~ l1'1o -Am A1'1inn 101 I i"'' ' -I~ l•I\~ ,,., 11 11 SS 51 , St.~ 0 Fii e (1)11\1 '\ ,'!. ",, ... ,, l(Al5'Df ,, ' •' "° Ml '• llOoi• pl -J ti tJ A ....... .lO I !>l1 101 .... ,• ltl't I '° !l \)1 ". n . n"'t ·~ S:l1 GI• r: , l! ~~-!t ... a ... 1,,.,.c1 ,, II IO I' II~ 11 tr1••~o1 , n ! tt tt -A erno 111 ~ 101""' lJl\ Cl + -LC Arn It Ill. II 1,i, lt'o I\ FllP• I' 11 .y. s1•• -f 11;(1 ... l'f I t .,,. If ... ·-"' l'.t:i'' \)I .. 10 11 ltl\ 1t'• ~-'' .... llrUl 12011 II n"' 11·· 11'\tt l ~I ICll!f llOot 12 , '°'~ '° '° + 1\ ,.tlhool 119 u 1n Jfq,(o. ~·· r,3'C':-~o ~M ~'I .. '"• 14 .... 14i 1 N nlG\ "° u l 11\ 1l'o 11'l Amllldo(.lolS 1 41 . '1 ..... ~,,.~., :1:1,._~i.1 .-t,FllSlllOI' 117' w, 'k.Cl"t.tjl 1 All'Jft» "'" N<1 U11R•I r100 Pio.,. f1!1-'· ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baulevarcl
afCars
LOOI fOI THI IMlll.M AT
THEODORE l ROBINS FORD OLDSMOBILE
2060 2850
HARBOR BLVD HARBOR BLVD
UNIVERSITY
L1t1 Show Nightly I
"'"'"" 1 n 111 ?"• 1"' 31'\ ""'pf,, fl 101 ICl)\l,.103\; S:l\lt•Co!lt 117 ~" ~~ ,\," 'l(!PUt 1100 s.; s.; !I ., NO!li~ \11 ' •I 1)~. 11''t ,,.. A Cen llf 1 lj l ''' '1"1 '• 1tv 8' I r 111" 101"> 101\h , ll'IY Tl!" It 140 ' • '• It: "i.,i 1 I uo jJ , ..i ., > 1111 1o11 y'°' ta J l"\1 1'11 .,.. ArnCtm 4111 • ~ •• llo .. +tft& P1n r:SO ....... n ._ ... Fty! , 11 ''\~ 11"• I(_ klncl II 4 •IW. 111<, f14-l.'ol•""' !~11 1! ,. ,,.. I!' ACflM 1-llll IC 11 t.l"'o '"'• !4'~+ I> loroJ $? '2 2tj ..., .. 16'11 *'-+ , J'M "0 ll 1J n " tr•"t ~I; ktlf\ldDll 1 1100 1(\) 1'11) 4,, N~tGt J 11 tt 'j Ill\ lll-' "'"Cl\61t1 l 1) II flloo 111• n•+ ~ Mii ~ ta 1' " m• ,.,. '"-l"M of t ~ \ , , ·~ I("" G!. 1 ~1 t ,, fl!... n 13•"t--I•"°"~"' j 110 • \to ''"" "'' Al'l'ICli91//fJ 1t IS)~1·~ ~lP..i l lll!\O ~\~\."'toiS"r•"" 1 l. ~ 1(1"""''"''S I "-lf 'll~'t ffoNofhl r!Ol!O ne 110 ~;';~ ~.\ ~ 1rn lll!J L~ i"+t .. ~ ~:. cr,.u, l~ ~ ~" ;g..~t \ FOOltC~~ u 1; 1\" 1~ 1l ! "'~~!J;:j :1 ?j 711: 11'! 21'~; =~u;; ll 4 11 11: ~ ~ !:1.:_ .,
A ... oY!.! ltd 1 f!o •-ti A ... 1.10 r,, 16 P.::1 19\* •• F06!""'1l11 n• .U ~-lW:J~ ff :: i ii; if'i."H 10 1S\i 2S '' t t Ho5Ppt 4 rl~ M1'I ~ ~ ~~ ~ u lit ~ 1~ ~"'t 'l "~" ~ 101~ 1• •~11 ~ 3fU J:.,:1~ ~:~'\2,i 1fo i)il1 !'?~ \ -::~t~r ,1u • a6f #;. #"' ~T \'!-=:t::J : ~ 1i,. ,ti.~ ,t.:~ 1f~ ~ 1
""" l"•oOi"I 1;G: 'i..: fi\:i_: :f l~ OI ~ 1 ?n; ll 11\li '1Mo! .. l ;,;• l't l(l'o«I!_ II 1} !Ga\ 10" ti!!t "tNfl01"411tt_ !: 7• ri .n ''-"..:. ~?1~s""v°'~~ ll 131 ft~ l\ fi~-\(I :: Ill i.!t g 1 i 'itJ u:: ... ,~ ~;'~ ~ ,k'o i1 'r:' ~~ i • :-J l(::u;~ll' i1 ~~ 1r' ~;-:-; .. ~Ir"~~.; • 11 1~ .. !~" ~· . :&c1
s' ; ~ ~ nl'it ~ OWl l~r \l 1• l fi•+ ~ ~g'=ol~ U ~112 l!'' ~ •1 O O th ti;\...!_~"-loo Nw1tAJr! <IS 17 H lot'• ~ ~l~t •t,~1'11 1e q '• ;r"-fl 0 1n 1~~P11 •Z '<'I ~t F...,~•Mi2• irs,.ie .. -;-"" :,,.,,,:1: 1 "1,'t~r"~ri::.:::~1-:0'i.1~ ~[; J.
! Hel:: !oa u llS fl,t f~: r.::r,;: Rtoi ~J PJ ~Ii w~ ·::1'1'. ~~=~~ .10 Jlt m tto..' • • I ellY H I JD I, n Jet ... it ltt..•1 ... NWSI IMI W1 ,j • ,, ;a '-1 !
... tiOll\t l.n ,. lh n, "' ID\; -.:1 ' ~ 1'1 • ~~ ~ ,, ,.u.hul 'I'll 11 "'ll "" t •• • .. ...-1 •• 11 • " • ~ .. 'I--• 1" pl s 1 I ...,..,HHO t7 SI 172 1' i .. '' t11r~t \ ¥0 t ' ' f:"°wl'lcl 4f ll 14; 1'0'1 1t• n • • ._ t~I 1 11 111 i' 1 4 ,.i, ' ,_,.,npt I 1CI 21 r l ,r~ :" ...,.., Inv '°'7 I ll l'O lib 11.._ 'l 1 .. ' l .. l ' \ ... l •t -0 G---¥ UOll 1 lool I to S o .,, ,,, • l"'""'l!ll-'C l " , ~I It M J ll•l M1\ J,tl';-i.j, lfll~tO I 1 1~ t !, 1"-t G•!j!t lncltl 11 '° 7•, 11 ,, ._ • '" M~ .. )2 t2 ~t •I ~S1 •-"° 'fwMu l t 11 lO • \!;" ,_ •'°;" A orp11 11 11 .,1uo1t +v. ril'i~ . ., \ • 0 ,';Corn 11 'o ~·Pl ,'(e •Mrff •' II llot llol N~H lt i2 'i 4\.tti' ,•
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1 ll 'r. R-. /;. t:l: ::::.. tr! 1: 1er ~ Jr.: r.: .. ;;ttr~ I~.,, , 'l: i!'''~ ' ; Ano1NG-JJ 11 ""'" loll"'-+17 h1.IJ11 f"1 I'\ .,SI\ -kl '·~·~•: .... ~W8'' I $1 Ii. 1t 't<IS..ltllt0 11 ... ' .......,'*' -12 "' 1n. 1 1n-i.. ic""" l! ..... u • }.1 • .. ~ ,_, t.zp 1J 1.Q: I.US _,., 1 (II"• ' ,.,, ~"$=16'2 ll ,:J~ft:tJrt?-t'~ J..°i\~\,~ 1:¥~ '~·~-: 'l:u rl )i;;i '.:,:11::fc5 fi il i,1'.,\.~~.,,, GlDI '-00,....,
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lutlday, J"""'Y 2, 197' DAILY PILOT 9
Legislators Get Around
Tra1Jel Expe1ises Hike Salaries from $19,700 Base
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Cililorola
lawmaker with aood attendance markl
stands to earn at least f:U,590 for 1972.
the Legislature vl'llh pay, prestige and
tools needed to do an effective job -
wrote recently: "For a private citizen
to Jive Uke a Callfomta legislator would
require an &Mual income ot at least
$150,000."
Puerto Rico to look Into their ex·
perlmentation with no-fault auto ln.-
surance.
\Vhen they returned, one senator said it
was immediately obvious that Puerto
Rico's system had, little relevance in
Calllornia because of the vast cultural,
economic and transportation dlfferenci!.S
betwee\i. the territory and the nation's
But rriany legislators' totals will be
hl11her than that when the state con-
troller's office close3 its books on
legislative expenses.
A major reason is out~f-state travel.
But a number of lawmakers defend
their. pay and benefits. Many are
And qtllfornia le11islators get around. --------------
DURING THE PAST TWO years -the
period for which record! are kept current
-the la\•lmakers visited 23 states. Mex-
ico and Puerto Rico on legislative
business.
Forty senators and assemblymen made
a total of 51 trips to \Yashington O.C.
'For n private t!ltlse11
to live like a California
legf#lat4>r U>Ould require
at1 at1nual h1t!Ome of at
least 8150 ,000.'
most populous state. .._
Members· of the Joint Committee on
Building Space Needs, sJudying the need
for a new Capitol, went to Albany to look
at New York State's new legislative of·
lice building·.
Members of a predecessor committee
traveled further afield several years ago,
studying new capitols at Brazilla. Hawaii
and Peru.
The legislators literally visit.ed the
comel'I of the United States -from
Alaska to Florida; Arizona to Vermont.
attomef! and contend they could be liv-
ing much better if they were in private
pr:actice. The legislator's base pay is $19,200,
which will go to $21.120 in two years. But many of them continue to practice
law While they hold public office, which
they are allowed to do v;lthln loosely
written and enforced conllict-of-interests
rules.
TWO, MEMBERS OF A SPECIAL
A.ssembly committee on prison reform
went to Attica, N. Y. recently to see what
has happened since the bloody prison riot there. ~
In addition, the legislator colleets $30
Jiving allowance for each day t~
Legislature Is in session, a total of 213
days in 1972. That Cigures out to $0,390
for each lawmaker who had perfect Ill·
tendance. Ttien, as critics often point out, the
legislators also have unlimited use of a
state-leased auto and gasollne credit
cards.
The legislators' trips are often to at-
tend e-0nferences dealing with legislation
or subjects under study by the
lawmakers or to sec how other states
have dealt w i t h problems confronting
California.
· · In 1971, several lawmakers visited a
Guadalajara, Mexico medical school at a
time the Legislature was considering a
Jaw that would pennit certain graduates
of foreign medical schools to practice
medicine in California.
Then last fall, Assemblyman Carlos
Bee (0.Hayward) returned at the in-
vitation of the school to explain how the
law had been implemented.
FOJIMER ASSEMBLY SPEAKER Jess
,Unruh -credited with helping to equip
SEVERAL LAWMAKERS TRAVELED
early last year to Massachusetts and
Fan1il11 Clreus bJI Bil Keane -------=
.. ,.. ""'-~ ......... , .......
"Oh, no! Grandma gave us o 100 set '1octly like the
one Santa brought us."
'
Cobs •Adopted"'
k .4
~ Bird Dog Unenthusiastic
\. VENICE, Fla. (AP) -Sady May !he bird dog got a
real surprise this holiday season -three grizzly-bear cubs
which she has since been nursing with something less than
ardent mother love.
Jacki Allhoff, owner of "The Wonderbears'' act with
the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & ~iley Circus, said
the eight-oonce cubs were delivered by their seven-foot
1,000-pound-plus mother on Orristmas.
UNFORTUNATELY, HE SAID, past experience has
shown that working bears make poor mothers. They have
Riverside Area
Students Urging
•
Quake Measures
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The communities and in Riverside
Riverside-San Bernardino area and San Bernardinp revealed
could be better prepared for there · \\'ere no apparent dif.
an eorthquake like lhe 6.5 ferences between the com-
magnitude temblor that struck munities in their a"·arcness of
lhe San Jo'ernando Valley tv.·o potential earthquake hazards.
years &go. say s a group of UC "They have not learned
Ri\'C'rside students. any more, apparently." said
The studenls arrived at 1he team leader Ron Fischer.
conclusion after a three-prong· "and they are no more con-
ed study of the situation. ccrned about an earthquake
lnt'ludeci "' e re geological, today fhan they were tv.·o
economic and social factors. years ago."
The students said they found
110\\'EVER. SEVERAL of· a number of Riverside and
ficials in the t\1·0 cities San Bernardino area struc·
disag_reed v.·ith the appraisal. tures on . or very close to, the
"We're reason ab I Y fault line.
prepared." Riverside' Cit Y These included the freeway
ro.·Janager Daniel Stone interchange of Interstate 10
responded. and Interstate 15, a large
The group of 15 students motor-hotel. a community col-
undcr a National Science lege. a department store, an 1 Foundntion grant explored the electric power plant and a
impact of lhe San Jacinto flood control dike, for ex-
fault. Their findings \\'ere an-ample:
nounced at the annual meet--j piiiiiiii
ing of the American Associa-
tion for the Advancement of
Science in Washington.
THE STUDENTS said in-
Q tcrvlev.•s of 247 persons in
seven San Fernando Valley
HOME
DELIVERY
~ ............ ,
'• MINERAL • • • • •• •
SPECIMENS • • ATTENTION •
SAVES
YOUR
TIME
' EFFORT
I a tendency to crush the cubs, he said, or allow the111 to •
be eaten by father bears who apparently don't know much •
about paternity but recognize a nice morsel when they •
see one.
COLLECTORS :
Now You Ca• ""'
• • •
Let Us Carry
The load
CALL
Jn addition, the mother bear was not producing enough •
" milk to feed her offspring, he said. •
Althoff pressed Sady May into service; and. while she •
1i was willing to supply the cubs with a meal ··every two ; • ti hours,. she refused to periorm such maternal . duties as •
1 grooming. •
• A laf9ol1. See
Thh ~ $etectJe1
Of ho•tlhll MINERAL
SPICIMANS
OWNr Is •ol11t Te l•NPt
MA.Ill! AN OFFEll
218 Hazel Drive
• • • • • •
COAST
SUPER MARKET
673-3510
·I GROOrtfJNG BY rtlOTHER animals stimulates intest-• Corona del Mar • r inal and kidney fqnctions in the young. Althoff said, so • Phone 673-3000 • 3347 E.COAST HWY.
human fingers have been taking the place of mother's ;li~~~~~~~~~~i~~C~O~R~O~N~A~D~E~L~M~A~R~~1 tongue to massage tiny stomachs and coax forth bear r •• • • • • • • • • • •
' burps. 1. Althofl said he tried to raise bear cubs several times .: l 1 0 0 0 in the past but a lack of knowledge caused him to fail. ~ 'j
A previous attempt to feed cubs on a formula used for ! -
baby lions and tigers proved unsuccessful. he said, adding: : ORDER ·~ ·
"This is the -;-first time ~-e've' ha!~ dog available." . r.~;
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'
•
.,
.,
'
'
l
•
Market Spurts
By 11.66 Points
NEW YORK (AP)-.'ltoot marbt llrlno.,nad
lhnd Tueoday, bo1Nre4 bl' """'"' ~ llopee.
Newton Zinder, 11111111 willl I.I'. Hatton It Co.
nld new1 that hl&J>-level puce tllb w!lll lbe North Vtetn.~mese.,,, to~· nut~ ...,,"1111 al&iJi
thing in the 11111ktt upn!ng, • •
.Robert Stovall, analyst with lleynolda SecuJ11*
Inc., noted that many lowor-prloed and spe<ulaUYe i=es were putidpaUng in the gain!, especially those hit by ye11Nnd tu oe!Ung.
, "It's like holding a ball under water," he Ill.cl.
'When the Pmllln! LI releosed, II pops up."
..
'
T-. J...,., Z. 1971 DAILY PILOT l l
•
•
•
Briefs
I •
•
..
--.
JZ DAllY PllOT
Diocese
'Crisis'
Denied
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The Northern California
Episcopal Diocese is not fac-
ing a financial "catastrophe"
and in fact has a surplus of
$140,000, a spokesman for
Bistwp C. Kilmer Myers says.
The Rev. Canon William
Geiiler, diocesan controller,
said the church's finances are
"excellent" aod said reports
the diocese Is facing a crisis
were "slanted."
Canon Geisler acknowledged
that pledges from 1 o c a I
( RELIGION)
parishes to , the diocese have
declined from $lllO,OOO a year
to $475,000 since 1966.
He was responding to
remarb by the Rev. Jerome
Pollltzer of Monterey that "we
are facing a catastrophe here
and we ought If> acknowledge
it."
eGroups Set
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
ei:ecutlve committee of the
Consultation on Church Union
says it wiU propose at Us spr-
ing meeting the establishment
ol a -ol experimental ecumenlcat communities.
-They ""Uld lie 11em00sfra-
Uon, or "generating,'' com-
munities based on the
theological ronoensus already
aebleved .by the e l g b t
denominatk>M seeking union.
Dr. Rach e I Henderlite,
chairman of the COCU im-
plication team, said, "1bere Is
a cn:mnoo yearning for new
life in the church.,,.
'"1e group was formed in
1962 to investigate th e
poaibility of union of the
African Methodist EpisCopal
Church, the African Methodist
Episcopal Zion Church. !be
Christian Church Disciples of
Christ, the Christian Methodist
Eeplscopal Oiurch. t h e
Presbyteriau Cmrch In !be
U.S. (Sootbon), the Unl1'd
Chord! ol Oirist. the Uniled
MethodiJt Chud! and !be
Episcopal CmrdL
• Blrtll Ce•tt'ol
MEXICO CITY (UPI)
The Roman Catholic bishops
of Mexico have given their
qualified support to a govern-
ment birth control program in
w~at appeared to be a major
switch In Catholic attitude on
the coptrovenial subject.
'nle Mexican Episcopate, ln
a "message to the people"
signed by 80 bishops, said it
hoped President Luis Echever·
ria's family planning program
which goes Into effect today.
"will be true to the respectful
criteria of human dignity, life
and liberty."
rt urges civ11 as well as
church authorities to prepare
couples to take a more COD-
scious, responsible and free
decisi on as to the number of
their children.
e A id t o Nttns
HOUSTON (UPI) -The
state of Teias has deeided to
give 30 elderly Catholic nuns
welfare assistance they re-
quested, the nuns sa id.
"We tried to struggle along
and not make our needs
known,'' said Sister Mary
Louise. convent m a j o r
su perior. "But we are poor.
poor, people and let's oot be
ashamed to say it."
Sister Mary Mar g a r el .
coun.sek>r of the Sacred Heart
Convent, said the order was
notified the state Welfare
Department· ruled the sisters
eligible, but·bad oot said when
the cbecb would start ar-
riving. The nuns will reported·
1~133 .. ch _!l!O•lhly.
e •RoC!k Mas'
. NEW YORI< (UPI)
Cardinal Terence Cooke
celebrated a .. rock mass" for
1bout 20, )'Ollngstert In. the
pedl11tl<i HCllon of Memorial
Sloan-Kett.ring Center lor
Cancer ReoeardL
Cardinal Cooke -read •
. .,.a.i -· whli:h" Prell·
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Men's Sportswear, 50
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Men 's Furnishing s, 7
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SHOP 10 A.M. t. t :JO·P.M. TUESOAY THROUWH Fl.IDAY. SATUlDAY 10 A..M. .. 6 P.M. SUNDAY' 12 NOON t. I P.M.
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. VO L. 66, NO. 2, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COU('ITY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1973 TEN CENTS
•
• _rrors
'
DAILY PILOT Prio•o· bY Ricri•rd Or•-·
AGONY OP DEFEAT -The girls are Ohio State cheer-
leaders and these are the expressions they wore as USC
~ its fourth touchdo\vn in the third ,quarter of Mon-
day's Rose Bo.wl game. For Ohio State, things got a lot
\Vorse. See sports, Page 16, for the con1plcte slury.
• Peace Talks
Spur Early
Stock Prices
Boats Da~aged Ill Avalon
Winds Fail to Retur1i .M ondl.iy, Afford R ep rieve
·NEW YORK I AP) -Stock market
Pi;ces spurted ahead in the first half·
hour's trarung today.
,1be Dow Jones a,ver,age of 30 in-
' d'8tnils'-at noon PSTWiSuP:to-10:~. to
I Ill<>. 4-0. .
AdvaQCe& topped dec)ines -00 the ·.NeW
York Stock Exchange by nearlt $to t
"The market is responding to the news
th,t high-level peace talks are to be
resumed next week In Paris," said
N~ton Zinger, analyst with E. F. Hutton
CO. Inc.
Cleanup continued along the Southern
Orange Coast today in the wake or the
year's most severe windstorm but no ore
could repair one maddening proble1n
which hit early New Year's morning in.
_ San Clemente.. -
Hundreds of residents set to watch the
Tournament of Roses Parade found no
picture. on their· television tubes alter the
high winds C8U9ed a power blackout in
the industrial section of the citY.
'Mle outage immediately knocked off a
cable television booster station and sets
all over town were without a picture.
Police received scores of calls from
angry residents. SPokesmen from the
Iota! cable service said their aides v;•ere
sv.·amped with pearly 200 calls at the
start of the-out-&g"':
Service was restored, however, by
about 10 a.m. to,ftlOSl areas.
Besides adding to the New 'Year's
morning hangover, the winds call'td city
'Crews in San Clemente to go to work as
trees and branphes fell over a wide area.
One large euealyptus toppled in the golf
Branches Dow1i
CQurse area.
Dozens of limbs we re torn from other
trees in th e coastal area .
New Year·s day at Dana llarbor \\'a'>
v;•itho'ut incident but thi: day before. as
the Santa Anas started· to build,
patrolmen-were kept-busy.
At one point last Sunday. patrolmen
said, a 1ingle blast of wind capsized
several sailboats all al once near the
harbor "ntrance.
Rescuing patrolmen plucked 11 persons
from the water and helped right tbe
·vessels. No one was injured.
AJthough early year reinvestment de-
mand was also a factor, be said, the u~
turn was ·primarily due to the peace
·news.
General investor optimism for l973's
economic prospects gave the market an
WX:erlying positive tone, brokers added. -
Autos, which have been reporting
higher sales, were up, with General .
Motors ahead 11/, to 82% and Chrysler up
% to 41~.
---Blue-chips-were act~ve-and-strong; as
American Telephone tacked on % to 53%
and General Electric rose 1'%. to 74l!4.
Skyli1ie Drive
Po1ver Returns
After Misliap
· An 83-year-old Ne\\'POrt Beach woman
apparenUy lost.control oLher 1973 luxury
car and smashed into a utility pole at
Hillcrest near Chiquita in Laguna Beach
cutting_power to about 200 Lagunans Sun·
Wind Gusty, But Loss
Said Ligl1t in L~na
· On . the American· Stock Exchange,
Cbampion·Home· Builders Was active and
qp % to 14%.
-The-Big Board index at 9 a.m.-Psr was
65-.05, up 0.57, while the American Stock
Exchange price-change index stood at -;$3, up 0.17.
Mou'ftWfn Hiker
Saved but Girl
dilfarternOOti. -·~-
Mrs. Nellie l)lafie Grundy. of 924 \V: , " . /, Ocean. Newport, was reported in
satisfacto..ry JX>ndition today at Hoag
Memorial Hospital after breaking her
left arm in the traffic accident
At· Geyser, Laguna Beach .Edison Com-
pany___manager, said power was restored
to most homes along Skyline Drive in
about 30 minutes. but another 15 homes
were cut off Crom power for 10 hours.
The accident was one of eight, four in-
jury collisions in Laguna Beach from
'
BJ0.,,·1ng gListy winds did 1ninor
weekend damage in Laguna Beach. tear-
ing dov;11 city Christmas dC'torations and
knocking dowq tree branches and clec·
trical \l'ires.
\Vinds \\'ere reported at bel\\'ecn 20 and
30 mil es per hoor today by Ldguna Beach
Lifeguards. Cool temperatures kept
crowds from beaches, and small craft'
advisory of high ""inds kept _boating
rlo\\71. One small fWin-hulled sailboat
overturned , but was righted quickly.
The large. eight foot squar e front win-
dow in the Laguna Beach county Branch
library \\'as smashed out again. either by
v;'ind or vandals. The large pane \\'as
blown out first over the Christmas holi-
day weekend and was observed shattered
again Monday. r
Several incidents of downed electrical
\\'ires \\'ere reported. One at 575 St. Ann's
!\1onday haq the Laguoa Beach Fire
Department standing by to prevent possi-
ble fire hazard.
Al Geyser, Laguna Beach Edison Com·
pany manager. said none of the incidents
was of a major nature and all \\'Cre
cleared op quickly.
Companion Dies Friday to today.
Aoother injury accident occu rred as a
vehicle co'ming down Temple Hill s Drive
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) A apparently lost its brakes, slammed into
Top Liberal on State
the divider at the hairpin curve near helicopter crew plucked a stranded biker C.oast View Drive, bounced into the north
from the slopes of snow-swept Hum-roadway edge and then rumbled head on
phreys Peak today but 'reported that a · into a wall on the uphill lanes.
teCOD.d died after two nights in subzero Passenger Mary Beth Johnson. 16. of
weather. ?2894 Via Pimeato, Mission Viejo. was
Supren:ie Court Dies
BERK EL. _., _ J'.J. Tbe Coconino COunty sherilf's office released after treatment at South Coast
Cl Community Hospital for cuts. identified the victim as Allison ay, 17, E ..... eter:, . __ ~n;::e,J , ~ ost
... 0.f~~i~~·ported that her companilon. SI liberal on the California Supreme Cou~t,
24.year-oM Clint-Miller. was in poor con-Trustees ate ,.. n: :. ilc .. ;,_ c. ... ,.,
dition from ex:posure and frostbite. Among Peters' notable opinions were
He was flown directly to Phoenix, 1966 decision striking do~11 the ballot
about 150 miles to the south. Pei·sonnel Meet initiative that cu'.~::·sed eaurorn ia f,ir
The two were.in a N!?~ Year's Eve hik· housing laws and the 197 1 opinion ip. Ing party which scaled lhO 13,000-foot mountain, part of the San Francisco Trustees of the Laguna Beach Unified validating the ban against women work·
Peats which towtr above this northern School District will meet at 7:30 tonight ing as bartenders.
Arizona city. -to consider rehiring Dr. Charles Hess and Peters suffered a stroke l\.fonday night
Dr. Robert L. Reeves, assistant d ed h' · t h' ho ·th Four companion! hiked out ~lcnda~ and l t is morning a is me w1 and reported the two missing. n al-superintendents for business and in-the doctor in attendance. l\.1arion Peters. . struction, res....,....tively. 'd rted p t uff red tempt to reach Ule two late Monday fail-r-~~ his w1 ow. repo . e ers s e a Bolh administrators were told they b d d d ed. Three we~ treated for frostbite and stroke in 1968, ot recovere an serve lhe fourth aided lhe search. would not be rehired at a meeting Dec. fulltime on the bench after his recovery.
. Winds reached fKl miles an hour Mon· 18, as was Dr. William Ullom, district h1rs. Peters said her husband planned clay. telni)eratures dipped to 10 Clegrees superintendent. to retire on his 10th birthday in April. •
below 7.tro overnight and there were five The two assistant superintendents are Peters, 11 native or Oakland, was nam·
feet ol snow oo the ground, searchers tenured, and. a1though they may be mov· ed to the bench in 1959 by then-Gov, Ed-
fllld. ed from their pn!sent positions'. may mund G. "Pat" 'Brown.
-The helicopter crew from ,Luke Air have to be kept on in other positions. He was instruct jM·d,e Supreme
.Fotce-Btse joined-tha-Marob u ,,. ·.:.:t 70~ Court'i QPer~tiom · · • Y.ears ei·
· .... · · .. .e -· -·-.r&-, · -· the .' 17 Aliens <l:har ed perience ; as ~1k al c::, ~= """'" -g -.. ~,}11~, One sunivor, Rick BuflUlgel, ;J, of · -• ..~. . ;~"1.~~}'1 ,.J.l»'!tO~ .. ~,.Years on
Scottodale, said the six, all ¥/."' ~ or.-;:~bl~R, f'Ia . ~rr--·-e.n the state Court o! m san Fran·
the. Arlr.ona ?t1ountaineering atib; began lra![l"'an and Jamaican refugees, caught d.sco before advanc hi.@! ~h. ~llllmlHB-(Cood-wealher-Sunde)Hll--ti\'-eu~tie•--.lter-lle~IOO. hl~i<>n ,......-itamlli>d ~moon. -off J er inlet and fleeing inland , have himself as the. st aclvaubtA
"Then it became windy and cold." !'.~ been c rged with illegal entry lnto the social th inker. ~ .. ,,
said from his bed al Flagstarr Com· United tates. Police said the 32·foot In the 1966 mUng
llulnil)'Jlospjtal where .be..ns..Jmilt«L ..sailboat "Magttlll': . .ll'.cnl.Jlil'OUlld Suodu said the ballot inlt
tS.. RESCUE, Pere%) night just south of the treacherqus inlet. thc'statc's fnir boos
Id
t ' " . •'
constitutional act by the people. He said
the people could no more act un-
constitutionally than the Legislature or
any other state body.
Prop. 14. the ballot measure OL.:tiawing
!he state's fair housing la'.'·s. had won
nearly a 2 .. 1 majority in the 1964 election.
Peters said the measure denied to
blacks see.king housing the' equal pro-
tection guaranteed by the 14th Amend-
ment to the U.S. Constitution. The
decision was upheld by the U.S. Supreme
Court by its refusal to hear an appeal of
the case.
The May, 1971 court decision outla\\'ing
the ban against female bartenders was
caUed "the most advanced opinion to
"date on women's rights." by J1erma Kay,
a female professor of family law at the
UC Berkeley.
Bible Reading to End
GLENDALE, Calif. (AP )·-The Voice
of Prophecy expects to complete its
fourth annual nonstop reading or the Bi-
ble sometime Thursday. The organiia-
llon , a radio affiUate of the Seventh-day
Adventists,' launclltd tbe reading at mid·
night Jan. l. and. expects to we more
than 100 volunteer.t in the project.
-/
Trunian Wills
His Papers
To Citize11s
INDEPE:-iOE/\;CE . !\to. (UPI 1-Harry
S Tru man 's \\'Ill, released today as puh l1c
record . gives nearly all !he forn1er
President's papers 10 lhc people of thl~
United -states, l'.iarrihg some personal
notes.
The exact va!Ue of the estate was not
kno\\71. r.1uch of the personal belongings
"·ere not expected to be asscs11ed whil e
hl rs. Truman is alive.
Tbe 22·page .,,,ill "'as signed by Truman
Jan. 14, l!l59, and also designates that his
\\'idow, Bess. sflall rl-'cei\'t' all or
Tn1man's persona l belongings remaining
in the couple 's home on North Delaware
Slr('(l in Independence.
Truman died a WC(k ago follmving a
long illness and was buried Thursday.
The will stipulated that the hundreds of
lhousands of presidential papers be kept
at the Harry S Truman Libr ary in
Independence "subject to the right of the
archivist of the United States" lo move
the papers.
Certain papers. ..strictly related to
business ana personal affa irs," will be
given to Mrs. Truman . and the executors
of the will are given authority to \\•ithhold
other papers from the natiun.
Gil'in~ the papers to the nation fulfills
~ pron1lse Trun1an made years ago that
he \\'OUld give the papers lo the country if
the L".S. gol'ernment would maintain the
Truman Library, \-1.'hich was dedicated in
1957, and built b)' public cont ribution .
The will also s!ipulated th.at a single
slab shall cover the graves of both
Truman and f<.tr!i. Truman, v.·ti.o will be
88 on Feb. 13.
Executors are given authori!y tn decide
if an obe lisk shoul<.: be at the head of the
graves.
The inscriptions for the grave<; are con·
t;:uned in a cochcil to the \\'i ll dated Oct.
ISee TRUil-IAN, Page !J
Council Faci11g
32-item Agenda
In Laguna Beacl1
Abandon ment of Main Beach area
roads. Village Faire height limit appeals
and meter feeding ticket complaints are
among 32 item s facing the Laguna Beac h
City Council meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at City ilall .
The council will h-Old the second re·
quired public hearin~ on the 11bnn·
donmerit of portions of three roads which
now eXtend into the ~1ain Beach p&rk
area. Broadway. Ocean Avenue and El
Pasco.
Village Faire, a planned specialty sho p
complex on the o!ri car ag<>ncy lot ;,t 1100
hl~k South Coast llzghway. will appeal
Planning Comm1~ion denials or a 112·
foot raising of the 30 fool height linlil for
the developn1ent
The pro1eet Pnv1s ions underground
parking for the shops. Design of the proJ•
ect has receh'fii approval of lhe Board
of Adjustm ents (design review ... board ).
Also lacing the council ar"
-.<;ta tus reports of Sewage Complaints
and Jnsuran<:e que..s,ions.
-St:ihl~ report on the J11hraus site for
a parking !itructurc.
-An appeal b)' Planning Com mission
de<:isiuns-on.land division by"Mrs. Marie:
lloybark. 2445 South Coast lllghway .
The council \j,'ill adjourn to a $f5eeiRI
meeting 4 p.m. Thursday with the Plan-
o~ Olrnm.Wlon to consider cleansing
the municipal code of out-dated laws.
I
Pen tagon's
De11ials
Reve1·se d
\\'1\SlllNGTO~ fAP l -The Pentagon
:.iC'knowledgNi today that n North Viet-
n:.imr~se hospital and an airpot1 normally
used by civilian planes !l(';ir Hanoi ap-
parently su ffered "some limited ac-
cidental damage" during intensive U.S.
bon1b1ng ra ids.
But Jt"rry \\I. F'riedhein1. the Pen-
tagon's top spokl'sn1<1n, suggested tl~at
the dan1age ('Ould have bt'cn causl'd
e1tht>r by U.S. bon1hs or by North Viet·
n.1mese antiaircra ft explosil'cS.
t-;onclheless. Friedheim·s acknowledg-
ment \\'as at least a partial reversal of
111s denials last "'eek that U.S. bombs
strul·k a North Vietnamese hospit al.
Those claims had been made by North
\'ietnam. •
"It appears th;:it sonic limited ac-
c1tll·ntal darnage h<is occurred 10 some
faeil!li('s nt (iia Lani airport and at a
hospital the enemy calls Bae f\1 ai."
FriedhC'irn said in a statement read at a
1111\\S briefing.
"The exact extent of this damage is
uncertain, as is il<> cause.
"Ou r 1nfor1nation does not square \\•ith
I binni's propaganda claims of massive
d<''\lruction at these sites."
Fr-ic<lbeim rOitated--whal he~ said -is
t '.S. policy to target .only military ob-
Jectives in North Vietnam.
HO\\'ever, he said. ··we know, and have
snid many times, that from time to time
<lC:Lidenta! damage to other than mililary
targels occur. sometimes involving
United States ordnance· or aircraft and
sometimes involving North Vi clnamese
ordnance or aircraft.''
lie expressed regret concerning "any
such accidental damage f ro1n whatever
source."
f'riedhcim sai d the Bae f\1ai hospital
and the Gia Lam airfield "'ere struck
during U.S. "bombing attacks against
military targets "'ithin several hundred
yards of them.
"These t\vo si tes were in close prox-
imity to mil itary targets," he sa id. "\Ve
have no kno\\·lcdge of what caused the
damage. ·If could have been either side.--"'
ffe said the Bae ~Jal military complex
comprisl's an airport. storage and
"·arehouse fac1li t1cs. and a petroleum
products depol.
He 1nd1ca1ed th at the Gia Lam rail road
yards \\'ere the ob1ect1ves of bombs
\\•h1ch s1ruck the ai rport used by Soviet
and other civilian air transports.
Hov;•ever. he said some MIG jet fighters
were hjt at Gia L.-1 m, along with the con·
tSee 80!'11BING, Page !I
U.S. RESUMES
JIIET BOIUBING
SAIGON iAP I -U.S. bombers at-
1ackcd the Southern Panhandle of North
Vietnam today, breaking a 36-hour stop
in the air strikes for the Nc1v Year 's holi·
d::1y.
The L'.S. Command announced that the
bombing halt remained in effect in North
Vietnam above .the 20th parallel, an area
tha! includes the major cities of 1-ianoi
and Haiphong.
For reasons of security, the command
said no oth<'r drtails of the st rikes wou ld
be ninde uvailable .
' Orange Coast
Weather
Some increased cloudiness on
\\'edncsday. accord i n g to lht
\\'ca thcrlady, with slightly cooler
tcn1pcratures. Highs of 57 are ex-
pected at tJie bt'>aches. rising t-0 67
in land l,01vs in the upper 30s to
Inv. 40s 1\·1th local frost.
INSIDE TODAY
Preside,1t Ni.xon showert up
br1gltt onrl early 011 New Year '.~
J>ay at lus Oval Office i11 \Va&h·
i-ngt011. D.C. Turnjng the -door·
k no b,_..he cli&ccwe'red--him1el/
locktd out of his own office.
See story crn Page 4.
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% DAILY PILOT l8 r-. 2. 197J •
•
.
Teclanical Ta lks C'lemente p .S., N. Viets
Resume Meeting
AccUUmt
·Kills Man
I
I
PARIS (AP l -U.S. and North \1icl·
namese technical experts sat do\\'n
together toduy (ur the first time since
Dec. 23 to \\'Ork out details or an c\'cntu·
al Vietnamese cease.fire.
The technical meetings had .been
suspended because of North Vietna~ese
prot ests over Atnerican bombing of .the
north. Their resu1nption marked lhe first
Fro111 Page 1
TRUMAN ...
2.1, 19til. Under the lel'nlS of the \\'ill
Truman's inscription \Viii read :
"Harry S. (wjth pelljldl Tru1nan
Born May 8, 1884
Lamar, Misso uri
Married June 28. 1919
Daughter Born February 17, 1924
County Judge Eastern Dist ritt
Jackson County 1.
January I, 1925
Presiding Judge Jackson County
January I, 1927 -January I, 1935
United States Senator, Missouri
January 3, 1935-January 12, 1945
Vice-President, United States January
20, to April 12, 1945 .
Pre!ldent, United States April 12,
1"5-January 20, 1953
A slmilar, but shorter, lnscriptlon is
provided for Bess's grave.
Basically, lhe personal estate of the
fonner President Is divided equally
between his widow and his daughter,
Margaret Truman Daniel. But there are
others remembered.
A plot of the Truman's land in
Ci:M>dview, Mo., where Tr.uman was
raised, was given to the Grandview
Lodge ' 118 of the Masons, to which
Truman beio"l.ed.
A trust fund of an undetermined
amount was set aside to give Bess
Truman an income ror life.
Truman willed 11,000 to each of his
eight nephews and nieces, Including four
nephew.a and one niece of the Truman's
aod one nephew and two nieces or Bess's
side oI the family.
A total of 15 great·nieces and nephews
were a:iven $500, but a 18th, Jahn Ross
Truman, received only IS. John Rols Is a
member of F. Lee Bailey's law firm and l-<~-·wu-a-defenM attorney in tbe---trial of
Capt. Ernest Medina.
J
J
'
Fl'VlllP.,eJ
RESCUE. • •
re•· fr.:-· · · J ft.et.
"Two of our three tents collapsed. The
wind and snow caved in the tents. All aix
of us got In one tent. There were three
sleeping bags for six people so we
couldn't zip them up properly."
On Monday morning, he said, Miller
and Miss Clay. were unable to walk, and
all .the gear was frozen. · .
"We left them four to five days food,
three aleeptng bags ind the ilpped-up
tent that they could close with ooly two
lnalde It. Then we hiked out to get help."
Snow and ice storms choked a large
portion of the western half of the nation
today, prompting authoritlea In some
areas to cloae highways and streets.
The winter 1tonn dumped an average
of ftve Inches of snow on a large portion
of r;ew Mexico. Silver City reported six
incbea, .Berning, five and Tucumcari,
four.
Bisbee-, -Ariz. received six inches of--
snow and Sierra Vista, Ariz., five inches.
Cold wave warnings have been posted
for parts of Montana and North Dakota
while cold wave watches were in effect
for parts of South Dakota and Wyoming .
Interstate 80, a major east-west route
across southern Wyoming, was closed for
the fifth straight day over a 100.mlle
stretch because blowing snow cut vtslbll!-
ty. Traffic was switched to slower
alternate routes.
OlAHI COAST LI
DAILY PILOT
~ °'9!'1111 CGISI DAILY flL.Or, w!lt! Wlllci'I
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*' ~"' 1W !Mii flu, "*"'""'' "'""'"' -'lftltlOM *'·" monu'"'·
I
step in resum pt ion of thl.! suspended full-
scale secret negotiations. due 10 begin
ngain next Monday, aflt·r a three-week
luatus.
Nguyen Co Thach, North Vic1namese
deputy foreign m i n i s t c r . and
Wllllarn Sullivan, deputy 1:1ssistant
secretary ol state f(lr Southeast Asain af.
fairs, headed the two delegations. They
n1ct at a villa in suburban Ch~sy-Le·Roi,
near the headquarters of !ht• North Viel-
namesc delegation to the Pu ris peat't!
talks.
The technical meetings :irr iin offshoot
of the top-level peace neijotiations led by
Henry A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho, a
member or the Hailoi Politlburo.
President Georges Pompldou said
"real precise difficulties, hard to
overcome" remain to be faced in the
negotiallons.
But the French president added that he
h~,>ed this time the talks will succeed. DAILY PILOT lltff "9lofl
A Loll Angeles man was killed and two
others injured Monday v.·ben his car went
out of control on the san Oieso Freeway
near the El Camino offramp in San
Clemente.
John Tappan, 401 died at San Clemente
General Hospital of massive head in·
juries, the Oringe C.Ounty Coroner'.t of-
fice reported .
A woman and a yolUlg girl suffered
major injuries in the crash, but highway
patrolmen thls morning said iden-
tification of the two was not certain.
They said the woman wu believed to
be Evon A. Grayson, age unknown, of
Los Angeles. Tbe baby WU Identified
only as "Baby Jane." Both are in serious
condition at San Clemente General
Hospital.
Speak l n g to representative!'" of
_journalists' association!! greeting him for
the new year, Porilpidou said: "The
simple fact that negotiations resume is
very important.''
HARBOR PATROLMEN SCRAMBLE AFTER YACHTS, DOCK BLOWN FREE BY HIGH WINOS
Section of Dock,, With Boats, Flo1ts Down·B1l ltlti Ch1nn1I, Sn19~ In Offshore Moorings
Officers at the aoene established a ten-
tative identlficaUon of the dead man by
tracing the license number of the small
foreign car. Patrolmen added that they
found several different names on iden-
tification in the car. "It's been a real
headache flndlng out everyone's con:ect
name," a patrolman said.
As the White House linked the 1).S
bombing policy to peace negotiations,
President Nixon awaiti!d today the return
ol Henry Kissinger for consultations
before the Paris negotiations reswne
next Monday. .
Nixon's assistant for National Security
Affairs bad been vacationing at Palm
Springs, and a White House spokesman
sald he ls to return to \Vashlngton late
this afternoon.
Raging Winds Blow Away
Section of Newport Dock
Marine's Slaying
Still a Mystery
Seal Beach police · have not yet solved
the mystery surrounding the apparent
slaying of a Camp Pe\1dleton Marine,
whose body was found on a freeway oU·
ramp last Tuesday.
Two other persons died over the New
Year's weekend from ,reviOus accident
injuries. ·
Henry DeLancey, f!I, or urm Los
Jardlnel, Fountain Valley, died at Foun·
toin Valley O>mmunity Hospital Satur·
day. He was Injured Dec. 23 while riding
his bicycle along Edinser Avenue, east of
Brookhurst Street In Fountain Valley. The spokesman, deputy press secretary
Gerald L. Warren , said Nixon and Kiss·
inger would begin late today a series of
meetings to -prepare the· U.S. stance
when Kissinger's talks with North Viet·
nam's re Due Tho reopen ,
The White House announc.ed Saturday
the scheduled resumption of the Paris
talks after Nixon halted massive born~
ing of North Vietnam above the 20th
parallel. The bombing had been resumed
Dec. JS after a two-month suspension.
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
the object was to thwart a C.Ommunist
bt..ild·Up, .
Today, responding to-newsmen's ques-
llons, Warren tied the bombing policy
dlr · ~tly to negotiations.
"ll you look, you will find that when
>serious negotiaUonrWere' P.nteffit tnto-
there was a discontinuation of bombing
above !he 2011) parallel," he said in
reference to the bombing suspension
which ended Dec. 18. .
War.ren referred also to hb: statement
on SlttW'day that the current bombing
suspension "would remain In effect as
long as serious negotlatlons were under
way."
From Page l
BOMBI NG. ••
trol tower.
Frledheim said informa!ion !hat
damage had been inflicted on the hospita l
came to him after his deniaJ Dec. 27 and
his reiteration or the denial Dec. 29.
He declined lo say how this later in·
·rormation was obtained, although he in·
dicated it came from U.S. aeriAI rccon·
naissance photography,
A number of American peace activists
visiting tn Hanoi during the intensive
U.S. bombings starting Dec. 18 have sup-
ported the Hanoi government 's claims of ·
severe damage 10 the clty, includlng
clvlllan structui:es.
Friedheint sald, under questioning, that
lo hi! knowledge none of these U.S.
citizens had been interviewed by U.S. of-
ficials to get their stories first·hand.
Power(ul winds Monday tore loose a
huge section of dock from Bayside
1'-tarina in Newport •!arbor and sent it
and 20 boats drifting down the Balboa
Island Channel.
.. By the time we got to the scene, the
entire 250-foot pi~e had broken away
from the bulkhead and drifted into mid·
channel ," said Orange County Harbor
Patrol Sgt. Ray.Graham .
"It lodged in the offshore moorings
about 100 feet down-channel from l!s
regular spot at Bayside Mrina," be said.
Graham said four har&r patrol vessels
and ·a number or heavy commercial
salvage barges were called Into action
a.(ld a number of_Bal~ Jslan5f resi_d_S?nts
rowed out to the drifting dock to lend a
hand.
"Orie "by one wd rhovtd . etfcH of ·the
boats tied to the dock to other an-
chorages," Graham said. "WP. also us.d
some of the boat anchors to try to
stabilize the dock.··
"One by one we moved eacb of fhe
morning threat~ned to break up the
Graham said the 51).mfle-per-bour
winds whistling down the channel that
docks even more and send the wreakage
through the moorin gs onto Balboa Island.
"Bul finally the wind died down a bit
and once we got the boats moved it
stayed pretty stable," be said.
Graham sai d none of the boats attached
to the dock. which included power and
sailboats rangi ng from 20 to 45 feet long,
was badly damaged nor were any of the
moored boats that were struck by the
dock.
"\Ve wor ked for more than five hours
trying to secure the dock and boats,''
Graham said. "I can 't say enough [or the
great help we got from hard-working
citizens."
Graham said he could not estimate the
amount of damage.. to the docks but did
say it was miraculous more damage
wasn 't done to the boats.
"I would say the value of those boats
"'8S well into the hundreds of thousandlJ
dollars." he said.
Graham said the problems or rescuing
the boats and securing the floaUng dock
\Vere compounded when the winds
threatened to break off more sections of
the dock still attach('d lo the bulkhead.
"But the boat owners and people
onshore used their own boat anchor& and
ropes to tic the docks firmly," he sald.
"Other11·isc we -...·outd have had real
Searcl1 P roduces
No Trace of Boy
Lost Of f Coas t
-.. problems."
p
\\iec>kend searches of the rocky
offshore areas' in Crcscen1 Bay produt'.cd
no trace of the 16-year-old Iowa boy pre·
sumed drowned Thursday.
The yout h .• ronn th11n Phillip Knizley of
College Park. Iowa, had been \'(siting his
father in South c;ate and the family had
~pent part of the day at the Crescent Bay
Beach.
Jonathan. \vcari ng levis. hod gone into
the surf. and apparently -...•as swept into
the rocks or out to sea by a strong rip
tide.
A combined ai r, sea and land search
Thursd11y by lifC'guards. Laguna Beach
police . the Harbor Department , and the
:'\e\\port ll<'[lCh hl'lico pter failed to locate
the yout h before nightfall .
The body v.•ould normall y be expected
to surf11ce within 14 days, Skip Conner,
head lifcgu11rd , said today.
He exi>ects currents lo move th(' body
south, or for it to v.•a!'h in close lO the
bench ":here lhe youlh went h1to the
water
Flat11es Wreck CaTc;
Damage a_t $20,000
Graham said the piece of clock was still
lodged among the moorings this morning
but commerical crews were consulting
with the lNine Com~ny. which owns the
dock, tc find the besfW8y lo salvage it.
Co1·011er Rules
P atrick Taber's
Death Suicide -
Orange County Sheriff's officers today
closed their investigation of the death
Ne w Year's Eve of industrialist Patrick
McDonald Taber with the ruling that thil
Laguna Niguel resident died of a self-in·
flic!cd. bullet wound .
The body of Taber, 56. was found in the
kitchen of his home at 17'l Monarch Bay
by his wife, Carol , deputies sai d. Offi(.'ers
said family members told them that
Taber had been despondent In recent
weeks.
Coroner's officers said Mrs. Tab~r
heard a -gunshot from Uie kit"chen about.
I: 15 a.m. They said ®e found a 4f>.
caliber automAtic wee!)On lylrti near the
body of her husband.
SheriU's officers investigating the in·
CAU.'Je of a fire wh ich did an esti mated cident recalled todRY that Taber was the
S20.000 to a Dana Point care e11rly Mon· designer Of the "bomb"baskel"·a device
day morning is llill under lnvtstlgallon. that is now beinG used by the
the Orange County Fire Department department's bomb squad .
reported today , Tabtr de.signed a plastic cont.alntr that
Fire broke out at 4:26 a.m. tn Ginger's protects the bearer from explnalons ns
7ffiirtles Bar at 24312 Del PraiJOR01a.--1rtgtnrs thnt 1 eco1 dect-by«vt:rfll sUtks·ol
firemen fough t the hlaie for hal f 311 dynamil~. Sheriff'$ Olp(. James
hour Rmarlbelt said
\
Graham said the only other wind·
related Incident occurred just before the
dock broke loose when two 45-foot
sailboats were reported stranded six
miles off Newport Pier,
"We went out and towed one in and a
Coaat Guard helicopter dropped fuel to
the other which was out of gas," be said.
Sgt. John Averyt said this morning
police still do not know why the Marine,
Ed Moore, 20, of Kentucky, was killed or
where he was killed.
Everett Fowler, 84, of 3929 W. 5th St.,
Santa Ana, died Sunday at Palm Harbor
Hospital of injurieJJ received Dec .• 19 in
Garden Grove. He was a passenger in a
car which veered off Harbor Boulevard
just south of Garden Grove Boulevard
and struck a parking lot sign.
Our First Clearance Sale in 3 Years . • •
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1YLON SHAGS--NYLON SCULPTURED
7.95 JO s.so Or1n9• 6.95 22 II 4.95 Gold
8.95 J O I.ts Ollv• 7.95 62 5.95 Blu• I: ,,...n
7.95 H I\ S.H Green tones 7.95 Jl "'5,f5 llei9e
7.95 25 6.50 OHve & Gold 7.95 47 11 5.H Gold
8.95 5'4 1/1 5.95 Red & Block 1.50 Jl 5.H Grey.green
7.95 27 If> 5.95 Burnished. Gold 8.95 29 6.10 Roy1I blue
8.50 28 6.50 Yellow beige
7.9 5 9 11/1 6.50 Olive-gold NYLON . COMMERCIAL 7.95 271/J 6.50 Green twee d
8.95 29 1/J 6.95 Beige tweed t .95 17 II 5.'5 Gold tweed
8.95 107 6.95 Red, White, Blu e 7.95 25 1/> 5.95 C•ndy-stripe
8.95 261\ 6.'5 Beige tweed 8.95 331/J 6.$0 Blue green tweed
9.95 52 6.95 Medium gr\ien 8.95 2J 6.50 Green tweed
ID.95 40 7.50 Olive tweed 8.95 77 1/) 6.50 Grei n tweed
8.95 49 ?.50 Green tweed 9.95 21 1/1 _7.50 Burnished gold twe1d
9.50 59 1/1 7.50 Gold 9.95 38 7.50 Beige & brown tweed
9.95 28 1/> 7.50 Yellow Gold
10.95 44 7.50 Green tw1td ACRYLIC COMMERCIAL 9.95 7 1 7.50 Yellow & Whitt
9.50 701\ 7.95 Ort nge tweed 11.95 62 5.95 Blue & tmer1ld
9.95 30 II 7.'5 8urnl1hed gold 11.95 45 5.91 Pink & or•nge 10.95 59 7.95 Brown & Bleck
10.9 5 24 7.95 Green twetd ACRYLIC PLUSH 9.50 501\ 7.95 Green & Olive
I 0.95 28 7.95 Blut & Green ll.95 4l ll 8.95 Gol d
PLUSH SHAGS ACRYLIC AXMINISTER FLORAL
12.95 1091/i 7.95 Tom•to Ortni;i1
10.95 .. 7.95 Beige tones ll.95 47 9.95 Blue, green, •qu• on
10.95 23 11 8.5~ Beige tweed be ige b•ckground
10.95 168 8.95 l ight 9r•y•gteen ~
I I.SO 24 lfl 8.95 Ollve tone• KODEL PLUSH
10:95 31 8.95 Apple green 10.95 261/J 10.95 5 I If> 8.95 Gold 5.95 Light gold
11.95 411/1 8.95 Green 10.95 24 6.50 Golden beige
12.95 25 9.50 Green tweed 10.95 401> 6.95 Gold
I 1.95 27 1/1 9.50 Burnt or1ng• . 11.95 27 9.50 Gr•/;e WOOL COMMERCIAL 11.95 2) 1/) 9.50 Me ium blue
11.95 )81/) 9.50 T•fly 14.50 35 1/> 5.9S Red & green tweed 12.95 241\ 9.95 Gol d & Green
12 .95 45 9.95 light custom blue 14.50 33 5.91 Red I gold lwHd
13 .50 28 9.95 Green & White
14.50 33 II 9.95 Rost WOOL PLUSH 1 l .95 2211 10.95 Green, gold, I bei9t --14.50 31 II 11.95 81ige & Gre•n ' 16.95 24 '·" lelg1
All prlce1 l tt in1t1lled 1nd includ11 M 01. 1pon9t rubber p1ddln9.
Dozens of remnants also priced for clearance
DRAPERIES -162 ·~TS OF RIADY·MADI iN AH DRTID SIZll .... $6.SO .. $' 7 .so
Everything subject to prior wl ..
AJ"'QEN'S
I · CARPET~ e DRAPES
1463 Plocentla Ave.
COSTA lllESA
646-4838
HOU~S1 Mon. Thru Thurt., 9 lo 5:30-fRI, 9 to 9 -SAT., '9:30 lo 5
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Saddlebaek Today's Finni
EDITION N.Y. Stocks ..
VOL. 66, NO. 2, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANG,E COUND', CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1973 TEN CENTS
.
Irvine Council to Choo.se Among Road Plans
By JOHN ZALL~ Ot IM Dfilr .._
Irvine councilmen mis~~ tween
three major road }X'Ojects um month in
o.Uocating acaree n!:sources for their 1m.
74 highway program.
A controversial link of Campus Drive
near UC Irvine, a widening project on
Jeffrey Road in the area where an East
Irvine man was killed last month, and an
extension of Bonita Canyon Road behind
;turtle Rock home! are the three pro-
Panel Goal:
Policy Plan
.
F Or.-¥alley
A 3G-member study team of the SACC
(Saddleback Area Coordinating Council)-
UC Irvine environmental project tonight
begins weekly deliberations on a Sad·
dleback Valley policy plan . which won't
encl ''until they complete thelr mission."
The team. area resident! invited to the
group by SACC, meets at 7 p.m. at UCI
in the University Club.
Its immediate goal is to develop a
policy plan for the Saddleback Valley.
which may take seven morilhs. A more
Jong-range effort is to Incorporate that
policy plan into the county's general plan
ror the area. which may be updated.
That may take three years.
~fembers of the team met Dec. 12 in a
get-acquainted, organizational session.
Tiie development or a policy plan is on-
ly one aspect of the SACC-UC[ project,
which is now working on a $39.000
budget, -rurR:ted " by tht ~era! govern:
ment and the university.
Ada Mae Hardeman, the UC
coordinator of the project, said she has
applied to the state for a lm.74 budget
of $43,670, tw~thirds of -Which would
come from federal sources and one-third
from the state (via the university).
"We won't, hear about those funds until
April or May." she estimated.
Mrs. Hardeman characterized tonight's
meeting as also "just getting organized ."
Study team leader Ed Haworth, a paid
planning consultant, will "present a shop-
ping list of issues the group might like to
consider," she sa id . "They'll probably
outline what they'll be doing. And
perhaps set up a schedule."
Another aspect of the SACC-UCJ proj-
ect is a committee headed by W a r d
Thompson, wjij_ch is studying alternative
forms of goVefhment available to unin-
corporated areas.
That committee Is planning an all-day
workshop for local officials who may be
the decision-makers for anything SACC
might want to do, including represen-
tatives of adjacent cities, or the league I)(
cities, the local agenc1 lonnation com-
mission and the county board of
supervisors.
Mrs. Hardeman said no date has been
set for that session, but that it might
come in late January or early February.
The government committee is due to
report to SACC on its study in February.
A meeting with lhree outside con-
sultant!. experts in the field of local
government, was held by the group in
December.
Alternatives include municipal ad-
visory councils, community service
districts and area planning commissions.
Scandal Figure Dies
WASHING TON COURT HOUSE. O~io
(AP) -Roxy Stimson Brast, 80, involved
in the Teapot Dome scandal of the War-
ren G. Harding administration, died
fl.1onday.
Orange Coast
posals facing the council.
Technically, the decision shoold have
bttn made in December. But lacking a
public works engineer to do preliminary
"'Ork:, the council bas not yet been able to
make a choice.
This delay is now a problem factor.
since there may not be enougt. time left
for the studies the council would
ordinarily require before maklng a
decision.
There is also a finaocial conslderaUon.
lrvine has about $200.000 to spend.
Normally, the county woo.Id match this
on 1 one-to-one basis. However, a new
city's first project traditionally gets
"birthday" runding from the Orange
County Arterial Higb .... ·ay Financing
Program (AHFP).
That is, the city spends everything it
has, and Ow county pays the balance. no
matter bow much it may be. Thus. there
is some Incentive ror a city to appro\'e as
Its first project the most expensive road
DAILY ,ll DT 'll•to b't' '''l'lcll 0'09ftft•l1
Netv Year, Neti5 Boy
Jay 1w1ichael Robert Foster is number one with his mother, hlrs. Ger-
ald Foster of Irvine. He also is the first baby born in 1973 in Orange
County. Jay arrived at 1:36 a.m. ?t1onday at Hoag Memorial Hospital,
Newport Beach. weighing in at 6 pounds, 15 ounces. Mother and son
are doing nicely, thank you. The Fosters live at li206 ?tlayapple
Way, Irvine.
Cold Diker Saved
But Companion Dies on Peak
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) A
heliropter ~crew plucked a stranded hiker
from the slopes of sno'j\'-swept Hum-
phreys Peak today but rep(,rted that a
second died after two nights in subzero
weather.
The Coconino County sheriff's office.
identified the victim as AJliSOll Clay, 17,
of Scottsdale.
Officials reported that her companiion.
24-year~J-i Clint fl.iiUer, was in poor con-
ditkm from exposure and frostbite.
He was flown directly to Phoenix ,
about 150 miles to the south.
The two were in a New Year's Eve hik-
ing party which scaled the 13,00().(oot
mt.:.i'ltain . part of the San Francisco
Peaks which tower above this northern
Arizona city.
Fo·1r compariions hiked out to.1onday
and reported the t~·o missing. n at-
tempt to reach the two late Monday fail-
ed. Three were treated for frost)jite and
the fourth aided the search.
belo\I.· .,ero ovemi~·!.L e:nJ th~re 1-1·ere fiv~
feet of snow on the ground , searchers
said.
The helicopter crew from Luke Air
Force e~!'.~ joined lh~ <""'lfLh as ·11 ii ;o
~ ·-··C ~ .~!~
scr·-
One _ .. n.-·ivor. Rick llufnagc l. . or
Scottsdale. said the six, all merr · -of
the Arizona to.iountaineering Club. bcg:in
the climb in good \li'eathe.r Sunday ~f
ternoon.
"Then il became \li'indv and cold.'' t.e
said from his bed at ·Fl "Slaff Coro·
munity Hospital where he \\.'as 1. :i• ·•I
for frost-bitten hands and feet .
"Two of our three tents collapsed. The
wind and snow caved in the tents. All six
of us got in one tent. There ~·ere lhrrc
sleeping bags for six people so 11 c
couldn't zip them up properly:·
On Monday morniug, he said, !\filler
!See RESCUE, Page 21
ii can justify 1n lerms of traffic and safe-
ty.
Depending .on the council's choice or
road projeet!I, the city's $200,000 could
draw from $200,000 to $700,IMXI from the
county.
Each or the three major road projects
under consideration has advantages and
disadvantages when seen in this light :
BONITA CANYON DRIVE is the most
expensive of the three wilh a price
estimate of $900,000. It also has an im-,
portanL safety advan1age, In that 1t would
open up a second entrance to Turtle Roc.k
homes.
··Emergency vehicles coming into Tur-
tle !lock already have diffu.:ulty during
peak traffic hours." says E Ray Quigley,
a resiJent of Turtle Hock and councilmnn
who first proposed the Bonila Canyon
project tor 1973-74 .
"As Turtle Rock continues to grow , it's
going to be Increasingly important for
there to be more ways In and out thnn
just CUiver Dr1\'('," he said.
In terms of "birthday·· funding, Bonita
Canyon 1s the best deal for the city, since
a $900.000 road can be bought for just
$200,000 of r11y funds Howt•\·cr. otbc·r
('OU ncilmcn question the need for lhe
pruJl·ct u1 co1nparison to others in the
c1I)'. and thl· rounly roads dcpar1ment
ha s l•xprcssl•d rloubtR 1-1 hr I her the extcn-
~1011 t'an Ix> 111sl!fll'tl 111 ll'rm" of traffic
tSee lllGll\\'A\', Pug~ 2!
D~mage Admitted
U.S.: N. Viet Hospital, Airport Hit
WASHINGTON IAP1 -The Pentagon
acknowledged today that a North Viet-
namese hospilal and an airport normally
used by civilian planes near Han oi ap-
parently Suffered "some limited ac-
-cident.al damage" during intensive U.S.
bombing raids.
But Jerry \V . Friedhcim, the Pen-
tagon 's top spokesman. suggested that
the damage could have been caused
either by U.S. bombs or by North Viet-
namese antiaircraft explosives.
Nonetheles!i, Friedheim's acknowledg-
ment was at least a partial reversal of
his denials last week that U.S. bombs
strutk a North Vietnamese hospital.
Those claims had been made by North
Vietnam.
"'ll appears that some limi!ed ac-
cidental damage has occurred to some
faci lities a1 Gia Lam airport and at a
hospital the enemy calls Bae to.1ai."
Friedheim !taid in a statement read at a
ne\.\'S briefing .
··The exact extent of 1h1s damage is
uncertain. as is its cause.
"Our in{or.nation docs not square \\'ith
~lanoi's propaganda claims of massive
destruction at these sites."
F'riedhcim restated what he said is
U.S. policy to target only mililary ob-
jectives in North Vietnam .
Ho"·ever, he said. "We know, and have
said many times. that from time to time
accidental damage to otlier than military
targets occur. sometimes involving
United Sta tes ordnance or aircrafl and
sometimes involving North Vietnamese
ordnance or aircraft."
He expressed regret roncerning "any
such accidental damage from whatever
source."
$200,000 Loss Feared
From Winds at Avalon
Cleanup <."Ontinued along the Southern
Orange Coast today in the wake of the
year's most severe windstorm but no one
routd repair · one madderiing problem
\4·hich hit early New Year's morning in
Snn Clemente.
1-tundreds of residents 5et to ~·atch the
Tournament of Roses Parade found no
picture on their television tubes after the
high '4'inds caused a power blackout in
the industrial section of the city.
The outage immediately knocked off a
cable television booster station and sets
all over town "'ere without a picture.
Police received srores of calls from
angry residents. Spokesmen from the
loca l cable service said their aides were
swamped with nearly 200 calls at the
start of the outage.
Service was restored, however. by
about 10 a.m. to most areas.
Besides adding 10 the New Year's
morning harigover. the wind!! caused city
crews in San Clemente to. go lo wo11k as
'trees anti branches fell ovi!r a wide area.
One large eucalyptus toppled in the golf
course area.
Dozens of limbs \4'ere torn from other
trees in the Lilast11I area.
New Year"s day at Dana Harbor was
1-1•ithout incident but the day before. as
the Santa Anas started to build ,
patrolmen were kept busy .
At one point last Sunday. patrolmen
said, a single blast of wind capsized
several sailboats all at once near the
harbor entrance.
Rescuing patrolmen plucked 11 persons
from the water and helped right the
vessels. No one was injured.
$83 Million in County
Phone Improvement Set
About $8.1 million will be spent during
the new year by Pacific Telephone Com-
pany to improve service facilities
throughout the county, much of it on the
Orange Coast.
Largest project involved in the 1973
program Is completion of a $5.7 million
communications ctnter at 4918 ~1oulton
Parkway in Irvine.
Pacific Telephone Company ex~utive
Standlee ti . Kautz says the facility in-
•
eluding one story and a basement will
contain electronic switching equipment
1-1•ith a capacity of 20.000 telephones.
R1s1ng service needs and increasing
subscribers in Orange County also re-
quire a $2.2 millron operators ' center op-
ening this sum mer in Anaheim, 1-1•ith
facilities for 124 operators .
They will use electronic consoles in-
1tead or old-fashioned switchboards.
Friedheim said the Bae ~-la1 hospital
and the Gia Lam airfield \4'cre struck
during U.S. Uombing attacks against
mllitary targets 1-1·ithin seve r<il hundred
yards or them.
"These t\li'O sites were in etose. prox·
imity to military targets." he said. "\Ve
have no knowledge of 1-1·hat caused the
danlage. It could have ~en either side.''
lie said the Bae to.tai rnilitary complex
ton1prises an airport. storage and
Wttrehouse faeilitit!S. <Jnd a pclrolcun1
J.1roducts depot.
11e indicated that the Gia L:im railroad
yards 1~·t!rc the ob1eet1ves of bombs
·which struck the airpo rt used by Soviet
and other civilian air transports.
However. he said some fl.ilG Jet fiRhter.->
'4·ere hit at Gia Lam. along with the con-
trol tO\li'er
Fri!'dhe1m -.:aid information 1hat
tSt<e BO.\IBING. Page !I
W i11.ds Destroy
Rolli1ig Trail,er
Santa Ana winds blew over a 20-
root house trailer on the Santa Ana
Freeway in Irvine Monday night
destroying it. according to the
California Highway Patrol.
The C•IP "'as right on the scene
to investigate the accident in-
volving the trailer -o"'ned and
towed by Los Angles Police Officer
George F.ckles Jr .. at Myford Ro.ad
durin~ the rush hour.
A CHP patrol car which hap-
pened lo be followin& directly
bihind the car and trailer almost
C'Ol\ided with the wreckage itscH.
Investigators said the debris lit-
!ering northhound lanes lied up
traffic for an hour.
Mesa Mayor Sets
County Aviation
Talks W cdnesday
<.:osta l\Icsa l\layor Jack tlammctl has
called an emergency meeting of the
city's Aviation Committee for 7·30 p.m
\\'ednesday to discuss airplanes and
airport problems in Orange County.
The session 1-1·ilt focus primarily on a
controversial resolution introduced by
the city of Irvine during the last meeting
or the California League of Cities.
Among several key points in the
resolution are reques ts to prohibit in-
crcnscd jet traffic at Orange County
Atrport and not to allow commercial air
traffic at F:I Toro l\1arine base.
Weather
Some increased cloudiness on
Wednesday. according to the
weatherlady, With slightly cooler
temperatures. Highs of 57 are ex-
pect..i at ·the beaches, rising to If/
inland. Lews 1n the upper 30s to
low 40s with local frost.
Winds reached 80 miles an hour ~1on
. day, temperatures dipped to 10 degr~
Bur.g'4r Leaves
'Tip' Behi11d
-Wednesday Rally to Ope11
Valley School Bond Drive
Despite the fact several new building~
<ind control CC'nle.ri; are included in the
SIJ'.l n1illinn outlay. Kautz said. $24 million
will be used for cable facilities, mostly
underground
New dialing equipment is being in-
st alled at severnl locations too. to handle
an increase from the 1.4 billion local calls
plaeed last year by Orange County
residents.
Locations include by address and cost :
4:102 Ford Road, Corona del i\1ar,
1'"152.00J; 23011 r:I Toro Road. !!.I Toro :
The resolution. brought he£oro the
League of Ci1ics Dee. 14. failed because
it did not S('ture a t'>''O-lhirds majority.
C'ost:i l\1esa "'as one of the 10 cities op-
posing the resolui.ion.
\Vednesday·s meeting in the fifth floor
confr?ence room of Costa Me5a City Hall
1-1·1Jl be to consider the pros and c<1ns of
the lrvine resolution, accon::ling to t.l<1yo r •
Ham mett
The mayor sai d he has invited
rf'present;i rives from Irvine, Newport
Beach. Santa Ana, Tustin. and Orange to
par1ie1 pate in ·the d1S<.'US.!i\on. An intruder who broke Into the office of All Saddleback Valley residents are in-INSIDE TODAY a Laguna Hills Roman Catholic church viled to a kickoff rally at 8 p.m. Wednes-
Pretidmil Nixon $howtd up on New Year's Eve proved in a very day at to.fission Viejo High Schoo I to
brighl a1ui eart11 on New Year's practical way lhat It •un't money he launch a campaign for the Saddlebllck
Da11 at his Ovat Of/let in Wruh· wu look.tng for _ \'alley Unified School District's S28
ington. D.C. Turning the door· A prtest who left hlJ mass to b~ million bond and SIS millk>n state Ill>
k • o b, he di.ooooered hmuelj vesligate. o IU!pi<ious nollt found the portionment election Feb. &.
locked out of his 010!\ office. buJ'i)ar numcting tile office ru .. at St. The BONDS (Build Our N~w DlllTl<t
See 110!1/ an Page. 4. Nic!iolu Colholic Church, ~ El TGtO Schook) rally wlU' be in the multi·
L.M. .,.. • , """ Lwllrt ,, Road. Orange· County SherUrs officen ~ room. .
Caltfifl'tlf• , ,,....... ,..,, said. ~. Valley Unified Schlol
=~1!"' 11-: :.i::= : ·'!be~ didn't stay to dl.clJll the 01Wtct becomes fUlly operational July I,
c.....-. ,. ...,,. , .. ,, situation with the angry priest. 1973, accordln& to terms of a unUlcatlon ___ ~~::,._ ! ~=-wia::!WS "::i_ 11He fled~" the priest told deputies. elecUon tut Jane.
.,,..,..._.. ,.... rwten •••: 1'But Di Jilt aomelhing belilOO. ~·---TJii"'Teo:-s special -aecnon ·Ta the =:-:= • ..,. 1•1; :=. ,.... 1l-u -, -He showed deputJes a '5 bll~ .slammtd district's first bond effort.
...._ 1• • .,... ..,.. • down on lhe pr1e1t'l 'de.sk as tne intt"Uder Voters are-being asked to approve $28
ran from Ibo churd!. mUlion In local bonds ond $It million In
I I
borrowing capacity for state aid
The. BOND campaign committee i~
headed by El Toro resident Nick Di
Giuro.
The nlly Wednesday night \\'111 be at-
tended by BONDS committtt chairman
and members, block worttn and other
votunteer campatgnera.
The Saddleback group has decided to
uSe a door·to-door approach recruiting a \
reP,,resentatlve frQm each school in the
area who lt supposed to-set "' worker for
each block wlthfu that school boundaries.
campalJin bn><h'""' prepared by Loa
Youlli 100 jilT<I rt rby !he Mfiiion Vl<jO
Development Company will be 1vail11ble.
al. the rally, as will. other lnfonnation
•bout lbe compaign.
•
SR! ... 000 ; 401 Calle de lo!I Mollnos, San
Clemente. Wl.000: 25762 Camino del
A\·lon, San Juan Capistrano. $$41.0CM>, and
3220 S. Bristol. $890.000 and fRl N. Bush
St ., $1.6 million, both in Santa Ana .
Bihle Reading to End
GLENDALE I A Pl • -The Voice
nf Prophecy expects lo complete its
fourth annual nonstop reading of the Bi-
ble 10melime Thursday. The ora11niz.a-
fion. a raCllO~amnate o( '(J)e sevemh~ay
Adventlsts, launched the h.ading at mid-
niJi,hl Jan. I and cxpecli to use moce
th.an 100 volunteers in th& project.
Ii<' indicated that the sub$tanee of th<'
d1scu'\Sion would provide Costa t-.1es11
~·1th ··1npu!'' for a public hearing Jan 10
in Santa Ana on county aviation prob-
lems. That M!~IOl1 will be conducted b\1
the Southern Cali!omia Aaaociat1on cit
(jo,·cm1nt:nL'\ (SCAG ).
-The" trvtne tt!M>luuon . which also cans
for a ban on construction of the pro~
Chino Hilli airport. has bf.en a-ltlciud by
its detractors for leaving only Olmp
J•cndlcW>n as a site for a major airport.
In their re.solution, Irvine city coun-
cilmen said their 5Ugesti0ns were
molivated by a general concern about lhe
location of airports and lhe noise they
generate,
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2 DAILY PILOT IS
DAILY PILOT Sltff f'tlti.
LAUNCHES NEW PROGRAM
Recreation Chief G1yle
R ec reational
Prog ram Set
For Irvine
T.udi1, .i....,,. l , 197l
U.S., Reds
Begin Anew
For Peace
PARIS (AP) -U.S. alld North Vlet-
na1nese t«hnical experts sat down
toge ther tod1ty for the fi rs! time since
Dec. 23 to work out details of an eventu·
al Vietnamese cease-fire.
The technlcal meetings bad been
suspended becaUJe of North Vietnamese
protests ovtr Ameri can. bombing of the
norlh. Their resump1lon marked the first
step in resumption of !he suspended full-
scale secret negotiations( due to begin
again nut ~fonday, after a three-week
hia tus.
Nguyen Co Thach. North Vietnamese
deputy foreign m i n I s t e r , and
William Sullivan, deputy assist.ant
secretary of state for Southeast Asain af·
fairs, headed the t\\'O delegations. They
met at a vill a in suburban Cholsy·Le-Roi,
near the headquarters of the North Viet·
namese delegation to the Paris peace
talks.
The technica l meetings are an offshoot
of the top-level peace negotiations led by
}lenry A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho, a
member of tbe Hanoi Poli tiburo.
President Georges Pompidou said
·•real precise difficulties, hard to
overcome" remain to be faced in the
ilegotiations.
But the French president added that he
) __ )Cd this time the talks will succeed.
Irvine's firs t full-rledged recreation Speaking to representatives of
Program gets off the ground this week journalists' associations greetinf him for the new year, Pompldou said : "The
with registration for 24 craft, art, music, simple fact that negotiations resume Is
and physical educa tion classes. very important."
Offerings r a n g e lrom wrestling to As the White House linked the U.S
freehand drawing to belly dancing with bombing policy to peace negotiations,
Pre.s.ident Nixon awaited today the return classes involving from 10 to UI students of Henry Kissinger for consultations
each. before the Paris negotiations resume
Other unusual offerings include pup. next Monday.
petry, girls' chann and personality, jazz Nixon's assistant for National Security
ball Affairs had been vacationing at Palm and rhythms, and et. Springs, and a White House spokesman
"We've tried to provide something for said he is 10 return to Wasblngton late
everyone," says Froome Gayle, the city's this afternoon.,
newly hired recreation coordinator. The spokesman, deputy press secretary
•"Whether In arts, crafts, culture, or Gerald L. Warren, said Nixon and Kiss-
phfslcal education, we try to give people Inger would begin late today a aerles of
a chance to do something they haven't meetings to prepare the U.S. stance
tried before.'' when Kissinger's talks with North Viet-
All classes will have paid instructors oam's le Due 'Tho reopen.
and meet in the eventngs. Most sessions 1be White House announced Saturday
will be held at University High Sc.boo! In the scheduJed resumption of the Parls
Irvine. There will be room for about 500 talks after Nls:on halted massive bomb--
in all classes, Gayle said. ing of North Vietnam above the 20th
Gayle said the classes v.·ere selected on parallel. The bombing had been re~ed
the basil of their popular appeal. but he Dec. 18 after a two-month ~uspens10~.
said most would offer at least some Press ~cretary Ronald L. Ziegler s~1d
physidl.I conditioning along· with-the in-~ the_~bJq:l y,·as to .lbwart_ a ~on)munJSt _
struction . b1..ila·up. '
"If you take the jazz clas,,, I can prom· . Today. resJJO?~lng to ncwsm~ s ques--
ise you a heck of a workout ," he said. t•.~· Warren ~ed the bombing policy
"The instructor Is very good and it will d1r !tly to negotiations; . u~! rock records." ''.If you look, you wlil find that y,·hen
He .. id the jazz class would resemble senous negotiations . wer7 P.ntered Into
a "how to" dance class for modem pop there was a dlscont1nuallon or bomb~g
music. above the 20th parallel:" he said . 1n
Another unique class, Gayle said, is: ref~rence to the bombing suspension
belly dancing which will offer "physical which ended Dec. 18. .
conditioning plus a lot of fun." Warren referred also to his statcm~nl
He noted that belly dancing was conce on Sat~rda~. that the ~rr~nt bombing
considered a medicinal cure for upset suspension . would rem~m m effect as stomachs. long .~s serious negotlaUons were under
Registration will take place Thursday way.
from 9 a.m. to noon and from 6 to 9 p.m.,
and Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. if!
Room 244: of the Irvine T'own Center. Fees
range from $2 to $35, with most around
$21).
The Irvine recreation department has
offered a few similar-classes in the past, but Gayle, who was hired in October,
said this ls the first time the program
has been as broad as it is.
Flames Wreck Cafe;
Damage at $20,000
Cause or a fire which did an e~umated
$20,000 to 3 Dana Point cafe early ~ion.
day morning is still under investigation.
lhe Orange County F'ire Department
reported today.
Fire broke out at 4:26 a.m. in Ginger's
Thirtle~ Bar at 24312 Del Prado Road .
Firemen fought the blaze for half an
hour.
OUNGI COAST "
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From Pagel
BOMiflN.G ...
damage had been ln£1icled on the hospital
came to him after his denial Dec. 'rt and
his reiteration of the denial Dec. 29.
He declined to say how this later in-
fonnaUon WB• obtained, allhou~ he in-
dicated It came from· U.S. aerial reron~
naissance photography.
A number or American peace activists
visiting In Hanoi during the intensive
U.S.-bOfflblfigl starting' De<:. 18 have~
ported the Hanoi government's claims of
severe damage to the city, including
civilian structures.
Friedheim said , wv!cr qu estioning , that
to his knowledge !\one of these U.S.
citizens had been interviewed by U.S. of-
ficials to get their stories first-hand.
From Pagel
RESCUE ...
and Miss Clay were unable to walk , and
all the gea r was frozen .
"We left them four to fi ve days food,
three sleeping bags and the ripped-up
tent that they could close with only t'i'-'O
in side it. Then we hiked out to get hclp."
Snow and ice stonns choked a large
po rtion of the western half of th e nation
lQday, prom pting authorities in some
areas to close highways and streets.
The winter stonn dumped an average
of five inches of snow on • large portion
of New r.1exico. Sliver City reported 111
inches, Bern ing. five and Tucumcari ,
(our.
Bisbee, Ariz. received six lnche! of
snow and Sierra Vista, AN., nve lnchts.
Cold wave wamlngs have been post~
for parts of Mo11tana and North Dakota
'~1hile cold wave watches were In effect
for part! of South Dakota and Wyoming.
Inters tate 80, a major east-west rou te
across loutl'lern W)'(lmlng, wu cl0!8t for
lhe fifth 1tr11igbt day over J 100-mUe
stretch becau se blowinf snow cut visibili-
ty. Traffic was swftchfJd to slower
alternate routes.
Winter storm watches were l!!ued for
souffierrllClaDo and ·ffie northern p;ortfOl\I
or Nevlda aod Utah.
Icy hills forced the closing of !Orne El
Paso,· Tex. streetJ and 11ulhor1lle1 In
other parta of the stale urged motortm
t.o attempt only emergency trips.
--• • r .
. ' I
,
MOULTON l'KWY s MoULTON 'KWY-:t--+
~ I ~ m
, ,__•::U.:;;.:RANCA;;;.;;;;;.,;RD~--t-~'"-------t' •
I
PALISADES RD
COSTA MESA
ROAD CHOICES -Irvine councilmen must decide
this month among three major road! for their 1973-
74 highway program. The choices are: A controver·
sial link of Campus Drive above UC lrvine (two
possible alignments are shown near center of map
by broken line and by star-line). Another choice ls
UCI
TURTLE
ROCK
I
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DAILY ,ILOT Mlf, llo'r M-(,_
a 3.5 mile extension of Bonita Canyon Road from
its present intersection with Cul •er Drive (shown
by broken line at far right on map). The third choice
is widening Jeffrey Road from two to four lanes be-
tween San Diego and Santa Ana freeways (top right
on map),
Califo rnia ' .
·Justice
Peters Dies
B,ERKELEV (AP) ..., J ustice Raymond
E. Peters, recognlud ns the foremost
liberal an the Ca liforn ia Supreme Court,
died today 11t his home here . H~ was 69.
Among Peters' not8ble opinions were
the 19&6 decision striking down the ballot
initiative that outlawed Cllllfomla falr
housing laws and the IW71 opinion In·
validating the ban again!!! women work·
ing as ba rt enders.
Peters !Ulfered A stroke t.1onday night
and died this morning at hi.s home with
!he doctor in attendance, ~1ar1on Peters.
his widow, reported. Peters suffered a
stroke In 1968, but recovered,and served
fulltime on the bench after his recovery.
~irs. Peters said her husband planned
to retire oo his 70th blrthdaJ. In April.
Peters, a native cf Oakland , was nam·
ed to the bench In 1959 by then-Gov. Ed·
mund G. "Pat" Brown.
He was instructed in the state Supreme
Court 's operations by nine years e1-
pcrience as the court's chief law
secretary. lie se rved in that post from
1930 to 1939. lie next served 20 years on
lhe state Cou.1:1 of Appeal in San Fran-
cisco before advancing to the high bench.
, By his opinions, Peters stamped
himself as the ..t'ourt's most advanced
socia l thinker.
In the 1966 ruling by a 4-2 court , Peters
said the ballot initiative striking down
the state's fa ir housing Jaws was an un·
consti tutional act by the people. He said
the peo ple could no more act un-
constitutionally than the Legislature or
any otber state body.
Fro111Pqel J a pan Radical Dead Prop. 14, the ballot measure outlawing
the state's fai r housing laws. had won
nearly a 2-1 majority in the 1964 election. HIGHWAY PROGRAM ••• roltvo (APJ -Tsuneo Mori, !8, a
student radical accused of leading a
kangaroo court that purged and killed 14
fellow memben of the United Red Anny
last winter, was found dead in his prison
cell Monday. Police said he committed
suicide. His trial was set for Jan. 23.
Peters said the measure denied to
blacks seeking housing the equal pro-
tection guaranteed by the 14th Amend-
ment to Lbe U.S. Constitution. The
de<:ision was upheld by the U.S. Supreme
Court by its refusal to hear an appeal of
the case.
demand at this time. Quigley. "There bas been one crisis after
another all year and we "just haven't bad
time to get to this road problem until
now."
JEFFREY ROAD between the San
Diego and Santa Ana freeways is cur-
rently a two-lane highway. But It is In very poor condition and despite the fact · ---------------------------------------------
that it is a major truck route for the city,
the county has balked at full scale
repairs since it Is scheduled ultimately
for widening to four lanes.
Last month, however, an East Irvine
man was killed at the intersection cf Jef.
frey and the Santa Fe tracks, and Coun-
cilman Henry Quigley says that "with all
the pock marks ln ii. Jeffrey Road Is a
definite public safety hazard in Its
present state."
Widening it to four lanes will cost
»t0,000. ~nna\ly the ~ity's .s~re _!ould
be $255,000, but under lerms or birthd~
funding. It could. get the job done for
$200.000.
But again , the county roads depart·
ment has 11at certified the need for
widening Jeffrey Road In terms of traffic
volume. despite admitting a certain safe-
ty problem.
CA!\1PUS DRIVE is the . final
alternative. Extension of it would relieve
a severe traffic congestion problem on
MacArthur Boulevard near UC IrviOe
and the Town Center. but most agree It
would also have adverse environmental
impact on wildlife in the San Joaquin
marsh.
The street portion of the pro}ect v.wld
co.st $300,000 (plus a $500,000 bridge to be
paid for entirely by the county no matter
when It ls built).
The county roads department Is eager
to do this project, and guarantees a~
proval of tbe road if the city wants it.
Councilman Henry Quigley has been
pushing for a realignment of Campus
from I~ original design . Instead of
skirting San Joaquin marsh and emp.
lying onto MacArthur Boulevard, as is
nov.· planned, Henry Quigley wants Cam-
pus to swing to the northeast and connect
directly to the San Diego Freeway.
"This would give the Town Center and
UC Irvine their own rreeway exll,"
Quigley says. "In tenns of long range
planning, I.his makes good sense."
There are several problems with this
alignment, however. First, no traffic
studies or blueprints have been done, and
both would need to he completed by the
end of January in order to have the pro)-
ecl qualify for funding.
In addition. a hookup v.•ith the San
Diego Freeway would require state a~
prov al by the end of January. But cur-
rent state standards say that there la not
room for a Campus Drive e1it between
the already es:isting Jamboree Road and
Culver Drive exits.
Thus on Campus Drive, councilmen
must not only decide whether the road
should be built, but 'A-'here it should be
built.
tr they decide to build Campus, but
move it as Quigley suggests, "the prob-
lem of getting everything done on time
WQUld present a difficult i( not impossible
situation-," according to both the county
roads department and ltenry Quigley.
If they approve Campus Drive as lt is
currently designed, they will not get any
"birthday bonus," since the city's
$200.000 is more than half or the $300,000
project.
Irontcally, the city could hnve a~
proved Campus Drive for 1972·73 when if
had accumulated only 1611,000 In road
funds. At that time, its birthday prtsent
'i'-'ould have been '90,000. But ln tale
December, 1971, the city had Just to.
cor;>0rat~ and wanted to put off a
decision on It& project lor more ltucly.
But one year laler, It Is JtlU fating the
same situation.
"I admit we 'A-'on't come out of this
thing amelllng like a rose." laid Henry
Boy, 3; Part Goat? .
lllJESCA, Spain (UPI) -. A surgeon
removed more than •30 1tems from lhe
sto r:nach of a 3-year-old boy. Amonc the
objects were stonet the alze of an olive.
sa:ev.·s, jewelry, beads, frult ltonts tnd
coins .
Our First Clearance Sale in 3 Years • • • -·-.........
IMl•lltlll
.7.9 5
1.95
7.95
7.95
1.95
7.95
8.50
7.95
7.95
8.95
8.95
1.95
9.95
ID.9S
1.95
9.50
9.95
10.95
9.95
9.50
9.95
10.95
10.95
9.50
10.'5
12.95
t0.9S
10.95
I0.9S
11.50
I0.9S
10.95
11.95
12.95
11.95
11.95
11.95
I l.9S
12.95
12.95
13 .50
14.50
I l .95
14.SO
.......
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30
24 11
25
54 VJ
27 1/J
21
9 1 V1
'27 1/1
'l9V>
107
2611
52
40
49
59•;,
'281/1
44
71
7011
30!\
59
24
5011
28
1091/J
44
2111
161
241/J
31
51 1/1
41 'It
2S
27V1
27
21 'h
31'h
2411
45
28
"ll ll
2211
3111
.... _ ......... 1 .......... -NYLON SHAGS
5.50
5.95
5.ts
6.5D
5.ts
5.'5
6.50
6.5D
6.50
6.95
6.95
6.9S
6.ts
7.50
7.50
7.50
7.50
7.50
7.SO
7.9S
7.95
7.95
7.ts
7.95
7.95
Or1n9•
Ollvi
Green t ones
Olive I: Gold
Rod & Bli ek
Burnished Gold
Yellow beige
Oliv•·gold
Green tweed
Beig• tweed
Red, White, Blu e
Beige tweed
Medium 9re1n
Olive tweed
Green tweed
Gold
Yellow Gold
Green tweed
Yellow & White
Orange tweed
Bumi1hed gold
Brown & Bleck
Green tweed
Green & Olire
Blue & Green
<
PLUSH SHAGS
7.95
7.95
8.50
I .ts
I .ts
1.95
l .9S
I.ts
9.50
9.50
9.50
9.50
9.SO
9.9S
9.95
9.ts
9.ts
10.95
11 .95
T ometo Orang•
Beige tone1
Beige tweed
light gr•y·green
Olive tones
Apple green
Gold
Green
Green tweed
Burnt orenge
Gr1p1
Medium blue
T11fd Go\ & Green
light custom blue
Grein & White
Ro1e
Green, gold, I: beige V
Beige & Green
6.9S
~ 7.95
7.95
7.95
1.50
.. 8.95
8.95
7.95
8.95
8.95
8.95
9.95
9.95
11.95
I 1.9S
1 l .95
1 l.9S
10.95
10.95
10.95
14.50
14 .50
16.95
....... ""' NYLON SCULPTURED
2211
62
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4711
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29
4.9S
~.95
S.95
5.95
5.9S
6.50
Gold
Blue & green
Bei9e
Gold
Grey-9r1en
Roy•I blue
NYLON COMMERCIAL
1711 ·•
2!i"h
33 1/)
23
77 1/)
28 1/)
38
5.95
5.9S
6.50
6.50
6.50
7.50
7.50
Gold tweed
Candy-strip•
Blu .. 9reen tweed
Green tweed
Green tweed
Burni5hed gold tweed
Beige & brown tweed
ACUYLIC COMMERCIAL
62
45
41 11
5.95
S.9S
Blu e & emerald
Pink & oran9e
ACRYLIC PLUSH
8.95 Gold
ACRYLIC AXMINISTIR FLCllAL
47
35 1/,
31
24
9.95 Blue, 9re1n, •qua on
bei9e back9round
KOOEL PLUSH
5.95
6.50
6.95
Li9ht 9old
Golden bei9e
Gold
WOOL COMMERCIAL
_5.9S
5.9S
Rid & green twe1d
Red & gold tweed
WOOL PLUSH
6.95
All prices tre instelled •nd includes 6-4 01. sponge rubber pedding.
Dozens ~f remnants also priced for clearance
DRAPERIES -"' ·~· Of llADV-MADI IN AHOITID 5 1%15 •.• $6.50 •• $17.50
E••rything subj•ct to prior sal•.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave. .
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURSi Mon. Thrv Thlll'L, 9 to 5:30-FRI. 9 to 9-SAT .• 9:30 to 5
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Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
• •
. VOL 66, NO. 2, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, I 973 TEN CENTS
...
Ocean View All-year Opponents to Ask Delay
Opponents of all yea r schools say they
w1.ll ask Ocean Vie~ Schoo! District
trustees tonight to delay implem~ng
aJl year schools throughout the elemen-
• f#ry school dhtrict.
Henry Lyday, spokesman for Con-
cerned Partnts and li'riends, said his
group will appear before the 19Chool board
~ ''plead for a reconsideration" or lhe ·
board's previous decision to 'survey 19 of
the distrlc' 's 22 schools by February to
see lf parents and teachers would like to
try an all year plan.
That deci.slon was reached on Dec. $ in
a unanimous vote of lhe three board
members attending the meeting.
Lyday said his group believes the
decisioo should have been made by the
full board .
11e noted thlt the matter is not on the
board's agenda for tonight , but pointed
out that the absence of Ralph Bauer and
Robert Zlnngrabc from the Dec. s
meeting is "of major importance."
The time plan appr<1ved by trustees
calls for teachers ac the . 19 schools to
vole on the all year school plan this
DAILY l"ILOT lll!fto ,,,, T•m C•wlll•
WHEN WIND IS RIGHT, CATALINA ISLAND LOOKS LIKE THIS FROM HUNTINGTON BEACH
A Califoml1 Winter Morning -Clean, Crisp Breathtaking and Fragile
Dairyma1i's Bocly
' . F oun.d ut Gutted
U.S., N. Viet Technical
HuntingtonHorne §p~rts Resume Meeti11g
• 'Ille body ol a 15J.1e1M>ld llunt1ngtao
Beach dairy worker was ..... Monday
momlnf In the ruins of a ooe bedroom
boose which was gutted by a fire late
New Year's Eve.
Huntington Beach Fire Marshal Jim
Garspach said today Cecil "Curly "
Anderson apaprently fell asleep in a
chair about 11 :30 p.m. Sunday, while
smoking a ciagarette.
N house, which W8.!1 in the back of
Ed's Dairy, 16583 Bolsa Chica Road, was
enveloped in flames before it was seen
by a teenage girl who also lives on the
!Wry property.
The fire department was called im·
mediately. Huntin,gWn Beach Police Of·
ficer 'Richard Cooi>er also spolted the
b1a ze while on patrol.
Cooper was told that Anderson might
be in lhe h&use and tried to enter the
burning building but was blocked by in-
tense heat and smoke.
The fire spread to two house trailers
and a bus by the time the fire depart·
ment arrived two minutes after notifica-
tlOll. '
1be two other dwellings were unoc-
cupied at the time of the fire, according
to Gerspach. , ·
Firemen battled the flames for abot.it
15 minutes before the fire was under corr
trol, preventing it from spreading to hay
.stacks and other buildings on the prop-
erty.
Fire officials estimated damage to the
dairy to be about IS,000.
Anderson had worked for the dairy.
which is owned by the Gomalves family,
for 14 years. Many of the employe.s there
(See BODY, Page %)
Crash lnjmies
Prove Fatal
PARIS (APl -U.S. and Nortll Viet-
namese technical experts S(jt -down
together today for the first time since
Dec. 23 to work out details of an eventu·
al Vietnamese cease-fire.
The technical meetings had been
suspended because of North Vietnamese
protests over Ameri can bombing of the
north. Thei r resumption marked the first
step in resumption of the suspended full-
scale secret negotiations, due to begin
again next Monday, after a three-week
hiatus.
Nguyen Co Thach, North Vietnamese
deputy foreign m i n i s t e r . and
William Sullivan, deputy assistant
secretary of state for Southeast Asain af·
fairs, headed the two delega tions. They
met at a villa in suburban Choisy-Le-Roi,
near the headquarters of the North Viet·
Huntington Band
To Get Study
By Councilmen
City Councilmen will consider the crea·
tion of a community concert band for
Huntington Beach during tonight's 7
o'clock session.
City Administrator David Rowlands
bas asked the council to authorize $15,000
to start the band and hire a director.
Rowlands suggests John 1'1ason. a
music instruck>r at Marina High School,
for the band master, at a salary of $250 a
month.
The city would also need a band
manager (about $625 a year) and a band
Ubrartan (about l600 a year), Rowlands
suggests.
The personnel costs ?'Ollld be constant
each year, Rowlands says, but the initial
cost for music in.struments would not be
repeated.
namese delegation to the Paris f>CllCC
talk.'\.
The technical meetings fire an off.~hrrot
of the top-level peace negolifltions led by
llenry A. Kissinger and Le Due ThQ. ::i
member of tt:le Hanoi Politiburo.
PreSidcnt Ge<>rges Pompidou said
"real precise di fficulties. hare! to
overcome·• remain to be faced 1n the
nl•go!iatlons.
But the French president ::iddC'd thnl he
t, ,>t'd this time the talks .,.,·ill succce<l.
S p e a k in g to representa!ives of
jou rnalists' associations greeting htm fo r
the new year, Pompidou said: .. The
simple fact that negotiations resume is
very important."
As the White House hnked the U.S
bombing policy to peace negot iations.
President Nixon 3\\'aited today the return
of Henry Kissinger for consultations
before the Paris negotiations resu!Jlc
next Monday .
Nixon's assistant for National Security
Affairs had been vacationing at Palm
Springs. and a Wh ite House spokesman
sHid he is to return to ..\\'ashington late
th is afternoon.
The spokesman, deputy press secretary
Gerald .(.. Warren. said Nixon find Kiss-
inger would begin 1ate today 'a sC'rh!s of
meetings \o -prepare the 0 .S. stance
when Kissinger's talks with North Viet·
nam's le Due Tho reopen.
The White House announced Saturda y
the scheduled reswnption of the Paris
talks after Nixon halted massive bomlr
ing of North Vietnam above the 20th
parallel. The bombing had been resumed
Dec. 18 after a two-month suspension.
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
the object was to th11-art a Communi1t
bWld·up,
Today. responding to ne\\5men·s qu~s·
lioos. Warren tied the bombing puli<'Y
dlr · =:tly to negotiations.
which ended Dec. 18.
Warren referred also to his s1:1tP1nc•11
on Saturday that the current bon1b111 g
suspension "would remain in effect as
(See TALKS, Page 2)
mont h. In the schools "·here It l'CC'elves
teacher approval. parents .,.,,Ul vote on
the pl'Qposal in February.
Three schools have hem eliminated
from the schedul('. They include Y.'est-
mont and Crest View .... ·here aU year pro-
grams already are in effect and Glen
View because parents lhere voted do11-11
an all year plan last year.
"If the trustees Insist on going ahead,
.,.,,e will insist they slipulale that the
teache r voting be conducted by secrel
ballot," Lyday said.
Lyday, ..... ho is a school counselor for
the Los Angeles city school systen1, ('X·
plr ined lhat the delay in the voting
schedule is being sought to allow purtnt!I
and te~cher~ the opportunity to study an
t'\ aluauon or the plan 1hoit ha s been in
USl' al West mont and Crest View s1nce
Jul\'. . ~
District officials oolr that l ~valua·
l1011 "·1\1 not be prepared until July of this
year.
"\\'e don't think it's fnir that parents
.ind (acuity are bt•in~ ilSkt-d to vote
before thert is adequate 111fornlation
availnbl<'."' Lyday said
• I Damag~ Admitted
U.S.: N. Viet Hospital, Airport Hit
\~'ASl ll NGTO~ Lo\P l -The Pentagon
ackno .... ·lcdged today that a North Viet·
namese hospital end an ai rport nonnally
U!ied ~)' c1v1han pl::ines near Hanoi ap-
parenlly suffered "some limited ac-
cidental damage" during Intensive U.S.
bombing raids.
But Jerry \If. F'riedheim, the Pen·
tagon 's top spokesman , suggested that
!he damage couli:I have been 'caused
eith('r by U.S. bombs or by North Viet·
nan1l·se antiaircraft explosives.
Nonetheless. Friedheim's acknowledg-
rncnt >A'as al least a partial reversal of
his denials last week that U.S. bombs
struck a North Vietnamese hospilal.
Thase claims had been made by North
Vietnam.
"It appears that some limited ac·
cidental damage has occurred to somC'
rac11it1es :it Gia Lam airport and at a
hospital 1he enemy caUs Bae ~1ai,"
F'riedheim said in a statement read at a
ne"·s briefing. .1
"The exact extent of this damage Is
uncertain. as is its cause.
''Our information does oot square with
Ifanoi's propaganda claim! el massive
destruction at these 'sites."
F'riedhelm restated what he said Is:
t1.S. policy to target only military ob-
jectives in North Vietnam.
l-lowcvcr. he said. "We know, and have
said many times, that from time to lime
accidental da mage to other than military
targPtS occur. sometimes involving
L'n1trd States ordnance or aircraft and
somcti 1nes involving North Vie~amese
ordnance or aircraft ."
l le expressed regret concerning ''any
such accidental damage from whatever
source."
Friedheim said the Bae 1.lai hospital
and the Gia Lam airfield "·ere struck
during L:.S. i.>ombing a'ttacks Agai.risl
military targets .,.,,ilhin several hundred
yards or them.
"These lVt'O sites were in close prox-
imity to military targets ... he said. "We
have no kno.,.,·lrdge of .,.,·hat caused the
damage . It could have Xcn either ~ide.''
He said lhe Bae ttiai military CQmptex
eo1npr1 s1'<1 an airport. siorage and
11arehous{' facilities, and a petroleum
product s depot.
I-Ii indicated lhat the Gia Lam railroad
yards were the objectives of bombs
U.S. RESUMES
VIET BOMBING
SAIGON fAPl -U.S. bombers at-
tacked 1he Southern Panhandle of Nonh
Vietna m today , breaking a 36-hour stop
in the air strikes for the New Year's holi·
day.
The U.S. c.ommand.annoonced that the
bombing halt remained in effect in North
\'ietnam abo,;e the 20th pa rallel, an area
that includes the major cities of Hanoi
and llaiphong.
For reasons of securit y, the command
said no other details of the strikes would
be made aVailable.
\.\ hich struck the airpo rt used by Sov1t'I
and other c11·1hao air transports.
Ho"·e,·er. he said some ~t!C jcl fi~hters
v.·ere h11 at Gia L'lm. along "1th the con·
trot tov.·cr.
Fricdheim said information thn t
a1.1mage had been infl ictt.'<i on the hosp1t~l
came to him afler his denial Dec. 27 and
his reiteration of the denial Dec. 29,
I-le declined lo say how thi s later in·
formati on wns oblained, although h~ in·
dicatcd it came fronl U.S. aerial recon·
nais.'ianre photography.
A number of American peacr activists
\'1S1t1ng in llanoi during the intensive
L'.S. bon1blngs starling Dec . 18 have sup-
ported the ll<inoi government's clal ms or
severe damage to the city. inc luding
civilian structures.
Friedhei m said. under questioning, that
to his knowledge none of these U.S.
.citizens had been intervlev•ed by U.S. of-
~See B0~18JNG , Puge Z)
Environmental Report·
Valley Ponders Asking
Lower Edison Land Fee
By MICHAEL GOODRI CH
Of .. °"'" l'INll ., ...
Fountain Valley councilmen tonight
will consider asking lhc Southern
California Edison Company to drastically
reduce the fee on F.dison right-of-way
land used by the city.
The proposed reduction is tied in to an
environmental report the city must send
to the California Public Utilities C-Om-
mission on an Edison proposal to build
new power towers along the two-mile
easenlcnt
The new power towers would be of a
modem. '"'o-sin~le·pole design able to
carry heavier wires for the propOsed ex-
pansion of the Edison facilit y in Hun·
tington Beach.
The ~ountain Vnlley easement. which
runs parallel lo .Newland Street from
Garfield Avenue lo Warner Avenue. 1s
part of a 16-milc tower renovation proj·
ect proposed by Edison.
Edison must first rl'Ceive permission
from the PUC which has asked all citirs
irtvol\•cd to su bmit environmental impact
reports on the project.
The report \\"hich will g-0 before the
council agrees to the new construction if
Edison will eventually lease the property
lo the city for 2S years al $1 a year .
The city is also requesting that Edison:
grade the entire right-or-way, install bike
tralls ~nd waUrways, Install an automatic
sprinkler system and c o n s t r u c t
decorative fences and gates.
Under an agreement with the PUC,
Edison now leases easement properly for
civic recreational purposes for $50-an·
acre per year. Private leases cost more .
The ci ty currenlllf fs leasing the ease-
ment property betweea Warner and Ellis
avenues for $1 ,192. One neighborhood
park. Westmont. has been developed at
Warner Aven ue and Newland Street.
One parcel along the easement is cur·
rentty being used for agricultural
purposes while another is the si te of a
nursery.
The city is also asking Edison to ev~n·
tually give those leases to Fountain
Valley under the $1 lease plan for the
development of one large open space
area.
Edison spokesman Jin1 Kennedy sn id
today that lus company y,.·ould probably
oppo~ the reduced lease rate because of
the expense involved if all cities affected
by .the Jo wer project request such leases.
.. The PUC ls also the protector of
rates." said Kennedy ... ,f we increase
our expen!es on a vast scale, power rates .
would certainly &P. up." t
Resume<l Talks
Spur Trading,
Stdck Prices
NE\\' YORK <AP J -Stock market
prices spurted ahead in the first half·
hour's trading today and rel ained the
increaS(> throughout the tradi ng.
The Dow Jones avcra,ge of 30 in·
du!>lria ls closed up 11.66 points at 1031.68.
higher sales v.·cre up. '
Ad vances topped declines on the New
York Stock Exchange by rK'arly S to 1.
''The market is re:»ponding to the news
!hat high-leve l peace talks are to be
resumed next week in Paris," said
Newton Zinger, analyst wi th E. F. Hutten
Co. Inc. ..
Although early year reinvestment de·
mand was also a fa ctor. he sa id. the up-
turn was primarily due to the peace
news.
('~neral investor optim ism for l973's
eCQnomic prospects gave the market ;in
unc:erlying positive tone, brokers addeJ.
Autos. v.'hich have been reporting:
higher sales. were up.
Blue Chips \\'ere active and strong
The Big Boa rd index-closed al 65.06.
up 0.f>!I. while the American Stock l:::t·
change price-change index closed at
26.35, up 0.21.
Orange Coast
·To Valley Cyclist
,
Fountain Valley police said today lhcy
•ill review with the Orange County
District Mtorney the details of a traffic
accident which claimed the life of a 87·
year-old bicyclist Saturday.
Bus Route Links· Cities Marine's Slayi11g
Still a Mys tery
Weather
Some increa~ cloudiness on
\\'edncsday. according to the
"·c::itherl11dy, v.·1th slightly cooler
temperatures. ilighs of 57 are ex·
Pl'(ted at the beaches. Msing to 67
inland. L-Ows in the upper 30s to
low 40s with local frost.
Henry Kau!man De.Lancey. ol 10797
1.-0S Jardioes, died at Fountain ValJey
Community hospital one week after tJ'le
accident in which hil bicycle collided
wllh a car.
Clark Corbin, Fountain Vall<y's traffic
investigator, 11ld the review of the case
Ill routine and ooled that be did not think
~ UUly that the car's driver, Kay F.
~-. woold be d ied. ~ to police ..,,.U, Mrs.
~S7, of Garden GroYe, w11 travel·
tng eutbound on Edinger Avenue on Dtc.
S3 wbtn her car and DeLancey•s bicycle
collided. ·
· Ollia!l'S aald both the car-and the blcy·
·Cle were traveling lhe same direction
wt of Brookhunt Street at the time of tile crash and that'l><L8ncey ajij)l?illll,J
piilled Into the poth .of the Cll'. Mrs.
Zubrod wu not cited at the Ume of \be
ICCklml.
,
Orange County Transit District to Opert 3 Liries
HuntlJliUln Beacb and Costa Mesa will
be linked by direct 00. routes this April
when the Orange County Transit District
opens the lint of three new West Otange
County u..s.
In announcing the routes, distikt
Director Gordon Fielding said buses
woold run ooce an hour .and that the fare
wouJd bt ts cents eacb way.
Tiie first line. which originates In Costa
Mesa, Will enter Huntington Beach on
Adams Avenue . It will travel through lbe
downtown IOCtlon ol the city, endllig the
route at the Five Polnll alld Town and
Country shopping centers before turning
ai'Oiiiid liiiifiioturnlitg to Coota 'Mesa the
same way.
Tiie """1id niute, wblch will probably
be ready lo go In S.""'11ber. will go
rrom Five Points to Huntington Center
and GolOen West College.
Accoo\ing to the transit dil'f'Ctor, the
third phaH will be strictly an inler city
line. That route is S1ill in the planning
stages and will be announced Inter in the
year, he said.
"Because of the shortage of buse~. in-
itially, lines will be served only once per
hour. Later, when all lirtel! are in OJMl:rit-
tion 1 closer freq uency of buses will· be
run." rieJ<ling.uid. ,.,.
JJe aa1cf..tbe lines bave to ft lnitillted In
stages because 01 difficulties the district
has In gelling the buses boilt.
Originally ;a;11na oflicilll!llD<l Plftll'
Md I.be first phase lO go across Adami to
Beach Boulevard to Ille beach and back
into Colta Mt>Sa. .,,...
But a city-sponso red survey showed
lh3t 80 percent of the people replying to
lhe survey relt mass transportation was
the city's biggest problem. so city of·
ficir.b: convinctd di.strict ofricials to alter
their plans.
A" planned , buses will travtl wtSt on
Adams to Delaware Street. to Hartford
Avenue 1t1d tbtn toOlb aJong Lake Street
to 'lblrd Street, 1crosss ~fain oo Walnut
to f'ltth Strn.I. l"n>m there. th< buses
wiP &o up Main Street to l1tit trttl and
along 17th -tO Delaware where the buses
"ill bead north to the F'ive Points Shop-
ping Center &Jld Town and Country Shop.
l>illl tehlef. ' -A spokesman Ior the city. said oo stops
have hem ld<ntl/11<1 °" the line yet. They
!See BUS. Poge I )
Sf:al Beach police have not yet solved
the mystery surrounding the apparent
slaying of a Camp Pendleton Marine,
whose body was found on a freeway off-
ramp la!t Tueoday.
Sgt John Averyt .aid thl! morning
police still do not know why the Marine,
F..d Moore. 20, or Kentucky, was killed or
where he was klllcd .
The Orangt County Coroner said
Moore's de.ath was cau.~ by strangula·
lion, and hl• body had apparently be<n
du mped oo the freeway offramp from a
moving vehicle.
~foore wa11 discovered by .motoristA on
the 1th street offramp at the junction cl
the San Diego and San Gabriel freeways
In Stal Beach.
•
INSIDE TOD" Y
PrtsJde11t Nizon 1howcd up
bright nnd tqrly on Ntw ¥tar's
nn11 at his Oool Office i11 \Va.th·
ingcon, DC. Turnr"g the door·
k 11 o b. he discovtrtd hfm!fetf
locked out Qf hi.I own ojfice.
See story qn Page 4.
L.M. hYf 7
C•ltt.nlit J C1••t'H*i , 11•N
C•"'ln " c,.._• ,.
DM* N.ita' I 11'1•i.I ,... ' •~.i-t '"" ,.... tt-11 .... .. ...... . tt.eo11 1c-l•
"""' L......,. 11 Mewi.. ll·lf
Nt!llMI'""" t
Ono~ Clollll'f I ~" .., .. ,,
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T11tvlsiM1 II TlloNltl'\ , .. ,, .... ...., . ........ ,.... , .... . .,... """ .
•
I
J
' I
I
I
I
•
_% DAILY Pll9T H
Hanoi Says
Sahta Anan
Protesting
A Santa Ana man . Is amoog 30
American prisoners of v.'nr v;•ho North
Vietnam clalmcd y,•cre urging Lhc U.S.
Consress to try to end the Vietnam War .
The officlaJ Vietnam News Agency
broadcast the text o! the statement a.Jong
with the name of LL C-01. Edison \V,
Miller and 29 olhcr An1cricans. all of
whose capture had bt.-en pre\'iously
reported.
A spokesman for the Defense Depart·
meot In Washington oonfirmed that
ftlillt!:t ls believed to be a prisoner in
North Vietnam but coold not provide
furt her details concerning Hanoi's claim
abut an antl·war statemenl.
The statement broadcast by Hanoi
recalled the remark made in late
October by Henry Kissinger, President
Nixon's chief adviser for national securi·
ty. that "peace is at hand" in Vietnam.
The statement by Radio Hanoi urged
congressmen to use "all your lega l and
moral power to bHng about peace.·•
I
....... ~·~·
·-·
fAUlt1.
I/
: I i
... -
"Recenlly our government claimed ~Jtm
peaee Is at hand." the statement said. / 1NotAHN01.1
ever before and American lives are In .a ·I ~ !
grave jeopardy from the round·the-clock ..t-l ..hM.Nttl ! !
'
• ~
'
' ••••• IOUTI SfmlANf&."11
OCICIODOO IOUTl ST.Am st:n 1973
I :
I
I
• . ' i I I I -•
"But now the war ls more fierce than ' ~ •llAH"'°"' ~
attack. This contradiction compels us to • :i
add our ·volce11 to the public opinion in ~ •• ,---------------------,,----l'~J
our country. Whether we have been de-.. MAP INDICATES US taJned for 1 few days or ,.veral yean, it B ROUTES PLANNED FOR HUNTINGTON BEACH
is important that you bear us. Transit Dis trict Ge1rlng Up In Wtst Cringe County
"Our government has not con·
summafed the agreement OD ending the
war and on restoring peace in Vietnam
althoup this agre<menl was !allslactory
to both the U.S.A. and the llemocratic
RepubUc of Vietnam u of 20 October,
19'11
0 We 1trongly appeal to the members of
Conift5S to exercise all your legal and
moral power to brin1 1bout peace.
Animal Shelter
Gets Huntington
Council Study "Thia ltatement ii made by those who
know that more delay can only tncrease Huntington Beach city cou~llmen
the suffertn1. lengthen our confinement to · h Ill and a.,antv.ate the well-being ol the COU"-n1g t w consider spending $27 690 to -·-,,.. build a new anlmal shelter. ' try which we serve." Th The broadcast claimed the 30 prisoners e proposal calls for construction 9f a temporary shelter at 8521 Edison Way,
were: Cmdr. Walter E. Wil6er, Virglnia next to the existing Huntington Beach
Beach, Va.; Lt. R1chard J. Fulton, 1'1esa, ~Humane Society shelter.
Arlz:.: Capt, Edwin A. Hawley, Miami, City staff members say the temporary
Fla.; Lt. Peter A. C&llaghan, New York ; shelter ~-ould serve about two years unlil
C.OL Miller of Santa Ana: Lt. (j.g.) a permanent fa cility is built.
Jose.Pl) E. Kernan, Washington, D.C.; The city does not plan lo renew the Catft. "'"Lynn E. Gunther, Eugene, Ore.; Humane Soc. t • t t h Lt. Donald l.Dgan, Northridge, Calif.: 1e Y s con rac w en it ex-
Ca Chari pires in February. A new agency, g:fil: es A. Jatiloo, LltUeton, Calllomia Animal Control, will be hired
; Capt. M.lrion A.. Marshall , a!I the offic~al cily dog ~her. Hyallsvllle, Md.; Lt. Col. William W. ~-u 1 ..,~ , ,._1 n1 :...· Lt Col J H. y ---A£m liR!1 bE&Cn umane Society """°'ee, llilUVIS; · · ohn uUl; facility is on city property, but Robert
Lt. Micblel R. Martini; Lt. Paul L. Sbai:key, humane society director, will
Grancetv C.pl Lynn R. Beem; Maj. conUnue to lease the site for private ~~ .?'.:J JCaabmonl H. ;Jt!Lt. w~::., T. work. ,--i ,_ 1 · r coat, . ip-Sharkey also holds a contract for
pl; Lt. Brian H. Ward, Marrland ; U. anlm1I control in Los Alamitos.
Duane P. Vavroch, Iowa; Maj. J'1flts C. Councilmen will also consider a
Condor; Capt David Ian Drumm.ond; revision of the animal ctlntrol laws
MRo.Sgtbe · James W. Gouch, Oklahoma; U . tonight The maln changes include a rt M. Hudaon; Lt. Jack R. Trible, ma d to 11· Florida; Capt. Hal K. Wilson, New York; n 8 ry ca 1cease program with a $5
Capt T·-M Gelon Ca"' Ch -t-fee, an incre.ase In the fee ror dog tags · _,, · ei; r•· a,~, f " l 17 d II A n--J Illlno'· Ca H rom ~ o , an a owing the new dog · ~··· r., ~; pt. enry c. t h to k 11 Barrows, and Capt. Richatd T. Simpson, ca c er ecp a of . the license
A de S C revenue. n rson, ..
From Page 1
BUS .•.
will be designated just before the line
goes into operation.
T~ city will not have to contribute any
cash to the operation of the bus line, lhe
spokesman added, other than ·the labor
costs to install the bus stop 11igns.
Ex-Blast Suspect
Jailed in Holdup
CORTE MADERA (AP) -Stephanie
Kline . acquitted last August in the auto-
bombing death of a former Biack
Panther newsboy. was in Marin County
jail today, one·or four persons arrtsted In
the holdup of a Corte ?.fadera
supermarket, police said.
Held with Mrs. Kline, 26, in lieu of
IS0.000 bail each ...,. Clain Green , H,
of San Francisco; Claudio Grayson, 20, of
Oakland, and John Turner, 27, recently of
Mill Valley , oflicen said.·
Police responding to a silent alarm
tripped at the Cooperative-Shopping
Cente r caught three women and a man
near the store early Sunday with a pillow
case containing $2,700.
Fro•P .. el
BODY ...
llved on the property in small houses
1lmll&r to Andenon'a.
He is survived by a brother Garland, of
Huntington Beach, and a son and
daughter belleved to be ln Arkansas.
Raging Winds Blow Away
Section of Newport Dock
Fimeral arrangements are pending.
Vessels Out of Mud
RICHMOND LUPI) -TWo smallde<;!Jm-
misBJoned aircraft carriers destliled for
scrapping were pulled from the ml.id near
the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge Monday
after being aground for 48 houra. A com-
mettial tug towed the vessels back to
the Red Rock Marina where they _ had
been moored awaiting towing lo Taiwan
where they were to be scrapped.
OIAN61 COAST Ml
DAILY PILOT . .
Tiit Ortr!Ot! Coat DAILY PILOT Wlifl Wl\ldl
k CIM!Oiftcd tllt Ntwi.Preu, 11 Plltlllshftl bV
,,,,_ Or•l'llJt' c .. sl P\ltlllsll"" C11m111ny, ~·
rtM tdllloM ff• pubfltfleo, MoncNy lhl'OllQ~
Frld.ly, for C.1a M4-H, N-iiorl B~ech,
HllMlnll!Oll IMCh/F-ltln v.ii.v. l.IOUM
htdl, trvlnlllf'llllllttKll Mid San CltrM"tt/
S.11 JMTI C..lllt-A 1!nqt1 r119lon1I
lld/11CM It Pllblhilled S.,.,.,..YI and S11n1hrs.
TM prlnclpll pulllllhtno pltnl 11 11 llO WP$!
811 &h'ftt, Cost1 Ma1, C.!1klrnf1, •2f1'.
Robart N, Wt.d
Prn.IClfl'!I tnd Pllbllt.!Mt
Jt cli: R. C11rlty
Vic• Pmldtnl trld 0-tl Mtntpt
• Tho"''' Kttvil Edllat
llioll'ltt A. Mwphint
~ltll Editor Chatles H. L.01 1Ucht r4 ~. Nell
A"IJ!tnl ~lfll EdllOti
Tt rry Coville 'N.i Or.,.. C-.ty l"dltw
............... Offfq 1717$ l eech lo11ltv1nl
M1Ui111 A4Jr1s11 ,.Q. hi 790, tl•41 °""' Offk• ~ IMCfl' 2U l'trHI A"""" Ctltt Mtw: Ja W..t t.y Str•I ~ ia.tc:llt »ii "...,...., loulrn,. ... -°""""": -...... fl Cttnlrit ....
T...,.e .. 11141 '42..fJn
a..llWA-Hl·H71
~ ,. ... °""'" c..ty ~ J40.122t
~ltlit, lt12, °"'Ne t;.o.1t ~tlllflt =· n\t":,.,. ":' ~trtllt•Uw
: .... ft~._!! Wlfl'IM 9'1(.111~ mpyr..,. .......
SfCMd cit• ""'"' NW .t CM!t #MM; c.11....,.IL ·~ M< prrltr u ,.,
mc11tllh'r 111 -11 u.1t 1'llflfl\1r1 mllil.,., ........... tUI~.
Powerful winds Monday tore loose a
huge section of dock from Bayside
Marina in Newport Harbor and sent It
and 20 boat!I drilting -down the Balboa
Island Channel.
"By the time we got to the !lcene, the
enure 25Q:fQ()l pie\!e liad brn"ken away
[rom the bulkhead and drifted Into nild·
channel." said Orange County Harbor
Patrol Sgt. Ray Graham.
"It lodged in the offshore moorings
about 100 feet down-chaMel from it.s
regular spot at Bayside Mrlna," he said.
Graham said four harbor patrol vessels
and a number or hea vy commerciai
salvage barges were called into acti on
and a number of Balboa Island residents
rowed out to the drifting dock to lend a
hand.
"One by one "'e moved each of the
boats tied to the dock to other an·
chorages," Graham .said. "We also used
some of the boat anchors to try to
stabilize the dock."
''One by one we moved each of the
morning threatened to break up the
Graham said the 50-mlle·per·hour
winds wh istling do.,..•n the channel that
docks even more and send the wreakage
through the moorings onto BAi boa lsland
"But finally the wind died down a bit
and once we got the boats moved it
slayed pretty stable," he sRid.
Graham said none of the boats attached
to the dock. which included power and
sailboats ranging from 20 to 4S feet long.
""~u; badly damaged oor were any of 1he
moored boaL'I that were struck by lhe
dock.
"We worked for more than rive hours
trying to secure the dock and boats."
Graham !>aid. "I c.an't say enough for the
great help we got from hard-working
citizens."
Graham SAld he could not estimate the
amount of damage to the docks but did
say U.-wu miracl.lbls more damqe.
wasn't done to the bo3tJ.
"I would say the value of those boa!$
\\'AS well Into the hundreds of lhous,lnds
dollars," he aald.
Graham satd the problems of rescuing
the boat! and securing the fl04tlng docJ<
wtre compounded whtn the winds
threatened to brtak oft more sectlons of
the dock still iattached to the bulkhead.
"But the boat owners and people
onshort..used. their own boat ..anchors and
, . '
ropes to tie the docks firmly ," he said .
"Otherwise we would have had real
problems.''
Graham sa_id the piece or dock was still
lodged amon~ the moorings t.hls morning .
but cornmer1cal crews wete ·consulting
with the Irvine Company,-whlch owns tile
dock. to find the best way to salvage 11.
Graham said the only other wind·
related incident occurred just before the
dock b.roke loose when two 4$-Coot
sa.ilboats were reported stranded six
miles off Newport Pier.
''\Ve went out and towed one in and a
Coast Guard helicopter dropped fuel to
the other which was out of gas," he said.
From Pa11e l
TALKS ...
long as serious negotiations \\'ere under
"'By."
"tf you look. you will find that when
serious ·negotiations were PJltered into
the re was a discontinuation of bombing
above the 20th parallel,'' he said in
reference lo the bombing suspension
Winds Destroy
Rollin.g-Trailer
Sanla Ana winds blew over a 20-
fool house trailer on the Saiita Ana
freeway in Irvine Monday night
des1roying It, according to the
C11hfomia Highway Patrol.
The CHP was right on the ""°""
to lnv1?sligate the acddtnt in-
volving the trailer -owned and •
towed by 10i Angles Poll<e Offleor
George &kl .. Jr .• at l\lyfonl Rold
during lht rush hour. ·
A CHP patrol Cit wblch ~•P
p<nod to be !oUowini; dlr<!Ctly
behind the car and trailer almost
collided with the """"!mg• Ilse~.
Investigators said the debris lit·
terlng nor1J\b0und l1net lied up
traffic for an hour .
• •
Wtlld Baters Boau · Gust Snapsi
-Avalon Da~ag~s Calv~ry's
Set at $200,000
Cleanup cootlnued along the Southern
Orange Coast today in I.he wake of th<!
year'• most severe windstorm but no one
could repair one madden.log problem
which hit early New Year's morning in
Slln Clemente.
11undreds of residents set 10 watch the
Tournament of Roses Parade f.ound oo
picture on thei r television tubes after the
bigh winds caused a power blackout in
From Page l
BOMBING ...
ficial s to get their stories first-hand.
While saying that the exten t of the
dam3ge is wicertain. Friedhelm con-
ceded that ''there could have betn
ca!lualtles" among North Vietnamese
civilians as result of the borhblngs ot the
hospital . He saJd the hospital is back in
operation, but did not explain how he
knew this to be so. .
Bicyclist Ends
~
6-day Jail Tenn
WOODLAND (AP) -Kenneth R.
Snook, 19, or Broderick neared the ,nd
today or the jail tum. he recei ved ror
failure to stop for a stop sign while riding
a bicycle.
Snook, who wu glvea a choice between
six days In jail or a $62 fine, told Judge
Ralph W. BonetU of the Wasbington
Judlcill Court In Broderick that he did
not have enough money to pay the flllt!:.
• the Industrial section ol lhe city.
The outl.ge immediately kDocked ofJ n
ceble television booster station and sets
all over town were wltbout a picture.
Police rt'celved scores of catts. from
angry rtsldtr1\s. Spokts:men from the
local cable servk:e said their a.ides were
swamped with nearly zoo calls at the
start of the outage.
Service wa.s resto~ however, by
about-JO a.m. to most areas.
Besides adding IQ the New Year 's
morning hangove r, the winds ca~ city
crews In San Clemente to go to work as
trees and branches fell over a wide area.
One large eucalyptus toppled in the golf
course area.
Dozens of limbs were tom from other
trees in the coastal area.
New Year'& day ·at Dana Harbor was
without Incident but tht: day before as
the Santa Anas started to b~ld
patrolmen were kept busy. '
At one point last Sunday, patrolmen
said, a single blast of wlnd capsized
several sailboat& all at once near the
harbor entrance.
ResculDg patrolmen plucked 11 persorui
from the water and helped right the
vessels. No one was injured.
Jail Protest Quiet
BOSTON, Mass. (AP) - A group of 22
inmates of tbe Deer Island House of Cor-
rection staged a brief protest Monday
n!Jht but returned peacefully to their
cell!I when confronted by Boston police
anned with shotguns and leading dogs
officials said. ~Uliam Murphy, acting cl:
ty penal eomm1ssionerJ said the inmates
demanded that three prisonen locked ln
eels! since Sunday for infraCtions of the
jail rules be allowed out.
Tentposts "
Cold .Santa Ana winds blew into Collta
~esa Sunttay and Monday but caused
rielatlvtly little damage other thin to a
2.500-aeat tent used by Calvary Cllapel,
A heavy gust snapped two of the four
telephooe poles llllpporllng Ille bli top
111ondey momina, cau&lng the heavy can·
vas sheeting to plummet to the ground.
The tent was unoccupied at the time.
Joann Day, a secretary for the popular
youth church on 3800 Fairview Road just
•cross the city bor<ler In Santa Ana, Slld
the tent was filled to capacity the night
before.
"We had Bible study from 8 to 12 and
there were about 3,000 people in there. It
was blowing pretty hard then but lhe
service was still very beautiful,'' she ad'·
de,d.
Rolled up by a crew or 100 volunteers,
the canvas was cleared away and cha.In
and other equipment quickly removed.
Little, If any, damage was believed to
have been caused to the canvas roof.
The tent ha11 been used by the church
for approximately one year. It wu
erected when the 500-seat chapel would
no longer accommodate the churth11
youlhlul nock. '
. ~sta Mesa Fire Department offici-'5
indicated that the gusty winds caused
more anxiety rather than any real
damage. 'I1lere were no losses reported
during the two-day period. •
The Orange County Department of
Harbors and Beaches said the ·winds
began blowing from a northeasterly di-
rection around ntid-~~ Sunday and subsided by I p.m. Monday night. No
further wlocb are forecast.
Harbor and Beac~ Department of•
ficials measured the peak Intensity of the
SUSl.J. al approximately 50 mph.
'
Our First Clearance Sale iii 3 Years . • •
·-li'rkt lt1• ,nee ,., Ml· Ytl. ,.., "" ~ l11tlflltd 14, r-111. 111~11111 CtlM'
7.95
8.95
7.95
7.95
8.95
7.95
8.50
7.95
7.95
8.95
8.95
8.95
9.95
10.95
8.95
9.50
9.95
10.95
9.95
.9.50
9.95
10.95
10.95
9.50
10.95
12.95
10.95
10.95
10.95
II .SO
10.95
ID.95
11 .95
12 .95
11.95
11.95~
11 .95
11 .95
12.95
12 .95
IJ.50
14.SD -
IJ.95
14.50
JO
JO
24 \\
25
54 1/1
27 1/J
28
91 1/J
27 1/J
291/J
107
l6 l\
52
40
49
59 1/1
28 1/1
.44
71
70 II
.JO \\
59
24
50 II
28
I 09'/i
44
23 l\
168
2-4 Vs
JI
51 1/J
41 1/1
25
27 1/1
27
23 1/J
38 1/1
24 II
45
28
ll \\
22 l\
l 1 \\
NYLON SHAGS
5.50
5.95
5.95
6.50
5.95
5.f5
6.50
6.50
6.50
6.95
6.95
6.95
6.95
7.50
7.50
7.50
7.50
7.50
7.50
7.95
7.95
7.95
7.95
7.95
7.95
Orang•
Oliv a
Green tones
Oliv e & Gold
Red & Black
Burnh htd Gold
Yellow b!ige
Olive· gold
Green tweed
Beige tweed
Red, White, Blue
Beige tweed
Med ium green
Olive tweed
Green tweed
Gold
Yellow Go ld
Green tweed
Yellow & Wh ite
Orange tweed
Burni1hed gold
Brown & Blac.k
Green tweed
Green & Olive
Blue ·g Green
PLUSH SHAGS
7.95 Tomato Orenge
7.95 Beige tones
8.50 Beige tweed
8.95 Light grey-green
8.95 Olive tone1
8.95 App le green
8.95 Gold
8.95 Green
9.50 Green tweed
9.50 Burnt orange
9.50 Grape
9.50 Medium blue
9.50 T •ffy
9.95 Gold & Green
9.95 Light custom blue
9.95 Green & White
9.95 Rose
10.95 Green, gold , & beig e
11 .95 Beige & Green
aottc li'rl(t S•I• ""'9 ,.., ... ~ ,.., .... Ytl.
ln11'I... If, ~ lllHflld Ct ....
6.95
7.95
7.95
7.95
8.50
8.95
8.95
7.95
8.95
8.95
8.9 5
9.95
9.95
11 .95
11 .95
IJ.95
13.95
10.95
10.95
10.95
14.50
14.50
16.95
22\\
62
33
47 \\
ll
29
NYLON SCULPTURED
4.95
5.95
5.95
5.95
5.95
6.50
Gold
Blue & green
Beige
Gold
Srey-green
Royal blue
NYLON COMMERCIAL
17 l\
25 1/J
33 1/1
ll
77 1/1
281/1
~8
5.95
5.95
6.50
6.50
6.50
7.50
7.50
Gold tweed
Candy-1trip•
Blue green tweed
Green tweed
Green tweed
Burn i1hed gold tweed
Beige & brown tweed
AcnYUC COMMERCIAL .
62
45
4J \\
5.95
5.95
Blue & emerald
Pink & orange
ACRYLIC PLUSH
8.95 Gold
ACRYLIC AXMINISTER FLORAL
47
24
9.9S Blue, green, aque on
beige background
KOOEL PLUSH
5.95
6.50
6.95
l i9ht 9old
Golden be ige
Gold
WOOL COMMERCIAL
5.95
S.9S
Red & green tweed
Red & gold tweed
WOOL PLUSH
6.95 Beige
All prices are installed and includes 64 01. sponge rubber ptdding.
Dozens of remn~nts a!so priced for clearance
DRAPERIES -'" sus OF ouov'...•01 tN •ssoano SIZES ... $6.50 ,. $17.50
Everything su bjec.t to prior stle.
'
ALDEN'S
• IN
COSTA MDA
MNCI tt57
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Aft,
COSTA MESA
646-4838 .
HOURS: Mon. Thrv Thura., 9 to 5:30 -FRI. 9 to 9-SAT .. 9:30 to 5
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1uf'\dA1 Jan11Jry 2 197J H t>AJL V PllO f 3
Truman Gives Papers to America . '
State lustice
Leading Liberal
On Court Dies
BERKELEY (AP) -Justice Raymond
E. Peters. recognized as the foremost
'liberal on the California Supreme Court.
died today at his home here. He was 69.
Among Peters' notable opinions were
the 1966 decision striking down the ballot
initiative that outlawed California fair
housing lav•s :ind the 1971 opinion 111-
\'alidating the ban against \\'omen v.·ork·
ing as bartenders.
Peters suffered a stroke ?-.1onday night
and died this morning at his home with
the doctor in attendance. f\-larion Peters.
his widow. reported. Peters suffered a
stroke in 1963, but recovered and served
1u1Jtime oo the bench after his recovery.
Three Killed
In Weeke1id
Road Crashes
A Los Angeles man was killed and t\a.'O
<>thcrs injured t\.1onday "·hen his car \l,'ent
(IUt of control on the San Diego Freeway
near the El Camino offramp in San
Clemente.
John Tappan, 4-0, died at San Clemente
General Hospita l of massive head in·
,luries, the Orange County Coroner's of:
lice reported.
; A \Voman and a young girl suffered
inajor injuries in the crash, but highway
l}:>atrolmen this morning said iden·
Jification of the tv.•o v.·as not certain. s Thev said the woman \vas believed to
f>c EVon A. Grayson. age unknown, of
tLos Angeles. The baby was identified
'Only as "Baby Jane.'' Both are in serious
fcondition at San Clemente General
..flospita l.
· Officers at the scene established a ten-
tative identification of the dead man by
tracing the license number of the small
'foreign car. l'atrolmen added that they
!found several different names on iden-
tification in !he car. •·It's been a real
. headache finding out everyone's correct
name." a patrolman said.
Two other persons. died over the New
Year's v.·eekend from ,rcvious accident
,in jurlfs.
Henry DeLancey, 67, of 10797 Los
Jardines. Fountain Valley, died at Foun-
'toin Valley Comniunity Hospital Satur·
day. He was injured Dec. 23 while riding
)tis bicycle along Edinger Avenue. east of
'Brookhurst Street in Fountain Valley.
Everett Fowler, 8~. of 3929 \V. 5th St..
Santa Ana. died Sunday at Palm Harbor
Hospital of injuries received Dec. 19 in
:Garden Grove. He v.·as a passenger in a
/::oar which veered off Harbor Boulevard
.just south of Garden Grove Boulevard'
.and struck a parking lot sign.
•
Dru11ken Driving
Arrests Pile Up
Over Week end·
Drunken drivers racked up a new
record in Oran~e County during the New
Year's weekend.
Police . sheriff's deputies and California
}!igh\\•ay patrolmen lodged 139 Inebriated
inotorists in county and city jails during
the 24·hour period that began at .f p.m.
Ne\\' Year's Eve.
CJIP officers accounted for many of
the arrests v.'ith 66 offenders booked in
the county jail on drunken driving
charges during the holiday period.
City jails were a)so kept busy.
especially in Anaheim v..·here 13 drunken
driving bookings crammed the jail cells.
Huntington Beach with nine suspects
and Costa Mesa and Newport Beach with
(our each were high on the list com piled
by 1he sheriff's office.
County jail bookings on drunken driv·
ing charg:es were also made by Fountain
Valley, Seal Beach a.nd San Clemente
police.
The Orange County total of 139 drunkP.n
.drivers was well above the record of 98
orrests set up during the same period In
J9n.
Truman Lihra1·y
Attendance Higl1
INDEPENDENCE. Mo. IAP I -Al·
tendance at the Harry S Truman Library
set a rec:ord on New Year's Day.
Dr. Belt K. Zobrist. library director,
said S.598 persons toured the library's
• museum e1hibits J\1onday. Tbe previous
dally high since the-..faclliti' Opcne,d in
1957 was 2,000. he said.
At 1he: (onner President's grave In the
Ubrsry c:ourtyard. oCtlclals saJd, there
\\'ere at least 8.350 visitors J\1onday.
Truman, who died in a Kao_, City
ho!pltal a week ago, was buried Thur~
day . Thousarl!ls .h.•l'l! come to the •
i00'<$1!».daily •io"" then.
I
Mrs. Peters said her husband planned
lo retire on his ?0th birthday in April.
Peters, a native of Oakland, was nam·
ed to the bench in 1959 by then-Gov. Ed-
mund G. "Pat" Brown.
He was Instructed in the state Supreme
C.ourt's operations by nine years ex-
perience es the C!Qurt's chief la\v
secretary. He served in that post froru.
1930 to 1939. He next served 20 years oo
·the state Court of Appeal in San Fran-
cisc:o before advancing lo the high bench.
By his opinions, Peters stamped
himself as the COU]t's most advanced
social thinker.
In the 1966 ruling by a 4-2 cou rt , Peters
said the ballot initiative striking down
the state's fair housing laws was an un-
constitutional act by the people. He said
the people could no more act un·
1..-onstitutionally than the Legislature or
any other state body.
Prop. 14, the 'ballot measure 01.ala\\'ing
lhe state's fair housing Jav.·s. had won
nearly a 2-1 majority in the 1964 election.
Peters said the measure denied 10
blacks seeking housing the equal pro-
tection guaranteed by the 14th Amend·
ment to the U.S. Constitution . The
decision was upheld by the U.S. Supreme
Court by its refusal to hear an appeal of
the case.
Elderly County
Man Mtu·dered· '
Wife Arrested
Six ice pick stab wounds in the chest
ended the life or an elderly Santa Ana
r •• 1 :::.. J· at;-:ently durir . ·1, ·o:.1tc
v..·ith his wife over their tv.·o--month
separation .
Ernest R. Mach:?nder , 71, of F!11 S.
F:..irviev..' St .. \\'as dead at the ·:ne. :JC'·
cording to poli c .. v.ho arrested his y,ido\11 · ... ,., -··
Effie Machander. 68, of 1350 S.
j ·n1" St .. \.JS expected to t i:· 'd
in a criminal complaint issued today hy
ttie Orange CoWJty Dislrlct Allom~·y·s
Office ..
;'J'.:r n n•j,' .. .;;, ...... 1. . -l lv
contacted friends of the couple and they
in turn notified detectives of the New
1·:::~.:-·s Eve slaying.
: . :.stig~tors said tod.:iy t ~ c-:uple h:irl
been married about 11 years and separ·
ated in NoYember.
Mounwi1i Hiker
Saved but Gitl
Co1npa1iion Dies
FLAGSTAFF, A:rlz. (AP I /\
helicopter crev.• plucked a stranded hiker
from the slopes of snov.·-sv.:cpt llum-
phreys Peak today but reported that a
second died after two nights in subzero
v.·eather.
-·'lb .. Coconino County sheriff's. of[icc.
identified the victim as Allison Clay, 17,
of Scottsdale .
Officials reported th at he;· companiion.
24-ye.:ir-"1-i Clint ~tiller. was in poor con-
dition from exposure and frostbite.
~le was flown directly to Phoenix.
about 150 miles to the south.
':"'.;e 111,·o 1,1 e~? in a Ne"· Year·s Eve hik-
ing party \vhich scaled the 13,000-foot
m 1<1.in. pa rt of the Snn Francisco
Peaks which tower above this northern
Arizona city.
Fc·:1• companions hi~.:d <:ut ~~ond~v
and reported the tv.•o 1nissing. ':I at·
terr.pl to reach the tv.·o !<"Ile ~fonday fai J,
ed . Three ~·ere treated for frostbi1c and
the fourth aided the se ~-~!'t.
Winds reached 80 miles an hour J\lon-
day, temperatures dipped to 10 degrees
le] n~t'O ovcm' •'· ·e \l'efl' five
feet of snow on the ground, searchers
said.
The helicopter crew fMm Luke Air
"l('d t'· -·1•·1:h :·s "'' th1·
One r\·1•:or. Rick Hu fnaeel. r.f
Scottsdale. said the six. all me,...· Df
the Ari1.on J i\louiltAineering Club. re-;.•n
the cll:-::.'J in good v.'eather Sui1day :.f.
ternoon.
''Then It became windy and cold ," J,e
~c::d from his bed at Flz~staff C-0111-
mun ity Hospital where he was L .J'"cl
for frost·bitt.ec hands and feet.
"Two of our three tents collapsed. The
wind and snow caved in the tents. All six
of us got in one tent. There were three
sleeping bags for six people so "·e
couldn"l :tip Jhem up properly."
On Monday morning\ he said. Miller
and Mis.s Clay were unable to walk. and
Bi11 the gtir wns lrazti:n.
"We le.It them four to fivt days lood-,
t1iree sleeping bags and tht ripped-up
tool that they could cl-06o wllh only two
inside-It. Th<o we hiked out to get help."
Snow and Ice stOrtn! choked a large
portloo of the western half of the nation
IQd>..Y.. prom~lng authorities in some
aren fu e1 ... ·highways and 1treets.
•
Old Platae, New Life
Old Air Force 107.'-\, reportedly one of fhe t\\'O
left in the world, is prepared for shipment from
museum at Orange County Airport to it s new land·
ing place outside a restaurant near Los Angeles
International :\irport. It \\'ill be used as a r uriosity
an1id st restaurant landscaping. The ot her 107.\ is
at Air Force l\luseun1 in Dayton. Ohio.
Dark New Year
Wi1icls Black Out San Cle1nente TV
Blo\\'ing gusty winds did minor
v.·eekend damage in Laguna Beach. tear-
ing dO\\'Jl city Chr istmas decorations and
knocking dov..'n tree branches and elec-
trical wires.
\Vinds v.·Cre reported at be\\\"een 20 and
30 miles per hour today by Lag_llQa Beach
Lifeguards. Cool temperat<rA k<'pt
cro"'·ds from beaches, and small craft
advisory of high v.·inds kept boating
dO\\·n. One small tll•in-hulled sailboat
overturned, but \~·as righted qulck!y .
The large, eight foot square front "'"in-
dow in the Lagun~ Beach county Branch
I
library wa s smashed out again. ei ther by
\\'1nd or vandals. The large pane "·as
blov..11 out first ove r the Christma s hol i·
day weekend and v.•as observed shattered
again ~1onday_
Several incidents of do\t.11ed electric:ol
\\'ires v.·ere reported . One at 575 Si. Ann's
1'1onday had the Laguna Beach Fire·
Dt>partment standing by to prevent pos~1-
b!e fire hazard.
Al Geyser, Lagun;. Beach Edison Com·
pa ny manager, said none of the incident s
was of a major nature and· all v.·cre
cle:i rcd up quickly .
Pla.gucd Mian1i
~
1\irport Takes
On 'f hi rd . Crisis
,\tl A'.\t l 1l'PI1 -A <·h<irte red am-
phibious pl ane-\\'ll h 17 persons aboard
n1ade a belly la11rl1ng tn a sho\\'Cr or
!'parks at Miami Intcrn<itional Airport to-
day af!er developing landing gear trou-
blt·
The Federal Av1auon ,\dn11 nistrat ion
stud none or the 15 pa~sengers and tv.·o
crt'\\'men \\'as injure<L It v.as the third
airliner 1nc1clenl here in less than a
inonth.
A ~pokesn1<ln for Chalk"s Airlines said
the plan\!. '1 r.run1n1an f\l:ollard. v.•as rn
rou!t• from Hin1in1 Island in the Bahamas
to the ron1p.;ny's Biscay ne baysidc
operal!on un nearby \Vatson Island.
Will Leaves
Wife All
I~D£PENDENCE. ti.lo. (UPI )-llnrry
$Truman's \\"111 , relea~ed today as public
record. ~IVl·s nearly all the former
President's papers 10 thr people of thr
United Stales. bt"1rr1ng so nic personal
notes.
Th e rxact value of the 1•.slatr \\"as no!
kno\.\n .. \luch 01 1hc pC"rsonal b<-Jong1ni.::s
11t·rc not ex pe('t cd to ht-assessed \l'hile
~!rs Trun1<in 1~ :Hi1l'
The 2'1-pagt' v.·11! v.·a~ ~1gned by Truman
.l.'.ln J~. 19S9, .".Ind also dcs1gnutes that hi~
\\'ldOll". Ul'ss, shall r<'cti\'c all of
Trun1ru1·s personal belongi ngs remaining
in !he couple's hon1e v11-No r1 h Delav.•arc
Strl'et in lndepcndcncc
Trum an died a "'N'k a~o follov.·ing a
Jong 1llnt·~s and \1·as burii·d Thursday.
The wil l stipulated lhat lhe hundreds of
thousands nf pres1d('ntlal pnpcrs be kept
at the l·la rry S Truman L i bra r y in
lnd(•pend<'ncc ··suhjt'CI to th<' righl of thr
an:h1v 1s! of the L"nited Slates" to move
the pa1K·rs
Ctrtai n p<"lpcrs . "stri ctly related to
hu~ttl('SS and 1JerSon11I affairs,'' v.1ill be
given lo l\lrs. Truman, and the executors
of the 1,1·dJ arc given authority to \\'ilhhold
other papers fron1 the nation.
Gh·ing lht papers 10 the nation fulfill s
a proinise Trunian made years ago that
he .... ·ou!d give the papers lo the country if
th e l' S. ~ovcrnn1r.nt "'ould maintain the
l'rurn~in Libra ry, v.•hich was dedicated in
1957. ant! built by pub lic con!.;1bution.
The \\"ill al so stipulated th.:it a single
sl ab" shall cover tht> graves of both
Truman and J\lrs. Truman, who "·ill be
88 on Feb. 13.
Executors are given au!hor ity to dt'.'Cide
if an obelisk shou!C be a! the head or the
grav es.
The inscriptions for the grflves arc con-
t:11ncd in a cod icil to the \\'ill dated Ocl.
2:L 1961. L"n<ler lhc term s of the \l'ill
Tr11man ·s 1nstript1on "·i ll read :
'"Harry S. ~1v i1h periodf" Truman
Born i\lay 8, 1884
Lamar, J\1issour i
~larried June 28. 1919
Daughte r Born February 17, 192~
County Jud ge Eastern District
.Jackson Count}
.January I. 1925
Prrsiding Judge Jackson County
,/;inu ary I. 1927 -January I . 1935
t rni ted Statt'S Senator, ~1issouri
J;u1ua ry .J, 1935-January 12. 1945
\"1ce·Ptesic!l'nt , Cn1ted States January
20. to J\pril 12. 1945
Prcsi~en t. L1nited States April 12,
ID4f>-.January 20, l96S
In just 2 years , . ,
outsellin"' everv ., -I
I
I
l
European c ar
(except oue) !
"
LOOK WHAT'S STA NDAHU EQUIP.\lE\'f ...
e RADIAL PLY TIRES • FHO:\T J)JSK BHAI\.E:-i
e FRONT BU<.:KET SEATS e FU LL CAHP ETll\(; , e RA<.:K AND PINIO N ST EE IU \c ;
SEE ONE • • • TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE ' ' ' TODAY!
.. Orange Counr11'1 1'omU11 of Fint Car,-
Rome Of The New Car • , ,
"Got.le• To11ela'' ohnson& son Rome 01 The New Car , , ,
"Golde• Toue•"
. . . .. .
LtNCOtN • . . ... ,. . ....
COUGAR; .,
2t2ll HARBOR BLVD. COS1'.A MESA • 540·~
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4 DAILY PILOT
..... . Israeli Jets Gun Down Syrian M.IG
•
~ "' with
T om
urphi n e
' •• 11 .... ..,-._ '
Blowing In
The New Year
OFF AND RVNNl~G DEPT. -You
ponder all !his rush of air lhat has
grteted us l''ith the New Year and )'Ou
have to v"orry if ii is a prediction of how
politiC!: are going to go in 1973.
There is ii. difference. ho\\·erer.
between the current natural winds that
are lashing us about and the normal
polltleal breezes whieh blow hot air.
Political buffing and puffing is usually
a great display but lea\•es little changed
after Jt all dies do\.\11. I mean. some of
your really best polllicians can gas on for
houl'3 on end and nothing much is hort
except your eardrums.
TRIS NATURAL BLO\V, ho~:ever ap-
pe.an lo be more devastaling. You may
have noted things have actually been
falling over, or Into other things.
OUTtnt reports indicate the wind has
been gusting up to f)5 miles per hour or
ao around here and has particularly
created havoc over the water from our
regfoo at Avalon Harbor on Santa
Catalina Island.
Early dispatches today say that at
leMt five vesuls have been lost to the
winds at Avalon, two hav'e sunk In the
harbor and three others wa11hed up on the
beach by wind-propelled surf. Injuries
"·ere also reported at Avalon to parties
who were attempting to save other boats
from a similar fate .
Certain sea-watchers "'ho are con·
sidered knowledgeable in such matters
have claimed from lime to time !hat the
Avalon Harbor is a bit suspect as to the
protection offered during times or
weather stress. Apparently the old adage
a~ny old port In a storm" doesn't
n 'ly apply to Avalon. You
may have left your heart in Avalon but
you may have also left your boat on the
bottom.
ANYWAY, TIIROUGBOUT all lhiJ, lbe
National \Veather Service has started out
the New Ye~r on a rtassurlng note for
us, aoolhing our coastal region with the.
word that the winds are going to poop out
tonight and end Wednesday. This is all
very nice. The wind may be gone just
about the time everything lhat was
standing has been blown down.
It has been Interesting that they've
been calling this current breeze a Santa
Ana wind tha~ was recorded up around
Alount Wilson at hurricane-fora: gusts of
about 80 miles an hour before it slo\\'ed
down in our region.
You may have al\\•ays harbored the no-
tion that a Santa Ana wind \vas going to
blow hot and make cvery1hing seem like
summer a1aln. Thus ooe has been like
everybody in Southern California lcrt
their freezer doors open all at the sa1ne
time.
11IE WEATHER PEOPLE warn us
r-that when the wlnd does die down or
maybe go away. then it's going to get
colder at night. Colder? How can that be
here along this best of all possible
coasts?
We ,..;11 simply have to look to other
points and assure ourselves things could
be worse. For example. it's been a great
big nine above zero in Denver. Or how
about minus four at North Platte, Neb.?
Or do you like minus JO degrees at
Fargo, N.D.? Try four above at Chey·
cnne, \Vyo .. y,·here they've been kno"11 to
have a few breezes too.
See? Things could be worse.
TEL AVJV (AP) -..Syrian and Israel!
ie1 llghte:rs cla$hed today in a do1fi1ht
O\'tt the snow-capped mountain! or
I..cb.1000.
The Lebanese eovemment reported ooe
Syrian plane cr.uhed netr the 1kl resort
of F'araya and another ·"unidentified
plane was seen c,rashlng into the ~el
\l'e!it or Abde ."
Abde lies near lhe Medlttrranean coast
irt northern Lebanon about 18 mlles north
!Jf Tripoli.
Latest Aeeoutat
THE DOGFIGHT was lbe first.Syrian.
lsraell air battle since Nov: 21 , when the
Israelis claimed they downed ab Syrian
MIG21s. The SyrlanJ end Ibo Jeradll
have clashed several tllnts on the iround
re<:ently in ltraell ret.a.lia1ion raid• alon&
!he increa.slngly sensitive Golan Heta:hts
c:.-ease-llrt llne.
The Israeli military command reported
its pilots shot down one Syrian jet ln
Flo1·ida Superjet Death .
Total Standing at I 03
MIM1I (UPI) -The death toll In the
crash of an Eastern Airlines superjet In
swampland west of Miami Friday night
has reached 103, acrording to the Dade
County (Miami ) medical examiner.
The statement by Dr. Joseph Davis at
a late Monday news conference was the
latest in a series of conflictin1 counts of
victims and survivors issued by airline
( I N SHORT ... )
spo kesmen and county officials.
The death toll announoo:I by Davi!! in·
eludes 101 persons who died 31-the scene
of the crash in the muck of lhe Florida
Everglades and two others 'A'ho died later
in hospitals.
e Comedienne OK
NE\V YORK (UPI ) -Comedienne
Imogene Coca was in satisfactory con·
dition after surgery to correct eye,
facial, and leg injuries suffered in a traf·
fie accident in St. Petersburg, FJa.
Dr. Pierre Guibor. who led a three-man
surgical team at A1anhallan Eye, Ear
and Throat Hospital in the 90-minute
operation , said Monday, "The
operative results are excellent and the
prognosis is good."
Guibor said ~-liss Coca's right eye was
repaired and "reconstruction was
Fort -Lauderdale
'Quieter' A ft er
Su1ida y Rioting
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla . (U PI)
Beefed·up police patrols at the scene of a
bloody New Year's Eve riot arrested 34
persons ~1onday night on minor charges.
but avoided a confrontation \\'ith crowd s
of youth s.
POLICE SAID most of the arrests
Monday night were on charges ol
disordl.'rly conduct and public intoxication
invol\·ing youths \\'ho live in the area,
plus a fe\v vac:ilioners.
The arrests came alo ng a haU-mile
stretc.1-i of resort beach \\'here on New
Yea;·'s Eve some ISO police engaged 4.000
reve lers in a three-hour baltle \\'ilh
nightsticks and tear gas.
\\'hen order l\·as finally restored early
New Year's Day, 70 persons hat! been in·
jured in the riot, including 27 policemen,
an(j 4-1 persons bad been arresud on
charges ranging from assault with intent
to commit murder to inciting a riot.
"Three orncers "\\·ete serkfus1y hUrt in
the New Year's Eve riot.
OFFICER BOBBY Weatheringt on was
hospltalizfd in fair condition after being
struck with a folding chair. Police issued
an all-points bulletin for 18-year-old Roy
John MartineJli on a charge of attacking
Weatherington with the chair.
,At Miami Beach in neighboring Dade
County, sheriff's deputi es arrrested 25
persons Sunday nigh! after a large group
of youths tried to crash several New
Year's eve parlies at s1vank hotels along
Collins A venue.
performed to the ri&ht stde of her face .·•
It was not known whether she will suffer
any permanent loss or vision to the eye.
e Aatrote0rld Flre
HOUSTON (lJPJ) -Judie Roy
Hofheinz, the mastermind behind the
Astroworld complex and members or
his family yrere amona: more than 100
guests who had to leave their rooms at
the Astroworld·Hotel Monday because of
a fire.
Damages "'ere estimated at f150 ,000
but no one was hurt in the firt.
Hofheinz, his wife, his dau,hter, her
husband and their children left the 12.~
a-night penthoose "Oele.stlal. Suite" and
spent the rest of the night at their suite
in the Astrodome sladium. which the
judge owns along with the hotel, the
Astros baseball club and other Interests.
e Po~ Reco.,er•
VATICAN CITY (APJ -Pope Paul VI
has rea>vered £rom lnfluenz.a and resum-
ed his normal activities except for au-
diences, the Vatican said today.
On doclor's orders. Pope Paul, who had
a slight fever Thursday to Sunday, had 10
skip an outing from the Vatican on Mon·
day to mark the New Year's Day w1th a
~1ass among crippled children. The
Vatican said the Pope received his aides
and attended his normal work. filsl.._ to
give him some rest the doctor ~
him to suspend audiences to visiting
bishops and otber visitors through Thurs·
day. Also Wednesday's publk; audience
\\•as canceled this week .
e Angela Vialt
MtAMI (UP[) -Allgela DaviJ receiv-
ed a wann welcome on her arrival in
Havana on New Year's Eve. acrording to
a Cuban radio broadcast monitored here
}i1onday.
The broadcast-said. Mits Davis, a prom-
inent member of the U.S. Communi!lt
Party, arrived from Afadrid, after a
circuitous trip from the United Stales.
She had been denied entry to Mexico,
'A'hlch has commercial nights to Havana,
and went to New York and then Europe.
It "'as ~Un Davis' second visit to Cuba
in recent months.
Bombing Jlea v)·,
Ge1ieral Report.~
NE\V YORK (AP ) -Retired Brig .
Gen. Telford Taylor. \rho was in l{anoi
\.li'ith three other Americans recently dur·
ing intensi\!e U.S. bombing attacks, says :
"You can drive for miles through Hanoi
~nd not see any d·amage -and then sud·
denly come upon a virtual desert."
"The bombing is quite heavier than
anything I was under in I..oodon" during
World War 11, Taylor said.
He added that the total destruction was
not so great because incendiary bombs
were not us:ed on Hanoi.
Taylor, a professor of law at Columbia
Unl"1!rsily, retumed SUndey nlgbl with
folkslnger Joan Baez; the Rev. Pt11chael
Allen. associate dean of the Yale
University Divinity SCbool, and Barry
Romo, national coordinator of the
·Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
Colorado Has 20 Below -
Loives t Outside Alll ska at Gunn iso n; Hi gli Florida
I
lodty'a.en<OWJ1eLand.ul1Lall !be Lsraeli
planes returned safely. But the orficial
Syrian radlo clalnled one Israeli plane
w11 bit. 'lbt. broadcast from Dam.ucus
acknowled&ed 1 Syrian plane alJO was
hit, but did not 1pecJfy whether li cruh·
ed " reported by tho Lebanese.
luad ,.ported the cloifiaht broke out
•bout t p.m. when Syrian planes at·
tempted to lntC«ePt rsruu planes on
patrol. Syria said tbe lsraell patrol had
ent.ertd Syril•n terrl!ory anu Oytn&_ O\'Cr
Lebanoo.
LEBANESE ~tllJTARY 10UtCeS said
2!1-27 lsraeli planes .ahowed up on rltda.r
screen,, as the flahtin& raged over the
Leba.oest mountain!!.
''W~ were nearly blown out of our aeati
by a serle.s of erploaions," said the Rev .
Ronald Roberti. who runa a IChool for
handicapped children in the l.ebanese
IO\\'n of Ajaltoun . on the road tu the ski
UPI T.....,_
rtSOrt of Fara~. 1 .. We rushed out end saw ooe plane
lrailW: blaek smoke headlne toward the
ground. There -· throe """ planu that looted u Jhouch lhoy ...,.. lwd!nc '
to Syria." l
Tbe Syrian-laraell cease-1'\re line bu
been at flubpolnt slnce Nov. 21, when
the ,heavteot flgbtlng In more than lwv
Yt•rw erupted. '
Arab guerrlllas slipped Into lsrult.lleld
territory r...n Syria on three occasions
at ChNLmAs time, the Israeli• claimed.'
and J.srael retaliated with an air nJd oo
Syria lul Wednesday. -' THE SVlUANS responded with an
artillery attack on JsraeU positions and t
setUemen1$ on !be Golan Hel&hl& Sllul'
Clay. The IJntlls <llmt beck w1th I nJchl
air raid on a Syrian army camp near
Damascus. t
The Israelis now claim to have a.bot
down 40 Syrian planes oln« !be 1161
Arab-lsnell v;ar. 1
Cargo Plane
Crashes , 5
Persons Die •
EDMONTON, Alta . IAP \ -A Boeing
707 cargo plane crasbed and burned in a
blizzard early today while landing at
Edmonton lnternatJonal Airport.. and
police said all five persons on board were
killed. •
The plane, owned by Pacific Western
Airlines, bad a crew of five and wu ar·
riving from Toronto with 75 bead ot cat-
tle. An earlier report said si1 persom
were on board.
Bearitag the Cold POLICE REACHED the cruh Aile at
the north end ol Telford Lake by
snowmobile. The 53rd annual Polar Bear Swim gets under way in Vancouver, B.C.
v.1th 253 swimmers plunging into the 44-degree water of English
Bay. 1\ct.uaJly, the \Vater '"as three degrees wanner than the air, and
it \vas raining to boot. 2,500 spectators \Vatched the Ne\v Year's Day
ritual.
They reported temperatures ot .-
zero in the area, with blowing snow and
wind gusting up to 60 miles per hour.
A spokesman at the airport control
tO\.li'eT said the 7f.Yl, fitted for use an an
international freigh~r on charter Dights,
Surprise Visit was ' in the final phase of an Instrument
landing "-hen it crashed.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police said
they had recovered three bO<lies and
v.·ere searching for the others. 1\e
\\Teckage apparently was at leut
partially covered by drifting snow. Pclice
said they might have to use trackin&
dogs to search for the other bodies.
Nixon Lo cked Out of Oivri Office
By FRANK COR.•DER
WASHINGTON (AP) -President t-;ix·
on, a surprise visitor to the White House
on New Year 's Day. is said to have found
hlmselr locked out of his ov.11 Oval Office
l\fonday.
Nixon. once expected to spend the en·
tire holiday weekend at Camp David.
1'fd., apparently upset security duty
rosters -and other things -by return·
Ing from his mountaintop lodge Sunday
night.
AL1110UG1f TIIERE is C\1ldence that a
few aides anticipated the quick return
from Camp David, one White House of·
ficlal reported that "'hen Nixon appeared
at his Oval Oflice at 7:30 a.m. on New
Year'!! Day he discovered, after !utile
wrestling 'A'ilh the doorknob . that routine
St'curity precautions were keeping him
out of his own inner sauctum.
By all accounts. it did not take Nixon
long 10 find a White House policeman -
a uniformed member of the Execut ive
Protection Service -who came up \\'ith
a passkey.
The chief executive. "'ho seems more
opt to a)ter apparent plans the longer he
Ski Lift Goes
Berserk; Many
Skiers lnjtired
BURLEY, Idaho (AP -One person
was in critical condition and four others
hospitalized Monday night after a ski lift
went out of control while carrying about
200 skiers at Pome.relle Ski Area 18 nliles
southwest of here.
itopltals treated and released 12
others. Pi.1edical "·orkers at the -scene
estimated another 40 suffered minor in·
juries.
Gerald Anderson, a spokesman for
Cassia Memorial Hospital, said Chris
Stevens, 29, of Hageman was in critical
condition with~st and internal injuries.
The other three admitted at Cassia "·er.e
in satisfactory condition .
Anderson said most of th injuries .
were broken bones and strains. He said
about 40 doctors and off-duty personnel
responded to the emergency call from as
far away as 40 milt's.
A1nbulance driver Roger Porter of the
\1.'estern Ambulance Service in Burlt-y
said one of the injured told him ''chairs
were flying everywhere and people were
falling and jumping:·
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dfhvtrf of ti!& Dall1 Pilot
I~ !fllAr,\lllttd
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,
remains in office -a point noted with
so me of his prcdecessoN -gave no ex·
planation for his helicopter return to the
\Vhite House on one. of the nation's tradi·
tional Hve-it-up holiday evenings.
A DEPARTMENT of Transport
spokesman said the crash site appettt1Uy
"·as in lhe gefteral vicinity of the Ol&ht
path for the runway that would have
-~-i.tl-i!mtrer-m-__Jbeen"i1i~in"-;'!us~e~a~1Slbe~~ti~mr.•~· ... ..,-.--...,..-~-TRUE";""MM;-Ntxorrh:1 The spokesman 1scoun a re
the day for Southern California to take that a po\l'er failure al the airport had
part in Pasadena·s Rose Bo'vl festivities caused the crash by depriving the 7flt ot
"'here her old school, the University of. electrically powered ground navigational
Southern California, defeated Ohio State aids or run1\•ay lights.
University's football team. The power failure apparently luted for
By all accounts, Nixon's only activ~ only five seconds, he said, "hardly
on New Year's Eve was to place a con-enough to put the plane off course."
gratulatory phone call to Coach George
Allen of the Washington Redskins, win·
ners of the National Football Conference
championship.
• Allen, his wife, four children and t~·o
in-la"'s turved up at the While House al
10 a.m. Atonday to enjoy Nixon's
hospitality. ·
But that still does no! explain why the
President \Vas jiggling the doorknob of
his private office 2,l.i hours earlier, or
\\·hat he did in the interim before en-
tertaining the Allen clan.
Ne'A'smen and photographers sum·
maned to the White House to record a
portion of the meeting between v.inning
coach and winning 1972 p~idential can·
dtdate noted thal almost lmmed.tately
!hereafter. Nixon had deserted his Oval
Office for hideaway quarters in the
neighboring Exect1t1Ve Office Btitldirfg.
COMMON
MARKET -;-
J'Oll IJGAl/ (
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Teton Climbers
Forced to Quit
GRAND TETON PARK. Wyo. (UP[)
- A group of 14 mountain cllmben led
by 64-year-old Paul Petzoldt made it to
\\ithin 1.500 feet of the top of Graad
Teton mOWJtain ~1onday but were forced
to tum back by a \\inter storm.
Strong winds and sticky snow halted the ascebl ol the 13,77~foot mountain,
said park ranger Tony Bevinetto, who
has been in radio contact wtth the group,
The other· 12 members of the party ot
26 remained behind at a permanent
'cllmN!i's' 11ur2,00 feet below the summtt.
NOIWAY
SWlDtN
Tho six countries of the European Common Market were expanded ;,
Monday, when Brllaln, Ireland and Denmark joJned the economlc and ~
trading bloc. The new, 'marktt (sh aded areas) conlaittJ m -mWloa •
person•. and a gross national product of $693 bllllon.
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Orange Coast
· EIHTION
Today~s 'lnal
N.Y. Stocks
VOL 66, NO. 2, 4 SECTIPNS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA • TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1973 N TEN CENTS
Coast Hilaer Becounts Son ~s -Ordeal
By L. PETER KRIEG
Ot .... 0.llY .........
Hal Doyle of Corona de) Mar today re-
counted how he stood through the freez-
i?g might awaiting rescue In Angelus Na-
tional Forest and propping up his injured
spn who h~ brOk~n bis .right arm and leg
when be plunged into an Icy ravine.
The )"Oungster, Adam, 13, a Lincoln
Middle School student, was Injured while
biklng in the San Gabriel.Mountains with
bis father,' brother and a friend. A ridge
collapsed. sending Adam plummeting on
his stomach 700 feet down an ice chute.
Young Doyle is irr improved condition
LOday in an Arcadia bosptial. But shortly
after the afternoon accident, the chanets
for rescue appeared grim to Adam's
father.
"All of us thought it was the end of his
life," Doyle, a 45-year-old computer
engineer, related today.
Doyle bad taken Adam, his brother
f'hilip, 14, and a friend, Mike Schieber,
ta. on the hiking trip Thursday.
"It wa.s about 1:30 and we were coming
back -the same ~·ay we 'd gone up -
and Adam was behind u~," Doyle said.
"The two boys crossed the ridge and I
went down behind it. Adam "°·as following
me but be went acros!I the 'A'ay the boys
did and it gave way."
Doyle said he scrambled down the
mountainside and found Adam in lbe
snow.
"Re was conscious ... more stunned
OAILY PILOT Sfftl Pllolt
HARBOR PA'tROLMEN SCRAMBLE AFTER YACHTS, DOCK BLOWN FREE BY HIGH WINOS
Section of Dock, With Boats, Floats Down 8 al Isle Channel, Snags in Offshore Moorings
To Avalon Boats
Set at $200,000
Cleanup continued along the Southern
Orange Coast today in the wake of the
year's most severe windstonn but no one
could repair one maddening problem
which hit early New Year's morning in
San Clemente.
Hundreds of residents set to watch the
Tournament of Roses Parade found no
picture on their television tUbes after the
high winds caused a pawer blackout in
the industrial section of the city.
The outage immediately knocked off a
cable television booster station and sets
all over town were without a picture.
·Police received scores of calls from
angry residents. Spokesmen from -the
local cable service said their aides were
swamped with nearly 200 calls at the
&tart-of the outage.
Service was restored, however, by
about 10 a.m. to most areas.
Besides adding to the New Year's
morning hangover, the winds caused city
crews in san Clemente to go to work as
trees and branches fell over a wide area.
One large eucalyptus toppled in the goll
course area.
Dozens of limbs were ton\ from other
trees in the l.'Oastal area.
New Year's day at Dana Harbor was
wltbout incident but the day be.fore, as
the Santa Anas started to build,
patrolmen were kept busy.
M one poln\ laSt Sunday, patrolmen
said, a single blast of wind capsized
several sailboats all al once near the
harbor entrance.
J!tsculng patrolmen plll(ked 11 persons
1""11, the water and helped right the
vessels. No ooe was injured.
Section of N e'vport Dock
Powerful winds Monday tore loose a
huge section of dock from Bayside
J\.1arina in Newport Harbor and sent it
and 2t> boats drifting down the Balboa
Island Channel.
"By the time we got to the scene, the
Rabies Clinics·
Set in, Newport
Newport Beach dog owners can get
rabies shots for their pets at a nominal
fee during two city-sponsored clinics next
week.
For a-cost o( $2 .. any dag over !ow:
months of age will be inoculated by·.
volunteers from the Kiwanis Club of
Corona del Mar and the California
Veterinary Association .
The first clinic will be conducted Jan. 9
from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at the city's head-
quarters fire station, 475 32nd St The sec-
ond clinic will be held at the same hours
in the Newport Center Fire Station, 868
Santa Barbara Drive.
FoUowing the vaccination, each pet
owner will receive a valid rabies
certificate to use in purchasing a 1973
dog license. . . ·-
Licenses will be-available at a cost of
$6 through Jan. 31 at pet stores, animal
hospitals and all fire stations.
Fire stations will sell licenses Monday
through Friday from 6 to 8 p.m_., on
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sun-
days from 1 to 5 p.m.
entire 25(}.rMt pie.:e had broken away
from the bulkhead and drifted into mid-
channel," said Orange County Harbor
Patrol Sgt. Ray Graham.
"It lodged in the offshore moorings
about 100 feet down-channel from its
regular spot at Bayside ?<.trina ," he said.
Graham said four harbor patrol vessels
and a number of heavy commercial
salvage barges were called into action
and a number of Balboa Island residen LS
rowed out to the drifting dock to lend a
hand.
··one by one ,.,.e moved each of the
boats tied to the dock lo other an-
chorages," Craham said. "We also used
some of the bOat anchors to try to
stabilize the dock."
"One.. by 011e we moved each of the
morning threatened to break up . the
Graham said the 5Q.mile-per-hour
winds whistling down the channel that
docks even more and send the wreakage
through the moo rings onto Balboa Island.
"But finally the wind died d0\\1l a bit
and once we got !he boats moved it
stayed pretty stable," he said.
Graham said none of the boats attached
to the dock, which included power and
sailboats ranging from 20 to 45 feet long,
was badly damaged nor were any of the
moored boats that were struck by the
dock. .
"We worked for more than five hour$
trying to secure the dock and boats."
Graham said. ''I can't say enough for t•1e
great help we got from hard·working
citizens." ·
Graham said he could not estimate the
1See HARBOR, Page 21
than in pain. He knew y,·hat was wrong
but I immediately ins'pec,ted him to see if
there was anything else.
"I asked Mike and Phil to come down .
I knew bow dangerous it \\'3s but '''e had
to move bim. ·
"We climbed up about 100 feet and
found the tree. We got Adam up there
and Mike and Phil went lo find help.
"Adam and i just stood there." Doyle
said.
fie sald they kept each other company.
They didn't think about the cold or th1·
time.
The skies were groy,·ing dark. "I only
thoUght of Y.1hat \\•e'd do if they didn 't
rescue us," Doyle said.
He thought they'd probably dJt from
the cold if they had to spend the night
alone.
He didn't know that ~1ike and Phil had
struggled up the ravine and made tht>ir
way back to the Angelus Crest ftighY.'ay
~ust when a snowplow came along.
The dr1vt•r had ::i l\.\·O·\\'ay radio and
they contacted the Los Angele& County
Sheriff's Office
The sheriff's office dispatched two
helicopters. One of them passed over
tw ice and didn't see them.
"r..11ke was ln the second helicopter,"
Dovie said. "they made a couple of
paSses and then spotted us. I guess it
"'as around five o'clock."
r..trs. Doyle said that was about the on·
(See RESCUE, Page Z)
Damage Admitted
V.S.:.N. Viet Hospital , Airport Hit
\VASHINGTON (API -The Pentagon
acknowledged today that a North Viel·
namese hospital end an airport normally
used by civilian planes near Hanoi ap-
parently suffered "some limited ac·
cidental damage" during intensive U.S.
bombing raids.
products depot .
He indicated that the Gia Lam rallroad
yards 'A'ere the objectives of bombs
which struck the airport used by Soviet
and other civilian air transports.
However, he said some MIG jet fi ghters
,~·ere hit at Gia Lam, along \Vith the con·
. trot tower.
Friedheim said information that
damage had been inflicted on the hospital
came to him after his denial Dec. 'Z1 and
his reiteration of the denial Dec. 29.
lle declined to say how this later in-
formation was obtained, although he in·
dlcated it came from U.S. aerial recon-
naissance photography.
But Jerry W. Friedheim, the Pen-
tagon's top spokesman. suggested that
the damage could have been caused
either by U.S. bombs or by No rth Viel·
namese antiaircraft ex-plosives .
Nonetbeles.s, Friedheim's acknowledg·
ment was at least a partial reversal of
his denials last week that U.S. bombs ,
struck a North Vietnamese hospital.
Those claims had been made by North
Vietnam .
Hay La11 ge nheun, Harbor
Area Leade1·, Dies at 80
"It appears that some limited ac·
cidental damage has occurred to some
facilities at Gia Lam airport and at a
hospital the enemy calls Bae Mai,"
Friedheim s:iid in a statement read a t a
news briefing.
"The exact extent or this damage is
uncertain, as is its cause. ~
"Our infor1nation does not square witt
Hanoi's propaganda claims of massive
destruction at these sites."
Frieclheim restated what he said ls
jectlves in North Vietnam.
Ho .... ·e\'er. he said, "We know. and have
said many times, that from time to time
accidental damage to other than military
targets occur. sometimes involving
t.:nited States ordnance or aircraft and
so1netimes involving North Vietnamese
ordnance or aircraft."
He expressed regret concerning "any
such accidental damage from whatever
source."
f'riedheim said the Bae Mai hospital
and the Gia Lam airfield were struck
during t;.S. bombing attacks against
military targets v.·ithin several hundred
ya rds of them.
"These two sites were in close prox·
imity to military targets," he said. "We
have no knowledge of \vhat caused the
damage. lt could have been either side:·
He said the Bae Mai military complex
comprises an· airport. storage and
v;arehouse facilities, and a petroleun1
DAILY P'ILOT S~ff P'hoN
SUCCUMBS AT 80
Hay Langenheim
Stock Prices Respond
To Peace Talks, Spurt
NEW YORK IAP l -Stock market
prices spurted ahead in the first half-
hour's trad ing today and retained the
increase throughout the trading.
The Dow Jones average of 30 in·
dustrials closed up 11.66 points at 1031.68.
higher sales were up.
Adv·ances topped declines On the New
York Stock Exchange by nearly 5 to l.
"The market is responding to' the news
that high-leve l peace talks are to be
resumed next week in Paris," said
Newton Zinger, analyst with E. F. Hutton
Co. Inc.
Although early year reinvestment de-
mand was also a factor, he said, the up-
turn was primarily due to the peace
news.
General investor optimism for 1973':.;
economic pr.ospects gave the market ;1n
un<lerlying positive tone, br<:ikers added .
Autos. which have been reporting
higher sales. were up.
Blue Chips were active and strong.
The Big Board index closed at SS.06,
up 0.58, while the American Stock Ex·
·change pri~hange index closed at
26 .35. up 0.21.
Hay Langenheim. long·time 1-farOOr
Area civic let1de r and former executive
secretary of the Newport Harbor
Chamber of Comn1erce , died Dec. 31
after \_lengthy illness. He was 80.
A rt/ldeot of 1256 Rutland Road, Mr.
Langenheim came to Newport Beach in
1948 as head or the city's Civil Service
Commission. then became execuilve
Chamber of Commerce.
He died at Hoag Memorial Hospital
and -in a written request -suggested
memorial contributions in his name to
assist the facility. ~
During his time in o!fice as head of the
Chamber of Commerce , Mr. Langenheim
y,·as closely associated with the Irvine
Company in a variety of mutual interests
for the firm and the city.
He arranged for location of Chamber
offices on Pacific Coast Highway and
raised ils nagging membership from 105
to 651 members in 18 months.
1-Je was also instrumental in arranging
the 1951 Boy Scout Jamboree which
brought youths from virtually every na·
tion in the v.-·orld to the vast campsite on
Irvine property overlooking the sea.
The ocean figured prominently in Mr.
Langenheim's life. .
lie originated the \Vestern Sprint Row·
ing Championships, which pilled col·
legiate crew teams racing down the
2,()0(}.meter Newport ~!arbor Channel.
He was also a former commodore of
b4M..h the Balboa•Power Squadron and the
Lido-Isle Yacht Club, having once owned
a bayf.ront residence at 119 Via Lido
Nord.
A Yale University graduate, ~tr .
Langenheim was a classmate and cohort
of composer Cole Porter and at one time
himself was president of the Orange
County P hilharmonic Society.
A yellowed newspaper column outlining
the colorful Chamber of Commerce
chief's busy schedule noted it was not at
all unusual for him to burst into song
during his busy schedule. \.
During 1956, Mr. Langenbeim resigned
hi! Chamber post to become a business
ISte CITIZEN, Page!)
Orange Coast
Weather
So me increased cloudiness on
Wednesday. ac co rding to lhe
weatherlady, Y.'ith slightly cooler
temperatures. Highs or 57 are ex-
pected at the beaches. rising to 67
inland. Lov.·s in the upper 308 to
low 40s with local frost
INSIDE TOD" Y
President Nixon showed up
bright and early oti Ne10 Year's
Day at his Ovo! Office in \Vo.sh·
inr1ton. D.C. Turning the door·
k 11 o b, he discovered himself
locked out of his own office.
See story an Page 4.
L.M. ..,. 1 .t.MI L....,_,, 14
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C....--.1 tt s-tt W.IJ
Dull! Nolle•• I SMCll IMt'kttt 1 .. 11 ••lfoN' ,_ • ,......._ 11
_ElJulai-t_la...It_...r....... t•1•
AGONY OF DEFEAT -The girls are Ohio State choor·
leaders and these are the expressl9ns they wore as USC
stored its fourth touchdown in the third quarter of Mon·
day's Rose Bowl gam e. For Ohio State. things got a lot
DAIL'f lllLOT ,....._ 111' ttkMN Dnll•
worse. See sp0rts, Page 16, !or the eomplelc slor)I,
,....... , .. ,, """"" . Ftr 1M • ..,.. I w_ .. N-t•tl ~ . ,, ...........
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% 01.llV PILOT H
Gwt Smips
Calvar y's ·
T entposts
C.old SantA Ana winds blew inlo Co6ta
Mesa Sunday and Monday but caused
relatively little damage other than to a
2,500-seat tent used by Calvary Chaplet.
A heavy gust snapped two of the four
telephone poles supporting the big lop
Monday morning, causing the heavy can·
vas sheeting to plummet to the ground.
The tent was unoccupied at the time.
Joann Day, a secretary for the popular
youth church on 3800 Fairview Road just
across the city border In Santa Ana , said
the tent was filled to capacity the .Q.ight
before. ,
'·we had Bible study from 8 to 12 and
there were about 3,000 people In there. It
was blowing pretty hard then but the
serviee was still very beautifu1," sbe ad·
ded.
Rolled up by a crew of 100 volunteers,
the canvas was cleared away and chairs
and other equipment quickly removed.
Little, if any, damage was believed ta
have been caused to the canvas root.
nie tent has been used by the church
for approximately one year. It was
ereded when the 500-seat chapel would
no longer accommodate the churCh's
youthlul nock.
Costa Mesa Fire Department officials
indJcated that the gusty winds caused
more anxiety rather than any real
damage. There were no losses reported
"during the two-<lay period,
The Orange County Department of
Harbors and Beaches said the winds
began blowing from a northeasterly di-
rection around mid-morning Swlday and
subsided by 6 p.m. Monday night. No
further winds are forecast.
Harbor and Beaches Department of-
ficial!: measured the peak intensity of the
gusts at approximatoly 50 mph,
Iowan Arrested
In Ne,vport,
Fa cin g Rett1rn
An Iowa man faces extradition pro-
ceedings to his home state today follow-
ing his arrest by Newport Beach police on a ftigitive warrant Friday,
Detective Ed Rudd said this morning
that he arrested Gunnar SprlngiB, 30, on
a Huntlnglon Beach street alter lalllng
him for some time.
Sprlllgis, Rudd said, bad been staying
with an unidentified Newport Beach
family for aeveral days before his ~t.
Rl)dd said Sprtiigls wu Indicted by a·
grand jury last summer !Jl IoWQi on
ceallng stole• property and carrying a
concealed weapon to sale of naicotlcs.
SP!'inRls ts being htld In Orange C.ounty
Jall -without ball facing extradition pro-
ceedings. Rudd said he could not be sure
when Springis would be sent to Iowa
because ht will probably fight extradi-
Uon.
Mrs. W ashhume
Succumbs at 65
Virginia Washbume, wife of oomposer
Joseph H. "Country" Wa.shburne and
Jong-time Harbor Area resident died
'Mw.rsday. She was 65.
Mrs. Washburne was a part-time em-
ploye at Gene Burton sportswear on Lido
Isle for 16 years. She has lived 18 yeaN
in Corona deJ Mar. Balboa Island and
most recently at 1750 Whittier Ave.,
Costa Mesa.
Besides her husband·, survivors include
two sisters, Mrs. Robert Daisey and Mrs.
Joseph--Feeley, both ot New-.rersey';
brother, Jack Be~koil of New Jersey;
and three grandchildren.
Priva te services will be held in New-
port Beach. The family has suggested
memorial contributions be sent to the
An:ierican Cancer Society, Orange County
urut.
OI ANGI COAST N
DAILY PILOT
~ °'111'" Cont DAILY Pl\.OT, wlfl'I Whl(lt
Ii combllial 'ltll Ntw1·Prn1. 1, ~tlSMd by
1twt Or11119e Co." Pllbllslllno CQm~11'i'. S9Pll-
r11e edlllom Ire Pllbl!Uied, MOl!dey !l•l'O\lllh
f'rlo.y', llH' COl!I Mts•, NeWpKJ Buen.
Hunflntton 9t1Kh/f'OU1111i" Vltley, LI°"""
Bet<h, lrvl~S1ddl~ •1111 Sin Cltmenru
S111 Jvfn Cep1,11·-A sir>Qlt r~Kin•l
tdlllon k WOlkltt!d S.turd1~ •nd SvnoayJ.
TPll IH'lnc.lpal PllblW.lno Plen• II ., JJO We.!
Bot)" Sirwet, COlll MtW, O~fomi-t, 9261 ..
Robert N. W1.d .
Prt'ltnr'll I nd Pull!bhtr
J1~k R. C11rl1v Vb "'-ldenl •!>d ~r11 Mtnaotr
Thom•• K1•vll ......
~ •• A. Murpllf"' MIMO!no EdllW
L P•f•r Kri19 .
Hewport 8Ndt Ctly Ed!Jor ""'*' a..c• Offld JJJJ N1wport lovl••1rd
M1ilin9 Addr111: P'.0 .1011: 1175. 9266J °"" Olfk• C.0.1• Mtt.s: Ill Wftl by Str.et L~ '4ilcfl; m F-t ""-" HIMl'"4rton ... di: 1m,s ha(l'I aou1-n1
1111 C"'"*"•: as Horth 11 Clmlrlo •111
!lf-rll•• J ll4J 642-4JJl
DAILY .. II.OT PM!f •v ,llrkll O'Dlftlllll
New Year, New Boy
Jay Michael Robert Foster is number one \vith his mother, l\lrs. Ger-
ald Foster of Irvine. He also is the first baby born in 1973 in Orange
County. Jay arrived at 1:36 a.m. Monday at Hoag Memorial Hospital,
Newport Beach, weighing in at 6 pounds. 15 ounces. Mother and son
are doing nicely, thank you. The Fosters live at 18206 Mayapple
Way, Irvine.
$83 Million in County
Phon e Imp ro ve ment Set
About $83 million will ht! spent during Rising service needs and increasing
the new year by Pacific Telephone Com~ subscribers in Orange County also re-
pany to improve service facilities quire a $2.2 million ope rators' center op-throughout the county, much of it on the Orange Coast. ening this summer in Anaheim, with
•
Te ela•ical Talks
U.S., N ~ Viets
Resume ~eeting
PARIS (AP) -U,S, and North Vici·
namcse technical experts sat down
together today for the lint time since
Dec. 23 to work out details of an evenhi-
al Vietnamese cuse-fll't.
The technical meetings had been
suspended because of North Vietnamese ·
protests over American bombing of the
north. Their resumption marked the first
step in resumpUon of the ·suspended full-
scale secret negotiations, due to begin
again next Monday, after a three-week
hiatus.
Nguyen Co Thach, North Vietnamese
deputy foreign m i n i s t er , and
William Sullivan, deputy assistant
secretary of state for Southeast Asain af·
fairs, headed the two delegations. They
met at a villa in suburban Cholsy-Le-Roi.
near the headquarters of the North Viet-
namese delegation to the Paris peace
talks. ·
The technical meetings are an offshoot
Officers Sou ght
By Home Grou p
The Cliff Haven Community Associa-
tion is looking for people to carry on its
civic affairs during 1973.
Persons interested in serving on the
board of directors are urged to contact
Donna Gallant, president, or Bob Cooper,
secretary, by Jan. 9.
The board will meet that night to
nominate officers for the coming year.
Voting will take place at the annual
meeting next month.
Cooper said interested persons may
call Mrs. Gallant or him or write the
as,,ociation at Post Office Box 1332,
Newport Beach.
or the top.level peace oegotiatJoos led by
ltenry A. Kls.singer and Le Due Tbo, a
member of the llanol PollUburo.
President Georges · Pompidou said
.. real precise dltficullies, hard to
overcome" re1nain to be faced in the
negotiations.
But the French president ndded that he
h:.;ed this lime the talks will succeed.
S p ea k i n g to representatives Qf
journalists' associations greeUllg him for
the new year, Pompidou said: "Ttie
simple fact that negotiations resume is
very important."
As the White House linked the U.S
bombing policy to peace negotiations,
President Nixon awaited today the return
ol Henry Kissinger for consultations
before the Paris negotiations resume
11ext Monday.
Nixon's assistant for National Security
Affairs had been vacationing at Palm
Springs, and a White House spokesman
said be is to return to Washington late
this afternoon.
The spokesman, deputy press secretary
Gerald L. Warren , said Nixon and Kiss-
inger would begin late today a series of
meetings to prepare the U.S. stance
when Kissinger's talks with North Viet-
nam's le Due Tho reopen.
The White House announced saturday
the scheduled resumphon of the Paris
talks after Nixon halted massive bomb-
ing ot North Vietnam above the 20th
parallel. The bombing had been resumed
Dec. 18 after a tw&month suspension.
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
the object was to thwart a Communist
b1..ild--up.
Today. responding to newsmen's ques-
tions, Warren tied the bombing policy
dir · ~tly to negotiations.
which ended Dec. 18.
' '
FrontP .. eJ
RESCUE ••.
ly hurnouroos moment in the wtw:ale
ordeaJ.
"1bey 11w two -le stmJdln( tbm
and wonder!d what all tbtt wu about
someboily with a broken lea," ahe said._
Doyle said the cboppel pul down on Oie
ridge above and the rescue team arrived
with a litter about an hour later_
''They put Adam down on lt and put
temporary spllnts on hls legs." he .said.
"Then they built a small fire."
It wasn't until the flames began to
bring warmth back to his body that
Doyle said be fell secure.
"After that l knew everything was
going to be all right," he said .
fl;trs. Doyle still is shaken by th!! ex·
perience.
"I'm all right until. I start think.Ing
aoout Jt." she said.
• She told ot how there were about 16
rescuers spent the night on that moun-
tainside, wanning their hands by the liro
then pressing them to Adam to keep hUn
warm.
Adam Doyle is still in an Arcadia
hospital today. Doctors still cann(lt set
his leg because of swelling from frostbite
in his right foot.
His mother said she's got strict In-
structions to ge t his schoolbooks -
something you might expect a straight
'A' eighth grade studen t at Lincoln Mid·
die School to want.
He's in the Intensive care tmit atilt and
couldn't even watch the footbalJ games,
over the weekend.
"But he's pretty philosophical," bis
father said. "He knows he's <::0asting
after-what he's been through."
Both Mr. and Mrs. Doyle praised the
1·escue team members, especially Joe
Kelva ot Huntington Beach. who wotmd
up with frostbite on all 10 toes after
spending the night In sub-zero telll-
peratures.
"But I've talked to him and he's doing
all right, too," Doyle said.
Scandal Figure Dies
WASHING TON COURT HOUSE, Ohio
(AP) -Roxy Stimson Bras~ l!O, Involved
in the Teapot Dome scandal of the War.'
ren G. Harding administration, died
Monday.
Our irst Clearance Sale in 3 Years • • •
... "
Sill Pol'ice
,... .... yf.
l111lotli.J ColW
NYLON SHAGS
..... rte. ,., ... ~·· ln111111111
NYLON SCULPTURED Largest project Involved in the 1973 facilities.for 124 operators.
program. is1.completi
1
on of a
49
is
8
.7Mmll11ion They ~·ill use ejectronic consoles in-7.95 30 5.50 Orang• b.95 22 1h 4.95 Gold
commun1ca ions cen er at l ou ton stead of old-fashioned switchboards. 30 O!iv e 7.9 5 b2 5.95 Blue & g•e•n
eMkway in Irvine. Despite the faq,..several new buildings 8·95 5•95 Green tonet" 5 B ~cUic Telephone Company executive and control centers are included in the 7.95 24 1h 5.95 7.9 5 33 5.9 eige
Standlee H. Kautz says the facility in-$83 .11. ti Ka t Id, $24 .111 7.95 25 &50 Olive & Gol d 7.95 47 1h 5.95 Gold
..,
cludlngtatn onel ~~~ an~tcahlbasem~t wilt! illmbet ionedou r ay, bluezlascaili't'es m1 loin 8.95 54•/1 5.95 Red & Black 8.50 33 5.95 Grey-green c~n e ec~un1c sw1 :~n~g.;eq;;;;;,"';,P:m::e•:::__--;,wffiii,fir~u~s;,j,-:o:_r _:c::•::..::.:=':=•_:m::o::':::.Y++-MS--lJ'V.--~~-~';:"~~iZoll!l,---,---_J!.'lJi___;t!_ __ "!lL-J!o-µJ_l>l11t. _____ +--
8.50 28 6.50 Yellow beige
From Page I
HARBOR ...
amount of dam age to the docks but did
say it was miraculous more damage
1''asn't done to the boats.
"l would say the value of those boats
was well into the hlaldreds or thousands
dollars," he said.
Graham said the problems of rescuing
the boats and securing the floating dock
were compounded when the winds
threatened to break oft more sections of
the dock still attached to the bulkhead.
"But the boat owners and people
onshore used their own boat anchors and
ropes to tie the docks flrmly," he said.
"Otherwise "·e would have had real
problems.''
Graham said the piece of dock was still
lodged among the moorings this morning
but commerical crews were coftsulting
with the-Irvine Gompany, whi«!h o-wns tlle
·dock. lo fiod the best v.•ay to salvage it.
Graham said the only other wind-
related incident occurred just before the
clock broke loose when two 45-foot
sailboats were reported stranded six
miles off Newport Pier.
"We went out and tow ed one in and a
Coast Guard helicopter dropped fuel to
the other whi~h was out of gas," he said.
New dialing equipment is being in·
stalled at several locations too, to handle
an increase frorn the 1.4 billion local calls
placed last year by Orange County
residents.
Locations include by address and cost:
4302 Ford Road, Corona del Mar,
$552,000; 23011 El Toro Road, El Toro;
$81 ... ,000; 401 Calle de los f\.tolinos, San
Clemente, $231 ,000; 25782 Camino del
Av ion, San Juan Capistrano, $541,0IXI, and
3220 S. Bristol. $890,000 and 507 N. Bush
St., $1.6 n\illion, both in Santa Ana.
Frotn Page J
CITIZE N ...
consultant before retirement due to age
and illness.
tfe joined .Bethlehem Steel Corp .. after
college as an execu ti ve.
r..1emorial services for ~lr. Langenheim
Will be Thursday at -2 p.m-:-tn Sl. ·
Andrew's Presbyterian Church under
direction of Baltz·Bergeron fvlprtuary,
with burial to follow in San Diego.
He leaves his wife, Eva, sons Navy
Cmdr. John P. Langenheim, of Hawaii;
James H. Langenheim. of Laguna Beach;
and daughters Mrs. William Lippman or
Brentwood and Mrs. Carroll Wax, or
North l~ollywOQd.
7.95 91 1/s 6.50 Olive-gold
7.95 27 1/J 6.50 Green tweed
8.95 291/J 6.95 Beige tweed
8.95 107 6.95 Red, Whit e, Blue
8.95 26 ¥1 6.95 Be ige tweed
9.95 52 6.95 Medium green
10.95 40 7.50 Olive tweed
8.95 49 7.50 Green tweed
9.50 59 1;,· 7.50 Gold
9.95 28 1/) 7.50 Yellow Gold
10.95 4-4 7.50 Grean twead
9.95 71 " 7.50 Yellow & White
9.50 70¥.. 7.95 Orange tweed
9.95 30 1/J 7.95 Burnished gold
10.95 59 7.95 Brown & Bla ck
10.95 2-4 7.95 Green tweed
9.50 50¥t 7.95 Green & Olive
10.95 28 7.95 Blue & Green
12.95
10,95
10,95
10.95
I 1.50
10,9 5
10.95
11.95
12,95
11.95
11.95
11.95
11.95
12.95
12.95
13.50
14.50
I 3.95
14.50
1091/J
44
23 ll
168
241/1
3 I
51 1/i
~1 1/J
25
27 1/i
27
2] 1/1
38 1/1
241\
45
29'
33 %
22 11
3 I%
PLUSH SHAGS
7.95
7.95
8.50
8.95
8.95
8,95
8.95
8.95
9,50
9.50
9,50
9.50
9,50
9.95
9.95
9.95
9.95
10,95
11 .95
Tomato Orang• ~
Be ige tones
Beige tweed
Light grey-green
Olive fone5
Apple green
Gold
Green
Green tweed
Burnt orange
Grape
Medium blue •
T•fly
Gold & Green
Light custom blue
Green & White
Rose
Green, gold, & beige
Beige & Green
8,95
7.95
8.95
8.95
8,95
9.95
9.95
11.95
I 1.95
I 3.95
13.95
10,95
10,9 5
10,95
14.50
14.50
16,95
NYlON COMMERCIAL
17 'h
25 1/1
Jl !/J
23
77 1/J
28 1/1
38
5.95
5.95
6.50
6.50
6.50
7.50
7.50
Gold tweed
Candy-stripe
Blue graen twaad
Green tweed
Green twaed
Burnished gold twaad
Beiga & brown tw eed
ACRYLIC COMMERCIAL
62
45
43 ll
5.95
5.95
Blue & emerald
Pink & oreng•
ACRYLIC PLUSH
8.95 Gold
ACRYLIC AXMINISTER FLORAL
47
351/J
33
24
9.95' Blue, green, aque on
beige background
KDDEL PLUSH
5.95 Ught 9old
6.50 Golden beige
6.95 Gold
WOOL COMMERCIAL
5.95 Red & green twead
5. 95 Red & gold tweed
WOOL PLUSH
6.95 Bai.~e
All prices are installed end includes. b4 ot. sponge rubber pedding.
Dozens of remnants also priced for clearance
DRAPERIES -162 s~Ts o r ••ADY-MAD I tN uso1n o s1zu .... $6.50 ,. · .17.50
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·orange fCoast T oday's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL 06, NO. 2, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGE.S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1q73 c TEN CENTS
Mesa Project Gets New Scrutiny
1be vast Don Koll project, a 59 mill.Ion
Industrial condominium pl'OpOiied near
Orange County Airport, will be scrutinii-
ed again tonlght by the Cosla Mesa City
c:.c.mcil.
Industrial Condominium Will Come Up Again
No controversy is expected at &:30 p.m.
wben c:Ounc:Umen will consider granting a
tentailv.e tract map for the 50-acre proj-
ect south of· the San Diego Freeway, soUthe~ of~ Hill Avenue, and north-east of McConn1ck Avenue.
'Two weeks ago the same project
brought criticism from Councilman Alvin
l>iokley when his colleagues approved a
z6ne exception for the project.
Pinkley's objectioo was based oo the
belie! that offices, storage houses, and
other noo-manufacturing uses would be
allowed in the complez in apparent viola-
tion of city zoning lawws.
,Even though Ibey do currently exist,
offices or warehouses in M-1 (manufac-
turing) zones are unlawful under the let-
ter of the law.
A blue-ribbon committee currently stu-
dying tile po"'1billty o! expanding the M-1
zone definition to make these uses
"legal" u1Umate1y may resolve Pinkley'".s
dispute with the other councilmen.
Meanwhile, however, Pinkley says he
will continue his refusal to vote on M-1
2ooe u:ceptlons be consldcn unl evpul.
He said be bad oo objections to voting on
a tentative tract map for the Don Koll
project because lh1s does not offend his
legal sensibilities.
Pinkley has rentained adamant on his
r refusal of lhe Don Koll complex zone ex-
ception despite an assurance by a com-
pany execulive that the company would
buUt it.s project to Irvine lnudstrial
Complex standards.
Although City Attorney Roy E. June
explained to Pinkley that Costa Mesa had
already established a legal precedent by
granting zone exceptions for non·
manufacturing uses, Pinkley hired a
private attorney "'ho reportedly told him
this practice was unlawful.
The l'OWlcilman's recalcitrance has
caused some informed council observers
to declare 1he recent confrontation stems
from a long-standing feud between
Pinkley and Don Koll over an office
building in the f..1esa del ~far tract .
The building, owned jointly by Koll and
State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport
Beach), was selected as a site for an
Orange County P.i-oba tion Department
DAILY ~ILOT ~MT~ l1 llldl1nl Dr"t
AGONY OF DEFEAT -The girls are Ohio State cheer-
leaders aild these are the expressions they wore as USC
scored its fourth touchdown in the third quarter of "1 on-
day's Rose Bowl game. For Oh io State, things got a lot
worse. See sports, Page 16, for the con1pletc story.
County Problems
Hammett Calls Special
Costa Mesa Mayor Jack .Hammett has
called an emergency meeting of the
city's Avi ation Committee for 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday to discuss airplanes and
School Trustees
Weig h Changes
In Boundaries
Changes in 1973-74 school attendance
boundaries arrecting 250 children at 12
campuses will be studied tonight by the
Board of Education of the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District.
The largest number of children in-
volved are those living north 9{ Uv: San
Ofego Freeway and attending Bear Street .,
School. If changes are made in this
~~ hOw~v.er. _district staff Jias-r~~
mended tllat pa rents of children in fhe
fourth grade and above be given the op-
tion of remaining at Bear Street.
airport problems in Grange County.
The session will rocus primarily on a
controversial resolution introduced by
the city of Irvine during the last mectin&
or the California League of Cities.
Among several key j)Oints in the
resoJution are requests to prohibit in-
cretsed jet traffic at Orange County
Airport and not to allow commercial air
traffic at El Toro Marine base.
The resolution, brought before the
"League of Cities Dec. 14, failed because
it did not secure a two-thirds majority.
Costa Mesa was one or the 10 cities op-
posing the resolution.
Wednesday's meeting in the fifth floor
conference room of Costa Mesa City Hall
will be to conSider the pros and cons of
the Irvine resolution, according to Mayor
Hammett.
The mayor ·said he has invited
rep're9ellta:tives from Irvine, Newport
Beacti~ Santa A.rui,..TustinJ.!!ld Orange to
participale-in the discu.uion. -•
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DAil Y P'ILOT Slaff ,.....
Mesa Ma yor:
1973 to Be
Jack Hammett, mayor of Costa Mesa,
today described 1972 as a year or "action
and prtigress" and believes this trend
will carry through the new year.
··1 feel that 1973 will be a progressive
year much the same as 1972 was," the
mayor said in a "state of the city"
message distributed to the press.
"There are many projects "'hich will
be initiated th is coming year and "·hich
"'ill be seen through to final completion.
A sign qrdinanb: will be adopted to
eliminate some of lhe clutter and visual
pollution etisting !n some or our com-
mercial areas.
"A. master plan of bicycle trails will
soon be adopted by the city council that
\1 ill provide a plan for bicycle trails and
Janes throughout the city. and the
Downtown Redevelopment Agency 11·U1
continue work towa rd imple mentation or
the do\\'fllown redevelopment plan."
Another ne\\' program ·the.mayor.plans
to launch is a "Get To .Know Your Com-
munity"5erles or lalks in various Costa
Mesa neighborhoods.
Hammett said the program will be
established to allow the mayor and city
staff members to "reach ou t to the
neighborhoods In the community and to
explain the functions and services of city
government."
In addition, the school board will set
attendance boundaries for the new An-
derson School. and also allocate new
space for children now attending Pre-
tjdlo School, which will be plwed out
next year.
The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m.
in the auditorium of Cosla ~fesa High
School.
He indicated that the substance of the
discus.sion would provide Costa Mesa
with "input" for a public hearing Jan. 10
in santa Ana on county aviation prob-
lems. That session will be conducted by
the Southern California Association of
Governments (SCAG).
The Irvine reaolutioo, which also calls
!or a ban 00 constructioo or the propoised
Chino Hills airport, bas been criticized by
its detractors for leaving only Camp
Pendleton as a site for a major airport.
BIG WIND TOPPLES TENT USED BY CALVARY CHAPEL
No One Was Under Big Top When It Fell Monday
Plaru: are to hold the meetings on a
quarterly basis at several elemen tary
schools.
Mrs. W aslihurne
Succumbs at 65
Virginia Washbume. wife of composer
Joseph H. "Country'' Washbume and
Jong-time Harbor Area resident died
Thursday. She was 65.
In their resolution, Irvine city COWl-
cilmen said their suggestions were
motivated by a general concern about the
location of airports' and the noise they
generate.
Nixon Urges
Quake Funds
Calvary Chapel's Tent
Felled by Brisk Winds
"I don't want this to become a political
type of thing. But if the people won't
come to city hall, city hall will come to
them." the mayor added. •
··Hopefully. input and suggestions will
be received from citizens so that a wide
variety of problems can be anticipated
and taken ca re of before they reach
critical stages."
Renecling back on t he ac-
c·omoh!'lhments or Costa "1esa during
1!172. Hammett cited acquisition of
F'a1rview Park . city beautification. a
Mn. Washbume was a part-lime em-
ploye at Geoe Burton sportswear on Lido
Jsle for 16 years. She has lived 18 yea"
la Corona · del Mar. Balboa Island and
most recently at 1750 Whittier Ave.,
Costa Mesa. Besides bel' hu!band, survivors Include
two sisters, Mrs. Robert DaJsey aod Mrs.
Joseph Feeley, both of New Jersey:
brother, Jack Beokoil of New Jersey;
and three grandchildren.
W ASll!NGTON (UPI) -Presi-
dent Ni.Ion called today for
generous contributions to
N"IC;&J'aguan ~e v1ctims u
tbe "best memorial" to Roberto
Clemente, killed In an air crash
while Oii the reUe! nu-lo
Managua. (See llories, Page 11)
Cold Santa Ana winds blew into Costa
Mesa Sunday and Monday but caused
relatively little damage other 4han to a
2,500-seat tent used by Calvary Chapel.
A heavy gust snapped two of the four
telephone poles supporting the big top
Monday morning, causlng the heavy can-
vas sheeting to plummet to the ground.
The tent was unoccupied at the time.
Joann Day, a secretary for the popular
yoUth church on 3800 Fairview Road just
across lbe city border in Santa Ana , said
the tent wu filled to capacity the night
before.
"We had Bible study from 8 to 12 and
there wen about 3,000 people in there. It
was blowing pretty hard then but the
service was still very beautiful." she ad-
ded.
Rolled up by a crew of 100 volulitee.rs.
the canvl! was cleared away and chairs
and other equipment qWckly removed.
Little, If any, damage was believed to
have been caused lo the canvas roof.
·'noise ordinance, R land de velopment
boom . anc:\ many others.
Last Rites H eld
For Mrs. Noefer The tent has been used by the church
for approximately one year . It was
erected when the 50Q..seat chapel would
no longer accommodate the church's Neille M. Hoder. 30-year resktent of
youthful flock . Costa ~fesa, died Friday at the age ol 91 .
Cone Mesa Fire Department officials Mrs. Hoefer was a member Of Rebekah
indicated that the gusty winds caused Lodge No. 2476 of Costa P.1esa and the
more anxiety rather th3n any real Senior Citiu:ns Recreation Cente r, New-
Private services will be held iD New·
port Beach. The !amUy has suwsted
memorial contributions be sent to the
American r.a.ivr Socitty, Orange County
unit.
"Every sporta fan admired and
respected Roberto Cltmtnte as one or tile greatest bueball playen or
our time," Nlxon said ln a stat.
ment 1'sued by the While Houro on
the ·dulb ot the .Plttsbargh Pirate
damage. There were no losses reported port Beach.
_ during_tbe two-day period.-.A naliv.e o! Kansas. she formerly lived
The Orange County Department of at 666 W. 19th St. Mrs. Hoefer died in a 17 Aliens Charged .. JuJl!P P ri>ves Fatal ·~·~ii the tragedy or biJ untimely
dealb, we are remlnded that be JUPITER, Fla. (UPI) -Seventeen
SAN MATEO (AP ) -A woman who deserved even greeter respect and Ha itian and Jamaican refugees, caught
lt•ped o!Uhc San.Mateo brl~-i--c•~dmlra:;m' 'C;;'ti'"'"":-;--;C'ror";;o;;;;;;hil;;--;;;'~'"i~l'endl""d;-t--"":Y-aulbodtles~sallboal lbW the Icy wtlters or aoulh San Fran--qualities u a generous ana auKI off Jupiter Inlet and r~ing Tntand, have
c1!CO Bay died 111 she wu beillg Down to' human boin&!' b<eft cllll'ged -..itb•lllepl entry into the
a nearby hospital, the Coul Guird said. United states.
Harbors and Beaebes saiJi the winds local coovale.1Ce0t home. She leaves two
btgan blowing -from rnorltreas1e1 tJ di< daughbtri; Ruth 0. Pollard of South
rectlon around mid-morning Sunday and Laguna and r1elen M. Cole of Etcondido:
subsided by 6 p.m. Monday night. No three grandchildren; .and three great·
furlhlr--wlndl--are-f-Orec"'"'"'~~----&r .. andchlidt..._
llarbor and Btac:he..' Department of-f>~uneral 11ervlces were held today,
ficials mealured the peak lllten>ity of the followed by b<irlol It Eternal lfills
gusts at approl'lmately 50 mph. Cemetery, Oceanside.
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branch early la st yea r
\\'hen homeo"ners protested ovt'r fear.1
their ne1ghlxlrhood ~·ould be. Ul\'aded by
persons o( questionable character,
Ptnklcy backed then1 and asked the
building owners to canal the lease with
the probation brpnch They didn't and
Pinkley became angered. according to
the sources.
Crowing objC<'tions by the ttles a de!
f\lar Homeo"ners Assoc1auon ultimately
did force the Probation Department lo
look for another location. 1'he office suite
on El Camino Onvc now is being used ns
n ""elfnre center for the r.Jdcrly,
U.S. Admits
Bonibs Hit
Civil Areas
\l.'ASHINGTON (AP\ -The Pentagon
acknowledged today that a North Viel-
namese hospital and an airport nonnall"y
used by civilian planes near Hnnoi ap-
parently suffered "so me limiled ac-
cidental damage" during intensive U.S.
bombing raids.
But Jerry \Y. F'riedhcim, the Pen:
tagon's top spokesman. suggested that
the damage could have been caused
either by U.S. bombs or by Norlh Viet-
namese antiaireraft explosives.
Nonetheless. F'riedbeim's acknowlcde·
ment was at least a partial rever&al or
his denials last week that U.S. bombs
struck a North Vi etnamese hospital.
Those claims had been made by North
Vietnam .
"It appears that some limited ac-
cidental damage has occurred to some
facilities at Gia Lam airport and al a
• Friedheim said in a sta tement read at a
news briefing.
"1be exact extent of this damage is
uncertilin, as is its cause.
"Our infor1nation does not square with
Hanoi's propag{lnda claims of massive
destruction at these sites."
Friedheim restated what he said is
U.S. policy to target only military ob-
jectives in North Vietnam.
However, he said, "We know. and have
said many times, that £rom lime to ti me
accidental damage to other than military
targets occur, sometimes involving
United States ordnance or aircra~ and
sometimes involving North Vietn amese
ordnance or aircraft."
He expressed regret concerning "any
suc h accidental damage from whatever
source.··
F'riedhcim said the Bae f..1ai hospital
and the Gia Lam airfield were struck
during U.S. bombing attacks against
(See B0~1BING, Pagr: 2)
U.S. RESU MES
VIET BOMBI NG
SAIGON (AP l -l:.S. bombers lll·
tac ked the Southern Panhandle of North
Vietnam today. breaking a 36-hour stop
in the air slrikes for the New Year·s hoil·
dity.
, The U.S. Command announced that the
bombing halt remained in effect in North
Vietnam above the 20th parallel. an area
that includes the major cities of Hanoi
and Haiphong.
for reasons of security, the command
said no other details of the strikes would
be made available.
Orange Co88t
Weathe r
Some increased cloudlnC?Ss on
\Yednesday. accor ding to the
~'eatherlady, wilh slightly cooler
temperatures. Righs of 57 are ex-
pected at the beaches, rislng to 67
inland. Lo~·s in the upper 30s to
low 40s with local frost.
INSIDE TOD" Y
PrPsicknt Nixon s'aowed up
bright and early 011 New Ytar's
Day at h~ Dool Offict in \Vash·
ington . D.C. Turning the door·
kn o b. ht discovered himse lf
locked out of his own office.
See stor11 Q'•I Pa ye 4.
L.M. ....,. 1 AIWI LMMlln 14
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••••• IOUTI ll'All'S#l&tflli
TONIGHT
CtTY COUNCIL MEETING -Clcy
Hall, 6;l0 p.m.
NEWPORT MESA SCHOOL BOARD -
Regular meeting, Costa Mesa High
Lyceum Theater, 7:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, JAN. J ,•
BASKETBALL -Newport Harbor v.
Anabelm at Harbor, 7 p.m. UCI v.
tt.taca}!;!!ler (i\.1inn.) Crawford Hall, II
p.m.
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MAP INDICATES BUS ROUTES PLANNED FOR HUNTINGTON BEACH
Tr1ntit DiJtrict Ge1ring Up in Weit Orange County
Huntington, Mesa Bus
Link to Open in April
Huntington Beach· and Costa Mesa will
be linked by direct bus routes this April
when the Orange County Transit District
opens the first of three new West Orange
County lines. '
In annowtcing the routes, district
Director Gordon Fielding said buses-
would run once an hour ant: that the fare
would be 25 cents each way.
Tbe IJnt line, whlcb odiioa"" lo Costa Mesi, -will enter Huntington Beach on
Adams Avenue. It will travel througl> the
downtown section of the city, endJn& the
route at the Five Point.II and Town and
Coontry shopping center.I befott tumlng
around and ,.turning to Costa. Mesa the
same wa.J. ~
The :<e<ond nlllle, which will probably
be ready to go In Se ber, will go
will be designated ju!! befol1! the line
goes into operatJon. ·
The city will not have to·contrlbute any
cash to the operation of the bus line, the
spokesman added, other than the labor
costs to install the bus sloJ¥lgns.
Hay Langenheim,
Longtime Coast
Leader, Dies
Hay Langenheim, long-time Harbor
Area civic ' teader and former exeeutive
secretary of the Newport Harbor
0 mmerce, dled nee. 31
and Golden West College. ' ' It •--lln According to the transit director, the a er a it:ngthy l ess. He was M.
third Phase will be slricll1 an Inter, !l!IY A resident of 125& Rutland Road, Mr.
ltne. that route ts still ln the ptaruifni Langenheim came to Newport Beach In
stages and will be announced. later in the 1948 as head of the city's Civil Service
year• be said. -Commission, then became executive "Because or the shortage of buses, Jn.
itially, lines will be served only once per secretary of the Newport Harbor
hour. Later, when all lines are ln oPera· Chamber of Commerce.
tion a closer frequency of buses will be ' ·He died at Hoag Memorial Hospital
run " Fielding said. tt'e said the 11nes have lo be inltl.lted in and -in a written request -suggested
stages because oi diftlcultlea the dlstrict memorial contributions in his name lo
has in gettlQg the buses built. assist the facility.
Originally: district officl.al.s bad plan-During his Ume in office as bead of the
ned tbe ... fint phase to go across Adams to Qi.amber of Commerce, Mr. Langenheim
Beach Boulevard to the beach and back was closely usoclated wtlh the Irvine into Costa Mesa. But a ctty.sponsored survey showed Company in • variety or mutual interests
th t 60 t f the 1 1"' .... to for the firm and the city. 8 percen ° peop e rep...,wg He arranged for Joc'aUon of ~amber the survey felt mass transportation was '-"1
the city's biggest problem. so city of· offices on Paclfic Coast Highway and
ficials convinced district officials to alter raised its nagging membership from 105
' their plans. to 651 members in 18 months.
As planned, buses will travel west on He was also instrumental in arranging
Adams to Delaware Street, to Hartford the 19S1 Boy Scout Jamboree which
Avenue and then AOUth along Lake Street ~rought youths from virtually every na·
o Third Street, acrosss Main on Wal11~ hon_~ the world to Jbe vast campsite on l~~"'t0 Fifth Street. From there, the ·~· , lrvllfe prol)!!rtf overlooking the se~.
wil! go up Main Street to 17th Strfft The ocean figured prominently U1 Mr.
along 17th to Dela~·are where the bu • Langenbeim's life,
will head north to the Five Points Shop-He originated the Western SpMnl Row.
ping Center and Town and Country Shop-ing Champiooships, which p1tled col·
ping Center. legiate. crew teams raclnf; down the
A spokesman for the city said no stops 2,~meter NewPort Harbor Channel.
have been identified on the line yet. They He was also a former commodore of
OIANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
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lt>e O<-Co.11 PuOl•!l'llng CO<n!Mn'I'. S.O.-
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J 1c:k R. Curley
Vkl Pf'll,ident arid GrMnil M~
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TI1om11 A. Murphi111
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both the Balboa Power Squadroo and lhe
Lido Isle Yacht Club, having once owned
a bayfront residence at 119 Via Lido
Nord.
A Yale University graduate, Mr.
Langenheim was a classmate and cohort
of composer Cole Porter and at one time
himself was president of the Orange
County Philharmonic Society.
A yellowed ne~'Spaper column outlining
the colorful Chamber of Commerce
chief's busy schedule noted 1t was not at
all unusual for hin1 to burst into song
during his busy schedule,
During 1956, Mr. Lan genheim resigned
his Chamber post to become a business
consultant before retirement due to age
and illness.
He joined Bethlehem Steel Corp., after
college as an executivt,
~temorial services for Mr. L"angenbeim
will be 'Illursc!ay at S p.m. in SL
Andrew's Presbyterian Church uoder
direction of Baltz-Bergeron Mortuary,
with burial \0 follow In San Diego.
He leaves his wife . Eva, sons Navy
Cmdr. John P. Langenheim. of Hawaii;
James H. Langenheim, of Laguna Beach ,
and daughters Mr~. William Lippman of
Brtntwood and ~1ra. Carroll Wax, of
North Hollywood.
Bible Reading to End
~ -T!i"vorce
of Prophecy txpects to C<>fl'\Plele Its
fourth annual nonstop reading of the Bl·
ble 10111ettn1e 1'1uniday;-'lbe~-orpnlZF""
lion, a radio a!Oilate of lhe SevenllHlay
Adventist.II, 1aunched the reading 11 mid.
night Jan. I and erpecta to uae moro
than JOO volunf«rs lo the pro)e<t. •
I
In Harbor
From Page 1
BOMBING .•.
military targets within several hundred
yards of them.
"These two sites were in clo!Je prox~
imity to military targets," he said. "We
have no knowledge of what caused the
damage. It could have !>een either side."
tie said the Bae Mai military complex
l'Omprises an airport, storage and
~·arehouse facilities. and a petr0leum
products depot.
I-le indicated that the Gia Lam railroad
yards ·were the objectives of bombs
"'hich struck the airport used by Soviet
and oiher civilian air transports.
1-lowever. he sai d some MIG jet fi ghters
were hit at Gia La m. along with the con·
trol tower.
Friedheim said information that
damage had been inflicted on" the hospital
came to him after his denial Dec. 'J:l and
his reiteration of the denial Dec. 29.
He declined to say how this later ln-
fonn1lion wu obtained. allbough be In-
dicated it came from U.S. aerial recon·
nalsaanoe photography.
A number of American pe~ activists
visiting ln Hanoi during the lntensivt
U.S. bqmbings·startlng Dec. Ufhave sup-
ported the Hanoi government's claims of
stvere .damage to the city, Including
clvllinn structures. ,
Frltdheim said, under qutsUontng. that
to hi• knowledge none of lhm U.S,
cltlwis had been lnterv1ewed by U.S. of·
flclnls to get their stories Jlrst·hand.
-WhllelaYing<lf•~ X1l!llr1lf-lhe
damage Is uncertain, Frledhelm con·
ceded that "there could haw betn
CMUattier'-1mong-Nortb VietnameH
clvlllana aa -11 ol the bombihg& ol lhe
hospital. He said tbebospltal la back In
.,,.ration. but dld not erplalo how ht
knew lhi,t to be ,.,
,.
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•
Winds Lash·
Vessels
At Avalon
Our First Clearance S,ale in 3 Years • • •
.... l'rit9 SIMI Jfkt
,.., .... ""· Pl' .... ~d. lntl1llell S4, '(dt. llllllllH Color
12 .95
10.95
10.95
10.95
11.50
10,95
10,95
11.95
12.95
11.95
I 1.95
11 .95
11.95
12 .95
12 .95
I 3,50
14.50
I 3.95
14.50
109•;,
44
23 1/J
168
2'4 1/J
31
51 1/1
-411/J
25
27 1/J
27
.23 Vi
38 1/J
24 II
45
28
33 II
22 II
] I I,)
NYLON SHAGS
PLUSH SHAGS
7.95 Tometo Orange
7.fS Beige tones
8.50 Beige tweed
8.95 light grey.green
8.95 OH"e tones
8.95 Apple green
8.95 Gold
8.95 Green
9.50 Green tweed
9.50 Burnt oranga
9.50 Grape
9.50 Med ium blue
9.50 Taffy
9,95 Gold & Green
9.95 light custom blue
9.95 Green & White
9.95 Rose
10.95 Green, gold, & be ige
11 .95 Beige & Green
&Ill~ ~rice 5111 pri<e
Pl' "'!. yd. ,.,. ""' 'l'Cf. lntl•ll.-1 SCI. ydt. lflllllllld CtlOr
8.95
1.qs
8.95
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I 1.95
I 3.95
I 3.95
10.95
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10.95
14.50
14 .50
16.95
NYLON SCULPTURED
' NYLON COMMERCIAL
171\
25 1/1
3 3 1/l
23
77 1/J
28 1/J
38
5.9S
5.95
6.50
6.50
6.50
7.50
7.50
Gold twead
Candy·itripe
Bl ue green tweed
Green tweed
Green tweed
Burnish 1d gold tweed
Btige & brown tweed
ACRYLIC . COMMERCIAL
62
45
5.95
5.95
Blue & emereld
Pink & orange
ACRYLIC PLUSH
8.95 Gold
ACRYLIC AXMINISTER FLORAL
47
26 1/J
24
401/J
35 1/1
33
24
9,9S Blue, green, aqua on
beige background
KODEL PLUSH
S.95
6.50
6.9S
Light gold
Golden beige
Go ld
WOOL COMMERCIAL
5.95
5.95
Rid & green tweed
Red & 9old tweed
WOOL PLUSH
6.95
All prices are inst111lled .tnd includes 64 oz. sponge rubb1r padding.
Dozens of remnants also priced for clearance
'
'
DRAPERIES """."" 1'2 S~S OF R£ADY-MADE IN ASSORTED SIUS .... $6.50 to $ 17.50 ,
\
IN
COSTA ,MlSA
SINCI ltl7
Everything 1ubi1ct to prior sale.
ALDEN'.S
CARPETS e D"RAPES
1663 Pl\lcentia . Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOORS' Mon, Thru Thurt., 9 to S;30 -FRI .. 9 to 9-SAT., 9:30 to 5
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• 1ut~a~. Januuy 2, 1973 D~ILV PILOf J
Truman Gives Papers to America
>
State lautice
Leading Liberal
On Court Dies
BERRELEY (AP) -Jurtlce Raymond
E. Ptters, recognized u the fortmoflt
liberal on the California Supreme Ciourt,
died today at hls borne bere. He was 69.
Among Peters' notable opinic:m were
the 1966 decision strlking down the ballot
initiative !hat outlawed CaJifomia rair
housing laws and the 1971 opinion in-
validating the ban against v.·omen work·
ing as bartenders.
P.eters su(fered a stroke ?tfonday night
and died this morning at his home with
the doctor in attendance, Marion Peters,
his wido'A'. reported. Peters suffered a
!!lroke in 1968, but reco~ered and served
fulllime on the bench after his recovery.
Three Killed
In Weekend
Road Crashes
A Los Angeles man was killed and l\\1>
others injured ri.tonday v.·hen his car v.·ent
out of control on the San Diego FTeeway
near the El Camino offramp in San
Clemente.
John Tappan. 40, died at San Clemente
General Hospital of massive head in-
juries, the Orange County Coroner's of·
fice reported.
A woman and a young girl suffered
major injuries in the crash, but highway
.patrolmen this morning said iden-
lification of the two was not certain.
They said the woman was believed to
be Evon A. Grayson, age unknown, of
Los Angeles. The baby was identilied
only as "Baby Jane." Both are in serious
condition at San Clemente General
·Hospital.
Officers at the scene established a ten·
tative identification of the dead man by
lracing the li cense number of the small
1oreign car. Patrolmen addl'd that they
l ound several different names on iden-
ificatiOfl in the car. "It's been a real
eadache find in out everyone 's correct
11ame, a pa ro man sa ,
~ Two other persons died over the New
¥ear's weekend from lrevknu: accident
~njuries.
: Henry DeLancey. 67, of 10797 Los
:.Tardlnes. Fountain Valley , died at Foun-
'loin Valley Community Hospital Satur-
:day. He was injured Dec. 23 while riding
;bis bicycle along Edinger Avenue, east of
~rookhurst Street in Fountain Valley.
· Everett Fowler. 34, of 3929 W. 5th st.,
&nta Ana. died Sunday at Palm Harbor
lfospital of injuries received Dec. 19 In
.:Carden Grove. He was a passenger 1n a
car which veered off Harbor Boulevard
·just south of Garden Grove 'f<>Ulevard
·and struck a parking lot sign.
:Drunken Driving
:Arrests Pile Up
:over Weekend
• Drunken drivers racked up a n~w
record in Orange Count y during the New
. Year's weekend.
: Police, sheriff's deputies and California
•ttighv.•ay patrolmen lodg~ 1~ i.nebria~ed
motorists in county and city 1a1ls dunng
• the 24-hour period that began at 4 p.m.
• New Year's Eve.
• Q-IP officers accounted for many of
, the arrests with 66 offenders booked in
the county jail on drunken driving
. charges during the holiday period.
• City jails were also kept busy,
\especially in Anaheim v.·here 13 drunken
·driving OOokings crammed the jail cells,
• ifuntington Beach with nine suspects
; and Costa Mesa and Newport Beach with
: rour each v.·ere high on the list compiled
: by the sheriff's ofrlce. .
~ County jail bookings on drunken dr1v ...
: ing charges were also made by Fountain
:valley, Seal Beach and S!n Clemente
t police. -The Orange County total of 139 ~NtP.n ~ drivers was well above the record Of 98
·arrests set up during the same periOd in ·
: l!rl2.
. ,
Mn. Pttel'I said her husband planned
to ~tire on bis 70th birtbdly in AprU.
Ptters, a nativt of Oaklaod, was nam·
ed IO Ille bendi In 1959 by the!>Qw. Ed·
muud G. "Pat" Brown.
He wu instructed in the state Supreme
Court's operations by nine years e:r.·
~rience as tile court's chlef law 5eic:-retary. He served in that post from
1930 to 1939. He ne1t served 20 years on
the state Court of Appeal in San Fran·
clsro before advancing to the h1gh bench.
By his opinlons, Peters stamped
hiinself as the court's most advanced •
social thinker.
In the 1966 nlling by a 4-2 court. Peters
said the· ballot initiative s\riking down
!he state 's fair housing laws was an un-
constitutional act by the people. He said
the people could no more act un·
constitutionaJly than the Legislature or
any other state body.
Prop. 14, the ballot measure 01,;tlawing
the state's fair housing laws. had won
nearly.a 2-1 majority in the 1964 election.
Peters said the measure denied to
blacks seeking housing the equal pro-
tection 'guaranteed by the 14th Amend·
ment to the U.S. Constitution. The
dtt:isioo was upheld by !he U.S. Supreme
·Court by its refusal to hear an appeal or
the case.
Elderly County
Man Murdered· '
Wife Arrested
Six i('e pick stab wounds in the chest
endl'd the life of an elderly Santa Ana.
rr ..lil Su --Y· apparently during a dispute
v.-ith his wife over their two-month
separation .
Ernest R. Machander, 71 , of Bii S.
F~irview St., was dead at the !':::ene. llC'·
cording to polite. v.·ho arrested his widov.·
0 ·-:~.,·,..t ,,.. ... '::.
Effie Macllander. 68, of 1350 S. r.. ,;·.cH:i St.. v.·as expected tot.:-n·1 ·d
in a criminal complaint issued today hy ,., .. ,·,
Offi~.
PJlt~ ::::i11 , ... s. 1d:ici.~H.Jt "'1'1·
cont.acted fMends of the couple and they
in turn notified detectives of the New
Y€'::r's Eve slaying.
l:_1estig21ors said today tt-: ccuple h:~·t
been married about 11 years and separ-
ated in November.
Mountain Hiker
Saved but Girl
Co1npanio1i Dies
FLAGSTAFF. Ariz. (AP) A
helicopter crew plucked a stranded hiker
from the slopes of snow-s,,.,·cpt Hum·
phreys Peak today bul reported !hat a
set'Ond died after two nights in subzero
\\'Cather.
The Coconino County shcrUf's office
identified the victim al Allison Clay, 17.
Of SCottSdale.
Cfficials reported th11t i1cr co n1paniion.
24-ycar-1'1'1 Clint ri.1illcr. ,,.,,as in J>OOt con·
dition from exposure and frostbite.
He was flown directly to Phoenix,
about 150 mil es to the sou~
i.'lE: two v.·e:e in a New Year's Eve hik·
ing party which scaled lhe 13,IJOO.fool
ml .tain, part of the San Francisco
Peaks which tower above this northern
Arizona city.
Fc"Jr companions hiked out ~tonday
and reportl'd the tv.•o . missing. i at-
tempt to rl:!ach lhe 1wo late ~fonday (ail-
ed. Three \\'Cre lreated for frostbite and
the {c.ur1h nided the s~-· -h.
Wincls reached BO miles an hour ~lon·
day . temperatures dipped lo 10 degrees
beh,, ·cro o\·em·, .. ti?· re 14e1 , f1 \'C'
fett of snow on the ground, searchers
sa id.
The helicopter crew rrom Luke Air
Force Base joined the search as about 70
searchers on the ground were nearing the
scene.
One survivor , Rick Hufnagel. 14. of
Scottsdale, said the six all members of
the Ar!!ona MoonlAineerlng Club. began
the climb in good weather &mday af.
· T111Dlan Library ~~ u becam• windy •nd cold ... t ••
saij from his bed at r1 ~ .. s1.,ff Corn-·.· Attendance Hi· gh munil• llosplt•I where 11e was .. "'"d for frost ·biuen hands and fttt.
t ''Two of oor three tentl coUapsOO. The
• INDEPENDENCE. Mo. (AP) -At-wind and mow caved in the tents. All si"
~ lfnd3nce at the llarry S Truman Library of us got in one tent. There were three
: set a record on New Year's Day. sleeping· bags for six people so v•e
~ or. Ben K. Zobrist. library director. couldn't zip them up praperly ."
+ukl a.591 perlOPI toured the Jibraf')'.'s On ~londai morni11g1 he said. ~tiller
•museum exhibits Monday. The previous and lilfss-Oay Yi'ere unabfe lo walk , and ! dally high since the facility opened In all UM! gear was frozen .
1967 was 2-,000, be J.lkl , "We lelt them four to five. days food,
• At the farmer President's grave in the three sk!epi.ng bags and the ripped-up
; library courtyiard, officials said, there tent tbat they could close with only two
, were al least 8.350 visitors Monday. " Inside It. 'I'!>en we hiked out to get help."
Truman, who died ln a Kansas City Snow and Ice storms chokfd a large
• hosp1lal a week 1go. wh bllried Thur,. poHiQo bl Ille weslim half of tlte nation
! d.lt,y. Thousands: have come to the today, prompting authorities In some
graveside dally 1lnce then. areu to close blghw1y1 and streets.
OAIL'T ,ILOf S111f ,11111
Old Plane, New Life
Old Air Force 107A, reportedly one of th e two
left in the world. is prepared for ship ment from
museum at Orange County Airport to its new land-
ing place outside a restauran} near Los 1\ngeles
In~ernational ,\irport. It \\'ill be U!'Cd as a curiosity
amidst restaurant landscaping. The other 107.\ is
at .<\ir Force f\[uscum in Dayton. Ohio.
•.
Dark New Year -Winds Black Out San Clern ente T V
Clcanu[l continued along the Southern
Orange Coast today in tl'te wake of the
year's mosl severe windstorm but no one
could repair one maddening problem
which hit early New ''ear's morning in
San Clemente.
Hundreds of rt'Sidcnts set to 11·atch the
Toumamtnl of Rose s Parade found no
picture on their television tubes after the
high winds caused a po"'·er blackout in
the industrial section of the city.
The outage immediately knocked off a
cable television booste~ station and sets
all o~er town .were "'-'ilhout a picture.
S"Wamped with nearly 200 caJ!s at th<·
start of the outage .
Service was re stored . however. by
about 10 a.m. to most areas.
Besides adding to the New Year 's
morning hangover, the .,~•inds caused city
crews In San Clemente to go to work as
trees and branches fell over a \.\'ide arta
One GPtge eucat)•ptus toppled nf tlf'e g~f
course area.
Dozens of limbs ""ere lorn from other
trees in the L-oastal area.
.New xear's day at Dana Harbor was
P lagued Mia n1i '
,\irpor t Takes
On 1'hird (:ri!'<is
~f[A;..1 1 1l'PJ 1 -A t·hartcred am·
ph1b1ous plane \\'1th 17 pt'fSOns aboard
n1ade a bell y l;ind1ng in a showe r of
sparks at J\tianii International Airport to.
dav after dc\'eloping landing gear trou-
ble
The Federal Aviation Adnlinistration
said none of lhe 1$ pas!>Cngers and two
f'ft•v.·n1cn was tnJured. It \Oo.il.S the third
<iirhner 1nC'1dcnt here in less than a
rnnntn_
A !>pokcsman for Chalk's Airlines said
the plane. a Grurnman ri.~allard. 14·as en
ar1gry residents. Spokesmen from the
local cable service said their nides were
the Santa Anns started
pa trolmen were kept busy.
to build . to tilt! t·o1npan}'s Biscayne hayside
. operation on nearby \Vatson Island.
..
Will Leaves
Wife All
t~DEPEX-DENCE. ~lo. ! UPI )-llarry
S Truman 's \\lit. rel<'ased today as public
record. g1vrs nearly all the former
Prt"sidcnt's papers to the pt"Qple of the
United States. barring son1e personal
notes .
The exact value of the rstate was not
kno14·n. l>.fuch or th(' personnl belongings
\\"erl' not experted to be assessed .,.,,hiJe
l>.lrs . Truman 1s ali\'c.
The 22·pnge 14•11l \1•as s1cnt'd by Truman
Jan. 14, 1959. <ind also dtsignates that his
\Vtdoi,1·, Bess, shall receive all of
1'n1man's pcrsonRI belongi ngs rrmaininc
1n tht! t·ouµle's horne on North Dela~·arc
~!r('r! 111 lndr;X'ndrn<·e.
Trun1an died n \\'Nk a~o follov.·ing 11
long ill11rss and 11•as buried-Thursday.
The ''ill st1pula!l'd thnt the hundreds of
thousanrls of prrs1dcntial papers be ke pt
at the llarrv S 1'rum3n Li bra r r in lndcJ>('nrlenc~ "subj£'CI to the right o thr
archi\'ist of the Uniled States'' to mo\•e
thr papers.
Certarn p11pers, "strictly related lo
business and personal affairs," will be
gh·en to J\lrs. Trum::in, and the executors
of the ,,.,.ill are given authority to withhold
olh<'r papers from the nation.
Giving the papers to the nation fulfills
a promise Truman made years ago thal
he ~·ould give the papers to the country if
the t:' S. government ~·ould maintain the
Truman Library, v.•hich was dedicated in
1957. and built by public contribution.
The \\'ill also stipulated that a single
slab sha.11 cover the graves of both
Truman and J\frs. Trum811, who will be
88 on reb. lJ .
Exccu!or.c. are giv<'n aut hority to decide
if an obcolisk shouk.'. be at the head of the:
gr:ives.
The ln.<:crlptions for the graves are con-
t;i1ned 111 :1 cod1c1l to the 1~·ill dated Oct.
2.l l~l l'nder the tenns of the will
Tr uman 's inscription will read:
"Harry S. l\ldth periodt Truman
Born lo.1ay 8. 1884
Lamar. l\1issouri
l>.larried June 28. 1919
Daughter Bom February 17. 1924
County Judge Eastern District
Jackson Count}
January I, 1925
Presiding Judge Jackson County
January 1, 19'l7 -January 1. 193$
1·n1trd States Senator. ri.!issou ri
January 3. 1935-January 12, 1945
\'ice-Presirlent, United States January
Presidt>nt. United States April 12,
1945-January 20. 1953
In' just 2 years ...
outselling eYe ry
Euro pean car
(exce pt one)!
.,
• LOOK WH AT'S STAl\L>AHI> E<.)U I P\I E:'l 'l' ...
e RADI AL PLY T IR ES
e FRONT BU<.:KET SEA TS
@ FBO\T B I SI\ BHA l\ES
e FLLL CAHPETINt;
•
e RACK AN D PINIO N STEE i{!:\(;
SEE ONE • •
Rome Of 'n'le New Car •••
"GeldeR To11elt"
I
• TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE
.. OranQ't Count~·, 1amflu of fint Can-
ohnson& son
-e,. •. ,. . ,
COUGliR;
2a1 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • 64Cl-683ll '.
' ' , TODAY!
nome 01 The Ne• Car • , •
"Gotu11 r ... .,,... ,.
•
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•
DAil Y PILOT T11tSdlY. January 2, 1CJ7l
.
J119t Israeli Jets Gun Down Syrian MIG
c!~\ with
·· Tom
U..pbine "'' · ..
Blowing In
The New Year
OFf Af\.'D RUNNING DEPT. -You
ponder all this rush of ai r that has
greeted us \li'ilh !ht New Year and you
have to \\'Orry If II Is a pt'fdlct!on or ho\I'
polit ics art going to go in ID73.
Thert is a difference. h<>1vever.
between the current naturl!iJ "'Inds that
art lashing us abou t and the nonn<1I
polltlea\ breezes which blO\\' hot air.
Political huffing and puffing is usuall y
a great display but leaves little changed
after it all dies down. I mean. some of
your really best polltlclans CAn gas on for
hours on end and nothing much is hurt
except your eardrums.
11nS NAn.JRAL BLO\\', hoy,·ever ap-
pears to be more devastating. You may
have noted things have actually been
falling over, or Into other things.
OJmnt report& indicate the ""'ind has
been pting up to 5S miles per hour or '° around htrt and has particularly
created havoc over the water from our
rtlion at Avalon Harbor on 5anta
Catalln• bl>nd.
Early di1patcbe1 today say that at
least nve msels ha\•e been lost to the
winds at ,\valon, two have sunk in !he
harbor and three others washed up on the
btaeh by wind-propelled surl. Injuries
were also reported at Avalon to parties
wbo were attempting to save other boats
from a similar fate.
Certain sea-watchers .,.,.ho are con·
sidertd knowledgeable in such matters
have claimed from time to time that the
Ava.loo Harbor is a bit suspect as to the
protectioo offered during times of
weather stress. ApparenUy the old adage
about "Any old port in a storm" doesn't
necessarily apply to Avalon. You
may -have left your heart in Avalon but
you may have also left your boat on the
bottom.
THE WEATHER PEOPLE .warn us
that when the v.1ind does die down or
ml)'be go away. then It's going to get
colder at night. Colder? How can that be
here along this best of all possible
couts?
We will simply have to look to otMr
points and assure ourselves th.in.11 could
be worse. For example, It's been a grtat
bil nine above zero in Denver. Or how
about minus four at Nonh Platte, Neb.?
Or do you like minus 10 degrees at
Fargo, N.D.? Try four above at Chey-
enne. \Vyo .. where they've been knoY.'n to
ha\'e a few breezes too.
Stt? Things could be worst.
TEL AVl\I !AP J -Syrian and lsraeh
jt'l nghters clashed today in I dogllght
O\:tr 1he snow-capped mountaini or
L<banoo.
The Ltbanest government reported one
Syrian plane cruhed near the 1kl reaort
or f"araya and another "unidentified
plane y,•as seen cru~lng Into the aea
'A'tSt ot Abde."
Abele lies near the Mediterranean coast
in northern Lebanon about 18,mllea nonh
ot Ttipali.
Latest Account
n1E oocnoHT Wis the fint Syrian·
Israeli air battle slntt Nov. 21, whfn tht
Israeli.a claimed they downed tlx Syrian
MIGlls. The S)'rilnl and Ibo lnelll
have clashed tew:rail tlmea m tbt lfOl.lDd
recently In lortell r«all•tlan rtlds •Iona
the lncrtatlnfly sensitive Golan Hel1ht1
ceaae-flre line.
The Israeli mllllery comm1nd reported
its pllota 1hnt down nne S)'l'l1n jet In
Florida Superjet Death
Total Standing at I 03
~1IAMI llTPI ) -The death loll in the
crash of an Eastern Airlines tuperjet in
sy.·ampland west of Miami Friday night
has reached 103, according to the Dade
County (t.1lami) medical examiner.
The statement by Dr. Joseph Davis at
a late Monday J)ews conference waa the
latest in a series of conflicting counts of
victims and survivors issued by airline
( IN SHORT ... J
spokesmen and county 91ff'C'iais.
The death toll announced by Davis in-
cludes 101 persons who died at the scene
of the crash in the muck of the Florida
Everglades and ty,·o others who died later
in hospitals.
e Comedle1111e OK
NE\V YORK (UP I) -Comedienne
Imogene Coca was in satisfactory con-
dition after surgery to correet eye,
facial. and leg Injuries suffered in a traf-
fic accident in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Dr. Pli;:rre Guibo r, who led a three-man
surgical team at 1\1anhaltan Eye, Ear
and Throat liospital in the 90-mlnute
op e rat ion , said Monday, "The
operative results are excellent and the
prognosis is good."
Guibor said P..1iss Coca 's right eye was
repaired and "reconstruction 'A'8S
omCER BOBBY Weatherington was
hospitalized in fair condlUon •fler being
struck with a folding chair. Polk:e iJsued
an all·polnt.s bulletin for 18-)'W'dd Roy
John Martinelli on a charge of attacking
Weatherlngton with the chair.
At Miami Beach In neighborin g Dade
COunty, sheriff's de put Its arrrested 25
persons Sunday night after a large group
of youths tried lo cr11sh several New
Year's eve pa rties at S\vank hotels along
C)lllins Avenue.
performed to the right side of her face ."
It was not known whether the will 1ufrer
any permanent Jou of vltlon to the eye.
e A1troworld Fire
HOUSTON (UPI) -Judie Roy
Holheinz. the muttrmtnd behind the
Altroworld complex and memben of
hi• farplly were """"" mnrt thin 100
guesta who had to leave their rooma at
the A!troworld Hotel Monday beclUR of
a fire.
Damages were estimated 1t ,150,000
but no one was hurt in the firt.
Hofheini, b.IJ wife, hla daughter, her
husblnd and their cbildm! left the f2,50C).
•·night penthot!ae "CelesUal Suite" and
spent the rest of the nlaht at their sulte
in the Astrodome stadium, which the
judge owns along with the hotel, the
Astros baseball club and other interests.
e Pojte Reeover•
VATICAN CITY (AP ) -Pope Paul VI
has recovered from Influenza and rtsum-
ed his nonnal activities except for au-
diences. the Vatican said today.
On doctor 's orders, Pope Paul , who had
a slight fever Thursday to Sund~y, had to
skip an outing from the Vatican on Mon-
day to mark the New Year's Day wit h a
~1ass among crippled children. The
Vatican aaid the Pope received hit aides
and attended his norm.al work. But to
give him some rest the doctor ordered
him to suspend audiences to vtsttlng
bi!hops aod other visitors through 'IbtD's·
day. Also Wednesday's public audience
y;·as canceled this week.
Colorado Has 20 Below
Lowest Outside Alaska at Gunnison; High FlorUln.
Temperatures
Mlell Low l'r, " " " " ij •1 ·°' 34 .o,
" ,, l t
~ il r. • !! ~ " ~ ~ '° 111 l' " , n ~ l~ u ~ 66 ., ll
ii ~
ll g' ., .. 11 ,h
,U tt .os .. .,
•
todAy'a tne0tmter and aald all the Israeli
planea rtturoed lifely. But the official
Syrian radio claimed one Israeli plane
WU hit. 'lllo bro<d<lst ll'nm llamucus
1cinowledled I Syriln pl ... allo WIS
hit, but did not 1peclfy whether It cruh-'l<l u roporWd by the Lebanete.
ltroel reported tbe do(flaht broke ou t
1boul I p.m. when Syrian pl..., 11·
tempted to lnteroept Inell planes on
P1trol. Syrl1 uld the Israeli petrol had
enlered Syrian lerriloey afler flyln& over
Ltbanon.
LEBANESE JlllUTAl\Y ....,... said
2>27 l!raell planea showed up on radar
scrwens as lhe tl&hlina raged over the
l.ebanese moon1w.
"We were nearly blown out of our aeats
by 1 sef!tt of etplooinns,'' uld the Rev.
Ronald Robc.rta, who runa 1 ICbool for
handica pped children In the Lebanese
tOY.'n of Ajaltoun. CJO the road to the &ki
Bearing tlae Cold
The 53rd annual Polar Bear SY.im ge ts under \\'ay in Vancouver. B.C.
\vilh 253 s\\i mmera plunging into the 44-degree water of English
Bay. Actually, the \\'ater \Vas three degrees warmer than I.he air, and
it \\'as raining to boot. 2,500 spectators \Vatched the Ne\v Year's Day
ritual.
Surprise Visit
Nixon Locked Out of Own Office
Ski Lift Goes
Berserk; Many
Skiers Injured
BURLEY, Idaho (AP -One person
wu in critical condition and four others
hospitalized Monday night after a ski lift
wtnt out of control \\•hile carrying about
200 aklers at Pomerelle Ski Area 18 mites
southwest of here.
Hopitals treated and released 12
others. ~1edica1 \\'Orkers al the scene
estimated anothe r 40 suffered minor in-
juries.
Gerald Anderson. a spoke sman for
Cassia ~1emorial Hospital. said Chris
Stevens, 29. of Hagen1an was in critical
C'Ondition with chest and intemal inju ries .
The other three admitted at Cass ia y;·ere
in satisfactory C"Ondition.
Anderson said most of the injuries
y.·ere broken bones and strains. He said
abou t 40 doctors and off-duty personnel
rtspaoded to the emergency ca ll from as
far away as 40 miles.
Ambulance driver Roger Porter ot t~e
Western Ambul anct Service in Burley
said one of the: Injured told him ''chairs
were Dying evttywhere and people v.·e.re
fallin g and jumping."
DAILY ,ILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtlll'tl'y of the Dlity P~ct
1\ 911.1r.1ntw:1
~., ........ ..,, II fW .. -~ .... ,_
''"' .,. t 1Jol ........ C.111 &!Ml _, f_,.. "~' ......... -,...c-. ... ,, __ ,,,. ......
,.,,,,. .. , llMI """"'' 11 'rM ...... na-1.,.
'(WI ftllJ' •Y I ...... , 1'l•f1y, ... I •·"'·
., ..... ,. ''" ...... ~ will k ·~ ff .... (•!It ••t , ............ u • .... .
remains in office -a paint noted with
some of his predecessors -gave no ex-
planation for his helicopter return to the
\Vhlte House on one of the nation's tradi-
U<:>nal llve-it-up holiday evenings.
TRl!fJ. MRS. Nixon had Je[t earlier in
the day for Southern California lO take
part in Pasadena's Rose Bowl festivities
where her old school, the University of
Southern California, defeated Ohio State
University's football team .
By all accounts, Nixon's only activitf
on New Year's Eve was to place a con-
gratulatory phone ca ll lo Coach George
Allen of tlle Washington Redskins, \\'in-
ners of the National Football Conference
championship.
Allen, his \\ife, four children and \\\·o
in·laws turned up at the White House at
10 a.m. Monday to enjoy Nixon's
hospitality.
But lhai still does not explain v.•hy the
President y;·as jiggling the doorknob of
his private office 2'12 hours earlier, or
\\ha l he did in the interim before en-
tert aining the Allen clan.
Newsmen and photographers sum-
moned lo the While House to record a
portion of the meetina: between y;;inning
coach and winning 1972 presidential can·
didale noted that almost immediately
thereafter, Nixon had deserted his Oval
Office tor hideaway quarters in the
neighborlng Executive Office Building.
COMMON
MARKET -
·~. ol~ya.;,t •nd '"' one p!IM I
trailin& ~ack smoke headln& toward the
ground. There ...,.. tine otlw pi..
that looked .. tllnoglt they ..... Modine
lei Syria."
The Syrian-Jaraeli ceas&-llre Um has
.been at rtubpolnt ah>ee Nov. 21, when
the llelvlest fl&btln& In more tbln t..O
yean erupted.
Arab guerrillas sll ppod Into Isnel~held
ttrrltory from Syria nn thr<e occulonJ
at Chrlstmu time, the lsraelil claimed.
and Jsrae.I retaliated with an air nld oo
Stril 1111 Wednesday. ' THE SYIUAN5 rt1pond<d with 111
artlllery attack on 1....U pooltlont Ind
settlements on the Golan 1iela!OI s.wr-
day. '!be laratlll wne blcl! With 1 allltl
air raid .. a Syriln """" camp -I Damucus.
'!be lsntells now cl1im to lllve lbnt
down 40 Syriln pl1nes tine< tha 1117
Arab-lsntll 'llt'&r.
Cargo Plane
Crashes, 5
Persons Die
EDMONTON. Aita. (AP) -A Boeing
707 cargo plane crashed and burned in a
blinard early today while landing 1t
Edmonton lnler111tlonll Airport. and
police said all five persons on boanl ...,.
killed.
'!be plane, owned by P1cific Wiilem
Airllnes. had a crew ol o .. •nd -. or· riving from Toronto with 75 head of eat~ ·
tie. An earlier report said si:t persons
v."tte on board . •
POLICE REACHED the crasb olte 11
the north end of Telford Lake "1
snowmobile.
They repcrted temperatures ot about
zero 1n the art1a. wtth blowtng srin and
y.·ind gusting up to 60 miles per hour.
A spokesman at the airport control
tower said tbe 7111, fitted for use an an
international freighter on charter fliahb ,
was in the final phase of an lnstrumtni
landing when it crashed.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police said
\hey had reooV.red three bodiea ll1d
were searching for the ottJe:ra. The
wreckage appareoUy wu at It.lit
partially covered by drifting snow. Pailet
said they might have to use tractln&
dogs to search for the other bodiea.
A DEPARTME~'r or Trlllljl(lri
spokesman said the crash site aPOlreOtl.Y
\\'as in the general Vicinity of the Oi,tit
path for the runway that -'OOJd have
been in use .at lbe time.
The spekesm&:n diaeou.nted---.,--..IP"\'l---
lhat a power laUure at the airport ad
ca""'d the crash by deprlv!ni the 7'11 ol
electrically powered ground navtgadou:l
aids or runway lights.
The po~·er failure apparently luted for
only fh•e seconds, he said, "hardly
enough to put the 9}ane oU count."
Teton Oimhers
Forced to Quit
GRAND TETON PARK , Wyo. (UPI)
-A group or 14 mountai n climben led
by 64-year-old Paul Petzoldt made it to
y.·ithin 1.500 feet of the top of Gruel
Teton JnOlDltaln li1onday but wtre fOf'Cld
lo turn back by a \\inter stonn.
Strong v.•inds and sticky snow halted
the ascent of the t3,77G-foot mountain,
said park range r Tony &vtnetto, who
ha s been in radi'o contact with the group.
The other 12 members of tbe party nl
26 rernalned behind at a permanent
climbers' .but 2.00 feel below the rummtt.
HOIWAY
·P()t .
Expa11ded. Market ...
•
The six countries of the European Com mon Market were ekpande¢''
Monday, when Britain, Ireland and Denmark joined the economic~
trading bloc. The new market (shaded areas) contlins 253 mllll.oll;
persons, and a grO<S notional product ol $693 billlon .
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