Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-05 - Orange Coast Pilot.. . '.f 1' ' .. ,, ; ; '• t . . .. • • . • .. . . . .. ' . . "'. " • • ,; a ....... • ' •: • ' ' ' FRIDAY AFTERNOON , JANUARY 5, 1973 .. . •' VOL. ... NO, J. 4 SECTIONS, 42 !"AGES " . . : . ,, .. . \ . . . . ' '. . ' . ,. . ~g .. '.P~r~.: ·Shootout . . '. ' .. i~..;. . ·s· J ,~~T.: .. . :aaw ... Om ··' . .. ) .. ."',.I!',,·. t -7/f'.4!!" -~i-·· . --:•.r -". >. , .. . . . ' . f ·· '· . :r ',. •• ·• r'" • .• ,. I • ' .. ·~ . . . . . • 1 • . . . ' . ' • ., . ' f;, II}' TOM BA.llLl:Y . · ? .. ~ . ot· ... ·~o.1w~l'l'!lt~ ~ . ~ , , ·~"lf.·~. C?irislrtias· Day ahd I ·was at · · i f• li•~ll>'I;"g•••rBeat:ti.:J'd;been, F • '. ~w,·t&lrit !Sl:l·.in<f"~~ I ' lr(!my iat~·s~: Jl',w_8$·kp¥1~ te~ling .., -::.~ . (lily old man,..,, deai4Y9U.kJiow,And· ~ .. - ·~ r got'to .think ing about all -the gOOd ~:We1d had.''. · · ·~ Petel'S" stopped St· that pmt .. smil-~!-~ . a.ti incretMous jury · and ''~tnilndedly taPJied•:one of ;the' two ~e. · Wlumfl of . ob$Clt'Q ·religions ~ . · whiih 110 ·'had. quoted 'lillerhlly· . ' t:tlie· aftemOon. • . .. ' . • ID • bid earliel' ..ftised to take the oath · · i~tifyiDg; 111UNday. abd ..yas· ooly . . ~!<>;ilo;so .al.let: a .bi}t.~. "!'&11ment , · .nlio-,ol<i>i.r.ni:..;Wf;RE J\MONG. FOUR SLAIN BY SUSPe'C'T' -ro:=~=:i~~~ .~• !·. ~-~:oep~it"~~;;ffs OOn :SChneide~ (left )· and Carl YJilson 1-ar~ in his wheel~hail, ·!Ii~~... . . . .. ' . . ,• . COW)iel table microphooe· spewall\>-· , . ~bl bis din!ctlon an~.;:,q~ha~·· ;·2: 8ff· . re··. e· rs1·&· mi· :~" ... ·B· lhb. . n· ... '""' · 'r·''"'st·'"... .. ... · • " · · . ' ·. · · o 1te 1mouY· , · • . . Uiify &rpertor1Coqrt filSt.orY.: • ·., .• • • ~ ". •. . ' " ' I ' . ~ ' Mudr' .ot:· It ·. Was :rambling and 1n-. · . . • . · rent·tO the poinf. that court reporter l . T c · D n.ivanewa:stinablelO·recOrdafluenl ;. D'' ense ounty 'ra°l'nn •· of what llie crippled d<!!en<laal r .lt-: ' ' . . ·1 I (,{.A.< lo response to 'defense . attorney , . 'J:aNow:'s .PrompWlfl; .. · · 1 • , • • But feters 24, J::"e.P.'lltedly testified that' : ... · B)'.' l\fiCHAEL Cij)OORJCll down by a· sing!' shot~n bla~ fired by hpd ~·killed Ch3'r.leS Pete~. 55, · ot"" o.itv 'l"UM)~ . an Orange County Sheri/rs deputy. lie · Flora Peters. 54', 1ess than. 24 hours ~ .TwO 'hos Angeles · County Sheriff's "had come to.the aid of the slain peace o£-.. ,_....,,,.,.,,,~'.aI!¢.· ' • · » "· · •tor dealh 4 icers. · blo!,......,.-,3_. ~-'· a ,,__ . . .~rf friend 'to Wl!ll" _ u..-~·, ~"";"5 ...... · -.~Y'. ifjernoon in M°JdW11Y" City 88 Eckstrom, who in add ition ~P being the ·,~ home. . . ~· .. ; .the)' attempted · to capture a 'double suspect in a double murder JS suspected ;~Yeu•see.-.f'ye ~ tb gain or lose: .. ' ·fil:Utder'I~· · . . · of criticaJly· WQU!lding a lhir~ victim at fh~ be<irded long·ha~ ~endant. told . : The,~. Carl Eckstrom, Z3,.of 1251 Ule ~~i:.i!it!.1. con'!itio.n t<r '.llle;iu .'Wl>J;Judg~~~· ·S]gllf•~t,l'~~ "' 'M!llltal'.ttrl!er:' )._be'.]U~.,.'-l~ 'ltoVi . ltiie •benicb arid ' ' · ~; • ..,...... '. ··~ ::-t~~~ • ~-.., ,. , .1• • r • . •. • The two-county massacre began • Ill Midway City .. ~--- DAILY l"ILOT Stat! l"IMt• WARY LAWMEN EXAMINE HOME OF t,IURDER SUSPECT In Mldw1y~City, Tragic ·c:limax to Two-coUnty"Shootlng Sprff · Stving With Knife Cu:ts Meat, Nose GO'I'EBORG. Sweden <UPI ) Bleedi ng, and with the tip of his nose nlissing. a 30-year-0ld man was ad.nitted to a GOteborg hospital Wday. Polire thought be Md been 'asSaulted and scilt a man to the scene. . The policeman fou nd the missing nosetip and the man explained he swung too wildly while cutting · m~at. County Canyon Fissures Widen; 4 Homes Perilecl The earth continued to slide today and fissures v•idr ncd in a Sanla Ana Ca nyon area of Anaheim threatening four luxury homes. Anaheim police, fire and public works emi;:Jy'::'S v.'cre in the·area today to con- .. ···rl'3tilr .,...y .. --.......... . ·. • • . ' .•. . al . wh~ -"'~'"L... · ·~---• ;w-.1 • • .let .JlOOll.... ~i"'i"e s ... vm • _ ~ _. .... -• ~ ... ~~t~~. f . :Ii··~~~·· 1 '' • ,. ··•·~ ;~~~lWM~;,stbta ~rritos ·F · h Child · ·r~:;,~~~-~" : ,,'.,' . ,,, : ; ' " ' ==:nter and shot )WO female renc ren • trol traffic.and to. do anything p<iss~bl e. to stop lhc earth mo\·ement. ~~!"'~.,;:;'g=:;,..;;.i-opli.I.,;;: 1-Yietini ! P.i.crure One girl. Ros<mary Vasquez, 20• Bell To Rece1've Fir' st • .i m no . · of 1 i bt: t the . . Gardens; wa~ sliot twice. in ~he ston:ia ch ' 1. think . .some~_ .~Y~ ·~ i. .te . -;6. • :.• •.•• •o. ; • , , • and died at Pioneer Hospital 1n Artesia. f . e I~ ~ca~g ~~ •' ~o~ !H' · · , ~f · Nud Her ,sistC.r , Cecelia. v.a~_uez. 11 •. ~u I tune, _l>e stud.beeied b:ick to· ttae ' ,. ersei e Gardens, was listed In crlltcal concht1on ers will be 'N • bis . ~ tdday attcr undergoing surg~ at :~#~· ;, Mondlly to ' ~ '.. ' Ap lnfruder who appe.rently ·broke into Pioneer Hospital. She was shot, in the :I Y, arte~·,l~;_A~b Y r,!~ 'li .LiifUba.Ulills ~bome "Thunday ni&ht ' chest, right side, left leg and left -late · ·~nu:~. " Y •• ~ · fomdrbiS/attr~~e vidim into acts of fortarm. . . . 'the f .. ·~· : ena1 '~ .. after. &bowing the A passing shopper. Michael Jeffries, ttlS 6ch"'W-'!1·~ :se\.i.nt .'~Wiii>ilieT'o;;ii·lltlde plctw.,Qrange Tl, Dowtley, was shot twice in the back ,JlOa . · '"? : ""~ ctujltJ' ~s -:Iii\!.. u be returned to his ca r, poU ce said. He bo;lho fi'!"I: ~=~f , .i1oi;~-•l<tlm .to!d-cltptJties d¥;d ·at' l)'oc>lru!f Community Hospital, ~•!Jib duaillnt.;'on(ettd·lhe~ · Beach · ~· • • ... ti~·~ --~ .· . .;~-~·~)-~ • 1 • . • • • ~~f-ftd .palled.• . O two girls while walking with them 1n '· .4.) ·rm": C..pr.D' • · .o,e mufii'bod!v0ql<>1-lhe homo. · the ihopping .renter parking tot Police NSt!-J'. ' U·J; tlilil~I · >-She aaMI be 'sOOwecl her •a picture • said they still have oo idea what the 2 ·. ·.' ;. . ..:.. · • lJCl!ltly ~Cl! fiOr:in the nude.and.told : rootlve was for )he sliootirlgs. PIT ,(}'11 Q , . · hec;.':l 'wl'Gl •lo--""''lille this." She Following the s~lings, the sU!pecl ~~ 1 .!... " ;,.. ' Mld.-fle lliftl tatfiimetafter~CQn)peJI~ ·.ren to' hls car and.fled, bu~not be.for' a ~·~. · J -~,...._·,her 'to ~ lo.,~s·or•tex.uit' •hopper' notl!<f. hls Jll:ense number and ~\r.'~'.';~.~ h,~ ~ ·' , , · . , phoned lliem to· lhe' sherilrs station lo . ,i tiMl~>ltlia~l..,;;Jti.i T ,lJI ...... ~~ ·~ fli<md. Lak<wood. •. . ·.~·:.f _ .,. ~ · ~ --<a.pktia,bl...._n dileiuec 1d.rawer. · TwO sheriff• de{'UtieJ, Sgt. Clr1 E. .,... ......._.,,. gOouat~Crediter with U1bod boin -iliy·the>'ll!llDalll·h.,_ W'illon,.40, and''hls ~. Sherflf's ,,.., ....... "I a . llllin.'"" ail . Wm! .. ~· ' '' • l>etedlve llcmalll w. Schnelder ai.o 40 tu•, :"lf.·el·:: in.~"' '"""! • '-' .i.rt '(. ·~1'ti' bellete-"file ;. "'""""'i cW.cked. the license numbers 'and pro'. ~ .:::..., . -bed bJ . cllltrauah~-vlcUin moy oieded lo the Fclstrom home, • t. ,. ,. • : · ' "ha>e.-·•nclei'tlie'~ ot.dftlp at They oootadtd the Orange Cooncy'1 ' . • · • tbt 11,ate,. .• iSoe KILLINGS, Pqe !) --, ' .. . / • ... .. '' . .. . '• . .. ' . • . . . r .. ' • . ' . . ' . ... ~· • • • ' .. Education on Sex PARIS (AP ) -The Education Ministry ha!ii announced that French high schoo1 pupils "ill receive "lnfonnation on reproduction" ~ginning nut fall , tbe first time sex education has entered the official French curriculum. The announcement Thursday came in conjynd!on wllh a statement that the · iiiini!try will make a report on the con· duct or Nicole Mercier. a Be:lfort philosophy teacher arrested for letting her phi1<>90pby ct.... read • pamphlet calling for JeJ:U&I rebellion. The morals charges againrl Mn:. Mercier were thrown out of court thi! weet. '!11e cue bad generated con- troversy In France. 'ftle "lnformaUoo on reproduction" will be Included In regular biology classes, the ministry said. At the same time, elective C0\11'31!!1 In smial education •ill he made avaltable ... lslde """" class ~8JDLJWJlh participation of physicians and "'- taUvis oC birth control organizatioos. The area affected is a cul de sac. Cir· cle Haven Way near the intersec!ion of Sar.~:-;;o Canyon and Nohl Ca nyon roads, southea.:;t of the Newport Freeway. Becau~ or the proximily of the free way, land bordering lhe homes ~s o¥:ned by the State Di·· '1n of 1::ghways. Mrs. David Gillis of 4043 Circle Ha\ en said !!he noticed a one-inch crack across the comer of the famll y property th ree weeks ago. The fissure has now widened to about one ~::Jill . Slippag' C011tinued through Thursday and .. ,tiago ( _ •n Road was ruptured . PolLCi' ha v' closed it off. Residents of the four homts were oot evacuated but were alerted. The r;nus ramily and olhen rema ined through Thursday nigtit. The three other homes are owned hy the Rev. Ralph Wil kerson, Hugh Thomll'O" and Goorge llealh . A concrete '·aJna~e ditch was 1pllt and brpken :n 5eVeral platt1. Stal' highway engineers are on tha scene and warting wi!h olfy officlifs ln hopes Of ilelei'ii11nlnji some way to atop Lhe sllppage. 2 Office1·s Off Duty; I Man Injured One man was killed earl y today and another serlously wounded by gunfire In an altercation .in a Tusti n bar with two off duty policemen from other com· 111unilics. Tustin police repo rted. nnnda/I S. Robinette, 25. <iddress not knov.·n. died at 5:20 a.m. ir: Tustin Com· munily Hospital. In !he s.1mc hospital seriously wounded is Sam P. Campise, 35. whose home add~s is also unknown. The shooting occu rred at 1:45 a.m. 1n the Bachelor's Il l bar, 14920 Holl Ave., Tustin police said. Officers involved who Tustin police allege did the shooting were Jerry L. Gray, 28. or the Garden Grove l)olice Department and Sgt. Thomas M. Baroldi, 26. of the Cypress force. Tustin police would not reveal any details of the affai r th is morning . They said they had called in Orange County District Attorney's Investigators to assist in the eas,. evid,ntly ~euse police officers were involved. Reagan. Gets V se Of Private Jet SACRAMENTO ( API -Gov. Ronald Reagan now has a $750 ,000 executive jet at his disposal and no longer Oles on commercial airliners. The nev.·ly leased state plane went Into service this wee k, a Reagan aide said. The dec ision to ren1 the pla ne was taken largely because or fea r that Reagan could be involved in a hijacki ng, Edwin "1eese lit . the Republican governor's top aide, told newsmen Thursday. Reagan norm ally fl ies at leasl once a week between Northern and Sou thern California. The six·p&5....enge r twin-jct CesSha Citation"wil r also l1e <l'vahable to other state officers and legislators when not needed by the governor. Orange Coast Weather 1'tw wealherlady !ICf:S sunny skies and "'alT!'lcr temperatures for the "-eek.end. wnh the beache.'I reach· ·~ 60 d('grees. rising to 65 inland. Overnight lows in the 405. INSIDE TODAY 0 r a n y e Count11'.t oulgofng Grand Jury lllkes some partinu !hot.! at cou nly municlpalitits as lhe 1973 panel t.• unv1IL1d.. Ste ston es. Page 8 today. l.M ... ,. I M111hl•I ......... 11 h•lilflll .Jl ,, .. ......, ·-• (lllfwf!J• I Or-.. C..., , I Cl<U$tifH !Ml •WIUl'tl\ft, t)..111 c-in 11 ,.,.,.,.. ,...-, 11 (,.....,..,.. 11 '"'" , .. ,, °""' Nttktl • thdr Mlr1l1t. , .. ,, '"""'-' ""' • 'TtlWll»ll u '""'•111:• ,,... ,,.,.,...,. • ., ,., ""' ...... . .,.,,.... . ~ 11 .,,_,, Wtwt 11·11 AMI U...tt 11 ._ ""' 4 Mtlllle• • W ..... • ~ -.. " • ' , I • Z 111.ILY PILOT s 'f riUJ J.lnuitf'J .5, i973 -, Aliens Reportedly • Ill Comity Schools Fro111P .. eJ KllLINGS ••• • SherUl'o Olllce, wblch m1Fed 1 blct up car driven by Deputy Andrew Romero. By CANDACE PEARSON Of a. Dellf ll'lllt Ill" A COU11\y school trustee charged Thurs- day thai illegal aUens are attending county tcbools and th.al one unnllflle<J school dlslrict wa:s virtually rubber- stamplng alien student entrance rorms. David Brandt or Santa Ana. tho <.'Ounty board's newest member, told h1" fellov.• trustees Tburaday that , he was "con- cernOO'' aboul foreign student.I being ad- mitted to acbools with impl'()perly filled out inunigraUon rorma, known as "I· 20's". Although he declined to name any B52s Make Most Raids In 3 Weeks From Wire services More than 40 U.S. 852 bombers al· tacked the southern half of North Viel· ll8m In the beavJe•I raid> in three weeks, generating protests today from Hanoi and charges that· President Nixon is preparing for new bombardments above the 20th parallel. 1be U.S. Command said the eight jet saturation ~bers were attacking sup- ply traffic in North Vietnamese rivers within five miles of the 20th pafallel bombing halt line, about 200 miles north or the Demilitarized 7.one and 75 miles below Hanoi. But command spokesmen refused com·. ment on charges In North Vietnam's of· ficlal Nhan Dan army newspaper that the United States, while limiting attacks below the 20th parallel, is carrying on reconnaissance "or several other localities ln preparation for new acts or military adventure.'' Nhan Dan left the Impression it was refening to the northern Haooi·Haiphong heartland. -American 1JOurces outside the U.S. Command confirmed that recon- naissance wu cmtinuing above the 20th parallel. These sources added, however, that they iDew of no immediate plans to resume the two-week aerial blitz o( the heavy attacks were halted Saturday. when the Unlled Stalel and f'iorth Viet- ~ agreed to return to the bargaining table In Pll'il. , The semipublic Paris ta1kl resumed Thursday and secret negotiations are to resume Monday. 1be United States always bu bad con. tingency plans for bombing North Viet· nam and as standard procedure revises them to keep them current. Tbe U.S. aerial reconnaissance above the 20th parallel is de>lgned to gather photographic evidence of bomb damage, monitor movement of war materials southward from China and watch rebuilding. This information is used to maintain a target list should Nixon decide to resume bombing. Meanwhile, Secretary of Defense Mel· vin R. Laird today ordered details with- held of U.S. bomb damage in North Viet· nam during the second week of the Amer· ican bombing blitz so as not to upset the Para peace talks. · "No infOmfatlon will be put out ~f thi s bulldlng at any time that will possibly ~jeopardize the success or those negotia· tions," La.Jrd declared during an awards presentation at the Pentagon. The secretary's chief spokesman, Jerry W. Friedheim, indica ted that Laird is ac- ting under orders from the White House. Other sources said the news blackout of the bombing summary was dictated by Dr. Henry Kissinger, President Nixon 's national security adviser who will resume negotiations ~1onday with the North Vietnamese in Paris. 0UN•1 co.t.n ST DAILY PILOT ~ Qnrll9 Otibt DAll.Y Pit.OT, wlfPI Whldl S. c.11C._. the H-,.__ i. hlG!lelMlll 11'1' "'9 on,... c-t Pvlllllhlnf conioenr. s- r•t• •11111111 •rs Pllbilthtd, MllW•Y lttnlll9h F,lid1y, fol" COlll M111, H...... Bea<.~. HJ,11'111f'IClhlrl 8t1c:1llP:ouni.ln V1tl1T, lt1un1 B..cf\, t~/S.ddlebKll MCI Sen Cle1Mnt1/ ~" J•1n Ctplstr111C1. A 1lno11 reglon11 •lltM h pVblJ~ $1IUl'lll'fl •lld SWllCl•YL Th• prlftdp.11 pubtllhl"I pl1nt 11 II UI Writ .. , $1fttt, tQll• M..,, C.lllomi., •:i.?t. Ro!.ert N. W1,J P'ttlllffll IN l"ll!Mltl*' Jtc~ R. Curlty Vice Prt:tNtr1t ""' Gltltrll Mltlltft' Tholft•I K•1,.ll Etlllor lltol'l'l•I A. Murphitt• Maftaolllrlf Edllw Ch•ti•1 M. Leo1 RieJ.1r4 P. Nill Alll1i.til Ml""lnt Edi'°" ~ OMl1 M-: SlO Wttl ll~r Strtel N...,_. Bt~: USJ H""'Pl<"l ~lt,.•rd u.i-•"cl'I: m ,.,. .. , •-Hmrlnt ... IMC:Jw. 17f1S BHcl'I .....,.....,.. s.n c..-...: as NotfPI 11 c.tmlllo llMI T.t.,••• 17141 141-4Jll Cl•"'-4 ~ '42~1671 t'fMI c..• ~ 1111• ......... htca 492-4421 . """' ........ ~ ~ Ctll"I~ .... ,llt ~. ""' °""ft CM1l ~Int ~-""' ...... '*'"'· 1111111,., ..... •ll'Wi.f _,,_. er lftlrtlt~ IWtlft ~ .. ..,.~ 1"lfl*rl 9"C-ltl .... iftl .. ., """"""' ...-. ............... _...._., c.._......_ Ctlltorftlil. hlltcr"i.t• ,.., fMT,.,.. a.u ~IM'rr 9' a'ltH U.IJ fnlflff\1¥1 fftflltWY _,.._, .... ltM rntflflltr, specU\c 8':hool districts, Bnndt "·avtd bct0.rt the board an 1·20 Form which car· rled the name of Joe O'Sullivan, former Laguna Beach city councilman and dir~r of pupil peraonnt!:l SttVices for the Santa Ana Unified School District. Hrandt, \\•ho was active in the reelec. 11011 1.:a1npalgu of Assemblyman Robert Burke tR·Huntington Beach1, cla imed the entrance form was c·o1npletely blank exc:ept tor the administrative !11.gnature. The forms art! supposed to be taken lo the Anicrlcan Consulate in the student's home country, and signed, filled out by the relative tbc student will llve with In Catuomla and then signed by thO dlstrl<t, Brandl contended. ••rm noc. try ing to deport anyone," he sakt. j'But J do ~t PIYinC for penons who are 110t contributing. •1 lie added thal schools were not re. quiring stringent enough identification <>f students and asked tht! tounty staff to m11ke a survey·study among county districts of the sltuallon and report back. Contacted today, O'Si..llivan deoied that any improper practiet!s were taking place in the district and questioned Brandt's rlgbt to interfere with an m. dividual district. ""'ft'"*"'" Swimnier Picks Bride Olympic swimming champion fl.1ark Spitz has announced his engage- -ment to Susan Weiner. 20, of \Vestwood. Miss Weiner, a UCLA stu· dent \Vho, like Spitz, has appeared on TV commcn:ials was introduced to the seven gold medal 'A'inner last October. Brewers File Suit, Open Fight Ove1· Distribution Lawyers for the makers or ''Lucky Lager" and "Brew 102" beers today PoP"" tion battle in Orange County with the fil- LAWMAKER ASKS SCHOOL YD TEST HARTFORD. C.Onn. (UPI) -A woman lawmaker has recommended th3t all Connecticut high school students be re-- quired to undergo an examination for venereal disease each year. State Rep. Virginia M. Connolly (R· Simsbury ) said Thursday the VD test may be necessary to combat the rapidly growing threat of the disease In the state. Mrs. Connolly, a registered nurse. served as chairman of the Governor's Task Force on Venereal Disease. ing of a $21 million lawsuit in Superior Court. Named as defendants ln the action co~ taining the c aim t t er au r es have also been deprived of $100 mllllon In unpaid taxes, are Heublein Inc., the Theodore Hamm Brewing C.Ompany and United Vintners, distributors of wines that include the Swiss Colony and Mogen David brands. It is alleged that the de£endant.s created unfair competition and violated antitrust provisions contained in the federal Cartwright A,ct by "black bag- ging" many owners of retail ouUets in Orange C.ounty. ''Black bagging" Is d"""'1bed In the lawsuit as the act of distributing gifts and premillrtl!I to retail beer and wine outJet.s in a move to eliminate com· petiiioo. It is £urther alleged that the defendants achieved their aim! by preparing "false and fraudulent" invoices, many of them to nonexistent recipients, to conceal the alleged true nature of their deliveries. From Page l PETERS' TESTIMONY. •• on \\'h1o:ther he was sane or insane when he kiJJed his parents on April 21 , 1971. Peters has already been convicted of two counts of first degree murder by that same jury in his second trial. Peters' first trial ended dramatically and prematurely in November 1971 when he was shot in the spine by a dcpuly as hl' attempted to escape from the same courtroom. Those \\'Ounds are al most certain to keep him a wheelchair for lhe rest of his life. Peters' father \\'as stabbed through lhc heart and his mother strangled just four ,. months after lhe Laguna BGlch \'ision that the smiling defendant recHlled for the jury. But it \Yns. Pclers assured the Ju ry. ··;1tl pa rt of a divine plan. •·You're thinking that if I'm not crflzy. f'm lt>rrlhly t'Vll . ., he told the jury after i. fl'\Y minute:;; of rarnbllng h!:::timony. "Jlut 1'1n not crazy. !t\TI terribly good.'' f'i:l ers n!isurPd th(' ju~ "'I was receiving spir1tunl RUidancc fron1 God when I killed my par('nls :incl it "·as all part of the plan of evolution that I'm going !o tell you a lot about before thi:; is O\'er.'' l'clers ndjustcd his hosp1t11I gown. ~carchcd for a p:is."'1gc in the volumes placed before him on lhe cluttered counsel tnhle and then Rave a brief glnnct towards his girlfriend. Anne Bartholomew. ;ind the C<luplc's ycnr-old daughter who ~·as seated ~n the fron t row of the l'UUrlroo111 . lie then wil \Jngly confirmed for TarlO\V that he is "a prophet of God. ' "The act of killin~ my parents was on net of counter cnl1urc." he told Turlow. "I cried in Laguna Beach so ntuch that I had to leave \11hen I snw lh:1t vision or my f11ther because I knew then that hi! killing wns plunncd " Peters Insisted that hi! fathtir's dt:att1 "removed him !rom pam. · .. t remember. you know. ho" he once mtl with me before he ~ent 10 "ork with a glass of wine JO hl!I h.1nd nod trlt'd to • ge t me to understand hi s problems," he told the jury. "My father was a super salesman, he \\'BS a truly honest man, but his famil y was breaking up, he was drinking and he kne\\' that 1 just didn't understand him," Peters said. Peters recalled an incident ln a San Dirgo courtroom shortly before the kill· ings when his father diso"A-ned him after listening to a judge sentence Peten on drug charges and order court action ag::iinst Pete rs' younge r brother on ct:arges Jinked to possession of mari· juana. "Yeah. but fnthc r is just Peters said . \\'hat happened a little part of to my it nJJ," "Ifs for all of humanity,'' he said. "\Ve've all got to have one religion . !\lasses -0£ Chinese people have to be a1nalgamatcd or conquered and the masses in ltldia have to be brought In \\'ith food and technicians and, you know " "~r American society is desperately ir, need of spiritual guidance," Peters ap- pealed to the jury. "Yes, I killed my parents but, you know. it's better lo do son1cth1ng for your family than for yourself." Petets will resum his testimony ~ion· d3). Debris Kills Cirl IJMA. Ohio (UPl) -Shrapnel rrom an exploding chemical tank car kill ed a teenage girl and injured her father 1'4ur5da:y following the derailment of ll oo.car, Erie--Lackaw&Ma freight train at 11nrrod . a community about 10 miles east of here. Betty Jo Silerar<I, 15. wao otandlng In JronLolher borne.about 5001eet (rom Ille derailment when Struck and killed. lier rather, Bernard, 47, sutrcred a fractured leg O'SUUlv1n aid wbllo be b onf¥ ad- mlnistrator In the Santa Ana district that signs 1·20 fonn1, h8 ne..ver llgns blank fornu:. "I don't know bow be (Brandl) could set II blank one," O'Sullivan sakl. "We doa 't hand those out." O'Sullivan e1plalned his district's pro- cedure with the forms aa follows: Normally the local relative of the stu· dent who want! lo study in califomia comes to the district to see if officials , will agree to entrance. "We fill in part of the form lhat says, yes, we will accept the student if he lives here," said O'Sullivan. Then the relative fills in part ol the (om> that say be wU1 be ""JlODSi· ble for the student durtna bis stoy here . "Then, Ibey take the form to the con- sulate In Mesko and praent lt," O'Sullivan aid, adding that the consulate theft and 1n other countries won't algn unless the district agrees 10 house the student , When the form is brought back to the di1trlct, the officials there ask to see a birth certificate, O'Sullivan said. The Ionn ii lfao checked by Imrni&ratlon of· fi cials 8lld the average alien atudtnt ' 0 wouldn't know llow to fill II out," be .. Id. 'Power Witla Bumilit1' Statesmen Hear Truman· Eulogy WASHINGTON (UPI) Foreign statesmen. govemrnent dignitaries, fami· ly members and old friends heard Harry S Truman eulogized. today as a leader who wore the mantle of his countrymen's trust "with truth and bore his solitary power with humility." Vice President Spiro T. Agnew represented President Nixon at the memorial services for the former Presi- den t in the IOwering aotbic Wasbinglon Cathedral. Nixon and his wife flew to Indepen- dence, Mo. Dec. 27, the day after Truman died, to pay tbeir last respects. Eighly·seven-year~ld Bess Truman, frail and ailing, was unable to attend. The Trumans' only child, Margaret Daniel, and her husband , Clifion Daniel, Wnshington Bureau chief of the New York Times, represented the family. Sitting with the Daniels and the Agnews in a front pew was Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, widow of Truman's sue· cessor in tbe White House. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy ([)..Mass.), and his sister, Eunice Shriver, were on hand to represent the family of the late President J-0bn F. Kennedy. Some 1,900 persons gathered In the Cathedral to hear the Very Rev. Francis B. Sayre Jr .. dean of the cathedral. describe Truman as a man who was "ready" when the "mantle of destiny" was thrust upon him. He said that Truman was "earthy, plain" and "I.here "·ere no wrinkles in bis honesty. • "When the time came, he stepped lo the anvil, humble but not afraid, relying always in his independent way upon the goodness of the Lord, in Whose hand is the hammer of our !ate." County Aviation Chief Convicted On Drunken Rap Orange County Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan was convicted on drunken driving charges Tuesday in West Orange C o u n t y Municipal court, Westminster. Bresnahan, of 9192 Oriole Ave., Foun- tain Valley, was fined $400 and plac.t on summary probation for two years by Judge Ragnar Engebretsen. The 51-year~ld Orange County Airport chief did not coolest police charges and submitted the case to the court on tbe basis -0f police reports. No witnesses were called. Fountain Valley police arrested Bresnahan last June 13 in the parking lot of the Slop-N-Go Market, Magnolia Avenue and Garfield Street. • Wilen they arrived at the ~Udw1y <!17 residence where Eckstrom Uvts w.lih 1Us parenll, Schnelder and Wt!Jon went 'tO che froot door and Romero went to cover the back. . Wlfnwes told police that SclJnelder yelled for Ec.k$trom to come out and when the young mAn refused, the deputy bega,o to break down the door. Eckstrom suddenly flung the door opea and fired at Schneider polnt blank with a .45 caUbor Thompeon wbmachtne curt. at'cording to the wltneues. \\'itncsses said Schntkler crumpled on the doorstep 1Dd Wlbon r1n to the side of the house and Into the backyard. Eckstrom emtrged from the houae wearing a U.S. Army Oat jacket .ad. chased \Yilson to the back where he fell· ·ed the otl}E'r <l~puty with another burst of machine-gun fire. A neighbor. Melvin 'Terrill. said he thought the loud bursts 'Were firecrackers. He stuck his held out the back door where . he saw the Orange County i:>eputy, Romero, who told h.im to get back wide. , Romero then sneaked up beh.in\f · Eckstrom as he was walking to the front· and dropped him with one blast from hif shotgun. p. Moment.s later, other Orange Count;- Sheriff's deputies arrived after &metJ_ called for aid . . Officers from the Westminster and Huntington Beach police departmenri were also on the scene 15 law men searched the area for any other suS~ Wilson and Schneider were taken ti Westminster Community Hospital wheN they were both pronounced dead on u- rival Eckstrom was taken to Orange Countt Medical Center where be WU booked OD murder charges. Eckstrom was described by neighbor! as a quiet "bookworm type." "He seemed like a real bright fellow," said his neighbor Twill. Terrill said atat Eckstrom was a stu- dent at Cal State Lnng ..Beach. "He wanted to try out .for the palice academy but they told him he was too nearsighted," said Terrill. Another neighbor, Marc Conlay, said that Eckstrom was a "pretty y,·eird guy." "He never talked with ar.yone and always seemed like he was scared of something," said C.Onlay, a lf>.year~ld student al Fountain Valley High School. Wilson Cancels Tour LA JOLLA (AP) -Fonner British Prime Minister Harold Wilson bas cancel· ed an American speaking tour becall!e of renewed U.S. bombing in Vtetna~ University of California officials here said Thursday. ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE JUST SOME OF THE MANY OUTSTANDING PIECES ON SALE NOW NEWPORT STORE SOFAS I' laether Sofe Sheffer Bros. 8' Velv•t Stripe 7' Crescent. Velvet. Sherrill 8' Print. Gr••n & Yallow Qu ilt. Merge C.rson 8' l ine n Print. Gold & Yellow, o,..x•I 8' l in•n Print. Lim• 6re•n & Whit• Mar9• Carson Sl••P Sofe Ou••n Size. T urquoi1e & Graen 90" Gold T extura. Marg• Cer1on 8' Multi Colored Print. Royel Coach CHAIRS Pr. Print. Gr••n & Gold. R•g. SALE $924 $7H $695 $579 $625 "'" $599 $45' $625 "'" $540 $2H $449 $)7' $470 $380 $944 $76' SALE Woodmark $15 9 ... $139 .... Pr. Wing Chairs. Or1n9• & Gold. Strip•. Roy1I Coach $228 ••· $1HM. Pr. Ch•i". Green Velvet. Roy•I Coach $228 ... $119 .... Pr. Chai". Brown Sueda. M61'"9• C.r1on $ll9 u. $2H"' Pai: High a;ck, Pi~k V.1 •• t Roy•I Co•ch $167 ••· $2tf-. I Leather Ch1ir & Ottoman. Sh1rrill $61 8 $478 I Wing ~Chair, Bird Print, Sh•rrill $219 $199 Pr. Chai". Or•ng•, Oam•sk. Woodmerk $240 $199 DINING IOOM Chin1, 2 Arm chein, 4 Sida Chairs Dinin9 T •bla. Amaicon of ' LAGUNA STORE SOFAS Rag. SALE I ' Gold & Orange Print. H•nradon $930 $n9.oo I ' Cra1c.1nt. 6r••n & Gold. Hanrado" $975 $7".50 I ' l in•n Print. Hanredon $799. $'59.00 I ' Whit• & Gre•n. V•lvat. Sh1rtill $619 $5".00 8' Tu11ado. Aqu-a & Gr•an. Merge Carson $570 $465.00 I' Wov•n Print. Royal Coech $689 $SH.GO 8' T ux•do, Whita & Graan Fringe. M1r9• C1rson $620 $52'.00 8' Graan & Whit• Ct•scant. Sh•rrill $599 $5J9.00 CHAIRS Rag. SALi Pr. Blu• Gra•n Print. Royel Co•ch $244 ••. $209 ... Pr. SwiYel. Gold Damask. Woodm1rk Pr. Gold Valvat. Sherrill Pr. 4Priri•·~ t.11r9!. c;.11on $205 ••• $17' ... $205 ... $224 ••• $179 ... $115 .... Pr. Strip• Velvat. Woodmark $219 1a. $1H ... Pr. Gold V•lvat. M1r9• C.non $209 u. $179 • I Wing Cheir. Rust, Woodmerk $225 aa. $1tf • I Ea1y Ch1ir. Gr•en & Bai91. Sh.mil -. • $279 ... $2lt• DINING IOON Rag. SALE Marth•Yllle $1562 $1252 2 A"" Ch•;n, 4 s ;d• Ch•in, Buff.t, 2 Arm 0.1irs 4 Sid• Ch•irs Double Padastal Ovel Tebla. O;n;n g T•bl•. H~-Moot..j~ $1714 $1422 Hlbritoo Trod;t;ono t $1069 $nf UNIELIFf'AILE SELECTIONS AT VEIT SATISfTING l'llCU, lfADT FOi IMMEllATI ND DRIVElT -SELECTED GIOUl'S NOM HINllDON, HUITAGE, DllXll, l OTHUS NOW llDUCED. f!'ICIAL OlDEl UPHOLSTERY f«OM HINllDON, IOTAL COACH " MAIGE CAISON AT su::-~:::."'.'L SAVINGS. ' ._.,TlA ' . , OREXE~ERITA66-HENREOON-WOOOt.tAAK--ICAllASTAN INTERIORS WDIDATS I SATUIDATS 9:00 It 5:30 NIDAY 'TlL t :oo· -~ ---- NEWPORT BEACH e 1717 WlSTCLIFf Dlt. "42·2011 LAGUNll BEACH e J41 NORTI-1 COAST HWY. ' 494-6111 TORRANCE e 'JJMt HAWTHOlNl ILVO. rn.rm Jt A $ Beoch th< Ir when two-st disml! Count; Judi aker cesslu thal DW?rlt. Slur ft!n!liO! more lurtl1e Stw argue. his la lie t1 water 1;11'iye Tbe the E Depai Army vised thO Ir acea. Stw more lelon! office; pany He amen class ... kil doma lrvi ..ucce that j breac violat stitut! the I. Tiu porcli what Com~ ASSO( <tory I ... .t .. • ;< J-. -~ ~ 11 • j .,, '1 T•I c, m C1 Vi co <;:· n< A 1¥ day'j soml In Ii abo• for f H< Best so mi u and tioiu I.hie Artlj WI Fr« hall new fo.- forb ne81 dell! catfl \\ij WoU mlii ·~ som Dee fir~ • 'w" dus: Ji1dge Nixes . nit Against lrvine'Co. A $350,000 lawsuit based on Ntwport Beach attorney Afax Sturges' claim that ttie rrvinc Company was guilty of fraud when It prevented him from building a fwo-story home on Linda Isle has been dllimissed in Irvine's !avor in Orange County Superior Court. -Judge \\'illiam C. Speirs took the action after Irvine Company lawyers suc- cessfully argued at the pre-trial stage that Sturges' complaint was .without merit . " Sturges had failed to meet a 3".Hiay ex· tension granted when he ple.Sded for more time to clarify his lawsuit and add further allegations. Sturges, 2219 Jl'ortuna, additionally argued before Judge Speirs throughout h:is lawsuit that the Irvine Com~y·s ti· tle to much of its Newport Beach "".aterfront property, especially Bayside Qrive, was "defective." , The lawyer has further claimed that the Bureau Of Land Management, the Dtpartment of the Interior and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have been ad- v~ of a situation that allegedly clouds ~ Irvine Company's title to land in the """· Sturges also 'alleged in bis " pl,ea ror more fim:e fo amend his act.ion that felony fraud charges are pending against officers and directors of the Irvine Com· pany and the Irvine Foundation. He also stated that he intended to amend his complaint to a comprehensive class action against the Irvine Company seeking a total of $400 million in damages. Jrvine Company lawyers bad earlier successfully challengtd Sturges' claim that the company was guilty of fraud, breach of contract, slander of title and violation of the state and federal con· stitutional righ~ of Max and Iva Sturges, Lhe lawyer's wife. The allegations stemmed from Sturges' purchase of a $34,000 Linda Isle lot and what he said was a blocking by the lrvine Company anst the Linda Isle Community Association of his plans to build a two- story home on the site. T•kes lrlline Post C. Thomas Wilek, deputy chair- man of the Republican National Committee,· has been named yice president for corporate communications of the Irvine Company. He will assume the ne\V position Jan. 22. l>All Y PILOT Siii! ,N!o They're Grand Jurors These are nine of 10 persons from Orange Coast communities who were tapped Thursday as mem- bers of the 1973 Orange County Grand Jury. From left are Harvey Williams, Irvine; Nora Lehman , Newport Beach; Kathryn \Vallin, Huntington Beach; Aribert Gazlay, Newport Beach; Alice Bartlett, Hun - tington Beach, jury Foreman lt'tarcia Bents, Newport Beach; Nedra Matney, Huntington Beach; Helene Hollingsworth, Costa 1i1esa, and Al fr e d Flores, Fountain Valley. James Dick of Fountain Valley missed photo. For stories on new jl,lry and the final report o! the 1972 panel, see Page 8. La s Vegas Hotel To Trade Nudes For 'Past' Image LAS VEGAS (AP) -The new owners or the Hacienda Hotel here have pledged a return to the "friendly image of the past," an end to nude stage shows and a $1 million renovation. The executives told a news conference Thursday or plans for a total change in the casino operation, as well as tentative plans for a convention center, high rise addition and a "camperland." The Clark County Liquor and Gaming Licensing Board last week approved the $5 million sale and new organization of the hotel. Atlas Hotel. Inc., a 5an Diego based chain, will manage the hotel, food services and grounds of the 17-year-old Las Vegas Strip hotel. Atlas President C. Terry Brown said the l~acienda operation marked the firm's first venture into Nevada. The new owners include Allen Glick, chairman o t e o tree rs: ne Fresch, president and general manager of the entire Hacienda operation, and Dr. Joseph Ingersoll , a Las Vegas dentist. Market Bandit Draws Jail Term A man arrested in Montana shortly after he took $100 at gunpoint from a San Cle1nente market has been sentenced to five years to life in state prison. Orange County Superior Court Judge William f\.1urray ordered the maximum armed robbery term for Raymond Walter Sharkey, 38, a former Orange . _sident who admitted taking the cash at ~gunpoint Feb. 29 from the Alpha Beta market, 903 S. El Camino Real. Judge Murray noted in Imposing sentence that Sharkey bad six prior con- vLctio~ne o{ them for the 1964 holdup of an Anaheim market. Sha rkey was arrested in Helena. Mont., a few days after the 5an Clemente holdup and returned to Orange County ror prosecution. Air Monitoring Station Eyes County Pollution A new air monitoring station is now located on the grounds or the Orange County Fire Station at %30'22 El Toro Road, C.Ounty Air PoUution Control ·Of· · ficer William Fitchen said today. The new station began operations Tuesday and is equipped to continuously mea,usre and record levels of various pol· lutants including ozone, carbon monox- ide, oxides of nitrogen. nitrogen dioxide, particulate matter and windspeed and direction. "Pollution levels in most areas are on a downward trend.'' Fitchen said. "Monitoring in the ?ioii$ion Viejo-El Toro area will help us determine the net effect or the state's motOl" vehicle pollution con- trol program and the accelerated growth rate now being experienced in this south coun y area. The Mission Viejo installation is a mobile ooe, Fitchen said. It bas been us- ed previously in Los Alamitos. "If our re- r;uest for state fu nds comes through 1,1.·e p!an to have a !)('rmancnt air n1onin- loring stations in this area:• The Air Pollution Control District has three complete perma11en1 statiOns tn La l·labra, Anaheim anc! Costa ~lesa and a partial station \\'h1ch remains in Los Alamito"s. The county district has the second longest continuous air monitor ing records of any. in the state, dating back to the mid-1950s. Fitchen said previous readings \\'ere taken in 1961 and 1965 in the El Toro- Mission Viejo area. These 1,1.•il\ serve as a basis for comparison. Readings from the new station Y•ill be used to call air pollution health warnings for the southern portion of the county when necessary, the air pollution control c ie sa1 . er recor s are sen o California Air Resources Board and the Federal EnviroMlental Protection Agen· cy. Tension, Press Freedom Analyzed in Sunday Pilot of TV WEEK and all his co-stars are featufed in story inside the mai;azine. • ~'"-"'...c.'_J_.,_~_~c......'·c__Jq_1_J~~~~s·~~~-D __ Al_L_V_P_IL_o_1__,,3 $3.8 Millio11 Action Both Sides Mull Rossmoor Suit By CA~DACE PEARSON 01 IN O.Hy !'llfl 11111 \Vhethcr the federal govem n1cnt ur th(' l~ossmoor Corporation in Laguna ll11ts will file for a court review of a rec.'On1- 1nendntion th:it the govcrnmc111 pay thr developers $3.8 m1lhon for unJuSt invrrs1' ('Qodemnation of 709 Lesiurc \\"orld ;icri;:i 1s sti ll uncertain toda\'. Attorneys for both pnrties 1!1\'0l\(•d said they would t.e poring ovrr !ht lJfi. pagt• dC'cision for days before th ry-dt•t11it· whether to file ··cxcrptions·· to it. \~h)(·h result in a full review by the seven·mc.in· ber U.S. Court of Claims. The recommendation the money he granted came Tuesday from U.S. Cotirt of Claims Commissioner \Villlam E. Day of Washington, D.C. Day agreed vo'ith Rossmoor Corpora· t ion's contention that they had been "coerced" into signing over property rights to. the U.S. in a 1963 agreement establishing a nondwelling, gn>entx>lt zone under El Toro P.1arine Corps ALr Base Flight paths. The corporation did not file suit for damages until 1967. mainly because, <i Rossmoor spokesman said this week, it too!< that long to prepare the case. The corporation then asked for da1nages of $2.7 million. The increase lO $3.8 million includes that plus interest for 10 years. The Navy Department, representing the ri.tarine Corps. agreed to trade excess federal properties for the Rossmoor greenbelt at one time. but those negotia· tions apparently broke dov.'n in 1!'70, never to be reopened. The breakdown was attributed by one participant to the J!:Ovemmcnt's selling of pr i me \Vashington. D.C. land to sorneone else. Alan l-lalkin. of the Los Angeles la\\' firm Latham and Watkins. y.·ho represented Rossmoor in the suit. said \Vednesday that ··it·s a lirtlc early to know what our future plans are.'' Halkin said Day's deci sion shOl\"('d an ag reement that th e federal governn,ent had obtained valuable property rights through its actions with Rossmoor. The 196.1 ag reement, Halkin added . was '·Nol obtained voluntarily·· fro1n llossmoor by the government. Com- 1r.iss1oncr Day agreed v.•ith llalkin's con- tention . Herbert Pittle. attorne y in the Justice Deriartment in Washington. D.C., first questioned whether the Rossmoor case was a ··big story .'' Pittle, who represented the Navy in the suit, then said he must ronsult with Navy and Marine Corps officials to see what they want to do now before proceeding ··1 have plans, but.I can't disclose them yet." he said, adding that he has 30 days from when the commissioner made his 1\·conlm(>nd:1t1on tu fil(· ;i notitl' uf intent of t':t"t'l'("lltOll Iv IL Hossmoor uuornl'ys htH'l' -tj days' to rile. P11tl1• s111d, If they do so first. he lht•n hn., 30 n1ort: d<i)S tu re~poncl \\11th . L11s Q1~n f1l111~. Aft1·r !hut. brief~ sta\1n~ \\hY the 1!t·1t·1:-;.1on is ,.h;:1llrnl:l·d n1u .... t tx: ~ulnn11!1•d lo 1hl' cour1 The 1si-ue is then put ou the court ·., J()('kt't uud co1111•::. up 1n ord~·r of fihng T/J(• t·1n1rt· n1attrr, 1f son11-on1' does file [,,r :1 rt·V iev.·, ("Uultl tukt· unl1l .J~c befor~ In . hr:tNI by thr t"UUJI. 1'11111· -:auJ , ··1f lht'll ., The U.S. Court of C:!a1111 S tht'n rct'l'::>St·S frurn ~lUlt to (lctulll·r lf 1he c:i .... t· is nut he:lrtl b.\' Juni•, il lS l:HTl('(J OV('r \O th1• foll11111ng f:ill s1'~'111n 'l'ht! taking of proµt•rty v.11hout ju:-.1 l"Otnl)('nsat1on is proh1b1h•d by r1i.:hts 111 the Fifth Arn enJn1ent to the Cons titullon. Huss:inoor officials pointed out lll :t slate· rnl'nt releas('d \Vedncsday. f'o1nn)1ssiune r Day 's report Sho\.\'Cd that he agre ... d \\'1th lto5!>1noor's · cl :um" th<it the govemn1cnt had upphcd pressure 10 {·ut off federal financ111~ 1n Leisurf' \Vorld if !ht• greenbelt did not re · 1r.::ln open. caused delays in Hossn1oor's w ning applications, and tried to influence t'Ount1· governmenl to zone the area com· pat 1blc \1 i\h ll'dcral requests. 1'he Marine Corp.~ at El 'foro has 1nndC' othrr land swaps to keep open space pro· tectivc preserves around its runways, \\hich are bei ng rncrout'h1·d by burgeon· ing dcvr!opmen!:'. Disabled Boats Towed to Coast LONG BEACH (Al') -Two di sabled bo:.its s1)0tted "1th1n an hour or each other off the coast of Southern Califon1ia Thursday ""'ere towed to NeY.1>0rt Beach hy Coast Guard cutters, officials said. All seven persons aboard both vessels were reported sale. A helciopter first sigh ted a 24-foot cabin crui ser missing since Tuesday about eight miles off Oceanside v.·nving a reel flag as a di stress signal. a spokesman said. Aboard were th :! OY.'ner, Roy Ambler or Ckl'anside. t\1r. and ~1rs. !l i('a.h r Booker of San \taco!'. ,lcrrv and Sandv Hill of Esconchdo, and llcbecc?J. \\·1eg Or Escon· dido. 1'he second boat -a 30 • foot vessel named llappy II -was slghttd by n Coast quard helicopter about 19 miles off 41. of San Pedro was the only on e aboard. the spokesman said. He was reported io good condition. In just 2 years ... outselling every European ca1· (except one)! · &ditors and re(JOrters working on Sun· day:'s first "Sunday PILOT" of 1973 find some topics le it over from the old year. ln iact,.some oi Sunday's-top .stories are- about subjects which have been around for several years. FOj\ ;TH.E ~LONE!-X -_"l}ea.chi!1g, Out" is the name or the new service ex- tended by Saddleback Valley Help Linc. It's for anyone who wants someone to talk to ... doesn't even have to be a hca\'Y problem, just someone who wants to talk about Mbbies, sr · ~i al interests, whatever. EOOK WHAT'S -STANDARD EQUIP~IENT. , : Here's a rundown or some or "Sunday's Best," including both the old stories, tind some new ones: LIVING WITR TENSION -Doctors and nurses bare their fears and frustra- tions in a symposium, "The 'J.'ilons We Ll~ With." reported by $ta f Writer Arthur R. Vinsel . J WWT PRESS FREEDOM? -The 1-~reedom of I1~iormation Act became law half a decade ago, but \Vashington ncw=-.:!n say it's still almost impossible ror joumaJists to obtain so m e in· fortnation freely. Story details the netJ&Uve tone of some news sources in ded"linf with the press In the nation's t·aplta . \llOMAN MOVER -Maybe oo ooe woUld argue with the theory that women mal<e ~ best packers of peNISnal prop- er()' -but a woman mover? That's - something else. Starr • Writer Allison Ot.--trr tells the story of Orange County's Hrst professional female "moving man" ' .. _,.her F~tc ·pro::wtion in the ln- dU>Uy. l'A'S'H MA~'ES rr -Alan Alda, Itl'l''lir~es-; m-akes-the cover SUf ER BOWL TIIRILLS -Past stars or Super Bow1 relive the big moments. The seven rememberers featured In Fam- ily Weekly story are Bob Lilly, Dallas Cowboys; Earl f\.1orra11, Miami ~ :ilph ins; ... l!erman, New York Jets: Jim Otto, Oakland Raiders; Len Dawson,· Kansa$ City Chiefs : Alan Page, Min- nesota Vikings; 'lnd Bart Starr, Green Bay Packers. Quake llits Ecuador QlllTO, Ecuador (UPI) -Two earth tremors &hook parts of Q\;ito seven minutes apart late Thunday with the sec- ond causlng some fri&ht among perwons living on up7.,r Ooors of tall bullcUngs. The.re were no reports of casualties or serious damage, Scientists said the strongest of the tremors measured two on the 12-grade Mcrcalll scale in Guaya· qull-and Quito. - e RADIAL PLY TIRES e FRO:\T DISK BRAKES e FRONT BUCKET SEATS e FULL CARPETING e RACK AND PINION STEERI~G SEE .ONE • • Rome Of The New Cu , • , . "G•We• 'l'•11dt" • TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE •orange Count11'.r Famllu of Fine Car,. ohnson& son ~ ..... .~1l Ht'\IRV . . . 2121 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • 640-5630 ' ' ' TODAY! Rome or Th• New c.°";. "Gold-r 011.,,.;; •. • t ' I 4 OAllY PIUJT Flldor, '-1 s. 1913 Big _Liquor Fro111 Viet J1111gles~ Good .News Firm Hit By Boycott LONDON fUPH -Al lout 30 pabo and bol.is jol...t lllday in boycottloc Sooldl. gin and ollltt flOOds prodocod by • buce Brilblb dlstllltty, hopinl .. 1.,.,. a speedy and mott genttous JtlUemeot for Jl2 cbllclml born d<lormed by a drug h martewd urxlts' the n 1 m e •·i.balidom.Jde_ .. ln Washington. CM1Umet activist Ralpb Nlder called foe a nationwide bo7coll ol the company's prodlll'll in the Uoi\ed Stata over the aamt WI.le. The compony, lJlllillml r.o. Ltd., mamtactum IUCh wen-toown Scotches as Johnnie Walker, Dtwar and Blld and Wbite and otber popular trandl o1 •bilk y and cm. PUBS AND UO'l'Elll in scattmd areas ol England oatd they would not tell the '°"'pany'• whiskey, gin aod o<h<I' products tmtil the finn reaches a ''generous" aeUlement with the pe.renta ol the chlldttn involved. The boycott hecan Wedne>day wheo two 11Upttrnarket cbaJns sakl they were withdrawing lhe company's prodlll'll from their shelves. Their aclJon WU the lale\I in I oerlts o! movot c!Hlped to penuade the com· peny to Improve Ill oiler ol $1U mll1ioo ., the chllmn '• parents. The children were born deformed In the early I-alter their mothen toot thalidomide, I Weal German-<leveloped Mdatlve. THE DIBTJLLEllS' CO. has always denied legal liability dur~ lleVerll year1' lltlpUon over the lsaue. IJ PBita AL!\'21'1' .. ..a.I C..1 d 9 14 --pNoo ..... deep Ill tho JuaPa cl Sooth Vtoawn, lllo lour ,_ ..... v-pell md paper. '""1 llO'lltd>ed brio( ,,,...., .. ol gr«lizlp .. their loved -· On W~y tbest lttten were mail· ed special delM!fy In New York City .• And for four more American famlliel the -would b<tng the ..... that for many maoy moolhl they had hardly allowed themod.., to believe -their mm trett lttll allvt ''Cod b&eta you! Ob. Cod bl.ell )'Oil!" aclaimed l.ir.. Virgil O'C..-wheo she picl:ed up her phooe at home Ill War- ren. Mldl., to ~ that 1 Jetta' fn:m brr U .. IT ........ John Davies, whole grandaon wa1 born without arms after his mother took the drug, sald he has banned Oiltlllers pro- ducta from his llqoor shop although he sakt It would cost him money . In lost sales. HE'S ALIVE -Frances and Viri(il O'Connor of Warren, Mich., ~ad letter from son shot down in South Vietnam in 1968. O'Connors' other two children, Dennis and Kathleen, look on. Father holds packages "It will cost me more than Distillers.'' he aid, "but we have a duty to do everytblng pouible to make them face thelr responslbllitles." London art deale r David Mason, whose daughter was born deformed after his wife toot the drug, appeared Wedne>day at a Wuhlngton news conference where Nodtt outlined boycott plans ol the com- pany'• product1 In the Unlted Sla"5. Nlder oatd It mt&ht ta.lie a mooth t<i orpnhe a boycott, but he 18id he lbought one would work. Sir Alexander McDonald, chalnnan of Dlltlllm', 1aid In a statement Wed· .0.CS.y that tbe firm ls seeking • "speedy and aatilfactory 10luUon to the " Agents Seize $7-10 Million In Fake Money ,,. sent to son which had been returned. American Flier Tells Remorse On Radio Hanoi HONG KONG (AP ) -Radio Hanoi broadcaJt a message from a captured American pilot today who described himself 81 "very ashamed" and "!lck at heart" at seeing civilian areas destroyed oYer M Wtoam Dec. 19. The POW Identifi ed himself as Air Force MaJ.,Rlchard E. Johnson and said be waz born In San Fanclsco in 1936. "l new a B52 out or Anderson Air Force Base in Guam ." he said. "I was captured Dec. 19, 1972. "I had relt that I would be treated roughly by the North Vietnamese people, and that I could e.ipect possibly beatings, things or that nature. CHA1"I'ANOOGA, TeM. (U P I ) ' ''But instead l've been trea ted very -Squads of fede raJ, state and local civilly. The people ... gave me a blanket agentl raided two lalr:e front eotttages when It was cold. They gave me hot tea, early today and seized between $7 and and food when I was hungry .•• tlO.mllUon tn bogll!, but nearly perfect, " ... 'Ibey took us to visit hospitals. t20 blll1. schools and a residential area, a market Five persons were arrested in the raid, place, I SUPfM>Se. 1 didn 't have the im- whlch also netted 8 complete printing p~lon that · any of them were milltary press, the engraving plates for the targets B.! such. "almost perfect" bills, a iupply of paper "Bombed by B52s were hospitals, similar to that on wblch real money Js schools, a market place and even a p:tnltd and two automobUes bakery. ... ' • • 6 "1 could not understand why they are . Thole taken Into a.istody were. id~n-being bombed and I felt ashamed of t1fied as Donald Bouton, 49, and his wife myself for having been a part of It. .• It Barbara, 37 ; Paul Joseph Fath, 34, and made me feel very ashamed and I could his wlfe, Laurel, 26, of Cocoa Beach, see no reason for it " · Fla., and Lee Edward' Prevett, 38, of · Klmapolls, N.C. AIL WERE CHARGED with the manuracture of counterfeit money and held under !50,000 bond each, pending a hearing later in the day before Magi1trate Charles Gearhiser. =raid and 1rreata followed the a~ ion of Todd Charle1 Hegg, '!1, in pol iJ, Minn. Special Agent Paul Deiter, saJd Hegg had been linked lo the operation. "We hive an Idea that possibly they made a trip north around Christmastime between he erand Canada and It's poulble they llllf have peued 10me of the bogus money in WM northern • states', 1• tel& Secret Service Agent Mllltr Davia. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Ddtmy of the Daily PIJot n 9uarantffii Mtoohl'·ll"""; If ......... llltt -,.,.r .., l :• .... ., '"" ..... ,,_ Of!'t' Wiii .. ....... .. ,.... <•ltt ..... , .... -it 7:• ....... ,,.,,...,, ... s-t.tyi " .,l. ..... ,_.1 ... .,_ cm ..,. t 1 • ..,, s.,.......,, ., 1 1.M.. S-1.,, c1n •• • -will .. ..,....... i. .,..., (llt\ 11"1 \Ill ...... t~ 11 I., Ttltpllontt Mou Ol'•noe COi.Hit., ,,,,., · 64l-4Jll ~,,,_, Hvnlltoulon 8t1c11 1nd w .. 1m1n111r . S40·1220 S.11 C11nwt111, C1phtr1no 8t1d>. Sin ~ffl C1plllr1no, Dllnl Polnl, $QUtb ~ .. L-1111111'\t.NISlllll 4'1·4421 ~~~~~~~~~~~ Singer Home, Loses Voice fl11LAN (AP) -Pop singer Omelia Vanoni returned to her native Milan arter a singing tour and lost her voice. "The air in my Milan is not very clean ," she com· plained today. Judge Bows Out Of Drug Cases B()S'fON (UPI) -U.S. District Court Judge Charles E. Wyzanski has dis· qualified himself from hearing any more drug cases. . Earlier this week, Wyzanski said he would dismiss cases involving po.ssession ot marijuana unless 14 assistant U.S. at· tomeys signed affidavits that they had never smoked pot. Wyumski made public his own affidavit testifying he had never violated any drug laws. Wyzaru;ki, 66, has been critical of the U.S. Attorn ey's office for spending too much time on ''trivial" marijuana and hashish cases while deYoting insufficient lime. to uncovering corporate corrtlption . embezzlement . tax evasion and civil rights violations. Thursday, the judge reversed his stand. "I am wholly persuaded that T griev- ously erred when I called upon assistant U.S. attorneys for affidavits declarin3 that each had not used marijuana," the judge said. "1 showed less sensitivity to the prob- lems of prosecutors than to the prob- lems oC defendants. I overlooked im- plications of liberty Inherent in the Filth Amendment.'' Aiutrak Jwups 1'rack RANDOLPH , Vt. (AP) -An eight-car Amtrak passenger train headed from Montreal to Washington jumped the track here early today, state police said. None .of the 95.· paiSe.ngers -or 10 crew membe rs were reported injured. Storm Pounds Southwest Middle States Freeze, Brace for New Ordeal C:•lffornla llGlNO ...t.---~ -tAIN ~;e;Js...ow f;m3M011!1u ~ .~~ . V .S. Stonmary 'Ille .... -lllll i.d ... ..,i tile mall ....._ 'frilh -. Ibo Com- -., Liaison rill -., Amtricaa Priwn ol. War in lDdf+ bin• bod bteo aoable to r..it Mn. Ponelli with tho ...... "I'm ......, 11111 praylog ,... .... tellfl>C the l:nlth,. she said. • lier .. __. ll.sleoed at -line. "John --_,, in bis heliooi>tor on Fdlntary S, 1'70," she said. "'Ihr ""'"-told as be was 1 priJOOe!' of war. appa.renUy bis name was bn>adcast oooe Oftl' Radio Hami, but this will be the fin! wmd from him." Joho P.....n. Is • u .s. Anliy capttlo, • gnodoate ., -l!Jc!> Scllool In Brad<Otm, J11.a. Whew-Threat Of Altitude Bomb a lloax RAPID CITY . S.D. fUPI) -A Trans World Airlines jet flying five hours from Madrid under an extortionist's threat it would blow up should the plane dip below a 3,2()1').root altitµde landed safely at an Air Force Base situated 3,278 feet above sea level. No bomb was found and -TWA labeled the threat a hoax. The passengers applauded when the Boeing 747 carrying 236 persom land Thursday at Ellsworth AFB, a Strategic Air Command base in the Black Hills. "There wa1 an awful lot of praying," 5aid Esther Ov.·orin of Southfield, ?tfich .• one of the passengers. THE PLANE WAS 40 minutes lnlo Its flight rrom Madrid to New York when an anonymous, Spanish-speaking caller told TWA ·s Madrid office that he had planled a bomb that would explode if the plane dipped below 3.200 feet. He said he would disctruie the location of the bomb if $237 ,000 ransom were ·pa.id. At 10:30 a.m., the captain told the passengers he had "some bad news" and explained the bomb threat. During the ordeal, which lasted fiv~ hours and covered 4.500 miles, plans to land in New York were aborted and the plane instead headed for Denver. It then was diverted to Ellsworth. The passengers submitted calmly to a methodical. 2at-by·seat search of the aircraft. helped in the hunt for the bomb and had "drinks on the house" at the stewardesses' invitation. The passengers laughed when crewmen quipped. "U anything happens, we don't have a job." SAC base for its la , passengers bat- tened down (or an e~ergency landing, tightened seat belts, took off shoes, ties and collars and put their heads between their knees. There were no need for the precau- tions. At 12:20 p.m. (PST), the plane set down safely. taxied lo the end or the runway and passengers scurried down a steep ladder and away from the jet. An Air F·orce bomb squad made an inch by inch search of the jet after it landed. "Everything's fine ," a TWA spokesman said. "No bomb was found . Several searches were made by the Ellsworth Air Force Base demolition squad and no evidence or any explosives was found . It is believed it was a boax." Robert Helmer. a TWA public relations officer. said the 747 would be flown to Denver today, where the plane and its car~o woukl. be more thoroughly ex- amined . -> Jobless Level Sta y s at 5.2% For Dece mber WASHI NGTON (UPI! -Unemployment remained unchanged in December at a 28-month low of 5.2 per· <:i!nt of the work fore£, the government sald loday. but the number of persons with jobs rose to an all-time high of 82.8 million . The Bureau of Labor Statistics said joblessness averaged 5.6 percent in 1972, down from the 5.9 percent rate in 1971 ~but still higher \Jl.ao-the ... verage.. rate of 4.9 prcent in 1970 and 3.5 percent in 1969. President Nixon's first year in office. After hovering at about 6 percent for 1$ consecutive months. the unemploymeilt rate fell In June lo 5.5 percent and re· 1nained at that level for five months before falling in November to 5.2 per· cent , the lowest since August of 1970. The administralion failed to reach its original target of reducing unemploy· ment to 4.5 percent by the middle of 1972. but White House economists last month claimed that the 5.2 percent rate fell within the administration's revised goa l or lowering joblessness to "the neighborhood'' of 5 percent by the end of 1972. The BLS said that although the reduc- tion of unemployment was·"modest," the number of persons with jobs continued to expand sharply in 1972. Employment rose by 2.3 million workers last year, far ex- ceeding the increases of 490,000 in 1971 and 730,000 in 1970. Reputed Hero Dies MIAMI. Fla . C.AP) -Thomu Anno11r, 85, whn reputedly dlv<!rted the usassln's 11im iind s1ved President Franklin D. lloosevelt'• Ille In &fiaml In 19.13, di"'!-1 Tu .. day. The · llUUet killed Chicago's m1yor, Anton Ce:rmalr:. -ldlttwaslnlm.1-.lllmel -.. "' Son Diop. Hla -.... -" ..... 'ftmndlJ bat _,...,. •• Aid lie ---lllaJ 1, 1171, aad his -i.d --bJ Ibo """' -lllll "" -alift. Tbe fourth Idler·---RoY--Ardlor. llis i$11 ..... _,..,, FIL, wre .not f'tl!C'Nble • 11:anmly. Tbe 1...-1<11en ~ -• tolal ., -~---l>Jthe Ametlcall ddegatieo. 'lbelr llplllcance -thal theJ came lrwn prilanera bold Ill South Vlemm bJ tho Vlei Cq. -...,...s Ill boUle Ill the ----uplntho • ..,.,... ,,,.,. ba .. -u pbantom- Ji1:e u their "'l)IOn, the Viet Cong, •nd Lbtir rate bu been • matter for con- J«tun. Tbeir fate ls marloldly dll!mnt to that ol U.S. pUoll sbot down over North Viet· nam who an: Installed In the "Hanoi lliltoo" pri1on camp In central Hanoi aDd Jiveo ....., to ttt111lar mall de!iwerla, food packages and vtahlna: Americans. . Hundredl of ArncrlcanJ are mlssing in South Vietnam, but only a few more than f IOOl'e of them have wrltU!n to relatives. Priloners who have been rt.lea.Jed 1n the aoutb, or wbo escaped, talk of cage-like bamboo pc1Joois, of Ion& t,.b through the Junilea IO avoid detection by allied growd troops, ol poor food . U~I Ti ..... 'MOUNTAl}IEER' BEGINS TREK ACROSS OHIO INTERSTATE 70 Mon1ttr C•n Shovel Up 65 Cubic Yards of .. Dirt in Single Bite Mining Protest Giant Maclii1ies Cross· Hi gliiva y HENDRYSBURG, Ohio (UPI) -Two ' lumber,ed across intttltate '10 in east.em Ohio, a move environmentalists bad fruitlessly fought to prevent. A group of prcitesters, nwnberlng between 50 and 100, huddled together in a muddy field some 600 yards from the crossing site with a casket they had car-. ried three miles "lO mourn for the land ... They left at dusk before the two machines -the ''Mountai~r·· and its litUe brother1 the ''46-A" owned by Han-- na Coal Co. -rolled to the south side of the highway for more coal mining Thurs. day night. Ralph Hatch, president lof Hanna, personally supervised the move of the machines, which a federal judge had ap- proved in December. He told reporters he believed the demonstrators were "misdirected.." "I just wish I were able to get them to use their zeal to help my industry solve its problems," Hatch said. "It only thlres a hammer to destroy, but a skilled . . " Harma, which owns the land on both sides of the interstate highway signed an agreement with the state in 1964 that allowed the building of that segment of the highway in return for the right for the company lo move machinery across it IO times during a 40-year period. This ~'as the first of the 10. "The protesters, some of whom had an active part in the court battle to stop Hanna from using the interstate highway, had planned the ceremony only as a symbol of their disapproval. They did not try to interfere with the move. The ''Mountaineer'' is 147 feet high and can shovel up about 65 cubic yards of dirt in a single bite. About four automobiles could comfortably fit Wide the buckeL The "46--A" is 103 feet high and has a bucket capacity of 46 cubic yards. On the other side of the highway,· the y will travel at a leisurely rate of speed to the si te of their next work about three miles away. · Eastern Airliner Descent ·Steep, Newspaper Reports NE\Y YORK CAP) -Sources at ment has decided not to rclry five of the Eastern Air Lines say the jumbo jet that Chicago Seven defendants on riot crashed at Miami last Friday made a steep descent into the Everglades instead charges, but has plans to retry all seven of the gradual descent first reported by on contempt char~es. investigators, the New York Times The announcement was made in reported today. \Vashington Thursilay by Alty. Gen. The Times quoted informants at Richard G. Kleindienst and by the U.S. Eastern as saying that for four or more attorney for the Northern o ·st · t of of the fina l six minutes of the night the . . 1 ric Lockheed LlOll ..jet.. new ~teady as a__. 1~ Ja~s ~-~~n. · [..__l_N_S_H_OR_T._ •• _. __,) rock" at its assigned altitude of 2,000 feet, indicating it was on the automatic pilot. 1ben the auto pilot, which the crew ap- parently was using while troubleshooting a possible nose gear problem, either was inadvertenUy turned ot.r or maliuoctioned and the plane lost alUtude until it was too late to avert the crash, the sources told the Timts. e GJs P•ltl Dle ltletttls WASHINGTON (UPI) -Almost 4 million World War ll and World War I veterans who have kept their GI in-- suraoce pollciet in force wUl receive $297 million in dividends this year. Donald E. Johnaon , V e t e r a n s Administration director. zakl ~ the average dividend woud be $143.-He sald the · total amount ol divldenda would be a record. The total in 19'12 wls $286 million. • Dividends will be paid on the .an- nlvnary dates o! individual po1Jcle1. e C~o 7 A~tle• CHICAGO (AP) -The JU51ice o.part- e Boggs E11logl:ed NEW • ORLEANS (UPI\ -House Speaker Carl Albert recalled rormer House Alajorily Leader Hale Boggs as a tireless work er who rose to lnnuential positions in congreS!lonal leadership but always had compassion for the Jess fortunate. Albert's eulogy for Boggs followed a ceremonial Mass of Resurrection Thurs- day for the missing Lauisiana Democrat, wbo disappeared Oct. 16 00 a night from Anchorage to Juneau, Alaska. Mn:. Rlchard Ni1on, Viet Presidenl Spiro T. Agnew and former President Lyndon B. John!on led the list o! dlgni· taries at the memorial servlct. e Fowl Ct1rba DroPJletl , WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Cost of Living Council has UJted price controls from the initial sale of broiler chickens and tlA'keys, However, en industry $0Utee said he doubted there would be a price hike as a result. The Coat of Living Council SAld the .ex· empt.ion was granted to IMure continu!d ·~.ton~ llOUl,tty J>r<!!luc:tlon and availability or -6iilllir clilCl<ens and turktyl at reasonable prices. • I ' I s An ... oct 1 th< on ~ c pa tht . ' • lh~ :: ha ... M "'' ed •• "' rol I ' ta fie -· ha -'"' dii LtJ ~ "" dl ep Cl • fe! th tij SU nt P; · .. ~ af II< st " • It 6 el " b1 to • q sl s! H c d n " J. p p ~ n " [ fi • ~ ti b b t' ~ 1 1 I r I t c - • • • • , ~ruJay, ~ 5 lf73 DAILY PllDT 5 Farr· .Petition Eyed Sta11ds Vp City Passenger Vessel Departs High Court Judge Seeks County Response San F1·ancisco's Quake in Hiding Coastline Panelists To Meet SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - Arntr~an President Llnu bas waved &OOCil>Y• to llihye11n of ocean passenger service. The llrll\'• 1 .. 1 hwlry liner. the SS Prtsldcnt Wilson. left on Ila final cruise Th.urlday night with a full '°8d of 300 LOS ANGELES (AP) - A decbioo from U.S. S.pttme Court Justke William O. Douglas ao...whetbe:r to release jailed 1XW81D111 William Farr Is being upheld pending rupooses from county of. facials to Farr's petition for ( , ________ ) "'::;ylly~ty =~ BRIEFS . st.wan said Tbunday 1ie bad --------~-been asked by Douglas to file passengers on 1 95-day round a resp:me by Jan. 10 to the world trip to 24 ports. Farr's petition. The APL's two cruise ships the Wilson and SS Cteveland '.: had been lollng money but were kept. operating with U.S. M a r i t i m e Administration •• suboridies. The Cleveland's end- ed this month and the Wlbon'1 ends-to April, when both ships reach lbe maximum age limll for such paymenQ at 25 yean. e1..otei10,.Flu SAN JOSE (AP) -The San- ta Clara County Coroner's of· flee said Thursday 14 persons ·' have died and 1,000 others .. ~ made ill in the county by diseases apparently related to London nu. Bronchial pneumonia caused 7 most of the deaths, a spokesman said, noting that the virus out break reached epidemic proportions between Christmas and New Year's. eRoaeSnotel' PASADENA \AP) -Snow fell brieOy here Thursday ror the first lime in 23 years, just 1hree days after bright sunshine bathed the 84th an- nual Tournament or Rosses Parade. llowever. there wasn't' ·.. enough to build a StlO\V man. The soow .storm began shortly after noon and lailed for nearly a half hour. But the snow melted as soon as it tooched the ground. e Elerllon SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gm'. Ronald Reagan has set ~!arch 6 as the date for a special election in a San Diego state senatorial district left vacant by election of Clair Burgener to Congress. eGuardFlre SACRAMENTO (AP) -The firt which damaged the California National Guard Christmas was p r o b a b 1 y started by a battery charger, State Fire Marshal Albert E. Hole says. e Prison Strike SAN QUENTIN (AP) -A dozen San Quentin Prison in· mates. the last holdouts in a work strike that started with I.200 participanls, ha\'e been placed in segregation Ci!lls. a prison official says. All but 12 of the prisoners who refused to work Tuesday morning had returned to their jobs by Thursday, said Lee DeBord, prison infonnation of· fleer. e Kl1t11 llaw k SAN DIEGO· (AP) -.A ~ black sailor has been reduced two pay grades and given a bad-conduct discharge after being convicted or assauUing two white sailors and rioting aboard the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk. Seaman Cleveland ~1allory. 19, of Pittsburgh, convicted Thursday by Capt. Bobby 0. Bryant , in a special court. martial, was freed afterward pending review of his case. He had spent 59 days in pretrial confinement. NO DEQSIQN oa the pell- ~ will be made by Im&l•s . 9 Inmates Ordered Identified ONTARIO (AP) -A judge bas been order~ to set aside an order forbidding pubUca-. lion of nsmes or pbotographs of nine OUoo prison inmates wboJestjfied at a munJer trial of two prisooers last fall. TOE STATE Court of At> peal . ruled Thursday tbat the order issued by Superklr COUrt Judge Richard C. Gamer "'as unconstitutional. The ruling came on an a~ peal · by the San Bernardino Sw>Telegram. the Dai I y Report in Ontario and tbe Pomona Progress--Bulletin. Garner had forbidden the news media to identify the nine inmates who testified at the trial of two pri&mers ac· cused of stabbing another con· vict to death. The Oct. 30 order was to remain in effect for nine months after the ver;lict was returned. The judge had issued the order at the request of the district attorney. who said he feared the inmates might not testify if their names v.·ere published. Man-eating By Police HOLLYWOOD (APl - A St. Bernard dog trained for at~ck was shot and killed by pohce when it returned to the Laurel Canyon home where it had eaten part of its dead master's corpse, authorities say. Police said they shot the dog Thursday because they feared it might harm children. Police said they were called Thursday ot the borne of William Fields. a 63-year-0ld M G ~t s o u n d department employe. by neighbors who complained th:a:t the .dog was howling. When officers entered the house. the dog f I e d . Investigators said Fields' body was in a bed and that he had died about two weeks ag<>. One neighbor Said the dog, which weighed about 180 pounds. had bitten two persons and killed another large dog during the past year. Officers staked out the home and shot the animal when it approached a short time later. Signs Topple Nude Posters Ban1ied --SAN-FRANCISOO ~AP)·-·Poli<e-h&ve·been ordored-lo· wam operators of topless night clubs tonight that they mwt 1 immediafely remove nude poslef1' from in front of their premises. Police Chiel Donald Soott ordered officers to distribute the warning after a judge refused 'nlursday to block a dty ordinance banniilg the posters a.s requested by some top-1 Jess operators who contended &be law was unconstitutional. SCOTT SAID THAT POLICE will meel with r<p'e- sentatlves from the city planoiq: departmeot and the city attorney's office on Monday to wort out a timetable for re- moval cl thooe lar1ler signs whld! requite use cl cranes. All toploa signs In the dty ar. espeded to be removed •itbln a month, Lt. aem De Amids, police public af!alrs olflcor. said. "This will be an orderly openltion." De Amicis said. ' "lt won't be like ProhibiUon whert v.-e're running around with sledgehammen brtaklng open casts." Superior Cotlrt Judge It'll Brown Jr. ruled Thuroday th.it there wUI "be ample time to raise the constitutional lssuei" all" an .,_ Is mad< under the onllnanct. BROWN WAS RULING ON a "'IUell to issue 1 pre- liminary injunctlon qainst the law by a group cl North Beach topless <lubs. aub """"'"'"lives argued that the taw violated conatltut-1 guaranteeo cl -cl speech. The disputed ordlnance forbids dlsptay of any llllote- graph or sign showing any port cl the human body· wlten the sign seeks Mtomm for plact:1 where entertainment ts avallablt. The onlllllllCO bad not been enlalcod for yean when ~ .JciJn Baii>q•lata, I member cl the iloerd of SUpenliaon, eornpl11ned about prolJl""°"I sl(IJll. au!> -thell toot ..lM.lssue to.Ibo.court&. unW be bu !<lid the l'<JllOD't, SU.wart II.id. A brld 1lsn bas bttn ulted from Sheriff Ptter J. Pitcbeu, the fOUnty or6d.al responsible for ~ munty jail where Farr tu been held slDCf Nov. 27 for refusing t.o di\'Ulge a news aoun::e in 1 story abrut the Charles MalllOO murder trial. Fll'T, 38, 1 Loo Angeles Timu newsman. has asked Douglas to relU.se him on his own recognhance pending all appeals In h1s eee. IN ANO'mER developriiient Thund>y, the Criminal Cot!MS Bat Asloclation. an organiz..a- Uon of more than 700 judges, defemt lltOme)'S and pros-' ecutors, ezpressed its support of Farr l1y awarding him their al'lmlal joumallsm award. James E. Patterson, presi· dent of the assoeiation , said in Los Angeles that Farr was selttted for the award because of bJs "outstanding acb1evemeat" He added that the .....,.;. lioB had Voted to provide the newsman with lq"al and ftnan- cial aid. "It is tragic that Bill Fm remains an lncaretrated pawn in a dispute betwttn Superior Court Judge Olarles Older and the attorneys ln this (:ast ln wbkb the Issues ol lr<edom ol the press and the ability of a defendallt to 1'eCUre a Cair trial consistent with the due pn:>e-ess of law becomes SK'OO- dary," an association state- fent said. " • . . REGARDLESS OF ho~· lofty the court's moti\•ts are. they bttome despoiled when constitutionally iln' permissible methods are used ta secure compliance with an otherwise valid court order," they added. Patterson said the award v.·01.dd be p~ted Jan %4 dur· ing a dinner al a iocaJ hotel "and not at the Los Angeles County Jail." HAVOLINE MOTOR OIL ,,,. "' WEIGHTS GALVANIZED OIL DRAIN PAN 3\?GollOf\ Copm~ily Gttt01 Fot Wcuhing ·~· FRAM OJL FILTER 1?~ LACE-ON STEERING WHEEL COVERS B*-1., Ton, Walr!Olf, Red White' e1 ... 99 'tf WESTINGHOUSE AUTO SEAL BEkM Fw All Cs• ..... Tn"h FAN BELT~ on ... Rite c .... ,.e,.i-M Te MHt All <>1ti..I e...,;,_.. 5'1K;.(lca1io111 F• F1t11, Al1er11t1ttr CARBURETOR AIR CLEANER •o• AMER KAN "'" ---·-- -=--=~~ =---- --------=-------=----~---. --=· 17"xl7" UTILITY MA'fS CALIFORNIA Nixon's Kin 'Too Poor' SACRAME~"l'O tAP l -A California welfare recipient wbo is a first cousin to Presi- dent Nixon sa}'s he aod his ¥.-ife have been invited to Ni:t- on's Jan. 20 inaugural but can 't afford to go. Phillip ~1ilhous or Cedar Ridge In Northern California's Nevada County and his wife Verlene draw. welfare because they art dtsabled. SAN FRANC ISCO I VPI J - We made it. folks. The earthqu:lke prl'dlcted for 9 a.m. Thursday -a Lremor ~·h.ich was going to make San Francisco's 1906 sh.aker look hkt' ~h.1\ds play - failOO to ma1eMahzc. mE UNIVERSITY o f California seismograph !11ation across 1he bay in Berkelf'y said the Sao Andreas fault didn 'I even "iggle at the ap- pointed hour. Of couf"SE'. self·slyled quake predictor Rt'tlben Greenspan h.ad admitted last week 1h.at his calculalions -based on eclipses, gravitational poll and geology -were faulty and withdrew his foreC'ast. Greeru;pan. a 67-year-0ld recluse, didn·t take up tilayor Joseph L. Alioto's invitation Lo tea in hls office u1 his predicted quake lime. Instead. the mayor hosted ~..nmen. lie strode in a fe\4' steonds after 1he appou1tcd hollr . not~'<l thnl thC chand<·lier above his d~k "1Wl 't sn<N·· ing. and then chatised c;n..'fn-- ,.pan. •·WE CM;! Tlti:AT this ns n jokr," h.e said. '"It's frlghll':nt.od 8 lot or pt'Op\e .. Cremspan withdre"· h i S propheicy fol.1owing the disa· sterous ~1aMgua, Nicaragua. quake. But n few of the local re-sidenl!I "'ho h.1d planned 10 be out or lO\.\'t1 Thursday morning le.ft aoy"·n~ -just 111 case. Earthquake expe-r1s scoff('(!. at the prediction. insisting no one can predict the hour or day of a major quake. But they also notOO th.nt large quakes strike this are-a periodi<'ally . The furthf'r av•"Y thf last one is. the soone-r the next one can be expected, they ~·amcd . SACRAMENTO (AP) GO\'_ Ronald Rtagan and lea~ers of ih.t! legislature have inviled 1he tH newly appointed ro11s1:'11 wne commjss:Jonen to a one day workshop J!ln. 12 in Sltcrnmento. Vott!l"S cr1';ited the one slat.ewide and 1111 regional coastal t'Omm1ssions Nov. 7 "'hen Ibey approved Prop. 20, !he C'0<1Sl lint in11lall\1!, The "orkshop aAf'nda "'ill probabl» CO\ er adm1n1s1ration. pla11111ng and procedurt"S, !he st<ilc 's Hesources Ai;teTK")' said 1n a 1te"s N'lt'asc announcing the i11v11a11on The Ul\'ll.:tlion '41\S issued jointl y bY He41..i:an. Assembly Spt'aker Bob ~toretti (0-Van Nu vs\ and slate Senate Presi· der1t pro 1em James Mills (0.. San D1ego1 the department said. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SA VE 30% • 50% --A-Ul PARTS CHECKER LIFETIME CHECKER AUTO c ME CHANI CS BRAND COOLING SYSTEM CHEMICALS ANTI-RUST .t WATER P UMP LUBRICANT STOP LEA!i: &: SEALER S MIN UTE FAST FLUSH ENGINE MEDIC Sll/Jfl'S OU B..-t hl1' ~,5..,.... SUPEI X C·ARBURETOR TREATMENT SO LDER SEAL HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID /•or JlPt•,., AM 01,c llt•.lf, '-"""'" s .. .e. "'"',.' s,.,,., MOTOR BATH ,. ..... " o....a-,, Qff I LB. MECHA IO CS CHASIS GREASE I LB . MECHANICS WATERLESS • HAND SOAP ·YOUR CHOICE • PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY 9, 1973 30.000 MILE BRAKE SHOES ~~~~. 399 ~'";"~ 1099 ln<l..don9 />r• EA. VW'o ~·"·~--•. _ ... ,.,.... ... ) -;::=.,.;::;.-· I ' . -----,-· ..... _ -~ = ~~ .. "":' •-:... _ .. 1 AMI' BATTERY l:llARGER 6 Or 12 \/oh S1•-•' kt,.i.r,,,., 499 (F•-l'f A.nol,10) MOTORCRAFT TUNE-U P KITS ALTERNATORS 16~2 ALL AMERICAN DWELL TACH :;;::;::iii'\~:~:..~ R GREASE GUN J.()OEL 110 Ref d!oble Eo1y To O,..ol• For tt-o, for.,, Stq. "'-•·· "'°"•-flt 6 .. 12 Volr s.,,,_,. ,_ p f• Pos•ll~• Or Ne9<1ti~· Grouod s.,.,.111 k•X· JI.,, 9!?. !!!!JERY 19?.9. 12 FOOT HEAVY DUTY BOOSTER CABLES 6C1l""'-t ac.,n...i.,. R•''''"' I(,, 498 S?.? 6~~ 1?.? 398 F• TJ. Lifeti-"" Of Yow Pre1et11 Cs THERMOSTATS ,,,._M C--'1"11 Syat•t1 Elfkienty 99' TOW MIRROR SPECIAL Clops On fail Alld s.c ..... Won't "'~"' <> O.m YowC.'s Flnl•h 299 HERCULES LIFETIME GUARANTEE HEAVY -- DUTY SHOCK ABSORBERS "-ontffd For TM Lil.!1111e Of Y-p,. .... , Cot 5 !.~. - f"O•/!•lrr Al ,.,,,U u,.1., 111.(111 I· l>r• llr•r 102?. 101-PIECE ·--.... ~,.,.A....i Air c-llt le11"'9 AC, AUTO UTE & CHAMPION NYLON FOAM SEAT COVERS FULL ACROSS FLOOR MATS TOOL SET BUCKET Orepf ....... F11ll7 Honlened 24 99 Snc •ts1- 1 -79• ... 399 f ll• MMt 179 SEAT •-•COOi ''" CUSHION A11ot1ff Cal•t .... c...,11-11iit C•lor• 111 EAST 19th STREET, COSTA MESA · JUST OFF NEWPORT ILVD. -BEHIND MESA THEATR~ 399 And l•.,..... ....... ..... Ti t,!• c11r-Plo"4 ............... STORE HOURS: 7t...,r Dolly ' lo ' 5-ley ' lo • BAllKAMEftlCMD • • • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Nih~ling The edges of Capi.ltrano Beach and parts of Dana Point are slowly being eaten away In a series of small 1nnexaUons which have some county residents furious. Already an1ered at their lack of local control, resl· dents in unincorporated area fumed recently when the Local Agency FormaUon Commission allowed "annexa· Uon of 65 acres to San Juan Capistrano, and 8-0 acres in the Palisades to San Clemente. The LAFC provisionally tossed another 20 acres into the San Clemente annexation to avoid a county island. San Clemente bas the longest track record on an· nexations, particularly in the Plllsades area where •·un- inhabited'' annexations are pursued. Uninhabited an· ne.xations involve an area where there are fewer than a dozen registered voters. This eliminates the oecel.!ity of an election. There is recurring Wk in Capistrano Beach and Dana Point about the chances for yet another incorpora- tion effort. If a serious consensus exists about tltls, residents had better get the legwork done before their future municipal tax -base is nibbled from under them . Another alternative ml.di! be to attend the Jan. 15 session at Marco Forster Junior High School to look into advisability of a coordlaaUng body of commurµty organizations. Lack of action now could shut the door to incorpora· tion forever. New Saddleback Trustees Annexations • thal is needed by trusrees: a knowledge o! tho college and its role in the community. ·Marshall , for live yem a college president, bu served on lhe general advisory commlriee to college Superlntendent·President Fred H. Bremer. Mrs. Berry al.so has served on the advisory body, most recently directing the activities of the Cl.Dance sut>- <.'Ommittee. Both new members have indlcatcd a willlngnw to work with the other live board members toward the common goal of providing the best educatiOn to students in the co1nmunity college district. • We \vi sh them and the other five members well in meeting the heavy responsibilities of their positions. Parking Gone Again Laguna drivers and visitors were given a welcome Christmas present when the city-Owned El Pueo parking lot on the Main Beach was reopened for the holiday shopping season. But the bandy gilt baa been yajlked away. The parking lot with its conven.ient all-day spaces is closed again. The oceanfront lot just north of the Hotel Laguna affords parking for about 60 cars and in the past has been open during summer and winter seasons with park- ing controlled by an attendan~ usually a blgb school student. The lot is especially valuable as a haven for down- town employes who have to contend with park.Ing m~ ters and two-hour parking limits at most spaces. It Is Two leading memberr of the Saddleback Valley com· Important, too, for downtown businessmen becauae each mua.ity Thunday night were installed as members of the car ~arked in an out-01-the-way Jot opens a storefront Saddleback Coli>munlty College board of trustees. parking place for customers. _fa,..,._.~ ...... "'HEEP. u~ 51~. 500N vou'LL se' z1 PP1~6 AL.OH~ Ar boo PtP.H:'' Eipanslon of life-boat<! f!om-ttve-io-seven-members---~.~'Tliere are mexpenSJve parliliig contl'OlS avalfa6leSo---+--'-:;;: with the appointment of Donna Berry of Mission Viejo meters used need not be installed nor an alteruWlt s and Dr. James Marshall of Mission Viejo is a step to-hired full·time. Even if the Jot offered free parting, ii ward broader community representation on the board. would be an asset to the business commun.ity to open Both Join the board with the kind cif experience up those storefront spaces. A Lovely Old World of Musical Fun ~NEY J.HARRI~ Although, ss 1 remarked not Jong ago, I'm not blg on the nostalgia bit, everyone has a IOft spot of his own, and mine ha~ pens to be Gilbert & Sullivan. It was somethlng I grew up wllh. the way other kids grew up with Tom Mil or Amos 'n' lulily. I had much older COUl1lla .. h 0 had come over here run lAlndoo to live, and they tried to carry as much Brlllln with them as they could -tnc1ud1ng a set of lbe Savayard Operas that muat have been pressed by 'l1lomas -bimlelf. AT ANY RATE-my cousins and I would sit around the gramapbone (or vlo- trola, li you will ) and follow these Gilbert & SUllivan scores with a libretto. You muat remember, chlldrea, bani as it Is to believe, there was no television in those benighted days, no tslldng films, and radio was still somelbing you searched for with a cat's 'Risker on a crystal·set. The wind-up victrola was where It was. Well, G&S became for ua what, I sup- pose, StraU.!S was for a generation of VleMese kids, or Verdi for the Italian youlh In the pr<-<l<Ctronlc era. We got to know eVery verse, melody, nuance, and blt of trickery in the Savoy repertoire, and never tired of the corny gags and an- cient clolmlng. Whal, ne•~r? Well, hard- ly ever. THE 011IER DAY, Dodd, Mead, the Dear Gloomy Gus Does the City of Laguna Beach really want local patronage when they hand out 13 parking ticket> durin& lbe holidays? F.N.K. '* ....... fWltlCh ,.......... ...... -_...., ........ -·--..,.. ,,_ NI ........ 0"""' On, Delh' l'lltt. publishers, sent me a review copy of the new book, "The GUbert & Sullivan Com- pmaion,'' and It all came back in a rush of warm DOllalgla. This b a large and bandlome com um of the plays, pro- ' ' talented people wbo made G&S a British instituUon for a half<entury. But who is go1ng to bey It? • We are a sedly dwindling lot, we G&S aliciooailiio, like velerans of tbe Spanlsh- American War. And we are apparenUy lbe last of the breed: J exposed my own children to the Savoy operas at an early age, and they exhlblted mild interest and amutement, but It never real!}' took. The world that wu molded and mocked in those entertainments was too far remov- ed from anything they could conceive to bold them. IT WAS A world of style and fonn and taste, a world of institutions that could be mocked but not seriously questioned. a world of relative pennanence and placidity 8Dd proud faith in something called "progress." It died, actually, with Victoria, but its ghost kept marching on until the end of World War 1 and the rise of the terrible Twenties. It was a lovely world, just as Strauss' and Verdi's were lovely worlds. But nowadays it seems less real than the world· of !clen<:e-flcUon. 1 may lum"out to be the last Gilbert & Sullivan com- panion. LBJ's Accomplishments The passing of Harry Truman, who left lhe White House 20 years ago in a hail of abuse, Ls a reminder that presldenb often go unappreciated until after they are gone. Today, for example, historians rate the spunky Truman among America's 10 great- est presidents. Down on the Ped· ernal'-1, another for·~ mtr president Is mourning over the way public opinion has turned against him. We have been among three who have criticized Lyndon JohMon for hlJ handling of the Vietnam war. But al'ttr the war clouds clear away, history JIUIY •1, alao look kiooly upon LBJ. For no other . president pushed through so much aocial ,. legislaUon. Here are a few of the t milestones he left behind when he retired from lbe White House : -MEDICARE: For nUllions of aenior cillzens. medlcare bu become so im· portant that, ill abstnce would be rtgard· .Quotes P.dei' M-Flalllpo, Pmlckattat aid< far i.--u1n11 r.c-m1e Affaln - "Whaltver p._ iJ made In the area ~ trad<, either wllh the new mark•~ of the Cl>mmunlst world or with our tradl· tiooal free market· trading parlnerl, It bu mote tbaA .. e<OOomlc ineanlr.g; " mutl be .... u part of tbt 'web 0( ...ced lnlmltl' tbal lada to -Id .•. " ed as a vto11Uon of the fourth com- mandment, "Honor thy father and thy mother." -,-cl\'IL-RIOHTS: Two ·epic mea,._ urt.s, lhe Civil JUghts Act of 1964 and lbe Voting Rights Act QI 1965, are regarded by black leaders as the greatest advance in aoclal justice since the Eman- cipation Proclamation. Thoughtful black leaders mention Lyndon Johnson 's name in the same breath with Abraham Lin· coin. -EDUCATION: LBJ deserves credi t for probably the most sweepln« educa· tional legislation in hlstory, which has brought an educational revoluUon to lhla country. Today, It's taken for granted that any qualified American youth can get a college education through grants, loans or jobs. Tbls wasn't true Jn 1963 wbtn most mlddlt-lncome parents wor- ried about ho1' lbey ,..... going lo educate their children. The college popuiotton has doubled •incl LBJ 's r<forms became law. AD In all, 43$ pieces of bosic legislation were pustd ~nder LBJ. Moat pleasing to blm, no dou~ 11 that none has been repealed; nearly all have been added to; and many appear in both party plat· fonn.1. MU!Jooa ot old people, blacl< citi..,,s, )'OW!C people -and evrn the prtP be<&.,. of the Freedom of Information Act -lllould be snte!UI to the lonely man down In Texu. More Prudent to Plan than Block County Must Face the Growth Issue To the Editor: I recently wrote to the editor ex- pressing my coocern that we, here in Orange County, should address ourselves to the growth issue' and get on with 801v- ing our problems. It was and is my coo-· tention that the · population of Orange County and other attractive areas, will continue to grow and that no acceptable way has yet been found to stop a people's migration or their desire to procreate. This being the fact, I suggested it might be more prudent to plan for growth rather than spend our energy stopping power plantJ, highways, utilities, water and homebuilding, etc. • .answer to my observations, both in a later "Letters" column and penonally communicated to me, dealt with me and the organization I represent rather than the is.sue. My motives were questioned. The motives of those I represent were swipect. But there was no attempt to deal with the issue of growth or the challenge we au face. That's a sad comment. It reflects on our inability to face social issues and solve our problems. Instead of trying lo identify the problem and search for aolu- tions. we become overly concerned with the advocate's race, religion, business or associate!, or else we try to find a con- venient devil to blame our problems on. PEOPLE LAMENT the fact we can walk on the moon, yet can't solve our simplest social problems. As David Moynahan said last year, going to the moon was easy compared to !Olving a social problem. Everyone readily-agreed tha~ the moon flight problem that bad to be overcome, was gravity and friction. Social issues a~ different. People can't agree oo the cause of those problems. 'I'tler r waste . t~ir time qllf;S\iOning .~cb other s monves and looking for a devU to blame. They cannot perceive the cause of the problem independent of the different pt'Ople involved. The quality cX. the future environment Wl' shall all share Ls too important to each of us to allow tbJs pattern to con- tinue. There are no devils, either in business, industry, labor or the uUlity companies, that are the cause of our eD- vl..ronmental problems. There an:, however, some very complex problems of. growth and pollution which we all share, and which must be objectively faced and solved if we are to make any significant social progress. GILBERT W. FERGUSON E1ecutive Director. CEED . . . Like UNke To the Editor : Regarding the actions taken recently by the Laguna Beach School Board and the letters to the editor maligning Ca p- tain Linke. To the uninformed it would seem from these letters to the edit.or that ' I. Qlpt.ain Linke is only a mtred serviceman who fought Hiller. 2. It is wrong for Capt. Linke and fello Y" board members to desire that students be able to read, write and spell. WF. WOULD like the readers of this paper to know that Capt. Unke was a Isn't It the Truth! By CARL IUllLE1' JR. One ad vantage among man7 lhat the bachttor man or wom11n enjoys l"I lo aJeep with two pillows. one to rm the head upon :ind the ether to punch Into shape without k.lcklng the covers olf or being told to llO snore dovm the ball In the spare bedroom. "Laugh •~d Ute wrld la11Qhl unlit 11ou; .filOre cnut: vau tlup alone ... -A.11th.or Uriidntti/~d MAILBOX set a rood eumple to bis llludenU. He held tho rspect of. students u well as parents. We wilh theft were hundreds of teachen who were just half as dcdialed lo t.ech1ng as Captain Linke proved hl....U to be. As for Mn. '11Dnas Qrtlomp saying, "the day of the McGolfey reader is past," it is im:leed a sorry time when someone lhinb rud1ng is unimportant. READING iJ such an lmpartsnt part of an e:Jtft lifetime. The first learning steps are most vital A perscn who le.ams to love r<ading Is ....ny a happy .... u adjusted hwnan being aD of h1s life. HurTlh for Capt. UMe and the Laguna lleadi School Boan!. KR. AND MRS. WM. WALKER ~rLlte To the Editor: A belated thank you, to Allisoo Deerr for the article, "Banierl Faced" in yoor is""' dated Dec. 22. With my wife being confined to a wheclchair,.we ue very .familiar with the problems facing Mick Spencer ih bis everyday living routines. WE WERE 'Vf!rJ impressed with a pro.- gram, recently introduced in Great Br i- tain, that anon for those in wheelchairs, who drive automobiles, lo park in restricted area. A metal plaque, about twelve inches square, indicates that the ca r is being parbd by a handicapped pel30IL 1n ma)or cities, lite London, this b: a • true bles.sJng to those who 'want to do for themselves' some of the things that are natural for those of us who walk, like shopping, business appointments, etc., withoul having lo park a bloc;k or two away. This approach is allO under con- sideration In other countries on the con- tinent. WHAT A GREAT gift and lift that would be, to our returning serviet?men, and others still restricted to wheelchairs. if our great state could institute such a program .... better stiU lf it could go na- tionwide. Great Britain is also thinkin about ree use of te ep nes a . 18 estimated that by the year t980 (aoo these figures were related to me by a leading wheelchair manufacturer), there will be 1.8 million people in the United States. who will be pennanently confined to a "chair." A large figuno, but still small enough for the above projecls to be worked out comfortably and financially. TIDNGS ARE getting better for the handkapped person, but I do wish that those building new motels, offices, airports, restaurants, etc., would confer with a handicapped veteran's hospital, or hunt up someone in the neighborhood who is confined to a wheelchair, and get their views, chair measurements, where the W-C should be located, handlebars for the showers, ramp heights, etc. Thanks again for that fme article. ARTHUR W. llAMPl'ON Radlatl0t1 BG%ard To the Editor: Jn hearing action conducted by the Atomic Energy Commission on proposals to baild two --largest ever, c;onstructed -experimental nuclear re.actors at ·San Onofre, the utility companies have declined to gi ve responsive answers to vital qu estions concerned with public safety. IN ESTABLISBED procedures of the bearing process, Capistrano Bay area residents triov.~ as Groups United Against Radiation Dangen were granted by the AEC lbe righl to ask and lo receive an,,wers under oath to questions DDT Ban Questioned Few chenllcal .atances b a ., e generated u much puslonate debate as lw DDT. Prailod lllld ooiaiet11..t wltb equal fenor, the pestldde has bem a tey ,...pan 1n the liPI against -.,.,,_ rying and crop-devouring lmects O'ftl' the past qlllrler-century. But tE DDT era ts about to come to an abnJpt end In the United Slates, Stll1lal this -& • virtually all use OI DDT in lhis .....try will be pnlbibited. WILUAM D. Ruciel1b1u1, ad- ministrator m the Environmtnlal PnJtec.. lion Agency, mnounced the ban laot June. Tbe docloloo capped lhr<e yeers of governmental lnqulrles, Including ....., months ol beatings. DDT, it was cco- cluded, poaod "an unaCCf11Uble riK to mM and bii .. vtrwuaeot." But tbe ban does not •PPIY to publlc health ...i quarantine -of the cbemtcal, w to throe minor crop -for whicll ao ef. fectlvt P.,t<ontnl alleruaUve Is .,... l'l!lltly avallatife. !bier certain con- ditlw, DDT may be ll3ed on g1M1 pep. pen, onlw, and --pot•-· Moreover, the EPA order does lat &fleet ll1I' manwacture of llOT for apart. Ruckelsblus' ..-.c••i.mt w a 1 greeted "Ith jllbilatioil \J ..,. vfronmtnlallst> and wltb tlilmq by EDITORIAL RESEARCH many agricultural e1pert.s. The case for DDT was eloquently set forth by Norman E. Borlau"g, father of the "Green Revolu- lion," In a November, 1971 address before a cooference of lhe U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. U aarlcultiu< is denied the use of DOT ~ similar chcmlcal1 "beclwie or unwbt leglslation that iJ now being prornotld by a powerful ifOU1> of h)'lterical lobbyists who are provoting fear by pr.dieting doom foc lbe -tltrough chemical poi9Dlllng," BoriuJI warned, '1hen the world will be doomed DOI by chemical poisoning but from starvaUoo." 'l1IB BP A and other govel1lm<Dt agen- cies ob¥toully bel ieve that will not hap. · pen. Over the nelt three yeors, lbe Department ol Aarf<ullure Ibo National Scl<nco Pounc&.tlon and EPA plan to tlPrDd around l2U million Io develop Im· pnMd .... t ·llllJlal<JD'lll technlq-. ,_ efforts w111 Ill_ dooel1 watched ·by the ~ aolnl>)1tllleoll ~ DDT. Both lldel realize that """""°""! edlcll cao 11""11 be mdnded. posed in printed ronn to the applicant utility companies and the AEC staff. GUARD has devoted thousands of volunteer hours to the study of atomic reactor safety problems. The 33 ques· lions were carefully drawn to elicit essential information requested by school, city state parks and highv.·ay J.13trol officials, and by engineers who are concerned that the applicants are unable to produce proven reactor safety systems. In good faith, GUARD volunteers donated the lime and money to produce and duplicate and mail all over lhe U.S. as instructed by the AEC. 40 copi~s of the questi~ns. The utility SO~tE OF these quesHons have be<>n posed by GUARD and by community of- ficials for more than three ye._ Whether the applicants do not have the information sought, or choose not to prtt- vide it unless or until "required" by the AEC lo do so, they coodemn themselves in either case. Much of the basic information asked sbouJd have been made public before construction pennits were approved for San Onofre Unit 1. but these questions o( distance of hazard of the most serious accidents (described by the AEC as class 8 and 9), time available for evacuation. length of time evacuation would be neces.sary, and adequate detail of p~ cedures in lhe evoot of a disastrous ac- cident, have not been provided to the public or to community officials. SAN ONOFRE 1 is now operating with llD emergency core cooling system whi<:h r. Jed in a series of model tests con- ducted by the AEC, yet the util ity com- panies have not · provided the ha1.ard 'factJ necessary on which community of· ficials .could attem~ an effoctive evacua. tion or per90llS within ~ miles bk the plant. . We contend that the refusal to ansv.·er these questions is an act of contempt against the foundation purposes of !he bearing process, an attempt to evade that purpose and thus negate it. LYNN ~!ARRIS l~lCKS, Chairman Groups United AgDinst Radiation Dangers You Co•t Sl,150 To the Editor: Congressman Philip Crane of I tlinois states that the Federal Government now spends $1.7~. annually Ior.cvcl"l'. m..an. woman and child in the United States (This means you .) He estimates that if overspending (i.e. defi cit fiiiancing) con- tinues to increase, in about 30 years it will cost every man. woman and ch.ild in this nation about $15,000. a year. Young people please take notice! "Spenders" in Congress must go. C. C. MOSELEY OltANOIE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vted, 1•1,bllslicr Thomer Keeinl, Ed.zur Barbara Krt ibich Editorial Page Edi tor. The" t'dltol'1a1 r'flRC' 11f lht> Ila!!) l'l.lot $ttkJ lo Inform 1111(! sOniu- latl' f'!'•den by prn;c-nllng • t1'1i new•per'1 oplnlont llnd mm· ml'nllU") un topic& ot lnttfc.'11' and lllt:nltlalnce, by provldln~ ll forun1 fnr the f'Xf'n!tlllon nt our read1•No· 1ll'nlnns. 11ond by pr1•1(•nlln;< lh<' d1vl'~ \'l~·~!nt~ rif lnfonncd ob. kf'Vt"rt and •pokl"linen nn topic,. ot thf' d'J', Friday, Januarj 5, 1973 D • A WA lnten mlsA Van I nat!Ot ol b\ Yiol.tl -,,,. tt1 ac Onie( operi AD miss! portL rlghl begll the I vide In to Al bu l20,0 by t sevei regu An p s v Pi lbw Dist on I Jr., nati ly E late! •tali A: atte mill c piru me< row mill pro 11 laut the "l'I on A mai and (in! 11 Die ' cha ma wei 'Ii ani F "' dee IUl1 as Aw saJ " "~ 1 om an ' ""' he An I tJi! :!'J Co B~ eh Hi lh• St· an rh pr Y< on tic °' "' Si V: s1 e• ' m th a fo cl M c cl h. ~ c u ~ n b • • ' c I 0 ' • I .. ~ DAILY PILOT Friijay January S, iqn ' Allied .Van Lines Slapped President Struggles With Pin piMed the blue-ribboned medal on Halg's chest below ro'h"S and rows of other military decorations. It prompUy fell to the floor . The guests broke into laughter' as Nixon picked up the medal and Y.isecrackcd : "I'm going to get this thing on lf it takes all day." Aft er a brief struggle, Nixon managed to pin it on askew and told Haig with a grin . ''I finally got it on. Don't move." Woodrow P.1~y .. 50, of San Dle o, is free on '2.500 bail aerpagnnocen a charge that he beat up his mailman because last month's welfare check was late. The mailman's injuries, If any, were not made public. ' * Retired U.S. Col. David II. Hackwort b , the most decorated officer of the Viet- nam war, said he is working as a waiter in a care In an Australian resort. And, he said, he likes it. "I'm here," he said, "because I like peace." The 42-year-old Ha cky,·orth. once described as a one-man army, won 91 medals in Viet· nam before he retired. He said he was disillusioned with American policy in Vietnam. * Fonner Charles Man90n trial Prosecutor V I n c e n l BugUot:I, who falled in his at- tempt to unseat Los Angeles County Dlsl Alty . JO!eph P. Busc:h in November's gene,ral · etecUon', hll join~d a Beverly HUis law flnn. lie was named a partner in the finn of Robert K. stein berg and Edwin Stan1ey. * Sens. Hubert H. llumpbrey and Georie S. P.1cGovern - rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination last year -both won coveted seats on the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee. Since there was only one Democratic vacancy on the committee, that or defeated Sen. WU!Jam B. Spong Jr., (D- Va.).1 the Senate Democratic Sfe<rlilg-commtttel decided lb expand the committee by one member, to 17. That decision, ratified by the Senate Democratic Caucu!'., tnade it unnecessary for Democrats to make a choice between Humphrey and McGovern for the vacancy. * Calvln C. Ekbiger, a fonner Calilornla bricklayer now a clty councllman In Lawndale, has announced he will run for president In 1976 as an ID- dependent hoping lo reach all Christians by traveling acl"OSI the land . Ehinger, 36, whose election 1o the council pool was hi> first venture ln poUUcs, said he would work nt odd )obs to svpport his candidacy . "llehlnd lhe L,1ues there 11 an underlying caute," Ehinger said. "The answer Is Jeau!." Hamllton t..ty (Ohio) Cieri< of Courts llokfl J••· allp say• four clerks In ltlo ol!lce can tither cut lbelr '>olol\'.jho.collar and ovCl'lho-oar hall' Wart Slnirdsy at start looking for other jobs. Thi• btll good 'UI old WU! marrle•Ul. HABBY GAYES STRAWBERRIES StrawborrlH UN red. plum• are pwple, grow your own. conr with maple ampl9. STRAWBERRY PLAMER 147 This plantor 11 three pocnt. ao buy it and don't knock it. ORTHO ROSE FOOD 99~LBS. Mab them welL mcxmke th•m wl1e, make them grow much bigger in size. GRAPE VIHES 96~. When T exac:o Denn.la feels line it'• from drinking new wine. h• fell On hia duff a:nd said, "that'• enough." We hear it throu.gh th~ ~ld grapevtne. • BJIREROOT FRUIT TREES 17~. • Plums, J*lfl• pe~ch. apple. and banana. the trff• we aay you g•t from Fontana. • (Bancmaa are none. ·;we did It !or fun.) That' a how we get them. from Santa .Ana. 1999 • ;=;;;;>. . Silen~e KO. l Just )JAHDJHI PRE-EMERGE 7as B'ARE ROOT ROsE·s Get thewffd1 before they get 1tarted. 10 your lawn won't come up broken-hearted. (p111!. Covers 2500 Sq. ft.) BANDJHI SUPER THBEEWAY WEEDJLIZER - Color1. na:me1 _you've heard before. {Peace, Doc Nebbi1h. Chry1l•r~ American Beauty, elc.) Field grown.. all healthy devils. • • • 1095 Bandinl makes a 2500 SQ. FT. COVERAGE great thrH way baggi•, Weeds. feeds. and klll1 the bubs. Maggie • Helps your plants get started and growing. Unle11 D'f'•r them you were mowing. Soften• the 1bock. moving around the block. (.Hey, ladyyour slip is showing.) 91s Roadlng about ..... ding and feeding of 2SOO aquar• IHting. blah. blab. blah. yak. yak. yak, whooeeee. ORTHO LAWN & DICHONDBA FOOD 3a5 COVERS 6,000 SQ. f'T, H•re"1 th• big of the biggies. and lt' a good for dichondra or lawn.. So U yow grass eats like piggies Just keep on throwing it on. KELLOGG'S lflTROHUMUS I asked Jeff what this waa mado ol and he told mo with J 39 Cl qulaical amH:e. • •. -~· Perhaps. they chew up old newspapers. bag them. and talk to them a while. 32-GALLOH TRASH CAM I think that l 1hall never aee, a trash can lO'f'ely aa a ahoe- (What went wrong here'? Where did I !all?) 2 47 GJlLVAHIZED TRA.SH CAH -~I""" hhlrlll th:at I ohall-ui-ret 1<tw~ a" trath can }oTely QS a tree. n think we're getttng it now.) 2.22 20 GAL . 3.33 30 GAL. 4.44 40 GAL. TRASH CAH LINERS Nothin' could be Unah. 1han to be in a trash can linah. ln the mom.in! (33 Gal.. 8 to a pak. END OF BOOK.) 19CPAK • • . I I 1 ' • • • . • . • • ' • f DAILY "LOT Dissolt1ti ons Ol ltlarriage Death l\'otltt• BALTL-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corou de! Mar m-l45f Co1ta l\fesa 141-U?f. • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI 114433 • . McCORMlCK LAGUNA ~Clnd0R11JARY 17• Lapna canyon Rd. •H-9415 . .. PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery J\.lortury Cbapel 3SM PKIHc View Drtve Newport Beach, CalHornla 144-!'IOI , • PEEK FAllllLY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7811 Bolsa Ave. WestmlDster S93-3W • SMITHS' MORTUARY 127 Malo St. BanUntton Bt:acb 5IHl3I , • Md.tr hJw,,, 5, 1973 BJ IAt'lt IROllACK II WM urged that the "'""ty ot • a... ,.. ,.... Board of SUpen:lsors meet SANTA ANA -Tbe 1m with county -lo Orange County Grand Jury 's &et Immediate action on the llnal report iJluod Thunday ,.port. strikes. hard at "provin-AIM urged was early coo- dallsm, chauvlntsm and home . &....tonal appropriations lo rule.'' . make Prado Dam on the S&nta The Jury was evidently Ana River, just over the coun- cha.grined at a lack of ty Hne, aafe and the response to a survey It superviJors were told mt to transm itted to all &? cities. authorize public works ~ .. . jects wblch promote urbanlU-~te two letters~ from Uon of lands adjacent to rivers the 1ury, the cltJea or Brea, subject to noodlng . Buena Park, Dana Point (sic), Laguna Beach and La Habra dld oot cooperate Jn com- pleting the survey and dld. lll'I even have the courtesy to N!:p- Jy. ( "ONE CITY, Los AlamltOI, bluntly refused ln two separate replies lo furnish the information requested," the jury report read. 11EGARDING lunctlOOI ol !he Local Al!ency Formation comrnts.lon, the Jilry aeld that annuatloa ~ are studied 1tparately, '&'llhout reganl for overall t'OD- sequences to the county. "'nlls piecemeal approach to the planning prooeu lhould be discouraged in favor of more IUlaU., bomeo for the......,.. -------Uoo ol noile pollution att lo- adequaU, lbe report 1tated. "An ettect.lve aoond at- tenuation procram lllloUJd be establlabed and enfor<>OCI and building lnrpeclon be In- structed to bold ,.leuel for occuponcy until bulld!np If. fected are lully lnlulated against noise ond completely alr~ndltioned.11 - Oo Ore pn>tedioo, lbe jury urged Iha! efforts In the mov .. ment to oomolldate all clty and county fire departmeoll be lncttal<d wltb the ob- jective ol llCtODlpl!Jhment u iloon u poalble. TllE' ORANGE County Airport atoo came in for coo- slderatkm. "'!be Jury II decr>l1 concerned regardin( the ap- parent permJssl VtDMB with which the plano1ng com· ORANGE COUNTY the oommunttlel u to the Id· vantages of tbe pnlll'llDI ao as lo decrelle public mlltaoce ta local ..mces. nu: JURY'S bulky year end statement concluded wtlb • -m•ry ol special reporll. T These lncJIJded: -1be Jury'• Jnveltlgatlon ol the Anaheim conllkt of Jn. ·-west dll!rges-wlth thr- cllWoo that thtre wu no violation of ltate law .. but that the city ahou.ld investigate further. That judges .,... lhorQUghly evaluate the ablllty of nornineea for the grand Jury. choosing persons with knowledge al I a w en-forcement. buaineu, rmance, p I a a n I n 1 • admlnlstn.Uon, ec:olou. government, llOdal work. educatlQn and law. -Drastically lncreuod fW> --. ,,.., . \ •• 8 UICe•n11 "Yot1 betftr not treat htr mean, Jeffy, 'cat.1M yov'rt · her UNClfl" I IU be inl '" be I Uk m1 sk Ai lei be pr wl m ni \'a re "The apathetic attitudes ex- pressed by the nonrepliers may help the public to un- derstand why mutual coopera- tion in solv~ countywlde pro- blems is So dl!ficull to ob- hultb lUiZard for the potenUal occuponta and wW aisQ result In the slraJllU!atlon ol the airport operatkm loog before new airportl are operational." ding of lbe county Human~----------------...., Rdallons Commission" WU lain." The report on non· cooperation conUnued: "When asked if lhey thought the coun- ty should have overall jurisdiction over such coun· tywide problems as airport locations, six citi~ did not agrefl:. Such an atUtude Ls dif- flcull lo believe clue lo the tremendous environmenlal im· pact. tbat airports have, not only on adjacent .,..., but even on nonadjacent areas located within the fllgbt pa!h." "SURPRISINGLY," .. t be Jury reported, "five cmes do not accept countywlde control of mass tra&lt, despite the failure eiperienced by most local attempb to provide such service, and also despite lhe fact that none of these cities have been able to provide local transit service. "Twelve cities out of 19 which replied do not accept the need for a countywide growth policy In spite of the very evident suburban sprawl that the lack of such a pollcy bas produced," the jury report said. Tiie jury added: "Under the battle cry of "Home Rule" many local politicians seem reluc14n.t to admit that mutual problems can best bt solved by consolidated ~ction. "DESPIJE such cllche! as big government and local con· trot wed lo mist all COil- s ve a em p s """"f"'te plans lor unified "Tiie greater numf>er of spedal district•,· t la e greater'u tlae -,...._._..,,_ '"'""" "' tlte futtt-tlolt alNI ~at of goverulllflftt." action, the jury believes that, provided the effective leadership by the Board of Supervison, the citizens ol the county will demand prompt and united action to improve the quality of life in the coun- ty." In a covering letter to the 265-page r e po r t , Jury Foreman Otto M. Schmidlen warned that he was personally concerned "about the trend of certain department heads toward stating that the money for this or that project was either state or federal money, not out of our budget. This is a fallacy. Regardless of where the county gets the fund'! lhey are initially taken out of our, the taxpayers' pockets." Schmidlen's letter also revealed for the first time that members of the jury and their counterparts in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties met three limes to discuss mutual problems. SUBJECTS dj,,c!Wcd • Irk eluded air· pollution, the penal system. consolidation or the marsllal's office with the sheri(rs office. sanitation districts, rapid transit systems and drug abuse. The jury also stn1ck at the proliferation of s p e c I a I districts. There are 124 such diStricts and the Jucy con- cluded there are too many and the Local Al!ency Formation Commission is the logical group to consolidate and dis..~lve many districts. "The greater number of sped.al djstrk:ts, the greater is the confusion among tu· peyer1 ol the function and cost of government. 1be organlza. lion ol local govemmen& urgeotly -to b. slmpllf.ied,., the report rud. ON FLOOD coolrol-;' lbe Jul'J' uld that more flood pn>tectlon ts -l'l' lo protecl l!uman llvo and property. Crillclzed WU the foil~ to complete a report on flood control -of the county by the U.S. Armf Corps ol Engineers. J "T..,el.,e dties out of 19 ..,,...,,. r e• plied do not accept die ..-d for a counttrU>lde growth t">lletl i• sptte ol rlle very erident suf>urf>a• ..,. • ..,1 tllat the lack of 1ula a policy laas pro• duced." • comprehensive annexation mission, airport commission, proposals," It aald. . --aitliort land Ille commission The Jury support& legislation and the 1upervlsorl respond lo to allow city councilJ and requests from developers for aupe.rvison to initiate an.-tone chan&es that would-coo- neution proceedings on cowr tinue to permJt them to ty Wands which are 100 acres develop land well within lhe or lesa and completely sur· high noise impact area sur- rounded by one or more cltl<S. rounding the airport. '"Mllrty.five such islands in "fl continued at the present the county would qualify for rate it represents a serious passible annexation to neighboring cities. The policy of the county Is to eliminate county islands, but this policy URGED WAS the con- struction of a second animal shelter. In the soothern l!eCloJ' of the county and that im· mediate consideration be given to a licensing program for cats and horses. , The Orange County Mediclll Center came in for con- siderable study. Upgrading of the. faclJjty was recommended. Also suggested was the adding of a system oJ decentralized ambulatory care clinics. On menial beallb, the· Jury suggested that Methadone clinics for heroin addicts be expanded and that a com- munity relatlons task force should be activated to educate suggeated, with a.a lncttase lD stall fronl the PJ't'lf1ll two lo no Jeu than sll ombudsmen and three clerical politlons. -m E R E C ENTL Y publicized report o.n work1n1 cood.ltloos al the medical center. It blamed 11low staff morale" on a..lreeze cm hiring, lack of night supervisory personnel, arbllmy decisions relating to nune-paUent ratio and a lack of romm1mjcatloD- at all staff levels. -A re.po.rt on visual pollu- tion, blaming the blight on the fact that many planning com- missionen are selected from the ranks of contractors, Is not being implemented el· fecUvely." THE JURY also urged that the public member or LAFC be a truly public member - a person who has not served as an appointed or elected official in any city In the county. Coast Das IO on Jory 6 Womeri, 4 Men From 13 Candidat,es Jt was also recommended that the LAFC make a con· certed effort to dis.solve lr- rigaUon and soil conservation distrlcts, since Orange County is no longer an agricultural county; and that cemetery districts be dissolved and the function taken over by private enterprises, and that many water and sanitary districts be combined to the economic btne.fit of the tupayer. The jury also suggested that Dlstrict bt dissolved and the functions taten over by the Heal lb Department CritJcized were the meeting payments paid lo city coun- cilmen and supervisors. It was Pointed out lhat many such directors are paid $100 a meeting and the chalnnan of the joint boards $350. LegisJa. tlon is needed to affect the change, the jury said. SANTA ANA -Ten Orange Coast residents are among the 19 persons who comprise the Orange Coimty Grand Jury for 1973. 11\e 10 jurors. six women and four men, watched their names drawn from the hat Thursday in Superior Court ceremonies that followed the discharging of the 1972 Grand Jury. Mrs. 1'1arcla Mae Bents of Newport Beach, nominated for "Ned" Rutrer of Newport Beach, was the immediate choice ol Judge James Turner .. foreman. SHE IS THE third 1''oman to be named to the Job in re- cent years. Her predecesson in that office were fonnel" Newport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall wbo headed the deliberations of the 1911 Grand Jury and Mrs. Marj Weed, wbo served in 1970. ' .. A SI'RONG county ad· Judge Turner takes over nominated by Judge Bruce Sumner. NEWPORT BEACH: Mn. l!farcia Mae Bents, 810 W. Bay Ave., Balboa, nominated by Judge J .E.T. "Ned" Rutter. Aribert William Gazlay, 350 Evening Canyon Road, Corona del Mar, nominated by Judge Lloyd E. Blanpied and Nora Lehman, 734 Via Lido Soud, nominated by Judge William c. Speirs. 17902 Hopkins St. and Harvey Wllliams, Apt. lJ.D, -SIOO Parkview · Lane, tiotb nominated by Judge Walter Charamza. FOUNTAIN VALLEY : James Waller Dick, 8174 Nlghttn.gale Ave., nominated by Judge Bauer. COSTA MESA: Helene Louise Hollingsworth, 1790 Pit- cairn Drive, nominated by Judge William S. Lee of Newport Beach. Serving with the lCknember Orange Coast contingent in 1973 will be: Alexandra Pauline Banigan, Beatrice Block, Ar I y I e McKenzie and William Ben- jamin Reed. all or Santa Ana. HARRY Clydt Barnes and Sophie Gendel, both of Fullerton, Keilh Davis and Margaret Ann Smith. both of Tustin and Joan Kathryn Rid· dle of Garden Grove. . . ' Walter Dick, a civil service commission investigator, was absent from the courtroom when his name was selected and the remaining 1 8 memben of the panel sworn in. County Cierk St John said Dick had already advised him that he was out ol the county on business. Dick will take his oath of office when be returns next week, the county clerk said . ministrative position Is esssen-from Judge MtDTay as the lial to efficient county govern-criminal calendar judge who ment." the jury report stated. will be the Superior Court's The supervisors were urged to llai:soo with the 1m panel. deal with all departments Only three of the 13 Orange Transit Officials through the CAO. It stated Coast residenb nominated for R L l H l that the CAO shouJd evaluate G and J rvlce failed to equest oca e all department h e a d s f~d ~in sethe panel sworn P regardless of their seniority. · by Count ~-~ William~ .,;.._-'llLQ -y ~· ~-----On envtronmenland-platF St John. SANTA ANA -Offlcials of pedestrian access to sidewalks ning problems, the report said the Orange C.Ounty Transit be banned. that "the lack of overall plan· m VINE, Orange County's District say they are having nlng of land utilization , toning, newest city, has two represen-trouble · providing buS service DISTRICT General Manager open space preservation and latives on the Grand Jury, In some parts or the county Gordon "Pete" Fielding said piecemeal annexation are Newport Beach and Hun-because pedestrians can't get verbal' wnununication with widespread." tington Beach have three to bus stops. various governing bodies had The 1973 Grand Jury was each, Fountain Valley bas ooe District directors Thursday failed to achieve the results urged to study refuse disposal, and Costa Mesa, a city .that called on other public agenci es needed. He asked for the L. ltl. Boyd Mental Patients Short on Caneer- A novel ol avenge length Is abolll ball a mile long. Al lealll,_.f,...)'OUHYtl!-bop0 wp-end-jump ID·their lncl>long lllrides lo read the thing. AMONG MENrAL PATIENTS, cancor ii ·none too oommoo. To be esact;-only about one thinl as common a1 among die g~ population. Can you esplain Ill "YOU ASKED FOR the Hunter's Adage," writes a -... ~ .. , . . . ·~ '! ' • I kindly clieol "lt's this: 'Early lo bed ••• Early to rise ... HIUll like heU o o • And ma.Jee up lies. I " Q. "IT'$ KNOWN die P y gm y tribes in Alrica actuaUy Uve Ill meed- crws of marijuana and smoke it alJ the time. Any cllance that could be whal stunts lbelr growth?" A. Not likely. Tiie Watuol trlbe$- men smoke il all the tiote, too, and they grow ..... 1ee1 tall. \-"'~., t\ -~ ·1 .. v' ,. ~\ NICKNAMES -I like the way the old Frenchmen named their kings. Cllarles the Bald, Loots the ~mmeiw, O>arles the Simple. Why don't we show une ol thl>bhmt flair in nicknaming our presidents? How about Franklin the Proud, HlllT)' the Brave, DwiglX the Durable, John the Ek>quent, Lyndon the Wise, Ricbatd the Tenackius?-P.1ore accurate nomenclature comes to mind, but this is oot a political pillar. WHAT YOU CAµ a hope dlest, young lady, the Au· strallan girl calls a glory box ... ONLY ABOUT EIGHT cars out of 100 sold in this country are incapable of goUJ&: fast« than 90 m.p.b. ••• IF YOU HAVE a science-minded ' length when magnetized .•• YES, I SAID nobody can fold a piece ol paper in ball JO times, nobody .•• PLAY A PIANO TUNE backwards on a taperecorrler and it llOU1lds much like crgan music, doesn't It? AFrER DINNER -Collet, maybe ple, and somellm .. a taste of liqueur, that's the customary alter4inner repast hereabout., as yoo koow. It's different among_ llWllEr001I Asiatics. 'Ibey like to inhale their favcrite perfume. Akb digestlQn. Qui.., the nerves. They just sit !here for awliile, snllfing. IN THE ClVIL WAR, lour right arms were lost In oombat for ev<ry left arm. but four left legs, likewise, for every right leg. Why, f don't understand. It's a terrible thing lo try lo analyze, anyway. THE LENGm OF )'OW' root is the same as the distance from the crook ol your el-lo YOW: wrist line. Or at least " should be, according to some medicos. c.rtainly hope that fellow up in Everett, Wash., who c:liecks up on all these items, doesn't hurt himsell on this one • THE WGHBORN WIVES o1 Italy 2!0 yeon ago blmj male companions. Their husbands paid the tabs. Said com- panloo.9 escorted the ladies just about everywhere. ·So- ciety approved them. Our Love and War man docs not a~ prove now. Addres1 mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Bo:: 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. fo PL dt Bl UI st hl SI lh 01 tt l-----51 rr " t noise pollution, air pollution has produced few grand within the county to help do fonnal resolution. 'i'====================o:! and fire department con-jurors, has one. something about it The resolution also asks that -. .................... --...-...~--------~---~.-...-..- solidation. The lO Orange Coast A resolution to be sent to fprouturevemsetnreets t a1! hludeigbwayblm-u s r-4,.A-C..7.....,.~ ~-........, ~1~0---0 ...... 0~ &. The supmrisors were urged representatives on the panel in planning commissions and city .. .._ ., to appoint an open space order of community are: councils throughout the county loading zones so that the fri!t coordinator charged wit.h the HUNTINGTON B EACH : stresses the need for now of traffic in nonnal traf-ORDER >< specinc responsibility of im-Alice M. Bartlett, 1718 Pine St. sidewalks in new res.idential fie lanes will not be restricted. •• D.gutU..• plementing the open space and Nedree Doree Matney, developments and greater ac. Fielding reported an Im-{'. T""9 IT111 program and that the local 17951 Scotia Circle, both cess to skiewalks in com-provemeot in revenue per mile .,. . Stick-on park ordinance be amended to nominated by Judge Cbarlu inertial and ..industrial-area!. during November despite a YOU RS ' require eight acres of park A Bauer, and Kathryn Louise Tiie resolution passed by slight drop In patronage. The LABELS land per 1,000 population. Wallin, 6782 Baker Drive, transit directors also urges income figures were 22.7 cents that fences or walls in rtsiden-per mile in November, com- TTIE P R E S E N T re· tial areas that b I c c k ed I 21 9 ts i October T"DAV I ~~d{:~~1~.01!!" ~~es ill" ~Board -Okays ,..----------.....;pa_r_40-·-""~"~-· .... ~·'""-t· 1 j U · .-: .. - The jury said that no ""!· . uests for cancelalion of Full rt ag ricultural ·preserve e on agreements should be ap- proved. but •dded that the Care "-Itter pr~rve program should be \..A! phased out and additional open spate should be purchased. The complaint voiced during the year that the county's Theo Lacy minimum !eCUJ'ity facility wa.s not correctly operated was repeated In the On.al report . Urced was ,.,,...,Ung out ol drug of. fenden, erection or a block wall to ttplace the current fon<e and more frequent bead counts. FULLERTON -A con- troversial lease of larger quarters for the north county regiooal mental health team and a day care center in Fullerton has been approved by the Orang> County Board of Supervison by a :H -. · The lease calls for 6,590 square .feet of space for $2,32$.81 a mooth. 1be pro- perty owner ii Soutbem California F.dbon Company. THE JURY llld tt wu ~ Se\teral pr{vlte "startling lo fllld that lbe J>SYcbolotiols Ill the north county, aecond laflOll In the county area obl«ted to the state, 11 wllllout a publJc lo-en!Mlted quaden, orgulna formation olficer." It said the that ilia ....,1y Mental Healtli role lbould be .. aloatail and-O.porblllill wu vtolltlnc the U.t the supervisors make law Ill '.not ming printe clear lo the public Ila -lm'locl oll<nl. !or not lncludlnc IUCb a poai-Supenloor Rob&I Battin lfGll Ill lta.neJl IJud&ol, WU tbe lone board member Pment mecllo* lor lo-oppoalnc Uio llMe. THERE ARE OVER 100 WAYS TO FINANCE YOUR CAR ON COSTA MESA'S Harbar Boul9Vllrd of Car• LOOI POI THI IMUM Al CONNELL JJOHNSON & SON CHEVROLET Llncol~lile<cury 2121 2626 HARBOR aLVD HARaoR 9LVD. Penonallzed • Stylish • Effldetlt ~ For You,..Jf or 1 Fri.n.t M•y be used on envelopes 11 ,..furn tddress le.bell. Also v•ry hendy •s identificetiott l•bel1 for m•rkin9 P•"on•I items such 11 boob_ records, photos, etc. Libels stick 011 9le11 •nd m1y h• us•d for m1rkin9 home c1nn.d focCI items. An labels •r• printed ~ wi th stylish Vo9u• typ• on fjne quelity whit• 911mmed p•p•r. I ,,. .::;.::..,-;;:.:.-::. ., .. ,., 1 1 I HM P"""'9 L*I DI• .. P.O. ... lW. I ---·""' I I I I . I I · I L __ ~L~!-~R.!~!!tfL_J- ' Frio.J , JMUMY 5, 1973 DAILY PILOT ! Sex • ID IJ.s .•• 2:; Years Alter Kinsey By DA YID SMOTHERS BL 0 0 r.t I NOTON, Ind. (UPI) -The United States Is be8dlni toward a Scancl. inavlan style of more permis- sive, free and easy sexual behavior. Before that happeta, It is likely to be saturated with so much pornography and obee3- sion wllh sex that many Americans are likely lo get fed up. In the end, the country will be better of( tor the change. sociological prof,sslonals an 804-page acientlflc t r a c t prepared by a group ol researchers based on the Hoosier campus. TUE i'IJIST PRNl'ING was for jwt ~,000 copiea and the asking price lfU a stiff, for that Ume, fl.50. lt became one ol lbe best known boots or this century, but few now can recall lts exact tiUe. Mention ''The KI n s e y Report," though. and most people will know what you are research respectab!.!, clearing lht ground fur more recent eye-poppers such u Masters' and Johnaon'• ''liuman Sexual Response.•· • U anyone or anythlng is to be blamed for putting movles In the neighborhood theater you could have been arrested for seeing-a few yean ago, Klnsey and his work are a good place to start. Alfred Olarles KlMey died In 1956, largely the victim of his own stubborn b u t Institute lhlnk with justice they have a fair idea ol what has been happening In r<gard to their sub )«t. Gebhard, an anthropologlst •ho joined the Kinsey team in !Hf, llzed It up. "I think we're going to end up !IOmethlng like Scan- dinavia," he said. "This is a model which. by and large, strikes me as ., reasonably healthy one. • TllF. SUITE OF off1ces 011 the lop two noonJ of P.lornson lh&ll on the Indiana campus 1s reputed to contain the n1ost exhaustive collection of erotica in the world outside of the considerably m o r e venerable Archl\'es at the Vatican. trends "'1th anolher )'Ou11g •,roman l'l hcl IS II\ C'hur~l' of slag n1ovies. "'\'e get n1uch bttl('r quality the~ 1hl} s:· .'>ht' SRYS "Kathy," Gt>bhard asks a girl bus.y with a set of pic- tures, "have you_ ever y,·on- dered v"hY the Europeans are fixated upon the but1 0<·ks. •Ki11•e11 111 or,. d thh•g• by ltl yenr• or •ome1f1i119 like Playboy. The \ lsltor IS greeted at II ouuct by a large poster of vt•ry purposeful Dracul Along ttkl way in the llbnl! ~e are other approprla! ~ten, one advertising movie r Alled "Fanny Iii Meelc; lht.• llcd Baron. another l·hiefly rememben ror ils depict ion of qui l'Qpulat1on. mESE, ROUGHLY, are the predictions of Soqle people who should know on this, the more or lets official 25th an- niversary of what is quite vaguely known as the scxuril revolution . 'I tlalnk tee're going to ettd up some- thing like Sca1uu-.,1a. "For a while , y,·e'll go through th\s chaos. this obsessh·e ir\terest in sex, flooded y,·!th pornography. Then I think y,·e'll get a little bit fed up with it and Sl'ltle dOYt'TI and things \YiU probably be healthier in the long run." There was a time, in whRI l!I loosely called the P.lcCarthy era. when U.S. customs in- spectors tried to plug a steady stream ol scholarly and or l!tillating books, suggestive Romnn artifacts, bold African carvings and similar whatnot from reaching Bloomington. ''''''·. Now , no one cares much except Gebhard and his In· y,•hJJe Americans arl' pr1 n1ari· The rnan 111 charge 1 photographrng the variOI rMn1festatlons of humankind st•xual past work s beneath h 1>1111 warn1 111111 quite C'O 1 l'11l10'nat port rail of his wi1 and C'luldrcn. The people at the Institute for Sex Researrh on the cam- pus of Indiana University here did not even koow the silver anniversary was coming up until a reporter menlioned it. Dr. Paul H. Gebhard, the in- stitute'& director, twitched his hussar-style mustache ai'ld said, "We'll have to buy a bot- tle of something and break it out." It was on Jan . S, 1948, that the publishing firm of W. B. ---Saunder-i,--Bpecializing-in medical textbooks, offered to select clientele of medical and talking about -even if they are not able lO spell out "Sex- ual Behavior in the Human Male," by Kinsey, A.C.: Pomeroy, W.B., and Marlin. C.E. It was the book which told in intricate detail bow people in America engage in aex, with whom, with what sezes, how late in life and how early. It was the book which started Americans -and peo- ple around the world -talking and th inking about sex in a manner they had never done be(ore. IT WAS TJIE BOOK which in many ways made sex SALE! GREAT REDUCTIONS 20°10 • 50°10 off vulnerable character, his "''eake.ned heart and char°ges tha t his work was an insult to American womanhood and a tool of Commur.ist machina- tiom: to BQften the moraJ fibre of America. "I CAN UEME~1BEll, \\'hen our first book ca1ne out , some joornahst came in and, said, 'I'm sorry, \.\l' can 't even write a story about thi s. You can't put words like mastur- bation in a family newspap<.11'." "I don 't think we're If Kin9ey's name hangs on respon!ible for these sexual in the n1emory of most Americans over 30, the changes. That voould be too lnslitute-M Sex Researeh (it f.'gotistical. I think y,•e v.•ere the result of a great trend that sex RESEARCHER Or. Paul Gebhard was never called the Kinsey \.\'as moving. Institute ), does not. That is "If Kinsey hadn't existed Kifisey reports on St>xual just as ":ell with. the there would have been some-behavior on men and women. researchers in Bloomington, one like him sooner or later. "\Ve'vc !f.'arned 1nore about who are quite .happy they have "I think he moved things by lh<' physiolog~ of sex in the slopped shocking people. ______JQ _years_.c11'._somethi.ng uli~keo__,,.la~st l.Q-)'.Cars .since._____M_til rs THAT DOES NOT mean that, which is an enormous a11d Johnso n than v.;e've known they have stopped Kinsey's impact for one man." 1n atl the preceding titne," work. They are still at it, on a Gebhard was generous Gebhard s~icl. budget of more than $200,CKK> a enough lo assign something of "HILL llAS AL\\'AYS been dustrlous curators. ly interested in the hrl·;1st~" "'Ve ge t the stuff in all sorts Ka thy givt"s a l·heerfl1l of ways ," he said . "Like some shrug. guy know~ he's going to die THE LlBRARY rI'SELF is pretty soon and he passes his much like an~· \lbr;1rv JU~t collettion oo to use so his y,·ite books: the works of !he ~1 ar­ won't know aboul It. We 've got quis de Sade nestling agau1st just about everything there." the complele bound copies of "Appart'ntly we'\'f' ju ~<'ratched thl' surface of thi~ c;C'bhnrd sa y~. "Som1~ pcop \\ill sav of sex rescarc· '\\ hf.'n ~rt you AOlng 10 1 fuushed \.\'Ith tlus?' To nlf.' ii tikl• asking a chen11st. '\Vht an.• )OU go ing to be throu~ \.\'1th chc1nistry"' ON A TYPICAL day.a cou -l r;;;;_.-_.-.----'Vtwport Ffl~hlun•·---...,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; pie of scholars fron1 out of HONG ~ONG town may be sitting ·at the reading tables, bonmg up on bawdy storie s from the medieval Chinese or the sex life of the Navajo. A studious, att rac tive graduate student .sorts and catalogues the latest ship- ment" of tar-out mlijf.iltnes; "\Ve 've got a guy who goes out and buys th en1 by the shelf full." Gebhard says, proudly. CUSTOM TAllOIS ,flMANEHT IN SANTA ANA ......, 1.1-c .. i. .. - 2 '°iilrr'S' s135 ,_,. ·--· • -.... ,i ... fAU Ull ltt. lllOllll l o.....i.· , ...... ···~~.. ..~ o...... w..r .... •1 •S Silk -If ,,. ... If •2 S ..... k1llR ,,,,,,,f~ ... !Ilk We.I • ., .... II t• c ... ~-· ....... •1 u 1 ............... 110 ,. SALE SAVI UP TO 5°"' o" Cwt•"" -.. 111....- iport(••••· Jlodt1, lhl"• •WI fl1 ANT 1111 year largely supplied by the the same sort of role to Rove'rnment. "Playboy" inagnate Hugh \'f.'ry direct ;U'ld it's both his "'"" -... • .... , -=a: ffi o•nT •-• H ( h H r.1 H f virtue and his vice -it's only 1000 ,uus1 1M'°'1tto ,_-; --saf . ._. If. for some reason, you are e ner, . w ose. · · e ~er his vice. in the sense that it woolUts • 1101s tUMPAT 10-s sitting in a homosexual bar a F~undallon Is listed ~y the •m-"YOU CAN GET a set of fw .t.,..i11t_... ......_ 133-0211w 133-0ltl Another is sifting through explicit photographic studies of lesb ian sadism. • ANT snu COf'tlD •fill ALTllATtONJ ™'" .......... 10 • shtule as one of its more doesn't help publu: relations. iust _tUTMW ai.vtt. '"'"• .,., '""'" _. yea r or so ago in Indianapolis, . "llc'l\ say, 'All right . to cure eight of those for S5 in Los f.1t ., ~i.... """'· ... "" Pi.,it , _ _..,, Chicago or San Francisco and noted benefactors. people of prernature ejacula-Angeles," Gebhard comments. ~.':::.~ ~~ ~ .. ~;. ~"','.; S::-~ ~~;,~= the person oo the next stool WRYLY, BUT WITll a ·lion. you 've ii:ot to have a ,~H~c~~d:is~cu~s:s:"~;.c:i~ncrn~a~t~ic~=:;::;~~~~~=~~~=~~~===~~§~ began asking about your sex touch of respect. Gebhard partner If th('y don't have a -- - -~--------- life, he {or she) might have recalled how Hefner . his partner w('·u get 'cm a had a personal motive. editors and his lawyers. 1nov-partntr.' · F A C NQT JUST A JOB Or he (or she ) might have ing "very calculatedly, rC'ry :\1astl'rs. inlCP1iewcd bv Or . aree r • • • been an emissary from the in-cleverly,'' first won "lhe bnt-!"Pl currespondt'nt Donal(! stitute, interested in nothing tie of the breast" end then HC'rn s 1n ·St. Lou is. v.•as BE A ''WOMAN IN WHITE'' more than a Jong. talk. co~ censors' acceptance of the re\·erential in his praise for ducted aloog the strictest prin-showing of pubic hair. the original Kinsey reports. ciples of scientific polling. Hefner and his competitors but had reservat ions about This is the current major in the slick girlie magazine "'hat has happened in Bloom- enterprise of the institute -a game "certainly pick up what in~ton since. behavioral study of homosex-the public's interested in and "The Kinsey Report is a uals based on 1,000 separate reinforce that int er es t , ' ' quarter of n century out of fltcom.t:. • MeJical or D,.nlal AJsUtanl in 4 or 7 r11ontlu. interviews and due for Gebhard said . datC'," he said. "and the ON publication next year. Gebhard was unrcs('rved in tra~cdy is that there haven·1 his regard for the St . Louis-bc<!n any similar studies sinct NlW CLAS SIS STARTING January 8 ·January 22 SUITS-SPORT COATS AFTER 1\10RE THAN a based team of Or. William H. that tin1e. It \\'oulri be of e\'en Lifetime Placement Assistant• 623 W. 17th, SANTA ANA 541-4461 KNIT SLACKS.-DRESS SHIRTS quarter century's preoccu-~1<1sters and Virginia Johnson. more value if son1cone .,.,·ere lo pation with sex. Kinsey and whose report on how sex ac-repeat the study nol'I'. \\'hat is SPORT SHIRTS his associates began research~f,tiu~a~l\y~w~·o~rks~~ra~iseid~a~l~mos~t~a~s~~rc~n~1~ar~k~a~bl~c~i~s ~tha~t~t~he~K~in;se~J~'~~~~~~~;;;§~'~"~'~...,.~·~s~1~,"~'~"~"~"~"'~'~'~"~'=====~~~~~~~j---J on "Sexua l Behavior in the many hack les as the first Report was ever done. -~------W=A,,S"-'-_,S,_,,LA=C,,K,,,Sc_,... _____ -fJt-~H~u~m~a¥n'ffiiM~aljle .. ",,,..;in;r,r,'946iu.g•;;;ynd --- )467 VI• Lido, N.-port l•ach 67).4510 ,. . . , News Subpoena Bill Planned Capitol Ne~·s Service SACRAA-1ENTO -Legisla- tion ~·ill be introduced this monthbyAssemblyman William T. Bagley (R-$an Rafael) to stop use o( the "subpoena duces tecum" to obtain news information gathered by newspapers, radio and television personnel. This type of subpoena re- quires the served indivkluaJ to bring certain documents at the time of a court appearance . Centinela .Bank still pays the highest interest • J . on savings. 4~% interest per annum accrued daily and paid quarterly on regular passbookaccounts.'oe- poslt by the 10th-interest paid from the 1st. - And offers 3-\Va)' Time Savings l)assboolis to I11dividuals ru1d Businesses. 5%01 1nttre1t per anrium 5~ % 1nter111 per •nnum 5 % lntere1t p1r annurry /{) on saving• left on 11vlng1 lttl on 11vlng1 ltft ~ forll: y11rs. for 1 yeer. for 90 d1y1, •interest to 6~ % per annum on CertHicatn of Deposit of $100,000 or mon! Now-with one passbook-you can choose any combination of these interest r8tes you wa nt. Just $500 gets you sterted-split any way you li ke. Then you can make additional deposits any time of $50 or mo re. Quarterly interest is automatically added to your account end compounded or will be malled to you on request. 3-Way Time Saving gets you the most·,lnterest for your money, Stop in at any Centlnela Bank office for complete lnform~tion. Accounts Insured by F.D.l.C. llJ~:~/fil~nk Soutri: Bay/1103 Aviation, Hermosa Beach/372·210'2 Pl1y1 del ftey/a111 w. Manchesler/BZ)·9281 -port-8M<l\13333 W, Coast Hwy./6'6-7121 -And soon in Huntington Beach Simulated TV pictu1e - You'll al ways enjoy maximu m viewing comfort, because the ccnven1ent swivel base keeps you "front row center" -whereve1 you sit in your room. NOW ONLY II diagonal Automatic -Fine Tuning Color Swivel Console Witfi -th is outstanding Color TV value you'll enjoy perfectly-tu ned, precise pictures-on every channel, every time ... because Magnavox·s Instant Automatic Fine Tuning always "remembers" to keep each station signal locked in-automaticall y! Compact and space-saving, this beautifully styled console will add charm to your home .• , while bringing you superb Magnavox Color viewino. Ava ilable in Contempora ry, and • ¥e~itenaneanstyling . DON'T BE SATISFIED WITH A SMALL COLOR TV WHEN YOU CAN HAVE A BIG SCREEN SWIVEL CONSOLE FOR ONLY t f •\'Z~\ f ! t _4_0_1 -M-A-IN-ST-R-EET-= 2 1;;;;;;0-...:.D_D_N~-"J-ES_T_&_W_A~R~N-l R.., HUNTINGTON BEACH ll'll G HUNTlNGTON BEACH Service & Sales 511 Sales Only 536·7561 tOCATIONS 842-559 6 • .· •• I • -- ' I • . '. ' Whooping Cranes_. Decline WASHINGTON (UPI) - A year ago, the last r~aining flpclt of whooping cranes pum bered 59. ~. jba -bas shrunk to 51: • The decline of eight In the population of lhe rare white and black birds was reported ( ANIMM.S J by Dr. J oseph .p, ~i uaociate' dlreclor,~ ot UJJ: Bureau of Sport"~ and Wildlife. 1 .' Llnduska de'"'ib••I' -u.e decline as "disturbing-,but In no way catastrophic." ~ said the flock declined by six fl'o!!1 ,, ' 38 to 32 In 1116%, then lncreeseil by 10 in two years. : "We would like to see the trend cooUnuing upward in- definitely but these minor set- bacta are to be e:1pected with wild populations," Linduska said. e Eagle Homes BOISE, Idaho (AP) -Four of the 13 wOunded eagles for which Gov. Cecil D. -Andrus sought new homes have been sent to zoos and sanctuaries ' throughout the Uniled States. 1bree others, too mutilated for public display, have been -to a wildllfe refuge. -~~·-v. FWieries ooe n eagle each n ' -. to zoos in Norristown, Pa and Batoo. Rouge, La., and ~e Hawt Mountain Sanctuary at Allentown, Pa. • A bald eagle was sent lo Patlw!nt Wildlife Research Center In Laurel, Md. e 'Bim' Born PHOENIX, Aln. (AP ) The orangutan population In ~ United Stales has in- crellsed by one willy 1he birth · of •Bim/~ a fotr-pdund boun- cing boy ,'atJ~ -~hoenlj< Zoo. Zoo officials 11111d llim Is the second offspring of Ben and DutclleSs, two of tile zoo's ~~---srpnt -4!'1"'kle; lllO -pubfi relailons 1-, said the or~'t m~ retused to catt .... fir him.so~ Was placed in an iDcubator In the zoo's Animal Care Center. 'Ille m:8ngutan ii the world's rarest primate and an en- <IMgOred llj)ecies, Arbuckle said. eGuest Herd DAiµs (AP) -Fiffy-lhree prize-wimUng G er ma n :'~ u..'i~ w;etbe'= Fairmont Hotel and _then taken by. elevatot . to the hotel's Regency Ballroom for auction. Four caUiemen bnported • _ -the-caUle, each .llailJed _..t '20,000 and upwards. Dr. Jim Sc ott . a veterinarian from Oregon, said the holel bad been selected inatead of a stDckyard because "this Is landmark .in the Dallas area ahd we want our t:1ttle to be it landmark. 11 eEetctDeri MIAMI (AP) -F'imnan John ·McElveen w~nt out to mow his lawn and spotted 1 box with a note on top saying: ••Pleue take care. of me." Inside, the Hialeab Fir< Depar1ment lieutenant found five small dlldta, But McElveen aald he and his wlfe Gloria have a pro-bleri:i. ,., . .... 'l!ley, ~ 1fave three dop, lndtldini • basaet bound -Sooop)' who batea ~ I m,uab bird, two pl!' rau, .-cat and 1 55-gallon _.tum fill~ ,with tropical IIsb. ' ''U we Id aDJ more Hiqalr, Wlft &OIDg lo bavt If lllt1\ 1111' J!llC8 lnlo I zoo," -(llrL !11~!'2'--'1 don1 --wllll-'l!m Fl"f lo-do Wltb u. ducb." aerylle sweater jackets 18.9$ \ • ., multl•eolor pant-tops 8.99 Dashi ng prints on polyester or acetate in e big, bright sleectio n of styles. Misse ·sizes 32 to 38 . So rry no mail or phone orders. Misses Sportswear, 66 /JK..~ Reg. $22-i W ing ~ollor, tob pocket styling on washable ; ecryliP, navy , red, iv ory. Sizes 36-42 . Not sh"*n: No tche d collar vers ion, 36-42, a·ssorted-colors.·. M+sses Sportsw8ar, 40 ~ ~ '· ~ ... >-' ' ~ young juniors' sweater.s, pants 4.99·5~99 Reg. $9-$1 I. Sweaters in assorted ' styles, colors, Jr. si zes S-M-L. 5.99. Reg. $7-$1 \_ Flores, boy-cuts. bikini-cut pents assorted colors, assorted fabrics, Jr. size s 5-13 , 4.99. Sorry, no mail or phone orders. Hi Deb Shop. 52 cheeked or solid wide-leg pants 17.99 Go long in cheerfu l checks or solid s in wa shable polyester. W ide-leg pants in hou ndstooth checks, block /wh ite, nav y, white, 8-16. Solids in red'. white, block. 8-16 . Misses Sportswear, 89 • plaid trousers for juniors 13.99 Reg. $19-$22. Quffed, plaid trousers in "!Q91/ny lon ble nd , come in orange/b rown/yellow, pink/ brown , blod /wh ite . Sizes 5-13 _ Mo;I ond phone o'rders invited. Junior Sportswear, 97 • '· sweater top~ knit. pant_s 5.99-8.99 Orig. $I 0-$1 2. ~sorted full foshioned nylon sweoters, 8-18, _5.99. Prop ortioned knit acrylic pants, sho~t~1-5<-,-­ ove roge 10-20, 8.99.- Street Floor Sportsweor, 65 save 1/3 callfornla. _go- togethers o.~1•.• . I • '. Reg. $15-$30. Tailored polyester , coordinates . , . -------~ ~ _,, ---,. ' jockets, pants shirts, skirts .' Sketched, ·Reg. $3 0 blazer, 19.99. Reg. $1 6 pullon pants, J D.00. Sorry no mo if or phone orders. I Active Sportswear,_ 78 --. _._ ORANGE, MALL OF OU.NG~ . " ANAHEIM . NEWPO~ HUN'rl N&TON lfACH CERRITOS _lJQO N. TJH_titt..Str1.t_tlJ.f.LJtl·lll ~--4JJ N.-.Ewcltd-171.4.J_JlUW •thk:.11, li l•11d (7 11> 6§1.1211 .l.27--Lld""t.,. AvMI,. 71--4~ t92~1J.,l---·SOO brC.rritos~M·•tt ttll) 160;f4T SHOP 10 A.M. te 9tJO ,.M. MONDAY tHAOU&H FRIDAY. SATUADAY 10 A.M. +. • P.M. SUN OAY 12 NOON to 5 '·"'· • 1 , , l ··-- 1 ) . ' • • ' o. c..e.llo Mn.--.-,... at tl>o be Orae C...01)' YOUl!I C.... oorU, llwti-bAILYPILOT~ """" at the -at 1ppnctatloo written by aludents alt<r lhelr new cultural u-......._ ... IJZC<'T'tl· hicllld<: '•tnank. vou /or Lettiag u.t go tcr tM conctf'C and tht conductor ICfd eue-rvthing Miu Blo1'Mt .sakt The in- strumen t I liked tltt bes& wai cht cello." "Thot """ • /uf• concert. I liked it. m tht concert I could'n't see beca&t.Ye you pul all 111.e bfg pcoJ>le hi our way , but I could hear.'' ';Tltank you for putting on tht con· cn-t. I really enjoyed it, attd. I 'tltvtr k1~w how good tl&at kind of nnaic was. At fl r1t l thought it was terrible. but now I think a lot more of it.'" "lt was fun and pretty. 1 en;oyed it uery much. I liked tht way they played the music. A.'tld ic loolud likt it was i1t very aood or<Ur." "Tha11k you for 03ki119' u.s to tlu~ program. Tilt Los Angeles Pl1Ul1ar· m0t1ic Orchestra plays very well. I'm glad. you let tts go to set tl1em.'' "'Tllank yo u for organizi11g and paying f or a c0t1cert /or sixth grade students. Also that1k the L.A. Pl1il- harmonic Orcllestra for putting on tlte concert. The anti.ouncer did a good job of cr11nouncin9." Young music lovero write and draw reactions to free concerts. • Concerts Orchestrated As a cultural enrichment p:"Oject for cowity studentB, the Orange County charge, a series of youtlt concerta. This i5 the 17th aeason fot the series, and this year alone six concerts with two performances at each re~ched almost so percent of the 60,000 fifth and sixth graders 1n the county. While tlli5 15 almo<t clouble the au- dience reached last year. the continual aim of the society is to increase the num- ber of concerts and audiences. To reach this gool , more funds are needed annually. The major share of money rai3ed £or this project romes from the annual spring fashion show and luncheon benefit. The event, entitled Fashion Concerto, Opus 15, will take place Wodnelday, &larch 21, in the Newporter loo. Follow- be from I. Magnia and jewels by Laykln et Cle. Advance invitations to patronesses are in the mall. Early reservatiOns are sug- gested 'and they may be made for tables of 10 with Mrs. Allan Browne. Special guests will Include community leaders, celebrities and condurtors of the youth concert series. Serving on the benefit planning COin· mittee are · the ~1mes. Michael Brick. chairman; Robert Lee, production chairmad': J.1. LyeU Evans, co-chainnan; G. ~l. Von Burger, decorations; 11omer Reed, 1favon; Richard Newell, hostesses. and Ralph Tandowsky, advisor. Others are the r.imes. John Virtue, Richard Pauley. J ames Sawyers, \V. J . Kalman_ Spelletich Jr. ··Come Rehearse With Mehta '' is the first invitation for 1973 from the Orange County Philharmonic Society. Again combining youth and music, among participants boarding buses to at· tend a rehearsal of the Los Angeles Philhannonic will be music classes from se veral Orange County high schools. The Jan. 25 trip to the Dorothy C.'handler Pavilion at the fl.1usic Center. sponsored by the preview committee "''iii f e a tu r e attendint a rehearsal and luncheon in the Blue Ribbon Room where • concertmaster David Frisina will be honored guest. try C!Ub at 1:15 a.m. and participants wiU take their aeatt Jn the Pavilion at 9:45. Return trip will bring those at· tendin1 home to the coast by 3: 15 p.m. Reservations r.r the tour should be made by Jan. 20 and further information is available through the Orange County PhUharmorue Office. Along with concerts and lectures, the Philhannonie sponsors a ir'CIUQ of Newport Beach and Corona del Mar music students who have become active in fund-raising and act u ushers for scheduled events. Mn. Seth Oberg chairs the junioc group. PIED PIPER-Like the stmied Pied Piper of Hamlin, Mrs. Seth 0 b e r g demonstrates that where there is mu- s.ic a~ youthfuJ, .• audieoce• can't be far behind. Mrs. Oberg is piping an invitation to a Jan. 25 rehearsal of the Los Angeles Philliannonic with Zubln Mehta con- ducting. Entbuslastic acceptance is shown by Cathy Collins· and Denise Doering Oeft to right) wllo model usher· ette costumes. ' .. . . • .. " . ll!A ANDERSON, Editor .. , ... , ....... .,,. .. ltn , ... lt Plof Unearthed Last Rights Read DEAR ANN LANDERS: Doel a person have corjtrof Oftr his remains? ~ need to know the answer. It ls driving me crazy. I have a terTible fear that no mailer what l SS)'., my husband will do things HTS way. All my life I've had to follow hi! mother'a orders. I was always "that ter· rible girl who .st.ott Mr 80n.'' (He watt 26 at the llme. 1 wu 18). ~fy mothel°"in-la.w Jived with us for 2S years, ran our lives and made our home hell I am not in good health and want the peace of mind of knowing that even though J could never do lhlnp the way I wanted to when J wu alive, I can al least have my Wt wl5h granted. I want to be buried with my kin. My late mother-tn-law put in her will that she wanted to be buried in the fami- ly plot and two places were to be saved ~si~ ~er -one for her ~son ang ope fl!r me. I'm perfectly ,,,.illifii to ha,•e her be buried wherever she ~ases, but I don 't thlnk she has the right to make such a decblon for ME from her erave. Is there any way I can make SURE 1 get my way about tlus? -RE!lr IN PEACE DEAR REST: Yet, tlaere II a way - Of I lMlpe 1" will ltllow ..... 11- tl>w..-" ,.. -UVE bi peoct 11 weft u rut II puce. Here lt Hf •a1 to do ff: Ct...it • lawyer and 1 flDel'al 'lreder ud Uve u a~t ilnwt vp tMt weal• e.,,, out ,.,.,. wblles. 8eod eoples to 1"' om.of~D ud lo I -fritod er TdlUv• ("' ,_ ......... ) ~ (11 J•r wW> N Ille_,_,. .. 11 .. II ..... tt IN '-nl .,.. ,...,_ •. Alter ,_,,. ... 6111, ... a. _,....J __ , DEAR ANN LANDERS: I hne reld your column every day for yean and have le.a.med a lot from )'OU. But ~ are cenaln things you can't put ln the paper, 1t least I hlven't ,... l!htt I noed to know yd . What -Id )'OU la)' aboot I flli who ls al.raid kl Co on her honey._! OUr -. dlnf d* ls cirt"1n( near IJld I llll ' scared stiff. I wa' always a mrpectlblt: girl and I still am . Several months ago my liance tried .sometbln1 on me am I told him J was very disappointed ln him. He never got out of line after that. Now I doo 't know what I'm suppoted to do and I'm arraid our honeymoon wW bt a big failure. Please, AM, some advice. -APPREHENSIVE IN JUNEAU DEAR AP: Don't worry, ltHey. Yter lluce 1'ill ditu of -001111. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Another '""11 to that fool who dkln't want to lnvlte on eplteptle to her daughU<'• Weddlnc. Old you know that the Epilepsy Foundation did a survey recently and discovered tha\ ..Jhe ..majority or lhe . people quest~ would rather have ulcers, arthritis, heart disease, an amputated Umb, canoer, stroke ~ blindness ? TI1e survey also showed that employes will hire wheekhair ~. e1~. TB rJ!<QV.,...., the deal ud tho blind ahead of epileptk:a. 1 New medlclllons ue being d ... lepod to help coolnll epile!><Y but the ~, doesn 't stop with the publtc. MlftJ phywl- ctans don't know enough about anti-con· vuisanl!. An)'-ont who "'ants to know who .the kno\\1cdgea~ docton are can write to the Epilepsy r oundation at America. 111& L St-. N.W .. Wuhington, ·D.C. -· 'Ibey ha1,-e a naUomride list. B<!ften two ud three mlllllll Ameriaonl lllller from tlli5 U'-, Ind tbe... probebly wm be 11 lout ..,. "dooet ~ .. It that _,.,. tho young cousfn WU not IDvUed to bec:Jpi. • the bride's mother wu 1lrlld be m1"ht have a !it and llCal< the ll\IUll. Sien me -MARRIED TO ONE DEAR M: MllJ' tbolco. I _,. ...aft4s tt letlon • WI tUl*d, no ............... .......-. - "-Hr ... toc. ,_, .... ·- J J Z DAILY ~ILOT Foicioy Jk 5, 1'7l Positive Boost May Save Isolated Women LINDA MARTIN By_CARQL MOORE of .. IMlllr ,.... SfaH On paper, Adelaide lltl(lyN? and Linda Martin tlOuld live the liqukt detera:ent 0twfm11 •llo118 competlllon. One volunteers her poychlalrlc nursing skills at I.he Free Clinic, walks (our miles a day on the beach and answers the ll<>' L. I n e overnight. Tha olher t"()IJNels draftees. plays tennis for lunch and partldpatu In a consclou,,ness-ralslng libera- tion group in Santa Ana. The fact that lt1rs. DeKlyne is 73 and Mrs. ~1artin is 2:6 In- dicates the srope of the UCl Women's Center 'a new Program Reach -Olli. for which bolh women are study· ing to be facilitators -•·a more supportive connotation than moderators." "We want the groups to -be close-knit, warm, emphasizing self~n(ide.nce. Positive at· tltudes help women openly give of tbe.lme.l~.'' Mrs. Martin said. NOl" ALONE Mn. Dt!Qyne a d d e d , "lntervlewa at lhe Fr<e CllllC have shown me lhat individual counseling ii not always the answer rot people who feel aUenated. They need a reJa· Uonshlp with others to relieve the desperatloo that they are the 'first person' in thelr aituaUon." lkeides b u s y schedules. the Mmes. DeKlyne and ltt&rtin share a coocem for people wbo feel iJ<>tated In today's society. Therapy is a word the womeo avoid, refer- ring Ins tead to en- couragement. Projed Reach out involves pera-professionals with this positive attitude h e I p i n g women or m\ddle age unravel role ambiguity. The usual mental health pl'oblems and family pressures are further com- plicated for the 165,200 lemaln be'-11 l:s and M In Orange OMmly because '<JI high moblllly ol the popoltllon and lack of klnlblp Uea and eommunlly stabUity. MATCIUNG UP Y ct many In thla la!Jel group are unaware ot e1t1Ung therapeuUc and 1 o c i a I reoour«>, a"' [llYOhologlcally Immobilized or have ~ been frustrated in attempts lo match commu;llity services to their need>. Under lhe new program, racllltators will meet weekly in neighborhood groups of about 10 women to talk about their concttns -relations "''ith men, other women, children. work; what makes them reel good or bad, and what to do about all this. Nobody is going to tell anyone else what to do. Each woman will decide her own goals. according to the project prospectus. With iU free classes or group mee~ under an educ1tiona.I rJtber than a medical or mental health unr brella, Reach Clul will start In the oprfni quarter o! 1173. PREPAllATION In the meantime. f1cWtator1 are attending claSSH In ' sex iole1 in contemporary society, group coumellng for women, criJl.s Interventi on and tmerien<:Y rel'tfraJ plus cue work seminars. 11lf we can just get the women lo move ool of their doldruml and rome to these ses.sk>os," mused ~t r s . Deklyne, a retlred psydUatrlc nurse wbo views tbe project as a "'clwn to crystalliu and improve the techniques I do know." As a volwiteer far tbt lfot Line and Telephone Tree. she admits to wondering at limes "whatever happens to those people who call, alone and frighlened al 3 a.m." Her remedy for lonely detachment is -"keep yourself moving" and ahe ·cootendl women are no1 dqwued alone but by their cblldrtn. Mn. Martin even quetUons whether lhe nuclear lamUy Isn't llJOlated, too. She would like to aee more lnt«cban&e allowing people to nt Int<> more roles and be of 1reatu asal&t•nce to· ucb other. Women's Lib i1 •~ ol her sktellnes for htlplng peo- ple rtl In. Asked lO proofl<ad a campus manual for students, she wu instrumental in get· ting lbe won11ng cba"itd lo "be or sht" and "hJm or her.'' And she has been lnvolvtd lo Chicano and black studies ~ grams, an e.z.perience abe con- siders applicable b e ca u a e most women must adjust to role patterns and legal stan- dards set by white males. ....,._~...s; She believes her youthful perspective will give tbe target women new attitudes a.bout the ir inner expectations and what really is required of !hem. ADELAIDE DEl<l YNE Pat to Wear Green Enrichment Extended ;.Gemini: Being Flexi.-=b~le.___1--f-Or-/-na1;,1gufatien,___.__To Etiminafe--SOredom Your Horoscope Sh Id B Y K NEW YORK (UPl)-Flrst Lady Pat Nixon's Ou e Our ey inauguration day wardrobe will be a soft green, chosen with color television in mind, Women's Wear Daily reported today. SAl'URDAY JANUARY 6 By SYDNEY OMARR LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22 ): Accent Is on relationships with opposlle ""· Key Is to be creall\le, receptive without being Impulsive, foolish. Strive to comprehend need> of young persons. P 111 c e 1 individual makes unusua,1 request. Don't cast first stone. belpin« bind. Key ls ,ta be persuasive without being in-' sistenl. Debts are paid, col· lected. Oider per!K)n expresses gratitude for recent favor. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Lunar cycle is such Owt your judgment, tntuiUon are on target. Take intialive. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Make new contacts. Welcome Prepare for obstacles. Those challenge. Be open to ad- who care the most may ap-venture of discovery. Personal pear to place roadblocks ln magnetism now at tr a cl B your path. Older 1ndlvldual Is members of opposite sex. fearful that you are neglec-ting details. Demonstrate, ii-PISCES fFeb. 19-March 20): I I --..i .a..ui Activity indicated in con· ustrale Pana ~ mell_.s. junction with hospitals, special Then vou gain moral support, financial backing. groups and organiiations. Be f1exlble. Provide cheer for SAGJ'M'ARIUS lNov. 32-one who i.s temporarily in-- Dec. II): FUU.h project capacltated. Sagtuarta could -ARIES (March 2l·Aptil 19): which baa been .If.ft hang~. play key role. Broaden Y~ are romantic now and !it~ ~ake slJll(Jcant prog-horizoru. Leo reacts well under fire. )\lhere there Is pressure. the 'f..eo ha live comes through with proverbial flying colors. The individual born under this !Odlacal sign often gets pushed tO the wall -but Leo surges back on the rebound. Lea is romantic, creative. exhibits a tendency to be extfavagant and recently went through emotk>nal pressure oooker. January and October could be cxiut.aoding months in 19?3 for Uo. mqlnatiorl. Imprint atyle: DAY you have unusual voice, refuse to be diacoW'•led ·by -Let otherl know. YoU will-be: are fond of music. will com· one who ls wet blanket. Leo da;ntjng to Xo'Jf own tune . plete important project in 1'73 layJ prominent role. Caltc~ ldea1 can be developed into d A 'II be t ~ nAf •ld im. pose. restrlc-valid concepts. Submit fonnat. an ugust WI your-mos ...--~--.. v.o significant month. You heve a Ung influence. Key is to be In· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan. good idea of where you are The trade publication for the garment In· dustry said that Jeremy Wren was making the First Lady's outfit, described as a soft velour· type wool dyed a shade between aquamarine and jade. • II described the coat as having a notched sable collar. The dress, dyed to match, will be in wool crepe with long narrow sleeves, a round neck· line, and a softly gathered skirt with a match· ing fabric belt, said WWD. Henry Friedricks is n1aking Julie Nixon Eisenhower's outfit, a rose-raspberry roat and dress. And Tricia Nl:<on Cox "is thinking about., a soft apricot costume. A spokesman for Fried.ricks ·confirmed it was mUing an oullit for the President's • younger daughter. But the other firm men· tioned bad no immediate comment. e woman who helps the Nixon women shop, Claire Treyz, said any details on the inaugural cloth es would have to come from the White House. The inauguration will be Jan. 20. dependent. 19 ): Money, security -these going even though you often TAURUS (April W.May 2tll: are highlighted . Check budget. permit yourseU to be'-------------------- Accent ls on overcoming Can~r individual can lend ~ sidetracked. By MICHAEL GOODRICH Of flte 01llJ 'llet lllff Peggy Staggs can remember when ahe used to Iron her children's-socks to fill up her Ume as a housewife. Today Mrs. Staggs is a history professor at Golden West College in Huntington Beach. She also is \'ery con· cemed about the boredom that confronU the a v e r a g e homemaker in her everyday duties. "Women need to break the routine of home and children. You Nath. the point when you decide this isn't as important as being yourself," 11y11 Afrs. Staggs. ~1r1. Staggs is one of a _group of women who is work· ing wllh Golden West College Dean of Affain Dale Miller to establish programs that will enrich the tives of housewives. Though still in the planning stages, they . hope to set up dlSCUS!ion groups and recrea- tional activities to b r i n g homemakers away f r o m diapers «Jld dishes. "The ¥."hole idea is to get women out of their homes once in awhile and Into a stimulating situation," says ~tiller. Ideas being considered by obstacles. Gain i! indica.ted, especially through deah~gs with professlonal superior. Alm toward goat Be aware of future requirements. Repair property . Eliminate safely Timely Topics Attact Attention on ~·· GEllUNI (May2t.JUI"' ~\: , Bethel 15.7 Floxlblllty tboUld be key · ou Bethel IS7 Job's Daughters may be puzzled about dlrec· . ' T k course which allows of New.port Beach wlll honor ti:· to8 be ·versatile. Exhibit Miu Cindy Tuz.. past honored ~e or-· Give !ull·ploy ,queen ol the belbel wbo CUI' 1 lell""""' c:urloslly. 5"1)1--renUy Is the grand bethel ~ ~~ ,J;Ybe ~olved. ,:enta_Uve to Saskatch- CANCER (June 21-July 22), A formal .-.cepUon b plan· Eschew shortc ut s. Be ned al 2 p.m. Sunday, Jan . 7, tborollg)I. especially where In-In the New[>Ort Beach Masonic vestments a r e concerned. Temple. LB GOP board room of the Laguna Beach SChool District building. Mrs. Hope will speak about her recent trip to the South Pacific and will show sketches in oil, watercolor and pencil m~de on the trip which tn·, eluded sjops in Samoa, Fiji, Bora Bcfa and 'fahlti. Alpha Xi Delta Interested persons may o.~ tain an aPplication form from ~1rs. Ross A\lslieger, 17335 Santa Barbara, Fountain Valley. Lido Women .Actively interested i _n furthering public interest in Indian arts and crafts, Dean currently is working with the San Diegb Museum of Man, the Navaho Tribal Museum . He will wear an outstandlng collection of Indian jewelry when he appears .. Welcome Wagon Lake Park Clubhouse wUI be the meeUng place for Welcome Wagon Newcomers the group include outings to special cultural e'lents, kaffee klatch discussion groups led by a professor, special counseling on career op.- portunlties for women and a class on Lbe American woman, taught by Mrs. Staggs. One problem the women feel they face is getting housewives to take advantage of the activities that will be of- f ere<L "Women are afraid of the word college. lt"s a situation where there i.s going to be communication and they are not sure if they will Ht in," says ~lrs. Staggs. "They feel safe and secure in thtlr home but they've been removed from the outside 14-"0rld and the transition is hard to make.'' adds Francine Freedman, a member of the steering committee. Jn order to attract housewives back to the cam- pus, Miller and hb group plan non-competitive and com- pletely aimed at permitting the housewives to pursue their own interests. They also are not tying their program in with the women 's liberation movement. "We're not trying to make women more militant but rather offer them the chance Peggy Stagg• to be more independent so they can be themselves," says Estelle Beri sh. .. can reel more self-fulfilled, her family and especially her children \11ill benefit,'' add1 Miller. Miller and his plaMing group hope to have their pro- grams in action by February. Anyone i n t ere s·t e d in parHclpatlng can contact him at Golden West College. Club Circuit Nutrition Aid e• Orange County !\fedical Center is seeking women who can volunteer as nutrition aides to counsel patienls in the clinic irea on ~e general nutrition and c o,n sumer eeonomics. ,. • Empalhy and cOrnpaulon ror the paUenl and willingness and ability to help are the key quallncations for the volun· tee.rs who will be trained ln a pre-sci-vice course two morn- ings a ~·eek for five weeks. Conducted by a nutritionist. the course will cover 15 Ways to Fight Fat, Saving Cents/ Sense While Shopping and Ho• t.o Give Your Husband an Ear-.. ' ly Jleart Attac~. · Those interested may call Mrs. Karen Owens at-633-9393, E1t. 684 or 683 before ~!onday, Jan . 15. Money affecting mate, pe.rtner is involved. ~e.m with hidden matters 1s 10- dlcaled. Aquaria and Scorpio play roles. Laguna Beach Women's Republican Club will meet at Z p.m. Monday, Jan. 8, In the Laguna Hills Mobile Park clubhouse. Speaker will be Vernon Spit.aleri and his sub- ject is entiUed · current Events. Applications for a $2500 graduate fellowship for ad- vanced study in social service are being accepted by Alpha Xi Delta, national social fraternity for 'A'omen. Projected looks In baJr slyl· Ing and rnak~up foi 1173 will be demoMtrated by Mr. Dean, co-director of Burtum'1 beauty . studios when he pre!e.nls the program Tuesday, Jan. 9. for the Lido !tie Woman's Club In theclu~. The speaker. a represen- tative of Elizabeth Arden 's Red Door, ls 1 member of the advisory boards of Golden w .. , College and the Unified Schools of Long Beach. Club at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~ Jan. s. Ir LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Change, variety of experiences _ these are stressed. You re- evaluate situation. Accent centers on marriage. relation! wtth public. Don'l lnslsl. cajole or chide. You will be provided Pen Women with necestary ln(ormatlon. Thelma Paddock Hope, a VIRGO {Aug. 23-Scpt. %1): Corona de! ~tar artist will ti.iaintain moderate J>a:Ce. Keep present the program for the With resolutions. 'fOu may Lagunp Beach Branch of the -f!e'I paT!.g t oT --.'"S'wCe1 lci6lh." Weigh ''arious (actors. If you, ljiiiiiOii-iiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii are a weight watcher, reln-r_-- force re90lutlons . Tau r • 1 , Start the Ne'#f' 1Jbrt persons play roles. 'Ye1r With fresh COSTUME Mens Wear The ahirt jacket >A' i t h eluticiz.ed wajsl and cuffs is a new feature from Admit One's holiday-spring collection (or mtn. It comes in vibrant colorati<m and ln mutM allover tones of I n c e n 1 e 0-o, Pomo Peach and 'Mcltet llelge. Oellgntd by MJchael Splnelll, !he jacke~ meant to be worn Q\ler other garmentl or by Itself, comes in small, medlum and large. -- UFFELL' UPHOLSTERY .... , .... Ille_ ,,. __ ----· JEWELRY··· ;· • Following a potluck !upper, ,_tel Free, a butcher will discuss cuts of beef and uwer questions. Cindy Tux National League of American Pen Women. To be eligible. an applicant must be a graduate of an ac- credited college or unh·ersity, have a grade average of B or above, have applied or been accepted for admission to ai---------------------11 graduate school of social work The group will rneet at W a.m. Monday, Jan . 8. ip the 4 ~ • -... DOM•tt1c~ .. •a:"" 11111n SWISS CHEESE BROWNIES •tO. ltt IA.CM and be interested in ~ulng a career of work with children or youth to combat dclln· quency in the U.S. 111-. s1.11 $1.19 6/49~ ITALIAN OILI •fSTAU•ANf t•K••v-o•oc••r al!lfl-WIM• ........ 1911 Adami at-Ma9noll11, Huntington Buch, OM 9' llMI ......... Dtll OW•HMI• Ill Clt~ ... 111 0.11'11t11• •••1 JI yMr.. ,.... .-1111 tfllM!RtfWI teath, rtv11t•lfl '1•1ttv. Ctitt ~tw, ...,.,.. ' ... " Ol'.lfltf c ..... , . NEW HOURS DAILY IMtlO-Jll. lt.t SUNDAY 1M CLOSID MONDAY SALE! 25-50% OFF SWEATERS! PANTS! MAXIS! BLOUSES! HANDBAGS! JEWELRY! ACCESSOR IES I ~J..., BIDTIQUE • • £,,l!leR HA'J BEEN CLEARED BY SHERIFF BOl.T..,.BUT J<XKJ>L.ACK l!t!ITILL.00 80 G"Ai8TIONE.0.- TUMBLEWEEDS -- ME ... '3 SfrnNG INAflllRl<EOCAR ON MAIN STIHOET. TMIS WA9 ON TI<& SEAT B~SICE MIMI by Doug Wildey SURE!~ TMCS MONEY .OPEN rT UP, SMGRtFF / GOSH,COWOO'r'J AUNT H!LOEGARP WiWTS ,...,_-----.., 1ll MAllllY 'IOU AWFUL MP! YOU'Rc by Tom K. Ryan ~ "fH()OOHi HAP OCCUR!IEO 10 ~· HE:R 60Al. IN LIFE! SHE: TRIES SO HAROJ ... Mun AND JEFF You BR<>K'ETH!i MANOLE OFF' MY Wll'ES f'AVciRJTE P ISH! FIGMENTS NANCY TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS 43 Austri1n 1 Weather· monk m1n'1word 44 Unusual Ii Precious 45 Isn't 1ble 11on11 46 Modern 9 Cut 49 Intended · 14 Greek 53 Come to· - goddess 54 Tidy 15 WW II group 55 Metl\od of 16 Church doing vestment 56 Remove dirt 17 1'19dte'f 1ren1 57 Comfort fbtil1i "' ·6(f Arid othm: 18 App11tation 2 word• 19 China 59 Work.Id in 20 Fall behind film• 22 Ontario city 60 River of 23 Come Poland together 61 Numerical 24 Tailteu preli~ •mphlbi1n DOWN 25 Hlt1 1 Waddles 28 Ching• tr1int 2 ''Thal'•. - 32 01!1 of m1\1rkyl" 33 Gab• 3 Build 34 E1i1t 4 C1nlne 35 Feminine 5 River of A11'1 name 8 Honor 36 Canadian 7 Clown Indians 8 CompaM 37 Salad paint I ingredient 9 Polynnl1n 31 Short time ntti\'11 period: 10 Chtngn • lnfotm.i • -ti Weatt\er· ~ 39 Rowfng m1n'1 groups '40 Bird• 41 Oeblr I l •1 .. 17 lO ,. l6 'U n " .. .. " .. " .. • 2l concern 12 Outsid1: Prefix • ' .. II • ., ..... 3l :II" ...... .. .. O" "' .. " "' ... 1 ~·. " ,. .. Yesterday's Puu:le Solved: 13 Churchman 37 Belgian coins 21 Obtains 39 Bordered 22 Bank '40 Chip transactions 42 Funow 43 M1rine VIP 24 Rugby ~ores _.5 Stop 25 Jewelry item 46 _evil: 26 Hermit 27 Weight unit Rare bitd 28 1n that pl1c. •7 Formal poem 29 Got 1long '8 Monotlly 30 Cancel unit 31 Defy'" 49 Exttnct authority 5(1 Importance 33 U • fi=:.1 . ' 5 t. Cheue-4 nre ".., 52 Food &tore:· 36 Tennis Informal players' 54 New type: mHieu Prefix ••• 10 I\ 1l " " . "" " 11 "' ,. !l;" .. " " " ~ ~ .. •. ' .. " ' .. .. " "· " ' ,. ~ ~ }J .,,_(.,...,_,._;;Q i\ ... ...,. _,,...,..,,. .... 'If~ by Al Smith PEANUTS MISS PEACH DICK TRACY 0 • •• .,l -··---.....-' by Dole Hale by Emie Bushmiller DOOLEY'S WORLD ltY S4Y.S 11/G ~ARit Al'TERAcAT BURGLAR! SALLY BANANAS GORDO !AOMl!cAITITOf t l'JANT 10 POINT ou r ~­ 'TfllNGf 10 'IOU! MOON MULLINS i ANIMAL CRACKERS WISH I Ml.<i, W15H I M1e1fr, Hlolie ~!! WISH I Wl5ll TOIJ""11'~ by Charles M. Schub: \v~ " - by Harald Le Doux NO ... WELL, I'M HERE TO ASK THA1 YOUR DEPARTMENT MAKE ,IJ< EFF0~1 TO. LOCATE_· MRS 51(.vf.STER ! SHE HAPPENS TO ee MV CLIENT AND I WAf.IT TO 6E CERTAIN THAT SHE'S ALL R.16HT .' by Mell • • KC~i,Y _S:Ci<OQI,. /;ENE i;tA L. ORG-ANltATION ' J'"o1"' Hl'.11'.. • by Chester Gould "llUT ITS SHOWINQ •ND Ml. ON A • ' -M T RCYCLE! ' DAILY PILOT J J! by Roger Bradfield IF IT !'$ Gt>&~ MBITloN To eea tu:K 11-eN eea C\J'fe PJcl( NoT a ~B D.tK t.11]11 iHe Jea1.e'5 CN ~f.sce, By Charles Barsotti l m-w&~ c,,.,..,. ujOl ~ • ~- " ' by Gus Arriola WIN, WPi;;f % ~AVI! NO • \\IA~ OP "CONTIWLLIN& G1i::•r5-, by Ferd Johnson Yes ... ,A NICE MIDDLE·OF·THE·RO,At> DRIVER . Roger BoDen I T~1~K T"A1" MlhH.T r-4A\IE. f l!EEJ.l A 747 . THE GIRLS "We're really cultinit loose al this garden club convention • -only our first day and already wt'\'e tried on see-tbro~ nighlgo'4'ns.'' ' DENNIS THE MEN ACE I I I ~I I- ' I ~G I Mf.1.111) A 81G flGtff ~ ijf.CI£ l.4ST NIG!IT 1 • ' . L • I J4 DAILY PILOT It's Unreal: . Thieves Rob . Clemente ' , •• • .. • ·Boros, Miller Open With . 67 • CAROUNA, P.R. CAP) -Frienda for fiom Clemente's carolina home, the ~nearby San Juan airport by chartered Civic leaden also ...,,t along, including remember Roberto Clemente as a man l>f'lrst described the star outfiel~ as a jet from Pittsburgh. They boArded bu!Je:S owner Art Rooney o( \he Pittsburgh of quiet strength in both public and man wtiG showed the same strtngt.h ln and rode five mlles to the church. ,..Stee1en' pro football telltn. ' priva1e life. .l pr1v1te life as he did on the field . -... .. .. That's the way he was 'remembered ..._ nils strength eveqtually led to his un-• itt:re, t.""y were· met !>¥ Clemente'• Whlle tbt mass was held on this island, Thursday 'by a prieat at memorfal timely death, the priest added. Clemenie widow, Vera. who had-. stopped a k>ng sim118" services were coaducted in services ror the baseball superstar. , . wes aboard a cargo plane carrying food. 'tfatch at th~ beach area to hear the: Pittsburgh. Some 1.000 ~le showed up Mcttt than 70 fl1ends of CleO'lcnte, In· to earthquake victims tn Nicaragua when pr1Cst11 eulogy. ~ et 1'finity Cllbedrttl Church there to he11.r cludlnl memben o I the Pittsburgh the craft went down ht the AUanUc After thq. mass endt<I, Clemcntc'a Clom•n" culog!zed u a man "wbb gave Pirate ora:anlutkm for which be played, Ocean New Year's Eve not fat from tM frltnd:l 1eft Lhe church-and poured lnto~· hlm.'ielf, even his Ufe,""'tor-otbers.." atttnded tile 45-mlnu" aervtce at the San· Puerto Rican coast. 1 plaza bulllhr with hundrodl of people.. Meanwblle, a movement continued to Fernando Romon Clthonc Church. • ,Tbe mourners, Including hisebAU COll"'-r..,'""'r.i Pint.. ltjm tbtn vlltted the ho"' tbt Mine or Three Riven Stadium Speaking In 1he small, 1ton• church not miS>lolle'P'l!Owle-Kulm. had amvlll " ~l!!fft Mlm!'t~respattr -'<hilli'd loiloberto Clemem.-Slod!um. on lbe 411$-yard 12111 hole, bitting a 11ltchlng wedge 120 yanls and Into tbt cup, I NlckJaus, easily lhe 1ame 1 domJnant figure last seasoo, wa.s ln a threatening position. He played his last nine In three-- under-par 32 after a sk>w atart. Bulls Oaim Politics W QD -- For Lakers .Asher Now 15th SAN JOSE -Costa Meai's Barry Aaber ren lnlm li...t to l!lb place and D6n Johnaen rolled a 300 game dur- illg tbt 165,000 San Jooe Open bowling tournament Thursday. Asher qualified for today's 24 be&d-to- head matches. The lop five tUgb scoren: will advance to Saturday's televised finals. Asher has 3,113 pin! through II gam ... , 175 behind tile leader G*' Lampo ol Endlcotl, N.Y. Johnson's 300 gom< propelled him htto -· • .,.. No. 24 spot. • II ~ b ~ ~ b I< II It ~ ~ IJ ' I Cl .. :'.: •• ~: ... •• "' " .. ' ... __ ., ~ "' .. •• .. "' " .. "' , ok H• " ,,. . ... .. Co ,, .. "' " ' •• '" .. .. .. •• •• .. Ml M• .J '" •• Go .... ot " "" '• " " m " " g • • c a • J s v I c I b i c I! I I -· -·-. Irvine Race Be~s; CdM Favored ' I • °""8a de! Var it I lilq , eblp playtn bun Wt year """'•-IOd !laodUoi lnlo1 lavorUe to capture oolrlchl wb'<ll obould be ....,gb to cac-::~ • tho title It shared lut seuoo ry lhem to the tillt. =.....~ Keooib• ~ Jtlt u I\" Irvine Leap but«. Tho Sta Klnp -at blllJ a•• opeoo tonlahL All ol Estonc!a, a ~ wllld> the ,11mea bea1n al I o'clock. ~ !or lhe middle ol Ille SI ""'In& between the Sea Jaelt. ·but ll"l1ed a ,_ Kil\!• and that flOO} is 1 laU 11::.cl:erbyupsellt,.Lallatn but unproven Fountain Valley In tho Onoc• -t~ 1, the ooJy major -Corona clt1 Mar wilt 1ia .. to tone: •r to the crown, and 1lx stop 1 Eslaoda. farnrd Todd {9)' fives 'who are capable ol Collini ln tonlgbt'a game, Upi<.tl al aoy time. wblje' .Ibo dQemma !or Ibo , Coach Tandy GUils' Corona Eqla is a lltUe more com- del Mar team, raoked No. 1 ln plu. It involves aolvlng 1 See Orange County and pouesolng Kln&I -and cont~ tba an unbeaten mark In 10 DUo of .All-Qf guard-Caley games, have holdovu blue Jooes aod NDlllq mate MIU llld. W 11111 HW, bu M IU op- -1 IOl>Jglll ud>-dtal -'l1le SU-of FOUDlaln Valley arelM, with lhelr only lolll comtna at the baods of 'Warren In the lblrd game of tbt )'ell'. Reider, a Rtltor -• ..m..a1u....io1 • ....,. lnl<> the pme and Malane b ... .,..,,,. 11.7. Ed1-will """"' oo 1-i -Dir! Wlnchell and 6-1 Bill f'llrd aloog the front Une and I bockcourt combo , of Dirt Zirbel &Dd Jay WUson. The C1Jorsen have woo lhre< of 10 pmeL Jn other garnet, C.11 Mesa will vllll Sanlt Alla Y .U.y ond Loo Afarnltoo is ll Mqnolia. • Qiota Mta, mu'1ltftl under new coarh Bob Sorensen, b tile darkhol'IO t.m In the leque. Mitt 1 llow start (the Mlll .... s Iott their flnt lour pmt1) Mtsa ll"l tocether five 1tntgb1 wina before loslna lo Oran1e In the llnal game of the · Orange toomament. Cost.a ~te.a features a balanced 9COrine at.tack, a bee:Y front line and a ptti8Ute man-to-man deltn1e wblch bas e"used problems for many teenis. Alamitos Racing Entries 4 Hows-in-nne Highligh .t Vangu~ds Coast Area Men~s· Golf Pla y In 35·77 Club men·• team will meet Hoop I..oss With the bolidayo alowlng tour JID. S In a prNm evat. -a-down loomament action •I Sblrley EnsJeliam.. Belty •1a1r •AC•. J .,..., ""' • )'lll'Clt. n-..... ~-at ·-goU ~--·Ide and.. sev-·"·-Mell Verde Country Club oo PASADENA Southern ~~ PWM SUDO, CW.lllllnO ,,ic. ~. a';;.. cl ~ ;;;: lridlcated °"' ci:u1 ~~ 0.btly l••t (Wt1-1) llf ha .. '"'""-ll•'ted play "· I•• •-~ L9hl of hob IAd91rl 111 Ul6"' &'' 1.11': -• '~· s .. ., siw.r <im11111 111 week. B'-"'-... TM CW1 O!olc• IJl:kMrds) Ht ~ ...... Jan. 11 ln tbe ant TQUnd of Calironla College's basketball team malclJes with Old Ranch team hoped for a UtUe more and Jrvine Coast meetlnj: In success today after the the other ball ol the bracket. Vanauanb we,. dealt an ~ :!a~:·;:.,:,,.,<~-::;: ::! Cost. Jtfes• F.d IWnley .Of Qirona ~el Team matches continue for ~·~1M1vi:~1 ll~ Harold Eckes.of Costa ?tfesa Mar '®red a~ at Big liX fteeb on 1 home-and-home T~ New L11o1c ll~I 111 scored his fint-ev~ ace in 1 Canyon Country Club lhb buts. Get ltfrlfy Ctr .. ~) 122 week. s1co.o llM:L ., ......, 1 .,_.. 10I!« golfing career on the • Ramsey URd a drtVfll' to Me.a Verde .. 11s ., • ci.111'11nt. PvrM ''* coOd hold of the ~tesa Linda caver Ure 2Qkatd lt!\b bf::»e 8enftle-Mllllek,utistent-in ~=~1--117----€oune~-Costa Meu--.,~>11---",.!'bllel"-plaJ!"ylngl.-!""'!'ln"tho!!-'"'.,. .... "l"",,...~Y-t-he• -abop at Mesa Verde .. ,""' 11o11 !Mvt-J 1n course Wilt week. ol Gloria Gartz, Bill Heyler ,... ... ~~';"'T.:=,. v~~o:t.r'"1 jg ~ Y.year-old Eckes uted Oxmtry Cl~ was married D1a1 tranity tMtw1 122 a five iron to cover tbt: 140 and Eddie Pettn. Saturday &o Edward Holmff ~~ .::r 1~~1 ::~ y~. ~ :'0a="W. ~· and the couple ls now ~ Slrtolfl TIM IT,......I 111 · f--'--C · moonlng in Ireland and TMllD •.t.eL -Yenli&. J y.r . _mwe-... , lflle' s...... Germ1Q1. 0111&. AU11wwKe.. ,._ 11• .'l'Wo aces were rtCOl'ded at ra...ta Wrigb• the Cl.llfornia ••• ..._ , .... , '" Irvine ~·-· ,._,..._ Clllll _,_ ' Sfwttcllff1 TM MoMslllnw 1s..i11t11 ,,., "'1Cl:ll ............. ,, , .. _.. pltche.r, ii getting a DlttowMltty CLlllM"ll 11• duting tfie holiday seuon, .,..'F'O ~""~~ 1 ~:W!rit> ::; G. W. Fleer made bis on the ~tiler°!, ~ fulai':! c--e-Kip tH•MI 1n 13th ho.le over 148 yards. Gene -amble 1ouma-~ at~-TooHn ,.,....,.. IMr .. I -IU ...... IUCIA rll,IWI'" s.na•,., *"" 11tkMnl1> 111 Sto dd a r d . tbe club's lain Valley's MUe SqUare golf ~;::-_:: ~~ t=~1 :~ greenskeeper, went 9Ut to play course this mooth. nibe boles and came up with BasebaU itan ~vine' In the r:ou•TM ••c•. m ~rdt. 1 n-r an ace on ·the fourth bole, 133 "-••e ~-~ : ·~ .· •-. Olcll & uP. C6'~ l"WN Jiii». "'-'6 .__.,~.J ~-UI ci.1'"1n11 IWkit woe: ,,, yards. He scrambled to get in vlted to -"'idpa lb ·tho Poco """"" s.co 1A11~1 the a 1io1 Ired r ..... • o.-M111 .. 11'"'"'' 11• 1 es requ or tournament along .. with club Dkkfv a.11 ,., 11tllblnlolll 1,!! recognition of his ace. ....... -1-Sou"-m Callfomla. GI-Bar CW•lt11t1l •• r -w 1.Ull: GVP F• cwrlOtlH 111 finishing_ after dark. 1'11ulott Viejo :Oia:~1;_: 1~~1 l\~ Irvine Coast will again host Mr. ,.,_111y CN'kvdenlvll 111 members of the women 's pro The M1lsfoo Viejo Country Fll'Ttt IAC•. 150 ya...... J .,..., olcb a. llP. Clal"""9. .....,_ UIGO. ci.1'"1ng prk• uooo. ll1,1n ~ Run llloOliuonl Co Doubl• Co (C.n»aal AM Pippin {Myltl) Olxia CfilM !N~l Tr~ Moor! ,..._n lllfllll'IJ Niie Train 1Wa'1on! T11rtyloa IT .... 11.11"e) Bid WOfl {Adair) Lltli. ~ ... IHfrtJ "' , .. "' "' ... "' '" "' "' SIXTM uc•. -Y9"b.-J YMr old1, Pur• PIDO. n. El Prlmen Ot\ AllO OMIT tf'6'i.. ,ll"lt OM1111ft.. Tn.ity Tried (lftldlan:h) lJQ .H11W$ Hite CC,.....) t:» C.........._ (N....,,...) 11$ G3Is Share Top Spot In Meadowlark Tourney Wilb the holiday ....... in tho bacl:ground, Oraoge Coast In B lligh~ Lee J.Dwery was tho 1wlnner with 15. Second piact -shared· by Domby .... The amual San C1emente chy cbampiomhlp will be de- cided in a bomf-.and.bcme aer- lea 'between SboreclUls CouJ>. try O ub and the San Clemen- te Mllllitjpol '°"""' teams bo- slnnlnl Jan. 11 at Sboreclllrs. Thll event ls an annual af. fair with a lro!>ilY goln& to the witming team of 11 players. In a sweepstakes tQurna· ment over the weekend for the best J7 holes, Chuck Crow was the winner with all net sccre. Secood place went to Jack Webb with 6Z roI'°"·ed by Frank Thoroquist with &3 and Bill Derby with M. R-cho SJ Bill Riller has been elected president of the Rancho San Joaquin golf ,,_u.1kJ> men'• club r ... tbe .....,;., year . setback lo Drury College ol Springfield, ~lissouri Thunda.y In the opening round of Pasadena COiiege's Ne w Year's Classic tournament. COach Paul Peek's Vanguardj met GeOrge Fox Collel!e of Ore&oo today In the comolatloa niund. "It waa the most physi<al game we've played all year," said Peek of tho Drury dh - and be had lhe evidence to prove it. The Vanguards' leading ,.._ bounder Jack Causey broke his nose ln the first half and had to si t out the rtst or the action while guard John Curtis sutrered an ankle sprain midway through the s<cood half and had to be taken out. Still, the Vanguards sta,.cl ckloe lhrougboul the ti!), holdlng the lead until mQ!iil!Y through the' second hall.""'" Drury started eootrolllng the boards. tae.t• c...._. mJ ftf'lpfft °"''"" s ' s 16 PeY'M 1 I l lS owav 2•1 • Cllffll l 0 I 6 Hea•tOr> •OJ I Dlrtll'il s •• , • W•l!et1 0 2 O 2 leroar-I 1 II • G1* •0 11 l ... 11 ll lS.U 11 +i•ltll-; S.C.I, ~ DA.IL V Pt(Of Unive1'8ih~ J In Sunset Play Bidding N e'wport T est,s For Upset Rugged Saxons Du.I HUis Hi&h SChool plars another strong team, LaguM t lfunllngton Beach a n d rargt and guards Ste\·e Beach kloks for its rim lellgue p nd J rt J M~rlns high schools t1pJ)'ar to ~terson .i e ones. wln and University ........,,!! for Th I bl ed r " f .. ..,...., have brutbens In store tonight at Ir o con1 n or "" o its s:econd upeet ln Orange Su ball 1Aar11 's 6-4 points Wedne&day League basketball nction in nset Lfogue ba!ket and figure to givr. the Newport toalght. •ctlon, but It's anc:!hl'r matter quint1.-t the moitt trouble. Dana llllls dropped a 56-46 ror the Newport Harbor The boards L"OUld tell the Sailors. tale and Ne\\'l\l\rl's chanctS (Orltest to leagu&-favorlte "" Coach Dale IT a g e y · s for \'k:tor ' """>' Ile In the Valmcla Wednt>:sday night. Newport quintet assumes the ability or Ne\\'port 's front line and lhlngs won~ get much burden of playing a tough -Jim S•'i<k. Kurt Sp-. and e~ier against vislllng El Loara Satoris ' t~m al its own Jaime lfolmes. Dorado. Laguna Beach "'ill gym In • battle or unbeatens U that trio can take the play host lo Brea \\·tine after one pmt' \\'edneJ<iay. boards away from Loara's University lravell to Sad· Tipoff In each instance is 8 crew it could trigger an upiict dlebat.t . o'clock follov.·ing 6:30 junior of the Saxon1, \\'ho have corn- All games will ~gln at 8 varsity games. piled an 11·2 mark and att 0'1i~ado surprised Laguna Also on tap is \\'estmlnster ranked Oflh ln Orange Count)'. at Santa Ana in a rematch of Coach Dou~ Stockham's Beach by a point in overtime tournament play in which San· \\1estmin.c;ter Lions could get \\'ednesday in the Artists' O'ATI ta Ana came from "'"" off the back in contention for s flt'!rt gym and will gi\•e Dana ilills, pace to post a 77.'lf) \'iCtory .' division berth In lhe Sunl'let 5-7 in Its first year of play, H_.""' .. stiff test. llUJ1tington Beach's upset League, but they 1nusl put ..,,......~ "'inners O\'er !\1arina meet together tY:o good ha.lws The Dolphins looked cood In liost Anaheim nnd Alarina against Santa Ana, somclhino carrying a highly regarded nd ·~ Valencia team Lo . the limit hosts Western . Anaheim n they could not do in toumcy Western are not considered ti· pl:ly against 5.:lnta Ann . and, If thinn• go right. Dana 1 nde I h h """ t e conte rs. a t o u g 'The latter's Joaqulr Zarate ~ might surprise El Dor· We.stern has a 1--0 record "-·ith "·as a parli<'ular thorn in ~ Golde-n H::iwks, defen. a one·polnl win over Santll. Wtstminster·.s s i d e In 1 . list.I ·~ Ana. December. ding eague lit • nty..-i The key clash is the Coach Jim Stephens and hlii La~ Btil(h ~ in N' rt H bo Loa t 'k overttme on a dltouled basket ewpo ar r· ta s rug. \11 ings figure to have things gle. Coach Tom Voigt.'s .~Loa~'.,.'_,-the=.;ir_,,~·ay despite the possible and-°"'"'ArtiN-,tabbed-for---&eeo Saxons ~f0Uj1llfme with continued loss of BOb-Losner Q'1d In the league, 9.ill be oot Westminster be(ore gaining an (~5) due to an injured ankle. to even their mart against ll·poinl verdict. Ne"1>0rt The Vik.es ha\·e Jost two in a Brea. showed nasties of brilliance in row. including \Ycdnesday 's Brea may have the ooorest lts opener when the Sailors 63.39 decision to rival Jlun- team in the circuit. althouith cut.scored Anaheim, 19-15, in tington Bea(h. the Wildc:ats do ~l a loo th ·~-"' h If . 4fr . , -ter in M Gre( Trioo. who c ~viiu a , sna ppll'li a Elmer Combs' llunlington ........ all situation. quintet may find itself in some was held to eight Points by Loara has four starters ba rk !rouble in the early going, but University, 12 under his 1 1 the rom ast year and keys to figures to blow Anaheim out in avtrage. Saxons' attack include 6-3 Kirk the second half. Laguna Beach llad El r·--==:~;;~~~;,;;,;;,;~~;;;;;;;;::-Dorado down b)' three Wedrie8day with 12 seconds ~tS., tl;tt and lost the game in r -L overtime on some hotl y # .,...... ~ .dlsDUted officiating. Stefan Garner scored 15 for NOW mru Jan 14 tbi ktlsts againll •1!1 Dorado • llS Laguna· had itl WJUal scor· Ing halailce. LaRUna will hwe ~NAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER' to stop Tri-pp anrl Dan Carpenter, a quick, higb.jum· f ping six.footer \\'ho scored 18 points against Unl\'ersity. University earned its rlrst ~'in siJl('e the opening game of the season by tripping the Wildcatt. 49-41 behind Jeff Giese. Paul Simon and Mike Scott . :: gradUafiy, getting back to ' 120 weekly tournament action with ~~ f"1f. clubs staging events this 1u week. 11. B....._, Ronclaklson Dell 'With 80 13. panded boahl of di"°'°'' selected fer ~ year include Bill Clari<, Jack CUMlngbam, El N'•uef Mort Davis, Al Mela"'°"• ._ Wayne Wilson and Steve Battle Tough I..oop Foes l•YllMTM •..t.e•. 400 .,.,,... J v•r Olds. Purw U5DO. nt. !!:I l"TlnllrO CM-I Ano Dlrtiy !NII. ~ Dlvltl9n. 5oul hby !Alll-l 11$ Go O!ldlle Ge rt,...~, 11$ 0ia,.1n 0n c•ob!Monl uo ""-k•n Dr .. lfl (C.rdo1al IU P91r Ot Dk• (Myle$J 120 ·-lot (.smlltll ... Flna.i Oo1c111on 1w11son1 no Too M.111..-CAdtlrl no Mighty SmclOltl (W11l11) JU RIMI Det111 CNltedetnvl! 115 EfOHTM It.A.CL a Yllnk. J yur otds. ,._ 13$m. Tite fl Prlfnero o.I ,._ Del'trr lflalL Tfllnll DIYlllon. c-1n Edrle !.t.dllf'J ns s.ur.111111 llodi.t (Trtiffllf'lll IU lltocbf Tooette (Nleodtnw.lll 11' Dai._,, P9llcan t~l 120 DlltO 0... IL._.,.) IU Fl,,. Ciika (We9-l 110 Ambtr D1.M tM1'111 11J G(•r o.ncer IMcCllRlkkl uo C.,._.1 Dandy (Hal1) TlO Byou Bird IC.niolal 11.S Meadowlark Al Meadowlarl: Country Club in Huntington Beach, Cuba Curl and Helen Moulton lied for ftrst place in a crias er°"' tournament in A night with identical. SI II :ICOlt<. In tho Class B competition, it was Rosemary Erickson first wilh 1811 Jollowed by Boonie Nuedo wltl> 3tl. Gloria Boland won !he C class compOlition with 1411 with Dottie O'DeU placing sec- ond at :12, • _ lll'est1 Vera It was stroke play action for NINTH Ill.Cl. 250 yanlL J l'"' old1 .. up. Cla1mlng. PurM SJDI, Clallfll"V prlctl 11600. the wome.a at Mesa Verde ll! Country Club with Dora 111 Donaldsoo'I 13 g•in inll' first ler!Oll'lbl '""""' Oy-P1lrol CC.rdoul Wiiiow Gold (t.lpllaml l'lfl Dellgl\1911 IW•nll Motlv1tor tT,..--.J Pod<et Rocket (Holrl) G4inll~n .Jlt,-(~) coma Coll.:! {$!olad j 111 - Jo Ann't Trt111Vrt 4G1na) Mr. P"' hr (Kanl1J 111 place in A night. PbyUis Smith :~ was second with a 77 •followltd •" by Lucille' P&!dOclo .with '18 ~\~ and Lila Yarka with 79. Alamitos Results Bucs, GWC In Ac tion Golden West College -after 11.s first Soulhem callfomla Conference Vi(tOr)' and Oran&< Coast lri<tl to bait a fOUJ'Pme losirll """k In JC bosUtbeD aeUon tonight. Golden West's Rustlen visit Santa .MoniCI wblle 0CC tttks lo piercf: ln the fine I wannup game for nut -·· South Coaat Cont...-opener. Hoth cameo begin at I •'clocl:. r The RusOen I..,. an uph!R ba!Oe against a Santa MonlCI i.am that captuttd Ibo a!ale championship la1t seuon. Wlillt Golden West was IOI· Ing a llt44 dedalon lo, LA Harbor In Its opener, :santa Moolca -rolling to • ~ decllloo °'" Los Angeles CC. El Nlguel Country Club ol Yekicb. Mission Viejo and San Laguna Niguel stag«I a blind Prospective new members Clemente high· schools, the draw, riro best b.1lls of. are welcome· to pick up an ap-Orange Coast area's entries in founome townament .this plication at the pro shop with the p 0 w e r f u t Crestview week. membership ineludil'lg &tarting League. will have their hands On the ,)finnlhg team at 133 times, special moolhly rates full In league basketball action were Jactie '.Watsen, Millie and tournament information. tonigh t. J-. Marg<!" Silljl<rt and 19tlt Hofe Mission Viejo must fae< a Marianne Delbeato. · powerful Orange team while Matclline cards determined Gary Singer, a member of San Clemente tangles with seand Jl\d third plaCe after the UC Irvine golf team and mighty Katella. the league's two teams tlrd at.131.,~ l'inDer of the Tony Lema best team and possibly lbe top place we.at to Dot Egan,.Janet ICbolarship award to attend outfit in Orange County. Leigh, Fran Rim aod Deity UCI, llred a sizzling 64 to lie Game time is I o'clock. Pine. · -the current course i'ecord at 1'1ission Viejo can tell San In thlrd'}llace; oho wi1b ISi, lrvlne eo..t Country Club. Clemente a few things about w~ 'Blcinda ' YoUnl, Dorollty · Gary is a junior at UCI and Katella. The Knigbis ripped Levy, Be)ty Cook •"'! Marge works at Irvine Coast on Mlsalon Viejo 68-45 Wednesday Howell • weekends. He cretlita current night , running up a !t-2 lead. Sunset League 's I ea ding scorer at Western last yea r. and " Jeff Welshans. a ~igh­ scoring junior who played for FOothill last season . ~fission Viejo went throu~h the ~Tinger wit n Katella Wednesday, but if the Diablos think things will improve much against Orange they may ~ surprised. The Panthers have l0&t just one time this year, 61-Sl to highly regarded Loara, and ooened league play with a 6$- 47 romp over Villa P~rk. Fish Report F~h pl~ waa also pro Richard Martinez with San C1emente had an easy determined. by ~.!Bitching helping him lo improve his time with FooUUll, easing past NIWftORT 1.,,., UH•"'> _ u with the team. ()f Dbris already brilliant young career. the Kni ghts, 6&-52. but will be •ng1~1: 1 '-''· '" roe:• coo · M • o--rt l..DlfO ••ACM 1~ t.1Ml11tl -HandsChach; · 1111e' ·~·'II' • Martinez used the videotape a prohibitive underdQg ag1'inst n .,....,.,.., ui bonlttt.-n• u 11e-o w11. Eilffn ·Bradwell and ,. Mary ......,lay· to show-Stnger several a tall and talented Kate.Ila ~ '"1tAtt1i• cov.-..__. n •noi.•1: JOO • .. ,. roelt eod, s cow eod. Metz get,ing the ~no~ 1;t 139. faults in his swing: and the team. uwrA M<*KA -s 1no1e<5: '' L ..: SJ budding young star has Katella, a I w a Y s . a 'Tti~.91.u;" _ • •nolRrt: 1 w11111 R•~,.. ado.,.""" to the switch with ap-powerhouse p I c k e d up ""'· 2S0 r-oc• cod. >""' he MOll,Q I A'r {Ylrf"I LHdl11tl -ll Fem Sproul and club c)\a~ r..'.-.:::C~t ···""""'"·-·------·t'•anaiiiiileiiiraiiiiiiiiMiiiiiikiiieiiiiiDunniiiii~· =t==""'=·i·,· J~i":"i"'=·=m='K~·~"'· pion Salley Owsley tied for rint place In • mutt and jell to~ a\ Raocbo San Joaquin Goll Course lh1a week with ~ poslinl a 17. lo lhe ae<oOCI rudi~ Nanda Beitel· .... lbe wfnoU with -~-Pal Lacl:Der woo thin! ru,ht -wltll » ud !\<Uy Bldemoro WIS !he foilrtb ll!lht victor "11h S'I' " Collegiate, Pro Scores . ' DDINllMi WOIJllH&Mi IJPI . • • Is renting a dreg? Are you throwing , money away? A\ Walnut Square.- your monlhly payment gives you &Jbstantial tax deducallons, and builds equity, So unlle yourseH. Come see us today. 119.910 $1 ,000 Down, No Closing Costs. 2 &3 Bedroom Townhomes (714) 551-4041 ftlce5eltt r Hoi IJCS • • • • • • : CATCN'tM • NID Wl'lll • llfCUJ'I ......... .. •.•. • • • • • • • : OUTSTANDING EXHIBITS BY STATES, PROVINCES, RESORTS : : PLUS WORLD'S TOP SPORTS' TRAVEL FILMS : ~ .. • • IN CO(ITINUOUS SHOWING • .; ~· . " ·······································~ I • • • • ~:®t?~~=~i : ~ '!'~,c= ~ ~IOllS; : ~ TIAIWS -..._.~&lttm•llJ,.. • • ..................... • • I I ., ~-• • ' . . .. . ... ~~~. .. ··-4 .. •• Jf DAILY l'ILDT Friday, J......, 11973 • Southlanders Scoi•e New ·Boat Slww . Ullman , Hogan Reap Top 1972 Honors Launclwd Today • ---TRAINING VESSEL -Baruna, one of the great rac· Ing yachts of all time, bas been retired from rom· peti tion and donated to the California Maritime Aca demy as a training vessel. Barona is pictured here with her original yawl rig. She was converted to a sloop by her last owner, John Mcintire. Southland aallor1 showed up well In international sailing eventa in 1972, bringing non1e trophies In both orfshore and one-design racing. The top performer In dinghy sailing was Dave Ullman of Balboa Yacht Club who won naUona1 tlt1es ln the Coronad<r JS, Sabot, Lid1>-l4 and 470 classes and a North American championship in the 470s. The 470 is one of two new classes added to the Ol)'mpic yachting games for 197$. The other local sailor to bring international hooors to his club and the community was Tim Hogan of Newport Harbor Yacht Club who won the prestigious Prince or Wales Bowl, symbolic ·of the match racing championship of North America. JIM KILROY start.d o!I the year 1972 on the in· ternational long-distance sail· Ing from by winning the Hobart, T asmania, to Auckland, New Zealand race in his famed 72-foot yawl Kialoa II. B 4" N Role Star of offshore sailing ac-oa. S ew tlvity In Southern California was Tom Tobin of San Diego B N Clas Yacht Club who sailed bis ~~«~r~u~na~~~O~W~~~S~r~o~o~m~_~Er=lc30="'=39, NemesiJ to v1c-tortes In the l,m.mlle San SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The aging n.root Barona, one- time premle,r racing sailboat of San Fran<:laco Bay, iJ back on the scene of some of her greatest victories -but head· ed for a JEW career as a school ship. The 34-year-old yawl, sea- wom after a storm-tossed, 7 ,500-mlle passage from the Fiji Island!, returned Sunday to join Ille Ca!Uornia Maritime Academy at Vallejo. Baruna'a blightwork Is peel· Ing and scruffy, there'• some rot here and there, and her sails are pretty well shot, but Banma "wW -like a yacht ,again" aooieday, promised her llklpper, SC:Ott Abrams, 30. The lll0,000 veael wu once lhe West Coat'• wtest yadlt, and in her heyday .three-time winne< of tho Newport.. Bermuda Race. "Sbe'1 aUll a great sailer," sald Alnml Wednelday in en lntervie" at Ban.ma's tern. j)Orary berth In lhe San FraJ> ciaco Marina. Baruna ha3 had - 1938 for New York textile merchant Henry C. Taylor. Bay Area yachtaman Jim Mlchael acquired her in 195.1 and sold out to Los Angeles engineering finn bead John W. Mcintire 15 years later. Mcintire, who bad taken Barona to Fiji, donit.ed lhe ship to the academy late las t year. The catch: aall lhe big yacht back to the bay. A crew was dispatched to take that challenge. Almost Immediately Baruna wu smacked by Hurricane Bebe. Recovering from that, the yacht took a bla!t that twice blew out her mainsail Jn Hawaiian watm. Several crew changes later, Abrams took over command In Hawaii, and oo Ille final l!og beck ID tbe coast, the crew In eluded • Abrams ' brother, Louie, 20, deckhands Greg Lowry, 2Z, and'Peter Martin, 28; two CMA cadets., navigator John Stroog, 31, ~ Bob Heuer, and cook Randy Shook, 23. "Being lhe only female was really fun," Randy bubbled. "lt was more lite a famlly- type thing -good vibes, with no shipboard romance in· Abrams figures it will take at least $50,000 and als month.. to get Baruna back in shape, right down to her usual coast of black paint for her topsides. Diego Acapulco, the 12S·mile Newport to Ensenada race and Newport Harbor Yacht Club's 385-mile CalUomia Coastal Race (San Francisco to Newp0rt) Tobin ·also won hi.; c1.aSl5 championship. Cal Preston or NHYC sailed his Santana-27 De Core to vie· tory In the !50-milc Marina de! Rey to San Diego race. Other Southlanders who scored In offshore racing were John Field of California Yacht Club who won lhe Whitney Series in his Erlcson-46 Ro!>in West, and John Llnskey, CYC who won the Malibu Transbay race in Independence. srARS IN local match rac· ing events were A~Je Campbell of Balboa Yacht Club, two-Ume winner of Long Bal Yacht Ooh Opens eason Balboa Yacht Club in- Two Boating Classes hnnounced on Coast augurates a new year in yachting Saturday and Sunday with the second race of its Sunkist Series. The series is sailed over three weekends in December, January an d February. One-design boats will sail Saturday and the ocean-racing and large one-design keelboats will sail Sunday. Newport Harbor Yacht Club seamansh ip, piloting, naviga-Other yachting activities in and Dana Point Marina will be tion, marine electronics, Southern California : the locations of two new 13-engine maintenance, sailing Los An.gele•Long Beach 'weeks boating classes to be and weather are offered LONG BEACH YACHT started by the Balboa Power throughout the year to those CLUB -Congressional Cup Squadro,n Jan. 15. who successfully complete the sailoff, Saturday and Sunday. Registration and first day ba.!llc course and become class will be at 5:30 p.m. at members of the Balboa Power w E STWARD CRUTSIN:G Newport Harbor Yacht Club, Squadron. CLUB -Isthmus to Los 720 W. Bay Ave. on th• Registrants for the up-Angeles Harbor, Saturday. Balboa Peninsula. c:oming _,cl•ssea are.-asked . to • -Santa !\1onlca ·Bay , Jlegi.!ltraUon·,,for ·the Dana bn'ng a. three-ring binder arid WINDJA~MER '(AC H T Point class will be at 7·p.m. on pen to the first session. CLUB -Winter Series No. 1, the same day at .the Dana For classes lo be held at all classes, Saturday and Sun- Point Marina. Persons ntl&!ing Newport Harbor Yacht Club, day. registration for the first fu rther information tnay be KJNG llARBOR YACHT session may enroll on Jan. 22. ~obtalned by . calling Mrs. CLUB -Manning Series, SUbjects to be covered in-Isabel Pease. class secretary, dinghies, Saturday and Sun· el ud e sar e t y a fl oat . at 673-1855 be.tween 9 a.m. day. seamanship, aids to naviga. and noon or 548-9978 after 5 SOUI'H C 0 AST R· tion. charts and piloting. p.m. INTIIIAN YACHT CLUB mariners compass, equi pment Information on classes at Midwinter Tune-up, trapeze and government regulations, Dana Point may be obtained boats, Saturday and Sunday . ..rules of the nautical road, by calling Paul McGuire at DEL REY YACHT CLUB - small boat handling and boat 496-0749, or George Knights, Mallbu Race. OR, MORF, trailering. 492--4452. PHRF, ODK, Saturday. The courses are free and a l';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;- course text booklet is issued I free to all students. Advanced courses In 'Aussi es Clllim Top 8 Spots 4DELAIDE C A P I Atistrallans took the first eight places in the second heat of the World 420 Championshlps sailed Thursday at Seacll[f. Anger Wangel won the heat, edging Peter Sieverwright. Jacquest Maniere of France was the first foreign finisher. COfdtal Weather l"W ~. V.n.Me WI,_,. Mfl!I ll'ld•"*""'9 ~ MOlllNl'll " .. » knob ln tffwnooM fOIN\' ...,.. S1n.r. O.W. H'911 tad1y to. """' ~.,,,.. ,...,.. trorol " 111 SL 111111111 1Mft renoot ''"°'" '2 to '°· Wi ler rnM!'en.rt .$1, SuK, /flooK, Tide• ,,.IDAY ~ toltll 1 :-'I "·"'· ,,, Second '°"' 4!01 11.rn. .0.1 iATUlllDA'I' 1 .,,. -. .. . '"' .... ·1 Flrti 1tw , . 'c"'' •·"'-t. 1--9 111(11'1 1 1ot "'"'' •• SMOl'ld '"' ' •tl7 P.lfl· o. I -. '"""."YI... '·"' ·i """ .. . . ... i" .. ,,., t flltfl .. .. .. . ~ •. ,,.. .:. Ji:, "" .... . f;t ""' iii. f:«t ··"" 0:11 .. "" Lease it, you'·ll-love it It.has air c ondit ioning, tinted glass, radlal w--w tires, deluxe seal belts, radio, deluxe side mold ing, other factory equlpmenL -. '*~~~~~ .... Monte C1rlo S Coupe No Down P1yment Abloluto Service Sltloloctlon Or1nge County llaMd •nd. Ownod Slnoe 1"8 531-0607 MacHor..oaRb AUTO AND TRUCK LEASING -0. ... ...,,ri., lol Anr CM-"' Mie Wotld" _ ... __ ( .. ,...,.__ Beach Y·acht Club's A11milollB1yYIChtClub. Congressional Cup, and Bill CAI.r!S-Tom Van Diver, Ficker, NHYC, who won Long Buch Yacht Club. CYC's California Cl.Ip ln a CAL-40-Ken Croan, .l.os match race series against Ted Angeles Yacht Club. Hood of Marb lehead, Mass. C ~ L A R K -0 a v i d The series was sailed in Motherwell , TorTance, Calif. BOATING Ericson-46 sloops. COLUMBIA CHALLENGER -Fred Cottrell , King Harbor '--------' Other Southlanders who won Yacht Club. natlooaJ and/or intemaUonal OORONAD0-25 -(world ) titles in one-d esign racing Bob Gales and B 111 were : Southerland, MBYC CAL-20-Paut Mer r It I , FINN -(North American) iiiiiiiiiiiiii~~!!!!!!!!!! Henry Sprague Ill, NHVC. H 0 B I E CAT·l4-Rlchard l.oo!ek, Camarillo, Cslll. New tackle !..-!mb and ..ult wait< game liabloi - mlnHoldlng boats -ale<k crllll !or marlio fiablng -plus all lbe new utrallerables" and cabin crulsen. ThCle are only a few of the attractions at the 14lb aruwal lntomaUonal outdoor Vaca· tton-Travei Expo which gets Wider W1J1 today at the Los Angel.. Cooventloo Center at Pico and l'lfluetoa Street& outboard ond ~- board powered deep ,.. sport. flahers will occupy thousinds of aquare feet of e:dllblt apace in the center. Most of them - ranging In size from ·15 to 11 feet -feature walk-through cockpits . One of the features of the EJ<po wUI be the %8 to 23-!oot cabin crul!ers which can dou- ble as travel trailers. 'Ibey are powered by inbollJ"d..ootboard engines and accomodate from· 1lx to eight people for sleeping and eallng. UNIROYAL GUARDIAN 4-PLY-N'tl..ON-CORD- 4-PLY POLYESTER CORD 700.lJ 'Mltwwoll C7h1J ll~hll 4i 549 ,ET. tl.11-. F70x1S -... _ .. -4i 579 "IT. tlM ea. UNIROYAL BELTED ROYAL MASTER PREMIUM FAST RAK STEEL BELTED ........... Wlltewall F7l1IS 4i 579 '"· st.n ••· F7hl4 17h14 H71114 H7111S 571x14 G7h1S FIET. n.n TO 11.n .... WMITEWALL-DISCOMTIHUIED TlllAD OISION 4-PLY NYLON CORD 4-PLY NYLON CORD ''""-llocholl 171115 F71115 'lT. u.a ea. COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE • • • 95 NOT JUST A BRAKE RELINE But. we. do. all this. 1. lnsl•ll NEW hHvy duty lining on all 4 wheels! • ..---, Most u.s . Con'lpKI t••• '?. Rtbuild the cylinders on-•11 ~ OllC t1r1kn Sll9hlty Higher. Whffll) ~ .. --3. BIHd brakes -Install heavy /G duty brako fluid. , .... 1 ._ 4. Inspect brake return s rin 1. __ ----\ ~11 5. urn a true all 4 brake drums. ~ ,~ 6. Repack front wheel bearings. 7. Adjust brakes and check emergency link•g*- FRONT END ALIGNMENT 8. Rotd test your automobile. C,..._ WlleM NI .,..... Cir fl lllolll'"911t ll'filtnNlllCI, rlOt, 11_.. 111t llW II.-. -r. W• ttfnltl Cl11· .... ,.,,...., IM-tll, ,.._ ,. ....... ctr 1n111vl1thl....,.• lll'fCffk•llHt. 11W Mftty cl!K-•llCI 111111111 ,...., 11--,. • ASK "AllOUT OUR ~Rn 7 POINT ONLY$ -. USED n111s n1111 lkxkwoll MAG & CHROME WHEELS JUST 50 "'"'''" Amlfkl!\ Cl" fClri wtlll Air Corid. MCI!« IOl'\lorl bers c;mt •lf't.J SAFETY INSPECTION! HEAVY DUTY VINYL For Men or Women For Ci r e l"IT. 12.U •· TIRE CHAINS . CAMPERS -TR.11.,C...,K,._.,_ PASSENGER CARS PASSENGER CARS Sim: J21b:1J te tth15-L7111S CAMPERS & TRUCKS IOlb:16·S 70lb:1S tS0.16-S 175116-J 700.17 751b:17 12·1W 10.16-J 70lb:1' TIRES ~ BRAKES -SHOCKS FRONT ENO -EXHAUST SYSTEM VISUAL NEEDS -UNDER HOOD Offic• e Holl'+• s e Full l•1t9th sipper plu1 111•pt e Co11 .. •niu l c1rryi119 c11e 95 e !Moll. Mo<H•M, lo•go ONLY I 1i:ti-e l1rt• e Air •111+. & pockeh FOR SAFER WINTER DRIVING ! COMPLETE CAR CARE SINCE 1959 Don Swedlund COAST GENERAL Tl.RE 646·5033 540-5710 HOURS: 7:30 to 6.-00 Dally " BEAB WHllL AUHtM•l!ff A aA&.ANCINO lllaYICll ' I --1 I I ! I I ' I ' u s l a h " n s t p 1 y n p a " g .. ' .. • ~ c c " I n it !1 ol ~ Cl c ~ Pl ~ I ~ bl , ti tl ~ Pl I "! ~ ~ " Ill I • J • I ll< = ~ Pl 6 w Satellite Permits Granted WASlllNGTOH (AP) Weowu Uoloo has been grlOl<d Che nne <00stnldloo pennle lor satell!C.S 10 lwldle such dome1tlc com- munlcaU0111 u telegrams, Telex and prlval< line ..,..lee. TUE P'EDERAL Com- ".';':"~~·CO mm I u 1 on ·~· w.cu Western UnJon to COlllllrucl lhree aaeelllC.O. wtileb "'"Id be linked to all 50 lllal<I by ... .., &nJlllld lla-e• ' ' . UPIT ...... '.ft>e ~-for Ille croimd scoli001 and actual openlloo wiA not be given for tomei liQle, lbe FCC aald, and Wt1lern Uqloo must construct the satelWes within 24 months. Patlure to complete ec»- struction withln that tlme, the FOC aald, wlll resuJt in alflQmatlc forfeiture o( the aujhorlzation unleu the con- COMMUNICATIONS SATELLITE -The next genention of communicatio°' satellites may look Wre thll one proposed by Locltheed Missles and Space Com· pany In SunnyvWe, Clill. The large fl ex-rib antennas and telemetry an ten· , nu flank a tnodel of. Earth In the background. t!llWtion period Is .mnded by ti,; commi111lon for gOOljl ca,i11e. jiEvEN OTHER ap- pl~atkins are cumntly pen· dltlg or being procwed by Che Cold Spell Costly FOC. The FCC acUon Is th• first cUiolructlon pennlt i.....i Consumer Fuel Bills Will Climb s-11 decided on Us mulllple SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - entry domestic satellite policy This winter's cold wave pro- laat June. This Is the !IHI l\ep d ced "hand . . th --in-the _field-after operatioo.t-~ a wntmg on e with satellites internationally wall" of Mure increased costs for several years. for Calllomia consumen, 111itially Wl!Sl<m Union President Vernoo 1., Sturg .. n pl.BM to Jaunch two satellites of the state Public Utilities and keep the third as a spare, . . .d Th ~ FCC said. The satellites C'.ommiss100 sai ursday~ will be buill by Hughes Aireraft Co. at a cost of $8.3 million each. The entire system, including launch costs, will cost $'10 million the FCC said. 11IE SATEUJTES are ex· pected to have a JUe span of ~fen years. The 48 contiguous states would be covered with a single beam . antenna. 'The satellites would also have the potential to serve Hawaii and A1aska by spOt beams. • Chavez' Worker s File Suit SAN FRA!ICISCO (UPI) - A NATIONAL natural gas shortage is affecting the operations of California gas utilities, and ordinary con· sumers will feel Lht economic impact, be said. Sturgeon said the cas shortage coupled with ex- tremely C{)fd temperatures caused extensive curtailment of interruptible customers in December. These include steam electric generating plants and industrial USP.rs of natural gas wbo must shift to fuel oil or di!tillate when shortage cuts off their gas supply. Only ten percent of normal Car Sales 'Terrific' union has filed a $128 million suit againSt the Teamsters Union and Callfomia growers arid shippers, alleging they ~ agreed to "sham" con-DETROIT (AP) -Ward's tracts that conspired against Auto World, a monthly -''-"'ties . .. ,...... • magazine devoted to coverage ~T A NEWS conference tn of the auto and related in· sMinas, where Chavez bas dustries, today predicted bien trying to organize lettuce reeord car sales during cale& ptkers in rivalry with the T$lm8ters for nearly three dar 1973. YOU'!· the labor leader an-In its January issue. the nquoced a new drive and ex· magazine said it found "rare ~ lettuce boycott. and almost u n a n i m o u s .,We'reoot.goingtocommit agreement'' among violence," Chavez said. econo~ and analysts that • Teamsten have the 1973 will be "a tremendous g0>wers. We've got the year for auto sales." ~ers." It esUniates 1973 sales will .IJ'be federal court suit ~ total 11.2 million cars, in· ' ed more than 185 lndlviduals eluding 1.ll million imports. and companies It said had cort-nus · comperes with· the sJ)lred against b 1 a ck s , previous recmd year of 1972 Chicanos and FilipiDOS with when 10.8 million cars were contnicta signed In July, 1970. sold, iocludlng 1.5 million im- The union, w):d'ch asked for ports. "~ Jess than $1.8,440,000" in The magazine based its real damages and $100 million prediction on 8 decline in the ln1punittve damages, said the une 1o ent rate five --lll!C'l4-were-oigned·-<ldeo"'1>plit<te.-Cho-cen==>"'co!:::!m~ wi 5.6 per· I'"" "a substantial ma'-'ey" ~-"''' cent in Wl2, a 9.2 percent hike ~ the farm workers were in the gross national product ~led by C!iavei' United $1.256 billion compared with FJrDl worters, AFLCIO. $1.115 billion in 1971, and a 10 je:E FEDERAL court suit percent increase in con.sumer came a week after the spending on durable goods ornia Supreme COurt nil-$1Z1 .5 billim am pared with that Chavez and his union $11S.9 billion in 1971. FINANCE natural gas requirement:; were available to steam eleetric plants in Southern California during December. Nor!hem California steatn electric plants were cut back lo ;,() per· cent. ALL customers in S outhern California -industrial as well as power generating u~rs - had to rely on alternate fuel s for at le.a.st aix days ln Decem- ber. residential or small com- rnereial user supplied as a s~ called "firm customer" "'ilh top priority, he said. Shortfall Noted Nation's Airlines Need Help -Pcinel WASKINGTON (UPI) The nation's airlines say their 1971 financial losses turned to earnings in 1972, but a presidential commission said the aviation industry as a whole needed a multibilllon dollar program to lift it out of "serious trouble.'' The Air Transport Associa· lion, which represents the ma- . r airlines said earnin s for the 12-monlh period ended ast Sept. 30 amounted to a $196 million, contrasted to a $147 million loss for the 12 months ended Sept 30, 1971. "WH.ll.E THESE earnings ~re gratifying," said ATA Board Chairmun Stuart T. , picket growen and ship- '*'" .... though I he ·------------------'!! 1).emsters contract wa:s valid. "l'lle slal< court said Plckeelng was permilslbl• use Che growen ~gned n ... y>ar"JllM without-.~ ptlng to de t ermine ""°Cher !heir field handa sup- ~ Che TeamsC.n. 1'be fann worke1'9 union "1ted the court IO prohibit growers and shippers from en- fWclng their pace with Che Teamseen and rr ... r<fuslng 10 bargain with Chavez.' ~-lion. Airline Job Plans Told Boss Banke1.· -...... Stark Maki1ig Plaits WALNUT CREEK (AP) -Fortney H. Stark ooce told the customen at Ille bank wliere }le waa boos that U.S. savings bonds were a bad investment, so the government -lbe bank's right to "'11 lhe bonds. -· the 4l·,..r-dd Callfornla DemocMll ha> gone to 03ngrels as a repretmtative -and SiiYit: be hopes to gel a -on Che Bonl<ing and Qirrency Comm!U... THE MAVERICK BANKEl\, who had a huge pe>ee oymbol bung oo lbe bank, ,....ltd hawkish House veteran George P. Miller ill Ille J..,. primary and in Novembe< _, Ille right IO ..... -lbe sla1<'1 sprawling lllh Qlo. an•mialW "I would Ullnlt !bot I ....Wd be m>Ot Ulltful and elf.,,_ tiVe ttwe," said "Pete" Start. -.ho beaded Security Na- S/\N DIEGO (Al') -Padnc ~ -bett. Saul-Alrllneo pllJ13 co Stan, 40 yeon _.,. thin lhe men he Is r<!Mcina. build 1 ~million ensiDe did DOI watt for his J111. 3 inauguredon lo begin work· Ojerhaul plane at Lindb<rgb lnJ 11 111 elect..i ollldil. His di41rid olOCI! bas alroedy FJel<I. a spokesman sald. Tb< ludlod -rl - !en Dlego-beRd airline STAllSAJDas•--•m••'l>e,__to ptrtorms engiM.overhauls-1<1< , ..._ ... -,-io~_ ;ovr- 8(1nlfr, Mexicane , and Alt 'llo Cl tielp lil oerilor -mem.,... e.nd lo .....,le cues wbldl raacb his olflCO ellicieolly. ~:;.. ....... Brothen, a I.ell Sl>rk Jaid he '-the new own« of tho bank woo't ~ ... firm, -"'"' the 1 ...... -.. ·.lbe.-.b.ii·---symbol. ..... ----,..---_. ... oornrael. DAILY PILOT PUBUC h'OTIC'll PUBLIC NO'l'IC'll PUBIJC N011C£ f I • , . ' \ l ' __ .._ . - r O~JLV PILOT S Frldat, Jlft..,,. !; 1973 How Come· Some Prices Declli1ed? By SYLVIA PORTER What linked t"Orn nakes and cuannbera:, pqckttbook.s and pillows, riilroad fares and raincoats 1n 1971? Ann·er: Each went down In price ln the face Qf a year of contin- uing in- flation. And what W3S the tie between TV picture tubes. rice, gas or elec- tric ranges and postal charges! P01t1'•1t Answer : Each was priced al lht end of 1972 at the same level as at the start or '72. The price changes were zero. INFLATION REM.\JNS the No. I e(OnQmic problem in the U.S. as 1973 begins. Despite some progress toward control of the upsurge in prices, the annual·rate of rise at year-end was still in an unacceptable range of 31h percent. Despite our awareness or the threat. an acceleration of inOation as the economy zooms along is widely anticipated. Bi.it there have been ex- ceptiOns ot the general -price trend, and let us celebrate them -for each tells us a lot about what forces are con. tributing tO inflation in the U.S. now and where the solu- tions to the problem might lie. To ilulstrate: The price of oranges £ell 3 Navy Okays Gn1mman's Big Loan BETHPAGE, N.Y. (AP) - Grumman Corp. has been granted an additional $18 million loan by the Navy despite the aerospace con~ tractor's refusal to build 48 more Ft4 jet fighters for the service under a contract ~ Uon. authorized by the Navy on Dec. 12, the· day after the company said it· wouJd not build the additional F14s unless the price were renegotiated. Stephen G. Kerekes, the sp(lkesman, said the loan was not predicated on Grumman's willingness to build the ad- ditional planes. The loan brings to SM million the com· pany's total indebtedness to the Department of Defense. The New York Times. which reported the loan in today's editions. noted that Asst. Secretary of Defense Bai:ry J. Shillito. did not mention the amowit of the new Joan in testifying before a Senate sub- committee Dec. 21. At that hearing, it was said that Grumman was negotiating a new loan: and the subcommittee's chairman. Sen. William Proxmire, ((). Wis.), said he believed. the loan was to be for $10 million. ' THERE ARE OVER 2000 USEO C.O.RS FOR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S Harbar Baul•vard af Car• LOOI fOR THI f"*ILIM At THEOOORE I UNIVERSITY ROBINS FORO OLOSMOBI LE -2060 ' 2850 .HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVO. J •• . ' t OVER THE COUNTER COMPI.ETE NEW YORK STOCK UST NASO Listi,... for Th"""OJ• JonU1ry 4, 1'73 • .... • • p !; • • •• , • 1 •• ; • c •• • !' • f • ~ ~· • • .. • • ~ ~· r • i • •• • ' • • .. • :· Tliursday's Closing Price&-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ; Market Scores Lo,ver . .in 'Trading NEW YORK CAP}--Stock market prices drifted 1 l°"1er Thursday, but a.flalysts said the decline was a · tonu>0ruy reaction lo • th....Say rally. The Dow Jones avecage of 30 lndurtl'iab bad spurted more than 86 polnta lince Friday, and some consolldaUon wu In ord,,. tbey aid. ' "Tod~• behavior wu a natural beat of tbe penc dulwn,' Slid Lucian RooJ>ll' of W. E. Huuon & o. : The retreat "h&nlly 1mountll to anything" In ·view of tbe market'• 1001-term advances, be added. ) J111ulf'f 1973 s DAIL~ PILOT r I • I , • t I DAILY PILOT Friday, January 5, 1973 "I take it you 're in no mood to listen to talk about . raises." Phony De livery TV Repair Fraud Scheme Reve aled SACRAMENTO (AP) - Counterfei t packages bearing the Radio Corporation of American trademark may have bilk:ed thousands of CaUfotnla television repalr dealers, state officials say. As outlined at a news con- ference Wednesday by John Navy Ch ie f Knocks Off Dun garees SAN DIEGo (AP) -The chief of naval operations bas cancel1ed his "Z..gram" which allowed U.S. sailors around the world to wear the blue dungaree working uniform ashore, the Evening Tribune has reported. The newspaper said 't1lur.J- day that Adm. Elmo Zumwalt Jr. a ted because "manv sailors went into bars and other civilian establishments wearing the less-than-natty unifonm which were fre- quenUy spattered with engine on and paint." ''THE DUNGAREE privilege . ranked with long hair, beards and sideburns in aending Na.vy traditionalists to battle stations," said the Tribune's military writer, Bob Dietrich. In Southern Califomia, Zumwalt's order will take ef· feet Monday. the paper said. . Sailors sfUI will be allowed to keep civilian clothes aboard ship. how_ever. · Kehoe. director .of 'the State Department of Consumer A!· fairs, here is what happened this week: HUNDREDS OF lhe 3-by·ll- inch packages falsely bearing the RCA label were brought to Un ited Parcel Service for COD delivery to television dealers in San Diego. Oakland, Palm Springs and Orange County. The delivery company co1· leded a llD.40 COD charge from the dealers on each package to turn over to the person who sent them out. . When the dealers opened the packages. inStead of the CJ:· JJeCted RCA electronic parts they paid for, all they found were a "couple of old transistors,'' Kehoe said. KEHOE SAID the par<el firm estimated that as many as 1,900 packages with the COD charge of $10.40 each may have been pu t into It de- livery system. But Kehoe add· ed no £inn figure was avail· · Th.e Ventura County district attorney's ofrlce filed a civil fraud action Wednesday · against James R.. Holsopple in connection with the case. Kehoe said. But no criminal charges had been filed1 he said. Holsopple ooce operated the Airway Television and Ap. pliance firm with stores in Long Beach and in the Foun- tain \'alley area of Orange County. and his electronic repair license is up for con- sideration of revocation at a Jan. 15 hearing in connection with separale matters, Kehoe said. Bikini Bulge · 'Separares'· Offered NEW YORK (APJ -tr you have more buJge here than there, you can buy your bikini in "separates." Swim Bali offered bathing suit tops and botloms, sold &eparately in different sl7.es, at the New York Couture Business Council's national press week Thursday. IF A WOMAN HAS large hips, she can bay a bathing suit bottom ln a size larger than the top. 'll>e suit. are cut in bright floriil prints, or plaids. COVON!pS run the gamut from matching shirts at $30. and aOOtte skirts at $3S, to a cowl-necked. dolman-sleeved <lop, at-$25. FOR PLUMP WOMEN, the ooe-pie.ce maillot, priced $30, inclUdes firm body support in the light places. The one-piece swim dress coveni: buJglng upper thighs wtth a .~dde"'1il-' aOOtt lkirL --~ --... -~ ~-.,, THERE OVE R 500 SKIL[ED TECHNICIANS READY TO SERVE YOV ON COSTA MESA'S · Harbar Baulevard af Cars "' LOOI JOI THI IMtLIM AT NA BERS I BAUER CADI LLAC INC. BUICK 2600 2925 HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. .. SAVE •2 ••• HAMIMIXBI 5u SAVE 1°1 ••• PORT. RADIO 296 OURRIG.197 Listen to foll.bodied sound, solid instant play chassis, battery, earpllone. case. SAVE 4f ... ALUM. FOIL Strong, flexible, SIO\k up al this l&w pnce. 25 It. on each 12'' wide roll. ) • • l>NE . DAY SA J;E. ~ SATURDAY o·N.[Y .;. 'rT , ~* . .f • SAVE 1f ••• SPADPUIS • f f---OU•RKd •• ~9~e~~­ . factory lresh Sll'rl< plugs for better engine pefiorm· aoce. Fit rmst cars. 111. llc ltsist1r Pll(S ••. Mc SAVE If ... • lllAMPll 299 OURRIG.197 Safe for cleaning all rUgs. Kon pl'iosphate. acid, non· lo~ic. famous Bissell. High in proteln, m1trit1on; floats on surface and keeps tank absolutely cleaJ. '\ .. ' J;el a free trial sile lube of toothpaste witb purchase .,, brush. ~ RECTRIC BWIO ass OUR RIG. 11.97 All the warmth you want without weight. Twin s1ie, theurostat controt. machine washable. Cl!o1ce of colors #36611 SAVE '1.88 •.. SAPllAU 322 OUR RIG. 4.88 lmport~d brown leathe1 toe· ring sandals, low slant heril. Teens & Misses'. SNOU IOf AT lOflt auc• 01 TOI IA NCI SAVE 81.55 ••• WARM PIAID BLANKETS x90'' fOR TWIN OR FULL SIZE ems / OUR REG. S. 99 Rest assured, warm and comfy during long, winter nights, with these bright red & gold plaid blankets to fit twin or lull size beds. All are moth proof, non-allergenic and machine washable for easiest care. Stock up and get the extra blankets you need right now at th is low price! STOii HOUIS: MONDAY th"' FRIDAY 12 NOON to 9 PM• SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 10-AMtll'7 ~ • HUUY SOMI QUANTITIES MAY l lUMITID . -' 1.m / , / ; t s I s f • • t t I By JAN EDWARDS Of .. D.ll'J "" lllff defedseless mammals.are also io danger during lbe return lr\p to lbe Arctic Binoculars, cameras and warm Ocean waters during Jl.1arch, April and clothing are the only equipment needed l.tay. to view whales in these times-unlike the An estiqiated 6,000 whales will be harpoons, ropes and stOut dispositi<im swimming and spouting downcoast and professional hunters n e e d e d ·during n-.ay be seen during the migration season past yean. ' from mlises. leaving at various interva1s Orange Coast residents can board ships; r f'rom three coast.\a locations. al-three nearby locati.on&-and-bead-for-Cruisers will leave -;t 10 p.m. and I the open sea to spot gray whales p.m. on Jan. I, 7, Jl, 14, 20. 21 . 27 and 28 migrating to Baja California •coastal and Feb. 3 and 4 from the new Dana waters during J!mYID' and Febrqary. Mario.-at :oana Polilt'-. .:_...c..,_ --- Whales from l,BCKI pounds to J5 tons will .!IOOD pa51 by the Orange Coast as lhey near lhe end of !heir anmial 6,000. mile, southward migraUoo from the icy Bering Sea feeding grounds to bear lhelr young in warm lagoons. Geysen of water 15 fef;t higb are spouted into the air as the whales breathe through blowholes atop their massive heads. And the water makes a hoarse, whooshing sound as it is forced through. Small baby memben of the berd m,py be seen traveHng close to their mothen. Most of these calves are born after the herd reaches Baja, but inevitably a feW females have to give birth in whatever sheltered spots they can find during the migration. The calves nurse many gallons of milk per day and can gain hundreds ol. pounds daily during the first few mont)s of life. Adult whales must guard their young from killer whales and sharks. The Girls, Comedy Keep Holiday On Firm Ice Holiday on Ice, the 28th edition of en- tertainment on ice, is presenting its skating spectacular at the Los Angeles Forum through Sunday, Jan. 14. Tbe show boasts a collection of skating greats, costumes, girls aild riotous com .. ·edy along with professional staging. Seven production numbers will highlight the two and a hall hours ol family entertairunent. '"It's a Beautiful World," a fflSI movin& mlWcaJ and skat.igg treat; "Mil Up~at Montessari," a feature for all c hildreh; "Fiddler on the Roof 11 a . ' slr:atb'tg tribute to the 1ong run Broadway musical starring Jay Humphry, and "Let Your Spirit Soar," a modem musical fan- tasy will all be ,... In the first hall. "The Blue and the White," skating at it. best, "Knight. of the Road," hoboing on ice, and "Together with Love," the graiid fmale featuring the entire cast will headline the second hall. 1be a r r a y of talent features such feminine skating as Judy McLeod. a Canadian champion from Vancouver. B.C., and petite Wendy Wat.son, a youthful charmer from Moodon , New Brunswick. nckets may be obtained for S3 rrom Whale WatdJ, 34972 calle Fortuna, Capistnmo Beach, !l'l624, 496-9561. Allow 10 days for mail reservations. Proceeds will go toward educational activities at San Clemente High School. Arrive.at the marina 15 minutes br(orc departure time. '\\'bale herd spectators can nlso take the Island Holiday passenger boat at the Balboa Pa.vilioo in Newport Beach at 9 a.m. and I p.m. weekends only. Tickets at $3 for adults and. $2 for children 12 years and under may be ob- tained by calling the pavilion at 673-5245 And a cruiser now leaves at I p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. weekends from the Village Boot House at the Ports O' Call , San Pedro. For reservations, call (213 ) S47·2662. Tickets are $3.50 for adulls and S2 for children under 13. \Ii ~ I h I I I, I ' "Snoopy" Is back. The WO<ld's greatest skater wiD have an even bigger rol.e in the 1973 Holiday on Jee. He is presented through the courtesy of Charlie Brown and friends out or the realm of "Peanuts." Jtmmy Crockett, one of the finest skaters In the business, a star with Holiday pn Jee Jnternatiooal for a d""8de, and Jay Humphry, tbe Canadian cha'!'PiOO and Olympic star, bead an im-~de list cl inaJe stars. Leslie -ol l.ol Angeles •• blad: able!' with -poll!nlial, ii In bis roolde,year with tbe llhow. lllil:e Bums mt# and ii featured In .....-al pro. -...ir akatlng Is line of tlie prlrile leahireS of the 11173 "111lon.-Davjd Su~oo and_Mmy Cl!urcb, ·till ~ 1dwn- pioos and world dance. team share the honors with • .,,,. l!oyer&," • greal adagio team. A now tHm will par Wen- <li' Waboo and John MaeWilliams, who Ilka ~ and Cburch are Clnadlanr. Ollllll' IWaoomes ... Mike l!uma and ~11111-and tho bAJlroom,chlo with &...ft a1V.11*..Steve and Sherry Pedley. Cehlli dien Judy Mi:l.eod op~ns Kolld'ey on Ice in spectacular style during "It's a Beautiful World." tal<en care " by Pao! la _, In two Individual el· forts iDif the combination • " Gigi """""'jlllll si.-1 Podley, as "Biddy and l!ocWy.• plli<lt artbls ..-..,.. In oddllloo to tbelr 11<ating In the pn>- --JlnlmY Q'oct.u, Jay Humphry ond Le•li• -will all be pr~tl!ll In outatandlng • soln ellorts. Nancy and Leandrt and David SUtton and Mary Cliurdl will also be spotll&flted In specially st.ged pair rouUnea. "The Swing W•ltt" will he one or lhe features of the rost paced flpal•. Elgbt couples will be starred ln the salute to group pOlr skalliig. - Tlclttta raoge from !3.15 to 16.25 and art available al the usual tlckel qm· des. fridq, rt 5, 1973 E ·FAMILY FOCUS TV Docu1nentary Z ero es on Home "An American Family," a ma jor series or a dozen hour-long documentaries \\'hi ch capture the inner erosion of a family and its relationships \\'ilh socictr as a whole, will premiere Thursday at 9 p.m. on KCET, Channel 28. The landmark television se ries "'as created and produced by Craig Gilbert who spent seven months record ing the day-to-day Hves of the seven members of the William C. Loud family o( Santa Barbara. All 12 programs v.·ill be presented nat~ally over the Public Broadcasling Service. Gilbert has brought to television, for the first time, a method pioneered by anlhropo)ogist Oscar Lewis in his street- comer studies of !o.1exican life. The resulting 300 hours of Gilbert's cinema verit.e film study have been edited into an unusual insight of present-Oay American life. Focusing oo lhe problems and joys of a real family in real situations, Gilbet1 has attempted to answer some of the larger questions about modem American society: What is the current American dream? What is lei\ of the parent-child relationships? Where are America's children going? Gilbert decided against the more lradi· tional ways of answering these elusive questions, having £eh. that the survey-type of docwnentary would result in dry statistics and barren conclusions. Instead, Gilbert has centered on a single family, exploring the entire spectrum or its interpenooal relationships as well as its ties with iociety. - This method has resulted in a dyMmic portrait ol the American cultlll'O. "I ~'t 1el out to prove anything," said lillbert. "I had faith thal ii we stayed "1th a family long enough, certain universals would surface -like how parents feel about children and husbands lbDUt WfVe§." Gilbert s~t l'l\'.O months in search of lhe "'right' family for the kind of study he had in mind . lie oeeded a family that would put up with a ma}or invask>n of privacy and one that was composed of attracllve, articulate people who came close to a tealizatton of <be vaguely- defined Amerlcan Dream. His search ended In Sant.a Barbara with Bill Lood, age 50, hls wife Pat, 45. Jand their five children ranging in age from 13 to 2{l )•ears, who opened thei r door to Gilbert's camera~. For seven mon\hs l~1ay 30, 197\ to Jan. I. 1972 J the Louds ahnred (heli mosl priva te moments _ with 11 nwt public aud ience. {During the Olmlng of "An American Family," lhe Louda' 20-yur malTiqe • Michele and Delilah Loud en1oy a sharing moment as sisters. They are part of "An Americ an Family." collapo:t'rl C'nd1111:: 1n a sepnrauon 1 \Vlulc llwrr '"•' nt•\·<'r 1norc than nnt' 1·an1cra r1 l'\I 1n tht• Loud ho1nc :tl nnv one t1mt•. ;1n add111o0<1I rrc\V \\a~ us<>d 1\hcn fa mily n11•mber:-. tr:i\·clcd or "crt• 1nvolv(-d 1n s1•p;.1ralC' at:t1\·1t1rs The series also follows the Louds back in time to ex plore their family roots. Still photograph!. horn~ fllO\·ies, letters, newspaper cli ppings and other family doc uments evoke thei r a ncesto~ and provide An unbroken hnk in the Loud chain of AmericAn eJ1periencE'. f;ill)(•rt dP'lr·ri l11•d lhf' Louds All l>E>lntt .. neither typicAl nor avcra1ee -l')f) lumily f:-" Th,\l'elorr . th1' ·S\'.a.ilt It: i;aUed .. An An,t'ricn n 1-~e1nily·• -311(]"' nol The Amt'rlct1n Fanuh Dut the Louds arc Americans and they tell us someth\ng about all !he farn1lles in thiJ country. fo]lo1\Jnq ;1 SJX'C'1;1J ..erl't'n1ng of St\t•ral "f'i;:nlenl~ of llK' ser1t'!. noted ;.u1throµo lnj!i,1 :'il;+ri;:an•t :\lt'ad raflt:'d II "an l'Xlr:.iorrhn;,r1 .,~·r1t''> ·· Shi:• "t ilt l•n !•1 .!Id_\ th;:11 "nothn1~ hkl' il ha~ ever btr11 do11c :i11<1 I think it rni'ly be as important for our lim<' as-\1f'rt• the invcnOoo or drama and lhe novt'I for tarlier genera-. lions ll new way to help pcopte 1111· derstand themselves." f\CE:T v.·11l repent carh of the programs 1he follo,1·ing S;iturrl r:iy at 11 p.m., and \Vedrtcsda» HI 2 30 I) m. "An \m1•rfr:1n F:in11lv"' l~ a 1>roduction or \~.N~r. Channrl 1:1. 1n New Vofk. l'rodul'er l:ill>ert has bt!en an ,execuli\'t produN'r for the stalion slrlCc 1066 and rreeived <1n Emmy Award nomlnitlon for "The Trlumph or Christy Brown." which he wrote and directed. ' I I( DAILY PILOT WHAT TO no·, WHERE TO GO \ They're Showing , 'Death • • in Venice' at OCC and Burning Trees in Neivpo t JAN. I PILM 51!111113 -Onmp Coosl College, 2701 Fairview ltold, Costa Men, Frlday nlcht film series in the Fcru1n. It admission: ••ON.th In Venice,,. Jan 5; "The Devils," Jan. 12; "Sweet Swectback's Sot1g," Jan. 19, and ''The LeanUng Tree," F'eb. 9. JAN. 5 FILl\1 SERIES ON ART -"Museum Without Walls," series or films on Picasso, C'r0ya, Giotto, Le COrbualer and others, spaisored by School of Fine Arts Committee for Arts, Sci- ence Lecture Hall, 8 p.m. Fridays, Jan. 5, 12, 19 and 26 and Feb. 2. Serles Uckets $JO, slngle-admiaslon tickets $2.50. For information call Fine Arts Box Office (714) 833-6617. JAN. l • H TRAVEL SHOW -8th Annual Southern California SpCJrts, Vacation and Recreational Vehicle Show. CQnvention Center, Anaheim. Admission $2 adulls. children 8-12 $1. H. Werner Buck sMw featuring re:crealional vehicles, travel and vaca~ tion ideas. Sunset :P.iagazine Travel Film Festival, entertain· ment. JAN. 11-7 FREE RIDES -Landsalllng, sponsored by American LaJld. sal\lng Organliatlon, takes pl..., Saturday and Sunday al Mile Square Park, l!rool<hW'll and Edinger, Fountalil Valley. Free rides. 546-8045 ror lllformaUoo. JAN.I ' CHORALE CONCEJIT -Coos1 Communlly Sympltony Or- dlestra will perfonn Iii Orange Coast College Audltorlwn at 8 p.m. Orobestra, aololstt and choir' wlll perform "lleotus Vir'' by Vivaldi and "Mlgnllicat in D" by Bach. Admission II.SO. JAN. I TREE BURNING -AMusl Christmas Tree burning IJlOll- sored by the Newpc>rt Beach Parb and Recreation Dept. takes pJaoe at 7 p.m. SattU'day Pt Newport Pier, Corona ael Mar State Beach, Oceanfront Pt Oringe Avenue in West Newport, 16th Street and Dover Drive, Jamboree Road and Santa Barbara. Children turning in tree• will receive a ticket f()r prizes. C<lU Ute fire department for information. 673-1315. JAN. 10 DANCE SERll:S -Series of Cilms and lectures on dance presented by Olga Maynard, lecturer in Cine arts, sponsored by School ()f Fine Arts committee for Arts. Fine Arts Vil· lage Theatre, noon to 1 p,m. Wednesdays, Jan . 10, 17, 24 and 31. FEB. 11 ORGAN CONCERT -Organist Tom Harmon presenting program undor 1ponsorehip of School of Fine Arts Commlllee !or Arts. VUlage Concert Hail, I p.m. Feb. 11. Admluioo .I. JAN. 1J ORGAN CONCERT -Auditorium, Onnge Coal! COilege, 2101 Fairview Road, Coeia M .... Solo orpn recltal by Dr. Jwotln Colyar who bas selecl«I music by Bach anll contem- por.uy Amtr1can compooen to be pl1yed oo the Allen Com- puter Organ. AdmUJ,sioo rree. JAN. LI • II DRAMA WORKSHOP -"How lo Become President" with UCI sludenll! helping p)aywri•ht Ian Bernard, UC! lecturer In flne arts, constnict pl'J'. Fine Arts Village Studio Tbeatro, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Admission 50 cents. JAN." SYMPHONY CONCERT-Concert for the New Veer wt1I be conducted by David Anthony, at 4 p.m. in the OJmmunlly Theater, Golden West College. 'Admis8ion $1. ( JAN. 15 CIDNA REPORT -Clubhouse Tree, Leisure World, Laguna Hiiis. John McCook Roots will present "Report on Malilland Chlna" at 7:30 p.m. Further information about tht Jecture series. Parade of Platform Stars, 1$ available by calling 837-6160. JAN. II LECTURE SERIES -Soclsl Science Lecturo Hall, UCI Campus, UCI community lecture series enlitled "The tbal· lenge o/ Racial and Ethnic 00!-A1'lltlld the· Wllrld." Arthur Marder. PbD., pnlelear cl hlll«y '"Ill dlacllll "?be Racial Minority Problem In Brltltilt locleCJ: Rooolutloo •( Olao8!" on Jan. JI. KM!dall E. llilloo. Plid. -~. lessor o/ hJ!ltory, wt1I -k 00 "Ethnic TeooiOOI In Sovlef Society: Myth and Reollty" ""Jiil. U. Karen Leonard, P!1d., assistant professor ol comparaUve culture will comment on ''Indla: Problems of Natural Integration" on Jan. SO. Lec- tures start at 8 p.m. Free admission. FEB. II WIND ENSDllll.E -Concert by University Wind E...Cmble sponsored by School of Fine Arts. Village Concert Hall, I p.m. Friday. Feb. II, Admission II. JAN. I.I DANCERS -Jose Limon Dance Company presents a 1"'" ture-OemonstnU.ion in dance at 8:30 p.m. Admisaion, $1. 0~ ange Cpast College, %'701 Fairview Road, Costa Afesa. JAN. II LA TRAVIATA--Orange c..U! College auditorium. 2701 Fall' vJew Road, Costa Mesa. San Francisco Opera's touring co~ pany will pn!l1ent "La Traviata" by Guiseppe Venti 1t 1:15 p.m. Complete opera will be sung iq· English. Tickets, 12 for. adull.81 $1 for students. Infonnation, call 83W803. -. .Shaky-Vear--for-B .. ..-adway _something Old,_Sameth.in~ --ew-o-n-boun-tjB-illboar $1T.7 Million Made, But $11.4 Mil~ion Lost EDITOR'S NOTE -The Broadway theater crowd bids farewell to 1972 toith relief. Overall ticket sales were down some ll5·mil· r lion and 55 productil)tl" bombed out ai a combined '°" of $11.4 milli<>n. NEW YORK (AP) -F~sl the good news about 1m . Broadway : Ten shows completed runs with total winnings of $11. i million, amt.her 11 continued . as sure or probable winners. Now for the bad news : Fifty.five productions bombed out al a combined lolil o/ 111.4 mllllon. • SUd> 11ddy cashbo• contrast ~;~·t surprise anyone. Ever f om Tb .. pls trekked off IJ ,acri>ss Attica plalna wllh his ~ Jlrsl wagonload ol troupers, 'I. .Gilly about <me sbow in five • as returned la~ ll'lth pell. ., 1J>e lm<a! !ally dramatizes. however, bow the law of lo~yturvy still ruled the Gtiat White Way at sundry I . 'I levels. aetting Into those • • some m~ iofonnatlon 1-....c:=== tho profession's m a s t e r players, writers and pro- ducers. . The main prizes for current activities were awarded to Alexis Smith. Phil SUvers, Cliff Gorman and Sada Thompson. "Two ~tlemen of Verona" was picked as the best musical by both the Tony voters and the New York Drama Critics Circle. Among dramas, "Slicks and Bones" won the Tony, and alter a red-laced recount. the Soloist C r i ti C S decided for "That Championship Season." Yehudi Menuhin will As the famous Shubert be soloist with Los An· the ater<hain organizati()n geles Philharmonic Un· moved Crom family control to der Zubin Mehta in more ecumenic a I ad· performance of Elgar's ministration, regional theater Violin Concerto in B activity acrou the n at i o n minor~t usic Center wued in importance as dra· conce beginning at m.n's ma.in future. F..or-tlut. 8:30 . on Jan. 11 , 12 first time resident companies 3 nd-4. embarked upon a production·---------- swapping project calculated to duce individual c om p a n y coots. 1ve • :Oii shekels situittion. f ij'Nnot o1 the p;,,ois rea111.ed • fl>i~ ending runa Iii the I ~l k k "'were monoplllzed by THE •MAN OF BROADWAY YEAR Producer Joseph Papp Has 3 Hits Taking final curfain calls were many eminent artists. 'Ibe necrology inc I u de d Margaret Webster. 67; Miriam Hopkins, 69; Berta Gersten, 78; Helen Bonfils, 82; Dorothy Dalton, 78; Margaret Dale, 96 ; May Craig, 83. and Jessie Royce Landis, ({T, Theater \ ;..J three. The~ ~ '00 .the llaol" paid ~ $7.4 million; "Prom· Promises" and "1776," ' mlllionoach. -Included 41 of ll'n's 58 efforts, w h I ch dropped •u mlllloo; and 10 ! previouHeuon holdovers that ""qui! with combined deficilB of '3 tDlllton. ~ more ominous sign or i*lator -diacontenl -was \'~sing boxoffice 1ctlvlty. -rSl{lce June, tickets sales have • declined by •ts mUUon from the previous seuon's com- par1ble period. accord\ni to Vat;Jety, the "principal Show business periodlcal. The dip. reflected, partly a drop in a.> a ftl'age number or &bovrt on display. Trade clrcl.. elso attributed the trend lo lessening tourism because of midtown's growing reputation f()r vice and violence. Musicals, Broadway's in· dlgenoua pride, had a tough year, with only W: of 24 mak· Ing It with fans. A trendy eruption of piece. about the "gors of big city Ille, 1>01\Ucal aatltt and suspeme all lalled to please. Off-Broadway once more out-did the Times Square zone with exhibits,, but even fewer · shows setiled hlto any . kiop or a run. Most rewarding were the efforts of the Public Harbor Art Museum Shows Bannard Works An exhibit of Walter Darby Danna.id paintings has opened in the main gallery of the Newport Harbor Art Museum and wm continue through Feb. 4 aS the museum's first 1973 exhibit. The painlings were done by the New York artist during the past eight years and Ute earlier paintings of the 8-year period contain c e n t r a I . Armenians In Concert Varoujian Kodjian1 1m first prize wlnneT of the Intern• tional Competition for Con· duetors {Sorrento} wlll con· duct the Symphony Orc~stra in a program of Armenian muslc at 7:30 Feb. 4 in the Music Center's Pavilion. Archie Dickranlan, president of tile Armenian Sympbonlc Molle AssociaUon, In maldng -the lllllOllOOement staled that the Soutlle'n C 1111 or n I a Mormon Choir wlU _.r in tbll JWoo'i 1Mu&I COllCeri. Lill Chookulan, soprano, will be the rmciPll IOIOllL ' ' abstract images floating in pale. m.pn ocb r om at i c backgrounds. His more current works have no central image but col· ors are broken up into l<>QSe, fragmented geometric struc- tures and patterns. The artist says he used rollers to apply paint, and fishllne was tied taut across one canvas to make a sublle, grid effect of colors. The sculptures and etchings of Los Angeles artist Jerry r..tcMillan will also b e displayed at the museum. He has plated goJd and silver into paper bag shapes eight inches · high, as well as used actual P3J>tt bags torn on one side to reveal color and black-and· white photographs and lithogrAphs of landscapes and other $Cent.S inside them. llJs etchings art of copper and bras11. The museum is at 2211 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach, Wilh Ute exception of Dec. 2.4 to 25, De<:. SI and Jan. I. museum hours are: noon f'o 4 p.m. Tuesdays throuqh Sun- davs and 8 to 9 p.m. Friday$. Free guided tours are Rhren fl'Om i lo 4 p.m. Thuroday>. Adult admllllon It SO cents ; lh.ldent.s cost 25 cents. There It no-adm-dlarga on Tueodoys. F..-mo1.. lnlorm>l\oo, call m.m. Theater, Cbelsea, Roundabout and La Mama Experimental Theater Club. . Lincoln Center's Repert()ry company, long beset with problems, faced further trav· ail as artistic directOf' Jules Irving resigned because of Ute organization's chronic finan· cial anemia. Cheerier aspects of the theatrical year were the emergence of off.Broadway's dynamic Joseph Papp as the Main Stem's activist successor to David Merrick, who cut down stage work for flirtation with cinematic enterprise. - At long last, a Hall of Fame was created to memorialize Gone from Ute male ranks were Rudolf Friml, 92: Maurice Chevalier. 8 3 : Reginald Owen, 85; Lew Parker, 84: Leo G. Carroll, 80; John Burrell, 62 ; Louis Lurie, 84; Allred While, 89; Brandon de Wilde, 30; Jasper Deeter, 78; the Rev. Thomas Carey, 68; John Lilel, 78; Stanley Prager, 54, and John Cbap- man. 71. As Broadway headed into 1973. its mood was ironically typified by the sole tune from a musical, "Godspell," which maae the um best-seller lists. The title, "Day by Day." • College Exhibit • Paintings and drawings by two fine aria ltculty meinbers -Kay Mortenson and Robert Alderette · -launch Golden West College's 1973 gallery shows. The cxhibi~ which 1ncludes the graphite on paper drawing above by Mrs .. Mortenson, opened Thursday and will run through January. Mn. Mort· enson workS In life nWing aifOlfiJ>hl~. Al4er- ette depicts contemporary We situaliollli in oil and acryllc paintings. "Play Strindberg" South Coast Repertory's third straight West C.oast premiere opens tonight f()r a four·weekend run, Fridays through Sundays at 8 p.m., at the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., C.osta Mesa. SCR presents the comedy "Mooncbildren" on .Wed.Des-- day and Thursdays, Reserva;. tions 646-1363. HMr. Popper'• Penguina" C.ontinuing for two more weekends is this children's play by the Fountain Valley Commu n I ti)' Theater. Performances Friday at 7:30 and Saturday and Sunday at 2 p.m. at l~ Mt. Baldy Circ}e, Fountain ValJey. Reservations !J63.9663. "Heaven Can Walt" A comedy of a dead boxer's "second chance " at life will open next Friday for five weekends at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main SI., ljunllngton B e a ch . Performances Fridays and Saturdays through Feb. 10. Reservations 536-4446. 1Chamber Musicians lri Concert The John Biggs Consort will perform musie-of .several cen- turiJ?S on Jan. ts, in the first. of a series of three choral chamber concerts at the Mark Taper Forum this season. The Los Angeles group tours the country performing at col- leges. ftstlvals, and museums. A film for Bailey·Film A.~iates. "Discovering the f\fusic of the Middle Ages," is rapidly becoming a standard in music libraries act'OM the country. Biggs. Clairo Gordon , Salli Terri. and Wiil iam Lyon Lee make up the vttsatlle organlzati()n. Instrument~ lo l bf' used in the roncert ~re wUI h)<lude m:ord..,. knnnm- t.mi..;, rau.~hpfeife. viola <13 Jf&mba, hnrdv gurdv. portative orsi:an and percussion. The concert wUI be followed hv The Jntimnte Bach anrt nn Evenln.R of World Premieres performed by the Master Chorale Chambtl' Stngers and the Ut11e Sinfo11taorcnmra- under the direction or Roger Wagner. ' • The first order or buainess in this brand new year of llv· ing theater is to take a look at tbe forthcoming events on the local boards for the first two months of 1973 and see just how many of them sound familiar. Remarkably, only .., about half of tbem do. or some 16 announced pro- ductions in January and February by the area's com· munity and collegiate theater groups, a good 50 percent of them may be classified as Orange County premieres . Of the remaining eight, about half of these fall into the revival category -oldies which haven't been done locally in so long they seem new -while the other four constitute fairly familiar fare. South Coast Repertory, as might be expected, bu two of these county premieres In the offing -"Play Strindberg." which opens tonight, and the long·anticipated West Coast premiere of "Tbe Basic " . debuting on Feb. 16 at SCR's Costa Mesa showplace. AMONG THE COMMUNITY theaters, three of them are leading orr tbe new year with local premleres of what may accurately (if their tiUes are any criterion) be described u sex comedies. 1bese would be, in order of appearance, "How the Other Half Loves," "Last of the Red Hot Lovers" and "The Ninety Day Mistress." The Laguna Moulton Playhouse will present "Other Half," a British import which caught the eye of dire(,tor Hap Graham when be was across the pond, and Graham's tak.· ing the leading role himself for the Laguna versioD, which opens Jan. 16. San Clemente continues to grab off the new ones and "Red Hot Lovers" on Jan. 18 wiU be the county's llrst look at the Neu Simon vehicle. "Mistress" Is the next one from Ute Irvine Com- • TOM TITUS Intermission munity Theater, opening Feb . 10. The other first timers on county st.ages are Orange Coast College's "The Braggart Soldier,'' set for Feb. 14-17; the COsta Mesa Civic Playhouse's a m b i t i o u s ''Andersonville Trial,'' planned for Feb. 16, and Laguna's unveUing of "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie," following on Feb. 27. ON THE BEA VIER side are a couple of reissues which haven 't been overexposed in our area -"Angel Street.'' o ni toni ht at the Lon Beach Communi y ay use, and "Look Homeward , Angel," UC Irvine's next pr~ duction, slotted for Feb. 20. A pair of comedies both seen several seasons ag() at the Huntington Beach Playhouse are "Champagne Complex," opening Jan. 19 at Santa Ana, and "Born Yesterday," set for Feb. 23 in Fullerton. Hun· tington Beach, meanwhile, will produce a comedy announced but abandoned by Westminster last season, "Heaven Can Wait," next weekend. For the music lovers in the area, the Fullerton Civic Light Opera is reviving the desert romance of "Kismet" for a Feb. 16 opeliing while ·the Long Beach Civic Light Opera opens Its own "Kismet" a week later. And the Ana· Modjesl<a Player• have their annual children's show in rehearsal, "Wlrulle tbe Pooh,"· which will bow in on Feb. 24 under the tute1age of Carol Faulstick, who staged the same show in Huntington Beach last summer. That's the schedule for the first two months -something old, something new, something borrowed and -who knows, maybe even something blue. But not too blue; after Jil, it11 still Orange County. Chorale To Salute ' -Perry Price and Michad Allinson will appear as solois'5 for the "Salute to Lerner aril Loewe" concert to be .....;._ ' ~· fonned by tbe Rog<r Wagner Chorale at the Dorothy Chand~ ler Pavilion January 27. !< Price, who has sung wtth many of the most famoif opera companies in the coun- try, was sol()ist in the hig~ successful Rodgers and Hail. merstein concert at ttE Hollywood Bowl this paSt season. • , Allin.son, who has recenilY played the lead in "Sleuth" l0 Boston, followed Rex Harrison as Professor Higgins in the New York -production of "My Fair Lady." Other soloists previously an· noonced for the concert are Andree Jordan, Bruce Yarnell, and Bill Lee. THANK GOODNESS •• THE HOLIDAYS ARE OVER. •• AND Wl'U ALL llOKE I The cha1'9e bill1, the credit card bill1, the one1 they said you won't have to pay 'til next year, will all be in the mail 1oon, if you haven't 9otten them yet! • IUT, DON'T WORRY. LOOK AT THE MONEY YOU'U IE SAYIN!i IY CLIPPIN!i THESE COUPONS. AND YOU'U IE HILPINli YOUI NIW DIET WARD OFF COLDS! AND HILPIN!i TO PAY YOUR llLLS, TOO! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . ' . . . SAN PllANCISCO TO COMPLETE SAN FRANCISCO • • THifi CITRUS SALE • • • CARNATIONS • TANGERINES • DAISIES • • • • • , ' - • $1.49 z • I OLM.SI .OO: 79' laoch . -DOZ. • • • • Limit .. 2 Dez. • Limit 10 LU. • Limit • 2 lch .. • • With Thia Coupon • With Thie Coupon • With Thia Coupon • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • Good llt• • OUI PAMOUS • LAROIR SIZI • • P'or All ,.,,.,... • P'IUM 19U11%1D • Tl!XAS RUIY RED • • ZUCCHINI • ORANGE • GRAPEfRUrT • • S9UASH • JUICE • • • IOC lb. • 49c 9.., • I o,.,.S 1.00 • • • ' •• 'h ...... 0.tr • • • Limit 5 Lbs. • u..it v. .... • Limit 10 • • With This Coupon • Wltl ,. .. c •• , .. • With This Cou,.n • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE JANUAIT llltll, 1'73 Allent;on: USTAURANT OWNERS aod CHEFS -Slut th• New YNr by 9;v;n9 , : your cu1tome" the fine1tl Serve them Newport ~. on the tabl•, and our : Frellt Sq•HIHI 0.:-.• Jylce in their drin•sl Tiiey d•seNe the berll Call us now! "'Orange Countv'• Moat Popvlol''Product and Flower HOM.le" ,---.-----. NEWPORT PRODUCE °""" 7 Dtiys • w ... 8 ......... ,.,.. 2616 Nowpoit ... lrtar<I oo 1H r .. 1...io ·-•7W7ts ,,,..,,. '7M2t1 i ' ' " i j y The most I the •• range No I orr ti caftte1 Whlc crunch ooeof restau1 Afte.i lood 0 ,, ' •• WE TH I FRll SAi SUI Or HI " 49 ' You'll Need All Friends, family to Dent This Menu HOCl lMAN'S The search for variety ln food, like most or ure·s enjoyable pursuits, h;&Ws the adventurous among ws to a wklt' range of places. No prospect is au tomatically declared otr limits -be it champagne or cafeteria, bistro or rathskeller. Which probably act.-ounts for the c.runch usuaUy attending the opening of one or those triple.thee.at spots combining restaurant, delicatessen and bakery. After all, bring an Immense variety of food offerings together under one roof Out 'N About NORMAN STANLEY and nearly everyone Is willlng lo demonstrate a little dcrring-do. Beyond mere spunk, however, thtrt's other g<>od reasons for the crowds troo~ lng into the latest su ch establishment in Orange County. It Is Hocbman's, on 17th St. in Costa Mesa, a New York style delicatessen and ·Barefoot in Museum • • Complff• with .oup Of' salad. • Choice of potatoes or rice. WEDNESDAY -Top Sirloin Steak ·-----·-······· $2.95 THURSDAY -Prime Rib ............................ ·--· $3.40 FRIDAY -Beef Stroganoff .............................. $2.95 52~95: • (Regular S3.t5) i• SATURDAY -T ournedos of Beef .................... $3.25 SUNDAY -2 Lobster Ta ils .............................. $5.10 Orange County's Top Entertain111ent JOE LIGGENS The Orl9lnal Hon•yDrlppet" with WILLY JACKSON ll•"qutt Ftciliti11 ~p t o 450 Ptoplt 16712 GUHAM AVENUE IAt WCNWJI HUNTINGTON IEACH 17141 146-1116 121JI Jt2-1tS4 ~ ~elected CalifornU. -: .~ .S or Imported \Vines Broiled Halibut Steak . . . . $3.7 5. Every ltf onday Nite: Ladies with Escort ~ Price 011 any 111enu i tcrn 1oith This Ad. OPEN DAILY 11:30 A.M. LUNCH DINNER SHIP AHOY 21727 SO. COAST HWY., SO. LAGUNA (NEAR MONARCH IAY) 4H..Jto0 . . ... ... -. ... ... .... 496-5773 flHH LOCAL LOtsTll Co_,w. Df.--SS.fl BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, T. .... Stt. ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR • 1 • • • • • • V1lld ir:r><11r ltlru Tllunci.r. J•""''I' t lllnr n . willl 1'1111 c•u""', ..., lltr yovr etilWt par1y. 209 Palm , Balboa 675-5774 ·~~ SPECIALS SeJwd Monday, T ue:sday. Wednesday, T~ RED SNAPPER ... , ...... ,....... 1.95 GRILLED SEA BASS .. . • . . . . . . . . • 2.25 MAHI MAHI ... , . . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. 2.25 TOP SIRLOIN ..... ,............. 2.45 NEW YORK STEAK . . . . . . . . . .. . . • 2.95 LOBSTER TAIL . . . . . . .. . . .. .. .. . 3.95 STEAK ANO LOBSTER .••• , •.• , • . 4.95 dilJMrr include sa/Mi, garlic chem tOdrt. dloiu ol bakMJ potato or ric~ Hawaiia 16111,.._ Co.A H~. Hunt"'-"' 8-::tl Q1-lt 582-1321 luncMo#I • dintw • banqwt; TO INTRODUCE the New ~·· (XperieneetM One entree atoor re2ular price , .......... anil the second eWee ~s 1 ...... ,.. ,nMitl •it '"""""""" ..... s.Nay lit .. T1MW11y '111 JM.If • ROAST LONG . ISLAND DUCKLING \\"ild r.ll'f' Sauce Bigardc, AMONG 20 SILICT DINNll INTJl:EES VINA HAR MER DUO E"t1rt•ini ~9 Continental Cuisine Cocktails Serotna l uncheon and Dinner Monda1i through Satuf'dalt, C!osed Sundays We ere located nerl t o the Mey Co. in Sout h Coast Plate . JJJJ s. ...... 140-1140 4 to 1 p.m, Mon. lhru Fri. Good Deed hiW•• S.... •'I' M.W'1, make the scene "'"· -· o,.. -..... Sundays lH02 COAST HWT. 1.t c-Y•"'Y. ,,,_...,, in the l1tjlijijlt1D ~==-.....:~~~-LA-G_u_NA-~NIG-UE~L=:::::_,::-==:dll-::-~·:-~-~~~~~~~=-==-=~~J_!::~~~~~~ Friday January 5, 1973 Winter quarter VCI Will Stage 'Look Homeward' Angelei; County Museum of Art. Another Gallery f 'l- h1h1llon, schedull'd Feb. 2:5- Aprlt I, \\ill comprise pu1nt - u1gis. dra\\'lngs (Ind wute.rcot· ors fron1 the \Vor ld \V&r I l perk1<I Garlands For Judy's ~<'lR6€)4' ~·ucculent Beef froni l 'aptain. Cook :~ broiler. Dt.licaciel .from lM Stven. ~a.~ . .\fagnifianl I/arbo r J-'ieu:. Codttalfla. Lunchreotll Ind Dinner datty SUNDAY BRUNCH 25001 CAHA DRIVE CAHA POINT HARBOfll 4ta.t1t5 Of!' ,tcofic Cotn H":Jhw"" -rw;>1 UlllolM N~ tnd Stn Otr!Mott H@OH'MAN'S Vegas Style SUNDAY BUFFET -. - SER VED FROM 9 A.M. f!U!T COM,Olf !i\IOK•:n VdllT• r 1 ... 11f-<;; '"u ~f-.1!"" \H•'. Ii 11-I flfl V.'I' t: llt:ttltl"\1, · i I! F \ \U H llt.1!111,t, · I I'll lltil ''t " . ( l/o l'l'FI• 1.1\l·ll · l.1•\I •n \\lf-.111 HFJ ... '''Ill I!• (<!lt'f-1l ll Ell ll\"11 -\t\l l'lllil' '<ll\llllt l•lit,f.1 .-.. f"llf:t:o;t: Ill.I' ""f /f-'..'> Y, lTll SOI It f"ltP I \I A I \ \I ll'IOt lf ' [•111 \ 1·0 1 <; 1•0 .u Ill' II t ''' \' II 111111 •. .... I f ! ., Fl ' 111111"1 1 .. , II I ' n u I ... ADU LTS $3.50 '1 11\111'\l,\I llll If CHllOlllN UNOflt 11 Sl .50 ~n Rl-~1-:lt\ \Tio\:~ OURREGl'l,\11 \1 1-\t 1"' \l.~<1 \\\II \111 J-. .. 21 I AST1 7th STltEIT COSTAMESA,CAllf, '· OA!LV PI LOT • THE NU·TWO Paul O'lri.. & Walt Dolan WM. thr1i1 Sun. . SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. to 2 P.M. IANQUET 'ACILITIES Jlf PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNTIN!f'TO N l lACH 536-2555 .. -~ Ed Sullivan: • One Easy Going --Guy Speaks His Mind and Lets Wife Speak Hers 87 JAY SllARBVIT '"lllm were jllll loo many of NEW YORK CAP) -them. People IOI fed "P with Interviewing Ed Sullivan Is an them. We trtea every devtce, unaetUing experience. He'• a but ••• " CCllDpWllYe Ugbr.r ol other 'lben, .U he Winni to the people'• cigarettes. He llghll aubject, Sylvla bu a thougbt. people up In mid.question. "You know, Ed, I doa't Another unnerving thing Is agree with you," the .. ya. that he'• relaxed. You come "There are 10 many people expecting to cbronlcle a signal every pla<e we go who say act from Mount Rushmore and they mlsa a vlriely show. Instead find that bll words Ev.eytblnc -Is movies. come eully and that he'• a "The Tuetday night movie, vflr/ euy-jO!ng guy. the Friday nlgllt movie, the He speaks bis mind, but 1bunday nlgbl m o v I •. there must be an equal-time Everything mw 11 the movie." provision aornewhere in the "Well, they aave eo m\dl mantage contract with Sylvia, money on It," he says ol the bis wife of IOl'Oe o years. She' networks. Sf!eab her mind, loo. Sullivan's woeldy t.levlslon -n they're together -1how premiered in living black and they iuually are at in-and whUe on June 2, 1948. It terviews -it produces a was called "Tout of the dialogue akin to that of Fibber Town." How long would it last McGee and Molly. . today? Ask him If the era of "How long?" Sylvia echoed. television's weekly variety "Tweoty minutes." show is over. Shows like the SUlllvan doubled up in ones he did for CBS unW June laughter. "It would depend on a year ago. what you've got," be finally "I'd say yes" he say1. said. "Well," hls Wire said, "we've ooculonally aeen ex-•:r. from some of those ear abowt and lbey were ... y borrible." "I resent that," he 1temJy Informed hor aod I b e y lauaJ>ed again. At 70, Sullivan Is getting ready to do three speclaiJ for CBS next year. He doesn 't seem reedy for SUn City yet and has no ldta of retiring. Or of getting out of the ocrivenlng bu.sinesa. He started off about 5Z years ago as a $10-a-week reporter for the Port Cllester N. Y. Dally Item. E I g h t newspapers bier -three fold- ed or were 90ld out and he lost bis job -be'• still writing. He does two syndicated Broadway columns a week, down three from the number he dld when bis weekly television show was on. Flvl!" weekly c<ilumns and the show must have been murder, but Sulllvin inslsll be lbrlvod m It. He does admit to having a eevere cue of tbt bluee: when the show Onally WU ca,,..Ued alter 2S yean on lhe air. "I -was very unhappy about being off the air," be '8Jd. "You get accuakllDOd to do- ing the show. And you form a lot of nice relationahlps with newspapermen around t h e country. "When you're off the air, it's lite being sent.need to the death chamber," be said. "It's soQ of like a newspaper where you're doing yoor colUJM aod oll d a sudden the ~ editor saye, 'I've got newt for you boy. You're lhrougb,111 he said, laughing at the memories. "No matter how UtUe the money Is or anything else, lhe presti~e or being on a ,paper and writing a column add hav- ing a byline -w~u. tt'r ezi. actly the same on televtalon. 11 Sullivon grinned when ul:· ed if he ever would reach the point of actually retiring. "Jeez, I hope not," be said. r-,---c'hln;;'e "Cui;in-;., ' . -ii---+•/*. .._ .. .,,.,_,, .... ,"'M . " ... o.M .. •u -1-Anaheim-Books-B-leie1.-J-oi-ns-K-f>€-FJ--Bradhury • • __,., COM BINATION _., LuNcHEoN Pt.ATES I Johnny Cash T S .._ NO RETIREMENT YET FOR ED SULLIVAN He's Gitting Riidy lorTTVSpecilli • f I I I ~~l~El•.~-+---c~~~~-A.-s-P.rogram-1Jireeto-r~~0-=..P=e=ak~_ tt . from $295 I ~'.'"°p ~ c:h :;,~b=geo: 0' A Coll OUT '~ABOUT ... ~~~~,·-t ege Featuring Tropical Drinks venUoo Center oo Feb. 9. He is -Leo L. Bleier, Jr., a veteran a poslUon as program (Coatlaaed from Page !3) backed by his wife, June program manager and station manager of KTEH·TV, Chan-The Orange County com· Hochman's is located at 428 E. Ill _ 1 1 1 ,,,.._...., tr I carter, cart Perkins, the operator, will become the new riel 54, for the Santa Clara Popular 9Clence fiction binaUon sandwich. $2.20, 17th St., Costa Mesa. program director of KOCE-County Office of Education writer Ray Bradbury returns wrltes salami, liverwurst, Food service hours are 10 StaUer Brothers, the Ten· TV, Channel 50, Orange Coun. where he organlied the pnr Swiss cheese, and Russian I nessee Five and Mother ty Television. grammlng and operational to Santa Ana College at 7:30 dressing, served with cole a.m. to 9 p.m., Sunday through PHONE.•• .645-5550 Maybelle and the Carter Hls appointment wu an-scheme in preparation for p.m. Tuesday, f<r a lecture slaw. 1bursday. and from 10 a.m. to L .,.., -)j~ EAST 17TH .... COSTA MESA I Fam1ly. nounced by Vlce President and licensing. on "Imagination -'lbe Leap The complete satisfaction l2 midnight, Friday and Satur· - - - - - - - - -All will also appear at the General Manager William His duties with the new Through Inner Space." with every item on every plate day. ----Swing Auditorium 1n San Fumlu. Orange County station will in-Foe or the automobile and ordered by our party was1========= Bernardino on Feb. 3. Bieler joins the sllllon from volve supervision of the total the hurried pace of modem evidenced by the conspicuous ':"1'o"co"x'K'w.S"H'1'c'o~~' ~-1. Q~~ RESTAURANT LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS SEA FOOD-STEAKS-PRIM E RIB INT ERNATIONAL ENTREES FROM $2.15 BANQUET FACI LITIES ENJOY A MEAL WITH CLAUDE AND JILL Prime Rib • t.u.do $2.25 -Dion or $3. '5 Paul Cot $5. 95 ........ ~Ll~YEiiiilENTERT~Al~N~M~EN~T!"'" .... ~ DANCING NIGHnY Luncl>-Mon. tilnl.Frl. 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Dloo.,_Moo. M Sat. 5to10 p.m. Cornpli-ntary l1lted·Ala1lia for all llril'ld111v1 I A1111ivt1rs•riai SU.'471 •.. In Seclud ed Alis o Canyon Food -Codctolls -Eatortolnment -Daocl'"l Now Appearing CHAPTER Ill OON-JESSl!-DAVE Tllftd•y thru Sundey 1:45 • 1 :JO OPEN DAILY l reakfut----Lunch--DlnMr--Sunday l runc:h EARLY BUFFET DINNER-$3.25 to $4.25 Salad Bar -Choice ot 7 hot enl.rees Sundey• 4 to 7:JO p.m. • Mon.--Fri.! to 7:30 p.m. ..... ,.,. -4ff-266J AMplti rm.t. Portll1t broadcast schedule including living, Bradbury expounds on absence of any left-0vers. • l ftlt YIAl I ARIA'S llST selection of new programs, the tragedy of present life Choices were the assorted schedule timing and policy styles. "You go through your cold cuts plate (corned beef. 111 21st Pl., Newport BHch Cantonese Food ••t here or take home o,_ y.., Areud Dcllfy IZ·1Z -M. _. S.. 'II J •. -. Nightly Dinner Special• SJ.95 TAtE!tkWHALE 400 MAIN. IAl.aaA PENINSULA PLENTY OF PARKING • 673-4633 CHAIPAIHIE SUNDAY BRUNCH . d eJo l h THE CITY ev pm.en . · ouse into the garage, drive pastrami, roast beef, chopped o..,... . 11141 6tt.noo During the past eight years alone to' an underground li ver, cheese, potato salad. souTH co.-.st ,t•z• o,.. Bleier has been the executive parking place at your office, tomato ). $2.50; breaded veaJ Coo•• !Moo ' !71 ~1 '40·,191 ' .. """' producer of numerous TV take the elevator to your cub-cutlet Ion the complete din- series enjoying n a t lo n al byhole and drive home at ner), $4.45 ; cheese blintzes distribution such as : "Solu· night without so much as wav. with sour cream and jams. Uons in Commwllcatlons," ing at a fellow being." $1.95; flanken in pot (bo iled "Cultural Clashes," and Bradbury has been "in" to beef short ribs t.ri.th matzo "Eager to Learn." fi bal l, noodles, k rep 1 a c h , science 1ction for nearly 30 He is a member of a years. He sold bis first story vegetables, in broth ), $4.25 . numberof p rcrfessional at the age of 19 and has If you don't have to count organlzaUons including the published 300 stories and 14 calories, some excellent sweet National Association of Educa-books of stories, novels and tooth pcssibilities are creme lional Broadcaaters and hu a plays since then. de menthe cake, 55 cents: ap- long bac~ground In the areas Tht science fiction wizard pie strudel, 65 cents; a French of radio and television pro-served for ten years 81 8 pastry, 65 cents. ductlon, public rdatioDs and write for Hochman's has no cocktail Hitchcock Presents series. He un • MYt ""'l'Yllllttt I~ ll"lllkal 11$11 & t.oipplle,, Bieler bas collaboralod with Ids wile, Tara, an author, on various boob and magazine artlcles. They will make their home in Huntingtlln Beach. wrote the screenplay of Moby can order their favorite drinks Dick and has created or tum to a nice selection of ----::;;;;;~~;;::---- numerous stage p I a y s beer and wine. performed by his own Pan· At .some pojnt before or demonium Theatre Compan y. after your meal, be sure to take the "long y,•alk" down the restaurant's mouth-watering delicatessen counters. Leather & Lace Nightly for dancing and entertainment It's all happening at And while you're up don't mis s the bakery with ilS deJec. table array of cakes, pastries, fresh breads. rolls and baked goods. If you·re able to depart without buy ing some little "extra " to take home. it can only be concluded you're one or the few who can let restraint override temptation. Most items on Hochman's menu ~are also available to go. ,And you may want to check into the complete catering service, which will provide various--priced party platters for groups anywhere from 10 to 1000. Ice skating everyday. MUA YIRDI SHOtPINQo CINTll 2701 Ho1rbor Blvd .•t Ado1n'll C0Jlo1 M.11, Co1lif. 92~6 Tel. !7141. 979-88111 'COCKTAILS II A.M.. 3 P.M. DINNER 1$ SERVED FROM! P.M. Open seven days a week , -""-~ Sunday is r.,Airporter qnn 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach (714) 644-1700 F'lltlBAY Open 7 Days cr.Io*•J' 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. ~CJ4 (\, I~ 1M •1""1J NlWl'OltT M . nd Sot. 11 :30 A.M.to 1:30 Sucleyt: 4:00..12 MIDNIG HT NOW APl'IARING MEL -ERICKSON AT THE PIANO 9093 E. ADAMS , HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 -.. , ..... RON SHY Relaxed .And Casual •• lnlh!tacy - Entertainment Nla:htly Cort'191' of Park ani Mlirlnt B•lboli Island 67J...4.h0 PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAV E CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS Now Me 'n Ed 's moblle ovens speed delicious pipln1·hot pizzas to your door in minutes. for promptservtce phone 646-7136 (Newport Buch/Costa Meta-17th •ndTustin) . f' 847•12~4 (HunUn&ton BH~h Ind Hie!). Get the Pizza with Pizzaz ~: ~ sa ~ . ~ ' ' ' Fl11e IU.H11t1 Cuul11e Coehralb NOW OPEN FOR L UNCH 232.5 E. COAST HIGHWAY 11 :30 to 2:30 Ta ... ti1n1 Fri. 673·8267 N;ghtly O;nno,.....CoektoUs 4 to 11 p.m. Rfllrvatlons Sund•y 2 to 9:30 pm-Closed Mond•ys Open Delly - 5 p.m. to 2 1.m. CLOSED MONDAY TEMPLE GARDENS - OJ'NS:S::SRe1tcur•nt RICKSHA COCKTAIL ~~~~.~~E Featurtn1 Exotic Tropical J>rtnkl IU"" LUNCH 11~0.l :JO .._ ........ , .......... (• IWtlwJ COSTA llllA ~1H7 540-1m 1814 N. Coast Hwy. !El Camino Real! SAN CLEMENTE 492·6571 THE BLACK KNIGHT RESTAURANT INTIMATE DINING COCKTAILS • DANCING SEAFOOD BAR ENTERTAINMENT Open Dall¥ 10 A.M. to 2 A.M. Lundi 11 :30 to 3 Popul~ ~... JERRY LAMBUTH . j, 330 EAST 17TH STREET COST A M~SA 642·2304 ---------· _.,. __ _ w .1111111 •• PlUS OTMER OUlSTANDllfS ACTS! .. ' . . ' . • • OAJL V PILOT 25 MOlllE RAT1NOS TV DAILY LOG Channel 50 to Focus on County RJR F'AREN1B AND \'OUNO PEDPlE MONDAY PERFORMANCE -"'!be 4:30 Mlml\ R 0 GERS' prbons." ExJ>erlS debtll• f'lUDAY ht~"' ........ ,. .... ............ _...,, . 4:00 ELECTRIC COMPANY Spellbound Child" An OP'fl· NEIGllBORHOOD !hi.I lim<ly and cootrovem•I 4:00 ELECTRIC COMPANY Entel'lainment, mUllc, ballet fantasy by "Bolero" 5:00 SESAME STREET issue. (IO min.) 4:30 MISl'ER R 0 G ER S. ...... -,., • ...., ., ,,. dilit• TV HIGHLIGHTS ~All 2"h .f.l*lmt Gtwl• Auf.ff( •• "-'' and bumor to teach rtadlng composer Maurice ftavel 8:00 FAMILY GAME -THUflSDAY NEJGltBORHOOD skllll, produced by !he whb lt.ll by Colt11'. "Elltabtlh" A blick motl>er 4:00 ELECTRIC COMPANY l :OO SESAME 1:00 B O_O K Chlldren's TV workshop . 9;30 nfIRTY MINUTES of teen-aged <: h 11 d re n 4:30 MISTER R 0 GE H S ' BEAT -'"J't'I(> f\1anueo re" 4:30 M!SI'ER ROGERS• W1Tll -Etlzabtth Drew decides to liberate herself NEIGHBORHOOD Author Robert$0n Davies CBS D 8:00 -"Mlalon lmDOSllble." Wife of crime syndicate boss hM him ltilied and steala records of syodlcate's operations. NEIGHBORHOOD -Varie-. ta!ks with Robert Wood , from tht traditional role 5:00 ARTISTS IN AAtERICA discusses the new novel. :i ty program communicating noted university pffilident with devastating results. - A portrait of Barbara sequ:it to his ~arlier "Fifth ffi Al.~ Ull AMtunn '-'•1 ........ '""'-.... .,. ________ -with young c::hlldren, hosted and specialist In urban a!· 6:30 FRENCH CHIEF -"Sit· Linden and her crcati\'e Business," with ho!il Robert by Fred Rogers. fairs. lSO min.) down Dinner" works. <..TomJe. NBC D 9:00 -"Circle of Fear" often "Dark Vengeance" tale of palr terrified by small wooden hone. • 00 SE0 "1E STREET TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 8:30 THE JUST GENERA-6·.30 MAKING TllIM:s· GROW ,: ~ -4:00 ELECTRIC COMPANY TION -''Consumer Law·· Hour-long progran1 for pre-4 .. 30 MISTER 1.1 0 G ER S , 7:00 SOUL! -"Shades °'-An 1 1 1 h -"Qu6tlons und Ansv;crs'' ~ •flftltffD l,IMIP 17 ,. ..... ~t· ABC 0 10:00-"Love, American Style" Stars Ster!· Ing Holloway, Richard Hayden, Ann Rutherford and Donna llpuglas. Friday Saturday . • Evening JANUARY 5 : ... aoa111mmm-, (J)IJl lhwt }.. ., ..... ''YtnpinOI" (l)c.t ... . • mn. ....... .. • Qtk TM • ' fB 1111 Dvlcl IJI...,.. m-"""' einw..- i'l:lO(j) Htrl•'• ... ,.. o-: (10) ·-c.. H1,,..• (COlll) '52-JoM rtn11, Kim Hunter. (I} CU ..... W1lttt CtonUtt 1!!11 ......... _ m...,,_ ---'fill'!!'-I "Thi $1111,~I" m..._._ m-• fil)DoU!"' Morning JAMUARY I 7:00IJ (I)-.. _ n am-o llJrn H.L ,,,..., • .... IU 7:15 D ~ ... A ""',.,. ol ~f'tl:·mil!wte inlonnatlcMI pro- &Tlftl;S for d!Hdten wt to c:ontempo. r111 1111.lSlc *l&rounds. f'JOllhsff• T.......,. om-·-a--o rn rn-"" (l)JVIC111111111 IJIJat f1tf111 m-.-... Holl,..,.,.> '54-ld1 l.iipliio, How1rd Duff • .,,.._ -tlq---PntlJ"-(cqm) -'41 ·-Robttt-- YOllRL M1urtt1 O'lflra. 1:00 IJ (I) .... ·- ,-i.,. ""It iutNIM .... ® 110 011l uaro1• 1r .t.0¥u111 t•l't IHllol '1lr/ • ..., 11\ll"l••ll ..... l) •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .-i.a 11111-~--_ .... go.-----.... ·-- For \Vee kender Ach•ertising Phone 6424321 IChool -"11"'-.........iuced by Soul, Part JI'' Rock and esp oral on ° 1 c Jlorticultur~st T h a I a s s a ""'""'".., .,....... NEIGHBORHOOD Blues sounds of Jhe Labelle American legal system with Children's TV Nttwork. S·.OO SESA"E STREET d Cruso offers h('lp(ul tips on I 00 u 'GGIE AND THE Lll Trio and vibrations from the regar to consumer prac-different aS""'1s or indoor : ""' 8:00 KNOW YOUR AN· liei!s and how to deal vdth "~~ BEAUTIFUL MACHINE bongos of Ramon ~1ongo gardening Ba I I "" TIQUES -Enllre program Santamaria. them . 7:00 PLAYllOCSE NEW s c exerc se program w1"1 devoted to Art Nouveau. Na· !:00 MASTER p IE CE 7:00 1't ASTER PIECE YORK -"Between Time emphas'9 on the abdominals. tJonally-t)'ndicated co I -TllEATRE _ "Delilah and ntEATRE -"Delilah and and Timbuktu -,\ Space 1:30 FOCUS 0 RA NG E umnist.s, Ralph and Terry lier Handmaid" ln this in-Her J~andmaid" See li.5ting Fantasy by Kurt Vonnegut, COUNTY -"Citizens Direc· Kovel, show and uplaln ex-tall 1 the "-···· January !0th al B p.m. • I h tion Finding Commi!sion" amples of gla.a, ai.lvtr and s mtnl o "~1n Jr.' Stt 1s1Lng January 91 Publ. all · Bette" series by Honore de 8:00 FOCUS ORANGE COUN-at 8:30 p.m. IC Blts program pewter . Balzac, Bette persuades TY -"Ciliiens Direction 8:30 AWARD SERIES hostod by Jim Cooper. A 6:30 ELLIOT N 0 RT 0 N St lnboc:k I t p·ndJ Co . lo " •·-•.·OO F'IRING LINE -"Chns· ·. group of volunteer citizens REVIEWS ·-Guest Charles e o accep a com· ' ng mnuss n ~ • Jhel f d. missioQ from Valerie. Stein-listing January 8th at 6:30 tianlty and Capltailsm" The discuss r in mgs on Gordone, playwright and ac· block ls prompt]y seduced by Righl Reverend Donald priorities for f u lure tor. talks about "where H's Valerie "'ho proceeds to tell 8 :~m. SPECIAL OF TIIE Soper. clergyman a Id governmental atiention. al" for blacks in today's all her lovers that she is WEEW -"An Evening "ilh niembcr of tht· Br 11i ... h Guests are: ~1rs. Gerry theatre. pregnant and neros more Mabel ~1ercer, Bobby Short Hoose of Lords. ~ill cla~h Commons, chairman of the 7:00 fNTERNATIONAL PER-and Friends'' and "Saner , ideollglcally with ren<Mned commission; Lloyd Reese. FORMANCE "Spell· 9 :~~VOCATES -"Safer Hours.'' See listing January intellectual Wiliam F. fberormer Bndrea,.~yorJ. a mhe.mne-bound Child" See llstjng Jan. from crime if closed 8th at 6:30 p.m. Buckl£'y, Jr. ; a i'u:i. osep 1 8th at S:30 p.m. ·ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii------·····---------iii Clines, chairman of the~ 8:00 BLACK JOURNAL -1 I mis!too's hwn an services ''Black St. Louis" First in o task force. series of report! on the 7:00 SPECIAL OF THE cities to promote greater un- WEEK -"An E\lening with derstanding-among blacks Mabel ~1erter, Bobby Short acr~s the country. and Friends" A delightful 8:30 PLAY HOUSE NEW hour-k>ng special with the YORK -"Between Tim£' "SOUNDER!' a most unusual motion picture premieres today nm n. ---------8-Wll • .,.. ... __ Ill ........... 1:11 a Ill om---1,ut--of-tbe-great supper--club---afld--timbuktu--A-Space This-is how-it warreceived by the-nation's-critics. o ltwll111 t• Dtft.ln @ Trwtll • Coulqm.a (I) Ckan GWW•MJU.? m1 """" m I Dru• If Ju11111it m ..... mn.""""" €E El Mel' Tlt111 Clrl .. • ... m-.. .., m_._ OllJrn n.-ag viu.. 0• GI.....,""" ms.a.• Strut UI f) (I) Wriu D illi l!.l""'-Olll@ filllK_ .... "' 9:00 f) Cll-.... O !lli l!.lU- singers, Mercer and Short, Fantasy by Kurt Vonnegut, pe.rfonning for their friends Jr.'' Action Is based on in an intimate, pri\lale-party episodes fron1 Vonnegut setting. Also fealured is novels and short stories. (90 short subject presentation ntin.) "'SOUNDER' IS A MISSING CHAPTER FROM 'THE GRAPES Of WRATH' "Saner Hours." "'EDNESOA Y I: 3 O INT E RNATINNAL 1:00 ELECTRIC COMPANY AND Of EQUAL STATURE:' Clwrale to Perform 7:JD IJ w.w ,, Survh'll D lllltywod Sq411rts l1 Mwil: (C) (?hr) "WoMIMa 11 lit HIP SIU" (mus) '43-Dofis 0 .... : "fllrl °"""' (wtl) '" -Rod Cimtron, Dourtas ~nlltdy. 0 Mtwlt: (C) "Tiit lflp'" (dr•) '51 -Richard Wldm1rk, Tint Loui~. The Soul her n Califomia fl.1ichae l Allinson, Br u c e ID Morie: .. ladp 11 M111h1I lrt1t-Choral fl.tusic Association will Yarnell , Bill Lee, and Perry The story of a family relallonshlp, the commitment · between man and wife, ot the unspoken, rooted understanding between lather and son. Cicely Tyson, most exquisite of actresses , Is a righteous warrior ot Inner fire. She Is superbly comr,lemented by Paul Winfield a large, stalwart man of courage and !em· pered Just ce. Hereby our nominations tor their Oscars ." -JUDITH CRIST , NB C-TV _, Dir. JICk tarson. ntn'" (wtS) '57-Jim Dnis, Me111 present the Roger Wagner Price. Whelan. Chorale performing the great Tickets for the concert are Cl) Tt Tttl tllt Truth (j) Th TllrillMtkltl fil) Ml*r Roa•n' •IP~ hits ( r om "Brigadoon," available at the Music Center @IICh11t11JUC.u "Gigi." "Camelot," "Paint box office. CJ Miilion $ MDWM: (fir) "'H Siem" (•d'IJ '41-Humpllrrr eo. 11r1, Join Ltslit. Arthur Kenned)', t[j The Mtw Prlt1 la IU&M mn.tliilrt l :JO IJ Sc:lobf-DM Your Wagon," and ''My Fair Followin g the "Salute to. O tliiDTllt """" Lady" in "A Salute to Lerner Lerner and Loewe," the 100- @ Tljuau: Wllffp '*the 1t1111 and Loewe" at the_ Dorothy voice I.AS Angeles r..1aster 0 (})111t...,KWI Chandler Pavilion Saturday, Chorale and Sinfo n ia m rn Drlinet fB Lit ~ ... "rtlvllit @) Wiii Street Weet mu..-..w...w (!) ClttMI Clrah"li ffiStu• sts.c Jan. Tl, 8:30 p.m. Orchestra will present a 10:000ai ms.attb 2Dm The COOCi!rt, second in a special Latin-American Night O (]} (jJ lnltdlld series of five to be performed Sunday, Feb. 25, a concert lO:JOU (l)JM Md .. l'mftltl this season under the direction version of "Faust" with 0 9 m1ttut..., of Roger Wagner, will feature Dorothy Kirsten and Norman U Mrrit: ""lldMt If T.......,. as soloists Andree Jordan, Treigle as soloists, March 31. m-•"" ~ EE DI A1W1 .. F1•ii, ,~ tao IJ ()) llllulN: l•pm!Wt r; o ag ms.., .. "' .. f-OllJCIJ filll>o ""' -m Ille••'• ... ,... (was) ••t--a•fl'J SUlliv'•n, Btod· • liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiiijiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iil •rici em.ford. 11 0 Ill lll "" ,_ GI-"" -m_...,. e lllofte: ..... bl(, ....... <~ '43-Gtortt MontlOflllfY, Kint 111" lo<. llil lm* ...... ·-ll'l •""' ......... "'_ m11 • ., ""''Sin 11:00 u rn a. runt&ttMI m Mo'fll: 1211,, "Shi,_., r...... 0 9 m s..i. ..., Ftotbtl •f' (mus) '35--0lck POWtll. Horth meets South at Mobile, Ala- l!!O a ®l m"" um. ,..,.. b1m1. o Cil Cll m n. hrtrtdst r.. CIJ Mobfft Ho• SMw lfJ "Aspirin tt 7, Oin111r II r 0 (})(E f1"J PUfto9 m""' '"""-m"'"" m rtttkNt JUlldMI m s.u .. StrMt (Ii) -llil""" u ... l:OOf)(l)CISF...,_ (t) (21o) 11:30 (1)""": '1>o IW""'1" (dnl "SIH hbWll" Concl. (dr1) '67-'57-Yictor Md.lilen. SIM lllcQ1111n, Rlch1rd All1nbor'-0 (]) Q) Udswtllt oulf!, Rlcll1td Crtnn1. m UtlllM4 W.W O ®JmJClrde « F11r m»tw1e:''tlhrtt"'"tMDllMfl" 0 (])(I) aJ a ... 222 {1cfY) '37_,iul Lukas. GI""'.... Afternoon f<l"'" fD Mldlrpilct n.atrt {R) lZ.-00 II (I) Ardli1'1 TY Funniu l @El LI CIMllMI 0 Jofln WIJll• Tlle1trt •JO 0 ... ltytl/USC a.111ttblU Tape Q (1) Q) TH MMMes d1l17 of Trvj1ns rt. 0tt1e111 Stltl 0 MMe: (C) "Ctp(ler CaQH• lllM p1.,..d 11rlltr II !ht Spofb (WIS) '5G-Ray Mill•lld. Mon• Fl'M· Ar1n1. 111111, Htc!J llrnarr. 0 ill (I) Ill n. 04' c..oto , ..111 -Ch•!••P 0 GI -m Mn< ...,,.. ........... fl!) Pnillitr ihl 40 m lfl"fflllfl 10:00 lZ..lO 1J (j) Flt htrt 11M1 Iii Cosbf ... , D Quaker Oats Special lift L * IN SEARCH OF [}]Alo: '1"" I• ....... ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS 0 fill,_,, ""'"'" Rod Seti inc Narrates m DllMtltaty Nftt a ~ m ! IPICIA 111 S.trdl .. fiil Stsllnt str.t Alldetrt Altnllltl Alt aplof1tlon fm Sablclff AllOH of the tlltory 11111 ist™'lub from 1:00 IJ (IJ Ctlildtt•'1 Fil• Ft1tly1I other Jll•lllb Ylslttd Nflh In the 11_ "Scnmblt" A film from En1r1nd ft'IOl:I jtlst, lnfhMfldl\C tl\t lnhlN-lbout I delinq11111t boy lilho llm tints. hi S.rtlni b lllfTillOf. 11111n tppartnl hit of trim1 for tht 0 (])(I} I!) lM ,..,.. .,.. udtin1 lift of mGtOl't)'Clt Wll'll· "LD'fl trlll tM L•rtnd," "lAw and bllq . ' tht Stxpof," "loft Ind 1111 Cryptic e ..... '-es Cift." 1nd "lm ind tht F1mitJ 0 CD 00 a:> The KN lftll Hour" m S.UI Trtll 0 ltfb larllft Pfttntl m :-u II T &rd.I Gl11t..... m C.. dt lll Nl11t1 EE s.c.strl" "CStle l:lCI G ...-(C) "tlf10I CltJ" (Jiits) ll'l"" lri) ltlcit St111bf1 'S2--l1f)folph Scott. R17molld M11- l • ll) °'" -tN St• ai"'·~~ loWlifll -,, ..... --. Mi----... jli ..... I. ei-....-m•-·-11:00 0 0 fJ 111111.llll -~"' IJ (I)'"' -... Attp .. llJClll!!ll-....... , ..... -.JIM ...... Slltw/UCl.A .... 0 Hlfll ScllMI lnMtNll LM COV• lllW Tl!ll c1e1., of lnllm n. 111p ol tllt Los Anplu City Hlal Ol'lp llll'lt. Sd'lool 81sketblll Gtmt of !ht WMt. (j) llltniltl DMe11 DontJ Hl&ll n . F1trnonl GllltrW:.Mlllllt n.m ow .. SM Qt T• « C.t••••* Qil·ttwlDtr ~Lttter to I ltNtr'' GI...,_ m ... .., ·· m._, .. _ m-- ·• a f.D ,..s m c. 11rt.llllt ' -lL!lStmci..t M l:JOOUIC ...... ltoitrt1 n. U9- ll:lOIJ CIS ..,, -(t) "A Siio """1 ol 0np W-II"" M ti Ult'" (dn) '~tr !Aw· Spotb AIM&, ~ -.---'°" Vic Monow. httr r tit. CD llllc:fWl'I ""1 nam-'-m-111.1 CIJ ., I • J:OO ....... if °"' lob Mmnt D WCIJ ID IQRWI T\11 h lab. T .. T• Dlt U.. ())fw Ort f1dl; '110Mt11 F11111 • k T• .. TNO tllt Sert" 'U:ll•'""' -,,_ o-:ltl.,...~"",_ . • snt .. ~ , ('"") 'fl4..C.'f*ne D1C111o. WiKla11 JJ>30. -..... ,_ ''"' '45 ...... _ ..... -.. ""'"" -111-,..., l>ooln 'Tho ••• '· a"""= ...... r ..... ...,.. """'Red P11net" (tdv) ·~ lfWIM, at MM: ••111...-(Wit)~ GI iMtt: -Jlll M.-Alf*" lOblrt 'flMlna. Mlfllltflt• Cll1pmtn. <""> . .,_...., ""'''~ Gto111 en.~ """"' ·-....... _.... · .~hie t11r11M1•• •• • moaCll • m- .,. ----l:IOIJ(l)CISW-.. w.·~ ....... ._...... DOIC..,. lMm" mz-~ • Walter I Carol Matthau Burnett • . ~.. ~-Tilli "-.r..::u:;'n' --All abcW I love and marriage!-• ...,,,... . .,,.-.-. nc-- SPECIAL MATINEE EVERY DAY "As smooth and entertamin1·as 'Butch Carndy', what with Newman pro1idin1 dandy bravura per- formance. It's all my mo1ie • mo1ie with nen that happy endinc we schmaltz lo1ers lo1e so well." NdilflCrist NKTodoy ~ "I tralJ topnotch comic pertonnance by Paul NeW11Ian. I 1ood time is what JOU will hall."=..'::! Starrinf: Jacqueline Bisset -John Huston -Stacy Keach· Roddy McDowall-ha G!rdAer ' ••• IT Will MOVE AUDIENCES -MOVE THEM TRULY, THAT IS -AS FEW FILMS EVER HAVE. The p1rfonn1rs are wonderful ••• this story of res1H1nce ond trlumph la th• bifth at bl1ck consclou1ne11 on the screen." -PAULINE KAEL New Yorker Magazine "'SOUNDER' IS A MUST. It hH th• ahlning light DI I beHlllUI love atory." -LIZ SMITH, Cosmopol itan "A TERRIFICALLY MOVING EXPERIENCE. Full DI para - doxes. II is at once heart· breaking and comic. aogerlng and reassuring . II emulates the pasl to clarify and guide the present.'' -CHARLES CHAMPLIN Los Ange les Times "THE FILM IS A RARITY. A MOVIE THE WHOLE FAMILY CAN ENJOY." -Ebon)' Magazine "AT LASt A COMPASSIONATE AND lDVING FILM ABOUT BEING BLACK IN AMERICA. 11 manages as no other movie has done to take .the special pride and trial of being black and work It into an experience that can be ·shared and felt by anyone." -JAY COCKS , Time Magazine -----~ -..lladnll• / M.a,trtL Production• ........ "SOUMDER" starrinoCICELYTYSON ·PAUL WINFIELD ·KEVIN HOOKS ·co.starring TAJ MAHAL· JANET MACLACHLAN ptoo..oc.ec! trtROBEAT 8. RAD NITZ cbrecieo O'I' MARTIN RITI '>treenpiay o-w LONNE ELDER. Ill ~on rne Newtiety Award 1'1'1M11"1Q Nattlby WILLIAM H.AAMSTAQNG ·songs and muse Or TAJ MAHAL·P......,,v.5'0N•·co.OR8YDE LU:o.t: • "It !11e leiel of brute physical action-John Boor- man's 'DEllYERANCE' is an absolutely lint-rate piece al ~01ie-makin1. You can taste the fear and hsaI the hammerinf hea1ts. It is an uncom- monlJ admirable undertaking." "THI GETAWAY" (HARtU CHAWL~. lo' Ang tits rtl'll, Wllol!ll!lbappaum.,111\ •!. thecaholawBI""? .... ~-- is 'Bonnie and Clyde' brou1ht up to date and en- ll1ened wilh the spectacular action sequences from 'Bullitt'. Acutely suspenseful and intenselJ 11citin1 slam-bani mo1ie. McQueen and· Mac- Graw 1enerate as much electricity as any ol the la bled 1creen teams al the past." ,!!"" ...;..."":'.!. .. Ill SHOWING NOW AT All 4 THEATRES CAU. TillATlll fOl 2ND fUTUIU , ' ' . ' . ... . . . . -... . . .. .... , > .28 OAILY PILOT F.tdi1,,.,,_5,1973 ! \(t llSIVI 01'A~,f t.:0 JlfSf HVfll 'it A 1 t ll;t.;;'.[,I '.It\! \ / " •• SEE IT BEFORE civlUZATIONSWEEPS IT AWAY .. " 4 Films On World Presented The beauty and excitement or the South PaciHc Islands wlll come to Santa Ana College Wednesday as the first or a four·pert film series revealing "The World Around Us." The public show!Pg wlll begin at 7:30 p.m. In the faculty lounge. Admission is $1. World traveler Edward Brigham, Jr. will narrate the film commenUng on the ~ pie and their customs and life styles as filmed on their native islands of Tahiti, Bora Bora , Fiji, New Zealand, Australia and others. Fete! and festivals, picturesque atolls, colorful waters and the magic of the tropical islnnds a:re the focus or the South Pacific presentation. ''The World Around Us" is Vegas Show 'Pariscope~ New Lido Spectacular "Pariscope" is Lhe new Lido de Paris spectacular being presented at the Stardust Hotel, Las Vegas. It include:J a medieval jousting match with live horses, a simulated erup. tioo ol Fujiyama In Japan and a French prison riot. A musical tr i but e to Maurice Chevalier set jn a 1930s baute couture salon and French cafe concludes the show in the Hotel 's Cafe Con· UDOll!ai. Raquel Welch c:ontinu~s ht:r firsl night club engagement al the Las Vegas Hilton and Vik· ki Carr and George Kirby Jan Troell perform ln the Ver,aJllcs Room ot the Riviera. Singer Patti Page and Pat Cooper appear in the Copa Room at the Sands, and the Continental Theater or ~he Thunderbird presents the Latin Fire Follies '73. Buddy Hackett and Janice Harper will be In the Cl)ngo Room of the Sahara through Thursday and Jerry LewiJ will start t.hett Friday, Jan. 12. Joey Heittherton and the lee Follies will begin Thursday in the Circus Maximus room at Caesars Palace, and Juliet Prowse and Jan Murray will appear In ttie Crystal Room of the Oese!'l Inn throughout the week. At the Music Hall at the Frontier Hok.I. Phil tlarrL~. D:rect:Jtg Harry James and rrank " " Sinatra Jr. will perfonn. The showroom at the Mint will N F'l feature O.D. Smith and the an educational fllm series ew f. m Lounge \Viii present Lynn NARRATED BT blending exciting films with Davis and Peter Urquidi . REX ALLEN adept narration to portray to Jan Troell. the Swedish Sergio Franchi and Charlie • ~-· the audlen-c:e-a-t'nnr1>lctul'!-ot--dif'eetor--r-ecently-acclaimed Callas-h e a d H-n·e-arth lite on other continents. Three for "T~ Emigrants .. " has Flamingo Hot e I . The r \ . . . been signed to d 1 r e c t Tropi cana offers the Foliea t.. \ remaining films to be "Taylor's Bride," a forthcom-Bergere starring Audrey Arno rl'!ri.-'f----111-7-'cl-ll--P.:ese.nted-&t-SAC-lnClude---ing--Wamer--Bros:-motton-plc-in the-TheaterResta . "Shangrl·La-Where People ture that will star Gene Live to be 100" (Feb. 7), "The Hackm an and Liv Ullmann. l ¥ lf lf lf Hlf lf lf~ Ne w Israel" (Mar. 7), and Troe!! also directed "The MAN CAN LIVE INHAllllONY WITH NATlJRE A.,.,._ ru,• •TAR. i.>UBll • HEINZ 8.Ell,.MAJflf "Village Beneath The Sea" (April II ). New Land," the soon-1<>-be released sequel to "The Reservations for any of the Emigrants," in whi ch Miss programs can be made by 11 · M callbig or writing to Com· U maM stars opposite ax , von Sydow . muruty Services, Santa Ana Miss Ullmann also will star College, 17th at Bristol for Wamers in "The Abd ica· Streets, 8anta Ana , 92708. tioo." while Hackman recently DRIVl·IN SUPll SWAP MEETS FOi FUN! PIOFITI IAIGAINS GALOlll kt•nloy & S.o~oy All Doy I A.M. to 4 P.M. completed a starring role ln warner Bros. ''Scarecrow.'' ., """' #1 ,,, ...,.........._ NOW SHOWING! 1. Costa Mesa-Mesa-548-1552 2-Huntif\gton Beach-Surf-536-9396 3. Anaheim-Brookhurst-rn~ 4. Garden Grove-Grove-537-6600 5. Orange-Villa-538-9951 6. Mission Viejo-Cinema Viej~1233 WEE KDAYS • !i:OO • 7:00 ·9:00 SAT• SUN · 1:00· 3:00-!i:OO • 7:00 . 9:00 IOl'IAY NO P"ISl:I At AST NmSTSffe'iEN"!An:::N "WHA rs UP DOC ?" , ............. 0 ...... 7 _. 10:H p.-. "ON A CLEAR DAY" ..... Str1111• l :JI p.a. ' '""''"'"'" Aro:ERT()WllCJ"r-IA'tWllWt«LERm:cu:TD4 SIA+ r , BAA8AA ST'AEtSNC> r. 'U' lltE SANDllOX" C().STAFAN'>~ 'l'lfn' · 7 1f"t--NP.A~ IJ'tf'ltU__ 7 L •fMSEDrn A IOJ'El B'I' l<J#~ ~FCFl'E ORCTlQBY """1N l"!:f&\1111 R · PF(.O..Cf.O ffi' JlWINWNQ.ER .A~ ~TOW1li'.IF •TEOtfCCX.CR• A'htilOW.C'.f:Nf'l"l f'CTU'll..'SlfllASEll R FOUNT AIN VALLEY <::3!13> ORIVE IN S-0'-to Frwv. t i 81'oolthm1t Fountal" V1l ley, MW'81 CQ.Hlfl GENt: HACKMAN -'1!RIMl CUT" MATINEES • SA f-:,"!Ulk&·MON. :DAILY 2:00 . 3,55 . "°. 7:•5 . •:45 Now, After 16 Riotou1 w .. 1t1 At Ptcific'1 Hiwty 19 Driv•.ln - You C•n St• It H•rt l Woody Alltn'1 "manHIN• YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO IMOW AIOUT SD .. "HOW TO SUCCIU WITH SU'' WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT ~ ~ --I"··· ............. . "Pete 'n'Tillie" __ .,.., ........ _...., ...... ·~ ... ,,. ..... 1_ .... ,_.1!2) Colt. Set. & s.. •. fro• 2 ·NATIQN~~(;NERAL · THl;ATRES EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY AllTllDNY QUINN YAPHETKOTIO 2HFM...,. 'HICKEY .. IOGGS' ;ENE KACKMAN ERNEST IOl!GNllll llD "'"""' CAROi lYhlY t *****·**** PACIFIC DRIVE-INS l-•ln ll,_., _ ... . 11. .... 1 111-4010 , o•n ....... -....,w GETAWAY· (PG) SanOi•1•f•w. all•-""•" 1s •• 1 962·2411 .,, ••• ,, snHSAND UP THI SANDBOX (I) ~- 1973 THE YEAR OF THE UN.DERDOG YOU CAN'T BEAT THE NAMES, YOU CAN'T BEAT TllE PRICE E:fil,,l!i ~--1 It''*'!'"'· I c::'1~ ®PIONEER' i;:;:m.o;oss Harmon kardon "famous" Model 930 Twin Powered AM/FM Stereo Receiver lover 100 waits peak power per channel) -Gan•rd's finest, Zero 100 auto- matic Record Ch•nger, zero tracking error, d•mped cueing, anti-skating, bue, duslcovfr, o1nd a Shure M91E elliptical dia1Ttond Magnetic Cartridge-two Pioneer CSE-500-3-W.aiy 3-Speaker System -koss PRO 4AA Profeslional Dyn•m;c Ste<eophones REGULAR $1,024.95 s7 4700 AEG, '319.40 ----· •• ••• -!- Ch.tnger wilh Visious Damped Single lever Cueing, lue and Magnetic O~ mond cartridge, two ELECTRO-VOICE 2-way Speakers with walnur finish. MPIONEEn° OX-8000 The Quadraphonic Receiver WITH SONIC I= -~-~ i o ('I r-r- -I -- • (~ .. • . ...... • Quadraphonic f~ 4 CHANNEL HEADPHONES A single unit, o11/ encompassi ng 180 w.tlt recei\·er for the creo1lion of o1 living presence, FO UR ch.innel ~ound field. ,325 REG/LIST 5599. Put your head togelher belween these two full range dynamic 1peaker1 end find out where your head's all · THE HEAD SET • lndiYiduo1I Volume Controls • cOiled cbrd · • P.idded HeadNnd Reg/List $19.95 ''687 ~ . C-60: 5 7 P,,h AMPEX CASSETTES. C-90: 879.,h ... .. -.. lo_oppaj+J Twowa.v --• Spea.ke r System REG/LIST $39.95 *1&90 . -• s11•.so see BOWMAN AM/FM CAR STEREO REG/LIST $159.50 2 YR. Guarantee *89 90 in lols of 12 or more • •WE GUARANTEE AND SERVICE WHAT WE SUL• EASY CREDIT• TUMS ARRANGED• LAYAWAY PLAN MAll °'l(J , ....... WCST LA. S.F. VAU£Y LONG BCM:ll P.O. IGI •it• ...... ""' Pin' Garage at Garae• in Alley Oki Hous .. 1 Ll I. 3378 s. Ovtrbnd 4626l4 Von Nuys Bl 2725 Pa~ est. Hwy llG ""I 139-2216 911-1731 434-0981 '"" i11. ' ·-~ ... • P~SADENA TORRANCE NO. HOLJ.YWOOO COSTA MESA Oog Hospital . . , Old Bar Old PaWftShop Old Antique Shop 123 S. Rosemtacl 17007 Hawthorne Bl. 4858 Vineland · 249011 Newport Bl 449.2533 37o.a579 , (al Llntenhim) _(714) 642-!1531 769-3473 • NiVE-RSI~!f 1°STERE. - - < • I • ·"' ·~ ·-:f§ :• .. 1 .• .1 :· .. ·.· .. ;;; . ,. .. :· . . ~ • • " /. ,~ ••• ..... :~' .r. ~ f: • k '· • • ' • . -~ -. z ~ Z' ~ rr . ,. , -· . •. ~H UIU•O 1..00K AT MA•itlAO• "PLAY STRINDBERG" • .,.~n, ONHI JAM. I tflr• ~. • -I P.M. ,., Qlcl,... Of Al """ "'THI SUNDAY llUNNln" ~la -l:OOP.M. "TERRIFYING AllDONE OF THE BEST SUSPENSE MOVIES OF THE YEAR:' -CB$ TV "MAXIMUM SUSPENSE: -Nnt y,,...l(PO$t a thriller •·• ·• "'l'OU'LL LIKE ).IY MOTHER" In the Galleries ArtMmeum Shows Bannard NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -Z2ll West Balboa I Blvd., Newport Beech. Paintings by Walter Darby Bannard of New York Cjty. He has been involved with color theory, trana.itions and juxtapositions: cJ color. On exhibit in the en- trance gallecy, the Object Transformed by Jerry ~lcA1il lan. ORANGE COAST COu.EGE, 2701 Fairview Road , Costa Mesa . "Photographs of a New Guinea People" on exhibit in 1be library, Jan. 20-Feb. 18. Sixty colot pbotojiraphs ~ the u.se of art in everyday lite. Exhibit organiied by the Southern Illinois University Museum. GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE -IS744 Golden West SI., Hunt- ington Belc.h. Paintings and drawings using the human figure as the main aibject by fine arts faculty members Ka y ~1or­ tenson and Robert Alderestt. Gallery is open Monday through Friday, ti a.m. to 3 p.m. and Wednesd ay 7-9:30 p.m. COSTA l\IESA ART LEAGUE GALU:.J\Y -206 \Y. Wilson. Coot.a Mesa. Watercolors by Cl~ \V. Soren300 . BAXTER ART GALLERY -Barter Hall, California Insti- tute of Technology. Pasadena. Oma Indian Art, a collection of Roy and tlelen Willman of Costa Mesa. through Jan. 21. AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol St .. Costa r-.1esa. Oils and watercolors by Shirley Richardson through Janu- ary. BRENTWOOD SAVINGS -1565 Adams, Costa Mesa. Oils by Olga Steam through J anuary. MESA CITY HALL -Tl Fair -Drive, Cosi.a Mesa. Watercolors by Soozy West through January, COSTA MESA LIBRARY -566 Center St .. Costa Mesa. Watercolors by Beulah Treadway through January. CROCKER Cl'nZENS BANic-=-%300 RattiOfBtV<f::-CilOla Mesa. Oils by Fem t.tiller tlrough January. DOWNEY SA VIN GS AND LOAN -360 E. 17th SI., Costa Mesa. Oils by Pat Ingram and (Gilt art in mixed media by t.1anct Schonthal through January. G99 .... C. Sc•tt • "THE NEW CEHTUll ... S" ...,, "DIALING" hltl .. Ctllrl Ill ·~.,~ .. --Om•r S111rll "fUNNY GtllL" 101 S. "'-<I.AIM "SWEET CHAllTY" (GI --' -.oc. STADIUM •l ,',f ·~~ • 1'ocllr1I~• Or•,,... c...,.,,.., ll•••rY..t s .. 1 E1191fl:"-I· P•ttr O'T"i. -kpfll1 Ltr1t11 "MAH OF LA MANCHA" E•Cllfl••• Ent•t•m.nl MtwJil_llHarvM -kill Wlftrltr of ) A<•Mm, ... Wlf'll "flOOLEll OH THE ltOOI"" W•H Dll,..y'1 ·~ow•••• £.JuutaU" --• "THE llAllEl"OOT EXECUTIVll" "SOUHOElt'" ·~ llld••nl M•nh .. "4 M"H CALLEO HOlllE" FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY -1650 J:::'ry .st.. Costa Mesa. Acrylics by Lucy Santoro wough fjl gg01f.M "JUDGE llOY aEAH" ·~ GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 Harbo<' Blvd .. Costa "PfTE 'H TU.LIE" Friday, Jlmlary 5 1q73 DAILY PILOT lc.!11!! .. wm• •"--''-'w...I _ ! __ _ 1UIC..,'9 .-11( PO'iIDJrl AMN1IJ£ -..fI~ ll(1lWI llG IOCllf 1111 r.MO. ll'lIY mr 1tc:0CM.1 S1fl.lJ smocs ~n 'MlllS ~ .... )IQ MLl.11 IW!lll .flit.I U!Ulllu Lr«: $llA ..c llil HlW• ltC.. 111lM.D .. --·-~· "9flllt.'.M~'l.Wf ~-Slll.*~•UMlllW ____ .,.,.CiltlJ:lt'--..,-D'll~-·liilr FPfil:;-.:::;;i A"•lttiM C•Mitl ~~ .. ~ "WAR DEVILS" •·--""" .,,_ I -,1;';;!1°'ik,;-ff;.;;j" ......_, ~""' l :OO.J1lO·S:40-l :OO.l01IS PATTY DUKE• RICHi\RD THOMAS• ROSEMARY MURPHY .... -':.! SIAN BARBARA ALLEN w.-., "'' "''" ... _,. . .,., ,,,,., .. , ' ............ """'" .... ~,,,. -..... ..._, --hfesa. Oils by Gertrude Mattocks through January. ~4!Jl1Wlflli •"II PtfESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 ~1esa. Verde Drive, Costa ~1{11~;Z;·(~:t~~//f~~;·~~~~;ii"~'"'~v~o~'~•;••~·~··;'~""~";i~~ h1esa .. Oils and acrylics by Virginia Kling through January. SECURITY PACrF IC BANK -196 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. -jiiiilllli--Oils by Merle Calhoun throogh January. TRANSAMER ICA TITLE CO. -170 East 17th St., Costa NOW AT POPULAR PRICES!! ALL NEW! The joyful songfu~ l'!Ql](jer"ful, stocy of the hfe and music of Joha nn Strauss' 5 C-• ._.....,._ s.c-'"'"" -·" ... -- CO-HIT EXTRA "FRENZY" (R) "DARE DEVIL "IT IS A SURPASSING PIECE OF FILMMAKING ANO A POWERFUL RECAPTURING OF A GREAT TIOE IN HISTORY!'' -C~rles Cllaplil. LA Tinm "The kind of movie Hollywood so otten strives for and rarely makes -that big, sweeping family picture with: heart and a mind!" .f'alJJ O. lmnermaa, Nem.eel Mesa. Oils by Lucille House through January. LAGUNA BEACl:I Pt1USEUM OF ART -307 Cliff Drive, La- guna Beach, "Country &d and Board" exhibit. Opens Jan· uary 6 continuing thrOllgh the 26th. Quilts. pottery and furn- iture. Open daily from 11 :30 to 4:30 p.m. 307 Cliff Dr. At.so fcaturc.>d work or Shirley Sa ito and Sylvia Bushell. FINE ARTS GALLERY -1',ine Arts Village, UC I Campus, Irvine. Room environment by Bruce Nauman of Pasadena, concurrent with a retrospective at the Los Angeles County MUJeWTl of Art. Hours : noon to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Sundays. Through Jan. 11-Feb. 18. Choral Music Concert . Planned at Fullerton The California S t a I e University, Fullerton Chorale and Orchestra will present a concert or choral music Jan. JJ.14. in the campus Little Theater. of the Choral Conductors Guild or Orange County. Soloists for the •raydn selec- tion are Terry Carter, Michael Childers, Edward Doyle, Dwight Fi cht.er. Patricia Fisher. Helen F o u n ta in, Eugenia Hamilton a n d Elizabeth Ptlason. To Life! ·Jiddler on NOW!' At 2 The•t,..I c .. 1 For Policy 0..-t-o<l.t .f• ..... ~., .. __ . (lo-·U7lllt1 ' o>fJV"lt'11""" • WINNIE"! 3:' • Tickets for the 8 p.m. performances can be ordered from the music department, 870-3511. -:;jjjr=====:=::::::=::::::::=:=::::=:=::~::::::::::::~=:;::~~=11 Howard Swan will direct the "The sharpest, gentlest, funni· . .. -"· ,,._ ' orchestra when it performs h b Haydn's Mass in o Minor, est film oft e year -Bar ra knov.·n as the Lord Nelson Streisand emerges as charming, Pt1ass. and Benjamin Britten's del ightful, endearing and beau. Cantata ~tisericordium. tiful. This is a far funnier film Soloists in the Britten work are Dr. Michael Sells, assis-than 'What's U.p Doc.' Here is tant professor of music at Cal the ultimate woman's picture.'' State, and Jonah Kliewer, .JNGENUE director of music at St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach and president Mrotv6n Sydow ·Liv.Ullmann "One of the 10 best pictures of the yeor. Thanks to Paul Zin- del's incisively funny screen- ' play and a tremendously believ- able. and touching performance by Barbra Streisand, 'Up the 1Sandbax' is one of the mast out- , spoken, outrageous and image. shattering film experiences in years.'' The Emigrants ~MeQuHn i1 mi;i..,.loin. Thtr Math-1•••• lii;ilfbr•odlll flighl and 1he ' do1he1 with t roolr.1 onri cop1· oU• , Moutifallv •~ by Som Peckin-- pok ·"""'l~ ............... ~ STEVE .... "' .. [Dft!lijij~I Alt 'IVlar:Cil:u\\l\f (PG) PREMIERE ORANGE . UP BARBRA THE STREISAND (R) .IBOX I PLUS· LEE MARVIN A y,_ Uf9 ......,_,. for ... -,. '-Hy ''Vanishing Wilderness" $HOW TIMES T•nm., Fri .. Mon .• THS. 5:00. 7:00 -9:00 NOW SHOWING ~ jWbatdldhappenon.J \"li(Wf -, IN T>'E LIFE AND TIMES Of ~ - . PETER TR.A VF.RS, Headers Disest CEJu) PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY RUN 2nd TOP ATTRACTION LEE MARVIN "PRIME CUT" " IOTH CINlMAS t ·1 .. the Cllhulawuw River? IN THEATRE #3 DIANAROSS§ BIWEHOUW "A Rm HOT SIASHI" ___ ,.. -·-·--, @-PLUS . ALAN .ARK IN IN "Tiii LAST Of Tiil llD llDT lOVllS" IN THEATRE #2 MAX VON SYDON LIV ULLMANN RATED (PGI t.t'.:N r,.....,..,. "'1A."'1f'W !. SlCH: Rtd.clm 'THE GREA I WAI.Tr stm~1or,rrt11 n ·' ~.v.1 Y(If tANl'Tt r~TRO<,'fY:IH""'1{}tll 1.., ~ ·..t..-11!:1->'AHJtYtAlll L,.,.:;s.n.t~ t.. l a .111.-.11s 11,' ~£ITT CR.al', ....W ff inlQ CJO rae:sr f'"1frl U•c:rre.r1 ) • "1l'Jr-.. ·Ar" ..rVJ rt.( .0• ll'"i'fj(.hy 1.,fllN.4'Mllf. •vn Plui "1(1.Yr:! [\ol~~ lo. Ai" l.J{ W L Sltf.l_ PANAvtJ::t( "'-flUll ~~~ ....:M o ~ .. ,~~~-~ "SOUNDER" COUNTY ENGAGEMENT GENE HACKMAN "PllME CUT"' 'l•t l••t.1Hfer4 "MOt 10(11" . " .. . NEW l973 Dt,ISTER COUPE ·- • Open Daily Until 10 p.m. Including Sunday • NEW 1973 SATELLITE COUPE Str. Ho. lll:Zl ·CJG.1216'6 MEW 1973 CHRYSLER HEW YORKER 4 DOOR HARDTOP "LUXURIOUSLY EQUIPPED ... MAl'IU,-. SUGG. llETAIL PlllCI! 5,,, No. CH4l-TJC-14M71 NEW 1973 FURY Ill 2 DOOR HARDTOP ( LUXURIOUSL y EQUIPPED! JANUARY CLEARANCE PRICED QUALITY USED CARS '67 PLYMOUTH PUIT 4 DOOi SE DAN VI, 111vtom111tic, r111dio, h,111t111r, powtr 1t.eri119, tllCI br111k11, tilt-telt whttl IVTM 606 1. $695 '70 PLYMOUTH FUlY II -0,. . ...,edelf, Vrt, A.~. r·l'dio;"' h18'• 1r, P.S., 'W/S/W, Air. (9714) $1295 I '70 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 DOOi S1d11111. \II, 111tom111fi<, rtdio, he•ler, pow1r 1t.1ri119 & br111k11, t ir con· ditionin9, pWf, wirtdow1. 1601 AFV I $1595 '67 CHEVY II 4 DOOi SEDAN 6 c•li1td1K, .1t.tid.llrcLJr111.1iniu ion, r1dio, h11t1r, "'hit• will tir11. IVGT 6391 $695 '69 PONTIAC '60 CHRYSLER fllUll~ J DOOi HAIDTOP • VI, 111to1911tic, r1dio, he1hr, power VI, eutorn1tic, r1dio, he1t1r, power 1t.1rin9, pow1r br1lte1, W/S/W, 1!11rin9 I br1•11, wftit1 w1tl1. 1ir conditioni1t9. lXXH 7611 IJWC 0061 $1495 '69 PLYMOUTH IOADIUNNll ./( redio;ft•1t.r, pow•r 1teerin9 I br1k•1, 1ir co.nditioning. IX1U 6431 $1295 $315 '69 CHEVROLET IMPALA J DOOi v1 ••. Jn1.t.rn1tic. radi•. h •• , ...... W!~ er 1tt1rin9, po"'•r br1l11. whit. 1idt"'1ll tir•'-(YPS!l 601 $995 • • GEl .. ·AWAY " ! , . -FROMITALL . IN ·1973 WITH ~~ AN INTERNATIONAL ~- TRucK scout oi TRAVELALL 1J FllOM A1LAS ~ · • . tJI> ll s.,.. No. JH I COCHl25421 • NEW 1973 . INTERNATIONAL TRAYELALL slSOO ... MANUf'. suoo. •fTAIL ,_ICE .. NEW 1972 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT Str. No. Allll0G515783 TREMENDOUS SAVINGS ARE YOURS "ON ALL OF OUR RE- MAINING 19n INTERNATIONALS IM'MEDIATE i>E~.IVERY .. ... MANUf', SUGG. lll!:TAIL l"lllCI •LUXURIOUSLY EQUIPPED •• • ~ _, •• .. • • l ~-• • • • • • • • • -. • . • . • .. .. • • • .. . • . . .· • • • • • • • .. --" • '. All NEW 1973 PINTO 2 Doors.4011 • Sp ... lld • ..-o• bu"'f>O' siuords, vi...,.i ifll .. . nor. buc••t Jeoi."forced 011 heoier. eic. (3R1<!'N11622S) 1 IMMEDIATE DELIVOY ' :~~ 1973 PINTO WAGON '2000 CC en<;1ine. !lnted 9!011, roi:llo, w ode oval behfld ,,..,., Dix. bumper, vmyl llRl~Xlll1'61) IMMEDIATE DEllvtRY BRAND 400 VI 011gi110, ¥i11vl int•rior, ¥i11yl roof, white w•ll tir•1, f•ctorv eir, r•· cfio, h••lor, tinted 91•11, wh••I cover1. tlJ6251 41511 1 $ · PRE- INVENTORY PRICE 2 DOOR HARDTOP PRE INVENTORY PRICE All 1973 TORINO N~W PRE- INVENTORY PRICE V-8, Cruise-0-Motic Tran s., WSW $ . Tires, Wheel Covers, Power Steering & Brakes. Factory Air, Jl:odio, Heater, 1;n1ed Gloss. (#JA27~41289) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BRAND NEW 1973 GALAXIE 500 ... V-8, CroisM>-molic, foc:tory air, radio, healer. tinted gloss,· whilewolls, wheel covers & loaded. llJ56HI 14260) '.IMMEDIATE DRIVERY 4 DOOR HARDTOP PJIE-INVENTDRY . PRICE USED CAR DERT-. '66V.W.BU Econoiny p"' for !hit-til:1n" No UDN24 rll IKVENTOIY Pll(E '70 DUNE BUGGY COrnplel• ""'"'. IPKlal ...... 11. tlr .. roll O.r, (111CHI) µ,iv°.1.-"'~"-.!!lt:~E ~PS<~?!~~·n~·~---$ .,8 ~ PIE INVlNTOIY Pll(I -1---u- I MUSTANG 6 7 Auto lron5. l«!Qrf or Condi! on ng, talflO heolet lctnSOUKK·•S7 Pll INVINTOIT Pllft $_788 '65 CHEV. PICKUP FIHIS de license No 528610 Pll INVENTOIT PllC[ '6 8 8~00~,~~~~ ~~~~~~48 PRE INYINTOIT PllCI I El CAMINO 6 7 V-8,o'"· "'°'" ''"'"""'"'· od. ;om top $9 8 8 ~he I. litMSt No V-46957 Pll INVINTOIY PllCI PONTIAC '6 9 LIMANSCOUPE V.S, outo Irons~ po_. ~IN"V'9 low - m leoge Sena No 117 S80 Pll IJllYDITOIY PllCE '69 2DOOINAIDTO• v.11. ou11> trons .. lot•orv or condi1 on ng.. power steer.ng, k:lw m leogt, No 132879 Plf INYENTOIY PllCI I CA MARO 6 9 V·8, lvc:torf o r tond I on ng, power Wter· ~ rodio htottr No .5•'427 Pll INVINTOIT Pll([ '71 DATSUN , PICKUr "speed rocflO hoa!tr. No 385CPG Pll INYINTOIY PllCI • '71 GALAXIE 500 HARDTO~ VI, llUton'tlllk, ff!Ctory ill~. llOIQf '"'°'1119 l brllkts. (S!l.CFO) I . DODG~.:-!~~000N 6 9 V-8, outa Iron~, 11 r c.orw:lil.on ng. power llterll'lg No 104914 Pll INVENTOIT PllCl ECONO VAN '69 lTONSUPllYAJll Auto. Irons .. rodio, h1011r. License Ho. 29802M Pll INYINTOIY PIKE '70 IMPERIAL LE BARON LO&ded lnl;l\ldlllO tuU power, -• l.tetol' yejr, l~j?) • $1288 $1288 $1388 $1488 $1488 $1488 $1688 .~2888 • f"rldar. Janu1ry 5, 1973 DAILY PILOT '9 ALL NEW FORD COURIER 1/2 TON PICKUI» IMMEDIATE DELIVERY _l'_RE-INVENTORY PRICE BRAND 1972 FORD SURFER VAN NEW 302 v.a Cn.ii~e-O-Mo1;c Trans., Tinted Glo~s. Corgo Door~. Oulside Mirrors, Comple1elv Paneled ln~ide . IE1<4GHP10127) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY PRE- INVENTORY PRICE 1973 ESCAPADE MOTOR HOME COMPLETELY SELF CONTAINED PLUS: • PUSH.BUTTON RADIO e FRONT DIVIDER 9 TINTED GLASS e FRONT BUNK e AUXILIARY BAITERY • e MEDIC INE CABINET • STAI NtESS STEEL RANGE COVER • AND MUCH MORE. {8•80668) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $ PRE- INVENTORY PRICE BRAND NEW FORD MINI MOTOR HOME RED-E-KAMP CONVERSION PRE-1NVENTORY PRICE fE3.4GHP4!19l) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BRAND NEW .. ' Complete FORD COURIER 1/2 TON PICKUP WITH A NEW LITE LINE CAMl'ER.SHEU MERC. /69 MAIOUll2Dl.ffD1" V-8, outo f!"Ol'll, lottoty or toodil1on nv. power s!Mri1'9. AM/FM radio heater vinyt • roof License No 8.4SAGM Pll INYINTORY PllC( $17 88 Package -, $ $1788 './ VEGA WAGON 7 2 ; s,.ed, h1otrr, ow 11il11. lic"111s1 No. r• 7S2£AE I " Pll INYllTOIY raKt j !SGT AMOJ1'1•J s29910TAl DOWN ,,.~.85 ••It.. !0tal (:01h pro:• ind, to• & li<o. Oelerred pflte ']032.60 ..-ct. to• oC & na t....,~. tho•o•' IM • " • • • • ' .. • . . 3• OAILV PILOT ;-Everyone Ho1 Something Thot Someone Elio Wont. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Con Sell It, ' Find It, Trod/ It With a Wont Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast--Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results f _ .... I~[_ ....... I~! --.. ' -torW. _ ..... _ ... _ i;Goi;;.,.,.;;•;';;:;;:::::;;;:;;:=:;Goi;-;~;,..;';;;::;:;;~;;;;;:;J :Ge::n:•:••~l;::::::::~:::::;;:;::Gener;;;:;;:;::'';:::::;;;:;:;;::;;;:;;;;,Ge~"°~''-'~~~~~-Ge-ntr~-''--~-..,...~ °"":~;~~;:.;'~:;:-~~;_;~:;:-~~:~;~~ General IAYSHORES -1111 LOTS IJJ /A * * * * * * General -~~-~ ~ •ASSOCllTB Completely rebuilt home, large enough for l/V41lCOftUI a growing family, with plenty of room w TAYLOR co. add on. New appliances, new carpets, new • BARBARA TRESSEN • paint & new futures. 3 Bedrooms & 2 baths. Ready for immediate occupancy. $74,i500 REALTORS 2828EAST<XllMT-Y CORONA Da. MAR. CAI.II', CAMEO HIGHLANDS immaculate home with some view & lots or privacy. 4 Bedrooms, large kitchen, profes- sionally ·decorated. beautiful yard, nicely landscaped. $69,500 BAYRtONT TRIPLEX With large pier & slip. \\bite sandy beach. Prime peninsula location. New & deluxe, "itb carpets, drapes. all built-ins, even fire- places. COMPANY REALTORS 2141 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar ~Selling Rul Estate in Newport Harbor Since 1944" •• 673·4400 General Open JJ.ou6e6 SunJag 1-Sp.m. NEWPORT BEACH 1847 PT. MARGATE 3 BR LIDO ISLE OPEN SAT/51JN . 1-5 BAYSHORES 2752 CIRCLE 4 Br/Den/Din . CORONA DEL MAR 3500 SURFVIEW 4 BR. Fam. Rm. 978 SANDCASTLE 4 BR/Yu/Pool IRVINE TERRACE 2000 ALTURA DR. 3 BR. LIND,4 ISLE 54 LINDA ISLE DR. 5 BR/Fam./water!ront * * * * * LIDO ISLE OPPORTUNITY OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5.133 VIA WAZIERS. 3 BR., 3 ba., sep. din. rm. Lo\'ely front patio. Owner has'/urchased another ho1ne! ! Eugene Vreelan OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 P.M. 1847 PORT MARGATE-HARBOR VIEW HO~. Popular portolino model. Plans avail. for bonus room. 3 Bdrms .. 21h baths. Prof. decorated & landscape<!. $69,000. Kathryn Raulston BAYSHORES-OPEN HOUSE Spacious 4 bdrm. wi den, formal din. rm. & breakfast room. Low leasehol d. Ovvner wants sale! $67,500. 2752 CIRCLE. OPEN SUN. P .M. M. Harvey DOVER SHORES BEST BUY VALUE CONSCIOUS? If so, you should in- spect this 4 bdrm., 2-story home. Exciting \'iew of Back Bay. $118,500 -F ee. Edie Olson 60' ON WATER Great family home: 5 BR., 41'2 ba., heated pool , pier & slip to accomodate lge. boat. $175,000. ~elusive area of Newport. Triana Bergin HARBOR VIEW HILLS BEAUTY 5 BR., 3 ba. ho1n e; lge. fain. rm. & formal dining. Lavish lndscpg., with canyon & some ocean vie,v. 3 Car gar. Fee land. $107.000. Ha'rriett 08vles-~ 2500 SQUARE FEET .. 0£ pure drama & pleasure, Cat\ be yours in University Park for only $49,500. 4 Bdrms. 21h ba's .. Cam . rm . Prime greenbelt Joe. Ton i EsC4Jbar OCEANFRONT-CAMEO SHORES Breathtaking view w/complele privacy. Beautiful tiled pool w/therapy. jacuzzi, fountain & waterfall. 4 BR .. 4 Ba. & powder rm. P riv. beach. $350.000. Carol Tatum ATTENTION BEACH LOVERS Please contact me tr you a re interes ted in Beacon Bay proprty .. Mary Lou Marion SPYGLASS SPECTACULAR See the view from the top-this 5 bdrm. ramily home is waiting ror you. Larue car· ner lot. Great wet bar. 2 Cozy fireplaces. Only $119 ,000. LaYera Bums -JU.1700 --644-2410 Coldwell, Banker ~ .55t NEWPORT CENTER DR ., N.B. Austin-Smith Gorman, J Realtors-ls ple•Hd to announce that BARBARA TRESSEN has joined our staff. BARBARA is a specialist in the Harbor View Homes area where she and her family reside. BARBARA is very active ln community affairs, being a member of Big Canyon Coun- try Club and the Thursday Morning Women's Club of 'Ne\vport Beach. POPULAR LIDO ISLE Warm & !riendly! A real family .home with 4 bedrooms + space for study. 3 Baths, sun deck, loads of storage area & space for boat. 40' Lot. Street to strada. $79,500 BEAUTIFUL LIDO ISLE Imm aculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on a choice Lido Isle corner lot. Bright & sunny & with a lge south patio. Excellent condition. Master bedroom opens to patio. $74,900 LINDA ISLE -$245,000 Protected patio on lagoon side of this cus· tom built 4 bdrm home with family rm, bil· Hard rm, formal dining rm & 41h baths. Fine detait-thrnout. l>ier &_slip.lor~ Jge boat. 644·7270 CORONA DEL MAR "OWN-YOUR.OWN" On the water! Fantastic view & pride of own- +iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii""";;;;;::;::::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::::;;;;;;::;l~•eir:s.shbiiP.....bldi. Private marina, pool, jacuzzi & security guard. Adult occupiea-:-2-Bearoom·s, 2 baths. Vacant -Immediate poss. $89 ,950 BARBARA invites her clients and friends to call on her at Austin-Smith & Gorman, Realtors.--2828--E Coasl-Hwy,_Corona del Mar. (714 ) 644-7270. ~~ General RON has recenUy joined th{' stair al our new of· ·nces:-tte-ttu-been----in- vo!Vl'd in RcaJ Estate in the Costa t.-tesa Newpcirt Beach area for the past fiye yean. With this wide variety .Df experience, )'OU will find his frlmdly. professklnal seJVice a great help In resolving your needs. The Area's Top Profts1ion•ls '-Are at Your S.rvict BUY NOW -SAVE MONEY!! Collect reliable rent-take possession Sept . l st on this atlr. 3 bdrm. & family rm. home. LOCATED IN EASTBLUFF-with xlnt view of Back Bay. Price is right-money mkt. favorable. $64,500 IMp ttdt "94y AIC...-y wMi ,.. .... A al II • ,.. , ............ flt. All ............... w •• .,. d.cra..4 1 • ...,., ....-1 "' ........... .... wfleN la ....,., DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. ,..,._ ••"'9 .,.. ..... '°' IClle ............... "' · ll1f uc• ~ 19 rllb c•l11"'• Md ,.,..,., s.t.. 11rdG'V l S•-*J. ' HOUSES FOR SALE 13 Bedroom) 1847 Pl Margate, Newport Beach 644-2430 $69,000 (Sun 133 Via Waziers (Lido Isle) NB 644·2430 $71.500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2000 Altura Dr !Irvine Terr) CdM 644-2430 $59,500 (Sun 1·5) (3 Bedroom & F1mily Room or Den) 827 Vi a Lido Nord,. (Lido Isle) NB 642·5200 $114,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) *2323 Priva te Road, Newport Beach · • 642·5200 $56,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) *2007 Holiday Rd (Baycrest) NB 642·5200 $75,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 114 Riviera \Vay, Ne\vport Beach 644·11 50 $145,000 (Sun 1·5) 9601 Clearbrook. Huntington Beach 962·8865 $42,000 !Sun 1·5) 9882 Cornerbrook, Huntington Beach 962·8885 $41,500 (Sun 1-5) 5711 Castle Drive, Huntington Beach 962·1373 $32,000 (Sat 1·5) 9691 Star, fluntington Bearh 962·8865 $42.500 (Sun 1·5) *2538 Colun1bia. Cos ta !1.1esa 540·1720 832.950 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (4 Bedroom) *978 Sandcastle. Corona del 1i1ar 644-2430 $83.500 (Su n 1·5) 10472 ~1 orning Glor.'', Fou ntain Valley 962·1373 $32.900 (Sat & Sun 1·5) {4 Bedroom & Family Room or Den) 2024 Balearic Dr (Me sa Verde) CM -545·'1577 $46.950 !Sat & Sun 1-6) *I ~JOO 11ighland, Ne\\•port Bearh 545·8424 $42.500 !Sat & Sun 1·5) 2752 C'irrle lBayshores) NB 644-2430 $67,500 (Sun 1·5) 3500 Surfvie\\', Corona del lifar 644 ·2430 $74.500 (Sun 1-5) **1653 Bayside Dr (Yochtsman's Co ve) 675-1935 Cor ona clel Mar (Daily) 9695 Marigold, Fountain Valley 8704650 $3<.500 (Su n 1·5) 334 Tours Ln (Ne\vport Riviera) CM 540· 1720 $32,800 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 5392 Sierra Roja ('J'urtle Rock) Irvine 540·1720 $45.900 (Sa t & Sun 1·5) (S Bedroom &. Family Room or Den) **54 Linda Isle Dr (Linda Isle\ NB 644-2430 or 833-0700 (Sun 1-4) **46 Linda Isle , Linda !<le 1 642·8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) **3 Linda 1'1e, l.inda Isle • 642-8235 · tSal & Sun 1·5) CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE (2 lo 3 hdrooms) **4411 West Coast Hwy, Newport Beach 642·5200 (Sat & Sun 1·5) ''Our 27th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Jooquln Hiils R..d NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. -10 Gentr.tl Gener ii oflnJa !Jjfe PRESTIGE-WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 38 Lindo Isla Drlv• Long water view from finest & last 50 ft. Main channel lot . . . $150,000 Lind• Isle Waterfront BeauWul, new 4 bdrm., 4'h ba. home on lagoon, with living rm., family rm. lge. game rm. or 5th bdrm ................ , ... $255,000 Sl Linda Isle Drive Elegant 5 bdrm., 41f..a baths; on lagoon. New carpets, drapes & wallpaper. Lge. attic storage area. 4 (rplaces. Lovely garden & large slip . . . . . . . . . . . . ............. $212,000 101 Linda Isle Drive Lovely 5 BR., 4 ha: borne with downstairs study. Mexican tile floors, beam ceilings, quality construction, slip .......... $155,000 For Complete lnform.ttion On All Homes & Lots, Ple.tM Call: CALL RON ANYTIME AT 557-4130 GINNY MORRlSON *** -REALTORS-* •• l.smMem. tc.M •Ve1'ile Dr. E'.ut. • --• C091a M~sa ···•* S57-tl30 illVINE COVE ' 0J>('n l!OU5(' Sunday 1·5 11<1 Riviera Way VIEW 34.000 SQ. F1'. 3 BR &: DEN CllARLOTIE R. LONG Value Conscious?? Buy this condo -BACK BA y 'AREA -3 Bedroom, 2'11 bath, built-in kitchen, stone fireplace. FAMI- LY ROOM , community pool & REC. ROOMS including billiards. Fee land close to every- thing .......................... $34,500. * AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS 644-7270 General General A U~IOOI: li()MI: BRICK AND BEACHY Cute and fresh! Three bedrooms, two baths, sou~ of the highway and ~lose to the beach and a cozy used brick fireplace for those rainy days. Presented a t $67,500. UNl9UI HOMD OF COIONA DIL MA.l, 675·6000 ~ llltt .. of ~,,_ Ewl .. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR u...i1"u-= ti()"'"-='" 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-61'1 r"lll .,,, L ~L.:9 REALTOR SINCE 19all PLEi\SI:: CALL 644-1150 REALTORS General OPEN HOME !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J -;:;;;::;::;::::;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;:;::::;;:;;;;:::::;:; 11 IG 5, SAT. & SUN. 19lll2 • Pro vidt."nce, lluntington ,Generel General &ach .... .It is a pleasure -----------------BA YCREST BEAUTY -POOL A fine home in a fine area, center of New- port beautiful. Behind wrought iron gates, you enter an Italian marble entry, bringing you to a sunken living room & a cozy fire-- place area. just the thing for these cool nights. A1any a1nenities that we can show you when you make an app't. to view. Offered at $81 ,00-0 CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS IWE ARE LOOKING FOR SOMEONE SPECIAL 644-7662 General STAR AMONG STARS Harbor View Hills Picturesque ob&t.'fvalion dctk v.·hcre )'OU view ·the stars at ni11:ht and Catalina by day. Luxuriously carpeted and Someone \1'ho net'(IS a home draped livin~ room enhanl'· in a presligl' location. A NI by an open hearth. helm<' that is unique and Fom1al dining a re a . lx'auli(u\ as v.·l'll as rom· llospltatlty bfockons you 10 fortabk'. :I bedroom plus the hull!·in bar in the pant"l- htmily Rl'ffi. in kilchen. · ed fa111ily room. \Veil ar· Room tor boat or camper. f'll~ kitchen with the A~un1t• j',; or 1.,. FHA loan. 1"1e111t>st Corning Ware ra'ngf'. Total payments of $13.58 per 4 bedroom, 2~ Mths, mon!h. S47-Ql10. s<>parute outdoor patio wi!h Ol'EN T1L ii . fT'S FUN ro SE NICE! g11s barbcquc. Childl'('n's ~ play arra. You OV.'ll lht' "i~· .land. $87.250,,. ... .. • ;: C. F. ColHworlhy & Co. ~~~~~ 640-0020 -• LOOK • to show this co\Ot"ful 4 &droom Home. New ex- terior paint. upgraded carpeting, custom (ireplace, large patio and room ror a pool ..... All this for S.11.850. Call Anytime, 64&-055.j, TIP TOE VlEW Parli Lido Condo. 3 Bedrooms. 2% BatM. Dou- ble Electric Ovens. J~Grne Is rvn\' unoccupied. $35,000, Call Anytime, ~ 1ma $ugS10IAlf Of fk( COLWtU (0. Invest Your Tax Dollars! RANCHO LA QUESTA $45,500. .. \\'hat lO'i~ dov.'ll '":ill buy I ~~~~~~~~~ you! A C-l commercllll in-I; rom{'. S·IT!>. per month ~ in· com{'. 117' x 137' lot and buildings. Q\\JTl('r w i 11 fifllU'l('f' bahUICt' of price 11·ith E-Z 1enns. Plan for the future, don't let thia ooo itel l\wu,y! Full prtce only Beauti lul 2 s1ory San Mil?Uf'I nlOdl!l v.·/full patio acrm.s rear of hon1e. 4BR 3 BA. lo.rgc family room with flreplsu:~-c. gardf!'tl kilch. fonnal dlnlnsc r o o m , Upi.,'ITldNI carpetg & drapes. One n1ll1• to ocean. COA'IS & WAI.LACE REALTORS • 962-1454 • Open Evonlng1 ~N~l~NE~U~Nrrs~'"' A dolleht to own 185.000. CAU. A.i'lYTJME 646-3928 EVE: ~543 1bere ls a reason U ,.elri same locadon Lachenmyer NEW LISTING Udo lsle Comer: Rustic C"harm-t.1asslw fireplace, adds com fort to lhla room,y 3 bedroom homt', unusual master wuite v.·ith separate dcn/1itting room could be used a.s donnitory wHb con- 11Ci:llng s tudy/play area .... $U4.IXK>. 817 Via Udo No<d, N.B. Open Set 1: sun 1-5 PETE BARRETI -REALTOR-Rl'<illor 642-5200 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~ associated BACK IAY CUSTOM with beautiful· POOL on quiet, tree-ahaded cul..._c ltrttt. . Excell~nl hotM with a N BYiab addreu. $46.950. . pp't only. MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES OCEAN VIEW! Beautiful 3BR cliff home + guest cottage down on beach. Brownell designed. Security system, lighted waterfall, large sheltered patio. Ken Hartley 642-8235. (Wll) WANT SOMETHING DIFFERENT? Lovely gardens accent this Baycrest Beau- ty. 3 huge BR's-2-story fireplace-study hidea\vay-skyligbt-handyman's garage-- do g run. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (Wl21 BIG CANYON-.IBR $123.000. 3000+ sq. ft. of luxury living. Room for pool. Wine Closel ti-laster BR w/fireplace. Conversation area. Built-in bookcases in FR. Kitchen trashmasher. 4BR + maid's w/bath. Walter King 644-6200. (W I3 ) CAMEO SHORES-EXTRAORDINARY • The-Wtimate-.degr,ee. oj m~g!li(jcegce. ~ master BR's, charming garden sitf mg room, 3 baths. DeligbUul new pool on lee- ward side for warm sunny bathing. Elaine Svedeen 642-8235. IW14) INVESTORS' ATTENTION! 2BR house on 8400 sq. ft., R-2 lot. Could build tri-plex w/10'/b zo ning variance. Close-in C.M. location. $18,500. Jack Howell 642-8235. (WIS) SHORECLIFFS Exceptional property. Mo st desirable 11>- catloo. Ocean view from 6 rooms. 3 BR's + Maid's, 3 baths, PR. 2 large sunny view decks. FEE OWNERSHIP. Elaine Svedeen MU235. (W16) LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT 45' or sandy beach-beautiful master suite on upper floor + 2BR.-2 baths---Oen-DR & terrific kitchen w/breakfast area. Valid reason for sale $225,000. (W17) [Irvine 1. -·k>i .. _,,_P"~ I IOI Dowf Drtw Mt-12SJ 1--1for-Action ••• Call-642-5678 ) ISR OKERS-AEAL TORS JOJ~ W folboo 67l-J66J ~ ~'1'~ ,,.. __ _ • l Nwpof1 looch,C.llt-12Ht ~ • I • [ ~ e I I I I I I I I J 1 1 i ' s ' • 3 • • -..... 1om\1 1. 111 ,11\ .. ! 4 • ' ~ .,, , ~ . HERITAGE . , REALTORS F'rtd.ty, Jattu•ry S, 1973 "J 111li"l 11'1lil, 1llage Real Esta te ---'lll'ullor DAILY PILOT :J l ('11•!.•11\ \ •''\ l~•U\o·; li.:;t•. pr1\', ""1111 J•••l. 2 ,.;ry. "\ul'('O: h•',11~· ~h;1l..1• 1•~if . 1 $p1u·iou-. I01lrr11~ . I~·· l\111111: & f/1n1 11\ r111.;. 11 l"•,tnl N'll'!i :'ll.1 ... 111 · 1r111 ... IJ•lll of Ill•• .\ )![J•l'>. l..u.uh, or t.lOTQ,lt[!' :11,.,1 S<"f' th1~ '"'•'t'f)lkm11I hVll\l' ;.1t $,,\".l,~r0. * 4!rJ.l'!l.lu • BY 0\\'nt>r-n1U.!rl sell-IOW'ly 5 Br. ~lesa rk'I i\111.r, car(lf'll', dm~. bll-1ns. all typtl"I; rlnan1•1ni: n•:ul)' $37.~. ;)19-1\.li Mesa v·-.-,d~.----- A REAL DELIGHT . WALLACE REALTORS 546 4141- (0pen Evenings) LY ROO~I 2::· r\G~ chnini:: room, plus -1 .. ., -, NEED CASH7 Jo'ORJ\!AL DINE. 3 11111 nn rern1s. Cull l\TR. DPENTIL~·ITSFUNrOBiN/Cf' • >:().'11:11-:rlnl. """""""· lo•· nnly 1"·500· FABULOUS -----A PEACH ~lroo1ns. 3 bathi>. New air Gl:->NY l\!ORHJW;.J BLQCI,,:, 51:>.S42•1 SOUTH ~ · ~ e 21 HOUll SF.BVICF: • I [aguM Beach eontJitionl•r and dishwashC'r~ *'** -REALTORS-COAST Rt-:.·\LTOH.S. ' Floor Plan ! CALI. u.~ f1r.;I -\\'e 1\•ill S<"II (Jn Prachll'f't'.' J.u. Shnrp Club ft1ciliti~ include POOL ,:(IM•* 1505 ?.tesa BY OWNER I your property or l!llarnnhx· I VICTORIA BEACH t•usron1 /null •I l.xln 11!1., unrl TENNIS COURTS! Call • •V•~e ~. roM ., BR l ' BA Cpt d ' FOR FAl\11L\" FUN. 5 your <'l!Ulty lw'f'1rc' 111oving OPEN SUN 12..4 frunll)' rn1 .. dliun"' rrn., 2'1-1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. J f::u;:t -O\\'NER VERY Ai'IX-...... ...,~ ............ ~ •· ~ · 1', f11<!, I 1 1 r · 1 rAr L f l I t • "' t' * • CO!I d1~hwa~~cr. fla~sto11e patio I • • DO ,.Oll WANl' * * ·We roomc:, Slf'J>-Ull 1v1ng i 11y. . o1· r11n1e<. :1pp . I 170 McAuley 1 ~1lh11, a,.1t-.IPrn is I n n d * * * IOUS -645--0303. .-·-. ·ta ?.feu, lh 1 11 BBQ C • r1n .. big family nn 9&1-l·l:iG. . 1 k1l1•he11. hhn dt'f'p f1•eeze, Mrs. Lynn Swan *•* 557-4130 \\1 JUI •111 · oppcr Honie'? lnvrstmt>n1? Trndl''! "'/flr(jll, Cf'ntmiC' hC'll<'h. Brn,.h . :i11rle; \\'lltf'h lh" J p11rlo ,\.:. a ~r1;irkhn~ poot 2001 Sixth St. 1Qpcn F:vening!ll p!unihin~. han:hnxid noon:. Then call owner 612-S::lO shll\\'C•i-s. Sf>p. ut\1. rm, "1\ash1ng "-1rn!" fron1 th1" $51,j()J. T\\U blocks hum school K· 1 t ha\'C .i BR, 2 il.\, pot>I. W{llf'rY>ttt'nrr. \Valk 10 •.. •. • 1'1'.lzy, hrnu11fully l"'slnrrd VIEW Balboa NEWPORT S!h Cogrri.d<'. ~l~sac'·11''11A 1 frplc, cusl hi!, cpt~. 11rp._, hf>Ach, schl.s. $4.J .G.JO. CALL I 1·arly Calif., flrit'U hf'an1~ & You are lhe "·Inner or HEIGHTS or , nv. -:'.:""'' a or bltn.<i. F.A~tDE. lo Oo11.n, 'l68-~l~o6. , lrpll·., 3 bdrm. c:oltll~"· jSl'>lflon1 availtthlf' Ck-l'An & 2 tickets lo the-I App 1 ln ~. aaT-4S61. $.19,:-AJO. Mh:hl lake-2 hr I F:l<'C'. eye garrH~f". F.A. Ua.) \ 11•11. l. ~p~1rklini.: lllct Sports, Vacation & Everything Everybody EASTSIDE -$29,9SO m1Jhile homr in ltX'DI area ••. I run111tt' 8' Oag-:lnnP p:iliti. n1 rule· Bu1ldcr remodelt'd Recreational Vehicle r:TART THE Wants! 1 C11t1nrry sill' yanl, dC't'p sh~ OPEN lfOUSF. DAILY Spiral Staircase f'1r.<t 11mf' olh·red. SY.J,500. l1k1· n•·Y.'. 4 Rdr1ns .• 'l b<l1h11, Show ~I 3 bf>drooni 2 bath 2 hrr· 1-rplg, COl'l'X'r ston~ f1rC'pl , l\7 Ma~mli1:1 St .. C.~1. BEACHSIDE-North fan11lv rrn .. r harm 1 n g at the NEW YEAR places, Uc~. pleclri~ kitchen, beaut dee. Sp{l.rkling bllins Thrf'l• lx>rlrorJmll, '!. i).1ths, llard-to-mmi•-by! \'ou he1! Spankln' tl<'\I'. Stimr yi1'\\' k1t1·h1•n \\/bltn~. Pr11ne & doubl d t h....., "t"ra11l"l'>l":l.n f'ounuuns hy fmin ""lllht:>u~. ~ Ovt'rsi71'il ll~·i~h1!' 111'1:a 11t.<tt.r Clilr Or. Anaheim Convention 2 car garage oil pr1\'atf' e. e ac ,.., garage. OOUble garal(t'. nt.•\\" shn1.: tilt! ~a" 5 llNlrm f.· lamily "'" S6:1,51AJ. C.nt.r RIGHT! alley. Sprinklen fronl & llard-to-fJnd 3 BR. 2 Bl\. rarj)('ts Sr drapr!t. $2'L J)f'r l IMMEDIATE 1 0 ~ !...-Inns., ·3 dt'h1xe baths. _,,. Only 1"900. home at thi!t price. Call ~tr. 1 ,. al 1 nn.:; Iii•· iliths. vrr · f"onnal clini~. Family rm. CALl ,..._ 646•1414 January 5-l4 Let us show you lhc> v.·ay ....... . ..,, Harris, :.&K42-I. SOUTll n1on1 l rt"e rl'nl Sf'f"\ u·r. POSSESSION I !>II f1 nr 'llJlf'I' conirorr. up. \\'/hrlck frple.. la,. r" 91.:, ~ Please call 642-~. ext. 314 with this adult occupied ~ ('Oi\ST IU:ALTORS. J 1,:r;vlC'd rhnl()ul. t .. 1~r fllt!IO. i:an\rn. F..xquisilr c:irrirl.ArfdC. befWecn 9 & 5 pm to l'lain1 dre a m ho me. 4 14 lk<Jroom plui; family room. rimf _ ldsi·p ~arJ~, fully Plum Ix¥! hnbby shop. ~· 11 a 'E AL TY your tickctS. !North County BEO{tOOMS. professional ~#!A~ 4 Bd 2 Bath H.f·&Hor1! 646-ITll 1~, tlalh, bu11tins, Clo!ll' \fi I !ift1 tnk!Pr1·tl '?' lo" n1au1t. toda;.i. S!ll,IDJ. Nt•r Ncwpert Peil Office tDll·frce number ts 540-1220} landscaping, loo.:ely covered rm., 21'.HJ \\o'estcliU Drive Ol'l'an, sOOpplng and J'IC'\v Pr11·1· 1Jn!y ~l.900 "'1lh only LAGUNA CANYON * * * patio, great far e'n· 1 New carpets lhruoul, 2 car 0 11 f)f1son· 1)ark, and ~hooll'. lfJ', tln11n. C,\LL !162-SK"il. 2 Houses on l /l Acre New England T Th• Fo tertaining. $1800 lotal down garage. Eastside O>s ta pen '11 9 P~I [.\cellent tenns. Prie«I at ry IS r a paymenL NEW YEAR .Rrtic-sa.MS28C.950.dl R 1 EASTSIDE-$26,500 __, only l32.500. Call 962~L ~~~.~~X'~~~r .t.;;;r11:0.;;~~ 1 C'ha~ qn th,e Starter OP£.N rrL i;. rr'S FUN ro BE NICE' oy c ar e ea tor Cozy c:o11age Y.1!h lan.;e ya111 thl';: hiirnhli• 1 hdrni r·ou.,1ry Peninsula Don't pay rent when you can ~ ' ' ~ BARGAIN 1810 Ne~n~d., C.M. i1~:~ni:fu~~~<;(' c~~~;~·d~~i:: ho1nf•. Df'l1.: ntn. h1'l<'k BBQ. \\':'llkln~ dblunrr •ri Ocean O\\'n your own home. Tiu! ' Jlerc IS a near hon1e \·aluf' r-;-0 ..... v;11•1u1t, almost intmrd. Ai!nrsthlr hi·onll'd l-hdrni. J1nd Rnv TW·nrhC'i;. A home offers 3 bcdroont!, , in Co!lta i\l<'sll flricf'<l a! ---posst'!>~lQn. Suhyour tC'·rnis. BROKERS INC. c..-inacr \l'/r-ornl'r ff1llt·", J.\pn.cloull 2.:-M Ml. r1. fa1nlly s pacious living r o o n1, $16,500. 3 &'(h'l'IOm 2 b .. 11h * * $32,950 * * ra11 ,\JR. DAY, 5'1a.M21, ELEGANT 11"Xt ilnnr, ',"'11.:_:.:ur li;",~'.n'~, hl'n111· 1\llh I h1rgf' bNtro- kltchen wall with all the and lots of xlras. Ch~;k lhi.~ 4 BR+ P.·laid's or guest rm. s () l' T Ji c Q A s ·r FIREPLACE & WINE I or •'(•n! 11 a '"'.nil). 1.·~ l)fll.~. 1n•'ludn1~ a hu~ built-ins. EXC('\lf'nt starter lall_l:e 61' x 135' Ill!. ,\. grf'al Pecky paneling, sha;::' Curp. REALTORS. ,\ mnrin::{ fin-place in lal'J!l' ! RANCHO LA QUESTA 11"1'· •>fft'"'1;1 1· ~~t)j'lOll. n1a~rrr su1 11• 11 i1h Ort•iln home for only $24,950. P.lakc Ontu Sl)!)l for Jods. CALL us at Most outstrulding buy in I ·1 ·th '" -,"l.l \'u·v.• and ~un [)f'1•I.:. F'an1flv * EASTSIDE * S<.i>aratl' amt Y. room, \\'I 1 ilR. J RA, fnil. din, lam J a call to 842-2535. ~ fri0-ll51 Open Eves. N'pt Hts. Beller hurry? hvrtl f nc lrom the-H•'IOn1, Sho·lh"r'o'<I 1'111i11. Rig oPEJITIL 9 • fT"SFUN10BENfCEI 21 BALBOA BAY PROP. a ~· 0 WI , · rm .. 111.'lf-clean oven, cu11-tm Cou11tn.• f\1 l('ht•n F:njov •hr 2 BR. & den, ftxer-upJ)('r enlertaln~OJ! wet bar . Bn ght erpl!I & drJ)5, 11nif lndscpg. J f ~ EV~ FOR 0E~~:~;= r~1~:'. P.1:1::,. ]:~:.~:: '.'::'° ~~;;~~~Tu:~ •' .. ,, AD.~\IS. "" l o ~hl~t~~~ ~~~'.G, ~"" . [~-®~.~~~I~,~,~ ~;~:-~:;1.,~~t;1: A DELIGHT h 11 J 11 -in 5 , brk. S27.2SO. REALTORS 642-4H23 i 11ppoin1mcnt to Sl!E' or come 962-2W. :1:17-:WOJ hol'lll' 1\·11h mt1ny <"u~trim • • ~rno. BY OWNER j 10th" OJK'n house Sat &: Sun, __ ~ __ _ lr11.tul"("'; .~111·h a' 11nh'ft ;:li•'(.~~y ; TO OWN Balboa Island JBR. J l~ BA, Fam Hm, v./v.· norin ro 5 P:\·I. 21271 Bulk-BY Q\YTl('r, fo"raocl~n 1n "-l1d1n1<: 1lorirs, . --·-•••i•~ c:rpts, drps. S"1ni J)'"IOI, 1 hrart Circ, llunttngton Fountain~. 2 )TS 'llrt, lge 4 sr\f-cleaning n1'('l1. hll-1n OtDF.R & dulrmi11g 3 Br.. "P cr1. ' ..,.,,. . KASABIAN R E C ' I 1 Ch I 1·1 nnkl 1ncetl ..... ;,oo IJl'ath. Br. 2 Bi\, family rr>0m 1 BBQ, P .. 'l.inhu-ds. t·ood 1 Pen. Pt. Oceanfront 1' ba -$TI ".IV\ 321 \\'<'Jll Jo,\nn St. · • , w/c:alhcdral c-lni.: & Pnrt1ul., l>!l!Pr ,.., any mon• "uni ('T· R/1"'1' n a 1 r1tm(' II) ., ., 1'\t('W Cl..... ·"'-"'· I f f 1 I Ii.! l ! I I ti I II * HARBOR * HIGHLANDS Hard·to-Ond 4 Bednn home w~i baths, lowly pool,1'!!!!1!1 covered potto, bll!M, nr.p1, io--HUNTINGTON BEACH C-4 LOT I hanlwood 11oo..,. ~ """'· MESA VERDE = ~~· ;,~c:r 3 l ramUy 2-bath honte oi1 112' s 192.. Soulhstde or 1 1 1 ~ near h p~ped cu~c \Verht>r rear Bolsa Chica lhoppinfl:, ltffll1ners IJbrary ~Room far pool 008 corner. Well I0011t('(I for pro. I: . park. SU.~. ~ trailer de. ~ pami wJ: lessional OffJtt or mall ~. SOU'M CO Md out. 2 f Ire p 1 R c e !!: • thopa ... •••• .. · ••' • Stl,500. REALTORS. ovtntud patio. Ottered at BARRETI' REALTY~ $29 ,5011 $3l,9'i(I. l()'X, down. CHARMING S BR 2 BA Coll -(()pon Evo«.1 borne-. new shaa crplit t:.J'\I• out. Xlnt oond. Ldicpd. ya:rd + a truJ1 trHt:. " • '*' HERITAGE . , REALTORS VERY SCARCE Owner 673-1488 714-21-1-327il. ~2-6&14 Eves: 962.5319 floors, shag rrrl. pro . u f'n1t1N11. , so uw-u1 rs purr in~· ut. 11r1n11• n n ' · · Janrl!4<'afl"<l 541 ,.'JOO 10' • 1 n"fris,:., \\"a~kr 8' 1lry!'r. ll('l'Hrllt•n11 lo1·:111or1s for !ht• The Punle wilh lhe Built-In Chuckle I FA C R·s -1 ! I• J J J There's on1y one 1rouble with bop music. How con you tell when the rKOrd'1 -? I K E B C E D I 1-s I I I I I 0 Compi11te tl\e chuckle Qvoted 5 I 7 by filling In t,he mi~ng word · . • • . -• you <W-telop lrOl'l'I tl*P No, 3 below. 0 gisc:~~i\ LETTERS '0 j I j I I I I l - SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 down 0f)f•n hnu~ Se1 &· Jlon1t:' rrirt'(t at $.~1.:ilO 11Uh """ ~1·:or Thi~ 1·h11rnun-: 3 Sun. K42-M04. 1 f''<lra lot, 111\ l11ndscnprd, H!:. '.! h·11h !1nus1~ nvrrlo"kt; •n n ~l'l""~-tnoh · ad jaoent-.Ju • hunw:: -tor, lli•· ui..·~.iU ,\• h.3til9r. en ( 3 .· •·: •. vvu.:1 V'-'• .: $20(0). lri<llt'•' ,\ r"a"' ]J<;llJIJ:" nt l llk1> 1\,.. ..... F.nAlnn<1 . C'Or.y . NOH.TH f:'~D * $110,(.i)I')! hrlght kilchrn, 2 vanlly * ' ·· hn1hs plus a llui:;-r nl'W'n II\·-Ho1n<' 1\·ilh 2 h<lrni. ;i_r1. ,!;,· 2 in~ rooni ;:ind " ilrn. E-7. nn. i;curii;I apl.. \~alk I•• 1 lf•rn1s A.nd IO\\', lo"· n1onthly tx~rh &. shop;111u:: f't'ntr-r I&. Bh.1t 962-:l.511. Oc-ran v~ I f\)it.'CH~ an I' payrn nnnu11I 1n('f"lmr or $7.l'lOO. ION ES HEALIT INC I S'f. l'MO REPOSSESSIONS Pn.-.<l " sc..•~. For inrorn1a11on 1'1nd locaUon • ~1fARP * 1 1 (7141673-6210 I 2 Bdm1., 'l bath horn,, or thc-!K' 1'11i\,,,. VI\. horneli, \\'/deck!! & pa.tin. Only 3 yrs 1001Wfl.ab)Ol llhd. COOl1tcl • old. PrlC'f><l fl)r immMinlf' ""-1 BMcJo CMfo!IM ll:lMO KASABIAN .,1 •. s.18.ooo 1 R.al Estate 962-6644 * >\tODERN • _ 3 &Inn .• l bAl.N: hlwh N>-11.n1 OP EN SAT/SUN 1-S AMERICAN DREAM ~·1r~ .• lot~ or i;:111..<i~. -: 1720 KINGS RD. Thi, •I berlrm. 114 baUr [l(>colu. Compan! this iii I r"f'tn'Bt l:i1 ril"hly f\crnrntefl $41,500. ~'-'1•1 llt~ •VU·:\\-' J BR. 2 r--1 A ~-ENGLUND h,, S~i.OOJ. I '" ~"'"' ~ y "'"'""" 220 20th STREET toneA. NH!umr \1A kJnn nnly $721 per mo. CALL 962-ol."tll REAL ESTATE I: RH k '.?UH 1h.1J1lt1'. S&l.~ RED CARPET HLTRS. 318 THALIA 4'>H'® 142 MASTERS CIR. COME AND SEE Oc VI $38 900-,\dJ!!l~r.I S.,\ c.c. G 0 If ean ew • , Cnui"'M'. .1 8t r::..m. m1. thlti wry 1'han> deconitl'd 4 l.811:(' 2-Sty: ~ RR &-(k'n on S-17,300. Bdrm., huae lot, next door l~ lol.t. S1Jd1ng doon:. from I S408 SEASHORE lo $40.IXX>CAI L"°~2..i 4': dm 10 au.ndeck. Bltn., 1slt1nd Nr-w duplex f,2!~ wAi.KER Rc4.i I y pf ldtch. C1tf'l)("ling, 4 UR . .i 2 BR--for R'n1 r --1e. dFape& No better buy In DSON REALTY ~w •II th<' ··viuago:· DAVI INVESTMENT AT MISSION REALTY "1·0731 673-9060 '46-n67 -THE BEACH -OWN-YOUR-OWN APT ., l BR, 2 BA In llarbo;r Multlpl~ mntd . aood \nt'(lmf' north end, In-et $21,500. 1 Hlahl11nd1. 2 blka (tom...,, ol· l'eturn. J. I... YOUNG Walincc t_...: ttr. RINtllor, llotarlners Elem. ~ lleeyl. REALTY M7-1216 or 842~10 19-1-9318. f'or •PP' 54S--1020. owtW. •..;..;;::c:;.;_.;_.;;.;.;_.:;:;;;:_c.=-"-'--'"-"='--~--- • . . ' ' ' . . .- , DAILY PtlOT ftldl)' ~ 5, 197) ' • I ~""'~...!.t~-~l;:iii~:;.;l;;.~;;'.!:.lii'l''~:;:_j~liilii~lii'"rlii'lii. ~)[ij~ I _,,,_ )~/ -. ... -I~ { _,.._ I~ [ ........ B,.,-1~ [ ,.. ...... -J~[ .... ~•b•.,-1~ Mol>llo Homo/ • Houso1 Unfum, :J05 HoUMI Furn. or Apt .. Furnj UO Apt, Unfum. 365 Apt. Unlum U5 Condomfnh1m1 for Nie Condominiums 110 for oalo .. 160 Troller Perko 1n General 1 __ U_n_fu_r_n_. ____ 3_1~0 1 llolboo loland Gonorol General l;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;l1axh<i.,i:Stii;...ru;;;:ti;;,.;;,;:-, ilEBmRC'.t;;;w~,.;-:w;: Newport S.ach lBR. Ba,ytront, prt paUo. bath. 10x30 C11bfl.nft c&n be 3BR 28.A, cite RIO, FA ht. View, parking, yearly or to WALNUT SQUARE CLOSEOUT SPECIAL LAST CONDOMINIUMS PHASE THR~E e No Closing Costs • Free Upgr•de Carrt e lmmedi1te Poss01s1on e $1000 Moves You In Santa Ana 1''.vy. to Culver, right abou t i;. mile to Walnut {1st ro:1d on left), left 1 mile to '"Valnut Square": or San Diego f,vy. to Culver, left about 3 miles to \Valnut. right to "Walnut Square" or call 714/551-4041. Bil New Cpta, drpe & bcda 14'/w ~· & drps, dbl ~· LfOO Sand11, 3 Bd, 2 BA, June .'Kl. '400 SQ. Baylront. lhru out. Jt"'amlly P"'~:I prlvk. ~';'imo. ~r.r: :J~71 o~ lrptc:, lrg yrd, nu trplJI, 2 BDRMS, urll pd, prege. brulch, tio.t docks uvcu. A• M&-8l03. c.lrf)ll, dshvallh, $340 yrly \'rly rental, Sai5 mo. $11,000. Space N'nl $6.;. l~a.se. 5600 lllv«!r Av"-" NB, ~213) ~ ~~-'. Sch., MG-6590 or 3BR. 1 ~ ba, bltins, d.bJ car 64&7'586, B1fboa Pentntula ~ gar, lg fenced )'I'd, trplc. OCEANFRONT 2 BR. ""oklOW.11ltlCOSTAMl!SA laund room, Jr;,O mo, Avall $300/mo. Yearly, 8 R lmn1ed 842-4258. Call ~Al< ......... A N 0 Ncw--1..uxuriowiJ,y ""'""""° lurnii;hed Bayview * nuick Cash * ThC'iik• Art> Just A f'ew 01 NO FEE-3BR, 2BA, near Condominiums Bachelor. Privalt' Beach. . .... Our M1\NY RENTALS . . . n('w Citr Park. !luge lot, Dock avail $2«i Ye 1y \VIII bu.Y. ~r prop«rty. All Sl<Ci. STUDJ::NTS, 2 Ur., "'itll al bit.ins. S250/nm. Furn. 315 Leue. 673-2is2. • ar cash Within ~.1 hrs. C11U furn., "' ilOOI. Nl'ar o.c.c. BKR: 962-551L 962 8.,1(5 Huntington BNch SPACIOUS 1 Br. beach apt. · Avail now. 3 BR Condo, 1% BA, pOOls. t.ra:. porch. Car. Ulll. incl. VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS I A 2 BEDROOM APT. Furnlohod A.Unluml1hod Adult Living Dishwasher color coo.rdlnat~d appliances • Piuab abag carpet. mlrrured wardrobe doors- Indirect lighting In kitchen · brealllast bar • huge private fenced paUo -plush landscap- ing • brick Bar-B-Ques • large heated -pools & lanai. Air condlllonln g, 3101 So. Brl1tol St,. Sant• Ano SS7-l200 COLDYiELL, BANKER A CO. i * pa.Lio, dbl gar, frpl, nr F"ANTJ\STIC furrWdu.'d I BR. Open hse. FH, Sat, Swi. al7 •( JY."'f" $169. Nf:Att O.C.C. 3 BR., 2 ocean. 53&-1515 ldter a pn\. Condo. Nenr pool. \\111.lk 111 E. Balboa Blvd. Balboa. I ~Ii ba .. blt·lni;. Stud{'Jllll, pet 4 Br .. 2 be, l.5xXI' tam rm.. beach. CN'lM!r out of state, O<.'EAN view mod bach e1~t. l l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!~!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""~I 0.K. fireflace. "" Blk schl. $260. will rent for only Sl..55 a .... , 1 1... I' * lh 'bl u.ucony, Po0 • -WiJ. nc A ~ Fu 360 A I Unfum ... BROKERS INC. Cal 892-1000. nlon to re11pons1 e b"1tu1t. u111·11, 1510 w. Balbol;\ BJvd. p,... rn. P • • .,.., MANAGING AGENT PR! pty want:s older home or fixtr llPPC'r fron1 pM pty. C .. 'in l.l4Y clish, Con!lider duplex -M. \V1egcld1, 6<&-"'2ll $l~Y.>. NJ:;\VLY dec:or. 2 BR., Irvine Call 536-2375. N . .B. C----u--------C "-I u. encl. &art1gc. Yard for kJd!i,1;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;: Condomlnlumt e S2S Wk & Uf On Ocean Otte m.M orone -nuir Pt-'!. * 3 BR ;? ba bo •A"" Unfurn. 320 Lovely Bach • BR·Rooms lmm1U.'\llale 1 Br. $13), utll. 2BR IBA, fittpl, dllposal, 2 BR. 1, b nUll rrn ..• !m ---------Maid Servi1,,,'t' -Pool· Util Pd pd. Sngl sly. cpllWT1, priv. paUo, gar, yrly. Xlnl loc. SZ"JO. H;\LBOA lslan(!. 3 BR, · i<\ 11· · · · · · · • Cost• Meu • CalJ 6'1'5-8740 • palio. Quiet Adlh1. 673-:ni& 705 Acacw. 548-5.U. triil. All util. pd. Ye11.r!y Z BR. l 11 ba. Air Conti .. $265 --------- =="'!!!!!""'""''""""""'""'""'"."'"ICASH tor ,i.our l'Q· Behilltl in LANDLORDS I 2 Bit. z Ba ...... , ..... $300 ~tESA Verde North·2 Bfl. COZY roonty l Br. Utll. pd. LCE. l Br. Pool, nr !dlops. C M 1 Business Prof)9rty 154 payn1ents ok. Alao, guai-n. FREE RENTAL SERVICE '.l BR. 2 ba ..... S'.!25/3601375 Condo. Privale patio. Pool. SL15. {2131 94.1·2928 14 4 0 3 Adlls, no pet.II. $155 util pd. I ijojjjsijlijajijjiieii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil I 1.. QI.It's plan. Mk for Jim BEACON RENTALS 4 RR . Turlll·ro('k ...... $3.115 Attachert gai·agc, Crpts, Mancila, La Mirada. Cal. 1884 Monrovi11.. MS--03.16. II I !WI) WfS T 0 TA L : Broonw. Newport J\1 e s a * 64, "lll * 1 l!H. 2 ba, fain r1n .... $•100 ('lrp11, blt·ins. 545-8711. Coron1 del Mer I BR, furn, Crpts, privllle l 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·;m~ 101'xZl.l9' CHOICE LOCA· Rlty, 642-9411. ~ H •-h patio._ $13.i/m.o ca J l HARBOR GREENS II T!ON, lt""llngton Be•"'"I~~~~~~~ LANDLORDS.• ired h·111 unli~gton -·· I BDRM •• ,,... apt. $WO. 642-8400 ZONED BUSINESS. PJtO· mo or $2'25. wtgarage. FESSIONAL OR OFFICES I If• I \VB'eacs·h""e 'alco'',..'nalndelNMewt.rpo•rt FOI{ rent, 3BR oondo, 1 ~ 67fr-Ol8Z. •TROPICAL POOL e 517,500 eu. TERMS \\'r ite : ~---"·I ha. 1!111 rin, 2 sty, pools, I Br furn $145. Gas & \\1J' pd. ·~~ ti 2' bit. r · Sll5 -•incl. util. Bach for 145 E 18th No 9 548-1168 IVINPAK. 199J Kihci Rd. & LKgu1111. Our RrnW Ser· REAi.TY p;, o, '~ gar. uis, re rig, Single ll lul('. No peti;. No ' ' : Newport Buch RARE FIND EASTBLUFF Fuml1hod & Unfurnl1hed Beaut.. 3 BR honle conlpl. "'fa formal dini11g rm. & a lrg. lam r1n .. lovely \fldSt._-pg and neat as a pin. All of this ~I {XX). CALL to J\ihei Maui, llawaii ' vi('.• I• FREE to You! '1'"'' A Conl""ny \\'ith V'-i'on ei1it.s, drp11, nr !lhopping & """kl 6~ "131 NICELY furn. lrg. 1 BR. ~ " •.1 .,... "' sch.ls. Children/pets ok. ........... ng. ,......, · ncl Qui d I lldUSF~ zoned C-2. Will lealll' Busine's Nu· View! Univ. Park Centt'f, lrvlnc '962-IT39 2 h\ks to Blg Corona. ~ch. e ~ et. A u ta, no v: 1ipt1on to buy, or st•IL O rt ity NU-VIEW RENTALS Cull Anytime. 83.1-0810 ,..,,.,,,,-----,---St60 & 1115 il pd y 1 pets. Elden 64fr2768. UJ\v do\vn 646-5331. ppo Un 200 s-'"'" or '"4·3248 Office hours 8 A~1 lo 6 Pi\t Irvine ut r Y· Huntl-ton •---h '~ ~ ---------1 adult, no pe'I:. 645-1624 ··• .__ CLE;\N int.'QmE' prop, Cf'nt * * ~ New Condos On B1y ~;:~:==::==~~ilN~E\V \\'alnut Square O:lndo. $145 . fl65 C.?-.'I. By. o~r. S~;~~-z Edward .Elliton._ Boat sllp a rut deluxe extr 2J3R...2..Ba.-Air.t.cond~ BR. 2 BA, crpt.s,_drps ,~;C;;•;•;;t•;;Mo;;oa;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;i Bacbelor-.\-1-BR, peb. Condomln1um1 Corona dtrf Mer bedtoonts. Open house Sat 3 BR. 2 ba ............ S:\25 o\vn 111.~lry room. Central LIVE LIKE A KING Divided beth & lots of From $130 lo $215 mo B1chelor1 • I Bdrm• 2 Bdrm• • 3 Bdrms Ph or 2 Full Betha 8• i;r..w:.'{) or ~"'WUIJ. 1212 Sendcastle four to chose from. 2 & 3 J BR. 2 Ba. air/cond ..• S2SO 1 an bltns. \\'shfd)T furn. :~ [rplc's, priv. garages • for sale 160 You are the winnl'I' or & Sun . Rellltor 11.t 4411 4 BR. 2\.i ba ........... $425 hea1i11g, ·cable 1V, pool & closets. Rec hall, pool & or '1.::==:::;::=:==;;::==J .. _:..::2LJi11L2k<iit'-iiLJii l<_~_JL\.\'est Coast I-lighway, N.B. garage. $240. mo. See at At Bud et 1 pool tables, &a.una. baths. ce. 1-l ,--. S V I & S-A-Jt-R-E'~----'f""'Y 46&1 Golftf.n-Glen--or-eal •--gee-~ en en a area Frank Conety portsi acat on 642·5200 Eves: 673-2320. l80:;1 644-3301, open Sat & FURNISHED · Keelsoo Ln. (1 Wk W. of oU kitchen. Enclosed pa· *OCEAN VIEYi * Z Units plu." beach cottage, just steps to beach. GOOd summer rental area. $62,500 Gib Yialkor Realty ~G Via Udo, N'pt. Beach * 67S.5200 * E-BLUFF BEST BUY Spacious 3 br, 2 ba. lrg ram rm, kit. Upgraded dl'("(lr. noortng, cust. shutters. Bright, clean. O\\'fier · $49,000. 644-4745 NEWPORT SHORES Walk to beach. Lgc. 3 BR. 2·Sly. 2~S bttrth3. Blt·ins. MUST SELL! $42,500 CAYWOOD REALTY * 548-1290 * 1171h Grend Cenal Recreetlonel Vehicle HARBOR View Hills, CdM. 3 Sun. UNFUltNlS1-lED Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). tios. 2 swimming pools, Belboe Island Showh BR .. fan\ rm., view. Lgc. NU 2BR. shag, dahfwi>h, 842--7848 sauna, recreation facili · You are the winner of A h . at c' ' I view lot. $500 ~fo. sndck, !XJOI, cust drpes, & * POOLS LRG 2 BR, beam ('(!ii. Crpt. Iles. Security guard. No 2 tickets to lhe na e1m onvent on BALBOA I.sland, '.l BR. 2 Ba. garage, all bltins. $Z10, * ENCLOSED drps, bltns, dshwi;hr, Uispos, pets. SpOrts, Vacation & ·Center 2 car gar. $375 Mo. 1 ,,:·sJNCEBl!MG"., 536-7774. GARAGES ~,,'·. N"tilr. u"".,·p.Adl•"wlt.i;, mo"'. 1 Model• n.....n lO 111 7 pm R I, IV hi I January >14 D. r~ranklin lUtr. 673-m2 st estern fuU: uldg. Newport Beich * CONVENIENT ,... -.- ecree ion• • C • Plea11e call 642-5678, ext. 314 Beck Bay University Purk, lrvine 'ro ALL BEACJ1Es 17676 Cameron. 842-5192. 2700 Peterson Way, CM Show bl'Otwecn 9 & 5 pm to claim ==.o;.:o:...-----1Days 552-7000 Nlght1 BLUFFS -Bay!ronl, outside FROM $140 MONTH l Bedroom Apt, sun nr Harbor Blvd & ot the your tickets, (North County 2 BDRM duplex, crpts, I"'~""'""""'"'"""'""'""''"' I unll. 3 BR, 2~; llA. frpl, 2 Bedroom Apt, S140 Anaheim Convention toll·frf·e number is 54{1.lml garbage diaposal, bltn stove, LEASE 2 BR. 2 RA cust. decor. drps, crpts, ADULTS PLEASE Call 64&-~7 Adem1 Center • • * 5145. 545-1506. townhouse. F'rplc, W/V.' a11pl. pa!io. Nr. pool. Lse. v L a!f'..:N . Small beach hotel. January s.14 NEWPORT BEACH Balboa lsl•nd cl'pt, dsh\\·hr. garage, S525/m(I. \\'l'ite Box 255 IL A POMONA Apts SSS/mo. Rooms Please call 642-5678, ext. ~14 Marine Contracting Firm &landscaJ>('<l1 .,~~eK y 1 a300rd. Pool _Balboa Island, 92662. 1 PHONE 642-20JS $il.50/wk. 5J6.7056. bl'Otween 9 & 5 pm to claim Finest e quipme n t & 3 BDRM, 2 BA, 'dshwshr, rec. at·i ilies. · nio. Condo, Furn. or 11760 Pon1ona Ave., BACHELOR, nnnl, Sll5 ..,,r your til·kel11. (North County waterfront location. ~ Yr. for<;cd air heat , crpt&, drps, lst & laiit + StOO. security. Unfurn. 325 /.,.~""'""'""'""!!!'!!""""" ~ •- toll·frec number is 540-122Xl! old oompany. Space avail 2 car garage w/xtra bath & c,_5'_-0_1~12~----~~ 1---------Casa de Oro Ci~~~.~~i~ts. 17676 DELUXE * * * for boat l:llllea & repairs. washroom. M~rried, mature On fltajor gret>n bell * * • APARTMENTS ~BILL GRUNDY RL TR. adu1b only! Avail Feb. 1st. Hanover modrl, 3 br, I·': Leo Galleto ALL UTILITIES PAID Atr Cond. Frplc's -3 Sv.·lm· NEW WATERFRONT 675-6161 Yriy lsc. 673-243l. ha. Calhedrai N'il. f'or 2195 Cenyon Rd. Apt. A Cornparc before )10U rent ~wport Beich ming Pools • Health Spa · d "·Ibo p • I lease until Sept BllS C M Cus1om desi0 ned, featurin°: $29 50 p \I' k & u l BR. Tennill Courts • Game and 2 an 3 bedroom ho_ m('S on BAR & R-ta"•ant, vr gr a~ 1_-__ • __ •_•_•n_s_u_• ___ 1 · · ott• 1sa ..... ·-e. • er ee p. N ~.. .... ,, .. RlJ-1010 ask for R. rit Can-e Spacious kil chen with in· 2 BR & bachelors. Color TV, Billiard Room. cwpon ~Y -with you.r prox $84,000., Price $39,(X)Q. non. Rei;id. 552-7835. \"ou arl' the \\'iruil·l' of ilu't•"t l1'gh11·11g J BR. •·1-•n $160 own boat ii · too Bea 11 BAY VlEW 1 Br, w/w shag,,-~~~~~~~~-2 1 .._ maid 11erv., pool. The Mesn, r " 546-0370 5 Pti. · u • ONLY 2nd Hand Furn & Ap-11 ., B 2 tickrtii to tic e Separate din'g area l BR. & Den l<'rom $185 tu11., annninted with man'-' 11 1 ll k crptg, drps, paint-a new. 41,li R, ba, Univ Park off S rt V cat'ion & 41.S N. Newport Blvd .• N.B. Harbor View Homes j'~ ,.,.... ' .1 P ance n area, we OO\vn. Yard. Gar. $185 y r I y, Culver Dr. Aval! J an. 1. po s, • • Hon1e·like storage 646-9681. MCOITERRANEAN · · rx ra.._ Yr gr 32M outstanding Pl'O· 642-8029. 6..U-9393 ext 195 vdcdys; Recreetional Vehicle e Private patios 2 Br + Den. Charming, pr1· 4'111 \V~:;t Coa:;t 1-ligh\\·ay, NB S!X'('tus. ' 552.931.i Sat & .sun. Show 0 Clo.~i·d i;arHgc "'/storage 2 BR kw.-er duplex · 1 blk to VILLAGE vale, low maint. Fee la nd. Open Sat & Sun 1·5 50 ac campground, 8~~ mo gr Cepistreno Beech • t-.1arbk• pul!nian beach. Yriy or winter $225 Forni Din. + Nook, Lush PETE BARREIT 64 f\.f, can expand. 1tark 1-1 -~--------3 BDRM, ;?tJ! BA .. honus rm, at the , • King·sz Bdrms or $250 mo. 130 46th St. See 2400 Jla.rbor Blvd., C.til. Lndscpd. In\med. Oci:up. -REALTOR-Dunn Rltr. 492-9920. NEW 3 BJ-t. Crpts, double $360. nio. Village Ill Anaheim Convention e Pool Barbi.'qucs . sur-I Nov 24-76 or phone f714l 557·!!020 See or ph. daily 1·5, 202·1 ga.mgc, appliances & great &15-2996 Center rounded "'ilh plush land· c2_1,.3i_,.,.,._"....,.2°"15 7 ._-;-=c-oc:: RENTAL Of'"FICE Port Provence Pl., 644-624!1. 642·5200 Glass & screen bus. \'icw! $250 on lease. 27191 January 5·14 scaring. I, 6. or R r..tos., l BR Apt. OPEN 9:30 A.to.I to :i:30 P;\I BAYFRONT ......, __ ~ _ --..,., Furniture s!ore . M.1'ious Calle Alta·Vista, capo Bch. L1gun1 Beech Plea.~e call 642·567~. f'.X!. :{14 Aduli livirig at its bf-st :!"urn \\'i!h new & llntique Time To Step Up ~family home + 2 ~~ HOLLAND Bus. Sales NEW 3 BR. 2 BA horn~. BEAUT. 3 Bdrm .. 2 baths: bct\\('('n 9 & 5 pn1 to ela1n1 1 LAP.GE ! BR $100 furn. Itcspons. mature cpleo Privat~m bea~:. T:r!ili: ~~: dQn 't weur hlm out doing 1716 COSalranxe, C~ 645-4170 ~~~).s r;.~1~~s~r ~:-~~25• fully carpeted & drnrx>d. i0~.~r~1~~:~~~111:r0fsh~~~~~ I 365 \\'. \\'i:nP<>ts 6.12.1971 ~~', ~ ~~"':~ll~h y~~~~b~d~nin_ ~{ir~~~J~ +community docks. Ownc.Y. yurd work • n10.ve. inlo a esman NeedL'd) . . Custom patio complete \Vilh * shopping and aclivitjcs, l~---.f.;!~!!1fi:~;;,~;;;=;;;;=;'':"'tl~~~~~~~;':!lll;;;;ur;:;;;m;-;;;;;;;;;;--;;;;;;;;:ic5!!:!!!~:!!!k ~~=;'";;:=11•~pe:n~tr~p~k~.=Loc~a~1~'~'/-So&n~t~h~ef!:~~·~~·~~~:!~~Yi~E~E~K~LiY;f;'i-M~OSN~T~H~L~Y~~OC~E~AN~F~RO~NT~iAPT~~l~B~r,i-~:;:;;;;:""',~~~'ff-:!7.t---t •The Bluffs • J BR, 21,l ba., keep him 1U1 a pet. Total ex-EDUCATOR supply store-'"'; 1 a 'ny 0 go course. xecu 1ve u tes · · · personal private. Two upgraded, "'D" plan. 1 yr. terior n1a-lntt•1WK.~ • Iota! Own. ill, So. Cst Plaza area. CHARMING 2 BR. l BA, •PlrleaM .. llopho,., 833~ Laguna Niguel 2080 Newport Blvd. ~=~{s~.~r ls!!. Util pd, bedrooms, den, 2 baths. IS) 500 0 ,., , <>A'>" cleclric hi tins & a.ir-cond. $5,ro:llbst ofr. 557·1246. w/frplc, front & rear yam, · a ry -.u .• 4 Costa Mesa patio, picture· book kitchen. • • wner. '11'.....,...,.,. •fin::. 675-6900 BACHELOR t l I Choice rcsule; are now on BEER, wine. food, pool. Sch garage. ~"· $157 • 1 BR. over garage. No. 3 RR. 21, ba., 2 [rplcs. 642_2611 ap • rn· m pon, Fireplace ru1C: other p1U8es. ~';'el.a:, thRe~~n ih~ market. 1 to 4 B<lnns. area. M/sell, bst ofr, $251r2 Br Dollholl8e'. No pets. end. Near beach. Childtpet Balcony, ocean view & STUDIOS & l BR'S I blk ocean. Lighl & gas pd. From $195. adult sectt0n. * 6-"'"" * Qwck possession. VA/F"HA, terms Van 646-8811 Bkr 417 Poinsettia. Call 64<Kl899. \\i?lcomc? ~udty gntt'. $465. SllO/mo. 210 Ce d ar. THE VENDO"E ,,,.o;m.) 5',}.. 1'~ROM $Z7,950. ' '. ' C ._..__ $175 • Uhl pd. l Br. frplc. 4~·-E & k nd e FREE Linens 548-1131 or 548--7290 eves. M Newport lieights larwin realty inc ORANGE' JULIUS, $8,000 ost• m8M Viel\'! Victoria Hench. .,,,..,4.., vcs. "'ee c s e 1''REE Ulililies \ BR. Furnished wlutilities \&ti Anahein1 Avenue ---968-4405 • ~:i.of!:rb~::!~. ~~fip-Three bedrooms 2 baths S275 · 3 Br, 2 Ba, frplc. Newport Beach • Full l{itchen & attached garage. Call l\frs. Pt:illips 5W·0781 HOUSE double garage, ' new sh~ ~~~ view. Garage. Dana * Adults Preferred * e Heated Pool Sl90/nw. 603 Irvine Ave. I $ I 3 5. BEAUTIFUL Duplexes/Units 162 Money to l«Mln 240 carpets & drapes, $2'25 JX'I' NU·VIEW RENTALS 3 BR. 2172 baths, blln~. carp/ e Laundry .Facilit1e~ PH: 645-4464. wlrh not a care in the tole month. Free rental service. 673-40.10 01• 494-3248 drps.' Pool. 2 Car gar. S300 • TV & maid ~erv avail \VATERFRONT 3 BR, lndry World. A Vic~rian (QY.•n· _;.:;,;;;_ _____ ..;,.;.:; 1st TD Lo' ans M RI "_." = '. Phone Se1v1ce rm., gar, winter. $285/rno. GIGANTIC 1 BDR:\l. You Het it's underpl'iced! That's why this apt \\'On'! last long, Cpts, drp&, stove & ref rig. Lots of green lavon. Covcr'd garag('S, Adults, no pets, 2020 Fullerton Ave. <I Blk E. of Newport Blvd. & l Blk So. of Bay, C.1\1.) &12·8690. hou8e wllh the ultimale in 14 Units OCEAN front house avail. 0 • tr . .....ru.,.,,,. 2 BR. $275 yrly. 544-2013 nlt easy malntPnance inside & 7 Col u· Du 1 Mid. Jan. 2 BR. 2 bas. frplc Duplexes Furn. 345 El Puerto Mesa 5. d Meda lOll P exes 6"' Re Ito 646-7711 · Lit & M BR Pr' out. 3 Bclrms., convert. den, close lo south coast. \Vil l -r4% JNTEREST a rs 1n str , 1vate N B h 1 BR's $l30& UP OCEANFRONT, 3 BR. 2 BA, dining plus a super tozy 2 d JD L 2043 Wcsteliff Drh•t' steps to beach. Located in ewport eac -fplc. Call Bing, days family nn. l!oniiid<'r trust deeds tor n oa ns Open 'till 9 PJ\1 seenic Victoria Beach. $550. Unfurn: & Furn. 838-1491 and eves. 6T:r-2949 OPEN SAT/SUN. 1.5 lio\\'n. S2l3.000. full prict'. Your O\vn castle, 1 br scpr. mo. Century 21. 494-9794. OCEANFROf\'T upper 2 Br, 1 All Utilities Paid Walker & Lee I t """' Avail to Jul\{' 20th $200. nio. Pool & "-·reation BACH. $125, tll June 28th. 436 16th PLACE · Lo11·est rates Oran"c Co. 1ousc urn ..,,, L N' I 3018 '"-"' Util in,.L 4 BR. l300 ,. · · agune tgue Adulls. (213) 795-. 11;:;9 'lnpl• Av•., "'' ' RcolloN "WE BUY TD'S" ALA Rentals • 64S.39001-~-~~-----~~----0 " " ' ' c" ABBEY REAJ,TY -- 545-7131 S I M _ $498. Monll.J'Ch Bay. Brnnd D. uplexe1 Unfurn. 350 i\lso garages for rent LRG 1 Br rr the Bay for aue.n1-anu ... , LOVELY, cuatom bl!" 3BR ho1ne In Newport Hti!:hls. Prof lndscpt'd, f)iclos:t>d _ watio )'',Jil'.as .frplc & Dar-Ir que. Side yrd for boat storage. $42JIOO. 548-2405 CHARJ\1lNG Rarw:h Styll' 2 bdnn, shake mot. used brick firepl. IW1nort<'lcd. $32,000. Owner. 645-1446 San Juan Capistrano F'OR sale hy 01\'nr. 3 Br. 2 BA. 6'.:Y. 1rans loun, $300). down, $33,000. 3.."681 Carn· TrJTn, 493-fl2Ut [ _,._ I~ ett er tg. Co. Fresh & clean, 2 br, encl gar, new 3 BR. Private com· NE\V apts for adults only. 0 ' -OU ft 61 NF..:\\' HEACl-1 DUPLEXES 642-2171 54S-061 I gn1 y11.rd. $145. n111nily. Guard Ka 1 l~ s. Balboa Penrnsula Balconies, firepla('(!s, beam-~~!.n~~8~5rs mo, furn or T\\'O . 2 Bdm1 .• , , , , , , $185. ALL new rtcluxe 4 ~r & 3 hr Setvtng Harbor ru1.•a 21 yrs. ALA Rentels e 645-3900 Privat<" acces!l 10 beal'h. ed ceilings, wood paneling, Beautiful apts. \\·/private l'flch. Balboa Perun. N..H.. R re tio Cl b · 1 · 2 BR, den, 2 ba, l!z blk bch & carpeting drapes Recrea 1 BR.Qceantront-$165 pt""f patio gar g l &I Js!E' & t-5 hr&: 4 br "" · 2 'BEDM1 HOUSE, crpts, e~ 3-n 11 ·In<'. ennis, '"'" "'"o: 1., ·~"" E 1· b 11'•· w1· h ,· mo. 182i1 \V. Oceanfront. • .. ~h'g·ard·n",,''1u·ng""°. A'dwspat,·, oet.'anfront. G-16-741'1 or Mon.y Wented 250 drps, rangt, disposal, single swi~ming, volley ball, ctc. __, • ._.., mo. yr~. ~ · ion u mg t poo · Call 494-4029. .....,, '" 64~ Don Thompson . . 4 car gar, Slli:>. No ch.ildren, Avllil. lt1ar. 831}-3637. Balboa Blvd., Apt A Furn & unfttln. Bachelor & no pials. 151 J::. 21st. C.l\t Bkr. . INCR~ yciur u1rr1·cs1 in· no ""'ti YEAIU.Y lease. NE\V 2 Br. 2 ldwnstrsl, 5J6..351S or I bdrnts. from Sl35. 140 W. BACHELOR for empt. man. * ~ * '=~=~~""'~~~·! C"OOll'; lflive lhre(' 1st T1'U!1t R ...... Mc rdl R' tt . Ba 'on Golf Course $300 2131863-1008. \\'!Ison (Just \\rest or NCW· Utlls pd $125. See Sal, :ll7 DELUXE lge 2 BR. 1~, ?8 [)('ed,, llppro)(. S25.IXXI each. oy c • • •• or ino·. Call 6r:r2000. · Costa Mesa · *" Tpo'-;;;n;-B,,1v"'.d0::.1-,,..,.,..-,--,-40th St. N.B. -New Duplexes- duplc" -Nc\vly crpt d, on 11inglf' family llt,im"s 1n 181.(l New~;i7s7219d., C.t-.1. 3 BR $2?. 1st nd 1 1 I BR, Furn, 2 lrg. closets, San·Ctemente e .2 Bdrm, 1 BA •.•.••.• $196. (!rr~I. bltns, rri::lc, encl gar, ~la i\lesa. 7~~ to 8 JX'L -1 • .• :i;. mo. a as' LRG 2 hr nice & lcean. Gar, quE'en stlR bed, priv dttss· 1----------e 3 Bdrm, 2 BA .••... S295. f~di~nt838~~~ g. Balboa Inf.bi Owners financially TOWNOHOUSE 3 Bclnn, l~ P ui; tltai~~· 11vt. nr shops. \\'ater pd. ing rm. x!ra lrg rooms. encl FURNISHED Bachelor apt, Beaut., spacious apts 1 '' 1111. • Sta c. Ba. 2 ear garage, GrcenheJt, Adlts. 2178 Placen!ia. $145 gar 1\·1 scorag~. Adu!Ls only, $105. mo. 49'2--0318, 774-3967, r~enced yards, patios and Roy Mccardle, Realtor Pool, nr. So Cst Plaza. Yrly Lido Isle mo. ~S-OOSL no IX'!S. alter 5:30. quiet privacy. Adults, no _ln_c_o_m_e_P_ro~pe-r_ty~-1-66 IXJO Newpc11:1 Blvd., C.~I. lease'. 5al-7712. TO\l'NHOUSE _ 3 Br & ** 2 BR DUPLEX, priv. 2035 Fullerton, C.M. Apt. Unfurn. 365 pets. 642-4837. 548-7729 R D Co 1 b 2040· Fuller1on SL {al Bayl Tax Shelter l'ntcr's r~a.ml "l.Y r, ~tudy, 21,-2 ba. Yrly-$450 nio. yard & garage, near schl.s $32.50 \\'K & UP. Studio & 1 tnC'fl yd, utll incld SJ•IO. Responsible udlts. 67~1 I. $165 nio. 998-U46. BR Apts. Linens, maid serv Balboe Penin1ul1 More Room-Less Money I l~ ALA R1ntal1 • 645-3900 Newport Beach 2 BR, hit-ins, rlfig, crpts, avail. Util, ph. scrv., child· I ------1--2-B--l-1L COME aee a real garden 4 UNITS-COSTA MESA "'-·-··f R ..... drJ)S 1 child no pets $165 i't'n & JX'I SE:Ct. 2376 New· DELUXE Duper<, r .. n apt! Uke living in a home · ...,..... °' ent TCJ S!)(lcious 2 br, fncd yd, cricl 6_1,:2·3.,. ' · · 1 Bl d "'" =~" 'lA" 'Kii:? Ba.. Blt·ins, car, drps, for $140/mo. 2 BR. tlh BA, e HI'. Dtr.\•n . a11n. !\taint. -gar. Kids/pets. $170. S2'25 : 2 BR. 2 BA. Stove, u-.JV pell v " ""'c-"'""' .....,.,.....,. 1:-nclsd gar, lrplc, laundry 2 prkg place~. prlv patiOs & • ~ .. V:ocancy Problcn1 ALA Rentels e 645-3900 rctrig, .c111tsldrps, huge 1 L.\RGE I BR $145/nio. + rn1• No pets. 838-49-19. rec areas. Wilson Gardens. • :'>l::i.x. Inc. Tax Savings HousM Furnilhed 300 y:ird. Ch1ld/prt. Huntington Beech dep. CarPot1 & 1 u u n dry Corona del Mllr Wil St \V f H bor 557-9930 2 BR, fl'nc:ed yal'd, dW S2'Q • 3 BR, Newport facil. Nr. (l'\\')' & shop'g. 998 on son~ o ar CERTIFIED Coste Mesa gnrgagr. Children, sml pet Heights. G:tr&Rc. \Vorkshop. IMMEO. OCCUPANCY El Camino. Apt 1, C.M. lijjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~~~~=~"---~-! _Income Propert ies 1----------ok. Nr. 19th & Fullerton Y1u·d. Child/pet ok. ~51. I 1 Park-Like Surroundi"9 -2 BR trier, furn, $l30 ino. u!il Ave. $225. 642....ffi96. $.1i5 ·:I + df'n or 4 BR, 2 Ba. NC\\' 3 Br apts $250. mo . NE\V l K· 2 BR 's: fronl $l 80 to ..... QUIET DELUXE T,\:'\ SHELTf-::P. incld. No childrt•n or pc~s. 3 BR. 1~ Ba, unique in· frplc., gar. Ocean view. Obi garage, dshwshr 521).;. Adults. Nr. beach & Q.a.i., __ -::_ _ 1, 2 & 3 Bit APTS Mobile Homes I SO Sl~f/N ~TS L646-1809 oBr 642-3375. ~t~~~o1~uf~1~U~~· l\~:.s·v~'i'.:::: 1::L~·I EW RENTALS 331 ~H .B. shop'g. 11-1 E. 20th SI., CM. ~ N~ ~~~i's: A~~1tsp~~ For Sale 125 .32 UN\TS aguna ••ch !''1!.,;;.1~i-11;9., _ . ..672-40.'lO or 4!M-l248 :..is--ou_,.1·==""==c--:--. A"°, "'".n BAch., Ants . . '"'" • ' , -DUl'tEl(''BR'.2B,-'" *-125Pl!RYiEl!K* -ON·T>JN11CRES''. -M =A"' -M t H R t I. >-.» 1 5125 ·Uri! Pr!. Ba1•hr1-0r apt. 3 BR. 1-lou!<c>. Lflrge fenced LUXURY O<'Canfront-Ncw & • • '' ne 'Y Apt&. furn,;unfum. Lt'8.se GrtJnlqUe pts. Q or ome en a S ., 15'' do\\'ll £11.1;t~1d1• C.i\l " No. end. Patio. Full ,..,...k· )'!l.l'd. Ch\lftt'('llfpels Ok. Dram<1tic .. BDRM. Dining paint«!,. Bll·ins. Lrg fncd & UP:. Pool & maid scrvic~. m FOR INVESTOR ._,,., Rl\f $600/MO \' I yard. Children & JM'IS ok. Kitchens avail. MoleJ Tahiti Fireplace I prlv. patiOs. l Santa Ana Ave., CM Ing. $210/mo. l.«1 & la.st mo's. · · ear y. Sl!IO/ 175._q,i R lt bo & v· · Pools Tennis Contnt'I Bkfst. Mgr Apr ll'l 64&-$-12 SALES & LEASING I GOOD MGM ENT $150 . Ulll Pd. Lri:: l~l<'h. t'l'nt. Ca.II 897-9361. Davr, 67:"i-1972 or 494..oo!S. , nm. , oxannc, corner ar r 1ctor1a. 900 Sea Lan, Cdltt 644·26ll full 5t"tvi1'e l3l')IH~ S:1l(•/F::1Crhange Lip. SCcr.is to O<'t'au Op.:n bt'tuns. ~1ESA Del J\.11lr, 4 br, fam 3 BR. 2 BA. All fatnilies H.B.. Apt A. 002-97SS 2 BR. Fun\. Crpts, dros. {MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) Gqi~G~al~~dltlB, !' d!:',1: Da M t H I b7J·j221. Gi3·7!ii0. 645·2:.:rn PHt10 i·m crpt drps $27"i mo \>,i_•lcome. S:.!2:i. Newport Beach hl!ns. Pool. Children ok. ~ ...... nmar Q Or OmeS 01'.nr 13rk S160 • Ulil ~rl. 11 Br. So. I '>''f~l n'l oPtion. ~9--0867. . Rent·A-Hou5e 979-8430 Algr, 126 Monte Vista, No. StOVt', n!frtg, drps. crpts. I INVESTORS Lanna. Patio. \\<x:xf:;y sei. NEWLY decor -3 BR, 2 BA, ll, CM. ROOMY 3 Bedroom. 2 bath, $13.i .. water pd plus $30. ling: J Br, 2 ba, clrnn, sharp. 3l12 BEAUT vu golf crsc. 2300 sq. Swedish frpl , t blk o<.'ean. =2~B~R~1----,..°"l~I --c1 -ground noor. $350 pr. month cleaning chg. 1815 Tu1t i11 531-6800 I T\\'O 4·PLEX1'.:S, x!nt rcH!.':1· NU-VIEW RENTALS ~llcW! Ave. $295. Call h. 3 Br. 3 B;a r1!odel. Lease Yenrly. C.11\ld ok. S300 carPon~ i:~~tia Y urn. plus aflllickius 1 bedroom I """"',o:,,· 5"8-=:::..:':::618::::,.· -----~""' --00--only S·l7.500. cn!·h. Sl1;;o. 67'.H0.10 or 494-32.18 J1n1, &12-9411. $495. 897-1305. 557.9409, JW2-8520. l563-B Sant.a Ana Ave. upsla\rs with private en. LOVELY 2 Bdrm, \Vf\V .CLEAN -C L dw:n, Calf :«2·l4ll!. 2 BR l B\ ·alk t be h A\tAJt .. l'I0\1• 2 Br k 3 br, BLUFFS, bayfront. Exec. NE\V Duplex, ~ br. 2 ba (!) 624-5632 &16-1022 trance. $200 pr month. Bo!h ctpl. wood lloors, drapes, 1run11ngton lk·arh. j, ll t •' • ~Am • J · ,~ IJ, \\ o, II~ . bltns, vlll'd. $1 ~$235. One-level 2 BR .. 2 bn., din. From S28.'rS310 'frlv, \Valk LRG i;unnv 2 BR ........ Iv units n.ext to Dfttk a tennis, gar&.g\?. No pet$. f\faturn n)(ldcl ~40 I Bdrm . .s•·t up r WALKE• nn. .1 • unc 14. No I" 111. rrlG--046!1, ~r>-9-191. John. rm. S."125 Mo. 6'44~89. to bch. Encl ,i;:-ar. &li.'lt.t~ or rum'. bPm:'n OCC .• 'Uc "1~ call Bailey 673--8550 ~. Adults. ~ PlaCX'ntia Ave. in ont.• o( lluntln,1tton·~ r1rn·st I -•''"" $~. 2l3: 360-6253 R!t 6 pni. . fit2.--7'9l 4 NEW, deluxe 3 BR. & den, 1.:-Re""•,."'.,"c-'bl~e-=-.,.-,~-udult park.11• Lo\v s)i~ll't' ren1 . , . . \\·k-cnds, 714: 49"--0589. 3BR. 28~·~ bl1tnJ1, c:?ts, drps Hl\RBOR Vu Hon\r~ -3BR:. 1. • $150. Yng married pref. Ch. Cove $600 M Xlnt price S.· ll•rini;. 17171 tk11lh Rl\11., H.B. Newport Beech ~1'1)1(', $24:i mo. 64~ 3630. Aft $395 !'Jld 4BR, $450. Avail 2 Br unturn apt yrly, Nl'ar _&IG-=~==·==~==~ ~ 2 1~~ · CdM H~~ 2tloBnR.. NQuearicl Cparenkler&St,.holopc'•"· 83~9110 TRl ·l'l~·x 2 Rr. ~harp units li. t.lfrll-IO·I Jan l:i, Owtl('r, Rl1-3894 bf>neh $175 11 rno. Bkr. BEAUT FURN 2 BR $175 up 'IS"'· " nr. ----W"11,1dc. $4•1,fffl. Lc11v down \\1ATERffiONT . PfER & SZ:.O!MO . 3 BR, ~. Jenced 2 &: J BR. -S2'n/S300 GT:>-4911. Ul\l pct Jltd pool. Adlt.s, no 1-Fa'f5P1~~· f:i~! 675-4392 ~Jdf!t, d$~. bltns. 1 story U:<OO FLAMINf;O 2 Rll, or lJ·atk up Sl0.000 l'l.J. CuJJ FLOAT · 3 BR, fonnal din-yal"(I. Nt>w cpts. Good toe. \'early. Walk to beach Sante Ana Height1 fl('U. 642.9521), g. JU/mo. 6T;:r-l5T3. ::.· ~~!Y~~~~h h~~~~: !~nt ~rne~~~i1Nf'l\'porl ;rsc ~111 , ;blbcllh.'1, Wf\'lycrpll., ~o fl'I.'. A.It!. 830-fi(ll)_ C~'OOd Realty 548-129Cl 1 RDRM ,,, ••••. Mull• .,1,·. 1 BR, $14-0 & $135. Large. ~I~. ~Rh!~.~~~: !~IEUlR. I & 2 Br 8x30 enclo~d porch. 1 <'l'lll y, · · rep,, i;:arnit('. eary Huntington Be1ch San Clemente 1' -,. Adullsonly.1993ChurchSI. s. of llwy. S325fmo . uJ L t I S I 170 lcl'llSI' O!lly, Furn\11hed JM(! SUO. mo. "A~.JM:''"' ~ "'/!urn. avail. Heated pool. Carport, she..~. prl.$. J\d ts. o s or • • mo. Unfum. $450 1'1'11). No G42-G415 """vw.:>· o15-4Gt8. $1~ & up. Adults. 853 M2-6883. , pet~ l'ete Brutttt Realty 4 l·Ht, 1"4 llA. din & kltetlf'n ! BR. 2 BA. bltfl8, shag-cptg,$1 ="tA~R=P=!~S.~c7he~ioT-.-.~til~pd~. 2 bedrooms each. Bltinw, Crnter St. 66-8965. \VATERF~RONT, 30· hoat ~Up · · _ · an·a, Crpts thru-oo,1. 2 car water & great view, $XIO., Duplexes, Sl45 mo, $50 cle11.nlng fee-. cboi 8X35 PARAMOUNT in Coata In Balboa. lnL 7 eo1111111 llll· 642-435.1. gar. 11, blks to elem. achl. 4 492-1005. . Fum. or Unfurn. 355 N OCC & UCI S:JI 1168 carpets & drapes..._ oe NE\V 1 le 2 BR's lrom SliO to Mela, fuU,v furnlNlcrl, l<U'ltC and. 673·7770. • WALK 10 water. $97 blkJ: .to Brookhu~t &. Adami Sant• AA'I• Heights r. • -kicatlon. Lea• -.f:..· S180. Nr. beach i, Mop'g. awnlni, very clean. $2%10. ---------Bachelor . .$12!! duplex. 2 Ur. shop .It C'l'nter. PH: 524--2615 N 8e h AVAJL. now 1 &J bdrm monUl. Call 6'Jl.,1550 JU. R. Adults. 114 E. 20th St, J\mtrle..-n · 557-9300 QUICK CASH H'OOM. ''orha 1.tnda for apPt. 3 BR, $%i0fmo. \Valer paid. •WP;'!rt · I( Apts, -heated pool, T'l!C. 2 BR. trplc. new qKa a_ drpA. l-'~~:,:1:;:37.:.. ------I •n 20x.f.l' Fu.II awninRr 1kirt. Rent-A-Hou'• 97'9-l430 2BR, elac bllin RIO. FA ht. A\lllll after Jan. 15. •'ned 1 Bdr + den, s .... '!."Clish room. Adults only. 6'45-06.Tl. Pool. Leue $250. Near e TROPICAL POOL e tfd4' porch. Lndscpd. Adull THROUGH A WestmlnJter w/w crptl & drpg, dbl pr, rtar y11&rd. Klds/prts ok. rtrepl11tt, 11\ bath, $225. ImfAC beaut 2 BR, ?JOI, everythl!'.18, 673-3850. 2 Br stud"1 Itt Ba, b'p], spri Pit. P'I OK S.A. r.15()0. Ph. DAIL y PILOT <enced & landocaped. Xlnt 546-4131. mo. Yearly 613-2912 Qulcturmosphcre & b1H11s. * GREAT VIEW _ 2 BR. * llr<UI!. uu & ...,.,pd, HS Mf.Ji'&t CU: 557•1848· 2·3 BR bi.•nut tum. 2 B,\, )()(', S200fmo. A a T : Vacancies coat montr. Rent Vacancies OOlt money! Rent $1M ~4. Frplc. bltns; sundeekll, pool 1 ~E.:;o''ilSt=h:.N;:;°'='"' ~!lj&.=.;1:,ol,,la.::__ ltlCYLIHE ~. 2 nwnlnlt'!i. WANT AD A/C. nr beach It o;LB, 962--M71 or 54Hl03. )'OUr hou~. apt., 11tore )'1)lU' Mule, apt., 1tnre $115 I BR TRA1L.ER $%10 11p. ~--615--lSli. J Bdrm, ! 111y--New mrpt!t I: t'uily eetup, lrg shrd. ~. '64"5678 le&K' or rcn1. $200 fl.rml$22S HOUSE Uuntfna? Wlllt-h the bid,;., efc. thni a Daily PlJot 1 blrtg .. etc. thru a D_aJ!r Pilot 132 \\1• \~'118o11 A good want ad i. a aooct 1~ drapes. Frple. $'.!J)/mo. 5.1Hflt. ,.._ ·-"-"-''"-'"-".cll92=---""='------'0"'P"E°'N,_fccto.:.U.:.SE=-.-"°.-'.:."m_n._ Q9n:ified Ad. ~. Cla•lt1ed Ad. &&2-5678. + ~5.'.IO • vdmt:l'll. CiiU !16.9-axrt. • )~~~~~'!~~~~~!~~~ I' I Aowl"...,"'-ll!li -"'-l[t] , .._,_,,,. .... J~[ Ap"'m'"bl,.Rml I~[~ __ '"""'_''""~"']~ I ...... I~ I DAIL V PILOT 3" --J~I:;;;; L>o;;;;,.,.,...,.;;;;;j;;;[SJ 1-.,.R..-. j~ l I. Af!· Unlurn. US Apt. Unfum. ' ' 365 Apll., Furn. Apt a., CN' Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Aph .. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Office Rent•I 440 Panon1ls 530 Found (frff ada) SSO • • • Jame1 Bra1hltr 5322 Slorr• Roi• Rd. lcvlne I Newport llHch N•wport llHch CORONA DEL MAR CONSIDL"RIKG R0t11$: to FND lltt> ciru.nl(t• & "'hllc rat Approx . 1200 i;;q. rt . o(flC'f' SwitLtrland I o r R~-vil' J.'airvkw & A~ta. spa.er tailored to your dl." juvt>natiOn'!' Nr"' 1~)uooJ11ttnn , C.1\1. ~ltio-OSIJI. I ,\i.m. Full security bldg. ~ mill'1' tt"'-UY Savt> tin1<', F!'.:J\t,\LB Ua.l\M't Jlound, WHY PARK NEWPORTERS ~-~-­Costa Mesa STAY HOMI ON WEEKENDS. v1-:n Y rtke 2BR apt, )~ar· ro•Lnd Sm. l~ ply. Dayg &12--6i67/Eves: 67'~1 \\'Ith an1plc parkina. money, fDr ll('llE'r ht·Hl1h. 'll!-!lti!D \' 20 1 1 AAk for Chri.r;one P.(), ll<1:< 3'ii3. TlJuttna, <>' • ' 1'°· -11 &_l"\'l'!!:· \' ou art u1e ~'inner o( 1 th·k~·111 ro ll1t' Sports, V•c•tlon & Rtcreiition•I Vehicle Show BOYD REALTORS 675.5Q3() ?olL"XiC'O. 714-42Er3603, e:oit S. FND 8k & -.•hllt" trn1 killen VIC \Vfl)lll•liff !lt'C:l, 6'$2'--1129, WOULDN'T YOU? It's all hero for you to enjoy Saturdays and Sundays and all week long, too, ..... I~ FOR JWnt. furn. rot.1111 in Costa Mt.>&a . Nu,"t' &: qukt ho1nf'. For ""urk·g n1an, &12-1791. C.~t Adult only. 192 .. iO monlh. Pvt balh & (T\tran(_'(', kit priv. 546-72S.i. New \V11letfront Offlct'!I Jn !he-l.5iandt'r Bldg. Sl!IO ~tonlh Pr1mt• Location :rll Bayside Dr., N'pt Beaeh B UI Grundy Rltr, 675-6161 DESK space tt.vtulab\e S50 rno. \\llll provld(' fuml,ure n1 S5 mo. Anl11vt"rina B(:rvlct available•. 222 Forest ,\ve., Laguna &ach, 494-9466. DESK spal'e available ISO 1110, \\'ill provide furnlturf' 11! 15 mo. Answt>rtng service llVtulabl-·. 17875 lkach Blvd. l!untlngton Beach. &l2··L12l. 17 & L'P. Incl utlL Son>< PRl::GNANT? Th I n k i n g Aborlion• Know all Uu:r facts first! Call Life Une, 2·1 hni, ~1~5522 PROBLE.\l l'Tegnan<')'. C'on· fide t th 1 · '" s y n1 pa ' " pn·~ni1n<'Y ruun111'1i~. ,\bnt'· """ • adoptions f\.'f. AP· C,\J{E. S.12-1 \:~. ORANGE Sw inging Coupl•s w111h1ng to rn1·1•! n1'\V fr1cndlJ. ;H/'\· 16&1 or 6-15-60:12. --S\VINGIN L; SINGU.:S Call Jun, 2 lo 8 p.n1, 539--3122 COUl'LES PARTIES l'Rll Phi! 2 to 8 P~I $750,000 health spa, 7 swimmin g pools, 7 llght· ed tennis courts. bicycle trails, pulling green, shuffieboard, croquet. Spacious Junior l's from $174.50 monthly, plus I or ~bedroom plans and 2-story town house• with 2 or4 bed- rooms, All with electric kitchens. private bal· cony or patio, carpeting, draperies. Subler· ranean parking, elevators, optlonaJ maid ser· vice. Gourmet food market, dry cleaner, beauty salon on grounds, See beaullfuUy fur- nished models today, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Other times by appointment. Just north of Fashion Island at J amboree and San Joaquin Hills Road. ROOM for rt•_ll_o-bl-<'-"-,-,-,-1 S10 Per rnou1h . 2;:, Flo"~·r $1 .,~tn_ ~li·11a~l6-9l~ UPSTAIH!': t1.11'11, llv n11, Bl{ $ & BA , ~'II 1'111T)', TIO l'UOk· J n~. S.~1/n10. IJ39-3-189. run111u1-e HvniL 2.1.13 .t:. j 5J9-J:w4 ~~I 11""'Y·· Cd~f. l~Ulrt'.' P,\Lr.t & CARD READfNGS OI::LUX pr1 ~n!r./h~ith. 1\111\d !>t'h'lt~~. no ~n1ok1·r~. C•1~111 1 ~!esa. 67~10. !HS-"1197. ,INECREl!lt L/Vll I.I' TO ITt MUil;., PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS e>w150011 ... •~4 10 •!r••m• cr.l'•I• 1 r111~1"9 Mnlng, Wood BIJIL\I, lrg clo!it'f, .,.,.,.,.,, Cplg, nil 11f'(' horn!'. Kit. prh·L S!!5 th ba dockl, two pt.tlOf t1•1r>g 11\1 Ml\lh Sl•rru into )'01.lr n1w •O•clo~• lllO. Ev,...~/\\•knds 61&-2012 on e y 1-DI 2·bellroGm Ollc:kn 1p•rt11Jlllt, Pool. a•un11, J•tuul l nO flt\• f elephone {714) 644-1900 for crentll inform1tion. h1•11t. Sm•!I 1>4111 c~. Frem 1165 F11rnl!ure •v••l•bll, MOC.II Cntll i{f>o~klt pr!vl\. $20 \\k, A U f -----1'00 1o 1'00. t:tOO F1hv11w All .n Co.11 Me11. Pl'lcn1 ~~2300. l'.:n1plOyl'CI only. Nr 19th S,. pt. n urn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 -------1 ~· c~t 00-7340. -' Apt.... II> T " ' f Cost1 Mes. Huntington 8e1ch Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 \\'AN lauy ti: or ovr l'Jr lovt'ly r\.B. hn1. Pv! ba, In! .. ~l!l'• II. Ph. £3f4t3Sl or Tells Past, Present & Future tiir~«. rlll 1 69-4-1350 FuUy lie. 1617 WESTCLIFF ALCOHOLICS Anonyn1ous. 1200 sci. ft. Cpl, "" t'Ond. Pho/If' 542-7217 or write . .\n1ph.· pkg. Ulll. Jnn!tor. P.O. Box 1223. Cos1a ~1t'sa. Haunigardnt>r • 104. 541·5032 Social Clubs SU DESK Space Avail. $."JO (X'r rnu. \\'ill ptovirle furn at $:i FIND '%'OURSELF tl\o. ,\n.~ St>r avail. 325 No. IX SO,_t EONE EI.Bt: i'\1''.l'JXH1 Bl, N.B. 5'IS-1192 DISCOVER 1\P ·I or;; ofr suites $.'l15. Of-DISCOVERY F'OUND New YelU"I cw sm1lll nua.le G e r m a n Shr'p~nl nnx, 6-l&-1938. al 11>1: . Ani1htlm Convention lost • Center 555 1 J11nuary S..11 Pl,·<l."'" , .ill Ii I:.! ,..,"T~. 1•xt. JJ-1 ho>!\\\'l'll !! N j Jllll 1o 1•l1tHTl )"l1r t11l..«l~. •;>..•11 th Cvu11t)' REWARD 'I tull f1·j·1· nu1nl~·r 1~ :,10.1!21.H Cro•y h1~1\\11 11·111111,· G~·r1n1u Sl1epl1~·•''· .\JOl'lll-:lt (IJ" Pl'I'...;. Lo:-1 ·: 1:! :>0 . I l. • • • Hol~ 1\\lt'. 11.nd B1•11ch Blvd. 11.13. [)(·11iw-r1:1.tC": ~7·861 I B1by1itfln9 ··---"-~--''--~~~ aflt'r ~ pn1. 01· &12-4.121, Ext. Licensed Babysitter Doy r(lrt' f11r 1 ,·h1J1L Infant · '''" SIAMESE \11/h!ue 1ll\PPh1 oollar, nam1•t1.11,t Chi Chi ro ;.iu;fi-·,~ ~~u11r1~';~~~·;,r,.~·:·n;-;0~ h111l'h, 11narki1. \'1~1:\ \"J,..,\. 3 i .~·IKo:>I 1)1.slrict. FV. Ju.~t !!l>U lh of l:iltni.:t:r ull ~lag · l 1 oullfl. :"\r. San Die~u Ft"\\,\. !i.574861. '""' h1n 1206 A\'t>. de 1, r:111rt'll01, :;i:; 492 ·148 t'\'t'/Y:kJKI. Ony, collec !}4G-100(l, R('111u'L LOST Nf''.I.' Yl'<U:< E\'r, Vir: Tilt-: )'11u1u;t•i;;t St·tlOOI, IU;•'ll '1 21 ,~. \opo.•n 6an1~7:30µr11. ~tngnullll ,< Ada1n.~. JIB llt'\o\'11 fl'lll n1i11i1ltUr da.schaund, ~~n11 p,; !162-:t9'J t H.('Wllt'd! C 1'1'tJI. lt'tt<.:h!'N, $20 .... kly. nceu 611',-3706 or 6'15--1057. - YEU.0\V Labrador, 18 nlll ' • old . Vic. of Garlield ~111.gnolla, H.B. A115 "JOCQ" 968-6030 or 842-+lll ask to ' llill. lHISJ l .S.:ttcr. ft!n1 P"P ---------\\'l!J, BABYSIT IN MY ~!!::.')_,\ VERDI'.: l-IOMB, DAYS fit-.• $iP. f-}i"t1k i;pare \1'/k ill' h I bath. !1~3'J.Q.~. $140 up spac 2 br/3 br 11,.1. ba CLEAN IBR. like nu, shag.1;H;u~n;•;i;;n~g;••;n;;;Be;;:•:c;h;;;;;;;;;;H;;u:n:;1;;in~9~1;o;;n;;;B~e~a~c;;h;;;;;;;;;;;ll ~P'~·"~··~J.~!~1'jn~"'~'"~'~-6=""'=·~~ pool, cpt/drp, blln, plygrnd. drap€":i, bltlns, laundry, Room & Board 405 1996 Maple, No. 1 , •. 642-3813 $130. 847-5384. 2212 College. No. 5 646-4273 ..2..JIDRM.....duplex._do.1,1,•nlo\l.·n,-.Jill &. roqa1 or Jll9lD_ ~ ~. Tl l·S35-6AAS C~I. Travel 213-387-1193 1 1110.-i. V11·. 19th & Ckt·an S40 lront, N.IJ. Rewurd liia.-&;95. B ath tub repair _} r_~ing 2---ADJOINING -{)~ .. ~ICES, ~ busy !lllt'~'Cllon C.r-.1. $9(1. Uli!'s ine. fi.12-£560. SET SAIL LOVELY 2 BR, 2 BA, nr carpets. drapes & stove. No -HUNTINGJON BEACH'S flN£SJ--ly 1n nLcf' 11uit't hon\i'. Empl schls, shopping & rre .... ,.s. no pets. $150 per mo., 536·3507. ~nt. ~.'>-m~o_c~··_,_1. __ ~ PROfi:SSIONAL SuitL• ready TAHITI -------1rJ'.lST: &•moyt-.t pup, mnlt• 1 l{EFl>i'ISll in '.l·hi!e or rolor in your 00111e or buslnl·s.~. ~3.f>.170 Tre. Jnr. I 16 wks, Vit· ~rookhurst Li11rf1l•ld, r·.v. Ile ward 002.soi2. tl!..a:o. lleil at Bolsa Chica. Gralll:l~h\ta1ted-Schooner, ~orange & .,.,·hile n1al ll.B. $275/mo. 846-1323. ~~65 ,,., mo. call 2 BR. Stoolo. P•tio, yard. Spanish Country Estate u,..vi"'inl~-t;;;H·;o'·;;;1';:';M;:o;•·.-1·~;;-;4;10 ', 1l;;========c-ccl garage. $150/mo. Infant ok ~ f't!RN:-2--SR;-Apr.-Pool. -no pets. Av!. no1\'. 8424549. · 1S--$1S-l\1rnp wrtcn. usintu-Service ' ' l'l't\\' & lt\le~ Bh. CO!ltll. 400 SQ Fl NC'.l'port BlvrJ, (213) 371-1239 Close to shops. Adults, no 2 Acres. Beautiful park-like surroundings. $.'.t!.JO 11•k up apt~. Childrrn pets $160/mo 2BR, crpts, drpi;, 2BA· .fncd Sunken Pool. Sparkling Spanish .r·ountains. It-per sei·rinri. 1176 Newport st1·1ped ('I\ 1. Brookhurst & ''&orn''. EllLS, "' r.v c FREE hair cuts with sham· poo & sel gt)O(l fro1n 1·3 to 1-10. Eilee?M's Bty. Salon. 642-05.11. I center Costa ?.1esa. Carpet llc.,.,·ard! 963-6471. & A 0.. 642··l230. iMt Pom0na, c.M. yrd, g1arage, laund fac, $195. S . R e , D' . Blvo. c:.t 54'1-9755, &Q-3967. 801 F rid HB • pac1ous 001ns Separate 1n1ng LOVELY l Br Apt. Near 0 a, · e \Valk in Ctuset.s Uuest Hom• 415 --LOSl': Small white SttnlOy Business Rent11 445 I \\·ay fli~hl LAX FrankfW1. pup. Vic. Anaht'im St. ne Jan. S, St:«!. OCC & UC!. No pets. $135 $140-nlce 2 Br in 4-plcx. sngl mo. Call 979--0134. sty, cpt/drp, RtO. gar. No • Home-like Kitchens & Cabinets ar 0 ... rpenter 2-IBR apt. 1 \V/gar. Adlts, no pel"!, "'Ster & gardener furn SllO ·mo. 548-6954. 2 BR. Adul~. no pets. BAY MEADO\VS APT. 387 W. Bay St. CM. 646-0073 2 BR. unfurn. Crpts, drps, bltns, pool, children ok. 126 Monte Vista No. 11, CJl.1. 2 BR. unturn. Crpts, drps, range/oven, refrlg. No pets. $140/mo. 968-1455. LOVELY 2 BR, crp1s, drp1, bltins, gar, downstrs. laund fa c., nr shopping. !WHJT29. LRG. 2 br, l\'i ba studio. $160 Util pd. Shag, bllns, pool. 1978 Maple. 645-5647. Bay '" C.M .. AM. t pet!. 962-4522. 1 BDR~t . Unfurn. 8165 . Furn. $185. La guna Beach 2 BOR!\1 . Unfurn. Sl8:l. }<'urn. 5215. TOWNHOUSE 2 BR. I \12 Ba., 1400 sq. fl. UNIQUE Laguna Cast\f' Unfurnished $200. * Private Room * h•r An1bul:1t"!J' !~1dy nr /\tan (.;1)ot!, ntllr!tlou.~ Yood. ... .. fi.l~·l·li'; r!IE Fac1ory ha.s shops ~~~~~~~~~=~ avail, lrt the n111ll rnngln1t I fn::rn1 $ll0/n10. 1dC'al for srnok(' i;hop, tropical hiih I Lott Ind found I~ , . Clover Reward 548-6266 \VOOD\\'ORK, p a n c I 1 n ,; , I BLAC K1 .... ·h1te1brw11 Ausrral· cablnelll, JUllios . ~n'l ian male shcphl'rd. Vil'. n"pair1. Uukr DaDurka, HarborJAdan1s. 54&36·l2 or 646-1~9!1. Apls. \Vide oc>ean vte .... ·!I. Acres of gardens. Close to beach & shopping. 2 BR, 1 ba., lge. f'OOm11. custom w a llpapen, chandeli("r'S, mosaic tile, shutters. $450 Mo. partially furn. Also avail, soon, other apts. $250 to $650 Month. 494-4653. OCEAN vie1v lease . 2 & 3 BR, 2 BA. New. Blk to bc:h. $200 up. 494-33.S3, 494-2339. ALL UTI LITIES FREE \Valk to HuntingtoP Center Adults, No pets XlCt', ehef'rful armos1>h~re. • Call ;,.1s-i1;..'l • ~---------549-I .I 74. All lyp(:S of ~hop. !'Ir. ,425 30th St., . Nr'.l'IXlrl Bt.•ach. 673-9606. Lido Isle LA QUINTA HERMOSA 16211 Parks •d• Lane. H.B. 714: 847-5441 LOVING tare. Nutn. meals. Priv./sem1. Nt'ar shOps, OFFICE STO~ Nr.,..·port & Bay Center 2052 l\'c.,.,·1)(1rt Blvd., C)I. UUI. pd. Pkng. &10.1152. p;1rk ,t. !lbt. 1'll·n & .,.,on1cn. 2 STORES nr. N•pt Post Of· ~~O-:l:Ji'.t j flee & Greyhound depo1. 59S LOV~:LY Guell! HouSI-' now sq. It. $165 & 300 sq. ft. $&). Oj)t'n for elt!el'ly. P...! & sen1l !-'~''~"-· ~--2~'~'-'·----­pi I. 5-14--0756. Vacation Rentals 425 lndu1tri1I Rent11 450 (4 blk s. So ot ~an Di ego Frv.1y. on Beach, , 11300 [l:q 1, r,1.1 Sp.ief' . .,..·.front I blk. W. oa Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane). mr, """ 2 ""' 2 fpl 2BA I 1 1 doo 1110 UPSTAIRS 2 BR. 2 BA, ' ' ' o e, i;c rear r. mo. crpts, drps, frplc. Adles. no -----~ r1lay rm. Nr ~k1 lit. Lr or I JrJ:l \Vhlllier St., CO!lta pets, $275 lease. 673-3824. Apt. Unfuri:i. 365 I Apts., snil group. 811-7148 I ~1esa, AUiO 18."il sq rt. $210. I Furn or Unfurn. 370 Rentals to Share 4~0 rnn tm \\'h1111rr St.. c.:.1. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Newport Beach · ------!;46-;JO'i'l Days, 646-0&!ll F.vc. * CAHPENTltY * LOST OOK:. Dec. 17, H.('\\'Urtl, lg. ,t, srn. 536-1648 Irish & Gol'\'lon setter niix. Looks like blk lrish seth·r. Carpet Service Found (free i ds) 550 L!{G \l'hi11· "' brown short 548-4542. ~S Car""t & Upholstery I hflll' doll: \BuUdog/Box!'r REWARD, smaJl .grey tiger '"' n1ix~1 l\l11l1'. Vh:: Warner & Dri·Shan11))1J free &'(It· •lriped, male est, red l.'OI· h d ,e .. ·1 "-• ~-"'"' Bushal'd t"V . verv well C l(U8.r ,~1 1-...:: anw .. " · ·" l1•r. Vic 3032 Harding \Vay, '"""' & LI co'"t tralnt><I 5:ll-T$.)3 (collar & v.:~l'eascrs a au flt'a collar). C.M. 833-2100 or 557-4339. bri,i.:111cncr.s & 10 ininutt ·-c--~----,--LOST: Lrg male Sealpoint blcaeh !or \\'hit~ carpel& L1\RGE011l m11lian pup vie. Siamese cat, !ICar on right Save your nioney by savinp Balboa on the Jetty, strand· lrnt leg. 700 B 1 0 c k 1ne e.li:b'!'l trips. \\'Iii clear, rd (II\ rocks: male w/small Margurerilf.', CdM. 67:1-5402. living nn .. dining rn1. & lra!hrr oollar . 612~73. hall $15. Any nn. $7.50. S~1ALL Yorkshire Terrier, L'OUCh SlO. Chalr S.'>:-l j yrs. FND : G~1·n1an Shepherd pup illver, hick & tan. Vic Sa.r1ta exp. is what t.'Qun\s, nol Sunday vie. 19th Ir: A N B Ea · t I( 109 Ana vf.', . . rs JUS n1f.'thod. I 110 .... ·ork m.vse '.\lrinrovia c.~1 . 615--3 clipped 646-1304. (_;.oocJ l"f'f. 531--0101. aftrr 4. I c'==O"'""C--~.,.-...,..c----,- LARGE 2 BR, crpts, drps, nr. Estancia Hi school. Older pref'd. $1.35. 673-81-15. * DELUXE 1 & 2 BR. Close gar. Bltns. Shag crpt. Nr. 1N_•w....:.po_rt_B.;•_•,cch-'---- So. Coast Plaza. 545-2321. I Huntington Beach \\'ILL shar(" Park Ncivport R-EADY FEB 1 I 1973 \'Es!! WJ; TAK.t; Pi'~TS:! a pr. 2 Rr. 2 ha . rurn. l-'•'lll. . I, 2 \Vet'ks F1'I"(' Rent roo! :r.,-::i. st:tt mo + u!tl. C.'111 LAGUNA NIGUEL Pool, riec. Bl<l,i;. dSh\\·hr. 61!)-1480. I M·I LOST, Rik mttl!! Labrarlor Cement, Concrete l"OUNI) '''hitc l'O<'.k·a·poo R.rlriever, Ans lo Oso.1---------- "/1vd collor. l'o•rnale. Vic Reward. {Ewtaide Costa Lincoln & lluntington St., P.l!'sa) 646-6827. CONCRETE \Vork. Patios. l'<'move blktop driveways. H.cJlOUr In concre l e . ~;,-7630. 2 BR. Bit-ins, crpts. 13.j Albert Pl. (113) 595-4436 or aft 6pm. 962-3172 29.R, l%ba. crpts, drps, gar, " OCEAN and HARBOR VIEW 2 BR. $200. 1 BR. $160 CASA MONTERREY 2 wotkt n~ girls 21 & !'J, rlCt'rl , 1600 SQ. FT. & UP. VISTA DEL '1ESA 5fr4&·,; I ,,,.,1 ,0 'h"c 3 BR. apt, I blk Oo Sao o;ego Frecw•y SEACLJF'F Manor Apts. l rmn1 heach. $100/mo. + Call 83l·lli00 R $ 43 P I C 1 & 2 BR, 2 BATHS B . I .50 oo. rp!s, Ut1l. Ph: 642-392·1 eves. . cl~l.Hcc.c'~'36-=-t_:i.:t9...,... -...,--,,,,..,-, ICHILDRENS pet 112/T:l. f..1AN 'S Bike, found on Green Vic: Balboa I11land. OU \\'ht belt, UniveNity Park before untrimmed male cocknpoo, ChriAtmas, Call to identify, Pasadena t.agll, 675-80.\2. Wesl 18th St. 6T:>-6048 aft 5. DELUXE 3 BR, 2 BATH $330. 758 W. 18th St., C.~r. 1-6.37-5978. EHi Bluff reva S • ns, gar · L'!p • ::> ·' j 1 2 c l 2 Bd hse & 2600 sq ft . Santa Ana PlacC'ntia i\\'e. A.~k about Fumisht'd & Cnfurnished -?uys. oo rm ; LRG. while dog from Palm Elegant apartments designed I'. t :>.lS-2682 /IU Ulil i!ies Pairl 2026 l\lt'yrr Pl. C l\1 off \\ Owner 1141982-3196. Springs. !Ne"'POrt Bach \\'ilh a f..1aster's touch, su· our c isroun · · • Charnllng l'ircpl<ot:('5 191h at "r.lcDonalds." I areal. Vets No. on tags! perb house security, exclu· 3 BR, 2 BA Duple:>.. Dsh,\·hr. e Spilciuui; Rooms.~ Closi:•ts CHE'.AP. Rental• \Yanted 460 &IG-5791 sive Versailles Club and irplc, OC'f'an \'ie'.I'. $32.'i p1·r e (;yn1, Hilli<trds. Pools. \V1\NT lady to share nice -"'-""='-=-=~c-c--= pool with unique Aqua bar, n10. 204 1 ~ 3'.lrrl St. &12-2\120 • l'ti!ling G l'l'1·n.~ Huntington J~·ach Home. * * * J'OUN D in \\'f'stcHff Salt Ir: fountains and formal gar· Days; &l&-£U4 c-ves. !"!" ~~c_1196 John Fearnley pf:'ppcr fen1ale kllten with SPAC. 2 BR, 2 BA, dens. All part Of rhe South NE\V Deluxe Ocean front 6551 Warner, Hntg Sch (;i~·L'n~;'to. share 3 hr 9561 Landsall Or. f~t'l&l~llar. 673~ or Twnhouse. end unit, r Coasl's finest apartment Apt~. 2-3 or 4 BR 's. Frplc'i;. S 6 1 Huntinnton Beach =------~ pa JO, community. Crpts, blfns. Yearly or 847-8 2 N"'Pt ~-'h horn!' on water ti You ar~-~he winner or FOUND hl11ck & while pool. Adults, 110 pets. 1 Betlroom/studlos from $195 monthly. 6T;,-19U Bkr. June. $l20. 67~· 2 tickers to tht' 5hC't'pclog IJt·c. 2.JLh. Vicinity 644-529S. 2 Bedroom from Ul5 ---___ -------NEED straight male & 2BR S V . & \Va[O('r ,t, Nr"·lancl, ~·oun- Huntington Beach Models open 9 AM til du k 4 Br.: 2 ba, brai~I -new llUNT!i'\GTON Gard r n s ur1r place \I /lo rt."l'lt S60-R3 ports, acalion 1;1in Valli>y. 8-12-:iR46. j;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ j ·~·· · ~s Yt&111e6~29~i7J. 1 A~ts. Hell at Bolsa Chic·a. _:~th & gar. 979-4S66 rvl.'~. Recreational Vehicle FOUKD young dachshund OVER 62 ??? R·lh-J323· .Comp~rr. · ~C' 'VANTED working girl. grad Show \'iclnlly ~tcFaddl"l'l & RETIRED ??? EASTBLUFF ·. l BR. Upp<'r. 11 ~at ~o.u re missing. fr. studrnt. 0\\'ll rni. N'.l'PI at lh!' Edi\·ard5, ll u n t j n gt 0 n All e IC' e t rt c · Sl~O. Ca!J $13() ·_$;!60. Penin. 673-7544 aJ1 6 pm. Anaheim Convention Beach, g,16-4107. SOCIAL SECURITY ?? ON THE BLUFFS 640-0349 for appt. DEL'."'E \ 1 1· C v.-. · / JI • priv. pa 10· YOLlr>OG fema!(' 1vi\I i;harf.' l enter FOl)ND t.mall ma 1 e PENSION ??? AT NEWPORT B!'.:ACll ai·ea: 2 · 3 & -1 Br's. ~1~1s1r, G pools s,1una. lf.'nnis Br. ho me"' same. $100 mu. JanuaT)' 5-14 Pood!t .. type, black. Vic. VILLA YORBA Yrly. Alw hoUS{'. No fC'<'. $1::0. Spa":ous P<_>'lls1d(' 540·fi071t I Please ral! 642·5678, ext. 314 M Ha H B REW ARD $50, Lost ft"male Afghan, fawn w /blk mask, Canyon Dr an'a, CM. 64>-2310 31~ nio. ft'ma.le pup . .,..., col- lie colorings. 113/73. Needs medicine. Vic. Victoria, C~l Reward 54&-0038. SMALL male, Blaek Poodle. Vicinity of ?.tagno!ia & Slater. 847-7S70. S?.1ALL n1alc black & \\hire J apanese Spartlcl. Re'.l·ard for return. ~ H.B. S~IALL Christmas Puppy black & brown, Mesa Verde area. 54.5-7427. PATIOS.PLANTERS slumpstont• wk. 891-3:>33. PATIOS, .,..•alks, drivc.'S. Saw break. remove & replaa: concrete. ~S-8668 for esL cusror.1 C!'.:P.1ENT \VORf Drives. \\'ALKS , pitl!OS Pool decks. Don. 642-8.'Jl4. t..:ontractor JACK Taulanc -R.l'J)aiJ renlOd., addit. 20 yr.1. exp Lic'd. ?.fy \Vay Co. 5-17~ .Jratting PLANS·HOUS4!1, Re m o d s . Room Addi tions. $50 up 557--0626 557-9ti9. Gardening BOB'S GARl~ENING ' ' ' ' '~ • ' From Newport Blvd .. turn a! ABBEY REALTY £..12-38.'iO _Bungaln'' Sl.'il. ~-16-02$9. I bc'tv.·ttn 9 ~ 5 pm to claim ~~1~40 + 114~~· ' · · 142:9622 J{ospHal Rond (1 block 2 BDRr-.-1 unturn apt. across 1 BR~\dtlH S.1bi!1 '"beach. 1\l;\N 10 share ";.,... l hr dplx your liekf'!.~. !NoMh County l-~-~~0-'---'-· -~ 1 BR.· $123 above Pacific Coast Hwy ) to st. from bf'ac:h . Avail yrly. I Sh,1£:" crpl,I! .. clrps, !rrlrv fac. nr OC'C'~n. Bal r enin. $l29 111 toll·frt(" nun1IX'r Is 54(}.12201 FOUND ShelUe-type female SAIALL male black & whlle Japanese Spaniel, Reward for t't'lum. 536-6035 1-1.B. BLACK cat w/whlte paws, neck & che11I. Vil'. 1'1esa Vf.'rcle Eai;t. 557-2833. & LANDSCAPING' lkaidential &. Co1nmcrcle.l Irvine lnduslrlal Complexes. ~7-4:.xJJ after Spm. 2 BR .. $144 Jun!' lJ 673-3036 dog. Vic. Sunno .... •cr & 3 BR 1164 entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, ~8-1596. I $!:{1. 2!l2 l \lh St., 536-f1112. ' · · * * • Harbor Blvrls., Rt.-'tl collar, · · · Newport B •ach, Ca. 92660. fE:\1,\LE R o (1 mm ate ;-.~OTHER 48 2 h.ld ALL lITILITIES PAID Telephone: (i1 4) &15·00GO San Clemente Laguna Beaeh wanted; ~hare 3 BR Bt'ach ''' • • c 1 _ren 5'1~-&17fi art 5. 1----------I House, $75 + Utils. ltt2-1.147 nettJs house in r.tonle Vista f'OUND !!mall black cat with e LIL-.:ury 1 br apt. -~--~--~--1NEAR beach,'\, tn\111, 1 ~R. 1 HF.ART of 1.a~una, Blk Sch. school ~hsl. by Jan 15. h·t d he t M • M"lt * 2 WEEKS FREE * lndt'Y, g:irage. :<tora~i'. 1 BR urt. $1 i.l furn, it6S oot Garages for Rent 435 Pl'rm. 1ncom<', t'x. refs. \\' 1 t' pa.,.,·s an c s • esa . SlSO G46-l818 rlC'l ~far area. 979--0631. • Dish .... ·llhers . Vista del Mesa Cable TV, Sl50. 310 Di.·I Adlts, 197-10::;1. 494-979-i. "EIV , . · K. M Sc •~1319 --,~ _ storage ~arai;:<'s, ·• d"" f 1 FOU:-\0, Fem. Ltten, ap· e Choice of 2 color schemes ADULT GARDEN HOMES ar, . ;;.r . 'Newport Beach ~11.e11, for mobLle hn111Ps, IRC?<J:i.t)"IATE net' eu, enia e, prox 6 wks. Vic Costa Mesa • custom carpeting mtrrNE AVE AT b-IES.i\ Wes tminster I l)QH.L<; & misc. 5'1S-9766, bn be~ch: yr rou.nd. n25. Poli<"c Tlept. 979·26.19. e Jacuzzi • ~ . · · , . --. -_ 611 1061 , • mo. ft.l;r35JS ~twn ;r:8 eve. Sm. brown & 111•ht Be<ll?le- lypt' dog lost ln Colll'J:(' Pk. Reward. 557-1236 nlt 5 pn1 . ORANGE long-haiml male cat, Laguna Beach. -!9-l-739S or 49-t-8942 a.m. & f'Ve. l\1ALE 12 Golden RPtriever ~ Irish Setter Vic. S. San Clcmrnlr~. re .... ·ard 491-0797. STOR'.\I DAJ\IAGI:.: Professional Garclcncr, Tre. Prunlni,:, Brat'lng. Cleanu~ Prune fru11 \l'l'l'!I now. r re dormant spray. (;eort:' &16-58!11 • EXP. 1-lawaiJan Gardcnt!I· Compl('lt' gnrdt'n s <' r v Kamalani, 6 '16-467t 642-1337. e HeatNI pool l\fove in w/deposils on!)' f'REE rent until Jan lj Irn· L8 . , -. --DOBER?.1AN P1ncher e Dt'ad·bolt locks 1 Br. Sl60 2 Br. $200 mac ., BR Sll-0 l BR SI 2:'l 1ve /\V,\IL J1111 1, 1'1'Hr Brach & ff'male Vic: 23rd St., C.,\1. Day & .Night Security, Pool, Pool' g93-ill19. ' •· Atlanta, $25 per mo -II 6'14 ) ~~5. 1,. ________ _ •Only $l40 per mo. FountaJns. Rec. Bldg. 1v1 ' 5:~0321. Announcemants 11 BAHIA PUERTO exercise rm, billiards, rol· Apt~., Jo"ND. Blk Labrador male . Jfrirl General Service• ~~s~1thorSI~~ :~~. ~fri~,p~h:;sc:t'.s~ ~· or Unfurn. 370 b"1g (~,~~Gfi:~ rf.';~i.~ s!(o~1~ \••••••••• .. ~ ~~ ~a~~~n 12-J0.72 tMtructiol'll!!J HANDY~I A:-l -All kinds < * r-.tOVE IN TODAY* prl patio or deck. 5'15-4855 Costa Meu I ~l .. .ia Apt l. s25 month. Auto Tr1nsportation 525 FOUND youn~ AJghan vie '1 .,..·ork. small jobs $139 A MO y I B yl ont :!Ii ,\VOCADO, C.~I. ·l:.O SQ Harnilton. c .r.f. specialty. ;1;~1636. [,.16-9723 • ear Y· a r THE EXCI ... I'.\'(; F'l'. $.10. CALL 64&-l!Rll OR NEED daily ride to RftJ H!ll 6-l~r57·10 ·Schools & Hauling S~~~~I & a~aiT.r. lh4-p~~: 3 Uwely new unfurn. RP:ls. PALM MESA APTS. I 96A-t.'i!l3 A(~T . & ).!cArthur trom Laguna I F=N=D-p-,-,.-,,,c,.~;p_t,_io~"~'-"_"_<~la-ss-·r•s in structions 575 TRAS. Pool. rec bldg. Kids 3 &.2 BR., 2 ba. each. Pier '.\1INUTES TO NPT. P.CJ I. from $140 Office Rent1l 440 r~·Arh. Share t'Xpense. \'ie. s. Coast Plaza in C.l\r. YARD cle:.i nup ,Ir{'(' shap1n i\·etcomc. r~rom $I39. See & slip. Many c.xtras. lmmed. FURN. on L";>-;FL'J<'.\. 49-._2996~·~~~~~--I 6.Jr,..j7);li. INTRODUCTION to music -or removsl. Weedi~, tra.s Algr. 173n Keel!Kln .. B". 1 C~~~l~~~ .. 673 8086. E l'nbelicvab!y larer apts · 1 G RT-~AT localinn on Bols..1 TIME FOR FOUND Siamese cat, male, theory, note roadin~. no In· hauHrtg. bus~s lrunmet blk w. of Beach Blvd. off · '""""'1 / ves. huge pool, Jacut:-i ('leet hit. Oakv~ood is S1 million in Ch1!'r-t a! \\'arner in fa st hlesa Verde area. Call and struml'nts n cress a r Y. lawn mainL 962-ffil2. Slater. 968-7510 or 847-4260. ins, shag cr1its. dtps, ~uni• l recreation. Sv1 imming hro1\1 ng area nf Huntim;:-ton DAILY PILOT idi·nrHy, 5 1&-4·17~, 49-t-5700. SKIPLOADf.R & dump true ete. Adults, no pi>!$. • 1 H ll h 1 b Ikarh. Stl"e('t level. 1100 sq. CLASSIFIED ADS work. Conc;rell', a<phal: * FRESH AIR SINGLES From SlSO' poo s. ea c u S. It or office 1\·/strire spaCf'. f'(JLJND : T~oy'11 Stingray TIME FOR S T ' 1 AAY.'lll". brt>aking. MG-7110. 1 BEDRi\t Fl'1Jn1 $!1;(1 I aunas. enn1 s cuur s. Less then 40c per sq IL b42 56 79 bicycle, lrvl.nc Terrace "' ,~v~~33b~kl1:t:.e~:wly 2 BEDHr.1. Froni $11'\0 Billiards. Indoor gall driv-0\\'f!er llii:C'nt. 8-16·3371. • area. fiT.-rT749. QUICK CA, SH YAl{O, giu-age l'll'anuJX -• ---------.-.-1 ,u1o0f~5 LAJ!ss" .A.1ail r.ron! SiD ''1 .. , r:i•'""e. S:ond,Vnllev.baJI, "'=.==::=:=c:::=:=;:::;=;o:.:C:::::;:::::::::=;:::=;:::::::::=~-'=l-~-,--~.~-:::~-~-==:;.::::::=-Remove tr~. dirt, 1,_,, , decoraled, .w/w """'lidrps, _ ~ ., " c 4 r'" r • '· THROUGH A .£ilve.wY'" gmillng. !ITT-~ ' bltns, ~Xce(!I ~ehig. 61 ; FOR LEASE You 're right. rh~y·rf.' under-Whirl pool Baths. And Io's MrrfS•,·,. , STAR GA,.E'W>"c,,., ¥.""'"'\. DAILY PILOT HAULING·°"' cleanu11 by rx $235. 0 smges, no pe · Luxury Bayfront Apts. priced! 1561 f.1('11(1 Dr. more. A resident tennis • .. .~ ..a'-" ·~1 college student, lge trl, ,';36-m\~:iorth of Hunttnmon 1 & 2 BRA. $350 10 $550 (5 blks Jrom Ne1\'PQrl BJ\·d, 1 pro and act1vit1es direclGr i:.;o..:::.:_=~---Br CLAYlt. POILAN ,,,.. "-WANT AD 5.14-lMG or 534-216.1. .,.. ''ft' Georg41 W illi1 mson --~~"~'~_,_~ ... ; 1·d'IO p.ans free Sunday ••11s l-f: .... Yalit re1;u!ts arf• jusl n phOn Beach. $l40. 2 BR. Bltru:, Re•ltor Under New brunches and barbeci.;es. ~Joi•• n )f. YfWrr>ailyAriiwifyC...iJ. 'Y' stir. ll ..-f-i: 642-5678 c!IJI a"'8)'. f;.12-.'l678. crpts, drps, pool. play yard. * ,.. ,.70 * M 1 S I Sl 'D .. :;!.-... .... ,~'" .According lo lh•f ""s"·, d ocf.11~L..., Lndry facil & carports. Cpl. ~ anagemen :artnig as 0:1 as 'i • ~ 6-ll.il. To dtvelop meisoge . or our ay, 2. ~21 .26 & 2 sml children ok. No CASA VICTORIA I Srngtas, one and two· .:; -'J..80-il reodW01"dscorrespond1ngtonunbers .m pets. CalJ 8"2-4664. 3 BR, 2 BA Duplex. l & 2 l'ir. Fun1 & lin~urn bedr::ioms, fUrnistied and . ofyourZodiocbirthsign,. scouio OR C,,,..._l~ dr!l""S 0 \\ TV 1 F'iltn<hh1p 31 S•l"IJ 61 You ~ NR. HUNT. HARB Dshwhr, frplc. ocean view. ~ ..... · ,,, · · un!urn1shed. Sorry no 2Mot,.,. 32 ~ el °"""' oc:.:J 1 BR. frrepl, dshwahr. gar-Sl25 per mo. 3'.14% 3.W St. i.int. Pool C'tc. Corni• By & children or pe1s. Models 3Bt>no JlPf'!'icd t.lDr.-lrQ Hor.11 age. Quiet adulta. SU--2020 Days· 646-6114 lnqulno about our 1'1nvc·ln . 1 0 7 •Study 3-',,_.io;ie 6"0f ~' eves. · Allo\\·anrt'. 525 Vil'tor!a St. open da1 Y 1 lo . 51, :is ln,<llt)' ~ °'1ted 46-49.SO ;:. O(EL213UXEJ 434~~m apt. t'ii \VES'rClJFF 2 BR. 1'11 BA. tit ll11rlxir, Ci\f, 642-8970. Oakwood ;~;z.t ~= ~~ uGm.u1us Townhoo.,. ltltnt, pvt Dana Point 8A1 38"71 68 T••P Hor 11~ Bath private backyard, [----------9J~• 391vf'f """''.mon ,· 11 garage, close 10 beach. patios. adulti only, no ptts. Garden Apartments IODtrnomt«rt• ,.0 ~1,.. roc.c" otc.11 . I 536-7029. 1728 Bedford Ln. szs per NE\V 3 Bil. 2 BA. unfurn. 2 11 Fl)l 4\ Don't 71 Pl(l(IK 3903'6W mo. 543-T~. BR. furn view. 2 BR. unfurn Newport Bepch llJi:•~ •2C•ititi..t 72 ManoQol 71.n.77 NEW Bch rental5. 3 br, 2 br RESIDENTIAL • -2 sty. viel\'. 493-93b'9. Irvine and 16th ~~ i~ !~~lttt ~! ~ & 1 brs. From $l5.'i per mo, garden apt .1 BR. elegantly Huntington Beach 645-0550• 642·8170 15Vour A.5M.ip 7~~·- 426 21st St. H.B. 53Hi802 or deooratm. M,..: u re in· -------16Mot AC Qu•it 7i,w111 M&-337L d--'cnl womao. ·~"'ii BRANO NEW ~t:\\' 2 Brinn u11f11rn. apt l7C>tclde •7(1""~ 11...,._ EAC H ... ~,,.. -$2!i0 mti., 2 1'.klnn furnished 18 ,.._.. .11 ,.._.,,,... 78 Thi WALK TO B lncl. 333-3732. QUO VADIS 111 art. s:GO nio. 11unu811en!W. 19Ht-1 •OH·11> 79fOl'ld New 1 Ir 2 Br, cpt/drps, SEACLITT Manor Apb. 2 Luxury Gardm Apts. ~1 I \\'. Bai' -Nt.,.,'J'll'lrt LIO ~~ ~ ~~hae :? ~ Trader's Paradise lines times dollars dwhr, trpl. 316 16tb. BR $164. Pool, Crptt, drps, Bachelor, I .l 2 BR's. &ach. Call ~ dayll fl?:I' JULY fl 2110"0" ~i s.a-... ~Fl•1 JA~.JO ......._ Me.3951, bltns, garb. d:tspl. l'm FROM $135 t~i'tn fit.marriino) or ~ -. -'DTc 5J'Ri:ild'7 13~ ~ ,,,,'li 2 BDRM deluxe apt. pooli;ide PlaotnUa Ave. Ask about H1J 1>n.•I ,111cunl·Sa11n111 88~2943 't'\'tni~""'~·----I ;_p 1:~~::~ ~ t:.'[5~ ~ ~ f; ~.; ~1~~~1,_,,..!:!,l~I ~ TRAOE ~.000 tqty In 12 unlt1 for eqty lrt 2, 3 or 4 imlll or !?'!' Baltioa Pen· inaul& prefttn"d. I ~1-1 ln.'(lnlc prop /for :t bd rm hou.W' .,.,., 2 to 3 8CTI.'1 ~. Calif only. Ph: . .J714 JS2.j()"J5 or P 0 Bo7 806 :ucamonl!'.a. Calif. !ll7l>. prda-i burwalow w/frplc. our di!COUrtl. 5'18--2682. R·· e11·1"1 'l11"1m &: ?.l!•re! * S'J'l~PS TO OCEAN * .9., 117.90 7&0"to11« 56H.,,.,. '6""-,. S: Adultt, s::no. st6--0259. 2 BOtu.1 Duplex, ~ blk to vt•1 1 1M• M•.E11;.D.IANoTEPt-ta rr:AHl .. Y 2 1. ~BR. apts. 2 vitG-O ~=. ~~1,,,t :~~ I.:.. 2 BDRM deluxe apt, pPl\Jlllde beach. Nn1 or unluni. ha'11,., trnm $~ to $3()(1. All&. JJ 29 '-It• $9 v.,,,,. tt S.• ! prdtn bunp)ow w/frplc. Frplc, beam clng, patio, II'! OCCUPANCY \\'inter · ocrnntront 2 BR., 1 wf 11 30TN 60rt.t1b11 90,.,,,....1,,., Adults, mo. 8t6:<JZ9. Gt1rng:e, yartl. Yrty C'lr lhni JS992 noruia SL bft . W.O <FurTil-A.$rl. ' tl 11 ,o,Gool @,y...,. {)N~ ,."~o~u=SE"--"H~"~"~""'"-''~'~'·~•-ch_u._,._1_"""_~_._673-66411_~-·-~~--f~_. _•_&_._w_._o_r_;_...,~~-ld~·6i5-1972 6TJ""'4073J__~ _ _!::::::::~·~\$1============================'.._~~--OPF.;N HOUSE C'Olwnn. Need a "Pad"f Place 1n 1d! and Stach L\lvd.) .v.·a.nt ad results .•• 00..~ Owner G7l-1494 HAVE CUSl"OM TRl·PLEX OM~ M!!Y. Trarlc f0r Trurl l'>eM1 or Bea.th Prot>- t'rty, 1.&17-5978 Eves or wkndL ARROV.'lfEAD Ch 11. I c t Hf'mM Unlll. S 01* acn. Rtv Ills \!U lot for I.Ke OOat rnc, n1tr ti.m or! Ek>."< 6.14.1 S.n DI'!') !l?JOG, 222-2923. . • - ' DA,ll Y PllOT ;JOIN THE ' . -. 'SELLERS C/RClE" WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR YOU ••• ' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ If you sell a service and don 't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Service Directory (classifications 600-699 in the classified ad •ection daily ) giv es you an advantage you get through no other advertising medium. It reaches cu.+omers who are ready to b~y. Be thert! when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell. If your service isn't listed, we'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone right now and reserve your space in the "Sellers Circle" ..• Your Direct Line-lo Directory Results 642-5678 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT ~· -. . '· .. [ --~ 1!5J [ ---][5J [ . 1~,~l~·-~,~·~l~-~[~··11-;11~]~~~[~·~:'1~1 ·•~ Haul"'I! l'lumbl"9 Help WanNol, MI , 710 Help WMled, M I , 1f' Help Wanted, M I I' 710 H•I W°"'"' MI P 71t GEN. lliltllJta'. 'Tl<O/-b PLUMBING REPAIR BABYSITl'ER """'ed lloo. DRAPERY , .......... _ JOBS Now ......... YS c.m.n, GIRL. S trtm. Gar A yd eltan&lp. No job 1Go mnaD Wed, Fri. M¥ bome. Own laltc<, to ........,. A 11> URGEN'n.Y NEEDED 80 Ell 139-2303, 557-eot. * 6d-lt28 * a-Clll at I ..,. •WI -dn-for I Se=tarlOo QAIO fy"PllDTolder HouMClt1anlng DRAINS unc1.....,.i • 17.50 !M&-1582. • ~ -eo. .... Top. _ .. _~· • Ke-o.en-Sewtr lioe to Ul)• • $11. 8 A B Y S ITT ER needed AWi-..--:;i.. e Soldtnrs/wlre wrt;p MESA Cleaniqr, -* &«1-2'0'.I * Mon-Fri. 3 Scb1 .... 1 at EARLY Mom. "-""' ~Clerk T)'pla~ ~I ,-~'!\'."· 551~~:i: Sawlng/Altorolioftt homeBAR. ~;".',::""w~~· auro route, Huntington ADlbolm . 533-232:1 SanRoutCHlet()poftlll•llt• --··--$2'J5. mo. approx. 211 NEVER A f'E1'; AT TEMPO 548-4111. Altorotlon1 M2.5145 at ,,,. LolWI Rooin. Exp. Un..., day. 811-2300 Te!!!fO Temporary Help Call Mr. Blllby Dedic.Nd Cleaning Neat. aoourat~. 20 years exp. necef,&U')'. NeatO lJ! __ ~Po * ELECr'RONICS J\JNJOR SaJesma:r 10.J!i *WEDO EVERYTHING * SlfM pea ranee. 54iH!l82; Exi>er'd """"'"""4J cbua11 Earn $21).$41) por _:.,... ... : • • 492-4420 •• Rcfa. Frt-e ett. 646-2839. 897-951$. wfml. 5t8-3m. t1Q1 new eustomett tor the NewsJH&pe:r blUTit!n LADY wants hou.!Mlcleanine SIGN PAlNTING, 'l'nlck let. BARMAID, ap 21-35. No ELDERLY lady w/car, Ute DAlLY PILOT. ntil ii not a BOYS & GIRLS work, experienced, own tering, •a t I• fact lo n COltUml! -..--.-a. Pre ,......... DeWl(>llPf"" route •"" ~ transportation. 847-3637. guaranteed. 548-4fti6. Can 646-9935 ;;"""~ lady.~ dA.Y "':k: not ind""OOe ~ or 10 yn and older. 1 wiU clean yoor bowie once Tel1vf1Jon Repefr BRANCH MANAGER U to 1. olM '1H279. ~~· ~tlootot!; W~~. ~c~t ~ a week for $25 experienced, A ~ ~ty tor ex-EXP'D Counter G l r l • ~~ llCbool and.8 on Seay, Daily Pilot, CM. ~. OOLOR T.V. repaired in per. 11 A: 1 o a a Kllb1ander Cleaners, :a46 ..$aturdQ We haw ooeninP e &IUl21 e &o~~~~AWJ'N = ~:OU~ ~~ ~· bmtt ~ Cout Hwy, :;o. fA&una. tor~ Valle>' & South NOW~ 3 women in thll 638--8487. Per• on n~ rector, FEMALE over 21, living Huntfwton Beach areas on-area • Part or tun time _ • 54!--0307 • COLOR TV Cal-Tronics Oaulfted ad no. 551, c/o ~ Beach area. ~ou i;uat.3 bep~t t~ Div. ot We!t Bend Corp. • P1lnting A 7G9 W. 2.0th, Costa Mesa Dall)' Ptlot, P.O. Box l!IOO, teu;:phone work b'om our of. pe.rticlpate EXPerienceJ Car Na:ieuary. Can tor P•perhenging Service Call $10. 64G-OU2 Costa Meta, c&lU. 92C1. fice, b:Jurty WI&"· 49T·l345. boys ~n pr i'o rt t y . Appt, Mr. or Mrs. Drew, Boot Bulldon FIBERGLASS Boat ManuL .......... 841h1874 H.B. CUSTOM PAINTING TrH Sorvlco ··-·-Appllcationa -bellta' ~ --:..,----:.,.--:-:--- lntcr/Exter. Unfum. inter. rouc;ru1j; taken. • · J~N'~ l.laot>Pe1tlo M:,; Nurses NHded six-c. price. f'ree color L'OO· TREE TRJMMING Qipper Marine Exper. Hard#A.re Cn.1.1wi1.. w •t pos n. ;Ji,> 11·7 & Other Shifts sultlng & est. Lie. ln11. Removal. Ornamental work. 1919 East Occlden~St Exper. Mlllmen hi:· wk. Xlnt Company Ben· Top pvt. duty pay. \\lon't be underbid. ~. Call Dave 673-1100 Santa Ana Calif · Dcper. Cabinet Assemblera clif:a. Paid .Pitedlca!, Life, lmmed. pa.y for Ooor duty. No WMting BOA ' . Cabinet Assem. trainees Unilonn&, Credit Union, etc. County·wldc Need RN • * WALLPAPER * l[II] T REPAIRMEN (w/"""• e>q>eriencel DAILY PILOT LVN • Aides. Lesooolie \Vhen you_ call "Mac" r.1...,awt f 1 Must have waterfront bOat Sanders It.-Helpeni Aak for Larry Miller Nurses Registry 351 Hos. 548_1444 • 646-l7ll f' yard exp. inc I u d In K .Ericbon Yachtl e 8U-4321 e pit.al Rd., N.B. Ci.obby Park hauJ?llll, mechanical It bull 1931 Deere, S.A. K __ .,. "-Lido Bldg J MZ-9955 or • PAINTING & repaira. Good Jobi for top 540--8001 •Yt""-• ...,...r1tor Sf0.911>4 . PAPERHANGING Job Wonted, Male 700 men. BLACKIE'S BOAT _.. -----Good pay. O'l9, 009 129 31,;c"-='~· ~~---Inter & Exler. Lic'd, Inc. YARD, 2414 Newport Blvd., ~ yrs min. experrence. oftys, NURSING· Director of Guarn. Call HaJTis, 642-4558 SA~ Mgr • Hire tr a I n N.B. 6'1'3-683(. • Fiie Clark nights, 'full or part time Nurses. LVN 3-11 shift. INT & EXT painting, paper motivated slsmn. develop • BOAT BUILDERS e Cl rlc Typl t temp. (n4fm-5860. Nurses Akles, day shift. ha . natural wood sale! mkt. +9 pm e CARPENTERS • • 5 KITCHEN hel full time Garfield Omv. HO!p., 7l8l . ,. ..-WEtDE!t Altc ·e-sr. Typisr " -,-. kl-A.e.,..Rs. INT Ext , _ .1 MAN & Car seek travel job. • APPLY IN PERSON e T h T • bnft.8. Beverly l\fanor c.onv. NURSES Aides, all shiltl, · & er. ""'coua. cei • Salary & mUeage anywhere Dlttmar-Oonaldaon 9C • yplSt Hospital, 491)..5786. exper. pref'd. Apply in inga sprayed. Lie., lns. -U.S.~aft5pm. SeaBoatCo.12616tbCM .• R T • t La.bo-1"'"" n-ou...·1 penon, Huntington Beach Local refs, 645-0800. Chuck. entecf-F~ WS80¥.S....needed.--Nigbl&-lt e IS '"" -.. n.a.xpc;:,_ y. Hosp., 188'11 Florlda TIIE-IIANCMEN, we se1.l , weekexl!I. Apply in penon. • Accnt Clertc:s ofc skills. In F:n Island. St .. H.B. 847-3515. too, llm's of vinyl sample!. WANTED part time, oc· Sheraton Bcb Inn, Hunting-e 8ookk & C.al1 Mr. Mag art an, NURSING Aides, all shift!, For home appt. 547--5846. ca.slonal or temporary work too Beach. eepen 640-0140. J[Jnt fringe bttfta. Beverly EXT SPECIAL $199 a1 bookkeeper. 10 yrs. .... * * * • SecNtaries LADY .. care "" diabetic """'" cnnv. Hospital, 3 Br. Uc/Ins. 71"783 Books, payroll, miBc. duties. J•nice BNsley VOLT patient, must be avail. by .~496-5==186=-· =~=~--1 ACOUSTIC ceiling.9 $8.99, in-C.all collect (21.3) 433-2335. 4951h St. Annei 7:30 am & be capable of NURS~ Aides 7-3PM exper. tetion and exterio!'!ll. licens-NEED help at home? We L•gVMI Be•ch Instant Personnel giving diabetic 15 hots. Mesa Verde C.Onv. Hosp. 861 ed R.S. painting, 842-9'171. have Aides, Nurses, Temporary Service ,_543--0 __ 1_4_2.-~----Center St, CM. 548-558.j, Houaekeepen,. Companions, You are the winner of 3848 Cam Dr SU't 106 ,-APT. INTERIOR H -•· u J h 2 ticket. to the pus " 1 e L-11 Secret•ry Nurses Aides omemou.ers, p o n , Newport Beach 546-4741 -Ex Crpt. Shampooing & cleaning a471681. Sport.1, V~tion & Equal Oppor. Employer Ma~. exper. to func':icJn as pcrlenced Ml-3061 * 642-7059 * YOUNG J Adul RKreation•I Vehicle ..-. ----------sec Y to attorney who is al!O OFC Manager/Full chg Reduce<fi rates for the off need hom~~Amer~ Show ~-secretary treas. of Nat'! Bo~kkeeper. Boai sea!On. 9--5, 64&-2449. family. Exch for household F11)RlST needed ~ shop, corp. Xln't oppor. AU fringe De a I er ship on Bay. Pli11oter, Patch, Repair . dulies -babysitUng. Ph: Anahel~t ~vention I/time, pcnn position. Top bcnefita. Call 979<>580. • Yachting Assocs corp 548-2519. c.ntor pay. Call btr. 1' Gl">'<2!ll. LEGAL SECRETARY 646--0551. . • * PATOJ PLASTERING EXP'D TELETYPIST, cur· • FRY COOK Beautiful modern of c. OFC. Manager/Full chg. All types. Free estimates rent in all procedures, January 5-t4 • WAITRESS Located in Irvine Complex. Bookkeeper. B o a t Call 54lJ...fm5 seeks local .... .., time wtR'k. Please-call 642-56'18, ext. 314 e DISHWASHER & Grear hours. Salary to $700. Dealership on Bay • .,... ~ between 9 & 5 pm to claim Call H I H 54()..Ql;5 y eh TIME FOR 546-10'26 eves. YoUI' tickets. (North County e BUSBOY een ayes, ' a ting As!loc. o.p. 'DAY \Vork, referenL"es, own toll·!ree number Is 54().J.2'a}) Must be clean & neat. Over Coastal Personnel Agency J,64&-055==-=.='·=~~~-~ transp., also husband avail * * * 18. Apply in pel'$0n, Surf 2'790 Harbor Blvd., C.M. OPERATORS, sl.ngle needle QUICK CASH for odd jobs. 543-23U. CAPABLE pleaaant woman & Sirloin, 5930 \II/. Coast LEGAL SECRETARY overlock. Zlppersetter. Top DAY work. Ge:neral cleaning. who loves children, cook!. Hwy, N.B. Xln't typing skills req'd. pay, expcr. only. RolP! Reliable. 'J'ransportation. Mon·f'ri. 3.7 pm. 673--413.1 Ft.JU.TIME LVN days, 7. 80+; Stenorette; exp er . Mfg., 865 Production Pl, 543--7000. eve. Tidy fol'Irltt teacher 3:30, xlnt fringe bnlts. prefd. 833-9031. ~N=B=.===~~~-·t THROUGH . A ~IATURE typist wants work pref'd, Beverly Maoor Conv. Hosp. LICENSED Shampoo Girl. 3 ORTHODONTIC FRON T in Inc. Ta.~ office, ex. CARPET CLEANER 496-5786. days wk. Ba1boa Bay Oub OFFICE Exp nee. perienced. 894-3813 Helper wanted: $2.50 per FULL time femaJe ht>lp. Beauty Salon. 642--0092. 962-2405 ILY PILOT , .H_•_l]!_W_•_n_t_ed_,'-M_&_F_7_10 hour. Call 673-7162. Apply Don's Car Wash , LIVE-IN help to do the cook· PART lime jobs, ideal for 1-1 0il'.f, SIOOO per month 510 Estrella. SC. ing 1n exchange for room & students 17 ·& ove.r, Hr. Advertising Sales The B!ue Beet, Gen'I Ofc Trne $100 wk board in nice home on Udo wage .. 15056 Jackson, Mid· WANT AD Formt•r Yellow page or 673-9004 aft 4 pm Learn au phases of this in· Isle: pvt room & bath, close way City. rnagazill(' space e x P • CL EA N I N G h e t p • teresting business in this to "ater. 613-~t. 1 ~P,chc-a-r~m-a_c_y_As_1_i_1l-•_nl_1 Mature male or female QUALIFIED, fastidW>us in-suJl('r spot. Sharp ind.iv: LT housekeep1ng, perm, 1 Mix business "'/pleasure in ~i..sslo~n only, Call far dividual who is proficient tn needed~ land thls.posi~n. day/\\ir., salary .open, ~~r an important part of medi· ANSWERING Service Operator needed. Will train, 673;270 or 675-0050. Denn.is Personnel'Agency of &'l>-8693. pe~ality. ~I Kim, [ Oassifted INIJEX l but will pay for experience. Ad>ertiling 155 _,.,., C.M. Are You Looking For CLER I CAL-Mature otc. worker. Know l ed&e medklal/medicare biU~ & bk.kpng & gen'l. ofc. duties. Garfield Conv. Hosp., Tl81 Garfield Ave .• H.B. hvlne, 21>!2 Micbebon Dr. LYN-PART-TIME 833-2100, Derull8 & Dennis GENER AL maintenance a..u Shjft. Apply In person, Person~! Agency of ll'vine, janitor, apply Bahia J!untington Beach. Conv. 2082 l\11chelson Dr. Corinthian Yacht Club, 1001 Hosp. 18811 Florida St., POWER Machine Operator Bayside Dr, CdM. Closetl H.B. 847-3515. nee'(led, expcr. desired. 1401 [ _..,..,. ]~ A New Future? CLERICAL Help, p/thne. Typing a mU!L HI'S !r12, Mon. M A CHINIST .Prototype & Warehouse Rd. CM 545-5859. GENERAL OHice, typing, ~els, metal, Capable of PRESSMEN 1250W, Hamada filing & phone, exper. tooling mfg. as well as pro-700, Itek. ~1anage amall desired. 494-94.lL totype. Oxnponent machin-shop. 54<H1681, ing. Must have exper & own tools. Top pay & lringe Real E1tat1 Sil .. beoefils. EOE. Accurate FREE Mold Co. (213) 921-7316. Cl•1sifici1tion 100-124 6 t 10 PM E K Mon-Frl. Woman ~ 25 0 ves.~ MP pref'd, Call Mon or Wed, HAIRSrYUST: get &'1.'ay your pre•ent iob while Miss Romeiro 64+-1230. from rollers. We just cut you learn. Mr. Ford CLERK. RETAIL hair. Space for rent. Hair --~646-~_9_60_1___ CANTEEN IN HOSP IT AL, West. G73-4186. Assembler . Electronic full time, 5 day week. HOUSEKEEPER, female, MAIDS wanted l&-25 yrs. License Tr•lnlng Must posseS! a ba!lc 54:r9331, ext 496. Bayview Conv. Hosp., CM. 5 Part time. Newport Channel Limited Time Onl knowledge of electronics CONCESSION help, women, Day wk. Apply in person or MAIDinn. ~ln:l~ FamotlS license course !.ow assembly practices & pro-35 to 50 yrs. old, to work at ~II. 642-3Sffi, aak for John-With ,~,erenccs, 4 hn availaole thru Tarbell Com· calures. Min, 2 yrs recent Orange County Fair rue. wer.!kly, Newport Beach pa.ny. Applicants fully ~ --I~ Cl•s•ification 125-149 Re.i Est•te, rAJ Gener•I ~ Cl•ssification 150-184 exp. Day shift. Apply in Ground& every weekend. $2 HOUSEKEEPER needed for area. 644-4021 eves. imbursed upon qualification. ·1( • I VperaonE.I See J1erry Whitson. HR. convalescent hos p l t a I . MAINTENANCE W or k , New or experienced saJes ega ectron cs, lCXX> West 64.2-9CXl6 After 6 PM Spanish speaking ok. Apply Elderly Man for P !Time. people. Openings available. '-------'· \'Varner, Santa Ana. in person Beverly Manor, Apply Sllverwoods 4 5 Complete training program. Classification 200-260 AS.SEJ\tBLY & Inspection of • COOK • 340 Victor, Costa Mesa. Fashion Island, NB. r~uture management oppor- ' · Woman desired to run kit· · I Call .,_ ~ am. e ectron1c part!. Help HOUSEKEEPER, depend-MAN age 45 to 50 for tunit e!. .1•u·, Sloan at ffcuelforR-.t J ...... req'd for part swing shift. chen. Exp necessary. able w/transp. Mon, W~. wood~rklng, full time. 2952 832·T5440A. RIEL l1CI 4·15-8·15 pm Good Conds !\tr. Baer, 673-5011 N.B. . Cos L ,;0 1877· • ' · Fri, 6 hrs day. Lido. Randolph, ta Mesa. .,....... COOK, exper. Also, food scr· 673--0629 Cl•ssilication 300~3,jS AUTO tee workers. ~rly Manor · · MATIJ.RE PBX Operator, · · en H Laguna Hills HOUSEKEEPER • live.in. Answering service. After-REALTORS [ •·-ll.91 SALESMAN 837~ osp, ' Huntington Beach area. Pvt noons & eves-inclu-l;;;=·,,.-'i'i,;:.c;;~,..,..=I ~•-tstor-, . . room. New townhnuse. Near wkends. Full & pari thne. Rl!Al ESTATE SALES . . B~w·, Agency, ·Pro·du·ct COOK, aingle, 'for. ·l"!:aort beach. 53IHl709. .... *"~ INCOME PROPERTY Clattlfication 360.370 ~~eri~portant. Sec area. Salary + rct. +apt. HOUSEKEEPER. pri MATURE grandmotherly e EXCELLENT I ~ CREVIER BMW Call 675--5016 Evening! only. rm/ba, 1 lady, cooking, type lady wanted for oc-POTENTIAL EARNINGS Rentals I & COUNTER &ir1 wantetl, over w/car, 6 day week. 64&-5532 cuktnal owmight babysit· e SU~ SAf.E.S &. . . ,-Sales · Service • Lea.sing 25 pref'd. Call for appt. or 645--0977 ting, must drive. 640-1751. LISTING PROGRAM roll W. 1st St., Santa Ana 548-281ll e SOUTH ORANGE Classification 400-445 835-3171 ... ' HOUSFJCEEPER I babysit· MATURE lady seek! position I~ DELICATESSEN Man, must ter for chUd 2 yrs old. 1 as companion -It hlkpg, COUNTY 557 9930 Annauncement id AUTO be over 18, neat & depe~ day week 841-8412. ~ment home or private. '" ' ·•· Pa· rts Counter111· an dab!e, full time. See Terry IMMED. Openings for l<H5 ~"· Hawaii. Cal. 494-a485. CERTIFIEO . or Jim. HI Time Liquors, INCOME Classificat ion 500-510 f?<perience ~ferred, Apply 495 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa. ladies full or p/time. Paid MECHANIC wanted. Foreign in Person to Pete at wkly. Earn xtra money or can. Costa Me113 area. PROPERTIES Ji] HARB DELIVERY Man, Perm ~tart a penn. career. For 64>5133. REAL ESTATE_ Penol\Als OR YW P/Tlme Early AM. for LA mtervw call, .8!n-5333 or Medical Recept Tme SALESMEN • Why not work · 187U Beach Blvd., Hunting· ~= =~ 0-:. ~!t 83&-782(i. Each moming yO\fll don a in the hottest area Hunting. Classific•tion 526-515 ton Beach. 842-4435. have dependable car, car IMMED. opening! for expe.r .. Iovely white uniform & ton Beach/Fountain VaUey. I IS] Auto Mechanic-Exp a 11 ihsurance & be reUable. scam!tresses. Apply 148 Los bright smile when you land and let us tl'aln )'OU! Call Lost and found I Imports tor ~ml dealership 642-4800. 1'folinos, San Oemei,ite, or thia super spot. Friendly Phil McNamee, VILLAGE "' _ . In S. Orange County Beach DELIVERY 01 DAILY call 492-8211, 8 AM till 4:30 indlv. tought to greet pa. REAL ESTATE. ~TL Cl .,. I' SSO "SS Comm. Send inquiries to .:nl' ""'~""' ... ...,.'~y. m'LY-..,_ PM. ...tienta in_pejlu~t. n o!c REG-Nun;e,..ll-7 OB,· 3-<ll .._ , '. •-"•"c• ·•on-·n Bbx m % oanrt-PHOt:-'P:ct. -....... ._,., .. .x.ot"!Uft vn •v INSURA CE SEC ~._,,...c ~·· . ~ :T newspaper caniera. Re-N 'Y \ .. au rTU, ~ • nrus 11-7 ICU, 11-7 Nurse aid. l ~-,.,.· ,,,., ~il.N~~· Costa Meaa, quires the Ule o! a station P.'tlme. 9 am·l pm .. X!n't & DeMll Penoonnel Ageocy CSR exp. 3-ll, Sao """~ ~===-~~~=~ Wagon or Van. O:lntact P.fr. typist, some sh. Initiative of Itv:lne, *2 Michelson Dr. Clemente Gen'l Hospital BABYSI'ITER for l child, 6 Han::y Seeley, Ut West B;cy a must. B of A Tower Bldg, MEDICAL ASSISTANT • 4~ll22. ext 214. Clessification 575-580 mo old, 8am-3:30pm, Mon-St., O>sta Mesa. Orange, Ph: betwo 9 & 1.2, Exp'd preier'd to train in RESIDENT Manager • ~ I [51 Fri. Xlnt ch.ild, good J163r, ,..,~ _,,,. ane-4\1 .... ..-• no 11~ t l ~r Id DENTAL A$ISTANT v.»-.,.,.u. ,"&J• ......,. "'~ ,....,, coupe to manage 5 --~R • .-.-.: o er, mature, "-"Dmun. --Sa.ts 5.1>-5690 .... & In San e r .... ...,. . Must hve "oWn transporla· Chalrslde, !It down. 5'4 or ·~ · • a"~' e m en t e l...,c=i:--o.1;:-,-,,.--,.J tlon. 64H5J5 aft 3:30 over.,Experienced. S days, 8 lRYINE oco~~ ... .., ~-··wanted I/time for 492-0046 or 837-8012. ass1 1cat ion 600.699 BABYSIT •-Ute "-·· .. -......t. to 5. Sn..lary open. 640--0300 • Ll\.;J\Jl~l~CL v..-1VUs car .wash dudes. If R. E. TRAINEE ~ ·~--·· ~ Newport Center. 5ERY1CES .... rc • .-.v )<Ill ere ,.liable I< looking R E ·I ~lment lli 1 J ~f/~. ~.!'11 ~0 .. ~· ~!1°rs. DENTAL A 11l1 tan t. -~....._ 1 for steady wotk apply in ~ll · Broker I: Developer, . _ ~ ~" ·~ cbalrside, min. 6 mo'• ex· F£E PAID per.ion to ........... Foon-lianae "'!::u1 t,~ ..,'0~ Cla1sificat ion 700..710 ;;~:;;e;;-;;l86;;rt;;· ;;;;;Be;-arh-;:;-:--;:a-;-r;:-e:;-a ~~~ pm~ts. Call ~:tacy to= ~:u. v;i:.~ ~ Wash,.uxt6 3 pm, M.5.112t . l ~·-~· II"'-J ~:;~;!r!E~u •. w;,:;.~~~ DENTAL See'Y·Bookkecper. Sec'y/Pub!Uhlng tn ISSO MEN wanted f/tlme fDr ~top"':""',! = ._ ... _ V sit eves for 8 yr old girl. Exper. or college. CaU Bkkpr/Gll'I Friday $600+ vanous car wash duties. U club. See chef at 8eti 53&-2S29 54&--m), Stenos lo $550 )'OU a.re reliable &: looking Brown's 3ll06 Coast Hwy Cl 'f' t' 800 8" • DESK ~-~ I 1 I Oerk Typlst/purclvi.J $460 lor steady 'M)l"k, apply In s. , a-•M. esst ica ion • '.J u BABYSI'ITER for com· ... «=,,.. po s t> n lnventory O>ntrl Clrlt .$400 peraon to manager _lidoj-";i-;=>''F"'--,..,-=----1 [ ll~l n1unil;y C(lt'lter programs, ava:~able Sheratan Bench PBX/R.ect'pt/Type $450 Qt.r Wuh. 481 E. t?th St., R1st•ur•nt Exper. Ptt• and SuppMt ~oa .. ~·~~~!.I, liberal Inn. Pleaae App~ penon. Free &: Ft'e Poalliona Costa Mcca. -OIShl.~r. \Viilten Or Wa.lf. . . ~-~ ~ t1ft-2 Paclflc t Hwy, 488 E. 17th (at lrvioo) CM MOTEL Maids want~ Ap-l'ela's & Bus: Help. See Min Classific•tion 850-151 B ABYSI'ITER WANTED, ' '4t.-1470 ply In penon only. Costa Mcl..eo;d alt 4 pm. Bt:n l ~. nly home Mature woman, DtSltwASHER ft>r acute ~ MeM Inn, a:ll5 Harbor Wvd. Brown a. 31106 So • ...._....... l '"'11 for 2 cltlld'ren, Morningi. !:P1':1· ~~ ~~= JANITORIAL Maintenance CM. 1tW)-.. ~na Beb . . -Mf;qt.ifimtnt " ~ _F~.V~·~-=~-· ~---Hosp4 18792 Delaware, •LR. Man. Niles. 40 Hr. wk. MO'lllER'S USe, llye in, 5 RN J"etif!f nlJhts. 11·1:39 ClasslflCation 900-9'12 BABYSIT Mondaya-1:30-5:30, ap.o611. ext a, Some exper. p.re t 'd .. days,! ch1ldren, pvt room & ~~ ~ Conv my home on beach In Nwpt tntervws 2-5 pm. 1Uchard'1 bath. Laauna Bch. ~7258. :u::r. • I . l[11i] Bch. $1.50 hr. GIH47$. D=~ Ve~cnn~~ L"6 Market, l433 VI• Lido, NEED 2 .... tttired or SALESMEN . ~.ii. BABYSI'JTER neette<I tor Hosp, 661. Center St. CM. N.8. 11emrttl:lred, t~ work eW!l')' Growinl a.lann compuiy re- • • odd hobn for 15 mo. old 5t&-56&5. JANITORIAL, ~. perm. weekend at Oran.., County qulm: experienced com.mer-. ci.uoflcolton 915-9~9 \>ObY.,..., home. m.m. *cn•nERY OPRS.* p/time. t am·U noon on Fair Gro.-$2 HR. Ve,., cl&l A h<tme aal.cmcn. FWI l@l 1PUW" SM. 6 pm.·10 pm Mol'I Ull'\I ll&bt work. ·time-bl.Mt. AU benena. I I ll•ve iometb1~ llOU want w " TABLER. Experienced. Thlll'll. il3Ml94. ~ Alter 6 PM TOP COMMISSIONS ---.. ~ ~ ~OWied '•d• do It -~CstD~~ ll\"':I glve1. dup ... the!led ~I .,.,. __ ,. , PIWI Bue -_,. -.,:.u N -~ .-...»Il:PI ··~l.:'!'i" .. -~ • •• tna o..QU.IP lol...llK.will..IUl.tl bu)' the new. CallfO<.;'l'!'olnlmenL-1 Oastific•tion 950·99C> ·· Beftch, 546-1431 to-Sbott Resulllt 60-5678. atun. nMtt.tm • • a. le or ol It. tt. p • I, T or d· in •• I at s s " rl< ·- s ' or • it- ft 30 ·Y • .... , ..... [fiJ [ ltfllj .. l[fi] [1° •:· . I~! •clt 11 ~[ l~l ~!~·d-··~l~~~l~!-·d_d_. ~l~;1 ~l _-~ ... -~l~~11 ',~~~ Ip Wo~ted, M ' F 110 Holp W•-· 'M I I' 710 nllq-100 Pumhun 110 Mlsalt•-Ill Mlscoll•noou• Ill Pl•nos/°"9•n• 926 P•ts, Ganorol ISlJ Boots, Molnt./ 1 --------~11---------Service SALZS.Tucbnlcal. R.eq'a 2 >'" sall!t exp. w/ek."t"tronlc bck1P"nd. Pn!f. pltlel!t11 con· trol exp. Sahuy 110,<XXI )'r. 50'1-i travel USA. For ln. ll'rvlew ell.II J. Whitehill 644~7Q!8. . SALESLADY for Jewt!ll'l' t:tore. References ttq'd, Call 548-3402. Sec'y/Recept, sh Sec?'f'lnry Tax Sec~tary Asst. Bookkft'per Encr. Stt~tary Medical Bek Ofc T)'l>lst Payroll/C.On•tr. Bkkpr/Constr. Exec. Sec~tal")' Cl"OUJl!ing Clerk NEWPORT Personnel Agency 833 Dover Dr., N. B. 642-3870 WAITRESSES ANTIQUES. J"" UTl...t MOVING FIREWOOD * AUCTION .;{ • • • AKC HEG Be..:I•. tlwnp~n Nl&hl Sbitt from Eiwland. 400 pea. Must tell complete 2 BR apt Bruce L. P•tterton bark .:rw11d, "''ould llke 111 ~lnpenon OMJc<locb, O\aln. Elc. tum.9'~Div.tnAotto-FRIDAY.7:30P.M. 26562Ar•c•na Dr. n1ttt malt' B t>a i;:l t How•rtf'1 Resteurent AnUQutl of lhie World. 19Sl man, Nu fOO • Sell SlSO. JANUARY S Mlttion Viejo w/papt>rs. Ob,tet1.fain1ly. '.\!A Hi~ l-? '.\IAID Sl-:RV ICt By lor,11 <'XP t!r1 e nced bullnt:.•i.s 400l W. Cout. Hwy .. N.B. = O»ta M "••, Awcado naQlb dbl hide • s ALE F..state I: S.oraa:e SaJt: Car· You art thl" v.uuit·r uf Pick of llHt<r-m,.Jt' 833·152G \VAITft.ESS.OI•--.... · bed, S.100. ~r Cht $35, ION, Olahpacl<s, \\'imiro~1. 2 11 k ,1 1 11 {;R~f& OOARO, 11-yn per Pttl'd :ri";; Over-A; ANTIQUE $quanl Ra.wood 2 twn bed.I, SXI ea. l Queen Old fllarble Top T11.bles·Lire S rt t V' Q , 'l' & all bn."1'(!1. f''ret-pirkup' pty &t ~ only .C W Pit.no, beaull.tul\y carwd. n $30. Yactu chn S4, Bue. 2 \\"111g &ck Vf:l~t po s, •cation ·Sherly a," Poodle pup~ 2·4' 1!171 SJo;AH.AY, hke new. au.. CM • · Wlll •00!-pt mu.. ottct. Oilld'• Rnt oomer ehfft PriCC!I reduced on fin!'•i-•ood Ch-!rt & Side Chair. Old RKr•alional Vthlcl• u\·ail. :>16-2S4lt v.·ith flyini,:: b.r1d¥e. dual oon. WA • . m-oo or 644-0f!l &t'OUP. $tO. Bar~-Brau with copy of thla ad. Lampa, Sewing :i1achlnc1. Show tNLI. m cncvy vs enalne • A~ w&nled, EJl;p'd, APi-fERICAN' Primitive ())m. poatu bed.• Mbc. Harbour Color TV's. A BMroom Sci. 11t the PAllAKEF.TS • 25 w a\•iary )(llllt•y, N'oft(I, all carpeted. W .....,.,otr, ~ Od_leo_ Rall Wil:n.nt-l4'0 n\Ode Splnnet dsk, tea cart, Uaht1 Apts nt-M&-7000 qr $6. off ......-ron:t. $3 off -r Home Bel>r Bar. Cheat of Anaheim Convention & ne-3ting box~·s. sin;.:ll-s $2 Slip avall . S9.9l0. OR will ,-::-:=~~=;;,;,',.="'=·c...----1 Walnut tn tbl m-1uo ru-m-tm. ~ cor<t':"U. otl per 3rd co';d. I)ru,.-en . Bunk Beds, Di· Center ('11t·h. at'i·2'7Y.I. tn 1c1e for ~1nn1ler boal. WAITRESSES needed. Apply A II ' MEXfCAN di.nl 50c:-off ""'C l2 cu. fl, vans, Dirll'ttes, \\.'a.,hel'5. Ja"'''''"'"' r~I' PF:l<l<Y C1x:ka1e.•I 11· 1th 67'.'":r-1619 .. ~------ln p@1'90h, Sbttab:lo &-ach PP ancet I02 ng room set, .. ~ Dry c r 11, Retrlgerators. Pl, 1"1 .,_,.{ ~7-8• 1 31, large Chronic C\1i;:e. S'..':1. :ti' r·11n1s Cal1111 C'rul5t't'. lop Inn. Huntt'...,..,_ ............... Tsble' le 6 cbaln, bullet, s'i-·e• -·-,-& ,, U•·h cast• 1·11 ...... -..., , C'"'., Aft .,_ ~·o .,.,.,.. I lo ..,-,=--""""""'•'""°'"-::;:c~"o,.,.-I URGE doub~ door rtfrla $2l0. Dtnett.. Ill'!, Danlih. Both v• • c •~ •• .. 1 bi'h\l'f•n !J &: U !Jill !o rl11.1tu t-r " vn1-".....-v"""' •hup1'. 1111n t"ni.:. rad ,· WELCOME WAGON ~ -~, -. ""-n~...'. red llble, blk/Wbl u"'""'I ~':ucalyptu. &: O .... noe....'OOd nlOrr C C Is 85-2 .~ll·f\'\1, d1•pth findt•r, f\l l ........... ""'.,. -n.o:1u1-..:: chn 4 $100 Cock aJI '"bi . ·--. WIN. DY'S AUCTION ynur l 1~·krt¥. IN()r\h uu111y • i,:;11l1·~. Jilli/I) ~lrr1". slct'ps g SUPERTISl1l d~r. elec. Nr. nrw. m. or -t t , toll !ret" numbrr '~ 5"'0-lnH in ti)Jnfor1 s..,n,. 67'".>-8577. for ~ QWy, Catter trade for J&L 5'&-mB. ~$60_. ___ =~'-· -----2 LocaUons lo st'?'\'e you. * * * 1111\IALAYAN r I 8 n1 e pt . --· -- Oppty, Superviay Exp KENMORE wu.hn' and SALEM MAPLE • Hutch Sand C&nyon & Santa Ana C0~1E BROWSE AROUND *PIANOS.ORGANS F1•n1, ~mos, ~ho•t,, A\\'luil,, ·71 UFLT.\ 1:· Tn hull, 130 -'d 0°•·-· + ~mm r -.__ -·"" ''Ar table f'rv.')'. or fllyford Hd. It! ,.. __ .. --11 ...... M· r_ ..... ,-·It· "" \'ul\,, •'11K, HI. lmmar-........ · ._._,. ....., · "'' ..__, g yrs old. Excellent ......., cau. ..., • air:r, Ntwport Hlvd. Goin" Out For 1lus1n;•ss ........... 1"°" .,, .... "" •" """"' d II II r 007 391' tervi-.. ;n .. Jan I 10 U •• ,.. ~akfut table end lab'-Irvine Blvd. ...., ly. Atl 6 pn'. '"l1-~•-,. ,.,..,n . I s.1cr1, cw. " oc ... M.. · · • · ~ condlUon $50.. ~"' • ~. Behind Tony'1 Bldg. Mal'li;. &1;1 quality . priee~ . !W'l'V. ' ... ''" r ' , I Kathleen Okel!, 1'18-11'00. ...,7_15-. _ru!~o·~.· AU. UKE NEW c t •t * .,..., """'" "'~ """0 'lal< ~alpoi"I k•lle"'· .'.'~" ·~·~·~·"~''--~---..., '" .-.-.oo• ""---Sat. & Sun. 9 to S n111 "esa u-..-,,.,.,., ,,,...v.·ai-SteLn11·ay-&ldv.-ln, elr. •" ,, .,,.. .. -Y.'HO WAh"TS TO. WORK1 REFRIGERATOR 5 years ............ , PRIVATE party mu 1 t Pl1Qet Pw.nos & Kolls Sl:J each. \fi' H11oelon \\'twll'r Eastpo11 ORNE A CAB! old \.'l!ty cll'll.n. 3 SETS; Twin bcood, ('Omf'r ORIENTAL It~ Sale. 10rT sacrihce tine art rolltttion ltl"ntals ...... \\'" Buy-Sell • 5-l~itlll e n~utt•·I "ltnnur 1na1or, $1400. CHOOSE )'OW' hoClrl. work 89:3-9060 fP'Ollplng. Tables, cuslom oH thru January. "'e have and lllmlture. All itel'NI DatJy 10-6 Sun l2·::i n-(\,., """' $Ulll Xlnt t'(lnd. for )'OU1"91!11, bt )'OUr own coven, bolaten. Ideal ape.Cf' the' largnt atock In OrunKC' 501,;, or lf.'55 of appni.ised FIELD'S PI,\.'>:OS """"ll's 854 67H•!.'O _______ , boss Men or women. Can be OVER DJ washers, dryen, aaven. Good rond. S15 ptr Counly. Expen cleaning & value. Chinese Clolsonnc Costa flil'sa l714J 66-lZil ·---------16 ~·1 L.nb.,;tt-r &kill w/1972 slightly handicapped. Vts, refrlgerators trom SJ!l.95. wt. &&-78-19. repa.irtng ol thc so.mt. Shop, 12 .. dee bo 1 S200 Sid OBEDIENCE cl.us 10 start •~'>!IP t\lt•rf'I U"\•. 11 v . ell'~:- ret ired. Age 21 b 70, sup-~780.. --M~U~ST'-'~SO~crill<e-.--,-So-1-,-, compare standby & save at Yard sc~sca; ll"xij" $~ Sporting Goods 830 \Vf'1'.t Jan. 31, 7 :IO prn, .11 11·11· !1-;111 11nllf'r Slax:I tlm1. plc.ment your income. Drive LATE model auto. ••uher & loveJeat, 4 mo's old. Call Shah 'N Shah, 2023 So. Pair signed Japant.'Se color RE INGmN 00 th•" Ni•v.port 8t•af'h/lr.u11.· 1.1 .• 61:.!7 alt ~ pn1 a cab 6 hrs or I10re a d•v. l"l-. dryr' 1~i A-1 --•. '~". Maln, Santa Anti.. 5al-1Zl2 1 1 <' s~ Val /\I 11 auto &l''D, Opr-n to all do~s il'"'' ·----' -v .. -.. ....., '-"' .. ~ prnts •l"x ' '"· ' nut ho , .' '''"· ol•I .. '"'-'"--1'.i.·•.. 1" 1'1 J;1n\fAkf' ltunaboul Apply in penon, Yellow Cab S4!i ea. 64&-5848. ----------i~'~'~i;r.;.:::,~7~340:::.,:l~n~CdM=:~·---hi b. l l'!S \V 1 s IJ.;Un, almo11t tlt'v., $110. " .,,.,.. ,. Co 186 E 16th St Co * * * Sota & loWoteat, l'll!Wr i· na ca lfl('l , . a nu! 50 .\1' old custom mudc uun CFPMAN-,:-('!,t .. ~h'. 1!1:.:1 ('1•111u ry mod. M~;.._ · ·• sta $80 1 YR. guam. del & In· used, both tor $160, UllU&lly STEREO. 1973 Gar r a rd dre15:t'r $100. 2_ elega.nt cabull.'I $1'!>. 64• l67'l • · .. :shonhaw po1.nt!'~ j s: !'>IJ Sh.1q 1 41\-:lif.;) stall. Latt" mod. all cycle home, 96S-'1910. nlOdel. Sy11temi.Ll'd auto hanging la1nps $12:'i for pair. -- . ' . :r Pul'\'hn'd, no 11:qiet'l', 6 \llkl - \VOMAN: part time. Apply Kenmore washer. 8J:9...JT18. DINING 1 c~r. ~ watt 11m/fm \Vhile rhnlr $25. Plus many~ four Skt1, DJ cen· ol~ _p7uppy shot SJAJ. I Boats, Sail 909 ARY, EXECUTIVE FOSTER F'REElE. , room BU te, CWJtom receiver. Jen s'-' n air other nusc. ltt.'n1s of l\IJl(•tt•ni, lu"l'lnd ~-. 11t•11er S-11-1!1 . Shorthand 80 wpm, typing 60 899 West 19th St., C.M. •, nJSH\\ASHblEl RS, washers&, designed. Cost S13(X}. Belt !rul"fMl.nslon 1pcakt'n I tapi.· Clolsonnr, glass, silwr. mounted. 6-1-1-59-12. sT-:-Bcrcnc.,-,-1 -11-,-,~-. old nuil~. 11'1l 'lt<"H AS !NC: lu!\1unou1 l9T.! wpm accurately. 1 .,.,. ryers, re , gua.m otter. 96)..4202. deck. Still brlllld new in toys 13.. blk SlO Call S R ·c ""': n1t11<1' 1•ru Ring aux. J' ~'OMAN age 3510 50 for Utt: delv'd ~7620-54G-5Zl8 · box. \Vu left unclaimeil 011 · "' · tort, estaurent, AK · prof. obed. 1rair1c'<I. 1 111·-.i11..,'l1 \\'11l eonslder 1 pt"rsonr11;'1 background fact~k. 40 hrs. 2952 · -' · BEST Qua]. Crib, mattr, laya1,1-•ny. Now, $134. Credit 64-Hiti:ll. Bar 132 $50. 496--1102. nr 111111 1' full ~ILu't· p1u1ner!I. -esentiat~-a-e-i:: o n-n rt n-g· n<Jolph, CoslD Mesa. G..-E.-OOIJBl:.E-0\T.EN,-most-dutngil!g-ta~.-Patd-, Qlip!. {714l-893=tJSJI. P-Rl-VA-Tfi-t>arty m u s I JO i!rltt.-ok1 lli..:AG-LI>:.-m;ilu. \\'r1w. -~illcd No._JSS knowledge helpful. \\'ORKING mN'lllgtt for rol-deluxe moch.·t Like new. Asking $68. 644-2386. 11. C.Olor TV ron!IOlt>, Sl50, sacrlfi!'(' fine art rolJt'('lion. DELI and Heslauranl 1-.:iiulp-AKC reg1s!('n'd. \\'1!1 llt'll J)nl\\" Pllnr. P. O. Box 1560 J ob includes being secretary fN• shop. u.......,r_ Ple..... 675-1458 or 548-6288 Gir--Sale 112 AU itcnts 51)1'~ or less of ap-n1rnt for sale. For delails for $~j-S42~:l. <_·,~,1,1 ti.l1°"l•, 92626, Give to ~encral manager & con· ~..... ......... Roni W•shors/D~ors -•· \Vp!!;finghouse wlndo\v air prat.ed , 1 Ch · -·'II troll ll ha 11· Sl'nrt resume P. 0 . Box 1623. • 1 ronrt1Uontt $125 '~ Walnut " ue. 1 n es f' Call 496-3413. AKC. (h'huahu~ shov.• quli! iu,'t'. 0<·l·uri:ition, ....... 1tJ.: er as we as w ~ ... ""'"·-'°'"'"-malnL "'•"""'a' In:"'!;' r_ .. -..... _"-'-·-...... Cloisonnt" 11" deep bro'A-n '" h "· ' perMlnnel recon:IR for 100 ~~. --""' ...... ..,,_,, ---..-.-~_...,. ·--. t-b I, Sm I cons o l·t" -~ T-V RMlio Hlf-' m· •. Ji. ll.k:i...91!.L..lill!nN: ill'.: ~ l~'ll('"c;i':m~.n-c;;,,,,-.,,,,;l ---11 prople & many other mi.se. • 639-1202 * Child's white desk " ptionognph. Misc baby ~~ ~fy-;::p i~ r:r~ z0~ Stereo ' --t, 836 1 _J~t·ry, ~:4·Z'i42 l6 t•Oof'\'tt;ln1TII, n-,.-1n am responsibilities. YNG. MAN , neat appeartng, SCHICK hair dryer, giant dresser, 90me power tools, lt .. ms. 17361 Butlomi.'OOd, 1 t T k base $JOO \IRF:DALt: Puppil'· /\KC Jt h, \\tlh tratl1·r. ontact Cathy Ehea for will train in f'loor Coveri~: hood. Hu mist. Money baek lamps, maple drnm table, F'V, 96:}-1698. r~er;:;. iig.:, Japan~ rol: STEREO UIO wan Ar.l/Ft.t , 'h.1~1p. sif'l' &· rlan1~· ' I $400. &W-7199 appt. Vega Electronics, Linoleum, qit & tile. fltust guAranlee. $12. 644~913. G.E. rotiuerie oven&: othE:'r PORT. rlil"h"1'<eher $10 .. 2 or prinls l•f' x 6" $75. s1erco n-~iver wllh It track I 548-0'.)63 r.lontgomery HJ' Sailboat, \\ .. 54().-0222, ext 11. have own transp. Hun-KENMORE W11isher $75 odds It ends. Sal only! 2C7 sel.s bunk beds $15. each. I Sidney Yard seascape 11·• x & quad input. with 2 J en90n I DOBEJL'-1,\N l'INSCllF:R fc · s:!!Jg Kt boat l'O\'Cr, nr. ne""·· Secretaries tlngtOn BeRth are11. pref'rd., G.E. [)r-yer, $50. Both I~ Bamboo St, Newport Beach. Auto "'asher & t:lec. drytr 15" $100. Large modern oil l~m front . air suspensKll'l niale IJUPl'leS. s;,o or offl'r" 612:'2iflli, 6T.l---t_,,1~87~·-~~ LEGAL S1t:ndy wor~. 842-2015 or aft good condition. ~. GARAGE sale: Refrig, $40. each, n a u g ah yd c painting $125. ri.tany oOwr \loalnut . cabin~. IPf'akers &: t.iust sar. 64:>-G::Kl'i. i 2fi ' l.uden; 16. Xlnl sulls & 6 & v"knds S3&-3207. F •t llO dinette &et. crpt. much kite-hen booth wftable $100. misc ill'ms Of Oolsonne profe111<1naJ size tumrable . rquip :\:Int racini;: rerotrl SECRETARY ~~ urn1 ure morE'. 9 to -'4 Sfl.t. 432.1 S46-3467. giaQ·, silver, ('[{'. /\lust see "'ith IWod bast', dustcover, LONG. Haired l)a\·hsh1.1nc1 I (1('(1 ~h~mp. 5411--0i!4'1 . ' SANTA ANA CIRCULAR rug, v.-ool, 8'. W l ntersv.-eet, Unlwnity f Rr.NCH Pmvln. O\'RI dlnin, lo appr{'("iate Call 644-66.11 M"Nile & cartrldgt:. Regular-pupp1C's. AKC, 11iUl &ho!.Ji. 31 -II Clean. Perfect ronditkln. $80 ;.P.,.,o;.k~·=~--~---table $40. 55 yrds Nylon • · · ly $368. l11wntory clearance n1os. 63i-R9()6. LIDO 11 1\/h!g:hwny trn ~r. ~ •• ",.,,""'ro,,..., -~.,';!eeyoullenntg"'a1. -]["'-I o' '""· .....a!J. GARAGE Sale -Come & get ;'"'"' ''"""•· II "'' ynl. M1Wscell,1_n.Jeous 820 ~~hlSl9!lL.l.!l5., "1"SA 1S191e"'°,-DACHSl lU~DS for sale, rc-d I ~.~:i.~11!s, I nr11·. $1050. '" ,.., ... ,.. -V NE\V walnut Bdrm set tt. Furn., t"ar & misc. 1 Pen1lnn Lamb f'Ollt, natural In ea r "'1g qui< a ors ·· n1iniatures. 1 male, 1 fem. -c· ------- lorney. :itust have Calif. Dinette set, coffee & end v.-eek only. 10102 Edye Dr., silvt'I" IO"RY-sz;o. All xlnl • llth SI., Coslu ?<.lesa. j s:ri l'a. 557-6285 aft 5. 1 12· Snu11 h1rd, r 1• 1· 1• n t I (. ~egal ~ckgroun~. Top pay. tables, etc., 540-1!44 2 . H.B. 968-4943. rond. 6'F.H174_ I.Up\V~~ doubl~ Bass ~rurn 645-24-12. S ii E p 11 ER D /lilaluniult' l'{'l11n~h••d Rf'ar!y to NI . mm ,ia. "s'.1"".s".1ng. _A_n_t_l'J..u_u;,;... ____ .....;IOOc:.;; RED ORIENTAL RUG GARAGE. Sa.le. Moving, BRO\\'N ( -~• nd !le·. 11:en c rome (yna-ZENITI~ & !tCA Tt•lcvll;lons \' Puppif's, 6 v.'ks. S35. 11.B. Sli."1. 6-l~r-~\5. _____ .1 M llO a, ""'-"' ro .!W)nl~ ~~are, 3 Tun1 Toni~, at drasli c price rf'<!uctions. 962-£2!'12 I SABOT TEMPORARY SERVICE DINING TABLE, Round, 6 x 9. $50. 644-6913 W~\;!_~~. ~~. ~~ t~·e~~:~ttt~':!c~':~o' ~.ffu4w;_~1Cynibllls. $5:25. All models pr1c1•d to cl~ar DOXl•E ·M' A-L·E:o---•~R~E~D~ 1169 . Diane. 675-6985 l 124 So. Grand, S.A. 547-5736 Queen Anne legs, $80. DfNE'ITE set: formlca table dale & McFadden) a · durln~ our end ol year sail". • • ' _=,.;:::;.:'°"=""'col SECRETARY. p/time for 979-£635 & 4 cha_lrs. Nice condition Hou,.hold Goods 814 ~.mer,~dj., .usectEquoncr ~· \VANTED dog house for J yr 11icture tul:N:-. 1 yr parts AKC, 10 v.·ks. 546-10~ Boats, Slips/ Docks 910 --') dl·-,slfl-• ,·n·-hnent •~ ~149 ISC. mp1ng p mt. la,,_ do"'. & !K'tvlct' v.•arran!y. Ca~h ~ Ho,ses 856 .. ,.,.. ... "" ..... BURLI-D walnut •he•l o! ·~~·~""-','n""'~· ~----1 ---------54j-3774 C.fl.t .... .. "I 'P r 2'' ..... "' "lhoat business. 1~15 Hrs per wk.. d . h • :.0 8'12~21j Plan nr lf'r;ns to 36 mo. , -----------·"" ., nr "·.:o .... 111 Flexible work schedule. Sh, rawen wit marble top. C UOf 9', floral print, good FRI SAT· Choice Furniture· \\'AYNE JO" riding sv.-eeper , Muil•al lnstrumonts Ill lfuiry for full ~leetkln. ,. Hf's! farillty in Nc v.·port -~ expcr. pref'd. Reply $200. Call 6-15-1679. cond. $85. F'ri.. aft 8 pm, all Hiboy 'oiest of dwn'. Jarobien 84 " tr I. p I,. x 1 ·~;.:.:~·:;:;:.:;;.:.:;.:.::.;;::.;;;:;::: Anicnnas sold or !nstallt.-d at 7 yr reg. Arab gt'lrlint; \\'strn, 711 !.hlo Park Dr . to Cla''ifi .ed ad o<o •Jo Sell the old stuU. Buy the day Sat. 846-9528. walnut Exee. Desk, Duncan mower, S'x.14' tanclt:m axle eosl v.·ith 11 ny -10, •'-t En~!. trail. Jumps. Raines 67'":r3.W,.,, .. _______ I ...,., .. _, FLUTE· EXCEU..ENT ~v "'" l·l-2". 51200. 11>37-7158. - t>&ily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, l •nejiwijsjtulfili.jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilll&lil-l ·l-dl.cj;·1e·m~1---64·2··5'76-ij Phyfe Din. table. King t~ll~~;, 1 .. ~1~"' mobile spray CO'.'\DJTION $75. purchased. ABC Color TV, ISi.iP for l11rg1· boat. $2.50 ft. r-1a M.,. ,.._ ...,.,..., headboard i..Amps books rig . .,.,...,.,., .,_ "'" ""'9 !Kl21 Atlan!a at :ira,noha, l~I powf'r. 1\•arrr. 510'""'"1." ~ • .._.. '"'0 "'°· toys & •ii .... """'0Abal•,.: i =c===~=-==~~ -·~ ·-s I $600 11-. oNQ .,. .... TICJ..'TOCKER Tl-IRl•~T Hunl.ington &ach, OOll-1129. [ 1 ~ r111 .. shv.r._!JT.>--:.oR:1aft6. ecre ary Ave. Balboa Isle, 673-90U Office Furnltur•/ ..___--' tC I -SHOP EAST. All mert'han· 824 STf:~EO trad;-ln-Your UM"(! ....._-:!.,~ NF:\VPORT U1:h. $1.50 ft (up Gd Skills Call Lorraine Miscellaneous Ill diM!' ',ii p~. Sale starts -~E~q~u~iP~·'-----..:.:~ 1-qu1pml'nl \\'Ill suvc you s . ~,...,... I to 25·1 side tif', on Rivo Alto \Vesl<"liff i\1on. 120 E. 19th St, Costa on purcl\llS(' of any 1u·v.· r l111.nrl('L 1194-35?1. 65PC'';n~~ Age°? A FURN. LR set, lampi, BR ~1esa S!i£:.!;hrs ~$z:i. :;~ j;s~ lly!!lt'rn Ln ·lhf' filtOl"f.'. USA BC);t5....-...1=:_&:._,S~k~.-9~1~! 1 l · lngl'r, · · set, dln. rm &el 2-TV's. DECORATOR hu super ....,.....,... stor. ca ,..,. "'" \ · Sl('l'l'O •·n-1gh1 L111u1dators, Boats, General 900 s, ~ 1 (~1ar~i~a'S6ntcrJ A COH'VtMENT SHOPPJHC Potted plants. ~1135. hea\'Y plush sh11.g carpet 19th CM, p~~. 642-3408. 179 r.:. 171h SL, Costa ti.1esa. I FIBERGl..A~ Inboard ski· SEWING cu1oc FOii THE MISC furn, c Io thing leftover. Royal blue :r> yrs. GOOD small metal office s.ta-244'.l. '* '* * boar. Damagt'd by wind and --~~S~E~CRET~~A~R~Y~~w~a~n~t~e~d~,~~~~~~OAl.~ON~~TH~E~GO~.~~~~~~~~~~~;·~lassware~~~·~9-~5~SO~I~. ~&~Su~"·+~H~a~,bo~'gb;l~"~'~35~-~yd5•~·~-~~l~o~~~l•~:l'~·~~ E. 18th St., LUDWIG double bass drun1 P1t Thompson watf'r . Sell for salvage. minimu'!1 2 ~exp. Typing 1507 Kathleen N.8. 543-3372. gold 39 yd.11. Tobacco 52 -· · act, R.ogt!h chronic 109 39th St. Apt. 8 12'251 Caladn:' St., OIJwney nt 826 dynasonic snare, 3 Toni New rt Beech Phom· 92.1-449:i . TRAINEES Start Work Monday For G. B. INDUSTRIES Distributin g Areo-Hydro , Equipment Locally ... No Expr. Req'd As \Ve Train $300· $41 o Per Mo. CALL 776-8551 Sat. 10 e.m. • 6 p.m. TV TECH EXP ONl\'. SOS 1'V • 6T.HSOO • TYPIST It G Ir\ Fridty tor : al!t.'Ollntants _ ofc:. Exper. I fJTlme, 5'f3-95H, ' UPHOLSTERY r &16-6634 ' ' ,. j • Rancid -Burst -Scarf .....,; Bedeck -CRACKED There's only onco trouble • .-•••••••••• ••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• •••••• •••••N•••••.._ Ctll'E mixed c-~ r I n g <r : .... Spanitl &:· Beagi':' puppies, 8 with bop musir. !low CIUl : : y.·~k old. Loves children you tell v.•hen lhP recorirs = FIND viouR NAME = .. ,_""· l.::O::CRA=CKE=- 0 ' --• J 1 • 16' SPEED boat w/outboard • • FR.EE German Shep. 2 yn $50. 25· Classic inbollr'd : WIN FREE SHl""AAI PASSES : ~ld;,:;.'!:,I. 91lHJIOO. °"""°""' w/U"aBec 11000. 28" D«"I VWI' ClW-acter tugboat $1500. 14' : : CUTE puppies, part Lab & ? Power Cat $100. 25' Owens f.ach DAILY PILOT Winner f rREE! 557-8190 ::: 1~1~·u1i:l~,;~tras~.- ·~,_._ T.wo $2 Value T1'ckets .=.· FRE ~T~TENs ~f~,h 1:;,~rr·r~"~:~;i \.:lt:L~ I , v.·rekdays ;,1&-1900 'l FEM 8 wks puppies. Half , :_:_=:.-,~-- Australian Sheph. llalf ·rer-i 25 Ov•ens boat sle€ps 6, ll('I\" rier. 962-6Zll. r ush1orl!, canvas. floor, --Nf'll !y dN-nrntt'.'d . ~lust M'(' COCl<APOO f1•rnalc fl'l'f' lo 111 h11 1f'v•• "!~2~>:~. good homt!. l..i kl"S children. Cal I 962-3241. Great Dane, l 1i years rn:.,.! * 962-1828 * now' Call 642 S67B Now~ Campers, Sal•/Rent'20 '73 GMC CAMPER SPECIALS HERE NOW Ovc•r 3ll -%-1 ton pickups in stock. LOOK AT THIS! '73 G~tC '4 wideside pk:lrup, radio. heater, custom cab, 875xl65 llbt'rglus belt tires, powrr 1tl"f'rlng, pow,. r brakt>,., brautltul Span!M gold 1111th dual camper, mir· ron & liD sll()('kR le 11pring11, pnwrrC'tl l>y a b11!'. 350 Vi l'ng .. l:i200 CO.V.\\'. Serial 5()5.119~. $3695 FULL PRICE BILL BARRY GMC -PONTIAC-FIAT 1 l~t SL at S.A. t°t"ll.')'.) 2lXXl E. ii'lt ~'!.,Santa Ana 5'>8-HXJJ Truck• Vac:i nriC'S cost money! Ren! your house, apt., slore bldg., etc thru a Dally Pilol I C!as..~1l1f'd Ari St.•Jl 1dlc ilen1s 962 tTrUcks 962 Trucks 962 " • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :1 • • • :1 :1 • • BRAND NEW 1973 GMC 1/2 TON PICKUPS li9 250 •n9in•, 1p•r1 ,;,., 9•u911, padd~d d•1h, ti11t1d 91•11, wood floor. fully f•ttory 1quipp•d . PLUS TAX & LICENSE IMM IOI.A Tl DlllVllY OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY T1le DAILY Pl~OT .. a•n It eoiy. Just check thro•gltolrt tM c.1..Ui.cl sectloe few 0 ods .. ll1tl119 wt111ter1' .-omes. It yee fJM yo"' ...,. Jut call 642:5671, E•t. ll4, betwMI 9 a.M. aH 1 p.m. to mall• tkkets st uy cotrN•lnt OITOll9•Mellh to pic.k DAILY PILOT effko. tip JOUr " " • • GMC TRUCKS, 'h TON TO J TON S, SPR INTS, SUBURBAN , Jlll.5·14 DOORSOPl:N WE£mlllfl2 NODN WUXUTS 2 P.11. " • CREW CABS, J IMMYS, VANS, RENTALS, LEASING Als.o full llnt of V1ns • C1mpers • Motor Homes Mini Homes • Conv•rslons At Big Disc ount Prkes. Nobody Be1ts Our Fin1nc· Ing 111 ' . . ·-· . .. .. . .. • • ' . ·' .- .. • DAILY ,II.OT F'ldl1J...,,y5,191> ~~~~~~·~~~~iiii~~~~~~l ~~~~~~,~~~~~~f~~~~~l1-Aul-~~k-•_ ..... ~·~"°1 ~~~~~~,~~~~~~ ~--_ ... __,](i]1 1 --Jli1 --~ lil I -l!il l -llil .__I __ ... _-_,!§] TOYOTA I L~i; .. I~!.__---·-__.].-.~· -Llf' -·'=''litr-1 ;~;~~;..;;::~~1 -'""'""' S.i./ltonl 920 ~"11 ... Biko" Cycl", Blk", Cycles, Bile" 925 --· ·-T~kl' H2 All Now 72'• Autoo, lmpomd 970 A·•t ... lmpon.cl -Sc 925 Scooters 925 Scooton s.i./._ ,_ ~G of tho ..u, I' 1 yr old. ooto,. 1---"""----1·10 INTERNATIQllAL % ton All D•-• CAPRI DATSUN "* ' Umes. SI .. 9, SM. -------·70 """ "" "' Lis""'""" Joll•'-.uRLo.T1A"'ocy*~1.. 1st Sbow1"ng :.=i11c. :,a:· .. ~· ~ tm?:tCf' 15f've. 2c!:,! ·~1k~Co~GssE::i ~ml., xlrtt cond. $800:: * 8 ~c alr mnditlonllw, l{lllt rtma: ~y~ 'BMmi' = SPECIAL . tm o.4'r8Utf JmZ,.: ~ENDER campw. Sips .;1~~:~~~ oo. Xlnt 1:-~~AI== E~:~: ·=z~c~ =~ ~~c: 'fro~ ~star~!:!r.000: =~~~i~~· ·~Tto~J°r~ ........ :. $4~ 1 ALLOTMENT =· ~ F ~ to s. Self cont. Like new. Many cond .. $1S5. In pl'rfcct tunning •nler HONDA • YAMAHA of the old .. •~Recreallonaf PONTIAC .., Harbo< L.C. ...... 182FWQ, Gm/ 197? CAPRIS . ""' ssm. Call ..... X""' W/1988 CMC ~· T 646-861)8 w/many xlJ'a• .$62!1. " "'"' TRIUMPH Bullde" lnlrod"''" a Blvd c.ita Meta 54HOI! ,,;'""'· bubo, AM l'ldlo. &R~w ._RE 61>-0'lSL ,.,,.. .. llo mu • .,., ot:Hl57. ·n Kawa 100 C<TR Dirt oaor. 641Hf<02" Up "50% d-. New 20' Motor Hmne Ett;Ji,. ..... irim. TOYOTA .......... $1111i .. ,,., "" • FIAT QUICK CA.SH Blk• S27S. ~O Honda 350, new rebll ~'"'' 2ts5 """"'' 81"'" C.M. '70 JEEP WAGONEER C:.::.'."'r..u,,142EYZ, white, j Y FOR __ ...;,..• -----1 $48--5866 J~n• wt1.1. $375. 646-1.922, ~ & 646-:M28 that alee.pt 8. Rear dtnette Cuttom wag6n. VB,, · IMMEDIATE ·n Spyder. Perteet Corid, ·n T:iO HONDA, Uke new. 64o--0742. MQtor Homes with bl& 6 cubic; foot re.Di&· automatic, power 1teertrw\ 71 TOYOTA •••.•••••• $2999 ~ xtra hard 1op. 3 yr auar on THROUGH A Less than 4IXKl mi's. Sac. '68 BSA 6.'!0ec, mint cond. Sale/Rent HO eratnr atw>danl. More water, alr rond .. 4 wbed drtve. L.C., HT, 872Dli"C, ereen, DEUYERY 4 new en,. moo. 963-406I. $1100 or bst olr. ~~1309. Best offer. --capacity, 1arler boldlna: Super ,Perlect. (7628Qf) l'lldkl; hubl. JAGUAR 1969 H"'ky "°· MX 962-4202 Roni A Motor Home tank • 50 Kal ... tank, 136119 D~E ~· l'ON"U TOYOTA .......... 11799 COMPARE DAILY PILOT ·~=R~""'~~""~ .. ~·~ssso~·~·~ ·n HoM a ce 175. Llke new for your V11c:iitlon standard. All thla on a T!AC, 1 Blvd., Hi tux., 295CQT, yellow, HA'.NDARD (!) 197l. JAGUAR VU't. '4 , , 496-1422, evt'l1ings condition. $395. ca 11 * l3'-430l __ *_ _ Brand new '73 Dodae 360, Costa Msa, 5t&-t017 Ef· radio. <ill'~r f AMAl-lA 1970, 125 Enduro. 842-4250 V-8, power chaait wtth pow· ftctive thnt inm. ·11 TOYOTA •••••••••• $1399 EqulPMENT ~;,::u:=, ~ WANT AD Only 1400 mi. beautiful con-um ~ ?'JO P ioneer. low ~~ace.1'.,"':, .:; ~' . .m :f •~rln&, ~tic brakes, 1955 GMC VI, 4 1P<1 trana., ~~:·• ~. ~. L 4 ~ Synchro Trani t1ret. fither, lnteJ'lot dition. 49'l-(l309. II C U al 6 r • au ma trans-3000 int. on ~ul. with ' . .. ..___ --to•-· n-•...: t ·~-It-M-m eage. a !er pm, \11att Jten Hitch & rack, misakm and Dual Wheels. or w:ltbout rack I toolbox, iO TOYOTA •••....••• $2199 i: 81;~~.;J ~""~ e~.... ~ .... 642 5678 Ua...e somethihg )'OU want to 492-8668 846-5742, $8995. (No. 008194). xlnt coOO. 1950 P"oni VI RI tux., 01.lCRH, yellow. 4 3 t>olit Restraint Sys!. 7,m> to 18,000 mlla M low • · sell! Oaai.tied ads do It Need a "Pad"! Place an ad! Seti the old stuff. Buy the SAVE $1500 Pickup, needa little work. '10 TOYOTA · · ••· •.••• $1799 S: BumW!f Guard.I Fron~';! ~r> ~LLAc -.-.-ell • c:all NOW 642-5678. Call 6f2-.5678. new ltuff. $8995 SJ.Z. Aft 6 pm, 494-em. MKII cpe., 29BBLW, beta:e, Heat 29XI Harbor BJvd. 1 ~--..,.--,--,...-.,97""0 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 A1ttos, Imported 970 V•ns '63 , AM/FM. AT, AC. S. Bucklt Seats Colta~~M;f,!esa~:.,,,.,.-~~~ 1---~--------~----1·--------170 TOYTOA .......... Jl999 1. RadU( Ply TirH " FULL PRICE '68 CHEV VAN ':.:.1 A'"l"Ac m>IIE, ....,, 8. ¥ • Pinion Steerln& ·nu-•~~ vu. M;"s.:1;' Int oduct ,.,,,, ' 1 • 9 Anilt Ban. UUCI ilU!Nllll r ory ~"ltr VB, automatt~. PS. (2M.11B) '70 TOYOTA ••..•••••• $1899 .10. Slmdated Woodgrain 1963 Harbor Blvd, C.M.. Bill BAR DJ SAVE$$$ Mk n w,.,, 552BQN, ,... ""' Panel . 64Hl3'1JM>-7m • .f1 HOWARD Chevrolet . radio, ' •pd. u . Aod ·....., more. . . · im XJ6-4. dr Jaguar. H,IDl GMC·PONTIAC·"IAT Newport Beach ~'l:?_Yc;r'drA ·" ...... · lll99 ALL HAU: EUROPEAN , ml. M"'I .. crlllce. o.,y,,, Start The NEW Y~AR OFF RIGHT \ MacArthur Blvd & Jambol'« '""'""" • •• 797AYn, ye1. ~COR 642-GWrtEves: 6'5-<1641. {lat St., At S.A. Frw)'.) 833-0SSS , low, AT. . Gusta~ ~Inc. Mere. 1970 J,_GUAR XJ6. Perfect. 2000 E. i,.t SI., Santa Ana 70 TOYOTA • ••••••••• $1199 16800 Beacll. Blvd at Warner OOO _.,. n~ -h-" 558-llXX> '71 DODGE % TON VAN. Corolla $pr'., 169BQ.f'. yellow, llunlhVtoo Bettcb . ~u:·~m. _\.lLll DOT D ·AISUN 1::1 A J BRAND NEW DATSUN 510 4-DR. SEDAN Th• 510 h11 0~1rfl11d c1m •111i,.1 11f1ty front di1c br1k•1, ind1pe11d1nt r•1r 1w1p•111io11, nylo11 c1rp•ti11q, full wifly! int. with r1clining bwc••t 111h, fi11t1d ql1n, wli it• w•ll• 111d m11ch "'or1 111 1!1nd1rd. Sir. #401546. FULL PRICE -+· TAX I LICENSE PAC E ARROW V8, a•tomatic, """""' • opd., radio. ~ \ (:113) 592-5544 =="""'-"=='~-=I paint. (X3T.I07) $2999 DAVE '70 TOYOTA .......... $1.199 "H ..... ot, tho Vlkl"9" MAZDA TIOGA ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 c.orona 4 dr., 066BEJ, while, -- ___,,_,.,,OtKSWAG -7 811iiec~~ A:.ro~A .......... s YO ' BE . BILL YATES INC l/1/'13. Mk II • dr., 196BQC, ,..Id, DEU HTED l\ICYI'ORHOMES 19 S 5 MET R 0 IN· AT, radio. THAT we're adted, the '73 ANO CAMPERS TERNATIONAL Van w/6 "10 .TOYOTA •" •····· · $1099 CAPRI.ls moYina American -san Juan ca --ey~-ale 1'::111.Af ~io 804B -e G\&8tabon-t.mooln-M1....,.+----l- Alongalde San Diego Frwy. $300.00. Call Che ate r •. 7 ioYciT · Ul')' ls moYinC Capris. 11•1 4934511 e 499-2361 e 837-4800 548-840(. o A ••• .... •• • $1899 the mcY.t lovUJe car on the ---==="'"'-~1·12 OiEV ~ T v p Mk 11 wen.. yellow, AT, American ~ today. 27' TRAVCO led cpt•d maP ~· ru:-radio. '71 CAPRI WITH AIR. 25' DISCOVERER Mi.FM. 'Stia.rpH:t 11 you•ri "10 TOYOTA ••.•.••••• S1699 (665GIOJ $2189 ~-2'l' OONTINFNTAJ.S , M..... •'MINI l\fk ll cpe., 078CCJ, turq., Gu1t11fson Unc Mere ID' PRIDE I JOYS see. ""'' aac, ___,. or AT, radto. VAN CONVERSl'JNS offer. 847·37ll oc 548-2993. "10 TOYOTA ......... , $1099 16800 Beach Ill Warner' ~aleg • Service e Rentals '64 VW Van. Xlnt cond. Corolla wp., Ola, red, 4 * sJl-=~~~5644 * Danmar Inc * ""bull' • .,.;..,. New """· •pd .. radlo. • "Home of the V'iling". · • clutch, transaxJe, trans, etc. '70 TOYOTA ••.••• , ••• $1099 13!!0' Harbor Blvd., G.G. $900 firm, ~alt 5 pm. ToroUa wgn 99'1CX\Y red •n Capri 0000. Automatic. 5.11-6800 :• I I Next to G.G. Dal!UJI '69 Ford Super Van, Cust int -4 spd., radio. ~ow~Mu8fe·1n~' ~~ ~!c.!; --------i & map. 302 Stick, $2400 bef • Dunlo 1972 Executive 28'. Perfect 10 or aft S 645:-8889 '69 TOYOTA •.•.•••••• $1199 group. P ala, Mlnt condition. Radlal ply tirel •. 64 DODGE VAN panelled Corona cpe., YCR.221, blue, cond, Private Patty All Extraa! Beller than new .fttms good $600 Be t OU · AT, radio, AC. l----=·===,.,-- condltlon. $19,500. 644-1630 9S2-9624 ait 4.Ji 1 er, '69 TOYOTA ·····••·•· $1199 CnROEN • • • AUTOMATIC ROTARYS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY HUNTINGTON aycH MAZDA E'\11?S Or" 673-1636 dayw. . Corolla lpr., XTI..072, turq., 1 __ ..,.,. _____ _ TroJlort, Utility 947 ~_!~~ ":::l ;,:::; • 4 spd., radio, AT. C1'._:·'-n Ma-r·~t1' ---7-~~-'-'T' -~ • • · 69 TQYOTA .......... $1199 Jrve - -TANDEM CAR TRAILER block 1912. 963--2838. Corona 4 dr., YXPS28, white, ·w/brakes, & new tires. '69 GMC CAMPER-VAN, % AT, radto. , $650. M&-355.1 N.8. T, V.S, auto, ftl;H, $2500. '69 TOYOTA •.....•••. $1499 CdM 673-7018. Corona 4 dr., YPTS26, eret'JI, -------- AWARD WINNING LUXURY CAR ·n G?ifC Van, V-8 paneled, AT, radto. AC. R d & R II II~ l crpted, m•~. m"'1 see! '69 TOYOTA .......... $1299 .. • yo Molon Awl01for5* . ··~70XI Corooa 4 dr., l8EEK, bciie, ~----~ ~-=""""~-~=I AT, radio, AC. Orange County's Oldest Dir. Autos W•nted 968 '69 TOYOTA , ......... $899 1fiOO Pomona Ave. i. Anlfquos/Cloulcs 953 REWARD ~. ~;:'.;: YBFlM4. ...i, eo.1a ~An~~ 1958 Ford, Skyllner, hrdtop ___ _,_ ___ ..._ Convert. Excel c 0 n d. '68 TOYOTA ••• · · ••• · • U099 11"" ~· 1-"""""'•<Ir., WXY536, wh1te, '71 DATSUN R~r~;;;:;,;;•· WILL PAY OVER radio, AT. 240Z K..D.. Bl •--'-'68 TOYOTA .......... $1009 Vehlcln 956 ..... , ue llUUll ~ 4 dr., WIF084, blue, Or.lginal Spotless.. Fintlh, '72 E :DJ Ford Camper Van Crufsalre La Jolla model s:roo miles, alr cond. Michelin tires, awnings etc. (TI4) 6T.H618. '63 TOYOTA Land-Crut11er. reblt engine & trana. $12Jl. 644-1271. Truck1 962 '72 MAZDA RO.TAR Y Wagon. FactOI")' air, 4 speed, rai:Uo, heater, radial lirea. (302FFJ). NABERS CADI LL.AC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Colta MCIB s.,i0-910D 1911 t\1AZDA R-100, lo mllea, xlnt cond. Call after 5 ~ GREAT USED CARS · BUY TH( NEW FLE AY New '73 Buick Electra Umlhld Sedan $1495 1971 VW BUG . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1095 1968 VW BUG . . . . . . ' . ' . . Vinyl ln1• .• R1dlo, Hultr. Likl New. J.60CYI Vlnyt lntitt., Radio, He11..,. Ste a, Ori .... Thlf..OM. WTFlfl 1965 VW BUG $695 1967 DATSUN 1600 ROADSTER '. .... $695 vi,.y1 lntll'. Radio. HHlltt, Nice Cl•. NBGl11 1964 VW BUG $549 1965 INTERNAT'L TltA VELALL $595 Vinyl Int ... , Radlll, Hnter, Priced 111 ~ell, PCRl.54 --------~---------1 'l65 VW. BU§ _ . Vlnyl lnt1r .. R•dlo, H11tw. RD!I J92 5615 I 966 DA TSU~ PICK;Up-.. -:-'." :~ •.. -. "'.". ~99 ~· ....... ' .... '•. ~ .._ .. -----~---~------~- $ 775 RMllo, HN1•r. Good Condlllon. REE.J72 ' 1·966 VW BUG • 1971 VW SUPER BUG ............. SAVE 1970 OPEL STA. WGN. S795 Vinyl Inter., Radio, H11ter. Nlct C.r. "4CPI ~ Sl)&t'd. L~ R.ct<, X~nl CondlUon. 2llCCJ 1968 VW CAMPER ............ $1795 1967 VW BUG ................... $999. Vlrl)'f Inter .. Radio, HHlfl', lmtMCllll!t CM • .XDl..Ht 1970 VW FASTBACK . .. . . .. .. .. . $1388 Vlnyl lfll«., Redi.. HMW, E11Clllln1 c..&. 4tlBEN 1959 AUSTIN HEALEY SPRITE . . . . . . $595 1v11 E~ L.oOll.1 lo 11:...,. Good. GBW1'111 1969 VW CAMPER ............... $1996 Radio, H11N(. hctlltnt R."(~ ZWXS1i 1968 VW FASTBACK $1095 1969 VW BUS ................... $1995 1970 VW CAMPER .............. -$2195 1Un Roof, t~i.tt Corid. ZDUIS .. LARGE SELECTION OF BUSSES, CAMPERS & STATION WAGONS -----, 1111 JMPOR.TS WANTED 0...,..-0>uniy'• TOP I BUYER BILL MAXEY TOY OT A 18881 Beach Blv :. H. Beach Ph. 847-8555 J Fe.or Junked or ~clced -utas. 494-1003, ... ail 21 hr.I. Autoo, 1!!!0~ 970 .ALFA ROMEO '61 AJpba 'ROOieo, Guilla Super, Weben, 5 spd, Mechanics special, call Ul-959'J aft 5 $500 firm '72 Alfa Spider, lo mi's, fact WUTanl)'. 631~ IMW . - ! $ ' 1225.66 - OFF WINDOW PR1CE (#4V39T3H~1921l New '73 Buick Estate Wa90n 51000.60 OFF INDOW PRICE ( 4R45T3C1051S7l .. _ ___......__....__. New '73 Blild: Le Sabre Cus'°"l Sedan 5817 •. 24 ' OFF W'NDOW Pl!ICE ONLY s2977 .33 FOR A IRANI> NEW 1973 BUICK CE~URY Colowd1 tt.rdtop <;po. Mo4lel #~d37 -ORDER. YOURS TODAY •. c. • I • . . F•lday, J"""'1 ~. 1'73 DAILY PILOT 31 1~~~11~~~1 ~~~-l~~~ll~~J~ ~~~ ~~~~~ 1~7""~--~1 1§!~~1 ~-;; ..... ~l§l~JI -·-I§! -..... ~r:.! __ ... _ .... ~!§];;;;~I -·-1§11_-_ ... _-1§1 1 .;;I ___ ..... ~1§!~1 ~ ....... w '10 A-. I_..,. 910 Autos, UtM 990 A..._, Uwl 990 AutM, Uwl 990 Autos, Uwl 990 A-. Usod 990 Autos, Usod 990 Autos, UMd MERCEDES IENZ VOLKSWAGEN ;,,;;;.,;,;;;;;,,•~*;.,,.__• -'-'-'l;.,;,;:;,;,;;:..C..;;A;;.;Dl;...LLA_C-'-'-' CttEYlt>LET --'-C-H-RY-S-LE_R_ FORD FORD LINCOLN M. Plttto.. MESORCUESEDDES '66 yw_ .ll.IG ~~2.!"'t.:1~ 4 ~. iwt:io, beater. A You 1.1'1! the wlMer of ON DISl'LAY cle8n .... fZR'118'1J ONLY 2 "'~··· .. , .. Sh • $895 Sports, Vocotlon A •;:~•=•Car ljOWAR'! Chovn>lot Rocrootton.I Vehicle Comlnt In Every D• N.wpott S..ch ~ '69 2llOSL (069Gi'>t) ~ MacArthur ar\'d A"'Jamborec &t lbe ·10 2!llC Cpe \9'9E;l!Fl l5!riO ~3 1555 , An•holm Convention YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER l.araeat IClf'C:Uon of. c.adO· lacs ln Onnaa County. Sales.Leasing. ·u 280SE Sedan • '69 vw vap. SUdt~ aide door J~~""t.~14 t&t2CRZ> •• $6775 window•. mploytt fUrnbih . ~.: NaL--ASK AllOUT Ing new van !or""'· Must ~ call ~«18. ••t. 314 uwn OUR UNIQUE ICU, prl. Pl)'. St,150. Will ~~clr::t! ~rr:hlo ~ Caclilac: Us.eel Mercect.1 Lt•u lll.'t~Pt older , .. r~u partial toU·tree number a 54G-ID>J 2000 HARBOR Bl.. Pt.n1 payment. M.>Ul • • • • COSfA MESA H f I MUsr sell -Campor ---'-~~~--540-9100 Open Sunday : OUM 0 111ports, w/t<nt. J.w loont 1682 on AMC •n FLEETWOOD Inc. all nu lirel, eag, •10. !st BROUGHAM $595 cub takes It. Ph day1 1 6862 Manchester, Buena Parle ~-5353. eves -t!l+-4810. '70 Hornet Factory 6~ car. Lea on the· ~t~Ana F'n.'Y mo vw a:..... Xlnt oond. than 6,COJ miles. FU.II ~·-RIH WfW-. Power Steering, Air Cond. PQ'*W, faciotY air, vinyl 1 """""'='""'~""'-~-1 • tires. Owner Excellent ~ car l663-top t.ft'did interior All op. 'gt 221 SE, AC, leather, PIB, must sell. Reasonable. AF\VJ. ......:_ (!~-) ' Just overhauled. G.I0-1479. .......... ~ · ___ •_,548-""'U'.15~-.c.*--i ·"'i;;~vw'°"''"'eam~-,,...-.-.. -,.-,-.,.-. S 1695 $8444 , MGA ""'" paint, •M<ks. Tape NABERS CAOILLAC deck + more. Immac. $1500. Wiant s Le :!GOO Harbor Blvd . e Coofa M.,,. ,;..9100 ~fGA '60 RoadJler 1600 . 645-4n2. Mech. xJn't. lJod.y-top ~-,~.,~vw=-c~..,-.-----m-1 .. -1 ' 1 ·ro Cad ~ Dl!Vil, gold Radio. $375. --7159, H.B. new, (act. ~'ll111lftleed eng., Ammfc:mlllalola,. w/blk lcathr inter. Blk top. MG. tent etc. xlnt C(lirld Loaded. Lo mi's. 1 Ow!'lf'r. 557-3522 .547·5126 Immac. J4500 firm. 545-8240 10 MDM;rRLO 1966 Chrytlor c1o1 ........... , Cpe. VI, au , PS. air, owner, 82.IXXI , mi. A1r oond. bucket .eats. ~.nt n.dW>. I fulll' equJp·d. Good cond. tZYKU~) Or-j'LY •tust ae:U. 00-2917. $U95 '68 CHRYSLER Dl, I owner, HOWARD CL. I 1 full power, radial llrn, mus:! ~ a::h e tee this one. 5*-4784. Ma~: Bl>'d • Jam'°"" COMET uusss '71 VEGA 4 1pd., radk>. ~N. $1266 ~ lt · You'll Buy It .... ~uw • VOi.YO • 1966 Ha.rb!ir, C.M. 646-9303 '7t CHEV. Clatom ~. ton plckitp VS, automa.Uc, PS, a ir, radio, wrap around bumper, 8 ply tirt>s. l9T71~l ONLY. 1.$2395 HOWARD Chovrolol • N.wport S.•ch ~lacArthur Blvd & Jambon.'I! 833-0555 1966 Com\!1 VR, good con- illtion. Betll ouer. 495-5.189 aft 6 pm CONTINENTAL '&.i CO r--'TI:-a:NT AL. Sun Gold, all pwr. air. ltlnt. con. $785. Will at.-cept older t·ar as partial payment or bids. pr1. p(y. &6-1219 . '67 Lincoln Continent.a.I Load. f'd Xlnt cos.I. lo ntiles tcrr-391<1 aft 6 "'krlaya.. 66 4 d r. Fullpow•r A'-t/FM 11tt't'e0 11250. 993·tlS4 CORVAIR DUNE buro' bulldt>MI, 1962 41ipd, Corvair Mon1.1l, Runis 165. 846-2587. •----------or546-18$. l ~c-o=~=-~~~~-' '65 Volkswagen }~ a c t or y ·73 MnN"T'£ CARUJ Cpe CORVmE "fl ~tOB Rd1tr. Blaze xlnt r ............ r. New pov.-er. Many 1234 So. ~fain St. 17 TO CHOOSE ~ROM .. ,....... . 1---------co nd AM radio -r .. •-Sa.ntaAna ~ th11.n 1.000 n1ll C's. '71 Ford MustarKJ Mach I '67 FORD VAN Camper i\1t1ti!l!C'(! Dt•luxr Club "'llltQ11, \\'ood Plll\(•led, V~rv Low Mlltt, .\lu,,:I k~n l 7~Fl.\\'', $2895 l.M• Sink & "'atcr PunlP. f1'C• t.lx, Double Bt-d, Ov~rtw&d !latch, ~Jag \Vhi.-th1, l-'ull (.'unuins, Radio. 929ASJ. Wards.Lee AmericMMalorw ,. S47-5116 lZW s.,. ~luin SI. Sanl4 Ana 65 Ford Y2 ton pickup Camper shell. llUIOnutlli", PS. A nlre rig. \l.3r.8711l ONLY $1195 HOWARD Chevrolet Newport Bea ch MacAr thur Bh•d I Ja111boroe uun5 MECHANIC'S SP,ECIAL 'SS F'ORD 2-DR. Good body £: intulor. 6 {')'!, auto. ~totor bad but hav1• good extra motor. You change. $150. flrn1 . • 543-3691 • ' $1595 fNr~qmrtilr·umn1 I LB'"..:::.:~~ j ·72 FORD C'apr1, 1'l(XlO n1111'ic, blui• rnt~laHh·. 11hltt• 1n1. 2000 rt eng. $~. 11nn1ac. "30-23'8. GREMLIN '70 Gremli n Bi~ 6, J S,lCJ, ~Ing \\ )l(~·\11, {rH!illE.N I $1895 Wa.rdS.Lee Anwlc8ll Motors ,. S47-5116 1234 So. f.'11111 St. Santa Ana ·, • eKtrwl! Super Clean. U600. · '67 to ~n EL DORADOS BurJ1lMy .... ·Hh bh1.ck vinyl '68 FORD Country Squire lup:age ski rack, chains &l.'l-1112 All ha run , .......... _, lop, pov.'t'r 111.'Tt'ln", factory '6.1 Cor"ette 327. 34D hp, l "-'aeon. VB. automutic, IMPERIAL $2.200. ~192S afte . BUICK vt> power, .._ .... ~ ~-~ t-'°l"'--~"-'~"'~"'•"'''L<''-r"';''-f-ndlo,-•-~-~·P.=======~ , ; m · all' 1UOritng. J \\11Kerec. alr;-'°rn11..... un..-a, -factory .._. , n=.ttt;-po-.f'I 11tccr 'f!7 MOB-GT, XJnt cond. cond Must !ltll, Belt oiler 1----------1 11unroof, con~i~e and y,•arranty a \' a 11 a h l". 4 spd, lftds some ........ y Ing and brakl?ll. roof rnck, Very sharp. Make olfer _,00 ph 7l' ~• _7 L S b hardto ,.,.__. I Int · (1H5nt3K460707l SAL E \\"Ork $1200. bef 10 or a.ft 5, (actnrv air, rlldifll °"''hite 49Hl98 over .... ~ ' ' ~· . '68 Buick • ii re ~ U>u•ce o enors PRICED. DAVE ROS.~ 6-15-8889 w111l-tirt"S, Vl'ry low mile_,., '71 IMPERIAL LE BARON . FOR THE TRUE EXECUTIVE 1971 CONTINENTAL MK Ill $5889 t'ully fR~lo~ ('(IUIPPC'd. with- 001 u do11lll OfM." ol u~ ti.Mil buy~ &.nywlk'rt'. Throe (3) ,,, thootil' fl'Otll. (sd. tl'i'S9AIHUl. ALSO NOW GET THIS. t.i<>l)C('OOS loo.I U N'CO L'l 11i 1th Inv. m1ll'11. Truly a Hnd !or llK!hl' \I ho i>l('P up. 1-\llly faelory ,,..1u11)1i.~I. You'll dn\'o• thl11 01\t' ho1nl'. ~. 1TX\'lfrJ1. Gu1t•fton Linc Mere 16.'11.Xl 8'•11,•h al \\'nrncr llunl1Ql.:IO!l Beach 812·IO\ol4 • ~713) 592--554• '"lfo1nr of lht• Viking" CHECK OUR PRICE 13U'a" UR l .• E.ASE YOUR NL\\' 1973 ?tlAll K IV or C'ONTINJ:o:NTAL from tht "VIKING ... Sltuah-d 11;1 new l:willtlr~ In llwlllnj""'oJ---1 l:k'nch. Your ~· motor1ng •'·'flt'rlrn1·f' ls now walli~ for )'QU at • • M~B 'TI VW . ~--back., auto, 4 door, automatic trans, air and · ""ICBE ~\Jll JV>.v.·er, fal1or..· n.lr, \'111'. I -....-" PONTlA~ 2-ISO H1trbor DODGE lou I. ,.... IJ-----1µ~~ 1 . . . tUt--atee:ring NABERS CAOttUC BIVd .. ca.ta. Me58, 5'i7--WI'r · N·"i-s-rRS-CADllLA . . , mt~ ru-.:-1! S. x nt cond. $2,CO'.l. ~.: ... 12·~ ;,...,_,. ... , •·"-.. I, •-· on _.. ... Ex· "' ~ c-1-• all ul r opl"''" Eves Ir. wknds, 6'15-8931. '-vuu. -... ~ · ~U;nt tr'.a~portan;,-;;: XIR· 2fiOO Harbor Blvd. effective thni 1/7/73. 2SX> Hurbol" BIVtl . il~~·l. pop a ~· Gustafson Linc Mere 16. ..... lif>Al'fl al !UTlt'T llunCing-ton R<-am • . ' OPEL 'f,6$600v:'• Xlnl Runni.n&: cond, 13.1. (Nta ?tfesa 546-9100 '72 ?\JONTE Ci\RLO \'inyl '67 DODGE ~R tt1eM 5'M)..9100 54222 64EHi71.8 alt 6:00 $866 '61 COUPE DE VILLE toP. tal>t'!lry intt'rior, \"H, Custom Sportsman Su~i,!1 FORD 19&1 Clilaxil' 2 door • v· 1 top ·•·•" • 1 lh · auto1natic, power steering-campeT & tent. v ... , f""'T steer.pwr brakl'!I auto NABERS CADILLAC • 1'11.'L')l.a • 1213• 592-554-1 "llom•· of tllC' \1\king" MERCURY '70 OPEL GT '68 Kombi, blue, radio, il0,000 See it-You'll buy it! t~r, f~~~:• fa~ brakes-windows., automatic, a u1omatic, PS, exlra clean; tram. air orig. o"TiPr 56,000 ~ llarbor Blvd. New Palht. New Radials mi's on new eng. Call air, tilt whtoel, MJ-FPof till whrels, fa1.1ory air, Am-"i nter SPf'{"ial. (VTS890l. mi. exct'ptional rond. thru· CMta ?tft."S<l 54G--9100 1968 ?tferc. Colony Prk sza Black Interior, Radio: 968-1486. -· '3}t41l.I ..... !. radio. IWXN857J. F~t stereo mult iplc>"I. very SAVE $ $ $ out. 73 pla tes. 1968 LINCOLN \\'t1gon. OrM" o~·nrr. Sl~ 099BNP '71 VW Bug Re-obit Ex Ltunl kl"'· mil<'rtgc. ISllJESJI. HOWARD Ch I t ~fadapscar C.?tf . Can be 341--0'..!69 I 6W ... 1M4. . $ . . . $2333 NABERS CADILLAC •vro 1 ·-n ·•tor 6·.~ pm . 1---------·c::.o=-'-'c::....:=c_~~ 1495 rellonl condition. IHOO. vo•·vo N D. h -~ ~ ~ ~ fi 6T~ 1. 2600 Harbor BJvd. ewport V9aC .67 i"'ORD LTD Coupe. Vinyl ,1967 Lint• Cont. 2 dr fully '6:1 :'ltc!"<·ury 'A'Hlo:Oll • Xlnl , rm. . NABERS cAOILLAC Costn ~lesa 540-9100 AlncArthur Blvrl I.· Jamboree .............. 11 · loodM. Coocl l'Ond $1 &1. ~hapc.-. $5.iO. !H71.~ \V. lSfh ]mpurts '65 VW Kornbl-Bus, good 1966 Harbor, C.~1. 646-93'.13 2600·Ha.rbor Blvd. 833-4555 Lop, -~·run iterior. 541--0'189/64&-l().I.!. St C l\f 5'1.li·lfi27 . -~•,.,· n. lt'7Q:; ....... ""'..;'·-·n VEGA p,\SE:I.. 4 speed, automaUc, JIO"'o"f'r stet'.rlng· 970 I Au.tos. • .l.mport~• 970 8 [ ~~F.V. ~ .::s .. •M:" '67 BUICK SKY~K. Fae· O>Bta Mesa 540-9100 k> nillc11• f89967J J $1 399 ·70 Ood~l" Challenger R.T. brakcs-scnta, AM·F'M radio, Autos, Imported ~ -uoow.=~j •72 V\V Van, 9 pass. Ta-tory .air, nutomA •power '72 COUPE OE VILLE DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. auto trans, P/S, P/B. factory air conditioning. --'--'--------"--'-----·I · ,... s!et>nng, power brakes. y· I I her · I • 2-lf«J llarhor Rlvd., O>&ta A/C, I o"·ner, Oraru:e Lt'M than 39,001 miles. deck·, AJ.1/FM, !iOOO mi. -d"'. heater, white "•all l1lY top, eat ll.t enor, •1 "l&-8017 Ell " l nd 1u-n 1 ... ., ., ... """" '" "' .., lull -•r lacto-a•• ''' "C&a, ..,. ecuve ~·/VO"" vi n\. I lop. ll c>r r' "' · PORSCHE M•k• ••"· -· ,,·-,, leu lhan 29,000 miles. ~• • ., "· · ., NABERS CADILLAC " ,~, thru tn/73. v.·1U1·an $2000. ~\6.-11611 or •----------I• 'l2 Yollow VW. Xlnl cond. !7S6DLNl. .w•u..,, · Bl d ,-$ 68 CHEV IMP. ~l-1:>21 2600 HRrlxlr '' . "n PORSCHE 914, xlnt cond, MAK.g~~ mll~J-7482 NA~Rf~a~rD~l~~AC 5999 \VAGON VS, autontaHe, PS. .•6~7~0od~,-,~,~,,-.,---Costa Mellll !"-..\0-9100 ' ' wl'h ·ektra.11. Make ofier ... "°'"'°=°'c;c=~-ce'-= Costa fl.1esa 540-9100 NABERS CADILLAC a ir . 1163.>Al ONLY Xlnt l\1echiu uca.l eond. Loar!· ·70 r ORD LTD .i l)r. 11.T . · GiJ--2590. '68 V.W. Bug Re-bit eng. 2f.(X) Harbo Bl d $795 t'd "'/extras. $1550. fi.15-1562 ~·uu po"·cr. fac tory air, lo '61 Porsche Conv. Reblt 1600 good tires. rrJO. Laguna '70 RIVIERA Custoi:n: ~II Costa Mesa r \I 540-9100 FALCON nlilt'a~f'. t'Xt-ellent l."Ond1tion. lnut1 Be L oond Beach. 494-3288. power, air rond1t1o nmg, HOWARD Chevrolet f600DSLl. $2399 DAVE it1i:,. 6~. au · '6G V\V Bus. outfitted far vinyl 1op, slrato seatll. '68 COUPE DE Vl~E. 1''111 Newport Be•ch ROSS PONTIAC . 2480 camping Allking $900 Call l:>KIAEP I S.1399 DAVE power, factory 8.ll', power ~laciUthur Blvd & Jamboree '62 FALCON 2 Dr. Alaskan llar hor Blvd., Coi;la 1\fl'sa, iU Porsche 9U T, air, gd . ' ROSS PONTIAC 2480 Windows & seats, AM-li'M Y.hite l'Xtl'rior 1\'/l'l'd tnt. ~Hi-*117 t.:lfl'C livc thru cond w/xtru. ~. Eves 534-Z£>, Harbor Blvd., C.osia ?tteu, stereo ndk>. (WUP015) 133-0SSS Bucket seats, new tires. 6 111113. or wknds ~76. '66 V\V KarmaM Ghia, 5-16-8017 Effective thnt KeUey suggested retail i..~ .. ~M~al~ibu-. "':rn=-,-,,.-. -A'"1'°"C. cyt. aulo, air . $300. l'rivate ·~n-IU_N_'_O_E_RB_ll_W __ t.,_\~:-l- 'TI Porsche 911 T lo clean, $T!"i. 1/7/U $2900 Sale price $2i99 DAVE PIS &: auto. Body .I: eng "~"-~~y._6&-_· ~1219-·~---O'U Cou-. >'ull !"•"•·•. . · Call 644-1879 ROSS PONTIAC. 2® Call .,.....:>-ftt36 '' .... ... mileage, 5 spd, sunroof, '66 RIVIERA Harbor IDvd., Costa !afeca., good cond. v•~ a.ft FORD factory 11.ir, 1111 whef-1, An1-Geminl Blue $6900. &U-OOSS. 19TI Yellow SUper Bug. 6 pm $11XXl. t-l'ot s1erro radio, IC'SS than Excellent condition. Crv>. Full ......._. &: fn"•..,-· s.t&-fl017 EffectiVe tlru 1~971~-CH"""EVELLE===-~~.~350=, 1----------29 WilL Buy ~·r n...rsche or .~ ....-~~· .......... , 1nm. ., '67 "us TANG VII 44,(Dl milt'S. IXPPI ). VW .... 10',"".,. '"00, Call _ $15.50. Ph: 8.t&-1640. air. ?ttag v.·heels, all vinyl,~~-'=-::;-;=="'°--auto, tir condition, radio '"' ·'I• NABERS CADILLAC j.l'G&' "' • • .._. _.__ wtlb'~ 7l EL DORADO automatic, air conditioning, Kent Allen, 837-1800. '67 VW BUG-RED intenor, uc~ exte • ...,. ' heater wfs, :11,IXXI miles. vinyl top. (vtJT805) $1099 '.!600 ihtrborBl\'d. Xlnt cood l800 644-l03.1 ronlrasrlng blk interior. Fully eqp'd-Llke new-17,1'.m $2,8l0. 847~. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, Costa Ml'sa 5-10-9100 '66 Porsche 912. Good con--· · SllOS95. milea Spec. f i r f! P1 Is I ,65 ChPv l ilr Im pala V-8, oll dltion. BEST OFFER. '64 VW Runs good, nu tires. paint-AM/FM stereo tape . I 2@:> Hll!'bor Blvd., ~ta "70 :r.tAVDUCK Cullton1 '71 Porsche 914, xln't dllion. Call 64H601 RENAULT NEW RENAULT Rl2 •2384 $2095 lhru mm. oonrt. Loe pvt ply. $575. aft 4 PM 494-5992. con-Wilso~. Costa' Mesa. See it-You'll buy it! '68 VW Beetle, automatic ~f.Oll Ltw14• '70 LTD. 2 dr, dlx Brouaham, Ira mM '71 Chev. To1vnsman \vag. air. stereo. Orig cost $5,00J, ns. 494...gg17 -'68 Camaro 396 Raclng equip. Full pv.T + air con<I. Xln't L es 11 t ha n "' h I s I e . VOLVO TOYOTA Air s~~ magi, new l"Olld. Lo mi's. 673--1010. S2.00J. 644-1376 paint. u1...-1u.111. Llr ·64 Clll:."V. No1•fl Stati<ln ·71 LTD 2 dr hardtop. ImmAc • "9""3 CHEVRO \vagon. f air L-ond . $223. rond. F'uJly e<1uippf'd, Mull'! VOLVO 1966 1-larbor, c.~I. ..... "" ?tloving, n111sf sell. 54!HH02.: M.'ll S259.l. 646--0618 PS~l~r'~: 2\s~~'.n"x_l~t~co::. 1965 Chevelle SS. r\v, PB, 1963 Chev V-S. R/H, au.to '69 f'ORD, Galx ~iOO. 4 dr, '73'S 557~ aft !">:30. PS. Supt'r aean. Reblt VS. trnns. P/S, Clean, Reg ror Good tramp car, Bei.1 OUer, hcatc>r. 1187Af'V\ $1399 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. 2480 Harbor Bl vd., Cosla Mesa. ~8017 t.:ffecti\'e thru 1/7/73. '70 FOTlD 500, vinyl hdtop . All J>'l~'t.'r. Alr-{.'(lnd . Xln! rond. Sl700. 968-£1i:l8. 1970 LTD Air/stC'rro, nu radial tin:.,_ xtnt cord, $1995. 541;-8739 ....... l IY•l lOICDtN•!llll(ve"f COUGo1.•·c..ut1•·«'.>0'llf '6.l Buick '1 door P/S, P/B, ST'JO/offer. &itr2163.i 1973 Bargaln, $140. 842·372'2. 548-81~. N.B. A '.. New 980 Auto1, New 980 1 Auto1, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980Auto1, New 9IO HERE N Ow I, Aulo I rans, rad lo, heater' :uiiii;~' ~iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9iil Runs tine. $250. 645-66.r?. • Come in test Drive CADILLAC TODAY! i-.7-0_S_E-DA_N_D_E_V_IL_L_E See It · You'll Buy It Vinyl top. leather interior. lilt v.·hecl, A?tf·FM stereo 3) l radio, po~"tr door locb. 'n SUBARU station wagon. '1 111111 fmil U1.18ACC J. apet\l. radio, healer, 23.IXXI -_. $3555 mil'8. (20CDUI 1589 OA VE YOL"" ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 ,tU NABERS CADILLAC Harbor Bl~ .• Costa ?i.fesa, 2600 HarbClr 81\'d. 546--8017. EttecUve thru 1900 H,arbor, C,AL 646-9303 Cotita Mesa ~0-9100 1/7/73. 'fiG.11' Volvo. xlnt eond "72 CAD. Cpe de Ville. Gofd SUNBEAM Rl~-t ?i.1ake offer. New w-drk. Green vinyl top. l----------I radials. 642-7246 eve/ Day Loaded "'·luxury l'xtra.~. 4 1967 S be Al i 4116-4748. ~. 10,00J miles. $6300. un Am p ne '57 #4 SHARP! New paint, l::mergcncy, 646-40":>1. $350. Call 962-6Mf brakes & byd cyl., tires,· 19'".JS CADILLAC, '73 plates, TOYOTA eng. 0. H. 979-6.100. new <m°", 1130. '65 Volvo, ~ dr. 1225, Very 673-017-1 or !196-5165 TOYOTA'S good cond;, 1 __ 'TO ELDORADO Coupo . ...... "'"' Loaded. Miners gold with Autos, Used 990 black vinyl top. 1118BBKI '73's e '65 Chevy, $100. Runs Now at '72 Prices! • 064 MGe~ 11um Sf199. DA VE ROSS PON· TlAC, 2·180 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, 5'-16-8017 d· k-'Ctive th111 1/7/73. ·MANY MODE LS Ha.ve 110T1tethlng you want to · & COLORS ' ldJ! Oa!ilSitied an. do it 1966 1'1ee~'OOd Brough. RebU <'ng. Nt'W tires & brks. $!IXI. 6-15-1679. Immediate we11 • ea11 Now 64>-6678. AulGs, lmpomcl 970 Autos, lmportod 970 D~ery AT Set It • You'll Buy It 1!186.ltarbor, C.M. MS-9.'m '70 TOYOTA Crown 4 Or. iedan. · 6 cylinder. automatic, air oond., vinyl top, lo mileage. F.BIO) Kelley 1ugeem~ retail $1980 Sale price $14al. DAVE ROSS ":'?NTIAC, mi HarbM m..i. Costa THIRllG OF A. NEW OR· USED VW? ' Let Bill Yates Volkswagen Prove To You Thal We Appreciate Your Business \ - NOW AT ORANGE COUNTY'S #1 VOLUME BUICK OPEL DEALER Volume Discounts Plus Huge Selection Equals Super Savings! 2 Ways! Buying or Leasing_ e OPEL 1973 Opel Manta Sport Coupe 1973 Buick Le Sabre Sport Coupe 4 ,,., .. 1ynct0flltlh h1n1., powtr di1c br•k11, white 1id1 w1 ll1. ti .. ted wind1hi1ld, 1900 cc 1119int , fully reclining bvc•1tl•~h. pliii iiiueh mo11 . #771115 $2458 "' $68'5 LeaM or luy 1973 Electra Sport Coupe A11to""•tie tr1 n1 .• pow•r 1l••ri"ll · pow•1 br1ke1, r.etorv •ir. lini1d 91111, ~i"yl top, d1l1t~• wh11I cov1r1 pl111 much mo••· llC1 02lll) • LeaM or Buy Per Month Leas• Pymt. --1 913-Riviert-Spor\ Goupe- f Mtta, 54&-8017. Etfl":dve lhru tnm. OVER 150 NEW A USED VW'S TO CHOOSE FROM.' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. BRING YOUR TRADE. . ' 0.P~ SUNDAY I I full pow..-, IMl"41fl.f power •••h, l'-•r witldow1, cr11h1 control, ftclory eir, powM do.r loc.•1. AM/FM pl111 much mOf•. IJH4J7740l F11lt paw•r, incl.11ifng 1t1t-i, wi..dow1, crui.1 control, f1 etory 1i•, power door 1•11•1, AM/FM re .. io plv11'1111ch ,,,o••· !lH4ll1241 $5877 SI 364' Por MDftth '10 Mark It Wqon Xlnt cood-lapo dcek IP.l'aket & mount Incl. Alt $1195. =-"'-;=:-,,=--..;;~::;'I ~--V~O..,LKUl'SW,...ntfAGEN~ OR ~~HES 1n J..andcruiJer, 1100> mi. we, lll<e ""'· 13200 AUDIS -VW CAMl'l!llS -°' 67l>-OIDI. A MOT9RHOMES llll8 CORONA 4 cir. xlnl ..-............ air, I ndlo, $1250. ~. TOYOTA 1m Muk n, 4 dr. auto tftnl, lo rnUes. 1 ......... 1141111.- 1n .1UWX P.U. !Wl, AIC, ~ .... •""'1<. $1195. "'Wmd II A 118p" ~-....... --llllo -~ DAIL 'f PlWI' • • " ' r j $5485 "'5 131 24 :::..M:;:.. • L•IM N' Ivy or > L.ase Pymt. Le15e or I vy I S,.Clll flllJtfKlfll ayallaW.. 1 .. dewn ,.,IMftft.. •ltt! no ,.ymanta until f•b. Ith. Ne~ t1~y 72 lie. fw your pr ... nt car. Wt will take u re of that M ll11t..,_ wMft r04i tr... ywr ,,..eHnt car to vt. All ,,-k• ff n:ot Include taa & lie. I ............. _.~ ..... ~-""\... • .. .i. •. j .• DAILY PILOT Frl91 ..... .,, S, 1971 • l i ' • ! • • • • • I ! • • • s • ~ t • i ' • • • • • I • . • • -. . . . . • .. BRAND NEW 1973 BUICK CENTURY LUXUS • \I... 4 ••L C_,. ........ II ... -tic, AM ...... Air 1;9M.. ""'""' .......... _ .. "*tw, IMHI .... c .... """ ..... ...... ...... _.,.., M1ldl I.a '"""' 5"1, ..,_. dlK !Ir.it-. ,._ -· tlfllMI tl.IH. ONLY THERE IS A FACTORY 1 AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR EVERY POPULAR MAKE CAR IN THE WORLCl ON £0STA MESA'S !§J I -i w. l§J,f~ _-_· .. ~ 990 Aulol, U!I MUSTANG 990 Autos, lh.i 990 PLYMOUTH MERCURY MERCURY ·~R~J'~s 1 · , MERCURY - Full ..,..,, laclol'Y ""·vinyl 69 COUGAR top, ..... ..,. Int-. dual ~ Orlalnal lnold• • L'Otntolt teat.I, AM·FM Out, Air CondJtionln&:. AM· rtereo radio, tilt wheel, low FM Stereo Radk). Diac mile1. (GSlEAF). Brak6, New Belted f'ire. NABERS CADILLAC ' 8IOllCI, 2:JJAGV. 2600 Harl>or Blvd. $2195 Costa Mesa 54(1..8100 '71 MONTEREY 4 lll". H.T. ~~ ~ltmrtr~ Automauc, VS, power wtn-..,....... ®•s, air cond, viro'l top. --~ ..... I 156COJ) $2899 OAvE ROSS ............. '61 MUSTANG -S!Mlby GT 500. 351 Ckvel&nd. 390 Piltona. 421 lteadi wilh 428 Cobra kit. f Spd. Jfunt- N1.1 wbcela:. Rff.1' &Ir ahock1. New paint. $1495. 83:H)144 After 4 P .M. '65, 289 fU per., 4 apd W/ JIOlllracOon. Xlnt shape, good car-for modlllcalion. $100., 492-1065. •n Muatane Futback: V-8 Air/Cond, P/S, P/B, auto trant. cbnne w~. Oean • 67H!9L OLDSMOBILE • 68 PlylllOUth Fury Wagon F'ull Pvww, Alt Cond, Beaut· lful Cat (6tlETVl. • $1495 WardS.Lee ~Mololl,. 547-5126 1.2.'W So. ~1.ain ~t. Sanla Ana 0111.D•llt YOUlltS MOW ot+.t 0.... lftl'll 1119., J .... 1, ltn PONTIAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., Cocta Mesa. 54&-8017 Effective thru 117 m. '72 COLONY PARK Wqori. Lo mil..... Full -'· factory air, rool rack, ex· ceUenl cooditlon. (Q28FS0) $4699 DAVE ROSS PON- TlAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., Colta Mea., 546-8017 Ef- fective thru 1nm. '68 SATELLITE •73 OPEL GT'S READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! CLOSE OUT SALE ON 1972 BUICKS- OPELS--GMC TRUCKS N!W-DEMONSTRATORS-aEC:UTIVE CARS OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY Harbar Baulnaid LOOlaJ. E~!:! AT DAVE ROSS lCOSTA MES PONTIAC DATSUN 24IO 2145 HARBOR BLVD. ARBOR BLVD • 1'111 MERCURY M"""", lvy, ~. vinyl lop, AM/FM stereo, lo miles, 2 new tiM, immac cond. $2950. Eve• 544-3666. 1969 Mere. Coupr XR-7, PS/PB/ air. Ork gm w- whlte vinyl top. $2,000. Call aft 5 pm. or wkndL 837~13L Must sell this weekend! '70 MERC Colony Park. F .P. + a.Ir. 9 pass. $2499. Pvt ptf. 642-9006 ~MUSTANG '66 1 OWNER, 8 cyl. P/S, auto trans, air, R.lH.. $800. l.eavina' cotintry. r.1&-m6. •70 BOSS~ CLtlO Old. '71 TORONADOS 3 to cbcloee from. FulJ pooNer, factory air, AM-FM stereo, vinYI root O>oice ot colors. Cloth or· vinyl interior. AJ low as 1050CXU}. $3999 NABERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Cotta Mesa 5'¥)...9100 61 Olds Viste Cruiser 9 PASS WAGON. VS, 2 Dr. llanilop. Aulomatic trans., power sleeruig, V8, vinyl lop. XTJ<55ol . $966 &-e It -You'll Buy It .pw.lewi& W TOYOTA 1966 J.Jarbor, C.M. 6.f6·93ro ORANGE COAST'S BEST SALESMAN •• New en.Pie. Must eell. $1895. Call ..,._ PONTIAC 72 9 pass stat w&n Mere. 1970 Mustang 2+2, Xlnt cond automalie, PS, air, rack. Monti.go MX, Fae air, 17,0XI 22,coo ml, like nu lnl, 2 nu Priced under wholesale new mi. Some pwr. $3750 cash. llrci, Call~ brnkes & drums. (WAU660) '70 BONNEVILLE 4 Or. 962-3557. 1-"==:::,:=-='=~= ONLY Sedan. Power steering, '65 Conv V-t auto Pis P/b $1295 pov .. er ""ind<W.'S, air cond., '69 Marquis ID Pau. \Va&. air, new paint, batt, $635. vinyl top, exceptionaJJy Jo --f-Jl~ul~I ~l>W'~·;'"!.l!'!!!k", a;!l1!);,,:!A~m!,-Fm=·;.i..Pv~tfptyiJ;;;~iii;;i'7Se'l~;alt~"'1i9°6;('pUim~. j--H:..:..:jOW~, A~Rj;;DtCih!.onvii:rko::l•c.t-t"'m~U.~!fia·· 1743ADEI Kelley ---=..-,--....... =.--..... ~,=~m~-.. 66"MUlltaJ!f"l'l'llV;"....... '"-~. ~ dof C GSSI lea '65 Morcu<y Comet Alr/cond. P/S, etc. Xlnt Mac:Arthw-BIYlj & Jarnbo""' pd,. $2499 DAVE ROSS ----~-.,-------------l owner. $250. 673-4287 cond S79'J-&4$-{1615. 833-0555 PONTIAC. 211ll Harbor 990Autos Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990Auto1, Used . 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990 ''·=12~o~w=s~CUTLASS==~~-.=.s.. Blvd., Costa P..iesa, 5-i6-80I7 t~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;::;::;:::::::;;::;:::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=:;:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;::::=:;::::::;;;:::::::::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:::;;~:cou . n op, y ~ 11 tenor. vs, automatic, power '70 GRAND PRIX. Green ohnson&son All Marks and Continentals ·--. l!~.r:!Jlf~ " COUGAH . ' --r.11 ~\! \Jf\Y Are Now Being Offered at APPRECIABLE SAVINGS Step Up. To LUXURY ... Excellent Selection Of Previously Owned Mark Ill's and Mark IV's 1972 CONTINENT LIKE NEW. Beautiful harmony of color. Spotless metallic mist finish with contrasting leather Interior and landau roof. Equipment-the fi nest. Full power, climate control air, 6 way power individual seats, AM-FM stereo, power door locks, till wheel, auto. cruise control and Jnuch more. See and drive Today. (N567SF) '71 El Dorado SALE PRICED Luxury equipped. full power, factory air cond., 6 way power front seat, landau roof plus many more .Juxwy items. Priced for quick sale. (693471Q41663) $5675 - ' '71 Continental COUPE SALE PRIC!D SPARKLING exterior finish with immaculate Interior. Landau, Luxury equipped thru-out. Full power, auto. temp. air, AM-Ffl.1. stereo, tilt wheel, po\ver door locks. Driv1$ like new. (809210) $4575 '71 Econoline 300 SALE PRICED '68 Cadillac SEDAN DE VILLE ATI'RACJ'IVE thruout, full power equipped \vl th factory a.Ir, &-way seat, door Jocks, tilt &: tele wheel, landau root Excellent tires. (XTA354j, $2375 '69 Continental HARDTOP COUPE BEAUTIFULLY maintained lnsidl' and out. Equipment with landau, power s teering, power brakes, power win· dov,os. powl'r scats, radio, hea ter, factory air cond. (641ITVI $2775 '69 Marquis Brougham '70 Sedan Deville EXQUISITE Beautiful inside and out The belt of luxury, full f>O"'"er, climate control air, 6 way poy."f!r seat, landau roof. See today and drive. {4808EK). • • $4175 '72 Plymouth SEBRING Like new, 15,000 miles, nicely equipped "'1 th V-8, auto, trans., radio, heatrr, power steerlng, power brake!ll, air condltlonlng. Landau ip:>f. See lt'today 1400ELB) $3275 '70 Mercury steeri"' -brakes _ windows. \\ilh black vinyl top. Pov.-er factory air, AM-FM 11terro 1v1ndov.·s, fa"tory air ron- with tape, sport wheels, ex-ditionlng. !842AUOl S27'99 tremely low miles. (794-DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, FYRl. 2480 Harbor Blvd., Costa NABERS CADILLAC Mo"' >l&-8017 Effeotlw 3300 Harbor Blvd. thru 1/7/73. Costa Mesa 540-9100 '69 GRAND PRIX. V8, po\\'ef' 69 OLDS CUTLASS sh'.'t'ring, air conditioning, tilt wheel, vinyl top, Cpe. VS, automatic, PS, air, (X\VZ0501 Ketley suggested vinyl root, bucket seats, retail ~ Sale price $1999 (3270FB) ONLY DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. $1495 2'llO Ha<h<" Blvd., """'- HOWARD Chevrolet P..tt'M, 546-80t7 Effective lhru l /7 /73 . Newport Beach MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree '72 FIREBIRD. Deset1 beige ••• ••ss with matching interior, ~ economy 6 cylinder, pov.·er '69 OLDS 88 Custom lf.T. steering, auto mat I c . Cpe. Factory air, AM-FM i061F.KR) $3299 DAVE stereo radio. (XTB840). ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 Kelley suggested ~tall Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, S2400 Sale price $1899. 546-8017 Effective thru DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. 1 _11_7~17_3. ______ _ 24fl1 Harbor Blvd., Costa PONT '6."i Ventura 2 dr hdt, Mesa, 546-m17 Effective auto, PS. PB. Air, $650. or thru in /73. best offer 5.'.i7-5888 alter 5: 30 '62 OLDS Wgn, PIS. P/B, pm. AIC , R/H , P /W. ·n Grand Prix. full pv.T, all Everything V.'Orics. Clean extras, t>.1ichelin ttrM. $400. 962-4381. Brov.·n w/beige Landau top. 494--0322. PINTO '68 Po"I GTO, '398' V-8 aoto, 1972 PINTO, 4 spd, Air, bja whlsale. 962-2667. PLYMOUTH LOW mileage 1968 Plyrnout~ VIP 4 dr. H.T. with vinyl roof. Air conditioning, radio. heater. Excell£'nt conditio11. Private party . . . prlce air, very clean. Orig owper. CdM.64HOOS. '72 GRAND PRIX, Low milea~e. fully loaded. Priv Ply. 847-445Z . 1969 Pontiac Catalina. Air, lo\v n1ilcage. Immaculate. $1000. &14-8675. RAMBLER $1,099 837-4239. 'fi7 RF.BEL \Vagon, 6 cyl. MODEL S Barracuda 1968', A 'C, P 's, clean. $700. fac air, radio, auto trans, Call 979--0923 mags, new paint. fold do""" T-JllRD seats. Priced quick sale 1 ____ .:._ ____ 1 suoo.. 492--0309. '65 PLYfl.i, 2 dr, 'Qi', 4 spd. Black w/Blk Int. Good cond. 540-5353. Classified Ads . . 642·56711 Autos, Used 990 T-BIRD '6.1. Nice cond., Good transp car. S400. or best oUer. 842-6721 H.B. A r<:flO(I want aa is a good In- vestment Autos, Used 990 1st OF YEAR SAVINGS ON FINE USED CARS 1971 CHEVY VEGA 1971 TOYOTA Auto. tran1., radio, ha at-COROLLA er. A 1il .... r btauty -tJ:· Auto. tran1., radio, httf• tr• nice! 12l2 CXMJ tt. With t•• prict1 up - $1795 htrt '1 ra41 1••ing1. (5]]. CT Al 1971 DATS\JN 2401 $1395 -4 Speff, fectory t ir. Ytl· 1969 TOYOTA low w/114dt lnfarior -CORONA Cl l7 CPG>. 011lv-. • ' . CRUISAR£ VAN CAMP(,R f---~.,-ll--il;m2.1" \V.B. V-8, auliJ. trans., 1>0wer steering, air cond., tl'1'tll'fk 1runrrw.-ra~ witn-iwtrn~I front• see.hi, many nth<'r campo'r acrcssorlt•s, low mileage, one O\\'ncr !8lJDVD 1 HARDTOP COl 'Pf, -SALE PRICED EQUlPPED with the fineel equipment. including full-POW- cr, 6 \vny lndtvidual front sC'ats, factory air cond., Ahl· fl\1 stereo radio, t ilt \\'heel, landau roof. (323DRB), COLONY ~ARK WAGON 10 peaaengor. 1'eauti.!ully Jnai.Dtained..J.'Wly equipped ·fn.t eluding factory air cond., pov.-er steertna. po~r-braket, luggage rack. 1982 BlM) $4095 A11to. tran1., r1d;o, heat • "· • door 1eden, 1off ±23 = baby .1bl_l!e -'DI.if~-:;:: r11I nict ctr. • • . • • . . • • • • • • . • • . • ' • . • • ' • • • ' r t . ' . . . • ' • • $4775 $2375 $3175 SEE. ONE .... TRY ONE .... BUY ONE ..... TOD~ Y! ohnson & ·son ~ ... ... - I ' . I I I) r~ ......... f1lf 11 ( t IH y· 2ml HAABOR ILW-COSTA MESA • 640 llCIO I • Rome\or "nle n .. ear , • , "O.Wett r..-.. I 1971 MAIDA Sil•tr Grty, Tht h1rd lo $1195 9et RXZ Rot1ry En9lne, • tood buy!. !779 OLHI 1968 TOYOTA $2395 CORONA Auto. tran1., r1d io, heat • 1971 DATSUN M , hatdtop cpt., c o o I wlllte color. Econoll'lical Auto. tre111:, radio, ht1t-tren1. IWTE 4791 Only- er. Loo• et tili1 beautiful $1145 1taflo11 wagon . Popular 0 r 1 II 9 e coiOI', 21,000 1970 MG 1!'11111. lf09 CTNI $2095 ROADSTER A sporty /itflt C4,, ~. , .... Y1llow, yo11'll lile 1972 DATSUN tlril1 one. (611 INI() 4 S,...d, l111Ciau fop, r•· 1972 CHEVY VEGA 4lo, h•tt9f, 17,000 ll'llles, 4 'I""'• re.l ie, he•tlf, l H•,.'• • id•ndy, ' ... 1ed•n, yo11'll flip for l+li1 ·~· cpe ., -~· 0¥•1t . •111. 1219 FUI Ora119e beauty, /Urt tt•. $1995 !490 Ell l ,$1895 S.. Our Lorge S.l•":!!on of P'U'! C•mpers a,,d Other FJ"t C•r• Garden Grove Datsun UIOI _Horbor Blvd., Gardon Gl'Ovo * -534-1255 * -< ; Friday, January S. 1~73 DAILY PILOT 39 ' 6 BRAND NEW 1973 OMEGAS OVER DEALER POSITIVELY NO ADDITIONAL DEALER CHARGES 6 cylinders. VS 's, stick shifts and automatic.s, coupes and hatchbacks.Take your choice at 199 over dealer cost. DEALER COST INCLUDES FIEIGHT, ALL DLR. PREP. COSTS, FACTORY HOLD IACK 36 CARS ONLY AT THIS PRICE!--,-U USED CAR SPECIALS *100% Money Back Guarantee! '69 v.w. BUG R&H, 4 speed. I XSS4JJ I '666 '68 Cadillac '69 Plym. Wagon '68 Chev. Impala • Cpe. OeVille. Full power, factory air. 2 Or. H.T. R&H, auto., P.S., air cond . 9 pa,s. VS, ~uto., P.S., R&H. l715EIMJ IVVD39ll .IWAE.)581 '966 5966 . ··966 '67 Olds 98 '66 Pontiac '65 Mere. Wagon '4 Or. H.T. R&H , auto., P.S., fact air, Ve ntura. 2 Dr H.T. R&H, auto. IWKC- landau roof. 5381 R&H , auto., P.S., air cond. IR DE43'41 , 0 5466 5466 5466 *If you ire not utitfiiil wit • pUrchases o one oTillese spec a s, you may re urn • car w1lfi1n oUrs rom a e o purchase and receive your money back. Specials good 'till Jan. 7, 1973. BUY WHERE THE SAVINGS ARE ! ORANGE COUNTY'S NUMBER 1 " HONDA CAR DEALERSHIP Brand New HONDA SEDAN 11051 888 1 Visit Our Large Recreational Vehicle Dept. New GMC Trucks, Large Selection of Used Vans and Trucks. '68 FORD l/4 TON PICKUP W ith I 0 Foot EIDor<!ldo Camper. [ F25- YRD0809l l '69 DODGE RED-I-KAMP Camper Conversion. ! 014EXS ) '71 GMC CHASSIS MOUNT Angeles. 2 Air Conditioners, Fully Self Contained. ( GEJOJZ 120972 1 SERVICE -PARTS -BODY SHOP OP EN _ _E V_ER y_ .. SATURDAY 7:30 'Tl L 5:30 • .. . IP YOU'RE LDDKINCi ,pQR A CAR , ~ . EXCELLENT SELECTION 4 wheel Drive Of Brand New BLAZER Au•. front teet, Nar •••t, tl11t. 9la11. 1icl1 mld91., H.D, 1hock1, H.D. front 1t111b1li11r, po1itractlon, 350 4 bbl., +..,,. bohyclram1tic, )0 9al tan•. powar 1t1arin9, brit1 hubs, AM radio, H.O. radiator, chroma F&R bumper,. 175 on· off road tires, 9au9a1, removable top, 4 wliaal drive. l._.4) 112 17811 -=· LUY PICKUP WITH . ~ EL CAMINO G-OFTHERQNL~~+r::~BLA~ZE_R_S__,_~-~~-Tl.~-.,-.... -.. w.-.d,.-,b.-..... -•• w-.. ~...._~.._.._._,~~ CAMPER 1taarin9, fuU wh11I CO'f'lrl, bitted white ~-l-------~~-=----=------:::::::----+l------AAN1U-D ----"--"='11 mtrt.,11, ••••rior ~ecor, ve ••~· -• Sleeps 4, dinette, refri9erator, $2 EL CAMINOS gine, tincro. tran1mi11ion. 1303) 1404· stove, sink , water tank, roof Olt) -~720k • I I.I -BRAND NEW 1973 MONTE .. CARLOS!!-. GREAT SEL_ECTION IMMEDIATE DELIVERY BRAND NEW 1973 Y2 Ton Fleetside 25~.•n9Jne,8'~ed,,'?_flp•~el .. $·2690 pad, guages, oil-amp-temper· eture. (612) ( 127998 1 I 8~~0 '73 % Ton Fleetside 8' bed, •oft ;,.,.1 pe.,f, u-$2928 tra heavy duty rear springs, . 350 VB 4bbl, 9"•9'" 8.75 truck tires. !516T l 1109585 ) NEW LUY fleKUP -- White side wall tires, AM radioJ decor package. ! r 814 ) (8232677 1 ONLY s22a9 # • .. ~ • . I ' • CHEVY TRUCKS I PLUS LUY TRUCKS • • 1.1 'I• • , ·SUBURBANS · • ' 1.J ·lj 111 ·11 J, "I I! ~I --.. ::1 1'· , ' . ~- ''ELECTRIC SUNROOF'' 350 VS engine, turbohydramatic transmission, tilt wheel, power steering, power brakes, vinyl roof, t inted glass, sport mirrors, radial steel white wall tires, AM pushbutton radio, heavy duty radiator, rally wheels, door edge guards, custom deluxe belts, red with white top. 1515 l I 41 I 217 ) $ "PERFECT FOR · TOWING" Brand New '73 Suburban 9 p•11. w•9on. R••r ,,,t, tint. 9l•u. ~.:t'. .b~~'. .:~:i:;ti~;~!··~·~::·,;;;; $'4462 hydr1m•tit, pow•r tf•eron9 & br•k•1, H.D. b1tt1•y, •lie. clock, 1•dio, H.0. r•di•tor, chrom1 f&R bumper, l78 ti1•1, 9•u9•1, cu1tom di~. inl•rior. 14661 11 12731 ) DEMO. & EXEC. CAR SALE '72 IMPALA CUSTOM COUPE S,405 MILES Air conditio11Jn9, tilt wh•el, turbo kydr•'1'11fic, vinyl roof, w/t/w, delu•• hu b Clpl, body iid• mld91., pow•r 1f••ri119 & br•k•1. C 107) 1102)68) ONLY $3795 141 1972 IMPALA CUSTOM COUPES . . . . -AU. WDH.. AIR_,cONDIIIONIN1..,__,.._ f211TJ flll9lll --12721 11 126 161 •• 111 111 104 114 1··15141 11107591 YOUR CHOICE $3695 '72 CHEYELLE MALIBU F•etorv •ir, )50 VI, turbo hvdr•m1tlc, pow•r 1t11dn9 & br•k11, AM/FM r•· dio, •lie. eloek, vinyl roof, r1lly wh11l1. w/1/w, bocly 1id1 111ld91., ti11t1d 91•11, door ed'ilt 9u1rd1. (21STI 15021671 ONLY $3395 UGE!D CARS . 546·1~03 ' FtldQ', January S. 1973 PAIL Y PILOT 4 l I ' a:::0 '73 DODGE SWINGER , ~ -.. SPECIAL 2 DOOR HARDTOP Full Fac lory equipped Order Yours Now --. $199 DOWN $73 MONTH for 36 MONTH S BRAND NEW ' Immediate Delivery I FULL PRICE '""'"'II """9" .. - ' -It< ll •OI Ot ... «•4 f!•t, .... ,,.11 ....... ' "'-•....U•l 'lltlfll!41't ••Tl IOSI~ DODGE VAN 109" wheelbase plus full locfory equipment. (Bl 1ABJV0227SS J. $2688 FULL PRICE l'LUS TAX & llCt:NSI 50RADIOS TO BE GIVEN AWAY EACH DAY ONE PER CUSTOMER FIRST COME· FIRST SERVED '72 DODGE MONOCO Auto. Iron~ , power s1ee1 ing, power brakes, etec Irie windows, air cond1rion111g, sµeed con!1ol, radio, heater. (585DZK) ' $199 DOWN $88 MONTH FOR 36 MONTH S I >0 '"'''"" '1'"' \IA I oo ' ' J,. •• ' Ill'' ,. ,.. P""'' "'' lo•. i.,., .. \ '' "'"~""'., •·t' ' IO •• • Uot.,,.4 •• I ;1J ""'' ••• A " &·~• AL Mll(l .. llGI U ll I I lJ "- TAKE '72 COLT 2 DOOR HARDTOP '72 VEGA 2·DOOR 'lH'A~L~:Gc:: $1388 FULL PRICE s199DOWN Aufo. Irons .• radio, he<iler, wtutew'.111 tires, reclining seots. ti11-s leenng wheel. (4 l 9FAX ) 4 5peed Iro ns .. rod10 Heoter, (607EOL) '72 CHEV · Malibu2Dr.H.T.$218 V-8, outo. Irons., 01r cond., power sleenng, rodio, hl!Oler. vinyl roof. {S860VW) FULL PRICE '69-2LYM. WAGON full y foClory equipped, (689£0S) '71 FORD 2 DR.Hardtop '68 YOLKS !~ ... ~.~~;~ .. ~!!n $12 8 8 Bug 4 •peod tcooL ,.,;,, heol". (XTK\'7) rodio, hearer & wsw. '71 DODGE CHARGER 2-Door Hardtop, V-8, oulo. Irons.. power steering, radio, heater, ~hitewoll tires. plus much more (0090f0) .$1388 '66DATSUN 4·DOOR factory equipped irKludm9 rod•o arid hl!O!tr (ll:OY317) .....--- 2 -Door Hordtop. Full y loc tory equipped. lo"" mileage. ( l 96f fH) ~ ,., ,,.,.,1.1t. ~.,., 1:1, .. ,,1!)1,,.. ~'"''al la• l•:1•'!1-.&all1at•1· 11 ·J'"•""O<'i "'"''I· 1~,.. L•1•··-~~l''' P"'•l 11 .,,,, 'u• & ,,.~~ .. A'"· ·Al Pl•' o• A ,r ~A ·1 ~ ,, FULL PRICE $588 FULL PRICE FULL PRICE '72GREMLIN ''"'""~'~~~•~•~gogo<ock $1088 IS9SFB AJ '71 VEGA HATCHBACK fully fac tory equ·pped (964BZI) '71 DATSUN PICKUP 4 Speed rrons., rad io. heater 919BSV) '71,DODGE · COLTWAGON Air comi•tio11fd, ou•o. Iron,, rm! o. l1<•oter 13280JA) FULL PRICE FULL PRICE FULL PRICE -· -~GDGE · $988 V-8.~~~!~~!!h~t- er, oir cood., vinyl roof (XS29l9G 162466) · · $ 4ss 1;r!;!_;~'$12sa FULL PRICE 1831DIWJ FULL PRICI r • • .. . . : : ·: • ' ' • . . .. . . .. . . . . . .. . . _., . . --.. .. ' • G DAllY '1UIT FORD Fully f•ctory •quipped. Radio, t r tc Good miles. 1osx. 856). New ~eint. '66 GALAXIE 500 4 Dr. H.T. VI, .tuto., radio, heater, full power, air cond. (2989641 '68 MUSTANG HARDTOP Fully f•ctory equipped. R•dio, he•t•r, etc. Good miles. 11 28 - AYDI '68 FORD WAGON ve. radio, heeter, autometic, pow- ., steerin91 •ir cond., good miles. IVZZ8001 , '67 COUGAR XR7 ·Full power, air conditioning vinyl roof, good miles. (VGAl921 $796 51096 -;,.;;.----·--·-----~------.----~--1 '69 FAIRLANE 4 DOOR I -.. -. OVER $1 ~000,000 WORJH OF _ NEW AND USED -c . RS AND TRUC· s • •• SLASHE-P · TO ~a-L YI; 1972 PRICE ! • ' . J . ' . ' NEVER A BIGGER SAtE IN OUR 51 YEARS ol:« DOING BUSINESS ' • IN ORANGE COUNTY! G.M. 6TMA1JB VS, radio, heater, automatic, pow- 1teeri1MJ.-l-¥CU66.I · '68 CHEVROLET WAGON Nomad custom. VS, radio, heater, 5996 automatic, power steering. lWIL- 6871 '67 CHEVY CAMARO H.T. V-8, r•dio, he•ter, '4 ,spd., $1096 Good miles . fVCK'421 l '67 CAMARO 2 DR. HARDTOP VS, radio, heater, •utometic, P.~.. $1196 air cond., good miles. IUEH018l '68 BUICK SKYLARK 2 Dr. H.T. Radio, heater, auto., P.S., air cond., vinyl roof, 9ood miles. 19-56ET.Xl '67 CAMARO S.S. Imports.· • Radio, heater, 4 speed, low miles. $5!6 -Roo1"raoi...+fl-"4i91 '67 TOYOTA CROWN 4 Or. 4 spHd, radio, heater, , ... conditioned engine. (1ZZ434) 5696 '67 Y.W. S9. BACK R•d io, he•ter, '4 speed, low miles. $896 IWA N563 1 '68 OPEL STATION WAGON R-.dio, he•ter, 4 speed, 9ood miles. IXRP91 l I > '69 DATSUN SEDAN\ Rad io, heater, '4 speed, low miles. IZVS2691 '69 Y.W. BUG 5896 TR.UC KS VANS · J( Wa90". 4 wheel driYe, 9ood miles. HOA OX ' '65 FORD PICKUP V1 ton. Radio, heater, overdrive, good miles. 15481551 '64 FORD P.U. & CAMPER Shell. VS, •utom•tic1 redio, he.+- er. .1 L26978 I '65 CHEY. >/4 TON Pickup. V8, radio, h1-.t.r, 111to- matic, good miles. 15397231 '67 CHEY. 112 TON PICKUP 196 5996 VI, r•dio, heater, low miles. (V26- 14l J $1096 '70 DATSUN PICKUP VI, r•dio, hNter, automatic, pow-$1196 2 Dr. H.T. Radio, he•ter, automat-$1296 '4 speed transmission, radi~, heat-$1096 '4 speed, good miles. White. (173. $1296 er steerin9, air conditionin9. 1223-ic, power steerin9, vinyl roof, air. · er, good mile1. IZKX5821 BEQ I ' ~D-IJ~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~-l•ITmYmG-19m4ml~~~~~~~~~~~~,l·~--~----~~~~~~~~~-1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ '69 LTD HARDTOP '69 CHEV. NOYA '70 Y.W. BUG '68 1/2 TON STAKE • Radio, heater, chrome trim, vinyl roof, low miles. IZOT636) ~-------------------------· '70 GALAXIE 500 '4 Dr. Wagon. VS, radio, heater, automatic, P.S., air cond., good mile1. IYDC911l '69 OLDS CUTLASS 2 Or. H.T. V8, •utomatic, radio, $1996 Convert. Rad io, he•ter, automatic, he•t•r, P.S., •ir, fact. werr. avail. power steering, a'ir cond., good l853ACD I m;les. IZNV 90l l .............. ____ .,.... _______________ . '72 TORINO 2 DR. H.T. R•dio, heater, •utomatic, power steering, vinyl roof, low miles. 198SEOll - '70 T-BIRD LANDAU '70 PONTIAC LE MANS 2 Dr. H.T. V8 , radio, heater, au- tomatic, power steering, Cj!OOd miles . l853BENI '69 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX '70 DATSUN WAGON Radio, heater, automatic, good miles. l652BSll '71 DATSUN WAGON Radio, heater, "4 speed, red. Good mHes. l4 71CID I ' '71 OPEL Radio, heater, automatic, good miles . IYCU9171 "•8 FORD 112 TON PICKUP VS , radio, heater, automatic. Good miles. I SS85'4B) 51596 '67 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER 4 x '4. '4 wheel ~rlv!, 9ood miles, new paint. (6740ZK) '69 CHEV. 112 TON $1696 2 Dr. Full pcwet', air conditioning, tilt wheel, low. miles. I 2S2ASH I Rad io, heater, automatic, full pow-$2196 Radio, heater, automatic, vinyl $1496 Pickup. VS, automatic, P.S., heat. er, air cond., vinyl roof, good roof, red and black. Good miles . er, new paint, Good miles. (2S'4- ,;1 ... 1348875 1 l96lBSYI ~OC~· • • ~ . ~~--~~~~~~~~-1.--..;.;.;.;;;.;..;;.;.~~~~~~~~1~--~~~--~~~~~-1 '72 MUSTANG MACH I '69 CADILLAC EL DORADO '71 DATSUN WAGON Radio, heater, automatic, power steering, air cond., 9ood miles. l696ESD J '71 T-BIRD LANDAU Power steering, brakes, windows, seats, air conditioning, low miles. I 125CCMJ '71 T·BIRD LANDAU -Full power, air conditionin9, load. ed. Good miles. l 900EIVJ F"ll pow er aod faclo'Y .;, con· s3 696 ditioning . ( 142ETB I '70 CAl)ILLAC Full power, factory air condition- ing. Low miles. I 16'4EAD I '72 PONTIAC GRANYIUE H.T. R•d;o, hHler, '"lo., a;r, pow. $3996 er win dow s, vinyl roof, low miles. I 179FEG J l Radio, he~ter, '4 speed, good-miles. 1857CAXI '69 Y.W. 9 PASSENGER Wagon. '4 speed, radio, heater, good rriiles. IZDTl291 ~.7-l~T~O~Y-O~TA~M-A-R~K-1-l~~~~~I R•dio, heater, •utorn•tic, •it-CM· ditioning, •pprox. 12,000 mil.es. 173 5EADI l . • '69 CHEV. 1 TON C.b & chassis. '4 speed, good ' $189'6 m;I.,, new faes. l95191CI 71 EL CAMINO VS, radio, heater, power steering, standard shift, low miles. (899- 77JJ '71 FORD >/4 TON YAN . E200 long wh .. I best. VB, red;o, $2596 heater, good miles. f91540J) .... a.MAMlltlCAU -• \ PAmllUICIHOUll ' ....... ' .. 1"-"':1-• ' 1 l 1 J , ] th Y< '" Ill ~ tiJ .. . , 1 . j ., a! ol It T ' .. d t 21 ' d ( ~ j ' 1 f ' f ' I ( I • I I I I ' I I •• t l l j j 1 I j I •• -v ~ ... --. --• .. San ~le1oenie • f;apistrano ' ... EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ' VOL 66, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1973 TEN CENTS Peters By TOM BARLEY ot .. O.llY .... tttft "It was Christmas Day and 1 was at the festival in Laguna Beach. I'd been, you know. taking LSD and suddenly I · st.w my father's soul. It was kinda telling me my old man was dead, you know. A::nd then I got to thinking about all the good times we'd had." .. Gig Peters stopped at that, point, arnil· ed at an incredulous jury and absentmindedly tapped one of the two 2 Officers Shoot Pair In Barroom One man . :Ras killed early today and another seriously wounded by gunnre 1n an altercttion in a Tustin bar with two off duty Policemen from other com. mun.itles, Tustin police reported. :llPOO•ll S. Robinette, 15, address not ~nl:iwn, dlec! at 5:20 a.m. in Tustin Com. munity Hospital. In the same hospital seriously woooded is Sam P. Campise, .. ·'nle jhooting occumd at 1 ;'5 a,m. In belOf'S DI bal', U920 llti ., Tustin police said. Officers involved who Tustin police allege did the shooting were Jerry L. <!ray; 28, of the Garden Grove Police Department and Sgt. Thomas M. Baroid!, %£,.of the Cypress force. "Tustin police would not· reveal any details of the affair this morning. They said they bad called in Orange County District Attorney's investigators to assist in the case, evidently because 11---IXlllC•e olficers...w.e.re~involv.ed~ j lµtruder Shows Victim Picture Of Herself Nude An Intruder who apparently broke into a· Laguna Hills home Thursday night forced his attractive victim into acts of saual perversion after showing the bousewlfe her own nude picture, Orange Ceunty Sheriff's officers said. 1be 23--year-old victim tokl deputies that her as.\aililnt entered the residence unknown to her during her husband's aboence, grabbed her and pWlcd her Into the master bedroom. or the home. She said he showed her a picture recently taken of her in the nude and told ~: "I want to see you like thl.s.""She said he left the borne after compelling ber to participate in acts of seiual perversion. InvesUgators · said the intruder found the picture in a bedroom dresser drawer. -' !.!..had~ tak"!', by, the !""l"n'~ hljS-bloif. Olficers $0fo: . • • Investigators believe the assailant described by bis distraught victim may have been under thf tnOuence of drugs at Oio time. · · Ciemente Youth Held in Burglary A 17-yeaMld Sim Clemente yooth faces charges of burglary -uaault today Iller be and • companion .....tedly wett surprlacd by the owner of a local DUJ1lc llore late Tbunday nfihl. Police charged that the youth Ibey ~"' In custoclY struck tnt,.Iiant James Jent.Im on the head with an unknoWn ~ )let and tbeJI !led with a oomDIDlon from tho Four M..., at 302 Estre~a. • Police apprehended one youth a-t!i/)rt, ·11me later. . 'Nothing was talfen·lii'llii! 10clClenL •· Jenkins, who said he came upon lhe ,. •. al about LI p.m. was not _, bUrt In the attack. E. Germany Noted BERIJN (AP) -The Nothorlands c,~t1c ._i11on 1o Eat • • Tells Court He Killed Parents ' mwlve volwnes or obscure religjons lrom which he bad quoted liberally throuahout the afternoon. He had earlier refused to take the oath be.Core testifying Thursday and was only allowed to do so after a bitter argument between opposing lawyen. The former lifeguard eased his broken body forwanl In his wheelchair, adjusted the cowisel table microphone specially cocked in bis direction and resumed what everyone present agreed was one o( lhe most astonl!hlng acts of testimony in Orange County Superior Court history. Much of it was rambling and in- coherent lo the point that court reporter Doris Vane was unable to record a nuent aCCXIUllt of what the crippled defendant offered in response to defense attorney Barry Tarlow's prompting. But Peters, 24, repeatedly testified that he had indeed tilled Charles Peters, 55, and flora Peters, 54, less than 24 hou rs after his parents had welcomed him and his girl friend to thelr modest Huntington Beach home. "You see, I've nothing to gain or lose," . the bearded long-haired defendant told 1he jury w.hlle Judge Kenneth Williams watched him sadly from the bench and proseculor Pat Brian pointedly turned his bL~k on him. "Okay, the basic issue for me is whether J go to the joint or the nuthouse, tight?" Peters murmured.· "I'm not trying to alter your opinion. • • But I think soml' ot you might get the message l 've been carrying around for a long time." he said. Peters will be wheeled back lo the courtroom f\\ond a\' to resume his testimony aftl!r the three-day break ordered latt: Thursday by Judge Williams. And it is expected tha t !he fonner llun- tington Beach 1-ligh School honor student Y:ill be the final witness ln a sanity hear· ing which must end wlth tbe jury's ru1ing on "'hether he was sane or lnsane when he killed his parents on April 21 . 1!171. Peters has already been convicted ot tv.·o counts of first degree murder by that same jury in his second trial. Peters' first trial end.ed dramatically and prematu_.rely in November 1971 "'hen ho "'as shot in the spine by a deputy as he attempted to escape from the same courtroom. Those v.'ounds are almost certain to (See PETERS, Page Z) -a-i-n -in Clemente Orders Billboard Down San Clemente's only billboard -a ban- ner luring golfers to the hafd..to-find en-- trance to Shorecliffs Golf COurse -was ordered removed this week. But the: removal will cause some beadacbe.s for the golf coune. It aloo pla<e1 the city In a tlcldish . . It is used, however, by tbe manage- ment of the privately owned, public links. 1be orders to remove the billboard came from City Manager Kenneth Carr, wbo said that state regulations now forbid a billboard anywhere within 600 feet or a tree way. Tbe billboard along Avenida Vaquero Is less than 600 feet from the freeway . Spakesman for the links management this week appealed to councilmen to consider the problems in guiding visitors to Uie course. No immediate freeway access is available. And other directional signs are very small, spokesmen said. And trying to attract the general public always bas been a tough problem. COuncilman Paul, Presley, an avid golfer, said be sympathized with the plight of the course. "1 know how much the management has spent out there in recent years to keep lhe golf coorse in good shape, and I know the problems in attracting the business," be said. Other cowicilmen, however, believed that the sign sbould be on the golf course premises and should he more In keeping with current city policies on sucb ban· 1be curent status of the issue is one oC uncertainty. Carr's orders to remove the banner will not be enforet!d un til the council casts a formal decision on lhe issue. The matter will probably come up for further discussion early next month. Earth Slides Canyon Area The earth continued to slide today and fissures v '1' ned in a Santa Ana Canyon area o! Anaheim threatening four luxury ' homes. Anaheim police, fire and public works err.;'. .. y?s were in the area today to con· trol traffic and to do anything possible to stop t!le earth movement. The area affected is a cul de sac, Cir· cle Haven Way near the intersection of Sa::::-6u Canyon and Noh! Canyon roads, southe a.:.t of the Newport Freeway. Because of the proximity of the freeway, land bordering the homes is owned by the State Oir::i"ln of 1::ghways. Mrs. David Gillis of 4043 Circle Have n said she noticed a. one-inch crack across ' the corner of the family property three weeks ago. The fissure has now widened to about one foot. Slippage continued through Thursday and ~::itiago C::. ... ln Road was ruptured. Polict have closed it off. Residents of the four homes were not evacuated but were alerted. The r;illis family and othe rs rc.mained thrcugh Thursday night. The three other homes are owned by the Rev. Ralph Wilkerson, Hugh Thompson and George Heath. 'F-orm11 RufJfJer.stamped' .Trustee Charges~llie_gal Aliens in County Schools By CANDACE PEARSON the n:lallve the student will live with in ot .. Ddt' Pl• •&1" California and lhen signed by the district, A county school trustee charged 'MJur> Brandt contended. day that illegal aliens are attending "I'm not trying to deport anyone." he county. schools and that one unnamed said. "Bllt I do usent paying for persons school district wu virtually rubber-who art oot oontributing." stamping alien student entrance forms. He added that schools were not re- Davtd Brandt of Santa Ana, the county qWring stringent enough Identification of board's: newest member, told bis fellow students and asked the county staff to trusteet ~ that he was ••ooo-make a survey-study among coonty cerned" 11bout foreign student.I being ad· dlstr1cts of the situation and report back. mitted lo achools "1th Improperly ftlled Cootacted today. o ·s.mvan denied that out immigration forms, tnown u "I-any Improper practices were taking 2t's". p11ee ln the di.strict and questioned Although he d~llned lo name any Brandt's right to lnijorfere with an ln- speclllc sdml dlltrlcll; llnmdt -...i • .u.tc!Ul ~et · -1be--an 141 Fonn which car-U'Stimvan said while he I.I only ad- rifd the name ol Joo O'SuJIJvan, fonn« mlnlstrator In the Santa Ana district that ·Licano Beach city counoflman and 11,.. 1·20 forms, be never ll!gns blank director ol pupil penlDl1llel ..me.. for fonn.•. the Santa Ana Un1lled School D1strld. "1 don't !mow how he (Brandt) could Bnndt, who wu actl111 In. tbe-reeJee.. -~! a blank one," O'Sulllvan aald. "We tlm elllipolgll of Aloemblyman Robert OOii't hand U-out-" Burke (R.Runtington Beedl), claimed O'SulUvan apllined bis dlllrlct'1 pro- the entnnte form wu oompletely blank cedur< with the ronm u folknn: mp! for tbt admJnlotntivt~ Nonnally-lhe--local rtlotive of the 9111- Tbe forms onuuppoocd to he taRn to dent who ....,. to study In California tho Amerlcon camWate in the -t'• ...,.. lo thtr-diatricl lo ... If officials 1-OllUDlry, and signed, llllcd out by (!!-AUEl!IS, hfe I) DAILY PILOT lhff ,,_,_ WARY LAWMEN EXAMINE HOME OF MURDER SUSPECT In Mldw•Y City, Tragic Climax to Two-county Shooting Spree /qj}¥'l' 1! U"t T..,_ .... TWO DEPUTIES WERE AMONG FOUR SLAIN BY SUSPECT Deputy Sheriffs Don Schneider (left ) and C•rl Wilson Saddlehack Board Rejects Change in V.ocation Class By JACK CHAPPELL 01 ,,.. o.i1y 1"1111 s11H A resolution with the intent of ending expensive duplication of vocational training classes in nearby community colleges was tabled to an lndeftnite future by Saddleback Community College trustees Thursday. Terming the document a possible en- croachment of state control on the com- munity colleges, the trustees roundly slammed all the "Whereases" of the resolution. all.bough some said they ap- proved of the "Therefore, be it resolv- ed." That "therefore." "'·ould have askL>d the state legislature to change the method of caculaUng average daily at- tendance for community colleges rrom the present system. based on student residence, to one bNed on student enroll· menL ff 1lie change wm! made, present in- terdbtrict arrangements required to penn\t a Saddlel>ock Dl•lrict residenl· stuDent to attend 1 specialized Orange CNlt-cW. would aot be required, 'lbe'TntefdtltriCt arrangements normaU,·"""1'" J)ilyment by one d~trict to the other to make up dllferences between-the cwt of education; and an amount of funds poid by the !late. Bom1 Pmidenl Pllldck Blctus said he WIS In faYW ol mlq the duplication l(' of some of the vocational education classes with small student enrollment. Board member Alyn JJrannon hit at (See VOCATION. Page!) Steffensen Tops 9 Others, Wins Clemente Post Donald D. Steffensen, 39. a represen· !alive of a large Orange County develop- ~nt firm . will assume a position on tlx! S.'ln Clemente Planning Commi.~sion next "·~k afttr beating nine other appliaints to the vacant post. Steffensen, an e1to1tlve with the John D. L.usk and son construction nrm, was selected after an executive Jel!ion of LOO city council this week. Steffensen. who lives with his wife and four children at %703 Via Moattclto, serves as treasurer of the. "Tr1lon Boo5ten. Re ls an elder at the San Clemente Pmi!Jytertan Church nnd a member of the loc•I Opttmist Club. lie will assume the unexpired term Wednesdll)' of Iota! conn-.-Ray McCaslin. wbo resigned ....,..tlJ. • ' • Suspected l\.ille1· Shot By Deputy , By 1'1IC,IAEl. GOODRICll or llM O.llr "llltl llltf Ty,·o Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies were machine-gunned to death Thursday afternoon in Midway City as they attempted to capture a double murder suspect. The suspect. Car\ Eckstrom, 23, of 8251 Flight Ave., Midway City, was later cut down by a single shotgun blast fired by an Orange County Sheriff's deputy. He · slain ace .. suspect in a double murder i.~ suspected of critically wounding a third victim at the same time, is in critical condition t~ day at Orange County Medical Cent er. The two-county massacre began shortly after llOOn when Eckstrom allegedly pulled a pistol at the Cerritos Shopping Center and shol two female companions. One girl, Rose mary Vasquez, ZO. of Bf'JI Gardens. wa s shot twice in the stomach <.1nd died at Pioneer Hospital in Artesia. lier sister. Cecelia Vasquez, 17, Ben Gardens, was listed in critical condition toda y after undergoing surgery at Pioneer Hospital. She was shot in the chest. right side, left leg and left forearm. A, passi ng shopper. Mjchael Jeffries, 27. of Downey. was shot twice in the back as he returned to his car, police said. He died at Woodruff Community Hospital; Long Beach. Witnesses told police Eckstrom shot the two girls while walking with U:iem in the shopping center parking lot. Police said they still have no idea whal tho motive was for the shootings. Following the shootings, the suspect ran to his car and fled , but not before a shopper noted his license number and phoned them to the sheriff's station in Lakewood. Two sherifrs deputies, Sgt. Carl E. Wil!j(ln, 40. and his partner, Sheriff's Detective Donald W. Schneider, also 4-0, checked the license num bers and pro- ceeded to the Eckstrom home. They contacted the Orange Coun ty's Sherifr's Office. which assigned a back up car driven by Deputy Andrew Homero. \\'hen they arrived lit the Midway city residence where Eckstrom lives with his parents, Schnekter-and Wil&on wen~ lo' the front door and Romero went to cover the back. Witnesses told police that Schneidtr I See KILLINGS, Page !) Orange Coast Weather . The weathc.rlady sees sunny skies and warmer t.emperatures for the weekend, with the beaches rea~ Ing so degrees. rising to 6S inland. Ov ernight lows in the 40-J, INSmE TODAY 0 .,. n n g t: Coitftty's outgoing Grand Jury takt:s iomt porting Jhots nt eotirnttt m.ttnidpmfttu as the 1913 pa nel iJ unveiled. St:e t tories. Page S today. l .M . ...,. • llWnltl ,-. " ....... .. ... ,...,... ,._.. • Ctllt.nlil • °'-(Wftty • Cltfll11*9 ,.,, .... _,.,, .... ~:::::... .. ~o;s. ~ ,, " .... "' ........ --• "'"' Ml,.,.. ,.,, SllltM1I .. _ ' T .... t'*' u ,~. 1l•lt _ .... ..., ,.,,, ... _. ' ... -• .. ,,_ " w ......... "'" tt•11 A•L ...... " ......... • ........ ' ·-... -...... I ( DAILY PILOT SC B52 s Make ·Most Ra ids In 3 Weeks From \Virt Sfr, it·rs A1on: than 40 U.S. B52 OOn1btrs at· tacked !he southern half of ;\orth Viel• nam u1 the heaviest rcuds in lhrce 'A'CCks . generating prolesls today from !lanai and charges that Pre~ident Nixon is preparing for new bombardn1cnts above the 20th parallel. The U.S. Comn1and said the right jct saturation bombers were attacking su-i:r ply tra!fic in North Vietnamese rivers within five miles of the 20th parallel bombing halt line, about 200 miles north of the De.militarized Zone and 75 miles below Hanoi. But command spokesmen refused com- ment on charges in North Vietnam's of- ficial Nban Dan army nc'A·spapcr tha t the United States, while lhniting attacks below the 20th parallel. is carrying on reconnaissance •·or several other __ _JJCaliJLiesJ'1-,pc •• • military adventure." Nhan Dan left the impression it was referring to the northern Hanoi-Haipho ng heartland. American sources outside naissance was continuing above the 20th parallel. These sources added. however, that they knew of no immediate plans to resum e the lwcrweek aerial blitz of the Hanoi and Haiphoog regions. Those heavy attacks were halted Saturday, when the United States and North Viet· nam agreed to return to the bargaining table 1n Parts. The semipublic Paris talks resumed Thursday and secret negotiations are to resume Monday. The United Stales always has had CQn- tingency plans for bombing North Viet- nam and as !landard procedure revises them to keep them current. The U.S. aerial reconnaissance above the 20th parallel ls designed to gather photographic evidence of bomb damage, monitor movement or war materials soutbward from China and watch rebuilding. This information is used to maintain a target list should Nixon decide to resume bombing. Meanwhile, Secretary of Defense Mel· vin R. Laird today ordered details with- held of U.S. bomb damage in North Viet- nam during_ the second week of tbe Amer- ican bombing bJJtz so as not to upset the "No infonnation will be put out of this bufldln at any time !Mt will possibly jeopar success or those negotia- tions," Laird declared during an awards presentation at the Pentagon. From Pagel VOCATION ... what he termed "competition" between districts for establishment of vocational courses. Jnterdistrlct agreements currently cost Saddleback about $735,000, some of which would be eliminated as a budget item paid by local tax monies. "People who don't want to go to their own school can pay for It themselves." trustee Michael Collins said. John Lund, board member, said he did not approve of the use of terms "regional planning" in the body of the resolution and that steps at rcgionalization of col- lege activities represen ted a threat to local board control. The tabled resolution was the product of a session attended by representatives of county cnmmunity college districts concerned about the duplication of the vocational educationRI classes offered to normally low student enrollmenis by each college. , Trustees also feared that if the legisla· Uon were enacted. students would take classes in other than specialized fields and would be able to attend other schools without board approval. Oltl'NGI COAST K DAILY PILOT The or...-C•ll.I DAILY PI LOT, wltn Wll OC"ll (. 1t1m1~'"11M~ew1.Preu, r, M11111c by IM Oro119• Co.it P111>U1hl119 Comri.ny. Sti>e• r•I• ldltio..1 ••• llWOl!tlla;I, MOtld•Y t11ra1191'1 Frlcl•y, for C•tl• M11•, N1wp0rf lle•cn, Hunlll'fl'fOn l t!KlllF011r!t1ln V•!l•y, L•~~"· llKI!, ltvlM/kdf1•H(k ond Sen Cl1m1n!e/ S•n J111n C1pl1lr1t>0. A 11111111 rt11·001~t .OlllM Is pUbll•llM S1h1rd1y1 ond S""6•Y~. fJltl prlnc:•1r pubH1llln1 l>l•nl 11 111 JJO Wt•I hy Str .. I, COilt M1t.1, (tll!ornl1, tl616, Rolterf N. Wt•d Prn1111111 •!Id Pwohtll"" Joitk R. Curl•y Vke PNlldllll ltttll O.....•t M•rtQtr lh•191•• 11:: .... .t !.dilor The,,.•• A. M,,.rphin"; ~lf'9 Ee11ot Ch1rl t• H. Loot Ric~••i P'. Nill At1/tt•nt M•nevln>J Eco.rO'\ S.. Cit_.. Office lOS Nertli El Ctl9lh10 Rttl, '2671 °""' Offk" C.Slt "'-I )al Wftl 8ty SITH! ,,,........, ltad!: WJ Mf-1 Boul~wll•G Hun''"'"" l11d!: u ers 111e~ eou1r.•1d U911111 fl•Kll: m f'Dl'111 Avffl1.11 Tei.,..• 17141 '42·4l21 Cl..,lflt4 Afte.rtl1l"'I •42·1671 S. C...._te A• O.,•tw lf1: T•..,.._ 4fJ ... 4Jt ~. "n, Or•,.. Co••• ~t11r11t Clfl"IPllllJ. Ht ntWt "'Jlr\ UM1r1111nt.. tdltw'-4 -tt« « N"""I"""""' 111-rellt _, "' r""9lfllclll ••ll'loolf .,..:Ill ,..., '" .... "" If tonfltlll ..,, .... ...,..,. ClfM •ltot peld ot Cwtl Mt-M. t.:..:.J>.----1-'-.llfWAl&...JWIO'latlllll bf c.trrW --SUS MOfttl'llf'I "' mt!I lJ 11 !llOflll'l .. I mlllflrY •Hnot"'"' '' t.J montti•~. ,j -- ·' " ., ..,.._P,,.el • , PETERS ••• keep him a wbeelchalr for the rest of his life. Petet!li father was stabbed l.hroU&h the heart aod hit mother strangled Just four monlhl after the Laguna ··Beach vision that the IDllllng de!eodant recalled for the Jury. More Study Du~·: " •. On In-lieu Fees But It was, Peters assured the jury, "all part of a divlne plau. ''You're thinking that If I'm not crazy, San Cle mente city "®ncllmen once I'm terribly evil," he told the jury aflcr again have thrashed over pl"O! and cons tao few minutes of rambling testimony. of a parks fee for new development, but "But I'm not crazy, I'm terribly good,'' !he issue seems deltined for more week.a l)eten assured the jury. of study before a final decision is cast. "f w" receiving spiritual guidanco The panel Wednesday beard a half-hour from God when I killed my parents and It of complaint.a about the nae, Jm.ptt-Unit was au part of the plan of evolutloD. that fee by developers and landownen who I'm going to tell you a lot about be.lore 1ermed the idea "double taxation." this is over." 'l1lc city at present requires either Peters adjusted bis hospital gown, dedication of a certain percent.age of land searched for a pauage in the volumes or the. payment of a fee. instead. "Hell." he said, "l've r<1ised kids In Shorecliffs and they never complained about not having •a place to play. We had no trouble encouraging the:m to find a place to play. "We had trouble getting lhrm lo ~tudy," he said. From Page I ALIENS ... placed before him on the cluttered Either the land donation or the fee is coonJel table and then gave a brief computed for all new subdivisions only, glance towards his girlfriend, Anne and the formulas are intricate. wlll agree to entrance. i•we fill In part of Bartholomew, and the couple's year~ld What Is proposed is the replacement of tbe form that says, yes, WP. will accept daughter who was seated in the front row .the cumbersome existing niles with a the ztudent if be lives here," said of the eourtroom. flat charge for every dwelling unit. O'S 11· Th h I he 'II" I fi ed I T f u 1van. en t e re alive fills In part He I n w1 mg y con inn or ar ow 'Jbe new charge would eliminate one th t h I "a prophet of God Qf the form that say he will be responsi-a e 9 • nagging loophole -rental units thus far "The act of killing my parents was an have been exempt from the fee. ble for the student during his stay here. ac t of counter culture.'' he told Tarlow. Jn fact, or late the only developments "Then, they take the rorm to the con- "1 cried in Laguna Beach so much that I required to pay the fees have been con· sulate in Mexico and present it ," had to leave when I saw that vision of dominiums, essentially one-lot sub-o·sullivan said. adding that the consulate my fat.her bc<;ause I knew then that his d•.v•'s•'ons h d • '~~~--idfu;,;:;;;&,n;11mo~il~'·"---'---:-------'-~-~--~--~-~--::;:;:-:;::;::;:::;::--;:;:;;;;:;-;:;:;;;;i,--~t~<~r~e~•Hn~Hrin~~ot1~~~rr,cmmtries--won't-sit!Tr--i----: ~ g was P anne · One such developer. former council " Peters ins.isled that h_is father's death candidate Alan Wulfeck. complained to !ess the district agrees to house the removed bitn from pam. councilmen this week that the fee p~ s dent. "I rtmember, you lcnow, how he once _cesaJs "a tax Oil a tax " When the lorm is brought backJ.o...tbe_ --+--sar-wtttnne"""~tore ti_e--went1~-witb Fellow builder Noah Cheatum fusisted district, the officials there ask lo see a a glass of wine in his h.and and tri~ to that the local building industry already birth certificate, O'Sullivan said. The DAILY PILOT 51.U Pllo19 Sisters St1·i1ggle Psychological drama. ",t\ 'l'imc f or Living" by Laura Olsher \Vilt be presented at 'friton Center in San Cle n1ente at 8 p.1n. Jan. 12 and 13. ln scene Becky, left, played by Jolie McLane, struggles with sister Carla, played by Diane J.lurley. Becky has just returned from a mental institution. The play. produced by the high school Thespian Honor Society, has been entered in the American Education Theater Association 'Festival. Councilmen All Get Invitations • Fro111 Page I KILLINGS ... yelled for Eckstrom to come out and when the ou man refused the de began to break down lhe door. get me I? understand his problems, be has been crippled by the Coastal told the Jury. Initiative. form is also checked by immigration of· "ti.ly father \\'as a super sa\e~man .. he .. 1 say let us float vlith Proposition 20. ficials and the average alien student "'·as a trul.Y honest. man, b~t ~ family lick that one, then get into the parks ""·ouldn't know how to fill it out;' he was breaking up, he was drmking and he i~ue ,. Cheatum sa·d said. knew that. I just didn't understand him," wuifeck insisted ;h~t immediate cash Brandt indicated he thought sorne Pe1ers said. . . . for new parks is not needed . students -perhaps five percent of the Peters recalled an 1nc1dent lD a s.an "W hav fi mil of beach which aliens -either never take fomu to the Diego courtroom shortly before the kill· e e ve es consulates or dishonestly fill out part or in gs when his father disowned him after ev~ryone uses as a park. alrea.dy' and the form. listening to a judge sentence Peters on dnve by old Plaza Park somehme and or the 27,000 students in the Santa Ana drug charges and order court action see how well used that .. park ~·It seems district, only 110 are aliens. While most ag:linst Peters' Younge r brother on to me w~ have enough, he said. . of those are from Mexico, some are from , · f · Councilmen have said one pnme ~t:arges ILnked to possession o man· reason for the tightened fees is the need Spain, Japan and other countries. Juana. . h b 1 1 1 d O'Sullivan said he , or his assistant who "Yeah. but what happened to my ~o raise ca.s tJ uy surp us reeway an also eva luates the form s, hand out many father is just a little pan of it all," rn RS~~ec\iff~h ha 1 . ed th t the more than that each yea r, but the Peters said. esi en s . ere V«:: c &lm a Y students decide for different reasons not ''It's for all of humanity," he said. need a park .Ill the are•; to come to school here. "\Ve've all got to have one religion. WuUeck disagreed with that case as Brandt said that education code re.-~1asses of Chinese people have to be well. quirements call for proof of birth only al amalgamated or conquered and the kindergarten and first grade levels and masses in India have to be brought in Wi'J son Cancels Tour suggested that legislalion might be a way 'A'ith food and technicians and, you know to change that. " In addition, Brandt charged, one school "Our American society is desperately LA JOLLA (AP) -Former British district (also unnamed) keeps a list of its ii. need of spiritual guidance," Peters ap-Prime f\.1inister Harold Wilson ba~cancel-allen students but won't reveal them. pealed to the jury. "Yes, I killed my ed an American speaking tour because of The st.ate education code requires the parents but, you know, it's better to do renewed U.S. bombing Jn Vietnam, county superintendent to report the something for your family than for University of CalifomJa officials here nwnber of alien students in the schoob yourself." said Thursday. each year to the board or supervisors. San C1emenle city councilmen lrad1- lionally have two busy meetings a monlh, but the inauguration of Ri chard Nixon late this month will cause a break fron1 tha t local tradition . Eckstrom suddenly flung the door open-!----,.; and fired at Schneider point blank "'ith a ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE Every councilman. Cily ntanager Kcn- r.eth Carr and others on the city staH have received CQveted invitations to the investiture of the President. And a lot of them are accepting lhe in· vitation. "\\'e'll be lucky to a ha\•e even a skinny council in two weeks." said Councilman Wade Lower Thursday morning. Lower v.·as invited . "But I think I'll stay ~hind. The weath1 back there in January is just too hard to handle." he explained . Councilman Clifton l\iyers is not ex· peeled to attend. Nor is Councilman Thomas O'Kcefe. But fellow members Paul Presley 11nd !\fayor Arthur lfoln1cs \Vil! travel to the capital. Councilmen this \Yeck didn't seem too confident about a productive mcctlng during inauguration \veck . Several major items were postponed until the first meeting in February. "\\'e've buih a pretty hefty agenda for early February." l\tayor l·lolrncs <1uip- pcd. One esIJE'('ially tough item is the resur- rection -once again -of the vehicular -acct'ss pro1Jlen1s 1nvol\'1ng Presiden tia l I lc1ghts. County Trustees Ni~ T \VO Fihns- Bl1t Not Bool~:s Suhjt'L"I of two f1ln1s l'l'.:r led becll11s1• of r on!t'nt hv (lrange County sC'hnol 1rusl('1'.s for \ir1\1ng for ninth io 12111 i;r:-idcr~ ari1 :ilr1•:idy b1·1ng rt•.iri bv f'ighth gradr "ludt•nl<t 1n st:Hc-11pprovcd lllt•ra- tun• trxtbooks Tht· fiJn1~ in 1111estion. •·1 .. ~dv or the T1i::rr" :1nd "f)r llcul 11•~1·r·, E!\· pertinent,·· arc ba~ed on sl·Clrl stories of the s 1me nan1e. They arc pJrt of ~· f1\ e-f1l1n series. ''Short ~torv Sho'Acase,'' d1str1butc<! to lorat schoolS b\ 1he rounl)' department or <.'<iu(·:if1on One of those fi\•e ''Tht' LClll<.ry." "'JS removt'd from c1rrul:i11on lao;t spri ni;t'. :1f .r complaints by son1e pilrenl<t thnt it "as too \ iolcnt Aftf'r a stirir.~ of healed mctlini;:s, its con1panion fihns \Vere then rtslr1cted to the hlgh ~chool levl'I Counly In.islets were told Thur!day that U1is h11s caused problems for eighth gra~c ~~ngl 1sh leachcr!I "'ho wont to show 100 'ilms wht'n the 11ludents are rtading the stories. 't'he board was :1s$1ured by one county scbool employe that OOth lilms were "fanciful and fooll!h'' and tll !or eighlh gr~911mption. Trustees approved \•Jewlng of those two flhm by .,ghth thro,gh 12th gntde sludeuls .45 caliber Thompson submachine gun. according to the witnesses. Witnesses said Schneider crumpled on the doorstep and Wilson ran to the side of the house and into the backyard. Eckstrom emerged from the house "''earing a U.S. Army .flak jacket and chased Wilson to the back where he fell· ed llie ,.•'-~~ c1-::puty with another burst of machine-gun fire. A neighbor, Melvin Terrill, said he !hough. the loud bursts were firecrackers. He stuck his head out the back door where he saw the Orange County Deputy, Romero , who told him to get back inside. Romero then sneaked up behind Eckstrom as he was walking to the front and dropped him with one blast from his shotgun. 1'-1omenls later. other Orange County Sheriff's deputies arrived after Romero called for aid. orficers from the Westminster and lluntington Beach police departments were also on the scene 15 law men searched the area for any other suspect s. \Yilson and Schneider were taken to \\'estm inster Community llospital "'here they were both pronounced dead on ar- r1\al. Eckstrom was taken to Orange County ~tedical CC'nter "ticre he was booked on murder charges. Eckstrom was desc ribed by neighbors as a quiet "bookworm type." "He seemed !Jke n real bright fellow," said his neighbor Terrill. 'rrn'ln-satd -:hat 'Eckstrom-was -a-sru: drnt a: Cal State Lnng Beach. "lie \\•anted to try out for the pohrc ncadcnl} but they told him he wa s too nearsighted." said Terrill. Another neighbor, l\-1arc Conlay. said that Eckstrom was a "pretty weird guy." "He never talked vdth ar yone and al wavs seemed llke he was .scared of somCthing," said Conlay. a 15-year-old student at Fountain Valley High School. Student House Loan Granted A loan of $12,000 has been mack? to the Capistrano-Laguna Region a 1 Oc· cupational Program (ROP) by Laguna Federal Savings snd l.oan for student construction of a three bedroom, two bath house. / Tha resJdem:e \Y-111 be con!llructcd on land owned by the Capistrano Unified School District It will be ouctloned off an.er completion and moved to 11nothe.r lot by the successful bidder. Construction hy the ROP class und~ direction of instructor Dean Whitak~. ls ,.pected to-be-<001pleled thl1 ochool year. Other construction projects Include 11 storage shed And but wuh for the Cnplstrano district.. JUST SOME OF THE MANY OUTSTANDING PIECES ON SALE NOW NEWPORT STORE SOfAS 8' le•ther Sofa Shiffer Bros. 8' V•lvet Stripe 7' Crescent, Velvet. Sherrill 8' Print. Green & Yellow Quilt. M•rge Carson 8' Linen Print. Gold & Yellow. Drexel 8' Linen Pri nt. Lim• Green & Wh ite Merge CarJon Sleep Sofa Queen Size. Turquoise & Green 90" Gol d Texture. Merge C1rson 8' Multi Color.d Print. Roy1I Co1ch CHAIRS .Pi. Print. Green & ~d. Reg, SALE $924 $7H $695 $579 $625 $499 $599 $459 $625 $469 $540 $2H $449 $379 $470 $380 $944 $7'9 SALi Woodm•rk $159 ... $139 ... Pr. Wing Cheirs . Orange & Gold. Stripe. Roy1I Co1ch $22 8 ••· $189-. Pr. Ch1in. Green Velvet. LAGUNA STORE SOFAS Reg. SALE 8' Gold & Or•n9• Print. H•nr•don $910 $779.00 8' Cr.scent. Green & Gold, H•nredon $975 $7H.50 8' Linen Print. Henredon $799, $&59,00 8' Wh it• & Green, Velvet, Sherrill $679 $589.00 8' Tuxedo. Aq ua & Gr•en. M•r9• Carson $5 70 $465.00 8'. Woven Print. Roy•I Coach $689 $5H,00 8' Tuxedo. White & Grein Fringe. Mer9e Co"'" $620 $529.00 8' Green & White Crescent. Sh errill $599 $529.00 CHAIRS SALE Pr. Blue Green Print. Royal Co1ch Pr. SwiYel. Gold De m1sk. Roy1l Co•ch $2 21 H . $119 oe, Woodme rk $205 ... $179 ... Pr. Ch•ir1. Brown Suede. Met1il• C.rson $ll9 ••· $269"' -P1ir High Back, PinkV;jvet Roy•I Co1ch $l67 ea. $299 ea, Leethel' Chair & Ottoman. She rrill $618 $471 Wing Ch 1ir, Bird Print, Sherrill $219 $199 Pr. Cheirs. Or1n9e. Dem11 k. Woodmerk $240 $199 DININCO ROOM SALE Chine, 2 Ann Ch•irt, 4 Side Ch1in Dining T1ble. AlfteriC9m of ' Pr. Gold V•IYet. Sherrill $205 ea. $179 ta. _P.r P..r:int. Mar9e-C.rto"--'21'4-..-, -$119 Pr. Stripe Velvet. Woodmerk $219 e1. $119ea. Pr. Gold VelY•t. M1r9e Carson $209 ea. $1'79 ea. I Win g Ch•ir. Rust, Woodm 1rlc $225 ea, $199 ea. I E11y Chair. Greei. & Beige, Sh •rrlll ,21, ... mt ... DINING lOOM Martl .. tlo $1562 $1252 2 Arm Che;n , 4 s;d, Ch.;n, Bufl.t, 2 AtTn•Oieirs, 4 Side Chain Double Pffe1t1I Ov1I Table. O;n;n 9 Tebie. H __ M...,. $1714 $1422 Hlbrltwo Treda;ons I $1 069 Mn UNIBJIYAILI SELECTIONS AT YllT SATISFTING l'IUCU, llADT FOl IMMEDIATE FH! DELIVE -$ELICTfD COlOUPS FlOM HENHDON, HHITAGE. DHXIL, I. OTHHS NOW REDUCED Sl'lc~I ~~\~~HOLSTllT FlOM HENllDON, lOTAL COACH, I. MARCH CARSON AT SUUrANTIAL OREX~ERITAG6-H ENREOOM-WOOOMARK-l<ARASTAN NEWPORT BEACH e 1717 WESTCLIFf DI.. '42·2010 LAGUNA BEACH e )41 NOlTH COAST HWY. 4t4·411il TORRANCE e 1J•4t HAWTHOIN~ lLYD. 211·11" . '· -· Satellite Permits Granted ... W ASlllNGTON I AP) \Vestern Union has betD grented the first conatTucUon permit for satelHtes to handle such domestic: con>. municatlons as telegra1n1.i Telex and private line service. mE FEDERAL Com- mwticatlons Comm t 1 a Io q authorlud Western Union to ""'9truCI three salellll"" which would be linked to aU 50 lllalel by seven ground sta- tions. ~e g0<ahead for thr!! ground sta.hons and actual operation will not be given for some lii>e, the FCC said, and W~tem Union must comtruct t~ satellites within 24 months. Failure to complete ~ structlon within that time, the FCC said, will result in automatic forfeiture or the aU\hQrization unless the coo· :rttuCuon period is extended by the commission for good UPI~ COMMUNICATIONS SATELLITE -The next genention of communications satellites may look lilre this one proposed by Lockheed Missles and Space Com- pany In SurulyVille, Calif. The large flex-rib .antennas and telemetry anlcn- naa flank a model of Earth in the background. • OAILYPILDT 17 PUBl.lC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE POBUC NOTICI! ,iCTIT~"":'111u•••• tVll'••..O. =T °" TM• 'i;:.::.~T' .. ::~::N·:· ·~~~.:::,,i::.11 lfAMI STAT•Ml!MT STATI Of' ~·~•tA ~ TM tllllow\'19 .,.._ It dOine bllti!lftl T~ lollOM"'O P9flClll 11 d06fll ~11 Ti.t fol--...,_ M *"fli8 ._-. 'nll COUJrT1' OJI oaM•t •1 .. : M; ... A·""1 CAl-fl'AltaC 01S1'•1IU't11fG (.O, t11' D-0.W·A-R 1!11"""'11iff. 1•1 ~Ill ilP4CHI NURI Ell:Y COMl"•NY, tltl MOTKa Ofl NaAl:IMe Ofl ,IT1TION 0-• Ori.,., $ult• ll:l1, Ir........ -"-·(Olli MeM, c:.flf. ""17 UM A-, W•hnlNf .. , e.!llWlll• LJ01t PltoaATlf Of' WILL AND l'Otl C1lllolnl1 ffi,oM ltooollo .1.1111"°' lt!OI ipllflOYI-~ J . CAiMlf', t1to Qottlk. L.,-n:ltS Tt.ITAMINTAll:Y l lOMO c:.OIG Co.11 Ent.,.pr\_, IJI(. A Orlvt, Wlllt1/tor, C1!1f . ..._. ....,.,_,.., Call.... w.t.IVW"OI C11i10rnlt ~-lllol'I, 211' °'-'OOlll lt.11 111,1.i~~ IJ Wi'IO ~ by 11'1 Tl•h l:Mi-Is ~ " WI ..... Eta ... o1 (LEOTA MAOCI! l!JKELL, Otlv,, 'Sllli. lGI, lrvlM, C1Ulorlll1 ~ hoe!lvlowll fl~. .U C1..1.0To\ OOOOGEll IMCEl.L.. ,.,_ l 11h lllltol-. 11 Ditlria c.Gl'IClllCl.o bV t lllldQllO Alll..,.. MkhMI J, c.IW MADGI 00000111: Dl<HMct. Ca.tll0f1llotl TJl\1 Ht,....,.,. flied 1114tll ti. C_,fY Tllll 111'-t Wll flWd wlttl ""'(OUl'I-NOTICE 1$ Hl iiEIY (ilVEH !NI 51~ I!. l"'*"" Clel'\ Of°'-"" C-ly Oft! ~ V , ly Ciw11 ol 0r-. C-ty Oft O.Ctfl'lblof JUNE Clll,1.10 ~ PllW r.r.in .... llltOI' Tnl1 ,,.,_. """' Wllll .... c-tv ltlt, Wlll..IAM •. st .jOMN, (O\IMT,. I, lf7ll. for ~· of Wm ..-.d for luv.11<• o1 Citr• ol O<ll<IOt C°""ty OI' o.<tmO.r 21, Cllll(, O'I' l~rtu M W•rO, Otwht. DtWW ... °"""• l..,.., T .. t-••rv IO P•!lll-lf'1 ,, "!,,...,,. M, W••d, °"""'"' Counly •tut, """"""' •• Uw ,....,._. to Wflkll 11 mHt tor 111•,,.... Cl••-P11bU111<!<1 0<1t'11• Cot11 D•llY Pllol, 1ttl A-el , ... _ ..... _ .... -r..rtlcul•A. 9"° 11\el IN ll!Y>t •!Id i>l•Ct P'ntM. Ot<t,,,_ tt, Ur.I •I'd J .. ~ ... $. 12, lt. U. ......... ~ I of htMlno ""' .. ~ NI """' Ml •or Put>l!~ Ot•"(le C°"I DtJIY Pllol. lt7J 1U1·1? -"' • l J-f'/' n . lt71. 11 t ·OO • rn , In I"'-O.CC .. nti.r 7t, 1t12 •NI J-l ry !, U. It 1 ttt t_,,_ of ~""-' No J °' uld 1111 )S4.).n PUBLIC N011CE l"llbll1Md Ort• COlllf O.lly l"llol, _, 11 l'CIO Clvlc Clt"•t• D•I.-. Wt1t In ------J-ry ~. U. It, M. ltJJ Jt-13 Ille ClfV of s.n11 AN, CtUIO<nlt , ' 1-------------1---0.1.:t J111111rv J, 1'>1 PUBLIC NOTICE •tCTITIOUI au11N•ll l I • ""N NA.Ml ITAT•MlllT WI I.. AM • ~1 J,,..,, TN lolJ.OwlnQ .,.,_ 11 Gt1111 """'"'" C_.,., Ct ... k PICTITIOUI AUlllllll t i . ,\. t..•I ADAI• NAM• ITATIMlllT fl) CQST,t. MESA DISl"o&A.L CO.I tfl A ,,.,. A'*-' •I UW IUPSllOa COU•T Of' CA,1.J"°4lNIA. IMI ..,._ll" Ortw hit. nt IRYINE: OtSl"QS,t.L C0.1 (Jt NEW~T COUNTY o• LO& AMOILIS ;~ .. ,~~llltonNt nMO Du'.~ .. ~.i-1119 ~ .... OOlna ~~ht~~:'' O•IC* Lttw, c .. ,. -...., ................ ~ A"'"'" fer "91!1 ..... , WHl"IES PRECISION OIUNOIMG, )01• WlnlMn pr, VP11¥ ''" lftdl~I, •11 p.,,_., c.r ....... '"" l"Vb411Md Or c I D It '''°' a H•lltG•Y· StnU """· f'l102 I 5MlnM. lo ••• M9ntt. (•Ill t \T.D CASI MUM••• 1..c11•1• .... ..., • ., ,,.n WILllM'I J. Wiii!•. 1731S ...... ,... .. ,, '"'' """-It Mino cOl'dl.iie• tit' •n SUMMOMI Jt...,..,., l. ... u . lt n Fwnttll\ VtlMy '1101 lnd1"1d!HI '1tlntlft: 11\CHAllD W CAAilP•EU. .,.., It J 9111..-.illt, Xllt1 kAlr.rdt Or.. WllllM'I I'. V•lti<I ~r.: DIHHIS OEOllGE CH•P· PUBLIC NOTICE o .... Pol11t, 111CQ ™• .,.,_, llllG with -c-tv MAH llflll llKH•llO llETEa MCCOY ~ T~J1 ll<Alnen I• bitl"O corducled by • C"'• Of Or.,._ c-'V on: O.Ctrnbto' u , T• tllt c.tMlltn'-: 1Mt1Nf.,.lp. ltn. Wll..llU I. ST J0"411. COUN"I V A d\111 CO!nli'Mlnl "" ..... fli.cl by -• mn WUlltm Wlll1• ClEllK, By ._.., J ~ °"""""· pltlrolltf -ln'I \'OU· 11 you wt.n to dttcnd HOTICI TO ClllDITOlll ln!t , .. ll<Mftl llled with tnt C-l'f Pnb6 this ltwwll, tw ,_, fUe In 1'111 (Olilr1 t SUPElllDll COOllT DP TMl Cl•rk Of O<•nv-County ot1: DI<:. H. Ttn. PvMI,,,_. Or•• COllll Otll't '111111, writl.n PIHclinO In ,.....,.... to "" -STATI Dfl CALIPOlllllA l"Oll av 8-IY J. ~·· °"""''., c-iv o.c-""""" IS. n. "· lt7l .,.., Jtnu.•Y s. pltlrtl tcir I .wlltlon Cir ... pi.Ncllnt. If. THE COUNTY D• DllAllGI Cl•r~. 1m >4s:&.n Jonrlc. C-11 wllllln • cttV* eltwt thlt 1111 .. A•1Mt l"dlJ7 --11 Mrwd on .,.,.. OtfWwbe. Etl•I• ol M.AllEL Cl AUS EN Pllbll\l>ed Or111Q1 Co.11 O.ll v Pllor. PUBLIC NOTICE ~ 6"evlt wlU bl..,..,.... Oft aOl)l.lctflOI' MtcCAllTNEV, o.e..Md. DKembcr IS, 2:2, 19. ltlJ •nd J•n11•"' '·• -------------by 1111plAlllltft11'111 -COi.Wt ma~. NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVE N lo ""'1trJ J.1n.n1· ludQtM!ll llfHllrlll you hw 1M o. cr«tlton or 11wt tbOft n1rned 61ndtnl PICTITIOUI AUllllllSI othlf rllllf ~ In tllt (Ol'f'lp4•1nl. !Nit tll Ptr-1 Nvlr>e cl•ltn1 1a•l11tl 1M llAMI ITAT•M•HT o ,... .1.., • ..-tiw "'4t• '°' •• ••· uld -4ea<!.nt .,.. ...,;iul...:I to 1ne ""'"· PUBUC NOTICE '"-fol1ow!no l'tf'wn 1, dolt111 D\lll~1• __ , hi .... -""'· .,.. tNuN .... wlltl '"" n«KMh> ~he•I. In 1111 Dfllct '" ....... plly M IMt ~ ....... ~ II lliftY, of tN tle<lr. of!~ 1-. 1t11llll9d cwrt, DI' PROPE'.llTV DATA SElllVICI!', ...0 Ho. ......... " .... "" """'· to Pl'tMl'll '~"'· wlltt ttw MCtlMl'V • Jt»7 I N __ , &oul•v••d, Ntwporl 811<.fl, O•tlld DK•mblr it. 1t7'11. \IOIK'-"· 1o ow unc1tr.Joried •I ltO 01,.,. su~~~fc,•11 T~o~::o~~o~~f t1MoO WILLIAM G. SH,t.RP, ntVf'9 Slr«ol·S11Ue "G". Lllfl'Unt 81..:h. ITATI Of' CAl lflOlllllA FOii Jtmtt B••lon Smltfl. 2 Ctntl Clrclt. PUBLIC NOTICE C Id S II C ~ Counl'Y Clwk Cf.f!lorl'll1 926.Sl wll!cn It ttw pl..:• gl THI COUHT'I" Dfl CNlANO• Ntwpa<I Bit~~. ttl4iO t BY l Cotlrn•n, i;IOAJ,....1 of lM 11•.0.'llgMd I" •II l'r'lllttrt N ,.... Thi• bl.lllN\1 11 bll"'1 Con0ucl9d by 1n 0 P O.PlllY pert1lnlno lo 1111 Hltle ol 111llf d.ced<Jnl, L "" llldlvld..,•I. e Os !SEll.Ll wlltlll'I fco.Jr monttu e!._r 1111 flrl! Pllbllc• E1lf!t of ZELMA E. DUDLEY •k• Jimes Btrtvn Sml!r. -"t-<111F ___ -31_,11-'"-l'-A""-&--'"'--'-c•'-''",__.LA~-~, .... ~,,,_~.;::l~... MO•ODf'I' & K•llCICMOl'I' lion of 11111 "'°'let. ~ELL~:y E~,t.lt~UDLEY l ka ZELM.A Tll11 tl•1tm..,I t!IM wlln the County r-----"ll!?:VEl'o-O·T1t-E'ft ap= -----· -1• .... c~ tMMO lt0 0•·¥ ~ 11 · • N · Crl\<11, CelltonNt tl1tt ROBERT II. HEHOERSON Mltt;8f GIYEll "' lhw WIUIAM J N y L 11, plications are currently pen· Tll· 12111 .m.an E•9CC11•or ot n. wm c....inor1 at ,,. •bO'ff N1ntO _.....,, 11 • · · · capse. ' Att9nwv tw P .. llttl" of 1111 •bcMI .,.mlld dKllMnt llltl tl1 pt•lOni NYl"9 ct.lrnl 191ln1t tllt ' •HY J. l•'fS1'"• OtcMllV. dfng or being processed by the Publlll'lld O<•-Co1nt D•lly Pllal, •AlllO •. CD""'" "Id ~I ••• requjr9d lo llll """"· PHUI FCC ...... .. ... uti the ... In IM offk• Pv&lllftlld °''""' c .... , O•fh> Piiot . e Fuel B 'lls-W 'lltl' b O«tmtlolr n, "· 1m 9<ld J•n..,.ry i, n. -GI_.,,,.. S'""'4111!. ..... • , •• ·--.... ..... ~ ..... , °"'-~ n. ,,, 1•'1 11'111 J1n11Ar, '· ''· ----11r·------o-umer .1lZ1__ ~ ~ ._._. c;;~~ ""1 ... c ....... -........... , 11«1 cwrt. ot 1 1 bnccacuo1ns-uie-, ..., · · -· i ---i im ----,..........,,.,_, ~ ""'"' .. M, "'" _,.. """"~ '" ,.,.,,_ --tructJon permit lsmred !-------------,t.ri-y tw ••tc-YOVChf<1. lo llwt unclef,19"«1 ti tnt oftlc• PUBLIC NOTICE com PUBLIC NOTICE Putlll-'*' °"'""" c1111t oan.,. Pi1ot. of "'' •ttorntv•· ic.111:KPAT1t1cic. .. , ___ ====~=,.,~-- since It decided on its multiple SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) _ "The natural gas shortage J_....., ,, 12, "· ''-1m H·n ~:!~.'":!•~.~i 6c':'..,•~':'..t.~ ;;,~~"':.~t1 fllCTITtous 1ut1111s1 eritry domestic satellite policy This winter's cold wave pro-will become more severe dur· HEWPOtT-M1s.1.01mo"'1~10 scttoo~ PUBLIC NOTICE LC1n11 BNc;11, C•tlfotnl• tOI0'2. wi.1c11 Is u... T,,. 1o11!:=E ,!..'!:~~~"!, _,,,..., last June. This is the first step ... pit.:•°' DUil""'" 01 ,.,. undf<ll11ne<1 In •11 ••· duced a "handwriting on the ing the next few years. Y.'hile 11.ik• 1 .. v1t1111 •~ J---------~~-~J m11tH1 11trt•lnl110 10 thl e11tte of ~Id EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUPPL,.,.,., in, the (ield after OperalJOll! the f I JJ 1.0 NOTICE IS HElllEllY GIYIEN ""9t tM l!•VlllOttMl!lfTAL IMPACT lll!l'Otl.T1 dlQICllnt, wl!tlln follr moroll" •tiff IM PKUi<;o C<>1s1 H....., $1,111 L HfWPOl'1 with tell'te · tc t' ally wall'' of future increased costs 1rm cus omer w1 1wve e<>1•d of EO\ll;•ll., ot 1111 N~' M... Notice 11 Nreb'+' 91Wfl tw tM ""' p111>11c.11on o1 11111 11011,,. 8-=11 ct11t n.wo • • far • se"veral'yesarosn. ma ion sufficient gas supplies the in-un111.:1 School Dltl'l'I(! or Or•• C-"f, En'flr_,....,1t1 R....,_ 11 ... rd, c11y o1 Dtlwd DK""'-20, 1m •kr..•d ·E Lind.,. u i4 w c for California COllSUJDefS , 1 . C•lllornl•, will •K .... I M .... tldl \IP IO Hunltrqlon 11..Ctl. ""91 lllot lailowlno ..,_ 00AI$ AN1'1 McCOY ADI U T . C ' · •rlOn, •-•u·atly Western Union • ternipt1ble customers will be 11 ,,. '·"'" J•""'•"' n. 1m. •'.,,. ottlc:• ..ironmtn1•1 E•'"'o11on Deel•••"°" ... E•ect,ttrl• of tnt wm lhfi ·tMJ:i~~:c'~ .;_1 1 11 ~ ,,. jlU President Vernon L Sturgeon . ed t It I f I Of ulcl K_. Ol11<lcl, llCl>led •I llS7 (IUHll -· ,..,,.1h.tv 90Pfoved *' of llwt MIO'le n•ITWC! <IK91Wnl I "' ....... 11c: llY tn 1.;o.. I ch t t Hit · requ1r o use a ema e µc s PIK"lf'lll• A..,.._, c111•• MIMI. c1111orm1, Jen1,1•rv 2, 1m : ic.ltKPATt:ICk a KltK PAT111c1C lnC1Jvld11•t p._...s lo aun WO sa e es of the state Public Utilities to a larger degree " Sturgeon •' wt11c11 t1m. ~Id ltld• w111 bl publk.tHv 10 n·lt4 P•lvtt• 1_..i1 c1w The ••'* 11 C•Nl9nll• •t.it. ,1111 ~~c,t;-•d ~· ,~~-'"""' c arid keep the third as a spare, 'd ' aptntc1 ~ ,..a tor: loc•t..i 11 JOOO P11m •-on tN 444 Wttt Oc.H11 •1w., 1.n• ,," c• , m.., '"' °"''"Y ~FCC sal"d. The sateU1"tes Commission said Thursday. sa1 . HE,t.TING SVSTEM·TllANSf'OltT,l.TtOH north lhte of l"tlm .,,, _, of OcHn LMll SN<tl, CA ""2 W~L~l~0i;~ 5~:: .. ,,·,"",. "· •"" ,I.II bktl 1r1 lo bll In ..:conlenc:e """"' lllu!I Clrd t Tth IUU 4X•1n7 · • N V CL ltlC be built by }lughes con11n1on" 1n11rvc11om. tnct S111Clflc.-tlon1 l!O n ·ltt i-c"-"91 ,,,_ II:• to A!IO<Myt lor' •·~""rhr t>v B•ttv J. ll••111••n, Oefllity, •'-af Co l f ., 3 A NATIONAL natural gas "PRICES AND costs are w111c11 •r• -on Ni. In 11w Pwt11111oci C• on xr a.:r .. tor • rtt111 cornrnerc111 Publl1hed 0••"9e COii•• 0111.,. Pllo•, Pul>!I 11111 0 c Pt21W ~I t . a a COSt 0 .... bo d . be f Ollkt, U,1 Pl..:1nlle A~UI, (!»ff Oevelol:M'nltlll lac1lld on 1119 no<'ltl ol!ll O.Cembt< 21, l't, 1911 tnd Jtl'IV ...... S, U, Otctm~ 1.1 ;:r.r.n Olltf Delly Piiot niUlion each. shortage is affecting the un to go up in a num r o """'· c1111ornt•. of C•nte• 5""' 1111 of Golfl••d s1 ... 1. itn ll»17 1,13 ' · · 1ne1 J1 1'111•rv s. n , . . EKtl bl<:ldl, '""'' w b<nU I bid dfp(l•lt ID n -11• c 0 n \I. r I ·~l•llno JJrn.n 'nie entire system, including operations of California gas ways and Cahforn1a rate In tN torm 01 • ctr11n..i or c1111l•r'1 1p1rtrntnt1 to conoomlnl11m uM 1ac11..iil-----:c=ccco--cc:-=c:----· I I b ls ·11 l $70 . ct1ec11. DI' • l>ld bond "'lv•l ton.,. 11t< cen1 ,, 16100 ~brook Ltnt. nor111H1t ell!'· PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE aunc cos . w1 cos utilities, and ordinary con· payers are going to bear the (~) of 11w "'"""'' 01 111e ltld. "'6de """ of l•..:11w11k or1v1 1nd s•vtwoo1i l ------,-==--~---J------·----million lhe FCC said. burd .. he ·d 1>1r•t11e tD 1119 (O"Qe• ot ,,. HfiWllOrl·AMM L•,,. • J'21l 1<1CT1t1ous 1us1 11111!'' • sumers will feel the economic en , sat . un,111ed Sdlool 01, .. ,•k l. I~ .,,. ~~' ... of ... coiiy Of llllM ~· It on flit wllll HOTICI TO Clll!OIT'Oltl ' NAME STATIMEllT THE SATEUJTES are ••• 1"mpact, he sat"d. FINANCE H "d h t I ctr' •• lur• to '"' ... n 0 we .. con.,..... ..... City CIHlr.. City of Hllflllll!llhln 111..:11, IU>ERIOR COURT OF T"I I'll following person 11 doi ng bltll"tl' ,. e saJ w en s earn e e IC pracMlh of'"' c111cr win bl 1ort1u.:1, or s20 Peun, H1,1n11oci1on 111ldl, C•lltotnie. " .,. · peeled to have a life span of "d th plants have to shifl to more In t•M at • bond. Ille fUll '""' thff90! Any per$OA ...ilftlng lo tommtnl on 11111 STAT• Ofl CALl•Oll:JlllA f'O• NEWPORT MESA REALTY WI £ Sturgeon 8al e gas . wlll ... forfotlled to wld khool Oltlrlct ol report lflAY do IO wllllln 10 c!Ay1 of 1n11 TH• COUNTY 01' oaANGI 171tl 51. • 511. 110, Cott• ~ C1111' seven years. shortage coupled with ex· expensive fuels that cost mu.st 0.1,. c_.1y. none. 1n Wl'lt1110 br prov1tt1no • COP'f to 11•· •-7.a '26,, · · -~ •• [" [ [ he efl ted · Jectr' 10 No b1c1+>er m•¥ wl!N1r1w hll bid for I tnt Dl,tclor Of Envlron,.....ttl lttlOU<'Cet. Etlttf of HOBART CH A II LE 5 T"°"1•s E Co•. lOt S"'t•l'lnlh l'I .. l•~ "° con 1guous s a es tremely cold temperatures r ec ui e 1c rai.cs. P9riod o1 1or1y.11.,. 1,,1 11.,.. '""' '"" in c••• of ""ci1y ci.n. 11 no ~i HARDSAW, •II• HOil.ART c. HARou.w. co••• M•••· c.111 t'/t?, • would be covered with a single caused e:s:tensive curtailment "The same thing is true of iM.., "' 10< '"' °"'"'llO "":"90'1 ·-..,. 11 nted w11,,1n 111e io dov ~ "" •"f:o~iccE H,','°•','.w,·,~·1..ec1,, .• _ .,. Thi• 1>1111.,.,, 1s t1itt11111 cond111:ted by ·~ lli natural gas requirements "''ere ,t.ny cLtuJflc&llon ""' 1nr>e "''"" ao.rd'1 •ctton 11111t bl ""'1 11 • com. '" 1nd1v1tt..,.1 balm antenna. The sate 'te!I of interruptible customers in available to steam clectro·c industrial output -fuel costs 11e+ow utr.:t·lhlU bit 1>1kl 1t ""cvrr9"T ,,,...,, 11 111..-. 11w &oe<d .. 111 Con110er tM ''"°11Dl't of "" ·-• n1rnec1 d~n• T.;,_~. E. cox Id al ha lb potential r.........mher. --·e 1·nclude ·u d . "II ·~ r••n IOI" n. iOl'lk•tllt' 1TICll •nd lntorin.tlon '' llltl• first •egultr rnMllllll thll •II oer"'"• Nvlnt ci.1,... -tn11 11'>1 T,,1, •l•ltrnen1 llltd wltn i11e wou so vc e ~,,. 11n::;:i plants i South C hf . w1 go up an pnces w1 go c1 •• -1111c:.11cn 1n t1tec1 w1111 ttie •bo<rt! 1o1i-1n11••pl••llot1 DI'11w P01lll'llll Pfflacl. w1d ~-' ••1 reQ111r.cr 1o 1H1 ""'"· c1er1r. of O••ng.e c°""iy Of'I . Oec• c°"'"'T to serve Hawaii and Alaska by steam electric generating D ern 8 ornia up to cover that expense" he 1111.a Tr..,.• c~H•. H 1ny r1'" listed Tom S.veo'l'I•. wl111 1111 nectoU•Y _...,,,,In """ office 19n WILLl,t.M E sT JOH mbt+' 7 • during December. Nor~tiem . . ' llelow •••not t11rr1n1 or ••• rR"IMd bV :sttreTttV of""" cl••-ol 1119 •!:>ow ..,titled court. 01 Cltril, by T~reu M Wt'd ...!!: ... ~-,., spot beams. plants and industrial usi::rs of C l'f . said. i.tior -st•tlf'M<lh ctu•lno ""t11GoS111111 r1.,,. Env1~111 • ..,1..,, a ... t11 10 o.-.sent """" w1111 11w ntctut,._ · • ...._.y. natural gas who must shift !o a I om1a steam electric h. or consrrlKll., n ...... •Kh ,,.,.111on1 w n Publlltltcl °'',. Ct111ii Dilly Pllol, vouctiw1. 10 ""' irnder.Joned •' .,,. oflk • Publlilled 0,.,"9' Ccwut 0111 ~ plants were cut back to 50 pei:· Sturgeon maliile 1s com· .,. con.Lttered •Pl,, of"" lll4ow 1111..:r J•n"""', 1,71 ,,.n o1 ,,., •"DI'....,, NILS D. GOEOH•RT. D«emt>tr"' nn •nd J Y 0 • fuel oil or distillate when menls 1·n respo ,0 8 ••"'" Any M•""· -u .... vtc1tlol\, oro-· tJ» N011t1 11ro..iw1v, s ... 111 ..os. s.nt• 1m · •-rr 1, ,,, ,,. cent. nse • '"°''°" °' or111r blM!ltt tNll DI 1n td· ,t.n.1, c• 1110a. wtlld'I 11 1111 p11e1 ot 1S.olli·71 shortage cuts orf their gas Federal Power Commission dllton to tl\9 DI~ lllled -~ IUlet.. PUBLIC NOTICE bullnHI of ""'lllldtrsl9rled In 111 1'\lrteri PUBLIC NOTICE supply. Ov1tl1m. INlll DI p.11d tor _, P1'1tlnlnct to llwt t•l•tt of u ld OKl(ltl!'ll, A L L JNTERRUPTmLE request that all s l a t e PM 1o1 11194 In ••CM• o1 tM •IOUI• d•v'i 1_.. "'1111111 f<M montti. '"'' "" nrst publlc•·J:c:=:=-c~~·~------Only ten percent of normal regulatory agencies note the -Ir. Md ti ""' r•1' tor D'l'W'll ..... or tlw MOTICI! Of' TlllJITll!'S SALi tlon Of fllll nolkt. NOTICE o• INTINTIOH TO •MGAO• i'~(J,f'.j~C,~i------_:____: __ _:__ ________ customers in s 0 u the r n " . Cf•ll ln\OOl\'fd. Oiied 0.C:""btr 71 , 1•n IN THI SALE Of' ALCOHOLIC ~ €alifomia ™industrial-a need for comprehen51Ve plan+ Hotldl't't 1h1H bl •ti hollclay1 rtc'llO"IUod On Jill!MI ~\~a: ,t. M. FIRST BETHEL MARIE HAR~SAW tlVEtAOIS nmg assure a equa sup-epp11c 1111 ,, .,,. p.tr11a.Or er•"· · •n11nm or"" N ElllN: Cltnvez' I £" --cal as power generating users -t.a.l"-V t'e~s1----..had 10,..1y-on-•1rm-at•-1rrets Plies through this winter." d1111ik111on ,,,, 1v1M of _.IUMll dtit1 •POOi, n1';!! ...... 'rvt,."', ',"'°"' ~~ of,.,. •bOY• Nmed dleedent su1111e1 to 111111nc:1 Of ,,,. 11c.., .. _ -"--,,,,...-. pur11.o1n1 o .,_. rvt r1<or,,,_. NILS D. OOIDKAllT ""lod -1 I •tu !'~ (1 1 .... _., __ 111'.1_..,,. ..,..,_,_ ~H-W -l4,.4fl'O II !nit No.~ Ill flOOll, nit Nl'tll •Md tlllfe 4ff "' ""• !IOI C9 1 MrtD\' gl.....i ftlll 1'119 ~ rgeon rep 1t:U 18 CL.Allll'ICATIDN ,, t.Ol , P'9f ,1 ~ Otllcl;l Rtcordt I~ tnt ~· -·· ,_,...,,-t,todt>rth;totd "'UWWi-fo-Hfl-lllt11!1C!(ll!'---· California already had re-=i:'~:•n .... '::: offle9 o1 1111 COlll'lty R-*• of 0t•111J11 ~.i1 1,141 Jt1:::" :t:.,'!" •t ""' "'""1-. dnutbtd •• SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Cesar Chavez' farm workers Wtion has filed a $128 million suit against the Teamsters Uil:ion and California growers aild shippers, alleging they h¥ agreed lo "sham" coir tl"acts that conspired against rdlnorities. Prospects 'Te1Tific' · ed d d m t .Sl [Ol,lflty, Slttt of CtUlor11I• WILL SELL ,1,ri-y fer Ad lfllttrllt'fll' CT.I. l · qu1r un ergroun gas Shtel Meltl I 71 AT PUBLI C ,1.UCTION TO HIGHEST " bll•hld 0 m c ' 0 !"' Pll I p «lO Pilllldft ROid, COii• Mn.I G l l rr f to d lo l d · C1rpenttr .. · BIDDER FOR CASH ! bl 11 II of 11 '11'11'1 o.• 1 •• o · urw•n! lo llJC:h lnltnllon IM 11,._ as was no cu o or any s rage. eve pmen an JO· Awrentlc:•• 11win w 1111ofollll'd In ton. ute in •ewfut montY of~~· u~ii..:i 5i;,t1 O.C:emw, 12, it. 1tn •nd J1n111rv 5, n. d ... .i11111e1 11 ltCP/vt11111 10 tM D.a.rtrn•~' residential or small com· terruptlble contracts for large forrnltv wun SKtlon im.s of ,.,. At 1111 soutn uronn ""''•nc• to 111t Old 1•n 352"n °' •ICOl!oflc 11 .... .,.'i' Control tor 11-11<1 h C•tlfornl• l•DOr Code. Orinv-County Courl'hovtl In ,... C!ty Of ol •n •lcotiollc beYl<1g9 lie..,.. (or mercial user supplied as a s<r users to assure t at gas sup-"fh• ID!'~"' 1t!'ltd11lt ot ..,.vet. It W •· 5.,,,. An•. C•llt .. 111 r!Qht, 1111" •nd 111. PUBLIC NOTICE llc•nM,, ,.,.. tMM P<•mltt• •t 1o11owt: called "firm cu stomer" V.'itn plies always would ~ ed UOOl'1 • Jou•MY''"n worMlno d•Y of ..... , COl'~t'f'ed lo 9<ld now neld tw II ON $,I.LE GE NEllAL (BONA "*OE , tlQlll {11 "-''· ~~..id Dffd ol Tnnl In lllt prQPl<fY PUBLIC EA11NG PL.ACE) for al least slx day! in Decem- be r. top priority, he said . available for home consumers u 1h•ll °" m1ndl1orv uoon the con• 111"'ted in wld counrv •net s1111 d1Krl1>-MOTtce: ;o""r.:rotTO•s l'IODe:w,1.v IHNS OF t!MElllCA DETRO IT (AP) -Ward's tr1<I01 1a wnorn ti. contrKI It .... nl"'11-:i· _, ti: IUPltlOR COURT OF THI! J l'ubll1i'led Ortnot COit! Delly Piiot, tl'ld ""'°" t ny tllbcon!r..:I« under m, o lat 11 ol TrKI No. 1lt-A •t ~· m~p 'TATI! O• CALlf'OllHIA "Oil 1"111"' ,, l97l Ji.7' A W Id thl °""' not ln1 tllen IM ~ opeclfled ,.,.. ,t<Otrded !n -0 PIO"'"° •nd •I of T"R cou-o• •••••• uto or • a rnon y lo .n "'Dl'lr.m•n em9iov..:I by lhem In IM • " "' • .. PUBLIC NOTICE Sh tf U N ted plCllflon of tllt COl'lfKI. MJ1<1U•"'°"" MtOI, In t ... olllct ol Ill• Jill, A·l""7 magazine devoted tO coverage or a 0 Ttie 8011rd ol EdiJC:•llon of ttM Newport· COlll'I,., rtC:Otr"" Of Wld (Ol,lf\fy, E"1t. of NELLE HUGHES COl..E-J---c,o.,0CT01T=1o"'u"s~o"us~o"woEoH~--Mts1 Unltl+d St;llool Dlllf1<1 , ... rv u ltlf MORE COMMONL y KNOWN ,t.S: *' E. GROVE, Otctt .. d. NII.Ml 'T'AT•MIJllT :AT A NE\VS conference in of the auto and related in-d gnl lo •tll'CI tny or ... bid~, Mid NII l tl!'I SI .. Cotl• M ... C•lll. NOTICE t$ HEREllV GIVE M lo """ sa1inas, where Chavez has pred' nec:nw•llY ICCIPI ""' IOWttl Dkt. Ind lo S.kl "11 wUt bll m.oe, ""'' lwlll>OUI Cf'IClllOFI of .... ·-n.lmtd dlC..,..., , ... lollo"'1119 Person 1 dol 1111$1 ' ' I tt dustries, today lCted Nati'on's A i' rli' nes WllYe ll'Y lnl onntllfy or lr<t9\/l••llY In ~~~or ;~~·"i:o.::~. or Dl'mpll:: !hit tll ,......,. hlVlnQ tl1lm1 f';ll lMl 11'11 •t: I no "''' .· i:,en trying to organize e uce record car sales during eaten-•nY bid rec~1v.ct. ~ "'" to OI !I'll rem•lnlflO prl.,.. Mid decedent ••• r lQl>l<"ld lo tH• "-"'• •ssoct•TED T",,. N 'c Iii ta ' No ptckers in rivalry with the D•led ~ tt. lm ~1"'' ~ .;, ""'~•!ii llCV<ltd ""' wkt w1111 1111 n«"t•rv voutMn, In 1111 o111t1 SERVICE, 11~ o ... 1111n 11. c .. 1a Miu, '-' f J three dar 1973. NEWPORT-MESA o...t of Trvsl to-wt!· Sl6 ,,. ,. with In· of !flt de•-ol tllt ·-..,llllld COlltl, or '212' ·1·eaznst,e:rs Or near Y UNIFl'ED SCHOOL DISTRICT ! <HI ,,.,....,,;., •I ' p,.oori.,.d 'In wld lo II"""'"' them. wtln lllf nl!CHM'Y S.•tll AOdlmtn, fUJ ~ltlln SI., (tnlt • the J bo I de In "ts January os· sue the o1 °""""' c-1y. • YOUCfWn. 10 "" ......,....IOM'd •' "" o111c• M .... .,,,. years, a r ea r an-J ' (1\ltorni. no ... 11). Mtv•Met.. It ...,., ......,.,. Ille'''"'' Of lflel• t!IONW!jl, SAMUEL .... OREEN· Tnll °"""""" II "" nOunced a new drive and el'.· magazine said it found "rart: N d H l p l a~ Dorotlly Herwy Fis!Mf' of Mid OMd of Tr1,1tt, '"'· chi~ •nd au1tG. m Notti! L..k• Avotn111. Rm. 211, lncll'lldt.lll "' concl\IC!ld by ,,. .... ~ lettuce boycott " and almost u nan i mo us -,. er••'" ""uld DMd of Truti. ~.. ".,. --··-1 11 _,,.,, ~" ee e P an e p..,..cfl9sl1111 •ve<'' ••PltrlMS ol llwt Tnni.. •nd ol !hi ""'" P•...ten•. C1tllotfll• fll01. wlllc~ 11 11'11 • .' • ~ · "'!o-11 l11e btrlelkl• ...ncter y ld Deed ol pl..:• lntst '" --n • lhl1 ll•temenl m.cr wltn ""' C°""'ty ,''We're not going to commit 8 gr e em en t ' ' among Plll>lllhlll Or•no• '°''' 0111v Piiot. T , ,,., lofor.., Vllid n11 dill lld .... 11 .. , Pf"l•ln1no 1o tti. 111a11 o1 ••Id c11nc of°''"" c-"' on· o.c 1., im · I ,, Ch "d econonu·sts and analysts that 0ec1m1>er tt, 1tn •!Id J1 n11•fY s. 10""tt>e ~11;..:"':C -itt:. DKlt;';iOI' dKedilnt, w'lltiln tour monrr.s '""' TM 1.,. 8.....,.1.,. J. M-~. ~ C°"'"•Y any VlO ence, avez 581 • nn l51!o-1l •• °'' ... 1 0_.. .... • .. ..__ S•lt nd • 11rsl publlc•flot1 ot 1nl1 nollce. C'4ork. "The T t ha the 1973 "II he " t end "' '"' ,,,. ....,,....., "" ' 1 Dtt.:t Dl<:•mO.• l• 1m earns ers ve w1 a rem ous WASl-IlNGTON (UPI > Tipton, "they still represent 8 wnmn Notk• of Dlf•ul' •nd E11ct1on 10 PHILIP R. ioLe-GRovE ~ We'v gal the year for 1111. to sales." c C S.ll. Tl\9 unoHnlOMd c•UMCI Mitt Notice ROIERT w COLEGRovE !Id e-,rwers. e nie nation's airlines say their suOOtantial shortfall from the PUBU NOTI E 01 o.f1u11 •nd E11ct1on to s.u 10 bl · · 1 \\r6rkers.'' Jt estimates 1973 saJes will 12 [ f th J--------------Jrec:orded In lhl county wller• !I'll retl P,t.UL OOUGl..AS HUGHES 1971 fi••••clal losses turned to percent ra e o return at 0 ,0,, •• ,, ••· n-__ .., 1, lac.ti" E••utor' o1111e wi11 "The federal court suit nam· total 11 • nu·111·on cars 1"n ·-· lb Ci ·1 A · Boord " " cou• "0 ,,·.• ...__ .. _ ·-1-of "" •tiov• n~""" dtcldent .• , • e vi eronauucs •M 011011or•HC• oF THI c1TY • 1 · FIRsT"FEOEA..'L' sAMu•L A. 01t1n•U•• ed more than 185 individuals eluding 1.6 million imports. earnings in 1972, but a has set.as a standard for the ~~••'•""v'o',"uM•,• ,',•"u:1 ~E11'..! ESC ROW C0111PORA."f10N 2n '""" l•M •-· tm. "' .PUBLIC NOTICE 1----- and companies it said had con-'lb th "d 1· l . ·o 'd .......... ,.,,....,. CA '1111 "ICTITIOUS IUllM•IS This compares w1 e pres1 en l8. commisst n sa1 i~ustry." . .~~!~':,1;:o'u~:v~~:.~'J;.~:~'r"rE,e ;~ ~~.;~11:1.9!i.t.n1u•• !~2~1ws"'°" MAM& ITATl!M•WT saired against bla cks . previous record year of 1972 the aviation industry as a .•. Keeping employment Ptt:s""o" 11110 THltEf'ot. An t. vie. Pr911cMnt ,.,,11111htd O::O. c°'"' oiuv 111101, r.:.i~tl ':'~;'<IO ""_,. ••• dol1111 C)ilcanos and F11ipinos with when 10.8 million oars were whole needed a multibillion at about the same level as last lHE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY Pllbitlhld Or•f!O' COlltf Dilly Pllol, Olc9mblf t1 1' 1tn .,,., J1nvtry s 11 P,l.ltll( NEWPORT TENNIS SHOI', 1 "1ftlracts signed in July, 1970. sold, 1"ncluding 1.5 Dll"llion ·-d u !"ft . t f . OF COSTA MEU. DOES HEREBY O't· Oecotml>ff ,., 191l •net J•n111 ..... '· "· 1'71 • • 150..n ... ,tr. N9WOQF1, N•Wflor1 l•ldl,,..., i'l'he UI~ 0 ar program to I It OU 0 year and holding down the DAI N ,1.S FOl LOWS: ltn is.i.n , ......... Elliott, 14'0 PMll N._I r., union, which asked for ports. "serious trouble.'' cal'\lU'ity grov.th rate were ... ss.,cTioHMI. ™,~,ty C~.J!..Y,',""n ~Zt PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Newport Sud!""° • '' t Jess than $28,440,00011 in ,.--'" Olll IHI ... 1'"' _.. Gill H, Elliott, 14'0 fltfk NtwMrl, 'The magazine based its The Air Transport Associa· major factors in the airlines' vo1..,.... iv unlto!'m au111J1ncr coc1e 1t10 NeWflor1 aucti nwo -'-• damages and $100 million b"li k f Edition. •ll•llna to defl!l"o.i. 11u11cn11111t IRIOO COURT OF T•• • mu 11111 ""' 1 ••• """ prediction on a decline in the tion, which represents the ma· a 1 ty to eep costs rom •nd ll'llllr •bllttm1n1 -OYtOH •"-"'' suP HOTICI! TO CRE01YoR1 ~rt-...... "'" 1 -'"' condocled ttr • ;• puru"to"Ve damages 0 -'d the "' ST.tr.Tl 01' CALlf'Olllll~ l'Ot ,... ·~ ,.. ... , , -1 une mployment rate five per-jor airlines, said earnings for outstripping revenues," he pr«*""" ivr "" d•Hlf!c•'1"" ....i TM• couWT'I' o• OllANGI. IUl"t:• 1011 cou•T o" THI: Mtrk II. E111a11 pacts were signed desj>ite the .d ,.,.,.,_, of "'""'""" ~1tt1no1· ,,.. NO A~ STATI! ol' CM.lf'DltJlllA "o• TN1 '''~ ••ltd with ""' c:-1.,. r-"a subslanl1"al maJO" rily" cent compared with 5.6 per· the 12-month period ended last sa1 . City C-11 M1Mr flncll ..-d d9d1rftlilll NOTICE DI' l"t11IVAT1! SAi..• 01' l•AL '"' «»UNTY o• DltAMO• CIH-of Orlflll C-.'V Dftl Die. 1 .. 1t1,, -· cent in 1972 a 9 2 nPl'f'<>Dt hike Sept 30 amounted lo a $196 The President's aviation "" •for-llonld vo1 ... m. IV wtll oro-PllOPllilTY ••. "''"" WILLIAM E ST JOHN COUNTY of the fann workers were ' . r---. . . "''°'!hi bulktll'IO otfkl•l w1111 ""PRPll' In"" .V..lftr ol 1111 Es!lt• of CL YOE lEillhl"' HEHR,. FllAlllCLIH SMITH, CLEtl(, • .,. h-t., ), ~ °"""" . in· the gross Dational product million, contrasted to a $147 Advisory Comm t s st o n, ,_, "-1n .... 11ng dtl•pldl t.:i ll'let«.· •RTHUR eu11;T, o.e..Mlll. alto ' t-., 11ENIY "· IMITH. ..mi, ttt>rfsented by Chave-z' United $L256 billion compared with million loss for the 12 months meanwhile reported that it tlft ovlkltnol. ~-:.~Ult, hllllh. NOTICE IS MEREBY OIYEN 11\el °:c,";~E IS MEll:EBY GIVEN lo "" ~lilltd °''"" COlllf 0.lly Pllol, Fann Workers, AFL.CIO. $1,115 billion in 1972, and a 10 ended Sept. :K>, 1971. "found today's a vi a ti o n pr.:'::W.:.':.tt; ~t:.,~ 11c11o11 to tne ::=.:· ~1;~ =:_..i1;·~~111""1'tr::! aldJ~ ot 1IM *"' Mmlid dtUdfnt ~ 11 ' n. 79 ' lm 11111 J•"""~ /; . . ..... . . t . bl " nd Mimk!Pll Codi It ldvertM. Burt ~Std. wftl "" II ortv•!~ "" llwtl ... ,,.,_. N'flncr dalmt -Im! ..... . mE FEDERAL court suit pen:ent increase m consumer s,..,.em 10 serious rou e a sECT10N 2. "s.c:non 1101 o..-ot1 i:,, •bout Ji ...., ,, 1m ., 1111 or'. Nici dlcldtlll .... rlQUlttd to fll• !him, PUBLIC NOTICE k he ding d bl ~-"WHILE mESE . eco nded spending ll03 .... ldl..... ...... .• 's JI 1 ... wllll the ,. ......... 'l'Olld'ltf'I. In"" afflc• came a wee after t spen on ura e g~ earnings r mme Tlllt eer'l•ln doc_, t09ltt o1 wllldl nett Of Lot0 •nd Loeb, ~ · u • · of""' cttnc of""' •b0¥9 tnt1111d oour1. Dl'J---,----------- Califomia Supreme Court rut· $127.$ billim rompared with are gratifying," said ATA billion in federal funds over •re., 111e w1111 11w otfk • or "" City e;: 'T!v,."': ~\:'n~~r1•1 ~·~to pr_, """'· WITlt tnt -Mry 1u1"•1t1D1t cou11T °"TM• 1115 9 b ·1u · 1972 Board Cba" St T th •• lo d c1 ... 1r., oe11111 mtriled •nd iotnt1nld ., · · ~. 1o"" lll'IOerlloNd '' ""'offk• 1t11.T1 ofl c,1.L1P011MIA •o• ed that Chavez and his union . 1 on m • 1nnan uart . e next .u. years upgra e vo1 um1 •v or 1111 uniform 11111ttl110 code =:i!.n Mt.:!'~'· ~:'1c111~::,' s'! vt ..., •ltomet'-PLUNKETT & TM• couNTY 011 OLU•• ~··d .J,.o-•grow and shin. l 1'7D Edttlon 11 i-.tw ldooled •• !flt ' •• .... ' II l"LUNICl.Tf, 412 Oii ...... ~ p o. llC111 He. ,.., ... --,_~ tn""-W.. ...--- --l!Ulldlflcl l:dde r1111tn1r •"'-n~ l~JUQl'tfl.vn-llon b~ Tiit •f!OYt.fnlL ed Mt. Ml;ftH119* a..A.---.LalUci:nll f'26.ll, •OTJCE OP .. .H.fAAIMO. OP. P,ITf'f'OM ws even though th e 1111uoino1 ""' ,,. city of c-t• M.w w1111 Superior C-1 • .ti of tlii ng11i. nn• ind wNdl 11 11w ol.u of butlnt11 of ""' LJOI fli•MATI! o...-wilC' AND l'Ol "'-•msters contract WBS valid. "1'Clllll•••""•"'•J11••••••••-C••C1·~ TfIB "IAJQR ·•-·e Of the 11wt fallowlnQ UCl'Pllon ' lnlWHI Iha! !hi fll•lt 11'1 tc:QU:r.cr lo<n t,tndw1lt1n9d In 111 in.tl9n Pfrt•fnlng to LITTl!llt TllTAMIWTAll.Y l\,o Ill •• ~ bUd.I Sedlon 206 INll bll 'menc1ec1 lo provide addlllon la""' of dl<Htnl ., "" ''"' "" ..... of Mid ~ wllhln '°"' E•l•fl or JESSIE T,1.1£11:. O.C..Md. ;........ state cow1 said B B k costs cited by the commission ""'' ""CllY Counc:ll s!.11 bit dNm4d 1111 Ill• ~·th, In •!Id to .,,. ,,,, praotr1¥ montlll '"" fht fin! po.ibllt.non of 11111 NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN INI , "" 0 an fol' IOc.lled In 1111 "°""'°'Of Orenv-, S!•I• of 11C1111C9 Gll!'HNA TABER FLICK h•s flllid hfffln etlng W3S permlssible illE:.1 ~ er WaS divided between airport ~:: .. °' AoPNle ti ptO\lll*i (tllkornl1. c-1¥ lr.IWIWn II UMJ2 VII 0•1~ o.c.n-.botr 12 ltn I Pf!lllcn lor Pl'Obl'I• of Wiii Ind for ...... the o_..,en signed ~i::, construction and new ~uip-11c'T10N J. Thrt Onllntnc• •i'lltl t•k• c.iaom1•· Ctplstr•M B•~· C•l!ID!'~I•, 111Ez ALBERT• JMrTM ~1111•u~• of Lttt.n T .. ,_, • ...., to 1"111· .-.. _,,v.,. fl«:! nd bl ll'I l\lll I Ind 9fl&ct 1tllr l9111lly dOK<lbed •I follows E~«:lllr1• of 1flt w111 _.. ,.,.~ to which It ,,,..,. fm' t"'-five-year pact witb>ut at· ment required by the alr lnes !. ~,• ci. fl'orn ~~ Its Miii. Lem, •nd •· e1oc1r. 11, or Tr1ct 71' •• ot •hi tb0\1 n•tnld dtttdtnt """""' P1rtk11••n. •m lllat "" """"•'WI .,, • s k M k emand " I .,. • Pl ' Oii' M1p rt<Ollted In !look n. P•llH !1 PLUNKETT • PLUNKfTT Ill•<• Of llt•rlng Ille u me h~1 !Mt!\ ""' tffnpting lo deter ml n e ,.__ a i'n g Plans to meet the growing d s .,,., ........ ,,"" ••pl••1~ •• ~, ,.n""~1~ to 25 of Mltelll1-..1 Mtoi. In TM 412 Oii ... Av• .. 0. ... ,., for J1n11A'l' ll)'" tt1l .• , '00 • ""·· In 1119 -~-the thei f" Jd hands KU f · sed 'l A ...,.,.. • " • pet.Mtt, •·-P11 rlCOl'lll of Or•1'19' c-rv. C1llfornl1 ·· · court,_.. ot ~rttMnt Ni> ) of \•Id wue r r 1C SUJ>' or lrterea C8paC:I y. C-D!Ke In the Or..-.cll COlst Ditty P'ltol, t TM s.<ilt Ii slltl!tct to cvrrenl ltl9I Hllllll""flllll SNdl, C,t. nHI (Ol,ll'f, ti 700 CJvtc Ctl'lter Orl~t Wnl, In POrled the Teamsters. cording to the commission. it ~~ r:':r:'c~~·~ pr~ -"· conditions. r ' I Ir I c t 1 0 n I : ~::~~) ~wtrill ~City of ""'' ""'· C•llfornl1. -~ifhe fann workers union • WALNtfr CREEK (AP)_ Fortney H. Stark once told would cost $48 billion to ~oo.tlltr w1111""' '*"'" ot 1119 ~· :=::".;i r~ '1:' ,:v:;:!' • .!':! PuttnsMd Or•,; co.tt o.Jl'Y 1111a1. '1911..JiU'.IAM'E ~'~ JOHN alked lhe court to prohibit the -~-at ... ~-• ~-he was boss that U.S. finance new jetliners needed of.,,. Cllv councn 'IDiing tor ..ci ~1"'1 of ,_d 10 bl ~11,111d 11111 o1 ttw r.;emw u, tt. • ''" ind J-~~ ,_.., c..,._ >.;"""1JUigc;» VJ!:' ~ WllQ:C the Mml. Pllf'(MM Pl'kt. TM pr°'*'ty II 10 bl told W. It. MlllVIY, Jll. growers and shippers from en-s:avinmt bonds were (I. bad investment. 50 the ..,.._..,m.>nt between 1973 and 1985. Added P.t.SsEo ,t.HO ADOPT'ED 11111 m1 <k'I' on •n "•• 1,,. w.i,. ""..,..... •• L-lottirg their pact with tbe .._.,,... ""' -·-~ to the total would be an of J_.ry, 1m. ekh 11r ~. ••• ll'l wti..:i tor 111ld rNI PUBLIC NOTICE MM ~ •1w. '"'" "' '!" ..... ' withdrew the bank's right to sell the bonds. JACll HM\MElT orociwf'Y tnd mwt bit rn .wt!lncr Ind w1!1 ---Let. ......... C•R""'I•""' Teamsters and from rerustJlg Now, •~ '!·•-"""' Califonua" ~t '--orw... estimated $38 billion for Mf'(llr Df tne Clly be rK'M ...... 11 llwt 110tr ... kl offkt'l. « JllOTICa TO ClllDITa-S Tll1 CHS) ~ •< bargain Jth Cha t WJU ._ 1"'Clol~ ...,.,............ I~ eV"•-· " Jon nd · Of COii• M... ,,,.., b11 ftled wllll TM C .... of the SUl't:tlOa COUllt OF THI!' Al....., .... ,.........,. w w Yez to OXlgrels .., 1 rtpreSelltative and says he hopes to arrport construct a im· ATTEST: s""*'°' c-1 11 en.,. """' ,ner 111t ""r n.1.n Of CALl~MIA "°" PVbl •• ....,, c (l'IOJliZation. -provement the comIDmion &ILEEll P. PH1PilNEV ~k•tlon llefWf Incl bltll!'• 1'11-111111 ~Id TMI (O\IWT'I' o• DltA•GI • Jeowery ~ ... ~'Wn Old o.ny 'i"'n • Airline Job Plans Told gei & lel-t Oil the ~ IDd Qlrrency COmmiU~. Jd ' City Cllt'll; of IM City ..itr. RIOfll to rtllC:t 1ny tnd t ll llldt Is ....... ,tin ~ sa . of c.11 """' 111tet1Y ,..,,...,,ed. "'"" ot PAui.. c111...c1. DoKeltld. PUBLIC l''OTICE THE MAVERICK. 'DA.rfl'l1'D who had a htUl'A nASNI "Direct financial particjna. Foa , ... wi. of 1111 retl Pl'OOll'IV ...... n "IOTICE IS HEREll,. GIVEN to "" • _____ _ Ol'.U'ln.1>11."' _.... ...---~~ , ..-lf,t.Ta Of' CALI NIA dtt(rfllld "'111 b11 mllde llOOI' 1111 loilowlno c•ldltor1 Of IM •-,,.,.... ........ 11-------symbol hung ()I\ the bank. \ll'l!IC8ted hawkish ffOU9e Veteran lion by the federal £0V1!;11)· COUNTY Of' Ott.ANGE )U """': •II CtUI In l1wtul rnoNY Of 1111 tlltl 1!1 pt<W'I$ htvlnt ct.I"" IOflnsl the A !f17• r~e P. •r.u- 111 • .. _ June _.mary and 1n •~-~ ment Is -mmended If the: C•rv o -= COSTA M~SA 1 un111c1 S••'" of ,1.mer1u 1 ""· 1ft ""i•ld Ot'<ttllnt .,, '""rr«1 ~ t111 n."'. "1cT1Ttous 1usn••11 ~a ~ \lJC I'"' l~t:lllui::l '"'"" I, EtLEEJll P. flHIMNEY, CllY Cltrll; •llotmltt,,., Olr'I c1il'I ""'Pll'1 t •tdll, ll>t wllll 111t n«"'WtV 'fOUICl'l9n, In 11wt of'tlc:• •AMIE STATOltn woo Che right to lt!ll'eseot the state's sprawling 8dl Q:o.. risk to prlvate industry b con· -s •• .or11c1o Cltrt of -c11y CO!ill'IC:ll or ..,.... of WCh cr..i11 1o "' KC._, ..... •o of rr.e ,II•• ot tllt ·-lfrtl!led '°'"'· ., TM to11tro01no ,,..,._ 1r• doo l'l9 lonal D "d ed l f I to "" City of cc.ti MIU, ,..,....,. """'"' 5lkl ldlnl'lhl••trl• •nd ""' ·~tin.ct lo Pl'_, '"""· "'111'1 the ntt"wry lllWIAlll •t gress lttrk:t. SJ er too grea or t !U!>' ""' t111 •bowe Aolld _..,... ont1!\tl'IA cOIW!i ''" pen:wit 110"1o1 of "" .,..,.., vouc11er .. ,. the .. ldWll.,.m •• lfll orfkt Mo H LE 111 . o •Io o .1."' D HJ woukl think tNt I WOU)d ~ most useful and effeo-port." the commission said ln No. n..-••• lntroclllc'MI .,.., ~ bk! ,.. •t<Ol'l'>Olf!Y 1119 Mfff .,... ""o1 ll>lir •'~ ·u.....oi..o.. tt•N· .uaoc1,1.T11. NIWJIOtt Profn-11-1 ttC:llon by Mellon ti I ,..ulrw -llf!f of llfl~ lo tMt 1111!1 """"""' ti'! II(,_ DEll:SO... ...,, DINSMOOR, A"°"""' tl • 9tlktl1'19, Svlfl 17'.,.. It!\ Mlfl,191 D<!Ye, tive there,0 aid "Pete" 8\(1.rk, who beaded Security NI• a statement. Mid ctty c~" Mid .... ..,.,,..,. 11.., of tro1tow1n0 conn•m111on or s.<il• by ,.. l••· no E111111h ~1r .... wi. 111. Cot!• ,._._. 1NC11. c11110n111 ""° o.t-1 n.-L '--DK--. 1m. 11'11 ""'"""' p11fted iuip«lllr CMI. M1:14, C1UlornL1 .,.17 ""*" •• -P'«• llOWI R1y ••lff· ,,., "•" Wftl. ~1111111 D9Ulo ur;I"-•1111 ldoptlid •• I WllOlt et • ........... D•i.d' Oectmblr fl. Im Of -I~,, of 11111 urndtnlffltd In •II ..,.,, ·-· ,.,. DlttO> CA. St.ark, 40 years )'OUl'llel' than the man he l.s rep&acm{, UNDER CURRENT prac· """'1111 o1 wld c11y c-11 lwtd on -ttiE• ,1.110 LOii ''" .,..-1111'11!'!0 10 11w '"'"Of Yid ~ o-.. w Motil.,, "'' 11 vatc:•n dJd not -'I f-.. _ J•n. • JnanmoraUoo lo heglD" -• u Ircraft manuf•CI•--2nd 4-Y of Jf.,.,..,.,, lm li¥ ""'fofiOWlllO fJiy : Jettn 5, Wlrrtn dfftl, "'!1nln lo.Ir mol'll!ft after !ht flri! "1.t<'t, H1<llndt 11t/gh!t. (.A. .,.., v. ll.llt ... , ,, "'ft-ce, 8 _..,., ,_I c•ll WI•: . . AttomtY• lot t!Mon t. EHloll. covb!ltt!lon Of 1'111 MllC9. T!llt bWl-Lf tondvc'Md bo/' • """"" 1 ...... an eiected offlc:ial. Hls dia1rict office has ... 1-....J.. rompete fOr alrline bu51neu ,.,.El; COUNCllMriNl ~. Admb1itt••lrl• wtlll-~H·....,tllld O•ttd JI""'"~. "" wflWrtNp. ~~ed.-, 7 __ -~z Uh I dJ "d JJ" 'd lg ed Jant1n, Plnkt.y, WllM". lt~lll 01 1111 nl•I• o1 C1}'dot ,t.rlht,tf' I ANI( OP AMER ICA aol:lltt R_, Gnol• ·-IW " '-'-" w n VI ua y es n NOES: COUNCILMEN:.._ 9ufl. 0.C.NMd NAf lOIUil lltUST AND ..... - SAN DIEGO iAP I -PaclOc Southwest Airlines pl•ns to blllld a $k\i Ulan engine m11'"1aul plant al Llndberlh l'leld, a spolcegman uld. '!lit ~ Dlcpboscd a i r 11 n e eonns engine overhauls for Sl'AIUt SAID as a fftShman coogrrssman be hopm to ill, Meslcana and Air be ol ll<i_p to ..,,.,.. bouoe membon and to handle cues wllidi niodl-bls-o/O.. .mcmly. -- • Samuel9on Ilrotbon, a L<o Sblrk oald be boi><o tlle """ ...,,... CJ/ the bank -·t airllncn, But 1lrllne e:s:· '"A~~~ressc~;i'~~i:.:.:-'*"°" t.o•• ~':f.0,. ---t~!:~ ;~~;ioN "'~,::.";':~t.!': :~.~2.c::;;: ecutfvet Slf the COit of tho .. , 1"'1¥ r..nd end ttll11ed "°" SNI el IM 0... '#Hthltl ......... of not IOO¥I """*' dtc:•fll IOlllS, (IDUCM, --·Un o! the future will Cll'Y of COii• ,..._ 1'11, ~d .. , Of 'Ml.iii ... 11Wf. •t Or'llMI A-L•l"">LD. MINO••'°" McCA•T't .. f.AlllM.UCM • ..._.. efS J~. ltD. La ....,.i-. C111-.it MU 1,,_ DIN'MOOll ATTOlllilYI AT LAW be-~~·..ts~!:>!r ~~U.:aH1:=1. .. ='.:~:.~im~ ~'~~·"'-•n :=-.-ir~v.1111 ........ manw-.;\u.i:t:.1-. "la' \.VUIU ace C'-*"' ""''" COUl'ldl .. WCltlWll _,.. Tiil fn4) ..,.,.. 1.-.,..... CA. ...., Aneeleo llrm, -pvm lhe ....,.,.. lhe big peace symbol. c:uns!nJctlon contract. •-'!II _______ , ----=-=Ott!! I' ._ • baotnlptey if an alrUnc 1 LI """'i.:. c~:,. c.tt:J""o.1i., 1111ot. ~ 2t?"~1~.:.. o;~~'°'S: ":Shldtw ~:"(out ~ltf l"tlo!. llVblllhlll Or•• eo..t Deltf "': tc000mically unUICCeSSfu • J•__, 1. 1m u.n ,.,, ~n J-v s. IL "· 2'. 1tn 12.n Jtn111.., 1. u, ,,, 11. ,,.,, to.n • jlJ DAILY PILOT SC Frlda1, J.vlu"'I ~. 1973 Mone,'• Worth How Come Some Prices Declined? By SYLVIA PORTER What linked corn flake s nnd <.'1.lcumbers, pocketbooks nnd pillows, railroad fares and raincoats In 1972? Answer : Each went down In price In the race of a year of contin - uing in· nation. And what was the lie between TV picture tubes. riec. gas or elec- tric ranges and postal charges? !"09T•• Answer : Each was priced at the end of 1972 at the· some leYe.l as at the start of '72. The pri~ changes were zero. Navy Okays Gn1mman's Big Loan BETHPAGE. N.Y. (AP) - Grumman Corp. has been granted an additional $18 million loan by the Navy despite the aerospace con- OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll1ttng1 for Thurodoy, Jo~u.ry 4, 1973 more F,4 jet fighter. for the n---· d ' 111 Tl! n 1.'i ti ~H 3' li 13 0.krloo9 Hold ,..._ '-tj · U<;;\JCIUse l n Cr e 3 Se pro-l:'' W.IF m P1ln1 Lw Im n. 14 Acme G.nl ~ tJi,i.-I I -,.----aeivice wider a....ainttact-o~-ductivity-----!n---those factor· .Fl:~~.U P ~~~ ~ u M"!!,.~,_,~ ~ " Uon. helped reverse the price trend. Elt:k;~11 il~ i!lt ~i:r"w tt:i ~i I. st~?to¥0~ J~ ,~ w • A Grumman spokesman said !~creased. producti~itv .re-~:r G::t U"" 1Mn ~l~r d= 'II~ :~ n1• ~~~~°J;.°'l; ~ l; ,{ mains a ma}Or key to inflation ,••nk1 1:1 1iv. I'll Poon Bro ~ n1i 1 Cmotr 0es1an ""--~ ff Wednesday night the loan was ''"'' ,.,'" ~ ,,,., cc. t 7Yll 11y, c~ '" it~ "' " control. Any progress we Fr11nc1 ·~ l1~ ""'Prot GoK m • ..., is a1111 cni11 24<1 1•~-~ 8f: thor'··' by •• N FrlKh l''' -Pr<>llffl 2S\lo 241 U Doullf'll~ Fd1 •~ I.I; 11 au ucu u1e avy on make on this is a plus. Frg1 Fd '"" tt" .,.SN cir 11"6 ''" 2s 111 Artl111 Prd 12~ -. 1 Dec. 12, the day after the company said it would not build the additional Fl4s unles,, the price were renegotiated. stephen G. Kerekes, the spokesman, said the loan was not pi:edlcated on Grumman's willingness to build the ad- ditional planes. The loan brings to $54 million the com- pany's total indeblednesS' to the Department of Defense. The New York Times. which rt!Ported the loan In today's editions, noted that Asst. Secretary of Defense Barry J. Shillito did not mention the amount of the new loan in testifying before a Senate sub- committee Dec. 21. At lhat bearing. It was said that Gr umman was negotiating a new Joan: and the subcommittee's chai rman, Sen. William Proxmire, {O- Wis.), said he btlieved the loan was to be for 110 million . IN THE FEW illustrations above you have read some fundamentals of economics. Now. here is a sampling of price declines . Over the period from late 1971 through 1972. com Oakes have dropped 3.7 pereent in price. In the same period, salad or cooking oil has drop- ped 3 3 percent. cucumbers have dmpped 6.5 percent. in- stant coffee has dropped 1.3 per<'f'nl. and strained baby food has dropped 1.5 percent. OVER mE SAME period prices of new tubeless tires ha\le dropped 3.5 percent. anti- 1nfec1Lves have dropped 8.4 )X'recnt. deodorants ·have dropped 2 0 percent, flshmg rods haye dropped 2.5 percent. hormones have dropped 2 0 pt'rt'ent. and home permanent refills have dropped 1.8 per- wit. THERE ARE OVER 2000 USED CARS FDR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S Harbar Baulevard af Car• i..001 fOI THI IMIUM AT THEODORE I UNIVERSITY ROBINS FORD OLDSMOBILE 2060 UJO HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. , I MUTUAL FUNDS --. ,,._ .. -. -- COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST • l I I ' ' I ! J ' \ ''" "":: ""' •• .... ..... i5 e • r, day January 5 l'i7l SC Olll y PILOT VI Friday's Closin g Prices-Complete Nelv York Stock Exchange Li st ---.:.~ ..... .,, ___ _ Blue Cl1ips Post Wall Street Gain NEW YORK I AP) -Stock mark et pnces scored solid gains toda y with blue clups and quahty is sues leadu1g the upiwing Anal)'lla said the prospect or renewed b1gh· level peace Ulk1 next w04k IJld hopes for an un· proving economy llVe lnvtt!Otl IP l!XCUll for buy· mg The market show1 that the path ot leall re- SJs tance Is still up " uld l\obtn Stovall analyst '"Jh Reynolds S.curltlu, Inc ' After a strong operung, prices sagftd In latt trading then lirmod ntar Ibo clo11 r.-.=i. • 1. Tre11d ----- ..... ~., P a 111110 lff111 Lft' La•t Ck. SS 10 > ~ • '" , ' • " "'' • ' ' ' • " ' ' n ' , • ,. • I l • ,. ' " . ' . " ' . 'l •• • • " " , :i . " ' ' '" •• • • " " • • • • 10 10 l7 • Jt i : \ -)U, J I s ·~· I . • 2 211• l• 21~ 1a ; o 1'o ) -. 13 1• 16 11 "· 1 . 11 IJ 12 o l s 1-9 ' l-8 ' 1 1 I I ~ 1 ~l O>.. IQ 1•11 •1 • --0 .,__ -··- " " n ' • • • " I ' . . " ... ~): a1 , ... ' ... " " ~ 1i~: J !~ ~\~~ ~ 2•1• ' ·~ '' 1 • ~ " t i ,,,., ' " 6~ 9 • . ' . 7l ' • . ., " , ' ~ .... 10 1) • , ' . " . . ,,, ' . " . no , .. ' . ,..... '"'' P I tlttltl Mltfl Ltw Lf.•I (IMlo. .. n " " l! " "l', l )l1i ' J ' 31 • ~ 'I"-~ H .1 1... • .. 4 .. n• :... '' i1 --,. l o I ),t-\• '1 .......... . 1:d rs .. t . t -·• 1 q ' ... l '1 l •I 4\ Ii "' I"' 1~· l" )l1 1•~-· ·~,. 1• 1• 114 f 0 ll"io 1 • ' I ... 'l ' 2•1r-• '2'24 1 '!'' lSlt'o l••\~' .4/4•11 •• ~. J ' J "" 111'. 31 .. 2 ~. ,.., ... •I 1... 1 1 ,.; ., •• 11,~11 1 - ' • • e Denn11's 81111 llONOI ULU - An l rnr1 d of the Tokyo Bro ;i~11ng Systl'1n said hL~ ! n 1s purchasu1g o~nny s h11pcr1 ul JI 1~a1l llOIC'I In \Va1k1k1 II rosh1 Nri k:iJ1m.-i r xe< ulh r 1111n;i9{'r :inrl r,( u rnl manllgl r "f Tnkyo Brond1 1s t1n ~ S}Sll rn f tir!flC !) ud \he f o I 01 I [ purch~sc agrc-.:n11 nl 1s t'X pcctcd to be signed 11ond 1y , ". ,...__ ' . ~. , .. ' , l. AmeriCC1M Sn I es Volume • • , • i I • . I • - DAILY PILOT Ftld.>y, Jlnuliy 5, 197) ''I take it you're in no n1ood to listen to talk about . raises.'' Phony Delivery Scheme Reve SACRAMENTO (AP) - Counterfeit packages bea rin g the Radio Corporation of American trademark may have bilked thousands or Cali£omia television repair dealers, state official! say. As outlined at a news coft· ference Wednesday by John Navy Chief Knocks Off Dungarees SAN DIEGO (AP ) -The chief of naval operations has cancelled hJs "Z-gram" which allowed U.S. sailon around the world to wear the blue dungaree working uniform ashore, the Evening Tribune has reparted. day that Adm. Elmo Zumwalt y sailors went Into bars and other civilian establishments wearing the less-than-[ijltty uniforms which were fre- quently spattered with engine oil and paint." ''THE DUNGAREE J)livUege ranked with long hair, beards and sideburns in sending Navy traditionalists to battle stations," said the Tribune's military \i.Titer, Bob Dl•trtch. In Southern California. Zumwall's order will take ef- fect Monday, the paper said. Sailors still will be allowed to keep civilian clothes aboard ebip, however. ~ B .k •• . I IDI. Kehoe, director of the state Department of Consumer Af- fairs. here is what happened this week: HUNDREDS OF the 3-by-3- inch packages falsely bearing the RCA label were brought to United Parcel Service for COD delivery to television dealers in San Diego, OakJand, Palm Springs and Orange County. The delivery company col- lected a 110.4-0 COD charge from the dealers on each package to tum over to the person whQ sent them out. When the dealers opened the packages, instead of the ex- pected RCA electronic parts they paid for, all they found were a "couple of old transistors,'' Kehoe said. KEHOE SAID the pareel firm estimated that as many as 1,900 packages with the COD charge of $10.40 each ma have been t into It de- ivery system. ut e a - ed no finn figure was avail- able. --- The Ventura County district attorney's office filed a civil fraud action Wedne s da y against James R. Holsopple in connection with the case, Kehoe said. But no criminal charges bad been filed, be said. Holsopple once operated the Airway Television and A~ pliance firm with stores in Long Beach and in the Foun- laln Valley area· or Orange County. and his electronic repair license is up for con- sideration of revocation at a Jan. 15 hearing in connection with separate matters. Kehoe said. - Bulge • 'Separates' Offered NEW YORK (AP) -If you have more bulge here than there, you can buy your bikini in "separates." Swim Bali offered hattting 'suit tops and bottoois, sold lepQI'&tely in dlf!erent sizes, at the New York O:>ut.ure Business O>uncil's national press week Thursday. IF A WOMAN ilAs large hips, she can buy a ba~ suit bottom in a size larger than the top. The suits are cut in bright floral print§, or plaids. Cover-ups run the gamut !rom matching shirts at !30, and cuJot.te skirts at $.15, to a cowl-necked, dolman-sleeved lop, al 125. .FQR PLUMP WOMEN, the coo-piece maillot, m.... '30;-hicludes lb m body~SIJ1>l>O!t m'the-i-lglif p1acel0Thi ooe-piece swim dress covm bulging upper thighs with a side-alit short •klrt. THERE OVER 500 SKILLEO TECHNICIANS REAOY TO SERVE YOU ON COSTA MESA'S Harbor Boulevard of Car• LOOI FOi THI IMILIM AT NABERS ~ BAUER CADILLAC INC , . BUICK 266o 2925 HARBOR BLV HARBOR BLVD • • • 7. SAVE •2 ••• HAllMlllll Waring &.speed ltand mixer at White Fronrs Discount' savings! Finger.tip dial COii-· trol. #HM -6. ·SAVE 1°1 ••• Piil. RADIO 29& OURllG.197 lislen to full -bodied ...,,1, solid instant play chassis, battery, earphone. case. SAVE 45c ••• ALIM. Rll Strong, flexible, stock up a! this low price. 25 It. on each 12'' wide roH. -, .. _ -...!---·-· •. __. --~ ·---.. ,. -,.. ·-• ONE DAY SALE SATURDAY ONLY , SAVE 1f ••• SP•Pl.118 4c OUI RIG.69< · factO!j fresh spark plugs for better engine perform- ance. fit l!llSt cars. ltt-11< llslsllr Pl111 ••• lie SAVE If; .. •SMMPOO 299 OUlllG.197 Safe for cleaning all rugs. Non phosphate, acid, non- to•1c. faITK1us Bissell. SAVE 30' ... Ra FOOD c High in protein, nutnlton: floats on surlm:e and keeps tank absolutely clear. • ,. CLDSE·UP TOOTillUSH ~11 .Gel a free trial size lube of toothpaste with purchase ·of brush. RECTRIC BLANIB ass OUR RIG. 11 .97 A!1 the warmth you want without l'te1ght. Twin s11e. therITK1slat control. machine v.ashable Choice of color· #3660 SAVE '1.BB .•• SANDALS 22 lmPorted brown leather toe· 1mg sandals, low slant heel. T~ns & Misses". SMOU lfOT ATlOM&llACM OITOllANCl \ ) SAVE Sl.55 I I I WARM PLAID BLANKETS 2x90'' FOR TWIN OR ·FULL SIZE BEDS OUR REG. 5. 99 Rest assured, warm and comfy during long, winter nights, with these bright red & gold plaid blankets to fit twin or full size bells. All are moth proof, non-allergenic and machine washab le for ~siestcare .-Stock up and ~et the extra blankets you need - right now at this low price! . STOii HOUIS: MONDAY thrv FllDAY 12 NOON lot PM• SATUIDAY AND SUNDAY 10 AM to 7 PM• MUHY, SOME QUANTITIES MAY IE LIMITED ' Es... 3088 BRISTOL ST. A-San Oiep-F..,.1y 1t-8rlotel .. • ' ~ .I I ! r 1 Lag11i1a Beaeh • Today's F inal N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1973 TEN CENTS Peters Tells Court He Killed Parents By TOM BARLEY OI 1111 Dally Pli.t flaff ··11 was Christmas Day and I v.·a,, al the festival In Laguna Beach. I'd been, you know, taking LSD and suddenly I srw my father's soul. It was kinda telling me my old man was dead, you know. And then I got to thinking about all the good times we'd had." Gig Peters stopped at that point, smil· ed at an incredulous jury· and absentmindedly tapped one of tbe two Tuesday Meetitig massive wlumes of obscure rtllgiOns from which be bad quoted Uberally throughout the afte~. He bad earlier refused to take the oalh before testifying Thursday and was only allowed to do ao after a bitter argument between opposing lawyers. Tlte former llieguard eased his broken body forward in his wheelchair, adjusted the counsel table microphone M>'Cially cocked in his direction and resulTM'd what everyone present agreed was one or the most astoniahing acts ol tostimony In Orange County Superior Court history. ~fuch of It was rambling aod in-- coherent 14 the point that court repOrter Doris Vane was unable to record a Quent account of what the crippled defendant offered in response to defense attorney Barry Tarlow 's prompting. But Peters, 24. repeatedly testified that he had indeed killed Charles Peters. 55, and Flora Peters, 54, less than 24 hours after his parents bad welcomed him and . LA Officers Ullom to Answer Murdered Board's Demands In County The Laguna Beach Board of Education has agreed to a special meeting Tuesday nlght at which Supt. William Ullom will formally respond to demands that be terminate bis services to the district im· mediately. Dr. Ullom and the board reached agreement on a second round of talks following an hour·long executive session, Board President William Thomas said the document reflected the attitude of the board majority. Browne responded that there is no majority opinion until the board votes on the matter. Orange County Counsel William f\.tcCourt cautioned the board in adopting any proposal to Ullom unless it has been reviewed by bis office for legal technicalities. By ~f!CHAEL GOODRICH Of ""9 0.lrY ,.lltl St.ff Two L<ls Angeles County Sherifrs deputies were machine-gunned to death Thursday afternoon in Midway City as they attempted to capture a double murder suspect. The suspect. Carl Eckstrom, 23, of 8251 Flight Ave., Midway City, was later cut down by a single &ltotgun blast fired by an Orange county Sheriffs deputy. He fleer!. his girl friend 14 their modest Himlington Beach home. "You see, I've nothing to gain or lose," the bearded lon8·balred defendant told the jury while Judge Kenneth Williams watched bim sadly from the bench and prosecutor Pat Brian Pointedly turned his b<:k on hlm. "Okay, the bas.le .Issue for me is whether 1 go to the jotnt or the nuthouse, right?" Peters munnured. "I'm not trying to alter your opinion. But I think some of you might get the message l've been carrylng around for a long time." he said. PeterS "'iii be "·heeled back to the courtroom f\londay to resume his testimony after the three-day break ordered late Thursday by Judge Williams. And it is expected that the fonncr Hun· tington Beach High School honor student will be the final witness in a sanity hear· ing which must end v. ith the jury's ruhng l Thursday's m .. llng opened healed D _ J ! --.m .n.-. .---..iscuss1on between b<ml'tt~ITWe.-r"llClJ·~ Norman Browne and Patricia Gillette -EolSlmllr,Wbo1lnrddltliltr101l<lng-t"'e.--¥ suspect in a double mu rder is suspectt'd over a draft proposal that Ullom discon- tinue work today and accept either a lump sum payoff of his contract or be re- tained as a consultant for six months at his established rale of pay. Ullom blasted the unofficial proposal, drafted by fl.1rs. Gillette. as "arbitrary and capricious" and told the board he wanted an official proposal that had been voted on by trustees. Following Ullom's statement, the board went into secret session and returned to the open meeting with a revised plan. The revised proposal was accepted by the board in l'I 3 to 2 vote, with trustees Jane Boyd and Nonnan Browne di.Sien· ting. The revised proposal demands tnlom respond not later than Tuesday and that he accept either a lump sum payoff or a consultantship for six months. It demapds that he be prepared to clear his desk not later than Wednesday. UJlom, Jn writing, acknowledged receipt of the offi cial proposal but said he did not agree with its terms and that he would not relinqutsh any or his rights as superintendent. The proposal requested Ullom give up hil right to tenure in the district. Ullom said he will have legal counsel 10 represent him at Tuesday night 's meeting with trustees. At the meeting 's outset Browne called the first proposal "a worthless piece of paper" since it did not have approval of the board . fl.trs . Gillette, however, maintained the demands was a summation of what had transpired in a executive session with Ullom last Tuesday. hiiriilJ,~r Shows Victim Picture Of Herself Nude -An intruder who apparently broke Into a Laguna Hills home Thunday night foreed bis attractive victim into act:!I of sexual perversion after showing the .housewife her own nude picture, Orange County Sberifr's officers said. 'lllc 23-year-old victim told deputies that her alltlilant entered the reaklence unk<!Own to her during her ht11band's aboen<t. grabliedller and pulled her into tbe mll$ter bedroom or the home. She said he showed ber a picture re<cntly ,.ken of h<r In the nude and told her: "I want to see you like tbiJ." She $Aid h< left -th< home afler wmpelllna her to puliclpate in acts of acxual perven ion. Jnvesdgators said th< Intruder lound the plctur. in a bedroom dres&er dhwtr. ft had bffn taken by the woman's lntS- band, officers said. lovestlg1tors believe I.be 1milant de5cribed by his dlstroughl victim may 1liveliRiflii>def"~ratiip al tho Ume. Kill Tustin Bar Patron One man was killed early today and another seriously wounded by gunfire in an alterePtion in a Tustin bar with two off duty policemen from other com- munities. Tustin police reported. Randall S. Robinette, 25, address not known, diei.: at 5;20 a.m. in Tustin Com· mup.ity Hospital. In the same hospital seriously' wounded is Sam P. Campise, 35. whose borne address is also unknown. The shooting occwted at 1:45 a.m. in the Bachelor's m bar, 149'l0 Holt Ave., Tu stin police said. Officers involved who Tustin police allege did the shooting were Jerry L. Gray, 28, of the Garden Grove Police Department and Sgt. Thomas M. Baroldi. 26, of the Cypress force . Tustin police would not reveal any details of the affair this morning. They said they had called ln Orange County District Attoroey 's investigators to assist in the case, evidently because police officers were involved. l'rustees'.lteject Vocation Class . T-l'aining Change - By JACK CHAPPELL Of ,,_ o.llY ~1111 Staff A resolution with the intent of ending expensive duplication of vocational training classe!J in oearby commtmlty coUeges was tabled to an indefinite future by Saddleback Community College tnutees Tltunday. Terming the document a possible en- croachment of state control on the com· munity colleges, the trustees roundly slammed all the "Whereases" of the resolution. slthOugh some said they ap. proved of the '"Therefore, be it resolv· ed.'' That ''1tErefort,"' would have a.sktd the llale legl'11lure to change th< method of. caculalJng average dally at· tendance for commU{llty college.1 trom the present l)'llem, bued on student residenct:, to one based on student enroll· ment. , U the c1w1p._... made, -l lo- ttrdlstrlct arrangements required to permit a Saddleback D~trlct rulden~ stu.i.nt to 11"'1<1 a apeelallud Oran,• Coast cl.us would not be required. Tbe fnterdtatrlct a -r r 1 n gem e n t 1 normally Involve payment by one tllatricl to the other to make up dliferencu between lhe coll ol education, ind an lllllOlllll Ollimdllili~-Ult"ltltt; (See VOCATION, Pqo ll ·~ of critically wounding a third victim at the same time, is in critical condition to- day at Orange County Medical Center. The two-county massacre began shortly afler noon when Eckstrom allegedly pulled a pistol at the Cerri tos Shopping Center and shot two femaJe companions. One girl, Rosemary Vasquez. 20, of Bell Gardens, was shot twice in the stomach and died at Pioneer J.lospital in Artesia. Her sister, Cecelia Vasquez, 17, Bell Gardens, was listed in critical condition today after undergoing surgery at Pioneer Hos pital. She was shot in the chest, right side, left leg and left foreann. A passing shopper. fl.1ichael Jeffries. 27, of Downey, was shot twice in the back as he returned to his car. police said. He died at Woodruff Community Hospital. Long Beach. Witnesses told police Eckstrom shot the two girls while walking with them in the shopping center parking lot. Police sa id they still have no idea what the motive was for the shootin gs. Following the shootings. the suspect ran to bis car and Oed. but not before a shopper noted his Ucense number and phoned them to the sheriff's station in Lakewood. Two sherifrs deputies, Sgt. Carl E. Wilson, 40, and his partner, Sheriff's Detecti ve DonaJd W. Schneider, also 40, checked the license numbers and pro- cteded to the Eckstrom home. They contacted the Orange County's She.rifrs Office, which assigned a back up car driven by Deputy Andrew Romero. When they arrived at the Midway city resid~nce ~ w~e Eck§ti;:om liv~s yith hi s parents, SC1ine.ider and wnson went to the front door and Romero went to co ver lhe ba<k. Witnesses told police that Schneider yelled for Eckstrom to come out and when the young man refused, the deputy began to break down the door. Eckstrom suddenly flung the door open and fired at Schnelder point blank with a .45 caliber Thompson submachine gwl. according to the witnesses. • Witnesses said Schneider crumpled on the doorstep and Wilson ran to the side or the house and into the backyard . Eckstrom emerged from the house wearing a U.S. Anny Oak jacket and chased Wilson to the back where he fell- IS.. KIUJNGS, l'qe I) KINS EY UPDA TED -lN PILOT TOD AY Twenty.Ci•& years ago, ·~ Kinsey Report•: Jl\lde Ila 1ppearance In this cotmh11 end America basn't been tlio same stnet. The rtpOrl ii generally ~ited wl\h usberina lo a aual revolution. For all yw w{nted to i<now about m , but = .l!tR o!rald 14 aa1' sec ~ DAILY ~llOT llaff l"tllle WARY LAWMEN EXAMINE HOME OF MURDER SUSPECT In Midway City, Tragic Climax to Two-county Shooting Spree U"I TeMpl\efOS TWO DEPUT IES WERE AMONG FOUR SLAIN BY SU SPECT Deputy Sheriff, Con Schneider (left) 1nd Carl Wilson 'Fornas Rubber-stamped' Trustee Charges IDegal • • Alien s in County Schools By CANDACE PEARSON Of IM DfllY ~lltl SI•" A county school trustee charged Thurs- day that illegal aliens are attenchng county schools and that one unnamed school district was vlrtuaUy rubber- stampifll alien student entrance fonns. David Brandt of Santa Ana, the county board's newest member, told his fellow trustees Thursday that be was j,con- cemed'' about foreign students being ad· milted 14 1<:hoo1' with Improperly filled out lmmigraUon (onm, known as ''I· 20's". Although h< declined 14 name any specific tchool districts, Brandt waved before the boan! an I-Ji Form.which car. rled the oame of Joe O'Su111van, former Laguna Beach ·city councUman and director or pupil personnel SttVices for the San,. Ana Unified School District. Brandt, who w1.s actWe in the reelec- t1on campaign of Auemblyman &bcrt Burke (R-Hunllngton S.ach). claimed the entrance form wu completely blank mepl for lhe administrative signaturt. The forms are supposed 14 be ,.teen to -Ille Amtrlcm1 0onsu1a...-;,, the 91udent',. bona COIDlUY. and lillled. lilltd out by the relative the student will live with in Ca lifornia and then signed by the district, Brandt contendc<I. "I'm not trying to deport anyone." he said. "Rut I do re'lenl paying for persons "'ho are not contribuling.'' He l'tdded that school!> were not re-- quiring 5tringent enough iclenlirication of students and asked the county $t.'tff to make a sufvey·study among county d1str1cts or lhe situation and report ba('k. COn1acted !oday, O'SLll lvan denied lhat t1ny improper practlres were taking place in the district and questiootd Brandt's right to interfere with an in-- dividual district. r o·sullivan said whlle he is only ad· mini!itrator 11J. the S,nta Ana district that signs 1·20 forms, he never signs blank forms . "l don't know how he (Braodt) could get a blank one," O'SUiiivan said , "Yle don't hand those out." O'Sullivan -txplnincd hi! d~trlct's pro- cedure with the forms 'as follows : Normally lbe local relaUve of tho stu· dent who \\'ants to study In Californ ia """"' .... the dlatri<C ..... u OU!clai. iStt ALIENS, Pqe I) on v.IK>ther he was sane or insane when hl• killed his parents on AprU 21, 1971. Peters has already been convicted of l\.l'O counts of first degree murder by that same jury in his second trial. Peters' first trial ended dramatically and prematurely in November 1971 when he v.·as shot in the spine by a deputy as he attempted to escape fron1 the same l-O.urtroom. Those wounds arc almost certain to (See PETERS, Page %) District Leacler sl1ip 011Wa y Out By FREDERICK SCllOE:'tlEllL 01 IN D•UY l'lt.1 Si.If The fi rings of two top administrators ot thf' Laguna Beach Unified School District were confirmed by the Board of Educa- tion in separate 3·2 decisions Thursday n1'"hL The action cleans the district of top l!!adership with the nonrenewal o( con· tracts for Dr. William Ullom, district superintendent, Robert Reeves, assistant superintendent for instruction and Charles Hess, assistant superintendent for business. The three men were notifi ed Dec. 18 that their contracts would not be re-- nev.·ed. .. While the decision on Ullom appeared final. the assistant superint endents were called U1to closed door session for reconsideratior of !he Dec. 18 action. But in balloting following the session. trustees Wiltlam Thomas, Patricia Gi!- telle and Gearld Linke reaffirmed their intention not to renew !he contracts of Hess and Reeves. Trus1tcs Jane Boyd and Norman Browne cast votes favoring rehiring. "I was shocked,". Reeves said this morning. "in light of the evaluation from the superintendent that my performance was superior." ACC'Ording to Reeves. the board ma· jority indicated I.he deci sion not to renew the contract "had nothing tu do with the way I performed my job." Amid demand s that Ullom discontinue his services Wednesday and the un- ce rtainty of lhe future of the two as,,lt· tant superintendents, Reeves com· mented: "I'm concerned about the breakdown in continuity for this district which has been evaluated from all possible ways as one of the most outstanding." Reeves said this was suppo rted by state tests results, experts in the educa· tional profession and the American Institute of Research which monitors fecl,,rally funded programs . such as those at Thurston lntermt'diate School and Top of the World Elementary School. Heeves became assistant superin· tf>ndent for instruction and personnel in 1970. Formerly. he wa~ principal of Laguna Beach High School . !less. assistant. euperintendentr-" for' husiness sinC'~ 1969. w:is not available for comment this morning. Orange Coast Weathe r The weflthcrlady sees sunny skies and warmer temperatures for the weekend. with the beaches reach· Ing 60 degrees, rlslng to 65 inland. Ovem1ght lows in the ~. INSIDE TOD-' Y 0 r o n gt Conntl('t outgoing Grand JUT"l/ tak.c1 tome parting sh.()t.s at county mvnicipalitte.s o.s 1/ie 1973 panel is unuelltd. Sec storits. Page 8 todau. l.M. ..,.. • ~· ........ " I.NIIMI I• "'flHet *-• I C•lll.,.,,Lf I Onllte c-ry I C1tM1lt.f IM1 •t.,Wl'ltfltt b-M Cf!lllft 11 S'th'lti ,~ 11 .Cr9'1wtf'd 1:1 s .. r11 1 .. 11 OUll'I frllolk tl I flOdl M~ l .. lt ldlftf1•1 ""• f Tftn'l1~11 ti "IMlflu 17•19 T .... ,.... D-17 1'1r IM -~ I WHl!tor I ...,._ It W-11•1 N-11•1! ..... I.Miiiin 11 ...... ...... 4 Mfl... • .......,., 11-ll Mt•M •» I - • I I I • • DAIL" PILOT LB B52sMake Most Raids In 3 Weeks From Wire Servlctt Tbt injured were SL Pierre'• wife, ge c · .:=.-----"F'-'r'-'•'"•~P'--"',....,e'-'J.._ ___ Bolly, and Q. R. 11n4 Bernice MJtclJell. Romero then sneaked up behind also of Long Beach. --;;otstrom a·s11n>..-...oong-t<rthlffl'o~ ( { • VOCATION .•• Board Pre>ldent Patrlok Baclru1 aald he wu In favor of endin( the dupllcltlon of some of the vocaUonal education d ..... with anaJ1 1tudenl enrollment Board member Alyn Brannoa bit at what be tenned "'competition" between dlstrlctl for eatabllthment of vocatlonal counes. lnterdlatrtct 1g?'eementa currenUy cost Saddl<baek aboot m&,000, oome of which would be ellmln1ted 11 a budget lt!m paid by local tax monies. "People who don't want to go to their own ICbool can pay for it themselves," truatff Mlcllllel Collini aald. John Lund, board member, ukl be dJd not approve of the use of terms '"regional planning" tn the body of the -lutton and that steps at rqlonallzatioo ol col· lege activities represented a threat to local board control. Tbe tabled resolution was the product of a session attended by representatives ol county community college districts concerned about the duplication of the vocational educational classes offered to nonnally low student enrollments by eacb college. Tl'Uste<s also feared that If the leglsla· lion were enacted, students would take claJieJ 1n other than specialized fields and would be able to attend other schools without board approval. · OIAlfel COAST U DAILY PILOT T~ °'9rlOe C..f tMILY "ILOT, WI"'""""" h utnb1r1tc1 tllt ,..,....,..tilt II Pllblblled W fh9 0..nt( CfNt l"\lbll~lal °"'""1 . .3.,._ ret9 •ttklM .IN """°'ltl'lld, Mtrodt, tt'll'Gllllft Fi1d1,, tor Co.11 Mftll, N....,,.rt &Md!, tilll'lllngt.ii 8"'11/"-ffll" V.11!i'y, LIVU'l'.1 .. di. ll"l'tl!WhddllNdi: Md 1111'1 a.-1.,. $en J111n C.plslr-.. A 1l11DI• "91oNI edltlM .. pubt!Mlld $.lt\lrdl-p w lunll1~· Tltt prlllc:lPll publltl\lnt11 pl1nl II 11 U0 ........ a.y $1rftf, C.0.1.1 M•I, C.lllhwftl.I, t~. llo\et+ H. W11d '""' ........... ~ J•cl-II. C11rl1v vie.~.,.... 0..-1 MIMtlf. Tho ... 11 "-••" ..... Tho"'•• A. Mw,~111• Mlnltw.t EllOw 0.1"4• H. i..... •1c~1N '· Nell ~ Mlflltlna ICJ1w1 i.., .. a...u Ofrk1 221 fo,.tt A'"""' M•ll/111 A'4r•••l P.O .... ••6. 92612 --CtN M•1 • W..llTI,,_ =tllclll Jm MfWJIOl1 a..t.nN Mll'lt "9dl: 11'11 Mell .....,.,., 111'1 tel at1Ht1r1111 CM11M .. , , ........ 1714) ... .....,,,.., a, lft-4 ....,, •• ,.., MZ·••n Mf-1 .... Al.., ........ , lala•••• 1 4ff.MU ~t. 1"2. ONlnfl CNlt ~ CllftlMnY. Ml 1'11W1 llOl'lfto t111111rr1t11M, ..itiw..i Mlttw • ......IMl'Mll.. ,..,... fN.1 Ill ~ WllflM 9'1Clllll ..... nilila. " ~ .,....,.. " ............... ,. .. "' Ce&tt Mlttt e.11...... .....!Ill .., (l l'flw .... L'lllllWIWI 'r !Mil U.lt. fMl!ffllYl lillllrlrf ~t;:;...--( tn11M""-"' ti ... ~.._ • ' Tb! young Smith girl was reported In and dropped him with one blast from his satisfactory condition at Hoag Hospital shotgun. this morning. "She is doing very well," Mom,ents lat~r, oth~r Orange County said a hospital spokesman. Sheriff s de~Ues arrived after Romero Traffic through the dangerous curve called for aid. near Crystal Cove was slowed for more Off_lcers from the Westminster and than so minutes as cleanup operations Huntmgton Beach police departments took place followlng the 8:40 p.m. ac-were also on the scene 1U law men ident searched the area for any other suspects. c Non~ of the drivers of the vehicles was Wilson and Schneider w~e taken to cited in COMectlon with the two col-Westminster Community Hospital where lision.s, aaid the CHP spokesman. l~ey were both pronounced dead on ar· Brewers' Lawsuit Initiates Fight On Distribution Lawyen for the makers of ''Lucky Lager" and "Brew 102" beers today pop- ped the cork on a beer and wine distribu- tion battle in Orange County with the fil- ing of a fll million lawsuit In Superior Court. . Named as defendant.! in the action con- taining the claim that fedt!ral authorities have also beeo deprived of $100 million In unpaid taxe!, are Heublein Inc., the Theodore Hamm Brewing Company and Unite<! Vintners. distributors of wines that include the Swiss Colony and Mogen David brands It is alleged that the defendants created unfair competition and violated antitrust provisions contained in the federal Cartwright Act by "black bag- ging'' many owners of retail oullets In Orange County. "'Black b:fggitig" is· de'!CT'ibed in the lawsuit as the act of distributing gifts and premiums to retail beer and wine outlets In a move lo eliminate com· pl'tition . It is further alleged that the defendants achieved thei r aims by preparing "false and fraudulent" invoices, many or them to nonexistent recipient!!. to conceal the alleged true nature of their deliveries. Student House Loan Granted A loan of $12,000 hat been made to the Caplltrar»-Llguna Re g Ion a I Oc- cupational Program (ROP) by Laguna Federal Savings and Loan for student C'OMtruclion of a three. bedroom, two bath "°"''· . Tht residence will be constructed an land owned by the Capistrano Unified School District. lt will be auctioned ofr after compleUon and moved to another lot by the successful bidder. ConstMJCtlon by the ROP class under direction of Instructor J)(oan Whitaker, 11 expectf!d to ht completed this ackool year. Other construction projectl Include a 1tor11e 1htd and bus wuh for the Cliptslfino dllfrlct. rival. Eckstrom was taken to Orange County Medical Center where he was booked on murder charges. Eckstrom was described by neigh~ as a quiet "bookwonn type." "He seemed like a real bright fellow," said his neighbor Terrill. Terrill said Ji.at Eckstrom was a stu- dent a'. Cal State Long Beach. "He wanted to try out for the police academy but they told him he was too nearsighted," said Terrill. Another neighbor, Marc Conlay, said that Eckstrom was a "pretty weird guy." From Pagel ALIENS ... \Yill agree to entrance. "We fill in part of the form that says, y('S, w,. "'ill accept the studeot if be lives here," said O'Sullivan. Then the relative fills in part of the form that say he will be respoml- ble for the student during his stay her e. "Then, they take the form to the con· sulate in fl.fexico and present it,'' O'Sullivan said. adding that the consulate there and in other countries \\1on't sign Unless ... the 'ctislrlct agties to 1Jo1lsc tnc · student. \Vhen the form Is brought back to the district, the officials there ask to see a birth certificate. O'Sullivan said. The form is also checked by immigration of- ficials and the average alien student '1\vouJdn't know how to nlL It out,'' he said. Brandt indicated he thought some students -perhaps five percent of the aliens -either never take fonns to the consulates or dishonestly fill out part of the fonn. Of the 27 ,000 studenll In the Santa Ana district, only 110 are aliens. While moat of those are from A-1uleo. some are from Spain. Japan and other countries. O'Sullivan said he, or his aulatant who al~ evaluates the forms, hand out many more than that eac.b year, but t}\e students decide for different reasons not tn come to school here. Brandt said that education code re· quirement.s call for proor or birth only It kindergarten and first grade levels and sugges ted that leglslatlon might be a way to -cbange that. Jn addition, Brand l charged, one achool dlotrlct (aloo unnamed) k .. pe •·list ol~ll alien students but won't reveal thtm. The 1t1te education Code rcqulru the county superintendent to ttPort the 11umber of 1llen Jtudent.s ln the 1ebooll each year totlif! board of aupirvllort. Searches FHaP,..eJ PETERS ••• :Ca~se Delay. In Flights ANNU-At-CtE1RANCf SALf JUST SOM! OF THE MANY OUTSTANDING PIECES ON SALE NOW NEWPORT STORE SOFAS 8' Le•thrr Sofr Sheffer Bros. 8' Velvet Stripe 7' Crescent. Velvet. Sherrill 8' Print. Green l Yollow Quilt. Mrrge Crrson 8' Linen Print. Gold I Yellow. Drexel 8' Linen Print, Lime Green & White M•rge Carson Sleep Sof111 Quern Sixe. Turquoise & Green 90" Gold T exturr. M•rgr C•rson 8' Multi Colored Print. Royal Coech CHAIRS Reg. Pr. Print. Grrrn Ir Gold. R19. $924 $695 $625 SALE $7H $579 $4H $599 $45' $625 $540 $449 $470 $46' $29' $37' $310 '944 $769 SALE Woodm•rk $159u. $ll9eo. Pr. Wing Chtirt. Ortnge Ir Gold. Stripe. Roy•I Co•ch $228 er. $189eo. Pr. Chairs. Green Velvet. Royrl Co•ch $228 ... $18f eo. Pr. Ch•its. Brown Suedr. M•rge C•rson $339 ... $26' .... Prir High Brck, Pink Velvet Roy•t·co1ch ... $167 ea~ nn to. I lerther Ch•ir I Ottoman. Sherrill $6 r a $471 I Wing Chrir, Bird Print, Sherrill $219 $199 Pr. Chrir1. Or1n9t. Dem•sk. Woodmrrk $240 $199 Reg . SALE LAGUNA STORE SOFAS Rr9. 8' Gold I Or1n9r Print. Hrn,.don $930 t ' Crrscrnt. Grrrn & Gold. Hrnrrdon 8' Unen Print. Hrnrrdon $975 $799, 8''Whitr I: Green. Velvet. Sherrill $679 8' Tuxedo. Aqu• & Green. SALE $779.00 $7ft.50 $65'.00 $SH.GO M1rge C1rton $570 $465.00 8' Woven Pr int. Royal Co•ch $689 ssn.oo 8' Tuxedo. White & Green Frin9e. ~·rg• c..... $620 $129.00 8' Green &: White Crescent. Sherrill $599 $529.00 CHAIRS Pr. Blue Grern Print. Royrl Corch Pr. Swivel. Gold Damesk. Woodm•rk Pr. Gold Velvet. Sherrill Pr. Print. M•rge C•rson ..P.r. Sftipe V:elyrf. Woodro.rrk SALi $244 ... $209 ... $205 .. . $205 .. . $224 ... $115 ... U!Ju, $1Heo. Pr. Gold Velvet. Marge Carson $209 ••· I Win9 Cheir. Rust. Woodm1rlc $225 re. I Ea1y Cheir. G'9rn & Beige. $179 ... sin ... Sh • .,111 $279 ... $Zlt ... DINING aOOM Reg. SALi China , 2 Arm ChaiN, 4 Sidr Chritt, Dining T rble. America of Martlnw!no $I 562 5125% 2 Acm Choi", 4 Sid• Ch•i", Buffet, 2 Arm Chaltt, '4 Side ChaiN, Ooybl1 Pedestal Ov•I Table. Dinln9 Tobie. H--·M"""9o $1714 $1422 H1"'1too Trodili on• I $106' '"9 UNIELllYAIU SELECTIONS AT YHY SATISFYING PRICU, HADY FOa IMMIDIAR NR DILIYQT -SIHCTIO GROUPS fl!OM HENHDON, HHITAGI, DaDIL, & OTHERS NOW HDUCID. SPICIAL ORDH UPHOLSTIRY NOM HINREDON, ROYAL COACH .. MA•GI CARSON AT su1n.+.• .... L SAYINtH. ' "'"' OREXEL-HERITAGE>4tENREOON-WOOOMARK-ICARASTAN --------- • INTERIORS , WDKDA YS & SATURDAYS 910D to 1130 l'tllDA Y "TIL 9:00 , . • NEWPORT BEACH e 1111 WESTCllf' DR.. ... ••2.2010 • LA&UNA BEACH e 141 NOlTH COAST HWY. ., ...... , TORRANCE e tlt4t HAWTMOANf llVD. 171·111' • .. •• • I t • I I I I - ] u )' • D u ti e • ] d d I • • a b f h r ' d I r • d • ' fi a I I ' I I ' I • c ( t I __ _, I • 1 [ I ' Saddlebaek T oday's Finni N.Y. St o cks VOL. 66, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1q73 TEN CENTS Peters By TOM BARLEY Of .. DlltT f'li.t SUllf "It was Christmas Day and I .... ·as at the festival in Laguna Beach. I'd been, you know, taking lSD and suddenly I srw my father's soul. It was kinda telling me my old man was dead. you know. And then I got to thinking· about all the good times we'd had.'' Gig Peters stopped at that point, smil- ed at an incredulous jury and abeentmindedly tapped One of the tv.·o Low-priced Housing Rejected By JOHN ZALLER Of ,.. Deify .. 1 ... ,, ... Irvine Planning Co mmi ssio ner s delayed plans for a low-priced housing development Thursday over the twin fears that its density may be too high and that it may overload the city's road system. The commission's action came despite an appeal from the Irvine Company tb~t ' . . Tells Court He Killed massive volumes of obscure religions from which he bad quoted liberally throughout the afternoon. He had earlier refused to take lbe oath before testifying Thunday and was only aUowed to do so after a bitter argument between opposing lawyers. The fonner lifeguard eased his broken body forwarQ in hl:s wheelchair, adjusted the counsel table microphone specially cocked in his direction and resumed what everyone present agreed was one of the most astonishing acts of testimony ut Orange Coonly Superior Court hls1ory. Mucb of it was rambling and ln- cohereat to the point that court reporter Doris Vane was unable to record a fluent account of "'hat the crippled defendant offered in response to defense attorney Barry Tarlow's prompting. But Peters, 24, repeatedly testified that he had indeed killed Charles Peters, 55 . and Flora Peters. 54, less than 24 hours after his parents had welcomed him aod his girl Criend to tbe.ir modest Huntington Beach home. "You see, I've oothlng to gain or lose," the bearded long-haired defendant told the jury while Judge Kenneth Williams wa1ched him sadly from the bench and prosecutor Pat Brian pointedly turned his t>;...k on him. "Okay, the basic issue for me is v.·hc1her I go to the joint or the nutbousc. right?" Peters murmured. "I'm not trying to alter your opinion . But I think some o( you might gel the message l 've been carrying around for a long time ," he said . Peters "'ill be "'heeled back lo the courtroom ~londay to resume his testimoay after the three-day break ordered late Thursdny by Judge Williams. And it is expected that the fonner •lun· tington Beach High School honor student will be the rinnl 11·itness in a sanity hear· ing which must end with the jury's ruling wm~n-.___._ a1n m 2 Office1·s Off Duty; Ma11 Injured One man was killed early today and another seriously wounded by gunfire in an alterc?tion in a Tustin bar with two off duty policemen from othei" com- munilies. Tustin police reportt>d Randall S. Robinette. 25. address not known, diet! at S:20 a.m. in Tustin Com.. munity 'Hospital. ln the same hospital seriously wounded ts; Sam P. Campise, • Parents on v.·hether he v.ns sant? or l.nsane when he killed his parents on April 21. 1971. Peiers has already been convicted of 1"·0 counts of first degrt'C murder by that same jury in his second trial. Peters' first trial ended dramatically and prematurely in November 1971 when hc- "'as shot in the spine by a deputy as he attempted to escape fron1 the same courtrooln. Those Wounds are almost certain to (See PETERS, Page %) Suspected l(iller Sl1ot By Deputy ... By mCHAEL GOODRICH Of 1M DtllY .. 11111 thltl T11.·o Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies were machine.gunned to death Thursday afternoon in ~Iidway Clly as they attempted to capture a double· murder suspect. The suspect. Carl Eckstrom. 23. of 8'lSI Flight Ave .. ri.tidway City, was later cut down by fl single shotgun blast fired by an Orange County Sheriff's deputy. He had come to the aid ol tbe slain peace of· ficers . badly needed but practically nonexistent J-~m· ~ho-<ily~.~~~~~~~~~ , r---ftlc'1:rom;-,whri..-.<ltti<ion'to-being-the-~-"1 The shooting occurred at 1:45 a.m. in · LOT .,. _ suspecl in a double murder is suspected -1!1.-tlllcl .. ~nu bar 1-~· ----~-...,.;· DAILY ... ·~t'--'I ·'i•• •-'hird •-1· t • '"'" • ,,..-nm• -nve., WAR1 LAWM tlRD£R>tlSPE"· 1 ,,. -· · -r--•N ....-:-:-' -v~ un a Commissioners also Ignored a plea from the San Joaquin SChool District that immediate approval of plans for tt>e North Irvine development could relieve school overcrowding by providing an ad· ditional school site to the district. But the commission's action did seem to satisfy representatives from several North Irvine homeowners' associations who said they didn't want high density developments approved for their area wltbout further study. The specific question before the com· mission was an Irvine Company request for .residential zoning on 200 aqes of 1 agricultural land bounded by Moulton • Parkway, Culver Drive, the Santa Fe I Railroad tracks. and Yale Drive. \ An ultimate population of 4.600 persons I is planned by the Irvine Company with densities as high as 25 dwelling units per acre in one apartment complex area. and as high as U dwelling units per acre for some condominium homes. The 200.acre parcel considered by the planning commission would have a market value of about $30 million. Irvine c.ompany officials said. All consideration o[ ·another 234 acres of land was put off by the commission indefinitely. . . If approved in total by the comm1ss1on, the-proposed development would con· stitute both the highest density and big· gest oew project undertaken in the city iince its incorporation, according to city olfidals. While the commission expressed strong support ror the Irvine Company's effort to provide low-cost housing, it was bothered by two problerm. First, camm.Usioners said they were i:,traid that new developments would create needs for roads. schools. police, DAILY .. ILOT St.ff P .... Head ~la11t1er Robert West of Walnut Village was elected Thursday as the new chairman of Irvine's Plan· ning Commission. The 3:J.year- old \Vest, who holds a master's degree in business from Stan· ford University, works in gen- eral management fqr a Nev.•· port Beach real estate develop-- menl company. Tustin police said. In Midway City Tragic Ctlmix to Two-county Shooting Spr.. the same time. 1s lJI critic~! cond1Uon to-' day at Orange County Medi cal Center. Officers involved who Tustin police allege did the shooting were Jerry L, 1·' • The two-county massacre began shortly after noon when Eckstrom Gray, 2.11, or the Garden Grove Police allegedly pulled a pistol at the Cerritos Department and Sgt. Thomas ~1 . Baroldi, Shopping Center and shot two female 26. of the Cypress force. {'(lmpanions . Tustin police would not reveal any One girl, Rosemary Vasquez. 20, of Bell C.ardens. was shot twice in the stomach details of the affair this morning. <ind died at Pioneer •lospital in Artesia. They said they had called in Orange lier sister. Cecelia Vasquez, 17. Bell County District Attorney's investigators 1.arden.s, was listed in critical condition to assist in the case, evldenUy because today afler undergoing surgery at police officers were involved. Pioneer Hospital. She wa! shot in the chest, right side, left leg and left forearm. Saddlehack Board Rejects A passing sfiopper, P.1ichael Jeffries, 27. of Downey, was shot twice in the back :is he returned to his car. police said. •le died at Woodruff Community Hospital, Long Beach. Change in Vocation Class By JACK CHAPPELL 01 1119 DlllY .. llet Slaff A resolution with the intent of ending e:<pensive duplication of vocational training classes in nearb~ community C()!leges was tabled to Sn indefinite future by Saddleback Community College trustees Thursday. Terming the document a pos11ible err croachment of state control on the com· munity colleges, the trustees roundly slammed all the "Whereases" of the resOlution, 8.ltbough some said they ap- proved of-the ''Thenfote, be it resolv· ed." That "therefore," would have asked the state legislature to change the method of caculating average dally at- tendance for community colleges fro"m the present system. based on student residence, to one based on student enroll· ment. If the change were made , present in· terdistrict arrangements required to permit a Saddleback District resident- student to attend a specialized Orange Coast class would not be required. The interdistrict a r r a n g e m e n l s nonnally invok'e payment by one district to the other to make up differences -UPl "Ttl .... les TWO DEPUTIES WERE AMONG FOUR SLAIN BY SUSPECT Deputy Sheriffs Don Schneider (left ) ~nd C•rl Wilson 'l'oruas Rubber-stonaped' Trustee Cl1arges IDegal Witnesses told police Eckstrom shot the two girls while walking with them in the shopping center parking lot. Police sa id they still have no idea what tho motive was for the shootings. Following the ·shootings. the suspect ran to his car and fled , but not before a shopper noted his license number and phoned them to the sheriff's station in Lakewood. Two sheri£f's deputies, Sgt . Carl E. \\!ilson. 40. and his partner .. Sheriff's Detective Donald W. Schneider. also 40, checked the license numbers and pro- ceeded to Lhe Eck11trom home. They contacted the Orange County's Sheriff's Office, which assigned a back up car driven by Deputy Andrew Romtro. --aad....s.ewea faster__jrnl the.,,__c.,i,,.t c..,:ta,.x,_~---~----- revenues could pay for them. I ud Sh between the cost of education. and an Ali • fl s h I ai;:~~~~~ .... ~~i~~~~,~~.-.. ~, --· en s-IB-b6U11ty c oo s When they arrived at the Midway city re~idence where Eckstrom lives with his paren1s. Schnelder and Wilson went to the front door and Romero went to cover the~back. "We need to know what the developer Utr er 0 1,VS LS 'committing the' city to in terms of in- creued services," s a i d Commissioner Wes Marx. he was in favor of ending the duplication ''It is vital for us to get some perspec- Uve on this b e f o r e we overcommit ~ves with too many homes," he ad- ded. CGmmisstoner Frank Hurd cwntered "As I see it we're over-extended now. Does this mean' we cut ot:r all develo)>- ment until we get more (road building) monies?'' "That's something we have. to con-- 1kter t'' Man: replied. Seaond, the com.mission W1l5 worried that uicle from Ille need for new dty -the development might ..,...,., the density pt<>pooed was too for attractlv. neighborhoods. lalnina that land coats were one of !ht-ggest coots of • home, in'tne Com· pany Plannlnil Director Jim Taylor aald, ''The only way to acbleve mode.rate in-come boustng Is tltnJuah (hiJlh) density." • SOme of the single lamlly delacbed homH tn the propoted deftlopment are j>l6nptd [O< loll ol. 4,,tJOO square 1 .. 1. PrtaenUy, the Mllllest loll Rllo....S tn lrrine ... 5,tJOll "l'W" feet, wllh lllOSI aim 1'>nstclerol>l1 ~· 1 ~--~"u~•-l<>U--on tho-ideo ol dc!lached bwstng whoa the homes ~ '° 1.t1oe llOOSING, ..... II Victim Picture Of Hers elf Nude of some of the vocational education classes with small student enrollment. By CANDACE PEARSON Board member Alyn BraMon hit at 01 .,.. o.uv P11tt t11fl what he tenned "competition" between A county school trustee charged Thurs-- districts for establishment of vocational day that illegal aliens are attending courses. county schools and that one unnamed lnterclistrict agreements currently cost school district was virtually rubber- An intruder who apparently broke Into Saddleback about $'735,000, some of which stamping alien student entrance forms. would be eliminated as a budget item David "Brandt of Santa Ana. the county a Laguna Hills home Thursday night paid by local tax monies. board's newest member, told his fellow forced hill attractive victim into acts of 1 ho don '-•' •-·.......... ""'--..,, .. y that he ~· "con-. ho · the "Peop e w 't v.•ant to go to tu.::1r ...... ~ 111Uf-....... sexual perversion alter s wing own acbool can pay for it tbemaelves," ettned" 1bout foreign students being ad· housewife her own nude picture, Orange truattt MJchael Collins said. milted to schools with improperly filled County Sheriff's officers said. John Lund, board member, said he did out immigration forms , known as ''I· The 23-year~ld victim told deputies not approve of the use of terms "regional 20's". thal her assailant entered the reoldence (See VOCATION, I'll• Z) -Although he dccUned to name any unknown io ber during her husband's specific achool districts, Brandt "''aved absence., grabbed her and pulled her into btfore lhe board an 1-20 Form which car- the masler bedroom of the home. KINSEY UPJ)A.TED rl<ld the name o[ Joe O'Sullivan, former She said he showed her a picture Laguna Beach city councilman and recently taken of her In the nude and told dJrector of pupU personnel services for her: "I want to see )'OU like lhb." She IN PILOT TOD AY the Santi Ana Unified School District. said he left the home after coftipell:!:i Brandt, who was active in the reelec- ber to participate In acts of sexua Twenty-live Yff1" ago, "Tue Kin"!' Uon C&lllpolllll of AS&emblyman Robert Jlttvenlon. Report" made its appearance in this Burke (ft.Huntington Beach). claimed tnvesttgato" said the Intruder found country and America hasn't been tbQ the <ntrance form was completely blank tbeJ)ictvre io a.bedroom dretMr drawer. 18me-1! mc_~t for the 1dmlnistrative signature. II bad been taken by the woman's lua-The report is generally credited wtth" The Tomil are ~to be ta\en to band, officers sa1d. Wlberlng In a sexual revolutlon.. For all lht American ~u in the student's Investigator. believe the assallanl you wanted to know about su, but home cwntry, and ltgned: filled out by ~ by his d1atraugbl-Yl<tlm moy-pel'Mfll ...,. afilld to iii ,.. story the-rellllift the stllderlt Wiii llYe with In have been under tho Influence ol drup at P11&• 9• ' ' Colllomla and then signed by the dlstri<I, ' the time. Brandt ~tended. ~. ' • I f I "I'm not trying to deport anyone," he said. "But I do resenl paying for persons v.•ho are not contributing." Ile added 1het schools were not re- quiring stringent enough ldenlificalion of students and asked the county staff to make a survey·study among county districts of the si1uat1on and report back. Contacted 1oday. O'SL.llivan denied !hat any improper practices were taking place in the .district and questioned Brandt's right to interfere with an in· dividuat district. O'Sullivan said whil e he i.s only ad· ministralor In the Santa Ana district that signs 1-20 form s, he never signs blank forms. "I don't know bow he (Brandt) could &et a blank one," O"Sulliven · said. "We don't hand those out." O'Sullivan explained h., district's p~ cedure with too forms as follows : Normally the local relative of the stu· dent who wants to study In California comes to the district to see If oWdals w!ll agree to entranct. "We nn 1n'"j\ii'ror the form that ,.ya, Y"· w• will ~t the student if he llvts httt,'' said O'Sullivan. Then the r<lalive 1111& In Jl&l't or the form that ,.Y he w111 be relj>Olll!- (See ALIENS, Pap ZI .. \ \Vitnesses told poli ce that Schneider !See KJWNGS, Pa1e !) Orange Coast Weather The wea therlady sees SUMY skies and wanner temperatures for tbe "·eekend, with the beaches reach- ing liO degrees, risinit to 6$ inland. Overnight '°"'S in the 40s. INSIDE TODAY 0 rang c County, outgoing Grand Jurt1 to1u1 aome parting shotJ at county munfcipoUti11 ci the 1973 panel it unuflJ~d. Ste storita, Pagt 8 todoy. L.M. ...... I httllll ,, C•H"'""9 I tl•l-llllM ,...., CM!lc1 U C,_~ IJ -~o.Mll ...... kM ' 1•1'61111 p-• "Ill-'''" ..... "" lttt'Wll • -" ~~ '~ -..... j I I • % OAILY PILOT IS Searches Cause Delay In Flights County Aviation Chief Convicted • On Drunken Rap Orange County Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan was convicted on drunken driving charges Tuesday in West Orange C o u n t y Municipal court, w estminster. Bresnahan, of 9192 Oriole Ave., Foun· taln Valley, was fined $400 and placed on summary probation for two yean by Judge Ragnar Engebretsen. The 51-year-old Orange County Airport chief did not contest police charges and submitted the case to the court on the basis of police reports. No witnesses were called. Fountain Valley police arrested Bresnahan last June 13 in the parking lot of the Stop.N.CO Markel, fl.lagnolla Avenue and Garfield Street. OIANGI COAST IS DAILY PILOT 'T1le ~CO.I 041LY '"'°'· 'wtlfl wtilctl -# k ~ .. .._~ ••• Dllbltltled try tile Or~ C..11 Pv1JU.riln; Co11·,111t11y, S.,. nflt .it""' t fa Olllllh"«!, M()ftd1y ltlfOWI> FrJd.ay, _. (Olte Mflt, NtWflOtl ~'"' HWI""""' 8e1d1/F01,1111tl11 Vtll•'f• L ...... l a...ai. 1nioin.rs.11c1111>.oc• ,,d s.n ci-111 S.n J11.,, C•pl•nr•llO· ,. linolt rtQlotlf1 ,edllloft ill pUl)lislltd S.lllUllyt fi'ld Svrid•Yl- ft,e pr(n(iPll P<.llMllllL"ll P'-"' Ii .i l1.I W-!I ''' )lrti•I, (Oft• M .. •. C•hlou1i., m:r.. Rol.trl N. WP•d Pr .. ldtnt •l'lld l'\ltlll.i>er Jee.Ii II. C1irlt'i' V<t 1'"'1MHI'-' 1...i Citnc-r•L Miow«t lh•fl'llt Keevil E<l!tor Tho1'1tt A. Murphi110 Ml"fflllf fllllor C••rltt H. loo1 Ric:h•td P. Nill AJ.tllt•nl NlllMD'"O Eon_, ) - • Breweries Traffic Act.eked .l • File Suit B52s Pound Reds·· .. ' In County In-Heavy Raids ~ From Page 1 VOCATION ••• • • • "Our Ameri '.JLdesperalfl;c..1---• tr. need of spiritual guidance," Peters ap-y~led for Eckstrom to come out and when the young man refused, the deputy began to break down the door. Eck!trom suddenly Dung the door <>Pen and fired at Schneider point blank with a . 45 caliber Thompson submachine gun. according to the witnesses. Witnesses said Schnelder crumpled on the doorstep and Wilson ran to the ~ide of the bo\Jse and into the backyard. Eclultrom emerged .from the house wearing a U.S. Anny flak jacket and chased Wilson to the back where he fell· ed U,, other deputy with another burst of n1achine-gun fire. ·A neighbor, Melvin Terrill, said he though ~ the loud bursts were firecrackers. He stuck his head out the back door where he saw the Orange County Ueputy, Romero, who told him to get back inside. Romero then sneaked up behind Eckstrqm as he was walilng to the front and dropped him with one blast from his shotgun. Moments later. other Orange County Sheriff's deput ies arrived after Romero called for aid. Officers from the Westmln!ter and Huntington Beach police departments \.l'ere also on the scene 1S law men searched the area for any other suspects. Wilson and Schneider were taken to Westn1inster Community Hospital where they were both pronounced dead on ar- rival. Eckslrom was taken to Orange County i\ledical Center ~·here he was booked on inur<ler chnrges. Eckstrom was described by neighbors as a quiet "bookworm type." "He seemed like a rest bright'. feUtrw," said his ntil!:hbor Terrill. Terrill said .hat Eckstrom was a stu· dent ll '. Cal State Lnng Beach. "/-le wanted to try out for the police academy but they told him he was too nearsighted." said Terrill. Another neighbor, !\-tare COnlay, said that Eckstrom was a "pretty weird guy." pealed to the jtiry. "Yea, I killed my parents but, you know, it's better to do something for your fnmlly than for yourself." Peten will resume his testimony Mon· day . Tonya McMahon Rites Saturday Funeral &ervlces will be conducted Saturday morning In Anaheim fo r Mrs. Tonya Charlotte McMahon of Mission Viejo. Mrs. McMahon, 55, of 2418 Salero Lane died Wednesday in South Laguna. ' The riles will be held at 11 a.m. in Melrose Abbey Mausoleum with the Rev. Msgr. Harry J. Trower of OUr Lady of FalimJI Catholic Church, San Clemente officiating. -'· Mrs. McMahon leaves a son, John McMahon of Mission Viejo; her mother. Hazel E. Klinker of Mission Viejo; a grandson, John McMahon Jr. and a granddaughter, Cynthia Lee McMahon. Lesneski Mortuary is in charge of ar- rangements. Goals Committee Cancels Meeting An all-day workshop scheduled for Saturda y by the goals co1nmittee of the Irvine Unified School Distric. has been -canceled. ·-_.. The committee is charged with helping to .fin~ a procedure to develop goals and objectives for the new district. The conference may be rescheduled for late January, school officials said. Anyone who wants to participate In the study can call the district o!f1ce at 552~ 0077. Yorty Announ~es LA Mayor Seeks Fourth Term LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Sam Yorty, calling Loo Angeleo "the most progressively administer«! city in the naticJt," today declared he will sett cltcUon t.o an unprecedented fourth term. Yorty. 63. took note of his 12-year tenure as mayor and said ha tblnkJ It Is an advantage to his candidacy. • "I DESIRE .TO USE tbel experience to keep our city moving fonranl on an even keel;' Yorty told a news confeffilCt. "There is oo substitute for ex4 pertence, and l am the ooly candldate with th< experience of rumi!ng a big city." Although candidates for. city offlceo have until Monday to Ille their fn. tentkllU to run, Yorty'• principal challengers already have taken out papors. TREV ARE JIORMER Assembly Speelrer ,1,.. Unruh, formtt po~ chief Thoma• lleddin, and clzy councilmtn Thomas Bradley and Joel Wlcbl. ' ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE JUST SOME OF THE MANY OUTSTANDING PIECES ON SALE NOW NEWPORT STORE SOFAS 8' leeth1r Sof1 Shiffer Bros. 8' Velvet Strip~ 7' Crescent. Velvet. Sherrill 8' Print. Green & Yello.;,, Quilt. Mer91 Carson 8' l inen Print. Gold & Yellow. Drexel 8' Linen Print. Lime Green & White M•r1i!• <Anon Sl••p Sofa • Qu••n Si1:1. ·turquoi1e & Gr••rt· 90" Gold Te1dure. Marge C1rson I' Multi Colored Print. Royal Co1ch CHAIRS Pr. Print. Green I Gold. Reg. SALE $924 $799 $695 $579 $625 $499 $599 $459 $625 $469 $540 $299 $449 $179 $470 $380 $944 $769 SAU Woodmerk $159 ... $139 .... Pr. Wing Chain. Or1n9e & Gold. Stripe. Royel Coech $228 e1. $18f eo. Pr. Chairs. Green Velvet. LAGUNA STORE SOFAS R•9. SALi 8' Gold & Oran9e Print. Henredon $930 $779.00 8' Crescent. Green & Gold . Henredon 8' linen Print. Henredon 8' White & Green. Velvet. Sherrill 8' ,Tuxedo. Aqua & Green. Merge Cerson ~t Woven ~rint. Roy1I Cotch 8' Tuxedo. White & Green Fringe. $975 $7H.50 $799. $659.00 $679 $519.00 $670 $445.00 $689 $519.00 Merge C1r1on $620 $529.00 8' Green & White Crescent. Sherrill $699 $129.00 CHAIRS Reg. SALi Pr. Blue Green Print. Roy•I Coech $2+4 ... $209 ... Pr. Swivel, Goldbam11k. Royal Co1ch $228 e1. $1 If ea. Woodmark $205 .. . $179-. Pr. Ch1in. Brown Su1de. Marg• C1r1on ._ $3 39 ea. $269 ta. ' Pair H:gh ·fiCk, Pink Velvet -• Royal Coach $167 ••· $lH ta. le1ther Ch1ir &-Ottoman. Sh1rrill $618 $471 I Wing Ch1 ir, Bird Print, Sherrill $219 $1tt Pr. Chairi. Or1n9e. Damask. Woodmark $240 $199 DINING ROOM Pr. Gold Velvet. Sh1rrill $205 .. . $17'-. Pr. Print. Marge Carson 2-:.:2,_,4_,•:::•>-="-'-' 115,..._ Pr. Strip• Velvet. Woodmark $219 ea. Pr. Gold Velvet. Marge Carion •209 ••· I Wing Ch1ir. Rust, Woodmark $225 ea. I E1sy Chair. Green & 81ig1. $1n-. $17t-. $1991& Sherrill $279••· Wt-. DINING IQOM $1562 $12'2 2 Arm Cha;n, 4 s ;d, Cho ln, Buffet, 2 Arm Chain, 4 Side Chairs Double Ped11tal Oval Table . D;nln9 Tobi•. H .. r-.Mool"'I~ $1714 $1422 , Hlbfl .... f,.d;t;ons I • $1069 $1tf UNllLllYAll.I SILICTIONS AT VUY SATISFYING PRICIS, RIADY FOR IMMIDIATI HR DWVOY -Sll.ICTID GROUPS FROM HINUDON, HERITAGE,_ DREXEL, • OTHns NOW REDUCED SPE ::l~G~HOLSTHY FROM HENRIDON, ROYAL COACH, I< MARGE CARSON AT SUUrAN~ \ DREXEl:-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN --------- ~. NEWPOl!T BEACH e 1727 WfSTCllFI D~ 142·2Dll LAGUNA &EACH e 145 NOlTli C:OAST HWY. •tMi1r TORRANCE e 164' HA:WTRO•N£1LVD. 171-ltJt ~I :;I •• ;;,. ,_ " ., W; ;· ... ·! ._, :, ~ .,. •. • ~ ~ ~ • i .... ~ •• " I I ,. ·~:r ~ I ' I ~·· - P~nger Vessel Departs SAN FRANCISCO (AP! - American Presktent Unes ha1 waved goodbye to 12$ years of ocean passengu service. Farr Petition Eyed High Court Judge Seeks County Response until he hH read the rosponse, He added that the asoocla· Stewort sakl. !Ion had voted lo provide the A brl.i also bas been asked newsman wlth legal and finan. !nim Shili!I Peter J. Pll<hess, cial aid. CALIFORNIA • Statads llp Citu_ San Francisco's Quake in Hiclli1g, SAN FRANCISCO ( l!PJ t - We made it. folks. ' ; DAil Y PILOT 5 Coastline Panelists To Meet SACRAM&:NTO (AP) The firm's last lu:a:ury llner, the ~ President Wilson, left on its final cruise 'Thursday night with a full load of 300 UlS ANGELES (AP) -A decision lrom U.S. Supreme Coor\ Justice WUllam O. Douglas on wbetbf!r to release Jailed newsman Willlam Fan' Is being upheld pending responses from county of· ficlals to Farr's petitioo for Ibo C\)Unty official responsible "It Is 1ragic that BUI Farr for the county jaII where Farr . remains an Incarcerated pawn tu been held since Nov. 27 for in a dlspute between Superior r.tu.Ini. lo divulgo a news Coor! Judge Charles Older and aource 1n a story about the the attorneys in this case hi '---------' Charles h-fanson murder ,trial. which the issues or freedom or The earthquak~ prL-diL·tcd for 9 a.m. Thursday -a tremor \\'hich \\'8S goi ng 10 make San FranC'iS('O·s 1906 shaker look. like elulds pl3y - failed to materialize. nt'\\'smen. lie stroci~ in a ie\lo' stconds uftcr lhl' uppoinled hour. noted that tlll' cJUl.udclil'r above his desk v•nsn 't SOO\\'· ing. and then chatised <.:reen· span. C:ov. Ronald Reagon and leaders Qf !be legislature have 111,·lte<t the &I newty sppQlntl!d coastal zone con1mi8sloneni to a ont day workshop Jen. 12 in Sacramento. ( ) release, says a county officlal. BRIEFS Deputy eoom.i Wllllam Stewart said Tbunday be bad .._ ______ ... been asked by Douglas lo Ille passengers on a 9$.day round a response by Jan. 10 to the world trip to 24 ports. Farr1s petition. The APL'1 two cruise ships ;-. the Wilson and SS Cleveland ;. had been loolllJI money but :i; were kept operatinf with U.S. '$--l.1 a r i t i m e AdmJnJ.stratlon k sub.!kties. 1be Oeftland•a end- 4 ed this month and the Wilaon's E;. ends in April, "hen both ships ~ reach the maximum age limit •: for"Such payments at 25 year1. :: • Lon.ion Flu ~ SAN JOSE (AP) -The Sa .. :; ta Clara County Coroner's of- ~ fice said Thursday 14 per&ens '· . NO DECISION on tile pell- Uon will be made by IWJglas 9 l 11:males. Ordered Identified Farr, "8, a Los Angeles the press and the ability or a Ttmes newsman. ha~ asked defendant to secure a fair trial Douglas to release him on his consistent with the due proco- own recognizance pending all ess ol Jaw becomes secon-- appeals In his case. dary," an association state-- IN ANOTHER development Tbunday, tM Criminal CA:lurts Bar Auociatlon. an organiza- tlon of more than 700 judges, Mfense attorneys and pros.. ecuton. expressed its support or Farr by awarding him their annual journalism award. Jamts E. Patterson, presi- dent.of the BS90Ciation, said in ~ Angeles that Farr was selected for the award because of his "outstanding achievement." fent said. " ... REG~ OF how lofty the coort's motives are. they become despoiled when constitutionally im- pennlssible methods an used to secure compliance with an otherwise valid court order," they added. Patterson saJd the award would be presented Jan 24 dur- ing a dinner at a kM::aJ hotel •·and not al the Los Angeles County Jail ... .. made HI in the county by bas been ordered to set aside ~ diseases apparently related lo an order lori>ldding publica· .. London nu . tion of names or photographs ~l.pnewnoolttaused--ni~1--ltunateo1J-·S--·f­ '-most of the deaths, a who testified at a murder trial ~ spokesman said, noting that of two prisoners last fall . i the Virus outbreak reached epidemic proportions between THE STATE Coor! ol Ap- Cbrlstmas and New Year's. peal ruled Thursday that the ~· • Roae SMfffl'? order issued by Superior Court ~ Judge Richard C. Garner was ... PASADENA (AP) -Snow unconstitutional. ~ fell brieny here Thursday for The ruling came on an ap- the first lime in 23 years, just peal by the San Bernardino 1 three days after bright ~Telegram. the D a i I y I sunshine bathed the 84lh an-Report in Ontario and the nua1 Tournament of Rosse! Pomona Progress.Bulletin. ~ Parade. Carner had forbidden the ,1 However, there wasn 't news media to identUy the ~ enough lo build a snow man. ed a; The snow storm began shortly nine inmates who testifi at .. after noon and lasted for the trial of two prisoners ac· nearly a half hour. But the cused of stabbing another con· snow melted as 800rl as it vict to death. The Oct. 30 touched the ,.._,....,, order was to remain in effect .,.............. for nine months after the e Elef!tlon verdict was returned. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. The judge had issued the Ronald Reagan has set March order at the request of the 6 as the date for a special district attorriey, who said he election in a San Diego state feared the inmates might not senatorial district left vacant testify if their names were by election of Clair Burgener published. to Congress. eGua .. dFl .. e SACRAMENTO (AP) -The fire which dama ed. the a orrua a tona u headquarters the day after 1---Chrlstmarwa!J}>-nrb 1 b I y ~tarted by a battery charger, State Fire Marshal Albert E. Hole says. e Prison Strike SAN QUENTIN (AP) - A dozen San Quentin Prison in- mates. the last holdouts in a work strike that started with 1.200 participants, have been placed in segregation cells. a prison official says. All but 12 of the prisoners who refused to work Tuesda y morning had returned to their jobs by Thursday, said Lee DeBord, prisOn information of- f.,.,, e Kittg Hamk SAN DIEGo (AP ) -A black sailor has been reduced two pay grades and given a bad<Onduct discharge after being convicted of assaulting two white sailors and rioting aboard the aJrcraft carrier • Kitty Hawk. Seaman Cleveland Mallory, 19, of Pittsburgh, convicted Thursday by Capt. Bobby D. Bryant, in a special court- martial, was freed afterward pending review of his case. He had spent 59 days in pretrial confrnement. By Police HOLLYWOOD (AP) - A St. Bernard dog trained for atta_ck was shot and killed by pobce when it returned to the Laurel Canyon home where it had eat.en part or its dead master's corpse, authorities say. Police said they shot the dog Thursday because they reared it might hann children. Police said Ibey were called Thursday ot the home or William Fields, a 63--year.old M G M s o u n d department. employe, by neighbors who complained that the dog was howling. When officers entered the house, the dog f I e d . Investigators said Fields' body was in a bed and that he had died about two weeks ago. One neighbor said the dog, which weighed about 180 pounds, had bitten two persons and killed another large dog during the past year. Officers staked out the home and shot the animal when It approached a short time later. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Police have been ordered lo warn OJ""'lllor.J of tx>pless night dubs tooighl that they must Immediately remove nude posten from In front of tlleir premises. Police Oliel Donald Scott orcla'ed officers lo distribute the warning alter a judge refused 'lltursday lo block a city ordinance banning the posten as requested by oome 1oJ> less operators who cont.ended the law was unconstitutitJnal. SCO'IT SAID THAT POLICE will meet with repre- ""'tatives from the city planning deportmel1t and the dly attorney's office on Monday to work out a timetable for re- moval of tbooe largor llgns which require use of er.mes. All lopl005 sigm In the city are expec!<d lo be removed wilhin a month, Lt. Clem De Amici!, polke public allail's ofllcet'' said. "This will be an onlerly operallon," De Amicls said. "It -·· be like Prohibition -''"""' 111111llng arouod with sledgobammon breoklng -an;loi." Superior Court Judge Ina Brown Jr. n1led Thursday that there wUI "be ample lime lo raise the conslitutional Issues" atler an arrest Is made ~ the onlinance. BROWN WAS RUUNG ON a request to i&5ue a pr .. llmlnary injunctloo against the law by a group of North Beach lxlplest clubs. Club repn!Oefltallws argu<d that the law violated oonolltutlonal guarantees of freedom of """""- GALVANIZED OIL DRAIN PAN 3'11 Gallo. Capacity 0.-0 F« Wo•hi1>9 Por11 •• A-ican & Popu lor l111port1 LACE-ON STEERING WHEEL COVERS F« All c ... .... Trudi ••t· '"'' 884 ·~ !!Si-- 99 HAVOLINE MOTOR OIL "'""' WEr.HTS OIL FILTER WRENCH OR CARBURETOR AIR CLEANER ••• AME A:tCAN CA.RS 1~ CHECKER ANTI-FREEZE 59 -----=-- - - ------·---=. -=----"--=--=----.:-_ ---:.::.. ~-==--=-=--- 17"xl7" UTILITY MATS A C, AUTO LITE & CHAMPION Sftc ........ 1 -79c ... Nixon's Kiri 'Too Poor' ntE U~1\'ERSITV of California seismograph station across lhe bay Jn Bt>rkeley said the S:1n Andreas fault didn't e"en \\'iggle at the ap- pointed hour . SACRAMENTO (AP l - A California welfare recipient who Is a first cousin to Presi· dent Nlxon says he and his wife have been invited to Nix· Of course, self-styled quakt predictor Reuben Greenspan had admitted last \\'eek that his calculations -based on eclipses, gra\'itational pull and geology -\\"Cre faulty and \\ithdrE!W his forecast. • on's Jan. 20 inaugural but can't afford to go. Greenspan. a 67-year-0h.I recluse, didn't take up ~1ayor Joseph L. Alloto·s in\'italion to tea in his offk·e at his predicted quake ti1ne . Phillip Milhous of Cedar Ridge in Nortllern California's Nevada County and his wife Verlene draw welfare because they are disabled. Instead, lhe mayor hosted ER AUTO c MECHANICS BRAND COOLI NG SYSTEM CHEMICALS ANTl·RUST 5' YATER PUMP LU BRICANT STOP LEA.Ii 5' SEALER S MINUTE FA.ST FLUSH SIO/'I OU s-•.r AMI l311Mll31 s..,/t;•l SUPER X ·CARBURETOR TREATMENT Ck-l'-C11r W•ik l'M ~ SOLDER SEAL HEAVY D UTY BRAliE FLUID Prw /l~,.i.r NM/ Do"Jt; llr•bs E~efif. S...LI!, Pe~n.I S~ct MOTOR BATH Br..-i U o.....lfo11 JI 0// I LB. MEC HA NICS CHA.S IS GREASE l LB. llECHA.NICS WATERLESS HAND SOAP YOUR CHOICE . . NO LIMIT AT CHECKER AUTO ... BUY l OR B UY A. DOZEN ........ . NYLON FOAM SEAT COVERS FULL ACROSS FLOOR MA'rS 1~ ::i:i. 3 99 s,lit s..t Qo.lm .. c.1 •• "\VE CAi\'T.TREAT this as a jokt'," he said. "It's friRhtened n lot of pt.'Qple." Greenspan \\'ithdre\lo· h i s prophecy foUO\,ing the disa- steroos ~fanagua. Nicaragua, quakt. But a re,,· of the local ri:sidents who had planned to be out of to\\·n Thursday 1norning lert anf\\·ay -just in case. Earthquake experts scoffed at the pred iction. insisting no one ran predict lhc hour or day of a n1ajor quake. Bot they also notM th.at large quakes strike this area periodi('a!ly. The further R\\'ay the last one is, the sooner the next one can be expected, they \\'amed. \'otcn created tOO one statewide arid &ix regiona l <..'Oastal commissions Nov. 7 when they approved Prop. 20, the coost tine initiative. Tilt workshop ajCend:a \\1lll probably cover admini~traLion. planning and procedures, the state's Re!Ources Agency said in a ne\\·s release announcing the invit"!tion. The invitation was issued jointly by Jl.eagan, Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti (0-Van Nuys\ .ind slate Senate Presi· dent pro tern James Mills (D· San Diego) the department said. PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY 9, 1973 30.000 MIL:E ·BRAKE SHOES GENERATORS ii"."im'~;~. 399 ....... ,~ 1099 All C•1 c..,, IMI"';"' P# EA. vw·1 ,...,,., """"-~-_,,,"""""""" •rT< 1299 P-XCHA/'t<il! "· -..-~. 1 AMP BATTERY CHARGER 6 Or 12 Voh Sy1l1t1111 J<~t•l•lf '·" C-ant..4 F• TM Llf.t1-()fy-p,.,9"t Cor 5!2. BUCKET SEAT CUSHION C:....11-tlnt Colon 499 399 ALTERNATORS GREASE GUN MOOEl. 110 R•ffllabl. Eooylo ""'°'' For Ho.M, F•111o~ 398 I( .. ,_ Yovr Ride ....... """ Yow Lood·Le..i 102! 16~2 101 PIECE TOOL SET 2499 ............... ' 'Ille disputed onlinan<:O ftri>lcls display of 1111)' phote> graph or sljpl ~ Nil' port of the lwman body ~ the sign seeks cuat.mon lor _l'laoes· where enterta inment I• anllable .. The ordlnanco had not -enforced for Y<Ol'S """' Jolnr Bor1>qolala, • -ol"tlle Boon! of SUpervllon; complained about proll!enitlng slBJ1& Club .,...rs then 1oOli Phone 645-8264 I I I.EAST J9th_STREET, COSTA MESA STOU HOURS: Dill1'f not-tAJtRA"M~ICMO ~If the Issue lo the """1&. • • • • JUST OFF NEWPORT BLVD. -BEHIND MESA THEATRE Suoday9~6 I ./,, ' f . .... '. . . . . . • • • • DAD .Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The S-2 approval by Oran~1~ounty Planning Com· missionen of the Canada Foot planned conlmunity In El Toro is appalling, given the project's inadequacy at this point and the manner in which it was hand.led. Tbe vote was forced tbls week by the ma/ority three because two of UJose commissioners were eaving the advloory body. In milting the vote, the commission majority virlu· ally Ignored the advice of the planning stair and the cautions of county counsel that he could not recom- mend changing an area general plan for one noncon· fonning development. ' Planning? but the planning staff ruled them inadequate. _ The commission majorit.Y -in another discourag. ing disregard for such valuable planning input' -ap- proved U1en1 anyway, Property owners do have t axes to pay and ·should be allowed to develop their lands. Jlut they could have done that with a less dubious proposal. The question left unresolved by the commission should be answered beiore the Board of Supervisors does anything to patch up the poorly engineered ap- proval. New Saddlehack Trustees The Saddleback Valley area needs a comprehensive- ly updated general plan, not one arrived at a piece- meal, political-s\ep·by·polltlcal·misstep. Commissioners Two leading members of the Saddleback Valley com· approved revisions to the county's transportation, hous-munity Thursday night were installed as members of the lng, open space and parks plans to fit Canada. Saddloback Community College board of trustees. This raises valid concerns about the strength of be county commitments to such plans and to good plan-Expansion of the board from five to seven mem rs rung procedures. Do they mean nothing when faced with \Vith the appointment of Donna Berry o( Mission Viejo strong property owners? and Dr. James fl1arshall o( Mission Viejo is a step to- The commission's approval of a transportation cor-ward broader community representation on the board. 'd ( ~ lik 1 f ) th t h Jd Both join the board with the' kind of experience n or m~, e Y a l'041way a goes now ere wou that is needed' by trustees: a knowledge of the college be laughable if it also wasn't suCh a disgraceful ex-ample of bad planning. The commission also okayed the and its role in the community. extension of a road through a military ammunition MarshaU , for five years a college president, has dump, adding the vague condition that that issue will be served on the general advisory committee to college resolved in later more detailed work. Superintendent-President Fred H. Bremer. , -------.=-O""hv:;;i;cou=;sl;;\'li' such ma ·or tran rtatlon chan es af-r B ls on the advisor bod -o er en fies an e , 2 acre ana a proJect, most recently directing the activities of the finance iU bordered In part by Trabuco and El Toro Roads. Tit-e committee. owners and the commission failed to plan this and many Both new members have indicated a Wi.J.llngness to lher...aspectlLof the projec~ard to the lmpac:._ __ work__with-the--01her-live-board-members-tnward-tbe•----l-----1 ,-C------on their neighbors. The project's full burden on the common goal of providing the best education to students Just-devel®ed resources and com munity services in the in the community college district. Saddleback Valley has not yet been fairly measured. We wish them and the other five members ~ in /"'~~· ..... ''(HEf!l. UPi SIR. SOON YOU'LL SE ZIPP1N6 Al0N6 AT bOO /'1.P.H:' Environment impact statements were prepared, meeting the heavy responsibilities of their positions. • A Lovely Old World of Musical Fun ~YDNEY J. HARRI~ Although, as I remarked not long ago, I'm not big on the nostalgia bit, everyone bas a soft spot of his own, and mine ha~ pens to be Gilbert & Sullivan. It was something I grew up with, the way other kids grew up with Tom Mix or Amos 'n' Andy. Dear Glo~my Gus Isn't It iron!< that Mrs. Judy Ros- ener has been appointed to the coastline cmunission (Prop. 20) to draw up a plan to preserve public beaches? She lives on Lido Isle, where a1l the beaches are private. K.H.L. Tilll ........ Nfll(tt n .... rT '+''-" Ml IMCflt.H11Y ...... of ll'lt ,._..,.,, Strid ,_ Mt ,...,. t9 Olotm' Giil, 0.llY ,1 .. 1. sa ' More Prudent to Plan than Block County Must Face the Growth Issue /,· / To the Editor: to a "chair." A large figure, but still essential informati on reque§ted by I recently "·rote to the editor er· small enough for the above projects to be school , city state parks and" highway pressing my concern that we, here in ~BOX worked out comfortably and financially. iiatrol oUicials, and by enginfers who are Orange County, should address ourselves THINGS ARE getting better for the concerned that the appQcants are unable to produce proven· reactor safety to the growth issue and get on with solv-handicapped person, but I do wish that systems. ln good faith, GUARD ing our problems. It was and is my .con-those building new motels, offices, volunteers donated the time and money tention that the papulation of Orange Letters from readers are welcome. airports, restaurants, etc., would confer 1 1 ll all County and other attractive areas, will Normally writer& should convey their with a handicapped veteran's hospital, or 0 produce and dup icate and ma continue to grow and that no acceptable messages in 300 words or less. The hunt up someone in the neighborhood over the U.S. as instructed by the AEC, way has yet been found to stop a people's who is contined to a wheelchair, and get 4-0 copies of the questions. The utility tight to condense letters to fit ttVtCe compa ·es t d ,. ans ers migration or their desire to procreate. or etimtnate libel i.s re&eroed~All their vie\vs, chair measurements, "''here 01 re urne eva ive ·.v · publishers, sent me a review copy of the This being the fact, J· suggested it might letter& must include signature and the W-C should be located, handlebars for SOf\1E OF these questions have been new book, "The Gilbert & Sullivan Com-be more prudent to plan for growth mailing addresi, but names may be the showers. ramp heighL'i, etc. posed by GUA RD and by community of- panioo" and it all came back in a rush rather than spend our energy stopping wlthhel~ on request if s.ufftcient Thanks aga in for that fine article. ficial s for more than three years. ' · · · wcr !ants, hi hwa s utilities waler ARTHUR W. HAMPTON Whether the a licants do not have the handSome compendium of the pla ys, pr1r an ome u g, etc. published. 1n onnahon soug t, or c se not to pro- / I VC ] the YOI. st.~ me lbe Un: • G ed ah! ' j ! di\) c" sch sta r boa l cousins w b o ·come over here from London to live, and they ti;!~ ll~. £111].1_ as muco Br taln-wfffi them .. they could -lncludini a set of the Savoyard Operu that must have been ductiona, __ ~onnance~ and all ,Jhe ------WELL,-AS-ONE.-mijlht---expeGt,--.lli<>----'--------------¥811-Ca st--8:1-,'1$0'----'vide it unless or until "required" by the tilentedpeciple whO maOe G&S a Brit~ answer to my observations, both in a A'EC-todo so, tl'iey condemntfiefiiSe••v~e•s---ll--o-- tnsUtutlois for a half-century. But who 1s later. "Letters'' colwnn and personally for the article, "Barriers Faced" in yoqr To the Edilor: in either case. pressed bY Thomas Edl5on bbDJelf. AT ANY RATE, my cousins sod I would sit around the gramaphooe (or vi.,. trola, H you will) and follow these Gilbert & Sullivan scores wllh a libretto. You muit-rememtier;-children, liird as It Is to believe, there was no television in those benighted days, no talking f-. and radio was still something you searched for with a cat's wisker on a ·crystal-set. The wind-up vlctrola was where it was. Well, G&S became for us what, I sup- pose, Strauss was for a generation of Viennese kids, or Verdi for the Italian youth in the pre-electronic era. We got to know every verse, melody, nuance, and bit of trickery in the savoy repertoire , and never tired of the romy gags and an- cient clowning. What, never? Well, hard· ly ever. THE OTHER DAY, Dodd, Mead, the going to-buy-it?-communicated to me, Oealt With me and issue dated Dec. 22. ~ Congre.mnan Philip Crane of Illinois Much of the basic information asked We are a se:dly dwindling lot, we G&S the organization I represent rather than With my wife being confined to a st.ates that the Federal Government now should have been made public before aficionados, like veterans of tbe Spanish-the issue. My motives were questioned. wheelchair, we are very familiar \vi th spends $l,750. annually for every man, construction permits were approved for American War. And \\'e are apparently The motives of those I represent were the problems facing Mick Spencer in his "'oman and child in the United States San Onofre Unit 1. but these questions of the last of the breed: I exposed my own ~ suspect. But there was no ath!mpt to everyday living routines. distance of hazard of the most serious children to t~ Savoy operas at an early deal with the issue of growth or the (This medlnans Y(tou. )dHf~ .etstf~mate~ th) at if accidents (described by the AEC as class age, and I.bey exhibited mild .interest and challenge we all face. WE WERE very impressed ~th a pr1r 0.ve~n . g .e. ~ icibo 1~S:mg ~ 8 and 9). time available for evacuation. ) amusement, but U never really took. The That's a sad conunent. It reflects on' gram. recently introduced in Great Bri· linues 0 mcrease, tn a u years 1 length of lime evacuation would be world that was molded and mocked in our inability to face social issues and tain , that allows for those in wheelchairs, wh~ cos~ evebory man, woman and child in necessary, and adequate detail of pro- those entertainments was too far remov-solve our problems. Instead or trying to who drive automobiles, to park in t IS nation a 1 ut ~15•000· a year. cedures in the event of a disastrous ac- ed from BDYthini they could conceive to identify the problem and search for so_lu~ restrjcted areas. A _!De1'1 plaque, a~ut Young peop e Pease take notice! cident. have not been provided to the bold them. tions. we become overly concerned with twelve inches square, Jndicates that the "Spenders" in Congress must go. public or to cOmmunity officials. IT WAS A world of style and form and taste, a world of institutions that could be mocked but not seriously questioned , a world of relative permanence and placidity and proud faith in something called "progress." It died, actually, with Victoria, but Its ghost kept marching on until the end of World War I and the rise of the terrible Twenties. It was a lovely world, just as Strauss' and Verd.i's were lovely worlds. But nowadays it seems Jess real than the world of science-fiction. I may turn out to be the last Gilbert & Sullivan com- panion. the advocate's race. religion, business or car is being parked by a handicapped C. C. MOSELEY associates, or else we try to find a con-person. I SAN ONOFRE 1 is now operating with venient devil to blame our problems on. In major cities, like London, this is a Radiat.io11 Ba::ard an emergency core cooling system which true blessing to those who •want to do for f. Jed in a series of model tests con- plkEOPLE LAMENT the fact we can themselves' some of the things that are To the Editor: ducted by the AEC. ye t the utility com- wa on the moon, yet can't 50lve our natural for those of us who walk, like In hearibg action conducted by the panies have not provided tbe hazard simplest social problems. A3 David shopping, business eppaintments, etc., Atomic Energy Conuniss ion on proposals facts necessary on which community of- Moynahan said last year, going to the \vithout having to park a block or two to build two -largest ever constructed ficiaJs could attempt an effective evacua- moon was easy compared to solving a away. This approach is also under con--experimental nuclear reactors at San lion of persons "'ithin 25 miles of the sociaj problem. Everyone readily agreed sideration .in other countries on the con-Onofre, the utility companies have plant. that the moon fli ght problem that ha~ to tinent. declined to giv~ responsive ans~·ets to We contend that the refusal to ansiwer lieSoci?'lercOme, was gfavitY anO (rictioO. ' vital questlons concerned. with public these questions is an act or contemet a issues are different.-People can't WHAT A GREAT lrlft and lift .... tha"i safety. against the foundation purposes or the agree on the cause of those problems. ,,. hea · They waste their time questioning each· would be, to our returning servicemen, TN ESTA BUSHED procedures' of the · nng process. an 11ttem~ to evade other's motives and looking for 8 devil and others still rtstricted to wheelchairs, hearing prqcess, Capistrano Bay area that purpose and thus negate it. to blame. They cannot perceive the if our great stale could institute such· a residfnts known as · Grdups · U-nited ' LYNN HARRIS IDCKS. cause of the problem independent of the program. · .. better still if it col\ld go na-Against Radiation Da.Ilgers were granted Chainnan LBJ's Accomplishments different people involved. tionwide. by the AEC the right to ask and to Groups United Against The qual:ty of the future environment Great Britain ls also thinking about receive answers under oath to questions Radiation Dangers \Ve sball all share is too important to free use of telephones and the mails. It is pased in printed form to the applicant eac h of us to allow thlS pattern to con-estimated that by the year 1980 (a nd utility companies and the AEC staff. tinue. There are no devils, either in these flgures were related to me by a GUARD has devoted thousands of Stork V111cl.ea1tltlc To the Editor: The passing of Harry Tnunan, who left the White House 20 years ago in a hall of abuse, is a reminder that presidentl often go unapp,reciated until after t.bey are gone. Today, for example, bis tori ans rate the spunky Truman among America's 10 great- est presidents. -Do.wn..o111 the Ped· ernalea, another for- mer presklent is mournlng over the way public opinion has turned aga'inst him. We have been among tho.se \\'ho have criticized Lyndon Johnson for bis handling of Lhe Vietnam war. But after the war clouds clear away, history may also look kindly upon LBJ. For no other presld .. t pushed through so much '°"!al le~slation. Here are a few of the mdettones he left behind when he retired from the WhJte House: -MEDICARE: For mlllklns of senior citizens, medlcm baa become so tm- portanl that Ill abe<nce would be regard· ' eel as a violation of the fourth com- mandment, "Honor thy father and thy mother." · 4 -CJVIL RIGHTS: Two epic meas- ures, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act or 1965, are regarded by black leaders as the greate st advance in social justice since the Eman- cipaUon Proclamation. Thoughtful black leaders mention Lyndon Johnson's name in the same breath with Abraham Lin- coln. -EDUCATION: LBJ deserves credit for probably the mo.st s"·eeping educa· tional legislation in history, wh ich has brought an educational revolutioo to this country. Today, It's taken for granted that any qua11fied American youlh can get a college education through grants. loan1 or jobs. This wa.,n't t.rue In 1963 when most mldd!~income parents wor- ried about how lhey were going to educate their children. The coUege populatkm bns doubled since LBJ '5 reforms became Jaw. All In all, 43$ pltces of basic Itglslation were pasted ubder L8J. Most pleasing lo him, no doubt, is that none has been repealed: oear!y all have boon added to; end maoy appear In botb party plat-form.o. _ Mllllolil of old f>!!Ople, black cluuns, ¥0W!C people -and even !be prea beclUM of the fl'reedom or Information busi ness. industry. labor or the utility leading wheelchair manufacturer), there volunteer hours to the study of atomic companies, that are the cause of our en-will be J.8 million people in the United reactor safety problems. The 33 ques- vhonmenta l problems. There are, States, who will be pennanently confined lions were carefully dra\vn to elicit however , some very complex problems of growth and pollution which we all share, and which must. be objectively faced and solved if \Ve are to make any significant social progress. • -GltBERT W: FERGUSON Executive Director, CEED Wl1t'e lchai r Life To the Editor: A belated thank you, to Allison Deerr Isn't It the Truth! By CARL RIBLET JR. One advantage among many that the bachelor man or woman enjoys is to sleep with two pillows. one to rest the bead upon and the other to pu_ncb Into shape without kJcking the covers off or being told to go soore down the hall in the spare bedroom. "Laugh on4 the world laugh• with you; snore and uou &leep alont." -Author Unidtntffied Why Is it lhal &Ince time began lh•no has always been conflict between men and women? No man can answer that qucsttDD.-but Ml' w1>man can: "Men don't understand us, is the reason why, and on lbose nwntrous occasions when we understand them, they \l.'OO 't admit IL" Few chemical substances have generated as much passionate debate as has DDT. Praised and condemned with equal fervor, the pesticide has been a key weapon in the fight against dJse.ase.car-- rylng and crop-devouring insects over the put quarter~tury. But the DDT era 1s about to come to an abrupt end tn the United Stales. Starting thjs month , virtually all use of DDT In this country will be prohibited. WILLilll D. Ruckclshaus. ad· mlnlstrator of the Environmental Protec- tion Aa:ency, announced the ban last June. Tht decbion capped three years of governmental inquiries. lncludtng seven months of hearings. DDT, it was """ eluded, poaed "an unacceptable risk to · man and hJ1 envlrooment." Bui the ban does not app!y lo public health and quaranUne Ulle9 ot the chemical. nor to three minor 1'r'Op usea for which no ef. ftctlve pest-controJ alternative ls ct1r· rent\)' av.ilable. Under ctrtaln con- ditions, DDT m'ay 6e med on ~ pep- __eerJ, onions1 and .stored aweot 1>9tatoes, Moreover,Thet;PA oiiler doea no1 afftct U.. manulaatuno of DDT for export. EDITORIAL RESEARCH many agricultural experts. The case for DDT was eloquently set forth by Norman E. Borlaug1 father of the "Green RevoJu. lion/' in a November, 1971 address before a conference of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. If agriculture ls deniied the use of DDT and similar cllemickls "because of unwise legislation that iB now btlng promoted by a poweriul group of hysterical lobbyist~ who are provotJng feai by predicting doom ror Ule world through chemical poisoning," Borlaug warned, "then the world will be doomed oot by chemlcal poisoning but from starvation." 111£ EPA and other govt'mment agen. cics obviously beJleve that wW not ha~ pen. Over th.e next three years. tbe O.pattmenl of Apiculturt, tbe. Natlon1r -lliiXiiil bf JP'ltefiil IO llili Ion,,.--- man clown In Texaa. ".lta11 i.t tJlt head, bu' wommt tflt'nS lt. •• -C1ttsirt Proverb Ruckelsha~' announcement wa s "iml!il tll-JU · Science Foundat1011 and EPA plan to spend arourtd ao rruruon to develop imk proved pest · management tecbn1que1. These ellor!J will be closely waldled by the 1Uppor1An and opponents of DDT. -fiklei rt1Ili£Uul1 aovmm~t edicb vlronmenWista and with dlsm4y by can alw1ys be reaoinded. I am responding to the letter written by Shelley \Valsh \\'hich you published 011 Dec. 28. In her letter, Mrs. Walsh sincerely pro- Posed that the stork theory be presented in the elementary school science text- books. She made her statements in view -of-the-'fect that a ~peeiaf Cl"eation 1heory will be lncluded in the science textb:>oks. It is evident that Ms. Walsh has con- fused lbcory with scientific fact. 'The human reproductive process is accepted scientific fact. thereby eliminating the stork theory. In the case of the creation process, all hypotheses are only accepted as theory and none are accepted as scientllJc fact. DA V1D PFEJLER ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N, \Vced, Pitbli.s her Thomas Keevll, Editor Barbaro Kreibich Edilorinl Page Edt!or Thr rdi1orh1I p11e;r or the [)ally Pilot se<'ks to inform and ellmu- late-t't'll.dl'rs by presenting thlt newsp11Pf!r'1 oplnkms all{I rom· ment~t)' on topics of int~t and slicnificancio, by proVldJng " torun\ tor the ex1)ttsslon of our rt'aders' JOlnlona. and b)' ('ll'l!a0nt1n11 100 dh•rrth' vlt"1i1t·11111nt9 or lnrormeci ob· iervtrs 11.l'ld spoke.men on topl ca of thf' d'>" Friday, January-~, 11173 :~ !llc nar get anc pre the ~ sat ply wtt bor iit- bel· E me fld Un bel .... 1°' mD ~ re! -he! U.! nal pal 1 the l'CI Ha hel wb nm tab 1 'lll1 , • ·i~ ihe 1 ~ mo ... ""' mo .. ., • , I . ' ;1 ·' • -. • Bu.,tington ileaeh Fountain Valley Today's Final N.Y. Stocks r VOL 66, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY S, 1973 TEN CENTS Peters By TOM BARLEY ot ... O.lfr ,_. Stall "It was Christmas Day and I was at the festival ln Laguna Beach. I'd been, you know, taking LSD and suddenly I sr.w my father's soul. It was kinda telling me my old man was dead, you know, And then I got to thlnking about all the good times we'd had." " Gig Peters stopped at that point, smil- ed at an incredulous jury and absentmindedly tapped one of the two Tells Court He IGlled Parents massive volumes ol obscure religions from which be had quoted liberaUy throughou1 the afternooo. He had earlif:r refused to take the oath be.fore ttstifylng Thursday and was only allowed 10 do so alter a biller argument between opposing lawyers. Tbe ronner Weguard eased his broken body forward in his wbeelcbalr, adjUllted the counsel table microphone specially cocked in his direction and resumed what everyone present agreed was one or the most astonishing acts of testimony in his girl friend to their modest Huntington Orange County Superior Court history. Beach home. Pttuch of it was rambling and in--.. You see, l've nothing to gain or lose," coherent to the point I.bat court reporter the bearded Jong-haired defendant told Doris Vane was unable to record a fluent the jury while Judge Kenneth Willlami account of what the crippled defendant watcbro him sadly from the bencb and offered ln response to defense attorney prosecutor Pat Brian pointedly turned his Barry Tarlow's prompting. b.: .k on him . But Peters. 24, repeatedly testified that "Okay, the baste issue for me is he had indeed killed Charles Peters, 55, whether I go to the joint or the nulhouse, and Flora Peters, 54, less tban 24 hours right~·· Peters murmured. · · after his parents had welcomed him 3.nd "I'm not trying to alter your opinion. • Bui I think some of you m1ght g't the message J 've been carrying around for a long time," he said. Peters "'ill be wh<'eled bock to the courtroom r.tonday to resume his testimony after lhe three-day break ardered Ia1e Thul'Mlay by Judge .Williams. And ii is expected that the former llun-.. tington Beach High School honor student "'ill be the final witness in a sanity he1-1r- ing 'A'hich must end "'ilh the jury's ruling ·v-._ r== ~-­- ------- on whether he "'as sane or insane when he killed his parenls on April 21, 1971. Peters has already been convicted of two t'OWlts of fir.a degree murder by thnt same jury ltl his second trial. Peters' first trial ended drdmatically and pn•maturely in November 1971 whtn he y,•as shot in th(' spine by a deputy a:1 he attempted to escape from the same court room. Those Y.1ounds are almost certain to !See PETERS, Page ZI /1\lien Pupils Cited ------= -·-... ..... v ¥-.. -· Si1spected l(iller Shot Number of Foreigners Concerns Trustee By Deputy By CANDACE PEARSON Of .. 0.14~ ~ .... lllfl A county school trustee charged Thurs- dny lhat illegal aliens are attending cuunty schools and that one unnamed schoot district was virtually rubber· stamping alien gtudent entrance forms. David Brandt of Santa Ana, the county board's newest member, told his fellow trustees Thursday that he was "con- cerned" about foreign students being ad- mitted to schools with improperly filled out inm,igration forms, known as "I· 20's". Although he declined to ·name any specific school districts, Brandt waved before the board an 1·20 f orm which car- ried the name of Joe O'Sullivan, former Laguna Beach city councilman and director of pupil pecsonnel services for the Santa Ana Unified School District . Brandt. who was active in the reelec· tion campaign of As.'H!mblyman Robe.rt Burke (k·Huntington !\each). claimed the entrance form was comptetely blank except for the administrative signature. By MICHAEL GOODRICH Of ... 0.11• ll'ltill 11.ltl' T"·o Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies were machine-gunned to death Thursday afternoon in Midway City as they attempted to capture a double murder suspect. B52s Make Heaviest The forms are supposed to be taken to ·the American Consulate. in the student's home country. and signed. filled out by the relntive the student will live with in C&Jifornia and then signed by the d.istnct, Brandt contended. The suspect, Carl Eckstrom. 23 , of 8251 Flight Ave., Midwa} City, was later cut do!All b~· a sing\!! shotgun blast fired by an Orange County Sheri(rs deputy. He had come to the aid of the slain peace of· ficers. From Wire Sen"icel : More than 40 U.S. B51 bombers at- tacked the southern half of North Viet- nam in the heaviest raids in three weeks. generating protests today from Hanoi and charges that President Nixon. is preparing for new bombardments above tbe 20th parallel. 1he U.S. Command said the eight jet saturation bombers were attacking su~ pl'y traffic in North Vietnamese rivers within five mUes of the 20t.b parallel l!oplbing halt line, about 200 miles north ot the Demilitarized 1.one and 75 miles below Hanoi. But command spokesmen refused com- ment on charges in North Vietnam's of- ficial Nban Dan army newspaper that the United States, while limiting attacks below the 20th parallel, is carrying on reconoai.ssance "of several other lcolit.ies in preparation ror new acts of blllijary adventure." Nhan Dan left the impression it was referring to the northetn Hanoi-Haiphong ·· heartland. American sources outside the U.S. Command confirmed that recon- Dalssanet was continuing above the 20th parallel. These sources added. however, that they knew of no immediate plans to resume ~ two-week aerial blitz of the Hanoi and Haiphong regions. Those heavy attacks were halted Saturday, when the United Stales and North Viet-nam agreed to return to the bargaining table ln Paris. The semipublic Paris talb resumed '11lursday and secret negotiations are to resume Monday. The United Slates always haa bad con- ttogen~ plans for bombing North Vlet- 'bam d arslilli&lhl1"\ICOOur~ j.hem to keep them current. 'The U.S, aerial recoMBWance above !hf 20th parallel Is designed to gather p&tographic evidence of bomb damage, monitor movement of war materials llQUthward from China and watch nbttildlng. 11iis infonnalion ls used to maintain a large! list should Nixon Wrong Plione For Jaycees A lfl'008 phone number was listed In Thursday's story aboul the """' tlngtoo Beach Jayc..s Reking nomlnallons for their ·annual 'I>ist1ncuJsbed Service Award. The phone number for BW Har- rington, chairman of the Jaycee rvent wu Incorrectly Listed. Har- rlnaton'a pn1110r phone nwnber is --12. Any local resldenis who want to ,. tubmlt 1 name for consideration !,for lhe aw• rd, may phone Har· ~on. prior lo Jan. 17. .. decide lo resume bombing. Meanwhile, Secretary of Defense Mel- vin R. Laird today ordered details with- held of U.S. bomb damage in North Viet· nam during the second week or the Amer- ican bombing blitz so as not to upset the Paris peace talks. "No information will be put out of this building at any time illat w\11 possibly jeopardii.e the success of those negotia· lions," Laird declared during an awards presentation at the Pentagon. The_se.c:retary's chiel spokesman, Je,rry W. Friedheim, indicated that Laird is ac- ting under orders from the White House. Other sources said the news blackout of the bombing summary was dictated by Dr. Henry K.i.ssillger. President Nixon 's national security adviser who will resume negotiations Monday with the North Vietnamese in Paris. Bandit Leaves Without Loot A Jone gunman rifled the cash registers In a McDonald's Hamburger stand in Huntington Beach Thursday night. but fled before the manager could turn over the money from the safe. .Police said the robber entered the hamburger outlet about 8:30 p.m. toling L .38 caliber hand gun. Confronting assis- tant manager Alan Miller, the robber said, "Don't move, I want all the money." Miller went to the rear of the store to open the safe, police said. But when he returned lo the front of the store with the money it contained, the robber had fied .. after ordy rifting-the'-cash registers. The amount of loss was not disclosed. • "I'm not trying to deport anyone,'' hi!' sald. "But l do resent paying for persons whQ. are not contributing." H added that schools were not re- Eckstrom, wbo in addition to being the suspect in a double munter is suspected quiring Slnngent enough identificnlion of WARY LAWMEN EXAMINE HOME OF MURDER SUSPECT 1tuden11 and asked the county staff tc.o--===~n.Ml"::':'"'-".chu:~~J..cl~.'.:l1~·=T~r:"l~g"'ic~C:'ll:'ma~x~1o~I~w~O<OV~~n::tx~S=hco=t':':in::•!:"S'!'P.'::'"~===--<lh"e,,._,saitm-erae time, is in crilical ro~~~ion to-ma e a survey-udy among county day at Orange €aunty-Medical lJICn!er:- districts ol the situation and report back. The two-county massacre began Contacted today, O'Sullivan denied that shortly after noon when Eckstron1 any improper practices were taking welfare Fanailies allegedly pulled a pistol at the Cerritos place in the district and questioned Shopping Center and sho t two female Brandt's right to interfere \Vith an in· companions. dividual district. v ll T A One girl. Rosemary Vasquez. 20, ot Bell O'Sullivan said while he is only ad· a ey rustees pprove Gardens, was shot twice in the stomach ministralor in lbc Sanla Ana districl Iha! ~ and died at Pioneer Hospiial in Arlesia; signs 1-20 forms, he never signs blank Her sister, Cecelia Vasquez. 17, Bell forms. Gardens, was listed in critical condition "I don't know how he <Brandt) could B • 1 f D c c today after undergoing surgery at gel a blank one," O'Sullivan said. "We IC or ay are enter Pioneer Hospilal. She was shot In the don't hand those out." chest, right side, left leg and left O'Sullivan explained his district's pro-forearm . ' cedure with the forms as foUows : A passing shopper, Michael Jeffries. Normally the local relative of the stu-A siit·month drive to establish a day If the contract receives final approval. 27, of Downey, was shot twice in the back dent who wants to study in CaJifomi!I care rent.er for welfare families in the Fountain Valley will become the first as he returned to his car. police said. He comes to the district to see if officials district in Orange County 10 operate.such died at Woodruff Community Hospital, · \Viii agree to entrance. "We fill in part of fountain Valley School District neared a Long Beach. . the form that says, yes. WP will accept close Thursday as school trustees &J>' a center. \Vitnesses tol~ polile Eckstrom shot the student if he lives here." said proved a cont ract for the center with the Sanchis explained that most counties in the two girls while walking with them in O'Sullivan. Then the relative fills In part counly Department of Welfare. Lhr state operate similar centers through the shopping center parking lot. Police of the form that say he will be responsi-Fountain Valley schools superintertdent schoo l d~tricts, but Orange County has said they still have no Idea what tho ble l()r the student during his stay here. Mike Brick told school OOard members operated its centers in the past through motive was for the shootings. "Then, they lake the form lo the con· h I f be Following the shootings. the suspect I d that, with t e approva o t state pr1·vate -nlracto-su ate in Mexico an present it,'' · "v '"· ran to his car and fled, but not before a 0 S I h h · 1 Department of Social Welfare and the "W f I belt 1·1· d ' u livan said, adding t at t e consu ate e ee we are er qua l 1e shop""r noted his license numbe.J' and h d · h · , · county Board of Supervisors. the center be •" t ere an 1n ot er countries won t sign could be open by February or Mardi.. cause we will be giving the children an phoned them to the sheriff,'s station in unless the district agrees to house the To be located at the Lamb School, e • .. ::ationally based program," he said. Lakewood. student. Beach Two sheriff's deputies. s.n. Carl E. Wbc h f b b ba k h 10251 Yorktown Ave .• Huntington . "" n t e orm is roug t c to t e f Wilson . 40, and his f'IJ:lrtner, Sheri£f's d. · be ff' · ls th k the center is designed to care or 4-0 f'"' 1str1cl, t 0 ICJa ere as to see a Policemen Shoot Detective Donald w. Schneider, also 40, birth certificate. O'Sullivan said. The children between the ages of 4 and 14 cht>Cked the license numbers and pro- form is also checked by immigration of-from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. ceeded to the Eckstrom home. ficials and the average alien student AC<.'Onting to Rubert Sanchis, assistant They contacted the Orange County's "wouldn't know how to fill it out ," he superintendent for educational services, Two Bar Patrons Sheriff's Office. which assigned a back said. the purpose of the center is to provide up car driven by Depuly Andrew B nd' '-" led be 1ho hi child care so that parents in families ra uiwca ug so me Romero. st udents -perhaps five percent of the receiving aid to dependent children can Jn Tustin Fi!!hl When they arrived at lhe Midway city aliens -either DeVer take forms to the get }ob training or find jobs. 0 res1dence where Eckstrom lives with hi~ consulates or dishonestly fill out part of The first year contract, lO be paid to parcnt.s. Schneider and Wil'4ln went to 'h f m 'be SChooi dl·s1n·e1 by the county from One man was killed early today ,.nd e or . the front door and Rqmero went to C(lver Of the 27.000 students in the Santa 1\na state and federal funds is for $91.460. It another seriously wounded by gunfire in the back. district. only 110 are aliens. While most i.~ to cover the cost of the center's an alterc?tlon in a Tustin bar with two \Yitnesses told police that Schneider t>f those ate from Mexico. some are from relocBtab+e build.in• and the"'881aries t>l ~ ~ ~ ~ · !h ~ • · • ~• 1=e ~"•~GS. '-ag' %)" • -ID of( duty policemen from o ei" com-~ ~ ......... 1.. r c lSee ALIENS, Page%) staff members. munities. Tustin police reported. () Randell S. Robinette, 25, addres,, not Searches Slow .Al. rport ~~~~; ~:~;:.~~n·t~~ i~:"~~:; seriously wounded Is Sam P. Campise, 35. whose home addrcn is also unknown, Orange Coast Passe1i gers 'Coope rative' to County &curity Early flights from the Orange County Airport were reported numing 10 to 15 minutes late th.is morning because or new federal regulations requiring the tearch of oaoh boanling -er. Selective searcbet bave been madt al the airport for the past aeveral months but beglmdng today, new rules were ln effect tbal roqulred each paaoonger to pass through u electronic 11Ca11n!ng device and 10 aubmlt all carry..., luuap to.a..hand search. "11'1 slowing 111 down quHe a bit: especially on the heavier nights," said Robert Bresnahan, dlrector of aviation at the airport. "But people are V<rJ CllOpera lvo. They say Ibey ""'1ld rather be ddaytd )en minutes here than lwo or thr,. da)'i on a skyjack to someplace they don 't want to go." Bresnahan said the delays would be shortened in lime as the airlines smooth· ed 001 the ~rch optratlon. "It's like anything new," Bresnahan said, "it will take u.~ awhile to get the bugs out, and until we dq, there'll be delays." The biggest problems are anticipated on Friday and Sunday night when traffic al the airport is hea-C '51. At ~ times, dtlays e o u Id be up ta. 30 minutes, B. e.whan said. "We~ severely ove re: row d ed already," be said, uthe space we'l'fl tak- ing up wllh oe>rches just compounda our problem." . A IJ)Okesman for Air C.IUomia , largest carrier at the airport. de9crlbed the new • restrictions as "pretty tough" on passengen and especially women. "The law now requires us to hand search the pune of every woman boarding a plan, .. aaid John Tucker or Alr California. "Or if someooe has a wrapped package, we've got lo rernofe the ribbons and pape.r aod search il We're as ciirefUt as we can be but it's obviously a problem. RI tlme." . Tut.Iler said that rule!J. may have lo be cllanged concerning what pa~ngers are allowed to carry On to plane&. "Up to ·now. we've allowed ju!lt about anything," ~er Mid. "But it's kind of ridtculous now to allow IOtDeOne to bring oo • •ull<IJO fbll of boots J11:11 to ovoid tSee SEAllCll, Pip ZI - I The shooting occurred at 1:45 a.m. in the Bachelor's III bar, 14920 Holt Ave., Tustin police said . OffK:ers involved· who Tustin police allege did the shooting were Jerry L. Gray, 28, of the Garden Grove Police Department and Sgt. Thomas ~1. Baroldi, 26, of the Cypress force . Tu!tln police would not reveal any details or the 1ffair this morning. They said 1hey had called In OraDgl! County District Altomey's i,gve«Ugatars to assill:t in the case, evidtntJy becaU3C poDce offioo'1 wett Involved. E. Germany Noted BERLIN (AP} -The Nelherland.! granled d;plomatlc recotPlllloo 10 Easl G<nnaDT .todaJ. Weather The weathcrlady sees sunny skies and warmer temperatures for the wetkend, with the beac.he5 rcadl· 1ng 60 degrees, rising to 65 inland. Overnight lows in the 40s. INSIDE TODAY 0 rang• Co1'nt1(.1 outgoing G1'c11ui J'Uru takes 1ome partit1g that.I ot count11 munici pa/i lles n.~ the 1973 panet U unve1ted. See stories, Page 8 todau. LM, '"4 I -" Q.......... , a...1... ,. ... , c~ u c.........,. 11 0..111 NMlcin I •fnOt'l.i ,.... • .. ~ .11·1• ........ _.. . ........ ,,. AM l.ttoetn H Mal... ' Mhlft &U Mtnlll ""'.... ll -.111oM1 ...... 4 Ol'ff9 c.rr • lnMwlllf\ """ IYt.\a l"ttMI' ·11 ._,. 14·\f ff9dl MatiMlh l .. lf Ttlfttl!H ).S ,,.......... tN1 • w .. -.w 4 w..n MN'S 11.n WllAI ..._ 4 ........ .,,. • I • - - % DAILi PILOT H Breweries Fiw Suit In County A 12-year~ld Fountain Valley boy was reported In guarded condlllon loday Iller being dragged 15 le« by n trudt TbW"l- day afternoon on Adams A venue in Hun- lington Beach. Huntington Beach Police said Mart Ammand, 9151 Lamora Ave., wu riding his bike aoutb on Brookhur:t Street when he stopped at Adams Avenue about S:30 p.m. A truck driven by 0 . Lee Clark, 35, Pasadena, waa makin1 a rijht tum at lhe lnlttsecllon and caugl ~ the Ammand boy and hll bike In the boltom of a large !railer canylng dirt, police roported. The boy wu dragged aboul 15 feel before C1art noUced hlm and atopped. The youngster was taten to JSAcifica lloopltal. Police 11ld lhe acclder.t Is still under lnvelll11Uon. , - " "I remember you know, how he once f,---------------~---'""'!"""-'!lll-!""'""he....weoLlo-.wo.cL.wl1•th0-~~~~~~~~~---~~~1 a glass of wine in his hand and tried to yelled for EckSlrom to come out and -when the young man refused, the deputy began to break down the door. • • • • Bld1 are being 90ugbt by Orange Coun-- ty fo r the croatlon of a parking f.aclllly for the county's Sunset Beach. epat of the project Is eallmalod at $$111,000 by the Counly Department of Harbor•, B<acbea and Parka. The plan calls for development of 974 parking apaces, five rest rooms, landscaping and Irrigation facilities . The county Road Department will widen and lmprove north and south Pacific Avenues bordering the park.Ing area. Utility lines will be underground and a new water main will be built Jn coopera- bon with Huntington Beach, county of- ficials Slid. From Page l ALIENS ... Spain, Japan and other countries. O'Sullivan said he, or his assl1tant who alao evaluates the forms, hand out many more than that each year, but the student s decide for different reasons not to come to school here. OUN•I COAST Ila DAILY PILOT n. O'll'OI C:.t D.AIL Y 'IL.OT -Wflktl .. ~ "'9 N1wt-Prw.1, It M11""9 11Y tt1t or.,.. a.st Nllltfttnt ~. s_,.. rate CC!Tlllflf, ere oublklllo, Mordrt "'""'911 ,,...,,, fiOr' Cost. M .. •, Ntwoorl lleec:ll, H11nl~~ l.HCbfl'W!:lt!n Vtll<tY, LAii._ hac:ll, lrvlMJStditUtlMcll 4f'ld Sin Clt-mllll)rtf S•n J\1111'1 C•pl5tr8no. A ~Ingle rt01onal t<Hlion ;. pul!\klltd S..lun:t•l'1 •nd Sllnd1ys. Tiie P™~1p$1 pUbjltfllnQ plenl Ii ft ))0 WHI ltY ~!rtll, em.ta /11,µ, t.t!lfomla, TI6l$, ltt!.1rt N. w,,o Pr•IMlll ..-id l"lilOllVlff J.,~ 11.. c..,,1,v Viet l'Tw.ldowlt •nd Ottltr11 M1n1111er Tlie1111• Ktevil Edllor Tlitll'ltl A. M11rphl~e Mt""""' E•l1or Ch•tfff H. L.e, llicfri1rd P'. N•ll Aultt111t Ma11111r1t Edttor1 T1rry Ce•i11e Wtd Offr.ge County Edtlor " ... --...... 17175 lttch lo11lt•1rllil M•iJi11t .Alll .. , ••• I P.O. 1011 7•0, 92MI ...... __ LIOIN e..ai· tl2 f«•I A~ c... ~ .... 1 ,,. W:T ,, .... N"""'811 .. •ctn tan N aou1..,.~ ~It (I-tel _, Jifftflt I C.11111111 1tM1 Ttl ...... l7141 442-4JJ1 Cl•lfW .u..rthktt '42·1671 ,,_ *'* or._. Ctwtr ""11• II• 14f.ll21 ~. 1'11, en,. C...I P'llMl .. 111• ~-... ~ 11Wlft, ttlwtrlltllM. •1•W ftllltfW er •-''"'""4" ..,_ ...., .. ,...,.._. •llhM ..... ,... ,.,.. . ., """""' """"· ,.~.r:.~-.. l!'!f:~':., at= ~ -"'"'' ..,-;:w U.1f """"'"' mfl1flWY etttlMIJ•• UA' lfttftltlp,, , County Trustees Nix Two Films- But Not Books Subject of two films re~tr' :ted because of content by Orange County school trustees for viewing for ninth to 12lh graders are already being read by eighth grade students lD state-approved lltera· turo tertboou. · The films in question, "Lady or the Tiger" and "Dr. Heidle,er's Ex· periment," BNl based on sl:ort storles of the same name. They are part of a five-film series, "Sbort Story Showcue," d~trlbuled to local schools by the county department of education. One of those five, "The Lottery," was removed from clrallatlon Jasl. tpring af'...r complaints by some parents that It was too \'iolent. After a series of heated meetings, its companion films were then restrlcted to the high school level . From Pagel SEARCH .•. the inconvenience of checking it into the cargo compartment." Bresnahan also pointed out a problem Vt'it!JC4he metal scanner. "People pass through once and ir lt lights up, they're asked to empty their pocket!!. But sometimes they're wearing big metal belt buckles, which can really complicate the problem." Eckstrom suddenly fiung the door open and fired at Schnelder point blank with a .45 caliber Thompson submachine gun. according to the wilnesaes. Witnesses ~id Schnelder crumpl ed on the doorttep and Wilson ran to the side of the house and Into the backyard. Eckstrom emerged from the house "M'earin1 a U.S. Army flak jacket and chased Wilson to the back where he fell · ed the other deputy with another burst of machine-gun fire. A neighbor, Melvin Terrill, said he though~ the loud bursts were firecrackers. He stuck his head out the . back door where he saw the Orange County Deputy. Romero, who told him to get 'back inside. Romero then sneaked up behind Eckstrom as he was walklrig to the front and dropped him with one blast from his shotgun. Moments later, other Orange County Shertfrs deputies arrived after Ro mero called for aid. Officers-from the Westmtnster and HuoUn1ton Beach police departments were also on the scene i'IS law men aearched the area for any other suspectl. Wilson and Schnelder were taken to Westminster Community Hospital where they were both pronounced dead an 11· rival. Eckllrom was taken to Orange County l\ledlcal Center where he was booked on murder charges. Eckstrom was described by neighbors as a quiet "bookworm type." "He seemed Jike a real bright feUow," sald his neighbor Terrill. Terrill said .hat Eckstrom was a stu· dent a; Cal Slate,Lnnr Begch. • "He wanted to try oul for the police academy but they told him he was too nearsighted," said Terrill. Another neighbor, Marc Conlay, said that Eckstrom was a 1'preUy weird guy." Yorty Announ~es LA Mayor Seeks Fourtli Term LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor S.m Yorty, calling Loe Angele1 "tho lllOll progressively admtnlatertd city in the nation," today declared he will ltd clectioo to 11'1 unprecedented foUrth tenn. Yorty, 63, took note of his 12-year tenute as mayor and said be th.inks It Is an advantage to hl$ candidacy. "I DESIRE TO. USE that espericnco to k'"P our clly movinl forward on an even keel," Yorty told a news conference. '1There 11 no substitute for e1· perlonce,. Ind I sm lhe only candid• .. wilh !he experience of running a big city." Althourh candidates £or city officea have untll Monday to file. !heir In- tentions to run, Vony'1 prl:nclpal challengers already have taken out J)lper1 . TH~Y ARE FORMER Auembly Speaker J ... Uilruh, format J>Ollce .tJ!lll,.( . - Tbomaa Reddln, ond clly councilmen Thomas J!radley an! Joel Wacba. Nixon Not Optimhtic On Talks ' 'Peteer Wida Bwmifftrt' Statesmen Hear:: Truman Eulogy~ WASHINGTON (UPI) -Fortlin statesmen, government dlgnltariH, famJ- ty members and old friends heard Horry s Truman eulogized today as a leader who wore the manUe of bis countrymen's trust "with trulh and bore bls JOUtary power with hUmlllty." Vice Pnsldeot Spiro T. A&Dew represented President Nixon at the memorial services for the former Presi- denl In the towertnr aolhlc Wasbiljgton Cathedral. Nlxoo and h!J wife new to lndepen- deoce, fi1o. Dec. 27, the day after Truman died, to pay their last ""'*"· Eighty-eeven-year-old Beu Truman, the anvil, humble but not afraid, rd)lll>F always in his iodependent way upon the goodnU'i of the Lord, In whose hand ·11 the hammer of oor fate." Envoys Spur~ Controversy, Hold Talks frail and allln1, wu unable to attend. PARIS (UPI) _ u.s and Nonh Viet· The Trumana' only child, Margaret Daniel, and her hwlband, ctHton Daniel, namese envoys today Ignored the latest Washington Bureau chJt'f of the New controversy between Hanoi and Salgan York Times, represented the family. over Vietnam'• future and held their Sitting with the Daniels and the fourth consecutive day of technical talks Agnews in 8 front pew was Mra. Dwight on provisJons for a cease-fire. L . Eisenhower, widow or Truman's SUC· U.S. peace delegation spokesmM cessor in the White House. David Lambertson sa id the diplomat.Jc Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-hfass.), experts were going about their task in a and his sister, Eunice Shriver, were on businesslike way. band to represent the family of the late "They are not reading protests and I ' I I ' ' I • I , : I d ~ • I L t • n ·q a ' ' v ·t ( ,J .1 ~ ·r President John F. Kennedy. walking out,·• Lambertson said. Some-t,IOO-penonrpt!Jered in the Hl1 statement w.as_an.......appe.reniL _--,1 Cathedral to hear the Very Rev. Francis reference to two technical sessions last 8' month in which the Viet Cong and North B. ~yre Jr., dean of the cathedra l, Vietnamese showed up just long enough describe Truman as a man \Vho was ,,,.. .,,..,.,,_,, ,, C' k..-h: f the Ha i· ---"n!a......., 'When-1he~"llllllltl·e-or-•e~y"-~~ .... -l.JUllill,lng 0 no "r . u· ::t111 1 Haiphong heartland -which has since was thrust upon him . h d he- He Sa.d lh 1 T .. rth been suspended - t en stalke from t 1 a ruman "'as ea y, meet' g plain" and "there were no wrink1es in his Them ~mmunists boycotted one such ~~Wbty. the t' he ..--1 technical session altogether in retaliation en 1me came, ste.,.t""W to for the aerial blitz. Trustees to Sell $350,000 Bonds Trustees of the Ocean View School District will sell $350,000 worth of bonds to build a facility for mentally retarded students. . The Wnds are part of a $3 miUioa OOnd issue passed by dist rict voters in 1967. Since then, Sl.16S million of the bonds have been sold. In approving the sale. trustees noted that they would be sold al :.i 5 percent !n terest rate. 111e money acquirro from the bond sale will finance the Cilnstruction of a facility for trainable mentally retarded youngsters at Lark View School. The teclmlca1 aesskm today in Paris contrasted with Thursday's weekly semipubUc talks In the French capital "'heo Saigon and Commmunist Viet· namese delegates again clashed over Vietnam 's status. Saigon repeated old demands that any peace accord stipulate the existence of two separate Vietnamese. The Com- munists again rejected the proposal, labeling it "absurd" and blaming ~ United States for supporting it. North Vietnamese diplomats sald H11noi's top negotiator, Le Due Tho, will arrive in Paris Saturday for ~fonday'a resumed private peace talks with White House aide Henry A. Kissinger. . They refused to say "'hcther Tho was carrying with hin1 instructions from his government to meet some of tile demands put to him i:Jy Kissinger in thel.r previous bargaining meetings. Klssini~ is expected to arrive Sunday. JUST SOME OF THE MANY OUTSTANDING PIECES ON SALE NOW NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE SOfAS Reg . SALE SOFAS Lt1thtr Sofe Sheffer Bros. $924 $799 Reg. SALi 8' Vtlvtt Strip• $695· $579 8' Gold & Oran9t Print, Henredon $930 $779.00 8' Crtscant. Green & Gold. 7' Cre1cent. Velvet. Shtrrill $625 $49t 8' Print. Gr••n I Ytllow Qu ilt. M1r9t Cerson $599 $459 I' Lintn Print. Gold & Yellow. Drtiilt l $625 $46' I' Linen Print. Lime Green & Whitt $540 $299 M'tr9 t Certon Sleep Soft Qu•tn Size . Turquoi1e I Green $449 $379 90" Gold T erlure. Merg• Carson $470 $380 I ' Multi Colortd Print. Royal Coech $944 $769 CHAIRS Rog. SAU Pr. Print. Green I Gold. Woodmarlr $159 H , $139 IO. Pr. Win9 Cheirs. Or1nge & Gold. Stripe. Royel Coach $228 1a. $119 ta. Pr. Chairs. Green Velvet, Royal Co1ch Pr. Chain. Brown Suedt. $228 ... $119 ... Mergt ~r1on $13 9 "• $269 .a. Pair High Beck, Pink Velvet Royel Coach $367 e1. $299 M. . I ltether ~Ch.ir & Ottom•ri. Sherrill $6t-I •$471 I Wing Chair, Bird Print, Sherrill $219 $199 Pr. :h•irs. Or1nge. D•mask. Woodmerk $2'40 $199 DINING IOOM SALE Htnrtdon B' linen Print. Henredon -&.' White & Green. Ve lvet. Sherrijl 8' Tu•edo. Aqu• & Green, Merqe C1r1on 8' Woven Print. Royal Coach 8' Tuxedo. White & Green Fring•. $975 $799.SO $799. $659.00 S679 $519.00 $570 $465.00 $689 $519,00· M1rgt C1r1on $620 $529.00 8' Grt•n l White Cre1cent. Sherrill $699 $5%9.00 CHAIRS SALE Pr. Blut Gretn Print. Roy1I Co1ch $244 ••• $201 ... Pr. Swival. Gold D1me1k. Wood mark $205 .. . Pr. Gold Vel't'et. Sh errill $205 .. . Pr. Print. M1rge Carson $22_. ••· Pr. Stripe V1tvet. Woodm1rk $219tt. Pr.:. Gold Yelyet. M1rg, C.r1on $209. ••· $17' ... $1790L $111 ... $119 ... $179 ... I Wing Ch1ir. Rust, Woodmtrk $225 ea, Sitt ... I E1sy Chair. Gretn & ltigt. Slr1rril/ $279 ... $2J9 ... DINING IOOM SALi Sl 562 $l2S2 2 Arm Chtin, 4 Side Oi•in, Buffet, 2 Arm Ch1in, 4 Side Ch1irs, Doubla Pedestel Ov1I Tebl1 O;n;ng Teblo. H---M ...... $1714 $142.Z Hlbrl'°" f,eda;ons I • $106t.,, $1'9 UNIELIEYAILE SELECTIONS AT YHY SATISFYING PRICES, UADY FOi IMMIDIAR F«U DlllYO -SILICRD GlOUl'S FROM HINIEDON, HlllTAGI. DRDIL, & OTHERS NOW REDUCED sn y ~:~~-~~HOURlY ,ROM HINHDON, IOYAL COACH, & MARGE CA.HOii AT suiSTA~:~ DREXU:.-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN --------- NEWPORT !EACH • 1727 WHTCllff Dl., M2·201t LAGUNA !EACH • 141 NOii.TH COAST HWY. ......... ,, TORRANCE • 2JH• HAW'YHOlHl ILYD. Jr1.12Jt b 'd . d r h h a b " n ti p ti ' d tJ l' II b ti b ~ a " II « • ·' a • • • ' 6 ; J a l • • • s • • Ii t . i 0 • 0 . • p ' • ; I • a I % I ~ ' i I < ' I i I t l I I I I I :i Session Set On Ouster • In Laguna Tht Laauna Beach Board of Educotlon has agroed to a speclll meeting Tuesday oliht at which Supt. William Ullom wUI formally respond to demands that he terminate hlJ services to the di!ltrlct Im· medtatcl y. Dr. Ullom and the board reached agreement on a second round or talks l<l!lowlot an hour-long executive stsslon Thursday night. Thursday's meeting opened heated discussion between board members Norman Browne and Patricla Gillette: over a draft propa.sal that Ullom d1Jcon. Unue wort today and accept tither a ~ lump sum payoff of his contract or be ~ talned as a consultant for ab: months at h1a establi!hed rate of pay. Ullom blasted the unofllclal propoaa[, ·dralled by Mrs. Gillette, as "arbitrary and capricious" and told the boanl he wanted an offictal propcsal !bat had been Voted Oil by trustees. Following Ullom's stiitement , the board went into secret session and returned to the open meeting with a revised plan. • The revised proposaJ was accepted by the board In a 3 to 2 vote, with trustees .Jane Boyd and Norman Browne dmen- ting. - DAILY l'ILOT Si.ft l'lltl• Tlaefl're Gt-atad Jtarors These are nine of 10 persons from Oran ge Coast tington Beach, jury Foren1a n 11farcia Bents, Newport communities who were tapped Thursday as men1· Beach; Ned ra ?i.latney, 1-Iuntington Beach; l-lelene hers of the 1973 Orange County Grand Jury. From l~oU ingsworth , Cost a ?i..Yesa, and 1\ If re d Flores. left are Harvey Williams, Irvin e; Nor a Lehman, Fountain Valley. J a n1 e s Dick of Fountain Valley Friday , January 5. lq/) H DAILY PILOT 3 $3.B ltlillima Acti on Both Sides Mull Rossmoor Suit By CANDACE PEARSON Of Ille O.lly Pill! llltf r1·1.:01nn1l'ndut1on to f1h." a notiC'c of intent 11f exception to It . Whether tht federal govemment or the llossmoor Httumey s have 4S c:Wys to Rossmoor Corporation in Lllguna Hills fi le , P1ttle said, If lhl'y do 50 fi rst, he will file for a cou n review of 8 ret"Om· thl'n has 30 more dll~s to respond with mench1llon th at th(' government pay the his ov;n f1hng. dcveloper:i; S3.8 million for unjust inverse Aftf'r tha1. br1l'fS stating v•hY the conde mnation of 709 Lesaure \\'orld acres dt11·1s1on 1• challl·11gt-d n111st be submilll·d is still uncertain today. to 1hr court. Attorneys for both parties invotvl'd The 1ssUl' is ttwn put on the court's said they v.1ould be poring over the l36· dO'·~"' and romrs up 1n ordi.>r of hhng, page decision for days before they 1.k'Cick· The C'n1ire math•r, if .someone does flle 'l\:hether to file "exceptions" to ll. which fc,r a r1.·\·1c11•. could t<ikl' un11l June bl.'lore result in a full revi('w by the sevcn·m,m· IA . heard by the court. Pittlc s.;.ud, "If ber U.S. Cou rt of Claims. ihen." The rerommenda tion the money be The U.S. Court of Claims then recesses granted came Tuesday from U.S. Court fro1n June to October II thl' case 1s not of Clai ms Commissione r William E. Day h••ard by Junt'. 11 is Ct1rried ove r to thl' of \Vashington , D.C'. foll v1\1n1? fall s1.·.s:-1ou Day agreed v.·Hh Rossmoor Corpora· The taking of prorK"rty \1'ithout JUSt lion's contention thnt thC'y had been 1."0lllp<"nsat ion is prohibited by rights ir1 .. coerced·' into signing over property th~ Fifth An1 cndmt>11! 10 the Constitution , rights to the U.S. in a 1963 agreement l{ossmoor official s pointed out in a state- establishing a nondwelling, grCt'nbe lt rr:rnt relea~C'1 \V'"dntsday. zone under El Toro J\.larine Corps Air Co1nmi s.sio11cr Day's report shov."ed Base Flight -paths. that he agreed v.·11h Rossmoor's claims The cor1>9ration did not fl le suit for that the governmen t h11d applied damages until 1967 , mainly because, a pressur' 10 cut off fc-drra l financing in Rossmoor spokes1nan r;aid !his week, it Leisure \Vorld if the greenbelt did not re · too~ that long to prepare the case. r-:::in open , caused delays tn nossmoor 's 11----'-.The-UVl...._jlrOjlosaL~manda-Ullom ·respond not later than Tuesday and !bat he accept either a lump sum payoff or a ~wport Beach; Kathryn Wallin, Hun tingto n Beach; 1nissed photo. r~o r stories on ne'v jury and tbe fina l AriDert Gailay, NewportBeach; Al ice Battretr."H"U"n-o----,r"'e"'po"rtor-Ctrer9 72 pane . sec a e . ration then asked for~iOj appilcations....llnd Ltic.cLto uuiwflwuaenu<x'C _____ , · donsultantship for sh: months. It demands tbat he be prepared to clear his desk net later !ban Wedne!day . ·Ullom , In writing, acknowledged recei pt of the ofricial proposal but said he did not agree with Its terms and !bat he would not relinquish any of his rights as superintendent. The proposal requested Ullom give up bl! right to tenure in the district. Ullom said he will have legal counsel to i'tpresent him at Tuesday night's meeting with trustees. At the meeting's outset Browne called the first proposal "a worthless piece of 'Jl8per" since It did not have approval of the board. Mrs. Gillette, how ever, maintained the demands was a summation of what had transpired In a execuUve session with Ullom last Tuesday. Board President Will iam Thomas said the document reflec ted the attitud e...,of the board majority. Browne res ponded that tqere is no majority opinion until the board votes on the matter. _ Orange County Counsel William McCourt cautioned the board in adopting any proposal to Ullom un1ess it has been reviewed by hls office for legal technicaliUes. County Aviation Chief Convicted On Dn1nken R~p Orange County Aviation Director Robert Bfesnahan was convicted on drunken driving charges Tuesday in West Orange Co unty P.1un icipal court , Westminster. Bresnahan, of 9192 Oriole Ave., Foun· tain Valley, was fined $400 and placed on summary probation for two years by Judge Ragnar Engebretsen. The s1.year--0ld Orange' County Airport chief did not contest police cha rges and submitted the case to the court on the basis of police reports. No witnesses v.•ere called. Fountain Valley police arrested Bresnahan last June 13 in the parking lot of the Stop-N·Go ~larket, Magnolia Avenue and Garfield Stree t. Police said he created a minor traffic disturbance when he swerved to miss a curb, after crossing a double yellow line to get Into tbe parking loL -"-unty Can On Bresnahan failed a sobriety test, ac-. l::AJ cordin to police reports. 11---'9 •.• ~·· s11res-Widen;--t~f~uder S-1~ ~Homes Periled Victim Picture • i,_~ earth continued to slide today and g.ssures widened in a Santa Ana Canyon Of H lf N d area of.Anaheim threatening four Ju.wry erse u e §omes. 't .Anaheim police, fire and public works enployes were in the area today to c:on- O"ol traffic and to do anything possibl e to ~p the earth movement. • "nle area affected is a cul de sac, Cir· ile Haven Way near the intersection of Santiago Canyon and Noh! Canyon roads, foutheast of the Newport Freeway. : Because of t h e proximity of t h e freeway, land bordering the homes is twned b}' the State Division of Highways. .. Mrs. David Gillis of 4043 Circle Haven iaid she noticed a one-inch crack across Ore c:omer of the family property three sieeks ago. The fissure has now widened tp about one foot. Slippage continued through Thursday fi:nd Santiago Canyon Road was ruptured. Police have closed it off. ;. Residents of the four homes were not evacuated but were alerted. ;~The Gillis family and others remained mrough Th ursday night. The three othe r Ji>mes are owned by the Rev. Ralph 'Wilke rson, Hugh Thompson and George Beath. An intruder who apparently broke into a Laguna Hills home Thursday night forced his attractive victim into acts of sexual perversion after showing the house'Mfe he r own nude picture, Orange County Sheriff's officers !aid. The 23-year~ld victi m told de put ies that her assailant entered the residenCf unknown to her durin~ her husband's absence. -grabbed her and pulled her into the inaster bedroom of the home . She said he showed her a picture recently 1aken of her in the nude and told her: "I want to see you like this." She said he left the home after compelling her to participate in acts of sexual perversion. Investigators said the intn.idcr found the picture in a bedroom dresser drawer, It had been taken by the woman's hus- band. officers said. Investigators believe the ass:ill anl descri bed by his distraught victim 1nay have been under the influence of drugs at the time. rension, Press Freedom ¥\nalyzed in Sunday Pilot --. . . : Editors and reporters working on Sun· lay's first "Sunday PILOT" of 1973 rind IOme topics leit over from the old year. 'fii fact, Some of Sunday's top stories are dbout subjects which have been around t6r several years. ; Here's a rundown or some of ''Sunday's ~st," lncluding both the old stories, and d>me new onea : ~LIVING WITH TENSION -Doctors tbd nursn bare their fears and frustra dons in a symposium, '"The Tensions We ~ve With." reported by Staff Writer "1Jiur R. Vlnael. :i_WB.AT pJUtg FREEDOM! -Tbl freedom of tr.lorm1llon Act became Jaw lillf 1 decade ago, but Washlnglon cil!:w:....,~n say It's still almo5t impossible Dir jou.mallstl to obtaln !I o m e in- lllrmatton freely. Story dellU. the ~gaUve tone of DTi e news llOUl'ttS in "'ling with the press In the naUOn's ~pllal. ' '.'-WOMAN MOVEll -Maybe no one "®Id arp with tht theory thtt women Jl&k< the best packert of pononaJ-prop- icly -but ~ woman mover! That's • something else, Sta ff Writer Allison Deerr tells the story of Orange County 's first professional female "n1oving man" and her i.rogress to pro::-.otion In the in· dustry. M•A.•S-H MAKES IT -Alan Alda, star of new TV seri es. maku the cover of TV WEEK and aU hi s co-s tars are featured Jn story inside the mar;azlne. FOR THE LO~'ELY -"Reachln& Out" is the name of the new servlc~ ex- tended by Saddleback Valley Help Line. It's for anyone who wants someone lo lallr to ... doesn 't even have to be a h~a,·y proble:n, just 10meone who wants lo talk about Mbblu, s; _: ial inlerr:sts, wha tever. SUf .id BOWL THRIU.S -Past stars of Super Bowl relive the blg moments. The seven mnemberers featured In Fam- Jly Weekly story are Bob LU!y, Dallaa Cowboys; Earl Mo rr a 11, ~tlaml · ilph1"1$; -r "r'Ttl''l, '.'lew York Jet1; Jln\,.Otto, Oakland Raiders; Len O&W!Kln, K.anaaJ City Odefs; Alan Page, Min· nesota Vlkl nis; ind Dart Starr, Grl!tn Bay Packers. • ....., Air Monitoring Station Eyes County Pollution A new air monitoring station is no\v located on the grounds of the Orange County Fire Station at 23022 El Toro Road, County Air Pollution Conlrol Of· ricer William Fitchen said toda y. The new station began operations Tuesday and is equipped to continuously meausre and record levels of various pol- lutan ts including ozon e, carbon monox- ide, oi:ides of nitrogen. nitrogen dioxide. particulate matter and wi ndspeed and direction. "Pollution levels in most areas arc on a downward trend," Fitchen said. "?o.1onitoring in the Missio n Viejo-El Toro area will help us detennine the net effect or the state's motor vehicle poll ution con· trol program and the accelerated grov.1h rate now being experienced in this south county area." The Mjssion Viejo installation is a mobile one, Fitchen said. It has been us· . . . quest for state fund s comes through v.·e plan to ha\'c a pcrrnancnt air 1nonin- toring stations in thi.~ :ire:.i ... The Air l'ollul!on Control District has three complete pcrmanrnt stations 1n La J-lnbra . Anahei111 and Costa !\tesa an d a partial station v.·hich remains in Uis Alnmitos. 'fhe county district has thC' second ,longest eon11nuous ai r monitoring reco rds of any in the state. dating back to the m1d·t950s . Fitchen said pre\'ious readings \verc taken in 1961 and 1965 in the El Toro- fo.lission Vieio area. These will serve as a basis ror comparison. Readings from the new station will be used to call ai r pollution health v.·amings for the southern portion of the county when necessary . the air pollut ion ('()ntrol chief said. Other records are sent to the Cal ifornia Air Resources Boa rd and the Ft'dcral Envir<1nmcnta l Protection Agen· dan1ages of $2.7 million. The increase to county govrrnrnent to zone the area com- $3.8 million includes that plus interest for pat1bll' v.·ith federal requests. 10 years. The Marine Corps at El Toro has: made Tbc Navy Department, represeri ting ot .i~· Jnd swaps to kttp open space pro-~ the !\larine Corps, agreed to trade excess tecti\·e preserves around its runways, fede ral properties for the Rossmoor v.h1ch are being cn<.'roached by burgeon· greenbelt al one time, but those negotia-ing de velopmen ts. tions apparentJy broke down in 1970, The Co rps 1s also entering into land never to be reopened. The breakdoY.'Tl n~i e, mrnls v.·i1h the Irvine Co mpany and v.•as attributed by one participant to the other local private landov.'Jlers. governmenl's selling of pr i me \~'ashington. D.C. land to someone else. Alan llalkin . of the Los Angeles lav.• firm Latham and \Vatkins. who represented Rossmoor in the suit. said \\'ednesday that "it's a liUle early to know what our future plans arc." Jlalkin said Day's decision showed an agreement that the lcdl.!rl.l l governmen t had obtained valuable property rights through its actio ns with Rossmoor. The 1963 agree ment , llalkin added , v.•as '·f'ot obtained \'Olunta rily" from Hossmoor by the government. Com· !T.issioncr Day agreed "'it h Halkm's con- tention. Herbert Pittle, attorney in the Justice Department in \\'ashing lon. D.C., first questioned v.•hether the Rossmoo r case was a "big story.'' Pittle, ~·ho represented the Navy in the suit, then said he must consult with Navy and Ma rine Corps officials to see what they want to do now before proceeding .,..·ith the case. "I have plans. but t can't disclose them yet.'' he said, adding t~at. he has 30 da~s In just 2 y ears ••• outselling every European car (except one}! Steani V eliicw Projec t Slc1ted SACRAMENTO ( API -A 14.3- million California research project to ,develop tv.•o low-smog steam automobiles has been announ ced by Assembly Speaker Bob ~loretti. The engines v.•ill be developed by Aerojet Liquid Rocket Co. of Sacramento and Steam Power Systems of San Diego, P.1orettl (0.. Van Nuysl announced Thursday. The vehicles are to produce only half the pollution allowed by strict fede ral antismog slandards which takke effect in 1975, Moretti said. They v.·1 1! ha ve a maximum speed of 70 miles per hour and travel from zero to 60 in 30 secQndS, he added . LOOK WHAT'S STA NDARD EQUIPMENT ... • LRAD1AL PLY 'f IRES e FRO~T DIS!( BRAKES e FRONT BUCKET SEATS e FU LL CARPETING e RACK AND PI NIO N STEERI ~(; SEE ONE • • Rome Of Tile New car • , • "Gelfle11 T•ueh" • TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE "Orange Countr1'1 Tam itu of f in e Car,.. ohnson & son . rl,.1f f1 ( lJ!~Y . COtJr,,\I~ • ( /\PR I 2Gt HARBOR BLVD,, COSTA MESA • 640-6630 • ' ' ' TODAY! .. • • I 4 OAA.Y Pilar Big Liquor Firm .Hit By Boycott LONDON (UPI) -At lea>! 30 pubs and hote!J Joined today In boycotting Scotch, gin and other goods produced by • huge British dlsWlery, hoping to force a speedy and more ienerous settlement for SU children born defonned by a drug it marketed under the n a m e "thalidomide." ln Washington . consumer activist Ralph Nader called for a nationwide boycott of the company's products In the United States over the same Issue. The company, Distillers Co. Ltd .. manufactures such well-known Scotches as Johnnie Walker, Dtwar and Black and Y.'bite IMd other popular brands of whisky and gin. PUBS AND HOTELS in scatttred areas of England said they would not sell the company's whiskey, gin and oUttr products until lbe firm reaches a "generous" settlement with the parents of the children involved. The boycott began Wednesday when two supermarket chains said they were withdrawing the company's products from their shelves. 'lbeir action was the latest in a series of moves designed t.o persuade the com- bnprove Its offer of $1 . · · to the chndren's parents. Tbe chlldren were born derormed in the early 1960s after lhelr mothen took thalidomide, a West Gennan-develaped sedaUve. THE DISTILLERS' CO. has always denied legal liability during several years' litigation over the issue. John Davies, whose grandson was born without arms after his mother took the drug, said he bas baoned DfstUlers pro- ducts from bis liquor shop although he said it wou1d cost hlm money .in lost sales. "It will cost me more than Distillers," he said, "but we have a duty t.o do everything possible to mate them face their respoosibilities." London art dealer David Mason. whose daughter wu born deformed after his wife took the drog, appeared Wednesday at a Washington news conference where Nader outlined boycott plans of the com· pany's products in the United Slatos. . Nader ·aald it mlgbt take a month to organize :-a boycott, but be said he ~ one would work. Sir Alexander McDonald, cbalnnan ol Distiller1•; said in a statement Wed· oesday that the firm ts seeking a "'speedy end satisfactory aolutlon to the thalidomide problem." Fro•I• Viet · J"ungles" GoOd News By PETER ARNET!' Al tMclel C«nl,,_ .... Ill their bemboo prlJon .. , .. d<op In the Juncl,. of South Vlolnam, the r.., men wtro given pen end paper. 'Ibey scratch4!d brief messaget of greetio&s to their loved ODel. On Wednesday these letters weni mall- ed special delivery In New York City. And for rour more American !amJiles the po1t:man would bring the new1 lhat for many many months the)' bad hardly allowed themselves to believe -their men were still alive. "God bless )'OU! Oh, God bless ycu I " exclalmed Mrs. Virgjl O'Connor when she picked up her phone at home ln War· ren, Ao1icb., lo learn that a letter from her son Mlchae1 wu oa 1be way. Ha was a U.S. army warrant ofllcer lhot down in his h<1ico1)ler on Feb. t, 18111, dlJrloi the Tel offemlvo batUe for Hue. Two months lator a released prisoner reporied ... Ina him alive. But In the five yeart alnee then, the O'C.onnon had received llOl one wont about him. He IS DOW 25. No'IJ a 10-llne letter was oo the way, brought back to America by an Amerlcnn deleptioo that visited Hanoi during Cbrlltmu. Mn. Orvb Parsens ol Sara&0ta, Fla., was nnbelievlng when 'lbe .Usoclaled Press called her Tbunday to ,.Y that • letter ftom her 2'1-year-old &on John wout_d be arriving soon. HE'S ALI VE -Frances and Virgil O'Connor or Warren, ~lich., read letter from son shot down in South Vietnam in 1968. O'Connors' other two children, Dennis and Kathleen, look on. Father holds packages sent to son which had been returned. American Flier Tells Remorse On Radio Hanoi ·HONG KONG (AP) -Radio Hanoi broadcast a message from a captured American pilot today who described himself as "very ashamed" and "slck at Si1iger Hom e, Loses Voice MlLAN (AP) -Pop singer Ornella Vanoni returned to her native Milan after a singing tour and lost her voice. "The air in my Milan is not very clean," she com· The organlzalioo that bad artanCod the Ano4J1er loller WU lrom J ... Maouel like as their capton, the Vitt Coog, and mall excbanit 1'1th H.ta6l, Ibo Com-Alto'I• o1 s.. llleco. H1a molher wu their late '"" been a matter lor con- mlttee ol ~ wttb Famllles of.. not at ~--·-•-bat _ _,...,_ --•• jeclure. Arnerl<an Prlaonen ol War In lndochlna, .....,. ·-...., -· -Their fall! Is marluldly dlffereol to lhat bad been unable to roac1I Mn. Panelli bo wu tbol down May 1• Im. and blJ ol U.S. pilots abot down over North Vlet- wlth the news. mother bad '-adYlsed bY Ibo PtD-"l'm hoping and iinylng you're telllnc tip tblt bo wu alive. . nam who are installed In the "Hanoi the trutb.'' ahe said, 11 her ~ --wu from~ 1111· HillM" priloll camp In central llano! and listened at another line. "Jolm was Attllor. Hla ..iattves In -...ia, given acceu to regular mall d<llveries, down in his helic:opter no February 5, ...,. not rucbable Oil 'nmnday. food podolges end vlliting Americans. 1970," &he said. 011be Pentagon told ua he 'Ole four letters were IDXIDI 1 tGtaJ ol Hundreds of Ainertcans are missing in was a pri90Jler of war, apparentty hll a .. brouebt blct: fhtm Ranol by the South Vietnam, but only a few more than rwne was broadcast once over Radio ~caa delec•Uon. Their aiCJllOcance a sooni ol them have written to relatives. Hanoi, but \bis wUI be Ibo llnt word wu that they came fnlm priloners held Prisnoen who have been reltased In the from blm." in South VltbW!! bf Iba Viet Cai(. aouth, or who escaped, talk of cag .. lik• Jnbn Panella is a U.S. Anny caplaln, a Amer1cam caP!Uftd In battle In the bamboo priaoos, ol long treb tbrouilh graduate ol Southeast High School In -have '-1 swalJooftd up In the the jungles to avoid dettclton bY allitd Bradenton, Fla. Juoljea. 'Ibey have -u phantom· ground troops, ol poor food. ·-=:~-=.~~~~.:._~__:~~~-=.~~~~~ Whelv-Thr~t Of Altitude Bomb a Hoax RAPID CITY. S.D. (UPI) -A Trans \Vorld Airlines jet Dying live hours from Madrid under an extortionist's threat it v.·ould blow up should the plane dip below a .s,zoo..root altitude landed safely at an Air Force Base situated 3,278 feet above sea level. the threat a hoas:. ~ The passengers applauded when the B<Seing 747 carrying 236 riersoos land Thursday at' Ellsworth AFB, a Strategic Air Command base ln the Black Hills. "There was an awful Jot of praying," said Esther Dworin of Southfield, Mich., one of the passengers. THE PLANE WAS CO minutes Into ila flight from Madrid to New Yflrk when an anon~s. Spanish-speaking caller told TWA's Madrid office that he bad planted a bomb that would explode If lhe plane dipped below 3,200 f~t. He said he woo.Id disclose the location of the bomb if $2.17,IXW> ransom were paid. At 10:3i) a.m., the captain told the passengers he had "some bad news" and ex plained the bomb threat. During the ordeal , which lasted five houn and covered 4,500 miles, plans to land ln New York were aborted and the plane instead headed for Denver. It then was diverted to Ellsworth. , Ul"I T ....... 'MOUNTAINEER' BEGINS TREK ACROSS OHIO INTERSTATE 70 Monster Can Shovel Up 6S Cubic Yards of Dirt in Single Bite Mining Prot~st Giant Machines Cros s Hi g liway heart" at aeeing civilian areas destroyed HENDRYSBURG, Ohio (UPI) -Two a hammer to destroy, but a skUled by U.S. bombs after be was shot down gigantic, strip-mining machines have carpenter is neces.sary to build." plained today. The passengers submitted calmly to a methodical, sea t-by·seat search or the aircraft, helped in the hunt for the bomb and ~ad "drinks on the house" at the stewardesses' invitation. The passengers laughed when .crewmen quipped, "If anything happebs, we don't have a job." ove-r North Vietnam Dec. 19. lumbered across interstat.e '10 in eastern Hanna, which owrui the land on both 7'----'A""'l~e,,,n~ts=_,Se,,=i,,z,,,e~-----1F .. ::.:: ...... ~bc<J.,~ .. f!lchanlin 1 ,j!de.,• .. 1ifiF1~".~J"':,.... ... ~li .. 111~i.-~-i~--"-=u::d::::, e Bows Out ¥!'!!!:..!lg_.-.!~~~~·ess1y;·~~~ ... ~~:'~~~· :='"o:~,__·talists=· ::i::-,ha,,.d=-~'..n~id;;:":~!,.,men~the'""' 1,,!,,1ria:;,h~th~~,o';;~:!!F."f..1:!!::!~~~~igned:!'th~ac;.•---- .. 1 flew a B52 out ot Anderson Air a co an A group of protesters, numbering ow e mg o a segmen o ·/ $~.10 M1·11! ~n Force Base in G~be-Said... :'.! was L"lL. n ~ their knees. between 50 and JOO, huddledtogetber in a the highway in return !or the right for T U _ _no pt red Dec 19 1ni... t:rlVF-U-ftSeS-----~ Were no neeofotrthe preca~u~--m;;;;;udd;;,;y l1eld some 600 yara!"ffOiri the -ihe~tonlOve~~ry across ~'I u had leli that 111J"·would be treated lions. At 12:20 p.m. (PST), the plane set crossing site with a casket they had car· it 10 times during a 40-year period. This In Fake Money roughly by the North Vietnamese people, BOSTON (UPI) -U.S. District Court down safely, taxied to the end of the ried tt1ree miles "t.o mourn for-the land .'' "'as the first o( the JO. and that I could expect possibly beatings, Judge Charles E. Wyumskl has dis-runway and paae:ogers scurried down a They left at dusk before the two The protesters, some of whom had an things of that nature. qualified hlmscU from hearing any more steep ladder and away from the jet. machines _ the "Mountaineer" and its active part ln the court battle to stop CHATl'ANOOGA, Tenn. (UPI) "But ln!tead I've been treated very drug cases. An Air Force bomb squad made an little brother, the "46-A" owned by Han· Hanna from using the interstate -Squads of federal, state and local civilly. The people ... gave me a blanket Earlier this ""eek, Wyzanski sa1d he inch by inch seareh ol the jet after it na Coal Co. -rolled to the south side or highway , had planned the ceremony only agents raided two lake front cotttages when it was cold. They gave me hot tea, would dismiss casea .invoJVing possession landed . the highway for more coal mining Thurs.-as a symbol or their disapproval. They early today and seized between $7~ADd and food when I was hungry. . . of marijuana unless 14 assistant U.S. at-''Everything's {int,'t_, a T w A day night. ~ did not try to interfere with. the move. $10..milllon in bogus, but nearly perfect , " ... They took us to visit hospitals, tomeys signed affidavitJ that they had spokesman said. "No bomb was found . Ralph Hatch, president of Hanna, The "Mountaineer" is 147 feet hlgh and $20 bill!. schools and a residential area, a market never smoked pot. Wyzanski made public Several searches were made by the personally supervised the move of the can shovel up about 65 cubic yards ol dirt Five persons were arrested in the raid, p\ace, I suppose. I didn't have .the irn· his own affidavit testifying be had never Ellsworth Air ~orce Base demolition machines, which a federal judge had ap. in a single .bite. About four automobiles which also netted a complete printing presslon that ·any or them were military violated any drug laws. SQUad ~ no evid~nce of any explosives proved in December. He told reporters could comfortably fit inside the bucket. press, the engravtng plates for the targets as such. Wyzanski fi6 has been critical of the was found. ll is believed if was a hoax ." he believed the demonstrators were The "46-A" Is 103 feet high and has a "almost perfect" bills, 8 supply of paper "Bombed by B52s were hospitals, U.S. Atto~cy'~ office for spending too f.lobert ~elmer, a TWA public relations "misdirected." bucket capacity of 46 cubic yards. similar to that on which real money is schools, a market plaee and even a much lime on "trivial" mani·uana and officer, said the 747 would be flown to "l 1"ust wiM I were able t.o get them to On the other side of the highway, they il bakery Denver today where the pl nd ·1 will travel at a leisurely ~te of s?ee<f to • pn·nted, and two automob" ~-· hashish cases while devoting Insufficient ' ane a 1 s use the1'r ---' tn help my '""'·~-· -Ive the · of th · "l could not understand Why they ~are . cargo would be more thoroughly ex LCGl uiu.-w 1 ..v SJte e1r next work about three 't'tde taken into custody were Iden· tim e to uncovering corporate corruption. • its problems,",Hatch said ... It only takes miles away. tilled as Donald Bouton. 49, and his wife being bombed and 1 fell ashamed of embezzlement. tax evasion and civil amined. Barbara, 37; Paul J~ph Fath, 34, and myself for having been a part of it. • .It rights violations. made me feel very ashamed and I could his wife. Laurel, 26, of Cocoa Beach. see 00 reason for it." Thursday, the judge reversed his Fla., ind Lee F.d.ward Prevett, 38, of stand. Kanapoli.s, N.C. "I am wholly persuaded that 1 griev· DAILY PILOT qusl;: erred wfl$!n I calted. upon assistant AU.· WERE CHARGED with the .DELIVERY SERVICE U.S. attorneys for alfidavits dcclarin1 manufacture of counterfeit money and that each had not used marijuana," the held under $50,000 bond each, Pending a Dtli'l'er'Y of Utt Dailr Pilot judge said. bearing later in the day before i~ guarantttd "I showed less sensitivity to the prob- Magiltrate Charles Gearhiser. )ems of prosecutors than to the prob-MMNv·'ric1"1 11 .,.. • .., ...,. ,... I I Tbe raid and arrests followed the: ap-,.,.,. ..-s:• ,.Ill.. uu ,,,. ,,_. "..,. w1u ems o defendants. I overlooked im· prebension of Todd Charles Hegg, 17, in ~. ~ "' ,...,. c .. tt ""' 1,111;e11 .,,., plications or liberty inherent in the Fifth ?itinneapolis. Minn. Special Agent Paul '-"''I' ..., ~ ., .., • .., ""'" Amendment." Veater, said Hegg had been linked to the C.~.":J ... r;;.:;:t:; ~~·T; operation. ""'· c.11. ••• 1•1t1 ..,.,11 ,. '·"" "We have an idea that PoSSibly they Tt!tphonts made a trip north around Christmastime between he erand Canada and it's poosible they may have pmed some ol pie bogus money io some northern states," said Secret Service Agent Miller Davis. Most Or1"'9 Countr Are8t ''' <J21 North-I Hlll'llift9ton 811ch · • 1nd WntmiNlff .•.. . .. 540·1 220 San Cllmln~. C1piur1rio Be.tch. $811 Jutn Capklr•no. o.n.. hint, SOll!ll LIGlllll. ltou,.. NIU<lel 492.4420 -· Am trak J wnps 1'rack RANDOLPH , Vt. (AP) -An eighl-<:ar Amtrak passenger train headed from Montreal to Washington jumped the track here early today, state poHce said. None of the 95 passengers or 10 crew members were reported injured. . . Storm Pounds· Southwest Middle States Freeze, Brace for Ne ·w Ordeal California ' rt;S. Sun1mar11 (Coa.stal. summary a1td !Idol dota appear todog 1111 Page 16.) Job less Leve l Stays at 5.2% For Dece mber WASHINGTON (UP!) -Unemployment remained Unchanged in December at a ZS.month low of 5.2 per· cent of the work force. the government said today, but the number of persons with jobs rose to an alJ-time high or 82.8 million. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said joblessness averaged 5.6 percent in im. d&wn ·lrom the 5.9 perttnt· rate· in 1971 but still higher than the average rate of 4.9 prcent in 1970 and 3.5 perctnt ln 1969, President Ni.ton's first year in office. After hovering at about 6 percent £or 19 eonM!CUtiTe mooth!~ Ut1e.mployrttent rale reu io June to s.s percent and re- mained at that level for five mouths be!ore falling in Novembe r to 5.2 per· cent. the lowest since .August ol 1970. The administration failed to reach Its original target of reducing unemploy- ment to 4.S percent by lhe middle or 1972. but White House economists last month claimed that fhe 5.2 percent rate fell "'itbin the administration's revised goal of lowering joblessness to "lhe neig hborhood '' of 5 percent by the end of 1972. The BlS aaid that although the reduc- tion of unemployment was "modest." the number of persons with jo~ conlloued to expand sharply in tm. Employment rose by 2.3 m1Ulon workers last year, far ts:· ceedi ng the Increases of 490,000 in 1'71 and 730,000 in 1970. Reputed Hero flies ' MIAMI, FIB. (AP) -Thomas AnJ>nur, 85. who repultdly dfvertid the lilSS&!JSln's aim and saved President Franklln D. Rooscveu·s lire In Miami In 19.13, died Tuesday, The buUet killed Chicago·s mayor, Anion Cmn~k. Eastern Airliner Descent . .. • Steep, Newspaper Reports NEW YORK (AP ) "-Sources at Eastern Air Lines say the jumbo jet that crashed at Miami last Friday made a steep descent into the Everglades instead of the gradual descent first reported by invesligti tors, the New York Times reported today. The T'1mes quoted lnfonnants at Eastern as saylng that for four or more of the final si.1 minutes of the filgbt the Lockheed LtOll jet 0ew "steady as a ( IN. SHORT... . .) ' rock" at its ass'8oed a!Litude of Z,000 feet, indicating It was on the automatic pilot. Then the auto pilot, which the crew ap- parently was using while tronbleshootmg a possible nose gear problem, either was inadvertenUy turned off or malfunctioned and the plane loot a!Ulude nolil it was too late to avert the crash, the sources told the Time.s. • GI• P•lll Dlc lllettu WASHINGTON (UPI) -Almost I miilioo World War II and World War l veterans who have kept their Cl ~ surance policiet In force will receive $297 million In dividtnd.s this year. Donald E. Job.Mon, Veter 1n1 AdmlnlsirlUOll dlreclor, said 1buraday tho •verage dividend wood be '113. lie said the total amonnt ol dlvldendl WOUid be • record. 'Ille tola1 In tm ....... miU!oo. . Dividends will be paid oo the ao- nlv..-xary dates or Individual polkles. • c;1a1e.,o 7 Aetio• CIUCAGO (AP) -'lbe Justice Deport. ment has decided not to retry five of the Chicago Seven defendants on riot charges. but has plans to retry all seven on contempt. charges. Tile announcement was made in Washington Thursday by Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst and by the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois. James R. Thompson. e Boggs Eulogl::ed NEW ORLEANS (UPI) _: House SPeaker~ cart .... All>Crt reca1Ied !Orme~ House Majority Leader Hale Boggs as a tireless worker who rose to influential positloM in congressional leadership but alway1 had compasskln for the less fort\ll\8te. Albert's eulogy for Boggs (ollowed a ceremonlal Mass of Resm-rection Thurs- day for the mis!'ling Louisiana Democrat ' wbo dlaappeared Oct. 16 on a flight from ~horage to Juneau, Alaska. Mrs. Richard Nl:r:on, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and lonner President Lyndon B. Johnson led the l~t of digni- taries at the memorial service. e Fod C•rba Dropped w ASIDNGTON (AP) -,,,. Cost or Uvlng Council has lifted prtoe controls from the Initial sale ol broiler chick<nJ end turkey•. However, an Industry 90Urct said he doubted there would be a price hike as a mllll 'lbe Cost ol Uvlns Co\lncit .aid the ... emption wu IP'anted to insure continuod exp&Mion ol poultry production and availability or broiler chickens and turkeys at reuonable prlcu. OAILV PILOT IS P~enger Ve8sel Departs Farr Petition Eyed SUlnds l/p City \ San 'F1·ancisco's Coastline Panelists To Meet High Court Judge Seeks County Response Quake it1 Hiding SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - American President Lints has waved goodbye to W yesn ol ocean passenger strVlce. The finn's last IUIUry liner, the , SS President Wilson, left on tts final cndsc Thursday night wllh a lull load of :IOO LOS ANGELES (AP) -A decision from U.S. Supreme Olur1 Jllltlce William 0 . Douglas 00 •httber to - jailed newsman Wlllla!n F'ir Is being uJ)beld pendlng responses from county of· ficialJ to Fm's peUtioo for ( ) release, says a county offlcial. BRIE'"''S Depny Coons<! William r · Stewart said ThtJrsdoy he had ----~~--' been wed by Douglas to rue J>A!sen&ers on a 95-day round a re1pome by Jan. 10 to the world trip to 14 ports. Farr's peUUon. ,. The APL's two cruise ships -.. the Wilson and SS CJevtland : had been losing money but : were kept operating wltb U.S. : M a r l t i m e AdminlllJ'aUon : sublidlm. The OewJand'1 eQd.. : ed thl• monlh and the Wilson's ~. ends In April, wh<ll bnlh ships ,: reach the malimum age limit : for such payments at 25 yean. ; e Looulo11 Flu ;: SAN JOSE (AP) -The San· ~ ta Clara County Cttoocr's of. -; flee said Thursday 14 persorui • have died and 1,IXX> others • made ill in the coupty by • .1 diseases apparently related to :--London flu . NO DEClSION °" the petj. tlon will be made ~y DoUglaa 9 Inmates Ordered Identified. ONTARIO (AP) - A judge has been ordered 1o set aside an order~ forbidding publi<:a- tion of names or photographs unlll be bas read the respo113t, &ewart 111d. A brid'a11o bas been asked from Sherill l'el<r J. Pitch=, the <00nly olflclol respoo.!ible for the ~ty /aU wbtre Farr taa been held s nee Nov. t7 for refusing to divulge a news aource In a story about the Oiarles Mamon murder trlal. Farr, SS, 1 Los Angeles Times newsman, has asked Dooglas to r<lease him on his own rtcognlzance pending all appeals in Jti.s cue. IN ANomER development Thunday, the Criminal Courts Bar Auoclation, an organlz.a- Uon of more than 700 judges, deftMe attorneys and pros- ecutors, expressed its supp:>rt of Farr by awarding him their annual journalism award . James E. Patterson. presi- dent of the association. said in ~ Anieles that Farr was eelected for the award because of h1s "outstanding achievement." -... · pnaunoni• ca11sed of nine Qjoo priSOA bvnatel i-·,._-,,_ -z.. most of the death.!, a ., spokesman said, Mting that the virus outbreak reached epidemlc proportions between -Christmas and New Year's. e Rose S110..,7 PASADENA (AP) -Snow fell briefly here Thursday for the first Ume in 23 years, just three days arter bright sunshine bathed the Mth an- nual Tournama!t ol Itoo..es Parade. llowever, there wasn't enough to build a snow man. The snow stonn began shortly after noon and lasted for nearly a half boor. But the snow melted as soon as it touched the ground. e Election SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan ha s set March 6 as the date for a special election in a San Diego state senatorial district left vacant by election of Clair Burgener to Congress. e Guard Fire SACRAMENTO (AP) -The ftre which damaged the Camornia National Goard headquarters the day after Christmas was pr o b a b I y started by a battery charger, who testified at a murder trial pf two prisoners last fall. . THE STATE Court o( Ap- peal ruled Thursday that the order issued by Superior Court Judge Richard C. Garner was unconstitutional. The ruling came on an ap- peal by the San Bernardino Sun-Telegram. the D a i I y Report in Ontario and the Pomona Progress-Bulleti n. Gamer h,ad forbidden the news media to identify the nine inmates who testified al the trial of two prisoners ac· cused or stabbing another con· vict to death. The Oct . JQ order "'as to remain in effect for nine months after the verjict was returned. The judge had issued the order at the request or the district attorney, vtho said he feared the inmates might not testify if their names were published . Man-eating Dog Killed He added that the .-.,. tton bad voted to provide Ille newsman with legal and finan- cial aid. "It Is tragic Ihat Bill Fan' n-malns an incarcerated pawn In a dispute between Superior COurt Judge Charles Older and tbe attoroeya in this case in which the issues of freedom or the prm and the ablllly or a defendant to aecure n fair trial coosisteot with the due proc- ess of. law becomes secoo- dary," an association state- f ent said. CALIFORHIA Niion's Kin 'Too Poor' " . , , REGARDLESS OF SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A Mw lofty the court's motives California welfare recipient are. they become despoiled who ls a lint cou..sin to Presi- when constitutionally im-dent Nixon says he and his permissible methods are used to secure compliance with an wife have been invi ted to Nix- otherwi.se valid court order," on's Jan. 20 inaugural but they ad,ded. can't afford to go. Patterson said the av.•ard Phillip Milhous of Cedar \\·ould be presented Jan 24 dur-Ridge In Northern Call!o.mia's .'ing a dinner at a local hotel Nevada County and his wife "and oot at the Los Angeles · Verlene draw weUare because County Jail." they are di.sabled. SAN FRANCISCO !UPI 1 - \Ye made it . folks. The earthquake prt•<.hct('d for 9 a.m. Thursday -a trernor \\'hic h v.·as gou'lg In make San r ranclsro·s 1906 shaker look like chllds p\;iy - ralled to materlali £c. SACRAMENTO (AP) 1lf!v..,men. He strode in ::i fe"' Gov. Honald Reago:in and ~tconds after tht' appo1n1t·d IC<.adt'rs of the legislature have hour. nott'<l lhat till' thandl·lt\•r 111vul'd ihe 84 nev.•ly appointed ubove hb des k \\'asn'I 6JlOU-coaillal tone con1missloners to 1ng, Md then chat1sc.'<i (1rt..'E'n-d ork•hop J "• i• m· a one HY w .. ...,. " span. S.ucran1wto, ''"'E CAN'T TREAT this as Voters created the one a joke," he ~1d . "It's statewide and six regional TflE UNJVERSITY o t frii;:htent..>d a lot of people '' l'Oa:Stal commissions Nov. 7 California seismograph 11tation Greensp.111 \\·1thd.rcw h I s when they annrrw@d Prop. 20, across the bay in Berkeley propht:.'C:y fol.lowin g the disa-........ said the San Andrc>a!I fault stem.is ?.1anagua, Nicaragua, the COflst line Initiative. didn't even v.·igglc at the ap-quak e. But a fl'"" of the !(l('al Tbe work .. hop agenda will pointed hour. residents Vi'ho had planned lo prob.1bl)' cover administration. Of course, self-styled Quake be out of town Thursday planning and procedures. the predictor Reuben Grcensp..1n moming le ft anyv.ay -just in had admitted last wee k that case. sta te's Resources Agency said his calculations -based on Earthquake experts !((!Off!'d In a news release announcing eclipses. gravitational pull and at the prediction. 1nsist1ni; no the in\ 1111tion. geology -Y.'ere fnulty and one can prl'dicl the hour or The in,iit1Jlion \\·as issued withdrew his forecast. day of a nmjor quake. But jointly by lleagan. As.'lembl y Greenspan, a 67-year-old they also noted that large recluse. didn"t take up J.1ayor quakes strike this area Speaker Bob J.loretti (D-Van Joseph L. Alioto's invitation to pcriodirally. The funher a\\'ay f'o;uys l and state Senate Presi- 1ea in his . office at hls the last one Is, the sooner the dent pro lem James Mills (0 - prt'dicted quake tinle. next one can be expected, they San Diego) the dcpartmenl Instead, the mayor hos!('d 1~1amed. said. ~---------~-------- , .......... ·50%. __ A TBBWEST'SllOSTCOMPLBTE DO-IT· VOURSEL•~ Atrl'O CENTER PARTS PRICES ' EFfECTIVE THRU JANUARY 9, 1973 HAVOLINE MOTOR OIL CHECKER AUTO ,. ... WEIGHT$ OIL FILTER WRENCH OR OIL POUR SPOUT llClll MEDIC • .. :,:--.-- DUI ETSI .....:::..-::: ...... ·-- c SPECIALS MECHANICS BRAND 30.000 MILE COOLING SYSTEM CHEMICALS ANTI-RUST 4 WATER P UMP LUBRICANT STOP LEAK 4 SEAL ER BRAKE SHOES iO,".;;~:;!. 399 ,_,,,., 1 Q99 All C•1 Co" t:;!:•fo• ~:;. ... WNWM~WM,..,,WWWY" 5 MINUTE F AST FLIJSll ENGINE llEDIC SIO,,, o;J lJ ..... t /l6lil EU..IS-6hot (). ire ars Hole says. OIL DRAIN PAN TREATMENT ,.,..,.. r-c., r•ll• TH ~ e Prison S li'I ·e SAN QUENTIN (AP) -A dozen San Quentin Prison in- mates, the last holdouts in a work strike that started with 1,200 participants, have been placed in segregation cells, a prison official says. All but 12 or the prboners who refused to work Tuesday morning had returned to their jobs by Thursday, said Lee DeBord, prison infonnation or- ficer. e Kltt11 HaUlk SAN .DIEGO (AP ) -A black sailor bas been reduced two pay grades and given a bad-conduct discharge after being convicted of assaulting two white sailors and rioting aboard the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk. SeaJDan Cleveland Mallory, 19, of PiUsburgh, conVicted Thursday by Capt. Bobby D. Bryant, in a special court- martial, was freed artcrward pending review or his case. He had spent 59 days in pretrial confinement. HOLLYWOOD (AP) - A St. Bernard dog trained for attack was shot and killed by JX>lice when it returned to the Laurel Canyon home where it had eaten part of its dead master's corpse, authorities say. Police sakl they shot the dog Thursday because they feared it might harm children. Police said they were called Thursday ot the home ol William Fields, a 63-year~ld M G ~1 s o u n d department employe, by neighbors w.ho complained Ihat the dog - howling. When officers entered the house. the dog II e d . Investigators said Fields' body was in a bed and that he had died about two weeks ago. One neig~bor said the dog, which weighed about 180 pounds. had bitten two persons and kllled another large dog during the past year. Officers staked ou.t the home and shot the animal when it approached a short time later. Signs Topple Nude Posters Ban1ted SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Police have be«t ordered to warn _.ators ol topless night clubs tooJgbt lllat tbcy must immediately remove nude pQf3lters from in front of tbeU' .,_,,. -·-·---~-· ~ Chi<! Doolld Scott ordered officers to distribute the warning after a judge refused Thursday to block a city onlinanc:e banning the po6C<rs as n>queoud bY oome top- less operators who cm.tended the law WM unconstitutional. SOOJT SAID THAT POLICE will meet wilh repre. seni.ti""" Crom tile dly plamlog deportment and the city attorney's omce oo Mooday to wort out a timetable for re- moval ol thooe larger signs which require use ol cra!le8. AU toploss &igna In the city are expected to be removed wlthln a moolh, U . Oem De Amicls, police public affairs ollicer. oald. "This will he an orderly operation," De Amicls Jlid. "It won't be like Prohibition where we're running around with sledgdlammers b"'8ltlog <>pefl casks." Superior Olur1 Jndge Ira Brown Jr. ruled 'lbursday tbat tt..... will ''be ample Ume to raise the oonstitutlooal Issues" ail« an atrelll Is made under the ordinance. BROWN WAS RULIJ'!(l ON a request to Issue s pre- liminary Injunction q.alost tile 1"w by a group ol Nor1ll BoAch topless club& Club r<pmentativ., argued thal the i.w violated CONtltutlooal guarant<es ol freedom o1 speed!. The dl'!"'led onllnance forbids <lliplay ol any phofD. graph or ~gn tbowlog any part ol the human bo<IY when the sign seel<J customen l<>i' places where, enlerllinment Ls available. , The ordinance had not been enforced !or Yffl'S when . 3~ GolJOll Cop0f:Jty G<Nt F.r Wo1h in11 p ... ,. FRAM OIL FILTER 1?! LACE-O N STEERING WHEEL COVERS 884 '!L-- ·==~a - 99 o,;,,.. Rit. C111t-E111~ To MMf All Ori1iMI e.,1,_.1 S,.C1f1cftion1 For F~, Ahott""I• ·--;:::· -·· Aif Ctfllil1I011W., CARBURETOR AIR CLEANER •o• AMERICAN CARS CHECKER ANTI-FREEZE 59 . ----------· ----------_---=---:::=--- -=-~ 17"xl7" UTILITY MA TS AC, AUTO UTE & CHAMPION Snc .,~ .... 7 -79c ... SOLDER SEAL HEAVY DUT Y BRAKE FLUID Ftl# R•pJtlr A.at/ Disf: /lN/t~r l:.'1trA<t.U S.AJI, ll•tl•r•I S~cs MOTOR BATH tltor~t II 0....Jla.• II Ojf l LB. MECHANICS CHASIS GREASE I LB. HECllANI CS WATERLESS HAND SOAP YOUR CHOICE 29~ NO LIMIT AT CHECKER AUTO ••. BUY I OR B UY A DOZEN ••••••••• '°"'' S..mdo "' Do• r-c.'• f bdt.h NYLON FOAM SEAT COVERS FULL ACROSS FLOOR MATS 179 ~~~ 399 G.lc. OI C1lor1 /!A, • • "tTlt P,XC.llAHr,P, 12~? ' ..,. _ .... l(i ••1"7 ' , ...... ,. , ..... ~ .r. .... __ ...._ I .. ,, .. ~- =-~ ---'* •..C: . -· . 1 AJllP BATTERY CHARGE R 499 TUNE-UP KIT - o-r .. 1...i For TM Lil.ti .. Of TOllt p, .... , Cor 5~. 399 -ALTERNATORS 16?.2 ALL AMERICAN DWELL TACH TESTER GREASE · GUN MOOEL 110 R•l1llobl. Eo1ylo Op..ots Far~, F•-. 51.vp 398 (;~"'''At ""'"" ill' 1·0 I Jl.OO Eh~• ..... 102?. H•t· JJ,,J 101 PIECE TOOL SET 24 99 ....... ;;;.:; ..... 111 IAST 19th STREET, COSTA MESA ST.ORE HOUIS: BAHKAMEftlCAAD I· Jolm Barbagelata ,. member ol the Boonl ol s~. complained about prolllemtlng signs. Cub O'ih<rs llien took the Issue to the <lOUN. - Phone 645-8264 JUST OFF NEWPORT BLVD. -BEHIND MESA THEATRE Dolly 9 to t S.wdoy9to6 ' ·u-_ __ ....., __ _........._.,_......, __ ,. __ • • DAD.y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Sensible Tninea or the HunUngton Beach Union High School Dlstl'let appear to have mended their fences and are now unanlmou• In their support of the $27 million bond propout 1et lor vote on Feb. 27. Two monthJ ago thb agreement seemed Impossi ble. Three trustees were then supporting the $27 million proposal for two new schools, while the other two board members bl.eked funds for one new school. But in a compromise, the trustees agreed to support the bond unanimously and build the second high school only ii it becomes aboolutely necessary. This means that other methods such as year·round schooling will be given close acrutiny to solve overcrowding problems before fWlds are spent for a second new scbool. This is a sound move by the trustees. It ~uarantees funds will only be spent ii needed and brings uni ty to the board and hopefully the district. Pollution Problems Compromise leaves, paper cups, even old newspapers. There is certaillly some problem with visible pollu· tion. But some clain1s of deeper pollution don't seem to stand up scientifically. 'fwo independent studies, nlade by competent ma· rine biologists, both concluded that the water quality ot Huntington }!arbour Is as good as, IC not better than, most man·n1 ade, enclosed harbors. One study was conducted by Marine Biological Con· sullants, Inc .. !or HunUnglon Harbour Corporation. The other "'as, and still is. sponsored by the harbors and beaches department of Hunlinglon Beach. Both studles determined that the dissolved oxygens in the water are more than sufficient ror marine llfe. They also round abundant marine life on the pier pil· ings and along the boat docks, which indicates be&llhy water. No severe bacteria buildup was discovered, thus posing no health threat to swimmers. The MBC sludy did discover a lack of fi!h and marine life on the muddy bottom of the inner channels. They believe it was caused by a jelly-like !Um of organic One of the most popular topics in Huntington Har· debris, diatoms, which has choked off the oxygen supply hour these .days is pollution. Perhaps popular isn't the at the bottom and creates a foul smelling hydrogen proper phrase, but · pollution of the Harbour channels sulfide odor. certainly has,.l>ecome a common subject. But both ~me experts and ply ol!icials consider It I{ Ungt H bo 'd ts have lervenUy op-more of a perplexing problem than a serious one. The un on ar urreS1en ·db ' h 1 h edbec Posed a pror.sed lagoon proi·ect because they claim it organic e ns as apparent Y gat er ause of poor water circulation in the inner channels -a hazard of will aggrava e the stagnant water si tuation. ~-----'m~an'!:·~m~a~d~e_1h,;arll'.!lcboQ!relis~. -----c--,---~--------t~"I ors vtew o the ar ur can be somewhat The reports are encouraging in that Huntington shocking some days, especially near the !lood control Harbour seems to get a clean bill of health -but all . . ~"""-' ~;,.... ''(HEE~ UPi 51~. SOON YOU'LL SE 21PPIN6 ALON6 AT '00 ('l.P.H.-f channel entrance at Sunset Aquatic Park. The water experts warn: we have to watch it to keep It that way. surface is sometimes littered with floating scum-twigs, It's a good piece of advi ce. ( H More Prudent to Plan ·than Block A Lovely Old World of Musical Fun Dear Gloomy Gus County Must Face the Growth Issue • FNEY J.HARBI~ Although, as l remarked not long ago, I'm not big on the nostalgia bit, everyone bas a aoft spot of his own. aDd mine ha-p- pens to be Gilbert & Sulllvap. It WU something I grew up with, the way other kk1s grew up with Tom Mix or Amos 'n' Andy. I had much older cousllll w h 0 had come over here from 1 London to live, and lhe tried to U the HBPD get,, its fixed-wing aircraft, will it ny out or Meadow· lark Airport al nlghl? H.11.R. nit tMtwr1 ,...IKh rt.O.ri' wlfwl. lltl PltlU'l1fY ........ tM --· $tM Ywr "' ....... ,. oi.nw OMI, Dt ll'Y l'Htl. To the Editor : r recently \mile t0 lbe edhor ex· · pressing my coocern that we, here In Orange County, should addreu ourselves to the growth issue and get on with so\v. ing our problems. It was and is my con- MAILBOX a second high sc hool would remove the incentive for implementation of space- saving techniques, and (Z) that the funds allocated for the second campus would be used for some other purpose In the event that this facility was later deemed to be unnecessary. tention that the population of Orange Letters from reade.rs are welcome. County and other attractive areas, will Normallt1 wrlttts should con~ their AT A SPECIAL mee ting held on Dec. continue to grow and that no acceptable meuage.s in 300 words or less. The Zl. the Board of Trustees unconditionally way has yet been found to slop a people's · hi ~"--corrJTtl lted themselves to th:e irn· Tlfj to CvnY.c:--ri.-5e letter1 to fi t lpact' · migration or their desire to proci-eate. or eliminak libel is reaerved. AU plementat ion of all reasonable measures publishers, sent me a review copy of the This being the fact, I suggested it might lttU!ra must include signature and to increase tbe utilization of existing new book, "The Gilbert & Sullivan Com· be more prudent to plan for growth malling addreis, but namer .,.,,., be structures so as to avoid the becessity of panlon," and it all came back in a rush rather than spend our energy stopping withh ld "'-ti' constructing the second campus, and of warm nostalgia . This Is a large and power plants, highways, utilltie.s, water e on reque:st if sufftdent f<1rU1er warranted that the funds banUome compendium of the plays, P~ and homebuilding, etc. recuon i.1 appbrtnt. Poetry will not be allocated for this facility would not be lbe pub!uhed. dacUoos, perform ances, and all spent for any other purpose whatsoever. laleottlutlled peopl le wha~' made G&BS al Brho1l~ an'::e';1to A!y O~~~ ~·In~ , There can be no question but that the ms OD or a u-century. u w IS ' · c trs one a 1 1ona campus 1s a ..J Y · . . communicated to me dealt with me an~ if our great state could Institute such ~ imperative if we are to conUnue a quality 11--on""1•,...art'""'aeiscd1y ?indlmg lot, we G~----tha-or.ganization-l-rePresent-rather-than~ogram..,...........&,etter-eUIJ-if-it-could-go-n~tioft-J>rogram-trnhe-atstflct, and c ~a . iKevelerans ol the Spanls}i; the is,,ue. My motives were questioned. ~ tionwlde. , with !h~ above-stated warra~ties that the lhe Sa\'OYanl Operu that must' have been pressed by Thomu Ed!lon blmsell. Am.....engn War. And we are apparently The motives of those J represent were Great Brilain la also thinking il>out remaintng-bond!·wiU-not-be ts.med unless- the last of the breed: I exposed my own suspect. But there was no attempt to free use of telephones and the malls It ls absolutely net'E!ssary, it is my sincere children to the Sa~oy ope~as .at an early deal with the issue ol growth or the estimated that by the year 1980 . (and hope that aU interested persons will see age, and they exhibited mlid interest and challenge we all face. these figures were related to me by a fit t~ endorse the proposition and to work amusement, but It never really look. ~e That's 3 sad comment. It reflects on leading wheelchair manUfacturer), there for its passage. world that "'.as molded and mocked in our inability to face social issues and will be I.I mJIUon people in the United GEORGE G. LOGAN AT ANY RATE, my couslnl and I would ill around lhe gnmaphooe (or vlc- trota, ll you will) and !ollow tbe9e Gilbert &. SulllnnJ <m·esJrilll._a..!Jbrelto.Jw +--must remember, cbUdren, hard u it is to believe, there wu no television ln those benliJ!led days, no talking films , and radio was stlll somelhtng you searched for with a cat's wi3ker oo a crystal-set. The wind-up vlctrola wu where It was. those entertainments was too far remov-1 bl Instead oL iry· 1 StattsJ who wtU..be_permanently confined ed from anything they could conceive to ~ vet'lour,hpro bemsl · d ···-• 1 mg 1 ° to a "chair " A Iaree figure but still bold them 1 en 1 y e pro em an ox:cuu1 or sou-all h. 1 ••· : ' .tions, we become overly concerned with sm enoug or me above proJe<:ts. to be IT WAS A world of style and fonn and the advocate's race, religion, busi,pess or worked out comforta bly and fi.nanc1ally. To the Editor : Radiation Hazard laste, a world of institutions that could <™';lCiates, ~r ebe we try to find a con-mING.S ARE getting better for the In hearing action conducted by the be mocked but not seriously qoosUoned, venient devil to blame our problems on. h3ndlcapped person, but 1 do wish that Atomic Energy Commission on proposals a world of relative permanence and PEOPl..E LAMENT the fact we can those building new motels , offices, to build two -largest ever constructed placidity and proud faith in something walk on the moon. yet can't solve our airports, restaurants, etc ., would confer -experimental nuclear reactors at San ' .Well, G&S became for us what, I sup- pose, Strau.u waa for a generation of Viennese kids, or Verdi for the Italian youth in the pre-electronic era. We got to know every verse, melody, nu&Dce, and bit of trickery in the Savoy repertoire, and never tired of the corny gap and an- cient clowning. What, never? Well, hard- ly ever. • • THE OTHER DAY, Dodd, Mead, lhe called "progress." It died, actually, with simplest social problems. AJ David with a handlc,apped ~eteran°i ~pita!, or Onofre. tbe utility companies have Victoria, but Its ghost kept marching on Moynahan said last year going to the hunt up someone m the neighborhood declined to give responsive answers to until the end of World War I and the rise moon .,..•as easy com .... .....J to solving a w~ ii conCined t.o a wheelchair, and get vital questions concerned with public of tbe terrible Twenties. ..,... """' heir vi ha safety It was a lovely world, just as Strauss' social problem. Everyone readily agreed t ews, c 1r measurements, where · and V rd that the moon flight problem that had to the W-C should be localed, handlebars for 1N ESTABIJSHED p--·•ures or lhe e i's were lovely world!. But be t•· ho he. bls l ·~ nowadays It seems less real than the overcome, was gravity and friction. i..,; II wen, ramp 1£ , e c. hearing proCes.s, Capistrano Bay area world of sclence·CicUon. 1 may turn out Social issues are different. People can't Thanks again for that fine article. residents knoWll as Groups Uni ted to be the Ia" Gilbert &..sullivan ...com-.. agree on the c~u~ of tho~ problems. ARTHUR W •. HAMPTON -Against Radiation Dangers were granted kt 'f'hcy, waste: thetr tnne-questioning-each . by the AEC the .right to ask and to pan n. others motives and looking for a de vil · d · to blame. They cannot perceive the Endor•e Bollds receive. ans~ers un er oath to qu~ons LBfs AccompliShments cause of the problem independent-of the J>O.~d m print~ form to the applicant different people involved ' ·To the Editor; uhhty companies and the AEC staff. Th 1· -' h 1 · Last month I forwarded a leuer to you GUARD has devoted thousands of e qua lty ui t e uture environment volunteer hours to the study of atomic we shall all share is .too impartant to concerning the upcoming bond ele<:tion of reactor safety problems. The 33 ques-- er~h of us to allow Utis ~ttern. to co~· the Huntington Beach Union High School tions 11.·ere carefully drawn to elicit The passing of Harry Truman, who left the White House 20 years ago in a hall of abuse, 13 a remlnder that presidents often go unappreciated until after they are gone. Today, for example, historians rate the spunky Truman among America's 10 great· est president!. Down on the Ped· ed as a violation or the fourth com- mandment, "Honor thy father and thy mother." -CIVIL RIGHTS: Two epic meas. ures. the CivU Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, arc emales, another for· mer president is IJl(lurning over the way public opinion nast~ afains him. \V e have been amoog those \Vho --,regarded by bloe1Meader9 as the-grcate!t advance in social justice since the Eman- cipation Proclamation. Thoughtful blaclt leaders mention Lyndon Johnson's name in the same breath with Abraham Lin· coin. have criticized Lyndon Johns-On ror his handling or the Vietnam war. But alter the war cloud! clear away, history may also look kindly upon LBJ. For oo other president pushed through ao much social legi1\atlon. Here are a ff!w of the mJJestones be left behind when he retired Crom the White House: -MEDICARE: For mlIUons of senior cltiz.eru:, medicare hu become so im- portant that Ill absence would be regard- Quotes l'<l<r M. Flanlpa, Prtlldtnltal ai de !0< llterw111!aat £c.oomle Attain - "Whatever _., II mode In lhe erea or trade, i!ltller with lhe """ """'''' ol the Commun.lat world or with our tradi- tional !roe m1rl<et lr•dlni portnen, tl has .._ thin 111 ICOllOllli< meantr.1 : tt mUJt tie _, 11 part of lbe 'web of •-Im-II' thll Inda lo -Id stablltty." -EDUCATION: LBJ deserves credi t for probably the most sweeping educa- tional leglalation In history, which has brought an educational revolution to th i11 country. Today, It's taken for gr.11.nted that any ,quallfl cd American youth can get a college education through grants, loans or jobl. This wa.m't trut in 1963 when moat middle-Income parent.s wor· ried about how they were going to educate thtlr children. The college populalloo has doubled smce LBJ·s ..i.rma became law. All in all, 4.1& pieces of basic leg1slatlon were PIS•ed under LBJ. Most pleasing to him, no doobt, Is that none has been repealed; ne.arty all have been added lo : and many appea r in both party plat· form1 .• Mllllonl of old people, black citizens. )'OUnf people -and even the press beca\lle Of the Freedom of lnfonnatlon A<l -lbould be gral</ul to lhe lonely man down In Tt111. t n _e. Th~re are no devils, either 1n District . As set forth in that Jetter, ·my eMelltial information requested by busines~. industry, labor or the utility principal concerns regarding the issue school, city state parks and highway companies, that are the cause of our en-'lfere ti) that lhe avallab1·1,·1y of funds for t I rr· 'als db t ho \'lronmental problems. There are. ~ ro o 1c1 , an Y eng neen w are however, some very complex problems of gro .... 'th and pollution which we all share, and "'hich must be objectively faced and solved If "''e are to make any significant social progress. GILBERT W. FERGUSON Exe<:utive Director, CEED Wl1eelchalr Liie-, To the Editor : A belated !hank you. to Allison Deerr for the nrticle, ''Barriers Faced" in your issue dated Dec. 22. With my wife being confined to a wheelchair, we are very familiar with the problems facing 1\1 ick Spencer in his everyday living routines. \\'E WERE very impressed with a pro- gran1. recently Introduced In Great Bri- tain, thnt allows for those in Y1·heeichalrs, who drive automobiles, to park in restricted •reas. A metal plaque, about twelve inches square, indicates that the car is being parked by a handicapped person . tn major cities. like London, thl.s Is a true blessing to those who ·want to do for themselves' some of the things that are natural for tho!e of us who walk, like shopping, buslnc55 Appointments, etc., wllhout having to park a block or two away. Thi• approach is also under con- sideraUon Jn other cowitrJu on tbe con· tlnent. WHAT A 01\EAT girt and Hrt that would be. to our returning se-rvicflmen, DDT Ban Questioned Few chemical substances have generat~ as m\l.C.b passionate debate aa has DDT. Praised and condemned with equal fervor, the pesticide has been a key weapon in the fight against disease<ar· rylng and crop.devouring insects over the past quarter-century. But the DDT era is about to come to an abrupt end ln the 1.J'nited States, Starting this month, virtually all use of DDT in this country wilt be prohibited. WJLLlAM D. Ruckelshaus , ad- ministrator or the Env1.ronrnent11 Protec- tion Agency, announctd the ban last June. The decl!lon capped three years of governmental inquiries. including seven months of hearings. DOT, it was con- cluded, poled "an unacceptable risk to man and h1a envlronment." But the ban does not apply to public beallh and quarantine UICI ol the chemical, not to three minor crop uscs for which no ef- fective pm;l-controJ alie.matlve Is cur- rently available. Under certain con- ditions. DDT may be used on green pep. pefs, onlon1 , and stored sweet potatoes. Moreovtr, the EPA order does not affect the manufacture of DDT for export. Ruckclshaus' armouncement w a s greeted with JUbtlallon by cn- •ironmentmllts and wllh dismay by EmTORTAL -- RESEARCH many agricultural experts. The case for DDT was eloquently set forth by Norman E. Borlaui. father of the "Green Revolu- tion," in a November, 1971 address before a conference of the U .N. Food and Agriculture Organii.ation. U agriculture is denied the us~ of DOT and 1lmllar chemicals "because of unwlse legislation !hat is now being promoted by a powerfUI group of hysterical lobbyists who are provoking fear by predicting doom for the world lhroogh <hemk:al poi90nlng," Borlaug warned, "then lhe world will be doomed not by chemi<al pot.oonlng but from stlM'aUon." THE EPA and other covernment afm- cles obviously believe that will not ha~ pen. Over lha-next three yean1 the Departmen t or Agrl<ullure. the N•""l>8l Science Foundation and EPA Dlan to spend around l20 mltt ton to develop Im· proved · peal -management techntqu~. These tlrorts 'l'fll be cloaely wotdled b7 lhe supportcn and opponents ol DDT. Bolb sides reallu! that ,ovemmtnt l!d.Jcts can always be rClclnded. concerned that the applicants are unable to produce proven reactor safety systems. In good faith, GUARD volunteers donated the time and money to produce and duplicate and mail all over the U.S. as instructed by the AEC. 40 copies of the questions. The utility companies returned evasive answers. SOME OF these questions have been posed by GUARD and by community of· ficials ' for more than three years. \\'hether the applicants do oot have the infonnatioo sought, or choose not to p~ vide it un)ess or until "required" by the AEC to do so, they condemn themselves in either case. Much of the basic inlormaUon asked ve nmaepu1c ore construction permits were approved for San-6nofre-tJnirt:1rut-these-quEst1MSOf distance of h3zard of the most serious accidents (described by tbe AEC as class 8 and 9), time available for evacuation. length of time evacuation would be neeessary, and adequate detail of pro- cedures in the event of a disastrous ac· cident, have not been provided to the public or to.-community ofUcials. SAN ONOFRE I is now ope.rating with an emergency core cooling system which I. Jed in a series of model tests con· ducted by the AEC, yet the utUily rom. panies have not provided the hazard facts necessary on which community of· ficials could attempt an effective evacua- tion of persons within 25 miles of the plant. We contend that the refusal lo answer these questions is an act of contempt against the foundation purposes of the hearing process, an attempt to evade that purpose and thus negate it. LYNN HARRIS HICKS, " ' Chairman Groups United Against Radiation Dangers Stork lln•clentlflc To the Editor: I am responding to the letter ~Titten by Shelley Walsh which you published on Dee. 28. In her letter, ~!rs. Walsh sincerely pro- posed that the stork theory be presented in the elementary school science teit· books. She made bet statements in vtew of the fact that a special creation theory will be included in the science textbooks. It is evident that "-1s. Walsh has con- fused theory with scientific fact. The , uman...reproductive process ii accepted scientific fact , thereby eliminating the stork theory. In lbe case of the creation proces~. aU hypotheses are only accepted as theory and none are accepted as scientific fact. DA YID PF EILER OftAHGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vttd, Publlslttr T4omas Ktevil, Editor Barbaro Krtibich .Edirofial Page Edftor Th<' \"Clitorh1I page ot thci 0.lly f'Uol seek• to Inform and 1tJmu· late readtN by rresenlln" thi1 new1p.IJ>tt'·1 oplnkms 1.1\4 rom. mcntar)' on top!~ or lntdtst And 1lJ('nlrltanC'f', by llrovldlnJ a frn-um tor th• tx111·euk>n of our rffdert' ,.,1ntnnt. and by pretCl'ntlng the dlv!'nt' \1lt'1-•;point1 llf infonned ob- sen·l'n and spukcr1mtn on topics of the dA,)'. Friday, January 5, 1973 ,-· --·----··--.. • • 1 J lb Y< sr m th tll I ed ab I - N ]j D c er , N., Or.a ~ It :!\"J be I )fl rort l~ a p1 Plfl Q &ii. Ilea ·~ .. - • . • • . ' Orange Coast EDITION • VOL 66, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1973 Peters Tells Court He l(illed . Hi·s By TOM BARLEY Of .. Dell'f' P'llM ti.- "J t was Christmas Day and I was at the festlvlil ln Laguna Beach. l'd bM:i:i, you know, taking ~D and suddenly l srw my father's soul. It was kinda telling me my old man was dead, you know. ~ then I got to thinking aboot all the good times we'd bad." Gig Peters stopped at that point, smil· ed at an increduJOU! jury and a~ntmlndedly tapped one of the two massive volumes of obscure religions from which he had quoi.d liberally lhrougboul the afternoon. He bad earlier refused to take the oath before testifying Thursday and was only allowed to <19 so after a bitter argument between opposing lawyers. The former lifeguard eased his broken body forward in his wheelchair, adjusted the counseJ table microphone specially cocked in his direction and resumed what everyone present agreed was one or the a ·w • Concern l' oiced Alien, Illegal Students Cited By CANDACE PEARSON CM .. ~l'r .._..., Staff A county school trustee charged 1burs- ·day· that illegal aliens are attending couoty schools and that one unnamed ICbool district was virtually rubber- • • .DULY PILOT at9ff,.... •f'r•s NOTHING PERSONAL' Mosquito Bolrd's Stein•r Newpo11 Realtor Losing Mosquito ' District Post By L. PETER KRIEG Of "" DflltJ Plllt .... Corona de! l\far realtor A. Sandy Stein- er Monday is going to be bounced as Newix>rt Beach's representative on the Orugo.Cowlty-Mooquito AhalemenH>i>- trtct, a seat he's hekl for 20 years. stamping alien sttld'ent entrance fonns. David Brandt of Santa Ana, the county board's newest member, told his fellow trustees Thursday that he was "cori-. cemed" about foreign students being ad- mitted to schools with Improperly filled out immigration forms, known as •·1- 20's". Although he declined to name any specific school distrlcts, Brandt waved before the board au 1-10 Form wblcb car- Laguna Beach city councilman and -of ta Ana Unified 9cboo1 District. Brandt. who was active in the reelec- tion campaign or Assemblyman Robert BW'ke (R·Huntington Beach), claimed the eDtrance form was completely blank except for the administrative signature. The Corms are supposed to be taken to the American Consulatt in the student's home country, and ·signed. lilied Out by - tbe relati\'e the student will live with in California and then signed by the district. Brandt contended. "I'm not trying to dewrt anyone," he said. "But I do resent paying for persons who are not contributing.'' He added that schools were not re- quiring stringent enough identifica~ion of students and asked the county staff to make a survey-study among county districts of the situation and report back. Contacted today, O'StJllvan denied that any improper practices were taking place in the district and questioned Brandt's right to interfere with an in· • dividual di.strict. ~ • O'Sullivan said while he is only ad- minisirator In the Santa Ana district that signs· 1-20 forms, be never signs blank forms. "I don 't know how he {Brandt) could get a blank one," O'Sullivan said. "We don't hand those out.'' O'Sullivan explained his district's pro- cedure with the forms as follows: Normally the local relative of the stu- dent who wants to study in California comes to the district to see if officials will agree lo entrance. "We fill in part of the form that says, yes, w~ will accept the student if he lives here,'' said O'Sullivan.' Then the relative fills in part of the form that say be will be respomi- ble for the student during his stay bere. "Then, they take the fonn to the cori-. mtlate ~ tn Mext ana ~sent-if;"­ O'Sullivan said, adding that the comulate (See ALIENS, P11e I) most astonishing acts of testimony in Orange County Superior Court hislory. Much or it was rambling nnd in· coherent to the point that court reporter Doris Vane was unable to record a flueDt acrount of "·hat the crippled defendant offered in response lo defense attorney Barry Tarlow's prompting. But Peters. 2~. repeatedly testified that he had indeed killed Charles Peters. 55. and Flora Peters, ~. less than 24 hours after his parents had v.·elcomed him and his girl friend to their modest Huntington Beach borne. ·'You see, I've nothlng to gain or lose," the bearded long-haired defendant told the jury while Judge Kenneth Williams watched him sadly from the bench and prosecutor Pat Brian pointedly tW'Ded bis b: .k on him. "Okay, the basic issue for me is y,·hether I go to the joint or the outhouse, right?" Peters murmured. ''I'm not trying to aller your opinion. • • But I think some or you m.Ight gt•t the message I've been carrying around for ;1 long time." he said. Peters y,•ill be wheeled back to tht~ courtroom f\tonday to resume his testimony after the three-day break ordered late Thursday by Judge \Villi ams. And ii is expee1ed that the former llun · t1ngton Beach lligh School honor student \\ll\ be the final \Yl!nt.'SS in a sanity hear· 1ng which 1nust end y,•lth the jury's ruling ain 1n DAILY "ILOT ""'"' W "•!rid! O"o.-11 S~ECTA~ULAR C()MBO OF SUN ANO CLOUDS, MAKE NEWPORT HARBOR BIG SKY COU NTRY --- Newport to Receive List Of 'Co11trol-free Areas' By \\'ILLIAi\1 SCHREIBER <» IM Diii'( .. u .. 1 Sutt City Councilmen ~1onday \\'ill try to .delermine which·areas.of l~cwport Beach !hey should ask be exempted from !he ney,·ly imposed coastal zone initiative control!. City planners have prepared a map for council scrullny that ou tlines those areas KINSEY UPDATED IN PILOT TODA l' Twenty-five years ago, "The Kin~cv Report" made its appearance in tlus country, and America hasn't been th1, same since. The report is generally credit1·d ~·1th ushering in a sexual revolution For ,111 .you wanted to Jwow about &ex. bl.ll. perhaps were afraid to ask , Sl'e story, Page 9. of !he city they believe meet criteria for exclusion established by the initiative - J'roposition 20 on the N'ovember ballot. .Under the wording or lhe initiat1ve:-any urban residential area of four or more dwelling units per acre that is 80 percent developed can be exempted by a regional commission created by the law. In addition. any urban commercial or industrial areas 80 percent developed can be exempted following a public hearing before the South Coast ~ional Com- miss}oo . Residential areas of 1he city that coun- cilmen "''ill study as possible exemptions include Newport Shores. Newport Heights, Cliff Haven. Westclif!. Harbor Highlands, Baycrest, Eastbluff, Park Newport, Lido Isle, Bayshores. Irvine Terrace and Balboa's Peninsula Point. So me of the commerctal and industrial zones that rould fall under the ex· ~ptions include Mariner's Mile,_ Hoag Jiospital, Balboa Island's rommercial sections. Bayside Shopping Center, the (See EXEMPT, Page I) B52s Hit R eds; Raids Heaviest I 1i Tliree Weeks From Wire Servlces fl.lore than 40 U.S. B52 bombers at· tacked the southern half of North Viet- nam in the h_i'!avic:st.r<\,ids.in Lb.rec Wl<eks. gCnC'raling protests today from Hanoi aid charges that President Nixon is preparing for ne\\' bombardments above the 2tlth parallel. · The U.S. Command said the eight-jet saturation bombers were attacking sup- ply traffic in North Vietnamese rivers within five miles of the 20th parallel bombing halt line. about 200 miles nonh of the Demilitarized Zone and 75 miles below Hanoi. But command spokesmen refused com· mcnt on charges in North Vietnam's of- ficial Nhan Dan army newspaper that the United States, while limiting attacks below the 20th parallel, is carrying on reconnaissance ·"of several other localities in preparation for new acts of military adventure." ln bis place, city councilmen say lJley'll appoint one of their own members wUh the express instructions to "do what he can to dissolve the dlstrlci." ·They say It's part of a countywide ef· foi1 to reduce the number of special dis.- lriets -with the mosquito control panel al)rime target. (See Grand Jury report, Searches Slow Airport {llhan D_!n left the impressii2n It was referrilig to lhe northern lfinoi:llaiPf\ong heartland. American 90Urces outside the U.S. Command confirmed that recon- naissance was continuing above the 20th parallel. These sources added, however, that thev knew of no immediate plans to re.slime the two-week aerial blitz of the llanoi and Haiphong regions. Those heavy attacks v.·ere halted Saturday, "hen the United States and Nonh Viet- nam agreed to return to the bargaining !able in Paris. i"8 I) .• _Councilmen believe the job could ht? clOrre cheaper by the Orange County Health Department. 1 ·~ Health ~nt can't even Passe1igers 'Cooperativ e' to Cou nty Security coolrol the flies," comes the caustic ~ Early flight. from the Orange County plY of Steiner, who points, out the dis-Airport were reported running 10 to 15 t-rlct was created in Im at the sugges-minutes late this morning because of new U.. of the health clepartiiienl federal regulatioos requiring the search ',"!'he Mooqulto Abatement District haJ of ch ~--••· -underrated," Steiner said. "People ea ~g passenger. just dm't understand it. Selective searches have been made at :'Yw don't mow what it -id ha like the airport for the past oev.ral months ~ ~ wltboul the dl9lricl. Ptople but beginning today, new rules were In doo't,.. mosquitos, so Ibey soy we don't elle<t that required each paaoenger to ha .. a problem." pass tbrovgh an electronic ocanning ~iner, who was just bonoied by lei-device and to oubmit all cmy-on lugpge IdW trustees fo< bis zo years' ..mce to • hand search. tl!'t has Included atteudlnfDB meeting11, "It's &lowing us 'clown quite a bit, several conferences and au~ two ~peciaJJy on the heavter flighll," said papers, said be Is certain the cltY • de-Robert Bresnahan, d~octor or aVintion at clllon to dump blm i.sn~ "'1)'lhlng per-tho airport. • acinal. "But people .,.. very cooperau ... They However, i.... ,..an ac<> when be was say they would rather be delayed ten --1& .. MOl!llUl10.-,..., ll _...,_....,... .... two .,._tllree-doYHO·• • sky:lack to someplace they don 't want to. go." Bresnl&:lan said the delays would be shortened in time as the airlines smooth-- . ed out the search operation. "It's like anything new." Bresnahan said, "it will take WI awhile to get the bugs out. and until we do, there'll be delays." · The blggeat problems are anticipated on Friday and Sunday night y,·hcn traffic at the.airport 1' bea:" :"St. At these tlmei., delays co u Id be up lo 30 minutes. B. etru:ahan said. _ uwe•re severely overcrowded alrJady, ·• .he said. "tt;ie space l\'C1re tok· iag up with searches Just. coippounds our problem." A spokesman !or Air calll11rnia, lsrgest • eani<r tit the lirpor", deo<rlbed the,,.,. restrictions as "prtlly tough" t>n passengers and especially women. "The law now requires us to hand search the purse of every woman boarding a plan,'' said Jobn Tucker of Air CallfomJa. "Or if IODleoMe hat a wrapped package. we've got to N!tlVIVe the ribbons and paper and search II. We're as careful as we can be but lt'1 obviously a problem at times." Tucker said that rulei. may have to be changed concerning what passengers are allowed to carry on to planes. "Up lo now, we·,. allowed Just nboot anything," Tucker said. "But it's kind ol ridiculous now lo allow *>me00e io bring on • 111\tca,. Ml of .-a juot to aYGid ---CS..-SEARCll;-l'lp-f/ The semipublic Paris talks resumed Thursday and secret negotiations are to resume Monday. The United States always has hall ron- tingency plans for bombing North Viet· nam and as standard procedure revises them to keep them current. The U.S. aerial reconnai!Mnce above the 20th parallel is designed to gather photographic evidence of bomb dama_gt;. monitor movement of war matenal5 southward from ChiM and watch rebuilding. This inform ation Is USl'd to maintain a target llst should Nixon decide to reswne bombing. l\teanwhlle, Secretary of Defcnsc Mel- vin R. Laird today ordered detail• with- held of U.S. bomb damace tn North Viet- nam during the secood week of the Amtr· ican bombfnl bUt> oo as not to up1<t tbe Parllr JJOI"' ·talb;-- Today's Final N TEN CENTS Parents on 11·helher he was sane or insane when he killed his parents on April 21, 1971. Peters has already been convicted of two counts of first degree murder by thal 'same jury in his second trial. Peters• first lrial <'ndcd dramatically and prematurely in November 1971 when he was shol in the spine by a deputy as he attemp1ed to escape rrom the same courtroom. Those wounds are almost certain to !See PETERS, Page !) Suspected I\iller Shot By Deputy By ~flClfAEL GOODRlql Ot *" Dflltw f't'91 Si.f'I , Two Los Angeles County She riff's deputies were machine-gunned to death Thursday afternoon in Midway City as they attempted to capture a double murder suspect. The suspect. Ca rl Eckstrom, 23. of 8251 Flight Ave .. Midway City, was later cut dov.·n by a sin811! shotgun blast fired by an Orange County Sherifrs deputy. He had come to the aid f)f the slain peace of· lieers. . suspect in a double murder is suspected 4f..-Gr-itk:all)l-wounding-a---thir4---Yict-tm-a•1----. the same time, is in critical condition to- day at Orange County Medical Ctnter. The two-county massacre began shortly after noon when Eckstrom allesedly pulled a pistol at the Cerrit09 Shoppin~ Center and shot lwo female companions. One girl, Rosema,ry Vasquez. 2t), of Bell. Gardens. wa!\ shot tY11ice in the stomach and died at Pioneer Hospital in Artesia. Her sister. Cecelia Vasquez, 17, Bell Gardens, was listed in critical condition 1oday after undergoing surgery at Pioneer Hospital. She was shot in the chest, right side, left leg and left roreann. A passing shopper, Michael Jeffries, 27, of Downey, was shot twice in I.be back as he returned to his car, police said. He died at Woodruff Community Hospital, Long Beach. WitneSses to!~ police Eckstrom shot the two girls while walking with them in the shopping c~n~er par~king. l~t. .P9llco_ said "they Still have no fclea what the motive was for the shootings. Following the shootings, the suspect ran to his car and fled. but not before A shopper noted bis license number and phoned them to the sheriff'S station in Lakewood. Two sheriff's deputies, Sgt. Carl E. \\'ilson. 40. and his partner, Sheri ff's Detective Donald W. Schneider, also 40, checked the license numbers and pro- ceeded to the Eckstrom home. They contacted the Orange County'~ Sheriff's Office, which assigned a back up car driven . by Deputy Andrew Romero. When they arrived at the Midway city re sidence where Eckstrom lives with his parents. Schnelder and Wilson went to !he front door and Romero went to cover the .. back. • Witnessesi told police that Schneider (See KIUJ'NGS, Page !) Orange Coast Weather The weatherlady sees sunny skies and warmer temperatures for the \\'eekcnd, with the beaches reach- ing 60 degrees. rising to 65 Inland. Ovemigh~ lows in the 405. INSIDE TODAY 0 r a n fl • County'• ovtgoinQ Grand Jury takes 1ome parting 11hots ot coun~ municipalities as the I 973 pond !, unveiled. Stt storiu, Paoe I toda11. l.M,...... • ... ,.. ,. C•llfWtll• t (l•ullfH ,,.... C-ks IJ (l'eltwtt'f 1 J °""" Nellon • t:•ltwt•I ~lff t rr-. t1.1t .... lhl ---• ... ,.._ .11 A• L.-n 11 ... _ . -..... - ,.. % DAILY PILOT N . Nixon Not Traffie War Optim~tic On Talks Newport Seeks State Gr':'nt BJ L. 1'&1111\ llllEG Tile ~oney, II II 13 forthcoming from °'"" DMtr""...., the state Office or Traffic' SJ!ety, would Newporl Btach police hope to parlay $160,000 and a computer into a potent be used lo hire seven new tr1£fic officert wr.apon against tra(fic accidents. (there are eight now) and to buy three WASJ1INGTON tUPll _ President Polict Capt. Richard Hamilton said lhe accident ~nvestigation cars and two department has applled for a state grant to I Nixon !old (.'On"ressional leaders toduy he mo rcyc es. "' that would allow police to double tbtir ndc h is not optimistic about the new round or current traffic patrols. Police wil l be operating u r t e peace t<1lks in Paris, but is going into theory that the more police on the roads, theni Y:ilh some hope. the pfer the ro1ds are, Hamilton said. But Ilixon did not n1enUon !he Just-tnd· From Page J "Look at what the QlP (ca.lifornia ed massive bombing or North Vietnam lilgbway Patrol) and the Los Angeles during the clos1..-d breakrast meeting at MOSQUITO. , 0 police accompllahed over New Year'&," the White flousc, acco rding to some or Hamilton said. those Present. "California usually leads the nation in The 111eeting had been billed as a last appointed, he did come under per-holiday traflJc deaths !Jut they announced session on ~·age-and-price controls, but sonat attack ror alleged lack of c:ommwi· a maximum deployment effort and cut Nixon brought up the subject or Vietnam ication with the council. them lo 34. The.re were 60 in Texas,'' he and the peace talks at the end of the red b · Ing t be said meeting, and. talked for more than IO '.... -"».~ .... 6 " Steiner counte Y pomt ou w~rk on er ea Ung the new traffic sec- minutes. u'1 T~I• had furnished COWJCilmen with minutel tion or the department's Patrol Division He then closed the meeting, and gave l.Aut Laugh of every meeting of the district and said actually began last July when city coun- no chance for questions. this morning, "They Just kept reappoint· cil men appropriated funds ror ad· Sources at the meeting quoted Nixon as Phyllis Diller said thieves who ing me. ditional clerical help to start feeding traf. I h S " ot opt1·nus· tic but stole her cosmetics case were 1 ~-· t say ng e wa n • "There was never an opportunity to ic reco1u.:s into compu ers. neither am I going lo bf pessimi~~lc." .,probably looking for jewelry, "This data wUI tell us "'here the ac· The President said the new talks were .. but would find only cosmetics report to them. They never uked me. ciden·: are and wh'at is causing them,'' risky, but that there IS a chance for sue· and laundry. They just weren't interested in it. They Hamilton said. "When we have th·· men. c.'CSS. never took the time to see what the it'll tell us \\'here to go and what kind of The President did not, however, go into mosquio abatement district is all about." violations lo look ror ~·hen we get there. , " u~,,......,... Swimmer Picks Bride Olympic swimming champion Mark Spitz has announced his engage- ment to Susan Weiner, 20, of Westwood. Miss \Veiner, a UCLA stu· dent who, ,Jike Spitz, has ~ppeared on ~ commercials was introduced to the seve n gold medal winner last October. From Pagel 1 any specific details of the peace :balk C T Philip F. Bettencourt, assistant New· "For instance, if the computer says ii· !hose present 53id. ounty 1·11stees port Beach city manager. said, that the legal U-tums on Coast 11ighway at Jam· PETERS' TESTIMONY . .::;:,.. __ _JN~i~xo~n~afill~soh~~d~n~ol\.!!m~en~t~io~n~r~eso~i~o~n~s:._..:._~.:_ ._Jbo!lQ!:!ree~do!l9!Jn~·1~e~a~u~se~ac~c~id~e~nt~s.~an~o~Ui~·cer~__:~~'..:::~:.:::.::::::__::::.::~::'.....'.::.::~~::::..:....:-=c.:..~•_::•_~-------' passed by Democrala In the Rouse and ---operalion-of~the4i&Cr.kt-hai-beln ok.'on-.. v.•ot.dd be wasting 6is time JOOkirig for the Senate calllng for an end to the war Nix' Two Fihnc-cem to local gOvemment for aome tlnle. kind of violation," he ~aid. -, Or • r·itorr or fllnds for war actlvitil!s. ~ "A good number of city officials are r · ' 1 changes on very disturbed with the whole opera· "But I it says unsa.e ane "He said he recognized there was a di!· B N B k tlon of !he district.'' Bettencourt said. Newport Boulevard near the Arches have ference of oplnion on the war,'' said one Ul Ot OO S "For one thing, the newer members of caused a great number of acciden~s. source, "but did.q:t ask for withdrawal of the board discover !hey have no possi· that's where the ofricers should be. the resolutions." ble inOuence on district afrairs. It's all ··1rs like duck hunting." he said. ''You One source, summing up the emotional Subject of two films re.~r· .led because run by the old guard." go where the ducks are .'' . tal" by the President, said, ''You glean of content by Orange County school He said another concern is that the fie said 1he computer also will be able from ·.1hat he said that he couldn't make trustee! for viewing for ninth to 12th district •·salary schedule is out of sight." lo tell supervisors if the officers are any promises." graders are already being read by eighth · Bettencourt said many councilmen be-"writing the types of violatio:u and A senator, who did not wish to be Iden· irlde students in state-approved litera· lleve district employes are paid much writing lhem where the computer to ld tified, said of the meeting: ture tenbooU. more than persons holding comparable them lo." "The President is insisting on four The fllma in question. "Lldy or the job!I with the health department. Although it won 't mean much In the points, tbe return of the prlloo.er1, a Tlge.r1' and "Dr. Heldle,er'• Ex· Bettencourt noted this was a major long run, the City Manager Robert L. cease-fl.re, the right of the South Vlei· perlmatl," are based on il:orl stories of controversy a couple of years ego when Wynn also points out that, If the city does namese lo choose their own government the same name. former Costa Mesa Councllman William fet the grtnt, It will save Jocal taxpayers and that the whole agreement must 'Ibey are part of • five-film series, St. Clair was appointed to the board. 120,000 thla year. nd C bodi "Short ••·-Sbowcaae," d'.~buted •· "H led I lit" d In ·-"" cover Laos a am a. -3 lawi w e tr to ge a ue cruse e go g "The grant was su~ lo come over From Pagel ALIENS ... there and in other cowitrie1 won't a1gn unleu the district agms to house the student. Wben the form Is brought back to the dbtrict, the offlcllls there ask to ,.. a b!rlh certlllcate, O'Sulllvan uld. Tile farm 13 a1ao checked by Immlgralloo of- l!dala and Ille avera1e alien student ••wouldn't know bow to fill lt out," be said. local ICbooll by the county department of but he was stopped," Bettecourt aald. 8 two-year period, 11 Wynn explained, educaUon. He &aid a Tustin councllman on the "but the Office of Traffic Safety found One of those five, "The l<ltttry," was board is trying to get somethlng started out that funds will be cut off next year. removed from circulation last spring anew and has called for the Orange "So they have Indicated they can get us at:.r complalnta by some parents that it County League of Cities to take up the all the money this year -even more wu too Violent. matter. than we first 8sked for -so we can After a aeries of heated meetings, lts Bettencourt also pointed out that the predict about 8 $120,000 surplus in the companion fUm.s were then restricted to Grand Jury has recommended reducing police budget." the hlgb ICbool level. the 2&-member board to five, then d~ That money wW be canied over to County trusteet were told Thursday solving the district as soon u posalble. nest year and used to help pay for the that thlJ bu caused problems for e~h . Steiner sees these developmenta d~- ho t to f .1 program. gra~ F.nglish teachers w wan erenuy, After that, local taJ:!)ayers will have lo the 'lJm1 when the students are reading "That fellow St. Clair, after he 1ttend· pay the total increased cost. the storlea. ed one meeting be announced be was go-"That is, if the program worka," Wynn The board wu assured by one county 1ng to reorganize the whole thing. He school employe that both films were called In reporter1 just to get some puJ>. noted . "landllll and lool!Jh" and Ot for eighth llclly be<ause he wanted to nm for mayor arade consumption. or someth.tng," Steiner said. ed f ho t "He made a lot of nolae, that's all," Trustees approv viewing o t se wo keep him a wheelchair for the rest of his life. · Pete rs' father was slabbed through the heart and his mother strangled just rour months after the Laguna Beach vision lhat the smiling defendant recalled for the jury. But it was. Peters assured the jury, "all part of a divine plan. "You're thinking thal if t'm not crazy. I'm tetribly evil,'' he told !he jury after .. few minutes of ram bling testimony. ··aut I'm not crazy, I'm terribly good," Peters assured the jury. •·1 was receiving spiritual guidance from God when I kllled my parents and it Yt'as all part of the plan of evolulion that I 'm going lo tell you a lot about before this is over." Peters adjusted his hospital gown, searched for a passage in the volumes placed before him on !he cluttered counsel table and then gave a ~icf glance towards his girlfriend. Anne Bartholomew, and the couple's year-old daughter who was seated in the front row of the courtroom. He then wWingly confinned for Tarlow that he is "a prophet or God. "The act or .killing my parents v.·as an act of counter culture," he told Tarlow. "I cried in Laguna Beach so much that I had to leave when I saw that vision of my father because I knew then that bis killing was plaMed." Peters insisted that his father's death "removed him from pain. ''I remember. you kno\v, how he onef sat \lo'ith me before he went to work wilh a glass of wine in his hand and tried to get me to understand his problems,'' be told !he jury. "My father v.·as a super salesman, he "·as a truly honest man. but his family was breaking up. he was drinking and ~ knew that I just didn't understand him," Peters said. Peters recalled an incident In a San Diego courtroom shortly before the kill· ings when his father disowned him alt.er listening to a judge sentence Peteni on drug charges and order court action a::::.inst Peters' rounger brother o.n charges linked to possession of marl· juana. ''Yeah. but what happened to mt father is just a little part of It all," Peters said. "It's for all of humanity," he said. "We 've au got to have one religion. f\1asses of Chinese people have to be amalgamated or conquered and ·the masses in India have to be brought ·in v.'ith food and technicians and, you know .. student.a -oerhaps Ove percent of tbe students. "Now a lawyer from Tustin has just aUtDI -e1t6ernivet...tate..Ionm~ID'clhw'!e___________ eotten on Ute board aqd canaulatea or dllhoneltly llll out part of do !he same thing," he said. the form. F p l Newport Beach Mayor l)ooald A. Mc-'-ANNUAb-GbEARANGE-SAbE 0! lbe 77,000 studenta in the Santo A-. l'Olll ftf8 Innis made the motioo last monlh to ap- dlJlrlct, Olll)' 110 are allens. Wblle mort KILLINGS point a councilman to the clty'a seat. of ~ are ll'om Mexico, some are fiom , , , Steiner remains philosophical. Spain, Japan 1nd other countries. In a letter to the mayor, be thanked O'Sullivan said be, or his assist.ant who yelled for Eckstrom to come out and the city for letting him serve and wished also evaluates the forms, band out many everybody luck. mare t1i.alf that each yeal';""'l:irt-Ule -when the young man refused, the deputy "lt!s nothing again.U me personally," studtn.ts decide for different reasons not began to break down the door. Steiner said this morning. "There's just to come to school here. 'Eckstrom suddenly flung the door Ol)en something afoot here in Orange Qiunty." Brandt said that education code re-and fired at Schnelder point blank with a "It's a big job controlling mosquilos ...,,;-........ ts can for nl'N\f of birth only at in Orange County, and our district has '1_._.._.. ,....... .45 caliber ThomnCIVI submachine gun. be ·zed as o or the best m· th kindqarten and flrst grade levels and .....,..... en recogn1 nc e suggested that legislation might be a way according to the witnesses. nation -if not !he best,'' he said. to change that. Witnesses said Schneider cnimpled In addition, Brandt charged, one school on the doorstep and Wilson ran to the district (al!o unnamed ) keeps a list of its side of the house and Into the .backyard . alien students but wbn't reveal them. Eckstrom emergid from the house The state education code requires the county superilllendent to report the wearing a U.S. Anny flak jacket and number of allen students in the schools chased Wilson to the back where he fell· each year lo the board of supervi.son. ed tbechln~ ~'=~ ~1~ !~lher _bU:S! ~ Chat:les Pobnet ol the Huntington -ma e-gun '"e. Beach (City) School District told trustees A 'i!eighbor, Melvin Terrill, said he that it would be "practically impo!Sibl e" to tell U BOmeoneJs lying. tbouil]. th e loud bursts were "I don't bold much faith that the in· firecrackers. He stuck his head oul the fonnation coming back (from the stairs back door where he saw the Orange survey of districts) will be factual," Co_unty Deputy, Romero, who told hi m to Brandt said, adding that so me school districts don't rePort illegal aliens get back inside. betause they help boost enrollment and Romero then sneaked up behind thus state money per average daily at· Eckstrom as he wa s walking lo the rront tendance. and dropped him wilh one blast from his OU.HSI COAST • DAILY PILOT "Tiit Or1nge CO.I DAILY PILOT, wlth wtlltll h (Ol'llbifled flMI Ntwl-Pr9ff,, II Wbllthtd Ir/' tl'WI Ori...,. Cia.tl Pvbli.ftllwJ ComiMny. ~ U tt. 9djllonJ.. llfC Pl/Ol\-'led, MOl)llly ltl"NSlh Frl!Ny, for (ltll Mn11, NIWPOrl 8NCtl, tt1111Urigbl 8.-dl/l'Olll'l tl lrt V•U..,., Ug......., B..ch. lrvlnl/$1ddlt:bKk '"" S.n Cle<ntnlt/ S.n JuM C..plstr-A sinolt .-.oloMI 9dl!Jon h puD!!tlll'd 511\ll'divt O!'ld Sundin. T}t.f JlflnclDoll ~bll ... lno Pltrlt Is 11 JJO Vttll •• , $Ir"'· '°''' M-. Cilifornl1, 9261'. Rob.rt N. W1.J Preio.n1 Ind f'vbhil'I« J ock R. C11rl1v Viet Pr•ldttll lrMI Gwwt"-11 M•M't'f Thom11 IC11¥il lcJI'°'" Thom11 A. Murphin• M•l'lll91"11 EdllOr L. P1t1r Kri19 ~ I M<fl City (dlltlr N..,.... hoc• Offic• )lll N1wport hwl•••r• M1lli119A4clr111: P.O. lo-.: 1175, 92'61 ...... __ C.la MeMr m w..t 1.tf St'Nlt L..,. had!~ m ,..,.... A.- Hw111nq"'" BaKlll 1711J lffdl toul1¥11"d ltn C1tm1r1111 JIJ 1"r1'I l"I C:.mlNG R..i r.r.,.._ t7141 641-4111 Ci-MW A~ 641°1671 Copyrlollt, lf1t, 0r.nCM CoQI l"Ulltt"""' ("'l.,.n.,. Ne MWS 1tor1", l!lut.lrttlofla. Mll9rltl IN11tl' ot t11Vt111~ ........ _,,. .. NProdvc.. wltl!ovl NllCllt ,.,. "*"°" of ~I -.r, hc:ond CIUS IOtl ... Mid 'at Owl• MtM. Clfftrtn\IL ~loft ~ t•rlw SIM tn1111ffll¥J w mt!! 1).1.f '"°""'"'' MDltwJ ............... ~llll't. shotgun. Moments later, other Orange County Sheriffs deputies arrived after Romero called for aid. Officers from the Westminster and Huntington Beach police departments v.·ere also on the 11Cene 1\8 law men searched the area for any other suspects. Wilson and Schnelder were taken to -westmfnster 'COmm'unny Hospifal where~ they v.·ere both pronounced dead on ar· rival. Eckstrom was taken to Orange County r.Iedical Center ,,·here he was booked on murder charges. Eckstrom was described by neighbors 1H1 a quiet "bookworm type." "He seemed like a real bright reJloy,•," said his neighbor Terrill . Terrill said .ha! Eckstrom y,·as a stu· dent al Cal State Long Beach. "He wanted to try out for the police academy but they told him ht was too nearsighted.'' said TerrUI. Another neighbor, r..tarc Conlay. sa id that E~trom was a "pretty weird guy." Fa:omPageI SEARCH ... the lnconveni<nco of checking II Into the cargo compartment." Bresnahan al90 pointed out a problem with the melll 1Canner. "People pua lbrough once ond If 11 llghta up, they'ro 11ked to empty !heir l>Ocketa. Bui somellmes they're we~rlng bl1 metal belt t.uckles. whlcb can really compllcatc the problent." , From Pagel EXEMPT ... Newporter Inn, Eastblufr Shopping Center and the Corona del Mar com· mercial strip along Pacific COast Highway. "What we are asking the council lo do at this point is to look at the areas that might fall under the exemption possibilities and then decide bow much they want to exempt," Community Development Director Richard V. Hogan, said. ''I have no way of knowing what direc- tion the council will take," Hogan said. "They could go for as much exemption as possible. or for a piece of it 3r for none of it." Hogan said once the council decides on exemptions, a Jetter wiU be drafted to be sent to the regional commission for ac- tion. The commission will be seated Feb. I and the first meeting has tentatively been scheduled for Feb. 13. Hogan said the com~ion \Yill tttain control over extmPTOO&reai thaf coUld be developed in the future. ''There is a clause under the exemption section that says any exempted area v.'ili be subject to conditions restricting signi ficant changes in height, density or nature of use should added development occur,'' Hogan said. According to density and zoning figures released several months ago by city planners, many of the city's most crowd· ed sections cannot rcctive exemptions from controls. .11cse include such areas as the Balboa Peninsula, West Newport, old Corona dcl Alar and Balboa Island. Hogan explained many or these areas art roned for duplexes or higher but are partly devek>ped with single family homes. Balbol Island, for example, i! only $4 pen:ent developed. acconllng to the city's zoning standards. · Hog!lll snld he Is not certain how long It '111 take the regional commission to rule on the exemption areas due to the In· IUalive's requirement that each ex· emption area mun undergo a _public heiring. "'said, however, mnklng a detennlna· tlon of which areas will be of least con· cem will probably be the commi11ioo '1 first priority. ,. JUST SOME OF THE MANY OUTSTANDING PIECES ON SALE NOW NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE SOFAS Re9 . SALE 8' Le1thtr Sofe Sh1fftr Bros. $924 $799 SOFAS Rtg. SALE 8' Velvet Strip• $695 $579 8' Gold & Orange Print. Henredon $930 $779.00 . 7' Crescent. Velvet. Sherrill $625 $4H 8' Print. Green & Yellow Qu ilt. Marga Carson $599 $45, 8' Crescent. Green & Gold. Henredon $975 $7,,,SO 8' Linen Prin t. Henredon $799. $65,,00 8' Linen Print, Gold & Yellow. Drexel $625 $469 8' White & Green. Velvet. Sherrill $679 $SH.GO 8' Linen Print. l ime Green & White $540 $299 Mar9e C11•on Sleep Sofa Qu••n Size. Turquoise & Green $449 $379 8' Tuxedo. Aqua & Gretn. Marge Canon $570 $465.00 ' 8' Wo11en Print. Royal Coach $689 $SH.DO 90" Gold Ttxturt. Merge C1r1on $470 $J80 8' T u1tedo. White & Green Fringe. 8' Multi Colortd Print. Royal Co1ch $944 $76' M1rgt C1r1on $620 $529.00 8' Green & Wh ite Crescen t. Sherrill $599 $529.00 CHAIRS Rt9. SALE CHAIRS Pr. Print. Greer\ & Gold. Woodmark $159 ea. $1l9ta. Rog. SALE Pr. Blue Graen Print. Royal Coach $H4 "· $20' ..._ Pr. Win9 Chai". Ortnge & Gold. Stripe. Royal Coach $228 •a. $18' eo. Pr. Swivtl. Gold Dama sk. Pr. Chai". Graen Velvet • Royal Coach $228 ta. $1H ecr. Woodmerk $2D5ot. $179eo.: Pr. Chairs. Brown Sutde. Merge Canon $))9 ••· $269 ea. P1ir High Bic k, Pink Velvet Royo l Cooch $367 H. $299 eo. I Leafhtr Chair & Ottom1n. Sherrill $'618 $478 I Wing Chair, Bird Print, Sherrill $219 $199 Pr. Chain. Or1n91. 01m1sk. Woodmtrk $240 $199 DINING IOOM Pr. Gol~ Velvet. Sherrill Pr. Print. Marge Carson Pr. Stripe Vel vet. Woodmerk $205 ... $179 .. : $224 ... $185 .... $21 9 ••• $189 .. .. $11, .. . I Wing Cha ir. Ru1t. Woodm1rk $225 ta. $1tf ... I Easy Chair. Green & Bei91. Sherrill $279 ••• $23' .... Rog. SALE DINl!IG ROOM Chin e, 2 Arm Chairs, 4J Side Chair s, ta.LE. Dining Ta bit. ArntriCOft of Reg . - Marti•vllle $1562 $1252 2 Arm Chairs , 4 Side Chain, Buffet, 2 Arm Chai", 4 Side Cha irs, Double Pedtstal Oval Tablt . Dining Teble. Htttredoft•MOftt"IO $171'4 $14U Hlbrlf'Oll Trad itions I $1069 $8tt UNIELlll'AILE SELECTIONS AT VIRY SATISFYING PRICES, IEADY FOR IMMEDIATE FllEE DILMIY -.SEUCTED GIOUl'S FROM HENREDON, HERITAGE, DREXEL. • OTHERS NOW IEDUCED. SPECIAL OIDH UPHOLST'EIY FROM HENllDON, ROYAL COACH, • MARIOE CARSON AT SUISTANTIA~ SAVINGS. DREXEt:-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN INTERIORS WllDAJS • SATUIDAYS f:OO to 1:30 , FllDA Y 'TlL f10t I NEWPORT BEACH e 1717 WESTCl/FF DR., 64?-2010 LAGUNA BEACH e i41 NORTH COAST HWY. •t<4 .. 5SI TORRANCE e 2l64t HAWJHOltHf llVD. J71·1J1' I ' , • l • • • • . •• ·' • -1 :I :· ~ =! 'I .. .. . ' •· ... •• ., .• .. , ' Frlct.1, Jlf\u4ty !>, 197) DAILY l'ILOT 1J Passenger Vessel · . Farr Petition.. Eyed Stands Vp City San Fra11cisco's Quake in Hiding Coastline Panelists To Me et Departs High Court Judge Seeks County ResportSe LOS ANGELES (AP) -A SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --flom U.S. SUprome American Pttsident Lines bu a.at J..UC. William • 0 . waved goodbye to UIS yean of Douglu 00 wbetllor to - oeeao ~~er service. -jal]ed newmnan Wllllam JJ'atT the~ fi~1~:'1 I~~ It being upheld peodh1c on its final cruise Thursday respon1t1 from county of~ niJht with 1 ruu load of JOO flciols to Farr's petllloQ fer rde&Je. 11ys a county ollidal. ( BRIEFS ) passengers on a 9S!day round the world trip to 24. port.a. ._ The APL's two crulse ships ;:_ lhe Wilson and SS Cltvelaod • had been losing money but " were kept operallne with U.S. .r M a r i t i m e Admlniatration : sublldim. The OevtJand.'1 end-~ ed thi1 mooth and the WIUon's ~ ends Jn April, when both shlpt -:;: reach the maximum age limit for such payments at 25 yean. Deputy C<lumel William Stewart 11ld Thursday be had been asked by Dou&w to rue a respoll'8 by Jan. 10 to Farr'• petition. NO DECISION on the peti- tion will be made by Douglas 9 lnmates Ordered ~ e Lotul010 Flu ~ SAN JOSE iAPJ -The San- ; ta CJara County C.Oroner11 of'. -Dee said Thursday It persons ~ have died and 1,000 others .iC made ill in the caanty by !' ms..-appmntly rel.at.cl lo I Identified ;:. London nu. ~· Bronchial pneumonia cau.oed ~ most of the deaths, a :;: spokesman said, DOtlng that :~ the virus outbreak reached •.. epidemic proportions between • Christmas and New Year's. :~ ONTARIO (AP) -A judge bas been ordered to aet aside an order forbidding blica· tion o( names or pbotogra of nine Olino prison inmates who testified at a murder trial' of two prlsonen lait fall. .. e Roae Sno1Cl' •• ntE !ll'ATE Court of Ap- peal ruled Thursday that the order issued by Superk>r Court Judge Richard C. Garner was unconstitutional. :: PASADENA (AP) -Snow • fell brieny here Thursday for the first time in 23 years, just three days after bright sunshine bathed the 84th an· The ruling came on an a~ peal by the San Bernardino Sun-Telegram. the D a i 1 y Report in Ontario and the Pomona Progress-Bulletin. ·: nual Toumamail ot &6ses :.: Parade. Gamer had forbidden the news media to idenUfy the nine inmates who testified at the trial of two prisoners ac· cused of stabbing another con· vicl to death. The Oct. 30 order was to remain in effect for nine months after the verdict was returned. :; However, there wasn't !; emugb to build a snow man. ::, The snow storm began shortly :· after noon and lasted for • nearly a hall hour. But the snow melted as 900l1 as it touched the ground. e Elertion SACRAMENTO (Al') -Gov. Ronald Reagan has set March 6 as the date for a special election in a San Diego state senatorial district left vacant by election of Clair Burgener to Congress. e Guard Fire SACRAMENTO (AP) -The fire which damaged the California Nalional Guard headquarters the day after The judge had issued the order at the request of the diStJ:ict attorney, who said he feared the inmates might not testify if their names were published. Man-eating Killed started by a battery charger, • ~~1e-Fire-Manihal-Albeii-E.-lh7" Police Hole says. _.,,] .. • Pri~Oll Strike HOLLYWOOD (AP) -A St. SAN QUENTIN IAP.l -. A Beman! dog trained for attack dozen San Quentin PrlSO~ in-was shot and killed by pobce mates, the last holdouts m_ a when it returned to the Laurel work stri~e. that started with Canyon home where it ~ 1,200 participants, . have been eaten part of its dead master s placed in segregatwn cells, a corpse authorities say. prison official says. Poli~e said they shot the dog All but 12 of the prisoners Thursday because they feared wbo refused to work Tu~y ·t · ht harm children. morning had returned to their 1 mig . jobs by Thursday, said Lee Police said they were called DeBord prison information of· Thursday ot the home of ficer ' William Fields, a 63-year-old · , MGM sound department e Kltt11 Ha1Ck employe, by neighbors who SAN DIEGO (AP) -A complained that the dog was black sailor has been reduced bowling. · . two pay grad~ and given a\· When officers entered lhe bad...-onduC! discharge af~er hou the dog f 1 e d . being convicted of assauJtmg se,_ . Fi Ids' bod two white sailors and rioting lnv~gators satd e y · r · was m a bed and that he had a~ the aircra t earner d'ed bo t two weeks ago. Kitty Ha"·k. 1 a u Seaman Cleveland ritallory, One neig~bor said the dog, 19, of Pittsburgh, convicted which we~ about 180 Thursday by Capt. Bobby D. pound~. had bitten two persons Bryanl. in a special court· and -killed another large dog martial, was freed afterward during the past year. Officers pending review of his case. He staked_ out the ~me and shot had spent 59 days in pretrial the animal when 1t approached contmemenl. a short time later. Signs Topple Nude Posters Banned SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -Police have been onlered to ..,...._...,..ol1ople!• night dubo toolgbl tilat-1hey must lmrnedialely ........ mide posters from in front ol their . ' pl~ (]lief Donald Scott onlered olllcen lo distribule the warning after a judge refused Thursday lo block a city onlinanCe banning the posters BS requested by IOme lo!> less operam wbo """"'"4ed the law ..., uncomtltutlonal. SCOTT SAID THAT POUCE wtll meel with repre- sentatives from the city planning deportment and the city attorney's office oo Monday~ wort out a timetable for re- moval ol those larger signs wbich require use ol cranes. All Wploss signs In the city are expected lo be removed within a month, U . Oem De Amicis, police public afialrs officer. l8id. "Thi• wfil bO an orderly operation," De Amicis said. "It woo't be like Prohibition whe<e we're running around with slediehammon b"'6ktng open cask>." Superior Court Jndgo In Brown Jr. 1'Uled Thur>day that ther<I will "be ample time to ralte lhe """8tltullonal lsoues" alfE< ao a.-II made under the ordinance. L ... BROWN WAS RUIJNG ON a request to llBoe a p~ Umlmuy injunction against flte law by a grwp of North Beach topless clubs. Club repreoen1au ... argued lhat the •·• law vlolat.d o:imlltutlooal guannlees of rr.edom of opeedi. , The dllput.d ordinance forbids display o( 1ny ~ graph O< sip showing any part ot the human bo<ly - the •lltn oeeks custom<n r... plaoo. whcf'e entertainment tr lm'lilable: .. The ordinance had oot been enlon:ed for ~ when Jofm Bai1>agdafa, I member of tho Boon! of Suporvis<n, complalhed allotil prolllrillog q... Clnb owners then tooi the llsuo lo the courts. ..w be lw road the ... _. stewart lllld. A brld aiJO 1w been aalted from Sherill Peter J. Plldle.u, the <OUnly official rapooslble for the COWlty jail where Jlarr tu been held since Nov. rt for retuslng to divulge a news IOUrce In a story about the Cbarlea Manson murder trial. Farr, SS, a Los Angeles Times newsman. bas asked Oouglu to release him on hi!J own recognhance pending all appeals in bit case. IN ANOTHER development Thursday, tht Criminal Coorts Bar Association. an organiza. tion of more than 700 judges, defense attorneys and pros· ecuton, expressed its support of Farr by awarding tum their annual journalism award. James E. Patterson, presi· dent of the assocjation , said in Los Angeles that Farr was selected fer the award beca~ of his "outstanding achievement." GALYANIZED l>lLDRAIN PAN 111 Gollon Capacity ..... , .. Washing '"'' FRAM OIL FILTER ,_ "-l<111t & Popu!"' ....... 1?! LACE-ON STEERING WHEEL COVERS Blc:lek, Ton, Wolnllf, RM Wh!M & 81119 99 _ WESTI NGH OUSE AUTO SEAL BJ;Alt 884 -l=r-..,:;'" - He added Iha) the assocla· Uno had voted to provide the newsman with ltgal and finan- cial aid . "It Is trailc that Bill Farr re.ma.Ins an lncarcer3led pawn in 1 dispute between Superior Court Judge Charles Older and the attorneys in this cue in which the ISSUM of freedom of the press and the ability or a defendant to securt a fair trial consistent with the due proc- ess of law becomes secon-- dary," an association state- f ent said. " . . • REGARDLESS OF how lofty the court's motives are, they become despoiled when constitutionally im· permissible methods are used to secure compliance with an otherwise valid court order," they added. Patterson said the award would be presented Jan %4 dur· ing a dinner at a locaJ hotel "and not at the Los Angeles County Jail." HAVOLINE MOTOR OIL 20&30 'EIGHTS OIL FILTER WRENCH OR OIL POUR CARBURETOR AIR CLEANER FOR AMEll:ICAN CARS CHECKER ANTI-FREEZE ,.,_y_ Car A911ln1t Wi11twn f,..u 59 l 7"x 17" UTILITY MATS A C, AUTO LITE & CHAMPION CALIFORNIA Nixon's Kin 'Too Poor' SACRAMENTO I AP I -A California welfare reeipicnt wbo ls a first cousin to Presi- dent Nixon says he and his wife have been invited to Nls- on's Jan. 20 inaugural but can't afford to go. Phillip Milhous of Cedar Ridge in Northern California'~ Nevada County and his wl fe Verlene draw welfare because they are disabled. SAN FRANCISCO tUPl 1 - We nl.Bde it, folks . The earthquake predicted for 9 a.m. 1'hursday -a tremor "'hich was going 10 make San Francisoo's 1906 shaker look like childs play - failtd to ma1erial1U'. THE UNl\'EllSIT\' o I California seismograph station across the ba~in Berkeley said the San reas fault did11 '1 even \\'igg e.._at the ap.. pointed hour. Of course, self-styled quake predictor Reuben Greempan had admitted last week lhat hJs calcuJations -based on eclipses, gravitational pull and geology -u·ere faulty and withdrew his forecast. Greenspan, a 67.year-0\d recluse, didn 't take up l'\fayor Joseph L. Alioto 's invitation to tea in his offiC'e at his predicted quake tin1e. Instead, the mayor hosted newsmen. lie strode ln a !e1v stcondl! af1er lhl' appotnll..od hour. noled thnl 1he chandellt!r above his desk \Va.m't snow· ing, and then chutlsed Green. span. "WE CAN'T TREAT !his RS a joke," he said. "It's frightened a lot or people." Gl"eCf1.!P3n withdre"· h is prophecy following the wsa- sterous ritanagua, Nicaragua. quake. But a fr.\\' o( tht!-local residenls \\'ho h:id pla1U1ed to be out of lo\\'Tl Thursday rooming Jert any"·ay -just in case. Earthquake experts ~ffed at the ireclktion. insisting no one can predict the bour or dn y of a major quake . But they also noted thrtt large quaktS slrike this area periodi<"ally. The further a"•ay the last one is. the sooner the next one can be expected. they warned. SACRAMENTO (AP) Gov. Ronn Id Reagan and leaders or lhe legislature ~e \n1•ited the 84 newly appolnlfld coastal zooe c.-ornmlssk>ners to u one day workshop J an. 1% ln Sacramento. VoterS created the one statewide and six regional coastal comrnlssions Nov. 7 wb<n they approved Prop. 20, the coast line initiative. The workshop agenda will probably cover administration. planning and procedures, t~ state's Resource! Agency aa1d in a news release announcing the Jnvitation. The invtta1ioo \\'aS issued joinlly by Reagan, ~embly Speaker Bob Morelli (0-Van Nuvsl and" state Senate Pres1· derit pro lem James Mills (0· San Diego / the depart1nenl said. IU PARTS TMBWES'l"SM09TCOMPLl!TE DO-IT· YOURSELF. PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY 9, 1973 Aln'O CENTEA CHECKER AUTO c SPECIALS ME CHANI CS BRA.ND COOLING SYSTEM CHEMICALS ANTl·RUST a: 1V ATER PUMP LUBRICANT STOP LEAK a: SEALER S lll!IUTE FAST FLUSH ENGINE lllEDIC SOLDE R SEAL HEAV)' DUTY BRAKE FLUID For R.•pl. It.ti Dla.c B""'°"" ti.uU. S.J..B. P,.._,I s,.ca MOTOR BATH H•asli lJ 0....J/<Mf! It Off I LB. MECHA NI CS CHASI S GREASE I LB. MECHANICS WATERLESS HAND SOAP YOUR CHOICE NO LIMIT ·AT CHECKER AUTO ... BUY 1 OR BUY A DOZEN ......... CHECKER LIFETIME 12 FOOT HEAVY DUTY BOOSTER f~g;~~y 19?.9 Of Y-p,.Hnt • NYLON FOAM SEAT COVERS ""''" c~~~~:~ 498 TOW' MIRROR SPECIAL .,,,,., Su•"' 0.0- Y-c.'• Fi11/1!. 299 FULL ACROSS FLOOR MATS flll ""' ·-- 30.000 MILE BRAKE SHOES o-...... 399 J0,000 Mil-1 A.llC..• lncl..ding p .. , V#'i A•lt ..,.. 1299 EXCNAHGP. ... ~ ..._.._.... " __ ... --I ::-:;::. ·1' --z.-.,;-~r-+r~ 1 AlllP BATTERY CHARGER '""' : Volt Sy1""" ~,,./M,,,, 499 TUNE-UP KIT - HERCULES ~IFETIME UA RA NTEE HEAVY DUTY SHOCK ABSORBERS C-..t-'For TIM Llfittl-OfY-....... c:- 5!2. BUCKET SEAT GENERATORS 10!.9 ALTERNATORS 16~2 ALL AMERICAN DWELL TACH ~~:\1:~~.~R ~ .W.ter --6 Dr 12 Volt Sy• .. • ,_ p m FwP.~hi.. ~~: .. Rtt• 11.H ... 9!?. GREASE GUN MOOEL. 110 .. Refillolil. Eo1yT• Op.to!• For Hoon•, , ........ HERCULES LEVEL LIFTS K..0 pt Y-RW. .......... Y-L-.l·i.-.1 ' c-,.,. AJ Ptk# Vf To $JJ.OO BIH.k,. 1022 101 PIECE TOOL SET ~-......... .._... .... ~ .... 24 99 sr Rltlton 1 ~? 399 ..,. "' 399 -a 79c ... SplltS... C-o CUSHION TriiJI• a..- <Mic. Of Plot-' c:.t-· Aas~c.1 .. , c..,.11-11"' c.1 .... ............. Phone, 645·8264 111 EAST 19th STREET, COSTA MESA JUST OFF NEWPORT BLVD. -BEHIND MESA THEATRE STOlE HOURS: Dolly ; to ' S""4oy9to6 'Ip, BANKAMEftlCARD -. ' I I ' ) DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAi.. P AGE -Many Tasks Ahead With a couple of notable excepUons, It seems New- port Beach just !'llowed another year U. drift right on by. Some big things did happen. There was, of course, the demise of the Paclf.ic Coast Freeway that climaxed a decade b,'tUe. And, there was the adoption of an ordinance limiting the height of all buildings. Both events will likely have everlastJng impact on our communlty. This is not to say the year went by quietly and with· out aften agonizing controversies, which took their toll of hours and energies from city officials, city staff and citizens alike. 'Those after-midnight council adjourn· ments testify to that. But looking for other truly significant events rorces one to stretch the imagination. \VhaL then, lies ahead for 1973? Pronilil:es of completion of a n~w muter plan of development give hope to at least one meaningful ac· complishment. . It is lhis document that most smgularly can show the way to confront the pressures of growth in a way to retain what is so good about Newport Beach. Taggi ng right along. of course, is the crucial study a consultant is performing to figure out how to pro- vide a traffic network to unchoke the streets of our citv. Both have progressed sluggishly, al best, during 1972 -as the need for them continues to mount. The community bas seen no need for sweeping changes in our schools, but there, too, some pressures are being f~lt. : creasi.n bud e concern -that by lbe voters of the entire stat.e, begins to e.'<ert major influence on our city. 1'hc ne\v coasUine management commisS:tons created by Proposition 20 will begin to meet and decide II there will be a halt to the coastal building crush. Two New- port residents are members o( the 12-person commis· slon. Probably the most significant building proposal to confront thc1n in the immedJate future will be a plan to build a multi-ntillion dollar amusement park on the shores of Uppor Newport 8(1y -if the propo.sal gets by n1unicipal and county governments. And there are the lrvine Company's plans for de- velopment of the coastal sector between Corona de11'1ar and Laguna Beach. They may, or may not, even be su b- n1itted this year. Ne,vport Beach residents also \\ill be watchlng close- ly as Orange County Supervisors -they hope -con- front the very real problem of Orange County Airport, and the kind of planes that fly there. City government, also, wi.11 be called upon to decide, if it can, on a la\v that \vill govern the density of all new development in Ne\vport Beach. Such an ordinance earlier may have eliminated many controversies that continue to plague ci ty fathers and that will need resolution soon. The VcrsaiUes on the Bluffs aoartment develop- ment in West Ne\vport stiU haunts councilmen. So does the need to decide the future of the Fun Zone property -and all of con1mercial Balboa. So do the Jasmine Creek Townhouses in Corona del Mar. There may welJ be pressure for more development in the West Newport oil fields. They are supposed to be studying the feasibil- --tty-of"anothtWharborth·ere. ---may be somewhat rellev by recen ax retomrleg:is- lation -and there will be an experimental program of sending children U. school year-round. The year 1973 may Wo ""e a tangible start on something many in Newport Beach feel should have been here long ago - a true center for the arts. And there are important issues like the ocean- front bicycle trail and the fight for more parks and open space that continue unanswered. ,, ·--~~~-·,.... (HEER UPi 5 !~. 500N YOU 'LL SE ZIPPlli~ Al0N6 AT 1.00 /'1.P.H:'' I And, come February, a governmental entity, created It always seems there is so much to be done in Newport Beach. Here's hoping the 1973 record for ac- complishment is an improvement. N More Prudent to Plata thati Block A Lovely Old World of Musical Fun Dear Gloomy Gus County Must Face the Growth Issue ~YD NEY J. HARRI~ Although, as 1 remarked not long ago, r1m not big on the nostalgia bit, everyone has a soft spot of bis own, and mine bap- Gens to be Gilbert &: SUilivan. It was Jometbing I grew up with, the way other lids grew up with Tom MU: or Amos 'a' ~'1ldy. I had much older eouains w h o bad :ome over here from • .hey lried to carry ~-rnucJt.llrllakHflll\­ .hem as they could -lncludlag a eel of lhe SavO)'ard Operas that must have been !fStlOd by '1bomn E<iloon hlmseU. AT ANY RATE, my cousins and I would sit around the gramaphooe (or. vic- trola. H you will) and follow these Gilbert tr Sullivan scores with a libretto. You must remember, children, ha.rd as It i.s to ae.Ueve, there was no television in those be!lighled day:i, .. lalkiJJg films, and radio was still something you searched for with a cat's wisker on a crystal-set. The wind·up victrola was where It was. Well, G&S became for us what, I sup- pose, Strauss was for a· generation of Viennese kids, or Verdi for the Italian yooth in the pre-electronic era. We got to know every vene, melody, nuance, and bit of trickery In the Savoy repertoire, and never tired of the corny gags .and an- cient clowning. What, never? Well, hard- ly ever. TIIE OTHER DAY, Dodd, Mc.ad, the Lsn't it ironJc that Mrs. Judy Ros- ener bu been appointed to the coasUlne commi!SIOll (Prop. 20) to draw up a plan to preserve public beachea? She lives on Lido Isle, where all the beaches are private. To the Editor: and a single petitioner, namely his at· I rec!.'nlly \\'rote to the editor ex-torney Richard Newell; the rehearing pressing my 'concern that we, here in 1'f.AIL.BOX ~·as granted by the city and heard Aug. Orange County, should addrcs.'I ourselves 21, 1972 . The City Counci l again con· to the growth issue and get on with solv-!inned its approval of the use permit 1~hich. in cssen<'i!. is the zone change to · K.H.L. nit ~ ,...... rMdtn' ......... "'" ~ ..._ ef ..., lllWllJl .. r. hM ing our problems. It was and is my con-which you refer in your article. The pro- tention that the population or Orange L•tt.,.. "-"' "..,.. •r• w.•c.mt. Nonn•ltt' perty wa s purchased by my company in -......... -.......,. ... °"" ... "'. County and other attractive areas, will .wn""' lhlvllll ,.,.vew ltltir """""" 111 • ...,.,. mid-September as I stated at the public continue to grow and that no acceptable ... -. ne '1111' ,. C'Mdtll .. kttH1 to '" -· hearing, long after the zone change or h t bee I d to t I 1 '' •llrnlHt. ltbtl It '""'°""'· AU letler, ""'II In. way as ye n oun s op a peop es granting or the use permit was approved . ' he" d • <"°" lieNtun •111111 ""111lrt9 .-cldtffs, 1Wt Ml-ffilgratiOO or t tr esue to procreate: "'" 11e w11t1M1111 '"' ~ 11 ...,1fkMnt ,..._ 11 on two occasions. This fact seems to be a publishers, sent me a review copy of the This being the fact, I suggested it might •PHttflt. '""'"' w1u .... e. ~11"'"· major point of your article and, indeed. i( new book, "The Gilbert & Sullivan Com· be more prudent to plan for growth may become a focal point of the entire panion." and it all came back. ln a rush rather than spend our energy stopping issue pending fu rther processing of the of warm nostalgia. This is a large and Power plants, highways, utilities, water If our great state could institute such a .application. handsome compendtum of the plays, pro-and homebuilding, etc. program .... better still if it could go na-ductlooJ, perfonnances, and all the tionwide. It should be noted that I stated the s a British WEf.4 AS ONE might expect, the .abov~ dates and facts at the las~ public iMtltution for a ball-century. But w IS later "Letters" co lumn and persoo8.lly free use of telephones and the mails. Jt is . had a reporter. in& '° ,buy Jtr -=,-,.=-communieeted-to-m!!, deak-with-rne-1'1,nd--'r<'':'ti::'m"'l!t :'d~""::!'!:~'b'1ei"a~r -"'""!JWllL-----JAK GONSffi-l:JGFIGN ·CO. We al'6 a sadly dwindling lot, we G&S th · t' 1 he u.A these Cigures were related to me by a aficloDad ... Uk. Vele-•• of the S•••'•h-e organ1za ion represent rat r uaan 1 d' heclch John Konwiser. .... .., .,...~ the I M · u ned ea 1ng w air manufacturer) there American War. And we are apparently ssue. y motives were ques o . will be 1.8 million people in the United Presiden.t the , __ or the breed: 1 exposed my own The motives of those I represent were Stat ho ill be ....,~ suspect. But there was no attempt lo es, w w pennanently confined cblldrm to the Savoy operas at an early deal with the issue of growth or tbe to a "chair." A large figure, but still age, and they elb.lbited mild interest and challenge we all race. small enough for the above projects to be amusement, but it never really took. The worked out comfortably and financiall y. world that was molded and mocked in That's a sad comment. It reflects on those entertainme.at!I was too far remov· our inability to face social iss:ues and THINGS ARE getting better for the ed ~ ...... th uld · 1 solve our problems. Instead of trying to handicapped person, but I do wish that 1rvm an,."""& ey co conceive 0 identify the problem and search for solu-' bold them. t~ose building new motels . offices, lions. \Ve become overly concerned with airports, restaurants, etc., would confer IT WAS A world of style and fonn and the advocate's race, religion, business or with a handicapped veteran's hospital. or taste, a world ot lnstttutlons that could associates. or else we try to fmd a con-hunt up someone In the neighborhood be mocked but not seriously questioned, venient devil to blame our problems on. y,·ho is confined to a wheelchair, and get a world of, relative permanence and their views. chair measurements. where placidity and proud faith in something PEOPLE LAMENT the fact we can the W-C should be located, handlebars for calJed "pn>gre.:SS." It died, actually, with walk on the moon, yet can't solve our . the showers. ramp heights, etc. Victoria, but ita ghost kept marching on simplest social problems. As David . until the end ot World War 1 and the rise ~foynahan said last year, going to the Thanks again for that fine article. ol he 'bl .....__ . moon was easy compared to solving a ARTHUR W. HAMPrON t tem e 'wattles. social problem. Everyone readily agreed It was a lovely world, just as Strauss' 1hat the moon flight problem that had to and Verdi's were k>vely worlds. But be overcome, was gravity and friction . nowadays It seenu: less ttal than the Social issues are different. People can't world of science-fiction. I ma y turn out agree on the cause of those problems. to be the last Gilbert & Sullivan com-Th ey \\'aste their time questioning each panloo. oth er's motives and looking for· a devfl to blame. They cannot perceive the ' Bal Zot1it19 To the Editor: I would like to address this leller to your editorial of Dec. 28. 1972, oinceming "Bal's Growing Pains." Radiation Ha%ard To the Editor: In hearing action conducted by the Atomic Energy Commission on proposals to build two -largest ever constructed -experimental nuclear reactors at San Onofre. the utility companies have declined to give responsive answers to vital questions concerned with public safety . I LBJ's Accomplishments cause of the problem independent of the different people involved. The quality of the future environment we shall all share is too important to each of us lo allow· this pattern to con- tinue. There are no devils, either in business, industry. labor or the utility companies. that are the cause of our en- vironmental problems. There are, ho~·ever. some very complex problems of growth and Pollution y,·hich we all share. and which must be objectively raced and solved if we are to make any significant You state that JAK Construction Co. bought the property "before they had their zone change and paid a reported $80C,OOO for aOOut 1.2 Nacres of bayfront. .... " The fact is simply this: IN ESTABLISHED procedw-es of the hearing process, Capistrano Bay area residents known as Groups United Against Radiation Dangers were granted by the AEC the right to ask and_ to receive answers under oath to questions posed in printed form to the applicant utility companies and the AEC staff. GUARD has devoted thousands of volunteer hours to tb~ study of atomic. reactor safety problems. The 33 ques- tions were ca refull y drawn to elicit essential infonnatlon requested by school. city state parks and highway J>Btrol officials, and by engineers who are concerned that the applicants are unable to produce proven reactor safety systems. ln good faith, GUARD volunteers donated the time and money to produce and duplicate and mail all O\'('r the U.S. as instructed by the AEC, " The passing of lfarry Truman, who left the 'Vhite House 20 years ago 1n a hail of Jbuse, is a reminder that presidents ?ften go unappreciated until after they are gone. Today. for ex::imple, historians rate the spunky Truman among America's 10 great- est presidents. Do\vn on the Ped· ernales . another for- mer prcsidenl Is 1---mourning over ttlt: way public opinion has turned <1ga1nst him. We have been Hmong those v. ho have critlci7.cd Lyndon Johnson for his hRndling of the \."il1fn1m v,ar. B11t after 1hc war cloud~ elt•ar av.•::i}·, history may nl.so look kindly u1>0n LBJ . F0r no other prnsldent pu.o;hed through so much soclal lefi!iSlation. Here are a re .... · or the milestones he left behind when he retired from lhe White !louse : -MEDICARE: For millions or senior clllmn!, mMJcare has become so im· portant that Its absence would be regard- Quotes Peter P.f. Fllnlgan,. Prealdtnllal aide for lntematlinal Economic Affaln - "\.\.'hatever progreM Is made In the ·area or trade, either wilh the nt\f markets of the CommunUJt world or wJlh our tradl· tJooal free merket trading partners, It IW mon! !ban an ICOllOmlo ~anin&: It must be Rtn u part of lbe 'web ol. ...ted W-11' that lcada to wari<I otabillty." ed as. a violation of the fourth C1Jm- n1andment, "Honor thy rather and thy mother." -crvn. RIGHTS: Two epic meas- urcs, ... th.e Ciril Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, are regarded by black leaders as the greatest advance in social justice slnce the Eman· cipation Proclamation. Thoughtful black leaders mention Lyndon Johnson's name in the same breath with Abraham Lin· coin. -EDUCATION: LBJ deserves credit for probably the most sweeping educa- tional legislation in history, wlilch has brought an educational revoluUon to this country. Today, it's lAkC'n for granted that any quallned American youth can get a college education through grants, loans or jobs. Thls wun't true In 1963 "·hen most middle-income parents wor· ried about how they were goln(( to educate their cblldren. Tbe college popuiatloo bu doubled slnct LBJ's rtlorm> became law. All In all, 4.15 plcctt of basic legislation were passed under LBJ. Most plwlng to him, no ®ubt, Is that none h.it~ been repealed ; nearly all have btcn ndded to; and mapy •ppear In both party plat· forma. MUUons o1 old people, black citizens, young people -and even tbe pren bo<auoe ol the Freedom of tnlomratlon Act -should be sn ttfUI to lbe lonely man dawn in Teua. social progress. GILBERT IV. FERGUSON Executive Director1 CEED 1¥heel cl1alr L fte To the Editor : A belated th ank you. to Allison Dccrr for the :1rticlc. "Barriers Jo,aced" in your Issue d;ilrd Dec. 22. With my \vife being confined to a "'heclcha ir. y,·e are very familiar with 1he problems facing Mick Spencer in his everyday li\'ing routines. \\'F. \\'ERI-; very impressed with a pro- gram. recently introduced in Great Bri· lnin. that allows for those in wbeelchain. who drive automobi les, to park in rcstrlctN! areas. A metal plaque, about twelve Inches square, indicates that the car is being parked by a handie1pped person. ln m11jor cities. like Londoo, thl' ls a tru e blessing to those who "want to do for tht:m5elves' some o( the things that arc natural ror those of us who walk, like shopping, busi ness appointments, etc .. \vlthoot having to park a block or two away. Thia approach Is alao under con- sideration in ot.Her countrla on the con· Unenl. WDAT A GREAT gift and Jilt ' thal would be, 10 our returning servk-emeo, and olhe:rs still restrlctcd to whcelcliairs, • The zone change was granted on July 24, 1972, by approval of the use permit by the City Councll of Newport Beach. A rehearing was requested by Allan Beek ·DDT Ban Questioned Few chemical substances b av C· genera ed as muc passiona eb8 e as has DDT. Praised and condemned with equal fervor, the pesticide has been a key weapon in the fight against disease-car4 rylng and crop-devouring insects over the pnst quaIUr-century. But the DDT era Is about to ~me to an abrupt end in the United Slates. Sta rting this month . virtually all use of DDT in this country wtll be prohibited . WDLIAM D. Ruckelsbaus, ad· minlstrator of the Environmental ?rote<:· tlon Agency, announced lbe ban last June. The declslon capp(!d three years or governmental lnqulrics. lnclud!ng seven months of h<Mings. DDT, It was =- eluded, posed "an unacceptable rlsk 10 man and hls environment." But the ban does not apply to public health and quarantine uses of the chemical. nor to three mlnor crop uses for which no ef· fectlve pc!St~ntrol alternative is cur· rently available. Under certain con· ditions, DDT may be used on green pep- pers. onions, and !ltored aweet potatoes. t.1orrover. l~ EPA order does not arfect tbe mMufaclure of DDT for export. Ruckcl.sba.us' announcement was lfeeted with Jubilation by en- Virorunenlallsll and with dismay . by EDITORIAL RESEARCH many agricultural experts. The case ror DDT was eloquently set forth by Nonnan E. Borlaug, father of the "'Green Revolu· lion." in a November, 1971 address before 11 conference of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. lf agriculture 1s denied the use or DDT and slmllar chemicals ''because of unwise legislation that is now being promoted by a pawerful group of hysterical lobbyists who are provoking fear by pridicting doom ror tho world through chem lea I poi""'in&·" Borlaug wamed, •·then the world will be doomed not by chel1'ical poisoning but from starvatlon." 111E EPA ond other government a•en- cies obviously believe that wUI not ha~ pen. Over the next thtte years, the Department of Agriculture, the National Science Foundation and EPA plan to spend arow1a $20 ·m1llioo to develop im- proved peal .. management tecbnJques. These ellorts will be closely watched by the SUppc!fteni and OpJlllll<ols of DDT . &th aides reaJize th.at government edicts can always be rcsclndcd . • 4-0 copies or the questions. The utility companies returned evasive ans~·ers. SOi\fE OF these questions have been posed by GUARD and by community of· ficials fo r more than three years. Whether tbe applicants do not have the information sought, or choose not to pro- vide it unless or until "required" by the AEC to do so, they condemn themselves in either case . Much of the basic information asked should have been made public before C1Jnstruction permits were approved for San Onofre Unit l, but these questions of distance of hazard of the most serious accidents (described by the AEC as class 8 an · · · length of time evacuation would be necessa17, and adequate del~~pro-~­ cedUres 1n the event of a disastrous ac· cident, have not been provided to the public or to community officials. SAN ONOFRE I is now operating with an emergency core cooling syslcm which f~;Jed in a series of model tests C1Jn- ducted by the AEC, yet the utility com- panies ha,•e not provided the hazard !~~ts necessary on v.'hich C1Jmmunity of· f1c1als could attempt an effective evacua- tion of persons ~'ithin 25 miles of the plant. \\le contend that the refusal to answer these questions is an act of contempt against the foundation purposes of the hearing process. an attempt to evade that purpose and thus negate it. LYNN HARRIS HICKS. Chairman Groups United Against Radiation Dangers Earplugs? To the Editor : Had some ideas for lhc oppasition 10 police helicopters in past months but ii didn 't come into full foc us until discuss- ing ear plugs y,·ith a sporting goods salesman. HE SAID he had lo use "'ax ear plugs for sleeping. ffc had a choice of the ear plugs or to go crazy from his dog barking as the police helicopter passed overhead about every 45 minutes during the night. My reply, ··1n our generation quite a little before your time 'A'e \\'ere at least a~te to teach ~ur dogs to stop barking with something called discipline. Probably it is a quaint virtue but you 'd be 3f0azed at how many O\\'ners could teach it to their dog! today." ' THE REPLY , ~'That's \\•hat you say t can't tell my dog to shut up ... he 's big. ger than me!'' Seems kind of self-ex- planatory. Glad he isn't a neighbor. Anyway whoever you are, Happy New Year to the man above in the whirlybird . PAIBICK M. ROYCE OllANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. \Vted. Publ111i tr Thomas Kettnl. Edi1or Barbara Krtibich Ed11onal Page Editor The edllnrh1l 1jj)-.:t-ot th(' Dally root setks \I) lnl t'lrn'I llnd stlmu- hltl' rf'ad1'1'$ by pr"5cntln1: 1h lii nt-"•papl'r't 11p1nlon' Anij rom· m~ntary on t•JPlt'S of lntcrt'lt arid lihrnlficar\Cf', by rro\·1dini:: a f11rum fur thl' ~xrrt-ulon ot our rt-tid~~· 011lri1un~. ~nd hy l•N'A{'ntlng tlil· dl\'f'N '-' vJ{'" 1"1lnt5 (Jf Informed Clb· srrvt "°' 11.nd 11>okc1mt>h on topi~ or th" day. Friday, January 5, 1973 J , • I d c • s j " g. a p: ti Sl ) 1 1 .. al oij m kr m se 35 th 1\ I av G! 0. 28' ' ' de -. ~ I • . • • Orange Coast EDITION VOL 1.6, NO. 5, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks FRIDAY, JANUARY s. 1973 c TEN CENTS Peters ·Tells . Court He l(illed His Parents By TOM llAJILEY °' .. .,. ... Pt• M-" "It was Christmas Day and I Wns at lhe festival In Laguna Beach. I'd been, you know, taking l.5ll and suddenly f ar.w my father's soul. It was kinda telling me my old man wu dtad, you know. And then I got to thinking about all the good times we'd had." Glg Peters stopped at that point, smil- ed at an incredulous jury and absentmindedly tapped oOe of the tv.·o muslve vohlmes of obscure religions from which be had quoted liberally throughout the afternoon. He bad earlier refused to take the oath before testifying Thursday and was only allowed to do so after a bitter argument between opposing lawyen. The former lifeguard eased his broken body forward in bis wheelchair, adjusted the counsel table microphone specially cocked in bb,direction and resumed what everyone present agreed •Has one of the most astonishing acu of testimony ln Orange County Superior Court history. Much of It was rambling and In- coherent to lhe point that court reporter Doris Vane was unable to rtie0rd a Dutnt account of what the crippled defendant offered in response to defense attorney Barry Tarlow's prompting. But Peters, 24, "'peatedly testified. thot he had indeed killed Charles Peters, 55, and Flora Peten. 54, lesi4fian 24 OOurs after his pa.rents bad welcomed him and Alien Pupils Cited Number of Foreigners Concerns Trustee By CANDACE PEAitwN Of *' 0.llY ""'' ll•ff A county school trustee charged Thurs- day that illegal aliens are attending county schools and that one unnamed school district was virtually rubber· stamping alien student enlrance forms. David Brandt of Santa Ana , the county board's newest member, told his fellow trustees Thursday that he was ''con· cerned" about foreign students being ad· milted to schools with improperly filled out immigration forms, known as "I· 20's". Although he declinctl lo name any specific school districts, Brandt waved befo re the board an 1·20 Form which car- ried the name of Joe O'Sullivan. former Laguna Beach city rouncilman and director of pupil personnel services for lhe Santa Ana Unified School Dist rict. B52s Make Heaviest Brandt. who was active in the rttlec- tion campaign of Assemblyman Robert Bwke <R·Huntington Beach1. claimed the entrance fonn was com pletely blank except for the administrative signature. ,Attacks in Three Weeks The forms are supposed to be taken to the American Consulatt in the student's home country. and signed. filled out by the relative the lllldeDl will live with In California and lhen signed by the district, Brandt contended. rom plJ traffic in North Vietnamese rivers d 'B 1 do f ?.tore than 40 U.S. B52 bomben at-within five miles of the 20th parallel sai · • ut resent paying or persons 18d<~e<1~me~~ ... :.;.;tne~m~hi..g;lf~OIJ';N:;Jo~ith~Vio,,~.tt. -iiho<ilrib~llillwniiiaiTiur1ffi1ne;.'-, iiabOU~tnt!liO~mniil;.,';"i;no~rth;r;;--,w.i11o..-..a~·nat--mntr1bfJtli'ir' nam in the heaviest raids in three weeks. of the Cemililarized 1.one and 75 miles He added that schools were not re- generating protests today from Hanoi below Hanoi. quiring stringent enough identification of and charges that President Nixon is But command spokesmen refused com-students and asked the county staff to preparing for new bombardments above ment on charges in North Vietnam's of· make a survey-study among county the 20th parallel. ficial Nhan Dan army newspaper that the districts of tbe situatiOn and report back. The U.S. Command said the eight-jet United States, while limiting attacks Contacted today, O'St.llivan denied that saturation bombers were attacking sup-below the 20th parallel, is carrying on any improper practices were taking reconnaissance "of several other place in the district and questioned Policemen Shoot Two Bar Patrons In Tustin Fight One man was killed early today and a~ther seriously wounded by gunfire in al( altercation in a Tustin bar with two oft duty pclicemen from olhef com· mun.itles, Tustin police reported. Randall S. Robinette. 25, address ·not known, diet: at 5:20 a.m. ir. Tustin Com· nilntity Hospital. In the same hospital seriously wounded is Sam P. Campise, 35, whose home address is also unknown. The shooting occurred at 1:45 a.m. in lbe Bachelor's Ill bar, 14920 Holt Ave., Tustin police said. Officers involved who Tustin police allege did the shooting were Jerry L. GJ:ay, 28. of the Garden Grove Police Ilepartmenl and Sgt. Thomas M. Baroldi, :ZS, of the Cypress force. Tustin police would not reveal any details ol the affair this morning. localities in preparation for new acts of Brandt 's right to interfere \\'ith an in- military adventure." dividual district. Nba n Dan left lbe impression it was O'Sullivan said while he is only ad- referring to the northern Hanoi-Haiphong ministrato.r tn the Santa Ana district that heartland. American sources outside the signs 1-20 forms, he never signs blank U.S. Command confirmed that recon-forms. naissance was continuing above the 20th "I don't know how be (Brandt) could parallel get a blank one,'' O'Sullivan said. "We don't band those out." '11lese sources added, however, that O'Sullivan explained hi! district's pro- they knew of no immediate plans to cedure wi.th the forms as follows: resume the two-week aerial blitz of the Normally the kical relative of the stu· Hanoi and Haiphong regions, Those dent "'~ wants to study in California beavy attacks were halted saturday, comes to the dlstrict to see if officials when ~the United States and North Viet· will agree "to entrance. "We fill In part or nam agreed to returq to ,the bargaining the form that says, yes, w~ will accept table in Paris. · the student if he lives here ." said The semipublic Paris lalks resumed O'Sullivan. Then the relative fills in part Thursday and secret negotiations are to of the form that say he will be responsi· resume P.1onday. hie for the student during his sta)' here. The United States always has had con· "Then. 1hey take the form to the con- tingency plans for bombing North Viet· suiatc in Mexico and present ii," nam and as standard procedure revises ' O'Sullivan said, adding that the consulate them to keep them current. there and in other countries won't sign The U.S. aerial reconnaiuance above the 20tb parallel is designed to gather unless the district agrees to house the photographic evidence of bomb damage, student. monitor movement of war materials When the form is brought back to the southward from China and watch district, lbe officials there ask to see a rebuilding. This information is used to birth certificate, O'Sullivan said. The maintain a target list should Nixon form is also checked by immigration of· decide to reswne bombing. Meanwhile, Secretary of Defense Mel-ficials and tne average alien student vtn R. Laird today ordered details with· "wouldn't know how lo fill it out,'' he held of U.S. bomb damage in North Viet-said. nam dwipg lhe second week of the Amer· Brandt Indicated he lhought some ianJ1omblng blit<-IO u not to upoet-lhe · studenls -·perbaJ>! tiV< P<"""t of tne Paris peace talks. (See AUENS, Page !I his girl friend to. ttleir modest Huntington Beach bome. "You see, I've nothing to gain or !me.'' the bearded long-haired defendant told the jury while Judge Kenneth Williams watched him sadly from the bench and proseeutor Pat Brian poli;Jtedly turned his b:. : k on him. ''Okay, the basic Issue for me is Y:helher I go to the joint or the nutbouse, right?" Pete.rs murmured. "I'm not trying to alter your opinion. But I think !iOme of )'OU might gt>t th(' mess..ige I've been carrying around for a long time," he sajd. Peten will be wheeled back to the courtroom Monday to resume h.is leslimony afler the tbrtt-day breuk ordered late Thursda y by Judge Williams. And it is expcc!ed that the former llun· tington Beach lf1gh School honor student Ylill be the final Yl'itne ss in a sanily hear· ing which must end with the jury's ruhn~ Ul'IT ....... TWO DEPUTIES \Vl!lE AMONG l'OUR SLAIN BY SUSPICT O.puty Sheriffs Don Schneider {loft) and Carl Wiison ~Nixon Reports lle'sNot Optimistic About Talks \\'ASHfNGTON (UPf) -President Nixon lold congressional leaders today he is not optimistic about the new round of peace talks in Paris, but is going inlo them with some hope. But i iixon did not mention the just-end· ed massive bombing of North Vietnam during lhe closed breakfast meeting at the White House, according to some of those present. The meeting had been billed as a session on wage-and-price controls. but Nixon brought up I.be subject of Vietnam and the peace talks at the @d of the meetinJ, and talked for more than 10 minJtes. •• #' · He then closed 'he meeting. and gave no chance for questions. Sources at the meeting quoted Ni:a:on as sa3 ing he was "not optimistic. but nel\her am I going to be pessimi · ~ic." The President said the new talks v;ere risky, but that there is a chance for sue· cess. The President did not, however, go into any specific details of the peace talks, those present said. Nixon also did not mention resolutions passed by Democrats in the House and the Senate calling for an eod to the war or a , 1tof£ of funds for war activities. "He said he recognized lhtte was a dif· ference of opinion on the war," said one source, "but didn't ask for withdrawal of the resol utiom." •One sotrr::e, ·s0mnm1gup tneemOtlonlll ta•·. by the President, said, "You glean rrom 1hat he said that he co11ldn't make any promises." A senator. who t!tid not '4·1bh to be 1den· lified. said of tbe met'!ling : "The President is insi sting on four points. the return of the prisoners. a cease-fire, the right of the South Viet· namese to chc>Me their own government and that the whole agreement must cover Laos and Cambodia. * * * Diplomats Spurn Hassk , Resume Cease-fire Talk PARIS (UPI) -U.S and North Viet· namese envoys today ignored the latest controversy betweea Hanoi and Saigon over Vietnam's future and held their fourth consecutive day of technical talks on provisions for a cease-fire. U.S. peace delegation spokesman David Lambertson said the diplomat ic experts were going about their fask in a businesslike way. "They are not reading protests and walking out,'' Lambertson said. "They sajd they had called in Orange c0unty--Dtm1ct Attmney's1nvestlgator. to assist in the case, evidently because pojice officers were involved. Patrons Praise . Bus Sclieduks Searches Slow Airport His stltemeot was ~an -aj)piirent reference lo two technical sessions h1.~1 month in which the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese sho\\·ed up just kmg enough to protest U.S. bombing of the Ha noi- lfaiphong heartland -which has since been suspended -then stalked from the meetings. The Communists boycotted one such technical session altogether in retaliation for the aerial blitz. lits. Mildred Neer of 166 W. 19th St., Cost.a Mesa is a real booster for the Orange COunty Transit District. District General M1ru11or Gordon "Pete" 1"1•1dlng rtported Thursday that many favorable letters had been ~ived and that Mrs. Nee.r's 01.rlstmas card wu typic~ill. It ....... Ill pan: ''You will oever realize the ha~ plness yvu have brought to 10 many • people. )'<l1IOI aad old, w1tb }'01lr MW bus l!Chedule and I lmow that I ··~ for hundreds. . "It is the beat thing that bu bap- 'pe!)<d.Jn years and we hope It coo--lllllts for ,..,. "1d wbh ,... an 'IUCCUS." Passengers 'Cooperative' to County Security Early fllg!U from the Orange County sl;yjack to oomeplace they doo't want to Allport ....,.. reported running 10 to 15 go." minutes late th.ls morning because or new Bresnahan aald the delays would be federal rem"•tlons _, ...... lhe search shortened In tlme ,.. lhe airlines smoolh· ·-• •••• ... ed out the ... rcb aperatlon. of each boardinc -er. "ft'• like anything new," Brewhan Select.Ive searches have been made at said, "It wlll take us awhile to get the tbe airport f0< lhe put oeveral monlhs · bop ou~ ind until we do. thert'U be but beginning today, new rules were ln delays." effect that required each passtnger to The biggest problems are anticipated pw through an electronic· soamtlnc · .., Friday and Sunday night when tramc device Ind to suhmll an C&l'TJ'<lll IUQ... at "" airport ts bea-.• !St. Al these times, to a hand March. deloy'a c o u I d be up to 30 minutes, "[t11 alowtng US dawn qulle .... a hit.. B.ff"1 h1 0 iaid. especially Oh tbe beavitr Olgbis1" said "We'te HVertly overcrowded Rollert Bresnlhan, dir<ctor ol aviation al already," be said. "lbe space we're tak· the airport. .Ing up with IUfChes JuJt compoundl ""' ''But people ... ...., cooperatlw. 'nleJ ...-. " soy they would ralber be delaJed ten A spoltesman for Air Calllomi., largest r.strlctions as "pr<tty tough"' on passengers and especlally women. "The law now requires us to hand ICM'Ch lhe purse of every woman boanling o pion," said John Tucker of Alr California. "Or if someone has a •Tapped package, we've aot to remove the ribbon!l and paper and St.a1'Cb It. We 're as careful 11 we can be but it '.s obviously a problem at times." Tucker sa~ that rule. may have 10 be changed~ what panengers ""' allowed to carry on to planes. "Up to now • ...,,.. allond just alloul anytbln1." Tuckor said. ''But k'I kind of ridiculous ,_ to alloW -to bring on a sulicUt fQJI of -. just Ill avoid ......._-=-=-=-=-=~~----' -=mlnata==· be111 than 11\'!l_or 1!ne..dan_oo_a___aniet a1. Ille airpl1, dncribed the.nrw ' ISoo-SEAllQl.-Pqo-l) • The technical seulon today in P&ris contrasted with Thursday's weekly semipublic talks ln the French capital when Saigon and Commmunist Viet· nameee delegates again clashed over Vietnam's status. Salpt ropeated old demand> lh>I any peace accord stipulate the exlstenct of two separate Vietnamese. The COm· muntsu again rejected the proposal, l11be1ing It ''absurd" and blaming the United States for supporting It. North Vletnamese rdlplomat!I said Hanoi 's top negotifttor, Le Due Tho. will arrive In PariJ Saturday flA' Monday's resumed pri•ate peace talks with White Hou11e alde Henry A. Kissinger. They refwled to 111 wl'lttber Tho was WTYinc with hiro imtructloos from hi> g<rm11menl lo mett -of the demands put to biin 0, Ktsalnpr In their previotl> barp.lnqi ,_.,.,, Kiiiinger is tJpecltd ., arm. Sllllllay. on ~·helher he .... ·as s::ine or insane when he killed his parents 011 April 21, 1971 . Peters has already been convicted of two counL'I of first degree murder by that same jury in his second trial. Peters' first trial ended dramatically and prematurely in Novt'mber 1971 when he was shot in the spine by a deputy as he attempted to escape from the same courtroom . Those .,..·ounds are almost certain to (Ste PE:l'ERS, Pa1e !) Suspected l(iller Sl1ot By Deputy By MICHAEL GOODRICH ot *' C)il"' ....... , ... Two Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies were machine-gunned to death Thursday afternoon in Midway City as they attempted to capture a double murder suspect. The suspect. Carl Eckstrom. 23, of 8251 Flight Ave., Midway City , was later cut down by a single shotgun blast fired by an Orange County Sher1fr.s deputy. He had come lo the aid of the mun peace of· flcers. Eckstrom, who In addition ~ being the of crilicaUy woundlng a third victim at the same Ume, is i.o crrucal-eoodit-ioft 1&------i day at Orange County Medical Center. The lwo-county ma!Jsacre began shortly after noon when Eckstrom allegedly pulled a pistol at the Cerritos Shopping Center and shot two female co mpanions. One girl. Rosemary Vasquez, 20, of Bell GarOens. was shot twice in the stomach and died at Pioneer Hospital ln Artesia. Her sister. Cecelia Vasquez.. 17, Bell Ga rdens, was listed in critical condition today after undergoing surgery at Pioneer Hospital. She was sbot Jn the chest. right side, left leg and le.ft foreann. A passing shopper. Michael Jeffries, 27. of Downey, was shot twice in the back as he returned lo his car, police said. He died at Woodruff Community Hospital, Long Beach. Witnesses tole! police Eckstrom shot the two girls while walking with them in the shopping center parking lot. Police said' ~ey slilJ have no idea what the motive was for the sbootin,P. -· Following lbe shootings, the suspect ran to his car and fled. but not before a shopper noted his li~nse number and phoned them to the sherifrs station in Lakewood. Two sheriff's deputies, Sgt. Cert E. \Vilson . 4-0, and his partner. SherUf 's DelectiYe Donald W. Schneider, also 40, checked the license numbers and pro- ceeded to the Eckstrom home. They contacted the Orange County'! Sherifrs Office, which assigned a back up car driYen by Deputy Andrew Romero . When they arri'i'ed at the ~fidwa~· city residence where Eck!!trom lives with his parents, Schneider and \Vilson went tn the front door and Romero went to cover the ~back. Witnesses told police that SChnelder (See KIWNGS, Page !) Orange Coast Weather The W!atherlady sees sunny skies &nd warmer temperatUttS for the weekend, wilh the beeches reach· ;ng 60 degms, rising to 65 Inland. Overnight lows ln I.he 40s. INSmE TODAY o r a" g t. Coun&w'• o•tQ<rino Grand Jur11 taker aomt. parting sltots ot countu munkipalU:iu as the 1913 pantl is unveiz.d. St.e s:tor1ts, Page 8 toda11. r f DAILY, PILOT c Fr""1 ,,.....,, 5, 1971' Breweries. File Suit In Count y TONIGllT TRAVELOGUE -NeWport Harbor Kiwanis presents "Russia," OCC Lawyers for the makers pr "Lucky Auditorium, 8 p.m. Ticket information I • B 64&-2163. .ager ' and " rew 111l" beers today pop-OCC FILli,f SERIES -"Death in ped the cork on a beer and wine dlstribu· Venice." Forum. 7 p.in, Admission $1. tion baUJe in Orange County with the ID· 81\SKETBALL -Mesa High at Santa ing of a $21 million lawsuit in Superior Ana Valley, 8 p.m. EstaQcia v. Corona Court. del Mar at Estancia. 8 p.m. Newport Named as defendants in the action con· llarbor at Loara, 8 p.rn. taining the elailn that federal authorities ''Pl.A Y STRINDBERG" -South Coast bave also been deprived or $100 million in Repertory Theater~ Friday, Saturday and unpaid taxes, are Heublein Inc., the Sunday, 8 p.m. Reservations 64S.L36.1. Theodore Hamm Brewing Company and SPORTS AND VACATION SlfOW - United Vintners, distributors of wines Anaheim Convention Center, through that include the Swiss Colony and Mogen Jao. 14, David brands, SAnJRDAY JAN. i It is alleged that the defendants WINTER REGISTRATION -Depart· created unfair competition and violated ment of Leisure Services registration for anti trust provisions contained in the winter classes. Community Recreation federa1 Cartwright Act by "black bag· Center, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. sing" many owners of retail outJets in STORY HOUll -Costa ?i.tesa Library Orange County. presents "Bob, a Job" and ·"My Friend "Black bagging" is described in the the Fish." 10:30 a.m. ' lawsuit as the act of distributing gifts COAST COMMUNITY SYMPHONIC and premiums to retail beer and wine CHORALE -OCC Auditorium, 8 p.m . ,. ~Power WitJa B•milit1' Statesmen Hear Truman WASHINGTON (UPI) Foreign statesmen, government dlgnltarie,s, famJ'- Jy members and old friends heaN Harry S Truman eulogized today as a leader who wore the maotle of bis countrymen's trust "with truth and bore his solita ry power with humility." Vice President Spiro T. Agnew represented President Nbton at the memoria l services for the forn1er Presi- Tamperin g In Papers Case Lodged Eulogy dent in the towering got.btc Washington Cathedral. Nixon and his wife flew to Indepen-' dence, Mo. Dec. 'll, the day after Truman died, to pay their last respect&. Eigbty.seven•year~d Bess 'l'ruman, frail and ailing, was unable to attend. The Trumans' only child, Maraaret Daniel, and her husband, Clllton Daniel,· \Vashington Bureau chlet of the New York Times, represented the famUy_ Sitting with the Daniela and the Agnews in a £root pew V{aS Mrs. Dwight L . Eisenhower. widow of Truman's suc- cessor in the White House. ~ Sen. &Sward M. Kennedy (0.Mass.), and his sister, Eunice Shriver, were on hand to represent the family of the late President Jolm F. Kennedy. Some 1,900 persons gathered in the Cathedral to hear the Very Rev. Francis b . Sayre Jr., dean or the-cathedral. describe TrUman as a man who was "ready" v.·hen the "mantle of destiny" u,..,, ....... Stvimn1er Picks Bride Olympic swimming champion Mark Spitz has announced his engage- ment to Susan Weiner, 20, of Westwood. Miss Weiner. a UCLA stu- dent who, like Spitz, has appe~red on TV commercials was introduced to the seven gold medal winner last October. petition. SONDAY. JAN. 7 the Pentagon Papers trial was accu sed v.•as thrust upon him. He said that Truman was "earthy, From P J •· outlets in a move to ~iminate com-Admission $1.50. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The defense in It is further alieged that defendants ClJILDREN'S THEATER -South by the government today of jury tam- achicved their aims by prep ring Hfalse ~oast Repertory Theater presents "The pering after two potential jurors revealed ~--aru:Ur.audulenC.'.Jnvajces, many-OL.them--S_un_d_a~y_F_un_n_ies_."_l _a_nd_2_,J_O ~p_.1_n_. ___ .,,lh"a"t' a young defense volunteer air to nonexistent recipients. to conceal the ched-them-and-tried-to---talhbout plain" and "there were no wrinkles in his age h~?WJ:;';, the time came..J)h~e s~tep~~P~E~T~E!±R~S'_T~E~S~T-""IM~OuNi.Y,!_ • ._, • .....,.,__ ___ _ the anvil, humble but not afraid, relying always in his independent way upon the goodness of the Lord, in whose hand is • .t ' t alleged true nature of their deliveries. .f'rom Page J the case outside or court. Defense attorneys, who brought the From Pllfle 1 ALIENS ••• aliens -either never take forms to the consulates er dishonestly fill out part or the form. Of the rt ,000 students in the Santa Ana district, only 110 are aliens. While most of those are from Mexico, some are from Spain, Japan and ether cotmtries. O'Sullivan said he, or his assistant who alsc evaluates the forms, band out many more thao that each year, but the students declde, f&r different reasons not to come to school here. Brandt !Ulid th.at education code re- quirements call for proof of birth only at kindergarten and first grade levels and , su~~ed that legislatiro might be a way to ge that. In additlon1 Brandt charged, one school district (also unnamed) keeps a list of its alien students but won't reveal them. Tbe state education' code requires the county superintendent to report the number of alien students in the schools each year to the boar<! of supervisors. Charles Palmer or the Hunlington Beach (City) School District told trustees that It would be "praetlcally impossible" to tell II someone Is lying. "! don't bold much lalth that the in- orma on commg m s KILLING S ••• yelled for Eckstrom to come out and when the young man refused, the deputy began to break down the door. Eckstrom suddenly nung the door open and fired at Schneider point blank with a . 45 ca~ber Thompson submachille gun. accordmg to the witnesses. Witnesses said Schneider crumpled on the doorstep and Wilson ran to the side of the hollSe and into the backyard. Eckstrom emerged from the house wearing a U.S. Army flak jacket and chased Wll50n to the back where he fell· ed the other deputy with another burst of machine-gun fire . A neighbor, Melvin Terrill, said he though. the loud bursts were firecrackeni. He stuck his head out the back door ·where he saw the Orange County Deputy, Romero, who told him to get back inside. Romero then sneaked up behind Eckstrom as he was walking to the front and dropped him with one blast from his shotgun. Moments later, other Orange County Sheriff's deputies arrived after Romero called for aid. Officers from the Westminster and Huntington Beach police departments were also on the scene u law men searched the area for any other suspects. matter up with the judge during a con· ference at the bench;-Sliid the girl volunteer involved had come to the defense team and offered her help only two days ago. They said they believed her talk with the prospective jurors was "innocent" ~d that she didn't understand that she was not supposed to speak wilh them. The judge o~ered the defense to find out as much as po6Sible about the in- cident and said he would discuss it further later in the day. possibly calling the girl herself to testify. Prosecutor David Nissen told the judge: •·we have what appears to be a prima facie case of an attempt at jury tam· pering." Defense attorneys objected vehemently to his comments, noting that they fir st brought up the matter, and said, "We're very much concerned about it." The two women who told of the in- cident said the girl approached them while they were having lunch, asked how they liked being on the jury, made several comments they could not remem- ber and told them she was a volunteer for the defense. One woman said she thought the girl mentioned the Vietnam war. Both said they admonished the girl that she was not to speak, but that she con· Unued talki - Before s e approac em, y sa1 , the hammer of our fate." Int erspersing his eulogy with prayers. Sa'yre. grandson of President \Voodrow \\'ilson. said : "Many of us remember still the dark days that Harry Truman faced -the loneliness of his responsibility and the generous impulse he ever brought to it" Sayre also asked ror prayers to "renew th e strength of the people whom Mr. Truman served : giving them singleness of heart, and grace to lay aside the things that divide them : and the vision of peace and a fre sh resolve to achieve it." \Vorld leaders representing more than 35 foreign countries came to pay homage to Truman. Among the ranking guests was Presi· dent Zalman Shazar of Israel, in gratitude for Truman's diplomatic recognition of the new state of Israel. Also on hand was South Korean Prime Minister Kim Chong Pil in tribute to '.J'ruman's decision to send troops to fight 1n the Korean connict under United Na· lion's auspices. Other foreign dignitaries were Irish ~ime Minister Jack Lynch; Philitr pines Foreign Secretary Carlos P. Romulo, and Lord Chancellor Lord Hailsham of the United Kingdom . keep him a wheelchair for the rest of his life. Peters' father was stabbed through the heart and his mother strangled just four months alter th e Laguna Beach vision that the smiling defendant recaJled for the jury. But it was , Peters assured th e jury, "all part of a divine plan. "You're thinking that if I'm not crazy • I'm terribly evil," be told the jury after .. few minutes of rambling testimony. "But I'm not crazy, I'm terribly good," Peters assured the jury. ''I was receiving spiritual guidance from God ·.vhen I killed my parents and it was ali part of the plan or evolution that I'm going to tell you a Jot about before thi s is over." Peters adjusted his ho spital gown. searched for a passage in the volumes placed before him on the cluttered counsel table and then gave a brief glance towards his gi rlfriend, Anne Bartholomew, and the couple's year-old daughter w,ho was seated in the front fO\Y of the courtroom. He then willingly confirmed for Tarlow that he is ·'a prophet of God . · "The act of killing my parents 'vas an act of coun!er culture," he told Tarlow. "1 cried in Laguna Beach so much that I had to leave when I sa\\' that vision of my father because I knew then that ~is killing was planned ." Peters insisted that his father's death •·removed him from pain. "I remember. you knov". how he once . sat with me before he went to work \Yitb a glass of wine in his hand and tried to get me to understand his problems," he told the jury. "My father was a super salesman, he 'ftaS a truly honest man, but his family was breaking up, he was drinking and he knew that I just didn't understand him," Peters said. Peters recalled an incident in a Sari Diego courtroom shortly before the kill- ings when his father di sowned him after listening to a judge sentence Peters on drug charges and order court action a::.inst Peters' younger brother on cl:arges linked to possession of mari- juana . "Yeah, but what happened to my father is just a little part of it an; u Peters said. ' "lfs for all of humanity," he said. ';We've all got to have one religiori. Masses of Chinese people have to be a1nalgamated or conquered and ttle masses in India have to be braught in with food and technicians and, you knoW ., . ~ survey of dlsbicta) will .be factual," Westminster Community Hospital where. · , R Chat lllJJllrlcboot-they were bolh-pt'OllOO!ICed dead on ar- dislrtcts don~ reJIOl'I illege] aUens rival. beca~ they belp boos! enroU-t allll Eckstrom was taken to OrllllJ• Cl>unty thus state money per average dally at~ 1'.fedical Center where he was OOoked on they saw her talking to a male member of tlie tentative fury being questionm-<llf-+--- lhe trial. • . teadance. murder charges. From Pllfle l _ Brandt. would not say where he got his Eckstrom was described by neighbors 1nlormat1on or where he got the blank I· as a quie t "bookworm type." "He seemed SEARCH ••• 20 form_ like a real bright fellow ," said his neighbor Terrill. Boy With Cancer Bitten by Dog PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Kevin Steen , 'thif~' lZ.year-old cancer-sufferer who watched the successful splashdown of the Apollo 17 spacecraft from an aircraft carrier in the Pacific-, is facing a new crisis. Kevin, who has undergone numerous operations for cancer and at one time was told be had only wee~ to Jjve, was bitten by a._ dog TbUr5dlly ·as be walked from • school. The boy's father. Orion Steen Jr., said doctors do not plan to administer an· tirabies shots because of the risk of com- bining the live virus of the shots with an· Ucancer medicatior is greater than the chance Kevin might contract rabies. Officials are seeking the dog to check it for rabies. OlANGI C04ST CM DAILY PILOT 'TileOnncM> C.0.Sf ·DAILY PILOT, will! which b COll'lblntd llW N.-Preu. 11 •lw.11 ey !tie Or~ll')e Cotst Publl\lllnO CO<npfny. """ r•hl edl!iofls .,,. p,oblblled, Morrd1y tti"""9ft Ptfftf, """'~" "'~•. HfWPl'l't 11-.., HUl\tlng!on tlNCl\IFOllflteill VII~, L~u'" BQdl, lrvlntrSaOdlm.cl< Mid San Clemtntt/ Sin Ju!MI C,,pi•lrfno. A sl~t'• l'tllJIGNol •nlon .. tubli•IH!d $•!u!'d•)'S. Bnd Sllnda)'t. Tll• pr!"tl.,..,1 Pllbli1flli'lo pL.n! 15 11 lJO we.1 a., S!ltel, CO.II M-. C.ll!wnl1, tUlt. Robert N, Weed Prtslo ..... Ind PllOli,11« J1ck R. Cvrlty Vke Pl"ftlderlt •lld Gtrt1t1I Mtr\fOV lhoin•t K.,.,n Edi tot Thom•• A. M11rphi11• MIMtlne Eclll'or Ch1rfe• H. Looi Rich•..J P, Ntll Auhtant MWllOlflt ldllon Cetta MeM Offke JJO W•t+ l1y Str••+ Ma1'i1tt A4dre11: P.O. loc 1160. f 24:Z4 °"'°' Offlc .. H..,.,.. a.ctlt mt Newport hfltwrd L6WN 9M~: ml'~-­ H\ll'lllfltletl 9QCll: 1711$ l•dl toultvlr'd St., CltrM!lltl JDS Hortll fJ C.mlrlt llttt T .. .,..... (714» '4J..4JJI Cs...lflff Aft.1lll1t '42·,171 ~t, t•rt. °'9.,.. Ctnt P.-tllti"-~y. Nf _... ,....,_ IJtw1,.ltlM, .. , .... .,.. ,..,u.. ... Nv"111--"' .,.,.... ""' -~"' """""' .,."' ...... mi..a.. of ~-..,,.., ""*" cf-. ....... "'" " c.tt ...... Qlff9nli.,. w.crfltflol'I w fttl'W .... Menlfl1Y1 . ..,. IT'lllH N.IS lllCll'l111JYJ fllltitlry ...,..., ... .,..._,, .•. "'"'· Terrill said .hat Eckstrom was a stu· dent at ca1 State Long Beach. "He wanted to try out for the police academy but they told him he was too nearsighted," said Terrill. Another neighbor, Marc Conlay, said that Eckstrom was a "pretty weird guy.'' Industry Relations Meet Set by CofC Tbe industrial committee of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce has scheduled a panel dilJ(:usslon on in: dustrial rtlation!f for .noon Thursday al the Coral Reef restaurant. Combined with a luncheon, the panel discussion carries the theme, "What You Have Always Wanted to Know About Industrial Relations and Didn't Know \Vho To Ask." Anyone interested in at- tending should contact the Chamber of Commerce, 64&-0536, before 5 p.m. Wednesday. Debris Kills Gi.t·l LIMA, Ohio (UPI) -Shrapnel from an CX'Jlloding chemical tank car killed · a teenage girl and injured her fathe r Thursday following the derailment o! a 60-car, Erie-Lackawanna freight train at . l~arrod,·a community about l{I miles east of here. Betty Jo Sherard, 15. was standing in front of her home about 500 feet from the derailment when struck and killed. Her father. Bernard, ~7. suffered a [ractured leg. the inconvenience of checking it into the cargo compartment." Bresnahan also pointed out a problem with the metal scanner. "People pass through ence and if it ·lights up, they're asked to empty their pockets. But somettmea· they're wearing big metal belt l.iuckles, which can really complicate the problen1.'1 Mesa's Leisure Services Offers Classes iii Art The Costa Mesa Department or Leisure Services is offering instruction in silk screening, decoupage. and construction of mobiles and windchimes this winter. Teacher Bemice Barlow will offer the mobiles and windchlmes class from 7 to 10 p.m. Thursday and on Jan. 18. The decoupage workshops are schedul- ed from 7 to 10 p.m, Feb. I and Feb. 8. The silk screening classes are scheduled from 7 to 10 p.m. Feb. 22, March 1, and March 8. AU of these Thursday evening classes will be held at ?i.-taude 8. Qavis Inter-mediate. School. 1050 Arlington Drive. Registration for these and other Leisure Services winter programs is scheduled from 9 a.m. to I p.m. Saturday in the Community Recreation Center en the Orange County Fairgrounds. Yorty Annonn~es LA Mayor See k s Fourtli Term LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Sam Yorty. calling Loo Angeles "the moot Pl"Og~lvcly administered city in the nation," today declared he will seek election to an unprecedented fourth term. Yorty, 6.1, took note of his 12-year tenure as mayor and said he lblnks it ls nn advantage to his candidacy. "l DESIRE TO USE iliat experience to keep ~ city moving forwa rd on an ~ven keel ," Yorty told a news conference. "There Is no substitute for ex· ~nence, and I am the only candklate with the experience of roMlng a big city." , Although candidates for city offices have unlll Monday to Ille lhtlr in· leoHoos 1'I run, Yorty's Jll'in<jpal chellcngeri elrea<ty hove taken oot papers. THEY ARE FORMER AJscmbly Sp<!aker J~ Unruh !orm<r pollce chi•( Tbomu Reddin, aDd cey councllmon Thomas B<lldle1 'and-.Tdel Wachs. JUST SOME OF THE MANY OUTSTANDING PIECES ON SALE NOW NEWPORT STORE SOFAS 8' Leather Sofa Shaffer Bros . 8' Velvet Stripe 7' Crescent, Velvet. Sherrill 8' Print. Green & Yellow Quilt. Mar9e C•rson 8' Linen Print. Gold & Yellow. Drexel 8' Linen Print. lime Green & White Marge Carson Sleep Sofa Queen Size. Turquoise & Grffn . 90" Gold T 9J(ture. M11r9e Carson 8' Multi "colored Print. R~yal Co~c .. h CHAIRS Pr. Print. Green & Gold . Reg. SALE $924 $799 $695 $579 $625 $499 $599 $459 $6 25 $469 $540 $299 $449 $179 $47 0 $380 $944 $769 SALE Woodmarlc $1 59 ea. $139 ea. Pr. Wing Chairs. Orange & Gold. Stripe. Roy.ti Coach $228 at. $189eo. Pr. Ch airs. Green Velvet. Royel Coech $228 ... $189 ea. Pr. Che irs. Brown Sueda. Mar9e Carson $ll9 ••• $269 oo. Pair Hi9h Back, Pink Velvet Royal Co!,ch · $307 ea\ .$299 ea . l eathe r Chair. & Ottoman, Sherrill $018 $478 Wing Chair, Bird Print, Sherrill $219 $199 Pr. Chairs. Orange. Demask. Woodmark $240 $199 DINING ROOM Rag . SALE LAGUNA STORE SOFAS Reg. SALE 8' Gold & Orange Print. Henredon $930 $779.00 .8' Crescent. Green & Gold. Henredon $975 $799.50 8' Linen Print. Henredon $799. $6S9.00 8' White & Green. Velvet. Sherrill $679 $S89.00 8' TuKedo. Aqua & Graen. Marge Carson $570 $465.00 8' Woven Print. Royal Coach $689 $589.00 8' Tu xedo. White & Green Fringe . Marge Carson -$62D $52f.OO 8' G'reen & White Crescent. Sherrill $599 $529.00 CHAIRS Rag. SALE Pr. Blue, Green Print. Royal Coach $244 ••. $209 ea. Pr. Swivel. Gold Damask. Woodmark $205 ... $179 ea. Pr. Gold Vt l¥et. Sherrill $205 ••. $179 ea. Pr. Print. Marge Carson $224 ... $185 0G. Pr. Stripe Velvet. Woodmark $21 9 ee. $189ea. Pf. Go'ldVi!Ve . ~arg;-arson 09 ea. $T19ea. I Wing Chair. Rust. Woodmark $225 ea. $199ea. Easy Ch.tit. Green & Beige. Sherrill $279 ... $219 .... DINING ROOM Reg. SALE China, 2 Arm Chairs, 4 Side Chairs, Dining T abl~. American of Martlnyflfe $1562 $1252 2 Arm Chairs, 4 Side Chairs, Buffet, 2 Arm Chairs, 4 Side Chairi, Doubl• Pedeital Oval Table. Dioiog T•ble. H .. rodon°Moat190 $1714 $1422 Hlbrlton T••ditio"' I '1069 $899 UNIELIEVAILE SELECTIONS AT VERY SATISFYINIO PllCES, READY FOR IMMEDIAn FREE DELIVERY -SELECTID IOROUPS FROM HENRIDON, HERITAGE, DREXEL, a. OTHERS NOW REDUCED. SPECIAL ORDER UPHOLSTERY FROM HENREDON, ROTAL COACH, & MARIO! CARSON AT SUISTANTIAL SAVINGS. OREXEL--HER ITAG&-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN INTERIORS WIDDAYS a. SATUl DATS t :OO to 'S:JO ~-FRIPAY 'TlL tiOO NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLIFF Dll., ~1.2010 LAGUNA BEACH e l4S NOR.TH COAST HWY. 494~6511 TORRANCE e 2JMt HAWTHORNE ILVD. 371·121t • •. .. ' ' " '. ., .... •• I ' I '· I I • • DAILY PtLOT 5 Passenger Vessel · .·Departs Farr Petition Ey~d Stands lip City San Francisco's Coastl ine Panelists To Mee t Higli--:eourc-Jmfge Se~-ic:s-eouniy ltespo~r.se • Quak e in Hiding • SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - ••'American Prtsldent Unts bu · w•ved goodbye to 125 ye-.an of ocean P3!&enger service. Tbe flrm'1 last lunary Uner, 1 the .ss President Wilton, ten 11 on 1ts final cru'-Ttwnday night wllh a full load ol 300 LOS ANGELES (AP} -A decision &om U.S. Supmne Cola! Justice Wllllam 0. IJouilu on wbelhtt to .. 1..,. JaJJtd newsman Wllliam Fal1' tmW be has read the responst, Stewart said. A brief also haa been asked fn>m Sber1ff Peter J. Pltd>eu, the county oflldal reorionalble !or the l'O\Ulty Jail where Farr BRIEFS Is bein& upheld peodinC tu been held slnee Nov. 27 for ..,_ from eounty of-rel~ to dlvuJie a nows f1tiall to Fan's pelitloo for l '°"""' in • story about the releue, aaya a county official. Charles Ma'-1 murder triaJ. ) Deputy Coonael Willlam Farr, !ti, a Los Angeles Times newsman, has asked litewart said Ttiursday be bad llo<qilas to rdeaso him on his -been asked by Dou&)as to me own recognJunee pending ail passengers on a 95-day round a response by Jan. JO to appeals in bis case. the v.·orld trip to 24 portl. FarT's petition. The APL's two cruise ships ~he Wilson and SS Cleveland ad been losin( money but ,, .. were kept operating with u.s, il!M a r I t i m e AdmlnistraUon !!aubsidieo. The C...lali<t'1 <1Jd. lted this mootb and the WliJon'• !1ends in April, when both ships ~:reach the mu.imum age limit ".:tor such payment! at 25 yea.rs. • :• e LmNlon Flu NO DECISION on Ibo pet;. tion will be made by Dou&)as 9 lnmates Ordered Identified IN ANCYl"llER developmen1 Thursday. the Q-iminal Courts Bar Aaociatlon, an organlza- Uon of more than 700 judges, defense attorneys and pros- ecutors, e1pressed its support of Farr by .awarding him their annua! journalism award. Jamee E. Patterson. presl- deotof the association. said in Los Angeles that Farr was Hlected for the award because of his "outstanding achievement." He added that the usoda- tion had voled to provldo the newfl1\8D with legal and ftDIJI. clal aid. "Jt is tragic that BUI Farr remaln.s an Incarcerated pawn In a dispute between Superior Court Judge Charles Older and CALIFO!IHIA the attorneys in !his case ln "'--------which the issues of freedom of the press and the ablllty of a defendant to secure a fair trial oonsis1ent Ydth the due pn» ess oC law becomes secon- dary." an IS30ciation state- fent said. Nixon's Kin 'Too Poor' SAN FRANCISCO I UPI I - We made it. folks. The earthquake predict«! for 9 a.in. Thursday -a tremor which was going to make San Francisro's 1906 shaker look like childs piny - failed lo materialize. mE UNIVERSITY o f California seismograph slat\On across the bay in Berkeley said the San Andreas fault didn't even "'iggle al the ap- poinled hour. '' ..• REGARDLESS OF SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A Of course. self-styled quake how lofty the court's motives California welfare recipient predictor Reuben Greenspan ~. they become despoiled who iJ a first C'OU!in 10 Presi-had admitted last "'etk that when conslitoUonally im· dent Nixon says he and his his calculations -based on permissible methods are used eclipses, gravitational pull and to secure compliance with an v.•Ue ha\•e been invited to Nix· geology -"·ere faulty and otherwise valid oourt order," on's Jan, 20 inaugural but withdrew hi s forecast. they added. Cfln't afford to go. Greenspan, a 67-ytar~ld Patterson said the award Phillip Milhous of Cedar recluse, didn't take up Mayor would be presented Jan 24 dur-Ridge in Northern California's Joseph L. Alioto's invitation lo ing a dinner at a local hotel Nevada County and his wife tea in his offi re at his "and not at the Los Angeles Verlene draw welfare because predicted quake tin1e. newsmen. lie atroOe in a few stcond~ nftrr 1hc appo1ntt->d hour. noted th11t lht.' cha.ndl·hl·r nbove his desk wasn 't SllO\\'• ing, and then chatised Green- span. "WJo: CAN",. TREAT this ns a joke." he !!Aid . "It's rrtfl'.htencd a lot of pt'Ople " GreelSJX.Ul wilhdrtw h I s prophecy follO\Ving the diSB· stet'OU.'I Managua, Nicaragua , quakt. But a re"· of the local rt>s1dents "'ho had planned to be out of to"'TI Thursday mornmg left anyway -ju.st in case. Earthquake rxperts scoffl!d nt the prediction, insisting no one can prt'dirt lhe hour or day of a major quake. But they also noted that ,large quakes strike this • area periodir:ally. The further away the last one is, the soooer the next one can be expected. they SACRAMENTO iAPl Cr0v. Ronald Reagan and leaders or the le1:islnture have 111vited the 84 newl y appointed cOastal tone commissioners to 11 one dAy work shop Jan. 12 in S.1crumenlo. Voters created lhe one stalcwide and six regional coastal commissions Nov. 7 when they approved Prop. 20. the coast line lnltlatlve. The workshop agenda wUI probabl>' rover administralion. planning and procedures, the state's Resources Agency said in a ne"·s release announcing tJte invitation. The invitation 'A"a!I ISSl.K'd jointly by Reagan, Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti ([).Van Nuysl and stale Senate Presi· dent pro tern James MUls (D· San Diego/ the department ~ SAN JOSE (AP) -The San- ~a Clara County Coroner'& of- ,.,!flce said Thursday 14 persons :rtiave died and 1,00> otber1 :; made ill in the count b •"' ases apparen y to ~t.ndon flu . County Jail" they are disabled, Instead, the mayor hosted ONTARIO (AP) -A judg•t=:;;;;~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~=~~;~~::~~::~~~::~~::::~~;;~;_:~=~::~;,;_;;~, has been ordered to set a.side ~~n °of names or ~i:.~ SA VE 30% • 50% Au TO warned . said. Bronchial pneumonia ea.....i !trnOst ol the dealhs, a i:8pokesman said, noting that ~the virw: outbreak reached epidemic proporUons between ..,.Christmas and New Year's . • ~· Roses-!" •• '. PASADENA (AP) -Snow ::reu briefly here Thursday for the first time in 23 years, just -. three days after bright sunshine bathed the Mlh an-·:nual Tournament ol -. CParade. ~ However, the.re wasn't : .. enough to build a snow man. ~The snow storm began shortly !':after noon and lasted for '*nearly a half hour. But the snow melted as soon as it tooched the ground. e Efe.,tfon SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan has set March 6 as the date for a special elecUon in a San Diego state senatorial district left vacant by ekrlion of Clair Bw-gener to Congress. e Guard Fire SACRAMENTO (AP) -The fire which damaged the California National Guard Christmas was prob ab I y of nine Chino prison inmates who teatilied at a murder trial of two prisoners last fall . 111E STATE Court of Ai> PARTS peal ruled Thursday that the order issued by Superior Court Judge Richard C. Gamer was unconstitutional The ruling came on an ap- peal by the san Bemardino ~Telegram. the D a l l y Report in Ontario and the Pomona Progress-Bulletin. Garner had forbidden the news media to identify the nine inmates who testified al the trial of two prisoners ac· cused of stabbing another con· viet to death. The Oct. 30 order ""as to remain in effect for nine months after the verdict was returned. The judge had issued the order at the request of the district attorney, who said he feared the inmates might not testify if their names were published. Man-eating HAVOLINE MOTOR OIL , .. "' ~EIGHTS OIL FILTER WRENCH OR OIL SPOUT CHECKER AUTO ·c SPECIALS ME C HA NI CS BRA ND COOLING SYSTEM CHEMICAL S A NTl·RUST .t WATER, PUllP LUBRICANT STOP LEAi: .t SEALER 5 llINUTE FAST FLUSH ENGINE llEDIC $1f>1S OU a-o.~ Mil .. , PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY 9, 1973 3 0.000 MILE BRAKE SHOES ·-~..... 399 30,000 M1le1 All C:.s lnc:l..di"I Pr-VW ', A,./, GENERATOR S 10?.9 1---.stan..1~1-a..balter)'...<harger,~, -..~-.~-. ,----1~ ;. State Fire Marshal Albert E. By· police . Hole says. I ' l ..• Prison Strike HOLLYWOOD (AP) - A St. ' SAN QUENTIN (AP) - A Bernard dog trained !or attack dozen San Quentin Prison in-was shot and killed by police .. mates, the last holdouts in a when it returned to the Laurel "· work strike that started with Canyon home where it had .,. 1,200 participants, have been eaten part of its dead master's ·, placed in segregation cells, a corpse, authorities say. · "pri90n official says. Police said they shot the dog -All but 12 of the prisoners Thursday because they feared : wbo refused to work Tuesday it might harm children. ' · • morning had returned to their ealled -· jobs by Thursday, said Lee Police said they were ' De.Bord, prison inlonnation of· Thursday ot the home of • ficer. William Fields; a 63-year-old MGM sound department ,· e Kltt11 Hatek employe, by neighbors who • SAN DIEGO (AP) - A complained that the dog was ·. black sailor has been reduced bowling. ~ two pay grades and given a When officers entered the bad-<.'ODduct discharge after dog f J d being oonvlcted of aasaulting house, the e · two white sailors and rioting Investigators said Fields' body was in a bed and that he had aboard the airuaft carrier died about two weeks ago. Kitty Hawk. seaman Clevelapd Mall~ry. · One neighbor said the dog; 19, of Pittsburgh, conVicted wliich Weighed aboul lM Thursday .by Capt. Bobby D. pounds, had bitten two persons Bryant, in a special court· and killed another large dog •martial, was freed afterward during the past year. Officers pending review of his case. He staked out the home and shot had spent 59 days in pretrial the animal when it approached confinement. a short time later. Sign.~ Topple Nude Posters Banned -SAN EBANCISro~AP) -PoliceJiave.beea.ordered to warn aperaton ol Clipless night clubs lnnJght that tl1ey must Immediately remoYe nude pooters """' in front ol their premise<. Poiiee Chief Donald Scott ordered officers to distribute the warning after a judge relu.ed 'l'bursday to blo\'k a clty ordlnanee banning tho pooten ., requested by some tor> r.ss opera!Ol'S who eontended the law was unconslltutiooal. SOOJT SAID THAT POLICE will meel wltb ropre. senlaUvos from Ille eity planning deporlment and Ibo eity allomey's olllce on Monday to wortr. out a timetable for re- moval ol -largor lli(lllS which require use o1 eranee. All ~ lilns In the eity ""' expected to be ,.moved wtthln a month, IL Clem De Amicls, polloe pobllc alfain ollicer,aald. "'Ibis will be an orderly openlllon," De Amlcis aid. 1 "n ...,.•t he llke Prollibitloo -.. ,...,. nJlllllni alOUDd wttl! sledgtllemmen ""'"kin« -casks." Superior Qui Judge Ira 8""m J r. ruled 'lbunday that there wl1l "be ample llme to ralae the coostttutlonaf ...,.. .. all.,. an amot Is made under the ordlnaooe. BROWN WAS RULING ON a request to Issue • pre. limlnary lnJW1<1lon aplnst the law by a (l'O<IP ol North Bead> topless elubo. aub repmentati ... argiled that the ' law vtolaled conotltutlonal guarantees ol -ol speech. • Tho dilpoled ordlnanoe forbids displly ol .any pholo- graph or sip showhlg.111y part ol the human body wt><n the sign ""'"' custom<n !Or pla<oll where "!1.•rtAlnrnent is available. The ordlnonao bad not been enlor<ed for ,...,. wl>m John Jlarbaielata, a -ol tho Board ol SUpemsan, oimplllned -·prollfemllal .... -Qub ....... t""1 toot ""' Issue to tile -• ll!t Gall1111 CopGClly GfHt Fat Wo1hlnv ...... F• A-icon&. Popular 1 .. por11 LACE-ON STEERING WHEEL COVERS 99 Y! WESTIN GHOUSE AUTO SEAL BEAM •• All C..• ,.. Tr..dt• 884 CARBURETOR AIR CLEANER Fo• AMERICAN ""'' 1~ CHECKER ANTI· FREEZE 59 - --- - --------------=-=---= ~ -=:..--=--- ~--- 17"xl7" U';l'ILITY MATS A C, AUTO UTE & "CHAMPION Sftc •l•l-7 _., 79c ... SOLDER SEAL HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID p,. ar~ Am Dhc IJf1Ua B11a.Ja I.Lil. rHHHI Sl'-U MOTOR BATU Bnull II 0......01• j/ Off I LB. llECH AN ICS CHASIS GREASE I LB. MECHANICS WATERLESS HAND SOAP YOUR CHOICE NO LIHIT AT CHECK ER A UTO ... BUT l OR BUY A DOZEN ....... .. CHECKER LIFETIME ~!J~~~y 19?J Of r-p,....,.. THERMOSTATS 99' NYLON FOAM SE AT COVERS """'' 399 S.lld Or s.11 ..... d-.rc.-Of c.1 .... CABLES TOW MIRROR SP.E;CIA{. Won't Suotth "'""" v-c.-• fiolitlii ~' I ' 299 FU LL ACRO SS FLOOR MA 'I:S Flt1 ~'' A-ICOfl C..• I.a_... c.1 ... I ·-. {!,I ~ 1._. : ... =-•"'I :;n--:r.:"" • ..i,. --::!" 1 AMP . BATTERY CHARG ER ' "' 12 : Vol! Sy1M111• Rtt•liw '·" 499 T\JNE·UP !(IT - HERCULE S ~IFETIM E .,... U..A.RA.NI EE nEAVY DUTY SHOCK AB SORBERS c;..,,ontffd Fw Ti.. Lf'-11-Of YO<J1 p,.....,, Cor BUCKET SEA T CUS HIO N c..,11-1111t coi.1 399 ALTERNATORS Cou 16?2 ALL AMERICAN DWELL TA CH ::::=;iTESTER O'At._I ... _ GR EASE GU N MODEL 110 R•l1lloble Eo1y To 0,-otto forH-, f• ... Sloop 398 K",.Y-RIM S-th Md Yow Looi'Lowl -·-6"" 12 Volt Sy1h111 F~ p Fw p.,.111 ... "'"-.... GrOUfld s,.., .. R.•1· ''·'' 9~~. (09,._,, Al Prk .... 11, To l !J,(1(1 111t • ., ... ,. 102! 1 01 PIECE TOO L SET · .................. Phone 645·8264 111 EAST 19th STREET, COST A MESA s::; :~u~: JUST OFF--..EWPORlltVD. -IEHIND MESA '.fHEATRE ··-......= Sn.kif 'f ..,=-...-- 1,1.,,.' ' I • .. . DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Acti·ve Year for Mesa com Mesa Mayor Jack Hammett calls 1972 "a year ol action .and progress.'' The acrompllshments of 1972 are numerous. Res!· dents were assured more breathilll space with the ac- quisition of the Fairview Park site. Coola Mesa l>e<:ame more beautiful through Installation of land&caping on city entrances. Jt became safer through the construction of bicycle Janes, the widening of roads, and the forma· Lion or a new animal control department. But 1972 also was a ye a r of vexation for Costa ~1csa. 1'here were many uroblems left unsolved and much of Costa Mesa's work in 1973 will be lo tackle those leftovers. Perhaps the most crucial of these are traffic and freeways, two persistent and interlocked headaches for the city council. Costa Mesa needs both the Ccrona del Mar F'reeway and the Newport Freeway extension to take the traffic off its surface streets. But so far civic leaders have been unable to win an early financial com· mitment on constructiori of either !rom state highway officials. Another thorny problem concerns zoning. This is especially true in the north Costa Mesa area where Mesa Woods homeowners are concerned about being choked off by apartments and commercial-industrial complexes. A reduction in density there was suggested in 1972 but action has been delayed twice. Zoning is also the concern of Costa Mesa city plan· ners who say that the old ~1-1 (manufacturing) zone o be updated. or perhaps be scrapped in favor of a broader I (industrial) zone which allows such uses as offices and warehouses presently prohibited in M-1 designated areas. rules which will end the sign confusion in Costa Mesa's commercial areas. ' And linalty, the problem-solvers of the city will have to give some thought to the feasibility of the Costa Mesa marina project. The vision of an Orange Coast versi.on of F'ort Lauderdale was revived in 1972, but it Is still only a dre•m . The challenges of 1973 aren't impossible, but they do Jay a tough road ahead for Costa Mesa city govern· ment. B11t Wltel'e Do Buses Co? For years, Costa Mesans, like residents of other Orange County cities. wished they had a public trans- portation syste01. Thal system, though still rather mod- est, is now beirig furnished by the Orange County Trans· portation District. Now there are thre""e bus routes serving Costa Mesa (there soon may be a fourth running from Bethel Towers to Orange County 1i1ed.ica1 Center) but appAienUy rela- tively few people know hon' to use the buses. The problem is that the bus routes and schedules have not received wide distribution in Costa Mesa . Bus stop signs posted by the city show where they halt but don 't say \Vhen and where they're going. Obviously, the only way to remedy the situation ~ to place a scheduJe into the hands of every potential bus passenger. And that is exactly what U1e Costa Mesa County Water District is considering as a pubUc service ......when...iLmails...out-ne.xt-.rn.onth.'.s....bills. There--WilLbo-a--t-----Jt' bus schedule with every bill. 'fo further encourage use of the new public trans- portation system Costa Mesa in cooperation with the county might consider placing these schedules under glass and attaching them to lhe bus stop poles, as is the ""' ~ .,.... _J :·~!.> ~ . Left in lhe 1972 Ille was another imporiant prob- lem: How to reduce the visual cacophony of advertising signs without hurting the businessman. The prese.nt si~ ordinance, suspended under a 180-day moratonum, 1s unworkable and will need lo be replaced this year by practice in some European countries. Both of these measures could help the county's en- try into public transportation become a success. c ''CHEEP. UPi SJ~. SOON YOU'LL se"z1P1'1N~ ALONia AT (,00 ('1.P.H:'' A Lovely Old World of Musical Fun ~YDNEY J.HARRISJ Dear Gloomy Gus U It isn't,, against the Jaw to change oU and empty car a.sh tray.!! ln the K·Mart parking lot, It certainly should be! Talk about pollution! R.E.A. llllt ...... nfllCt'I rMCtlft" ...... "" --'" .................. ..... ·-"' ,...... 19 OltM!f Ou .. o.flY Piiot. LBJ's Accomplishments The passing of ll arry Trum:in. who left the White Hoose 20 year.!! ago In a hail of abuse, is a reminder that president.!! orten go unappreciated until after they are gone. Today, for example, historians rate lhc spunky Truman among America 's 10 great- est presidents. Down on the Ped- ._.,__ cmales • .anothcr for- mer president 1!! mourning over the way public opini()n hRs turned ;1galn~t ttim. \Ve havf' tx•cn timong th()S(' "'ho h.'.1Vt crili('u:1"l'l Lyndon John.<>0n for hi.s handling of tJ1c Vietnam \\'&r. Bul after the war cloud~ C!\1ar nway, history may also look kindly up()n LR.I. For 110 olher president pushed through so much social leglslalipn Here are n re~· of lhe mlltstooes he left behind whtn he retired from the White House: -MEDJCAllE: For millions or senior citizens, medicare bu become so im· portant lh1t ll.9 absence would be regord· Quotes Ptltr &1. Flanigan, Prt1ldenllal aide rot, l'.Dtem1Ulnal Economic Affairs - "Whatever procress la made In the area of tr1de1 eltber with the new mark!?f.s of the OommunJat world or with our ttldJ. jlooll rree martcel lr•din. partners, It bat rBIK'I than an economfc meanins ; It m\llt be .een u part of the 'wtb of Wlkd ~ that lcada to wwld illltllffr.' ed as a vlolatloo of the fourth com- mandment, "Honor thy father and thy mot.her." -·CIVIL ""RIGHTS: fwo ... epic meas- ures, the Civil Rights Act of t9fi4 and the VoUng Righl.!I Act or 1965, are regarded by black leaders RS the greatest advance in social justice since the Eman- cipation Proclarilatifin. Thoughtful black leaders mention Lyndon Johnson's name in the same breath with Abraham Lin- coln. -EOUCAnON: tAJ deserves credit for probably the most sweeping educa- tional ltglalaUon In history, which has brought an educaUonal revolution to this country. Today, lt's taken for granted that any qualified American youth can get a college education through grants, loana or jobs. This wun't true In 1963 when most middle-Income parenta wor- ried about how they Yt'eff: going to educate their chlktren. The coUege populaUon bu doubled since LlJJ's reforms became law. All in all. 435 piecu of basic legl:slallon were passed under LBJ. Moat plea.sing to him. no doubt, ii that none ha.1 been repealed: nearly all ha.., been added to: and many appear In both party plat. lonna. Mllliom of old people, bl1d< cttl!ens. young people. -and ev"' the pew because of tbt freedom ol lnlormallon Ad -fboWabe lhllful 11 ~1ooe17 man down ln Texts. · More Prudent to Plan than Block County Must Face the .Growth Issue To the Editor: I reccnlly wrote to the editor ex· pressing my concern lhat we, here in Orange County, should address ourselves to the growth issue and get on with solv· ing our problems. It was and ts my con- tention that the population of Orange County and olher attractive areas, will conlinue lo grow and that no acceptable way has yel been found to slop a people's migration or their desire to procreate. This being the fact, I suggested it might be more prudent to plan for growth rather than spend our energy stopping power plants, highways, utilities, water WELL. AS ONE miebt expoct, the answer to my observations, both in a later "Lette!'S" column and personally communicated to me. dealt with me and the organizalion I represent rather than the Issue. ity motives were questioned. The motives of those I represent were suspect. But there was no attempt to deal wilb the issue of growth or the challenge we all face. That's a sad comment. It reflects on our inability to face social issues and solve our problems. Instead of trying to identify lhe problem and search for solu· lions, we become overly c<lncerned v.·ith the advocate's race, religioa, businw or associates, or else we try to find a con- venient devil to blame our problems on. PEOPLE LAMENT the fact we can walk on the moon. yet can't solve our simplest social problems. NJ David fl.1oynahan said last year, going to the moon was easy compared to solving a social problem. Everyone readUy agreed thal the moon flight problem I.hat had to be overcome, was gravity and friction, Social issues are di!ferent. People can't agrt'C on the cause of those problems. They 1vaste their tinie questioning each other's n1ot ives and looking for a devil to blame. Thl:!y cannot perceive the cauge of the problem .. indepcndent of the different pt.>op!c involved. The quality of the future environment \Ve shall all share is too important to ('ach of us to allow this pattern lo C<Jn- tinuc. There are no devils, eilher in business , industry, labor or the utilily companies, that are the cause of our en- vh onmental problems. There are. however, some very complex problems of gto\.\1h and pollulion \\'hich Y•e au share, and which must be objectively faced and solved If ~·e are to make any significant social progress. -GlbBElR'I' W7 FERGUSON· Executive Director, CEED \f/teel.-halr Life To the Editor . A belilted th<lnk you. to Allison Decrr for the article, "Barriers Faced" in your issue d;ited Dec. 22. \\rilh my wife being confined to a wheelchair, we are very familiar with the problems facing Mick SpenC()r in his everyday living routines. l\'E \\'ERE very impressed with a pro- gram . r~enlly introducC!d ln Great Bri· ta.In, lhat allows for those in wheelcbain, Isn't It the Trutl1! ' ' By CARL RIBLET JR. One advantage among man7 that the hachelor man or woman enjoys la to sleep with t\\'O pplows, one to rest tho heaJ upon and tbe other to punch lnto shape without kicking tho cove.rs oft or being told lo go snore down tbe hall In the sp•re bedroom. "u11<gl1 and the world ia"l!lu with -,,..,._llJld w .. 11ttp,.um,." -'-Author Unldtntl/i•d MAILBOX Letters from readers are welcome. NormaUy writera should convey their messages in 300 words ar Less. The right io condense letters to fit space or ·eliminate libel is reseroed. All letters must include signature and mailing address, but 'uimes may be withheld on request if sufficient reas~n ts apparent. Poetry wfll not be "'00 drive autOmoblles, to park in restricted areas. A metal plaque, about t"•elve inches square; Indicates that the car Is being parked by a handicapped person. In major cities, like London. this is a true blessing to those who 'want to do for themselves' some of the things that are natura l for those of us who walk, like shopping. business appointments, elc., ""'ilhout ha\!lng to park a block or t"'O away. This approach is also under con- sideration in other counlries on the con- tinent. WHAT A GREAT gill and lift ihat n·ould be, to our returning servjti!men, and othen still restricted lo wheelchairs, if our great state could institute such a program .... better still if it could go na- tionwide. Great Britain ls also thinking about · free use of telephones and the mails. lt is estimated that by the year 1980 (and these figures were related to me by a Jeading ·wheelchair manufacturer), there will be 1.8 million people in the United Stales. who will be pennanently confined lo a 'jchalr." A large figure, but still sina\J enough for the above projects to be "Ol'ked oul comfort.ably and financially . TlfJNGS ARE getting better for the hnndicapped person, but I do \vish that those building new motels. offices. airports, restaurants, etc., would confer \\'ith a handicapped veteran's hospital. or hunt up someone in the neighborhood \\"ho is confined to a wheelchair, and gel their views, chair measurements, where the W-C should be located. handlebars for th<. showers. rami; heights, elc. Thanks again for that fine article. ARTH UR W. HAMPTON Earpl11gs~ To the Editor : Had some ideas for the opposition lo police helicopters in past months but il didn·l come into full focus until discuss- ing ear plugs with a sporting goods salesman. llE SAID he had to use wax ear plugs for sleeping. He had a cho.ice o( the ~r as the police helicopter passed overhead about every 45 minutes during the night. My reply, "In our generation quite a Hllle before your time we ~·ere at least able to teach our dogs to slop barking \.\'ith something called discipline. Probably it is a quaint virtue but you'd be amazed at how many owners could teach it to their dogs today ." TIIE REPLY, "That's what you say, I can 'l tell my dog to shul up .. , he's big· ger than me !" Seems kind of self-ex· planalory. Glad he isn't a neighbor. Anyway \Vhocver you are. Happy New Year to !he man above in the whirlybird. PAIBICK M. ROYCE Rae/lotion Ua:ard To the Edllor: In bearing action conducted by the Atomic Energy Commission on proposals to build two -largest ever constru¢ed -experimental nuclear reactors al san Onofre, the utility companies .have declined to give responsive answers to vital questions concerned with public safety. IN EST ABLISlfED ptocedures of the hearing process, Capistrano Bay area residents known as Groups United Against Rad!ation Dangers were granted by the A EC the right to ask and to receive ans\.l.'rrs under oath to questions posed in printed form to the applicant utility companies and the AEC staff. GUARD has devoted thousands of volunteer hours to the study of atomic reactor safety problems. The 33 ques· lions were carefully drawn to elicit DDT Ban Questioned -.,, . --- Few chemical substances h a v e generated as much passionate debate as has DDT. Praised and condemned with cqu:il fervor , the pesticide has been a key weapon in the fight against disease-car· rylng and crop-devouring insects over the past quarter-<enlury. But the DDT era Is about to come to an abrupt end in the Uolted States. Starting thia month. virtually all use of DDT in this country w111 be prohibited. WlWAM D. Ruckelshaus. ad- ministrator of the Environmental Protec- tion Aa:eocyt announced the hen last June. The deCislon capped three years of governmental inquiries, including seven months of hearings. DDT. It was con- cluded, P08ed "an unacceptable rlsk. to ma1i and bis environment. '1 But the ban cfoes not apply to public health and quarantine uses of the chemical. nor lo \hree minor crop uses tor which no tf. fectlve pest"°ntrol alternatm: is cur· rently avallablo. Undet cmlln · ci>n- cf;Uona, Dll1: may be used on ill'C<ll pep. pen, onions, and stl'.ll'ed sweet potatoes. Moreover, lhe EPA order dee1 not.-affect the manufaclure of DDT for export. Ruckelshaus' anoouncement w a s greet ~th j ea:. vironmentalilll and wllh dlllnay by_ EDITORIAL RESEARCH many agricultural e11:perts. The case for DDT was eloQuenlly set forth by Norman E. Borlaug, father of the "Green Revolu- tion ," in a November, 1971 address be/ore a conference of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. JI agriculture is denied the use of DDT and similar chemicals '"because ol unwise legislation lhal ts now beloc promoted by a powerful group of hysterical lobbytsts who are provoking fear by predlcting doom for tho world through chemical pol3onlng," Borlau1 wlmcd, "then the world will be doomed DOI by chemical poisoning Wt from starvation." TIIE EPA and other government agen- cies obvlously believe that will not hair pen. O\:i;:r the nc.it t.bree years, I.be Department of Agriculture, the NaUOnal Sclmee Foundation and EPA plan to spend around S20 million to develop Im· proved pest -m&""iement ledmtques. Tltae etron. will be clotol,y watdled by the 111pporten and ._11 ol DOT. Boib aliteu'Ullze. thal11>vemmeot edlclt can always be ruclnded. essential information requested by school. city state parks and high"'ay J.iatrol officials. and by engineers \.'.'ho are concerned thal the applicants are unable to produce pro\·en reactor safety systems. In good faith. GUARD volunteers donated lhe lime and money to produce and duplicate and mail all over lhe U.S. as instructed by the AEC. 40 copies of the questions. The utility companies returned evasive ans·sers. S0~1E OF these questions have been posed by GUAllD and by community of- ficials for more than lhree years. Whether . lhe applicants do not have th e vide it unless or u:iu1 "required" by the AEc.ta..do.,.so,..lhe.y...condemn-themsel\1es in either case. Much or the basic information asked should have been m:ide public before construction permits were approved for San Onofre Unit 1, but these questions or distance of hazard or the most serious accidents {described by the AEC as class 8 and 9). time available for evacuation. length of time evacuation would be necessary, and adequate detail of pro- cedures in the evenl of a disastrous ac - cident. have not been provided to th e public or to community officials. SAN ONOFRE I is now operating 11o•ith an emergency core cooling system which f. Jed in a series of model tests con- ducted by the AEC. yet the utility com- panies have not provided the hazard facts necessary on which community of- ficials could attempt an effective evacua- tion or persons wilhin 25 miles of the plant . We conlend that the refusal to answer these questions_ is an act of contempt against the foundation purposes of the hearing process. an attempt to evade that purpose and lhus negate it. LYNN HARRIS HICKS. Chairman Groups linited Against Radiation Dangers S1orl.: V11s.-ie11llfir To the Editor: I am respond ing lo !he letter written by Shelley \Yaish "'hich you pubilshcd on Dec. 28. In her leuer. Mrs. Walsh sincerely pro- posed that the stork theory be presented in the elementary school scicn<.·c text· books. She made her statements in view ~ lhe f~ct t~at ~jpecial s:reation Uleoi:y. ~·!If&e 1nclude<J in the science tcxtboc:.:. It is evident that Ms. \Yaish has con- lused theory v.1ith scientific fact. The hu,ma~o:'7producti\'e process is accepted sc1ent1flc fact , thereby eliminating the stork theory. In the case of the creation process. all hypotheses l'lfC only acccpted as theory and none are accepted a:i; scien!lric fact DAVID PfEILER ORANG! COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. Weed, l'ub11.$her Tl1oma.s Kttvil, F.d1lor Barl>aro Krei bith Edaonal Pogt. Editor Tht' C'dltnr1nl 1>111?.t or tht O.ily Pilot ~ttR! tn Inform &nd 1tlmu-lt1t~ rcadm b)· prese nllni:: lhi'i rte\.\Aplptr't oplnton~ 11n9 rom- monLAr) •ITT-lQJH<t ol lnlcrt'lt end ai11nl!i cance, by IJl'U\"ldin1; a forum for tht' expt'C'55lon of our readf'rs' oplnhlltl. and by pb'~nllttg thf' divenu:~ vl~1pOinU ol lnfBtmM nb- ser.•crs and 11fl(okesmC'n on 1oplci of tht" dly. _ _,Fri~ day, Jan~3,_.1973 .. - -• VI \ , .• DI 0 ·0--h ' I \ I ( 1' VOil to ti ~ the c: 26,' the Rob , G Jen olfi• San a ed : list ~ lion Can '11 ~ offk Boe . ,) I .1 •