HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-12-20 - Orange Coast PilotI
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DAILY PILOT Y anlaees Strilae Out
* * * 10' * * * In Hiring Manager
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 20, 1973
YOl. "-'"°· »4. 4 s•CTIOfilS, ~ PAOll (Seo Sports, Page 33)
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1960s' Teen Idol Bobby Darin Dies
Sauna' Ordeal Blast Causes Crater
Daughters ··:Say l
By TOM BARLEY
Of .. ~tr l'ltll .,...
Two 0£ Maria Parson's four daughters
testified today that the family-oriented
mother they knew before the alleged
sauna room incident of ?t1arcb 2, 1970,
no longer exists in the Anahe~ home.
Both girls stated from the witness
stand in the Orange County Superior
Court trial that Mrs. Parson, 49, is
Invariably in a "zombie-like" trance
before-the' tetevi:iion set when they return
home from school. ·
Attorney Marvin Lewis, Sr. claims
the alleged ordeal in the sauna room
of th e Holida y Health Spa in Orange
for the Jisychlatrlc transformation in
his client. ·
Lewis claims in his $1 niilliOO lawsuit
a'gainst the spa that Mrs. PanoD has
become thfte women -sex hungry
Marla who selects ber mates from local
bi:rs, remorseful Betty who bitterly ~ts Marla's escapades and the
llUbmarged real seli ol Mrs. Parsoo.
Jessica Parson. 16, lold the jury that
the only variation in her mother's a~
pathetic attitude to lite .comez when
she decides to go out alone for the
evening.
0 1ben her face lights up," Jessica
said. And' the Anaheim High School girl
described with reluctance for the jury
her mother's pn!!ellt-d1y lcmdnees for
minbklrts, Ugbt, tow-cut blouses and
"cheap, fancy clothes."
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Both Je>sica and Mary Paulette
C.ut
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Weather
U11 be cooler Fridor.~"""'1ing
lo the weather .....ice, witb bigbs
in the low 71111 lnlalld dippin1 lo the
upper IDs at the beadles. Some
hlgb -but mostly lair
lltiol.
INSIDE TODAY
• If llO•'rein obGnduned dog, ~our chance of finding •a home
are probGb b<U<r jn Hunting,
to-n Bea.oh han m1~here elte.
See 1toru1 Page 10.'
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Parson, 15, testified that the mother
they kne:w before she allegedly was
trapped in the sauna room was a happy,
vivacious woman who made all her four
daughters clothes. · '
"We were always having parties at
oUr house," Jessica said. "Mom loved
family gatherings and when she v.·asn 't
(See SAUNA, Pa1e %)
Queen Mary
Financing
'Not Proper'
SACRAMEN;O (AP) -'lbe city of
Long Beach impro~rly spent nearly
$14 million in public tidelands money
in converting the Queen Mliry to a
museum-of-the-sea and ti:>urlst attraction,
state olflcials said today. ~1be State Lands Division rec:om·
mellded that i~ parent Lands Qxn..
mission sue the city to force It to
repay the mooey to the tidelands trust
fund. ,
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Ufll TtllllbeHi
THIS IS THE SCENE OF OEVASTATION CAUSED BY SPANISH EXPLOSION
Prime Minister Luis Carrero Blanco Killed, His Car Ripped Apart
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The city used $5'.6 million of its
share or tidelBDm oil royalties to convert
the shtp, the lengthy Lands Division
report said. Additional inveobnents we~
made by private oompanlea which held
Queen Mary eoncessiolll. Hijacker ···Takes Liq.uor, Of that, '13.9 million or 24.7 percent
directly benelltted ccmmerclal ventures
on the ship in violation .of state law,
the report said. D D • • M ~1 :i.:i.:::11~~1°ihe'"=:::=.1o~ umps river in ·esa
.contencllng all t\mds were spent properly -
and legally.
Spain's Carrero
Killed by Bomb
Fi'om Assassin.
Edward N. Gladish, the dlvtslon'o ex· By • ARTHUR R. VINSEL He told Costa Mesa _ Police Otrlctr
eart.tve officer. said the converted. ocean °''" Dllllf ru.t ''"' Harlan Pauley be beard .. a .. voice .beside
liner baa: become more oLad!Olnmel'Cial A liquor delivery' truck driver was him as someone stepped onto lbe running
venllD'e "wtth 8 maritime m ... uin *' kicked 9111 ol his van in Costa Mesa boanl and stariea to ~. but glimpsed
Its 1--'·-" • W"".....,"" morrung' by a kidnaper who -I be hi ~-a-.......__.._,, a .38 ca i r revolver at 's temple.
'lbat vlolates the original "*'Pl o!. hod hijacked his $3,000 load of Chrlstmu "Sllnd still .• .," be was told at tliat ·
the project in which cornmerdd opera-spirits at gunpoint in Alhambra. point, adding that bis abductor was
MADRID !UPI) -An explosion killed
Prime Minister Luis Carrero Blanco to-
day, hurling his car high into the air
as he was leaving a church where he
had,_ just attended Mass. The government ·
said later C&rrerb was ' killed by an
assassin's bomb.
dona -aldl as shops, l"lllllruta and Thomas J. Hyllengren, of West Covina, a black man who aeemed to be pulling
1 hotel -we re to account for less tore off a paper bag that had been the hijacking completely on his own.
, than a third ol lhlpboenl l)lllCI, be taped over his head u a blindfold and No accomplices joined him and . he
oald. nn to a teiephooe to notify Costa Mesa forced Hyl!engren to lie down on the
1be oat1o91< II bleak for the Qi.... . pallce sllortl,y before noon. carpeted floor of the blg late model
Mak'y" eftl' to'bec!ome the~ H:e1 wai unharmed in 'the ab4fuctlon, liquor delivery van after taping the
, venture Lot1g Beach bopod ll .,.,...., wt.lcli be Mid spanned what seeJ)led brown paper bag oVtt.his.head .....
Gladl.Jb said. to be1 several hours after he was con-The victim, an employe of the Milford
1be report Bald the lltate' ........ ..,.., .hwted at jU11polnt during , his first Company a" distrihl1tlon firm ·head-
sider c:uttlng off lurtber ~ of oil · ·"rdlndl"'ot-"tlle"day''1ii'1M· slin Gabriel·' quarter;./ In 'Verndn, 'laid he .Wai
revenueo with Long Beach "oo the V1U.y. threatened but not injured during the
grounds that this city hu demomtrated lfyllengren said he was very slowly long ride over various routes to the
no need for. thll publlc moaey for proJ· maneuvering his yan lull of liquor into Orange Coosl
ects ol otatewide interest." ,1114 oliq • lleblnd . a ·store on Valley • , "LI¥. odown<··.wa¥ t!own .. ~· L don't
Oladioh's report allo oald there were Boalenrd In Alhambra when the hi· want to bear inother'WOrd," the lil}ICker
(Set QUEEN MARY, Pa(t I) jacking occurred. (See lilJACX , Page I)
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"The prime minister was the victim
ol an awssination, '' a government
spokesman said. '1We will release details
lhortly."
Carrero, 70, was killed when a bomb
blait hurled' 'bls car ·al:ross the roof
of lbe church. The church ls around
the corner from the u.s. Embassy.
Witnesses said the prime minister's
car was hurled against the edge of
' ·the..., rOof of' thi Cfuarcb, bounced over
It and landed on a second floor terrace
on the other side of the building. Carrero, ·tus driver and bodyguard
l"l'l.~~~-Uy "'• • • '"1e government ae th e arr
(See BLAST, P11< 11
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Singer, 37,
Succumbs
T~ Surgery
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Bobby Darin,
the brash ambitious teen idol of the
early 1960s who sang "Mack the
Knife" and "Splish-Splash" and married
Sandra Dee, died today after his second
open heart operation. He was 37.
"He never really came around after
the operation," a spokesman said. "He
was just too wea k to recover."
Darin made a number of_ records
that sold more than a million copies,
including "Dream Lover,'' and won an
Oscar nominalion as best supporting
actor in 1963 for his role in "Capt.
Newman, M.D."
His marriage to Miss Dee, OQe of
the teen idol romances of the 19&0s,
lasted six years.
Darin dJed at 12:15 a.m. at Cedars
of Lebanon Hospital, less than seven
hours after a team of four surgeons
flllished the second open heart operation
to be performed on him in less than
three years. -r
In February l~o valves were
inserted in Darin's heart, which had
been weakened by a bout of rheumatic
fever at the age of 8 .
During routine postoperative check!
last week, doctors sa.Jd they discovered
that on e of the valves was maliunc-
tioning. A new valve was installed
Wednesday in an operation that took
Darin was born Walden Robert Cassot-
to in a tough area of the Bronx in
New York City. In his early days in
show business, he picked up a reputation
as a brash, cocky kkl who got ahead
more lhrqugh his energy and determina-
tion than by talent.
In later years, associates said, J)e
mellowed a bit. ~
He burst onto the national music scene
in 1960, when his distinctively fast tempo
recording or "Mack the Knife" -the
sardonic ballad of an elegant .mug&er
from "The Threepenny Opera" by
· Berthold .Brecht and Kurt Weill -won
him one of two Grammy awards.
Darin iloted that two Grammys were
all that Frank Sinatra bad woµ, anil
said "I hope to pass Frank iii
(See BOBBY, P1ge Z)
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HOLIDAY TIDINGS
SENT BY ROBBER
EVANSVllLE. Ind. (UPI) -William
Bryant received a Christmas card signed
"From your friendly bank robber -
Richard Alsop.'',
Bry8Jlt is assistant manger of the
Midwest Federal Savings and Loan
Association here. '
Alsop Is serving a sentence in fe<lr.rat·
prison at Marion, Ill . after being .~
victed or \wo Evansville savings and
loan ro~rles ty;o years ago~~Judlng
one at Bryant's office in wblcn flJ.1000
was talen.
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t 2 DAILY PILOT S Thursday, Oectmbtr 2([1973
/Energy Chief
• • 'l'NiHINGTON (UPI J -Energy Chief but sa id If there is compliance with
\\!itUam F. Simon asked AmerJcan the voluntary measures he asked. ra·
motorists today to Jlrnit themselves to Honing may not be needed. ti.1eanwhile.
JO-&allon> of a we<k and sai<l·il everyone · ~al le9ders aoaght-today to
complled, gasoline rationing may be expedite passage of an emergency
averted. energy bill negotiated late Vlednesday
Simon, head of the newly crea ted
Federal Energy Office, also asked that MOV IES REACT TO FUEL
gaoo)ine stations restrict sales to 10 CRISIS. Story, Page 30
gallons~per customer. Both conservaUon GASOLINE INCREASE SEE N
~easui'es are voluntary -for the hme BY FEBRUARY See p 38 being. ' •ee
:~Simon told reporters that he ""ill make night by House and Senate conferees.
his recommendation to President Nixon They hoped to get the compromise bill
,out week on "'hether he thinks gasoline passed _rup approved as quickly as poss!·
ritloning might ultimately be necessary, ble, first by t.be Senate1 and then by
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.. Child·beati119
~.Marine and Wife ,.
' : ..... Held on
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\\·ife ·were arrested on charges of felony
'1Uldbeating late \Vednesday after police
.(Qund' their 2-year-old son wandering in
a. neighborhood bearing evidence of
severe battering and bun1s.
'.;·Johnnie Bernell Lessley, 21, and his
UPI Ttlffholt
Felony
wire. Sheila Looise, 18, were booked
at city jail before the dinner houi:.
The child, Jesse Jerome, was taken to
the cowtty's Albert Sitton Home for
dependent children.
Police allege the child bore scars from
bums on his forehead and both feet,
bruises in the area of his groin. a
black eye and nmnerous other bruises
and welts.
The case first came to light when
a man living near the couple's residence
at 116 Callie Dominguez phoned the
police.
Officers said Jesse had been wandering
arolDld the neighbor's boat building proj·
ect for tv.·o· hours before they were
called.
Officers initial attem pts to oontact
the family failed, they said. Mrs. Lessley
v•as not at home when the boy v.•as
found.
About an hour after the boy \Vas
taken into protective custody Mrs.
Lessley returned home and was arrested.
Her husband was detained a short tim~
later, police said. ,
The boys' mother was transferred to
Orange County Jail and her husband
was kept at the local .facility.·
Arraignment for the couple was set
to take place sometime today, officers
said. The youngster allegedly the victim
of repeated abuse, did not require hospital
treatment for the injuries, officers said.
The healed bums on the boy's fee t
were apparently caused by some sort
or long, burning ember, officers theoriz· ~. 0
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·'Self-rationing' Asks ·
tbe lIQUSe. before beading home for
a monthlong recess.
The bill contains power for the
Administration to Impose emergeoey
measures to deal with the energy criSis.
Under this authority, It could make
mandatory such limita tions as Simon
<Oiled f0<-as weft as gasoline rationing.
Some members of Congress insisted
that rationing was the....onlyJal.i:Jo.lutkfil
to gasoline shortages, but Nixon and
most advisers have been resisting this
as a last·resort mov e.
Simon said the President's decision
on rationing would be before the results
of the voluntary measures Simon asked
White Claristtnas
are known, but Simon lndicated that
any decision to turn to rationing would
be implemented only i1 conservation pro-
grams failed to attain conaervaUon goals.
Urging compliance with the voluntary
Jimit, Simon said: .. I am asking people
to let the 10 gallons last them a week.
I am asking them to stay within the
limit," U possible.
'jSome drivers \\'ill need more than
10 gallons, such as traveling salesmen,
or those who commute long distances
to work and cannot form carp:iols or
use mass transit," Simon said. '
"Thus, I am asking tMse drivers who
can get by with less than their 10-gallon
Actress Edy \Villian1s takes advantage of the warm Southern Cali-
fornia weather to flock her Christmas tree with "snow" under the
direction of Sam Palazzola, tree lot attendant. The weather', a winter
phenomenon in the so uthland. helps keep residents in shirt sleeves
and bikinis while sections of the na tion are suffering in below·freez·
ing temperatures.
share to do so In order that tho3'
who need more gasoline will have it
available."
.At the 1ame Ume, Simon announced
that u millloo bomb of military jet
fuel would be provided to JnttmaUonal
alrllnts "to help them through a crisis
period until the end of January."
Critics of the 10.gallon sale limit said
that drivers who dld not heed the request
to u.p conaumption to 10· galloos a
weet could clreum"""t the sales limit
by buying at mo"' than one staUon.
SlmOn said In a s!Altement that he
d!d not think "anyone needs to IUffer"
with tho 10.gallon voluntaey limit on
Jury Indicts
Huntin gton
Tax Activist
From Wire Services
A Huntington Beach woman who has
battled local school and city tax in·
creases has been indicted by the Fresno
Grand Jury on charges of conspiracy
TEEN·AGE IOOL OE AO AT 37
Bobby Darin Succ umbs
Fr om Page J
BOBBY ...
to obstruct justice in an income tax evcrything's he don('."
case. Later, he predicted that he ,·;ould
Claire Kelley and three other tax pro-be "a show business legend by the
testers were Indicted \Ved.nesday on thne 1·ffi 25." Fle refused to accept
charges of tampering with evldenc't in dates in New York City . he said , until
the trial last week of National Tax he could appear as 8 star in the most
Rebellion chainnan Jim Scott. prestigious roo111:5 in town, because he
The others indicted were Scott, a wanted to go home in style.
Fresno insurance agent; W. Vaughn Darin told friends that his father was
Ellsworth of Mesa , Arimna, and William a "small·lime gangster" who died before
E. Dexter, a disbarred St. Paul, Minn., Darin was born, and that his mother
attorney who faces charges for prac-was on ~·elfare v.·hen he ~·as a child. ticing without a license. ,'J'he Grand Jury indictment contends He was a bright student. and won ad·
·Mrs. Kelley and the others tried to mission to the hi ghly rated Bronx. High
place a document in evidence in a School of Science. and attended the
government exhibit that didn't belong Hunter College Bronx camws for one
there. semester.
J\.1rs. Kelley, who couldn't be reached But he learned to play drums and
for oomment today, bas been a member v•orked during his school vacations
of the Committee for Sensible Taxation in the Catskills, his entry to sho\v
in Huntington Bea~. business. In 1956 he started writing and
In addition to oP,posing most · school si nging commercials in New York.
and city bond or tax issues. J\.·lrs. Kelley He later wrote his hit rock tune,
has publicly objected lo paying income "Splish..Splash."
taxes. He met Miss Dec in 1959 \\'hen they
Jn one incident she refused to pay u·orked together on a movie in Italy.
her taxes in paper money, contend.in.'!: He was 24 and she. \Vas 18. They were
that ii isn't Jegal tender, and offered married Dec. I, 1960, jumping the gun
silver instead. on the scheduled wedding {"We just
'The Tax Rebellion organization claims \\'anted to get it over u·ith," she said l
that the government's method or col· by holding an impromptu ceremony in
lecting federal income taxes is un· a friend's apartment in Elizabeth, N.J.
constitutional partially because a strict at 3 in the morning, borrowing a ring
reading or the Constitution mentions only from one or Darin's boyhood rriends.
gold and silver coins. _,.,. -They broke up in 1~. ieconcil.ed,
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ASSASSIN'S VICTIM
Luis Carrero Bl1nco
From Page, J
BLAST •..
HIJACK ••.
~Rig-Car.I"-yingLoh_alt Load
Tips Over in Pennsylvania reportedly told \llin u the white van
zoomed down what Hyllengren said
seemed to be several different freeways.
Scott, convicted last week in a jury and were divorced in 1966. They had
trial of failing to file fede ral income Dodd 12 a son. . now .
tax returm for {our years, is trying On June 25 oL this year. be marred
to-have-hi:s-convictioinwertumedl=, -io<;nC--cA"n;;;dr.-reia:=:vi7:e'-a"'ge~ri', w, '=a;e!.g~a;'s~e~cr;;e~a~11~ .. ~~--
the grounds that a federal agent
burglarized his motel room.
Free ~n bond1 Scott today filed for
a new trial or a stay of execution. From Page J
SAUNA ...
o,o1J11cement that Carrero had been
@.i.,assinated more than nine hours arter !Us: death.
The 10-year-old admi ral, named prime
minister six months a g o by
Genera1issh110 Francisco Franco to share
the burdens of government, died shortly
a{t.er arriving at a hospital, the govern·
ment said.
Vice President Torcuato Fernandez
Miranda took over immediately as prime
minister. The explosion occurred at 9:45 a.m.
(12:45 a.m. PST) -at about the time
a trial of 10 underground labor leaders
v.tas scheduled to start in Madrid's Public
Ql'Uer Court. Leaflets have deen strewn
io:; Madrid in the past days in which
l!Jlderground left·wing organlzatlons an·
ownced strikes and unspecified protest
acO.ion for the day of the trial.
· ')'he defendants, among them a worker
ptiest and Communist veteran Marcelino
Camacho, were arrested 18 months ago
in: a l\1adrid convent where they allegedly
held a clandestine meeting. They were
charged with illicit association, and the
PrPsecution asked in a pretrial brief
that they be sentenced to temlS ranging
(tj>m 12 to 201h years.
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DAILY PILOT
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He was finally freed in a horseshoe-
shaped alley of an apartment complex
at 1887 Monrovia Ave., near 19th Street
in Costa Mesa, after which the hijacker
drove off at high speed.
1be driver said be ran back down
the alley in an attempt to get a glimpse
of the hijacker's getaway route but the
white van bad already di!appeared.
lrlvestigators said the search was com·
plicated by the fact that Hyllengren's
Milford Company delivery vehicle was
plain-colored, without any exterior J8bel
except for a small serial number.
Since inflation began sending the price
of food and liquor and other consumer
items skyrocketing, hijacking h a s
become an increasing problem.
Wednesday's incident, apparently pull·
ed by a lone .thief, operating on a
free-lance basis, 'ls the latest in a grow·
ing string of such cargo hijackings.
Lawmen in the Los Angeles area
\Vednesday announced the arrest of six:
more among about a dozen men
suspected of operating a truck hijacking
ring In Orange, Los Angeles, Riverside
and San Bernardino counties.
Suspects in that case were all black,
mostly from the Compton and South-Cen-
tral Los Angeles areas.
Investigators say that in more than
20 truck hijackings which have occurred,
the preferred merchandise is liquor,
cigarrettes or candy, which can be easily
re-sold. i
They are consumer cmunodities which
are difficult to trace compared to a~
pliances, vehicles and other items on ~'hich serial nwnber records are kept.
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Governor's Wife
Vacates Mansion
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UPI) -Declaring
that "our m3rriage has mt returned
to normal." Barbara Mandel, wife of
Gov. Marvin 1\-landel, moves out o( the
governor's mansion today , where ahe
has lived without her estranged husband
for almost six months.
The governor announced last July that
he was leaving his wife of 32 years
to marry JeaMe Dorsey, 36, a Southern
Maryland divorcee. J\.fandel vacated the
office residence at that time, moving
first to the Annapolis Hilton and then
to a nearby apartment.
Mrs. Mandel remalnoo in the mansion
and repeatooiy belltUed the governor's
decision, blaming It on the. lncreued
pressure of his oUic!-
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STROUDSBURG, Pa . (AP) -A trac-
tor-trailer carrying radioactive cobalt
tipped over today on Interstate 80, 10
miles west of here, state police said.
TrooperS immediately sealed off the
area as an emergency precaution.
"We do not know if there is any
danger, but we are not taking any
chances," said trooper David Guard at
the Fern Ridge station.
Investigators at the scene were at·
From Pqe J
QUEEN MARY ..
serious legal questions about the spend-
ing of 9.'.lme money in the conversion.
For instance, he said, the city spent
$1.9 million for an ins ulation project
actually worth only $400,000.
The thr~member commission was to
consider the report during a meeting
today.
The city bought the retired queen
of the British passenger fleet in 1967
with the original plan of converting
it to a dockside museum and tourist
attraction for $8.75 million. But project
costs soared as plans were expanded
and unexpected conversion problems
were encountered.
The report also disagreed with the
cootention of city officials that the proj~
ect is beginning to pay for itself after
being open to the public for two years.'"
During the first two years of operation.-
the Queen Mary project has···run ·at
a $3.8 million deficit to the tidelands
trust fund, the report said.
"The staff has prepared financial
statements based on information pro-
vided to us by the city and they present
a rather bleak picture," Gladish said.
While the museum itself bas made·
a profit, the fomdation that operates
it ls 11.6 mlllion behind in payments
on a 14 million loan ob!Alined to construct
exhiblta.
The city bas received no money Crom
the operator ol spechlllty r-urants and
only 117,000 from the hotel lease, the
report stat ...
"Not only Is the project not amortizing
the Jnvestnient -which was the intent
expressed to you and the Legislal!D'e
-It is actua11y not even self-sustaining
and hRS created a de/lei! in the Udelands
trust fund ,". Gladish said, •
"To guess at the future _ would .be
lJnpractical and 10111ewhat Irresponsible,
considering the track re:cord.'' be said.
tempting to determine whether the lead
casings protecting the cobalt may have
been split in the accident, troopers said.
State police said no one was injored
in the accident, which occurred on a
wet roadway during freezing rain.
The trooper said that cars in the
middle of the sealed-off area "are beihg
moved out as fast as possible."
Guard said that officials of the Atomic
Energy Commission and the
Pennsylvania Department of Health had
been notified.
The truck was operated by Cooper.Jar-
rett, Inc. of Philadelphia. The firm said
it had no immediate information on
the vehicle, and police said they did
not know where it was bowtd.
Stroudsburg is located in Monroe Cowl·
ty iii the heart of the Pocono M0W1tain
vacation area. It is about 100 miles
from Philadelphia and New York City.
Santa Claus
A 'Prowler?'
If things keep on like this, Santa
Claus is going to have a tough
time making the traditional rounds
next Tuesday night.
A resident of Irvine's Turtle Rock
development telephoned po l i c e
Wednesday night lo report a
~!er lurking around the home
>f Donna Balcoa, at 18712 Saginaw
Drive. .
Officer Frank De La Mater
quickly arrived to find it was mere.
ly a friend secretly leaving a
Christmas gift on the frmt
doorstep.
doing things like tha -she was working
fo r the church, the PT A or our youth
organizations."
Jessica testified that her mother today
Is almost always depressed and often
weeping and has delegated all her
houskeeping and kitchen v.·ork to her
family.
And both attractive girls testified that
M_rs. Parson will often reprimand them
for doing something that she herself
had suggested to them weeks or months
before.
"She hel~ me dye my hair blonde,"
Jessica srud. "And then lat('r on she
started yelling and screaming at me
because she'd just noticed that the color
of my hair had changed."
Both girls testified that they cannot
now approach their mother with any
personal or family problems of any
kind.
Nobody Sells G.E. Micro· Wave Ovens for less than
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I~
I
Starr Off er Quashed
Diedri ch Role i11-V ote Ripped by Casp ers
Dy WILLIAM SCHREIBER
01 ttl• Oah't 'Piiot Stlll ,
In an unexpected maneuver \Vednes-
day, Orange County Supervisor Ralph
'Diedrich coni.cred onouRh board votes
lo w11¥rnv.• the county's offer to buy
5.500 acres of the Starr Ranch in the
hills above Snn Juan Ctr.pistrtino.
~oard Olalrmtin Ronalj Casper~.
pr1n1e 1nover ol the Starr Ranch ac·
qu.isition as a major wilderness park.
r1ud later Oicdrich's action was "a
r~tribu liCIO for niy challenging his posi-
tion paper on agricultural preserves and
the future or Orange County
agciculture."
Caspers Tuesday pushed through a 3:2 rejedion or . lliedrich 's proposal to
dissolv e Ult Irvine Ranch agricultural
preserv<'s and end the tax sheller they
have set up. -
"~1r. Diedrich is obviously a very
poor loser and in this case the outcome
\vas unfortunate.'' Caspers said.
"lle's obviously a 1nan \l'ho doesn't
like to be crossed." Caspers added .
"I ~ese~t his using something in the
public . interest a!I n weapon against
another supcr\1isor. Thars about as low
as you can get."
Caspers said he .,.,·ill rely on public
opinion and poss ible action by the Orapge
County Grand Jury to reve rse the
decision and added he is hopeful he
can ~·in back the ,·otc of Anaheim
Supervisor Jlalph Clark to turn the tide
in January to save the land.
Thl' action surprised mosl rounty or-
!icials who y.·orked for months to close
the deal for the ranch along Ortega
Highy.•ay at a price of $4.4 million .
Diedrich, who 11•as joined in the 3-2
,·01e by Superv isors Robert Battin and
Clark. succl.'cded in freezing the $1.5
nlillion dO\\'n payment offered by the ·
county until after a public hearing in
January.
Diedrich said the Starr Ranch Foun-
dation. a ronglomcrate of 10 charities
holding title to lhe land, has had two
months to reply to th e county's offer
~oindexter was talking about1 retaining
"royalty rights" over the grave I
resources on tbe ranch .
"I told him last month we would
have to drop our appraisal down ac.
cordingly or the deal waa oU," Hen·
nessey said. "l thought that was tlie
end ol it but apparently it wasn't.
lfcMessey said the g'ravel resources
were appraised at about $350,000 but
Caspers said depending upon the method
of removal used , they could be worth
as much as $2 .5 million.
Part or the reason behind the county's
desire to buy all the mineral rights
was a plan to lease the gravel pits
to get some return on the investment.
Supervisor Clark said during the
discussion he wanted a public hearing
but wasn't sure or cancellation. ~le later
voted in favor or canceling the deal.
"I \Vas as surprised as you were
at Mr. Dicdrich's proposal but I felt
all the questions needed to be answered,"
Clark told a reporter after the meeting.
Caspers told reporters the action
depicts the po\ver of the "new majority"
on I.he board -Diedrich, Ballin and
Clark .
"II seems like some kind of muscle
gnme ... \Vhich just happens to be
partisan." Caspers said.
Caspers said he took his chances
defeating Diedrich's move against the
agricultural preserves but never dream-
ed punitive action agninst the Starr
Ranch \VOUld be Dicdrich's next step.
"J'm a poor loser on some things
but nothing compared to him," Caspers
said.
Caspers added he thinks the Grand
Jury wiJI step Into the issue if only
to study the mechanics of the unschedul-
ed agenda items Diedrich has slipped
in several times.
0 This type of thing really upsets mt ,"
Caspers said.
He also said Diedrich took him aside
after the meeting and told him "this
\Vas only I.he beginning."
"This has been a tremendous attack
on my open space goals for the county."
Caspers said. "Supervisor Diedrich is
clearly inclined «>ward urbanizat\on of
the entire county."
The Wednesday action is the latest
in a series of ·difficulties over the Starr
Rand> purehase by the county.
In September, it was le a r n e d that
a private development company, C and
E Affiliates of Anaheim was bidding
for the land, possib1y with Japanese
investment money totalling as much as
$6.6 million.
The rumor or Japanese interests was
never confinned but the C and E deal
fell through.
Supervisor Clark said today it hwas
nothing more than a sham by a non·bona
fide buyer."
The northern 5,000 acres of the ranch
y.•as donated by the Starr heirs to the
national Audubon Society after failure
of a $12 million deal offered by a
Penn Centr.al company to buy the entire
ranch several years ago.
.Starr Decision Causes
Dismay in Capistrano
and has not done so to date . By JOllN VALTERZA or control it the ranch were earmarked
.. I am also disturbed by rcporls lhat 01 IM c 1u, Pll•t s11t1 i de l 1 certain interests have bci:n discussing or ve opmen · acquisition of mineral rights on the land \Vednesday's \\rithdrawal of the coun-Weidner said that iii local city circles rr he s there never was a solid feeling of oon· for thf' i;:ravel deposits before the county ty's o er to buy l tarr Ranch hit fidence in the county negotiations with
gi::ls Litle," Diedrich said. hard in San Juan Capistrano -the the Starr Ranch foundation.
lie y.·ould not say where the-reports city most directly affected by any change ''Tbrou~ut the disomk>ns we never
came from but S.1.id any conditions like or plans ror lhe acreage. we re rtaUy assW'ed the ranch would
I.hat \rould be unacceptable to him . become a county park. \Ve beard st-g ·•1 d •t i.k th ii f th hol City Manager Donald \Veidner reacted '"'' on 1 e e sine o e \\' e expressions of desire on the county's
thl·ng " 01·ed · h ·d "I t'il · to -ws l"ednesd· ay afternoon \\'ith . rte sa1 · am s 1 in ..... ' part and that was all," he said.
favor of acquiring only the open space dismay and said the most immediate C.Oncern over added traffic from the
that i~. in im1ncdlatc danger of develop-effect or the apparent collapse in negotia· Starr acreage is still secondary ,
men!. . . . . lions would be renewed city efforts to however, to a current controversy over
lie also said he is still lttlSure-1f -file· a sphere-of-influence map. county plans to use Ortega to senre
so m.~ch ~'IOfley should be spent on The project first was tossed to plan-fhe new Prima Desecha Canada dilmp
land .. so rar from !he population cen-ning consultants early this yeaT. but site in the same region as the ranch-
t.ers: . . "fell to the back burner." Weidner said. lands. D1~r1ch s move caught everyone by ''This nloSt certainly would cause tht-The main concern is the addition of
surprise. "·oric to start up again on the map," thousands of vehicle trips a day on
It camr al the ve:y end of th~ meeting he said. the narrow, winding, dangerous highway
i-------'".-an...o~cnda_i!em followmg a ~ ~ment_._wbic.h has..haclit.s share __ w.hich-i&---a-state-.tboroughtare.--
m1nutc musical J)rcsentatloo by a rho1r or false starts. would denote the areas The California Division of Highways
from the Jop~in Bo~s Ranch.. . surrounding San Juan y..-flere land use has no plan5 fur any change! to the
. Ca~~rs said during the. dlSCUss1on be v.·ould directly affect the city . road until perhap! late this decade.
1s wilhng to ~l a public hearing on "And were the ranch to fall into
the mailer to force the charities lo private· hands for developrnent , the im-
make a de<'i sion. But he said canceUalion pact on San Juan \\'OUld be massive,"
of the agreement could negate all the \Veidner said.
work done so far 10\\'ard buying the Ortega Highway -already the focal
land. point oC disputes over heavier traffic
Caspers said he is of the opinion loads -would be the only highway
t~t. Starr .Ranch Foundalion attorney serving such a development .
Wilham J>o1ndexter has "botched the Thus, every resident of a community
deal up by trying lo make a deal on the Starr acreage would probably
for the gravel rights." rely on San Juan in one way or another
Assistant Orange County Real Proper-\\'eidner added . '
ty Services Director Joe Hennessey. who The filing of a map with the Local
has been tile county's key agent in Agency Formation Commission could
!he negotiations. today confirmed that serve to give the city nn added measure
Pot(ted) Tree -This four-foot high marijuana planl slls in lhe office of ilie Trenton ,
N.J., police headquarters, decorated wilb 10 red balls. The plan~ con-
fisca~ as evidence in a' drug case, was deconled as a Christmas
tree for the holichiy seas~n· by-a special service-unlH!etecUve.
./
Solo1is in Iowa
Miill Obsce1iity
State Statute
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) -Iowa
legislative leaders today began seriously
considering exactly what fonn the state's
ne\v obscenity statute should take now
that the Iowa SUpreme c.ourt has
overturned the state's 64-year-old law
barring obscene ex:hlbitions and public
indecency.
In a UR3Jtimous decision, the high
court ruled Wednefll:l~y that the existing
law is so vague that it is unconstitutional.
The ruling overturned the oonvictiOM
of thtte Cedar Fall! adult-bookstore
operators found guilty or allowing a
17-year-old youth to view an allegedly
obscene movie in a (:()in-operated
machine in May, l!m.
Chief Justice C. Edwin Moore, who
wrote · the opinion, said lhe 19'14
Legislature would bt responsible for
rewriting Iowa's obscenity laws. He said
lawmakers should have 0 ample time"
to study and rewr!IA> lhe statues, mating
t~ "specific and clear."
However, House and Senate leaders
agreed that · even !bough the crlmlnal
codes cornmiU.. bas done background
work in writing new state obscenity
laws, it may not be easy to reach
a t'Oft9ellU among lawmakers on the controversial lsoue. Jn addition, they
said, writing an obscenity statute which
will survivil nurrieroUs court tests will
be a complex and palnslakinl task.
Turban-weari1ig
Sailor 'Guilty'
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A sailor w)lo
wore t turban to wort as a member
of the Sikh n1llglon hu been convicted
of btlng out ol unKorm.
Jn a nonjury summary court-nw1lal
trial, Ronald S. Sherwood. 22, of Houston
....., found innoc<nt Wednesday of Id·
dillonal charges of dloobeylng onlen
and report!ng lalA> for .,or]!,
The judg<, Cmdr. Al"""1 D. Chrlslian,
oenltnced hlm to reduction ln rank from
petty olfietr to ,..man recniil, lhe
lowest pay Bfllde.
Sh.rWood said he eonv!<led lut month
lo Slkhtam, a 16th ctnlury olflhool ol
Hindullm wltlch requires lMlllbtrs to
weir luriJons conltOlltly as I oJcn ol
ttspecl !or God .
TtwrMll.y, December 2D, 1973 s DAILY PILOT :
A Christ11ias Toast
Lupe Ortiz, smallest baby to survive in history of Orange County
\Vhen born last summer, drinks a Christmas toast of for1nula offered
by nurse Beverly Noble, as main. ?i1rs. Angel Ortiz or Santa 1\na.
offers l1ug. Staff of Orange County l\1edical Center newborn inten-
sive c~re unit held a. Christmas party for their young graduates Tues·
day p1ght. Lupe weighed 1 pound, 9 ounces at bi1ih and was there
four months. She's now pushing nine pounds.
Crew Rescues
Stuck Tongue
DOVER , N.H. <UPll -Four
fire trucks responding to an alann
found, instead or a fire, a 16-year-
old bof with his tongue stuck on
·a signpost.
James Land got into the predica-
ment Wednesday while waiting for
the school bus in lO·degre e
weather. \Vhen the bus arrived.
the dri ... ·er didn't know what to
do. so 'he pulled the alann.
Firef~hters solved the problem
by poortng a gtass of cold· water
on Jimmy's tongue, separating it
from the metal post.
Mother of Six
Pleads Innocent
OCEANSIDE. (AP) -A 30-year-
oJd mother of six pleaded innocent
Wednesday to a charge of murder in
connection with the death of a 21).year-old
Marine.
The plea was entered in A1unicipal
Court by Edith ~1arie Brandt, who was
arrested in Denver on Dec. 13.
The 1'farine was Lance Cpl. James
E. Killius, who was stationed at Camp
Pendleton.
•
County Approves
Mission Vi ejo
Baseball Parks
Orange County supervisors have ap·
proved a joint powers agreement with
the Capistrano Unified School District
to construct l\VO community baseball
diamonds at the Viejo Elementary School
in J\.1ission Viejo.
Caspers told other board members
that the need for baseball facilities in
the area "has become overwhelming.
"It is my hope that at least four
ball parks can be constructed at schools
within the next year," he added.
The fifth district supervisor said coun-
ty funding, estimated at $5.500 for each
facility. would provide fences, backstops
and dugouts. 1
Although the ~'iejo-School is in--the
Capistrano School District, Caspers said
a similar joint powers pact will be
signed later with the Saddleback School
District for ballparks at other schoo!S.
Getty Trip Ve toed
. R~~lE (UPI) -The mother of kidnap
victim J. Paul Getty III. bitter because
the youth's billionaire grandfather refus-
ed to pay his ransom. vetoed a \•isit
by her son to the oil man 's Engr h
estate, a friend or the family said to y.
Mino1·ities ·:
Plan Raked
By _ Trustee
, . By FREDERICK SCllOEMEllL
Of 1111 Clll, Pli.1 IU•H
South Lagunan Cl:iy J\.1ilchell, member
of the state Board of Education, today
had so1ne sliff criticlsn1 or proposal!
lo hire 1nore minorilies and womci1
in Ca llfornin schools.
Speakin g from his honte. ~iitcheU said
1he proposals y.·ere "jockeyed around
lo appc~ the minority groupg.'' :
"\\le should get to the point when':
qu.111ity .educatioo is the im)X>rtant thing,"
said ~htchcll. "I !eel quite strongly we
stand a rc3! danger of. missing quality
education by lrying to cater to minority
groups just because they are minority
groups.··
"Pl'()plc should be judged on ability
regardless of t'Olor." he said.
'rJ!e . state board last \\'eek i;ave
p~·ehminary approval of 'programs to
hire more nunorities and women in
all Cnllfornia S(·hool districts.
i\ final public hearing and vote on
the ri1a1tcr \1'ill not take place unlil
Febrtwry.
~1ltchell said in many instances •a
job \\'ill be given to a person Who
is "qualified or qualifiabte. whatever
!hat 1neans."
"If lhey are qualiriable, they should
he hired on a temporary basis.
regardless of color," ?i.1itchell said.
~le said programs designed to hir.t
more minorities and women may ca.Yee.
reverse discrimination against other n8'6·
minority applicants. ,.
\Vhi\C on the subject or hiring prti-
ticcs. l\ttitchell said the slate needs i>
increase employment opportunities ·air
handicapped teachers, such as thou a't-
Uicted by blindness or confined tO~'a.
\vheelchair. • 1
"So1ne of these people make the rnOst
dedjcated teachers because they ~ ,
lintited in other activities. l f you ge t
n real good handicapped ·teacher tbit
<.'UIS ·the n1ustard •. it's a good inspiratiOn
10 lhe students," he explained.
In other matters. that came up befott
the state board, Mitchell said he finch;
some merit with a _plan to_allow studeltJ
to le-ave school at age 14. ~ ...
He suggested that some students over
14 mighl be better otf in vocatlOaal
cduc:'ation or apprenticeship prop:aols ~
rather than regular programs. 1"()f
course. it's something that must ~·~
eare£ully and logically evaluated:"
!\1ilchell said. '
The board "'ent on record agatiillt
reducing the 11ge to 14 from 11. :
Mitchell said he questions the eneraY
savings !hat could be realized by putting
students on a !OUMlay school week.
as suggested by one assemblyman.
ls raelt Wounded
To Get-Playho),:
TEL AVIV lAP) -Three thousand
copie!I of Playboy magazine, niidi
centerfold and all, are en route to Israell
soldiers wounded in the October war.
!\1rs. Ephraim Katzir, wife or th~
Israeli president. requested the shipment
or the men's magazine in a recent
conversation "'ilt1 U.S. Ambassador Ke&
net h Keating. · ··
from H.J. GA.RRE[
l •
with Si ncere best
wishes for a happy
holidey season.
H.J.GAI\RETT fU~NITURE
PROFESSION AL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
•
•
Open Mon.
Thurs. & Fri .. Eves.
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
' '
• If• DAJLV PILOT Thursday, Dt<:tmbtr 20, 1973'
Death T·oll in December Storm: Cl.ifull s
with
Tom
urf b in e
~ 1_:.~;.
~upervisor
P rops 'Gift'
' ,JIICKY TICKY POLlTIX' Our good
Orange County Board of Supervisors
i;ot a special little se renade yesterday
'41\en youngsters from Joplin's Boys
Ranch dropped by the board room and
offered a few Yuletide carols.
after that. Third D i s t r i c t
. fvisor Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton
~ his little Christmas present to
:people of Orange County.
moved that the board scuttle its
-planned purchase of the 5.500-acre
,r Ranch which. for more than two
now, has been envisioned as
· ge Counly's wilderness Park.
• part of his rationale, Diedrich sug-
ed that Starr• Ranch was too far
oved from our county's "population
er" to be spe0<Hng $4.4 million for
property.
u have to suspect. however, that
ould be difficult to ha ve a wilderness
these days right in the center
range County's population.
i; . yway, Dedrich asked !hat the funds
tiflrozen and a hearing be set sometime ~anuary on whether or not to go
... ad with the purchase. ~E WAS SUPPORTED in this freeze j:' Santa Ana·s Bobby Battin and
heim 's Ralph Clark. Fifth District
rivosr Ronald Caspers of Newport
ch and First District Supervisor Dave
er or Garden Grove voted nay.
aspe.rs, who has been' spearheading
park move. seemed particularly
ked by Diedrich 's unexpected and
upt attack On the Starr Ranch pro·
I.
on the race of it. you might
t that what we have here is
Uc where Caspers wants to spend
of park money and Diedrich want
save it.
ELL, NOT REALLY. It is more
rous than that. Some thinkers even
gest it's more aroma or partisan
'tics up there in our wonderful County
I.
ou see, you have to re1nember that
rvisor Diedrich trotted out a great
is just lhe other day in proposing
t all the Irvine Company agricultural
erve lands should be removed from
. _t special status.
;,tl'his, of course. v.·ou\d force the taxes
i on the open land and undoubtedly
!crate development -a condition
mly not be ter ribly appropriate
t now.
S IT DEVELOPED, Diedrich lost
t battle in another 3 to 2 vote .
h Caspers. Baker and Clark opting
the ag preserves at least at this
as his last maneuver of the old
r, Dit'drich got even with our Fifth
trict supezyisor by putting the kibosh
Caspers' hopes for a wilderness park.
Caspers claimed after the session
~Diedrich warned him that this v.·as
fy the beginning. Whatever that
means.
So it seems that the name of the
i;an1c among our supervisors is "if you
\'Ole against one of my big deals then
l"m going to vole against yours."
You shoot me down and I'll shoot
you down.
SO DIEDRICH GOT even. He has
l\\'O other Democrats Y"ho no doubt will
stick right with him in the voting on
our non·partisan supervisoriat board.
And the mai n thing is to get those
t1vo Republicans -Caspers and Baker.
But •Nhat about the public losing its
11·ilderness park?
Oh , never mind the public. Let them
cat ca ke.
Hunt Says Spied
On Gold,vater
WASHINGTON IAP I -Con\·icted
Watergate conspirator E. Hov.·ard Hunt
· has testified to the Senate \\·atergate
committee staff that he spied on Sen.
Barry Goldwater (R·Ariz.J. during the
1964 presidential campaien. The
Washington Pos1 reported in its Thurs·
day ediUons.
Quoting unnamed informed 500.TCCS,
the newspaper said that one source
described Hun1 as telling the in·
vestigalors !hat he and a team of
operatives undertook the survei llance un-
der directions of President Lyndon B.
Johnson through an intermediary.
DAILY ~ILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtlivtl')' of the Daily Pilot
is guar•1!1ttd
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T t"Phclnff ..... .,.... ,..,, Ar"! ....... '4f4h1
-•w• ,...1es ...ca _,, W ····• •• • '"*IUI ... ~-""""-a.Ill. ;..,. Na C1*'"51 ... ,..._ .... &....-. ............... ., .. .,.
..
From Wire Stn1ces
A deadly December storm stretcblng
from Jndlana to Colorado brought dea1h
and destru<:tion to the Great Plains
and much of the Midwest today. Traffic
was crippled in areas and hundreds or schools were forced to close.
At least 12 deaths were reported, bring·
Ing the week's tot a I of weather-coo-
ncctcd deaths around the nation to 34.
Five persons died In Kansas. 3 in Illinois,
2 in Missouri, and I each in Iowa
und Nebraska. Twenty-two persons died
earler in the week when a storm swept
up the Atlantic Seaboard from Georgia
to fl.faille.
Russ, Arabs
Pledge Help
At Geneva
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) -Soviet
and Egyptian foreign ministers pledged
to do everything they could to make
a suceess of the Aralrlsraeli peace con·
Ierence which begins here Friday. r
The pledges came from Foreign
Ministers Andrei A. Gromyko of the
Soviet Union and Ismail Fahmy of Egypt
as delegates begin arriving for the con·
ference. A high·level me1nber o f
Fahmy's delegation also told newsmen :
"We are not closing any door. All
parties must show elasticity and toler·
ance."
Eban said his government 's aim at the
conference was .. a peace agreement sign·
ed by all sides 'vhich \Viii bring about a
oondilion of coexistence between Israel
and 1ls neighbors."
Eban. leaving Tel Aviv ,vith Israeli
delegation, said peace for his nation
meant free passage instead of blockades.
cooperation instead of hostility and
mutual recognition of the sovereignty
of the countries in the Middle East.
GROMYKO, CO.C HAlRl\IAN w i t h
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger
of the histori c negotiations at the .Palace
of Nations. ~'amed that the talks would
be "very complicated.'' But he said
he hoped to see "good will and realism
around fhe conference table."
Gromyko and Fahmy met after dinner
\\'ednesday night. The Soviet foreign
minister told newsmen: "We discussed
subs tantive issues but I am not prepared
to say what lhe substance was.·•
The American and Jordanian delega·
lions were arriving here today, and
Kissinger and Gromyko scheduled a din·
ner meeting tonight.
King Hussein of Jordan fle1v to Syr ia
on Wednesday for what the Syrian ne,vs
agency <SA."JA) indtcated •\V as a futile
attempt to Persuade the Damucus
government to send a delegation to
Geneva.
Palestilie Cliief
Asks Terrorists
Be Gi ven to Hirn
BEIRUT, Lebanon (APJ -Palestinian
guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat is asking
Kuwait to hand over lh.e five Arab
gunmen "'ho killed 32 persons at the
Rome and Athens airport h-1onday so
they can "stand trial before a Palesti nian
revolutionary court." the pro-guerrilla
newspaper Al Moharrer reported today.
The paper said Arafat has instructed
the Kuwait office of his Palestine Libera·
lion Organization lo ask for the ex·
tradition of the gunmen, who Oew to
the Persian Gulf sheikdom in a hijacked
West Gennan airliner and surrendered
Tuesday.
The Palestinian ne"'s agency \VA.FA
reported lhat the PLO has asked the
Kuwaiti government to allow i ts
representatives to participate in the in·
lerrogation of the five terrorists.
BftfSlt of /fCoNtTt
William A. Do&rovlr, an ·auor·
ney for Ralph Nader, has per·
haps the reddest {ace in Wash·
in glon after beJng called to
court for playing •tlbpoenaed
presidential tape at party. "I
am very embarrassed," he told
the judgc. "I hope I'll never do
anything as foolish as lhat
again."
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Today,-an-eatlmattd 2501000 Easterner.a ol t e·Chrlatmas vac"itioi1Jan. 7. --...-
were 1Ull either homeless or without Snow forced the cbing of 'e St.
power because-of the torm. -Tem--Louis AJrporL -for-hout'L-and-caused
pe:ratures. hovering around zero, forced delays at Chicago's O'llare flekl.
many East C.oast residents to stay It was one of lhe heaviest snow storms
another day In emergency shelten, on record In Illinois and Indiana, almost
hotels, or with friends or relatives. paralyzing traffic. More than a foot
Hundreds of schools were closed of snow fell in parts of Illinois, lridiana,
\Veaneaday and today. All public schools Nebraska and Missour.
were closed in Omaha and Lincoln, Neb., Drlfta closed highways atonr. t h e
while 300 called off classes in St. Louis. storm's path from Colorado to Indiana.
Hundreds more shut down in Otlcago In Detroit, only 2,547 fans made it
and other smaller communities, and tri through the ice and snow Wednesday
Jndianapolis, Ind., schools were officially night to watch the horses nin at Hazel
closed Wednesday nlght until the end Park Raceway. Race track officials said
!hey losl1290;115. At Narlhville. Mich .•
Harness Race"'·aY, officials called ,.off
racesL
Thousands of motorists abandoned cars
front Indiana to Colorado. M a n y
rt~ldents decided to park their can:
nnd drive , )lUt lowid the public
transportation service also bogged down.
Cold weather arlpped mos1 of the
nation as freeze warnings were is.sued
all the way South to the Texas Gulf
Coast.
Tra£fic on Interstate 57 was backf:d
up for 45 miles ncross central Illinois.
A t ~I-hour back-up of trucks was
'Highest Integrity'
Vl"I Ttl.,li.tr
IMPEACHMENT PROBER
.·John M. Doar
Kissinger Meets
-Tho for 5 Hours
011 Viet Flareup
Republican Will Head
Impeachment Inquiry
...
WASHINGTON (AP) -John M. Doar,
a fonner assistant attorney general, \vas
named today 10 head lhe House Judiciary
Committee staff conducting an in-
vestigation of grounds for the possible
impeachment of President Nixon.
Doar, 52, a Republican, was appointed
to the Justice Department by President
Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1960 and slayed
on to play an active role in developiilg
the civil rigb!s legislation of the Kennedy
and Johnson administrations.
Since leaving the government in 1967.
Doar has served as president of the
Ne\v York City Board of Education and
as director of a private antiPoverty
organization in the Bedford·Stuyvesant
' area of New York founded by the late Robert F. Keonedy.
DOAR WAS CHOSEN by Rep. Peter
\V. Rodino (D-N.J. ), chairman of the
House Judiciary Committee, to head the
first impeachment inquiry aimed at a
president in more than a centlU'}'.
000.r will head a staff of about 30
lawyers, most of 'vhom have already
been hired and who have been working
for several u·eeks compiling infonnation
for use In the Impeachment investigation.
ln presenting Doar' at a ne,vs con-
ference, Rodino called him "a man or
ability and the highest degree of in·
tegrlty."
Rodloo said Doar ¥.'ill start hi s new
duties inunediately, organizing the staff
and directing the continuing investigation
in preparation for the return of Congress
on Jan. 21 after its holiday recess .
RODINO SAID the selection of a
Republican to head the staff v.·ill lend
a bipartisan tone to the Inquiry Into
poesible impeachment of President Nix-
on.
He said he made his choice after
an intensive search and a screening
process in which he was aided by
members of the legal profession, jurists
and the academic community. •
In another effort to b o I s t er
bipartisanship Rodino in vi t e d the
Judiciary Committee's sevei;:i senior
Republicans to join with its top eight
Democrats in an advisory committee
that will help detennine the course of
the invesUgatioo.
.
• I
uported on lnter.s~ JO ne.ar Ef· •
!Ingham, Ill'
"The drlvets a(en't J>i'ot~Ung, the
trucks ar.e.~· a state.. trooper:. slld,JeC~c:·
ring. to recent protest• by independent
truck drivers up&et by lowers~ lifniU
and higher fuel prices. , '
A stalled driver In Mwourl, D. H.
\Villlams of Warrenton, notnlnated the
occupants of a pickup truck that stopped
beside his car aS "the two meanest
n1en I have met."
Wllllam.s ~ aald ht assumed they in·
tended to help him bul, instead, U.,,.
pushed his car into ·a deep ravlile and
stole his wlndow scraper.
U.S .. W eatlier "
S. CaHfoMl(a
Guity winds •lld 1111mr teMPC:r•.111rn In tM
ut111tr toll .iono with rnornl119 '°"" cloud• Mtr tilt co.it wert ex.Pldld lo 11•9tl S.OUtllern C•lllornl• •o;i•ln Frklrv, tilt ltr1t o•r or winter. LOI A119t!n ll•d llgFI •mos •"II • h~FI nt•r 16 lod~v wllh 1 pr~lcl•d ovtrnlllhl low •' •I et ll'ICI Civic C111l•r.
\trrlablt-clo\ll:l1 lod•f, LI""' v•rl101• wll>dt ftlfl\I
IN mon..IM hovr1 bircomltl9 -I 10 aouth"'"ttJIY
10 to 11 k110t1 In 1/t1rnoons tocl•v •ltd Frlorr. Hllh
todrf 70. C0t1lll ~lfvrt• ranH from .Q lo n. lnllnd
11mH1.iu11'1 r•n" lrom .Q ta 1$. Wrlt!t" ltlTllHl"r·
lur• 5'.
S1n1, Jlfoo11,. Tide
St<ond Hl9h
!>ectnO low
Flrtl Hlth
Plr1! Low
S.Cond Hlth
Stu1"9 Low
THUltlOAY
PltlOAY
Sun RI-•:SS -.m. Seti 1:11 11>.m.
Moon 1tlse1 S::tt •.m. set1 l:s.t ''""'
l ;IO •.m. I.II
11:16 1.m. 2.1 l:l2 r .m.' ,_,
J;JI p."1, ......
PARIS (UPI ) -Secretary of Stale
Henry A. Kissinger and North Viet·
namese negotiator Le Due Tho conferred
loday for nearlv five hours in a second
attempt to sav'e lhe faltering Vietnam
cease-fire they worked out nearly a;
year ago. '
They met .for 2t~ hours before lunch.
then resumed" for -another l\\'O hours
and 10 n1inutes in the afternoon .
SURPRISE~ .. '
There was no statement . Bolh me11.
left smiling and waving. .
Both ~Tho and Kissinger smiled an<J..
\'l'aved · at ne\\"Smen and bystander&'
at the old ~1ajestic l~otel, where the
cease·fire ,~·as signed Jan. 27 by the
United states. North \1ietnam , South
Vietnam and the Viet Cong.
' . f
.t j!Oppjness
' ., I ..
'
That pact has been consistently broken
although the l\\'O men shared the 1973
Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating it.
Tho refused to accept the a\\•ard. citing
the almost rontinuous fighting si nce the
truce took effect.
· ts ·
ru'/11ufround16u!
The meeting \\"8S the second meeting
bet"·een \he two men since the original
ag reement. They signed a supplemental
pact last JWJe that also failed to bring
peace .
An estimated 50,000 persons have died
in battle in South Vietnam since the
pact \\'as signed. Only hoW's before Tho
and Kissinger sat down, the South Viet·
namese government accused the Com·
munists of the most attacks across the
country in nine months.
In addition to meeting Tho, Kissinger
planned to make final preparations with
Algerian Foreign f\.linisler Abdel Azi z
Boutenika for Friday's opening cf the
~Uddle East peace conference in Geneva.
Arriving \Vednesday in Paris after
a two-day visit to Portugal and Spain.
Kissinger called on alt four parties to
the Vietnam cease·fir e lo honor their
pledges and "'Ork for peace. t'
Paper Reports
Illegal Nixon
Tax Deductions
WASHfNGTON (UPI) -The Internal
Review Service has reopened an audit
into President Nixon's '"", •income ta x
returns for the past fo\tr y.ears because
he uodC?l>aid -apparentijt il\e.Bally -
by 17 percent, the Washington Post
reported today.
ACcording to the Post1 a tlfx accountant
who reviewed Nixon·s returns_ for the
newspaper found that the Pre:Jident fail·
ed to "adjust" his gross lnqome properly
by listing bis BMual ·~iOOO' .expeµse
account o! tile \ITOng llne, lncludlng
ll .. additional salary. As a' ·result,
he took more charity deducUQlll than
he otherwise would have been entitled
to, the Post said,
The Post said the error resulted in
an underpayment during the four yean:
oC more-than •131000, or 17-perccot..
of the flll,651 he did pay. For 1972
the newspaper figures show, Nixon paid
less Ihan hall of what he should have
by deducting more for charity than would
have hem allowed if the e1perue account
had been properly-noted.
-W orld-Nalional
News Also on Pg. 32
•
With so much of what we've all come to take for granted in short
. supply, we at Irv ine Nat ional Bank would just like to comment
briefly on silme commodities that we should never run out of. Like
happiness, love, peace and ki ndness. We beli eve that things like
a. sunny day, a snow-capped mountain and the laughter of chi ldFen.
are a lot more important t han an extra ta nk of gas, or an over-sized
steak. Maybe this holiday season we will all think about all the
good things around us .. :and be happy.
cJeason's flreeting.s Jrom
j
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Drutth Driving
State Jury . Says
· -Z'herg's -Guilty -
-LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
program requiring m o s t
owners or 1966-70 cara to in-SACRAMENTO (UP! ) -
Veteran Aaaemblyman F.clwin
L. Z'ber( loday lacod a man-
clal«y !lve<lay jall tenn after
a muoldpal court Jury con-
victed him ol drunken driving.
Z'berg, an e J glh I ·term
Democrat fnlm Saa-am<l)lo,
vlllbly Dlncbed w11<n the jury
relumed the Verdict Wed-
neaclay, VJaiting Judge Haven
Courtney aet ...,tencing !or
Jan. 11.
BECAUSE OF a similar
drunken driving conviction in
1969, the '7·ye..--old lawmaker
mllll aerve live days In jall
under atate law.
Z'herg rtlused to comment
San Diego's
Electricity
Bills Up
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A rate
incre&9e granted San Diego
Gas & Electric Co. will send
residenta' utility bills climbing
next month.
'l'1e company said the $23.I·
inillioo booct allowod by the
state Public Utilities Com-1 mission Wednesday means
monthly residtntial electric I
bllll in the San Diego area
will rile an average of $1.29,
or 10.1 percent, starting Jan.
I.
Gaa bllla wiU increase an
average ot 8 cents, or .a per·
cent, SDG&E said.
'l'1e utility said the llS.5-
mlllion electric rate increase
would pay l<r rising luel coots
and Ill upected 5 percent
drop 1n· c:omumptioo from
SDG6E'a -v comuvatioa
pr<Jt!l"Oln.
'The 11.6-mlllion gas in<nue
covert increuing costs for
labor, capital and en-
vlrorunental protection, the
comJ>11117 said.
Practici1ig
What He •.•
SANTA MARIA (UPI) -
Vincent A. Hiii, a candidate
for the dly council, was ar-
rested by the blgbway patrol.
Hill, JI, WU smoking a
marijuana cigarette in hi! car, orr.,.,. asl<I.
Part ol Hlll'1 platform:
LegaJJzlnc marijuana. ·
State News
Auo 011 Page 32
•' •
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,,
..
on the verdict. The jury in
the long-delayed case
deliberated Jess than three
boors.
During the five-day trial,
Z'herg took the stand in his
own defense and deniod he
was ooder the influence of
)-•~ .~.-b led UP'I Tll_...,. a~ •= e was arres Home Loss
Nov. 17, 1972, after his car
rear~ed another vehicle. Fire swept through a
Z'ber( teatlllod be had only home owned by actress
two scotch-and aoau on the Y v e t t e At i m i ~ !& x
night in question, and repllod Wednesday. ca u s 1 n g
"abrolutely oot" when askod _$_4_0_,o_oo_da_m_a_ge_. __ _
by hi.s attorney i! he was
drunk.
stall a controversial smog con-
trol devi ce by next November
has been postponed for a year
by the C.Ufornia A i r
Resources Board.
The five-member b o a r d
\'oted unanimously for the
delay Wednesday, saying the
move would save gasoline
because the devices w i 11
reduce gas mileage. That has
been hotly CUil<sted opinion,
however.
But the three arresting of·
ficers testified they felt the
lawmaker was under the Ur
fluence of alcohol.
ONE OF THEM, <llarles
"Barham. said Z'berg's suit
was soiled and nunp1ed, that
he dropped bis driver 's
license, flunked two physical
coordination tests and that
there was fresh vomit in the
backseat of his car,
IRS Orders Statio n
To Fill 'er Up Free
SAN FRANCISCO IAP ) -
To make up for overcharges,
federal authorities have
ordered a l\10W1t S h a s t a
service station to give away
free 3,600 gallons or gasoline
Saturday.
Brownell Olevron Service
will distribute the fuel on a
first-come, first-urved basis, I
the Internal Revenue Service!
said Wednesday.
. . ...
We Have a Full Line of Gift·
wares, Housewares, Maior
Brand Appliances, Hand and
Pow.er Tools for Your Last
Minute Gift Needs.
. ' • I
ti ·:. " . ! ' 1 I ,,
We Wish You A Happy
Holiday Season
"'I •
;:: : ,,r. i' ,;t,. I:.
'''.:: Ii; ,,,_ 1
. i.' '·: . ' . ' ·-------'--1-----·11¥.-o .•. ' ' . I : •
•
l
I'• t' 1:: ;:· ·Avail.l:i• In
J.' ,, st-~'"',_ Pi \: IQYIL~
·H; ;; •eufrad. .1~ ,' : .!Jer&, . . . .
·, ' I
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Thursday, December 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT ~
Keep your feet warm
with a lovely and ·
practical gift of shearling·
lined Slippers ...
We gladly gttt wrap, free
of charge
'
·'
' '
(-'~
'-~~·-OUR WESTCLI FF STORE
OPEN SUNDAY 11-A.M.-T0 -4-P.M.~
FOR YOU R CONVENIEN CE
1V_~l!lilfSHOES
fOl t1R 1rma'J//!11,
e NEW PORT BEACH e 548 8684
~ -Wunkja<Mt' 1"h? chembr.oy shirt. pv . All cot!cn.'Bu.111U~ tomalch t11a·50r.i-n .
lluy ON ch.Kt slw . size .JI in doubt buy
lergaT .Al\sizos~1':ro\ 1\12Xt!>Or4 U.f' Blue,
Csne~laua\18.li? natwal,~. Nat •
in c:tm!umy) perrtiaMl\t •J>ft"> in
men·a. B::ry5'4114ilnble
mb!U£ ancirt.~
pmianont Jft99.
The cordu""I :shirt .
Bu.y.-ct en., it~
ouitrcut.1ooornpensatt
for slTrinMgo .\'.Orn
· -~i.tjlldwt. Mi.nl5" . . on! __, y.
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: 9
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• DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Discussion
' It is indeed rare for developers to seem grateful
when a governmental body down.zones their properties
or decreases the buildable areas of their projects. But
that phenomenon occurred last week at the South Coast
Regi onal Zone Conse rvation Com mission n1eett ng.
The commission, on the adVire or staff planners who
developed the new standard. basic ally rertuccd the allow·
able building area on six individual Corona del Mar lots.
The action ls most Important in that it set a prec-
edent for all the old secllons of Newport Beach and
presumably all other Orange County coastal communi-
ties \\1ith lots of less than average size.
That some developers appear relatively happy to
see any kind or guidelines which they can follow in the
co1111nission's pennit areas, testifies to the uncertainty
and confusion that ha! prevailed since Prop. 20 became
the law of lhe state.
But the fact that such a potentially far-reaching de-
cision was made Mthout detailed commission examina-
tion or enunciation of the choices involved, or without
full prior public discussio n still adds up to unsatisfac·
tory procedure by the commission.
Guid elines are indeed needed. But the commission
owes it to the people to present more fully its ideas for
major guidelines or decisions before taking action.
Lonesome Whales?
and so far the boats bave sufficient fuel. But most of the
passengers have been youngsters on school field trips,
and now many school districts are cutting back or eli-
minating fleld trips lleeause of the shortage of school
bus fuel.
Fuel crisis or no, the whales are on the way, with
the majority expected to pass the coast late this month
and during January. So shore-bound whale fans. armed
with fleld glasses. should still be able to glimpse this
unique winter event.
Boat Law Puzzles
Under pressure from state water control authori·
lies, the Orange County Ha rbor Department is about to
start enforcing a c<>unty ordinance requiring holding
tanks on boats equipped with permanent marine toilets.
The law also requires marinas to provide pumping
stations for emptying the holding tanks. They are de-
signed to prevent overboard discharge of sewage.
Announcement or the Jan. 1 enforcement date, ef·
fe<:tlve at Dana Harbor, Newport Harbor, Huntington
1-Iarbour and Sunset Aquatic Park, seems to have precip-
itated some confusion among boat owners and marina
operators.
There will be no whole sale boat inspections, says
the Harbor Department, but vessels stopped for speed·
ing, non-registration, or other violations will be boarded,
inspected and the owners cited if no holding tank is
provided.
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The California gray whales migratin~ south to their
breeding grounds al Scammon's Lagoon 111 Baja Califor-
nia may not have as much human company off the Or·
ange Coast thi s year.
Jn past years, as many as 60,000 area school child-
ren a season have participated in whale-watching cruises,
seekin g close·up views of the giant trave lers.
1.larina operators are uncertain if they must put in
permanent pumping stations cQnnected to city sewers,
or if portable units will be acceptable.
Careful handling Of marine sewage di sposal is es·
sential in any boat-oriented area. But an ordinance that
apparently will be applied only to violators of other
marine regulations hardly fills the need. And the cost
difference between permanent and portable pumping
stations is a major consideration for marina operators.
"Well here we are -with a president who ha s to say 'I am not '
a c;ook' and a vice president whose main qualification is
But the fuel crisis may force many of this year's
whale-watchers to make their observations from the
shore. if at all.
1'he cruises got under wa y as scheduled last week,
~Glimpse
•
Of Life
Near Chaos
( ART HOPPE )
A good deal is being written these days
about the Ameri can inteUigence Com·
munl!y. but rew tourists have visited
there.
Actually, the community is located just
beyond Sanity, Pa., on the brink of
ciiaos. N.M. What strikes the casual
visitor is the preponderance of bugs -
tiny bugs, middling bugs, giant bugs.
Bugs . bugs, bugs.
Underfoot , o ,. e r·
head, in the walls.
gverywhere bugs.
I "Frankly,'' said
t:h e distinguished
riiasterspy, General
Homer T. Pellibone.
DSM, CIA, FBl1 \\'ho
Serves as the con1·
O"tunity's unofficial
lnayor. "I believe \\'e have the finest
Collection of bugs anywhere in the \rorld .
A bug tor every occasion -that's our
D\Olto."
: Pettibone, who was \\'earing earphones
lb order to monitor his own conversation
..,... ("You can't imagine the valuable in-
t.tlligence I pick up that "'ay." he ex·
plained) -kindly agreed to cond uct a
disorganized tour of the comm unity.
"Its the only kind ""e have,'' he said.
NOW ON your right -don't trip over
the "·ires -in that imposing un·
derground building is Army Intelligence,
a fighting outfit \\'illi an enviable record.
Nobody knows how many civilians
lhey'\'e captured in their dossiers. "If
You can·t get a Russian. get an
American ·• -that's their battle cry.
•''Then there·s a Naval ln!elligeflCE'. Air
torce Int elligence. secret Service, IRS,
Alcohol and Tobacco. 15.342 local police
intelligence unils. 50 state agencies: the
Bureau of Obfuscation and so on . But
QO\\' y,·e're getting into an in teresting
l)eighborhood.
"See that huge edifice on the ~~
That's the FBI. It's become a byun·
Dear
Gloou1y
Gus · •
Coold it be that America has '-1
on a Jong binge and now Nixon is
our hangover?
J. A.\\'.
GloenTY Ous twn"'"" tr. Mbllllt!H llY
rtfdfl"I •fffl • 110t MCnurfl'I' rttltcl ltlf
Yiews ... tM HWIN"r. Stnd .,..,, "' ,..,., 11 Glllilln'I' au .. P•Ur ,llot.
down lately since the caretaker left. But
on the other side of that high wall
perforated \•.'ith peephole!! is the CIA.
You'll notice 1heY're having a fire sale on
wigs, disguisers, phoney identification
card.! and rubber gloves - one half of!.
"And ·kitty-romer is that white house.
· Between you and me and this wire::tap-
ped lamp post, there's no one but rank
amateurs in the white house. 11iey've
been giving the community a bad name.
\\'e refer to them as The· Gang \Vho
Couldn't Loot Straight.
"BUT THEY do provide a valuable
liaison between the CIA and the FBI. For
example, they told the CIA to tell the
FBI to call off it!I investigation or the
v.·hite house's Mex ican laundry. But, of
course. the CIA had to refuse on the
grounds It hadn't spoken to the FBI In
years."
Ove r a refreshing lunch of mkrofllm
and coded me!!sages -the staple com·
munity diet -Peltibone proudly
estimated that the American Intelligence
Comn1unity over the years had ac~
cumulated through burglaries, bugs and
su rveillance several thousand tons of .in·
telligence - 98.2 percent of it totally
American.
"In all due modesty," he said
niodestly, ''\re are obviously the most in·
telliFfnt community in the world."
Asked how thi s intelligence was shared
and coordinated, he appeared fla~
bergasted. "'Shared? Coordinated?" he
cried. "It is lhe patriotic duty or every
member of this community to gather in·
telligence -not to give It away!"
TllUS it"s safe to say touri sts "'111
agree that while the American lnteUigen·
ce Community Is an Interesting place to
visit. you wouldn't y,·ant to live there.
Not In a place as buggy as that.
'at least he's honest.'"·
Clarification is in order -and soon.
Obligations to the Party and the President
Vice President Walks a Tightrope
W ASlllNGTON -Vice President
Gerald Ford, whose swearing-in evoked
the ooly genuine political sentimentality
in the Capitol since th e Watergate SCilQ·
dals, has dismayed supporters by re-
jecting important advice from long.time
political intimates.
Advice No. I: That Ford forego his
aMual skiing vacation over t h e
Ouistmas holidays and slay i n
W a~ington, t h u s
building the "tal<e-
charge" image of a
Vice President in
a wtlque situation ,
wbo 1' lulty equipped
to lead the country
if Richard Nixon
falls.
-Advice No. 2:
That Ford hire a
sophisticated politician of wide ex·
perience as his chief aide to run a
serious Ford starf largely independent
or the White House and capable of
tackling major issues.
HAVING BEEN in office only one
"'eek. Jerry Ford has plenty of tlme
to create the impressive staff his su~
porters envision. The disappointment is
real. however, that on the st rength of
a pledge to his long-time admini!!trative
aide, Robert T. Hartmann, he has now
made Hartmann his chief of staff.
"Bob Hartmann is a bri ght guy and
a tough guy, but he rubs almost everyone
the wrong way without even kno1'-'ing
it," one Ford intimate told us. In sum ,
Hartmann falls short of the dynamism
that Ford allies feel is needed.
One bright spot in the new Ford
star! is Kenneth Belieu, a former Lyndon
Johnson aide who served in high Pen·
tagon jobs for both President KeMedy
and President Nixon. Belieu will run
Ford's legislative arfairs office, and he
has high prestige \\'ilh Congress.
FORD 'S STAFF is just beginning to
grow. l\fajor changes -including the
all·important spot of staff chief -caMot
be ruled out in the future. Fa r more
importan t to Ford, as the only Vice
President fn history chosen by Congress
on the recommendation of a President,
is his political relatlomhlp with ri.tr.
( EVANS·NOVAK J
Nixon and the Republican party. It is
here that the decision not to postpone
his skiing vacation witil February may
have cost Ford a symbolic advantage.
As one Republican elder told us: "The
President is going South or West,
Congress is going home, but the political
crisis over Nixon's fWure, the energy
thing and the Middle East will stay
right here in Washington. Ford lh>uld
stay here, too, to show that he is ·dif·
ferent and to begin to fill that terrible
leaders hip vacuum."
BUT FORD chose Christmas as usual.
a hint that he Will not allow himself
to become a foil for Republicans · who
want the Presi dent to resign. Moreover,
no sooner had Ford been sworn in than
he began a major defensive ·sweep ror
the President, clearing him 0£ Watergate
blame and praising his release of
personal financial data.
mAT IS predRly what bothen Ford's
political rriends, and other Republicans
"-'ell to Ford's lelt, who see the party's
only salvation ln Ford replacing Pi.tr.
Nixoq well before the 1974 general elee·
lion.
Yet, Ford himself is well aware of
the risks of becoming a White HOllSe
patsy. For example, Mr. Nixon at first
insistA!d that the Ford swearing-in be
a Nixon operation, held in the \llhite
House. Ford, backed by the entire corr
greuional leadershiP. of both parties,
said no.
What helped finally persuade the Presi-
dent was F'orcrs private word, spoken
with candor, that a \\'alk down the
House able with Ford might enhance
the beleaguered President.
PERHAPS more significant, despite
his reputation for followlng the letter
of any presidential rommand, Ford at
least once in the recent pa!!t flatl y
refused lo do the White Bouse bidding
fn a matter involving high and con-
fidential hational politics.
In abort. despite Ford 's seeming lack
or guile , he has shown he can sharply
circumscribe his obligations lo A1r. Nix·
on.
Whether shaiply enough remains to
be seen. He is walking a tightrope
as handpicked Vice President to an
all but rallen Pre.sklenL To fulfill his
obllgatlons-lo-his-party....and lo tbe
presidency (u opposed to the President ),
bis closest political Criends feel be must
not become rront·man for Mr. Nixon,
but instead the No. 2 man in the nation.
Mao: Fabulous Invalid Nears 80
Rumor has it that he smokes lllte
a chimney, drinks like a f1Sh, works
weird hours, and caMOt control hls
hand and lip movements. That may or
may not be true. It is beyood dispute,
however, that he is the third most
po\\'erful man on earth atfer Richard
li-1. Nixon and Leonid I. Brezhnev. He
is, of course, P...1ao Tse-tung, leader o£
the Peoole's Republic o( China, who
v•ill celebrate his 80th birthday anniver·
sary Dec. 26.
ft.IAO is even roore of a fabulous
invalid than is the Broadway stage.
In the early phase of the Great
Proletarian Cultural Revolution, report s
or the chairman's death reached the
West . But Hsinhua, the Chinese news
agency, said on July 25, 1966, that Mao
had swum "an hour and five minutes
and rovered a distance of JS kilometers
in the Yangtze River" nine days earlier.
To buttress that claim. the Chinese
government released a photograph show·
iog 1rta0 and four others in the water
and another of the chairman wearing
a bathrobe and waving from a launch.
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
Soviet Soort. a Rus,,ian newspaper. noted
wryly that htao's time, 65 minutes for
9.3 miles , was considerably better than
ttle world record . The paper invited
Mao to take part in the next international
swimming competition.
FEW PEOPLE are poking flDl at Mao
Tse-tung as he nears his ninth decade
of life, still very much in control of
the \\'Ofld's most populous country. He
weathered the Cu1tural RevOilution as
handily as any previous crisis, and his
international stature has never been
higher. President Nlx<11's trip lo Ollna
in 1972 was cm.1idered a diplomatic
triumph for him -but it waa rm less
so for Mao, his OOst.
BECAUSE of the recent dramatic shill
In ChJnese.Amertcan ~. a number
of historians have been playing the game
ol what·might·have-becn. In an essay
published last year by Foreign Affairs,
Barbara Tuchman recalled that Mao
and Chou En-lai had olfer...t, in January
1945. to confer with President Roosevelt
in Washington.
The offer was Ignored, but •1rat if it
had been a<cepted? Ms. Tudunan wrote
that " . , , it i!! cooceivable that
lhere might have been no Korean · War
with all its evil COJl!!Cquences. From
that war rose the twin specten of an
expaooionist Chinese commwiism and
an indivisible Sino-Soviet partnership.
Without those two concepts to addle
statesmen aM nourish demagogues, our
history, our pres«1t, and our ruture,
would have been dl£ferent. We might
not have come to Vietnam ."
Both China and the United States
have suffered their sbare of internal
upheavals since 1945. But through it
all Mao Tse-tung has kept a Ught hold
on what the . Chinese call the mamate
lA heaven. And if he llvt!! until next
October, he will preside over the 25th
mmlvmary o! the People's Republic
he founded.
Columnist's Mail: From Camp David to a Chilly Jail
"''ASHINGTON -There has been
nothing merry about our pre-Christmas
mai l. On one day alone, v.·e counted
1.500 letters con·
demning and defend·
ing President Nixon.
~fost of our ma il.
however. has
brought neW!I tips
and individual com-
plaints. lb'e'• a
sampling :
KEVIN KEN-
~'EDY. Boslon: "I
ttad your column about President Nix·
oo·s emergency powttS. can't C\'lngrus
revoke thele powers?"
k~S\\'ER: O\w the )•ears. C.OOgreM
I:.1s paMed 470 la ws 'tllhich grant the
Pres)dent dictatorial powers. All the
PresldCtlt has to do Is proclalrn an
ein<rgmcy. What Congress giveth, or
'courst, Congres1 can taketh away.
J.B., Atl anta: "f have heard that
!!in&cr Frank Sinatra channeled M~fia
mone.)' lnto the N11.on-Agnew cempe1gn
Jut yea r."
ANSWER: We hav• been able to traco
$$:J:OOOl{iil SlnilttO COlllrtbuted to the
"bon-Agftt w a mpa.lgn. It 'l\'&I his own,
nol Maf ... -y.
MAJ. GEN. HARRY VAUGHAN.
(USA. ret.). the late Presldeiit Tnnnan's
military aide. Arlington, Va .; "In the
summer of 1946. I took Mrs. Vaughan
and the children up (to the Camp David
pre!!idential retreat) for a week. There
was a security detail of about I> J!lef1
at that time. I undastaod tt now
numbers over 200. In 1946, when guests
were there. a cwk and 1ever1l stewards
were leDI up to take care ol. them.
"l\'e spent a rat.her tlrelome week
and I recall the water In the pool
"'as Wlder 50 degree11. I killed a rattler
and two copperheads by way d reerea·
lion. A week or so after I returned
home, l recelved a bill from the Navy
for $140 for food . Th is, I would gue5',
y,•as the last time In Whlte Hollie history
thal a presidential alae ha! paid for
anything.
ANSWER : Preoldent Nixon ba! 1tmk
$2.4 million of the taxpayers" mmey
in the Comp Dav!d ntttat, more than
was spent by tho lhree peeyjoUI
presidf!nts combined. Among other Im·
provementa , Nixon bullt a foncy, hoot<d,
$150,IW pool outside his cabin. The cold-
water pool ls now used by his 3eCllJ'it.y
men. Presidential aid., are still dunned,
however, for meals at Camp Davkf.
(JACK ANDERSON)
FRANK STURGIS, member ol the
Watergate break·ln aew •. writing after
a Ol1Hlight stay at the Brunswick, Ga.,
city jalf: "It was a small and very
dirty plare. The cell next lo me on
my left had two young girls, Karen
-age 12, and Brenda -age
14, both white. On my right, In a cell
were two young black boys, Mlke -,
age IS, and Gary -age t6.
"Jack, with all my problems and me
with a family, I just can't see what
b happenlnff in this world of ours that
puts Children In a Jail.
"'ll>at night I (ro<e w t t h my t•'O
inmate friends. We had a blanket, and
we burned everything we could get our
hands on, including the mattress. We
had to stop becau1e the hacks came
and we had to stop the fire. At leaat
we ltayed warm for • little while.
We dlitn't sleep all night because of
the wind and cold.
"I stlll cannot gel It ou t of my mind
lhat lhese young people are suffctlng
in a dlrty, cold and windy jail, and
no one cares what happens to them.
They are just cruldren who have been
in that jail approximately 22 days.''
ANSWER: We have confirmed your
report. The jailer claimed the cells '!"'
usually heated , but the "heat must have
been kicked olf" tbe night you .,....
there. E.C., Washingtlln, D.C.: ''The A1r
Force has disassembled a Soviet Sill .. ,
captured by the Jsreelil. It <Ontalned
an integrated circuit &tamped with tbe
seal of the Tew ·lnstntment Company.
When the missile delt<ts a heat source, ·
the electronic guidance system swltchcl
from radar control to infrared borne,
and lhen the missile swings around.
If neecssary, and overtake& the plane
in the rear."
ANSWER: The missile you describe,
with the TeJ:as Jnstrument circuit, is foum in the NATO .... ena1. It does
not, 'llccording to out Air Force sources,
resemble the Soviet SAM-6.
R.J., Jack.sonville, Fla .: "The U.S.
Attorney here, John Briggs, said in a
speech Iha[ your employcs broke into
the late Son. Tom Dodd's ..!Hes What
is the ,.difference between that and the
Watergate brealoln, which you have con-
demned?
ANSWER: Dodd'• papen whld1 pro,
vided evidence that he had YlolatA!d
federal laws, were removed from his
m.. by his own employes, not mine.
They tater test1nec1 that 1 bad <'OUl!Seled
them not lo rtile bis files.
HAROLD GREEN, Cblcego : "I hove
niad oon111ct11111 reports about the senility
of Mao Tse-hmg."
ANSWER: S<crelary of State Remy
KialJl&er durlq hb recent Peking visit
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. W«d, '.Pubf!slllr
Thotno.s Keevll, Editor
Barbaro Krelblch
Editortat Paa• Edilor
Thursday, December 20,. 1973
found Mao. now approaclllng 80, lo bo
menWly alerl .. Another visitor caught
the oJd revolutionary in a reflect.Ive
mood. Mao acknowled1cd that his health
wu failing and lll'Oke of his "ap-
pointment with God ...
HAROLD JOHNSON, New York City:
"Administration spokesmen say that a
50 mph speed limit not only •i ll ,. ..
fuel but reduce accidents. Shouldn't
automobile IMUrance rates go down?"
ANSWER: Doll't count on It.
Tht ~torial pnae of· the Dally
PUot attka 1o tntorm ud 1titnul1te
readen by ptttenllOI on thUi pq:e
dlvf:T'ltt <.'Ommentary on toplca of Irr
terest by syndic&ted mlumruata and
<'t.rtoonlstJ. by provkltne a forum lor
rcadert' views and .tiy pre11C1ntlna this
ncwrpe.ptr'1 oplnk>n1 and tdeu on
current toplcs. The edltorl&J opinion•
of tM De.Uy Pilot appear only In 1ho
cdltorl•l column at the tt>p of the
pag~. Oplnkml expr'ftle<l by the col.
wnnlrts ind cartoor'llttl and letter
wrllcn are thtlr own and ho endont-
ment ot their v~"' by &he _Dal.b'
PUot should be Wtm!d.
•
Dtllght tho taato bu do of your
lomlly end gueots with our
1$Jty, ovon-freah baked plet.
Tlijl perfect treat to top off the
holiday leastl
AND WHEN YOUR PIES ARE
READY, WHY NOT PLAN TO
I•
BPlllkllSI DP
lunch with us!
OUR DINING ROOM WILL BE OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY
FROM 7 AM TO 5 PM. WE INVITE YOU TO HAVE A LEISURELY
EARLY BREAKFAST, LUNCH OR DINNER WITH US.
M 1 I IJ _ • ,. I Anlllble 11 lhetl
.,.. OJNlllJAL~· ~-
~...._ . 'K4; eo;;"'llft11ouUont:
NEWPORT BEACH, 3110 NEWPORT BLVD.
HUNTINGTON BEACH, 9791 ADAMS
FOUNTAIN VALLEY, 16155 HARBOR BLVD.
'
J
Thursd.ly, Oetembtr 20, 1973 "I DAIL V PILOT 7 •
Uproar
Oil Refinery Planned in East
Onassis • ID
CONCORD, N. II. (AP) -
Circllng over the New
Hamps}iire coast in his private
je_t , intematk>nal financier
Aristotle Onassis caught a
gliJnpoe of the 1pot where he
wants to build a controversial
!600 million oil refinery.
Then, braving the near-zero
cold Wednesday in a gray
tweed suit, Onassis left bls
jet at Manchester Airport and •
boarded a rented helicopter for
a close-up aerial look at
Durham Point and the Isle
ol Shoals.
EXCEPT FOR a few curious
stares in the airport tennlnal,
the arrival of the Greek ship-
ping magnate went virtually
unnoticed. But the journey of
the multimillionalre to New
Hampshire was being watched
closely by local ....-S op-
posed to the refinery.
Onassis brought a team of
technical comultants to ex·
plain that the refinery would
be built to protect the en-
vironment and, hopefully,
satisfy the community.
His plan to construct the
huge refinery on a tidal marsh
outside the college town of
Durham has put him at the
center or an uproar O':'.er 1 the
arrival of the on industry to
tbe coast of New England.
TWO REFINERIES, both in
Maine, have been proposed
for the region, but the region
has none. In Durham, where
the principal industry is the
AP l'tlol•
SURPRISE VISITOR
Aristotle Onassis
University or New Hampshire,
residents have expressed fear
or the economic and en~
Sboall, 1even miles oll
coast.
The firm proposed lnstantng
an offshore buoy tenninal for
supertankers, whose crude oil *
would be piped undennter to *
Durham Poinl *
Qpen Moo.·Tllun. 9 un.-4 pJR.;frl 91.111.-6 p.m.
"STATEMENT SAVIN&S "·PRESTIBE Cud
1UD1A PAIK Merutry SaY!ngs tlldQ., VaUey View at Uncofn "'*'
Sl'ATE REP• Dudley \V. * llUITillTOll IUCH MMCUI')' Savings Bldg., Edlnget It Beach *
Dudley of Durham, a leader * TtJSTltl MerCl.I"' sa..i..-BIOg,,}r-00! BIYd. at Newport Avt. ol the opposltloo, said he ob-* " •••• * jects to the refinery because * LA HAlllA·fULUllT• MercurysaYiflQI BldQ., lmpll'lal Hwy. ll Harbor *
it would (1) strain the town's* CA-Merou<ySa.ingsl!jdg.,A-81vd.1tSanlliogoflwy. *
h>using, (2) threaten tourist * 11xrr QOUS Me1eury S.iq:s Bldi-, l.Dnf Buch &Nd. at C.SOll st *
trade and (S) rtqlrire the*********************'*' storageoltargeamount1near1.::..:....:..:....:..:....:..:....:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~
p:i:;r.;:,r:,::h..ct Ji.t •-... a lhaek---
l!Utl1)Ulldlng the unlver11ty KCIQllV
with ref ineries and
petrod>emlcal plants would
risk the state's $121 million
inveatment in the school and
protests that New England's
fuel 111pply would be in control
of a foreign company.
The refinery would bring in
J,000 to 2,500 persons and add
about $420 million to the ,
town's $.1'1 million tax base.
Prior to Onassis' visit, Olym-
pic· adopted a conciliatory
stance toward building tl>e
refinery.
IDEAL FAMILY GIFT .••
TELEPHONE AMPLIFIER
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vironmental effects of the pro---------~
ject. Intense opposition has
developed since the plans were
announced last month.
Onassis' Olympic Reflnerie!
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at Durham Point and an op-
tion on Lunging I s 1 a n d ,
westernmost of the Isles of
•
Bathroom
Back Pay
NORTI! WELLINGBO-
OUGI!, England (AP) -
The Town. O>uncil deter-1
min~ that it had been ac-cide'ntaflY underPaYfiig ·a
public lavatory attendant
foc the past aeven yean.
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t1ad1e lhaeK----
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18 ll. PEEi En
CAP8Y
filled. solid & hard candy
beautifully wrapped in
a gilt box. Perteet appe·
tizer, last minute gift.
MW!E=-~
WRllTtlAlcH
• Swfss M••• .
• a.11.111,1•1tic
• Swtt•·Stt ...
H1tl
88 . .
Be the first on your ~ock to own a
friendlee Watch. A qua lity timepiect
with th~ smiling Ell ond an attractivt
red. white and blue band.
• \.. CANDY llOT AT TV I. APPLIANCE MARTS . J .
w .. i~tfiii!iiWfitiMAiPI '
. '
• ,
WHITE FRONT OFFERS ALL THI§ PLUS THE LOWEST DISCOUNT PRICE§ IN ALL THE WE!iT -. -. -. . '
=::I ::=I =· ~!=H~~~M~~5 ~I
•
TV & APPLIANCE MART HOURS:
' ·SHOP '11L CHRISl!ll~S 11 A.M. TO I ,.M.
CONVENIENT CREDIT TERMS
•
\ ·. ..
• •
.
'
• ,
. -•
•
. • .
• •
~ . ' llL~DAY HOUIS: DAILY SUNDAY .10To10
PrlcH lffectlv•. n.,. S.n. Dec. 23
fhllr$day, Otcm1btr 20, "' J • 0 .. 1._, l>JLOT 9
LIST FEW DAYS ·Of THIS SALE *-
•
;AM/FM :;~:i
.PaEJRADIO
850
Take.it-everywtiere solid state radio. Beautl-
f\llly designe<I. Includes b.fttery, & strap.
DeliV"erS rich sound.
SAVE5~98 •••
EllEYBAN
ll !~T
24.ts
27 fuft size keys. 8 cllords and volume con-
trol. Hi-Impact cabinet w/music holder.
Book illclude<I •
PHILCO 18'' ~ ... -:j
CUI POITABLE
•i!sg
Comp. at 299.97. loaded with features
for a brilliant, detailed piclure. Pre-set Mem· ory-Mal ic tuning.
•IBITS STBlm
lraJDES 8 TRK. -·1sg
Camp. at 199.97. Beautiful cabinet
houses a complete stereo entertainment
system. AM/FM-FM stereo radio. 4 speed
automatic changer. Fabulous at this price! ~
Packard 181125" ::.;
COLOR CONSOLE TV •4gg
CASSETTE
IBORllll
1896
Rotary controlled play, slop & rewind .
Battery operate<!. Molded mike holder. W/-
mike, batteries.
10 INCH· HIGH
CAI RAMPS
18~!
Provides easy access to the front end of
your car. Front and rear stops, 11 in. wide,
skid resistant lop & bottom.
MAGNAVOX POil. . JACK STANDS
SIMI PIRI • 01.HLTBI .
'4111 ORIG. FAii tRADID
At74.95
Porta~le. phooo delivers thrilling stereo
sound. Automatic record changer plus pair
Of 8" SpklS.
St 121?r?.33,49
l •I· 3.47 stands raise cars lo 12''.
lq. 2.99 Purolator oil liller includes
free dispC)sal bag. For most model cars.
RCA 14 INCH ~0:::; TV
COLOR PORTABLE
.i!i!9
COMP. At 249.97 .
Computer -crafted life-like color. One set
VHF fine tuning locks in perfect picture
and holds it channel after channel.
* SYMP•C 3-PIECE
Deluxe Stereo CONSOLE
COMP. At $450.
Quasar 1180% solid state works in a drawer chassis.
lnsta-Matic pushbutton fine tuning system. Giant
screen col or. Model WV8000.
STBlmRADIO
IBTRACK
5~Ep I:~ ...
COMP.At299.97
100 watt (IPPI solid state dual channel ampl i-
fier, AM /FM-FM multiplex stereo radio. 4 spd.
automatic changer and 8-track stereo tape
'. player. Fine furniture cabinets. .
PlDDlE SADDLE
FM stereo radio and 8 track tape player
for your car. 10 watts RMS power. Track
indicator lights tor tape player. #817FM
SAVE '10 ••• f 0 SPEBI .
IAC•· Tlllll BllE
· The most Pol'Jlar bike of them all at a fabulous
low price. Featlierweighl frame with bright
metallic finish, centerpull caliper brakes, gear
protectors. Don't miss out on this fabulous offer.
CHB-09
•IEBllEU.
REG.
59.97
Sounds a pierc ing alarm if your bike is moved;
easily installed.
4ss HG.
7.97
RUIBBI QUEii
HmRMATI
4~z
7.99
. "
Rubber or vinyl lloor mats in assorted
colors. Choose from full -or twin front.
Heavy dulj; will last for years.
SAVE '10 ••• 10 IPEBI
IAClll BICYCLE
97
HG.
79,97
Shimaoo gears. C'111er Jlllll brakes wit-
safety levers, 13" frame with rich
brown liniSh. T~e de luxe racing bike
at a special low p1ice. # 75/888
AUtOMOtlVIS llOt At t V & APr llANCE MARTS . .. ~ ~ llKIS llOT AT TV & APPLIANCE MARTS j
_ $S\M-ii\%1SMiSOOTffiiN~RMOl
·~. l
_WHnE FROl\fT OFFERS THE .LARGEST SELECTION OF NATIONAuY FAMOUS BRANDS
cos·TA MESA
~. . -' LMG ---3088 B R I ST 0 L ST.
San Di eqo freeway at· Bri stol.
•
---c>~----':I----=-----
'
OPEN EVIRYDAY
-'Tll CllllSTMAS
· 10 AM-10 l'M
'CHRISTMAS IVI 'tll 1
--\: ..
,
-· --• l"H .. U 1 Thursd~, Dteember 20, 1'173
Jtf11tts Find Bo11aes
In H11ntington, .They Have .Heart
By .CANDACE PEARSON
Of .. o.ity Pli.t 1.,ff
city dog catcher, report tin
enthusiastic response to the
Daily Pilot's "Dog of lhc
Week" pictures and slmllar
publtcity.
to 500 dogs housed the re week·
ly. '
If you're an abandoned
mutt, your chances o! rtnding
a home may be better in
Hunttngton Beach t h a n
anywhere else. AT TBE ORANGE County
animal shelter in Orange.
news coverage gene r a t es
"quite a bit of lnterest" bu t
can't take care or the 400
And whi le pictures or pu~
pies' eyes gaz ing from shelter
cages tug nt the heartstrings
elsewhere in the county, In
Laguna Beach only t h e
pu rebred spark the most In·
tcrest.
II you . can get your picture
in the newspaper, anyway.
Officials at tho Huntington
Beach Animal Shelter and the
Calilornla Animal Control, the
"PEOPLE ARE basically
or iented lo oae animal, like
l
2640 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
646-5527 OPEN EVERYDAY
INCLUDING SUNDAYS
LIVING
CHRISTMAS
Soloct o LIVING Christmas Tree
now from • v1rlety of Pines -
MONTEREY, J A PA N E S E
BLACK, ITALIAN STONE,
ALEPPO •••
Specl1lly grown ind 1uit1ble for
our coe1t1I 1rua.
EXCELLENT GIFT!
Decorate
Now ••
Plant
Later •.•
Or Give
To Your
Lt.Mt T'"9 prked from • • 6.50 Favorite City!
CHOICE SELECTION ... Still Available
CUT CHRISTMAS TREES
DOUGLAS, NOBLE and BALSAM FIRS.
We hive: Tree 1t1nd1, Sno-Flox kits, tinsel, fl1meproofing, lltH and
orn•ments.
In Time For Christm1s Gifting •••
ROSE ·BUSHES •
Finest # 1 Grades
Bar•root
Nft nrittfet -4 ..rl·bon hrrorl'". A,ollo, l •CCctltfff, Ceclle
1n1..., (MM ad cllMMfJ, G1ct•ollkl, PtoU, Phoet1lr, Troplcono, ••
Muy ,...,..1
P,i<0d hom 2, 98 to 4, 98
Be1utifully
'Hollister" Wr1pped
POINSETTIAS
Trodlti...I C•rtmrnas plcnit tt.ot
trows 10 weU I• CaJJf. cllMCte.
""'"' -8. 95
BONZAI TREE KIT
Cont1in1 tree, pl1ntln9 mix, rocks and container.
Everything to grow·lt·your&olf.
-· ··~ "" 5.'95
Mn. IJrMI SllllMH9fJ• I"',_.. ...,_,, •etl4
~ .._. ..,_,., wfll bet., o•r ..,....,. .• ,
Frid1y, Doc. 2ht. 10 A.M. to 12:00
0-'t 1t1lu 11ctr .._I T,.. Kit Dewtoutrotlo11!
COME SEE US ..• BRING THE KIDS
CALIF. GIFT , ••
'LITfLECAOO'
°"9ff ....,. ,., ... • .... n ......
H..., Troe 12.50
Santi Gives ·
Free Trees
To all Kida
Sit. ind Sun.
2:00 . 5:00
NURSERY-
FLORIST
a collie," said an official at
the Laguna Beach Society ror
Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals (SPCA). "They don't
want a basset, a dobennan
piMCher or anythlng eJae.''
he said.
The !Alguna SPCA received
15 calls for a collie pictured
.in the paper but once that
dog was gone, other visitor•
said "tough Juck • . • and
usuall y wa lked away/' he ad·
ded.
Publicity just hasn't drawn
people in like the shelter e1·
pected, he said, rating overall
res ponse as "better than
average but not th.nt great."
And mixed breeds are the
last to go.
THE SHELTER at 20612
Laguna Canyon Road has an
average 15 to 18 dogs weekly.
1t costs from $10.50 to f20
to take one away.
Operators of the Orange
County Pound at 561 City
Dr ive South "try to select
a dog it's difricult to flnd
a home ror" as the object
of attention. Some days,
they've counted as many as
1,200 people making their way
past the rows of animals,
which come in at a rate of
80 to 150 a day.
Puppies under four months
old cost $5.25. Older dogs cost
$5.25 plus license and rabies
shot.
HUNTINGTON B E A C H
shelter officials seem to speak
of the most successful ado~
Lion stories.
"We've gotten 5iO to 100 calls
on a dog (after Its picture
is published) and usually the
dog is gone fi rst In the mo~
ing, gone right off the bat,"
a Humane Society official
said .
"And it helps the others
out. People take something
else all the lime. 'lbere are
people in and out or here
all day long," he added. As
many as 15 to 20 dogs have
found new homes on one day.
No one breed seems to at·
tract the visitors to the shelter
at 21632 Newland Ave., "just
what catches your eye." About
90 percent of their 30 dogs
a week are mixed breeds.
The average rost of buying
a dog there is $10.SO
"When we do get !IOmethlng
In the paper, the next day five
to 10 dogs au adopted," Gay
La Rose at the caillornla
Animal control said.
The CAC, at BSZI Edinger
Ave., has as many as JOO
dogs In reskience weekly. Of
tho,., she added, lhe puppies,
poodles and Great Danes seem
to receive the most acclaim.
Seven pupplea and two adult
dogs were purchased last Sun·
day al a publicized open bouae
at CAC.
The public response was
"great," the CAC official said,
"We baa qulle a few people
in.''
A dog costs $9, plus rabies
and license fees: If the dog
is more than four months old.
Stores Fib,
Say Dolls
Are Banned
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
doll so lifelike It eats, drinks
and even Qas a periodic bowel
movement requiring a dia per
change, is in such demand
as a Christmas present, the
Consumer Products Safety
Commission believe! some
stores have been falsely telling
cutsomers the toy has been
baMed.
The doll Involved Is called
"Baby Alive" and a com·
mission spokesma n said the
agency has had "literally bun·
dreds or calls" from shoppers
across the country asking If
it was true the toy was banned
as stores bad been lelllng
them.
Commission C h a i r ma n
Richard 0. Simpeon wrote let·
ters Tuesday to retail trade
a s s o c iations .representing
department stores, drug stores
and other outlell telling them
some stores apparently are
misleading conaumers and
making decepllve use of the
commission's Dame.
He also wrote a letter to
the Federal Trade Com·
mission asking It t.o look into
the situation .
•
Kids Like To
Aak Andy
POW H0Hda11
After 511 years In
North Vietnamese pris·
on camp, Lt. Col. Don·
aid Odell hopes energy
crisis won't ruin first
Christma s with family
since capture.d "I'm
planning a snowmobile
outing in Northern
Michigan -if there's
enough gasoline."
'
TRADITIONAL
MEN'S
CLOTHING
not
faddish
apparel
Camel Heir
C•ehmer••
Shetland•
. H•rrle Twe•d•
Make your Christmas more •••
COLOBFIJL!
PICK A SONY FOR YOURSELF • • • OR YOUR CRONY
AND REMEMBER ••• WE HAVE ONll; OF THE LARGEST
SELECTIONS IN THE HARBOR AREA ••• IN ALL SIZES
• • • AND THAT'S NO BALONEY !
SONY.TV SONY.TV SONY.TV
KV·9000U TRINITRON8
COLOR TV
• 9·incl'I 1cr11n measured
d11gon111v
KV·l500 TRIN!TRON.!
. COLOR TV
• 15·1ncl"l screen measured
dra9ona11y
••• .
I
KV·1?0 1 TR!NITRON&
COLOR TV
• 12.mcl"l screen measured
c11a9onally
..
KV·5000lRINITRON•
PORTABLE COLORJ '/
• S·lnch 1e1Hft meaiured
diegon aHy
KV·1710 TRINtTAON&
COLOR TV
• 11.1ncl'l 1CrHtt fnt11ui6d
C111gon111y
• 17-lnch sc1un measured diaoc,1ally
SEE OUR
COMPLETE
SELECTION
OF SONY
BLACK &
WHITE TV's,
RADIOS &
STEREO.
AA&D ELECTRONICS
• 275 EAST 17th ST.
COSTA MESA
642-8882
·Opon Dilly U Thur&. & Fri. 9-9
"Quality Prod•1cls • Professinnal Service"
,
Other
Deat1is
.. llEW'LOWER (AP) ~Dr.
llolpk F. BaraiPI. 'If, the
lint prealdent of Cerrttoo
Collece, died at bis llome here
Wednesday . He wa1
superintendent of Excelsior
Unloo lllgh SCllool In Norwalk
for 2'I yeara.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Asalt-
tant U.S. Atty. -.i p,
R.llM, '41 prosecutor in "Clean
Snep," a Justice Department
probe of corrupllon In the U.S.
Immigration and NI·
UonallzaUon Service in the
southwest, died Wednesday.
He also was a fonner Marine
Corps COWlSel.
SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) -
Ted Crosby, brother of en-
tertainer Bing Q'Osby, died
Wedneoday. Crolby had beeo
employed a1 a representative
of a California weath e r
modlficatlon comiany
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI) -Dr.
Frieda s. llobocbelt·Robblm,
who shared the Nobel Prtze
for experimental medicine in
l!IU. died Tuesday at a nun-
Ing home. She won the award
with two colleagues on the
faculty of the Un iversity of
Rochester for lll'Ork i n
discovering the causes of per-
nicious anemia.
ST. JGNANCE, Mich. (AP)
-Prentiss flit. Brown "Sr., M.
a former U.S. senator and
congressman regarded as the
father Or the Mackinac Bridge
connecting Michigan's two
peninsulas, died Wednesday.
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP)
-The Rev. Mary E. SUver,
116, who first carried tfle
Gospel to North Carolina
sharecroppers In the mi<J.
l!KW)s, died Wednesday.
ROCHESTER, Minn. (UPI\
-John D. Baker, 56, named
general manager of t b e
Oldsmobile dlvis.ion of General
Mown NIW. 5, died Wedn&
day.
De•tlt Notice•
OtloUIOOlPO
Fri nt Gr1rw:kl4fD. Rnlctenl of CO!'-
d.. Meri GI.. of Oflfl\, Ott""blf' 1t, 1m. Su vi....:! toy wile, GIMI br~I,
AA!orllo Grandolfo Incl JOlll'fl Gv!HilPt.
both of ll•ly; 1111..-1, Sy1¥i1 C1t1ld0 Mid Mallltt1 F....+111 ltfl IMP""""-
11-ry, fo'ldly, 7:>0 PM w .. tdlK C""""I.
R.-Ulm Mai... S&h1f'dlY, t AM. botf'I If
SI. Jon" tlM 811PTl1t Caldlllc Ch~,
wtlfl Fr. AA!horrf McGowl" Mfk.11!"'9. In~!. Good ~ C_,..,y.
w.1,utt ch-1 MDrt111rv • ........., 01.
r11tlO<"i.
ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MOtmJAllY
U7 E. 17111 St, Colla -Hltm • • BALTz.BEllGEllON
FUNERAL HOME
eon.a dd Mar -Colla MHI IM llH • BELL llllO~llAY
MORnJAllY
111~-• DILDAY BROl'llERS MORnlARIES
11111 B .. c11 Bl•d.
BantlallGD Beacb MZ-Tl'll W~An.
Loeg Beacb !-1111 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORnJAllY
l'ltl Lagoa CUyoo Rd.
IH-M15 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAllK
Cemetery MorlUr7
3511 P~lew Drive I
Newport Beacll, Calllonila
114-1711 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
!HI Bolu An.
Wt1lmluter ltl llZI • SMITH'S MORnlAllY
111 Malo 81. -u:=.-
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
.. . .. •
' Polltleol Notes
Citron's Coastal Panel · Sets
' Running .Meets for New Year
LONG BEACH -The new A new he.aring hasn't been Ana, p0wcr plants and utllltles
By o.c. HUSTINGS year will bring a new list set yet, but a commbsion of· element.
0t""' Dattr """ lfeff of regional coastal commlsslon flcial said today It will be -Mnrch 4: 9 a.m. to 11
Saying be wants to squelch ORAllGE CQ11111V meetings, Including th• lint aometime In January. p.m., Long Beach, pennits. ~rs that be may run for un 11 public hearings on parts of The 1974 meeting schedule -March 11: 9 a.m., Long
the Leglslatur., Orange <Joun. the coastal plan. cumnUy Includes: Beach, water transportation
ty Tar Collector Bob Citron 'lbe South Coast Regional -Jan 7: 9 a.11). to II p.m., element.
has announced that he will Zone Conservation Com-Loog Beach Harbor Depart· -March 18: 9 a.m. to 11
aeek ..... 1ect100 to that post 2 {;ountians mission will step up Its pace ment headquarters. 9 2 5 p.m., Long Beach, pennits.
next year. and meet weekly, alternating Harbor Plaza Drive, permits.
Citron, IS, said be ha• 1 pennit aod plamlng sessions. -Jan. 14: 9 a.m .. Long -APRIL t: 9 a.m. to II
lot more to accomplish 15 Appointed The conunJsskln, established Beach, geologic planning ele-p.m,, ~1ng8Bea9ch, pennits.Lo
For Post
Thursday, Oteember 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT J 1
• • ' . ' ' • • •
TUESDAYS thru FRIDAYS ,
. ' •
~ .. .. . ~ ~ .. · ~ 5 to 7. pm ~ , : . ,, .
• ' •AT
v " .. • •
• • • • • • • • • ., •
~·ii&aggri~~~· •
.. • tax coUectoMreasure by the 1972 coutal zone act, ment. -Apr! : :30 a.m., s p I a· . ·c1e· D. I . .: .:. . ,,
. . ' bu Jurisdiction over con--Jan. 21 : 9 a.m. to tl p.m., Angeles, land and a Ir • 333 a)'SI . '· ve. .' .
Heal.IOllidhewUlcontinue SACRAMENTO (UPI) -struction wllhln 1,000 yards Long Beach, peimits. transportation element. ~ .: .. " .. " ;.,.
to use his olllce ... platform Mrs. Thomu M. Yedor of In Orange and Lot Angeles -April 15: 9 a.m. to II . • • .·, ,· Newpo· rt' a.each · •. · •· .. • ~ to speak out on county luues. Santa Ana and Bernardo M. counties. -JAN. %1: 9 a.m., Long p.m., Long Beach , perm.itJ. •
"It was my speaking out Yorba ot.Anahelm have been Beach, water and mineral -April 22 : 9:30 a. m ., ' • ~ ~ • , • ~.
In June 1971 concerning the reappointed by Gov. Ronald rr ALSO IS supposed to resources planning element. Newport Beach, recreation!~'~:~,~·-~· ~' ... ·~· ~· ..,· ~· ~: ...... ·~· ~·~· ... ·~·-..,·~ ..... ·~· ... ·~:~··..,· ·~· ... ·~·~· ~ r-.' great lnetnc~a of the Reagan to the areawide men-aid In developing a master • -Feb. 4: 9:30 a.m .. Tor-element. -i
O>UDty operated data proc-tal retardation program for plan for the coastal zone by ran ee, energy planning ele--1\.tay 13: 9 a.m. to 11 p.m., 1 esfilng departm.ait," aa id orange County. 1976. ment. Long Beach, permits. R ad h D U P"l t .~ Citron, "that finally ttSUlted ~1rs. Ye do r , 45, a The first hearings on the -Feb. II : 9 a.m. to 11 p.m., -~1ay 20: 9:30 a.n1., Santa e t e U y l 0 ~
in the county, tut Augu11t, Republican, and Yorba, 52, marine element of the plan Long Beach, permits. !\1onica, appearance and \
hiring 1 private fadllUta also a Republican, recetved had been scheduled this -Feb. ts : 9 a.m. 10 11 p.m., design element. We Dare You .~: manager to completely ta~ three-year terms . They have month, but work wasn't com-Long Beach, pem1its. ..:..May 27 : 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. :;r.
over and nm the county'I data, _'::"":::..ed::..:on::..:the_board_::..:alnce::..:_l!n_o_._.:.P_le:_ted:::..m::· :..t::im::e:_. ___ ~ ____ F_eb_. _2S_,_9,_30_a_.n_'-:_· :...S•_n_<•::___:Lo:=ng~Be::a::c::h:.., :..pe::r:..m::it•::'·::..: _______________________ ;I" processlna: dtplrtment." •. ·:;-_
Tod Mozley of Santa Anl ;i:
will be Citron's ampalgn ' ..
manager for the June 1974 • . . .~ election. MozJey m a n a g e d
Citron's election campaigns ln
1970.
Also on the Committee to
Re-<lect Citron is DOD S.
l.foiley of Santa Ana the
retired county tax collector.
* * * ASSEMBLYMAN F I o yd
Wakefield (ft.South Giie) says
he wl1I seek the GOP nomlna·
lion in the Orange o.m.nr•a
reconsllluted 7oth Aaaembly
District.
Wakefield, ol c:ourae, wtll
have to move to the coanty
to run In the 7llth, but, •under
reapportiooment Ian, wwld
be listed .. the tncumben~
if he gets the nomlnalloo.
The district coven
mrtheastem aectloos o I
Orange County, lncbxllng the
Orange area. It la IJrmly Ia
the Republi<lln colunm In
terms of voter registration.
Two other potential Cl!>
didates are Orange banlror
Jim Beam, who bu been ac-
tive in the county chamber
of commerce, and Bruce
Nestande, executive d.lrector
of the state Repibllc:an Ceo·
tral Commttt ...
* * * REP. DEL Clawoon (R·
0.-,). who repttStnts por·
tlonl of northwestern orange
County, lost his bid for the
chairmanship of the Hooae
GOP Polley Committee, the
number -Route GOP Jeadmllip pool.
ClaWIOD, MD!lldered I COD--
lel'VltiYe, kilt an an •Tl vote
to moderate 'Barber B .
C4Dable Jr. oa N..., York,
ooe ol Presldmt NIIon'a moot
loyal dftll'!il I :mal support.en.
'lbe %7-member committee
vole! on port)' pollcy stands
Oii major leliJlalloo. It WU
beaded by Rep. John -ol Artm>a 1l<ior to bla eJeva.
Uoo to the HOUie GOP
Ieadmblp replaclng V I c e
President Gerald Ford.
Children's
Drivers
Needed
BUENA p ARK -Volunleer
driven from Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa are Deeded
to help transport gutl!ts to
the anD\181 Chrtllmas port)'
of Glaso Mountain IM, Inc.,
an organization foe the hao·
dlcapped.
'l11e porty II oc:baduled for
l :!O p.m. Sunday at Knotts
Betry Farm hett.
To volunteer u a driver,
<all Jonnla Rotberi>am, !21-
'llll3 or Alice Kendall, s:IS-2970.
Glass Mountain IM was
organized In 1968 by Becltman
lnltnlment exec:u\lve William
Fairbank•, Olympic
wbeelchalr buketball chin>
pion, aod Dorvthy Gossa8" of
Slllll Aoa.
Broker Gets
Sentenced
For Bilking
llAN'l'A ANA-A -er..,.
I
mistle-toes for the whole family.
3 20 ~3.91 Glrta acrylic all-. Tip-
• ~ cuff.Ptnkorbtue.111-13·
2 40 !t'!l~~ontrtcotacuff.
• Fluffy pon>pom. .. tt-. S,M,L,XL
~.3.99 Men 1 cotton corduroy moc.
terry llned. Crepe Nbber heel,
IOleo. Brown or green. 8~·13M.
3.20
•
Reg. 3.99
Men'• doubleknit moc. Navy Of
brown polyester,6-13 whole alns.
80.i. R~.$1 "I' Tola animal character ldyfle
knit. Vtnyl IOIO. Alsorted colon.
S,M,.L,XL
• .'f' .• ~
Chlrgo It on rout .ICP11010y c!Wto cord.
Men 1 vinyl moc, foam-backed 3 20 R~.3.99
• nylon t~cot llned. Brown. S.12 whole sizes.
•• ~! .. :;
• • • • ...
• •
... ••• • • ,.
• l: ; . • • ' . . . . ' .. .. . ' • • ·:.t; •t • . . ·~ .; .. ;
"' •• ~. ~.
~ ~ ~ .. . ,
t' .. ••• ... -.,.
'• ••• .. :•I •
•• •• . '
CUHd of bllklng mobile home
. purchuers out of more than
•tcTn~• tu11•••• ' fGO,(lOI) after a lofti' -in-,..,., ,,,.,,,.. ... , • hlch
,..,. 1o1tM11111 pwRn 1t clolnt """""' Yeltlgation ln w Ne11rpor-t
•• ! IELl. • ASSOCIATl!I .. ,.ND AND Bdcb police participated hi• Cl!:VIELOft~INT CO., l700 1Mft lfttil1 beeft seiiteneed to 0De to 14 N...,orl -..c:11. C.llt • .,... In•••• ;-_, l'on'nl J.,.n ltll, "1 Tutttn ...... , ~years ... llli JIC'1'0ll·
NtWPOft '"'"' c•"'-· nwo Oranae County s u p e r Io r
TM • 11v11..a. It "' en · Court J""'-James 'l\amer lnllJvlcM4. • I ...,..
·-J. ... onlelid::the priloll-t.nn '"' c!,,~~q -;.,;.,., C:-;': -Jarvi Edward . Farley, 4S1
-" ' • '""" -the Sin Dlef> 111111 .,..,_ ....,. too" """ ""'· plttided CUUlJ lo p9lld llleft ~ ,,. "' ,,, ,,,, tnd '= charges.
•
BUENA PARK
•
!
' ' ..
'
1 2 DAILY PILOT
Ireland Rulltag
Co11traceptive . -
Law Not Valid
we will be open ••••
SUNDAY
December 23
12:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Deity: MH. ttlr• Sot. t :30 t9 l :JD
• NEWJIOIT
COIONA DR MAI
1131 l!HI CoQt Hwy.
SDlltll ef "•lllltll 19'Md
67l·S655
OIANG-1
411 so.Ill M•l" NNr ••......,. S•uare
~ 639-4141 ¢§%9~~
ADJUST-A-BED~
BV'SLEEPER-LOUNGE CO., INC . •
a gift of
jewelry TliE 11bECAUSE
1 lovE you" qifr
Pictured above clockwise liom upper left comer.
3 Strand 18K Gold Bracelet, very heavy Ualian sryle SPECIAL ••••••••••••••••• S216
Twisted 3 Strand 18K Solid Gold bfacelet. partial florentined ••••••••••••••••• $212
Man's Black Stat Sapphire Ring, fine star, nugget 14K VG $230 •••••••••••••. $115
Cultured Pearl Pendant, Swlr1 design, line cullured pear114K ,S42 ••••••••••••• $21
Australian Fire Opal Pendant, beauty in simpllelty nugget 14K $64 ••••••••••••. $32
Diamond Bridal Set, oxidized floral design "In style" 14K Gold ., •••• •••••, ,,,$218
Pel ite Pear Shape Fire Opal Ring (shown Is black star) 14K YG $144 ••·••• ,,,$72
Ollset Pear Shape Fire Opal Ring (shown is black. s1arJ 14K VG $128 •..• , , , •• $64
~a1ched Wedding Bands, very heavy wide nugget design 14K VG The Set ••. $113
3 Days Only 3 Days Only 3 Days Only·
BONUS SPECIAL
TIGER EYE
TIE TAC
FINE HONEY
COLOR ~ $3~;;f/l·
BONUS SPECl'J'L
FIRE OPAl
Of' t lA(IC STAI
SAP"'41tE
EAIRINGS 141( YC ' -
Mo11y 1tyl•1
VAl UE 579
$29.99 ~
AU 14K or 11K GOLD
l 1M!.' 0.1 Oo•lltf R1111 $348 C.•1wn -~~ C.rs Tl! '' lfT •
.i.1 S k141 Crnl R1~~ 74 Sool•• '~Ill lhUll Stflt N[f. ....
f 11t 0~11 CodQ~ R•n1-695 J 0.11 . 11~ '' llupet Sl390 .•
W1•fl ti.11e1 0.11W1 R·~I 1 74
D•11tr cil Utllt!L 16"01 SUI.
l1'11 l It.., Chl11tr R<llC. 1 2 0 Jh-gtt. l ._,., l I I r., '240 , '"''l 1''" ,,,. .. , ... 89 '9141 9'111 fnip .. ti 11 ......
l#f1tt' •lhru tu .. •r. 1t11111 44 Slflr, Jiat UOftS Sii , ,,. ", .,,
llU11 lli1. Cl11lllr l 1ftC, 2 5 5 s °'''. in ~ t w. 1•1 "£' ..
Jll""l"'M-$216 T 1ittt I• 0.S.. Ill , , , , ,
"''"' .. -.. 310 '""°""II/Iii&. l'C .....
""'"""•"" 29 ,.., ffW ,. ""' ••••••••
BONUS SPECIAL
IAl'OOUE
(Ul TURED PfARlS
IONUS SPECIAL
.5 leiwlilul
Strl••
SPECIAi
$4,99
BONUS SPECIA~L
CUITURED
·pfAltl EAIRINGS
6 to 7MM hnlN)u'
p~0<t pie<c~GfY
bultOll 141( Gold
VALUE $36"'4
$11~99 .!
BONUS SPECIAL
llACK STA• SAPPHIRE «
fllE OPAl T@ikE TAK
14K YG """"~'" ~· • 'YAlUf $35
$16.99
Ai.L 14K or 1BK GOLD
l1d>tS' 0111 ODii Ri111 $84 2 ht'7 op.ih. lul ,.Ht ..... ,
llnt111fl lldt lrKtltt. 1 9 Q Clf¥ed 1411. Gold •111&tl ......
A"1ttsk1" Ciml & Ruby Ri11t. 80 2 1ub1H tcttlll CO!ll in lC., •• ,
M11'1 Orit11111 Jadt R1"C. 2 9 7 • Opt~ lhp lilt&. UK TC .•..
AmtthJ1,I l iar. Ptlile Hurt 89 Shipe 1to11t i1 1411. TC Ill~ ... ,.
lt•in· '"lltt Clt1ler R;.c, 89
J ll•Ntl Kl ii llffft ·~p ,,,,
lhW1 1.0. lrull!!t~ Jiil 3 2
T&. Pffft<I Jor l•ll'l'flnt ..... , ,,
fire Opel'& 011. Rina. 180 4 .,\lij1at din. 1tu1~ WC ••••
n., a..i '''"'"· °'" 42· Strlt. littJ tlllln TC , • , • ,, , •, ,
PHill AMltml-Stlltlltt 39
Dl11tr ~ •• 1411 TG S1L •••••
... .., "S.,,l Wllllft ' 44 0,tllijtc I .... HI 1411 TG Sii,,,,,
' Stile n4 u.innol Gt-• Wotcllu STA Rf
So .
. IAM LONG BEACH, 43t3At.llnllc Aw.· WHITTI ER, 12918 ~ltSt.
SANTAMIA.:tll!IN.-AECOHOOIEACH,-.... .,_
TORRA.NCI, 24.-1~ aw. TOAA~NCE. °"Amo F .... ..... ~ p.s S{,, NE.-ORT IEACH, F•ion l•nd ORANGE .• Ttil Mall of 0,.,.
ANAHEIM, A .......... PINe LOS ANGELES. Arco Piel:•
Nixon Seen as Grineh· '
contro\lel1lal.' " • BOISE, Idaho (UPI} -second period A m e r i can
Nlnlli graders at North Junior Humanities class came up
HI"" School have created a with the Idea, they approached SHE SAID AS ljx1g as the ,
5 .. teacher Margaret Dom'iniek understood the P r e a I d e n t
bulletin board display llUed somewhat gtngedy . really didn't steal airlltmas
"How the President Stole "They didn't know if and lhat the.re iJ an energy'
phristmas." J'd like it," Mrs. Dominick crisis, she felt ib would be>.i;
They entered it in the said. "They said, _'It's kind ol all right. • school's annual decorating _:=:_=::...:=~.:..::..:..::.::...::_:____::_:_ _______ , <
contest, explaining It was a \If
take-off on Dr. Seuss's book
"How the Grinch S I o I e
Christmas."
IN TIMI POR CHRISTMAS
SIL YER DO UAR KEY CHAINS
WITH
UNCIRCULAT!D
DOLLAR ooly s72s
Cllifomla F8cleral Savings proudly of fen
a bu...-r crop of new high rates.
f9R t\000 OR HORE :
7~% ""'**--··· 7.79% ........ Tmns:4to 10,.ears.
_ ...
6%% ""'**-......... 6.98%1
....... Ttl'ml! 2.lti to 10 ye•rs. .,.... rw. •
6~% ~--... 6.n% --.·-----rems:l1010~ __..,..
FOR ttOO OR HOR£:
5~% .,..,__ ........ 5.92%
....... Ter,.;90dlfltD l,.. ....... . '
FOR tt00.000 OR HORE:
Cerlilicatesol $100,000or more can earn interest
rates fn excasof 7ff"dependlngon lerms ind amcutl
ol-L
FOR .ACCOUNlS OF ANY SIZE:
5~% • .....;... ................. 5.39% A:::.1111 Add or withdraw anytime .,_.,...,
WithOUt penalty, No terms.
S~mini11Jumdeposll.
16 Free Senlc8 Free travelers checks. money
orders. notary service. trust deed note collect~
and photocopies of important documents with
'
OUR ARTIST OF THE MONTH • SHOWING IN OUR LOBBY DEC. 15 ·JAN. 14.
YAMILE GAE%
Yamlle wu bom Jn. Colombia, South America and studied at (Escuela de
BeUOI Art.is) Fine Arts School In Bogota, Colombia. In 1965 she came to
Calitornla and took lessons with Mrs. Pam McNulty, a portrait teacher. Then
'With .Mr. Ed Elif!, Presi dent of the Buena Park Art Guild and a very fine
IJ'!lst.
She is· now ltuclylng with .Mrs. Ryo Terasaky, who specializes in flowers, she
bu bad "viral shows and commission r
'
balanm of Sl.000 or mor9. e __ ,,..
services witti any belancel
Calfoinlr Fedin1S14-.S· and loan AYodalion • A»ets ewer S:z.J 11troft
AccxM#lts Insured up to 120.000 by Ill'\.....,°' tbl Unit9d Stites~
Costa
M0M
Office: ' .
2700 Hltbor~
546-2300
•
OPEN SATURDAYS,
9l01.
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12'' B & W Portable
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IN YOUR CHOICE OF 4 CABINET COLORS
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You'll Like This Price -
Chromacolor II
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Call For Our
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•
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' 1974
RCA
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3 Year Picture Tube
1 Year Parts & Service
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Both These Fine Sets Fe•ture RCA'•
• 100% Solid State Cha11i1
• Accu Mati c IV• Auto Fl11e Tuning e Accu Line Picture Tube
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3 YEAR PICTURE TUBE
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• 5i;:eaker oanfl doors s""l"ll lo c1nt1r. Clblntl se1m1 lo 11,,.1 an 1 ·
dlCJ>ly rtc~se<I bsse. Stltcled twtrd'lfOOd i.olid1 wllh Yel\Mrl of . Amtrlc.an W~lri11:.
YOUR CHOICE $469
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Tlhl Sa11 ,.,\lrlnt-Moclel VST•H. TM r0tnt1nllc br.,vur1 al SP!lnlsll
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to slrlklng f/ftcl. Mo!>lllvt ornamtn1al doO• pulls oro,..lde 1n Old
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WARRANTY
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TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE
9021 Atlanta St.
Huntington.. Beach
. .
.
19046 Brookhurst St.
'Huntington Beach
' .
968 3329
Houas:
DAILY 10.J
SAT. tO.lt>I
lllN. 11•1
FINANC ING
• .. No finance Charges
If Paid In 90 Days or Low
Down & 36 Months to Pay o.A.c.
BankAmericard • ·Master · Charge
•
-\
•
I ·I DAILY PILOl Thursday, December 20, 1973
DIAMOND SALE
BEFORE CHRISTMAS ?
RIDICULOUS ...
BUT TRUE! ,_,.·~ ,~~· ,....,
"
1 h i~ Chri')trn as d iamonds arc a n1an 's best
frien d. Thi s year you 'll be able to .1fford the
on ly gift she'll we ar \vhen she choo<:>cs to
\Vt.'ar nothing else ... your diarnond :
Thi':> y~ar, if you don't \~·astc time you'll
. 111a J...e il to th e biggest SJ.le on fi ne, beauti·
fu ll y cut unique diamonds and other jewelry
th at is .wailable AT 50% SAVINGS. ; .BE·
FORE CHRISTMAS!
RAC ITl'S COSTA MESA JEW ELRY IS
OVERSTOCKED'
Take, advantage of their si tuJtion. Make a
big investment at a small price .•. Give a
gift she'll never outgrow. Diamon ds make a
gif t of love. Bu y one tod ay a t
•
RACITl'S
COSTA Ml SA tfWf_lltY UlOAN. INC.
• 183&· Newport Bol\ll'vard
Welcomes you Weekdays 9.9 :00 • Saturday
9-6:00 •Sunday 12-5 :00 •With plenty of
free parking in the rear.
J 01111 Corradi1ae
A~tor Denies Ru1nor
SAN FRANCISCO tAPl -
Actor JoM Carradine is often
taken for an Englishman -
but he's a direct descendent
of President Ja1nes Monroe,
is collaterally related to
I icorgc \Vashlngton, and v:as
born "on edge or Harlem"
in New York.
The 67-year-0ld performer
\\'ho knows a lot 0 r
Shakespeare by heart and
ranked the late Jotu1 Bar~
•All he 1va11fed
f o do 1vas get as
rich as his 1vlfe,'
(Carradh1e "aid
of Barry111ore.)
rymore as one of his great
companions opened Monday
nighf as "Scrooge" in a
musical version of Dickens'
''Christmas Carol.''
about all the Shakespeare TllOUGll ll[S family has
roles he's played and said a mansion in Natchez, Miss.
hr believes Richard Burton -built by an ancestor "'ho
came close to being the fought I~ Natchez Indians
greatest Shakespearean actor and was granted the lalld by
slnce Barrymore. the then Spanish governor -
"lie should have been,)' Car· Carradine's hotne is in Ox·
radine said. "lie had a fine nard. head. lte spoke beautiful "I have a waterfront apart·
English. But he didn't give ment," he said. "I still sculpt.
a damn. All he wanted to Hotlywood has disintegrated,
do was to get as rich as people are scattered hither
his wife." and yon. l\.1y close· friends OO\\'
He ranked Leslie Ho\vard's are painters, sculptors, musi·
"Hamlet" as the best as.ide cians, with maybe a doclQr
from Barrymore's. ~n~. lawyer or two thrown
"Bob Ryan, i>90r man, u•as ~-'_n. _______ _
the best Coreolanus since
James F. Hackett." he addL'<i·
Carradine, whose falhet
u•as an As&lcialed Press
correspondent a n d mother
a physician. s a i d he cte-
cided to be an actor 01
the age of 14 \Vhen he 53\\'
Robert Bruce 1\tantell in
"~1erchant of Venice."
"I walked out on Clouds,''
CLOSED
SUNDAY
WE'·WILL
IE PlfASF.D
TO SERVE
YOU SIX
he recalled. llE'S 6-{oot,..1 and \\'eighs on· "You can't tell about an
ly 145 pounds -the pe1'fect actor unless you've seen him
DAYS A WEEK
MONDAY
through
FRIDAY lean look ror the miserly on stage." he said. "In films.
curmudgeon. The mu sic a I it's the director, the editing.
"Christmas Carol" was done You have to see an actor 10 •.m ... 9:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
I 0 a.m ... 9 p.m. on television \\'ith the late sustained, in one piece . to tell
Basil Rathbone but Car-whether you're seeing an 1-
radine's periormance at the artist or not. . THE HOUSE OF
Cow Palace was the first on "~Iy son David spent the
stage. first three years of his career
There are many legends playing Shakespeare. He was
about Carradine -one that Laertes to my Hamlet and
Cecil B. Oer.1ille discovered damned good. He wanted to
him as he recited Shakespeare do 'Lear• y.·ith me. He'd also
up and down Sunset Boulevard like to do 'Royal Hunt o(
in a scarlef·lined black cape, the Sun' again, uith me. lie
\\•hich he \'ehemcntly denies. took Broad\vay by stonn in
S.111ati CHst Plcne
Coste Mesti -Lo"' Lrttf.
Scan. E•lll Of Mon.
Directl1 Ac.t os.\ from
WMlwo"~
....... S4i·20i'
Read tl1e Daily Pilot
We Dare You
He does admit that he that," he recalled.
1 played Shake speare under the:1-----------------------'--------------------
stars <it an empty Holly,vood
Bo\vl -but strictly as an
exercise £or his voit'C.
11\1 A \\'lDE·ranging in·
tervie\v, Carradine spoke -----
v CHECK THESE FEATURES
•TWO FULL WIDTH WASH ARMS '
like havi ng a separate dishwasher
under each basket.
•SEALED 1 ANK: no dirty oUtsidE' air
circulales over dishes in drying
cycle .is in o;ome other brands.
•HUMIDITY FREE DRYING : no ho t
steam is ex hau~led into room dur·
ing drying cyc le.
•OISPOSO DRAIN: lc1k es care of .111
soft wastes ... no rising neces·
~ar y, no messy sc reens to cleiln.
•HEAVY ·DUTY 'n hp MOTOR:
wilh 5 year warranly.
•PATENTED THERMOMATIC
HEATER : tor safe drying.
•RANDOM LOADING: so simple a
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Never Before A Deluxe
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UNOERCOUNTER CONVERTIBLE. PORTABLE
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BUILT BETTER BACKED BETTER
p.u:nWi1131~11 ~.u1.wir·.u.~~
_, -., ., FREE 1 YR. SUPPLY ~ <:; ? EXCLUSIVE 5 YR. <::: •
Z1! PA RT S GUARANTE£ -.:::: CASCADE
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~LIMITED
~OFFER
14VAll.l UNITED
STORES
Day after day, month after month, over
70,000 Mutual Savers earn the high est
interest availa ble-compounded daily-with
insu red safety. Extra services? Of course:
free photocopy service. free travelers
cheques, free notary service and, with
qualifyi ng balance, fre e safe deposi t boxes
and free note collection.
Mutual Savings pays more interest than
you can earn at a bank-with insured
si,l fety, extra services and a Jot of old
fas hioned personal service. becouse-
Whether your accou nt
balance is $5.00 or
$S00,000, Mutual
Savings has a high-
eaming. insured savings
plan to lit your needs .
Your Interesting
Neighbor ... in your
nearby Mutual Savings
office, welcomes the
opportunity to assist you.
Now nearing a half·century of
service to Southern California
savers, the Big M-Mutual Savings,
is alm ost half-a·billion dollars strong
... and still growing with three new
offices Ihis year!
Now 9 offi ces: Canoga Park-
Chatsworth. Capistrano·San
Clemente. Corona del Mar. Covina,
Glendale, Pa sadena, Thousand
Oak,;. Vi sta. West Arcadia.
' .
.
CHECK OUR LOW PRICE.
USE OUR LAYAWAY. MUTUAL SAVINGS
SALES OMLY •••
6961 WARMER
HUMTIMGTOH BEACH
142-5596
·-s-., .. S;er•ic•
SiM:e tt2i
SALES & SERVICE •••
40 I MAIH STREET
HUHTIHGTOH BEACH
536-7561
W IOlfl lllOCftllOn •
Capto1nno.S... C......,.e: 530 -Camtno • &tmta/493-5651
Qpei\ Mond,,y.'lllundo\l 9 ty>l to 5"~' Frldoy 10 AM I06 Pl>!
t_.a clolMor: 2867 Eut C-Htgh-/675-5010
'
Divorce
-taw Eyed
In Study
Caplttl News Service
SACRAMENTO -The law
has a way of nexing to meei
the needs of society as tha(
society changes, which is one
of the reasons we have laws
that are' bad and laws that are good.
Enlllronmentallst
r'ormer jewelry exec-
utive Ken Gjemre has
shucked his position In
business and ha~ be-
come an environmen-
talist in Dallas with
his own recycling shop.
"l've been an environ·
mentalist all my lite -
even before we knew
the word -hating to
throw things away and
hating the waste."
DAILY PILOT J5
Sometimes, the effect of a,-----------------~aw cannot be foreseen , as
1n the case or Prohibition
and must be Changed becaus~
there is too much evidence
against It. Sometimes the law
is unequal, and must be made
applicable to those both more
aqd less equal than others,
to recall one phrase.
DIVORCE LAW in
Callfomla used lo be based
on the guilt system .
Somebody. one of the mar-
riage partners, was at fault,
and had to suffer con-
sequences for the breakup of
the relationship.
(NEWS AN..aYSIS)
The legal process of divorce
necessitated accusations of
"'Tongdoing and provided the
means of setting penalties 00
the offender in the financial
settlement.
So in 1969 the Family Law
Act was passed by the
Legislature, (I) to ease the
process that "'as taking place
ln eve'c greater numbers and
(2) to make the concept or
marital dissotuli<>n nKlre in
tune \\•ith the realities or a
modern. less r est ricted
society.
Atn'HORS OF the measure,
A.%emblyman (now Los
Angeles Ccunty Supervisor)
James llayes and State Sen .
Donald (:runsky, won praise
fro1n the National Conference
<>f Commissioners oo Uni·
form State La11·s <>f ·the
American Bar Association.
"tich dre"' up a uniforn\
divorce la"' mcxleled after the
California statute.
The Family Low Act "'as
looked upon as a ncv.· trend
in di\•orce law.
The nalional divorce riltcs
ccntinue lo climb. and one
in every seven divorces takes
place in California .
Other states are looking to
California's experience with
the Family Law Act for
refonn guidelines, to see If
li beralized divorce legislation
has ac.hievcd i n t e n d e d
JlUFPOS'!•~---
TO PROVIDE systematized
infonnation on the subject, a
major study <>f the impact
or no-fault divorce has been
initiated at the University of
California 's Institute of
Governmental Affairs on the
Davis campus.
Eighteen-month flll'lding for
the study is being provided
by the Natiooal Science FOWl-
dalion. which seeks an ex·
amination of ~ing pat-
terns of property division, sup-
port or spouse. child support
and child custody settlements
under the old and new lavts.
A rour-year interview p~
gram is backed by the Na-
tiooal Institue of Mental
llealth. Couples Crom San
F'ranclsco and Los Angeles
counties filing for dissolutions
will be re-interviewed up to
t.wo years after the final
decree.
PRINCIPAL investlgator.i: ln
the project are Lenore
\Veilzman, assistant Pi:°'fessor
or sociology at Dav1.s a~d
assistant research soc1olog1st
at the institute: Ruth Dixon,
assistant professor of
sociology at Davis, and Herma
J-1.ill Kay. professor of Jaw
at Boal! Hall, UC Berkoloy.
The intent of the Family
Law Act, which became ef-
fective in January 1970, was
to create more equltable .con·
ditiom for divorce setUemenls
and make the mclal and
ecOOon'lic readjustment <> f
broken families that much
easier by removing the ac-
cusatory tone from the pro-
cess.
UNDER TRE NEW law,
flnanclal settlements are bas·
ed m the length of the mar-
~-· · --~-ol the two 1111gC, I~
p.rtles, and their ability to
poy.
32A N. NEWPORT ILYD.
NEWPOR T 81.ACH
642-3766
n Years SlfM UUtleft
e SALIS • llR'llCI ·
SllCI 1924
MARKC.
BLOOME
I
"•"" • eHt ( ...........
FREI • ; • h1stol!=on
FRIE • • • Rotati
FREI .:.::E!!'!.~~
OUR LOW PlllUD STEEL BELTED RADIALS GUARANTEED 40,000 MIW REDUUS FUEL CONSUMPTION & TIRE WEAR OVER CON·
VENTIONAL TIRES ACCORDING TO WORLD·WIDE INDUSTRY TESTS ••• PURCHASED BY THOUSANDS OF SATISFIED CUSTOMERS
•.• REDUGD FUEL CONSUMPTION SAVIS GAS & YOUR HARDIARND MMY TOO!
STllL·BILTED
Guaranteed 40,000 Miles!
115/14 6.45/14
ll&/13 6.50/13
166/16 5.60/16
181/14 l.3&/14
195/14 l.l6/14
205/14 8.26/14
206/16 8.215/115
2115/14 8.156/14
E71/14 ••••
DJll14 ·
195/14 .
FIJll14
205/14
1111114
. $ s.6011 s • • • • 17'5
. $ E78/15 • • • • 1995
•21'5 G78115 ••••
H78/15 •••• $24.'5
DOUBU ACTION
SHOCKS -::' 41s .... .. .. ... . . . .,"'".,,.
POLYESTER CORD BODY -
• FU.L 78 SERIES • 12/32' TREAD DEPTH
YOUR CHOICE -"···
ANY SllE. : :
' .. ..,,,..,..,,,..,
A78/13
178/13
C71/13
C71f14
E71f14
f71/J4,
071/14
ff78/J4
071/Js
ff71/JS
J71[JS
161/13
160/14
F60/14
'60114
fORflGN & SPORTS
RADIALS
fAMOUS fAllllC IMPORTED UDIALS
STEEL NON-RADIAL" BIAS BELTID WHITES
145113 •• $1495 . 2495 '71/14 •..
~'!.'~.2 ... r.i~/1.5..31"
~!~1'.c .. 31" ~?J.!'.s .. 33"
1s5/13 .. s19•s .165/15 .. s19•s
165/13 .. s19•s 175/13 •• '1995
155/15 .. •1a•5 16s/14:~ s19•5 ~?~/l.5.2r•
' Wit el Afgn. 95c
S4YI '7.00
••11111r $7.111t11•1N•t. r.11
•In U.S. ctn •.• •llll Uil• Id ••i 2 11r1 '111rc11:.11 ••• etr Cllilll•••• • ter•I•• Clft 1.tl (ITU. .... 1·J1.J4
OUR CONSUMER POLICY
• 4 WHEEL DRUM or
2 WHEEL DISC RELINE
• ARC & INSTALL LINING
• FOlllGN & DOMISTIC
(MOST CARS)
• QUALln IRAKI LINING
• CHICK SPRINGS & SEALS
• CHICK WHEEL CYL
• MUSUH &
INSPECT DRUMS
• IMSPECT MASTIR CYL
., ADD HAlll FLUID
• ROAD nsr CAR
NOW
ONLY •••
Ol SAVI 40% & GIT A COMPLITI
PAWGI llAlll JOI for ••• $49.11 cu.< ""'
M•t.• .... nlllf"llU~lMIR Ml,...., lllK l lllt -IUU"'
MtM ...... m-. "·" 14(11 f'tft •n. 1t1<1ll , .... , ..... , u.11 '" •••n .,.,_ -·-NIW Pasadena Store~ 1917 E. Colorado .Blvd. c .. --;::.:~-:::-~,~ ...
AUTim .... _
....... Wk .... Oltleirwhll
•
.... IUCll ...•• 2111 UllWIOl IUI. llJ.1141 JIS.2111 CULYll an ..... 1141 IUILlllA .kll. llN111 llt.Ult SAii lllllAIDllO •••• 1211 It. w111-· 11111 llS.212'
-.urUJID ....... ttll l !Ill II!. 11141 llMlll "IA Nl•A W.ITTllll .... i. W. Wlllll llll. --1-TUSTlM •• : ........ 41111. MT111 llt4J ISMllt !IOU-.............. 1111 SllllSIT It.VI, • 1-1111 -MllM ... lm S.-OClll SI. llt41 llM111 -•••••••••• tllll SI. 11111111t Ill Pl. J.1111 . ~·· llVDLl MllU ••••.•••.•• 1421 lffllll IUI. ll 1·1111 DOWlllY ...... ttlll UllWIOI kVI. WI 1-1411 1' Htl4. TAIZAltA ••••••• , 11111 llltMA ILVI. Mt.2221111·1411 .. .
•
-·-........ lit 11. L.l IW. WI S.ttll wt ~1214 -mmo .... Ill •. Wltt1Tt8 It.VI. 121-1111 Pl S.1111 ·-CITY .. ltll llll llm IL SI S.111111 1-1111 ' ~W .•.•. 1111 CIUtstllW llVl.11S.ltltI(1-1241 SAllTA -KA .... 1111 WllltDl kll. 121-t!ll l!Mla ---.! , , .. 1111S1t1f-11.144-414t
tAUll G«OVI ... · .... 14'41 llOllllltllll lll41 IJl.llll TOIUllCI ..•.... 11141 ltllllllllHI IL lll·llll lli.tlll ll•ltADA ltlW ........• 11111 -1( SI. 111-1711
IUlllA PA111-AIWl11M .. llll llllCkll IL (114! IJl.1111 HIDlllA ••••. 2114 W. 1911CllllS IL II J.1111111-1111 ilioim .. , ....... 1441 Ill. l'ICI 11. 444-Ull 2SHl4l
ctST llllA . · • · · •.... -1111111 kVI. 114 Ill-••.•.. 1 1 t · · . . .111 t 1111SA II!. 114-lltt 111-2111 ---
..
..
·.
•
' ..
•
11• DAILY PILOT
. .
FIRST IN RACE
State Sen. Richardson
Cranswn
Has 1st
Challeng·e
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -State
Sen. H. L. Richardson (R-
Arcadia), citing inflationary
policies and government con-
trol as targets, has become
the first Republican to declare
for the 1974 U.S. Senate race.
· Richardson announced here
and in taler appearances in
Los Angeles and Sa n Fran-
cisco \Vednesday he \\'ill seek
the seat held by Sen. Alan
Cranston (l>Calif. ), w h o
presumably will run fo r re-
elcctit:n.
"I BELIEVE the gove rn-
ment is heading to\vard an
extremely inf l ationary
policy," Rchardson t o I d
newsmen. "U it's not curtail-
ed, l could foresee an in-
flaUonary curve of 20 pe rcent
by 1975."
He said the ~nsequences
or continued "use of fiat
money" created through the
federal reserve system could
produ ce •·a monumental
deficit" or "bankruptcy of the /
currency."
The candidate 'said he also
would campaign against the
"unbelievable amount of
governmental r c g u I a t o r y
power" exercised at all levels or the economy.
TIIE CONTROL has become
"stifling" and will produce a
._ __ --slowdown makins Americans
"incapable of operating as a
free society," he said.
Ri ~hardson, who has
represented California's 19th
district since 1967, is a former
advertising executive an d
author of "Slightly to the
Right," a book of political
philosophy which has sold
more than 300,000 copies.
Stepping Down
SAN DIEGO (API - Elmer
Enstrom Jr., a U.S .
magistrate since 1969, says
he is retiring Jan. 1. Enstrom,
57, of Julian, was an assistant
U.S. attorney here from 1959
to 1964 and served as a U.S.
commissioner for portions of
the next five years.
REFLECTIONS
~v
Reyn
Sheffer •
"Th• h1•rt of th• giver
m•kn the gift d11r •nd pr•·
clou• .....
M1rtin Luther
During the Christmas sea-
son. an untold num~r of
gifts are purchased and ' glv·
en out of a sense or duty ..•
because it is expect<:-d.·or be·
cause gifts are customarily
"exchanged.'' ......
\Ve can only achiPve th!!
fin est spirit of Cht'i~tmas
.,.,·hen '''C make our gifl.!1
daer and precious . • . aa
"·as God's gift to mank ind
on that first Christmas . . •
by giving of ourselves, from
the heart, and perhaps to
those ,.,,ho neither deserve
nor expect our gift.
.\Ve ~·lsh for you and ynun1 1
a merTy and meaningful
Holiday Season.
a:HBFFBR ~mo .. T1WlY
t7• SOUTH COAST HIGHWAT
l.A&ONA IEACH
--4f4.llJI
SAN CLEMENTE
ISJ) NOITH EL CAMINO JtEAL
492.0100
Thursday, Dfcrmbtr 20, 1973
PRE-.HOL:IDAY
•
JCPenney
NEWPORT BEACH
SALE STARTS FRIDAY MORNING 10 A.M.
Women's Accessories
Orig .
0 412 only Assorted Earrings, N•ckl•c•s
and P•ndants 2.00-3.00
0 288 only Ladies & Junior, H•ndbags
& T otas 4.50-8.0D
0 I SO only Bout.lque Stocking
Stu/le" 1.80-5.50 D I 00 only Leather & Che in Belts .88-4.88 D 120 only Coplen W;g, 19.00-23.00
0 60 only Ke_y Chains 1.44
0 I 00 only Polyester Sc•rves .88-1.88
Women's Sleepwear /Loungewear
D 15 only Dressy Knit Lounger
D 60 only Nylon Print l~unger 0 11 only Long Swa•ter Lounger 0 40 only Floral Print Coulotte
lounger
20.00
14.00
16.00
20.00
0 50 only Assorted Gowns,
P•jamas, Baby Dolls 4.00-8.00 O 15 only long Print loungers 16.00-17.00
Ready-To-Wear
0 30 only Misses Casual Shift Dr9's I 0.00 0 15 only Junior P•nt Su it 21 .• 00 D 10 only Misses Bett•r long Dresses 48.00
0 12 only Misses P•nt Suit 24.00 0 12 only Setter Junior Street
length Dress 30.00-36.00 0 30 only Holiday Long Dresses,
Jr., Miss & Helf 15.00-44.00
0 20 only Half Size Jersey Dresses I 0.00
D 15 only Half Size Print Tailored Dress 9.00 0 I 0 only H•lf Size Floor Length Dress 17.00
Women's Uniforms
0 40 only Assorted Uniform ,
smock type I 0.00
0 15 only Uniform Poly Pents 7.00
O 30 only Assorted Styles Shift and
Pant s,;1 7.00-20.00
Bridal Dept.
0 2 only Lace Gown, Site I 0 61.88 0 2 only S•tin Gown, Size 7 & I 0, 94.00 0 I only T •ff et• Gown, Site I 42.18
O I only PolJ Sheer Gown, Size 12 63.81 O 6 only Bri el Veils I 0.00-20.00
Misses' Sportswear
O 100 only 100 9/. Polyester Pant Tops 15.00
O 28 only I 00 -;. Polyester Blazers 22.00 D 8 100 9/. Polyester large Site P•nts 11.00
Junior Shop
D 10 only Cable Knit Cardig•ns
O I 5 only L/S Striped Sw••ters 0 15 only L/S SoBd Bluer
0 I 6 only L/S Better Print Shirts
O 18 only S/S Prin.t Pentsuits
O 10 only Glitter Vests
Shoe Dept.
24.00
17.00
27.00
17.00
26.00
12.00
0 40 only Pr. Womans Espadrill•
SBpper 4.99 D 30 only Pr. Womans Casu•I
Shoes 7.99-9.99
O JO only Pr. Big Boys Dress Shoes
Sizes 31/z to 6. 7.9-9-10.99 D 30 only Mens Dress Slip-ins 26.00
O 40 only Pr. Womans Hi H1el·
SHng hck Clog 7.99
D 40 only Pr. Mens Tennis Shoe with
Racer Stripe 6.50
Men's Furnishing
D 27 only Pla;d Je~n Sh;rts 1.98 0 48 only Fashion Sport Shirts 6.98
D 97 only Long Sleava Turtlenecks 5.98 0 120 only Knit Dress Shirts 11 .98
0 84 only Men's Ties 3.50
O 200 only Long Slee,. Leyor Look Sots 9.98
Men's Clothing
0 38 only Mens Sportco•ts
Wool Fancies 0 110 only Mons Fell
Jae Ice.ts 0 170 only Mons ~locks-.
Dress & C•su•I 0 156 only M6ns Sl•cks 0 I 02 only Mons Sloe ks
57.95
17.99-19.98 .
5.'8-7.98
1.tt.10.98
11 ;00.20.91
NOW
1.22·1.H
2.81-5.88
.44•1.81
.44-2.11
10.18·11.88
.44
.22-.44
15.81
10.81
12.11
16.88
2.00-4.00
6.00-8.00
7.81
15.88
31.11
17.H
21.11·26.81
1.00.25.81
4.00
6.88
11.88
5.00
3.50
3.50· 10.00
34.00
66.00
22.00
37.00
S.00·10.00
11.81
16.88
1.88
20.88
13.18
21.88
13.18
28.18 '·"
2.18
4.88
3.00
18.11
4.88
3.18
5.11
3.81
3.81
8.81
1.H
7.88
46.11
12.11
4.11
6.11 '·"
Girls' Dept
' Orig.
O I 00 only School Age Girls Dresses s;, .. 1.14 5.00.13.00
O 80 onl.y Pre-school Girls Dresses s;,., 3-6x 5.00·9.00
O 60 only School Aga Girls P•nt
Sets. Sizes 7-14 7.88-15.00
0 40 only Preschool Girls P•nt Sets
s ; .. s 4-6x 8.00.11.00 O 62 only Girls Outerwear
s ;,es 3.12 3.88-21 .00
O 24 only School•g• Girls Body
Suits. Sizes 8-14 2.88-5.00
0 80 only Asstd. Tops, Bustouts, Fly.
aways, ate. Sizes 7-14 I .88-5.00
O 36 only L/S Swe•tar Assortment:
Sizes J-14 7.50 0 36 only V•sts, U-neck, V-neck & T•nk
Styles. S;us 8-14 2.88-4.50
Infants' Dept.
O 40 only Toddler Girl Dresses
s;, .. 2T-4T .Z.88-6.00 0 25 only Toddler G,irl Pent Sets
s;,., 2T-4T 6.00-8.00
O 50 only lnf•nt Pa"1•m• Assortment s;, .. 1-1 v, 1.88-2.88
D 24 only T oddlar G;rl Nylon
Gowns. Sizes 2.4 1.88 0 60 only pkg~. Oieper Penties
{6 per pkg.I newborn 6/.44
Boys' Dept.
O 250 only School•ga Boys Shirt
Assortment. Sizes 8-18 1.79-3.98
O 30 only Preschoolage Boys Shirt
Assortment. Sizes 4-6x 2.49 O 30 only Schoolaga Boys Pents s;,., 12.18 1.88-7.98
O 30 only Preschool Boys Corduroy
Pent. Sizes 4-6 3.98-5.50
Men's Slack Clearance
i7o Prs. Group I
'
156 Prs. Group 11
102 Prs. Group Ill
Stationery Dept
orig. 5.91-7.98
or;g. 1.91-10.98
orig. 11.00.20.91
O 33 only Nostalgia Pens 1.95
0 96 only Magi~ Print Min i Kits 1.50
NOW
3.88-f.88
3.18.7.88
4.88-11.88
5 ........
2.8a.16.88
1.11·3.18
.81-3.aa
5.18
1.88-3.81
1.IM.81
3.88·6.88
.aa.1.11
.II
6/.22
.81°2.88
1.81
.88-4.81
2.88-4.88
488
NOW
688
NOW . 18
NOW 9
·" .66
TRIM·A·HOME DEPT.
16 ooly 6' ARTIFICIAL CHRISTMAS TREE
Odg. 14.99 NOW 7.50
2DO ooly SANTA LAMP
Odg. 1.00 NOW 44C
CUSTOM DRAPERIES
ASSORTED FABRICS
AND COLORS
UP TO 50% OFF
BRING YOUR MEASUREMENTS
D 350 only pr. P;nch Plut Shorty
Curteins. Asst. Sizes 3.99-6.99 1.88 .. J.88
D ~O only pr. Rudy Mede
Oreper;os, Aul. s;,., I 0.50-48.50 6.88.J0.88
D 25 only C.fo Rods. 48-86'". 4.50 1.11
Furniture · ·
D only E•rly Americ•n Herculon
D
D
tJ
D
0
D 0
D D
D
Solo. Rust 229.00
only Contemr.or•ry Sofa.
Gold P e;d 309.00
only Contempor•ry Love Seat.
. Oliv• 189.00
109.00
99.95
only Occ•sionel Chair. Gold
only Sq. Commod•. Paean
only Franch Prov. Dining T •ble
Pocen 139.00
only End Tobie. Derk Welnut 71.00
l only Denim Donut 0.•lr. Navy 69.95
I only D•nim Arm Choir. Nevy 79.9S.
4 only Vinyl Apnlo1~ Ch1;r
Red1or•Blaclf
3 only Vlnyl Arm 'Chelr
Rod oi Bleck
69.95
74.95
141.00
221.DO
ti.DO
41.00
41.DO
It.DO
31.00
41.DO
41.00
41.00
41.00
Merry :~bristmas _from .Penneys. . . -. . ..
JC Penney •
24 FASHION ISLAND e .NEWPORT BEACH ONLY
f l®r Covering
O only Polyester Shag Rug
5'9"x8'6". Blue
0 only Polyester Loop Rug
6'9~'x8'6", Orange
O only Polyester Loop Rug
6'x9'. Orang• 0 only Oval Shog Rug
6'x9'. Multi-color
O 171 only Sheg Cerpet Tiles
I 2"x 12". Multi-color 0 I 00 only C•rpet Samples.
18"x27". Asst. Colors
O I only Poly Plush ·Shog Carpal
I 2'x34'. Avoc•do
0 only Poly Plush Shag C•rpat
12'x27'9". Lt. Green
Home Electronics .
Orig.
22.00
18.00
I
18.00
49.99
.86
361.97
295 .63 .
D only Opti9an Organ w/bench
Wal""t 499.95
O only E•rly American TV-Stereo
Theatre 995.00
O 40 only 6-Trans. Port•ble Radio 12.88
Major Appliances
0 only S.B.S. Refrigar•tor. 21 cu. ft.
Avoc•do. W/ice maker 539.95 0 only 5,000 BTU Air Conditioner I 19.95 0 only 6,000 BTU Air Conditioner 154.95
O only 8,000 BTU Air Conditioner 199.95 0 only I 0,000 BTU A;r
Conditioner 209.95
Housewares
O 12 only Le Creuset 9" Skillet 7.95
O 5 only IO" Stainless Steel Fry P•n 11 .49
O 5 only "Biscuits" Canister J0.00
0 15 only SH Salt 1.75 O 10 only Champagne Bottli ng Kit 7.99
Gift Dept.
D 26 only CoNloss Electr;c Clock 11.88
O 5 only Fr•med Roclcwell Prints 45.00
O 6 only 4 pc. Bar Sat 5.00
Piece Goils
O 60 only yds. Haw•ii•n Prints 2.22
O 48 only yds. Polyester Metallic Plaids 3.99 0 35 only yds. Acrylic Crepe 1.98
O 42 only yds. Polyester Sp•rlcla Knit 6.99 O 110 onfy yds. Bond ad Acrylic Knit 1.66 O 37. only P1nncrest Electric Scisson 12.95
O 31 only yds. Crushed Velvet 7.99
Bedding
O 40 only pr. Standard Pillow C•ses 1.88 O 29 only Fitted Bottom Twin Sheets 2.99
O 31 only FHted Bottom Full Sheets 4.99 O 4 only Twin Bad Spreads , 12.50
Sporting Goods
0 8 only Sat of 6 Fiberglass
Huntin9 Arrows 13.'45 0 50 only 24" Archery Face T1rgats
0 60 on1y Archery Accessories,
String_s, Points, etc. ·
0 3 only Foremost 12 gau9e Shotgun 88.88 0 12 only Double Knit Western Shirts
Hardware Dept.
0 only 9" Motoriiad Sew Paclc•ge
with Blade Guerd 199.99
0 only IO" Motorized Saw Package
with Blede Bu•rd 234.99
O I only 4" Deluxe Jointer 144.99
O 36 only 6 ft. Vinyl Carpet Runner D 76 only "Welcome"Rubber Door Mats
D 6 only g•ls. Adhesive Mort•r O 28 only Rexible Dryer Vent Kits 5.00-6.99
O 40 only rolls Asst. Wallp•par double roll
Camera Dept.
D
D
• 3 only Bell & Howell Low L;ghl
Movie C•mera 179.88
2 only J.C. Penney Super 8
Cartriclg• Projector 104.95
TBA Dept
D I· only Mini -Bike los hi 109.95 O 36 only Jumper Cebles 1.81 D 150 only Survivor Radial Tires. Limit•d
quent. G78-14 & L78-15 Verlo"'
• ST~RE HOURS
Friday & Saturday
10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
NOW
f .11
f,81
f,81
34.81
.50
·" 175.fO
143.56
241.00
744.00
f.11 '
43'.00
61.00
61.00
98.00
98.00
4.11
5.11
4.11
.44
3.81
6.11 ·
24.81 '
1.11
1.44
2.88
1.22
4.11 ...
4.H
5.81
·" 1.81
3.81 ....
'·" .25
.25·
59.H
3.33
14'.H
17'.H
109.H· ,_ ... ,
.so ·" 3.,, ... ,,
.33
12'.DO
77.00
5'.04 ...
v. Off
Sunclciy 11 a.m. to 6 P·ll'· '--'-----
Mon day 1 O a.m. to 6 p.m.
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T""'4ai, O"tmbtr 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT J7 ~~~~~-.,..-~~~~
• Give Christma·s· gifts of fragrances .
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COT-Y EMERAUD'E
GIFT SET
F•lconoMl~t. nlPwt,dl .08 ozt. 500 . and u1t1nc aw er, n •
wl 4 oz.
MAX FACTOR
GOLDEN WOODS
FRAGRANCE GIFT SET
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Spr11 Mist Cofoene 1 ~ oz. 500 lllth Pawder nl wl 3 oz.
' REVLON INTIMATE DELUXE
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PERFUME DUSTING POWDER
NL wt. 6.7 oz. 500
. . ,.
APRI~ SHOWERS
SPRAY MIST PERFUME I ~-z-n._oz. _7_9_¢ _ _...
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CHARGE IT 11 The Tr111ury
with your JCPonney Cllorge Card. If you don't have a charge.·
just see how last we can open up yqur new account.
•
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1t
GIFT SET
Perfumed Tak:, nl wl 3.6
oz. Eau de Toillette Spr1y
Mist 1.5 fl. oz.
PRINCE MATCHABELLI
COLOGNE DUET
Wind Sane Ind Golden Au·
tumn Coloene. 31s
ORSAGE DUSTING POWDER
ITH GENUINE.DUSTER PUF
Ch-. blue; pink or
yellow.
FABERGE
SPRAY COLOGNE .
Available In Aphrodesla,
400 Woodhue, Tiil'-Flam·
be1u. 1.7 IL oz.
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OLD SPICE
GIFT SET
4Y. .II. oz. After Shave.
Lotion and 4y, fl. oz. Co·
loene. 299 1 t
BRUT FLIGHT ·
GIFT SET
1.5 II. oz. Lotion. 1 fl: oz. 500 After Shave Creme Lotion.
ENGLISH LEATHER
GIFT SET
All·purpose Lotion, Stick
Deodorant and ..ap-on·•· : 5 7 5 rope.
JOVAN MUSK OIL
FOR MEN ·
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4"(1'.oz. 500
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We rewrve the r .. ht to llmtt quantltl•. Special prices good thru DM. 21, 21, ·22, 23, 1973
BUENA PARK ORANGE .
Nt. wt. 4 oz. 1 77
MENNEN SKINBRACER
4· PIECE GIFT SET
229
ROMAN BRIO
GIFT SET
4 ff. oz. After Shave lotion 399 and 4 II. oz. Coloene.
BRITISH STERLING
GIFT SET
•
~ Shive lotion 4 II. oz. " ,. __ Spr1y Deodorant nL 675
wt. 2 Ol. .
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Baech 1t 01'9~thorc>9 City Or. at G1rden Grov. Blvd. 3900 SO. 8rl1tol • No. of So. CoNt Plaza
Opoft Dolly l:Jll to l :Jll p.ftl,lu-J 10"1D.1-0pen 10-1.P..m• D••lr Su..iar 10 to I. .>pen l.0-1 p,m, Dally Sunday 10 to I
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Pr i 11 cin<rl
Re k nts
On. Part ts
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
A suburban elementary school
principal who forbade female
pupils to \\'ear pants at school
has relented.
· Principal Emanutil!!
. Oamonte of lm Cerritos
Elementary School ln South
San Francisco lifted the no-
pants rule ror girls following
a t'Ollrt action by t h e
American Civil L i b e r t i es
Unloo.
'
Thursday, Otctmbtt' 20, 1973 •
30 Years Later
WWII Soldier Finally Home
From Wire Services
Pfr. SI mo n Francis
"llobie" StalUngs 'A'3S buried
in HcrUonl, N.C. "1th full
military rites -almost 30
years after he was killed in
Germany during \Vorld \Var
It.
Stallings, 25, left a widow
and 3-year~ld daughter. 'nley
had only a Purple Heart
award to remember hlm by
because none of his personal
effects was returned.
to encourage judges to reti~
by 70. '
* Legislators received some
shortage-related advice when
they met In special session
at ~1adison to r e v I e w
Wisconsin's position in the
energy crisis.
The Rev. Geor1e Stacy con·
eluded a ceremonial opening
prayer by remarklng: 'jMay
all our words be gracious and
tender today, because tomor-
row we may have to eat
them ." The group, representing the
mothers or five girls who at-( )'
leld Los Cerritos . filed a clvli . PEOPLE
rights action against Oamonte
in federal court. '---------
* Gov. Rould Reagan ap-
pointed Rady C. Garcia, 431
a decorated Vietnam war
, i\lrs. Lee Port, altorney for
the school, disclosed that she
e1pects the suit to be dropped.
His body was found last Navy officer, as his associate
September. His daughter was press secretary at an annual
notified that the remains had "7,402 salary. UPI T.t.ftole •• been identified last week. llls Garcia, the Governor's assis-
wUe remarried 21 years ago. HOME FOR NOW -tant press secretary since * Prime Mini~ter Kakuei June 1972, succeeded Clyde
N•w Tlir• New "Sorry I overstayed,'' said Tanaka of Ja.pan is out Walthall. who was promoted
Yeor'•,_•.,.,,--ff_Jj"":;-~a.,ndww,,r"'it.,le<CnS-'n'!!o"leC,.;'o~n~a _of the hospital after to press secretary. iiliday parking line enve ope. w" suf!erin1f11!1-earinfe·~-~-~---~-~
signed Otis R. Bowe n, M.D. tion but doctors want An unidentified htiddle East Spectacular and inside was the $2 fine him to return Saturday ··oil magnate won 4.5 million
in cash. for further checks. francs (almost $1 million) ln
W1ttt 11&1 .. Prkn eH x-..
tM w•y, liwe c.elMI IONA wlrtt
• "Trip .. TilrMt."
r~------'SI Wooden Nickels l
WOITH IOc I I ow1,,. °""" :sptctacular. 11
Ii 11·1 wortfl 90c low•rd• Mv
You lliec .. .,. " Wooden Nldl .. °t KOHA PUlllCHASI ·---------~------... • HOLIDAY CHEER
Ill W• ·~ 11•1111111 prlc• on our M bevrr•e-""rU" brM!d1, 1ucft JR •• Eerly Tlmet , • • Ol.tr ~ "over en OUllCe'' w.tl drlnlr.a « Just 70c r~~------Sil ~-..... -....... , R D•nclng And ~ Entert•lnment
t.: Dane.Ing M lllt ~lrlggoer ' M Room from ' p.rn.. pl111 I lliosco• HOLLAND Mon·5'11
::-.·-------~
Bowen, a physician, who two nights at the Evian Casino
also happens to be Indiana roulette tables, casino officials
governor, received the citation son of conductor Leonard said in France. It reportedly
beca\tse a parking meter ex· Bermteln gave the First Bap-was the biggest \vin at the
pired while he was speaking list Cllurch ln Dallas a casino in 2S years.
at the Indiana Club in South worthless $20,IP) check, but A spokesman said the
Bend. police said church officials oilman, whom he refused to . * will not press charges. identify, frequently stops at
Baxter Ward, 54, Lo s The unidentified man~ about the casino after business trips
Angeles C.ounty supervisor and 40, gave the church the Check in Geneva. The mystery wtn--
fonner television newscaster, during a performance ol the ner WNtred uP to $16.000 on a
said he is seriously con· 410-voice choir. He said the single turn of the wheel, tbe
sidering becoming a candidate money would pay the choir's casino said.
for the Democratic nomination expenses for a trip to New *
for governor next year. York to sing with the New The high-fashion house of
"It all depends on what hap-York Philharmonic Orchestra. Chanel announced it parted
pens between now and late Suspicious church members company with Ra mon
January," he said. prompted a call to Bernstein's Espmu, the second designer * New York office, which in· who unsuccessfully tried to
"Irs the only thing you get dicated an imposter using the take the place of the late
free from here," President fam ily name had run up bills Gabrielle "Coco" t:banel.
Nixon told bis fourth attorney in several other cities. A spokesman denied
general, giving William B. * publl!lhed reports that the
Saxbe a copy of t h e The presiding justice of Chanel perfume c o m p a n y
Congressional Record with the California's Court of Appeal would clo1e the Co utur e
KONA LANES confirmation vote. aMounced he will retire Jan. · division of the organization.
"Otherwise we'd be bribing 5, a day before his 7oth The house's spring fashions
1 • you ." birthday. will be revealed as usual In
i. 2699 Harbor, Costa Mes• * Juslice Preston Devine January the spokesman said, ';;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiigi;-~Ai;,im~a~n.,;;w~ho~poi:iiised~~·si;.ith~ei;;;;;~no~t~edi;.iai.;;is~ta~te~l~awii;;,d~e~s~ign~ed~ but the designe'l' was not riam· I ed. Esparza and the Chanel
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SCISSORS SHARPENED
REGULAR
SHEARS
PINKING ·
SEWING
BARBER
GARDEN
KITCHEN
SURGICAL
ETC.
Ground to a perfect uniform edge by experts
with the finest commercial equ ipment avail-
able. Bring in all your scissors. Your
neighbors, tool All work done while you shop .
PINKING
SHEARS
FR IDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY
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HOOVER
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• Automatic Power Drive
• Wide-Angle Heod Light
• Positive Ag9ilotion
• .Cleons Any Corpel
Low Pile lo Sho9
s1s9so
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JCPenney
Wo Know· W.hat )' oui Looking For
24 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH •
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finn decided shorUy after he
presented his first and only
f11shion collection in Augmt
that he would leave at the
end of the year after supervi&-
ing the fulfillment of orders,
the spokesman said.
FASHION RINGS
IN NATURAL GOLD
IN DIAMONDS
/\. S$c-o.
B. S-130.
l~. s~os.
IJ. SJJO.
[. s~;s,
~ES}l.BARll -w----( ~"""
Watc!llf Plu•
N1wpeh .. ,,ti lll M.riM AVf
·~·Ibo.I hl•"'
KIDS LIKE TO
ASK ANDY
. . •
The high cost of ''cheese'' is dowo.
•
. ORANGE -AANTA ANA
City C.. Ii a.-OtM M 9Dll a_ Miii •HD. d to. Oolll fllill
Opel'I Dlift' I SunN)'t 10 10 10 ()pit\ DlllV' & Sl.n:lilf 10 IO 10
~R!UARK
Optn ~I .....,.I~ to 10 P.M.
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UC Irvine
Offering
Lectures
The University of California
at Irvine Extension program
for mlci.JaQuary includes lec-
tures on subjects from "Cold
Pricklies vs. Wann Fuzzies"
to real esta'e series. For furth·
er infom\ltion, contact the e!'t·
tension coordinator at UCt.
Here are '8 list of events:
TU•SDAT, Jiii. 11
"CrN tl1111 e11 £nvlronmtnl With 1"1lnl1 11111 P-11: Cold P•l(klltt vs. W"rm Fuu;J-.," J""" Lend. M.$.W., 111 ltlll'lplJt, Ptr1 of t kc:lur. seritt,
"H111°'nl11111 111 Cru ll .... AWll'lftllf," 1-10 o.m., Rmt. SI~. sn , Jlt, un1 ...... 11tv Hloll SC:llool, t771 C1mP111 Drive, , ... ,,.,. "°"': _.,."Wdlt •\01 Credit,
"J; 511'1Qlt tdml•1lon. SS.511.
"land l"11rd11M tnd Ofter l"•-rt· tlM " lot:> W1lkM, llf'lncl!lfll, W1flll"1
•111tv. First of 1 Itel~ ..,.rn. •·D·-·-'"!!:91 l'·•~tlcH In t ..... Hou'I"" tr.ctu1trv," .,.,.;3& 11.m., ltrn. 1,1,
Hum1nlllt1 H•ll. ""' IJSi Sll'IOlll &dml11lon. U.511.
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Trudeau's 'Hell
Of a Rich Man'
<rrrAWA (AP) Prime ~1inister Pierre Eliott Trudea1u
says he 's "A hell ol a rich
man " and Canadians probably
should keep an eye on him. ·
TruQeau's ei:change Tues-
day with newsmen occurred
after he submitted to the
House of Commons some cori·
...
flict of inter e st s recom-
mendations for p u b I i c
servants.
Ask ed about his o w n
personal assets, Trudeau said :
"Why don't you just assume
I'm rich." ·
-Pressed for a figure, he sa1d
with some Olppancy: "Let's
say flOO million."
Ul"I T.i-.,.
CANADA'S TRUDEAU
Thursday, Ote,mbtr 20, 1973 DAI LY PILOT J9
What'll It Be? Cranes or Craters?
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The rare whooping crane bas
a highly placed fr iend Jn
Washington who might just
get those big Air Force birds
off their necks.
Defense Secretary James R.
Schlesinger, an a ma t e u r
ornithologist, has been asked
to rule whether the use of
~1atagorda Island off the Tex-
as .C98Sl as a practice bomb-
ing target is endangering the
species.
THE BIRDS spend their
winter ln the adjacent Arkan-
sas National Wildlife Refuge
and some also settle on the
s outh v.•este rn part of
~1atagorda after summering
in Canada.
Sch.tesingc r is examining a
report from Interior Depart-
ment official Andrew Sansom,
who concluded that the birds
are being disturbed and
t h r e a te n e d by ,plane
overflights, bombing, low-level
str..afgtg and hunting b Y
nlilitaey per s onn e l and
civilians on the isl3nd.
The Air Force, which owns
part of ~1atagorda and le3ses
the rest rrom the state and
a private owner, has used the
island as a practice bombing
range since World War II.
Tfie 100-yard square target
area is more than five miles
from a place where whooping
cranes have been spotted, an
Air Force official said .
SANSQl\t SAID hunters are
warned by the-Air Fgrce not
to shoot the v.1iooping cranes,
but that the precaution docs
not alv.•ays protect the birds.
He r~mmended t h a t
Interior acquire the rest ol
the Wand Jo protect !he whoop-
ing cranes. Until then. lie
suggested, bombing and straf·
Ing should be halted from
October through April.
THE AIR Force denies that
Its activities endanger the
whoopers, saying it had taken
strict meas ures to Insure their
safety and that the population
of the cranes in the wild has
more than doubled since the
bombin g rah ge was establish-
ed , now numbering about 50.
"l11ldftnl~lari•: lncl!lel!ce, Dl1lrl1"1-tt1111 Ind Contrlll," Tlmo/tly Crocklll',
M.O(' 11rol•1sor, C:ommun!tv j, llnv ron1M11t11 Mtd!Clllt, C1!1kl•nl1 Coli«!• of Medlcl11t, UC lnl11t, Plrl of 1 ltetu._ wrlt1, "C1nc1r ••.
Enoloi:1•, ~11ldtmlol1111v. Ther111~i" .1·10
!.m .• F.1r1oh1Mn ltehff'I H11ll • .....alc•I uroe llldo. fff: Non--crtdll.· u.51 C:rldlt, l.5S1 Sinai• ldm!11ion, W.JO.
Put your holiday girl .in a great gift robe. And save.
7 11.m.
"S.•l1m In Educ1t1on," Lvnn Onn, M.A., lllClltf' 111d re1n rche•. Perl
of 1 work111oD 11roqr1m, 1 • 10 11.m. Am. ts.i. Humftnllll!s Hill. Fff: W , wllll llf' wltho!,lt credit.
WIDM•SDAY, JAM. 16
"Anlm1I ~lrl 1nd Admlnl1tf1tlon ol Flr1I Aid ,' 01v1d Hutlmen, O.V.M.1 ~Ill Smr.• Ptl Cllnlc. l'1rt 01 lildl.lrl lll"ln. "Fundament1I• of
Anlll"llll Cl rt ," 1 • 10 P.l"l'I., RIJI. H7, s11r11111us H111. F"; Non--credlt, I SSI Credi!, 110.
"511tnlli'I. MfJ1lc1n. or Clllc1no?." l-rd Pltt, 11S01:ll l• llf'tlfl llOf', Hl1torv, ftlltornl• S1111 Unlwr1!tv •I Norlhrloo.. ,,rt of I 1tehff'I 11fle1, "C1IUornl1: MYIM I nd Rulltln (" 1 -10 D.m.. ltm. 17', Humanlt ts Hi ll. FH: Non<Adll. SlO: Credit, ISJl Sllllllt fdmluloll, SS.50.
HA,,,.,tcen ..Culhn't Tllf-h 111 l"OD Arlt." 1"1ul Frhltr, l"h.0., 11M1t1nl
ErolH'!l!f.i Enot1111, c111om.n C11lf11111 UCI w11Utm1. M.F.A .. !"ltllnl Pl"• 1wr, Art Cll1111111n Pl1eQe, 1 -t;JO P.m., itm. ts.i, Hum1nllle1 Htlt.
F": wLm or wlrhcM credit. '"·
lMUltlDAY, JAN. 17 "H1llue!noo1n1 1nd sh 1m1n I 1 m !P1ruv!1n Sh1m1nl1ml," M 1 r I• n • Doll~!n O. RI,.., Pl' 0., 1~•ocl1l1 11"1'1111or, Anlttfppoflgy. Clfllornl1
St1t1 Unlver11!v 11 Fulttrlon. P1rt ol 1 lteTur•lllm 11dt1, "S"'8m1nt1m: Sludltl In N-rdln1rv A11lltv.'' 1
· t ::IO o.m., Am. 101, Pn~lc1I Sclt nee llldll. Ftt: W , wllh or wltllovt cl'9dll; 51111111 ldml11loll, SS.
"fllflCtlon of lht N.,._. SV51fm," Alfred E. lhMrQtr, Pll.O .. 1nl1T•nl 1N"ofnsor, l"hnk tl Medlcln1 end RI II I b I I lt1lloll (Nl\/!"011ftV1loloavl. r.1111orn1~ CoH-of MldlC:I"', UC Irv,.,., l"trt of • llC'l11rt Mrl". "Tiit
N1r¥0Vt 5...,11tm," 7·10 o.m .• Frnl'lmln Lteuur1 Hi ll, Medlc1I Suroe II Bl.,.,., Fee: Nl'n-r.redll, "IS: Credit, ISS;
Slntlt tdmlulon, $6.s'.t.
TMUIUDAT, l"tllDAT & SATU•DAY J-.. 11, II llld It "Tiit N__,valolOOk a.1'1i r 1tthlb!llte1l11r1 foltdlct111," Jirrom1 . lobl1, M,0 ., proftnor 1nd d\411rmlfl,
Pllnlul MfdJcl11t •l'ld Aell11'!1Ul1!1on. C1lllornl1 C~tll!Qe of Mlodkl11t. OC lrvlr.. A ~·v conttrenc1. I 1.nt.·
S p.m.. """°""' Inn, 1107 J•m-bor11 ltotd.. Htw-' Bff<.11. FN :
1100, ••c"I for raldtnt nt1vskl1n1 I ncl llllll"ftl, for Wllofn II II 1511.
,.!DAT & SA1V•DAY , ... 11 1M It
••A '°"* 1t Y-Ful\11'1: 1"tr1G111I 1nd ~11IOJ11I 1"11nl\l1111, Rober! 01w. Ed.O.. prfllcll!'lt, l111tltul1 ,_ t11t Ol•"llOIMMlll of Human RHOllf'Cfl. A "-4rt -'lend or1111r1m, Fri .. 7.10 ,,,..,.1 S.! .. t t .m.-J 11.m., ltlfl. 2'0, SOCl1I Sclttice• t-r. UC lrvfnt
Cl-. '": S3S-
, •• D-AT;-1ATUIUJAT iM-IUNDA"T;-" J•, 11, lt 1!MI • "lndlv!du111lied L1111rnl1111," J 1 nt v-.rd, M.A .. ttldltrnt..n11<; n ntll'
c<!Ordln•IOf" •~1t1tute for lnd90Mdtnl lductll-1 •-rdl. lf'ld./or Allbln o.w. ld.o •• prnld1t1t, 1111t1tvt1 tor
ti. 0.ll'e'-Nnl of Humfln Att.OUl'Cll. A tlu'te-dlv DrflrGTllfl, Fri .• 7·10 p.m,)
Set. tnd 51111., l ;:IO 1.m .• s D.m., ltm.
174. eon...1... kltnef lkilJ-"": ....
PltlDAT, SATUtlDAT Nlf SUNDAY, JM, IL lt lllf ,. "Tl!l1 Lulll 11 Ollr Lend: A Hlstorv
oil Elllnlc Alnlfk l Lii FdklCll"O," Kl'lfll and ltUllY McNtH, fol• music COft' I u I I I n 11 . A lletl.lr"IH>lrforl'l'llnct .....it.rid worl<lhac> 11111 .,..._....,, Fri .. 1·10 o.m..1 Set., I 1.m.·lf .-, 1•
r..m.1 $1111.1.1 •.1t1,•l2 noon. l..S 11.m .• m. 17', Humenitt.. M1 tl. Ftt: Ml,
neludt• -1Ntlflal1.
SAT\lltDAY, J111. It "$eltetlnt Y-SmtH l llllnftl Com-out.r: EllCtl'Onlc: AC~llllCI tor the 70't.'' Lnt..-L Wl'ldl, M.8.A., B.S.£.E.. m1n""""'nl 11MM>l"tl CPrl-IUlllnl 1ped1ll1!, Altlllndtf' Grent j, CDmDlhYI ~ It. Grtff, M.B.A., l .S.1.£ .. mtftlQlmtnl tdvltQl'V CPr1-1u1t1nt Alt••ndlf Gr111t & ComDlflv, A ~IY M1T1in.r. ':lO 1.m.-l;lO
p.m., Rm, ISi, Ph111c:t1 SClll'l(H Ilda. F11: ~ lncludts unch tnd oertlnci.
"Ulnl!INI Tlmt Etlectlvelv," How1rd Wlli.on, p r• I Id• n t , Admlnl1tr1llll'e •-rcll AMOClttn. 1nc. A ~v wmln1r, t 1l0 1,m.-ol :JO o.m ., Atqlnc'I Room, Grtnd Hotel. Numblr I Hortl Wav. An111tlm, F": $«1. lncllldH
dau mtflrl•l1. lunch t ncl 111rklnu.
IUNDA'(, Ja It
"'91)!k Ule1r," ltollerl C. COl'ftbl, M.O .. n10Cl1t1 o.1n, c11nkel llf'Oftslllll'
DI .llf"lll"tl• C11lfoml1 CDlleC!t of Mtdlcl111, UC lrvl11t. tt. _.otv or. Dr1m on Cwrrtnl 0.~ots In l"htrmfCllolrv, t 1.m.-4 o.m ., ltm. 1CO. !IOCl1I ·· k lenct Mitt. F": IX!,
l!'lcil,ldn IUllCll I nd Plrillno.
MOMIAY, JM. 11
"0.Slcin Ftbrtc1Uon. StfH, Fln1n-cln11 end 1~,t11!1t!1111 of locJ.tr'l Mobile
HonM." Mitt Coda. bfCVtlvt di"°°"
C1lttoml• Mobllt Home ~ Al•ltlloftl Kin L-. l llllte11t 'tlct ekllfit rn1Mqrtr , MoDllt KOIN nl. GrHt Wfll'"' S.vlnos 1nd n Auocl1t1on. Pert Of • t.ctvrt ,...i... "MOl!llt Hornt 1"1rlu: P1lf. l"r-t ind flllUO'f.'' 7-10 11.m .. Am. l7t, H111111nfllt1 Htll. F": $651 Slncitt tdmlu loft. $6,JO,
TUftDAY J...._ n
HA H11DOffllN1.'' iouter to bf Ill· llOUll(l(I, l"trl DI I Mc:l'llf9 Mfin, "H1~nln;1 In Cr11tlw Aw1r~.-· 7.10 11.m .. •ms. JlO, sni 512. univ tv Hklll k'-1. •m 1m11111 Pr ... tn.t'll Fff: -.c;red:'.i SlOI CrMflt, lSSI 111111 tdml11lP11, a.SO. "TI"• l!:ncumbr1nc.1: Hfl'fl' 1 Tlllt
Com11tnY func!IMll Whal 1:i I ':!' l;'."'~~?~m.':fc"1~ Off1l1 =t;.s..,·\ ,,~,r:,: 11:1"'J! "~1~' \ndu1t~I 7.f:30 _ _111m., ltm. 1", Hum1n tlfl Ht I,
UC lrvoM c:-. ""' f5S1 1lnol• ldmlulon, IS.511.
"Mll!on111Cltt of tht Slol11.'' Heltn Golhcllll~. M.O .... 1r1t1nl cllnlctl ""° , Mtdlcl 111 . !Oel"m1lol1111Yl.1 lomll CDllr.• of Mectlclr., U1..
Ir "'· ,.rt • kc:ln_1ttln. ;~:; ... · r"io o.1~,~~·"°'°:,'ie Hiii, Mii(; ell SurOI I lldll. ff: HQIKl'tdll, W 1 (~It, W I S l'IQlt
ldmlulin, 14.JO. .
waONllDAY. J1t1. n ,''tllf Gold lt!Jtll 11 MVlll Ind $'1'11\'
ba(.'' Jallll 9.:. 1"o1111111n11. M.A.: Pti.o_,, Clrdd4itt. "'•lorY· UClA. r'l'1 ... t lechtre lff1tl. ''C1lltoml1: MVlll1 !tin." 7-10 11.m .. _'!'!"1 l11, 1 Hiii. Slnott _..Dion. ..
...,... J=l:."~n~ V1rQl11l1
,h.Oii 'Itel ·prulo.111, The "A" llV r-lr1t of I UC lrvlnt Ex· ltelure 11rrn . 1.f;JO o.m .. !': '" Comovtff" Scl~ lldlt. FH:
"P'1m!fltl, Htt"tdlttn" o. .... 1oomtnt11 l)llOl'df:n.,"~ltn11 W P'owttrf M,O .. ~ltf1t1nJ ~ llOl"o ... fdll rlC•.1 1Ukorll t lellf DI Mtcilclflf, Vi; w1111, l"•rt bf • llCluno Mrln, "TM ervout lvto,;.1-10 tt~m .. llm'l!iri ' ecturl H11 , lc1t :tlll"H ti . II! NOl'l-Crtidll, Mil Credit, S5 I nalt: tdrnlUloft. M.$0.
• "Vlll'Olt. SN=~ A iiirot JndJ:C =,..~:f1~T ,~:·1-:..~
S.!1!=1 E~UC•I~ r o I• ct I , • ~1 ~ !~~t11u1r,"'9 'J:f.C
l ;,";:\!c ~11.: ';! ,m; ~I ilM""fi~' "1 -....... , ~~ 'l~.ftll'I -• • ltvofi• In ,....IMrY RH , : •
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ORANGE
City Or. at G1rden OrcV. Blvd.
"""_...,_ ~ " ....... 10 ~
~ SAN:TAANA
3900 So. 8rl11ol -No. ot So. Coast flNl.n °'*' Dl!'1 and SUndly 10 """' '° 10 p.m.
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0 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Deumbtt 20, 1~73
•
; Upper Bay Walk
One-sided Tour.'
~ Jom T\Jnney. did It roor years aeo when he was numinc
; !or the U.S. Senate. .
. George McGovern almosl did it two yean agO'when he
~was running for the presidency, but then sent a subltitute
• at the last minute. ~ Jerome Waldie ,who is ruMlng for governor, did it a
• · few months ago 11 as parl of bis walk-
~ ing tour of California.
l
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WHAT IS IT, you ask, that all or
these politicians have in common?
The answer 11 atmple. 'nley all
recognized the Importance of making ·
a pilgrimage to Upper Newport Bay
• ~·. to pay homage to the environmenl
. .
1---IJ--'-=. The latest on this list ol di>-
Utt:lf t1ngalshe-hfr:K:e-seekers--is-6eorge-·/\-----I·-'
Moscone, a San Francisco Democrat, majority leader of
the state Senate, and a man \\'ho wants to be the next
governor of California.
Along with an entourage or press agents, the senator
showed up last week at the home of lytrs. -Fran Robinson.
who is the member or Friends of Newport Bay who most
often winds up giving tours lo political dignitaries
uwE DON'T ASK them to come,'' Mrs. Robinson as-
sured this reporler. "They come because, If th~y are In-
terested in the environment, this I~ the biggest cnvlron-
mental issue going in Southern California."
"Or at least it was until we won the fight to preserve
it," Mrs. Robinson said.
Moscone's tour, which took about an hour by auto-
mobile and on foot, went off smoothly enough.
Mrs. Robinaon showed Moscone "the fence the Irvine
Company put up lO block off one of the finest fishing areas
on the bay." She pointed out "one of the finest archeo-
logical sites of its type In the nation" that has been "cov-
ered over" by bulldozers working for the Irvine Company.
And she told how th€ Irvine Company tried to get $10 mil·
lion for "three islands which it may not even own."
As the tour went on , Moscone became more and more
enthusiastic about the ba y.
HJ'VE REEN ON TllE road for 21 days," he said
''but I don't think I've ever had the chance to walk in azi
area as beautiful as this one."
Moscone also began to offer opinion on what the fight
over Upper Newport Bay was all about.
"This looks like a classic case of the people vem1s the
devclop~ent interests of the IrVine C.ornpany," pronounced
the candidate.
It is well known that the Jrvine Company has a difrer.
ent outlook an the fight over the bay, but its point of vie#
went unrepresented.
AS SOON AS THE tour was over, flfoscone hun1ed off
to his next appointment, but not before per90nally thank·
ing two newspaper reporters for taking the time to make
the trip with him and not bcCore his agents could dlstri·
bute pro-Atoscone material to everyone JD ai&ht.
iSki Mask Vogue
Now Petty . Thieves Use' em
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI I
Since local crime news gets
only limited circulation, I
. don't know if what is hap-
:pening here is part ol. a na·
. tional trend.
But in this area there have
.:been an unusually la r g e
·number of robberies and other
felonies this month by ~
wearing ski masks. ·
THE USE OF ski masks
in holdups Is nothing new,
of course, but they previously
were confined to large, well-
planned capers carried out by
professional criminals.
Now e v e n small • time,
amateur hoods are using
thcsn .
A few days ago. for ex-
ample. the wife or a con-
gressman was beaten by a
prowler she caught stealing
o bicycle from her back yard.
' l~e '"'as wearing a ski mask. .
When a fashion reaches all
the way down to neighborhood
Sunday is
F'l1l1E>AY
bicycle thieves, you know it's
really catching on.
THERE ARE several possi-
ble explanations ~ why ski
masks are what the well-
dreased criminal is wearlng.
Siding is a glamor sport.
a status symbol to criminals
born on the wrong slde of
the tracks. They have l'ttle
chance of making it fu a sk:l
lodge but bank robbery gives
them a legitimate excuse to
visit ski shops. Shopping for
ski masks, they get to mingle
with the beautiful people,
perhaps pretending to be
heading for Sun Valley or St.
Moritz.
It could be, however, that
ski mask crime is more
climatic than sociological.
WHEN WINTER arrives, the skier breaks out his equip-
ment, maybe buying a new
rnaak wh1ch he is eager to
try out. Then alas, It !ails
to snow.
Frw:trated, the skier goes
out and robs a bank. Which
Is about the cinly other thing
you can do In a ski mask
without feeling over-dtt!:SMd.
A third possible explanation
ha.s. to ~ with the ~·
Crl.Sl.S. With the g a s 0 I i D e
shortage growing e\'er JrOf"Se.
prudent holdup m e n 1.ll-
doubtedly are thinking in
terms of alterna1ive5 t o
)etaway cars.
ONE SUBSTITUTE that
must have crossed their minds
is getaway skis. 1\nd sk i
masks are merely the first
bit of equipment to be tested.
This theory may strike )llU
as a bit far-fetched. But if
you pick up tomo'rrow 's
newspaper and read that a
bank has betn robbed by ban-
di lS carrying ski po I es .
remember that you beard it
here first.
ALL TIUNGS <OOJldmd,
however, I lean toward a
lounh theory -ski masks
have replaced the 1llk stock·
Jnp that bandits once used
to conoeal the~ identity.
'ftte advent of panty hose
made that dlagui se im -
pncUcal. When a hand!\ pull·
ed a panty stocking over his
head1 he <001dn 't find anything
to do wllh the other leg.
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Stocking Stuffers
PAINTS or CRAYONS
Pre-Finished
BOSTON ROCKER
• hftr...! rocker -...,r. fioisl!e4 &
r.W, lot ClirislMos 9ilti ...
• Tur...ipesh& , .... .,..isoit&H<k
fer lltrt CMtf1rt.
RIG. '29.ff s249s
'Fully Jo inted
PLUSH BEAR
• l ... pit.pf.'11'1r1w1111t .. rh 17"
loll. .............. , ..... _,., .......
llG. '3.U
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-• •• Sp~c;al Purchase! •..•. ~ i \! . (
Heirloom
~~~DISPLAY
CASE
• H1riwffll with
c1rvelll irl~lfll JW.
'41Rlll, tllll (IWtf.
•fill th. with •• .,..
11k11 & ''"'.'"· RIG. 'l .H
American Standard
TOILET SEAT
• M1r~eli1eirl ~lms·
Ii< Stll ... diti(I
1l 1elers.
• Metil r1i"l1ue4
REG. '•.It
s499
BLACK LITE BULB
• Ki ... li1k1,.st1r1, RlG. 9t•
1rtw1rk.
• ... It IUIW i111t1·11ty 6 9· C efirliMryliflit ..... ~.
..
Special PVi'cflose!
..
CLOCKS :I 1 I
"Timf/y Christmas Savings!". , l i
• Supei savings on this special selection of docMs. , · •
• We bought these al tremendous savings and· we!. +
•
passing the savings on to you!
Styles to dress up any room in your .home or
for Christmas gilt giving. ' .
• All are lomous Spartus'"'electric docks· just
plug 'em in & they' re off and ticking.
3·Roll Pock
Gin WRAP
PAPER
• l irliffff"t Mtw.,
r1M1,..-,_ .....
• 76" wl41 -11..i
11161" '"'· 11G. cs•
35~
REG. TO 18.95 99
· 3-Sfool Package
CURLING RIBBON
•lit l-Spffl
Nli4ty <tl1r1. C
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• Ore11., litll· P\
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UG.3!• I O-SPE0ED 1B.lllES . ~ .
Pk;.of2S
Gln·WRAP BOWS
• G1y,1elerhl
ti.w1I
• A1sertff r1llr1
'11ri,.1 Ii.
-i. ....
RIG. JI•
.... 111
"A Petfecf Gilt For An,one!" :
• -· sw.J.. oltroill .... , ..... wlllo"' Hr lntrs. • WW. rl'tie ,..,..,,Ml ,,11,., hnArolin.
• ,toltl reflt<lws lot ri4Jot solely.
• full, 'l-lodl ff•••· .
REG.
'69 .• ts
-Easy To Assemble • c ........ """"'-• ·'-'''· LAMP IHADI SALE! • HMYil¥dwM1 ..... I"" •itdt111 IHC1I, TOY 6: ITORAGI CHllT
''lur On• To Store Titos• #t,w CIJtltfmos Tott!" "Dr••• IJ1t Tito•• 014 Lomp1 At largain Prices!"
1 ............. NptrM, Dr11tn & T.,tr ~•lreifM.
....... h .. lteovyt... s 3 7 7 .., ",.,,i..im wltli
1htill<tlv1 hlM •
RIG. TO,._,, 11.
• ,_.,_lktoMe<4 llG. "·" c11ntr.t1M.
1St.t'tty1,'1tM .. ,
•lollet.
I 16" Im I 16" Wtli Ifft • ......... 11 ......
1100 KITCHIN IQJCIJ
RIG. 'lf.fS
'1488
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000
7 Pc . Reverewa re®
ST AIMLESS STEEL
COOKWARE
"Erery Homemaker's farorife
Stainless Steel Cooliware!"'
• Copper dad for ev111 hoot · stainless stool for IOllf woor
& oasy deaning.
• 7 pc. set indudts 111 & 2 qt. covered iauc1p1ns, 6 ~t.
covered Dutch oven, IO" open skillet (dutch ovtn cover
fits.)
• Beautifully bo xed for gilt giving.
RIG. " '32.95 ,, .99
Aluminum
SIRIUllL PAN . ,., .... , .... ,,, .....
c.kt •l•n. • ,,, ..... t.r
Aluminum
BUNDI PAN
.......... lool*y
...... ,.l.tt.4t1·
... ,., l t'-'1.
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INSTALL .. EASY AS 1. 2, 31
1.
.. 14MK!Ms.
RIG. 'I.It
.. ,..,....,"" 79c ,,_.... -2
RIG. 'I.It 0 --l.-----.... ----i ..............
WORKSHOP Kii· .... ...,, .... ,...,.., ........ ,.
• H fr11 Wt iMIWe4.
Particle Boa rd ~
J WORl.BINCH
I' ....... -·l.tll-!Wdo"" '849 11r'wlff1 ....... ,. .. -... ' • ••1>11," '* .. I
l f · 1 :. .. W'rlt~n'Flip·Grip • , ~
. ,, .,, .. · '. MULft.fflroON YIH , . -...... -..~ ... :---"\., . .
t • . ~i!:.':~.;.. • , 4 9.9 ~ l l5.'17.1S ~ ~ % •
Hinged
OMELET PAN
• ,., ...,.., fihio • =.,.,.._... RlG. 'l.tt
··-·""'" $299 11 iniM. · ,,, ... ,..,.,...., ......
Pkg. of B
TIAIHCAll
Ulllll -
• Str .... ll-feU..
1i11 li11t11.
• f1rell1h.t11111
Cltrhl"''' tr11la.
Cott Iron -Divided llG. 6t•
COIN allAD IKIUIT 3 9 . ,,, Ctf·-•I• llG. 'JJ S . c tMl rNl "4tw ..
11Ht ... m11. •235 •~~.:~mt•.. _
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COFFEE
URN
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RIG. '10."
'7'' Deluxe Mirro·Motic'I .
1 .. o1o11 • .l•"Hlh" ,.. AUl~MA nc .CORN P~llPIR ., ..... , .........
fAl lUJ . AS20UIHFAUC11 ""'"'"'""'"'-... ; WITH POP-UP cnw. I
tS :;;:: RIG. '2S.4t • '-"11""·'" • s99 9 88~ .(,·::oi;1· 7•• .:=:.~.lllo htm. .• ~ RIG. '11." ~..ili..P'!!!!"e~~~\ ~
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·APPLI
PARIR ., ....... "" ,...,..,.d. . , ......... .
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crnk ... 1 1M I
WNkltflJf.
sa9s c...,..tt
1a ,t.1.hs...,.
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Woste King UniVenal
GARBAGE
DISPOSER
"Quiel< Mount for Easp lnstallalio'l
-Just Snaps Info Place!"
• 1/2 h.p. '"''" hon1Hts tflt tovghtst wntt.
• ....... .," stai•l•ss stHI swivel i..,.U•s.
• filttrtftss HM 111.ktt re4u<es Mist. • 1,, . ..,., ........... ....., ••.
REG.s3999
'4t.H
Go~rmet
VEGETABLE
STEA•R ........................
flotl • W" _,,.,,Wit Miter
-........ tit"" ,.1.
• S .... ' ... dM lltt ttt!Mtl
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RIG. '2.9'
~199
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Thursday. Dtcem,Wr 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT
' By Phil lnterlandi I
Lo-----..,;•;.~;;;.'·;,· r,.'.;'"...;~,.' .. · ,.' -·_.__· ,.",.",."•;...•·---w ............ 1,
' "f shouldn'l be here loday -I feel like a Christmas toy
with no batteries." f
L.ltl. Boyd
10 Families
Top s in Wealth
Ask 100 women on the day they matTY 1£ they think
they got the right men, and 99 wUI say yes. Ask them
two years later, and &6 will aay yes. Ask them 20_ years
later, and only fi ve will say yes. Such ls the su~ismg re-
port of that matrimonial sage Or. Joseph B. Tramer.
~tost of the people in "Who's Who" are professOrs .
Q. "Name the JO richest families in the world, Louie."
A. So you want to identify your
competitloo, do you? AU right: Sas·
som cl India. Rockefeller of the U.S.
AJba of Spain. Rothichlld now of Bri-
tain, Mitsui of Japan. Berta ol India
Cecil of Britain, Wenner-Gren of Swe-
den. Krupp of Germany. And Matar-
au.o ol Brazil. Or so research, indi-
cates. Thought the names of Mellon,
Getty and Hunt would &how up on lhat
llat, but they didn't.
MILK BATH
i
Am asked if milk balhs really can improve a girl'•
comple1lon. Hardly. But that notion has been around a long
time. Started back in the 19208 when a milk peddler in
Brooklyn .,ed the lamous showman Flo Zelgfeld !or !allure
to pay for 50 cans Of'l!lllk dellv.red to the Hotel Marl boro
at the rate of two cans per day. Taking the bait, a repol'ter
learned the milk had gone to the apartment ol that dandy
actttss Anna Held . No, &he didn't drink It, she bathed in it, .
-.! leaked out. Zlecfeld's defense attorney Charged the •
milt was sour, so hurt her complexion. An out.Of-court
lettlemeflt., arranged Jong in advance by Zlegfield's press
qent, . ended the matter, after neW!plpers nation~e
carried tho fanciful tole.
DRUMSTIC K
When you chomp down upon that drumstick, son, you
put into play more than 30 joints and 50 muscles. But no
doubt ti's worth the effort.
Numerous fashionable gentlemen in Europe 300 years
qo carried around their ovm nutmeg graters, like little
pepper milla, to spice ·up their grub on the spot, wherever.
Another big reason the coyotes outnumber the wolves
these days is a healthy coyote in a hurry can go about 5
m.p.h. faster than a IWift wolf at top speed.
Andy Griffith Is not the only famous lellow to live in
Mount Airy, N.C. It was the adopted hometown, too, ol
thole original Siamese twins, Chang and Eng.
The letters Q, X and Z are the three least used of all
in our lanpage. But I'll warrant you'll not guess which is
the lourth leut-llsed. can u J.
Addre11 mail to L. Af. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New·
porl B<IU!h 92660. Copyright 1973 L. M. Boyd
TV to Push Good
Advice on Food
m:w YORK (UPI) -Some
day IOOn your television will brlnC inlD your llving room
me llllnule ol a night In the
lile of Gerry and his wile .
You · wtll see the wile Is
T°!mera moves in 85
Gtrry watches where his wife
says "the.baby Is ldckilll(."
diets. It was prepared witt
help lrom the U.S. Depart·
ment of Agriculture and
Health, F.ducatlon and Wel-
fare-
THE BOOKLET <b' D11
available in any I'""""'" but
Enali!Jb yet. A Spanitb ·
lanauage edition i S COIP
templated. ·•
11118 SCENE, straight from Mrs. VirJlnla H. Knauer.
bed, is part of a new Advert.i s-special assistant to the Presi· 1nl Council cunl>Oiln l1un· dOOt !or consume!' affairs. In
cbed wltll tho htlp ol govem-'°"" tor the llllJIChq of the merit lhd the lood industry. cunpalgn. >lid :
The oommer-cial, UUed · "111• need for public
0 Pfecnant Woman," made. it. awartaea · ot · nutriUon is
detlUt In a prlv1te ~ startly evident lrom '°"'""
in New York the other day. ment statistics on th'
The gov.mm<nt people hope American diet.
lt wl11 get the measage across : "While our standard or living
You are what you eat. has risoo, the quality of the
The Gerry com nl er c I a I diet o! a stgnlllcant proporti<ll
message Is this: of our citizens has l.U.n."
"THE TIME to worry 1bout
your first pregnancy 1:1 long
--'It happens. Thal'• -, your .bo!IY Is stortnc up the
ntdrlellta your baby wiU Med:
· Find out what they aro before
you be<Ome pregnant.
"Wrlle !or the bool<: rood
Is V.. 1blll J .. Somelhin&
to' EaL NW!tloo, Pueblo,
Ql:M,, 11009. II
'1\t,-ht -Is another TJll'I of the c1mpalgn to help
Amtrtcans tmprove t h e I r
Water Post ·
• SACRAMENTO (UPI)
Dooald A. sandlson, a Btverly
Hiiis businessman, wu ·~
p0lnled to the 131.2'&-i·)Ur
post u deputy director el ·the
1tale Department ol W11tt
RelOUl'Cel. Stnd.laon, ti, •
Repu!Jllcon. Is cootroller of
the P e er 1 e 11 Developmenl
Corp.
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U , DAILY PILOT
For the
Record
Ainnan First Class Howard
A. l\forgn, son of !\tr. and
~1rs. Cletus C. Gowdy of 21851
Newland, Huntington Beach ·
has g'raduated at Lackland
AFB, Tex., from the U.S. Air
ForcesecuMty pol lee man
course conducted by the Air
Training Command.
The airman, v:ho was train-
ed in security and law en-
fdrcemenl is being assigned
to Davis-Monthan AFB, Ariz.,
for duty with a unit of the
Strategic Air Command.
Ainnan First Class Ben C.
Conner, son of ~Ir. and l\lrs.
Edward D. Conner of . 575
Traverse Drive, Costa l\fesa,
has graduated at Keesler ·
AFB, Miss:-, ·from a special
course for electronic computer
equipment repalnnen.
Airman Conner. OO\V trained
In the operation and main-
tenance of electronic com-
puters and .tf ss ociat e d
aerospace ground equipment,
is being assigned to Offutt
AFB, Neb'. for duty with a
unit of the Strategic Air Com-
mand.
Airman Conner is a
graduate of Costa l\1esa High
School.
Army First Lieutenant Lon-me E. Anderson, son of l\lr.
and tits. Thore H. Anderson ,
20831 Horizon Lane. Hun-
tington Beach, is attendine: the
nine-mopth engin eer orficer
advanced course at the U.S.
Army Egineer School, Ft.
Belvoir, Va.
Army SpeclaUst four Doa ne
I.. Nan.el, son of ~1r. and
tfrs. Wray H. Nansel, 716
Calle Bahia, San Clemente.
participated with other
American and allied troops in
Exercise Reforger V i n
Germany.
Navv Seaman Rec r u i t
Donald 1'f. PeterS(ln Jr., son
of t1r. and ~frs. Donald M.
Petersen of 9061 Regal! Drive,
Huntington Beach, graduated
from recruit training at the
Na\·al Training Center here.
•le is a 1973 graduate of
l\faine \\'est High School, Des
Plaines. Ill.
Cadet Stephen E. Lord. son
of Robert B. Lord, 21742
\llindsong Circle. ltuntington
Beach re ceive d the
distinguished cadet au·ard at
the U.S. l\1ilitary Academy at
\Vest Point, N. Y.
Navv Aviation Electronics
Technician Third Class Robtrt
R. Cagle Jr., husband of the
former tfiss G. Lynn IIagen
of 15761 Belfast, Huntington
Beach has completed the ad·
vanced avfation electronics
course at l\fillington, Tenn.
1'farine Sgt. James B. Vile.
son of l\1r. and l\frs. Judd
A-f. Vile of 2533 Fordham Dr ..
and husban~ or the former
1'fiss l\laure~n A. Okell. all
of Costa r-fesa, has reported
for duty al the Afarine Corps
Supply Center at Barstow. He
is a graduate or Cost.a Mesa
High School, Costa Mesa.
I'VE SEEN
THIS BEFORE
GRAYLING, ~fich. (AP) -
Cnw!onf County resident! who
dump trash on the side of
the road may get 1Dme in-
1.,...tlng packages I h i s
Chri5tmu leaSOll.
John B. Hurr. the Cnw!ord
Counl1 pro!l«UlOr., SB)'ll-lhe -
garbage will be malled back
Jo the ownert. C.0.D .•
Thursday, DKe1nbfr 20, 197)
ms Cuts Glossary, Corners Oil '73 Forms
.
ure to · Please
ve.ryone n our mas
SONY TRANSCEIVER
$99'5
7-Ch•nne l Citit1n '1 ll1111d with the
lw, power. Speci~I tough finiih pro.
te cti it •9•in1I h11rth .w1•lh•r. lde1I
for tportt, f•ttru. c•mping, bo•l-
in9. Sep•r•te milre & •P••lrer for .
9r1•Nr cl1rity. '
•:;J:i' -. ,
·~..... ~··.
~
SONY CLOCK RADIO
DAT AND DATE
s4995
FM/AM Oigirnafic Cloclr radio f•llt
tim• lo the 1econcl, the d•y & d•I•
•t • gl•nce. L1 r9• 1peek1r tone, e11y·
fo·t•ach "1noo1e b•r", 90-min, tltep
timer. lllumin1f11d nurner•l1.
SONY®
TRINITRON COLOR TV
• 17·fnch screen measured diagonally
• Trinltron one gun/one lens system for
sharp, bright, life-like color
MANY, MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM! • Push button automatic fine llring. color
•
and hue control
• SOJid state reliability
• Instant picture and sound
• No set up adjustments
•Illuminated tuning indicators
•Top mounled easy carry ha~
•.Simulated walnut grain cabinet
See our huge selection of SONY for gifts! We have 'em!
FM/ AM/l!Hf WIATHll
SONY POCKITAlll.
TfM-3900W. Full range of
FM/ AM ond all VHF
weather broadcottl In a
mini-size-radio. Rich tone,
blodr. profeuional-type
s2495
..
T'l/-115 BlACKI. WHITE
PORTABLE TV
• 1~·inch pichnrnnaw ..
diagonallY '
• 'lle1ijhS 14 lbs, 12 0:!.
• ()per ales on AC or QC (With
optional accwories)
• Sol,d slale rel,~bility
• Ea~y carry ha ndle for
POr!i1:l1ht;· •
• Bl;;ck ca:iine1 with chrorr.9
"'m S 139"-
SONY STEREO s209"
SONY>il
TRINITRON COLOR TV
• 15-inch screen measured diagonally
• Trinilron one gun/one lenssyslem f(l(
sharp, bright, life-like color
• Push button automatic fine tuning, cok>r
and hue control
•Solid state reliability
.. Instant picture and sound
• No set up adjustments
• lllur.ninalod tuning Indicators
" Recessed side mounted handTes ·
.. Walnut grain wood cabinet trimmed
in chrome
...17QA:fM.SJ9No, l>M, PhonoSy>tem
SONY
FM/AM RADIO
539" SONY
POCKET RADIO fOf less l'IO"l 'l'OV'd P<:Ff for separate oorr"pot 191 Its. -.oJ con get com-
p::menfs at !he same QUOli),<. or ballet o1 ossent>led ~ tne HP--t70A
·Integrated Comoonent MJsic S'yslem. Wl1h pru.isioo kx CJd:jing SQ
4 -choonel bU!l!·n
You gel o SONY trontond blerwilh IF 1111M b piecise flJrVng ad
Cl'{Sfol CIOOr recspllo!'I. A 8511 oulo/tronuoL 3-~ IUmloble wilh
cueing oontroL A SOiid s!Ola all lronslslar orrpliner ood lwO SQl'o'Y
2"NOf ~peol<o<s.
Wilh O detochc:ble dus! CC>lef included.
So"v ·port•ble r•dio h•s tupet·
1e1itive circvitry fo pull in
we•k 1'11lio111 cl•erly. ll ig l.2w.
lm1x.) of 1ound power, l•rge
~" 1pe1ker. L.E.O., twifth11ble
AFC, '·w•y optr•lion, betlery
or AC. With b1tferi11 & e11 r-
phonr1. TFM-72SOW.
'9"
Sony AM r•dio witli pow;
er & 1le9•nc1. H•ndy
finqer·fip contro/1, 1111y•
lo-re•d tunin9 di1I; cer·
rying tlt1p. Cornpltl•
.,..;th b1tl1dei, earphone.
TR"f lDO.
•• . %6 Years of lntegrft11 &: DependabHlt11
, .. , . Costa Mesa • Harbor Area i
Microwave Oven
Cooking Demonstration
Sat., Dec. 22 at 11 a.m.•4 p.m.
Cos ta Mesa S~ore 01'1lly
By Thermador's Home Economist
with Thermador's
Portable Thermatronice
Microwave Oven
In no lime at all (Y. the
usual) yOu can have a
complete meal on the table.
Browning element gives food
that done--to-perlection look.
Cooks in metal pans_up to
Ya" deep.
Genuine stainless steel
interior.
Handsome black glass door.
With the portable
Thermatronic Microwave
Oven you can· cook any
place-indoors or ou tdoors.
Gets you out of the kitchen.
• Put it on wheels and take it
where the' action is.
It's a beauty too-come in
and see it work!
Microwave Oven
Cookirig Demonstration
all
by UTION'S · Honie Economist to show you
the greatest features of microwave cooking
Fri. & Sail.
Dec. 21, 22
11 am•4 pm
AT OUR
EL TORO
STORE ONLY!
With the , Litton Micro-Browner, you can prepare a tender, juicy steak
-seared brown and crisp on the outside-in just 1 Vi minutes i• your
microwave oven! Use the Micro-Browner for steaks, chops, grilled chHst
sor1dwiches, fried eggs, hash browns, pancakes, omelets, French toast-
and many moro of your favorite f~ds.
[8LITTON
Litton Micro~ov• Pv•n1
NHH1 •""' "'°'' 0~11111c..:OV. tooking tltofl 1i1i.r., ~. •
411 E11t Stvenleenth Strett
Dolly 9·9, Soturdoy 9-6
646-1684
El Toro • Saddleback Valley f
El Toro Rood 11 fwy. (Next to Sn.On) ~~-~~-~··:•;;
Daily 9-91 Saturday 9-6 =
83·1.3130 '<Ir .. _ .... ·
We.ht:ive IM!Rt ow
bu1lne11 o" Mtt11-
fled1 loyal cw,._
m1r1. You mutt lte
aatl1ft1d or well
..... k top<!. lflEE~ ,..,, ~
NEW.TOLL FIR SERVICE PHONE HUMID Dnlfh 7.3437
Delivery and lxpert ln1tallatlon
•
•
E'an1H11 Circus l>y BU Kea11e
-:''It's this year's mystery cord -Jone and Ed .
Jone and Ed WHO?"
TV Absurdities
.
4.ds Rougli, on tlie Stomach
:. By RICK DU BROW •.
:)JOLL YWOOD (UPI)
T"elevision absurdities a t
C!Jri•tmas·tlmo:
;All those ads for electrlclty-
~g luxury ltem5 at a time
w'hen the energy crisis ls bear-n;g down and people are faced
w_tlh worrying about
necessities.
:Au. mOSE embarrassingly
sicond-class commercials for
slipposedly first cla ss
perfumes. ;w those ads arguing the
great issue of whether one
electric razor shaves a little
c~ than another. (fl cer-
tainly is attractive to sec
some stubble on the home
screen. l
·All those toy commercials
done with a com~n opulence
and sales~rlented fantasy cf-•
feet that would win the ad-
miration of P.T. Barnum.
~ 1110SE brassiere
advertisements, wh ich cer·
tain]y lend a lot of class to
the stalions"t.hat carry them.
AH those ads in which
women tell us !hat, even
There is a sort
at Allee• i" ·Won•
tferla1uf au,. a w
tieese ceme-ows.
though they may he doing
other things at the moment,
they are also simultaneously
cleaning their toilet b>wls
(you see, the product actually
is doing the job, and isn't
it wonderful that these ladies
are so happy?)
All those new car sales
pitches that. \\'ilh relatively
few exceptions, emphasize
luIUry and trivia. and blithely
ignt\,re the question nf mileage
despite the fact of the fuel
shOrtage. There is a sort or
Ance.in·\Vonderland aura to
th.ese come~ns.
about electric shavers for
women 's legs, and the charm·
ing atmosphere these ads
bring into the living room ,
es pecially if you see them
while having something to
drink or eat.
All those game shows with
money-hungry oontestants who
seem just a little bit on the
unique side during t h e
Christmas seaaon.
All those news programs of·
fering relatively n e w s I e s s
Chrislmas stories .because It's
the season· to be something
or other. Bah, humbug!
AU. TIIOSE used car sales
pitches that try inanely to
insert some Christmas navor
and succeed primarily in glv·
ing the season a very rare
quality of sleaziness.
All those advertisements for
inexpensive appliance items
that can do no end or
housebokl wonders. (If they're
so wonderful, how com e we
don't see commercials for
them steadily the y e a r ·
round?)
All those deodorant ads with
th eir \\'Ondrous sprays that
will make the Christmas
season smell better . /These
ads are particularly effective
if a viewer happens to be
having a snack. Along with
the commercial s for
bra~ieres, feminine napkins,
toilet bowl cleaners and elec-
tric shavers for women's legs.
the deodorant advertisements
succeed in making American
television truly unique in the
worlfl)
Dean Named
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -J.
Cordner Gib!On , dean or the
school of agriculture at Cal
Poly' San Luis Obispo, was
named to the state Board of
Agriculture. Gibson, 60, a
Republican, will fill out the
t~nn ending Jan. 15, 1975 of
Harold 0. Wilson, who re.sign-
r.d to become Gov. Ronald
Reagan's education adviser. -==-----:=--
holiday
€nt€Qta1n1nq
HICKO RY FARMS OF OHIO
Gboos6 ~Gb68&6
Ball y hod
Big favorites at Hickory Farms of Ohio. 9heese
Ball is made from a special blend 61 cheese,
Cheese Log lrom aged, smoked cheddar. Both
covered with ground nuts ••• dellciousl $
ea ch. ., , 2.2.9
Our Store is Loaded with
Parly Snacks & Other Fine Foods
~ c--"all, .. ,..I ..... .._ "*'· -ontc DA.1LY.i ......._after .. ,,.Ii 'ti I P.M •
...... 14Mttl
•
WE STE N'S •
' .
Thursday, Oeefltlbtr 20, 1973 • DAILY PILOT :f:J
s·uper-gifls for all the
super people you know!
II Movl.e Bonanzal
~
!~
'
' MODEL 2680 s97aa Instant
Keystone
BO Second Choose the
ST602 for
great Christmas
films!
MOYies •re better than ev•r, when you rMk•
them yourself! Gel t•sl •nd 1low motion
-MolsrdlHOIVe.. IAd W~le-lo-tlle-_
photo 1ff•cta. ASA range, 1S..250, f11t f/1.7
i.n1 zooms from 7 .smm. Aulom.1tlc CdS
el1ctrlc •Y• •Ith m1nu•I ov•rrlde. B•tlery
ch1rg1r lnclud1d.
8 144~~ .....
Charge lhHe or
any gifts, todoyl
High Performance
ST802 Camera ...
Merry Chrlslm11, hint you come!
TtM STI02 has •II fe1tureS listed
above, plus zoom lens lrom 8mm ind
wtde 1ngl1 to 41rnm lelepholo.
It's the 'super-Director's'
Choice -Model ST1002
GA.F's llnest, low priced person1I motion
picture Clmetl offers adw1nced film.making
te•turn Including zooms from 8.Smm, ind
clo .. up to 85mm from wide angle shots.
Thi• Christmas. you're • re1I pro!
Ii
Slide Projector
A-great-holiday-value.features 500 W brllllance,Jl3.5
· precision lens, pop.up editor for slide preview, re-
mole control forward, reverse and focus. Carrying
CIH and 100-slide tray included.
OUlll flEGULAlll PR ICE, 171.15
Honeywell Pentax
SPOT ;(ATIC
--~00 ~
Get lhe P•nlax "feel" ind see why it'a the worl«1
best -selling 35mm tingle .Jeni reflex camera!'
Super ~accuralt thru·lh•·lens melerlng, •huller
speeds from 1to1/1000 of a second, buill·ln seh·
timer, and the Super Takumar SSmm f/1.S lenL
Thal'• great •hooting -at a great priee, now.
SEASON'S
SAVlllGI/
. s214• OUlll REG. PR ICI, '
U41.IS
."Everflash 800''
The only camera
that does it all -
Makes its own
picturf!s,,and It~
own flash!
TN lftllMI cl!Mr• with penn•~nl •l•ttr•ftlt tl••lll
AdJ11t1 ... 1-•tlc.lll' lor
perf.c:t n.111 •ape911r•1 ~Nr ,...., ... s feet or 10
1 .. 11ro,.. 111111• Clau.I UNI
r1g11J1r Pol•rold ftllfl, lor
1ta1td.lrd or .,.u>N Pkt•lfft.
11'1 IN P1rlect "llndlf'
CllMr• lllL
s599s
MFO. LIST PllllCIE, srt .11
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
JUST USE
THE AD AS YOUR LAST
Ml!IUTE SHOPPING LISTI,
Soligor Auto
T-4 Lenses
~ Duals ·
• Movie Prolactor
Lei's He 111 th1I gre•I foot•ttl Profectqr ahows reguJlr
end Super·8, wflh alo~motlon, fist forw•rd, sllllt , and
regul1r ind ullr•-•Jow modon, Also •goes forw1rd Mtd
reverse(!} Ou•rtz: Mtoftn limp, f/1.4 zoom lens, cerry.
Ing ce1e •nd 400' ml, IOol
'. 817?.! ... .,
;Pocket .camera
'Outfit
PraCor
MODl!L C·2000
Clnatta Recorder
Selld ••tt, pu1Mtunon con"9ll. .. , .. ,,.or Ac,
tutom1tiO. leve1 oon1ro1.
:82418
•
TELEPHOTO 135AfAf
Autom1tlc 12.8, 4-eternent Jens, /
ingle 18°; tlll mott S.L•t c........ •1913
lll!Q. t7t.IS
T·4 Mot1n' ftDI lnch.lcled
AUTO·ZOOAf 90-230
Automatic f/4.5, eln1n eS.ment
zoom, 1ngle 27~·12°. llulll·ln lens
sh1de. Top q1.t9llty,
""""" 815874
Po11r•le-"'I 11t.pllolo, llJ.5,
Antle 12'.
$96.73
Auto 2Bmm
StMfltll-nl w1• •rifle, 1/2.I, Antlt 74\
$91 .63
Hon•flr•ll Pentox
·Telephoto
Lins
1ttmm. t/3,5 Super~
.Multl•ONtecl Teliumer
Lens cuts relffflkl!\
tr1n1nd1. to so~ '"°'' N9hL High 'l"llNIY. •9911
M.Llt., tll'l.tl
CAMERAS & ACCESSORIES
M ODEL 2748Z
810778
c:.ra.AIG
canatta Recorder
Model 2622
•2915
• Model 220, with ah1rp ,.. . I
'element, f/9.5 IMS; UHS ~
, · 110 film c1rlrldge, manr
qu•llly t11tures. With
strip 1nd thrn
l"':;""Mqlcu,b ...
Craig '
ca1culator
'$79~~.
· Pt.ts
This year's 'Super
Santa' Gift choice
Her1'1 1 gift th•l'I popul•r with •nyone from pr .. 1een1
lo po1t gred1f Quellty pl•yer-r1cord1r l11ture1 buUl-ln
beU1ry rech1rge1blt drcull •Uh en autom1tic thul oft
.,.1.m. SlnQ)e control OP9JtUon 1nd •dju1llble pr••et
record lew1I control. (AC Adapl1r/Ch1rger Included.)
\~ ...,_-,,.,,_ ·.-· ,,...,.._... '
Five functions, 8 digit reecf..out,
full flO•tlng declm11. % k1y for mark-ups..
diM»Vnll. AC/DC, bullt·ln recht'rge1ble NIC1d b1Uerles.
APF Mark VI
Calculator
Memory feature,
color keyed oper•tlont
An out.llindlng Cttrlstm9t v1lue In 1
tine pockel ctlculelor. I digit ,..d-.,ut, ll01llng decl-
IMl, .. p1r1te0 M:;:;, M+, M-•NI MC keys, % key, +I-key. fto blgger thtn JOVr p1lm, It's 1 super
•locking stuffer! AC 1d1ptor, batteries 1nd c1rrylng
CIM Included.
C4MER4S ETCETER4
clirl1tmii1
Picture sf
SP.ECIALISTS!
STUFF ALL YOUR STOCKINQS
AT CAlllERAS ETCETERA •••
YULE BE GLAD YOU DIDI
STEREO & SOUND EQUIPMENT · PHOTO PROCESSING & ETC.
SO •. COAST. P,LAZA, COSTA MESA DAILY: MON-SAT. 10·9:30 P.M.
SUNDA Y: 11 :30-6:00 P.M.
979.3373 • .--
• PRICES GOOD ·THROUGH DECEMBER 24th• USE YOUR BANKAMERICARD ANO MASTER CHARGE!
. -
•
•
•
I
• •
If DAIL y PILOT Thursday, O«ember 20, 1973
\
That's our toy prices. Shop around and ~e.
HABITRAIL ~
Deluxe Habitrail'Set
REG. 15.99
SALE 11.88
Starter Habltrall'Set
REG. 8.99
Sale 5.88
PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU DEC. 23<d
RUMBLER X-3
CIM>pper trike with a 2·speed stick
shift tr1mmluloft. seat ldjust-
menti. By'~ ·
. .
ORIG. 28.97
REDUCED TO
22ss
Saucy REG. 16.99
129·9
Mow her arm. sherro.oes
her lace. Many
eitPf'essions. some
hilarious. By Mattel.
PEACHY DOLL
NOT AVAILABLE
IN ORANGE
Mini/RUMBLER
SpecJ.lly dH9'td f« YoU"lQel'
ridm, ~ J•to S, Wtttl Nlfety Ind
styling IS top priority.
ORIG. 18.99
REDUCED TO
200/ OFF ALL MAGNUS
/0 ORGANS 13ss REG. 19.99 to 99.99
NOW 1599 to 79 99
•
'.>··"'
/
,... ..
JCPerref
Ill '5fi 18! (I !
CHA.AGE IT
w11h you1 JCPen~ Cha1oe Card u )'O\.I don t ha\'f •Charge,
1u\I StthoWlast wetan
open upyQuf nl'!'I¥ ltCOUnt,
.. ,
ORIG. 11.9'7
NOW 9 ~·99 Fisher Price Play Family Village·
Lota of fun for the pre-schooler.
l~ludes people and cars.
• 1'. :"t" • .....,. •
•
Mini WHEEL
For 'Ages 1112 to 3, In sturdy
blo-molded plastic-
REG. 6.97
SALE 599
MARX LITTLE WHEEL
. PLASTIC AND STEEL PEDAL
BIKE
' 9§
REG.8.97 6
Fisher Price
Play Family Camper
4.97 •
REG. 10.97
..
11 99. Toy Chest .
• 28V:~x'1?~."~18~high.
Woodgrain f1n1sh. Reg. 13.99 By L!lll• Tikes. 799 Mattel's Hairy Canary'!'
A controllable airplane that
actually !lies.
Reg.16.99
Deluxe Big Mack
drag bike
Heavy gauge tubular steel body
w1!h steel all-lerra"in fork . ByMurrVy. /,
/, ' MURRAY JET
' AIRPLANE
REG. 17.99
·1388
BUENA PARK
..... .. 0.••ill!Orpe
12.88
Reg.16.99
Skittle bingo
Tougher than bingo. Shoot for
the numbers, 1etlers you need.
By Au rora.
SKITTLE POOL
REG. 16.99
12.88
ORANGE
Cpoo Dolr t:aO .. - , .... _, __ CllyD<.11-0--. .... ,..~...., .. ,., . .
•
•' i
" -
' I
••
REG. 13.99 . ..-
10. 99 TABLE and
CHAIR SET
MOLDED PLASTIC
F;OR INDOOR OR OUTDOOR
RED OR
BLUE
CHAIRS
'
SANTAANA
-lo.-·No,ollo.o.11--... ,.. Dllf..., '!I!',.
•
•
-
J
•
<+·' ~"'!·-" •?°} H
\ ~
Usi ng n,u.rsery p ins, Joyce Ki el
positions prize succulents a round
the rin g l right)
e s suggested by Gloria Welters.
For 11 hanging wreath l ebove)
she rec'omme ~d s working on
e n easel (above, right) so
it cen ·be wei gh ted properly .
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
'TtWPlllllY, Dk9lllllet' ,., 1t7J •
A Real Eye Opener
•
Mr. Sun Sets MOod
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A, certain
person ln our office says '4t}ood mom-·
hlg" to eveQ:body · Who walks · ln the
door. If he doem't get a reply, he
will follow that 'individual arOund and'
keep repeating "Good morning" WlW
be gets an an!Wer. ' 1
It's not that I am unfriendly, but ' horMsexuals. Jn spite' of ·u, .,._ctl.9eS
J can't stand Io hear "Good morning" of the extreme mllltant" ~&6nle ·claim
300 times In 15 minuf15. Also, some It b a superior iif~ho, wtiicll II lan't),
mornings I don't , happen to !eel like they have done a great deaI to ellminate
saying "Good morning'' or anything else. the medieval practices and 1barbaric
What can I do about !hii!?LNOT EVERY punlshmeDt directed at homo9elUils.
MORNING IS GOOD Tbb is• particularly impnsslve when
DEAR N.: Nolblag lllllO)'I 1 mlrllq ooe relJM!lllliors , tblt 11· ~~y as
-••• Ike u ~ cbndtr. lMl, tbe , U.S. ~Navy routiAelY Rnt all
BUI yo• -ol gedllg Mr. --convlctea -· lo l'bmmoiith lo cot -·Ille'' lulppf Yollqt ..,, 'Prllon when>"lhey served a'ltrm and
mlply 'tlm. ,,,_ lypet are •DIP' were then pnn a'bad oooduct d!schaige. ~ If . :tloil'd get $0 beG aa Mm' We've come a Jq" way stnce tli,i.
eor!ler YO!I might leel .!><U<', Tr1 II< • It is bitter Irony tblt tbe •Gay Llb\lnl·
tJoq movement "'9 1elecied J>.'Ychlatry
DEAit ANN 1,LANDERS:. Your COi' aa cme·~ prime~ roi: attack.
~, !, "Gay In Decahr," correC!IY lroalc, becaule ;lt was pey<h)atry-,niore
h t _._ lier of than_ any other' branch or medicine that t • • ........ num tried to help and tr,at the-110.-.ual.,
Pll'chlatrlsls now join the Gay UbenltlOn Contrary to •Gay !Jberation , pro1>
view that homosexuality Is a n agiiftda, psychlatr!as never try to make
"allemallve llf .. Ayle" rather than an the bomOlexual ""•al..,1'" a'aalnst maeoe. ' his will. Sucii a \aall ..;\i'd i:· ~e.
You reply that an ~uall • large Thia 111bject deterVes more ,.rtoua study
number ol psychiatrists ( . more) · tiod r<Stlrdi ao ,lhlt ~ \how·
disagree. Na met o! three pa trlsts ~ It ls deol8J1.ltedf llUlY;' iiJcntda'.y be
(Including mine) ..... ailed lo support .i.....i In ~ op!rU ol UDdenlMdlDg llld
the pos!Uon that ...,_lltj, lo an w!UMM Jftjudlce.-4INtsflEtY, ,ZI&
illness. ' MONO M: !BB~IM,.o., WA81!· 11Ho~ality11 IJ no more a-.apeciftc -JNl'm'l~,-D:G. .r.
diagnosis than Is "hete-1ity," Ill f.'~ DR. LE ~· • yoo
some Instances "'""-"81lty '11 I 'lir,tW ... joe11do~1 fl ' '
symptom of underlylni ooal1lct, O< the ·~.I....,_· !Mt
end t'elUlt of genetic, blolosicol, culturll . 1~, ff
and "1vtroomeolal I-~ are WI I aW ' IMJ · -llolp
miny variellol ol bomoltXual lle\*vjor· ....,_ f 1MJ olwl di 1111
The experimenting 1dolncent, the~one:-liJll*ft .. # Jq_ .... dl••••d•a
night Stand, the compllslve ""*"' In 1 "'*" ~--;klld-IMlt Ile a bar or restn>On), the ""!rrted ~-1....,. liMltl loill ..,..., wllldl tllly
uat.--to name a few. .., II&.
In 1JIY cUolcat experience a1 a prac-1 "' 1 • uctna psychiatrist, the ir-ably ·wen .•• n'l,nlll )'1' ,.y .lo """""1ze. lovt,
adjuited homcileXUal rai'cly comes , In ,...,,..an, flnl -l;r;Omd~ Acquaint
1o be "stralghtaned out:"• If he consu~ ,......., 'fltli Ibo IUldellDes. Read -
8 poychlatrllt It ls becaule ol lllllety, t•don'I' lltllltlll, "IA'!I O< Sa Ille!
c!epmalon, or oilier emotional ~ '!OW If '1'111 111f 'Dllla;enoe." Far 1
"YlllP'•ma whlcli also oi:air bl Ibo • ~inldl •' Cllill In eoln llld 1 lm13, ............... ' lltlf.wlditolld .......... with
The Gay Ulltratlod 1119'1'-bu -rq m • Alla Limdn, J';().
-much ,to mUt. die vuhlk 1ware -. ID W. 111111: Dr., ~. Illiaoto ol the cruel dllcrlmlnatlon aplnst .... '
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Decoraf 1ion Su c;cu ent ,I
rt
"
I
How appropriate to call a Christmas
wreath a friendship circle.
And you need a lot oC friends to
make wreaths out of succulents as Gloria
Walters demonstrated in her Laguna
Beach home to UCI Town and Gown
gardenlng ehthusiasts.
She admitted to get the necessary
abundance of plants in a variety of
textures and oolors requires "a teeming
garden , lots of neighbors who are willing
to Jet you thin their succulent bed.,
or a few midnight acquisitions."
Such tactics result in flats full of
kalanchoe, tapestry, ghost plant, hen
and chickens, red sOOum ("we call it
pork and beans'') plus plenty or jade
plant for filler.
l.1rs. Walters cuts these into twig!!
and rosettes to start a labor of love
wh,ich can last six hours for a 3().inch
wide wreath. She creates smaller
versions with friends and workshop ..
participants because "it's such a
pleasant way to spe nd a day together,"
Succulent wreaths are worth the effort
because they last for months (even years
if a moss base is used) as a patio
decoration or natural centerpiece.
"''They bloom tor you and grow in
beauty. As different sprouts reach for
the sun, the wreath creates its own
shape,'' l\irs. Walters said. "If you work
with it a little, it makes itself more
interesting ."
Since succulents thrive for a Jonie
time on their own moisture, only al!
occasional misting or sprinkling is Tlf.'e<J·
ed. Coastal residents can do this by
leaving the wreath outside Overnight.
Otherwise the only upkeep lnvolved
Is random replenishment -pulling rag·
ged pelalJ or tatte/ed portions and
replacing them with fresh duplicates.
To start a wreath, Mrs. Walters blnds
Styrofoam ring forms v.·ith green floral
tape or packs t"''<l wire wreath frames
whh spagnum mo~ and wtres them
together back to back.
A strong hanging loop (she uses elec-
.trlcal cord) is attached at this point
so that it too may be covered with
plants.
\\!hen the pinning begins, l\Irs. \falters
positions four or five prize succulents .
around the . ring as aceent areas. Fro."!\
these she works outward using smaller
succulents, blooms. petals and shoots
secured v.ith nursery pins or hair pins,
later covered by the smallest sprigs.
She recommends working on an easel,
if the Y.Teath is to be hung, so that
it is properly weighted and plants are
pinned lightly enou~h.
November is the perfect thne for the
project, ti1rs. Y.'alters said, because suc-
cidents are in their full range of color
nod wreaths are ready for the holidays.
She advises that the l>lant.s be gathered
ahead of time and stored in boxes so
that the Y.Tcath-maker can start at the
fun, artistic stage.
"Experiment v.'ith succulenls, spikey
as \\ .. en as flat ones. Premium blooms
can be replanted for use another year,"
she said. "Others won't give you the
mileage but you just have to learn."
For further details, she o f f e r s
workshops at her home where her latest
creations are displayed on doors and ·
!ence .
for the Holidays
To make a cook1e and candy house
that would dclillht Hansel and Gretel
and the young at heart, start with a
large batch of frosting and lots of im·
agination.
cut house shape from cardboonl. Tape
~Us together, frost outsides Lightly and
stick m sugar wafers, trlnuning where
necessary to fit oorners and peaks.
Fold . roof over cookie walls. Lightly
"glue" in place with frosting and frost
top side lavishly, letting some drip over
edge to form icicles.
Then the 1 .. begins.
Overlap almond crescents, vanilla
wafers or flat candles to fonn shingles.
Brush their l!l!> edges with corn ll)'l1lp
and sprinkle with colored sugar crystals.
Outline roof with ml n i at u re
marshmallows or club'mints.
Peppermint sticks, licorice straOO.s or
chocolate-covered orange sticks ~ be
, used to outline doors, and windows or
make shutters and window boxes.
Tty orange sucks and pastel minis
or nougats and licorice sticks for fencing.
Q1t gumdrops Info. lloWOf>, shrubs and
vines. Maire a forest by !rosting ke
cream cmes and studding them ""ith
halved speannlnt'leaves.
Let your sweet tooth be )'Our guide.
That's how Bea Anderson, women's
editor and Carol Moore, food editor,
made thO house, nt left, which has
been on display In the Daily Pilot lobby
and was donated to the cbUdren at
Fairview State Hospital ....
•
.... DAILY PILOT
(
I .Actress Lesson: Obs-erve,
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Community '
·volunteer Cherri Pal • gives performance
lo fourth 9reders
ol Kettler School,
Huntin gton Beach,
an introduction
methods.
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' :P. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 I: '. ' . • i : . : ' . •• ' . • • • • I I
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RENEE "STAR" BAROTH
JOE CERNIGA
• ALSO OUR NEW
BOUTIQUE BY SANDRA
son11onEllA 2v1-1wv
• vr20 OOK 1-1EM
lOE C~l-11GV
KEVIEf .. 2!YK .. BV~O!H
. ~\\~t4 oue1ler (~ salon t~
1610 WEST COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH 642-3970
GETAWAY .;;;;:'"' . "" co•1rO J &, ...,.., .
Soulh CCJa st Village "' .. •
Sunflower at Plaza Drive ; to\ITM '
next to Soulh Coast Plaza ~ ~::! 1' l \•~ D•IGC Costa Mesa =9>=9fl=!ll:;1if==='#=
714•556•8276
By HILARY KAVE
Of tM ~Ir '"*' Sllff
Cherri Patch was simply a
young mother of two dressed
in old.fashioned clothes.
Minutes later, iihe turned
into a mean old lady, shriek-
ing at those around her.
Then, she became a sad
old lady, and finally, a gld4yi
laughing old lady.
Mrs. Patch is an actress
who just happens to live in
the Huntington Beach Qty
School District. When the
Community Resources
Program blossomed I a s t
spring, she was Mj! oC the
parents in the community who
volunteered to share her
talents with the s c boo l
children.
According to Leslee BeMett,
founder of the program, Mrs.
Patch's presentation I as t
spring were so enjoyed she
is being sought by many
teachers this year to perform
again.
With a ring 1 of enraptured
fourth graders around her,
Mrs. Patch sits before her
mirror and begins applying
the makeup that puts creases
and wrinkles in her smooth
sk.1n.
AGING UNNOTICED
But as she applies the
_:.mfilceup~ t~ J!!Ii-time actress
glibly talks lo the children
-·about-acting, about remem·
bering things,,about observing.
Slowly, Mrs. Patch grows
Make-up comple t ed , Mr s. Patch
.
twis ts her fa ce in to t hat of a mean,
old wo man and swoops down on fro nt row.
CALCULATOR . -·. -.. ,' t • C""l~ CPlMUCllll
• ' YOl.T .. n••' PICWl)IO
• JC 4DUT<ll •Yl tl.,UU
1 n. r.octOllT ~&&
lf!u.Tl-·~1 I
• IDUI. t in ... .,.. -s 28 .88,
/ I I \
~· -·-NI Mlalln.<.TI~ I• fM -. 1111 tUlll,U IW.1~· JVtt h 1 lt ........ .,.. CN.l!
U\·t611 •• ,., U.V.1
..... cut •• •· Ma~
THE. BIZZ Y CO.
Ill~ -r _,.l Ill.TI. COSTA ... tJ6U
•SWEATE RS • BLOUSES
• GOWNS • SLIPS
. .... ~
···~-~ ':' 0 H 'NTINGTON BU CH
224 Or•llflf•lr Mtll .. HUf'lf~Ofl C..,.,...
LAGUNA HIL LS . COSTA M~SA _.
L.•1u11• RllltMifl-· llO~NtW'9f1 lhif .
SHOP SUNDAY 12·S (11,., C...t• MIM I
llankA1t14':ricard • !\lat11.rr f.har,i;f'
I
more and ~ like a woman
in her 6'bs or ?Os but the
chi.ldreli are enjoying the litUe
theatrical games toq mucb to -nolfce. --·
Two children come before
the class, look at each other
closely, aod then each one
shuts his. eyes and tries to
describe the o t he r ' s ap.
pearancc.
"Observing, and remem:
bering, is important to actors
and actresses," she tells the
class. •
More children raise their
hands and rattle off early
memories -or getting spank-
ings, of running away, or good
times on a train.
111.e children giggle, and talk
among themselves, and are
eager to respond to
Mrs.Patch's promptings to
talk aloud.
FRIGHTENING
Finally. l'•frs. Patch rises
up, twists her race into that
of a cruel, mean old lady,
and swoops down among the
children in the front row.
Reciting lines from a recent
community play she appeared.
in, h-Irs. Patch is convincing,
and many of the children back
away from her in fright.
The purpose of the· tittle
hour and a half presentation
is to give the children some ·
ex~~e to thea.~Jical
methods, and to make the
learning fun.
Apparently, the perfonnance
is fun, for one little boy
(
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Remember
yells oot •11en the recess
bell rings, uAw, let's
not go to recESS toaay." SO
the class stays in during
recess wbeo -the -o t h -, r
classmates echo his sen·
timents.
rn its second year or ex·
istence. the Community
•
.Resources Program riow has ----------
178 volunteers -all parents
willing to donate an hour or
so of their time to teach their
skill, knowledge or hobby lo
a class of children.
·VOLUNTEERS
Last year, there were 88
vo!Wlleers, so things are on
the rise, according to Mrs.
Bennett, organizer.
Mrs. Bennett sent out a
survey at the begiMing of
school this fall, asking parents
what their intere s ts, oc-
cupations and skills were, and
if they would be willing to
give a presentation to a class.
The responses were com-
piled inlo a diStrlct-wide hook,
Usting the pe_rson, his abilities,
and time available for presen-
tatiorui. Each teacher was
given the book. and told to
MOii. tllnl Sit. 1t • S:•
Christ1nas
Gifts &
Decorations
to Fi1lfsh up
Las t Minute
Shopphtg! -·-D1ilv 10 to S:lO
511•. • I J te 41JO
* 6 D..,. U•tll!
feel free to call on these 1111111 Tiie •••rew•nt c111hr
lo I th · HUNTINGTON alACM persons supp ement etr UMI ALGONQUIN II WA•Nlll
lessom. !§~"'""' ~ So far, volunteers 'have in·
eluded doctors. dentists, a ~
keeper-who went over "rea1
big" -, a hou.sew\fe that liPeopl~uotes) macrames, ari airline pilot. (
a fireman and a policeman. makes -·
Hundreds of other occupations Fl111 lnA V' and interests are listed in the U1\ ~
book, too. in the r.1,!l'QWj\lll-IP.ij"!l!J,J"I
'
AIR STEP -CALIF COBBLERS....-...
OR. SCHOLL -BERNARDO -
VINER-BEARTRAPS-MlS S AME RICA
MAGDESIAN -
G!lASSHOP'PERS By KEDS -
Edwards -Hi Pal1 by W1ileo -
Robin Hood -PF Flyars -U.S. Kids -
CORRECTIVE SHOES FOR CHILDREN
C•p•tio Do1~e• Sho11 -Da nsk in
225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA
548 -2778
e •AHIC.11.\ElllCAllO e • MASTl!!ll CHAii.Gil •
.RUNNING IN CIRCLES
AND TRYING TO PARK
WON'T MAKE CHRISTMAS
A SHOPPING LA1tK!
SHOP JEAN DAHL
AND DO IT WITH EASE
YOU'LL NOT ONLY BE JOYFUL,
YOUR GIFT'S WILL SURELY PLEASE!
WISTCLlff PLAZA -17ttl & l•YINI, NIWPOIT l l ACH
MON.·FRI. 10 ·9 SUNDAY 11 .5
Aha Newpemr l•-7 Dcryl t:J0-6:00
"·'· '" O•r P1t'tl1W1rtl Pllllwl & Oilr Anll• C>11q c .. 1tc111111
'
PRESENTING OUR
IMPORTED
BA TILE-JACKE T'
JN NAVY, OAllC l lOWH ANO
l llOf, S.59.$01 ,LANklO IY A CAllfll:NIT
IWIATll AND VIST WITH CONTI.I.ST StlA,S
.AT CO~lAI, WAIST AND cu''·
• •
__ 1W1AJ1Ltu_..._ ...._y_1s11,,,u~--~,.
, GUY LIVINGSTON P~ON.SQu".\RE, SANTA ANA· .5P06345
'IN (VfHINGS 1119-SUNDAYS 12-.5
•
•' . Th11'lday, Dettmber 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT
Health Car-e Needs Unlimited MANUFACTUlElS'
SALE!
• . .
By LAURIE KASPER EVININCi WU.R
& HOLIDAY DRUSIS Of ... 0.llY ......, S,.ff
• OrlflMI• e o-M-~llWI e
AT HLOW WHOLESALE!
Dflita" Fobrl<1
At Coat!
ShoMon B<nnett b&J round
women in other states and
Canada areo'.J _ e distant as
some may think.
Acryllc: -hlynt ... -
Tilil!1t11 -V•IVtlttn
Open 7 D1y1 A Wffk
'Tll Xm11 -t AM to 5 PM
WAAI HOUSl 72' W. 16111 St.
CoatGM"" • q ....... lrnert & f'lllal e
When she and three other
women from the Feminist
Women's Jleallh center in
Santa Ana went OI), a seven
week tour to demonstrate and
lecture on their self·hclp
techniques, they repeatedly
met women who share their
•
"
Merry
Christmas
&
Happy
New Year!
/v , t etas .
INTIMATE APPAREL
W•1tcliff Pl111• •• 111h&lrv1"-
N-port S.ach1 C.lllornia
Give the
Cre<ttive
Gift
•
C. r
*
Gir e a length oi fabri c ...
,he'll love your gilt of 11 Jl:ury lobric. Se lect from our lrtmt~
doul voriery of ;,.,.fo1hi~n . l1r1t quality fabnc1 . Our Fabric
Conivhonh art very co~ obit and con he lp you.
Give a, Fabric Gallery
Gift Certificate ...
A great ;ih idea for yeoPround gih giving. Ava ilable in ony
amount.
We cl111 at I PM C~ristmas Eve.
lAGIJNA BEACH
118~~
OPEN: Morl.·Soi ~m PM
Sin 12.0PM
health concerns. And, she
said. they round a d d e d
evtdcnce to support their con-
cerns.
Two women from the Los
Angeles center discovered the
same In a trip to ,Europe
as did another Orange· County
woman who traveled to
Australia and New Zealand.
Health care, decided Ms.
Berutett, is a "globaJ issue
... All women have the same
problems with getting health
care ... All women have the
same problems with their
bodies."
This just reinforced the con·
cluslon she had come lo ~·ith
her involvement in the center.
"If women are to have more
control over their life, then
they need more control over
their bodies. In order to do
that, they need to know about
their bodies.
''Women everywhere sup. began with self-examination
ported us," said Ms. Bennett. and now include gynecological
"lt was fantastic ." · and abortion clinics, "spreads
The group first beaded north like a grapevine," she claimed.
and lhen roughly followed the simply because ''women have
perimeters of the country for to deal with the same basic
the trip. stopping in about things with their bodies" and
30 places within the 16 states all want to know more.
and provinces they crossed But education was only one
GRASS ROOTS reason they wanted to talk
They offered lheir.....:pt'eserr-with women-about-the clinics
tatons· at YJ\1CAs, women's which have been operating in
centers a n d universities. California for several years.
'!Where ever there was a DEVELOP SKILL
group of women, we went to The second rtason Ms. Ben-
talk to them," she said. "It nett said, was to encourage
really v.•as a grass' roots thing. v.·omen to develop skills,
We just went out and did become paramedics, doctors
it." and nllf'Ses "so that women's
Where ever they went she medicine can be in the hands
said, they spoke ·to from 30 of women.
to 300 people, many of whom "We found "A-1>men all over
had heard about sel£·help were suffering bad health
groups in other cities and care," she charged after citing
states. a third reason for the trip
Word of the groups, ~·hich as finding out what. the care
Brief " Encounter Ends
By ERMA BO~IBECK
I don't scream "Sexist?"
often, but how come depart·
ment stores have a men's
night in the lingerie depart-
ment for those ' •p oo r ,
bewildered male shoppers"
and women are left to wander
through men's lDldenvear
alone and without friends?
Where does it say women
\\-'Cre born into this world wise
in the v.'ays of grippers and
boxers?
SpdJ1g Bites
For the last three years
my husband has shopped alter
hours in a department store
boutique where they plied him
with champagne, a siie 3
salesgirl-named Francine, and
GIRLS, 50 GIRLS who could
make a man forget a wife
who wore feet in her Dr.
Den tons.
For the last three years
he has emerged with a
nightgown that I have to wear
over a corset and under a
Laytons · Tell News
coat, and hiccups that I've
had to cure by smothering
him with a pillow until he
stops breathing.
This is not the way it v.·orks
for women. The men's depart-
meilt still enjoys the Victorian
modesty of a man who wears
a necktie to bed.
"I want to look al sOme
underwear for my husband,''
1 said to the young sales clerk.
"They're all in those racks
near the center aisle," he mo-
. tioned.
"But they're all packaged,"
I said. "How do I know what's
inside?"
"They're labelled," he ex·
plained patiently. "And there's
a picture or the contents being
worn on tne outside."
Not one of tbe models was
a real, live man, but a line
drawing or a faceless figure
with his hands on his hips
picture is.
Women, she claimed, are
still being eicperlnlented on
with the morning after pill
and o th e r contraceptive
methods without being told the
side effects.
But men. she said, are being
told when they are being given
an experimental con,
traceptive. The male con·
traceptive she charged won't
be released until researchers
accumulate at least five years
or data ''which is not v.·hat
they do for women."
She said she is not saying
women shouldn't take the pill
or try other contraceptive
methods.
"I just feel v.·omen shou ld
be given all the facts ," she
said. "If then they choose to
go ahead and take a
substance, at least they're
f!!Bking an.educated choice."
• Tie
AT
WIT'S
END
"I don't kno\V," I hesitated.
"He's been watching football
since August and hasn't stood
up. He 's about as wide as
a recliner-lounge cushion and
he's probably your size. Could
YOU' hold it up?"
"No, no, I don't think so,"
he blushed.
No champagne. No size 4-0
Francis to help me with my
de<?islon. No centerfold to
model the biki nis w i t h a
matching sh'ave coat.
No woder n1en get all· those
rotten ties for Ouistmas.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn 11torris
Layton of C.Orona del l\-1ar
have announced the engage-
mentor their daughter ,
1'1argaret Mary Layton. to
Sam E. Barker Jr. of Santa
Ana.
wearing a pair of shorts. '-==========:,'! "These are the boxers and 1r
The bride-to-be is an alumna
or Marywood High School aad
Santa Ana College and will
graduate from the University
of Redlands in February.
on this side are the briefs,"
he mumbled and started to
leave.
"Hold it!" I said. "What
are the choices?"
"There are a lot of choices.
There are the boy legs. the
athletic (slits) on the side, the
CHEER UP THAT
BOAT OWNER FRIEND
Stop lit & Sel91=f fro1n Ocr Voi t AuortlMWt of WwM,
Sllp~ , • , Gl"fft Proctk ol Gift Ito'"•·
,_
·:
. " ' .. t:: Her fiance, son of '-1r. and
Mrs. Sam E . Barker of
Garden Grove. is a graduate
of Santiag«1 High School and
Santa Ana College. He plans
to attend California State
University Fullerton in the
fall.
bikinis ... " 1·:
"You're kidding.'' AT YOUl Open This Sunday 12·5 1 •
"
"No they come in rayon, NEAREST IOOK STORE For Your Shopping Convenience j '. cotton, patterns and plain, I · pastels and solids. And. or
1
°' 30 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT BEACH '! c
course, there are . matching l~=~M~A~l~IN~E~HA~R~D~W~A~R~E=~~-~~~~-~-:-~-~-~;;:::~~~:=::~~~==:;;=::~-~·~--1 T·shirts . or undershirts with They will exchange vows in r"--.-.~spr:l.'ing iilOl.!rLadYQueen or . wltlfGUtsteeves-;-V~ks;-t •
crews. What size do you · t ; ol ·Angels Catholic Church,
Corona del Mar. need'·" ! •(.
Women's Way to Win
Political Strategy Told
By CAROL l\IOORE ~1rs. Musfelt recounted the
Of "'• 0.11, r 1i.1 11.tt trend ' to consolidate lhe jobs
"We're gearing up for ,74. of city clerk and treasurer
"Women In office are doing and her own legal suit to
· keep her job when it was well And with red istricting, destined to be made part.time.
dileftchantment .with 'govern-"It's important to keep
ment and the W~terga~e mess these small elective offices.
maybe voters will reallre that . They are tv.-'O tremendous
women can do lots that they safeguards that make things haven'~, been able to do public.
befo~e. . . "The treasurer receives, in-
Tb1s estimation came from vests and disburses all funds Vivia~ Hall. one of , the and hoods and the clerk is organ1z~rs o~. the Nation~l in charge of. complete records.
Women s Pohltcal Caucus m So the truth can be procured
Orange Col!Dty, as she led at budget and election times." a panel entitled The Way to , . d Win before the Huntington City off Lees a~d school ~r
Beach Branch, Amer i c 8 n Po~ts are ~ditiona! .starting
Association of u n i v e r s i t y pomts for higher politics.
Women. But Cathy O'Nei ll ~ied . for
Anolher panelist, Dorothy State Senate on her first time
Musfelt, city clerk of Laguna out last year. She lost by
Beach, reminded potential one percent or the \.'Ot~ but
candidates tfult the time is has announced her candidacy
now for entering municipal
for Secretary of State.
Why is she . seeking higher
office after the initial setback?
"I figure people will vote
for a woman for secretary,"
was the Quip.
But seriously. having been
through one. campaign, she
knows what's needed foi' cam-
paign reform and can direct
election practices state\vide.
A mini-Oocumentary about
her campaign showed the
grassroots issues, scheduling
biase~. strategy and financing
fit into a candidate's daily
routine.
No special funding sources
were indicated for women but
the increasing amount of in·
dividual donations \vas em·
phasiied and considered the
answer to the reliance on big
business backing to which
women have less access. ~
"Nomination papers have to election! next March S. liOiiiOiiiOiii~~~~~------::~---ll
be clrcufated and riled by Dec. M_,,,,
'1:1," she explained. A stale--· • 1
mcnt or quallficalions (200 Christmas!
Words) and some times a
minimal filing fee also must
be aubmltted.
"Then all that's• left is the
campaigning lllld don't be
alarmed by the number of
ie&lstered voters," she said.
"We have 10,000 registered
wters in Laguna but in our
lallt e)tellon (council reoall)
lhe 16W vote """ only 1,200 af)d the issue was decided
lly Z,000 votes. That's the
number you have to conJ· b ....... ~~;;:;;;;.~ Vince." ---
Keep W1rm
This Winter
With A Giff
From
~L..
BIDTIQUE
From our boys' department ...
the s-.ater lot:ki:>r hdiday visiting.
44 fashion island , newport center 644·5070 ,
WE'RE IN THE DARK
"OUR LIGHTS ARE OFF, BUT THERI IS NO SHORTAGE OF ENERGY WHEN IT COMES
J'O....CUll._Ml..R~HANTS AND THEIR WIUIN GNESS TO S~RV_! YOU.
OPEN EVENINGS MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY '.TIL CHRISTMAS
• ,\
·r : i .
• • • •
" . . " • ': ' : • : . -.
I
' ' "
• l
t •
• I
DAILY PILDT
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Capricorn: Take · .the Lead
FRIDAY
DECEMBER 21
By S\'DNEY OMARK
Leo loves theater but can
despise theatrics. T h e s e
natives twve an ~te sense ot drama and can be sen-
limehtal while exhibiting a toup cover.
Leo can be many things
but not ea!)' to understand.
Leo adores being nattered but
cannot tolerate being de-
ceived.
Leo is a bundle or con-
tradictions, loves traumatic
entrances and er.its a n d
doesn't ilways know when to
arrlve or leave. These can
be the charming, beautiful
people "'1o are allo stubborn,
fiery and loud.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 191:
You are able to reach more
persons. What you say and
write commands attention.
Know it and make the most
or it. ,Stress indepencleoce
without being arrogant. You
get rid of burden. You also
have chance tO aid ooe who
helped you in pasl.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201:
One at a distance could light
up your life through call, cor-
respondence, green light ror
project involving roreign land
or Jangwge. Look behind the
scenes. Get money n1atters
on the table. Check cur-
riculum. Improve potential
lhrough .sfudy.
Ct!UN! (May 21·June 201:
Lie low. Check contracts.
rollow 1hrough on tip from
mate, partoer: You may be
expecting . something to be
delivered at home -but mix-
up occurs unless you repeat
address. Aqurim, Le o
persons figure in roles.·
CA~~ER (June 21·July 22 /:
Highlight versatility. Don't
feel there iJ onJy one way.
There are numerous paths and
you do have right to explore
and experiment. S.&fttarius,
Gemlnl persons .are likely to
be involved. Leg a I corn·
mitment should be hooored.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ac·
cent on romantic and creative
pursuits. You imprint style
White House Decorated
and desire. Personal
magnetlmi soars. You galr
support from those who may
have seemed out of reacl
Aquarlu and Scorpk» personi
are apt to be 1n picture,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. Z2)
Be analytical. Rtject pa'
answers. Go after reasons
motives. Gtmlnl could be in·
'"Wived. B u i 1 d for futurr
security. H o me, property
values should be conaldered
Be aware ol right-of·way.
plumbing and other essentials.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. Z2 \:
Dealings with relatives are
emphasized. Be diplomatic.
mature. You gain by Wl-
derstanding, not by insisting.
chiding or cajoling. Request
is fulfilled ; it brlngs added
responsibility. Time payment
could be involved.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
What appears to be a mori-
bund proposition is about to
take on new life. Know it
and don't be too hasty in
tossing aside what you worke<l
to achieve. Patience now
becomes valuable a s s e t .
Pisces, Virgo could figure
p~inently.
SAGITrAR!VS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Lunar cycle coin·
cides with chance f o r
leadership, initiative, n e w I
starts and creative approach
wtllch draws favorable at-
tention -and results. Keynote
now is organization. Also, you
find that involvements are in-
tensUied.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
·19): Finish rather than begin
-round olit projects. Deal
with Ubra, Aries individuals.
Personality should be em·
phasized. Wear bright, "sun-
ny" colors. Put best foot
forward. Take the lead. Get
better distribution.
AQUAR!VS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Accent is on how to
overcome one who secr etly
rtsents, envies and feels in·
ferior. Means be gracious but
make dear that you are
strong. Discourage any idea
that you can be pushed out
of .Picture. Flex muscles?
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20),
You are put forth for
leadership po!itlon. Don't Jet
false shyness deter. You have
'
,.
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at a small-size price! Enjoy
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Padding over a tempered-
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Now at a Great Saving!
•
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~~~
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With Every King or Queen: Fieldcrest No-Iron
Top and Fitted Bottom Sheets & 2 Pillowcases.
2 King or Queen-size Pillows. Mattress Pad.
Metal Frar:ne on Easy-Roll Casters.
Double Bonus
With Every Mattress Se!: King or Queen -
Padded Vinyl Headboard and Quilted
Bedspread;, Twin or Full -Headboard and
Metal Frame on Easy-Roll Casters.
,
TWIN or
FULL
SIZE . ..
ORTHO FLEX . ''·
Let the children dream·
of Santa t.hls Christmas •
Eve on this lovely
Twin or Full Size Mattress s5 I 95 Set! Conta ins Mattress,
Box Spring & Double
Bonus. Shop Now! 'flfrs. Pat Nixon leads a tour of the newly decorated right -and ability -to show
Executive Mansion to show Christmas decor. Behind your stuff. Do so ID forthright • ,
the-First Lady is a red and white gingerbread-house.--manner.-Teach. Observe. BUY NOW& FOR CHRISTMAS which took the White House chef three days t.o. Articulate beliefs. Be con-
n1ake. fident. Accept chaJlenge.
School Programs Close Year
EST~ PTSA: General
meeting al 7:30 tonight ·will
be follov.·ed by a sneak
preview of beautiful cr eations
which will be auctioned Fri-
day, Dec. 21, in the Art Court.
•Media represented will be
papier machc paint in gs.
macrame, ceramics a nd
crafts. A special section will
be set up for younger children
wh ere they may c r e a t e
something themselves. Girls
league will assist and baby-sit.
FULTON PTO: General
meeling will take place in
conjunction with a student
Christmas program tonight at
7: 30. according to f.1rs. Dale
Edwards. program chairman.
Mrs. Palmer Bradley, "'ays
and means chairman, reports
that gifts from Santa's Secret
Shop will be available for
purchase at prices ranging
from 50 cents to $2.50.
Proceeds v.·ill be used lo
purchase primary playground
equipment. Bake sale "'ill be
conducted by cigl1th graders
with proceeds earmarked for
graduation activities.
HARBOR VIEW P F 0 '
Parents and friends are in·
vited to attend the annual
Christmas program thal will
take place al 9 a.m. tomorrow.
All grade levels will per£onn
in the program enlilled Joy.
Santa Claus will then visit
with the. students.
l\10IOLA PTO: Parents and ,viii attend a performance or
ST. JOACHIM PTG, Annual
Christmas program at 8
tonight will be followed by
refreshments for students and
parents • • • Room mothers
are sponsoring a holiday bake
sale Sunday, Dec. 23, after
all ma~s. Items will be gaUy
wrapped and will include the
r ecipe.
friends are invited to attend a play entitled "Mr. Popper's ----------:=!
a program entitled Christmas Penguins" tonight at 7 in the
Around the \Vor\d tomorrow learning center. Appearing in RU Ff ELL'S at 10 a.m. Internalional theme the play will.be students from •
will he carcied ou\ wilh each Mrs. Devon Eulberg's class UPHOLSTERY
la.sroo per(orml.ng a song . . . Classroom Christmas c n1 WlMtft Yn Wnt or dance from a different parties will be presented by n. '"'
country. Room 1n others the room mothers tomorrow. 1t22 H..ttof lh'd.
assisted in preparing the pro-c... ,. ... -S41-02St
gram by researching custoi_ns .. ===========~~~~~~~~~~~! making costumes and teaching,;
the songs and dances to the
children.
PARK VIEW Pro , Public
is invited to attend a
Christmas program tonight at
7 in the humanities \\"ing of
the schooL Primary classes
"'ill pr~nt a choral reading
and older students w i 11
perform · dances and voclll
numbers. Students from MGM
classes will appear in a play
entitled, "The Three Litt!e
JGttens' Christmas, '1 v.•ritten
by Joyce S. Christmas and
directed by Ms. Linda Close.
PUVAN PTO: ~1embers
PRE-C HRISTMAS
SAJ,1~ ~
~iel)ta' . u~ ~uct100
e COATS e JACKETS
e SKIRTS .
e DRESSES e PANTS e TOPS
A Gr.at Collection in time fer Hollilay
Wearing or Giving!
THiS SUNDAY AT 2,3g PM
AT NEWPORTER INN
1117 J•lltberM lld., Ne.,.n 11 .. eh
O• view from 11 o"' to Z pm ! Dtr.. Z:l I
TalftMl1 Ct ... , Cllfd;, M•lltr Cll•rt•• Am1rlc111 111""" A«tPIW.
flQCOR lnttrnatlonal . (PtY) Ltcl.
'Ill
ORTHO TENSION
comfort with Ortho's Crown Flex Center!
Mattress, 2 Box Springs, Ortho-Pak
& Double Bonus. A Great Value!
Ortho's luxurious Queen-size Se!
conlains, Mattress, Box Spring,
Orlho-Pak & Double Bonus.
OATHO SPLENDOR A King-size
with Re inforced Borders and
Crown Flex Center. Includes
Mattress, 2 Box Springs, Orlho-Pak
RTHO SPLENDOR
Queen-size elegance wilh ideal
firmness ! Set conlains Mallress,
Box Spring.'Ortho-Pak & Double
& Double Bonus. Bonus! A Terilllc Orlho Buy!
FULL SIZE
.,,.... ---,,.. ",-..... , __ ·"';'
/I ·, , I , I . .,_ ..
DELMAR
Beautiful button-back
model ; also available in
Super Queen Width, s·
15 I 95 wider than normal Queen
Size sleeper, also Love
Seat & Malchlng Chair.
GUARANTEED
FREE CHRISTMAS
BAHAMA
A Christmas bargaln on
this great 9·piece set.
Includes: 2 Mattresses, 2
.Matching Foundations._.,.,., •15915 2 Quilted Coverlets, 2 • Bolaters & Walnut grain
finlth Cor11er Table. .
Ortho Products are· manufactured
by Ortho and sold only through l~~~.:..~o~r~lh~o;!F!ac~t~o~ry~S~h~o~w~r~o~o~m~s_J~:!'.~ ~ ~l"C!Un..;...,....,.,
AS~ORD
A styllsh button-back
model at a big sale price!
Also available in Super
Qu een Width, s· wider
than normal Olleen Size •1 • 91 sleeper, also Love Seat & ·
Matching Chair. FULL SIZE . '
OVER 50 FACTORY SHOWROOMS
CORNER GROUPS
Jj ~~· · """'
--·-.......
CAPRI A treat for your living
room or den. With 2 Mattresses,
2 Box Springs trimmed In vlnyl, 2 fitted,.
qullted Coverlets, 2
•
curved-top Bolslers a *17991 Corner Table In your
choice of 8 finishes. . '
THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAiN OF.M~IlR5,,~S SP~CIALISTS
ORANGE . SANTA ANA ANAHEIM LAKfWUO~ .. .£...!J53,
1441 N. f.ut• A... Ai fo•t•I• y.n.y ( 1111 Welt U.. A,., 44JJ C II •s :;Mt( A':° f:: :u:• ~'l:i
16111 H..._ .._. 11--. ........ lfMINIWft C111•111111 .._. . 1H..... l'!IMIM11 ,_. VtMUrt ...,.,,.. . a...-OP:a, CeCiftrflle t140J
• . · IZ1ll llO«ll10 ·
•1 MIHION Ill.AND, NIWPOltT llACH
Ster• Hn: 10 A.M. te t :JO P.M. M ... tllr• s.t •
-11 lo I P.M.
n --'---IKMf ,,_ I.Ml..,... C•Nfl s•rn _.. TKtW
IKl'tU= ~": Ma I (etrMt If acl"'-1 Nld " 1..,.1 -.. el , .. Mert ,,,._, N4 WI ,...,_. ,t,~ I ,._., UMIN ,._., 11tol:fl ........... lltl ~Off
' -1n;111.1,11t11,,11411,14111:1flj1;111,11 11111i1•0;;1j 1illtji!Htf4''1'''·':111:r,1:1:1.1y5;111,1:1,19Li11p1111r,11111 '-~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~--'' ( I l -._,..
• t
•
•
AMIUR
TUMILEWEEDS
MUTI AND •JEFF .
HOL.D THE
LADDER,
X'LLGO
UP!
FIGMENTS
_ ....... -.-.-,.:" -
NANCY
•
I PONT BELIEVE VOU-
YOU 5'10 SL.UGGO IS A
HIGH 5CHOOL STUDENT
~ ICLA551 39
.......
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLB
Ye1lerday'a Puul• Sol....ct:
ACAOSa 52 WelefcourHt
$4 Fore• Ollt
11,.,. 09 °"9 CGnft)'Or.
6 MoYl1 l)OOCh 2 wotdl
9 Pualon 59 f1Cl1
14 Towardlhl ez We;«
""""' .......
115 Pa.tll m1t111tplae1
1n11t1ri1I 615 SculphJl"ld
16 Qu.beo 1 ......
. nel9hbot 67 Lo1t1dclut1:2
11 Conl1lnlng .....
woo1111 70 Ewll being
19 Y11m1d 71 Small group
20 WABell lor 72 Colonyot
in.1c11
21 Mol1IUl'9 73 Without 1
23 RO!Mtl IYTlfll brNk: 2 words 11 Ha .... dinnlr 38 81ylng
2• PhoM1 191ln 74 R111rtilned 12 Somlthlng .. , Qu9df~
2:7 Mlr'M(• 715 Son ot Ztvl unique; SIMQ -43 Son ol Jaciob, ,..., .. DOWN t3 Ctw1g1 48 Ell'ly llltO
fil ··-ulc., 111 Blllk 48 Frencl'I
!off' 1 Pivotal tral'lucl\Otll 61 Pollll'tby
-31 Alo«la 2 Mo•ltm ,,. ....
35 M1!9 lhMp dlCIM 22 M1111'1 63 SaMllChtwlrl't
~1 o ... oon·a 3 "'"" """"""' capital
CIPllal ""''""' 25 J\111'11 fofwlrd M Moln
39 ltol111d plll'll: 2 wOtda 2t5 M1rcl'llndl1lng 57 Moved upward
40 Troop of <H-events 58 $peak1
CIYl!ry """" """ 28 Greel't 111t1r violenu,
•2 Flower ltatur1 & CMllc1 30 R1p1lr 1 root 59 Pr1nk
•4 T1n:ly • c1i.nc1&r lbbt. 32 lc1 l!Oclt1y 60111110
•5 IMldl 1 Fu ten.cl Wllh Mro: 2 words 61 Languid
47 lnsttvm1nt1: • .~ .. 33 ln11de: Comb. 63 F1Ugue
tnlomitil • T"' lo~ 6G c ....
•D Droop I El1etrlc1l lll'llt 34 001• ea ·-HodQ91:
&O T Ilk much b11t 10 Preclpllllkin 35 Ru1 DOdg1tgrMt
uylllll• ' ..... ,~ 38 Coln ol lndl1 et COii tcuttle
•
. ,
by Dou9 Wiidey
by. Tom · K. Rya"
so MOCH
FOP. OUR
&ROOP 1\il:RAl'Y
SESSION
by Al Smith
by r;>ale Hale
by_ Emi~~mlhr
I SAID
"HIGH STOOL.'
STUDENT
DOOLEY'S WORLD
MOM'S lllifiN
SHOPPING
EVIORY Dl<'I I
-rn1s w•EK ·
SALLY BANA!iAS
Thursday, O!<tlTlbtr 20, tq73
-Aft WEP:'f EVENING SHES
~ WAApP1N' PACJ<AGES ••
MAK!NG FRurrcAKE: ...
~ING CA.ROS-
DAILY PILOT
by Roger Bradfield
YES-SH~ SAYS rr'.S
A SHAME: 'TfiEY HAVE
1tl J.IAVE: CHRISTMAS
!llG"lT DU~NG 'Tfio
HOl.l Pl'. YS
By Charles Barsotti
1-1ev;1'LL8eT~e f'otKsM1sseoMe (JeLL
aNP MY f1Ui\'1S<!G BIT DURING TH!! Ge!l,N~T
... I THINK f.IUMBUG-GJISe TH!!l?e GJllS
8 SURPLUS CRoP TlilS Y!?llR.
OFF 5E!a s ON, Rell a. v;
efl,SPIRIT? 5cR006e ...
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
IM-I GOT TA HANC> IT TO
'iOU,.JOKe··'>bU1RS" TH'
BIGGEST ASSET I"! TK'·
~NTll<G SN,l.ppY C,l.B COMPANY.'~-:;!!
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
:___o~-1-~...J L~~->-~..l..L-~~ L~~~_;;;~~-'l ~
by R09er lol•.n ~ ANIMAL CRACKERS
... 'COURSE, Tt-1/l.T
WOW1T flAPPEN FOR
,1. BILI.ION ClEARS ...
WM .. T?
by Charles M. Schulz
AFTER. THE HOUtWI§ AU OVE( AND E'IEJ!'(THJN6 HP5
<ll/leTCD llOJj/N, l'M 60/No
10 5UJ6 '/Oil !
THE GIRLS
JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux
MISS PEACH
I I I
! •
• rll:ANC.11-li'S ADVICl:O' ~.
-ftie K•~~y ~Hoo1.1S AIO~i'"
e,.uc.c..-~sFu1. APv1cr S•flV1($,,
. f.Vt~.'!
DICK TRACY
\
t THINK ,o ... euT I'VE
GOT TO 6EE THE CASH,
FRIEND! YOUR CREDIT
AIN'T MUCH GOOD!
I
by Mell
•
•
•
::C.;i..\ARCIA 15 . ADVG 'fLAlE'*
•
:t:r W'A~ wfbtl M'f ADVIL'.!! ,..~T
fflANClti6 WfNf 1t1ro JqsiN~~s.
•
. b., Chester Gould •
"I'd better not -every time be bowls a low score I Jnt
know wbost fault It's ping lo be."
DENNIS THE MENACE
·~ eEUE~E.JN-SNITA
CIMIS,rorfr YA. GINA'?'
P""-· 11.·.10 • I
•
•
'
\
:JfJ DAILY PILOT TtlursdaJ, Otttmbtf' 20, 1~7)
·--" .. ..
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS
ABC 0 6:30 "The Broken Lance." Movie.
SpenC'er '!'racy, Hobert \\'agner. Jean Peters, Jtich·
ard \\11d1nark.
CBS 6 8:00 The Wallons. John-Boy's emotions
get in the way of an essay he is writing.
NBC O 8:00 Flip \\lilson. Guests include ~1ac
Uavis, Bob \Vi\liarns and Louie. Burns and Schrei·
bcr and Bobby sa ndier.
ABC 0 8:00 Tonu:i. Dave 'fo1na poses as a go.
between in na rcotics sale invol vin g college profes·
sor and leaders of two synd ic ates.
CBS 6 9:00 Movie. "Gun fight at OK Corral."
Burt Lan caster. Rhonda Fle1ning, Kirk Douglas, Jo
Van Fleet and John Ireland.
TV DAILY LOG
Thursday
Evening
DECEMBER 20
mo" (dr1) '39 -Pat O'Bflen, lint
Wym1n.
l :lO m Mtrv liriffin Show
a!) Nowtlt
uoao o mmwm ••••
@8il!!J(00@lQ!CIJl Nm
81oMIUI
9:00 O (9 (l)l ®CU. Th11sd1r
Morie: (C) (2M) ~unll&ht 11 OK
Corr1I" (wes) 'S7 -Burt Lanustei,
)(irk Doualas. Rhonda Flemin1, Jo
Vin Fleet. Lyle Bettger, John Ire·
land. The siory af the 1unliah1 1n.t
made le1ends out of Wyiilt [up,
a U.S. mar$hal, and Doc Holliday,
1 dentist·lurned·gambler.
@ CotHtslllp If Eddie's F1tllu
(J ntlaqShow m "he Fli11tttones
ID Sllr Trtk
ti) SIMplfmtnlt Mllil
9 Movie: (C) "Thtrt'S ND l llli·
nts.s Uke ShoW Bullneu" (mus)
'54 -Dan D1iley. Muilyn Monroe.
fr) Hodgtpodge l.Gdft
'fl ThrH Stoo&ts
D ~ 000 (!lre111idt "The
last Payment" Ironside's aide Mark
Sante•, helped unwittingly by a
&hetto character, sets himstll up
as tht bait to catch a killtl ~n
shark.
(fl tllt IGld OntS ~
5:30 00@ (}) Hog1n's He1ots 0 @ CIJ (!) Ku111 Fu "The [Iii ·
i1" A beautiful woman's indepin·
denct, 1 criWltd man's love for
her and 1 jealous suitor provide a
dangerous challenge 10 Ca ine. Ditnt
Muld1ur. Oavicl Canary and Mall:
O Movie: (C) (90) "lroktn Linet"
(wts) 'f>.t -Spencer T11cy, Robert
Wainer, .kan Pt1er5, Rithud Wid·
mark.
(I) Ql Ci)(~ l!Jl Nm
. O Dick Vin D,t.e
fiQl Mtr¥ G1illi11 Sllow m Andy Griftllll
ED Chan&lnl Musk m t.Nln& E.ISJ a:> Movel•
al Desert Thta1r1 m uttle b.uls
' Clark 1uest -
ti) Estt Mtilco
fD MeJ1 Wllo Madt tht Morits (R)
"Alfred Hitchcock"
I!) Y1rltd*I Ytrpl
'630 III lA Hiena
(ID Ainlteur Y.wktf
HIOO CD B!?J ....
10:00 0 ~ m flllt Follies Sammy Df.
vis Jr. welcomn Jack Cassidy, Ten·
nessee Ernie ford, Floreoc1 Hen·
deoon ind Rodney Allen Rippy. O lowlillc lor Dollilrs
(j) MO'tle: (2b1) "The Tttttrtd
Dress" (dra) '57 -Jelf Chandk:1,
Je1nnt C111n, Gail Russell .
(I) Seatts of tlle Det:p
O What's My lint? m I love lUtJ m Mod Squad
(ft)(]) I Ore1m ol Jeannie
ELl Esm11ald1 Iii (j) D111ntl tEl friu a. Tlleonil
(ji' (j)) Lissie ~fl Primer Amor ~ Tele·Rnlsla Musical
(E Spttd R1ctr
oomma ••n
(!) Night SalltJJ o @ill fl} Stt••b or s.11 Fr1""-
cisto "Most Feared in the Jun1le''
A youn1 girfs search for her ntw"·
born baby son leads lier to llomi·
cide ~nd a bewilderint maze of con·
tradictions. Kitty Winn 1uests.
ti) Je1tro Con Osw1lclt Cllvt
ID 00 T~ Jones Ctlristlnn Sp+
Ci1I
ED The Killers "Genetic Defecl1 (RI
7:30 B Ofson Wetlts' 1ii11at MysteriH
"Compli men!S of Ille Season" A
drunken dt1elict returns a pre<:iO!JS
doll to a millionaile"s d1u1hter and
1eceives l'#O ienrds -one totally
unexpected. [ti Wallach st11s.
lO:lO 9 Talk Back
(I} Twili1ht Zone
Q) Bill to5br m Sp1nlsk ComtdJ
€!) Juevu di: Gila a:> Praise Ille Ltrd Clult
u,ooaoommm••n rn l!l ®I EE ~ ®Nm e r.i1iaht ZoM
l3) Ho11n's Herots 0 the Mtw Price b Riaht O Help Thy 1rtei1llbor g You Asked f(ll II
Co11ttnlralion Ltt'f. Make A Dtal m Btwitched
tfJ)CI)To Tell the Trant
(2j@ The thrillsttltfS ED Accion Chiuno
( i9 [))J Jimmy De1n SlloW m Jonll111n Wlnlen
(fl Peiry MUOI!
O Phil Doruihue Show m To Tell tlle trvth
Q) C:.et Smalt
Qt rn l.Mna [lsy
~ All rtd Hitdlcock Pruents
(~(!))Trails West
Ell Tiit Ghoul Gang 11:301) (ii:@)® CBS lit• Movit:
1:00 f) (.19 (j)) 00 The WlltOl'ls "Thi "fort Dobbs_". (wes) '58 -C~inl
Tri1n11e" John·IW(s emotions 1et Walker, Vlrgin11 MaJO. Brl1n )(e1th.
in lhe way of an ts»y he Is wrltingl 0 ~ @ @1 m Johnnr Clrscin
when the Riv. rordwic~ begins call · g Mov it: "Wtddi111 Prts111t"'
in g on John.Boy's favorite high (com) '36-Cary Gunt, Joan Ben·
school teacher, Miss Hunter. nett
0 :il (~:'@ ED Flip Wilson flip 0 @(!) al Dick C.tett
welcomes Bums & Sthre iber and m All od H•·•·-• -b Tht filth D1m1ns1on. r .............. n•stn
0 Movie: (t) (2hr) "Tht Kenlutk· l!J MovN: "K.n11s City ConfldtR•
i1n" (ad~) '55 -Burt l1nuster. tial" (mys) '53-John Payne.
Willer M11th1u. 0 Jt (3" ID to1111 ''The Cain 12:00 @ One. Step ltJ'lld
Connett1on"' Da~e Tami poses as al 0 lfril brlaff Prtstnts
rio·btt"lfeen m a n1rcoliC$ sale in-1 .ID Mowit: ''liifttl Dolpflift Stl'eel'"
volv1ng a to!!e1e ptofessor ind lhe (dri) '47 -Larui Turner, Oonlll
ltidifs of two srnd1cateL M1thael Reed. Van Heflin.
Tolan, fu nk Campanella ind Ptterl Qj Pllil Donahlill Show
Brotco guest.
(J Million $ Movit: (C) (2hr) 1:00 rn 0 (j) ~ {j) Men
'1he An&IJ HUis" {dr1l ·5~Rob·1 0 ®J ·iil m Tomorrow
ert M1lchum, Stanley Ba~tr, Gta O Wanted Dead Of" AJIYI
sea la I I AJhtd Hitthtotk Presents l:lO 9 Hlrflw1y Patrol
801!n1 from the Otym~it 1:4S 0 Movie: (C) "Half Anrtl" (com)
_ l• ~ftor1 loven . '!ii-Loretta Young J~ph'Cot1en. @ Movie: (C) (2hr} "Th1te Coins '
in the fou nllln" (1om) '~4-Chtlon 3:00 m All·Hi&ht Sllow: "Camtol Dtllh,'"
Webb, Je~n Pe1er~. "01i••r tlfisf'
Loi Hutvos Po1iyoces 3:10 0 Movie: (C) "Kelly l Ml" (dr1) I The Advocatei
&1r1van1 Mu1lt1! '57 -Van Johnson, Piper Lau1ie, lE Movie: (2hr) "llld rrom Koko-Martha Hyer,
Jenniltr Jones. Van Heflin, limes Friday M1$0n.
1:00 O (C) "It Happened One Sv1tmt1"
(ram) '4!1 -Jeann• IA11n, Dana
DAYTIME MOVIES Andrews.
3:00 ({)"The llrt TI1111 I Sn Ar,hit" S:DO @ (])"Bombs Over Bu11n1~ (dra) ltom) '61-ilobett Mitchum, Jack
'42-Noel Mtdison. Webb.
t ;JO O (C) ""latlt People" (so~) 'Sot O"_§ (C) "TIM D11 the Flllt Calltt
-Gr•aolJ Pack. R111 Gam. 6111" (adw) '67 - Tom CGurtenaJ,
Slim W1nam1ku. lD:OD l11 "Shld"' tf Cril'" (mys) '66 -«<t • Ke1win M1lhe"S. Pl1r An1eli. J:lO 1~@IC) "Clptlit frlmn111, M.O..'" toncl. (dr1) 'OJ -Gr11ory PKk, 0 "Jaclmtt ol Tombst.ont" (WIS) Tony Curtis.
'4!J.-B•fT'J' Sl.llhvin. 4-:00 1J IC) ~.io.11 tf A1t'" (drl) ·~
IZ:OO O "Diet frtcy n. Cutb.tll" (mys) ln1rtd Btr1m1n. Jou f1irer.
1-46--MOl'llft Conwty. "Cow Colllll· 4:30 00 S.1111 IS lOAM Mst1111 llJ" (wes) 'Sl-CdrTK1nd O'Brien. (~ ({1) "f!N Down ltlcw" Cond.
lt:JO m ''MHl11t SMry" (dtt) 49 (dli) '51-Robert Mitchum.
KOCE TELEVISI ON LOG
J 00 ,;1110ty •I Art !Cl LffWI ll
Oll "Art •no Ml<'•lc"
l tJf WOll'llll ICI "TPl9 WOl'klftO MD111tr
trio o., C•r•" m ll•t!~ T~l<'f~·
0411• 0.t ffl'OIMI< )0. 411 l !JCI II·'"•
.... (l,,•itMlldlt IC I a!ll1'1911•t In· ltn..:t1or1 !Qt 'M,•lc1n°Amtr!c1n
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·····~· '.1 ..... 1 , .. ("....._ W1r 1'-l 'l t•f -· \
'
•
In Rehearsal
Theater Groups
Aivait New Year
The holiday season is upon
us, wi th virtually all or the
community th~otcr stages on
tile Orange Coast darkened
for th e next three weekends,
but there's plenty of work
going on behind Lbe scene s.
Local producing groups are
in rehearsals for their leadoff
productions of 1974. T\\.'O of
these theaters announced the ir '
Intermission
new casts in Tuesday's co!·
umn. Tociay \\'e take the wraps
off three more east an·
nouncements.
In order of their appearance
in .January and ear l y
February, they are the l~un
ting ton Beach Playhou se with
"l\lrs. Gibbons' Boys.i. the San
Cle mente Community Theater
wit h "Come Blow Your Horn"
and the Irvine Con1munit y
Theater with "The First
Fish."
AT HUNTINGTON Beach.
Joanne \Volcott has captured
the title role in "J\.1 rs. Gibbons'
Boys," playing the doting
mother of three Dead End·
type kids -J\1ark l\1anning,
George Small and J i m
Grimsley. Rex Day is. cast
as her boyfri end and Phyllis
.King as her sister.
Rounding out the llunt ington
cas t are ~1yron Wilson, Al
Jones. Ray Leitner and J .D.
Reichelderfer. Dolores llar-
rington is both an offstage
voice and stage n1anager.
while husband Burt Har·
rit)£lOn doubles as technical
director and set designer.
James E. Sn1ith is directing
the comedy, his first direc--
torial assignment since the
early da ys of the Huntington
Beach Playhouse. "~1rs. Gib-
Stage Debut
HOLLYWOOD (UPI I
Sandra Dee \Viii make her
stage debut for prociucer Tony
De Santis in ''Agatha Sue.
1 Love You" in the Drury
Lane Theater, Evergreen
J>ark. Ill .
bons' Boys'' opens Jan. II
ror rive weekends, at the
l311rn, 2110 J\.1ain SL, ltun·
tington Bc3ch, with rescrvn·
lions being taken now at 842·
5421.
1"\?0~1£; BLO\V Your tlorn,"
\Vhich first saw the light of
day in 1961 as the maiden
work of a new playwright
named Neil Simon. h a s
become one of the staples of
the community t h e a t e r
repertoire. This tin1e around ,
Joanne Applegett is directing
the comedy for the San
Cle1nente Community Theater.
Paul Alcott 11•111 play the
leading role or Alan Baker,
with his .offstage wife, Linda,
cast as Connie. Ken Shaw
portrays the younj?er brother,
Bllddy, and Sherri Beauman
is Peggy. The shO\V·stealing
roles of Papa and Mama
Baker \.\'ill be handled by Tony
, Brandt and Phyllis \Ventz.
The San Clemente pro·
duction opens Jan. 17 at th e
Cabrillo Playhouse, 2 O 2
Cabrillo Ave .. 1vhere it'll play
for three weekends, Thursdays
through Saturdays. T h e
playhouse is taking rescrva·
lions at 492-6465.
"THE FIRST FfSll'' hit
Broadv.1ay about the same
time as "Come Blow Your
Horn," but has never been
seen in Orange County -or
perhaps on th e West Coast.
It's the third offering in the
Irvine Community Theater's
se<1son of county pren1ieres.
Uis Farah will play the cen·
lral role of a \\'ife who calls
on a call girl to bolster her
husband's delerioratin~ se\f-
confidcnce, while John Lough·
man is the free-being buddy
•
•
ENTERTAINMENT
Opry Star
Crusader
NASHVILLE, Tenn (UPI) -
Skeeter Davis. a veteran of
15 year~ on the Grand Ole
Opry, said she v:ill continue
her religious crusade even if
it means ending her singing
caree r on the country music
show.
Her appearance on Friday
night 's Opry show was cancel-
ed after she criticized the ar·
rest at a suburban shopping
center of 17 young "Jesus
1'~reaks."
"I'm no! a trouble maker
and I don't want publicity,·•
she said. "I am a Christian
and J love Jesus. I am con-
cerned with winning souls and
the Jesus people are beautiful
people. They are not here to
hurt anyone, just spread
love."
NBC to Show
Hockey Gaines
NEW YORK (UPll -NBC's
broadcasting of National Hock·
ey League games begins Jan.
4 at 8:30 p.m. There \\ill be 15
.such telecasts, including 12 on
Sunday afternoon and ty,1) Sat-
urday afternoon.
'vho eng~l"Jeers the transaction. Best Actor John Phillips will enact the
husband. \\ith Beth Titus
playing the lad y of the evening JtOLLY\VOOD (UPI)
and ~lary Benion as the bud· Giancarlo Giannini. slar of
dy's paramour. Warner Bros.' "Sono Stato
Opening night for "The First lo ," \von the best actor a"'-·ard
Fish" y,1\l be Feb. 9. \\'ilh at the San Sebastian Film
three more weekends of Fri· _F_c_s_ti_•_al_. ___ _
day and Saturday
performances to follo\v at the
Hun1anit ies Hall Playhouse on
the UC Irvine cam p u s.
Reservations are being taken
at the Irvine box office
number. 557·7297. -----
Movie Industry -Sees Both
\
Good, Bad in Fuel Crisis
LOS ANGELES (API -For
the movie industry, the ua·
tion's energy crisis is both
good news and bad news.
spring and ran seasons will cripplC the Industry.
be affe<ted. Selig said that ,
Movie studios are fa ced with
the same shortages that every
industry and to every citizen
is forced to dea l Ylith. Studios,
when they are in full pro--
duction. ~re heavy users of
electricity; The Burba n k
S1udios, home of 1 Warner
Brothers and Columbia, is the
second heaviest user of elec-
tricity in the city of Burbank,
following Lockheed Aircraft.
development of t h e con-f • ~IVlDU~L ~Ul)IOS are
talnment screen, which would , pushin g their o w n con·
allow outdoor projection in servation p ro gr a ms . A
daylight, is being huo"i.ed. spokesn1an for U n I v e r s ~ I
On the plus si de, many in-Studios ~il~d so!"c ho! ~~~
dustry figures are hopeful that moves: Lights 111 t c
the energy crisis will actually ecutlve build.log a~e ,on only
increase the 8 t er business. over the si:crctaries areas;
Film companies also use a
lot a£ gasoline, especially in
these days when directors like
to shoot on real locatlons in·
stead of the back lot.
l\.IOST F I L l\.t executives
believe they will be able to
maintain full production wider
the energy limitations.
In tlnaes of erlsb
-depres•io11s a11d
tears -people
Jurlle t foe k e d to
111ot,ies. · ·
They point out that in other
times of crisis -depressions
and wars -people have flock·
ed to the movies.
"People are not going to
be able to travel as much,"
says one vete ran observer. "A
lot of other luxuries will be.
cu t down, and people will turn
to l!leir neighborhood or
downto\vn mov ie houses for
entertainment."
"\Ve have managed on a
voluntary basis to reduce our
power usage by 30 percent,''
reports Robert Hage l, general
manager of the Burbank
Studios. "And "'"·e have had
only a 60 percent im·
plementation of our program. VETERAN PRODUCER
We hope we can bring it down 1-.fike Frankovich -"Bob &
to 40 percent." Carol & Ted & Alice" -
Another element or the bad believes the shortages v.-ill
news is year-round Daylight have a healthy erfect on pro-
Savings Time. duction.
The film industry has long "The J>O"'-·er crisis v.•ill hurt
opposed the extra hour of all the inefficiencies and help
daylight on the basis that pco-all the effi ciencies in film
pie stay outdoors longer and making." ~e said. "1£ every
OOn't go to theaters as much. company knoocked off a COU·
Drive·ins are the hardest hit. pl e of unneeded days of
since they require darkness shooting on each picture, the
fo r projection. savings would be enormous,
both in energy and budgets."
"\VE DON'T YET know The industry has formed a
what the effects of year-~1ot ion Picture Energy
around Daylight savings will Conservation Committee and
be.'' ·says Robert s c I i g , is hOlding meetings to discuss
chairman of the dri ve-in com· ways to save power. Leaders
mittee of the N a t i 0 n a I be<:ame alanned by a proposal
Association of The ate r before the Los Angeles City
r · l Co"'"'il to limit all businesses Owners. "As ar as win er "'"' is concerned, \\'e think \Ve can to , a SO.hour work week. Representatives told the Coun·
all other oCflees use daylight.
Shooting companies are as ked
to cut off lights between takes.
\Ve've told cameramen lo
reduce the foot~andle power
in lighting scenes as far as
possible without losing quality.
"We have regular checks at
7 p.m. and around niidnigbt
to sec that all winccessar y
lights are off . 'l'hennostats are
now set at 68, against 72 or
74 before. We've turned off
the Universal City sign. All
portable electric heaters have
been removed, and we've ask-
ed people to be careful not
to keep coffee perculators on
all day. Refrigerators have
been set at the minimum
thermostat reading.
Casli Goes
On 'Sesanie'
NASHVfll.E, Tenn. (AP) -
Country music star Johnn y
Cash, his wife June Carter
and their young son appeared
on lhe popular cttildren's
television show ''Se s a n1 e
Street."
Cash watches the show
every morning with his son,
John -Carter, and says
"Sesame Street is the best
show on the air."
Though Cash m a y be
familiar with the show. some
of its characters aren't too
familiar with the country
singer. Oscar the Grouch
thinks he's "Johnny Trash''.
and Oscar 's fello w muffet Bill
calls him "Johnny Flash." · live with it.'" cil that such a plan would
lie pointed out that manyr-::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;liil:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ drive-ins in the north shut
down in the winter. It remains
to be seen how much the
-~"ti!> :;: '<"~ ,,.,..~~
·•• . I
Many ot his felloW offiCerS c~ him
the most ~ous man ahe -an honest cop. ·
",•l••JllCAN GllAHITI" •A llCASfl '-lllll. CO'K\A CO f'lodx:loYI
Sltlnrt;r 'llO-WlO ~HJSS • '10t.IW 10'/Al",P · f"f<.ll ! [ MAI • CHAAU[ MAU!N SM11M
CNOl'Q>lllo!•MO.CKIN!'lf P1•1r.; • Cl"lt"l<'WUW.'S•'NCl.fMAll.IACl
~ l)y G(oPCf: ll.CAS and GIOl'A >WI &. \\'ll\.Af-0 !tjVC( • o.~·~i<!<:> 1>¥ GlOQ(,( ll.CAS
Cll·l'w:lo..ceQ br G"'8( klPll. f'lgo.,c"" b¥' 1-AANCI!; f{)llC;CO<>POl.A
... ~ 11C.lll-'( •1(04JICQ.Qll•
STADI UM 1 -1 0 DRIVE IN =I I
A Niii_.,.,. MUASI. ..., ........... .......
AL PACIND~BERPICO"
KatltRI ,..,.Stadium °''"". 639·8770
llAR&OR at ADAMS, COSTA MfSA. PHONE 546-3102
(l'ill..!~ ·-~~ "THE YAU.CHI
~PAP(R.5"
0VAN CANN(>"
SflRfS DEC 21 FRIDll •
atl!STllAS
"(XECU1'M
f&'!f;> ~,'
.
ON HARBOR Bl VD.· ONE Mllf SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY.
·-....... -DILM*lmla
Al. ma1111.
·BEHPEO~
"'~·~-..... ;•~••;•:•~':··~II ,,
•I I 1• :: r11aa~1 '••• ,. ... ........ . .. -........ ..
1
!JMJJ.,.,
u.o cw-.. MAONUM ,_..
. . . . . ..
I 1 ' N 'I~ I • "
CIN EMA \ lljC
\
STARTS
FRIDAY
DEC. 21
• .,
ENTERTAINMENr
Reddy Due
At P1ison
Helen Reddy, ca p ito l
recording artist and Grammy
A\\·ard winner, was to perform
a one-hour concert (or 892
inmates this afternoon at th e
Cali(ornia Jnslitution r o r
Women at Frontera.
The prison concert will be
the second that Ms. Reddy
has given within the past three
months as "her contribution
to women who do not receive
their equal share of major
entertainment.'' Ms. R e dd y
performed at the Federal
Wo1nen's Con·eclional lnslilu·
lion al Terminal Island, San
Pedro, last September.
Feat11red in Pat•ade
THE
GREATEST
ADVENTURE
OF ESCAPE I
Fountain Va11.ey High School Band and Drill team added its talent recently to
th e daily parade of Walt Disney cartoon charactrs at Disneyland.
Tl1ey Really Need Tl1ese
,
"Mannix ": A suil from
Columbo's tailor.
OPEN TONIGHT AT 6:45
TONIGHT 7:00 9:45
By RICK OU BRO\\'
HOLLYWOOD I UPI!
]1cre\\'ilh our C h r i s t m a s
wishes for the occupants or
televjsion:
For ··The \Valto125·•: a
Cadillac.
For ·'i\faude": an in·
troduction to Frank Sinatra.
MESA c~~~!
188.l N EWPO RT Bl VO
S 4 81~5 2
LAST TIME THURSDAY
"THE MAN WHO
LOVED ~CAT
DANCING" • "PAT GARRET AND
BILLY THE KID"
Stem Frldey
Walhrf Matthar.1
"CHARLEY VARRICK" • "HIGH PLAINS
DRIFTER"
'PONCHE '
;LAa~CHA
-=-'--~ .
. From Spain, the land of Don
Quixote comes anoth<"r first in America thjs
delicious .• carefully blc:nd~d fruit y."ith su
1
perb
Brandy , 1s aged to perfection that you require:.
. Drink it for pure enjoy ment use
, it in gourmet dishes and always after a superb
meal. ' ... at your favorite Liquor Store
' l A MA NCH A l111l11sl1<1' !1.1
P.IL BL.\ lUOJ l;1q1.Jtd 81':1''11 ~·.1111 ~J/(l,1)
•
•
For David Carradine of
'·~ung Fu ": a good Chinese
diMer.
.. The Brady Bunch '': a
medal for sheer nerve.
"Bob an~ Carol and Ted
and Alice": four tickets to
a swap meet. ·
"Needles and Pins": ·an
award f o r extraordinary
uselessness.
Jean Stapleton of ''All in .
the Family'': every prlZl'
possible .
.. The Bria n Keit h Shoy,···.
a IO\V·sugar diet.
"ADAfi.1 'S RIB .. : a better
Fate. It was canceled bv ABC-
TV. Why doesn't CBS-TV.
which 'knows what to do y.•ith
a comedy show. take it
aboard? .
Howard Cosell : A. ni ght on
the to\\·n wi(h ''i\ilaude. ·· ,
"Colwnbo": A suit fro m Joe
Namath's tailor:
Amanda Bl ake o f
"Gunsmoke": sonie .Chanel
No. S. a black-negligee and
\vhatever else it takes to 'vakc
up l\1arshal Dillon.
Jack Lord of ''Hawaii Five-
0 .. : at least one more ex·
pression. Thal would make
two.
ROD CA~1 ERON: A· million
thanks to this vastly un-
derrated actor for all those
terrific lo\v-budget movi es of
his that constantly show up
on the home screen.
Vern T\1iles: A night on the
town vl'ith me. or, if J'1n tied
up, Cary Grant.
"Calucci 's Dept.'': At least
one rating that doesn't send
the cast and the crew ho1nc
crying.
Jotmny Carson: a solo guest
appearance on the Dick Cavett
Show.
Tony Randall and Jack
Klugman of "The O d d
Couple'': more recognition for
the high· level performances
they tum in each .week.
Redd_:_Foxx-. dinncr--wilh
Alfred Hitchcock and Robert
l\lorley.
JAZZ·
DAVE PIKE'S Cj)UARTET
Appearing .
Wed. thru Sat. • 9 P.M. • 2,.M.
HUNGRY JOl'S
1506 Ocean Av11., Huntingtori Beach
536°9006
-
Daily Matinees At All UA Theatres
s111., S1Jn. a. Hol.
1:15PM
"A FILM ABOUT JIMI HENOll:IX"
J•1>ict JOpH11 Chuck l!lttrv "KEEP ON ltOCKING"
acrfl'I 11'1 Colorl (II:)
E•duti¥t E•ctuJive
Ent•a•mtnl Eng1g1ment
w111. lrMtthau I Wall. Matti .. ~ true• o ... n lr'llt• tk!rll "LAUGHING "LAUGHING t POLICEMAN" + POLICEMAN "
11 :15·1:30-4:30 13G-l:30·5:~
6:30-1 :)0.10:30 7:)G-t:JG
In Color! (RJ • t 111 Color tAJ
t Kunt F11 Ma•l•"I "CHINESE PROFES·
$10NALS" "TAIPL5:
Topol/Nonna Cr•ne
F IDOLER ON THE ROOF
•
"MAN OF LA MANCHA"
. loltl In Color! IPG) IRONS" 80lh Ill Color! !RI
8111H'I $1tt1Und
"WHAT'S U,. DOC t" TAKE THI! S ANO RUN
loltl In, i;okirl IO I
--~
"DELIVERANCE" "MAN IN THE
•
WILOERNESS" !II:) 1 Mil. Only! Now l~nJ Mon. ''TOM SAWYliR" "PUFF 'N STUFF" IOt
Thur«Jay, Oettn1btr 20, 1973
Doris Day Goes
To Dogs on TV
Ry HY and MAIULYN GARDNER
Q: \VIII Doris Day be back on TV now that her series
has concluded? -!\1rs. Otts Farrell, Richmond, \'a.
A: Doris doesn 't have to call it a day. You'll probably
see her more freque ntly on your home screen than ever
before. Filnling com1nercials-for General_ Foods under a
conlract lhat calls for $1 milllon over a five-ye;1r span -
for only 17 days of work. She'll do the Gaines dog food
spots -a product close to her heart (as \\'ell as bank·
book) since her favorite people are dogs and other anin1als.
('Glad You Asked That')
Q: Seen1s to me I read recently that actress Claire
Trevor bad pussed away. J\1y husband says J'tn "'rong -
which I hope I am. Can you resolve this for 1ne~ And
also, tell us her age and about bow many films she made'!
-Lillian Frombach1 !\1iami.
A: Miss Trevor, 64, happily, is alive. On the stage
from childhood, her fi rst picture was "Life in the Raw "
in 1933, followed by more than 150 feature Ciln1s. She \Von
an Academy Award for her role in "Key Largo" (1948 ).
Born Clair \Velminge r, the noted actress has only one
hangup. She enjoys smoking cigars. "SOmeday,'' she said,
"I hope I'll learn not to inhale!"
Q: Every once in a wbJle on a talk sbO\\' I hear some
performer refer to ''flop sweat." What does ii 1nean? -
fi.1rs. Buddy Barnett, San Jose, Cat.
A: A flop sweat is an old vaudeville term , still used,
to describe the sheath of perpiration that soa ked a comic
when his act flopped. UsuaJly he'd blame it on a ''tough
audience" and, as he slumped off stage, he'd remark :
"Boy, I'm covered with flop sweat!"
Q: How many boys and girls bas Bing Crosby fathered?
-!\1rs. T. Hartley, St. Cloud, Minn.
A: Six sons and one daughter. Four boys from his mar-
riage to the late actress Dixie Lee, \vhom h~ wed _ _!n 193Q.
And tw o boys and a girl from his marriage'~ to ac·
tress and registered nurse cathy Grant. Incidentally, the
seven offspring try to stage a reunion every Christmas
season.
Q: As a l6-year-old1 I'm curious. Weren't there sex-
oriented magazines on the new11tands y,·ben my mother
and grandmother were my age? -Eloise R., Spring·
field, Mass.
A: Yes. But in those days, much was left to the read·
cr·s imagination. In slick magazines like True Romance
and True Confessi6ns, stories (written purportedly by the
girls \Vho dared experience affairs worth confess ing) \vould
breat hil y wind up \Vith a paragraph such as: "I melted
into his arms. The next morning ... " etc. \Vhat happened
bet\\·een the time of the melting and the next morning
was not descri bed in detail. Spiciest of that type of maga-
zine v;as one plainly labeled Spicy Stories. The spice "'as
nice, but the wording cautiously couched.
Send your questions to Hy Gardner, "Glad You
Asked That," care of tliis newspaper. P.O. Box 1560.
Costa P.1esa 92626. Ma.rily1i and Hy Gardner will answer
as many questions as they can ift their colunni. b·ui
the vohinie of mail makes personal replies i rnpossible .
Fa,-ned Old Club
SA.MUUI ACTION!
To1ill,o M\f1111• 111
"SAMURAI"
-ph11 -
"TRAIL OF B\.OOD"
TIMlS
"TR.A.IL" -7:30 only
"SAMURAI" -9:0S 011ly
3•~9 v;. 1,1do
N~w~ S.ach
.......... 67l·83~0
ALL YOUR
FAVORITE STARS!
"JIMI HENDRIX"
•
"MONTEREY POP"
Ne•t Attroctlo11
Eli1obetti Tovlor
"ASH WEDNESDAY"
STREISAND
&REDFORD
TOGETHER I
THE
SHOWING WAY
NOW! WE
WERE
h cl,.>i•o 0<-(-Rty 1,,......,..nl
CO-HIT
"JENNY"!~)
STAITS NIOHTlY 6:4S P.M.
m MANN
THEATRES
Taylor
"Ash
wednesday"
HenryFonda
I
WllKDAYS 8140 ..asl.'
Sot.·Su11. 2:00. S:20 {l)
1:40 -AND-
JACK LEMMON
"SAVE THE
Near Barrkruptcy--..
. NEW YORK (UPI I -The
Lambs, a theater-district
private club that housed, fed
and watered t-he greats of
Broadway since 1874, is facing
bankruptcy and p o s s i b I e
demolition unless its members
ca n raise $1 million.
Samuel Land ow, chairman
of the club's fund raising com-
mittee, says the sum is needed
to cover mortgage, back taXt'S
and interest payments.
"FORECLOSURE would
mean destruction of th c
Lambs Building, a n im-
pressive edifice designed by
Stanford Wh ite in 1905 and
of the finest examples
turn-<if-thc-century New
York architecture still stand-
ing in the theater district,"
he said.
The six-floor building has
two. floors of living quarters
and a fully equipped theater.
where many sketches were
shown that later became hits.
''Some of the gr ea t es t
Broadway shO\\'S sta rted as
One-acters here." said James
O'Neill, 90, a ve teran
pe rformer '\l:ho has been a
member of the Lambs since
1908.
O'NEILL SAID the club's
membership roste rs has in·
eluded George ~1. Cohan, Ed-
die Foy, Al Jolson, John Bar-
rymore and Douglas Fair-
bank~.
"PAPILLOH" lf'G J -Sttvt McQ11fffl &
Dutlll'I Hollm111
"SOUND OF MUSIC" (Gl
"ROMEO & JULIET" (GI')
Stlrh Fr'id'V
"ROllN HOOO:'
-' ~ .... SIAD/UM " I :;:;,.
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"WHAT'S UP, DOC?" IPCil
"PLAY IT AGAIN SAM"
"APRIL FOOLS"
"FIDDL1i ON THI IOoF" ...
"MAN OF LA MANCHA" IGI
"SERPICO" IRI ...
"IADG E 373" 1"-1
"LITILE llG MAN" IPGI ...
"A MAN CALLED HORSE"
DAIL v PILOT :JI
... "'.r. ··-~,..... ' ... ,. . ····· MARXBw. C~plt!t, u'ntul filmi
SPECIAL
SHOW
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~ fOUNTAIN YAlllT .,.f.#'~I .....,,1toO;";.;i;iiil1D1Hc.1a
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OFOUNTAIN YAllrY .,.1'..e:'~D ...,,1oe,.-;.u;;, A llO.'Hc.1•
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Lincoln Ave.
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Knoll
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(1 .) CHINIU PIOfUStON.lU fl)
12.l HONG KOHG CAT Ill
(3.) CUTTHIOAT NI .. {I)
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AL PACINO
SERPICO fRI
+ WOOOY ALLEN
PLAY IT AGA IN , SAM (PG)
s.n1>1epr...,.
, ' I C•~t1•one Off·•-' •tl·t5•5 -· "" (1 .) MIDNtOMT COWIOY Ill
(2.) UIVUS (POI
(l.J MAN CALllD HOISi •con " IOUllSH °"NI 1111s
FROM Fashidn Isl'and
Newport Beacn S~EA-EO S .OlJNDS OF THE HARBOR
• •
•
•
. '
\;' :J! DAILY PILOT * Thursday, O.ttrnb" 2Q, 1973
., In· Congress
I
••
,,
.•
'
1.
"
1:
' ...
'
f
'
I
''
'·· .. ,
•
Social Security
l11crease Pusl1ed
[ Nation
promise between House and
Senate legislation, agreement
y,•as reached Wednesday to
convene a conference com-
mittee today to begin working
on a final bill .
Senate Finance Commiltee
chairman Russell Long (D-
I.a.), and acting House Ways
and Means Co m mitt e e
chairman Al Ullman (D-Ore.),
had come Under pressure not
to Jet Congress go home this
week without a benefits in·
crease.
e Se11. Ervill
WASHINGTON (APA -Sen.
Sam J. Ervin Jr., (().N.C.),
retiring from the Senate after
two decades, says this year
of Watergate has been a
disaster from v:hich the coun-
try will recover but President
Nixon may not.
The '17-year-0ld Sen a t e
Watergate committe
chairman, a Harvard Law
School graduate who made a
national television audience
smile knowingly when he
described himselr as "just an
ol' country lawyer," said
Wednesday he'd finally met
an opponent he could not
master -his own advancing
age.
HOSPITALIZED
J oh n n y Weismuller,
former Olympic cham-
pion and actor, slipped
at a banquet in Las Ve-
gas Wednesday and in·
jured his hip. The 68·
year-old actor is in
Southern Nevada Me·
morial Hospital.
e Spa~e Kl1111k
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(AP) -That "klunity-klunk"
the Skylab 3 astronauts heard .
three weeks ago is back, and
mission control thinks it might
be related to a recurring gyro-
scope problem.
Commander Gerald P. Carr
of' Santa Ana reported hearing
the sound Wednesday while
checking systems in the Apollo
ferry ship attached to
end of the space station.
Mills Claims Oil
Shortage Creawd .
LOS ANGELES I AP) -Liddy have won a four-month
State Senate president pro ten1 delay of their U.S. Dis trict
James Mills ha's accused the Court trial in the Daniel
oil industry of artificially Ellsberg burglary case.
creating the Pre sent short5ge But lawyers for th e three
to amass more profits. say they will press efforts
,. "The well-being or the coun-to dismi ss the charges before I m----~~ry7came se·cond-1o~the profits--the---nC'\v-tra:il-date--of-Apr-il-
' ..
·.
..
·'
' .
•
..
..
"
.. •• ' • ' . • •
of stockholders." the San 15. The la\vyers said they v.•ill
( State J
Diego Democrat said Wednes-
day, contending that the
1najor oil fi rms anticipated
the present shortage three
years ago.
Mills told a hearing or the
Senate Public Utilities and
Corporations. Committee, of
y.•hich he is a member, that
one methOd used by the oil
firms to create the oil crisis
was their consistent opposition
to legislation which would free
highway trust funds for mass
transit.
e Trial Delay
LOS ANGELES (AP )
Former White House
employes John D. Ehrlichman,
David Young and G. Gordon
present motio ns alle~ing the
defendants are subjects of
''discriminatory prosecution''
and that publlcily surrounding
the Watergate hearings has
1 prejudiced their ._right to a
fair trial.
e Bo111b Probe
SANTA CRUZ (AP)
Police are investigating the
explosion of a llomemade pipe
bomb that destroyed offices
of the Interna l R ev en u e
Service, Selective Service and
mi litary recruiters and caused
$100,000 damage Wednesday.
The early morning bla st
devastated the second floor
offices of a concrete building.
Fragments of a bomb were
found in the rubble of the
explosion which was heard as
far a\vay as two miles in
this coastal communit y.
Liberia11 Vessel
Sinks; 40 Dead?
VANCOUVER, B.C. iUPll
- A plane and six merchant
vessels today circled the area
V.'here the Liberian freighter
Oriental Monarch sank , but
officials said it appears all
40 crewmembers have perish·
ed in the North Pacifi c.
"Apparently no one has
survived," sa id a spokesman
for the search and rescue
coordination center arter a
day·long hunt turned up only
(..___w_orl_d _J
four lifeboats -all empty.
The 15,000-ton freighter,
bound for Japan with a load
of American wheat. broadcast
the international d i s t r e s s
signal Tu esday reporting it
was taking on wate r in the
engine room. It saiik nine
hours later in an area about
500 m.iJes northwest o! Vah-
c00ver Island.
e TralaCrash
The rush -hour train from
London's Paddington Station
to Oxford jumped the tracks
\Vednesday night in the \Vest
London suburb of Ealing .
Some of the passengers died
\vhen wheels sliced up into
their compartments.
e Pla11e B11r11•
NEW -DEU!l (UPI ) - A -
\Vest German Luf t han s a!
jetliner carryi ng 109 persons
crashed and burned today
\vhile trying to land in thick
fog at Palam Airport. The
plane was des troyed but there
\Vere only JO minor injuries.
"We ran for our li ves." sa id "
passenger Otto Biermann, 37.
a Municb hotel manager. "We
could easily get out because
the emergency doors were
open. The plane was burning
wllt'n we sprang out.''
e Shotg1111 La1111e h
MOSCOW (UPll -Two COS·
monauts and eight new. Sput-
nik satellites whirled in space
orbit today in one of Soviet
LONDON (AP) -Tangled space history's most active ,
"TeCkage and the remains of weeks .
Chtlstmas presents lay across -The Soviets hurled eight un-
1..ondon's main nll line to the manned ea rth satellites into
West today aner an express-orbit in a 1'shotgun .. launch
train crash that killed 10 Wednesday aboard a single
persons and injured at least rocket , their eighth multiple
•
.,
Kerm Has Valu~s Fdr ··
' .
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JOE SCIBELLI
Jorda11 Says
Dallas Has
Momentum
DALLAS (API -Dallas middle
linebacker Lee Roy Jordan wants the
·Los Angeles Rams to know that playing
in a regular National Football League
game and the prcssure·packed playoffs
is a vastly diHerrnt experience.
"I'm not sure they 've got confidence
they can beat us," Jordan says. "We·ve
been in the playorrs a number or times.
\V e know "'hat we can do." ·
The Rams under ne'"' coach Chuck
Knox race lhe Cowboys Sunday at Texas
Stadiun1 in a ,National Conference
semifinal playoff game.
Los Angeles tripped the Cowboys 37·31
in a regular season game V.'hich found
the Rams jumping to a big ea rly lead
and hanging on in the second half for
the victory.
"I'm not sure at the end of the
game !hey fell they beat us.'' Jordan
says. "\\'e had jusf played in that emo·
tionally draining r.1onday night game
against \\'ashington and ii was a case
of 40 guys not being ready. I know
1 "'as very tired.
"But \\'hen '>''e "'oke up \\'e played
on pride in that second half. A lot
of teams would have been embarrassed."
Los Angel es' fleet Harold Jackson
caught rour touchdown pass<'s against
the Cowboys the last time the teams
met and Jordan says that won't happen
agai n.
"\\le "'e re just nakfoqted.'-' Jordan
says. ''This time \\'e will give him some
.\ •• Thurulay, Ot<trnbfr 20, iq73 DAILY PILOT 33
If Won't Be Like Last Tiriie--SciheI-1i
... '
LOS ANGELES (AP) -"I'd be lying
1f didn't --say J expect-us to win
Sunday,'' says offensive guard Joe
Scibelli ol tbe Los Angeles Rams, , who
faco Dallas in the first round of the
Na1ional f'ootball Con!e~ p)ayof!s.
But the 13-year pro adds he doubts
the game SUnday will be a. repeat of
a regular season meeting when tt'ie Rams
beat lhe Cowboys, 37-3t.
"l'd like to say thnt things won 't
be any different tlwl the first time,"
he said. "I'd like to ·say that John
Had! will throw four touchdown passes
to Harold Jackson again but J doubt
that'll hap p..e n. \Ve"'re too evenly
matched." •
Scibelli, the Rams' offensive captain,
noted that the Rams and Cowboys are
first and second, respectively, tn team
offense and defense in the Natlonat Foot·
ball_ qqiference:-
"lt's no secret we're very successful
with our running game, and I hope
Sunday •afternoon that we•u-continue
to be successful,!' he said. "But It's
also no secret that Dallas-is exceptJOnally
strong against the run."
The Rams are making--their third
lrip to the playoffs with Scibelli while
Dallas has been in the playoffs. several
years running. But the Rams veteran
adopts a bit or his coach's philosophy
"'1\en Jt comes to regular Season against
playoff pressure.
Chuck Knox, u•hose Rams had a IZ..2
season and won the Western Division
ehamplornihlp in his first year with the
team , insisted on taking the enlire season
"one. game at----a time!' and -.refused
to look ahead -even after Los Angeles
wrapped up the title.
SclbeUi says he only worries about
one thing -his own job.
"It's just everyone taking care of
his own business and in my case hoping
UPI TelHlloll
WORKERS CLEAR SNOW AWAY AT MINNESOTA'S METROPOLITAN STADIUM WEDNESDAY.
Sports 111 Brief Snow Follows
Williams Signing Nixed; Minnesota
>
take care or business better th.an
Jelhro Pugh." Scibelll v.1ill be racing
Pugh, Dallas' derenslve tackle, ln su.n.
day·s game.
•·vou have to respect their defensive
line," said Sclbelli. ".\nY oftcnsl\•e
Jinen1an who doesn't is foolish."
The Eastern Olvl~lon ch amp ion
Co\vboys have ~n so succesfilul, Scibelli
says he doubl'I: they will try anything
really different against the Rams.
"They may make some minor changes,
but basically it will probably be the
s1n1e defense C\'Cryone has seen all
season," Scibclli said
Anothe1·
Miracle
For Alle11?
'VASH1NGTON (AP\ During a
game, Washington Redskins' coach
George Allen makes more moves than
a policeman trying to unsnarl a traffic
jam during a snowstorm.
Allen licks his right thumb, polls do\\'fl
on the bill of a red baseball cap, claps
his right hand into his left palm1 and
rubs hi s hands on his chest.
Then, before a play is about to unfold.
he bends over in a semi-crouch with
his hands on his knees and stares onto
the field.
\Vhen the play ends, he leads the
cheering or the pep talk.
. Although such gestures are no more
than Allen's \vay of burning off nervous
energy, the practice makes for an in-
triguing ·cutaway shot by television
cameramen \Yhile the play-by-play an·
nouncer tell s his audience that Allen
is passing signals from the sidelines
just like a third-base coach in baseball.
Actually, Allen leaves the . defensive
signal calling to linebacker Chris Han-
burger although he has many' dUicussions
with the defensive unit when tile offense
is on the field .
\Vhatever he docs , ho\\·ever, he has
sbmething going far him.
A1len has coached the Redskins into
three straight National Football Con-
ference playoff games 'during his three
years as the team's coach after spending
five years with the Los Angeles Rams.
His lo-4 record with the ReQskins
this season, giving Washington a tie
for first place in the NFC East Division.
"·as his eighth straight year as a winning
coach.
"In our nrst game 68 points were
scored, and that's im.usual. ThJs time.
"'ell, maybe somebody will make a
n1istake.
"Being an orrenslve lineman, I'll tell
you I tltink we\'e got a lot of work
to do, y.•e've got our v.•ork C\ll out
for us."
Scibelli added that tho Cowboys w111
also have some v.·ork lo do slnce the
Rams defense is the stingiest in the
conference.
"\\'hichever team v.·ins , v.•hatevcr each
team l:(Ains offensively, they're gonna
really earn it."
JOHN HADL
Gabriel, Hadl,
5 Other Ram s
On NFC Sqt1ad
NEW YORK (AP) -John Had!, who.se
restrained passing brought los Angeles
into the playoffs, and Hunan Gabriel,
\\'hose ae ria l bombardments m a d e
Philadelphia one of the National Football
League's most explosive teams, have
been voted to quarterback the National
Conference in the annual Pro Bowl
Game.
Five other Rams were named to the
·team • including, wide receiver Harold
Jackson, offensive guard Tom Mack,
rook ie running back L a w re n c e
McCutcheon, defensive tackle Merlin
Olsen and linebacker Isiah Robertson.
Isaac CurtiJ, a former Santa AM
High School star now with the.Cincinnati
Bengals. was named to the AFC team
that is dominated by the Miami Dolphins.
•
diffe rent looks and changeups." ff R F o -:.J 1--1---,1-fl·.:~:~~~de~:'!iv:~~·f:!~~;--arness ta-ces --ixeu J o JV o~kouts
During his five years with Los Angeles
and three with Washington, he has com·
~Piled..a _79-28,5 re<:ord-b<.sLilLJhe.JiFC
and second to only Don Shula of the
Miami Dolphins in the National Football
League.
Five rookies, were named to the 40--
man NFC w.uad anno_unced...today....l'hey.---1
are tight end Charley Young of
Philadelphia, running backs McCutcheon by bumping hitn at the line of scrimmage
l''ilh linebacker D. D. Lc"'·is.
"\Ve'll give Jackson some things he
\\'On't anticipate this time.'' Jordan says.
''\\le just might have Lewis in his face .•·
Jordan says the Dallas defense, whirh
has been superb in the stretch run
into the playoffs . is comparable to lhe
Super Bowl teams of 1970 and 1971.
"Our defensive team has the attitude
lhat u·e ha ve to play every ga me like
it was a shutout," Jordan says.
Dallas coach Tom Landry says the
11-year veteran Jordan, who is the fiery
leader of the Doomsday DeJense. is
"having his best year overall , .• he
bas just been excellent.·•
Jordan, who has never made an All·
Pro team , leads the club with six in·
terce ption • He swiped three passes in
one quarter against Cincinnati.
The former Alabama All-American
says "Our team is extremely confident
... just like the Super Bowl -teams.
There's a much more positive attitude
than last year."
Pitt's Majors
Named College
Coach of Year
PHOENIX I AP) -Johnny Majors,
who turned a IO.time loser into a football
bowl team, says he feels "a little bit
like O.J. Simpson did last Sunday."
Majors. head coach at the University
of Pittsburgh, was named coach of the
:· year Wednesday by the FQ,Otball Writers
Association of America. Th e an·
nouncement wu made in Oklahoma City.
• . ·
'
"It is a great honor," said Majors,
whose Panthers will go agai.Mt IOtfl..
ranked Arizona State in Frid!y night's
Fiesta Bqwl. "I accept It on behalf
or my starr, players and the ad·
ministration, Crom the chanctpor on
down.
"I don't really work ·for this type
o( thing or for any award, but I am ~
pcoi•lly happy to receive this ooe. I feel
• litllo bit like O.J. 51._ did hist
SiJnday when be coiled in all hi8 team;
.:.. mates to thank them for enabling him
to rush for the yardage that he did,"
Majors, S81 narrowly won over Barry
Swilr.er, tho UnlVefslty of Oklahoma's
first-year coach, In balloting by 761
FWAA members.
Paul "Bear" Bryant, whose Alabama
team was ranked No. I in the nalion
In the latest Associated PrtS9 Poll,
finished lhird, followod by J e r r y
ClaUtomo ol Maryland. Joe Paterno ol
Penn State., Aro Parseghlan of Notre
Dame and Bill Mallory ol Miami , Ohio.
BOSTON -American League presi·
dcot Joe Cronin today rejected lhe Ne\\'
York Yankees' signing of Dick Williams
as manager.
"Based upon the entire rCt'Ord, 1 find
the New York club did not have the right
to sign Dick \Vililams and, Lhus. I re.
fuse to approve his contract "'ith Uie
New York club1" Cronin said.
After formal hearings Tuesday and
Wednesday, Cronin accepted lhe signing
of Ralph Hook as manager of lbe Detroit
Tigers.
Houk resigned with two years to go
as manager of the Yankees on the final
day o( the 1973 season. Williams quit as
manager of Oakalnd arter leading the
Athletics to the World Series champion·
ship, with two years remaining on his
contract. Wililams signed last week as
manager of the Yankees.
e Dr11'f!rs lndlrted
NEW YORK - A group of major
harness racing drivers and others have
been indicted on charges or conspiracy
to fix Superfecta races at Roosevelt
and Yonkers raceways , acting U.S. Atty.
Edward J. Boyd said today in Brooklyn.
The indictments, unsealed this morning
in Brook1yn Federal Court, listed 29
persons, including 14 drivers.
1be charges included conspiring to
accept bribes, a.idJng and abetting in
the bribing or other drivers, and the
fixing of Superfactas a..t lhe two tracks
between Jan. 1 and ~pril 13 or this
year.
The amounts o[ bribes and monies
improperly won were not revealed,
although drivers participating in the
scheme allegedly received a winning
ticket in exchange for their cooperation
on eadl race or $1,000 cash.
er ....... ssued
SAN DIEGO -The S.n Diego Charg~ say Duane Thomas borrowed
$12.264.29 he never repaid during his
troubled year with them.
The National Football League team
fil<d a U.S. Dislrkt Court suit Wed-.
day see k I n g lhe mooey and court
costs. The Chargers said Thomaa bor·
rowed the money between October' 1!1'12
and July 1!17S and lit<ed verbally tq
repay ii out of bll ~aey.
ec-•c...._
M05COW, Jdaho ~ Ed Tron! was
named head football <"OBch at the
University ol Idaho Wedneoday, ac·
cepting u,nder new terms a job ho declin·
ed three days earlier.
• to ... ••r•H l'l••lbu .
HOUSTON -Ohio State tackle John
l!lck.s, runner-up In the 'HelSlnln Trophy
wtlnr, teammate Raody G""'-..s
Biil ll'yman ot Tesas and Lucious Selmon
of Oklahoma have been named finalists
for the fourth annual Vince Lombaidi
A"•ard.
The Lombardi Award, a 45-pound
granite trophy symbolizing discipline and
sacrifice. is given annually to the na-
tion's outstanding COiiege foot b a 11
lineman. ·
e Gould Turns Pro
SYDNEY -Shane Gould, Australia's
record-breaking swimmer, who at one
time held every "'Omen's freestyle mark
between 100 and 11500 meters, Wednes-.
day signed a $50,000 cootract to turn
prof essiona I.
Tbe 17-year-old Australian slgned the
contract with the Adidas sporting clothes
fi rm \\'i.th the proviso that Miss Gould
could go to college, if she wanted to.
Miss Gould v.'On three gold medals,
a silver and a bronze, at the 1972
Summer Olympic games in Munich.
e Aides Rehired
LOS ANGELES -Seven of last year's
UCLA assistant• coaches have been
rehired to serve With new head coach
Dick Vermeil
Named from Rodgers' 1973 staff were
Lynn Stiles, defensive coordinator; Terry
Donahue, offensive guards and centers:
Jerry Long, defensive backfield and
recruiting coordinator: Billie Matthews,
running backs; Jim Criner, offensive
tackles and tight ends: and earl
Peterson, pass receivers and coordinator
of the junior varsity.
e Kings ha Trou•le
ST. LOUIS ~ After a brief four-game
unbeaten streak. the Los Ange.Jes Kin~s
show signs of being in trouble again
in the National Hockey League.
The Kings. beaten 3·1 by St. Louis
\Vednesda.y night, have managed only
one victory in their la st five games.
a ~9ers
e Perranosld l\'a111ed
LOS ANGELES -Fonner pitching
star Ron Perranoski, once nicknamed
··The Vulture " when he won 16 games
as a relief 'ace, has been signed by
the Los Angeles Dodgers as a minor
leag~ pitc~g coach.
TULSA (AP) -Bud Grant. stoic coach
o.f lhc Minnesota Vikings was
·philosophical Wednesday about his
team's trip to Oklahoma to practice
for Saturday 's game against the
Washington Redskins a\\'ay from the
northern ice and sno\v.
Eastern Oklahoma \\'as struck by its
first snowstorm of the season \Vednesday
and received . between t\\'O and three
inches ol snow.
Grant awakened Yi1ednesday morning
to discover the snow-covered ground,
icicles hanging from the trees and traffic
snarled all over the city of Tulsa.
So the Vikings were bused to Tulsa
University's Skelly Stadium to don their
:.iniforms, then skidded over to the
International Petroleum Exhibition Hall
to work out on a concrete surface slicked
by a recent coating of oil.
The rubber cleats squeaked and slid
as the players went through their
assignments in slow motion. After about ·
an hour and 20 minutes. Grant blew
his whistle and called it a day.
"We accomplished something indoors
today, too,'' Grant said.
"Our blocking assignments were set
up, and we u·orked against the
Washington offense."
On the way back to the stadium dress.
ing room, one of the team buses got
hWig up on the ice. Eight players in
their purple uniforms and two assistant
coaches jumped out to push the bus
and the three cars which were stuck
ahead of the bus.
"It looks like \\'e didn't go quite far
enough south," Grant observed. "This
weather made us feel right at home."
Grant hoped that he could use the
stadium's turf today alter the snow
was swept away.
The Vikings wind up their three days
of Tulsa workouts and fly back to Bloom·
ington, Minn., today.
The Vikings did get one day of outdoor
practice before the storm hit. and Grant
said the chance to work out In warm
weather \Vas not lhe only reason for
the trip.
The players have been together for
three days wi~h nothing but rootball
to occupy their minds, away from the
Christmas bustle and the distractions
of shopping.
Saturday, Allen will have to contend
with the tough Minnesota Vikings in
an opening round playoff game. His
job will be made even tougher because
of a questionable quarterback situation.
Bill Kilmer, wbo was expected to start,
has been hospitalized the past four days
with stomach cramps, and Sonny
Jurgensen, who probably will start, bas
been hobbling most of the season With
tom cartilages. The third quarterback,
Sam Wyche, has suffered from double
vision beceuse of a facial injury.
While the Vikings• defense is won-
dering who will be quarterbacking for
the Redskins, Washington's defense
knows it will be facing Fran Tarkenton,
the type of scrambler who has given
the Redskins problems.
"With our defense, linebacking is a
vital spot, especially against a team
like the Vikings," said linebacker coach
Jack Pardee. "Our three are really
corning together now and they should
be able to handle everything."
Williams Bags
' 1st NY Error
BOSTON (AP) -Even Dick
\Villlams, '"'ho managed the
Oakland Athletics to the World
· Championship lasl season, needs
a scorecard to tell the players.
\Villiams, in lown for a hearing
be.fore ;\n1erica n League President
Joe Cronin on his controversial
move to bccon1e manager ·of the
New York \'ankecs, was ap-
proached in the lobby of a hotel
Wednesday by a 1nan who extended
his hand and said, "I'm glad to
meet you."
"l'n1 not all~'ed to talk to
reporters," \Villiams responded.
"I'm not a reporter,'' the man
answered. "I'm George Stein-
breniler -an owner of the New
York \'ankees."
and Chuck Foreman of Minnesota, punter
Tom Wittum of San Francisco and place-
kicker Nick Mike-Mayer of Atlanta.
The Jan. 20 game is at Kansas City's
Arrowhead Stadium. The Amer1can
Conference, which won last year's game
33-28 at Dallas, leads the series 2·1.
The only unanimous choice in OU,
year's voting by the NFC's 13 head
coaches, who were oot allowed to vote
for their own men, was Dave Wilcox,
San Francisco's outside linebacker.
DEP:EHSll
Ends -All! St11~•P1. AA(pmlt L, C. Greenwooo.
Plllsburon: E!vtl'I Batt1t1, H«MtM.
Tac:k!f/$ -M!l.e ~~ .. 1 1,,1,.,1., .... 111 Jo. Gf'eene,
Plllsburah; P~ul $ml!PI, OMv.r.
Ou!Sklt Unet>Kkrfl -JKk Him, Plttfbur1tr1 AndV R.ullf'I, Pl11,boJ1go11 Tlcl lilndrkk1, l111in-1.
Mkltlle 1l1Mi..ckrr1 -Wiii!• L111l•t, "-" Clly; Nick &UOl'llCOl'lll, Ml8ml.
Cl!l'netbec'' -Wllllf' &row11. 0.•~1 C!lrlll(I Stoll, Cltvt'l8rod; R~•I J1mt1, 8111!1lo.
S11t1!a -J.-..1 Scot!, Ml1ml1 DlcJr. Anclllnol'I •
Ml•mh JoKk T1111m. 0•11.Wll'ld.
Sl'ECIALllTS
Punte-r -Ri v G11v. 0.kWind. P~t·lilt•er -Giro Yeop<tm141'1. Mlt ml. t(ICk-t".rurntr -Gftg P•ulll, Clev1!1nd,
Rebounding Wins for UCI, 83-73
UC Jrvine added 'A new dlmepsion
lo a hot shooting hand Wedne_sdJ,y night
to post an 83·73 victory over visiting
Moorhead Slate College and move above
the .500 mark for the first time this
season in actlon in UCl's Crawford Hall.
The new dimension was complete con·
trot of the backboards, aome lhing that
wu lacllin( ·in cons~tency tLlbe t"!-
1..,... lbll ,.ar. UCI controlled the
boards, 51-21, with Jerry Maras nabbing
II and Scott Magnuson grabbing 11. ·
Co•ch Tlm Tiit wasn 't entirely pleased
·with the performance of the""Anteaters:
11We had 26 turnovers." he lamented
following the gamt?. "We were very
shabby in some areas but very good
In ihootlng •nd on lhe bol!ds."
The turnovers came irlfi'"'"ftriety of
ways. Violatlon....Qf the-lhrte l<COOd
nilo, double dribbling and bad pa.,ing.
"I thollght our front 1lne of Dave
-
Baker, Marls and Magnuson playod well
tooight, especially on the boants."
'lbe victory gives UCI a 3-2 ~cord
for the s e a so n \Vitb tho next 1tamc
Saturday night at home against North
Dakota State.
The Anteaters have hi\ above 50 per·
cent from the floor in all five games
Jncludlng 58 percent agaiast Moorhead
State.
Four players were In double figure!ii
"'ilh Magnuson topping the list W'ltb
17 followed by Oary Eubanks with II,
l\.1aras 14Jnd Baker lS. -
UC lr¥1!!t till ,,._,._. tnl
19 fl '4 I• .. 11 ,. " 8o•ft' t 1 J 11 t.1r~1,.. I l o 1
Ml•11 • l 4 1• Rt<ll'ltk• I 2 4 lf E11blnk1 S S t ll Grltr 1 J S 11
MIQllll.otl t J 1 11 llowtrl S t 2 11 O.v~ 'J2fM19"ft J02• T!Vtnlll IOlfltfttw 21JI
Mr~vl• JOl •Wolr t2J• '"'".,. , o , , C'.nlOn 1 I , , P11l'#ill I 1 I I CllrtWlft 1 1 I
P&vl-' 1 LJ Tot.II J1 I• , lol•lt V' ,, n 71 14~•11im.: us '"' ...
,
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'
HB Rips Monarchs;
Rarikin Scores 33
By STEVE BRAND
Of .... Deify Ptlitt Steff
111ere were those w h o
theorized t ha t Huntington
BeadJ High baskelball this year without Raul Oootrera.
.. would resemble an army with-
out weapons.
Only the army would be
more potent.
Critics of that Ilk wlll be
W\happy to learn the Oilers'
arsenal lnchldes a lot more
as Mater Del discovered
Wedneoday nlght in the !Ioli·
day Basketball Fe!tlval at
Anaheim Convention Center.
With Scott Rankin dropping
in a flfetlme high 33 points,
the Oilers smothered Mater
Del's Monardls, 81-64 in the
tourney quarterfinals. Con·
treras was held to just 15.
Hwitlniton Beacli p I a y s
Anaheim tonight at 8:30 at
the Convention Center after
Anaheim outscored Magnolia,
53-45 in the o t h e r upper
bracket quarterfinal game.
Mater Del, with the loss,
faced A1agnolia today at 4
for the rlKI!! lo play for fifth
place.
Rankin was bot from all
over the court, sizzling from
long range and rarely missing
when given a pass Wlder the
haskel
figure scoring nlgbts.
"1 didn't tell Soott to shoot
any more than usual," said
lluntlngton Beach co a c h
Elmer Combs, "he was bitting
so he kept shooting. We have
a good shooting team and now
we know il Raul has a bad
nlg'hl or fouls out early, we
(See RANKIN, Page U)
Boes, Gauchos Fall
Young Hiu 20;
GWC Triumplis
Golden West College was the
only Orange <bast area junior
college basketball team to
escape with a win Wednesday
night as the Rustlers outlasted
Trade Tech 87.& in a game
played in Los Angeles.
Orange Coast College wasn't
as fortunate, dropping a SS..56
contest at Rio Hondo College
while Saddleback suffered an
Saddleback collected I t s
eighth loss in nine games ln
much the same way as
Cypress dominated the boards,
especially in the second half.
Dave l\fazc ( 19) and Tom
Hoffman l 14) paced the
Gauchos who trailed just 31-26
at ha 1 f t I m e after leading
three minutes b e to r e in·
termission .
82~ setback at Cypress or•• c .. 11 <wl
College. " " ..
1 • , " • Six Golden West players ~~~~ ~ r
scored in double figures, led ~'::... : ~
by Taras Young's 20 points, woni.v ' o
as the Rustlers evened their 11i::~. ,l :
' 1 n
" season record at S-5. 11.i. HeMe 1"'
C hd ""'' GW took t e lea with 15 ••"~ J 1 i
minutes to play in the first ~":. ~ ~ ~
half and was never headed, t-11tltrtchl 1J s i llrooltt J 0 3 although Trade Tech made a 11o1111011 , o 1
' • " • ' ~
" • ,
" " ' ,
BOB LOSNER (52) DUMPS A PASS TO BILL FICK FOR AN EASY BASKET IN MARINA'S SEVENTH STRAIGHT WIN.
His 31 points at halltime
helped propel Hunt Ing ton
Beach lo a comfortable 45-31 .
lead which Mater Det never
really tbrealaled. furious nm that fell just short '~=:. ,: 1: 1~ at the fmls11 . Htlnlme: occ 21.a1
• ..
MARINA'S BOB LOSNER, BILL FICK (44), KEITH KOELLER SEEK REBOUND.
Banquet Results
Athlet es at Fountain Valley J\Iost Improved: Terry Funk.
and Mission Viejo Hi gh were Junior Varsity
honored with sports a"·ards_ Captain : Brian Douglas;
banquets Wednesday evening. ~1ost Va I u ab I e : Pat
At Fountain Valley Barry J\1cLaughlin; Mosl Improved :
Pierce l cross country I and Greg Funk.
Dan Luttrell (water polo ) FrosJt.SGph
were named mo& valuable. captain: Richard Sendra ;
At l\ii$lon Viejo Cary Most Valuable : John Sar·
Okazaki "'·as named most miento; Most Improved: Jer·
valuable on the water polo ry Hutching.
team. Fountain Valley Wit.er Polo
Special award winners: V1nity
Missk>n Viejo Water Polo Captain: Corey Creasey;
Vanity Most Valuable : Dan Luttrell;
Co-captai ns: Jim Lyle and l\1ost Improved: Todd Leeds.
Kevin Whitela\v; ~lost Junior Vanity '
Valuable.: Cary Okazaki: ~1ost Captain : David Trux : ~tost
Jmproved: Terry Murphy; Valuable: Howard Furlong;
Pro Results
N1notlll l1t111INH AnKi.11.M
Allen!• 107, Ne"' York 10$
s .. n11 124, Hovs•°"' 111
Dttroll l'l. Chic•~ 87
KlnMll Clly-Orn1h1 106. Cleftlend t2
Phll1dtll)hl1 101, Photnllr: 91 Arnerlc1n l••k•lb11I A1MCl1llo~
Sin A"l<mlO 101, Vl!glnlt 100 C1rotl"• 111, Memphis 90 Ntw York al, Kfl1 tvckv 12
lr>dj1"e 104, Ultll 18
SI" DI• 111, Otr1VH" lll
?i.tost lmplrational: Mik e Most Improved: David Pooler.
Bush. fy>sb-Soph CHUCIC'S CD=
Junior Vanity Captain: Steve Kolitz; ~fost D
Most Improv e d : Ron Valuable : Will •Wgue; Afost 2'~!1!"::!'""
Henderson. Improved: Don Williams. ,....,.
t'r<>sh·Soph ,:;~~~;;;~~---~~~~;;;~~~~ Most Valuable: Br ia n McDouglo. Most Improved: DOES YOUR CAR IDLE ROUGH? WE
Ron O'Rlelly. START HARD?
Fouatola Valley Cro11 country GIVE POOR MIL EAGE? CAN HELP
C1pt1I•: ~~ty p J er c, : j 'u'E.;fi:'"' ~!!l.!~!!!!R ..!,.HOP
?.lost Vallllble: Barry Pierce; """'"-""'""',..;;'";:.;":~!'_.;'.;:!.t':;_:;•;;~::;':_:;..:.!.:,:!'~,;,~":'..·;•i::,:•~':::"':,.....,,..._,.._J
' 7
Arrive Late
Undefeated Vikes
Top Monte Vista
In all the Oilers connected
on 34 of 72 field goal attempts
with Doug Rabe (16) and Con-
treras (15) adding double
Leading by 19, 7f>.56 with o.I_,, WHf (171 ~ II ,1
12:52 to play in the game, ~,:1 ', ~ ?
Golden West saw Trad' Tech wu11am1 t o s
rally to trail only 85-80 with :::r ~ ~ ;
" " " " " ' * 2:07 to play. ~~'m:'i~ ~ ~ ; " 11
" Golden West clinched the To1111 .o 1 11 """"...,_ '.;H" ~111 flf ,, w;n a minute later when H•inirne: s~~'b.~k·•:uf"'°·
1' s t ll Young slipped open under the 11,..,,, ~ ~ '' "' 111:•"~'" ....
Weir
Contrere•
Cltr.111 G1um1" S<:Jewl"llll ••ntne" ""' Ctl" Toll ls
~ : ~ 1~ basket and scored an un· Rvuo o o ~ 1
:
1 1 ' " contested lavin, Mti• ' 1 ' " 2 3 O 1 J• Normtndl• 1 O 4 '
1 o ' 1 (XX saw its record slip to ~~'t.., : ~ ~ ;
: ~ : ~ M, inclu~ losing the last Haff .... " 1 o , ''
0 a 1 o two, when the Pirates were Mer•r• 1
0 ', ', •, O 1 1 1 Sol>!lr•tl!
3' 11 i' 11 tDl&ble to handle the taller T111 .. 1 rt ' ,, ,, 1
By HANK WESCH
01 !ht DlllJ ~llot Siii!
Mttw ~ llH~ "' Rio Hondo Roadrunner&. cwnt,.1111 n0 ,,
lead briefly in the :se<:ol'td MCC•ug"-Y , 1 ~ Bob M k II ed I c1mP11111ro 1 2 period, trailing by four , 30-26, M•rtlrw:i•I• s o i l~ an er co ect 19 or Wt111.1 .. , " o '
•• • •
t\1.1> minutes before halftime. ~~"'' .s 2 ~ n the Bucs as he was the only : ! . J ~ But ~farina rattled off five Prltl1 ~ ~ 3 1: OCC player able to fire sue. H•mm1n 1 o 2
Ecci.1 o o J a cessfully over a '" Fred B1rret1 ' ' t straight points and was never Schu111 2 , , 5 iro Hort"" 1 2 2 threatened. Tor•11 21 10 21 " Haberecht, who led all scorers GlblOll 1 o o
Hlffltlngt!!":: .. o.t20r1;;-0 ,, •1 with 31 and dominated the :!i.$0!\ : ~ :
" " ,
" • , • ' "
Late arriving Marina High
wasted nO time once it got
on the basketball court and
dispatched l\.tonte Vista 74-57
in opening round play of the
La Habra basketball touma·
ment Wednesday at La Habra.
~larina was the epitome or -. boanls Toi••• n 11 11 M•lft' Del 16 1' 1S ,...._.. • H ,,,,_. C ' -a well-balanced team, and had ___ c.::_ __ _:::..;,:-=..==--=:..:.:~----------"~' ~"-~'-.:!"~·~~~-~·~·A~·c_ __
Mechanical problems ""''ith
the bus and heavy traffic
caused Jim Stephens' Marina
Vikings to reach the La Habra
gym at just about the time
the game was scheduled to
start for their aftemoc~ match
wT!lll\lonte-Vlsta . But once
things got under way, 20
minutes behind Schedule, the
Vikings took charge and won
with relative ease.
'Ille victory, ?i.f a r i n a' s
seventh in succession to start
the season, moves the Vikings
into semifinal play tonight at
6 against El Rancho.
Marina jumped to an 11·
Point lead in the first 4:20
of play by dominating the of.
fensive board. The Vikings
scored four times on follow-up
shots after misses in that span
and ·took a 15--4 advantage on
a three-point play by Bill Fick
with 3:40 left.
Monte Vista cut into that
·Hoop Scores.
Hlfll Scholl!
Mlr<sle 63, Cyprni. 3'
W11nur 91, C1nvon JJ Le H11br1 72, Sl"1t .lne ..0 Et A1ncll0 52, Lowell .Sl
LakewoOO 61 , S~l!Cr!I !I Gardto\ Grav• 12, SClllt1! PtMdl'l'll 76
Kil•ll• .sa, Wtller" 50 Lo1r1 SJ. l(ennwv S2
AntM!m 53, M111noll1 s.t
!>«vile 11. Oran-ge S$ SUrlf!V Hlll1 52, R•ncllo Al1mllos 51
?i1v1nn1 63, LOI Aelmllos ~
Foo!Mll •1, G!tnn ~ IDT)
.l•flltf Coll"• Senti A111 11, Sen Ja.qvl" 0tt11 7l Lano a11dl no, untrv u si n Mttto ts, c1rr1t111 1'
Comolon M. Modesto !I Mt, St" A"toftlo 7•, E11t LA 10 !OT)
Sou111wntem llO, 1""*1•1 V•llt'f' $2
the final scoring statistics to
prove it. Four Vikings starters
hit in double figures, three
with 16 points and guard Rid!
Branning with 17.
Branning drove the lane for
most of his points, Byron
Rosiek ani1-FiCk popped iii
12 to 18-foot jwnpers from
(he n~ks for 16 ~ts each,
and big Bob Losner got eight
baskets from around the hoop.
Losner was also highly ef.
fective defensively, blocking
four shots and grabbing
several rebounds.
Despite a second-period cold
spell, Marina 'A·ound up hitting
47 percent from the field (31
of 66) and was 12 of 18 from
the free throw line.
Monte . Vista matched
Marina in shooting percen-
tage, hitting 22 of 41 shlts,
but was battered on the
boards and committed 14
turnovers against a Marina
man-to-man defer-me.
M•rl11t (10
' " " " "' Ko.lier 2 o o ' Flclt 5631' Los"er I O J 16 llre"nfflf 7 J 1 17
KC111clt I 0 I 1•
L&nd!lrel 1 2 :» ' ~erlter O I 1 1
Jenltl"t o 0 I D
Lervlt D D 1 O
To11t1 31 12 IJ 7• ~ ~y 0..ttws
M1rl"1 21 14 'JO lt-74 Mon!t Vhl• ll ll IS 111-11
Pro Hockey
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•
Thuriday, Drctmber ~. 1973 r DAILY PILOT 35
-. CM Principal Seeks Winner
To Coach Football Fortunes
Area Prep
Wrestling
Results
Torrid-shooting Norwalk
Downs Dana Hills, 66-56
Girls Awards
Debbie tlastings was n
most valuable back and i
ttam captain ror the Got
West College field hoc
team at an awards gather-
thls week.
When Costa M ... High decides on a football
coach for next seuon, he11l have to be
a wlnner. Principal Bob Packer is adamant
about that and for good reason. He knows
what it takes to be one.
Packer wao Nogales Hlgh's (La Puente)
llrat varsity looll>all coach and alter four
STEVE
BRAND
years ln that position, showed four con·
secutive winning seasons.
The last two were in the Sierra League,
which at that lime was like trying to win
In the Angelus League or Rio Hondo League
now. A man named· Mal Eaton was coaching
at West Covina High, which assured one
IOM a year for Nogales.
"Athletics are vital to a school,'' says
Packer, "and there's nothing like winning.
We'll look outside for a winning coach, an
individual who has proven he knows what
it takes to win and has produced.
"We think our record this year (4-~) showed
we're coming in football and with a change
of league and coach, we hope to be com·
petitive next season."
Since Packer himself was a successful
football coach, would be like to step in?
"No," says Packer, adding a laugh. 11 I've
been that route and I'm happy where I
am. I'll support the athletic program but
not as a coacb.11
You have to believe with a principal 1hat
Interested, Costa li!esa's footbaQ fortunes
may be on lhe rise.
Aller Erl< Hubl deotroytd Ille Z.A fteld
11 Ute Clf' cn111 eoutry tlull, skeptics
wen overbeard murmllrin&, "Sare, but what
would liappn U be ,..,.. 1'111111111( Ill the
S.A wltb tbote Lompoc kkll or tbe 4-A
.U. Ralph Sera Md Gary Blume?"
At ie .. t part of tbat qDHtlon was answered
receaUy at O e c I d e a t a I College when
HUt dmled oU Blame, &be Lompoc runnen,
Jim Scltuktl ud Roeer Fablng, as •·eu
u Coron del Mar'• Briu Hamaker la
a J.mlle NL
H ... t ud Seraa 1q1111tt off Saturday at
UC lrvllle Ill a 11 .... (ilmed also al 6-mlles),
t•me&tr dub, 111 melen, 11 .. meter
IHu•dlet, 1SOt meten, JGO.meter hurdles, )..
mlle (5,IOI will be ilmed) and all the fteld
eventa.
Compelllloa 1i.r11 al '' 15 and the final
event, &be S.mlle ran, starts at noon.
Los Angeles got another pro(essional soccer
club this week and you have to wonder
about the timing.
Youth soccer is going big but it really
hasn't been around long enough for the
huge following needed to make soccer on
a season·long basis a success. Further, with
the energy shortage, travel in the North
American Soccer League as well as travel
by fans may be severely cut.
I believe professional soccer will eventually
be big enough to make a go-of it without
the ethnic matchups which seem to be the
only draws. Only the timetable for success
should be closer to 19'!0 instead of 1973.
lrllMll CU) 114) ,Milllll ti -8oylf iE) pln,.,O Oarntr 5:59.
103 -Wilson CFI pll!Md MNd
J:l'll. 112 -Younkin IF) plnnad Bkkllf l:O!I.
llO -1111 IFI pll\Nd ll1,1e11<1t 1:,6.
12) -ll:tret!Ot CEI dee, Wavntr .... Ill -Wiiker CEI dr-w1ttl Sc;olt .... 131 -Sparling 111"1 daf:. HI"" J:.e. 14.S -s~ IEI plnnad HoDWr 4:•. lS.C -ltitnn, {El plnn.d Booth J:~L
165 -8ueka (Pf _, bV tor'f911. 11S -lrwln CFI dee. aak. .. 1:11.
ltl -Clt•ry IF) oll'lllld Hl11 5:05.
Hvr -~ Fon.It.
J...., Va...ity
....... (2t) 121) ,. ... , ... ,
t$ -Sn'lllft (Fl IMC. Brook& S-Z. 10.J -Mc1Un1ev (El dac. stetti ••• 112 -LAflOllcMar (F) plnnM Smith
l :ID. 120 -~ tEJ dnW wlltl WUllan'll
tFI J.t. 121 -Holly {Fl dtc. Ptttt"S M.
133 -Htlrm (f'l dtc. M1rc1reUI ... 131 -Doollttta ... (FJ dee. Snow
IS-1 , 14.S -Ra_, (El dtc. Vin Sklk1 ••• 1$.t -Sweenev (El pl!'lned a,.,...,mer
1:56.
IM ltob!nllOll (El dee:. Block ,.,,
115 -11:-(IOI dtc. SPlolrlem , •.
191 -M1tf1W CE) dtc, HH1e11 , ..
Hvy -MKNellavt IEJ woo by JIHll., Vanity
,lclflCI 141) 1151 Casll MIM
9S -Otrauht IP) dee. Brookan1 ... 1C11-Veit l 'I pln'19d Pul'dr 1:11.
112 -Nlchol1 (Pl Ok. Klnl'ledy 15--3. 120 -Wilker IPI dtc. OUOdrldft ••• 1n -Miiiet" tCI die:. Loth1mner
11-5. ID -SfNll ll"J tMe. San.rd , ...
131 -MalhlesO!'I ICI pllltlld Kl1m.
14.S -H'lde tPI pinned Pltl'"tt.
IS.C -l Jndllolm {Pl olnnld COQJllr. llS -Devora IPJ plMld Allum
3:05 17$ -Sta11er IPJ pinned Snell.
191-811a,,,.n (C) plflMcf M1r1ln
HV'I' -Cl•rpool IPl pinned McCoy. ·-l"ldllca fUJ l•I c .. 11 Mtu
9S -Currin (CJ plflflld Simmons :SI. '
By RON EVANS
OI 1111 oti11 l"lltt llfff
A red·hot shooting Norwalk
Hlgh Lancers basketball team
moved the Dana H i 11 s
DolphJns into the consolation
brilcket of the fourth armual
Laguna Beach Christmas in·
vltational tournament Wednes-
day with a 66-56 victory.
The Dolphins scortd the That was as close as they
first ·basket and that was the could come, OOwever, and a
moment later the tempo
only time coach T 0 n Y switched again in ravor or
Stillson's crew held the Jead. Norwa1k as the Dolphins had
'Owing the next six minutes, the misfortune of throwing the
Dana Hills scored only a ball sway on a -fast brea k.
single field goal while Norwalk They had a man wide open
was hitting 14 points to take under the basket and could
a t().point edge. have closed within seven
Other winners i n c 1 u d e11
Gladys Penate as most Jqt
proved player and a dupli.caie
award for n1ost valuat>le
forward to Becky Pearce add
Kathie Tanner. T
IUY A NIW n DATSUN ••• SAVE AT
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2145 HARIOR ILYD. C.M.
540-6410 .
Dana Hills returned to ac-
tloo this afternoon against ea...
yon High School in a con·
solation bracket encounter
with the loser eliminated and
the winner moving to a 3
o'clock game Friday. Kirk
Christ hlt 30 points•in leading
Walnut to a 9Ml victory over
Canyon.
Jn that first period. the points with a fi eld goo1,
Lancers h.it eight of 13 at· Each team committed 25
tempts fro1n the floor for 81.5 turnovers but many of the
percent and in the second Norwalk exchanges came Jate l~~~~~~~~~~~
period, they were even hotter, in the act.ion with reserves
College, Pro
Results
f · in the contest. canning niqe 0 13 tries. It was a matter of Dana That hof streak spelled niination for the Dolphins who llills failing to dent the tight
trailed from eight lo 17 points ~ defense o~ the Lancers for the balance of the game. 1n the early going t~at even·
Turnovers \\'ere num~tually spelled the difference,
on both sides and the Dolp · however·
had dif.ficulty at the fr 01111 Hi1~ 1.sa~ ,, tp
throw hne on the few Rime~ 3 o 5 6 ~··-·1 · th h d 5c'hrey t 0 2 I JI01 i.uul l0S ey a · Springman J 1 l 2
Dana Hills had troubl e get· 01r11•n o o 1 o • Thorn•son ~ O 1 I ting through the Norwalk HolltNn 1 o l •
ell• laR•tHI• defense in the early going and ~Ir!~~ : : ~ ;
wrsT got off only nine shots in To1111 ~6 • 16 .st. I P~~ t:!!.:~ enchJ 19• '11 the first period, hitting fo ur. o an• Hu~!ar• by Cu•r~,6 11>-5'
f'Ac11<1c coAsT The tempo ,increased in th e Norwa11. 16 20 i1 i.J..-66 •
s.a1111 P.ctHc 11 , wt.i111er S6 second stanza with eight of Oraoon t2. UC 01wl1 59 N1v1da !La• v~•d 76, uc san11 17 find ing the mark.
8~1!'.t.r.:ion st. ''· Por1t1nd st .10 Early in the third stanza.
l!AST with Mark Schrey, Andy Hoff .
Tamflll "· Ruf;t<I " and G ---hit Penn "'· L1s1n1 12 man reg '11V<uason · -. Syracuse 59• Penn st. ss t•"ng from the floor the wa l'lfl'lr anll ,.._,flll'I an """ 11 Ad.ldft 11111 Tre"'"' 5
DON'T DISCARD THOSE
OLD . TENNIS SHOES!!
Wlscan.M!'I 69, W. Vlf'1llnl1 '2 ' ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE
. I
N]191r1 7'. Mlnnesol• u. Dolphins closed th e margin • WESTCLIFF f'lAZA ...... FAS"toH ISL.AND . COltONA DEL MAit
st. 80M1\lll\hl e n. ,1i111more u. 62 --~~e~·~h"_~~r:_:~~fl~ee~t~in'l!_'m~o~m~e~n"_I.:!·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SI. Francis CNY) 100, Queens 57
Scranlon 69, SusquehlMI "
SOUTH
LSU 67, T1Jt1 ... 60 VI. cammonwe.lth n. Ttltl$ A&M 11
Morenead SI. 92. Lwlllana Teeh
96 lo~lr11mtl canlln•ry 96. NW Loul1laM n
MIEtWl!ST
Uni Scores
SoCal Areas Lack 61-44 Win
Ski Report • 103 -SIPfVl!r (P) oll!ned Twdl. 112 -Mllcartn11 (P ) plnnt<I Eblr1nd.
Ek1tr1nd. 120 -P:arltar (P) pll\Md Tnch. 127 -Wright (P) pinned WllWlll.
133 -0100tr (Pl \fllOf'I bv forlelt.
138 -Tolllver (P l plnn..:I Tavlblugh.
1is -w1ath9n (P l won br forlelt.
15• -Bannall (P l plnMd Miller lt.5 -Grant (p ) pinned Holden.
17! -NO mtleh
11111 St. IJ, 8U"tf IO (2 OYerlimH)
Oral Roblrb U, Cll St. Ha.,.w1rd '2
Crelghlon 61, AUQlnlllnl '9
Akron St. 11 , St. Mary's S6
SOUTHWEST
Cll SI Fune Ion "· Ta)[ll 1Arll"9'
"" "
"
•OCKIES
Arlzon• ~7. k1ns•s SI. 72 N. Arlran• 61, C• IS!. Baker5fleld
Don't
waste
time.
This
Christmas,
give the
Holiday Snnw
By M. R. SNOW
OI IM DlllY l"lltt Stiff
In Tourney
191 -smith (Pl pinned Ealfutdt. Hvy -J1ml1 tP) won Dr forfeit. P'9Ullfll1 Val.., lt2) 161 Newport
9S -H•n-INJ pinned 01vldJ.llfl
2:20. . 103-ClllM (Fl Ok lt1119tl" 15-0. 112 -Wttmote IF) pinned 1"1tton
By HOWARD L HANDY :~'° -H1sktll '"''dee Carr l.t-5.
TOURNAMENTS
CAI. IA.PTIST TOUltNAMEHT
' Fh~I ltound UC Rlvll'1ld1 90, Frnno P1elnc 76
Cll 81plhl 80, LI Verne 69
Pomoni·Pllt1r 41, C1I SI. Domlnguet
Hiils 66 . Lubbock Chrisllan 62. LA B1ptl1t S7
Of 1111 Dall.-l"llet Stiff 127 -ChaH (F) 6ee Smith .... l~not (Fl pinned Ba nay "5.
beY:..;,,g .. i:,.;;rt:;, ;:'= ~ . ~ -"'~ "' "" ·~·-Prep Basketball
terns than in recent games, 1"5 -~q\111 IFI OK UpdfOr'OWI 1... Junior VarWty Unlvenity High School's Tro-ls.t -Quick• IFI plll!Md 811Mtt WtltlMI lUJ {541 D•IWI Hin• . ba k tbaJJ ped ·JS GIJ'l'ltl (10 F 11•1 P11.1b~ J<lm s e team rom . 16s Plffr'Nn (F) dd Robffi• .Mom'W {II) F (ti S<ln'•no
A.H.
WEINERT
Seiko
Chronograph.
A ellronog11ph II 1 wrlll w1teh th•t'• a 1100 w11cl1. Th11 1!tlk S11ilo "IOllll: S<llt·wlnd, ltOP·
•1111 Plllh bullon. 1yncluonirad ...c:oncl •ailing. 30 m1nu1111ca1da1. 911.2 11. w111 .. 11s1ad. E1111,
1-sh/So•n•tfl cel1ndar, ln111nt d1y/C1111 HI.
Luminous. St1lnlets llltl, S11ko g11y d11I wilh
blua mlnute Ul~k. Ali'. 101 No, AH067M-17J.
Only $120.
lo 8 61-44 Opening Victory OVer l·~·1s -Muuo CF) plll!lfd Keller ~ l•I ~ (SJ ~~~-= 32 m~~'1f5LAN0
Aquina!I High in the fourth :36. Mlvak• no> G 111 Andlr'SOn 2040 1
Thefe will be a ball oa the
slopes this week as holiday
merrymakers o p e n the
Christmas and New Year's
period by doing their thing;
particularly in the high Sierra
areas where snow depth is
measured in feet.
ml\ and Snow Valley; where
the man-made stuff covers a
portion of the hills, r<pOrl
skiing lrom mid way down.
There are other areu where
snow is manufactured; but the
picture is so skimpy that
schussers should telephone to
ascertain conditions.
I La Be ch . 191 -01hllng (F) dee Helfrich 5tarlng SUOs: Weslerr.-81tes 1. l ___ .. _·_•-____ ....J::::
annua guna a m·,.~·~•t·:'.'.__::_.'.'.'_:'.__'.:'._".::'.....'.'.'.'.::..~·~·M~"~"~'...,.~"~'~·~~~~-_l==:::::::::::::::::::::::::'.:::~~~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!_ vilatiooal tournament Wednes--:~ -H•kh IFI plnntd Wrlllht Ha1tthnt: Da,... Hiii• ?9·26.
day. Unfortunately, Mother
Nature has not blessed the
Southern Cali fornia areas .with
ample snow. Only Soow Sum-
* * * Checking
Ski Vista
SAN FRA NCISCO (UPI ) -
Good to "'<Y good skiing
was the word from resorts
along Sierra on slopes with
"spring'' conditions -firm
in the morning with some
thawing ln the wanner af.
ternoons. Tbe -weathennan
predicted generally f a i r
weather with c]ear skies.
Roads were clear and open.
'l1te report at selected ski
.,...,, Interstate 80 : SUgar
Bowl , &-9 feet base snow ; good
skiing on hard packed slopes,
5 lifts operating; Donner ski
area, 3-4 feet, very good pack·
ed powder and some groomed
powder,. all facilities
operating ; Boreal Ridge, 4--5
feet, good to very good packed
powder, 90me ice, 3 lifts.
Highway 119: Alpine Mead-
ows, 4\H feel good skiing. 6
chalrlills. 2 pomas; Powder
Bowl ; 3~ feet, trace of new
mow, good bani packed, 3
lilts; Tahoe Ski Bowl . 3 fleet, 90
percent groomed, good lkliQg
on hardr1o soft; Homewood,
I 11-4 feet, good to lair Oii
bani packed, 7 lilts.
Highway 50: Heavenly Val·
ley, 5~ feet , 4 incta new
very good pected powder, 10
lifts aperating, California and
Nevada sides open; Sierra Skl
Ranch, W feet, good to very
good packed, slopes bani to
soft, all facilities CJ!l68tlng;
F.<:bo Summit, 5 feet, good to
very good firm powder, I lifts,
opens daily beginning today.
Highway 88: Kirkwood
Meadowa, I~ leet, good
hard packed, I chair lifts.
Students will be storming
such Sien-a areas as the Lake
Tahoe complex and popular
Mammoth and June Moun·
tains. An eyewitness report
can be given here on con·
dltlons at Bear Vallty In
Yosemite -fabulous. Despite
a bright sun, the slopes, ex-
. cellently groomed, are ideal.
. All facilities are rwming
under the expertise of friend--
ly, belplul people. Croo<:oun-
try instruc<lon, touring and
nordic racing, aloag with a
racing program for the recrea·
t.iOD skier, underway. Ragnar
Hakan.90D has a staff of five
qualified instructor>, while
veteran Nick Fiore heads the
ski llChool. Bear Valley rMks
as a pioneer among callfomia
ski areas.
With the action centered in
the high Sierra, here are some
quick highlights: Reservations
are a must before heading
for the high country. And that
means at all areas ... special
events are planned for day
and evening fun, with many
areas slashing prices of lift
tickets, lessons and other of·
ferings • . . Alpine Meado"'
now has 13 lifts for an uphlll
capacity of 9,000 -thus, less
waiting in line ... Tahoe Ski
Bowl was one of the last to
open. .. E>perts who know
estimate that there are sii:
million skien in the nation
AND hall ol them live in
the West. •. Loogeat run at
June Mountain, r e po r t s
Orange Count l an Bud
Hayward, Is on the eMt
side of two and one-l!alf
miles ..• FickJe weather can
make a difference for SoCal
operators. It ii recalled that
last year's fabulous seuon ac-
tually began as early as
November lL Today, the
whlte stuff IS1parse .. , Tahoe
complex operators say that
only IS percent of their
business comes fn>m SoCal
residents and 1i percent from
the bay area. • •
Highway !: Bear Valley, M
\0 fee~ very good packed, D ,t. NT<TN
5 lifts. .I~ ,a.a •••
Hlgl.way 1118: Dodge l!id&t.
l lWIO 1 e e ~ loocl pecked (,._.I 1ed tnm Page SI)
5 chain, 2 n>pe tows. can keep up Ille scorlnC·
Mt. Shut.; Sid Shasta, ·11 "! thoqht we'd be a good
feet, v..-, good packed scoring team lnlide lhla_yeor ,
powder, 2 Ufts. but If we keep hltllnC outBlde
Nevada' Sllcle--. 3\W Ute n did aaalml Miier Doi,
feet. very aood m1chlned we won't need IO."
gn>omed JJOWder and pocked Tiie Will WU ~
j>owdor < f chain, J pomll Beoch'a nilllb w(lbout a ....
and I T-blr; Sid !nclloe, ltlO For Mater Del, II -tho ,,..._1 gn>omed very aood llnll ,........IDC aatlllclt alter
,,..ted powder. the Mwrdla hod ~
Highway 1116' Mammotll their only two dehola aplnll
ML ; I lee~ very good JllCked ftve wins In 09tl1lme.
powder, all fa c LI It le s Brendon McCaqbeJ, a
operaUng. Colla -raildm~ """*~
flllhway 187: North Star, match hill J'I -polnl
1 reet, good hsrf packed, an peifomwlce ol l!Otlday Dl'1tl
ladlJllel open. • and WU held to 13 points,
Th.e win moves University
into the second round ol pla y
tonight against Miraleste IDgh
with tipoff at 9 o'clock.
Host Laguna Beach plays
Ontario at &.
Coach John Drlscoll 's Tro-
jan,, wasted little time moving
in front from the outset, scor·
ing the firs t six points, four
by Jeff Giese and two by
Scott Kafesjian. 1be Aquinas
FaJcom were nev¢1' able to
catch up.
A tight man-to-man defense
employed by the Trojans baf-
fled the Falooos and limited
them to six points in each
of the middle quarteni.
"I thought we executed bet-
ter tonlght, especially in the
aecond half," Driscoll said
.aftor the game.
"We didn't kick the lead
around and play jungle ball
when we got in front. And
we worked the ball in for
shots under the basket. We're
not always going to get the
home nm ball and it helps
to get those iMide shots."
With the Trojans in com·
mand all the way, th ey tried
to draw Aquinas out of a
sagging zone de(en.se near
balfUme with the score, 29--18,
in their favor.
Two University p 1 a y e r s
played catch near mid~urt
and lhe Falcons only briefly
ventured out after the ball ,
immediately falling back to
guard the key. . Driscoll was happy to win
the fint game in the touma·
ment. "Now we're sure of
playing at least four games
this week and that's the big
reason for entering a touma·
ment. It gives us a lot more
work." ,
In the fi..t hall, University
bit at a 42.5 percent from
the Door but the average fell
off sllgbtly lo the secood ball
with reserves getting in a por·
Uoo of lhe actioa. ·
Leading scorer for the Tro-
jana ,.., IW,.Jlan with 19
u three playen hit In double
figum.
,,,._.,. t•I~ "' t,
s 2 1 lt
' . •' ' ' . . ' ' I " • , 1•
i : ' ' : 0 0 ' 0 I 0 2 2
~ ~,~j,f
UftlWtjj:--., ~ ,. ,,_.,
A..,_ II t ' 21-44
Prep Basketball
-
•
Give him the works. And then put him to work
after the holidays.
. '
'
(
SPECIAL
Sidi 11/4' drill. Ughtwelghtfor
easy handling. Double lnoulated
fOf salety. Aocepts most drill
ac:celiaories. Single tpood.
9.99*
SPECIAL
Skil" 7Y•" power aaw. 8dra
cutting capacity, comfortable
handling. Features new safety
switch and safety guard stop.
Automatic blower.
29.99
C:horge It on ,.... .ICPenn•r charge cont.
BUE.NA PARK
Op9n D.ily 0:30 to 10:00 p.m.
~ 9:30 to 10 p.m.
ORANGE
.Open Dolly • _,
10 a.m. to 10 p..m.
SANTA ·ANA
Opon Dolly ......
10 a.m. '° 10 p.m.
r.
i
'
1 •
/·
•
' ..
·~ D DAILY PILOT Thundat, Dt<ombtr 20, 197) •
,, ..
·.
• .. ..
"·
• •·
_.
. .,
" '
, .
" "
[
,
...
• -• • " .. . " .. . ,
,
•
" • • .
-I •
I
Area Golf Results Alamitos
Results
Alamitos Entries-
'ltlN'M IMnlh
Ctter & '"'· ,IUI l"•I l!1U ti IUCtl NI flint It.Ct.
U lutl•t .. lltl. 1111 1M tt•
"' '" m >n
"' "' '" "' "' "' "' '"
llocktt Tt IM l"'°'lltl) ,,,., ••• (l(nlth!l
lolt'I llf Elld 1u,Mml
N-MoOft f.._rtl
LM lotr Wttctr. !Adtlrl
Rtck On M~ IPr,....11'1
~ ... (Myletl
Cr.Ill« {Trllll,ll'I)
Gary Singer, Ste\'e Ryan
and Steve Robertson from the
UC Irvine golf team will com·
pete ln an lnternaUol'lal
tournament at Corona Na·
Uonal golf course again.st a
Japa""8 collegiate team to-
day and Friday.
Sioger and Ryan will leam
tog ether In today's better
ball of partner'• competlllon
while Robertson will team
with NCAA individual cham·
pion Paul Wise or Cal State
(Fullerton).
WIDEN YOUR ARC, BACK AND TIIROUCH 12) s•VIMTM llACS -«JO vm .. 3
llt ""' ollh 6. up, AllOWtll(f. ,UAlt lit '3.500. TM Ftllbrook.
llf Jot It Good ICrHOlrl lit A.loM ltr (MYletJ
SICONO •ACI -.00 Y•rds. 7
..,.,, old -llltM. Clth'llltlf, Puru S13(11),
ST••w Balo {Adllrl
F1mll'o 1"111111 flrooltll
MoOMlruclr !Mon11)
.C.IO ).«I '·'° 11.00 l.IO
10 • .0
llf Okkty lh11 8oY llt1nld
COUl'lty f't thOm (NlcOO.~)
Rt!Oftllll 5ttr \Cl.r!IM) Jloldl"'• WMdtr (Adtlrl "' '" '" •u
There are 40 college and
university stars on each coun-
try'a team with the U.S. squad
also including USC, Stanford ,
UCLA, Callrornta and other
West Coast schools.
Friday's competition wilt be
on an individual ba!ia for 36
holes. A team score will be
kept.
•
The illustrat ion shows the paths rollowcd by the llands
Cost• /tlesa and the clubhcad during my backswing and forward awing.
You'll note that the arcs are con1ldcrably wider on the
It's Toys for Fairview backswing lh:in on the downswing. Then they widen again
weekend at Costa Mesa Golf on the 11trough-swing.
and ())untry Club with more I think it's important that you unden tand lhat the back ..
thin 818 golfers from the swing and forward awing arcs arc not lclCntical l also think
men'! and women's clubs tliat you will eventually hit your shots rarthcr and sfraighler
lilgned to participate in the ir you can widen your backs wing arc. This is done by
compet.IUon. slretching your kft~dc muscles, extending your left arm
Entrants are required to and turning your shoulders rully, u you work the club back
bring a toy worth $3 or more and up to the top or your swing.
plus a $1 green fee to The only thing to guard against is that you don't sway
participate in the event on sideways u you widen your arc. .
either day over the Los Lagos 'i=============='":o::::::~:;"':;-=:: .. =:-:=~ Cour>e.
Bill Brown has been named
golfer or the year for the
men's club aUer winning llis
flight champk>nship. He gets
a trip to the Los Angeles
Open for his e(fOrts .
Set1elltf
Dale Noak finished with a
net 65 for fint place in the
annual ham shoot at Hun-
tington Seacllff Country Club
thi! week as 190 hams and
a like nu mber of bottles of
champagne were djstributed
to the victors.
In a special tournament for
club prps and assistanls held
at Diamond Bar Country Club
recently, Dave MeKeeUng
teamed with Brian Lake for
a 18 nel Another B!Si-t.
"HlnlNG THE IRONS"-off1rssolid trip, slMeeendswln1pol111.
era to boost iron play end lower aolf KOf11I Send 20• end • a limped, r•turn 111v1loP1 to Arnold Pelmet", ,/o thif. IMP''·
Eric Pollard, teamed with
Lake for a 69 ~1ith both teams
well up in .the finish.
Mission Viejo
In a mixed couples high-low
tournament at Mission Viejo
Country Club this week, two
teams tied for first place with
scores of 148. •
On one squad were Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Grubaugh with Mr.
and Mrs. Max Gardens. On
the other were the ·warren
Bransbys and the F r e d
Schudels.
Jack Cate Ydth the Phil
Jlassans.
Santti Ana
Ed Heid or Newport Beach
scored a hol~in-0ne on the
15th bol~ at Santa Ana Coun-
lry Club recenlly.
Reid used a fi ve "·ood to
cover the 168-yard distance.
Barry Hallamore has been
named most Improved golfer
of the year at Santa Ana
Country Club and was recently
presented with a go I d
certificate by head pro Gerald
At 149 were Mr. and Mrs. Hall. ----~
Tl"" -20.•L Ah• ?•n -W•r Clllc n.n.. Wiii'•
ll:Hpect, ltockM 1'111'1/Df!, El lt•lero.
J•vdtf't.,., ~,.,, ••r Miu. ~nt.
TI411tD ltACI -* Y•nft. S Yt•r olOI L Ill). Cl•lml<19. Plll'M UXIO.
Art P!PO!fl !Ad•lr) I.to 4.IO l .:IO Motl lt0¥1t !K11lgtit) S.4111 2."2
BUWI R11d ... IH•rtl •.21
T1111t -~31 . ""''° ,,,, -Mr. M•n "'· Snttlrr T .. kY, ~NllY WIMI, Dorl'l lOOk lick.
l'DV•TN •..Cl -3JO Y1rd1.. I
YtAr olds. Allow1r.:1. Pvrt1 SHOO.
'A l tklY I S\lfl Flo w 1 r !H•rll 1._«I 4.N I.Ill
l·tohl !loom (Mllctlc11l ! . .O 1.20
FIH1'1 O\ipt IWt rd l 2A
Thl'll -11.1•.
AIM r•n -Mluqlld ltocltt, MllJ
lttwtrd l•r, Wtr Cl'lk.'t edict. '-'r.tt """""· ,l,TN ltACll -11'0 y1rd,_. 3 y.tr
ohu I. 1111. Cl1lml1111. Pvr'H tttoO.
Mlndi!ll1 IM~lnJ 17..0 7,00 3,4
Bit 0'81r {IU(l'llrdll •·" 1.10 A~'I''• Aocktl fDrty.r) 2M
Tlm1 -'5 .• 1, "''so r•n -S.lld'I' Vtnn111, Htvtnftt!I. M~l~t.e. Fl-11'1 All!'I, C"-Utoml1 kfidt.
SlkTM ltACll -3:SO y1rdl. 3 y11r
Olcl1. Cl•lmlflt. P\lrH 1131».
0\1119 l!I Sl•rr (Wt rd) t.11) 5.IO -tM
Ne11 SICIPtl' l5n'tlttl) 7.• ._20
V•ndt Vt91t (Dr...,.rl •.oo
Tl1111 -11.to. Also r1n -Slt,,...wn , ,Ill 1,
Hlgl! Grtsl. CtN Mt Kid, OlndV
r';OOCI &1r, Ortlrt Ztfl, Dull O.vtl
1. ., ••Kt• -~ • ,,.,... & ..,.. 11.,.,, ...... " ......
llVINTM ltACI -150 Yl rdl. 3 Y••r old1. AllOW"l(I , PVfll um. Tiie PIM lh1bM1.
Tw.tw Fl.,,. lllph1m ) 1.20 t.IO 1.60
Rocky Dlfllltdo IW•nl) 2.60 t.«I
SPffd k -fNltodtmu1I •.l'O
TlrM -17.71,
AllO ''" -MWrt'• c°"'. Afr Cooltd, l lkf Gr1nclfnt;, C1ctw1 COP'I'• ~
Cllll"Ot. .
llOMTM ltACI -11'0 ?lrd1. 3
'l'tar old1 L up. Cl•lmlng, Plll'M il60Q.
S•ntuf,,..1 Jet l llltoul 11.40 e.60 •.:OO
DltlnOl'ld hr1 (GtrJI) J IO l.20
G1blno (Myl .. ) ).H
TlrM -"6.03.
Al'° ••II -M-$f11y, Vlf'lde
l lnd1, G1ll•11"'-r• E.'911 Llndlng, Op1I Me!.
IJ la.tell -l·l •llttl!M'• "" .. 1·011!Tlllllf .. ,.., ,. .... ttll ....
NtNTN IA'I -ltD y1nh. l y11r
01c11 L up. C11tmlno. Purw SllOO.
S1llor'1 Ctlt 119 (Ad1lr) ).IO l.60 t.«I
l 1plt l11ull fllroolrll 27.60 •.10
Gold Ingot U>t..,1r) 2.tO
TlrM -11.17. ""''° tin -P1llto ltc-d, llltclr MOOd, Arl11 Tiie Rim. Trul'I' Up
Tlf~I, l l.Kky Mui, Roy1l'1 R1<1W1f1
A.nttll SU'l't MIU.
" llKt• -J.s.elltn c,..,.. .. 1H..lplt I.Intl. 1'1141 ......
SICMD ltACI Sit yarn, J
..... , o1ctt e. Uf. Al...,.,111U. ~ ..
1111111.
IN. ''"'"'II IMV*J Mltlw-v o.tidY lCerdW:ll lt\11! ,_ (UMtitfl
W1tni l'M Tri ..... (0rf'l'9f)
G_U, Knlt'llf Aft1lr (1(1"111
THllD ltACI -d y1rd1. t v••r
oldt, Cl1lmlna. ........ S1300. Ci.lml111
prl(I ""'°· Jot 1'r11ltr· IG1r111
fl'rl ttON tTrMM,lfl)
00 C-IMorrl1I
Ft•tlrt lty Cllkhllt'dl)
GllM 9o (Adair)
Cuti H Quick CWt r•lll Htctor• '91 (Smlltl)
Nlct A k IWt lMlll Coe! Mhl tClfdoitl
S1brll'lt Ottk (ltllou) .. ... Pt4Me
CtllOOld (M'fltll
Dtppe OVdt (Mytttl
Ftr11 Stll'IO {Nlcod.muiJ
Jan I r"" (llpMml
'" '" '" "' "' '" "' '" '" "' '" "' "' '"
•ouJtTM ltACI -17D Yttlk. 3
.,.., old• • up. ci.1m1119, PilrM
11600, C1t lmll'IO P!'l« UOCJO, Prince Altlll1 Stc1. (Upt11ml 111
ltO'l'tl lladl Chick CC•"'9trJ llf
Vll'W:lt l lncla IOrtyer) 117
f'trlC'f WIHow Cltld'llrlkl lit l"tllilO« (Cantoni tit
Miiby KHUt n !Wtt111 122 E"'9 LallCllnt IHMllHIWI) 111
ltnlt Ttnlt (NICCIOe!NMI 122 -·-Low Sit""' ll lcktU llt ,,,._ Wins UlkMrdt) 117
Ol•I l r•"4Y ITrMWrtl l:tt
W•r '•tdl IW.tnlll 11t "''™ U.C• -. 3SG '(lrdl. 3 .,.., old• • '* f llli. • rr111rn . Cltlf!llng. PvrM UlOO. C .. 11111"9 ,,IC41 $AGOO. J-,,.. terooUI no
Rov•• LOlllM IRl<Mrd•l 117
N11trlt1tlOl'I (Orev«I \It
Trll 0Kl (frM-1) 117
SUP« C.tt (Acltlrl 1~
Clllrttty Cttlct IKfllflltl 117 l urnl Mftqvltt (ICtnltl llt
SIXTM •ACS -lSO vtnSa. 3 ,..... ddt. Clelml"I. f"urM 11soo. Cl1lmlno
prlc1 13500.
TOP'I Otl IMOrrlO lit
l'IYI J..,. IM1r'll 122
lP!op1tJ%t8sJ
makes
FDtlBAY'
in thl l1t4ldijll1)I
IDEAL COMBINATION •••
FOR THE
TWO CAR FAMILY
ECONOMY and LUXURY
LINCOLN-MERCURY'S CAPRI
Concerned about gas mileage? Capri's the answer. The
perfect "second" car for your family .•. economy, perfor-
mance and outstanding European styling. Pick the Capri you
) like best ... 2000 or Vb 2800, -4 speed stick or automatic.
Sun ,oofs, Radial tires (standard).· Dozens to choose from • LINCOLN-CONTINENTAL AND MARK IV
America's favorite prestige automobiles. Now, in 197'4's
superb new styling, comforts and features you've come to
expect. Never in automotive history has there been a better
time to buy in the luxury car fie.Id. Continentals . , . King of
the luxury line.
''The Best of Two Car Worlds''
'
EXCEIJ,ENT SELECTION IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
•
2626 HARBOR BLVD. of CARS
COSTA MESA 540-5630
I ,.
Slrod Httrtl
: I
COSTA MESA DATSUN
Prtsents
FOOTBALL FORECAST
GIO. ZIMMllMAH ·--
MS.....hl ••• ,, ,, ,, • 17 W-'htft ......... ,, , lJ
IH~•••I Co•tM1 P'hly..tfJ
o.t-. , , . , , . , , JI JltNllflk ••••... , 20
IA..nc. c .. t .. c-. ....,.-offl
Sn4ey, D11a•Mr 2J
D915ee •••••••••• 20 .... ~ .... -••••••.••• 2J
1....-.1 c .. t.tw. ,...,_.ff,
,._, , ,, ,,,,, 17 Chtcl..-1 , •.•• ,, ••• 16
IAIMricn Co1fwnce ,,.., •• ff)
.• PtMloy, Dec.-Mt-22 ,
FtmA IOWL: Atb:1H Stite , . , , l l Plthb11r1ti •••• 24
Setllnley, Dec....., 22
TANGlllNI IOWL: J.l.,W. •.•• 21 -MJa11d IOhl1J ••.• 16
Us
First!
2 DOORS, 4 DOORS, & WAGON
(GOOD COLOR & SELECTION!)
DEMO SALE
1973 DATSUN 610'S
~
• $AVE
Used Car Specials This Weekend Only:
THUR ., Fiii., & SAT. CLOSED SUN., MON., & X·MAS DAY
69 Datsun Roadster CLEAN
SRL 311, Sky Blue, 5 speed. radio. heat·
er, il hardtop. (079ABA)
69 Datsun 510 Wagon $AYE
LOW MILEAGE-ONE OWNER ,Blue
with blue vinyl Interior, automatic
tranamlnton. ' nulio (Ll.K54)
72 Yep Wagon $PECIAL
Green wtth matchlne, vtnyl lnterior, au·
tom•tic tralllmlulon, radlo, heater~ '
linkd elAI&. (123ABC)
AN ECONOMY WAGON
68 Trinnli GT 6 SHARP
Dark maroon, 4 •need. re&o. beater,
' wire wheels. <WPA911J , ,
REAL GAS SAVER
66 Milstang $795
2 Door H.T., Bl ue with vinyl top &: viny l
Interior. automatic transmission. radio,
beater, &: air condlUonlng. (TSH348)
PRICED TO SELL!
69Cllevy1-l Ton $1395
Automatic transmlulon & heavy duty bumper. (#2441)
SALE PRICE
68 Toyota Corona • $1199
2 Door H .T.. Pearl \Vhlte wtth black
vinyl Interior, 1utomaUc tranamiulon,
radJo, & heater. (VTS300)
71 Plymoutb 1295
FURY II 4 Dr. Sedan. White with blot cloth Interior, automatic t.ranamiuion,
radJo, hea.ter, I: power 1teeribg. ( •2'42)
REDUCED PRICE!
• ' .
I
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PIJBIJC NOTICE
1"ut11f11Mid 01•1111• D«t'l'llb9r 20, 21, a. llJ, .,,,
PIJBUC NOTICE PIJBLJO SOTICI:
-•,
--_c -'
l'UBL10 NOTICE PIJllUC NOTICE
.
•
~. ---
Tlwrlda), -20, 197~ OAILV PILOT S7
J OVER THE COUNTER
NASD Listings for Wednndoy, Docombor lt,1173
•
1J~ U';'.i
I '" tt JS II t• it. a~ ·~ . ''°"' U\oo ... ,
l~I 6''t ,,.,\ ft'.
21i.. 21·.., t\• Jl.oo • • • •l~'I ••'\. II"-1l' o :M'l )j' I 1•' • 11 11''• 11 11'4 11 12 II ,, '11
111, U'• ••• Jh ,,, ..
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olO\.'I ''" ........
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••• ' 1 '.. '" ll '. 1J J • • •• ,. " 20 11 ~ I'• t • "'. , ... •.. ' ..,.,, 1.1· 1
11. • •• U't1 U',. i • I I.lit I'• ll..., ,, ,
1..1~ •'• ,, j • ,
2'·'1 J •
l:Vo 61'1 •.. •'• ••• • ••• ,~. 10 ·. S'• t'' l.\1 I'•
111 ' •• ,, 11'.> ''• . ' 1)"' ,,.,, u•. u•, ,.~. ,,,,
'"" t 11 l J u ... l)t\
II"" 11 .. lll'I !) ... 11,J 10· .. l )' 1 ........
:»'l. JI~
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-;J8 DAILY PILOT ThursdiJ, Dtctmbet' 20, 1973
PUBLIC NOTICE
MOncl TO c•IDITO•S IU,llt/011: t OUftT Of' THI!
STAH 011 CAL.1f'OltNIA f'OA
TM• COUNn' 0 " OltAHO•
Look for Hig er Gas I~ Vp $1 Million
Rossmoor Projects Booming .........
!.11•1• ol ARLETT E MART I H E
~··*· MOTICi IS HEREIV 01\11!.M lo the
~llOJ• ot tl'lol •l>O'H Ntnld dlc.o.tit
!ti.ti tll WloOlll IWIYl"9 el1lm1 •IMl""t
rtw Mid dkedftlt -l"t<llllrtd 10 tilt tnem, Wiii! IM l!KftMry 'tOlltlllrl In
the oHkt of tr.. cl«k ol fM •tMrn
t'fttllltd tour! .., to 1>"9M"I them. with
In. 119Ct&Sl'l VOllCJwn. To llM undH..r9'*:1
... tl'lt offlco of Pill Al!Of..., ltotlotf'f
R. M•lllto.I, 321 So..tlll lltllfrlY Orl\it, Sult• A, 8•vt•IY Hiils, C1Utorfll1 ttnU,
wtddl 11 lllt PIM:• of bllslnttl " lllt
un0ft'1uned In au m1t1tr1 Dtl'l1!11ll'IQ
to ll'lt "''~ ol Mid ffctdent, wlll'llll
four month1 tlltor 'tilt fl r11 publk.ilOll
01 11111 notice.
O.!lld Dectfnblr lt. 1m
KUltT MARTINI!,
EJ<tc:!ifor ot tM Wiii
ot Tiit lbO\lt 11•11"otd cltctdtnt
•Oll!llT It. MALLICOAT,
1'!1 51*111 ltwr'ly DftYI,
'~"· .. l t"'11 Miiis, Ctllfer.11 "21t
Ttl; UIU JU-flN
Al'-'f fot ftKlllOI'
Pllbtlth90 0.1""4! CIMll Otfly Piiot
0.CMT!btr 20, V, lf1l Mid JtrM.1'1U'Y
3. 10. 1t1' lM7-n
PUBLIC NOTICE
.... '2"1
NOTICE TO t"R EOITOll:S
01" aULIC Tll:AH$1"Ell:
Prices
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The price increase granted for
crude oil by the
A d m inlstratlon Wednesday
will show up U a 2.3 cent
a gallon increase for gasoline
and home heating oil in
February, Cost of Uving
Council Dlreclor John T.
Dunlop predicts.
At the same time, President
Nixon's proposal for a tax
on "11t•indtall profits" earned
by the petroleum industry will
mean smaller profits for big
oil companies.
1stc:1. '101 .. 101 u.c.c.1 TIIE p RES l 0 ENT an·
f\la!l(e II llerrin' 11!~ IO Ille Credllorl ot wn111m T. Kirin, J r. aM Be•1y nounced he would a s k
Klllll, Tr1Ml1rrw1, wlloSt buslneu ild-Con ' J ua' lo ,_ (lrHI It !Cle C:. L09an Avenue. Cost.I gresS 10 an ry .,,..
Mn•, cou11ry o1 Or•"ll*· suit 01 pose a five-year wind£all prof-
C1llforn11. th.-! a bulk lr11111fer 11 ~DOlll !'ts taX Oil producers who to be m.ede to Dotl•ld E. ~(oll,
Tra11111r", whoM bu1lne11 ~"''' 11 might earn unexpectedly large 16121 RoKot 81'111. SapulvHla, Coun1y ot Loi An;e!t1. SM11 ot ce111nr111,,. profi ts from the rapidly rising
TM 11r0perly IO be lraMltfrld b • Of 'I localed at lOlll E. Lfl.:lan Avt-nut. Costa price 01 •
Mu.a. Coun!Y ot Ora"ljt. SI•!• ol "It is Unfair for some to
c~'!f:"!~~,.ny r1 d•Krlbed 1n ;enerel profi t as a result of the
•1: An ~1-x~ 1~ trMo. 11v11"''· enu:11men1 sacrifice of others," Nixon
111111 9ooe1 will ot lhlt El1<lfook ~urolu1 ·d ( · I I ta t.111i11'~' 1·no"'" ~1 K&\ol Elec:troolc sa1 , re erring o vo un ry
surp1u1 •rid 100:11ted 11 1Glll E. L°'an energy conservation e!forts by A~enut, rl"'t3 11e1<1, Coun!y ot Oran;it,
s1at• 01 c11!1orn1a, the American public.
l he ~U!I: tr ·n~lt'' wilt M r!!n<Ummaled i1len Dunlop announoed SR
ori or '"'' tM i111 d•Y cl e>ec1mbtr. 1m. 11 1:00 f>.M. 11 Ea•1 M. P•Jet. increase of $1 a barrel in
E"I· 31S Soutti 61wrb Orlvt. Sull1 'h ·1· · ( t crud sot. aa ... e-1" 1-1i11• covn1v cl Lo1 Anoa1ts. t e ce1 mg price o mos .. e
111te ol Calllor!'ll•. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::~' Sa tar ,., kno"'1"1 '' the TransferM-, 1'
11!1 bull-narnn 1nd .1ddr"se1 u•KI
b¥ Tranlf..-ors tor Ult thrn ye11r1
last 111st. 11r1: ••"""· OJ!td O~e..-.blt" IL 1t7J.
OoNOld E. Scon, Tr1nst1rtt
MAlltVIN A. HARTEN
JU SOU'I~ a1¥tr1Y OrlYI
svne 50t
a1ftrf'I' HUis. CAH~mla 90212
l!Krow No. 24
Puellshad 0r•ll9' CNst O•llY ellol,
O«:tmber 2e. 1971 31-16-13/
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTIC:I!' ro CIUIDITORS
SUPERIOR r o uRt OF T tl!
STATE OF CAl.IFOlNIA FOR
THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
Ho. ll.·1il"
E1!11I• ol CHARLES" EDWARD TRUS·
TY, OPC•~r.td.
SILVER
BUYERS
If you are buyin9 1il¥•r ind
not from u1, you ••• payin9
too' muclt!! .999 Fin•, I Oa
ci . bars from th• old•1t and
lar<;esl refintry in th• U.S.A.
SPOT + 48c
FULL .PRICE
NO ADD ONS
• • 100 01. min.
lmmedia,. DellwlffY
Oeilerlhlps 11¥allabl•
C & H GOLD AND
SILVER DIST~llUTOlS
'"' Wllslllrt aMI .. S•lla '14 at¥1rlr Hlll1, Ca. "211
(211 ) 274-7115
NOTICE IS HEREllY J:OIVEN 10 lnt
rredltor~ cl t~ a~~vt 1111ml!d dec!<lcnl
th1t all perwn1 havlt'lg cl•lm1 111al111t
!Iv w fd de(t'dl!fl! 1•11 •f'lflllr~ ID fl!e
!hem. wltti Ille 11Ktsa1ry ¥0Uchers. In
!tit office ol flM d••-cl IM· abO\le ,
e11t1tled cou.-1, °" to pra,enl them, wltll
Int 11ec~••Y vo1<.:.M!r$, to the orr"
ders!11ned 11 c/o Ooo\lld A. McCartln.
UQO Ad1m1o Svlrt 315, Cos!• Mtsa,
C1nlitr"T11, Wtrlch 1$ Ille pltca of bUll'nts1,~~~~~~~~~~~~~.1 of •"• 1on~~ .. ,1g....., In 1111 l"IAll'rs Def• ;.
111r>lng to the estate of w ld dec.edfftl,
·~ ... · r nt:~~ •lier th1 !irsl pti blkl·
!Ion of lhls noll«.
Oiled ~cm~ 11, 1t73
• Mltdrtd Ell1.1btfh Trllitv
E1rc111r1, rt tM Wiii
of n.. •~ NOtnld dlctdtnl n,,..1111 A. M<r~·ton •
150f AclamL Slllta llJ
r~·•:> '•es1, ,. .•111r .... 11 t1i 2'
TMJll'lortl: 1n•1 S4f.ns1
A ' • Irr F.~KHld~
Publllhld Or1nv• Coast Dallv 111101,
r--,.,.~-, 20, 21, 1971 111d J11n111n'
'· 10, 197, 3'4'·13
PUBLIC NOTICE
llOTIC E OF ELECTION I
NOTICE 15 HEREBY G\llEN ttial
WAN!lDf FUGmYE
IN RED SUIT AND IEARD
• Ill February By JAN WORTH
Of 1M o.ltr '"" SNff
Maryland,
Illinois.
and
Per lhare eamlnp .... It
peroont from fl.JO lo fl.O.
The complllll' r e c o r d e d
'81.0'I mllllon in UJl>llitles. and
f98.0'I million In -!or
11'73, up !run 137,19 milllon
Jut y....-. PRODUCERS CAN pass lhe
increase on to consumers tn
the form of hJgher prices.
That would likely mean a 2.3
cent a gallog Increase In retall FINANCE
gasoline and heating oil prices ,.._ _______ _,
J Udginl! from lhe BMUal
report issued thi.1 week by
the R=moor Corporation,
developen ol Laguna Hills
Leisure World, it appears the
mArket tor all-adult com-
mWllUes Is booming.
Roasmoor made $4.1 million
income after ta1.es ln fiscal 1m, up fl million lrom 1m.
"Both private entUJ)rise and
govemmen~ loog<>lieoted lo
the youth market, a r e
diJOOverlng the mature adultl"
the repoli commented.
RESIDENTS OF Lquna
Hiiis Leisure World must be
at least 56 yeart old. Age
requiremeotl of the other
Rossmoor adult commWlltles
range from •5 to 50.
The ..,.ts Include f 2 I
ml1lJon In land, f22.S mJWou
ln projecl devtlopmenl and
materlala, and fl.I miWon In
COllUllUllJty facllllies.
llJll TttwflOi.
FUEL PREDICTING
John T. Dunlop
oil produced in the United
States. '
Dunlop admitted the price
rise would not boost oil sup-
plies but "will create ad-
ditional incentive for the
petroleum industry to purs ue
further research and develop-
ment efforts, nevi exploration
and new technology lo aug-
ment our energy resources."
in February, ll\lnlop said,
The propo6ed new tax,
which must be approved by
Congress, would •iphon up to
$5 billion in oil company prof·
its in the first year following
e nactm e nt, Treasury
Secretary George P. Shu1tz
estimated,
The money. Shultz sug •
gested, might be spent eilher
on a trust fund to help finance
energy·related projects like
rapid transit that are ex-
pensive and risky business
ventures or a "plowback"
system under which oil com·
panies could get part of the
tall back through refunds or
tax credits and spend the
money on new refineries or
more energy research.
THE TAX wouJd prevent
windfalls by heavily taxing
any money earned through the
sale of crude oil above a cer-
tain base price. The base dif-
fers for each company but
has been rough1y $4.25 a bar-
rel, and the tax would be
based on a graduated Scale
from 10 lo 85 percent.
Elk Hills Field
Ready to 'Flow'
TAFT (UPI) -If Congress
gives approval to tapping the
Elk Hills Naval Petroleum
reserve fGr domestic use, the
oil field is in such good shape
that the oil could be lloWing
within weeks.
An administration-backed
bill to start pwnping from
Elk Hills to alleviate the fuel
shortage ls now the subject
or conference between the
Senate and House with pros-
pects shadowy whether it will
be passed before --t h e
Christmas·New Year recess .
10 billion barrels. Second
richest in the East Texas field
which has an estimated I.9
billion in the ground .
THE NAVY has recenUy put
a "ho comment" policy on
its staff at Elk , Hills but it
had previously been estimated
that production cou1d build
swiftly since the field has been
kept in military readiness.
Experts said the 160,000 bar·
rel figure could be reached
i:n tv;o months, 230,000 barrels
a day in 18 months and 350,000
barrels in three years.
PVC Okays
Southland
Gas Boost
REVENUES TOPPED fl8.I
million from the corporaton's
six adult and two family·
oriented communities, com-
pared to SSS.3 million in 1972.
Headquartered in Laguna
Hills, Rossmoor also has built
developments for some 50,000
residents in California,
Arizona, New J e r s e Y ,
~ a mts1age m
stockholders, Rot!smoor presl·
dent and chairman of lhe
board Roos aw.. described
1973 as the company's .. finest
year," both growth-wise and
linancially.
IJABILITIES lhclude tlU
million In ..,.,....11 poyable
and accrued lfabllllles; '40.3
mlllloo b\ llO!eJ, bondl, and
-loons, and "·' million In clefem>d looome
lax.
Stockholders' equity
amounts 10 f30.e mllUon.
The corporation paid '2.IS
million In inoome lax in 1973
and deferred fl.14 million. LOS ANGELES {UPI) -
11te state Public Utilities
Conunission has g i v e n
Southern California Gas Com-
pany authority to boost its
rates to support an exploration
and development project for
natural gas in Canada.
Air Cal Claims Fuel
Rollback's 'a Kil'ler'
Developments opened this
year include:
-R<losmoor Coconut Creek,
In lhe Mtami metropolitan
area, for 5,500 adult con-
dominiums around M acies
of lakes and an !&-hole golf course. The increase, -announced SAN FRANCISCO {AP) -
Wednesday and effective Dec. Air californla says it will be
18, will amount to $593,000 a unable lo operate if forced
year and will add one-tenth back to lm fuel levels, and of one cent· a month to the
typical residential gas bill, the United Air Lines plans to
PUC said. cancel 13 regular departures
The increase will support from here next year.
a program of Gulf Oil limited R. W. Clifford, spokesman
in the MacKenzie river delta for Air California, told a state
of northwest Canada. Public Utilities Commission
The project is "a critical bearing Wednesday that the
part of the overall program airline already has trimmed
of developing sufficient gas fuel.. needs by 17 percent. He
reserves to meet the long-also argued that flight can-
range gas supply needs of cellations to save fuel wW
the-southern~c a-1·1·1·0-r n·i-a---normcreaselOaG factors or
market," the PUC said improve profits
The f e d e r a I government
plans to allot 15 percent less
fuel to airlines than they
received in J972. That and
other cutl>acks has '!'WTed
the PUC lo investigate fuel
requirements for California's
transportatil>n indl!Slry.
United announced it will
-New World. ·In Willow Hill,
New Jersey, for 1,100 single
family dwf lllngs.
-The lim pba,. of the l30
million Laguna Hills regional
shopping center.
-Initial transactions toward
some 30,000 future dwellings.
eliininate I! flights, mooUy THE JS.PAGE report
~ly, between ~ Francisco described/future commercial
and 10 other cities in six states developn\ent in the works, in-
beglnning Jan. 3. Affected a~ eluding the Laguna Hills
flights to Los Angeles, Detroit, Health Spa set to open ne1.t
Eugene, Ore., Portland, Seat· fall and a seven-story medical ~-Rene>, Sae r a nu: n t.o .,._centeLproposed to link with
Stockioll, Modesto and Hilo, Saddleback C o m m u n I f y
Hawii Hospital
Complete .Mid-day American Stock List
--~ ----~ -~ ---• -A&-l..ilstC"! (aopltil HI'S 10 l.;:.:~ Fld R1sout .1' l.~t..:': •lt<:1ftdu ,:1U ;~?t ..-GE.Jlf!.1:% ,·~.'': SomUnln .JO 1 '-r'C~ ··•eo .-' .... fd .l?b 14 2tl felmontOll . 11 12 .... ~ ITEl. t:o<P 10 )!•-"" P11cG&Epf 2 IS 2S -+" SlrrlOllS .IOD ., '"'"" .... ~vto".20 1 !~·~ C:::tun .llb 1 ••.-o,. felsw1y .ii ,, 1~-. .. ~1 l'-J .1--PGEltpf l"' I u""-~ sim.,i.111,,., 11 4"-•,,.. 'btr Ptt~I :io c..resw .29 ..., l Fibn!lld .,, i. '*-~ .>act"' -~ 2 ''•-''< PGE spr 111,, 1 '' • 'n Si"'~• wr,. s lt'h • ~ "rr-.~ml 1 ::: •.• Car,..I ... U ~·-~-!\• Fldkot..iSll x• 13 •.• J~wy 1l J\io-~1 PGSrpf1'4 IS I! .. +"'° ~kCit~~I : :~·i,i
'"'• f'rK ~ ~-. (~ CMri•rC""' ,. 211)-'. f ldlfl<O .,, :.! ·.~.. . ... ·"'"'' Cp )lo. 11 It ·--· ··PGEP'I• ll;o.. I 1n. . . ' sJo I~ ~ to I~>-.... 11.cllon 1no!I 21 )U.+ ~1 C..!ols Cf.¥. IS Jw.., t't f ltm(DA ;06 -, -..., Alronle IMI S 21~ ... PGEltl!il l\lo 1 It ••• !.oll i 'OMll'!Oul.1 I 1 -t1 CailleAMI 1 2'0 -+\to Fitmwy lt'IC 10 )\1,. ft JollnPTer .21• 11 ''"' , .• P11eHok1 .lt t i +'lo Sotll~.0.0 JI VJ •·• ... dotll OOG1 1 11~ .. .,. Cti\Jetonln '° ''"•"" FillrDy.Okl 22 6'--"• JS.tll<hlnc: i 111•\0 P•tNW\.11 I I),. ••• 'IOI• , ,..,_Ill '*radix 1n, ' n1 • 1-. C.¥11ron c. 2 l\1• 111 Flnc:l ~8 .20 J 1~ 11 JuplMr Ind 2 '~•• ~I PilCS¥\..fl .11 4 "' ••• ~P ·"' J 12 ••• '*roFlo ()y 1 3.,_ .. \• C 0 I Corp • l'o •.• FlnGln .:Jee I IYf • \, -K It-P1ll C.p 1 11 •.. ~ci~·IGt ao: II._~' '''°"'• Inc: 1 I -.... C.llu Cr•tt IJ I '.. FsOln t.llb i "". .... Killwrl . '°' • 61\-\'I P110Ftl ·* i l'-'-.... SCE I.» 11\o ••• "'~I TK ,. n ..... Ce!'! Sort .09b u • -\I Fsl °'""wt ' l!t-.,,, Kill>oe• Inc: ll 1•.. •.• P•IOM I.ho •l ...... \o SCE::: ~·;; ~ 1tt. -n1 !~l:t::.: : 1~ ::: ~~~u~ ;~1.~: ~::~rz:'.:; ·~ ,; ".~~'. ~:r~:: 1~ ;12 .... ~::::i'\;'J 1
: 'i!!""".~ ~~Opl111:•i • :"" :::
'IC Pllto ill l 2~ir-V. ChmpH .02b ti l\~ ••• 1$1VM I."" 11 ll'h + :i.o lit.I¥-RI J I ...... P1t1tato1 ta I JI;, ... Sii lltfA ,'.,'" ,', ~-,·.·• 1.lrbotne Fr U i\o,. :i.. CNorMI Incl l I V, ... UtVaMt wtS II t·lt--1·\t Kar(.orp .lO :h 61/1-loo P1r11P1• ,IQ S t v, ... "'' -+ """'<' .1• n 11\o-lf Cl'llrwr Md 11 3 ••• l'stmr' .2llt t · ,,,,_ \" Ktnwin .» 1 1 , .• P•r'wy Ol' S J1"! •.• $cotirm.aro in 4 ~:_.·" ·1··· Mil '° ' IJ>.o • •• c H c Corp 1 , ....... FIKIWrF't M I '"'• \1 Ktle"""'.... 2 Jlfo ••• P•rsOll .no 1 Jt\-\.'o Spln(.tr c ll 1.1nWood'S l 11 -1; ChmExp .20 I 4 + V. Flsnm.aro .20 ·11 2''> ••• Kt•-.... 1S U~o-I;, P•tFSf\.111'1 11 1'-•.• =••.n 12 11.t .1.11~-•Alrl ts ,Chfrry8 .21 llOU.+V• FlilfJlnd .12 31\o ,,, KtrC0 .1CI 'Jl••lt-P•t.toon .20 U I \•-"" st•~~ ;;1:,_.-:• ::~1:~cit : ~:~:. :;~ g:~~u~._;: ~ ~~! t: ~~'rl'ducl 1: ~t:· .~~ :r1:~~,;: ~ 1~;).; ;::~ ·~ ,~ ~i:: ~; st•Nie11i'cp • 1 • .:: •11 •m lndu s ~ .... ~. Chrl~tna Co 2, .~ .... \'t' Fl• C.lpit•I • Ht •·· IUti...-11 Pr 1• 2 -~ .. Ptaw I.I'll:! II 1o:i.,-lo SIM11Pr .d: " s• ••.•
1.llagl\ .IJrlt •l s ... Cl Cn~ l.Sttl 3 11:i.-\-. Fl• Roc:ll 111 Ii i.._-\-'I Kiii Ark Cp S9 ._.... P91wEH WI • \to-1-. Sid P1clllc ll l•t-'• ::::;.Ai~~ ~ ~~:~.:: ~.;,.~;"[1 'j :;~\~ ~:~~T:;'.: ! '~•\+·i~ ~J:':,~!o~ i.: ,:~ ::: ~:T11~~· ~ ~~: ~ ~::~~71! ~ 1·~~-·1
AIJnllre l>ll 2 I i i .,, Ciner1~ If I ::: l"Ovdr11ft1 I 111-'lf Kit Nti9i;o 6 Iii+'-' PtllflObWI 11 ,,,._ ... SlarrelH .'IO l 6 -'•
Allied .1rti1t 77 ,,,,_ \~ Circle II .2ti )(I l l•+ "-FOJGC J . .a. rlOOO "Vll-1~• Kit.rYu Ind 2 l 'lt-1-. P9"" E ·~ S t •i.-. lo Sllllllm IPll 7S 10-'9-1,
Alpl\l lndUS . ' l\t ... CllrnFi11 .1• I 2'1-t ..• For Clly .11 7S •Vo ... Kni<ker Toy , 1n 1 .,. 'lo P.,•RIEI I.I J n ... si,, ... ~ •• ·,J.~ ,•, li•-.... All•mll Cp l l ''" ... Cl. Finc:I Cp l l -"-For11tUI ?II . 11 .2 •.. K111llmre .Cl 1 20.... ... ntrOfl Ind l •·lt-1·1• « ,_,., I Altte Corp II ._1.+1·16 Cl.Irk (of!~ S '·• ,.. Fo•Slan.21 ll t +"" K-Ttl lnll t l 'J.i • •11 Pep 8oV1 I )\ Ult+""' Slf'PlllC .:Mo 16 IJ\11" It.
•
• Gtn"r!I M11nlclp11 I Election wlll bel NT R Ph Ml~ rri 1tit-c11y °' FOll~ttoln-:--van,y -lily-TIRR¥~G{l;A ~-• -
e" T11csll1v, thll 5th dll'f (If Marti'!,
WHEN OR IF the leg}slation
is approved, Elk Hills is in
such a stale. of readiness_tha.t
its constantly malntained 1,000
wells could Start producing
180,000 gallons of oil per day
within 60 days.
GM, Ford Allee co w1 1 1.11-1.16 Cl•r'e c. .30 1 ,,,__ v. Fiia. C•r .JO 1 ''" .. . -L L--Ptpeom . .a ' •~, ... r,::~_::i;., 1: ~"'-'i; .Aller.Edl-SO-L..I_,......!.~. C!Mll!l!Ll~-.. F.J..tltM'I .4' 11 _.,_ ~ I.I h!oe.Jn---10--1'1...... Ptrllll C .JOb IJ '"' ... •• .. _ ··-· -----Alc!N pt 3~ zSO .q • \lo Cliiiiij" ':<!~ 1 '"'•+ \~ Fr•n,1N .J2 t S'.l -lit Lilf1y it.cili ., ,,,,_ v. F't"ffl'lii'iTCO 11 .,,!i-f-.,. '"''" "' .. -, .. -1t1~. '"'" Ill• fflllow1 1111 o111cars: I Thia rnan was las.t seen
For tllrtt 131 Member1 ol llw! CllY violating all speed limita,
council (FU!J term ol lour ¥a1r1l , dr" · I d l"k h" I The polls wlll be oll4!n betwfffl 1M , 1v1ng a s e -I e ve IC c
hourt 01 1:DG .t..M. •rid 1:00 P.M. pu1Jed by various animals.
EVELYN H. GRIPPO Subject in question was
DeP\llV CU" Clerk h d, I d . --• The 46,000 a c r e reserve
lying 16 miles southwest of
Bakersfield, is the biggest oil
field in California and one
of the largest in the United
States.
OATEO : Oecembtr it, 1tn rat er rotun ca in a 1't:Y
Putillstttd o r11nv• coast O.llY pi1111, suit and cap, black boots,
Oecembtr 20, 191l llU7·73 has a v.•hite beard and was
PUBLIC NOTICE ------------5UPl!"lllOll: COUllT 01" CAl.ll"OllflllA
COUNTY Of ORANGE
C1111 Humbtr 111S4f
SUMMONS
Ptah•lil/{1): Gef"aldlna Fld!M ¥1. Oe-
1~"1(1): Cl11uda Poll~. Ed'w11rd A.
111maer. OOH t 1t1rough x , lnct11slv1. I To t:if DNll"'d'~I(<~:
A clvll eompMlnl lllt been llltd by
lht PIRlnllfH!l eoalnst """'· II vou wish
to 6efend lhll l11wsull, \IOU muil file
In !hi~ courl 1 w•l!!en olc1din3 l11 r•spOnn to Ille com!llalnt tor • wrlllen
or or111 pleading, u ~ JuMlce CourtJI
within lO dil\11 after lhll 111mm0111 Is
st•vtd Oii "°"· O!n1rwlsc, vour lletault
wlll bf enlfre<! on 1ppllc.1ll011 bV lhe
rlftlntlll(sl 11nd the court mav tnt1r1
11 judgment 1191ln1t you tor the m011eV
er ilh~r reltel requesled In lht comnl,ll~!.
'II you ¥rl1h TO 1ttil Ille 11d¥lc1
o! •tt ~llorMv In lhl1 m11tter, you ,
1hould do so promptlv !O tllftl your
pl--'11111, II tny, m11y IHI flltlf on
time.
t'lel~ J11n. 20, 1911
(SEAL)
W E. 51 JO"IN, Cterk
8¥ i;llr~n E S"~"'· 0f'!lvt¥
COLONEL S. HERIUHG 1"11.Aflli<LI N
,ll•orne\I at Law
~M 'l!a11 111~ St.
carrying a large bag. He was
heading nbrth.
Due to his great speed and
large sack, he Is \vanted for questioning, We have also
been notified that he ha"
been soreading cheer and
i;ood v.·ill. Reward for mak-
inv. rontact v.·ith this subject
\'."Ill be a ?l'lerry Christmas
and an Happy New Year.
YOU OR YOUR. DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US when you
need a delivery. We will de-
liver promptly without extra
charge. A great many people
rely on us for their health
neNs. \Ve welcome requests
for delivery service and
charge accounts.
PAR K LIDO PHARMACY
351 Hospital Road
FrM Delivery
Newport Beo1ch 642-1580
rt has an estimated 1.3
biillon barrels of oil at depths
up to 6,000 feeL Alaska 's north
slope Prudhoe Bay field is
estimated to contain at least
COllEUEASE
LEASING l:J [i
Your Ffttory Autflorlft'd
CheYToleJ LMll119 DHIM • New '74 Y .. a Hatchback
$8840 Pt:lll MONTH
PIUI Tax & LI(:. On A.ppr. Credit
24 .Mo. o.e .L.
CONNELL CHEVROLET
2128 HARIOl ILYD.
COSTA MESA , 546·1200 CMll Mt... Ctllf, n,17
T-': 11'tl 5t'·1111 ljiiiiiii A1t-r tor p1111ft1111 ·• II Publ',111:.1 Oran oe rnast D11!1y Pilpl.
Dec""'f>el" XI. 11, 1971 tnd J1nuer¥
l, 10, 1914 3ES8·7J
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OP' INTENTION TO ENG,f;GE
JH THI! SALE Of< ALCOHOL1c 1 alVl•AGES
Dtt•..,btr Jt, lt7l
TO WH OM IT MAY CONCERN: 1
SublKI IO l~su•nce 01 111~ Ileen~
•POiied lor, norke 11 netebv 9!ven 1~1
Int 1•'1-J~r~lprtfll nropos•• '~ ~ell .•lt~~Olk
t1e11-r1ge1 •I II•• 1>•eml1n. descrl~
•• 1o11aw1: 3333 Brl1101 Strtt!, Area
0 -11, Cos•• Mese , •
Pursu•nl 10 111eh lnt1ntlorr, tllt 11n-oer~lgr>ed 11 •Pnlvl"ll '~ 1ne o~pArtm~n1
of Alcotlollt Bever11ie Conlrol !or lu11ance
ot tn AIC'>l!Ollt l:ll!v~· .. ~• tlcen•t tcr
!hew prefl'lfstl 11 lolll)Wi:
ON SALE BEER & \'/IN!:
U~cn. f"ldt PUllHC E•tln9 PIKt)
CHATEAU WINE ANI'>
CHEESE SHOPS, INC,
Ptlblllhtd Cringe Collsl Delly Pllol.
O.C""'btr ~. lt7l :1156-13
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI! OP' NON-ll!ESPONSll1LITY
At 114 "'°"'· 11, 1tn Wllll1m M. Jol'lnM!fl
1n(I DorolMt D. ~Olln\On. 111 1 Cast
Hitll'W•Y• Lot St, leguru 8..c:l'I..
1"1d the 1l0tlo. ol Marlin Jonnson wa1e-r
WOl'ltl SuJlplr Co. In lh tnflr•f>f· Tiie
S:llf<"'1Mf" bel119 S.OVll'I Or~I Supply c. Wm, M, J~ end Dorlne1 D.
JOIWI-wlU no tonoar •w.imt 111\r
r1Jt.P011slt1lllry tlntf"Ci..I flt" otP1erwi1t for
tnt conllMMd OJ*llloftl ol Marlln
JohntOl'I W1~1 S<nlf!lr Co.
W""'. M. JDl'lnloPI
PlltlllltMll Ottnllt C011t Oallr Piiot.
DICtmDll' •· :n "' tm ,.....13
PUBUC NOTICE
•ICT1110UI IUSIN!l5
NAMI ITATEMl:NT
Thi followl1111 P"llOl'I b d(lfno ~u•lllffi
'" PIONll lUI TAKE OUT No. l1. 21&0
Hlrbor Bl....:11,. Cotlt Mttl, , •. m n.
,,D,.., It. OIDl'I. "' Ctrn1t!011 Aw .• CO.It Mtta, Cl. '21>2'.
Don't be impulsive with your
RETIREMENT INVESTMENTS
CALL
NEWPORT EQUITY FUNDS
RIGHT NOW
and learn how other investors are
earning an average of 10% to 14%
DON'T DELAY
Get the HIGH INTEREST Retirement Fund Story
From Newport Equity TODAY
17141 644-8824
Did you. kl'IOW 1111(, under an act of Congress c.lled the
Keogh Acl you, as 1 wit employfd indN~ll. c:•n conuibutt'i•
11 ~ilicaf"lt' ponion o l your Income. before u x11. to •
rf!trrement pr~ lor yourself? " , ' . ' "'twPort Equity Fund.' 1n ~'«I ,..., f K~
F Uflds, hn designed 1 program .-mlttll'lf ~•t •nv ~ lrom $500 up, mmtdltte~v. wlth·itto'rM-wer19ing
10% to 14", No longtt" dQ YoU have 10 ec:c:umul•te ,1111re-
ment func#s for lont periodt ar..Jo"' ln1srnt.
progi.-n is one o f th• fl1st in Southltf ~lfor
......__.,i J • • "
As with N~dfJ EQ11it,y's Mlfl es11biht1Jt Trust
Oeed program, yew will bentfft frOfft.....:.nd .. 114 !119•t and
carefully .. lec1~ i"""'1mtn11. "·.
GIVE YOURSELFcTHE HIGH lll'llRl!STCltDICE
FOR YOU
0
R KEOGH FUNDS'rifllYEAll •••.
CAt.I.. 'TODAV 'Upto ... •11!1. wlO ~ ........... Tiiis bUtlnttt If COfl(fUttld by 1111
llldl¥ler11111,
T•• '.~; •:::. 1"" ..... 1 , ,..,.,, r.ewpovf Equi·ty 'Tunds ,_,., tltfll, .., Or•noe Counlt Oii J 1if I I r;
"''''"""" "' 1f7l, ""'""" -N...,,.oort Ctrt!trf620 N1wporf Ce11ttr Or./S"ul"ti 2 11
PdtllM Ora,,.e Ce1tt O.ttr l'IY'" ""'e ..... , 8 C 11 l ~ I 2•
...... il'.lbtl " ""' ~ .. 11 ........... ·.··.·.··.·.·.'."·.· .... ·.·.·.'.·. •••
1
•• 1.·.
1
•••••• .... ••• ••• 1•n """n
• . .
p • Ft • AlumSpe.4' t '"'• "-CIOD•y .OSI: 11 l l.;.-'lo Pre,nltto.<IO 1 20 • "> Lil-•5111".IM J1 2,,.__.,. P9rt«C.0.P 11 l~'' 'JI Sle¥coknl1 2 2,,._, ..
lit,,. II Am~ss wls 111 111/1 +1\'I ~1 Inv wts SI ' +..., Frlgltronlc 11 lilr.• \olo Lilnclm-Ld • Jl'I-\" Plloenl1 511 l} ''·•• '1 stpCorp .SStl JI •\-o~ \1 r• "e ix•ng Amco ll'ldll s 3'h .. c ,_,.I Corp * • ..., ... Frl<ind Froi ' , ... .., Lil,.,.,,, .:Mo J 310-'·" ""Uiltl .Sle l '"" ..... SIO@SlloP ·'° ' lSl.'o-t ••
AmAgrMm I 11~ •.. ColtMltn 9 2\0 •.. FrlKM .:JOv S t \o •.. Lil.,.Wd )It If J~'·" Ple NP.IJSI 11 l\.il-"t ~110r9 21 •-1·1•
AmB11trt .!oO J •""-\.o Cootsto .10 ] 6'•• \la FrDlllltrAlr I (''I+ \.'o L..lneco Inc: 1 J Plldmnt .H • Jlo !i.uplrFG .lO J •~~+Vo
Ch 0 ArnBusP .10 t 110... -· Col!Mlt .i.. 2 11•., ••• FrOlllAlrws II l'i1 •·· LilrRttl.Jlb I 1'1+'(~ Pie Pl~lie 1 •h• W Supc.r11l .Klb I } •.• ges t AC11M!1wl lll l·l._l.16 Col'lenHlllCI 1 1'0-1'1 -GG--L..lt"WllAlwt 15 lo--1·1' Plone4'rS.y! I 1'1 ••• SoJoertn ,tJ 11 J -\II ar ll .l.mFlt ,1111 2 12Vl-t V. Coll~1".I~ JS 2'-+ \ .. u.t>rlltll)lt S •'•+\'I l..IToudlFd 10 ... "-P"-"trltl 21 4 • SupSurfC.11 1 1 -"" A Ft1\ch w5 J f(i •.. Coll In" Inc "6 21,._ h &IJillY Crp i. l '• ••. I.CA Cpwh 11 t 1-\'lo PltWsYil .i.. l •'\ ,:: ~ (,p 17 Jl~ •.•
DETROIT (UPi) -General
1'-fotors Corp. and Ford P..lotor
Co., found innocent Wed·
nesday of criminally con-
spiring to fix prices in the
auto fleet market, still face
lawsuits from customers ask-
ing more than $2 billion in
damages.
AmGl•IFVI 2 ~.-\~ (oleN.111 .Sl l t \\o-'11 v.; ... 1 .21i11 J .,,,.._\~·L.e•Rcllll .?4 111 ••• Plu•CPAln 11 lt.-•1 s.vi.cir..1x 5 •l1 ...
Am 1n11 Pie 1 ' , . . Cole<nlf! .4' •S t i\ • .• C...(il COrp • • •• , ·uar H19 2S S\~ ••• Pl11Mrot1ic 11 11\'I •. • s.yn,1 •¥ Cp tl 2"'° .•• A ...... l~•.n J Jl1 ••• Col11!9e .1111 l s·-"' G.lrlilnd .XI ID s •.. l.lllhC.0 .SQ 2 6h •.• Pt11111 c.r ... Jl ., •.. S.yrilt•CAI 5"1110••1""
A,....Lrel .l) ~ ~ • • . CotComl .10 1t \l; . • . c;..,1or01 .20 11 J -loo l..N Eftl .XI • to -"-Ply Gem llo. • l li • \'I ~t•• c M J 114-l + ,,_ ..... Mol lnn 1 IV.• V. Coh•ICo .21 l'I i\ ...... "o G.lrnor Slff I I'• •.• l.eeN.ltl(O 27 l \'I ~·· PN8MIWI! t4 1 ... •·· 5'MoCp .JO ti 21 -\'I A Pttro 1.20 , XII•.,"' ColwM19w1 1 l'-"' Ge•rlll .1«1 ' t'~•+ i .. l.te Plllrmt 1 U ... PfttuSc • .o. ' I "'"'" \Ii 5rium ~ 10 1111-\• AmPl111 IOI< ' • ..__ '" Combd Com 31 11v.+ ._ Gen 8ullor1 1 U·16-1·1• l.lftlClh Pl"u • l._ 'II Prleum O\'l'I 10 J..,.,. l'I -TT-A Prt< .OStl I J\-.+ 1'1 C.omDEquop U U -~• GenC!f11 .t0 IO I'·• II: l.«i9~Pr . ., 1 i •.• PoloronPl"d 1t IV. •.• T111ll-... J 11 • t-. Ary1RU 1.llD I I -~. Cm11<0 l.10I I 34 -.. (>fl Houwwr 11 1\f-.... l.llSl.lrt TK IS .I •.• ~l~enro SI. l ,,_._ \ .. TtdWI 0--7 1\0.,. ....
Am AecGrp 1t 2'• ... C.omlAllf .lO 6 I + "> Gen Jnltrlor i •'9-111 l.ell!tF .n.;, t •'·• Pot"r l"'tr 21 J + b TKlllll T1~1111 1J ~ •.• Am s..Jet ·-• 1< •••. Cornl M ·'°'ii I 11,.._ l/t Gift II.IC Inc 2• J'1o-\<. l..tw11BF ,JO I ,,__ .... Pratt L.ilm l I 10"1 .. , ltt Srm 1 I • ·•
Am Te< .080 ' l \• .•. Commodor t l'to ,.. (>fl RtSH<h 1 ' ... Liberty F..0 7 I'll • .• Pr11t1L,pl'2'~ I lOVo-~ lejonAn . l 11'-+ Iii Am Tralnng • 4lo-'.'1 Cornm l'\'f( 2 71 .......... Gf!Re!llll".C.. S I ••• l.lllAM .100 I I '•,., Pl"tl COrp ' 2i1 ltltti.• ill ( 11\J •.•
AMICCp .O' • 1io •·· Comswc (p 13 1~-\. Gerl'jll Inc: I l"' ••• l il¥Llnn Ill 1J ''• •.• Pre!'!Hltl ... I 1•11-"' lffll'WO C.p 10 lfi+ ... Arid•t• Rad 1 t~• ... Corn1111()yn 11 1 •.. Glft•S<O Te<: 4 1\\-•.. l.irw.• n Nn » 1;., •.• Pl"Hll'J' C4' ' ,._, •· · Ti-to wtl I 1 -to AA;lc .IOb 20 no+ v. Compu1•• ll 2J-lt+ \11 Gerb«rSt. 111 J • -"" llo't'ds Eltc • Al-\l Pl"mMt .o~ S 41/1-"' Ttf"ldrl\e lft ll IJ"-• ..,, NIUWJl\y Ind 10 3\o• '.'• Comp qu~ 2 H o ... Gi11nt F .tog I 11,,.. ... l..oellmfts .n t ' -I• Proltr lfl'! l 10 11'.'o-\Ii Tt,..oP WU •1 2•1o• ~ A D Ind Inc: 31 .. -1·1• Compt Mell ~ 2'11-''> Gl11fttYI .!Oil l.MwsTll wt UM ''' ••• P'rp(T 1.•111 J9 10">-l'I Tl• tntl Ca 60 •v.+ :1 Applied O.t t . ,,,,._ to Cortct'le .J:a I 7•.-1'1 2S t 13·1•+1·16 l.SB Ind''* I 21.o-'l PrDVGM .IO 1 t :\;o• Vo Te•sllr Crp 2J '""'"" \io
The innocent
A~ltlne .10 112J'h ••• Cortcrd Fat! 1 1"'-+\" GITAI~. 10 7~••"" LlVCpwti I 1''1-\<o Pr"lltlE .HO t 2"'-'JI Ttll1ron-.t1 I lt'lt-\11 .V;us Inc I ... •. . ConOfc Cp 111 2''1-.... GI.ad! ?ti; 1l 2"'-.... Lynell Corp 21 21> ... ,,. Pl"llO &kl .14 7• ,,,.._ ~I T ,. I lnc•r s J•it-.... verdict , .lrrCLd .080 IS Ul/t-·~ ConnellyC.. '•:U. ... Gll\10( Pr 1 2..., ••• -MM-PJAln<W\ t 2"'1•"' thorDlrM~ 16 l,,._ .... .lr-LilG 1.JD (Q 2• ..... "> Conroy ln<: 13 J\'I-\'I GlatUpl2''1 1 l 1...,-\,"I ~~rOdy (t'I 1 ~ •••• Pull•~ 16 1-'lo Tt'lrlltm .ioe • 7•.1o-l1 however, lessens the chances
the two automakers will ever
have to pay the S2 billion
damages sought by 38 states
and cities and five fleet
customers who had to pay
higher prices when discounts
were eliminated in 1970. These
43 price fixing cases are pend·
ing in federal c o u r t in
Chicago.
The fleet market -sales
of 10 or mor e vehicles to
a single customer at one time
-accounts for 12 of every
JOO car sales and iS valued
at more than $2.5 billion. Until
May 21, 1970 Ford and GM
offered discounts through their
dealers averaging $250 per
car.
Electricity
Powered
Train Eyed
.Vml( Ent u ,._..,. 1,-. ConsQ!I ~s SO 6'•l ... GlenGe .JOt 3 ,,,_ '•• Mt PJw 1.11 2 ll~ V. P'uftl11G l!Jt 1T ' ..... 'It lid-II .XI 10 l\t ••• Armln Corp 1 1""•+'-' Con~Ret .10 • 10 _,,,, GtenOiSll 'k l i'·'-+~ Mlllo!'y Ad ::n "1 ... Purepc: U.1J U t \;,+"' Tl!11ny .10 ''"" •.• Arrow E!tcl 36 1>1 ... COllSYl>f (p 10 6'0-~. GlosMt8 .2• 2 ,,,, ••• .._mMrt .11 11• 111 ,., -0 0,-Tl"""ta .200 10 IJ\1+ \0 .lrulld!Cp s-1 ....... "1 (Oii! M.l!erl lO 1 ..• Gloue11tr E 21 10 -"' .......... ! Stti ,, l'I• •.• -It It-Tltmlls Opt! l l \lo ••• Ar-'ti , J'•-'lo ContTet wls ~ 1 •.. GIO\ltr,lncp 1 I ... M6m;tir .JO I •lfo •• , R•nc:Mr £• S U:W.t \\ Tot.l\llm .JS t ih-\'o
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8elll¥l0tlR l i l~+\.t OIRo,.llld ',,,. Hl~OSIL J '·' ••• MDamCo Co ''"' •.• R!«ffl'ft ,24 s l~+·;,.:USA•erlun'I • l .... -~ .. Ben lnll .OI t 1.,. ..• OlsrPll .t9b • ls,,.,_·;,; toiamo1r11 .J2 l Jll •·• MOOO lncor 2 ,,,__ ~ =~*';;"' 2: !>'-~ US Al<1utt11 J 10~-\II BelKOtR 'N 2 I~ \. Ottecto In< 17 I ~ H-¥ PIM olt I~+ 6t MtgOI' l,:Qb 11 '*" \II -. + " Un1¥C9 .OS. I 1\~ ••• &en S!2.12b ! !1'11+ \'lo Ot>oel:r Cp 109 7.,;_'i.; ltlrlAll.JOll 1 151"ot \fo MMtonS ,32 1 J.11 ··· AoDtlll ll'lclll ! :~+'Vi U"lvCOll12k 11 •o-\'f
&eriel!.td WI II JU.-Vt Dl¥Ap :ioe 71 •+-~ Har!fld Zft y 2~1 ••• ft'OltS SW! $1 I J -"' =:.::. ::'1 2J 11·1t+ 1·1• Univ Rel Co 1f ~ Ill Bfn•Ui Cp J Jloo-1/1 OHJllld,lOO 1 1lo Hlrt1Mt Cp 1JJ6 ... -\;,Molttlcli1191n 1 ll>t-111 AllOtrl ("' •U'll +'·UVlridwll 2 S\i ••• &e•oEntlll 1 J,,.. ... 01amonc1i M l 19""•'ih .,._rW¥GrP J n-. •.• #tV1rn\.10 I 13 -\-. 01111 .,. 11 •• .. -vv-6er9 RI .~ID S s1,, • .... Olatioler ~ IS 1tt HllDrO Ind U 1l1-\'o MD¥1e\tr ·'° t •II\-YI Ro 111'111 lllU 4 .. + \lo Vat Dor Ind I JV.-V. &e•Ot"&rw 11 J +l'I OlltirO .o!Ob I~ 1, -'ii: Haydl\S .O!tl 8' I~ •.. Mov~l111Jln 10 '-•.• RolllllSll'!t"I t )\ti ••• V•l$1al!OI; 2 '"' &erniom1I } J~ ,,, DIOCIH In( , 1\.,._ V. HlallllChll'I J ' -l'I :¥PO Vlclto l J .,. R°"'o Ta:r l • '11+ °"Valley Mttl , 41'1-·i-t
Berte• COtp J ,,,, •• . OiK l"Wlc 9 f;\O t ~ Hllh Mor .JO 1 3\lt •.•. MP'S 111trnl 2t I •·• Rou.mor 1 1\1 •, • Valll'ltC .0 , lJ\'o 11i
lltrvtnC .10 9 (';'! ,., Ol""'rlnclwt 1 '11 ... I-WI•<•• Ill ' 1\1. ··• 'Mlllll.1.m .1CI J l \fo ... ::;.a; i!~ 2: ~t.! ~ VthNr '.14 I J\lt ........ Bfthlhm Cp 2 lh ••. OlilynCOtp u ~""-\' Hllltlll,l)lb 10 '"-+ V. MWA .«19 S 41-'l ••• flPJ Prod t I"-Viii .. lint ~ 1\t+ \'I Bfwt•lrEnl ~ 111-.... Oolt\IPtl,. )6.)1\,+lil 1-WrMll .• I 7loo+V. ~M--RKlrldlnc: 1 1..., .. ·~\IMl)ofn ,JI ( 6"1.-~ 6e¥Hll lkp 10 3~+ \'I OttwMll (J) 2' 11,!, HI 0 llKorP .,. JI.-\ '" Nl~O llldl I 2vt-1tt Auddl<-Cp 1 l•~-l.'I Vara lllCOIJI 12 21& •n
Blc Pin .21 11 U\lt+ \II Ort•Ul.1~ l Uh+·~ HlafllftllCao S 1loo •.• NanlAM<:lk o' ' 1·" ,.11 ... ,.1,. .. 111•1,,,_,, Vern11onCp 'l JU ... "' V Suiter I l'-... Or9 '•ir .,, 1 S Hlll"'tWI ~ l l , . , Nttltllll H 1 VI-•" ...... v• ,. vo••• C. &!t'llllM .~ ' U\li + \<o OunloO .... -1 1.... '·• Htpoll"OlllC 2 ) , , , M0111t .IOb J t i,!,-.... RllSll-S IM 2 2.,._ "' ... ' + I ..
s1r111trs .n 'IGVi •.• Ourors .'t loJ • , 1-::: HD'-Ind 1 2v. •.. Nilll Htttl" • '"' ... :_llSJc~~1 ·;:' l ~ ~.~~=~:i · 1~ ,~-1:~~ TORRANCE (AP) -An $18 Bio Dy111n'I( 21 ""' + ~ Oyr111tetr C lll Jt. + ._, Holl~ '°'"f ' 1"-"' "'11 Ind WI• 11 I 111 • i · lty•llH .1!6 10 11\li t on Vllo.N lnc:tr SJ 21-.+ \olo Ble'\!1'19 ,., 4 4ff+ V. DrneUEI !« • J\o+ \Ii HllrlMIC ,I 1 11""-\lo NllNf.A .10 e -l • _ .. • • . . Vjnlffl Errt 14 J •·· million f·Aeral contract has s1..e1n1 •n 10 1 •.• 11 HDr11.aH11n1 s • +i-. MtP.,...,. 'u _..., --..--vL;.r·cer , •••
t:\I 81ultllnl wt 10 \-t , , • E :r;1mM -, -,. , .,. HOsklM .7lll I 1<\lo , • • ""J·rtllm 14 4--~" SUMlt .4"19 4 41 + ._, Ill"' 4,~ ... been awarded to a finn in Bodl"""·'° 1s •"-'• E• e o011t 1 1'"" ~LltD 12 lt'Ao-,. JUI clH ,20 • 41/t .•• Saf11ran W 1 • ,,, v:i:i.• ... 2 IV! •·· lkllltck Co S 4:i.o+ \Ii , EarlSc.11.Jt i ~+·~ !10UIMl•wl 11 ""•l·ta foitflollf!.Kltt ' t \I.+ lit SC JOMS .6) 1 ,..__ UI V <Wlltt .lO S )1"11-Iii this Los Angeles suburb to eon &1rrwk 2 nt-\'II E•rltlfte 12 10 ,.;. • .,,. H01ot1 MOl"" 12 •"'-Vi Nelly Oii Kif 13 J • • • s-ni.. Al' toO 11 -l'f W""'1ff 1 :' ~!, build'an e,...,......;mental train Bowva11 .10 st~-EalonO .Kle s taYi+vt HOtl1¥J,11b 1 111-r-'l>t Jitttwill~ J th ... ~S2:~ 't~t:+·~ Wt<k"ui '.n 1 ••• _..... 8owtnffll'll 1• J).\ro+ "1 Etstn(G. I I~• .... HOv!iltn ,IOCI f , ..... ,. !'tttO• l<IM ll' •.. sar,..,1 Ind 11 lh ... WildtH ,IOI! ' ;:....·~ ( wh1'ch wi'll •-po-red by elec-&o-c .to 2 6\1+ ,.. Ec•m« '"-,, ,,..._ •• HNltV• .11 1 •\II-"' Hl.l'llllt .0111 1 ,,,._ "' ••. .......__ w..,,,1.., , 1~ •• . II': ""' aracrllt•981'1 1t s•-.-\(j Ec--c-, 1 1,-,_-::'. Mitlltlllfl Olt u !l.V.+t\olo ,.... ldrl#! '' i.t-1·1' -.JO J ii.+"' Wilf"' ..... "" tricitvitgeneratealtseU. lr"MComot Hit~+"' E~tiiCW!OI 7,, ... _o:; ~••t.10 •It ............ ,,,, '"~ ... $a¥oylndlll 14 \II-\-llO(t01t •• .,,,_,," ' ecJ ~IO'IClll .K 2 J ... Ed"'°' U ,. ?\It-v. ttl!OMll Gari J l \4 ... INt""'k It U 21--"'° kllldr. Inc ' l \11 ... W.~ ,ICll S f"1 ., • The contract was award 11rtn1H WI' 2 '" .. , E"-c.orPt11 , 3 Nudll.!04 .to ' .. 111. "' ,... ,., .a u 1 ... St.N11tr 1,.. ' 14'+ "' :::"'~ _.: S: 1~ ·v;
AIResoarch ManufactlD'lng CO 1r.w.an 19 11 ,,,,._ "' eo.1n" 20 s • ··· ~· .io. 10 f14-"' NTT1""s'"• 1!' "",.. ... t::~ 1 ~ '!' 11~ _ ·.: .. ",'""••.• ""'• .' •, .,.:... •,, llr..-iErt .... s 'j -• E~M iSo J ,,._ ·~ ttw\il\'Ol .15 10 2t1-' ~ 14 Ntcfllclts .. ••• ,. .0$ ... ...,,. .n b• Bowing Vertol Co. of lr"ttreC.0.p l 4--\lo '-·" ,, ..... Hyttl 1ncp '° 1\'lt \'I NJIP1.l• IC\')+,,.. SCrll'lltrJ2 "' •.• Whf•I•"'' ,, ,~_ •• ' I ••-rC . .O i t \11 ... tl<_;n:;::'...m' 1 1··, •~ MW9'c1Pdgi; 2 22 -I'll ...,tS.Vlty 1s l21't,.\"" ko.trrvfl.till J If~-"'' · •..-.. Pbiladelpbla, acting In behal artO.rl lllCI 11 '"' ••• El HO;;;"". I '""'"'" ;:.; _, I-...,,. lll(p 11 1 • . . SN '°"""' 11 It""-\II -·1&. l"M 6 "' •. '
f llrllOY Seillo 6 flt • . • Elt<I M ;,.. '' I'"+ l'I 'Ce Cp .~ I 91"1 + "' !'to tm Dlw u' ,>,,. , •. . SWAMH • S • 61>t-" ::'i ,f61'; 1 • l·l ... 1·16 O( the fedttaJ Department 0 11rool1P 16 ' )l'o;. l'I Eltc "'" f"" l(H ,'°'Olft 2 "-+ 14 ,. T".!m = ~•• 5Nptf"1 "ep 11 lll 1 c:..i lO t~+ ~ Transportation. &r,«& • .to, s " -v. Etec!~~l.i f 1~ ~ ttnoc•Gtwr 1 1\11+ 111 t>10~011 1tc11.1•+1·1• t:!i~.~ is; n::·~ =:t::!ci :.t 1~ 1~ :::
ITU tnot11t 5 ltt •.• Elt<:tlN $1\ 1.s ttl+ l'I tmotrO .IOtll ti ,.\1-1~ ""'' · •\\"'I JJIA.+ 'lfo 1:~ ~ii" 1 •Ill-W WltlrtMtll 6 1'9+" Boeing Vertol ls a subsidiary 1111"11' co 1 11.t ... El T'Ol'lit• 3 ..-. .. v. 1-ct .n ' lift + v. ,,.,,. wt H\o+ "' <Mo,,-., \'-•• W11...,..1 c. ,, 1 llwlll".XIQ I I + \-. ElilG«Ulll 11 1 \lo lndHttdwt 11 4 -\t tfOW COi'!> t l~\tl .. ., ""' j ..,,_ "' Of Boeing Co. 0£ Seatlle 8nd lklndrC 1.0f 11 111.t .,, EQllllr Niii JI ~-.;J.1t lntUthl !i'lt I 't•1·16 Huctaarboil 10 C~\'t ~"!,Mt_. 10 ...... 1•1 WlttiHAfl= JJ .... •1.0 81/rgtll Ind I 1'9 . . • ErniU!, lOt 2 l \II lflll'llm 5¥• 10 1\t ... NUINC 0110 S ll~ ~ ..., .-itttk1 1! '\' .,'j WI Giii J11 l't + 1" Garrett AiRelearcb ls owned aurftilnl • .0 ,. 1\\+ v. Ero 1,.,,;,,it • 1 ~~-"' •n•~""' Jto, ' 1"9-\'I -0 0--St~! LU i.40 1 '"' '" tw1.llf:i Ill I ' ..
b h SI I Co I In' Bull..-.t.o;lat 20 (\,_"' ElOiilrt Al 1 s~-\lo 11\lfmaoke " lh ... OUPl!lr• co J ,, ... " t(~\;jl I ...... Wit •':i .. l"-. yt e gna mpanes 8,,,111, c;.1 3, :I0\11,.,.. Esu•o.tll\ 1 1tot. 111eenano1t 11 ~1·" 5"'1.zo • .'-"~"' r¥1ca<:.IO 11 •111 ... wu"'c!' 1 •"'•" -n , 1 HUis -C C-EUt...¥ Of!> 1 •loo •:,: 1111 Focxtt.'lt 1 l ;. \'I lttltJ1 I 1f 0 '9-W ¥iKt tli• t ~fl-~ WI . 11 • \' •••
'"VI oeVery • f:lt Ptlrol 11!1"'+-"1 Ellln~'(t°tSlo I J ::.; 1~11,lll'lrltl' JJ t -~ .CCo ,IOii JS~•'°! ¥1rn .1 • 4 -" !J~~-U l\'I ·1~ Garrett officials Said the ex· aotdll'IC .. 1 h .. ~ '""•ti'" ,91 , )'" 11111 ""' .10 1 10 -1, i . ..,, 1 1111 ... '°" ea ,4t t t-,. + "" Wli'FJ;i'.., i "'• ..
pcr"mentaI 1rai·n -Id con ., •. 1~ 1cm ,~, ... 1 '-•<.i111¥co u , .. ._·(.; 1M1i. .... 11 1 ii., ... Mc,.-, ,._."' \ac ,,,b ,, ""'-" .,.,,m~ •Jf 14 -·" ·1 • I COmcnr lJ ·~ .... '-•<Irle 14 I 1\.)-\,, IMI Sl,..\t~ lh I" ~ tt ?Yr-V• IM ,IOI I ii~ •·· Wltl.....,i JI 1"
h -• c:ed hen the l"'rl E•P J 4 • t\ ' p JI lllt $ysl . 19 JtjO ,.,., '9 Miii t llro+... "'iftd"':t 1 llro ••• ~ft 4 Ht ... Ytrl ea\ p1vuU w am<e i11to u s _ " P"•tN-ICA-;. I•"-~ 1~1e•P'IOfO ' t + t.i. i@"lf t4elll u • ..., .,. .,. S · 10 '"" • 1.• ""' "t; 1 11li-n tr.l'n brakes are applied into C.tmpll Oii" 21 S 1$-lt-J•lt F1tiirl<I Nit 1 1 '"''l~llm t 11 -V. rtl&'lcl ind 4 """" \'I llrf!JI f! 11 ,!~• l't ·n r J1 4 • It
con1.c.ts i• ·'" ... l"•l'T••M' s, ::: 'l'lllt'jq~'" J 10~-= .,.1! ; !"--~ 3'llt0!~1~ , ~.~ $~.r1 ~1·"'11t:.1·~ sullicltnl quaotitlea of elec-~ :.~ '! f'-.~ ~=~:s=t I t~ ~ :~:t:~ r~ 4 J .!: "' ·ff 1 !". \; 5Plofofrlt .M ... !!II .. ~ u ._" ttlcity to move the train a!: Mtfl'IH l I ... F1mn,os1 11 I .... lllwOlvf ,(j JO s~·" Ottrt rlll\ •'' ••• =-r, r ~.~ ... ~~ 11 -==:
•u ·.a... bJ " d 1 .. 1.:. Suo Oil I $ -... '°tJl!IY ''"' I •\t-\oo lftwl" ... ,IMI II '"'+ llt -JI -man r MYJ-. cons&lK"rl e aa .... nce. .,,,111111 s I" ... 1"11Morll"Jo11 ' •'h•"" ln¥1tlll,•ll 'u.-.-.... !'&fl '"""1 '• " ••• =·~·!: ~ ·.~.~ ,. ... ,.;:; ,, 1 ... CMIOOt Ind\ l 1 -\t "tdMrt .tOQ 1 17\.o-\'o !Dflki Inc, II 10\.o + V. filK Ct! l"r• 1 I • •• ..,.. •
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Wednesday's
CJ osing Prices
Net4' York Vps and
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NEW -YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
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DAIL\' PILO.
Year's High-Lows
Appear Every Saturday
Rally Disrupted
By Oil Tax Plan
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l"'I "" P·E till• Hlall 1.ow Po-iltl Cl'IQ. s.sn frlet P·E High Low Close Chg.
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E RR ORS. Adverti1er1 shoufd check their
ads dally & repcrt errors immediately, The
DAILY PILOT 111um11 li•bility for the first
incorrect insertion only. ------~---~ -------~--· --~---
DUPLEX
[ HcMnfor$1l1 J! ti!) [ Hous1llorsa11 )[fl! J NewPort Shores
I ~~;;;;;;;;;;;'~;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;::;~/F'ec simple. Xlnt rent-
MESA VERDE
SPECIAL
Call 556-8000
For an
Exceptional Value
!• al. 011 I y $59,000.
673-7420 General General
Ul'lll()Uf'. t1()-'tlS
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEXES
$125,000-"Homc-Sized" units of 1,800 sq.
ft. each \Yith three bedroo1ns. t\VO baths,
rock fireplaces . patios, all electric kitchens,
beautiful condition~
$1341000-"King-sized" units: one \rith four,
one with five bedrooms. Both \Vith big living
rooms, fireplaces and south of highway lo.
cation.
UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 675-6000
2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
General General
//~S~~
ANOASSOCIATES • "REALTORS
TRIPLEX AND A VIEW TOO!
One block to Corona del :ri1ar beach. Pride of
ownership property in high rental area. All
units have a vie\v. Asking $132,500. A listing
of Ed Nelson.
CALL 644-7270
2828 E. Coal t Highway, Corona del Mar
-r.:==r-w-,-E_C_A_N_H.,.ELP Y,voOiuUioiiiuiVv;-, -P~ll!!!IJ
SELL. OR TRAD£ A HOME
ANYPLACE.IN THE NATION
UNCOMMON CONDOMINIUM
Bluffs. 3 bedroo1ns, 21/2 baths, 2 story form-
er model. ''ou clon'l have to be rich to buy
this-just s1nart. One look should be enough.
$53,900.
BRIGHT NEW DUPLEX
Comer Jot near • shopping. Steel and con-
crete construction, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths
both units. Old Corona. ~136,500.
DOVER MODEL BIG CANYON
Sparklin~ new 2 bedroom Dover condo1nin-
ium in Big Canyon-ready for fast occupan-
cy. DeHgfitful end location in· ne\v sec lion.
Family room . ~9.500.
QUI ET STREET
Very clean 3 bedroom home \Vith large
family roo111, !orn1nl dining room and 2
balhs. Large patio and Jov •. · maintenance
private yard. $68,900 .
SPYGLASS HILL
Lovely 6 bedroom traditional home. Cozy
famil y room \Ylth fireplace and \\'Ct bar.
Bonus room. Swimming pool, gazebo, view,
$225,000.
~
644-1766 ColdweO,Bankar ..........
21'1 San Joaqui n Hills Rd., N.B.
-·
oflJo .!Jd/e
LIDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge. family rm.,
or 5 bdrms., with 6 bBths. Lido Nord, Spec·
tacular view! Waterfront living rm. '"ith
step-down wet bar. Pier & float. $275,000.
* * * * WATERFRONT LOT ON LIDO NORD
30'xl05'. Magnificent View! $t65,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 B1y1ld1 Dr., Su itt 1, N.B. 675·6161
General
MACNAB
·IRVINE
-------•·------~
WANT SOMETHING BEAUTIFUL?
4 BR, FR. \v/lovely atrium! Great value at
$57,!lOO. Laszlo Sharkany 644-6200. (Y37)
BAYSHORES PERSONALITY )
Captivating 2 or 3BR/FR home featuring
wood & brk ; country kitchen of gingham
& beams. $67,500. Martha Macnab 642-8235.
(Y38)
ULTRA BAYFRONT PARADISE
Spaclous 4BR w/well appointed LR &
master BR. Panelled den w/fireplace.
Pier & slip. ,38!i,OOO. Harriet Perry
642-8235. (Xll)
[Irvine I -ntb-lrvlnt flttllyC:O..paOJ
IOI Doftf'Df'IN 142·1:23$
•
VIEW HOME ••
... In Coron11 del Mor, ~·Ith
Jargl', lowl'r level !Rn1ily
rn1. & patio. Upper level haa
2 bdrrn., 2 bntha: house ex·
p!lndnblc In n1any "'R)'!i,
SSG,500.
f\1ove into this 4 bc-drm, 2
bath home. Localed on tt
large 1._-01·ner lot before ..,, ...... ,.,. ...... ,.,.!!"'"' J Christmas. r-:e\v carpeting & ~ $I 6S PER MO decora!cd for your pleasure.
• VA apprnlsal and '"''' pdcc
VACANT • i"''
2 STY.
Lachenmyer
Realtor
Cute a11 a bug! Tiu1l '!I lhl'
only \\'l,Y 10 dei«;ribc •his
rWfll T\\O Bedroom ho1ne. It
hflis a den "'1111 built-In ~hclv· in.a:. tonnal dµllng tooltl,
hu!h lundiscapin_. and ls d'-'-
Jlghtfully df!COrated. H's the
bellt l\1onoco on lh¢ n1111·kt!t.
$6!1,500.
ESTATE REALTY
1303 AVOCADO DR.
NEWPORT CENTER
640-1120
OPENTIL 9 •/T S FUN lOBE NICE!
TAX HEDGE
Don't \Veit any longer to shelter your in·
con1e! liere is an ideal starter. Sharp du·
plex -Prime locaUon. $78,950. Super low
down. CALL NOW!
GRUBB & ELLIS CQ.
REALTORS
General
Corona del Mar
Corona del Mar
Bachelor Pad
With Pool
On a generous 60xl00 lot
675-70IO
Huntington Beach
1llage Real Esta te I' HZ-4471<::::.)546-1103
DUPLEX NEAR NEW
CIVIC CENTER
BEAU1'l~'UL. near new
duplexei;:. \Vilh 3 bcdroon1
.t 2 bedroo1n WlHS. Owner
nuty t'Onslder V ,.\.
962-2456
In \valk·lo·privarr. co1n· .,,
nlunity bt'nch Coron n •
J·lighlanlls. a \\Cll decorn!.cd 8813 Ad 1 .. , r llB
1llage Real E>ta te
2 Hr. :!· l~ hoine \\'Llh . ams a " agno ra
fo1111al dining. spacious
master suih'. l'C'ar yard \\'ilh
patio sun de('k and large
frtt forn1 pool $69,:ioo
CALL 644-nll
111!.AL FELL THROUGH.
Ex1•cuitvt> hon1c back on
1nnrket. Hugr rnston1 pool
\\•ilh f'lt'C.1rif" IV.'CCP +child
safC' piny yard, all fran1ed ,.. . ' ' \:as_ ~ NE\\'LY pa1ntM cluplex. 2 ~ Br & frv!c 111 ca. unit.
Separate garages. $72.500.
hv lush pl'i\'utc grounds. E1~an1 nla.~trr, private
study, v.·lff'-Snvcr kitchf'n,
and garden ,·iew dinlna:.
Ch\'ner must have fast ,
fast sail'. As&ume low In-,
tl'r1·st loan or you narnt
tht' IC'tmi;. Rf'duccd to
$39.~. Ukr 962-Mll =========I 61:>-3266
I
_;;C_;;os'-t"a"M-es_a_____ CON!)() SPECIALISTS
Walker&Lee
ll lA ~ t •T ATI
e !!AVE ONE TO SEU.'!'
RENTING??? e \\'F..: CAN 00 IT! •
WA~NA BUY ONE? • IT COSTS TOO WE'VE GOTIEM! • OUR
MUCH SALESMEN ARB BONDED.
larw in rNlty Inc,
So buy your faniily this 9684405 * (24 hrs)
gorgeous 4 bdrnt biggiC' 011 Equal I-lousing Oppty.
a cornE"r lo! \\'ith open coun-!!!!!!!'""!!!!!'""!!!!~~!"'!!
II')' spaces. Also includei; STORY BOOK Rumc ON
2 !lt-.:urious b.1ths. All this LAP.GE LOT. Shake roof
in Costa 1\1PSa whl're livin~ and v.·hite wood siding. Lola
is lree nncl easy. FHA and of deroralor \\'Rllpaper and
\'A terms available also 5'lo pol ish f'd paneling. Separate
do\\'I'I program. \\'on·t last candlelight dining, roam.:
long for S27.500 Call ~65 fireplacE' \n h\·ing room on-
Opcn eves. ly $33,950 nnd )'OU can buy
it any .... ·ay you like~ Birr
962-5511
17214 COAST ll\VY.
711 : 846-131!4 .~ 213: 592·2845
Irvine
If YOU HAVE
THE MONEY
WE HAVE
THE HOUSE I Sheer Perfection
Aln1osl new Tw1Jc Rock PIM
Supe r sharp 4 bdrm home 3 thars been bt'autlfully up.
with lots of room for the grnded, professionally land· 1
kids. I-luge pool and game scaped and situated near
room also. Nice carpets & pnrk and pool. Prl<.'C of
drapes_ thruout. Dbl g.aragc $69.500 inl'ludcs nn out&tand·
de:tache:d. Great kitchen ing view of the hills.
~"" MOM? Pnocd " "11 CALL 552-7500 Ill Costa Mesa (or $37,500
-oll locm,, Call 54>-9491 VISION
Walker&Lee e red hill
111111.1 •• ,.,, REAL TY REAL TORS
El Toro Univ. Park Center, Irvine
•
v. E. "°"""' & Co. 2 Bdrm. + Pool I .;:;~;;""~'-=;:•~ .. :;·~
$24,495 "SUl'ERlALEll"
2 Bdrm condo., dt'3ira.ble ground levt?I noor plan, 1 ~ 4 BR, 3 BA. f . rm , dlnlng
years new, Freshly Palnt@d rl\1. 1plll level, plUI tan·
wHh tastefully paneled and ~atl~ pool. ~uat lf.R Wa mim;n'ed livin2 room plush eek. I Hurry. $.53,000.
wallpapered (lhrlng , area, CaJI 646-6710 or &e-8400
lhag carpets A custom ZQWCUSEJ!lr'fttC)'OtltCffttl!t.t I
drape1, oversized pantcy [ V. E. lloWanl & Co.[ I area. near achools, v.·al.J<lng • ,
dlst&11cct0Hunttnaton .... r-.....
Center, Swimming pooJ and
many park are... FOR E1pocl1lly for you 1 I
SALE BY OWNER. Alkina Bralld new 3 bedroom wHtt only S24,495 call today built·!!) vacuum system. :
847-3095. l'~onnttl dining ftlOm •. Bia ,
TAKE OVER $28,360 , 7% f1lmllv mom. F\replace.
V LO """ l'antl.11.lc kitchen. T\led en· A AN. $"'1V • Per Month try. 't-:i.tlo . ..:.>mpletely land-I
pays •11 11 4 ClAnt bednns, scaped! Outat•...11 ..... value! 2 Hi baths, heavy shake ••u1 """" ~-.,. roof, t>IU!h carpet• •nd -,~. Call 49HOOJ, decorator dl'ftpel lhru-out. TARBELL, Realtors
Lolf of cha.rm And a be"ln-19'l;I S. eo..11 liW)'., L.B.
ner bargain price! I Bkr I the fastest drawln the West.
962-00lJ .•. a DAiiy Pllot Cllutfted
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' •.' r
~ Thunday, Ommbtr 20, 1973 OAILV PILOT <11
lnl,.. Now~ iMch Com•t•ry Loh for Solo 11ii HOUHt Uni\irn. SOS Rou'" Unlurn. 305 Coii<lomlnlum1 ,rA~P1:;';;'·:..;F:..;u1:;r;;n:...· __ ....;3::60:;: Apt. Unfurn. 365
TNJISE ~L .. ~llllllv Park IAYCREST h _:..;L::olt::::f.:C::.ry!Jpt~•--.;1:.:56 2 ~H.;.~..;.,-,-rinrs.-.,.-,",~'--~-40-u-H..;.~..cnG ::.::•::n:::•r.:•::.• ___ ...;.._ Irvine ~~U~n~f~ur!nj.D~-~=~32:0J~D~•n~a~P~o~ln~tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _B_•_lbo_1_P_•_n_in_1_u_l1 ___ 1
$57,500 ,EMETERY plot I owport -och 3 Sr, 2 Ba, larze 11tudlo, WcstmlruJter Me 1n 0 r ta &t2-0691, evH ~ bkr. \VE hgve a 1$.r,:,'P lleiertlon 2 BR. 11~ be. bRlc.<0ny, l'ncl11d
£8JY gardrn. $56,000 Large living room, formi!I Park, Beech atvd., \Yest· MciUfitiln, DtHrt Ot BRAND NEW homes $10,000 CONDOS LIVE in the all ucw DaM paUo, S1%i .muolhly. 315 E.
OiA•ner-Realtor 833-8668 dining. Larae ldtcbl!n and mlnstcr. Paid $27tl ~an Retort 174 ava.Uablc ror leue tn the Live In luxury, with 3 BR., Point lfarbor at I he 8'1.y, Inquire "' Apt C.. Call
L .. un• Beach family room, new carptll ago. lat $130 takn It. _,;.;,;;.;,,;;:,.;.. ____ _;,;..; NE\Y YEA!t. fron1 $·125 to 3 ba. + ocean virw! bt3ullrut MAitlNA INN 673--1521 or MS-7771
and paint. 4 btdroom11 plwsM ''-'~~:..'::""=· ------LAKE ARROWilEAO HouHI * Aptt. $475 ""r month. Newport Beach. Rent• from fiiotcl. 34902 Del Obispo 51· Corona del ,,,,.r
LUXURY UYING ~.. " * * r~ •.tnn Month. 67~ (496-23.\1). Kl t ch f' n, Er-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil rumpua room. --.y care Commercl1I Great for ~ar ruund !Ivins; 141•0111 _,., rtclencles & ,\partn1ents.
Privacy Ir: bettutltw Mt. ~a~~~ for pool. 1'4or Proartv 158 le. cl06c lo the vi~. 3 NEWPORT CREST CONDO. llulcd pool, dirt.->ct diul vi-·""· ~ bd-· 2,, ._1._
0
&.;.:..:.L yr old Bavarian style 3 level 2 BR. 2 BA. \Vet bar, trpl, phones. televts.Jon, aauna iMd:d ~th 'i;;;Uey fe:tu;& Call ~7171 NEWPORT BEACH home with o~n beam CCII· $160 • F'um 2 Br mobile hOme, near pool. t!'nnls. Orpa, u -hn.th, I Rund r y fo.clllliet.
thl'UOlJt. Prore1111lonnlly ''"'I· OllfNTILt• IT'S FUN TO Be NICE/ PMnte Ba,ytront Site illp thru~t. 3 br 2 ba+ nr beach, chlld & •nll pet. tras. ~/mo. 557r0l'rn n1L'<ltiJiJ ruom. C'lo&e 10 Snn '" 1-~-t ~•-._ ~~• completely finishM base-Sl'rn • Spic & Span unl 2 Ur d Clemente & ' ""U a Be h iscaped, pni.cUcally a no - -• ! or """ toptlll °' 11n1i':S fO I t E I Id c l\I NEW 3 BR, 3 BA, In. rm.. ..... I -ll 'llC . ~i:1;::::in1:~~· M'!':r~ ,_ftll, i!'t" ~OG:~~ll~iltr lnco!:fr6.: ~,:.hop, r tki;r'u I a~~ .;•. i!e~y ~·Br' 11~!0 apt, "SINCE 19'16" :~I~). :!~l. ge~·;a:P~1~'. ~~~llihiJ~~y sh~~ping0
u r
Bo T ·~ 500 nmii,f:I 1 ~ M $36,500. (2131 451-3898 after f111lc, Irv '>''ftlk In closet, gar. tst \\le11tem Bit-ltk Bldg. nts, aaunn S4~. M4-3M9 restaurants. $50 week & Up.
Y crmcc. "°', . I ~!!~~!~~~~ pert es, center Coll ta ('sa. 6 pm or anytlnle wttkt'.'nd1. $275 • Lrg 3 Br hi;e, every-University Park, Irvine D 'Bring this ad & rt'Ct'lve ~I I. Owner. 66-2020/~ HOLIDAY l'e!ltai N Shoni thing for the ft1n\lly. C.M. Days 552-7000 Nights uplexes Furn. 345 $5 oil 011 first "·eek's rent
._/T0'1'fZJ't GRAND dPENING Condominiums Lake Arrowhcnd. :LAkr. \VE HAV~o1:~~!Y, MAN'l , REAL EStATE Nowl ~r21BBoEDyR Tgwott for 1110 160 view. Comlortable 337-UOG LANDLORDS FREE ,. N•wport Beach Huntington BHch " 00M ~ BR., 1 bath · •· ·• • S2i5/31~ LUXURIOUS OO::AN1'~RONT
(-Sb
TOWNHOUSE
2 Bi', flreplnce, J)O(>l, pr1vtlle
patio1, co11Unent1tl break·
ta~t. Spacious irrouncls, near
llhopp!:iz !: flnf' tw:u:h. r·ur.
nlllhl'd or unfurnished, fro1n
$250. Corona del Mar,
644-2611.
-·-------1190 Clenney,,, SI. OONDOMINIUM HOMES BY Owner-2 aty Montlcdlo LANDLORDS!-2 BR, 2 ba, den, o./c $27' 3 Br 2 Ba frple "'°'"'I $JU.$16S 494-~73 549--0316 Ba,yb'ont J-lomes Townhouse. Immaculate 3 ~ 3 BR ., ,2 baths · · $3S5/425/4j() guraic. $450. \v1ntcr.' 573.9499 BACT-IELOR & 1 UR. P:\t.io11, Boat Slips Br, 1 ~ Baths. Private -.. _ _.11 I • We Specialize 1n Newport 3 Bil, 21f:r baH1s , ...... , ~ or 9824211. frpl t's, prh..-. naragcs • Di· 3 Bit 2 Ba ground lloor
EMERALD BAY Full Sccw-lty Hlghrise po.t\o. Cw:tom drape1. Many r.,......., Beach e Corona del Mar • 4 BR. 2\.1 baths -.•. $4251450 • vided bath&. lolll ot ~IOl!leuc. duplex. s~I car garR..11:1!
A charmlnll 3 bdrm., 2'.~ Steel A concrete COZllt1'Uctlon extru. $27,~. 5 4 9-214 5 ~------.:~~ & Lacuna. Our Re:ntaJ Sc!r-CALL 552·7500 Bilbo• P1n1nsul1 Rl'C. hall , pool & pool tabll's, llC1'055 fm in lf'11nl!t & p.vk.
bath split-level honic with Prl·~te BaJ-·•ca btwn 10-5 .• 109 Gcorzetown vice la FREE to You! T'*" .. ~1•.. o--r Avnll. 12/26 S.12:1 rno to
I •• ~· ., VISION 3 BR, 2 BA. !rpk, beam sauna .,., ''"'· ""-""' or )'Our· ..,.. .,.1-''ll • ,
•nn oce1M vc~'.. An npen 2garagespacespttwUt. ,Ln=o•,;C:.:·:::M::.· ____ =_ Buslneu Nu·Vlew! f't'.'il, all modern. Gt1r. Close self. l730t Kcelson Ln. (l ~ '"' "l::·c·-~-oor Pan & Inc eittenslvt! Rool ~P , .. -•-k SALE By -.. ner, BI u, n.. I I 200 NU-VIEW RENTALS blk w o! Bea h t blk N 2 BR 1 B,\ ea.......,o: dr•~ use of wood thr'UOut, n11lke u ~ o"'iu'rtunt ~.. •• 7 So =r.por un ty 673 ..,...,n or 49-t "2'° I to heach. $32a/mo. 96.~ ot S1niCr1. c ' · flrep.la<.'l', jlOQJ~.-' .~-·
this one of the n1-1 ••1· n PPo ty to.""~ Lagoon Villa l' , oon· """""" -.i 't3 • d h•I C I M ·-67" ··~ traeUve ~1 in E~ruld chase Ba.Yfront Proper'.y In domlniun1/ Laguna Beach. Distributor NE\Y llome • 3 BR, \Vlk re I orona de ar 8·12·1B•IR 1 ~~=~l.o.>ctO~·----~~=
Bay $107 Newport Beach. Including &ll appJlancesli: MUSICAL to schools, park &: pool, • 2 BR, rtplc, $285 mo lncldlnv RETIRED people. clean, 2 BR, 1 ba. frplc, slo\'P, l·rpts,I
TuRN R ASSOC. 310 Fe67Jt5R1d., N.B. ~~[ e • 714-005-3401, GREETING CARDS lrruned oc.:cupancy, $•125, P..EALTY REAL'1'9RS uttl. Stove & re.frig. erPI; qu!cl apls. al the beRch. rlrps, $2?.:l yeorly. Xlnl lo..:a·
1100 N. 0Mt11t II"')'., Laguna. =~=:::;;:......,,--,-,""'"' !\takes all others ob8olete 646-1086 .• Univ, Park Center, Irvine thru out, GTh-2672 !'vcs. $95 mo.,=.,., -,M.rc lin11. ~
494-1177 ''BEACH PEACH'' BLU~""FS Plaia Condo. 2 BR, ca.ids for every occasion B•lboa Peninsula J.11.>-W<J O\VNElt'S UnH, :! BR
l>""I den, 2 baa,. end location, with appropriate tune for 2 BR Condo •.••. $'l25 Mo[lse SPAC_ne'>'·er 3 br.2 bu, se~. Duplex, ocean vie\\',
OCEAN 1'"RONT must see Super 11h11.rp 2 BR beach cot· greenbelt, new cpl, By each. sold thru retail 11tores ON the Point 2 BR, 1-~am 2 BR Condo · •• -..$245 l\1o/lse porch. \Valk tihop. 5l~ Ii·is. Laguna Baach & $6SO. 675-2569.
this fab. COMlline vu. OYO tage • !luge R·2 JOt. Walk owner, $47,500 6'6-2900, eves, established com08lly. Oislri· rin,. ~")'pie, 2 car gar, $335 3 BR Home ••• •. $295 mo/lse $300/nlO. Lse. 6•!4-6682
delx apt. 2 br/2 ha, new to Lido Shops. $49,900. 8.1.l-8118. butor delivers & collecls yearly 673-7495. 3 BR Home ••... $300 rno/lsc Costa Meae OCEANfRONT 1 Bl". incl.
cpt/drpa, SC<'Wi.ly, pool. incl 6-ll!-6710 or 645-8400 cash. If you can start ini· 3 BR Honlc · ·• •. $.~25 mo/lse u!il, S210. aetuss hunt AJ.
LGE. l·BH., l·BR. 11('>!. Bltns,
t:v.r. S250 l\lo .. yearly
&cni(' J>ropl•11 ies 67j...j726
tipplcti. $70,500 0\vncr. Cl~~lllll<l!t!lelll!l!Si!~!!U_ :ln:,:<::;O:,:mo:,:::_P:_r:.;O:i[>!=r.:.tY!......:..;1::6::6 nied. & make cash invest of B1yahor•• 4 BR Home ••••• $300 mo/lse EASTS I DE DUPLEX ber00111>. 729 G11vto1a.
714-499-3005 r' NTIL9 S SlbE $1900. up depending on No. 2 BR 1 BA I fri Y •I BR Home·····~ mo/lse 2 Bd11u, l bnth, garage, 494-1719 Costa Mesa
Legun1 Nlguel V. E. l""11nl & f.o. EA T ol 11_ccts. Write Incl ph no. 5300' per m:. A~ailgim~:: RANCH REALTY 551-20CIO crpts, huge fenced yard. EF1'~1 C, apts fro 1n $50 ·wk ----·------; rwi:-~ COSTA MESA f'ederal Industries, Box Ca ll 673-9-103 BEAUT. Prlncl'ton nwdel 3 Vegetable garden area. Rec. or $170 1110. Pool, niald, e 11or.1F_; AT~10SPllERE
BY Owner·SPRclous Cnn· · 2776, AnaheirTt, Ca. 92804 or BT', 2 Ba, lrg !iv & din \'eh. storage. Slove & rcfrig ph. ldry, Vlllugc J1u1 Dix 2 & J Br. $170 up. Ro:nt1il
dominlum high atop Laguna * 5 BEDROOMS * RED CARPET caJI Mr. Sheldon, Corona del Mar area. BBQ & patio, Xlnt inc. $16.5. mo. Mnture adults 494-9'\36 Ole., 3095 l\'lace Av c .
Niguel. Gracious adult liv· Oen, dining area, 3 Ba, clea.n EV"LUSIYES 714/533-1500 ;;;;.;;.-;;;,;;.;·;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;:I Univ Prk loc. S345/mo. o10n1Ya·.,:'o pets. 642-4809 alter 1 bd!·ni, vie"·· Vicroria Beach 546-1034.
ing & OCf'an vii'\\'. 2 BR. spacious l·story. CUHhaven. ~ COFFEE SHOP * AS NEW I I I Avail Feb lst. 5.i2-73.D .... area. $218. 497·18.U or "n°'E"A-"UT=="c"-.ro~-,.-,~B~,-t~d-pl~~-,.
2 Ba. Many anienitles. lnl· Vacant. May lease. $79,500. $39.500 Duplex. A 2 bdrm * * • • • Lido Isle Newport Beach 494--2354 before 2:00. bllns, gar, laundry, nu maculate. $49,900. 496--9408 GEM and 1 bdrm on one of the Completely remodeled and re· · N rt B h paint $200. 673·838·1 be(. 9,
Lido l1l1 -IA---best landscaped streets In GOOD PRICE furbished 3 bee.Inn. 2 bath Home For Christmas FABULOUS VIEW OCEAN· ewpo eac afl 5 or wknds.
IDF Tustin Ave .. N.B. Eastslde O:lsta. Mesa. 10% GOOD TERMS home. \Val)< to ~hopping and Beaut. Lido Bayfront. 4 BR., FRONT 2 Br, stove, refrig, $35 per "'k & up l BR SPACIOUS new 2 Rr. 2 Ba,
LIDO REALTORS 642-4623 down. RIVIERA REAL TY ~~:dC::S =t a~d lt~:.!ren!~: 4
1
11800bap., den, pier & slip. ~91J~~· Yearly. 2 Br & bach·s. c01or TV: blllis. drps, carpeting. pool,
BAYFRONT BLUF·FS CONDO $42,800 .. 2houses. IS2l,400t>a). 149 Broadway, c.M. 644-8567. l 614ef1~0· G7J.-Ol49 ...-m1tid SCl'\', pool. THE frplc. gar. Adults. no pets.
Pier &: slip: 4 BR., 2 bl\.; vu lot , nu 3 br, tam rm, 2'h Super neat 2 bdrm, 2 bath 642-7007 645-5609 Eves. '"'""""""""""""""""._ lcA._g1::.·...:::·c:·.:::::_ __ ,::::=.:::1 Juplexea, l\1ESA, 415 N. Ne\1:port 376 \V. Bay St., Cl\.1
just ~uced to $249.!'iOO. bu, din rm, neulral karastan houAe up front with a 1 MODBRN 2 BR, 2 ba, bltns, l ~~;;~~~=;;;;;;;;;li~F~u~m~.~o~r~U~n~f~utrn~.~~35~5'.l~B~l~vd~.~· ~N~B~. ~646-~968~1~~~ l & 2 BR. SlJS.$155. Stove, c
1
•rpt, 1 mkany161upgrade~u· be-
1
~rnnOO; ~~c~~ ~~ Investment
220
carp., drps. $300. NEW, Newport Beach B Ibo p 1 1 PARK NE\VPORT furn ref, crpt/drps, hld pool.
ow mar et ,500. Wi se single houses sell for. lO )'Q Opportunity exciting 2 Br. 2 ba, dbl. a a en nsu a l>ach, sub let Jan.July. CaJl Adults, no pets. 645-8965. :_:107~.y ~us owner. down. e 18_5'/o CASH RETURN • gar. No care. $375. DELUXE RENTALS SPECT 3 BR 21 \i ba 1 640-0110 2 & 3 BR, ba, crpt/drps. 1
.. LIDO ·REALTY •
L • 1,, I•' ' II
*67J·7JOO *
B1'SrBUY L,DO
3 BA, 4 BR + 81\y Vie'>'•.
88' to bch. 425 Via Udo
Nord, $137,500, ~7414 Bier;
-
S•nte Ana Htights $61,800. ($30,900 ea.) Two 3 $lXKI per $6500 invested + University Realty 673-6510 Newport C~t. 2 & ~ Bff: + blk to. bay 0~ bch. ocean Beaut. 40' w window beach J>O?ls, playgmd $150 up. Call "
bdnn, 2 bath houses en sep. tax shelter. 5.57-9930 2 BR, den, din. rm. 21ni den: tennis, S'>''lmm1ng. vu. frplc, beam ceiling. lrnt. w/d,_Lh@,_ 3 _br.1,,.Mec;.oo,::l,;;40'-.,-~----~.I
LOW ta.\': "County" recent, lols. Buy both & sell one BA, laun. }"P, patiofl, 1800' Brand new. From $400 Mo. $350. nio. Winter. Avail yr· 642-5251 or 543-4757 2 BR. Adult!!, no pcl s. BAY
comlortable 4 \Br & den, off or keep beth. Money to Loan 240 vu, 1 yr old. $375. 409 Gold-HARBOR Jy. 675-14[» Beaut. 40' \'U "'indow beach l\fEAOOWS AP'l'S. 387 W.
3 Bn. 2 sty bdme at end Sf4~ 7,:inlls. ~~bdrm, 1 TD L enrod, 675-6900. A t F 360 frnt, w/d, '..! ba, 3 br. To Bay SI., CM. 646-0073.
of cul-de-sac. Drive into bath houa~u:ree l bd~. ~ st oa ns COZY Cottage 2 Br, l Bu, P s. urn. June 31. 642-5251 or 548-4757. UN FURN 1 & 2 Br. Garden
3 BR., 2 ba., dining, liv. !::.bi~· Ii: ~nJi~. -~ hath hoU&t'll, plua a duplex. near br.ach. Beam cell, Balboa Island Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apts. Frplc, D/'.V, prlv
Mea1 Verde
& game nn. F.A, heat, /standard tbl All Immaculately cared for, UP TO 90% frplc. $275/MO. GTa-3509 patio. S.170-$195. 557•2841.
frpl., W/\V carii .. drps: ~~ loan at fes8 7%fr color coordinated and land· 8~% INTEREST * 2 BR, 1 ba, l!rcplace, REALTORS 1 BR Apt avaH tor 6 mos Balboa Peninsula 3 BR. l ~ii ba. spacious npt.
fnC(I. yd. Fruit trces.$311,950 Allfled b d scaped. A true pride o( own-2 d TD L huge yard-trees. $285/mo. SINCE 1944 or yrly. 1,2 blk 1o bay. Child ok. $175 mo. 646-J:iTl
0y,'fler 56-3182 ~Aloan. $45~ r-..::er 00 enhlp complex in pride of n oa ns Incl wtr--gardner. 833-8974 673-4400 STUDENTS \VELCOJ\IE, RENDEZVOUS Apt. 2 br, 757 Shalimar.
N.wport B •• ch
ownen1hlp area. ~;;!.;A~~=-"''--":.;,,:,-1..,~!""~;;;;~~~!!1 call 213-289-8366 evc11. 2 be, crpt, drps, din nn. lndU!', Santa Ana Heights. Costa Mesa I I dk ll 3 ROOMS, $9'j OlO. 1 adult For detailed lnfonnatlon on Lowest r1t1s Or•ng• Co. TENNIS BUFFS LOVELY 3 BR, 3 BA, 2 sly. 2 a?1 rm, rg sun pat, se
HAR OR VIEW/
"!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!I these and other unlls, c11ll S I M DESIRABLE f,p. patio. Adults only. clean elec ra~e, dshwshr. over 35. No pets. 2037 B : Red Carpel, R ca 11or1 , •ff er tsl• Ca. Only steps to tennis c.-ourt, Yearly. $400 67a.-0800 On the ocean Subterranean \Vestm\Mler Ave Apt 6
CARMEL [ I~ 979--2550, 2829 llarbor Blvd., .U.2171 SfS..0611 HOME sv.imming pool from NE\\r · prkng. $370. Call (TI41 The fastest draw tn the West.
3 BR, 2 BA. Fam/Rm, Din ........ lill' Co6ta. Mesa. Serving Harbor area 24 yn. 2 Br. 2 ha, cpt'd, drps, forced 3 bedroom (or 2 & den) DELUXE 2 Bedroom 2 Bath, 525-4933. • .. a Dally PUot Chwllled
v• t -• •-1 " l ~iiiiiii . -air heat, Gart:Hll.6p, bll·ins, f I .. ,_,:., 11-I 11' 216 Cry11al yrly S325 mo.1~~~=:~~~==~~~~==~~~:'.1 .-un t'Ouu, ao:au · yu , up-FOUR-PL.EX, 0.ta f.feM, DON'T BORROW !rpl 'A orm~ U.L1w•g', 1.Ucp ~ce, se 6~7178 (!) ~21•9 graded O\vner $69 900 81 ,_ di k-·-'--1i:.i:. c, pat ... , garage, water clearung oven, beautiful Can· •·-or ·~ " ·
6"-6480.1121 rorl Ashley' Pl: Mobile Homn t•u.,,, luw,,._.., ......... 900. 'TIL YOU CALL USI tum . Ad ults only, no pet•. . I ·-l'gh Co Mm 24 Unlls CM nr Bo -" RATE REASONABLE yon view. :u6 •• t 1 ts. n-B 1•-· Peninsula BAYFRONT For Sale 125 ' · · now on your home ..., ... ty struction ,, .. ill be oompleted,_•----------NR O!ANNEL ENT. !lhop!l, 15% dn, 1or any iood PUl'Jl08t! Serv-Across from Country Oub by the 1st of Jan. Located1·
fi BR, 4 BA, + saWUl, nl'\v MOBILE HOME YEAGER REALTY 556-6:1.TI ing Ins Angeles eooi'.ity for 275 f\fe!I& Or. * Ph. ~ high on the hills of Harbor $35 WEEK & UP
ctfl'!t rum., ma gn 1t1 c !'n t FOR SALE: TAX TIME BUY over Z> yean and NOW in View Hills. $500 per month. • Slecplng Rooms · h d k I ho: t Prepaid lnten!!lf. down. 7 Orange County! • 3 BR home with stove. 644-4687. • Housekeeping Rooms view. s'nfi ec • a .'1 SILVERCREST Units-NEW. 1st User. East SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. Neat& clean. Available now. OOtt e Ocean View Apts l,j~ii';;ikS....,iiii;ii120iii:ooo0...iiArtiiiiisiihii•Pii""m MOBILE HOME C?tf. 833-9182. 646-4414. ~~ Cam<n4l 556-0100 .~.!~c.Y°ft'75~~,~~n~o. 4F!~~~. ~io~al ~~°?n~ BALBOA INN 1• al' x 5.1', 2 BO 2 BA, carp., HOUSE + 6 UNITS 'WUU pus Drive, N.B. --.,.. nn, private tennis & pool 100 Main Street PALERMO draped, blt·ins., refrlg., New unit. at 2637 Elden, Morf9agtt, ~dutua &pre1t'::'~~ E~1~ddf~ Privileges, $495/month. 675-8740
wloashr ,,.er & ~~~~drynd' .• '' wiklt':"h. CM. lat uaer w/200% write Trust DMda 260 Realtor, &fG..8811. 644-5686 c Ven in gs & BA YFRONT & BOAT SLIP 4 BR, fam rm, llUJM!l' clean! ..... ...... ... 11 Ude ... .... k d 0'" '735 d c -" J
$76,GOO clock, storage shed, land· o . Call Bu r V'IV"'l'U • * * * 1t * * '>''ee en s; ...,._., &f!. o-op 1 BR w/M-IP or boat
'-scaped patio. Three )'I'S. old ltARBOR Heights 4 plex. By PUT YOU.R MONEY NEW exec 4 BR, 3 BA w/lSO w/lcss than 13' beam. S225
BROKER 8»-0780 • like nu. Located In new owner.. $85,00'.>. TO WORK FOR YOUI BEAUTIFUU.Y PANELED degree view, tennis & pool total utlls lncl. (1) 682-0155
adult pk. away from noisy 541)-9212 · 3 bedroom home with love-$600 mo, Eves & wknds, 1 DOOR to Beach, 2 BR.
JUST COMPLETED · St. One·half bl. from club-Industrial Property 168 ~cr;ndr fut°:~~~~ ly carpets and draperies 644-1791 Winter Or Yrly. Furn or
Santlaan Avf'., • \lle~I· house. $15.995. Call EVES. :.;.o;:.::.;.:.;.;o.:..:..;.;;,::,:o;,J....;,;:; nnd covered patio. Walk to QUIET, secluded area. butU -::;•:;:f..,;6:;73-66:;...::::.'°::....-----I ... ~ 213-694-4690 ., 11... U 1 Orange County reaJ estate. shopping center. Family -'--lk 11 I -elttf • Dover Shores area, c'AN BE, SEEN AT: Tax Sheller · .. iuUI n ts SIGNAL l\lORTGAGE OJ. situations only. $250. Per >1<uurt we to a serv ces, BACHELOR, I block to bay 4 BR • ·3~ baa, $139,500. BRANO NEW -$125.000. (il.4) 556-0lOS I ''iricl. ·swim & sand, -3 Br. or ocean. $95. mo. utll incl. Al.SO 1101 Highland, 3 BR CRESTMONT Owner fin. · San Oemente ·~Cam Dr NB Month. Call owner agent at 2 Ba.$330/mo.PM, 673-1417. 675-4600 days.
'Ide S T • • REALTORS ·~2100 -pus •• • · 837-6398 $110,000. ()y,-ner • Bui r, E TA ES ,..,~ ~.,.... 1 or 2 br; Winter, $165 to OCEANFRONT furn. 2 Br,
543--7019 eves 644-8.ln. lo.51 Site Dr., Brea. !Central Lots for Sile 170 INVESTQRS wanted to make NR. SOUTH Coast Plaza & $175; Year I y, $225-$250; s:m mo.
FAST POSSESS. A\'l'. across from Brea or buy trust deeds. 638--5015 Bullocks. G~nbrook Home (213) 791-3077. Call 642-ti277
Con H 1 Lot ••• COMMERCIAL 3 BR, 2 BA, din/lam rm . .::::=:..:.::..;:::.,::c_ ____ , __ ..,:;:::.-""C::"'---Jlarbor View Carmel model. im. osp. ....,, P.1ajeslic Mortgage Co. HVH 4 Br. executive view Corona del Mer
3 BR .• 2 ba., fan1lly nn.. 001 NT~~I RAY, PK. MGR., LOT Ws-On~ Carnation. CM. home, tennis, pool, fam rm,
lots of extras, Price reduced ..:::':..'.::'::·~::::.:·"8'-"'·-----din rm, $600 owner.~ ELEGANTLY furn Cdl<.1 apt.
to $67.~ Including land. t-.fOBILE Home 12 Flanllngo DOWNTOWN """* UttMED. occupancy. 5 BR, Newport Htights Superb vw _Qf .bay. 2 Br, CORBIN-MARTIN 65x24 2 BR, 2 BA. Air cond. 2$385BA, Bar Harbor Home, 2 ba. Lrg hv/dm/k\l.areas.
A COH\IDflENT ~AN
SfWIHO GUI[)( fOR THE
CAL.ON THE GO. ..-..... <-'
For an 1d In Woman~• V.orld
Coll Mory Both 642-5678, ext. 330
Jump Into 19741 1 His Favorite.
REAL TORS 644-7662 8x32 sun room, self cleaning COSTA MESA ·. Option poss I b I e. RU5rlC & cozy 2 hr, l ha, Ideal for exec. cpl. $450
Ew oven, Kitchen Aid dish wash· I0.200 sq. ft. C'l lOO rt. tront· _Hou __ .., __ F_u_r_n_l•:..h..;od...;.._300.....; lo'~.O.rolto;.e=r:.. ~·-·-"'~·-833-63>11=--•-r Beaut. yd, Gar, crpts, drps, mo.Avail short term· I . 'i ll·' VIEW-VIEW·VI er, full length awnlngi;, ood l39'l •'l<:r! "'/utilities. G.,,..., John·• ::;67::.:3-:::32611'°".'------I
H bo I M ~ ad 1 k age on g street. , sq. 'f""" ~.; 1 • ar r V ew, new onlego 1 lanclsca.,..,.. u t par , ft. Ree.A .. to build. Gtnaral SHARP 3 BR, 2 BA, good son, 645-6625 or Msg. 673-1235 Costa Mesa 4 Br, fam rm, prime view, choiee space see to e.p-..., location, No. 0.1. ~lust see
B
loc"'"-',". :,~·7500Gll SimJ>llOn, preciates· ~o,r ap'!:tp. M836-9461 ~2313 l BR cottage, mo, c.~f. Also Inside to appreciate, $295 Newport Shores Ca•.. de Oro
l\'C ;J;W" hefott •u• •au" 1 walk to beach, N.B. $150 mo. 642-0445 WALK TO BEACH,. -
BEACH Living, 1 blk. fron1 PRICED FOR QU ICK SALE & Bachelor unit N.B. $95 EASl'SIDE Cute old JSR, ALL UTlLITrES PAID
\\'Oler. 3 BR. 2 BA . ronv. Like new, Si Iver c re JI t util pcl. Agt. Fee. 979-8430 $250. Needs TLC, newly dee. · W' hclub, 3 tln~isBtf ~~~ Compare before you rent
10 h,,_ master BR '"/frplt•. o" --·• Ma ~.53 Cpl Jamil t e ave · Custom designed, renturlng: -~ .. .:wiervrvuu nor, "'V·' . •-lboa llllnd e or Y no pc s from 1350 mo V<>-atly w1 Blt·lnl. 2 car gar. on alley. Completely set up In ex· IHI 645-4586 ·• .;~ • Spacious kitchen th In· t~
B • ., ~ 612 ,.~ I ' t k . ca.11 today! They go !Ast direct lighting
Y owner ..,..,>IU\I. ·J'IW. t~~1!~~. 6DJl ~-l~~ LOTSI LOTSI LOTSI 3BR. cozy, frplc, -near waler E.SIDE chce.ry 2 Br, country CAYWOOD REALTY • Separate tlln'g area
TRADE NewjXlrt B ca c h LAGUNA BEACH. '? beach.. 127 Opal, $300 nlo. at.mos. Adults or oouple '>''/ * 548-1290 * e Homc·like s torage
Prop. for Out-of-Town Prop. -'D"'l"-r.C....-------· l0cean view, hillside ncreage 673·2288. Infant. No pell! $170. 548-0715 e Private patios
BJ..T. 714/673-2058. NEW custom bit heauty in for development. Sile for 28 R, 2BA, 2 cnr gar, ready eves or wkends. S_a_n_C_l_e_m_•_n_t_e ____ 1e Clotied garage w/storage
3 BR, 2 BA Monaco, S62.500 1idull park on the bay. 8 UnllJ. Mu It I· P 1 ex for occup $250 mo + util, $150 Lovely 2 Br upper. cpts 2 BR , range & oven, cpt!I • M.arble pullman
Includes land. 1831 Port Kini· SIS,500. 675-0'l'l3. downtown. Comn1erclal -&ll until June 15, 675-5075. drps, bllins, disposal nr & drps, ocean view, newly • Klng·sz &inns
berly. 644-8317. bRullddabcl•.
1
R Ito Laguna Niguel shops A occ. mature adults painted, $l7S. 146 Mariposa, • Poold~ .. ~thbecpluessh· lans,...d
Completely fenovatcd ""'EsUte, 497·1761 3 BR. 2 ba , comp, turn.ex-si.HARP~;;:;;:.;,:.;B;;;R,,.;;TO;;;;;W:;;N:;;H;;O,;U'°'s"E~. I ~~~~~-----1 scaping
* DUPLEX -$34,950 *
1
[j] e arpe •• rs no pets 548-0059 S94-4284 roun. ,_.,, w1 u •
75-4524 Genwal r ~=~.....;c.;..,.:.;_;,,;,,.~~-Houses Furn. or Adults, No Pels
Owner/Aaent 6 iiiiiiiiiiiiiil NEWPORT Beach Io t ceptionally nice. Be au t l'ii Ba. Pool. Near ~chools Unfurn. 310 1 BDRM. $185.
2 BR. home on quiet St. 65'X150' R·l located on view, ~~:41 or .,492-3l4S & shopping. $295/MO. mo. --~-... ------365 \V. \Vilson 642-19TI
· Dbt gar. Paved alley. Acreage for wit 150 Irvine Ave. nr High School. eves. ··~un! Reaity. 567"'"8267 Gener al $30 WEEk & UP
Fortin Co. Rltn. 642-500> ;;::::.;::2;:..;.;.....::.:::.:_....;::.: $18,000 will help finance or Lido Isle DELUXE 2 bedroom, 2 bath ";:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
lOfl NB .............. , , T\VO 2.28 11cre: fiat 1011 ca.'lh offer. 0'>''tler 8 to 5 ::.;:::,.;.::;,;;. ______ I townhouse. Pool, 2 car gar. • 1 •. 'l'VStud!oM&·~ .. BR Ap_ts.A·-"
DUPLEX nr ocean, $62,500 $4500/ea. Lucerne Vfllley _w~kC'daC"'Y':o'='54,5."'-U=41,c.-.,,....,.,..., \VINTER leaSC", beaut. So. Adult. $225/mo. 645-6610. 3 Bdrnu., 2 ba., um. • cuu Service: villi.
M
.1 La R -•i r u-~ dwn ... ,_ incl 7" c bay~nt borne· • BR 5 ,·early ................ S300 • Phone Service -Htd. Pool 1 es nJOfl t'.'cu o ,,...,., """ '""' · ro "1.fakc Roon1 Fflf' 011.ddy" ••v ' ' ., COZY 2 Br, fplc, pool. sml 3 BR 2 ba J e Chll .. -n & Pet Sectlo
•..... "u-' Int. on ea. lot S..\·arti cl t .. _ bn .. beaut. furn. Sandy heh. ..-I ., ., un , new carp, UI"' n 9252 11'1 •~ 7144~3005 . • . ean ou t'"" garage Pier & float. Sl650 l\lo. ,, ... , adults on y, r c f, drapes, decor, yTly. $325. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM n his heMI on his bir!h·
Jt's a bfee;Ze .••• aetl your ••. turn that junk Into cash Bill Grwuiy rutr. 67~161 E-Slde, $200. 548-7008. Waterfront 2 BR, 1 ba. year-548-9755 or ~3967 SIZES 8-18 dajr 11·Hh this pullover.
Items with ~ase. use De.ily Have sorneth1n~ )'OU want to w1th a Dai~l C&sslfied NICE 4BR, 2BA, newly ly. Unf. $300. (Ad good for $5 on rmt) I .... 4T ..nr _,, Crochet hnndson1e S\\'!'ater l~P\!~ot~Cl~aa~U~led~. ~642-~007:=8;·=:..;"~'=".=C;;IMS::;U"l;ed:;;a;da;;,,~tlo:;;l:;,t :..;•;:d.=C=:al=I =:;==::====-13 cJt,.R,& 2 be~h. $l.5J1~~~ 16 decorated, fucd yrd, gar. 1 BR. l ba. Yrly. Uni. Can-1''0R oonvcnience·2 Br. close "1 111,.,,.;Mt lllM1..-L~m ~:~t~·nh~n 2 iJ:,1k::
mos Lease. 646-3569 $2&5, 5.57-5080 nery area. Sl85. to Mopping, beam cell., . !'wtalnly 11lngle crochet -rais-
U f 305 HuntJnaton 15each 2 BR., 2 ba. turn, winter walk in c\osel!J blb18 attrac. Zip up thlS fashlonnble cd rlb·irtitch bands. Pattern
\ •
S@~~lA-l~~trs·
TAaf Intriguing Word Game with a CltucHe
------r•"-41 ltt ctAY a. POUAN
0 Reo'"'noa "'"" of the --.... --.... four tc:rgmbled words b.
1ow to form four limp!. words.
I REMPOS I
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I VAROF ·1 1
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I ff A S I E I ! •1 bought som• ,,,.., tod1y.,
I I I II After the butclter cut It up ond
go .. me th• bill, I thought I
•---...,....,....,..,,.---, WU paying I --. " /t.ut I BUGORE I ........ ,--.-, ..... , ........ ,, .... ,-1 .• c...p .... "'" dwell• quotad
. • . . . br f111inq I• lh'e mlnlnq·word ..__.__.._.._.._....__. \'Oii "-loo hom •IP No. 3 below.
1 :~~~rs~~~~E~ETIUS r r 1· r 1· r I' 1 ·
"H;.;•.;;UM..;..;•:..-..;,;..n_u.;.r;.;n_,_.___ s;, $300. & spotless. No' 00gs'. $167.50 jumper over its o"'fl shirt 7049: slzes 3642 included.
Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA cul de Aac. furnished. a36-5ll3 4 and all your turtle!Dps and 0.;:;l:;;M~r;:cal;_ ______ 1 1-1 •·J/R&O Jg Jn-.. bodysuits. Quick to sew in SEVF.,NTY.~v•• CE'NTS ... ...,.., • nc • ....... LGE FULLY FtJRN. 2 BR tweedy '>''001 blends checks .. , ..., •
ALA UNTALS lot, dbl gar. $2(i(I. ask for Bltns, pool, beam cell. plaids -er • • .for each pattern -add 25
Dnle 962-4471 Ad 1 (In! t k) · cent'! for ench pfl.tte rn for • · u ts _an ° no pets. Printed Pattern 9 2 5 2: Air !\tail and Special llan·
wt W.:W.ltt 1H MMCI 3 BR. h'plc, crptg, bltns, $180. 642--9a20. Misses' Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14. dHng: othet"A•lse third.class
extremely lrg. fncd yard. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"I* SUNNY APTS · POOL lti, 18. Size 12 (bust 341 delivery will take thn.-e f ~ HOUJU 2 1nln frOm llunt. Center Newport Beath • Adults Poolside $150 Up jump 21' yds. 45-lnch: shirt "'P.fks or rnore. Send lo j , ... :!:1. 842-978.1 1--"----,....'----e Also Children's Sectk>n 1"6 yards. Alice Brooks, the DAILY
-----3 BR, l ~~BA, bltrui, dlhwhl', BAY Ave. yrty-Yacht club 177-E. 22nd St. CM 00-3645 St:VL"llTl'·l'WE CENTS PILOT. 105. Necdlecnift
NIWPOIT&U.Y,C.M.'4,.oU crpts, drps, nr. Marina & bch; ()c(oan I blk away, 1 BR. !ipaelous 6 unit for ~ch paUem -odd 25 Dept., Box 163, Otd O>el~a
NICE 1 Br dplx SlOO, mature High. shopping. $ 2 9 0 . 2 ~r & den, 2 1?fl, cov. biding, like l'IC\~, garage, ~nts f?r each pattern for Station, New York, N.\' .
1 Atilt t1I ~Id 1 1 • .,~ 828-66n or 828-5200 pa.ho, flrplc, all bltin.s, gar, 1160 Adil no· ..,.15 ........,. Au· Ma.U and Special Hand· 10011. l>rint Nan~, Ackfrw;.i,
• u ..,.. or ,u;.o. Lend to the .charm of flU11 Eide, ,,.:·1•12 .~rt 6' ~ ling; othe~lse third·class Zip. J>.tt"m Nnmhrr. ON BE.AO:! 1 Br dplx $130. 2 Bcdrm, 1 bath, bltns, 11\l'ie prestiee setting. Ready to n , U'tl1""" " delivery will take thrn:!
Utll pd, buic rum • now. lot, dble gar.. S2'25. mo. move in; For appnt S'B-1468. 1 BR $160 &: $150. 2 BR weeks or more. Send lo NEED L ECR.AF'T 'i2!
CUTS l Br, $190. 1 on lot. Ask for Dalri, 962-MTI 67J.0149 or n+222-0'55. $195. Ne"' crots. Xxtn. lrg. ?tfarlan ~lartin, the DAILY Croc~t. knit, etc. t"'ret1
eltloiJ1:rto2 bes'r~.$~Uc :~: :;lrv..:.;;ln.::•:....-------1Coodominlums LAAdRuGll•E J:i_3d~'.'.'"r hi~/ ~~e~42,18~u&.. OeJet~: d:!:;.i!~· ~~~""~ Book.
Bring 1ma,ll family &-pet. NEW 3 br 2 be bltins Unfurn. 320 oo. a::au , u..J mo. York N y 100U pr I f Bl\~ic, fnncy knols , pal·
NEAT & clean 2 BR tJ.75 trash comP, c:rpb:, drol: 1-leated pool. Adulta, no NAME · ADOHt:.Ss w~h terns. $1.00.
IOOn. Make ~t now. Pel comm. park It poet. Nr Huntington Beach pets. Call 645-8965 ZlP, 8121; and STYLE tn"t•nl Cl"CM'hrt Book • OK. UCI. ss:HW47 STUNNING l br garden apt. i--mmER. Learn hy plctuttll! Pal·
4 Pt.EX. 3 BR. '1~ BA, $185. UNIV park condo. 3 BR. t..R.C new 2 br Jtudlo. pool, rec area, 710 W. 18th SEE MORE Q u I ck tg:·J;(~iruitanl (lift Book BltN, C 4-0, patk>, pet & gt"l'('nbelte, pool, nr frw)' St. Costa Mesa. Fashlona and choose Ol'Ml ..., ...
pool. . 2Edltlbe, FR, hJghlycupgrab!~ & bc:h. O:illcJ o«. $22!t. LARGE l Bdrn1 fum ·~t. pattern free from , our -more thQr' JOO gilts -
HUGE! )'8J'd 3 BR. 2 BA $250. nburgh Oil rccn · 827'"8525 11 35 mo. + dep. 642---'""'~2 Sprlna:·Summ,cr Catalog. All $1.00.
if' C&l' 111:a.r, ~ldl. pets OK. $300. 55)-7098 N I D •• h ,.,... sites• 0nm 50c Onmplelfl Afl(h.illl Book -~~n~, B 2 n -.,~ N I "-" H I ewpor gweC aft 5·3Cll,M · · Sl.00. ~ ~ 'Ul\.Old1.1 • r, 0tt .,._,. EW Turt e '""""" ome w ' . tNSTA SEWING BOOK lt .nrty Hui B'">kll • !;0(-,
, Frplc, all appl's, 2 car. rec f8 cll, itr UCI, 4 br-$450 SHARP t sty Blu!fJ ccndo. 2 Br. 2 Bo., adulla, 1 child, ~ today, wear tomorrow • CAIJ.. US lf .)'OU need help, mo. 3 Br-$425 ~· (1141 l BR, 2 Ba. Vitcant . $170. }563 B Coriander Or, $1. Book of ll l"rlre 1\f&ham.
we hive Iota "'°"'· 54~334? betwn a.m: A (pm. $450/mo. Stile by owner. Of 5,;7-8150 INSTANT FAS It l t> N ~.dlt Book 1 _ lli p.'lllems •
ALA Ront•lt 64243'3 NEW 3 & 4 BR hon\es In 154,99:1. Will tal<e 2nd. 2 BR. Tralltr. l11m/ 1130 BOOK • Hundreds o I !Oc.
3 BR houle. C.M., $JM. 2 1\n11erock, walk to pool, 3!3-8635 per mo. Inc.I .to~ti 809. No fash\on facts. Sl. Ml.l9t!Unl QtdU Book 1 ..
Br. walk to bt&Ctl "Balboe , tennis A 1Ch11. 833-7*. EXCITING Bluffs 3 br, 2\1 chlldrtn, no pell. V'fV"l · 11'1 a bl'tf:zc .•• ll"U )'OUf' 50c.
I
I
Sl.85. 2 BR ):)t:achfroQ.1, H.B. Haw ICHMtblf1' )'Ol,I want to ba .. nt tennit club. 1M $5501 tt'1 a breeze. • •• aill your Items w\lh ease. uae Daill' Qallt tor Ttldas'• Uvlq -A.al· 'tee. 979-30> 11tllT Clustned a\1'1 do tt mo. sale by owner St4.995. ltcm.-wtn' eue.-use Palllt Pilot aau\Old. ~ U-MulltW p&tterna..~~ ---"I
a.ASSIFIEO wm tel ttl •'t'll ~ caU NOW &U-M'll. \VIII 18.ke 2nd. S.U-863!1. Piiot Cla111lfted, 6G-567I. •••••••••••••••••• \
• ., Ul>ISCRAMllE UTTUS TO I I I I 1 I I I -Gfl' ANSWER 7 -=-ZE F
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800
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' ,...,.,..,._c:;DAl:;:.::,LY:...:..:Pt.::LD:.:T __ ...,.,,..,...,....,._,.,Tc.o;;;_"::cSd:::"c.· .::o.c".:.'m..;b.;."-.2Q,..:.,• ,,19:::7::3 '.'.::~7'0:::7"-:o;Oi"I ---,-----=,...,,---:c 'f I W -_....,-M,.....,&"""F"'1"'10"""'·"-t•"l-:-p ·wanlod, M& F 710 -Apt. Unturn. J6.5 Apt. Unturn. 36SG ~,;;ac;'•;.:9c;•;;.•_;f.;;o_,_R.;.•;.n_t __ 43_S Person1ls · 530 Cement, Concrete Help Wanted, M & ,. / 0 H•lp W•nted, M & F 710H1 P ant-.,
1-------·--'ANITOR &: ?r.Jald p/ttme. ' Costa M.H Newpon E:tact?. r Olt r.1otor lloml'a;, 'rrallt n1, • PALM It CARO READER TOTAL dl.K'Oltnt on .Ul C&o x • N 1f--... Glen llaven of Nciv.•port
El Pu erto Mesa
2 BR Apt., Unfurn
$170. All Utll Paid
No Children, No Pets
Paci Ir: RtcttfltlOn
Boats. etc. 1652 Ncwpo•1 •d ••/reduction. 111831 S.ach mtnt wo<k. Call Rog"' De1·1very-Sunday Only C<r.>v. H .. p. 1555 Supe•io<
PARK NEW PORT Blvtl, Coila Me&&, ~48-911iti / ,~B~h~~~. ~S!tan!t!o!n.!527!!!-3'06~~~ Moore 543-Sl79. Aeeoontant to S14K Ne 646-7764
ARTMENTS 1 ••• C I _...., Accnt/R.E., EDP to Sl2K Ave, . • ·
AP Offi<t R1nt1 -on r-,or Teleproceulrc, l60/BA1. OF DAIL y PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE-!lolMED. oeed lo< sharp ex-lkm~t~~ ·~·0~~~~~rooms • I LOl'C llwf Found jfRl GE:RWICK I: OON Programmer Sl2K QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATION per. clerical help. Detai.I
r r. 119'.1'! Ope" ,._G Dally ~ Bldgs°"'''uA'lfi1J4Ji'mod ~~~U;~n proc. to!: WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. BENTON ;';l',.;.bt~~lll~·d. Sh
Spa .''""' Tennis 6n-rolf" c. • SG-2170 Marketing Rep 1'150 WILLIAMS 330 WEST BAY 5TREET '-COS-1959 Maple Av1, C.M. Att'<>l!s fronl f°a&h ion Isl and . . found (frff ads) SSO Supervisor R.ctaU $100 TA 'MESA. 'TELEPHONE 642-4321 FOn. AP-a1 Jan1 borec on San J uaqwn JACK Taulane, re pa Ir. Girl Jo'rlday $600 INSPECTORS ...._ ... tilUlu ZI Hiiis Roo d. ' FND: Lovable red. <emod, add. L!c. B-1 269012 Payroll/EDP to $S15 !'OINTMENT. ~ v (714) 644-1900 • diith/brown fml dog. 24" 111y \Vay Co. 642..-4703. Acctng Clerk/Type to_S525 An Equal Opportunity Employer
2 BR, I BA unrurn $195 eONE-MONTH FREE • · • • high w/tlea collar. Vic. DON MAIER CONST. CO. Steno $500+ ht & 2nd Shifts
151 £. 21s t St.. CM .,. 1 3 & 4 BR ., ... 1 1 EXE-C OFF IC E Banning & Bushal'd, H.B. Mujor re:mo<l. Lie 285692 P/ttme PBX, Enjoy working ~,--,,,.--,--,-M,..-&:::-;F"'°"7°'lO.-:H=l:..WU.:::;1::_,r,MiiJ&cF0.7'ilOiil ~-I 1 I 1 'II 5 * 646-8666 • N ... 1 , .. v<-LS. rp <". • 968:-3417. 4.lfl-2336 or 234-0108 w/Ugures l o $2.75 hr rt1lp Wa nted, I p an 9'111 ,-,,_"son nispec ors. ,, n. 1.,,~~"'J!~~~~~~1 patio, plush cpls & drps, I OCEAN Vic"' Ofc tn Unk>n CALL TRISH HOPKINS -yean CXJ>('rlence pret•lfllon I' NEW ADULT LIVING Blk 10 .beuch, 3();1 & 3f}t~1 Bank bldg, Ncwpot·t Center FOUND: beaut. long haired E lectrical & Gene ral JERRI WHITTEMORE COOKS. ·ro train for assts-FRY COOK 1nachlne ihop or shttt
1 BR &. 1 BR wl Iott. }Tplc, E. Ball:>oa, tllvd., 1711St" yrly y,•/rccept, ph, secy scrv. blk & \\'hite yng cat, fem. Uc'd. 842-0731, 64:>-0357 tant manager, Graveyard ?\future, exper. & depcn-nictal I alu rn. fabricw.Uoo. ~ ti t' & 1 $360 & $425. n10. 612-2800. Av\ Jun. l\h'. l\fcfarland, Vic of Marguerite & San ~ PERSC>NNEL shift 6 dizy11 wk. Co. paid dable . .Apply in peraon, Surf Familiar w I &ovc1i1n1e11t bl!~~ &"';.eCrJ1aa~I. sia~i EASTBLUFF. Back bay 644-9440. = Hill Dr., CdM Gardening c CD\JV"CC •Ar Clt.V"V benefit». Jack In The Box. & Sirloin, 5930 W. Coa1t specs. Own hand tool1 re-
$180 ut\l pd. Adult&, no ptih1. vleY.•. $twining~ 2 BR 2 BA ~F~IR~ST=-m-,-.-,-.,-n-t ~,-,~-,-. -D~lx-. ,;;.:,~=-----~-IEUROPEAN Ga rd en er. ..x.IV"'-'-1·~...._ I 1205 Baker, Costa :r.1esa. Hwy, N.B. ~~ quired.
393 ltamlllo:i. 64S.44U townho~. Frplc. Li: c o[flccs nr. ~irport. 1.2 & FOUND; Beaut. m 111 e Maintenance_ Landscaping. 488 E. 171h SI. (at Irvine) 0.1 COUNTRY·ROCK1 Bluegr8.SS GAI-5 18 to 35 _part tin1e, * TOP PAY
• TROPICAL POOL e patio. Adulis, no pels. $330. 3 Rn1. ~pnt-cs mm $135 l\fo. SiRme-se at Dick Church's Tree Removal. Very Suite 224 642-1470 mWiiclan m.'t,'dcil.. Verptile, $l to $4 per !Ir, 10 AM * LIBERAL \YAGE
2 BR., 1 1~ Ba. Spiral strcst>, 640--0349. Ja nil.orial .... ~~~ .. & aniplc ~nt 548-450l 0 r l'l.'asonable. 642-5329 eves. able to sing. f>4Z..3335. till 2 PM, ?.ton-Sat" 2 to PROGRA?.1
trplc, bltns. Ira encl patio, O IANNE:L REEF. 2 SH .. 2 parking. ~ Bel. noon l\1ow & EDGE ~DELIVERY Man for elU'ly 6 a wk. gd lookmg & * PAID HEAL.Tit &
fncd yrd. Gas & \\'Ir 1)(!. BA Bayfron t Condo, .i;hp, or 83.1-2840 Aft . noon FOUND female cat -at CLEAN UPS ADMITTING CLERK mo~ning L.A. Times hon1e sharp. 646-6838 DENTAL INSURANCE
51&-U68 J)()OI, ful'!l R\'ail. Ne''' In-NE\V Deluxe Office Space Edison High SctV>OI. Brown e 554-0057 e nos ital exper. a must. dehvet')' route. l\lu11t lutve GENERAL OFFICE * 11 PAID 1-IOLIDAYS
terior $450 lse. 011·ncr For Lense in ChoiL'O l\Jission & black 1vith wWte. Flea PACPFICA HOSPITAL economical car, 25 yrs or X1n't starting salary & re· A YEAR 2 BR, 1 be., blllns, crpt, 615-80741673-2067 Viejo Auto Pla.:.:a. Good o,'°o,l,cl"'"=-· °"962-°"2605'7'-,--,---IGeneral Services II . olde r, 2'h hrs a dizy, No imbursed ree for sharp in-* LONG TERl\1 SECURITY
d+""d· ,· p1.1~·-mom,;..,1.~1,•c 'c"as'. \VE~LlFF 2 ~·. 1 1~ ha. :Frv.·y offran1p at Avery FOUND, Black fem. dog. 8.p-Hw~l.ington Seach liOllcitlng. no oollecting, d' ~ typin ... & lite ~ .,.. UI" Aton·Fri, 3 P:P.1·11:30 PM good supplementaru income. iv. "'''a·o --· APPLY IN PERSON nyon Dr .• or call 645-l 422 T~·nhsc. Adulls only, no Park"•ay. Call OY:ner, Paul prox 6 nlOS, med sz. long. ORANGE COAST .,A., ,.,..,11 211 "" exper Lois of :PR & friendly USTRIES eves. pels. 1728 Bedford Ln. Brazeau 8.11-1400 hair, flea collar. Vic Bluffs '"""""" ' e:rct. · \Vestminlter, Garden Grove, atmos°phere. Fee Jobs Also. ROYAL IND
NE\V 2 s1v, 2 kln ... sz BR, $250/mo. 548-7533. AVAIL Jan 1., 2nd Or ol..:s, 6.li-4720 days. SERVICE APARTMENT P..tana g er' Huntington Beach are a. Jason Best Age ncy
Adults. n0 pets, 1~1.ins & NEW DUPLE_X 3 BR. 2 BA, I Bea.ch Blvd. air conrl, cpt, F'OUND white kitten. 4 black Total Maintenance for o27lc\~.llscoHUP:le,, ... ~~ix;,~~· fi.18:.29'2-1. 17400 Brookhurst, .l''. Viv. 2040 E. Dyer Rd .
dish"'shr, crpt, drps, 381 \\'inter.. S250fmo. Day s drps, <tulet. ~Oc sq_ ft . Call spots & black tail. So. of the Home Chi:ner --"°--'-Wl '~·· ~ DEUV. Man LA Times to Suite Zl3 963-6Tf5 Santa Ana . 5-10-3210
Victoria, v.·alk to c.~1. 979-316:1; Sat & S un, rollect 213-39-l-001:> 1'.1 r. Atlt1n1s, Republic homes, c AR p ENTRY-ELECTRIC· ASSEMBLER home& In N.B. $200 per mo. G e ne ra l Office $425 Equal Oppor. Employer n1/f
hospitnl $:?25 545-1657 645--0232 Ziebanh. CM Call 56-2201. Exp'd & mature wom8.n, t'Om-1_+_ho_n_,,,._._642-4800 ___ .___ Local, type ~'i. hs grad
1 BR , carport, pvt patio. N H . h DESK space avatlable $50 FND Dec. 18 -Spaniel mix PAINTING-PLU1'1BING n1ercial eJecU'Ollic assembl· WESTCLIFF
Nev.· crptfclrps. All elec. _ ewport ••~--n10. \Viii provide furniture female, Vie: Beach & • Free Estimates er for wiring & soldering. DESIGN
R dlt onl No at $5 mo.· Answering service Indianapolis -was injured 24 llr. Emergency Servlee ASSEMBLER DRAFTSMAN Personnel Agency ~sp. a 11 y. • PLEASAt"'IT & DESIR-available. 17875 Beach Blvd. by car _ 536-7127, 960-1233 Days 546-5961 ll-1echan1cal for electronic oro-For integrated circuit IRy· ll\1ark III Center) Kelly .. child/pets or \\'ater beds. ABLE. 2 Br, pool, gar. JtunU'ngton "-ach. 6'" '321 NI ht 962 3822 ""1680 duction. Pref.• man w/pro-out. Must be familia r w/ 1651 E . Edinger, S.A. $135. 548-1322. A<l"il•, ""pets. •iso. "8-'922 uo.: .. ........, PUG -Fawn -1 or 2 yrs g s -or .,...,. 542-8836 " ,, '"' ~ .,.. " ·i Lt~NSED BONDED vious exp & interest in ei<'C· micro electronic desl"n &f 1 -==~""~==c--1 2 BR-2 BA. Obie. "IH'll"e. PRIME office space, ava1 olri. Vic College Park, Cl'vl "'"""" -"' GENERAL OFFICE • • I I d N INSURED tronics. or printed circuit layouts. Avail. immediately,. I yr. Westminster at r~ashlon snn · l'Y.'port 549·1276 ===,,-,c-==-;=:;I ELECTRONIC TECH Workreqsavarietyoldrnft-Typing, filing, good phone Services lease. 'No small children/ Bl'SQoFch~.861 SQF,. to R2·3T° FOUND Sheepdog. E. Costa "THINGS" byR M00
1 se. PGlen'I Upply in small etectronic Ing skills & the ability to voice, shorthand not nee,
pets. $275 nio. 318-lGlh Pl. 2 br, 2 ba apt. crpts, drp!I, 'ro Bo. '"ui;n..,,. 04"c'"!1u~cp Y l\1esa area. CnrpcnEtry1, epaR"mod· 1u.m· brm for Tech. prof.icienl in work independently utilizing prev exper in engineering
NE\VLY DECORATED like new. $160. per mo. x "'"'~ · "' · .,~ .. v. Call 642-5618 bing. e c · e e Ing use of con1mon test equip-design guide lines. office helpful. career oppty
2 Br "'/carport, $145. Wtr Hot & cold \\'atl'r furn. 16f7WESTCLIFF.:_N8 FOUND. fluffy Calico cat, "642.=.,-56"=!3=·==-~-,-~~ I ment. A1ust be ambitious & dra . In N.B. Call f\ir. Chase on • TYPISTS
pd. 2194 Placentia Ave. "E" 642·5617. 2300, 1710, 1200, 720 sq. ft. llea collar. Vic Center & CARPENTRY. electrica l fast for development&: prod. Pttust h~ve ftlng edue_auon-Thurs, Dec. :nth, btw ~ ani
Call btwn 1 &. 5, 636-4120 Apts., I 5.X. per sq rt . Ample prk'g. Pomona C 'I "A" 9384 plumbing, fix-it. F & B resting, Must be able to rwi al trrunlng +•I some indus. 12:00. 833-3447.
• SECRETARIES * GENERAL orr1CE
370 Ulil . &unigardne1._ 5~1-5032. • "' · ~ .H00o"m"e-'R"-c"pru=·'~· c.6'2-_1_403~. __ 1 Drill press & build prot~ ex~r. Koo\\ ~e of elec-2 BR, 1 ha & 3 Br, l 'ii Fur n. or Unfurn. I F'ND sml dog & puppies in Hauling type etectronies. 54&-282'l or lrorues also helpful. GIRLS-GUYS ba, bltn range, drps, crpt,1-.:..-=-'-'-;...:._; _____ Office w/beaut vie,v. :iG.5 Sq. front of K-l\1art. Can't :.;.;;::.:c.=-------I
pool, clubrm. QU"POrt. 2212 Costa Mesa ft. Newport.1Cen1crd. $425 ncdio. keep. 642--018'.? HAUL, dri·-.. a~ removed, fHS-2635. XJn't starting salary + oppor. TRAVEL,
LITE INDUSTRIAL * ASSE ?.1BLERS &
*PACKERS
NEEDED I!\1MEDIATELY
Start The College Ave. 64G-fi032 Profess1ona ly et'Orat · ...... "~ BABY Sitter, for 8 yr old to grow w/a dynamic, ex·
2 .BDRi\1, shag c r µ t ' Tl!E EXCITING Estate Realty, 640-U20. F'ND: \.\•hltefgold f m I grading, sldploader, dump girl, li\o·e in, tree rm & pandlng co. soon to relocate OVER 18
d'sh she ! · til pd PALM MESA APTS ore sui1e, 1000 ft. Suitable Cock-A-Poo163Vic. l6th St.. truck, tree u;m, niisc. brd in El Toro, Age betwn to Irvine Industrlal Complex. New Year Right
i wa r. re rig, u ' BC • f doc H t I I C.!\1. 54&-5 979-8837. 21 & 35. prel teacher or pool. Children "''elrome. ll-t!NUTES TO NPT. H. or ·tor. u n n g on FO"ND Pek;-se dog at LOCAL moving & ha"ltn' g h ~ . Phon 1838 Placentia. 642-8138 1'1.JRN. OR UNFURN. Ganlcns, 846-1323. .., ~..,~ .. prof. muc u= time. e
Unbel'·evably-1a-e apts., ILL h 11. 2052 Fed-Co Dept. Store in Costa by student. Large truck. 1or details,~83.7-5647 alt 5. ... \\' 1'I are:-my o ice. ~" F .:..-, "'"" """"'n Re n.. .,. •o•s huge pool, Jacuzzi, elect bit-Newport Blvd, Suite 9 $G0 ,.,esa. en1<Ue. ~-as. oo.1ry. <Jo>'r"'J.O't or BABYSl'ITER for occasional Dana Point
Send resume or call
for personal Interview
SILICON GENERAL
1 B le no children ins. shag crpts, drps, sauna !\1o. 646-87CH a.rn. only. YNG. Siamese cat, lite taffy 673-0647. days & eves. out. 35lh &
r, v w, etc. Adults, no pets. rolor, fem. ilea coller vie. GET RlD OF UNSIGHTLY Newport Blvd area. Phone 7382 Bolsa Ave. or pets, matu.re ad u It SJ NG LES 'From $150 Sl-IARE attractive 0 ff 1 c e Del Mar Ave., CM 546-1182 TRAS!l & DEBRIS $12 673-4372 Westminster 892-5531 $135/mo 493-1885; 497-2511. 1 BEDRM. F-m 1165 11_uite. \\lcstclif_f D_r, N.B. LOAD COLLEGE STU '" · h d 111 •• 3100 SMALL blk long hair cat · -BABYSITI'ER needed, Calif. Equal Oppor. Employer Huntington Beach 2 BEDRM. From $185 F lu·n is e · J • ..,..:i-Balboa Isl. 673-9210 or DENT 548-6428 Sch. Dist. prefer yolll' home, 1:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1unturn Apts Avail from $10-Business Re ntal 445 ~154 SKIPLOADER & dunip truck RJtcr 6. 557-4156 DRAPEH.Y Y.'ork roon11 ex-
UNDER NEW lo $15 LESS. '"OUN D. •ten's bifoc al work. Concrete, asphalt, BOAT pcrience only. Table & You're right, theu'rc under-NEWPORT SHORES '" " · b k. "'"1110 hin t ! 11 MANAGEMENT " {Tlasscs nr Mesa Verde on sawing, rea 1ng . ......,.. . MANUFACTURING mac e operR ors, u or priced! 1561 1'1esa Dr. 600 To 1600 Sq . ft. spaces, "' •:: part time. Carnie n' s 2 BR. Blt·ins. Ne\\•ly dee-(5 blks from Newport Blvd.) nvail. inimcdiately! 62nd & Baker, 546--7999 \VASHER, dryer, stoves ..,. Applications are now being Drapery Service, 782 W. 20th
orated. Encl garages. Beau-546-9860 Pacific Coo.st Iii\')'., Ne"rport FC:N"o=. ""M"alccce=~&--=F~e-m-. Hot wtr. hlr. $2· Refrlger. taken for cabinet shop sand· St. Costa ll-1esa
tl!ul landscaping. Lrg play NEWPORT , , Beach. For office use, bar-Dachshunds Vic. SheN·ood free. 847-6684. Scrap iron. ers, trainees, cabinet assem-' .~~--
are, a ch~d's dream. Close APARTMENTS her shop or any business. St .. C!'.1 548-6459 YARD, garage clean-ups biers. \\1ages depending on DRIVERS .
to shopping & schools. Rents very reasonable; 555 remove trees, dirt, ivy, pa.st exper. Fiberglass mold-Cross Country. .No special
Children welcome. 1 BR. & 2 BR. monUi to nionth or lease. Lost driveways, stumps, 847-2666· ers, gel-coaters. Apply in lie. rcq'd.
Call 842-0480 Furn. & Unlurn. From $140. REWARD! Santa An a 32 FT. FURNITURE Van person, 1931 Deere Ave .. MacGregor Yacht Corp
UTUJTIES PAID : 675-&050 '' for local furn hauls & gen'! Santa Ana. 1631 .t'lacenlla, C.M. ~ i N f HB No Pets -;; Heights area. Black shaggy $14.5 -n m • o. 0 · 2•~ N-·,.,.,,., .. t Blvd., ~1 terrie r . Name tag hauling. 548-1862, 557-2736. BOAT CARPENTERS DYNAl\UC Newport office 2 B• bl!-• crnts d....-.c ......., ".,,_., '-" -1'1'''1111 Cl.,-need d ... "'" .,.. • .,..... Call 646-1038 -R·~··---"Licorice", J ames Dressler u-Name it "-e have It, free l:..'-<!*tienced only 556-8920 s personable front esk poof• play ant carpon & --~~~===--s · 3 d Pho "t ·~1335 l.ndry facil. Cple &-1 sml * CASA VICTORIA * 601 Dover Dr.. u1te ~~ on tag. ne estin1ate, Clea~up yards BOOKKEEPER, full charge gu ·......,.... · ..
child ok, no pels. 842-4664 1, 2 & 3 BR furn & un( ==N=E7W-'PO~R_,T,-c-B~E_A.,Cll'7.CC-. garages. 548-2732. t'.X!*ricnc:e, part time, apply ELDERLY male. Quahflca·
aft 5:l0 pm. Carpets, drapes, Df\V, TV OFFICE on NcY.·port Blvd. RE\\' ARD, Gold Sign ate Housecleaning Dillmans Restaaurant. 801 lions Acctng :nckground,
UNFURN 2 BR 2 BA br ight ant. Pool. etc. 525 Vietoria Avail. on lease Partially Ring. \I'/ family crest, lost E. Balboa Blvd., NB management 11.. iliry, must
&-sunny drape. s hot' & cold St, at Harbor CM. 6-12-8970 furn, ca11>l·tl'd, air/cond . Sat. 15th Dec. Vic: Fashion HOUSE Of CLEAN BUSBOY. S srepolarttes. '~.~.·11ounng0Upcocnple,.a,• ' ' 2 WEEKS FREE RENT ;iarking. Approx . 1000 sq. Island, \\'estC"liff Plaza, So n 'ndow & r~ \Valer f"m . Oosets ~1ore. t 61· """'A OOl'S, carpets, \\'I s . Some exn•>t', des1n1ble. See ,.,ty & opport"nltu. ·~-~. " &""' ft. $250/mo. \Varchouse a so Coast Plaza, home ;i.-.,.,.,.,, F 642-6824 ,...... .. " ..,.... ~w 1 child, no pets. $15.5 per I Bl' furn, util pd. $140. mo. avail. Ideal for contractor. office 547-9555. walls, ree est, Personnel Manager. ENTERTAINER
mo. 5.11-6515 Lg 2 Br, unf, water pd, $155. ~2616. LOST-Vic. La:guna Canyo n Dedicated Cleaning Balboa Bay Club Apply at Baers Lair, 4507
NE\V duplex. v.'alk lo beach. 67S:58CK.I. .~.T-H-E~F~,-,-10-,-y-.. -h-,-,-a-Jrg 9 mo RidgeQ<lck pup . * WE 00 EVERYTHING * 1221 \V. Coast 1-lwy .. N.B. Coast Hwy, NB. 67~11
Jge 2 or .3 bdrms, bltns. LUXURY Lrg 2 -SR, adults, shop avail. $1S5fmo. Jn "Tw•k" Brn w/wht spot, Refs. Free es!. 6~2839 CASl-llER·FEl\-1ALE, part
dshwhr, crpts; drps, irplc. bltins, pool, nr shopping Cannery Village 425 3()th St., chest & paws cut on r/side PJ inting & time, for Retail Nursery. EXECIJTIVES
$230. to $295. 540-9m center & bus, l!Wl Pomona. NB. &12-1!))(). HELP! needs medication p h • Apply in pel'SOn only at $15,000 to $75,000
d bl h '-":C--0-"7~'=-~~-= -w .. ~ 497-120'-aper angin_g, ---22ll FaiIView Road. Costa Send "'"me o< call TODAY 2 BR, cpts, X11S, uis, Lagu na Bea c Industrial Re ntal 450 •L .... u -u C·~-s n< r-·ys shop-----PROF. PAINTER l\lesa for confidential NO COST -·~·-, ' . ,.. ' ---ENGLISl-1 POINTER !\1ale . . . ping & sehls. I child 'OK. STUDIO, furn $l<IO. 2 br.
1
* COSTA MESA * ,vht w/ bro""'" spots, notch-HONEST WORK CASlllER/counter g i r I . e:rcecut1ve interview.
No pets. 646-3186 or 5-l>-0760 unfurn $230. North e!1d of 680 S.F. 220 po\\·er $115. ed ear, ans Strider, Vic : Reas. ln!fext, free estimate. Must be able to \\'Ol'k grill, EXECUTIVE SERVICES,
...... WALK TO BEACH Laguna Beach 494--1985 eve. 1300 S.f'. Pril':lle ollice, College Park, Mon 17. $230 =R='=''=·-'54&-~2'159-:7~·-"'-~~39_13_.~,, I ~:Jl ~1Monday-FridRy. 8S8 N. Ma~~ianta Ana
2 & 3 Br, Cpts, ...... R, bllns. Newport Beach plenty of pnrklng. Reward, 5;}7-2321 ask for PROF ... · 1 ·n<J «l 96 .. o _, · ·1 bl BOB · ""'"""covering sate CASHIER-FULL u·mc, e•p'd 1 .,.. -&.J gar. 308 161h St. 536-8548/ Larger units a \'a1 a c. 1. N -14 · all ...
841-3951. Ba che,lor Furn $20S Ready for occupan<'Y.. ie. 0· "'..-J · insur., prefd. FACTORY help needed .. No C ROBERT NATTR ESS RE\\'1\RD for fl'nl. calic.'O types of paper. 714 ; BUILD & GRO\V c:rcper necessary. Opening e WALK TO BEACH Ocean Vie\\'. Yearly lea<;e. · ALTO ' cat, Vic: Bonita Vista Tract 842-4386. co2 Cll\IVI 00 all 3 shifts. Apply in
Heated Pool. 1\dults Only. RE R ll-Jission Viejo, ans Susie, · o>.J _,,.,...,., R R bbe 415 Brand nu 1, 2. & 3 Br, cpls, LAS BR I SAS APTS. Costa r.1esa 9i9-6571 EDDIE Pisz De c o ra t 1n g CLERICAL person. eeve:s u r, drps, bltns, gar, 221 lGlh SL \\·earing Dea collar, lost Dec Service. ~asoMble rates. ·Ave. Pico, San Clemente.
1 =7 551:> River .4.l'e., NB 12 830-5828 I ed Ass' ts Top 84 -.>.hi · NOW LEASING . Neat "''ork. 492 3630. mm · lgJU1len . FIBERGLASS CaH 642-2566 RE\VARD. male ID wk Sable $$$. Long or short term 2 BR, 1 BA. Bit-Ins, cpts, 400 Huntington Beach PAINTING. Paperhanging. Call °'" ... ~. Mold shop assistant foreman.
d 1 blk t be h 1115 Rooms Collie nr. Harbor & Vic-"I ~ I" I t ~, ~~ rps, o ac ·.;.cc."--------NEW M-1 "aster ..... a .... man. n ·"°"" · NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO. Previous exper. ......,.ulred. ,., ""-" "'~"-!""" -loria, C.M. call Tom Evans I I ~-9~5~• .• , mo. o-t5-..>WJ, .....,.--,)JU, ROOMS '2{) Y.'k up w/kit, 940 Sq. Fl. & UP at 548-2138 or 646-1411 Loca re · '"•= est. ir -''7'1 TEMPO Temporary Help · Apply In person, 1931 Deere
NE\V Apls, Y.·alk . to beach, $30 "''k up apts. Children I-lamillort t: NP\Vland St. EXTER. $220 & up. Rooms Ave., .Santa Ana.
l 2 & 3 BR ~vn1I & . 2376 N rt •~1970 LOST Siamese Seal Point 118. Neat \\/Ork. Airless COMMERCIAL FOOD SERVICE ' · pet section. " e"po -,_. male, 9 mo. Vic. Santiago C-" Ro 960-1407 536-2.i79 Blvd OI. 548-9755 ° r & Galaxy a t Holiday, N.B. !'!pray. ..... y, · TELLER ASSISTANT I
NORTHEND, 2 Bil. Condo, 645--3967 4001 BIRCH, NB 1-tewartl! 646-0169 PAINTING & Papering, 21 P ,'time, 2-3 nrs daily.
11i bas. rpts, shutter.>, St'l5.1_P_R_l_V_A_T_E_Roo~-m-~&-~ba~th 3600 Sq. Ft. Sprinklered. Lt. HE LP, Lost broY.·nish blonde years in Harbor area. Refs Experienced $2.577 hr. Apply to,
FREE to travel Ha\\·a.11, Mex-'i''ith Kelly
ico City & major cities. ~lust be neat & single. No 1401 Dove St., Suite 340
.exper_necessary. All trans-Newport Beach 833--1441
portation furnished "''·'2 !Bank of Calif. Bldg.)
week expense paid training _ ~
program. For appt !or per· ~
sonat intcl'Vlew, Call Mi" KEYPUNCH
Sands, (n4i 774-8097, 10 AM-
5 PM !\Ion thru Fri. Parents OPR.
111elL'Ome at interview. Min. 1 yr exper. on 029 &
GUARANTEED Schools,
pay and !raining.
Today's ARl\iY has
300 job opportunities,
1n4) 645-1163
For the faets.
HANDYMAN
059. Day shill .
For Appointme nt
Contact Carol Smith
AVCO
Financia l Service
644-5800
Reliable couple. For apts. Equal Oppor. Employer 1 day per ~·eek. Live Jn.
177 B. 2'lnd St .. C.J\l.
HEAVY EQUIPMENT
OPERATOR
No exper. req'd. \Vill tl'ain.
Ages 17-34. $325 mo .
Starting salary + n1any
benefits. Now intcrvie\vini;.
KEYPUNCH
OPERATORS
Am1y Oppor:tunities, (7141 URGENTL y NEEDED
66-1163.
HO~USEBOY, exper. Refs. Do Univac tno
everything. Thurs. & Sun •':"'-------,I off. Occas. nitc v.'Ork. Jfl' Se~arate q_uarters. H r s . rf-'Y. J
61on. tliru \!Ted., 1-A?.t-1 J-( in
PM, & 3 PM·7 PM . Fri . 2111.Dll P..t Or.
& Sat 9 AM·2 Pi\1 & 4 ~
.PJ\f.g P?.1. $350 mo. starting 1-Mm
Jan. 2nd. 548--9525.
II OU SEK EE:l'ER-live-ln: •-•DIES TRAVEL routine cleaning & lndry. ~
assist ~'/cooking, mus I OVER 18 drive, Priv bdrm, bath, col-
or TV. Reis. req'd. call If you're look.Ing for an t"X·
6-14-5123 cillng job see ll-tr. l\fcl.a.nc>.
l~OU SE KEEPER & She~ton Bch. Inn, 21l2 • 'Id Ll . · r: 1 Pac1l1e Coast 1-lwy., H.B. chi care. .,:e u.1• ., '1 Suite 122. \Ve have openings
da¥s. Some Enghsh nee. for 8 ladies free to travel
Priv, rm & TV. CalJ Mrs. U • • t Hi h In Lo fn41 673-9114 N.B. .:;. "" re n. g earn gs, ng, ' trans. paid. P a r e n t a
JANITORIAL
Full & p /time
Permanent Openings for
PORTERS
v.·elrome al lntervieY.'. No
house lo house: sales.
LIQUOR Slore Oerk, full
time, apply at 2072 So. East
Bristol, nr OCC airpon.
MACHINISTS
!l·l6-04·Kl. \\•fkiteh£>n privl. for colll'ge i\:Tfg \Vh!!le. Storage. Baun1-Jong hah'Cd l'O('k·a·poo, ans furnished. 642·2356. ·Irvine Unified
3 BR, 21/1 Ba. Patio age nonsmoker nr OCC. garclncr, 541-!".iOJ2. to Sheeba, $10 H.e\\·ard, INT/EXT PAINTING UNITED School Dist r ict Apply Personnel Office
2 blk$ to beach. 536-6663 557--M59 Storage 455 968-6985. Free Est J im 675-3559 CALIFORNIA BANK 14600 Sand Canyon Ave. BetY.•n 10 am & noon & 2-4 pm
For growing valve mfg.
Permanent 4-40 v.·eek.
Newport Beach ~~1f~atc~U10!~o.~~J· LOST tall, thin. \v hit ('/ PAINTING, INT/EXT 2301 s. Main Street E Eas1t !Oprvine THE BROADWAY TURRET LATHE
645--1502 STOP.AGE • 1260 sq fl, 10 male Saluki 1-lound . Vis f Paperhanging. ~7887 Santa Ana qua por. Fashion Island, N.B. BAR WORK
ft ceiling. 2 OH doors, Nr. NC\\'Pt Shores. 642-3848. (547 9581) Employe r
Vacation Rentals 425 11· i' TENN IS ANYONE? e Beautifully furn. P 11 Im
Springs rentals. Homes or
Condos \V/6 tennis cour1 s.
\\'kly, monthly or annual
BIG! I
~"'c.:nc.:.taC::ls.=°"Gl~n'_ia_\_V"~°'~·k. Assoc. Canyon R ca I t y
(714 1327-3500.
Renta ls to Share 430
NB PO, $175 mo. 642-9510 MALE SJ•••tESE, ne"le-d, P laster, P atch, Re peir -EquaJ Oppor. Employer 1st & 2nd Shift s ,...., " '" ual · FOOD Server, experience not
Rentals W anted 460 de-clawed, broken ta i I, * PATCH PLASTERING * Eq Opportunity necessary. Must be willing Put a JltUe "loot" in your AQUA DIAL
N<'f'rl Erupty house or small
bldg for Nt.>w Years Eve
parly. J-:\'es. 673-3184.
Misc. Rentals 465
ard 644-4237 Employer rew . · • All lype!!. Free estimates -::::z~====z~1 to learn. Days on 1 y. Levis-sell thoSe b..;.ubles for Apply 1741 Placcnl!n, CM SJ\·fAU. black poodle. Alale Call 540-6825 ii --644-2601. 210 New p o r 11 "bucks''. Call Classified
College Park. =p"'fu-m-..,-b~in-g----..,---COMMERCIAL Center Dr, N.B. 1.:642.::o· -'·5678=c:'-' ~-,.,.-""""""'I
=-~Ca""'ll-'55'-c-,-11'-4=1-,.--c TELLER Holp W•ntod, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 710
SML gold plated star shaped L.R. OTIS PLUi\ffilNG -r
pin. no value sentimental Remodels & Repairs. \Valer Experienced I• •1
only. 6T:>-5480 heaten. disposals, furnaces,
LOST male Irish Setter. no dshy,•ashrs. 64~263 MIC & UNITED
MAINTENANCE
TECHNICIAN
(Public Works)
So lu y $691-$139 Mo.
from
$160
collar. Vic. Victoria C?l-1. BIA. Coniplete Plumbing CALIFORNIA BANK
SHARE large llLxurious 2 Br Call 548-3368. Service. Lie. 272694.
11:.: Ba apt. !rplc, nc1v !urn, ' PLU~ffilNG RF~PAJR 30'l9 Harbor Blvd.
EXECmVES-IAIAGERS
"JOB OPPORTUNITIES" Apply before 5 Pi\1 Monday, •
Dec. 31. 1973.
At Oakwood Garden Aparl·
111ents
GREAT RECREATION: :;:wim-
nung, saunas. ht"al\11 clutl~,
bll!1ards, 1onnis, pro t. pro
shop, golf driving rang e, patty
room, etc.
FUN ACl"lVITIES; r uU·timu
d1reclor, lrc!'l Sund.-1y brunr,r1.
BBC's, trip~. parlll;S, and
more l
BEAUTIFUL f•PARTMCNT:;·
Single:;:, 1 t ;• t "<lruom~•
Furn. & unlurn, \V1:h il'I tt.e
ell11as. Mo<J1·i.. ''r•·n 1u 10 7.
Sorry. no pe1~ •,r 1.l'!1lart'.'n.
Oa.kwood
Garden AJ>Artmcnts
Hewpolt Bttch/Norlh
lnlM *'0 1("~ f.J-0~~
Nowport 811ch/Soulh
16111 11 lr.1~• ~·~.ano
11 ril pd, pool. l\olillion dollar ' No job too small C~~a2>033lesa
vlt•\\, Must see to believe. I~ ** 642-3128 * * ~ ~·l'.175 Dana Strand Rd. Apt I SeMces ..S Rlplir'I Sew ing/Alter.ltions Equal Opportunity No. l, Dana Point. Gr ce n . , ---'"-------c I Se '= 1 • Employer La nt. \\' or oast 11vy. e -EXPERTISE -Alter. Ladies ""!'!~ ... ~~~!!!~!!!!!!!
Ultk. I PerJonal1 ll•l Babysitting & i\lcn!I. Pick up & delivery. CoMPANION I Housekeeper,
\\'1\NTF:U, Roo1nn11l!e. \Vork· . . ~548-7197 after 6 Iv-in, prlv. rm & bl\.
ing hn!y, 55, 1\'ishcs lo share 'iiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii lsl\otlTH'S Sch. area. Your Television Repair Security more bnportant
3 Rni. <ipt. \~1ith san1e fol' 1,ii • 530 honie or mine $1 hr. ~ than high salary. No hvy
11•111, S50 & 1~ )loh1 & gas Personals d 5 d k ·~ ·-WO<k. Good health, -01 • ----------ays, ays aw . ~·· COLOR TV Repair, expert, ........ ""I' 1n(1nth. Nol deluxe. hut bl t t ho """ & ~ driver '" DEA REST GEORGE, LIC'D ~--, my -·· near reasons e, mos n me. coo ...... 'Et guuu • t•lcan, l>un1forta ble and rl'ais-\..a.l.'t:" -" 1 n.-Re 1 Cl "'ed Ad No Ill If you 1-cr1d thi11 :lnd are s. Coast Plll28. Birth thru Antenna se,v1ce a so . .l:K-1• PY assu1 • • un11bll'. 2079 Thurln Ave., Gall ore 96S-2'l83 Daily Pilot, Box 1560, Costa C.!\f. Avail Jan Isl. st ill having a problcn1 1with 6 yrs. 557-8656. em • · M-·, 9~
your drlnk\11i.;, ci11\ Rll e igh C Tile ...... .r»IR
FE!\! Room1natr in 20's Hills Hospilal in NC\.\'J)Ort _•_r-'po_n_l•-•------· i ----------Controller Tre11 $30K
fl{'Nk!d lo share 'v/sa1nt>. Beach. I bclievt' your health & a.II CERAMIC TILE NE\V & Mirll t'Omputerg. 30 mil '74
Hunt. Ikh. 2 BR $89 + ln Rura ncf' ""II c ove r *All lypes *Big sm • remodel.~ est. Sm jobs Jr. Accounta nt $12K
el•'1•, cull V(·ronlca 84&-6476 alcoholism. Stan O. 53frl648 welcome. 53fr2426. n........-.1
or S17-l.229 \ Lovf', l\faric ..,...ti~=-·
ROOi\,1'.1,\TE, female, lo f1JLLY LICENSED ~arpet Service 1,T_op...__So_ll______ Liz~= :J:e?
~hare 2 BR apt \\'ith same. * SPIRJTUAlJST * hot * QUALITY * Suite 104, NB 833-8190 Call Linda 9 6 8 - 4 9 fi 0 ·, Spir1l"al readin"s JO a.m.-10 JOHN'S carpet & Up stecy Estab"-hed 1965 .. ._. Dr! Shampoo, (Soil Retard· • ll-tuLQI & TOP son. * U5
833-1810 p111. Ad\'ice on all mailers o.nta). Degrea sers & *
Fl::i\1Al...E roommate to share 312 N. El Camino Re:al, all color brightenen I: 10 ~ COOKS
3 Bil. <'Ondo, Laguna Hills.
1
~1£.9'?.,;me4!!.!e:..J.~r appt call minute bleach for white I'!!!! DAYS. NO EXPER. NEC.
5..QG-2409 Afl . 4. PM• ,.., wu, "~· . carpets. Saw your money I; [ll] ANCIENT MARINER AJi;o entering lo parties. by tlllving me extra trips. I I i I IO'.;;;;c;;-;;;:;;;:;;-;--;;;--,-;;;;-ll ~G:!1'..'.'!1V!!9::;':..!10~''.....:k~•'..'.n'.!l _ _:4:;3~5 PROSLJ..:~1 Pregnancy. Con· \Vilt cleM living rm., dining Ei...,iwlt f 2007 W. Coast H6f&.o2ot
LARGE deluxe 3 Br, 2 Ba, fid e n I s Y m Jl a lhetic & h 11 115. A I :·~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiilijiil Newport Beach ~ blk to 9Ctan. $26011\10. MINI WAREHOUSE S prognr.in,~ ci)unsellng. ,,_bor· rm~J. A , ny ~· Apply 3 pm-5 pm Mon-Fri
to J"une. a12 42nd $1., STORAGE Hon I.· n;fuptlons ref o $7.;JU, couch $10. Ontlt $5. Job Win•~, .. -•lo 702
upstairs. Vaca nt. ~767. No Move-In or Move-out APCAR~: .&12.-4436 ~ty~ieft!d.ls Iwtl~! ~r~ ,_ -·-COOKS
I DLJ< to beach. 'J br, 1ba. charges, r~rom $7.50 per LfFI:: OR. DEATH myseU. Cood ret. 531-0101. NEED help at homo? We DAY/NITES
l160Cal_ yeatly. Uttl 1ncluded. 1;on11h. •-l..t"I our bal:ilcs live. 'For DlBERNARDO &: Soos _ have 11ides, nu r a e a , -Apply In Ptl'IOR
1 613-0731. · 11m Ito" " Nrwlanc\ SL, 118 tiltc.rnatlvrs IQ ABORTION carpet salea. _ illlltallation_ ho us ekprs, companionJ. C•rl't Jr.
2 BR. trpk, dll)!I, crp1, ALLS PACE C(il\ Ll.fE LJNE f'ISl-5522, and re.pair. 963--26Jg Ito m c m &.k er• Upjohn 21532 S. Brookhunt
AdullS: no pe11. $225. mo. 960-1970 2.1 hrs. Ce nMnt Concrete Ml~. ·" Hl!JlUnsrton Beach
Clll aft S:30 p.m. 66-6500. GARAGE Spa<.'i' for rent ur-:sr MASSAGE lN N.B. ' . BABYSM"IER wanted; 1 COOK
$ l 2M·$75M Range
SALAlllS·NIG-OTIAILI
Ar• You Un•mployod No-Aro You Sookin9 A Ch1n90
-Worri.O About Your Ag-Tirod of lrokon Promi101-
Und1cldod A1 To A Propor Co11r10 of Action--
ARE You ·vNDER PA1 D7
If Yo•. Cu Aatwor 'nl9 ~lowl19 c.t.t.ntt, I• TH
A.fRrMOtlft, Wo'd LAI• A• ,_,..,s.w WM Yo•
IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL
-WE CAN HELP YOU
A, Do you h1vo 1hong voc1tionol clri ... 17
I. Do yo11 howo good n1ti•• lntolllgonco1
C Do you f•1l 111fllcl111lly 1t1otiw1t1d to 1chtowo1
O. Do you h1•• th1 1bility to m1ko d1ci•ion1
E Aro you roody to 111 1 r111i1tic c:1ro1r obj1ctlY17 f: If yov wit• convlncod th•t holp w•1 ..... a.bl~ would
yo11 occopt It, without d1l1y1 •
YOU SHOULD KNOW e Th• INH•r 10~1 •'• t1ot 1d .. 1rtl11d e Thluf 1t•rfv p,of111lon1I lfflwonco :. 101notim11 n1c11• ••rv . e Gettln9 tho right doof1 optn, Af th1 ri9ht l1w1I r••
q'it11 tochnlquo. • • e E11ecutl•• potltlon1 ''' fHlod thro119h lllot11f1•1 l11t1r·
.. 1.w.. • e Mi1' ,0111rno m•Uln9, ii not• tot•! tntwor.
SEND RESUME OR CALL TODAY
-FOR-
NO COST EXECUTiVE ·INTERVIEW
EIEOUTIVE SERVICES, llC.
-HOME l)FFICE -
CITY OF
IRVINE
4:J)l Campus Dr. 92JS64
(714) 83.l-3840
' Equal Oppor. E1nploycr mil '
MARRIED person over 21 1
Cl\r & phone l"K!t'Css. $125 ~
wk. to Sia.rt. 89-1'"80'.Xl ,
MASSAGE TECH. I
TRAINEE 1
Young IAdy (l8·28l u·anted 1 tor lcgttlmatc full lime pogi-i
tlon. No txp. nee. \Ve st:nd i
to school, cam while learn. !
.Apply In per'90n any aft. or
eve. 2930 W. Cat. Hwy., f
Newport Beach. j
M E D I C A L Tl'Chnok>gis'i
llceMed exp'd, PM11, part '
ttme. 8!2-0611 '" :m I
NEED Self ~lopmenl!
DJ+ Jobrl!
Toda>'• ARMY
IS the place lo train.
FOi: lnfonnation phone,
t114l 66-1163 ' _,
NEED llcenM!d nur1t1• who
enjoy older people, Call ~10br642-&M<.
. NOW HIRING .
2 Bedroom, bltm, DW. Ml!..r Dolo.·ntcm-n H un t in gt on 3400 Jrvlne Ave. Suite 1038 PATIOS, walk•, drives, c:On-c~ld 847~me, ' d~ a Ex.per. In nunlng home eook-
-__ c ---" ~~~ .. ~ Pt'r -~~ ... ~.· ~~-or -~a~n: ~~9.~~~ ~1s-=~4Lic. · ~ ~p Domt~ 1\let. -1: Sir. I -~ ~~~~~O!P~'!!.
BAYl'RONT 2 Br, 2 ~ _wl DOUBLE Garaa:e olf alley, A LCOliOLJCS Anonymous CEMENT: Patio, drives, open IOOn. ~n ~ on 54(1.5690.
(7141 547"'25--
-.. -N. IMln St. S.m• An•
Waitre11ta. b11t hon, cook
trainees. kitehtn hclp. Must
be U or Ovtl\ Apply in
penon, CIJ.nlno't lt.allan
RHUurant, a&44 So. BNU:il.
Santi. Ana l..S pm starting
Monda)!. 1rt Pldot ptiv btaoh It s)ler stora~ only, N cw port ~ 541-7217 or write walka-Repaln, saw It stllfl. ~ in.. 5.30. ~H&:::ve:::::_,.=-lb=1 .. ,-,,...,,,,-::.,::ant~to;:
s.')50/mo. 979-0031. 644...CStO ilelJchls. G44-«l30 P.O. Box l223 Costa Mesa. remove. 1-"'ree est. 5#89518. a.A$ SE~ -642-5671 tellf Ouciftt!d ads do '!Ill •
!SECURITY IANK IUILDIN& SUITE 7021 ...... ... ' -
\
I
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·1 h11!'5da1. Dtttmbcr 20, 1973 OAJLY PILOT 43
~-'tlli:e:f.lp~WW.e;;ntt.OCIT, MMi&,.F"i]'ftoiii:Hr.eJ:p:"iwW:e::nt;::ecl::;,"1M"'&'F..,.7"10..,,H"'e=p°"W"'•:-n""te..,...,...,_....,...,7..,.lO""'F,...u-rn""l"'tu-,.-----::,:-:IO~M"'.1-,c-•"'il'::"a00neo=u-1 --"'1"'18""P"11:-n:-o:-1/'1lo:::,:::9'::"•n:-1c----..826°TV, Raa10, HIFI, Dogs 8 4
WAITRESSES o v., 21 :..:=C:.:APc:..::.ISf_llAN_O_..;;,;,: YANKEE CllPI><r 5 h.p. • I NOS Stereo 136 • PUPPY WORLD • I T•-'"'lott llrll l
MOTOR ROUTE
The Dally Pilot has an opening for a driver
to deliver papers to carriers in Laguna
Beach.SOuth Laguna Monday through Fri·
day afternoons and Sunday morning. Salary
plus auto allowance. Phone Harry Seeley
642-4321, for appointment . '
An equal opportunity employer
~ented, M & F 710 I Help W a nted , M & F 710
NURSES AIDS & orderll••· RECEPT. MEDICAL
All shUt1. Call 642-8044 or l..()(·111 rn.dlologist seeks exper.
642-24l0. lndiv. lo hllndle front desk
PART Tlfo.1E & a I es l ady lticlucUng bkkpng & Ins.
\\'ant~ fonn!4. l\1ust be accurate
call for appolntnwnt typillt. Salary to $500. Call
613-6250 ' Coa!!tal Personnel Agency
jiii;;;;;OiiiliiOiiiiii.,.iOiimm I 540-60.>5. 2100 Harbor Blvd.:
Pafroll Cl'rk $600 CM.
BIUing Clrk, Lag Nig""l l500
Secretary SGOO
Secretary, s .A. $650
F/C Bkkpr, Buena Pk '$650
Secmtllry $650
F /C Bookkcei:x·r • $725
,Cell Jeannie Sisco
& Sid l·loff man
NEWPORT
Ptr1onntl Agency
833 Dover Dr., N.B.
642-3870
ROUTE DELIVERY, early
morn L A Times, approx
2 hrs per morning, $200
mo. 536-1172 morning or
968-8915 eves.
SALES, do not reply unless
you have had promotional
i;u1es exp. ; if so, and can
evaluate an unusual oppty
for a co.recr business con-
nection, phone f o r in-
)h•rvlt•1\', J\1r. L eona rd,
M&-1059
pttfe1Ted, experienced or MOBILE li0l\1E PAGEANT mlnlblk<', ('X'lraa. Good cond t' A ZF.Nml RCA & _Sylv1Ul1a Bull DoKJ._ Ch.lhuAl:l11.'\!i, i ·tn)
wW traln. Apply in pe_nion. $600.000 Model. U om c.. S75. Kc Kl wrfboard 9'6" • ORGANS TV A 1tereo1, pri<.'C'd l,.~s Poodles, Shih 'fsu, Amcr.l ~;;;;;;;;;;;;:.;;;;;1
G I a n I no ' a 1talI11. n F\11'nlt\ll'e Sale. Uquklatk>n $30. Velsey aurbaartl 9·2·· tNt.n lhe di1100unh1n \\lllh Eti.kimo, Pit Bulll, 8 u I ii
Restaurant, $44 So. Br1~1ol, of 2 stores forces us 10 ~. 3 h.p. lawnmower FULLERTON MUSIC 3 yr. picture tubes.' l yr Tt.rrk!:r, Cocko.poo, Irish C•mf!t11 Sal•/Rent 920
Santa Ana. 1·5 pm 1tartbJ.i ll<'ll this beaut furn. Ap. etijtlne SlO. 2 DJnls.h modtm Our Newest Loc1tlon J)ll.rt!l &. serv\C11, A 11 Setter. 100 MIXED PUPS!!
Monday. pllances, b cd s pr cads, r.h11.lr1, I walnul end tbl , 18191 EucUtJ, Fountain Valley av11.ilo.bl111 models In !ltoek Slud Strvk'e ft1ast Breeda. WE RENT CAMPERS ON
-WAITRESS pillows; cptJ &: decorator 1\·alrtut t~ran\lc lamp, $50. 1 Blk. No. ot San Dleao Jo'wy &: on dJsplay. '13 model~ Open Eves: 531-5027 YOUR TRUCK. P.f e •a
Exr>t-r. De~ndable, P.tature Items at BELO \V I.I· takt!s all. \\'aJnut 1ttreo 5574836 priced to cleAt. Cash oo AKC Dobermasl Pinsc:hen. , Camper Salca, 2036 tlo.rbor,
' Neat. Applr. ln penon, QUlDATION PRICES, at l'Ol'lllO\e AM/FM, s ~ 0 . Rentals from $5 plan or tennt to 36 mOll. b4ack A tan, to good hOrnce "c".M~. &o;'6-4<ltl2=~·~==~-1
Sur! ... 5. 1 WlY ot our 3 locatlora Jn 962-~17 after 4:30 pm. ABC Color TV, 9021 AU Mta, onJy. ft':male11; 9 mo, t yr, Sf'ACTORY OIRECil
"' iron, 5930 \V, Or••ge Co. Salo ls Fri, ""!, 1~• 8 kh l H I ~ II I I I rt ' Coa t H NB .... .xi. F:LF.CTRICAL ~etcr Bo.'<: or """"' roo urs. un-3 )'l'!I, P.ta e lf, show only. vi1e ops or mpo s ~ s wy., · ' & Sun. Ne\v 100 11.mp f . 1'. E. e P ianos & Grandi tlniton Beach, 968-3329 or 497-1549 eves or leave a donu:&Uc trucks at low low
WAJTERS, "'aitrcsses, ttkl 33413 San Juan Crttk Rd., 1'ERVICE, 120/240 V, sin~le Sohmor. Ylt:naha. Knabe 96Z-6.W,l. message & 887-4700. prices. Call today. BM-C.695
restaurant Pf'1"110nnel. All SJ Capo phase. Surface mounting 20 RICE'S TV SERVICE \\o' h -'-hl1 t t ror Bill Brothers, 645-8'14'1. 5830 Cnrden Crove Blvd., 20 • ~1ason & Hamlin • \\'ur-AKC Cienn Shep pUppics, e ave .. KC' " or n'lOS Appllcatlon11: being accepted. Wt'Stmiu8lcr maxluin poles, (10) amp2. lltzer ·Sto ry & Clark -tfC1rmerl~ In Pantry S Cntrf J\1&F, Champ blood Jlnc.s. tru ks. Meaa Ca.mper Sales, ••~ 0 , h 1 d St single pole (1) 40 amp Kawai. Stcin11.•ay. Cable * Holiday Spacial * IOP<iuallty ped.vcry friendly 2036 J-Jarbor Blvd., C.M.
WELDER, experienced In l.wo2 uc-ac D v ·• anton pole breakers pushmatic Nelson • Klncaid • Cable Used & Color TV Ael!I • While & alert. 6 wks, Only ~ •70 V\'I Camper bus, 46,000
or11an1ental ll'On on I Y. GF;NERAL Elect dry('r t yr breakers. 83&-4972 aft. 1 pm. • Baldwin • Otickt'ring -they huit! ! Color h"Om S65 lO •"OOfl homes, 897-1029 or miles. Xlnl cond. $2500.
494-6376 old, xlnt l.'Qnd $75, beaut or 842-3825 aft. 6 pm. New M))lne13 from $-495 up. B & w from $35 1.1.p. roi· 893-2300 531--G658 or 83().310.1
WHO WAN'rS 1'0 WORK? Pecan dining rm set, 6 cane BRAND new GE 2 cycle Used & rebuilt pia.nol also 1 11 DRIVE A CAB! back chrs. 2 leaves, 1nust dishwasher, f,1odel GSD 280, Uprights from ....••••• , $69 ~~~ca : or 546-6CI03 l~D~s ~~~· T ~ups! ~ CyclH, ~iltet
CHOOSE )'OUr' hOUN, \\'Ork sacrillce to RlOVe $385, $100. Scars 14,IXX'l BTU' win· S~inels " ,. , , •....• $145 l37S I ""'flll Ave Chi IY, y '_, . . p lll'4' I Scooten 925
1 II be -.. -•Maple lamp "ble 120 dow A/C l!lO ·-It) •~. "a e • " 1995 -1> ·• !ietvlce p,,v ply 1----------or yourse . your own 1vw1u ..,. , YV .,...vv .--':! 1,, •••••••••••• ~24 * BICYCLES * boss. Iden or women. Can can eves 642-5692 Blue 12' x 20· indoor/outdoor Grands " ............ $395 USED COLOR TV'S
be slightly tfandlcap~. \V'ALNUT Victorian H a 11 crpt;-m . ~1:159. e Or9an1 FOR CHRIST°'•s St.-;dBe.rnard, fem. 1\KC $19. ~iOL-DS AN\'.BU<E
Neat • Oean AppenranCf'. 'l'rr.c $175. Old painted di New, Ui>ed and Trade-Ins MA rt>g · Urand chan1 p stock, l ife Guarantee On:
VI$., retired. Age 25 to 70. Qul'en Ann tbl & 6 needle LEATI~ER goodsl3 88al k S· llam1nond . Baldwin. CoM 2 YEAR \VARllANTY ~c1•2\'€'.,'",.,, b1red. $150. Bargain. Niahlki 10 sp lronl ...• $99.95
S I I · lu s-l oount. Purse! · • ey ON PICTURE TUBE .,. .....,_. S Co upp ement your neonie. po1nl c ·s. _,, Eary A~t holders, custom belts $6.99, \Yurlitzer · Lowrey. Kimball untour Eq lol •••••. $89.95
Drive a cab 6 hl'8 or n101<e a or aft 5 PP..1 499-2128 Cash & misc. 6'15-44S9 \'an1aha . Gulb1ansen • BERT GALI.EMORE TV LOVEAl31.E blk Lab. ntixcd Al.SO
day. Apply In pel'80n, only. Kav;ai * 969-2783 * pupies/ 7 y,·ks, n1ale $10 Ne\\• ltnlll -JO tp •... $59.95
Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th t.1ATTRESS & box spring, ANTIQUE carou!el hot~e. Optigan .... demo , ••• Slll:5 I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Fem $.5. Ust'<I Bikl"S ..... All types
St., Costa h1esa. llallmark, queen siie. New 1921 ~illman Beautifully Spinet ...•.. l'le\V •••••• 1499 AT7ENTIONI 645-7()9.1 B<!achBlcycles,800 E.Balbot\
WOMEN n c ed cd f o 1' & never used. Sells new resto · Exciting addition Free Organ lt1sons Vanason!c Stel't.>o-Hecelver. IRISH Seiter. Ch r 1st ma t1 Blvd .. B!llboa 6/;;>-w for any decor. 673-13~ housecleaning. Good pay, $174. ~t. Special price $87. Phone 557-4839 Al\1 Ft.1. Tnpe jacks. rte. 1>uppies, AKC, chan1p line11, 11VO rare classic thumpers.. eooct hrs. Call Rubble's Rag set. Mr. \Villiam11, 64$-170l GORGEOUS Sil\'cr mink FULLERTON MUSIC Must Sell Sl2a. EH5-0283 be-reaM. pri~ to good home. Velo thruxton, former Bon·
A h1op, 541hm57. COUCH Lovestat $220. coat. Custom 'mo.de-. Full 122 N. l!arbor, F ullerton (ore 10 Al\1 . oft. 8 Pl\1. 642-3671art6 Pt.t neville record holder, like
Cocktail & small table $50. length. Sz 10-12, Sacrifice. 871-1805 weekends anytimf'. AKC GREA.T p Yr enc es ne11.•, $1,JC5. AJS.ri;tatc~less
Dinette $50. Bedroom set Ap1it 6'15-3959 ht"H: Open Nights 'Ill 9 JOHNSON 1223 basC', DU).I C.1u·istn1as puppies, males. Typhoon, fi(X)c~, partial!~
$300. 556-7472, 558-1500 ex1 ANTIQUE watches, clock. Sat: 'Iii 5:30, Sun. 12-5 pre-amp mike, hl~sseni::er ~.,.., & J>C'I. Reas. 6 wks. restored, $l75. 837~722 afte1
PAYROLL CLERK $600 75. chlnR, chr!, Dt'Y Oo\ver, 3 n1obile, "S1.1.pcr l\la.x" h11sc 544-1797 5,0. ~w~ee~•-•_nd_'c.·---.,----I
f"ee Paid. rlgure your \Vay to SECRET ARY 7 matching pieces 0 r driftwood & ceramiC" ~ifts. SCRAM-LETS anlenna $225., ull or p~r!. SHIH -TZU'S, Blk & "'hi, 1 vi::sPi\ 1nolol' scoo t e !.-
the lop. Gre11t growlh & An opening for an Individual Antlqu•• 800 decorator line m 0 du I n I' Succulant gardens. 545-0753 AlllO VHF ·scanne~. mo1ntor yr ntalc & 8 nlos fem., (scnrcc as hen11 tee_U1) ~1.1
chRnl.>e to advance. Also Fee y,•ho Is a self starter .,...; ::::::.:;:..:::::::....----= furnilure. Cost $800. $200. Cl·IILDS pool tnble $7.50. J·Iot ANSWER·S ·" low band l'CCl iver $20 Adorable for Christm11s miles per how'. Ba miles
Po11ltlons. Cl!.11 Ann Christle, xlnt secretarial skills. lo.fust GOING OUT OF 640-1090 Wheels track & access. $7. ea. 645--0339 aft . 6Pl\-I 64·1-1 755. ' pt>r gallon. 2300 mile!\, S6H5.
556-8505, Con trol Career En1-enjoy v:ol'king \V/!igures. BUSINESS 3 WALNUT occas. Ibis. Marble <.'ClUee table $5. s TE RE O Co n1 r> on C' n I ST Be!'nard ~la! 11 0 '7.,1 license paid ··Save Gas!
ploy1nent A,ccney, 3--100 h·· Complete clearance thru matched set. no-mar lop 549-4338 Person -1''avor -Anise -System. 70W 1i.l\t.~. Snns11l sl;ort hair, g~ \:ichlld!n: Buy Sat-ride' ,,Sunday for
vine Blvd., N.B: For Appointment CHRISTMAS $50. Lrg Manzanita gas log OLD PIANO SlOO Brogue -SURGEON 2000 E turntabl(' S.150. AKC. l\1usl sell, best oir, pe:Mys a day· 642-1002.
PBX telephone answering Contact, Carol Smith Quilts, oak & y,•alnut furn., $25, ~2--0642 Needs RefinishinR "I bought soihe meal to-;64~2--~1~71~9;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;l~9G8~-~=:553~.:g-----;;;;;;;;-;g;-;; {ll J-lodaka $225: (21 '69 11erv. 1-'ull or p/tlme ..... ·J:o.:x-i·n .. •clt'Y. Clo·~ Sal. & •ton. VELVET 1 & 1 1 1781 Bahama, Costa Mesa day. After the butcher cut it . flonda OO's, $175 ea; {l) pt>r. pref d, but n ot AVCO "" .... ., '' 60 a ove sea • up and gave me lhe bill I AKC reg Nor w e g 1 an '69 Bullat"O ')qi Pursang
necessary. ln S. Ana ai>ea, Antique1 for Interiors Nr ne"·· n1ust sac. Also SOLID oak antique mission thought y \\'I.IS paying a SUR· ~-------Elkhoun<!s Cha.nip sire great S42S. or trade'for V\V bU&;.
540-1962. 3545 .t.:. Coalit Hwy .. Cdlo.l ~~~cu1,,o,11~ueen,7J.sz ""~~de-a-rocker. leather seat & back GEON." I[,. fo r a1r1s!n1as Easy pmt 5'\.~3120
F l'nancial Servt'ce ANT.IQUE JEWELRY ...._,._,, ·v"'"' or """"· S25. &ts.4767 -=~~--~-~-FM to You l~'~"~'"'~"~v~a~11~64~2--~27~6ll~,--lsciiiii!NN'ss:;;:-!P.~' Penonnel Clerk . GRAND OPENING .. ""NN S sp, l Pea
Great spot to lea.111 general ~5800 GLASS -CUI, blown, pressed Garage S•lt 812 ~1ED. site desk, Sl5. * SALE * OLD Engli5h Sheepdog pup-Picker) model needs clean·
ofc duties & keep ""rsonncl Equal Oppor. Employer & cranberry. .:..~"'-';__;;.:;.;;::.._. __ ....:..:.; !I dra\vC'rs Coait Muio'c 3 Line1, 2 Times, $2.00 pie~, AKC. Ready for ing ~"" Musl' sell by 25lh 1~ SILVER & FUR !TURF. Call '"'!'II. 6.'8-8684 Chnstmas ' -IYll. ' ttt'Clrds. Stcrt $.,150. Ca 11 N · Now has 2. locations to serve 49'1-4367 646-8..124 06,::7>-4287:...:::c._~-~~~~-Control Career EmplC1yment SECRETARY $600 PICTURES & MlRRORS 10 Spd Bike. 7 pc Virtue all your musical needs. FREE Part Tmie1· spade, or 1970 llonda Mini Trail 7b
Agency, 3400 Irvine Blvd., * BACK.DOOR IMPORTS * Dinette set, Both good cond. Ne,vport a t Harbor, CM ll mo old, AKC Reg. Boxer puppy, $75/offcr. Hodaka 9 o,
N.B. 556-85(6. Fee Paid. Great spot in Ir-1896 Harbor Blvd., C~I 968-9490 aft 2 * 642•2851 * 673-6087 fem.ale, fa\\1l, ad o r ab I e recently overhauled $175.
l.i ... iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii• I vine Complex. ASBtst pres. (Park In rear) Lionel Trnirl Set. Brookhurst & Talbert FREE pUppies, 6 "''ks, will Christmas prt!Sent, 842-9TI7. 1992 ~>Me·--. CM 543-2428
Pr! I 11ec'y, Grow w/worldwlde ANTIQU<' 1· I I I ,_. nt ng t"O. Also Fee Positions. Call i:. irep ace mant e De uxe. "''Ith table Blk S. Brookhurst, SD Frv.y. hold for Christmas, &16-2089 POMERANIAN,. AKC, male, WILL trade Baja Bug for
Elly Ellis, 556-8505, Control ~akbr~!'bl!~n~.bl~; 7~~ =o<iiLr*hlj'p,'u;1-5<-7;;oc,t;*;;:-;w.;;;;t,I ;;--•-!J63.;,;;";33;;;;*--;;; I GERMAl" Shep, 8 mos, lO mos old. S65. nlini bikes or sml cycit'. IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS
Day Shirt
* F.XPEHIENCED 111ULTT·
LlTH OPERA TORS
* BINDERY \YORK ERS
Apply in person
MARTEc ·
Reproductions. lnc.,
1577 Placentia Ave.,
Ne"'-port Beach, Calif.
an equal opportunity
employer m/f
Career E1nployment Agency. ·i· hi bl POOL tbl plus acces. \Vards male, ali shots, \'er y Call 833·2539 G4G-2l06 or (213) 596-3790 ask
3400 Irvine Blvd., N.B. Sill ing s p. \Valnut ta e, 1% Stratacomb-bed. S185. PIANOS -ORGANS lovable. 5..'il-5864. OiRISTl\IAS Puppies. for Bill.
etc. 557-Sl74 afternoons ===~,-,-~~~~,-I 847-8990 N & U d G l . Cock·A-Poos. 3 niales & 1 .• ~ O'--'O. ~cc=~~~~~.--.. -.1 SECRETARY/STATISTICAL ANTIQ. oval marble lop GARAGE Sale. Furn & lots ew . se. reatseect1on. h-11xed Tef'l'ler, male . fem Call 642-4928 73-350 Bultaco,s: ......... ~
for 5 m. Npt Bch oUice. table; handmade quilts, of misc. Fri, Sat, Sun. 5381 3700 PAIR R. F. Flyer tennis CEompeU&'tivSue prices. Open Housebroken. lLlve:;:; kids. SCI · ' · ALSO '72 • 125 CC, BjlllaCQ
Req. statistical & cor-misc. art i c 1 £! 8 • Nice Cnnier, Irvine.('I'urtlerockJ shoes. Priced for quick sale. ves. ndays. The best Also male cnt 645-2003 l~AUZER pups, stud pufSang ~2725
respond an e e typing, Chro'stm•• ,,.11,, 320 lllh St, ror Sale Upright Piano $300 586-4411 deals are always at: F"REE 1 ood ho 3 service, gIOOm1ng. Terms. 10 SPD Blk Xlnl --•
0 1 ul -W II' h M • C'ly o g me, mos 971--8182 or 522--8366 aft 5 $75·. , e. 1,.vuu-1 shorthand, 1 key ca c otor H.B. Combo Organ, club chrs, NEW J\1otorola a IC S USIC I old pup has had shol.s. Call ~'°"c7.--"===='-='"-"'-
flnancial background. Var-"""::::,~~------baby. furn, misc. 962-8765 AJ\l car radio, $60. Soulh Coast Pl••• 540.'l<r~n ~1547 Child's English Saddle Cllll Mike l)42..Q)24 · u· ibil't BRASS bed, pot belly stove, .... -~~355~. ice re:spons 1 y. "''OOd cook stove & misc. Hounhold Good1 814 * S45-004R * SILKY blal"k & white female !-"'its H·~ony S80 4 hp mini bike.
536-1943. IRVINE Coa.<it Country Club THOJ\1AS Organ, Paramount rat. Affectionate & playful • Almost new, $65.
SERVICE Station be Ip \VINCHESTER 25-20 cal. 11\'IN box springs, mattress membership. style, Best ofier. Also Con-557-9908 646-9283 AKITA pups for Christmas, 962-4590
y,·anted. Exp. only. Apply ad 1 ·~ V $200 & frames. Pair, almost new. &t2-1i25 tina Accordian, ---AKC, parents X. Rayed HOND SL 70 till ,,_, In person. Top Dollar tor m e 1.0'>"· ery rare. · Call 496-6469. FIREWOOD clear priv pty &12-2803 • A, • s . wi0,r
right man. 300 E . 17th St. 11.fter 5, 499-1088 I ' • warranty, 57S nu. Tohi C.I\! SHIP Painting by Egdar MED. si.ze desk $15. 9 WILL DELIVER & STACK Sporting Goods 830 r.ts W Suppiel GOLDEN Retreiven, AKC. 675-~
CE ST 1 _... Payne, Laguna artist, 1930·s dra11.·ers. ~~~l~~~es. &IG-923-4 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~.;118~w~ks~, ~m~w;~t ~,.['k:l~IOO~.~,aU~, "12=tt"o"N:.D_A-~-50-.-M-ode~l-K2=1 SERVI a. be p wantt.'U ~~~--=:::-=--= -----'=----POOL table, beaut. % in 494-7744 or 539-6742. Show room ;_::,nditlon. sm
full or p/time Apply, 900 $900. After 5, ~1088. Jewtlrv 815 Mlsceh1ntovs slate, 3 'h ft X 7 fl. classic CHRISTMAS YELLOW LAB E. Coast H .... -y .• N.B. Appliancet 802 I.:;;,:;.;,:;.;_,.,_ ____ ___:'-' lge sq. legs. leather pocket~. Pet1, General 850 • mi. $1400. ~1396
PROCESS OPERATOR ;ii;.iiiiiiiiiiiOOiiiiiiiiiiiiil -'-'--------RIKGS. rubit>s \v/opals, sap-1 __ W_a_n_ted ______ 8_20 gold felt, 3 yrs old, incl ANJl\W..S "R" US P~~d:.cN!p~·~~ho~~~ '72 HONDA l50 SL. Runa
\\'c l'leC(I pco[JI(' to fa bricate SILICON GENERAL FREIGllT DM1AGE SALE phires \vtopals. l opal Harclbouncf copy of "Lena all access & wrought iron ------great, $450. Must sell. CaQ
IC·-. In ,,.,-1., l·h. New llotpoinl 1>elrig's., l>rinccss ring. 1 ct Chaltu1n b · 0 dble lamps, $495. 968-5268 Free llamste~ ""'/purchase PEKINGESE anytime 646-5898. • .~ " • " fr<>.\•er" y r.1arc1a avcn-of cage free cage TEST OPERATOR dish"'ashers & ranges. emerald \l'/dian1onds 4 ,,.,11. "\Vomnn in \Vhite" CHRISTMAS Scuba Special, '"/pu•cha;• o! can"-'• ""by AKC P_uppies, 842·1039 l\101'0. R Cycle · 80cc, new: Rapidly_ g1"0\\ing IC manuf. s""'" & d •-10 II pal 2" all b' , al .. • ~ ~J °" \re need proplc to test litl{'ar has in1nic:l ooeninRS ff)r: "''a '"" .oo ryers, u.c ry sma 0 s. " sm ru tes, by \\'ilkie Collins. \Viii s"'·a p New uminwn tanks, Keets Cockatie\s Finches FOR Chnstmas 5 wks AHC re:gu;. St & dlrt. $215. De.y', cif\·uil~ on t'Cl1nputcrized TEST TECHNICIAN "'arranty. pearl ring, sapphires current best sellers. 557-0041 regulators. deeom meters, puppi~. Sml T. c;P Poodles'. Schnauzer puppies. Pet or 673-2415. Eves 675-2811. 1:_q~ipmenl. 2 Yrs tet'hnical training. 2 ~~~ ~~. ~p~~?~ -'::.''c:o:!'.pa:::l::•_49'i=•-.:.":""25,,___ ___ ,-.-A-NI b[I TO BUY-L-tON"Jii 40% of(. 495-1957 Sheps. Deposit "'ill hold. show. 642-2991. 5 spd Boys Schwinn. Xlrit
SHIP/REC. CLERKS \'rs exper.intestequipment ~ N Tustin Orange ROCKBOUND INVEST· C\R AwqTr.A"'l FLYER SKIS, Spalding, siderals, G 839-8520 • AKC Toy Poodle Puppies, coodition.$35.Call
1 Pnxlu<:don control or 11.•;.lre· repair. Conipuler mainten---~·==-=--'·='----~ l\tE.NT • Ladies gen1stone · S . 200 CM, Excel cond, POODLE-PUPPY silver. 7 wks. 586-6688
house exnE'r. r11·f'f'd . a nce-. Tef'l'adyne expcr. de--r!J\gs \'alue up 1200"fe in 10 'l"RATNS. 8.17-%85. only used 10 das. $95. SALE 962-4829 after 6 20 .. Girls Schwinn g ;--.1_.. TRAINEES . bl KENhtORE & GE automatic yrs. Discounted 494-8361 eve. \\'ANT "Gr11h holrl'' bar for 494-4502, 642-8095 AKC 1 _,_, s1ra e. waAher $65. ea. Hotpoint bath tub ri4l)I tmr) "'°°-""='~::...:=---All breed grooming & min. Schnauzer ' ma e good condition, 3 years old.
\V.-are willlng to lruin pro-dishwasher $7S, Norge elec BEAUTIFUL dlan10nd wed· · " HEAD SKIS, new. never us-boarding Kennel. 546-2S4S. pup, wonl shed, for $2{1 ~7762
pie for the nhove positions . MAINT. TECHNICIAN dryer$40.Guar&dellvered. ding-set-.-.Paid $500., asking __ 9fi0.l31l'l _ed.-:bJS....CM,.-$70-m -besl • -Ghl'istmas.---$100.-842-7361 wANT:usea bike tor yn"
>..in·t starting salIU)' + OPJX>r . Z.3 yrs maintenance exper. 546-8672 $375. 644-2903; &15-809'2 'VA"-.r-rr"n ,,;,.,. 11late top ofier, 837-S966 *Stcur1ty Pet Food* DOG OBEDIENCE-Spon. by boy, ~pprox 20.. be for;
" gro\v \\•1I> dynamic. ex-General maint. & repair ofD ·"E"·L"'u"'x"E-1-.. -1-rl-pool--w-as-h-er Ml1cell1neou1 818 JXl(ll 1ah1<>, >!YR WILSON X-31 \WOOs & Irons, Beef by 27c lb. Cott .ch Parks & J«>cr. For info. Christmas 963-3152
d. " 1 Test-manufacturing equip. C11.ll Mf'l...1000 like new $125 15c IQ. All Kennel supplies 541-3914 673-3180 55&-5300 · pan 111g ro. soon lo 1>e ocate Semi conductor backgrnd & dryer. Warranty. $475. ANNOUNONG · Call sn.3315 5'17-3977, 14.18 Wilshire, S.A. SILKY ' AKC' h Honda 150 fromt end dam·
to Irvine lndustrlnl Complex. prcf'd, new. $X)O. or best offer. the Sale of ~~·u:ir..sl Instruments 822 ~--'o==c::.:::..::=--pups, , c a.mp mage w/2 xtra eng, $35.. 646-2748 Store, Restaurant, SHE'TIAND PONYS REG.. sired, no odor/shed.Hold 646-4370
Apply In l)er.;on \Ve otter i.:ln't starting salary, PURE SILVER n ENT FOR ONLY Sa B 832 KITTENS, AKC TINY TOY for Ou'istmas 962-4743
SILICON GENERAL «mpctitiv< benents. good Rent WHhers/Dryers & PLACER GOLD " ar POODLES, DUCKS, PET SCH\VmN, Red, apple cr&te,
11.·orking conds, challenging $2. \\o'k. Full malnt. The International OR BUY \VIT~{ NOTUfNG CAGES. 546-1224 GIVE a Great Pyrenees pup-very good rond, s ~ o. gro11.·th. * 639-1202 * Silver Exchange· DOWN. Dn1m. PA's. ilikes, GOOD, USED AB PY for great all year love. 962--0149 aft 5 & wknds.
DOUBLE l .~ & 2738 Camino Capistrano, r.u'll'lr. Arill!l, Rf'C-organs RESTAURANT 2 B y parrots, Great Family Dog. 546-0989 .. 1 ..:::::,.::=,72;;:;.:.,::.c:==~M~.•.I
Send t'('Surne or call fClr eecuac oven . Suite 7, &in Clemente. k Piano, All brands. EQUIPMENT Peach face loveblrds, Days. LATE Yamaha m1
nu! . electric cook top. Oven only 4!12-l680 No a"'f' limit. """""'Tl' nf'erl-{2U) 5~5300. eves. 675-2846 HorMI 856 Enduro, reedy for racing.
7382 Bolsa ,\ve .
\r•st minster 892-5.'ill
pt>rr.o interview i&Q. The cook top is only =~~-'-7-=:'--=-~~~ Chicken bro aste r . Cres PARAKEETS . $250. 673-769!J Personnel Dept. $35. phone ~7-2010 1'~ R 0 M LA PPL AN D M . OP""'.N Nlr.H~ 'r!' '· S, Cor food warmer Taylor 3~ Yr old B kski _,,..,... ~~--------1 ~•0•1 · ul R SAT. TT'.I . !>::l'l. SflN' 12-'i. '"'ll •----·. Hamil.ton Bch . FOR CHRISl"MAS . ~c n, ",_.,er BlKE practically like nu, .,.,,._........, BeauUl eindeer 1-lide. "" u"-~= Horse Geldmg gentle Best -
Equal Oppor. Employer
PUBLI C \VORKS
P.1AJNTENANCE
COORDJN,\ TOR
73.52 Bolsn Ave. NEW Sears Coldspot, 15.3 Perteet tor a throw rug, Now TWO Conveni"!nt malt machine. Blender. Ra· 546-84-41 ' ' · Ligbts, .! peed om e t er,
\'Y'estn\lnster cu fl, upright lreezer SJOO, h l I ~.-t'oan~ +n Servo. You dar oven. Elec. cooking C 852 offer. 542-59G7 after GPM Odometer, 3 speed 846-2982 Gr:>-<tm or ang on the \Val . many ..,._ . ij_:::.e::.11:__~----= ADORABLE ~ Arab fiOny , ., Equal Oppor. Employer decorator uses. For the S:ULLERTON MUSIC counter area 12 ft. WU! sell English trained • jumps BOYS 2J • 5 speed Road-
REBLT v.·asher, dryer & ecology minded, thi s 18191 Eurllrl. f"6llnl:iin V<1llev individually. Best ·offer. SOMETHit:ifG DIUerent! Rex $.165Some tack. 557_1104 · master. Good condition. $3Q.
Salary $957-$1165 l\1o. S T AT I 0 N ATI'ENDANT.
Full or part time. Chevron
Station. 3000 Fairview.
Costa MeSa.
dshwsh. guar d e I i v £! r Y · domesticated animal has a 1 Blk. N. SAn Diego fl'\\')'. 642-0590. curley haired cats, neuters, Call 968-1233 '
$-ts-.$95 546-5281-839-7620 wilden1ess appearance. $50. ,',: Euclid. TV R d' H IF " breeders. pet & show qualify 2•• YAMAHA $175. . Apply before 5 PJ\il ~londay.
Dec. 31, 1973.
STENOGRAPHER
P,,Just have good typing abll·
lty & tile sh.
"' •• o, , • 10, •• kl•• "°'·~ I ~ ~ LADY Kenmore dishwasher, Q't'"l'-'IUO e 5574836 e Stereo 836 ens. ,.,..,~. Bolt1and I• ;e Call 646-0815 •
cut ting board j top, xlnt P UBLIC FURNITURE 12'1 N. Hnr~r p,,!Jerton ----------!SIAMESE kittens, with MlrintEqulpment tc.. FOR SALE· H nda 50 'nl
cond, SlOO. 675-3 43 * AUCTION * e 871 -1805 e f.1ED Span Stereo beauty papers & shots. · · · 0 mi CITY OF
IRVINE KELVINATOR re:lrigel-alor J<"RIDAY 7::i0 PM AM-FM works excel see to 10 Weeks. 536-7962 tra.U, xlnt cond. $135.
$40. In tin1e for Christmas, loads FF"P~nl F:R f\vin rf',v('rh $440b. beHe\'e $150. Cash. Call Dogs 854 Boafs1 Ma,nt./ ,_4_94-_76_9_2 ______ _
4201 Campus Dr. 92664
{714) 83J.~10 For Appointment
Contact Carol Smith
642-1785 after 6 Pltt of model home furniture. n"( er. :<:l!l'M'r J'f'VPr · after 6 pm 548-3386 Service 902 1970 HONDA 350, xlnt cond.
$390. Snnn ('('n"<'T1 IJn~g "'""'" -"'=-""!::".=-:'--"=--* SUPER LOVING * $500. o.,r best offer. PhOne SINGLE box sprirtgs & mat· MASTERS AUCTION + fnnrl<>rs ""bin"t iv/4-12" HI GHEST Prices Paid (or AKC Male -ll'oe LET U 962-foO&i
tress, good condition $25. 2u7a:1a f\C\vport lilvd., Cl\I sf'lf'rikr>rs $425. Surf' P.A. Color TVs Working or not. "" * S CLEAN * 644-0468 * 646-8686 * sv:i:lrrn + 3 Surn PF.~n 533-0912 $20, To good home 549-3735 TRIUMPH '64, 650 Bon·
PUBLIC \'Y'ORKS LEADMAN AVCO Building Materials 806 y f"ikr<t + :-1 .Atla'1-bonni 21" COLOR TV, $95 Also AKC ituY~UR. BO~:~ * ~~ll~ new,1 low mi, $187-$967. filin~ deadline-I BU II '1.l1u1rls, $7f'(J. Gih'll"ln ~ 21" Black & white, $30 Both Irish Setter puppie's. c.eaning per .,....,.,, Miss on Viejo.
Jan. 4, 1974. City of San Financial Service e Surplui.Bulldlng •• pi1ifAr y,·/r~se $300. All xlnt oond. 533-6912 Anaheim Call 5"48-3177 ~at~,h7 ft. Haul outs up YAMAHA 100, xlnt, 750 ml ..
Juan Capistrano, 3 '.? 4 0 O 644-5800 t.lATEIUAL . IIYA's of t'it:\V G:ood· used 1urniture & ~~ ':..!.. "11,~ '~28nios old. 18" RCA p::lrtable black & CHRISTMAS PUPPIES ~bor & o~::e~~r ft. + 68~a!.,.. with helmet. $180.
· Pasro Adelanto. San Juaii Equal Oppor. Employer ITEMS! Doors, lumber, PlY· appliances or y,•W sell for you. ,,..."", ,,.,......., white TV set. Good rond. 8 \Veeks old. shots, SS each. * 673-7291 alt 6 PM * ,.,...._,.., Capistrar:~ Ca. ·193·117.!_._ wood, alum sheettng, n1old· MASTERS AUCTION COMPt.F.TF. T.url1\·ie: 0 1'11'TI Incl. stand. $50. 847-2890. 9~7432 . HONDA, CT 70, new cond,
REA,l ESTATE SALES ing, wlndows, etc. 2075\I Newport, CM 646-8686 M.>t. Sllvrr sn,11rkle fini~h. K·Mart port. Jv. Xln't con· DACHSHUND Puppiet1, AKC,1:Bo;::e:t:'•:.;:.P;:ow;::e;.r_""."""."906:;:::·
1
~I~ow~~m~U~•ag_•_, _"_·_"_'·_1_150_.
if you are interestL'CI in true THE BROADWAY BUILDERS SURPLUS 839-0974 aft. 6 or SWlday rhrome. Dvncsonic mnre. d' 1o S2S 8 wks old, 2 females lett.1. 6#-5948
professionnlisnl & possess HUNTINGTON BEACH 2400 So. Main St., 5.A. Behind Tony's Bldg. h1at'L ~:nd~c~~~lll"~"'~~~t~~ 11
n. ea.Lt 53&-$34 ·phone 962-3279 '73, 22' Searay, used 10 hrs. ·n YAMAHA 250, DT·l. lo
Integrity & enthusiasni, you 1'1on thru Sac 10-5 Vicki's Orininals M~in. After 5, Call TV R d ' H "FI TV Radio HIFI like nu, ·head. galley, sips mi. $425. Good rond.
may qualify for 11n opening Js Accepting Applications n4: 546-1031 "'=' S48--2152 s' a IO, 1 ' 36 $ ' ' i36 7, w/traller. $14,000 value 494-5TI2
In our resld£'nUal division. Cameras & Exquisite Holiday Dresses ;.;;;;t;;•;r;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;;;;';e;r10;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ~c. $9.~ .. Drag Boat Pon-GIRL'S 3-spd. Colubnila, likl! Join a 28 year old oompany, GUARD 177 .Riverside Ave. · Guitar. exrellent oondition !lac fue~ lllJ. over 100 eo.1¥ new, oost $50, ,.u l20
I fully 0 .,..'lled &: operated by Equipment 808 Nev.•port Beach \l'ilh case S.10 w/ trader to match. 3 *499-3623*
Its founder, "'·ht1sc life Is 5 J\111-10 AM f.1on thru Sat 548-4223 . · 646-9273 shows 1st in all 3. $15,CKX>'l ----~=~---I
! dedicated to ~al e!Jtate & Apply PenoMel Dept. N:mO~ ~;!:<II'~'.''";":,.~ BRADBURY oil SlS O., ELF.CTRIC ruitar Gui ld COLOR TV lnvested Sac $8.500 firm l SMAIL boys red bike. 4.7
'
I pmfeMional a11slstance to 3rd Floor A $ll8 67r>-38ll Bnu:idt Watercolor $250, Starfire l\fark 4, like nl"W. 540-3961 yrs. $l0 • i the staff. A fine oUice in Interviewing Hrs to.:12 :r'· 1 cost . • Picuso Lltho. $150. Dall Cherry wlca~e SLiO 6'f5.8740 CHRIS 32' Skiff Lapgtrake, Call 646-Dl6
a choice locnUon among Mon thru Sat L'lho s~" the Pvt E S ECIAL SPECIAL ·••, TWZIO, FB, AP, OF, SHARP I969 YAMAHA 125 I Newport'• prinie propertlC!s. f 't 810 1 · r.<N., 0 rs. FLUTF.: ARMS'TRONG. SP CIAL P • ""' Intervi~w• by appointment. Tm Edinger, Hunt. Bch. urn1 ure Party, ~95 onen hole, French model. • Winch, radio remote, outrle· ~~7127uro. New top end. $395.
I IT k hi .. ~ Prl prt 5'" -ger.t, bristol, 387 h rs , -
I
We1lt N. Taylor Co. Equal Oppor. Employer WICKER loveseat & nymph \N King nitting nine nc, +1\J\I· Y· ...,...,.,,."' ·i===-=-=~~=~~
REALTORS cbN[ J.'ill Cood condition. all In at ruct ion y,•ifh O'~ice furniture/ CHRISTMAS BONUS , $16,500, 644--0343 eves. BIKES: 2 Glrts, 26", both
I 2111 San Joa<iutn Hills net. TYPISTS 98SS"' machine. Will trade for Eauip. 824 '73 Bandito Boat 18' 455 Olds excellent rondlUon, $20.
Newport Ccnler 644-4910 VOLT na-UXE Nlagra C ha 1 r , ~~iving roon1 couch. Bayjet 20 hrs must sell take each. Call 644-1311
EA ESTATE I I I P I heaters, rollers & vibrator, EXEC S\VVL oms 515/25 over pa.yments ~1354
R L nl a n ersonne $600 new. $2::() sell. 673--7699 CIVIL War Items wanted for Sec chrs $8/24 Dcslu1 $20/!IO 8o•ts, Sail 909 Mobile Homa
SALESMEN Temporary Servk~ private collectlon. Guns, Pl•= 867 W. 19, CM A BRAND NEW 25" COLOR CONSOLE TV \Vh)' not v.'Ork tn the hOlteit 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 PIANO, Beaut. French Prov. swords. pictures, e 1 c. 642-3.iM SNO\VBIRD. fiberglass hull, MOBILE HOME ana • llunHngtoo Beach • Newport Beach 546-4141 Story &: Clark. W/bench. 546-1047 =====-~=-;cc AND w/on-shore mooring. So. FOR SALE:
'
'ountaJn Valfccy. Let UI Equal Oppor. Employer _497::,::·::IS!il:::,_cve=:..· ----:.:;'-"7--==,-,,::-.,,...,,-ITYPEWRITER. IBM Ex· n .... Balboa I Mak f!er SILVERCREST all M KILN CRESS 220 elect. e<>utlve, . Excellent cond, Ufl.J• s. e o • l::~.:.'uvu5.AG~h'kEAi UNDERWRITER 2~~~~~ :S~.'Jn~ ~\O dee~:;~1ve."."'mou1~;: ~Pr:ni°"••"'~~::-~,"'0"':2'4"'qa~n-•---.8'"'26 A BRAND NEW 14" COLOR PORTABLE TV ~'.'im21~~ Rkhmond :Kl' ~~·~!L:i ~~~ ..
ESTATE, 963-4567. s Yrs exper. In auto . 2 yn :"":::nd;:::.._,1:::75'.!., .:6'73-65::o:::·T3:::·:.._ __ I reas. Evefl 7·9J>m, 963-5227. '--'.;..:..;......=.;.,_-...;...;;.. so· l\101'0R·Stiil. Cabin sJeep :.!raped, bl.t·lnl., l"drtg.,
RECEPT /SEC'Y exper home owners w/IOrllt DINING table, buffet. coffee NEWSPAPERS Mnvtnt:i:: Ant:iQ~ Uprisi:ht 10, new Cerllst diesel en· wQher & elert. dryer, wired
Up to $65(). fee Paid. Walk 11.1.pervlsory expt:r. table, washer, folding chairs Piclred up from your home Fl!hc.r, $275. Story & Cl"'rlc $10 00 WK glne, boat in l.l!. Paz. $9,995, for D> air cond., ldtch.
1o work ln N.B. Sharp St!nd Resumes Onb' It misc. goodies, 673--5937 or save for pickup. No Console , ll~hl w~lnut. like • • consider tr11.de or invest· clock, storaie shed, iand-
per80n w/good work AVCO BRAND new naugahyde, ch~. 962-aiU nPW $500. Prl pty. S46-9850 ments, 831·2733. acaped patio. Three yn. old
r<eordFee ..;__ Sllhlo•~. typUlngCo. nA~I ~~~$.100. 1 ft lona:. Call ntE Ideal ....... stmas ~fl, UPRIGHT. 1885 llnrdman. e -._. -a11 ""ru &:: llOBIE 16. no 1725, lUll • dlullkle ... ~u. Local~ in ~ rlm .... Cai "'"' ~ '"""-' V 1 ~ Ilk • One tor the famtty r •"" ,.... race new sails 2 trap It a .,... away uvm no-,,
'
~-Emplo..-ent Ageo-Financial •-rvl...... BrttannSca Books, compete, ery omAte. 00"" e le.bor u' ' St One-haU bl. from clu• ~~lrvlneJBi~p"1NST.e. 620 Newpor:9ctr Dr. s~. !loo~~~ulrre= 1i&i £tin"' bookcase. r~l'ke~~l~~-ow~al : =f:.:::~ : :i~p~!~~:~ilable ~~.$1600. 675-3793, ~~~~ ·eau EVEf
RECEPT./TY Ne:.rcrt luch, C•. 54&'3289 3 train sets on 3, x 6• custom PLAYER J>\ano, tmmac. an-16' VENTURE Catan1~ran CAN BE Si IN A.T i
Afternoons, ew11 I& wknds. Equa OppOr. f:mployer 8' COUCH, 6' -·cit • IOat layout -. llque, a11,.N1nl ee<f, 11,475 RENTACOLQ'R \V /trailer, all rigging, u5ed CRESTMONT ~ Over 21. Apply n pertoll, ......, ' • •~ cMh or f;rms • 84U935. twice. $550, 6 4 4 -2 6 4 8, ' Newport Bench Tcnnta Club, lounge chair. Royal blue. 642-0138 642-9116 ESTATES
I 2';0! ~·-tblull Dr., N.B. YmlAN'$ Fur. o.,.. !213) 'f'l3..4S6l GET A FIREPLACE FOR HAMMOND Sol°"t 00<nn. 2 !O'l Site Dr Btt (C.Olnl """' ~u1cK CASH CllRISTMAS N Selll'! Kcvbollt'li!. Alrno8t new. -N c w A h I c Ill llOBfE 16, 1 yr old. ron1plete _,' .• a. 644-«SI. llEY TUR.KEYi Interested in ,.-. . • ew ' MU!l'.t sell. 492-4881. ....v • ,..IC9nt ay, nl • m, 1 ' 1v •tli_gh\vay tr:\llcr, $\GOO. A\e. ncrolll tmm Bttn
J!.ECEPTIONIST, for eoll ... ? No? Woll then, In· THROUGH A GAOOvoc•dOB w/vent 49'1-llMO ~·7"°31"1--"'1 0~_,(..,b--,nd CALL 991-1 ,1!50 '"•1167'.~""9 • COCommNTA·crll:fy·>.PKLo.t,,G•R.48 •• Opto~try owce. non · ti•rcsi.ed In mone.y'Tt Con-D uy, Pluth carpeting, . ammofll' ntnn, Ml NOW ;.J ·~ .,
imok<r, good 1 ppearaJ\CI!. !net: DAILY PILOT nilnl .,..n, 17 sq yd. new\, auto rhy1h,.. 1875. ~~~~~~T l=''"c.'-;"""'o=c:lng,. .. :_ ____ 1 ~ Vetcran'I Attain Ol'ftce Scll at cost 495-1542 tran1d11torlsed. 646-6590 00.r Expires Dec. 2!, 1973 ST.,O * Gi3-.6309 rat Profit 11 -.ttained. When
MY d,y I• !he BES!' DAY to 01'M!l" °"1tt"Olll'l!"-, Cl.ASSIRED AD SALE. Drums, gultan;, I. umtlGtrr Plane, Antique Member of Anaheim f!tlambor of Com,,,.rce you .. 11 tluouah resul,,_...
run .. a<ll Den'! tlolay, • \ ,...,.:*~-S5~-=:S3~*:;,.,_ -64 2-56 78 horo1, Fri. Sat-& Sun 140 """1· good eondlllon. I~. a• Sabot, $100 Complflt ting o.!lY Pilot Cluoikl 0-lll<d Ad. ....... t142..'16'11 __ ,.;__,c_c:J,;_:, __ ~Ca:::brll=lo:o.•_:Coo=ta:.;M::: ... =--'---846..J~~73S~--!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!t!!!!!!!!~I ~ Ads . 60-!l'll
Equal Oppor. Employer m/f
935
• •
•
..
l:_l..f DAILY PILOT Th11rsd11y . Oecem.btr 20, 1973
Motor Homos Autos Wanted 9681A"'os,-:-lm_po_r~te'"'d:--:t.97"'0-:1.~ut~o-s,""<'1m-po=rt-:-ad-:-·-"'t1"o"'A""u"t'°o.,.s • .,U"tac1=---990:::"'"'i'"A"':U'°'to"'s-. ;;Utad 990,Autoa, o;;i ...9901 Au.t.-., 1.!Md 990 Autos, Usad
Sala/Rent 940 r o P DOLLAR PA ID DATSUN j MERCEDES BENZ IUICK CH V OLET CORVETIE ~~~---MUST'ANG
HEN'r A MOTOR HOME -IMMEDIATELY E R 1 DODGE --------I
M1N1. HOM~ Oll, VAN mn Al.I. rnnEtGN l""" DATSUNS JIM SLEMONS '66 nu1CK Skylar!<. n111. ATLAS '73 CORVmE ATLAS '61 MU51'ANC ,.,,,back.
CON\·F.RSION, LO\\ AS $9 Call ur eo111 .. In '" I"""'' LI". ' IMPORTS Air. Red "'' \\'h.lte Lan<lau ' Low ntlleo;>.l" cxcelJcnt 1·un·
per Day & 6c J.IC't' nU!e. ~ v ,-, " NEW '74s top. StehXI & cassette $300. n,.~~s11011~~.~l ~.~}•lbulee ~ .. , nln.a <.'011d~lon. New paint,
RESERVE YOURS TODAY MERCEDES BENZ !'!,_n,171pg9on lwy. Make ol!01· Chrlsltr/Plymouth -oilh .. -· ·~ Chrysler/Plymouth ..... """ '"~" $1000. 894-33·11 . NOW IN STOCK ~ 19 7 CL-I pnnels .... ~ loving ,...., • 1969 D d 54:;.2083 .
'"" .... ,, Ii AUTIIORIZED ... vro et low ml.le• r-1·· p-vto... 0 CJ• '"' • 6') ' o!or v•nl'S, IMMEDIATE L'J\«',S , SERV, !CE '6!!. SKYl.ARK c u1>to1n delux. ' '""' '-" ... ~1USTANG '67 , V-8, auto, Su"""°" t.lie1hne • OP<n DELIVERY ~J~' "si .-air. pis, pl b, KOO<! con<!, Malibu Hardtop owner."'" 1' np•" 1"" rod, Polara Hardtop """ PS/pwr disc brki,
Road. Kt:'n \\'•·l~h ~2!\ii!t D••to·, ,,,,~ .. ,.,,,., '''"''"'' I Im emons Sl liO or best ofter. 0~6-3166. ' but a luxury f:4Ulpped per-R&tl, Xlul <.'Ond, priv •• , .. B1tnki\ineiii'1trd & ~I u i; 1 I.' r 3100 \Y. Co;1111 lh\y., i\.B. u... u '""'' ..-" '" V8, automatic, radio, heater, sons! llports car, "'·Ith ptw.·cr VS, automatic, radk>, heater, $005. 5.'\G-.995.1
Churge ai·i·t'l>led 642-9405 ll\'i>r 100 ncl'I' & u11cd Imports CADILLAC JlQ\\'er 11tcerlng, white 11lde \l'lndow11, tiUIOniatlc U'8ns., po11er stecrlng & bra.kt>S, ---ECONOMY CARS v.·all tires, vinyl top. t 1038601 tilt & h~lc steering 1vhecl, \\'!Ute sldv ,v.JI tires, all· '6.'> l\1USTANC FstlJk. 32,000 \\11.J.. trade L.0>u1v. l"nul' TOP CASH 1\\'r'rr top buyer for any $ 1 --•·lo · · 1111. St-t i·ad . 11·1-,, NC>>' " '72 595 actoty air cond .. and A~f/ ,,,.unult ntng, • vinyl top. ..~ ..-fcir Lu.-:ury t·ar or n1olo1 . ON DISPLA y ! ust'd i\lc1'Ce<1Pis &nz.) Cadillac CDV "'/full tank Fl\i ,.1ereo radK>. A inust 10 (\-AA987). paint. Xlnt cond. $.SOO
ho n1 e f ni ~n i 1n 11 n1 t'\'nl lfOr l'1('.'.ln lid<> 1nodC'l t"<ll"I 1301 Quall or RA!:. Take over lease Open Daily&: sun. '111101,,1.1. 688HRE $8 S 6•1.')..()729 aft 4:30. 644~7 I lll\d lru(.'k5~ l :-.'l•11port Beach pymcnu or $176. mo. No 2929 Harbor Blvd., see. · 9
•Dole's ~toior Honie Rentali ' Howard Chevrolet 1 833·9.'m d11·11• <>t'efllt no problem. All Costa l\fii:aa HURRY Open Do.Hy & sun . 'tU 10 J>.~t . OLDSMOBILE
'7J :!3-ai' i\l.11. & '.\hnl.! I :ii ... c.\rtluu· an•I Jninl>urce F.:"Tt:n. f>'lt0:\111,·JacARTllUR black "''/full leather &. Ian· 546-19,34 2929 1f8rbor Bl\'d .. r~ 'j '6" 2'JO SI 2 I dau lop. !fas heavy duty BOB' LONG E.. Coilla ~1esa 1·ce n\1 <'s 9 111 9, 1'i:i.l\ ... fr91~ N('\l'J11i1't J~·uch I • · .. fops, aulo, r<'< trailer lO\\'lng pa c kl\ g e , PR
Auto Service, Parts 949 833.0i);) -Will BUY YOUR i1·/blkl'~~-· ,.,1,. ~'!..~er, lik~ 962-4283 e1'H & ivkends, '70 CllEVROLE'P 1.1\fallbu, 546-1934
8ales &: Sf>:'VI~
OLDSMOBILE
GMC TRUCKS S 0 11111.1. ........., """"'°"" Sll\1.'1', Blk llf, Pwl' Sir, li..IAZDA -""''""TOP IJOU.All DAT UN , T YOTA . 61;.2100 doys. '" ~J>~PLACEA1F'..NT &: all:-.-~·01! TOP USJ::U CAH~ OR VOLKSWAGEN PORSCH"E '70 CAD. ·cc1v 1''ull Pl\T,, -~3B~~r Conditioning {-2001 E . .,L~l s1.,I
1hary R~S 111.nks. /ll<"k-ups, If ,\'0111" 1111' IS !'\Ira 1·l,·t1n.l pAJD rOILOfl. NOT. \I'll.I. O>A•ncr 1nust sell. \\'/Sac. CORT FOX at Santa Ana F\\·y.I 4 "'hi dri\'C.:1, \·aus & 11101"1 '1'1' u-. fll'~t. l'A'' TOP DOLLAR. l'.\LL 'litl PORSCHE B ser ies. belOIV 1011• lx>ok \'a]U£'. Sanlll Ana SSJt-7871
honirs. l\~~'l~-_ ~-.~:''-_U E_R, ~l 'l ~K . 1-.:J·:NT ALLl·;N, .·.10.0.112. _ hl'lu1d nt'"' pninl & overhaul, $2,375. Call no\I', it's a beau-1 '72 CORVF:T'TB r on" er t •
C01'1PI.J-:I f,L\ 1·etiuiJ1 ht•adl --'~' IL11 IMir I.Sh<!. .~1 0 \TSUN :.!IOl Si: , ,. _ :-.1111 ('(111d. Alust .gcjl. Reas. 1y. 833--9293 After 6 Pi\'f. Dealer 11.000 mi, being: ll'llnsterred.
for $230. Che\'\' SI;\ t·\l SIO. rc.~l;i :\h•!<a tli\l-2~Jil0 j ., · ·,. ' .. -IV~-).:d!'; !ii:~ 83:1""'96. :?;;&iNe\\'JIOrt Bl\'d., CM Rd . d 350 &l2-.191ti . • · <LI ---·-. --. ----1\ 1t 1 I.'. ,,i..~ Au, 1tuto., ....., l · · e , air con , nuto, ,
· 01 nil·ss.ii.:l' \I l·, lfl!\: 1na ;:i;, silvl'r. P11. party '71 Po1-s1·he 914. Blk. 1\pp 1973 CADILl,.AC Eldorado. 61r366t Dai! 11/\vinck>11·s, p/b, tilt & lele-_ii64~4-4~5.12~'~,,,~~clllnlllin~"~~~~-~~I L\IPnHTEI) AU1'0.~ ~llh-.:li20 1 grp, ,\i\1/fi\1. n1ags, Lo Fully loaded, Black 011 Black Sunday 644-2900 i;eope l'l'hl, qundniphonlcs, ;::: BEST PRICES PAID! 1971 210z n1 ilr~. :1t12-7AAO -?llust sell, Excellent t.'(lnd .. BY Oil'ncl': 1966 Chevy 6 speakers $5400. lirtn. I~ Dean Le wis Imports LOAIJl::D PEUGEOT dlr 1600G\V\V) $6995. 892-4444 Capri1·e. 283 engine, clean Oiel'ry. 846-7211.
f.uto5 forSlle ~ l!JW _!.l11·hor, C.~I. fi~6-9;-:0C Pri\':111· Pal'!~. 6/._,....;~'iOS 1973 CDV 10.000 nii's. Like. -'14-",,;"·-'5.llH=' -'oo;=·-----Cl lRISTI.li\S sharp, !ilOt'k
Autos, Impo rted 970 'ill l>ATSUN Pickup. Lo NEW PEUGEOT ne\\·-.. us l' · ac ""1 ..i. Union 76 Golckn Y.'est in
FIREBIRD HONDA CARS
'68 rmEemo ,00. , •pd.1 uN~VERSITY OLDS
1\•/v\nyl top, Excel cond, 2850 !·!arbor Blvd.
hvine, 552-9288 ~osta l\1f'11a 540-9640
FORD '6:J Olds F85. Good t'Ondilion.
$175. 647-3:.t!'l dys 842-7320 ----------J Cl'CS.
'70 FORD LTD
Fully equip. Very !llJ~rp, Jo1v
n1ilcs. 463DBN. $199.J.
CORT FOX
~~------· '66 Olds Cutluss. Air. lXl111cr,
xlnl t'Ondl1ion. Pt' iv u I c
OnnCI', ll\USt scJI 5"8-29~1.
PINTO -----I •1 t S tl s ""9' I '62 Cor\'ellt" St599 !'.Ce at ·
Antiques/Classics 953 inilt•s. ~.lnl 1.'0nd. I 89HIOC(J• 638-l8:i7 ei•cs CHRYSLER \\'eshniJ)s1er Denll'r •--~------I ALFA ROME"" Cull :-.;a; ... (i!)i.'2 DEALER -----------'-'=O-·-="=~~--1586 K Bl d C•I 19i2 PINTO, radio, heateL', ' .... CHEVROLET ATLAS COUGAR -'~'1""' , .. , ·' ; ''"""" 2001/ ·~ """;"'· CAH COLLJ-.:CT lON S .1-------·---FIAT Con1plrie Sa.!es nnd Service.,__________ &l.r366. I o._~11,y I one Ol\'tlt'l". oiiginal tiJ'C!i, St11nk·y SIPan1!'r, S ~I! 0 O ·. = "O>>>pa"'' 011 d"·play ' Sunday 0 " !9~" .JV '-'-'-" • u-tt ~ :!:;' __ ~>hOll(' 64:>-4056 llllt.'l' j , Ford \\'oody \\'gn, Sl!XKI: '17 ... 1 . 1 PACIFIC MOTOR itUST SACRtl>~IO-:. '69 Chev Chrysler/Plymouth 'li8 COUGAR, auto, air. \inyl CAR POOL SPECIAL l9Ci9 4 *ALFA ROMEO
Fol'<I Con\"('l'I. 82500: ·;17 Brst th•al all111,1 s! Rl'rlin:1 ~ 'j:: 1:.1 t 1at Sp~dc·r. :11n/fn1 ln\pala 2 dr h.ardlop cu!ilOn1 top, lmniac, TOP $62.50 mo. T . ,.. . PLYMOUTH
Lincoln ('onlincnlal i\\ark fl'Olll s::1:J:J ~ Si•r. ::u:.'8.~ I, Sll'H'O, -~1ag!<:, ~-J i\"1 Pli, pi~I. I IMPORTS COUJ)C, a utomatic trans floor 1968 Chrysler 1 494.-1587 orino . CJUll't' 6 passen):C'I'
II: Lola 1'i0 .• $10,000. 201;, ·;:ts ,(: ·-;::·s, l'olnti!ctC' i;r-. •·1111fl S.~j()IJ {)lj-7 197 h'U tr 1 b kct l ~=-------Station \\tagon, fully loar.ll'd -... ......-:..__ PEUGEOT/SUBARU s I , s . a o UC seas, N Y rk '71 COUGAR XR7 51,000 ini. \\'/po1rer, rli.~r IJ I' a k c s, Pl(u·enlia, C~I. 6-12-JO:i:i. ll0l'llf1n t)(;\\. Buy 01' ]l';ili\' I .. . po~·er steering. Vinyl root ew 0 er P/Brk. PIS air, pl'ivatc A/C. rte. 67:\·178.l C\"('S.
l\!G l~f~~-·i1lR0ads1cr-:-1..ai;1 ti'OUJ JENSEN \ 1:1! \V. Lincoln A~33e .. ,,V\ ah· cond Red \\'ilh '"hite VS, automatic, rndio, heRler. I 1mrty $2500 497-2236
of the (·las.~i('s! u r 1·g. Jim Parkinson's ---------1; na l'Un a; · """ _•o~p_. _"1_4-4_68~1_____ po"·er steel'ing, brakes & '63 FALCON Sc1uire. shuky
011·11('1's. Under :,U,000 to!al JENSEN SAAB '7'1 Chevy Biscayne 4 dr \\;ndo\\'8, l'l'hile \\"Bil 1ires, DODGE on style, but i; 0 urt
n1LIC's. H.cslo1·cd lo inint INTERCEPTOR ----------t J){'lu.xc. Loaded \l'/fnc air, air 1.'0nditiol)lng. (VZT220J. ~~anics, $1 00. 54!).....3793
ATLAS
cond. 25 1n.p.i;. S2000. No L.i\RGE SF:LECTIO:'ll * SAAB Sac. $475. belo"· blue book. $695 , ==-o=-~-
offe1·s_ 642-7623 o~· COL.OHS NC'\\' tires. Xlnt oond. -AT LAS '70 FORD LTD Counlry Trucks L\l:\IElJI,\'I f: l)ELl\'EI{\" , lit'sl dl'al ahl'ay:i. Con1plctc 963-6086 Open DRiiy & Su.n. 'Iii lO P.~I. Squire \\'agon, fully ft!Uip-VS, 11uton111ti(·, radio, heater".
________ 9_6_2!1i-ti·6-IOO or 645-6·106 , FUL l. SERVICE I ~cleetion no11'. Buy or leasc1·n TOco\\'o,,~-5~;-8~,-~-,-,..-.-.~,~;k-e 2929C~~~~e~!\'tl., Chry,_sler/Plymouth ped, $1550. 612-0,'"J90. pd\\·C'r i>let'ri1u.;. ,1·hlle sidt'
Chrysler /Plymouth
1967 Plymouth
Fury Ill 4 Dr. Sed.
CifERR'' •(i~ Chrvy shor: DEPARTMENT I f1'0111 . , nu, lo nil. air cond ,t: 546 1934 1968 DODGE fi9 FORD \\';\GON 11111! tires, air l'Ollditionini;. bed. nu cus1on1 µainl, GDYR AUSTIN AMERICA Jim Parkinson-' shocki;, $277j, pvt pty. • GOOD CONDITION 1UOJ:!71J.
Polystet•l 111·1·s. 111ag-s. G c~·I. --! 644-7311. l ---------CORONET $900 a48-0297 C\'CS. 1 $495
1\'/headcri;. i11ak1· or 11· "ti!I AUST!:\' 1\.\IJ·:r·:IC'A lrooks \VILL tnke l carat, 2 carnt. CONTINENTAL -~..,M..,.,E"R"C""U=R~YC=----1,0pen Daily_ & Sun. 'fil10P.i\t.
!XlS-2842 ;.;d. hu1 don'! 1u11. h.~t oflr. ! 3 carat diainond in on tl'adc VS, auton1atic. radio, heater, ----------2929 llnrbor Blvd.,
I • li l'' S!"''' 1 "92-•A•.• pov.·er steering, \\'hire side CllE\1 P.U. 1!166 1:l I. flct·t _:.::._ '"':.......... -·----or llC"" car. .....,..,.,_ \Vll.J.. trade Luxw-y home \\'Bil tires, air conditioning, '70 i\10NTEGO Villager, full ' CO!ila ~lt"AA
bc<l, auto. uil', lt&J.1. n"<'Ond. BMW , 00 C I &-1a--b-IOO or S45-&I06 1969 Cll~VELLE h1alibu 307 for Lux1u)' car or motor \'i.nyl top. {XI\~). poi\·er, air, 1'~:\f, & od 546-1934
l'll!,; A: Iran!-'. N1•11 froul ,;1 \\'. oast H1vy .. N.B. V·S. air, slick. Vet)' clean. ho m c / 111 in i n1 um rent $695 inilengl'. (TI4l 728-8585~~
brks. S 111.tv Ii 1: .... ;1~~ u1·[ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 642-9405 $800. Call fl46.l367. 644--0i87
"43-ll46. ·--· -THE RED BARON'S I --M~A"'ZDA SIMCA ·11 .tmpala. Blu• 2 dr, 4',000 MUSI' "'" before Ott 31sc Open Dnily & Sun. 'Ill IO P.M. I MUSTANG PONTIAC
I \YllI::l::L 1h·i1·t• '' Cl1e\)', nu Perfect cond. Nu i\tnrk 3, xlnt cond \VIII 11ac 2929 Harbor Blvd.. ------------------
1973, la.1fled sri50. U.>11 IHi. CHOICE R !Sim(.'a '39, con1lng classic lll~S $139.'l 61~-4307 n1ak,e otrr. rii2-9IW833-0022. Costa._i\'lesa ' 69 i\·1USTANG
Call &i4-:!611i .:ir 6-12-!HI6. ..inn *Mazda '73 otary * l'ncrgy SJX'('ial. SlO. NC<.'ds · · · 546 l 934 l\1INT COND. $500. ---~~ l"lA $66.MON.TH cngitie \l·ork. 6Ta-ii88 '70 i\1onte Carlo. P/'I'-, p/b, '62 Lincoln Continenlal • Ti\J{E OVER PA\~lEl\"TS
air, J)/S. BPst of f <' r. Inunaculatc. 675-6886 e &15-4767 e =~=-li73--937ti \\ill a.·c~·pt trade·ins ---------·I tlon \Vagon. Po1l'er steering '66 i\IUS J ANG, 6 l'VI, t'X· I
'(]7 Ponliac CTO, 6.1,000 ml,
4 spd. heatC'r, Nu paint,
I l'f'IJ.1ir. S 1;5_ 6.i2·9a.W.
T-BIRD
'i:! C11EVY au1 0, 4 1rhl dri11·. '1 · · · d 10 ,,. t to \Veil-cared for 1350
)
:;1; J\10!'1(J'!l."i O?EN LEASE TOYOTA rnr con • au • 'ny p. · 1971 DODGE Crestl'l·oocf i;ta· M2-i796
c,-. C-llcV-Y ,-~-T~.~,u-m-p ~Tl-'U<'~.,, :ii. CH'.\U,u n"t"·. "e"'e' 'a42·c6666h 73 LANDCRUISER 9THURICOKUGCHASAH CORVmE :.~~··;,.~~.~~~~!/~~: cell"'' <'>nd, $150. 846-4'09 I 1·uns good .$11:;(1 d>-Hunt. Sch I i\'ICI:: CllRISTl\l,\S GIFT al! 5 67-54'''" -· 'i2 CORVETI'E. a.lr, PS, Pw. Rleering \\'heel, only t:>.OOO '7•1 MUSTANG II C""'. 4 l'y\, . Shnrp 01·i•in".l .,_,, g1-,1 ,,.1·111 I=-=~ __ . .:r-_.'->__ SALES, LEASING & ' S O DAILY PILOT 4 spd, very clean, 673-8031 m iles. like ne .. ·. &14-4687 "" " .JU '" ·1P2u•.·onv~i·yr10010n;;1: 10•1··'",',1~1k1· ,sa'lJtieBack.EXCEllENT SERVICE I MAZDA OfT-T p WANT-·AD an 1 pm ~fUST sell, 1968 ~-e Da•I auto, radials. tach, grl'at I '1hile hnrd top. <"Ontincntal " .. .... .._ .........,. • gas ml, lttust Sl'll. 846-00."iS kil. Xl111 motor, dl'h·c train
•10 0 0 G!2-l"""'' • I '&4 CORVI.TIE, top cond. 2 dr auto, best offer 497-1528 ~-· 1 · ,. ood 0 ~ ~ 0 l '000 ., (' ' 0 . '73 J\IACH J· 3·1 ·· 1 . r .~ Ill <'l'IOl', nu Lrt'!':, G:
';)9 Int 11•• 1on .... c<11J1111·h01~i;1s TV"""dlL:r\1 I ny ·. $"3'9"7'7"'l:Sl-I'' ·1 642-5678 i\·l ust sell. evenings .trans. lul.1 p~·r.c1~\:\ti~·~i l ~1.'1~,1f';11"'l'. 675-6 71 2 or ~ 1 &lf>..-1843 afll'r 5 pm I \Vhlte Elephant ·Dlme-A-Line ,, ........,., 96 $5.)0. t:an bi.• ~C'11_,11 l!l;17 f'~c "-'-J71~~Hc:it·'.~J~I. 842.&~ /~--~----~= Stern rndio, many C'Xlras. ~---~----~
.. ~1,1.Blvd c~ h~llJl\J _. -·~ 11..A.... ( 1974 MAZDAS Autos, New 980 1 Autos, New 9IG Autos, Ne• 980 Call S.16-3367. I Autos, New ,.
IJJ rht'\ y. ti l')'I. 111~g;i;, ~ i\l. :bi 102 1'1:H"t:"u<'r1!<' P.u k1\ 11y I MME DIAT E -1\· • M l•11~t 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
pa111,1l 1nlc~· ~-1;pt ti liool1 tl.ll~sion \"h'JU • lU~ tAll\D ....'::.~~lf~IOl1. 6 ~~1j.'l\Jl :-::ll 2010 c 49:"1'"1!1-ll) .. ~~L1VER':'. . TOYOTA
"61 Fflrd Fal«on Ph.:k·U/l 6 US~~ ,\\IEHY 'l'\\'Y. EX!1' 1 S!'.L 1l·lt AL L NE\\
c) I. hul'kel ~ars-goo<t slJ<ll)l'I _ ... _ _ _ 1 R X4
""· >'.6-titi>; ORANGE COUNTY'S 1%6 Harbor. C.!\I. 64&.9303
LEASE 'ii TOYOTA 1200 Vo'n,-... -9631 OLDEST BOB LONGPRE
II :.!u~e ~.~~k~t;~ ,I "' ,,;1!~?.~ .
Corolla se<.lan . Get 30
n1Hcs ~r gallon .. Only
\'<t n lhal ls Jo;-1dC<l ll'f' hn1·f'l ..,, 01\ '-=.1111a .\na f11•y.1 I
--,-,X\"t" en! st• ce11on o pre. ~ ----one ol 1hc clcanei;I in 101111.JL-fl 1 1
1
~an111 ,\na ;{lll·'i8il
C:qu 1p. 11'llh s111<1ll VS, :u110r Jlllll: r£'·C'Y'ilUa!ion niodcls 12 l\IHz<ta P.X2. $2100. Ftn t
Sj.'1.:14 rno. 36 tnos. ope;;
r nd lease.
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA !11al1c tr~ns .. po11er sit"('!'-DEM'o $ALE · • ~Lc1~'0 radio. heutl'I', Can't
1ng;, radio, 111a!: 11hcels. . , . . 1 , ~ , . I llC' ht•al. &1:1-1217 ' : ' 11·hire leller \\'idc n1·nt !ires. S,\1..;.,~-~t .. P.\ ICF._-LEASI:'\G -----,c~===
t:on11;lctc cus1on1 interior 0\ F.H."F .. \S fJF.LIVERY ~AERCEDES BENZ ~1i1h 2 01·erl_1e_ad v<'nls. This ROY CARVER, Inc.
' ' ' 1( 11
1s a bC'auurul ,·an und a 2::-t i:; 1~u St
111 us 1 lo SAVEllGE. CoJSla :\~!>a. i l. ·546-~~H 50 USED
MERCEDES
'74 TOYOTAS
LEASE or BUY
BOB LONGPRE
f'1AZDA
~2001 E. Isl St.,
al Santa Ani;t ~\\',\. •
Santa Ana a.J'\.-7.~il
DODGE '72
3/4 TON VAN
CREVIER BMW ' ON DISPLAY S<di·~ e Service e I.rasin..:: I F;11·tory Au!horized Dis!l'i bu-
~.> \\'. 1~1 .. S .. \, :i?.:i.:;''il lor for all l\lcrt•Pdes Jll'fHlu i::1s I
1 Ask About Our Unique
'73 3.0 CSA DEMO Used Mercedes Lease
Ne1v i\Iodels -1\'c11' Colol's
al
~toJt lruii&
W TOYOTA USED BMW'S !\'c1\' ('nrs -Parts -Sr1;·it'f' I
'73•J .O SA DEMO Plans tNi6 llarbor, C.i\I. 646-9303
·11 •vARJA H f 1 •70 2800 cs ouse o mports 1 TOYOTA ·so ctcan 25 mpg.
'70 2002 I G.%2 i\1ane~1P.~l(·1·. Buer~n Park
1
1so1q1 i_:>~nccrn.ia. _Apt S $1300;
on 1hc San1<1 Ana I• n1·i·. 6~4· ... 6.J. (1\0tkJ bl\V 2-a
/?. & 11. P:S. HLllO .. !:UJX'I" '69 2002 j23·7250 . Jackie
n1a gs, giant 1i.1hhl'r. 1;)249:ih'.1 l ~68 2002 NOW OPEN 1 .l~J~co=H~O~~~A-,~0-,.,-1-ra-g-.-L-ug-.
$3295 J!l7'l :;_o rs J-i.\I\\'. niaruon rai..:k. 11900 n1i. New cond.
on110. i-1c1-eo, 1 t'a 1 h "'r Mission Viejo Imports S3'.«l0 01· bC'st. 968-6767.
ooi' ~··uN O(lhols!ery, !•1 nii. i.·,7 .... 321: •. I MERC,,E,,D,UEl''lls' BENZ T.O.P. Priv. Ply, '72 TO)'Ota
11111·11 !-J.~i. Dr. John. I , .\!h:II \\'gn. F1~ $2600. ----& I 6 16-2~:;9, 1-~.,=-, c"'t°"11-:"'°1·"'1-.cc"~-CORTINA FIAT 1--TR_l_U_M_P_H __
BUBBLE TOP C'HHISTli\~ C,\f?. F OH Cor1nlt'!£' ;.\RIC!' & Sei'\•1cc
~-.. ,.,_,,,,_ .. <> • ., -..--.·-,.,...,..
·-..>a °""" 1 """'-nm
\'.8. wihcard-o! \'Ulu1• 1QBZ· SALE -'fj,>; Ccwriuu GT, 2.·1 Visit Us Soon At I ·io GTti+ eng: & trans
(Y.J:;). n11~. n1r.·h \In!. 1"111111. 2 . ..,101 ~fari;:ur1·i1e Park111tiv 1·eccntly reblt at dealel'. Nu
$3989
GUSTAFSON
Linl'oln·:\h•1'f·urv 16SOO Beach ;,r \r<t111cr
lluntingtun BPa,·h
S42·8."44 * i: . .n:; I .J!J:!.j."i ll
"llon1<> of 1hc \'1kinL!" ---'69 OODGI·: Van. 1!: T<ln ..
Speed T1t1n.~. 39!rriC'. s1u.-~1.
CORT FOX
Den Irr
Z>86 Ne\\1X)l'1 Bl\d ..
f1-l:-r366J D11 ily
l=~'°S~nclny_~:!._1:29j(Jc...~
.tij OOl)GE 1·1111, x In I
n1cchanic:tl c:on<I.. i·ehll t'nt;.
llC\1· exhaust. :'l[l;~T SELi.:
Call J~a.y or \\'1•ndy ·IH&-!)U(ll
'il t"'ORD \lan, eronon1y 6 1
<')'I stick. n1~s. slnl cono.
1 cu:;t. lnL Gas Sa v c r
&12-314.1 I
"i3 DOLX;E \'an. :--, Ton.
shorlic, fat· all', p/~. r~/ll. I
!llet'CO, 300 sng, n1n;;s xu·n
nict" $36.10, .1-16--.l.~!l ---1 'b"9 rORD F600 11'/14' :1h11n
\'an. Nu eng, nH. ,1.-rC'xl11·
$2300. Can bC' !:C'cn :it l!l:'li
Np!. Blvd .. C:\·I htv.· ;..7 l''I j
'69 1'"'01\D \·an. 8 p:ts,', 11)
n1ileAge, maJts, fully crr11ct I
inter)or. 644-4410
F'ORD Van ·72, Eronohnr,
1 T. auto, R&ll, liH·t air, I
13200. 968-2241.
'12 Cit.EV\" cus ron1 Vun 11 I
1nugs, hsl offr.
uall 960-14i0
196.'l fORD Van, ne1\' eny1nl'.
n.t<.llator, lil'f'll, rin1~. di.!>L
$800/btt o!r. ;,,~.
Auto Le•sing 964
1·1·l1t1. l)('s1 1iHt·1· f>1 t•r S:;j(J. .\l1s~1on \'1cjo 495-liOO -die Hnrtl battery. '.!:> n1pg.
~;;7.:;1~1 111· ~:;o.:o l!lll. •Li~E ,\\'Ef~Y P\\1'. J-:XITI ."!?.()....48'i6 51850 or best offer.
Au tos, lmpor ted --970 ' Auto!), imported 970 I VOLKSWAGEN
WILL BUY YOUR I ___ I GAS SAVER
PAID 1'--0R OR.NOT. \\'JLLI
, PAY TOP DOLl.i\P... CALL 1
Need
remodeling?
See
want ad
.. . ..
SERVICE DIRECTORY
FOR EXP ER T HEL P
i 11 t h e
J\EI\T ALLEN, .»I0-0 1--12. I
I ''il \'\\' Camp11~11til1~1
h·n1po top, ;tir. 11'11· hitch, ! 20 1npg +. (Inly !i,000 1n1.I
Isl ca.sh ufft'l' O\'P1· $3200 1
l<1kC's! Y.1•sr111n~t~ 897-2464
·1:~ V\\I l\arn1a1111 Ghia, a
real gns sa.vl'r, 27 l\1PG,
S:!700, bsl or~ 496-7868.
'liS \I \\I , Beige, pcrfec1 I running t'(lnd, $830. Ol' best
_qffCI' 49&-03iJl
1009 V\Y BUS, '72 eng, strong
l'UILllCJ', 2;'1;\IPG, $1700.
616-(} 1,13
'GS BUg nu Ui50 t'ng,brka
pnin1,\\'ide til'C'S, f la r cd
lo•llrlE'l'S. Offf'r-a-IS-1235
'69 \r\V !iq. bck. 11.UlO. air,
rarli:tl:-;, Ju.gb'ltgt' ' rack
I A!\l/F~1 $1500 493-4617
·;,g V\\1 BUS.
Reb\t, MOO.
I Pho11(! 557-3182
) '73 \l\V, 7_ pass Bu~, 12,tn:I
m l, dlx mter., $3650. Uke
1ie11•, priv party, ~7-9T:i0
VOLVO
'74 VOLVO'S
HERE NOW
Immediate Delivery
On All atodC'ls
'
Wouldn't she just love it
under the Christmas tree!
-CAPRI 2000 or 2600
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
' • FOR CHRISTMAS!
ORANGE COUNTY'S ONLY LiNCOLN·MERCURY DEALER
, . TO RICEIVE THE
"Distinguished Service A)Yard" for outstanding Service after Sale.
• "Orange CoMnt~·, Family of Tine Cari''
--
2626 HAJ.BOR BLVD. OF CARS ' -COSTA MESA 540-5630
• ·-• • ·~
Today's Final ---·--
San Cle1oenie
Capisira·no EDITION N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 66, NO. 354, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES .
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1973
• • • TEN CENTS;
Gr~nny 'Robin. ll_OQd' Jailed for Baa ClieCKS+
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of l~I 01Ur l"llot Sltll
Sandra Leah Phillips Spinellan. ii.
likes to think of herself as a Je.wish
Robin Hood, bouncing -~d chec~s to
pick up items which she promptly turns
over to~ charity.
Foootain Valley police, \Yho operate
under the California Penal Code instead
or old English folk tales, think of her
more in terms of the felony bad check
Starr Ranch
Group Sets
--La11d---Sa-le
By ll'JLLIAM SCHREIBER
Of ..._ a.Ur PMot Stiff
The conglomerate of ten charities
holding title to the Starr Ranch will
put it up for sale in the wak~ of
the 0 r a n g e County Board of Super·
visors' vote to withdraw the county's of·
fer for the land, the charities' lawyer
revealed today.
William Poindexter, who administers
the Starr Ranch Foundation holdings,
said. "we have been getting numerous
inquiries, both foreign and domestic,
about the land for development."
(Related stories, page 3).
Poindexter confirmed that some of
the inquiries are coming from JaPanese
investors Interested In buying the 5,500-
acte pareel for development into a pian-
ned community.
'"Since the county hai apparenUy
cancelled the entire project aner spend-
ing thou"8llds ol !lollars and a year
and a hill! on II, the chariU•• are
left with the only choice ol lilting the
property for sale," Poindexter said.
charges she pleaded guilty to in court
this week.
·And Judge James Smith, who sen·
tenced her to a minimum 45 days in
Orange County Jail and -three -years
-probation, -appai-ently thinks she needs
gllidance because he also sentenced ber
to seek psychiatric help for her
charitable tendencies.
Those tendencies led the Santa Ana
grandmother to write more than $2,000
worth of bad checks in six west County
TEEN·AGE IDOL DEAD AT 37
Bobby D1rm Succumbs
Bobby Darin
Dead at 37 ·
'
cities before her arrest in October.
She also allegedly ran up $16,000 in
unpaid charges in stares and.gas stations
she believed are "anti~mitic."
Even the detective who tracked her
for-four months-this_:summer admits
she is the InoSt unu..ual check· artist
he's ever dealt with.
She is the kind of person usually
. described as a pillar of the community.
To attest to this standing there is a
wall full of appreciation plaques and
awards ln her home.
Yet in West Orange County Judicial
District Court last week and to Det.
Marty Engquist who arrested~her,_she
readily admitted to the bad check
charges. . .
"She told me she di<I it for the thrill
or It," he says.
Engquist offers an example that he
believes captures the essence of Mrs.
Spinella 's Robin Hood tendencies.
"She told me she was shopping and
saw a long dress that she liked.
"But the dress was just made out
of cotton and the store # was asking
something gyer $100 for it and that
made her 1nad.
~''She -told -me she said·-to-herself
'Fair's fair. If they 're going to charge
prices like that they deserve what they
get,' and she "TOt.e them a bad check
for it," he asserted.
"When she was tell ing me about this,
she showed me the dress. It was pretty
good looking, but it had all the lags
still on it. I don't think she bas ever
worn it," he added.
Engqyist related tha~ after he arrested
Mrs. Spinella Slfe readily gavtt fiim-all
of-her idenUfication. -she-had -tbree
driver's licenses - and told him that
she considered herself a modern-day
Robin Hood.
"She told me that all or the stuff '
she charged or wrote checks for, with
(See GRANNY, Page %)
'
Decomposed Body Found:
. . . . •
Gn ·Knoll Near SC High
Marine,
Wife Held
In Beating
A Camp Pendleton Marine and his
wife were arresied on charges of felony
childbeating late Wednesday after police
found their 2-ye;lr-old son wanderlog in
I neigl!barbood r~ng evm-•of
severe battering and bums.
Johnnie Bernell Lessley, 21, and his
wi.fe, Sheila Louise, JS, were booked
at dty jail before the dinner hour.
The child, '-Jerome, was taken to
the county's Albert Sitton Home for
Grisly Find
Puzzles
Policemen
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of the O•ll't 'JIM St.ti
r
The badly decomPQSed body of an
apparent murder victim was discovered
on a secluded knoll overlooking 8,\n
Clemente High School early lndaY..
The ccindition of the remainl wa1
such that police initially were unable
to determine the sex of the homicide
Victim. Investigators said the· body had
apparently been dumped several wee·ks
ago and was fowKI with its feet pointed
up a slope. The coun had a firm offer on the
table of $H iiiillion 10 buy Ille rana;'---!--Rter
as a major wilderness park. But fl..l
e~-_______ dcpendent,fbili' D;<11. .. ~--~--.:;w·gery Police allege the child bore scars from
...fr:'.'.,.#--IPolie<--Ghlef-Cliffonl-folurray-satd-·~~--1
canvas tarpaulin with metal grommets
supervisors voted 3-2. Wednesday to sup-
port a motion by Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich to cancel the agreement.
A key motivation behU'kl Diedrich 's
move was a "rumor" that the charities
were trying to retain royalties on the
Starr Ranch gravel resources.
Poindexter today confirmed t h a t
ron1or.
"The charities agree to accept the
county's very low appraisal of the land
as the purchase pri·ce and in view of
that low price, they thought It only
fair they retain at least a half-interest
in the minerals ," the Los Angeles lawyer
said.
"This would provide added income
to the charities for works such as heart
and cancer researclt," he added.
Poindexter said he feels the councy's
offer was $1.5 million too low but ihat
the charities wanted to accept it becau.se
it "would have been a greet thing
for the colDlty to have UU.ildemess
area for au time."
Poindexter said the cbaritles have no
choice but to put the property back
on the market to Jlquldate it and get
out from under property taxes.
He said the land could be offered
In two parts, mineral rights and open
space for development.
"There appears to be a lack of desire
on the part of the Board of SUpervisors
to complete this transaction so this is
our only course of action," Poindexter
said.
Oraage
Weather
ll'll be c<ioler Friday, according
to the w<ather aervice, with highs
in the low 70s inland dipping ln the
upper 60s at the heaches. Some
high cloudiness but mootly fair
skies. 1 '"
INSWE TODAY
If you'rt an abandantil dog,
your chance• of fiflding a home
ore probably better In Hunting-
ton Beach than anywhcrt elae.
See story, Paa• 10. ·
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Bobby Darin,
th_e brash ambitious te_en idol of the
early 1960s who sang "Mack the
Knife" and "Splisb..Splash" and married
Sandra Dee, died today after hls second
open heart operation. He was 37.
"He never really came around after
the operation," a spokesman said. "He
was just too weak to recover."
Darin made a number of records
that sold more than a rriillion copies,
including "Dream L-Over," and won an
Oscar nomination as best supporting
actor in 1963 for his role in "Capt.
Newman, M.D."
His marriage to Miss Dee, one of
the teen idol romances of the 1960s,
lasted six years.
Darin died at 12: 15 a.m. at Cedars
of Lebanon Hospital, Jess than seven
hours after a team of four surgeons
fmished the second open heart operation
to be wformed on him in less than
three· years.
In February 1m two valves were
Inserted in Darin's heart, which had
been weakened by a bout of rheumatic
fever at the age of 8.
During routine postoperative checks
(See BOBBY, Page %)
' Council Happily ..
n·urns Mortgage
To Civic Cente~
A retired Army general ' lit • fire
·m San Clemente city counCil chan:tbers
~ Wednesday evening, and when the blaze
ended, a packed house applauded hearti·
ly. The event marked a turnjng point
for th!! cit:y.:: it's civic center now bas
no mortgage.
Retired· Brig. G<n David Blakelock
beaded the special committee . ad·
mlnlaterlng the le~• plan
under which the $230,000 civic e<nler
was built 10 years ago.
And It was he who held the · final
bond which was burned In the riles
In advance of Wednesday's council
T·c1ocament wu called baclc 19
years earlier than Its expiralloa date
by action of the council a yoat 'llO.
The panel cbo8e to aave al!ded Interest .•
)>y using unencurnllered """"'"' ln ~'y off the tab for the hilllnp complex.
Not everyone oa the council .lihd
tho idea ol lnrchlng the eipired docu-
m"'t ..i dtvpploc its 8fts In a foll-
linod barbecue brooaht In ~ for
• (See GENERAL, ·Pase Zl
'"
burns on hiS forehead and both feet,
bfl*ies in the ~ea of his groin, a
black eYe and numerous other bruises
and welts.
Ttie C8Se -rirSt came to light when
a man living near the couple's residence
at 116 Calle Dominguez phoned the
police.
Officers said Jesse had been wandering
around the neighbor's boat building proj·
ect for two hours before they were
called.
Officers initial attempts to contact
the family failed, they said. Mrs. Lessley
was not at home when the boy was
found .
The· Fisherman
About an hour after the boy was
taken into protective custody Mrs.
Lessley returned home and was arrested.
Her husband was detained a short time
later, police said.
The boys' mot.her was transferred to
Orange County Jail and her husband
was kept at the local facility.
Arraignment for the couple was set
to take place. sometime today, officers
said.
~ the thi~ winter sun s)oks toward the horizon, this ·fisherman seems
oblivious to all but the task at hand, preparing to catch a fish. It isn't
always easy in the· winter but · for the dedicated pier fisherman it1s
fun trying when the weather is nice. Large crane on the right is be·
ing used to replace pili~gs that support the San Clemente pier.
The youngster allegedly the victim
of repeated abuse, did not require hospital
trea~nt for the injuries, officers sai4.
11le healed bums on the• boy's feet
were apparently caused by some sort
of long, burning ember, .officers theori:i:·
ed.
·Court Rules Dana Strand
Executive Privilege Not Considered Public
WASHINGTON (UPI) -White House
press aecretary Ronald L. Ziegler in-
voked execulive privilege Wednesday in
closed door testimony In a $6.4 million
civil, sulf brolllht by the Del)IOCratic
National Commlttee over tho break·in
of ita Waterrate headquarters.
-
By ·TOM BARLEY
01 tfll Dalfr Plitt Stiff
Dana Strand is not a public beach,
and lawyers for Orange C.ounty failed
to prove in a full·week trial that . it
bas ever been one, Superior Court Judge
Youth Nabbed
Mesa Store Prank Backfires
A curious boy, 14, out Christmas browsing with buddies dropped
a spny can of red paint into a $229 ·tnsh compactor appliance at a
Costa Mesa department store Wednesday and pushed the button to
see what would happen. . ~
THI FIRST thing that happened was an explosion of crimson
-me! ·paint and the sec.ond thing was a 'tha9e through lbe South 11 Cout PJaza mall bJ Sears, R~ebuck and Company security men. The !lllrd thing that happened was· t b i t Costa Mesa pOlice
shoir.ed up ·and toOk the boy in'to cuslody on suspicion of malicious·
1!l!1Cblef.
~ -~·
DISPOsmoN of the aharge In court will probably depend· on·
wbe!Mt llil lamlly ~uys a new ;trash compactor -red'.on the inside
-tor Cliristilias, investigators :iaid. , · .. . ,... _, .. •
-
' , .... -.... ..... . ....
James H. \Valsworth ruled today.
The ruling rejects the county's argu-
ment that the three-acre shoreline area
falls under the provisions or prescriptive
rights laws and leaves the Chandler·
Shennan Corporation free to develop
the ocean·front property.
"I am bitterly disappointed," Deputy
County Counsel A. C. Wahlstedt, Jr.,
said today. ''But I cannot comment
on our future action including possible
appeal of the decision until I have in-
formed the county supervisors of Judge
Walsworth's ruling."
"I thought we had a .good case, and
I ·also thought we put on some pretty
solid evidence to back it," Wablstedt
said. ''This means, of course, that the
Chandler-Shennan peoJ)le can now bar
the beach to the public. '1
Judge Walsworth sta.ted in his brief
ruling that if the county bad proved
public use in the five years prior to
1956 he would have ruled for the county 1 Walstedt said.
"Frankly, I thought we'd prove public
use from muc.h farther back than that,"
. the county lawyer added. Wahlstedl's
trial witnesses included a local resident,
who testified ~ using the beach fron1
around the tum of the century. •
. Los Angel.. attorn<y E d " a rd
Fitzgerald had not been notified of Judge
See !STRAND, Page I)
'
along the edges bad been tossed over
the corpse and only allowed ~
of two legs and an arm.
Officers sealed off a long section ol
Avenidli Pico ifrinfeaiately -intarid fioni
the high sctfool campus which is closed
for the Qolidays.
Coroner's investigators spent three
hours in a painstaking ._examination c4
the area surrounding . tl1e' remains and
shortly alter noon rCD)OVed the tarpeuli1i
and discovered that the victim wu an
elderly man with reddish blond hair.
The only clothing on the victim wn a
pair of light-colored shorts. and a darfe
shirt.
Chief Murray said it was imposslb!e.14-
detennine what may have contributed to
the man's death, The victim, he added,
appeared to be very short, perbaRI jq his 50s or 60s. • _
The remains were discovered at abOttt
9 a.m. by Thomas Doyle Solomoo, 'of
124 Patero De Oro, who told pollCf
he had been walking hi• dog whei
the animal ran over a roadside etn:
bankment and began wallowing in lhi
bushes. :
Solomon discovered to his horror that
(See BODY, Page %)
Nixon Won't
Pay Back V.S.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A White
House spokesman said today Presi·
dent Nixon will not reimburse the .. '
government for federally financed '
work-at bis San Clemente and •
Florida residences which the ·
General AccolDlting Office sug.
gested he should have paid for
personally at the time. ~
"The answer is no, 11 Deputy
Press Secretary Gerald ·L. Warren ·
said in response-to reporters' ques·
tions.
Warren said the GAO report .
released Tuesday questioned only
"an infmitesimal" portion of the '
$1.4 million In federal funds spent •
at the San Clemente and Key Bis.-• ·
cayne residences, mostly f o r •
;ecurity reuons. •
The presidenUal spokesman said' •
the auditor's report "deflates • , ,
the.. wild charges" that Nixon
benefitted from the government-
financed work.
· Waln!D was uked gpec!flcally •
about the GAO's suggestion that
certain landscape maJntenance,
sewer work and surveys should
not have been pala for by the
govemme'ilt. He ~ Ill tho
negative when uked whejher Nlxoii
would now pay for thoee Items.
• ' ,
•
••
•
. 2~LY PILOr SC Thur1d11, Dfctmbtr 20, 197) ..
~·supe • YISOI'S -Plmie Slides
Past Runway
,.,.._P.,el
GRANNY •• • -Ccupers P~ns SJ4 Milli on
Tia elands Fund
•
~doptLand
·Use· Element
GRAND RAPIDS, Midi. (AP)
-A North Central Airllnel DCe
1lld off a nmway at Kent County
Airport today u ii tuled for a
takeoff.
N""" ot the 911 persona aboorcl
were reported lnju....r.
Orange County Superv isors \\'ednesday .Airport ol_fJcla1s aald the er~
adopted a ten-· vear land use element slid to one side while headed ctown
o1 too .. count~-icncraJ .plao ..thut .. cowd •.•... the runway ~d lb wheel> became
allow population in unincorporated areas ~nd<lownud.izr--a comblnation--Of~·
ro gro~· by 500,000. snow a m . ~ The passengm were nown to ~ The 1983 Land Use Elemen t, appro~ed their Chicago dtstlnitlon ln another _two "-'eek! ago by the county Planning al
..:Commission itter nearly two years of ain:r I.
u·ork. was acce pted withou t change, but
1 s~pervisors strongly Indicated rc\:ision
~·ork should begin immediately. '· Supervisors resolved to adopt the plan
now to meet a state-mandated Jan.
"'"I_,, deadline. They said they'll amend
it· later.
-. Slate law allows three amendments
:to the plan a year and county plaMers
~ve already scheduled the first amend-
·roent date iil April.'11. G. Osbome.
interim cowity plaMing director, told
.the supervisors Wednesday.
The new plan could permit 500,000 new
,people in county territory by I~ if
·all developments permitted under the
•plan's zoning description are approved
by the supervisors.
.•·. BUt Irwin Schatzman , a plaMing of-
·.ficial who outlined the elements for
the planning commission, told the board
.the plan ls merely what . could be and
:_not a guarantee of what will be.
. • Generally speaking the plan is broken
into three major portions . These include:
~ . -Land preserves which may not be'
developed at all during the next ten
years.-
•: -Planning reserves which are in the
.process of Intensive planning now and
may be ready for development any time.
-Urban areas which are currently
under deyelopment of on the verge of
development today.
· , The element includes numerous sub-
·categories such as 16 different residential
~density lumpings, ranging from one or
more units per acre to as many as
. 40 units per acre.
• .During Wednesday's public hearing
·objections to th e plan were voiced by
·city oCficials and private citizem whG
.,claim the plan is either inconsistent
u•ith their own general plans or is un-
'necessarily discriminatory against cer-
• tain types of development.
;, 1 Supervisors al9' beard obpections from
environmenta l leruler Dale Secord who
•warned thal unless the land use element
· is brought into line with curren t coon·
~ ty zoning, a flood °' lawsuits will result. ..
F rom Page l
··STRAND. • •
From Pqe I
BOBBY •.•
last week, doctors said they di1COvered
that one of tht valves was malfunc-
Uonlng. A new valve was installed
Wednesday in an operation that took
Darin specified in his will that his
body shoold be donaled to medical
science.
.. A spokeS1Tiif!I said the body had al-
ready been t.ransfeJTed to UCLA where
it woold be used for research.
"He felt that If there coold he any •
puTJlOS< served by dying it '""'1d be to
help save other people's llvet," said
the spokesman.
Thus, he aaid , there wUI be no fu.
neral although friends may hold privato
memorial ceremonies.
Darin was born Walden Robert Cassot-
to in a tough area of the Bronx in
New York City. Jn .his. early days in
show business, he picked up a reputation
as a brash, cocky kid who go\ ahead
more through his energy aDd determina-
tion than by tal~nt.
In later years, associates said, he
mellowed a bit.
He burst onto the national music scene
in 1960, when his distinctively fast tempo
recording of "Mack the Knife" -the
sardonic ballad of an elegant mugger
from "The Threepenny Opera" by
Berlhold Brecht and Kur! Weill -won
him one of two Grammy awards.
Darin noted that two Grammys were
all that Frank Sinatra had won, and
said "I hope lo pus Frank in
everylhing's be done."
Later, he predicted that he would
be "a show business legend by the
time I'm 25." He refused to accept
dates in New York City, be said, until
he could appear u a star in the most
prestigious rooms In town, because he
wanted to go home in style.
Darin told friends that his father was .
a "small-Ume gangster'' who dled before
Darin was born, and that bis mother
was on welfare wtien he was a child.
He was a bright student, and won ad·
·.Walsworth's ruling today but he weloom-mWlon to the hJghly rated Bronx High
at the decisioo u blng."~bsolute!y fair.'.'. .. ~l . o~ Science, ~ attended the
Filzgerald said the Chandl..--sherman Hunter Qillege Brom: campua f9f one
group has no immediate plans concerning semester.
the development of the 2,200-foot But be learned to play drums and
s1xite1Jn-e-area;-but "obviously-we'll have worked during_ bis_achooLYacatk:m
!he exceplloa ol about $100 wortb of
-!Ueo, • pve a1fl1 to oomeooe tlst, .. he Mid. •
Tiit -lad7: who .... the Anaheim B'llal B'rlth'• Woman Of the
Year and a put -1dmt ol tht fhaplor,
proved tio be cme ol llltqulll'• moot
dlttlGll!t -· He ~rplained that, he had tbe $1,000
worth of bad checks wrltlen by Sandra
Phllllps which either It.Jed an addreas
In Fountain Valley or a Poft Office
bo"in-H111ttnrton Beach.. ..... -
"She no longer lived at lM: Fciantaln
Valley address and left no forwarding
addrtSS when she moved out. .IJ1le Po3t
otflce bo~ l.\!Jted jlle Fountain Valley
address, SO it WI! a dead tD(I, ;, he
said.
The only things. Engquist had to go
on were her credit cards that she
periodically used for identification when
writing check!.·
Through the gas card, be wu able
to locate can driven by people tWng
IL
One family In Santa Ana, whlcll turned
oul to be her daughter and son-in-law,
was located by the detective and he
says he kept bugging thtm about Sandra
Phillips. Thet denied knowing where she
was.
"One afternoon I got a call from
Sandra Spinella who said she was calling
from Houston. She said she and her
husband had taken Sandra Phillips In,
but they didn 't know where she was
now.
"She 1aid she wu contacting me
because I was bugging her fa.mlly.
"But I got suspicioll! because she
wouldn't hang up and let me c:all .her
back. I knew she was around here
somewhere," he said.
So Engquist pressed his search and
eventually fotmd out that his suspect
had posted ball for another daqhtor
who had been picked up in Stanton
on a traffic warrant.
"She had to give her name and address
when she posted bail, and th afs how
I found her," he saki.
Accompanied by Capt. Les Rowlanf,
Engquist went to pick Mrs. Spinella up,
but found she bad just left for a B'nai
B'rlth meeting.
They beat her to the meeting and
one of I.be women got the two officers
confused with the speakers they were
erpectlng from the Jewish Defense
League.
"We didn't make a blg deal out of
arresting her. We just sort of 1eparated
her from the group before they got
inside and told her daughter to make
up aome excme for her absence," Eng-
qu!SI added. •
Rowland notet that when aJie was
in custody, she told them abe ·would
tel.I all. u'Ibe Jig'1 up,t' she reportedly
said.
Acalrdlng to £ncqufll, •be k'l'I -aeparate IOI -one In the name of
Sandra Pltllllpe,. one In the name of
Sandra Spinella and one in the name
of Stephanie 'lllalcher.
• To St.ep Down
Orange County Supervisor Ronald
Caspers of Newport Beach said
Wednuday ht wlU Itel> ... .., u
cllllrmlih ol the board ~xt year
and throw bla .._.i to Supervbor
·RalJlh Clark " Anahtlm. "He wanled the job this year
when I got it and I think he
1t.:Ktld have ll now," CUpen uid.
Both Ca'P<rs and Clark .,. up
ror 1"1ectlon in June. Casper•
hu held the post of dlalnnon
for two or his four yean on the
board. .
Ca1pers said he wants to give
up the chalrmanehlp to devote
more time to the needs al his
diltrict.
Commission
Won't Hear
'
Units Claim
State Coastal Commissioners Wednes-
day r e f u s e d to rebeer Aires Develop-
ment C.Ompany's claim it should be
allowed to finish a 4l't-unlt San Clemente
condomlniwn without a permit.
The porlially-<Olllpleted condominium
·ls In two buildings at 408 to 410 Pasll.dena
Coutt.
The commission met Wednesday in
San Mateo.
Wil h Its failure to get a reconsideration
of its claim of. exemptioo from ~
visioos of the 1m coastal U>ne .. act
Aries has exhausted all appeals . -re
lhe commission.
IL! original exemption claim and an
application for a building pennit have
been denied."
1be question Wednesday was whether
Aries qualified under the State Superme
Court's See the Sea Case, which said
projects could be exempted if substanUal
construction was done by Feb. 1.
Aries didn't receive lts final local
building penn.its until after the Feb.
1 cutoff date. The. option,, left include
a court appeal -or some redesign of
lhe exiSling bulldlng.
In related action, the commission ap-
proved a claim of exemption by Fairway
Seaviews Co. and Great Oak Manage-
ment Ca. for a condominium at 2SOI s. El Camino Real, San Clem<nto.
The previous deadline for daiml of
exemption was Nov. 8, 11112 when
Proposition 20 became law.
The commission conducted a public
hearing on 'the propoaed addition of
234 campsites at Doheny Stato Beach
in Clpb trano Beach, but woo't vote
on the -untU -•time in January. A permit for the Stal< Parks Deporl-
menl project waa granted by the South
Coas:t regiooal commiasim. It was ap-
pealed by Tom Fryan and · other
memben 1 of the Unl tod Soutb Orqe
Cout Coriunun!Uea~
-use Critized
SACRAMENTO .(AP) -The city of
Loni Beach Improperly apeot nearly
$14 mUllon In public tidelands money
In converting the Queen Mary to a
mUMum .. f-lhH<a and tourut altracUon,
atato olflclals aald today.
'Mle State Lan<h Dlv15ion recom·
mended that Its parent Lands Com·
mission sue the city to force it to
repay the money to the tidelands trust
fund.
The city used $56.6 mllllon of Its
share of UdeJm:b oil royalties to convert
the ahlp1 the lengthy Landa Division
report said. Additional investments were
made by private companies which held
Queen Mary concessions.
Of that, S13.9 mlllton or 24.7 percent
directly benefltted ttmmercial ventures
on the ship ln violation of state law,
the report said.
L-Ong Beach officials 1ubmitted a
rebuttal statement to the commission
contending all funds were spent properly
and legally.
Edward N. Gladi.sh, the division's ex-
ecuUve officer, said the converted ocean
liner has become more of a commercial
venture "with a . maritime mu.sewn as
Ila appendage."
Thlt' violates the original concept of
the project ln which commercial opera-
tions -such u shops, restaurant. and
a hotel -w e r e to account !or less
than a third of shipboard space, he
said.
The outlook ls bleak for the Queen
Mary ever to become the money-making
venture Long Beach hoped it would,
Gtadilh said.
The repart said the State should con-
sider cutting off further sharing of oil
revenues with Long Beach "on the
grounds that this city has demonstrated
no need for this public money for proj·
eels-of statewide Interest.''
Gladlsh's report also said tberc were
ariOus legal questions about the spend-
ing of some money in the conversion.
For instance, he said, the city spent
$1.9 million for an insulation project
actually worth only S400,000.
'111e three-member commis.sion was lo
consider the report dw-ing a meeting
today.
The city bought the retired queen
()f the British passenger fleet in 1967
with the original plan of converting
lt to a dockside museum and tourist
nttraction for $8.75 millio n. But project
costs soared as plans were expanded
and unexpected conversion problems
were encountered.
The report also disagreed with the
cmtentlon of city officials that the proj·
ect is beginning to pay for Itself after
being open to the public for two years.
·During the first two years of operation,
the Queen Mary project has run at
a $3.8 million deficit to the tidelands
trust fund, the report said.
"The staff has prepared financial
statements based on information pro-
vided to us by the city and they present
a rather bleak picture," Gladish said.
While the museum itself has made
a profit, the foundation that operates
it is $1.6 n1illion behind in payments
on a $4 million loan obtained to construct
exhibits.
Rig C~g Cobalt L-Oad
Tips Over in Pennsylvania .
STROIJD5llURG, Pa. (AP ) -A trac-
tor-trailer carrying radioactive cobalt
tipped over today on lntentate IO, 10
miles west ol bett, state police said.
Troopers bnmediately sealed olf the
area u an emergency precautioo.
"We do not know if there is any
·danger, but we are not taking any
chance1," said trooper David Guard at
the Fem Ridge station.
Investigators at the scene were at-
tempting to dltonnine whether the lead
Marine Chutist
casings protecting the cobalt may ha ve
been split in the accident, troopers said.
State police sai d no one was injured'.
in the acciden~ which occurred oo a
wet road\\·ay during freezing rain.
The trooper said that ears in the
middle of the sealed-of! area "are ~g
moved out as fast as possible."
Guard said that officials of the Atcintic
Energy Co mmi ssi on and the
Pennsylvania Department of Health bad
been notified..
The true~ was operated. by Cooper.Ja~
l'!tt, Inc. of Philadel phia. 'lbe firm said
it bad no immediate information on
the vehicle, and police said they did
not know where it was bound. tti start thining about it l10f'·" , in the Catskills, his entry to show
"We've had both this $lllO)ling ...,;ty busln..,., lo 1956 he slarted writing and
lawsuit and all this coastal protection singing commercials in New York.
business facing us up to oow and He later wrote bis bit rock hme
naturally our plans have beeo barn· 0 Spli!lb.Spla!b." '
· .pered," Fitzgerald said.
·.:-Fitigerald pointed out that the
';Chandler-Sherman group a still willing
to sell a portion of Dam ~ to
·the state for possible de;eqmmi as
·-a public park.
. "Site told us the third one she. _.pt
m case ... So! .atopped .by ; a ll:tffic
cop. niat way When they ran the name
-tlirooglffor i Warrant cbect-;ttiere would
i>'l l"I ~t, Oil II.
"Sbe told us she believed she'd never
be caught," be sald.
In fact, the woman who ls a member
of the Cliy qi Hope '1 Million Dollar
Chm, ll>ld Engquist her only fear was
that he would read the woman's pages
In local newapepers and reoogn!Je her
picture.
'Disappointed'
Ne~ Speed Jj_mit . About Jumping
Adjustment Time Camp Pendleton Marine sg1. James
Stroudsburg is located in Monroe Coon·
ty ln the heart of the P<XX>OO Mountain
vacation area. Jt is about 100 miles
from Philadelj'>bia and New York City.
··. "I think that would bt a bir ar-
.r.angement," he said, ''We 're an:ainly
willing to go along with the-ceed for
public use in the area. ptO\iO:d ~·re
Jeft rree to develop the remamfrg portion or the beach."
Wahlstedt argued during the t.'"i.l.I that
public use of the beach ove-many
years had created prescriptive: ~
to the area which ov~ fbe.
·'.Charxtler-shennan group's dev!Ic~
·Plans.
: : Wahlstedt's lawsuit was aimmt ~
:\)cal in its argument to that ~ by
·tlle county against the Laguna :S-ipl
;€orporati on when public ~ to
:nearby Salt Creek Beach was thn!atme:! :~ur years ago.
: . That contro\·ersy ended when A~
·Development C.Orporation, sucressrJr in
·the area to I.he Laguna Niguel Corpora--
: tion, reached an agreen1ent \\'ith the
:count\'. . .
OU.M•I COAST ..
DAILY PILOT
.. • " ' -•
• • '
. .
Front Pqe I
GENERAL. • •
the "cremation." .
Councilman Thomas O'Keele, who
earlier bad opposed the call-back ol
the document!, challenged the wisdom
of burning so significant a document.
"Has anyone talked 10 the auditors
about the propriety of bumlng an expired
bond ?" he asked.
But the general, already poised With
matches and bond in hand, challenged
the idea of saving it.
.. Look," he said, waving the document
"11s full of holu and completelY worthless. It
"I know that in the old days of
tbe midwest, bJ,Jrning the mortgage was
a ce;remony of sorts, but as a lawyer,
I thin): the documents should stay in-
tact." O'Keefe said.
.. Bum it," ahouted someone in the
aadience.
So BlaJ<elock did.
And .a. document once worth about
$120,000 vanished .
San Clemente
Council Nixes
Rock Concert
Proposal> for a ffff rock concert at
San Clementc"s North Beach filzled
before city councilmen Wednesday.
The panel agreed to upheld a recom·
mendatlon for denial of the Idea from
perks and recreation commiuloners.
Bui the action Wednesday came
"without prejudice" and It means that
it loca l businessman James Jenkins
wanta to resurrect the Idea, the cotmeil
will consider It once again.
An apparent l•cl< ol lnlemt bf the
promotor spume! tbe commlalon and
council actions.
Oty Manaref lcennelh Can' told _,_
cllmen that Jenkins wu absent from
two monthly meetings of the comm.luloa
where dlsCU!lion on the plan was set.
Jenkins also wu ablent from OO!lnc:fl
cllambm Wedneoday .
Several monlhl ago be bad wed
for permission to use the dty atta
lo P""""t a free COllC<rt by the ~
"Honk" and added that lt would aerve
recreationa l needs by the Yl>WIC•r
geocratlon In the cily .
De Leon, who survived a fall of 1,500
From P.,,e I
"I guess I'm going to have to do
a little more reading," be added.
Set h CHP feet with a collapsed par1chute, says
Y he'• disapopinled about being unable to BODY . • • ,
Engquist ackmw!edtres that his attitude
alx>ut this case Is atnettnt from the
bad cl>ed< coses he's ln....Upted
"Most people who do somethin·g like
tht. do It because they're hurting finan-
cially. Site 1houglrt It was a game
because for her, Jt was.
"She U>ougbt she could go on forever
because she bad covered her tracks
pretty well But tha t really motivated me. ~
"When !be bad the nen-e to call
me and tell me she was in Houston
when I knew better, well , then J got
inlo high gear/' he said.
CaJifomla Highway Patrolmen crobing
Orange County freeways will go easy
on ticketing motorists for about 10 day1
altor Calilomia's speed limits drop to
55 miles per hour Jan. 1, a CHP
spol<esman in Santa Ana aaid today.
But on orders from Highway Patrol
Convnissioner Waller Pudinskl, as many
dri veni as possible who are exceeding
the limit will he stopped and at leas!
given a warning.
"There will be an adjuslm<llt period
of about 10 days to get people used
to the new sigm and moving . wJth the
slower traffic," ~Jd Officer Duane
Frisen, the CHP's day watch commander
In Santa Ana.
jwnp again.
Unable to engage bls reserve chute,
De Leon landed on his feet recent! y
but suffered a hairline fracture of the
pelvis.
The 20-year-old from Guadalupe, Calif.,
said in an interview Wednesday : "When
I learMd I was alive, I yelled 'Airborne'
to signal my buddies on the ground
that I was okay." Their joy that De
Leon WIS alive ewked shouts and
laughter.
De Leon !lid he wants to jump again
but his Mariz}e Corps duty tour ends
Jan. 15. He plans to enroll in Allan
Hancock Community College in Santa
~faria. Hls wife Maria and 2-year-old
son live in Guada lupe.
'
his pet was rolling on a body.
Jmmediately after the discovery the
resident ran nearly half a mile to a
pay phone at San Clemente High School
to call police.
Later, Solomon reported that he
regularly exercises his dog in the remote
area and last week he and the animal
were in the same area but noticed
nothing.
That report led to speculation by Police
that the remains could possibly have
been dumped over the roadside Jong
after death. .
No permanent stru ctures exist in the
area of the discovery. The site lies
in the middle ot vast grazing lands
which are part or the Vlsbeek Ranch.
Council Ba11s
Night Lighting
For Advertising
Nobody Sells G.E. Micro-Wave Ovens for less than
• San Clemente city councUmen Wednes·
day followed an similar ction earlier
ln the week by cotDlterparts in San
Juan Clplstrano by introducing an
ordinance which will ban advertisini
lights alter business houn.
The move -the latest of a Jong
sequence of energy-saving rules enacted
by the cofincil -came up late in
Wednesday'1 session.
Councilman Thomas O'Keele said San
Clemente should follow a pattern aet
In Loe Angeles and other Southland PORTABLE
cities where the ban on advertising MICRl'IWA\tr: OVEN
lighling has been in effect for some · 11""'" • • l11H11...,. .. ~"" 11,..llflto ......... 1 tune. • N• hn .. ,....,. kM!I coei. it!"-* ·
''I know that many bmlnesses 1lready .I~':·:=::.:.:".::,:::'!.....,,
are cooperaUng with the idea and that •L"'_.. .. __,""'~°'nt Jt hu made a difference," he said. ·;i::..~-r-· 110 v ·
11But there are atlil many In ' San HOwonz.r I
Clemmie .. wllcl 1111 Wlllllna-eloetrldl1.c"-1---1--------"' ..,.._ __ lie added. c..cuneno. wltb Ille Idea
WU unanJmour.
National Prayer Da y
WA&HINGTON (UPI) -'l1lO Senato
adopled • .-1u11on toda)I caDJnc tor
olllerYance of a "national day <If humllla-
tioo , luting and prayer" on April 30.
'Jlie ._iutton WU introduced by Son.
Mark 0. llatlitld (R-Ore.). and adopted
by -..rce vote and w!Jh. no deboto or
oppotlltlou.
--•
ITOll HOUU1 MM, ..._ le. l llt 19 l :JI
\
..
•
~·~~il:~Yl COOKING ~s~~v~i~1c •
f11ll 11t1 Min-°""' too111 3 w.,.1
1. ""*'"t with Mia-w. 2. Cooltt Corl11t11tloMlty
3. Coolr; loltl Weys tt Onoe:
M~lorSpted
COMtfltl0111111 for .........
NOW ONLY
COME IN FOR A •CIDWllE Cllllita , ••• ---
. IY' A HOME ECONOMIST
-SATURDAY',, Dl!C . Z2
, T2 'NOON ·4·P.M.
90 l'A Y~ <;" 11 ~H
WITH A'PROVI O .
,(RfDll
1815 NEWPORT BLVD., • • Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548· 7788
I
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• • •
•
'Fh1ll'8day'
Closing Prices
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• • . . • .. . ' .. -. ..
.hursd41, Dt<tmbtr 20, 1973 SC Ol.ol'I PoLDI !19 t\!l
NEW YORKSTOCK EXCHANGE
' ' I
---2-
..\'ear~sHigh-Lows _
Appear Every Saturday
Mai·ket Loses
Earlier Gains
•
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""' " "'" " "' .,, ,.,,
"'' ..
. .. .,,
••• ·"
••• . "' , •lur ....
'" """' ,, ... ,,
ERRORS. AdvortlMra should <heck tholr
ads d1ily & r'pcrt errors immedl1t1ly. The
OAILY PILOT •ssum .. i11blllty for tho first
incorrec,t Insertion only.
. . -~ •
•
DUPLEX
[ ~ous•s forSale J{ te ] [ tfOWtslorSW JI 11!1 ] Newport Shorts
I ~·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·;;;;;~~· ;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~/Fee simple. Xlnt rent-
MESA VERDE
SPECIAL
Call 555-8800
For an
Exceptional Value 1• al. Only $59,000.
673-742-0 General
UJllj l()Uf' t1().4tf'S
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEXES
$125,000-"liotne·Sized" units of 1,800 sq.
ft. each \Vith three bedrooms, two baths,
rock fireplaces, patios, all electric kitchens,
bea utiful condition !
$134,000-"King-sized" units: one \Vith four,
one wtth fi ve bedrooms. Both \Vith big living
rooms., fireplaces and south of highway lo-
cation.
UNIQUE HOMES R11ltors, 675-6000
1443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
Gener ii
AND ASSDCIUCS REALTORS
TRIPLEX AND A VIEW TOO!
One block lo Corona de! Mar beach. Pride of
ownership property in high rental area. All
units h~ve a view. Asking $132,500. A listing
o! Ed Nelson .
CALL 644-7270
2828 E. Co1st Highway, Corona del Mar
WE CAN HELP YOU IU'f',
SELL. OR TRADE A HOME
ANYPLACE IH THE NATION
UNCOMMON CONDOMINIUM
Bluffs. 3 bedrooms, 21h baths, 2 story for1n·
er model. You cton't have to be rich to buy
this-just s111art. One look should be enough.
$53,900.
BRIGHT NEW DUPLEX
Corner lot near shopping. Stet!! af!d con·
crete construction, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths
both units. Old Corona. $136,500.
DOVER MODEL BIG CANYON
Sparklin~ ne,v 2 bedroom Dover condomin-
ium in Btg ('anyon-ready for fa st occupan-
cy. Delightful end location in ne\v section.
Family room . $89.500.
QUIET STREET
Very clean 3 bedroom ho1ne \Vith large
fan1ily roo1n. formal dining room a nd 2
baths. Large palio and low 111aintenance
private yard. $68,900.
SPYGLASS HILL
Lovely 6 bedroo m traditional hom e. Cozy
family room "'ith fireplace and \Vet bar.
Bonus room. Swimming pool1 gazebo, view.
$225,000.
~
Coldwall,Banker ..........
2161 San J.,.quln Hills Rd., N.B.
__.__ __ -----
rn REALTORS
4 Loc1I Offices to' Strv• You
Gentr1I
oflJo !J11/e
LIDO waterfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge. family rm.,
or 5 bdrms., with 6 baths. Lido Nprd. Spec-
tacular view! Waterfront livlng rm. with
•tep-dow!l wet bar. Pier & float. $275,000.
* * * * WATERFRONT LOT ON LIDO NORD
30'xl051• Magnificent View ! $165,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Dr., Suite l, N.B. . 675-6161
SAVE YOUR ENERGY •••.••
FOR THE CRISIS & YOURSELF!
Walking distance to Fashion Island, !nine
Financial Center, Big Canyon Golf Co urse,
& the Newport Tennis Club. Spend your va-
cation at the community pool. ·Your car
needn't leave its 3 car garage & you can
stretch out & enjoy this beaut. 5 BR., -formal
din. rm. Harbor Vie\V .home. Sensibly priced
at $119,500 .
CORBIN-MARTIN
RANCH STYLE
VACANT + POOL
$25,000
Vacant ranch style home.
POOL. JUST $25,000! NEW
paint inside & out. NEW
shag. NE\V electrical &
plumbing fbctures. Natural
\vood interior. Vaulted &
beamed ceilings. Family
sized bedrooms. 25 ft .. t'OV·
ered patio. SPARKLING
POOL. Cabana. $5CO do\vn + closing. $237 per mo.
$25,000 TOTAL PRICE. 0\11n·
er le!t!
Call Now
963-6767
* 4 Bedroom home_.(buge
master BR) + family room --====--..cc=-
+ deo, ' baths, many ex· SOME THING
tras. Q"iet •lrecl. $57,000. SPECIAL!
ls this exceptional 3 BR 2 BA
HarOOr Vie\11 Homes Carmel
.Plan, \Vilh beautifully de·
velopcd front and rear yards
featuring literally tons of
masonry, open bcan1 patio
covers and sun decks. lrs
on the greenbell. A stone's
throw from clubhouse and
pool.
\Yell priced at $7:,500. Fee.
CALL 644-7211
MACNAB
··IRVINE
WANT SOMETHING BEAUTIFUL?
4 Bil. FR. w /lovely atrium! Great value at
$57,lloo. Laszlo Sharkany 644-62-00. (Y37)
BAYSHORES PERSONALITY !
aptivating 2 or 3BR/FR home featuring
wood &-brk; country kitchen of gingham
& beams. $67,500. Martha Macna b 642-8235.
(Y38)
ULTRA BAYFRONT PARADISE
Spacious 4BR w/well appointed LR &
master BR. Panelled den w/!ireplace.
Pier & slip. $385,000. Harriet Perry
642-8235. (Xll}
[Irvine I
..
m HA\' ,\ 111:.\l'll
963-6767
OP£N TIL SI • IT'S FUN TO BE NICE!
[~· ~
. . ' .
~1ove Into this 4 bedrm. 2
bath home. Located on 1:t
large COITK'r Jot before
Chrisln1as. Ne\V carpeting &
det.'Orntcd for you r p!easul'('.
VA appraisal and sales price
just
Buy Beach
644.1211 Property NOW!!
P.S. the tree provides the ON WATER
apples, you make the pie. 2 Bedrm, 2 ba, nc\11 dock for
1 , Newport Shores
..
28' boat. $75,00'.l.
t;E Picturesque, large 4 bedrm
_ OinJC't type, \\'Ill lease op-
Corona del Mar
Private Beach
$58,950
tion. $48,500.
-CUTE MONACD_ -
Cute as ·a bug! Thn\'1 the
only way to <lescrtbc Ud11
.neai Tu'O Bedlwrn ho11lf!. u
hfl• a den Yi'ith bWU·fn sht>1\ ..
in&, formal dln.lna: roon1.
lu11h le.ndscapJng 111'1d Js de-
llghtlully decorated. It's the
beit Monaco on the market
$69,500.
ESTATE REALTY
1303 AVOCADO DR.
NEWPORT CENTER
640-1120
OPEN TIL ~ • IT'S FUN ro BE NICEr
THE REllL
ESTllTERS
BEACH con AGE
ON R·2
Great beach hollse on 18J"Re
R-2 lot where you can add
2nd unit -only 2 short
blocks to beach -ne\\•ly
remodeled & decorated. An
excellent buy in an an>a
that is sky·rocketing in
value. Only $51,950. 646-7711
Open eves.
Walker&Lee
lllAL llTATI
--
TAX HEDGE"
Don't wait any longer to shelter your In-
come! Here Is an Ideal starter. Sharp du·
plex -Prime location. $78,950. Super low
down . CALL NOW !
' GRUBB & ELLIS CO.
REALTORS i15-10IO
Gen•r•I Huntington B••ch
20x20 Master BR.
on Huge Corner
1500 Sq. tr .. in this 3 bedroom,
2 hath, with huge farnlly
roon1. All electric, good 0011·
dlfion. Near 0<:ean. Only
$2&.500. and $1400 dO\l'n pay-1---------1 n1cn1. •
B1lboa Penin1ul1
VACANT. 4 BR., t1tn1. rn1 .,
!gt>. kit. 2·Sty. $87.500
Marshall Realty 67!H600
Corona del Mir
Corona del Mar
Bachelor Pad
With Pool
On a ge nerous 60x100 lot
.,
HZ.4471 ( :;::.) 546.flDJ
DUPLEX NEA;-N-;,;
CIVIC CENTER
BEAUTI1'~UL, near new
duplexes. \Viti,_ 3 l)e(lroon1
,'<: 2 bcdrocun 1mits. Owner
muy l'Ort.<tldcr VA.
962-2456
I n Yt'aik-to-prlvalc coin-I' munity beach Co r o n a
Highlands, a \Veil decorated S8t.1. Adams at Magnolia liB 2 Br, 2 Ba home with
1llage Re~I Estate
formRl dining, s p acio u s
mRSter suite. l'l'nr yard with LH . .:AL FELL TKROUGll.
patio sun det'k and large Exeruitve hon1c back on
rree foi·m pool $69.000 mnrkrl. Huge custon1 pool
CALL 644-7211 Yt'i1h t1lcct!'\c S\\'l'<'I> +child sa fe play yru·d. all framed
by lush prlv11!C' gt'OUnds.
E\C'gant n1aslC'r, private
• S ' • s1u1ly, \Vifc-savcr kitchen, fC and ).":nrdcn view · dining.
0\\'JM!r must hll\'e fast ,
NE\VL Y p:untcd duplex. 2 fast sale. A~sun1e low Jn·
Br & fn>l c in ea. unit. 1Pt'Csl loan or )'OU name
¶te garage's, $72,500. the tcrn111. Rl'duced to 61a-~ $39,500. Bkr 962-5511
I
Cost• Mell I .iiicoiiiiNio000ii8i.PiiiEiiCJiiA.LliiiiiS'l'Siiiiii I
e HAVE ONE TO SELL!
RENTING??? e \VE CAN DO IT! e ' WANNA BUY ONE! e IT COSTS TOO WE 'VE GaITEM! • OUR
MUCH SALESMEN ARE BONDED.
larwin realty Inc.
So buy your family . this 968-4405 * (24 hrs)
gorgeous .i bdrm biggie on Equit l Housing Oppty.
a corner lot \\'ilh open coun-1 .,,..;,.,...,,..,,., ....... ...,I
try spaC<'S. Also inclµd es STOR V BOOK RUSTIC ON
2 luxurious baths. All lhls LARGE LOT. Shake roof
in Costa J.lesa "'·here living and \\"hite ,vooci slding. Lots
is tree and easy. FHA and of dcroraior \\'allpaprr and
VA terms available also 5~;. poli~bcd panellng, Separate
down program. Won't last candlC'Hght dlning, roaring
long for $27,500 Call 545-<»65 fireplace in living room on-
Opcn c\•es. ly $11.950 and you can buy
...--.. il any\\"RY you likl!! Bkr
962-5511
INVESTORS W lk & l
100.000 propcrti... ,,,. CLOSE ESCROW a ... ~.t ... ee di!m:_~.R~~.~?<l~kii"'
blocks from PR IVATE -ili"r.-BEFORE •74 ~M:;:::U:;:S:;;T"::S;';E;.L'=:L:3::';N;;O;;W~ 'loon! 4 Bedrooms. Ill =~{.Li~:t~1 1~ -~(;AKE ARROnffuO On this exceptloruil duplex BOUGHT NEW HOME ~~r~~le d::i~· J~ats as·
shutters and craC'kling f.ire-. buy in Corona del i\18.r. 3 BR Secluded & beautifully decor-The Reil Estate fair
place. Spacious oak paneled Great for year rou~ hvtng 2 BA ownf'rs unit + $200/ ated. Move right in. Quiet 536-2551 139-6133
!amity room v.'ilh fireplace. & C'lose to . the Village. 3 mo. rental. Near park and Eastside Joe. nr Back Bay. •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~•
3 bedrooms • 2 baths. Ex-yr old Bavanan style 3 levcl tennis courts. Reduced to Gourmet kil ch \11/new fR111·
pandableyard· • home with open3't,am ce! $84,500. ily series Com ing stove. L •~· _..: ... ~. :.i~ONS
call 673-8550 lngs thru-out,. r 2 CALL 644-7211 Conv. pantry, law\d rm, .•·· h.'· 1, • .1-ir and location
OPENTIL g. ITS FUN TO BE NICEI + completely finished base-M.111\ massive Br!'!, C07.V fli>lc, \\'/ ,.,. 1 c I· II \ ' 'IA homes, n1ent for playrm or shop. gen. v.'OO<l paneling, dbl i;lnks .1 _ ·
Lndry facilities. $36,500. 1 , in bathroon1s. by OW!l('r,
(2131_ 451-3898kendalter 6pn1 or ~~ S42,500, 548-1313 or 646-4568. K/\SAOIAN
anytime wee s. ._!..._.!._. R :al Estate 962'""44 ~ MESA VERDE
THE REllL
ESTllTERS
LAGUNA BEACH Ponin. Point
RENTAL OR SALE 2 BR. & paneled den charn" er with large front &: rear
Fit'!lt O\\'ncr dC'preciation on yards. Home in xlnl rond.
beautiful three bedroom · Dbl. garage + parklng.
t\\'O bedroom duplex v.·lth $69,500.
large sundecks plu~ n1any Call: 673-3663 673.£688 Eves. added features. Close to
beach and shops. Inrome po-
tential is $890 per month.
O\\·ncr "''ill lease or sell. m I
279 Dolphin Way.
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
102\ W Balboa 67l·l6LJ
ASSUME 70/c 5 Bedroom or 4 bedroom Hunt1ng.!,_C'i. Harbour '2 ° + ronnal dining + den VA LOAN + family rn1. Interior
atrlun1 \\'/v.·atC'rlall. I-luge $244 MONTHL y m•"" bednn with fplc ~
Yes, anyone niay assume this 3 car gar. Only $64,950. Coll
good VA Joan. Home is lo-545-8424 SouthCo Real tors.
~
'1!!j, .........
NEW HOME
cated in nice neighborhood. ASSUME 7 l/2 3 FHA, Price reduced for year end
It has 3 bedrooms, huge sep· f..'05 total payment, lo dwn. sale on last of ls.I NQV
arate family room, cheery 4 Br, 2 bath, fenced yard, Harbour Homes. 4 Bedrm.
kitchen, and master bed-must sec 10 appreciate, ba lh. formal dining, great
room Is separate from other owner agt'nt 557·20Z2. asswnable loan. Call area. Low, lo\v price is 1 .,:...:,::.:~=.c..c'="'=~~ ,..., ..... ~!"!!'"'!'!!!"'!!'!'~~I $33.IXXl. CHRIST00MAS s,pcc3iruB. ',~ HUNTINGTON HARBOUR r= Call 847-6010 now a{'rc, rses 0 • r. otAt'JY
Call 675-7225
Walker &Lee
~l&l t •t &TI
•
Ba hon1e, $49,950 Tarbell l\U"\L
Realty-IH0-1720. 17214 -COAS'I' tf\VY .
714: 84&-13Si & 213: 592-2&4~
Irvine
IF YOU HAYE
THE MONEY
WE HAYE
THE HOUSE ~ Shur Parfoction
Almost new Turtle Rock Plan
Super sharp 4 bdrm home J 3 that's been beautifully up-
with lots of room for tho
1
graded, professionally land·
kids. Huge pool and game scaped and situaled n~ar
room also. Nice ea.rpcl.S & park and pool. Price of
draJ'.lf's thruout. Dbl garage $69,500 includes an outBtand-
dC'tached . Great kitchen Ing vie\\• of the hills.
nn• MOM! Priced lo "11 CALL 552-7500
1n Costa 1'.Iesa for $37,500
-all \em". Call 54$-9491 VISION
e red hill
\Vrllnut Square Condo, super
11riM"!!dcct. 2 B~ !· rten "A"
Model. Bet~ than tlf!W,
cjuall.y clll"J>CIS, shutters
thruout. Super Io cat Ion .
fll,IXKI . 645-8400.
-----~ --
• I
' • ---.
•
±=Lagu11·a Deae Today's Final
EDITION · N.Y. St-.cks
•
VOL. 116, NO. 354, 4 SECTIONS, # PAGES ORA.NG~ COUNTY, CAUFO~NIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1973 TEN CENTS
__;;;_~-==--~~~--~~~~--~""'--~----~~~~~--.~--~~~~-.. ............ .,.. .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---:.:-'~
Granny 'Robin Hood' Jailed for Bad Checks 1
By JOANNE REYNOLDS ·
• Of ni. Dallr ''"' staff
Sandra Leah Phillips Spioellan, 42,
likes to think of herself as a Jewish
Robin Hood, bouncing bad checks lo
pick up items wbicb s.Pe i:i:romptly_ t~
over to charity.
Fountain VaUey police, who operate
under the California Penal Code lnatead
of old English folk tales, think of her
more In terms of the felony bad check
•
charges she pleaded guilty to in court
this week. •
And Judge James Smith, who sen-
tenced her to a minimum 45 days in
Orange County Jail and three years
probation,' apparenUy thinks she needs
guidance because be also sentenced her
to seek psychiatric help for her
charitable tendencies.
Those tendencies led the Santa Ana
grandmother to write more than $2,000
worth of bad checks in six west County
Weather Watchers .
Roland Faucett, left, and Ken Fordyce adjust weather monitoring
equipment at Storer Cable TV in Laguna Beach. Subscribers are giv-
en time, temperature, wind speed and barometer reading over Chan·
nel 10 from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Community announcements are. also
made. It is a step toward local programming in 1974 or 1975, say com-
pany officials. )
Tidelands Funds Used
On Queen Mary Vessel
I
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The city of
Long Beach improperly spent nearly
$14 million in public tidelands money
in converting the Queen Mary to a
museum-of-the--...sea and tourist allr!tction,
state officials said today.
The State Lands Division recom·
mended that its parent Laods Com·
mission sue the city to force it to
repay the money to the Udelands trust
fund .
'
Oruge -~·
Weather
ll'll be coeier Friday, according
to the weather service, with highs
in the 1ow ros tntand dipping to the
upper !Os at the bcacla. Some
high ckludines but mostly lair
skJes.
INSWE TODA. Y
1/ 1/0U're an abandoned dog,
11our chances of finding a home
ore probably bdttr In Hun~ng.
to-n Beach than anvwhere else.
See 1torv, Page 10.
The city used $56.6 million of its
share of tidelands oil royalties to convert
the ship, the lengthy Lands Division
report said. Additional investments were
made by private companies which held
QUeen Mary concessions.
Of that, $13.9 million or 24.7 percent
directly benefitled commercial ventures
on tJJ.e ship in violation of state law,
the repert said.
Loo{· BeiCh o!llcl.is submitted a
rebuttal s~tement to the coaunillfon
llOllteading ,all fllllds ·w.re .spent. (!l'OP"'IY
. and legally. ·
Edward .N. Gladish, the division's ex·
ecuUve officer, said the converted ocean
liner haS become more ,of a commercial
venture "with a . maritime musewn as
Its appendage."
That violates the original concept or
the project in Wli.lch commercial opera·
tions -such as shops, restaurants and
a hotel -w e r e to account for less
than a third of sl\Jpboard space, he
said.
'!be outlook ls bleak for the Queen
MJry ..... to become the money-making
. venture Long Beach hoped it would,
Gladl&h said.
'Ille report said the State should con-
sider cutung of1 further sharing of Qi!
revenues with Long Beach ;•on tlii'
8"JllDds that lhls ctty haa demonatrated
no need for thls public moaey for proj-
ecta of statewide intms!." ·
Gladish's rePort also sakl there were
oerious legal q-about the 1pend·
inc of m:>me money in the conversion.
For instanct, ha uld, the city spent
11.9 million for an tlllUl1Uon project
1ctuaily -only $400,000. ' The three.member commission wu to
CON!der the ,.port during . a meetlng
today.
cities before her arrest ln October.
She also allegedlY.. ran up 116,000 in
tmpald charges in stores and gas staliom
she believed are "antl"'9emitic." .
Even the detective who tracked her
!or four month! this ·summer ildmitJ
she ~ the most unusual check artist
he's ever dealt With.
She is tbe kind or person wiually
described as a pillar of the community.
To attest to this standing there is a
wall full of appreciation pl'!:ques ahd
awards in her home.
Yet in West Orange County Judicial
District Court last week and to Det ••
Marty Engquist who arrested her, she
readily admitted to the bad cheek
charges.
"She told me she did it for the-thrlll
of It," he says.
Engquist offers an example that he
believes captures the essence of Mrs.
Spinella 's Robin Hood tendencies.
"She told me she was shopping and
}
saw a long dress that she liked.
"But lhe dress was just made out
of cotton and the store was asking
something over $100 Jor It and that
made her mad.
"She told me she said to herself
'Fair's fair. lf they're going to. charge_
prices like that they deserve what they
get,' and she wrote them a bad check
for It," he asserted.
"When she l\'aS telling me abQut tlti.s,
she showed me the dress. It was pretty
good looking, bul it had all the tags
still on it. l don't think. she has ever
v.·orn it," he added.
Engquist related that after he arrested
J\!rs. Spinella she readily ga\'e him all
of her identification .:... she had three
driver.'s licenses -and told him that
she considered herself a modcrn~ay
Robin Hood.
"She ..told me that all of the stuff
she charged or wrote checks for, with
(See GRANNY, Page 2)
Laguna €ouncil
.
Sycamore
Rejects
Hills Project
Dog Finds
Cadaver
In Hills
By. JOHN VAL TERZA
Of fbt Deity Piiat Steff
The badly decompooed body of an
Old man was disi:oven!d on a secluded
knoll overlooking San Clemente High
School e:iuV today. .
Doors Open
On Future
Of Parcel
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
Of tfla. Deity ''"' SWI
The 2,016 unft Sycamore Hills develop-:
ment proposal was rejected Modday
night in a C-1 vote of th• Laguna Btadl
City Co1D1cl1.
-Allhoiiiflhiglily critical of the pro-
posal, councilmen agreed not to cJoee
the door on future talks with developers 1be 'CfXkfition of the remains was
such !hat police lnlttaliy were unable
to determine the aex of the homicide
victim. lnvestlgator1, said the l>OOY had
apparenUy been dumped several weeks
ago and was found with its feet pointed
·up a slope.
Police Clliel Clillord Murray said a
~vas tarpaulin with metal grommets
alo9g the edges had been tossed over
the corpse and only allewed expoaun:
of two legs and an ann.
· on ""What"ll'iighcbi!· att· ·a1:eeptable"' u..··· ·
ol the ~acre paretl.
·.:;.+,,-"""1-'"-~The-action-foilowed-tw0-and-Lball __ 71 hours of debates, chieOy on en-
vironmental impacts of the project.
Cowicilman Peter Ostrander, an
architect, cast the only vote in 1Upport
Officers sealed olf a Ioog section of
Avenida Pico immediately in1and from
the high school campus which ls closed
for the holidays.
Coroner's investigators spent three
hours in a paimtaking examination of
(See B_<JDY, P1ge I)
Teen ldo_l Darin
Dies at Age 3 7
After Operation
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Bobby Darin,
the brash ambitious teen Idol of the
early 1960s who sang "Mack the
Knife" and 11Splish-Splash" and manied
Sandra Dee, died today alter his second
open heart operation. He was 37.
"He never really came around arter
tbe _operation," a spokesman said. "He
was just too weak to recover."
Darin made a number of records
that aold more than a million Copies,
including "Dream L<iver," and won an
Pocar aomination as best supporting
actor 1n 1913 for his role in "Capt.
Newman, M.D."
Hi.s marriage. to Miss Dee, one of
the teen idol rorilances of the 1960s,
lasted six "81'5· ,
Darin died at 12: 15 a.m. at Cedars
(See BOBBY, P11e I)
Tire .Fisherman
As the thin winter sun sinks toward the horizon, this fi sherman seems
oblivious to all but the task at hand, preparing to catch a fish. It isn't
alwaY,S .e!l~Y in the winter but for the dedicated pier fisherman it's ~un trying when the Y'.eather is nice . Large crane on the right is be·
mg used to replace pilings that suppo~ the San Clemente pier.
Court Rules Dana Strand
Not CQ~sidere~ Public
. ~ . '
By TO~f BARLEY h3s ever been one, Superior Court Judge
Of "'-Dlllr '11" Steff James H. Walsworth ruled today.
Dana Strand is not a public beach, The ' ruling rejects the county's argu.
and lawyers for Orange County falled ment that the three-acre shoreline area
to prove in a full-week trial that it falls under the provisions or prescriptive
r ights laws and leaves the Chandler·
Sherman Corporation free to develop
the ocean·front property."' .
of the development.
Prior to the vote denying the specific
plan for the development, counciJlJW1,
in a like 4-1 decision, found the en-
vironmental impact repGrt (EIR) in-
adequate.
Coimcilman Carl Johnson called the
ElR "superficial and shallow" and said
it did not adequately deal with storm
water run-off or wildlife inventories,
Mayor Roy Holm said the report was
"very weak, very inadequate." Holm
said he was concerned about run.off
and traffic that -would be generated
_ by.Jhe project.
The council's decision on the EIR
brought some stiff criticism Crom Rodger
Howell, attorney for the p r o j e c·t
developer, Newport lnvestments Inc.
"Despite the enthusiasm of Dne
members of the audience, this ts n0t
the free and independent empire of
Laguna Beach," Howell snapped.
"We must have some kind of rules
and regulations to bind our society
together. You may wish to beat · us
over. the head when we violate those
ru1es, but you mlllit offer protection
when we follow them," Howell said.
"We wish to proceed with this project
and we intenil to proceed with this
project," Howell said. ·
The Newport Investments plan called
for development of 2,016 Wlits to be
built over a 10-year period. The project
(See SYCAMORE, Pace I)
* * * Greenbelt Chief
•
Youth Nabbed· \ ''l am bitterly d..isappainted," Deputy ,,....
County Counsel A. C. Wahlstedt, Jr.,
said today. "But I cannot comment
on our future action including possible
appeal of the decision until I have in·
formed the county supervisors or Judge
W~sworth's ruling."
'Exurberant'
Over Decision I
Mesa Store Prank Backfires
• A curious boy, 14, out Christmas browsing with buddies dropped
a spray can of red paint into a J229 trash compactor appliance at a
Costa Mesa department store Wednesday and pushed the button to
see what would happen. . ....
' THE FIRST thing that happened was an explosion of crimson
enamel paint and the. second thing was a chase through the South
Coast Pliia mall by Sears, Roebuck and Company security men.
The third thing thai har,Jiened was t h a t Costa · Mesa police
·showed up and took the boy nto custody ·ou suspicion of malicious
mischief. , . .
DISPOSITION of the' charge .In cour.t. Will proba~ly depend on
'!rhethei'"lils family buys a new trash cont~tir" -red on the inside
-for Christmas, lnvesUgators said. f'' . .
-
'
' .
thought we had a good case, and
I a thought we put on 90ll'ie pretty
solid evidence to back it," Wahlstedt
said. ..This means, or course, that the
Chandler.Sherman people can now bar
the beac"b to the public."
<Judge Walsworth stated in his brief
ruling thab. 1£ the county had proved
public use in the five years prior to
1956 lle wo\ild·have ruled for the county,
Walstedt said. \
"Frankly, 1 tbollght we'd prove public
use from much farther back than that,"
the county lawyer added. Wahlstedt's
trial witnesses Included a local resident,
wh~ testified to usfag the beach from
See (STRANO, Page I)
James Dilley, president of the La~ 1
Greenbelt Inc., said today be • is ,
"absolutely exurberant" with tb e
decision of the Lagtula Beach City CouQ... '
cil against the Sycamore Hills prollll'.liUl.,..
"It is ' an lmpartant victory,'f-latd:'
Dilley. "The council ls to be -I
gratulated for its courage and respect I
of the town's interest."
Dilly bas led eilorts by the Greenbelt
to keep Sycamore Hills as open aapce.
Representatives ~·Newpo~
lnvestmenta lnc., developen of the pro-
posed 21016 unit project, were not
available today for comment on. tbt
council's action .
The council defeated the Sycarnaft;
Hills propooal Monday night la a 4
to l decision, and agreed to ~
discusaions on wh>t might be awe "°'
ceptable for Sycamore Hilis.
Z DAILY fo'JL.()f lO
~G1·oup Sets
r ~
Land Sale
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of, tflf o.i1, f!llol .Slafl
. 'l'he conelomcralc of ten" charities
holding title to the Starr Ranch will
~ .. put It up ror sale in the wake of
··.: .. the O r a n g e County Board of Super·
: .. ~ yi~rs· vote to v.'lthdraw the county's of·
.. (~ for the land, the charities' lawyer
''rt!veRled today.
Will tam Poindexter. who administers
~ •'tho Starr Ranch Foundation holdings,
" .. -said. ""'' have been getting numerous
inquiries, both foreign and domestic,
, ,about the land for development."
·-()telated stories, page 3).
~' J;>oindex.ter confirmed that some of
. the inquiries are coming from Japanese
.. j/ivestors Interested in bu~ing the 5.~
.. "'aCre parcel for development into a plan-
. 'ned community. •
.. · " "Since the county has apparently
Cancelled the entire project after spend-
' , .,ing thousands of dollars and a year
·and a half on lt, the charities are
... , left with the only choice of listing the
property for sale," Poindexter said.
, • -The county had a firm offer on the
,: ... table of $4.4 million to buy the ranch
as a major wilderness park. But
~ · supervisors voted 3-2 Wednesday to sup-
; .. -port a motion by Supervisor Ralph
· • ·Diedrich to cancel the agreement.
A key motivation behind Diedrlch's
-·'. ·D10Ve was a "rumor" that the charities
• '1tre trying to re lain royalties on the
Starr Ranch gravel resources.
,; · Poindexter today confirmed t h a t
".rumor.
· ... ;'The' charities agree to accept the
county's very low appraisal of the land
.-flS the purchase price and in view of
that low price, they thought it only
falr they retain at least a half-interest
; .rn .the minerals," the Los Angeles lawyer
·said.
"This would provide added income
·.:·to the charities for work! such as heart
. , '~nd cancer research,'' he added.
. ~ ·. Poindexter said he feel s the county's
~ b~fer was $1.5 million too low but that
' .the .~rities wanted to a~pt it because
... :r.1t would have been a . greet thing
, for the cowtty to have this wilderness
·::-erea for all time.''
' Poindexter said the charilie.s have no
., .c;hoice but to put the property back • __ !10. lhe market to liquidate it and get
· ..... ~JJt from under property ta:ies.
, " He said the land could be offered
t-IO two parts, mineral rlghtll and open
, . ~pace for development.
From Pagel , .... . ··-.. .
·.~:SYCAMORE . • • . .
carries an $85 minion pr1cetag and would
have left 75 percent of the site as
: .pc.rmanent open space~ It· would-add -
~ 1,000 persons to Lagwia 's current 15 ooo
population. · ~ '
The firm asked for aj,proval of the
project through the use or a specific
plan~ whJch must cover all the design
:~details. Once a specific plan is adopted. ·· .u. becomes a Jaw just like any other
-.,<1ty onllnanoe.
Johnson charged during the hearing
. that the spedlic plan recommended bv
1he plaMing commission for city C0W1cil
'tpproval was "nothing more than a
~ague statement."
Attorney Howell asked the council to
give the developers guidelines as lo
what they would find acceptable as a
specific plan. ·
, Jotmson said the ~earing was not the
-;-place to do so and Holm said the council
, :\.\·ould consider new guidelines "at the
: earliest possible moment."
: ·While no specific date was mentioned,
: ; the council may again take up the
l • matter when it meets Jan. 2.
i The project has been before the city
: in one form or another for more than
. : 13 months . It has met oppooition from
environmentalists and the Lagwia Green·
: ~ belt Inc. wh ich has attempted to main-
,: lain the land as perrn nnent open space .
The plan cleared the planning com·
mission in a 3-2 split vote following
numerous public hearings.
OU.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
1"' Or ... C-1 O.ll1' l"ILO't, wllll Wflkll
It t"t!MI ..... Ille H .... ,,"', b JIUllllihtd llf
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.. ,. ldlller4 ••• p,obllllltd, M_1, thr0\11111
Frld1f, fQr Co.ft MIH, H.--t llttdl,
H11n11,..•· 81echf,Ollrlt1ln Viii..,, L•g-
B•ch, lnlne.lkddlelMtk ...., hll Clflllen!lf
hn J-C'¥!lk'lllL A •"'911 rttlontl
ldlllOn h ll'*!llhld 11111 .... .,. .... klrlHn.
TIMI ptlftci.:o-1 Pllbllthl"V p!1nt 11 et tlO Wftl
•.-., 81y S!rwl, C•ll Mftl, C.lllw111t, ntN
._ ... ,. H. w,,,
l"resllltnl tnd P~blllh«
J•cli: R, Curley
Vlc:e P't .. ld9111 fNI Gentftl Ml"'VW
n.11111 K .... a
E•lhlr
lhtm•t A. M11rph;~•
~"" '"'* Ch1rl1• H. t..•t lllck1N '· Hell AMl1le11! Mefletlrll E~llo __ .._
212 ftl'f1f A••~11• .· , lr[t1lll..., A'tlttttl ,,0 . ltJ 666, 92611
' ..__
' "' ...
. .
· .. ~·"· ____________ ..
Claild-beatillfl
• :.:..l==--·Mari~ne-a-nd Wife
0.llf Pit.I Stiff l"llft
City Hall Decor
The traditional Yuletide decorations at Laguna
Bea~h City . Hall are tni ssi ng something this year,
Christmas lights. But Santa Claus and hi s reindeer
are still a sight to behold during daylight hours.
They ~re o! course framed by one o! the AJ:t Col-
only's continuing decorations, the massive heritage
pepper tree that adorns the lawn.
Private Family
Services Slated
For Carpenter
Private family ti.merat services were
held this week for H. R. "Russ" Scott,
longtime South Laguna carpenter who
died Sunday. He was 62.
A native of Nevada, Mr. Scott had
worked as a self-employed carpenter
in the Laguna area for 26 years. He
specialized in door repairs .
Mr. Scott is survived by hls widow,
Charlotte of the family home, 30801
Marilyn Drive ; a son, Larry, of South
Laguna ; a daughter, Lorraine Sherman
of Tahoe City; mother, Minnie Scott
of Laguna Beach: a brother, William
Scott of Grass Valley; a sister, Gladys
Pierce of C8.rpinteria ; tv.-o grandsons,
and numerous nephews and nieces.
The family suggests dooaUons to chari-
ty.
Services Held
Fron• Pagel
GRANNY • • •
the exception or about $100 \VOrth of
necessities. she gave away to someone
else," he said.
The diminutive lady who was the
Anahe im B'nai B'ri th's Woman of the
Year and a past president of the chapter.
proved to be one of Engquist's most
difficult cases.
fle explained Uiat he had the $2.000
worth or bad checks written by Sandra
Phillips which either listed an address
In Fountain Valley or a Post Office
box in Huntington Beach.
"She no longer lived at the Fountain
Valley address and left no forwardin g
address when she moved out. The Post
Office box listed the Fountain Valley
;~::;:ess, so it was a dead end," he
The only Wngs Engquist had to go
on were her credit cards that she
periodically used for identification when
writing checks.
Through the gas card, he was able
to locate cars driven by people using
It
One family in Santa Ana, which turned
out to be her daughter and son-ln-la\v,
was located by the detective and he
says he kept bugging lbem about Sandra
F M C Phillips. Tbet denied knowing where she-Or r. ooney was. · · "One-~attemoon-·r ~got a call~rom
Last rites were conducted \Vednesday Sandra ~inellai . ~o s;~-sllt ~ 'c ing at-P~cific View-Chapel-fol' Laguna Beach_____!!Q__m 4touston. 'tte ~1d l she _a her
resident Harry Cooney who died Satur· husband had taken Sindra P!inlips in.
day at the age of 84. but they didn't know where she \\'as
Mr. Cooney iJ survived by his widow, now.
Westine, of the farhlly home, 255 Cypress .. She said she .was contacting me
Drive and a sister Ella Hetherington because I was bugging her family.
of Arizona. ' "But I got suspicious because she
A former real estate and insurance wouldn't hang up and let me call her
broker, Mr. Cooney bas lived 1n Laguna back. I knew she was around here
Beach for the past 31 years. He was somewhere," he said.
a member of the Albert Pine IAdge So Engquist pres.1ed his M!arch and
Kansas, and the Masons. He wa.s ~ eventually found · out lhat his suspect
native of Illinois. had posted ball for another daughter who had been picked up in Stanton
on a traffic warrant.
Administrator
Eyed by Board
Laguna Beach Unified School District
trustees will hold a noon meeting Friday
to hire a new high school administrator
and award construction bids for portable
classrooms.
"She had to give her name and address
when she posted bail, and that's how
I found her," he sai.;.
Ac0ompanied by Capt. Les Rowland
Engquist went to pick Mrs. Spinella up:
but found she had just left for a B'nai
B'rith meeting.
They beat her lo Uie meeting and
one of the women got the two officers
confused with the speakers they 'verc
expecting from the Jewish De£cnsc
League.
South Laguna .
F or1ns 'Parks
Peop"le' Group
"People for Parks" is the name of
a group or South Laguna residents trying
to rekindle interest in purchase of local
park land within Uie community.
Mr. and Mrs. -Blair Ballard, 31668
SceJ1ic Diive, are the coordinators of
the citizen committee.
Mrs. Ballard said despite a recent
refusal of the county Board or
Supervisors to purchase a park site,
local residents are not going to give
up the fight for parks.
Activities planned by the group are
fac t sheets. petition drives and a "march
for parks."
South Laguna, a community of 4,000
persons. has no parks. Unsfer erl!Ung
county standards there ahould be four
acres of county park land for each
1,000 residents.
Several residents in November tried
to get the .supervisors to purchase a
park site near the intefsection of
Catalina and Monterey stree'ts. · ~
'Phe board tabled • the ma t t e r Jn..
definitely, pending a review of financing
plans by the county Harbor, Beaches
and Pirkl DepJrtment.
Other ~dents on the commlueo In-
clude Dr. Robert O'Brien, carol Pike,
Barbara -Schultl-aod Mr.-aod..Mra...Blll
Piper.
From Pagel
STRAND •• •
around the tum of the. century.
Los Angeles attorney E d w a r d
Fitzgerald had not been noUlled of Judge
Walsworth 's ruling today, but be welcom·
ed the decision as bing'''absOiutely fair."
Fitzgerald saJd the Cliandler-Shennan
group has no immediate plans concerning/
the development of the 2,200-foot
shor.eline area. but "obviously we'll have
to start thining about it now."
"We've had both this annoying e<>IDllY
lav.'Sllit and all this coastal protectioo
bu siness facing us up to now and
naturally our plans have been ham-
pered," Fitzgerald said.
Fitzgerald pointed out that the
Chandler-Sherman group ii still willing
to sell a portion of Dana Strand to
the slate fC>r possible development as
a public park.
Held on
A Camp Pendleton Marine and hls
wife were arrested on charges of felony
chlldbeatlng late Wodnesday after police
lowid their S-year<>ld son wandering in
a nelahborbood bearlna evidence of
aevere batterl.ng and bums.
JohMle Bernell Lessley, 21 , and his
wife, Shella LOulse, ti, we"' booked
at city jail belore the dinner hour.
lbe child, Jesse Jerome, was taken to
the county's Albert Sitton Home for
dependent children.
Police allege the child bore scars from
bums on blt forehead and both feet,
bruises In the area of hls groin, a
black eye and numerous other · brulJcs
and welts. ·
'111.e case first came to light when
a man living near th~ couple's residence
at 118 CBlle Dominguez phoned the
police.
Officers sald Jesse had been wandering
uound the neighbor's boat building proj-
ect for two hours · before they were
called.
Officers initial attempts to contact
the family failed, they said. Mrs. Lessley
wu not at home when the boy was
found. About an hour after the boy was
taken into protective eu1tody Mrs.
Lessley returned home and was arrested.
Her husband waa detained a short Ume
liter, police sald.
1be boys' mother waa transferred to
Orange Co\Dlty Jail ind her husband
was kept at the local laclllty.
Arraignment for the couple wu set
FrelllP .. el
BODY •••
the area all!TOlllldlng the mDllns and
lhorlly alter mm ...nov.d the tarpou!Jn
Md dlaoovered that the victim was an
elderly man wtth reddllh blond hair.
The only clothlni oo the victim was a
pair ol llght.\:olored shorta and a dark
shirt .
Felony
to take place sometime t<Kiay, otficers
said. The youngster nllegedly· the victim
'of repeated abuse, did not require h05pital
treatment fbr the injuries, oificers said.
The healed bums on the boy's feet
were apparently caused by some sort
of long, burnlng ember, officers theorli·
ed.
TEEN-AGE IDOL DEAD AT 37
Bobby D1rln Succumbs
From Page .J
BOBBY ...
Ollel Murray said It wu Im-Ible to
determine what may have t"Ontributed to
the man'• deoth. The victim, he added,
~ to be very llhort, perhaps In
hll IOI or IOI. 1be rema1ns were ditcovered at about of Lebanon Hospital, less than seven
t a.m. by 1lmDu Doyle Solomon, of hours after a team of four surgeons
124 Patero De Oro, who told police finished Uie second open heart operation
be bad been walklng hll do( when to be performed on him In less than
the tinlmal ran over a roedaide em-three years. bankment and began wollowtni In the bushel. In February 1971 two valves were
Solomon d!Jcovered to hll bomr that Inserted In Darin's heart, which had
his pet wu rollln1 on a body. ~en weakened by a bout of rheumatic
Immediately after the-dilcoYery-thr-fever-at-the age of 8.
mt.dent ran nearly half a mile to a During routine postoperative check~
pay phone at San Clemente Hl&b School la~ week, doctors said they dJscovered I
to call ..,uce. ;" . that one of the valves was malfunc-
Later, Solomon repOrted that he tioning. A new valve was installed
regularly ·exerclaea his dog ln the remote Wednesday in an operation that took
area and lut week be and the animal Dvtn s~illed In h~ will that ~his
were Iii the same aru but nOllced liOily sooula-~•t-to--medl
nothing. science. That reporl led to 1peculatlon by police A spokesman said the body had al-
that the .-atn1 could -lbly have ready been translerred to UCLA where
been dumped over tbe roodalde Jong it would be used for research.
after death. "He felt that if there could be any
No permanent structures exist tn the purpl)Ml served by dying it "·ould be to ·
area of the discovery. The site lies help save other people's li\'es," said
in the middle of vast grazing lands the spokesman. . , which are part o( the Visbeek Ranch. "nlua, he said. there will be no fu· neral although fri ends may hold private 1
memorial ceremonies. '
Airman Fined,
Given Demotion
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An Air Force
crew chief has been fined and reduced
in rank fQr refualng to obey an order
to go to Guam last aprin& to 1ervlce
B52s ul!ed' In bombing cambodla.
Sgt. Willard L. Farley, 21, ol La
Puente, was reduced ta the rank of
airman and firled $200 a· month for
six months Tuelday at Mather Air Force
Base, the Air Force~reported Wednesday.
Darin was born Walden Robe.rt Cassot-
to in a tough area of the Bronx in
New York City. In his early days in
show bulineu, he picked up a reputation
as a brash , cocky kid who got ahead
more through his energy and determina·
tion than by talent.
In later years, associates said, he
mellowed a bit.
He burst onto the national music scene
In 1960, when his distinctively fast tempo
recording of "Mack the Kn ire·• -the
sardonic ballad of an elegant mugger •
from "The Threepenny Opera" bv
Berthold Brecht and Kurt Weill -woii
him one or two Grammy awards.
An administrator's position at Laguna
Beach High School has been vacant
since a reshufning of the administration
earlier this year.
The portable classrooms will de added
to the high schoo l campus and Aliso
Elementary School.
''We didn't make a big deal out or
arresting her. We just sort of separated
her from the group before they got
inside and told her daughter to make
up some excuse for her abse.1ce," Eng·
qu ist added.
Rowland notes that when she was
in custody. she told them she would
tell all. "The jig's up," she reportedly
said.
Nobody Sells G.E. Micro-Wave Oven1forle11than1>ull{a,.{'
Board clerk Jane Boyd will chair the
meeting in the absence or board presi·
dent Nonnan Bro\\'n, who is vacationing
in ~1exico.
Motel Custo1ner
Leaves Clieck
SAN FRANCISCO (AP J -A discr"t
Lombard street motel owner wants to
play Santa Claus but is faced with
a problem. of the utmost delicacy.
Virgil Hunter s11id Wednesday he found
a check for $20.087 in Insurance benefits
paid to a widow. Bl.It he found It after f
a man and v.'Oman. apparently register·
ing under false names, had rented ,·
room £or three hours Tue.!day.
He v.·on 't reveal the name on ,the
check or the register at the Sands ~tOtel.
but said of the widow "I'm certau;
she '11 know who she Is." ' .
Lice Empty Sc~~ols
In Indiana City
ANDERSON , lnd . (UPI I -All of
Anderson's 19,000 school children observ-
ed an early Christmas holiday today
alter an epidemic of bend lice emptltd
classrooms throughoul the clly. ornclals
ordtred schools closed Wednt<d ay, three
days ahead ol schedule, to control the
epidemic.
(
According to Engquist, she kept three
separate IO! -one ln the name of
Sandra Phillips, one in the name of
Sandra Spinella and one in the name
of Stephanie Thatcher.
. ';She told us the third one she kept
in case she got stopped by a traffic
cop. That way when they ran the name
throu_gh for a warrant check, there would
be no wants on it.
"She told us she believed she'd never
be caught," he said.
Rites Conducted
For Mrs. Miller'
Funeral services were held Wednesday
at McCormick Motluary !or Marga"'t
I. Miller of Laguna Beach Wllo died
Saturday at the age ol 84.
The lie!·'~ Jei-i ol St. Ceorge
Epbcoplll Churdl olllctated a\ the
services. Burial !ollowed at lnslewood
Park Cemetery.
Mn. Miller ls aurvlved by two slsten,
Mrs. Rhea Moore ol Laguna Hiils a~
Mrs. Florence Wiikinson of Wasblnston.
A native of K1nsa1, Mr1. Miller had
lived -at 230 GrmMew St. for'th• past
six years.
---~
,J>ORTABLE
MICROWAVE OVEN
STO•I HOURSt MM. tit,. Sot. 11~0" ltJO
, ..
I I
I
I
I I
I
COME IN FOlll A •••• •C.-111 C081111 _,.,,,..
IY A ~OME IC:ONOMIST
SATURDAY, DIC:. 22 '1
1.2 NOON· 4 ·P.M. '
. ' 11 ·
~ .,
90 DAYS «: SH !
WITH . APPROVED .
CR&Dl1
1815' NEWPbRT BLVD., , 18
Downtown i:osta Mesa -Phone 548· 7788
'
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·saddlehaek~~.___, =--Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
I VOL 116, NO. 354, '4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAtlFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1973 TEN CENTS
5,50.0-acre Starr · Ranch t·o -Go on Open Sale
By WIWAM SCHREIBER
Of IM O.llr ,lltl Slaff
The conglomerate of ten charities
holding title to the Starr Ranch will
put It up for saje in" the wake of
the 0 r a n g e County Board of Super·
vlJOrs' vote to withdraw the county's of-
fer for the land, the charities' lawyer
reyealed today.
William Poindexter, who admlnisters
the Starr Ranch Foundation holdings,
said, "we have been getting numerous
inquiries, both roreign and. domestic,
about the land for developmen t."
(Related stories, page ~).
Poindexter confirmed that some of
the Inquiries are coming from Japanese
investors inter~ted in buying the 5,500-
acre parcel for development into a plan-
ned community.
"Since the county· has apparently
cancelled the entire project after spend·
ing thousands ol dollars ·and a year
and a half on Jt, the charities are
I
left with the only choice of listing the
property for sale," Poindexter said.
The county had a firm offer on the
table of $4.4-million tO bliy the ran-ch
as a major wilderness park. But
supervisors voted 3-2 Wednesday .to sup-
port a motion by Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich to cancel the agreement.
A key motivation behind Diedrlch's
move was a 0 rumor" that the charities
• were trying to .retain royalties on the
Starr Ranch gravel resources.
Poindexter today confirmed t h a t
runlOr.
"The charities agree to accept the
county's-very-low apprai!al of ~ land
as the purchase price and in view 'of
that low price, they thought it only
fair they retain at least a half-Interest
in the minerals," the Loi Angeles lawyer
said.
0 1bl.s would provide added Income
to the charities for works such u heart
and cancer research," he add~.
Poindexter sakl he feels the county's
offer was $1.S million. too low but that
the charities wanted to accept it because
tt J.'would-have been a great thing
for the ·county to have this wilderness
area for all time."
Poindexter said the charities have no
choice but to put the property back
on the market to . liquidate it and get
out from under property taxes.
He said the land could be offered
in two parts, mineral rights and open
' ueen'
space ror de\•elopment.
· '·There appears to be a lack o( desi re
on th e part of the Board of Supervisors
to complete this transaction ..so...Jhis. _is
our only course of action.'' Poindexter
said.
He sa id the charities are still more
than willing to sit down with the rounly
and discuss saving the ranch deal. But
until th at time comes, he said. the'
land will be up for sale to the highest
biC.dcr.
St.are Raps Use of Tideland Mone y .
SACRAMENTO (AP) .-The city of
Long Beach Improperly spent . nearly
IH million · In public tidalandS money
in converting the Queen Mary to a
m~um~f-thHea and touriJt. attraction,
state officials said today.
The State Lands Division recom-
mended that its parent Land& Com·
mission sue the city to force it to
repay the money to the tidetands trust
fund.
The city used 156.6 mlllloo of its
Santa Claus
share ol tidelands oil royalties to Convert
the ship, the lengthy Land.! Division
report s8id.. Additional investments were
made by private companies which held
Queen Mary concessions.
Of that, $13.9 million. or 24.7 percent
direcUy benefitted cootmercial ventures
on the ship in violation of state lliw,
the report saKI.
Long ·Beach officials submitted a
rebuttal statement to the commlsslon
Dog· Makes A 'Prowkr?' . · .
contending all fwtds were spent properly
and legally.
Long Beach City Manager John Man•
9ell said the city would welcome a la"'·
suit.
He said th e commission's claim that
there was a dericit in the tidelands fund
was "totally inconceivable to us and
completely ridiculous."
Mansell said reports of all expenditures
on the Queen Mary had been available
(See QUEEN MARY, Page %)
MISS~ YIEJOANS WATCHED LIVE NATIVITY SCENE WEDNESDAY to!IGH°'T"' ""' ,,;,, -
Thom Mertt~ JOMph, MOl1n i1 Strubb W11 Mery in Hi111ido·Portr1y1I u thinp k..P .... this, Santa Grisl Find
ClaUS---1'1 .. golng-~ve .. a .. tougb_ -~--~-,....-',..._' -----
time --die tradiu-1 l'OUlldf • -.
Sheep Pat on · a
. -
Show ' -~~· · ~. · Iir Gtemente de=~ of telepliohed~ ~
I . w-.y nllht to ~ • ~ lurking uoond thO borne Yes Sir, Yes Sir, Twel ve 'Ha nds' Fulll,U-Veij'~0---1 ~Bilc:oo,a1mu ~_w_
Olficor Frink De La Mater'
quickly arrived to find It w,,. ~
ly a friend oeoreUy leavlrul a
Chrtatmas gilt oo the front
doorstep.
By JAN WORTH °' ... ~ ... .., .....
Six men from the Mission Viejo
Activities Committee have decided that
the guy who wrote, "Ba, ba; Black
Sheep, Have You Any Wool?" waan't
so dumb.
Because "three bags full" Is about
all the reward the six will get for
U.:ir trooble Wednesday with two rowdy
animals.
The tale begins when the committee
was 1001,ting for animals for lheir live
naUvity scene held on a hillside above
· Eldorado Park Wednesday.
Someone suggested borrowing the two
sbeep from the SPCA Animal Shelter
in Lagwia Beach.
"They Jet us borrow them on one
condition," Kerry Baichtal of the Mission
Viejo Company said. "'Iba1 we wouldn't
bring them back."
The coounittee decided to take the
sheep anyway and find homes for them
later.
So they piled Into a truck and went
to collect their new pets1 a ma1e Romn"
and female Corriedale.
"What the SPCA forgot to tell us
was that the sheep were wild," Baicbtel
said.
Tl)e six chased. They lassoed. They
turned coWboy for a day -all to
get the sheep into the truck.
"We thought we were golng to have
a rodeo instead of a nativity scene,"
Baichtal said. "Can you imagine a bunch
of city boys trying to calm down two
wild sheep?"
"We llnallt had to cradle the sheep
• in our arms to get them still," he
said. "Then when we got back lQ MisSiOn
Viejo, the sheep wouldn't get out of
the truck."
Nervous about the sheep's behavior,
Baichtal tied them down to bales of
hay for the evening perform.ance.
"Suddenly they turned ~an
actors," ~id. "As soon as the pro-
gram _started, they turned as gentle
as lambs -and that's n.o pun."
They even let the sh'epherds pet their
noses and ears, he said .
With their acting debut out of the
way, the sheep will be kept at the
Mission Viejo stables, where a pair of
shears await them.
County Agrees
To Adopt Land
Use Element .
Orange County Supervisors Wednesday
adopted a ten ~ year land. u s e element
ol. the county general plan ~t· could
allow populatioo in unincorporated areas
to grow by 500,000.
lrvirie Commuter (;roup
To -.Survey Bus Service
"We figure we'll offer the wool to
Mission Viejo High sCbool," Baicbtal
said. A crafts class there might welcome
the chance to comb and spool raw
wool. he said.
Then two sheep will be given to ·a
new ''petting park" for children planned
at O'Neill Park in Trabuco Canyon.
Meanwhile, Baich.tat anCI friends are
shaking their heads. They've decided
there's nothing meek about mutton.
.The 1983 Land u .. Elemeot, approved
two weeks ago by the county Planning
Commission arter nearly two years of
work, was accepted without change, but
supervisors strOngly indicated revision
work should begin immediately.
Supervlsc>D ruolved to adopt the plan
now to meet a state-mandated Jan.
1 deadline. They said they'll amend
it later. ' 1be Irvine commuter needs com-
mission ls -seekinl ways to survey tbe
"14 percent of ,[rvine reslden&:" who
commute to Los •""-ales to determiRe
if they would u.e a city-8'flll(ed bus
or car pool service. .
Don Cadle of Xerox Corpori!Rl(' In . .. .
' ~t · ' Oruge
•
W'eatller.
lt11 .be cooler Friday, aamllna
to the -tiler lerVlce, with bJab1 •
In the low 'l1la Inland dipping to lhe
upper ltl8 at the -· Some high -but moally lair
sides. •
JNSWE TODAY . I
If vau'rt an abandoned dog,
y01tr chance• of ftlldlftg a home
arr probably bcttar i.. """"""" ton Beach than anJllOMrc tlit.
Set •toTv, Page 10.
L,M...... ti c.11,.,,... I, ,. ·--... .. ... ~ 11 . ..,.., .... ' • ...., ....... 1 .,,.. ........ If
...... 11.,,
............ 11 .,._ ~ .... -· . , ......... It
::.... ....... .: _.., .... 1' ................. °""llCM!tr ,1
"'" . Ii ----.... ;:.•.\':" ..: -. .................. ...........
the Irvine Industrial Complex Is • found-
ing member of the city corrurUasioo.
~ and Jlruce Fem. of Allergan ~ Corporation launched an
exj>erlmental car1poo1 program involving
nine IIC employers In a portion of
' the indils~al park.
While some 15 per<enl or 4,lllO
employes ot those lim\1 silo.wed Interest
in the program, Ferris .estimates fe.,..
than two percent are actually sharing rtctes= to work. · ·
. · "Many Seem to be wailing a decision
bf the . President on gas rationing, >I
Fm~ said. · ·Meonwhile, the ·Cily CqunCll establish·
ed cOmmission Is proceeding with its
studies of needs for commuter si!rvices
to and from Irvine.
Cadle, who Jives In Founlain Valley,
Is the cltilon member repftlelltlng Jn.
terests of wubn who commute dally
into the ..... city.
Hmhand Am-ested ' .. • . ~ I .
. BIG BEAR CITY (UPI) -~ge ·
M. Aillaud ·was aITesteq on a murder
chlri!e Wednesday night alter he sur·
rendered to sheriffs deputies and told
tho!n that he bad stabbed his wife.
Deputies said Alllaud, 20, led officers
to hfS home In this mountain community
where his ~wife, Vicky Sue, 19, was
found dead of a knile · wound in the
chest.
State law allows three amendments
to the plan a year and county planners
bave already acbodulecl till! flnt amend-
ment date In April, H. G. Osborne,.
interim county pluming director, told
the supervillOl'S Wetmeaday. •·
The new plan could permit ll00,000 new
people In county territory by 1983 U
all developments pemiltted under the
plan's zoning description are approved
by the SU])el'Vlson.
But Irwin Schatzman, a planning of·
fidal who· ouilined tfle elements for
the planning commission, told the board
(See LAND USE, Pqe I)
Youth Nabbed
Mesa ·Store Prank Backfires ·
With the help of area firms, Cadle
•kl, the need for establiahlng a com-A curious boy, 14, out Christmas browsing with buddies dropped
muter service Into Irvine I! being ex· a spnti can of red paint into a $22.P-trash cOlppactor •srlIDlce at a ~· dllficult group. to gel In touch Costa esa department store Wednesday •!JI.ii pushed e button lo ~--"'·--drl ho 1 Irv' see what woul~ happen. " • · · "'"'' are uamc vers w eave me '"
every day, he added. -tRE FIRST thing' that bap~ned was an exploclon or crimson
Cadle said a survey method Is being enamel paint and the second thing was a chaie' through the Sdl!Ql
aouglit to reach .thooe driven. · Coast Plua inall by .Sears, Roebuck and Comp1ny security men. The new city commlsaloa Involves Th ·
t ti of the I~-i~·-1r· 1 e third thing that 'hanpened was that Costa Mesa police
ropreseo 8 ... "~ 'N~ 18 showed up and took the boy into custody on 1118plcion of malicious Complex (llC), the GIOll« Irvine mischief. ·
lndustrlal.Leaguo (G,UL), OrlDC• County
Tronait Distrkl ~and the cky of Irvine Public Worb llepl-staff. DISPOSITION of 'the charge In court wllllprobably depend'\On
Irvine councilmen directed that the whether bis family buys a 'new trub·~pattor -red on the lnllde
needs for commuter services be r~ -!or-Christmas, mvestlg1tors said,
boclc at the-council'• Feb.-11--llnf.-·i__.=--------±=---~-----------'
"• ' '
By JORI( ·VAl-Tl!RZA
. Of .... °""' """ a.ff ~-body--0!-an
<I' man ,... discovmd oo a S<!duded
kDolt .....iooting San Clemente High
School earl)"today.
Ttle coodiUon 'of the . remains was
sucli that police Initially were unable
to detennlne the· sex of, the homicide
• vlCtlin: Imiestlgaton said· tile. liody bad
apparently ~ dumped several week!
ago aM wu folmd with Us feet pointed
up• slope.
Police Oliel Clifford Murray said a
canvas tarpaulin with metal grommets
along the edges had been tossed over
the. corpse and only allowod exposure
of two Jegs and an arm.
Officers sea1ed off a Jang section of
Avenida Pico immediately inland from
the lrigl1-1chool campwrwhich is closed
for t!te holiday'-_ · .
COO:x>er's Investigators spent three
hours in a pain.1tak.ing examln!l:tion of
the area surrounding the remains and shor11~ alter noop removed the tarpaulin
and discovered that the victlm was an
eld ... ly man with reddish blond hair.
The only clothing on the victim was a
pair of lighkolored shorts and a dark
shirt.
OUef Mumy said it was impossible to determine wbat·may have CIX!tributed to
the man's death. 1be victim, he added
appe<lred to be very short, perhaps iJi
his 5tlo or 60s. •
'Ibe remains were discovered at about
9 _a.m. by 'Ibomas Doyle Solomon, of
124 l'atero De Oro, who told police
he II§~ . been walking his dog when
the .rum.al ran over . a roadside em--~t and began w11llowing in the
Solomon discovered to his horror that
his pet was rolling oo a body.
lmmedlat~y ~lier tile discovery the
resident ran nearly half a mile to a
pay phone 11 San Clemente High School
to call pcilice.
Later, Solomon reported that he
(See BODY, P11e !)
Caspers Plans
To Step Down
er.n,. County superv1sor Ronald ea..pen of Newport _,, laid
Wednesday he will otep do1'll as
chairman ol the board next year
and throw his llUjlport I!> Supervioor
RalJ!I! Clart "' Ailaliltm. "He wanled the job this year
when I got It and I think he
sbouJd.havt It now,'' CUpers said."
Both Caapera and Clark are up
fur ,...lectfon In June. Caspers
has held the pool of cbalnnan
for two of bil four •aan on the boord. -<
Caspers said he -ta to give
. up ·the cbalnnans1dp to devote
more time lo the needs of his dl!trlct. •
u,,, ........
TEEN·AGE IDOL DEJIO.. AT 37
Bobby Darin' Su~cumbs
Teen Idol Darin
Dies at Age 3 7
After Operatio~
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Bobby Darin,
the brash ambitious teen idol of the
early 1960s who -sang "A-tack the
Knife" and "Splish.Splash" and married
Sandra Dee, died today after his second
open heart operation. He was 37.
"He never really came around after
the operation," a spokesman said. "He
was just too weak to recover."
Darin made a number of records
that sold more than a million copies,
including "Dream Lover," and won an
Oscar nomination as best supporting
actor in 1963 for his role in ucapt.
Newman, M.D."
His marriage to Miss Dee. one of
the teen Idol romances of the 19608,
lasted six years .
Darin died at 12:-15--a.m. at Cedara
of Lebanon Hospital, Jess than 'Seven
hours after a team of four surgeons
finished the second open heart operation
to be perfonned on him in less than
three years.
In February 1971 two valves were 1
inserted in Darin's heart, which had
been weakened by a bout of rheumatic
fever at the age of 8.
During routine postoperative checks
last week, doctor:s said they discovered
that. one of the valve.s. was maUuqc.. t
tionfng. A ne'v valve was instalteil l
Wednesday in an operation that toct-
Derln specllied In his will that hilt•
body should be donated to medieel
science. \
A spokesman said the bodY Md al-~~ :.:-l~t!Cl.A -..1
"lie felt tbat tr there OllUJd be oiir
CSee BOBBY, Pop I) -•
• ·-----
• 2 DAILY PILOT IS Tt111r~, DKtm.btr 20, 1973 -· ,•.
___ lanners_ to __ Ref ine ~
Irvine
The city of Irvine zoning code approved
by the City Council urgency fonn Tues-
! day night is to be rerined by city plan. ! ning commissioners tonight. 1 The zoning code puts into effect the
(· city's general plan e f fect i v e Im·
1· • mediately, or just two week! ln advance
I"
1. Parents Feel .
··:3 R's Still .
.: l1nportant
~fost parents in the Saddleback Valley
Unified School District still think the
1 •• proverbial "readin', writln', and
, · 'ritbmetic" are the most important sub-
: jects for their children to learn.
But according to a recent survey of
.... district parents, they also place high
_,_ priority_oo ·bala~ fin~ arts training.
individualized instruction, vocational
' training, and programs for students with
. · special needs.
Pat Bushman, director of instructional
services, said the sur\ey showed most
··, parents . oppose sex education in ' the
primary grades and have little interest
in pre-school education through the
~ , district
The surveys, prepared by a volunteer
. task force of parents, teachers, and
students, were filled out at community
. ~conferences held at each sch:>ol in lbe
, · district in November.
Some 70 items were listed, with each
.. participant asked to give the items a
( rating on how much it is needed or
1 not needed in the district.
. Parents a s k e d for more counselors
-·-for their students, smaller classes and
. ·.more remedial reading classes.
. , They gave high ratings lo strong
discipline policies, and lffective com-
munication involving students, teachers,
... ·and parents.
-:·· They supported developing attitudes
•.:· of self-Oiscipline, responsibility, good
judgn;tent, and respect for law and order.
Data collected from the surveys will >·. form the Core of a district master plan
. •. of educatlon f0< the nm five years. ~l 1 'lbe' remlting document will be review· ·i." eel each year to evaluate 1the direction
· • the district is taking.
"We now have the -material to chart .. Our course for the next few years in
Saddleback Valley," District Superin-
•·• tendent William 1.ogg said,
_.~ · "'nw: greatest adventure .will be in
.. "a-eating a district program to match
the challenge."
;Irvine Council
, Election Gets
+:19th Candidate " .... -
Former Greentree Homes Association
'" president Richard B. "Dick" Clark
' " became the 19th person to begin lhe
· nomination process by taking out papers
" Wednesday for the Irvine City Council
election in March.
Clark who lists himself as an engineer.
lives at 4162 Belvedere St ., Greentree
Homes.
On TUesday, Mary Ann Holden, a
•student and housewife of 4841 Gai~port
Circle in California Homes, was the
18th person indicating interest in a city
: council seat.
. To date, only six of the 19 have
· returned the nominating pa pers with
' · the requittd 20 signatures. They are:
: Colmcilman Henry Quigley or the Ranch,
. : retired Marine Corps officer Arthur W.
: Anlbony of TUrtle Roe~, planning com·
' missioner Frank Hurd of University Park,
· : department manage r Robert J .
: : .llolmstedt of California Homes, Coun·
cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor of University
Park and engineer Mrs. Hazel Myers
of the Ranch.
"
OU.N•I COAST u
DAILY PILOT
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f
J
Zon1llg Code
of the Jan. l deadline.
The code aMlgns all land In the 41·
square-mile city to one of thret buic
designatiom. They are :
AE -exclusive agriculture, a z.ooe
in which the farming uses art e1.pected
to be permanent and urban en-
FromP .. eJ
BOBBY ..•
purpose served bJ dying It would be to
help save other people's liviii," said
the spokesman .
ThU!, he said. there will be no fu-
neral although frien<h may hold private
memorial cettmonies.
Darin was born Walden Robert Cassot·
to in a tough area of the Brom in
New York City. In h.iJ early days in
show business, he picked up a reputation
as a brash, cocky kid who got ahead
more through bis energy and detcrmina·
tion than by talent.
In later years, associates said, he
mellowed a bit.
He burst onto the national mll!lc scene
in 1960, when his distinctively fast tempo
recording of .. Mack the Knife" -the
sardonic ·ballad of an elegant mugger
from "The Threepenny Opera" by
Berthold Brecht and Kurt Weill -won
him one of two Grammy awards.
Darin noted that two Grammys were
all that Frank Sinatra had won, and
said "I hope to pass Frank In
everything's he done."
Later, he predicted that he r.ould
be "a show business Jegend by the
time I'm 25." He rerused to accept
dates in New York City, he said, until
he could appear as a slar 1n the most
prestigious rooms ln town, because he
wanted to go home In style.
Darin told friends that his father was
a "small-time gangster" who died before
Darin was born, and that his mother
was on welfare when he was a child.
He was a bright student, and won ad-
mission to the highly rated Bronx High
School of Science, and attended the
Hunter College Bronx campus for one
semester.
But he learned to play drums and
worked during his school vacations
in the CAtskillJ, hls entry to show
b~l~ess. In 195d he started writing and
s1ngmg commercials In New York.
He later ~ro~ his bit rock iune,
"Splish..S pl8.!1h."
He met Mi.ss Dee in 1959 when they
worked together on a movfe in Italy.
He was 24 and she was 18. They were
married. Dec. 1, 1960, jumping the gun
on the scheduled wedding ("We jbst
~wanted to get it over with-,-!!.--she said )·
by ~kling an impromptu ceremony in
a fnend's apartment ·m Elizabeth, N.J.
at 3 in the morning, borrowing a ring
from one of Darin's boyhood friends.
'Ibe.y broke up in 1963, reconciled,
and were divorced in 1966. They had
a son, Dodd, now 12.
On June 2S of this year, he marred
Andrea Yeager, 321 a legal secretary.
Identity Found
For Sports Car
Accident Victim
A sports car driver cremated early
Wednesday when his Japanese sedan
shot off a mountain road below Irvine
Park, overturned and exploded in names
has been tentalively ldentlfied. '
He Ls believed to be Selmer Tate
27, ol 12066 Pearce Avt., Garden Grove' acco~ing to Orange County Coroner'I
deputies who traced auto leasing com·
pany records.
California Highway Patrol Information
Officer Duane Friesen sakf the victim's
body was reduced to a few bones in
the predawn accident.
The overturned sports car was spotted
aboul dayllghl Wednesday below the
roadway by an Irvine Park employe
driving up Olapman Avenue near San-
tiago Road en TOt1te to work. •
Coroner's deputiee estimated the high
speed accident occtuTed about four hOUr!
before t.he wreckage was found by the
passerby.
The car was new and carried only
paper temporary license plates and
registration which were destroyed in
the crash.
Hopeful's Party
Listed in · EITor
Jrvine city council candidate Robert
Smith of 'l'llrtle Rock lncwreclly was
Identified as being a Republican In an
article appearing In Tueaday'1 edlllona.
Smllh bu ng!stmd "decllne to atate"
and is affillaled with nellller party.
Municipal elections In C.llfomla are non-
pa rilsan. The Daily Pilot rqreta the
error.
Fire Burns Landmark
GUERNEVILLE CU P() -/. fire which
appeared io have been set by arsonists
Wedneoday night desltOyed the -
GuerneVllle IM, a Llth ceolluy landmark
ln the Russian River remrt tOwn. The
IM, lonn<rly a hotel, was being used
as a restaurant but had been. doled
for !he day.
( .
croaehment is not anticipated.
A -general agriculture in -it'.hlcb
all recreational, commercial and fanning
uses which may eventually be replaced
by development are classed.
PC -planned community, a catchall
deslgnaUon !or all devel-ent Including
residential, commercial, and induatrlal.
Vlllageo auch ., Unlvenlty Par~ }>ave
been zoned by this s)'?ltem in which
the applicant files an· individualized plan·
ned community zoning document for
government approval
Jn addition to the beslc zone dames,
there are a_number Q( "oygJ.@Y" zones
which Include only land Impacted by
conditions peculiar to the type of overlay
woe being con..ldered such as floOO
hazard, or hillslde district.
Other overlay zones are established
for open space, geological hazard-area.s
and civic districla. . .
Finally, the zoning code eslabllshes
a point system for evaluaUni whether
adequate public service -will be availa,ble
when a development is complete.
. [. '•' /\
.. ~-> . ~ .
""'' ... '· ••
,
• • .. ._
• -~· '
•,
\.
• .. .,.
' \.,
UPIT ........
Points are given · for completed sewer
and water system!, roadways, ijre and
police-protection, private-parks, public-
parb or school grOWlds and other urban
amenities.
or a toW pooslble 4S poinlO. a
developer must accumulate 32 polnt.s
in order to receive a c i t y residential
develapment pennit.
THIS IS THE SCENE OF DEVASTATION CAUSED BY SPANISH EXPLOSION
Primo Mlnl1ter Lula Carrero Bianco Killed, Hl1 Car Rlppod Apart
"
Such a permit must be sought and
obtained prior to filing a tentalive tract
map.
Such permils, along with tbe l"neral
plan phasing program .,.. designed lo
provide for "orderly growth and develop.
ment."
The Jll!lleral plan Id-' nv .. year in·
cremeni. !or development. Land !ailing
in an area desaibed for development
in 1985, for example, will not be con-
sidered for rezoning to that use WJtil
1980 or later . ·
Land set !or development belweea L'!7a
and 1980, meanwhile may be zoned for
lhe intended use within five years of
lhe projected completion date.
The time lag, city officials say, is
to allow the city to develop its capital
improvements budget.
Such a budpt and the u!Umote spend-
ing of JDOOey for roads fire statloos,
parks etc. ultimately determines the
number of polnta a developer will
receive.
Without ll1Ch ameultles of alty life,
builden will suffer in the point co\lllt
at the time a residential development
permit is IOUlht -
Plannlni commissioners are cm·
sidertng ways of lldding ldlooll 1and
oommen:ial lhopping ........... to the list
ol items the city will cmsi.der before
giving a permit or coMidemg a tract
map.
Attorneys say the difficulty in e3ch
case is similar. The city does not control
provision of those services. Schools are
-..iled by another public agency and
private interests set the Urning for
developmenl of shopping centen.
Planners Drop
Zoning Pl.an
From Agenda
The zoning plan for the largest village
to be built In lhe city of Irvine is
expected to be dropped from tonight's
planning commission agenda.
Both city staff and the Irvine Company
agree the matter might best be con-
sidered at the commission's Jan. 10
. meeting. Environmental impact report
(Effi) data !or the 27,500-penoo village
ii incomplete and the commissiOn has
another weighty topic to mull tonight.
The city's pennanent general plan ion-
lng law is due for further consideration.
Commissionen meet at 7:30 o'clock
in city hall, 4201 Campus Drive.
Boys Chorus Set
For Rotary Show
The Falber COughlln's Boys Chorus
of Costa Mesa will sing for the final
meellng of year ol the Laguna Hills
Rolary Club.
Rotary program chairman B e n
JohMon said the chorus, comprised of
three dozen boys ranging ln age from
eight lo J4, will perform at Chandler's
Restaurant Dec. 24.
The group has had two European con-
cert toun and sang for Pope Paul
VI. In addition, Ibey have performed
at Disneyland, lbe Hilton and Flamingo
Inns of Las Vegas, the Anaheim Con-
vention Center, and san Dieg6'1 Sea
World.
. .......... 1
BODY .. .
ngularly exercl!<s hi& do( In the remote
a"'a and last -k be and lbe anlJ!ll}
fltre in the same arta but noticed
·nothtnr.
'l'llat nport led to speculatloo h)' Jl'!llc.
that the mnains could posl}bly liove
been dumped over lbe roadside Iona
alter death.
No permanent 11ructurH exist In tho
area of the dlacovery. The ail.e lies
In tbe mlddl\ of vut crazing landa
which are part or the Visbeek Ranch.
I
Spain's CaITero
Killed by Bomb
Frftm Assassin
lllADRID (UP() -An erploslon tilled
Prime Minister lAJ.ls C3U"ero Blanco to-
day, hurling his car high into the air
as be wu leaving a church where be
had just attende<l""Mass. The government
aaid later Carrero was killed by an
assassin's bomb.
"The prime minister was the victim
of an assassination," a government
spokesman said. "We will release delallJ
shortly."
Carrero, 70, WU killed wbeii a bomb
blast IDuled hi& car acroa the rool
of the church. The church b around
the oorD.r from the li.s. Eml>usy.
Witnesses said the pl'ime minister's
car was hurled against the edge of
tho niol ol the churcb; J>oull'*L over
it and landed on a secood lJoor terrace
on the olber side of the building.
Carrero, his driver and bodyguard
wtre also killed instantly.
The government made t h e an-
noonc:ement that Carrero had been
assassinated more than nine hours after
his death.
The 70-year-<ild admiraJ, named prime
minister six months a g o by
Generalissimo Francisco Franco lo share
the burdens of government, died shortly
after arriving at a hospital, lbe govern-
ment said.
Vice President Torcuato Fernandez
:P.firanda took over immediately as prime
minister.
The explosion occurred at 9:t5 a.m.
(12 :45 a.m. PST) -at about the time
a trial of 10 underground labor leader.i
was scheduled to start in Madrid's Public
Order Court. Leaflets have deen strewn
in Madrid in the past days in which
Wlderground left-wing organilatlons an-
nounced strikes and unspecified protest
action for the day of the trial.
The defendants, among them a worker
priest and Communist veteran Marcelino
Camacho, were arrested 18 months ago
in a Madrid convent where they allegedly
held a clandestine meeting. They were
charged with illicit association, and the
prosecution asked in a pretrial brief
that they be sentenced lo terms ranging
from 12 to 20V. years.
FromP .. eJ
QUEEN MARY ..
liDce the beginning of lbe proje<I .
"We woode!' why, after Ove years and
hundreds of thooalmcls ol clollart spent
by the ..... ln'researdling this project.
that expenditures they knew existed -or
·...,. rootemplated -and which Ibey.
helped review prior to' submission by the
city, should now be a matter of such
great ccocem," be Said.
F.ciwa:rd N. Gladish, the division 's ex·
ecuUve officer, said the converted ocean
liner has become more of a commercial
venture "with a maritime museum as
its appendage."
That violates tbe original concept of
the project in which cOmmercial opera-
tlona -such u !!hope, restauranb and
a hotel -were to acco\lllt for less
than a third or shipboard space, he
said.
The ouUook ii bleak for the Queen
Mary ever to become the money-making
venture Long Beach hoped II would,
Gladish said.
The r~port aak1 the State ~d cm-
aldel' cuUlng off further lllarlnC of oil
revenues With Long Bead& "on 1the
grounds that this city has demonstrated
no need for this public money for proj-
ect& of statewide interest. l!...--..
Frotn P .. el
LAND USE ..•
the plan is merely what could be and
not a guarantee of what will be.
Gene.rally speaking the plan is broken
Into thrtt major portions. 'rlieoe include:
-Land preserves which may not be
developed at all during the next ten
years.
-Planning reserves which are 1n the
process of Intensive planning now and
may be ,...c1y foe deVl!loplll<lll any Ume.
-Urban areas which are currently
under development or on the verge of
development today.
The element includes numerous au~
categories such as 16 dUferent residential
density Jumpings, ranging from one or
more units per acre to as many as
40 units per acre.
During Wednesday's public hearing
objections, to the plan were voiced by
city officials and private citlzem who
claim the plan ls either inconsistent
with their own general plans or I.a un-
necessarily dlsalminatory against cer·
tain types of development.
N. California
Market Strike
In Settlement
\
BVUJ!TIN . . '
. SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -A lmta1""
ttttlement In tM 17-day Nortlttm Cali-
fornia · butcben' strike aplmt 1aper-
markets wu reached &oday after mara-
1boa 1enlon1 pre1nred by t.be bolktay
1eaaon1 Ute federal mediation service
office announced.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Just as they
were reported nearing a g r e e m e n t ,
negotiations broke down again today in
the 18-day strike-lockout I n v o I v I n g
California supermarketa, a management
spokesman said.
'Ibe two sides ·were "far apart" on
a number of key issues and talks 1n
W asblngton were broken off. a
spokesman for the Food Employers
Council said.
He aaid the bargaining woold return
to Loa Angel .. and ·prObahly wouldn't
ftlUmt unUl after avwtmas.
"They coukln't make a deal and there
was no use to stay there in the cold."
said spokesman BGb VoigL
A total news blackout had been im-
posed on the Washington talks, held
in the offices of William J. Usery Jr.,
chief federal media tor.
Earlier, published reports said agree-
ment appeared near in the dispute which
has Idled about 22,000 food lndWllry
workers in nine Southern California coun-
ties aloog wilh lood workers ellewhue
in the state.
Wax Head Heist
Uses Paper Bag
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Two youlhs
entered the Wax Museum at Fisherman's
Wharf and asked attendant Chris Shean
for a paper bag. He gave a bag to
the boya and conllnued his rounds In
the otherwise empty museum .
About 10 minutes later, he noticed
the youths had left. He also noticed
the beads or Frankenstein and one of
Jack the Ripper's victim! were rnlssing.
PoJice said the youths decapitated the
figures and used the paper bag to com-
plete the thell.
Nobody Sells G.E. Micro·~ave Ovens for less than "I>uA{a,f.
I
PORTABLE
MICROWAVE OVEN
COME tN FOR A --· CGOllll , ••• ' _,.,,,.
IY A HOME ECONOMIST
.. SATURDAY, DEC: 22 "'
1-2 NO~N • 4 P.M •. . .
90 DAYS CASH. 11!!1!!!!
WITH APP~OVED -
. CltlDl1 ~
1815 NEWPORT BLVD., tBm
Downtawn Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788
I .
I
f
.. .
un~ilqlion eaeli
-Fountain ·Valley
~Teday!s-F
N.Y. Stoeks
* *.
VOL. 616, NO. 354, 4 .SECTIONS, 44 PAGES --ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSOA Y, DECEMBER 20, 1973 TEN CENTS
Huntingt~n . Master Plan Deadline 'Fiasco'·
'Ibere were no turprise! but coo-
alderable criticism \Vedneaday night u
Huntlng1on Beach councilmen approved
two state-mandated elements tq the
city's master plan.
They had to approve both the land
use element and the open space .and
conservation element to .meet tbe'.state's
strict Jan. 1 deadline.
Councilmen agreed they had met the
deadline but met It poorly.
"ThJs Is really a fiasco ," complained
Councilman Jack Green. 0 We have pros-
tituled tho. ~ mechanism and hurt
our own credibility as a city with this."
Their chief complaints centered oo
the open space and conservation
elements developed by the planning
department.
The CC}flServation pl•n . categorizes all
potentlal open or recreational lands in
the city's aphere of .inftuence -about
31400 acres planners say -which in-
cludea Bol~ Chica and Swiset Beach.
The J>e)ll not only outlines what does
or does • '. t exist but includes goals
. . •• ' ueen
Over Thfl Bead
This-pigeon at the historic mission in San Juan Capistrano seems at
ease with the world, .certalllly at ·ease,.wllh . .Kevin O'DonneQ,o ~'of
Founlaln Valley as iMI ,;,;ts on the younpter's.head. • . . .
I • , . " . : t '. . . . .
$inger 1lobby:DJ1rin Die s
After ,2nd Hem.·t Surgery
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Bobby Darin,
the brash smlatious teen idol of tlie
early !911oo wbo aang "Mack the
Knife" and HSpJ1'll"Splash" and married
Sandra ~. cf!e<I today alter bis lec;ond
open heart operation. He was 11. •
"He never teal!Y came upmd, Iller
the ojieritloll,~ a apolreaulb.i1ald. "lie
was just too _,ak to nf9Vei.~'f ~.Jo( -~ parin made a n\UDl>Or.. .of .• .-.
that sojd more tharf a ddlDbil ~.' ,
Including 0 Dream Lover/', and .wen Bn
Oscar nomination as best supporting
actor in 1983 for · his role in .. "capt.-
Newman, M.D."
His marriage to Miss Dee, one of
the teen idol rOlllanc.s of the 1980s,
lasted alx yeari. r.
Darin died at 12:15 a:m. at Cedara
of Lebanon H .. pltal, less then oeven
¥urs alter a team of four · surgeona linl:ilied Ille ......i .open boarl operallon
to be performed Oil him. In lea thail
thtee yell'I.
In Febnlarl' • 1171 two valvea were
lnaerted In. Darlll'a beart,, -which bad
been weakto<d by a bout ol. rbeumaUc
fever at the ace of 1.. •
Dming routine, postoperative checks
last week, doctors aald they dllcovered
that one of the valves wu malfunc..
tloning. A ·new valve wu Installed
Wednesday .in an operation that took
Dorin aptelfied In hlo will that his
bod)' -be donated to tne<!IC&l octmce.
A apokesmon 711ald the body hid al·
feldy been ir~erred to UCl.A wbere
lt would be lll<d for ..-rc11.
"He felt \hat II there could be any
plrpoM -~y. d7tng 11 -be to help ••• other people'• ll'ltl," aald
the---,
'"""· he Ald, tbert will be no tu. neral altholtgh lliends may bold ptivate
.. •
,UPI~
'l'llN-AO E IDOL DEAD AT :J7
Bobby Dorl~ Succum~ •
• IMf!IOrlal ceremonloo.
'florin •wu born Walden Robert CUSot·
t. In a tough area of the Bronx In
New York City. Jn hit early days In
lllow·buslnm, he picked up a reputation
(See JIO!IBY, Pqe ti
•
for obt&ining more open space. 1bat's
what set off the critlclsm.
One section suggest.. the city will
attempt to acquire eight acres of park
land for each 1,000 residents.
Mayor Jerry Matney fumed at the
suggestion, reminding planners, . "We
can't afford this and we never adopted
this as city policy. Why weren't some
of these things refined Out?"
The eight acres standard was listed
In the ·city's Goals and Objectives {GO)
s t u d y as desirable, but councilmen
'
4 lndicted
In Tax Case
Tampering
From Wire Servkes
A Huntington Beach woman who has
battled local school and city tax in·
creases has been indicted by the Fresno
Grand Jury on charges or conspiracy
to obstruct justice in an income tax
case.
Claire Kelley and three other tu pro-
testors were indicted Wednesday on
charges of tampering with evidence in
the ~trial lat weet fl/.-NA«w.1 Tax
Rebelllon chairman Jim Scott.
The others indicted +, Scott, a
Fresno insurance agent; W. Vaughn
Ellsworth ol Mesa, Ariz.ona, and William
E. Dexter, a disbarred St. Paul, Minn.,
attorney who faces charges tor prac-
ticing without a Jicense.
The Grand Jury indictment contends
Mrs. Kelley and the others lrled to
place a document in evidence in a
government exhibit that didn't belong
there.
Mra. Kelley, wbo couldn't be reached
for comment today, bas been a member
of the Committee for Sensible Tuation
in Huntington Beach.
In addition to opposing most !'lchool
and city bond or tax issues, Mrs. Kelley
has publicly objected to paying income taxes. _
Jn one incident she refused to pay
her taxes in paper money cootending
that it isn't legal tender, 1and. offered
• silver instead.
The Tax Rebellion organization claims
that the government's method of col-
lecting federal income taxes is un-
constitutional partially because a strict
relading of the Constitution mentions only
gold and silver coins.
~t. co~~icted la.ft week in a jury
trial of failing to file federal income
tax returns for four years, is trying
to have his oonviction overturned, on
the grounds that a federal agent
burglarized his motel room.
Free on bond, Scott today filed for
a new b:ial or a stay of execution.
deliberately avoided making it city policy
because of the high cost of achieving
it.
Ken Reynolds , who resigned this week
as planning director but will be kept
up to six months as a consultant, tald
councihnen this· department considered
the element .-an outline of desirable
goals, not standards which have to be
met
"Th.is become! a part of the general
plan, and ·we were very clear on some
things we did not want as port of tire
general plan, especially the park acres."
replied Councilman Al Coen. "I think
it was an abuse of somebody's discretion
to leave that in there."
Deputy City Attorney John O'Connor
admitted he was not satisfied with the
document.. but said because of the state
deadline there was no real solution .
He also . said councilmen were right,
standards in the open space element
would be considered as law, but he
added that the city can revise the open
•• Ill
Dally 1"1'91 S.taff ..,_.
THIS IS THE HOUSE MR. JOHNSON'S THIRD GRADERS BUILT
At Meadow View SchOol, Sug1r, Spice ,ind LittJ• Fingers
· ..
ll! Sweet ll~lise
Kids Cook Hom e fo r: OC Ho spi tal
By TERRY COVILLE
01 !he Dally l"Mtt SWI'
It will never meet the building oocle,
but the house built by young students
at Meadow View School in Huntington
Beach is the spiciest structure in town .
The walls and roof are ginger bread .
The garden fentt is ribbon candy. For
roofing shinglea they used gilm drops.
Lollypops dot the front yard like leinon
trees. . . .
Hospital authorities . said Tracy's con·
dition has improved and she will go
home before Christmas, although she
is not completely recovered .
She nearly drowned Nov. t in a
neighbor's swimming pool, but was
revived by Huntington Beach paramedics
and has been hospitalized since.
. II'•· a s\ght lor· the eyes of Hansel .
and Gretel: .
Mrs. Masters, who served as chief
cook and bottle washer during the ginger
bread project, ·was asked how she kept
tioy fingera out of il
Huntington Free
Oinic Awarded
·Federal Grant
Orange Cooniy SUpervlsors Tuesday
gave the Huntingtori Beach Free CJinic
a ~year, '70,490 grant from county
federat reVenpe stiariri funds. -
Backers of the free clinic told
supervisors their annual operating costs
amount to $210,570. The grant money
will be Used to defray operations and
also for remodeling a new headquarters
site. .
The free clinic has been · promlSed
the use of the i>ollce department's detec-
tive bullding when the police move into
the new civic center in mid-February.
The detective ' bull ding, which wm be
leuOd to the clinic for '! a year,
will be remodeled to Include eight
meclcal exambdnc rooms, four counsel~ • • in& rooma,, Ont large •~rap" room and
• large receptlan roqm.
Spokesmen for the free clinic say
the detect! .. ollloe will offer about three u-· the space of the cumcil clinic office on Ith su.t. Tbe coot af remodel· .
Ing baa been e•lrnatlld at IM,000.
• --~------
•'
)
But the flnt.eyos ·and bands to.t.uch '
it will' be In.a ward at Cbildrin's Hospital
of Ol'ange County, Wbere lix·year.old
./J'racy Westenberg, a Meadow View
kindergartner, has spent the past few
weeks.
Tracy's older brother, Reese, is in
the 3rd grade, so he and his classmates,
wlth the help of teacher William Johnson
and parent volunteer Jeanne Masters,
baked and built the ginger bread house
for Tracy 's ward mates ..
-''I think ti\ey reali~ none of them
would like to be in a bospltal at
Christmas," says Johnson. "So they are
pleased that other younpters will gc.t
tbe house."
Man Discovered ..
St uck in -Ve nt
LOS ANGELES · (UPl) -If Willie
Booker, 19, weighed a rew pounds less,
he wouldn't be in.jail lnday.
A passerby nouceci -Booker stucl< In
an air vent al· a dry cleaning s}f;lp
Wednesilay. BoOker's head. shoulders
aqd arms protruded· and he was squirm-
ing vigorously, .but mel\jng no progress
in freeing bimsell. .
di took_ police an .llou ID unstlck the
:>t, 151-pound BoOker from the u;lnch
vent. He k>ld olllcers he was looking
for a warm place ID aiffp ....., be
got stuclt. '
,.
,;. ,,
· "I '1idn't,". ·~ laughed ... They ·ate ·
half ol lt ·before lt. was built. llut they
won't touch tDe liili.Shed product."
Valley Seeki ng ·
Thr ee Signals
Fountain , ValleY, is asking the Orange
County BoaJd of Supervisors to put _u~
$191,800 to .help improve or signalize
three city streets.
City councilmen · have · requested the
funds from t~ oounty1s 1974-75 Arterial
Highway Finlncing Program. Tbe funds
would be matched by city mbnies.
The requests are for $77.200 to improve
Ellis .Avenue between Ward Street and
Newland Street ; $78,500 to improve
Warner Aventie between E~lid-Street
to the Santa Ana River ; and for $36,100
to improve and signalize the intersection
of Ward Street and Warner Avenue.
.
Plane Crash Kills 2
OONCORD (AP) -A civil engineer
and his nephew were killed Wednesday
when their single-englne Piper-aircraft
crashed ln dense fog and burned near
Buchanan Field. lnvestigatora Identified
the victims as Kellh Grl!llths, (.!, and
his nellhew Brett Grilflths. 17, both of eoncoitl. ..
' ) space element up to three times in
t914.
There was less criUcism of the land
use element which is essentia lly an in-
ventory of current and future zoning
in the city.
After more than two hours or staff
reports, public hearlng and council com·
ments, Councilman Henry Duke summed
up the frustration : "We coulQ have come
in here, opened the hearing, closed it
and left. We can 't amend it or do any.
thing."
• I
State Hits
'Business'
Percent Use
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The city of
Long· Beach improper:ly spent nearly
$14 million In public tidelands money
in converting the Queen Mary to a
museum-of·the--sea and tourist attraction,
state officials said today. 1 The State Lands Division recom· 1 mended that its parent Lands Com·
mission sue the city to force tt to
repay the money to the tidelands tnist
fund. ' The city used '56.6 millloo of lit
$are of UdeJands oU royalties to COOftrt
the ship, the le~gthy Lands Division
i:eport said. Addltionat investments were
made by private companies which held
Queen Mary concessions.
Of that, '13.9 million or 24.7 percent
directly benefltted commercial ventures
on the ship in violation of state law,
the report said.
Long Beach officials submitted a
1 rebuttal statement to the commission
contending all funds were spent properly
and legally.
Long Beach City Manager John Man-
sell said the city would welcome a law-
suit.
He said the commission's claim that
there was a deficit in the tidelands fund
was "totally inconceivable to us and
completely ridiculous."
Mansell aald reports of all expenditures
on the Queen Mary hlld been available
since the beginning of.the project.
"We wonder why, alter fiVe years 'and ·
hundreds of thousand! of dollars spent
(See QUEEN MARY, Page 2)
HOLIDAY TIDINGS
SENT BY ROBBER
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (UP!) -William
Bryant received a Christmas card signed
"From your friendly bank robber -
Richard Alsop."
Bryant is assistant manger of the
fl.iidwest Feder&! Savings and Loan
Association here.
Alsop is serving a sentence in federal
prison at M.artm, ID. after being con-
victed of two EVamville savings and
loan ro~les t\vo years ago, including
one at Bryant'~ office in which $12,000
was taken . 1
•
Orange Coast
•
Weather
It'll be cooler F.;day, according
to the weather service, with highs
in the low 70s Inland dipping to the
UP.per Ms at the beaches. Some
high cloudiness but mostly fair
skies.
INSIDE TODAY
if you're an abandaned dOQ,
your chancea of ,f1nding. a home
are probably better in Hunti1tg..
toll Beach than-0111JWhtrt el1c.
See story, Page 10.
AM llllllln 2t ·~ -.n'' M...,,,...,. IJ
~ ........ Ol'Mte~ 11
ftfA • -.... ---T ........ ... -.... . ·-. ---W.nl.... 4.8
•
•
-
:/t OAJL Y Pll01 " TllurMfu , Dtetmbrr 20, 1973
1--Bom~ IGJIS . •
No. 2 Mair
~In Spain .
Caipers-Pl.ai;u
To S_rep Down
-Orange County ~pervtsor ROlllld
Cupen of Newport &..ch u ld
Wednesday he will 11ep down u
chairman ol the board noit year
and throw his IUJlPOrl to Supervllor
Rllvb Clark ol Anobelm.
~RID (UPI) -'An assa•dn's bomb-
today killed l>rlme Ptfini5ter Luis Carttr0
~. the righl·hand man t o
GenerallsSimo Francisco Franco. in an
exploslon that hurled his car over the
roof of a church where he had Just
attended Mass.
"lie wanted the job this yell'
w~·· I ~t It and I i\i!lk he ehOOiahive rr now, 'Ciij)Ora uld.
Both Caspers and Clark an up
for re-election In June. Caspm
has held the post ol chalnnan
for t~'O of his four yean on the
board.
Ca!pers said he wants to give
up tlie chairmanship to devote
more time to the needs of h11
district.
"The prime minister was the victlm
of an assassination," a government
spokesman announced nine hours after
he was killed.
.1 • Vice President Torcuato Femandei
.. ~lranda iinmediately took over as prlme
.. pUnister.
Tbe government said Adm. Carrero,
•'IO, Wal killed by "a potent charge
•J>f explosives" plantl'd. in a tWUlel •,...kmen bad been digging under the
\,Jtreet in front of the church and around
• ·tbe «<n<!r from the U.S. Embassy.
.... Wltnealel said the prime mlnlster's
Dodge llmousine was hurled agalnat the
~ roof of the church, bounded over it
• ·and landed on a second floor terrace
, ·on the other side of the building.
'1'11e text of the government said:
"The investigaUon carried out at the
'.siie~the death or the president or
.. tbe government (prime iiiiniSter) b a s
, 'aboWn it was a criminal act.
· "From the buerilent of the building
No. lot on Claudio C'A>ello in hladrid , . an underground tunnel was dug to the
'•center 'of said street In front oC said
".building.
'·. "At this point, a powerrut explosive
· charge was set under the pavement
, and triggered from the outside at the
~ exact moment that the president's car
· 'made ita customary journey.
. "Police inspector Ju an Antonio Bueno
. . Fernandez and the driver or (Carrero's)
.-yehicle, Jose Luis Perez Mondeja, also
'died." Carrero had just lef't the church where
. , he attended Ma ss almost every da y
. berore being dri ven to his office. Wit-
~ J1esses said the car was moving from
, .lbe curb when it was blown at least
· 50 feet into the air.
· . · Carrero's death· was not announced
orficially ror three hours and the . _ assassination was not mentioned for nine
hours.
1-After the natiooal radio and television
. networks broadcast the announcement,
·~they switched to tuneral music
Infonnation Minister Fernando de lJnan
·. then came on tbe air to announce a
· "~Y mourning period which meant
·:·dosing of movies, theaters and other
· ' places 'Of entertainment.
Spanish television then went ol1 the
.air. Tbe Spanish stock ezchange also
· shut down.
·.r · The bJast tore out a crater z fef:?t
deep and 30 feet acro91 In the place
where carrero•s car had just passed.
:Golden West's
· Christmas Show
: .. Costs a Gift
For the price of a toy, west Orange
~·County residents will be treated to a
'.. m>edal Christmas st.age show at 2 p.m ..
'Saturday, in the litUe theater at Golden
West College, Huntington Beach.
.,
' ' ..
.,
,'
"'. ..
'
Toys collected at the door will be
given to the U.S. Marine Corps ror
its annual Toys for Tot! campaign. The
price of admission is one new toy.
· Some of the performers include Bonnie
Owen from Huntington Beach who won
the Miss Orange County title last yeir;
piano soloi~t Ron Neagle; Eddie Baker,
a young lad who recently did his
"Hapless Hobo" dance routine at the
Palace Hotel in San Francisco : gymn asl
Allison Fonte; ballerina Phyllis Cyr ;
Joan Golden's dancers rrom La Habra;
and a group of local youngsters doing
the "mt and Foond Christmas Play."
Th< show Is produced by Charl ey
Baker, a Fountain Valley dance in·
structor. !\farines in full dress uniform
.,c:ill also be present.
OIAN•I COAST Ml
DAILY PILOT
'Tl'lt Orfflft C....tl DAILY PILOT Wlltl ~kll
1, COrNlll\td.ltl• Ntws·PrtH, It P\lfllltMoll w,
,~. O••llO• CO.•I PUD!ltl'llftg Comp.11nv. s.,...
••1• tOillol\1 t rt P\llllltllfocl, M-•1 fllrDllCll'I
Frk11y, tor COlll Mn1, H.wport ktcfl,
/'lu"•lngton lh.tcl11,oun11>n Yflley, L1aun1
l uch, l•vln•ISl<ldlt~~k -""' Sin Clefntnlll
S111 J111n C1•l1tr1110. A 1fnlll ,..1on11
ldll .. k Pll'ollllo«I ilh1~1"' Ind Sund1ya.
,,.._ pr~;1111 M lltl'llnt p1111t i. 11 111 W.11
Bty Strw!, COl!I MIU, Clllfornl1, tHH.
Ro\1rt N. W11cl
'rKldt nl 11111 l"11Dll1flllf'
J1,k ... C11rl1v
Vi« l'tnkltnl ,.,. G-•I M1111111
TI!tMll tl:tt¥il'
liOltor
Tlit m11 A, Ji411r,hi111
M-11111 ldnor
0.MIH H. Leo1 .. i,h1ril P. Nall
Aol1M11t Mlllltfnl ld1"8rt
T ''"' Cowl Ito Wn t Oftl'IOI CllllllT EllilOr
. ' . H ........... ltOHke
17171 lo11h loul1w1N
M1Ut11i A4ilr1n1 P.O. I•• 790, 92641 l-';
. . .
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--L...-9"dl: 222 """' °'""""' Clll• "'-1 nt Wftl .. ., '""' ~ tMtt11 am ..._, """°"I'll
Slit Cltfnefttt: lb Mertti 11 C.rni.. l11I
, .. .,.... (7141 641 ... Jll
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fl.-111911111 O'"'" ~ C1t•::•lll J ... IJ:lt
~. 1'1), Of9flM C...t ~"'"' ~r. "' ,... .--. ""'""-.., ""Wiii Mlttw, w lfWI"~ Mttl•
rl1t1' " ,.. ...... •llilMiil ...U.f ""
.......... CllllY'l'ltfll -· .... dMi ... , ... N llll ti Ctltt IMM,
Cell"""'· MMct"i.tltft. "' ~-u.u ~~"' ..... Q,11 -*"' 'Pill!~,., ·.• ,,_ ...... _,.au """91\IY.
~-!: '----------
.From Pflfle l
QUEEN MARY •.
by the stat. In retearchlng this proJect,
that expendltum they knew .. llled -or
were contemplated -and which they
belped review prior to oubmlllion by the
ciW, should now be 1 matler of auch
grfat concern," he aald. ·
F.dward N. Gladish, the division's ex-
eculive officer, said the converted ocean
liner has become more of a commercial
venture-"with a ..maritime-musewn as
Its appendage."
That violates the original concept of
the project in which commei'clal opera·
UonJ -such 81 sbope, restaurants and
a hotel -w e r e to account for less
than a third or shipboard space, he
said.
The outlook Is bleak for the Queen
Mary ever to become the money-making
venture Long Beach hoped it would,
Gladish said •
The report said the State should con--
sider cutting oil further -sharing-of oil
revenues with Long Beach "on the
grounds that this city has dernonatr1ted
no need for thlJ publlc money for proj-
ects of stat.ewlde interest."
Giadish's report also said there were
oerlous legal quettlon! about the spend·
ing of aome money in the conversion.
For instance, he said, the city spent
$1.9 million for an Insulation project
actually worth only !400,000.
The three-member comm..Lu.loo was to
coMlder the · report durtng a meeting
today. .
'Ille city bought the retired queen
of the BrlUsh puaenger fleet In 1967
with the original plan of converting
It to a dockside museum and tourist
attraction tor 18.75 million. But project
COl!ll aoared. 11 planl were expanded
and unezpected coaveralon problems
were enOJUDtered.
'lbe report also dfllfl!'Oed with !be
contention ol city -!bat the proJ·
ec:t ts beginning to pay for Ille!! after
being open l<I !be public for two years.
During the first two yean ol operaUon, .
the Queen Mary project hu run at
a 13.8 million deficit to the tidelands
trust fund, the report said.
"'Ille staff has prepared financial
statements baaed on Information pro-
vided to 111 by the city and they present
a rather bleak picture,'' Gladish said.
While the museum itself bu made
a profit, the foundation that operates
it is IU million behind In paymenll
on a $4 million loan obtained to coostn.ict
exhibits.
.From Pqe l
BOBBY ...
as a brash, rocky kid who got ahead
more through his energy and determina-
tion than by talent.
ln later years, associates said, he
mellowed a bit.
He burst onto the national mu.sic scene
in 1960, when his distinctively fast tempo
recording of 11Mack the Knife" -the
sardonic ballad of an elegant mugger
from "The Threepenny Opera" by
Berthold B(e<:ht and Kurt Weill -won
him one of two Grammy awards.
Darin noted that two Grammys were
all that Frank Sinatra had won, and
sald '1I hope to pw Frank in
everything's he done.11
Later, he predicted that he ~uld
be "a show business legend by the
time I'm 25." He refused to accept
dates In New York City, he said, until
he could appear as a star in the most
prestigious rooms in town, betause he
wanted to go home in style. ·
Dartn told friends that his father was
a "smaJI-time gangster" who died before
Darin wu born , and that his mother
was on y:elfare when he was a child.
He was a bright student, and won ad·
mission to the highly rated Brom: High
School of Science, and attended lhe
Hunter College Bronx campus for one
semester.
But he learned to play drum.t and
worked during bis school vacations
in the Cataktlls, his entry to ahow
buslneu. In lll54 he started wrtlin1 and
alnging "°mmerclala in New York.
He laler wrole hlJ hit IVCk tune,
''Splish.Splash."
He met Miss Dee in It!' whtn they
worked. toaether on a movie In Italy.
He was 24 and ahe was ll They wer:e
married Dec. t, 191111, )Umping the gun
on lhe scheduled wedding ("We just
wanted to get it over, with ," she said)
by holding ·an Impromptu ceremony In
a friend's apartment In Ellubeth, N:J.
at 3 in the momlng, borrowlnl a ring
from one ol Darin's boyhood friends.
'Ibey broke up In 198S, reconciled,
and were divorced In 11166. They had
a son, Dodd, now 11 ·
On June 25 of this year, he marred
Andrea Yeager, st 1 legal aocretary.
--
Standards -
-"Tighter Now--
At Freeways
Anyone who wants to build a . house
or an apartment next to a freeway
Jn HunUnston Beach will have to do
lt under etrlcter environmenlal controls,
the city council decided Wednesday
night.
Counciin\en agreed to ""' a Z\16-unlt
apartment complex propoetd nezt to
the San Diego Freeway at Edinger
Aven ue and Newland Street as a prece-
dent for more envi ronmental control.
The developer. Shelter Industries, Inc.,
was told to ~t tough noise and air
polluUon standards to protect the tenants
from the hazards of living next to a
·freeway.
C.OUncllmen al!IO told spokesmen for
Sheller that before anyone would be
allowed to occupy the 1partment11 they
would be m ... ured to see if !be Inside
of them Is as quiet, shielded from
freeway noise, as engineers predict they
will be.
The Shelter spokesmen Aid they 1 were
arraid such a performance standard
Y!'ould kill financing for the project,
but when councilmen refused to back
down. they agreed to try.
Dick Harlowe, an executive assistant
to· the city administrator,..... said today
the city 1taff will now try to inco'i'porate
the noise and alr pollution standards
for construction next to freeways into
an ordinance .
11we never had any such standards
before." he said. "But anyone who comes
in with. a plan now , will have to be
concerned about protection from the
noise and air pollution of the freeway ."
Court Orders
Sanity Testing
For Cultist
Psychiatric lestlng bu been ordered
for Steven Craig Hurd with the proviso
that he will go on trial Feb. 11 for
the sla!'ini of Mission Viejo teacher
-F!crence Raney Brown If he Is found
to be sane.
Orange County Superior Court Judge
James· Turner Monday named two
psychiatrists to examine Hurd, 21, and
set J111c ~_as the dat. he will read
the rule "1ft\' that report. He set bail
at $500,IXKI.
Hurd wu returned to the COtlllty jail
from Atascadero State Hospital la.st week
after staff at tile state faclllfy detennin-
ed that be had recovered his Hnity.
ldenWiecf in pretrial court ICtJOo as
the leader of tile ·gang that mutUated
and dismembered Mro. Brown, 31, of
El Toro, in an Irvine orange grove,
Hurd wu found two years ago to be
insane and unable to face trial.
Hurd was linked at the time to the
"devil cult" kllling of Mrs. Brown on
June Z, 1970, and the hatchet staying
24 hours earlier of santa Ana service
station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin,
21.
It wu alleged that Mra . Brown was
stabbed to death and portlorui of her
remains devoured by gang members
in a macabre tribute to Satan.
Carlin was axed to death despite his
pleas that he had very little money
at the service station and bis repealed
appeals for mercy.
Hatchet wielder Arthur Craig "Moose"
Hulse, then 17, is serving a life term
in state prison for his part in the
Carlin killing.
Gang member Christoper "Gypsy"
Gibboney, then 17, is serving an in-
def.inite tenn under the California Youth
Authority for his role in the Brown
slaying.
Marina's Girl's
Athletics Eyed
By School Panel
The methods and the goals ol llirls'
athletics at Marina ffigh School In lrun.
tlngton Beach will be outlined tonight
for the Marina C<>mmunlty Council.
MIS9 Betty Morr, head of the girls'
physical education department a I
Marina, will talk to the council at 7:30
p.m. In the school's faculty dining room,
15871 Springllale SL
Interested residents are welcome to
attend tonJght's meeting. The Marina
Conununity C.Ouncll Is composed of
parents, students and staff members.
Meetings are held on the third Thurs·
day of each month with a different
upect ol the school's cumculum
hlgbllghted at each session. For lurther
tntonnation contact council Chairman
Julio "Jay" RJ vera, M6-IS70.
Valley Council
Okays Signals .
Fountain Valley City Cowtcllmen have
approved pllna Cllling for trafllc lllJnsls
•t three tntenec:l1ons Cll1 Sl•ter Avenue
and at Euellcl Street and the San Diego
rreeway.
The city will advertl,. for bids on ,
tho lnlllll•tlon ol 1lgnal1 •t Sl•ler and
San Mateo, .Loa Alamot and Ward
Stmts.
The Orange County Board o f
Supervlsora b bellll ulced by the city
to alloCltt 111,100, ball the n.C..sary money, for tho Euclid oft ramp slpll.
Merrg Crisis
The staff at Bob Mazy Texaco, 1833 S. Coast High·
way, Laguna Beach, hasn't let tho energy crisis
spoil their goodwill to customers this Christmas.
Tho sign went up in a corner of the station's Jot
about a week ago and has given customers some·
thing to smile about "in spite of it all." ""' 1
]_ 0-gallon Weekly Limit
Asked by Energy Chief
Hunti1igton Sets
Special Police
Goal--Drunks
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Energy Oilef
\\'illiam F. Simon asked American
motorists today to limit themselves to
10 gallons of a week and said ir everyone
complied, gasoline rationing may be
averted.
Simon, head of the newly created
Federal Energy Office, al9o asked that
gasoline stations restrict sales to 10
gallons per customer. Both conservation
measures are voluntary -for the time
being.
Simon told reporters that be will make
his recommendation to President Nixon
next week on whether he thinks gasoline
rationing might ultimately be necessary,
but said if there Is compliance with
the voluntary measures be asked, ra-
tioning may not be needed. Meanwhile,
Congressional leaders sought today to
expedite paMage of an emergency
energy bill negotiated late Wednesday
MOVIES REACT TO FUEL
CRISIS. Story, Page 30
GASOLINE INCREASE SEEN
BY FEBRUARY, See Page 38
night by House and Senate conferee!.
They hoped to get the compromlae bill
passed and-approved u quickly u poul·
ble, first by ill~ ~nate, and then by
the Houae, helore beading home for
a monthlong recess .
The bill contain! power for the
Adminl.stratlon . to impose emergency
measures to deal with the energy crisis.
Governor's Wife
Vacates Mansion
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (UPI) -Dedaring
that "our marriage has not returned
to nonnal," Barbara Mandel, wife of
Gov. Marvin Mandel, moves out of the
governor's mansion today, where she
has lived without her estranged husband
for almost siz mont.hJ.
The governor announced last July that
he was leaving his wife of 32 years
to marry Jeanne Dorsey, 38. a Southern
Maryland divorcee. Mandel vacated the
office residence at that time, moving
first to the Annapolis HJlton and then
to a nearby apartment.
Mrs. Mandel remained in the rninJlon
and repeatedly belittled the governor's
decision, blaming it on the increased
<pr,essure of his office.
Under this authority, It could make
mandatory such limitations as Simon
called for-as well as gasoline rationing.
Some members of Congress insisted
that rationing was the only fair aolulion
to gasoline sb()rtages, but Nixon and
most advisers have been resisting this
as a last·re90tt move.
Simon said !be Pmlcleot'a cledllon
on ratlooiJii would be belore the riilulta
of the voluntary meaaurea Simon uked
. are known, but Simon Indicated that
any declllon to tum to rationing would
be Implemented only If conservaUon pro-
grams failed to attain conservation goab.
Ur1ing compliance with the voluntary
limit, Simon said: "I am asking people
to let the 10 oilllonJ la.st them a week.
I am uklng them to stay within the
limit " If JIOlllble
11S:nne drivers 'wtll need more than
10 pllom, lllcb u traveling aale11nen
or -who commute loog dlltan~
to wort and connot form carpoob or
use mus tranait," Simon said.
'"Illus, 1 am uklng tbote drivers who
ctn 8" by with less than their l~aDon
share to do so In order that tho!e
who need more guollne will have It available._" _ _ _____ _
At the same time, Simon announcecl
that 1.5 million bltrelJ of m~ll jet fllel. be ~ to' ln 11r1InesM!,dto help them thtoulb 'I ·cr1s11
period unUJ the end ol January."
CriUcs of the IQ.gallon sale llmll said
that drivers who did not heed the request
to keep cooa...,,Uon to 10 gallon.o •
week could circumvent Ille sales llmlt
by buying at more than one s\IUoo.
Simon said In 1 statement that he
did not think "llll)'OOe needs to IUl!er"
with tho l~allon voluntary limit on
p&
Wax Head Heist
,Uses Paper Bag
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Two yooths
entered the Wax Museum at Fisherman'•
Wharf and asked altendsnt Cbrls Shesn
for a paper bag. 'He gave a bag to
the boyB and continued his rounda In
the otherwise empty museum,
About 10 minutes Jate.r, be noticed
the youths had lefl . He also ootlced
the heads of Frankenstein and one of
Jack the Ripper's victims were missing.
Police Aid the youths decapitated the
figures and used the paper bag to com-
plele the theft.
Huntington Beach police officers ex·
pect to sober a large number of drinking
drivers over the Christmu holidays with
arrests and citatiorui.
Starting Friday night, special police
units will patrol the streets every night
unUl after Jan. 1. They'll have one,
primary mlalon: stop the dnmk driver.
Lt. Emenoo Huie~ commander of
the traffic division, says beefed up
patn>ll will be out nigbtly from 5-p.m.
to 3 1.m. Normal traffic patrol cars
will also put a greater emphasis oa
drunk drivers during the hollda)'I, ho
said.
The extra manpower worth $4,500 wilt
be paid for by the cowity through the
Alcohol and Traffic Safety Projad.
City police officers have been working
with the county project for tbe past
year by Jncreasing the enlofCe'D:\erit
against drlnklng drivers, and also con·
ductln& vohmtary surveys of motoristJ to delermlno their drinlt!Jig hablls.
Since tbe traffic safety program began
last Jonuary, Hunlinltoft Beach officer>
have ltl'elted more lhan -tte drivers
and ilsuecLmor_L.than 2,171 dtatio~
In C01U1ectton with drinking.
-n
''· •I!. "' " ' ' Valley Approves
Work on New
City Water Well
A new Foantain Valley city water
well wtll be COlll!ructed In IZ.houl'Hay
llhllll II Warner and Wlntersburg
Avenue&. •
City councilmen Tuesday approved the
construction., which will take about two .... u.
Original proposals called for 24-11our ...
day operation, which would cut the time
to c1rt11 800 feet In ball. But Mayor
George Scott Tuesday said nearby
homeowner. would complain about night
operation.
Wayne Osborne, city public works
di.rector, said so far oone of the 10
aflected reslclenls hid objected to the
drilling. He pointed out that the nots.
from the drill would exceed that allowed
in the city 's noise ordinance after 8
p.m.
The council unanimously adopted a
1 a.m. to 8 p.m. operation time.
Nobody Sells G.E. Micro· Wave Ovens for less than
•
I
PORYABLE
MICROWAVE OVEN
ITOll HOUllt M•. tflr1 hf, l 1N .. l1li
•
..
..
•1'11811&1•1111 _,...,..
IY A HOME ECONOMIST
SATUIJDAY, DEC. 12
12 NOON· 4 P.M.
90 DAYS CASH •
WITH APPROVED •
CRIDll riliiil!il
1815 NEWPORT BLVD., 1!Bm
Downtown Costa Mesa -PllDlll 548-7788 ,
. .
--Thutsd•Y, Otet111btr 20, 1973 H DAILY PILOT 3 '
"Corpse " of--Man -Eonnd
,
'•• • €lement_e
i
• t
Starr Of~er Quashed
' .
Diedrich Role in 1V ote R ipped by Caspe rs
By WILIJA~I SCllREIBER
Of fllt Olllfr ,lltt $1eff
-1n an undpected maneuver Wed.ne>
day, Oruige <; o u n t y Supervisor J\alph
Diedrich oomered enough board vot es
to withdraw the county's offer to buy
5.500 acres of the Starr Ranch in the
hills above San Juan Capistrano.
Boa rd Chairman Ronal::I Cas~rs ,
prin1e mover of the Starr Ranch ac-
qu isition as a major wilderness park.
~aid !att r Diedrich's action was "a
retribution for my challenging his t>QSi·
tion paper on agricultural preserves and
the future of Orange • C o u n I y
agricultUre. '_'
casper1 Tuesday pushed through a
3-2 rejection of Diedrich's proposa l to
diswlve the Irvine Ranch agrlcuhural
preserves and end the tax shelter they
have set up.
"Mr. Diedrich is obviously a very
poor loser and in this case the oulcomc
was unrortunate," Caspers said.
"He's obviously a man v.·ho doesn 'l
like to be crossed," Caspers added .
"J resent his using somethi ng in the
public interest as a weapon against
another supervisor. That's about as low
as you can get."
* * * * * Starr Ranch Will Go
On Sa,le To Public
The conglomerate or ten charities
holding title to the Starr Ranch wiU
put it up for sale in the wake of
the O r a n g e County Board or Super·
visors' vote to withdraw the county's of-
fer ror the land, the charities' lawyer
revealed today .
William Poindexter, who administers
the Starr Ranch FoW'ldation holdings.
said, "we have been getting numerous
inquiries, both foreign and domestic.
about the land ·for development.''
Poindeiter confirmed that 30me of
the inquiries are coming from Japanese
investors interested in buying the 5,5(11)..
acre parcel for development into a plan-
ned community.
"Since the COWlty has a~rently _
cancelled.. the entire project after spend-
ing thousands of dollars and a year
and a half-'"'On il; the charities are
left with the only choice of listing the
property for sale," Poindexter said.
The county had a firm offer on the
!able of $4.4 million lo buy the ranch
as a major wilderness park. But
supervisors voted 3-2 Wednesday to sup-
port a motion by Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich to cancel the agreement.
A key motivation behind · Diedrich·!
move was a "rumor" that the charities
y,•ere trying lo retain royalties on the
Starr Ranch gravel resources.
Poindexter toda y confirmed t h a l
rur1Klr.
"The charities agree to accept the
cOWlty's very low appraisal of the land
as the purchase price and in view or
that low price; they thought it only
fai r they retain at least a half-interest
in the minerals ," the Los Angeles lawyer
said.
"This would provide added income
to the charities for works such as heart
and cancer research," he added.
Poindexter said he feels the count y's
offer was $1.5 million too Jow but that
the charities wanted to accept it because
it "would have been a great th ing
for the county to have this wilderness
area {or all time."
Poindexter said the charities have no
choice but to put the property back
on_itle market to Jiquidate it and get
out from under property taxes.
He said the land could be offered ·
in two parts, mineral rights and open
space for development.
''There appears to be d lack or desire
on the part of the Board or Supervisors
to complete this transaction so this is
our only course or action." Poindexler
said.
He saki the charitie! are still .more Uia'ri~ williN tO sit' dOwn with the cOunty
and discUss saving the' ranch deal, But
until that time comes, he said. the
land will be up for sale to the highest
bi~der.
County Adopts Land Use
Population Growth _Plan
Orange County Supervisors Wednesday
adopted a ten · year land u s e element
ol the county general plan that could
allow population in unincorporated areas
lo grow by 500.000.
The 1983 Land Us e Element, approved
l.\\'O weeks ago by the county Planning
Commission afte r nearly t\\'O years or
v.'Ork, was accepted without change. but
supervisors strongly indicated revision
work should begin immediately.
Supervisors resolved to adopt the plan
now to meet a state-mandated Jan.
t deadline. They said they'll amend
it later.
State law allows three amendments
to the plan a year and county planners
have already scheduled the first amend-
ment date in April, H. G. Osborne.
interim county planning director, told
lhe supervl90rs Wednesday.
The new plan could permit 500,000 new
-lo in county lerrllory· by 11113 if
all developments pennitted under lhe
plan's zoning description are approved
by lhe l!Upervlsors.
But Irwin Schatzman, a planning of·
ficial who outlined the elements for
the planning commission, told the board
--.
the plan is merely ~at could be and
not a guarantee of whit v.·ill be.
Generally speaking the plan is broken
inlo three major portions. These include :
-Land preserves v.1lich may not be
develOped at all during the next ten
years.
-Planning reserves which arc in the
process of intensive planning now and
may be ready for development any tim~.
-Urban areas v.•hi ch are currently
under development of on the ve rge or
development today. ·
The-element includes numerous sub-
categories such as 16 diffe rent residential
density lumpings, ranging from one or
more units per acre to as many as
40 units per acre.
During Wednesday's public hea ring
objections to the plan were voiced by
city officials and private citizens who
claim the plan is either inconsistent
with their own general plans or is un-
necessarily discriminatory against cer-
tain types or devel,.ment.
supervisors also beard obpections from
environmental leader Dale Secord who'
warned that unless the land use element
is brought into line with current coun-
ty wning, a flood <Of lawsuits will reSult~
Minorities, Women
Caspers sajd he will rely on public
opinion and possible action by the Orange
County Grand Jury to reverse the
decision and added he is hopefu l he
can win back the vote o( Anahci1n
Supervisor Ra lph Clark to tw-n the tid e
in January to save the land .
The action surprised nloSt county ()f-
ficials who worked for months to close
the deal fo r the ranch along Ortega
1-lighway at a price of $4 .4 mill ion.
Diedrich. who was joined in the 3-2
vote by Supervisors Robert Batt in and
Clark. succeeded in, freezing the $1.5
n1illion down payment offered by the
county until after a public hearing in
January .
Diedrich said the Starr Ranch Foun·
dalion, a conglomerate of 10 charities
holding title t9 the land, has had two
months to reply to the county's offe r
and has not done so to date.
;,I am also disturbed by reports that
certain interests have been discussing
acq uisition of mineral ri ghts on the land
fo r the gravel deposits before the county
gets title." Diedrich said.
He would not say where the reports
came from but said any conditions like
that would be unacceptable lo him.
"I don't like the smell of the whole
thing," Diedrich said. "I am sti ll in
favor of acquiring only the open space
that is in immediate da nger of devclop-
1ncnt.''
lfe also said he is still unsure if
so much money should be spent on
land "so far from the population cen·
tcrs."
Dicdrich's mo ve caught everyone by
surpr ise.
It came al the ve ry end of the meeting
as an off-agenda item following a 30-
minute musical present ation by a choir
from the Joplin Boys Ranc h.
Cas pers said during the discussion he
is willing to seL a public hearing on
the matter to force the charities to
make a decision. But he said cancellation
of the agreement could negate all the
v.·ork done so far toward buying the
land.
Caspers said he is of the opinion
that Starr Ranch Foundation attorne)'
William PoinQexter has "botched the
deal up by trying lo make a deal
loi the grave1'rlghts."
Assistan t Orange County Real Proper:
ly Services Directo r Joe Hennessey. who
has been the county's key agent in
the negotiations, tod ay confirmed tha t
Sta rr Decision
Cat1ses Dismay
In Cap istrano
\Vednesday·s withdrav.•al of the coun-
ly's offer to buy the Starr Ranch hit
ha rd in San Juan Capistrano -the
city most directly affected by any change
of plans (or the acreage .
City Manager Donald \\'cidner reacted
to news Wednesday afternoon with
dismay and sa id the most immediate
ef(ect of the ap parent collapse in negotia-
1ions v.·ould be renewed city efforts to
file a sphere-o f-influence map.
The project fi rst was tossed to plan-
ning consultants early this year. but
"fell to the back burner.'' Weidner said.
"This most certainly woul d cause the
work to start up again on the map."
he said.
The document. v.'hich has had its share
or raise starts, would denote the areas
surrounding San Juan where land use
would directly affect the city.
"And were the ranch to fall into
private bands ror development ' the im-
pact on San Juan would be massive,·•
' \Veidner said.
Oft.ega Highway - already the focal
point of disputes over heavier traffic
loads -would be the only highwa y
serving such a development
•
Educator Hits Proposals
all Ci!J!omla school districts. By FllEDl!RIClt 8CllODIEllL °' .. ....., .......
South Lagunan Clay Mltcti.11, member
of lhe &tale Boord of F.dlicallon, 1oday
had ""'"" stUf crltlclam of Pl'OPOlliJ
to hire more minorities and Womtti
in California schools .
A fl:nal public hearing and vote on
lhe mal1o[ will not take place until Fe~.
dedicated teachers beCause they are
limited in other activities. If you g c t
a real good handlca.pped tf!:ache r that
cuts the mustard, it's a good inspiration
to the students/' he explained .
Speaking from his home. Milcbell said
the proposals were "jockeyed-around
to appease the minority groups."
"We should gel lo the point where
quality education ii the import@..nt thing. •t •
said Mitchell. "! feel qulie strongly we
sland a real d•11&1'r ol ml•ing qualily
'l>!ucaUon by l!Jlnl 'to cater to minority
groups juSI becaulO Ibey aro minorit)"
groups."
"People should be Judged on ability
-regardless or color," be said.
The state board latit week gave
preliminary approval ol prosrama to
hire more. minorities and women in
Mitchell said ln many instances a
job wUJ bo glvea to a petson who
I• "qualif'ied '"' quall!lable, whalever
that means."
"II they are quallflable. lhey should
be hired on a temporary basis,
reprdless or oolor," Mltchtll said.
Re said programs, df!:signed to hire
more mlnorltlet and women may cause reverse discrimination against other non-
minarity applicants.
While on lhe oubjcct or hiring prac·
tle<s, Mllchell said the sl•l• needs lo
Jncrtase emp10yment opportunities ror
handicapped teachers, such as those af·
Dieted bY blindness or conlined to a
wheelchair.
11Some of these people make l11e most
ln other matters that came up before
the stl\te board; Mitchell said he rinds
some 'merit with a plan to allo\v students
lo leave school at age 14.
He suggested that some studenls over
14 might be better off In vocational
education or apprentic..'<!ship programs
rather than fcgulnr programs. ,;Of
counc. it's somethi ng that must be
car(!fu~ty and lo i: I ca 11 y evaluated,"
Milcbell said.
The board went ort record against
reducing the age to 14 from 18.
Mitchell sald be que~tlons the energy
savings that coold be realized by putting
shtdcnLS on ,. a lour-da y Khool week.
as suggested by one assemblyman.
White C:hrist11aas
.<\ctress Edy Williams takes advantage of the warn1 Southern Cali-
fornia weather to-flock-her Christmas-tr-ea-with "snow". undet-..the
direction of Sam Palazzola, tree lot atte.ndant. The weather, a winter
phenomenon in the southland, helps ~eep residen_ts i1.1 shirt sleeves
and bikinis while sections of the nation are suffenng 111 below-freez-
ing temperatures.
•
Court Rules Dana Strand
Not Considered Public
By TOM BARLEY
Of Tilt Dl ilf P'llM Slllf
Dana Strand is JJOt 1a public 'beach,
and lawyers for Orange County ·railed
to prove In a full-week trial that It
has ever been one, Superior Court Judge
James H. Walsworth ruled todaf.
The ruling rejects the county's argu·
1nent that the three-acre shoreline area
fall s under the provisions or prescriptive
!'ights laws and leaves the Chandler-
Sherman Corporation free to develop
the ocean·front property.
"I am bitterly disappointed," Deputy
County Counsel A. C. Wahlstedt. Jr.,
sa id today. "But I cannot comment
on our future action including possible
appeal or the decision until I have in-
fo rmed the county supervisors of Judge
\\lalsworth's ruling."'
"I thought we had a good case. and
,,,;
I also thought 've put on some pretty
solid evidence to ba ck it," WahJstedt
said. "This means. of coUrse, lflal !he
Chand.Jer-Shf!:rman people can now bar
the beach to the publlc."
Judge. WaJsworth stated in his brief
ruling that i! the county had proved
public use in the five years prior to
1956 he would have ruled for the county.
Walstedt said.
".Frankly, J thought we'd prove public
use from much farther back than that,"
the county lawyer added. Wahlstedt's
trial witnesses included a local resident,
who testified lD using the beach from
around the turn of the century.
Los Angeles attorney, E d w a r d
Fitzgerald had not been notified of. Judge
Walsworth's ruling today, but he welcom-
ed the decisioq as bing."absolutely fair."
Dog Makes .
Discovery
At l(noll
By JOUN VALTERZA
01 lllt 0 1llr Jt/ .. I Slt fl
The badly decomposed body or an
old man \\'as discovered on a secluded
knoll overlook ing San Clemente High
School early today .
The condition or the remains wa~
such that police initially were unablt
to determine the se x or the homicide
victim. Investigators said lhe body had
appa rently bee n dumped several week~
ago and \vas found with its (eel pointed
uµ a slope.
Police Chier CJifrord Murray said a
canvas tarpaulin with metal grommet~
along the edges had been tossed over
the corpse and only allo\ved exposure
or tv.·o legs and an arm.
Ofticers sealed off a long section or
Avenida Pico imnfediately inland fropi
the high school campus which is closed
£or the holidays.
Coroner's investigators spent three
hours in a painstaking examination of
!he area surrounding the remains and
shortly after noon removed the tarpaulin
and discove red thal the vict im was an
elderly man wit h reddish blond hair.
The only clothing on the vict im was a
pair of light-colored shorts aod a dark
shirt.
Chief Murray said it was impossible to
detennine 1vhat may have contributed to
the man 's death. The victim, he added,
appeared to be very short , perhaps in
his 50s or 60s.
The remains were discovered at about
9 a.m. by Thomas Doyle Solomon,· of
124 Patero De Oro, who told police
he had been walking his dog when
the animal ran over a roadside em-
bankment and began wallowing in the
bushes.
Solomon discovered to his horror that
his pet was rolling on a body.
Immediately after the discovery U1t
resident ran nearly hair a mile to a
pay phone al San Clemente High School
to call police.
Later, Solomon reported th al M
regularly exercises his dog in the remote
area and last week he and the animal
were in the same area but noticed
nothing .
That report led to s.peculatk>n by police
that the remains cpuld possibly ·have
been clumped over lhe road.side long
after death.
I sraeli W ounClea
To Get Playho}'
TEL AVIV (AP) -Three lhcmand
copies of Playboy magazine, nude
centerfold and all, are en route to Israeli
soldiers wounded in the October war.
,.trs. Ephraim Katzlr, wife of the
Israeli president, requested the shipment
ef lhe men's magazine in a recent
conversation with U.S. Ambassador Ken·
nc t;1 Keating.
fr om H.J. GARl\ETf
l
' •
,•
·'
with sincere' best
wishes for a happy
holi day season.
H.J .GAI\l\EIT f URNITURE
PROFESSIONAL Open Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thurs. & Fri. Eves. COSTA MESA, CALIF.
•
,
I 4'"DAl).Y Pll.OT
•
wUla
Tom
urphiue .. •::·." .,
upervisor I .. .
i trQps 'Gift'
I CKV TICKY POLITIX: Our good ·~' e County Board or Supervisors I . a special little serenade yesterday
youngsters from Joplin's Boys RaDeli dropped by the board room and
offered a fe~ Yuletide carols.
t after that, Third Dist rict
isor Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton
his little Christmas present 10
pie of Orange County.
moved that the board scuttle its
lanned purchase of the 5.500-acre
Ranch which, for more than two
now, has been envisioned as
e County's wilderne:M Park.
. part of his rationale. Diedrich sug-
that Starr Ranch was too far
ved from our county's "population
r" to be spending $4.4 mill ion for.
properly.
. have to suspect, howe ver. that
Id be dirficult to have a wildemes.o;
these days right in the center
ange CoWlty's population.
yway, Dedrich asked that the funds
zen and a hea ring be set sometime
i~ anuary on whether or not to go
a~ with the purchase.
iP: WAS SUPPORTED in this freez'
blfSanta Ana 's Bobby Battin and
~eim's Ralph Clark. Filth District
!rivosr Ronald Caspers of Newport
h and First District Supervisor Dave
er of Garden Grove voted nay.
spers, who has been spearheading
park move, see~ed particularly
· ed by Diedrich's unexpected and
pt attack on lhe Starr Ranch pro-~-t on the face of it. you might
saiiect that what we have here is
a;tatUe where Caspers wants to spend a~ of park money a:nd Diedrich want
t'!'t'ave It. .-•ELL, NOT REALLY. It is more
ous than that. Some tltinkers even
est it 's more aroma of partisan
ics up there in our wond erful County
~u see, you have to , remember tha t
S•rvisor Diedrich trotted out a great
ue.is just the other day in proposing
l'llfl aJJ tbe Irvine Company agricultural ~rve lands should be removed from
ttjJ: special status. ·
.----)biis, of course, v.·ould force the taxes ui~on the open land and undoubtedl y
a~lcrate development -a condition
~ may not be terribly appropriate rJRtit now.
~ IT DEVELOPED, Diedrich Jost
battle in another 3 to 2 vote,
Caspers. Baker and Clark opting
the ag preserves: at least at this tlfe. ' ~ as his last maneuver of the old
Diedrich got even with our Fifth
ct su pervisor by putting the kibosh
Caspers' hopes for a wilderness park. ~ Caspers claimed after the session
t@.t Diedrich warned him that this "'as
only the begiMing. \Vhatever that
means.
So it seems tha t the name o( th e
game among our supervisors is ';if you
vote against one of my big deals then
I'm goi ng to vote against )'ours."
You shoot me down and I'll shoot
you down.
SO DIEDRICH GOT even. He has
IY.'O other Democrats who no doubt will
stick right with him in the voling on
our non-partisan supervisorial board.
And the main thing is to get those
t\vo Republican s -Caspers and Baker.
But what about the public losing ils
wilderness park?
Oh, nc\'er mind th e public. Let them
eat cake.
Hm1t Sa ys Spied
On Gold,vater
WASHINGTON (AP l -C:Onvicted
Watergate conspirator E. Howard Hunt
has testified to the Senate Watergate
committee staff that he spied on Sen.
Barry Gold\\•ater (R·Ariz.}. during the
1964 presidential campaign. The
WaJhington Post reported in its Thurs-
day editions.
Quoting Uflllamcd informed sources,
the newspaper said that one source
described Hunt as telling the in·
vestigators that he and a team of
operati ves undertook the surveillance un-
der directions of President Lyndon · e.
Johnson through an intermediary.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Otllvtry of the Daily Pilol
is guarantttd
Death ~oll-;-in Dec,emher-Storm Cli s l
I
From Wire Services
A deadly December storm stretching
fro1n Ind iana to Colorado brought death
and destruction to the Great Plains
and much of the Midwest today. Traffic
was crippled in areas and hundreds
oC schools were forced to close.
At least 12 deaths were reported, bring·
ing the week's to ta 1 of wealheM:on-
nected deaths around the nation to .34.
Fiv e personJ died in Kans•s. 3 in IUlnois,
2 in Missouri. and 1 each in Iowa
a'nd Nebraska. Twenty-two persons died
earler in the "'eek when a storm swept
up the Atlantic Seaboard from Georgia
to .Maine.
Russ, Arabs
Pledge Help
At Geneva
GENEVA , Swit zerland (AP) -Soviet
and Egyptian foreign ministers pledged
to do everything they could to make
S success of the Arab-Israeli peace con·
'terence which begins here Friday.
The pledge! came from Foreign
Ministers Andrei A. Gromyko of the
Soviet Union and Ismail Fahmy of Egypt
as delegates begin alTiving for the con-
ference. A high-level member o C
Fahmy's delegation also told newsmen:
"We are not closing any door. All
parties must show elasticity and toler-
ance." -
Eban said his government's aim at the
conference wu "a peace agreement sign-
ed by an sides which will bring about a
condition or coexistence bcl\veen Israel
and its neighbors."
Eban, leaving Tel Aviv with Israeli
delegation, said peact for his nation
mea nt free passage instead of blockades.
cooperation instead of hostility and
mutual recognition of the sovereignty
of the countries in the Middle East.
GROMYKO, CO-CHAIRMAN w i t h
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger
of the historic negotiations at the Pal ace
of Nations, warned that the talks would
be "very com plica ted." But he said
he hoped to see "good will and realism
around the conference table."
Gromyko and Fahmy met after dinner
\Vednesday night. The SOviet foreign
minister told newsmen : "\Ve discussed
substantive issues but I am not prepared
to say what the substance was."
The American and Jordaqian delega-
tions were arriving here today, and
Kissinger and Gromyko scheduled a din-
ner meeting tonight
King Hussein of Jordan flew to Syria
on_ Wednesday for what the Syrian news
agency (SANA) indicated was a futile
attempt to persuade the Damascus
government to send a delegation to
Geneva.
Palestine Chief
Asks Terrorists
Be Given to Him
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Palestinian
guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat is asking
Kuwait to hand over the five Arab
gunnien who killed 32 persons at the_
Rome and Ath ens airport r.fond ay so
they can "sta nd tri al before a Palestinian
revoluti onary court," the pro-guerrilla
newspaper Al Moharrer reported today.
The paper said Arafa t has instructed
the Kuwait office of his Palestine Libera-
tion Organization to ask for the ex-
tradition of the gunmen, who new to
the Persian Gulf sheikdom in a hijacked
\llest German airliner and surrendered
Tuesday.
The Palestinian news agency WAFA
reported that the PLO has asked the
Kuwaiti govern ment to allow i t s
rtpresentatives to partici pate in the in-
terrogation of the five terrorists.
Bhuh ol Month
William A. Dobrovir, an allor·
ney !or Ralph Nader, has per-
haps the reddest fa ce in Wash-
inglon a!ler being· called lo
courl for playing subpoerraed
presidenlial tape al party. "I
am very embarrassed," he told.
the judge. "l hope I'll never do
anything as foolish as lhat again." •
Today: •n eSti mated 250,000 Easterners
v.·efe still either homeless or without
power because or the storm. Tem-
peratures, hovering around iero, forced
many East Coast residents to stay
another day in emergency shel~rs .
hotels, or with friends or relatives.
Hundreds of schools were clmed
Wednesday and today. All pubHc schools
were closed in Omaha and Lincoln, Neb.,
while 300 called orf classes in St. Lou.is.
Hundreds more shu t down in ·Chicago
and other smaller communities, and in
Indiana polis, Ind., schools were officia lly
closed W~esday night until the end
,,. U"I T.....nett
IMPEACHMENT PROBER
John M. Door
Kissinger Meets
Tho for 5 Ho1trs
On Viet Flareup
PARIS (U PI) -Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger and North Viet-
namese negotiator Le Due Tho conferred
today for nearly five hqurs in a second
~ttempt to save the faltering Vietnam
cease-fire they worked out nearly a
year ago. ·· •·
They met for 2J.l.t hoi.trs · before lunch,
then #esumed for ·another lwo hours
and-ft) miliutes in the afternoon. i ,
There was no statement. Both melf
left smiling and waving.
-BOtnTfioa n<rKtssinger -smiled and
waved · at newsmen and bystanders
at the old Majestic Hotel, where the
cease-fire was signed Jan. 27 by the
United States , North Vietnam , South
Vietnam and the Viet Cong.
That pact has been consistently broken
although the two men shared the 1973
Nobel Peace Prize for negotiating it.
Tho refused to accept the award, citing
the almost continuous fighting since the
truce took effect.
The meeting was the second meeting
between the two men since the original
agreement. 'Itley signed a supplemental
pact last J1.D1e that also failed to bring
peace.
An estimated 50,000 persons have died
in battle in South Vietnam since the
pact was signed. Only hours before Tho
and Kissinger sat down, the South Viet-
namese government accused the Com-
munists of the most attacks across the
country in nine months.
Jn addition to meeting Tho, Kissinger
planned to make final preparations with
AJgerian Foreign Minister Abdel Azii
Bouteflika for Friday 's o~ing of the
Middle East peace conference in Geneva.
Arriving Wednesday in Paris after
a two-day vi sit to Portugal and Spain,
Kissinger called on all four parties to
the Vietnam cease-fire to honor their
pledges and work for peace.
Paper Reports
Illegal Nixon .
Tax Deductions
WAsHINGTON (UP!) -The lnlemal
Review Service has reopened an audit
into Presid.ent Nixon's income tax
returns for the past four years'because
he underpaid -apparently Ul~gally -
by 17 percent, the Washington Post
reported today.
Accordin& to the Post, a tax accountant
who re'iiewed Nilf;on's returns $for the
newspaP,er found that ~he Pres1aent ran.
ed to "adjtllt" his gross income properly
by U.tbqJ bis aMual '511,l!OO expense
acc:ount · ae the wroo1 )ine, i~ng
It as oddltlonal,!llory. As a fi51'1t,
he took more charity deductioM)..than
he otherwiae would have been entitled
lo, lhe Poot said .
The Poot said the error resulted in
an underpayment during lhe lour years
of mon than $13,000, or 17 pe.rcent
of lhe $71,651 he did pay. For 1972
lhc neWlpaper figures show , Nixon paid
leu thin hall of what he shoold have
by deducuni more for charity lhan 'INould
have been allowed if the expense account
had been properly noted. .
World-National
New1 Also on Pg •• ~~
or the Qirlstmas vacation Jan. 7.
Snow lorctd lhc closing of lhe SL
Louis Airport for hours and cawied
delays al Chicago's O'Hare fltld.
it was one of the hea'Vlest snow storms
on record 1n Illinois a~ Indiana, almost
paraltzing traffic. More than a foot
of srlow fell in parts' of Illinois, Indiana,
Nebraska and Missour.
Drifts closed hlghwlys along t h e
storm's path from Colorado to Jndiana.
In Detroit, ooly 2,547 fans made It
through the ice and mow Wednesday
night to watch the horses run at Hazel
Park Raceway. Race track officials said
lhey l.,..l $290,lK. Al Northville, Mich.,
Harness RaceWay, officials called off
racts.
Thousands or motoris ts abandoned cars
from Indiana to Colorado.1 M a n y
residents decided lo park· lhelr cars
and drive, but !Qund lhe public
trawiportation ~Qoice also· bogged down.
Cold ,. .. lher gripped most of lhc
nation u freei& ,warnings wft imued
all the way South to the Texas Gulf
Coast.
Traffic on 1nterstale 57 w14. backed
up for 45 miles across centrar· Illinois.
A 11ii-hour back-up of trucks was
'Highest Integrity'
.
Republican Will Head
Impeachment Inquiry
...
WASHINGTON CAP ) -John M. Doar,
a fonner asSistant attorney general, was
named today to head the House Judiciary
committee staff conducting an in-
vestigation of grounds for the possible
impeachment of President Nixon .
Doar, 52, a RepubliCan, was appointed
to the Justice Department by President
Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1960 and stayed
on to play an active role in developing
the civil rights legislation of the Kennedy
and Joht\son administrations.
Since leaving the government in 1967.
Doar has served as president or the
New York City Board of Education and
as director of a private antipoverty
prganizaUon in the Be4ford-Stuyvesant
area or New York founded by the Jate
Robert .F. Kennedy.
DOAR WAS CHOSEN by Rtp. Peter
W. Rodino ([).N.J.), cbalnnan of. the
House Judiciary Comrnittte, to -lhe first impeachment inquiry aimed at a
president in more lhan a century.
Doar wi ll head a staff of about 30
lawyers, most of. whom have already
been hired and who have been working
ror several v.-eeks compiling in!onnation
for use in the impeachment. investigation .
In presenting Doar at a news con-
ference, Rodino called him ha man ·<Jf
ability and the highest degree or in·
tegrtty."
Rodino said Doar v.'µI start his new
duties immediately, organizing the staff
and directing the continuing investigation
in preparation for the return or q,ngress
on Jan. 21 after its holiday recess.
RODINO SAID the selection of · a
Republican to head the stall will lend
a bipartisan tone to the inquiry into
possible impeachment of President Nix·
on.
He said he made bis choice after
an intensive search and a screening:
process in which he was aided by
members ol lhe legal profession, jurists
and the academic community.
In another effort to b o 1 s t e r
bipa11isanship Rodino I n v i t e d the
Judiciary Committee's seven senior
Republicans !<I Join wtth its top eight
Democrats in an advisory committee
that will help detennine the course ol
the investigalioo.
•
reported on Interstate 70 near Ef· ' . !ingham, m. -,
"The drlveri aren't protes'ting, the
trucks art," a state trooper sifd, ttfer·
ring to recent protest8 6y independent
truek drlven,ui>Ht by lower'"""" limits
and higher Juel prj~es. ,. • '
A stalled d,rive• In M~. D. H, wnua·ms of ·watr'e riton, nonilnated tl\t
occupants or a 'p]c~up tniek 1hal slopped
beside his car a§ ''the twO meaneit
men I have met." • ,
Williams said' he assumed lhey In·
tended .to belp ~ll!I but, instead, they
pushed his car iJito.,..,a deep ravln~ and
stole his window scraper. ~ ~ ,. . .;~~
•:• •·'"-..• ~ 11:11 •• ,,.. 11
t ::Q ··"" 2.• ·1:• '·"'· 4.1
SURPRISE ... ...
•
• ~ '• I
., ., .... r'
--..
j/Dppiness
:--! ~I " .. -t 'l'i
'
· -ts . ~l~tound16u!
' With so much of what we'.ve all come to take fo r granted in short . .
. suppl y, we at Irvine Nati onal Bank would just like to comment
briefl y on ·some commodities that we should never run out of. Like
happi ness. love, peace and kindness. We believe that things like
a sunn y day. a snow-ca pped mountai n and the l au~hter of children.
are a lot more important tha n Jn extra tank of gas. or an over-sized
steak. Maybe this holiday season we wi ll all Ih in k about all the
good things Jround us ... and be happy.
/ '3eoson's fl.reeting.s Jrom
' .
•
••
., -'
'.Q f t . '
' •.
... ' .
, . ., .
,, -'"• • "' ' I.
f ..
,
I
Tod"y's Final
N.Y. Stpeks
• • • . • • • . . .
VOL.. 66, NO. 354, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1973 N TEN CENTS
County •Babin Hood~ Bounces Chechs
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tile o.irr Pllet se.tt
Sandra Leah Phillips Spinellan, 42.
likes to think of herself as a Jewish
Robin Hood, bouncing bad checks to
pick up items which she promptly turns
over to charity.
Fountain Valley police, who operate
under the Callfomla Penal Code instead
of old English folk tales, think of her
more in terms of the felony bad check
Candidates
Disclose
Finances
All Newport Beach city council can-
4idates -except for incumbents -
will have to make full .financial
disclosures when they file· their nomina·
tlon papers next month, incumbent city
councilmen.have deci6ed.
All seven incumbents will have to
mak"e public their · asset.I in April,
whether or not they ·are reelected. Ex-
actly when in Ap:ril isn't clear, but
the date is likely to be after the election.
charges she pleaded guilty to Jn court
this week.
And Judge James Smith, who sen-
tenced her to a minimum 45 days in
Orange County Jail and three years
probation, apparently thinks she needs
guidance because he also sentenced her
to seek psychiatric help for her
charitable tendencies.
Those tendencies led the Sarita Ana
grandinother to write more than $2,000
wort!t of bad checks in six west County
While City Attorney Dennis O'Neil told
col:Dcilmen the lnteii>retalion of the new
state disclosure law is still to be made,
they adopted the. !ollowjng -lutio~ _
regulating the election:
"Each non-incumbent candidate, at the
time of filin g his nomination papers,
shall file a financial disclosure state-
ment. Incumbents do not have to file
their atalement until April."
'Ille resolution says the disclosure re--
quiies the lisUng ol any ... _'Interest
worth '$1,llOO or more and 1111 lnteml
in real property worth $1,000 or more.
In .cldltion, ;Clndfd•t .m '-"~ 19 lbt any Ioans; llfts or ~ ;r· flA
or· more recelnd Jn the plll'U lllllldlp.
"
cities before her arrest in October.
She also allegl'dly ran up $16,000 in
unpaid charges in stores and gas stations
she believed are "antl...semitlc."
Even the detective who tracked her
for four months this summer admits
she is the most unusual check artist
he's ever dealt with.
She is the kind of person usually
described as a pillar of the community.
To attest to this standing there is a
wall full or appreciation plaques and
---T11ere""1r•,--__.-_.--.,-;,.r··-
oppoaiUon in .reaction to the new law,
and O'Neil told muncilrnen be ls hopefu1
a California Loque of Cities p,mel will '
ful'l)}sh a an!lvrm inter}tetatloo to all
cities within the next few days.
'FAIRVIEW BENIFACTOlt JOHNSTON RESTS AMID BIKES
Used BJcycle·DOnon Heighten.Mell Man's Christmas Spirit
O'Nell said it ts uncjear whether can·
didates must report all assets, or just
those that mi(lhtJflect the boundaries
of their Jurtsdlctiilii.
He expl&lned that Incumbent coun-
cilmen will not have to file tmtil April
becauae that lll• the Lime ptelCrlbed
for all other establlohed office holden.
Beskles council members, others who
must dildooe their .....u are plmUng
com.missioners, city managers, planning
directors, county, aupervisors and county
administrative officers.
candidates.in the Newport Beach elec-
!See DISCLOSE, Page 11
Agee Candid3te
In Newport's
Sixth District
Planning Commission C h a i r ma n
Wllllam Agee toilay lll1llOUllC<d he Will
be a city council caodidate Jn District
6 which covers Irvine Te11'1ce, parts
of Balboa Island and old · COroda de!
)far ..
He Is ,the lint IUth diatrid' candidate
to 8DDOWICt. lncwuhent Q>undlmaJ\
Richard Croul has nol ired""! his 111-
tenLions, but Is not ,eipeded to .,.i.
a aeCond tenn. ·
Bieyeles Galore
F airvi.ew Kids To Get Yule Bikes
By AR111UR R. VINSEL
Of ... ~ty n.t Slaff
A ,self-styled Santa Claus' helper, 83
yem old, who didn't have enough used
bieycle.s for his annual donatioft to men·
tallyr retarded children at Fairview State
Hospitd is Up, to his. ears in them toda • . Y·1 ·• ' , The mponse to Bob Jolmston's' sug-
gestion in last . Saturday,'s ·Daily Pilot
that -people· mJght like) to contribute
some has' been oy~belmtng.
'1We-'ve got bikes· all over Hell's half.
acrir:." jokes' .Johnston, an 'explorer,
na.tur&.list, adventurer ·anc1 authority on
Central America.
Hls. Yai:d at 2S39 Cornell Drive, Costa
Meaa~)OOq like' ..a ,used car lot,_ except
that tM s'toclt is entirely bicycles -
about 40 ~'f{·-. which will, be distributed amooi . Fairview children Christmas
morning. . " ,ffe bas repaired, re:pamted and out-
fitted ·-bicycles With new tires for a """'1 ·years aoll given yoongsters
at'lhe facility for the.mentally retarded .
His· btst , year before saw 18 bikes
shortage story appeared in Saturday's
paper. He found his phone ringing. He
said it didn 't stop until 10 o'lcock that
night.
. "I missed my Rotary Club meeting •
today just ,worl<ing oo them," the 113-
year-old naturalist said Wednesday o( the
array of bicycles parked in his ·yard·
awaiting cleanup and painting.
He said that despite the fuel shortage
which has led the ~late ·hospital to
cut. back in its fleet vehicle gasoline
consumption, officials have promised to
send a truck to pick up the Christmas
bicycle shipment. ...
Johnston sent 20 or the two-wheelers
out to Harbor Area cyclery shops to
be filled with new tires and says the
firms now refuse to handle any more
of them for the time being.
"They won't <to any more lire work,"
he e.tplained. _'"They d\>D't have enough
tires for .their own business."
Johnston said the bicycle gift that
put him in one of the 1 best holiday
spfrits be ~ _ expei:ienced in 83
(~ BIKES, P11e 11
. '
awards in her borne.
Yet in WeSt Orange County Judicial
District Court last week and to Det.
Marty Engquist who· arrested her, ehe
re.dily admitted to the bad check
charges.
"She told me she did it for the thrill
of it," he says.
Engquist offers an example that he
believes captures the essence of Mrs.
Splnella's Robin Hood tendencies.
11She told me she was shopping and
saw a long dress lhat i5he liked.
"But the dress was just made out
of cotton and the store was asking
something over $100 for It and that
made her mad~
"She told me she said to herself
'Fair's fair. If they're going to charge
prices like that they deserve what they
get,' and she wrote them a bad check
for it," he asserted.
"When she was telling me about this,
S,be showed me the dress. !t was pretty
good looking, but it had all the tags
stili on it. I don't think she has ever
worn it," he added.
Engquist related that after he arrested
l\frs. Spinella she readily gave him all
or her identification -she had three
driver's licenses -and told him that
she considered herself a modern-day
Robin Hood .
"She told me that all of the sturf
she charged or wrote checks ror, with
(See GRANNY, Page 2)
' ueen'·. Fund Hit
Stare-Raps V se of Tideland Mone)'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The city of
Long Beach improperly spent nearly
$14 million in public tidelands money
Jn converting the Queen Mary to a
museum-of-the-sea and tourist attraction,
state officials said today.
The State Lands Division recom-
mended that its parent Lands Com·
mission sue the city to force it to
repay tb.e money to the tidelands trust
!und.
The city used $56.6 million of its
share of tidelands oil royalties to convert
the ship, the lengthy Lands Division
repart said. Addition al investments were
made by private companies which held
Queen Mary concessions.
Of that, $13.9 million or 24. 7 percent
directly benefitted commercial ventures
on the ship in violation of state law,
the repOrt said.
Long Beach officials submitted a
rebuttal statement to the commission
contending all funds were spent properly
and legaDy.
· Long Beach City Manager John ~{an-
3ell said the city would \Velcome a law·
suit.
lie said the commission's claim tha t
there was a deficit in the tidelands flDld
\vas "totally inconceivable to us and
eompletely ridiculous/'
11.fansell said reports of all expenditures
on the Queen Mary hcid been available
(See QUEEN MARY, Page 21
Commission
May Approve
"' High Rise
_Singer Bobby Darin Dies
After 2nd Heart Surg~ry .
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Bobby Darin, r --.----, • !iewport. B<fch p I • p·p 1 n r com-!he -l'"Jh ambltloU. lien 1dol 'of ,the
miaiooefs will be asked' klni8fit to a~ early J980s who sani "Mack the
prove Irvine-Company plans to construct. Knife" and "Splish-S~lash" and marri<d
tw,1> high rise condominium towen in Sandra Dee, died '""•• al~ bla second Newport Center. . .,_,
Comlhilsloners will 3180 be uked to open-heart operation. He wil 17. .
approve two m um enslty. tuft. 11lle-never:"-really~~-a(,iu._
dominium projects in Big Canyon. the operation," a spokesman sakt. "He
The two items are near the top or was j111t too weak to recover .11
•
the agenda for the meeting w h i c h Darin made a number of records
begins at 7 o'clock in. Newpart Beach that sold more than a million copies,
City Council chambers. including "Dream Lover," and won an
'Mle city council earlier this week OSCar nomination as best supporting
approved me<lium to high density actor in· 1963 for his role in "Capt.
development on'tbese·propertiel!"·At·ihe· ... N.eJ!!l!!!!!. M.Q..."._ __ .. _ ... _. ____ _
same time, the council also banned all Hla marriage to Miss Dee, one of
other apartment construction on re-the teen· idol romances of the 1960s,
maining undeveloped landln the city. lasD~ixdl:r!i 12:15 a.m. at Cedars Both pro~ts 1have been on the plan· ning comnussim agenda for several of Lebanon Hospital, less than seven
months, but have been postponed peifdillg houn after a team of four surgeons
the council decision made-Monday. fmlshed the second open heart operation
The two proposed hlgb rile con-to be performed on him in Jess than
dominium towers in Newport Center con· three years.
ta.in a total of 245 units. They would stand 160 feet tall on seven acres of In February 1971 two valves were
land at the: intersection of.Santa Barbara inserted in Darin's heart, which had
Drive and San Clemente Drive. Average been weakened by a bout of rheumatic
densi ty is projected at 35 units per fever at the age of 8.
acre. During routine postoperative checks
The commission wiU be asked to ap-last week, doctors said they discovered
prove a tentative tract map for the that one of the valves was malfunc-
projeots and environmental impact state-tioning. A new valve was installed
ment. Wednesday in an operation that took
The two proposed Big Canyoii con· Darin specified in his will that his
dominium projects involve a total of body should be donated to medical
167 wtits on about 16 acres of land: sci:n~P,kesman said the body had al·
Executive Privilege
WASHING TON !UPI) -Wliile . House
press secretary Ronald L Ziegler in·
voked executive privilege Wednesday iq
closed door testimony in a $6.4 million
civil suit brought by the Democratic
National Committee over the break-in
of its Watergate headquarters.
ready been trMSferred to UCLA where
it would be used for research.
"He felt that H there could he any
purpooe served by dying it would be I<>
help save other people's lives," said
the spokesman.
Thus, he said, there will be no fu·
nera1 although friends may bold private
memorial "ceremonies.
Darin was born Walden Robert Cassot-
Ul"I Te•"(:
TEEN-AGE IDOL DEAD AT 37.;
Bobby Darin Succumbs
to in a tough area oI the Bronx in-
New York City. In his early days Hi
show business, he picked up a reputation
as a brash, cocky kid who got ahead
more through his energy and determina ..
tion than by talent.
In later years, associates said, he
mellowed a flit.
The only other district mklent to
indicate he may go after CrouJ'1 teat
is Paul. HUmmel, president· of the Corona
de! Mar Civic Aesoci atlon.
~~~ .. ~,llfts, iOme ~jleep.,the bjcycJes ~, COll\M,uni\Y """* .,,d: ~ rent thim out I'roin
blke·pools !or,use ln'J>rOtlrams to leach
patients how to haildle their mooey.
It's Voluntary ··Now
Ag~e. 47, has been active In , city
affairs for about three )'earl. He said
he became Interested when he wu lctlve ·
in the fight asainst the --Pacific COBlt Freeway., ·"'
Asee served . u cliilrman of the
Citizens Transporlotim Plan Ad¥llotY
Committee that pidecl '.)INplnlloo II
the new traffic study that Is -before
planning comrnlllionen.
He was tM: sub~ of IOme con-
troversy when he declined to reslsn
that post upon appointment to the plan-.
nlng commission two and one.ball yean
ago. • .
In announcing hlll candidacy, Asee .
said, 111 am KnmllY c:om:mltted to geo. •
en! pals of Newparl Tomot ""' ud the general plan policy.
"l feel that my voice will be much
stronaer u a mem~r ti.' tbe NJwpor:t
Beach City COUncll In worlllnc lo d·
fectively ..-the ... -.i ~
actor ot the cl.tJ ud ~-Ill
useta," he .. 1d.
Agee alao llllllOUllCed tlii! 1ill clmpOicn
commlttee will ....&I ol Mlnball Duf.
lleld, Ricbard Clucq. MataOI Skllllnc. (~AGEE, ..... 11
•
•
.Johmt<*t,i arfived home.,•lro.m a trip
to MU!ao 'Sunday nlabt alter the
'
,; '
~aspers Plans
· if-0 Step Down .
I . ~..,
"°"-'County Supervisor Ronald Cl-1 of Newporl Beach said
Wedneiday '·he will atep down as
•,cbllnnan ol the board next year
and tbrow his aupport to Supervisor
Rolph Clark at Anaheim.
"lie wantod the job this year
....,, I IOl It and l tbinlt he
atM>uJd have It now,'' CUpen llld.
Both ,Caopen. and Clark are up .,... -leCtl!in In Jmie. CUpan :ti.a .bdd .. Ula 'POlt of ~rman for lwo of Ida four years· on the
bolnl. · Cail>en sild be 'ilanll to 11ve
llP the cbalnilanshlp to, devote
llllft time to the needs o! hl1
dlllrlct.
'
· 10-gallon Limit Urged
WASHING TON (UPI) -Energy Chief
William F. Simon asked American
· motorists today. to limit themselves to
10 gallons of a week and said if everyone
complied, gasoline rationing may be
averted.
Simon, bead of the newly created
Federal Energy Office, also asked that
gasoline stations restrict saleJ to 10
gallons per customer. Both conservation
measmes are vohmtary -for the time
being •
Sim® told reporters that 1te will make
hia ~ to ~resident Ni•on
next -• Wllolber~thlnl!I -1Jne l'llionW ml&bl U!Umately be ne<tssary,
but said, H tllll'e lll compliance with
the vqhmlarj measures he asked, ra-
tlmlng 111111 not be neec!M. Meanwhile,
Co~ leaders oought today to
expedite r:1e of an emergency
energy bll negotiated. late Wedne>day
night by Ho.,. and Senate conferees.
'
r
They hoped to get the compromioe bill
passed and approved as qu]ckly as possi-
ble, first by the Senale, and then by
the House, before beading home for
a monthlong recess.
The bill cootainl power for lbe
Administration to Impose emergency
measures to deal with the energy crisis.
Under this autbOrity, it coukl. make
ma1l4atory such limitations as Simon
MOVIES RIACT TO FUEL
CRISIS •. Story/ Pago 39·.
GASOLINE INCREASE SEIN '
BY FEBRUARY, ~ P ... 31 .
oalled f<>i--:as ... 11 as psoline rattontng.
Som~ mem\""" -or Consress Insisted
that rationing wu the only fair solution
to suollne shortages, but Nixon and
mosr advtaen have Ileen reslstlnl thb
as a last-resort move.
Simon said the President's decision
on rationing would be before the results
of the volWJtary measures Simon asked
are known, but Simon indicated that
any decision to turn to rationing would
be implemented only if conservaUon pro-
grams failed to attain conservation goals.
Urging compliance with the volUntary
limit, Simon said: "I am asking people
to let the 10 gallons last them a week.
I am asking them to stay within the
limit," II possible.
"Some drivers: will need more than
JO ga llons, such aS travelb\g salesmen,
or those who commute long distances
to work and cannot form carpools or
use mass transit," Simon sali:I.
"Thus. I am •asking lbo8e drivers \Jbo
con get by With less than . !beJt 10.gallon
share to do so In order that thote
who need more ga90llne wUl have it
arallablc."
Orange Coast
Weather
lt 'II be cooler Friday, according
to the weather service, 'vith highs
in the low 70s inland dipping to the
upper 60s at the beac~. Some
high cloudiness but mostly fair
skies.
INSIDE TODAY
If you're an aba11doned dog,
your chances o/ finding a honie
are probably better in Hut1ting·
ton Beach than anywhere etse.
See story, Page 10.
""" l1.11dtn u Me¥fH •n
Mutu.I ~-fl N•llM&I lhWt 4. ti
OrtnH C11111ty II ,To\ •
1-11 IWI l'-Cll Mtrlltb a4t
T ...... IU. • n....-. IW1
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;: 2 DA!LV PILOT N lhursdQ, Dtcembtr 20, 1973
Saunc Ordeal •
• • Daughters Say '\~f·
·Mother 'Zonihie'
lly TOM BARLEY And both attracllve girls t01tified that °' ..., o.11y "lie! s111t Mrs. Par$0n will often reprimand them
Two of ~farla Pa.rson'a four daughters for doing something that ahe herself
testified today that the family-orleoted had suggested to them weeks or months
molh<r they knew lielore lh• alleged before.
sauna room lncldtnt rl March 2. l9'1tl, "She helped me dye my hair bkmde,"
ho longer .. 1sisJnJbe Anaheim home. Jessica uld. "And then later on she
Both glrls stated from the witness started yelling and screaming at me
1 stand in the Orange County Superior because she'd just notl~ that the color
J
Court trial that Mrs. Parson, ts, is of my hair bad changed."
' invariably in a "zombie-like" trance Both llrls testified that they cannot
belore the television aet when they return now approach their mother with any
-home from school. penoni.I or family problems of any
t Attorney Marvin Lewis, Sr. claims kind .
( the alleged ordeal in the .sauna room "She just isn't interested," Jessica
J of the ~ Holiday Health Spa in Orange aaJd. "Even if J can get her to listen
... for the psychiatric transformation in she often doesn't seem to understand
:i his client. what I'm talking about ."
,. Lewil claims in bis 'l mlllioo. lawsuit Lewis said today that he intends to
• against the 1pa that Mrs. Panon has put other members of the Parson family
become three women -sex hungry on the witness stand today before Judge ~· Alaria who Selects her mates from local William Murray calls a t<kiay Christmas
. bars, remorseful Betty who bitterly recess.
., resents. Marla's escapades . and the He said his future witnesses will in·
,'_, submerged real seU of Mrs. Parson. chute a Roman Catholic priest, several
· Jessica Panon, 1$, told the jury that psychiatrists and Mrs. Parson herself.
,J ~'"~ti y vart}tudation tin lhfer mother's ha~ Fonner patrons of lhe health spa.
pawi: c a u e o I e comes w en have testified that the sliding door of she' decides to go out alone for the the sawia room often jammed a!'Mi that ' I evening. health spa personnel were never within
"Then her face lights up," Jessica shouting distance on such occasions. ~1 said .. And the Anaheim High School .girl A Finnish sauna designer and a l described ~Ith reluctance for the JUry carpenter who helped build the Orange
,T ~~r ~1,!~t-da~ =ie:s :J facility have also testified that they
T •• ,, • "&" • w.~ e --would not periODally have .suagested-the
cheap, f~ clothes. use of a sliding door on the sauna Both Jessica and Mary Paulette room because or inherent mecban'cal
Parson, 15, testified that the mother problems. 1
they knew before she allegedly was
trapped in the sauna room was a happy,
"· vivacious woman who made all her four
daughters cloth•" "We were always having parties at
our house," Jea.sica said. ''litom loved
1
1 family gatherings and when she wasn't
doing things like that she was working
Nixon, Won 't
Pa y Back U.S.
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UPIT ........
THIS IS THE SCENE OF DEVASTATION CAUSED BY SPANISH EXPLOSION
Prime Minister Luis C1rr1ra Blanco Killed, Hl1 Car R.IPJMd Ap1rt
F rom Page 1
GRA NN Y-. • Watergate Committee •
the exception of about $100 worth of
necessities, she gave away to someone
else," be said. Probes Nixon Brothers
'The diminutive lady t4'h0 was the
Anaheim B'nai B'rilh's Woman of the From Wlre Sen1tta six unproductive mining claims in. Mono
County, Call!. Year and a past president of the chapter, The Senate Watergate Committee stall
! for the church, the PTA or our youth
organizlUons.!!.
proved to be one of Engqui:'t's most is trying to determine if Presldent Nix~
WASHJNGTON ~AP) _ A White difficult cases. on's two brothers were involved Jn the
House spokesman said today Presi·. 1 h ,250,000 sale of apparenlly·worthless
Meler was qlJelltionecn·~enuy-by-the~
commJtt .. staff. ill Waobington.
J ... lca U!&Ufied lhat her motbet-today
is almost always deprwed and often
weeping and has delegated all her
homkeeping and kitchen work to her
family .
Fro• Pqe l
DISCLOSE ...
He exp ained that he ad the $2,000 minina claims to Howard H""~es, It dent Nixon will not reimburse the • --....., worth of bad checks written by Sandra was reported today . government for federally financed work at his San Clemente and Phillips which either listed an address Pres ident Nlxoo's older brother, F.
Florida residences which the in Fountain Valley or a Post Office Donald Nixon, lives in Newport Beach
The new subpoenas also demand "all
records '• on President Nimn'I dealings
wllh the dairy industry, which allegedly
gave the· Nixon campaign '500,000 in
1969. General Accounting Office sug-box in Huntington Beach. but he was unavailable tor comment
gested he should have paid for "She no Jonger lived at the Founta in loday. But that probe may be temptrtd by
persooally at 1he time. Valley address and left no fonvarding The newest Watergate probe wlll llkely the anno\Dlcement Wednelday by Dr.
"The answer is no," Deputv address when she moved out. The Post produce a new legal cmfrontation over Georee L. Mehren, a general manager
Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren Office box listed the Fountain Vallev presidential tape! after the Watergate of American Milk Producers, Inc., that
said in response to reporters' ques-address, so it was a dead end," hf commiuee subpoenaed 481 tape the AMPI gave a total ol $800,000 to ti said. recordings and hundreds of other items both the Democratic and Re.publican
, . Uon will have to file their nomination ~~rren said the GAO rePort The only things Engquist had to go from White House files Wedneaday. parties and the dooatlon.t were about
papers between Jan. 10 and Jan. 31 released Tuesday questioned only on were her credit cards that she Questions asked during recent con· equal. ~ • at noon. *'an inflnites.lmal" portion ot the periodicaJly used for identification when fidenlia l interrogatlons: indicate the fn.. "I am sure an effort was made to
... However, if· an Incumbent candidate fl.4 million in federal funds spent writing checks. vestigators' interest in Donald Nlxon balance thlJ out ," Mehren sald.
: , · does mt file by the cloelng date, lhat a\ the San Clemente and Key Bis-' Through lhe ga.! card, he was able and Edward Nixon, • Seattle consultant. It bad earlier been reported that the
deadline is atended for five days for cayne residences, mostly for to locate cars drjven by people using It was reported DO hint is glvr.n as Watergate panel~ it alto Jnvertlptlng
non-incumbent candilial.es ln that dll!trict ;ecurity reasons. ·t to what role, if any, the Nixon brothers Donald Nixon's role in leCUrlna federal
to rue. The presidential spokesman said
1
·One family in Santa Ana. which turned ~if11ttheha7e!fplayedts Into llndthe tranaactiot U •'-n. approval of. Hughes' acqujsttlon c# Air-
.; Each candidate mlli\ furnish t>tC.ween the auditor's report "deflates . . . out to be her d?ughter and son·in·law, u s 8 wan ou uiey west, the commuter airline IM'Ving
.. , 20 JO algnaturti-4)tfregisteredJNoters_1-lJie"se.-.:wild......chacie~haLNlx.on._,_~w·a.s...JocatecLby-1b~ective and he received a_ny rewards. · Orange Cowity and the Southwest. '
living within bis district. benefitted from the government· says he kept bugging them about Sandra ~akl--Nixon-reportedly-hti9-~~xon -lfad a<!amantly denied be-eve·r
Councilmen have also adopted 1 new fin anced work. Phillips. Thet denied .tnowing where she que~tJoned ~ th: m~tter by •talf ur interceded for Hughes or anybody else.
eligibility requirement for candidates. Warren was asked specifically was. vesttgators in Cahfomia. . . The White House had no immediate
'nley must now be residents of the about the GAO'• suggestion that "One afternoon I got a call from 11,T1"'Y 1 F. Le~tt r, assis1tanSat t 0
1 comment on the new demands. But
I nl certain landscape maintenance Sand . 11 \.-. . a erga e comm1 ee counse mue th red rt · to be ~n ed "'• dty or o y one year. • .... _r!l..~P~ .. ~ '!'!.~ S!1d_~he·-~-~ cal!IJ.l.B _...Dash confirmed that "th tt.ers till ey appea ce a1n Cua eng
Bomb IUlls
No.-2 Man
lt1 Spain
~ ..
MADRID (llPI) -An essalllilt's bomb
loday killed Prime Mln~ler Luis Carrero
Blanco, th• right-hand man t o
Generalissimo Francisoo Franco, ln an
etploslon that hurled his car over the
r()(( of a d>urch where be had Just
attended MaJS. I
'0Itie prime minister was the victim '
of an wasslnation,0 a government
:spokesman announced nine hours after
be was killed. I
Vice Pretldent Torcuato Fernandez
litlranda immediately took over as prime
minister. ,
'Ille govenµnent said Adm. Carrero,
70, w.., killed by "a potent charge
of explosives" planted in a twtnel
workmen had been digging under lhe
slr .. t in front of lhe church and around
the corner from the U.S. Embasty. 1
Wltneues said the prline minister'•
Dodge limousine was hurled against the
roof of the church, bowxled over it
and landed on a second floor terrace
on the other side of the building. ; ,
The text of the government aaid: ·
"The investigation carried out at the
sile of the death of the president ol
the government (prime minister) has
&hown it was a criminal act.
"From the baaement of Ille building
No. 104 on Claudio Coello in Madrid,
an underground tunnel was dug to the
center of said street in front of said
buHding.
'.'At this poinl, a powerful <xplmJve
charge was set under the pavemtnt
and triggered from the oolside Bt the
exact moment that the president's car
made Its customary Jo\lm<Y.
"Police inspector Juan Antonio Bueno
Fernandez and the driver of (Carrero'•)
vehicle, Jose Luis Perez litondeja, also
died."
Carrero had just ldt the church where
he i.tten<lea Mass i.lmciit every day
before being driven to his olllce. Wit· nesses saJd the car was moving from
the curb when it was blown at least
50 f .. t into Ille air.
Cunro't death was not announced
olficlally for three hours and the
assassination was not mentioned for nine
hours.
After the national radio and television
networks broadcast the announcement,
they 11 " i t c h e d to funeral music
lnformaUon Miniater Fernando de Linan
then came on the air to announce a
tbreH8y mourning period which meant
closlng ot movies, theaters and other
places of. entertainment.
Sponlsb teleVillon then went oil the •ir. 'Ille Spanish 1tock exchange olJo
shutdown.
The blut tore out 1 aater 25 rett
de<!> and 30 feet across In the pi-
where Cmero's car bad Just Pl*d .
Froal.Pqel
QUEEN MARY .•
•! Councilman Paul Rycko{f was forced sewer work and surveys should' from Houston. She said she and her are u·~·der investigatlo~,, e ma · s -···~-the-grounds that ~ey were too.sweep-alnce the beginning of the project.
-.•:. to go to court to strike down the city's =~e~;~n~e ~~s~~~~ bfu !~ husband ha~ t1aken Sandra Phillips in. Donald Nixon is cl~se friends wilh mg .and would consti tute a fishing ex· "We wonder why, after five yean and
old tbree-'.year residency requirement in negative when asked whether Nixon but they didn t know where she was John H. ~1eier, a Newport Beach resident pechtion through executive omc:e files . hundreds of thouamds of doll an spent "l I.91'Z but the courts at that time did ould f thos now. and former H gh a·d who th Samuel J. Powers, a Miami att(tmey by the state in re.earchiq Ibis project,
. L not declare what residency period is w now pay or e items. "She said she was contacting me billionaire has ~~ ~ ea '9 :nu~ serving as a White House consultant that expenditures they knew alsted -or ~· justified. be,~use I was bugging_ her family. court case as having provided hlm with on _the tapes case, bad commented were contemplated -and wbi.ch they
In addition, candidates must be But 1 got susplciowi because she recommendations 10 minin h es earher that any demand for hundreds helped review prior to b isslon by the \ registered voten of their own dlatricts From Page I wouldn't hang up and let me call her which were of littl e ~orth. g pure as of tapes "really wouJd almost ahut down city, should now be asu ir:tter of such ~ for 90 days prior to their nomination. back. I ~:w she was around here The mining claims were mainly in the executiv.e departme~! fo r us to have areat concern," he sald.
• 'lbree campaign expense reports must AG EE somewhere, he said. Nevada according to the suit but it to do that kind of work. Edward N. Gladiah, the dlVillon's ex·
be filed by each candidate, two of them e e e So Engquist pressed his search and was rePorted a sale in question involved Jn addlll~ to specific request!, made ecutive officer, ta.Id the converted ocean
.
" :.i
prior to the election and one after It. eventually found out that his suspect by 1exact limes and dates, for White liner has become more of a commerclal
There will be four aeats up for election SUz.anne Rudd, Wallace Calderhead, Carl had posted bail for another daughter House tape recordings, the commJttee venture "with a maritime muaeum u
April 9. So far none of the incumbent Van Winkle and Gerard Van Hoven. who had been picked up in Stanton From Page l made general requests fot information Its a~ndage."
candidates. have formally announced A.gee is an account executive ~·ith on a traffic warrant. on the following subjects. That''vlolatet the original concept of
·:, whether or not they will seek re--election. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, FeMer and Smith. "She had to give her name and address BIKES -The Watergate break·ins of May 17 the project in which commercial opera-
:. They are Vice Mayor Howard Rogers He is past president of the Corona when she posted bail. and that's how e e e and June 17, 1972. lions -such as shops, restaurants and
.~ in Dlatrlct 1, Carl KyrnJa in District del Mar Civic Association. I found her," he sai~. -The planning o! any break·in or a hotel -we r e to actount for leu
l 3, Milan Dostal in District 4 and Richard A graduate of Ohio Wesle13n Unlversi· Accompanied by Capt. Les Rowland, Christmases on earth came from a little electronic tsurveillance at the office or than a third of thipboard space, he
. Croul In District 5. ty, he married and h8! two ch.ildren. Engquist went to pick r.trs. Spinella up. girl 6 years old. home of Las Vegas new a paper said .
District I includes most of the Balboa The Agees live at 714 Lark.spur Ave., but found she had just left for a B'nai She brought her bicycle to give for publisher Hank Greenspun. The outlook ls bleak for the Queen
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Peninsula and Lido Isle. District 3 in· Corona del Mar. B'rith meeting. a retarded child at Fairview State -Any offers or autborizatloru1 to offer Mary ever to become the money·maklng
eludes Newport Heights and Bayshores. The city council election is April 19. They beat her to the meeting and Hospital to enjoy. e1ecutive clemency to Watergate venture Long Beach hoped it would,
District 3 includes Westcliff, Dover one of the women got the two of!icers Jt was the only bike she had. burglars. Gladish said.
Shores and the rest of the area west ron!used with the speakers they were ·----------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;.;;;;;;
of Upper Newport Bay. District 4 in· ~-hool Boundary expecting from the Jewish oCtense
eludes Irvine Terrace. part of Balboa ~ League.
Jsland and most of old Corona de! Mar. "We didn't make a big deal out or
ORANGI COAST •
DAILY PILOT
I Tiit Ot•"ll• C...H 0411.Y ,ILOT0 wlll'I wl'lldl
ts Combined I~ H._,..U. Ii .... l\Md bY
fM Oreno-C~ol PUOli.a.lftt c:.r..ny, S.,,..
r•I• 911111ono ••• PllD!bl'itd, Marld•r 111""'911
l Frlll1y, tor C<tll1 Mnt, H....,,_, ... di.
"""llnvton ••Kh/Foun111ri V1t11y, u.-
1 !IN"'· lr~lne/J..td181dl Miii J.., Clt!Mnlt/
1111 Jue11 C.llletr•no A 1lng l1 19glontl ""'ion Is M!ltht>d llohll'!Mfl ff'd S!Jnll•n.
...... ,.IMlpel pvblillllrlf Pllnl It 11 JJO W"'I
.. , l trMI, c .. t1 MIU, ClllMl'nJ.t. titl4.
"•li1rt N •. Weed
l"r .. ldtnl 11111 PlllllllMr
Jeck R. Cvr\1y
VIC"I 'r•lffnl •"9 Otllw11 M""9tr
The'"'' IC11•ll
ltllet
Tlleffltl A. M11rphiR1
Mlf\9lll'll f'llW
L. l'el•r krl•1 N~ lttdl Cily filer
.....,.... IMcll Office
J)JJ N1wperl l1ul1•1,J
M 1ilf~ .<414,•••i '.O. I•• 1115, •2661 --C-t1 ~ ~ Sii """ ..,. "'"' u.-. MMl\1 m ,_., ,.._..
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Chan ge Sougl·t Arresting her. We just sort of separated " her from the group before they go t
inside and told her daughter to make
up some excuse for her absence," Eng· Newport~Mesa Unified School District
trustees were asked Tuesday to approve
a boundary change to permit about SO
students now In the Estancia High School
area to go to Costa Mesa High School.
The switch involves a triangle of land
bounded by Newport Boulevard, Harbor
Boulevard, and Avocado Street.
If apRroved by trustees early next
year, freshmen from that area could
b<gin attending Costa Mesa High School
next fall .
"These kids Jive closer to r.osta Mesa
and we think the change makes senae,"
said Deputy Superintendent Norman
Loall .
Wax Head Heist
Uses Pap er Bag
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Two youlhs
entered the Wu lituseum 1t Fllhennan11
Wharf and asked attendant Cbrll Shean
for a paper big. He gave a i>lJ to
the boy1 and continued hi• rounds In
the otherwise empty museum .
About 10 mlnul•s later, he noUced
lhe yoolha ba<L Jell He olJo noUced
the !ieadi of Frankenstein and one of
Jack the Ripptr's vtctlma wm mllaJn&.
Police said lhe youtltl decapllaU!d the
figures and used the paper bag to com-
plete the theft.
quist added .
Rowland notes that when she was
in custody. she told them she would
tel.I all. "The jig's up," she reportedly said.
According to Engquist, she kept three
separate IDs -one in the name of
Sandra Phillips, one in the name of
Sandra Spinella 8nd one in !he name
of Stephanie 'I'hatcher .
. "She told us the third one she kept
In case she got slopped by a traffic
cop. That way when they ran the name
through for a warrant check, there would
be no wants on it.
"She told us she believed she'd never
be caught,'' be saJd.
In f1J.ct, the woman who is a member
of tho City of Hope'• Miiiion Dollar
Club, told Engquist her only f .. r waJ
that he would read the woman's pages
in local newspapera and recognize her picture.
"I ~ I'm going to have to do
a Uttle more reading," be added.
Engquitt acltnowll!d(et that his attitude
aboul lhll c..e le ilJlterml from the
bad cbe<k cases he's lnveeUgated.
"MOii people who. do aometlling like
thll do It because they're burtJiig finan·
clally. She thought It ,..., a game
beca ... for her, it was.
"Site thought abe eould go on forever
because ahe bad oovcred her tracu
pretty well. But that really moUvaled
me.
Nobody Sells G.E. Micro-Wave Ovens for less than
PORTABLE
MICROWAVE OVEN
STORI HO"Ut MM· l'.'n ht. It.JO,.. 1:11
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COME IN FORA , •••
n\\qiu~ING
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2. Coo1u C...""'llocllftt ). c..ii.,. w..,. tt °""': M ......... ftlflMll
Con•••ll•ll#t '" -·HOWOHLV
... ..... -IY A HOME ECONOMIST
SATURDAY, DIC. 22
12 NOON· 4 P.M.
·90 DAYS C:.l SH ...
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WITH A"'ROVID
· CR I Dl1
1815 NEWPORT IVD~
Dawntown Costa • -,_ 548-nee
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T Oilay's F inal
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. "°· NO. 354, 4 SECTioNS . 44 .PASES ORANGE COU NTY , CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1973 c TEN CENTS
County •Babin Hood!!) Bounces Chee/as
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of 1t1e Dallr 'lltf Staff
Sandra Leah Phillips Spinellan, 4t,
likes to think of herself as a Jewish
Robin Hood. bouncing bad checks to
pick up items which she promptly turns
over to charity.
cflargcs she pleaded guilty to in court
this week.
And Judge James Smith, who sen-
tenced her to a minimum 45 days in
otange County Jail and three years
probation, apparently thinks she needs
guidance because he al~ sentenced her
to seek psychiatric help for her
charitable. tendenci es.
cities before her arrest in October.
She also allegedly ran up $16,000 in
unpaJd charges in stores and gas stations
she believed are "anti-semitic."
/ Even the detective who tracked her
for four. months this summer admits
she is the most · unusual check artist
he's ever dealt with. '
awards in her home.
Yet in West Orange County Judicial
District Court last week and to Oet.
lt1arty Engquist who arrested her, she
readily admitted to the bad check
charges.
"She told me she did it !or tbe thrill
or it," he says.
Engquist offers an .example that he
believes captures the essence of Mrs.
Spinella's Robin Hood tendencies.
saw a long dress that she liked.
"But the dress was just made ou t
of cotton and the store was asking
something over $100 for it and that
made her mad.
"She told me she said to he rse lf
'Fair's fair. 1r they're going to charge
prices like that they deserve what they
get,' and she wrote them a bad chec k
for It," he asserted.
"When she was telling me about this,
she showed me the dress. It was pretty
good looking, but it had all the tags
stili on it. I don't thi nk she has ever
worn it," he added .
Engquist related that after he arrested
lt1rs. Spinella she readily gave him all
of her identificat ion - she had three
driver's lice nses -and told him I.hat
she considered herself a modern-d:<iy
Robin Hood.
"She told me that all of the stuff
she charged or wrote checks for, with
(See GRANNY, Page 21
Fountain Valley police, who operate
under the Calirornia Penal Code instead
or old English fotx tales, think of her
more in terma of the felony bad check I .
Thqse tendencles led the Santa Ana
grandmother to writ~ more than $2,000
worth of bad ch'ecks in six west County
She is the kind of person usually
described as a pillar of the community.
To attest to this standing there is a
wall full of appreciation plaques and "She told me she was shopping and
' !lO-galwn-Driver Freed in Mesa
Gas Limit
Voluntary
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Energy Olie!
William F. Simoo asked American
motorists today to limit themselves to
JO.gallons or a week and said if everyone
complied, gasoline rationing may be
averted.
Simon, head of .. the newly created .__,
Federal Energy Office. also asked that
gasoline stations restrict sales to IO
gallons per customer. Both conservation
measures are voluntary -for the time
being.
Simon told reporters that be will make
his recommendation to President "Nfu>n
next week on whether he lbinks g~line
rationing might ultimalely be necessary,
but said if there is compliance with
the voluntary measures he uked, ra-
tioning may not be needed. Meanwhile,
Liquor Hijacked
A liquor delivery truclt driver was
kicked out of his van in Costa Mesa
Wednesday morning by a kidnaper who
had hijacked his $8,00QJoad of Christmas
spirits at gunpoint in Alhambra.
Thomas J. Hylleng ren, of West Covina,
tore off a paper bag that ·had been
taped over his head aS a blindfold and
ran to a telephone to notify Costa Mesa
police shortly before noon .
He was unharmed in the abduction,
wfjcb he said spanned what seemed
tc be several hours after be was con-
fronted at gunpolnt during his first
rounds of the day in the San Gabriel
Valley.
Hyllengren said he was very slowly
maneuvering his van full of liquor into
an · alley behind a store on Valley
Boulevard in Alhambra when the hi·
jacking occurred.
He told Costa Mesa Police Oilicer
Harlan Pauley he heard a voice beside
him as someone stepped onto the runriing
board and start;ed to turn, but glimpsed
a .38 caliber revolver at his temple.
"Stand still .•. ," he was told at th$t
point, adding that his abductor was
a black man who seemed to be pulling
the hijacking completely on his own.
No accomplices joined. him and he
forced Hyllengre n to lie down on the
carpeted floor of the big late model
(See IIIJACK, Page Z)
• ~0.VJES REACT TO FUEL
2 Daughters
Say Mother
Now 'Zombie'
Singer Bobby Darin Dies
Mter 2nd Heai~t S~gery
. . . . .
I
1.
CRISIS. Story, Pogo 30
GASOLINE INCRE.ASI SEEN
BY FEBRUARY, S.. P191 38
Congressional Jelders .:1ugbt-todQ 4-to
expedite passage o[ an tmi.rgmcy
energy bill ._ilated !ale W...._y
night by Ho.,. and Senale coalerees.
'Ibey hoped to get the compromlle bill
passed and approved u quickly u poss!·
blc, first by the Senale, and then by
the House, before beading home for
a montblong recea.
The bill contalnt power for the
Administration to lmpooe emergency
measures to deal with the energy crilis.
Uhder !his authority, It could make
mandatory Stich limitations u Simon
called for-as well as gasoline rationing.
Some members of Congress insisted
that rationing was the only fair solution
to gasoline shortages, but Nixon and
most advisers have been resiltiDg tbii
as a last-resort move.
State Raps . Use
Of Tidelands
Funds for 'Mary'
I SACRAMENTO (AP) -·'The city of
Long Beach improperly spent nearly
$14 million In public tidelands JDC!ll'Y
in . converting the Queen Mary to a
museum-of-the-sea and tourist attracUon,
stale official.I said today.
The State Lands Division recom·
mended !hat Its parent Lands Com·
mission sue the city to force it· to
repay !he mooey to the tidelands trust
fund.
The city used $51.6 mllIIon of ita
share of tideland& oil roya!Uea to convert
!he !hip, !he lengthy Landi Divlllon
report said. Additional lnveslmenta were
made by private companies which .held.
Queen Mary cooceaalons.
Of that, $13.9 rnJUlon or 21.7 percent
directly benefltted cunmerclal ventures
on the ship ln violation of state law,
the report said.
Long Beach omclals submllted a
rebuttal statement to the commtaaion
contendin!I all !Wlds were spent properly
and legally. •
Long Beach City Manqer ~olm Man-.. n said the city would welcome a law-
suit. ·
He said the comml•km'1 clalm that
there was a deficit In the tidelandl !und
was "totally lnconcelvable to 111 oitd
completely tidk:uioul." ,
Mansell said reports al all expeodltum
on the ~ Mary bid -aYlllable
aince the bqinnlnc al lhe project.
11We wonder why, after five yem and
hundreds ol thoo-of dollm 1pent
by the atale In ,researching this projocl,
!hat .. pendltures they know exlated • or
were contemplated -and which they
helped review prior to subm-by the
city, should now be a matter of aucll
great concern." be ulcl.
Edwiud N. Gladish, the dl'1slon'1 ...
ecuUve officer, said the eomerted ocean
liner has become more at a COllllllfli'Cia venture ,,..with a matltlme mmeum u
\ls a~ndage.11
-Dllltr l"illlt Sl•ll 'II~ . . .
FAIRVIEW BENEFACTOR JOHNSTON RESTS AMID BIKES
UMCI Bliycle Donon H.tghten Meta Man's Christmas Spirit
Bieyeles Galore
Fairview Kids To Get Yule Bikes
By ·ARTIIUR R. VINSEL
Of rM oeitr P'n.t Sl•ll
A Eli-styled Santa Claus' helper, 83
years ~ (ll'bO;didi\'t llave enough used
bicycles ~r h1a • iQnual donation to men·
tally re.tarded ,childre0 at Fairview State
H<11eftal . is up to his ears in them ·
to<lay.
1be response to Bob • ,Johnston's sug-
gestk>ii in ' last . Saturday's Daily Pl1ot
that• ~pie . might like to cootribute
spme has been overwhelming.
"We've ,got. 'bikes all over Hell's half~
acre,~·· ·jOkes' :Johnston, an explorer,
nat~alis\, adverlturer and authority on
central America.
Hls yard at. 2S39 Cornell Drive, C.osta
Mesa, loo~ like a used car lot, except
that the stock is entirely bicycles -
about 40 MW -which Will be distributed
a~ Fa~iew children Christmas
morrung.
' lie ·bas ~ re-painted and out·
fitted -'JlieycleS with new )ires for
a clozm ·.,.an lUld given )'i!Wlisters
at lhOJacllity for the mentally retarded.
Hiii ~ year • befor• saw 18 bikes..
dlatrlbuted. •
lo Mexico Sunday night after the
shortage Story appeared in Saturday's
paper. He found his phone ringing. He
said it didn't stOp until 10 o'lcock that
night.
"l missed my Rotary Club meeting
today just working on them," the 8J..
year-old naturalist said Wednesday of the
array of bicycles parked in his yard
awaiting cleanup and painting.
He said that despite the fuel shortage
which has led the state hospital to
cut back in its flee t vehicle gasoline
consumption, officials have promised to
send a Lruck to pick up the Christmas
bicycle shipment.
Johnston sent 20 of the two-wheelers
out to Harbor Area cyclery shops to
be fitted with new tires and says the
firms now refuse to handle any more
: . of them for the time being.
"They won't do any more lire work,"
he ~xplained. "They don't have emugh
tires for their own business:•
'Johnston' said the bicycle. girl that
put bim in one ·Of the best lioliday
spirits he has experienced in '83
(See BIKES, Page %) •
• By TOM BARLEY
, Of ftle DlflY '"" Steff
Two or -M&ria "'farson•s four daughters
tesO!ied today that the fami1Y-oriented
motli"er lhey knew before the alleged
sauna room inciden t of March 2, 1970,
no longer exists in the Anaheill) home.
Both girls stated from the witness
stand in the Orange County Superior
Court trial that Mrs. Parson, 49, is
invariably in a 111.0mbie--like" trance
before the television set when they return
home from school.
Attorney Marvin Lewis, Sr. claims
the alleged ordeal in the sauna room
of the Holiday Health ~pa in Orange
for the psychiatric ttansformation in
his client.
Lewis claims in his $1 million lawsuit
against the spa that Mrs. Parson has
become three women -sex hungry
Maria who selects her mates from local
bars, remprseful Betty who bitterly
resents Maria's escapades and the
submarged real self of Mrs . Parson.
Jessica Parson, 16, tokl the jury that
the onJy variation in her mother's ap-
pathetic attitude to life comes when
she decides to go out alone for the
evening.
"Then her face lights up," Jessica
said. And ijie Anaheim High School girl
described with reluctance for the jury
her mother's present-day fon~ for
miniskirts. tight, Jow~ut blouses and
"cheap, fancy clothes." .
Both Jessica and Mary Paulette
Parson, 15, testified that the mother
they knew before she allegedly was
trapped in the sauna room was a happy,
vivacious woman who made all her four
daughters clothes.
"We were always having parties at
our house," Jessiea'Said. "Mom loved
family gatherings and when she wasn't
doing things like that she was working
for the church, the PTA or our youth
(See SAUNA, Page %1
~get them as penonaI gifts, some
wardl keep the 'bleyc1es as community
Jll'Ol)e#y and some. rent them out from
.bike· j>OOI• for Ui!O In programs to teach
patients how to handle their money .. '-
Study Gone to Waste?
Lo,i Al':IPELES (lJPj),., ~ Qirin, .
lhe brasp ambitious teen Idol of the
early 1960s who sang "Mack the
Knife" and "Splish-Splash'' and ll'larried
Sandra Dee, died today aller his second
o~n heart operation. He was 37.
uHe never really came around after
the operation," a spokesman said. "He
waS just too weak to recover."
Darin made a number of records
that sold more than a million copies,
Including "Dream Ulver,11 aod won an
Oscar nomination as best supporting
actor in 1963 for his role In "capt.
Newman, M.D."
His marriage. to lttiss Dee, one of
the teen idol romances of the 1960s,
lasted six years.
Darin died. at 12:15 a.m. at Cedars
of Lebanon Hospital, less than seven
hours after a team of four surgeons
finished the second open heart operation
to be performed on him in Jess than
three years.
In February 1971 two valves were
inserted in Darin's heart, which bad
been weakened by a bout of rheumatic
fever at lhe age of 8.
During routine postoperative checks
Jast week. doctors said they discovered
that one of the valves was malfunc-
tioning. A new valve was installed
Wednesday in an operation that took
Darin specified in his will that his
body should be donated to medical
science.
A spokesman said the body had al-
ready been transferred to UCLA where
it would be used fOr research.
"He felt !hat i! there could be any
purpose served by dying it would be to
help save other people's lives," said
the spokesman.
Thus, he sald, ttiere will be no fu.
neral althouih friends may bold private
memorial cer.emonles.
Darin was born .Walden Robert Cassot-
'
.Bike Trail Plan P,ushed Jobnstm arrived home from a trip
' ·.
Santa's Plione
.. ' .ls in Service
t
Qlota· Msla chlldrm who tried
to reach Santa Cleua by telephone
Wedneaclay night and were In-
formed by • recorded voice !hat
hla pboae wa1 .ct In service can
try •Bain tonlaht and Friday nlpt. Incorrect telephone n u m b e r s
were dlslrlbuted Wednesday by
Santa's helpers , the Colla Mesa
Jaycees. Jaycee President Don Bull
apologized to !he disappointed
yolllljslers and their P!ll"enta today.
~ said the correct JlU!l1bera
are lllH327, 516-53211. lilt-IS29 and
-· Calls can be made between 1:111 p.m. and "l :lll p.m.
-ovemlDp.
By RUDI ·NIEDZIELSKI
Of 1t1t o.ltr 'lllt Sl•ff
Costa ft.1esa could have a low-cost,
energy-saving transportation system and
It could be rea~y to s<rve the public
almost overnight.
All it would take is a few buckets
ol paint. The paint would be used to
stripe o!! the first phase of the Costa
Mesa bicycle trails system, a'ccordlng
to Chuck Mc:Donald.
McDonald,-DoW a motion picture-TV
sludcnt at UCLA. drafted the bicycle
trails system over a year ago with
the help of a citizens bicycle trails
coouhittee.
Tho plan "'" to bave been im-plementOcl by city hall long ago but ·
the tmpollll wu lost after McDonald
tranlferred out or Orange Coasl College.
"They' .. given this thing a very low
priority and lhey'rt draggfng their Ice!
on it," McDonald said Thursday while
visiting in Costa Mesa . .
"With the energy crisis upon us, this
is the time we need it the most. It
took us two--and-one-half years to get
this report out. It was about 100
pages and it was a damned good report,"
Mcllooald charged.
Assistant City Manager Robert K. Dug·
gan agreed wilh part of McDonald's
observations. "
"It's just about number l12 on our
priority list," he said. "\Ve did have
a 1tudy on it '8nd we bad a citizens
committee which made the report. Then
it went to the planning department."
However Duggan added that the plan-
ning staff wu burdened by SO.Jllucb
other worlt. including the new sign
ordinance, that tbe city collllcll nine
moitlhs ago establ~hed prior!Ues for
various planning projects.
I ' ,.
"The council determined that the bicy.
cle trails had a low priority compared
to some other things the coW'lcil. wanted
to get done," he said.
"lt's bogged down and it doesn't
deserve to be , Newport Beach !!nd Hun-
tington Beach have !heir bike !rails
and they started .after we did," said
Mcll<l1ald . ."'.'l'm planning to be back
in this area in June and I sure wotild
like to start riding bicycles again ." ·
The' Costa Mesa bicycle tralls system
propoaed by McDonald would eventually
cover 50 miles. 'I1Je first phase would
involve striping existing roads while the
second and third phase would involve
the construdlon of barriers and right
ol way acqulaitlons.
McDonald says he recently ·cheeked
out the routea in the system and says
the plan Is still valid and could be
implemented immedialely,
-·
U'ITI ...... . ' ' TEEN·AGE IDOL DEAD AT .$1
Bobby Dorin Succumbs :
• • •
to in a tough area o.f the Bronx. !in ..
New York City. In his early days ..,in
show business, be picked up a reputalion
as a brash, cocky kid who got aJie¥
more •through his energy and deternilia ..
tion than by talent. •
In later years , associates sald1 ':he
mellowed a bit.
• ••
Orange Coast;' •
•
Weather . •.
It'll be cooler Friday, accordlni •
to the wtather service, with highs
In !he low 70s inland dipping lo lhe!
upper 80s at the 1be.aches. Some'.'°
high cloudine&'! but mostly fair
skies. • ,.
INSIDE TODAY
If uou'n an nband61!ld dog;
your chances of finding a home
are probably bet£eT in Hunting.
ton Beach tha" anuwhere elst.
See 1toru1 Page 10. .. .
--•
'
c Thursday, Dtcembtr 20, 1~73
Caspers Plans
To Step "J!o·1v1i
Orange County Supervisor Ronald
Crispen oC . Ne~·port Beach said
Wednolday he wlll step down u
dWrman ol the board next year
and throw his support to Supervisor
Ralph Clark ol Anaheim.
"He wanted the job thls year
when I got It and I think he
should have It now,'1 Caspers said.
Both Caspers and Clark are up
(or re-election in June. Caspers
has held the J>OSl of chairman
for two or hJJ four years on the
board.
Ca1pers said he wants to give
up the chairmanship to devote
more time to the needs of his
district.
. -. Cobalt-laden
• ..
:~Truck Tips
Over on Ice
STROUDSBURG, Pa. (AP) - A trac-
tor-traiJer truck hauling radioactive
,-, cobalt tipped over on icy Interstate
80 today and police cordoned off 20
.. miles of the east-west highway as a
'· precautionary move. .. Karl Abraham, a SPokesman for the
Atomic Energy Commission in King of
: .. Ptussia, near Philadelphia, said. "As
.. f.ar as wt know as at this time, there's
• .. ·been no release or r a di oa cti vi ty.
1 However, th at could change."
He said the containers are made for
rough handling and tbat there have been
Bomb Kills
No. 2 Man
In Spain
MADRID (UPI) -An .,..,.in'1 bomb
toda y killed Prime Minis ter Luis Carrero
Blanco. the right-hand mon t o
Genefallssimo Francisco Franco, in an
e1plosion that hurled his car over the
root or a church where he had jtl.'t
•ttellded Mass,
"The prime minister was the victim
of an 3SS8SSlnallon," a government
spokesman announced nine hours after
he was killed .
Vice President Torcua to Fernandez
t.!iranda ·immediately took over as prime
minister.
The government said Adm . Carrero ,
70, was killed by "a potent charge
of explosives" planted In a tunnel
workmen had been digging under the
street Jn front of the church and around
the comer from the U.S. Embassy.
Witnesses said the prime minister's
Dodge Umousine was hurled against the
roof of the church, bounded over it
and landed on a second noor terrace
on the other side of the building.
The text of the government said:
"The investigation carried out at the
site of the deaU:I Of the president of
the government (prime. minister) ha s
shown it was a criminal act.
"From the basement or the building
No. 104 on ClaudlO Coello in Madrid,
an underground tunnel was dug to the
center of sa id street in front of said
building.
I
f similar accidents in the past With no
leakage.
~ Joel Keller, director of civil defense .
"At this point, a powerful explosive
charge was set under the pavement
and triggered from the outside at the
exact moment that the president's car
made its customary journey. ·~ in Monroe ColmlY, said radiological ~··monitoring teamll equipped w1th Geiger
.... Counters bad been sent to the accident
' site. 1 If It broke out of the containers, l the cobalt.00 would not spread long
· ."' distances, according to Don McOonal, 1 ., chief of the radiation control division
-. of the State Department of Environ-
, mental Resources.
"It would probably be a local con-
tainment at the scene of the accident
and there would be no problem,'•
-McDonal said.
~ AJ!en Burgess, a dispatcher for Cooper
Jarrett. Inc., of Orange, N.J., which
owns the truck, said the vehicle was
caJT)llng cobalt.00, housed in two con-l' talners. He said one weighed 3,530
' pounds. the other 3,658 pounds. I He identified the shipper as Picker
' IntraAmerlca Corp. of Cleveland, Ohio.
·•· · an X-ray equipment firm. He said the
' shipment was bound for the New York
. City Port Authority.
Q:ibalt-60 has several mes, be said.
among them as a dlagnbatlc isotope
1 In ~itals or in industry to take X·rays
: ·of Iarle machlnery.
· "We do not k n o w if there is any
danger, but we are not faking any
1 ~ces,'' said trooper Dave Guard at
the Fem Ridge station.
State police said no one was injured
' tn the acicdent, which occurred on a
• wet roadrif:during freezing rain. I·· 'Ibe r said that cars in the
middle of sealed-off area were "being ~' moved out as fast as posslb~e." : .
.
' ·-
. --"
•
,
• '
FromP119el
BIKES ...
Christmases on earth came from a little
g~I 6 yean old.
She brought her bicycle to give for
a retarded child at Fairview State
Hospital to enjoy.
It was the only bike she had.
Crash Blocks Route
MERCED (AP) - A grinding collision
involving at least rive tractor-trailer rigs
blocked most of California 1l9 eight miles
north or here today. lhe highv.·ay patrol
said. At least thre<! injuries y,·ere
reported as olflccrs attempled to clear
the fog-choked highway and reroute cars.
OlAH•I COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
Tiit Otll'IOt Cotll OAIL'f' l'ILOT, Wiii! Wllldl
11 -!nod 11'1• ll•••·P''11H, II P\lblllfled 9Y
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tdl!len II JOlll!i.l>ld klu_,,..,. Ind Slllld•V•·
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"Police inspector Juan Antonio Bueno
Fernandez and the driver of (Cnrrero's)
vehicle, Jose Luis Perez Mondeja, also
died ."
Carrero had just left the church \vhere
he attended Mass almost every dny
before being driven to his office. Wit·
nesses said the car was moving from
the curb v.·hen it v.'as blown . at least
50 feet into the air.
Carrero's death was not announced
officially for three hours and the
assassination was not mentioned for nine
hours.
Identity Found
For Sports Car
Accident Victim
A sports ca r driver cremated early
\\lcdnesday when hls Japanese seda n
shot off a mountain road below Irvine
Park. overturned and exploded in flame s.
has been tentatively identlried.
He is believed to be Selmer Tate,
27, of 12066 Pearce Ave., Garden Grove,
according to Orange County Coroner's
deputie8 who traced auto leasing com-
pany records.
California Highway Patrol Information
Officer Duane Friesen said the victim 's
body was reduced to a few bones in
the predawn accident.
The overturned sports car was spotted
about daylight Wednesday below the
roadway by an Irvine Park employe
driving up Chapman Avenue near San-
tiago Road en route to work.
Coroner's deputies estimaled the high
speed accident occurred about four hours
before the wreckage was found by the
passer~y.
The car was new and carried only
paper temporary license plates and
registration which were destroyed in
the crash.
Sprinkler Halts
Fire ·at Plant,
Keeps Gushing
A malfunctioning automatic sprinkler
system which put out the small fire
but failed to shut Itself and Its wat~r
off resulted in about $8,000 damage to
a Ne...,1>0rt Beach industrial firm
overnight.
Jerry Todd and his employcs at Arrow
Sash and Door Company. 1620 Monrovia
Ave .. arrived today to find the building
flood ed and th e sprinklers still spra ying.
New port Beach Fire Departn1ent
lnspector Art 1',lorton sa id at the r8te
or 15 gallons per minute, the structure
absorbed about 8,000 gallons of waler
ove rnight.
Despite the fact it ran out and dov.'Tl
into industrial drains. the v.•ater caused
extensive damage lo stacks of v.·ood
and other door and frame malerial11
In the building over a period of several
hours. \ ,
''Apparently the fire started Wednes·
n i g h t and the 1prlnklcr cxtlnguished
it." said ln!pecior Morton.
He added that a fire alarm \b.•hlch
would ordinarily be a c t l v a t e d
si mult:incously with the sprinkler failed
to go off. so the incident wtnt undetected
and the t;prlnk(al's continued their spray
until about 7 a.m. today. .
Investigators said the blar.e that ac-.
tivated them was possibly ignited · by
!P"rks from a grinding who<! In the
door and sash manufacturing firm .
Damage 10 the structure wa1 about
ISOO, wliile llii! ddlUOifal JO!! In
materials. including carved ornamental
dOors, comprised the rtmalnlna damage,
firemen said.
Hit by .Cai·
Neighbors and friends huddle around Leslie Andrew, 10, to comfort
her after she ran into streel Wednesday near family's apf.J1,ment at
2885 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa and was hit by a car. Motorist Verne
R. Truslow, 57, Santa Ana, was not cited. Leslie suffered a fractured
pelvi s, but wa s listed in good condition today at Costa Mesa Memo-
rial llospital.
Watergate Coniuiittee ,
Probes Nixon Brothers
From Wire SUvlces
The Senate \Vatergate Committee starr
is trying to determine if President Nix-
on's two brothers were involved in the
$250.000 sale of apparently-worthless
mining claims to Howard Hughes. it
was reported today. (Related story. Page
4.1
President Nixon's older brothet, F.
Donald Nixon. lives in Newport Beach
but he was unavailable for CtJnunenl
toclay.
The newes~ \Va tergate probe will likely
produce a new legal confrontation over
presidential tapes after the Watergate
committee subpoenaed 481 t ape
recordings and hundreds of other items
from White House files \Vednesdey.
Questions askeii auring recent con·
fidential interrogations indicate 1he in-
\'estigators' interest in Donald Nixon
and Edward Nixon, a Seattle consultant.
olt was reported no hint is given as
to what role, if any, the Nixon brothers
might have played in the transaction.
But the staff wants to find out if they
re·ceived any rewards.
Donald Nixon report.edly has been
questioned on th e matter by staff in-
vestigators in California.
Terry F. Lenzner. assistant to
Watergate committee counsel Samuel
Dash, confirmed that "the matters stilt
are under investigation."
Donald Nixon is close friends Y.-ith
John H. 1'-ieier; a Newport Beach resident
and former Hughes aide whom the
billionaire llas named in a $9 million
court case as having provided him with
recommendations for mining purchases
which v.•ere of little ~orth.
The mining claims were mainly in
Nevada, according lo the suit, but it
was reported a sale in question involved
six unproducUve mining claims in Mono
County, caur.
Meler Was questioned recently by the
commlttee start in Washington.
The new subpoenas also demand "all
From Page I
SAUNA ...
organiiations. ·•
records" on President Nixon's dealings
with the dairy industry, which allegedly
gave the Nixon campaign $500,000 in
1969.
But that probe may be tempered by
the announcement Wednesday by Dr.
George L. Mehren; a general manager
of Ameri can Milk Producers, Inc.. that
the AMPI gave a total of $800,000 to
both the Democratic and Republican
parties and the donations were about
equal.
''l am sure an effort was made to
balance this out," Mehren said.
It had earlier been reported that the
Watergate panel is also investigating
Donald NUr:on's role in securing federal
approval of Hughes' acquisition of Alr.
west, the commuter airline serving
Orange County and the Southwest.
Nixon had adamantly denied he ever
interceded ror Hughes or anybody .else.
'The While House had no l'riyhediate
comment on the new dema,rids. But
they appeared certain to be 1Challenged
on the grounds that they were too sweep-
ing and would constitute i fishing ex·
µedition through executive1.0ffice flies.
Samuel J. Powers. a Miami attorney
serving as a White House consultant
on the tapes case./had commented
earlier that any de!l'land for ,hundreds
of tapes ''really ~·o~d almost shut down
the executive department for us to have
to do that kind or' work."
In addi tion tcv'specific requests, made
by exact times and dates, for White
House tape ,recordings, the committee
made general requests for infonnation
on the foll9Wing subjects.
-The Watergate break-ins of f\.tay 77
and June 17, 1972.
-The planning of any break-in or
electronic surveillance at the office or
home or Las Vegas newspaper
pubt!sher Hank Greenspun .
-Any offers or authorizations. to offer
executive clemency to W a t e r g a t e
burglars.
-The payment of money to those
burglars after their arrests.
-An y attempts to use the CIA or
the FBI to cover up the Watergate
affair.
l'roM P.,,e l
GRANNY • • •
the excepUon of about 1100 wortb of
-1ues, she gave away to ,._.,.
elie1" be &aid.
Tho dlznjouUv• lady who was the
Anaheim B'nal B'rlth'1 Woman of the
Year and a past president of the chapter,
proved to be ooe ol Engqulst's mO!t
dltnculrcases.
He explained that he had' the '2,000
worth of bad checks written by Sandra
Pbllllps which either ll•fed an add""
in Fountain Valley or a Post Office
box In HW!tington Beach.
"She no longer lived al th• Fountain
vaney addrtaa and left no forwarding
address when she moved out. The Post
O!Cice box llsted the F9untain Valley
address, so It was a dead end," he
said.
The only thing• Engqu!Jt bid to go
on "'ere her credlt cards that she
periodically used for identification when
wrltlng checks.
Through the gas card, he was able
lo locate cars driven by people using
It.
One family in ~anta Ana, which turned
Nixo1i W 01i't
Pay Back U.S .
WASHJNOTON (AP) -A Whll,e
House spokesman said today PreSJ•
dent Nixon wlll not reimburse the
government ror federally financed
work at l'lls Snn Clemente and
Florida residences which t h e
General Accounting Office. sug-
gested he should have paid for
personally ot the time.
11The answer 111 no," Dcput.y
Press Secretary Oernld L. ~arrer
said in response to reporters que&-
tloos. , t \Varren said the GAO repor
released Tuesd:iy qu<.'sUon on ly
"an infinitesimal" porUo or the
Sl.4 million in federal f ~s spe.nt
at the San Clemente " Key Bis·
ca yne residences, stly f o r
!iecurlty reasons. . The presidential pokesman said
the auditor's re'1'rt "deflates . · ·
these wild chafges" that Nixon
benefltted rt the gavernment·
financed wo .
I
warren "'as asked specific=ally
about th/ GAO's suggestion that
certain/ landscape mainlcno.nce.
sewer work and surveys should
oot have been paid for by the gov~rnment. lie responded In the ~gative when asked whether i'Jixon
,\\'OUld now pay for those items,
out to be her daughter and son-in-Jaw,
was located by the detective and he
says he kept bugging them about sandra
PhlUlps. Thet denied koowtna where she /
"~<in. afternoon r got a can lrollJ ,.. Coastal Board
Sandra Spinella who said she wu callhlt
from Houston. She uld she and b~r
husband had taken Sandra Phllllp•r in.
but they dldn't know where shi / was
now.
uShe said 1he was contacting me
because l wa• bugaing her l~y.
"But I got suapiclous 1*ause she
woukln't hang up and Jet me call her
back. I knew 1he was 11 around here
somewhere," he saJd. /
So Engqu!Jt pre~1bis oearch and eventually found out that his !Ulpect
had po""1 boll lo . another dtU(ht.r
who had been picked up In Stanton
on a traffic warr¥.t.
"She had to glye her name and address
when she !lOS\ed ban, and that:J how
l found her,'' J.e _saiC.:. ' Acco~ed by Capt. Les Rowland ,
Engquist nt to pick Mrs. Spinella up.
but fo •he had just left for a B'nai
B'rlth rMeUng.
They 1beat her to the meeting and
one of the women got the two officers
conflllfld with the speakers they were
e.rpOcting from the Jewish Defense
I;eaguc. -
I "We dJdn't make a big deal out or
arresting her. We just aort of separated
·her from the group belort they got
Inside and told her daughter ·to make
up IOll1e excuae for her absence," Eng· qu!Jt aclded.
Rowland notes that when she was
in custody, she told them she would
ten all. "Tbe Jig's up," she re~ly saJd. . •
According to Engqa!Jt, she kept llrff
•eparate Il>a -one lo the name of
Sandra Phllllps, one in the name of
Sandra Spinella and one in the name
of Stephanie Thatcher.
. "She told ua the third one she kept
in case she got stopped by a traffic
cop. That way when they ran the oame
through for a warrant check, there wouJd
be no wants on it. ·
"She told us she believed she'd never
be caught," he aakl.
In fact. the woman who ls a member
of the City of Hope'• MJllJoo Dollar
C1ub, told Engquist her only fear was
that he would read the woman's pages
in local newspapera and recognize her
picture.
"I guess I'm going to have to do
a little more reading," he added.
Engquist acknowlectaes that bis attitude
about this case Is aJfferent from the
bad check cases he'a Investigated.
..Most people who do something like
this do it beeause they're hurting finan-
cially. She thought it was a game
became for her, It was.
"She thought she could go on forever
because she bad covered her tracks
pretty well. But that really motivated
me."
Seeks Solution
To San Onofre
SAN MATEO (AP ) -State Coastline
Commission officials say they have held
Informal sessions with Sou the r n
California Edison Co. ext'Cutives to find
a solution to the problem or expanding
the San Onofre nuclear power plant'.
Melvin B. Lane, commission chainnan,
said Wednesday at least three separate
discussions have been held with utility
executives "to look to our common areas
of concern and see what common ground
might be acceptable to them and us."
The commission's denial of a pennit
to cons truct tv.·o more units at the
San Onofre plant . some three miles
south of the \Vcstem \\'hite llouse In
San Clemente, has been widely criticized
in the light of the current energy crisis.
The commission based its decision
ea rlier this month on the grounds that
expending the power plant would hann
marine life and destroy unique sandstone
bluffs.
Lane said the dlscll5Sions with utility
officials concerned setting up a marine
life monitoring program and ways in
which the two new units could be built ·
on the existing site without harming
the bluffs.
FromPqel
HIJACK ...
liquor delivery van after taping the
brov.11 paper bag over his head.
The victim, an employe of the ,.iilford
C',ompany, ·a distribution firm head·
quartered in Vernon, said he was
ttJeatened but not injured during the
long rlde over various routes to the
Orange Coast.
"Lay down ... •lay down ... I don't
want to hear another word ," the hijacker
reportedly tOld him as the white van
zoomed down what Hyllengren said
seemed to be several different freeways.
He was finally freed in a liorseshof.
shaped alley of an apartment complex
at 1887 Monrovia Ave., near 19th Strttt
in Costa Mesa, alter which the hijacker
drove off al high speed.
The~ driver said he ran back down
the alley In an attempt to get a glimpse
of the hijacker's getaway route but the
white vnn had al ready disappeared . .,
Investigators said the search was com-
plicated by the fact that Hyllengren's
Milford Company delivery vehicle was
plain-colored, tvlthout any exterior label
eicept for a small serial number.
Jessica testified that her mother today
is almost always depressed and often
weeping and has delegated all her
tiouskeeping and kitchen work to her
family.
Nobody Sells G.E. Micro-Wave Ovens for less than
And both attractive girls testified that
hfrs. Parson will often reprimand them
for doing something that she herself
had suggested to them weeks or months
before.
"She helped me dye my hair blonde,"
Jessica said. "And then later on she
started yelling and screaming at me
because she'd ·just noti ced that th e color
ol 1ny hair had changed."
Both girls testified that they cannot
now approach their mother with any
personal or family proble1ns of any
kind. • "She ju!t isn't interested." Jessica
said. "Even if I can get her to listen
she often docci 't seem to unde rstand
what I'm talk.ifii about."
Lewis said today that he intends to
put other members of the Parson family
on the witness stand today belo~.l..iljja..
William A-turray calls a lo.day Christmas
recess .
He said hll future w11n .. 1e1 will In-
clude a Rom1n Catholic priest. several
psychlatr!lta ID<l Mrs. Parson hmelr.
Former patrons of th< h<alth spa
have testified thot the sliding door of
the sauna room often Jammed and that
health spa personnel were never wlthtn
shouting distance on such occasions. •
A Flnnish sauna designer Bnd a
carpenter who helped build the Orange
fn cility have al80 testified that they
would noi-penonally have suggeoted the
lite of a slldlng door on the sauna
room because of inherent mechan ical
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