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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-07 - Orange Coast Pilot7 I ' : --T - • • a • 810 ~· :.__' now, DAILY PILOT tars Be~rt Sharp ~llt1 -"by B:arry -Tru1nan * * * 10' * * * . . " Tl'!URSDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 7, rm VOL 61, .MO. ML I RCTtOllS. 71 ....... . . , • • • • •• , • • • • • • • Alamitos High Dr~g ,Raid Nets 27 • .. StUI Critical ·/_ KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Despite a ,...-bemt and 'llbo<ed brealhillg, former ~ Harry .s Truman, •· rallled -.iJ -,. Doc<mn1aid bis health wu crltioal but his daughter said, .. I have great faith that he's ~ lo come out of tbl.s all "gbt .. n PbYsidans attending the nation's ~ cbiet executive sald lbeir primary con- cern was whether Truman's heart was stioog enough. Snow, Rain • • "President Truman's condition is Im-- proved, but bis qe and the J)Olenllal of sudden change 1'l(Ulrel !bat be coollnue to be described U crlllcal," Aid I mtdlcal -today at -llolpilal. Truman rallled during the "\iigbt and 0. .. Wallace Graham, his persooal physi- cian, said dettmration of 1ilil heart and lungs stopped early today and hil vital signs stabili7.ed. The tough litUe former President was rushed lo the hospital TU.sdii7 night llUf· fering lung coogestion. He. bad been ill for two weeks at bis -home In nearby Independence, llo. before entering the hospital. His ...,. dition fll'St was "fair," then fell lo "serious" Wednelday and "critic;Jl'' Wednesday nlg)lt. . ,. ' ..;.\.. ". . Lash State; Break Seen Trwnan's w~_Bess, 87,_81)_4_their.only -.- daughter, :Aargaret Truman Daniel, ··' stayed by his bedside through the nigbl, leaving the hospital at S: 15 a.m. SAN FRANOISCO CAP ) -Snow, rain and ball lashed much of Northern Califorp.ia today, closing one major road and malting others ha.r.ardoos, but the weatherman says thete may be a break in the weather as the storm front moves Iowan!. Soutlml Call!ornla. Heavy: moW by sunrise forced closure of Highway 17 belW... Los Gatos and Santa Cruz, while Highw ay 58 at Alta- mont Pass and Interstate 101 near the Oregon border were slippery . and motorists were advised to carry chains. Decrea$ng showers were foreca~t for the san Francisco Bay area with a chance of thtmdershowers with hail and some snow on the peaks. By morning two inches of snow covered the tip .of Mt. Tamalpais 'In Marin county and light powder dusted the saota Rosa foothills. . 1be weatherman said it would be fatr and cold Friday with lows ranging from the mid IOI lo mid 30s. The interior valleys also can e~t showers tonight and some fog Friday momlng and possibly some Uum·. denbowen with hail , the weatbennan said. Snow fell oq Sk)lline Bouleva rd •near San Jose, .,.. the California ~gbw~y Patrol said tow truclcs we"' belDg d1>- palcli!d to aid stuck motorists. . Tho Weal~ Sel'\'lce said neal'hlizzard conditions "1ld cootinue to prevail In the Sierra Nivada. There were: 11 inches of snow reported on Interstate 80 west of Donner Pass. Thirteen """' lnchel of "'!'w fell during the night--at Norden near Donner Pass in 9-degrff temperature. Chalna ~ required on Highway 80 from Aubdrn to east of Reno; on state .Rt. .18 0 Clraon-Pa11 which was clos· ! ~ STORM, Page II ., I "I feel be is much better," Mrs. Daniel said as she left. "He's sleeping normally and naturally . I have g,.._t Jaillr that he's going to come out oL.,_ttiis all right." Mrs. Daniel said she · tallr.ed with Graham "and he says there is definite improvement." In the mid-mornlnl mealcal statement by Graham, read by hospital spokesman John Dreves, It wu 'reported that "there was a dramatic change In the !Wig and bear! -charaCtulsed by a rapid heart rate of UO and falliog blood pressure of 80 o~i(80." This develoPl""!I d~~,-nlghl caused doctors tQ 1Cbange i n111~• s con. ' dition from "serloUs" to '1tcrltlcal." , "He became e~lreme!Y-o(,breath and bis k~a were ordy ~ e!- ·fective from 3 'J>.m. unw 9:15 p.rn. Wednesday when he · lespondeil to medication," Graham aald. "The former Pretldell t's ternPerature is somewhat controlled bit nuctuating. It peaked al IOU al midlllgbL '!be major concern b stlll heart fallare." In an early medical ata1-t todly, Gtaham said, ''.vital ~ -to be sta~le as ·they ba,.. been durinl the nigbl. Respiration and cardio fudctions are stable . ._ . " f _. ' ' DAILY 'ILOT lt.tf """' u.okjiig.on'is-hls.olnlel:.B.ud Keyser, a"famillar For- estJ:Avenue figtire,. who bas acquired a-companion for·Pancbo. His namtiis·l"ltto. Pancho the ·parrot seems to be ~aying "catch nie it you can" atop his perch on a Laguna Beach patk.~ ing meter. It bas expired but be was unruffiad. M:an Shot Twice, Slain I Ai;Night Clqb .i~ Mesa • 'I f ..:. I A man free awaiting pr,osecution after being arrested on a 'burglary charge about three weeks ago was shot and kill· ed this morning under s j m I I a r circumstances at a Costa; Mesa nlabt club. '!be lncid.cit occumd at the Little Big 0, 19'3 Placentia Ave., apparently when owner Ted OWens arrived to open up the bar. Owens fired the fa tai' shots, police said. William--B;-oKcUyo26,-waH"hot-at least t'9ice in lhe torso aRt and died in Costa Mesa 11-nal Roopital •bc3rl 7:15 a.:",:~.-ez~=-~in g ~ of llll -11Yinc about mid-......... .-.~,. w.re unavailable for addTtlonal IDlormallon . Owens a longtJme Costa Mesa tavern owner whO bu (Miealllorially tangled wJth city ofliclalt, le'IUled lo discuss tho case. No Information was immediately available abOut whCtber Kelly was arme<t when fatally shot at OWens' Llttle Big 0, a larg~-el'ub In M lndtllirtal ares, featur- ing nlihMlme dancing. . I I I Costar Mesa wi.ice arr°esled Kelly three weeks, •HO! duriDK ·an all.e(ed burglary at Musket and.&phre.Anllque Anns,'446 W. 19Sh St:,~Jnvestfgators dld'note today. The victim or tod~'s fatal incident was taken into custody at gunpoint by in- v<s~gatlng officers apparently respon- ding to a burglir atB"rm that was tripped. He had been released on bail pending preliminary bearing on that burglary chatge, In Harbor Judicial Dislrict Court. PoUce said today they had no ·~nnanenl address for KeUy , whom they believed·t6 be a transient in the area. .. ' Alioto' Will Run SAN'l:A ot.AI!.\ (AP) -San Franc 1CO Mayor Jooepl/ "noto lays only ""' foreteen evenl.s -such u • be.art attack -will keep him from seeking the Democratlc nomlqatlon for goyy:rqor. "li . fiile nlli'ig 'tla·1e Wt'e' torrinlow, lid sign in,'' AliOto Tueeday night told a dinner R•therlng here -d In bis honor by S&ntit.·Clara Ma)'Or Gar)' Olllnior. I I I • , I Suspect in Rape Found Guilty .Of; ·Pei-versions l .. -...,. · Ali Orance County Superior Court jury that Jailed to reach a verdict on three ol six felony ct.tea tiled against Steve Bron90r1 filed "fact_ to the courtroom Wednetday nlg)K-to find the Fontana chicken rancher pilty of sU perversion counts. . . The jury adv ised Judge Walter Cbaramaa that a full day of deliberations had left them deadlocked on charges of rape, kidnaplng aod. a:ssault with a dead· Jy weapc:cJ filed against Bronson after he aUegedly abducted and raped a 19-year· . , old .Laguna Beach girl . Bronson, 24, w a 1 fOOnd •guilty of sodomy aod oral copulation and innocent of ap 19dlll"'181 cliarge.of rape. J~ Charamza and the two allornep involved, In the trial were to return to the courtroom later today. to dflennine If 'Bronson Is :a lie retrled on tho ripe, kld- naplng Md amult charges. Sentencing on.. the aex perversion allegotlons will be delayed periding that 'dec~K!rl. Judge Channaza said . ' ~ was arrested • •l his San Bernardino County home Sept. 15 just 24 !See GUILTY, Pap I) ' - • Need Seen For Other ·Area Action A massive roundup of drug sellers at Yos Alamitos High School may show the need for similar raids at other county high schools, according to Los Alamitos Police Chief Roy J. Kundt z. His officers. assisted by federal narcotics agents, arrested 27 persons, 24 of them high school students, early Wednesday following a six-week in- vestigation. A female undercover agent , enrolled at the school, purchased cocaine, hashi.s~ and. marijuana with a streel value of $6,CKXI from student peddlers. Kundtz said. '"Ibere is no doubt there is some kind ol narcotic sales goihg on in every high j school in the county," the police chief 11 said. uwe moved in here because we ' want students to know that their school is ' not a sanctuarY fqr drug tales.,. -or-tne 1l-stu<le7n.Ts arriSted in night raids on their l'lomeS five were girls. In~ vestigators said. The lengthy investigatlbn i n t o widespread drug sales at the school was financed and coordinated by the federal · -..... Drug Ab.lse Law Enforcement Agency. Cliief Kundtz said. j 'n>e female undercover agent. a 2.S-• year-old woman who officers sajd easily passes for a high achoo!. girl, was enroll· I ed at the school with the cooperation of principal Dale Schroeder. · Orange «::east Weat•er ·The weatberlady aay1 It will be parlly cl-Oudy on Frldoy, with cooler. temperatures a Ion g the coast. Highs espected to ,...ch 60 degrees. Lows tonight, 35-4l. INSIDE T ODAY The Orange Coun~ P r e s 1 Club takes a group of under· j}HVileged children to DilMU- land each year. Writer Ari Vin· sel recoU.s this 11ear'1 Wit to the Magic Kingdom tK a warm Chlistmal •to'll on Page 10. L.M...... I ,_ . CletlHIM • *WJ C"'9tu ""XfMs ti c,._.. 11 ._.. ........ 11 . .............. . lill"""'-f ... ......... lS. JMJ ,.,. "" "~ . ' ' , .... IM1'1111r1 Jf AMI ~llflet'I It ' , - ' APO LLO 17 PLAYS TO BIG HOUSE IN SPECTACULAR DELAYED BLASTOFF Curtain Held Up For Three Ho urs-But Spectators Thought It Wis Worth It '17' Astronauts :·Right on Target SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI J - ., Apollo l7's astronauts rocketed through bpace today on the final and mo.st dif- • ficult chapter of America·s planned ex- ·~ploration of the moon. . They sailed sinoothly despite an elec- Lron.ic failure that dcl<iyed their depart- ure by almost three hours and forced . lhe1n to step up their speed &lightly. Noonday brightness brieby flooded . Cape Ke1U1edy at 9:33 p.m. PST as their Saturn 5 rocket. tall as a J6..story build- ing, roared oU its launch pad and traced an orange comet trail into the sky toward a Sunday rendezvous with the moon. The 1noon landing is se t for Monday. On the ground, more than half a mil- lion people watched the blastoff. some of them hundreds or miles from the cape . A Jast second electronic circuit failure de\_ayed tbe launch 2 hours and 40 min· ut$ -aod threatened to postpone It for an entire month. But technicians at the cape and in Alabama worked cut a way \o bypass the faulty gear and get the flight started safely. Despite its !ale start, ApoUo 17 wils going ~ smoothly that a course correc- tiaA )JiaJlCUV~r scheduled this 1norning \va~ ~nnceled. The astronauts had fired an e x t r a strong -and very accurate -blast (If the top stage of their rocket to break out of earth orbit toward the moon, going a little faster than originally plaMed to make up Jost lime. Astronauts Eugene A. Cernan, Ronald E. Evans and llarrison ll. "Jack" Schmitt locked the command ship and n1oon landing craft nose-to-nose and cast off the spent top stage of the Salum rock- et five hours after launch. Mission controllers at llouston report· cd the discarded rocket stage was on a true course to slam into the Moon's face Swiday -while Apollo 17 Js behind tbe moon -about 124 miles east of where Apollo 14 landed in 1971. The shock '"'aves. equal to the explos- ion of 11 tons of TNT, "'iii be recorded by instruments left behind by previous moon crC\VS. On Monday, Ceman and Schmitt are due to land on the lunar surface at mid - day, and about four hours later to begin three days of eiploration in a rnountain- rinuned valley whlcb planners bope will ti! more scientifically productive than any moon· visit to date. . At 7:20 a.m., doctors in mission cantrol said biomedical slgn$ frmn Ceman in- cticated. be was asleep; The other two crewmen were not wear- ing sensors, .but doctors said.' from the lack of acUTity aboard the shlp they, too, appeareCI to be asleep. Before the sleep period began, ttJe as- tronauts dined on beer and gravy, clilcken stew, ambrosia, gingerbread and brown- ies. 'Ibey were to be awakened at mid- afternoon after live hours and 10 minutes of rest, to begin their second day in space. Overhaul Completed Oil Executive Named Tran~portation Chief CAMP PA fill; Md ... ~l;: p;.,i<lent NiXOI\ .. mple~.his lfJ>li>ef,Overbaul (o. day 'ii!:-!"~ Clo/de. '!Jfnegar, 48, a Los. Angeles .oil cam.pay executive, as Transplft;tatlon ~etary. Br,inegar, "'.ho holds a doctorate in economlci"and Hkes fast cars, will suc- ceed John}!.. Vblpe Who is becoming U.S. ambassad&r to ;Italy -a ~L ~e wanted. OU.ffE COAn JT DA ILY PILOT n. Ol'Mfe -=-•' 0...1Lv PJl.Or, ..tttt ..m1ctt 11 c:MIDIMd tN ....,,,.,.,....., II llUtllllhld bY ... or... °"" ............. c:.,,....., . ._ r•t• MllloM ,,. "*illlld, MMll•Y l1W'O¥llh FrWty, Mr COSI• Ma•, H-siort IMdl. ~ 8t11d1fF_,.ln V11i.y, '-"- ll.eldl, 1..,,IMIS..dlli.ctl n Stn Cltmenlt/ SM ,_ C.pllllr-. A &1119!• r1111on11 .,.11i.n • PJbllelled Sllllll'lllft. .not Sllnd•r._ TM ,,_...., ,_.llltllnl lll6t'lf b •f ~XI Wtsl .. y 6trwt, Cftt• MtN. Dlilol"nill, fl'M. Roltert N. Weed ~r.ll!Nnt tnd htllllllff' J•tk Ill. Curl•y Vkf ,.,. ..... , •IMI 0-_. ,,._,., n.,,. •• K •• .,u EdllOI' '111011"111 A. Murphine MNlel'"8 h l!OI' Cheri•• H. Lo.. Rl•h111,_. ,, Nill Atlltltnl ~!rig Ectl!OB Offk• ~ MfMI: 3Jf Wnl &..., Simi ......,.,. ... di: ,,,, "....,..,. ~4 Ll9uM hlcll1 m ,..,..,, -'- ~~ lucll: 1711J a-:11 ...,-...,. "" ~I JI.I Mlf1ll El C...-RMI Ttll1pl1 11 (7141 H J-4JJ1 C' tfW A'"rthfltil '41·Sl 71 ' , ... r.-.... At ....... "'~·--4tJ-44JI ..... ~ ..... c-tyC... ..... .... ,Ut °"''"""'· 1m. o.....,. Coll! N:lt/dilftl ~. ... ""'" ''°""· '"111""''*"-.... ror 1Mt1or .,. ed¥tl'~ i..111 ""' .. ,.,,... .SltlM ..-C:ltl ..... """"" M ..,,,_,. --· tMIMf diet ........ Hid •I OMl1 MfM, OllWlll1 .... ~"'-'"" br urrllr '2.d ="' ..,. "''11 t.J,lf ll'llftltltv1 mllltln' NlltM t1M lt'!Ollttllr, The appointment is to be the last Cabinet face change to be announced by Nixon but other switches at the sub- Cabinet level are anticipated for the second term. 'lbe reappointment of Richard G. Kleindienst as attorney general is expected to be announced Fri- day. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, who annowiced the latest ·~ pointment -which is subject to Senate confirmation -said Brinegar, 45, a senior vice president or UnJon Oil Co., is •·a very qualified manager and executive in the business world." Ziegler lav ished praise on b o t h Brinegar and Volpe and noted that Volpe would become the first Italian-American to head the U.S. m1ssion in Rome. "When Secretary Volpe takes up this important diplomatic PQSt he will be retracing a journey that brought his own parents to this country as penniless im· migrants at the tum of the century," Ziegler said. • Of Brinegar, Ziegler aaid : "I don't know what is meant by the lerm 'oil man' but Mr. Br.lnegar Is not an oil man. 11e is a very capable manager. His area of qualification goes to the n1anagement of people.'' ' Brinegar Uved briefly in !he late 1950s in Yorba Linda, Nix(ln's birthplace. WHO'S CALLING WHAT FALSE? OGLETI!ORPE, Ga . (AP) -A report from the Maco n County Extenalon Orflct ••r,s: 'A survey oC women attending a meeting to prot:Ht de<.'eptlve packaging revealed the followln·g -15 percent tinted their hair, 38 percent wore wlgs, 80 percent wore rouge, 98 percent wore lipstick. 25 percent wore eyeshadow, 22 pt'.rcent wore false eyela11hes, and 93 per. cen t wore nail poll11h." U .. IT ........ APOLLO 17 BLASTOFF After Thr•""""'• Deloy 1-pollo . Coverage Planned Mond ay SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -No more special telecasta of the Apollo 17 night are sched;.;led by the three major netwdrks until Monday when astronauts Eugene A. Ceman and Harri!IOll H. Schmitt land on the moon and begin the firtt of thffi! lunar explorations. Monday's Scheaufe follows , all tlmes Pacl(lc Standard: CBS: 11:&0 Lm., to noon; 8:30 p.m. to 9. NBC: 11 :30 a.m. to landing conclu11lon, scheduled about 11:54 a.m.; 4:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.; 8:30 p.m. to 10 :30. A8C: 11:30 a.m. to conclusion ()f Ian· ding; 4:30 p.m. to '5 p.m. f'rom Pagel STORM ..... ed temporarily due to hlgb wind; and oo lUghway 50 over Echo Summit. A 12-unlt apartment building Ylas evacuated In Lafayette when mud slid down a hill and struck the two-story structure. Manager Truman Bryan said no one was injured, but the builttmg "probably wlU be t<ltal loss." Dense fog moved into some areas or the·San Joaquin Valley early today drop. ping visibility to near zero. It was to be partly cloudy this af- ternoon Vt'ilh a Chance or scattered showers. C<lld unstable air accompanied by showers Was expected to move east watd Into the Valley today and may even bring light snow to some areas tomorrow. Dense fog is likely tonight and early tomorrow with some areas remaining clea r. Temperatures could drop into the 20!:I tonight causing possible frost damage to agricultural interests. Temperatures in the low to middle 30s were the rule in the valley this morning with afternoo n highs expected in the 40s and 50s. Ll&ht winds were expected with chances ~ showers diminist\ing ajler tonight. · . 1 • Meanwhile , 29 industrial f'u:ms wbosi gas· service had beer:. curtailed t>ecawi:e of cold weather and short supply Were restored to service 'Wednesday aftei:: being forced to shift to standby fuel sources for ()RC day . The firms all have interruptible con· tracts. No residential customers were af· feet ed. 80 Patients Flee , Fire at Tustin Care Facility A minor fire in a Tustin intermediate care facility caused the evacuation or 80 patients Wednesday. . A possible panic was averted by the calm action s of two persons, firemen said. Karen Clark, 45, a resident of Tustin Manor, 1051 Brian st., where the fire broke out was treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for smoke inhalatk>n. The facility's maintenance man . Robert Magdaleno, 29, underwent sifllilar treatment at Tustin Community HosJ'ital. Gtcn s hot l'ictitra -Tustin Lawm an s Health Improves Tustin Police learned this morning thnt a fellow office!;' seriously wounded early Wednesday In a neighborhood gun batlle has passed the 1crlsls point. Tustin Co1nmunlty Hospital officials to)d .ofpcer Waldron Karp's colleagues that his conditlpn Is now "stable and · rapidly improving. ., "He had a good ni ght," hospital of· fieials said. "He is· doing we11 and \\'C ha\'e high hopes of a complete recovery." Karp was operated on \Vednesday for the removal of a bullet that st ruck the 31· year~ld patrolman in the stomach as he moved to intercept a rifleman now iden· tified as Gary William Johnlon, 37, Tustin. ~·s gun 4iscbarged as he fell to the sidewalk, the. bullet hitting sheriff's depu- ty Ken Stewart, rl, In the race. stew art underwent B\D'1ery .ln the same hospita.l and ts also "doi'ng well" today. Johnson was felled by shotgun blasts and handgun fire fron . a Tustin patrolman working with Karp and a sherirf•s deputy becking up Stewart. He was operated on for wounds in the hand and knee and is recovering in Orange County Medical Center from those injuries. Johnson bas been booked for assault with intent to commit murder and shoot.lng at an occupled buJlding. Tustin police said the latter charle stems from . Jo6n30n • allegedly ftrblg several rifle shots into a home occupied by legal secretary Laetlcla J •t,n O'Halloran,' 30, at 13322 Diamond Hild Drive. Potlce said Johnson fl.red several 1hotl through the bathroolll . wJiid9w Ind Into the glass shower dooi' of the residence In an apparent bid to force Mrs. O'Halloran k. open the front door. Frmn PflfJfl l GUILTY ... . s hours artor he allegedly lckt!d. blonde victim on Pacific ~t y in Laguna Beach and held an against her temple. " . 1 I The girl testified that ahe gol W. tlie car because she ·thought a womll\J ..,ear- inis: a bead turban was seated bebln,.lbe wheel. , BronSCln denied from the wltness~box that he had worn the black padded bra and women's shoes described by UM= girl during her testimooy and said lle';)!Oid ' h.,,r $20. I • • Purple? Ma1he Ziegler Describes Nixon's Slacks CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) -Culfiess, yes. Flared, no. Purple, perhaps. That's the rundown on President Nixon's slacks from White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. Ziegler was asked at a Camp David news briering today about a report that the President had been seen strolling at his Catoctin Mountain hideaway attired in purple flared slacks. "I think flared is a little exaggerated," Ziegler replied. "SOme ol .bk slacks don't have cuffs on them ..• He's a regular guy." What about the co1or? "I doo't know about purple. Some ()f his slacks are blue," Ziegler replied. uld it ... our- FiCC Chec Acco1mt for 1,·· Ormaybeour $100 minimum personal account low cost auto loans? How about our 5% Golden Passbook Account? Are extra banking hours the reason? Possibly our drive-up teller windows? --'- Whatever the rea~on. we're growing by leaps and bounds. Our smiling tellers and prompt, efficient service seem to be just what our Orange County customers are looking fo r. George, the,,,_,, 1m,,.1Jal Banlc Uon Hours: Dally 10AM to 5PM Friday open till BPM Drive-up windows open 9AM ANAHEIM Lincoln & Beach 821-5410 CO!M'AMESA Harbor & Fair 979·1000 SANTAANA -17th & Bristol 835-0151 Soon in the City of Ora nge Join us. W! must be domg something right • , • IJ r w or wi I dl s c t 0 s 0 A c v I t b • s DAILY PILOT :J Supervisors Put $14 Million 'U p for Grabs ' By JACK BROBACK Of .. Otllr .......... After a two hour hearing !)n the use of $~4 million in federal revenue abaring funds, Orange County 1 u p e r v I 1 o r s Wednesday directed l.belr admlnl.stratlve officer to digest the material and reLum with a priority Uat. SQggestions on use of the money came from a muJUtude or organizations and in· dlviduals. County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas . opened the discussion with an outline of possibilities and restrictions on spending the federal money .. He said the funds could be only used for maintenance and operating i.'OSts of COU.DL)' govern- ment and for capital. expmldlturea. The cout1ty has received $8.9 million to spend between now and next June 30 &lid will receive a total of $14 million for the calendar year 1973. Thomas estimated the told federal funds coming lo !he oouiity for the five-year life or the State and Local Fiscal Assistance Act at $51 million. He said Orange Qxmty will receive ·'Have a Nice Trip' Jan Evans reaches out to hug her astronaut husband Ron as he , Gene Cernan and Jack Schmitt make their way to the Saturn V rocket that started them on their way to the moon. Behind her is Cernan's wife, Barbara. County App1~oves Repairs At E )IorJO Trailer Par~. .. ' El Morro Beach P.1obilehome Park residents got permission from the Orange Countii Board of Supervisor! Wednesday to re)iair damages front oce11n storms thi.s year 'Without providing public access to the beach. Through the El Morro Investment, Inc.. the owners of trailers on the beacbffont had applied for a building perm.it to reconstruct a seawall · and repair damaged deck!: at the facility just ..nort!Lof.Laguna.Beacb onhcifiU:oasL Hlgbway. Slaying Suspects Facing February Trial in ColJlllY Two slaying suspects who led atTeSting shertfrs officers on a 90-miJe..an..hour clu.se that t.'l\ded with the )llreCklng of their car in ~ Beach have been ordered to face trial Feb. 5 in Orange County Superior Court. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner set the trial date for Michael McNab, 30, of Stanton and Joseph William Ruschak, 27. of Garden Grove. 'Ibey are accused of the. murder of Steven Avery Brush, 27, of Anaheim . Brush's body was found in a parked car in the Cabot Road area of Mission Viejo by deputies who immediately launched a pursuit of the two men they saJ~ they saw standing over tbe body. 1be chase ended when the McNabb- Ruscbak car plowed into a wall near the Cottage restaurant shortly after a patrol car pursuing them hit a wall near Aliso Beach. Occupants of both cars received only minor Injuries. Coroner's officers have determined that Brush died as a result of a aeries of heavy blows to the bead. C'leanup Law Was· Too Dirty pAJNESVI!LE. Ohio (AP) - The City Councll might consider banning IOm4!! llterttute as too rt. Cl1I< -If It can penullde Kathleen cotter' lt.s only councilwoman, to reod 1 model law. The low• of Willowick, a Cleveland suburb, gave t h e _eamesvllle council a ~ of Ila new ordinance rtguliUiig putiOc dlspla)' of ·any kind of eexuat ac- tivity at e1pllclt sexual dl8plly11, an ordinance thorough In Its descrip- tion of what's permitted. MJn Colter, 1t1rtlng to read it, blushed and 11akl the ordinance ll.9elf lhouldn'l be allowed In public. - The county PlanntJ mfsEQn ap- proved the use peMnlt bUt ruled that the beach colony would ha~ to provide a IO. foot wide acceSsway to the beach for use of the public as required by the coonly's Beach, Recreation District zoning. Through attorney Milfred W. Dahl, the trailer owner appealed for reliel of lbe ruling from the supervisors. Dahl said that under terms of the lease or the property with the ITV1ne COmpany, the mobile borne park was barred from granting the accessway. He said 16 homes were displaced and 13 decks destroyed during three winter storms. "The first storm damaged the seawall, the second took it out, and the third washed the sand out from under the trailers," the attorney recounted. "These people only wan t to protect their property," Dahl pleaded. "The alternative is to do nothing and lose their trailers to the sea or get a waiver of the access requirement." Ray Jordano, a 15-year property owner on the beach said the residents had no objection to admitting the public, '"but we can't tell the Irvine Company what to do." He said there was no parking available for tbe general public and no restrooms. ... _ Commerce Choice Frederick B. Dent, a Soutb Carollna textile executive, has been chosen by Pre&idenl Nix· on as the next secretary of commerce. Dent, 50, heads Mayfair Mills In Spartanburg, s.c. Jess per capita lhan other Southern CalUornla counties because its taJ. rate is lower and Its average per capita income higher. For example, the county's allocation amounts to about $8 per capita while Lo8 Angeles County will get $10 per capita, San Diego County, $7, and San Bernardino Coul)ty, $14. Thomas offered a '"shopping list" of possible spending which totalled $21 .7 million. Areas covered were public safe- ty. environmental protection, public transportation, health, recreation, social "{:{ servJCel. financial adm1i1Istratlon and capltal building expenditures. Tbe building suggestions totalled $10.2 milllon and included $1 .8 nilllioo for the new Harbor Distrit1. Municipal Courts buildlna in Newport Beach. Other building projec ts included 8if conditioqlllC tor Juvenile Hall, $37$,000; a nre department training canter, $277,000; a new aounty administrative buildin1. $5.28 million, and a VOter Regis~lion and Public Administrators warehouse. $1.8 mlllleo. The Qrm:ige County League of Citles * has been active In offering the supervisors advla;: on how to spend the money. U!ague ' President l\obert Finnell, Placentia mayor pro tcm. repeated t~ organization's urging thnt 50 percent or the county's funds be spent on joint proj- ects with the cities. He based his argument on the highly successful Arterial I llghw1:1ys Financing Program in which the cotuity's gas tax funds are shared on a matching basis with the cities. prOVtdc additional hmds tor loea1 park!, to buy park lands in developmf!lts whett1 builders are helplng m~l the housing needs for persons of low and moderate incomes, and to provide free bus passes for those on welfare, and those receiving Aid To Families with D e p e n d e n t Children. Thomas said that some of the revenue sharing ful\ds might have to be spent to make up the county's share of wellare and health costs which he a&id were going to be cut $500,000 by lhe state aud fed eral governments. Dra11aati c Changes Finnell admitted that in addition to the almost $5 million the cities want out of the county's pot , they will receive an addiHonal $8 million from the federal government directly. The administrator said tbe AB to, the recently approved state tax reform bill would have no direct effect on .county finances. Revenue Checks "'But," he pointed out , "the cities have t:1 percent of the population and 87 per- cent or the total tax base. People should be the prime consideration, rather than places or programs." Backing the Luguo of Cities pitch for a 50-50 split of the county funds was Paul Ryckofl, Newport Beach councjlm1n, and James Wells, Villa Part councibnan. Ryckoff called the feder!'l . funds, "No windfall. they came from the Ua:payen." Will Be Smaller Finnell said Ule revenue sharing act lists high priorities for law en forcement, .fi re protection, sewage disposal , streets and roadi and building code en- forCement. "These are basic city services," he argued. Others plugging for pet projects in- cluded Lucien Trubill , P.n;sident of the Orani;e CQunty Chamber of CommerCe. He asked that $250,000 be alloted to the Overall Economic D e ve Io p men t Program. "So far we have only been able to finance training programs and v.·e should move in to actual economic developments to provide real jobs," he argued. WASHINGTON (AP) -The first rev· enue-sharing checks are going out 17 days before Christmas but many state, city and county officials won't be in a holiday mood when they open their mail. The Treasury Department conceded Wednesday that earlier estimates of how much state and local governments were to receive are far off base because of new, updated data cranked into the fonnula in recent weeks. One state, not identified, \\'ill receive 20 percent less than originally estimated. About 6,000 government un its will re- ceive SO percent less than estimated earl- ier, while 7,000 units will receive 50 per- cent more. A number of large cities are affected. The Treasury withheld the names until senators and congressmen can see the amounts first. The checks, totaling $2.6 billion, are due to be mailed Friday, but Congress will get the \vord Thursday afternoon . Slate and local governm ents probably \viii get their checks early next week . They'll be dated Dec. 11. The changes are so dramatic because the earlier estimate was based on 1967 data on the lax effort of state and local governments. The ne\V data are based on a 1970 survey. At a news session Wednesday, at which his name was withheki under the grolltld rules, a Treasury official told reporters: "There are very substantial shifts amoog states and ~fi're Some very .significant ljhifts witbiri~tes." * * * Lea g ue o{ Cities Ask County Split Federal Funds The Orange County League of Cities belleves that the county should split its allocation of federal revenue sharing funds with the cities. If the Board of Supervisors approve the Jeague'$plan UUS is hOw much-eaClf Orange Coast community would get: Costa Mesa, $260,190 ; Fountain Valley, $143,080; Huntington Beach, $484 ,610; Irvine, $113,680; Laguna Beach, $67,620 ; Los Alamitos, $38,220; Newport Beach, $323,890; San Clemente, $70,070 ; San Juan Capistrano, $26.950: Seal Beach, $97 .020 and Westminster, $184.240. The League of Cities fiscal experts determined the suggested allocation for each city on the basis of assessed valua- tion and population. * * * Mo st in Fa vor Of T ax Dec reas e Fifth District Supervisor R o n a I d Caspers asked his constituents to express their views on ho .. , the county should spend some $14 million in federal revenue sharing funds. The response : Property tax reduction was favored by 37 percent : en- vironmental protection, 17 percent ; public transportation, 13; public safety, 10; social services, nine; recreation, five; libraries. five, and health, four . Caspers sollcited the response through an advertisement in the DAILY PILOT. Chicano Death: Suspect O eared AllAMOGORDO, N.M. (AP) -A di.strict court jury has found Orogrande service station owner Perry Bnm!IOTI, 57 , innocent of manslaughter in the Aug. 3 shooting death of Colorado Chicano ac- Uvtst RJch.ard Falcon. Falcon was shot to dealh at Brunson's se"lce staUon while he and fri ends were en. route to a national La Raz.a Unida conventlon ln El Paso, Tu. District Cow1. Judge E. Forrest Sanders of Las Cruces ordered Wednes- day the Jury, the defendant, and his family _be guarded as they left the courthouse. Agreement Reached "' VlENNA (AP). -Austria Md Ells! Oermany announted today agreement to establish diplomatic relations us of Dec. 21, o t'Ommunique said. 'I'he Treasury is urging patience. The officials said a grievance procedure wilt be set.up, but nothing can be done until the efna1 data on which the distribution is b6sed become availab\e earl)' next year. . . i " All appeals probably will be handled together, the official said, ~use etiang- ing one figure affects all etfi'er. amounts. 1be Treasury will mail out 35,903 checks. There are 1:&20 governments for which a share has been set aside, but the Treasury hasn'i heard from ·them. They eitlter don't exist Gymore or haven't answered the ~ury•s inquir- ies, the of[!cial said. Of the government units, 2.8,000 ·have populations under 2,500. Among the re- mainder over 2,500 population, the offi· cial said, 920 Wlils will receive an amount 50 percent lower than the first estimate. Another 2,300 will get 10 to SO percent less than estimated. About 1,400 will get 50 percent more and 3,400 will receive bet~n 10 and 50 percent more. The remainder will receiVe between 10 perCent more or less of 1he original es· timate, be said. ~ He got no inunediate reaction from the board members but Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim reminded him that funds spent for the county jail, weUare and health services were for the benefit of 100 percent of the county residents. The League of Women Voters next of- fered a list of preferred spending proj-. eels. Mrs. Jeanette Turk of Huntington Beach, women's league president, said that funds should be spent to meet recur· ring rn.>eds v.·hich have been often postponed because or other pressures Car county funds. The league stand, while not ruling out property tax reduction as one of the priorities, did state that "funds should not be used to provide services which should be funded by currently available tax revenues." Top items on the women voters list v.·ere $700,000 for facilities to treat drunks rather than jailing them; $265.(){i() for bicycle trails ; $1 million for buying open space: $2.50,000 for funding of local parks jointly with cities; $1 million for foste r care for children; $500,000 in start up funds to subsidize 400 low cost housing units, and $375,000 to air condition Juvenile Hall. The League of Women Voters list total- ed $5.1 million. P.1rs. Turk said the re- _m.aini.ng @unty funds should be used to William Meyer of Garden Grove urged that funds be eannarked for a flood con- trol project in his· city which be said would cost SI million. Dan O'CaJlah.an, director of the Com- munity Action Council called for spen- ding, "the poor people we represen t. There are 150,000 of them in Orange County." Betty Inman, an Orange Coast College professor speaking for the Children's Service Council, called fo r more day care centers for working mothers. Verlyn Marth, who regularly addresses the Costa Mesa City Council. shared bis views with the supervisors. He said that all the funds should be spent for open land. "Orange County is in desperate straits in total reduction of land. It has been the victim of cold, brutal overdevelopment, '' the Costa Mesan said. Evelyn Gaymon or Laguna Beach agreed. "I am against increasing development of our open space. With '"'more people we have more crime. I also opposed reducing property taxes because tt . .! rich would benefit most." .Ei Cetera . " __ ._ ~ MO•• ••Y•"o """' ... -.... ~ .. For your hoo'e or the1rs ..• Ne>;er -lo4orget accent delights Re911l•r A, ltd 4' 6", S' $115.00 I . Liiv >.cc.enory Teble, II" H, $129,00 C. Oct1uien•I Che!r. 24" W. $152.00 O. T•ble Top loo• Stencl. lO"W. S 15.00 (, Swivel Ch eir $195,00 SALE $1119.00 S 9t.OO s 129.00 $ 19.SO t l •t.00 Yo ur fa¥orite inferio r de1i9ner will he heppy to '''ht you. e~; ~I~ H.J.GARRElT fU RN l1LlRE tll ~ M~75 PROFISSIONAL Op" Mo,., 2215 HARBOR BLVD. INTERIOR DES IGNE IS Thun . l F.1. e,.,, COSTA MESA, CALIF. '-· • I l i j l • f DAILY PILOT Thurtd11, Drctmbet 7, 1972 Viets Pin Down Mrs.: Marcos Stabbed • Foe ~ear Saigon Hundreds View Attack in Phi.lippines SAIGON (UPI ) -Goveromont troops chaJing guerrillss who rockel<d South Vietnam 's largest allied airbase pinned down a Communist battaUon in two villages near Saigon today, lbe:o called in air strikes that flattened the area, field reports said. In the air war over North Vietnam, U.S. Navy jet fighter-bombers bombed lbe runways at two MIG bases Wednet- day, U.S. command spolcesmen said, hitting a missile site and kno4ing out a key nilroad bridge. Cloe of lbe strikes was cinly siJ: miles below the 20th Parallel bombing halt line imJ>OSed by President Nixon. A command spokesman said B52 bombers trying to break up Communist supply routes Wednesday new Inas.!ive strikes in the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Vietnam!.· SeVenty· five of the big planes dumped an estimated 3.750 tons of bombs in the area and 21 of the Stratoforts hit a huge con- centration of trucks and supplies on the nortbom edge or the buffer zone, the SPokesman said. The conunand said B52s hit 12 times in three-plane format ioos inside North Vlet.- nam from noon Wednesday until 0000 to- day and new 20 strikes In South VietMm . Ten of the northern missions were \lllthin four miles of the 20th Parallel. South. Vietnamese Air Force lightcr- bombers using bombs, rockets, cannon fire and napalm smotbered the villages seven miles northeast of Saigon, field reports said. More than three battalions of South Vietnamese troops and two tank groups -about 6,000 men -closed in on the area after beginning the light with the Communist unit Wednesday night. An estimated two companies of Com- munist in fantrymen and a rocket unit - numbering about 500 men -were believ· ed responsible for Wednesday's daylight shelling -of tbe huge Tan Son Nhut airbase that killed nine persons and v.•ounded 54. It was the biggest barrage at tbe allied base since the 1968 Tet fi@~ing. " ' "r , r-~-- ~""" VICTIM OF KNIFING '\_Mrs. Marcos (In 1967) ( ... MANILA (UPI) -An attacker armed with a long, curved bolo knife stabbed and wounded Mrs. Imelda ?iiarcos, wife of President Ferdlnand E. Mareos, as she was presenting awards for c i v i c beautification in a televised ceremony t<>- day near Manila Airport. Guards grappled tbe man to the floor of an outdoor stage where the attack took place and shot. and killed him as ~1rs. Marcos fell. Hundreds of persons in the crowd screamed as they watched the at- tack. Foreign Undersecretary M a n u e I Collantes said Mrs. Marcos suffered wowids in her hands and anns but was not in danger. Collantes carried her to a helicopter which flew her to a hospital. AN HOUR AFTER the attack, medical oUicials said Mrs. Marcos was in "good" condition. A member or the Philippines congress also was wounded, but not seriously. North Plains Minus 20 The attack occurred during a ceremony at the Nayong Filipino village near Manila International airport as Mrs. Marcos handed out prizes in a cleanliness and beautification contest. Estafania Aldaba Lim, secretary or social welfare, who \Yas with Mrs. ~iaroos on the stage, said : Arctic Weather Puts Chill on Atlantic Coastli1ie "The man looked strange. He lunged at Mrs. Marcos. The bolo was in a sheath. It didn 't look sharp. I saw him Junge three times." NA1'°'4A.t WIA!Hfl 5'1'¥11(1 IOll(.UI ... ]It.JI! 1$1 IJ-I • 71 30."' 3QOo ' • ··c*'tK;-·....,;f':;::.;:i!;;;t- L09A_L •• t • 3 ,,000 IHI. s-Wll 1lw lltt/y In tM Antel-V1ltlv. V.S. S111nmarg Sy TM Auocl11H Pr111 F•klld 1rctlc w11rher i.ettled over the no<ll\ffn i..11 or tlMI n1tlon 11rlv lodav. llUSl'llnQ terfll)&rllurn lo 2G bllaw 1ero -cros1 111.e l'IOl'll11rn !111lns. tmle1ohln11 !Ille force Wlndl QYW tlW 1111 ... n G~.i Ukn 1nd DUttlnQ 1 chill lnla 1r..,, ~;~J~s 1~w,.:.,:... 111te1 from The Ttwt 11m~r1ture dropped to 2G below In Mon1an1, WVOtnlflll. Mln-11 •nd Norlh Oaltella. MfnMal>Olll Ml I ftcOrd will! .21), bllrlnq I P<"•Ylolrs ·ll ,,, In ""-6•1ft over Lil!" 0ni.r111 Ind L...te Erll -• ••P«lld l'O df:posll uo fo 5 !nche1 of ,,_ In llM vlclnllv of tM lfltn. , Coastal Weather Conslder1bll doudlnlll with Sl»W· .,,, lodly. Vlfllllle ll'lndl nlohl 11\d morning ~ blcomlfG -rerly lD IQ ll knoll 111 ..,_,,_. todly 11\d Frlcl1y. HI/.> ""'T In uPI*' .SOS. Coasl1I '"'~'' urn ••rm !rom ~ lo 59. Inland Hmptr11ures r1ncie from ~1 lo 59. Wat., t1""1)er1l11tt 60. S1111, Moon, Tides THURSDAY Stcond hlgll ,. ........ 11:11 p,m. J.5 Stcond io... .. . .... ~:ll o.m . .(I" l'llllOAY Flrtl Nth ..... . .... t :J6 1.m. 5.8 Flr1I low .. . l :U a.m. 2.7 Second l!lgtl . . 11:" p,m, J_.I Slcond -low . . 5:06 p.m . .(I J Sun RIMI '''" 1.m. S1ls •:.cl p.m. Mootr RIM• 1:n 1.m. sm •:23 11.m . . . ~1RS. HELEN SANCIIEZ, who was near Mrs. Marcos on the stage, told UPI DAIL 'I' PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivtry of t~ Daily Pilot 1s guarantttd ,,,._,tcby.Fri<la•: It -cl• .,., 111 ... ,_ ll"r •r S:ll p.lft.. Cl" 111411 .,..., t"1' will M .,,....,, 1• YM. <•Ill .,. tat• ~ 7:)1 p.111, """"••Y •nd s_..,,. 11 ,.,. "" -nc•l"L ¥•11< ••PJ bJ I '·"'· S1111 .. 1y, ..-' a.t'-~unCllJ, <•II ••I • <•PY win "' ............. you. Call• l tt llkllfl MNlll It 1.m. Ttltphon~ H-....,1 H11"!1"9fM ••Hll M••I o""•• c_,, A, .. , ••• 642 .. 121 ••cl We•lminllf'f' "i• • • • 540•1 220 Sa" Clsn>e1111, Clpi•lr-l oad•, S•• J11•• Capl•I•-, oaq ,..i..1. S...111 L_,..., •• Lat-1"'91tt/ 492-4420 THE DRESS BLOUSE A GIFT OF GENIUS To whirl her nonstop thru hol;doy parties atop polazzos, longskirts, velvet pants! Just machine wash and dry between porties. Polyester, sizes 1 ()..18. l . THE RUFFLE ••• at neck and sleeve. from Rhoda lee. White, bone, 12.00 2. THE TIE .•. to bow or loll long. lee Mar's crepe textured polyester. French cuffs. 'Mlite, pink, blue, 13.00 3. THE SISSIES .•• oll ruffles and lace at front and cuff. Cool polyester /cotton blend• from lady Manhattan. White . · 13.00-14 .00 collect;oo. 4 . THE POET SLEEVE ... sleekly knit while, block or red. lody Monlicttan, 16.00 AN OPEN INVITAT10N1 SHOP EVERY SUNDAY 'Tll CHR>STMAS 12 to 5 ••• Hunt Brunch is served in all Buffums' Restaurants correspoodent Femnndo del Mundo that bo6pltal to express their concern . 1'-1rs. Marcos was about to e1tend her There was no immediate identification hand lo lbe atacl<er w lit pulled out ol tho attacll.r. "what looked like a »lnch dagger" and 1be attack. which wu accompanied by struck three times at the. [Int lady. ga!p\l 'lnd scrwnJ rrorn onlookt:n, toot She said she pulled Mrs. Marcos away pJace on a raised open-air stage and was and shouted, "Ma'am, he had a bolo!" recorded on televisloo. by ooe Marilla Mrs. Sanchez said she ht>rd a shot ring channel out and saw the man sttj.king out widlly Mrs • .J,larco:i: was banding out awards with his knife. and s·haking bands with contest winners 111rs. Marcos. she said, then fell on beT. when the bareheaded assassin came on The attacker slumped to tbe stage in full the stage, hesitated momentarily, pulled view of the spectators, many of thMI Ute long knife from his belt and lun&ed school children. forward. At tbe lllakail Medical Ceoler, Presi· _1:Mrs. MllrCOll, wearing ber UJU8I dent !llaroos arrived by car and blll'fled"'-..J11!1pino lemo gown with !ta sraceflll but· inside the opt!raUog room. C8bioet lerlly sleeves, fell bacl: and llllft than a members, top military officials and ball dozen security mon swarmed m the foreign dignitaries converge;ct oo the attacker. •• $1 BiQion llJdus.try • Scientists Call for Ban On Cold, Cong~ Potions WASHINGTON (UPI) -During tbe first two days of Senate hearings on over· the-counter drugs, seven scientists in- cluding a fonner medical executive or the Vick Chemical Co. have urged the government to bW1 all cold and cough remedies from the market. Or. Charles C. Edwards, head of the Food and Drug AdminJstra.tion (FDA), was expected to be questioned todiy___Qp why the government has allowed the coo- tinued sales of ovef'-the-<.'OWlter mirtures for colds and coughs. Edwards and other FDA officials were among witnesses scbedu1ed to appear on the third da y of hearings by the Senate's Small Business Monopoly subcommittee on the $1 billion a year nonprescription medications industry. Dr. Donald C. LaBrecque, director of clinical research at Vick Laboratories in 1970 and 1971 , testified Wednesday Lhat NyQuil , a popular night-time cold remedy v.•ith aMual sales of more than $20 million, contains "everything but the sun.'' lfe said the main reason it puts cold sufferers to sleep is that in contains 25 percent alcohol aJong v•ith an an- libislarnioe. He SlliflesltA a gls55 of sherry -which bas only 20 -t alcobol -would work just a.s well to ift.. duce sleep and would be safer. Calling tho remedy "a witch's brew," be said "they added a Utile of W.. and a little ol lbat and the product came out." Ricban!Joo.Merrell, pareol company of Vicks, later issued a Jt,atement saykig. "NyQuil ... bas been used.safely and el· fecUveJy by millions of people in the United St.ates . . . We believe that Or. LaBrecque's testimony is substantially iDoorrect." LOTTERY JACKPOT PAYS $I MILLION PLAINFIELD, N.J. (UPI) -Louis W. Bradley, 49 has ·won $1 million in the New Jersey state lottery and told ntwsmen, "Now I can get out of debt." Bradley. ~·ho owns a tool rompany in Willow Grove, Pa., said he buys two lot· tery tickets every week, gives his wife one and keeps the other. It was his that won Wednesday. .J SHOP MORNING, NOON AND NIGHT• EARLY CLOSING SATURDAY• SUNDAY 12:00.5:00 NEWPORT t #I FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENTER • 1>44-2 200 • MONDAY THRU SA TRUDA Y I <1:00·9:30 • SUNDAY 12:00-5:00'' • I / I n t J I t • r ) r s t G~ .&ate Hike Gets Approval recommendation, said the in- crease was required because C~da has ruled t h a t Ametican firms must pay nO Jess for gps than ls paid for out-<>f·state las frOm EI Paso Natural Gas Co., w h l ch recently bOosted its price. • c; • .,, .. , so,..11t TOJPV.N(:FJ (Al').-Polk'< are distributing a drawing of a young man wanted for ques-- lionlng in the Thanksgiving Day disappearance and death cjr an ll-year-<1ld girl last seen riding on the back of the youth's bicycle. Offictts said altOOugh they want the youth fot ques- ~k>ning, be was not a suspect. e Paather Parole -SACRAMENTO [AP) - Black Panther chief of staff David Hilliard bas be e n recommended for parole from state prism by a California Adult Aµthor1ty StTeening panel, Hillard's attorney says. Hilliard was sentenced to si:< months to 10 years in state prisQn ·ill June 1971 on a con- victlorl M assault with a dead· 1¥ weapon. The charge stem- med from the April 1968 shootout between B I a c k Panthers and_ O~and police in-whlch Black P a n th er trusurer Bobby Hutton was killed. Black Panther Eldridge creaver, now in Algeria, and 'tw'o pOlicemen were wounded. e Perter Df!u SACRAMENTO .. (AP)') - Assemblyman carley Porter, a major spon30r of the $3 billion State Water Project, bas died of an apparent heart attack In Washington, D.C .• his Capitol office says. He was 66. Sln1 from 36 Shorts to 52 Exlr• Long .... ,, \ Women Told to 'Get ' ~n Tune-With Body' Two· Union Aides Found SACRAMENTO !AP ) - 1\1,'o labor Union officials have been found shot to death in the union's offices here, sherifrs investigators report. Judge Tosses Magee Out- 23rd Time union associates said "there was nothing" to indicate the killings Wednesday ~ere con- nected with union affairs. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Rucllell Magee\ erupted with I NVEST IGATORS ten-another courtroom outburst at tatively ruled out robbery as a his murder-kidnap t r I a I motive. Wednesday, arguing with the judge and spitting on his Deputies identified the dead court-appointed att<irney. as Roger Ekar • 34. n r He was ejected from the suburban Carmichael. an in-proceedings for the 23rd time lel'oational ,. repre~tativ~ or and sent to a loudspeak.er- the Stationary_ E n &l_ n e e r s eqyj_pped hol~g cell. Union, and John [)µncan, 31. On Tuesday Superior Court of Sacramento, business agent Judge Morton Colvin ordered of Local No. 39. Magee han<kuffed after he · BoU> had been flhot with tried to strike his attorney, what detectives first asswned Robert Carrow. Wednesday was a ftrearm or about .38 ColviJI told Magee t h e caliber size. handcuffs vrould be removed if The bodies were discovered he promised not to repeat his by Barbara Johnson. a, • earlier outbursts. • secretary, when '(she opened ·· -"Y(bit about tbe disguised the local 's offic:£S ea ( l y restrilnts, the ones nobody Wednesday. Mios~ Johnson , sees but me?" Magee asked 111 who has work<ll;·/ll.~ ft(-to hb repeated de- for 15 yean, said • 1Q)jahd that he bt~ed to act the office were locked"1 .,. •• as his own atto"Fney. TheCricketeer hopknit blazer suit hGs built-in bounce 'IThis knit blazer suit is fleXible as well as flattering. ll's tailored in a 100°/o Trevira polyester doubleknit that bends when you do and bounces right back to its original shape. Cricketeer tailors it with· contrast color stitching, patch and flap pockets and a high cente~ vent. The trousers have flared bottoms and 3/• top pockets. Ease into a Crickateer blazer suil. You 'll hke the way it feels, .and looks. CRICKEI EER$ largely male medical p~ fess ion. And mo s t gynecologists, they contend, treat their pa· tients in a "rllualized'' way ago as the beginnings of an al'1mative. She aaya there are now 50 .to 100 such groups in tti. nation, many o! them in women's homes. CALIFORNIA 0EWS AN..U.YSIS) SHE AND A full-time stafi of about 14 teach women how '--------""' to eumlne themselves and that frightens, discomforts and mysillies them. MS. DOWNE.R spOCifically mentioned tile Rradtce ol draping women with sheets, leaving their genitals exposed only to the physician. It i!I un-- ~. she says, and prevents the woman from seelilg' what is being done to her. She encourages women to demand that draping not 'be done ·or throw the materi81 on the noor.t Childbirth in hospitals, sht said, is oonvenient to the dt» t<ir but is harder on the mother. Raving a baby at home is "safer, ntcer, more congenial and has less trauma," she said. Ms. Downer founded the Feminist Women's Self-Help Center here mon! than a year • •• , " I each other and bow their reproductJ"' ~slems work. "We teach them to recognize the' normal ap- pearance" of their genitals. she said. Women noting ab- normal condiUons are en- couraged to seek medical treatment. General good health and some home remedies are part of the classes, and It was here that state medical authorities stepped in . Two uoclercover~ agents saw Ms. Downer apply yogurt t<i a woman's vaginal yeaot i~ lectlon, and had her charged with illegally p r a c t i c 1· n g medicine. · BUT THE eight-man, four woman Municipal Court jury "apparently agreed that what I was doing was not so dif· ferent from applying suntan lotion to another person or ap- plying a Band-Aid for a cut," she said. The time has come to con· ' serve one of our most im.por· tant sources of energy. Naturhl gas. And right in your own kitch· en there's a whole range of ways you Cl!l1 help. Like never using more flame than you need. Boiling water, for instance, doesn't need a full blast to keep it boiling. And if you'll cover pots and pans while cook- ing, you'll lessen the need for a high flame. Pre$s Ousted In 4 Hell's Angels · Trial OAKLAND (AP ) -Al the request of four Hell's Angels facing murder charges, a judge baS ousted the public and press troftt their trial dur- ing testimony about an alleged informer. Superior Court J u d g e William Hayes said he was reluctant to close the trial Wednesday, but he felt the defendants' rights to a fair trial sometimes were more importanl than the public's right to bear about it. " ' OAJL V PICOt 5 : Hash, Bear Cage Found in Sierras r I as six suspected smugglers are still at lar(!e. REDDING I AP) - A bear cage oontaining $250,000 worth or hashish has been found on a lonely dirt rood in the Sierras, but sheriffs deputies say one Himalayan bear and as many The bear cage was found \\'ednesday three miles from the spot where authorities found a companion cage four t days earlier. , •I .... , going to bed. During the day set it at a comfortable temperature, and leave ihhere. Mov· ing a thermostat up and down only wastes gas. And draw your drapes at night to keep the day's heat inside. As for hot water, be sure to check for leaky faucets. Little drips can add up to a big drain on your hot water heater. Don't stall around your shower stall. Jump in as soon as the water is hot. And try not to wash less than full loads SUITS $110.00 Also, don't pre-heat your sPOlr co1rs s10:00 oven too long. in your washer. . . Here are a few hot tips on These little hints will save energy Red, N1vy, Blue, f -"'' ~-Brown ind Tin. heating. Don't ·1eave 'windows by burning less gas. They'll also save you money. And, these .. . '~ -i . ' 1-';".•z a ' . _. °" ot.&ffl OIAN .. ttt-11lt LOSCllltlTOSC- CllllTOI 111-tJJI wide opei;l when the heat is on. · Always turn your thermo· days , who can afford to bum stat down at night before that? • ........ ~. . Helps.ave gas @d your money , too . • ' I • • DAII.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Mixed Tax Blessing The $1.1 billion property tax reliol·school finaoC· In~ bill passed by the state Legis lature just before its ad1ournm ent has been ealled a tax shuffle rather than a tax reform . This can be said Clf any tax reform measure. QI.} viously, the n1oney to run the state and operate its schools mu~ come out of so1ncone'i pocket. The ques- tion is hO\V 111ut h should co n1e out of whose pocket Some Orange Co unty official s have estimated the measure nill deprive the co unty of $55 million in tax revenue, \lo'hile bringing in onJy $36 million in State aid for schools. 'rhe county Board ot Supervisors unanin1ou s- ly opposed the measure before its passage. The new bill , while it "'ill have an adverse effect on 111ore affluent school districts and on some more afflu· ent individuals who rent their homes, is at least a ste? in the diret1ion of tax reform, and a welcome one aft er six years of fruiOess debate. Under the law, $561 million is earmarked for new state aid to schools, $488 million for tax relief to home- • o\vners and renters (who will receive a small credit on their inrome tax} and $63 million to reduce local bus- iness inventory taxes. The revenue will come from a one-eent increase in the state sales tax, \vhich will go up to six percent next June; a boost in bank and corporation taxes; and a portion of the state's Federal revenue sharing funds. The school allocation will help toward meeting a California Supreme Court decision which ruled the current school fio_a.u_~ing policy unconstitutional because it relies too heavily on property tax. California's 2.5 millltln homeowner~ will ,veJcome the move toward the end of next year when the average property tax bill will drop by approximately $128. Future property tax increases will be stricUy limited, which worries county officials. .- increase for some. reducing but usually not elfminat· Ing the overall saving. However, Gov. Reagan, '''ho called the tax bill "a firs t step," ha s strongly hinted the state's current ffnan· cial surplus may later pennJt a reduction in income tax rates as well. Summed up: Better than nothing , and maybe better than that. Rights of 4New Adults' 1'he 1,130,000 young Californians who became "in- stant adults" this year gained a good deaJ more than the right to vote. The e£fect of the IS.year-old rights legislation passed in 1t1arch is being felt not only by the under·21 group, but also by their parents, by financial and bu.s-- iness institutions and by local government. In addition to the vote, 18-year-olds now have the right to marry without parental consent; negotiate loans (without parental responsibility for the debt/; serve on juries and run for election to city council and school boards; and apply for many business and pro- fessional licenses formerly restricted to persons oVer 21 . The la\v also removes the parental duty to support children under 21 and relieves parents of financial res- ponsibility for auto accidents of their children past the age of 18. Olher new rights for 18-year-olds include betting al race tracks, qualifying for welfare and food slamps and establishing their own residence, which can effect community college choice· and exemption from payment of out-of-slate tuition fees for students who reside in California for one year. " Q ;r • ' ' ,. ) " " ~ " " ,,,,.. .. ~~ ' The measure admittedly is double-edged. Part of the property tax relief is offset by the sales tax in· crease. The increased sales tax deduction on income tax returns normally will not offset the lost property lax deduction . This could result "in a slight income tax Despite the dire predictions of some oldsters. the new freedom for 18-year-olds has resuJted. in no major debacle. It has had the beneficial effect of greatly st.im· ulating youth interest in government and promises to build an increasing sense of community responsibility an1ong our for1nerly too-sheltered you ng people ; .. • 11 SIR1 I t>ON'T THINK FL~JN(i IS QUITE 1HE ANSWER~ An Aging Franco Clings . to Reins 'Su pet-corn' Heralds Flnw In 'Superman' .. Francoisrn \Viii never disappe.ar because CrOd does not want lt to disap· pear.'' Lt. Gen. Carlos lniesta , head or Spain's Civil Guard , told a roaring crou·d last summer. But Francisco Franco Bahamonde himself is in failing health. The aging dictator is 80 years old this week . suffers from Parkinson's disease and has undergone several jaw opera- tions. 1-"ranco has long insisted that he \viii remain in power as loog as strength permits. At the same time, he has laid careful plans for his succession. Should he die or become incapacitatet.l, the Cooncil of the Regency v.·i!I assume pov,.er aod summon the Cortes tparlia· ment i. 'MJe Cortes, in tum. will swear in Prince Juan Carlos, 34, as constitutional monarch. Adm. Luis Carrero Blanco. Gt, the present vice president, will take over as head of government. The most striking feature or the Spanish political scene today is the government's immobility. Although lhe country baa changed greatly since the 1936-39 Civil War, the principles by which Franco has governed it have not. The definilion of a political leader in Spain is, "someone appointed by Franco." IT IS DIFFICULT for the historically minded to write about Sp.ain wi thout prcr jecting the emotions of the 1930s. But these emotions are becoming less and less relevant to lbc Spanish people . More than one-haU ol all Spaniards were born since the en<l o{ the Civil War. This means that only a minority have had any experience of democratic govenunern. Although Franco wa.s never prepared to tolerate any real measure of political liberalization , be has proved to be a ruler without an id!Ology. He bas managed, in one way· or another, to disappoint all of his major supporters '. the arm y, the Falangists, the Carli.sis, the Christian Democrats, and the CathoUcs. Military EDITORIAL RESEARCH In our human arrogance, w.e e<>n· tinoally underestimate nature · s shrewdn ess and far-sightedness. Only lately, with the rise of ecological studies. have we begun to acquire a little humility_ But not enough yet. PROUD EUGENICISTS have always men are distressed because defense ' wanted to produce a Mice of "supermen." spending has been cut. When viewed as ! all stamped out of percentage or gross national product. the same gmetic Spain 's defense budget ranks as one of cookie-cutter. like so the smallest in all of Europe. many thoroughbred THE TWILIGHT OF Franco's long racehorses by the reign finds diJ¥:0[ltent growing among tame sire. Nature studeril$, liberal Catholics, workers, and . knows better' bow· t · · t· -.A ev" .having created mmonty groups 1ke the Basques. i11i:: .~·lf:J licit or·dif-C.tbolJc Church hu deserttd Fniooo'• a. ~ P Y camp and now supporis the hlO epara-lftilia. ~· breeds. .... tim of church lad' state .• \'IDcmte ~ gjaetoc t)(llOS. " · Cardln:ll Tarancoo, a lOatllng edvocate ct' · ~· ~ the ®eans ana l>pport un· political freedom pltl$ged last .1anuary 1tty tot them to croSsbrced. that he would 'speai up for "those This is to incre~se the survival-value of without a voice to defend their legitimate the hum an species. The more we are aspirations." It has been said that !,here ar<? only three political groups that m!lttcr in Spain -the establishment. the opposition that can be put in jail, and the opposition that cannot be put in jail. At present the establishment is headed by a group of technocrats who have modernized the economy. There is little likelihood that ::i. second civil war will break out when Franco leaves the scene. Not even the Com· munists. losers of the first war, want that. The technocrats hope to keep the population quiet, if not ez:actly content, by steadily improVing the standard of liv- ing. Their ultimate goal iB to bring Spain into the Common Martel. But Sicco L. Mansholt, the Common Market's cbief executive, has made it plain that an undemocratic Spain will not be grantea membership. As a Spanish econorr1 ist told the Financial Time:i of London, "'Or.e day v.•c will be forced to choose : democracy or stagnation." ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ alike. the more danger of some common ailment striking us all down ; the more we differ, the better the chances that some part of us would successfully resist and survive such a plague. It has already begun to happen with com. ln its natural state, corn crossbreeds with a wild com-like weed I.hat reinvigorates and reinforces the health of the grain. IN tER TO get a higher yield, and increa productivity, plant breeders have n devised a breed or com of great uniformity, which will grow almost anywhere and can easily be harvested and processed by machinery . lt turns out that there is only one flaw in ii. Massive Marxist Study This "m.iul-bred " com is highly vulnerable W new blights, which could strike down an entire crop. In the past, different strains were reai!lant to dlf· ferent diseases; what harmed one kind left the other intact. But a "univenal'' com IS subject to universal blight. When all variations and wild form! are extinct, where might a resistant strain be found? Exhaustive infonnation on the idcotoe:ical, political, economic, social, and cultur al aspects of the Communist world . and a comparison with their equivalents in democratic societies m11ke up a monumental reference v.·ork . the on- ly one in existence of such magnitude : Marxism, Conlmun ism, and Western Society '. :i Comparative Enc yclopedia in 8 Volum es (Herder and Hcrder-J\1cGraw- ltlll ; $276 unlll November, 1973. and 5320 thereaftCT). WORKJNG FOR scverol years under the general editorship of C. D. Kernig and with the cooperaUon or an advi.sory Dear Gloo111 y Gus (THE BOOKMAN J board of 20 specialists on Soviet affairs, more than 700 outstanding scholar:i in- cluding 7..blgnJew Brzezinski, Victor Ehrlich, Merle Fainsod and Harry Woolf have contributed entries which are fac- tual, objective, and totally fr ee of partisan opinion. As Kernig notes in an ed itor 's prerncc. this gi ant work ··endeavors to cover all the areas In which I.here Is disagreement between Ea.::t and West. An lntemetiona:I team of scholal'I and expert!I ... has at- lempted to discover the origins and structures or the conflict.JI, to analyse "'hy interpretations or the:ie connlcts dlf- ft•r and lo determine the methods adopted Jn 1h11 vark>lls approaches.·· / The same would be true of a single human 1fene1ic type. We might create a ''supemtan" impervious to all known diseases -but if ~me new infection were to lfke root and !prtad, the whole human race would then be vulnerable to this disaster. TllE DIFFERING n1orbidity figures in different parts of !he 1t·orld are partly environmental and na rtly geneti c. We still don 't know \•;hich is which -\vhy stdmach cancer is pandemic in one country and hardl} known In another, why heart altacks declmate one populA· lion and leave another intact. We do know, however, I.hat 'diflerent strain s have built up d I r f e r e n t resistances : we are only mildly bothered by measles, wh ich kill~d thoUsands of Adult Eskimos when Introduced there by ""hite mca. And Africa ns arc far more imptrvious to malaria than we ore. If science ever succeeds In producing a .superman. one !!Upe r-disense could carry uii all off. • Minority Recruit11aent Policy Rapped ' Navy's WASHINGTON -A lot of people in and out of the Navy are going to be jarred by the repOrt'or the special House Armed Strviccs Subcommiltee investi· gating the wid ely-headlined "discipline crists."' Foremost among them \\'ill be Ad1n. Elmo Zumwalt, modish Chief of Naval Operations. His knuckles will be ra pped for "going too far 1 too fast.,. While the investi· gators' report is still in preparatioo, three factors are be- ing singled out as largely responsible for the series of violent racial out- breaks and numer· ous instances of deadly and costly sab- ot.age on warships : -Adm. Zumwalt's fan far e·d ''libcralizi ·on" policy was ill-cooceived and too pr 'pitate -especially in cer- tain ''racial ~uali · ' aspects. -Eulistmen of a large number of young ghettd" blacks basically unsuited for military service, particularly in the highly mechanized and technical Navy, due to below-par educational and social qualifications. -Lax and unsound recruiting prac- tices and procedures largely resulting from the Navy's difficulty in obtaining needed personnel because of tbe ap- proaching end of the Vietnam war and the virtual elimination of draft demands. As one committeeman tersely put it, "Too many of the wrong kind of youths were signed up." . • Discipline Crisis (ROBERT S.AIJ.EN) was signally impressed by the rrnnk testimony of Comdr. John Schaub, CX"· ecutive orficcr of the aircraft earner - Constellation. who played a leading part in dealing with the vehement demonstra· lions by black activists while the 81 ,~ Ion warship was on maneuvers off lhe CJljfomia coast. Schaub's fort.brighf comments arc singled out as especially pertinent. One telliog highlight is aa rouows : ':The policy of mlnodty recruitment ts Poiirly conceived a8d wholly unfair. Uritet this sysle!Jl, encouragement is gi\!en to tbe recruiting or educationally dej>nved personnel' who ano then placed in competition W"ith others better educated aod better fitted to meet opera· tional requiremtnts and standards. As a result , the inadequates are assigned to duties of a menial and low-grade nah1rt>. "They aren't ~ssarily stupid. It's just that they haven't got the education or capacity lo handle electronic and technical equ.ipment. Yoo cao't tum over a device or machine l\.-ort.h a million dol- lars to someone who is liable to ruin it through ignorance and lrlability." · The investigators' report will highlight 011e grim and startling statistic: ; ln the past six month!:. 23 men have , lost their lives in fires and e:r:plosions . , aboard Navy vessels -with some 1of ~ • these tragic incidents clearly due 1o 1 anon and sabotage. In Adm. Zumwalt's cl osed·door testimony , he OaUy denied t b 1 t · "permissiveness" was responsible for , ' sparking racial clashes and fatal "ac-, • cidents." I~e vigorously defended bis • policy of "liberalized refonns" and con- tended "discipline is n04. b e i n g • · sacrificed." OTHER OFFICERS, on Ute carriers ;: ConstellaWon. Kitty Hawk ;me( ottier .' warships, bluntly and emphatically · refuted the Chlef of Naval ~tioos .. The investigators' report will quote tbem as asserting: '1Unquestionably, some reforms and , changes are necessary. But too· much •: was undertaken in too shorl a • time. t \\'hen sailors ehall~e an offit'f:r'• ~ .,, er order and stage notl and deJmnltra· • lions. that is not 'racial trouble.' That ls mutiny , and it has to be dealt J"ilh as 3 such. If we're going to have M elflCient : and combat-effective Navy, it has cot to •-. be a dlscipltood Navy . Anything less,than • that spells certain disaster." ... _ The investigators indicated criUctsm of Adm. ZUmwalt already is evoking coo-• SIGNIFICANTLY, Since the outbreak gressional approval. f or the w J de 1 y pablictzed shipboard Says Rep. R. H. Gross, R-Jowa, nm: . .1. disturbances and demonstratioos, l.he ing member of the Foreign Affairs earn.. ~ Navy has quietly lmtltuted two im· mittee, "There will always be violations · portant corrective measures: of regulatioos and disctpline in any branch or tbe military service, but when l. Drastically tightened up t'<lucaUooal violations become wbolellle and a~ .. POINTEDLY noted as sign if.eantly and ol!M!r eligibility requirements for r1ciaUy and politJcaUy motivated, tliere -N· relevant is that in some months this year recruits ; at lea st two years of high must be an immediate end, 00 matter f~ around 20 percent of Navy recruits were school are now mandatory. 2. The how drastic the punishment. If Adm. ~· black. Blacks constitute approximalely number of black recruits was cut to Zumwalt is so liberal and 50tt Q:aat he • l2 percent or the population, around 9 perCcnt last month -lowest can't enforce discipline ln the Navy, he • The three-member investigating pan el ratio for some lime. abouJd get out or be tossed out" tt Too Many Amateur Freuds ~ ' Some things we could all do \Vilhou t: Amateur Sigmund Freuds who like to skip rope in other people's minds. Guys who want to help you sol ve a crossword puzzle you'd prefer to \\'Ork out yoorseU. Twenty-four hour viruses that hang around for almost that many days. An yone over the age or 10 v.·ho uses the word "yummy ... Ck>udy mornings. Hatcheck girls who uy lo 'look Uke the lnte-Marilyn Monroe. Pickled eels and h•U·fried peopll. Little white dogs lhat sneak up be- hind you and bite you on the heel. Yeterlnarlans who charge rnore tMn lnternist1. People who wear thc.ir glasses on 'top of their heads and get mad If you won't help the1n search for theltl. o vernight loveri who think it is clever t(J write "Mr. and Mrs. Tbomu JeJ. ( __ H_AL __ B_OYL_E_,) fer30n" Jn the registers of fleabag botel!. Any more chainsJ of any ki11d of chain stores or senices. \ going to have kittens -and you sU1I .. haven't been ab~ to get rid of the ones • ~ she had :he last tllne. : .. Gu)'I who go aroond In public holding • f; radlo to their ear. ~ ... EMERGENCY calls from th( office on ~; your day off. r:· Handlebar llWitBChes on guys ,who ~ e<.uldn't lift a t\YO-pound steak overbcad 1': ANYONE YOU pay money to Who wit.bout getting red tn the face. ~ • lacks the courtesy to say ''Thank you." Another rent raise. Anyone who cuts down a lree , whose Another tax hike. signature you like ta see against th& aky. Another world just like this oni. ' > Racehorses that 'don't Si!'eht'.1!;ble""1Q'''' ··From · UKl!'f:· -and· ·(lther· vexations of learn how to eome in first when }IOU want body arid spirit, delJver us, Amen. • them to. .. A big bug in lhe bathtub. Two big bugs in the bathtub. A dearth or rainbows. Avybody who writes •n allQD)'mol,lS let- ter about anything, · PEOPLE WHO wbi>t>er l<ltlather In lbe comer at cocktail part!et. • · Peeple who stand Iii tho center ol tho mom and shout at each other al aoclttall parties. • • OIAHOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. tVeed, Publisl!P 'fl1u 1ruu Kectvi t,1 F.dltor • • Barbara Kre~icli -" Ed Coriell Pooe ~ditor .~ CorWderlng Northern lreland is beJnc blown IJP at least onc.e every 24 'bow's, It Is comforting to learn Brldah ParlJament hill bcc!o asked to ban Tom and Jerry Cartoons [rom the BBC, doe to their exce. «Ive: violence. Tl-It: ENCVCl.OPt.:DfA show!! wh nt obstacles must be overcome before any n:all.stlc though! can be given to a global clviliMtion Jn which everyone enjoys equal rights under slmllar conditions. Tt doci not only reveal what la dtrferent in E:a11t and West, but explains hOW' lhrsc differences have deveklped. Jn analyzing the past, It pavu the way for 11 better understanding o( the fu ture. ·-----B11 George------. ' Peeple who aay Ibey cao•t ~•d cocktail partlol! bat U.p rlgbt M goto( to flv• or 1 of them • week. A. R. V. Tilh ........ .....i.c:" ,.....,.. ¥..... Mt llHIUWil'r ...... ti -.,. -11'-r. I• '"'° ,et ........... ....,,., OW. OtllY Pli.t. The first four volumes wtll be publish-- ed t.hia moat.h.-Vol.umc1 5-.and 6_ w.lll ap- pear in the !iprlng or 1973, and Volumes 7 and 8 later the same yenr. SHARON LIEBERT Dear George: Doesn't dealing with misery, wM. and human lravall Rel under your skin afte r years of dolnf an advice t.'Olumn ? How do you kee p from becomln~ dee& depre8'ed by writlng your-advu::e cofumn ? SYMPATHETIC Dear Syrnpalhetic · t keep from be<:<lmlnJ! depressed by writing my ad vice column like this: I never read my adviee cOl- umn. (Send your proble.m1 to Geor&e. ffnd !com th(! ·secrets of plannm, for n brighter yesterdnyt) Wlvel '!M \hlnk Ibo lamlly wUI !all apart aDd there ~will ))e nothlng left on earth t<f live for If thet do111t get 1 color tetevl.s!on tel !or Cbrtt\mu. ,,,. rtnalna or • telephone Just when yau're comtorttb!e In the reclining chair and ht1ve settled doWn to read a nice ne• tronf~tmge n1urdcr story Tn tl'le aflenii>on nt"8paper. I Anotbet •n~ment U111 lbe cal Is I 1• • ' .. -~ .. v T BR dent prom Trea !bat keep Co.1 a of ..n plan. 1be -plans oeo\.o alleg ttve 1be make 'llilth • • Tnursdily, o.ctmbfr 7, 1'172 OAJL V PILOT 1 President Vows Aid To -NATO BRUSSELS (AP) -Pru!· dent Nixon made • quoWled PnJllllse to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization today that the United States will keep and Improve Ila llll0,000. man force in Europe. In a letter read to the NATO Council or Fo~lgn Ministers by Secrel8ry of Stote Wll~m P. RQgtls the President added two ~lifiers: -Tbat the other alliance ( . BlUEFS ) UPI,,......_ LBJ Donates His Home WASHINGTON (AP) -The nncb home of former PreD- dent Lyndoo B. Jolwon and more than 200 acres ol the Johnson ranch in Texas are being donated to the public, the Interior Department says. Interior Secrelary Rogers C. B. Morton said the National Park Service will begin work at once on a project to In- terpret the "life of a president" in ediiblts at the Johnson home and at Other sites in Texas. Ad,,...-ilMmffll What do doctors recommend for patients in pain? . Doctors all over the mun try dispense over 50,000,000 of these tablets to their patients each year. There are many medications' a ton recommend moat than any physician or dent.ill can pre-other leadinc tableL .cribe for pain. Some are nar-Headache and dental pain is colic, many are aYailable only retieYed incredibly fast; minor onpreteriptioo.But thereisone pains of arthrilia are depend· .-in reliever, available without ably -..ed for houni; even the preecription, doctors dispen1e aches and paint of colds and flu again and apjn ... Anacin. ree,ponQto Anacin. So the ten· countries al!o keep and lm· prove their forces. JA!=K PAAR LOSES HIS HAT,--IT COULD HAVE BEEN WORSE . u-,. Tobt Nlliblo;.Tltor All!!> Bit ""'"-.quiring Stit~hes Each yNr, docton (i"9 over 1ion and depn-.ion that can be 50,000,000 Anacin tablet. to call9ed ,,Y-such pain will be re· their patients in pain. If rtoctors lieved · too. And milliona take think e nouch about• Anaiclrt to Anacin withqut stomach upset. dilpenae all these tablets, what When you're in pain, why better recommendation can you don't you follow the practice of ask when you are in paint• ao many ,doctors a'nd take the -That American tr oops ' might be reduced aa part or an over..all deal with the Sovlet- led Communist bloc. e Store AtttUed WASllINGTON (AP ) -The Federal Trade Commission baa accuaed the W. T. Grant Wholesale Prices Up Sharply Co tio Ide tail ~-•-WASlllNGTON (AP) -'!be ., a na nw re 11:awuu, or . using deceptive tactics to rise in wholesale prices ae. sen ils oouPoD-book credit c e I e r a t e d sharply in plan. November, dampening !he '!be proposed ~mptalnl, Nixon administration's hopes which the FTC today said It that Inflation baa been brought plans to issue under Its con-under control, government of. sent.order procedure. a Is o ficials said today .. alleges that Grant has sold The Labor Department's property insurance in a decep-Bureau of Labor Statistics live manner. reported that the wholesale The F"I'C said the company price index rose six-tenths of makes t.naccurate credit-cost one percent, both on an ad- dloelosures Jn vlolatloo of the justed and unadjusted basis, Truth Jn Lai1dlng Act. wt month. It was the biggest Increase Jn wboiesa!e pcices • Bltlck Kiiied since July and 'II revened a recent trend on slower price GREENVILLE, N.C. (AP) increases at the wholesale -A white policeman has shot level. a blad: man to death, touch- ing off eight hours of missile THE INDEX was pushed up tbrowing and s p o r a d i c by price increases of fresh sboot1n1rtn a Negro section of vegetables, eggs and dairy Greenville. products, cars and furniture, Police said one white lumber, leather and some teJ:- motoreyclist, identified as ~Ule))l'Oiducts:":rise w. AlerS<Te ~~linlm. HarrJ Scbultz. was 11bot and the rise w ...................... woonded and at least 12 other prices of coal, bides and mo&ortsll -white and black and natW'al gas. -_. Injured when their The 1'!PO't means that It vehicles were overturned or will be difficuJt for President bit by m1Js1I<s In the Wednes· Nixon to readl his target o1 day ni&hl melee. Moot of slowing the rate ol inflation to the tnjuries were minor, police at least 3 percent by the eod aal<I. otllle I'"""· Rises In wbolesa!e prices are usually nllected • AWe Fired quJokly In "tall ..-.. Tu the llix months that ended WASHINGTON (AP ) -In In November, wbolesale prices the first ripples of an Interior went up at a seasonally ad~ De p a r t m e n t personnel justed annual n te of 5. 7 per- sbakeup, one top official has cent. 'nlat rate has slowed been removed and six others somewhat in the last 3 reportedly are on the way out. months, malnly because the Interior Secretary Rogers c. index declined slightly In B. Mort.oft announced Wednes-October on an unadjusted day he has accepted the basis. nstgnatlon of ,George B.li~~j~~~~~~ H8l"b:og as National Park Service director. Informed llOUr<eS said that makes -bH r<COnlllleoded to FllDnAV' Ibo White House that six gn I ~U.Uy appointed department officials be Greot f hristmas ideas The Sweater Vest - ALL LAMBS WOOL, IN U-NECK, OR V-NECK STYLES, PRICED $I 0. TO $12. IN B !\'OWN, NAVY, GREY, WHITE, RED, BURGUNDY , STEEL BLUE. A Wonderlul Christmas Gilt ' From .•• • • Ydu see, Anacin contains ~t a doctor might give you Tiger Wounds Paar; lm __ o_ .. _•f_tho-,-"-p•_i•_..i_;..... __ ,_d ... _;_ .. _m.~·~own __ office __ ._Ta_•_,_A_•_"'_'"-"1 Lion Gets in Licks WEST MILFORD, N. J . (UPI) - A tiger has bitten talk show host Jack Paar and a lion ripped open the tire of a car carrying Paar and John F. Kennedy Jr. during a !ilmlng session at a wildlife preserve. "He's going to have a sore wrist for a day or two," said. Dan Brennan, executive vice president or the Warner Bros. Jungle Habitat. 0 'I1ley were good wounds." He said Paar was bitten on the right wrist Wednesday after he "playfully" picked up a 6-montlH>ld tiger to pet it. The wound required five stitches, Brennan said. uTiger cubs don 't like to be picked up," Brennan said after driving Paar to bis •SHAGS e DUPONT 501 • Hl-LO'S •SOLIDS • TWEEDS e ANTRON •NYLON • COMMERCIAL e NYLON Bronxville, N.Y., home. "It's something they're not used to." "Jack loves animals. He's crazy about animals," Bren- nan said. MATERNlTY PRE-HOLIDAY 5 ALE Pur had been filming segments for an upcoming &bow. In the show, two Siberian tigers c.re introduced to two lions. "He had promised. the Ken- nedys he would bring young John Kennedy along," Bren- nan said. That was why the late president's son was with 30%TO 50%0FF Paar. Including: DRISSIS, TOPS & PANTSUITS ~ MATERNITY SHOPS '"'""' l.i.n.I, .......,. ClllNr -N...,.., aNdt Ot'•llM ~ ... 5"'""" c;.....,. -o • ..,.. o ... ve As Paar, Kennedy and a Secret Service agent drove throUBh t he drive-through part, a lion mauled ·the tire of their Secret Service car. An "'"*' .......... C ..... -Cnl• M .. - "'--m l"tlMI ..," .. -L9lll •..c11 I • •-· •--~ -... Tiit City, S a-1111 -Orll!lff 111 .. "'""'_..,. Mill " °"""' -Ot'lllllt ,~ agent bad toclumge the-tire.:_l_:~~~~~~~~ All of THIS AT ONE LOW PRICE •SHAGS • KODEL Hl-LO'S • POLYESTER e PLUSH SHAGS • TONE-ON-TONE • SCULPTURES lOOO's Of YARDS TO CHOOSE FROM Complotely fn1lolled VALUES TO $10.95 Bring In your room musurement1. e TRI.COLOR SHAGS NAME BRANDS IMMEDIATE INSTALLATION Every $tyle & Color -Every Roll -No Pressure or "Come-Ons" Many Terms Lay Aways Name· Styles Available Bank Available Brands and =· Fi11anc:in9 • Colors MIRE• STORJ. __ ,_ l -. ........ HOUR : -•M.M i S-.1J..I CARPET WAREHOUSE ·124 E._ 17th _ST. QO_il A_MES,o._ TE~,~~l30 • HOLIDAY DAZZLERS . 8. Front tllt tklrt, brau-tone button1. V-neck. Red or Black. Mltse11lze110 to 18. Long, lean and a bit daring. 100'% wuhable polyester la whipped up Into all this fash ion at IN• tiny price. A. Side tilt lklrt, keyhole neckline with rhinestone trim. Auorted holiday colors . Junior •lze17lo15. 17.99 each ~-~ . ~ • "' .. ' " I ' - i • • ! I C 8 DAILY PlLOT Thu"'1al, °"'1nbcf 7, 1912 QUEENIE B Phil lnterlandl "Don'tlry locharmm&.Iplan to begro\.ICby all day!•• L. !J'J. Boyd Spider the Best Weather Prophet Old Henry Ford almost never whistled in his execu- tives for coofcrences in his own office. He went to them. To save time. "I can get away from the other fellow's of- fice a lot quick~ than I can get him to leave mine," he said. This is Item No. D-168 in our file of tips to board chainnen. Not referred to much, this file. Little demand. THAT PROFESSIONAL woman least apt to get a di- vocce is the school teacher. Or so the statistics indicate. Our love and War man says the fem- inine school teacher tends to know what sort of husband she wants before the wedding. And once she gets him, she ·s not given to letting go. AS A WEATHER prognosticator nobody beats the spider. When rain is due. it will tighten up the threads supporting its web. It Y.'ill lengthen them when good weather is at hand. And if it doesn't repair its web after the rain comes, that's a sign there's about tO be more rain. WATER -It bas been estimated a strea~ -water no thicker than a wooden matchstick can pour out 3,600 gallons in 24 hours. Stockmen make use of such data. An old. boy in ea.stem Oregon once sh>wed me a wet JP\J1.. t.er in a crack among some rocks. Not a river. Not even a creet. Just a tiny trickle. "With µw.t," he said, "I caq,1 water the whole herd." Thereupon, be troughed it to .11' • tank, and did so. For about 60 head. Q. "THAT infamous gangster known as Pretty Boy Floyd, how many people did he kill?'' A. Just 10, evidently. When FBI agents shot him in 1934, the_y found a silver dollar in his pocket with 10 notches oo it. MOTHER'S MILK -Argument continues over that claim that a baby will thrive just as well on cold formula as on a heated bottle feeding, A San Francisco mother v.oo't buy it. Says she: "What's best ror the baby is what's most natural, and a mother's natural milk is warm ." Rea.son.able . Still, Dr. Emmett Holt d ·New York's BeUe- vue Medical Center has said babies fed chilly formula straight from the refrigerator sleep as well, eat as much, and gain weight as fast. UNTIL RECENT YEARS, pickpockets were common in Japan, but purse snatchers were just flat out llllMard of. Thefts Crom men ~ all right, accord.lng to the well defined crime code there, but not thefts !nxn wooien. ALL CATS, no matter bow big or small, are propor· tioned fairly weU the same. This means if you blow up a snapshot of your houserold kitten to the size or a tiger, it will look like a tig~. Jn conformation, at any rate. JUST BY PICKINO up that drumstiok at the dinner table, young fellow, you bring into play more than 30 joints and at least 50 muscles. Is it worth it? Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Bo:r 1875, New· PoTl Beach, Cati/. 92660. Congr•tul•tion1 to you who fi nished your Christmas shopping In October. For the rfft of us, Jean Dahl In West· cUll Plau will be -10 '""· - 9 p.m. bovlnnlnt Monday, Dtceinber 11th. WIST'Cll" rLA%A -17ft a llYINI NIWPOlT llACH AIM Ntw,.,._, I• • 1 hp ftlM :ll ·-' ' ·" • • I 2.88 ' Reg.3.47 Table tennis set , Includes 4 tournament-size rubbe<,,face(I paddles, 2 official balls. net, posts, and rules- I' (44 Reg.5.47 Deluxe table tennis set lncludes 4 five-ply toumament-.size rubber- faced paddles, 2 official . l>aJls, net, lleiU)(8 poo1S, and rules. GRANADA HIU.S 18000 Chatsworth SI. I WOOOLANO HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd, RIVERSIDE 3520 Tyler SI. SANTA ANA 3900 Soulh Brlslol St. 29. --. '. Reg. 36.97. Save 7.09 Special table tennis ~le 1/2" stableply top. 'Wood aprons and steel comer caps. Easlly folds to play-~ or rollaway positions. J } 44. l, Reg. 54.97 Save 10.09 Deluxe table tennis table '>'o" stableply top securely bo~ to rectangular sJeel apron Sleel comer caps and double-braced tubular steel legs.. Folds to play-back or for rollaway storing. I TORRANCE Sep1,1lveda and Hawthorne LAKEWOOD Caraon St and Paramount Blvd. BUENA PARK Beach and Orangethorpe • ORANGE Garden Grove Blvd. and Manchester ~·' '• -.. • • .. .. 3.33 Reg.4.27 Reversible 171/4" dartbQard '. 88'ebattond ' • •on different · di~cier!o. lilci ' ' ' 9 ilirts and nJ ~· ~ 5.-33 'Aeg ~ 5.9 Deluxe 18 ' reversible dartbC:lMt ' ' t ' • • .. t . • • • I • i • • l • • • • Heroin ' ' • \ I • ' ~ ! . • ' • • I ' • I • I I ' • • • ' ,, ' t .. • No (;arities Cliimps Brush T ee tli ' • . , INVEST NOW ! IN LAGUNA FEDERAL'S EXCLUSIVE BICENTENNIAL SAVINGS PROGRAM DAILY PILOT 9 PATRIOT COMMON SBNSB .514 " Savinp Certiftcato $500 Minimum j9[1 PUlboot M:colll& Day·in-to-daJ-out ·compounded inlaal. J --- ,.-_ F / ?z; • CONTINENTAL CONGl.ESS $\,i 9' S.Vlnp Certibtc tSI,000 Minimum .. * ... MINUTE MEN s~ % Saving• Certificate $1,.500 Mini.mum INDEPENDENCE 6% Savina& Certific1i. $5,000 Miolmum Get Your Bicentennial Era Portfolio Yo~ fQr the 'asking is this handsome Blue4nd-gold portfolio outlining tho purposCs. and goals of our nation's Bicentennial, and designed to serve as a ~t file for documents and bulletins. See Our Current Bicentennial Exhibits These includo·. 1772 California/Colonial Time Line Displays, and -at the Home Office -Laguna Beach Stamp Club's "llistory of Stamps" Collection and the Freedom Shrine of Great Documcng.c ' ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST, FIRST AND STRONGEST INDEPENDENT FEDERAL NOW HAS 4 CONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE YOU San Q emente Branch Home Office :260 Ocean A venue 60 1 North El Camino Real Laguna Beach, California Laguna Niguel Branch Laguna Hills Branch 3 Monarch Bay Plaza 24038 Calle de la Plata ~~-. AND LOAN ASSOCIAT10N' • .• lamilf,9.9,§,~[Y A little .Quys a lot of Skil. ' power tools for Christmas under the Squiggly"· Roof .. • II . ( . ,; Skll 1'•" dou~le l~•u· · llted drill. Fas,t a¢cotate · drilling in concrele, • • metal.brjckwork, plas- ter. wood or wallboard. (Model #503) 12.99 Skil %: "double insu· ... lated drill. Ooubie reduction gearing for added drilling torque. Removable side l)andle. (Model #560) 15.99 Skll %: " v1rlabl• speed double ln1ul1lt,::I dirlll: 1 /5 h.p. motor. O'io i ooo R.P.M. Adjustable trigger speed control. Removable side handle. (Model #569) ' 19.99 ' I C 2 , Skil 2·speed double lnsu- , lated jig saw. 2800 S.P.M. for hard materials. 3500 S.P.M. for soft woods. Foot tilts 45° lelt or right. Makes own plunge cut. (Model #487) 19.99 Skil dual 1clion double Insulated sander. Use for either orbilal or straight line sanding. Front and rear grips for easy control. (Model #490) 19.99 Skit 7114 " power 11w. Professional QfJ&lily. New safely switch and safety guard stop . Develops over 1 ~" h.~. 5200 R.P.M. cutting speed . Cuts at 45° and 90" . Automalic blower. (Modell574) 29.99 .. 12-plece Ht of jig 1aw bl•de1 • American made. 3.99 11).pl.ce high 1peed drill bit Ml American made. 3.99 S" Poll...mg/ NncNftl klt for drUla. 79¢ • .. ~ .... ll!IU 18000 Cloll•onl Sl • -~· lllW moo l'lc'°'l ~"'·. tlYl~SIOI 31111 lyle< • JAMTA ••• 3900 ~!rill~ It• TOHAIKI Sepol""' .. - ' •IAtlW_Clllo!Jl __ W"-•IUl ... PAtl reiii.;fDiiiijillOpo .. OUKfGo'"'-liil.llli M"'Ots'fW .. h__, Cliri1,.•1ltw1 """ WHli .. y1t1>0tt 10!00 -M...,• 10rll tt lt~ ' • ' • - I I f) DAJLV PILOT For The Record • Jtlarriage Lice1ases Death Notltts ARBUCKLE & SON WESl'CLIFF MORnJARY U'I E. 17111 SI., Ctola M"a -• BALn-BERGl!RON FUNERAL HOME Conn def Mar 17~HSO Com Mesa 141-UU • BELL BROADWAY Al!l!lnJARV UI BIWdway, Colli Mesa uww • McCORMICK LAG UNA BEACH MORnJARV 11'$ Laguna Canyon Rd. UU415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ctme1<r7 Morlaary Chapel M Poclflc: View Ort" Newporl Bado, c.JUonll -• Pl!Elt FAMIL V COl.ONJAL l'UN~RAL flOME 7911 Bolo Avt. WfltmlDlttr lt345t5 • SMl'l1lll' MORnJARV GI Mala SL ffaDllD""'D l!Mch llf.WI,,. • Th11rsoi)', Dtctmbff 7, 1972. Day of Enchantment Sc rwe Takes Firs~timer to Disneyland Editor's Noie: Tlte OT· angt Coi.inty Prea1 Club rakes a group of children to Disneyland each Christ· mas Seasan. The y are un- derprivileged children pick· Pd because they've llever been there and might never yet the chance. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI th• DtHY l'iliM Stiff ANAl-IEI~1 -Sometimes you can mett a girl and have fun tosether, holding hands like there's no tomorrow and kno wing you may never meet asain. but such sweet and sim ple limes can be the very best or all. Her name \\'as AMa Ptlay. ~ M1y weol off ahead. "When!'a 'that guy'?/' I then heard Anna May say. "That's Art," said Sandi Mosley of lhe Register. "Come on Art," Anna May hollered bock. SHE ROUERED it often durtng the day, one In which she later lapsed at times into a strange, small silence that could be tiredness, or just wonder at Disneyland itself, or the unsaid dread s h a r e d because she r--and we -knew it couldn't last forever. She said ii like she was showing me Disneyland; like our roles were reversed. Passins one of the few rides we hadn 't ridden, alter she •ftnally opened up, she pointed to it, warning me aboot the ~rils of the Seven Dwarfs' ~ave. SHE WAS BLONDE, with big brown eyes t ha t sometimes -at unguarded moments -he.Jd a hidden "THAT ONE'S scary ror hurt. \\'e met on ~lain Street, sure!," she remarked U.S.A., at Disneyland. judiciously. She was terribly shy and "How do you know? You've silenl the first few hours, but never been on It." "~.... "Yes I bove." tbe.n rd catch htr watc..,;.,16 12 hour! and had to he round wu the press club president, a cyrUcaJ old bachelor, drafted as a chaperone himself. 'Ilse tittle girl who then took charge as his personal guide ORANGE COUNTY even commandeered l he coupon book from his pocket , making sure he got a C in· stead of a D Ucket, whlchever '---------~ the at,ractk>n required. One of the last ones, before a dinner that ended a Jong delightful day, was Mr. Toad's Wild Ride. "Look ... I'll driv e, okay?," she suggested as we stood in Jine. ANNA MAY made race car jockey Parnelli Jones look like an eJghtb grade d r i v e r training Mil, getting us through that devilish, zig.zag. ging maze. Safely outside afterward, the once too-solemn litUe girl who had taken so long to begin laughing looked ba<k et it, folded her arms triumphantly and cackled. She also asked a lot or ques- tions 1 couldn't answer after we got l<qUainted, llke why the Disneyland and Santa Fe Railroad W8Sll't en time. Talk Slated On Saucers FULllERTON -Stan too T. Friedman, a nuclear physicist and authority on unidentified flying objects, will deliver a lecture and slide presentation Monday entlUed "F I y i n g Saucers are Real .. " The event will oyen to the public and will. beg10 •l a p.m. at the Little Theater, located in the mmic-speech..<frama b<JUd!ng at Cal S t a I e Fullerton. Ticket. will he $1.50 ror general admission and $.75 for Cal state student!!. For more information, call the AMoclated students office at 870-3421. Planni~g Advisers Appointed Santa Ana-Orange County Supervisors have appointed the consulting firm of Barton- Ascl>mao and ABoocl•tes of Chicago to develop a planning program to comply with pro- visions ol a state law whJch la effective Jan. 1. Richard Ramella, principal pl Anrier in the county's Gener- al Ptanolng f'rolnm, cifu.d lhe hoard a list ol lhree nam,. " qualified cmsultant.s, In- cluding ao Atlanta Onn and one from San Francisco. SUPERVISORS selected Ille Chicago organization because it has done prevJou.s work in lhe county. 1be appointment OI a ...,. sultanl at an.-.ted cost ol $40,000 was dictated by the provisions of AB 1391 which takes effect at the first or the year. "When?," I asked, without me. And then Anna ~lay would thinking about catching a little tum away, b i d i n g a girl in a litUe fib, a!te.r she hearlhceaki!J!lly-beautilul grin had earUer agreed th a t with both hands. Disneyland was nothing like · She had holes in the knees of she could ever have imagined. 1be state law provides lhat a county cannot mate zone changes or lssuo building permits in an area which does not have an adopted general BUT I WAS spored trying to plan. answer 111e 1ast likely quesuon Tustin W eiuhs "A long time ago ... " she her knitted stockings and a murmured "A h u n d r e d split was starting in the years." shoulder seam of her sweater. Th is account of an en. Sometimes, as we wandered chanted afternoon could go on through the · Kin do forever, but the DA IL Y Magic g m, PILOT doesn't have time or she would stop and stoop to space to tell all about a magic straighten ~ ragged stock· day with Anna May and 31 ings. other kids. she might have askod. -e Tiii! COUNl'Y has general Anna May was bubbling Bicycle Trail plans for a l•w selected ..,.., when she came running to say such as the central Irvine goodbYe as o UT group broke TUSTIN -City councilmen :Ranch and l;quna NJcuel but up, "boldlng out her new here have asked city engineers does not Have such for most or Mickey Mouse wristwatch to for plans and a cost estimate the unincorporated areas. show it was a real one. And for a SG-mile bicycle trail. Planning Director Forest l'm damned glJd U wa> dark Trails would he conswcted Dick.uon t o I d supervisors in that parking lot. in the area 60Uth of Jrvine three weeb ago that his How can you explain why Boulevard and East of the department did not have suf. you have tears in your eyes, Venta Spur Llne and along ficient staff to complete the SHE SEEMED s e l.f ·con.. SOMEHOW,. THE only one after a whole day at Red Hill Avenue from Warner various general plans within a sciciUsly aware that they were who got lost during the hectic Disneyland? Avenue to Irvine Boulevard. reasonable length of Ume. not too new , but determined 1 __ __:: ____ ::_ _____ _: ________________________ _;:.._ ____ I they should at least be neat. I didn't care, but bow do you tell that to a clothing-con· scious lady who just turned 9- years old? We first rode the ·Peopte- ?i.1ove.r machine with another Press Club chaperone in the same car. Then she and Anna Bus Drivers Ke.ep White Shirts On • SAN'I'~ ANA -The Orange Coonty Trlllll\t District, trying to create an "image" with the distinctive a-ppearance of its buses and drivers had to settle for plain white shirts Monday for bus drivers. Brilliant orange shirts with white stripes .and name and district insignia patches, pro- PoSed by Ille district stair, were turned down by the board or dlrectors. The district will rent the shirts at a cost of $2,822 an· nually for 70 driven. 'nle shirts will feature a driver name patch on the front and a OCTD patch on the right shoulder. The staff members modeled three different uniforms for the directors and stronsly SUJ>- ported the orange shirts, but directors decided that white was "cleaner looking, neater." Jackets were also modeled by staff. They would cost an additional $1 ,190 a year and were rejeeted for the present. Supervisors Cancel Two Yule Me.ets SANTA ANA -Orange County supervisors h a v e cancelled regular meetings scheduled for Dec. 26-27. The t\1-·o-day Christmas bresk was ordered by the board thJ1 week . Board Chainnan R o n al d Caspers of Newport Bea.ch proposed the holiday and got backing from other board members. The board issued a bulletin that all matters to be con- sidered on the Dec. llJ-20 meetings must be submitted to the clerk of the board by 5 p.m • Dec, 12. i\latlers submitted afttt lhnt dAte wiU not be considc!rett un- 111 the Jan. 2·J, 1973 sessions. \Vine, Cheese Party Slated • TUSTIN - A wine and cheese-tasting party Is plaf>. · ned for 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Slturday in the State ~futuat Savlngs Building. 615 E. First St. here to raise funds for lcllolaroblps sponOOred by the UC Irvine Parents Organlza· lion . Mens sweater closeout your choice: FOR $- • Flat knits . .,._, lashlon knits • Cardigans. pulklvera . .tip-fronts • Craw necklines. V-necks. turttea •Solids. patterns.~ S-M-L·Xl • Wools. acrylics blends. Grab an armful. Pick oneforf11/fJ/l'f man in your family, every man on )'O<Jr gift list • · Extended Chrittmot Store Hours Weekday• 9,30 T9 1(~00 Sunday• 1 i>.00 Ta I i>.00 . . . . . • • ••••• • • • • • • • -. • ' @f0 The biggest selection ·of the big LP's. At .the .. littlest price. \ I And that goes for . \ the RED-HOT ONE, too .~e~E~~fs!~~· ,,.--.. .-~--. ·:..... . . _ .. ;:: •' s.· . '" . ; . .:. ... -. . . . ·. . :.. .. ... . . ··~~·~;; -~ ./':_:.:! -fM:~~~:~· .· ... _'P,~ ·"\_~., ~, ' "Catch Bull at Four" CAT STEVENS 3.27 11Faces" SHAWN PHILLIPS 3.27 • • • ~- , . . •I ·, ~ • s: .. ., ·. ~ • s M r i be is co p 0 K is Cr a j r • Thund1y, Dteember 7, 1972 DAIL V PILOT l l SterilizatiQns Gain W· £ouples !ncreasingly Turn to .Surgeons [I~ NEW_ YQJ!K UPil -More and more, ..,..4ii American couple& are relying on surg~'s tools to clip the stork'~ wings. Voluntary sterUizatlon, Which· results from either tubal ligation or vasectomy- the former for the female, the latter for the male-11:ppears In fact ti? be on the way to becoming the preferred contraceptive method amohg husbands and wives who want no·more children. •. As of lrTO,· more than one in sl.J: such couples bad been sterilized and nearly 50 percent more · indicated they would seriously consider a sterilization opera· i tlon th prevent future unwanied pregnan- cies. This is the report from Family Plan- riing Perspectives, journal of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America Inc. ~ THE REPORT ON ''The Acceptability of Contraceptive Steriliiation among U.S. Couples: 1970" is"by Larry L. Bumpas~ .,.. and Harriet B. Presser. Snow lob Ul'I T.._... Scholar Ptesser 11 associat6 professor Detroit ex il.c u t 1 v e leaves office at end of day only to find bis work is jtlst sWtlng. He must shovel snow off car and out of ~king I o t before starting slippery way home. Free·way Service Severed SAN DIEGO (AP) Motcrists s tranded on freeways here· wiUl out-of- service vehicles are now rind- ing when they phone for free help that the company's phone is also O!Ul of service. So is the company. of soclomedical sciences, school ol public health and intemation~ institute for the study of human reproduction: Ckllumbia University. Bumpass is associate professor, department of sociology and center for demography and ecology, University of Wisconsin at Madison. The possibility of the acceptability cf sterilization ·as a contraceptive method of choice was suggested to the in- vestigators by data from the 1985 and 1970 National Fertility' Studies (NFS}. ''WHILE nm Pil.L remained the -The American Free w a j· Patrol has folded after lour • ~ c:itf providi{lg ·ft e ,e assi<tance ta stranded - Diego Freeway driveN. i> . . ' ITS 18PONSOR_~!" American Oil c.a., ~ • supportfi no me ~-..;. peel ~ ml with ~ lW« -' • keep the !\Ye '""'"" ·'"'Ii:-.... holli»Plor--opetating e\rery year. . . ' Highway Patrol Capt. Bob Killingsworth says the public is the loser because the freeway patrol provided fast service to anyone wt» called, and thereby helped keep the !r~ays free of daogeroua congestion. "HA Vltlw. TUE freeway patrol was kind .or unique here." Killingsw~th s a i d . "Moel other places are like v.•e are now. If people need serviec, gas or tire repairs, we're going to have to call peo~ who are going to chaf{e mcmey Md Who won 't respood as quickly. •1 ' , Hop in your most popular contraceptive method used b.Y couples who wanted no more children, as well as be married couples generally, the proportion using the pill appeared to plateau by 1967," the investigators reported . "However, the proportion choosing contraceptive sterilization only began its precipitous increase in 1969. What is 'Tlae proportfmt choo•· hog COtttraceptllle steri- ll:atlon 0ttf11 began its preclpftous increase in 1969.' more, most couples choosing th.is permanent method of contraception had previously been using the pilL .. " Some highlights of the report : -Among all such couples considering or ha•lrlg had cootraceptive ~rilj2ation; vasectomy bas become somewhat more popular than tubal ligation. Thl! 'operaUOQ' on the male ~ not re- quire Jn.hospita\.-treatment. It is relaUve- ly simple and inexpensive compared' to tubal ligation -cutting the tubes through which the egg f~m the ovaries travels to the uterus. -FEW BLACK MEN have had vasec- tomies aod few black women believe their husbandS would seriously consider this type of operation. -1bere is considerable misinformation about the effect or vasectomy on male .24" potency , especially among blacks, and this may, at least In part, be the reason this operation bas failed to attract black couples interested In permanent con- tractptlon. -While wives average age ls 32 and husbands age Is 35 at sterilization, the operation Is more prevalent aroong couples where the wife is past 30 than when she is in her 20s, even though the couple wants no more chi ldren. Serious consideration of the operation, however, is "quite high among young women." -Two-thirds of couples adopfmg sterilization never had an unwanted birth previously. But those whose last birth was unwanted are more likely to have had a contraceptive sterilization than those whose last birth was wa_nted. We Dare You Try Saturday's News Quiz ,;., ... CoMvni ... Po Icy · ..,,_.....,k•""--..... -.. ---let ""91ll ., 1enkn '-"'" 11 J11, •ltlJI CHIHf llf lllKlll tf c..-atflln; •· S. .Ir..._ U» ---........ " et11 Ulll tn-1n1. (111 n1.mt. " •• ,....., ltll Ht ff ,.. ""· J ,-.a.a-............ . ...... ....., ......... ,.... fif1: 7 .35.rl-I (t:71fJ ... ) 1.1.1.rr-1 t•7•1•"> .WliNI',,,,_.,. • FOlf.• DOKE·C#•:''l' 1495 MARKC. BLOOME %OFF NOW · on 2nd New SAVE 16" ..• IUY 2 fw 119" .. F 0 R '''": or Iii" Ea. fit•: a .25.rJ.j c101111<1J a.25.rJ5 cto1111r1> H~Tf '(' • FOlt•!I 8.!';!i.rl·I fll711fl·I) "'·"·""".''"'. ftl f('t.; j 'jj9':; j"§9:> S,60-1.5 · 6.S0-11 1.1S-14 7.7.5-J4 l .2S-J4 1.ss.1c l .2S·IS I.SS-IS 5 .60:.: r .'i s .. -;,,.T 1 :1 fir•: (H78fl:J} 15" J5N 11•:a 11•·1 19" 22•:; 19•:; 22•J l..i'' I. 711 l .H.1 I. 'JO :!.:.></ :!. I:! :.?..1 2 :? .. lH :?.•l'J • • REGULAR Drum Typ car and come as you are! Tne lmper.ial folks are 1 wa iting tor you! uo.16 •15~~ 1.so.1, •• , •2a .. U0.15 "19 .. 1.9h1"5 .. •34 .. uo.15 "22 .. l.7Sa16.S •• "38°0 1.M.!6 "24.. 10.l!h16.S. •44•• ' ·i •49•• .E'18/l4 •••• · •• •31•• f'78/J4 ...... :•3:r• 671Ul4 •••••• '3"91 018114 ....... •3r• 678/JS ..•••• •35•• 01811s •••••• •3r• 1,78/15 •••••• •43•• 1170/14 ''' '22 .. fR70/14 •• , 'M" GR70/14 •• , '27 .. HR70/14 .,, '29" fR70/IS ••• 'M" . GR10/IS ••• •2r• Hl10/IS ••• •29•~ 1170/IS ,,. '44" BB* AA FuR .Sl11 u.s.c .. I 0-01G1•· • ~ sec-r•\•f'f -C::-""' .,-- ~ Banlc • 'Cotti· M•11 , .H.~r r Blvd. al Fair Drive (714) 979· 1000 112.00x16.5 MARKC.-. llUOME ' ·~ 1 .. ~·IJ JJ..,UO. -~E•T., ' 60 & 70 Series rn&ll~m® 001rnm COSTA MESA , ... ,.....,~. C~•....-&M ....... ) (714» ,,, .. ... SPECIALS «:•etc:e •.' Sl:cr 678/1$ 'Q2495 878/ l 4 .,,, ' 178/14 ·-"" • n..t WIM fh .. ..., •• • ..,UO!ll•l .. ,.,, •• lM11/l•I I• 1.,.1 .. ~ 111111•1 (f'f./ISI l•'li1SI t"'-'""---.-o-! . ""' Wlln'EWA'IU f70/14 24" 2 295 G70/1'26" G70/1S %8" l'l0/11 F60/1 .5 29•• , ...... uu .. ')"'""'''• LA HARBRA not Wtilnt.r llYtl. (ctrMr .. Wlll11tr • ltHlll 674..J••• I BUENA PARK H62 UMet. lktl. tc•rMi Ill Lllldlll 6 KMll) 17141 126-llH • 1. llttt.11 rttw h1ulH ll•IJtt •••II 4 whetb 2. ••'-114 •II 4 wltttl cyli•4tr1 l .•• ,ttk ,,.. ........ , ltt•rl*fl 4. l•rit & -cltlM •II 4 4,..,. .. s. 11"4 ' ..... u ... ' cltKk ...... It t.r ...... '· ''"'"t •r••• ,. .. ,. e11tl .. 14 ihw• 1,n.,. & IMi1•• 1. Arc 1rl!HI tll kcikt , .... , . I . l•i'"t frHt trHM IMh '· fl'ff •4j••t-11 ftr lift •• h•irtt 1 o. •••41111 ,.,. .-f•fy 12 !'~~--... ,,.., .. 1, .... FULLERTON 112\ S.d IMll4 t1 tlll, M. 9' lti..,.. ... l',_..YI IJ14J 170·0100 . ' ' , I ' • , ,. • • • o• . ,. . / ,~ I • • • '.'$ • ' ' ' . ' • ' ' ' I I J 2 DAILY PILOT fl.2 Miilion Allan· Funt Aide Named in Thefts NEW YORK (AP\ -Allan A. Funt 's acl'Quntant was charged "''ith s t e a l i n g $1,285,836 from the Olm pro- ducer. best known for his "Candid Camera'' television program. the e1pens.e as production costs for such films as "What Do You Say to a Naked Lady" and thus financed investment speculations, gambling. ex- pensive trips. j e w e 1 r y purchases and a Miami Beach condominium, Hogan alleged. The district attorney said Funt became suspicious of his actOUntant after noticlng that his bank balances plummeted $233,000 in less than two months last summer. A1anhattan Dist. Atty. Frank S. Hogan Wednesday said Seymour Coldes, 41 , Woodmere, N.Y .. sfole from Funt's personal and pr~ ductlon company a c c o u n t s from February 1968 to August lN FEBRUARY, Hog an 1972. His indictment llsls 44 said. Goldes obtained a counts of grand larceny . $2.50.000 bank loan ln the name Goldes, a certified public ac-··of Allen A. Funt Productions, countant, was also charged in Jnc . to cover de cl i n Ing two other indi ctments with b 1 nine additional counts of grand a ances. . . larceny for allegedly stealing A second 1od1ctment ch~r~- $30.000 from two other men. ed Goldes with eight counti of HOGAN SAID Goldes was Funt's business and financial adViser aOO naa power of at- torney over seVeral of the pro- ducer's personal and business accounts. grand larceny for aUegedly siphoning more than $2{),000 from' the accounts or Gerald Feil. who pr.oduced the-film- "lord of the Flies." New School The accountant w r o t e checks to himself, concealed Christmas Lighting Canceled · 'The accountant was charged in a third indictment with one count of grand larceny in connection with his alleged failure to pay bills with $10,000 given him by Paul \\linston. who is also in the theatrical field. Bob Hope dedicates school named in his ho'nor in San Antonio. Comedian talks to stu- dents after ceremonies. . · DES M.OINES, rowa (AP) - The annual Christmas home lighting contest, sponsored for years by tne Jaycees and low! Power and Light Co., has been cancelled this year. 10%,0Ff:. WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY OF OUR A power company official said \Vednesday one reason is concern for wise use · of energy. CHRISTMAS . TREES ' LIVING CHRISTMAS TREES FROM $20.00 UP RALPH SCHLENKER, vice president Of Jowa Power, told the Des Moines Tribune the utility is not discouraging out· door lighting. but is no longer encouraging it. BEAUTIFUL LIVING GIFT JAPANESE BONSAI S..11 '""• ... ~~~---·········'5.50., . . Schlenker co.needed · o n e reason is that a new rule of the Iowa Commerce Com- mission says that pritie money for the contest would have to come out of profits. TAKATA NURSERY The Jaycees said it is "plac- ing money and manpower on 711 •l"kEI STREET: (M«t·t• Fire St•tlon) on 8rl•tol at hkfl' -COSTA MESA 546-07')\ more worth\vhile projects." #~ MEN'S SHOP DOUBLE KNITS or WOOL SPORT COATS NOW $43 NOW $53 Rog. 85. to 95. Rog. 100. to 110. Sites: 38 to 48 e Regul•r or Jong SLACKS Doubl• Knit Rog. to 26.50. '• '-l1ru. 0..11 .... ll:•lt SPORT SHIRTS $15 FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING All Coloro $23 Rog. 32.SO. 1/2 PllCI POLO 1/2 SHIRTS Price e h9 L.,..-etc., P•re SI• & Pefpltlf llECIWEAR •:-•. ~ 13. 95 Open Sun. 10 to 3. Wffkdays 9 to 5 <Yf/~ MENS' SHOP NIEWPORT IEACH 1107 J•Mbo'ff ltd, -'htt•1 64•·0110 LOCATED AT THE NEWl'OlTEl INN VIit Yw .........nctni., __. ~ .............. ........,. SPORT SHIRTS 22.50 and 24.50 WHl\Hlo Arn1I '$1-Jl60 SPORT SHIRTS 'f -.-:;-,. ,,..,---..A-=t>iir __..----- • ' I No· Plaee Like BOrdello Films Curbed ANKARA (All) -A . Executive's Family Lives in Uriu.sual House porlWM!taiy eo....itlM ap- proved 1 otrld -ceuonhlp law thll prohibits films 4oplc> tine tl>realt .. !be mllllOrY • the COllllltullon. purllc flllll\lil, public health, natlOnal secur!!Y and public order. It 11~ . P"'ll"rlY -past Ibo carrl•ce houle. the fOCk ~. and the tcrY&nts quarters," Wunderman aald. MOUm'AIN VIEW (AP) -There was a U-wl\en !nvtn Wwider01an's 15-room home roe~ with the merry 80unds of tink1lng cocktall glasses and laughing ladies ol the night. Wundennan's 21,~-story home, built in 1924 and todlY valued M $Hl0,000, used ID be-a bordello. ''It was a real den of iniquity," said Wunderman, a 41 .. year-0ld scientist who is board chairman of three local electrooics firms. "ln those days, they had every vice imaginable -greyhound racing, gamblina:, girls and "ft"S JUST TOO CUlSE for comfort," he 111d, pre- dlctlnl! !be pttl!ellCO cl the roadway and trlcl homes will "dcolroy tile whole n1vor " w. cllarmlng p~." '""' "°"" ortglnally-warbull\-ara ·--m.. wheelinC speakeasy where sleele-)'Olllll ,.._ greeted lorblda rums that ~ racial or clua le, rellgloua or na= f or encourage -e·r l min a gentlemen callers from san Francisco, Ill nlJlil to the north. behavior. : booze." r--- WUNDERA1AN BOUGlfT the 7 ,2£K)..square foot home. 10 years ago and said he bas since "maintained it as dose as I could to the original -except, oC course, for the vice." But now Wunderman and the palatial borne -it lft.. eludes an BOO-square foot ballroom, two mahogany ban, a hat.check room, seven bedrooms and five baths ._ are (aeing-a--el'i&is. Developers ol a housing tract want to construct an access road adjacent to the acre site on which the home is located. "The road will run within earshot along 220 feet o( my Wllndennan lives In Ille -\V!th Ills w~e Golda and their lllree children and saya he wwldn't take f!ll·OOO ror the properity. . 1 But he admlts there are disadvantages to llVMt iD· a house with a ,notorious past. . •. " · "l!ve had people next to n 1in line •at.the·apennark.et SB)', '.there's the man who U\'d in a~ of p~t14tion'/' Wunderman said. "But ll cloesn't adveraely affect me af all." MOST WHO DAVE R~ for .• look at the OOuse -Including some former studenta rw'-8111ng the wilder side of their college days: -remember it as a normal looking mucture on the oul.\lde bul designed as a rUgbt club on the Inside. Wuiiderman said. 1-TICHOOU ------C.... frMM, C•llfenllit P11. C714J f7NJU 1n7 S. ,,........,., SI. ......_C1L .-.. ... 1114) 776-JIM • 111111111111111,1111111i1l1111111111111111i111 -• • • • • • • RADIO GIANT CH~RISTMAS TOY & HOBBY --GIA--NT--SA LE SAVINGS . . CONTROL EQUIPMENT cox cox -SANDBLASTER PINTO •HolYCO or . = AUIRORA . ROAD ENTEX MAZDA RX2 ·• FUNNY • RACING CARS • YOUR CHOICE WITH WANKEL ENGINE flOWERED 8Y .041 GAS ENOfNE ......... BY .... CAR OAS ENGINE. i '' •' = N0.6562 I i.:ox'Lmodel of Bill Sc)lif.sk.v's _ Pinto is built for the top This is rhe car of N0.8333 the year! Features an authentic Wankel REG. S!i.47 • • • • • •• ., REG . 53.99 $2.99 rotary engi~I .l 7 DISCOUNT RRICE $3.99 Mpdeled after the super fast single ~aters that conquer~ rugged Baja in the famous Me1dcan 1000. REG. $!9.99 $9.99 drag racing. Authentic 16 1 /12 ~le model. , REG. $19.99 $9.99. !!Jhi• -Oouble B .layout • is 54" by 36" makei ~ .6 different .track lay N08105 ou1s. REG. $19.99· .. $13 .99 The world's most popul1 engine fOf' Y,.A free !light and control fil'le flying! No. 1 ' 1/16 s::a1e....;mer of 1he NHRA V'O"ld finals. Flip-up, detad'lable "Demon'' funny c.Y body. OYome flegs. Movable injecta. ~ b.ltterflies.. Detailed front upensic>n. REG.SS.7 3.99 ""'-_ .. N0.7311 --·- MODEL POWER HO CONTROL SWITCHES REG. $29.99 $23.91 1/16 ale. ()le" dw best lookiru rails on the track tciiay. 9tin1t It ~1n )M~d by 'the low·prolile GP·20 li!ill.d Oi•wl. PIEG. S.'.M.95, . DISCOUNT PRICE $28.88 TNT . MINI CHOPPER Free ffight . .,. -~ Powered >-by the famou5 cox .0<09 engine. ·• "stlAiGHT TRAC~ 18" CURVED .• TRACK a1H11111H111111m111r-1'-· • .. -· .................... II I@ • ··~~\\\\i\liiiiillill!!!li~ ;::".~'""" ;\\\\\\\\\\i\\l\1llhl!l!ll!-:;,:;"bl' = • SALE REG. 25c EACH • PRICE $1.49 OOZ. • MATTEL CROSMAN '° POWERMASTER REPEATER • • • • Positive cross •. No. 760 bolt safety. . • holds ·up to • 2 octav e, ••sv play ey • \ \ 180 c ·rosman .• Simple to Ope'111•, just slide bo.tpl d2 ~ l~elOdy keys ($] ' I super B·B's. • 1n showfile pot on teCOl'd 1~ U octeves. ' a e I No. 3500 • sE3: 99g '"\'wllch an$'32:'&8 V¥oa ble •Olume '°""26,7 6 . .$.\9~99 = • • • • • • • SHOP AND. SAVE AT s~o~~~~:.~c::.30~~1~00 ... , OS CANOGA NEWPORT ORA'NG . WESTCHESTER L ANGELES PARK BEACH E CERRIT Kftll~fl AAL'i.J'!'; MAM .. (f ltROAOWAY Cl\£N5HAW $£Ali!$ ~llC),,rNG C(NlfA • NlAA MAV CO, fAll_!,!1001( SQU A~( JA$~tON tSlANO Ql'l'()t/t( 9AO•OWA'I Dlil'T'. StOA( SEA AS MAl.l OF OMANGf lOS C(MMI f QJ; ClN rtM 8ETWtlN St AM!' ANO ORRAt"ttK • "l'o\I W lit~ 1 :Jll•\·~ ~AN1A A~"'llAMA 614\ fALLIAOOI( !1-0 fASHION ISLAND 2211N.0AANQ( MALL 1$1 LO~ ('ff!IUIOS • • <Jll<r.IQ\111 1)11!°ff271bS 11 1lll'91Jl1J /1t4Jl4ol•OMI 1714l ttl•l100 12131924::1JN llllllllll'lllllll•••i·1111111111111111111111111'1 -------------'-__ .:._, ~· "'-·~· .. I' ' .. h • I ., Thursday, Dtt:trnbtr 7, 1972 DAILY PILO T J" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. Nation Cleans Up By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK (UPI) -!l's working, Mrs. Johru!on. 'Ibe Lady Blrd beautification cam- paign is catching oo. Your project as former First Lady to turn America back· laJU)p.t it once was, plus au ~t~otlnuing efforts of valious organizations to Keep America Beautiful, is paying off. no longer ~ ~ bugaboo it .. KUDOS TO nlOSE states · was about live years ago when including Vermopt, New York, we made a similar trip. Kentucky and West Virginia Litter, (lf course, is for well-kept picnic and minimal on the interstate barbecue areas. Dining under a grove or trees on a sunlit highways which are patrolled fall day Is a joy too frequept- conslanUy. But the same ty m~. generally was true for the About the only major litter back: roads which we prefer~ we encountered was a t red. Ausable Chasms, N.Y., the Undoµb~y, the keep-clean . mini-Niagara Falls that at-- programs are spurred by our tracts thousands of tourists. natio~ concern that we save We folln'J the viewing areas our enVll'<lnment -or else. cluttered with empty beer Slates with conservation cans, bottles, papers and consciousness -and laws ~ what-have-you. help. The lit~er maker is Graffiti has been rated a na· ~scouraged with thre~ts of tional problem, but we saw Ht- fines up to $500, depend111g on tie. Someone painted his in- the state. , itials atop Whiteface Moun- general, they 're cleaner and more fully equipped than on our last trip. Btrr THERE'S still room tor improvement. Some had no soap. Some, no towels. They w.re hardly like beiog at home, although a couple of filling stations had taken the pains to waUpaper. I suspect the fault here is oot always the station manager's. Women away from home seem just generally more care.less than in their own house. • • -!/; "' ONE DAY ONLY! ~ FR·I. DEC. 8 lir SPECTACULAR SHIRT STUFFER I1 ' I II J · II I II r I COMPLETE DINNER • Seup Of Tli• Dly Or T ...... GrMft Salad ROAST RACK OF LAMB AU JUS MINT JILLY RICE 'ILAF VEGETAI LI DU JOUR FRESHLY IA.KID FRENCH BREAD ICI CllAM SUNDA~ OR CHOCOLATE LAYIR CAKE IEVIRAGll •ICDMM•NDliO TONY lO&O GJIOUI" :[ ·xi, I I !l 11ese•VATIOMS •5rs DANCINO TD A Sl/ll'tlllNGLr INOtr oiwi HOM :i1111nwArs I "Since Gro ndmo and Gronddod hove been here we haven't 51-nt Dod'dy out for fr ied chicken or hem- 'My husband and I have roundeq out one month of motoring, covering 3,900 miles from the Thopsand Islands "to Bow lin g Green, Ky., beQgehopping through cities and towns all the way. SOMEBODY'S D 0 I N G And we found roadside rest tain, in New York, though. area after resr area so well Something must be said equipped with litter cans you about rest rooms at gasoline dared not use them. stations and in restaurants. In We noted a thoughtful bit of equi pment at an Ellz.abethtown, Ky. state rest area. One stall in each Md been equipped with special bars for the &afety of any ban- dkapped traveler. • 'l I l1 1 sTuff ~~IR[ 1 1 . e. burgers even ONCE !" something right. The litterbug .. • ' ····-~··•·llllltllllllllll:lllllllllllllllllll!J ~~·,. ...... ..&!A.NT CHRISTMAS : • MATTE.t. •COOL CAST • Amer ica's favorite family tun! Provides thrlllS,excite- ment and aggravating setbacks! REG. $1.99 99 • •MASl'ERPIECE • • = • • • • • • The art auction oeme. For 3 to 6 players. REG. $4.99 • Ages 12to adult. 2 99 fie '(Our own art buff! • 'ARKt:R •NERFppP-• • ,. • • • 1• Shoot baskets in the house; or office! 4 inch ball and met1I hoo?i with mar-pr,oof brackets. I. REG. $2.99 = $1 .99 ·TO .Y & HOBBY GIANT = SALE SAVINGS = THAU DECEM~R 11TH. TOYS STATIONERS • • MERRYWATCH=- .. -~-.. , . ~;-· = No. 7500 • Actually keeps rea l time! • TicksupagreatTic-Tock! • A rriust fdr the littl e Tot's stocking stuffer. • Sill .. 1~$2.99 gAlE $1G~57 = AEG.$12.76 8.88 SELCHOW •. SCRABBLE Became •classic in the game world ,overnitel A mind tickler! ,. . .... ~ltJ<l·)i ' '-~> ... :<;··':~ . l .· .,,, "·~· . . ... " . -. .. I:\ .. • •• ~ • $ ....... • .. • .. ., ... : ... •.,. NO. 1 no-4730 lastic, deluxe refusable SALE e kit, no need for _,a~;i::::., and paper. Players r;id ownfleet! REG.S4.99 SAlE PRICE 2. 99 ... VOi DURHAM PG8 UTILITY DISNEYLAND TRAIN BALL . A net:essity for 1he child centered family! . -' ~ .. '(" ) ' 1 •. ' no5630 REG. SJ.99 Walt Disney's Casey Junior. t SALE Great fun for a little one! P~'.~E9 BSALEncluded. RE2 •• 99 SP~CIAL PRI CE Wide traction racer! Fast! Chopper stylin g! 9.99 BRADLEY f.IVIOT POOL= • • -feJtures. an • automatic •. pivot shooter, Automatic • '"""'"'=ball return • 19" by 32:'1" • REG.S16.76 . SALE PRICE 11.7 6 PARKER LANDSLIDE • • • • -I: • N0.31 • A Parker Brothers game • of power pol itics. Have REG. $4.99 . fun ~~t~itting the $2 99 oppos1t1on! • MEGO ACTION ·• JACKSON = '1 • •· . All action figures are • posable. 8 inches tall, • 1he biggest little man ; 1n the wotldt • •• -~-REG . S 1.99 . no1100 99 SALE PR ICE ( IDEAL TWIRLY BIRDS • • •• / . Take off,., and land[ Make 90 degree turns! Plan your own fligh t path. SPECIAL PRICE • ~,. • l:<'.l N0.3113·8 • REG .$5.99 ·= $3.99• • SHOP AND SAVE AT ALL KARLS STORES •All STORES OPEN l DAYS A WEEK• STORE HOURS : MON. TijRU SAT. 9:30 to 9:30 SUN. 10:00 to 5:00 WES-TCHE!llER •LOS ,ANGELES "'H!Nfl ftAlP>i'S MA~K(t FIR 0 1'10WAV CRENSHAW S•tOPPIN(; CENllA NlAA MAY CO. CANOOA PARK SE AAS fAll8ROOK SOUA!il( < NEWPORT ORANGE CERRITOS BEACH f.t.SMI ON 1glANO SEARS -~OS ClARITO~ C:fNtfA OPP;OSI TE IAO•DWA 'I" MAll OF OAANOf SETWf(N St:AA1; 0{.'f.S!OA~ ANO 0A8AC:HS • • • • • fi~S~ W ll/1h ~.j/' \II ~ANT A f!AAllARA IJl•l JA~ltROOK ·~J tf J'A,MION ISl•NO 2271 N, ORANG( MA ll 1<;1 l OS Cfl!ll!T('l.<; • :•. ,111l1r,1n1111 1~1 31z'J?Z8~'> J11Jl34f•llll. tlltle••·0911 111•1111.1100 • !2131924-3358 • 11111.lllllHllllllllllllllllllllllllllll·llllll I think that all told I counted only nine autqll\Obile graveyards. although o n e cl~ly visible from Interstate Bl outside Carlisle, Pa., was a lulu. Not too bad a record , really. 111 RESTAURANT I I NIWPORT llACH ~ 22u w. co•n. HWY. ~ ~ ·-1714) 646·10!7 '/~ M l>-'1 M .................... 4/1 '· ) \ ........ ···~ You can stop lugging water. You can stop rationing water. You can stop storing water. You can stop paying for water. The AQua-Pure•Water Filter. For spring-fresh water right from your kitchen tap. htr• of Co&tl Mtll 10at-pon Blvd. Caeta Meae, C4 8282t 714--642-1753 That's right! Bottled water can be a lhir"lg of the past just by Installing an Aqua-Pure Water filter underneath your kitchen sink. You or your plumber can put ii in easily. It only lakes a mailer or minutes. From lhen on you can enjoy bottle-quality water • Crystal-clear spring-fresh water every-time you tum on the tap. The AMF Cyno Aqua· A~F Cu no Pure Water Fiiter. lt'1 like having bottled water on tap. At a fraction of the cos!! Aqua-Pure• wyeR FILTERS - . see the Aqua.Pure Water F11tar at: i -Plumblng 312 • 3rct St. - L.guna Beach, CA 714 ·49+~501 GM~ald & lleblo • °'""'9 PM-j s2a ,N. El Camino""'' 100 LM-Obrlfol Sen Clemente, CA 71 a.n4 .~,· OA • 1 714-492·1721 _...,. - • Finch to Leave Dec. 15 ., .... ...--.. __ _ • Stat1re V1avei!ed Spectator in Dover, England, examines latest statue of Sir \Vinston Churchill , utfveilcd on 98th anniver- sary of famed prime minister's birth. ----- France Reverses Actor's Sentence From Wire Services An Italian appeals court cleared French movie star Pierre . Clementi, 30, of drug charges. He has spent 16 months In prison since his ar- rest. In overturning a two-year sentenee, the court ruled the state had Insufficient evidence against him. . The court uphel d the twi>- year sentence against An· namaria Lauricella, a friend of lhe actor. of the Rand Corp.. Santa Monica-based nonprofit ''think tank" engaged In national securify problem s and domestic affairs. They are Pro£. S o i a l\1eatschlkoff of the>'Universi· ty of· Chicago Law School and Dr. Eleanor Bernett Sheldon, president of the Social Science Research Council of New York Ci ty. * A n t hropologist A1argarel l'ilead told the ninth gener,fll assembly of the · National Council of Churches in Dallas Clementi \vas sentenced last February on conviction of possession or drugs . Police said they fowid 20 grams or that some of t h e pro- ,---------. nounccme nts of Pope Paul VI ( P,..,.Q,DT•1" J are "an expression of the L C .i..i:, generation gap" in t h e "·--------"'-Catholic Church. cocoaine, several capsules of LSD and piees containing marijuana to Mtss Laytkylla's house, where tbe ai:tof' was staying. * Justice Wllllam 0. Douglas, ne ver one to run with the crowd, declared that the idea -that the U :s. Superme COurt is overworked ls a myth. "We are,, if an ything, un- derworktd not overworked," said Douiias in a dissenting opinion in a minor procedural case. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, particularly, has com- plained publicly of a mounting load of appeals to the court. * Theft of jewels worth an estimated $L8 million from the home of a woman reputed to be among the world's IO richest may have been the work of a lucky small-time sneak thief, London detectives say. Scotland Yard reported that a thief used a ladder Sunday to enter the window of a back bedroom in the home of Swiss- bom Mrs. Afaria Holder in Lond on 's fashionable Hampstead section. Mr s. Holder, a divorcee, and her servants were away. Said Mrs. Holder : "A loss is a loss. What else is there to say?" * "And I don't know how we are going to get a young Pope," Dr. Mead said at a nen conference. "His en- cyclicals would have been refreshlng 4{l years ago." * The Rev . Jahn. Fearn, vicar at an Anglican church in St. Mary's Twyford, England. has decided to replace traditional hymn singing with rousing soccer songs to liven his servi ces. "This is no gimmick," said the 38-year-old vicar. "h1any of the prayer book hymns are terribly out of date and choked wi th ancient expressions." * Eve n the Marine Corps' commandant is participating in group instructions in racial relations, the top l\.1arine himself disclosed. Gen. Robert E. Cushman told newsmen in San Fran- cisco that each M a r i n e , "including myself," is being given 20 hours of such in· struction. "We are telling each A1arine that every olher Marine is an indiv idual man" and whatever their differences "the y should not resort to violence," the 57· year-old general said. WASHINGTON (AP) _.,., Robert ll. Finch, counselor LO the Prtsident. has announced he will leave Lhe White House Dec. 15 to enter law practice in California. Finch, f o r m e r lieutenan t governor of Ca lifornin. sa id he will announce in March or April whether he will run for governor or U.S. senator in Cal ifo rnia in 1974. Finch made public \\'ed- nesday a letter from Presiden t Nixon dated Nov. 24 accepl ing Finch's res ignation, ' ' w i th deep regret." California you have my best wishetil in whatever you un- dertake to do," the President's Jetter said. adding : "Your state and your coun- try have a great investment In yo u and t hope that at some time in the future you will be able to return to public se rvice on a full-ti me basis." Finch said he will join the Los 'Angeles law fir1n of McKenna and Fitting, which he said will become McKenna, Fitting and Finch. The nrm has offices in Los Angeles. San Francisco and Washi ngton. .. AMl!RICAlll -R119. Sl .'11 -l!•P. l'l/ll/'72 OHE~SE .,;,,. .. 0~~ ALL WMITE MEAT -R19. SZ.10 111. ,iV• Slc 111, TURY.F.Y ROLL ~,;:;,~ fl , (7' /!, ITALIAN DELI e BAKERY ol..ucct eJ.Jeli RESTAURANT 8911 Adams at Magnolia, Huntington Beach, one 11 "" ~1'9ftl Deli o,.r•r-1 In c<111,.rn11, $1111 Jft Gat'11•1 •-21 yean Dolty 10-1: Fri. 10.•: S.•. 104: Cl.-d MOii.; 961-4446 Republican Congressman "...... ell!' -' Paul N. l\1cCloskey says he is giving up his commi ssion as a colonel. in the Marine Reserve because of a court ruling tl)at Cllllgr.sm>e!I should not hold military status. McCloskey, who represents the newly formed l 7 t h District, said he didn't resign 900lleT because the tudge's order applied to the 93rd Congress which opens next month and not to recenUy ad· joumed 9!nd. McCloskey as a r.1arine lieutenant won the Nitvy Cross, Sliver Star and Purple Heart In the Korean conflict. * 'M>e fml woman trustees have been elected to Ute board w ...... ..,..., See '" ca.mt-. · . 'f:"'r .. PloM's CM~1stl!M ,1tt:•vtf to ,.. 11J.s ' ' . ' nua ,spg, SO tlLt.!f.u Er rct•rc.. !Ell Siu.le. CAl..WUitO!I lfU Mf11: tl»tlJs, ~ • • I • Fully electric typiiwittr m11111: lltctric r1tiim, ilitttic - Ubuloton, ol1<tric blck llJICI, tl1<tric hell SfllCI. UNIVERSITY l!JP. q,..p-( ff:r. IN I N&w-r IOULrVNID CO.T.\ 1111-CA t l t•7 look for big blue U aL"Newport & 19th St. I Discounted Sharp calculator with Olympia Typewriter at $179 .60 Shirp discount price 79.50 $259.00 A REAL BONUS FOR CHRISTMAS some teaching at bl! two alma muter colleges, USC and Pt- cidental College. Fincb resigned as lieutenant governor to become t~ fir.i:.t secretary of _Healtb , Education and Welfare ln the Nixon Cabinet on Jan. 21, 1969. He left HEW tQ join the .White Houso staff. counsel.Or to:" the President on dom~Uc affalrs Jw1e 24, 1970. . Fincb skirted q u e ·s t i o n s about his political futur e saying polls have shown that he would be the strongest Republican candidate in a general · election for either senator !fr governor. HE SAID HE discussed lb< future with Gov. Ronald Reagan since the election but neither or us said wbat we were going to dO." Reagin 's second term ex- pires in 1974. I~~~;;;~;;;~;;~;,;;;;;;;;;;;~!!!!! A group of promineDtj~ Californil!fls ga ve a dinner a\ •Blair House in Washington Tuesday night rur 100 past, present or future high-lever admlnis!r8tion o£ficials In· I ' eluding Finch. · Nearly ~eryone L~n~ to. Landers GETAROUND GREAT COUNT ON A-1 KOTZJN to very neotly hondle oil the great """ detoils of the casual pant •. Check out the 2'/•" cuff, contrast stitching, greot poc;keting, 23" knee and 26" wide bottoms - just right wlfli the re.. hig'f ~ Ncivy, burgundy, ' chamois, taast. Pure cotton, 29-36 waist, 13.00. Finish off wifli on easy fitting polyester/cotton jersey shirt. Flo_.ed wifli long 5" point caller, 2 button cuff. S-M-L·XL, 15.00 ..., I • . • ' ' ' . • . . . ; I ' " " • • .. .. : I ' ~ ' • . • ' ~,......--........... -...,;.--.,.----~---~·~·---~-'\ SHOP MORNING, NOON AND NIGHT e EARLY CLOSING SATURDAY e SUNDAY 12:00-5100 . • NEWPORT e #I FASHION ISLANO e NEW,ORT CENTER e 644·2200 e MONDAY THRU SATURDAY, IO:OO.,:JO e SUNDAY, 12100.1:'9 I ' >,/ ~ r¥l . ' • ' .. . . .. , . -' -· .. .~ Thursday , Dt<:tmbtr 7, 1972 DAJLV PILOT l5 -' . No Humbugs This Season . Rising Incomes Means Better Buying Mood at Cliristmas Hot Product A fluores"!lnl lamp has )>een developed by Westlng- h~se ongipeer~ 't';> _9perat~ at tem.peratmes'of 212 degrees FihTenhe1\. The lamps will bepllron-ibe Skylab experimental space station that will go into orbit in 1973. They will operate in the highet tem- peratures of the gravity-fr~laboratory. Chrysler Boosts Price Another $40 on Autos PROPOSED ?('!"!' ISSUI! By JOHN CUNNIFF Alt llltlMM AllltYd NEW YORK -As If he didn't have problems before, Santa Claus la facing the most teriou1 loglrllc• challengl! of hll Ufe thls year, and -....,, of serioul mlon and limited vtslon oay he must , trade 1111 1Iejgb rir a 747 Jtt. 'It strains CrtduUty, they 1ay, to believe that anything less than that can transport the avalanche of gtrts tliat are expected to tumble out or fireplace! on Christmas Eve. 7,000,000 Shares MassMutual Income Invest.ors Inc. c.a . ~ St.oc.k P1, . . ....... l:.C...IK. ... _.,_... ... .....,. ....... c.a.- ------·~~~~~~~~-"·~~~~~~~~~~~;._. To obt1ffi • copy of • ~ lba(l'\u)' Proepectu• o( Mu. M•tur.l lncom• lnvulQn Inc., cocnpl•t• 1nd min tb ... covpon co on.of th• tn...,.. ... , duLen u.c.l ahoYe. ,yJn.,~--~~-'-~~-,. .... ~~~~~~ ... I CltJ•~~~~~~ .... 1·~M,__~_..;...::C .... ~,__~ FINANCE a everywhere, despite the ir· regular geogr:aphlcal pattern of pros perity that is often disguised by the national slatlsUcs. A study by Sindlinger & Co. or Swarthmore, Pa., indicates that the country's total gift list wi ll be enlarged by 25 percent. More peopJe will give more glfU to more people this year than ever before, said Albert Sindlinger, president. • Oassic Car Care Kit $9.50 FREE, FANCY GIFT WRAP ••• THAT WILL-LOOK BEAUTIFUL UNDER YOUR they were ill·sulted to both the 1 mood and the pocketbook of consumers. NOW, BOTH mood and pocketbook have changed, and f t h e retailers, advertising media, aunts, uncles , cou sins and kids are likely to benefit The problems belong mainly ~ to Old Nick-and probably to t some parerits v.·ho bought on I credit. Wer• •• ••r wey S.1 Y 01 Cllrfst- LOCAL EDITORIALS ~. L TREE 1 'w·~~~~;;;;.;~;;;;.;;;;;.;~;;;;.;;;;;.;~;;;;.;~]!•~~~~~~~-~-~-~~~~~~~~~~--~·~~-~·~-~~~;~~~ "Be )e Rshers of Men" The fish and cross symbol is based upon the ancient Christian sym~. which was inspired by Christ's words to his follower s. All pieces shown are in '4 karat gold. Pendant, $17.50. Tie tac or lapel pin. S12.95. Ring, S20. Do Something Beautiful • ._ Cllare-Atc-1$ ln..-11..i -•-•k•~ IE•,•ff• llallkAmericarcl •ncl M•~l.., Cll•rt•, MO, SLAVICK'S Je\\'.elers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644· I 380 37.pteoe kit contains hiah speed power unit, acce .. sorie:S for ~inding, polish- ing, cleaning. :sharpening. sanding, shapins and drllr Incl sturdy carrytng case, too eaddy, chuck W'ench, dressing stone, metal polish and plastic polish. kl .. I for handymen, hol>bJ'o lsts and professlonab. MEZURLDK" Power Tape QChooM 12', 18' or 25' wlth•A'blede. 12'.t.oa 11~1 with ~· bktde. 0 Extt• Ugtitwfilgtlt, dofableCI~. O E•t'f·ll>t'e11d epol!y ~ted b110. with cushioned retl.ll'n 1nd convenient toggle lock . ••011 $3.98 OPEN MONDAY -FRIDAY 9 .9 SATUR DAY 9 ·6 SUNDAY 10. 4 --~- • • '· t \ I I I • ' E I .. . . . ' . ... .. - .,. ~ DAILY PILOT • . . At • l!tees • • • antast1e ' 16'' Super Chromacolor · " Di•9on.iil , . . • , , Ideal for Holiday F~thall e 1m MODEi. e DECOIATOI CAllNO e HANDCIAmD -?CHASSIS e 3 Y-l'tctwoTlbo WCllTGllty. 1 y_. FrH Parts. 1 r ... FrH S...lco. D·l7·2 I SUPll CHIOMACOl.01 Mu.NS e Richer Colors e Supericit Briqhtness e Greeter Contrast e Sh~rp•r Detail $3.1888 • • .. 12" Black & White Dla~~ , ' The Best-From Zenith . • . . . • new, b~lghter picture • one-button tuning • 100% soliil·state chassis ' SD2564 with Electronic Remote is available and in stock. CAJ,J, FOR PRICE ,, 25" Suoer Chromacolor Diagonal I Titan 200 ·All Solid State Chassis 0-1335 #I v' Rated . • 3 Stego IF Amp $8488 e V;doo Rengo Tun;ng Sy.tom ~ e 48" Monopole Antenn1 ~ ABC WARANTY J ,.., Plctwe ,.w....,. 1 , ..... w..._, ' EVERY . ZENITH • ·MODEL IN . STOCK-IF .. . YOU BUY. . THIS WEEK THI WOllLDIS FtNUT lll.iYISIOHS • • IMllllttmlMIMI wtlll fMn -hrll ..it .,. I*• c9llin.t - .tJtctl'lll'llc~• , 1 y_. ... 'H ... Serwlc9 ~~: ~up~r -~OJll~~~~r,: • • • \ .1S~2350R • . WHY-m PROM AIC1 ... Au'" Cl'I:" ........ ,. """ -. .......-x .,...,.., ·-• 1 ......... , t __ ........ rw ..... ~ wa:a1r • "" •:•"' _.Ill tJf e l•IAL11ll1u,.,..._. •ta ............ w. w. w. -°"' ................. °"'. • ' .·Wl.1H "· SpaCe~·SOO ·c~'l:fC:., . , . INC:l,UDING STAND e Autom11tic Fine Tuninq .• Cu,tomiz.ed T un inq e 3 Year Picture Tube W1rr1nty 98 • Walnut Cab....;; < •. u· r' •." IC. E e Solid Statf ~. r; • 3 Year Picture Tube.. o'F ' warranty -1 Year Parts -1 Year Home Se.v~ THE YEAR . . ~ • ft-: - ~§" Solid State ·Maple SUPER CHJIOMACOLOR D4116M You PfclUre Tube Wurenty PRICE "f•~r "P•rts W•rrfttv. ' !J I Y Hr Free Horne S..-viu -...................... ' • • ' • - • , I • ~,;. ~~ •i • --T l . '• •• . i ' . • • \._..-- ,. • . , • • • " . • • • • . Anim~I creation~ indude Gene Ross' snake (above), Sue Baif;y'.s J!ilnda · and Jo~a · ~/oss' lion ,(below). ' - ' • • . ' • ' • ' ' '' . ' . .. ~. 1. ' ' .":. '; , • • • . ' ... . " . . ' .. . " ' •• j t1 . ... Dave Tliunell displays his ---~1eculptlf' (cil>Me:)+:At •. ght~--· ~ Mike Reid, Kurt lysthlt, Alice Di Natale and Julia _ .~,-·--------i.:...'O.ily do pop art projects. ' • ' . ' Ceramic vase by Jane Davidson is example of handlwodc-of li>avis Middl•·;< Sc~ol :students ii\·" .rafls . • T~~hn.iques I • 1, .,, I/ .H,. . ,. ,. ~-' . . !Ii... t ,,. t ,, ,, ! . • • • !f,--das8 brings to mind 20 students placidly standing at easels dabbling paint on a ca 11 v a.; Y~V " llayeitt b8el} ~ Dlivt. OOddle Sc1'00l in 'Costa Mesa, when. there al'&' 30 elettives in the creative arts. Slu<\enls ·in Janet Taylor's and Don Fox's classes do paint and draw. But unlike many junior high level art programs, this ooe extends into crafts as well. Each semester this year more than 300 students will try a new craft project each week along with draw· ing and painting. Projects range from papier mache and ee<amics to tie dyeing, cardboard sculpture< and larger-Olan-life pop art. l'\.nd sometime during the semester, the teachers explained, each student finds a craft he exrels in or en- joys most. For SO{lle, this interest in art renews inter- est in other' stibje<!ts and in staying in school. Students play the radio, or their own a l b um s brought from home, so their creative efforts are made in an atmosphere they'enjoy. The classes have sparked so much interest that ~U· dents work. on 'extra projeds at home and parents ~ the school 'to get detailed instruclions o.ri crafts they want to try thelllllelves. , First semester students have a·lot to show for their efforts. First, there is a larger portfolio of sketches and paintings and then there .. ._ l:rBl't projeots that qualify as handmade gifts for.the holidays. , . l • The cl118Ses oper~te as open wprkshops and Ms. Taylo< added, "the kids are on · their own and really in- volved." • ' ... BEA ANDERSON, Editor • ' ·' 1 I Tilvr.i..,, ~ 1, 1971 .... 11 Dally Pilot Photos by L• Payne - • " " .. .. " .. , ,. \I I DAILY PILOT Foursome Bridges Many Octaves By JO OLSON ................ The Humpbreya S tr i n g et may nol be destined fame, but ill members are Ying a lot ol fun rehearsing ' !lier and discovering the )'B and saUsractions of ic. tPractice lessions take place Wednetday evenings and ormances are g I v e·n ever the group h a s ·MUSIC ·BOXES SELECTION IS .STILL EXCELLENT! ._ .. _ \ . .,._..._., .. ' . a.-"---. . . lltli.t! bn .. , •• llllMcl ...... IWIM .. Itri • • • 11111 ,.,.,. ...... .. l . . -ltl Nik ..... Cozy robes ••• warm and gay as your holiday wishes. C-11_., qullt or _jersey In long or short longth1. Such yummy colors I .Jrom 21.00 Sunc!Ay Shopper? ....... ' Hwt ... I• .... 0,.. 11 t9 I • polished a new number or there's a Humphrey or Vidal tamily gathering. The members of t h l s ensem ble are Jta un- usual feature; they're a 11 children of Robert and Helen Humphreys of Costa Mesa. Leading and inspiring the quartet Is Cynthia, 17, a aenlor al Costa Mesa HJgb School, who plays ftrSI violin. ~ violinist is Annette, 15. , 13, plays tbe viola, Charles, 11, Is tbe cellisl. SMALL VIOLIN . Cynthia, the lirat lo start playing an instrument, used to get her father's balf..sized violin out of tbe closet and play with it when she was just a child. In fifth grade ahe started group lessons witb Jim Guy at College Part School, then in seventh and eighth grade she studied with Guy at Davis Middle School. Two years ago she started studying privately with Rene Bregozzo, a Costa M e s a violinist who encouraged the quartet and now gives private lessons to each m e m b e r before their Wednesday night rehearsal. Each of tbe cbildreo started with their father's small violin, which he played as a boy, and several switched In- struments to fit in with the re- quirements of a string quartet. Denise moved to viola and Charles elected to finish out the score with cello. The lmplicatio0$ of having a full-fledged string quartet in the house are interesting: !n'OCKING STIJFFER "Mom got quartet music and put it in our stockings last Christmas," said C y D t b i a , ---Otlitt Giit Sq•e•t .... --.. ••ANT"'m eHma • ..,_ • 1UP1 • PANTS • swu:na e ltOWMI e PANTY HOii &AYAWAY ... " IOID • ••n CllTIPfc:Am -~~1HALF-SIZE SIIOP CCllTA MnA , ........... . . ·-.. ··-· I HUNTINGTON BEACH M HDNTlffTO• CINftl , ................. , NUllTOtl-IMOu S ': .. : ........... 01 I,..,,. • ...._ ....., M•-M tM e W . 1M. e S.. 12.&. •••IJ: JJl" ..... 11 e M .. tett••f'9e "And last year we got the music for 'Happy Birthday' and played it for m y grandfather's birthday." "Her grandfather, Ray Vidal of Huntington Beach, played in the old Fairview Hotel in Costa Mesa," added Mrs. Humphreys. "Music was important to him. It meant so much for him to have his grandchildren pla y musical in-, struments or sing." Mrs. Humphreys has played the piano and soon will be forced lo start accompanying the quartet because her hu,s.. band has purchased a brand new piano for her. STREET MUSICIANS The quartet is valuabJe because it teaches the youths to appreciate music and gives them a sense of self-satisfac· tion, Mrs. Humphreys said. Inspiration to try to branch out and perform for outside groups came from hearing street musicians in San Fran· cisco recently, Cynthia said. The quartet members were fascinated with the ensembles they heard from · their hotel window on a vacatton trip. Denise has become so en· thu.siastic that she has started a string quartet at Davis, and everyone is: waiting to see what William, IO, will choose to play. "I'm hoping he will take up the flute," confided. Mrs. Humphreys. "The fiute sounds so nice with strings." Bob Jr., a student at the University of Ca'I i to rn i a, Berkeley, is the only one not involved with the quartet, but he bas his own f.llllP' musical group ot~ he's PrinciP1I: he playa tbe harmonica. Powder Puff Derby Tracked By ERMA BOMBECK Ccmedlan Jerry Van Dyke made an observation in his act the other week that .11till has the men talking. He was puzzled over why wome.n never go to the powder room by themselves. "It 's true," said my hus.. band. "Meo don't sit around taking a poll of whQ is going and who Is staying. Why women?" "You 're making a big flap over nothing," I said. "No, let's pursue this," said Fred. "Why is it nuns travel in twos , bot priests wander arou nd 'by themselves?" '•For safety," countered Mayva. "ls that why you had a destroye r escort of f I v e women at Co;a's party last week when you went up for fourths on the cake? What were you afraid of? You'd be attacked for making a hog of yourself?" "You know, you 're ri ght," piped up Phil. "Men can slip away from the table and be back be!ore they're even miss-- ed, but~ take Marj here. "She stands up with her handbag under her arm and PERSIAN RUGS ......... Ori-·-c.,.... .... ,_.,. I Btle S•rouks I mix•d si1e1 I ) B•l•s Bokhtr•s ·(mixed si1e1) 2 Bales Quern•• linltld silk included) I Bile Af9h•n1 !mixed sizesl 2 Btles Kermtns (mixed 1i1e1I a.1. lnditn !mixed 1i1e1I Bele Shlr•1 I mixed stz•s I 2 Btlts Kesh•n• lmlxtd 1i1esl lite c1l1dlN oho a.ct.4n c1l1cton ft9fM. C..-. .... ., -· • .,., .............. plocol ., , .... -' Siii ..... . BEKINS MOVING & OORAGE UJS Newport An. c-M~ Ctllf, Thuncloy, Dec. 7 -B pm \ftewhlt & I~ fNm 12,..... 1MtU time of auction . Aslfl11M1t1 Lei• ...... ..._ l••c•rN ii.y OLOll TaADI UCHA.Mel CO. T.,..: C.-w ~k. FREE TURKEY I WrTM •V•llY f'UltCMAlat Utt ft• ... -~ Mlllft ., M'f: HIM II ...._. tif •tcMAID'f MAIKITI ............. a.-.... -Sl69.50 ==- UO magto. JI.Ill,,._, the bclaon. Utt-Meller opene door, 1um1 Otl llQ11t, Ckll9l ctoor·anct IOCJtlrlt. Evtn tum1 otr 11gt111ft1r mry. one 11 ..,. lnllclt hoolt. Prevent atrWhlid blck from tuoglng at hMYJ DW9 door&. Stay .. ,,, wann Md dry ll'llldt w- no matttr how bid lht WM!htr. O•Dll IAILY ,_, •. XMAS INSTALLATION! 642·3490 SEA COAST BUILDERS SUPPLY 1651 Pl1centl1, Costa Mesa ~· ' ' w.,. .. "'..., St•Y••C.,...._ • • ~BRASS R/Ni @?Dl1t1MtWe S-rt w.-.u A,,.,.i ~Y' e Norm•n Wl•tt e Bi•yl• Alto Coll W"r 2111 Eatt CHlt Htty. Cor••• det Mw 671-474• ---~-~~~~-~~~-~ COMI UPSTAIRS TO SEE MARJORIHTAMP!.R ! FASHION BOUTIQUE !I 445 E,. 17th, Cott• Mna W (.1bell1 AKlllllC Mulk:) iA e JACK WINTERS PANTS & ILAZ:ERS e ~ e KINGSL!.Y KNITWEAR e ~ SPICIA.1.5 OF THE WEEK ~1· GIRL TALK GOLf SWEA nas SH!>RTS .:,:.~ 1&1 & :.:. *&DO ~ " . ~ E~citing Xmas GiftJ,oear Now iri s·tock! -~ IANKAMlklCAkD Htun: 11 " 1 Hllr MASTEi CMAltGI!: --.---~---MMMM--~~~~ . LAW-A-WAY ROBES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY Best Selection Now! THE' HOUSE OF AIR STEP -BERNARDO -MR. KIMEL SCHO LL SANDALS -PASSPORTS MAGDESJAN -MISS AMER ICA VINER CASUALS -LIA Edw.1rd1 -61rb1rieh -Robin Hood PF flyers -U.S. Ked1 -S11mm•t•tt•1 C.1pe1io D.1nce Sho11 D.111ce Weir by D.1ndi;in CemctM S-.. fef QIWru 225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA 548 -2778 e •ANUN•ICAltD e e MA'1Elt CMAltGE • Dela#ey Br~s. SeafoAds j fllllclc Go-e~ Meal Yor T~"B ... 11 ' H0Hu11 Sleopper ' Corn • Clam Chowder 11'1 Cllf'l o1cfl "'Ht \Ii CllJ Cll.lltll• tr '"'"' wtllll WIM 1 t. Hlf .. .. '_,,_ .. CHOPPED CLAMS ......... 89' ... ,. • Veta's INTIMATE ·APJ"Alfl W•1tciUff Jll~••• .1lfll\1r-.1ln1 H•wpef'l It•.; O.llfor"i• , , , • ' Caution!_ Clothing Hazard to Health DEAR ANN LANDERS: I know you get lhn>ugb to the men very well because . --~· you are on their side, but ptease be a friend to womenifor a cban&e an.d..:wam_ them against putting faslllon before safe-- ~ ·' , • ·.~ / ty. There are so many examples, I don;t know where to begin. Firs\, the no-bra fad Is .. e of the dumbest things females have' ever done to thermelves. U they doo't mind'looklng like a herd of fresh cows, Ibey .iiouJd at · least consider wt>at ~y are, doing to their breasts. That doctor wbo warned of a generation of "S~·Dooper Droopers'' knew what he was ta).klng about. AnoJher hazard Is the bell·bottom trousers, long skirts and maXi coats. They get caught in escalators, are dangerous to drive in, and thousands of women h~"'..e tripped on all that extra r.•nl goods aod eodad up In leg casts. The Dl>hoslery lad is ilnotber horror. It Is uobealthy to go without stockings. Infectlom are easily picked up aod blisters and other foot problems occur more easily when a bare foot ls rubbed ' by a shoe. And speaking of shoes, the new sky-scraper plaUonn soles are murder on the back and risky to walk in. Save these dumb women fr o m themselves, Ann. Please. -SICK OF FASIIlON FREAKS . ', ) . :- DEAR SICK: OK. I'll do·my .~ Hear ye, sllten wM are sla'fet of ·fabloa., RttW'll io yoar brinleres! ScaWe your MU bottom•, long skirts and your maxi coatl! Plit on ltocklnp and throw away thoae crlpplbig plalform lhoe1. Don't lei tbe ofasldoll CW"I rain you! Be bJ.. ..,.....I! ee·friei··ee m•! ee eom- for1a1>1e1 Do" yoa think anybedy wlll pay at. tenlloG lo'lllal? Neltber do I. , DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm sitting here reading a letter from DUr son who ls away at college. He's a freshman. I recall Vividly the way he looked when be left to apply for admittance. He was barefOQ.ted, wore an Wlpre.ssed pair of jeans with a rip in the-. knee, a faded sbJrt, and bJs st~ bi.& was 'baf:l_g__ing down his back. · 1-• ·It occurred to meras he "walked out or the house that .ll our doctor sbowed ' 11p IOC)king like that, my son's attitude would be ooe of disgust or perhaps mistrust. U .our pastOr .aWearec! on tlie. pu)pit looking '° shabby,.my son, would woruier, "Wb8t's he trying to prove?" If a pilot came· to work iD 'that sl9ppy get.up, his passengers woulil questi<io his com· petence or perhaps hiS .stability. ll a judge showad·1'P In .the courtroom look- ing unkempt "!Id disheveled, my son would have no r.espect·for his authority. I am wear3i of· ~ young people say, "What I wear doestt't matter./l'm the same. person, reg~ of hOw l lool<!" Why doo't these kids reali1.e that at first meeting, ..appearance· is all there Is to go on? Pewle must judge by ·what they see. .' I'm so sick.of sloppy1kids in•tom, rag· gad, lll-fittlng.cl-Otbes. l·Just mid to let off steam somewhere. 1'µmks · for being thero, Ann. -CALIFOllNJA MOTHER i!EAJt CALwo~: A m 1111 o n DIC(then. ~ haye written yOdr letter. You've._ wbat'• been on tbtlr minds and In their hearll for a loqg. llme. To all of yoa I aay tbll: If kids are clean, Ig- nore the resf or it. The get-up we eon· 1lder weird 11 oaly a fad -and fads ~i.q.. , Dlscover bow to be date bait without falling hook, line and sinke r. Ann Landers' booklet, "Dating Dos and Don'tS," will help you be more · poised and sure of yourself on dates. Send 35 c:.nts In co1n·a1ong with a Jong, stamped , self-addressed envelope and your re· quest to the DAILY PILOT. Host Habits A I ittle buys a lpt of 1 Christmas und.e.r th ·e . ... . sq·uiggly ® Roof.·· ,. ' •• . . Thursday, December 7, 1972 DAIL V PILOT J9 • l~~~~~~~~~~~llrJlllJllilMJISMMMJllB1tlil Don't push drinks on guests / . at holiday or aoy party time. CLOSED -· ... ~1 1 After serving the firSI drink, let tlie gilests determine when SUNDA y thel' want a re!lll. AnQther bad habit of some' host.s, accordiDg to health educalors: speeding the even- ing "freshening up" drinks aJready In guests' hands. And the very worst habit of any host? Offering an alcoholic drink as "the one for the road." Correction 'lbe Magic of Christmas, a musical ,lantssy presented by the Saddleback Valley Camp Fire Girls, will be given In Los Aliso Intermediate Scbool, Mission Viejo. Originally it was scheduled in the La Paz School. ' , . w. Wll;L • Pl.IASID TO 511'11 YOU SIX DAYS A WEEK MONDAY . through FRIDAY I 0 •. m .• 9:10 p.m. SATURDAY 10 •.m .• 9 p.m. THE HOllSI Of' BE OF GOOD CHEER THE BIDTIQUE IS HERE! A Grfft ,._.hr AH , .. ~ Sltopplot ht TM •lrl I• You Ut. FAIR.IC SALE· DON'T MISS fHESE BARGAINS PRICES GOOD THURSDAY THRU SATU.RDAY DOUBLE KNITS -better ..... lty 100% Polynter seloctloo so faboloa you'ye 9ot to'" It to bellne ~. 60" wide°" bolts. 2o99YD. BLOUSE PRINTS 100% ACRYLIC • ....... MIWIY colonl METALLIC CHAW$ -..--... lowtfhl -·· ., ptiats. 45" whle .. hlh. lll"fm ....... BONDED KNITS " ... ........ 1.29vo. 1.77vo. ,.,,.,. ...... __ .. _.,..,~o.Mm POLYESTER CREPE 2.88 YD. JERSEY KNITS Hw•fMll ... 100"fm. ,..,_ .,... ............ .,..... ...... c..,. ......... 41" Soft .... ~ ........... .W..Mr'h' .... _,.., D ..... , ....... 1.99YD. 88CYo. FARE FUR SLEEPWEAR SATIN· ,..,...,.., ........... 11 Ho..,. ....... .,... .............................. FLEECE ... .,. ........ _ .. ~ 3.99YD.~ --··"'-...... -....... 41"W...,. •••• 89Cvo. l 77Cvo. rah N.OW IN COSTA MESA 841 W. 19th at Placentia COSTA MISA e Phone 645-7132 Open Sund•r. 12 -s "" -' .. ' Misses' short sleeve boucle knit tops Just the thing to top pants and skirts. Choose.from · 4 styles In fashion shades. Machine·washable acrylic/ polyester. Misses' sizes S,M,L. 6.99 • ' Boys' brushed velour sport shirts Super soft Arnel• triacetate and nylon stays velvety afte r countless machine washings. Button or zip front .. Six richly toned colors. Boys' sizes 8 to 18. 3.99 ~~ or UtOOUf Tim• P•Y Pl•n • Men's double-knit spo.rts jacket:. · Polyester double·knit two·butt style with ce nter back vent, flap pockets, top-stitching. Men's : 27.88 ; Men's long•sleeved sport shirts Comfortable warp·knit, machine-,t..,. washable 100o/o nylon in wide • selection of colorful prints. .4 Sizes S,M ,L,XL. 4.44 • t ' ' . .- Bring your dry-cleaning to The Treasury. Suits, coats, dresses cleaned and pressed. ggc ~~~::::::_~~==~~~~=· t:il~e~~m;uf~~f3~,.~~"d~~~~.,~~.,k~~~Y:JI " •IA Mt A AMA .)900 Sol~ Brittal $1. e 0 TOllAIKI ~ tM HIWlllOf!lt• LA•IWOOO Cft»I St •1tnl'lllMll HIW, • IUllfA P.A•K IMtll _. Ollflltltlbtpe e OIAffl "*-SIMM•._., :08 ,.. . • II.MAIA •w llOOO CllltS'll'M!I St • WOODlAID MtlLI 21500 Vietory 81'4 . llYll11Dl3~ ,..., lataM .. Orlttfl•• Start Me•n Wet Ml•J• t 1JO ta 11•· l•Ml•Y 101'9 T• 10111 • \. • • ' . .,,. ff DAIL V PILOT rour Horoscope PUDIJC NO'nCE I PUllLIC NOnCE PIJBUC l«ITICll ~~---:c-c-~~~--~~PUBIJ~~C~NO'n~~CE~~-1 -~:::::::::-"'.:--:::::::::Ji!~:ff!Y:iii!!';;ci[""::::::::-::-::::: •tCTtTIOtJS ausn1•11 a lftft -... .-rtCS "'"" ... ''°' PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC N<mCE UMI ITATMIMT IUP•al<Mt C0411tT 04" TMI ,-KTITIOVi t\lllllllJI PIC'TtTMMll •llfl•hl NDTICI lS MlltllY GNU Not .._ ..... ~-" "'-~,.. .............. h OOll'll IMlllHI """Of' CM..U'OUllA .-o. ........ nATIMIMT MAM.I naTWdlf1' c-tY. ca-.... ..... ,.....,. ..... Ill* ... ,. , ... "' ........ ,. •• ••: TMI COU"1'1' Ofl OllUlll lrw ......,... ~ h ~ lwtf-TN filltifwi .. Pf!'-II llill!W llllliw itit *91 My ti ~. ltn. M Wiii ~lie (llrfl ... -.lit ~-TMlf Altf ClJllTlla GAU.IE•Y, Alll ........ ,.,. "' M l wilot .. tlh flelor, C-IY •••t1'111lllllri1fi. _. __ ..., IU ,.._ ~ !,, _...I CINTIJt G.1.LLllt"f', let Souit1 COM! NOTICI 01' MIASI•• 01' PfftTIO.. C~U.RHGlfll YACHTS -N~T l'Alll P iii(.£" CLIEAHIHO H llVICI, .,.._ ~ .at ""'IU .._ .aid -wll .. ~ -IM "90 "' HtOllw•y, LtfYN .._.., Callf, fWI .-0. AU'TMC*ITV TO MlllJtOW llACM, •If l,.My1"9 It v 1111 ¥•, ..., ~ Dflw. ~ ~ llMI fOllowllle: 1. --·-·• L-~ SllOOpl, C .. ltol-1'11, lnllO MONIY ANO TO •XICUTI IDllO Ofl NlfWPOfT .a.di, Callfw11i. nul t2'ol6 ~ CNlf't ~ .. -Mof!Nd .. ll:d., S..t ~ll. (lllf., tol«l TIUllT C"""""9W YKlll &.llH. l11t-, ll.. Mid v...-. .... lArttPWt Dflllt, ACllfil Ufltt Alr __ ,,_ Taurus: Refuse TPll• llutl-11 ._i111 COllMMll by I E•l•fol of $HIJtLEY MEL V I H It VIII• .._.,, N"'"'1 -..Ch, C .. ll. HuntlnftOn lff(.fl ~ ,~ •i!l~• -·. "' -~ c0rw1110... $EACOllO, Dlc:M..i nMO Thh """'""" .. Wkll CVllluC'9lll ..... '" An Of .. i. ~ IO ....... "*' In ~-l'IC• w • _,, .. H1rry L. Jtuti111 NQJJC&: \I J:tl!!ElY JilYEN tntt TN1 _~ I'-.~~ W 1 <~ !Ml......._ J_t!loll__t..l""_!Kf! If! ,_on !lit ill !ht eHke et flM c-.~ WI "'-c-ry nl• 11•tl1"9'111 111«1 .,,.fl'! rl>t COU#llY MEIUllTT l'M.Mnf $1.ltCORO. 11 n • oof'1llili-. fiiCiiiilorthid --fii llw Slilt of Hid V.,..,.,. Mll"lll>klnllOil lulldlfll;-}lf ,..:; SyeM1CW1 _ ~·'..~ AM, Cal ; _ _. ...... ~ (1er11 of or.,.._ C81111ty Oii: ~ 4, K\llOt of "-will o1 11w ~ C1IOorN1. Ttih lllMmlnl m.d wllll 11'11' C_.., Mini-w• r11tt ,.,. 1t1i. Jlll'Ol"C"I ,...,.. -.n ....,"'.,_ W 1• ,,,, WILLIAM •• IT JOHN. COUNT'!' -~I ..... flltd ...,. • petltlOll tor , ... u • ..., Yl(lll s. .... Ill<. Ckf't: of or .. .,.. '-"I' Of\; HOV. n. trn " ~l"VllOO by lllHflltlml n.11r. • """' ., ~ .. Ill "" l!t tile ofllcil ol' CLUK, bf........., J, MtOdl)ll, Ofollty. •"' OrCS.r aulnotfll119 lhl llellt'-to bOr-ly: Hwtitrt '· W1!Mmft, Jr, WILLIAM E. $T JOHN , COUNl]' I/It Ciltk of tM "°""'of 111.,.,..,IUB, • Im .. L ... -~-.... PJIM ·-f\llldt •lld M tx«ll-. llOI• Mid... ' 11c..u.,,. ct.ERIC1 •r .._..., J. ~ ~y. lld0tt1' •lttntton Iii uHtd .. l«!llllt 1rJO. .I ., • - 'lldl"*I Of...,. c-1 Diiiy '!lot, ot 1ru\t •ffKllno ,...1 "'°"''~ com"*"'• Tl'll• II•'"'*'' Wit "IH wl111 tnt Clllflo "1.1• .,in .-..Ulr• lfl«f'I If '"'"" flie conwecr to PIY not '-' -.an "Id ,~,...,. -To Be Limited FRIDAY DECEMBER 8 lly SYDNEY OMARR Aries usually ls willing to U\ke the ltad. 'l'lleae natlvts are natunil Innovators and c:•pable ol bounding back after- ~riods or advttslty. A.r;es ls a Y+rrklr, aggressive ancf more 1!¥in willing to fight when the diuse ls rlght. In affairs of the ~·Aries ls dra1<11 to Leo. tn money matters, lt U Taurus who often comes through for Aries. ARIES (P.,1arch 21-April 19): Accent now is on acltievement. Promotion· may bl! In offing_ You are able to make room fGr yourself at top. Tear down in order to rebuild. One in pasition of authority will aid. Know it and act accordingly. )'rAURUS (April 20-May 201: Good lunar aspect now coin- ciles wilh jow-ne)'!. higher e4ucatlon, publishing. You are capable of successfully getting message across. Refuse to be limited. Expand. P e r c e I v e potential. Write and advertise. GEMINI (May 21.June !j)): Joint efrorts succeei,;. One who advises on money affairs is apt to be on target. Financial gain is distinct possibility. Virgo, T a a r a s individuals could play key roles. Mate, partner has good news for you. CANCER (June 21.Ju!y 22): Publlc relations Is accented. Be sure your message, image Is coming across. What ap- pears an obstacle is likely to boomerang in your favor. Special contract. could be cause for-c:elebrahon. LEO !July 2:!-Aug. 22 ): Vitality returns. You will be more cheerful. Those who de- pend on you are due to return many favors. Employment, health pictures will be brighter. Past efforts J>9.,- dividends. Ugal affairs create promise, not problems. VD1GO !Aug. 2:1-Sept. 22): Pleasure received t b r o u g b c:reative endeavon. Be ready fcir constructive clumge of 'Bargain' Smells Of Fraud ~ 1, 14 tl, •· 1tn ~n 1tnow11 •• »o'1 \llroffll• W•v. 1o11t11 ty 0..-t o1 Ot~ Cwruy on H<W. l.S. l'vdl...., or-.. Coa•I 0.11'1 ll'Hoi. d\MI ,.ti tf ~ NI flrltl to lfl lllllfW't. -'""" •Af !MdllftlQ Y Y bl l---------~---l 1..111....,., C•tlfor11!1, rtf•-kl whk~ 11 1'71 H~ z:I. !JI, eM ~ 1, ''' In f!lt tllK\lliol> of t!lt '""°"" toflll'l<I. sct11ery, ou are a e now to PVBLIC NOTICE '""' '°" fvrlfllf' p1rtic:ur1n. •M "'" r11t w.-. '· w~ Jr, im m1-n Ollf _. ...,.." 111Nt 111e ,,......m,.. nt• °' ,..... w11 M ,.Id •t1r COmp!et. ProJ._,t One you ad 11-•I'd plet• of rw•rl1>9 ,,.. wme 11a1 61111 u Tllw• .,,,,.,. NI• JU ._.,.."" 11m1 1n ••bM el Mtlt "*'" In 111y trw C'l!Ofldar ••'J',•nd for SI~.~!': ~"" • • Pae '*" ... tor o.c.mbll' 12. 1m •' f:OO Lil!ll Afltll"• c~t. flMs PUBUC NOTICE $1111111Vt, •IMI llttl hoH!dm, vnlftt oltl«wl,.. llOIH, Pw "1! i;: ::-.;;;: mire disptays affection. Young ........ COUIT O" TH• ''""' In lhl ~of 0.pfll"fll'lll!I No. T ........ (11)) ~ Pt!' CllY .,,. , ... fllall .. tllal trlottloll of .... fOnOOrlllt '1 " la I n -l "' Nici COlll1. 11 7!111: avk c.nw Ofl..,. '"''11 OI "°""' bMn IO tftht. , pef'lOll p ys key roe. Vt:: , .... T~'.· c.::#'·:::'t.o. WMt, In ,,.. (Jty °' SMle AM, C1Hfwlll•. PUl;lllthld 0r.,,.. "°'" D•llY ,llot, I JllD hctl IHddH" """' Mf'lll w1ltl fllt bid • .-tllfK.,. died .. -.. "'c ':! receptive. ..., ,...,_, Dtt.I ~ "· 1m N11VtmDW JO. 9lld ~blr 1, 14 ti. ..me• TO C.JtlOITCNtt • '*llllft'lllle '** or • l>lddw"t ....., "*"' ,.Vlble te 111a ..,... f\111,, MOTtC• Ofl NIMltfO °' ,9TIT10N ~!:!IA~I:. ST J~N. ,,,, i»n :~:::i::,c:J::.:r..ro: =-~::.:J.r::..~"':..·:::.ti:~11~":r:'i.".:.=~ lJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): 'a HotATt,: ~~·:'!:~ LOVll.lSL 'l1MON a MIGDAL PUBLIC NOTICE THI COUNTY o, OtWMt• t11 .,.. ....-°' 111,111r1 "' ... i.r 1r11t wct1 ce..tr~t. "" ~ "':::..:,a Follow through on Ideas. w1LL ...,.o ,.. .......... ......,,.,,. .... ...,.. w111 11t fOffltlld or, 1n c ... ., , t.olld, i&a Ml ....,.. ..., wn1 tie "' TalTAM•llTAllT Lii ......... Cllltonll•.... E&11t. of MAll:llt MA a TI N.t l "Id CoUllfY ol' Or~ ' Proceed along 0 rig in a I E1tat• "' WARREN It.. STILE. Tiii (nJ} ,...,,,, ·~.T~~~s· ' IELTJtAN, •1$0 kMwfl .. ,.U.JtlA Eidt llld '"""' -......... form fl.lm1'fltd ......... C-..My "' OrtllQI. creative lines. Rome en: °:o~~ IS HERl!llV GIVl'N ""'' ,......,. ,.,, '•tttllMr The ~= PKIOfl •• clolne tMlllHI ::r.r::N ·~:. •IMI '" MARIA M. 1':" ~~ b= !"J ::er=,\."".;=·;..!' .:.t" ,,:'....t.,:: WltJt.Rl!:N KOTT STILi!: .... lllM ~II ~Ir~ Coe•I Dally=:;••: ..., •"·· S I NOT ICE' IS HEtit.e'llY GIVEN '° tl'lt :,•.:i."ll '11t,.,. IOK el '!tie .mount of 11'11' Cfll'ltnct, In llCC'OrOlnct wllll Sftlllrt vironment is emphasized. • petltt.i 1ror ..,...,.,. "' Mokior•llftk wm · · J a. M LEASING. -1 lll'll'ffOKI • cnoJtors °' !tit *"" -""' dlcltOOf\t ow of 111e 00\lwllment c.oe. •tld wit W'lt'I' bo!ld 1n 111e ~t"' 1'°"' o1"" Domestic: lire win be hannier .wt tor ••-ot L111..-. T111-1arv PUBLIC N~CE ~ ... ,,.,· c111ton>t...,• ":.d s-.._, 111 . .,.,_. l'llvlne ci.un1 "1111t1 ""' c1111ract, oU11•11 ... 1no 111a 1111M\11 ~· °' tftt Cen1rK11 MM ..._ "' t't'' ' to ,11111-.....,lllCI to wllkll It "*" V 11. ...,..., ll'ICNJ • . • Miii ~ -rtoOliltld te lllt ltlM\, bt flrsl ~ b¥ 11'19 Collflt'( (-.t Md ~ ltdrnllllllrlfor of Ot"llllOI Leo brightens atmosphere. +or f\lf1l'ltr """11C..,.., .,... ""' 1.,. """ -..it• "111• C•11*""1• t1103 w11t1· t1111 ~ -clllf~ 111 ni. 11tta c-1y, 11111 pl1et1 of ......,_ !tit .-hll be«! •tCTrTIOUS IUSINIU TN• Ml""I II bllllO cOlllllUdld llo/ ~ flf Ille derlt'of tM ..... lfttlttld c-1, or Tl'l<r eo.n1 "' SUpttv11ors .......,... ffll rlQM 10 n (llCI tl'IY tr •II bldl, Events occur whic h make you Mt for~ 2'. 1m. •••:DO•·"'-• 111 NAMf fTATIM•NT lfiilly!OIMI. i. ~ ltllfftt ""'"' TIM '* .... ,,. Nici noi ...,...,11y IC«P "'* io-1 prica bid. Md • wehl• 111y IMorrntllty reel more secure t1111 '-""-" .t °'"""-' No. l If TlllP 1o11ow1ne ~ 11 aa1"' blnlnni Miki Je11mov ¥OU<tMrt. 10 !tit undlnl.,.. 11 1t1t tH1ct 111 tnY blcl recllwd.. • Mid covr1. ,, ,., Cl"'<: C9tltM' on ...... ; c Thl:I .;1&-'c ""!. ~llN~~ of Ill• ~ l"\.UNlliTT AND llY OROEJt °"THE IOAll:O °' SUflERVISOll:S Ofl OllANGI! COUNTY, CALI• W.,.t, Ill ... Oty If Sin!• Ml. c .. lfOl"rtll llEACH VA.LET CLEANERS, 17212 ...... .... -.. on. ' ftl.UNKl!TT ill on... ·-· HIW-FORHIA SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): o.11e1~s.1m PtcHk c-.1 Hl"""•Y· Hvn111111or1 ~·t..n..._,., J. MlddoJI, DlcMllY ln0to11 ~ c.aton111 92641. -.hkll 11 091911 N..,.,,....,. -.1m You can be on better terms =~kSIJOtlN ~~~rprl••• inc.. Nim !:~ri.:=:,"'.":..111:;'~:'"'4:.\: with neighbors relatives. lt09••T M. IUU,.MAN Clflfoml•. Pllblbhtd °'1""' COMI O•HY Pllol, dleldtflt, wlltllll ._. ll'lllllM ifft.r llw !SEAL} • • • 1,... .-..i •--Tiiis bl.Ill"'"' i. Dllflll COl'lduclH by • Nowrnbtr 16, n lCI •nd OK•mti.r 1. nnt PllOlk•*"' °' tflb nonce. Ideas Jell -you find solutions. L• .Mlrlll1, (allfltnllll ccrpotltloll. 1'12 :nn-n Dlttd No••""" , ... Im Check calls mess.ages What Tll: i11s1 n1..m M~ w, Holier PUBIJC N-CE ALFONM> M. 1ELT11tAN _. ' , ' ~ fot Pait"-Vice ''"'°'"t VII ~-IN "tilt • you seek IS available. One who l"Ubll.iied Or•• eo.11 o .. 1v Pilot, Tht1 1ta'-i1 tried w11tt "" COl.lnl'I' °' 11w 1110Ye n•mH dtctdMlt h d long admired you may Dtctmtllr 7, •• IJ, lt12 nr.1·12 Cllrii: of°'"'""" '*1ty ..,, NOWll'lbtt u. ,.ICTITtOUS IUSIN•ss PLUNKITT. ,LUNKITT a -Im. ly llvlffy J . Mlddox, Dec>\lly NAM• STATf:Ml!NT •y: Mlrllll '""'*'" now put { e e I i n g s into PUBLIC NOTICE c-ty c11t-. ,.,,,,, Thi 1a11ow1no per1<>11s ••8 dolno '11 ot1w •-I , -- PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NO'nCE I H1111Htt11M e..cfl. Cll""'"ll ftMI •1-1--IUllN•H words. PICTITIOUS IUSINESS Publl$111Pd °''"" COil! 01Hy Pllol, '"" Gt'~e~·~ FROll!N FOOi>!, 1Tl61 T1h (n4• .... NOTIC8 TO c•SDtTORS 11AM'• iT'AfDiillNT S··G-AR!US (Nov. 22-HAMI! STATEM•HT ~:;,.•mt>« u. 23 ' .:io •nd 08.:em~'·-~ we.',',~, •• ,•,:!"',.· H11n!lr>g!1111 811C:ll, .. ~ .... ;~ont Dilly Pllof, ~~:t:1:c.~:J..:r.= ... ~~.tot.,-. pll"Ml'll .,. cloll\Q' Fl 11 I TlllP fonawi no Pl•-•t8 clol119 "" ..... ·----'' -" .... "'••1mbt< , THI COUWT'"J' OP CNtANOI _ ..... _ De 21) Obtain hi t f tiu•lness 11: 'JI'( H. ,Jeffrlff. .Jr., 1'161 .Wttlport v-.-.., .. _r • "'' .,... ' Nt. A·1Glt U.S. OEVl!LoPMENT •QUAIL COUN· c. : n rom HARRY w. TltVLOk PLUMllNG &. PUBLIC NOTICE Or., H1,1nllt10lon Buch. Callloml• tiUt. Im !\7'·'2 "'""' Of !OWARO fl'ISIU! O'HARA. TRY VIL.LA.QE,_4100 ~ '""'· Scorpio message. You are able HEATING, UIO T11•ll11 ""'·· COii• MM JIM J.ttrles. 17161 WestpOM O.C.•Mcl. ..~ 1-.c:ll, C11lfoml1. • h I Mnl '2621 •11 Or .. HUl'llllllllOll Inell. C•Ufomll '2649 PUBlJC NOTICE H01'1CE IS HEJtEIV GIVEN to !hi U.S. O.vllOIWMftf c..,.,.non. '100 now to 11t toget er puzz e cnnon 11. °""""'· m Ernw•lcl 1..,, f'tCTl110'1S IUltNl:ss Tiii• 1111u-11 btl"'ll conc1l!C19cl IW 1n crtdllor• flf 11\11 .-... ,..,,,.. ~1 a1rc11 StrMt • ..........., kldl. CA t7..0 pieces. Money situation im-L-Inell NAMI. nATSMlitn ltldl~. tflal •II --Nvlfll clllmt "''"~ llw CA C1Hforlll• Corportrle!ll Eamt1! H. Blrnett. 9357 Chrhtaplw, 1.,. follow! ... .,..._ 1, clollll b\1$JllMS JI'( H. Jlllrtn. Jr. • :ttlU Mlcl cllH:lodtnl .,_ l'IQUfrecl to ttle "*"· WMC OeotlOP"llfot •COfnlltll'Y, t10I proves. You collect debts and Cypr-. T1'111 111"""""1 flied wlltl the C-ty MCmCI TO ClUMTOltS wlltt !tit_., -'*"· In"" offlct W1lal!lrt ...,.,,.. Loll """"'"' C•llt, gain rewards , ftemaln nexib!e. Tiil' tiuslrltll II btl"9 concllld9d by 1 11' DANA aLUFFS. LTO tol OC!V.,-Clerk ot Dr•llOI CO\lflty Oii: Nowmblr 15, CltEATION Ofl t•CUJtlTY INT'l:ll•n ot !tit dirk II Illa ablW Mllttllli eoilrf, tr IA Celltof'llll CrjlWlllOfll ptrl1<'11sllifi. Dt'IVI SulM lU. N~ IMCll. 1tn WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY u ..... U111f1nn c-c&ll lo pr-rt !him, with f119 ,...,,,.,... Thll......,,... ft~ WI llrnlttd Accept otter which inc:Judea c11t1ar1 11. OllfK•n Clll~ nwo o.E•ic. •1 ........., J. MldOox. OlcMY. CMt • ..-Trwlrln VIMtlln. ,. !hi \lndlrWINcl _. 1M31 E. per1ner1NJ.. travel. Tiii• •l•t-t 111tc1 w1111 "" c_.., chin.: T SM/ft\. tol 0ovw om. ~ltllld Dr c 1 O.lty 'f.:S To .n "'°"' tdcll119 d•lms 1911Mt "" 1"'""" Hlgllwly. ""'"' 216A. s.11 '""' eon Zlltrllf', Cltrk of Or ... COUllty 111: N<W. 1'. Im. Sii 121 ..... Btedl. Cit '2660 ' 1"91 °" · debtDr heralftltMr """"*'• blMcl Ill ~ ClltfiDml.a ~ ....._ It ... l"T'llkltnt Ill' ""*""' M. W•rd. OtfMlfV County Tiii~ ~llllu Is c:coriduCllld by I U/l\lled November 16, n. lO Mid ~ ... ?2 lr1nwdfortl or -Is OC'CUl"rinll btfor9 pllft"' ~ "'"" ~ .. -'" •" u.s C.•••1111111 '"· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ci.n: parlrotrlN!k, 1m 11w butt "'"'fer clela1bH ...iow 11 COflo metNn ""'"""" to ""' "'"' " Mid ms•"""""' -*"" wlltl tM c- 19) Et l r t• • £ P·tU.tt Clllrlel T Smllfl wmm1recl1 !MC:edlllt, wllllln IO\lr ll'lllllnl •ffll' ""' ry Cltrll llf OrMlOi COUniY Oii Nev. I .. : emen o un1ng avors Publlllllcl DrtnOI Coesl Diiiy 1111ot, c.-a1 Plrllw PUBLIC N011CE Notica 11 tl«ell'f 01""' "''' • bulk 11,..1 •le.lb°' fhl• not11;to, 1m. your efforts. You can expand, ~ 1, 1" 21, 21, 1m XM-72 Tl'll• slifllntnt _flied wu~ 111e C0111'1-1r1Mfer by w1v o1 c ... 11on 01 • MCVl'lry 0111c1 No.tmbl• u . 1m PtU1• -·"-ts and 1-A l'f Cltrtl o1 Or-. C-ty on Now 16 l11l&rnt Is 1bout to bt madl; IM nenw o4 Clf"d L.. $~ MIU.lltAJI. MONTOOMllT 11~ new conques ""' PUBLl_C NOTlCE 1m. · ' ,.ICTITtous •us1NHS "" d8tltor Is E•ecvt•I• ot 1111 w111 & OUnDll happier Loose ends are put ___ _ ---F1l5tt NAM• JTATl!M•NT 0utn111n IMUrl!IC•. lrK .. • ca11foml1 of tM ,...,.,. 111rnec1 111ctc1ent .,. ...,. ..... •- • . FICTITIOUS IUSIN•ss WIENER ANO Wl:ISS Thi l0Howt1111 ~ ••• dolno COt'PO'•Holl, fwMerly ..,_, •• TlllP oa.. J. ~ ,......_., Clllt. together. Your sense of direc-No\M• sTAT•MllMT m Nttttl hrnlCa s1n.1 1>1nl11MS •-= CIMlrlft J.nntnoi 1nwr1~ A09!KY of 1Jdl 1 . t~ Hlt'IWIY T...,._. 11111 nMMI ••""" t. Is ···--~ You --··,d The tollowlnO Plf'lmll .,.. clolflll W..I cev1 ... CA tlm WAVE IT FL.AG COMPANY. no Aothelm, Ill<. Sitlll• 11U. PllblltMd 0r ..... CMJI D11fy Pllof. 100 t:lUWIU\.'l:\I. l.VUI b!J:llMH 11. T...,.... (!ISi '31·22&1 ll1lbolo Drlvt, S .. I Beath, Calif. tlM b\lsl-1 lddl'ftS of !tie dl:blor It '1101 $ .. II f'4 "'"""'' C.lllf, N_,btr )0. Md °""""*'" 7, I'-,,, win popularity contest. You're H. H. 0 HOl..llJtOOIC PLUMBING &. Pllbllll'Mlcl Or•noe coa~I 01111~ l'llOI. ll•rbar'• Jtulfl Long, 525 Hlrttord (B), San Joequln Hltls ROl'cl, fttwPO<I Inch, •"-Y .... ••9"h1• lr72 J214-n · la 1 HEATING 1'IO T111tln AYI COSll Ni)Vlftl.blf' 30, Ind Olcambet 1 14. 21, HlHll1ngtOll 8Mch, C•lll. C1lltor ... a; !tit 1llml of ltll -Id Plrtv PlllllllMll OrlnVI-Cont Dilly '11111, going p <::es. MIM f26'i1 ·• !'12 ' 3213-n 81rblr1'T.,._ SIONS, If.I BrOldWly, 11 CNrles 0. J.nnillOSJ 1111 b\llf""I Id· N-btr lf. 2:l. » Md OKtmber '· PUBLIC NO'nCE CUftofl • DUIKln 127 Emer•lcl 8IY C0$11 #MUI. Cl . !ll"ISI of ltll MalNd party II 105' Wlltllln lm 3173-n AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Feb. LIOUIMI aMch ' ' PUB!JC N-CE r1111 bllllne•• 11 btlflll cOl!ductld b'f • lllYd., u. ,..,,.._ C•llton>t•1 111 '"' u I• PUBLIC-~-. Eamt1t H B1r1111tl t:l57 ChrlslllpMr VII P•rtntr.nlp. k..-n to 11'1 llltlll'ld lllr1Y· Nici debtor ~••-.:.a ,.ICTITIOUI IUll•nt. 18): You get bac:king from Cypress · ' ' l•rblr• R. Loroo his UMd tPll tallov..1"9 atMr Will,,... MA.Ml'. ITA1'1llUlfT I b nlzatlo Y I Troll tluth .... II Wino (Oll(lucled by • Thll 11•1-I 111..::t with the C-ty 1111me• ltd ~ wlltlln ""' .,..,.. ,.JCTfTMHJS •uttNUI Tiii fOltowlnl """"" I• ...,.. """"* cu ' orga n. OU ga n perlllll'slllp. •1c Clerk °' Or911g1 C-IV Oii: NOY 21. 1m. I•" pall: MAM• ITATmMINT ff: now by aiding others Means Cllftofl II. 0\ll'!Cln 'fCTITIOUS IUSINl.SJ By .. "'"" J. Mlcldo•, ~IV C-IV B\lllllftl H-: Qo.ltnllft .. J111111no-Ti. fdloWl111 lllf"Jlll I• llolnt tMintSI INVIESTOll$ REALTY, ,,,, Orloff • ', Tl!ll llllllTlllll Hied w1111 !llt C-l'f NAM• nAT•MIMT Cllrk.. ln1ur•~ Aiiency ,., Or .. Catl1 MIM mH cooperate in proiect aimed at 011"11 of Or111111 COUl!ty O!I• NOY 2• ltn Thi followlnQ ""'"' •• dol"' tiusllllSI ntm 8111111111 ltddrn-: 4'(11 Blrcll Streat. MASTl!R S!RlllCE co l • ''. J-T. Well•. 17'7 Ori• Dr .. C•I• • ·1 h I I B Thal' M. W cl .;._,...:, ,: _ _..; 11: Pllbll"'" OrlnOI COid 0111'( 'llOI, N~ hKh. C•lltornl1 I ·c• OH _ -. ""' -ting spec1a C a r f · y "' •r ' .._.,., ~··•r CHARLES T SMITH It NO Novtmblr ZS. » llMI Oactmbttr 1 14 TM ......,._1, to bt Mltci.d fll 1M lroc*llurst, "-11111 VI II'(, 1 · • ..,... Thll boAI-ii "'"' C'lllldUclld .... 111 I'' v .. ~ Clerk. ' ' "°3-r.i. .... ..,.¥. HllOO Rlll'llll Ml•dl, 1"31 Sin FtllPI •r Answer requests Show that ,..11191 ASSOCIATES. tol Oowr Drlw, s11111 191'1 S1C11r11~ lnt•rts• 11 now locateci 11 2101 51 Fount•!" \lilll'( 92108 lndlvlduel. · il I f P\lbllsl>ld Or•nitm Co.tit O•llV PHot 1211. Newport Bueti. Cllltoml• '2'60 • Saro JOllQUln Hiiis Roed, N~ •••ch, fhl b\111 1 ~ Clllclvc:t..::t l)y J1nw1 T. Wtl!• you do care -be ava ab e or Dflcemtter 1 14 11 211 1m as-n Charin T. smun, fOI 0owr or1 .... , PUBLIC NOTICE ca111or1111; IM~-"" to 11t sublK•eG 10 Inell ~u•• "'" • 1111 an n t1 •l•'-n1 111«1 """' tM CIM,l!lfV £ pearanC:eS ' • ' ' Sit. l'!S, Newport lluctl, Cit t2'60 11\8 wcurlty lnte<nl IMI' btt cltncrlbld y H ' Jt Ma I C:llrk ol Or.,... CCM!ly Oii" OK. J, \f11 persona ap · ' PUBLIC NOTICE 1hl1 tiuilneu 11 cond\ICl9CI by 111 lit-~--•llY •• 111 Nmtture, fUr11l1hlngs. This 11=~~11d .:.~ IM Counl'I' WILLIAM E. ST JOHirt, COUNTY dlvldu1L PICTtTIOUI IUSINESS machlMfY, t'Q\llpme<ll. 9')1)ds Ind (haftols, Clttlt of Or•llQI County on· OKen'\Dtr • Cl.ERK, By Anll\lr E. I(.....,., O.pwry. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 2{1): l-----~~~-----1 CMrles T. Smllh NAME STAT•M•NT fhllurn. motor ttllldH, I ti;: 0 u rot 1 ltn WILLIAM .. IT JoitN COl.lllTY l'ttrn N •-fit £ I :ttnl This 11mmeot WIS filecl Wiit! !hi COii!>-...., rKlfvtbfl, COlltf"IC:I rlfllh, 1111rchnt " ' ••_._._w' ..._..... PubffslllPd Orlol!Ot C-t Diiiy ,llo!, ow you ~ne I r 0 m HOTICI" TO CJtl!brTOJtl IV Clttk of Ora11111 County Oii Nov. ,,, TlllP foll~lnO PltllOlll ••1 -"" ordtn, cNll•I paper, lfe' 0 t 1 I b I I CLllJtK. by kVerty J. -.._..,y. 0..mber 1. 14 21, ,., 197'.I 1:J:SS..n ~ ndshi What was a one-SUPERIOR COURT OP. THE 19n b\1$1-••• doc\lmllnls l'ld ...... ...,,, Ind o-"•I In-1"11 .. 111e ps. STATE OF CltLll'DllNIA l'OR • "21• p &. G l!NGINEEJtlNG, 117 w. 11111 ! "9106n. lnctudlng 11111 'no1 HmllN to •II ,,,..,.llMcl ~ ClilSt Otltt' Pllot,1------------- ... ay street becomes a give-THE COUNTY OP ORAN•• WIEMER MO W.-tsS SI. Unit 12. Coll•-.... C•I. m 27 .: tht IUllS OI ~ kind, lll!vl'I. Ot ~ 1, 14 ti, .. lf7t :li:364-n PUBUC N011CE · · H N• •·14TIS m wor111 ....,..._. sneet Plfltnorl 1• o.-. 761 Hill'llltvn. clncrlP'I.., of dHltor 1nc1 tM b\llto. and-take proposition. o m e estate of JEAN BAKER CARMEL ww c~ a t1m Apt. 11. co.1• MIN. c.i '26l1 1r1nstw 11y w•Y o1 crffti111 o1, Mellrity PUBLIC NOnCE tile can also become more SCHHEIOER, 0ec ... ...,. T•~ 1111) #l·nD c ~~· ~HamllJQtl ""'· •· 1n1ernt 11 to bl conwm1M1te1 •'"" of-1-------------""" •·-·-'-•• Mat c:onciJia-NOTICE IS HEREllY GlVEN to IN Plltlll~ Or11101 Ceat o.lly Plkll, T: a WllnlM 1:1· IMlno anclucW II'( 11(1 of UllllM &Mk. 500 SOvltt Melll Streif. I *"" NO'nC• ,. C.Jtlllft'On IMSJI~. e Cl"ldltors of IN lboYt Nimld dtcldlnl NO'ttmblr lCI, .wt ~ 1, 14, 21, ~ C 1 Orwooe, Clll,..., Oii or 1!tlf DICe<nber MQnC9 TO C.JtiRMT'CMtf SUPIJtlOft COtoJltT Ofl Ttf9 tory ~esture f.o £amity mem-11'111 IH Pt!'IOllS flilVllll <lllmt tOalMI ... 1m n72-'2 '•"--a 0-IS, lt7'.1, SU,.Jtl09: COUltT CW TM• STAT9 Of' CA&.l,_.IA N4t •-· JI ~n ~ pied n.. Mid ._, •r• r-..irtd to 1111 tfltm, Thi• lll*'-1 tiltd with IN C-ty 0.19CI: OoctolMr II. 1f7! ITAT9 OP Ui.l..,.ltlA POil TM• C.OUllTT OP Oil.--.: 1.11;:1' • Will uc acct t Br With l"-llKIHlf'I' VO!ildlln, In 1111 office Clerk of OfMIOI COun!y , Nov 21 1'72 S.CWW ,wty: TM• COUffT'f: Of' ..... "9: ... ...,_ P--iAted of IM clerk GI '""' •tiov• .nllllld courl, or PUBUC N011CE WILLIAM E ST J~N CoUNTY CHARLaS o. JENNINGS .... .nm E1111e "' MARY WltllNI JOHNtTON, r1;lll:.UI • lo iw-t ""'"· wtltl '""' ~ry • • DEITOJt.'S NCl..Aa4Ttotl E•lall .. WM.l..ACE JENNINGS .. MAllY JOHNSTON. -MARV w. ~. IO IN llllderlll9"«1 11 lhe ollle1 CLERK. •r a-ty J. Maddu:, Oepvl'f. STATE OF CALIFORNI,\ HUTCHINSO!il. Olc:oMMd. JOt4N$TON, Dlc .. 9111. IF TODAY IS YOUR of his 1t1orneys, LINOHOLM a. MOTICI OP nurn:•'I 1AL9 ~st.d _ COfltf Oll1Y ":.::: COUNTY DP OR.ANGE NOTICE IS HEREIY 01\IEH i. ni. NOTICE 11 Hlttt:IY Grvt:M te tM JOHNSOH. tOCI Wllilllr"I 61Yd •• S\1111 HXI, T.s .... , .... n ... __ OK ' I ""' lllldenlaMd. ,..,.....,.. ol "" '"""°" "' IM ...... --~ crwn.s Of "" ....... -'* ~ BIRTBDAY c:ondltions are due L• AflOlln, C•llfornl• to011, whltn 11"" GROVER ESCROW CORl"ORATIDfrt .. N~ ll. a. •1111 tmblr ,,'·1•1!,.,,..,. cledlr•: ""' ... --ftlvlllO ctllMI ...i1111 "" •H ,..._ heW. aaM _..., 111e · ll If · pl1ce of bllsl1111u of llllP llf'ld..-1l91'<1d 111 111 duly •PPOln~ frui t" lltldlf" !ht follow-I.,. ""'~ 1 Thal all ol thl •1.tl!Mrtls C'Olllllntd Mid dlcecN1ll •rw l'ICllllNll to 11'41 "*"• cllctOlf!I .,.. ......irM to t\11 lhlm, to settle. You w1 get O mer-m11t..-. 1111rrar11rno 10 the nt111 of Mid 1110 dlscrlbifd dMd ot trust WILL SELL In ·wld nofl~ to Cf'<ldttors ,,.. trw 11111 wllh ,,.. 111e11Mry _..,..., 111 ttw of'llc. tM ~ wuct11n. 111 ,,. eflla ry-go--round and begin to get dfc1c1e111, wr1111n loo.tr rnon1111 11t1r 111t AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE PUBUC NOTICE corr.c11 •l'ld °' tlllP c1er11. 11111111.._..1111ttt.ci covrt. or ot llllP Qtrk 111,,......,. .,,"*' m11r1. or firs! Pllbllc1llon of lhtl notice. HIGHEST BtOOER FOR CASH (piayabl. 2. Thi! !hi l!sl of busfMH n•met Ind to prtMr\t "*"· wflll tr.. ~lfl' to preMll'I !Mm, wtnt 1111 lllC9llfY greater results from efforts. D•ltd Dlc•mbtr '· ltn ' ,, lime ol Mle lll .. wtuf ITIOl'll'I' of .,,. fl'leTITIOUS IUSINISS cddreun Vlecl by MIO 0.blOt wt~ WNCl'llft. to 1111 ~llH •t lhl {Ifft« 'l(OUChert, IO .... ulldtrslOMcl ,, ,,.. ttllc• You • a dynamic individual LAWRENCE '· CARMEL Unlled Slal111) '" "9111. tltl• 11111 lnllr'tll No\M• ITATmM•NT lhrff ytars •• ,, Plitl, •PPll•lno In Mid of .... 11toorn1y, 'ETEJt J. LINDEN, of 1111 •ltonlrl. It, I! v 'll. TT ar . E•ICU'IOt ol tr.. Wiii COllYlytd lo Ind now lllPld by II vlldlr Mid Thi followl"9 perton 11 clofno 11\fllnlSI rooll~ to qeclltors Is l!JH. tr\11 •nd t"Ort"tCf t.»11 El Toro ROid, Suitt 202, El Toro. GllAYllLL, 121 Elli Ollrfleld It-. and a natural e.lecut1ve. More o1 1111 •boVI ,..med decec1t111 DtH o1 Trutt In the llfCCllt'IY 111'11111111 .. 11: •nd r;o11111 .. an of MKll bull11111 ,.."""' c1111w1111 t26lO. wllkh 11 11w p1K, ol Glenct•l8, c1111on111 tnm, w111ct1 11 tM d 1-An LINCH~ a JOHNSON deKrlbecl: NEWl'OllT-MESA REALTY, 350 E. •NI aodrtUll 111ed by 11lcl d8blor cllirlllll bvll,...1 of !hi undtrslfrotd I" 111 rn1tt1r1 Pike of blllH!eM of 11'11' lllllllr'll ....... In •U persons are ue to 1.,11;\.:o~e ... Wlltllln .. .,. .. Sult• n• TR USTOll: MESA LANES, INC. 11111 SI .. CO.I• MIN, t2'21 Hid PKlod. p«11!nlno lo -...... of UIO ~,. m1n..-. fll'"l•lnlno lo IN ....... " Nici aware of that fac:t April Will L ............. CA ...,.., BENEFICIARY; Santiago Cunmtrclll Jtoblrt SPH•· 20t s ..... 111\1111 PIKI. EXK\llld ., OranQI, C.tllOrnll, 11111 Wllllln tour montnt •fttf' !hi 11'111 Plltlllteo clKIOllll.' wlllllfl frou!' monl!M •flw IN . . . . Tit: (UU -.11• l •nk Co.ti MMt, t2'21 111~ d•l of~. ltr.1:. !Ion of lhl• l'Oofkt. ~ tint PLJblftetloll of lhll llOllce. be your most significant""-"' fer ••~ RecorMd J\lly211, 1m .. 1111tr. Ho..11116 Thi• bUllMU 11 11t11111 cancluct9d err.,. we OKI•,.. under panalty o1 Pt!'lllr'I' o.1ec1 N"""'*-' a.1m D•tad NooMlllll .. 1rn month in 1973 P11bll1hed ar.... Cont o.u., l'llot, 111 book 9Ji. paoa 1n of Otllclll II.--llldl"'°""''· lhll llw torlOOfrog 11 , ..... •ncl <or•KI. ANN H. HUTCHIN$0M E. v. "&l.sotol • OKemblr 1, 1" 21 , 21, 1vn :J3U.12 111 llllP otllc• ot tr. R_..... of or.,.. Jtoblrt $JoMI, Al. T. Q\11111111 E~• "tfll Wll E~tcV!Ot tf IM )"Ill 1---==c-::=-===c---I County: Mid detd ol tnnt Clllcrtbn tlw ly: TllllmM E. Cu C..,._ o. '-lllP "',... ablMI '*'*'..... . illf ._ .-.-... ...... PUBLIC NOTICE 1ou,,..1111 pr_.ty: n.r. •••'-' n1.i w11tt ni. C-ty U• ""''' LllWw aw.,.... ,..,.. ,, LIMDC.• A. n••nt HAV.11.L LOI a fl/I Newport Miu TrKI ... Oto1t of or..,.. c-tv 111: Nov. 11, 1m Swtle 111 natl •• T-...... ..... .. .. ............ _ fllCTITIOUS IUSIM•SI ,-., on I rT\IJO rec:orded In Mk S. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY '5tf Wlltlllrt I 11C1rtl 91 ~ C........ ,_ ......... ~ ftm NA.Ml: nAT•Ml:MT pave 1 of MbeelMIMWt Mlpl, ~CLERK, ly 8-'f J , MlddDxt Dtpvty. lntftY ..... ~ "212 Tllo (n41 .. 71»' T•1 mt) .... of 0!'•"'118 C_,l'f, C11Jfwrol•. 11"21Jl1 All: Jt-N L.. 1...... Jtt!iWMY lw ._.,,. .......,-tar e..-r ~~t ':'.~"" ~ ari doing E=-cec>ll"IJ llllPJl'fnom !hi Wnterly t Pllbllin.cl Drlflll Cont DlllY ,llot, Altwltlyt IU Llw hbllshlcl °''""' Ceetl o.lty ,!kit. .........,_. °''"" Cont Ditty '11111, LITTLE BIT OF MEXICO • ICfft. Ho'f'lmblr n. 30. Ind DecernOtr 1, 1... Pllbl!llMlcl °''"" COllt Diiiy' PltOI Nowinl:llf' • .,. D+ I .. 7. 14,. n . No .......... ~ ,, '"' "· RESTAURANT, 17502 Buch ~lvd .. H\lft-ly~';: ~"' tMmrom 1111 Nonlltr· 1tn :att2-72 o.ew-1, 1'12 l.lf:l.T.1 1'12 J:M-n 1m »M-12 111191°" llKll. c1tit. ma ion S41pw1or •-· cost1 Mesi. PUBLIC N-CE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC-,._....,.. PUB!JC ~CE G. It. All~alldlr, 21"'2 ,Kiiie Coatl CaHfornll 01 I llr"lll acldrlU Ot C<im· V&I ['11\111.._D J~I' Hwy., Huntlfllllorl hKfl. Call!. 926.u "'°" dnlgftltlon JI ahow!I •t!OW, rool ---c--:-:C-C-CO-=-cc-----------,-c----,-.,--.,.-,--,-,,--,.,-..,,-,-,-;-.,-c-:-7-r::=c:=O--::O--O:==:c--7---C•ollne Alo:•rdlf", ti~ PKtll( warr111ty It or-., to II• CD!TIPlllflllH CNtblNAIK• NO. ,.,.... -1161 -11 lmprtc:tiGll •1'111 nee of "" Olrtd«' of ..... _ servlctli COUNTY OF OllANGI! , .. Coest Hwy., H'-""lllO!on llldl. Calif. or t'Ot'1'«1atu) Af4 DWO!NltNCI! 0, TM• CITY CUU ... ~ " • ...,.it Md '11Cf'NllOll Ind • CC19Y II IN lf"'9 lhtl bl. "'CITT OF COSTA Mii.SA 1 ??t.-... _,___ TN belleiic:I•,.,. \!Mir 11lcl Dffd o4 0 , _ CITT Oii' ........... MaSAt 111:~1 pl.,. for IM Clry fl/I C111!1 11111 DHIC"I of IN City Olflt fw thl City, I, EILEEN '· PHINNEY, City Otr1c ,.,., --11 lllfno conclud9cl br" • Trvtl, by rMIOfl OI • brMCh Ot ckl•ull Ill Cll. • ". .,._. Miia. Tlil Clfy ~I """*" finds ... Seid .. h. ---~ ..... ~ .. a«nvt Clefll of ,,.. City C--.cH ti P•rlnenl'llp. llllP ClblfOIHonl &ecUl'ld I h Ir I It y • ACTING Al •• -0,,ICIO •o••o 0,. O.Cllrtt 11111 rnlclellllll ···--· --.,.,,. lf\IH bl 1val&lldl lot ... le .. , '1l'Y ol co.ti -... ....,. -'lf"J' G. All• ltlttanditf' 111Prw1o4or1 alfCVl9CI incl dlllvered to thl IDIJtlCTOlll OP TM• COITA Mas.ti complllwd 11~ thll ldoplloll of IM VIN' 111r11111111 ~ ~,_,,..of lhlt tllt IOo¥e '"' """""' Dl'"flflllfu <~1"1 lllMfnlnt ftflcl wlltl tM C-'Y \Hldlr111$111d 1 wrlllwto OKl•rlllott of 'AJtlC .utO Jt•CJtUTIOM DllTl:ICT, orlflnal m1n1r plan 01 parkt ,......1.-1 11w City "'COii• """'· Nllfl!Ptl' n-.. Wlf !ft!IOC1k44 llMI c- ert; of °'111111 Counry ..,, OK-'· Dt/11.111 ~ DltnMd for Sii• Incl wrllltn Jt•YISINO TH• MaSTQ "-AH .01111 roMMOll llf Mid m11llf' pllft to .... -S9CTION 1. '* ~ thllil ... _..... ft lllClllll at I rtflll., ltT.I. WILLIAM II. ST JOHllll. COUllllTl' roollc• of brHCll 111C1 of oNc:flOll to ,11111 PltJtlCI AND l!:•DUCllM TN Lr the r"lcltftll•I ar11s 111 lhe Cll'Y. Thi Ctty lfflc:I lllf bf In f'ull Ntc9 .... lffolel "*-of loMcl City Clutldl 119lcl 111 "" Cl.l.Jtl(, 11'( llrllrly J. Mlidox. 09plrty. .llllP ullcltn!Onld to MCI Mid ~IV to NUM••ll OP ~..,. ZONaJ Couno:ll fllrlhlr ftndt •1'111 'kit,_ "'el ft f"J' Utl clrts trern ... etlet Ill....... . .,., .. N_,,.,.,. 1'72. Mt1 "21Qt Mll1ty Nici oblfOltlons, Incl thlrqf19r Ille FllOM 1, TO . ,, AllD STATll~V It In 1111 bill lnlllfllls Ol IN llMltl\. ..... Md .....,_ IM ~ fll """"' (lfl .......... NIMd Intl ICloplM •ta Whlll4I .. ubll$hld Orli"llle COi•! D•llr ..i1o1, ~ cl\IMcl Mid notlct of bree<:h Rl.ltSOlll TMIJt•FOll. 11' •IMI wtlfllrl of IN ~!Mt Mid ...,. ilf'ltr lh ~ _... .............. ,..._..,. "*""° "' .. Id City Cliullcll .Olcember ,, U, 21, 21, 1912 :136d-72 •NI ot 1lectlOll kl bt RKordld A119u1t 11, THE CITY COUNCIL D.f' THE CITY mltlt'f" pt1n tit Plrkl bt "'""IMd to rll0!1I anct Ill IN 0..lflO<t CO.It 0.ll"J' ,llot. • Nt1allIM.illlUyllfOtc;lrntolr,1'12, 1t1 19n •• IMtr. Ho. llOlt 111 book. lll'm pagt OP COSTA MESA, ACTING AS EX-OP. 1(18qU•lely Ind tffklllllll' --,.,ti: NllltPI .... of ......... clmlllt!Oll ~ ... flll4lwllll noll call wll: '"41, of Mid Offld•I Reo:ords. FICID llOARD OF OIJtECTOftS bF THE Wiid rte!ll•llOll n..-of the clttmn1 of IM 11'111 P11bll11Md 111 the City o4 Coofll ,,,..., AY1!$ COUNCILMEN: Hllnrntlt, S1ld i.111 wlll bt 1111c1e. but wllho\11 COSTA MESA l'AJtK ANO RECREATION community. IOQlltoer wlltl !tit M""" of fllt "*""9ltl Joird""" "1llld911 WlllOfl, Rldf* PUBLIC NOTICE 1---::::::::::::C:-":::'.:7'=:---I COYIMnl or w1rr•111Y. tXP<"flt 0t lmplllcl, DISTRICT, DOES HEREBl' ORDAIN AS s•CTION 1. ltctordl1111tr, lftlr Wly of lflf City CouollcN \1111'"9 flf' ft........ MOEi COUNCILMfiNl "-:=~' PICTITIOUS •USIN•Ss regen:llng tlti., PCllMUIOll, Ot Ill-FOLLOWS: notJCI of pllblk Mlrlfto, "" rnesttr lllln ""........ ABSENT COUNCILMEN : .. _ NAMI" STATl:MINT curnbr1ncn, lo pay Ille ...... 1lnlng prfn· Sl.CTION l . Thlt Clty CourKll of thl of parb for IN City llf Cotta Mftli lt PltSll!D ANO ADOf'TEO flll• Mt! Ml" IN WlntlU W'ttlll&OP'. I lllYI ,_...., Tiit follow!ng ptll'toll II doing business cip.1 111m fl/I 1111 llOlll(I) SICUf"lcl by Mid Cll't' of Coal• MIN l'Mlreby flllcls MCI htrebl' •merodlcl .. loll-: of a.c.mw. ''"· .. , my fllncl •tld ..... "" SNI ol 1111 [8 11 : Dl9d of Truat, wlltl lnlllrtst u In ulcl dlel•r11 11111 1111P 1d1llng m•t11r !'1111 o1 A.l!Kf*I to lhh OrdilllflCI m1rll<ld £• JACK HAMMETT C1"1' ol C.Mll Mlle 19111 Jlh d1r "' WINT[R ~UART AMINA OF l'AICISTAN, 53C1 Wnt roott prlnrlllld. lclv.-. It •ny, under lht ptrk1 kor lhl City ol Cosl1 M"' COllllll\I ~lbll "It" and madl 1 pvt hlnof, II a Mlyor of IM City OKtmOll". 19"2. WlllOll St., Cotti Mew, C•lll. '2626 11rm1 of Hid Dlld of Trvtt, fin, dlaroe1 lllxlltn U•l Mvel0pm111l 10nt• lhr0U9'!0\lt Mas"" Piii dell0111tl111 IM bolHld•rlH al ot CC.II ,..,_. EILEEN ,, flHINMEV IQINI Mllld. S30 W. WlllOfl SI., Costa Ind O:Plf!MI of tM Tnnllt ll'Ocl of l"-1M City, wllk h Hid 1onn -• ~ tl• t•I lOtlel whlcll Mid p!al Ii htrllr( ATTEST: Clly Clel'lt llMI t• .. lti<lo Mell, Calf!. 92616 !rush Cl'Hlld by' Mid Dlld of Tnn.t. to MtYI lhl p1r-•nd rttrNllOll ~of ldo¢ld •• !hi m1Hllr plan llf ptrllt for EILEEN P. ,HINNl'V Cltrtl OI l"-City C111111tll f1' ........ Mar. 10·1973 Tiit• b!J:lllllSI Ii COlldl!Clld l)y .,, Said II.Jill wlll bt hltd Oii .......,.y, !ht clllllll• of"" communUy. The City tlllP City of COlll Miu. Tht offlcl•I 111•1 Clly Cilttt of 1111 Clry ""City of COlll MIN .. , .... , .... , .. ,..,. AftaacH. La1dscape; DNWIBt • llnlc. "'""' W•hrcoler; Color • De1i11: ,,..._kl11; 11- terlor D911t1; Jewelry; C • r a rn I c 1; Sc1lphre. fyo1ht9 c1 ....... Ufw Drawl..,: P•lllflBt; C- a111ic1: ~Hy. _..,,,_..-r-v.kt•111 R.c..,ny ~WJMtory IPril1 or thon1 forir«h1tr1 17141 4'4-1120 no 1.o9o .. c .. ,.. •4-Laq••• leach ms1 ll'ldlvldlfll. J_...,. i, Im 11 11 :00 A.M. 11 !flt Of· Council furltltr llndt -dKl•'111 !loll t1w! ot Iha,,...,,... pl111 ol perlo:.a for ffll City of If Cell• MIN 'W!l ...... Ot .. Coell o.11'( PllO'I, llJl>ll M•llcl llcff ol T. o . SWvk9 '°"'OlllY ...... llf appllclllan"' wbdl't'IJ!on part.•-to .... C0$11 MISI tlllfl bt kip! Oii ftll In IM ol· STA.Tl! Of< CAUIJOJt.NIA OKtmMr 7, 1912 »n-n This 111._.,t w•1 1119CI wllh thll Cou,.. AIMrlt.I Towv, Dl'il Clry lllwl west, , ty Cllrk of Drlll(l9 Counl'f 111 Nov. 21. Or11191. Cllltllnlll, 1m. 0.11: Ho••~ 21, ltn. 'llllltLTl.R R. U.ltMllOCR ~ E.c:row COl'por•llon A"-Y 1t Llw •• ••kt Tn111ft, IMI Wftldll'I· DI'. ly "T. D. SERVICE COMPAN"J', .....,.,., 9-11. C1IU, ""1'tfll Tali cn4) '4J.USI av Wlldo R H-. FZllU VICI 'rllldtnt Publllllticl Orlflll COllll Dilly Piiot, IT ....... Nll'llmllll' 2:1. lO, •lld OKtmblf" 1, I•, PVblhhed °""" COHI Diiiy 'llot. irn m.s.n Decemblr 1. 14. t1, 1m )30f.7J I • I See by Today's Want Ads 8 f'OR SOMEONE \VltO LIKES TO SURF These iiurfboetda, one a 6'4" Hawaiian Surf Craft, the other a Bahoe 5'8", would be a aood Idea for a Ouirunu &itt. e BE CRAFTY and put· chase this ~· Fab'Unet power boat wtlh lwin °""'"'" Good oondltlon. 8 AH SO! Thi• 'TI To)tcta lruck is very .enalble buy. It ha1 radio, hea1~r. b\a tlre11 and a s1ep bU'Mper. 15,000 mll<'JI, * Ml"'---. ·----------. .,._ ~ :::.....- (j) - CITY of COSTA MESA PARK • DISTRICTS Oll:OINAi.Ct 1t·•I ADOPTED OECD18EJt 4,11n bMI.,. A • • . . • • • • . • • • . bu by SU I s ... to .. to w ~ sh w "' Ill I • . - Thursday, ~tn1ber 7, l'J72 s DAILY PILOT .21 ,t_ ; Valletf Bigll School· • • • • Book Reports Out At Media Center · • By MICHAEL GOODRICH ..... ....., , ......... "Thia: ia t.he television generation. They've been into media all thclr Jives. Now we're starting to reicb them ' lbrough it ... Warren Pendleton, director of the Fountain Valley High Scbool Media Ctnter, may soon be Putting the traditional bOok report out of business. The book work is still there · but it is being supplemented by new aids in communication such as slides, cassettes, col· Jages and video tapes. Theae new aids to education are being made available through the recenUy com- pleted media center on ·the Fountain ·Valley camp u 1, which Pendleton helped to design. The media cenier, which it an 1718,000 expansion ol the scllool library, 11 geared to permit the students to explore a subject ·through various communication devices made available in the media p~ d~ction room. • BOU"l,IQIJE t:1 .. 11:ANt~llS ALTIUTIONS I 11anL1H• IOI PAltlCUl.Al L.ADllS Warner-Dale Center Corner of W•rner & Springdal•, Huntington Be•ch 842·2050 PACIFIC COAST COUNSELING CENTER oe Joo-i-22: .1973 •ill .,... Its SOUTH LAGUNA OFFICE* at 31706 Coast Hl9hway, Suite 401 South i.a9una 497-2955 to be open Days, Ewenlnq1 and Weekends speciali1in9 in The schooJ was able to purchase many of the new media supplements from a $138,000 federal grant wbich it won last spring. Also included in the ex. pansioo. of the library are the addition ol English, social EXPERIMENTAL GRASSES, PLANTS IN SOUTH COAST FIELD STATION VIEWED DURING FIELD DAY Older Adults, Fam ilies, Couples, Groups, Children, Indivi duals, .. Adolescents and Parent Effectiveness Training C la sses. ' BEFLECDONS UC Irvine Scientist Vic Younger DesriJ?es Turf at Irvine Site to Young Visitors ~. studies and fine arts resource ----------- Reyn Sheffer ..... ·--s. Wiit Al. an American rabbi. born in Hungary, Steven Wisc may bave had more opportunity to share in the jQY.$ and sor-- rows of other people than moat of us. He may also have had qceaslon to observe the emptiness of unshared lives ancl thus inspired to make tbt> observation quoted above. No matter how great our auocesaes. how much materi· al waltb we accumulate or what pin&cles of position we ..cbieYe, we derive very little sau.taction unless we can share our success with those who taN! about w. Sliartng worlui both ways. No disap- Polntment is as b>Te&t, no failure as overwhelming, if ah.,..,, We hope you will look upon us as a friend in need, ready and able to help you through dlrtlcult times. • a::HBFFBR. ~ mo&TWJtY , LAGUNA IEACH . . fll• SOUTH COAST.HIGHWAY 4t+.t1J$· ~ SAN CLEMENTE 1133 NORTH EL CAMINO REAL ••2-0100 , . rooms. The center will also in- corporate the sc~J guidanc e room. The medJa J>r<!duction room is the middle of es:cltement in the new complex. -Here stu- dents with assignments in various fields can come and design a mu!U.medla project. One atudent assigned to do a reporl on the coastline lnilia· tive checked out a camera from the center and with the help ol one of the media supervisors took slides show· ing different aspects o f shoreline development. After assembling his slides. he then taped his presentation on a cassette and tbe whole report was made to the class without using one written word. Students are also imtructed on bow to mate collages, tronsparmcles and movles oo various topics they would like to research for their claS9eS. Plans also are underway to have business classes mooitor the morning stock reports via television and make daily · predictions on Wall Street ac· tivity. 'lbe media center a I s o · 1nvo1 v es particlpation ol parents. One student ls in the process>0f building a computer with his father. 1be mlni-com- puter 'trill .eventuallY be placed m the center to aid students with the math' projeCts. A sound film •trip library ts part of lbe media center. Here • stude!!ls may check out film atrti>s •uiimented by recotds that cover subjects ranging from history to science. FrOm .. the .man WhO brODlhlJOU TI18Lal8 111'881 Plln8I Eal'lh. You read his mmlono COPY bestseller. The Late Great Planet Eanh. . Now follow Ha1 Lindsey Into the frightening realm of the occult and other·worki s;>ir\tism. Is there a netl)erlancl of wandering spirits? Is it possible 10 contact Iha! world? Can the luture be accuralely foretold In this life? Whal at:>out the phenomenal rise in satanism? Demon possession? Witchcrall? You'll find these and other subjects uncovered 'In incredible detail in·the r.hapters: Perilous Tide From the Other Side; Birth o! tt·.e a1ack Prinoe: "D" Day Earth; Three-Dimensional Warrare; Angels of Lighl; Diagnosing Possession: plus many more. saran Is Alfva And Well On Planet Earth. new from Hal Lindsey wilh Cs role Carlson. A. stunn1og , authoritalive report that is cenain to i;nake a beUevel- out of you. , At bookstores everywhere in Clqth, $4.95: Paper, $2.2 5. Supplementary 32-page S!Udy guide, S.75. LIGHTMOUSE CHRISTIAN STORES 1001 'INI -DOWNTOWN Sprl .. It. 1t Ulflower 11¥4. (Just North ot San. Ditgo' Freeway} LON• QACH IOOKI 8 lllLll 8 MUSIC 8 01PTI e CA.IDS OPIN t..a (M IATUIDAYI) Ediso1i High Sets Comedy Production Tickets are now on sale for the Edison High Scho.ol com· edy production "Goodbye Charlie" to be presented Mon- day through Dec. IS, in the school theater. The play, which will begin at 8 p1m., deals with a man who is reincarnated as a woman and must make a series of humorous adjustments to this new situation in life. Tickets are now available at the Edison financial office and wUI be sold at the dooi'. Prices are: adults. $1.50; students, $1, and children, 75 cents. • (Ji y'6 P~'ll~in'J6 =;::::_~=~I GIFTS FOR CHILDREN OF ALL AGEL • A Hltchld cleolor for Creative Playthings® 6 "" ., .. ,. ...... ,' Sopr•110 lit tli• ~ • .,of C two'lte+, ... ~-H ''••tic: 12'4" 10119 f0642 /R3 IO 2 ... ., .. ,. ..... l11fl••·~'· J..uru_ ''••fie: 60" high F0240 GLENMEYRE, LAGUNA BEACH ..... -- • • . . UCI 'Grows Its Own' Scientists Testing Greenery of Future I . • Ordor now for 111urod Christmas doll..,, • We have a flexible fee. Main Office -713 S. Pacific Coast Hwy. Redondo Beach -· (213J 376-5759 *Open House: February 1 l, 1973 1 -3 P.M. Pub lic Invited to meet our staff, Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers FURNITURE OUR GREAT NEW DINING~ AND/OR GAME SET, BUTCHER BLOCK DESIGN TABLE AND LEATHER· LOOK SWIVEL CHAIRS. ' This bright new RB design looks twice its. price In atyl· Ing, materials and quality. The stunning end practical 42" table on a heavy wrought iron base, end four swivel based chairs upholstered In heavy grained vinyl with the look and feel of leather • .New season colors. The set with 18" extenafon teat table, also available, •329. 4 I FURNI RI aHOWA M ITORlll ~S ANCEL£$: 6121 Wilshlrt Blvd. Miracle fllile: 11040 W, Pico Blvd~ 8840-S:-Westttn Ave. ANAHEIM: 1672 . tihcoln 8lllERSf1EtD: 3010 Ming A~e. CKULA lfS'TA: 475 Broldw-11 " CUREMO/llT/POMONA: 232 t. Foothill COVINA: 94S N. Atvu OOWHC't': 9435 E. ffiitone tt CAJOM:J88 /II, Johnson Avt,(Soonn CLENDltl: 3l3 N. Ctnlt•l Avt. UAMAOA fllLLS: 10100 Balbea Blvd. MUHTIM~TON IEACK: 19431 Btacll Blvd. LA HAIR.A: 1720 W. Whlltler lONt BEACH: 2189 Lakewood Blvd. MONTEREY ,Allll: 415 S. Atllnlk: Blvd. PASADtNk 15 S. Rostmead RIVtRSIClt1,JO,OOO M~anolia SANTA ANA/TUSTl/lli 1103 E. 17th SI. SAN IERNARDIN01 999 S. "["SI. $AN DltG01 7475 Claltemont Mtsa 81Yd. lSoon' SOUTH BAJ: ISS33 S. Crtn$haw Blvd. THOUSAND OAK1 244 Tl!ousartd Oaks Blvd. Yf.NTURk 3409 Ttle1r1ph Rd. WODOLAND MllL~ 22223 Vtnt1111 Blvd: 5HOl"1Di\YI4 W((I( • Wf.UUMYI 10 IJNTll.t •MTUlllMY 10 UNfll6 • IUN04T 12;30 UNTIL I · fllll ,AlllCINC • f11r:r: OCCOiltATOlll S(iltYIC'• rft(C DCLIVllitY • COf'IYtNlf.Nl IANIC ll:JtMS ' ( I " I ,, " ,, " II ,, ,, l l \ DAllY PILOT s llvtday, Dfcl'lnber 1, 1972 Air Bag in Autos ... Ruling. 'Deflated' CINCl'NNAT!, ObJo (AP) -,-------..... A federal <:ourt temporarily has deflated the protective airbags the federal govern- ment had ordtted aU U.S. automaker• to install in their new can beginning in 1975. The Ith U.S. Cirewt Court of Appea~ has ruled that the N,a- tlonal Rlgnway Traffic Safety AdminJstration must redesign testing proctdures for the airbags, known ln official terminology as passive, or automatic, restraint devices. -FINANCE THEY ARE desjgned to in- flate automatically and pro-'----------' vide a safety cushiQn for passengers in motor vehicles which strike other objects with a certain level of force. Aian- datory installation had been sthe<iuled lot' Aug. 15, 1975. Tbe court's 2·1 decision ordered the installation deadline "delayed until a reasonable time after" new testing procedures are devis· ed. Chrysler Corp., American Motors Corp., Ford Motor Corp., Jeep Corp. and the Automobile Importers o f America had appealed lhe NHTSA's Marcil 1971 safety- standanls. ruling. THE COURT look note of automakers' complaints that present airbag testing pro- e Acquisition LOS ANGELES -Security Pacific Corp., parent company of Security Paclftc National Bank., disclosed it is con- sktering a proposal to acquire Midwestern Financial COrp., a Denver·based firm engaged primarily in mortgage bank· ing. e Oil Fine JUNEAU, Alasaka -Stand· ard Oil of California has been lined $10,000 in a massive oil spill last September at A n c ho r a g e International Airport. Atty. Gen. John Havelock YOU CAN TAKE US FOi GIANTED • , • by TERRY GRANT. R.Ph ... when It comes to pre- ' pcriptlon drugs. We won't '·I mind a bit. That's Yi1hat we're •• here for. In fact, we l.nvtte you to take us for granted where prescriptions are con· cerned. It is a point of great pdde with us that we carry a complete stock of prescrip- tion drug medications at all \imes. ln our pharmacy. we aro prepared to fill e very prescription drug order that comes our y;·ay. • As l'l('W drugs are intro- duced by the major pharma· , ceutlcal manufacturers, we · purchase them for our· in· ventory. We knO\V that an Important part of our pro- fessional !ervice depends on our having the drugt your •' doctoni \\'ants yoo· to have ~ --4lt the exact time he wants you to have them. . '' YOU OR YOUR DOCI'OR CAN PJtONE US when you peed a delivery. We will de· liver promptly without ~x· tr11 chlll'ge. A gi.eat many people rely on us for their · • health needs. We welcome ftQ.Uestt for delivery service and chara:e accounts. ' • .. l''.U:K LIDO PHARMACY U1 Hos,ttal RN4 N••,.,, lwh 642·15'0 • • ,,.. DlthtwJ ,...a.. , .. , .... "'" Our S.urtnridc Twll ll111r $125 lid Sw1•t1r Yt1t ly 'olo $22.50 COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST • · . .. " .. "' .< .. • r ·i:: •• =· •• =· • • •• .· ,. W edii~day's Closing Prices Complete New York Stook EXebange List NEW YORK (AP) -'i'he stock market pulled itself together in the afternoon hours Wednesday and edged upward after a mixed start. Trading was active. The Dow Jones average of 30 Industrials, com- ing off Monday's record closing high of 1,027.02, dropped 4.a7 points Tuesday In so m e moderate profit takin~, and !<>day the marker had tho job of pushing the mdlcatoP.!o a new goal. Dt.:cn4>tr 1972 DAILY PILOT • DAILY PILOT . • SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A Sl~milllon class action suit has been rLled agalnllt the troubled Bay Area Rapid Transit District and others. -alleging "negligent" design or the $1.4--billiori pro j e Ct• s automation system. The Superior c.ourt suit also names as defendants · Westinghoose Electric Corp. which instaUed the .system'~ automati~ train coottoQ, and the Parso n s B~boff­ T u d or-ll<chtel eqineerlng con sultant combine. · The plaintiff is San Fran- cisco attorney Milton Stern Jr. on behalf of taJP,ayers in the ( CONSUMER ) three-.county.-district where the 75-mile system has been built. Currently. a 28-mile leg or the sys,tem is operating from Oak,J.and to Fremoot. • llfeasure L9ses SACRAMENTO (AP ) - A move to treat compan1es like people as rar as state taxes are concerned has been killed in the state Senate. Sen. John Nejedly's pt!POS- ed cmstltutional amendment · would ·have deleted the two- thirds vote -required in the Legislature to raise ta:res On a corporation, bank or insurance· company and allow them to be hiked by a simple majority vote. The Walnut Creek Republican's measure was defeated on a 17-21 vote. 9 TUlO Charged LOS ANGELES (AP) 'l\vo Los Angeles area men have been arrested by FBI a11Z:ents on a six-count federal l"rliMmP.llt aC"f'USinJ them of defrauding the Bank o f America of more than $3 million under the pretense thev planned to use the moneY to recover cooper cable from the ocean bottom. The FBI said Robert D. Pollock. 45. of LonG; Beach and attorn ey Kenneth N. Detlamater. 60. of Canoga Park were arrested a n d chareed with consolracv. mail fraud and airlinv: and abetting crirninal vinlatlons. Edward D. Snead. 48, of Sunland, a former Bank of Amerir11 vice oresident. pl~d­ ed ruilty earlier to two counts of Issuing cndit and loans to Pollock and De-11amater without authoritv in return for $85.000 In kickbacks. He is awaiting sentencing. e Appe.al St•1Hed LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los Anv:etes Unified School District is considering whether to appeal an order to promote and pay lost · wages to a woman security &Rent it a 11 e g e d I y discriminated against because of her sex. Angie L. Holland, a n emplO)'e of the district for 19 years, said that in June, 1911 the wat denied a position as 1upervi1J.ng security agent, even thougb she wu first on Ibo eligibility list, because sbe LI a woman. The state's Fair Employ- ment Practice C.onunlssk>n ordered-" Ille dlalrlct to pro- mote Mn. Holland to a ""'""Jaory post and pay her .., In lOlt wages. ec.ueer •asartJ LOii .uiµJ:LES (AP) ~ UCLA•ll ......... ---It•• ...._,. = ... 111~.~--.. ....... _ .. . ....... _. ..... to I' tr Ill'. ....... Brown, the 11;11 I_.., ••b-1 ..,...., ..... lli&llM letll ID *'R1(1111Y -..... pt#Wk: ,..,u..,,,_ ol I .. . '• - l/N·IROOK • JOlllTAll YAWY 17200 SO. llOOPUIST tlDO YADS IOVtl •WAIF• 1 MOllTOUI 9055 CINTW AVL , --*"1CIAllPIA%Al SAU. PIKES llOllOllD '11111 DK. I 0 llOUDAY llOUU . Chrlstma.s Spec.lcill BEANBAG CHAIR -. . ~ . ' . . . ' 1~ P•rffff Gift fOI' Anyon--"Any Room!" . • TOp __ ~_uality ~leatherette beCnbag"in your choice of colors . ..,-j'!'I. right for . rel~xi~g. , •Piclc cine up for each membitr of\he family-they'll love 'eml SOLD El.SEWHEU FOR $19.99· . $999 WOW! h. SAVE $10.001 " . ·. ~. ,· : , 1f2" Thick R1!9u,lat Size 'PING" RONG ·lA E TOPS • TWo · piece table t~akes irit, ;egulation : si,ze;·s ft .. x 9 ft •. top. · . , ; ~ Tougi>r!!!rticft l>a9!d vlifh bffiCi~ green finish-in: e i ·o~foftion'~1~ntfot"dinnerl ' 1·"--111G $1t,W-.. •I ··5, •• ·J ;iS.5•· , . '. ~. . -' SAVE $3.001 111KUr ' AF'TP • ...... GAie ' llANOll STATS COCK MON,·SAT. 9:00 AM to 9.00 l'M SU,N, t.cio AM 1o 6 100 PM JIT lit lllTAICIS ., ,, 11Witli A free Motor & Spitf11 • It's from-Char·BrolPr so you know it's the best -and the best bar·b·q buy this year! • Ell"'lnates wo~~~~rrylng, lighter fluid, chartoal' a'nd messy· ashes forev91'1 • Complete with-post, no·tllt base & pennanent brlquets -AND a free ~otorlzed rotisserie!! • We stock everything you need to Install It yourself. "REG. 5109.99 SAVE 540.001 WOW! . . • ,~1 1/18 TEST ARRAY OF CHRISTMAS DfCORA 'llOllS ANYWHERE! 36'' Diameter SNOW TREE SKIRT • Encircle your ,,... with o swirl of snowy wh ite. •White cotton looks like drifted 1now. RIG. 79c lt... Lff .. Uke POINSETIIA '''"• 1rodltfoftal Cltrl•tma• llowerl'' • For b90utlful c•nterp;.c;es, mantels--outline your doon & windows. •Your cholc• of red or white. llG. Uc ftc 7 1L Chr11tmcu REPLACEMENT LAMPS • keploc• thote bumtd-out bulb1I • Your choice of all th• color• in C7 Yi indoor and C9 Y~ Ot.ltdoor. uo. 7c UG. 9'C :sc 71 cm•-. nv,..,,_ 6 OL Spriiy PINE TREE SCENT • Hone st·fc>QOOdness for•st fragranc•·it perfect for artificial trees, wreaths, etc. • 6 oz. aerosol con bf ffesh traditional Chr11tmo1 fragrance, UG. 69c ''LoYely As A froun w ... rfalll" ·• Hundr•d• of ·shimmer- lng 1trond1 per pock- 18" k>ng:_flan,eproof. llG. ftc 29c 7 P1c1. 130.."-I SPRAY SNOW • A mini bU1i.ord !hat stickt to most any 1urfoce but i1 90slly remO¥ed, • For wreaths, trHJ, ornam•nf• & windows. llG. 39c 2ftc 7110.. '·· Sturdy-I LIVE TREE STAN., • 6" wolet baMn to keep th_e Christmas · · grffnery fresh . • Non°tip1 holds all frets up to 3%" trv·nb. llG. 99< 6t Snowy JNIUte ANGEL HAIR ''The Stuff Drecrm~ Ar• Spun Oil'' • Perfect for all types of Christmas decoralions. •Top quality, U.S. made . with spun. glass. ~ •1 Big 2 01. box. ' llG.39c .2t 1 s Light lnd- MIDGn LITE sn • Colorful: assorted bulbt hav1p petal-type refl~rt . \ -, . • Push-In ¥tP.loceoble 1'0M~1 , • Complete with spar• bulb and flasher. A 99c VALUI 3t ... ~ ... • 15 rt. ""'• TINSEL Gllf,AllD , • Drop• on trffs, montel, pockoge......mdoon or outdoors I • Choice of glittering holiday cOlon--tt's . ftam~roafl ·110, 69c WOW! 25' 1 lb. lox SNOW FLOCK ·• ''C,..,. Your Own Srrowfalll'' • Sparkling whit•, flam• retardant s"pw flockino sticks to most 1urfoct1, •Will Cover up to a 5 ft. tr••· llG, 99c ...... , .... 6t DECORATIVE SNOW • Looks like real tnow-<lings to your tr•• and MOst 1urface1, • Easny deaned from any 1urfoc.-.non-to11ic1 won't Minn tkln. 110. 49c VALUI 2t.o..1'1<1 ' • . • • • • . . . • . • . • ' . • ' • . • , • -: • ., • I ' • • , . - . I . ' I ! . ' ' j ' ·"'· ......,. ... ' • I <' . __ ::r ( • • •• r • ' ; • ,,, ~ . ... , ~· ... "_""' " - • I • .. . .,. ' ... ' " ' / ,. ' . : -' ' " .. • • • ' • • .. . , '!" ·11 •• i,. ~ ~•t{ :-; • :i·J: " • • '~ I • : ,_ • '1 ... .. '. . ·- " .. •• , . • • •• ,,.~ ". . , ' ~.· • , .. r ' ... l • !. · . ; ' . . • . . .. .. Slowly tum the pa,ges of this gift guide." · The answers: . are . all here·.( :' '. You'll . find the . right .. -~ift · for everyone,· • ' bUt ·h~-- there are on~ 18 days left untH ChristmaS: ' , • w ,. . • • . ... i . ' ' . ... , • • • • " ,, • , • \ t. • J ' • • .. , ~AILll PILOT ~hrlllmn Section Thur1ct.y, 0.0.mber ·7, 19'1l · · For Holidays Ho\v about a hardwood photo frame Oik.e the one being examined ·here by Jean Given) or leather-covered album (8uth Cooper is bol.ding one) 'for the discriminating gift giver? They and many · other unusual holiday items are available at Francis Orr Stationery in Coron·a del Mar. Fu 11 11[achine.-~ 'Klomp-it' • - Nev.· children's game combines Disney playing cards, GAF Vie.w-A1aster pie· tures and the fun of trying to "Klomp" lbe cards. It's sure to be one of the popular new games making debut this holiday season. How Sweet It l! = . ' . lions tbey can eat ts -wbat lbete ~ are con<entnttnil on. The tree, lildi door Jtanglnf$ are all from des!Jlns thought out by makers of Tootsie ROils .•• using, what else, Tootsie Rolfs. No doubt the ideas haven't all been fiil1red out by lhe ~dy makers, just in case aomeone in your tribe wants to tl7•6o illmlt -othu-waya to make """'8et tb1nga'L IO .hang...around the howe. ' Best Toys Give Rein To Tot's Imagination 1be best toys are lhole that give free rein to a child's im- agination and to bis constant urge for creative sclf-ei:- pl-ession through b u i I d i n g . ~ature's own elements of · .,P,ad, water and clay provide ~efous constru c t ion ,lnaterials, as do man-made Lego P!PtJc building brJclis. Tbla lodcller Is learning to bl\lld with a set of colorful jumbo bricks. Because they . ""' large and clip together ~ly; •be is able, without frustration, to construct while .developing important eye-hand 'coordination. . i "' H1s older brother enjoys endless bours of inventive play with the regular Lego system. Using his imagination and knowledge of the world around hlflli he may create a complex Chinese pagod.!i or a simple truck. Building toys offer remarkable freed.om of ex· pressk>n with timeless fa.sclna· tlon. Each part of t h e system clips together with every other part, so the child can add to his er her collection knowing that everything will fit You can start a child off with a beginner or basic set for Christmas, then add to the system on birthdays or other gift-giving occasions. Sniffy's Calendar fqr 19 73 Offers Adventtere in Scents . . "Sniffy's Y 1973 Adventure Calendar" ~ a new concept In the fragrance series by GOiden Press, Western Publishing Co., Inc. Which she doesn't waht in her nice clean house. Newest Winery The hero of the year Is Soif. fy, a skunk with a problem. He wasn't invited to Chester ChipmUnt's Christmas party because Mrs. Chipmunk said that atunks have a bad scent Snlfty'1 mother tried to con- 9Gle him by explaining that his scent was good and would pro- tect him from dangerous beasts in the forest. But he continued to be sad. He wished SO hard for a new scent that a Fairy Godmother came and told him she would give him a year to decide on a new one. Santo RiboU invites Visitors to his family's newest winery, the San Antonio Winery at 1500 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, managed by Patrick and Vicki Sander. Holiday gift selection Includes wine jellies, savory cheeses and wrapped gift baskets. :"I . about as close to real life as you can get Sylvania portable color TV r Model CD1162W hu big 18" t diag. meas. !ICreen, Color·Bright 85<8 pi cture tube for sharp, natural color picture. Gibraltar 9()TM chaASia for tolid 11tate performance and n:liability. Only s299ts Sylvania color TV model CLl30.2WR with glut 25" diagonal Color Brl.ght 851M pictu111 tube and Gibraltar 90 chuei1 for solid 11tate reliability. Plus S function Remote control Matching stand optional extra. Only s4991s sw· Pnly s349os Sylvania pcr10nal portable black and white TV model 1034 with 9" diagonal picture. H1t11 me.mory VHF fine ttin.ing. complfltely solid atate. lncl11dm black 1un 11c:reen, earphone jack, earpbonea. Only s991s Pnly s3991s Contcmporaiy style Sylvania con!!olc color TV model Cl.2441 W with new 25" diagonal Chromatrixr• pictun tllhe for the 1harpe&t Sylvania color picture ever. With GT-100'""' chauiA, Perm.•· Tint control, AFC and Instant color'""'· Only 1649'5 25 Y e•r• •f la~,,.itfl & Depeadtdrilftr COSTA MESA ' EL TORO HUNTINGTON BEACH Harbor A,... Sa.WI.-Valley f ountain Y•lley 411' I. hveftfffflth It. 11r ......... ,,...., ltMI( ........ o.rlleltl 0.11)"1 .... ht ..... ( .. Jtt .......... 1 (•at•• wc11.., Mkt.) hlly 1M, ht. 10·6 Dtllty 10 ....... 10·• 646-1684 837-3830 962-5528 SyJ,•ania audio component 'Y'llt:m model Ac.512, bu aolid state AJ.l/FM/Fl\1 stereo ~iver 50 watta peak music power. BSR micro-mini automa6c turntable, globe 11peabrs utilize 4." extended range 11e&lod air eU11pemion 1pcake1"11. Pnly s179ts RADIO DISPATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV & APPLIANCI HlVICI PHO .. 541~7 ' . . , . ' l J I ' • • ' .. Christmas Tree Big In Brazil • RIO DE JAN&IRO (AP) - The Oerman·lnspirtd Christmas tree gradually has replaced the traditional · Portugues'e nativity scene' as a 'yuletide symbol In Brazil - Latin America's biggest coun- try. . In big Brazilian cities. private homes as well as s a. 1 es-conscious businesses, celebrate the C b r 1 s t m a s sea.sous wltb evergre.ens deo0rated with U.S. style col· . ored balls and lights. Despite the fact that Christ:mastlme temperatures may be around 100 degrees (F) in such places as Rio, Salvador and Recife, the wintry pine tree seems to have caught ·OO for good. About 50 years ago though, a Christmas tree was hard to come by in Brazil. Only in the far south, an area of intense German colonization, were they fam.lliar. Portuguese- descended Brazilians would stare with \\'o nder at their foreign neighbors' candle stud- ded tree lighling up Christmas Eve. Slowly. however, the Chrishnas tree gained in popularity. Brazilians, who are remarkably united to tradl· tion. saw a different idea and liked it. The only modification was that the candles gave way in recent years to Japanese- made electric lights -tha.t Dash on and off. In Brazil's vast rural in- terior , the .old Portuguese custom of setting up a nativity scene still exists. Some of the creches. homemade mostly, are of touching beauty in their primitive simplicity. One man Crom Minas Gerais State. who now lives in Rio, fondly recalled for a reporter the glittering backdrop he and his brothers used to make for tbe family nativity ~· They patiently wood grind broken bottles Into a f powder which they ~ over a glue--impregnated piece of burlap. ,The effect, he said. even in the pale tpecUon·of a , kerosene lamp, WU dazzling. · Brazilian nativity scenes do not nccessaril,.y 4ave to stick to Biblical lepnd, or have anything to do WI.th realltt, "-5 long as the baSlc ele!J\enll are present -the C'tlrist child, Mary and Joseph, al\epllords. the Three Wise Men, and at least one cow, sheep and donkey -no restrictions prevail. In many small towns. the nativit y scenes are a point of family pride and rivalry. A local resident with f a r · reaching ·1magtnAtKln may , draw visitors from_ miles _ around to see his Christmas creation. This rivalry is further en· couraged by the stlll-active custom of masked children roaming from house to house during the week b e f o r e C h r I s t m a s, "surprtS!ng" neighbors by knock.Ing on I.heir doors and demanding ad- mittance. The ritual symbolizes Mary and Joseph's search f o r shelter. The home owner Is ex- pected to ask, in mock ig- norance, "Who's there?" The children answer by asklng for food in -a time-honored song. Of course, lhey are admitted to have a long and critical look at the nativity scene, while gorging 1h,,_msetves on homemade doelkies. EMILIA PALOMBA • Ceramic Figurines By The Artist Honored •t the Milano Trienalle • ME/tlORY L ANE IN HARBOR CENTER c ostA>MESA ' 549.1501 OPEN 1 Di!-YS ladMIOICllD . • DAILY PILOT Chrl1tmn Sect!__, angora'd top ••• gala longsklrt Hol iday separates .... bia s plaid longskirt in mauv e/plum , sky blue/white. yellow/poppy, nylC>11-wool, 8-1 b, 30.00. Vest in angora- nylon-lambswoo l in mauve, sky blue, poppy, · pink, yellow , white, S-M·L, 10.00. Polyester shirt, navy, mauve, yellow, white, I 0-1 b, 12.00. Misses Sportswear, 40 ifted ide a s for her • sporty separates by Wldte Stag Sh irt-jac and ponh in soft-touch doeskin of polyester· AvrilJ!l rayon blend. Blue ice and coffee-cream. From a group. S~irt-jac, 8-16, 30.00. Print shirt, S-M-L, 15.00. Pants, 8-18, 18.00. Active Sportswear, 78 rom-dc soft-sleeve •louse Lady Arrow's gifty blouse is J as practical as it is pretty. And, tho tuch ·end loco make ii super feminine. W oshoblo polyester in wh ile. 8-18, 22.00. From e collection. Misses Sportsweer, 89 ANAHl!IM NEWPORT HUNTINSTON IEACH OlAMWEi M'ALL 0' 0lA~$£ 47 F••hiott hl•ft4 17141 M4·1212 7777 Ec011pr Aw•H• 1714) Mi·Jl)I 2l00 H.:f .. ~11S~t 17141 "t l tJll CElllTOS 100 Loi C..-rlto• Mtll ltlJJ l6f).04ll 444 N. (11Glid 17141 5)5-1111 SHOr t1JO AM ... '°'00 ,,M. MONDAY THlOU6H SATURD~YJ.U~t>Ar u ' A.Mi. to. r.M. • ' • •• • • • • -." .. . . ' . . . • " . ·' . • .. • • ""'' ...... . • " ; -.. . . •• • • ' ~ • • • ' • • • ' • . • ' I. .. t'+..oAll y flllOT Chrl1tm11 Section Thurtday, Decombtr 7, 1972 ' (i f' -.o/1.o .,,.., Ill •. "'a"' *' l·'· ,<f;'s.y{:--. .- ,_.,·;,,. ... ,,., ... ;.. •Sue Thobe and D. R. ~tack hold turkey and che:ese ~··•pack \Vhlch were first and seco nd prizes. resPe<:· 1 .. .r tively, in Medi-Rx Pharmacy's ··Name The Scare- ' , cro'v" contest. \Vinning nan1e \Vas "Nel~on A1edi' ,.._··ind runne1 .. up \Vas ·'Pharn1er Rex ." ~ J ~ ... ;,;.~ -1. T ''.; . .J-nie-wrty • ie r·i Pumpkin pies \Vere a\varded to five contestants • "Avho sub1nitted the name ;,Stuffy" to Medi-Rx •; .Ph armacy contest as na1ne of scarecrow donated ··· by ShireCn Baker of Harbor Vie\v School. Winners I·.· include (from left) John Keeting. Brett Hazell, · Rachel Fine. Jason Fin e and Sa lly Hess. Pharmacy ,•: at 2700 Ea st Coast Higll\vay, Corona del l\;Iar, has • lots of "stocking stuffers" for Christmas. ----- ~ '''Pocket-sized '" '1 ~ ~ J.an Milham shO\\'S off ne\11 Kodak Pocket lnsta· ,., .. matic available at Harbor Photo. 312 1 East Coast J.lighway, Corona del Mar. It's the one that liter· ally fits into purse or pocket \vith ease. And it ha s the easy-loading and other features of its ·'big" sis- ter cameras. ~---~~~~--~M-~----~-~---~.- . ' i~card.s ~NOW FREE ·fo;; fUYAWAY " ·' ... 8 RE AK$ ! THE SLATE I BARRIER I FINANCING AYAILAILl ·<r • UYt GUM CUSHIONS • GENUINE ITALIAN .f • .a HEAVY llWAAO CLOTH SLATE 7/8" THICK Ito '• fURHfTURE CABINET • DIAMOND HONED m 'e ::•: Sd or sy,11 . S P E C I A l :" IUT. A FULL Sill $2 9 9oo 8 ft. Table.. , 1525 w. ·a..pm4111 ORANGE' l4 Mlie WM cf Mlin Phonic W..1112 Ot w.- •• ' • ' • nuggly gift slip1ters .~ .. D • .. .. . -- tor small fry Keep those little tootsies warm t his winter in soft sl ippers for boys end girls . Rel ioble's fully washoble d~ep pile slippers, soft cushioned insoles, sturdy rubber outsole. F. Lo-Boot, S-M-L-XL. 3.50. G. Eskimo Bootiful , multi - color knit cord trim. Red, whi te, blue, M-L-XL, 5.00. H . Mini Boot, S-M -L. 4.00. Not shown: Ripens Slipper Socks, 100% acrylic knit argyl e plaid, rubber soles. Red, novy, 5-8, 4.50; 9-11, 5.00. Children's Shoes. 58 • for her The slippers she'll love snu ggling up to on those cool nights and chilly mornings. In a fluff of softness and color, lined in warm plu sh. Sizes 5-10, medium . By "Comfy" A. Dorm boot, by True-stitch, oyster or fawn cowhide, 9.00. B. Short hair chow, by T ru-stitch , assorted colors. 6.00. C. Backless, by comfy, white with confetti collor, 6.00. D. Shoggy Chow, by T ru-sticth , assorted colors, 6.50 • E. Jester, by Comfy, multi-color suede bootie, 7.00. Slippers 35 ' • I ANAH-EIM NEW,ORT HUNT1NQTON IEACH ORAN&i, MALL OF ORANWE '4'4'4 N. Ewclhl C714t 511.1111 '47 F1thion ltl1nd 111'4) 644·121 2 7177 E4h't'' A'onue 17141 lfJ.JJ)I 2100 N, lu•ttn Stto1f 17141 ffl·IJll SHOP f1JO A.M. to 10100 P.M. MONDAY THftOUGH SATUftD AY. SUNDAY 11 A.M. to 6 P.M. .. \ ' t 1 ' I • •• , .. j·-/ , . CUAITOS 500 L•• C1rrlfot '4111 12fJ) 140·0411 '. .. / • • Thursday, 0.C....bor 1, 1912 hat every good beard deserves " , .. . .. . '\" ........ -~- !...., ''l>I', '., ... , . • ... I. ·"""l~ .. (Aee savers 'VIP .~'.feo:fu~' f!Oo'ting mic;o hoods with 9b J ots of cqmfort. Head odjush fo 9 shoving ,pP\itiQ~s. ~Id wide voltage. VIP 50, sorrie os above, plus-'cord/cordless ~opobiliiies. Up to 20 shaves without recht1rging. Shaver cou nter, charging light. Travel -ca5e •. · ¢heck our l~w prices on both m&lels. < '. tt.;. •• ., • • '·' • I ,.. ... ~· -·~ ... # .. ._.~~ . - • , l926 ' woth >slarited.;heod. l:Jses replace- • • 1' .. • • ' ... • 'I ~·~-~J· • ... 'i,·). ·~l'(. .... . ~·-~ ~ ' ·• .. ,. a sharp gift SM-7 hos 1;764 ,sh.ovi(ig holes for fast , close shaves .. Head is n~ ~~~ contoured~~ush-bu _ton head release, podd.ecl ~rtp, barber-type · side-bum trimmer, 26.99 .$,M-8,;some os obove wlth cord/cordless odvontoge for a qujc~ charge sove :O oywhere! Defuxe travel case ... 35.99 • •• f· j .- · aple blad~s ,_: :· .·bonos ·set includ ed. Hide- away, siel~b~itrimm,er.; Co'nifo'rt '~ -'..l.... - -- - - - - 1 1 Order by T1l1piion1 or U11 H1My Mail Orcl1r Coupon I schlck ••• the fleXtble foll t I . ..,,,,, .. , con '° . , •~·•·>--' LB29, like tlie 26, but it's cord/cordless . Recharger,. travel case, comfort control bars. 31.99 Mark Ill, micro slot hood, replaceable blades, comfort dial, side burn 1 trimmer. 32.~ , Mark IV has all the quality fe~tures of 1; the Mark Ill, plus world wide voltage, c,ord/cordless capabilities and a bonus set of blades. 41 .99 ANAHEIM 444 N. E11clid 1714}1SJS·ll21 r1'10111I Shoppi119 S9'Vic1 T1l1pho111 Orcl1r1 W1lcom1 227·1 177 1 P.O. 1111 2072 • · T1l1phon1 Ord•r loard 9,.01/fv I Ihm '''" : I . I I ll1""ln1/ A't1n1itl Q,.n Daily 1:]0 1.m, to 5;10 p.m, Lei A,1191111, C1lifort1l1 90052 S11nd1y 9:]0 to 5 p.m. Nam~ lpl1111 prinll . , . , •••••• , • , • , , ••••• ,, •• ,, •••••••• ·•• I I Addr•u •.•.•....... , .•.•. • • •• · • · · · · · .•...• • • • • • · · · • • • • • • 1 I City ••••••.••••••••••••••••• St••· •••..••••• l ip •••••.•• 0 C11~ -I 1nclo11 $. •• •• • . • 0 C.O.D. 0 Ch1r91 -1 I M., lroadway 1111mber i1 • , , , • • • • , ••• , , , ••• , • , • I .. ,..,. lldd ... llK. tt•!ldllng dlll1'9" ldlcl!llOlwl blyond The lrllld..,.y .. I 1._,--· Md 7Sc tfrvlc9 dlW9e Ol'I _..., """*' .U.00 -1K C.0.0.'L ----------- NEWPORT 47 F11hhn1 hl1nd (7141 644~1212 CERRITOS The Schick 400 is a real comfort for your guy. Super thin flexible head for fast, smooth shaves with never o nick in sight. 34 precision Shic k stainless steel blades wisks hair away in re cord time. Generous pop-up sideburn trimmer , world-wide voltage and deluxe case. 29.99 Camera s, Shavers, 13 • • • HUNT1NWTON IEACH 7777 Edi119•r A••l111• 17 111 lf2·J,JI ORANC.E. MALL 0~ OAA°NGE 2100 N. l11•tl" Sttfft / (714) m -IJll monday through Hlurd•Y~ 9:30 to I 0:00 __p.m. 100 lot C•rrlto• M•ll ( 21 JI 160°0411 • shop all stores sunday 11 •.m. to 6 p.m. • DAILY PILOT Chrl1tma1 ~ 'Freeze' Action Imagine chll dr e d stantaneou::ily l r o 1 e midleap as they acam open present1. Friends relatives Mid their la party poses fore Brilliantly, colorfuUy stands still. It is not the Duh science fiction ray gun t halts these holiday scenes. It's a new kind of Dash for your camera -simple, econ- norrllcal and completely automatic. Electronic Oash has been used by professional photographers for years. You see them at every sporting event, Political rally, wedcfing party and other activity that calls for still pictures. But'you don't have to be a professional to use one, according to the leading manufacturer . Anyboidy can. Honeywe11, which a 1 s o · makes computers a n d ably the thennpstat on;; living room wall, re My of the 17 different of electronic flash, It markets will produce of 10,000 flashes - light for 500 ?b<"ll'""" of color mm .. - Not only that, you no have to worry about· posure. Honeywell V'ellted flash ·units Strobonars that au cakulate how-much scene needs and d e 1 procisdy thal amount. If the action ia taking on the other side of the the flash unit pull out light energy. If it's up brief wlnJc llUlf be The flash turns l!ltlf off at the proper leaving you to · focusing: The cost? It ranges fro~ $4$ for Honeywell's smallest'fl.llly automatic electronlc fla.sh - about cigarette pack ab6 ~ to $190 a n d up for bi1..,.pro- , fessional units. Quality j~DOO­ auto flash begins al a-$23. Oh, and one WI wonderful ~ity _about electronic flash. It's one of the feW produe{,s fu the world that actually thrives on use. The more you fLa.sb it, the better it likes It. " Harm om· ' Is 'In' Gift · " This c':hristmas • gilt will be a llar·n.;o~ happy lillle lnstrumenl helng helld loud and records, 1 ridlo, te~ on· counUeu, campuaes the natlon. , . Literally anycno. can' the bannonjca. It's as as breathing ln and oU:t -. in fact, ~t is bow it's~ , The aird,y, e o m I musical mlgbty miW. especially popular wilaitf!)e . younger generation, thaii'l1"9> its wi<le>lnld ... by 11(01»- inent nd. ~ blues stlfla When yqu,gtve ' harmonica as a gil4 ~'11 be gtv~I of music. lflal will lasl long after the "<llristmu ·ti~ 1l"ci~cH1WO)I •• . From ' the modes! -..iwt. t popil!a< Marine Band nllilll!l-prlc:'!i below $4, to 1lle sumptuous S.per Chrom(lllloa at pi, a .haJ;monlca wlll'briig lastlhg Joy to youlig ancl'l!ld alike. There are more that!: 50 different models of Hollner harmonicas available, f o r beginnjng to a d v a rrc: e d players. Hohner harmOnk:as are priced as low as $1.75.• Variety o Greenery ~ '• Most Oorists stock a var of greens, too. Fairly pl1· and reasonable at this are sprays of varlOUI" kll*I .i • holly, rbododendron, lau;fl. mahoola, bayberry, leu , Magnolia grandlRora, .baJ1 r and huckleberry (which Is tually a variety of gayllllSSllia shipped from Oregon). Gr such as ~ ar\ dispensable In llowei;_ ~ rangements. With maey'{ol them, a spray , Or ~(J ~ stitutes an arrangement ~ia itself. . • .. Gladiolus art ooe of Ille ist au-round cut now,n. l. ~ may he clepeaded on ti isl almost u Iona u tome • or chrysanthemWlll-With .,. ~lad1%."'":!\\f ~= 11~ ~ shape for a ..-or !O 1. Even the IUI f!Oretl Ill 1 lips of tho ~ can · ctecoraUvely llTllilpd n shallow contalnen wftb .... of IOlt lf-1· " , ~Al LY Pl LOT Chrl1lm11 Section 'Sweeten' Yule Tree --Candy ' Pl-taking old-fashloned tree ornaments and house decora· lions is a stimulating project that will provide youngsters with hours or amusement dur- ing the holiday season. The handmade bells, trees and angels they create add an old- fashioned warmth to the Christmas scene, enriching the meaning and spirit of the SeaS<ln for everyone in the family. Any child five years of age or older has the dexterity to tackle these construction proj· ects. No special equipment is required. Materials used are normally found around the house or can be purchased at the supermarket. The colorful c a n d y oma- 01ents are a br l g h t ad- dition to any family's tree and the variety and richness of design is limited only by the child's imagination. Various cardboard shapes are cut out, cold loop hangen applied, then candy pieces are added to acjlieve design effects. k cheerful decoration for dOOn or ehandellen ls 1 ahlny c!Os:ter of sliver bells made hjft paper cups, aluminum '"' and ribbon. The swinging bfi..'Clappen: are Tootsie Pops tbf!. can be unwrapped and I ~tfOYid as a snack when the d~rations are taken down. 'J'hese Chrlstmu craft Ideas fo{ children were designed by ~ economi!ts for the T~e Roll Family Food and Piny Institute. Bow .To Mate ,Cudy Tree Oniameall MATF.RIALS: Toots I e F!Avor Rolls, Candy Berries, Fruit Fills. Black Crows, Sour Drops, cardboard, gold or silftr cord. . ' ' ~UIPMENT: Rolling pm. slJ.l*p scls&>n and double -DlRECTJONS: Draw de. desired pattern shape -tree, bell, candle, angel -on tbree- inch cardboard squares, then cut out. Melt three vanilla Flavor Rolls in double boiler. Use melted Flavor Roll as "glue" to attach cord looped to top of cardboard ornament. Flatten Flavor Rolls in other desired coloni and Davon on cutting board, using rolling pin. Cut into shapes needed to form ornament's design with scissors. Complete design us-- ing Berries, Drops, Crows and other candies. Affix all candy to cardboard with vanilla FlaVor Roll "glue." lliw To Make S0¥<r BelJI MATERIALS: Seven paper cupi in v a-r i o u 1 siu:s, aluminum foll, seven Tootsie Pops, rlbboos and large -· 'tQUJPMENT: Skewer, scislon and stapler. -DIRECTIONS: Use skewer, or scissors point, to punch bole in bottom center of each cup. Cut out JeVen strips of aluminum foil, each three in- ches wkler than depth of cups. wrap foil around each cup, tuc!Dng In edge at top and folding neatly over bottom. (Mak• cerllln the bole re-mains open.) Cut seven strips of ribbon in varying lengths from six to twelve Inches. Run one length through hole in cut bottom, pull to Inside and ti• double kMw around middle of T~e Pop stick. Push end ol stlclc back thrwllh • the bole and bend about one-ball inch of stick end to aecure pop In· siDe cup as bell "clapper." Place a bond of ribbon around oOtskfe of OJP to form dellfl", ...,,,. edges by stapling. Ciomplete remaining cups and staple topS ol ribbons together, arranging bells to hang attractively at varying levels. Attach a large bow to ribbon tops, concealing ends, and hang on door or from chandelier. r:::::.:=~-e 1 J EWELRY j I ~W~H~ E I i • llNM I i • U.I l lNG-S I I • llACILm l I • PINDAMT1 ... e DIAMONDS J ~~~FFY! I WAYNE ORR I .IEWREI JIJ l.IM•.C--f.._. .. .._. • .._., Thurcdoy, 0...mbor 7, 1m I ski-style p.J.'s hy manslngwear Cotton knit bolbriggons, cut full ond eosy, snugged by fir m ri~bing , , , smort gifting for cool nights. Mochine woshoble in red, lig ht blue or gold, siz es A-B-C -D, 6.00. Men's Furnishings , 91 - eounts I t • J velour tega •Y pleetway The plush touch for shevU.g! Ame.19 ·triecetete/nylon velour in feshion colo"' with controst trim. Wroperouncl one size fit, 18.00. Men's Furnishings, '11 " ll ' • ' • Wl'llP'Dp ">' ...... re•M Adding on extro floir to his hours of leisure, the meticulously toilored robe by Robin. This, • geometric print in tricot-bonded ocrylic, mac hine wosh- oble, wrinkle resistont, 22.00. From • collection, 20.00 to 35.00 Men's Sport Clothing, 48 ANAHEIM NlWPORT HUNTIN~TOH IEACH OR:A.NGE, MALL OF Olll.AN$E • .... -•Oomi lopllio 444 N. E11tl14 lff4J 111°1121 41 Fa1hl•fl ldall4 171"1 M4·1212 1111 Etll11t•t A'1fl"• 1714) l tt.JJJI 2JQO N. T111ti11 Str11t 17141 ftl•IJll cU(1tos •· iOO Ltt Cettlhit Mill 1111) 16~0411 . ' ' SHO, t :JO A,M. t• IOrOO ,.M. MONDAY THltOUSH SATURDAY. SUNDAY 11 A.M. to 6 '·"'· " J ' • • • t • I I l t Mouth llVntering :Treat Craig and Betty Martin carve hickory-smoked, honey-cured ham amid fine selection of domestic and imported wines and cheeses available at Honey Baked Ham Store, 3l00 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Orders are now being accepted for Christ- mas Eve delivery. " Wear Coat to Fit Your Mood No Matter What the Seaso n Not long ago a man bought a 11.Jacket, lwith 1ots Of ·!naps and coat for its wannth or to keep buckle;;. lined y;rith heavy out the rain. For f a 11 , shearhng ~t spills onto the , ... _, he . . 1 collar. '"'"'ever, IS 111 ~ Pl;, 8 If you're the rugged, pleasant surprise. There are Western type, the "Marlboro coats to match every mood, Man" jacket should be just the time or place. thing. Done 'in leather, or Want to feel like Humphrey suede-like ribless corduroy, its Bogart? Belt yourself into a no-nonsense styllifg makes it a trench. Slightly longer and classic in casual menswear. pared down close to the body, The country gentleman but- the trench is a w e a r tons on a shirt jacket, over a anywhere, go anyplace classic. sweater aDd shirt in con- How about Clark Gable as a trastiilg prints and wean World War I flying ace? Zip suede or leather jeans, sturdy into a snug-fitting bomber boots, and a jaunty cap. Still at Sears He calls himself Brother John and be bas spent a good part of November in the Furniture Depart- ment at Sears Costa Mesa store (South Coast Plaza), keeping busy making Christmas gifts and 0tlior metal sculpture from watch parts, balloons, motor4 cycle pieces or any other metal material he finds to synthesize the parts he needs for humorous figures, centerpieces, novelties, etc. Unique in de- partment store setting, Brother John offers shop. pers on-the-spot chance to see and buy whatever tbeylikeof · '!t:to~rk~-~"======-=""'========~I ·Clip Lighter ~ the pipe sn10k"-rs' companion. Odorleu, tulcless, h&S R tamper on end. CU.pa In pt;>tket for cu)' carrying · only $9.95 Thurod1y, Do<embor 7, 1972 DAILY Pl LOT Chri1tm11 Sectl-7 .I •• . ' ~ .. ' • eonven1enee - t I ·-. .. ·--. . . - ) - 319.95 -/ --/ cranehes trash In 35 seconds flat • • • tlie trash compactor 279.95 If trash is a growing problem in your home, then the Kitchenoid Tras·h Compactor is just W.ha.t you 've been wa.iting for. It compacts to about one quarter original volume ... put cans, cartons, bottles, most other trash in ... saves trips to the trash con. Easy to operate, tu rn the key on, press the start button and goodbye trash. Buil t-in litter bin for small trash. Convertible design installs in an I e inch SPace or use free-standing . Kitcheneid exclusive, .. no expensive trash bag~ needed. Attractive tex tured brown top. , a whiz In the kitchen ••• 1 undercounter dishwasher 319.95 Less work for mother and everyone in the family with this Kitchenaid wonder. Giant capacity dishwasher hes 7 push button cycle s, including rinse /hold, plate warm and lig ht soil. 9-position upper rack ra ises , lowers and tilts. Heavy-duty Gold Seal motor and forced air drying .. And the low price includes panel. Normal replacement instellation e<1n be arranged at reasonable prices. ' Ma jor Appliances, 80 convenient terms availabJe u.u.u[lD]]W IJhapllftaIJm~ % l1IJn.® IlDIRID.\,J,.\.,11\,U,J~ '-JAJI.."'-/ ' ' ' ANAHEIM NEWK>AT HUNTIN~TON 1£ACH ORANQE, M.ALL 0, O~HQI , CERIUtoS 444 N Eualld (714} 1)1·1121 47 F11hlon 1.1.u {714) M4·1212 1111 Lflltpf AY•1111• (7141 lt2-JlJI 2l00 N. T1uth1 Sh••• (714) n1.1Jll ioo "' c."u •• Miii (21J) ........ SHOP 9il0 A'.M. to IChOI P.M. MONDAY THAOUWH SATURDAY. SUHOAY 11 A.M. t. • ,,M, . - • '. . . ·,.? -' .. ' • '. .,.; .... ~ .i ~ • ~ ' ( • ~ ., . • ~ ., ' ' ' 1 ~ i .... 1 •• . ' ' I-DAILY PILOT ChrlllmH Section Thursday, Doc:ember 7, 1972 " Chris11nas Tr ee Fascina ting Wonder for Tiny Y o11 ngsters Dickens Would Like March of Dimes Taka Ille advice of chlld esre e1perll and make the '. day rich wltb learning ex· periences, free of rush and •. frantic activity. The Christmas tree is a I rascinating wonder for a IQY haby. He'll gau delightedly •I the bright shapes, colon and lights. Pul him near the tree ni an infant seat or on 11 soft blanket spread on tbe floor. BALDWIN PWIOS and OIGAllS Complete Selection M ... HI• Vole• ol IGWwl~ .. , afMI 'J'O!"ll !IHr .... ditt9'•M .. .. _ ... ,, IAlDWIH lllOSIC LU" WOODWORTH , ,14110 4110 OR,411 S4L£S 515 MOITH M.llN, SANTA ANA • 547"'51 ! ' TOOAY'S TINY TIM Joins Mlrch of Dfmff ,KAPLANS 'RESTAURANT DELI & BAKERY OPEN 7 DAYS~-WEEKLY I -. IT'S PARTY TIME Trays Garnished and Decorated _. .. ready to serve '.- MEAT PLATTERS BANQUET-STYLE -I., e Corned' Beef e Turkey e 'Ha m e Roa st Beef e Pepper Beef Office Parties • House _ ~ • Salami e Potato Salad e Cole Sla w e Assorted Cheeses • Relis hes Included: aie bread, dinner rolls, a nd comp- li mentary assortment of our minia- ture Dan ish Pa stry. •I ,I ~ Warmings • Business ',, ·/. luncheons • Showers Birthdays • Any Occasion e IN OUR OWN BAKERY e If Charin llvtd ... ho de-hlmsell to_raisill& day , be undollbtecllY would money for tho Hospllal For have approve<I_ of _)Ills coun-Sick Otlldren, which 5till try~ Notioqll i'iMmdltJon. operateo on Great Otv>ond SI~ March of Dimes. f London. During his era children ' Amo1111 bis most .......iUi became street un:hlns from rund-ralsing readings, ~ the day they loddled out of the year Jl58, was his classic their hovels, and •a deformed "A Qiris,tmas Carol.'~ Whet youngster on a erude crutch more fitting example Qf dli't stirred more revulslon than medical need than Tiny ~ sympathy. A few citizens did with his little crutch and see I.he need for re!onn, and heavy leg--braces! ...... ~ .... some spoke out. · ~ 1ay leader like Di&'ens, Charles Dickens' vcice was who saw what had to be one of tho .clearest and mosl for sick anst cri_pple<I -~· tire!' relentless. He invesUcated, and worked to aee it doM~ wrote vivid newspaper~ mJgtl.t baYe~ . .bten an • and novels; he traveled and IPll'at,.._ for 'file Na · gave readJnga, lo mm the Foundal&-Marcll of Dimes public f • e 1 res_poos\bililf ibis country' mere than a -toward the Wlcared-ror masS tufy laler:, This orgaWlion of childr~en. , saw the need for pteveotlae Dickens ' eipecially amt· and treatn\ent of bl11lt de!ed.s, idus to the treatmeni a( whl~ti affect some S,,0,0 sick and crippled children, and babib annually, in the United • Candlelight Brightens ~hristmas Seasons . - Stateo. With U.. help of volunteen tllrougbout I h e country, ·its members work to raise funds fol' l'tlW'Ch, - PHARMACY , -, . WE HAV~ MA!IY-MANY 'lOW -COST STOCKING GlfTS " , . HElll ARE A FEW 1~'15: ~"ICI THUi IUPR 1AL4 SPICIALS-_,, ••· NEUTl0$j:NA So•p,. , , ••• , , ••• , , ,,. • :,. , • , • , • , ,., • $1.00 KODAC.OLO R CARTRIDGE' FILM, 12 E•po111re1 •••••• $1.40 GILLETTE TRAC II R•1or1 , • , , • , • , ••• , ••••••••••• ,$2.95 A~ST. COLOGNES, M • L,d;., l Men1, Si119)v ·I Gift P•clc1 •••••• , •••.• $2.50 '"• Sl.JI SJ.st S1.00 WE ,,QUOTE PRICES OVER THE-PHONE , •• ANYTIME •. · 2700 l Coast Hilhwav. at Fe11!1e.af. · Corona .def Mar .. __ • AMPU PAlllN$ ,IN ltlAI ...;.... -t :30 . 6:00 hlly Cltt9' . ._..,. _. II p•,.r--i 644-7575 CA KES FOR ALL OCCASIONS _ . _ BAKED TO OR.DER WEDDINGS -SHOWERS -BIRTHDAYS BAR MITZV AH -ETC. RYE BREADS ... PUMPERNICKLE •.. CHALIS ... BAGELS SPECllllL CONSIDERATION ulftlGM fll CftllrdlH. Templft .IMI ..... 111""'9 01'9a•l11tllM .. , THE ·DO-IT--YOURSELF $29.94* •WAX FLOOR .. • &oath Coast ?Im 3333 Bristol, ¢ tlle S.. . D'-9o' Frwy., 'Costell~ .. REST A'uR~ • islo-9022 BAKERY • 540·7511 LO~I L'!tt -_ NEXT TO MAY CO. ,-~~;;;~~~~~--Th;~;~;;~~~~;~~=;~•>M•1 ~I ,ff/' See ~ .... ~since fire! I t ~, The live. ·t;· Z~tv. I :!_ 'Demonstrat1on \· Mad!'~~.~~!'AvE ovEN I :j Amaoe Fado•y •1 , ,,,. I 1'.l I Home Economist will tt , ! 'f I be at Tovatts Goldenwest j 1 9 I r ·~ I Store to dem onstrate ~) n ·J . th• amn;,9 Radu'"9e I.fr !,- Sat., December 9th from 11 to 5 .1 ' . ' • • ;. • I FREE CRYSTAL STEMWARE Now,geta11e1egant1etorBremen Space Age Cooks Crystal Scartdlnaviiln-atyled Extraonlina• Wil I'::.... stemware ab9olutely free with Pri . n I UIR the purchase of an Amane ces . Radarange mlciowav,.e oven. ' a Live Demonstration' ,ft="t· The 24-plece set lncludn eight, Sta,e As Low • +-ounce Sherbet-Juice gla1sn: a_ eight, 9-ounce and eight, All ~~~::ijf~;gf~,~7: $]· 49 A , .,,., ...... ""', I • Col*a 5 lb,.,,, in 35- • .frozen veeelabi<s in 5 111111111 • Cup cakes in 31-s! • Crisp bacon in 4 llill1tsl ,,..,,,1111116 GIFT TO YOU. l I M>LDENWEST Ir WAIND HUNTINGTON llACH Sa"5 Ollly 842-55" I i I 401 MAIN STREET HUNTINGTON BEACH t' "Service Ir 'Sales -53'-7~61 .... ! IT'5$0LID VINYL TILE! • Come in one\ choo. from donns of beautiful coSon ond patterns right in stock. These supple 12x12 inch 'tiny( tiles trim to fit wilh scissors ••• go down fast and easy over ony cleon surface. In Just one aftemoon, you'll haw o shiny, ~warfloor 1hot will lottalifetimal 35" 52cVA\!l'~Y ... .,-~ *$ .9.94 .. YOUR COMPLETE COST FORA 6X10 FT. KfTCHENt " -TMICKSHAG . . . 59~ CAIPIT Till Ji -s.t~padclac!.-.. lf ·•kl< 12•1 2 " - · FllST QUALITY CEIAMICTILl ]"•]" -l Colo., Will 39" l•1f • lif1fim1! " 52c v1l111 ! SQ. ,OAK PARQUET FLOOITILl '" Pre-finished • 6 llx6 ll ;,, 1 ·S" tiles. Compare ' at27c EA; · Easy pr., Wet~ ~ AmOX mov"ted 49. os low as • I SQ. rr: ' ·inch iiles. 89c \IOlvel ' DONT PAY FOR WASTll Tok• bode"""'°"· ~ed tile for i.n ,.,,,,.., C-OST A MES6 ml HAllBOR Bl VD. 645-1126 SPECIAL HOUR$; OPEN SUNDAY 11 A.M.. 5 P.M. MON.· THURS. • .f'RI. I A.M .• 10 P.M .. TUES.· WID. ·SAT. 8 A.M., 5:30 P.M. At.WAYS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING! JUSTSA.V "C..,A RG!: IT"' > .. ( • ( • , . Monday thru Friday . . 10 A.M. to NOON 1 P.M. to 4 P.t.f. 6 P.M. to 8 P.t.f. Saturday ,, 10 A..M. to NOON 1 P.M. to 5 P.M. Sunday ' ' 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. • • • .• • Thu....Uy, Docembor 7, 1972 'one-stop' shopping at its finest! OPEN EVES. 'TIL CHRISTMAS BEGINNING MONDAY, DEC. 11 .. . . . ~ , DAILY PILOT Ch ri1 tma1 Section- OPEN EVENINGS .. 'TIL CHRISTMAS BEGINNING MONDAY, DiCEMliER 11 IN THE GIANT .30 FOOT GIVE YOUR YOUNGSTERS THE BIGGEST THRILL Of; THE SEASON • ' ....... ~!-, ... ~ ·. 1aR the pictures you wish -· ' With Santa or the Snow Man • r ~ :10-DAIL Y PILOT Christ.,., Sectl°" Thursd•y, December 7, 1972 . .. \Shristmas • • The Chrliflilu cardl you heh! toetth<r by yam, t<llllo ~ or get lhll year may un-without an. envelope or double "lold Into !Ulklle pocters, he u dimensional Oirlllmas ttte ' • S-T-R-E-T-C-H S-T-\-T-C-H r I (PFAFF)lf~-1 1 ~~ ·SEWING r .. MAC.HINE TIM owly MWl"t 111achh1e wlftl hH l11ttH 5-T·l·E·T·C·H ~tcket a•d tile Matcll""*w ttiot -tcltet plOlch ..... pt'llttS whli. yo11 MW. HICtS START AT $4CJOO • Convenience • Service . • Quality • "" Just in time for Santa ... MEN'S to • 40 STO~ES TO SEIM YOU FLARES • • • • • • • • • Z300 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON CANVAS -CRISS -CROSS SANDALS Sizes 4 • 10 All Colon $299 WOOLWORTH COSTA MESA I ' $185 Values to $17.00 HARBOR Clothiers in Back Miii • co~;~;~J JEANS • Junior Sizes S-15 •Zip Front e Wldo Bolt L-e Blue, Rust, Tan Ant•lope SPECIAL BUY $]!9 I , JCPenney t -CO$TA MHA $TOii ONLY v • l. - -• I Have Diffe.rent Look, Use cardl," Parker aaya. "Bo&h sende< and tt<tlver take part Jn harm...... Ibo fl n • I SHOE. CLEARANCE men, girls, mens and boys. Also children's sites. Some women's -·· ' R<v. $3.99 to $5.98 JC Penney CO$TA MISA STOH ONLY Windsor Shop now for tliat perfect Gift ••• for th.at . Special someone on yoiir Christmas list • Layaway· Now! Windsor SHOPS rault." c•rds, whlcb ore lllllled 011 In ounolves t!w1 pl 11 l'ff<ly· , Unfold ..... cud< IDd tbty the envelope Ind tben pop out mad<," Porker lllYL "11le becorDe rudy-lo-blnci pollel'I In bocomo OhristmM tree or need !or wbll the aociololllta with IUitable ae11ooal table adciramentl, anct.~•rpui. call per1on1Uutioa 1eemr meuoaea-Pohl -•nd tocetben", wbldl oller 'i'"' grealat ...... -,... theY tum Into oelf-malllna choice ol dollp Ind -t pie, but It'• aet llmKed In mvelol""', ~ with • Jola Jollfd by yam or gold oord, lbem by any _... Ohle< foll oeal. One II a trianfillar Int other ftesh --lllil iJOOple want In e • P r • • a Santa dealp. Olriltmaa. --lnO." "Unw_." cardl-a1lo niw ,._ by aocfal 811itllti· DeopUe. tbll do-l~younelf thll year, are 11 lnchu long CtinJlonlel YllllkelOvlcb llllows· treod, ChrlltuW remabll I Ind !old out. lnln Will or·man-• lDMY ol .. would rather buy illlplchly tradltlonol bollday, ue --DbP-lnnol oometblni Wt've -led Parlier uys. .•. ~E~ SANTA ·· DAILY lD Ii t CAllOUSEC COURT loa111 ~'8t '1lau -He•di11t the li1t of ft•hir•1 h Tri11itro11 Color, - 011 1 big .. ~r1111 pl111 p111h-b11tto11 1utoni1tii: color, 11tur1tio11 111d hu1 1:011fTol_ Ch1rco1I 9t1y c1bin1t, fTimm1d 111 chrolllt• Solid,St1t)- E1r phon1. 15" Dt1gon1I pictur;. $379e95 • I · SONY COL~ ~ THE-1 • • ,,,,, ... , ,,,~~!-~ .. ~~.~~.~ i Yow'll 111 th1m mot• fT1M-to-lif1 on th1 KV-1710'1 big 17 iiteh ptct11r1 m11111r1d 4i1go111lly. A11tom1tic fiPM tuniftfJ with ,.rfect color 11ti,1r-,tio1 1iwl hn -•II iii '!fl! pu1h-butto11. S449e95 . . ICV·11lt 4 CHANNEL EXCmNG SOUND ! FROM SONY TV-TJt Mu1ii: th1t liv11 from Sony SO 4-ch111111I, R1· cord1, FM St1r10, FM/ AM R1dio. Now yo11 c1n 11rp1ri1n1:1 th1 111 1nv1lopift!1 1011nd of 1iv1 p1tf0fm111c11 without hiving to shop for 4-ch1nn1I 1tt1d1m1ntl. Thi comp1ct SOP-400 i1 1 m1gnifi1:111t m111ic 1yat1m th1t r1- ptod11c11 1t1nd1rd Stereo, St1r10 Ou1dropho11il: <SOI. R1gul1r 4-ch111111I Mitri•. Dhi:r11t 4- ch1n111I Di1c. • lut ver11tility w11 not g•i11.0 ~y • 11crifici11g 1111 of oper1tlo11. Thi b11Ht-i11, fi119 compo11111t q1111ity, FM" St1r10/FM-AM tu111r, ft'ont ind beck ch111111I 1olid 1t1tt' 1mplifi1r1, built-in SQ 4-ch111111l d1coder, 1..d 4--1p1ed 1uto/ "'1111111 ISR t1i1rnt1bl1 111 contrii,ut1 lo your li1t--.... t 1nin9 1Jtperi1nc1. $349 e 95 B~T IUYL BUY SOHY " Big S.ound, Smell ~ce:· l • Phono, FM Stereo, i!M-Ai'(f & C.u.tt1 Enjoy c11 .. tt.1, r.cortl•, FM ·~· Ell""' AM l:iro1dc11+. wit6i 11,1,.,.. SONY ft'l1lity. R1coN c1119ff" from ptie11ojrapl'I, tu111r or with o,..._1l1tnlcropho"", t I .. • • ON SAU .s~lf:,Nt.•95 '" -~ 1177 HP 149 • S1rvint tho H1rbot •w-sinc• 19$7 A Frieftdlr P!Goo to Shop ...: wtlh ~ iin>fce. q1'CJ!llll pro. 4 u c t • • COfllpe- ,mc.. and a '1op qOal. itr 1en1ice d«pqrtmni to ketp Y°" aalllfl<d,- !71 WT 11TM mm. COITA MUA .., .............. o.JIJ' 'TV OWlltMM • -• t ,... Miii. • ,ri. a.t. ! . • '"°"' .. M741 --------------------------~-- • ~ • " ~ • . ' ' • Ecolqgy . Gifts , Make Big Splash T~s . Y ~ '1119 jDcrUltnl co n c e r n about l!>e quality ol the envlromneol h 11 brought ecltntlllc and educ>tlonal toys to the !.,.front. '" Kita for testing the quality of the environment, wntching plants grow or finding out about the weather have all l been introduced ln tlme for Chrisbnas glvlng. Even the Barbie doll has expanded her interest be)IQ.nd cloth!ng and her ..-W bo)'frierlcl, Ken, to include a paUo garden se,t POND P.UMP' : . FILTER M.T!M ~ s27po MIW SHIPMINT KOi JOHNNY H0Rrz0t( TEST I.CIT CHECKS WATER, AIR POLLUTION Thia Non-Toy'Toy' lncludn 10 Exporlmenta for '.Y'OVth Mirkot ft.ell $1.IO t. U,000.00 FANCY GOLDFISH • " • ' Real Santa j A Computer Ii 1} 'IJJo,' ho. ho," reads t h e ' •• dS&ge. ~'Merry Christma~ t' from ·the rrorth Pole. I have " made IDY list and I am. check· ~ Ing it t"1ce. Havt you been ~ naughty or~!" it continues. 1-"Message! from Santa" via 4 ¥ the !Jolide!~r.ese r v atl on · netwo~i are hn a n nual" J feature at Holiday I n n s throughout the world a t i Christmas time. A The system, the world's i largest privately owned com-i put er·c o n t r oiled com· -. munications·network, is a vital I 1tn1< 1n . lh• dally operauon or ~ Memphis-based Holiday Inna, ~ Inc. .J LlaHTS e PGOD e ACC:ISSOllD BANKAMERICARD WELCOME Play Acting Hel ps Givin$ In V1ew of Psychologists facific Goidfish Farm . . A gift must have a proper may mate the recipient anx· 1eHtng. Ptychologists say the "Joos; and destroy most of bis act of giving must be a bit of or her pleasure In the. gift. An overly lavish present can also make !lelieve, a litUe play-act· create anxiety a n d em· • 14700 GOLOENWEST, WESTMINSTER ~ .. _w.,, ... -893 7105 .-0,.. s.-..,. 12·5 714 -' ( .... ~ , ...... " .......... ing between twd people. This battassment. biilds true no matter how longl.===:=o=;;;..===-=~ you've known each other, or bow unsentimental you believe you an;, Never hurriedly give sometnmg as you dash out of the .door, or as a pea~ . of. fering after an WJ,pleasant p» ment. Be relaxed, est.abliSb a pleasant mood. tbe subject first: "I f.hought of you thil artern~.01 ,._!!10{ 01 saw the most ~· A gtft should not ... ie be. lety. A fragile, .~fo.<Ore. for or e&Sy·t<Hose ;>~ 1 Bold mod d•1ign1 1 vivid flor'els, popular pa isleys, sew right for colorful ' robes, 1t-hom• we~rin9. REG. :.::: ,;•"-' ~ri~1VE '1 00 ... J 97 ~2"/45" wicfe·h•M w•1h1b/1 ' Yd. ................................................. -"~ .. ' Holiday· Fahri~s • FOR FESTIVE EVENINGS e Shandora Prints . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • Fancy Flocked Crepes · l'l.. e Super Screen P~i~!s .............. r.:. • • • Metallic BrC?Cc:ides· ................. 3~. e Velveteen Prints ..... _. ............. . While you'm shopping for every- one else, do yourself a Christmas favor. Be.your own Santa ciaus-"'illl a e RED Quilted Nylon ..... l'l.. • RED Deep Pile Velvet ... 3': •. • . ' gift of comfort from Evans.1he finest ryame ina! .. homefoot- ·wear fdr men. 54 FASHION l:SLAN CHROKll CHI& $14 NEWPORT CENTER e 644-4223 Opp. Broodway -AllO Alhambr~ ' . 36/54" Wide Cotton/R•yon/N ylo n/Orlon Blends , imported ' ·SUEDE CLOTH Soft e~rth ton•s in. a he•vy quality, wo1ter repellent cotton th1t look• and feels .reel suede. • REG. $3. 98' yd . w... SAVE $1.01 yd. . ' 297 ilHOUSEoF FliBRICS ': . ' · · · alw.qysf irst qu'ality fabrics · . .. A . . ' f • ' Thursa.y, 0Kem.aer I, IY/ J. ~ ...... , •. Lv I ... h1·\:.tmw• ... -..IO~'T-11 .. _ BALLS .... '19'5 IN c."""" t ... .t Acc ... er~ 2G40 Harbor Blvd .~ • COSTA MESA '. OPEN DAILY 9 to 5:30 SUNDAYS 9 to S ~HOLIDAY DECORATIN G \2~ (, IS FUN! ./)'I ~ ~ L~~~tlf ~/~____, LITILI ANCiELS D1licihtful fr11 or p1ek1ci1 tTimt 69¢ eocll. :• HOLIDAY CORSAGES All cllff1r1nt, ••eh on1 1n origin•! d1tiCJl'I, • from .....•••.•• -. ....•••••.•••• z.•t Z. ,' : .. IELL "'GAGES" Whim1ie•I HOLLISTER o•i'llin1r d 1•ig 11 °1 for door or w1il from •• , • , ••••••• , , , , , , 2.50 Delight A Youngster ..... A DONUY LIADS nim CAMILS M•d• fro"' Ofi,.. WofHl. Tll••• c:liermfn9 cervM e11J,,.1l1 •re •ur1 to li9ht up th1 •Y•• of • eh/lcll 111 two 1b11 2.49 end 7.9L SNOW-FWK Aoek your owrt fr •• witfl 10~. 1no~ l>l•ufv, lt'i 111y ellcl fu11 with SNQ.i FlOK, a Creft0 M11t1r PNKluet, Be Different -Give a ''Vitamin,. Tr" AVOCADO or CITRUS Som1 with brllll1nt fruit Thi pop11l1r LmLICADO, dw•rf A,,,~cfo • !1•rrt Lim1 Tr111 Pi11il Gr1peftuit Ow11f M1y1r Lem11n Minnol1 Tang•lo Y1l1nc:i1 Oren91 W1,h\119to11 Nenl Or1n91 ''*' ... .... 8.50 .. 9. 95 -· Be On The Safe Side Use California Flameproofing #SS St•f11ppr11,,.J f<v F1bric:1 •• st.ti •ppro ... d for cir11n1ry tueh 11 tr1e1 end Oou9h1. Have You Seen Our Outstanding Seleaion of Living Chris tmas Trees llYIN~ TrM1 , If not, yo11't1 in for • lr11t wh1n ye11 111 tfl.e ILUI, ILUI IP I UC I TRHS ind t+t1 .,..ry bt1t 'f•rl1tios of PINES. Th•v • ire re1cly to decor1t1 new, And pl111f l•t1r In .... ~'your Y•td -o"r - ..... ,...,, to 1 church, 1ehool or park. ,,_,_9.50 1.98 AND 3,69 Amaryllis ' Bulbs Her1'1 1 51 1 AT 9ih Th1y'r• 1lreedy pl111tt~ ill ettr1eti"9 eont1i1t~ 1..d re1dy lo bloom. ' ' ONLY 3,98 . Start plan ts earlier, grow them, laster. Easy to Install In flall,' 1ashbed1 or window boxe1 • Autom1llc tharmoatat, AvallablEr in six size• le• Not h1cludecl ,_., .... 3.95 ' ' . ~ .. • • • w;. . . ~ -. . . . . . ti 2-i>AtL Y PILOT Christmas s.ction -This Dutch Puzz le Is Geared ,for Tots A major toy manufacturer tht.. Christmu la offerq a templing pacuge or 11 \lflVS\lal puules which it lw bad mode under a special ar- flnaement with a ~tch maoufacb:lrer. The new puule11, called "Pick-up & Pf:Ck" puzz.les, are 1 geared for the two to si.I.-year- old age group. 12 dif{ere11t subjects are orfered, including 1 Children Arouod The World, Nursery Rhymes, F a r m Animals. Occupatiom a n d other, simplar subjects. • A number ol othO p<ml.,, ID-and nro "!:" 1 cw.cars witll troduotd b y • Fi.sh~Prke. "trunb"' Juc:pee. bavt pt._ designed to s14nd; The.lop level of Ille termlnal thus they be<ome toys iD their bu ~ pmJnc port for the own right. :i: bellcjlpler. A crut, which Play Family Air and tW]\f~ the baggage cooveyor Play Family ff t are and allo ll]Jlns the hellcpp\tr's new additions to the ~ ro'91', acUvatee a reallll:lc dingly successful Play Family . "~p. wbomp" c o pt_ e r series which .was • initiated soPnd. 'l1ie lower leyel of the several years ago. Airport 'has a cbtck-lo ~ter The Airport has two hinged Qnd aocea ramps. Tbe fllei sections which permit a child truck hose nt:s all vehicles in- to create many different c1udln&'· the jet wh1cb has a layouts. The item. which will realiatlc whlrrln.8 aound and a retail in t he $17-$11 p<ice pilot whole head turiis ldl'lbd range, includes the popular right. mtkel • retl1sUc "putt.putt" llOWld. In the water the boat ..-I ell .-y ports are Ooatablt. Included In the b\lrical<ly designed Item are five play family-"'· dining table and two matching chairs, harbeqae srw. two deck lounges (with three "resting" poallloos), a llurdy Utile speedboat anl two play family life preservers. All ac- cessories are re~able. When pulled the "sldpper" loolts port and lllarboard .. the helm wheel turns left and right. The sun dedt, which Wll up to allow euy aocea to il>l.maln deck, Ibo heoomes I !'OOV-carrytnc1iandle, The H-t Is heautil\llly deslgnio(land colored in ~' cletaU. it Is intmded for c:hlldru nro to eight-)'W'I old and provides for versa~ play situalionl which cso help children 'develop manlpulallve skiill as well as powers of Im- agination. , Consumert questioned have indicated they consider the toys and puziles good values, particularly in view of the educational and constructive aspect! of their designs. -:-:,.-~~-..,,,..,..,~,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-' A Joy ous Gift for People You Care ,:A~ • z' JONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGUL~ ' ,,: r' • , :·' A ...., .,. l w..I ~ · . ', 1 ( ..... ,. "" .............. _ ... _.. 54 95 .... ............... .,,....., ... __ A ............. -''•" .... ,................... ' .......... , ........ ..,. .... L -I............ • .., ' ,,, .............. J ....... ~-........ , '. _........ '.' .......... .., ... Each puu.le is solid wood finished in bright, non-toxic colors. The puzz.le pieces have non-removable "easy l i ft ' ' plastic knobs so they can be removed to reveal a picture 1 discovery under each. Tbese pictures rtlate to and amplify the subject of the puzzle. Play Family Fun Jet (whk:h is Play FamUy AlrPott is already in the line as ~ solklly constructed ft om separate item), a helicopter, hanlhoard. wood and ~le. sil play family fig u r ds Jt is intended for ages tWo to (including a stewardess abd eight. • helicopter pilot) four pieces of Play Famlly·H411.18tboat ts a luggage, a line 'tractor, two land and water &oy. On land tt baggage trucks, a fuel tabck, can be wed as a'AJlltOy.-wbich ., Song· About Rudolph All-time Favorite NEW YQRK fAP) -Ono _ .!l<lli add<!! a _oln_llu<ln<lO!!r to the eight ordinarily "'80Clated with pullilJg Santa'• sled. After 1919, when Gene Autry introduced the song by Johnny M a r k s at Madilon Square Garden. to the lilt of Dasher, ;J)ancel)1 Prancer, V I :i e n , Comet, Cupid, lloMU and Bllt:en, Rudolph had to be In- cluded. . Tl¥! soog, "Rudolph the Red Nosid Reindeer" has sold more 1han rt million records, and five tD.illlcin copies of sheet music, one of the biggest hits in the historr of ~r ~music. The original record by / Cowboy Aulrf lw passed the seven million mark to become the all-time best seller of Columbia records:. · Johnny Marts' Ru dol ph 1 _ turned .,,i to be oot ooly red- . nosed bul gold plated. TJli! PLAY FAMILY AIRPORT ENCOURAGES YOUNG CREATIVITY man who wrote the lyrics and Design Allows ChUdren To Chins-L1yout,•Mow Pieces music for the e n duri n g r•••-.iM.uia•MM ••MMMMMMM, ~ . LIDO t. ~::=. I I ANNEX •. ~DO CANDY I ~ SHOPS "' ::=" • I ~ liiJ I 11 ~~Av~~'??ci w,.w;;':j'pCD9 ~ I . NEWPORT BEACH . IA I -~"'.' ... .,............. ..... .......,I ~ . t. . •7 I '1· L... ........ ~;..:7;:~=~---! . HOUSEBOAT .JOINS .PLAY 'F.AMILY I FRESH ROASTED COFFEE Newost Addition to Popui... Line· ~ FROM ~ROUND THE WORLD ~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~-11 Quality Gift a Compli,tilen~ I A gift should-say "quality", -it says thatt ~ far as you're! ao matter what it1 prlie. A concerned, the r e c i p i e n t It well-made present of obviously deserves the best. No matter i fiijh quall(y is very nattering what you're buying, i 3mc3mm~1:1 DW.GlfTFlll:LY DIFFERENT t:llRISTMAS GIFT IDEAS < FiM Tt a We Gift·Wrap, Mliil &. Deliver MOM.-SAT. -1M DIC. 1"'21 UNTIL 9 P.M. JJIJ·YIA LIDO. NIWPOIT llACH . PMONI 67W141 llthind Tk llr.1• DolfWiin) Let us put money in your pocket or on your cuff • • • F rom the 01,d W orl,d of Poland l••utif11I, uttful i.W•lry now -tii1.vr• 111 1 few ll••n. A11thlntie eoiru;, ntw or 014, Mount.cl In 14k 9old or• 9'\0f'O thon h1n41ol'ft1 -· e11"••r11tion pl•c••· TI..y 1ro 1 9ood i11.,•1h'nont th1t Ctfl •nly lncr•a1• ;,. ¥1h10. lrln9 yollt olJ coin• 111, or tom• i11 ond tJllllfll"• our cornplat• taltctlon thtt ttfl bt lf!ountad in c11ff lin••· ring1, lflOll•"I dips, b•lt b11e~ts or koy chain•. "The Siona Cunff4clc• Built" HUNTINGTON CINlU ............ H•l11r• leecll ltWIOI I The Ultimate-in Craftsmanship Handmade c:erami<s, handwoven wall hanging• and ou- . pen bandcarv.ed wood' (boxes and goonnet lrltdlmware'.) GUts from $1.11 to $111.11 KRUGER'S WEE SHOPPE ;., little but loaded with the llllusual In !oik art from around the world. I S355Via!Jdo,~-(boek ol _Dol...,) """' ll•M AM i. I f'M, ...... , t AM 111 2 f'M. deMll JMMiy -------------------- • Prepared The Old-Tirne Home Made Way: Deliciously Different Lido Candy Cottage n nvia __ ,.. __ (Mmt,,.:11 .......................... , _.,...,., ,_.,. _______________ __ NEW IN .NEWPORT BEACH! I ~USTOM DRESS .WEAR .ALTIJIATIONS 'ft\AGIC NEEDLE UIS Vii Lide -Suit. 0.1 J PhoiM: 67$.JOO • Open N••.m.,_5 p..n.. -Mon.· Sat. ------- Christmas lavorlt. was hom In Mount Veroon, rl· Y, ,\ .. writer in the true tin pan alley tradition, he was inspired to create "Rudolph" from a Christmas brochure he'd been reading. · Marks recalls that Autry didn't like the song ~ry much at first, but agreed to put it. the filp aide of a number no one remembers called, "If n Doesn't Snow On CbristmaS. .. -J-i..1 runlQj BOO! S~BE In n.. MALL ' 21 t1.,,.11,,.1en c-r Huntintlen,lleach1 1934555 19USS6 ••• Jast food. books ~ •• offers these beautilUl 1'al~s ••• installed before·· arri1'es Choice of s t y les a nd yarns in all these price ranges, completely installe d . with padding . . . 99:1 Cornpleflly lt>mll# Wlfh PorJding e Iii-lo styling in DuPcnt Continuous Filament Ny- ioo Pile with dooble jute backing •.. choice of tweeds and solids ••• won't fuzz, shed or mat ' • Heevyw~, hi-Jo Herculon olefin pile guaran-- teed against most stains •.. static-free .•. ioog-weering . . • selection of all the wanted colors. 99;1 Comphtelg Jnmll.tl With /latltliflg e Medium-length, dense and thick Shag of nylon pile in,.~~ed tweed> and aollds ... meeu FHA OUDW11US. e Sculptured, heavy cadon nyloo pile that hides IOU and stainJ ••. virtually static-free , .• choice of 2-tooe tweeds. • Thick and 'heavy Shag of DuPont Dacron Poly· ester pile yarn in delighUuJ tweeds , • . easy to clean ... durable, resilient. e From LEES -new ahOrl Shag of twi!ted 111d plushy nylon pile y111111 in kolor tweeds • • • I beautiful ~ crafted to tab! heavy Ille anywhere in your hotile. 1 5--thlck, short Shag of DuPont Dacrun poly- ester pile . , • elegant styling ... exqulJ!te col· loclion of tweed> and solids •.. truly one ol the beavieat llbaga made. e Dense and lull Shag of heat->et twist and plushy nylon pile yarns , .• two-tone tweeds ~ •• won't mat OI' crush. • Extn-hetvy, scu1ptured DuPont •501• nylon pile in tweech and solids • • • easy-cleaning • • • FHA quality. • Level, commercial~uality DuPont nyk>n pile ex- ceUent for use anywhere ..• lively twel!d4 ••• takes heavy wear. Your fihoic-e . 99;t CotrlpMt.ltJ lnml«I With Altlt//flf e Llmldoul, -shag of lush~IJ­esrer pil& in aqlids and tweeds ••. __ ,,, __ .__ ' e ~~~I polyester pile In hi-lo style or level • lOop wltb ·random shearing • • • in many tweeds and !Ollds. • 3-color Shag of DuPont Dacron polyester pile, e:rtta-beevy and ·dense ..• decorator color com- binatlons •.. won't ever mat. 99: ~ lnmlltr/ With foddiflf e From LEES -tlghlly·twlsted denle nyioo pile (alhiooed into a longer-strand' Shar .•• 1n two- tooe and S<:oior tweeds . . . a sracellll carpet.- ing easy to·ciean and durable. e It's hi-lo ••. it's carved styling ••• 1!'1 1 aupe!' iatlve Shag of sbcrt, but thick, nylon pile. New! Yee, with two-tone swirl color-ellecta to «.'Oma plete lhJs brand new look. • WI om• JI -60 -,. DAYS ACCOUNTS. o,.. ••••••• 'tll ' , ..... -s,tlirdcry 'tW,6-.. .., 11 .... 524 West 19th Street, Costa Mesci Nollt to Bonk of A,,,.,lca -Phone 642-4305 T • ' ' ' ., I ' ' ' I ' J I l ' l l I l I I .. ' ' ' ... Thu....Uy, Doclml>or 7, 1972 DAILY PILOT Chrl1tma1 Socti..,_lJ - All Yul e Ornaments -Not ·M.a de Equal ,;.1•....,·-. . - . explained, "it is up to me to '$aqcl. d~ tatted ,Jn. the world, the.re ii a decline in take the ebri.stmas bask:!: and struc I« their prtductfoo. this type of productivity." The breathe new Uf& into them .'' She 1tbit tbelit ~. Chrlstmas business ~ shlf· -To akl' her, sh6 bu ,an. 1n-. tions ''° b9 followed many titC to countries Where born taleol, years of lrl;ntng toooi~• oC mn. 1way. thousands stlll depend on piece at fine art schools, experience ~'.puuon c( Oristmas wort for their existence. in the field, a fanctful decOTauom -to he Mn, Rothenberg ma~ an· mind and tboosands Of dex-I I"' ~ tndllt1ry nual triJ>s io the Orlelll to trous" hands throughout ' ,the a~e~y a e . ' overaee and U.truct in' the t~---;.!;j._;,~1 of l>olp"'ub factlirles that nro-l'Orld. •-, , ....,..., __ lD duce •--tloos. Ibo ~S · Her .Christmas creatures are audl ~et as. Mexico, what ·~tries' have In in- created in a brigbtly-Ut office Japan, ~I; Kong, Taiwan, dlgemus materials tnat lend theme and then on large • Most of Ornaments ere ~ -themselves to certain types of on Broadway. She hits on a Czechos;€a and }bq:ary pieces of white paper she detailed i the American ite'!'!-S1e ai8o has _learned sketches the posea and dress issembly . WUllng, -patient ~ch. CQUDtries ezcel 1n w~k- and expressions or the specific hands of tl¥>ee who labor 1oog mg with specific art supplies. Christmas character that will foe small lnounts of mooey She knows, for instance, that btipg her theme ~ life.., Mrs. are needed~ ~aonallze the the Ja~ can bl; ~ted Rothenberg can Dot go off 'OD item u Wei 88 keee: It in an O'! to fashion ~qulsite P.1eces an unbridled night of faney, .acceptable ce renie. :"'1th paper, while the Chinese but must always remind Vice prddent Benjamin µt Hong Kon' are. f!18.51ers ~l herself to be realistic. 'Ibere pointed out that there is 8 molding [etching ptXJe faces m are costs to be considered. definite relalon between a plast~c. Both Mrs. Rothenberg and her country's ' dxnny and the ~ knowledge makes. tt company primarily are in the amount of C.ttage 1 a b 0 r possible f~r her to save Um_e business of producing novel available. He t ' "Japan us-.and ·~r ·'~,. '11').l.l,n' ornamen~ for the many, not ed to be the'1 g-producer :1~ , , ~trj' the wealthy few. of Christrn~-veltteJ-but ~~:~~·--~ 't"J..@ 'nle art director colors her now that ;he 11·~ toonom'ically ~~lent to do . .. HI•." 1_d_es_ig_ns_c_are_fu_lly-::a=n~d,_'g_i_ve_s_o_n_e _o~.,t=he,._s~\ro't-,.: s_t_na_t_io_ns_in_ 11 ,,, ·-• 1 , ". •. \ .• . • •. ~ For ·s~oHs . The DAILY· PW 11 the newspaper f<>r. .,aports' atortg·, ' the Orange Coast. • ·.Complete, .statistics on loOaI blJme and -~c-.·· • SHOETREE SOUTH COAST lll.AIA Co•t• M,,, 546-4791 UPPft° LD.,.l glmm11' some ol that ole' SOFT SPORT • See Our away games, trtlff ~ge, II-------,----;--...,.-,,--------~· more u:cluaive · stories on N ' , }' IMPS, ELVES AND SANTA CLAUS FIGURES F.ROM AROUND WORLD They All We,. Born al Drawing Dffk of Mar jorie Grace Rothenberg ' NEW-YQRK '(AP) - A appeal to-a-variety -or persanll , while there place·an·qrder for Cbris6nu tree ornament is a tastes. There are centerpieces -~th.tgeneral merChancfise 1 OuiltmD tree ornament.· If of' fruits and now~, some .. Some. of. Mrs. Rotbepberg's . ~fe teen. OD&. U'ee'load of topped by e),v~ or kissed by recent and DQ.Vel creattons in- tbem, )'OU,,_ .seen them 'all. angels and ·some :.tbat move clud~1 nnei ~of the ··f\appy • ,,_, "mtlY. 't;Q. be the observa· slowly aJ'04Jl(i in time to a snownian, chUbby ,8nd with ~ : do. 'of a tlM'WI who ' has seasonal tune. i·aunty plaid cap r...,lacing the • ~ v~:-is a direct Plastic trees -from 2 Jeet ,, usual black to~hat7'an es!Omo ' Holiday Orange c...i sgorls than M)< ', ear y , veryone other 1 o ca II Y. distribu~ newspaper. -: ~te~ to 'Landers 'HAMS " ... s. .... It-JN-!', .. .,.. ......... .. , ORDER NOW FOR mRISTMA.S , dioO!'•l\H>I "!hE ~'°' n e z er to JO, including green and line, gnome con,es, tile' caney , , ~· or hai~ bad the. white Canadian pine, cypress \<>Ok the-pattloClc -fOok,-l'lf' . ~ Ol llelnl' hiMii oo the · end f!lng noodle pine -are so, tyri>llan th"'1e; and ·a· clianri· tour of Santa's World, Kurt S. natunl in appearance you e_x-ing line of~"Santa a~ Home." ' l .~·· • •• ....., to -wftlt "-'• Spice ~-· e Ideal fir l1utl£g Na...,._.. -• !""""'"" i;C11i.a1t•"'"'" ...i WloOI e D~eohtliil wltta 5-dwlcltllTa Go ' Adler, Inc., one of the largest pect ~to~· "I ttipught it woul~ be fun," . am lllOflt creative producers Louis Benjamm, t h e com-she said "to let children see of novelty ornaments and P,iny's . Vice president, said, Santa ~lthout his cap and deool'ltJons for the holiday Metallic ~ are out, ~t coat, relaxing at home in shirt . 1Ai.l Hi6 H QUALITY AT DISOOUNT PRICES 1711 LC.. .... _..,, C:-W .. M• -671 ... t"Mnca~•l If I ~ II.._..,. 1 seuon ·in the country. the J!OPWarity ~ arti,~c~J sleeves, sli~rs and green t Having 18eD decoritive Yule trees . is oo the inCrease. He suspenders." This line also pieces.through the esthetic eye explained tl}ese trees can be shows Santa in his rus:ht cap of ¥arJorie Grace Rothen-easily stored ~ saved a~d and gown; Mrs. Santa on the ' berg, lh<t~·· art direc-olthough tber will melt they phone. baking o-oake ancibolli ... , --tor, mUas ii rather Im-never go ·up m Dames " f '•-t ked 1y 1 bed Ben. .. Jained·~ 1 o wau uc ,snugi n . _JIOssfble ever again to regard J~ exp ~uat . or Mrs. Rotbenberg's ttiougbts ' -· 1ms. •·•• ,.,, ........ •1'"'2461 MAD ·~~~~~ 10055 Ap;llMS Ai' Al!.OOlC~ST ., • I them casually a n d im-those With more e~.1ve continuously are filled .... with penooally. tastes the company sbll rm-swi.rb of pi.J:ies, elves, abgels, 'lbe lniUal stroll through ports £rom Europe hand blown wise men, members of the ~ tlrie: floors of Ad 1 e r ' s glass ornaments, candy and claus household a n d the located at 1107 • mini lights. The lights. he tinklf.o( .bells. , ~ ,1 , HUNTINatON llEACll'~~l lr ~:~·~··~:':':1~·:::~,i ::·_,, ,_AJ .. tb.~ .. se special low prices flt. New York tends sala, 'come1 from lta1y which t t · 1 s b e·r an ti u a 1 the uninitiated feel leads the field with th.is item. responsiblllty to gtve the old by the quantity of 'Ille Italian lights have not as and tradlUonaL a.new Jlnd ap-~l glitter. There are yet been matched for their peali,.ng twist. ''In e way," she ' gross loll of gllis ornaments brilliantglowand.durability. -'--=------'-----------.,.-.'~~---.,------ of all conceivable ahapes and The ov~ view qf Adler's • t.' ... ·o:• · •:· ·' '" IP ... • ' !. · hues mantel hang~ mostly novelty decorations is im· ~ bur with many presstve; but:..itis tbe~ciose.ups I vlria~, and s e em i n g I y or sniall indivjdual pieces that · enough miles of garlal'Mls to are memorable. And this is encir<le the globe -gold and MarJ«.ie· Grace ~nberg's silver tinsel, colored paper domabi. 'lbe company's en· and others made fancy with tb•"•stic art director whose fruit, bells, berries, mistletoe, e~ in ~ with the leaves and bulbs. whlmatcal~ illustrating ' There are usorted versions cbildren'ltiCiCil' Mld.iesignine i of the nativity sc:ene -mak· / s o p b ~· m~ntzc:d . ing uee of hart, fine wood, Christmas window displays 1s ' gluls, porcelain a n d papier. responsible fgr products w~ 1 macbe. 'lbe ceiling decora· are exclusive in theme and : tiDns range from the simple design. 'Ibis · exclusivity is • • design to the staggeringly whet makes Adler different ornale. 'Ille wsll bangtn&s and from moot in the field and is door bangers run the gamut of why retailers beat a path to !lie lndlfional but ere fashion-their door. 'l1ley often come to ed with lngeoulty C<rlain to see the special creations and 1 · ) i 'I I :,IliE . 1 ·JU;D l 1 :BALLOON t : · LTD. ~-~· 1 r's 't!Cwas the night before Chiisaji:is · an.d ' there 'neath the tree . ., ' ' ' . was a Florence lliseman cL:ess wrapped just for -me. . . ... l~I .. .. Caravella® by .auiova doesn't just -- te11· time. It' says: 'Merry Christmas.' Day &!ld Qate model has ch rome finished case, expansion bracelet. 17-jewel movement, ~weep~second hand, lum inous markers. ' ' '· t . . ,. • '• " " . .. • ,. : ~*;~?~ondW · ~·h~ '~~~watchhaswhite 25.95 ' Tapered lin~Iii.cOret sllver·lone case ~· golct·tQll~ case and . ' , ... . ' ' • textured bracelel-11;jewtl". 84)Uet8ble expansion movemenl, unbreaktlble band. 17·Jewel movement·· watch hu wtlh• ai1Ylr4one case. Shock rostl1111t 17-Jewel l!ICMlntent; ·~~tlt'tM.'. .... .. .. malilspring. sweep aec.ond hand.'.Water and shock resistant iS ' ; rong 89 case, crystal, I .. ~·Vl(t!l exp~~to develop a IQt of new frf~nas. How tabout you? ' . . A• • "· ' . ' . ' ' 1· D,ecember 7thrro11 Only! Special thru Monday only! 5for59¢ Color reprints. Standard gloss\es from your Kodacol~ negatives (110 1l1e ftlm not I-In ollelt • • • tM mett .. ll&lolfwlly -al d.lldrtl'• ...., In tie ..... ... II "°" opee la FaP ... hlead, crown remain Intact. , . JCP.ennev ~ ,.:: We kn~!" ~a! y~'re 1Qoking for. Newport Ueaa •' 2J fn•hlon hland, Nowport loach 644~108 16177 Alt•'"111i111 St,. H11t1ff11tt0f'I he.ti ·144·1666 Shop Sunday ~t the following store1:1 ' ' . IOI To'fl'n A Country R4 ., Or11t90 151·9598 FASHI ON ISLA ND, t-l•wport ~·ch (714j 6*2Jll. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunfl1i9ton jMch (!141 892,7771 . • .. ''ri'i'lf""•.,, ... ""--i "t • • ,. ' < ' . .. "· . ' • t 14-DAILY PILOT Chrl1tmH Soctlon Thursday, O.C.mb.r 7, 197l Artists of World ltundrtds of artlsts from more than 81 countries have contributed designs for the 111n· nual UNICEF Greeting Cards and Engagement Ca lendars since 1949. That was the year Maurice Pate, first eitecutlve director of the United Nations Ch ildren's Fund advanced $10,000 of his own money lo reproduce. a painting o f children dancing around a Maypole as a Christmu card. The picture had been drawn by Jitka Samkova, a Seven- year • old ciectioslovakian "schoolgirl. to express thanks to UNICEF for the food and clothing supplied to t h e youngsters of her devastated village at the end of World War JI. At that time . the custom of sending printed greetings at holiday times was traditional to only three countries -the United States. Gtnnany and t Great Britain. Today UNICEF Card.1 are sold in 105 coun- Sh e talks Back trtes. and world-wide saleJ galleries, mU1a1ms, private have zoomed from 110,000 of colledtons, artllts' studiol and that nrst card to more than 80 exhibltloN on a Starch for million in 1971, of which S5 million (approximately 40 per- cent J were purchased in the United States. Proceeds of these sales pro- vide almost 10 percent of the vaccines and vi t ami ns, hospital and school equipment, high protein foods and other forms of long.range a n d emergency UNlCEF to more than 100 million children in 11 countries. Often intensely regional in style and content , always of universa,l. appeal in theme, these cards have created a new fonn of cultural exchange among distant peoples as well as a wonderful way to further the work of the Children"!; Fund among malnourished, uneducated and disease-ridden children of Asia, Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. Throughout each Ye a r , UNICEF rtprese:ntadves and special Art. Advise'? c o m b EVENING OWL possible card d e s i g n s . categories ioclude cbildren, C'hristmas and other festivals, winier scenes, abstract, folk and ~ligklus art and ex· pressions of the Unlled Na· tions Ideals of p e a c e , brotherhood and the well·being of man. The final selectian is choaen by an International Art Com· mittee comPQ5Cd of museum directors, art critics and book publishers , together w ith members of National UNICEF Committees who are responsi· hie for the sale or cards in One of this Christmas season's new dolls does more than just talk back-she'll repeat1 what her young 11motber" tells her to say (with the help of a recording device). The new companio!l do~ is called Gabbigale and she's by Kenner. \ . " .. .. . . ' ' . . . . •· . ... ~ . . . , Cards for UNICEF t!>eir rapectlve eoo11t , • The im " · of UNICEF G ... tlng I rd s reproduce pa ntlng1, sculpture•, tape>trtts collagea and object d'art t span both the globe and ennium of anlstk: genius. undoubtedly the artist! represented rent UNICEF co ·on are Henri Matisse, w designed the "Torch of H o p e ' ' especially for F shortly before hll death (11154). aod master abstra P 1 e t Mondrian, w b 1 e "Com- posltio<1 In Ov ' Is used by arr-angem nt with a Netherlands usetnn Such other famous Wnten as Marc Chagall, PiClsso, Salvador Dali, Andrew ' Wyeth, Rene Magritte, i Shahn, Henry Moort, R Tamayo and Steinberg ha e con~buted to past coUecti ns. Other hig "ghls of the 1972 UNICEF include snow scenes by; American and European '1tiats a n d an 11 • year-old ,J8paoese schoolboy, an exotic "Wonders of the sNow'i CHRISTMAS Bush" by Papa !bra Tall of Senegal:· a tapestry Bird of Peace, a cilugraphlc Angel, and the whJnWcal "Santa's Helpers" a n d "Chrlstmu GalU!ns". Buflbe moot Important and attractive upect of UNICEF c·ard·s remains the humanitarian ooe. Jn nadont, where the per capita income u s u a 11 y average! around $100, through the United Nations Children's Fund nearly 410 m 1111 o n children have been vaccinated aga!Mt. ljib<rt11looll; more than IO~ achooll, vocational tr1lnln1 cent.en, and other educational unlla have been equipped, u well as other thouaanda of day care and youth centers; millions of TORCH OF HOPE malnourished children have received daily high-protein food supplements. These are only a few of U NICEF 's long-range achievements. Th e n , of course, there is the ~mergency aid which UNICEF provides In man-made c r i s e s like Bangladesh and Blafra and natural catastrophes like the Peruvian earthquake and the Afghanistan draught. In terms of speelfic aid, your purchase of a $2 bo1 of UNICEF Cards can provide enough vaccine to protect 100 children against smallpox or 50 cakes of soa p for a mother and child health center. When you buy a "1 box or an Englgemeut Calendar1 you contribute enough antlblotlc ointment to cure 30 children of trachoma or sbc baby chicks for an applied nutriUcn ~ gram. A $5 purchaae will pay for a large blackboard for a primary school or 3 stethoscopes for a mother and child health center. Since 1963, UNICEF has.of· rered an anoual aplraJ.lioond Eng1gement Calendar with full color, full page II· lustraUom printed bacl<-to- bacl< ('3). In ncenl. yean, the U.S. Built-in Dishwashers Prized by Housewives _ Committee for UNICEF bu IJao lnln>duced I group of -. puuleo lod olhlr cllt lleml wllh ID lnlmlalJonal thlldren'I theme. Othe\' UNICU 11Hll In- clude: a wall) calendar1 u. luotrated with Chlldran'a art, which ldenl(ft• major ... tfoaal, rtllflloul lod ldlool )lolf4lyt ·-the -Id (fl), lod two Jlcaaw puzzlea ('3 and 'l.10). Since eacb UNICEF 11111 will bilng needed bel_p lo .. -.i chlld u well 'al joy to the ldual reclpfen~ tb1a 11 I way of enhancing the pteuure of ono'a &ifl.livfnfl and makloi It more mean- lngfW. """' HUNTINGTPN ~IACH STORE ONLY J~~-ANN~~YEAR 20-o/o QFm; ON THESE BEAUTIFUL Mu "~~·. ~GS NOW THRU 'SUNDAY, DEC. 10th An entirely new concept in Birthstone Rin91 for Moth· ers •nd Grendmothers. Your choice of birthston•s set in 14K Bleck Antiqu•, o; Natural Gold .. , also ,.,,ifeble in Whit• Gold ... with •ny numb•r of birthstones you d•sir•. S•l•ct your Christm•s 9ift1 nowl 14K GOLD WEDDING BANDS R99Uiar 19.99 to 119.99 .. ~ .............. -20% "' . -===-.!.........,_ . 0 09* lnslallation thal Is easy to ac: r! r~ · · · compllsb and requires fewest & a pan., whlle the second deals OUR 100T>l ANNNEllSARY vEJ.~ 7777 Edl11CJ9f, Huntington Beach with lnstallation using more·I~=============================~ complez procedures, aucb •I cultlng aod swealin& · plJlel, steps that "'l!llh'e ..,.;;iai tools and a working lmowledge o/ plumbing pnicedura •• Bes1des installation instruc- tions, the handbook coolalns belplul lnformatioo about the locaUoo ol the dishwasher in an older home and installatioo in a new borne. O>pies of the "Built ·In Olsbwaaber Ins ta 11 at ion Guide" are available at $1 each from: Consumer InfonnaUon Center, t b e Maytag Company, Newton, Iowa 50208. With the handbook, a new buUt·ln d.Jshwasber and a few tools, the husband will have no problems coming up with a welcome gill this holiday ........ BE ORIGINAL For an or1gtnal topping to your Ciristmas package, tie tiny pine cones and sprigs of pluUc pl!u< to 1 big red bow. Pine adda ao original loOch to plaoe cards for your holiday party. COLLE CTOR'S ITEM Tit• .•11111111 Chtlttnt•• pf•t• Ii. R..v•I Co,.11lt19e11 roru/1111. 1972 MOtl¥0 "111 ff.t 0.11'ft" 116,00. 'Ote lt1ncl·finl1hN pl• .. • wltft ttlelr 1h1r1cterl1H1 •Ll110 11nclet9l1te lt1.,. 1n l11cre11ln9 ¥1l oe. stmas e@nt@i- Giit Free with the purchase of. ' any Singer sewing machine with cabinet ••• a brand new ,5iooervacuum ~rr . ,. ' Right now we have over 150 beautiful sewing macNne and cabinet combinations.Come In and take your choice. The Golden '!bu!:h & Sew• machine with cabine1 . Exciusive push·button front drop--in bobbin. Bu ill·in and interchangeable Fashion• Discs to crea te a variety ot stitches. Soft.touch fabric feed system. With Bakersfield cabinet Model 750 with 692 cabinet. Fashion Mare' zig-zag sewing maehine wlth cabinet. Sews buttonholes, even mends without allachmenfs. Ext:fusive front drop-in bob4 bin and zoned presser bar control for a variety of fabri c we ights. With Kingston cabinet. Model 257 with 708 cabinet. 11 9.95 Large assonmenl of sewing boxes and beskels from· 3.98 10 15.98. _Sf!iQ.§R and participa t ing a pproved d ••••·· . Singer Sewing Cen1ers have a Credit Plan lo fi! your budge! and, 1f you wish. monlhly payments can be deferred uni ii FebfuaryL 1 ~73 . Many approved dealers offer attractive credit terms. •A f•Jdt,.,.rk ol lHE $1NGtA COMf'ANY. COSTA MIU lrl1IOI • SWtfJowtr SOvltl °""'' 'l•ll ....... cone Mlt.t. .not Htfllw ll'ld. H•....., CtnTtr Kl .. tUS MUNTltrt•"TOlf llACN ldlnttr ., hrtc:h Hunllntl'Drl I~ Ctnttf lt1·1Mf OlANOa II lllllll!Orl !•~I "Tiit City!' CW.It!" -MllMIN HOVI 9'11CIM.._l'I °" ..... .::'.'l "*"' • ' ' Thursday; December 7, 1972 DAILY PILOT Chri1tmH S..tlon-11 In genius Keeps Gtft Wrap Them Excited /Floor Tile Dresses Yuletime Keeping the kids fro m pee.k-the kids, tie candy canes or ing at tbelr preaenl5 during lollypopa to tbelr packages. tll03e last few tantalizing days Otherwise sUck to lnedlblea - before Christmas can ta:x the miniature plastic cars, boats ingenuity of most parents. or animals. Cut pictures of However, ~'a one good your youngster's favorite baby way to convince them that it's animals out of magazines and alinost as much fun to look as glueibem all over w package. it ls to rip open : Wrap their Or make a happy kitten out of gifts especially for them, with "Q-Tipa" cotton swabs. fuzzy animals, Santa Claus , Remember, kids like bright modern designs, bright ~lors, colors. So combine greens and and a comblnation of tenures. :reds with gold, sliver and All it talr:es ls a IftUe"' in-other 'bright hues: <;tit shiny geouity, a few ine:xpenstve and metallic paper into supplies, and a bare minimum circles, !tara, and modem SOPHISTICATE D STYLING UN DERFOOT of time. geometric shapes. Let 'the' E Ml. t Mlk H H lid For e:xample, make a jolly rainbOw be your guide. ____ •_•.:.Y' __ ,_n_•_•_•_nc_o __ ., __ •:..PPY:...:._0 __ •..:Y_• __ _ Santa. First, cover the box For the next-~teen set, cut with shiny blue or green out large felt IeUers in bright' paper. out of construction colors and pasta tbem on a Fix Up Privat e Study Room ·paper cut a red triangle for package -LOVE and PEACE ~ Santa's cap, a red rectangle are favorites. Or personalite it B R d ] for his body, pink for his face, with your child's name or in-. y emo e ing Home's Attic fuchiia clP.cles for his rosy itials. Make fiowers and snowy . ' ceiling, walls and floor. -ha-s/ing-Menage-cheeks. and round nose, two branches. oot of ·cotton swabs Thls Christma~ give your --~1Uletirlgtitblue eyes, a smn:;---aOO-angl!therilOver a-daugtiter tf\8 -lftlvRy s1ie 1ng red mooth. Glue them on package along with some of needs for study .(and to en· the paper and add two_ blue .or those brightly-colored paper tertain her friendi). This most green mittens and thre~ white cutouts. appreciated gift might well be circles -one for th~ top of his Use sequins scattered all hidden right under ~ur roof! hat, and_ two for suit buttons. over a small package. lt's Santa suggests u give Or substitute white ball fringe. easy to gfue them on bf your youngster an pttractive F~Uy, take a handful of "~ dipping a cotton swab into the room of fiet own remodeled Tips''. cotton swabs. Glue on glue, just touching it to the , from ~t.ed spa~. 'liat was three for his fur-edged hat and package, and popping on a se-• once a ·cluttered attic He six for his-beard. For his curly quin. Make a green sequin 1 di:scovered' that· most Attics locks, cut off the tips of seven Christmas tree with a shiny are constructed in sucll tp1way swabs and glue them on each gold paper star on top. Or that tbe .main.suppj)rts .\re in side of his face. -make a Christmas pompom ',.place. ·Because of thb, a.-..lt· After "Santa'' finished the- carpentry and tile application, mother and daughter become Santa's helpers and decora te the room In a' manrter reflect- ing their own gOOd ta ste. Lind• Clarke of Family Bo-Ok Store shows Bob Y9ung a Holman Revised Standard edition of the Holy Bible. Store specializes in Bibles, Christian bQol<s~W!!Ily-rnading matter, records _and gifts. The .store is located at Number 27, Huntington ·Center, Huntfngto•r Beach. .. Small Clothes Dryer Big ~it at Christmas Holiday gift gi ving can be a ·joy when the"present really pleases. And often it's the Slll8ller gift that makes Oie blQi!sl bit. SO when its time to shop . thls year tllink small -coo- Sider a compact automatic clothes dryer; venierit laundi'y center. Sears, RoebJck and Co., for example, offers a 24--inch-wide Portable electric dryer th3t\. so small and mobile it. can· be rojled right into a closet or almost an)' other-niche. But though it's small outside, it has a six- -pound-capacity;- If you think you can trust with half a · styrofoam ball. yow'selfer can, easil)!i, add a " SOUJH COAST ' PLAZA COSTA MESA •ht91fla'DJet• Fwy. SHARING A gift is a sharing of yourself with someone else. To emphasize ~quality or shar- ing, a gift should remind the recipient of your relationship with him or her. Home at Your house Is on display more than ever during the holiday season, so be sun it glows from floor to ceiling with the holiday spirit. Resilient floor tile can servt! as the ideal stage for pre- season preparations and ensu· ing event!. A new Fashion- craft tile line lntroduced this year by GAF Corporation combines sophisticated styling with the efficien t maintenance and economics demanded by decontor and budget-minded homemakers. This series tile comes in a range of designs in keeping with today's trend toward en- vironmental decors -rooms that interplay wood, wicker. brick aod stone with Dowers and plants. A brick tile design so grouted and textured it could fool a brickUlyer or a slate.design that.'cOuld make a quarry worker look twice are just two of the deeply em- bossed, thick tile patterrui available to home improvers. Each tile, whether 12" or 9'' square, is indexed so aeams disappear. The noor design moves oontinoously acn>SB tht room -the eye ootices onJy the rich character of the pa t· tern itself. Tbis floor tile thus creates v.•all-to-wall beauty. Indeed, the floor may be regarded as a "foorth wall," as it is jusl about that easy to cart for. Mud or snow tracked ln throughout the hec tic' holidays wi ll wipe clean with a damp sponge. To bri~ out the rich, subtle patina in the floor tile, t. h e manufacturer recom- mends only dry )Xlffing after complete mopping to enhance Fashioncrafl 's style an d design. · FREE PATTERN Yo1r di~ of •Y 51Mplklty McColl's °' l llttMWkt ,....... Wltlt tliis ocl 0114 • SS.00 ..... pore-.•. ~~Y 0~"·9j e Of'll IAllY <U.. "Um .,,.,,,,.. SHOP . U.JW:QY 9.JO "Ill•""' IHO (Mft AYO. (Ill u..c.hl) ..... , MOOMfOSPt& IUIHA Pill • na.a20 'l1lousaDds of A m e r I c a n homemakers who live in apartments, , mobile homes or small houses where space is at a lJremlum know what a beneftt compact appliances cu be -especially lauadry No special~wlring is requir- ed. Just plug the dryer into a regular outlet, select the cor- rect drying cycle and press the push-lo-!tllrt timer. IESELH TOSHIA \ . -~ OPEN S.UN. 12·5 P.M.-DAIL Y I 0·9 · P.M. ·~!•Dees. ' With compacts .. even the mvallest !lorne can have a con. Choose the hea\ed cycle for regular and permaOe.nt ptess fabrics....os. the unJlealed ~e for 'flulfmg linerul, drying plastic and refreshing woolens. In many tnstanceS it may not be necesaary to vent this Miltlttoe can be used'" for dryer either.· But an exhaust thinis other than a romantic deflector and a Window ven- ei:cuse. The 'mantel of ·the ting kit ate available for use 1 ftreplace or center of a during hot, humid weather. i ~ ~aft ._ideal .... 'Use the dryer as a portable ... , lJSE MISTLETOE f ....... thii b'MI ijecora· ... roll'About, attach it',td a nil :fat tion. '' · \ir mount it oh a special stiet· ; ing ract. An internal, lint 1 • ' . r screen and a side-opening door FRESHENER wilh a safety switch that stops After a holiday party, tumbling.action when the door fresberi. your h o m e in-is opened are two more expensively by put~ing one fcatuns that make this gift teaspoon of ammorua In a rate big. larg~ ~wl of. ~ater and leav· Pair up the dryer -in ~g Jt m t,lte livmg ~m over-white, avocado, coppertone or rught. ~ is especially g~ tawny gold -with a cotor- for dispelling the odor of c1g-coordinated Kerunore .compact arette smoke. agitatar-type washer. • l STROBE • mam1ya 500 DTL CAMERA with f2;0 LENS • Dual lln tM loq Jiiter• • OM ftJ "s,.l"fOie fw "Avt11p" • U11lvets.tl llMM llllllt for c..,1e11 LA111 • l11lefClwl .. 1lllllt1 • Ditter S,0.11 1 Soc le J150t Sff Pl11 I 124!!CE 199 .95 \MAW4Y !!Mlltr ' The· Four-Chlnnol Champ SANSUI Qlt 1500 An "&.tvfhi119" roctl'fer for •11""4v'• e11j0Yft1ent. lt'1 111 AM/FM 2-C~•nnel/4-Ch•rin•I Recei••r-Docod•r• Sv11- . the•ii.,.,Amplifier-Con~l-C.iiter. It 1;:111 decode 111y comp1tibly rn1tri•e4.4-ch1n1I recording or broedcest ttld 1t1vffie1ile two em.t r11r chtnnels from 111v q11'fH'°Non1I 2-ch1n11•! 1t.reo PMordi119, ttpe, bro1dce1t w •th•t 1ourc1. It c111 hertdlo 1ny di1cr1t1 4-clwinHI t•pe'j whotjri1r c1rtrldg1 or ope-reel, 1rtd h•• control. f"'" e¥Ory •fi.nc . tion. 100 wettt of tot1I IH~ mrnic power with let1 tf1111 O.I % • tot•I h•tmo,Plc or IM di1tortio11. V(1lnvt c•bi"•t lnclitd«I. • • > \MAW4Yllllt (eumig· •ARK 5001 MOVIE PROJECTOR • VAIUO EU PRON ET rt.s. 17-30.111 Zoom Len• • IV SOW Elll p1old Rlflljlttf llullil • Full)' A11tom1tlc Thrt1dln1 S9' • s,.~11111111 Fllin TransPorl 6 • 400 ft. R•I Capac II)' • 11 fps. '°"'•d • Slow llollon • fHI _,,. REG PRICE • $111&1• ~oftlr!I Klld ,._ 99 .95 ' $29995 . . . • • • • JWWE(IJ MANUAL .. TURNTlBlE \ . . . ~ $119'5· • Automatic E1pot1W• Conttol wi th lbn111! Override . ""''""" '""'"' 7681 • Auto Filth Control \,MAVift . • tar IEG PllC£ 94.97 111680 ·SLIDE PROJECT Vivitar AUTOMATIC LENSES 14-SYSJEM 2&MM F2.& 13SMM F2.8 5595 ttlGPRIC 74.95 39 95 R!G PRICE . 54.95 6095 ..... IC!• 14.95 JOOMM FS.S 6995 ~;."ft!c . 90-230 ZOOM 99 95 ~::,~ c:reAICS CASSETTE RECORDER • ' 'rl~All Y P1LOT Chr1SlmH S._c_tl~on~ ___ T_h_u_ro_d_•~Y·~O._c_o_m_bo~-7~, _19_7_2 'Action' Promis ed For Tykes Toddlers, infants and pre- schoolers will get more of the action in toyland 1972, ac· cording to an expert in toy trends. Designers ha ve given ~major emphasis to scaling down school age· favorltes to t the capabilities of younger ldml, cueing in with the re- cent massive research on ear- ly childhood. Children, not long out of diapers, will be ex po se d through toys to the need for preserving the natural en- virorunent. Smokey Bear's fire fighting role is supported by a fleet of special trucks driven by forest raliger persoonel designed by Tonka . Knickerbocker is helping to save the trees with picture books and contingent of talk· ing stuffed Smokeys. Even toyland's stereo area moves in on environmenlal concerns with Screen-A-Show slides by J.(ennet starring "Tom and ;Jeny Discover F.cology". New ways to help blby learn to talk, touch, see and hear ·An! !eatured by Dr. Burton 'i:· SNOOPY POWER • White, director of the Harvard Pre-School Project. Touch--N- Teacb, one of the additions to his Playtenttals series, ex· poses babies from e i g h t months up to a variety of words and grammatical pat- terns. As a child presses a big push button, he simultaneously hears words and phrases and sees p i c t u r e s illustrating them. Touch-A-Tone Introduces baby to interaction of sound and color patterns when be touches a big button with even the lightest pressure. Al\ lY'I ClfTJ .. rall tatiery Wlf- n1ti11. Crt.Uell Urrict n1t/1M1 1t sll1tit 11tr1 cesl &II ctltt lYs CarrJ J Jf. ,le.tan tlM w1n11t7 l11kr 1u:l1..,.. • .. .. ... . . - ~~~~~~~~:rf~ NO MONTHLY PAYMENTS 11L SSP Pee Wees designed by Kenner for operators as young as two and one hrilf. Olassis are molded by small fingers fo grasp easily, and so Is the Power T Stick that sets off the gyro power. Neither batteries nor tracks are needed. Play with trucks, with whimsical little wheel toy.!! in- corporating 'pears. melons. pumpkins, c e I e r y and tomatoes w l t h traditional truck features, is made safe .irld intriguing even for babies r as young as six months. Kitchen Pl•Y gives the very youngest cook! a jo,ful assist with models designed for molding make-believe turkeys, Clsh, bread and cakes with Play-Doh. Gomoblles provide a range of autorr.oUve parts to give realism to auto body shapes molded from Play-Doh. Wonder lncorporates the classic baby walker which can be converted into a rocking horse when the baby Is ready. The Oki Woman's Shoe, a pro- duct of Clllld Guidance, ap- pears as a slide \vith a fun tunnel and a climbing gym In back. - A standout exam~le of broadening ~nger children's experience Is the Snoopy Tootbbn.tlh. OperaUng on bat.- teries, it ii the first of this type of toothbrush scaled down for small mouths. The toothbrush Is housed i n Snoopy'• dog house. The Juke Box, a to}J favorite with lcbool goers, has a new ver1Jon to enthr all preecboole:rt and a c t I v a t e their tnterest In reading. storyt.Jme Juke Box plays fav.ortte taltl. as they come alive for listening children blrl Ibo paga or • ool- ilrf!ltl pldure book l:eyed to the narrailve. Motor cycle styling bas pro- lllerated with lll'>"ty models such • tllo lady IOO by AMF. For .. M"I .young riders 111ere a111 """' r.muy lhapeo ., • lady bug with J>Od•la by i'tlel and I l'l)'ina Turtle with an ovenlled tr!\'.e ,..1 by Pl&.)'skoM. IM ,E 111 Al-NOR (t1tr DIE 1111 W!SllMP~ Wt\I 11 Hll~Of wy, lONG ~IA<H c.11E11 an:. 11 DCl lMO tOS ANGIUS . TORRANCE .YOWNIY J[ffEISDN llVD. AJ HAYSEI TOll•HC[ llfl. W0001'11ff ar IM,(lltAl l etwt1n l1 lr11 l LI Cl•~••• Al HAWlNDINE WEST or SAN, ••• rwY. YAUIYWHT YAUIY UST ANANllM !CANO;& P.Ul) ClflOU lYl Al IOSCll (PACOIMI) Lf~11ll CUYOll 1 AT os 0•11r WIOl AMO WIUUN WAY SO, OF OfSN(YU.Nt I • DISC • RCA 18'' COlOR PORTABLE OR · ZENITH BIG SCREEN CHROMACOLOR ( your!!li choicf!· EA. RCA has computer crafted tlis.)8" deluxe coloc portable to assure you the finest color picture with reliable service you wnu1d expect from· a console costing 1ar more. One set VHF tuner for continuous fine tuned reception. Trim line cabinet with built-in antennas and carrying handle. ZENITH introduces new super chromacolor on this 'big screen color portable. High perlmmance features coopled with outstanding operating dependability and long life make this portable a great buy. Enjoy Shafll, b!azlng color in any room in your muse. Deluxe two-tone cabinet with top carry hand le. IAVf ... mm m.ID STATE ITBIBI WITI AM/FM Al1 TAPE Pl.AYR s Ultra Modem styling in tllree piece pedestal base. "The Luna" packs 6-0W of solid state '""' power. No need to sllop around for separate slereo """"°""ts .. ; Zenitll has pat them 111 toge11er to rive top list01iog performana!. ~ . . J ~sr+H~~ PHILC8·18.4 W: •EROST llRllEIATll-fllffJtl WARRANTY Oil MOST MAJOR APPLIANCES Us•• 1141r 11r1111I tit1s1•11• c11llitlt1L [Jf11sJ111f •a11t1itlrltl"J wa"••tr· AllMIUL 1--CUSTOM .UX'FB&M/R&RIGERAT• ' I I•'( now and 1avt s A<Hdmtifii httZl!f/ftlriger-*'· Euy teefll "'*' llee!· • llld "8(!cus lower treel«. 11.2 ei. ft. of 1t!ri1er1tar II«& Tiie WU:'nlle ill Stofalt tffie., 11111 '"lit)" ~ ,,.. ... . ' COVINA ONTARIO AUO l\VAILAILI Af O"I T'f' I ... ,,UANCf M.tlft 1151 r.· Al USA art IJll NOllTH MOUNTAIN AVE. ltlw1t1 ••. & Ar1•w ll..i. II !TH OfffWl. <OS.A SANIHNAR 0 30U lllSTOt. Avt. '" OIAMCl SllOW IOAO I 1£1W£llf FWT. I HM Cl Sf. JUST OFF nn. ' • G~lNIAll • TIMPlt CITY • WNITiU ll: \1411111.IMl!ltl'll Q1t llllMUl It fl, , .. u .. n 1u1 .. Tll ....... ,' 111""'"1t•1n . Lfll.lllllll'TlfflS •$fVDIO(lfT • WllTCMUtll • \01 AllGllll 11111 Wllllti II.ft. Hff S..J.fl'IU\Nll'fa JIN 'Ill. l•ff llfl. "'''"" ttl!lftl ..,._ 1t•1•1u .. us .. MlttlHIMg . ' , . , Poster Cdf'd · ' 4fere's a ..-idea ih Christmas card's. This Qirlstmas card is a0o tualJy. a poster fqlded <for maijing. wt.th a greetlp&, printed.on the rever,.; side. The se- · rles, 1from Hallmark, ofiel'!f a choice ofi four designs. ,• " :.· Don)t Let Glamour Go Gloomy All that holiday partying! YO\! _!!liss a lltUe sl~p he_~, eB;.t some extra goodies there . Yoo. remember." It hap~. every year; then comes the morning you look at your face, aod (sob) .the rest of tile holidays loom unprettily. No reason to let your glamor go · gloomy this year. Your face should r~ect a glowing -Christmas"spirit,but it -can't if· Your own spirit is out of sorts. All because of a few, btlt Cun, ~ llldulgeoces. ladulge, by all means. But this· y~ vow to be a.war~ of I' tblap W<e hOw !ale, it ii ... ' how mUch you've eaten ••• how little time )'W've' 'talO.i for skin care. iw.'I ...... hollliaY ·lestiYe-" ~9' . ...rllll'"'Jiii.-do 10< :ioorseII ea.i!Y a n d ln- complCUOWlly \ao they'll .all · .. -~~·do.all )'CltcR> aod if loot Iii good!)' ' DIL • 11te and skin ..., , Jieii&li. IOOd: diet ii '!!le rclinlliilliiii oii-Wlllcb' to l\IJ!ld, YOU"' alrea know ·iibou\ ' -" ell....!' iincf fnlita ~a-Y ,. ariddisb (all freah;when possi- ble). But also try drinking at least three glasses _of water a day. (Hot water is even bet- ter.) Proper skin cleaDSlng. It's one of the cardinal rules foe bOauUM young-looking skin. Clean skin -really clean skin -comes already wrapped in a neat. compact pa~e called the Skin Machine. It's a new idea, an automatic cleansin brush from Clairol, the beauty people. It's gol 24,000 soft, tiny !I' brisUes which genUy rotate to chase awa~aml ex~~~ oils, and sUmulate \ your skin "'1o·a-pretty ·glow-a!'the-<ame time. A skin machine is a great idea for teens, too, who ha~ , their own special complexion problems. It's neat and com- pact (battery-powered) so it's a grut Uttle stocklbg·stufler. l'mll air: get plenty of it 6 because U maintainS skin tone. . saeeJ 1911 rest. Relu for a 1' periochach day with your feet , higher'\than yoor bead. A slant ' board ii great but a pile of pilkiw• will do,' Be 'bajipy. Tension Is the r ci1U9e of many of our skin's ' upsets. Often all you have to ., say kl y~self is "Slow • dQwn!1' ; [ Procteuon against t h e Weather. Too much sun and , too U~isturt team up to " ~ Use lots of , age · . moistUr.ila', everrw!""· . Canlld ..,_,., Select ob.es ~ to your skin and !is·. special neecls.-Most la~es are 8 combination of dry, oily • li1ICI normal and each pert should be treated separately. Use loQie, translu,cent po°'der; pressed ~er tenda lo. clog gores.' J '' ' I 1o-· ' I Centerpiece I ~ " 1 l Gre;c ·Gift · ptOitalning ls a)~ays In ~rillll a;;t.l,,... time, and ' ftonsts 11111est a centerpiece arrangelrient of bohy or pine combined with rooes for the hosteas on your ·gill list. In the cloys of the dhll<il, boUy "81 ' believed IA> ward aplnot evil aplrltl In tile home. A Swedilb feiend of tile Christmas TOie tells of trees and flowers - bunting lnlA> bloom o n Cbrlsi.ntis Eve to create a )\fagle derden. When a doubt· Ing mooi said the garden ,. .. Sa"'o's work, the blosaotns laded. Only tiie Christmas rose rema1nod as the 1Yfnb01 of the season. ' Thur1d1y, December 7, 1972 DAILY PILOT Chri1tm11 S.ctlon-17 r ' ,. HOlllAY STORE HOURS: DAILY &·SAT. 10AMto10 PM ·· SUNDAY 10 AM to 7 PM l ' . ' l . \' - \ LIGHT, •EN-WEAVE . · CASEMENT. DRAPBllES C•ICE OF 5 coLOa REGULAA 8.99 88 50''x54'' Contemporary styled draperies, ~in an interest~g woven- knit'-n/rayon/acetate/polyeslerblendc let your wi'~--~ · dows-see things in a new light Quali~ tailoring includes blind-stitched 1112-in. side hems, 3 ' bottom .hem. In natural, olive, tangerine, sauterne, gold. Rec. 10.9UD"•84" ........................... 9.88 DISCOUNT SAVE 83 ••.• ' -Novfm-BOX~BIFJ-SHt - DESIGNS FOR KITCHEN, BATH !Ii • ·!· AND • Reg. $5 & $6. Special savings on this attractiye selection of boxed gift sets, very gifty yet so practical, each beauJ}- fully packaged and readY:to-give. Many to choose fro~, we've shown just a few. . . - Hot Stull. Includes a wooden trivet with cerami c tile insert plus a oig. matching potholder. · Farmers Market, Four herringbone weave cotton towels, colorfully patterned for a cheery kitchen accent Bath Boutique, His & Hers bathroom tumblers with two attractively pat• terned guest towels:-- 1 ~--'> l --~-. TBIRIFIC VAlUf I ACRRIC Bl.ANKHS IN FLORAL PRINtS REGULAR 5.99 s Dreamy, soft acrylic blankets promise allergy-free sleeping comfort and light, just-right warmth. 72"x90'' size fits twin or full beds. Choice of pretty floral patterns on white. ~~MF.ft~$~~ .AN ENTBITAINlrt; IDfA AT BIG SAVINGS ' FOR THE iUDAYS ••• 1'8-PC. PAllY :-RIGHT PINCH BllWL •BP ' ' . '99 SAVE ON DRUG · ITEMS AT WHITE FRONT STDCIUPISAVE ON THOE EVBIYDAY FAMILY DRUC NEEDS c SALE " • -v ' . ' . • la-DAILY PILOT Chrl1tma1 S«tlon Thu"d1y, 0.comb., 7, 1_972 -"---"-'-"-"'--'-"'-'--'-----''--=-"--'-~~~~~ Hang Popcorn Ball Wreath on Door • PIPE LOVER'S DREAM PIPES from $12.50 IP Carved Meerschamll Pipes .•.. $30.00 •P No Gllir9 ••• No Squfnt. Up to 5 tin. ti• ll;ht of OCWJrMntDntl llmps. fvtly Adlumble ••• Aw!-i" ch>ko of diwiltOr mktn combH91 ... h --- • ELIMINATES MESSY POTS AND PANS ' . MAKES MEAL PLAN NIN& A SNAP • COOKS COOL WITH NO MASSIVE HEAT BUILD-UP • • EXCLUSIVE 5 YEAR WARRANTY MICROWAVE OVEN _...,.,,A BF•. A gift from Aman a Lof ily lr1m1n Cryst1I. Hl~blown crydal pitcher 1ttd 6 h11~ b11.G 9l111n p11'101111ixed with yo11r i11itial etch-41 011 the pitcher I 9lette• YOURS FREE WHEN YOU IUY A RAOAll.ANEPE I • acte·.wtnv. ,.,... _...,.Door • Potllfw Lock pt., ......... .. OpW'don with door (l9en • 15 mlnuteT1''* Control • Ugfil ariteh • • Exch11lw Rildm ... __ ..., MODELRR-4 e PuU down S.-Thnl Doof • AutomeUc El9Ctronlc Lock lock& unH 90 door can't be opened wU:hout .c.opplng the op9ratlon e 5-mlnute Timer Control e 30-tnlrMa ThMr Control • stort- • Stopwwltcti e Uoht switch e Ofl/On buznr ..ttc:ti e Exck.tlhoe Radennge ---................................ Am ••·RADfRAHG~ MICROWAVE OVEH FM!~YEAR WARRANTY . .,._. W•••• I,_. from dale of or1oinll purd'I .... tor home u• onfr, ln U.S .. All)I~ or f91*r of pwtl found deJectlw u lo workmen.tilr, or m.tertal Under nomMll u ... This lndudee labor r~red tor res>'ac•ment of de ectlve part&. Oefecttv. P"" .,. to b9 rwtumld through AnlMl'a dlJ*-chlritMltor oro-nlution. • OWMrisr11p1•1a11 for~ .. trntl c:tiera.e.k:IClll Clftllge. tight bulb .. and normaJ malnlMMCe (cleening of the fllt«, deliino Of ~ cmty). Airy Pf'Oduct. eubj9Cted to •cctdent, mlw (Ol*ltlon wMn own II .aptv, op.med wtth mettl utenllla In th• oven, CIY9f'<l00Jdng, u1111 of mttllllc fol~ or cllaftel wtth metdlc con-- tent}, negllQence, •tMI•, def8Cllnent of .. ,. .. pl ... or llteratk>n lhen ¥CHd .. warrenty. It th• •rvloe ...t II broken &Jr other than an authorlzlld Amana _...., the warr1nty 11 VOid. In c.wtd .. tile wat'l'ltrtY 8PPflll • above exoept that H doel not oovitf' tmte. dul-. aaaeumenll Je¥ttd. .. time of pct export. AllAllA Rl!PRKIEllATlON, INC., AllANA, IOWA • . , stops. Sall to taste. double recipe. Makea Z quar'.a. Home Pictures Perfect Gjfr CHESS sm OGARS SMOKERS ACaSSORIES LIGHTERS, HOLDERS, etc. JTamvencc flPeailiiew ·• -..tkard ~~"'" . . ' ' #S TOwn and Couf\tf'Y' Oranee 542-1752 the action it0rtable- WMr.v•r th. ectio11 11, So11y'1 PSI/ FM/AM porteble wltl fh1cl lt. n, pub. llc 1•rvict bend picks up 1tetio111 thet let you heer police com1111111icatio1111 fir• e119ln•• 011 c•ll, h•rbor 11•w1, mlli- t•rv 1114 9over11111e11t 11etwork1, conth'I• 110111 w11t+.1r report1, ind loi1 mor•. And you c•n 1110 rel1 .. to it1 l.e111fi· ful FM or AM 1ound1. T1'1f'11th t'm•ll .~ li9htwei9ht, If he1 • powetf11I 1.5 W lmaLI 011!p11t, lar91 4" 1paaker. SONY® • -r. the pilot's portable The Sony TFM·1600W i1 1 4 bin~ pcM'· t1bl1 witlo. r11I 1ir pow•t, it t\111•• i11 Air, l11co", FM end AM b1n .. 1. It tun11 i11 tft1 mo1t wicl1ly ut1d civil d1f1, 111rch 11td r11c.u1 1t1tlo11t, 9lid. 1r piloh, etc. Solld 1t1t1 circuitry. SONY® . -- .- \ - • DAILY PILOT Chrlotm11 Section-If Christmases Past Were Lengthy Things ChtlJlnw !tuts Involving nwdl pomp and clrcurnltance dale -to ancient tlm<t. <Ja medieval &gland, for ln- l&IDCI:, QuUtmu f e a 1 t 1 J.,...s -ral da)'ll and were ~ Jubilant aflaln. ~ 1.-began wilh the cft'einonlal entr~ pf the lumterl, musicians, and Ute muter cook, the latter car-rilnc Ibo head bl I boar OD I sllnr platter. A lemon, tbe None l)IDlbol bl plenty, was ~ In lhe boor's moulh and -of l\l!IODW'Y, aod _. 'lllCir<led Ibo . .......,. New Raggedys bead. slaughtering, force an En&lilh In America, bringing In a waluut down Its throat there boar's bead did not catch on. times a day, and a gI.us of lnltead, the turkey soon sherry once a day. The meat became a lavorite aod almost will be delicioully teOOer aod aymbollc 01rlstmu dish. have a fine nutty navor. "H~'s a recipe from the Mince pie also dates back to 1~ centurr that reveals the _.ancient days. some of the tencter lovmg care our an-• recipes for it stretched the lm- ceaton afforded turkeys being aginatlon too P~ for the holi~ay One fro1m 1394 instructs: "A 54;'800, says Sally ,Hopkins, pbeasast, a capon, t w o holiday c o n s u I t a n t or partridges, two pigeons, and Hallmark Cards. . two rabbits. Separate meat "C(l9p up turkey some Ume fronrboo.es and chop into fine before Christmas and feed' ru...11. Add lhe liven and well. Three da)'ll b e hearts of these animals, plus Ml.niatures, marionettes flDd bean bags are among the new sizes and shapes in which youngsters will find their old -1riends, Raggedy Ann and Andy, this Cbrlstnw. Puppets have easy-to-use pistOJ grip bandies. .. ' ' ~, • two kidneys of sheep. Add lit· tie meat balls of beef with e&&L Add pickled mushrooms, salt. pepper, vinegar and varloua spices aod pour 11 Into the brolh In wblcb U.. bonea were cooked." The c o o k subsequenUy shaped the pies in replica of Christ's manager and placed a :small figure or Jesus on top. clent Roman Empire where it was the custom to give gaily wrapped confections to Roman senators as part of the New Year celebrations. This was accepted while Catholicism r e i g n e d in Enaland. However, when the Puritans pre vai l e d , con- troversy raged. During the early years of cfirlsJianity, cookies baked at YuleOde conlalned a mixture or many spices. It was believ- ed that these spices were sym- bolic of the offerings brought to lhe Infant Jesus by the \Vise 1'1en. It became a tradi- tion throughout the world and homemakers developed . their~ .. ..:::::..J.~;/i;:~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!'ii;l own special recipes using their L M Y. U&C!" particular native spices and ENGLISH GREETING CARD OF 1890'5 SHOWS YULE CEREMON We owe the origin or Christmas cookies to the an-ingredients. · Sant• Cl•u1 Rides Log Pulled Br GeeM Preceded By R•bbit1 $ KING SIZE • •• the complete set ... Ortho-Pa Get more for .,0. money thll Christmas with a massive Ortho king -a full ~ft. wide by 7-ft. long. Packed with quallty feJtures like Scroll-Quitted cOYer, Tempered-Steel innerspring & Cotton Felt filling !Of" added cushloning •. Ortho'• Crown-Flex center glwts extra support to back & hips. And '#hen you buy any Ortho mattr9S8 ••• you get eYef"Ythlng you needfOf great Sleeping: Matt""s PLUS 2 Box Springs PLUS the original Ortho-Pak & Ortho's king-size Double Bonus! M•ke your Chtiattnaa . bfightef, wtlh this 9f'lllll Or!ho king. Wilh luxury .fil'il: ~entllat9d I Reinlorced bordiq. You oet Maltf9SI. 2 Box Springa, Ottho-Pak & Double Bonual ' FIPkscrest No-Iron King or Queen size Top Sheet .. Fieldcrest No-Iron King or Queen size Filled Bottom Sheet • 2 Fieldcrest No-Iron Klrig or Queen size Pillowcases• 2Kingor0ueensize Bolsler Pillows• King or Queen size Mattress Pad •King or Queen size Metal FraQ'le on Easy.Roll casters. Double Bonus King or QUHn: Padded Vinyl Headboard AND Quilted Bedspread. Twin or Fall: Headboard AND Metal Frame on Easy-Roll Casters. Rand lhd: FUll·fashloned Top Sheet ANO Fitted Bottom Sheet: 'TW.fN OR FULL .... S64 t,1u11:7i:!~:~:1 QUEEN-SIZE ••• •196 S17 5 QUEEN-SIZE ••• QUEEN-SIZE ••• S157 With Malt,.... Boll $9flnf,OfttlH'ali l OoYbfil ~ With Mart-. Boll Spring,~ & Dl;dile eonu.r With Mettren, Bo~ Sprin;~k l Dolltile Bonutl TWIN OR FULL • • • s77 TWIN OR FULL • • • S85 TWIN OR FULL •• '. $96 You can · only buy Ortho Products at Ortho Stores. a=== '-.'.HI! NATION'S.LAROl!ST CHAIN ·ORANGE SANTA ANA and 2-445 N. Tustin Ave. (1•r••• froM 01111111 Milli ... o ... 617-01511 FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 H1rbor8lvd. teeJMr of M'"'"1 N1.t te 2Hv'• 1't191181 ...... ,,. • • The Capri IN SCOTCHGARD" PRINT Cornpftlte wllh 2 M1ttresaea, 2 &ox SprlnOS. 2 Fllted Oullled Cov8rlel1, 2 cur.fld.. top Bol1fflr1 and a 't'8rsame Comer Tabl• !ft 8 dlllarent ""lahet. .. U~ 01" MATTRli!SS SPECIALISTS ANAHEIM 1811 West Lincoln Ave. l1tw1111 E11clid •nd lroolfi'urtt /\.,!t-•11•• • J11tf ''''of Nd M1rt • • "'•"'' ,,,.,,,0 LAKEWOOD SO Stores to Serve You -4433 Cen'dlewood Ave. C•ndlewood Shop1 I 1cro1...-fr1111 L1k1wo.4 C111t1r J ,...,.,, •11·4I14 1. • " ,, 'i ., l • • - -. .. ~AILY PILOT ChrlllmH S.Ctl°" Thursd1y, O...mbor 7, 1972 Chicago ~ • Fairy Reverenc e Inspires Castle 1n -among the tiny boo~. -~~~~_;:__~:::_~_:_~~~~~·..:·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-. bandwri'tteo for t.he collection by such authors as AIOOus J-luxley, Daphne du Maur ier, • I Adela RQgerr St. Johns, and John Steinbeck -ls one by F. Scott Fitzgerafd, w h o s e "real·life" books Wt:re t h e ' hallmark or the era. The author must have felt a kinship with the actress, whose sfarrin& role in "Flam- ing Youth" became the modeJ for a generation of flappers. Fitzgerald inscribed his book for the castle with these words : "f was the spark that lit up Flaming Youth, Colleen A!oore was the torch. Whal lit- tle things We are to have caus-- ed all that trouble." GREAT HALL OF FAIRY CASTLE ORE"SSEO FOR CHRISTMAS The casue. which stands seven feet tall and occupies about nine square feet. of space. cost more than $500,000 to build_JJ._was-U...)lralnchlld of eon~·s father, whO con- ceived the doll house~'a!; a home for Colleed s collection CHILDREN VIEW· COLLEEN MOORE'S CASTLE Danes, Finns Assemble To Decorate for Yule CHICAGO (AP) -Down the Of miniature furniture. He had stairs from the coAl mine, just another purpose in mind when around the comer from the he suggested they build the nuclear laboratory, is the ca.s-castle; to take Colleen's mind off pre ~·reality al \l>O tie where the fairies nve. failU('e of her first1 marriage to You don't have to be a fairy prodµcer John McOqrm.ick. tale buff or even believe in In her bopk about the doll Santa Claus. Yet there's house, Colleen writes of how magic in the miniature perfec-. everyone inVolved in the proj-, ect became enchanled w rr;h lion of Colleen Moote's Fairy "Colleen's Folly." Colleen and Castle, improbably located in the castle's designers spent Chicago's Museum-of Science'! much of their ti_me dreall}ing and Industry. up furnishings "real people" .# wouldn't have. "Real people" Pi-fore than a million children wouldn't have a floor of rose see the castle every year, and quartz bcrdered in j.ilde, so the magic is in their faces. that's what the fairies have in Otlldren are usually a rF-their drawing room. bunctious lot in a museum, but "Perhaps only in that place a child viewing the 'fairy casUe and time -Hollywood in the s~udies it with a gaze tinged twenties -could such ·a fan- w11A reverence. tasy · .have been achieved," Doubtless the children are wrote Colleen-.:.::. OOw Mrs. looking for the fairies who Homer Hargrave, widow of must live there. After all, the Chicago businessman. In where else would a fairy live, an interview from her but in a castle where the California h o m e , Mrs. princess sleeps on Sleeping Hargrave said she sees no Beauty's bed, and rock-a-bye-lack of fantasy -"reverse baby'O cr'adle sways in a fantasy" -in the 1970s. The himmelli is usually treetop of the Magic Garden? Movies like Stanley Kubrick's suspended over the dining The castle abounds with fairy "CIQ!:kwork . Orange," she lore, from upstairs in the cave said,~ shoW,-the prevalence of room table. Made oC reeM, of Ali Baba to. King Arthur's "sick fantasT' today. these geometric shapes pro-Roond Table in the dining "The fantasy that I knew in bably symbolize the stable room. the early days of the movies Buy . Now ·While Selections. Are Up -Prlcei Are Downl ~ " ' . -.. J(innft. Spinignpl.-Sdt fun foi' all 09ff. Ar'l';Olle can draw b.eutiW deflgfls im- medlo,.1y0 J 9.S GIANT-TINKERTOY kif' glonf imoglnaliona. aWld o room,. t reet lifnizt IC"""""" COMtn.ld o ...... Molded In bright coior., soft ond 1twdy f0t: dreom- en of al 1119"- -2 LOCATIONS·-.·;.....,~....,.--___..~ , ,....., n. ,., ..... ...._ , ....... c..r. c.-.... llJ L 1M St •• c.... ..... I ' &41·1454-t .. t 4191ty, S.., 11 to S Ml•JOJJ-·11 Hit....,, ....,.tl.te I I COft Wi anything •'f'O" con 1ay fuatOl _.. __ .. tw'll repeat -rythl11g l;o11t.ll lfle. I om ,, .. taf, too! ·14•9 ·' • DAREPUNE· STUNTER · Climb, drte twoop i~ or ollf. Pilot the plane yo1.1raetf. No bott9rie1 needed. only Hl-DeTFlE ·• W1M toLthniugh-her-~ to you on youn. S~ con toy 11 different thingt. 911 MOHOPOl.Y .,. ... r1c., -Become,o·M ·tyc.oofil buying and Mf1ing r.ol ettvtie in thi•~ fomOu.~ a•• e 911 ' • M aking C hri s tmas ornaments starts early for the Finns with a joyous celebra- tion the !sat Sunday in Novern. her. On that afternoon, called "Llttle Christmas," everyone from toddlers to graybeards helps carve, paint,. glue, and assemble festive trimmings of reed, straw, wood, and paper. The rei:ults mirror their innate lkill•and good lasle. where Christ was born. Some For skeptics the magic is in was a fantasy that had poetry are covered with straw and seeing how much of Colleen and beauty," she s aid . hung with paper stars to sug-Moore -Colleen Moore, the "Building the castle was the gest the night sky. The merry original cinema "Rapper" of greatest fun because we coulU straw figures tied witb bright the fantasy-filled 1920s -is in all 1tretch our minds to the string or cord, have wood . lhe doll house. Many of the fullest. When we took trips of ~ads f.or heads. A jolly elf castle's fixtures were made fahtasy buildhlk the doll resembling Santa Claus is from Colleen's jewelry. The house, we toot fbem without made of paper; two wood chandelier in ibe \drawing benefit of UD, but only our . . Give Birds Tree Treats Berries are a treat for maOy birds. Bunch sprigs of berries into clusters and tie them on the tree with red waterproof ribbons. Bright red holly or dopood berries, pewter gray bayberry, brilliant o r a n g e mountain ash, slate blue juniper or dark red sumac can be used. To give the birds a real holiday treat, Ue on tiny bunches of &.sh grapes. disks are glued togetAer for room is hung with rubies, chocolate BOdas'! "· ' his head. emeralds and diamonds which Mrs. Hargrave said she The Danes excel et simple once adorned the neck of the thinkS fairy tales help develop but effective ornaments. Balsa famous film star, and the imagination and creativity in wood silhouettes depict birds, chairs In the pr Ince s s • s children. "I'm quite sure that stars, and children. These bedroomdress clips'!'.". e made from her the great designers o f ornaments are cut out in automobiles and machinery every imaginable outline _ Such decorations, like the had wonderful fantasies when animals, fruit, religious sym-castle's fairy-tale motif, are they were little," she said. boh _ then painted in bright timeless; but elsewhere in the So a museum dedicated to hues and stored for that castle are features which bear the rational pursuits. of science wonderful moment when it's the unmistakable imprint of and industry is a perfectly time to trim the tree. A the Roaring Twenties. logical borne for the castle mobile can be a collection of l--:;;l~n:;;the~U;;br;:;:a;;ry;;,;;f~or~e~xa~m;;pl;;e;:;:w~bere;;;;;;;:the;;;f;;81M;;· ;;· es;;;;li;;" v;;•;· ;;;;;;;;;:- notched cardboard circles in l contrasting colors. ~ FRANCIS-· New, low-priced Canon SLR camera accepts full Canon FD lens system deve loped for famous Canon F-1 • AtCIPll ALL CllllOn fO 1nd ~L Len1H • Tll<u·lhl"'l.1n1 Ctnler. ~ORRJ FINE STATIONEiiY Christmas C•rds Gift Wr•ppinj 'M•teri•ls e G•mes Picture Frames • Book Ends Photo Albums e P•perweights l..ther & Limofl' Desk Accessories Cross, P•rker & Sheaffer Writing Pens Custom Engr•ving •nd Printing Jm E. COAST H.-HWAT 675-1010 Cot.ONA DIL M.U -CONVENIENT PARKING ' Wtlgh!1d Mt11r Ro1d11'1gl • Wldt·Open or Slopp.0-down 111rr.r-111 .. L1ns M1\frl1>9 • Shun11 1p.ed1 from 11500 to 1 S.cond • At!lex VltwlnO wllh Mlcroprl1111 f OC\11lng • CC<nplt!I wllt! FO 511mm Il l.I Ltn1 Only $19995· .,_ ·------- ca11on"W..:n ASK TO SIEE A DEMONSTRATION OF Tl9 ULTIMATE SLR CAMERA SYSTEM "'c.n<in Cani•rts Sold encl StrYic1d In tllt Unli.d Sttlll!S tnd C•ntde bJ Btll .l Howl'll HARBOR PHOTO 3121 E. C-Hwy-.C-clot M• ... u.m.,Jcard Moster C ... o 673-4670 fcw fwtvre presidMtt w+io can't wait become prnident today. Get your •IK!o<iol -• ;. 311 Part.er't land. ' slide game. ......... Porttltf Brothen new 90fne of tiuick mnnectioM few aves 9 to odull. R~ei far o chtu-like 311 Oriental ver- tlon are iit- cluded. Tension filk the oir, the lot- tie Zone i5 cokf.ond ..... Bott\ U.S. and Gefmon troop• morc.h Of'IWOf'd' '-' battte. Who wiM 1he 'tictofi 6e? CHOPCYCLE Daredevil roeing an FAT TRACK 1Mg "8" speedway! Rip 'round on a collision course . , • roise the ramp ... 'n leap or lou~ 11 88 CONYER Tiii.£ PARK aw Your BankAmerlcard And Master ChafCJe Welcome At Toy World FROM Fa§bion Island , Newport Beach STEREO SOUN.OS OF THE HARBOR ' , ' 'I " • , . . , Thund•r. lloclmbor 7, 1972 DAILY PILOT Chrlu mu Sodioot-l l DICK TRACY ---' ~ TUMILEWQDS ' . TMIS IS A MAM's JOll SO oolfT PUl.L NN UTTU! KIO eALONl!V ON US OR MOMf'!'OUGO. - by Tom K. Ryan m ~ seeN wuso ~ t-:---~::::=::::----i WIMl'l.E! SNAP OOT OF 11! )/ rt> MAKE Ollf MY WILL, M l'M Hf:IRLfSS • 11o1 ....... NOONE 10 PASS 111f:, 1VRCH10? WMEllYOU~INSIDE Y<lUUSEE ASIGl'I · WHlcH SAYS.SILENCE': THEN YELL. OUT, HEY.MUTT! by Dale Hale by . Emie Bushmiller J HATE SNOW BUL.l..ETIN ·- 6ECAUSE OF ™"° BL.l~D. AL.L. sci-lb~ WIL.l! BE" CL.OSED TOMORROW .. O oO 0 \l t-o-~. SMACfo(. ,__..,_., 0 1-<>--0~ SMACk' ··~ \/ //~ .. : DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS ~~ .a...? Am ,,Rd ~'? GORDO MOON MULLINS CHRISTM,l.S LISTS! J ~HINK WEIRo LETTIN<a C~ISTM,o\S <QeTTOO COMM&RCl,&.1- i"'O },1).UJ>:l.ALISTIC ;;! ,_.,,,, ~ ,. 7 ci{~!lt~: 'You "Po °""1 ee a.i execvn l/e' el~ Sflt.IR~ ex R?r-Eie aco:rJlllTs. PRe5Tl6e. '3 ~NI t.IH=MeS. .. " "" PEANUTS by Chartes M. Schulz DDAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE a.oss 1 ·n-:ln of 1klng profit 1~ :"pt;tltor •P9na1 d ,.. 11pai_n: -·· " ... 18 Odliplldgt 17 -hlltdel· phl8n1:2 word1. ,. ork pltt flluMr 21 Shlpwr.ck. 1.g. Pht'HtOf dltblllt l: 2 .... -1tMoJ:o Low teb!ne11 ~~f~~-: UnlQUllled To ~--:· ."""" 8te1lnner: Ver. '•of"do'" ...... ....... ao•bond: .... Amid 48 Much o~tlght r ' • • 11 "48 EJ;perienctd m11"11Jf 60 Send,b'f difllnnt wr, " God S4 Caused btlil to .ound 5'-, 11,.tde U Skv;.Arcl\ilio a Cont!Mrrt 1" 04M- M Kind of gun ff1 The Alm 88 Genuln l 88 Plf\of Engl1nd 70 Doc1rin1 71 OlspoM of for money DOWN 1 Surf1c1·t&- 1ir mi11iL11 2 lndonui1n .... 3 Boy'1 name 4 French coin & Wr.dttd I Stoi:ipl~ p1•c• 7 Cont9ndtd 8 T1kt ·-I Tr1y1I .. .. 10 Ele ricch1ir: 2 wo1d1 ·11 01ac1nded 12 .A1tro1or + bpo• ·Yesterday's Punll SoNed: 13 Activ• ~11on: lnlormel 11 Works '22 Jungle enimal 24 Sign of oonow 28 Mulllm ju- 27 Hold e billet 28 Nf'll'lt98ptrt, TV,elc. 29 Pertol • flight 31 Fe5ttner 32 E•PUl'lge 33 V1ne118l'I m1gi5tra11s ,36 Goin 40 Heinllton, On1., 1ootblller 41 .E1rllfl 44 StOl'IV ol7 Mulk~s 49 sw11: Abbr. S 1 Laut r1fined 63 O~h•tra1• 55 Cont1in1r 511 Bont: Pf•fiit 17 AppterenC• M Bklegr~ pigment 80 P1rtottM ...., tl1 AdjKtMI 1ufflx 12 Ftmlnil'ltl nickname 86 Chtro- 10 II 11 13 " .,. JUDGE PARKER • r-----... I CAN DO AINllllNG r WANT! 'tO!J MIT ,l\f se l'VI! llfCIDED NOT"!ll 61'/E '/00 All'lllllN6 AIR Oli15TMAS! by Harold Le Don p::m111~i=ll:i'CC:::::!ir<sii<H:OouUic:Co;;N'T'Ti1""1 Y?S ... eur ~o TELL HIM TEU. HIM THAT SHE.'I) RATH!R Jri'OT TAl.X . MISS !'EACH fuTVRE: f!O~EPHONE r COMPANY A E:i<ECU.T.IVE? f Of . MERICA ! ...... • c:=:H:;<;;:af===~ l'EIKINS CtNH 15 HERE WITH HIM ... THAT I'M WITH M!? REPRESEHTIMG HER! IS TMAT ALL Rl61fT WnH 'VOU1 LYNH? ·llllT 1111"5 If NO OTHEll: FLITU11:£ TEU!PMOH! COMPANY /i'QCLITMS CLU&l \ \ I J .I ~-~ .. / .. / ·. -•,' ..:>' \ by Mell by John Miies • by Roger Bradfield ~-----~ By Ck1rles lanOnt ~~~~~~~~ by Gus Arriola by Fercl ....._ THE GIRLS ' • P. 11 ' • " (c ,@ I/;:~ -.... 'f~7J'0 ... 7 UMoQter, &bll b nu Bob ts stvbt& mt for Cltrllbllu - I Joul bope lie doep~ Cd too aqry wMll mo wbea I tell blm." DENNIS THE MENACE ~ • , ·.~ I - ' . . cn"'--'D"'A'-l"L Y'--'P-'-1i::.O:..T;_:Chtl=":.."'"=':..*='-1lon'-'-___ Thursd1y, !>o<tmbt< 7, 1972 , • Hot, Dusty Australia Dreams of White Ch~istffias SIDNEY. Australia (AP) -breasted robins and equally slzzllng ho I English->ty{e la how Cbrlatmos la In A> much . u anytlag elof, 0111 lllOlllhl In odvance. Alic:e Springs is a hot, dusty red-cheeked j o 11 y Santas va riety {or Chri!lmas dinner Australll where the southern tllil formula atY.-Mlm a The Ume difference can ~ but green oasis bang in the wrapped -.ip (II !f<>st,.llghling ii glylnl way to cold fowl. And bem\lpllel'e summer bu lllll ciir-llnlt. la . .,.. lbt ~ fer tdephooe middle of Aus!Talia. red ttlllc wltb Wtitte ,_.trim-the p>pularlty of plµmdulf !IQ! managed to tUe over "'°"" .. -...,.... ...U.wbhen. A clll l "ll'!e It Is surrounded by hu/ldred• oilng. pudding Is waniog ~gainst the completely from the En'41illi tlocll lor'lbt ..U.C .-.-1 i,. 8'd!Mf al !111Ma7 llilold of thousands of square mUes '111ecounter'l.r ~wrapplnc onslaugbl of fruit Salad and ' heritage of the vut a>ajQrily o6 ~ hi; •nd ...,.,the ... relo!i~ at of red·linged scrubtand which P!'P!r-ia simlt~ With designs creom. , . ~· .• of Ila IS mill~, • ~ WWW'** bmlnoll I 8,lll. -,. wblall -· •I arourid Chrlstmasreally starts ol ~ .,> over ioy _, '!el,-·idllfl~ ·~ply (ljl !be rnoJor oo .. ~ ~\f tbe 'pectlllll i# .._ In Cbrlstmlls 'can itrllil ....... to shimmer and slmirier JU IJ!OUDtilbis. ,,, · ,Cbllleil lci.DJ <lr?bMr .. lk!fpty • ~ 1lhe, IJ:l;.b/'f talj .• 'lltlet' -,hisul.W ..,... tlons. teroperatul)!S climb to"iml 95 lfom@ . are U<orated witb Ian'*' Nldebts go lw!mming' ihtee 'lllilllih •ICjolore 'mile-ryllop which help keep Ille Jn Sydney tbil ·yor; Ibo,. degrees Fahrenheit in the Christmas trees. bedecked in,...,. pools. !flhey~-or .a country, bundreda ol thou-lutlLey nd "°"'cold. ' •u aome llltain on-·• shade. with cotlM "snow," and neighbor-don't b ... e pool, sands of people spned Christ-Wltb two mJlllon British Im-credulity, too .. A cleportm<nl But In the local newsagent's sprigs of JmltaUon holly and an occasional saunter through rnas on the beaches, swim-mlgranta ainee World War U1 ltore lritroduced a.ta Claus shQp, the raoks . of Christmas misUetoe are everywhere. the lukewarm· water of the ming and surfing in the aea, the tel~ lines Io r In July, upiallll!'( lh8t it \!'&S cards sill! lndude many depic-Turkey remains as the ganlen sprinkler suffices. sweating and swllllntl on the <l>rlstnlu Diy-calla ·to . !be '1181. O>ftJli!cWll to ...... sure ....:t=in!.g.....:'::"'::w::•___:sl::e~ig~hs::•___:r:..•:..d:..·_.::tra.::dl=tlo:..na::..:.l _fare.:::.:.:..•_though-'--"--the---W-ith_nu_·_no_r_va_na_·_u_-.....:...:lhl,:.c:.s_sa_nd ___ .:.under __ a_sunsba __ de:.c.f..1-'-_~:;_..:U:..ruc:·\ed:.:__Klogdom.:..;:=-'-""::..:.+b:..<1:.."*:..ed::..:.':..'tlia....;,:..~~-'"'~---!....a~ SUMM ERY CHRISTMAS 'DOWN UNDER' Amazing Doll Repeats What ev er Said to Her Count on the world or dolls to be run of surprises. with a variety or talents that go fa r beyond realistic h u m a n behavior. For instance there is a new WILLIE TALK Teeches Ventrlloquitm doU by Kenner named Ga~ bigale who sciys back exactly what you say to her. A tape recorder hidden inside her does the trick. And there's the Blythe doll group that provides constllnt surprises by four q u i c ~ changes of eye rolor -done with the pull or a string. She was inspired by the adult vogue of changing personality by changing the color of t'O:P- tact lenses. The Blythe dolls have their owtrooattque-o f - mod costumes and a variety of wigs. some ro\or-matched to s1:1nglasses. Toyland's baby doll birth rale is accelerating with em phasis on almost human skin and behavior. Lively . Baby by Horsman has a -most resillient soft skin, achieved by filling her body with sort vinyl molded foam. Mattel h a s come out with Baby Play A Lot who has life-like ann and head ac tion. ldeal's con- tribution is Lazy Dazy. She closes her eyes, droops her head and fall s over on her pillow when her behind is pat-- led. An old favorite with a new look is the ventriloquist doll, Willie Talk, dressed in con- temporary sweater a n d slacks, who opens and closes his mouth when a hidden string is pulled. Kl MONA TERRY VELOUR IN COLORS AND WHITE HANDSOM•, COMt'OltTA•LC '2 . ltO•IS IM ltlO, 'MUTI, 4 0111.lllf, ILUll, lltO..,., OOLO. Olll tlll" ~IT1 ALL. THE HOUSE . OF JQUTH COAST l'LAlA -COSTA MESA -LOWl:R. 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Ctysbl Cylinder swag • c.;u...t., 111 .. • lo,,•ly colof'I e Ir••• fi11i1h ch1l11 tMI trlrn e El99111t 111 H•ll or •ntryw1y e Mod•I 170 88 ~ Flasher e RM l11k1Ut1 f111h•r, 120 volh, 100 ••"• e A441 ••clt1· 111•flt to •ny Chrlrlm•• di1pl1v 0 lmjlrial . Ill Dislnllaster e Scr•pe•, w••"• •1111 rl11M1 4i1hff, pot. •nd ptnl e Stft 1H 1e11lt•ry, with •x1T• cl••n•i~ 1H1Wlf' • Fih 111 1i11k1. c-" wlHi compl•+• ialttuctlM kit 33'- Mon-O'War . Marine Finish · e Protect •t•ilut I Ull, 11lt •ir, wetlf, •c:lcl', •tc. e P•I•, full· bodi•4 glo11 • •••uHn •• 1urf•c11, ... 1 ... J.71 2'!. • 4 . ' ·~· ~Steal "' '" )be btu Ir J• • •• ~lV PILO~ II • 1 2W e '11 Still Be No. ".l If . We Lose , Sa ys McKa y .. ,_ •llLACK HAWK DENNIS HULL PUt LS KINGS GOALIE ROGATIEN VACHON OUT OF THE NET TO SCORE. THE HAWKS, WON, '4. / ·ilers to Pass Prothro Relaxed Trojans Coach, a t Ease R ega rding Bowl Battle NEW YORK CAP) -Top.ranked Southern CallforniA ii taklng a ho-bwn approach to playing Ohio State in the Rose Bowl and coach John McKay thinks the Trojans are No. 1, win or lrise. "Losing to Ohio Seate certainly won't make us No. 2," McKaJ said Weclnemay. "We're ll-0 now. It we~ and are tl·l, now who Is going tO be better even then?" USC'1 silver-haired coach came to New York for a i91nt news conferenCe with Ohio State. ~ Woody Hayes. ()n]y Woody -.uC!n't allow up. "l~s toufb .to..get a Pight here !rom COIUlllbus,"· )'Med McKay. 'lbe Trojam-Buckeyes matchup in Pasadena· gives the Big Ten champions. 9-11 a shot" -.with a victory -at con- vincing YOten that Ohio State is No. 1. Final voting comes after the bowls. "Now, if we were playing # an un- defeated Ohio State or Michigan team in the Rose Bowl," McKay said, "I would be in ravor or putting the chips on the table. But not against teams that can't be better than you anyway." McKay said the 1972 USC team is superior to his nationaJ champions of 1962 and 1967. "Tho9e other teams had off days now and then , but this one never has," be said. they like 11-muatachel. What ~ Uke, boys do. Both my own ,,.,. r Ion& hair and one bas • Fu ,,,.__" McKay re!Uted e clUn that Sou Cal bas a nationwide recrullq ad 1 "NinetY percent ol our bo)'i come """'• JOUlh of Bak«alleld. Moot ol those ln>m outside. Cali!ornia are ,..,.. wllo r«l'll! us instead of vice versa." ;; Commenting on 80Dle of * players, ,_1cKay called Anthony ''$i1: Davis "a fellow who's built like Garrett, has the facial appearance ol ~ J. Simpson and runs like nellber.''•IJi compared him more to the Wasbineteq Redskins' Larry Bi-own, • but 111¥:, ''Anthony's faster than Larry." . On brutish middle llilebocker .B!char<I. . 'Vood, McKay said, "He's 6 feet S, .m pounds and runs 100 yards ln 9.7 ~. Richard is the type of player I can rea!JJ; coach well." ·..r Quarterback Mike Rae, the coach sata. "calls most of his own playa. The ciOQ . that go for big galners usually COme: from the bench, but most of thole tlDt flop are called by lhe quarterback." 1 ~ .. McKay said he turned down a pro· coaching career with the Los A.njeiu Rams three times includina: two ~ ago when Tommy Prothro of rival \J~ took the job. ~.f. "To be honest. I knew the Rams' owner, Danny Reeves, watn't going to live for long," McKay. "I knew a change of owners can upset your-life in the pl'OI, so I turned it down ." .¢.it :» ·~. ~e~, l)~af t · efe nse First Sit~tiQn Unchanged, Melee Brings Coach's_ Vow The polls, McKay said , are the greatest things that ever happened to college root· ball. "Thej tw7l it from a regional game to a national. lt makes people in Alabama or Nebraska root like hell agaiDst us. Without the ~lls, they wQUl~'t care," he said. * * * Woody Replie5 ' . . . , CHICAGO (AP) -Ollcago.• Black Hawks coach Billy Reay says U.t de- spite a 6:-0 O&:ying of the ·Los Algetes Kings, Keith Magnuson wlll "hea"rpieoty from me soon" for the mntrove'9id player's part in a ~ period nie:lee ·;' ,· Rams Must Beat Cards · Still.~puflinJ. on a cigar at New York's fashionable '12l" restaurant, McKay said, "Being No. 1 isn't. the ultimate thing for us at USC. Going to tbe Rose Bowl Is the biggest goal of all." To McKay; Evaluates SC ill.OUSTON • Nebraska's Johnny en may have been No. t in the or~tbe Helsmari.'.J'r'Ophy voters but 11001 be the No. l pick .It! !he 1m pro , .. if the Houston Oilers ·get the first . I . Neither will two other Helsmaii Trophy · Greg Pruill, o! Oklahoma and .,..,.,, • Glover of Nfbraska, according .. E!rs coach Bill Peterson. •µ,: 1.hink Rodgers is .a great athlete." Petenoo, whose Oilers have a' 1·11 , worst ln the NFL with two pmes ·P,lay. "ii!'\ when you are building a m,~ba~ to look at youtneeds. .!'U.wtl~-~•p!l!•blis_hed program, we lllt. go oiler an all-around performer ' e &dgei-s. But to tutve ll ~at football ,Ou have to have a• great defensive .. •' " H -1' .. • .l t .':i.--· Ill' .. ··~ . ~SAN oiEGo .!.. All orrer lo WI the San o Padres to a Washington. D.C., ' arket executive was acknowledg- :wednesday by a spokesman tor the ldlonal League baseball club. • · · ~ JOoeph Dan~ky, preside<ll ill the iuf*niiartet chain Giant ·Food. lnc .• ,said i day before that he oifered $ll.7:> Dillfion for the Padres. A spokesman for Buzz:ie Bavasi, who is tr;1ng to work out financial problems with San Diego city officials, said the president of the Padres "won't deny that Dgure." "He·s been offered that much before," said the team spokesman. '_·from in- ~sts in Indianapolis, Buffalo, Toronto Or 9001eplace." But be said Bavasi wants to say nothing publicly about the offers, for-now. ""' NEW YORK -T_..i.d •C\llt ... Pasarell of Puerto Rico and veteran Pan.- cbo Gonzelez survtwd a wave of. uPeeta to lead the Held into the quarterfinals of the $75,000 •Oean Air Indoor Tennis Classic Wedn~y. Pasar~ll rallied to defeat Sandy Mayer, f..6, 7·5, 6-2 while" Gonzalez was beating Sweden's Bjorn Borg, 8-1, 6-1. . Fourth-ranked Clark Graebner-of New York became the fifth seeded player to be eliminated when he was beaten by " Ovf! Bengtson of Sweden, 6-4, U, M. Dick s~on. the third l<Od, was u~t by Paul Gerken, 71, 6-3 and Brian \J<lltlried (eighth ), was put oot by Haroon Rahim or Pakistan, 7.f, 'G-0. LONG BEACH (AP) -Coach Tommy Prothro.iurveyed lhe breakfast gathering Wt!lJlestlay and judge<f, "We're all just a little more relaxed uii! week." And that's what concerns Prothro regarding bis W. Angeles Rams. Will bis athletes feel tJie same way? The attitude was teMe at last week's Prothro breakfast and the up-and-OOwn Rams were-up. 'l11e playen were "tense and tight. 'Ibey feared San Francisco," said Prothro. 'Ille Rams defeai.d the 490rs 26-16 to stay alive in ~"We>tem D19bJon of the National Foot~ i,ie•s , National Confec:ence. ~ ~ "Our situation is unchanged," the coach said as biS>team prePfred for Sun- day's game agalnst the 2-9-1 Cardinals in St. Louis. "If we lose one game. mathemaUcaUy we. are not out ol it but in actuality we're out of it." The ~l Rams are tied with San Fran- cisco, just behind 7-5 AUanta in the division race. The .f9en play Atlanta Sunday. Who does Prothro expect to win? Who does he want to win? He ducked both questions with this answer: "I'm picking the Rams over St. Louis. All we've got to do is beat St. Louis." The Rams' enigma ha• been lhat they have loot to teams they supposedly sboOid beat -Denver and New Orleans. Y<lllie ·ieam hii dOne well against San Francisco aNI Atlanta. • Since tile~ ruli%e they can't lose lgl\in, Prothro Yid, "I woWd think we'd mate an alktut effort" at St. Louis. · ''lf11iatunl to.be"'*"·!« San Fran- cilco IJ!l.l l-'thlnk Ibey_. -a,little more than wu natural," aa1d Prothro, "'1<>'s not certain why. , "I think San Franclsco~hit w: harder than.any team we've played thls year. in· cludiug San Franciaco the flnlt ·ume aroih:). We've been hit hard ..• bui: this game Monday night waa the firs! time I felt our opposiUoo shocked us, and ton- veraely it ;was the fint time we have shocked a team." W"ill the Banis keep the ••Zero Fonna· lion" play bandy for the rest or Ote aeaaon ? Said Prothro : "W~ probably won't ~ FeeliJlff~ Rev~led . B.ench's Parents Sp~ woul4 be In bis position, ""'l'be a little less. He's concerned though. 1 know Johnny.'' The small moltl oper1"'1 by Bench's perents was swamped wlUt teJephont calls Wednelday, mootJy 1..,,, well· wl!Jhen. There were, Mrs. Bench said, tlll'.ff crank calls. "Yoo just have to oonalder the· aourco af those," she $1ld. .. . . it for two or three years but maybe next week. We might run it once and wait for futur_e opponents. to figure out how many things we can do with it." Jim Bertelsen gained nine yards on the play which had Bertelsen lined up as the only back behind the center and two linemen and the rest of the team split about 12 yards away. lt clicked for a first down preceding Los Angeles' fint field goal. ~ 1be 49ers "weren't prepared ... they reacted awfully well after the ball was centered to hold it to nine yards. When thii.'ball was anapped, I thought ii would go 30 or 40 yards," said Prothro, who says the fonnation, which be first observed at a Memphis, Tenn., high school garrie in 1946, has too many limitations for wholesale·use. at Chicago Stadium. · The Hawks' impressive victory on the scoreboard Wednesday night vaulted them into first place in the National Hoc,key League West for the first time since the early part of the season. They also didn't do badly in the numerous fights that broke out.. . . It was a flgbt·fill=cootest that .Ii"'. a total of 76 penalt; · utes asses9ed: ~ Klngs by losing · a cbanee iOlfe for second place .ln the NFL's · Westefn Division. · ' While not planning to over·work bis squad, McKay said, "We still want to win against Ohio State and plan on winning. But, we're not going to ask our kids to win, win, win and then ask them to bust their hides a month later and win one more for us." McKay said the cross-Los Angeles trip to .lhe . Rose Bowl is "a reward for a gre8t season. Since we don't practice as hard far the bowl, we often don't play as well as we have in the rtgUlat season. But, that's.my ePP,roach." Then, the man began reeling off bis Tlje fight that got Mag111i5on in bot philoaopbies. ·water with· Reay came after~tbe'Ha:-Vb' . "We. doo't ~U.eve in a lot ol rules. Stan Mikita and the Kin&s' T'er.ry H.Brper, There are no curfews since I have becanle embroiled in 1 a scuffie. 08.n • nothing again.st my student-athlete! Maloney came over to assist" Mikita, sta""' Up t0 study. Altbo&&P.l grew up throwing numerous punches at Harper. · in the crew..oit era ' I don'( have ruJes As though not wanting to be left_ out, against long 'bai:r or inu.stacbes. Magnuson came off the bench to join Jn "'Ibe girls on campus like longer hair wh~t had become a f"'F"for-all. and, for \ a reuon I , cmi't understand, CINCINNATI (AP) -Woody Hayea, whose Ohio State Buckeyes will meet No. I ranked Southern 'Calilomta In tbe Raie Bowl, says that "yoo can bet the w\flter of that game will be the national '*"'1- pions." Speaking at a local football award.I banquet here Wedne>day nlgbl, l!o1'9 replied to comments by Southem Cali!omia coacl! John McKay W-Y that the Trojiw should remain No. 1 even if they lost. "Losing to Ohio State certainly won't make us No. 2,'' McKay said at a news conference in New Yort in wbidl Hafts was supposed to hive partidpated.. ... ~ Hayes said the OigJ:tt be was oalwas grounded In CievelaNI, becluao' al l!id weather, and New York's a~ · le closed to all air traffic. · • -.. "No matter what John McK>J' ~· the decision as to which tea,m wui "bl'"No. I will he made by tile iililin'1 sportswriters alter tbe bowl ·-llUe been completed," Hayes contkKMiclai~ "It's amaring lxlw a man's can change oo that," Hayes aaidl ,'1 remember in 1968 when we ~ Southern Cal In the --:.,.~ McKay said the winner of that -Jrill be tile national champioo. "And I probably said what be'1 saYin. this tiJne." Southern Callbnia ~ riiii-"ftii~-with-an ll-0...nriird and received e•ery flrsl' place !Ole lli:tbe Auocia"'1Press~c0llqe.~ nmkings. . . " ' . .q:e Flies Through the Air Madrid goalkeeper Garcia Ramon Un't taking flying h!ssons. He is demoostrating the skill he employs . ' ... _ In guarding the g o a l by deflecting a Barcelooa scoring attempt In a recent game. Ohio Stale, with a H r<i»rd, """"'~ lo third In the 1-AP ppjl. :,L Hoyes said lle·speiii pai(Ol.w......., reviewing films of ·Southem iear.1 ll straight victories. ., ~ "They couJd·very well be lbe ~It football team Ohio State has evor llW." Haye> said. ",ADtlmy Devil Isn't IS ti!9d as O. J . Slmp!IOO even if he did IOOl'e 1iz agoinSI Notre Dome. I don't 1blnt· jle~I get' sb: againiJt us." '. • Hayes was referring ·to oavts•,4 Y. touchdown effort In Soulhem Cal's ~j, victory over Notre Dame Saturday, and to fonner Southern Cal 11tandout rusher, Simpson, who baa been playing for Buf· falo in the National Football League:-, \ Soccer Star's Head on BIOOl r • LONDON (AP! -. George B<it, "\be · Rolls Royce·drMog playboy ol Bil¥ soccer, Is biding aomeplace and !.Grldj>n bookies are laylng 3-2 on hJ1 "llJe 1 a oew team. 11 Best is soccer's anewer to Joe Na:mlth. • 1 .... 1ov1ng ...,., ...... u.. - gorgeous babes, .......,,. ........,.I' and occasionally ~ oome ...,.., Be.o;t'~ team, ~=r Uldtldi lli.t'td up with Ill wild ..i .... .....,. anxious to peddle Ibo. -'"~!f.l Manchester United at between and 1916,000. . . That Is, ll they can !bl lllm. SUspended !or 14 .i.,. by Ulil;d Manager Frank OT..,;Q, -eWl!I'! fomtcl although r..-...,. -~ bouncing around tho pull cllouft wltb cbld<s. Manchester Unflod'• only ~­Beat'1 llaahy RGIJ>.Roju, left ~.i" a traia staUon. Brian Clough,-...... Dlllllff el soccer team ID the lndu.tr1ll clt1 Derby, showed Interest Wednoldq ., pur<haslng Bes~ wbooe toles beod • \be glitter Of l.ondoo tbon Ibo ~ alive ttrai.-cf o..t.y. • • DAILY PILOT I.· 'Tie Breaker System ... ~I s It H e r e to Stay? By DENNIS CM\PBELL Of,.. DallW' ,. ......... Mos1 high achool football waches who have been in- volved in the California tie l>reaker system view it as they v•oukl a rainy day. . They don't particularly like it, but they don't koo w what to do about it. CIF playo(f games far this season have end- ties, and in each cue the to advance · w a s ined by the C&Ufomia reaker formula. tie games were between ey Christian and Notre or Rivenide (s+-341, o Verde and Palm Springs ·11 ) and La HS bra and Jt"thorne ( 14-14 l. Valley Christian, Palo Verd e d La Habra all advanced er the system. In the event or a tie (in f games only), each runs four plays. The ball t into play at the 50-yard with each t e a m ting offensive plays. explains. "There's a lime element ln· volved In a playoff game and It's critical that you get a win- ner as soon as you can. "l hive the feeling myself that lhls is the fairest way to do it. You can go by first downs or total yardage or penetrations, but some lealTL! can move the ball in the mid· die of the field but can't score. "Playing an eitra quarter m ight be fair, but if that end- ed In a tie? How would you break it?" S.,. Gory Van Balun bl Valley Cluitllan: "I don1 know U there's any perfect way of doin& it, but I want the game won or lost out on the field rather than by looking al statistics. · '*I would like to see it done the \\'aY the pros do it, with a sudden death overtime, but I really have no complaints about this system. "At lhe end ol lhe lie pme you run four plays, and on that you baae the rest ot your season." "I don't care for It," 1aJ1 Otto Plum of lilwtborDt. "Jt was lhe first Ume I was ever involved in the siluaUon and there mu.st be some better way. "I don't tblnk we could use a sudden death because the game could g:o on for boors wilh people getting hurt. But I'm not satilfled with the present system, altbooib lt'1 probably the lesser of several evils.~· Robert Slaqel ol Nolft Dame bas been • tie breaker victim two yean in a row. "It would be belier to play another five inlnutes," be says. "The system Is generally fair, but we lost to LA Baptist last year on a poor call by an oUlclal. A 15-yard penalty put the ball in our territory 8J'ld that W88 the ball &ame. Orange League CIM,lnplou Accomando Consistent For Lions It's amazing how many t1me1 one can vlew • football team and coipe away with one Impression, then aee that same unit later and wonder If it11 the same team. It's the aame wttb many an Individual as perform~ somelimes sparkle, mme- times fade. But for Westmlnoter ll1gh quarterback Dan Accomando that hasn't been the ca~. He 's been good every time out - Mr. ConJilleot for the Lions at quarterbaclc. ~ando and lhe ml o1 his Westminster m1i., are In the C1F AAM aemllhu!l1 (Frl- doy nllbl II Lollg Beach'& Veterans Sladimn. 'Ibere are many reasons for coocb Bill ilom!Q's Uons' succes!, Jnc}udq tucb items as tacklea Larry Grady and Martin Tru)lllo, &pllt receiver Gary Maddocks, tailback Tony Accomando, middle r u a rd SU!ve Fritsch and oeemlngly 100 others. r each t.eam has run its led lour plays, lhe pooi- of the ball determines the "I rather like the system. but then we woo with it I do think that a good pastiing team doe9 have a certain ad- vantage, because If you throw. an interception )'OU haven't I~ anything." "It's a heck of a way to lose." Laguna Beach lllgh's Artists swept U> u\e Orange Bryn Barnard. Standing ~Eric Hui!!, David Peden, League championship in croso countri Kneeling Jon Brockman, Jeff Tensfeldt, Karl Weber, coach But lhe key to It all bas been Dan Accomando'• COllllstency. Time after Ume he's p:milbed the opposition wilb hi• passing and running. Adds Carlyle Lyaiet1 of Palm from left -manager Paul Latimer, Cl,nn Wilsotl, Len Miller. • Sprtap: "It definitely fa vors ---------=-------'------'------------------------ a passing team, although I iJ!lflall!IUy, the system is ed upon with lhe most by the coaches who suc- lly advanced in the , oUs. ~ man most favorable to ~ system Is Palo Verde's ~ llll Ramtey. "We won, so my ~ ling is a positive one," he Cralg Hastin ol La Habra saw h.is team win with the system but doesn't particuJar. ly like it. "It's a hard way to encl a game," he says. "I've always thought there must be a better way, but I just don't know what it is. ~-~ ~ Bucs Bag 78-52 Win; ~ 1t . ~~Gauchos Fall, 74-58 .. ~ don't know of any other way of deciding a game. "An extra period ·might be belier, but lhere ii morn chance 10< Injury. I r<ally don 't know what you would do if Iba! eoded in a tie. "lf you played a sudden death overtime you might be out there all night. I've Vikes Gain Tourney Semis With Eas y 66-47 Triumph thought about it and lhought By ROGER CARLWN about it and I haven't come Of ttte o.11r PIM 11a11 up with a good way yel Only two Orange Coast area as Los AJ was simply out· lllanned. At one point in the second quarter the Vikes rebounded on five straight offensive caroms before getting the basket. ~ :::, By CRAIG SHEFF ~ ~ Of ._ DlillJ' l"li.t St9ff ~ ~ Orange Coast College rolled ~ :to its fifth victory in six The system waa inaugurated ~ teams survived Wednesday~s f~llowing the 1968 season when play in the eighth annual bitter rivals St. ~aul and El Marina -Westminster Rotary Rancho tied !0-20 m the cbam-Invitational ba1ketball tourna- pion!h.ip pm~. ment with Marina's Vikings ~·was just a question of how Up to that time, r~ do~ gaining a semifuuds spot wide the final Point margin ha~ been used to determine against Long·Beach Millikan would be. whlch team advanced in tt:ie in tonight's 3:30 tussle at THE FOUNTAIN VALLEY BARONS of coach Dave Brown struggled lhrougq three quarters as Savanna'S\ full. court pressure worked like clockwork in the third period. . ·' ~ ,,,,,. aJTles Wednesday night, easi- ' outclassing Glendale, 7a.52, "the opening round o( the annual Miles Eaton tallonal basketball tourna- t at OCC. win puts coach Hero sey's Pirates into Friday t's semifinals (7 o'cloct) 1!1aat tough El Camino, a 7f. Tictor over Saddleback. Tonight Phoen.is: b a t t 1 e s ~~· so at 7 and Allan Han- miltea It up with Santa 11 9 In other !Int round mes. The winners play at 9 · y. Sad d I e back, meanwhile Glendale al 5 Friday in ooruolatlon rollod. slnipl~ was too quick too talented for Glendale. Bues, utilizing their , repeatedly got easy lo!. And with freshmen Bogdon and Rod Soook lnating the boards It was 'her all the way. anae Coast controlled . the e tm"m -the sfarT and jt With freshman guard Bruce playoffs but no system was 1n Marina Miller having his best of-use for championship games. Wedn~y's action resulted fensive outing of the season, Tiie St. Paul coacl&, Mari-in ~ ripping Lo s lhe Bucs zipped to a 37-21 Joa Alldc:-later 80ld 1111 ltida Alamitos, 66-47, and l\lillll<an halftime lead. Miller got 10 of were ~ to play another deaJinf El Modena an ts-65 his 14 poinb in the opening game if necessary t 0 setback at Marina. Other half with most of them coming determine a winner " says championship bracket action Oii lay-ups. Mike Peck of lhe C!F 'office. al Westminster resulted in Bogdan finished with IS re-"You Clll ,Imagine bow they Kalella trampling Kennedy, bounds and 10 .polnU while !ell. P.eople dldn1 tnow 75-05, and Long Beach Poly Snoolt ""'trtbuted U caroms wheU.0.: to feel sad or feel whipping WBM'elt, fl&-57. . aad U polato. And ' sophomore good• It·-1 ...Uy a cJuun. In consolation tlfls Founlam guard Jobb Seymour toa.ed in pionship but it wasn't really a Valley quaµfied to meet Sant.a If palnls. loss" Ana torught (8:30) a I In the Et Camino-Sad-A· number of systems were Westminster after de!~ting dleback game, the losing coosidered _ including an ex· Savanna, 61·53. Westminster Gauchos got off to a poor lra period of play, discarded was erased by Santa Ana, 77- start, trailing El Camino by a because of, among other 70. , 16-S ·margin early in ihe first reasons, the risk of injury -San Clemente's '! r 1 to~ s half. and the California system was dropped out of the picture wtth · But Jeff Hatfield came off the bench end lhe &-! senior put life in the Barons' offense. Savanna had a 46-42 lead with 8:32 to go when Hatfield went to wort. He scored nine of the Baron.!' nes:t 13 points while Savanna was gotng acoreless. His three-point play with 4:02 to go put Brown's skySa'apers in a lead they weren't to lose. WESTMINSTER'S UONS lead and feU to an unreal See Vlk.es Page Z8 '!'be Gaucbos cul It lo lour finaJ!y adopted. a 63-511 loss In Santa Monica (30-24) near the intermission The method was devised in and MlraJ~ ~ied,to get west"'11111W J1''" .,, !! and trailed by 6eVen (34-27) at the 1920s bt a tllgbUy different by Marina s JUDM>r' varsity, 57-r::~ ii 8 i ~ the halt. form by Harry J. Moore, then 56, at Marina in other con· w.1111 , 2 ,. 1, But tumovers and poor an adminl.strator at Wilson solaUon play. r~,. i 1 J ' shooting plagued coach Roy High School In Long Beach. Tol•l1 fhi • 11 7G Stevens' Gauchos early in the . It wu first used in a cbam· TUE MARINA VIKINGS of SMI• AM 'J n -' "' seoond ball and El Camino tionship game in 1970 when coach Jim Stephens had 00 ~ ...... ~=, ~ i 1 if • 29 ad •••·-nd Lakewood trouble in duplicating a n z. strea .. ed to a 47· v ... .._" !shop Amat a earlier root of Los Alamitos a.s c*;:., 't' ' l ij and it was all over. tied 17-17. Bishop Amat even· Mark Adams, Mark Ford and r::,;,." 0 0 1 11 Dennis Murphy and Rick tually won the game with the 101.11 :M t 12 n B • ...;;.;, lhe G cbo llh Bill Fick took turns sbootlng -" -auer ..,........... au s w tie breaker. westlTllMtw n 2t 12 11 -1111 10 potnta each while the War-T.-rd tbelasbionGril.' fins: down in rapid '-"'• "£:..c:U.111 ... a: Tl" riors' M center Rusty Smitb S.)'l 1Ab1reod't -Fo : ? .. " had 15 for game honon. "U you have to break a tie in Stephens pu.Ded his starting ~~ i f ~ a ebamplonlhlp pme, I'd llnmp with Z:57 left in the "•1011 1 ' 2 J •-'1 "'It ., "' prefer an e:ztra quarter or a third quarter with a ~27 ad-~=:~" 11 !1 ! l~ r:''.~.,', , j ' ,,' sudden death overtime. I don't vantage end let the reserves w11-o 2 •• l Tot1l1 U•ll51 "",','•'• •, ' I 11 think injuriee would be a fac. mop up. scor. ~ °""""" "" O ' ured Th · I I ~" Cl-nt.111 10 It It -51 M111••'"°" 1 o I tor becauae a kid is inj ere was no turnmg po n 5 Mollle-13 22 14 14 -u 1 : g:\m11~er ! j ! 10 when he loafs, and you aren't ---------'--'--------------1 ;.IJASSET'T -Mater Del R r11 2 ' • find I ting In me first p e r l 0 d Mu uni.. 3 ? f g going to anyone oa GIVE EDA BROOK$. THE PERnCT FRIEID-SIP. Ver •-"bles lo blast St. It~:,, !~ 10 " » the fifth quarter of a cham· L&VU H1Ull'{'•' El C•l'l'I no J.4, 5.odl~k pionship game.'' vteve 7'1·58 in a Blahop 27 ___J Ford prefers to Jet cham· mat basketball tournament Or•• CllhtT 11A> ., '" piorulhip ties remain Ues, "but ame Wedneaday night at l ;i!,Vmovr f ! 1~ I realize that you have to ad· t High. Mm., g o 14 v·-ooe •·am In • pla·~r '!'be lnnin M ~-"' eooo.n ! 3 ~ l~ cun,." K ;ruo. w g onai-\;lll wtte 5l'IOOlr. o o ' g a me. But four downs bothered by a full court press !.--Mti_. .. .,.1 "'"' f I l i iJ" 8 hard way to decide in tbe f1m quarter, but got ' l J' 'I It. I'd prerer the es:tra quarter rolling behind the acorlng a~ or the number of penetration! rebounding ol Gr<g Green.. ,.,. "u • • lnllde lhe 20." 11'"~1 Georg• Herold, and S..ve> ~::"~'""'::_::...,~0«:~"2·:;-:;:;,:=,;==========f=­Martindale to post their sec-Ii wlnollhe-.. w·Hv PAY Green hid :15 poinll and II ~ for Mater O.l ~E~·Lz:it MORE FOR LESS? -1·11 ~ olf"' "m 'l.-:J: n.1.~ ~bob MUJlllP GRAN PRIX St. Paul Favored Over Lions Westminster High is a five point widerdog in its CIF semifinal football game with the st. Paul High Swordsmen Friday night while Sunset League champion Western Is a two point choice over Anaheim in selections made this week by lhe DAILY PILOT sports staff. Pasadena's Lancers are a two-point choice to win the Calll~a stat< jlDllo< college crown in the Shrine-Potato Bowl game at Bakersfield Saturday afternoon. Benaab -..._ b'I' ' c~ O\lff' RldlklM bv s ~-F~~l Ct>i.t& owr Colts, ti, O a~ °""° e.a" . Llonl -llflli toy Vlkl11C1$ -,.~ " l """"' -C•nl Ml• 11'1' 2 Oclllllln• 01'tf' G •nts bY 11 S.lnt1 ovw Plllr tt IW 1j Steelen; o ...... Olien ltY 1 Ctwt r«n owr BfOl'IC~ bw l R110ir1 -J.is IW S 0•1k1 Vftr ltnMSMt 5111• tl'I t N01'1h C:•roll,,. OY1r Florkl• bY 2 P•1ie»na ov.r '"':E1 '" St. "•ut owr Wn "'""' bv $ W1ttm o,..r ANlltl~ ' , i.nt• M9ri. over C by 'I H•br• OYV L05 lllJt tl'I' 1 F Ul'l'IOl'I -P•w Jt9blft W 3 B•nnlncl o ... r 8or0fl b'I' l Temvl1 City OY., Nortllwll'W bY I M.tt -S.nll ••Ill• b'I ' The stats reveal -JG5 com- pletions in Z29 attempt& wilh only 12 inlercepllons. Tllose 105 good ones have accounted IOI' l ,767 yards and 13 --And l>il pualng has gained in order, 112, 150, 133, 80, 318, 150, 160, 112., 155, 136 and 181 yards. And when he sets out to run he's also been hlgbly effective. He 's chalked up 41~ yuds In 9Z carries and mn4 10 touchdowns. "We didn't expect to be thl5 good at lhe start ol the season" oplnes Boswell, "'but as lhe ......, bas progrtssed I'm not surprised we're bl the semlDnaJs at aJJ. "I've felt this team WIS destined fer something." 1 Now St. Paul looms ahead. lhe CIF'• No. I lum, un- beaten in 11 games and boasting • clel..,.. lhal bas been awesome to · say the least. '!'be s.....rsmen have blank· ed seven upponeots and allow· ed 36 points In all to 11 vlo- tinlll. "'lhere's no magic way to beat that kind of defeue," says Boswell. '"Ibey are V!!l'Y well diaclplined and we're not g61ng to fool lhem. "It's just a matter of playing a better offensive game than lhey play defeme. We have to be cattM of what we throw and we have to nm at tbem very aggressi.veJy." ~ lyman'a MEN'S SHOP ljorne Of Their Ulellma Racalla HMtld _. ... id lnCf ~-11111-, dnlng. FOR CHRISTMAS ;:::ei ... ..... , ... ..... . ... • • • ,.,, ..,.,_. Mff'tt ..,, JAllTllM UCILLO 111nM.un1 MUMSINewu.• 89'~ ... l'l.IAA llOTI ·THIA Al l sncu.~ 5AU raicu Dl'ICIAU 'I' omalD l'I' IALll•H l'OI THI CHlllTMAS llOl.IDA 'I' NEWPORT CYCLERY 21 16 NEWPOIT BEACll '&75-1700 Hal le (nt (j.;._, ... AMlricM Mnfw CIMF99 • I . ~ • --.. ·--14 at-f.IJ•W . ,. arcw.w "" ·--ZI -. ... .. .... __ 12 .. ~ • WHAT•YTOOO " IOMIKl .... MAM ,, -" CIO ....... QO to •llOCKYDINiltDO • . . w , "" • . • • • 1S • 1S • 12 • tO • 10 • • , 11 • •• 2 • • • • • 0 s 3 , 3 • , • • • • ' 3 0 0 .._ 310,171 ....... 209,117 1U,t1t 11113,112 15t,'8S ........ 140.$75 107,174 911,¥2 ...... "·"' 30.910 ' For··----... C21310Mll:I or (7t4J W-..71. . Tidclll I .... ...... (213) 431-lllt ... (7t4)111-t2H, L.OIALMllOl ... ---NY • • Oilers Topple Friars By HANK WESCH Of ""' o.llY Pltlt ...., l{ot shooting Raul Contrtras ~~ led Huntington Beach High to : · a &l·SS non-league basketball victory over host Servile Fri- day, Contreras, a S.-9 guard. hit five of six shots in a third quarter spree that led the Oilers from a 2'7·25 halftime deficit to a 10.point lead, and although Servile made a bid to catch up in the final quarter, the Oilers held on for the win. The victory was the second of the season for coach Elmer Combs' crew, and the Oilers.· did it by virtue of Contreras' hot hand and the 'NOrk up front of Sco(i Rankin, Doug Jtabe and Jim Weir. Contreras hit four shots in a row from 12-15 feet out on ' both sides of the court and ad- ded another basket on a slick steal and lay.up as the Oilers ' -pulled away In the third pe-" riod. Co ntreras , only a sophomore, cashed 18 points on the night to tie with Rankin for scoring honors. Huntington hit its first three shot.s in succes!lion in the peliod and then handled a . Servile full court press with ~ ease to can sir shots in a row during another part of the • quarter. ln the perkld the Oilers cashed in on 11 of 18 shots t'o just five or 17 for Servile. Until that time, a n d thereafter, tile game was :r.,~~~;~~."!1\1: Irvine League Champions point edge. Servile led through Corona de! Mar High's water poln team completed aoother undefeated Irvine much ol the second period . League season and coach Cliff Hooper's champions again...made the-CIF -play· overeomlng a slow start in offs. Front kneeling from leCt -Jack Lorenz, Bruce Otto. Standing-Jay which Huntington had Jumped Stallman, Simon Bougbey, Frank Browne, Kirk Del ValJJ, On ladder frnm IOjr- to a five-point lead. Mark Watson, Dan Perlnington, John Crimp. Bruce Krumpholz not pictured. Servite's biggest le ad, _____ _c _____ _:: ____ :_..:__,__ __ __::_ __ _'-C:_:_:.:_..::_:_:._c___::_=--:.=-- however was four points midway in the second pf:riod , and a basket by Rankin and two free throws by Rabe cut that down quickly. Servite's front line was most effective during the second quarter outburst, but Hun· tington came back t o dominate the offensive boards in tbe second half with Rabe, Rankin and Weir doing tbe most damage. ............. 9Mdt en.•,. " ,. 1, COl'llnrlt I 7 3 II Nlllll 1116 Rtt)t lllt R111kln 1 4 I II Wtlr SG 710 A~eloon 00 10 To1111 2.s 11 n 61 ""'" Sllndovlll Sm!lll Kllll- Kenlon ~,..,.,.,, GllrniMWI To!•lt Sen! .. IUI " ft ,, " J 0 s 6 ' 0 J 11 • 1 • u 5 \ ' II 2 D 0 4 ' O o I • 0 1 0 2tll7S5 Seen..,~ Hootlng•on 8NCh n 11 n 1~1 Se,.....!t, 12 IS 12 U-S5 Boes, GWC Wrestlers Lock Horns Area Prep, Wrestlers In Action To u mament competition between the Irvine and Sunset leagues will open the wrestling season for Orange Coast area high school teams Friday. The round robin affair will begin at 2 p.m. and is schcdul· e0 through 10 p.m. A dance at host school Estancia will follow the tournament. All area Irvine League schools will participate with the ei::ception of Fountain Valley, wlUch will compete at the Mt. Miguel tournament. The Sunset League won last year's meet 31-17 and with the absence of Fountain Valley, will again be favored. Each Irvine team will wres- tle out of one gymnasium while Sunset teams will rotate for each match. Mesa Women Golfers Elect New Officers • The Costa P.1esa Golf Course women's club toot advantage of a rainout in tournament play to elect ofricers for the ensuing year this week. ~1rs. Barbara Morton was elected pre;iident of the club with Barbara Leonard servin g as first vice pre!lident and tournament chairman. Sybil Foster will take over as second vice president and handicap chairman. Phyllis Barnes is secretary, Carol R~ is treasurer and Maxine Assmu!I will serve on the board as advisor. oitd flight with Helen Cowden second. Mary Vand<r Sommen placed third with H a t e I MQ!lica and Vi O'Gara: tied for fourth. June Doyle and Roberta Andrews tied for first in the third flight with Virginia Stevens and Olah Morgan tied lor third. El Ni9uel It was match vs. par at El Niguel Country Club this week as the women's club staged its weekly tournament. In A flight, Jane Robertson was the winner, three down. Bfff Cangon 11arion Menne was second at Big Canyon Country Club of four down with Dottie Egan Newport Beach staged a guest next at five. day to.umament th1s week. In B flight it was Miltie In 1he guest flight. Mrs. Johnson (3), Ruth Cohen (7) Frank Paddock of Mesa Verde and Virginia Whitington (8). fired a low gross score of 75 to Sybil McDevitt won C flight win individual honors. A-1rs. R. with six down while Sally L. Lohman or Santa Ana CC Bruce and Gene Carrick tied was the A flight net winner £or second at seven. with 67. Nancy Dougherty won D f Tllur,da~. Dtctmbtr 7, 1q72" _______ _:D::_Al:.:Lc:.V..:P..:ll::D:.;T_,M CdM, Jones Outduel Rival By DKNNIS CAMPBELL Wulfenlt'ytr. who averaged Of ,.. Dllf¥ ~.., Pa• 19 points pt.'r game as a Casey Jones dtd his usual freshman.and U last year as a job on Mark Wulleme)'er and ,.,}!>phoTilOrt. hit on just tw o of Corona del ~1llr, Orange Coon· nine auern{Jt s. l)''ll top-rated high school Jonl'S. a first learn All.Cl~' basketbaU team, did a ;ob on selection ltl:it year, rarely Troy Wednesday night, blitz· gave Wulfcmeyer a chance. to ing the host Warriors, 66-44. show his stuff. The Sea Kings kept their Jones himi>elf didn't have a record perfect as they easily particularly good nlght. lie romped over an inexperienced finishNI with 2Q points on an and outclassed Troy ~am. eight-0f·22 performance. but 10 Last year Jones shut down of his points came in a sudden. the usually h i g h.. !I coring fourth-quarter spurt when the Wulfemcyer and Wednesday game was decided. night he.id hi.!1 highly regarded Corona de! 11ar led Troy b)' opponent to just six points. Western nine, 30-21. al the half and steadJly pulled aw11.y in the thii-d quarter JOOt..'fi and (ellow guard Pt1att Keough ktyed a third quarter outburst as the Sea Kings nloved out to a conlfortable 46--31 lead. \\'hen Wulfemeyer fouled out of the go1ne wilh 5:24 [t;!ft to play, Troy loi>t au)' chance for a win. Forward Jeff \\'harton. who helped the Sea Kings <.'Ontr<>l the backboards against the shorter \Yarriors, added 18 poin ts to the tolal Keoogh had eight and Bob Clark had nine a~ the Sea Kings, although not pla)'ing particularly well. had"'the game well in hand. C.,Nll Ml Mir \Ml ., " ,1 ,, 0 I 1 G '~K CltrK ,...,, Wl'ltrlon Ko1m•1• ... ,11.,.y W1ll Mc:C.ot~Mll Total• • t ' 111 ) s 1 ' 1 :r 3 • I 7 1 II • 0 6 & G 1 ! I G I l G ' 0 • ) ~tll1116C Sc... 01 0Ullr11n \ c ... on• Gill Mir 11 n If ~ Trow 11 '10 I~ Anticipates Surprises BIG SALE They are covering th e Anaheim Stadium field in case of rain before Friday night's epic CIF AAAA footba ll playoff struggle b e t w c e n sunset League c h a m p i 0 n Western High and C I a r e VanHoorebeke's An ah e i m Colonists in a rematch of a regular season league game. In the first encounter between the two schools. Western won, 16-7, but coach Jim Everett at Western isn't confident of a repeat victory . Asked if his football teams had ever played another op. ponent twice in one season, he remarked : "No. I never ha ve coached against another team twice in one season. And I can't say l 'n1 looking rorward to it this time. "J' m sure Anaheim make some changes for this one. We don 't try to fool anybody, though. "I look for Van to pull a few surprises." What about his undefeated (11.0) Western Pioneers? Are there any changes in the off. ing Friday night? "No. we're too dumb to make any changes," he adds facetiously. How does he assess the game and what are bis im- pressions about the outcome? "Both teams are pretty much run-oriented. I think things kind of went our wa y in the first game. We had good field position and we were able to control the ball on the ground. "We really had a good night and this time 'it will be a tossup. I'd like to see about 80,000 people there Friday night, then if we get beat, we'll at least make some money and go home a little happier. "We are from the same district, the same league and have a pretty good rivalry going. It's a real challenge and I'm sure Van and his guys will be up for this one. I only hope our kids are also up for it." The Western c o a c h says his squad is in pretty good physical shape for the struggle • which means that Bob Acosta 1 will direct the attack at quarterback where he has been sensational at times this season . FAMED GOLF & TENNIS ITEMS! ~<If'~ Mlll'S UC GREGOR GOLF r f' SlAltTER SETS WIL ON r.-.MITAL TlNNIS RACKET , '• Orange Coast College's wrestling team. one of the top JC squads in the state, will be favored to defeat Golden West tonight when the two rivals clash in the GWC gymnasium at 7:30. OCC's Pirates are fresh from a second place finish in the tough Sout h we s t c :·n tournament last S a t u r d a y while Golden West placed 10th. First iound actk>n will have Costa Mesa and Anaheim at Costa Mesa, Edison and Hun- tington Beach at Orange Coast College, Estancia and 1.A>ara at E5tancia, Los Alamitos and Marina at Estancia, Magnolia and Newport Harbor a t Newport Harbor, Santa Ana Valley and Santa Ana at Orange Coast, Buena Park and Western at Golden West College and El Modena and Westminster at Golden West. In e flight it was La Rue flight. three down with Maxine Harrison of Santa Ana cc and Jolley next at six and Jane 1.frs. James Brimble of Irvine _T_er_he_ll_t_hi_rd_a_t _se_v_e_n. ___ • Coast CC tied. for first in gro.ss wit h 95. Mrs. Harrison won the gross and Mrs. Brimb1e the Acosta runs the pass-run op. tion play to perfection and has an outstanding tailback to pitch or to handoff to on reverse plays in Alan Osbon. ........ -~-­'Nltft lljloo...,W/-. Sophomores Dan L e w i s (167) and Steve Joannes 1118) pace the Pirates Lewis had a 4-0 record (\vilh three fallst in capturing his division title al Southwestern. Lewis has a 6--0 season rP.COrd. Joannes also won his weight category with four convincing decis)On!I. OCC sophomore Tim Bandel finished second at 190 while teammate Gary Casey, a freshman. wa·s thlrd·in the 1'17· pound Class. And the Pirates' P i u I LaBlanc (142.) and Jeff Noon (150) picked up fourth place medals. Golden \Vest's top effort came from Rick Masters v.•ho was second in the 167.pound dlvi!lion. Teammate Pat Buono was third ( 134 I and John Suter placed fifth (heavyweight l. Sunset teams will then rotate in a clockwise manner. For eumple, Anaheim will wreslle Edison, Huntington Beach will wrestle Estancia and so on. net awa rds. 1n the members £lights, 11rs. Henry Meyer won the A flight gross award with 83 while ri.1rs. Harry Brown was the net victor with 66. In B flight it was Mrs. \Villiam Whitlow the gross \\•inner with 9.1 and Mrs. Lewis Evans the qet victor at 68. W•r• •11 our Wflf S.1 Yo1 Cllf'liU11cn. One tra.eling trophy will be awarded to the winning league and will go to the first place team in that league and an all· tournamen\ team will be selected based on individual records. w1nn!~·~~ monihlyl~~!!!!!!!!,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!li~~~~~~~;:_1 Gals' Tennis ringer tournament at Hun· tington Seacl~ Country Club were annou~ this week. In the ilrst night, Joan Weaver was the winner. Helen Cowden and Rose Erickson shared honors In the se<ond flight as cUd June Doyle 1and Virginia Stevens ~ the third flight. In a f\1utt and Jeff tourna- ment this week, Kay Moser wa!I the fil"!lt night wiMer fo\lowt'd by Joan Weaver, Pat- ti Schottmiller and CUba CUrl. n-Erl--tho ...,. GRAND PRIX $12277 :. C::•J'=-~~ ::::·.:: .,. lo«llft ....... )I -. .,. .......... _... ......... ,... T & L. °'*" -ftir ,.. ..,,..,, """"'· ll .,.. ... • ........ MO. • INCLUDING I YIAill/ .... Ml. WAIUtAMTY DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2410 H•lter IM.•,.... Dr .. C... ..... LIASI DlllCT -PACTOIY AUTHORIDD HAU• Mtn,.,ri,. ••M " 11• e .... I •¥9111 .... J'Y "-• PllD DORAN -l ..... H11 RlG. Jt.tS SALE 34•s " STORE HOURS : MON. THAU FRI. 10A.M . TO 9 P.M . SAT.• SUN. 10 A .M. TO I P.M . LA'MIRADA ORANGE TUSTIN SANTA ANA SHO,,INO ClNr!l'l 1956 Nl.WPORT AVE . llJJ $ ll'lllTOl Sf. fHj.oo.,..,.1 ... ,o_c:_.,, N TUSHN •I FIAST STRl.El 111 MlltAlllTHUlll I'"°'": 521·11&1 Pl>ol>t. 6;11.JllO Pl't-. 832·6891 f'hl)M, bl7·:1J11 NOW,' STORES IN ORANGE COUNTY ' ' - DAILV PILOT Start Your Engines! ThursdAy, Dfctmbtr 7, 1972 WITH DEKE HOULGATE ·ie Bobby Allison was winning a quarter millioo dollars, anl was racing toward his second U.S. driving cham. p and Richard PeUy was earning his fourth_ stock car 11 Bill Fox was driving a ~11ni-Cooper in a ser1es of club races, sonic of them not even open to the publi c. • Jlis payofr was a trip to the Sports Car Club of America 's a • 1 American Raad Race of Champions. In a triumph of the Herculean praportions t~at the pros scored on a larger Fox won his JO.minute race at Road Atlanta and was the C Sedan class national champion for 1972. Sedan is a somewhat obscure class. even for amateur It Ls for small Imported sedans. like the Datsun 1200, a GBA Junior. Fiat 128 and Anglia, plus the Mini-Cooper, lm"t even sold in the U.S. any more because of reaeral .aty regulations. ... ~I Fox is a junk yard operator in Studio City. He's single aad ~erything he can squirrel out of his bu siness. every minute he q.n spend away from it. he has invested in the r ace car he bougbt three years agoln England. Last year after finishiog sixth in the ARC he heard or a mechanic in England wOOse engines woo the European cham· pionship. Fox bought a motor from the man and put it in the Mini. When the engine went sour in .luly, F'ox shipped it back to him and had it rebuilt, at a cost Uiat must have been enor- mous. At Road Atlanta on the first day of practice he broke a ring and pinion gear and found himself without spare parts or a local 111'.lurce to get them. He called his mechanic in California, who air shipped Ule gear to Atlanta . It enabled Fox to qualify fer the race. Fox H'i11s b!J :11 Sero11ds Tee ·raet! ltffll was a "·Ud sbo'tl·. with the lea d changing buds several Umes before Fox broke away from the pack lo win by 31.I seconds. The whole thing cost Fox several thousand dollars, and he didn't gtt more than a conple of fines in the w:Ece story. Wby did Bill Fox work so bard for so little? activity that Is not a norm," be expla.iAed, "can be a f ti. U)lftllliO& Ollt'I self. I'm not ao artist, so I can't paiaL ~• to go tbrooglt • comer at the maximum speed the equip.. ' Is capable of doing 11 an artistry &hat can be appreclated by • er• wbo understand IL It Js my means of realizin g accom- pUs,.,ent." ro'J: is a young man wbo wants to progress in road racing. Now the sport fnrees him to find sponson so he cu afford to mov.e up to a bigger, faster car. He says what be spent thil s peanuts compared wUh what will be requittd when be mo Into B Sedan. Jn that class the winners are all factory- ba , with budgets lo spend tbat even a moderately succt11s· fuJ t;aslnessmu can't afford. •r know Jt'a ·absard to do what J did." Fox said, "to work for a whole season jut for 30 mintues of racing. but that one race was worth all the effort. Five years ago I set a goal, to whll a national championship, and I did It. That's mine." Skeptlral Reporters Shu1111ed :"Revenue figures projected for fut ure races at Ontario are veey optimistic, and it is difficult to imagine that they will be ~. particularly with an unfriendly competitor in its back- ~· Ontario has an uncertain fu ture." -this column, January, 1969. city fathers of Ontario must feel at this point like the who caught bis wife-being unfaithful, only to find out erybody in town had known it for years. was a time when skeptical repor ters were shumed. r· ed, villlfied and subjected to a Jot of pressure. foe once tried to interV"lew Ontario's mayor about speedway f ing. He turned on his bee.ls and walked .away. One sports editor was accused ol being on the payroll of a ri~ promoter, a charge which seriously questioned his abS<>- llrtflY. unreproachabl~ integrity .. The fe.llow _had to threaten a laF't to stop the whisper campaign agalll!t him. 4:ftother reporter was flattered to learn that the speedway's ~ executive went to the trouble of trying to get him fired. Tlt'Writer kept bis job. ~ Ontario Clti:e11s Bll11ded ! Public •pb'lted citize ns of Ontario were blinded by the pros. ~ that the $!5.5 million speedway would put their town on ~ map. It did, of CORrSe, and the sheer grandeur of the place 1uf &190 Hlped to upgrade the Image of aat& racing. ! WMle dnlni those wonderful Wnis, OMS managed to Jose so6:lelb1n&' betwttn $.5 and f1 million in little more than two ye.,i. { It'• a shame the operatini company found it impossible to co~ue. Under direetton of Us fourth manager, John Cooper, ll ked as U the speedway was being run efrtd ently. The basic stumbUng block , Cooper repeatedly sakl, wu the b Interest charge oD municipal revenue bonds which cen- a sort of first mortgage on the place. '111ose bonds oated at the wont possible time, under terrible market DI and In clttamstances that migllt never have been .. Ued U they could have been conlrolled by the SEC or ~other regulatory agency. !· City Counrll Approve• Bond Issue £• The voters never even got to approve the bond issue -it done in city council. The prospectus used to sell boncb was ~pie-~th&sky. No stock promoter could have gotten away Price9 quoted to build the stadium were certainly nol tom. Revenue projections for the speedway were a joke, a sad one. : l'tbe most regrettable aspect to the downfall of OMS was machinery was set up to prevent poor management but er used. A board ol five Ontario businessmen comprised t tario Motor Speedway Corporation, a non·profil entity f~ed as a watchdog. · :)To our personal knowledge the OMS Corporation never vfiOed a single action, never questioned an elpenditure, never a single valid suggestion that heJped the bu.stneM opera· of the apeedway. How that it's up to the board to weigh the merits of various to take over the speedway operaUons, guess what. The ' ls once more a tpectator. Decisions from now on will be by the bond underwriters oo behalf ol the bondlu>lde,.,,, the underwriters reel a moral obligation to them. lt'1 t.oo bid the)' dJdn 't ltep in earlier. , Chargers Clash Vlslion Viejo High'• un-Coach Pat Roberts' Dlablos ten (W) and No. I "61ed rtly on the ootalde obooUn11-of 'abloa are blet In action Mike Bowen aod Ro b I when they mtt1 the Ferguson aloog with. \lie !nolde ending champion Edison play of Steve Rudesill. °*'Ser• at LOI AmJgos Coach Dave Mohs' Chargers 1n tbe fourth annual have a revamped lineup wllh basketblll tourney. Dirk Zirbel, a &-0 guard, the Tipoff Is at 1 and the winner • Jone r eturning starter. The pilyl the survivor of the dh1raers cJptured t b l 1 foUowlq c•me betweeo Santa tourney a year ngo for their Au Val)eJ' and Loa Aml&ot a flnt-ever toumamen~ crown nlsht. Iller at the same site. Jn varsity b&sketbatl. Monahan Coaches' Top Pick Steve Monahan has been seJected player-Of-the-year by the South Coast Conference football coaches and joins seven other -0f his teammates OJI the all-eonference team. Joining Monahan were first team se lectlons Alvtn White (quarterback), John Dixon trWUl1ng back), Bob Fate tcentcr) and Pat Sweetland (defensive tackleJ and seeond- team picks Tim 8 and el (guard), Dave -<1-a-C"<k-s on- (defensive ladle) and Ken Shibata (defensive back) . Rice Tops All-SoCal Loop Team Football coaches in the Southern Ca Ii for n i a Con· fcrence have selected Golden West College's Rici Rice and Ri o Hondo's Carl Zaby as players-of-the-year in th e circuit lhis year. Rice, GWC's record-3ett.iog tailback, was one of eight RusUers named to the all-con· fcrence team by the coaches. AU-SOullltF'fl c.i1,.,111.11 CH,."9!1CI Fl"'! T .. m ,,,_ TE-M1v11, LA Soulhw1stlf.S.. Wlt-Dt L• Fl.Mini., East , Fr. WR-tlavwoodl,Sa11t1 MOii 1, Fr. T -BHrd. It H"""' So. t :!:,~~r.l ~l~l. So. G -w IM!n, II.la Hondo So ~ -DI A~IO. S.n!I MQi;ka. So. B-Smlth, Santa Monlca1 _So. 8-Rlc1, Golden W1111 ~­RB-Z11>¥, Ria Hondo, ~. RB-D1oo.r, C~Fr. L -Poner, Gota.n W"51, Fr. L -Sa.....,uroll, Rio Holldo. Fr. L -8radltv, LA Cl..,., So. L -M1rttne1, Etsl LA . So. Lll--Ferrvm111, GoldeTI Wttl, So. LB--Helldlfi.on, LA Cltv, So. L8-P1vne, San!I Monica. !.o. Da:IOCl,_Goldlll Wttl. So. O 1rlft. E11! LA. So. 08-'"""''rt Htr1)0r, So. 8t:~:~J. ~~' So. CG-Pl1¥9rt-ol-l-'(f:er: 1tfce e II G Zll>Y YIKES ... Cont lnued From Page ia blew a 19-polnt second quarter shooting display by Santa Ana in the fourth period. Santa Ana's Joaquin Zarate stole the sbow In the last quarter, hitting J4 of hl.s 24 counters in that span. Santa Ana shooters connected on l I of their first 12 11hots In the fourth period to tum around a 57.-49 Westmimter lead at the end of the third perlod. lt negated a sparkling performance by Westminster's Gary Andrews, who scored 30 points for the Lions and at one stretch in the early going !allied 17 strRight for coach Doug Stockham's Lions. SA.N CLEl\tENTE'S TRI· TONS fell behind early lo Santa Monica and were Ullllble to grab the lead after fl"t period action. Dan Nau led the Trltons with 20 points. MARINA'S JllNIOR VA~­ SfTV nearly pull~ o(f thr up-. let or the tournament. bowing to Mlralt:ste lll3h'.s varsity, 57-56. CO.ch Roo Wod,.y playocl hi• tntlr• squid •od the junior Vlke.9 Md two chanoeJJ In the final 47 sec- onds IO win It but couldn't connect. Keith Koeller scored 14 end Byron JIOlllck OIJ>!)ed In II for Marina, which · f01t without benefit of o fret throw point. Ori tit£ Banquet Trail LA Sharks • Prep, JC Athletes Lauded To Train In Mesa Craig Way. Sergio Vargas and Pat MoorhouJe were nam· ed. most valuable on Edison High's football . cross country and water polo teams Wednes- day night •l the school's an- nual sports awards banquet. Winner of the Mark Naylon award (most lnspir8Uonal) in football was Mike Morado. Special award winners : _ .. , Vtrtltv -C"'tel'" 8111 Fard; MVP~ Crelt W1y; Mcl5I l ...... retlonel lM1r- No¥lon Aw•nll: Mlk• Mor-: Moll lmprOYlld otflntl'(f: Betit: J o I o.tMfrlt .. : -I lmpt'OWd Olfft\MY• tin.men: Frent Ovleclo1 Mat lmpr,,.... ed DneMIYll 8edt: Ed Weln1Mr9'1r; MoSI I ..... ~ tlefenlWe l!Mnw-n: Miit• 8r'OOU. Junior Ver'lllY -Ctplefn: OIY9 Rog•Wd; MVP: 0.lt Abr1m1. ~e -Ceptalt1: Cr1 l 9 H,.wlry; MVP: SI""' Hlnn. Fl'Olh (Gr-) -Ctp!elt1: J!111 8<19erl; MVP: Jeff ltobl.._. Frotl'I (Gold) -Ceplolt1: &ob Fl1,.. ~elly; MVP : Rlclt a11110r•. ,,..,,. ,..,..,,.,. Vl riJIV -Cepteln: OeOl\U. WU..,..; MV: Ser9lo Verps: Moll 1.,..Wetloruol: o-ls WllMlll; Mal.I l"'Pf'0\19d: Colin MtCOftnel. Collegi~~,, Pro Results .. J11n~ Vorslly -C1pl8ln: Gl>l'don l !nd«olh; MV: Mike Ltndry. Frm.h-5opl'I -C1p!1ln: len Green: MV: Kem Abrams. W1ttr "* VersJty -Coot1ln: Howard GowGy; MV: Pal Moorllo\ISI; Moil Oedlclled : George 8udrl1; Mil$! lmpro.,..: Scott Pol1mar. Jvnlor V..-slty -Ctpltln: 0.¥41 Sul· ton; MV: Dave Pldtlord. Froth • Soph -Ctpl1!11: O.nnl1 Q.erieg; MV: Jeff W1UanG. Tim Gollnick was named most valuable on Costa A1esa High's championship cross country team Wed nesd a '!I nigh t at the Mustangs sports award banquet. Special award winners: sim FITS 171·14 . 7J5-14 F7 .. 14. nl·l4 F71·15. 775·15 •71·14. 125-14 .7 .. 15. 121-11 H7 .. 14 • 115-14 H71·15 • 115·11 1795 21 95 banquet .honcring the Golden W..t College football team. Rice ls a running back and Heil plays deteoslve end. But COmellus was named the offe?slve captain and the defensJve captain's award went IO Mike Ladd. The DAILY PILOT award for defense was presented to Dick Ferryman. The Los Angeles Sharks lee hockey team of the World I-Jockey League will move inlO Costi Mesa for training about mid-January lf current com· pletion plans are met far the newest and biggest ioe rink in Southern California. KJondike Ice Arena of Costa Mesa will open Its doors to the public at that lime, according """ to manager Joe Felkione. ,,,,-Laguna Beach Hlgb'I foot-"We will have p \Z b 11 c Newport Harbor H I g b • s ball teams will be booored skating, figure club llbting, try •---ill be ~th ~. ards •·-t amatellr hockey and will be cross coun wcuu w "' a ......... ..., aw """""ue the training area ror the honored with a ~ awlf<I tonight at the girls gym on the Sharks," Felicione told the banquet tonight In 'the se&ol Laguna Beach campus. DAILY PILOT today. nfeteria ~ It 1:30~ . It gets under way at 6 The rink will be open seven o'clock with presentation of · """' caplaln, most valuable and days a week with several Fountain v a11ef ltigh's foot-mo.st improved aw 1 rd s sessions Mily for ap- ,ball teami wUl be honored highllgbUng the evening. proximately 2'12 hou.n each. ..-with a s~ awai'd banquet Youths Jnterested in the in tfie sa10of ~a ~toni«hr· """' hockey program can call Feli· beginning at•~•. . Marina High's water polo cione at 979-1750 1at anylontime Coach B'ruc e' Pietfdrd'• team wlll be honored with a togainfurther in onnat on Barool olmpleted their f!)llrtb sports aw* banquet mpight the age group teams that will straight' winning Sea~.a at Vllla,SWeden Restaurailt in represent the new arena In ~W""lllatk: ~ Huntiriifulf" BeaCfi. ----Southland lea~es._ .... ' ·It ets und wav at &·30 The KJoodike ice surface Included in the program is .~ er ~ · · will be 90x212 feet according the naming of the captains,,.. to the manager. Minimum re- llJOlit valuable player aod most · Cage Results qulwnents for lee hockey on improved~ player on each the professional ftont are team. 85x185, giving the new rink ruck Rice was selected as the most valuable player and Steve Heil was named the Rustler of the Year at Wednesday night's awards ,.......,. Venltr I f the M11t1t °" 1u1 l•J ltye4e amp e space or game. "°'"""e" 111 " u1 een~ The new rink i.s a local =~ 101~1 ~ 11~~ ~'-:!: enterprise with George Baney Heit £01 G e1n Fe11•ao and Associates ol the Orange ,_ .. 101 G 1101 t.,gnn r~~st area owners a n d kllrlf'e mum: Mtllf' Dlt: RMmltck VV<I 11, s..n 1s. ~t t. LoYa•: builders of the skating em-Glli..rt I. Hllfllmt: Ml._, Oii ~25. porium. LONG M -ILER AS LOW AS • Rugged 4-Ply Nylon Cord • Good mileage at economy prices 861oekwell eize 7.00·13 pl1,11 Fed.,. .. E•cl~e T1x 11f $1.9~ pt1t tire end lrt<I•. ;,;~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::=:",r_,_· _____________ .. _ ... _etiow bllld.-.111 ...,II_,, ••• 11111111.,. hlgM•. 00 LUBE & 4SS 0o1coa.H1Jack•rs ~~.;~~~~~~ SH~~KS 34so BRAKE RELlNE. 4oA»OO MIU . OUAR4.NTE' -.... ., ALL . LINING &, ''AllO,R 9Mllty .. ,. I 7 'I ..... ""'--'• -,_ . ......, CARS 2 95 WHm BALANCE PLUS WEIGHTS 149 Many Ways To luy W£ HONOR ALL MAJOR CREDIT· CARO$ W}tUL ALIGNMENT IU!G, VALUlt: tit.JO ..... ••• Jona I -OPEN 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. 'Mon. thru Fri. S.turd•y Io . .,,. lo.S p.m. U.S. CRAGAR-MAGS SPOKE 2FOR49 M.., - TRUCK -CAMPER -MOTOR HOME TIRES Sow• From $10 to $30 por nro SID • ONLY SIU ,, .. ,, 21 .fl 100°16:5 700-11 .•••. , JI.ti 171·11.I 700..16 •.••. : 27.tl t l0.16.1 , .... ,, •••••• )1.71 10.16.1 f .LT, J,14M1.61 12·16.S ACIOll F&OM THIODOll IOllNI 'Gilt ONLY Jt.tl ., .. , lf:ll • •••• It.II Phones 646-4421 540-4343 r • r r-------------------------=--c.-.--~ _,, ____ ____ TONIGIIT'S TV IDGlillGHTS KllJ G 7:80 -"Experiment in Terror." Glenn Ford as a po!Jce detective hunting a kidnapper. Lee Remick, Stephanie Powers. CBS IJ 9:00 -"The African Queen," Humphrey r ~gart won an O~ar for his performance as a dissolute ship caplam persuaded by a spirurter mJ>. ; sionary (Katherine Hepburn) to destroy a German gunboat ·NBC 0 9:00 -Ironside. An old man, grieving for hl_S .murder~ daughter, urges police to solve the killing despite the sl immest of clues. Tisha Sterling guests. KCOP ID 11:00 -"The Fugitive Kind." Marlon Brando, Anna "1agnani and Joanne Woodward star , in this 1960 movie vers~n of Tennessee Williams' ·~ "Orpheus Descending." ABC 0 11:00 -Behind Prison Walls. Author Truman Capote cond,ucts probing interviews with inmates of San Quentin Prison. . lV DAILY LOG Thurs cloy Evening DECEMBER 7 Fridoy I· DAYTIME MOVIES --Humphrty Botut. kltl!arine Htp· blll'll. Robert Mor1eJ. In Ille Canto d11rtn1 Worid War I, 1 spln1te1 (Mbs Htpbum) persuades 1 dissolult ca,. bl11 (8ofart) to try to ~troy 1 Glr· 1n111 1unbolt. 0 (]) m l.....W. "Who'll Cry tor My Bit.yr An ol4I man, 1ritvin1 for ltis ~ 111upt11, VfltS pollct to sotrrt tti1 111111111 llespitt tllt alim-mest., dlltt. Tisha Sllllll'll iruem. o rniil.IB"' .. _._ ...t ...... .,Ann1llsl" A WOllWI fToM JIU Webster's p1st sudd1nty rtlJIPl•n to asil: him !or Mlp In d11rin1 111r tlusbelld of • murlilf ttllf(t. RGM""'J Fo~hl auests. flJl.,Tt""'""9 tD lHI , ... ,..... ....... .. ''LI S)'lphld(' Tht Paris B1Ht1 rt- cn~~ ont' ol tti• 1111at ehofeo- lflphk'Mnb If tfM 19th etfl\UIJ f11turil\i H rerial N 11tl Michlll Dtn•rcl dances the roll of 1 Scoltish lllObfrt who ltlls IR IO¥I wittl I WllOd• )IN •plril 1:.::..- .4 . , j OAll,Y PILOT Stiff l'llO .. In Gilded. Cage RicharsJi Doyle "punishes'' h.i s uncle, H. J. Parks, by putting a bird cage over his head in this scene from ·the South. Coast Repertory comedy ''Tango," playing at the Third Step Theater in Costa Mesa. 'Popper's Penguins' Cast Set for Valley One of the largest·casts yet assembled by the Fountain· Valley Community Theater will pr:esent the children's pr<r duetion "Mr. Popper 's Penguins'' for 12 performances, begiruting Dec. 20. Charles Stanaert, drama U.. stuctor at F.dison Higb School in Huntington Beach, wm play the title role, while Mrs. Po~ per will be portrayed by Claire Richardson. The children and their friencb will be played by Joel Straiw:, Sharon Kennedy, Gary Houston a n d Cindy Moct. Other featured roles are being taken by Jennifer Hig· ginbotham, David and Katy Peck, Kevin and Carey Miller, Michelle Abshier, Stephanie Preston, Nansl B row s e t , Wayne Mayberry, Sam Wan- non, Delia Sanchez, Colin Miller and Dorcey and David Abshier. A nwnber of children from 4 to 12 who will be double cast ln the roles of pengulns are Kayla and Marla Adler, Jennie Blendennan, Nikki B I o c k , Heidi Christemen, C a r y n Cogert, Mindie Dafforn. Mary Gentile, Renee Hassay, Kris, Mlira and Lisa Helber, Julie ifOiitS, Michael K a p s o n , Deidre 'KuhleftdahJ, Llsa and Noelle Mart.in. Jennifer Peck, Lohie stePhe!is. Beth Strauss, Yvette TetraUlt,-· Gina, Mark and Mary Jo Trumble, Lindl Willhite ·and Diane Winnard. "Mr. Popper's Penguins'~ v.·ill be presented primarily as a holiday attraction on 2 o'clock matinees on Dec. 26-22, 27-29, Jan. 5-7 and 12~14 . Eve- ning performances will be giv· en Jan. 5 and 12 at 7:30. Perlonnances will b& given at the· theater building. 18280 Mt. Baldy Circle, Fowitain Valley. Advance reservations are being taken at 968-9663 or 847-6570. ' Dyan Cast HOLLYWOOD (UPI! Dyan cannon is the fifth star to be cast in "The Last or Sheila" topped by Raquel Welch and Richard Benjamin. -JO• ... Where Will It End? Frankness on TV Cart Go Just So Fa.r By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD IAPI Where will It end. this greater frankness in television and movies? For tel evision, the answer is fairly predictable. Th J s season's trend of dealing with such themes as hon1osex· uatity, adul tery and abortion has brought a hopeful attitude on the part of television film make.rs. But they know that boldness can only go so far in TV. After all, the industry is still sub}ect to regulation by a government agency, the FCC. GGvenunent agencies are subject t o pressure from members of Congress, who are responsive to protests of outraged citizens. "While television viewers n1ight laugh at a little sex talk on 'All in the Family.' says a network official, ' · t hey wouldn't allo\\' ·oh. Ca lcutta ' on the home screen." Some nudity has already been seen in dance program s on public television. wh ich also allows more explicit language and treatment of sex than the commercia l channels. Bu t public television can only go so far in frankness and it will suffer d o 11 a r malnutrition from government. founda tion and other supporters concern- ed with public image. CABLE TELEVISION is ano th er matter. It is not su~ ject to government regul ation or censorship and might well be able to offer it s subscribers the most frank of current movieS. The limits or commercial !eie'vision were expressed by Robert D. Wood. presldenror the CBS Television Network : ENTERTAINMENT careful, tender. thoughtful, responsible handling." ~1ovies are something else. The film industry 's r~ing syStem, explains prOOUCt'r chief Jae!k Valenti , o n I y classifies movies for thelr ac- ceptability for children. It does not dea l in matters of taste. Thal, to many critics .oI the rating system. ls the trouble with films today: the lack of taste . Some directors can deal lyrically with sexual scenes, others obviously exploit sex for shock va lue. ONE OF TllE most tastefu.l the burst or freedom , and they went overboard with the dcpi<..1ion or sex . Eventually it wltl bt.'Come so t.'OOlmonplace thnt audiences will rejecl it. ALFllEO HITCTICOCK con- cur!;: '·The scene of a man and woman wrestling in bed has already become a clinche, and audienees are weary of it. I think directors would ht' much better o£f being more subtle, as I was in ·North by Northwest ' I shov.·ed Grny Grant climbing into Eva Marie Saint 's upper un the train. and then I ('lit to the phallic train entering the tun· nel." Valenti. in leading the trend to grant fi1m makers almost total freedom. has claimed that films merely reflect cur- rent moralitv. "I don 't ·agree." <.'Uuntpr<; director Cukor. ··1 th i nk ~reat'r freedoms are in the alr. but"today's films pre<;ent a distorted view. Thl'y have gone too far, and have alie nated a great se~ment of the movie audience." Whether films Y.'i ll go farthe r remains to be seen. The answer. argues Hitehcock. lies with the general public: "The writer-director only wants to make his work as realistic as possible. If people are pe rm issiVt!, the films will reflect that .'' of directors. George Cukorl----------- "My Fair Lady," "Travels with My Aunt," comments: ··My quarrel wit h son1e of the cWTent films is that they present sex so unattractively. On the screen as in rea l life, you can condone wickedness in attractive people. "Now we see leading ladies appear nude on the screen. I think they are ill-advisee!. Clothes arc among man 's greite3t · inventions _: for those who do not have great fig ures. I foun d that those who did, girls like Lana Turner and Ava Gardner. preferred to keep thei r bodies covered." Another veteran director, ~ .'iiolilary Kim Nichols is caught in a pensive game of solitaire in this seen~ fro1n ,;tlapp Birth· day," ('losing Friday and Saturday at the L-Ong Bea('h Commun- ity Playhouse. --- J\f ason Sig11s llOLLYll'OOD IUPll James ~f ason has signed to play ;i director in "The Last of Sheila " at \\'arner Bros. GEORGE c. SCOTT 'RAGE' . ' "To say television is doing lhings on sex. you have to look at how it is-bandied. To do sex for the sake of sex is the worst thing in the world . When it's handled by highly.skilled peo- ple, it's not only acceptable, it gives muscle f l one to television. But it rC!(Juires King Vidor, believes the trend toward sex may be waning: •·when censorship was re- moved, film makers enjoyed -·-1"110 119 •HMlt Mia I •Ill •O 0t ... "''"~ , ... ~--------1 SlfVE MtOUEEN IN HJUJllOI IONMll" • • 'Falnily' No. I Again NEW YORK iAPl -The Columbia Broadca s tin g System's "All in the Family" show topped the Nielsen television ratings li st for lhe week ending Nov, 26, ratings figures made public l\1onday showed . It wus the fifth time the pr<r gram had been rated number one in the nation since the start of television's fall season last September, ABC's "Tuesday Movie" and NBC's "Sunday 1\1 y st e r y l\1ovie" were rated second and third in viewing audierice size by Nielsen analysts.· Other winners in the list of highest-rated shows, according to their standings in the ratings, wefe : '·Maud e '' (CBSJ, "Sanford and Son" (NBC), "Hawaii F i v e -0' ' (CBS \, "Walt Disney" (NBC), "Wednesday l\1ovie of the Week." (ABCI, ';Chitty-Chitty Bang Bang" and "Bridget Loves Bernie'' (both CBS) and "Marcus Welby" (ABC ). Night Voice HOLLYWOOD (UPIJ -Edy Willi-ams will co-slaii with Italy's Alberto Sarno and Aldo Ray in "A Voice in the Night" to be filmed on location in lta· \y and in Hollywood. \, I KClU~IVl fNCAGEM£Nf .tMIU 6Al .. t . U IMfttl<lll acm they only _kill 111e1r rnoste1s CHAAl.E!I •RllNllllN "THE MECHANIC " """"·-- BURT LANCASTER' 'ULZANAS RAID' •. ' L ' ' . . . DAILY PILOT -Mail POllrittg In 'W altons' Solid Hit • ... By JERRY BUCK , llOLLYWOOD (AP) -Tile · mail pouring lo to "The Waltons," a gentle, believable viJk>n show about a 1 ra family, falls in- K three categories: ~, arents write that they .. dOn't have to worry about ~ children watching this show. Others say they don't let their chlldren stay up to watch \1tt1FVWOO but are making an ptlon for "The Wall.oos." i mail comes from those att: aware of ratings and they bope this show won't • lost. _,,., Despite the fonnidable op- ~tion of Flip Wilson and 'W..}'?Jle Mod Squad," this show A VS;GOt being losl. CBS picked it ........ up for the rest of the season and ordered two additional. shows, for a total llf 24. "When you look at the com- petition and its ability to generate an audience J would equate "The Waltons' with any successful show on television," said Robert 0. Woods, presi· denl of the CBS Television Network. ALTHOUGH "THE Waltons" articulates the old values rather than the new morality, it is not inconsistent with the sense of reality seep- ing into television this year. The family is believable, the characters are credible, the stories are realistic. Characterization plays an important part in this !how, and It la dtftloped al a.pace that is d6wnr1ght lel!urely !or television. Llttle aide plols in- volving tbe chi~ or Ike God!ey. the • gr(,ver, ·..er the Baldwin ststen with their "recipe.'' meanc5et 'no~bere, bill o!ler lnteni,illal i!>&lilU· COotrlbutlng )WgJ>W)' ,to the belie•abWty Ii· Ille laC\ that l""J'M~ Earl Hamner Jr'..' the e1- ecutive stOl"f conSufiant, Ls recre11ting hfs own boyhood in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. , Hamner said, "So ,many people see things oo television they know are flctlOn. I thlnk the feeling here is that they are seeing real people. "nley are seeing life, not lmitations of life. I think our actors are people you like, i)eOple you would like to be with. DAI&. Y PILOT ttcttt ...... !''Creation of WorW' "I mINX a lot of ·the ~ peal is lbe period.. We'.re faithful to the 309. A depression may not in itself' be appealing. 'Ibey were 'hard times, but we weathered them and it offers hope that we can weather what we're going Helping B1,1nd ~ffricky Miller Play Don George and Jeani Gibbon share a happy mo- ment before terror strikes in this scene from "Wait Until Dark." Final performances of the Huntington Beach Playhouse drama will be given Friday and Saturday. - ( MA MASTERPIECE!" !Ill ~MILO.Z-=, 11111' I ~ I 1 IHllW ~~­·-- NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES c..t.~ ........ 2:00 through now ." Producer Robert L. Jacks sees it as "a longing for the days that were." .. People are fed up with modern living," Jacks said . .. Lord, we see that every day. They're fed up with freeways. the din, tension and people are moving back to the soil. This 'Mousetrap' Begins 21st Year on London Stage · th taste f th t " LONDON (AP) -Agatha gives em 8 0 8 · Christie's detective thriller Richard Thomas, who plays ''The Mousetrap" has begun Hamner as a youttl. said "There1s a sense of participa-its record 21st year on the lion you don 't have in other London stage today with its shows. That has to do with the B,3ltth performance ·and an fact that our show is based on assurance that ''we won't go characters, not plot a n d nude." mechanics." Premiered on NoV. 25. 1952, Thomas said he based his "The Mou s e t r a p ' ' ha s characterization of John-Boy, outlasted rock 'n' roll, the a teen-ager in transition from Beatles and the miniskirt and boy to man , on his own still is playing to full houses. childhood summers spent in "We'll do our quarter cen~ the theater or the 1970s. While "Hair" and "Jesus Christ Superstar" pack in t h e crowds, ' • T h e ~1ouselrap" tttrives on com and being good, clean "family murder." "Things have never been so good," says Saunders. "There is not the slightest sign of any diminishing OOsiness. More than 3,000,000 people have aeen it, and 700,000 are being born every year. Logically, there's really no reason why it should ever end." Kentucky. tury," forecasts director Peter Hamner, whose soft Pied-Saunders, who has been with lj~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~I moot voice provides the nar-the play throughout its run , ration, said, "I think basically "and we won't go musical and Americans want affinnative we won't go Dude." gj~ things said about our society Some might think "The and I think here we are saying ?i.1ousetrap" is anachronistic in l 0 affirm•tive things about love,[lrlll~~ll 1 1 the family and lhe inherent goodness of people. "We're trying to make a positive statement on the human condition. The values we stress are timel~respect, frugality, thrlft, independence. self rel.ianCi! and f a m i I y pride." ............... Ry• O'N"I "WHAT'S UP • DOC?" ---A 1\tik O• Sklhl wl"~SklC .... "SNOW JOB" Jean.Claude Killy loft Color-19Md IPGJ ~HAO!-........ ........... IW.Wt-•Ol ...... THE NEWEST OF THE SKI EPICS "TI!is ·1s Skiing" Al1e !PGI JEAN CL.AUDI llLLY "Snow lob" WATCJI FOl, "PITI AND TIL~r· KIDS LIKE UNCLE LEN Peoor Sophia James OTool.e. L.Oren and U>co dream lhe Impossible Dream· in an Arthur Hiller Alm GM Crwtld M•11 • , • W-C .......... , ''THI SIN 011' ADAM At40 IVI" TllMIY',. Wll*ahl "IWllT I UUA" lofll ill C ..... I fll Hfid Ovar1 4tll SIM"' ..... .. Man of~ ~Mancha" BOXOFFICE OPEN DAILY 12 NOON TD t l'.M. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY AESE,.VEO SEAT ENGAGIMENT! For OrouP'I ot 25 Cl' mor1 ull Jim 011n t71'1 fi:J1.J797 .llml H ... rtt • "llAIHIOW 1111001." ....,_ ''1't MOTi.LS .. l•lh IR C. .. rl ll•lwd l•l t Miii .. ""'' "THIS IS SllCllfilOH J-C ..... Klllr ''SHOW IOS" hlll Ill c.ltrl IPOI Mii.._. X..n• l'•I HIS TNn• SIX Al'T•• DIATN" .,PUTNl.Y SWOPI:" ... Ill c.tllrl OU -. ... -..rcr------------~-..,.-- Odaer Tryouts Llsie41t . . . I . C 'M. ' rvine w a·st , istress . - . 'llte best lald p11111 of mice and community ~groups olteo 10 aatny -ao the Irvine COnlmw!lty Tl>eater .... ~ be alldlllolllng on Mon- day for .. ~ )J That YOu!"1fter all , Amateur TIK)ltt to Ibo com· edy ..,.'H>e itleued belnre lhe February pniductlon date, so the Irvine group will aubstitute lhe Orange C.U.ty pnmiere ol another-comedy -"'l'!le Nlnely lllJ' Mlatrm" by J. J. Coyle. JteadjJlgs for "Mlstrels" will be held Moodly, Doe. U, In SI. -~ aiurcll of Jrvioe, Qll"1' Ori•• and SndhUrg Way, at 7:1011.m. I> c8st of ~ women .ud four .,.. I• ·required. Directed by Tom 'l'ilu•, "1ile N"mety Day Mistren" will open Feb. 10 . l<ir. three weekends In ~ Hum1!11tleo Hall Playl)ouse on "Ibo -uC Irvine can\pus. FUrther in- formatiQn le available at 567· 7297. AUD1'110NING-NEXT weilt will be two upcoming pro- ductions in the north county area -the Ana-Modjeska Players' "Winnie the Pooh" and the Fullerton Civic lJgbt • MOONCHILDREH A comedy by • , , Mich•el Wollor Wnt CMSt Pia•h,. MC1t919 AMleMe DIC, llf thru DIC. 17 .. NI., SAT ... SUN. I P.M. JI.) <>~b • J~ I • ~ •" I •1 r /,' • r \ ---CtNEDDME JO t. ,.=1::.f''"::'J;'"CL .. ---CtNEOOME l f '" ... ".:':~.-. •• r.'..'..o:.t'. ,... .. ---.. SIAD/UM I .. "~;...,..·11c·-----.. SIADIU/lf l . .. .--.:-~~ 11 ' ·----.. SIADIUM·J .. -··-'ts 11 . - - - -l• Opera's "KlsmeL" Carol Faulatlci, f well· w ... Onntl& Cotuityla<lt .... will direct "Wlnnie" for the Anaheim group and will bt Recreation Center, 340 W . CommonweaJth Ave. Dance auditions will bt beld Wed· nesday only at the same time • at f.he Hillcrest Recreation Center, Z35 E. Valley View (CALLBOARD) A~?Klsmet" will be pn111<mted -r for three weekends I n c .. tlrig Monday and Tuesday February and March, opening from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Loara Feb. 16, at PI um mer Playhouse, 1901 W. 'Bi-Oadway Auditorium In Fullerton High tn Anaheim. Auditions for the School. Further tnrormatlon is position of musjcal director. _a_v_all_a_b_l•_•_t_S2&.1132 ___ . __ _ t!W be held Dec. 16 !rom 9•· a.m. to noon. Roles are availabJe for children of all ages. ·'!be pro-1..i~*""*""**"**"**"*.._*.._* .. !~y~ °!"'~.14 and hu@,ttilriii T1IE nrLLERTON , Civic Llght Opera wW audi~Oll ac- ~s. singers and dancers for 0 Kislnet" on Monday: Tiles· day and Wednesday of next week. Doog Lance Is directing with 1"" Krete<..oo_tbe.J>ato.n and Kathleen Melcb<ir as choreographer. Actors and singers will be heard Mooday and Tuesday at 7:3-0 at the Amerige Park .w ....... .., s.u , .. artst- be'"'" ........ ... ................. ........ ,....., ....... "••DDLm• °" ntl aoo .... IM T"I ... TOP OP WOMDlllTAIMMUTI • WALT ~fllSMIT'I "DUMW" & "1..o.O"' --Hlll'fT9111'LIEI ,, •• , ..... & "THlll'I A OS9L IN MY IOU .... "THI D.t.11 .... AOVlinv.I" • '"TOllAI TOllAI TOllAl" ... ••> c...,._•-"TM• VALACMI ............ ,ca1 • '""' Clll1tt .. tr. ....,-1Ltrl••••J1L J IAT.19"'. .. llft•r.& wow., .......... 1, Jltl lllv•••ld9 frM••r ' al L .... on SI. 52!-15 L~A ... wKIOI .:i"1;,o SIAD/UM 4 .• .. ~l!!1=-:J ..........._ "THI 90STON ITltAtf•LIR" (I) l...., .......... -•I .t K...i1 5Z1·221J •IAMD IHllZI '#"111 ~ ...... porbtll9 TV BET plus .......... t""' SD FREE TOYS! Mmdebli': ...... ,,,,. .... INl\oil·i;l- plwl ...• ~•·"for _,-dllldl ~~ no. __ ... __ _ ·----·-----·· l'Ull -l(OUll' (All-i FOX SOUTH CCl""T II H•f •lRE --"--~ .. 009Ta. IOI. .... C41Jf00"'.," ·-,,Q _,tr ... _ _, _ .. ,...,_ ~\/9 Of' •t.g9 --·-~-cfh~.:. ~·oM;;;;;;o;;;,• ... ON~---·0"~---9 _?~ ... 1ufl_.,Mllt11" A llPAIAll PIA(l (Pe) PlUS•AU#.f.111111 Ult Of TMl llD MDT lOYllH IP .. .. "" ... " t TMn: t5 SlllPll (ti ~ SltOW JO• IPIJ .....,tl,otlll6'U.l&MllltM • FROM.F asliion Island: · N e~pbrt Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR M::a:z . ~. llJl•~i ·: I > : ~ ------------------------ ( Luk of 09t1ea Road Smog Peril For the Record To Heart Victims . Dl11olutfon1 ~~"'~.!!:"1-~~J.:...i::stre.. Of Marriage e~,~~~:iAI"""' LONO BEACH (AP) - Freeways hatbar enough a~ pollution during rush hours to serloualy endanler the heallb . of heart diseue victims, a . sludy lhows. Carbon mo119xide Inhaled during a freeway ride of 90 minutes Incr e as e s the llkellhood of heart pain among coronary pallents and abO causes seriou.s c ard I a c changes, apparenUY from a ·( ECOLOGY) reduction in o~gt;n. concluded · lhe study by lb~ Long Beacb V e t e r a n s -Administration Hospital. The study said carbon monoride, even al what were believed to£be relalivefy>ow levels, -·~y-alfect­the heart. Carbon monoxide, an ln- gred.ien\ of smog, replaces · vnal ozygen in the blood stream, which i.!I especially · dangerous for beaft· disease "paUer1ts a I r1e·a d y suffering from reduced OIY&<JJ reaclling their hearts. • Bait Seaght The rn.easure was killed on an 11·21 vote in the Sen.ate. Sen! Ratph DUl1, ( D - Ga r .d e na), called the A>sembly-passed blll ' ' a mess" that was too loosely drawn and could clog court calendars. The bill .... lotroduced by for'P!'r Asaemblyman James Hayes of Lolli Beacb, a Republican who now Is a Los Aq~es Cow)Jy supervisor. eAt!ffrd Set ,... 111uwn1 .. It ~Ta:• V:'_. KtrtcM1 fir-. Jllllann.e T. W llO'I' 0. '=' ~01!,:. _, ""*--D1 °'"' GlotOMO,. IMtt-•Ni J 8 I Ip II O .._, , .. ~ -.... _ J-, GfftrtMve Ii. Md Jtlfltt T. ~':"VMC\'fltlll1 JM!! Mil C*Wt A1~...:1e1w11'f Cl•tnC• tfJCI Pr1K1111 i.lr~'·,'!1.vlf~.: ::= r-rv,.o•DY ~ ..... J-1 • .,. "'.,. J. ~Ur. '"'TJiili ... ~,...m " J1111 Ill~ JOlll P. Mii WlftllM J, M'-·" WM J l J,·• 11\H'kl. Dtfllc:e Mid WllU.,,, Thon'lal ...,_'E I am 8fTY and o'''""' Alltl lt911'11M. Dlllorft A MCI OC11\41110 tr:"~~...i!'n 'e' ~~ W. Sitt«, Htncy Mtt'1t and OlarMf H-. IE"*' J,~ ;~"'"I Hornw , s•-•ri. ~ . OtfH1!t c'r Ellk!.-., M*11l1 lrld llotllrt Emmon1. GrK I I llan trod Wtl ........_ DI-J-tftd J~ NIN'Y ~ Clw~llM . •rod St-. ~ ltoDlrf"I(,"" o..nr.. s. Dt'Wi"ir.''0oi': ~~o..:::r~ ......... Judi~ ....... lrld TlloMM .. ~· ,,... 'i:.'e~! (,.,.... Dwfollt Md ,,.,., lteddldl, ~ Alffl ft Jll'M'!Y ltl'f Ito ISZtiO A !Id AIWl9 M. Htfflllf, JOl'WI '"" Mtflt '-w1'1iWiatld. W1T11ltom Leo •nd Mfll'llle ~. Oer9ldl .. 91111 •ot11irt J, Jfff\ • F1'9o11t, a..1Nr• A, 8NI lMl"f D. 1'll'ri'l1•" M. t111 •nd Trov w. Cr811\. Allflaffl M.wll' 8M Llord MwrY Mofll-. SVIV!i MMla Mid Rldllll'f M. W•rMr, MldlMI l"r.mtkk and Nana' ~111, NlllCY I!. and Ht11Mrt HolNrljl R-Olrl1Mllft VM Abt;OUOt, M~ Jt,liW bmor._ C•ltllflM arid Sammy I, 811c1 Erlclr. Wrlotlt, Collnle M. ario ~ o. 1111111, Donna I!. •lld How~rd J . UnlUll'.d, . Dewly MorTI• •nd Debora Mante,,.. Gu..,_Jl.IPI I nd EltlllOI' o.u FRANCISCO (AP )_ A West • Ju-111, Elliabl!lh Ann •nd "l'rllderlck Olt\.11 Gun!, Audr'9' M. and Gordon D! Wtlls Sierra,CIUb la·-"t that halted l"I... .............. • lttl.,., T..-...,.11 Ind ltldl8rd L w;,w MclCL_,, Llrl"f E. and Circle J, Emond, ESlelll ... •nd Gl/111 J . all Umber -·tting and road AJ111o11111. Jlll'wl MlcMll •nd Donni Lw F..-r1ra, MGNa Lluy and Atfreda ._., Hoffnet. L-Ind JNn Loi~\ Ovlrk. C8f'OI l . l<'ld J•-M. bull.fi .... On 55 million 8 ......... 5 .of Htggtns, Al~ •nd 1Ct111111t1 1. c1.,.1r.. Ma111reti. and 1o11., \.U-1'6 '-l ,_ P_l .. , Jtan Tirrffll 11\d Gllbtl'I Nllf"H, DoiiolllS 8nd lar11arl DOW Pftlld!m national f,........ N~. "'flen R-lcl and Judlll'I Roiw!.wi. 0...... E. Ind Dan w. ·-~ JO'f'Ct ,._II, Oonrlll J. •nd Mk:l'"4 L. lands bas been settled by Sadtrtlttf, M8ry J. and ....., E. 111...,-, Arl-MllV Incl WllH1rn IC!'\19'!'1'". 1 ....... 1y JNn Ind R•vmond Mldlffl. pretrial llfWll. v11n1 11:-i.y. Oef)or1h L. and ReK !I. 111 lur1on, L•ny Alan •rid Jane Anne Doro. Don• Yvonnf •nd Ste,,.,, Mk llae t A Forest Service com-.,, ,_. ICUllWI. ICl•UI •nd lllrtlal'I WlllOn. Mil ..... Jlnf Ind Ja....,. Lowell ••• -· NIYlrTetM. llent1 .. 1n c . 8lld ,,..ru .Tobltr. Valley J. Ind Jack E. mltment to......p..r..o tiu_c_e__e~ It's n1--• o.1111Mini, Jtn1i.r •. 111c1 J ..................... 11>1ma1<on11,-co111en enc1 Peft'r o. -• ----·~11.._ SlciU:fiil. Helen Louise ~ F~~"' Wotflln:I, Ondlc1 Marlt Ind L..lrrty Joe Luek!I _Kiss" vJ.r OJJ men ta I impa c t ' Hagstrom. 11t111or1 • '"•frict.I 111111 O'G•r•. Lorr11 ... c-a111 1nc1 Tl'lorM• • st.atemeitts before letting anf-'l'ht.S'"'We1J:m·el.nin·g-·san-~-~,,'c:!;1~5~11d-,-.1p11 ic. ----~;:,e;,:~ J11o:11tt1 A""' 1nc1 1"""'8n Los Angeles City C.Oun- fu"··e _,Hi.. -ntracts 1.n ta \Vas asked to. leav. e c1ou11h. wrn11m Ja"'" •no 0 11na c. Ja'"" cilman Thomas Bradley •w """"o.Mf& .. ., th Mall G ICI UQfl, Lindi J. Ind Roc.rt C. Clll'"rnltr, EllMfl Ron incl Wlllrf<I ll. roadl foreits suited . u.A e new ermain 1C11r1y•toa. wr1nam P. •nd v1r111n1• c. Monl"'", a.tt>tr1JNn1nd J .... 1c1 L" gets a kiss from . his ess re m u1e in downtown st. Cloud, '"°"'1am ic.tll....,.. Mil ~ ,., •1981. KJn.,. w. •lld Ronald o. ttl meot: " , ~· unc111 K-v Ind Ar1hvr ev1111 wife Ethel after be se _,e -policy, "·"'"·•• in . MinD,, by police WbO Hand...son, lvMfl Mlrv-t I n d "'-El/11 G. •fld ~ M. formally launcbed bis TDC UQllll;lVM:U Thoma UMI• ll:lwnbal'k, Jlldlttl ANI •nd WllHtom 1:1-. 28 ··~··-by Actln. g , informed. him vehicles C•ll'.No. Lindi""" 1nc1 JOMPh Jann Homlf" • 1 1 "" U.U"1:11.-Y""' 1-.,.. th J in AILoecs, 1(111ter1.,.· D. -.oc1 Frtonelt A. .......,, Rldlard D. •lld 81rl Y. campaign OT mayor 0 Chief E. w. Schultz. satiSfied are -aga111.~" e aw Schrottt.J-L.lndFt"'IClr.::11:· SlokMi.ry, Donna Anne •nd James Los Angeles. the Mall Lanarnen. Edward c. 1nd \11.., nl• L. 1.81. the Sien'I Club'• main claim . King, NlllCY LM and Kemftil PM DomlngutZ. IUcllanl Ind P•trlcl• Ann -----------that the National EnYirOD-HllYll'Mln, 111111 Ind Al1r1 Gordon Soll_., L~ LC11,1111 Ind Cllarlts "'~ M~, Lllf.il! C. IC. Ind Tllorblllnl T~1 mental PoUCy Act required Shtrrl L. l!lort •lld Thomas s. Connor. Jr., JllCI< F. Ind 8onnt. IC • .... _ F-t Service to provide G•n:ll, Freddie PNllp 8nd Ca!'Ole c -.-Anderson· l..llH'I J. Ind Chlrln J •~ ~ •• La s Rlckttt•. ,,...K elllllfla •nd Lots Olirit , u.._. AvMI /fJ. •lld Cr1t1 J. SANTA BARBARA (AP) -the impact etatements. ws een C1f'flfell, Htlln Maril •nd U.ny Joe HIO!jh. a1rti.r1 Joan end Thoma• --fi Wood. WitVM Norblrl Mid Robbin u... L~. 'ui::: attorney general's Of ce • st. • ---L-..a Suuwt, Rkllard I ., 111 .no ~II ll"""41 M•,,.,.,. • State Tests has fded suit h~ seeking to ':V8,. .... ~ EH Ha~her. 1-MllrnM 1na Wl1ll1m ~1:19· Mllrllll Aljn1 Incl WHlltllfl 'stop oil d.rilll.Dg,on an island in LOS""GELES (AP) -The ect:ve Tubb. K•lhlrlnf Ann Incl Jon Roblrt -Snl1111...,J_udlth Ann •nd Roy Edward the Santa Bar•» ~---el Jl""U~ II FOKO, VIima 1nd Mld'lllll Hom, -1~· Ind Sharon M. UGI 8 VllllWI • Slate >OUA_.-U gener'aJ'S Office ' Mltl'llllSll Donna J11n Ind "-nls ~·~JOO-· 0 'o EUl'9fl Ind Elm1r Mutrs The ·t filed in Su rio -\Ula..-:;_,. • """' 11111'""' ''lP.•n<1 J11"'"5· Capitol Ne-Service SUI • pe r bas told le g i s 1 a l I v e 1n-.. ; ....:.KOi Newt Senlce l"rincll Sl•i.r. M•nwr'"I c Ind LO-II R ... ~-.. ~ ·--. asb the court to ' --.. . Smlll\; Effl• L. Ind Johll l.otb8, Rol:ltrt . Jr .. 8nd CMol L INDIO -Department of \..N\&11" 'llO:I" ,._..__.,_ .. __ t 1 --· SA~'MENTO ' Fatal ae-81.Wt1, e111.-Ly"" 1nc1 Edmllnd Gl.off'r'"tf'O. Unda •nd 01Mv s. halt ou ..... n!l ........ Santa kosa ........... -... tu9 .......... ' vn.n -,., •• ,. 0rv ...... ~ Clr1 Ind s.nv ":r. w n"-· and Salton Sea . - T......,, -7, 1972 DAILY PILOT Men in Service Airman Mkllael A. Brick, soo ol Mr. and Mrs. Gale P. Brick ol 26«12 Pepita Drtvc, Mission Viejo, baa b ee n ..,lgned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., atter completing Air Fon:e bulc tralnlng. During his 11.J: weeks at the Air Training Com a n d 'i Lackland AFB, Tex.. he studied the Air Force mission, organization and cmtoms and received special instru ction In human relations. The airman has been assign- ed to the Technlcal Training Center at Sheppard r 0 r specialized: training in aircraft maintenance. Airman Robert J. MMrls, SQQ of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. ~tor­ ris of %221 Anaheim Avr., Costa Mesa, has been assigned to Chanute AFB, Ill., after completing Air Force basic training. The airman has been assign· ed to the Technical Training Center al Chanute f o r specialized training in the aircraft equip m.e n t main· tenance field . His wife, Colleen, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Fritsch of 228 Fairway Pl., Costa Mesa . Marine Cpl. Holland R. Browa Jr., husband of the former Miss Delilah G . Sawyer of 1917 Anaheim St.. C.Osta Mesa, reenlisted in th e Marine Corps for si.J: years during cereDlonies held at f\1arine Corps Air Station, El Toro. Marine Pvt. Robert R. Cttly, son of Mr. and Mrs. George R. Culy of 16701 Turstall Lane, Huntlngloo Bescb, graduated from bas.ic tra~ at the f\tarini Corps Recruit Depot i:-i San Diego. UliCned to Company A, 1111 Battalion of the 82nd'1 mth Infantry. The SerJ!eant Is tbe soo ol Mr. and Mn. Spergeoe Gttf· fith, 108 Myna Lane, Fowitaln Valley. . .. ' Navy Seaman Recruit a., T. Nelsoa:, mn of Mr~ Mrs. Virgil F. Nelson ol 2\151 New l a nd St., Jtunt~ Beach. graduated from reclvlt train ing at the Naval Tral.hfng Center in Great Lakes. • Ainnan First Class Joha "T. 'Driieare, son of Airs. Nflilcy c. Durkee, 19111 Oiurcb~. Costa Mesa, ha! i.rrivecf'ifot ~uty at Sembacfl Q , Gennany. Airman OeGeart, an in- ve n t o.r y managemint specialist, is assigned to •~Wii.i or the U.S. Air Forcet' bl Europe. Amrica's overseas air arm assigned to NATO •. He p r evio u s ly . served~ at McClellan AFB. Marine Pvt. Darill ·1 J\ Nusar, son of Mrs. c.,men Figueroa of SM Oak St., Costa Mesa, graduated from basic training al the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Die(O. U. S. Air Foree Techlllta1 Sergeant Alfred E. HealWi"'*Jll of Mrs. Elizabeth Heallf;: of. 8911 Clipper Drive, Huntington Beach, has graduated ffPn! the Tactical Air ~ (TAC) Noncommbsioned . • ficer Academy at · y AFB, Va. ...•,,, Sergeant Heaps, who reo.;ve advanced military leadership and management training. '°' a photo laboratory techni~ at Langley. He ls a member:@ a unit of TAC which proVie,s combat wtlts for air stipPol't ol U.S. ground forces. -~'6 ..... b'oYenlal land mp•between cldents tn which one or mor! H811Tldgt, o.w11n c1er11 111d o.11w ~· ...,..~,.., 1nd Jot>.. e -ater ~rces crews llland by .Mobil 9il C.Orp. ~al,Petro'·"-and 1 --............ ·had, •been ·~-u-g ,.,,.... • L. Ind D•nnY drilling . t ha been Airman s~vea P. WbiUitr', The sw.t contj!sts whether ........_.. io:w.i• ._ t'"""W""" t """"'A'.u Pirt1r, JKql,ltllnt ""'""" 1nc1 PM ,JI~ AM L. ,.,:~ K. eqwpmen ve Navy Seaman Robert O. -Santa Barbara County could Angle •11 .. Da coo~ ~ DUijOt dropped I ~8.5 per-1!:'.J;. AfLet It. Ind RCll:llrto M~ w. Glwlll c.1111r1 ... .-na ensworth used to sample the bottom of Se f Mr and Mrs son of Mr . and Mrs. W~ Validly •... 1...-...:.--.1.1111 ..... oe . ga ws. celft between t•."r-.""'Ufl in l"llll1n1n, J-o. Incl .lltnel ,.,,, Hulr"Dlnnl1 Capen Mid L'(llltte K1v the Salton Sea. o-~~: socn Se.vi. • f -E. Winther of 20701 Beach m),'d, ·-~ ~....... A ... ••g letter from lbe at "-1:~1-u:.~.,.· • Patrol ar Good. Frtltleft K8Y Mii O.Yld Lt. w".,.,.· 91tty Lou1111nc1 e11K .JWUQ~ • tz 0 1,-· Hunti......... Be a ch, "--the island which Is pn·vately -->""' e • '-'IUUlu ... ...,,... 1 • ,.1 ... DKlfnlllr 1 w1nti1n1. Onial "'· 1n.c1JUlnll•1. The department•· ooe of the ~an Blvd Balboa has ,,._, .:::' ' • torne:y general's office was ea.a of juriJclictioh, lecon:ting Wlllllolt Stlln"I Ind O.ulcl s H-v. Min-L. Ind rnny Jo Ill V\."t:' ., I graduated at Chanute Al".D, owned, w:lentalthout lmprepanng an released it the Assembly sub-to Commiationer Walter• Pud· =-E~nor .ncr L...,,. • J l"::'i,t. Ant11onv Michie and e1ro.r1 8 state and 10 federal agencies returned to Port Hueneme, 111., from the U.S. >Jr F~ environm pact report committee bearing. lnskl. "' F1m11 • ...= ~~8nd .~1:'1~ ~::!; Wf1Tr.~'l.!,'J:-::rl~:: °" participating In the feasibility from a ten-month European jet engine mechanic cootse as re q U I r e d by the ""--J · I •·-t ~.~--the ·o11, Ql.llM Pwnlll ciem.iiifn. 1nd GeorQt Arturo t dy to d el 1 t' t deployment cond cted b the Ai Tr •-'--. ran 11111:;: eglS a ..... o-Jl1'e 8 -...,,,.."'"'6 !anle per! l lldt. O.na L. Ind Alllllonv G. Ac:liiiftl, An»-r. R. and ltttv J-SU ev Op SOU IOns 0 ' U Y r 81.1~u15 EnvU'OMleDtal ty Act of tem..ti. ... to leam u the city m~~a.y Pa-1 81'ftlllS for """' Mlfolttl E • ....s Cll8rln L. e~•udlt, Frenc LT. Ind J1 ... M. salt and nutrient contents, and Command • 1970 t'..,,'6 5"" •• V "'-""' Mona C. Ind Eddl1 R. HI~ 8'ttYt · Ind 8tnanl Wllllll'l'I Arm Se t J p . • acted lncorrecUy in obtaining drunten· .driving soared: 4(1.9 Mlnl\all, eirblor• AM •nd John ~~l~· f~i:'."'.!.:i ~ ~;~· EtlW•rd fluctuating w!lter I e v e I Y rgean ames · The airman, now trained' to , eBUI mo.-.._... a ~ parcel of surplus ~&... ..... 1 P•ter-HorDWflE. E6YllM D •M simllll o. problerna·ol the sea. Griffith, of Fountain Valley, inspect and repair turbCJjet ........ .,.. st.a~ la.00 for $34,400, then _ Two reasons were reported ~"'ti. s~~ ~111 ~ w.tt1r wtt:'NncftltY c•~1111 . •lld '•111• Reiytta of the drilling will recently returned to his borne and gas turbine engine~,' is ,sACRAMENTO (AP) -AD tr84ing it with an additional for~ tbe decline -iiJ(teased ~i!,~ ArlhlH' Frank Ind K•""-~. ~1= ,P.;.,,~J;~1, AM be employed to determine the station at Ft. Bragg, N.C., being assigned to Castle An. attempt to give pr'i vat e $175,000 payment to Oc-enrorcmient and CTi' of """ Nd.'"'~~~ unde--E.M seabed'a eapacity to support a after undergoing intensive Calif., for duty with a unit of ' the~-•• •·• ~~-• the lb " · law 1t1ty1n., lminne G. Ind J'"'" "· 5'='.;. Olroitl'I' Jl'tlfl .•nd HIJllll f ·-•--sal · I Ir · · t the US ~. dtisenl ,....,, to sae to Jm.1t ~u.cu. In return, city e presumptive · , , 811111y, sanctr• ic. •nd wmiirn M. 5c1r1,..1_,M~1n1 . ;1,111 •nd .dike or .~ing a " t~n--1ung e auung a · · the Strategic Air ComDRllKI. environmental 'damage rece1v·ec1 i 4.S.itcre 'parCel which establishes a 'blood.level ltr.lnrier. :=.~r.:":'OC: LMl•lld ~~Wlnttll H. and Mtorn-,.-L. , centroting", area, which l.!1 an Anny Jungle 0 per a t Ion s SAC is America's nuclear ed e;;.::1 ~ti~ . ::~ ~ :en:1~ U!:; ~·~!oo; E.¥3':l 'a$ o... ~tll~l:i=r" L:.•~"" ~=~ol ,"m:e ~ ~~ ~ing Centtt in the Canal ~~t ~~ in~r:gu;; -im Legislatare. ', ·~recreation lite. the lnftueoce. ~h~~~'t.E. ~~"":".:;'~"'"'" sidered. Sgt. Griffith ls regularly ballistic missiles. I I A ~las-ifi~d Ad Could Help Fi .. 11 Santa's Wagon .. I .j I ,...,, -..;.... ............. a-... .,.. _____ _. .... _. ...... , ' l About this time every year, the ad-visors in the DAILY PILOT Cla~sified Advertising Department really become Santa's Helpers. They're ready now to help you write an ad that will sell the surplus things you have accumulated. Our Santa's Helpers have a wagonload of ideas to help you fill Santa's wagon -or to come up with extra holiday cash for whatever your needs might be. Look around and see what you have to sell. Then dial the direct line to help-you don't have to write to the North Pole . Tell Santa's Helper What You Want To Sell Use The Direct Line For DAILY PILOT . Classlfled Advertising .. i , i ... · .. ~... ··~ ., .. , ...... ~ ' I I ' ' . - ·' • •>-L~---·~------~---------------------- DAIL V PILOT Thund~, Dtc:ember 7, 1972 Everyone Hes Something That Som eone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want' Ad ' The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642·5678 fot Fast Results _ ... _ _ ... _ ---""""'J ---I~ I ~er al General General Gon1r1l Go.... Ooneral Oonor1l ~1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;:~;;;::;;;;;:::;;1;i;i;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9);~,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~:=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Ge\Mr•l ·, 2~ ACRES fAX SllELr!:l't mat UA. ~I."/' ~U,-Slldd, ~ NllASSOCIAT!S REALTORS 2828 EAST COllST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIP'. J . 6:4·7270 M gnificent Duplex . . . . . . in Corona del Mar manish architecture prevails in this del\ghl- DUPLEX -TRI-LEVEL, 4 Bedroom. 2'12 th,. fireplace, built-in kitchen. BACK ljNJT 1 Bedroom, 1 bath. Enjoy your 3 ter· raced porches. This as a beauty for only ' .................................. $78,500. * Stpirise • Sunset • • . View • • • • H you enjoy viewing the harbor and ocean, t~s is the place for you . 3 Bedroom. 2 bath pJus 2 fireplaces with a built-in Kitchen. &eautiful landscaping .............. $64,950. * ~USTIN-SMITH, ~~~ & ASSOCIATES . A Upi,jl(Jlt tKMt: THE SPACE POTENTIAL It's clean, lean and loaded with room! Four bedrooms and still space for your Unique ideas! Courtyard entry, hillside privacy, ter· raced vie\\'. and joy of .joys -a motivated seller. That's space poten~al at $67,500. UNl9UE HOMES OF COlONA DlL MAR 675-6000 A lhti ... of V"4y Netlo• REALTORS Gener•I General GALAXY VIEW 4 Bedroom, 4 bath home. Beautiful dec<>ra· tor furnishings included. Large, covered pool with roll-back·roof ................. $245,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Or., Suite J, Newport Beach 675-6161 • Newport ,_. -SELDOM SEEN for im Eulltlde akePei\ ~ e -4 Bedrooml, 2 ):laths HONEST TO GOSH • TRI· hou9el on 8 lot, two ' 3 • f'trepJace,. Electric Kit· PLEX FIXER-UPPER. be·droorn1, thl'ft' ·~ chen · Prime Jocatlon. M a k e bedrooms. PrlOe ot $85,0)) • Rural Atmo.phere with he l $4$ 000 is 7.5 times annual~ •~~~lit for Several liimoney re il,lffl. c?s~~pOOoo Bert M: ~~ 646-0555 • 548-1168 Eves. 557"'6244 e +PLliX ~=======~!~'~I: !DELIGHTFUL EASTSIDE 3 e PRIME N---Helghtt: bdrm OOme w/beauutul in· '•~II terior -deep """" aw. .... : ~ o~ ~~m ~ M,_ Home comer !lrepl for that <mlY 60 FT. BA YFRONT wnH · sur ,. Clu1s0naa. Dining .... _ a11 L<>Cated in a very.pr Im e area, you'll be : ~.,!.°' ~iw.'~ & Bluohavflll Pool ~:: =": fJ.:i.~ amazed at the value offered In tbiS 4 bdrm., to Finance endoled patio, storage for ... •••• SOUTH co . - 3 bath home . The finger-slip can accomo-o Ottered for $90,000 camper lo boaL ljew tile & R£ALT6ru;,· ~· date 2 lge. bpats. Now the surprise -only • Call -·· 6'&-0555 crpta, """' = iDllde A ~""'~~,.....,,.,..,-,,,..,1 $135 000 • out. Move ln. . $26,500. 1660. ORANGE, C.M •• Xlnt · ' .r. "' -· -Roy_J\lcC•nlle R11.ltar for lloctM'• office etc. < ~~;~~,t~~~~··~· 675a •• ~~;:c·:~ ~~~:~~~ SUUIOIAIY Of TMI CIOl.WW. co. bdrm.a., 2 baths, new crpts 1l AM to-• P.M only OUTSTANDING le paint. ~ eor JoL FHA EASTSIDE, 4 br, l ba. pool. INCOME terms. Call anytime. trplc,_.t bl~.cpta, c1rp9, $610. Monthlv SCOTl' REALTY 536-15.13 bltns, tel calls 10 am-8 pm 8 UJ>lis, Olj)al'kllaa dean on Coron• del Mir lo dn, $40,!illO. Ownr 80"'31D the inalde, old on the-out· Fountain Yaney aide. Must sell or exchange BY 0 w n er. Spectacular fur tax f"l!UOnl. :Priced Spn!au Hill ~ vi~ OWNER ~tet %JOO Ol\ly $48.~. trOm thla luxurioul!I, oew 4 1quare feet, 5 oeonns. 3 -YES VIRGINIA -Bdrm. Medltt. borne. Sep. baths, air -bri<. there Is an underpriced home dininc room. $99.95b. SU.500. 962-1373. 1or sale. Owner moving, 67:r1010 -~7050 OWNER arudous. Park yard, must sell 3 BR, crpta & trees, l8:1Je home: 4 hdwd floors, Mesa dcl Mar.-WATER~Rotf.I" ST. bedrms, bUilt-lns, b r k, Now priced to sell fast! In Corona del Mar $37,900. 96Z-8865. -INCOME -Like bri2ht ttd shag carpta. OWNER sacrifice. 4 bedrm, $345. Monthly co:ey llvlng nn. w/buge 3 baths, den, swim pool, 3 Units close to shoppin& • brick trplc., • 3 BR's. + park like yard, bric, $31,500, room to build more. Priced guest quarten:? U '°· you'll ~. - to 9ell before January. Only love this home! $$4.500. H ti_._ -$32,.500 COLOWEU.,, BANKER un .... !"""'. 1 CALL ANYTIME Real!on 6'-W430, 8J3.-0'100 OWNER .... "..U -· OCEAN SIDE OF HIGHWAY The owners of this fine home have left nothing undone in the deconitlrig and furn- ishing of this magnificent property. 3200' of perfection. 3 Beilroom, 3 bath and an up- stairs den with a fireplace. Sunken living room, raised dining room, and giant sunken family room with wet bar and fireplace. Every wall is papered, paneled or mirrored. The master bedroom suite 'bas the sunniest closet in the world and an enormous sun· deck. The upgraded carpeting is a delight lo walk .on. See this today by appointment J~'""""l""'"""'"""'"""'"""!l!"''"""l""''"""'"""'"""!!!!!!!J , only. Call 675-7225 Go:·· * *Go:·· * * 1ma 111 644-3921 SU.3413 SI'! Newpcrt Center Dr. _hla < BR. lam rm, etc. :noti -sq It' of luxmy .. -DUPLEX-BY OWNER CALL . 80-1<111 'PATTI Nice 2 bdrm. home on lge. 45xll8 ft. R-2 lot. Room for an additional unit. Xlnt real estate iDvestment to hold for tbe future or im· prove now. Shown tbru our office only. Call .for app't. Won't last long at $59,900 I CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 0..-11 TAYLOR co. ~~u~:,•1wt1 T °' mrcoc.wru.co. s11as.ota•Y °' fHfCOLWIU.co. ~ Gener1I THE BLUFFS -$58,000 Popular "E" plan in ~ice end location with terrific ·view overlopkillk park. 3 Bdrms., fain. rm, & 2'h bal.bs.' l'rivate entry c<>urt· yard. New paint & carpeting. New panel- ing in family rm. Lge. rooms. Terrific buy. Quiet Dignity ! S'harp, sharp -close to ocean ~t , home on quiet t. Large gracious bright rooms -charnting1\hrouih- ottt with beautifur decon- BRICK, TILE AND BEAt.tS Lachenmyer 'llltl l.Antapwi, -Id A WALKER REALTY read)i to move in. Sbutten. • beautiful new Jcitchen. balb OWNER leaving. Fam.Uy nn. A: carpet. Open Sun 1-5. la huge with natural brick JGG,500. &73-l&J,lj; 675-7616. fireplace, 4 bdrm, brk. 13S,!l50. 80-2561. RP 1ltu1 PARK $plnllh 20Urtyerd QUICI( CASH loads to the pool area of thla HUNTINGTON Lusk •BR. bome. v1ow "" 5 BR + FR + DEN :::a';....~,,:,.~ THROUGH A s5'·'50 for ~=-~ D. AltY PILOT $52,950 Real .... -· lm-0100 'Beach-Pool ~llSt Reduced S.ycrest Horne -''Our '2]th-YHr'' tive shag carpeting. Lovely ,,,,t ;::,1e, s~:,.';'1of an WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors ~ ;"" ~--~ . • ,set the theme in 1bls custom 4 bedroom. 3 bath home. Fe•turel i a c l u. d e beam ceilings t h r u. o u t , formal dining ...... lull" separate family room w/parquet noon, elegant Uvlng room w/wet bar, all eleetrlc kitchen &: • tiled courtyard entranceway. Nestled at the end of a quaint little cul~e-sac on huge lot. A truly different home with quaHty built into e\>ery sq. ft. and offeted. at only rn.soo, -- Yes, the ca_ ls right! 11 550 Newport Cleakr Dr. WANT AD lOO booaht th1t beautttu.I ...., ,...-coot would be PANORAMIC 642 U'N :r.~~~ OCEAN VIEW •;Nft $2000 ! BiiE TO BEACH! JUST ReDUCED B'l ANXIOUS O\VNER! Formal living roont and dining room. SUNKEN F Ai\UL Y ROOA1 ! Coty breakfa.st nook in chd's kitchen. Truly giant sin! bedrooms. Laundl')' l'OOm.. Covered patio opens to SPARKUNG POOL! The lfl4rpest home in the area. ~ fast. 645-6303. I OK I\ I L Ill \0\ ... ... • -J "" \ acre of land goes with this 2111 S.n Joaquin Hiiis Road ~l~~~~six:d 3 Ivan \Velis built. home. Pri· NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 6"-4910 bath•. $45,~. Pl···· call vacy abounds v .. ith plenty •<N ... ...,,-= of toom lx'tv.·ecn neighbors. General General for appointment to see now. ~h~ccd:,~r ,':,~':'diJ;~~ .. Just Listed" !! iiiiiiiiiiliiOiiiiUiiNiilTiiiiSiiiiiiiiil ~®~"'-·2535-~~i--R---.~ ·~ modern kitchen. Naturally r:_.u Sh & ..,... _,..... a lMge hea!OO pool, wido ""!'Ian ores BS ~:A,'!ILR,,..B_ patio decking, manicured One of -"moot uked EASTSIDE . _ ·~ _ landacaping, and a separate about" homes actually $145 000 are« tor your own vegetablt' comes on the market. Asked • • garden. Elegantly decor· about because ot its location Conslstent inoome or $1660. atcd. Yoo own the land. South of Hamilton Street AH individual houses with· Macnab-Irvine CALL M/Hllll' COpen"...,;') . -. HERITAGE REALTORS sell. Ideal foi' ia. family, Bay A ocean spread at your ---------1 with 2600 sq. lt., ob quiet feet.· Short w8Jk to 2 gzut cul-de-sac. Full pr l c e swimming beaches from [ ] $52,950. Please p ho n e charming l bdrm., 2 bath ~l&rrv ~2313. =ey.. $195,000. M·a r Y AdWrtising 11LICJ\ . ~ ij COLDWELL, BANKER • 'I W DAL RealtDn 644-24.ll, m-0100 . ·~v 550N-~t .. Dr •· 1 :._,,,._ Jliel I -SPIC'l'ACULAR ct.11ifiut;on 100.124 $89,500. Can you picture a 1800 sq. garages. on 1 acre. Call for Single Level ft., 4 bedroom. 2 bath home details on how to buy. Bluffs Condo Y>'ith a real tile fireplace. SOMETHING SPYGLASS f ' jr.=l SPECIAL ";;';me ... _ $to~" /i':"2". --~ A ChRe?lty Comspany • I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! A big family home for the Corner, poo1Biae lot. 2 c1 ••• -.~ ••• 1,·on 12•149 r1stmas urpr11e growing fam.lly, 4 Oversiz.ed Frplcs, ate~ llv. nn., r1.. ~ Gilt wrapped for the whole ~ bedrooms, 2 baths &: family ~P! din. rm. phu tam. rm. • 1 ~ Decorated in exquisite taste. Large 'formal garden 1er· race v.ith forever vi<'w of al! electric kitchen, scpar· Newport at family . complete wiU1 play· room, ,Jocated on cul-de-sac ~cm. Mary Lou Marion. ,.. .. Estat•, I the gl'{!enbel! and Dover t S J C 500...,. bay ""tivity. 2 bed· ate service porch, a heavy shake roof, lush landscnp· ing, quiet c-ul·dc·sac strecl for only $34.950? You better call now. 842--2535. houSC' for the young ones. 21 street just a block from COLDWEU.. BANKER Gtner•I . Beautiful 4 BR. Montego ~ elementary price $.34,950 Realtors fi44...20'.l, 83.1--0700 Cl "f' 1. ISO 18, plan. S58.900. Hcl!'n '\'oocl ~ 11 with VA tenn1 available. 550 Newport Center Dr. •••• 1c• ion • "' H C room, 2 bath, formal dining 6f4'62l:Xl (Rill Call S46--ll51 Open Eve.11. f J'-1 4 N~«!:';~ '=~le~~.1_~2~~: ~~ ~ Macnab-Irvine San.J~apis!!"!':fcre ~ :U!ci ':m~~ ~-'nm RICAL~ cs~tes. 10 acres. Entire able." $58,000. . ~BS l:A.T&RS I '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1I prd_perty is buildable. Gentle C. F . Coles worthy & Co. OPEN 'Tl.. 9PM I ~ l;64!;2!;-12;;;3S;;;;;;;;;~644.4200 ""~' with view of valley. 640..0020 FIVE UNITS This horse country property I EASTSIDE $41,500. ~·500· 644-l330 eves&: Classification 200..260 lmmacula,. thn>ouL Lath "'"""!'l'~!'!!"!l~!!'!!!'!!!!' IMMED, POSSES. I -I -1111§ J plaster walls, new crptg, UJ> 1-YOUl\'E FOUND Move right in . lovely 2 _ • _ graded, like new. Forml bdrm. home, move-in cond. hai room for 22 hom., and I .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Wa k ta Beach GOV'T ""ldY for buHdiog or bold ONE MAN'S LOSS 6 Bedrooms COSTA MESA fot; investment. 3 bedroom dining . patio. Ololce toe. A BUY' Frplc., stoYe; lots of tile. Classlfic•tion lOO·l~S Xlnt terms. To see drop ln Over ml sq ft, 4 bedroom, Nicely decorated. Dbl. gar-I fii8l al733 Weslcliff Or., N.B. :8tbe~Uy~:,1<': ~cfRGANR-rie1°iLTY ,.Cl&ICiltiforhnt ]~ REPOSSESSION Ider ho ro-rru CAN BE YOUR GAIN -p I 0 me on p "'" v· Bu 11 de r's repossession. OO Price $225.000. Call 546-lliOO. WALK TO BEACH• \V h INVESTMENT DIVISION Newly carpeted & painted . · roug t • etc. 4 Big bedroom on giant iron enclo~ front y~rd. ~--• ·~ cul-dl'-Sac lot with enough Curved dnveo.vay. Stained • ..,_. .R........ room to store boat trailer glass plus tiled entry. Fam· BSTA't&REI and camper -aJI ~t once. ily f'?Oln. 6 bedroon:s. ~ OP£N 'fl. 9PM _ Xlnt liberal financing to Sparkling blue pool with • AU. available. Imme d. slide. Low care yard. A tew Poss. steps to park and greenbelt! \ Rt.>fl.l.ty Com~y CAMEO SHORES BeaUtlful home w/arand ocean view. 2 master BR's & lcp. oonv. garden room. No expense or effort has !Jeen spared to accomplish this love ly result . Elaine Scvedcen 642-8235. (RL'\) Macnab-Irvine 644-6200 $25,950 beautilul 3 bedroom. Ele'gant fireDJac:e . Large f am i 1 y kit.Chen. builHn range, oven ft dishwasher. Beautltul Patfo and a park-like yard. S«>-1720. JOa,,., co:TS ~WALLACI! REALTORS 5414141- (0pon E-Jn91I ASSUME $27,000 GJ LOAN. 6% % INTER.Esr. sm month. Act fa8t. Call 64!>0303. I Olli \I I 01 ~O\ R • ;< I 0 A , Super Bowl A •UJ>'r home to be in by SHORECUFFS SuJ>'r Bowl time or sooner. $ 79 900 This huge 2 story features a 1 , . very large family room, Hard !o believe. CdM s hn~st enough for )'OW' own Bowl area. Streets lined w1t.h games. With 3 I a r g e Coral ~s plus key to pn· upstain bedroom9 Only vale beach. This 3 bedroom, $3,500.00 down. HWi;i and 2 bath home is looded with call 646-"n.7L used brtck, wood, warmth and charm. Everythlrag in· re TJIS JltEA.L~ side In now aod you own __..., l!I· the land. Hurry • Call ~~&AK 673-8550 . (!P(N Tll. tPM ,.---· -----, INVESTOR'S PARADISE -5 Just released sharp 3 Sep~te homes netilled in bedroom, 2 'bath corner on this huge lot. Great .tax home. Real quality with shelter and Po t <;-n t 1 !11 han:IMX>d floon'I aod plaster gro\Vth. Each unit with walls. 'Von't last a week. separate garage, ynrd and call OO\\'! Priced at only Ja'!ndry area. Lots o f $25 (k)J privacy, covenieoce and at· Can' 546-5880 (O 1 mosphere. CALL us for full pen eves details. Asking $76,500. CALL ~1151 Open Eves. -• -HERITAGE . • REALTORS 64s. 7221 large comer lot, boat ao. 67• ~2 67' '"9 -~ Cl•ssific:afion 360-370 'MESA VERDE ce... Only a'1dng $48,500., In ~a prime location, Costa Mesa r ll.,,,lil PACESETTER GJNNY 1'.10RRISON Renbf *** *• --REAJ.ron• ·EastsidoH> 11.m-Home-1 5 Bedrooms, ~ baths of ._. pure delight are featured Jn '*W!)* 1505 W.. lirepl. • big lot • alley • 376 Cl•ssific:ation 400 .... 65 * * v~-.... "'·~ E B-·d~• $27 500 B ' I 2 stories ot this all livable Q..,. .ur .._._ · ...... "¥<,J· • • Y lf,;;jl =~Ji~!~roo::=~ *• •• *;•* o:a..::-~~only · ask for Pegg Mr ~l Nntl~ yoo,r toee through the new {Open EvenlnasJ ~ • d Cl lfi • i""""'~~~!"'!!'!!!l"'"•l 1u"' ,.,. carpeting while C VI Ulnfo~ 111 out.on 500.s10 SPYGLASS """ view. the 11rep1.,,, and anyon ew J~ l ""~""'!ili!!!iii!!iii!!iii;;;I SPECIAL :;ourkld•arep1sy1ng1nthe Cut• , bednlom" ..,.. .t~L1~ . ........... 5 ·' HERITAGE . . REALTORS WIF huge J)at'k·llke yard. Jw;t carpets, paneled 1 iv i n a -· · E one block from the Balearic room, IArae fenced_ 7ard Dlwft.._. c.ta Mell Cle11Jfic•tion 62S..5J5 INSURANCE School, and priced at only with a can;oo view. CUI-de-H!!','Ott 64..._,_ 299, 1 o f[S] 48,900. Call 546-2313 sac street. All this for ,_ ~-: I ------·-, $24,750. eau 646-nn. · . ....,...,...., ram•) -~msAJ~ Nice!..!~;;-._ ~~rm• Cl1uiflc•tion 550-r.55 \°Qt OPEN T!. 9PM ~ ~?J le f~~o 1::th =c:: 1 -1r-i $23 ffO · ~Gar. Alley acc:en !or . . t!!J • $27 250 boat .. ......... tlOl'all•· Cl -~ • 3 IR 11/2 IA • $3UOO. • ....... , .... 575-580 ~--__ ,, __ , Fall 3 11pacloua bed.roo m s. CALL .a,. ,4,·14141 I~ ................ ~-. .atreet. _ Cbeerful 11vinr room 1 91v ~ ..._ _,...,.. :~=~=~~~~~ ill in !he air and leava are bandmme fi re pl a oe. ..... ~ · ~l'!illft!"""!ol ~~here, ~. quallelnt. Bul'lt -l n kitchen, 4filT\? Cleisiflcation 600-699 .. ,~.,y palntcu • se r dlshwalher. Patio Fnahl.y 'N · N p ' t TARBELL ftl;gw,.~EALERS 4 Bodrm. dining room, entry LOTS OF LOTS • OPE~!< '"" hall, cu .. om ceramic tile. says scll with all t.t"nns or-l>&inted• inside A: ~t. Uke ••r ..,.,. ••• orr c• I J!IlJ submit 13500 o1own and tw ..,. cupettng. Jr. -t! * FHA RE .. O. * """"'-'' f I over FHA Joan w Ith park-!lke lfOW'ld•· 541)-.J'IJ), f' paymonta of $194. We'll :. i . 3 Bdrms. -2 81th1 Cl•1tific:ation 700·7 I 0 show It to YoU· • m ;t :J:I! • 1 Butlt·lnssJ,=· !loon . HarbOr, ;;:r'-. .. ''A50 DOWN I -I 11~1 2935 Harvor, Costa Mesa Some view home!'lltes. l!Omcl ~:;;::;:;:;:;;'.;~~~;:;: 1 ·tndi~ct light.Ing, natural I: wOOd CHbinets, prime home DESIGNED ~ 't_;;. "~'":~.~:~: ~'IT POUNDING SURF .,.., Sl(rt720. Realtors 545-0t651. 25,'50 J 8 , BROKER O Cl•11ific:atlbri 800-136 FOR THE within Harbor Area. Cllli for Bmnd New Surfllide Duplex · more details. Peninsula location! r~lush 2 DISCERNING PETE BARRETT bed., 2 bath cu .. om unlls • ~ -4 bedroom, 2 best carpeUrag, drape11, bath h<Mne 1oca1e<1 on cu1. -REALTOR hr<aktast + w. beam ceu-dMac street. &Jl'J'()W)ded --Ing • spectacular view! -lly'-lole ot bea'utltul ll'l!<t'O 642..5200 BuUd•r ultlng $91,000. JO% £:1tn lar&c rooms. Located ~ down or try a trade!! bl p restige Jlundngion -R-2 LOTS Iii Bet.ch atta. See tt 10U'll I. ~ tidy 1t. Prlced al $35.00>. GS"xl35' <8788 sq. ft,J • IHT-el!O. 2. 1 I' I ~ ~ 50'iacxl' • I BIJc: -17th St, 1 • 'nm llKAL Shop'g OWNER mll8t 51'.ll, 4 btdrms, &8 J~iU· CA.LL Afr, Harris, SOU'nl ~llr Hvlna room. tamily ·-OPDi_2'!::.tPM • COAST R.r.. M:HH,2-f, room1 fi~place, brk, For that Item unde'I' $50. try $3-4,500, 540-lm. Sfll Jdle Jl+mt ••. "1-M18 thl'! Ptnny,,lincher. NHCI a "Pad"? Place an adt •• ... 1 ........... °"';ii·····-.'!8·· ·-1--2 "°"'*•"'with ... ~ I , ~ = co uot ry a~ll> *-'"* ,..,.,,_l'L. chtttrrw Iota of -'I'! BY ow-. The ......,,, '" ::U.. =~ ~. ~~e:,.!;•,,·~~v~ 0.11lflci t ion 850-8'51 TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Cooota Metoa BACK BAY Macnab-Irvine CUSTOM OLE' OLE' witb beuti!UI POOL on quiet, MEDITEAAANEAN VIL-ttto-shaded c u I -de -t a c t.A:GE 4 PLEX DeIUXe, sfreit. Excellent ~tiRC .apacfo1:11 and aecluded apart· home with a N'cwPort Bcaeh menti 1n w1 cxclu.slve and address. Brand new on the cMenUal location. No va· market. $47,950. Roolty Cool . EASTBLUFr.i"'BR. Latte & lovely tradHiOnll home. Stepdown It~. 3 bllths. WAlk to tchoola. Quick po!lltlJ\on. S69,500. Jack. Howell 6#G>O. (R32) tntJ'a modem fdtchttf" tn• .... del ' ttet I cludlng dilhwalbtr tot Meu de Mat. -.500. • -..__, I• Je J Mom. A must Mt ~~ =Slt-:=!857;=:.-~..,,.,,....,.,._,,.. .............. I(,. ~le ctrrE·Cottage • 2 Bt. Nesti· I ~:;--.,.,:--,--:,.,.J ' ed In -~ l:M,500. Lot C11 .. lflutlon 900-912 cancics. Expand ~ur port- folio \vlt h lh!s .one tor a very low down. 1 E::!;· J1(;;: ~nl~ I l'.:i Relllot'll 54$-11491 67Hl3l. I · ~t1 ... 1 ~ Open l.'w1 BY OWlX!r nice 3 Br l Ba • • Rcalton; 64G-mt ENJOY ntE 11tarter home. S 7 $ 0 J tin, Clast.iflc:ation fi I 5·949 21)13 W••tcllU Orlvo 642-1235 644.4200 HAPPY IJOUDAYS $225/mo. 123.000. &U-lltl.1, 1'1 I l§J a w,~ll1IH /!,Ill Macnab·lrVine Op<n 'til 9 PM I !!~'!!!'!'~~~!"'! .... SEE "Pi:rE 'N TILLIE" cm 642-2312 -..... ' """ I I Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! Dally PUot Want Ada have lfOUSE Huntl~T Wateh the Scl.Whe old llvd buy the new ' .., ~~~~ CaU 60-5678. tiarptns gal~. OPEN HOUSE Oolwnn. •tutt. Cf•11iflc•tion 950·9f0 -' ) ,, • $16,900. l BR CONDO, J\lll right far oacs.r-penon. Thia home la In t'Xcellent oond, crpll A -lb-• ......,. kilch A din rm. Prhie alto inc ........ wlU It deyr. Min i8iO ... _,,_ ......... 11'13. ..,. all. ld<al for ....... perlOll, clOle In lbopplnfl, ,.. _call l' n I ' • I I ' ' l' ~'. ' ~ l'_, 531·5111 11::1 Ul-5111 FORMAL I BEAUTY ••• Lovely$ Bedroom, deci:lrator wall paper, extra tlOltts, tr1ple ceramic aink. ., up Llvlna room, phm ~ n:tru,. $44,650. CALL - --·--c-____ ,... .. 1Ut1dlf. Drcembtr 1. i q n DAILY PILOT :JS '.:1" I~ I • .......... I~ .__I -~-I~ _,__ ~I --------- Pre-Grand Opening Sale! ·-$S 1,A9S ·--Clloiu Illa .. I -Lolty1Mn; llW9i19youl Act mllly lO Mlect )'OLW' own •kwpott Beach oonclOnilnlum. V'tsi1 the tempofaiy offices ol the Newport Crest Information Center, ...-ntlyloctrlodal 2400 West Cooat Highway Sul!& B, -Beach. " Newpoo1Beodl In c:ieme Pr 1, 1 rty WALK TO IEAal HUfltl"I'°" Boach Cost• - 115 HouMI """'"'· Newport a..ch as c.r.ctaminluma Unlvm. • l • • , plOll A tmnll from th1I • BR. 211 b&., ., Uv ...... blt·!n ltltcl>. Wl!h dlftlna CTv=REALTY * 541-12'1 * Walt .. wat .. , ...... Bad> HSE for ""~ JSR. 2BA. lg S90. A1lo SllO SQ&la. Udl pd. )'I'd. ooW'red p.mUo, con. Rent~ t7f..IQO W!'l'ted pr, Nr. Estancia L h«h H.S. Avall in Jan. Call 4 Bl for $400 :~"°NEW ' BR, 1% BA. i [Np&ea. near the C10W1 Mlla i..-. -•""83• Newport 111ilflt1 BY """''" l BR, 2 BA, dell, 2 frplca, Vfflibtd dbl -·- --· $110 • NICE Bad'I. So. La-S BR Ir Fam Rm. trplc "Bar 1\11\L FW1 ldtch. Ocean Harbor" Nr 1Ch11 ' &hop'e. View. A\11 apprx. Dec. 15. $2)) • t.rnL PD. 1 Br. Stop. $3.1.Ymo. 838-6341. ~-"'°'· Deoon.w Hou-Unfvm. $2'!5 • llTIL PD. <lwmJnr Dono P,,lnt 2 Bt. P'n>lc. View. Dedt •. l'--'----"--'----- Gar. 3 BR. 2 BA, trpl &: car. Just NU-VIEW RENTALS l'Ode<:.128S per mo. No pets. 673-t<m Ol" 4!H-3248 n4: m-388l. THE BLUFFS Condo. ~Ji~~ ~ -"W" Plan. llllO Sq. .,;I Fi lam,,.. • la9...., Niguel .; .., ki,., ·~ balhl: _ ... __ .__ .... "'""----1 lg@. priv. patio. Wal.Ir: to 5Chool t. marlcet. Avail , Jan. l-15. Best ttnt.aJ val\llel a.re alwaya with- $' &st ~¥, YEARLY~ NEW2Br, 2 Ba. on Gotf Cot.lrR. $300 mo. Call 675--:lm.. Mi11ion Viefo ""';;;;~...;.;.;;!.;C...----LJ 3 BR. 2 BA. .,_, ..... bhna, pool prfvil. 1st A LUl - mo·s rent. $235/mo. 83IHl87l. TownhouM Unfum. 335 BEAl1l'IFIJL 2 "2:,!_ bdrm. Newport Boach , .E::;l:..T~o::ro:;:_ ____ _ 3 ba., .formal ~ rm.., •• mvettd :tioo!: ~I '!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!I WATERFRONT • PIER 1: 4 BDRM, 2 Ba.th, crpts, cirpl, 24~~ ~~c~ ~ • 546-llZ2 INVESTORS FLOAT -3 BR. bma1 din-bltna. fe~. Nlt't' cond. 644-1133 ANYTIME 3 soru.t towntiou.e, 2!h Fount1ln Vin., or TWO f.PLEXES xtnt retum ing nn. 2 baths, w/w crpt., 2C32 Palme.Ir:. $250. mo. _-=.:.:..:===='--bath&, frp.l c, dllhwht, lit! Tustin ~-SCTCall,500. ,~ch. $C150' f.lrepl., dbl g:ange. J Yea.rty 96:HiOT9 er 962..am EW patio, art. dbl gar. S2ll/per BY ....... _ ............ lVI-detalliJ leue only. Furniabed $500 G.rden Grove VI ... 2 Bedrooms, mo. Attn 4:30 pm, 962--0l13. vwun-, 2 sty Spanh1h SC.lttl. mo. Untum. $450 mo. No11.:.==c...:.~;.;_---I 2 Bath, den, yearly N •--·h Med i terraneanho~ •. Mm pets. ~te Barrett Realty .• BR. 2 BA, bltn!I, crp~. lease of $375. Realtor, ewport -Featured lo Home • &C2--oml, d:rps. $2.15/MO. Fenced 644-TnO -TRJ-'-.LE\TEL"'---2-BR,--3-ilA,-I ~~~ ::O~ ~ Walk to Water, $UD. Alao yard. Lrg lot. Bkr. 54.Ht!IL ttple. Magniticenl view on ;r.. a:~.:~ 1nn Bet.ch Blvd., H.B. ~~: 1fil: ~ ~~ach, 1: H;;unt;;;;l";"';;;°';";B;e;oc;;;h;;::;, 11 0-;:_-E_~_--,-BR.-tro_m __ -.. -.-w. ;:::,~ ~-~ !1::':-t~y ~ ~ acre Sot. OJstom built by R.E.L T. Rent-A..Houte tJ9.1UOl1 .... .,t 1 % BA. outside 871--9282, Ext 36. 'f : pruent OWDer tq 1961. $15,0:0 Flnanda' Home FINE oce front house 3 IMMED. OCCUPANCY ~. fam rm, Jlv rm, din ' : Open Dally 10 a.m. to sunset. 17141 645-6.141' 'JlSntE'~N Cowan HeiKbta uea'. Price ~dawn~~ BR. 2 bu~Winter or Yri,Y. New .3 Br $250. mo. ;-, ki~~p~itn.~1'!; _S_•_nl_•_AM _______ I reduced to $148,000. Ph::me ,. .. ~ T n.on T v· .. ~ 6l3-4191, ..... ......, ....... A Dbl aaraee. dshwshr .. _ ttor:: y DELUXE Tw'llhowe, 3 BR. TO BE JOLLY t.uxury tri-level home locatm tM{mtnutes from tbe beach ~ walk to bee.lllifUl goll ~-Extra lal!<e fam!Jy 'p wllh warm fireplace. APume 6'4 % loan. SCT..fiOlD. fill"ih~1 L~BB ~'fl.t'J 54+--8938 or~ '-JU.oU cnn ~ • ...,...,............,.. -A n.-.•---' ~-•-H B gar uuu~ opener, ..,,;), r . ...... _ ... , O'.J-OCONRD!N.:'~TANTSCAPITAL _Nowport lslond ~ ~s;u1a1· . . .. .... nf,61>-328T 11> Ba. Crpl<,-. "'"""' ""_.,.__ .,v.., Harbor View Home lge pvt.. patio, d~ Pf. Nr. p,..au.111 ......... 120 5«1-'1115 6IHll;2 ..... NEWPORT Island. Secludod 4 BEDROOM -yearly So. C.Ut Plua. - !k•lldl""aNew-_WISE ~NVESTMENT !.;':, ~-~~,,:. 3 BR, 2 BA, bltins. $219. lease $475. mo. Avail-Duplexes U.m.m. 350 Want to Sue~? ~ ~":;.: winter, m--0883. per rho. Children & able December 15th. COl'ONI del Mar 1iA=~~! ~ranga rnoome"'ii'c. per San Clemente pets o. k. Ag e nt . REALTOR, &14-7270. m ·--'1111 mo. .t..a.-i~.. $11,500.. Call 962-4471 or 546-al03 • BEA ........ N BAY * ·--0~" -~. SllORECIJFFS, 3 br • •·n, 'v O'U"~ ... UC J Bdrmt., 3 b&.,, elec kit. SHIRLEY REALTY rri4 ~~~231~·1·v~A~CANT=~~B-rand--n-..,--.. ~BR Refrl1., dlahwshr , SPAC. 3 Br., 2 Ba., 21$ cat gar, ooran vu. pri. bch, privl. $.150/mo. WkdyJI att 'T, 675-33l3. !•": W.Hwl Jl1•J1.•c.nclu;...;;.;.•tc.r..;l•;;.l..;P_r..;•..:;P'..;;;..rty.:.-_161_ 1-----U-n_f..;u_m;.;';...__;30.;:.;;51 ~~~~~ ~~ MC:,.~~Y ~ 2w~·o l~ p8f~·E8tfN~~ ·' -:. PRESTIGE --M·l Lot WJ'x265', xlnt area. General refrig. Xlnt k>c. $225 per H~·E0g1EnRIE RI"".,_..., •NV!. PATI0;644--1687 !·~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~;;~ Anchor Investments LTD, mo. inc pool le rec facilities. v _,._.., Span\ah hacienda slnele story Mobile Homes 833-3147. Move in lmmed. Caa Dale, Y E A R LY RentaJ-Unfum. Costa Meu f BR atrium model, elegant Newport a.ch N.wport 8Mc1' For Sale 125 Mountain, Desert, 962-Mn AGT. Vacant Now. 3 BR. 5 houaes ---------< Cilley, tml lrg: llv rm, fitep)., _:..;:;:..;:.;;;;:,.... __ __;;o H B TOWNHOUSE N 2 from the beach. NeY!ly 2 BR Duplex, cpts, drapes. UlllP'8dedw/w/Cfl>ta&:drps, ~ 111._ u-......_Is 1_.;.R;.;ec;°';;'rt"-----;.;..;.I RENTAL.I Bz.' 1~ Ba ·1 ~ painted. I...arge brick patio. bit.ins, washer, dr')"er, yard tml din nn, centtt &arden \ iii ._ ftlllMI LOT in famous Lake Havasu. HouMe * •-L s2io. Kid ok. ':af:°to· school· All Util Pd. 127 34J.h St & ~e, ,,~ .J!ls. $00, atrium, overslU'd ktt w/all WANTED home of the world famous ...,., beach. Next to Hunt. Harb. N.B. Phone; 213:54)-5772 or \\"est C.M . .,._~. mod hltin appl ... A mus! SALES t. LEASING Loodon B....... Locatod * 141•0111 * 1..:.846-=..=ll:::65=------n4, 613-5562. 2 BR, l\i BA. crpts, - to set. e e e e e e e e full tenrice facility close to all llChools It city. W llOICOSfAllllA LEASE. 4 BR, 3 ba. exec. TIIE BLUFFS bl.tns. wa&be:r/dryer, patio, I J n..-.._.... "s=5 ss<nl or will trade for O>sla ' born<, prof landsca...,, 4BR.2\IBA gar. $171). mo. 696 Don-ell INI.. •Ill IMllRi Mesa or Newport Beach ln-These Are J;; A Few Of Close t.o Sch1s & beach, CONDOMINIUM St., CM 9G-6367 aft 5 PM. • l nL51U (-J ••t-<a•• Real Estale Associate, Broker, or Sales-oome prop. 64M8B'I. Our MANY "~~ALS • , • $365 mo. 968--2570 Desirable Door plan, lrg 128S. & $295. NEW! Crpts .. .... -.. -m -with. Income property ·~"'en"" 531 6800 ~.. e-pri polio, Wik lo -· pvt yards. 283-294 E. -,1 --. -..-· e RENTAJA Palm --* -4 Br. C<>ndo. Crp..; -· ocbo!s, -.. -$400 19th C.M. 64&<lOl!T. to work with Realtor, Developer, Build-;!d Al~ 38~ 2BA. btd $115 _ NEAR Everythiqi! 1 ·~~""'~:;>:!!""~'"~· ;,_pool_&_c1_.-__ · I ;i""'~· iiByi-;;-owner'i;;:;·-;;64+<;::;0335:;:=,~. · REPOSSESSIONS . er, In Ne~ .. Beach. 90% mu!Uple split. ~-L val! cm 0, ·, Br. Furn duplex .. E/slde. ~ HOS. LUXURY Oceanflont -New Huntl ......... Boach ,~&;, w1••0 J ljj ~~ a · a Avl now. lrvlne · ,._, ... . •: :.':':"'~~ • '1,. ~~ CALL Mr. stonls, 646-4414. All inquiries [ ~~:" * ;...:. °""'~lie 1 s'oo ~·: LUXURIOUS contact . are stricUy confidential. ::::::~-m;.;mm;;1 ~0r~....,.~~Co.~:P~rip.~;;.!1~76;1Sl35 ·ALONE on Ii Ao! H.,.. 2 BR. 2 ll&. Alr/rond ... S'65 Yearly. Da,w, 65-Jm or I New 2 BR, 2 f1'plcs KASABIAN = 1 ~r. dbl gar. VacanL 3 BR. 2 Ba. ""''"""' .. $285 494--0615. SPANISH DECOR ,.:c l Eitote ..,_,.ILL/j·Jj ...... r~wport~ Ap.tl11Mlf1 LAGUNA Beach Estate by * 3 BR. 2 Ba. air/cond ..• $310 EXTRA !ge. 2 BR house -CLOSE TO BEACH ~ ~ ~----. ._ -""" Fw Sele tll owner. 3.35 billaide ac:tts -$145 • cozy 2 Br Cottq:e! 3 BR. 2 ba. Atrium .... S340 New crpts. drps. Compk!tely $225. mo + $100. security OCEANFRONT COMMUNITY LGE. family heme, ocean- ---------~ 2 Br, 2 Ba bo!ae. Gar. Fenced for tot. 3 BR. 2 Ba. Atrium .... S365 private. $200/mo., 1st " deposit, rduodablf'. 4 Br.+ Fr.+ Poot * 2;1 ~~S * .?;'i:_,;':f'p';,,";";';.c~: s1>1.nxra*'UPPER! lBr. 6BR.3Ba.fam.rm ... $415 ~..it.. noo Security'"'· AGENT.- Charming custom built home. tum 1mm11c. Six 2-BR.. l4-l Beautiful canyon vill"W.; 14 2 Ba. Huge yard for kid&/ ISE 2 BR, c r pt s . d rps . IMMED." OCCUPANCY . -'11911 TOTAL D~N smau 3 Bedroom cdtq-e, country kttcllen, huge back yald, not far from ftch. (]n(y $11,000. BKR. ~ on Peecbtree Ln. • bdrrns., ·• . borse1 allowed. $93.0:0. By -•-~•--~ .,_ pool N 3 "--·-float--· 5 BR., 3 dinin& rm., ~ family BR, B • B anus · $29,250. appomtment <n<l 49+-0568. ·LANDLORDS! -·-· -·· -· . ew ~ -·mo. ba. H• livilll rm .• nn. 2% bl.~ Modern dn. 6 x Gr. Elec pr dr. $395 mo. Dbl pntg1!', dsbwahr I w/lrplc. Formal din rm. islaDd lr:ttd1iea. Evtn a bl.tn RED CARPET RHttort R -~--F FREE RF.::.nAL SERVICE 548-2253. 33i ~ .. ~ •Circl.lU. e, H.B. .--, BY Owner _ ~ 4'e-...U equipped kitchen, deep "-· Beoutifull> * _, * ~....,.., .,.ms, llO BEACON RENTALS 2 & 3 BR. Cone w/fam rm) ~ ,-I FoW>talna. .... <Br, 2 Ba. ~~ ":":;'.":; ~ .,...= ~ Commorclal ..,... * MM111 . * "SINCE !Mii" CA~1:'5~~~1""l ""!!!!~"!!''!"l-!!!!!ll!!!f ':, 1 ::C rmcpt. w-<:a~ ~·: ~ ~ ";~ ~ a SPARKLING P o o L. Property ~ lnvestors/a."lden •cl~~~~· Util m. lf~~m ~ ~e NEWPORT Shores 2 Br, den, 0!;U:..2 ~· hr"ma,1*~ ·-$4(.500. 10 ,....,."' A -• ..u $S2,500. FIRST TIME Thlrtffl> a=s citrus -Red· ALA -• 6G-3!l00 D•y• m-7GOO Nights 2 Ba. pool " club privL Nr. ~ar. ""i"' ~ S;&G.soot. p1..::l brme. Room for CAU. '9' '46•1414 l.ands -.N.E. comeroffexu • 2 BedmL Fenced. bch. $300. 213: 681-1278. ~ ~ c o\lple . CJWNl:R wants a c t! o n. pool. 192 500. "W' OFfERED and P....., · P"""""'lY Klds/peta. Ulil. lncludod (Adults). $W. no peta. -..-t 3 BR !n llupt Sch., .. -* ~ ' 4 ~ In ·~· Beta d~_<! al~'!'out·OOO perN •=a·~ $160. . 2 BR. II( bo. .......... $lS5 -Soulh:=.;::_;;;LO!I::!::"""::::---·-~3116==";,,· ~~=-.,..,-.,...-1 ;i;_..to beach. ONLY • l l ALTY ~-.::s an_.. -., "" · awo ..,,. ...... AiARenta1s e 6C5--3900 2BR.2 Ba ............. $300 -.-:: .J38.SOO. Call ftlr details, .:ft\'!'~ Near Me ... rt P••t Ofrl(• center. Sll.:D> ~ -tor qUick sale at $10,.3)0 • e 3 BR. 2 BA. fenced. 3 BR. 2 ba •••........ $.12; NIGUEL Sho~. 3 br, den, 2 NEW 2 Br, 111' Ba triplex. •A,._lCl.8 PATI'J. WALKER ~ $10(.0XI -Owner will mrry Includes own water • near Kids/PetS. $1$/mo. •BR. 2 ha. Btoadmoor $385 be., nrw home w/compl elec Bltn ~. trpl, erpt, drpL ~TY ---------1 'ZS" at 1% for 30 )Ul'S. exi.stlns homes_ amall house. ALA Rental! • 6'.S-3900 4 BR. 2 ba, fam rm S400 kit includ. rerr;g, In k1Yely No c b I d r n I no pe$;I.. ~ -IG.CIOI*' JUST tlSTEDI AgenL 6°15"'12'J5, onproperty.ownerarudousd-:.::::.:.,.:;::::;:::::,~~'="''-gate controlled community. S190tmo. 911 21th St. HB. o=.rn,~~e;.~~ .... -=-=-Newport ~·Dllplex . 3 LOCATION• ~~~DlMSl600. ON LANDLORDS! 8 red h·111 !.v;':.::·~J.".'!:...ht. ·d~. n6T.H>440 ,;:,·,BR. Bl-~ • dining rm, bulltins. brk. *EMERALD BAY * Bdnns. down:, 2 up. Shag • u,,~ .. nu:a,.. We SpreclaliU': in Newport r-wi --. ...... .._ u v-, $28.COl, 846-(l604. ~ mfs~ ~ ~. ~·~~; '=r· ~-.. mlot s:; (9™ RRAi~ rr::.. ~ :!~ s! =1:r=~~ . ~· ~]~ T'r .!i: ; ~ER~seg;i.~:,.:w_n_Vta __ Udo_~NB~_675-A500 __ diabwtUber A built-ins. ule ao bis term Land· ·EE;ab?CRS vlceiaFREEtoYou! Try REALTY Unfum. 320 1jjjokij.jjNii;oj;peii;jts.ii-iij!iiiillmi •; fltt~ce in lamb rm, brk. $66,000. leue. Tt ~7225. al!N;Ji t PM Nu-View! Univ. Park Center, Irvine _...:,;;o.;°"':.....--....::.: L Hill Call: &13-J663 &U-2253 Ews. NU-VIEW RENTALS Call Anytime, """"" $36, • 962-6566.. . ~· I Cond1211lnfum:s RMI Est•te W•nted IM m-4030 or 6'-3248 Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM ON THE BAY OWNER mu.5t letve, full din· BY OWNER, 3 BR. 2 ba... for .... 1601 I;;:=:...;:.;;;;:;;.:.;;.:.;:.:::.;:;:.;;.'-' 1=='--'-'---"=~ I•!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,.' 3 BDR~I DLX TOWN· ~S: ~.~i:_~~ ~kitch.~ == NEWPORT T0WF.as * fi)uick Cash •a.1-. Penlnsu.. 4lti!! 2~· ~~~~-= 0~~ HOUSE& All the amenities l ~;jl;jl;jj;jjimiiiiiii:.ii~ 846-1383. ~ bm, ca 1 l ON THE BAf Will bey your property, All BAY View 1 Br w/w ahaK 633-9393 ext 195 wkdys; =1~p ~ ~~:'%_~ Apta. Furn. OPEN House 3 b d r m E.'Ves/wknds, 642--2155. Luxury i BR. 2 BA. ¥1 dee-cash wt thin 'l2 hn. Call drps, paint, all new. Yrd 552-9314 Sat I: Sun. 642-51Xl. nd prestige din rm .• 12' r wall l:::lim:::l;llll!ll!illl:::lil!: tric Co ndo1 •. CUpetins, Gar. $190 Yrty. 60-8029. Lanun1 Beach Bllboa 1111 84&412ll. ="'"'-=""------DOVER SHORES' OVerkloksthebayl:vl~or Cost• Meu nso . tITJL PD. l Br. So. Cost• Mesi LOVELY3Br. 2Ba. $34,150. sin So!twind Dr. Lido Ille ...._ ndlant beat. ... -· -------- 3 Br .. 2 ba, b'p!e, patio, 'crpl, tt.ic~~~ * BEST BUYll ~ · :=,. "'":" =.r"" ~ I i:...-. Bltns. Patio. Cat • DELIGHTFUL 2 ~"""~~ii-bltm. Bollt entr. By owner. -·-lOt Exceed"wlY ~ a beJoonies.. Pool. patio an;.! LRG. 2 mt t1rep1. dbl pk. BEOROO _.,., ..... • I .. 'lm. 961-2'7ll. 5 Bd:rms., l1ni 'baths plus din well built. 1a um J-.stlQ' 4 le boat ck>ck:a. 1'bp dedc I: prage detached, coYered $195 . 2 BR. Apt. Huae deck. M -split lease; $400 mo., yearly < nn. plm Jge. sundeck. Brm., 3~ bath "Reaeocy" b t k 1 ~ INC. patio, lrs yard. One child Gorgeous <X'e&n view! level. Near shopping. Winton, Realtor 677-mt ~ : lrwlM LID0$19~LTY home. Excitina view of :,;~~·~rsrr/),,g un~ OK. $225/!DO.; Pb: 60-0596 $300 -l.RG. 2 +Den. 2 .BA. Immediate occupancy. S.lboa PMinwll i : Back Bay. $11&.500. Fee. 1D% down. 3121 W. eoui 962-1151 or 60-lnL Frplc. Gar. 30' deck. V1tw. $225. I mo. 644-7270 e$25 Wk A Up On Oceu ~ Fi·-t!l~T. ,L ~~T.~Etpo!nt _=_~*~"_r'°_n;~~-N-' ~*~Be_ach_ Edie~ BANKER a.,, NJI. so-:zm PRJVATE party ...... small ':l~ '!lt ':. u-:;.=: ':rii~EW RENTALS RLTR. Lovely Bach. (BR--·~ ...,...... ...... nn Realtors &U-20> m--0700 OONDO SPECIALISTS -home wltncome units 1n trwya $27Smo. 833-833) bef 673-4030 or 494-3248 £1st Bluff Maid Stt'fke • Peol • UtU Pd Model. Highly upgraded B~ o;icf~4 ~ 550 Newport Center Dr. HAVE ONE TO SEIL! WE Ccnlm del Mar. In area 7pm 645--3061 aft 'T, ask for * 3 BR It DEN* .;.;."-;;;.;.;:.;.;.._____ e Call 675-8'7«1 • with lots of extras. Low tio --'··--' CAN DO m WANNA BUY Dec. 23-30. Wril@ RB Scott, Mike MEDITT, STYLE BEAUTIFUL '"E" plan 3 Br. IDEAL tor 1 adlt, Sm1 .1 maintenance land&eapln&, pa • •a.iuo..~ $'78,000. ONE! WE'VE GOTI'EM! General Delivery, Lo'a • Family room. $550 per mo. tud' of 1.. ... -- pados and decking. 1Grttn· c67>-"'39F-=-.°'c-=61l-~'i11ocfl6."'---•--L lay .&-VA, FHA 55', 2, 3 & • Altos. Ca. 9402'l; (408) RE;NT or Sale: 3 BR, 2 BA Frple. 2 Baths. Built-in or aeU for $56,950, will con· 11 10' rear _,. ........ °" belt iocatiOn near all J1Chooi. Newport iMCfll llU'""' ~ BEDROOMS. JN ALL '73&-4871. wilh lar&e pool, be'auL kitchen. W/W Carpet8. aider 2nd (U 637-t589. home, $135 per mo. til 'f ]· e.nd. ahopplni. $66,50?, 1--'--..;.;-"'---<;,~~-M3 i!~! LfT U5 AREAS. From $27 • 950. WANTED, 3 or 4 bedroom, 2 ~'ji· ,E ~~ T.O.W. Area 1335 Month Fount1ln V1lloy 8EA$1i5 ..... ~ ~:t:lfi3. 2 aftBR~ Pen. Pt. Ocunfront ~........-. u..., am y ~UBMIT OFFERS. 1a.nvin bath bo eutakle 1oc.a .... + c n. ""t'·...,.. Ml5'1.QN R£ALW o.n • c~· 8 eel h•11 Prime ot all ocee.nfrmt )o... rm. pWce~ ~· ma~.: reall;y, inc. 9lf-.MC6. tloo. M:·be dean. ~ PL, C.M. * "'"1311 + * '-CON00-3BR, Fam Rm ' Util pd. Adults. ~ r I calkmll; thlJI ebanning 3 xtru. Swimmina pool> NEWPORT RIVIERA-AU. rear yard trees. good. alft. HORSES I: Otildrm ok. 3 Separate dining rm, 2 2/3 Edg~·ater. (l) 8'71·211116. . , bdrm., 2 bath house over-~~ lfor ON 1 FLOOR. Lrg. pluably Price ranit of up to~. BR 2 BA, frplc, blUns, N4rwport 8MCh ba, dbl ~ llU', S'\\1m FURN. 2 Br apt, Yl!IU't1'ifai"jj~ looks the ocean I: harlxr oy N , crpt'd, 3 BR, 2 BA. din mi. Pri party, Prtndpla only. EB Cypress, Back bl.J' pool. Sauna be, tennis mo. Incl. UtifSO'T E ... REALTY entrance. A l'lll'fl llJlting at lllONewport Blvd, C.M: flVl.C. lQx«l priy. patio. 2 557-«123. area. Avail now. $355 per EXEC condo hi Bluth:, 2 sty courts, 3 mi from beech ~B~!_Yd~.,~6T.1-61!S)~~-·----1 Unlv. Parle: Center, lrvine $110,000. 54a-172t car gar Pool. rec. nns etc mo lie. 6tl-«K2 3 BR. ~ b&. 2 patlo, frplc 63'T--a34 C t Meu Call Anytime, 33J.(l!2(I $34,SCO.' Owoer/A&t ~4 WANTED from pvt. owner, EASTSIDE • Br 2 Ba. frpl, + xtru. $450. mo. !'ir51-2490. ~°'B_ii:"~;~:;:i;_i~;;~ Ollice ....... 8 AM " 6 PM * * View * * or 642-3013. Open Sat.,.... :!'· ::::. .. ""!.~.~ ...... ""'wbr, ;,.., crpt • N'PT 9'ores. • BR, pool • Huntl!'!!on 8-h l BR, """' 2 ~-~ Lowetit prictd custom home See dlrectocy. inclUded. Pvt. party will pe,y painL Encl dbl~ to rec privll. ~~ HUNTINGTON Continent& queen size bed, priv RACQUET0ub21~~ RMiri"iNc. in map.ificent Dov e r Spadoul 2 story 2 BR. l'ii cuh. 494-n.89 or 494-2791. sch1a. No pell. ABBEY REAL: &0-3830 Towntiou.e. 21 4 Br. sty, ing nn. xtralrgrooma, ::-·~!m :,: '= muter F.StM Shores. 3 BR. 2 ba., maid'• BA. Blt-lnl. frplc. Separate WANTED $275. Oean 3 BR. 2 BA, htd lJlr:e to ttadeT Our 'I'nder'a l~ U.. bl..tns, wsbr-Or)'er, g2'omar ~·/slof'l&e. Adulta only ~·ie Owner. Prln. only. nn. Panoramk: view. $89,500 prage. Pool, recreation Residential lot pool. 1-rl'• same rm. Frplc. ParadW column ia5 L°!~! ~· drptl,I doee to ahop'g no Fuli.~, c.u • 832-'1058 i , (714)173-e210 BALBOA MY PROP. room. l&und:ry 1aCWties. In Costa Meu area. Bltns.. w/w carpet, drapes.1=5=1-;;::=5=daya~=!a<==-:;:=,.:_:•;,;1Choo;;:':;,·;;96i-81111::::;;·:::::==.J!;i;;:=,;;:";;,:;-;;,';..,.:==t * ~74'l * Quiet · -ts ~ No 54&-lmi Cdlege Park. 51>-M33. • 11truu S..ch' _ .... , •.-c .......... .,... childrtn OVft' 15. F.lien. 2 BR cute fenced ---~ g; , -- -•• BRING THE KIDS C.M. tu-2181. $Zl.900. Pool avail. PJO/mo.tnE: ' RARELY • , • Near !he beach. Charmin& 5 Duplexas/Unlll 2'Jnd St., C.M. 6IHl45. .• will you oot'llt acroa a UHd Brlck A Shutters BR. 3 b&., den. lormal din-Nie 162 fl 11 3 ·BR, 2 BA. tenoed yard. bu)t like thl1 In tod&y'1 Decorate lhil 3 bdrm., 2li in&. Ultd brick a,ccenta. Flllllly onb'· $250/mo. S@~otl}A-lG£~s· The Pun/e with th e Built-In CbucJ.le market. 3 Bd.nn1-2 btlh.t; 1 be,. home. Lara:e taznlly rm. -GEM NEW * A&ent. 8S'T-127l * clOee to acbooll, .howln& & acl'Ols ~ tr om UW> w. COut Hwy. NB lush'IW 3 BR, 1 BA. Cl'p(a, d.rpa O RilOl1w0t left.rt of the beOdl. Larae mde )'Ml, opac-<Ov'd., °* brick REALTORS ~ Opportunity 200 tncd ard i>10 lovr -mb!od wonl1 beo """"·ln .-yard wllb ~tio. Land loci. ICl9.000. QIARMING ' BR. .... DUPLEXES -'• ~""; . low .. '°"" """ ···'· _,L ~~ =· 1;r1~~ ro~~KER ~l>.R., nook. Verr priv. Jot ~~~= ~· ltw ind, $225 mo I N 0 H C 0 P I In thl "dreM1 roUnge" Realton 6"-24.'I>, 83J.-a700 fully lndacpd, many extru. BUILD'Dl SELLING NOW. . •• Re "Pete N' TUI.kl'" -. _.,._. ok, LrK yard j j j j 1 j ~·1 A'1 Armbru8tr.t. oniy 550 Newport Center or. Fee. 90% q.n. mt. Pott tJC 9 ~-~-w-•1 Maltba '.:;"':,;,,:~=·~~----._ 500 Pl~ R. Vu llomel, ~ 51 ;;;·~~tt. · u'A1TR. Ir& 1 br hie . ~ . n ~"'!Ir 1-<I. 0 W n • ' I * UQIJOR UCEllSE * Drpl/ ...... Crpl, •tv, ,...... t , y I LIDO ISLli l"_.6,!Gt . 3.14-~ ~-enruooaaJaa.....i. No-$13Tmo.-. I N A WE K 1 1 t/T01>'(¥/t ~.!r:-·,;m"t,·{::.!Jf = DOVERSHORES S-Ct11oi A4lunlonffuntbl((' (o;;:.~)v -2 BR, l BA. Crpi., drpo,f I I ·I I J IEAL ESTATE IUl!e w/baloooY. Loca!od IAYFRONT ""_,to rtrianil, H.B. W-oiueot (ZISl21MHi di-I. lnun<d. OC<:Up. No . . . . . . near club, tenn& A private IC.'.lll: •tl8 ~ • --,._ pdl.i $1C5/zrm. S7)o2ll8. ll90Glo""'""Sl. beacl>.Ellf!',,."""land. !OFt.onwatft'--••te _,. to._. ,,_ ~·•llAPPINESS• * I -~16 COLDWEIL. BANKER lartlo larp booL llWllllul • 'I-• ( .. ..ltwloot -• D y R I T I f ,..,...,~~~1 n.a1 .... ---.. ·~-1st TD Loans lamlfyu.r·~·N·nm " 1· 1 1 1 ;ANTAST.IC VIEW r.r.o Newpoot.C.-"Dr. :t!t,~ ~ = Inca-Pflf !!!f 166 . 3 --.188';., r....: A girl wm go to ""Y length .·: Ot t.quna A entn oout· (X)U>WEU.., BANKER 6* ,._ JNTEREST -to tho · L ..... Ihle! 2 Bdm> home; den, 106 Lindo ltlo Dr R<>I M4 l430 l3:M100 TAlf SHELft:R yud. °"' -· $230/mo I ogo ·-....., .~~:..i:.~.i:. ·~·~-i:·~.f.: ~...;;or;Cfiit..,Dr. JO~N~Ts 2nd TD Loans 1nc1uc11,. ...... 549--r E ER IN I ••-1 Coll: 67$-3613 D*-1630 -· •finest .... u':?'ro,nt -.. ,tr: .• ._.c:; J2 UNITS l.owHt nfel °"'""' O>. TIMI FOR I ,. I I I e ~:::: t ... ~ "::1 moolty. \'.JaAlll. o" •or 3 BR, 3 ~""" x1nt -. 1385 ·M "WE BUY TD'S~' "'UICK C "'SH '°" '"'"" '""".,. "°' 3 bo!ow. associated flrl')ll'flf', Qffll ;r.11<; ,•1J•,y. ~,1,,,i.llJ6tl WmottvELTONatod. &'COMPllHY ~--~ ' ,:__L For U M . down. w ... m C.M. ... . .. 8 PllNT ....... , £ I I rM:J: WI'" ·~ """" • ~..-1 0 LE 1(1$ IN I I' I' I' I' I -~ lnl<imlatlon 00 !hia ,OR INVllTOR s.ttlor Mft, Co. THROUGH A TH!!! !QUAO[S ~ ;'~ ~. p1ea1o call 0000 MdMINT Ml-2171 MM6l I DAILY PILOT -• l.Jl!o to -Ollr Trodet'• Ted l!!!trt, -. Salell:x-.O Up. MS2379 Servtnr llarbor .,.. n !"'; ll\ TullCOW<alGIT .t 's!2v,1 LE mos I I I I I I p-colman lo ......... •The Blulll -s BR. 21>· b&, l'Mrm, -°"'11'/ar 2nd TRUST DEED UWl8 'WANT AD ~ ~· _, . . . . . . ~~.,,...., 111, ~""'.': ~='1f. Call .. !fA"0,.::'&1 ~ A,.:s,,.:-..r 11 • ""4 ... * ~n..1=. * _c;::;ALL:.:::;;...;M:.:::2..::·"~71;;_,__;sc~IA.::.;cM-__;LE"'ET:...s.:......:A:...N"'s:...WE.:..:..:.:..:RS.:......:1.:..:N:.....:c-=LA:..:.;s.:.S1::.F1.:..:c.:..:A..::no.:..:..:..::N::.....:7-=oo-=- •• • : .-I • I ' ' ; ! '' l • ~"'\ : .. ' . " -.; : -. .. --- • -· .. __. -. . . .. ... , !%'r e:-----------------·----· DAILV !'!LDT • • • , ........... _ J!t] I A,M-.f,.-1~ ( Aµ~ I u1or-J[tll.Aoo<·---J[t] r-,,.··-·· ... -1~~·-"'-l~ I --• ....,. ,,. ( --.-lfo'F"""';;.c...=--..o..;"°;.;;1:A.::;pta.~f:..;v:..;rn.;;... _ _...;3'o""' Apt. Uhfum. us~.~.~ ,"5_!,.~iie!~.~-iiiiiiiii. -~Ml~Ap!:..~Unfwn.~iiiiiiii~Ml~l~ .. ii ... ii.,..iiiiiiiiii•~.:1~-~--:;.450;'!~,~-~~~l~iii=.~iii:::iii:....~,;:i Newport 8Mch General -•I ~~vn~t~~,.l~on~~··~"'~"'~!!!i~H~""~"1~,_.~..,~l1~oc~h~iiiilATl'RAC~· nn • bolh. sq, Ft. 3.Jhuo p.,., 11$. HELP Gold l'Wilialilillllt , , M•KLY-MONTHLY i!xealtlve Suite• --poriBlvd. ""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii9 .;..;;;=,..., -· ""' .-. "' 1280 llQ. ., '1!0 •· m J>Wr. ca1 .,n 11 -.--:-~ ' BR. 2 bL, l .,., . end • Back • CM. a.. '"' prof Pvt._~.."1?1'"~ -· -kltte• lnd.i, Pllri<'•· w/lndry. Avail. oow. EL CORDOVA APTS. OVER 82 "' woman. 1100/mo. a.a:m. C. """'""'' NA'l'l'RESS, O:>n>na . dd Mu 3 BJ\., 2 bf.•furnllhed Sttpa to From $145 • • • ROOMS S1B Wk \fP wlkit. RJtr., C.M. 842-1485. • Beat!\ Saw.' trom the • ....,, ................ U/5 RET RED "' l30 wit •P ..... --11111 s.. Ft. 3.,_ pwr. $95. '1WJS7. ' Ceet•Mn• •• I, . '°'"" STUDIOS & 1 BR'S e l'J'lEE Unent -e FREE Vtllltles • FUIJ Kitchen ~Heated Pool • Laundry F•cUHi~ associated 3 BR,2Ba ............ m 1 & 2 &.cl""'"" I poctlllvd.,CM.~ 1280 ~<ilo., 220 pwr. FND: Pt. G<>tikn • 2 BR, 1 Ba, P<nh1 ..... ,$250 Dishwasher • Shag Carpeting • Walk·in Clos-• • • PRIVATB --Cocto Pvt. :T pleolJ< -· ' Saint -el \V~w~~m~~:n~a.i. ets, Forced Air Heat. -Extra Large Roorm -SOCIAL SECURITY "' Mesa home, tsS mo. c. T NATl"R.£SS, mate bet~ ln-100 Allo Oceantront.l Avail. Bea\J.tiful Game Roont ·Heated Pool · BBQ's-54&'9346 lUtr., C.M, 642.1485. Vlc. FllUfrtoa Mtmal· CALL: 67>5663 Enclosed Garages. Quiet surround!ngs and • • • KITCHEN priyUas. MAn mo SQ. n. M·l apace Center, 53G-Ttll .. • nl\ close to shopping. (Nr Harbor & Hamuton St) p£11•10N m on\Y.$60/n>o.216114loerSt., wilnlni ottlct, lrg ,.., ,FEM. 001>1....,.., ""'' t MuJt Living -No Pets. .. "" ~ •.• • C.M. M-6110. door. fm.&O/mo. 1m Wtut. okL Vk:. ltWw ~ TV 6 maid aerv avan ~4~ e Phofte Service BROKERS-REALTORS 202; W Dolbac. 61l·J66> 20n Chari• St., Cost• Mou 642-4470 Newe'st A~· .. ~·ent' Complex WEEKLY ot monthly 1 hlk ti. An. Cl!. 6'6-<iOOl <!Bys Thun. !joy/.30th. Sett at ru ,....~ to ~ach. call 67Sr&no ot or S464i8I pvea. ,;2llh::;:;:..::81c::";..°'~•o.· .,----,-±I HACIENDA HARIOR l.owest Rates 6THll40 .Aol<lore.d. ~ SQ. l'T. M-1 ..... 'FND: SmOll hOney ' ~. *"'WEEK & UP NEW 2 Bdrm fuinlshed •pt ~ • Studio • 1 3R Apts $350 mo annual lease. Sil e TV A: Maid Service ;\vall w. Bay • Newport Beac:;ti. From $154 1 Br. $123 • 2 Br. $144 • 3 Br. ·$164 NICE rm., Et-CM. Ktt., =:'"'11;J::,· 1~·= ~ ~"ii DELUXE 1 & 2 BEDROOMS ALL UTILITIES PAID privU. • No!Mlmoker. $70. ~· St., CM. ~ <1aya, NB area. 6*-ml. • Furnlshod A Unfvrnl1hed VILLA YODA 143-00, T-3 pm. '1H289. or 11<6-<1681"""' ~ptloo "- Healed Pool -Garages -Shag Carpeting · Room & lloaord 405l'co=RNER;;;;='."..,""'12:.;.;;..;-M,...J,...,.>0ne"' "!,:,' \iic~ 00: ~r Dishwasher -All UUJJties Paid. Call 842-9622 SEMJ-prlv nn in home ol w/'11J' bl<lg.191 W'.1911' St., Sat. 12/2. Ph. a.1'<8 e Pbone ServlcHitd Pool Call 88&-4832 da,ys (San ~~:~:,~1 , BematdJnoJ or 883~ 29(3 Adults Only • No Pets prac nurse Cot ambulatozy O»ta Neu. ... or~ days. 241 Avoudo St., Cosio Mou 646-1204 Apt. Unfvrn. 365 Newport -h gentleman, llc'd • lna'd. SIAMESE Cat • r. 541-9155 or 66-3967 -""~"""""~·=·-~~~~~ ~. $1.Z DX'.lnth & up. 3rd Girl needE:d (or 3 hr • Th1s ad .........i for $5 on rcnL townhse in Park Newport. ~ .,,,....... .$122.50/mo + S91 ref. ~. UnbelJevi1bly Jkautiful dep05. Move in 12/17. EY't'S VILLA MARSEILLES Lag vno ktoch Ho~ls Mo~!, 410 "" -,,_ .,,,.i Chlca H.B. Fnd ._ 11 1-'---96H225. r : ]~ ,..,..... Vlc: W"""" A 1 VAL D'ISERE Garden Apts. ~1673, Days 8'5--1401 Lyn. Adults -no pets. Flowers ne. 833--0780, Ann. SPACIOUS I .. 2 BEDROOM APT. OCEAN and .. . •• -. . •. • ........ 84&-7426. ·-t Fvrnlanoa Unfumlshod Wide ocean views, aetts of 'HARBOR VIEW WEEKLY.nl•• • Watorbedo, SMALL "-" -•• .L.• .. UNIQUE Laguna euu~ Apt ... {-~ . Adult Living garden11. Cloae to beach & Color TV. K1tcber11. l block A 500 ~ 1n parking >e Dishwasher color coordinated appliances • shopping. 2 BR,,. 2 Ba.: Jge. ''wtMre Coneeni•llty t'ra~ N~ Beach nnottnc~ w~""~ Col.at •• eyerywhere. Stream & 'WANTED le st:raighHoi ~ Wa!erfall, 45' pool Rec. Rm. share 3 BRm~pi Bch duplex, " Sauna Sgls 1-2 Bdrm., '' bl k be h >1 t ~ , 1 J'urn.i.Jriturn. from $138. n oc to ac . rep ace _ , ~~: m> Parsons, ~~~· $180/all year .. . Plusb $hag carpet. mirrored wardrobe doors· rms. ·It storage. Custom P,..vaH1" ... • · SUBMARINE taeet dally, · • ·indirect lighting tn k.itcben • l)reakfast bar·· w a,11~ cbanlkliers, Elegant.apartments des!Ped u-ut1t Home 415 Hamlft Ba.Y •• Sln Juan FND Blk. grey, tan . ._,.:-i:·i huge--p1i11a&e-feaoed patio • pluSb landsca~ Mo~~ '=:"Ma= = ~~i:~~: Capistnbo. Gall: s:to--4929. = ~~t.,,.·i'l''·l--ing ··brick Bar--be-Ques • large heated pools adults only. Alao avail. &Ive Versallles ciUb and 7di lSf?, c.~ & lanai. Air conditJonlng. soon, other luxury apt~. $250 pool wirh unique AQllabar, * Prlvi1 .. Ro0m * ]~ FEM.\ AuatraUa.n S . El P•-rto M-2 BR lower duplex -•1 blk to " -•-beach. Yrly or winter $225 ' ' 3101 So.~8r11tOl 'St., Si1nti1 Ani1 557-8200 t~A~ .. mo. By app't. only fountains and for~ gar-Ambulat""" *:" ....... "r Man~ w/3 rm pup, nr Bua ~ COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 4~· dens. All port ot the South _, ~" lnfl-11•. Jl!Hi'!O '. 5 sPUT-1ever 2~Ap4cpts, €out's --ttnesr--apattm·ent Good, nutritious Food. Pm. ~ -~. _ - MANAGING AGENT drpg, l'ii baa. Ocean view community. . Nice, cheerf~~e. 530 =rnns-, "'Soilal"'""'l-,,blk;;-7&_,,""• deck, carport, 2 bib from 1 Bedroom/studl08 from $195 * Call_ * *HINDU SPIRITUALIST * shaggy dolt w/btk town. $225. Yrly. Adults 1st 2 Bedroom from $305 Balboa Can't kell! &: -lest + $100 deposit, Models open 9 A.M. til dusk Let thil ad · cba~ your . · • a ~. 'vail J Isl Women. XI n t nutrtdoUI belt~r Prolesa.ion:8J adv:Jce SIAMESE cat-small 1 BR's -$130 & UP or $250 mo. 130 46th st. See Unfurn. & Fum, Nov 24-26 or phon e 2!3n&42]5. All Utllltles Paid SEACLIF'F r-.tanor A p t s Pool & Recreation Bachelor apt, uHI pd. 1$9 Ma.pie Ave., CM $148.50. Pool. 1525 Placentia I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!~!![!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![!!!! Aho garaa;es for rent ~v.!;;,,!.sk. about our discount Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfum. 345 loo:> SQ. F'T. grac:iow; living. .,...,..,.,..,. -'--------- 2 Br, 1~ Ba, dlx ntob. LG. 1 bdrm. apt., l blk. to Costa Me111 Co1ti1 Melll 6H>605 eves, See Apt Sat, ~ PRIVATE Rooms • Men or wbGle outlook on life for the 613-6449. ..,..n. I\ • an. · meals. -Complete care. Ph. on lile. Lie. RMdiQp daily. sealpolnt bealatiful ** 3 Br., 1112 ba. ** 2 BR apt, wtw cpt, dl1Jll, kit. 6C-«l1I. 10 AM~lO PM. 4!D-9136. ''talkaHve." Foond on Large, newly decor. ~ ~., :a.nbe~: ~t.: ON THE BLUFFS Renti1l1 to SMre GO ~. s&n ~:.Cam!no Lii. about ll-20. 545--'"-~,..,.-i home. w/w crpt, auto bay or ocean Freshly paint-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l d.shwhr, comp\ furn. Htd ed. $165 per ·mo., 675-4fi00 pool. Mature adJts. No pe'ls. $175/mo, 4 Seuona'a, 2359 $325 • Yearly Oceanfront. 2 , N-t 1:~0 ,,.,..., BR, 1 BA. Deck. Gar. Bl!-~ • ~ ... ~ . 645-8008 i HOLIOAY PLAZA ;;:;,..,R. 2 ~R 1225 4 BR .r~ DELUXE Spe.ctous 1 BR .,..... · · .i -turn apt. $1~. Heated Pool. $275. Bach. •.u..o· Nr beach Ample parking. Adult.s, no ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 pets. Apt; Unfurn. 365 1965 Pomona Ave., C.?.1. ;11_ Capi1tri1no Beach SPAC. 2 BR, beam ce;...._, -1, much storage. Attrac. tum. NEW tux an vu 2 BR -Walk: to sl>op'g center. p · ' ~ ' ' ina:.• 50. 536-SU4 or 642-2'154. alisad~, -· mo., 34626 .,...,... Camino Capistrano. * SHADY ELMS -POOL. * e Adults Poolside $140 up iiCiioriioniiiioiideliiiiiiMoiiiiiir iiiiiiiim e Children next block 111 E. 2'lnd St., CM 60-3645 1 BEDRM., 1 BATH, FURNISHED-man o n I y . Eastslde C.M. Ph: eves, 673-4577. SSS. SMAU.. l bdrm cottage. Suitable for qu)et senior citizen. No pets. Clofle in. Coeta Mesa. 541Hi227 ON TEN ACRES Apts. furn./unfurn. Lease Fireplace. / prlv. patios. Pools Tennis Conmt'I Bids!. 900 Sea Lan, CdM 644-2611 <MacArthur nr Coast Hwyl HARBOR GREENS Fvrnlthod & Unfumlshod From $130 to $215 mo Bi1chelor1 e 1 Bdrm• 2 Bdrm1 e 3 Bdrm1 I lh or 2 Full Bi1th1 lt1'aster slze bedrooms w/ high beam ceilings, large living room w/gas or wood burning . fireplace. Convenient laundry area off kitchen. Enclosed pa- tios. 2 swimming pools, sauna, recreation facili- ties. Security guard. No pets. Models Open 10 Iii 7 pm 2700 Peterton Wi1y, CM nr H•rbor Blvd & Adom• patio, bltns, crpt, drps. ~ FND 1 .. -~cat.•, Close to "'erythlng. 1170 ground -· All 1" AT NEWPORT YOU · t ·-·-"to -•· St CM nd $190 Mr n-;,1. l will share my home wl• O\W! it o "'.._......... ~ Westminster-P V ·• mo. 880 Center ., • Call rou • mo. · .......... ., Ingle woman & yoone cbild Jolly Good Otrbtnlu enter-Ave. 891-B&J.l .... ,. aft S:ll pm wkdys, fill dill' 494-7447. From Newport Blvd., turn al + babysitting. Walk to tainmenl, You'll get it in FND ~-" Ji..t<.t 'tan • wknds, &&2.83«). SPECTACULAR view 2 &: 3 Ho!lpital Rood {1 block -school $12!f + i;i util "Pete 'Nt. Tlllle" ltan'lng ~•iau ,.., 2 Story Condo. Drps, w/w Br., 2 Ba. blk to bch. New -aboYe Pacific Coast Hwy) to SJG-..ts9s. · Walter Matthau ~ Carol dog. \Tic. Fountaln ~ Y C""tS, 2 bdrm lg ba. ~ IMlln •-~ AnA-3383 entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, 8ume" Elem. School. 968-1039 .. : '" · Ll · dl .. 1 .. ,. r avm ....,., -.. ...,...... ' Newport B'!ach, Ca. 92660. FML to ahr furn. 2 Bt, 2 Ba./::=;;;:"=.,..,,-:=:--= upstrurs. VUig rm., u ... ,. 494-2339. Telephone: (714) 6'is.oo60 apt. w/same. PooJ . PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con· r m., kit. % ha. dwnstn. M SAJCM. ••M. 545,..5355, ...... sympathe tic Fncd patio, gar. No children e1a Vi1rde """ ~=" ..-. _ _.. A~-or pets. Older oouple. 1 Br N ~' • pregnancy oou • .....,.,mg. .,.,.... E=~GE l BR $15.5. D~~•2 /J.rf.l3 :·~~ ~~~~s: Da:: G~a: ::!i~r.t.~n~ ~~~ref. AP-~ fOO~ :'°~'. Ofc., 3095 Mace Ave. · $112 ea. telephone SJ:r1670 OIR.ISTMAS jitters! Wresll-CM., 962-8679. I> Utils pd. Refrig, l"aRlte, cpt, ~J034. EASTBLUFF 2 Br, den, 2 bet. 8 & 5 673-3493 aft 6. tng wrappi.ngs1 LUV'N UPPl'Jt ~. in ~f ~'ts. ll~an~ 'noMa~ BA. ¥· 848 ~igoa Way. WILL ~ beaut. 2 Bt apt CARE • wrapa gifts, ad· PW. ' ~I~.~~ ill Walk to shops, 18 8 7 Newport BHch &W-0906 or 497-tm w/workir.a: ,....,. 25 lG 35. NO -~~ ~ants •. Y®r home,BaloT ·===::..::==c.~ .. .,;.. l Monrovia 645-4267 p EWPORT ~-n Clem-....... · male call:.;~ ple1.ae1 business; ours. 497·211H. Lost ff95 QUI ET-DELUXE ARK N --"• 53<-3885 aller 6 pm. WOULD Merritt Rlcbu<I Cox 1 -& 2 BR. APTS. APARTMENTS WE care at ea.. Coatenta. FEMALE IO ohace me. 3 :;,....: ~C: Belt Buckle ':'.; Pvt. Patios * Htd. Pools Oft AL-bay Grae~ living in quiet &Inn home w/2. CdM D. Ueeh(y at 550 Npt. Cntr Slilver, blc..,ckt inllhalalped ~wi/h Nr Shop'g * Adults Only •mr area with oceen vu, 2 BR, area. 675-6096 or 541-C:MS. Or. Suite 334.-644--tfm. ·~t: ~ ~ "a , ~ 1777 Santa Ana Ave., C.M. Luxury apartment living OV· c~/~/~~~ r •-~. Ga 1 for Rent 435 PREGN. ANT, ! Th 1nk 1 n g plus arnall "B". IAN(_,· Mgr. Apt. ll3 646-5542 erlooking the water. Enjoy V"" -~«J-: ~ ~-<&~ "THE GAB' ""'"" $750,000 health spa, 7 swim-Lge din area. 'apen bearn Garage for Storage. Abortion! }(now' all the Vk11ie, xtra high in ' I· ~ ming pool.s, 7 llj.hted ten· ceiling, priv balcony, rec & 1959 Maph! Ave., Costa Mesa facts first! Call Ule Line, me1tal value. One Qr1a 2 Br. 1'-2 Ba w/ gar. Acllts. ni& courts, plus miles of laundry. Adults. no pets, Manager, Apt ' 5. 24 hrS, 50-M2'Z mak.itli:1r JM;ir, un not ~ 1 BR, $130 & $140. 2 BR. $165. S/Pool. Ideal for bachekn. 19'33 Ctnurl1 St. 54H633. FURN. 2 BIL Apt. Pool. Clo6e lo shops. Adults, no pets. $160/m.J. Crpts, drps, bltns, fnod yrd bicycle trails, putting. Ahllf· 492-2259, 492-<M64. Garqe tor rent. PALM • C4JtD READINGS repi,ced. Reward. 9,~ R= Joor~~r.2r:;:;1u, 546-0370 .;:{., ~w~v~No~~. ~~74~~~J..!·~ Apts., · ~ ~ Ad~;'~&'*~;"4ln •:tMt. =Ex~~ 1f·=~~ plus spacious 1 bedroom BRAND NEW 2 BR. 2 be. and 2-bedroom plans; and Furn. or Unfvm. 370 Off' . ters. 2\3: 611--1350. Fully Uc. or C30 to ~' .: 1 19CI Pomona. C.M. Fvm. 8'1Ch. & 1 Br. Ea- coptlon.tlly nice. 2110 Newport Blw., C.M. NEW 1 & 2 BR's from S190 lo $2:20. Nr. beach & shop'g. 114 E. aJth, CM, 548-0131. NICE 1 br dplx. Quiet. Sepr. by garages. 1 Adult over 30. No pets. stS-1021. e $135 • Nicely furnished 1 Br. Apt. Adults. 132 W. Willon CM. 645-4530. 2 BDRM, utll pd. $170. mo. Na pets. 2717 Maple St., Apt B. 54HS13. PLEASANT lower 1 Bt, pool, adults, no pets. Util pd. 1884 MOnrovia. 548-0336 JiJRNISHED 0 AR AG E APT. Single per90n prefer- upstairs with private en-"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! $Z5. Airo 2 BR, 1 ba. SXK). 2-story town houses. Elec-• ice Renti1I 440 SWINGING SINGLES ~ Gray ~·" trance. $200 Pf' month. Both "!!! Ct>,~. drapes, ~ beam tric kitchens, private pa.:os Bill.boil P9f"im;ulil CORONA DEL MAR can Jim, 2 to .a.p.m. pupJ ''Tas&Je'' 2~ mo., ~t units next to park &: tennis, How's Your Budget? ceiling bltin&, patio -or balconies cupeting dra· ?-BR.'2 ba, avail-n:nv-tn June Up to -5,.000 9CI· ft.. of.ftce m-.3122 · 'Blufb' ate«, New pb;r • callBailey6'13--8550~. Great, when you get )'OW' 642-6857 or 642--98$ perles. Subienuean Pane-30th. frplc. blt-ins, space tailored to )Qllt' COUPLES PARTIES ~. 644-242~; 2 bedrooms each. BJ.tins. mone)''a wonh at the Ven-2 BR. upstaln, bar. blb\I,_ 1ng with elevatOl'll. Optional diahwshr, $2'JS. mo, 92!J w. deaip.-Fllll llClll'ity b«tg. can Phil·, 2 to a PM ~ ' carpets & drapes, choice dome. Handy location with crpts, $165/mo. Util paid. maid service. Just north of Balboa Blvd, 213o-69t-118l w/ample ~· 5J9-.S34C LOST;. small, male' ~ 1i:,an~~·call~RL,P~: lotsafnearbyactivitie1 for ~Mr.ot~f ~2 ~L~ ==~;1.tii':!11:::..7 Coroni1 del Mir nnYDAlkREALlorTOOuiatineRS ~ •• 30 ALCOHOIJCS . ~-~!-~~!¥., .. the kids ... plus play and ....,... TII "~~ 111nr1 .uv ""'.,....,.., Phone 542-7217 or wnte ,_,,....., ,..,,.. pro! area. Inside: .-SHAD"ll'l2y ELMS POOL T~:~n~:.i \n1J~:;' S~"1Cl0US 2 SoBR.. beam OFFICE SPACE P.O. Box 1223, a.ta Meaa. Vic belwn Irvine &: SPACIOUS 2 Br. 2 Ba, open beams, priv. gar. -Av! arr prox. Dec. 10. 673--0937, 67>-4873. * GREAT VIEW-2 BR. * F'rplc, bltns, mmdecks, pool $210 up. &U-6344, ti'J'5.l5J5. 2 BDRJ.t. 2 car coven!d park- ng. Pool. $2'.LO incld'g water. Ph. 675-1727 SPAC duplex, 4 BR. 2~' ba, sep dining, close to bch, ten- nis; park. $365 mo. 640-1091. Cost• MeH • 1500 aqlllll'e feet -* .. .....,·s., pool. . of Hwy. 4 000 sq tt 0 c Cuty Air-•--~c'o:.~M'= • ..,..,~,..,.,-,..::;:. * 3 Bedrooms • Adults Fooblde $140 up NEWPORT TOWERS $193.SO Month. Adults • ~ Port area: H1&hb <.'Ompet· ..uoi;lill Clubs SU * Big living room with • Childre.n next J;.1.ock ON THE BAY pets. Broker 644-4848. • itive rate. Johll Bel~n. Don't Be AJone- Yoon, f=a$~ ... a new :~R, SL; & ~3: L~~;:-O 2dls~~t alhl elec: Cost• Meu GRU: f.:LLI . FoDr i'sche avHolll!d~! lite at w/furn, avail Heated pool. ~pe·~ ra an eat. • R THE VENDOME mo & up. adults. 853 Ovmoob the bay & view Of CORONA OEL MAR Dlsc.inry LOS1' vlclnlll< ~ Center St. 645-6965. the ocean from )'QUI' llvi!W 408 Sq. Ft. SUite. lnuned-11"835-6885 • 2J3.387-3.19.1 Broad~ Shoppiaa ' E: ~~~iuf;nu~ Dan• Point :J!:s. ~pa~ lately avail. 45c Per aq, ama)! lttllte -in* "'t'O~ &. boat docks. Top dO A: tt. Ample parking. ~ I ~ poodle. Rtward. ~ l DELUXE OCEAN blllft, 1 BR, w/w s ub-terr . park 1 n g :::sca:,o . ,. A . :?o ~11t,~~ l.911 _. FOlllll LOOT; wblle loog ~P'#. APARTMENTS cpts, drapes, refrig, stove, w/eJevators. FuriUshed &: .f,,, Vk:. Wai4_ce: &t ~ Air Ccnd . Frplc:'s • 3 Swim· wshr/dr)'er, $250. mo , pref U n furn I !I he d. From fl m ........ DESK space avallaWe S50 $10. Rew. SG--9709. •~, 1 -~..,,::::,· ,.:5'1H838c::,,;=o..· ~-~~ LRG 2 Br. $150 Car !>rps, 2 BR. Crpta, drp&, bllins, stve, priv tncd yard. kids Private pe.&. Gar. COO.pie OK, no pets, W. aide, Jftf. 548--5ru, 642-3534. 673-7178. ming Pools • Health Spa • middle age, retired couple. $300/MO. 3121 W. Coast !'!:~:"''°"~~".::. mo. WW provide hl.rulbft F.<HmCf (fr. .. ) SSO LOOT: PEI' GOOSE, .~. Tenni!I Courta . Game and Aft 5 PM, call 49&.-5903. Hwy NB. 642-zm. ltrUlllSWltit.161iq at$5mo • .Answ9ria11el'Ylce . OeDtral CH;y l*rk. ~ Billiard Room. Huntington Buch y ei1rly.S.yfront w1tlrillls creett, avallabl;?. 17815 Beach ~lvd: ·YELL0W W.b, Mariners lN7.9639 ., ..... , · 1 BR. From $160 3 1..ov .. 1 ... new untum. apts. re!Ulllc .ttllc few )'OUf HWltiap>a Bw:h. 6G 121 Drive, N.a Male, 3 to 5 BL.\CK Latrador Retri4;\J:, 1 BR. & Den From J185 • Luxury 1 br apt. ......, 1xtr.1P1Clon J· or 2.tlfffOCIM 6 OFFICES 1050 8q: n total mos. old. Hr21k E TER RANEAN e Adult 3 & 2 BR., 2 be.. each. Ph~r .lplttl'lllat. rrom $165. Otcc:ntor· N crpted d 2 ~ okf. JJl!&)e, bt In C.If. BACHEU)R, util paid, $145 mo. $50 cleaning fee. Nr 0CC It UCI. 557-1168. e TROPICAL PCX>L e M DI e Dishwash"8 &: &lip. Many extru. lmmed. lln• flfllltllrt pacU1tt •••llablt. lighu, 't re indc: e • ~~-' FND • German ~ 3-4 Reward. 642--fi692. , ., • LLAGE occupancy 2'300 r11rv1tw ttd., Co1t1 Mt11. ting, a c, uau""' mn old mate ~ nose VJ • Qlofce of 2 coF schemes · ..._......... . area. 16c per 111 ft. 6'B-1417 · .......__ • ue...--LOST I01dm lab p.ip, vit-2 Br studio, 1~ Ba, frpl. sprl Rrcue. GM &: wtr. pd 145 A n..,. E. 18th No. 9, 645-45115. 1 BR. Furn. pt. ...,/mo. EL •-"" No pets or children. 820 D UX extra ug 1 on.. apt Center St., C.M. 60-5848, ln 4-~ex_, Close to South a Custom carpeting call: 67J.3663 '>I~ Eves. PIKIM: $4S.2300. aft 3 p.m. Vic: ........... Mesa,~·· BroadV.'a)' &: Tustin, C.?ll. 2400 llarbor Blvd., C.M. e Jacuzzi 'nlE EXCITING ailabl FOUND prescription . sun "Mac". 6*-8378. . • : (714 l 557.scr.ri e Heated pOOI PALM MESA APTS. DE.SK ~ce av e $50 alaSRS in ~ lot at LOST "'"ha.n Hound. ~. RENTAL OF'F1CE e Dead·boltFIOcks MINUTES N mo. Will provide furniture Fashion Islaitd, '64i-61s:L ._ OPEN 10 AM tp 6 PP.1 TO PT· BCH. al ~mo. Anlwerlng service vie. Center St., C ·~ • New Villa Pauli1 • OBiHSIIA40 PuERTo FURN. OR UNFURN.--available. 222 Fottlt-Ave.,-MALE~BeM:le--fQl.vld--in llewud. 6'fo..l484; 5Q-J9l Unbelievably l~e apts., Lapna Beach, 494-9466. College Park area. 56-4338. XER pup 5 mos ··'le $!':iie! ~~:C:!~ ~UtorS~~ * 2 WEEKS FREE * :SeJ':l~~ec.!.~ OFFICE rental or dezk FND Grey & White Male cat fawn, 4 white paws.~· c Coast Center. Adib , no pets. Hvntl""°" 8-h $155. 557-5529 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2 BR, 2 BA, c:rpt, drps, bltns. LeQUINTA HERMOSA Spanish Country Estate Liv- ing It Spacious Apt&. Ter- raced pool; aunken pa BBQ. Unbelievable 1Jvine · 'MiR. FURN. $115 2 BR. FURN. $215 2 BR. SllldJo.Fvm. $240 AU.. UTlUTIF.S PAID . Adult!! No pet.I C 4 bDa S. of San Diep Frwy on Beach, 1 blk W. an Holt to 162ll Partcside Lane.) (n4) 8C7·54tt Wshr/dryer hookup, patio, gar. 1 child/no pet $170. 18l-H Del Mar 5'lll-82'IS Shag cpt/drps, patio, Yisto del Mesa ~tc: Adtilta, no pets.· space. Handy to San Dlqo vtc. SUl'lllt!t Beach, 592-1647. W1lsoo!Placentta 548-7804. beam cell., garag.,. * FRESH AIR ADULT GARDEN HOMES SINGLES From 1150 Fr.eway, l.aiw>a NlgueL Want ad ....Wm .. , 64:1.5613 ""1J Idle ltemc . , . 642. From $180 Walk 3 block! to Beach 1 BEDRM. From $1fi0 831·1400. $140/Up spac 2 Br, & 3 Br, 622 llamlllon, C.M. Lrg 2 &: 3 BR. Aptl. Newly IRVINE AVE. AT MESA ·2 BEDRM. From $001 'p~RQ~FE=SSl=O-N~AL~SU~i-le-...,-...,~ 1% Ba, pool, cpt/drp, bltns, See Mgr. Mr. &: Mn;. Hoban decorated,· w/w crpt&, drys. 1 ~~n~ w/de~ta.Br~'JNI Unfum Apts Avail From $10 to go Hell at Bolsa Chica. * * * * * '17.6.. plygrnd. 1996 Maple, No. 1 548-2062 bltns, except refrig. $16I & Sec ~ to $15 LESS. Hl!.,!B.!:.J,12151!!:!!!!,mo.~_!IH&-~1323~':_-l,,----.-------i-----;;'•f.''1'\.I 64>-3813. e NEWPORT e $235. No singles, no pets. Day & Night urity. Pool, You're· right, they're under· -. • LARG R SJ&..1711: Fountain&. Rec. Bldg. w/ priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. AIRPORT Min View, 3 office ~ I nr Es~: Hi=·· 8:J:; e APARTMENTS e exercise rm, blllianil, col· (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) suite, crpt&, drpi, AJC, T d I Pa d" ''I ~ ~•• Sn.8145 2400 Newport Blvd., CM NEW ... ch apt., 426-Zlst St. or TV. Ea. Apt. has dim· 516-9800 833-&150 eves, 54H757. ra er s ra 1se .... ., •• "~ eves. 1 &: 2 BR. Fum 4:: Unf. 4 blociaJ from acean. I BR waaher, relrig, shag cpl, I: LA MANCHA ~ LGE 1 Br. Pool. Nr thops. Children'!! Sections. $155 mo, 2 BR $195 mo, 3 prt patio or deck. 545-4855 Brand New n..1 ..... e Unit.!1 Bu1lne11 Renti1I 445 Adlta, 00 pets. Sl40 util pd. MUST SEE! Fr. Jl2!i BR $265 mo. Manager SEACLIFF Manor Apt.s. 1 Rent now ,o;.-r.:,,..,. con-l--'--'-"------ 1884 Monrovia. 54S-ro36 ALL UTILJTlES PAID wanted, Tobin Realty, Inc. BR. $143.50. Pool, Crpts, structioo allo~ o{ l AVAILABLE Mar. ~L CdM. LltG. 2 BR. 1~ BA, priv. Call 646-1038 846-3371. drps. bltns. garb. dllpl. 1525 mo '• free rent 1 BR. 1 BR 2550 aq, It. cornet atore. patio. No pets. Children ak. MESA Verde. Duplex 3 BR. 2 MOVE--IN TODAY-•' Placentia Aw . Ask about It-den. 2 BR's &: l BR's. Present t~I, cannen i: •. ' .. . ; . .) $155. 726 Joann. 84&-1584. full BA. Adult>. Ctpa, drpt., 2 BR In spac. f..plex. $139. our diacount. 548-2682. From $1!6 Dahwshr encl Olaflln. 1~ tin. rt. ~ NEW 1 & 2 BR'• from $170 to bl.tins, dlwwshr, fncd yd Pool. Kkll ok. See Mgr. CH o ICE OCEANFRONT gar iwtm'•g pool imQ•a windows, to ft. facing Coast -$145 • $165 $190. Nr. beach & ahop'z. w/2 pat 101, Decorated. 173'n·B Keelaon. 1 blk W. of large 3 BR. 2 bath oft Peti acceptahle. Hwy., 85 ft. side street &: Bachekr A: 1 BR. patlol', 114 E. nb, CM. 548-<n37. Masltt BR with BA. frplc. Beach Blvd, off Slater. Seashore Dr. w/p.rage. 642--Dn' 778 Scott Pl., C.M. garden, partdne, «le Ill· rt lines times dollars . ' " !rylc's, priv. garages · 2 BR. .. ~.1 ... no pe!B. BAY Pl5 mo. Comer Jot. lS4l ~7510 or 847~. F'plaoe, forced air beat, H I •---h Allo oWce suite, 650 1q. fL Divided beth & Jots of MEAO()WS""APTS 381 w Wint~ Pl. No. A. 2 WEEKS FREE RENT! 1 yearly anly, 1173--MM unt ncrton ...-35c. Rented ·~Mor aep. closet.I. Rec ball, pool A: Dn•• St CM,,...,_...:....., • Cotner of Mace. 546-2187. Br. Frplc .. Nr. bch. $15$. NEW DELUXE ft--n1ront B··~o NllW arately. c. . utt.rs,1~'::'.''.""''::::~'.""'-:::-.-"'!:'~~~~~~~fl! pool tables, 11auna baths. '-J ., ' V'l<T"W•.>· Call ~1661, 9-5 pm. • ...,......,, ' ~ Realtor 6'73-4U> 32' Sloo PC Clafll. .n l BA RONT llOME . Ni. See Jor )"Ollt'M!lf. ln'.ll ~ l B_!t. ~~t ~~~· ~~ 01c:Me!0~3:. wkdays. ~~ ~ r~: ~~;: QUO VAOIS Ill NEAR 'alrport .Cl) 16x40' ChampL~8 HP Olitbrd. ~ cal, troplal, 3 Br, 3 Bw Keelton l.n. (1 blk W. of '"''''6• crp ... , .... .-• .,.....,. frlend"i." a turkey dinner and NEW dlx 2 br dpbc. Cpt, 67H9ll Bier ~ Lwtury Garden Apt.I. stores in bullllng lhop'g trade Iot late model car c•I •"41 dock fcr,.Ja Beach, I '1!~~~~<!' Slater). ~. 53+-3m ·the a ntl ca Of Wa1ter Mat-drpti, D/W, bltns. $175. 218 SPACIOUS ,· '"R 2 ;cth ~. ;., •,,?,,,BR's. center, Coa:ta Mesa. i~or or T ... ~.. ~oo . ~ 60' on !>a,y. -~-"'~"-''~=~--12 BR Wlll.1rn. Crpts, drps. thau and Carol Burnett in K l I I 5 3 6-7633, Q • uu -..... MW lease information cell Tom ...... m.... suw for TDa. LRG. 2 Br, bef.m cell., crp(, range/oven, refrlg. No pets. ''Pele ·~· Tillie." ~~ e ' w/trpl#rs ~M ~Wij ~'Th' Htd Pool.Jactml·SaunaA Andrews. 5 4 6 -9 5 5 6 or ~ ooo N Tustlri 5 Ac Fun A: Ski •boa_t, 18~~ drpl, bltn d-wlhr, dJ1pt, pool $140tmo. ~1'155. ' SPACIOUS 3 br.. 2 Ba, WALK TO BEACH H~nchin ~ir. va ~ Re~J:!°°n..~N: ~~rt! 537-1467. h~ horn~-Trado' S250,oo0 M~any 1ll HP.·.: N&: .. uiP~1tal· Ml~a.01;: ~ SPACIOUS 2 ,Bt, 2 Ba. nr. crpUdrp. ~iet. Adults, no N Br dro. 2 BR NG f'....,iHis A IDEAL Colta Meu lot. eqty tor tolid income prop. For s~. cab over oe• • ....:....:::~ •~tM . •u•v acbools, lhop g & frwys. No pets. S 19·5 /mo . 2281 d':.~. &: .!1. lt&cpt/16~ ~IFF-' :i~ l~~, I N D & Otc/store. 1D) eq. It. DI.YI. ert)', Prin only. Bkr. ?T! i ~-: ~·· ~· ~· --IU6/mo. m-013<. Fonlbam B"' 641H689 847·3967. •• -·-~· nu~... ,,_ ASK ABOUT FREE 835-3437 143-13911 .,,.. A 5'7"'89 • 557-7621 • ; :. I 1 BORM. FURN. LARGE 2 BR. .,.,,.. .. & ReL646-4s39. 'CLEAN 2 Br apt 1135. On ii'ooJM~ ~Jan. 1 • DECEMBER RENTI -' l'2"'BR"'.-'f'-2='5tud"":,:;1o"'a-1M-lf."'P"'llm,.... t6Unl,,_134Meq.Anaiet;i. t Apt. Nn.r lab J)N1l. drape& No t i n g J e 1 . S 1 6 0 _ 2 Br 1% Ba Beach Blvd. across from WESTC1JFF 2 bdrm. 1 ~ 18992 li1otida· St. 847-9448 FOR leue 150:l ;;{. ft. 1tona. ~· nr aftoP1 A IChl.s. will tMWe for ~ It ~~ ~Beaut. endoeed Pf\~ .It S130/mo. Can 548-'12l9 -1'ownhou9c Ct,,ia. drpe. VW Agency. Gai'. No dop. ba to..Vtt"'°'fse blt·h'll· JM (~Nie. w. of Ger!ield 01 Zo.nt~CGr. Hun~~~'.; TR.AO£ 26M ~· ~mnfl ·or: indu1 la.liq. DOOi.St.No pef>7~J.1Y'fml:if 1ll35 I Bdrnt l Bath. Bit-ins. pr. 2'49 ·Orange, Apt ~ 54M879. pellol, adU.lts 0niy no 'pets: &00 Beaeb'"""'DIVO:> Adams, ffB. 538-I+c!J. .,..,. ~·Of !':_~:,~RJ••; Piirx'. only,.-.-."'4. ,' i-=Uth===-~sa&-"-"~'-"''·.,....-..,-,, New shag crpt. New paint. CM:. Stt--1809. A ail J 1 im Htl)ITING'l"ON Garden a vw.Hl'ofO ~· .. • Ca1l N • -..;io CUTE 1 Br. duplex. Avail n45/MO., e "37-8780 ** BEA'~" l • 2 nn BEAUT. 2 Br, 2 .!*; dJx ..8.iSa:J an. ' per mo. Apia. Hell '11 BoUa Chica. lndlllfl1of lfl-I 450 TRADE $41,900 -13' 2 W1tL tnde top qUali\)! Smlll Jriv )'Ud uiuu1.o """" poolside nr bch. ......,., low ' 846-1323. •Cocopue • See new houla· Ontario. ~t palntinp 1"8c ,v • ~I cblJd Of(. M-a. $1«5 LARGE 1 Br, b It-In 1, ConteJll.parary Ganten ApU. dep. 2320 FtoridL 53rrl976. YEARLY: new 213 Bt. what )'OU're -ml19ine. Fr. S.A.. nr Warner. ~ eq ft vn lot: BttntiWd for all)' .ttu' '«' :;u,-r l' Mo. W.-0 ar m-:UJS. !~ ... ~:.._ro~· no peta. ..PaUos. frplc., pool. $~ WALK to QOean. 2 BR. newly 1135/$300. 2 Bil Oft ocean '130-ta0. wllta 6 lG sq ft, l'H.l' wrlta T0'1 bolt • . . • . Yalut, ne«t imali utU:, ._. , •.wv V'f<r'UJ.QO, llf(l. Call S§'J-o.102. dee cpt1 drpa, bltina. ·$390. • Jo.dlna:. Paul C h r I 1 t 'M2-479o ' ,. ,:.. 1,::,~:n= u::. 2'BR with or without FOR.in..nowTownhooat!3 Constderdilld53MJ.S5. ABBtv REALTY $&).3850 n:;.~~~~·~ 55T-7900BKRS. "s;;cl:;r.;UTtFUL:::,=....,,y"""11""'A"'H""'A ele No~ Min O.n l }'rplc. 111 bo, end. BR, 111 BA, <'l''" -2 BR. PattJaUy tum. a-IO 1 BR. ,,,._ Communlll' Pool. IUJ, ~ !> 0 o lo 1 de !\ENT M·l~ ... ft. 114fl. ORGAN~ ~er roll · ' pa.do, pr. Fr $189. 64+-o962 d&h/wth, d~ pr, pool, nr park. fl-411/mo. ca 11 $18.Vrno. See at *11 Dom· ~ $150. ~. MO. U'irS No. 8, C.M. tap klokl Uke dttk, •new lefuna .._. UNFURN. 2 ~ •pt. Adult~. South Cout PllJll, 55).m2. ~1070 Mr. Smith. h1P> Dr. or call ~. l BR., 1 bile to beach. Shag ~ oorKution. Trade lor-1m. " A..0 1 .. -. ... "'peti. tHO. 611) J .... SL 2 er .. 2 Bo., ..,,. .. d .... , 2 BR. bit ·his, ~rps. cplJI, NEW ! BR, I both Duplex, <:l'plg,-. lndry .... !"'· nME FOR-lrllCk ... '" 6411832.· cvpMC)', M.ly l"edet. l br. Apt C, C.M. 548-95'13. blt1111,, end pr/paOo/)'8.l'd. encbed pado. J1J). Ground Door. 217 33rd St. 202 14th St. s.1&-0352:, . ANSAPHOND. val $l50• "IO ......... ,8llt .b'olO wOler. 2 BR. oup1 ... n<5-o,>t'd.] 1165 A n'lli. 5'6-0H•: 1503 'A' Ala~.. 5.16-8719 $27!i/mo. Ynrcy. 613-95G8 Lido l•IO> "'UICK CASH Honda 350 SL. VIII !600-'911 Prbi:· AlVt. ~·Yr 1eut. cl\lld I: amall pet ok. S45-i491, Johll. l uni1 luc:h NC!W 2 9t, i BA, f.rplc. "' VW Camper, vN SJJ50. '71 . '1111 per mo. JT!2. 61S-4713. 3 BR. 2 BA, 111 blk ID beach. !! $l50. Y"•~rly. 219wi.t: St. PENTHOUSE, 2 BR., 2 ha. THROU4iH A Ford van 1$)1) eq. For~ llACH_n(blol'llll~Col Put a Ultle "loot " In >l>llr Clubhou,. w/pool • '""'"' m:AtiTIFUL VlEW, Crpld, * llll>-03< * 00 °""""'view. Av•ll. Im· DAILY PILOT. photo «i: lurnor? 61S-78T, ho. • N. o-t -<>Pen Levt.-aeU lliMe b&ubJu for -f,1t,~•!7 "~~ $245 mo. dl'Pd. l Wt. No pata, no 2 BR. 1 8Uc to Ocfen, J)('W n1ed. J\ll"n M' u.n:tutn. Full E>toe,1'15-4.!81,49~-•ros "book•''. Call Claltllled '· • chlldttm. 11S8/Mo. 14 5 ol\q, ........... $2111. ICCUl'lll<blllldlni! WANT AD * * * * ,. "'! ~ Cl&aUJ~I Ada , •• IM2-arnl Cedar way:: Ph: .fM...4029. )Tly. Utl11 pa, 6'13--0TSt l,!BOQ:YD~_!ll~EAL~,C!:TOTO!!!!!llS!.J'75'"930~~!1 __ ~~,_~~-=:=:_--iiiill••m••••-------~!!!iill • • • • --~ -= ·~ ...... .....,,~_ ~ -· -...fv ,. L~ ---• • •• ---" ·---. -. -r • . .. .. _ l~ 1--..... 1~ I E 1111-_ l[II] I llilJ I Jill) I l[H) I • "' ... , ..... Ii ,,,,. 8 ~ lq6t)11• . • • ' ., . . Tltur1dl(, Otctmbtr 7, 1'172, l~I ••·· I~ ! -11~ beol• a HoUMClM•htt Hoitt Wonto<I. Ma F 710 Ho!p Wentod, M-& F 710 Holp.W...W. Ma F 710 ~Ho~l~p~W~.~.1~..t.c~.~M~ ... ~ .. ~7;1ofl1.~-ii!i~"~i!iiiiiiiiiii_~~ .. ~"iiiuct~lon---;;:;_~,1~G;1,;19;· O;"~Sa~lmii.";;~ ... ~!1~' ' •iNfructiona 5JS FOR fut l~··b Holiday ASSD!BllERS ty t DOUGHNUT ' cl •·· ·-·-. • • •m> a -· n!ta •hltt, LVN R.N • ..-t...V.N,. lull tlma l NEIOlfllOIUIOOO ""'-" JS INSTRUCTION _ e:an ... ,. or e.x c t JI en t gate', 1 am, ·M&cGrcaor Fe.male, ap 25 lo 45. .Apply ,.U A n..,1. M0-3091 part, Umt .. e\lctniQc.,&-n!Jhl ~· i.Lem. Jnd.. crib. e.i up or iqdiv. xlnt preparation ol Hol id ay Ya.ebtO>rp. J63l Pl~ntla. in ~ • .._Pk, DoucMut. MAID WANTED-• tlm shift. Beverly Manor COO--AUCTION lo..., to ·-~ ttUQ sift. ~'"'i;;;!i l meals c&ll Patty&: Debbie. CW. . 135 £.17th.lit, CIM. • ..... ~ e, valt'tctmt Hospital, 2'462 c ' Yl •. e""" n Ill!!! •2591, Let •• ua do )'OUt ATTRAC. Receptionlst/ilomc EXCELLENf =-:~=k. Nev.-port Via Estrada, LRguna Hilla. =etiba~~~~°6'p~ ~t· .,.,__ ~ ~·;;::.~:.Wk. We """"'1. Ov<r 2S, nlahll JOB OPPORTUNITY MA I NT EN ANCE Man. Salos · PERSIAN RUGS t;ng R<>.'<l ' Borton, Chuilc J ,,..,__ ... _,..... ..... ~.,... only. Wed.-SUn. 846-136:1. 1 ....... -ett&blJahtid small New· --.'d, 2 •·-a--"" 1-.-0 --sentatlve needed tor Roae + 6 ex.Ira ple<lt!I UO. will clean YoOr home fbor. UT() -... ~-.. -.-r• ........ -~"' ·-tu" ·r1 .. -~ & Sa• :r, De~. A MECHANIC )IOl't Beach firm Involved apt bide oomplex. 8t6-<l619 Orana:e Couniy terrllory. 1v.<•·· ... ,, " ~hl~. Expe. Call 646-GTJO tor AM prage, perm., xtnt with manutacture1o(yaci1t· MA'IVRE "G-' Prr c M 56 yr old compaey. Salury, and ott.er Orientel IUCJS F'airhll.I, Or., new p 0 t ter pm. • woririna cond mostly J.ite tna. sldlns & back'·J)lckln& ~ • · • oomm.iuio111 bonul-.lt other C R Beach, 548-1007 . Prof. CArptt Cleaning meehailleal i b'ont end, fa.brica seeklpg individual In1uranot 0 ff I c:e • tll-!ting:e benetiis. For appoint· Grptts and Uftnerl GARAGE Sale. Boats, aul.011, Al8o "i'\ndow•,A floor care. Hunt Auto Center, 1825 intttealed in (growing '\Vllh' bw(~ & a~ility to ment call 642-1960 Mr. toys, haehold itc1n.1, crtJ's, Call Dutct 537·1S03. Laauna .. Canyon Rd, LB, company. Coll<&• bftck· conunumcate a must. D•'Y• 1..;::M~cy~•";.· ,.,..,..,~~= BEKINS MOVING & STORA6£COMPAHY ete6ffi Vktom, Cos I a L•ndsciplng ~ a:round belpf\ll, Must be' "33>-"'=7398o==· ------SALESMAN _AUTO Mesa, Sat & sun.9 &lll. 1£1..1. -,-AUTOMOBILE Lea•.! na: pel'llOMble, able to meet MATIJRE woman wtown New & used cars, small 1535 N A Household Goods 11 · , .. ~~~ ~Car T~lephoncio, BRYANT'S ~pl landacap. s a J esman, Exptrlenced, publlc. Dutie1 varied. Mar. transp. l.0...1 care for 18 mo. force, bl~ area. All bnft.11, ewport Yt. ,~Uc Call oiverten, tnc A deslitllng. 19 yn. Mua.gemtnt OfP· Guaran--keUng & sales reipon1lbll· old Kiri m our home. Muat top pay plan. Live & sell on Cotta Metil, Calif. NEW and antique furniture: ' l •o l Buy A New P"-local exp .. IJe'd ... Winter ty, Car, Medlca ln•. Ral:f." lti~ta ~udtu ,~ tm-::,~ ~'1' 7 •itnlW· so. Coast. Tom Stamp Fon!. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7th, 8 p.m. "'"'"'"· doa!n, '"™'· Mov· ~tem .For Your Office! rates, 962--0482. Wutiams Leutng, lpc. l 4) m t · a • pm. 49Z-U37, Sari Clemente. ing, must tell. Otlental rug, COmm Syste'ms 979-1234 Mainteni1nn 638-3410 (213) 748-84ll. EXECUTIVE SECTY MEDICAL ASSISTANT SALES Clerb &: Cashlera, 9 x 12, $350. 54H948. sitting ;.;.:;===;;;.----!AVON ~~=TI~S DENTAL RECEPTION :r:e!me~t :'z,~ J!x: some exper. Apply in Viewing & inspection from 12 noon until lewelry 115 FLOAT ~CE Fast growing Huntington FJCG x.~ detittd, person. Cbt"tkcr Aub::l Parts, time of auction. Auctioneer : Lieb Rosen- . LO~~ Car&e '°!'. littie 1 tots, Palnt1 k d7j.l'Ot .i:9ur· 13 Fj!_.atmnew91 ~nllpaym, eou'"e" .. • Beach ~.· event!vt Practice i 4 ,,e 22•· to~. ·.,.!!P8,,_ N.B·. 111 E. 19th St., C.M. bl S ed b GI WEDDING BELLS ••• .. _.~ ,. , w a nd y, ar , 1 ~···· -·•· ~ ~ ·~ _, .,,_,... um. ponsor y · obe Trade Exchange . be · ,,,..., t...-. s Pe I' en c e -CO!lts. v a c at 1 0 n s In has o~ .... g for girl with Internist, Call 543--3142. · C \\'on t nnging fot 1ne & -.._a.,...,. tract) H • B . 543--2757 R.E. Whittemore F bnwy.Call 1 ability to auume resporW-SALESLADY, exper,, for O. n1y gal, 90 must sell beaut. 1 ~ P•intine a e taU11. 5fo.: now or blllty in addition to being MEDICAL Assistant, basic Laguna Beach shop, betler '.S carat dla.lnond ring, klSJ . ,-* ENJOY '11iE Pe-rh•C,tl-detaU11. 700. intelligent creative enthu· lanb &: x-ray. 5 Yh. back of. dress.et.' 494-4298. Ternu: Ca1h or Chtck & HC'rs wedding ba.nda. r. ir. uoLIDA<iP<" * ,...... . .,.. . BABYSITTER. 3 to 5 days 1 ti •-• •--~"•Sal ce exp. Lawton School, 623 1 · ; u id Sa -rt ·~ • ., • ,. wk, 7 to 5 or 2 to 5 .......... sas c ~ c =ruu. ary W 17th St S.A.541-4461 SANTA NEEDED .,,~.,~~""""""""""""""'I v.·ute ye ow go • ve ...... 1 .~$M "'Pet.. 'N'. T·llllt'' CUSTOM PAfNTING Bal r;:,::· open, Future unlirilited. 22 • ·• • A 1 '(have bill of sale &:-guar· job. My home. "°"'' to 35 _,,,, pref'l'd 848-0654 PP Y Friday lG am, A·l . AntlquM 800 anh.-e of quality '-m local •r~ter _ lnter/EXter. • Untum. inter. Trana req'd, q15-1314-· ":~ · ' MERCMANDISE Steno, Harbor Center. ' [ ][DJ jev.·l'lcn i. Aski~~ $285. "H · spee. price. Free coJor con. BAKER M... WO....... EXP:ER D cable TV un, -'-'11 -. SEAMSTRESS ...... -IJ BRITISH Antique Importers " ~ no& nR SMALL uiu· '& ' t lJ I ' or ·--. -d und f t l l SUP"R-iiilSOR' · 1' · P · II Th•>'"" really ""Y hand· "r · ~ -?' s ng es, c. na. will tran. Afternoon shift ergro n s a er s Iii YI E' . ll Ind 'al . • . eraona y aeleeted whlsale , .;, typet work. CUt. doors, Won:1 be undet1:1l!f. ~ . Wtnchelf's Donut House' desired. Trabft considered. , x~r. pn te ustri i,na-trade only. No retail. By some rings Sr a good OOy. a:.--......,.._-.-..i.-i, ~.'--e-. ' -ii--.-.'~ , _....,_.,.-.. --...rBl~. -~. • 64 2-~. Telepromp.ter. Jn'~~ 91. ~i_ying, co-ch~: Gene~ mending. _ ·appt: 2l3-431-72Sl S. B. 546-571G eve11 .& wkends ftir 1 1· ~··,.uuu. u.-u15n. u-wu .l'.°"""u ..,.,., ntuuu vu ...in. E I t ordination. aistribution of GoOd pay good hours H I W ·' M app'L NO CHECKS . CASII , etc. 962-1981. -* WALL PAP R * qua 0 PP 0 rt u n 1 Y stock fOl' fine chililrens wear Irvine ' 540..4450 e P ant-, -& F 710 Appll1nces 802 ONLY. home. Tepairs Plum-When yod call "Mac",_ BEAUTY OPERATOR ,o•o;m=p='0"'-""oo·-~~--~ stores. Appreciation of con-NEVER A FEE AT TEfiiPO arpentr)' _painting. 5;48-1444 _ 64&-1'01 EXP'D Shoe Salesman for struction & qUallty ot fine Te1t1po Temporary Help SEXTANT KENMORE automati c TURQUOISE JEWELRY '"''",, ,. .. ,,_~.rt:.!!" L: · Womens Better Shoes ckl•h•--e tial washer, family 8ize. three Gcnui~ Indian, tome "o1d Ul1I ~JJUIJ. L.M.B. PA1N1'1NG ' PART TIME Cameo Shoe Store~ South ...... 16 ssen re.mn. 6 months old. Ex-pa\1,n . squashes, braceiets, S.Nlet AT YOUJt SfllVICE OuaratttM + Comm Coast Plaza, CM, 3333 ~~~~:UU~: H~~~~: RESTAURANT eellent condition $ 1 50 hishl, t e·t ts hes etc:<. , \VlNTER RATES · • Bristol st. 644-8897 for ap,Qt. SEC~ETARY 642-0J22. · \Vholesale prices. 6200 W· il'QHN'S Carpet & Upbolltery LARRY BOHLEN 546-1926 M W rd ='-°"·~"·o"-"~""-,.-~~de~d~~t-f l """"~~-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Now lnterviewin" IZ cu FT Se·-~,1_n Cst. Hwy, N.B, 646-7317 . • ~Ori-Shampoo free Scotch-0· 0t•omery 3 i:...v-.._,MU,... en a Excellent p y • ... ., """ """' (Soil Retardants). PAINTING & PAPERING, '5 AUi.st.ant. F/tlme. X-ray Morft... a For Experienced retrig, Good cond. SlOO. or DIA. Sol. approx. l ct. $350. _ ,•n--uers &: all color 19 yrs. in Harbor area. Lie certlllcate req. !$4$-9475. Insurance Sales Excellent Benefits make oUer 673~ or A qual; Sol. eaITlngs 1 ct. •1 jjtb'bmers & lQ minute ~~ Ref'• tum, Beauty Si1lon EXP'D try oook, part or full Fi1m1ly Life Excellent Future Dell Personnel _ Fry C.ooks 6T~7429 · S2%. Leisure World. t1 1.:ulea.eh for white carpets. • time. Colonial Kitchen 512 I WaitreSs Mgr. • Waitresses KENMORE port. dillh-(Zl.'Jl 43t-l294 6-8 pm I ~~ your money by saving API'. Iriterior Painting, 892..UI J H.B. w. 19th St. C.M. H ns~ranc• Company Hun~ngton Beach High Hostesses • Bus Boys washer chop-block top DIAMOND ~~ carat & beau! ._Ji\~ exlra trips. Will clean Carpet shampoo, cleaning. BRAKE Align&: Tune up FRYCook,exper.only.Swing J!menteo~:.gsWeininsuS: School District, the fastest Cowiter Girls. Dishwashers Used 6, mo. $150. &ID--Ots:i bru~h('tj "'~t/gold Tiffany I.. vtng rm .. dining rm. & Refs. Ins. 642-7ffi9. M h E -•itt ..... St--12 50 h ho growing school district in aft 5. setting, $32a. appraised at 0 A $7 50 ec . xp necessary "'' v 11v · .... -, . per r. n1e owners ot S. o Co t · 1-~--Pho ~.i 557 "'33 bef 1 00 hall $15. ny nn. . ' INT. & Exter. Accous. cell. Salary + Comm. Good Co. Cottage CoUee Shop, 562 W. "··"' . ' f Savin range un y, is ....,.....'6 ne or aoply Mon. thru REFRlGERA 0 "' . ....,... : p.m. I E $10 Chair $5. 15 yrs I .... ~-1 L' I .... uu.om1a s a.rge8t gs for a sharp personable SaL tx-tWC"en 9 & 5 T R & stove, M 116 ·: .! • Is ~hat co nts, noi ngs sp • ...,...... ie.; ns. benefits, 548-9383. 19th, CM. -& Loan Companies. All self-starter Who pOssesses very clean, S50 each. 7130 achlnery I , \I Local refs.' 645-0809, Chuck. FULL b .. -qualified le,d.s. Exet>llent · & """"" ·.~ ........... " t \Ve s t m i n s t e r A v e •1 et.hod. I do work myself. INT ,, EXT pain""", paper BUSBOYS-18 yrs or older. c ..... 6" bookkeeper training. (714)-233-"-Mr. poise ~....,... J..,... .. "" ... t o be 630 Newport Center Dr w 1m· 1 ' ' LATHE-Logan 10" 4 Jaw 3 Good ref 531--0101 ""' "''6 Apply in person after 4:00, Newport Beach area. Write .,.,...,-the .secretary to the district N rt B h · es ins er. Jaw, KOK too'J hotdCr. ... • • b ........... ; natural wood 353 ~-eoa~ H Cl 'ti-~ d N 497 D il Fox, 9 am-4 pm. •upenn· tendent. Must be ewpo eac 6447804 OVER~ l 'l , , ..... -& .. -& 548-.,......t ,., wy, ass1 ""a o. , a Y """' washers, dryers, Jacob8 Chuck on steel wood ,• c.n.nt, Concrete finishing 7905. Newport Bch. Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, .COsta MOTEL maid, Mon -Fri, able lo work under heavy re54~. tors from $39.95. table. $350. 546-1694. 1 PAINTING -HoneJt, clean, CASUALTY l11J1urance glrl., Mesa, Calif 92626. Prefer mature person, pressure &: dead l t n es. Single needle operators ..rv•ou I -,ATIOS..PLANTERS guaranteed work Licensed Laguna Beach. 49rH521. Desire an AA degree or Part or full time, •on 1 YR d 1 1 Ml II ·J ~! & insured.. 675-5741>. exper, pert-time. C d M G I H I I equi'valent college J e v e I 548-S<l95 >t<JU • guarn, e & n-ice aneous 11 A,tt Concrete work:. Brick, agency. Send reswne P .. o . .nere oustc ean ng NURSES aides, exp er, t . • 1 bly in of stall. Late mod. all cycle I slumpstone wk. 894..J533. PROF. eainttnt, also roofs, Box 592'/', Orange. Ca. 92f.i67. Occasional Work: preferred, all. shifts. Bever-fi~in~ a~ ;r;a men t 0; SITIER desired evenings. Kenmore washer. ~lm. A .LY~ ~AIGH ORJGINAL l lj'. 'l'IOS. walk>, drives. Saw. accoUA. ceU. -lnter/exter. CLEANING woman 10 , No Heavy Work ·. Mwrt Drive ly Mano t Convalescent b . am· ·-tio· ,, 5 Corona del Mar Area. Own COLDSPOT 17 cu ft U..,.;"ht otl painbng, gold frame, Li /Ins ~-L 64""'"1 Good -" Short Hours H-'tal, .,,....,.,Via Estrada, usiness a tm,....... n "" -~~ .• ., ·-1. "~ 24" x 56" "Fall" ••ene ••~. I ~a1c. remove &·replace c ·l!'•~es ..... J.J.;J. N---... Centerotfi-bldg.' ~· ""!" ~ of !bl ........... U"t'r'1l1.> fret".ter ooppertnne $125 --"'!:-,. 0 _ 1 -I p c-..i-• "" ApplyJnPerson LagunaHllla. yrs . respons .e ' .. Wonderful Christma s couu=e. ~-Qll.e,... p as.terr etah, Repair Nite work, bondable, pd. . _ •11 am • 1 pm I -'"'=:=;'=":;=:~~~=-I secretarial exper. including . I 54&-1694 aft 5:30. t 646-0SlB t. STOM CEMENT WORK vacation&: iruJ. 40 Hr. wk. RENTAL READIER OFF'ICE MANAGER 2 yrs of exper. as a Typist e DISHWASHERS washers prescn · · I: . vea, WAIXS, 'patios. * PATCH PLASTERING 644-0606. m 1 . ~ bookkeepln& bckgmd secretary at an ad· Burroughs LlOOO $450 dryers reblt &uarn & BELGIAN all wool 9xl4 Pool deckt-non. 642-8514. All type!!. Free estimates • 569 P-· 9th St., C.M. Call Lorraine min:tstratlve level position. Keypuncher $460 delv'd' SJS.-7620: 54&-5218 carpet, light beige. $35. ~·~WORK Call~ CLERK TYPIST ·· GENERAL Office .. -ing ffl. WES'ID..IFF A1ust possess good RecepVGen. ofc S475 Re.I..;..., •~ •2 doo . MIKASA porcelain, 90 pc t·t !". ~u:..i'• "'t' Pe~el Agency secretarial skills. Salary F/C Bookk:eepet S65!I • ...,~ra..,r-r set ''Rose Mist" $ 5 5. ' t,,. ~'." *Rs~14is... Plumblhg PURCHASING DEPT. ~~~Ms~~~; roe Weslcllfl Or., NB $790 -S970. Interested ap.. Assistant Bookkeeper $500 Grea~ SlOO "552-::' =--""':::::=-..,.~---- DRAINS unclogged • $7.00 Costa Mesa. 645-2770 pllcants report for the skills Recept/Secretary $500 B 0 UT IQ U E I t e tq s !:\ Cfiitd Ca,. Sewer line to 100' • $15 Purchasing or mat'l control GIRLS '• TRAVEL . PIANO Player It Drumml?r. & written te.~ ~t 9AM, Sat. Legal Secretary S650 GAFER & Sa"ler !lecfl:ic CIOM!-Out! candles, soavs. 1 * 549-"'°""' * exper, helpful.· 60 w.p.m. A 1 In ~--I' Qec. 9th, room .118. Hunl-Writer/PR . $3 hr 2 dr . range w/rotissene. toys, etc. Blty now ror ,11 J• LI secl' ..._ elee. typewriter. Must have 18-2'1 pp Y peraon, ._....-,v s ihgton ~ach High School, Tax Secretary $575 Bargain, $175., Call 496-6998. Christmas. Who I es a I e : •,,, ; .. -B*b SC!'ft * PLUMBING REPAm top clerical skills. IF you're looking for an ex· Bar, 8l0 W. l9th St., CM. 1905 Mam Street, Hunt. Bch. File Clerk $.165 C1mer11 & prices. 207 62nd St. NB. l'f J a y• 1tter ,._ Nojobibolimall R IE Equal OpportunitYAdvertisingSec'y $650 E l "" , I ' Day care for 1 child: t.nfant * ~ * C!tll For Appt. . · =!~ :. ~ M=~ •• fRsl•[Ete Salts Employer, En1m1a Secre• .. -· 1 $&IO g,u fl'.'?!"' evl P LAY H 0 U S E .' Child s 1 .•~ Yf". Full time. Prefer lnchatrial Relations ·...-··o ..... ,, 0 custom made, sh 1 n g I es. I work [ n g for tc~hers. COLE PLUMBING Coast Highway, ~te 200, Typist . . S425 DUAL Reg. & Super 8 dutch door. EZ to m<M?, !1~M yanf & 2 playmates. 24 hr. servfcre, 645-U61 -(7141 4~9401 Hunt. Bcb. We ve open-Free &: Fee Pos111ons Hone)'\l/ell Projector. Auto $50. or besl offer. ~7 " ... -v·-"'" ingsfor1airlafree~travel licenM Trolnlns SECRETARY NEWPORT load. New $160. Sacrifit'l' H.B. : . t lunch, snacks. .,.ta S•wi-/Alter•tl?nl -" US. H'""" · ' ""''Cc=~~~-~= · 'v.·ew SchOOI Distrkl, FV. •-. cw over · · '6>' pay Limited Time On y Openiftgs in Newport & Seal Pertonntl Agency S60. 962-5185. s u RF Bo ARD s, 6'4'', ., J"!.1 south ot F.diJJger otf Vicki'.-Or'911\als -TELONIC =~tt°!t~~;_arents Famous license course now Beach for exper. secre-133 Dover Or., N.B. 3X4 AGFA view camera & Hawaiian Surf Craft $65, Magnolia. Nr. San Diego Prof. deai~. tailoring & INDUSTRIES available thru Tarbell Com-taries. 642-3170 tripod, film ho Ider s: 5'8" Bahne, $45. Both Xlnl ~-438tr .. tyl•~ ·~ •325 . pany, Applicants fully re-Apply In Pel'SCln l":lz:::'lz:::'lz:::'lz:::'lz:::'lz:::'lz:::l:Z I mahogany & brass. $35. COB!. 96l-®3 , _,.., res ~ ..... Q'W"'I ~ L .. una Beach HOLIDAY SALES lmbursed upon quaillication. 1055 No. Main, S. A. I• 673--0734. HOUSE Paint $2 gal. nee. Alteraflont 642"'45 -The HoUday Season requires New or experienced sales Rm. 201 Betwn 9 am & 3 pm TYPIST ~MM RETINA 1--8. Meter, mirrors SS box, dot. 21" 'llv ~ Taulane _ Repair Neat, accurate.*' yean exp. Equal Oppor. Employer extra.sale11 ladies to take & people. Openinp available. So. Calif. 1st leather cases. Mint con-$10. '62 Chev $4(). See at 591 J •• addiL 20 yrs. exp, Sltfn• l ~~i!'!'~~~ ....... ~ .. t,iu ~ers •• S2. per hr" up. eom ...... ~~ete training program. N•tlonel Bank Huntt'-ton D-.ch dltion. $3.5. 673--0734. Knowell Pl., C.M. r ·w•d. My way Co 5.fT-0036 CLERK·TYPlST, sharp, for 0 to w rs per wk. Phone •wc management oppor-Equal Oppor. Employer ··• ue E . . MAGNETIC SIGNS tax ottice. Jan. thru April. Mn. Murphy, 521·9363. ~!=: Call Mr. Sloan at High School Dlstrld Furniture 8JO ~~ed1:8b~ii ~. ~~~ oftlng ' $10. * 645-2449 N.....,,.,frer. 6°"12fl0 Hotol·Do•kClork SECRETARIES ua. an opening for WAREHOUSE SALE THIS $199. Christo\u •u-·-•· Remoda, Mn•t~wNCR4200 Apply TARBELL 1 ~·-•-Wav ......,.,.._ ~Adfttio ... $50 up. Tolovl.ion R...-Ir ' CONSUMER . ~ .~,.. .. _.:.. !rut --* 1 ooo;. FREE * lntormodi•I• WEEK NOON 'TIL 7 PM. ~-~ ~--·~ LOAN OFFICER ·=~~-~ ... ~ Cl k T • t MODEL HOME FUR-KITCHEN cabine ts .& 1 -~: 557~ COLOR 1V Cal-Tronlcs ~;&n.wi;:.-REAL TORS Liz Reinder's Agency er YP11 NI s HING s p Lu s formica counter top a. I ~ i'9cfrica1 769 \\'.. 20th, Costa Mesa Exciting oppor. in Costa H 0 USEKEEPER. live-In REAL ESI'A 4500 Campus Dr. SOME ANTIQUES. HUGE Harden Enterprises, 815 W. -.. tt-&rvice ean $lO. HH:Hl2 Mesa fo! exper. consumer Rri¥ iboni, TV, $300 pe.f TE · 546-2118 Newport Beach Starting Salary s:;29 mo. SAVINGS. 340Cf mVINE 18th St., C.M. 642-2842. !~ !CAL / REPAJR / loan officer. Property Im: mo .. lfune 1;0,,,..lhb pref'd. SALESMEN· Why not work =::;:=,,.:.:o.:;,c=-=--===, Plus excellent benefits. I ~•ODEL I "1 yrs . ......,.,..r. Tiit provement & Mobile Home- 0 ;.962-4283=~==-=~~~~~ in the hottest area Hunting-SECRETARY • Newport Typing 45 manual, 55 elec-BLVD. (1--BUX S, OF BEAUT. white mink & ~· .., ... -background pref'd. ~Xln't 1: ton Beach I Fountain Val-~ach Attorney seeks part tric. Interested applicants BRISTOL) N.B. 541>-1371, leather, car coat. Must ' . · 645-6211.· Repair Work & Remodel working conds &: fringe HOUSEKEEPER. Lido Isle, ley, and let us train you! tiJn.e aecy. Must have xlnt report for the written test M.STRCHG I: B. of A. sacrifice. $ 2 0 0. Call I' \iF,CTJUCIAN, licem,ed~ At ~~ ,Pnc;es. benefits. Please call !baby), mature. English Call Phil McNamee, VIL-typing skills. Call bef 1 pm. Dec. 9th at 9am, room 2.32 ROCK MAPLE-dining tabJe 1 ~642~-<69=l~. ------:hi!>on&oi. Small jabs, mamt. ,Call ·~5 Rod Lewis speaking. Own trans. Refs. LAGE REAL ESTATE, 64iH22'7. Edison High School, 21400 & 6 chairs, buffet cabinet, 4 ADLER 21C elec typewrit!lr, ''& re-pairs. 548t5203. -(714) 642-4711 Pvt nn A bath. ~3743. 962-4471. SECRETARY, part time, to Magnolia. Ave., Hunt. Bch. drawer ch e • t, desk carbon + silk ribbon. Like 6 ·ardenlng Glendale H 0 U SEKEEPER/C:Ompan-RECEPTIONIST work In o\vn home. Musi Equal Opport1U1ity Employ. w/chail', 2 end tables, 2 new S250. 9 ft Sofa. $800 I 1 11 • 1 Feder•I S.v.ingi ion, Must drive. No smok-An interesting & challenging cype a neat letter and take er. occ. tbl.s, Also millc. items. new, Sac $200. 614-5576. • "1"'· BOB'S GA"nENTNG Ei4..,41wll f' zm Harbor Blvd, CM i.ng. Call 962-5224. position in the pleasant en-dictation. Mr. Darlin&. LIKE NEW. SACRIFICE! HU SBAND'S Chri8tmas! ! · ,.::.· & LANDS(".APING I ~~· ~~~~~~;;;; l ~Eq;ual;~O~ppo:r~. ~E:m~p~loyi•~r~ HOUSEKEEPER, live in, 5 vironment of an engineering 499-4588 mornings. WAITRESSES, Full' & MS-4681. Salute him wl'lO" cannon Resiclential I< r..ommercial day wk, Mon-Fri. Own firm tor a proficient typlst. p/time. apply, Co 1 on Y 3 Cushion Teak couch $70, on whls, shoots beer cans . • :.. lrvlrie-!nduttrlal Job,"·-·-~. Malo 700 c kB II "" L'do ,_, 67~-.0'>AD. Exper not neces.s Secur1"ty Kitchen. ~.an Juan teak chair ...... 30" sq teak 673-4194. Co I .. " ~ oo • ro er Man ns., 1 ..... e, .....,.....,, Odo. lt'cM'.,;.:ln. c. Capwtrano m42 ~--' "'""'~'--~----, t -' 557 .. ~!a~er Sp. m. • -v•~6"' tbl $25. Wht fonnica bdnn1i10VING'. \"·-~, d-. ~ u SCRAM-LETS Day shift, w/great exper. HOUSEWORK. No ironing. ~ 186 . .._.;, he ...... r Hwy t. 7 _, n <><: 1938 ~ ,. .-..._.....,, 'J"' ~ in lrg food operation. Call 9-4:30 Tues & Fri. Must be ~-A'"hlm ••0 Offi ' se .,..s.•~· · refrigerator, dining room ,:fllfmJNT yd. lawn· serv. $10 Oief Fred, (714) 644-1700. thorough. Own Ir ans p, "C"-... 1 0~~~ •--1cers WAITRESSES (2) Mex:ic~ dresser/minor, end tb. set w/bufiet & end tables. ".,-.nio, back yd!! a19o, weeding, CQ_UfU.:,~ndable. to be Refs, After 6, 644-814S. .LAI .... • ppor. Empw.r"r food also 1 Hostess. Exp d. 546-1694 aft 5:30 p.m. Best offer S48-487l. r ~ -!f.!'u1"" ...... ~trl~flr~ A"N,SWE~s-full time rnanagen & aome ~ Reciept. $ecretar.y Part time & Full time H'!':. ~~p.,ly 3201 C'.oast _G90D ~~I -triple d~S9('.r LARGE --tv.1) aided outdoor :,,.,,...~ · · . ~ft maint. 67 a.pt unill, Costa PIUshotftceonNewport:Bay. Avel'llie $100 per week to ~J $250. King ti:eadbOanl $45. electric clock. Never witO. . -tu'¢esslonals do it. 962·11612. PonCho _ Waken _ Dirty _ Mesa, Salary, free rent . & fRYINE PERSClNNEL Groovy co-worken & JoU!r of start paid v 8 c a t I 0 n W ANTEf?, 2 \Vomen. Tem-Marble top rute atandl $65. cnst $290 sacrilioe ll!iO -' i..""'PROBLEM SOLVER Entirt>-WIDTH olfler benefits, 546·1740 CC11'.N""~<"~ public contact. Great hospital to life insurance'. J>O:r&ry Case Covering & Dellk & chr $90. 421 Kings 64;"Hl276. ' ·,. ~ gardener. Tree work, A girl ,,,11 go to onu J--'h eves, 546-6867 eves .,Jlol\I'~ personality &•good typing. 0"""'..+unity to adV8.llCe to Llte Assembly. Will train, Rd,, N.B. 6t2--0808 DP1K prunlr!i ,shaojng "' -._, ""•"' Salary Start $550 Call J .,.,.......; . Apply bet 1 & 4 875 C W WRO WINCHESTER 410 Shot gun pi ~e.'~ .. to Change het-WIDTH. CPLE:over 26 manage 30 FEE PAID Page, '540-6055, Coast~ det~ve. ~tact Secunty 15th St OH Pla~ntia. NB UGHT tt:on patio furn .• S175. Winchester M12-12 ga ~';;;~:,;,c"":Sei-'-'Sc1~ J-L Win ....... , F-·lo 702 unit., CM, apt + "lllary. Penonnel •-........ , 2 7 9 o Agent. WhH1te Front Store. WANTE.D . ,·, get~, ~ 16 u n g e shot gUn $175. No chec¥. ¥PLETE gen'rl ean -•--·-~ ol' 213: 393-41589. Sales Manager to $11K Harbor Blvd~."' CM-J 2222 So. arbor Anaheim . custodian ha w/arun. "' chair. f75, Gd. 545-56?5 ?P8• Lge trees, pruned ~r Field Service to $10K ~"""'=--"="""'~~~-Mon, Dec. Utb' 9 AM-12 time. Head Start Program. cond. 67r3637 '"'"-'=""'' ,..-,---~,.-, IJl"-Oved, Winter rates, LADY wiAbes Housekeeping_ CREDIT CHECKER ~11 Order Desk to $900 RECEPTIONIST noon. ' Call 968-5122 between 9 &: 2 MOVING: Must 91!11, best of-HOLIDA y ~ress special & 96>-0492-& Nursing in private hOme. Exper pret'd. Cotfta Med Above -uire know}ad"e. Shine in busy front of!ice w/ I !!!!'l!!'!!!!!'!!!!!!""!!!!""!!!!"'\.~pm~.'---.-~-=c.-,-.,.-f take 9' f & cl b Christmas items. Sat. Dec. I Prt'fer males. W r l t e area. ca 11 co JI e c-1 •1 ~,. .,... l: er 8• 50 a u 9, Assistance League Thrift COMPLETE ~a rd en t,..n It Clmrsitled "" No """ Dally of lndus comm'! adhesives ray of typing & gems Of SECURITY guard, mature, WE need S h a k I e e chair w/ottoman, like new. Shop 505 32nd St NB. service, clean-~s. laWn ,_, ·JOO, 213/8Sl-5050. .sec:y /Advertislng to $650 public retattons. Start $45(), experienced. CdM. Sal. 10 Distributors. No experience 645--1'131 after 5 pm. · ·• , renovating and scalping. Pilot, P.O. Box 1560• Costa ~D:::ELIVER::.:;:=,:::;y:;:..-of.--0-A_l _L~Y A/P, Inven. Control $460 Call Sally Hart, 540-6055, am to 4 pm. Perm. 613-Zfn. necessary, No lay ofts. f'or BASSETI' di . 1 It 12xl8 Bldg. Must tnOYt! 968-0832 Mesa, Ca 92626. . Pll.QT, SUNDAY ONLY, to Order/Experience $460 Coaital Per!IOnnel Agency, I ,;iiii;ii;;;;;o&iiiiiii;;iiii;;iiiiil H.B., call 963-3..126 & 1 n1F se' Wood const, wired, cmtd · NEED, t,etp at home! We new-per eattlen. Re-Purchaa. Clrk/Typist $460 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM, SENIOR EDP Westminster area, 531--0315. ~an. ova tah e & 6 chairs, Co11t $2400, Now S 4 7 3 '. EXP. Hawaiian ~ank!nn. hive-Akles, Nurses, -..-Prod ct' Cl ric: ~.tm china hutch & bu.Uet. Best 639-3075 Complete garden s e r v. HoueetCet~ Co . quires the use of a 'Station u ion e .,..,,., RECEPTIONIST CONTROL CLERK WHO WANTS TO WORK? over $300. 645-5787 · Kamalanl, 646-4676, 642-1337. uon;tn ~· u ~lj:~ ~agon ~1Van~tae: ::~ MT~~~n·1i~'!c Positi~~s$600 for apartment complex. E.'C-Run EDP SertiCe Dts.lc CHOO~~~ A~:!.! work MEDITERRANEAfl htd~a-H!f~~. M~:' to !d": General Servl~e.-l 54'H681. • 'St~a ~aa. es --, 488 E. 17th. (at Irvine) CM pe& l'i~: ~!.':..-~ii:.woF'i!i Ptelortonnbaltape llb~1 tot'~~ for )'(IUl'!tetl, be your own bed. Flo.~~~..!.~ Xl•nt cond. Lov.-est Prices. West Coa•t EXPER. Housecleaner wants 645-2779 .,, .. ~.. ..._. ns, a.nee con .. ., ..a boss Men or women. Can be ;;::=:;:0::';::'~";'-:::;~~;::;-;;:::;l..'W!'.'ood"!'l__!Spec!!'!~tal~ti~es!,_ • .!_893-~~lSJJ.~ UNORQANJZED? c; I ea n work Jn fCdM. own trans. DENTAL ASSISTANT 1 ~~~~~~~~~ Sat It Sun, 11 to 7:30. $2.50 and update production job slightly handicapped. Vts, *** Sora & matching love 44 Sq. yd• gold nylon u ... !Jol 1 your ~. b1'.ld shelvet. Mih.. 4 hti work. 675-8952 Chala1de, lit down. 5'4 or I ~ per bour. control cards. retired. Age 21 to 70, sup. 11C8.I never used Both $160 .., • .., HowtehOld wori, H~ulint. over. ExJ>erk!nced. S days. 8 JUNiOR Sa.ltelmen: :W.15. Pha 546-G70 EXPERIENCE: plement ~income. Drive ' . . carpet. Xlnt cond. '.:ff Your' ~-e•. Ron 645-56tltl DAY worker, wanl8 cleaning to 5. Sa.fary open. 640-0300. ..,.&_ ,•'11'1.•M> pet ---" .. , 1 1 2 b 6 d Usually home, 968-7910. 54()-4032 aft 12:30. r,-,.. has & r..w-n --""""' • RECEPTIONIST'. AIR It o ye•rs a ca r.r more a ay. 543-4797. • by dafu ref, exp; Newport Center. ting new cwitaner. tor the payable -exp, Int.er Mon, prior control clerk exper. Appbt tn pmion, Yellow Ql;b RATTAN, blue/green floral, ANXIOUS to It'll Newp9ft . ntAN _ All klndl of transl · 50-0'l11. .F. 710 DENTAL ~ for front DAILY Pll.01'. Thia Is not a Wed, Fri, 10:-12. $150 · kl' ience. in OOS Ol' OS environ· Co., 186 E. l&lb St .. Costa :.._pend. ~' ....., ~!1'14 eet, good Beach T e n n i a Cl!Jb . 1'tl'k, sm11.ll joblJ a Hep Wel'tted, M & o!fl.oe, X·RtY• A Prevention newspaper route and doea 11tart. ptllllb Cow, 3001 ment l~M~.,.~·~~~~~=~ "" ..... -.... Membership. 640-0070. '{ • 1JIPeclally. 956-9374: 546-9723. ACCEPTING )! ..:.... inlt:NCdon. Non-cmoker 18 ~"'~-~ orfl Redhill Bldg 1. Suite l<m Apply 9-12 Mon thru Fri COCKTla AILlnktable, round, CARPET layer has Shap 1 '1t l"I app cauw.a to 28. 64+-0611 '""'"oa.u_,.. •• ......rportatlon PACIFIC MUTUAL B ck w-p marble 175. Hi·Low!, Will ttll at eo11 1:s~. ~.61~'::':-=t DENTALAss~t. Exilcl 10 ~ ~~d.f': ~A1::or~"tr!: 100 Newport centM or. [ Mwdiirtlu jf~ J eau 97H93.1aft 6 · iftt:s labor. 55IHll82 ·~ --LOADER & dump tMJck lea11t 18 yrs of age. Coloi,y X·l'9.YI & orw evacuation, Sa~. We have oi>eninP Ben Brown'• Rettaurant, ~;~";"";po;rt;Be~ac;h;:~1 i·~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;·~'V= bEOROOM art. 2 nit e SURFBOARD -f '6" ere; work. Concrtte, agphalt, K I t ~ e n ' SM Juan l =-~,;;.;,,._-=~....,----~!'ounlliin Vall~y .t: Sou}D 3l106 S. O>Ut Hwy.. So. equal O(>POrtunlcy employtt stands, chest of drawen, & Noll, perffrl oond. '$46. aawlng, breaking. Mf;.7110 Capi•trano. DEN'l'AL SEC La 1·u n a Huntlngtori Beach areas on-Laguna. See Miu ~McLeod frame. soo. 6Th-0'17l. 552-7372 eves. l YARD.. g•--elesnups. AFTERNOON N Nlgue.1, btwn 22 .l '5 at ly. You mWlt be out of bet. 4 & 6. SERVICE , Statton &llesman Antlqun , 800_ DlN~E. 6 <'hrs, $65, Old * FIREWOOD * ~ !:."l'' di I ewspa~r least 2 ·-exper. 6"" "'·'. ltChool ~ 3 PM to & fr! --• nlty 1~ Po r I a b f ve lret>:ll rt. vy, deUva-y. Newport Beach l-'0!::::..:-''"0:.:,".o::!='-"''=,...,=~ UJ' • RETAIL Sa le s, Exp & luOOman , lop pay 1'1? HOOSIER • Mlnl cond. va . ,,.,,_ e ORANGE & L!:MON' 1 wwys, Rrad\ng. 847-2666. area. Must OWJJ dependable Dental Aailatant po.rtlcipe.te-. EX~N Saleslady Frrtme. Apply in bcntfits. Exper. man pref d. 11ou . J typewntC'r S55, 963-4073. DELIVERED 6.1'7·684.1 -r--1-1 '"hfclo, •l&-8•.-. · N--"-a·• ·-~1; boys ilven pr orlty . pcrlfOn Newport StaUoneni. Full & p/time avail. Apply, w/ !,;~augar, st1:1.in e i ROUND eek table 48", old NEW -.·per h .. -.,~ \".;::-~::--;:::"::•~~::-;:-:~-! 1.i"iiiiiii~'~~-~;&iiiiiii• I ~~·;:;i:·~-···~~;:uio;• .. .;~;o& 96S-984L 4229 Bl b SL NB 4 .. t. ,,. Shell Station 17th & Irvine, glass .........-. Complete EdillOn "u •.7 ""' 7 i;iiiiiiii'-iii•&l&iiiiO I Sy-lvlii Wctt , ~ ....,r -. , "Gem" phono_graph railroad ~h. Ebony cRrpet, l"O)'al blue. 12 ,.._ HOUSE Of CLEAN ANCltllT . o.,.,artn1ont Store J W R bl N.B. w/fittsld« hom $500. DoUl<h Et.,.,.., Churn. 642-0066. Brown T.! >d• 543-461'.4 _L -, wfndoWa. ~~walls, .~•. J W R bl • • 0 lllOft Rff..ICU .. CCU SERVICE Station Attendant table w/flour ~In & drawets 2 Uphol11. Uv nn. chairs, nice USED BICYCLES g I lc)tn. In Atta.•642~: .-.. 0 ftlOll · J.U:30 PM, 11 PM·'7:30 AM w/o.per. Top wop & $115. 645-«nl.or 494--5803. condition, Flotal pattern All types 6'2-1712 'I J ~O~, carpets. MlllNER N~ ~ t=t:-C~ f1~1·:: 11o~• ~!t~: ~00. A~l~c~. ~ ~~~~=;!._ ~ ~~~~ t fU BALDWIN ~inet piano •• [r-~·=ce~d/ -Hu Optnln& For · New Mlary rates. Apply, Beach, torlt.n tide chain,. ~ fonnica table .,w.cnJ':. A Ant>que ~_S.panl ~h . m . . . . Dishwasher PBX Rlvorvlow u...~"·I SERVICE "8Uon .. tendant, tem--""""" frame• mfle. m-7912 alter 6 pm. '""' 1511fl, -· • Xlnl R_.e.rtinr STAMP & !1112 Mottipl 3 · t ·-"o. F'.:::!'.'.'.° pert time. ExJ>er prd'd. ru·.:7:1-'t ·•·•·. ~~11~ -FOR Sale. Re<I """""'1 !""" Trarld*portntlon AA!!1!_ca1nnt'p~ COIN DIPARTMINT '· " 8 -· .,. ~ .. -Lowell Oabom E o -•• •• u-•·~ IA -~ Sl& Jlf "",-, ~...... ~· ~·at be trper. 5anta Ana Sttvice, 19001 Brookh~t. MUCH antique furniture, ,.Go:::::!.:~c,.;:Sa::.::1•:.... __ .;:1~12 Xln~ amd.! • • l'1 C ... ftl ~..& pm1 Mon·lri Part.time, exJ'lf'r not nett•, 531·16" B.B brlc-a.·brac. Moving. mU11l 1 • _..,:.._"N": w.-eo.at e,.y.--...,,,but 11e1p1u1. -APPIY'..._ 1o.s em it N '• · .. 11. 548-8948. _ GAR~:,-:~ Sat.•~..,, ... DJ'.SIGNER~ AM 'll' _ *WE 00 .r.Y..;.i:.n." in1 ""r Newpi)tt' Beach M&-0201 / •2 FUbian Id., NB ' ' l SERVICE Station Attt"rldAtlt. 5. 1,.,,,, ~ St., Fountain AM1'9' Giant aite. 4r -"11 I~~ Free Nt. M-_2839. · · ApPly \n penon 10.5 pn\ F.qual 'Oppor. Emplo)le:r 'l'OP SALARY, Apply n Del"-P /Ume eves a wknds. Lllo ANTIQ · Sa.le. On oon-Valle~. carTltr rll.Ck Ir box $15. &U-68$9. 1! l""ULlNG A ~anup by tJt> ASSill'ANT Cook. unbldibua 82 tublon Ill., N1l . llOn, Sanla Ana.Brillol Conv. mechank:al erecr NCA I ap-11Knment acceptable. ~leaae for van. 11wite set. klnplze O'KEEFE am M •tt dltb-1~· atudent, lge lrlt. youpg man ~ Ulll1 chftf ln Equal Oppot. Em~ L!XJAL SECRETAllY Jlospltal, 1Z9 tlemlock Way, pt9.l'ffJ"ICC. A1>t>b' . AM, 2590 cill for appt 96&-24.10. hedrm. Id, S)>a.rti11h like em 53+-M or ......_ .._ bouM otmdoft. ~ •iill•iil••m•• wlaood,"*1l11 A expirrlence. Sanlll Ana. Newport Blvd .. C.M. CASH =ttt NCR, t \itt'Y now, extra firm matll'tall., WlAbti'. GOod condition. f& V acandft colt - 1 Rent »lY In· pe~ n,. Ben, ~.,. RN an 1hift1, t/time ICU. SJfAKt.EE -DISTRIBUTORS rart". 1900. Mint oond. f!ti,H993 cw. &33-9'l64 after !,. hoult ...... -.,,-ltore )linfflrborBl 'C.M.l01m• DfMND:aJOK Pill a little ''loot'" tn )'OUI' Pacltlca HOIP. 1$191 Wouldyoutlketoml\kc110me $299. 73. M.OV1NG -~tblb)l:f\I~. OR TABLE ~T11 .t to. tbfu a~llY Pilot l Jiil. Mr. i.ftln. • ~ltlnOld Levlt-ttll tm.e. b.J.1.1bles for Delaware, H.B. 8'2-0611. extra money ~ Shoklce Like to trade? our Trad«'• b~ 1 -NI· -tc!YI. -ml.lie~ !Y··1~ .~mtrc mod • Aillllollkll•li-lloll ..... ol4 -Soy 1111>. BLU~ DOtPHIN. "bud<>". Call CiiwfJJed SelltboofdlluffBt>ythe now produ<tl! ~48-52;3. Part>dlle<Ofunu>flkl<)'OUJ Jtema, nn -or .. ~"' -M·fr.I·-· now! Call 64Wa6'18 Now! Mw atuH. ~ Via Llt!o, NB _642-li6'18=="·------1tuU. Anytime. 5 1\nea, 5 d!f'! tor 5 bucks. lt8. 96>%119. i CIU!lfted Ml • , • 9d-M11 .A!!•wlng,Servlco/ '" ~qulp,/Mobllo Pllonoa : ~ ·.. FREI PllONE 818 \ • /1 " -- ---·~----~ ..-- DAii. Y PI LOT .... _ ... I~ I l~ I •d••• I~ ;;;I ;;;;;; .. ';;;· '"~'~~~ I ~ l~I ...::-~ ... I~][ ~ llil I -·• 1§11.__-_ ... _ .... __, 1W-,~;..,;..l .. ,;..n..o"°;.."';;....--'t;.;..;;11 MllCello-118 : Pl•nos/°"91ns 826 TV, bcllo, HIFI, Boott, 0....ral fOO llM!t, llW~ t\I Auto Serva, 1'11'11 Mt f .T,;..rvd<t-=;;.... ____ '6;.;;:2 Von• . ,, * AUCTION * FREE Day ca... 1 or ORGAN HOBBY 1-5.-1"-eo.;.;.... ____ •u._ u.ft .,, ""''°"' Joo Boot. •• SIDE TIE Anll. Hur Undeneal '70 Chev. v. VANS'. _, FRIOAY 7 ~30 P.M. ChNt:mu Sbopper11 . RCA'*' o:mol.te, perftt:t Aluminum. 7~a~ m<Mor, ~~· wattr. S ial Tonp(dc up.V8,c:t11tom,AT, 8 N~ ChriM1an c.ni... 1or -... 1.115. Cali -' condllJoQ. 633."26< pm. --pee PS, lacto<y ah\ I pt, tlroi, VA NS' 1 OECEM ER I l~hool olten bu1y Don't buy IUtY .-aan until 963--2963 11Jler S. ao.ts, Speed & Ski 911 "Prevent Rust 1; Corrosion" wrap a~llf\d bumper. , " Nl!W & u~ furnltun-fron1 mothen 1 t\'tt day of child you can pt11yt Non.players f.'RENOI Prov. 5• ~fagna,io:o: 12' 6" Starers.ft, fbrgla, trlr, ~dust It w•lt!r tlaht Pl'lced at Wl'tOlt aa l e. ..., bankruptcies & f't'oJ'IOM(IS. care. Ages 2 lhru 5, Dec. 4 welcomt" 10 1\ltf!nd ffl'.'t> v.-ork St good nd 11.lum. &p&rl $650. Prlv. Pt)' 20 Ft Sett ftl3 ~ ttries. l wxictrbody "includ&I tleam {9'7718E). 0; atons. Portable rolor TV'11, lhru Dec. 22. By appt only, llhopi1. f'or lnlonnatlon 61~ YCJ')' 00 · 642-SSM. year new. 445 ct OldlmobUo chafatl" $22.:IO, Rqular $ "50 VANS' nPW velvr1 (.'hilii rs, divan!, for into · call 646--1117. Cont.act: Toni Olet.t"rich Boats/Marine pack-a-jet enctne. F.Qulpped $33.!'iQ. (All FOC'(I & Uncoln ., • Spanish r<1rklall tobte1, f'LUORESCENT J.'ixturcs, 642~2151 for tllhitl.r It water lldfna. PrOOuct•) HOWARD Chevrolet • nt" .,, lamps, pictUl'f'S, bedroo1n Complete w/lamp from C~tt Muth: Service l[I Equle· '°' FuUy equippeQ tandon1 GUSTAFSON Newpoft Beach Double D1scou 5,ri· sets, chests, dining 1ablc•j, $4.9.i Genl Surplus, 165,g NewpQrt Bl vd. Al llarbor L...,-:-'-'"-'-•-".,°"--1-IONDA portnble aen. like trailer. This outfit i9 like LINCOLN-MERCURY MacArthur Bivd fr; Jamboree bullets, king si;:P mat· Supt>Mar, Co!tta ~fesa. '"'-~t ~le!IB. . 1140 J ne\lo'. Ofiiinal rost $!QXI. 1.-D-h W 13• •u• GMC'o _ n...i..01 _ ........,. a .. new • enoa, ex. cond. Sacrl!ice • ..,.,...., p h 0 11 e vevv -•c at . erner ~ , ... __. tr cs s I'.' 8 • rf'frlgl•rtuors, Ml.scell1MOu1 *PIANOS*ORGANS* 3 lin•s, 2 Times, $2.00 hoist 44' Foot 28' $275. 830-6482. .,,.,.,., Huntlnfton &etch -.~11J~INT=rn=N~A'=Tl~O~N"AL"'""'!l~to-n Ford -Chev. atove1, ~·1tsht'rs, dt·yf·rit. W•nt-• 1~ l •••••••••1 1,~64~!Hl276~~------al al CON·~•1·PO p·--dishw1:1.Sher & l><IUC ll -----------'v IJ11m1nond. \\"urlit2l'r, n1any · 16. Boston Whaler without "Home o the Vlklnt" Travel I. VB, auto., r, •"1•. • ~n.rr~\.J • MORE!! WANT TO BU'" othel's. Pre.srnMn 1.1pec-lals, BLACK long hair male kit· Boats, Power 906 motor , lully-ulp. east port 142-1144 heavy duty camper equip-Cll lNOOK, TR.AVCO 1''0R· WINDY'S AUCTION "" 1noclt>I close·outs. Piano & ten, 3 mo. N~ds good ~"cost ..-xM ped, exceUent tires. Kc Uey ENS'l'OV • PRIDE il JOY. Large heavy duty :rcewlng Organ rt'nlals. ZHonPy sav· ho1ne. Eves or wknds ''J9n SEA RAY" model, SlSOO, nu _....... VOI.KSWAGEN 1 p e (': i a I , Suggested Reta.ii $3250. Our Save on thlt I inal·hi!W. Reuphol~tl'rillb 1n~ bargains are 1~re righ t ~.2251 455 Old!' Pack-a-jet, 20', ~· engine overhauls, 40 hp Sale Prl~ thru Jl..10..72 ill Year End Clelrlnc:fo> 1 COME BROWSl!: AROUND ,'"YP"~·.,96>-<mS=-"'=~·=,.-== now ot ; Sh Series, F.quJpped tor Water MU sell l•' Sid boot &: S2·Jll, l500cc $28.S brake $2999. (117ASFJ ( P.f 55) like this '?2 Chev. % q , .........,, PRIVATE PAR'ri \\'ANTS W ff" h u • C"ty LOVING Germ;an epherd Sklin& I. fishing, tandem Tra er. reline $27.95 + part&, DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, 350 VS .. tic ...... .,\~ Newport lilvc:I. TO BUY PIANO FOR a IC s MUSIC I pup, female, wks, free to trailer. Call after 12:00 5.11-2164, 548-8995 lledans only, Incl. l'(!place 2480 Harbor Blvd., Coll# at-N-~. •,",.78"awlde' ~~ :&hind Tony's Bldg . ~1al'ls. ,..&__ 541).2830 1.'QOd hon1e. 67.'.J.-3512 ...... UlfS ._. Posf:a Mesa • 646-!1&'16 CAfil( South ....,..,.t Platil -'"°==CO::...::.:'-"'=~-noon, Cn4J 830-6482. MUST 14' SKJ BOAT, good CO'KI. shoes & machine rlrums, ll.1eaa, 546-8011. tires, radio, with l'Obtempo ~22'7S *PIANOS.ORGANS AIREDALE male l 'iJ yrs, SELL! Evlnrude 55. Best offer. Call Beach Automotive Center, 73 C'--·ro•.-.o. lfpor18man n. sleeps 6, • • -Th 1ft Sh ==='""'"-'~'-,.~-abandoned. Obedience train· 842-o992 nw.-,..., ~rr1 r op \\'ANTED quality dollhousc. Going Out 1'~or Bu.slncS11 ed. P tse help save. 962-m4 '71 Sldpjack 20· open crulaer. eve1, 531-8970 I,;;"°'~~·--.,...=-.,..,, Pi'ckut'· & VaM stove, il-e box & toilet room. 113 Main St., Bunt. Bch. i.... Approx 11"x25". Best quality . priCf!s . serv. 215 O~fC, 90 hrs, dual batts, VW Moton, completely reblt, In beautifUJ daril: yellow l having ifs ll/l1lual Christmas &H-159Z Ka .... ·ai·Sll'in\lo'a)'·Baldv.•in, etc. I'U. bring Joy ro warm quarter seats. coclcpit cover rnat. & Guar. $290 & up Ex· B Stock 1Yhite with matching lnter- aale. Thurs, ON-7 ,!(, F't1. • \IJANTED • Pool table, Playtt Pianos &: Ho!ls home. Signed: \Vyshe11, the Bimini top, oompas&, t>:lee'. 1 1 ~ Changl'. Abo "1l!e us tor Low Prlcet ior. •CGE252Ul27577 St~ Dr!c' 8, 10 am·2 pm. Toys £ Slale bed. Good oondition. Renrats .....•. \\'(' Buy·Sell spayed calico. 6'75o-6072. bilge pump&: blower , aatcty T••..,.tatbi .._ Tune Ups & yalve Jobs. HOWARD Chevrolet Un. . _ 'RiltJ: for lhe v.·holl' ran1ily. w.2417 Daily lo.ti Sun 12-5 HALF rocker, hall lab, gapd PllCk. $5750. 6731234. . . ml Y~ AAutomo~~:~ 1366M K Nowport BNch Retaff $6995 ij. New & near nl'YI'. J<~IELD'S PIANOS "'lllc-hdog & lovea; kids. 31' OfRIS Cabin CrulSE'r, top MH177 .• "e., '-"'"'"' esa, ?itacArlhur It Jamboree Blvd r-ve $2000 ?o.IOVlNG. Girl's 20 .. bikf', Musical Instruments 822 Co~ta Mci>A t714l &1;,.32:X1 NeOOs nu home. 642-2913. shape, twln cng. radio S I /R 9 US.OSSS ~ ... banana seal, $15. Sean; d<" UPRJGJ-JT Piuoo & Bcnl'h. F'l..UFFY gray kiHen, !rielJd. .stereo, depth flnder, tuJi Campein1 a e ent 20 McADAMS Bros. auto body flll 1"rfC:9 $4w luxe washer ,I} rll')·Pr, $25 • 0..EAllANCJ.: Sale. 12 Beauliful 1nahogany. Ex· ly, Trained, to good home. galley, many~?· sleeps 6 . _, & painting-Complete paint '68 1'~o~ % TD Std Trans, . cacti. Kll'\,1bl'rly knlls, $10· s1ring Gibson, Flut(', Gibson ccllcnt cont). Must be !>C.~n '193-4765 in comfort. , 67r.-85n. Slkle INs~~O.eeper. jobs & minor dents $85. Runs like new $1395. • '56 Bl' 'L BARR $25. Girlis' 11ucdr skirts ,!;. aeou!l't~i· t>k><·. tlrurn set, to bt_. RflprcciatM. Shcrlfic<' 1968 • 17• Chrla Craft $295. fl45..7460. 1643 Plaoontfa, J.~ord PU· w/campar V.S, I. ;'297r.ly knits ~$10. ~i':!'.in~~~~ie~a~m~r;~ S3T:i. Call 644-66.11 afttJ1· 6 ~:~~~;oh~?r1:;,':~_j;~j: Corinthian Sedan. Chris 210 5.11-2304 l~C~M~-~~~~~~~! ~~~ r1~n851take~~v'f. PONTIAC-GMC-FIA'T..; Cello, TV's, school desks. pin. tary, Aft 6, 497·~. HP w/only 135 hl'll: Xlnt 1009 Food % Ton, 10~'1: $395 e '62 Do4ge 20' Stake ls! St. at S.A. F'rwy .. )I CHRISI'MAS Flea ?.1arkct & Thr lft Shop Gallery, 140/ BEAUTIFUL l!a.llan82Provin· ~~~~~~~~~:I ~~&i~~r an x 1 0 u s· Ca mper. UJw miles. See to I -~.. 11 '4 I Bed, clean & Ms new sOOrt am E. 1st St .. S.A, 558·l~ j• Boutique. s a nt a Ana Cubrillo, Ci.\t Thurs/1''ri cial Hammond H-1 organ ; ~•w apprec. 551-1989 aft 5 pm. "" block 3l8V-8, &i5'-00M. .70 FORD ~ Econollne. in· Y.W.C.A. 1411 N. Broadway, sat only. for sale by owner. Will l'On· I ll~l SKIPJACT< 20, !-1ybrld«e, j ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;; -~'='==''-"!i1'-c1C'-'"'---,.-I \VB V . h 1 VS .d t d 1· I "" ~ •·~ FWC "' 'TI TOYOTA H we truck an w1l au o., , . 1 Dec. 7th, 8th & 9th. 12 Noon SA.'\OPHONE, xlnt I 0 r s1 <'!' m e on ine Pano as ..... -200 hp interceptor Cycles Bik•s • K 11 ..,,...... ted R tail II to 9 pm. Ai'J.tiQ.ue!I, books, beginners, lhas f'IC!W pads. rlov.·n payment. 673-StiOS '····••;;;;;;~~I motor, outriggers, 2 radios, scoo'ters , 925 ~-nor•I buR/H, Bif.,ooo""'m1.'' '1i100·• l~cyn..;-s.1': Price ~ru jewelry, 1dolls, roins, bot· l"Orks & springs plus gold P LA\'E'R PTANO. \\1urlitzer ~ fatho-tecotxltt, head.I... baH1---------'."'.".:'.:-:'.~--l·-;...;...;.;c.;;;. _____ 9;.;SO:: ~ w, 1 • u:lO'..nUl.lls $2499. (891l)4.E) Ues, gilts. lacqUt'r fini8h. Like ne .... •. l'l<'ctr\<'·\Valnut ronsol<', 2 Dogs 854 tank, Etc. $5000. 548-:ti84 1973 750 HONDA ?i-tusr sell , 1965 % T G?i1C & ,:::::,,==-~-~--fP463) DAVE RO$ PON- BOUTIQUE items: N e"'' For quick sail'. $55. 64&-6068 yrs old. Call Shirley at -=---------l'°de' 1 c 1 RVI 8 S£ 5 R-G 1 Mc 6 71 Very lmv miles. Ridden camp king, 8~~· camper. ·~ ~!~0~~~~, TIAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., , handcrafted items for i;all'. BARITONE sax o p h on I', :'l.'l;G-2.119. CHRISTf.1AS is only a.round se , .. , ath, r .d.f. twice. Gold w/black trim. $1895. Honda 1967 90cc, $175 ing, HeaY}' Duty Tires. Ex· Costa ~1~. 54&-8011. Lge Zodiac purse S:1. Cute Everett Scheffer/by Buff PL RUY a Play<'r Piono for !ht' rorner & a Great Dane $14,500. Mooring avail. Pvt Extras! Cost $1891 neo.Y . '72 Buick Centurian, 2 dr, -==-"'='-'-'~=b-lll-l, -,,-66 1 stuffed toys $3., Christn1as F.xcel, Ask'g $32a. 842-M20 Christmas. David T. puppy is "''hat your man pty. 1141675-2381. r.t ust see. Sacrifice $1499. all pwr, v.•hl sidewalls, rellent Cond. $595, 832-5.117. 1958 PANEL van., re~ elves $4., t"rochet Ponchos SELMER J\fark \'l F. fl ;H fluprl'f', 29\0 D r.l'al'c La., wants! AKC C h a mp ion a;· FA f R LINER Twn 6Ta-147:l. AM/FM stereo, A/C, lo '62 Intemalional pl(':k-up, Vi, VW eng., ne w pa:, .,. I $12. 842-lSAA alto Sax \\'/cas('. Paid tr.XI. Cl\1 ~~15-46:;() sired. Fawns & Blacks Chryslcrs, Good cond. UXl. BARGAINS in girl's bikes. mi, $ 4 3 7 5. TI4/54&-3653 4 spd trans. $550. Good con: ~=· runlii " • BRANO JI('\\. Ortho kinp;lli7.e Sell for $400. 546·5 117. .\:-66 HamnlOnd Prof. O~nn 637-7S18 Also good Johnson 18, $125. Schwinn Stingray $ 2O ·12"°''''-''p~ty~-...,...~-~-dition. 492-7296. . 1965 KAISER mail van. 11 I mattresi;, box s J'I r in~:"! . SILVERTONE 0 R U r.I S. in x1n't conrt. C'oi;t ov<'r GERr.r. Shep. pups, 7 male. 644-5084 Schwinn 2.J" w/dbl baskets FOR a J olly G 0 o d '70 GMC Suburban, air , full cylinder, good cond. $500. • bcavy fl'flmc & easier!';, $10,000. Pv1 ply \\'ill sell for 2 feinale, $25 each. \\'ill be 28 FT DIESEL LUlmS •n on rear fender $J5;. &b Christmas. get in your car, pwr. Lo mis. $2975. 494-0072 ~3884 :t lin£>ns and 11 i 11 o \\' S, ~plele. ~9<; o I u I e I Y $5500. 67'....6234. 7 \i·ks. by Christmas, custom sport fisher, fast ~" $10. &aG-8297. go .sec \\'alter Matthau and 0or=--=494-="'l77'l~·...,--,,=,,.-~ -'-"'-==·------ > bOOsprcad. tl('W $.Ul, Sl'il ror cct. s.t. a.· UPRIGHT Piano for sale. 9i9--&120 Long range, loaded. 673-696&. ·11 OSSA Pioneer 250 cc. ~I .. Burnett In "Pete 'N' '60 FORD ~2 ton heavy duty, '69mag~..:..1,VAN• ~pa~t•-''·.' ! $250. 586--0996. Office Furniture/ Pn"v"t• ~U1y. s~. Call SKIP Xl nd 'l t ll • .,"" Tillie v .. 4 ,pd ~ 0 ••h only ,,,,.,.., "'' "'6 '14 PC. \Vll!TE NAUG. SEC· Equip. 824 646-?.6J2o';&45-l?9}~ ~tALE Irish Setter, 16 Jl'IO!'l. JACK 2-1' FIB. -4 mos, nt co . nus se • ......,.i~='--------1 ~ · ....,... . ......., · CALL. stS-?630. ,.~ ·tIONAL, offi ce chajr, din· old, shots, AKC. 1'~emale old. Fully equJpt. In water, See at 1XIO E. Edinger, Unit S._... R Rod iH9 ,::,::...:::=--~-~~ ' elte set, P~T cd~er, nr A typewriter repairman ha~ PVT · party wants to buy Setter 3 mos old, AKC. slip avail 642--1837 aft S. F, Santa Ana. r-•1• ace1 I ~.. '69 Toyota Hilux % T. Autos Wanted 961 ·polisher, EMPT VW mags. late morlel e!ec typewritt'rs Console plano, In gooct con-846-39M. SCHWINN <;ontinental blcy· DE Tamaso Pantera. ! Im e pickup. Orig owner. $1395. , 545-4735. & calt'Ulators, likl' nc,v. di lion, for cash. 962--0657 J\11Nl Schnau1Rr pups, AKC, 1,Bo_•_l,;.••:.....;S.o•..;11 ____ 909;.:;; 1 cle, new tires, good rond. grn w/ blk hood & trunk, ( -'Call=-'alt"'c4co'764>-"=3447=o'-,-,-WE PAY. TOP lrHEAD Skis." St'andarrl 205 reblt, P."Uar. 847·9864 days: • \VURLITZER EL E C 7 wks, v..i.11 hold till rf I $[l $85. 673-3257. 10,<m mi. New radiator ** WANTED: ** CASH hfarkcr hi nr!inlls. p 0 Jes, aft fi, 536--0538. I P tANO, 3 mo!'I old. $350. Christmas. 644-7895 or •• 0 [ !! '71 YAMAHA 250 Enduro. modltk:ation & dl11t·ributor 10-12 stake bed ·,boots. $60. Schwinn unlcy· SEC. chrs $8-$23, wood desks 642--0808 Newport Beach. GoID-1786. Many extras! Exl cond. ldt & battery. Smoked glass, * M&-1235 * ·,cle. Never uscd. $ 3 O. SZ0-50. star cnb $40. 867 \V. [ UPRTGlfT piano. Good con· F E M A L E Doberman DTSAPPOlNTED BY WH.AT $550. Call 641)....1156 sidt; mi.rror kit .. & sid~ V•ns . 963 644-4714 19th CM, Pierce, 642--3408. dition. Asking $200 or best Pinscher, 14 mos. old. YOU SA\V AT THE SAIL-• '70 Honda 350 CB. Xlnt stnpe ku, "£'"'' Nii:,hol tali 1.:.::.::.,.. _____ ....:_:; · e TNTERIOR DECO RATOR BRAND new Executive desk offer. 549-2.r.m. 539-7392 BOAT SHOW? Now oons1der rond. 6000 n\k's. S 3 9 5 . pipes. $9800. Ph: 645-7622. 1971 Ford Van conversion. 1 I U ...,.,. · · 675-2916 aft S pm T 9 ton · low m i. ex I r as . i. S.....,.lalizi ng in Anliques & chair, Walnut, Retail *• UPRIGHT PIANO, good SILKY TERRIER a u powe,= cru111ng au..'<· · rucks 62 ~· ·1· Du H bull u $4600/best offer. 831-2268 IJR.• ..... pn."c"'·· •'19-•2S•ll .S .• A .• l.!100 .• S<'.ll $400 ••. 4.94-.1891.. co9~ad01981300. . Call alter 6, Bc51a,,uwtitu0tualAK,.,·,c. 16e~aJ1e45,7. 010. 11ary lc · t to oyds '72 Honda CL 350 Any ~ ,.,....,, ,.,...... 100 A·l Standards with over reasonabl4! cash offer '68 Ford % T PU 4 spd, '71 GMC Van, V.8, panelled, WANTED: Piano in good 3 Boxer puppies,. 1 .male, 2 400 miles range at 6.5 kts on * &U-122'1 • Radio, good rond. $1700/of. crpt, mags, many extras. Ask~ ~~e:h M=er musical rond. J ~111 pay up fem. for sale, 6 wks p ld. the lnte~J lank. Aluminum YAMAHA '68 100ec Trail te.r. 54&-3165~28-2057· c-~~11J'Jl°"",,----,7"""=-.,= l-luntington Beach to $200. p1,., call 675--38.18 546-5385. .spars. Stainless steel tanks bike, xln't cond. 700 orig. 1971 Datsun Pickup '69 Ford Van, Nu tires, $1900 847-&m KI 9-33ll • $50-$125. Purebred Spring· ~ h~w~~':;'~~~: mi's. $189',,673-tl813. $1525 firni. ~3861 Finn.~~~· lf.tPORTS WM'TED Sewing Machines 121 ~ ~t~~s·~;;m. South matched grain hand·rubbed G~ ~ :nre· ~ 5 ·59 FORD Pickup, V-8, 4 spd, ,,6,.2.-_-.--,-=-c;.v;::..::::;rebc:T-.:11,.,,::~::c Ortnge County's ~· SINGER Zig-7.ag portable. 4. African Mahogany interiOf' n mes m enncys, · runs \lo"ell. $475. Pvt pty, .,.Hp an, ··•· l'OP s BUYF.R A COH'IEHIE"'7' SHOf'ANG SEWING CUlOE FOR THE CAL ON THE CO. AKC .....,.is. Beagles, ~-with teak tlooni. u ....... ua!ed 6T'r3689 must sell 963-1752 ,..,,...:fin". ~•;,::12Sll::;;·,:646-::=--9;:1;:51l:..,.:-::: Bl1;i,lMAXF.Y 'JUYOTA years old. Exr.eJlen1 con· -~.. '"'"< ; d.,. •M ~3823 ored, $35. Choose now for storage. Quality Md Crafts· ·n Honda 3.50 Scramble! Ex· F ast results are just a ...._..ne O&lly .Pilot Want Ad& have 1 Beach Blv :. 1 10n . -rrv· uo..-• Christmas, 545-5678. manship ,,,., soperior words cellent oondition $350. call a~"aY. 642-5S78. l'"" bargains gaJore, H. BeaCh Ph. 847.SSSS Sporting Goods 830 G ='=ERMAN='~~She=p,'be~rd'C'-p-u-pp-,ie-s. are inadequate to describe. 540-8855 i =R==-"11on"-''-""i =~--Recrutionil RecrMtional 1 ~~--"-------10 good homes $15. each. Do not even come to look ·n yAMAj{A 90 MX, must ecr~ 1 · 9S I 9S6 " .A...&o --"""""'"'!'!!! For •n ad In Woman's World GOLF Clubs-4 m a t c hed 4 .... """""' until you are ready to buy ,.u. Xlnt ---~. ~ l;,;;;V;•;h;;••;l;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9S6;;;;.;;:;;V;;th;;i;lc;;les;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;6;;;;;;V;,;•h;;;c;I";;;;;;;;;;;~~~ "Titleist \Voods," a I u m . _ :;;==-"~::c'':":c-=c-:-'~ -shafts, Tl('VCr used. New PooDLE, miniature femaJe, or )'.OU will go away eating 67l-7Sl.8 your hean out. $1 90-a.<iking $100. S.18-3.%.l. spayed, 30 mos. (rare T•IE MAGNIFICENT l973 1969 Kawasaki, 90, 5 spd, Call Mary Beth ia-5678. ext 330 :in Women's Sizes I Instant Fashion 9395 WAIST SIZES 30'!.4SY:I" ' I GOLF' clubs .t· bltg. 4 species). 536-8108 * CONTEST l I * Like new, MUST SELL. Spaulding Exec. n1 o rJ <' I • AKC Mini Sc:hnauzer pups, ,A-='~'-o'•ccl>lO=c.·=642=-;-3396C"'-. =- \Voods, 8 matched Irons ~5. male & female. Ca 11 will be open Dec. 9 & 10 in Schwinn Tandem bike 562·5460. 633--0!l55 (Orange). Slip 3A, Newport Archl's Like new, $00. BRUNSWICK pool table, 8', BASSET Hound, 10 mos old ?itarina Cbchind Centh1ella Call 892-1754 top rondilion. 5185. Call shots, good stock, no Bank ) "SCHW~~INN~~s-u-p=rn~-sPO=R~T- 846-2529 papers. $l5. 84?-4913 Holland Yachts/Newport absolutely perfect ' TI+64+-0U9 545-6759. SKIS . almost new Rossignol SILVER pood]e pup, lovable. 21 o·s. & llead Killy's, 200 V..'e're allergic. $20. USED BOAT SALE * '69 SUzukt Savage 250 cc BRAND NEW 1972 GMC TRUCKS AT OLD 1972 PRICSS .i cm. S120 mounted. 64fr1624. 673-8760 Kit lr $?50 dirt. New rings, aqod tires, Store, Restaurant1 GREAT Dant! pups, Jnrerna-Hobiewi~. t~i;·~·:: $570:i -'"~'·~Ugh=~l'-Ask=~l42S-·..,4~97-·1571_.11 Bar 832 tional Champ Blood line, 1-toble 16', lair cond .. $1150. ·~.Triumph 650cc, reblt eng. 15 -3,4 Ton Pickups 2 -3,4 Ton Vans . . I ' • 1----------AKC reg f7S. 962-5495 aft 5. J{obie 16'. 3 Demos, $1450 up 6 frnt ext. Many xtras.. RESl'AURANT Equip. \Valk· AKC Collie Pups. Ready to O ipper 21' w·trlr •.•. S:s95. ?I-lust sell. 642-136.5. in l'(!ach-in box 8'x10', go Chrls1mas. Ca.Jl alter 6 Clipper 26', 3 mos .... $44511. NE\V Yamaha 125 twin, ~ Retrig. pir (':aE:e £ other pm or Sat & Sun 968-84a? Coiun1hia 22' lnbrd v. .. trlr spd. 368 miles. Cost $500; misc equip. &Ta-1007 or CHtHUAHUAS, 7 weeks, $25. New condition ...... $61 25. gel! $275. 644-2595 a!t S. '1~-l521. 409 28th St .. Nwpt each. 64l---481S days, eves All tht'se and new hoatli 1970 HUSKAVARNA 300-8 Sch. after 6. 534-3885. Available at Hobie Newport, spd. Xlnt shape. 2 tankJl. lat TV. R:adlo1 HiFi, !RISH Setter ,,_ 1700 \V. Coast Jliwy, 645-:m&2 s;im. takes! 673-1658. - _s_r_e_reo ______ 83_6 pedigree $10. pups, papers 32' Sloop, PC Class. recent '69 HARLEY Sprint, SD> . . "'=="'-67:;~:::2675;='=,..--= rccond. SJIXX). Fully equip. 6 ciu;h. 8,fJ.Xt milet>, needs ZENITH &: RCA TV Mie at ~ HP outbrd. New Cush, sail front brake. 979-9328 Orange C.Ounly's largest LOVABLE Lab puppy for oo Will trade for late dealer . All ave.ii. models in sale sat. 4 months, has pup-ver. 3 HP BJUGGS & STRATI'ON st.ock. Priced below the dis· PY shots. ~ model car or sell. 673-2490. MINI BIKE. $00. Call counters w/3 yr picture AFGHAN puppies, beautiful KITE 878, Good racing ~545-'1356=·c;::='-====--·ll tube, l yr parts & 1 yr Reds w·Blk mask. Low, low record, 2 &alls, yard dolly, 3 i1 HONDA""1600 service. cash 90 or 11?1'1rl!! to prlce.'J. 642'-9899 ~essons,, aailing/ra.c!ng incl. 'TI ~~ HONDA $650 36 ~10. Factory .11.uthorized OUTSTANDING BORZOIS' in pnce. Qualified in· •837...(i638 or 968-0014• sclVlce on premises. ABC · · structor. 673-7965 Color 1'V, !kJ2l Atlanta at (Russ.Ian, Wolthounds). Best HOBIE CAT 14' Magnolia, H.B. !J6S.3.329. breeding. Terms. 832-7457. Xlnt cond. STEREO deluxe um Gar· SCHNAUZER Pups. Shots, 538-6310 (Orange) rant ~I, large pro-Will hold for Christmas. RACTNG Sabot 2 sails. Xlnt '00 Honda 300 Scrambler !essional changer. Jensen Terms. S22-83ti6. cond. $275. ~t ~s1:'1~· air suspension speakers, 220 Horsu 856 ---'*-846-=_,l.::404c..c•::...,_=, =--c-7-"'="-"'~-"--=oll \Vatt AM /FM MP X ---------SHORE mooring & 11. Electric C•rt 930 -···-r t•pe d-k "-nd 9 YR old -. Pinto -'din .. , ·=-~· ..... , " "" · °'-... -~.. &''" -sailboat. Balboa Peninsula. OWNER Sacrllice. G-at tit-new & guannleed, was left $300. 9 yr old Palomino •~ <TI•l 9llH040 •• unclalmed. Now S 1 7 5. mare $.100. Ye a r 11 n a: ~. ' Uie 3 wheel elec car. for YOU can be hfoaulilully Term11. Credit d e pt. palomino pinto SL'lO. Will HOBIE Cat 16'·8 mos old. All Cash, very rea.s. !162-Q72. bud 89.l·«i01. take oilers. 54&-1171 aft 6 racing gear. Trlr. Ex. cond. Mot r u---dretll!ed on a tiny get! SlfiOO. 5G-81ai. a .---nwt Our acclaimed "ln"tant 21" Color TV. beaut. picture op:"m".~=~__,-......,--e LIDO 14 e Sele/Rent 940 f'•.".lhkNI" Book teaches )'OU S95. alM 19" Blk & \lo'hlte ~i ARAB Gfolding, 3 yrs, how! Learn to choose the port. $3.'i 979-4462. $250. Tack addition a I , $400. Call 557·1126 21' TRAVCO 'TI HONDA~ SL $850 SUPER COND. $495 OR . BESf OFFER. 557-7630 right Bnes for your figure, v acancies cost money! Rent 545-3738. vacancies COllt money! Rent 25' DtsroVERER NO SIDE SEAMS! One 1he ~tterns and fabrics that )'QUI' bouae. apt., atore MORGAN 8 yr old gelding, your ~. apt.. store 20'.Zl' CONTlNF:NTALS a in pattern part tor . lhe do lhe most for you. 128 bldg., f'fc. thru s Dally Pilot Some traJning. $150. Call bldg., etc. thru a Dally Pilot al' PRIDE It JOYS ll~n"""nls that are dl'!llgn. pagc11 of fAshion knoW·how, Cla.'J&lfted Ad. 642-5678. &J6..9185. cta.trtect Ad. 64H'l618. VAN CoNVERSIONS to fit larger slzc!'I coin· hundreds of pictures. <~==~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~;;::;;;;;= !:ales • Service • Rentals bty. Make .... , '" no SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS * Da-r Inc:. * al all! lor each pattern -add 25 S T~R G.A:ZER:~M ~ l.1801 "-~-tvd G G ·~ -a•-lor each pattern lor ~~~~:::..=.:: · ~ =~ B ., : . Printed Pattern "",..::.: NEW ...... '"" 531-6800 omen'11 Waite! Slzc1 30, 32, Air Mail and Special Hand!· BJCLAYJ. Next to Q.G. Datiiun 38 ""I' 43 4jlL Siz.e Ing; otherw1.,e thlrd<lass ' 36• ' .,., 1'.11, ' ,.. dellVt'l")' will take three }( y..., Dolly AdMf7 GWclt N' JUST CO !akes1-% yard• 60-inch.-weeks <1r more, Send to J Acco,d/,.f to'"• Slo,,. V MOTOR HOME RENTALS ~ SEVf;1"'Y·f1Vf. CENTS Allee Brooks. the DAILY To develop me11oge for Frldoy, Or. Olty lgst rental fieet tor c11ch Pflltern -odd 75 PILOT, 105. Needlecraft rtOClwcrd!ltomSpOl'W:llrigtorurbm LOW WINTER RATES cent" for each p8tlcrn for Dept .. Bo:< 183. Old Chel1JC11 of)'Ol'Zodkicbli1h1ig'I. 60t N. HatboJ' Blvd. Air Mltll l\nd Special ~hu\<11· Station, New York, N.Y. 1 BtlQht :UP'.............., 612 ~io.t 839-0030 •• d 2 T~• ,.,._ ..... 6 ...,.id i . Jng; otherwi.e lhlrd"(!hts..'4 10011. Prl.nt Na~. -rtfi!I, 3Gat llS!owly 63 e. .. i-R I -Hom delivery w\11 take three Zip. Pltteni Namber. "A"°"' 34n.. 6"4 Unclor tn • ~weeks or 11lflte. Senrl to NEE 0 LE CRA~I '72! :5.Moooe JSOf 6S I-for your Vacation Marian Mnrtln. tht> DAILY Crochet, knit. etc. Free ~~ ~;: ~~ * UM301 *-- PILOT, 442, P6Uf'rn IJeJ)L, d lttctlons, 50c. ''°' 310f 61 0f .~ , ~. 232 West !!th SI .. New lftllllanl Mauame ftMli;. 9TN j91.loW11 "9Sell .~ ... , .. ....u-.c.~ .... ~ f york--N.Y. JDU . Prlnl Basic, fancy knot&. pal· IO~ MJAte 70U........ J.'ree mJ. iuur. All optional KAMr--. AODRW with t~rns. Sl OO. :~e-r ~=-~~ ~ wk. Pvt Pty. UP, 8DZ and STYU ln!tlanl Crtlt'hel Boot -13 ~ 49\it 7JVw • ~ Learn bJ pk:turesl Pat-I".....,. ... ,.... '" Y0w '71 Shuta Motor Home for !a'°' MORE Qul~k ten.. S1.l'.O. 11~ ::t"'-:n~ 81!lle, 18', tell~td, llPI' 6, ...,.... and..._ one OompkilehllturtQtftBoc* 17Wll 47 .._.. 77 ~ alt cond. tape de c k. t1ft"9 bft from our ... more thttn 100 £1t!A -t•GHt. ..,~ 71Y-.lf 4$-~. ' C.Wos. All $~. -.... ~~.: .. ;~ ~~ SlC(!O -or-.. ~t olltr.-for. eq, fNfft"= SEWING BOOK """'""* Al -21 "*-!1 i..t 11 v-Fully equlp'd MOflOio,Home • .... ibd..Y.·weu tona1ow. :~·~lfy ftq 9oritll • k ~~ ~-¥'°*" H~ Xlnt cond. 64)..12$5. .. "°'°" of ti Pl'fle 4f&h•• 24 YN ~ ,_,,.. IM~ '72 ~ ,Arrovf 241 . ~STANT FASlflON 50c. ZO-. .. _,M...,_ .ISToklf'lt atr,1en,S:Dad-.y1t!lcml -~ o 1 Q.IHI 8ttoll: J • 1& Ntteml. ~ ~ ~ ~ If re1or1 Free inllUl'IWIOe. &i4-C39 11ctt. SC:•m QltlK noot 1 _ il:r' =xw·.. =~ .... ';:c" Auto SerilOli. Pe·i:-t• Mt ' ~ -•f t -._ lOC. 60~ 90U.. -~~L • " n . '"'~ ~· "" -· . 1315 cc vw ......, .,.., ·~·lt'ln ''''°.,_!llllp -,,. ,..,.,,., -~ '°'GGOI m,Aaiiiii .,_N-"I '>-;f'_ pl~.-; ;,ma.,-plno, 1 -3,4 Ton 4 Wheel Drive Pickup " . 1 -3,4 Ton Crew Cab Pickup REAL BARGAINS ON usm TRUCKS 1970 FORD '¥• TON PICK-UP V-1, lotdM witfl tquipmtltt. IS•r· •Ml2591 1969 FORD VAN CAMPER lubblo Top. CWJR 199t 1970 DATSUN PICK·UP l ikt Ntw All Thru, 1357 8CKI 1967 FORD :y, TON PICK-UP Srnoolh At A Wttcll. (44449) 1966 JEEP 4 WhMI Drivt P.U. A·I Condition All 7hru. 11255SH I ' 1969 CHEV 'h TON PICK-UP V.1, Air, E•ceUent Co11d. (I 102501 1971 t• CALIFORNIA CAMPER Rttlly Shtrp! 1969 BAKERSFIELD I ' C1mptr Ctrnpor't Dtli9htl 1970 CAMPER B' SHELL With W1lk·ln Rttr Door. 1969 WEEK N DER 8' C1mpor Fullv &fj ipptcU WAS NOW I $2995 I $2595 : I $1995 I $1395:'. I s1795 I $1295 I $2195 I $1695 - f s23_95 I $1995 ~ I $1295 I $995 I s1095 I $695 I $995 1 s695 ----------'· 1971 WESTWAYS 1 l'h' C1mpor A Rotl lt•ulyl I s2695 I $1695 - ---~------------'-------'----~· GMC: TRUCkS, 1/1 TON TO 3 TONS, 5'11NTS, SUIUllAN, JIMMY'S, VANS, IENTALS, WSING • Also hi U.t of Y-c-,.... M-Homn, Mini Hom.., Con- At 11t DW' ...i l'rlct1 Noliotly -Olli' -letlll • 1t Rft!llll &CH618. It beluUCul pattm.. 50c. ~ \81 '1 ·~-~ ~ etc. See tt ~· ........................ 1 ~·!!..H!!~~ .. 53l-4ll!>~~·__JJL.....-'1"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 l • .. ' '. ~ . · 1 • • • ------------- ThundAy, Dtcembtr 7, 1972 DAil Y PILOT §JI ..... .., .. l§J [ . l§J[ • 970 Auto1, lmpomd TOYOTA 970 Autot, II_. J~ .;;;[ ~-... _ ... ;;;1§1~1 [ ..... ,,.:. l§J I _..,_ l§J ~I ..... _ ... ~ .. ;;;;;1§1~1 1~--·-... ~1 990 ~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990 -IUICK CHEVROLET CONTINl!NTAL OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC PONTIAC + tax r,.r-mo1 38 mo. O.E.L. • lmmldleta Dollvory ·I"· LEASING SEE & DRIVE The All New '73 TOYOTA •~A IJVIE•A '73 Mont Carlo 'TI-4DR Contlneat al. TRANSFERRED .. .... e AM/FM ........ !eatbe• Int, Mu.I .. u Olda '66 HolidMy v .. , automadC powtr &teer-S-Cna 'flnyl top, FIA, ft rpwr, tUt "88" Sold c~, $695. Call S.10 Executive 9 pus wagon V-8, .... 'i!~tludlli2i,',"· neco.?; A• .... Set r;;Cond. ltr whl. lfutt .U to btlt of· am or aft 6 pm. 493--3506. Au'°matic, power stttrinR, de ...... .., ..... ~ ... .,_ teri ....._, a.Ir, elec. wlndow1, eledric ·-Reil ·1•i•y. $8 .88 PLYMOUTH .... wi nd ow .... ck. ("-) ONL"' '11CondSedari,11.000 ml, Nu, _________ I Howards' speclal buy of the ,..,_ • 'J. + tax per mo. -nd AMI._ .. 1tereo •c1• ,---' hol -·' $1195 •.,v"-1100 ~m '...,_..., lil68 Plymoulh VIP 4 dr, week .,..~ at w e_,e. 96 mo. 0 .E .L. ~ \'"°BEO) only '70 PONTIAC '69 PONTIAC Crand Prli. P.S., alr, Vinyl roQJ. l'.S., lo mlleqit.Excell <'nt <.~ d!tkln. Kelley &i.gg<."Mted Retail $2705 Our Sal1• Price thru 12-10-Tl L~ $ Z 5 9 l IYQP7291 IP4931 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. 24 80 Harbor lilvd., Costa f\1 esa, .Y. ALL MOD ELS ro';;.~D MAKES N-Opon In NEWPORT BEACH .Dtaal.W • mOTA ·"I II RD vinyl roof, radio, beater, a.Ir -w..o •• HOWARD Chevrolet Imm-ate Do very FO """'lttonlng, pwr .i,er<ng & $2450 546-flll7. Newport &..ch ALLLEMASO, IDNEGLS 1---------1 hrakei. New tires & brakes, HOWARD Chevrolet ·n GRAND Prix, bi'11.ut cond. 1966 Harbor, C.~. 646-9303 MacArthur Blvd 6 Jam~ '67 FORD Mwitang. V.8, xlnt oond I: juat ~.cm N rt a _ h all extl'al, very tt"aaonable. . .,..urem caHfornia ~\>H 1000 w. (OHi Hwy. 645-6400 --·s AND •••KES p s •---heel mUea. Kelly • u g g e 11 t e d ewpo 09•c 'TO TOYOTA Crown 4 Dr. · __.. '"""' auto., · " c ... vo,ro; w 11' t 11 $1 350 rt MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree 673-"J50'1. Sedan. Auto., air, vtnyl roof. Southern &alifornia eKx~~~t ~~AAS h R!'~i p~m:: 831-423.4. . .•. p ce 833-0555 ~!9'12=-G='1°"1AN'=o~r"'n~IX~-l.M~ded.,...,_ ' "~ 1st National :~·" Bali lea . Jn e"XceUelrt eon d l t lo n. BUICKS e ..... ;, ......_"'........ Must sell . Xlnt co n d. K II Suai! ted Retail J SlllO Our Sale Price thni. '68 PONTIAC Le 1.Wu Cpe. 979-0l7Z or 673-Jl2t. .. n> Slllg ~ ~l ).tlchelao!) Drive ·t..(Corner of MacArthur} WE HAVE THE NEWEST 0 1' DATSUNS IN INVENTORY FOR YOUR SELECTION $1~"' ~-._,,• ~-··-· * '67 Sl<ylari< Convertible 1st llLotl.nal 1.2-10-12 1s IU99 <XXF677> PONTIAC P.s .. air. v1ny1 root, rttlly u.i;.72v .... ~ 'il:mr~(23ssiQ) * '69 Buick Skylark, 4 dr. NIUU CP'47l DAVE ROSS PON· wheels, k> mileage. Kelley ltAMILER (P44.2) DAVE ROSS PON· 44,000 mJ &-32,~ ml. TlAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., 'TI PONTIAC Grand Prix. Suggested Reta.lJ fJT;)(). Our 1-------- >1_1'vJne, Calli. ""64 TIAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., rib, PIS. ,xlnt t11es. .. IM.law C:O.la Mesa, S46-tl017. Silver with ebony vinyl top Sale Prtoe thru U-~72 is RAMBLER S . Good Costa Mesa, 546--MlT. CLEAN. 842-2446 MHNllll5 ·n Ford Cntry Sed," 6 pau plua opera side windows. ( 2 3 7 3 7 8K101TI7J DAVE tran11;1!.>natk>n. '63 \\'agon URGENT t Mill "ro .2001 Michelaon Drive 1ta wag., full P"iT• air, rib, P.S., P .W., air, ta 11 y ROSS PONTIAC, 2 4 8 0 SDJ. 64 2 door $350. Private • mt11 'brkl '69 Buick 2 dr Electra, Top (Comer of MacArthur) xlnt oond. Mll.lll sell! $2'l95. wheelll, tilt wheel, 11tereo, kl Harbor mvd., Costa ?i.fesa, party. 847--04.17. • 418JJ.8Q) 213/127.ms? EWARD Toyota Corona, new • Shape! ~-bvlne Calif 92664 99J..()993; att 5 673-7824 mileage. Kelley Suggested 54&-8017. '67 Rl'bel 4-dr, 6 cyl, stan- Ures. Leaving for Europe. M2-'156o ' • 2 dr Hrdtp Retail $4155 Our Sale Price 1964.-=o~Red"',---,Co~n-v-ert""l"'b«,---xl-,--,nt danl !rans, gootl ~hape. Be1t offer. ~llll. c ADILLAC n4.f833...8D> 213/62T.oost '56 Fairl&ne, ... ownr' thru u.10-ri i!I $(1913. {P462) ·-~~portatU.n •<>er.. •=1be I (( ~, '65 l..andcrubier, Excel oond, "' 100% WARRANTY ; ~,IP· auto ,!:11"'5• ong -6646 ' 1776571JA726542l DAVE ... ~~ ~ ..,.,., 1 0 er. "''' '"'" . ' whl dr, new valve11, t.lre1 70 Capri'* c,.. like new • $315. 837 . · ROSS PONTIAC, 2 4 8 D T ·BIRD ' . ILL PAY O'(ER ..., ........ l'W lalo "'°""I, olun, low, 'm.llN9o d&noa-~·~ iiii'pOrtl, t'ruclc1 or Qn;per1. ·~~ and ask tor Buyer ~,'. DAYE ROSS Tir~ . aood brakes, $1500 or beet YOUR ONLY VB, AT, pg.Air, tilt wheel, 1970 FORD Country Squire }farbor Blvd., Co&ta 1.fesa, '68 PONTIAC Fin'bird. V-8, otter,~. FA-RY electric windOw•, el~ Sta Wgn. Xlnt cond. Pvt. 541HOI?. auto., P.S., air, vinyl roof. >..•v seats .,~·i~root 22 85l pty,bestoffer673-1993. Kelley Suggested Retail '67 TOYOTA Corona, new AUTHORIZED • 0n1y' ' ,85 FALCON n faJ.r '72 FIREBIRD, i mm a c. f1940. Our Sale Price thru tlret, ~p. 64,000 miles, mllea. (4.17 ), wago • Super loaded w/fact xhm 12-10-72 is $1799 (\llV193J """" cond. Belt •ff" CADILLAC $Z3f5-cooditton ffl.in5 Musqell. MH860. · CP<>;J DAVE ROSS PON· !16&--8838. DEALER HOWARD Chevrolet .72 LTD Country Squire '69 PONTIAC GTO Coupe. TIAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., '68 TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr. Largest selection of Cadil-Newport &.•ch PIS, P/B, AJC, xlnt oond'. VS. P.S., aJr, vinyl roof. Costa Mesa, 546-8017. Michelin tiret. Sharp con-lo.cs in Ora.nee County. MacArthur Blvd A J•rriboree ~after 1 p.m. Kelley Suggested Retail '68 FIREBIRD, fully equip. dition! $940. Pvt Pt Y • Sales-Leo.sini. ,... $2100 Our Salr Price thru ped, extremely good cood. c1J636-2399 ---.11Uss1~----JEEP _ 1.2-1"'12 " nm. c662FVYJ i:.ow --~- '72 T·BIRD Assume bAia~ of $5300. Full Fae\. Er1ulp. incl. cruise {~1ntrol au10 1emp. A1.t/F1' !llPrPO s ix \\'UY JlO"''er St'&.lll, optionHI 460 cu.. in. c~. Mpc-c.'1111 ordf'r Walnut F'1rc pnin• ""/mntching wheel covers. Prlvate Party. Eve11. 838-7869 '&1 CROWN Wagon. Ml!, • N b '69 Mcilflfu SS lllOJA> DAVE ROSS PON· '68 PONTIAC Flrebird. vs. air, xlnt cond. $11.50. Q erl ,._ VI ~ _.. ""'--I -1963 Scout, 4x4, mechanically Co'I'IAC, 2480 Harbor Blvd., P.S., air, vinyl roof, lo '70 T-BIRD Landau Cpe, al * f>75.3853 * Cacllac ............ • • -•w;, • l(>Od, Belt offer. 11ta Mesa 546-a)].7. mUelllt". Kelley Suggested power, 17,0Xl mile1. i>erfect ~ 2411 H•rbor Blvd. FIAT '70 T yota St• Wag wide tirel, liiq 'Wheela, 536-9.)22 '69 PONTIAC 9 Pus. Wagon. Retail $1915. Our Sale Price cond. $3400. 64Z-6!163. PONTIAC ------- 'wet• Mel• ~17 1 ---------o ' • 2600 HARBOR BL. priced$400underwholetale. '12 Toyota Land Crui&er, 4 P.S., air, rack, lo mile~. thru 12-10-72 is $17 9 9 . PAY TOP DOLl.AR '68 FIAT 850 coupe: 38000 ml. $950. Bob 6C-48lO COSTA MESA (YQ.m89). o,NLY whl drive like new 14 ooo Kelley Suggested Retail $1599 {P53) C137378K-101TI7l VEGA .IDR TOP USED CARS s:m v.wk on eng. $400 o• VOLKSWAGEN 540-9100 OP"" Sund'f $950 1 l33>J '5.11HJ348 .tlt 5 $25.15 Ou• Salo Price thnJ DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 1--------1 • . best ofler. 5.1&991B. --------1CADILLAC '68 Sedan H Che I m" ' . . 12-10-12 Us $2399 CYOY077) Harbor BJvd., Costa Mesa. '72 VEGA CT. Orange. 4 ~pct. -~ ::i. i. extra doao, '70 ... <~~--··· -· '61 vw doVWe •• t~, top a1r,·.,1"!' o~~ a.!~ ot MERCURY TIAC410c) ~~,HROhoSS BlPON-"'6-•J17. ~!.". ... 971'1 ~-?' ,"""". 4 pm-$2!50. BAUER BUICK ....,. ~· .. _.., ~ power, Y .. Y ' • ·--..-· • -..ion • voou ar r vd., Don't give up the ship! """-"'wn · --COYer, extra clean. MUsr Bua:. 4 •peed.1_racUo, heater, tele.cop~ lteerini'., twillte Mac.Arthur A: Jmiboree Blvd 'TO MERCURY Cougar. V-8. Q>llta Mesa, 546-8017. ··List" It In cla.Slllfied. Ship Fut results al'€' ju11t a phoBe 2925 llarbor Blvd. SEU.. sm:i. 400-0)7. clean car. {t.KT881). Only sentlnal, .ut:lnl radio Ql.0555 p S. llr' inyl lo 2-5678. a ldoaa 979-2500 HIL1MAN $995 •le. A ...,....,,..__prjc;'d _ ~--n• _ ~---.,;n.;.... •Keil., ..;:,..,.. Claasllled Ada . - . 642-~ to Shore lUaults! &IH>678. call away-~~ 990 Imported 970 ---------HOWARD Ch I t below Blue Book. l>t $m> ~' ~~·~~· ~~~ Rotall l290C> ow-S&le PricoliA;uto;•;• ;U;;Hd;;;;;;;;;;;;990;;;;A;u:t•;•;·;U;;Hd;;;;;:;;;;;;;990;;;;;A;ut;o•;·;;U;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-evro • check takes It. 644-21H9. \11, P.S., air! vinyl root, lo thru J2..10-72 is $ 2 6 9 9. ~~'ALFA ROMEO '64 lllUMAN HUSKY Newport Boach , ""11eage. "" ley $uaeated ...... 14 radial tires, l'\lN good. MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree 69 CatffDlc Coupe de. RetaJl $1Ul. Our Sale"'Prlce (913BHZ) 1Pml DAVE -· $350. Otter 64M285 133-0555 VLandllle-Full .,1•>• .. Byr, w b It II thru 12-1.().72 la $1699. (Pet) HROarS~-BldPONTIAv., ,5 .. t.~ .. o Alfa Romeo au p. O"Nlm'. (~). DAVE uui-....... _......, JAGUAR '70 v.w. POP-TOP CAMPER 5'0--1130. ' ROSS PONTIAC 2110 546-8011. JAGUAR '65. 4 dr aed. 3.8 S., lmmac., Jo miles, wire wills, air cond., auto traJll, AM/FM rad., nu silver/grey paint, red lthr int., $2500. 833-9550 bet 8 am &6pm. 1970 JAGUAR XJ6. Perfect. 24,000 mlln. Red. SJSOO, Call 642-.4391 or 642·2789. MAZDA *Al* LAST wtth air conditioning. al! CAX> •a CD~oadectt Bnt Harbor Blvd., eoita MN, "·n:-;eo1o=.,..,,--;;Parit=-:w::.,..,=:-~- whtte with belp interioi otter over C\'P!lll88). 5t6-80l:T. Only 19,000 mJ. Absolutely Kelley SUgestecl Retail 6J5.Ull8. ..... ,....,..l'\ll' ....... Cam'"-lmmaeulatel Ne.w titt1, de-$2885 Our ·Sale Price thru -'-'ni:o "~-l .. .,. tux air, P/1, pi b, tilt will. .. , .. -•• ~ DA'._ '66 CAD O:mv. New mp, all V1, P .S.,• afr, :yellow, lo ack 1 •u~ ... ~ROss·· POaNTIA~C 2~·.Lo xtru. Fuµ~e!"· Fine cond. mlleap. KeUly Suaeated luu r • e c. ,,_,... ,,..... ' · Pvt ptyf '1351· 552-91.n. Retail $1855 Our Sale Price 03161 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. , CLEAN• lhru J2..10.72 ii s 16 9 9 "MERC.'==--eom.~_.,.t "•n,....,,-dr=Spt::-~17. ~~ri°~ Da ve' {YHK4'9)• (P438l DAVE Sed. R&H, Alr:, e,uto., tlntea 'TI VW Bus, M,000 mi. nu • · M\.l.M-... ' ROSS PoNTIAC, 2 4 8 o Klui. ,Brown vinyl top: kJw brakes .It bltd tires, custm 61S-d912-ar ._.,,,.,.....,. . Harbor Blvd., Olsta Mesa. mi., 1 owner, Private, Cdlpf. int, 5 pus w/dbl bed. Im-'65 ~. $800 or excllange . ~17-. 675-1D3>. mac In & out. $2500.: for sq~~ VW. 1970 Ch ~---··~t •n u••nuis -··•·-2 TI4-89t-60'17 att 6 or 548-1834 ev. ~ £A .. '• dr, -:':.":\... ,-,.--, ·-'"1 wkenda: •MARO 8 Paa. Sta. Wen. Pwr. Alnl~m. ......... v '72 VW B,,., I puo. ~ C.. " ~ "':.':1 .. ":.';!°~ ~tll~; !~~ whla, ~fm "'"· • '69 Camaro, V-8, pwr, air, lo T•ck>>y Air, luggage "'cl" MUSTANG 15,000 ml a. Ice box, cur-mi. retalil $1875. Make fair new ttree A brakes. Panel-" taina & ~· Mr. Gordon. otte'r Alilakln V le J o • in&. Askinc $25~. 557-4861. I -------...,..Cit. .... ~ -Ev.. . MUsr"'G '72 Futla 55~7 -83l).l4G. '59 EL CAMINO, a real cher· Al' -Wbtlblk int, 351·2Y -'67 4 Camper, new brks, *xlntl971 ___.~Rally Sport ryl P/S, P/B, air, new mac wbla. WO ttrea, Jmded. 1600 paint ~ --.....,, ""'· MUil M Fair value -........, • .,., ' 673-4800 .. 64&-<ml "'· $850. or ! MHJ52 ' ' ,..,~ e e e _,. paneling, bltln apkn, ""'-"'='==""""=== -,;,,;,;;-:====;-I lllTlllllTIC .~".'!!, k< Hawall $!IOO. CHEVROLET 100"/o WARRANTY '69 ldult&ng, Wt. top, top NOW ON mSPLA:ir ...,,_ .. -'71 CAMARO cond. -.ooo m1·~ onr. MIKE McCARTHY Buick -Opel -GMC Trucks ALL PRICES PLUS TAX &: LIC. 894•5631 OPEN SUNDAY 894•5631 These cars carry 100o/o unconditional Mechanical guarantee tor a ==-=--=~~pe==riod==--o_f _l_O _d_a~y_s!~~~, 1972 BUICK ELECTRA 4 Dr. H.T. V-1, •llfo. tr1 "1., f•dory ,.;, collditionin9, pow•r 1te•rl119, power br•k•1, pow•r wihdow., power •••h , r1dio, M•t•r. whit.Well lir•1, tinted 91•111 wh•el cov•PS, Und•u top. Serlel No. 10911. 1970 BUICK WILDCAT CPE. Cp••• V-1, •ufo. t ... nt., f1ctory •Ir co!!d itioni119, pow1r •*••ri"9· pow.r .,,,, •• ,, r.clio, 'h•1l1r, whitew•ll tir1s, tint.cl gl•ll, wh1•I 1•v1n, L11td111 top, Uc•1111 No. 171AGA. ~477 ~ . ROT~ LoW4';1~t': ~I~.,_ ~~ ~~~M1-v:,,, a~m:~I"':.[.. ": owner .. $1&50. ~· --·· i ~ IMMEDIATE~' ..,.,, M"'tS.UNowl • aole,Alharpcu. C155DFCJ OLDSMOllLI! DELIVERY1 036-"""· Cuatom cpe, V-8, automattc, only 1---------11 ==~===-===--0--------------- ' """"' -· ·P•wn $2995 '68 01~ 1970 BUICK RIVIERA ..::. HUNTINGii BEACH ·~;w·i!\\f; ~· t:i ~":··· alrla 00 :::·· ~~ '4; HOWARD Chffrolot V~ta Cruller 9 .::: -· MA DA ~-· Pvt P t Y. priced~. (~) ONLY Newport Beach VS, AT, PS, Air1 Rock. ALFA RO~ 1750 ' ·$3095 MacArthW' Blvd a Jambo,.. Pl'lced .Wider wnoleaale. ~,:;,;.~K°!'i~";· ~ted l~l BEACH BLW. ~~~ .... ~~ ljOW~RO Chff,..lot 133-41555 CWAVlla>l. Only VI, •ute. tr1111., fect•ry •'t condilio"in9, power 1t11rin9, pow11 brt•e1, power wlHow1, redlo, h11ltr, L•nd•u lop, 1111 wh11L Un 1t1• H•, Ol7ADV. Retail 13225 Our Sal• Price • M ........ -. eond. tml or bell ofi'1", , ~ llNch *'72 El Camino, Alr/cond, $1595 1970 BUICK LE SABRE,, ,.. . tbru 12-10-72 Is s 2 7 9 ! VJ ... ..... .. ...... 493-4fl01. 14acArUl'Ur Blvd I: Jamboree mio, 7?iOO rnUe1, make of· I HOWARD Chevrolet ~ ~ s2277 (ZBV322 (P-428) DAVE Pw 142 liltt ,63 V.W. VAN, Excellent ns.o555 ~'"""=' 640--03S3.~~~-=.,,....,,--, New__., ... ch c,.. V.t, 111to. tr1111., f•ctory elr coll4lft1t11Jit. poww tt.•rin9, . ROSS PONTIAC 2 4 8 O -;-.;; r-"' pow1r br1k11, r1d lo, h1•t1r. whlt•w1ll ffr11, tint1d 91111, l•nd111 • cond, New enatne. equipped 196.1 Chev. Impala Super '63 Chevy Nov~,. White, Good MacArthur Blvd A Jamboree tap, tilt wheel. u ...... Hi. 0711MA. Marbo• Blvd., Co.ta !"es& *'< '""'"""'· Malce Oller --Call after I PM. cond. lmm"""te S al e ;-;;;;~*~":;.ts;.:55i;-;::;;::::::;l--;;;;;.-----.--..,;------~....-,.-..--=:;::::.::-.':'---:r-ll 54&-8J17. ' ~aft 4. ~ ' 8'7·7314 ewt/wknd.a ;:; - l750 Spldcf Vetoce -· •a 'VW BUii, new ..... • -IMPALA, V-8; air, • CONTINENTAL '1&\'kDSE=~t"';:f Th••• cars below carry a -so.so mechanic -Xlnt cond, S23.'iO ,ftim, clutch. Recent valve Job. door -~ .... 1 owner -.. "" In p s. air -12 "' w-1331 111>. -· aft s pm. ~·-' 1------Cllltom "'· • • • warranty for a peno· d of 30 days '70 LINCOLN' MARK Ill. Stereo, all elettrtc. 25,332 USTINAMERICA ~~t1;'f.'~~ '65 El "~mlno = ~:i.r.~0:li =~~~ 1967 DODGE MONACO MERCIDES IENZ aft 5 pm. VS, automa~, pa, air. wbeel; 1"11 _.. Prt .. ol thrtl 12-10-n la l4Sll9 1"'39J 197U AUSTIN AMERICA· !I VW -•--~ !WI CR788ll3), Only --" ~--..i In thla ' ( 39 65 llld701!82) DAVE AMJFld, low m l I e a a e . ·--·~ ~ '...,,..,t'. .;J: ~~. ' $195 ~~WWpa~~lle. Kolley Ross PONTIAC. 2 4 I 0 -~~ -~. * 5fl-Ul)8 * HOWAllD ChoYrolot ~ llotal1 -Our """"' Bltd., Colt& 14 ... AUSTIN HEALEY ~ "' be -=., APJ:t '6T vw Bur, --. -NaWport Booch 15899 ~~ 1f~~1l s ~ "'·~"""oLD='s,..cu=tt:c •• ::-os:::u.,.=me:::, 11 mot Jlrm, aft 8 • 115-11141. ~~-~ Rtw ~A Jamboree Blvd DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. only 31,000 mllet. $1& oe 61* Austin Healey Sprltr, 19m Mm:edel Dl. Rum Id; ~suPtt 8Mtle. '1!550 In 0555 2480 Harbor Blvd., Colta bHt otter 60-4306 engine xlnt, body fair. •t aell, leavlna state. e Call 131-?d da)lee . 1962 IMP.U.., needs IDme Mesa 54&-8017. :i1!181='°~o'°'ld"°a -if42~, "=t~a-pd'"'.-oria-.-11 Nte<ft,clutch work. Best of. $0). 673-&8 aft'-e Evn aft T: -...u&Te work. '150. 8'B-ri881. can CONT'L 'n Mark nr1 Blue, ownerJ. ~· ltl.t -cown, = Mj'~_ sioo. 6754Jro;. u1c MG' ,67 vw eamper retitt 1800 atter e pm. whtte top, 10. mue. ieather l500. uu1 MT-5816. '6l .Austin Healey 3IXJ) , en&'. Xlnt cond.' !562-9214 or ''°'57:-,:BLACKrr,~,.,cbeYy=,-. -:d"e"'an'", 06 Pvt ply, full equjp. $6500, ;;196:1:;;;,-,0:,.ldl,,-.-;:CU;:::t;;:la"u:-, -Re-bl="i' II una ·IQOd, Needs body Wi;llfs ,_ MG u .. ~, new -·, 675-4542 cy~!. stick, tbttt. SoOC! cond. 675-T085. •rwine, new battery. RAH. Call att 6 557 3M5 -.. _.... ··• '71 Bui flnmac ..... _ __.__, Jl8!5. ate--8102. , Sell idle ltema . , . 1)(2.5678 $2!0. BU-6337. . . . • dutcll, top, pain~ win whll, PriCed to aen.' ~ ...... -. A-, -9IO Autos, N-9IO "'A-ut-.-H-,...,.,N,.._---~9IO" BMW :;, ~1~· or make .:;._,;;,:;i!l4HS31~~~~....,\p;;;;:;;;::;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;ill "v1111t --bonlit, • MGA •e vw, N• brlto, "-• ' 0 . tJl:H,Lo ,nilleaae.-• .l'" .. cond. sim. 91't-52'J!I, MUST ..U l969 M G A VW BUS wmt SUNROOF w/reblt ens. ~. or l:nt GOOD coNDmON ~ . ofter, 17l SelTl!I., No. A, San $1500. * 536-7924 Oem. - OY CA•VIR, Inc. MGB '" ,"'-, Good"'~·~~ ' %W E. 17th St. pan · ., .... ~ "" 111-..... , ...... •••• $550. 54&-1235. iaI _....... MGB '69 Conv. wire whls, . USID BMW's am/Im. New ti'", VOLVO brk1 /b11.tt . Pvt pty. • •ff 1600 lm-12'1!l, aft s . •70 2002 ·n MGB rdstr 8K mis Rlbr 71 2100 SE DAN FM/MPX/tr>e Abarth Exh&t ; CRIVIER BMW etc. call !H7·1627 He•b Lee SEE & DRIVE Th• AD New '73 VOLVO Slle1 • Service • Lea1ing '67 MGB1. only 35,000 miles, ~ w. lit :S.i5i7\" Aoa mUll "'..:'·A * _,,. AT l•i.:a ~ , CAPRI OPEL - Capel V&-2m Spt Cpc?. 1953 Opel Olympia Station YllLYD841-. 9303 Wagon. Rwu good. $Dl or .,,,.,. -~ •. ....__ c M Autom.. air, dl!Cllr poupi ~--~ ~n-..._ nu-uu~, • · ~ -••-Id'·-t uo:a~ uu.er. _... w • .... ......,. -mo u.-, 1 et '59 Volvo. new motor, Ure• A Wllb!d tlrel. 7400 mllel. •n Opel Rallye, llT:iO. Air battery extra clean $315. f2!!!0. l4HMJI. eond, oock 113, coaaole, disc Mll-1750 1973 BUICK Cent1ry Hardtop Coupe ' 78 NEW 1973 BUICKS !n S~k '"' lmlllOdlote Delivery A'f NO PltlCI INCRI ASI ' + r •• a Lie. 110 v.1, AUTOMATIC TRANS., POWER DISC I RAKES, RADIO, IUMPER STRIPS; F/R CAR· PETIN(I;. STOCK •1011. CLOST OUT SALE. ON ltn BUICKS· e,.. Y·I, 1ut.. tr•t'll., f•CfOfY •It 1•1Mil+lot1ln 9, p•w1r 1la1rin9. t•41•, h1e+.t, Llcen11 N•, VlCJJO. 1968 BUICK 225 4 Dr, H.T. v.1, •1110. tro111., foct•rv •Ir co11dltlo111,,., pow11 1t11ri119, pew1r brolio1, power wlri4•w1, po-r 1e1h, r1d io, h••t.r, whlt1w1ll tfr11, llrit14 91111, wheel "'"'"' U!ld1u top, ttlt wMel. U11ri1• No. WWIOO. 1967 BUICK SKYLARK c,.. v.1, 11110. tr1111., f•ctoty •It ••ri41t1011l11f, '°wer 1teeri119, ,ew•r brokM, re41•, h1•t1r, Lt!ld11o1 top, Uc•~ No. VEZIT4. 1967 FORD MUSTANG V-1, outo. ff1n1 ., power 1t11rlf19, rodlo, h11t1r, L1nd1" top. Uc•n11 Ne. TSRl5tl5. 1970 OPEL WAGON " "'"''" 1uto. f1•t11., foctory 1ir coriditiot1i119, r1dio, h11l•r. Li- '''"' No. tlJIHK. 1968 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill H1rdlop. v.1. 111to, ff1ri1 ., f•,.l•rv 1ir coi.dltf1t11l119, pow1r d11rl119, p•wer br1~11, r1dio, h••*•r, l1ncf111 top. ticen•e No. xc,11•. 1969 RAMBLER ROGUE Cpt. 6 cyl,. 1ulo. ffo111., power 1t1erl119, r•clio, h11tor, tinted 9l1t1, whool cov•n, l1n41u fop , wlriyl inffrior. Licent• No. XUR· .. 11. 1969 VW WAGON * CAPRld972,. lljco< ,,,,w. brkl. !73-3261· '60 VOLVO 1228 ~ n:~·m.f" SlllJO. PORSCHE bdlo, Mater. Auto. NEW-DEMONSTRATORS.EXECUTIVE CARS OPEL G.T.s •.1.!f'Oek IMMIDIATI I ,. cyl., 4 tpetd. FM r1d io, h11ter. Uc-Ho. ZA'o1os. "' !550· ' • 64&-41111! ' D QM . , ·~ ~~~ IUICK D TSUN JIOZ, lt1l. blue, =b~ Exhallll •L~ •'-'- t cond. "" -,___mar '" "'""""' AJC, "1 Pill· m-G'& PO :&e. ,!IU, _ Good VI, IWlomatlt:, ,..... - -l(oriJ UIOCU. Belt tnr.-air cood, OOd<t< -' IO..Qlll). ' -_ --(JVS. Polclle ,._ ms. IP/. Onl1 ' AM~, :Mlchel \nt . , $10f5 • :-;;· ,.;_~ 1~ , ,HOwMD a.. .. o1o1 llC ''\mt. ...... ~......, ' iio. or , 141-4811 ldaC!Vlh"' Biv<l * Juo-m-•U t TO OTA :"' -a&-.,.. mi. OPEN ALL DAY SUnDAY .... ...., 'TO Mk.Il waaont. 4 tpd, lllr, White. AMI_~ air, Ml J>Wl'• priced to aeu. 493-+167, Pvt ptr, $low. &n-1009. 499-1730: • ~ .. ~"~~~,.~1 .. ~ ... ~-J1~.j~~~11,;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;::. " • • -• • ' . ' . . ' · Vltt'fl U'TEX SEMI-CLOSS ENAMEL IETS 'IQU CUM UP WllllWATElll •EXTERIOR · • li'ITE{llOR SGRUBBABbE OUR •FAST DRYING PRIC• , •DURABLE 499 COMP. RETAIL 7.50 GAL. SPARKLING WHITE • ·ARMSTRONG® GASTlllAN V·INYL ~USHIQN-FlOOR~~ e~qRTED PA1')"'R!!l"!k! .OUR•'P.R'ICE •COLORS .' ' · · 3 ·99· · · · ' •. • LONG·IASTINGSHtNE • '. ,. CoMP. 'RETA1i..4~59 ' . > co~~~k"f~l!OllODS · ".\~. ' FAOftli1*. ... 59-.if P~ "'-, ' f. • , DECOR.J\lOR BE.J\DS . 3 SlYlfS e Pl~SliC e 50 FfET STRUNG ON NY'9'-'N 10 POPULAR COLORS CUT To' ANY LENGTH-WILL NOT RUN. IDEAL TREE TRIMMINGS OUR PRICE SINCLE COlOff SINGlE COLOR -ROUND BEADS -MULTI-SHAPE BEADS 199 c.-. 249 COMP. RETAIL RETAIL SOFT 3.95 4.95 • . SOFT. , , Pl.ASTIC TARPS 4MIL BLACK 9X 12 FT.OUR PRICE 148 .... 1.2.X..t5_f.I. OUR PRICE ~ EA. B MIL VINYL TARP 4% X 7 FT. OUR PRICE CHRISTMAS GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE CAt4lllE-S C'ASTINC 11 LB •. WAX BLOCK RE.SiN COMP. RETAIL 2.79 OUR ·178 PRICE . FORM lAMPS TRA Y,S• AND MANY DECORATOR ·ITEMS CHRISTMAS CANDLE MOLDS: to OOAST OUR • 69 ceAST© • 2· e SANTA CLAUS eANG-EL •CHRISTMAS TREE •SNOWMAN ' .OUR PAI.CE PRICE I I C , .. WITH GAl., CATALYST WITHOUT:CATAl'tST r , EA. 2,98 ou. • COMP!.EJE LINE OF MOLDS & RESIN, 'CO~OR·s AVA.IL.A.BU '. j ' • ' ' • 1 .. • • -. • • CHRISTMAS GIFT CERTIFIC~TES AVAILABLE I I I i I I i , I ' ~1 I I 7 ' I ) ' I I I ·I I 7 I l I I 1' ---.,.,,,..'\ • \ San Clemente ~apisirano EDITION Teday's Flaal I N.Y. St.eeks . 'VOL 65, NO. 342, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES I -. . . ' •• r THURSDAY,. DECEMBER 7, 1972 .. TEN CENTS . Dust Storm Rages; Crestlite Te.lls Controls Scares ' of northen1 San Clemente nuisance codes or buainca llceole and "81<1!nts lnalsted Wednesday· that coun-use permlt renewall as le'(en(e In cllmon halt asaerted emissions of red halting the dust wblcb -'<d!J.::""" from tile plaot that mines rare and dUlt from the cr..mte aggrepte prod-bakes u I<> fonn .ieUets uoe4 1n COllCftte. uets ~ and • i mu. l t a n e o u s 1 y Tbe lssqe Wednesday luted onty a few spo-.., le< the fil'll) aonounced tlley minutes as councilmen ~wilily referred were m.tanln( '200,000 worth of pollution tile citizen demand!.!<> the piaiii)ln( com- cmitror equipment. · mis!lon.for a recommendaUbn. • ~;4lvln( 1n-uie-v1sta del-~Hbe~a-publlcilt lor·drmlite Verde and Sbor~lffs North areas, filed dispenserl a news release to newsmen, pet!tlqns with more than 160 names In-but no one lro.m the !inn addressed the slsting that tile council use present couneU. • That release stated that. the finn shut down apentions oo Nov. 9 .ao that the equlpmen~ recommeniled by a consulting firm could be installed in the areas wbere the shale is (1Ul1Ched into pellets and b8ked in a kiln. The major ch.mges, say Crestlite spokesmen-, are: -A-new"machine--whicb-squeeres the pellets !Ore efficlenily and "leaves less material to Orpk d.>wn intc dust." -A dust·Utht collection hopper has . been installed ln the klln-mmusi-syswn--Ne.w dust !J!eals at both ends of the I<> try to trap tvftl more dust billowing · huge l<lln. out of the 2,800-degree' tumace. -Spray systems ln the loading area to -A cooling system in the exhaust gas belp C\lt down \be dust. line I<> d<cnase the 'fOlume of the escap-Ooe other pnijed which the firm prom· lng gases!· ' · ~ ~s to undertake is t h e hiring of a· . , -ReplaCement of 3 million gallons of ~ ~ ooce a week to clean tl;le water kept in ponds !)ear tbeo:i kiln. 'Ille roadsides ·in t)ie e:iq~nsive residential water pre1ently bei()g ..!. ua4il qestlite--area~wber pellets assertedly collect-- spckesmen said, contains d!Ssolved from passing trucks and then are·cnui~ minerals and other pollution-causing ed by traffic. compounds: Tbe ,residents have waged a battle ·- against the airborne red dust ever linct .00 first houses •·ere built in the area. At present, a court case is under way between the Qrange County Air Pollution Control Di~trict and the {inn over past dust emissions. Crest.lite manager Kenneth Teel said Wednesday that the firtn shares the neighbors~ concem about the dust. :'.!LalLour_ work is comRJ.eted~an schedule, we expect to restart the kiln and resume operations as a clean com- pany on Dec. 2<1," he said. 1n· -ans t> " ·: Jail Ordered ~apo.. Official Senteneed Weekends_ Sin Jua>-Captstrano city councilman .f~ Keith Weathers was ordered to- day I<> 1pead bis weekftlds for the next four months in a-ange COUnty Jail. Weotllei's, l'I, of mu Ortega Highway, wu alto ordered to &eTVe three years pt(lblUon for ~s role ln a domestic fracas that led to a sliot&un con!rontation Jlllf rt with 1heiff's officers. .rt ha .. looUd at yotir record as a cdboon and I l!llvt I<> ,.Y that I am ti=;· .,·m-11+"'-"':Jie ~a:=·"~: r l~ Weltben-. -t - ··'Bui I ....,.'_you woolllbive·fell lfiYGU'WIN tbl.41Pa!Y ll!lrifl who ·f4oed •l!i!lled ~ J1ld&o l\lllmy -- -· "I am --II. a "'8dlUINI of probation that ~ not I!"""' ~ lo< !lie torm. 1ad&e ~. ~"tilltlt --In <111111!1 ,..._. tlU "'*"lnC ., I I .. ond bis· lul will lie. or..i am lll!rdl ... He -tile -Iman tblt be will be released from county ·Jail Jo lime to speod Chriitmu Day with his family . "I lhave great faith lh yoo. and so do many other peop1e who wrote to me," Judge Murray added. "And rhope I<> see you back in this court one day so that we can clear this unfortunate record," Weathers was ariested by deputies who said the councilman met them wlttr a loaded sho!iWJ when they entered a Mission Viejo home to make inquiries about a 4 a.m. incident a\ the Dana Marina. It wu alJepd that ~ coundlman'S' -wife,-""--Ellllll Weatben, had-beea·wilh. a !Dile eacort at tllal loditioit when -drove up aiid •llllDl*I bis car iiiO lbe couple's au!<>. _ Mrs. Weatben' male compai)lon !<>Id officers be was threatened wlth a 11r!oarm before Mn. W~1 Jell the ........ ..,... ___ ...... W 9 I Vlojo -at.:11111111! -1be SUperlor (1Darl Die indlcatet lhll the couple, wbo ha" two ~gbters, bas since beO!t -led. LA Oil Ex-ecutive Named Transportation Secretary CAMP DAVID, lid. (UPI) -~t Nucon completed bis Cabinet o..rbaul to- day by naming. Claude Brinegar, 41, a r Los Anleles oD company executive, as TrmllJlh taUon-.ecretary. BrJnegar, who bolda a doctorate in •' ecj>nomlcs ond libs last can, wlD suc· c¥d John A. Volpe who is becoming U.S. aml>iisodoio I<> Italy -a post he wanted. 1be -lntment is to be the last C05lnet lace change I<> be aonounced by NW>n but other switches at the sub- Cabinet Jevet are anlicipated for the second term. The reappointment of 1Ucbatd G~ Kleindienst as attorney 8-.I Is expected in be anoounced Fri- day. . White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, who announced the latest ap- < ' , Juniors Seeking Do;nated Items For School Sale San ~enlt·. High Scbool11 junil>f c)a.u launched a quest this week for donated Items suitable for a two-day Nmmage sale Utls weekend at the Moo&e LDCl1e. Fwnlture. clolbe1, dishes, toys or .any other resale Item will be gratefully ac- cepted from local donors, said class pmldent Rod Roberts. 'Students will lje available through the week I<> ptck up the Items U donors are unable to brlll( lhe-IJOOdi I<> the Lodjl• li'rlday'----c Lo.inauons alto will be accepted at the ]\!gh ochool 1tudenl ~t!Yltlea om .. '!JlilrtdaY or Frld81. Plclmp -.n ., .. be arranged by ca1Ung- ll06erts at -· or Bob BlaboJ. at-492-'MI. : Besides the rummage sale, tbe event wtll lncllldo a Ilea market offering •tu· dent art and craft wares, baked goods aJl(I Clu11tma1 !<>ya. l'loort for tW 1111< both da)>s wtll be from t 1.m. to I p.nt ' pointm<nt -which Is subject I<> Senate confirmation -saki Brinegar, 45, a senior vice president of Unkln Oil C.o., is "a very qualified manager a}ld executive in the business world." Ziegler lavished praise on rb o t h Brinegar and Volpe and noted that Volpe would bee()me the first Italian-American to head the u.S. mis!ion in Rome. "When Secretary Volpe takes up this important diplonlatlc post he will be retracing a journey that brought his own parents to tbls country 8! penniless im- migrants at the turn of the century," Ziegler said. Of Brinegar, Ziegler said: "I don't know what is mea,nt by the tenn 'oil man' but Mr. Brinegar Is not an oU man. He is a very capable maqag.er. His area of ~alification goes to the management of people." Brinegar lived briefly In tbe late 1950t in Yorba Linda, Nixon's birthplace. ' • WHO'S CA LLIN(;: WHAT FA LS6? OGLETHORPE, Oa. {AP) -A report from the Macon ~§ Extension Office Sltyli: "A su~ __ !'!.J omen attending a meeting to ~ ~ve packaging revealed the li!llowlnC' -ti perceol tinted their ba)i',-38 percent wore wfa:s, BO percent wort' rouge, 98 percent wore Upstlck. ~percent wore eyeshadoW, S2 percen~ wort !olse eyelaabel, and IS pel' cent wore nail polllb." -• < • • OlELt.. r~E GOT 17 Sll'.ll'niw PA~S 1ll GET f'f\E6ENT9 f'OR ALL MY Fl\IE!.tDS l Light Opera Will Meet With C~ty A special meetint between. officials of the South Coast Choral aod Light Opera Association and city p a r k s com- missioners was ordered by city coon- cilmen Wednesday to solve a bitter feud between the the: :rical group and the city over use of the community 'clubhouse. • !, The mmnils*nera aod p a r k s ilUpll'intendea .:ArJ(e WJiterman Jnsist ,, tbal 111e cl'flc · croup .!Wt' ~Y.;,\ 1or ---for ti.~ : mediately ·~•-n.-• , costumes from the ~as buildings. ' 'rn a sblrt,.lutJlllle •• 'n •..Wednu-~-="t;~"\W;. -. be1 e HeOI cbme • the d!lbliJ'l'<., rt diootlc. Cblldreo, ·be ""80!'ted. ""' ,llowed to roam tbe clubbotme aod caµse "wear and · toar'"m lllO new bolldlng. -Yeilding, .'a leildeT In ' the llleot!lcal organlsalicii, apologi2e<I; !or the coatumes tnd prOmlled to removt them, but added that storage areas do not exist for bulky items commonly as,,octated with a thetetrical production. She also denied that 'the rehearsals were a problem. I, I t • • , • 1· ' • t ' ... " .... ~ ... -" (~, J 30, .$T..,t;, DOES..-• 8Et1EVI! IT , ~. 70, Watch Btamiff from Rlftllki<! Suts • • ' 1 ') . ) : . . ... . ~t ·Ap!j~l~~·s~e··s;~t . "That's yezy plcayfinislf," she retorted. She added that I( tbe 'group bad"' pay each lime Jt usel1 the clubhouse for rebeanals, the costs would' kill produc- tions; 1be feud thus far baa caused t cancellation at t6e clubhouse of _,a Christmas production. That show wilJ,be held in tho? blgh school Triton center in- 9 " . . . . :Nuns ·nfg~[:<Jn: Schedu~ stead. 1 Mrs: Yeilding blamed 1 •;poor com· munication" as the prime son for the dispute. ) Open-spafe Planning To Be, Topic in Capo The need for open-space planning for parts Of the South Coast will be lhe discuSSion topic jor the meeting ~~t weok of the Capistraoo Bay Area League ri Women Voters. Tbe. open di~ will J:>e, ~ld during a 9:30 a.m. meeting Dec. 12 at the ·home of Mrs. Vella Nutt of 245 lilonte Vista, San Clemente. Asleep a t Switch? WARSAW (UPI) -Two locomotive engineei• have been charged wltlj_ [ailing asleep while at the controls ol a freight train which sped out of control and through the door of o 1actory ond1 int<> a wall, the newspaper llziennik Ludowy ieported. , . " '. SPACE CENTER; lioultim' (UPI) -· Apolio 17's · astronau~ r~~~ted ~ space !<>day on thedinal ao<I .mplll dif- ficult chapter of America's planned ex- ploration of the IDOl?O· They &ailed smQOthJy 1despite an e~ troluc' r.uiire 'tbat'del!ye<1 thelr-depart- ure by almost three hours and forced the,;. I<> step up their 'spOed slightly. Noonday . brigh~ brte(ly flooded Cape.~ at'9:S3 p'.m •. Psi as ·tbe.ir, Saturn-$ roc~t, ,tall aa a 36-1\loly build- ing, roared off its launch pad ahd traced an orange com~t trail into the sty'toward a Silnday rendezvous wtth the ~-Tile moon. landing ls set for1 MQnday. On tbe ~more than h"1f a mil· lion people watChed the b~t"'~ some or tlrem hundreds o! mijes from the cape. A last seoond eieCtroni.c cirCuit failure Was canceled. . Tbe..a¢'orujuts bad fired an e x t r a strQqg ,-1 a¢· very accur~te -blast of lhe l\>I,> •ta&e of thelr·rnci<et to break out of earth orb« toward the moon, going a little '(asteritban originally planned to make, up· loiJ! µ.pe. AllNnauts.Eltgene A, Ceman, Rooold E. Evans· and.' Harrlson H. "Jack" Schmitt' locked, thie c<mmand ship and mooi landing craft "°8e4<MKJBe and cast of! the spent t<>p stage of the Saturn rnci<- et1 nVe-bouts•after launch. Mlsslor( contrQllen. at Houston reJXlrt~ ed the discarded rocket stage was on a . (!lee . .'APOU.O, Pap li Jury Selection delayed the launch 2 hours and 40 min-T n Co t D th tites -•nd •threalonf'd, to poatponc tt ~ un y ea for an elftite•month. B6t iecbnicians at, .. ' . --• , the cape 1aitd in Alabama 1'Qrkid out a LT " l 'Tl"-1 · d way "' bypass the faulty gear anl get r1~ J.Je aye the flight started aafelY. ~pile tts late start; -Apollo 17 - golrtg so !moathlf' that 81 coms,· COM'j:C- tlm maneuver scbechlled thia morning lun> Selection In ~ Orange County S@eflor CoUrt ·murder trial of a Dana Polnt men Wat delayed today to enable the trial judge to prepare his ruling on a series of pretrial mollo111. Pqrple? »~ybe. , Judge Walter Q\aramza saJd he will rule Monday on detcnse motions ror sup. preniofl of evidence apl.nst Thomas Bradford McCutcben, 50, of S!lll Olinda St., and wi II then commence the jury selection pl'OCMll. -Zie g'ier Describes N,ixon's Slacks .. CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) -CufDw, , ... Flated, no. Purple, perhaps. That's the rundown on President Nlxon's slicks frQm White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. -, - McOJtcben· la a"""8ed ol the killing laal Sept. 5 of Mrs. Virginia Lee Ham· melt, 45, of ,U. B Wave St, Laguna Bea<h. Losuna polloe called I<> the scene by nelihbon who heard shooting said they found McOJtcben itandlng over her bo.zy OD tbl>-ftoat lawn. Merchants Charge Blackmail ,, By JOHN VALTERZA Of .. IM'ly Plllt ltltff A large groUp of angry San Clemente "' businessmen flooded council chambers Wednesday and succeeded in indefinitely slaUing proposals by a consulting firm to begin red ·curbing parking places along El Camino Real in eaae asserted traffic congestioo. In a hearing that lasted nearly two • hours, charges of "blackmail" and -"political suicide'' came from the tbree- dozen or more buslnel!men concerned over the !ederally-subaidized TOPICS program. 'lbe specific issue was a recom· D'Hmdatlon made ear er this week by tbe -·~ lliil . .... ..... engineering continue for the nrst poaae of the changes along El ~amino from the Greyhound bus station to Avenlda Cabrillo. The commission, however, set a aix- month giace period to allow yet another attempt to ronn a downtown parking district to make up for the' loss of El Camino parking. 1be action, however. drew criticism from the chamber of co m m e r c e governmental affairs committee, the Apartment, Hotel, htotel Association and at least 400 businessmen whose peliUon was delivered to the council We<Piesday evening. In general, merchants Wednesday in- sisted tl}at traffic congestion is not critical lnough along El Camino to war- rant the changes suggested by the Pomona finn of Lampman a n d Associates . Councilmen supported a motion by Mayor Arthur Holmes to conlinue the technical aspecls of the project along the affected area, but no irnplemenlation of the proposals to change signals and cut parking would take place until suitable offstreet parking is developed. Terming tbe issue a cart·before-the- borse problem, the council essentially killed any chance of new red curbs until a parking district is Conned and lots in· stalled to the satisfaction of the businels community. To set the district in motion, Holmes also ordered the !ormatkm ol a citizen's committee made up of the businessmen present al Wednesday's se55ton . That committee woold attempt to lay (See PARKING, Page Z) Orange Weat•er The weathcrlady says It will be partly cloudy on Frklay, with cooler temperatures a I o n g the coast. Highs eipected to reach 60 degrees. Lows tonight, 35-43. I NSIDE TODAY The 01'0nat Counq, P r e • 1 ChJb takt1 a group of undft'• priuUtged childrtta to lJi!M.11· land each ·~· Writer Ar& vm. Jt:l recn.lU thb 11eor'1 t:Niie .to the ftl ogic K inqdom m ~ wcinn Chrilt-f'f'WUI 1torw on..l?at,ie..10_ l.M. ""' • Callflnlla S Ckl1tlfltll awr c-k• •""' 11 C""1wttf ti Ziegler was asked at a Camp David ne'fS brleflni today aJ:iout a report that the President bad been seen strolling al bis Catoctin MounUlln, hideaway attired In purple Oared.slockl. "! think Qared Is a li!Ue exaggerated," Ziegler replied. "Some of bia alacks don't have cuffs on them ... llc'a a regular guy.'' Wbat about the color? "I don't know about purple. Some of hl• slackl ar~ blue,1: rtcgler.rcplled. AiTeoting ollloere &aid McOJtcben !<>Id theOl he hid taken !O slecplntt pll~ In the hours beforo the kllllng. He alle8ed\r t<>I~ them he wu dlstrauaht beca"'° Mn. Hammtt hod ended their rolaUoosblp ,arU•r tbal evening. •Deeftl --11 •• 1 ....... ,... • •11""1•'"-l ' •• ,lutlff lJ. .,, , ....... ll«Wf 11. JI H " , I l I ..... ·' 111~. DtUfl'lblr 71 1972 Ul"IT ....... APOLLO 17 BLASTOFF After Three·hour O.l1y Apollo Coverage Pla1111ed Monday SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) -No more special lelecasts -0r the Apollo 17 flight are sched~ed by the three major networks until l\fonday when astronauts Eugene A. Ceman and Harrison H. Schmitt land on the moon and begin the first of three lunar ~1ploration1. Monday's schedule follows, all times Pacific Standard: CB$: 11:50 a.m., to noon; 8:30 p.m. to 9. NBC: 11:30 a.m. to Jandin; conclusion, scheduled about 11 :54 a.m.; 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.; 1:30 p.m. to 10:30. ABC: 11 :30 a.m. to conclusion of Ian· ding; 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. O ...... COAIT SC DAILY PILOT 'TM er..,. C..t'DAflY l"llOT, .itrt ~ It nrntlilMll IN H-·l"rft•, It ... 1111.111 W Ifie Or.,... Coast l'vbllsllf"' Cotftpl"f, S.- Fllle 9d.11*'9 ••• JllllollilMll, ,,.,......., ltlr..,P l'rWly, fw Co.It MeY, H...,_, ....._ """"""*' kkfll f-11;,, ...... .,. ............ 1Mc11. ltwlM/hdlltMc.lr. ,,,..,.S1n Cllmtf'lllf .... J-C.,ittr-A ll"!1'11 •I'll-I MlllM It _.llMll Sa!\lnll1y1 Mid Svnc11n. TN ,;tn.:IHI MlliP!lftg Pl.11'11 11 If UO Wut .. )' '"'-'• CO.la MllW, C.111«"'-, m». ltelllert N. W1M ~lal'ldP~JsMr J1c:li: It. C.rley 't'fc• l"ttllffnl ~ C-11 ~" lh•r1111 Ktt1'il .. .,, Th•••• A. M11tplti11t ~"" h <tw Ch•rl•• H. Leos •rchtr4 ~. Nill ............ M-a"" Edi,.,. S.. Ch 1 •••• OMq IOI H.r .. El C.rwi11e ~••I. t2672 --c.te Mee.1 JJI W.I ..., Strett ,,...,.,. itM.11: UD H.....-.1 ._....,. ...... ""'911 .. Kiii J l'1S ~ ~ U,.,... hectl1 nt ,_, A¥¥i.il , '4111••••• C714f MMl11 a ... ••••'""' M1.u11 S.G 1•1 Al ... I IW , ....... · ·~ Clll"l'l1llM. mt. OrlNltlt c.., ,,enllMe ~.,.. ... ...,. ................ ..... 'ti-....... ., .._.........,. ..,...... """ .. ,. .. .. ........ #«Ill "" ..,... • °""'""' .-. t::..l"Lr::" ......... It c..n .WW. w Ulf'tflr" ttll ,...._LW _.. U ,11 ....,..,, ~ ·-·•-iil-...;a -....... ".----- Condition Of Truman Improves KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Despite a \•eakened heart and labored breatbine. fonner President Harry s Truman. 89, rallied sharply today. Doctors said bis health was critical but bis daughter saki, "I have greal faith that he's going to come out ol this all right." Physicians attending the nation's 33rd chief executive iald their primary con· cem 'A'as \\'hether Truman's heart was strong eoough. "President Truman's condition is Im· proved, but his age &nd the potential of sudden change requires that be cooilnue to be described as critical," said a mt:dica1 statement today at Research Hospital. Truman rallied during the night and Dr. WaJlace Graham, his personat ,pbysi- cian, said. deterioration of his heart and lungs stopped early today and his vital signs stabilized. The tough little former President was rushed to the hospital Tuesday night suf- fering lung congestion. He had been ill for two weeks at his home in nearby Independence, ~to. before entering the hospital. His con- dition nrst was "fair," then fell to "serious" Wednesday and "critical" \Vednesday night. Truman 's wife, Bess, 87, and their only daughter, :11srgaret Truman Daniel, stayed by his bedside through the night, leaving the hospital at 5: 15 a.m. "I feel he ls much better," Mrs. Daniel said as she left. "He's sleeping normally and naturally. l have great faith that he's going to come out of this all right." Mrs. Daniel said she talked with Graham "and be says there Is definlle improvement.'' In the mid-morning meafcal statement by Graham, read by hospital spokesman John Dreves, it was reported that 11tbere was a dramatic change in the Jung and heart function characterized by a npid heart rate of 120 aod falling blood pressure of 00 over 60." Thia development during the night caused doctors to change Truman's con- dition fn:ln "serious" to "critical." "He became extremely short of breath and his kidneys were only mlnimaDy ef· fective from 1 p.m. until 9:15 p.m. Wednesday when be responded to medication," Graham said. "The former President's temperature is somewhat controlled but Ouctuating. It peaked at 102.8 at midnight. The major concern is still heart failure." 1n .. early medlcal statement today, Graham said, "vital signs coollnue to be stable as they have been during the night. Respiration and card.io functions are stable. .. " Grand Jury Sees Morale Problem At Med Center A major problem in staff morale exists at Orange Coonty Medical Center in the (I pinion of the County Grand Jury. A 10-page jury report released today found four areas of concern at the hospital. They are a position freeze in· stituted last August, a lack-Of evening and night supervisorial p e r so n n e l , arbitary decisions relating to nurse-pa- tient ratio, and Jack of meaningful com- munication at all levels or staff. The jury, following what was termed a minor complaint earlier ln· the year distributed a nine-point questionnaire to all 869 members of the nursing staff. About 74 percent r<Sponded. The jury report, signed by Foreman Otto M. SchmJdlen admJtted that a stati!tiC&l breakdown of the answers shows a aubstantlal percentage of positive respotlle, but concluded that ma- jor problems are apparent. Answers to one question seemed to contradict the jury's conclwkms. Nurses were asked, "if you have worked at other hospitals bow do you rate working for OCMC?" Of 337 responding. 48 perctnt rated tht medical center better than other placH, 23 percent tbe same and 24 percent worse. Seaman Found Guilty in Fire . NoRroLX; Vo. IAP) -A milltiry judp todaj '-I Seamu A_....,Jollroy Am. ll\llll)I ol ~ •.11botap Ind bmnltn•i. a -In the $7.killll<a lire aboard the aircraft carrier For- restal July 10. Military Judie capt. William E. Neely sentenced him lo five years in prison and a bad conduct cils- charge. The conviction of the 19-yeal'Old Oakland sailor maned the largest act of aabotage in naval history. Snow, Rain Lash Stat-e; Break Seen SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Snow, rain and bail lashed much of Northern califomia today, closing one major rood and making others hazardous, but the weatherman says there may be • break in the weather as the storm froot moves toward Southern California. . Heavy. snow by aunrtae forced closure of Highway 17 between Los Gatos and Santa Cruz., while HJghway 58 at Alta- mont Pass and 'Interstate 101 near the Oregon border were slippery and motorists were advised to carry chains. Decreasing showers wen forecast for the San Francisco Bay area with a chance of thundershowers with hail and some snow OD the peaks. By mornJnc two Inches of SllOW covered the tJp of ML Tamalpais in Marin County and light powder dusted the Santa Rosa foothlll5. The w..therman said It would be fair and cold Friday with lows ranging born .the mid 20I to mid 30s. . . The lnterlor VaJ!<)'ll Wo can upecl sbow.n tooJght and ...,. fog. Friday montlllg and poosibly ..... thtm· dersbowers with ball, the weatherman aaid. . ' Soow fell on Slcylloe lloulevard near San J09e, and the California Hlgb.way Patn>l said tow trucks ....,. beln& dis- patched to aid stuck motoriltl. The Weather Service said neoN>llzzard cooditi«us ...Wd oootinue to prevail Jn the Siem Nevada. There were Yl incbes of mow repOrted on Interstate 80 w.st of Duiner Pus. TltlJ1een fresh Inches ol snow fell during the night at Norden near·o..ner Pus ID lklegree temperatutt. Cbalna ..... ""l1llrid ... JDclmy 80 from Auburn to east ol Reno; on -.late Rl II cv.r CatlOll Paa whlcb wu ckis-ed temponrlly doe ,to blgla _, Ind on Highway $0 Ovtr Echo ~ A 12-unft apll'tment bcdM!oC WU evacuated In Lafayette -111ud .alld down • bill Ind llruck the f"Wl"'Y ·-· Mai\apr Truman Bry1n said no one WU [QJured. but the building "pn>bably will be total Joa." Denae fog moved into some areas or the San Joaquin Y alley early today drop- putg vlllblllty fo neu zero. It '1aa to be portly cloody this af. temoon with a cbanct of scattered showers. COid unstable •Ir accompanied by Sbowtrl WU expected to move •atward into the Valley today and may even Iring light snow to some areas tomorrow. Deo8e fog Is likely tonight and earlJ tomorTOW with IOIDe-areas remaining clear. Temperatures could drop into the 20s tooiglit cauoln( poosible fn>SI damage to agricultural intereals. Temperature! in the low to middle 30s were the nile in the valley thiJ morning with afternoon blgbs upected io the 40s and 50s, Light winds were ezpected with chances of showen diminishing after tonight. School Receives 700 Booklets About Flag Some 7llO pamphlell erplalolng the history of the American nag and the Pledge of Allegiance have b e e n distributed to students of Marco Forster Junior Jngh by the Clown Valley Ex· change Club. 'Ibe distribution of the information Is a part ol the club'• participation in the ... Ilona! "One Nation Under God" program ol the Exchange Clubs. Man Shot Twice, Slain At Night Club in Mesa A man free awaiting prosecution after being arrested on a burglary charge about three weeks ago was shot and kill· ed this morning under 1 I m 11 a r circumstances at t1 O>sta Mesa night club. The incident O«Umd at the Uttle Big 0, IM3 Placentia Ave., apparently whtn owner Ted Owens Arrived to open up the bar. Owens flrtd lbe fat.I ahots, police hid. William B. Kelly, 29, was shot at Jeut twite In the &ono area and d1ed ln Costa A-leaa t.lemorlal Hospltal about ?:45 a.m., acoordlng to medle41J pel"ICIMel. lnvestlgaton wel'f: still p I e c I n g together details of the slaying about mld- momlftR and detectives were unavalJable for additional lnformation. Owens, a lon&tlme Costa Mesa tavem O\\ntr who has occaslonaTiy tangled w1th ·' city officlaJJ, refUsed to dts<:usa the case. No tnlormatlon wu lmmedlately available about wbe.tbu Kelly WU armed when fatally lbol at Owens' UtUe Big 0 , a Jarc:e dub 111 ID tndu.l\rlal area, featur-- ing n1&ht.t1me clallclnf. c.sta M ... police amsted Kelly three ,. .. kl •P durinC ID alleced bur&lary at Musket and Sabre Antique Arms, 444 w. 1116h SL, ln-1gatora did not. today. 'l'be vktlm ol todJ7'1 fatal lllcldent w11 tatm lillo custod1 at pipolot by Jn. veatl11tlq Cll_ftcen appamtly reapon.. din.II: to a bw)1ar alarm that wu tripped. Jfe had -.. -.. ball pending prcltmlnuy •beariltJ on !bat burglary cbarrt. In Harbor Judicial Dlatrtct dOw1. Pdllce aid todJy lhq had no permane11l addi-eta for l\elly, ""°"' they believed to be a transient In the .,.... ---~ --. • GtmsMt l'icti11a Tustin Lawman's ' :~.Health Iinproves Tustin Pollet learned this morning that a fellow officer seriously wounded early Wednesday in a neighborhood gun battle bas paued the crisis point. Tustin Commua.lty Hospital officials tokl officer Waldron Karp's colleagues that his condition ls oOw "stable and rapidly improving. "He bad a good night," hospital <1,fr ficials said. "He is doing well and we . have high hopes of a complete recovery.'' Karp was operated on Wednesday for the removal of a bullet that struck the 31· year-old patrolman .i.n the slOmJch as be moved to intercept a rtnen1an now Iden· tified as Gary WUliam Johnson, 37, Tustin. , From Pflfle l APOLLO ... true course to slam into the ~loon's face Smday -while Apollo 17 is behind the moon -about 124-miles east of where Apollo 14 landed in 1971. 1be shock waves, equal lo the explos- ion of 11 tons of TNT, wtll be recorded by instruments left behind by previous moon crews. On l\tooday, Ceman and Schmitt are due to land on the lunar surface at mid· day, and about. four hours later to begin three days of exploration in a mount.ain- rimmed valley which planners hope will be more scientific.ally productive than any moon visit to date. At 7:20 a.m., doctors in mission control said biomedical signals from Ceman in· dicated he was asleep. The other two crewmen were not wear· ing senson, but doctors said from_ the lack of activity. aboard . the ship they, too, appeared to be asleep. Before the sleep period began, the as- tronauts dined on beef and gravy, chlckeri stew, ambroola, gingerbread and brown- ies. They were to be awakened at mid- afternooo after rive hours and 10 minutes of rest, to begin their second day in space ., Or maybe our Karp's gwi di.lcllarged as he fell to the sidewalk , the bulle_t hitting sberitf's dept.I· ty Ken Stewart, 27, in the face. Stewart underwent surgery in the same hospital and ls also "doing well" today . Johnson was fefled by shotgun blasts and handgun lire Iron. a 'l\Jslin patrolman working with Karp and a she.riff's deputy backing up Stewart. He was operated on for wounds in the h.md and met and Is recovering in Orange County Medical Center from tho6e Injuries. Johnson has been booked for assault with intent to commit murder and shooting at an occupied building. Tustin police "Id \he latter charge stems from Johnson · allegedly Bring several rlne shots into a home occupied by legal secretary Laetlcla --J-e a n O'Halloran, 30, at 13322 Diamond Head Drive. Police said Johnson fired several shots through the bathroom window and into the glass shower door of the fe!ideriCe in an apparent bid to force Mrs. O'Halloran t. open the front door. Pa1·ks District Terms Continued Terms (If office of aU tfive directors of the Capistrano Ba y Park aod Recreation District have been extended, the Board of Supervisors was told Tuesday. In a C<JmmunlcaUon to tbe board, the district said directors Jack Snipes. GeOrge Ballew and Sylvia Perez were nam\ld to serve until November tm. Directors Daniel Lelsinger and Miles Collins had their tenns extended to November 1975. The communication stated that the term& \\'ere continued under the pro- visions of the Uniform District Election law. The board members, informed that they had no jurisdiction in the matter, received and filed the report . low cost auto loans? How about our 5% Golden Passbook Account? Are extra banking hours the reasoq_? PossU,ly our drive-up teller windows? Fre•P.,eJ PARKING ... tile rn>Wtdwvrk f« a porldng dlalrict. The· nnt meetln& wu ~led for Tues- day at 7:IO p.m. In ClOllllCll cbamben with partlai-tnlflc 00lllllllssloo4rt ,00 aome -a--'· 'l1le compleinls beord Wednesday ranged from lack or ooUce from city ball when a curb would be painted red to asserted ovemactlng to a. minor traffic problem. Mark Marks, chairman or the ln- Ouential chamber commit~ told coun- cilmen that if the TOPICS plan were con- llWDni•ted along El ~ Real, It would deal a death blqw to downtown business. "lll>ny merchanlt honestly believe they would be put out of business if Ulese changes took effect," M said. · Local realtor Craig Strlc?J<land told councilmen that tho six·monlb' grace (Jtlrlod suggested by the advisqr)' com- m.ialioo was "a fonn ol blacUm.Q" to force buslnes.mlen to consent to a lpeclal parking district." ,.;- Local baolt manager W-.µi8"' g.1on also joined in dl!cussloos and ~ cooncllmen with sign8tUttS11 elecutw.. of the city'• major banklog "\W"'dm -IUppc>rtjag the eomplalnts by tbe~ chants. , The large petition was p....euted bY El Camino businessman Tcoy DIGIOVlllllJ, who stressed that the merchant! bad '1\rt· gestl!d their bloO<f" and sw .. nlitnl!tlj' shops." I "One thing hurts about t h'e1' dlscussions," said Holmes soon a - terwatds. · ''Thalls tbe1implicatioo that this co cil Is trying to butt the bullDess con!· mwtity. We know that without a busiJl!'S8 community, we don't have a city," he ad· ded. Foreign Aid Topic Of County Me~ting "Future Prospects for Fore1gn Aid" wtll be discussed by John A. Hawiah. ad- ministrator of the-~~ for Jlliema· tlooal Development l4!1>1 ,.t tonight's meeting of Ille orange Co911Y'j\lorld Af· £airs Coullci1 In Santa Msf.; - Hannat> is the fonner president of Michigan State University and bas arv- ed in the federal govehtment under presidents Truman, Eisenhower, Ken· nedy, Johnson and Nixon. The dinner meeting wOJ be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Saddleback Inn. our • $100 minimum personal eocount Georga, Me frlMldly Imper/al Bank Uon . ' ' • Whatever the reason , we 're growing by leaps and bounds. Our smiling tellers and prompt, efficient service seem to be just what our Orange County customers are looking for. m Hou~Dally 10AM to &PM Friday open tlll 8PM Drive-up Windows open 9AM ' •' er1a ' ANAHEIM Lincoln & Beach 821-5410 COSTA MESA Harbori& Fair 979-1000 SANTAANA 17th & Bristol 835-0f 51 So'o~ In the City of Orange Join us. We must be doing something right MlnN ,....,_. Depoatt lnlorance CorPoratlon, . ' . I I :.. ··~ l' alley High School Book Reports Out · At Media Center Dy MICHAEL GOODRICH ot t11e OllfJ Plltt lllft 11bls is the television generation. They've been into media all their lives. Now we're startlng t.o reach them through It." Warren Pendleton, dlrector or the Fbuntain Valley High School Medla Center. may soon be putting the traditional book report out of business. The book work is still there but It is being supplemented by new aids ln communication such as slides, cassettes, col· !ages and video tapes. These new aids to education are being made av aUAble through the recently com'.. pleted media center on tb$ Fountain Valley camp u B 1 which Pendleton helped to design. The media oenter, which i1 an $718,000 "1"'nsioo of the school library, l! geared to permit the students U> espl°"' a subject t1uwgJJ variout communlcaUon devices made available in the media pn> ducUon room. Tbe school was able to purcliase many of the new media supplementll from a • 1138,000 federal grant which tt -.... s DAJLY PILOT 2 !,! BOI Jrl~IQI J E t:l .. t :i\NEllS AlTtlATIONS & llStTUH& POI 'AITK:Ul.Al LADllS Warn~r-Dale Centet• Corner of W•rner & Sprlngdele1 Huntlrt9ton Beech 842-2050 PACIFIC COAST COUNSELING CENTER Oft Jan_.-, ZZ, 1973 wrn oi-Ill SOUTH LAGUNA OFFICE* at 31706 Coast Highway. Suite 401 Soutti i..,.... 497-2955 to be GpH Day., heofll<Js alld WHl<ends speciali1in9 in ;:=-=-=-=======:;1 won Iasl sprtng. , Also included in the es:- REFLECTIONS panslon of the library are the addltiO!l ol E!lg)Jsb, 80cial EXPERIMENTAL GRASSES, PLANTS IN SOUTH COAST FIELD STATION VIEWED DURING FIELD DAY UC Irvine Scientist' Vic YoUnver O.srlbes Turf •t Irvine Site to Young Visitors Older Adults, F1mili•s, Couple1, Groups, Children, lndividuels , .. Adol•scents end Parent .Effectiveneu Treinin9 Cl(lss111. ,, studies and fine arts resource ----~-----­ Reyn Sheffer " Steven S. WlM Ar. an American rabbl, born in Hungary, Steven Wise may have had more opportunity to share in the jo)'I and aor· rows or other people than most or us. He may also have had occaslon to observe the emptiness of unshared lives and thus lnspitl'd to make the observation quoted above. No matter how great our ~uccesses, how much materi- al wealth we accumulate or what plnaclc• of po11ltlon we achieve, we derive very little a.tlsfactlon unless we can share our success with those who care about us. Sharing worb both ways. No disap. polntmcnt Is as ijti!Bt, no failurt' as overwhelming, If •hattd. \Ve hope you \\'ill look upon us as a friend Jn need. ready and able to help you through dltncult times. ~H€FF€R mok'TU.\JIY LAGUNA IEACH 976 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY 4t4-15JS SAN CLEMENTE 15)) NORTH El CAMINO «EAl. 4f2·0100 rooms. The center will also in· corporate the school guidance room. Tho mooilpniductlon room is the middle of excitement in the new complex. Here stu- dents wttb assignments In various flelds can come arid design a mulU-media project. One student assllJlled to do a report <rl the coastline initia- tive checked out a camera from the center and with the help' of one of the media supervisors took slides show· ing different ruipects o f • shoreline development. After assembling his slides, he then taped hl.s presentation on a cassette and the whole report was made to the class without using one written word . students are also instructed on how to inake collages, transparencies, apd movies on various topics they would like to research for their classes. Plans also are underway to have busi.neis cla956 monitor the morning stock reports via television and make daily predictions on Wall street ac- tivity. 'l1le media center a I so Inv o Ives participation of parents. One student is in the process of building a computer with bis rather. The mini-com· fl"ter will eventually be Jliaced in the center to aid students with the math pro)ects. A sound film strip library is part of the media center. Here student. may check out film ·l!lriflll augmented by ,-. that cov,.. sub]<ctJ ranghig from history to science . ..................... llmlllll From Iha man WhO brouahl roil The Lale Oreal Planet. Earlh. You read his mUHon- copy beslsetler. The Late Grea/ Planet Earth. Now follow Hal Lindsey into !he frightening realm of the occult Rnd other-workj s::iiritism. Is there a nelherland of wandering spirits? Is it possible to contac1 lhat world? Gan the future be acclJl'ately foretold in this life? What about the phenomenal rise In satanism? Demon possession? Witchcraft? You'll l1nd these and other subjects uncoY9rec:I in Incredible <'etJll in lhe chaP1ers: Perilous Tide From the Olher Side: 8111h ol tt·.a Black Prince: "D" Day Earth: Three-Dimensional Warfare; Angels of LiQht; Diagnosing Possession-: plus many more. Sa1an Is A/Ive And Well On Planer Earth, new from Hal Lindsey with Carole Carlson. A.stunni,,g, authorilalive feport that is certain to make a bel'l6'Vef out o!you. At bookstores everywhere ln CIOth, $4.95: Paoer, $2.25. Supplemenlary 32-page sludy guide. S.75. LIGHTHOUSE CHRISTIAN STORES 1001 PINI -DOWNTOWN Sprint St. at hUflowW 11¥4. (Just North of San Dlejj;o Freeway) LONG llAC:H IOOKS e lllLIS e MUSIC e Ol"S e CAIDS O,IN l·I (M SATUIDAYS) .1111m .................. .. Edison High Set,s Comedy Production Tickets are now on sale for the Edison High Schnol com· edy production "Goodbye Charlie" to be pregented Mon-. day through Dec. 15, in the school theater. The play, which will begin at 8 p.m., deals with a man who is relncarnated as a woman and must make a series of blDllorous adjusbnents: to this new situatlo.n in life. Tickets are now available at the Edison financial office and will be sold at the door. Pricea are: adults, Sl.50; students, $1 , and children, 75 cents. g (fi'4Pla,1~ Glm FOR CHILDREN OF ALL AGES A Mloctecl dealer for Creative Playthings (!0 y1at• ... -Soptal\O in th• ••v .of C Two otta.,•• .. Pt11tl11 12Y." let1t F-0641/R:SIO v•ar1 ..... lnll•t<1bl• 2 P<lttl .., .,11,fle SO" hlth F02.40 GLENNEYRE1 LAGUNA BEACH . - We have a flexible fee. UCI 'Grows Its Own' Main Office-713 S. Pacific Coast Hwy. RedOftdo leach -· tz13 I 376-5759 *Open House: Febrr.tary 11, 1973 1 ~3 P.M. Scientists Testing Greenery of Future Public Invited to meet our steff. j f I § • I Order now for H1urod Chrl1tmH delivery • Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers FURNITURE OUR GREAT NEW DINING AND/ OR GAME SET, BUTCHER BLOCK DESIGN TABLE AND LEATHER- LOOK SWIVEL CHAIRS. This bright new RB d .. lgn looks twice Its ptlce In sly~ Ing, material• and quality. The stunning and practlcal 42" table on a heavy wrought Iron base, and four awlvel based c hairs upholstered In heavy grained vinyl with the look and feel of tealher. New season colors. The set with 1 tr exrenslon leaf table, also B'lsllable, '329. QWROOM ITOREI LOS ANCll[S: 6121 Wllshlre Blvd. Mi11tlt1 Mitt: 11()40 W. Pieo Biwd.; U40 S. Western Ave. ANA EIM: 1672 ~. Lincoln IAllE.ISFlllD: 3010 Mln1 A'Vf. CHULA VISTA: -476 8tOICfw" CLAREMONT/POMONA: 232 (.foothill COVINA: 945 N. Azvsa OOWN[Y: 9435 [.Firestone lL CAJON: 188 N. Johnson Ave.(Soon ~ Gl[NOAl L 333 N. C!nlrll Avt. WIUDA HILLS: 10100 Bllbo1 Blvd. HUNTINGTON IEACH1 19431 Beach Blvd. LA HABRA! 1720 W. wtilttltr l OlfC llACJf: 21!9 La•ewood BIWd. MONTEREY ,AR~: 415 $. Atl•ntlt Btwf. 'WOEICA: 85 S. RosemeMI •IVERSIO[: 10.000 M11noll1 SANTA ANA/TUSTIN: 1703 E. 17th St. SAN llRNARDINO: 999 S. "["St. SAN DIEGO: 7475 Cl1iremont Mfl$t Blvd. !Soon~ SOUTH BAY: 15533 S. CrtnshJw Bttd .. THOUSAND OAllSi 2« Thousa~ Oaks Bflld. VtNlUR.\i 3409 ltfttr1ph Rd. WOObtAICD Hit.ts: ZZ223 Vt1nlur1 Blvd • ...,,, 0.-.l'S A Wl[JI . Wf[KOAYS 10 UNTll J · IATVltDA'f to UfCTll •·SUNDAY l:l!JO UN Tll f . rltll •Alt1UNCll • '"'' DlCOAATo.1 Sllt\l!Cl. '"'' oruvvtT . c;ONVlNJll'tT IANK Tl'""I ' I .. 4 •• Zf DAILY PILOT SC Air Bag in Autos Ruling 'Deflated' CINCINNATI. Ohio (AP) -,.--------. A fedtral aiurt temporarily has deflated th< prote<:tive airbags the fccll'ral govem- menl had ordered all U.S. 1utomalc:tn to install in their new can beginning in 1975. Tile 6tb U.S. Circuit Court of Appeala ~as ruled that the Na- tional Highway Traffic Safety Administration must redesign testing procedures for the alrbags, known in offic.ial terminology as passive, or automatic, restraint devices. TREY ARE designed to in- nate automatically and pro- yide a safety cushion for passengers in motor vehicles Which strike other objects with a certain level of force. Man- datdry Installation had been ldieduled for A\li. 15, 1975. 1be court's 2-1 decision ordered the inst al I a t ion deadline "delayed until a reasonable time after" new testing procedures are devis· ed. ChrysJer Corp., American Motors Corp.. Ford Motor Corp., Jeep Corp. and 'the Automobile Importers o f America had appealed the NHTSA's March 1971 safety. standards ruling. THE COURT took note of automakers' {'(lmplainls that present airbag testing pro- e Acq11isitlon LOS ANG~S -Security Pacific Corp., parent company of Security Paci!ic National Bank, disclosed it is con- sidering a pro~ to acquire Midwestern Financial Corp., a .Denver-based firm engaged primarily in mortgage bank- ing. e Oil Fine JUNEAU, Alasaka -Stand- ard Oil cl Califorriia has been fined $10.000 In a massive oil spill last September a t A n c ho r a g e International Airport. Atty. Gen. John Have!ock TOU CAN TAKE US FOl GRANTID • • . "" a ... 1c: f.U C.-Wr•'* O...r Southwick Twlll ll•1tr $125 ltd Swt•ltr Vttt ly Polo $2.2.SO T1tttrs•l1 'l•nntl Shirts $19.SO • Fall 72 Gur, Llvlngstan, Ltd. 111111/IJI IA~:~~.::.~·1 { OVER· THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST ' • I \ I Thur~day's Closing PrietS-Complete New York· Stock Exchange List Another Record 1 Falls on Market 'f NEW YORK (AP)-AJded by some of the blue- chip i3sues, the stock market pushed ahead Tb-.. day, in active trading, for the se<..'Ond consecuUve day. The Dow Jones averaae of 30 lnduatrlal stocks, which 381 another record cloilng blgb Wednesclar at 1,027.54, atayed on the plus llde throughout the BeSS!On and aet another closing blgh; -- Advancing Issues on the New York Stock Ex- change led losers, but by a nUTOwer margin than on Wednesday. ... · •• . I . - SC DAILY PllDT Zi_ • l • • • ' Z<t DAll.Y PILOT Taxpayers File Suit OnBA.RT SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A $100..mlllioo class action suit has been filed against the troubled Bay Area Rapid Transit District and others. alleging "negligent" design of the $Lt.billion project • s automation system. The Superior Court suit also names as defendants the Westinghouse Electric COrp., which installed the system's automatic train controls, and the Par son s Brinckerhciff. T u d or·Bechtel engineering cotisu1tant combine. 'Ibe plaintiff is San Fran- cisco attorney Milton Stern Jr. on behalf of taxpayers in the (CONSUMER) three-county district where the 7S..mile system has been built. Currently. a 28-mile leg of the system is operating from Oakland to Fremont. e 1Ueas11re Loses SA"""l:AAMENTO (AP) -A move to treat companies like people as far as state taxes are concerned has been killed in the state Senate. Sen. John NejedJy's propos- ed constitutional amendment would have deleted the two- thirds vote required in the Legislature to raise taxes on a corporation, bank or insurance company and allow them to be hiked by a simple majority vote. The Walnut Creek Republican's measure was defeated on a 17-21 vote. e T"'o Charged LOS ANGELES (AP) Two Los Angeles area men have been arrested by FBl airents on a six-eount federal if}(iictmP.nt acrusin11 them of defrauding the Bank o f America of more than $3 million under the pretense thev planned to use the money to recover cooper cable from the ocean bottom. The FBI said Robert D. Pollock, 45, of L<lni;z Beach and attorney Kenneth N. Oellamater. 60. of Canoga Park were arrested a n d cha~ed with conSPiracv. mail fraud and aidin~ and abetting criminal violations. Edward D. Snead. 48, of Sun1and, a fonner Bank of Amerlra vice oresident, plead- ed ruilty earlier to two counts of issuing credit and loans to Pollock and Dellamater witlloot authoritv In return for sas.ooo in kickbacks. He ls awaiting sentencing. e Appeal St11dled LOS ANGELES (AP) -The l.o.s Anireles Unified School Di.strict is considering whether to appeal. an order to promote and pay lost wages to a woman security al(ent lt a 11 e g e d I y discriminated against because of her sex. Angte L. Holland, .a n emp~ of the district for 19 .. )'Mrl, said that in June, 1971 she was denied a position as oupenlslni security agent. even thoUgh she was first on Ille ollglbllity list, because she ls ' woman. The Rite's Fair Employ- ment PractJce Commission or4<ftd Ule district lo pro- -Jin, Holland 10 • -tlloi 1 poet and pay ber .. Jn loll ....... e (:-er Razerd LOii ANGll:L£S (AP) - UCLA lo ....,..In& .,bestoe from ~ 'Cfll\np tioi 1 It bli -termed by .... _, .... 111_ ... ,...... ~ bawd to •d ,, Dr. Jlorold B"""', 1he aalftltltJ'I eavt....-i ....... _, alllcer, llld .............. ---In ,, ~·:J>i., n:::..::. i •• • -· Th<indoJ, -7, 1972 , ( WCI.flt ~=--=-~· l./N·IROOK ' HOUDAY llOUIS -• .SAT. '100 AM "' 9!00 PM SUN. 9:00 AM lo 6100 Ml Christmas· Special! BEANBAG-CHAIR __ "The Perfect .. Glft for Anyon-Any Room!" •Top quality leatherette beonbog:in your ckoice of colors -i~st right for _ relaxing. • Pick one up ~reach member of the family-they'll love 'eml SOLD ~HIR! FOR. t19.99 . $999 WOWI h . -¥ SAVE $10.001 . 112" Thick -Regulation Size PING . PONG c TABLE TOPS • Two piece table, top--makes· into. regulation size< 5 ft. x_ 9•ft. top •. • Tough particle board with official green finish-invite a Chirt,se foreign e.xchol;lge student for dinner( .ilG,.$8.99 -$5:~ ' ' •. SAVE $3.001 ' Al~ ··- ewe ~llAHDU STAYS COOi. -., YALVI J!T ••• DITAKU • t- 11With A free Motor & Spltl11 •It's from Char-lrol .. , '°you kn-It's the best-·and fhe,best bar-b-q buy this yea.rt • Ellmlna'ft!s wood-carrying, llghter fluid, charcO:Pl .and messy ashes forever! •.¢.0111plet11 ·w1.,,, ~"' no411t;ba,e_ • · !19t1nanjtnt brlqyets -AND a ,..._. motorized: rotliserlell . . • Wjt ~ock everYfhlng you need to lnstqll It yourself. REG. $109.99 SAVE '40.001 WOW! ·TNEf fREA TEST ARRAY OF CHRISTMAS DECORAl/ONs · ANYWHERE! ~ . . .. -......_ ' 36'' Dlamet!I" SNOW TREE SKIRT • Encircle your tfM with a swirl of sm>wy white, • White cotton looks like drifted snow. REG. 79c lt... Llf ..Uk• POINSETIIA ''Ute Trocfl,._of Chrl1frrto1 •lowerl'' • For beoutlful centerpieces, mont.is--outllne yoiJr doors & windows. • Your choke of red orwfli••· RIO, 151 ftc 711. Chrl1tma1 REPLACEMENT LAMPS • Replace tho1e bumttd-out bvlb1I • Your choice of all the colors In C7 'h Indoor and C9 y, ovtdoot, RIO. 71 RIO. 9c .Sc 7c . en•·,_ u v. - 6 OL Spray PINE TREE SCENT • Hone1t-to-goodness forest fragrance is perfect for artificial k'ffS, wreaths, etc. • 6 oz. aerosol can of fr.sh traditional Chrittma1 fragrance. UG. 69c 4t JumloePack , ICICU-EL ''l.oftly As A froz ... 'W ... rfolfl'' • HundNdt of shimmer- ing 1trand1 per pack- 11" long-fli.imeproof . . l RIO. ftc 29< 7 '1'111: . / I 1a~A- SPRAYSNOW • A mini blluord that ttkb' to most ony surfoc.e but h easily remov.d • • for wreaths, trHt, omomtnts & windows. RIG.ate 2ftc 7no.. Stunly -· .. ' \, LIVE TREE STAND >· • 6" water basin to ke"p the Christmas greenery fresh. . ' •·Non-tip: hotds all trffs up, to J~·· trunks. RIO. f?c 6t SOtowyWll ... .. I ANGEL HAIR . '"'The stvH-Dreant• Are s,.... Oii'' ' I I _, • Perfect for all types of Chrl1tmo1 decorations, •Top quality1 U.S. mode ; . wlth.spu~ Q._,.,_. • Big '2 01, box. ·',-·ate ·29' 1 ; 'Lit11t· ltMIMr MIDGET LITE SET • Cototfvl, oslOf'fed butbt hav. petol-eypt •etlectot. •>Push-In r.ploe99ble lamps 1 ~ • Comptete with apore1 . bulb and, flasher, • A 99< VALUE .- 15.ft;'-9 TINSEL fllWID • Drape on tr-.s,. Montef, 1 paekag.,__;~Of~QOr•I • Choke of glitt«ing hotid"ay c•......O's ftdinep.ooft · UG. 69c . WOWI ~ .251 . . •. .. 1 ~ .... SNOW FLOCK ' ''C ...... Yow Own Snowfolll'' • Sparkling white, flon)e retardant snow ftock inv sticks to most 1ul"foce1. .~ Will cover up to a 5 ~tree, RIO. 99c -- 6t DECORATIVE SNOW • Laob like r.al 100• dings to 'f04>' tree and lttOtf 1urfoc:es. • Eotity cltoned fTom any surfoc'......,.n-toxk, won't horm skil\. no. c9c VAUll 29' .... ;., •• ••• •• .. • . • ~ ..; •• • .. • . . • ·: • · . • . '• .. . :· • • •, :: • .. •• .. •• • . ., :· :· • • .• • . • I ~ ~ I I I I ( I ' \ ' L r ! I I 1 · I (l ! • .... .... 011a Heaeh Today's Flw•I E o..I T l-0 N N.Y. Stocks VOL. 65, NO. 342, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE coll~, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1972 • TEN CENTS : ' Laguna · ·v a¢ertl-,.f'rona Here to Apathy . . By CANDACE PEARsoN showing" at the polls. ot .,. ~IY ,,.., '''" On special eleeUons, Koch said, voters Many Lagunafl!I were intensely con-are ofteJ;I, more apathetic and turnouts " cerned about Tuesday's special election 1 17 to ts percent are expected by school to recall two members or the Laguna officials. . Beach , ~ Board and are still But Koch did add that on isolated cases speculattiig today about why on!y 35 pet· of concern, 50 to 60 percent of the voters cent of the registered voters turned out. have TeSpooded. . AD erperienced achpol election watch-. ~ A lot of Lagunana thought that this - er, rrcd Koch , ass ls tan t county _,the question of who should govern 1tbe superintendent of 'schools, said today that schools. -was such an issue. 35.per:ceOt i.s.r&etuaU.y consltfered ,"a good .Witb the recount going on, the' election . . na is still alive but in 'a few voien' minds, it was never even born. "I didn't even know there was-an elec- tion," one man said "What was it about?" The traditional reasons -''I was sick," "J was too tirtd," '"L was busy mOviu~ ·to a new liouse," -were given by many non-yoters today. But a.-rwm~r of others were mor'e vocal BboUt their reluclance · to . pass ballots on the recall or not-recall of . \ ' lnJst ... Gerald Linke and Patricia Glllelte. They basically divided into two camps: those that felt they badn't kDown enough to vo~ and those who were "disgusted" with thL! recall or with recalls in general. "I iouldn't undersiand what all the fUSI was about," remar~ one while. haired man in a Forest Avenue coffee shop. . "I know I ·shoWd have voted.'" said one ~ ELECl'ION, Pqe.z1· B . . tts1nessmen • Charged on Bookmaking Additional -·Arrests 'Likely' A Laguna Beach bartender and a . downtown barber ·were arre:stea 'I\le:sday .. felony ~. allegi!ig bookmaking ' ll!1CI 1f81<ri1!c activities. • • • toglma Iieacb 'Det. SCI. N<lI Purtell Dow You Voted . , Linke Rec~ll !. 290 Ledroit 73 161 2. Emerald Fire Station 47 88 3. 265 San Joaquin St. 60 67 4. 289 Wave St. 8L 123 5. 393 Myrtle St. 47 78 6. 361 Holly St. 82 118 7. 21J2 Cypress Ave . 49 84 8. St. Mark's 40 63 9. American Legion 102 88 10. No. Campus, LB j!igh 90 96 11. Thurston 80 97 12. LB High 75 75 13. 996 Glenneyre St. 109 126 14. 1455 Santa Cove St. 114 82 15. Agate Fire Station 80 71 16. Agate Fire Station 109 81 17. 426 Nyes PL 109 73 18. 1149 Noria St. 98 31 19. Lutheran Church 1&7 67 20. 1875 Temple Hills Dr. 148 90 21. 1320 T~mple Hills Dr. 58 75 22. T.O.W. School 115 59 23. 30802 S. Coast Highway 26 131 24. Aliso School ' 54 72 25. 31553 West St.. So. Lag. 75 90 26. 31740 4th St., So. Lag. 112 62 27. 22711 Vista Del Sol, So. Lag. 28. 50 S. LaSenda Dr., 97 76 So. Lag. 95 94 29. El Morro School 54 104 30. 315 Harold Dr. 64 82 31. 475 N. Coast Highway 35 72 32. Boys Club 43 19 . 33. 3173 Mia Laguna Blvd. 148 83 34. 2986 S. Coast High.way 36 18 ''roTAL'! 2,818 2,824 .c • • • 0 • v 27 IB 6 3D 22 11 15 19 28 24 24 17 24 23 19 17 22 21 24 30- 23 11 2 15 15 7 9 15 19 19 13 -a 34 9 819 • • "' • ·" " ~ 76 49 57 85 49 61 45 42 99 90 86 76 172 110 77 104 107 91 160 144 58 114 24 53 68 104 93 86 54 68 39 42 i-44 32 2,758 Giiiette Recall v .. -No- 69 162 45 91 58 67 79 125 46 75 82 115 47 67 40 63 95 66 65 96 69 109 77 74 109 126 109 86 60 68 111 77 103 74 93 35 150 74 146 91 57 73 111 61 24 124 53 73 76 87 112 61 87 79 92 96 51 106 66 82 36 67 42 21J 150 81 35 19 2,738 2,810 .: • .. • .... 81 54 60 96 .53 91 51 49 102 97 87 ' 78 116 113 85 120 114 102 170 !SS 69 121 24 SS 78 109 68 92 64 81 43 42 161 37 2,984 said today \b<, .,,..ts """! Patt, of a eon-. cerled ~ operatloo, an opera· . iT ~ ' £.:' l .-~7.'t:rE...,==-t ~gU1lfl'i1f ,~·ttJSe two arrests More arrests are likely, Recall Time's Vp Pur<eD all · .• 1be ,.,. ~1ne1te11 1 are "Kent HAU Willard, aO, ol 119312 Los cruces, J.aiu11a Nignel, a bart<JDder in dowoto,WTI ~ Beach; and Raul· Lopez Campos, 32, of 2'180 VlctQl1lj ,«;ID_e, J.!!&11118 Beach, a barber. "We placed the agent in the various places, He picked up on the action and bought up tbe football cards from whoever would-sell them," Purcell said. "We do expecl lurlber amsts. There are a lot of people involved in tbi's., The undetcovU operation was becoming known, so we"thought we'd better move," Pancho the parrot seems to be saying "catch me .if you can" atop his perch on a Laguna Beach park· ing meter. It has expired but he was unruffled. Looking·on is his owner Bud Keyser, a familiar For- est Avenue figure, .who has acquired a ·companion for Pancho. His name is Fido. be said. . Sgt Purtell said the activity Involved sales of "football cards" for both college and pro football games. CUstOmers were to identify possible winners of upcoming games and circle winning, numbers. Two games out of a possible 90 were involved, . '. Nixon ,Sewcts Union 'Oil Aide For Cabin et Po st . . CAMP D~VID, Md, (UPI) -Pr'esldent NbOD completed bis ca&lnet overhaul to- day by naming Claude Brinegar, 49', a Los Angeles oil company ezeculive, as TransportAUon secretary. BrLoegar, who bol(f$ a doctorate in economicr am likes fast cars, will sue. coed John A. Volpe who Is becoming U.S. ambassador to Jtaly -a post he wanted. The appointment Is to be the last Cabinet face change to be announced by Nixon but other sw~ches at the sub- Cablnct level are antictpat~ for the second term. The reaJ)pointnlent of J;lichard · G. Kleindienst as attorney ieneral is expected to be announced Frk day. · White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, who announced the latest ap- pointment -wli1ch ts subject to Senate COl)ilrmation -uid Brioegar, -45, a senior vlce president of Union Oil Co., is "a very qualified manager and executive in the bualness world. '1 Ziegler lavished praise on b o th B"-1 and Volpe and noted tllaL Volpe . would become the first Italian-American to bud the U.S. mission In Rome. 11Wben Secretary Volpe takes up this Important dlplomatk: post he will be rotndng a journey that brought hit own parentl to this country as penniless lm~ rnf.Rrants at the tum or the century," Ziegler IOlcl. Of Brlne1ar, Zlealer ••Id: ''I dOn't know wbat la meant by the tttm 'oll mari' but Mr. Bdn"8tr ~ not an oil llWI . Re 11 a very capable mana11r. His area or qualUl<f.tlon g .. s to the management of people.'. BrtOt&or lived briefly In the late 1950I In )'orba Linda, Nixon's ~lrthplace. • :Police -St~tion Crowded,·-he said. Purcell characterized the local arrests: as persons uway dOwn the totem pole." He said the arrests were 'part of an in- creasing drive by Southern California lawmen to clamp doWn on betting opera· lions. He cited activities in Los 'Alamitos • • ' . . But City · IJall Has Room and Los Angeles. · The Iocatdepartment had received in· formatioo that wagering activity was being conducted in the city and had sent for an out~f-town underoover agent. By JACK CHAPPEIL or ,._ DfillY !"lilt St.ff QUESTION: What Is ciivernous ·and comfortable and d~ nothlrw Six days a week! ANSWER: 'lbe Laguna Beach City Hall chambers. QUESTION: What is small and cramped and works like crazy 24 hours a day, seven days a week? ANSW.ER: The ~year-old Laguna Beach Police Depart· ment facility. Problems of the overcrowded PoUce Department, where five detectives share a· tiny ofiice, where o£flcers drew up re~ amid other actions and where clti.1.e$ yis.lting the front deskt are sub-· jeeted to a barrag:e of radio calls, were ouUined for the council by PG!fce Chief J°"!Ph J. Kelly. MORE Kelly noted that many of the department's supplies, kept In a catwalk behind jail cells, were swamped recently "be• a inaner stuffed clotblni In a Joilel' and &oded the jall. He said that every available space Jn the)acillty wa1 being put Jo.,., but that the department had outgrown me apoce available and had even reached Into the Agate ·Street fire statton for storage of OlELL, 1'¥E GOT 17 ~g PAY5 lt>.GET'f'REsENts · fOR ALL MV fl\IE!-105! ,, , . ' . . 1 some records. The chief said more space was needed. One Of the suggestions was that the big chambers used'by the City Council ~nd othergovemment~ bodies of the city be turned over to Qiie city st8ff and that poHce operations expand there. The chambers, too,· when constructed were built so that a second level could be added. But, what of the council, and other city governing bodies? Mayor Charlton Boyd suggested they all could use the Festival of Arts Forum for meetings. "This certainly is not an economic use • o!' the square footage," Boyd said as his eyes swept around the huge chambers. For many years, the South Orange County Municipal Court used · the chambers on a full·time basil and such a move would not have been possible. With construction of the Laguna Niguel (See STUDY, Page I) Arts and Crafts Show Set. Friday Laguna Beach High School's Arts 8lld Crafts show wt't ope1. at 7:30 p.m. Friday et the school gallery, adjacent lo the auditorium. The show continues Saturday at 7: so p.m. and will be open to the public Monday throuah Dec. I~ from 12:40 Jo I: 3t p.m., school lunch !*'iod. Represented are student painting•, drawings, leather crafts, pottery, weav· Ing end ~welry. Works will be available fol' purchase. P11rple? Maybe Ziegler Describes Nixon's Slacks CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) -Culfleu, yes, Flared, no. Purple, perhaps. That's the rundown on President Nllon'1 1lackl from White Rouse press secretary Rooald L. Ziegler. Ziegler wu a.sted at a camp David news briefing today about a report that the President had been ac<n strolling at hb Catoctln Mountaltl hideaway autred In purple flared ~acu. . • "l think !Jared 11 a little .. aggerated," ZJeclar replt.d. "Somo 41 bis slacks don't have cults OD them , .. He's a regular BU1·" • What about the color1' "I don't kn<>w about purplo. some or his slack! are bfue," Zlealefreplled. I H• ..,,,;; c·tA e ..,. • ' • Contest Still in Limbo The cliff.hanging Laguna Beach recall election continued to hang today pending the recount of ballots 'wtiicb apparently have retained trustees Gerald Linke and Patricia Gillette in office. 1'ht election will not be certified until the recount of ballots has been com- pleted, officials of the county Registrar of Voters office saki today, 'nlat recount, requested by at least four registered voters who told officials they were on the side of the two truitees, will begin Friday morning and may be comprered by close of business, or will conUnue Saturday until all ballots have been recounted. Unofficial returns indicate that or 16,00'.t regiktered voters in the school district's 34 precincts, about ~ perCe:nt of those registered actually cast ballots. The question of recalling Mn. Gillette received 5,549 re.Sponses with those voting against her recall carrying the qudUon by 12 votes. Llnke was apparently retained in office by six votes as 5,642 persons voted on his recall. In a curious twist, the affidavits re- quired for the recount were apparenUy filed by supporters of Mrs. Gillette and Llnke according to Roland aMilhot, filth supervisorial elecUon division chief. Mailhot said any registered voter of the district could file an affidavit for a recount . Jury Selection In County Death Tr.ial Delayed Jury Selection In the Orange C4lunty Superior Court murder trial of a Dana Point man was delayed today to enable the trial judge to prepare his ruling on a series of pretrial motklnJ. Judge Walter Chllramza said he will rule Monday on de£ense rootioM ror .sup- pression of evidence against Thomas Bradford Ml'O.ltchen, 50. of 33821 Olinda SI .. and will then commence the jury selection process. McCutctmi ·11 accused of the killing last Sept. 5 of Mrs. Virginia Lee Ham· mett, ~ of 1121 B Wave St., Laguna Beach. . .. Laguna Poik:e ~lied to tbe sctne by n<J«hbors who heard llhootlng said Ibey found McCutchtn standing over her body oo the front lawn. A..,...tlng o!licen aald McC\J>chen told them-he·had-talten 30 1le<J>ing pll~ in >he hours bo!ore tjle -lllil1g. He allegedly told them he was dlltraught because Mrs. •rammtt had ~ thelr relationshlp earlier that evenina:. ~ The $400 cost of the recount will be borne by the school district. Mailhot said three teams of four persons would be called in to recount the recall ballots. His office today was matching records of numbers of ballots cast, and precinct tallies in a canvass of the election, normal procedure to certify an election. One precinct board which did not prop- erly fill out official forms was called back into the Registrar's office Thursday for an official recount of their ballots. Mailhot said the official count matched the unofficial one. Defense Witness Guilty of Ly ing SAN DIEGO (AP) -A defense witness in the trial of a reputed Secret Army Organization member has been convicted of perjury. Calvin H. F'ox. 43, of El Cajon, was found guilly by Superior Court Judge Bonsall Noon Wednesday or lying under oath during the October trial of William F. Yakopec. , Yakopec, described by police as a member of the right-wing peramilltary group. was convicted of bombing art adults"nly movie house and auaulting a: police officer. Orange We atlte r The weatherlady say! It will be partly cloudy on Friday, with cooler temperatures a I o n g the coast. High.! expected lO reach 60 degrees. Low1 tonight. 35-43. lNSIDE TOD~Y the Orange CoUNlll P re 1 s Club takt• a group of under· privileged children to Disne11- land each year. Writer A.rt Vin.- sel recalls thil t1t4r-'1 visit to tlie Magic Kl11gdom fn 11 too:rm Chrtrtma& storu °" Paoe 10. L.M. ..,.. t C.it._... J Clhtllltll Jl-# C""!n )Cmtt t1 CrMt..... U DM!tl """°' " litllW .. I I"... ' e11~--.. ,,.. Plllltltt IJ,, •·JS Ptt JM ltKfl'f ''· ,, ,_ M AMt L....... 1' • • I • • I I I• I I t •' • • . ' i ... DAILY PILOT LB -· ,.. __ ;;_c:::,::.:_ __ : Delp Sought '17' Astronauts L~guna Seeks Citizen Aid Riglit on -arget "'-lll!i _..1s a Diblleal ad· ....... "'ln\'Oh~ llQ' critic"' may turn out to be a polilieal rt1.lity i.n Laguna Beach as the dl7 malls formation of a rillzen' budget c."OOlfll1ttee to chart the course of future <!l:Y SJl'lldlni. .. ll'1 tlmt. it'!I really tune to start 111· '~ tbost people who have been aC'· Uw u criucs." Councilman Carl Jabmaa said during a recent session at wmcb the format)()fl of the conunittee -....dl.......i. 'l'be council see1ned to agree with J 'itatement by Mayor Charlton Boyd that a k>t of people in the city would J1k.: Snow. Rcii1i , Lasli State; reak Seen SAN FRANCISCO (i\P) -Sno""'· r:tin and hail lashed n1uch of Northern California todny. closing one major roa d and making others hazardous. but the weathennan S3\'S there may be a break in the wealht'r as the slo nn front moves toward Southern Californ ia. Heavy snow by sunrise forced closure of-Highway 17 betv.·een Los Gatos and Santa Cruz. \\'hile Highway 58 at Alta· m<mt Pass and Interstate IOI near the Oregon border \\'ere slippery and motorists Wl're advised to carry chains. Decreasing shov.·ers v.·ere forecast for Ux San F'ranc1sl.'O Bay area. Y.ilh a chance of thundershowers vo'itb hail and some sno.,..· on the peaks . By morning tv.'O inches of snow covered the lip of '.\tt. Tamatpais in Marin County and light povoder dusted the Santa Rosa foothills . The weatherman said it would be fair and cold Friday v.i th lov.·s ranging from the mid 20s to mid :.:>s. The interior \•alleys also can expect showers tonight and some fog 1--riday morning and possibly some thun- dersho.,..·el"S v.·ith bail. the u·eathennan said. Sno\\. fell on Skyline Boulevard near San Jose. and the California Highv.·ay Patrol said tow trucks were being clls- patcbed to aid stuck motorists. 'Ibe Weather Service said near-blizzard conditions v.·ould contmue to prevail in the Sierra Nevada There were. J7 inches of snow reponed on Interstate 80 west of Donner Pass. Thirteen fresh inches or snow fell during the night at Norden near Donner Pass in 9---degree temperature. Chains were required on HJghway 80 fro m Auburn to east of Reno; on state Rt. 88 over Carson Pass which was clos- ed temporarily due to high wind : and on Highway ·50 over F.cbo Summit A J.2..unit apartment building was evacuated in Lafayette when mud slid down a hill and struck the two-story struct~. Manager Truman Bryan said no one WBS injured, but the building "probably will be \ot8l loss." Deme fog moved into some areas of the San Joaquin Valley early today drop- ping visibility to near zero. 1t was to be partly cloudy this af- ternoon with a chance of scattered showers. C.Old unstable air accompanied by showers \Vas upected to move eastward into the Valley today and may even bring light. snow to some areas tomorrow. Dense fog is likely l(_)flight and earl' tomorrow with some areea remainin& clear. Temperatures could drop into the 2ll::i tonight causing possible frost damage to agricultural interests. Temperatures ln the low to middle 30s were the rule in the valley this morning with afternoon highs expected in the tos and 505. Light winds were expected with chances .of showers diml.Dilhlng after tonight. Meanwhile, 29 lndultrlal finm whose gas service had beet curtailed because of cotd Wfl1\lber and abort supply •ere restored to service Wednesday after being forced to shift to standby fuel sourCes for ooe day. OIAlfel COAST u DAILY PILOT lo b«Omt ul\'olved In lomlinl Ille budatl prior to the anou'al pugiltstlcs 1D settfna t.bt tu rate. The mayor proposed selling up the group. perhaps made up or five persons Iv ""rnlist the aid of people in the rom· mun1ty that litt very knowlOOgeable about finances," he said. The body \\'OUld be charged with king· ll>rm courst"-setting responsibilities for the most part since the 1,913-74 city budget is already moving through the niunicipal mill . ··There \\'ould be no thought of stopping the nonnal progress or this budgel" Boyd said. He noted. however. that the ron1mit1ee might make son-e recom- niendations for the upcoming budget. ··ln the past. this has been, in effect. handed to us h;.i the city manager without \Cry moch cittzen input," Boyd said as he hefted !he thick city budget in his hand. Planing commissioner 1-tichael ~fay agreed. "This is one are<i that many ~ pie feelthal they hav.e had no represen- tation." ~1av said. • SPACE CENTER, llouslon (UPI) ~ Apollo 17's astNnilul.s rocketed through space today on the iinal and most dif- ficult chapter of Am e.rica1s planned t!X· ploration of lhc moon. 'l'hey sallcd smoothly despite an elec-- lroale !allure lhal dehl)led their depart· ure by olmoet lhr<e hours one! forced lhem lo alep up their speed sllgblly. Noonday brightness briefly flooded Cape Kennedjl 1l t ;p p.m. PST .. lhelr Satum S rocket, tall u a 38-story build· q , roired off Us launch pad and traced an oraoae comtl trail into the sky toward • Sunday rend<Zwus with Ibo moon. The moon 1sndlni Is sel lor MOl'<lay. On the ground, more than half a ml!· ' lloo people walfhed •lhe blaSIAlll, aome ol lhem hWJdreds of nlilea from tlJe cape. A last second electJ'Qnic.~uit (aiJure delsyed lhe launch 2 boors and 40 min- The aatronauts bad fired an t x t r a etrooa -and very accurate -, blast or the top s~ge of thei r rocket to break out of earth orbit toward the moon, golng a little faster than originally plaMed to make up lost U1ne. Aalronlula Eugene A. Ceman, Ronald E. Evana and Harrlsoo -,H. "Jaek " Sclunitt loclced Ute command ship one! moon landing craft nose-to-oose and ca.st ofJ the spent lop slage ol the Salum rock- et rive houn afler launch. Mission c<mlrollera at H...-,repart· ed the dlacarde:!:t roe~ •t.ice Wal on a true course to alaol Into the Moon'• face Slllldoy -wblle Apollo 17 Is bob1nd the mQOn -about 124 mj1ea Ult of -· Apollo 14 landed 1i1 1171. '!be shock waves, «iual lo 1he ~ ion ol U Ions of TNT, will be ~ ~Y Iosttumenla lelt behind Ii)< pnvloul mocin crews. , On Monday, Ceman and Schniill lire due to land on the lunar surface at m~· day, and abolll four hours Ille 'to bee!• Johnson rioted that in the pa.st. citizen rommittees have been successful, and "certainly could be expanded into this area. CHARLEY SMln!,JLEFTl, 130, STILL DOESN'T BELIEVE IT . He and Son, Chester, 70, w•tC:h Blastoff from Ringside Seats • Ule$ -and lhrealene<I lq. ti<>t.l~_il for an entire month. But technicians at the cape and in Alabama worke,:I out a way to bypass the faulty gear and get ihe ·flight started safely. Despite its late start. Apollo 17 was going so smoothly that a course carrec .. !Jon maneuver scheduled this morning \ras canceled. _lh!'ee days of uploration in a JnOWltaio- rimmeil valley Wlilch planners ho~wm be more ICienWM:ally productive tban.ilnY moon visit lo dole. , '"It is easy to criticltt. Serving on the co1nmittee may give them a different perspective on il. and certainly, they are able people." Johnson said. The committee could. investigate long term capital improvement budgets. and set priorities for expenditure of city funds, coWlCilmen and planning com· missioners agreed. The committee could also study the role ol computerization for city business. Man Shot Twice, Slain * * * Apollo Coverage At 7:20 a.m., doctors in mission control said biomedical signals from Ceman in· dicated be wu uleep. 'nle other two crewmen were not wear- ing semon, but doclon said lrom the lack of activity aboard the ahlp lbey, too, appeared lo be asle<p. Planned Mondav J At Night Club in Mesa Prom Pfl!Jf! J Suspect in Rape F: ound Guilty Of Perversions An Orange County Superior Court jury that failed to reach a verdict on three of six felony charges liled agairult Steve Bronson fUed tgck to the courtroom \Vedoesday nibht to find the Fontana chic ken rancher guilty of sex perversion coonts. The jury advised Judge Walter Ch<.ira.J:ma. that a fuU day of deliberations had left them deadlocked oni charges of ra~ tidnllpi.ng and assault with a dead- ly ~filed II!~ -alter be alle«edly abducted one! raped a 19-year- old Laguna Beach girl. Bronson, 24, was found guilty of sodomy and oral copulation and innocent W an additional charge of rape. Judge Charamza and tbe two attorneys involved in the trial were to return to the cou rtroom I/Ker today to determine if Bronson is .o be retried on the rape, kid· naping and assault charges. Sen~ncing on the sex perversion allegations will be delayed pendin g that decisioo, Judge C'larm8;Z8 said. Frona Page l ELECTION ... slightly embarrassed woman, "but 1 just IM it go by. I felt a non-lnvotvement. I didn't know enough about It." "Well, 1 didn't vote," said one woman, "Beca.U5e we don't have any children in lhe schools and I didn't know what it was all about." Another woman said neither she nor her husband voted on the is.sue because they don't have opinions on "those kind of things." They too have no children in the schools. 1be o1ber camp of non-voters, while more expressive and infonned about the ~all. shared one characteristic with their fellow non-voters -none wanted to be identilied. "Oh, 1 should have gone," one woman said, "but I don't agree with recalling in the fi"lt pl3ce. It doesn't seem to do any good to vote in the city. The riff-raff have taken ove'r,'' she said. The only person who agreed lo use of his name was a voter who felt he had the Mgbt theory about !-he turnout. Van Newinger said, "People never vote much. I've been here 26 years and I know they don't have th£lnterest. '' He said, "Laguna Beach doesn't belong to the people any more -it belongs to the speculators and people who are retired and only live here a while until they die. "It's not a city of homes any more - !l's just 00....." A man free awaiting prosecution after being arrested on a burglary charge about three weeks ago was shot and kill- ed this morning under s i m i l a r circumstances at a Costa Mesa night club. The inckient occurred at the Little Big 0, 1943 Placentia Ave., awarenUy when owner Ted Owens arrived to open up the bar. Owens fired the fatal shots, police said. William B. KeUy, 26, was shot at least twice in the torso area and died in Costa 1t1esa Memorial Hospital about 7:45 a.m .• according to medical personnel. investigators were still p i e c i n g together details of the slaying about mid- morning and detectives were unavailable for additional information. Owens, a longtime Costa Mesa tavem owner who has occasiooally tangled with city offidals, refWJed &o discUsl tht case. No information was lmmedi•tely available about whether Kelly was armed when latally shot al Owens' Uttle Big 0 , All-day Par~g For DowntoWl1 Laguna Appi·ovecl Downtown parking lots along El Paseo Street will be opened f<r all-day parking . the Laguna Beach City Council decided Wednesday nlghl. A nominal charge will be collected by an attendant, the council agreed. lt also recognized that in addition to opening some 60 parking spaces, the action would provide holiday employment for area students. The lots bad been closed after summer with anticipatkln that tbe asphalt would be torn up for development of the fllain Beach Park. That development has betn delayed due to excessively high coo- structlcn bids. . A request by the Laguna Beach Assistance League that the lots be open- ed during times of its lectures one day a month for four months was deferred for further study. Foreign Aid Topic 0£ County Meeting "Future Prospects for Foreign Aid" v.·i\1 be discussed by John A. Hannah, ad- ministrator of the Agency for Interna- tional Development (AID) at tonight's meeting of the Orange County World Af. fairs Council in Santa Ana. Hanna)' ts the fonner president of ~1ichigan State University and ha!I serv· ed In the federal government under presidents Truman, Eisenhower, Ken- nedy, Johnson and Nixon. The dinner meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. tn the Saddleback 1M. Laguna Council Action These were the major actions taken by the Laguna .Beach City Council Wednesday night. SEWAGE PLANT SWAP: Aulhoriud spending ~ for a consultant's study of turnover of the city's sewage collection and trtatmcnt operation to the Laguna Beach County Water District. 'Ibe water dlstrkt put up a like amount for the study. MASSAGE: Enaeled an urgency ordinance prohibiting lhe opening ol any new massage parlors in the city for four months. The tnaSMge moratorium wou1d allow the city time to study way1 oC keeptn& undcsirabk! establlsb- m~ts out of the Art Colony. ALTA LAG UNA: By unaolmous action put lhe llnal nail In lbe coffin ol Alta Laguna Boulevard exten1lon from top of the World to Arch Beach Heightl. Council action rescinded permlaslons for COMtNciJon of the road. MAIN BEACH EXAM: Qave ofrlclal approval to """1\'tlllng ol lhe Main lleseh Commlllec and dlr~ the Planning Comm!Mlon lo ael up lhe body using as many of the original members AJ J)OS8lble. 'Ibe group will take an· other loolt at the park in view of exceS1ively hlgb development bids. Council o!Jiclally tumt~ down lhooe bldll. a large club in an industrial area, featur- ing night·time dancing. STUDY ... Costa 1.1esa police arrested Kelly three u·ceks ago during an alleged burglary at ~fusket aod Sabre Antique Arms. MS \V. 195h St., investigators did note today. 1be victim of today's fatal iDciden~ was taken into custody at gunpoint by in· vestlgaling officers apparently res~ ding to a burglar alarm that was tripped. SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) -No more special telecasts or tbe Apollo l'l· night are scbed;.:led by the three major nern>orlcs until Monday "When a:Stronauts Eugene A. Ceman a o d Harrison H. Sclunitt land on the moon and begin the first of three lunar exploraUon.s. · Monday's sc:he<lule follows, all tl!ne$ Pacific Standard: · ll<giooal ·County Civic Cenler, the c:oort moved' 8Qd )e(t the chambers vacant, while bnnw<lialef;y -...,., the pollce depertment pined ~er, but no .iplOL ... ' He bad been released on bail pending prellmiosry hearing on that burglary charge, in Harbor Judicial District Court. CBS: 11:50 a.m., to noon; 8:30 p.m. to 9. NBC: 11:30 a.m. to landing conclusion, scheduled about 11:54 a.m.; 4:30 p.m. to S p.m.; 8:30 p.m. lo 10:30. '!be counclJ aulhor!led City Manager Larry! Rose lo lnveslJiale the molter or exponslon ~f city departmen1s tnl!I ~ chambers. Police said today they had no pe.nnanent address for Kelly, whom thE!y believed to be a transient in the area. ABC: 11 :30 8.m. to conclusion of Ian· ding; 4:30 p.m. lo 5 p.m. otiserved Chief Kelly about one of the "closet of!Jcest' shared by two men, "It's not a SPot for !Omeooe w i t h claustrophobia." our • Ormaybeow- S100 minim..., ~ ICCOOlll low cost auto loans? How about our 5°/o Golden Passbook Account? Are extra banking hours the reason? Possibly our drive-up teller windows? • Whatever the reason, we're growing by leaps and bounds. Our smiling tellers and prompt, efficient service seem to be just what our Orange County customers are looking for. Hours: Dally 10AM to &PM Friday open tlll 8PM Drive-up windows open 9AM ANAHEIM Lincoln & Beach 821-5410 COSTA MESA Harbor & Fair 979-1000 SANTAANA 17th & Bristol 835·0151 Soon In the City of Orange Join us. We must be doing something right ' Mlmber F.Jru Oepoglt lnourance Corporation. r I ) 7 7 . . . Saddlebaek • EDITION VOL 65, NO. 342, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES • ORANGE COUl'JITY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1972 S uspecred Burglar , .LA ) Oil -·Exec • Ill Cabinet . Sho t Dea d A 'man free awaiting pN>SeCUUoo after • btilai arreated on a burglary cl)ilrge abaul tl!roe wl!ells ago was sbol llll<f kill· ed this morning under s i m i I a r clrcwmtances al a CO.la Mesa nighl club. f' The incident occurred al !he Lilile Big -o~ lM.1 PlacenUa-Ave:;-apParently wben- n,.,,...Ted <>wens arrt...i to open up lhe i.r. '°""" Cidd lhe falal shol.o, police said. Wlllll:m B. Kelly, 21, was shot at least lwiee.ln lhe tono area and died in Costa lllfaa M1!moria1 Hospital aboul ? :15 a.m.1 accarding to medical personnel. Investigltoni were still p i e c l n g \ngelber dtlails ol lbe slaying about mld-moalinc IDd detect.lve1 were unavailable for addiUoul infonnation. • Owem, a ia>clime Colla Mesa tavmi ownei: !Ibo bu ~onally tallgled with city.olfidala, reluJed to diBCQSS lhe case. No lnfGlmeUon waa lmmediately .--\-lberl<eiiy was armed """" falally shot at. Owens' Lillie Big 0 , a ~ club ID an industrial area, featur- 1111! Dicht-tlme dancing. Colla Mesa ,police arrested l(elly three w..U ago cluring an · alleged burglary at Muatet and Sabre Antique Ann.s, M6 W. 19511 St., inv!'lllgators did note today. The Ylcitlfn ol today's fatal incident was .taken Into cun\dy at gunpolnl by in· ~atlng olllcers apparenUy respon- dii>g lo a blqlar alarm that. was tripped. • l{e ~ ._ µleued on ball pending ~-·~ 00 that' burglary dllrtle, in llarlJor JudidaJ District Court. POllce said today they bad no ~ l<ldroal fur l<elly, whom Ibey poi\end brbe a transient in lhe area. , ~~ &iy ~Peace 'f alJu.-Stym!e~;_ Problems To"/(l PARIS (tll'I) -Tia V)llnm ET! Com· m.--todq tbat "'80ti!'timm JO end lbe Vletnom ---and Ille "-lean sllle odailttecl ~ still .,.,.,.-·<to he overcome. illll two 1111 ol. lalka -lbe regular ~ Parta --aDd _.1 -aioai between lleiry Kllsiqer and Le Due 'Ibo -were held aa llCbedulecl. Killillgtr. Prealdent ·NW>o's special envoy, beg'll bis fourth ses&on of pri- vate nqotlati"1S this week wltb North Vietnam's Le Due 1bo at 3 p.m., a few hours after !he llt81b weekly -ion of lbe aeml-public peace talks ended in a barrage of pessimistic statements from lbe Communists. Today's talks Jastl'd four hours and the White Houle said Kissinger and Tho ,woold meel again Friday at 3 p.m. Offi- cials said lbe meeting woold be held at the Amerlcan-eelected site at Neuilly Sur lleine. . Haoo11s deputy negotiator, Nguyen Minh Vy, said Ulat South Vietnamese de- )lllllds for li'OOP wltltdnw~ls by North VJetnam were 1Ull the obstacle to peace "These lendentloos .diitortions and ab- IUl'd demands have again pusbed the ne- aotlaUons into a deadlock," be said. ~ "'Ibe eap bas never been deeper be- tween tbe words and acts" of tbe Ameri- can delegation, Vy aald. A-.pomman for lbe North VlelnameS< delecation declued: "The Impasse per- ·11sta: II ol Ulil hour." 'l'be Viet Coog negotiator, Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh, told newsmen after the weelt-lv talks: "While rumors circulate about !See Pi;:ACE, Page 2) Or .... Coast Weailler The weatherlady says it will be partly cloudy on Friday, with cooler ttlmperattD'es a 1 on g the COISI. IDghe expected to reach ti) degrees. Lows tonlg)lt, 35-43. INSm E TODA. Y The Orange County P r e 6: .t Club take1 a group of under- prloileQ'ed children to 1Xmey- land each veor. Writet Art Vin· 1el ncolla thil 11ear'1 vtrit to the Maaic Ktngdom in o worm Chmtm<ll'116<!/ on Page 10. ,· President Co mpletes ''Re fini,sh ing' Uf'IT ...... CHO tCE FOR TRANSPORTATION Oii Executive 8rineg1r Jail T erm Ruled For Councilman In Capistrano CAMP DAVID, llld. (UPI) -President Nil.on completed his Cabipet overhaul to- day by naming Claude Brinegar, If, a Los An(l:eles •oil · cotrlpany ·e:s:ecutlve', as Ti'an!JportatiQD ~retary. · · ., , Brinegar, who holds a doctOrate in .economics and likes last ~ will suc-- ceed Jobn A. Volpe who ts becomlng_u.s. ambassador to lt&ly -a post he wanted. The -appointment ' is to -be the la~ Cabinet-face change to be annou~ _by Nixon but other switches at the sub- Cabinel level are anticipated for the secOnd term. The reappointment of ' . Doctors See Tr uman Rally 111 Hospital KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI ) -Despite a weakened heart and labore..: breathing, former President Harry S Truman,~ 88, rallied shai-ply today. Doctors said his health was critical but his daughter saiO, "I have great faith that he's going to come out of this all right." ~ PbY,icians aUendlng lbe ... uoo•s 33rd chief ex~live said their primary· con- cern wa( whether Truman's heart was San Juan Capistrano city CCJ4?1Cilman strong enough. James Keith W~thers was ordered to-"Presi41ent Truman's condition is lm· day to s~ his weekends for the next proved, tiit his age .i;.nd the poteilUal of ' lour months Ip Orange COunly Jall. suddeo ~e reql.iJls ,t)iat he continue Weat!ler1, YI, of 27)11 Ortega HllhWay, 10 _be described as cri~t,'t said a ""' also ·-11 ~ --""'111<11 -ot .....,, ... -~l.J: :•. :-z..:;:;ze ·a~ raJlied ~ 111e ,night ·~ J!llY!:T-lrilh sb..-ift:I . ~. wan-Gjilllllqlilt"personat pbisi- "t hive lo!oked -------a-.Un ~-if iiflils-iiWI d- citizen and I have to ,illy tllat t-~am • =· 'eaJly ~ lind his vT:!i ~ 1m=· :;£:' or-· -._; Cci1rt Judce -_-,. 's ~ aid Truman11 W .. tber.. • . ·a ·'haft deoCrtbOd last njght's , •pu1 I~~ yoo woiild ~le!~ as acule ~ry edema. U you ...,. tlllJ deporly ahertfl -faced ts a manifestatkin of lioart failure, a loaded 'shotgun?" Judge Murrat com-but at the present time there is no evi· mented. "I am making It. a colldllion of dence of myocardial in!arctioU." probation lbat you do not Possess In response to a question,-a spokes· fireamis for tJM!' three-year tenn. ,+ man said ... myocardial ~" is the Judge Murray said Weatbtrs' . first "term most people uee or what most weekend in county jail Will be served this people mean -. Ibey ~Y heart at- coming weekend and his .._last will be tack." _,.,,_ served next Marth a . The bulletin also made mention of an lie aosured tbe councilman thal be will "infectioo in lbe broochial tree." be released from countY jail in time. to A spokesman sa!d he could not elal>- spend Christmas Day with his family. orate 911 that. subJeCt: The report ~lso "I have great faith in you and so do ?Oted the f~rmer president was contmu· many other people who wrote to me " IDl,to recerve oxygen. Judge Murray added. "And I hope to ~ The tough little .ronner ~nt was you back in this court one day !O that we rushed to the bosp1~ Tuesday night suf- can clear th.is unfortunate record." ferlng lung congestion. Weathers ·Was arrested bY, deputies ~ who said tbe councilmalt..met ·them1 wilh J -. S k a loaded shotgun when Ibey entered ' a ' oaqum to ee l.tission Viejo home to make inquiries about a 4 a.m. tiicident al lbe Dsna $3 4 Milli' Aid Marnia. , • 0 ll It was alleged that the councilmen's wife, Mrs. Ellen Weathers, had been with a male escort at that location when Weathers drove up and rammed his car into the couple's auto. Mrs. Weathers' male companion told officers he was threatened with a fireann before Mrs. Weathers left the scene and drove to the Mission Viejo home of family friends , Newport Firm Gets San Joaqu!n • ' l. ' .• :y 1 School Cont~ct A COntract was awarded Wednesday night by SN1 Joaquin School Dls~rict trustees for $1.04 milllon .. to E. ~· Weltzul and . Associates Qf Newport Beach, t~ low biddt:r on the College Park SCbool 1n '!rvlne. ' Construction on the newest elemeritary llCbool in lnlne may beein 'lllthhl 1be mottth, with !he estimated completion date in fall t lf73. ' 'l'iie sd>ool i.. planned for ?30 students. The project cosls bad been eotimated by facillt:iea pl8Mer Dave King .113 fl. 7 mllllao, 'bdt all four bids reclolved11t !he district were -thal. ;.., tbe --bid. ... llt Dillllon, was from Mear Cal Corporallon. , / -R; G. Webb ConltnJclion bad the. third Jowest bid, ot $1.11&4 mllllon llltd the hiihest bid , 11 .t mDllon, was !rom fljnrtck aod Sona. • Irvine \JnHled School Dil a tr I c t tend"1t Slan Corey ftl>rlased that lbe bid W89 10 lllCCt!llllJI. ooquln trustees unlllimoualy graated the contract lnd were "very pleued" by !be progml an plarw for the. lnllt lite. • For Two Schools ·San JoaqUin School District officials will apply for state aid totaling $3.4 million to build two schools -one in Irvine and one in Laguna Hills -nnd will make a bid to buy the Saddleback area site, trustees decided Wednesday night. ' n>e applicatioos, for $1.8 million for the University Park ll (also known as Villa1e Park IV) site .in Irvine and Sl.6 million for the New World School in Laguna Hills, will be filed with the state allooation hoard. Approval is expected because the district recently qualified for three elementary schools because of increased enrollments. At the same time, trustees authorized the st.all to make an offer to the Rossmoor Corporation for J?Urchase of the New World site, based upon np- prailal. . Both ocbools are being planned for 730 atuclen(!. 'llte lnlne school would have 20 classrooms and t'tfO kindergartens and !he Lagupa Hills school, slightly smaller, would liave 18 claun:iotn5 and two kinde111artens, under tbe plana lo be "11>- mitted to the ~e. I I I •• II"·< ' ' Richard G. Kleindienst as attorney general ls expected' to be announced Fri- day. I White House Jll.ess Eecre!ary Ronald L. Ziegler, Who announced the latest ap- poh;itment -wliich-tssub~-to Senate CO!lfinnation. -said ' Brifiegar, 45, a senior vice president of Union OU Co., is "a very qualified manager and executive in..the_l>usinesl w~·----Ziegler lavished pl-aise on b o th Brinegar and Volpe and noted tbat Volpe would become the first Italian-American to head the U.S. mission in Rome. "When Secretary Volpe takes up this important diplomatic post he will be retracing a journey that brought his own pai:enls to this country as penniless im- migrants at the turn of 'the century," Ziegler-said . Of Brinegar, Zi egler said: "l don't know what ls meant by the term 'oil man ' but Mr. Brinegar is not an oil man. H.! is a_ very capable manager. His area of qualific8tion goes to the man agement of people." Brinegar Jived briefly in the late 1950s in Yorba Linda, Nixon's birthplace. Purple? Maybe Ziegler Des cribes Nixon's Slacks CAMP DA'VID,i(d. · (lJPI) -· Cufiless, yes. Flanod, no. Purpl e, perhaps . That's the rundown on President Nixon's slacks from White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. ' Ziegler was asked at a Camp David news briefing today about a report that the Preeident blld.been seen strolling at his Catoctin Mountain hideaway attired in purple Oared slacks. "I think flared is· a llttle exaggerated," Ziegler replied . "Some or his ~lacks dan'ti.have cuffs on them ... He's a regular guy." What about the color? "l don 't know.about purple. Some of his slac~ are blue," Ziegler replied. Movb;.g ·S.ath -N1Jr.t1iern Part of State . ' ' c1ltt~Q;f4 by. siOr~ -.;.;;,.... ' .1 ,;r__ ·--.. -'l'I·--- ~ ~FRANCISCO iAPJ -Srtow, .. rain and llall lubed muclJ ~~ ea..~-closll)g ..... ~ "'l!l= """"" .~ ... -o~ .,.. • ~-ui,no ma , be •. ,,.... In too .... Uter as lbe stornl front' lnoves toward Sbutbem Californla. • 1 ' • H~avy snow by stmrise ~· dpsure of lllgbway I? belrien Los GalOI lind Sanla eru;., while lllg!jway 58 ' at Alta- molit Pass .and 1 Interstate lQl; near. tbe Oregon border ·were · sllpperf and motOrist&' were advised to carry cbalns. Decrealinl .showers' were 'forecast for ihe 'San Fiiniclaco Bay area Wlth a chance of thundershowers with ball and some anow on the peaks. By motning two inches of mow c:overed the tip ·of Mt. TamaipaiS in J\larin CQllnly and light powder dusted lhe Sanla Hosa foothills . The weatbennan said ii. Would be fair and cold F'ridayJ with lows ranging from lbe atid 2'11 '·lo mjd ... • The interior valleys also can ezpect showers tonigltl and aome fog Friday morning and . possibly • some thtmM dershowers with hail, the weathennan said. · Snow fell on Skyline Boulevard near San Jose, and the California Highway Patrol said tow trucks were being ~ patched to aid stuck motorists. The Weather Service said near-blizzard conditions would continue to prevail in tbe Sierra Nevada. There were 37 incbes of snow reported on Interstate 80 west of Dooner P~. Thirteen fresh inches of snow fell during the nlgbt st Norden near Dormer Pass in &-degree temperature. .----~ --..1..---'C!Wnl were requhd on Higbpay 80 from Auburn to .-ol Beno; cfl ate Rt• over ~~·wld~h !'II clos- ed "'"*"""'lly due to li,i. Wind; and on. Highway tlO ov.r l!:cbo Summit . A 12-unlt apartment buildlng was evacuated In. Lafayette when mud slid down a hill and struck the twe>-story structure. Manager Truman Bryan said no one was injured, bul the building "probably will be total loss." Dense fog moved into some areas of the San Joaquin Valley early today drop- ping visibility to near zero. It was to be partly cioudy this af· temoon with a chance of scattered showers. C.Old unstable air aceompanied by showers was e:s:.pected to move eastward into the Valley today and may even bring llght snow to some areas tomorrow. Dense fog i~ likely tonight and early tomorrow with some areas remaining clear. Temperatures could drop into the 20s tonight causing possible frost damage to agricultural interests. Temperatures in the low to middle 30s were the rule in the valley this morning with afternoon highs expected In the 40s and 50s. Light winds were expected with chances of showers dimin ishing after ton1ght. Meanwhile, 29 industrial !inns whose gas service had beer. curtailed because of cold weather and short supply were restored to service \Vednesd ay after being forced to shift to Slandby fuel sources for .one day. 'l1le firms all have interruptible con- tracts. Irvine P.anel to Study ' Project for Uni Park Irvine ptaooing commissioners tonii:ht will consider a tentative tract map pla~ ing 300 apartments units oo 18 acres of the 31-.acre aPaitment-comme.fcial zones In Univ~slty. Park southeast of lhe University Drive and Micbelson Avenue lnterteeUon. , The lrvlbe Cc>mpeny request for the twoct.ory apartment complex will be conetdered by commissioners •ho meet at 7:• ln t:lly hall, 4201 Campu! Drive. Tbe proposal ls lbe Drat aparimenl project IOlllltt sin« lhe city amended · the Uolvoralty Park :orting. It would be bullt in lhe pmenliy vacant acreage northe.,t of th;, largely complete planned community. 1'llO parcel 11 zoned for a deNity of 21 unlta per acre but the tentall\l'e tract map calla fo~ ooJy IU unlls per gross ocre.'Tbe adtrlt.and family uoit.t would be built between the proposed new University Park COllU'DlrcLal ctnter and a ruture elementarJ icbool. ' The school ls expected to be blult ac ross Michel!On Avenue from tbe new Rancho San Joaquin lntennediate School. Other matters to be taken up by com· mlss\oners tonlp:hl include: -Ftlrther review of the loth revision or the Irvine lndWltrial Complex planned community IOning text which calls for equal treatment or all commercial parcels, notabl y the 50 acres owned by McDonnell • Douglas Corporation . Th a t parcel presently may be developed only with a'5>1"oval o f a conditional use permit. 'l1le rtvlsed ttmlng law would re- quire only·cUy review of a site pan. --Obange or flOne to eliminate the seven acre1 or c:ommerclal property in Turtle Rock that wa s dcJeted by thr lr•ine C.Ompany at the request of reskltnts and the city. 1.one cha nge to medium dtnsity ar:>attn1ents wtll allow lhe already approved Richard B. Smllh d\lplc1 tract of 150 homes to proceed on the 31 'Kres acron ~mpus Drive rrom Unlver~ty Hip School. • .. Tooay's Final N.Y. Stoek.s - TEN CENTS Ul"IT ........ APOLLO 17 BLASTOFF After Three-hour Delay Apollonauts Head For Final U.S. Visit to Moon SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPt1 Apollo I7's aslronauts rocketed through t.pacc today on the final and most dlf· ficult chapter of America's planned exM ploration of the moon. They salled smoothly despite an elec- tronic failure· that deJayed . their depart· ure by almost three hours and forct'd them to slep up their speed ali1hlly. Noond~y brightnes., briefly rlooded Cape Kennedy at 9;3.1 p.m. PST ns U1cir Sarum 5 rocket. tnll "aS n 36-story build- ing, ro!lred off its lnunch pad and traced an orange camet Ira.ii Into the sky toward a Sunday rendetv0i1s with lhe moon. The moon landing is set for 11-lunday . On the ground, more tb:)n half a mil· lion people watched lhe blutofl, &0me of them hundreds o( miles from the cape. A last second electronic circuit failu re delayed the Wunch 2 hours 1nd 140 min· utts -and lhreAtencd to poirtpone It lor an entirtt month. But techolclau at the capt' and In Alabama worked oot a 'vay lo ~ss the faUlty gear ·and get the night started safely. ' Despite Its tnie start, ,Apollo 17 was going so smoothly that a. coprse corr'<"' tlon maneuv!r scheduled this motqfna WB!I CAnctled. . • TOO utMnaul! had flrf:ld an e x t r fl 11trong -and Vttf' ~·rote -blast Gf the to11 stt1a:e ol their rocket. to1 brtak out. of cm1h orbit !oward tl\e mooQ, g91ng a little faster than origlMUy plaMed to f!l<e .. APOIJ.O, raie I) r • • I ' • I:' DAIL y PILOT IS .. ~.·.spectators Watch '17' :Streak Off ... CAPE KENtlEDY , Fla. IAPI -Led b/ Viet President Spiro T. Agne\Y, scores of VlPs Jet cut cheers as Apollo 17 11. 1umtnated the \•elvel black night sky at the start of its )ourn ey to the moon. And at a secret site. aslronaut wives 'Barbara Ceman and Jan Evans, com- 1orted by relatives and friends, anxiously waited for :60 agonizing mlnutd for the delayed liftoff. · Earlier they made a tearful farewell et crew ' quarters to the high-spirited astronauts Eugene A. Cernan and Ronald E. Evans. The third member of thr Apollo 17 te ani. Harrison H. Schmitt, is a bachelor. Agnew watched the launch from the firing room at 'the Cape Kennedy Space <:enter while a party of his personal guests viewed the shot from bleachers at a special site reserved for some 10,000 guests invited by the N a t i c n a l Atronautics nd Space Administration. Gov . Goorge C. \Vallace of Alabama, crippled since an assassination attem~t in May, joined the Agnew party. Hts wheelchair was lifted onto a special plat· fonn where the governor had a ringside view of !he launch. So did his wife Cornelia. • \Vallace "'as greeted by cheers from other guests at the site and .spent aOOUt 10 minutes signing autograpOO. The top NASA guests included l'<ln- gressmen, ambassadors. f o r e i g n di&nltarie.s and a handful of show business personalities including Frank Sinatra, Eva Gabor and Jonathan Winters. Far away in a deserted section of the VIP site was Charlie Smith, a 130-year- old former slave from Bartow, Fla. "ll 1 was at home now I'd be in bed." said Smith. who quit work as a citrus worker at the age of 113. "l think I'd rather be at home. I don't believe these meu are going to the moon. It just can't happen." The launch also brought together again the Apollo 11 team of Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Mike Collins. Armstrong and Aldrin made the first historic walk on the moon July 20, 1969. Thousands of persons scattered along the Atlantic Coast watched as Apollo 17 blazed its fiery trail through the mid· nlgbt sky and then. in an awesome shower of light. became a disappearing star as it raced toward the moon from Cape Kennedy. Sightings of the Saturn S's blastoff and glorious departure !tom earth were reported as far north as Augusta, S.C., and as f81' south as Nassau in the Bahamas. seconds after the 9:33 p.m. (PST) lifloff. Cloudy skies, fog, and scattered showers lhrougbout the rest of the soutbeutern United States disappointed space watchers who had pol.i.sbed off binoculars in hopes of seeing the last American blastoff for the moon for decades to come. "It was like a fire in the sky," said Pat Duncan as she watched the rocket's trail light up the sky above Miami some 200 miles south of tbe spaceport. * * * Apollo Coverage Planned Monday SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -No more special telecasts of the Apollo 17 fUgbt are scheduled by the three major networka until Monday when astronauts Eugene A. Ceman a n d Harrboo It Schmttt land on the moon and begin the first of ~}\ree lunar explorations. Monday's acbeslule follows, all times Pacific Standard: CBS:· ti.:30 a.m., to noon ; 8:30 p.m. to 9. NBC: 11:30 a.m. to landing Cilnclusion , scheduled about 11:54 a.m.; 4:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.: 8:30 p.m. to 10:30. ABC: 11:30 a.m. to conclusion of lan- ding : 4:30 p.m. to S p.m. OIAMI COAST IS DAILY PILOT ,.,. Or9llet o..t 0...1\.Y lllLOT, .tffl -"'Cf! _ ................... ,....., ............ ... ~,..... ""'*""'"' ~. s.p... .... --............ M°"'9y """""' II',..,, • CMlt """· """""1 Affdr, t1 bl Cl IMlcfll• ... t11r1 VII...,, l._ ..... fMWIHillltMcll llW SM C""-le/ .. ,,_ c..llolr•-A ""''-•t0iftnel ..... ~ -llMll "--"' Wld S......,t(L flle ................ """" If If D Wn t .., ....... et.I• Mew, Cltilfonlle, 9'»2'., a.Mtot N. W19' ........... ,..~ Jeck lit. cwt • ., Vice ............. 0-.1 """"""' ,...,. ic....;1 ,_ n.... A. Mw,i.1111 -·-a.... H, LMc Jt lclrienl P. Nall ......... MMll4iil l• ...... -a.II ,..., -'::!.:.:r '""' ........ 9-dtl DO, ..... .IUI .............. .._.A_ 11 ....... tillC.tll l"" tlldl .......... ... as 111 •_.II'~"'"' 11111'' CTI41 MMP1 a a c Mtann a '°"'11 .. 0 ti Al tlf IAl'lll"ll ' ........ .... CIS; -,_ ..... C.-.::'llMllJ ~. -... •"""'-.. """' -...--,, ............. '*"' """' ...... 7 ............. ,.._ ..................... . ..... ~ ::=; -.. CW• MtM. .:=-W =::::riZ, ':.,.a.,~-= --·-. • I APOLLO S AACE C AAl'T SECOND. STAG~ l P'llltST STAO~ • s-1va 3rd STAGE UQUIO OXYtll!N TANK APOLLO SATURNV Launch Vehicle ' \IPI T ........ TROUBLE SPOT -The oxygen tank which delayed the Apoll<> 17 launch is in a 581h-foot long section of the Saturn 5 rocket immediate- belo\v the lunar module storage area. The tank is one of two fuel cells in the $33 million third stage. Silent Tribute To Teacher Killell In Crash Offered A special memorial without \\'Ords to a ~'oung teacher killed in a car accident took place \Venesday nigh t wheq Sa n JO<J({Uin School District trustees b:fti five minutes o! silence before the Invocation. The quiet observation v.·as in honor of Tierney Anne Hill, 24. of 1220 Park Newport. Newport Beach, who was fatally injured Monday when her car skidded and overtWTled in the northbound lanes of the San Diego Freeway in El Toro. f..tiss Hill had been teaching fourth grade at Del Cerro School in ti.fission Vie- jo since ft opened Jast year. It waa her flrst leaching assigrunent. Marilyn Harris, assistant superinten- dent of instructional services, told the board about Miss Hill, after which the trustees asked all present to join in the silent memorial. Mrs. Harris made her presentation brief. She said it was "difficult" in- troducing the matter. An office worker at Del Cerro con- tacted on the phone aOOUl Miss Hill began to cry. Funeral servicea took place this morn- illb at Smith and Tuthill f\.fortuary in Santa Ana. Many of the teachers and staff from Del Cerro and nearby schools attended. hliss Hill is survived by her father, Dr. Thomas K. Hill of San Diego. From Pagel PEACE ... the pcmibility of the peace agreement being signed today, J am sorry to disap- point 1you ." On the American side, lrlinlster-coun· selor Hpyward Isham, filling in for Am· bassador William J. Porter who Jsham said had laryngitis , said, "The fin a I phase of aettling a conflict u long, as bitter and as resistant to a 90lution as thls one cannot be simple. It cannot be driven through briskly or without taking into account the interests of all the par- ties ." While the propaganda ~·ar between Hanoi and Sa.lion continued, Kissinger met with Tho in the Paris suburb of Glf· sur-yveUe , scene of secret talks last month. ' / Before meeting with Tho, Kissinger conferred for 75 minutes with French Foreign Minister Maurice Schumann who flew back from a NA1'0 conference in Brussels to have lunch with Kissinger . After the lunch \Sith Schumann, Kisa- inger was rushed by reporters. Asked about the provisions of the draft peace treaty he replied with a smile : "Yoo want me to give them in ire.at detail?" While the Communisls v:pressecl pes. simbm and demanded that the United Suites sign the accord worked out in Oot.ber, the French press proclaimed a cease-fire signing was imminent. Four Get IO Years LONDON (AP) -The "angry brigade" trial , the longest heard ln Bri- tain this century. ended Wednesday wltb two young men And two girls sentenced to 10 yean1 ht prison for plotUng bomb and bullet attack& on targets i.hat in· eluded the U.S. Embassy and the home• of two British Cabinet mlnlltln. The verdict came efttr a Ill-day hearing in Old Ballty, London's ctntral crim\nal court. · l'f'OtltPflfel APOLLO ••• make up kJst time. Astronauts Eugene A. Ceman, Ronald E. Evans and Harrison H. "Jack" Schmitt loclu!d the command ship and moon landing crall .............., and cast off the spent top stage of the Saturn rock· et five hours after launch. Mi.ssioo controllen: at Houston report- ed the discarded 'rocket stage was on a true course to slam into the Moon's face SWJday -while Apollo 17 la bel!ioil the moon -about IU mlltl -of wh<no Apollo 14 landed In 1971. 1be shock waves, equal to the n:plos- lon of 11 tons of TNT, will be recorded by instruments Jeft behind by previous inoon crews. ~- On #onday, Ceman and Schmit! are due r.d land oP the lunar surface at mid· day, and about four boura later to begin three 'days of exploration in a motmtaln- rimmejf valley which p1anoen hope: will be more scientiHcally productive than any moon visit to date. At 7:20 a.m., docton tn mission control said biomedical signal& frcm Ceman In- dicated he wu asleep. The other tWo crewmen were not wear- ing senaors, but doctors aaid from the lack of activity aboard the ship they , · too, appeared to be asleep. Before ~ sleep period began, the aa.- trooauls dined on beef and gravy, chlcken stew, ambrosia, gingerbread and. brown- ies. They were to be a\iakened at m.id- afte.rnooo after five hours and 10 minutes of rest, to begin their second day in space. Tustin Officer's Condition Good After Gun Battle Tustin Police learned this mornlng that a fellow officer seriously wounded early Wednesday in a neighborhood gun baUle bas pasaed the crl&ia: point. Tustin CommunJty Hospital officials told offJCtt' Waldron Karp's l'<llleagues that his condition ls now "stable and rapidly improving. "He had a good night," hospital of. ficials aald . "H~ Is doing well and we have hlgb hopes il( a complete recovery." Karp was operated on Wednesday for the removal of a bullet that struck the 31· year-old patrolman in the stomach as he moved to intercept a rifleman now id~ tlfi ed as Gary Wllliam Joboson, '7, Tustin. Karp's gun di.acharged as he fell to the :i;idewatk, the bullet hitting sheriff's depu- ty Ken stewart, 27. In the face. Stewart underwent surgery 1n the umo bolpltal and ii also "doing w'11" today. John101M"' !tiled by shotgun blasll and handgun fire Iron. 1 Tu<ttn patrolman working with Karp and a 1herlff'1 <i<!lllY backing up Stow1rl lie was operated on for wounds In the hand and knee and II rl<i>vering In Orange County Medical Center from thole injuries. Johnson bu been booked for awull with Intent to commit mW'der and ahootll)g at an occupied building. Tustin police said the latter charge 1tam1 from Johnlon alleged]y firing 1evcral rifle shots into a home occupied by legal secretary Laeticla J e a n O'tlaUoran, 30, at U322 Diamond Head Drive. Police aald Johnton fired aeveral 11ho11 lhrouah the bathroom window and Into the gfus shower door of the resktence ln rn apparent bid to fon:t Mra. O'Halloran 't open the !ront'door: · I Carril'lo Site Due For Study , San Joaquin School Dl!trlct trustees have scheduled a speclsl meeting Dec. 14 at 7 p.m. at Los Alisos Intermediate School in El Toro to dlscUJS imslble ac- tk>ns on lbe Cirrillo Drive School slte in Ml.ssioft Viejo. The Carrillo Drive School wa s orlginally planned to open in Sept.mber; 1973, but all five bids received on the project Nov. I were over the allowed state budget of Sl.6 million. The district staff recommtnd e d Wedneslhy night that truilees ,.ject all bids. revise the plans to reduce cOsts and readvertise for new bids. · Trustees decided they want to review plans for the school at the special mectlog, whJch is apen to the pllblic. A modified contract for bu,, services by the Communily Enlttptises_l:ompall)'_ will also be discwlsed at the meeting. Trustees bad a first reading of the revisions Wednesday. The new contract baa more district controls or QPCrati~, steps to reauce costs and an increase in rates. The district's busing baa been widely criticized by parents for tardiness. allbough staff bas maintained that bus pe rformance is gradually improving. Los AlisOs School is at 25171 Moor Ave. SF Cracks Doiv1t On. Unruly Dogs SAN FRANCISCO (UPI I -Municipal judges have decided to finnly enforce lav.·s against owners of undisciplined dogs. . Under the program, effective im- mediately. dog owners may be arrested or cited by policemen who catch their animals in the act of defecatiflg on a sidewalk, lawn or other private property, running loose, or "breeding" in the streets. Arre.steel owners will be fingerprinted. booked and requir1....: to post bail of $10 for a first ..iffense. $2S for a second and $50 for a third violation. Ormaybeour Medical Center Morale Studied A major problem 1n ataff morale exhits at Orange County Medical Ctnter in the opinion of the County Crand Jury, ~ 10.paJ:e jury report relea:ICd todoy found rour areas or l'<lncern at tht hospital. They are n position freeze In- stituted last August. a la,ck uf even1J1g and nlgbt su~visorial p e r s o o n e I . arbitary decisions relating to nurse-pa· State Attorne ys Sup port De~li Penalty in V pte IJORONADO (AP) -With I wonl'1>f caution from a aupparter but only ooe dissenting vote, the naUOn'a atat.e at- torne~ general have recommended reinsta tement or the death penalty ror certain crimes . The National Association or Attorneys General voted :J'l.l Wednclday for a resolution asking that "the death penalty be provided as a Je1al punistunent where it is af.propriate by the Congresa and the st.ate eglslatures. •• The onlr dissenter was a repreaeo.- tative of Minnesota Alty. Ge n. Warren Spannaus. Some attorneys general were absent or did not vote. The rtSOluUon ·was pretented by a committee heaJed by Oklahoma Atty. Gen. Larry Derryberry, who llld the panel decided "ihe alt.em.alive · for reinstating the death penalty most likely to be favorably considered by the U.S. Supreme Court is one that 11."0U!d impose a niandatory death sentence for specified offenses. "Each ~late v.·ould determine what the offenses would be," he s:.id. The Supreme Court ruled June 29 that the. death sentence, as presently ad- ministered, v I o I a t e s constitutional safeguards against cruel or unusual punishmment. The court criticized the current practice of allowing juries the option of imposing thi: death penalty. !lent ratio, and lack of meanll'\iful co111· munlcatlo.n at all levels 9f at.art. The jury. lollowl11g what was termed • minor complaint earlier In the year distributed a nine-point que1tlonnalre to ull R69 membert of the nursing staff. About 74 percent rt.-spondcd. 1'.h~. jury report, slgtled by Foreman on·o 1'-f. Schmkllen Admitted that a statis tica l breakdown of the answers shows a subatanUeJ ~ge of pos.itive response, but CQ.neluded that rna- jor problenu are apparent Answers to one questlori seerDed to contradict the jury's (llncluslons. ~unes v.•ere asked, "if you have WGrte.d at Other hospitals how do you rote wotkh:tl .to r OCMC?" 'i Of ~ responding, 48 percent ri led' U,,, medical center better than' other-place& 2LPer<ent the -same and ~ worse. '~ On the generaJ question of morale, nhle percent replied It was excellent, f.f per-.. cent-good,-:9.pereonl fair and--1! "°""i"I poor. • Nurses also found working conditions ex~elleot, IO percent; good, 47 percent ; fair, 31 percent, and poor, 12 percent. Firm Reject.ed On Sign Appe.al A shopplng center development · flrm failed Wednesday in an '"effort to get a \'81'ianct to exceed 1bc total square feel of s.iil\S allowed wxler the county's sign resbictiOM law. Rockfield Enten>rises, appealing a 7.oning Administrator's d~lon denying the addillona! sign space,ta'lhe Board of Supervtaors, w11 acting. M l\e\lllf of K Mart department store and K Mart auto store. The firm wanted J46 square feet or signing instead· of lbc maximum 100 allowed by the law. The newly developed shopping center is a 12·store complex on the north side of Rockfiek.I Boulevard. near El Toro Road. our· I • $100 minimum penonof ecoount low cost auto loans? How about our 5°/o Golden Passbook Account? Are extra banking hours the reason? Possibly our drive -up teller windows? What ever the reason, we're growing by leaps and bounds. Our smiling tellers and prompt, effic ient service seem to be just what our Orange County customers are looki ng for. - Hours: Dally 10At.' to 5PM Friday open till &PM Drive-up windows open 9AM • er1a ANAHEIM Lincoln & Beach 821-5410 COSTA MESA Harbor & Fair 979-1000 SANTAANA 17th & Bristol 835·0151 SOon In the City of Orange Join us.~ must be doing something right ' • ' Bunt.ington Beaeh Fountain Valley .c.-.• <->' ., ' ' ~--~---~~~-----~· Today's F l•a l VOL 65, NO. 342, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGE~ ORA~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1972 TEN CENTS • Ocean View's Libraries Being Crowded Out By JOUN ZALLER Of .. o,iir "l.Jlf .... Tiie· Jibrarlel, learning cen(ers, and tPecill activity rooma: of1 t~ Ocean View ~ J>istrict> are in danger of ex-linclljlo. ' • ' Afllt yean of U!ing , s u r p I u s ~ lo , llftJYille vllriety in the ~ Pt;OIJ:IM~ Ocean . VleW: II on ti(\> .~-of, an 9.._wJling cnmCb that ~ ~venIOD",of thi.sf space to ...... ticlaoJ·'CliWa-.-. . ' "The kids are coming and they've got to have classrooms befft tbey have lll!raries," says Woodis Clladdick, wls- tant superintenden~. "We've got ~ some bard decisions to mlle." Clladdick told trust... !hi. week that there are 728 -and t , 5 9 o apartments uncjer-CooslrGctlon in the distrls>t. By June , they are ••~ to produce 11~~ whlle the dlatrlct bas room for onlj 1,,284 more students . ~:nirumatliil--,,.---yet, Chaddick said, except that the district has two schools on an all-year schedule, which has opened up 250 additional classroom sJots. "Wltat' really bothers us is that we won't be able eYen to start work on a new school until December 1973. At that time, the district; probably will have 700 students more than It can han- dle, he oald. 'J1»e, dlstfict W8.!1 .able to build Up .a surplus of classrooms ;n-the-late 19&08- because the state authorized the cop- structlon of new schools on the basis of "houses under constructiOn," Oladdict said. "We could cowit r.2 cblldren per house or apartment, and qualify for new schools on that baSis," Chaddick ex- plained. . ' "But when we only wOund up with one child for every ~ apartments and one ctµld per house, we sUddenly had extra classroom apace.!!- 1be extra rooms were converted to have to actually become overcrowded libraries, teaming centers, music rooms before we can even slart building a 'De" and other special uses which the state scliool. And then it 's two years of waiting won't help pay for . for construction, while the overcrowding But now, as Ocean View's enrollment continues to worsen." is catching up to its capacity, the state Chaddick said the overcrowding ~uld has changed the rul es and will only allow be relieved and libraries kept if more new buildJngs for students that are ac-. schools in thi .diitrlct opted tor all-year tually enrolled. schooling, whlcb produces a 25 _, "They wqnt to be sure we don 't get greater rulilization of space by. using ~l far ahead again," Cll:a~dick said. classrooms .12 rather than nine months "But under the new_.system. il..meanS~we ____j)Qr Ye.it. tA Oil Exec • Ill C-ahinet -> ' ,-~ • C~clion-C!Jn~ on $5 million sewage tr unk line that is zig 11Ufl!g.lll....., lllroulh Fountain Valley to Westminster. The Orange Counf1 Santialliln Dislrlrt line will provide addition.al sewer capacity for porjiona ~W811t .Oranae County. Work cutrcn,Oy is ~king place on Talbert Avenue between Bushard and Magnolia Streets. Project i_s scheduled for completion next year. . State's Rain , Hai l, Snow P~9.Y1:P~ School Cl9~qre~ .. .f ..• / ' ' , President Completes 'Refinishing' ~ CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) -President Nixon completed his Cabinet overhaul tcr day byC naming ClaU'!e Brinegar, 49, a Los Angeles oil c.ompany executive, as Transportatlop secretary. Brinegar, who holds a doctorate in ecoDQmics and likes fast cars, wlll suc- ceed John A. Volpe who is becoming .. U.S. ambassador to Italy -a post he wanted. The appointmen,t is to be the last Cabinet face change to be announced by Nixon but other switches at the sub- Cablnet level are anticipated for the second tenn. The reappointment of Doctors See Truman Rally I Jl-' Hospital KANSAS CIT¥ MD. (UPl) -+ Despita •-~~=:~-..:lt:.;·mf fa-~· bm!iiiiii. • bmlr 1'tc••ml 1IBiff Tiumao, 1111, rallied obotpfy ~. lloctGrc-l!lrbeallb was critical but hJs daugbter· sahi, "I have great faith that he's going to come out of this all right." Physicians attending the uation's 33rd Chief eiecutlve ·said lheir primary con- cern was whether Truman's heart was strong enough. "President Truman's condition is im· prov~, but his age i;;.nd the potential of sudden change reQ1..ires that he continue to be described as critical," said a mtdical statement today at Research Hospital. Truman rallied dur'ing the night and Dr. Wallace Graham, his personal pbysi· 1 c¥n. said deterioration of his heart and 1hwgs stopped early today and his vital ·signs stabilized. This afternoon's report said Truman's Richard G. Kleindienst as attorney general is expected to be announced Fri- day. White House Press Secretary Ronald L .. Ziegler, who announced the latest ap- pointment -which is subject to ~nate confinnation -said Brinegar, 45, a senior vice pres1dent of Union Oil Co., is "a very qualified manager and executive in the business world." Ziegler lavished praise on b o t b Brinegar and Volpe and ooted that Volpe would become 1the first Italian-American to bead the U.S. mission in Rome. Se aman Found Guilty in Fire NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -A mill~ay fCJl!ll'I, 111!1J111n . Apprentice J<llf'JI AJli!ioa guUty of. anan, sabotage and hazarding a v....i in the .. '7 ~on . fire ._.a~ ~~aft wrm-Fpr: ~'..l\iJY:'.10. --........ ~ -. ~ Judie Capt. '1fl11lalll. E. NeelJ, ••tmced 11im to five ,..:rs in .,.. ..a • bOd -~ ~- 1be convlcdon of the 19-yelNlld Oakland sailor marked the IBrgest act or sabotage in naval history. Valley's Plavan All-year School Plan Under Study The Fountain Valley School Board will coo.sider approval for the all-year school plan of Plavan School at the regular trustees' meeting at 7:30 tonight. "When Secretary Volpe takes up this impcirtant diplomatic post he will be retracing a journey that brought his own parents to this country as penniless im· migrants at the turn of the . century," Ziegler said. Of Brinegar, Ziegler said: "I don 't know what is meant by the term 'oil man' but Mr. Brinegar is not an oil man. HJ Is a very capa ble manager. His area of qualification goes to the management of people." Brinegar lived brieny•in the late 1950s in Yorba Linda, Nixon's birthplace. Supervisors Ask Revenue r Priorities By JACK BROBACK . _ _,_ .... ~~ J..~'" Alter a two hour bearing oo tbe uae of Slf million in federal revenui sbarirle funds, Orange County a u p e r v l t o r 1 IC'-! directed their adminJ.9tntlve oftictr to digest the material' and return with a priority list. SuggestiOll.!I on use or the money ca.ne from a multitude of organizations and ln- dividuals. County Administrative Officer RObert Thomas opeoed the discussion with an ootline of possibilities and restrictions on spending the federal money. He said the funds could be only used for maintenance and operating costs or COWlty govern- ment and for capital eipenditures. 'ftle county bas received SB.9 million to spend between now and next June 30 t nd wilJ receive a total of $14 million for the calendar year 1973. 'lbom8s estlmated the told federal funds coming to the county for the five-year life of the State and Lochl Fiscal Assistance Act at $51 million; ' J ..,.,...... CHOIC S FOR TRANSPORTATION · Oil Ex~ivt Brln..,.r· " 27 Rou11ded Vp In School tiai.d · A t Los Alamit;os A massive roundup of drug sellers at Los Alamitos High School may show tb\e need for .si,milar raids at other ~ty high schools. according to Los: Alamitos Police Chief Roy J. Kwxttz . His ofricers, assisted by federal nareotics age nts, arrested 27 persons, %4 of them high school students, early Wednesday following a six-week in- vestigation. A female undercover agent enrolled at the school, purchased cocaine, ' hashish aqd marijuana with a, street SAN FRANC!sCo CAPJ--Swirls of rain. hail ,-ind snow over Northern California forced closure" taday ·of 'Schools in at least·~~· c·ounties, closed two ma· jor roads r-RJ:etipltated dozens or sometirnes pelted wfth..sn0¥1 ·arad sleet .. Hunlington Lake In the-FrHno County foothills reported three feet or new snow, and Bnss Lake in the Madera County hills showed seven Inches. doctors "have described last night's episode as ati.1te pulmonary edema, which is a manifestation of heart failure, but at the present time there is no evi- dence of myocardial infarction." Parents Veit.in& in an election last monlb gave 69 percent approval for starting an all-year calendar I n February. He slifl ' Orange CountY will receive less per capita than other Southern California counties because its ta1 rate is lower and its average per capita in~me higher. value of . .$§fOl»..-f~m ... .s~nt ~ . Kundtz !akl" , · ... .:._ ,;_:~·.\(·~,:~~ "There is n\ dou_bt. ... dri!re -~~ ..-:,:..: minor bigbWar--~·' Snow blantetfid.Jht Si~a !oolhills and many )ower elevation L'idg~, including the Marin County. 'kills vWDJe from downtown· Sao FrlRCisoo. Near blizzard cond1Uons cooUnQed in lbe ~ierra Nevada Ilse IL · In Marlri/" the Wbtdlrig PanQramic, Higbwu, an eight-mile route linking St!Noo'leacb wilb SJ.ate Highway 1, was closed by the Jllghway Patrol Ibis morn - ing due to snow. · ln Santa 9ruz, state Route 17 between Loo Galo< and -S.Wta Cruz was blocked for a ball .hoair 'fhile highway crews dumped sarid;arwl salt to melt the slush. 'I1le road to Mt. Hamilton near San Jooe waa <!08ed temporarily with six to JO inches el snow. The Highway Patrol also .saMl'1ow trUcks were di!Patcbed to Skyli~tltoulevard there to aid ano~ stranded molorlsts. . . lnterstate •580 at Altanion'Y'Pass and U.S. 101 near tbe Oregon border wtre1 s~pery aDd motorist£ were advised to ClllT)' c!Joli11f. Snow 1liowers Jn El ~do and Placer counties' foot!-ills cloied · most schools. Mong the coast, schools were r«esetd in Forn.ina and other parts of 90utbtm Humboldt ,eounty. . Much of the :entr:il VaUey cleared to- day, but lbo.-foothllls were dusted and San Francisco recorded .a season low 38 degrees today, and hail and some brief sleeting were reported. The Highway Patrol said there were 12 minor accidents on slick freeways during one half-hour periOO here. The weatbennan said it would be fair and oold in the San Franclsoo area Fri- d~Y· With. lows r11f18in&;ffom-Ole mi<HIQ• to mid 30s. '·-' 'lbe NaUonal' · Weamer S e.r v i c e predicted much ?,>pier temperatures in the Sierras to'nighl with ConUilued''snoW showers, possibly through this weekend. Tllere. Mre 57 inCMI o1 lllOw ~ at Donner Pass on Interltate 8, ,atxltzi 13 , of it falling during the Jllgbt. '' Echo Summit reported 20 ·Inc~ oo 0-. gi::ound, and Reno had five ~· Chaina were required on Hi&h""'Y 80 from Auburn to east of RenO; on state Rt. 88 ovei carSOn Pass JYrilch was clff. ' ed tempor4r~y duo to high , wind; ind on H111hwsy i!J over Echo .Surmult. ' • ' In response to a question, a spokes- man said "myocardial infarction" is the "term most people use or what most people mean when they say heart at· tack." The bulletin also made mention of an "infection in the bronchial tree." A spokesman said he could not elab- orafe on that sub~. The report also noted the former pfesident was continu- ing to receive oxygen. The touah' little fOrmer President "'as rushed to the hospital Tuesday night suf- fering lung congestion. i ... He had been ill for two weeks at bis home in nearby Independence, Mo. before entering the hospital. His con· dltloo first was "fair," then fell to "seriOW1" Wednesday and "critical" Wednesday night. Truman's wife, Bess, Ffl, and their only daughter , :Aargaret Truman Daniel , • · (See TRIJMAN Pqe Z) However, it was unclear whether a 70 percent approval or a 67 percent (two- thirds) approval was needed. School officials admitted giving out botl. figures at various times. A final decision must be made by the school board, and the results of the vote wi!'. be presented fo: the.Ir consideration tonight. The meeting will be held in district headquarters, located at the intersection of Newland Street and Talbert Avenue. J ackson Lectures LONG BEACH (AP) -The United States bas failed to develop '1strategic doctrine" regarding nuclear testing ob-- jectlves that would serve as a guideline for a seconQ ::trateglc Anns Limitation Treaty (SALT) with Russia, Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.), told student.! in an address at Cal State l.mlg Beach Wednesday. .United Way ~earing Goal ' C1iristmas 'Rwk' of Donatio~ to Aid W est County • campaipien for the 19'13 Weal Gnlnll'! County United Crusade have ralilld 1436,000 -about 78 pen:ent of the crusade'• goal ol $1114.$25. "Our ctmpelgn f1 MUiing ahead of last year's pace aJ1d last:year we \Opped our goal by aboUt f$,OOO," reports Winn MacEwan, aa&oelate campaign director. Tbe campaign strttcbet lhrougb Jan. 31. A big boost In collectfont la c1pect«I over the Christmas holidays. "We an still •!ru811Un'g for money, as we do each year/' Mrs...MacEwan says, • "Even UtOUCh the press l'fl>Orla business ts •up', we rind a lot of ~pie in this area ""' atlll unemployed." • Tiie Wal Orange County United Crusade covers Huntington Beach, Foun· \.Sin Valley, Westminster, Seal Beach and Garden Orove. Last year11 goal waa ~101000 and the ai.sacle collected aboot 1515,000. 'l'hc mor.ey ls dlvided among :u local ngcn- cles. The biggest sag this year has l'Ome from the ho.me campaign, what Cnisadc .,. I I woriers call lbe "metropolJtan dJvtaJon ." So far, only '6,010 has been raised from individual donorl tn tbla area. The ~m· polgn I• conducled by malling oom• 70,000 leltm seeltmg Individual <on- tr!butloou. Crusade WOl"ken do not lmoek on doots, they only sepd letters ln thla cam· palgn. -Other dlmlons, and their coU<cllons '° far , Include: 1 -commerce Md lndustry (more ~\In (See CRUSADE Pqe II· ' . ( ' For example, the county's allocation amotults to about $6 per capita while Los Angele! County will get SlO per capita, San Diego County, $7, and San BemardinO County, $14. 'lbonw offered a "shopping list" or possible spendJiig which totalled 121.7 million. Areas covered were public safe- ty, environmenta! protection, .. public transportation, health. recreation, social services, financial administration and capital building expeoditures. The building suggestkms totalled ,10.2 million and included $1.8 million for the new Harbor District Municipal Courts building in Newport Beach. Other building pro,tect.s included sir cond!tioning for Juvenile Hall , $375,000; a fire department training center, '277,000; a new county administrsUve building. $5.28 million, and a Voter Registration and Public Administrators warehouse, $1.8 ·million. The Orange County League of Cities has been active tn offering the supervisors advice on how to spend the money. League President Robert Finnell , Pla'centia mayor pro tem.' repealed lhe organir.atlon 'a urging that 50 percent of the county's funds be spent on joint proj- (See REVENUE Page Zl Switch the Numbers; It's 75, Not 57 A Delly PUot article was in error Wednesday when tt stated thal 57 per<ent of parents mw:t approve the all-ytor cllendaf for 111elr ichool hcfolre the Ocean View School Board would conskter Implementing the plan. 1'he correct figure Is 75 pertent. The Dally Pilot regrets any misunderstanding caused by lht error. I of na-rci}ti~ s41&.gomg· oi\,in e~Hi°' ;· · school in lhe county," the'.Police Clt.jef said . "We' moved in here ·beCair.se-~ want students to know that their 9Chobl i!. not a sanctuary for drug sales." Of the 24 siudents arrested in night ' raids on--thefr homes five were girls, iD- vestlgators =d. The Jeng y lnvesligatioR int o . widespread sales at the aChool was financed and COO(rdinatechby the federal Drue Abus~ Law Enforcement ~ency. Chief Kundtz sai . Orange We ..... The ·weatherltdy tayf\it will he partly cloudy on Friday, with cooler temperatures a I ~ n g ·tbe coaat. Highs ell]>ected to reach 60 dell'"';'· Low1 lonj&hl, ~. ·INSIDE TODA'l' Tl1t Drano~ COtlnty P re 1 a Club take1 a group of uncle,.. prfviltped cll:Udren. to Dfiner- land each year. Writn Art VUt· 1tl rtcolts thU year'• uiri& to· the Maaic Kingdom tn 4 .wcrrm Chrill""" llor!i on PO{le 10. • L.M. ..,.. • ,,_.. • ........ 11 c .. .,.,. f • Mw* ... c....-~ ...... ,.,. 1:1 CtlNa Jl*!' 11 ~ ..... 4,,7 ,,..,..., 11 0...... ~ ,. DMtll Mlflc" 11 ...... .. lllllWlill .... ' ..... M4ll'llllfl .. .....,...... ,..,. ........... :• 111111.-, .. -"""""" .. "-"" . ..,.. ....... . . "'"' ......... ) ..... ,,. ~ .......... 4,1 Aftll~ tt ( ' \ ~DAH,,V PllOI " '""""'· --1, 1972 Viet Rech Revenue Checks Suspected I Purple? Maybe Say Talks Deadlocked Will Be Smaller \\>ASl!INGTON (AP) -Tiie flnt AV· enu ... barlni checks art golna out t7 days before Christmas but maoy state, city and county olflcials won't be ln a holldny 1nood when they open the.fr mail . atcilllclat ohlltl w!W otallf·" The Treaaury ii urgJhi pa-. Tho olllclals said a grievance ~ wiU be set up, but nothing can be done UQtll the final data. on wtJJc,~ the dlstrlbuilon is based become available early nexr year. Burglar . ' Shot Dead A man free aW1ltlnt pros.....itlOn ofter being or...ted on a burglary charge about three weeks ago waa shot and kill- ed this morntng under s i m i I a r cirCWl\ltaoces at a Costa Mm al&ht club. • ) . Ziegler Describes Nixon.'s Slm;ks CAMP DAVID(Md. (I/PU -~. ,.._ 1111red, no. l'wJlt, porblpo. Thlt's the nmdown on Prtsldent Nlson's slacb fn>m Wblte -pt,.. semlary Ronald I. Ziegler. ZJfgltr was bUd 1l a Camp ~vi<f 1news briefing todJy •bout a report that the Pn!sldent had be>etl .... 1Uolllng at bla C&toctln Mountain hldea~ay attJrocl lo purple flared llacD. • "I think flared i. • little w~erated," Ziegler r<plled. ''Some or bla s!ack1 don't have cufft on them ••• Ht a a regular guy." What about the color! "I don't know •bout purple., Some of hia 1lacks art blue," Ziegler ripllod. PARIS (t.:Pl l -The \'1etna1nese Com- muni!ts said toda)' that negotiations to end the Vtelna1n war arc deadlocke<'. and the American side adn1illcd there still are probJems to be ovt>rcomc. But two seu of talks -the regular weekly Paris peace talks and secret ~ slons between Jle.nry Kissinger and Le Due Tho -were beld as .s<:heduled. The Treasury Department conceded Wednesday that earlier estimates of how much state and local governments were to receive are far off base because ol new, updated data cranked into the lonnula in recent \\'eeks. One state, not identified, wW receive 29 percent less than originally estimated. About 6,000 government units will re- reive 50 percent less than estimated earl· ier. while 7.000 units will receive 50 per· cent more. AU appeals probably will be handled 1otlelher, the olliclal said, because chana- lng ooe figure affects all other amoonll. Tiie 1'rusury will mall OOl $,90! chee:kl. 1bere are 1,620 governments for :~re ~·t~tf=tii=~ Tiie locldeut occurrtd at the Utile Big . 0 , 11113 Placentia Ave., appartntly when owner Ted Owens arrived Lo open up the bar. Wounded Officer Gains Kissinger, President NtJ.on 's special envoY. began hi5 fourth session of pri- vate negotiations this week ~-ith North Vietnam's Le Due Tho at 3 p.m., a fe>.v hours after the lfi!lth \veek.ly session or tbe semi-public peace talks ended in a birrage of pessimistic statements from the Communists. Today's talks lasted four hours and tbe White House said Kissinger and Tho 'tOUld meet again Friday ,at 3 p.m. Offi--~als satd the meeting ~d be _held at the American-selected site at Neuilly Sur ~e. ; Hanoi's deputy negotiator. Nguyen Minh Vy. said that South Vietnamese de- ,.\iands for troop withdrawals by North Vle.tnam were still the obstacle to peace "These tendentious distortions and a~ surd demands have again pushed the ne- gbtlatlons int() a deadlock," he said. "The gap has never been deeper be- tween the ..,,.ords and acts" of the Ameri- can delegation. Vy said. A spokesman for the Nor1h Vietnamese delegation declared : ;'The impasse per· sista: as of this hour." nte Viet Cong negotiator. hlrs. Nguyen Thi Blnh, told newsmen alter the v.•eek- ty talks: "While rumors circulate about the possibility of the peace agreement being signed today, I am sorry to disap- point you." On the American side, l'dinister-coun- se.lor Hayward tsbam. filling In for Am· bassador William J. Porter v.·ho Isham said had laryn&itis, said. "The fin a I phase of settling a conflict as long, as bitter and as re!istant to a solution as this one cannot be simple. It cannot be driven through briskly or \Vithout taking tnto account the interests of all the par- tt .. . ... Grand Jur y Sees Morale Proble1n At Med Cent.er A major problem in staff morale exists at Orange County Medical Center in the opinion of the County Grand Jury. A 10.,page jury report released today found four areas of concern at the ho!pi~t They are a position freeze in• stituted Jast August, a lack of evening and night supervisorial p e r s o n n e I , arbitary decisions relating to nunie-pa· tient ratio, and tack of meaningful com- munication at all levels of staff. The jury, following what was termed a minor complalnt earlier in the year dl!trlbuted a nine-point questionnaire to all '8 members or the nuning staff. About 74 percent responded. 1be jury report, signed by Foreman Otto M. Schmidlen admitted that a statistical breakdown of the anSwers show! a substnntial percentage of poil.tlve response, but concluded that ma· lor problems are apparent Answers to one question seemed to contradict the jury's conclusions. Nunes were uted, "lf you have worked at other hospHals how do you ra~ workln& for OCMC?" Of !37 responding, 48 percont rat«! the medical center ~er psan other places. 28 -°"' ~ and 24 per<ent worse. On !)al ~al question of morale, nine percent repued If was e1celleat, 44 per- cent good, 29 percent fair and 18 percent poor. Nurses 1180 found worlting conditions eie<Jlmt, 10 perc<nt: good, t7 pereenl ; fair, 31 percent, ud poor, 1J percent. ' -··-. DAILY PILOT A number of large cities are affected. The Treasury wilhhekl the names untU senators and coogressmen can see the amounts first. · The checks, totaling $2.6 bUlloo, are , due to be mailed Friday, but Co-.,.,,lu get ~ word Thursday afternoon.!... State and local governments probably will get their cheeks early next \\'eek. They•u -be-dated Dec. 11. Tb.t changes are so dramatic because the earlier estimate was -ba!ed on 1967· data on the ta.i: effort of state and local governments. The new data are based on a 1970 survey. At a ne.,.,·s session \Vednesday, at which his name \\·as v.•ithheld under the ground rules, a Treasury official told reporters:. "There are very substantial shifts among states and there're some very 1:r 1:7 -{:[ Most in Favor Of Tax Decrease Fifth District Supervisor R o n a I d Caspers asked his constituents to express their views on ho·.'! the county should spend some $14 million in federal revenue sharing funds. The response: Property tax reduction v•as favored by 37 percent: en· \lironmental protection. 17 percent: public transportation, 13; public safety, JO; social services, nine: recreation, five; libraries, five, and ~ealth, four. Caspers solicited the response through an advertisement in the DAILY Pfi,QT. They either doo'l Wit anymore or haven't anmrea-we Treasury's inquir- ies, the olficiiJ said. Of the govermnent uni11, 28,000 ha•• populatiool wxler 2,500. Among tho , .. lll8lod<r -l,lilJO populatlm,. the Olfi· cial said', 920 unib will receive an atOQWlt 50 peri!<nt lowV than the flnt e!llmate. AnollJtr 1.-io .W111 ·gej 10 to IO peTtent lesa than esUmated-' AbOUl1,40lrWl!rget 50-_irmor• and 3,400 will receive between 10 and 50 percent more. The remainder will receive between 10 percent more -<lr less of the original es- timate, be said. * * * League of Cities Asks County Split Federal Funds The Orange Coonty League of Cities believes that the county should split it!I allocation of federal revenue sharing funds with the cities. .If the Board ol Supervisors approve the league's plan this is bow much each Orange c.oast community would get: Costa Mesa , $260,190; Fountaln Valley, 1143,080; Huntington Beach, $484,610; Irvine, $113,680; Laguna Beach, $87,620; Los Alamitos, $38,%20; Newport Beach, $323.890: San Clemente, $70,070 ; San Juan Capistrano, $26,950; Seal Beach, $97,0'lO and Westminster, $134,240. The League of Cities fiscal expens determined the suggested allocation for each city on the basis of auessed valua- tion and population. * FrotnPffffeJ REVENUE PRIORITIES • • • ects with the cities. He based his argument on the highly successful Arterial Highways Financing Program in which the cowity'!I gas tax funds are shared on a matching basis with the cities. Finnell admitted thal in addition to the a1most $5 million the cities want out of the county's pot, they will receive an additional $8 million from the federal government directly. "But," he pointed out, "tht' cities have 87 pereent of the population and 87 per- cent of the total tax base. People should be the prime consideration, rather than places or programs." Finnell said tile revenue snaring act lists bigb priorities for law enforcement. fire protection, sewage disposal, streets and roads and building code en- forcement. "These are basic city services," be argued. He got no immediate reactkln from the board members but Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim reminded him that fund.t SJ)eflt for the county jall, wellare and health servia!S were for the benelit of too percent of the county residents. The Le.ague of Women Voters next of· fered a list of preferred spending proj- ects. Mrs. Jeane tte Turk of Huntington Beach, women's league president, said that fun~ should be spent to meet recur- ring needs which have been often postponed because of other pressures for county funds. The league stand , while not ruling out property tu reduction as one of the From P119e J CRUSADE ••• 10 employes), $32,$95. -Busine!s (10 or Jess emplo)'esl, $2,635. -Majer corporollons, $63,43L -P!Ofessional, 14.180. -schools, !4-0.929. -Advance gilts, 121.973. -Agency drives, 1,200. Another large chunk of money comes [rom Associated In-group Donors (AID), which involves once-a-year drives in big companies, such as McDoMell Douglas. Crusade directors expect to receive $190,623 from AID for 1973. Mrs. MacEwan said no spcciric goals are set for the divisions. "Instead we try ror 100 percent participation. U we get It, ~·e 1mo, we'll make our gool , no matter how much individu:il!I gi~." Gaals, however. have been set for In· dlvidual cities. Scott rlanagan, assistant superin- tl':ndcnt for pupil penonnel in the Hun- tington U.nch Union High School District. i!I campaign chainnan for the city of Huntlni\On Beach. The city's goal l!I •t46.t66, and Flanagan'• workers have so far ralaed $l.ll,176 (that Includes money from the vartous divisions). City chairman for Fountain Valley Is Mn. Jan Wiiheim. Her town's goal 11 $33.450 and campa1,ner1 have railed $23,611. priorities, did state that "funds should not be used to provide se!"'ices which should be funded by currentl7 available tax revm~.n Top ~jtems on tbe women volera Jist were $700,000 for facilities to treat drunks rather than joiling them; 1265.0I~ for bicycle trails; $1 million for buying open space; '250,000 (or funding of local parks jointly with cities; $1 million fo r foster cart for children; $500,000 in !!tart up funds to subsidize 400 low cost housing units, and $375,000 to air eoodition Juvenile Hall. The League of Women Voters list total- ed $5. 1 million.. lira. Turk said the re- maining county funds sboold be used to provide additiooal funds for local parks, to buy park lands in developments where builders ... helping meet the boullng needs for persons of low and moderate incomes, and to provide free bus puses for those on welfare, and those receiving Aid To Families with Dependent Children. Thomas said that IOltle of the revenue sharing funds might have to be spent to make up the county's share cf welfare and health costs ~'h.icb he said were going to be cut $500,000 by the state and federal governments. The administrator said the AB 90, the recenUy approved state tu: refonn bill woold have no direct effect on county finances. Backing the League of Cities pitch for a so.so split of the county funds WM Paul Ryckoff, Newport Beach councilman, and Jiime.I Wells, Villa Park councilman. Ryckolf called the federal funds, "No windfall, they came from the taxpaytrs." Otben plugging for pet proje<ll in- cluded Lucien Truhlll, president of the Orange Counfy Chamber of C:OmmerCe. J{e asked that $250,000 be alloted to the Overall Economic Development Program. "So far we have oo1y been able to fmance training programt and we should move in to actual economic developments to provide real jobs," he argued. William Meyer of Garden Grove urged that funds be earmarked for a fiood con· trol ~ject in his city which he said would coet $1 million. Dan O'Cl:Uaban, director of the C:Om· munlty Action COtmc1l called for 11pen- ding, 0 tbe poot people we represent There are 150,000 of them ln Orange County." Betty Inman, an Orange C:Oast College professor speaklng for the Children's Senrlt.-e Council, called for more d17 care centers for wortlnl mothers. Verlyn Marth, w6o rep.larly addresses the Costa Mesa City Council, shared bi3 viewt with lbe aupervilors. He said that all the funds should be spent for open land. "Orange County la In desperate otraita in total reduction of IJnd. II has been the victim Of 001~ brutal OW'devclopmenl," the Costa !lie,.. uld. Evel)'D Ga)'lllOll ol Laguna Baacb ll(lr~. "1 am against lncrtaslng development of our open 1pace. With molt people we have more crime. l al.so opposed reducing property taus because t~.~ rich ~"OUld benefit most." 0\\-'tllS firtd the fatal shots, police said. William B. Ke.Uy , 26, was shot at least t wlce ln the tono area and died in Costa M... Memorial !joopltal about 7:45 a.m .. according to medical per9CIU)tl. investigators were still p t e c t n g together details ol the ~ about mid- morning and detect.Ives were unavailable for additional lnlol'IDltioo. Owtns. a lqtlme COOi -la"'"1 0wner who has occasiooally taopd wllh city ofllctals, ftfuaed to <Uscuu the case . No lnlonnatlon ns lmmodlat<ly available about whether Kelly was anned when fatally &hot al OW!M' Little Blg 0. a large club in an industrial area. featur- ing nlght-llme dancing. Costa Mesa potlee al'T<Sled Kcllr im.. ~·eelG ago during an alleged burglary at Musket and Sabr< Antique Arms. 446 W. t95h St.. investigators did note todaJ. The viclim ol today's fatal lncldent was taken into custody at gunpoint by in- \'estigating officers apparently respon- ding to a burglar alarm that was tripped. He had been released en bail pending preliminary bearing on that burg!sry charge. in Harbor Judicial District Court. Police said today I.hey bad no permane.nt address for Kelly, whom they believed 10 be a tcanslent in the area. Democrats Sued CIDCAGO (AP) -Operators of the lntematicnal Amphitbealre sued the Democra~ National Committee Wednes- da) to ccllect 12$1.991 In bills they said ~·ere unpaid from the 1968 natiooal con- vention of the party. The suit by the Union Stock Yard and Transit Co. named Jean Westwood, com- mittee Chairwoman, and 112 others as defendant s. Tustin Police learned this morning thot a fellow officer seriously woundtd early \Vednesday In a neighbor~ gun baUle FroraPqeJ has passed the citsis point. ~ Tustin Community, l!ospilal OU!qab told officer Waldron Karp's colleagues that bla condltlott 11 :,,,,.r 1'ltable. and rapidly Improving. .• "Re had a gOQd nJibt," J..ip11a1 of. TR. UMAN fidils aald. "He ii ~ well mid we . • • • ha•~1>!8h llopeo ol.o eomplete ....,...,_.. d b be '•ht Karp .... OJ!tr!,14<111!LW.ednMclli lot stayed by hi1 bedst e tllroul -t · •.. • the removal of a bullel \hat alnlc~tbo 31· leaving the hoi;pital at S:l5 a.m. vear-old patrolman In the stoma 81 he "I feel he is much better," Mrs. Daniel ~ said as she left. "He's sleeping normally moved to Intercept a riflen.an DOW· tden- and-natUrauy. I have-grut falth...that_~t,, II Gary J!llliam John 11, he's going to come oot of tbla all right.'' ~--• m•• "--'·=· be 1 ... •· ... Mn. Daniel said &be talked with ·-• • •-~ u -w "~ Graham "and be says there II de!!nlte sidewalk, the buDet ttlng &beriff'a depu· im(rOvement" ty Ken stewart, 27, Jn the face. Stewart In the mld:momlng meciicol statement underwent 111rgery In the same holpital by Grallam ,.ac1 by holpltal spokesman and 11 also "doiilg well" today. John 'Drev~. it was reported that 0 tbere Johnson was felled by shotgun bluts was a dramatic change in the lung and and handgun fire ~ron-a Tuatln heart function characterized by a rapid patrolman working with Karp and a heart rate of llll and falling blood sheriff's deputy backing up Stewart. pressure of 80 over eo." He was operated on for wounds in the This development dllrlng the night· hand and lmee and la recovering jn caused docton to change Truman's con-Orange . COunty Medlcal Ce.nter Crom di lion Crom "serious" to "critat." those lnJurlea. "He became mremely short of breath Jobn!On bu been booked foi; auaull and bi3 kldney3 were only mlnimally ef. with intent to commit murdor ud fectlve from 3 p.m. unW 9:15 p.m. shooting at an occupied buildln(. Wednesday when be reoponded to Tu1Un police sald the latt<r chars• medication," Graham said. stems from Jolmooo au...,dly !lrlJ!I "The fonner President'J temperature several rifle abota 1Dto 1 home OCCQpW is somewhat controlled but Ouctuatlng. 11 by legol leCrttary Lletlcta J ea n peaked at IOU al mldnlgllt. Tiie major O'Halloran, Ill, at 11312 Diamond lleOd. concern is still heart fallun." Drive. In an early medical statement today, Pollet taid J~son fl.red several lhots Graham said, "vital stg115 contlnue to be · throush the bathroom window and Into stable as they have been during the the glass shower door of tbt res)dence in night. Respiration and cardio functio~ an apparent bid to forte Mn. O'llalloran are stable ... " lo open the front door. • Ormaybeour $100 ......... penonal_ • low cost auto loans? How about our 5% Golden Passbook Account? Are extra hanking hours the reason? Possibly our drive-up teller windows? Whatever the reason, we're growing by leaps and bounds. Our smiling telle rs and prompt, efficient service seem to be just what our Orange County customers are looking for. Hours: Dally 10AM to &PM Friday open tlll BPM Drive-up windows open 9AM ANAHEIM Lincoln.& Beach 821·5410 COSTAM!fA Harbor & Fair 979-1000 SANTAANA 17th & Brl8tol 835-0151 ' Soon In the City of Orange Join us. W, must be doing something right. J I I 1~ I I I t I • I I Apollonauts Ul"I T ....... CHARLEY SMITH, (L EFT), 130, STILL DOESN'T BELIEVE IT He ind Son, Che1ter, 70, Witch Blastoff from Ringside S..ts •• APOLLO M 8PAC~CAAl'T THl"D STAG~ 8!'C°"°· 8TACll~ IM CM • S-IVB 3rd STAGE LIQUID OXVG~N TANK . ' . > • -· ·-· -, -. H DAILY PILOT ~ Sailing Free to .. ,. Electrical Problems Delay Start SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo 17's astronauts rocketed through space today on the final and most dlf. ficult chapter of America's planned ex. pk>ration of the moon. They sailed smoothly despite an elec- tronic failure that delayed their depart· ure by almost three hours and forced them to step up their speed slightly. Noonday brightness briefly Oooded Cape K~nnedy at 9:33 p.m. PST as their Saturn 5 rocket, tall as a 36--story build-· ing, roared off its launch pad and traced an orange comet trail into the sky toward a Sunday rendezvous with the moon. The · moon landing is set for Monday. On the groUnd , more than half a mil- .lion _people .watched-the blastoff, some of them hundreds of miles from the cape. A last second· electronic circuit failure delayed the launch 2 hours and 40 min- utes -and threatened to pOstpone it for an entire m()otb. But technicians at the cape and in Alabama worked out a way to bypass the faulty ge.ar and get the fight started safely. Despite its late start, Apallo 17 was going so smoothly that a coorse COJTeC- tioo. maneuver scheduled this nl()ming was canceled. The astronauts had fired an e x t r a strong -and very accurate -blast of the top stag~ or their rocket to break out of earth orbit toward the moon, golllg a little faster than originally plaMed to make up lost time. Astronauts Eugene A. Ceman, Rona.Id E, Evans and Harrison H. "Jack" Schmitt locked the command ship and moon landing craft nose-to-nose and cast off the spent top stage of the Saturn rock- et five hours after launch. l\1ission controllers at Houston report- ed the discarded rocket stage was on a true course to slam Into the Moon 's face Sunday -while Apollo 17 is behind the moon -about 124 miles east of where Apollo 14 landed in 1971. 1be shock waves, equal to the exptos. ion of 11 tons of TNT, will be recorded by instnunenl! left behind by previous moon =~ I' pi(iM~. °"919' ""'1 Sdunitt are due to taDd on tbt llii:iar surface at mid- day, and about four bocn later to begin Ut'IT ........ APOLLO 17 PLAYS TO BIG HOUSE IN SPECTACULAR DELAYED BLASTOFF Curtain Held Up For Three Hours.-But Spectators Thought It Was Worth It Attorneys Call for Death CORONADO (AP) -With a word of caution from a supporter but only vne dissenting vote, the nation's state 1 at- torneys general have recommended reinstatement of the death penalty for certain crimes. 'The National Association of Attom'eys General voted 3Z..l Wednesday for a resolution asking that "the death penalty be provided as a legal punishmeat where it is appropriate by the Congress and the state legislatures." The only dlssc!.nter was a represen- tative of Minnesota Atty. Gen. Warren Spannaus. Some attorneys general were absent or did not vote. · The resolution was presented by a comrrJttee heaJed by Oklahoma Atty. Gen. Larry Derryberry, who said the f'anel decided "the alternative for feinstating the death penalty most likely to be fav()rably considered by the U.S. ") Supreme Court is one that would impose a mandatory death sentence for specified offenses. "Each state would determine what the offenses would be," he s:.~d. The Supreme Court ruled June 29 that the death sentence. as presently ad"" ministered, v i o I a t e s constitutional safeguards against cruel or unusual punisbmment. The court criticized the current practice of allowing juries the option ()f imposing the death penalty. • Et Cetera elicl~~ ~~~ thr<e.dlyf =-=· mOllntain-' 'bfl:!~ hope will vetban any I moon to date. ' • · 9 SA URNV ·~~ Launch Vehicle . P19'9T ~ STAClll!: Uf'l T ...... TROUBLE SPOT -The oxygen tank which delayed the Apollo 17 launch ls in a 58~·foot long section of the Saturn 5 rocket immediate- below the lunar module storage area. The tank is one of two fuel cells ln the $33 million third stage. Laun~h Viewed · Agnew, VIPs Clieer at Blastoff CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP ) -Led b; Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, scores of VIPs let out cheers as Apollo 17 iJ. Juminated the velvet black night sky at the start of its journey to the moon. And at a aecret site, astronaut wives Barbara Ceman and Jan Evans, com- forted by relatives and rriends, anxiously walted for ·;o agollizing minutes for the delayed liftoff. Earlier, they made a tearful tarewell at crew quarters to the high-spirited astronauts Eugene A. Ceman and Ronald E. Evans. The third member of the Apollo 17 team , Harrison H. Scjunttt, is a bachelor. Agnew watched the launch Crom the firing room at the Cape Kennedy Space Center while a party of his persqnat guests viewed the shot from bleachers at a special site reserved for some 10,000 guest.! invited by the N a t i o n a I WHO'S CALLING WHAT FALSE? OGLETHORPE, Ga. (AP) -A report from the Macon County EJ:terWon Office • S&)'S : "A survey ()f W()mcn attending a meeting to protest decepllve packaglng revealed the following -15 percent tinted their halr. 38 percent wore wigs, 80 perctnt wore rouge, 98 percent wore lipstick, 25 percentfWore eyeshadow, 22 percent wore false eyelashes, and ts per- cent wore nail polish." Atronautics nd Space Administration. Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama, crippled since an a.ssas.!inatkm attempt , in May, joined the Agnew party. His · wheelchair was lifted onto a special plat- form where the governor had a ringside view of the launch. So did his wife Cornelia. Wallace was greeted by cheers from other guests at the site and spent about 10 minutes signing autographs. The top NASA guests Included con- gressmen, ambassadors, f o re I g n dignitaries and a handful or show business peroonaliUes Including Frank Sinatra, Eva Gabor and Jonathan Winters. Far away in a deserted section of the vtP site was Charlie Smilb, a 130-yeal°'" o1d rormer slave from Bartow, Fla. "U I was at home oow I'd be In bed," said Smith, who quit work as a cllnas wwktr at the ap ol 113. "I think I'd rather be at home. I don't believe tbelC meu art going to the mooo. It just can't happen." . The launch also brooght together again the Apollo U team of Nell Armstm>g, Buzz Aldrin and Mike Collins. Annstning and Aldtin made the lint blstoric walk .. tbeJll<J(Jll Juty 20, ll!W. Thouwlds of penom oc.ttered llong the AUanllc Coast watched as Apollo 17 bl82ed Its fiery trail throogh the mid· night sky and then, In an •wesbme shower or light, became a disappearing star as It raced toward the moon from Cape Kennedy. At 7:20 a.m., doctors in mls!lon control said biomedical signals from Ceman in- dicated he was asleep. The other twb crewmen were not wear· ing serisors, bJlt doctors said from the lack of activity aboard the ship they, too, appeared to be asleep. Before the sleep period began, the as- tronaut.! dined Cll beef lnd gravy, cl:Ucken stew, ambrosia, gingerbread and brown- ies. 'Ibey were to be awakened at mid- llftemoon after five hours and 10 minutes of re5t, to begin their second day in space. * * * Apollo Coverage Planned Monday SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -No more special telecasts of the ApoUo 17 flight are scheduled by the three major networks until Monday when astronauts Eugene! A. Ceman a n d Harrison H. Schmitt land on the moon and begin the first or three luilar explorations. M()nday's schedule follows, all limes Pacific Standard: CBS: 11 :30 a.m ., to noon ; 8:30 p.m. to 9. NBC: 11 :30 a.m. to landing conclusion, scheduled about 11 :54 a.m.; 4:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.; 8:30 p.m. to 10:30. ABC: 11 :30 a.m. to conclusion or Ian· ding; 4:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Foreign Aid Topic Of County Meeting "Future Prospects for Foreign Aid" will be dJscussed by John A. Hannah, ad· minl.strator or the Agency for Interna- tional Development {AID) at tonight's meeting of the Orange county World Af· fairs Council in Santa Ana. Hannaf' is the former president of Michigan State University and has serv- ed ln the federal government under presidents Truman, Eisenhower, Ken· nedy, Johnson and Nixon. The dinner meeUng will he held at 7:30 p.m. In the Saddleback Inn. , Four Get 10 Years LONDON (AP) -The " a n g r y brigade" trial, the longest heard In Bri· taln this etntury, ended Wednesday w1th two young mtn-and LY.-O alrll sentenced to 10 yean in prison for plotting bomb and bullet attacks on U1rget1 that ln· eluded the U.S. EmbaSBY and the homes Of two BrlU!h Cabinet mlnltters. The verdict came after a 111-day hearing In Old Balley, London'• etntral criminal court. -·· ........ ~ ... . ... ......... _. A. R1,ul•r A. lid '4' 6", s· SllS.00 I . Uly Acct11orv T ebl1, 18" H. S 129.00 C. Occ11io n•I Ch•it, 24" W. $152.00 0. Teble Top loo• Stend. JO"W, S 25.00 E.. 5-.i ... •I Clu1lr SI t5.00 • H.J.GARRETf fURNl"fURE II PROFESSION.i.L Op .. M•"·· 2215 HARBOR BLVD. ~ INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thu,., & f,;, ev... COST.i. MES.i.. CALIF. M6-0l75 o. SALE $169.00 s 99.00 Sllt .00 s it.so t16t.oo 4.:.-0All Y PllOT Viets P in Do wn Foe Near Saigon SAIGON (UPI! -Government troops chulng guorrlllas who rocketed South Vi<lnam'1 largest alUed airbase pinned down a C.Ommunist battalion in two villa&~ ne_ar Salgoo today, then called in ~ir &trites that flattened the area, field reporta said. In the air war over North Vietnam, U.S. Navy jet fighter-bombers bombed the runways at two MIG bases Wednes- day, U.S. command spo~esmen said, hitting a missile sl.te and knocking out a key railtoad bridge. One of the strikes was only six miles below the 20th Parallel bombing halt line imposed by President Nixon. A command spokesman said BSl bombers trying to break up Communist supply routes Wednesday flew massive strikes in the Demilitarized 1.one separating the two Vletnams. Seventy. five of the ·big "planes dumped an estimated 3,750 tons of bombs in the area -and-21-o1 the Stratoforts hit a, huge con- centration of trucks and supplies on the northern edge of the buffer 7.0ne, the spokesman said. The 'command said B52s hit 12 times In three-plane rormatioos inside Nonb Viet· nam from noon Wednesday until noon t~ day and flew 20 strikes in Sooth Vielnam. Ten of the northem missions were within four miles of the 20th Parallel. South Vietnamese Air Force fiihter· bombers using bombs, rockets, cannon fire and napalm smothered the villages se.ven miles northeast or Saigon, field reports said. More than three battalions of South Vietnamese 1roops and two tank groups -about 6,000 men -closed in on the area after beginning the fight with the Communist unit Wednesday night. An estimated l\lo'O companies of Com· munist infantrymen and a rocket unit - numbering about 500 men -were believ- ed responsible for WedneSday's daylight shelling of the huge Tin Son Nhut airbase that killed nine .'persons and woUnded 54. It was the biggest barrage at the allied base since the 1968 Tet fighting. ..... W I T ....... VICT IM OF KNIFING Mrs. Mir<ol Qn 19671 . . Mr.s. Marcos · Stahhe Hundreds View A-ttack in Phili ppines -' 4 MANILA (UPll -An att.Uer armed with a long, curved bolo ltnlle stabbed and woonded 1111'1. ll!lelda Marooo, wtre of President Fenllnattd E. Man:os, aa she was presenting awards for c t v I c beauUficaUon in a televised ceremony to.. day near Manila Airport. Guards grappled the man to the floor of an outdoor stage w~ the attack took place and shot and killed him as Mrs. Marooo fell. Hundreds of penons In the crowd screamed as they watched the at· tack. Foreign Undersecrelary M a n u e l COllantes said Mrs. Marcos suffered wounds in her handa and arms but was not in danger. Cd.lantes carried her to a helicopter which new .her to a hospital. AN HOUR AnER the attack, medical officials said Mrs. Marcos was in "~" cooditlon. A member of the Philippines congress alSO Wis wounded, but not seriously. The attack occurred during a correspondent Fernaado de! MUodo lhat Mrs. Marcos WU About to -her bond to the ata<ktt -lie pulled out "what.Joobd-UU-•·IO ''+ =t.ud stniok lllrM limes at the llal , She Aid abe pulled ... *""lo ._ and shouted, "Ma'am, be bad. f! bolo!" Mrs. Sandlel Aid abe beard a DI doc out and aaw the maa llrtking oat wtdl11 with his kn~e. Mrs. Marcoa, she said, ~ fell on ber. The attacbr slumped I<> the otaae In ND vie.I of the spectaton, many ol lbem school cblidret. At the MUaU Medlcal Centei, •Pre.sl· ' dent Marooo arrived by car aad hurried inside the opero11ng ....._ cabinet members, top military olfidals and foreign dignitaries 1con....,e.i on the lloopltal to expreaa their coocern. 1bere wu no tmmedlate ldentlflcatioo ol lhe attacker. • • ttacr.wtllclrWat,~b -and screams from -.. .-took 91¥t 111 a ralJed open-air ltage and was reconted on television by one Mahila eJ\Mntl, - -" Mn. Marcos waa handlitg out '"'"" &lid -lng bands with oonttsi winners when die bareheaded a....,in c8me on lhe •tase1 beaitated momentarlly, pu)Ied !be long ltnlle from his belt and ~"" forward. • ... · L' . "-.. ' . Mrs. Marcos , wearing her usual Filipino terno g0"1I with tta grioeftd but- ttrfty sleeves, fell back•llX\ more than a bal.f doten security men swarmed on the attacker. 4 . - Sl Billion lndut,.Y Scientist8-Call for Ban . North Plains Minus 20 ce remony at the Nayong Filipino village 11ear Man.lla.JntemationaJ~airport-aa-Mrs.-;-- 1\fareos banded out prizes in a cleanliness and beautification contest. Estalania Aldaba Lim, secretary of social wclfm, who was with Mrs. Man:o.s oa the stage, said: i}n totd,-GDunh=Potions= ~· I ;> . . ) A rctic Weather Puts Cli ill on Atlantic Coastli1ie "The man looked strange. He lunged at Mrs. Marcos. The bolo was in a sheath. -It didn't look sharp. I saw him lunge three times." WASHINGTON (UPI) -During the firs t two days of Senate bearinp on over. the-rounter drugs, &even scienUst$ in- cluding a fonner medical executive of the Vick 'Chemical Co. have urged the government to ban all cold and cough remedies from the mark.el • .,..., • """110C1aco \. ~----'-#-::it- L ... A-ll• l 3 . NEWPORT • #I ~.000 Ifft. s.-was also liktl'I' In lht Anl~IOIN Valely. V .S. Summary By T"' AUOcllltM l"reu ~ ~l~-;":t:Otll~:-~~~ l\1RS. HELEN SANCHEZ, who was near Mrs. Marcos on the stage, told UPI P'Ahlnll ~lvrel ta JO btllDw mro Kflllq IM llOtf1'llWTo J)lalns, llnlffsn(ftQ ~•It fore• wlndl _.the Qflwn Great Lakn and PVtllng • d!H Into Ille ~~~l:.C.s ~~1:.e. si.tes from I~• The t"'1Pt1'1lun drvpped ta 20 beiow In Mcwl"tia' WV0m11'1!1, M'""'"°l1 Ind Nortll 0.kota. MlrnNPO!ls .. , I record with -.211, ~1/tna a previous -IJ Mt In ltl6. DAILY .PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE G•'" O'iff L1ka Onl=•!ld Litt Erie WI I~ to I UD to 5 lnctiH of $nOW In the v nftv of ttw Dtlivtty of the Dillly f'llot ··~ is giynnteed Coastal Weather ~-~rfUf• " ,.. ..... ...,. ,_ C0Mldel'abl1 ckiudlMSS wlltl "1aw- er. today. V•r1•W. wllldl nlohl end m«Nng bDu,.. '*-frw -t.rty 10 ID 20 knota Ill •"--lodr/ JIM FrlllJl'I'. Hlgll tadly In upplr _Jh. • C09st1I ~ti.lrlt rai.ae k"am "' .. ,., •J Si• ......... ull .... .,...., "" 'lirill ... ~ .. )M.Cllb ............. J;)f"""" to 5t. Inland r1tuns ranga lrom '1 to 5t. W11tr 1tvr1 '°· Sa ...... r _, ~ ff ,.... M 111t -""" ,...,,. CMl'I' toy ' ...... ~.,, at I L-. s""''· call '""' • "'" wlll "-.......,.. 1'9 ~I'll. Ulh ,,. flllM ...i111t a.m. Sun, Moen, Tides · THUIUOAY 51cond high ........... 11:17 D.m. 3.5 ,,,,,..,,.. lllattlNftt ........ ._,. S«vnct '-··~i:iD.t.Y' •:ll ti.l\J. ~-• First hlflt ... , . , .. . .. , t ::U a.m. !I.I Flr'lll k1w . • . • • . .. l :U a..m. 2.1 S.CDl!d l'llfh ........... 11 :,,p.lfL l .S ... o.-.,.. c_,, -""5 ... 642-4121 .... WR'1Jnlmtar ••-• •• ·540-1220 S... C~ Cl---Bltldi, 5lconQ tow .••..•. , ... 5:K p.m. ~.J s .. ,_ c.,.. ...... o.a ~ .... sun •lies 6:"6 a.m. Ith •:.c p_m. MOOll ltllls l:tl a.m. Ith •:13 p.m. S..OMI ~ u..a ,.._.. ~tJ..44H THE DRESS BLOUSE A GIFT OF GENIUS To whirl her nonstop tlni holiday parties otop palazzos, longski rts, velvet pants! JU5t machine wash ond dry be-. parties. Polyester, sizes 10-18. 1. THE RUFFLE ••• at reek and sleew. frcm Rhoda Lee. White, bone, 12.00 2. THE TIE .•. to bow or fall long. lee Mar's crepe textured polyester. French cuffs. White, pink, blue, 13.00 3. THE SISSIES ••• all nilfles and lace ol front and anf. Cool polyester/cotton blends from Lady Manhattan. White. l 3.Q0.14.00 collection. 4 . THE POET SLEEVE ••• sleekly knit white, black or red. Lady Mafhoitan, 16.00 ,,,__,....,. AN OPEN INVITATIONi SHOP EVERY SUNDAY 'TIL CHRISTMAS·12 to 5 .•• Hunt Brunch i• served in oil Buffums' Restourants ' Dr. Charles C. Edwards, head of the Food aud Dnlg Administration (FDA), was expected to be questioned today on why the government has allowed the CM· tinued sales of over-the-counter mixtures for colds and coughs. Edwards and other FOA officials were among witnesses scheduled to appear on the third day of bearings by the Seria.te's Small Business Monopoly subcommittee on the $1 billion a year nonprescription medications industi:y. Dr. Donald C. LaBrecque, director oC clinical research at Vick Laboratories in 1"70 and 1971, testified Wednesday that NyQuil, a popular n!gltt-time cold remedy with annual sa1es ol. more than $20 millioo, C'Ohtains "everythlng but the sun.'' He said the main rtason it puts_glld sufferers to sleep is that in contains 25 percent alcohol along with an an- SHOP NDRNING, NOON AND NIGHT 1 EARLY CLOSING SATURDAY 1SUNDAY12:00.5:00 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENTER e 644-2200 e MONDAY THRU SATRUDAY 10:00-9:30 •SUNDAY 12:00-5:00 ' • tltustamlne. He suggested a gllU· or sherry -which has only 20 percent alcohol -would work just as well to in· duce 1leep and would be safer. Calling the remedy "a witch's brew." he said "they added a little of this and a little of that and the product came out. .. Richanlson·Merrell , parent comP411X,0£ Vicks, later issued a stal~t saying. "NyQuil .. l has been used Sal~]'. and el· fectively by millions-or people Pltlie United States ... We believe that Dr. LaBrecque's testimony is substantially incorrect." LOTTERY JACKPOT PAYS $1 MILLION PLAINFIELD, N.J. (UPI) -Louis W. Bradley, 49 has won $1 million in the New Jersey state lottery and told newsmen, .. Now l can get out of debt." Bradley, liho owos a tool company in Willow Grove, Pa.;'caiq....bt buys two lot- tery tickets every wee'k., kives tus wife one and keeps the other. It was h1s that won Wednesday. " - 2 4 ' ' .. • • • • ' I_ ~ I I I I I I I I I 7 7 , ----------, Orange Coast · EDITION Today's Fl••I N.Y. Stoeks :VQL. 65, NO. 342, s SECTIONS, 7,2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORN1A THURSDAY, DECQ.4ER 7, 1972 N TEN CENTS. O·wnership of 3 Upper Bay Islan_ds Pro·hed By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. o.llY' Plttt "'fl Irvine Com,l,>8DY ownership of the three lsl&nds In 'IJJll)<r Newport Bay is still open to some qUestion, and both Orange C.U.ty and· the U.S. government are trying to find 90f1)t answe1 .; , . ~ty 'Counsel Adrian Kuyper Sf id· tir· dsy 'hls olflee -at the. request of the county real iwoperUes servJces depart- ment -is researching the titles to the islll!ld& • ----. lie conlinned lite probe is in response to claims that the Wands were nol in ex- istence in 1850 -when'Califorv.11 joined the wtlon -and therefOre ar~ tidelands. "~ tlieory 1s Ii they -·t .mt then, they wer.e O'f4'1le4i by.tidal actio~ and are tidelands and therefore-can'~ be privately owned,!'·Kuyper aald, Depofy C.U.ty CooDS!'l i:;ta~ Parker ~la16ed ·!ha~ a -1~ ~ decision has furtber ·clOudod lite Usue, , --nier.......-or ~liOil liel\V!en Orange County and Uie Irvine Company that defined the boundaries of Irvine lands and county tide1ands around the bay," Parker said, "and it refers to 'an Island' of 17.7 acres ill the ba). "The two lower islands apparently were owned by someom: else at the time and subsequenUy acqulred by the com- pany," Parker said. Kuyper said bis job is to find out if the i stands were in existence in 1850 and then to determine the erreet or the 1926 ad: judication. "We've got to find out whether the county could alienate them (sell or give them away) ~ and then to find out whether we did," he said. Parker said much of the information furnished to both bis office, and the U.S. Department of the :nterior, has come from County Harbor Commisslooer Frank RoblnsoD> and retired Newport Beach atto~y Max B. Sturges. stUrges-; In a letter to county supervisors Wed:iesday, claims to have original maps 4ated 1859 that do not show the islands, while they do show Balboa Island. Sturges usert.s floods in 1861 created both Balboa Peninsula and the Upper Bay islands -"at least a begining and geologists state ttiey ·accumulated right up into the 1920s." sturge!I. Nrl.ier this Year filed com- plaints that the Irvine Company doesn't own fiUel.OtiM&Isle . . William R. Mason, Irvine Company' president. said today, ·"We were surpris-. ed to hear that the Orange County: Counsel's Office and the £ederal govern-· ment might feel that there is a possibility the Irvine Company does not have clear; title to tb~ islands: . "The islands are classified as swamp· and overflow lands and are the same as the Balboa Peninsula, BaJbaa Island, Lido Isle . and other areas ln Lower 11\U ISI:ANDS-Pago!.) • , LA Oil Exec • Ill Cabinet-- President Completes 'Refinishing' ' - Driver Slftps 7 ·Vehicles, Assorted Objects in Spin A 77-year-old woman driver cut a swath of injury'and destr:ucf.lon across Newport Beach's Westcliff Plaza Shop- ping center Wedneoday allernoop when she lost contnll olner bmzry sedan. Gladys E. Qerberts of !SU Klnp Boa\!, N""1'0rt ~. told 'J>Ollce she .0. ddeotally bit the accele\'$r· instead ot the brake. The big ~ shot ahead and, police 1aid, hit: . -Four boys. (None was hospitalized.) -seven vehi¢1es, including f I v e bicyclel. I -A No Pariitig Sign. -An ornament.al planter; -Two shopping carts. I -A parking lot lljllt standard, Investigators said the pole also bent and lite. jarting impact ~ung its il· Iumlnatlng ltµnp 'globe 1-, causing it to plutnnH:t' like' an aerial bomb onto n parked truck. Debris ' hurled ahead as the Lincoln Continental jumped the curb also rained .... the ga v-On Drug store automatic c1oor,,11ki shnpqel;wi-sold.· ,..1JOys wI1osi\~·· ·-ing olf the ~:a. ... It 'l'lm& in-• wild arc through tlirparting lot1 all of them 13, included ~il>hael J, ~"If· 1021 Leeward Lane; ~ritl.)C . ~ ·1936 Leeward Lane; Thoma's ll Mock'ett, 1601 Antig ua W'ay, and Warren 'H. Bradley, 1129 Pembroke Lane. 1be victims, who suffered lacerations, bruises and abrasions plus one with a sprain requiring a splint all ,\'"ft treated at Hoag Memorial Hospital and released. Mrs. Herbert.sand her passenger, Mrs. Violet M. Billln&~ '2, also of !Sll Kings Road, were shaken but declined medical attention, police said. A .fifth ·parl<ed bye)'l:le • bal""lling '.o a neighborbOod Birt was mangled, but she \'/as' not aboard at' the ume. The e~rly driver waa 1191 cited. The 'Callfornfa veiilcle Code does not apply Oil prlyale ""'l!"rl1. • • ' ~... .. .... ~ ·' • t CAMP DAVID, M:d. (UPI) -President Nixon completed his Cabinet overhaul ~ day by naming ..cJ.aut!e Brinegar, 48, a Los Angeles oil company executive, as Transportation secretary. Brinegar,. who bolds a doctorate in economics and likes fast cars, will sue· ceed John A. Volpe who 1s becoming U.S. ambassador to IWy -a post he waDted. The appaintment is to be the last Cabinet face change to be announced by Nixon but other switches at the sub- Cabinet level are anticipated for the second term. The reapµolntrnent or Doctors See TrumanRplly 1,, Hospital JCAN~ ClTY, f.!_o, (UPI) -Despite a --beart-lltld lllbore~ breatliing, ._... PftlidoDI 0 •-S T!uman II ;;u;;.....,..,~., ' . Dodon aaid bis health was critical but bis daughter sai<i, "[ have great faith that he's going to come out of this a11 right." Physicians attending the 11atloo's 33rd chief executive· said their-primmy con-- cem was whether Truman's heart was strong enough. "President Truman's condition is im- proved, bui bis age ~ the potential or sudden change l'eQLires that he continue to be described as critical," said a mt:dicaJ statement today at Research Hospital. Truman rallied during the night and Dr. Wallace Graham, bis personal physi- cian, said deterioration of his heart and lungs stopped early today and his vital signs stabilized. This altemom's report said Truman's dock>rs "have described last night's episcMle as 'acute pulmonary edema, whJch Is a manifestation of heart failure, (See TRUMAN Page !) Sore Hand Brings City Fire Engine A call by companions to aid :: fire vic- tim at the Newporter Inn sent Newport Beach firemen racing to the scene. but once there they wondered : Was this trip necessary? The victim they found on arrival Tues- day was identified as Al Koebrtch, 42, a Maywood stagehand who singed his band when he got too close to a Klieg light. He asked for some ~ve, which they gave him and then returned to their sta· tion. Richard G. KJeindienst as attorney general is expected to be announced Frt· day. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, who announced the latest a~ pointment -which is subject to Senate confirmation -said Brinegar. 45, a senior vice president or Union Oil Co., is "a very qualified manager and executive in the business world." . Ziegler lavished praise on b o t h Brinegar and Volpe and noted that Volpe would become the ftrSt Italian-American to head the U.S. mission in Rome. 0.tLt .;\.., ... -THEY'RI l>lSAPHARINI lrvlM Company. Sign Irvine Company Can't Keep Signs Around Back Bay It was about a year ago that the Jrvine Company erected a b&rbed-wire fence around Upper Newport Bay to keep peo- ple off its property. On !bot f'°"' it pOP)!'<Hlle bilgbt ,,.d and while sii!i! ~~-IU' oimeul:lp -part ol" its. ciei'enl.! agl.1ns1 c!ajms that the public may bave acqu_ired title due to prescriptive rights (continued access and use over the years). It was about a month after the fence went up that it had to come down because or public react.ion to the barbed wire. Smooth wire replaced it. The signs went back up. But the signs have been coming down ever since and the company is getting annoyed. "We put about 180 signs arotmd the bay and· about 100 of them have been stolen the past year," a company spokesman said today. The spokesman conceded they make nice bedroom decorations, but said com- pany officials are growing more-and more upset. Suspect Slain At Mesa Club; Details Unclear A man h:ee awaiting prosecutl,oo arter being ai:rested on a burglary char1e. aboOt three weeks ago was sh~ ~U)id1\itl· Corinfy Asks Priorities ed this rooming under t S ~ m 11 a r circumstances at a Costa Mesa night • · club, \ .S~pervisors Discuss Spending of Federal Funds The lncldent occurred at theµtllt. Big ' 0 , lNS Placentia Ave., apparently wheii owner Ted Owens arrived to open up the bar. Owens fired the fatal shots, police said. Willlam B. KeUy, 28, was shot at least twice In Iii< lo"° aru an~ died in COSta Mesa Memorial Hospital about 7:n 1.m., according to medl<al personnel. Investlg1tors were still p l e c I n g toe<tJier detalli ol .lhe alaY!ni about mld- momlna IDd detectives were uD1vailable ror 1ddillon1l lnlormaUon. \ Qweas. 8 lonailme Collll /.teta laVC(ll 0W11<r who bu occasionally taagled wltb clty omcl1l1, refused to dlscu.Y the case. No information was immediately avaUable abOUl whether Kelly W81 armed when fatally shot at Owens' Little Big 0, a lqe club in an industrial area, featur- ing nlgbWl ... dMclni· • By JACIC BllOBACK .... _..., .......... After a t..,o bour bearing on the use of $141 fnuuon ln federal revenue sharing funds, Otaoge County 1 u_ p e. r-v I 11 o r s Wednesday.directed their admlnlstraUV< officer to dlaest the ll)lterlal and ..- with a priority !lat. • • Suageatlool on Ul8 ol lhe money ca.ne from a mu!Utudl ol orgaaliau ... and In- dividuals. County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas opened the d!ICUllloo with an ouOIM ol l>OlllblllUet and reotrictlont on spendln1 the fedora{ mooey~-He oald the funds could be only used lor malntenBn« and operating COits of county aove.m- ment and for ca.pltal e1pendJture.1. The COU11ty has received II.I mUlloo to spend between oow and next June. 30 t:.ud will receive a total of 114 million for the • calendar year 1973. Thomas estimated the told federal funds coming to the ceunty for the five-year life of the State and Local Fiscal Assistance Act at $51 million. · He Aid Orange County will receive lea per capita than other S06tbem caufonUa counues bec•uae Its tat rate Is lower and Its average per capita income bll)ler. . . For example, the county's a11ocatlon amounts to aboUt '6 P'.tr capita while Loa: Ancol .. county will ·sei 110 per capita, San _Dl~l!l -"'"'1ty, !'I, ond San Bemardlno C.OUnty, $14. Thomas otrered 1 "shopplng list'' of P.OSSlble spendin1 which Wlalled 111.7 mlWon. Areas covered •ere public cafc- ty, environmental protection~ public tran>portatlon. btollh, recreation , aoctol servlct.1. flnanclal admlniltratlon and capital building expenditures. The building suggestions totalled $10.2 million and included $1.8 million ror the new Hal'tk>r District Municipal Courts building In Newport Beach. Other building. pro:kcts included air condlllorun. lor Juvenile Hall, 13'15,000: • fJre department tratlll.ng center, $277,000: a new county admin.iltrative bulldJng. $5.28 mUUon, and a 'Voter Registration and Public Admlnlstnton warehouse, 11.8 mllllon. :.1 The Oranf• COunty .Ltailie or Cities Im *'1 ae.Uve In of!erin1 the aupenrl9ors advice on bow to spmd the money. lague Preddtnt Robert Finnt1:ll, Placentia mayor pro tetn, repeated the organlJ<iUon's urging Ibo\ IO ptroent or tht couilty'I fuodt lie -t C111 Jotnl proJ· 'tllMllZllSNUC .... I), • "When Secretary Volpe takes up this important diplomatic post he will be retracing a journey that brought his own parents to this country: as permiless im- migrants at the turn of the century," Ziegler said. Of BriDegar, Ziegler said: "I don 't know what is meant by the term 'oil man' but Mr. Brinegar is not an oil man. HJ is a very capable manager. His area of qualification goes to the management of people." Brinegar lived briefly in the late 1950s in Yorba Linda, Nixon 's birthplace. Rain , Snow 'Cl()~~ Schools · ' '' Roitds iii State SA'.11 J'!IAHCISCO (APl -Swi<I& of rain, bail and , mow o'ier' Northern CJalllomla f,....i •i!iour! today Ql schools in at least three coUnties, cltlled two ma- jor roads and · Pf't<lpltated 00...... of mlnc>r highway accidents. Snow blanketed the Sierra foothills and many lower elevation ridges, including the Marin County hills visible from downtown San Francisco. Near bliuard conditions continued in the Sierra Nevada itself. In Marin, the winding Panoramic Highway, an eight-mile route linking Stin.90n Beach with State Highway I, was closed by the Highway Patrol this morn- ing due to snow. · In Santa Cruz, State Route 17 between Los· Gatos and Sdnta Cruz was blocked ror a half bolU' while highway crews dum,ped sand .and salt to melt the slush. The -.cl to ·Mt. Hamlltoo near San Jose was cloaed temporarily with six to 10 iocbes of. snow. The Highway Patrol also said tow trucks were dispatched to Skyline Bouleyard there to aid snow· stranded motoruts. Interstate 580 at Altamont Pass and U.S. 101 near tbe Oregon border were slippery and motorists were advised to carry chains. Snow showers in El Dorado and Placer counties' foot ' :.lls closed most schools. Along the coast, schools were recessed in Fortuna and other parts of southern Humboldt County. Much of the ~ntrJI Valley cleared to- day, but the foothills were dusted and sometimes pelted with snow ar.d sleet. Huntington Lake in the Fresno County foothills reported three feet .of new snow, and Bass bake in the Madera County hills showed seven inches. San ~isco recorded a season low 38 degrees today, and hail and some brier sleetinl were reported. ne Highway Patrol said there were 12 minor accidents on slick freewa ys during one hall-hour period here, The weatherman said it would be fa ir and oold in the San Francisco area Fri· day with lows ranging rrom the mid 20s to mid 30s. The National Weather Ser v i cc predicted much c,oler temperatures in Ute Sierru tonight with continued snow showen, poaibly through this weekend. Thtre were 57 inches of snow reported at Dormer Pam oo Interstate I , about 13 or 11 falling during the night. Echo summit reported 20 inches on the ground, and Reno had five inches. , ())ELL, l'\'t GOT 17 SlmlllG PA~S TO GET PRE5ENT5 FOR ALL MY FRIENDS! I' •I l I • ., ' ,,,:,, ' . ' ' ' , , ..,.., ,....... . CHOICE FOR TRANSPORTATION Oil Exec::utiv-.B1inepr S"thools t-0 Drop Baccalaureate Mass Services The mass baccalaureate service which has always preceded the individual graduation ceremonies ror the five Newport-Mesa high schools will be no more. District trustees have decided to follOw the suggestion of religious and com- munity represe11tatives and disband tbe collective service so the schools can hold individual baccalaureate services. • The decision came Tuesday night aft& associate dlfultt sujJerlntel)ilent Norman Loats pn!serl)ed school bo>!rtf •memiler!t' with the group's suggestions. These in·• elude proposals tn est a b,I i s1h baC·, calaurP.a(e boards or pare'nts, fadJ!ly1,and students at each schoo l to set t.ip regut8- tions for the services. The regulations would be reviewed by the district superintendent. The change in pol icy is the result of a protest by local religious leaders who complained to !he board that the mess serviei! held at Davidson Field was not • conducive to inspiration because of noise inlerference and the physical ditficulties of addresSing the two seU of bleacher& on opprislte sides or lhe fJekl. Orange Coast . Weather . • . . -The weatherlad,y says it will be : partly cloudy on Frjday. with : cooler temperatures a I on 1 lbe ·: :S:!g!~~!~~~t.to~~ch ·: INSIDE TODA V The Orange Couiity P. r e a s Club take1 a group of under· prh.1il.tged chUdrtn to mtneu- land ench y~ar. \VrlUt' A.rt vs,.... sal recaUa this year1 Wit to the Magic Kinpdom tn c worm Chriltm., 1torv on Pau• 10. L.M, ...... I Cell...,_ I Ciani"" u.» c-k1 Xll'lltl ti --n o..tll """'" •• • .i .... w.1 ,... • •11ttrttlftfMillt ,,.,. "IM9n , .. ~ ..... 11111 1:---, .. , it .. _ . A1111 UllCIW' It ,.... .. """'* JI -· -M41'"1 ..... It 1Mtl9NI ..._ t. r ar..rc...,-" ._,. -lltel ,,,..,...,. ... ., ·-.. --.... -. w-•'•,.... , ..... ...... ...... ', ' -. r ' ~. • OAILY PILOT lhilf """ BROOKE THOMPSON WORKS ON HIGH SCHOOL MURAL At Coron1 del Mir, 1 Little Psychology Mixed With Paint Students Put Psychology, Art on High School Wall By Vt'ILLIA!\1 SCHREIBER • Of flte O.lly Pllef ,,.., One stark . white classroom \Vall al Corona del Mar High School has blossom- ed into a graphic explosion of colorful, youtbful expression. In an artistic effort that wouki make Peter Max proud. so art and psychology students have created a nine by 12-foot murat on ffie back wall of the pSycliilogy room. 1be students were turned loose on lhe ICboolroom wall by two teachers who thought painting would serve as fll'Sl· hand art experience and a first-rate means of self-expression. Art .e.JCher Joan Swanson a n d psychology teacher Aminah CI a r k couldn 't be mOf'e thrilled at the way things worked out. They say they ended up with a huge oriJinal artwork -and a bunch of better-ad1usted youngsters. "We put psychology and art together .and let them meld -it was .an incredibly creative process." said Mrs. Clark. "Some of the kids had absolutely no art experience and yet they turned out some marvelous things ." The mural. which \Vas painted with a dozen shades of regular interior house· paints, depicts many aspects of the human psyche and a number of personal expressions, she said. "It was completely designed and ex- ecuted by the kids," said ~1rs. Swanson. "Each artist did his awa part of the whole thing and then it was all pulled tagetbe.r.'' The resull is a series of about 30 separate parn!ls united by a surrealistic dream sequence that stretches across the entire wall. • '"The dream scent. was done by a rew of the best .art student$. They y,·orked a long time on that one," sa id Mrs. Swanson. The dream is envisioni;od as fleecy \vhite clouds on a field of blue in· terrupted only by small angel figures. a few birds and a six-inch-wide rainbow meandering across the whole scene. . "The mural took about four weeks to <;_omplet~ -one_week of classroom plan- ning and three '!''eeks of execution," said ~1rs. Swanson. "ll is still not completely finished bUt shoulti be 't'ery soon." Mni. Clark said her primary: reason for asking Mn. Swanson to paint the wall or her room was not only to get.students in- volved but to create p e r m a n e n t d<1ssroom illustrations. -''We .use grapb;jc iJJustrattons of psychological things au the time in in- atruction." she said. "Now all we need to do is look at the wall.'" The entire project cost the social studies budget about $75. "We had full support from the ad- ministration to do it," said Mrs. Swanson. "They were all for it." Now that it is almost finished, both women say they miss the hustle and bus- tle. "We thought we'd never gel it done but here it is and v•e all kind of miss the work," said Mrs. Clark. "l hope this kind of eilorl won't stop here, though..·• Mrs. Clark said she hopes other schools do the same thing. · "It really brings kids togetheJ· and lets them express their individual styles," she said. Both teachers admitted they had a personal hand in the wall • painting ex- ercise as well . "It was one of those childhood urges to draw on something that everyone thinks is sacred,'' said Mrs . French. Scott Named Dean at OCC Dr, Jack Alan Scott was named Dean of Instruction at Orange Coast College Wednesda y nlg}lt. OUNH COAST • DAILY PILOT Tiie or.,.. C..I OMLV PILOT, _.. wllkll .. ~ ""' ,...,_.,.,..., " "'*""" .,. -Orwillt 0.... l"vOlllll"" eomp.ny, s... nfe 9dl!IM$ .,.. PlilDll&lltd, MOOICUI~ t11to!,i;1'1 ,.,..,, ,., CM11 Mesa. N...._-t a..dl, IMl1'!41QL a...dlfF-1111! Valley, lA9ufll ltldt. l~SWlli.blcll Ir.cl Sin C~nltJ S. ~ C.pbir-A ~inlll• r19 ion1I .. m.n b pUbl/tMid .. lvnJlp end Sundl\15. n. lll'"lnt• .. ""'"' ~nl II II U> W~I lty t.trwt, ,Ql6M M-. C.lhornhil, t162t. loHri N. W1M ~-'*~'"*' Jo~• R. C11rley VD~ _. 0-11 MlnlOtf 1\eM11 K""U ...... Titom11 A. Mlll"phi111 Mlllltllf'lll EOllOI' l. P'1t1r Kri11 ......,_., 8elCll City ?:dllW ............. Ofllloe J))) Ntwport 1o,,i..,." M1'"-t A.Uru11 P'.O. lex 1175. fZ66J °""' Offkao CIMll9 M«tl: »O Wnt .., llf..i lo...-l..cti: m ,......, ,,_ ""'°'"""" llMdt: 1 NTS IMClt ~, • .... a.-Mt: JU Hint: El ClmlM llMI , ....... 17141 '4z..4JJ1 a n 1~'42·M11 ~ mi. Orw!99 c.-.1 ....,.... ~. ,.. -llWlft. '""''""'"" ....... ......... ., *'""''""""" ... ,,.., .. ,. ·-w\lfleyt ~ ........ ....... " ..,....., "'*"· ' --... == ,.v " c.t• Mela. QllJs; ... I: .-ll'f CMTJtr t1.u .....,., I llir """' D,, 1 S "'°""""I "'""""' -· ..... lfM .......,.,. • Scott. 39, a former provost and dean of the College at Pepperdine University, was the unanimous choice ~or the job by the Coast Community College District board of truSl.eeS. He will take over his new duties Jan. 3, filling a spot held formerly by Or. James S. Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald will assume the presidency of Foothill College in Los Altos f.lills next month. A nati ve of Sweetwater, Texas, Scott has been provost of Pepperdine since 1970. He received his AB degree in religion from Abilene Christian College, his BD degree in religion from Yale University, and hi!! MA degree In history from Claremont Graduate School. He earned a PhD in history from Claremont in 1970. Before becoming a provost at Pepper. dine, Scott was dean of instruction and associate professor of history al Pepper. dine. From 1957 to 1962 he was minister of the Whitney Avenue Cln1r<h of Chrut In Hamden, Coon. From 19S5 to 1957 he was assistant to the president at Abilene ChrJstian College. Scott was president of the Pepperdinc chapter or the Ameri can A1soc\1tlon of Unlvenity Professors. and wa' selected for the 1972 edition of outstanding Educators of America . Scott and his wife, Lncreta, ?lave five children, ranging in age from 17 to 6 . Fitzgerald has been dean of Instruction at OCC since 196.l, He came lo OCC in 1965 as a music instructor and has served an 111slllant dean of student activities, and chalrman of the Dlvllk>n of Fine and AppUed Arts. ,._P-.eJ REVENUE ... -with lbe dU... Ht bU<d bit argument on the hllhly IUCCeSllUl Arltrial °l:llgbways FillonCfng Proir1lm In which Ille oouoly'o (U lu funds ore lllared oo a matching liesi• with tht du ... • Flnntll 1dmltted that la 1dd!tton to lbe almoct 15 mUllon lbe dUes want out ol the county's pot, they will receive an additional $8 miUion trom the federal government directly. "But," he pointed out. "the cities have 87 percent of the population and 87 per· cent of the total tax base. People should be the prime consideration, rather than places or programs." Finnell said tne revenue Sharing act lists high prioriUeS for law enfol"CC3lenl, fire protect.ion, sewage disposal, streets and roads and building code en- forcement. "These are basic city services," he argued. He got DO immediate reaction from the boSJd memben but Supervisor Ralph Clark' of Anabelm reminded him !hat funds &pent for the county jail, welfare and bealtb senitts were for the benefit cl 100 perceqt of lbe county ~nts. The League of Womeo Votei:s Delt of· f,rod a list of preferred sPendln&. 1>roj- ec1;. Mrs. Jeane~ T1lr!_ ol.!!un!1!18!on Beach, wqmen•s league president, sa!(I that fWlds sbould be spent to meet recur- ring needs whfch have beeo often postponed~_olother.pressures for county fund s. The ·1eape Stal)d', while not ruling out praperty tax reduction as one or the priorities, did slate that "fWJds should not be used to provide services which should be funded by currently available tax revenues ." Top items on the women voters list were $700,000 for facilities to treat drunks rather than jailing them; 1265.0M for bicycle trails ; $1 million for buyL"!g open space: $250,000 for ftmding of local parks joinily with cities; $1 million for foster care for children; $500,000 in start up ftmds to subsidize 400 low cost housing units, and $375,000 to air condition Juvenile Hall. The League of Women Voters list total- ed $5.1 million.· Mrs. Turk said the re· mainiog county funds should be used to provide additional funds for local parks, to buy park lands In developments where builders are helping meet the housing needs for persons of low and moderate inCQmes, and to provide free bus passes for those on welfare, and those receiving Aid To Families with Depende nt Children. Thomas said th.at some of the revenue sharing funds might have to be spent to make up the COUDty's sh.are of welfare · and health costs .which he said were going-to be..cut 1500.000 by-Ille stale aid federal governments. '!be -tor said the AB 90, the ~.PP.oft<! stale lq rel¥JD bill would ve no en-eff0C4 Cl!! l""""ty finances. I Backing the League of Cities pitch for a SO.SO split of the county funds was Paul Ryckofl, Newport Beaoh """"!1:;'i:::;t James Wells, VJlla Parlr . Ryclw{f..,callOd 1jie federal fundi, 0No windfa8. they came from the· taxpayers." Othets plugaing for pet projecls in- cluded Lucien Truhill, president of the Orange County Chamber of Commerce. He asked that $250,000 be alloted to lhe Overall Economic Dev e Io pm en t Program. "So far we have only been able to finance trainlng programs and \\'e should move in to actual economic developments to provide real jobs," he argued. William 1t1eyer of Garden Grove urged that funds be earmarked for a flood con- trol project in his city which be said would cost $1 million. Dan O'Callahan, director of lbe Com· mwtity Action Council called for spen- ding, "the poor people we represent. There are 150,000 of them ln Orange County.'' Betty Inman, an Orange Coast College professor speaking for the Children's Service Council, called for more day care centers for working mothers. Verlyn Marth, who regularly addresses the Costa Mesa City Council, shared his views with the supervisors. He said that all the funds should be spent for open land. "Orange CoWlty is ln desperate straits in total redueUon of land. It tias been the victim of cold, brutal overdevelopment," the Costa ?\-lesan said. Evelyn Gaymon of Laguna Beach agreed. "I am against increasing development of our open gpaee. With mort people we have more crime. I also opposed reducing property taus because It.! rich would benefit most." * * * ~fost in Favor Of Tax Decrease Fifth District Supervisor R o n a I d Caspers asked his constituents to express their views on ho·v the county should spend some $14 million In federal revenue 1harlng funds. The response : Property tax reduction was favored by 37 percent; en- vironmental protection, 17 percent; public tr ... porlation, 13; public safety, 10; 1K>Clal services, nlne; recreation, five; Ubraries, five, and health, four. Caspen sollcittd the response thnltlgh an advertisement In the DAU.Y PlLOT. Democrats Sued CHICAGO (AP) -Operators of the JntematlonRI Amphltbealrt iue<t the Democratic NationaJ Committee Wednes- d•> to collect 1251,992 In bill• lhty .. 1d weni unpaid from the 1968 national con· ventlon of the party. The 1ult by the Union Stock Yanl and Tr1DJlt Co. named Jean Westwood, com- mittee cbatrwoma,n. and 111 othert as defendants. I Revenue Checks Will Be Smaller WASHINGTON (AP) -The firSt r<v· enuHharlng check.s are going out 17 d~ys bcJore Chri!t.mas bl.It many state, city and county o£ficials won't be in a holiday mood when they ope.a their mail. The Treasury Department conceded Wednesday that earlier estimates of how much state and local governments were to receive are far off base because of new, updated data cranked into the fonnula in recent weeks. One state, not identified, wW receive 20 percent less than originally estimated. About 6,000 government un.its \\'W re- ceive 50 percent less than estimated earl- ier. while 7,000 unHs will receive 50 per- cent mor~. A number of large cities are affected. The Treasury withheld I.he names until senators and congressmen can see the amounts first. The checks, totaling $2.6 billion, are due to be mailed Frid11y, but Congress will get the word ThW'Sday afternoon. State and local governments probably v•ill get their checks early next week. They'll be dated Dec. 11. * * * League of Cities Asks Cou11ty Split Federal Funds The Orange County League of Cities believes that the county should split tts allocation of federal revenue sharing funds with the cities. If the:.Boan! of Supervisors approve the league's plan this is how much each Orange Coast community would get: Costa Mesa, $260,190; Fountain Valley, $143,080; Huntington Beach. $481,610; Irvine, $113,680; Laguna Beach, $61,&20 ; Los Alamitas, $38,220; Newport Beach, $323,890: San Clemente, $70,070: San Juan Capistrano, $26,950; Seal ·Beach, $97,020 anti Westminster, $184,240. The League of Cities fiscal experts determined the suggested allocation for each city on the basis of assessed valua- tion and population. The changes are ao dramatic because the earlier estimate was butd O'\I 1987 data on the tax effort of state and local govemmenta. 'l'he new data are based on a 1970 survey. At a news session Wednesday, at whlcb his name W88 withheld Ul¥ler the ground rules, a 'l'rusW')' official told reporters: ""Ibere are very subltanUat lhifta among states and there're aome very significant shi!ts within states." The Treasury is urging patience. The officials said a grievance proc:edure Will be set up, but notblng can be done until the final data on which the distribution is based become available early neit year. All appeJ!s probably will be handled together, the official said, because chang- ing one rigure affects all other amounts. The Trell!Ul'Y will mall out 35,903 check!. There are 1,820 governmenU for which a share h8.9 been set aside,-bu& the Treasury hasn't heard from 11\tm. They either don 't exist anymore or haven't answered the Treasury's inquir- res-;-the-officlal said. Of the government units, 281000 have populations under 2,51Xl. Among the re- mainder over 2,500 population, the offi- cial said, 920 wiits will receive an amount 50 percent lower than ihe first estimate. Another 2,300 will gel 10 to 50 pereent less jhan estimated. About 1,400 wW get 50 percent more and 3,400 will receive between 10 and 50 percent more. 'lbe remainder will receive between 10 percent more or less of tbe orlginal es- timate, he said. Bomb Injures Youth SAN RAFAEL (AP) - A IS.year-old San Rafael high school student, Thomas H. Garvey, was listed in good condition after a homemade time bomb went off in his hand!!, blowing off parts of four finger$ and causing chest, head, and ab- dominal injwies. Police Capt. Tom Stephenson aald Wednesday that Garvey told officen be made the device by stuff. ing gunpowder into a piece of pipe !Del attaching a timing mechanism. Ormaybeour low cost auto loans? How about our 5% Golden ~book Account? Are extra banking hours the reason? Possibly our drive-up teller windows? f'-P-.eJ TRUMAN ... b.ll at the present time there is oo evf. deoce of myocardial lnlll'dlon." In ~ to a .. q,_ue&UOn, a spokes· man Aki '~ btfarqloll" II tbe "term -people "" or wlllt moot people wan when Uloy U1 h<or\ 1t. tack.'' The bulletin also made mention of an "Infection In the b~chlal tree.11- A spokeoman said he c:Ould not elab- 1 orate co that subject. The report also noted the fonner presldent was conllnu· ing to receive. oxygen. The tough Httle former President was rushed to !he hoopital Tuesday nlll!t !Ill· fering lung COll(estlon. • He bad been Ill for two -kl It W. home · la neorby Jndepel)tlence. .'Mo. litlore enter1ng the hospltnl. Hit cat>- dition first wu "lair,' then fell ~ "Serious" WednesdJy and 11~ w ednesday night. f'ro111 P•ge J ' lSLANDS .•. Newport .Bay which w.n acqutrod by In- dividuals from the state.of Oallfornla," he nil!._ Mason said, "James Irvine acquired one of the Islands In 1901 and other fn. dividuaJs acquired lhe other two Islands at-about-lhe-aame time. "There was a chain of ownenbip on thesO two blands unlll tilt 19111 a~ judlcatlon whlch established the boun- daiy between the lkl<landl and the swamp and overflow lands," he said. "Shortly after the adjudication," be said, '"Irvine bought these two lllands from the then ownetr. "The county of Orange and the state of Calilornla both admitttd and alleged the Irvine Compe.ny11 ownershJp of the blands in Ille OOOl\ltuUonallty sull in Superior Court In mo, and the court made a finding of fact that the l.sllndl were owned by Irvine. "Allo," Muon sakl, "prel.lmlnUy title reporta mad• by two UUe comp1nles verify Irvine ownership." A proposed land ezchaoro of lbe islands for county-owned tldelaadl bu been ln the courts for &everal years. Kuyper said if the island! were in ex- istence before 1850, there would be no question !bet could be privately owned. "They would be within the· original grant from the federal government to the state," Kuyper said. The state sub9e- quently bu granted control of tts tideland.t to lbe county. - • $100 miMNll t*llOI .. 9IXll.1 u • Whatever the reason, we're growing by leaps and bounds. Our smiling tellers and prompt, efficient service seem to be just what our Orange County customers are looking for. m Hours: Daily 10AM to 5PM Friday open till 8PM Drive-up windows open 9AM ANAHEIM Lincoln & Beach 821-5410 COSTA MESA Harbor & Fair 979-1000 SANTAANA 17th & Bristol 835-0151 ' Soon In the City of Orange Johrus. We must be doing something right. c - 'twflilr FtdilM Olpoll NU.ranee Corporation. - I \ ' ' . . . . .. ' School Gets Facelift Bond Funds Go to Refurbish Mesa High By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01 fllt Otlly .. , ... Stttt Like Old Mother Hubbard, trustees of the Newport-Mesa School 0 l 1 l r I c t discovered 1'1<9dey nlghl ihal their cOj> board is bare. or the flU mJUJon bind I>••• pu!l<ld In 1969, Superintendent John Nicoll said there was $1,001,623 uncommitted funds left. TllAT CONDmON did not last long •• trustett voted unanlmoualy to use a1J the remaining construction money t o refurbish Costa Mesa High School and Costa Mesa Plan expand its student cepaclty from 1,900 to 2,400. All ol the projocl> al the high school orfglnally ootlln<d by the school and dJstrict stall would have colt more than $2 million, so school board members w.,.. lorcell to oelect priority projecta. They authorized architects D a n cannJchael and Richard K<mp to design plans for a new library, l'f.IOUl'Ce center audio visual-televisAoo 1tudio and recep- tion area. THE PLANS ALSO call for remodeling "and conversion of e J I s l I n g ad- ·Survey to Seek Opinions On Strict Sign Ordinance By Rlllll NIEDZIELSKI Of .. INlly Plitt 11_,, Costa Mesa residents and businessmen may soon receive a survey that will test their opinions about a strict new sign ordinance. The survey Idea was suggested Tues- ~y night by several penons who at- tended a joint meeting between the COsta Mesa planning staff and t h e BeauUfication Committee. de:~ n~2~~':5u11 ~~15:r! {~ wbich all QJst. Mesa businessmen will he ""lUired to cmlonn. Reaction to the 70-page proposal was generally positive. but the need for more opinioo from both commercial and residential sectors of the community sooo betame apparent. Keith Priest, a representative of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce, told the group it was especlally important to sound out the feelings of the businessmen by means or a questionnaire. ''YOU WANT TO have their coopera- Police Carry No Stieks,-Hippies Walk Softly Out SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Police, wear- ing suits and Ues, speakinc aoftly and canying_ no st1cks calmly talked abq.Jt 150 ragtag re!id~ d a ClownMnm Cfa511~· pad to leave voluntarily before they were arrested by the tacUcel squad. The resident.a of the free conunune called "More House" faced evlcUon Tue~ day on orden frOm the health depart· menl, which said the seveJHto<y bulld· ing on Market Street did not meet bealth --On Monday, about 30 riot equlpped po. lice in blue jump suits ~ helmets lined up in front ol the building showing '"""' before a scheduled evlctlcn which was called off by pol.Ice at the 1ast minute due. to court action. However, on Tu~ay, the tactical squad waited around the corner a block away with ambulances aod paddy wag- ons in case t h e community relations team WBlJ unsuccessful. They weren't needed. Residents, many long-haired youths will> sleepb!g hap and knepoeck>, plus ·some winos and other derelicts, left calmly al lhe soggestion ol lhe !IO!I talk· ing community relations team. u . aem De.Amicis said the pol.lee were trying to avoid anests because "we too often look like the bad guys in thlngs like this." ti® rather than 100,000 court trials,'' he said. Costa Mesa Mayor Jack Hammett. however stres9ed that the sunrey should extend to a broader cross-sectlcn and that it could be programrried with the help of the city hall computer. lt is unlikely that the survey will be sent out until early next mooth because a tentative sign ordinance haJ not yet been drafted. All that is currently available about the proposed signfllg plan Is the sJgn study, e detailed workbook which ei:amlnes sign- ing 1rom rocbologlcel, 1ega1, economlc. • and other: viewpoints. THE STUDY MAXES no recom- mendatioos other than that existing signs which do oot meet the requirement.J of a future ordinance be amortized. It was estimated by Costa Mesa's chief of advanced plaMing, Arnold F. Hamala , that the amortization filing system and machinery would cost the city between $J0,000 and $20,000 duriD.g the first year of operation. Despite lhe high cost. planning staff members say amortizatkn is the crucial element in developing a new signing plan. It will enable eWtlng e,_... to be phased out over a period of. years. RICllAllD llVNQVJBT0 the designer who wrote the lrvine Company signing manual, said Costa Mesa staff members had shown some perceptive thinking in their study. But he stressed the need that all Costa M~s must become Informed eoough aboul the' plOpOSed ordjnance to real~e that -11a goocf-sigri ordih&nce Is: for the benefit of everyone." UriJike other advertising media, bad signs cannot be turned olf by flipping a page or turning a knob according to Run- quist. Therefore the ~rson who is con- fused by too many s i g n s simpy shuts them all out mentally. '"111EY'RE OBSTA~ we drive through. You just tum them off and they become colors. You tum on the radk> and listen to it which l! just another way of drowning out the confusion,'' he said. Newport-Mesa Board Takes Yule Vacation After expanding the Christmas vaca· tion for scbool personnel, trustees of the Newport·Mesa School District ~lded to give themselves a little Christmas vaca· tion. They voled unanfmously Tuesday night to cancel their regularly scheduled meeting which was to have been oo JMc. 19. The next meeting of the school board will be an Jan. 2, 1973. UPI T...._,. Ge"ing to t;Jae Bottoan Deputy Sherif! Mlk• Miller ol Pasco County, Fla., •acts ¢08'1 look at 4 loot-deep sinkhole that opened on heavily traveled U.S. 19. Four cars blew tires and a !11th bo&ged down with wheel In hole. . J mlnlstrallon. coonaellnl and Ubrery factlltt .. , an overhaul ol the pbyalcal educetloo area and drainage and sit. work to oo;ncl the expansive aou ln'o- blem thal la slllftlng bolldlngs on cam- pus. SChooi boon! members abo tabbed '""' projects l<>r priortty lhoold eslre luncb hea>mo available during C<lrulruc- llon. 11>ey are new oclence, droma and q:riculture facillUea and conversioo of the bus garage to auto mechanic ebop classa. The total proje<;t will -fl,151 ,000, bul Nicoll uaured board members the additlooel funds beyond those cummtly In the building fund could be found In money1 oet aside to leeae buildinp lhat the district oo longer needs. ''THIS PROJECI' will consume' all our available resources," Nlcoll said, "But I think it can be done. We're in a position ol keeping the faith and we abou1d do It." Nlooll further declared that the district "will nol tiae state aid !or these projects and I doo'I ... US ba.villg.Lbood_elec!ion. For future projects there's a trend In the legislature that may make it possible to use a leaae-purchaae arrangement." Carmichael and Kemp told board members the COSta Mesa drawings wouJd take about 18 months to prepare wlth completion of the total project "two or three years from now," NICOU1S REFERENCE to 0 keeping · the faith" harked back to the campaign waged in February of 1969 to pass the bond proposition. Two previous attempts had failed end bood propooent.s and district olliciala went oo record seylng passage of the measure would solve the dl>trict's expamlon problems !0< Ille next loor yean. Prior to tlie-supennlendent's report on lhe -'ol Ille UD<OIDlllitted luncb, Lrustees agreed to ward Ille 1637,485 - ract f<r the district-wide lnstroctlonal materials service center to tbe J . Ray Construction C4mpany of Costa Mose. Those funds as well as the money for the 11.37 rnlllioo Roy 0, Andersen School in Corona del Mar, the remodeling of Estancia High School and the conversion of the Davis School to a middle school have already been set aside. BUT NICOLL NOTED, there are the remaining proieclS aL QJst. Mesa High SCbool as well u the o:11version of Keioer and Ensign schools to middle schoola ye! to he dooe. He also noted that relocatable cleasrooml will he DOeded et Sonora School and at Estancia and Costa Mesa hlgb ~Is .. those remodeling projects are beh:l8 completed. Nicoll Ulllf<d lhe board that there ere several potential 80UJ"Ci!S of income, in- cluding the sale of aome of the district's unused real pn>perty and an increase in the dlstrict's assessed valuation that could cover these upeodilures. WITH THE CONCURANCE of the two architect.., the superintendent e.rplained that some of the proposed. work at Costa Mesa High School -partlculerly the pro- jects related to improving the looks of lhe bulldinp lhal have settled because of lhe unstable &Oil-can he handled by the district's building main le nan c e department. "While the project et the high school will commit the balance ol the bulldlng fund, it will put us well down the road on the high school project without en- dangering any of our other projects," be sald. Child-proofing Maikd Blades Ordered by FTC WASHINGTON (AP) -Philip Morris Inc. can send samples ol its Personna razor blades to homes but must clearly disclose what they are and send them specially packaged, the Federal Trade Commission says. The FTC has accepted provisionally a consent order requiring the New York City firm to: -Clearly and conspicuously disclose the pr<SenCe ol razor blades Included with other prodocts which ere dellvered unaollclted to homes or llOld to retailers. -Package unaolic:ited raJOt" blades sent to homes in a manner designed or oonstrucled to he slgnlllcanUy dllllcult for children under sil to cpen wilhin a ret1SOnable ume. tn e complaint, issued March 12. 1971, the FTC challenged Philip MorrfJ" dbtribuUon of samples of its Personna razor blades by means or home delivered newspapers in various cities. Guided Walking Bay Tour Slated A (Ulded waiting tour ol Upper Newport~ 1!111·be conducted 5aturdey ltartlttg at I a.m. at the Jntersection or Easthllllf and Baclt Bay Drives. ~ 'Ibe tour, one of a series being spooeored by FrieodJ of Upper NeWl'Orl Bay ll1d the Stem Club. ii des;,ned to ecq111lnt rmdelll> with the ecolOIY w.d structore ol lhe bay and Its sorroundlngs. The IAlUr> will paoae at selected speakers stations wbeie talks on birds, loaila, fish and mleros<oplc life In tho bay will he given. 'l1lO walk will he ttlatlvely ahort. ac-cordlna to the aponaon, and Is O!"'n to -. Other toun will be held Jan. II and Feb. 17 ldr those wbo mlJS the 5atur- dny .... L . . N OAJLV PILOT 21 ' Precarious Perch The heavy crane and other equipment being used to move the hoge rocks for the 28th .street groin in Newport Beach have moved out well into the surf- line while perched atop the narrow erosion-control barrier. All the materials for the groin have jo be carefully trucked out to the tip of the structure on a lO·foot·wide dirt road. -· This Campus Run on Guts New College Has 75 Students on $150,000 Budget SAUSAIJTO (AP) -The brochure says New College is a year-old liberal arts college headed by a Jesuit priest and accrediled by the state of California. It addJ that the campus is located in the students' heads. The students decide the budget. what fat'Ulty to hire and fire, whal they '.'Ii.sh to learn and how. Dr. John Leary, former president of Gonzaga University, started the non- denominational college in the fall of 1971 with 22 students, $2,500 and "a lot of guts." Now, it has a $150,000 yearly budget, 75 students, 22 facuJty memb&s and still a lot of guts. THE FACULTY INCLUDES professors from nearby colleges, an architect and a m:...."l who owns a furniture workshop. Tbe campus is a cluster of paneled, carpeted rooms upstairs over a generator-assembly plant on t h e \"aterfront In this San Francisco bayside community. There is no library, no cafeteria, no living accommodations; and classes are heJd wherever the student feels he can learn something. Some students want to learn Navajo rug weaving; they will spend a month living with Navajos in the Grand Canyon. Some only want to read; they map out individual pr:ograms or total reading. In a course called "Building Imagina- tion," teachers rented an old house for one semester and each student decorated a room to express an atmosphere. STUDENTS INTERESTED in recording arranged lectures at a teacher's home by rock musicians Barry Melton, fonnerly with Country Joe and tbe Fish, and Mike Bloomfield. Father ~ary says New College aims to Jet the student decide what be wants to learn, why and how to go about it. "'lbe great goal is to get people to want to learn," he said. "Teachers need to be rejuvenated, and students need to be reached.'' On Fridays, students take part in direct study in the community. John Farah, 20, of Washington, D.C., is in· !crested in medicine, so he spends Friday momlngs with a physician. "New College puts you in a risk situa- tion,'' Farah said. "If we come out of here with something, it's only because \\C put something into it." ANOTHER STUDENT, 18-year~id Iris Alhanti from New Jersey, said: "With other colleges, they tell you what to put into It. Here yoo learn whatever Anaheim Benefit Show Not Backed By Coast Police Newport Bench police Chief B. James Glavos h a s wnmed r e s I dents that telephone JOllcitations being m a d e around Oronge Coonty ln the name or his department are unauthorized. "'Mlls is an unfortunate mixup started up in the Costa Mtsa Employes Associa· tlon," Clavas aald. "They are pushing a benefit show at Anaheim Convtntlon Center and gave the solicitation rights to one ol .-pn>leulonal gmips." Glavu said the sollcltora have been us- ing a number of COrne-ol'l!I to scll the llcteu, lncludlng nercotl<• prevention and Police ocholanhlp programs. and ooly rteently began using Newport Beach police as a aupposed backer. "Our departmenl h~s a b s o I u t e I y nothing whateoever to do with Hus sollcltatlon," (:lavas said. "It is com· pletely unauthorb.ed as far as .we are concerned." No one representing the OJsta Ml'!sa group could be reached for comment fri· day .11..,__ you are most interested in ." Father Leary has written: "If war and injustices, insecurity, one's love life -or lack of it -and the deeper problems of the why and whence dog the young, why not start here instead of diagraniming sentences or stu mbling through elemen- tary French?" The priest said the priest said the students refuse to allow their teachers "to give long lectures on irrelevant topics. The pretentlous attitude that sutdents had to listen to us then recite it back and we'd give them a grade is out." "Students look at the teachers as employes and Criends." Farah explained. · "We're paying for !he school, so we decide bow it will be run." He and other students agreed no one has come to New College "just to hang out." They said most appear to be working and studying long hours. NEW COLI.EGE OFFERS dozens ·Of classes, with pass or faiJ grading and graduation in three years. Counes are arranged in categories such as science fiction, comparative religions, new ap- proaches to biology, drama workshop. the modem novel, urban problems and an overview of Shakespeare. When management problems arise. §tud~1s, fagdty, Father Leary and sometimes the trustees gel together lo discuss and vote what to do. Father ~ary said students picked the five full- tlme and 17 part-time faculty members this year from 619 applicants. The tall. balding priest served eight years as president of Gonzaga. then went to Utah State and .... ·as a vice president at Santa Clara University in 1971. when he and students began talking about a new college. They attempted to get the university to sponsor it, but Santa Clara officials vetoed the idea. So Father Leary and 22 students did it on their own with $2,000 be borrowed from a friend and $500 from the Jesuits. New College is in the process of regional accreditation which takes four to six years. It has received a Califomia state accreditation tor a three-year bachelor· of-arts degree in humanities. ru1noN IS $1 ,000 a semester, or $2,000 a year. F~tber Leary, who heJd lhe firsl classes in his living room, said he hopes the school always can remain small, with a maximum ol 750 students and a "dispersed" campus. He said this is a fancy name for using other people's buildings -churches, schools, libraries and homes. Afternoon Reflections A Newport Beach couj>le park their bikes in the •and near the har- bor cntranco to wfllk along the shore and taJk. The spot. known 11 Newport Wedge, is not alw ays quiet and serene. When the bi& \vaves con1e In from the south, this lonely st-retch ts packed wfth spectators as body surfers ride the giant bon.....usblng surf. ZI DAILY PILOT SC T-.-7,1971 Air Bag in Autos Ruling 'Deflated' CINCINNATI. Ohio (AP ! - A federal toUrt temporarily has denoted the protective airbags lhe federal govern· ment had ordered all U.S. automakers to install in their new cars beginning in 1975. The 6lh U.S. Circuit Court ol Appeals bas ruled that the Na· Ilona! lllgtroray Ttalllc Safely Admlnlstratloo must redesign t.sllng procedures !or the alrbags, known in of!lcial temllnology as passive, or automatic, restraint devices. mEY ARE designed to in- flate aulomatically and pro- vide a safety cushion for passengers in motor vehicles which strike other objects with a certain level of force . Man- datory installation had been .scheduled for Aug. 15, 1975. 'Ille court1s !·1 decision ordered the inst al I at ion deadline "delayed until a reasonable time arter" new testing_ proced~s are devi.r ed. Chrysler C.Orp., American Motors Corp., Ford 111otor Corp., Jeep Corp. and the Automobile Importers o f America had appealed the NHTSA's March 1971 safety· standards ruling. 11:1E COURT took note of automakers' complaints that present airbag testing pro.. FINANCE Finance Briefs e Arq11isitlon LOS ANGZLES -Security Pacific Corp., parent company of Security Pacific National Bank, disclosed it is con- sidering a proposal to acquire f.1idwestem Financial Corp., a Denver·based finn engaged primarily in mortgage bank- ing. e OUFlne JUNEAU, Alasaka -Stand- ant Oil of California bas been fined $10,000 in a massive oil spill last September at A n c ho r a g e International Airport. Atty. Gen. John Havelock YOU CAN tAIO' US FOR GRANTED • • • lily TERRY GRANT. I.~ .•. when it comes to pre-- scrlption drugs. We won't mind a bit. That's what we're here ror. ln fact, we invite you to take us for granted where prescriptions a.re con- C<'rned. It is a point of great plide with us that we carry a complete stock of pre8Crip- tlon drug medications at all times. In our pharmacy, we are prepared to fUI every prescription drug order that comes our way. A! new drugs are Intro- duced by the major pharma- ceutica.I manufacturers. \.\'t purthase them for our In- ventory. We know that an important part of our pro- fessional service dPpends on our having the drugs your doctors "''81lt., you to have -at the exact time he Y:ants you to have them. YOU OR YOUP.. DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a dellv~ry. \Ve \viii d~­ llver promptly without ex- tra chari;i:e. A gieat many peopl~ rely on us for their hea.Jth need$. We welcome requests for delivery Rrvice and charge accounts. PAl:K LIDO PHARMAcY 351 H..,.lhll RNd •t•~o-ON,.. .... rt IMc.h 642-ISIO ,,... Dtltnfy ' °"' ~thwidl TwtU llu1r $12$ ltd S..1ttr Yut ., ,.,. $22.50 T1tttn1tl fl1nMI Shlrt1 $19.SO Fall 72 Livingston, Ltd, 14 FAs.ilON IQUAll! IANTA ANA S47-~4J • ' COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK -UST OVER THE COUNTER • NASO Ll•tlnt' fw w.drleoday, D1cM1bor 6, 1972 • ' " o .. ange Coa i Today's Fl•al EDITION N.Y. Stoek.I VOL 65, NO. 342, 5 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES -, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, 1972 c TEN CENTS. - Gas Station Ow~erS . Support Mesa Sign Plan Service ataUon owners in Costa Mesa ptannlne department •• It sugeesta U:iat,,. uy tbey are prepared lo bad: efforts by new li8M be baoee on what tbe - city oflicla1' to reduce tbe ·amount of car. oclualty oee u be driYa by 1t 1 cer- algn adverils!ng. tatn -4. r Pbil Evons, chalnrum of the Service During a meeting 'betfttl\ planning Slatlon .and Garage Owners Convnlltee, · department staff ~ lod tbe Costa says bis group endorses In principle the Mesa Beaullllcatlon -~; Evans plans lo develop a new Costa Mesa sign said bis lfl>UP ~ .Upporti,ig tlie effort by plan. vollllllafUy taking -. ... price llgm. JI< referred l!POCiflcally lo "the Colla . Evans oddedi' tbal -station M'!"'"Siiii S!iiily jiiit comple!ed tiy u;e·· opemornllm ha.,. no c:ootrol ooor tbe, Condition Of Truman lmprov~s KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -Despite a weakened , heart and labore..: tnathing, former Pmident Harry S Truman, 811, rallied aha•-ply today. Doctors said h1a beallb was critical but his daughter_ aai<.i, "I !lave great faith tb8t be'I (Olng tc come out of this all rlgbt." ' Pbysidans attending tbe Wltlon's 33rd clilel eu<utl .. aald -primary - G!l'D was whethtt TnllDlp'• beut was stl'O!li<OOUgb. . "Pn!aidtnl 'l'nulflltt ....... 1<1 lm- -ed,..:bul-bll ... ad ta -1 ol sudden cbange -tllol be c:oollnue tO be _described u critical," .md a mtdlcal statemmt todl1 at Ra11rtb Hospital. . • a ·r · Chief -Ticketed For Fund Work It's not often that a police chief gets a citation, but that's what ha~ pened \ lo Costa 11 ... ~. lop cop Roger Neth tbe other day. Chief Neth was "llcl:eted" by the ' City Council for bis """""'81ul e&ll\- palgn lo mike Costa ~ city employes tbe lop Unitell Way givers -in tbe-natioo. OOundlman Willard T. Jonlan wbo reed au: tbe cllatioo said Netb and bll c:<><bairmen wore lo be "tremendously _.,tu1atec1 for thls magnificent effort." Costa Mesa's 421 rmmlcipal empklyes gave an avence of 131:91. Their per capita conlributlon ahatters laat year's record of '3'1.96 in Milwaukee. . Rai~S ·~ CIO$C SehOOJs ' . . Truman ;alllecl' darlll Ibo nllbt and R .. Dr. WallaCe Graham, 1111 -1 pb)ooi-!< ()a S clan,_uld de--Jiii beort and . lunp.-early lodq and bis vliaf algns staiilllaM SAN FRANCllOO (AP) -Swir1' of This .-•1 ,_i aaid Truman's rain, ball and -ovor Nortbem doctors "bave -last nlchl's ~ -~ -~-toda ol scllools episode as -..-l'J edema, eau,-a Im,~ _... Y which is a mantfestatklll fl. heart failure, in at 1euti thi'OO counties, cklled two ~ but al tbe present time Oleno IS no ovl-jor roa<ls ,and preclpllmM dozeni o( dence of myocardial Infarction." minor hi ghw•l a<cidents. In response to a question, a spokes-Snow blanketed the Sierra foothills and man said "myocardlal lnfarctim" is the · .t-lnci·"''-"tenn most peopJe use or what ID03t many lower elevlUon n"6-• ln&U'fi people me.an when they say heart at-the Marin ·County hills visible from (See TRUMAN Poge I) downtown San Franclsoo. NearJ blluard conditions continued 1n1he Sierra Nevaai Schools · to Drop Baccalaureate Mass Services The mass baccalaureate service which ·has always preceded the indlvidual graduation ceremonies for the five Newport-Mesa hlgb schools will be no more. , District trustees have decided to tonow tbe sugg~ of rellglous end com- munity representatives and 'disband the coUective service so 'the sChOots can hold individual baccalaureate services. The lleclslon came Tuesday night alter associate district superlniendent Nonnan Loats pretented acbool board members With the group's suggestions. These in- ch•de proposals to e s t a b 11 s h bac- c,Iaureate boards of parents, faculty and students at each school to set up regula- tions for the services. The regulaUons would · be reviewed by the di.strict superintendent. • , .The i:han(e in _policy is tbe result of a protest by ~I r<llgious leaders wbo complained to the board that the mm service held at Davidson Field was not conducive to: inlplratlon because of noise Interference ilid the physical difficulties ot addressing tbe two selS of bleachers on opposite •Id" of the field. • t • 11 .... ••• ' . ~ itself!,! Ir{ A1.arin, the wind:in& Panoralfiic lligllway. ao eight-mile r6ite linking Stlrlson Beach with Sllle Highway 1, wsa closed by tbe ·~J Patrol thi& morn- ing due trl snow. · In Santa Crui, State Route 17 between Los Gatos and Santa Cruz WU hk>cked fo1 a half hour while highway crews dumped sand and salt to meU tbe slush. The road lo Mt. Hamllloo near San J08e was closed temporarily with six to 10 Inches of snow. The Highway Patnll also said low ·truclol were. dlspltcbed lo Skyline Boulevard there to aid snow· stranded motorists. Interstate 580 at Altamont Pass and U.S. IOI near tbe Oregon bor<ler were slippery and motoriJb were advl.!ed lo carry chi.ins. I • , ' ~.showe r .tin El ~ado aqd Placer . counilff' 'foof ·1Ui cloled moat schools. Alµng the coast pjs •were receSiecf' lri Foitun8 and' 0Uier parts ol soutberp Humboldt County, Mud! ol ~ .Jontul Valley cleared to- day, but tbe lop!hllll were duated and somella* DOltM wflll miw, ar.d aleel. Huntington 'Leko~ in tbe ll'mno County loothlllll ~ ~~feet QI -anow, and Bus l.eke lil tliO Madera County hills allowed oeven lncbea. San Frandlco reoorded a season low 38 degrees today, anJ ball Ind IOID• brief sleeting '""' f'lePill1ld. The eapny l'ltrol sold tbeN ""' a min0£ acclllmll ooollck fnlWaya ctuilng ooe bail.bOar period bero. Tbe --.. d I( woold be lair and cold In tbe Bon Jl'rlnclsco area Frl- dll)I with lows """"" !Jorn the mid 20I . to mid iltle. Mesa College Offen 'Me88i ah' in Con~rt.. --. e-·· "M-" wru be -led Flldo1 nlchl bJ the -CIM!ornla Collop llUJlc Oeplllment u part ol the c..&a Mell ColltQ.e'1 Christmas concert. Tiii coacert wllfbe held at 7:!0 p.DL In the coll... auditorium, 1$&1 ·Newport Blvd. It lo -to tbe public without charao. • st. .. or number of-signs at their facility. .. I have 15 signs at my statlon. But the oil company owns the property and if .. they want to put up a new sign, they j~ come over and put il on," be es:plained.· A new ordinance which wUI probably include perceptual an<f estbettc criteria for slgu Is e'J)eeled to be adopl<d by tbe Clly OOundl In January. . MeanWl!lle, Costa · 11,.. 1' in the •leC- ond---of..a.--.wllich..pro< North Mesa Question Gets Push A plan calling for reduction in density of a 390-acre area of north Costa Mesa appears closer to acceptance or rejection today. Mayor Jack Hammett told a hiblts the COO!b'uction of any new signs it overruled the planning commission and with the ucepUoo of those whlcb are approved a 35-foot pole sign for Riviera likely to meet the future speclfic.ations. Sofa Beds, 3016 Bristol St. The • emergency moratorium also Riviei-a originally asked for a zone ex- ma'.kes allowances for businesses that ception to excE!ed the current 35-foot were under construction or bad filed for • height limit for pole signs. The exception building permits when the sign freeze was ):>eing processed when the 90-day was ordered by the Ctty Council. moratorium began. Such a rare hardship exception was Councilman Alvin Pinkie)" who made made by U>e· counc.C....~y-nigbt:wben--the-motion for -approval-termed this a ec 0 hardship condition, saying "if we hadn't held up his application, he W<>Ukl bave had his sign." His council colleague, Dom Raciti, however. argued that the sign should not be granted. He became the ~issenter' to a 3 to I vote. Mayor Jack Hammett. whose medical center lies adjacent tq the Riivera store, abstained bequse4of • possible conflict o[ interesL , Beach Man Hit by Mesa , Bai· Owner By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 ,... Dl41Y ...... , .... Freed following a similar case three weeks ago :>ending his future coUrt date. a burglary suspect was shot and killed inside a C.Osta Mesa tave rn early today when his movements awakened the ov.·ner, who sumelimes sleeps there. Ted Owens, proprietor of )he LltUe Btg O. 1943 Placentia Ave., pumped twO .31 caliber slugs into the victim about 6 btlmeowner-spokesman that he saw "no reaaon" for the 90-day del1y. "Why pro- cnulinate !or 90 days?" be said Monday lligbt. _ .i..,. a.m.. hitting him in the chest and I!"""~ ~ shoulder. ·n, o11..,i tbe roman:., .. ~ru , William B. Kelly, 2&, of 21572 Pacirte- . ~ :.:. Coast . Highway, Huntington Beach, died "' ~~ ~ about 7:45 a.m. ii. Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital of his WO~ -~~~C.-~~:r ,JI~ Dlelll tbat the city "((!I 1he ~ ........ tbe p1an, • 1"' plan wli beld up for 90 days last -., '1lie -. --g Corn-~ lq< tbe offl<W reuoo that ao cn- vhoimantal llnpaet;report had not been filed. . -ilolli llaminet> and-City Manager Fred Sorsabal said they did not believe it (See NOiml, Page I ) , UPI T ...... ,. Trea.t Chest Pain Seriously, Says Heart Specialist 'Have . a Nice Trip' ' . Jan Evans reaches out to bug h~r astronaut husband Ron as he, Gene Cernan and Jack Schmitt make their way to the Saturn V rocket that starteli'1tiern-on their·wa'y to the moon. Behind her is Cernan's wife, Barbara. (See Stories, Pictures, Page 3.) Althougb more than hall of the chest pains usually associated with bear! at- t.acb turn out to be false alarms, doctors and pt~ cannot rely oo the odds and the aymploms sboold. still be treated as the real thing, a cardiologist says. Scott Named Dean at OCC Dr. Loren Heather, associate chief of cardiology at the Orange County Medical center. spoke eo a ~iac care seminar Wednesday in Orange. He said most people who have heart at- tacks have warning che.!t pains, or angina pectoris, but many are not ~ thing, tben, Is lo be able to tell the dllfeMlce between angina that i.s a wam.lng of impending attack and angina that Is not," be said. Heather said angina UI usually either stable or unstable, with I.be unstable in- dicating a aedous and immediate risk. Stable rtngina, De explained, occurs over aj ~ of years and is predictably bfou&ht oo by exertion, emotional stress, eaUng ,too much heavy food, or by ex- posure lo tbe cold. .. Dr. Jack Alan Scott was nauied Dean of Instruction at Orange Coasi College· Wedoesday night. Scott, 39, a fonner provost and .dean of the College at Pepperdine . Universily. was the unafiimou:s choice for tbc job by the Coast Community C.Ollege District board of trustees. He will take over his Dew duties Jan. 8, filling a spot held formerly by Dr. James S. Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald will assume the presidency of Foothill College. in Los Altos Hills next month. ' A native ot Sweetwater, Tel.!lS, Scott has been provost of Pepperdine since 1970. He received his AB degree in religron from Abilene Christian College, his BO degreo in religion from Yale Universlty,,8nd hiS MA degiee,in hlstory from Claremont Graduate School. He earned a ·Pjll> in history from Oaremont in 1970'. ,,. J Before .beooming a provost at Pepper-- dine, Soott was dean of instruction and associate professor of history at Pepper· dine. From 1957 to 1962 he was ministe r of the Whitney Avenue Church of Christ in Hamden, Conn. From 1955 to 1957 he was•assistaol to the president at Abilene Christian College. Scott ·was president of the Pepperdine chapter of the American Association of University Professors, and wai: selected for the 1972 edition of outstandin g Educator! of America. Scott and his wife , Lacrela, have five children, ranging in age from 17 to 6. Fit:.gerald has been dean of instruction at OCC since. 1963. He came to OCC in 1955 (IS a music inslructor and has served an ·assiStant dean of student activities. and Ctialhnan of the Division of Fine and Applied Aris. ' ... County A~ks Prioriti.es Su~ervisors Discuss Speriding of Federal Funds By JACK BROBACK calendar year 1973. 'lbomas esUmaled ot ilif DNI¥' l't ... ""' the told federal funds corning to the Alter a two hour bearing on the use of coon\)' for the five-year Ute of the State $14 million Jn federal revenue sharing . aftd Local Fi~l Assistance Aej. at «ll funds, Orange County a u p e r v is o r s million. ,,__ Ill ~ Wedneadly directed their admlnlstnlive · Ho ~ ~tr " ·-·v• officer lo dllnl tbe material and return las per caplla than other Southern whit a priority list CBU!omla counU. because Its tu rate is SUlgdltlnl on "I< of the mooey ca.no lower and 11S ave....., per capitll Income from a multitude of organllllUono and In· hllber. dlvlduall. \ For ....,,ple, the -.ty·1 lllocatlon County Admlni•t"l'tlve Offioer Robert a.....i. lo abaul 11 por capita wbile Los 'lbomu opened tbe discUISlon with an Anplel County will re1 · 110 per-capita, ouulrio oi poalbllltlet end -rictlons on San 'Diego County, 17. .inO San spondirl( tbe ledenl monoy. He said the Beroanllno County, IH. fwlds could be only used for main}ll\.M\Cf 1'Mmll oUetM a ''•bol>Pinl Ult" of end operating costJ of county ,....,.. poaolble lpendlac... which · :otalled 121 .7 ment and for capital upendttum. . mUUcm. Ar,!11 OIWe.rCd were public caf Tho county has rocelved 18.i nllloa lo 17; c9vil'OlfIDMllal protection, public tpend between now and next Jtma Wtttd t.ranlportatton, health, m:reatlon, 90elal will receive a total of $14 m1JUon for the aervlcea, financial adn1lnLttretioo and ' I -·. capital building expenditures. The building suggestions tota\Jed $10 2 million and Included $1.8 million for. the new Harbor District Mun icipal Court.a building in N'wport Beach. other building projects included air conditioning for Ju~lle Hall, $375.000; a fire departmeot tralnlng center, $277,000: a new county administrati ve bulldina. $5.28 m_llUon, and a Voter Registrati on 11nd Public Administrators ~11rehouse, ILB mllllon . The Orange County Le•fl'l• ol Cltlco bu been active in Offcl'lng he .supervleort advice on bow t6 spend the money. Lelgue President Robert Finnell, Placentia mayor pro t m, repeated the organization's urging that 50 percent of, tho county '• funds be spent on Joint proj-<See REVENUE Poge II He had ~ aJTe:Sted at gunpoint In mid-November when police responded to a silent burglar alarm at a Costa Mesa antique weaponry shop. Kelly was faced with burglary. possession of stolen property and narcotics charges following that arrest , according to police. Harbor Judicial District Court officials could not be reached at noon to determine if Kelly pasted monetary bail or was freed on his own recognizance prior to trial. Investigators arriving on the scene· found Kelly sprawled inside the large nightclub , a considerable quantity ot change in his pockets. Detective Capt. Ed Glasgow said patrolmen are keeping close track of any similar burglary cases which may be reponed in that area. Evidence showed someone smashed a window to gain entry to Owens' food-and- drink operaUon located in a primarily iJt.. dustria l area on the city's west side. "Ted was sleeping in the back, heard a noise and ca me out with his gun and a rlzshlight .'' Capt. Glasgow explained. Owens told investigators he saw a figure behind the bar in the darkened building and apparently ordered him to -freeze. "He accosted him -I don't kr.ow what was said." be added. Owens -further claimed, according to the captain, that the man behind the bar started coming toward him so he became frightened and opened fire. Ca lifornia Penai. Code g u id e I i n e 1 authorize a private citizen to use reasonable force to intervene when he encounters a sus..,ect in the commission of a felony crime. Henry B. Stegmann, 34, owner of a !See SHOOTING, Page %) Orange Weatloer The weatherlady says It will be partly cloudy on Frkilly, with cooler temperatures a I o n c tbe coast. !Iighs: expected to reach 60 degrees. Lows tonight, 35-43.. INSIDE TODA". ,., ,. T,1e Orange Count\! p·., e 1 s.... ...;\ Club take& a group of under· privileged chUdrtn to Dilnq,i- land eat:h r1ear. \Vriter Ari Vi11~ .sel rtcoll.$ thi8 uea r's vialt io the ftfoglc Kinadom tn a warm Chriatma! st.ory on Page 10. • • I i - • )! DAILY PILOT c Revenue Checks Will Be Smaller WASHINGTON IAPJ -The first rev- enue-ehari.og checks are going out 17 days before Chrlsbtl38 but many state, city and county officials won't be in a holiday mood when they open their mail. The Treasury Department conceded Wednesday that earlier estimates of how mip state and local governments were to receJve are far off base because of new, upclated data cranked into the fonnula in recent week4. One state, not.Identified, will receive 20 percent less lban originally. estimated. About B,000 government units will re- ceive SO percent less than estimated earl- iel\ while 7,000 units will receive 50 per- ceDt more. · 4 number of large cities are affected. 1be 'rteaaury withheld the names until senators and coogressn'\en can see the 3111ounts nnt. · The checks, totalln'g n .& billion, are due-to be malled Friday, but Ccingress will get the word Thursday afternoon. St.a1e and local governments probably * {( * Le~gue of Citie,s Asks County Split Federal Funds The Orange County League of Cities believes that the county should split its allocation of federal revenue sharing funds with the citie&. If the Board of Supervisors approve the league's plan this Is how much each Orange Coast community would get: Costa Mesa. $260,190; Fountain Vallev. $~3,0M: fiuntington Beach. $484.6 !0; Irvine, $113.680: Laguna Beach. $67.620; LQs Alamitos, $38,220; Newport Beach, $3%3.890; San Clemente. $70.070; San Juan Capistrano. $26.950: Sea! Beach. $97,020 and Westminster. $184.240. ..,.he League of Cities fisca l experts dl!termined the suggested allocation for each city on the basis of assessed valua- tion and population. TONIGHT DANCE PRODUCTION -Costa Mesa High School presenta: ' ' C r y s t a I Christmas," Dec. 7. 8, 9. Lyceum. 7:30 p.m. Students 50 cents Adults St. '"TANGO" -South Coast Repertory Theater, 18Z7 Newport Blvd . 8 p.m. Reservations, 646-1363. FRIDAY, DEC. g POLICE BENEFIT SHOW A N D DANCE -presented by Costa ~tesa Police Association, Anaheim Convention Center Arena, 8 p.m. Ticket information 963-244•. CHRISTMAS CONCERT -Southern CaHfomia College Music Department presents annual concert. C o l I e g e Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Frtt:. IBVINE MASTER CHORALE !.. "Christmas Festival of Music," OCC Auditorium, Ticket Information 543-6049. OCC FILM SERIES -"Johnny Got His Oun," Forum, 7 p.m. St.00. NOCHE CULTURAL CHICANO DE Azn..AN -OiMer, music, art and photo exhibit, Fotk.lorico Dancers, rum and drama, OCC Student Center, 6:30 p.m. $2.SQ. "MOONCHILDREN" -South Coast Repertory 'Theater. will get their checks early oe1l week. They 'U be dated Dec. t L The changes are so dramatic because the earlier estimate was based on 1967 data on the tax effort of state and local governments. The new data arC based on a 1970 ~urvey. At a news session Wednesday, at which hi& name wu withheld under the ground rules, a Treasury official told reporters: "There are very substantial shifts among states and there're some very significant shifts within states." The Treasury is urging patience. The officials said a grievance procedure will be set up, but nothing can be done unlit the final data on which the distribution is based become available early next year. AU appeals probably vtill be handled together. the ofUclal said, because chang· ing one Cigure affects all other amounts. The Trea:!IUTY will mail out 35,903 checks. There are 1,620 governments for which a share has been set aside. but the Treasury hasn't heard from them. The-y either don't exiil anymore . or- haven't answered the Treasury 's inquir· ies, the o!ticial said. Of !he government uniU:, 28,000 have populations under 2,500. Among the re- mainder over 2.500 population, the offi- cial said, 920 units will receive an amount 50 pt'rcent lower than the first estimate. Another 2.300 vt'ill get 10 to 50 percent less than es timated. About l,400 "·ill get 50 percent rr1ort and 3.400 "·ill receive between 10 and 50 percent more. The remainder will receive between 10 percent more or les:s of the original es· 1in1ate, he said. Fro1nPa9e l REVENUE ... eels with the cities . He based his argument on the highly successful Arterial Highways Financing Program In which the county's gas tax !unds are shared on a matching !Jasis "'ith the cities. Finnell admitted that in addition to the almost $5 million the citie!j want out of the county's pot. they will receive an additk>nal $8 million trom the !ederal government directly. ''But," be pointed out, "the cities have 87 percent of the populaUon and 87 per· cent of the total ta:r base. People should be the prime consideration, rather than places or programs." Finnell said U>e revenue sharing act lists high priorities for Jaw enforce:nent fire protection', sewage disposal, s~!~ and roads and building code en· foreemenl "These are basic city services," he argued. From Pagel NORTH ... would take a full 90 days to complete the report. ifomeowners believe that they are being stalled by the planning commission over a $10 to $15 millk>o Segerstrom Co. plant which i! planned for the north Costa Me sa area. The density reduction plan calls for the 40-a cre Segerstrom property to be chang· ed Crom commercial to residential use. Homeowners say a strip of residential development along Fairview Ro ad between Sunflower Avenue and the San Diego Freeway would be a better buffer against the Segerstrom I r. d u s t r i a I District across Fairview rather than the medical in~urQnce complex now being planned. , ""' , ....... FORMER PRESIDENT TRUMAN'S CAR STANDS ,1\-T-EMERGENCY iNTRANCE L'icenM P11t1 "S 7 45" It D1t1 Th1t World War II Ended In Europe Fron• Page l TRUMAN ... tacit" Tbe bulletin also made mention of an "infection in the bronchial tree." A spokesman said he could not elab- orate on th.at subject. The report also noted the former president was continu· ing to receive o~gen. The tough litUe former ?resident \vas rushed to the hospital Tuesday night suf- fering Jung congestion. He had been ill for two weeks at his home in ne.:irby Independence, Mo. before entering the hospital. His con· dition first was "fair," then fell to "serious" Wednesday and "critical" Wednesday night. Truman's wife. Bess, 87, and their only daughter, ~Aargaret Truman Daniel, stayed by bis bedside through the nigbt, leaving the hospital at 5: 15 a.m. "I feel he ls much belter," Mrs. Daniel said as she Jeft. 0 He's: sleeping normally and naturally. I have great faith that he 's going to come out of this all right." From Pagel SHOOTING ... route of amasement machines, shot and wounded two Los-Angeles brothers about two months ago under s i m f.f a r circumstances al Pier 11, on Newport Boulevard. Investlg!ltors conferred with t h c Orange County District Attorney on circumstances of that case, resulting in no charges against the shotgun-anned Stegmann. The slain Kelly in today's case carried a metal bar with a booked device at the end, a common burglary tool believed to have been used to break the Little Big O's front. window. Questioned about whether the dead man was armed, Capt. Glasgow said probabl oot but that factors appeared to be sufficient to frighten long·time bar owner Owens. "Not with a weapon as such, I wouldn't say he was armed," Capt. Glasgow remarked of Kelly's hand-carried in- strument. Investigators said they did not know if Kelly 's family is local or if he himself is married. The address listed for him Is a trailer park. ~~~~~~~~~ 27 Nabbed in Alamitos High School Drug Raid A massive roundup of drug sellers at Los Alamitos High School may show the need for similar raids at other county high schools, according to Los Alamitos Police Chief Roy J. Kundtz. His officers. assisted by federal narcotics agent s, arrested 27 persons, 24 of lhem high school students, early \\'edncsday following a six~week in· vcstigation. A female undereover agent enrolled at the school, purchased cocaine, hashish and marijuana with a street value of $6,000 from student peddlen, Kundtz said. Or maybe our ''There is no doubt there is some kind of narcotic sales going on in every high school in the county," the police chief said. "We moved"' in here because we iwvant students to know that thelr school is not a sanctuary for drug a ales." Of the 24 students arfested in night raids on their homes five were girls, in· vestlgators said. The lengthy investigation i n to widespread drug &ales at the school was financed and coordinated by tbe federal Drug Abuse Law Enforcemenl Aa:ency, Chief Kundtz said. low cost auto loans? How about our 5% Golden ~book Account? Capistrarw City Leader Sentenced San Juan Capistrano city councilman ·,,imnes Keith Weathers waa ordered to- day to spend his weekends for the next four IDOlllN In Orange , ~ty JaO. , w .. then, ri, o1 mu Orttga Htgbw~. wu abc> ordered to aerve threl ,_,s probation for h~ nlie In a doml;slic fracaa that led to a shotgun COC1lrootailon July 21 with sherlfrs ofDcers. ' , .er have looked at yO\ll' rte*d u ' • citizen and I have to uy U...t 1 1• 1m tremendously impressed," Super lo r Court Judge Wllllam Murray told Weathers. ''But I wonder how yoa: would hav'e felt U you were the deputy sheriff wbo faced a loa4ed shotgun?" Judge Murray com· mented ... I am mattng tt a caDdltloft or probllUoo that you· do not poss.,s ·tireartns for the thrff.year term." Judie Murr.ay said We,tl\era' first weebDd in county jail will be aerved this coDilog~eekeoo and his lall will be wvec\,pel\ March 21. , ' He ..-....S the couildlman lbal r. will be released tioq1 ~unt7 jail tn lime to spend Cbrtstmu Day with hi• family. "I have great faith in you and so do many other people who wrote to me." Judge Murray added. "And I hope to 'see you back in this court one day so that we csn clear this unfortunate record." Weathers was arrested by deputies who said the councilman met them with a loaded shotgun when they' ent.red o Mission Viejo home to make inquiries about a 4 a.m. incident at the Dana Marina. It was alleged that the councilman's wife, Mrs. Ellen Weathen, bad been with a male esoott at that location · when Weathers drove up and rammed bis car into the ~couple's auto. Mrs. Weatber11' maJe companion told officers he was threatened with a fU"earm before Mrs. Weathers left the scene and drove to the Miaslon Viejo home of fanilly friends. 11>e Superior Court file Indicates that the couple, who have two daughten, have since been recxmclled. • $100-...... -- UC! CONCERT -Presented by Univenlty Wind Ensemble. Fine Arts Village Theatre. 8 p.m. UNICEF BENEFIT -Christmas con· cert sponsored by Model United Nations, UCI and Coatrtline Ota pt er, United Na- tions Assn . Crawford Hall, 8:30 p.m. Oil Executive Named Are extra banking hours the reason? ' OIANM COAST CM DAILY PILOT n..Orwll9 QM DAILV f'll.OT, wtllt wt'llcf'I .. comMolM ftle "'""""'"'-II PlillllWMoli tor .. ar..... C'tnt hbll*"''"' (Ofl'IOllll\'. s.pe. ,.... .clltllM -MllsMd, MoN•y ttlfWlfl .. ...,., 1br Coll• "'"'· ~l!WPllrt •well, ttwllll....... •M<flll"oum•lit VII~, l~\1111 11o11c11. '"'"-'ledlllimllldc Md S•" °"""'''' Jtfl Jvwt Clpltrr-A 11,,,1e mlllMI , ..rHlo!I It ,.iltlltd S.. ..... n trld Sur1C11ws. TM ~ -~ _.,, b fl U0 West ..,. ltnilt, c:..te ~. CtUforllll, fl6». Ro .. ert N. w,,, f'+tl!Ofl'll •rid ~UCllll!lw Jtcli R. Curl.., Ya ~f INI °"*'II~ ll10Mt1 Kto•ll ·-no111•• A. Mu,phino M ..... irw •«tor CHrl• H. l..01 Rl1.li.1r4 '· Ntll Mbffnl Mtnffll'lll Millot1 c:.e.N .... Offle. JJO Wo•t ley Stroot M•m.t Mtlro••: r.o. a.. 11•0. t2626 --"""'" lffcllt ~ NfWPIWf ... i...nl L..-. "'9dl1 22t ""'"'""'-.._llfttlefl 9efdl! llWS ·~ ...,..._rd .... Cl«Mftlei JllJ Nfrfll I.I C..miftf·ll..- Tel .. t 1a1 (7'141 ...,...Jll Cit ••4 ........... .., ... ,. °"""..... 'm. ~ c-tf hl:tlllfl"'9 ~r. tt. ,... ,..,.1a, 1111111rtfttiM • ... Nrlel ,,...., or ...,._.""'*"' '*"' INY M ,_._... Wltf*tl ljllfC51i ,.,.. ....... "~OOllfMJ'. ..... CllM ..... ""' 91 Cott• "'""" Ctlt~ ..-.Vlliltlfll W Cff'riw IUt """"''Yl "' IMH tJ,IS "'9l'lttlb'I f!llliflrT -.ilnetlint' GM .lM!!ll'ltr. • • Tra1isportation Chief CAl\fP DAVID, Md. (UPI) -President Nixon completed his Cabinet overhaul to- day by naming Clautfe Brinegar. 48, a Los Angeles oil ' company executive., as Transportation secretary. Brinegar, who holds a doctorate in economics and likes fast cars. will suc- ceed John A. VotPe who i3 becoming U.S. ambassador to lto.ly - a post he waiited. The appointment is to be the last Cabin~ face change to be announced by Ni.llon but other switches at the sub- Cabinet level are anticipated for the second tenn. The reap~lntment of Richard C. Kleindienst as attorney general is expected to be announced Fri· day. White House Press Secretary J\onald L. Ziegler, who announced lhe latest a~ pointment -which Is subj!Ct to Senate confirmation -satd Brinegar, 45 a senior Viet president of Union OU eo.'. is "a very qualUied manager and executive in the busineu world." Ziegler lavished prai.'le . on b o 1 h Brh)Cgar and Volpe &nd note!d that Volpe would become the flrst ltallan-Amerl can to head the U.S. mission In Rome . ''When,Secretary Volpe takes "up this tmportMt dlplomauc post he wtll be retracing a journey that brought hl1 own p~rents to this country 13 peMlleu Im· migrants ot the turn of the century," Ziegler said . Of BTln,gar, Ziegler said: "J don't know wh&l (1 ·meant by the tenn 'oll man' but Mr. Brinegar Is not an oll men. H ~ Is a very capable maneger. Hit area or qu&llficatiQn g0ts to the mensGemcnt " "''' ......... C HOleE FOR TRANSPORTATION 011 Ex1<11tlv1 Brl""ar I of 'people." . Brinegar lived briefly tn !ht late tHOI in Yorba Llnda, Nixon's birthplace. Possibly 9ur drive-up teller windows? Whatever the reason, we're ·growing by leaps and bounds. Our smiling tellers and prompt, efficient setvice seem to be just what our Orange County customers are looking for • Hours: Dally 1()AM to 5PM Friday open ~ll_8PM Drive-up windows open 9AM ANAHEIM Lincoln & Beach 821-5410 COSTA MESA Harbor & Fair 979-1000 SANTAANA 17th & Bristol 835-0151 SOon in the City of Orange Join us. We must be doing something right - 7