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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-12-13 - Orange Coast Pilot• 7 • .. ,-·Orange Soil at C~ater • < ! WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON; OECEMBER ·13, 1972 VO&..· ... MO. -f lllc'TMHtl.·Ml·rMU ... 'or man _, ' .. e·a = :: J ' I ' Suspect ' . In ·; An1·hush ~:.!fw.~'4(~~ --- ,. Huntingt9n Search On . I "'I • . ' ~ . '·~ .. CpptrDta ~:-----·· . . 111 llUCILl.ICL GOOOIUCll °'~ ..... ..,., ..... '. . ~ . -flt· ~M+e+i:tat I ...... -..... l Colli .... pollCe .... Taeidly dgbt U.-a 11-yMN!d cJde ~ -~ ................ _ ... tlD 1ni1i11 pelieo __ ... h n T. Nab d1ainl ·a "'111111bn . andllJldi last Oct. II. The """""" --• LelllO Robert Pe1era, If 1111 N1 , ""-SI., ~ 11 ..,.._ -""'"'"'· at C-. llOiit QtJ Jolf ..,_op a d!ule of .-if willi lotoat to -1..-. 11!·11 ,,._ held in ... Of $!111,11111 bili . A conitiined -of U e.ta Meaa and Onille ll,l!llCe allloon a1nlled the unempl0y"1 -!Oader al his apart· m"1lt lalt Tuelday. Police claimed lo ha~·-uilcovered nine -riOet and allotpnl in the procelll. Paen, purported to ~ the newly eieclo4 ~ of ~ qr-. Coanly e!Jol>le"' liie:--""*" ... eydo_ f'!ll· -.. ........... dtnil_~--. c,ota ....a Dettdln Capl. ~-u. Gllllow ~d Pew.' 8rrest cllml'lfd a Jon. mv.tlplim -Colla Mesa ..xr OraJlll9 police -Into the ..,. ih'ifiel_1)( the H6'1aM _ ~ __ "We've hem keeping the Hessians Under sm:mDonce !or~ llOlllO time and quesllonlng -·of them .... and .... and' doing lhln&s ol that nature," Glasgow explalned. He added that .Peters. wu believed to have taken over the presidency of the oullaw bike club around the time of lhe allepl ambuah .W Jeffrey Ro&4 and ---That "night' ol!icii" Nash was on pairol In Irvine when a car contelning two "~t" ~·men ·~ him and told him of an lnjUred men In the n>adway. AA Naab, ,23, specj 10 the IOeDe1 the IUp- pooed victim, ll'bi face down. jumped Into a· crouch ·On.r llledi .i "lbe· ol!icer tlrocliib die -·o1.u.. . ..,.i car. Naab gunnid 1111 car In ID altelllpt to run downrbll ... ltut but was•blt.on the face bJ 'a ,bollfl !rapDfllt.. The bujhwhacker •-!*l·bY·~ lnlO' a nearb)' oomflekL • • C:.pt. GJasei>w Mid .Jbe anall caliber revolver alJetjodly iMl,in the auact was not recovered from Peters' apartment. "We're looklna for It thollib." be odded. Police w1idil J!01 "'1 • WllOlber Peters • had been pOOIUvely ldentllled .by Ii . / Patrobnau Nub, a former Costa Mesa ,··wT ~ 'n DDTNGS officer whb -aaJrned lo Ibo Irvine & . • AU • .q&u. · heaj Sept. 'l, when Colla Mesa loot <>Ver 1IOMJ GOO. Jj N~S = ~~ .. In Irvine on a contract , · t' MNDwblle, DOllct' are lllU on lhe 1wi.v ~ clJiiilfied lnint ada loolcout fiir tlie b other men who helped ariac home,sood .. ..._Here'• a true Peten witb ·lho--llleied llllbuoh. · _,,, • .., __ Jj" ' • ~-·Balboa peq. ,...., • ' ' • body S :ue1.1 ' F:.:.. · =~(,!...~· -mx uspect -"" ,. ~ , :•~ ' bird SANT~ MONICA (AP) -A 11....,t 'JM.-Cliled.:,GY·u:ru:. ad baa bten •=-Ip the """1 flrw •bich .... se"-of~lt, dial Injured two women and -a ea-,aar-111111 pi* a DAILY Plµ>T old man lo Jui-> from hla flame.eJ!lll)!ed ,..i ad. . mom. Clfford lioUYWGOd, a, was ~e,d •• E ;. I I =~:bl !er ~,..i.au. Of 1( r; "'· .I • • Hantlncfm -~nll-·--I fllg the local -~·~for I the bodies of a Newport BuCh dory fisherman and his 3-y......id dlughter who dlaa~ Tbesday -ol!~ from the Edlsoo --plant.- Newport Beach and H U· a t l n a:· t o n lileguardl oean:bed chilly ocean waten ·all Tuesday afternoon, alter the empty dory boat of Allen V augbn ltnillll.,.~. ol ~ Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, was spotted from shore. Polloo hellcoptera alao were baed In Tllesday'ssearcb. Knight, and bis daughter, l'atrida. were alone in the boa!, ~ hit lobster traps about 200 11n1s olllbo,.. · pnlice sald. Ufeguanb 'believe llotll drowned. ,. Huntington Beach lifegnard Mike Mossier aa)d be !Int noticed Knilbt'• · boat mewing ""'tli from lbe pier a\oul 20; yarda from the,allote.. . Et4;.;4i-..tin? . ' . . . He· aald Kn11b1 wu ••ndiq in lllo · rear ol the boat cradling b!s daolPler in \lrl T....., his arma whll~, he I~ to steer the boat by shlflin&.hls ••11!11 ln>m.m.jo to aifll!. · _ ~ Kn1')!'"*8a~~~ from checlcll!i hls.lobll<I" trap 1dilCit --Iii tbe llolsa Cllica ·Blllfb a~,-... to one Ill~. ·• . . • -A 'alrull ,believed to be that, of Martin Bormann was ·fo und in }Jerlin by workers in a railway yard near the Berlin Wall. But examination showed it is not his, but probably that of some antl·Nazl-sbot·durlng the last days of the war. . .. . Orange Soil May Hald Secret w Moon's Death. Ne:wsweek Chose ' Not to .. R~· Story On D. B. C.OOper Minutes' later Jl¥jol .C .. Dov.la,. of Ill Cbkago st.; HunUngtoo 1f!acb.. Nici he saw .-man in the ...... ueif'to Ulie·ilOrJ in the vlclnitY o! Beadl>-anl. • ' Davis aid )\e l.\•illi!J~-,... div·· Ing but tl>en Di>U""ll 11*-"9<7· was trave~ Ing in •·'"!Jall clft!l>Mil loiljle•llllll'in the water. , Lll~rds on the ~Ui&·t11e llea fishermen boots' wom b)' Knlflll .. mllJ~, (See DORY,"'9 IL---'° . f ' ' • I ! . . ~~· 1: , • · !wi • ~~. • ~mx (AP} -·Newaweet • · · srA~ ~·:-<-\I».=. -Jil•~«1ihf•~-~"•"'181.,a1111t,· .'MqHJne, worried l>Ylhe Cllflord lrvlng, 0r.1-.. 8 ' ceaat 'Two jubltiot • Aineiicaii advenlurera gathermg many bags of lunar 18111plea, i'boax d«lded at the laot mlnule·to ldll' a - prepared today fOi' a farewell hntar ex· including scoops of the orange dust never ~ cove~ story on 1 ... r.. ..... 11• authentic In-• • • ' ploralion. before found on the _moon. ,..terillw;Wlth '~=;~ i · ~· ·~~·:.,.... <..•'. · ·;' .. ," .'· ~ already · ,alJoard their lander 1be orahge material was found during · B. ~P.lh:::• ' · · ~tD;i ~ .:r.· 1 ~ ' • ' ~ ., Cllal!Wer 'waa' a new dlscoruy -exploration of an ancient avalanche, U , hi~~ · · "i·/, < • ·J · .• '14 '· • ·' • . "' /f i : : aampfeioftntriguingqrangesollposslbly miles Ctt.m the landiog camp in Tauru,.. Ki#'· .'~ r · ,· ,,.,.~ ~a.rl"-; · ~~t ,• .... ·<,, · '• t-•• ~.', ·f"··,) 11at1n1io-lbe1astflerisaapoo1adylng 11t1rowvane1. s y·colnclden<e, u wu ~ ~ ~Y·.'91' , ..... ·"'Iii: ; ·a· -.A.Vlllie'• moon (sfoe t<Jated picture, stories, Pa11t found by Ceman, not Schmlll, a geologi!I Donald,.S ~~'~ii;id, ....... I· I (qr ' wthflll&ll!,;' -; 4) and ~rlca's first professional sclenti!I bo~·tb.'B== " ". .it' ... ~~~~'S7 -;i' .UU-11 Eulehe A. Ceman and Har-In ojlaoe. · • ,......,.,.., ....,_._ • ' : t .l!>o. ~.· rildfr' lo '17 r11on H. 8dnDJll, In their last Jeq}ogy "Hey," <!%Claimed Qornan as ibe , pair_.,.,... ~ <I "~ • · ..iera1 r :i:..it· ~~-1 ~\ • • • • field trip in the moon valley of Taurut-stumbled Into the ..U at the rim °I a =ir; 1MJc!~t atle01Jllljlg 101 , " .. ,.,.. . · Litlro,w today, were 10 tal<e an eight-mile crater calWd Shody.''Walt a minute . . . ·; ......;. ~11* .!!.'!::: ~-·~: I .-. ~ .... ~~Y , drive· •Iona thi base of a h1lh mountain there 11 lotange IOU.'• emrq_.... , • ... ~, 1 ff"',~ , ~ • • : ~":ii,:,!._.l::, 1 , ~ l • ~ and atthe foot of wrinkled hills, ualng an "Well, don't move until I see It," said ~thlil~~~~•,°1'P'11iil1,· : ;..~~;!1..J<=1 eleetrlcCJr ,wiiba)lOIC!ledfendtt., · lhe Harvarfflncated Sclmiltt.-· '~ •. ·:;••~-ii-' "'--'.! •\,~~:t«l~,'1'!'.,. I Tbe 1~r 1tw. they "like _to "lt'a aJI over'~ <reman ~•ent,..on. ~· • ettblttt ~j .. ,,...,._,.i • vrw-, cover new grOdn(t'• "i'i-aveled a1 'llilie c Jedly, "CJrana~. I've stlincf it up Wt•.h lsed FJeinlni l n exi:I re lllt&view prod~ <f.lwmi! for .,.i .... • ~ my feet. . with Cooper In exchange for the core. S.e E~t, POge , • "Hey, it. la'," iholdtd' Scbmltli .. I can moDeJ. Tbe JO"e"UDtllt'dla"81Murphy 43-1 , .~ , , · • , 1 I~-THESEFl.N(ES 'Rl .. 1t from here. It'a.oranae." pooed ... ~. ' uo. ·• _,.,. -~ -" • M IN 1'HE Sl'!RIT.AHO On urlh, IClalllsti·...,. aJao eiclted Cooper I• b\e·name used by a man wbo• ; -• }! ---"' -r~ OHL~ II MOU \ l)Y the dlicovtry, tbW111 cuatlouo In the!• ~~c• NoOl).W6t Alrllnil fllahl on • ~ ~ • ~~ • '!, . Pll'IS L!F(•lt> SHOP. evaluation. They said; the "'111lfe soil ,..._.vlng F;vt, lll'll, • ~od lhen • , •. ~ '•· 'lt ~. -i,: • • • • • may have originated from "the last parachuted fn>nl the Boeing 717 aflor ;.o;::-...i. ' , I ....,. · ...,_ · • o o • • 8IMOUI IMP of ~kattism" °"the moon. c:ou.cttni '200,QOO nmom froin the t =~-:..: ~==-~~ ' • 0 Dr. llobln Breit, chief of the airllae in Seattle.. · _, --·-.,:: Hl!~~~-o--•'-::::..0-•:....;·•£1 e"'lry. brancli at t 1. e Manned Flem int ~ leltlOed TUtaday that r.:: u1!' .: · ~ , 0 o o • aft Center, sald the material .even to llil1 ~be •till ha! !eelJlJga lhat 1 ,,. ,. - - -~,.,. "' • 0 • • poutbly could he rust -which bas been the 0. 8. Coopi!t be Interviewed wu the ""'"!' • --' • ! .,. ;~ (Set APOLLO, hp 11 (Set COOPER. Pqe II --• .. " ,, t .. ' ( ' • • 1~ I I 2 DAILY PILOl $ Wtdfltsd.ly, ~emDer 13, lq72 =----"------=----"' -~ Bob . Battin . Spends Most-$139,903- First Dbtrlct &ipervi,.,. Robert Battin wu I.he top spender in r e c t n t sUpeMllaorlal campalg11>. II• rtpon.d ·,f130,983 spent In tbe ae~ral election. Tho bl11est chwilt ol the mo""f came lrom 1 ~.000 loan and a IS,000 donation from Or. LoUta Cella of Santa Ana and Ri chard J, O'Netll, Mi ssion Viejo. In total, four candidates r or 3upen:isors repo rttd spending $346,656. This compares w~th $380.980 spent by 11 a,splrants for the two 1 jobs in lhe June .primary. Wllllam Wenke, Sanla An a attorney who oppc>Ud Battin In lho nmoff, .. ld he spont 189.351 ; Ralph Dtadrlch, who defeated Incumbent Wll1lam Phllllp.1 ln the Third Olstrlct $88137& and Phillips, !40,1125. Phll\lps said he had a. defle:it, reporting contributions of onl~ '26.464. tie had receh·ed contributions ot $57.289 In June when Diedrich led him by 10,000 votes. The reported spending Is believed to be well below actual outlays as only cam· paign contributions ol $500 or more must be re ported. I But evtn t h e rePorted coftl: were MlronomicaJ compared wlth I.hose of a few years ago. Only Board Chairman Ronald Caspen of Newport Beach 1p. proached the fipres, He reDOl'ted spentJ.. ing $81.695 1n 1970, moa:tly hi.I o VI n money. Candidates of other offices reporting by the deadline Tuesday included William Dannemeyer, v.•ho tried to unseat Assemblyman Ken Cory (0..Carde n Grove), $77,64'; John Black, Newport Com11aissioner Dumped PJan s by Detroit PoJice Commissioner John Nichols to lead the Old Newsboys parade on horseback this week, :were upset when his mount. reacting skittish· Jy to the crowds, reared and sent him flying. The only damage to the commissioner, an experienced horseman, was a sore posterior and damaged pride. He rode another horse in the hour.l ong parade. Dist1ict Seeks ---~ Teacher's Job In Morals Case Huntington Beach Union High School Dfstrlct trustees are seeking t h e C!ismlssal through Orange c o u n t y Superior Court action of a teacher ac- Cmed of 15 counta of tmmoraJ conduct. Suspended teacher James H. MatU1ews Js charged in tfltl lawsuit with making improper advances to lS female students ibd the mother of a student. ~ 'School authorities allege that on one oCea.sion Matthews, a teacher at Hun- .lington Beach High School, ..,._ home a femaJe student who was, the lawsuit slates, "alr~ high OD pills.'' 'lbe complaint states that Matthews got the girl drunk on vodka but ahe was able to resist hi.I advances and rePorted his alleged conduct. She ls one of 13 -ts listed In the lawauit. lt Is also alleged that Matthews uttered obecenlties in class and .that on one oc- casion he taped an obscene message on a recording device that wai part of the school's communications system. Matthews was iwq;ended by the cpstrict board last Oct. 25. His lawyer bas asked that the board bold a bearing into the allegaUons filed aglj;ln!t the teacher. Jt is additionally alleged In the Superior Court action that Matthews offered forg· ed rererences when he applied for employment with the district. IT DAI LY PILOT n. ~ Clllilf DltlY ,11..0t, trtll'l 9'flfdl II ......... Wt M&llitf'o-. lit ......... W .. oi-te CWll ,........ ... ~ • ..,.. , ... 9'111"'1 .. -' ...... ....., .......... frliNy, tw CM.ti ~ N...,..,. ~ Ill II 411a ~ VlllM'J, .....,._ 1'.-dlo IMMl.s.dd""9ck ... S... ~ IM AIM C..~ A lltlM rtfbw,f ........ JUb!Jtfltll, ... _...,. ... ,..,.... 0. ~I "'1'111flMlle ,.__ 11 1111 SJO Wiit hy Sff'Mt, c .... ~ Clllfom!ec, ,,.,.. hitert N. w • .4 _..,_ Je•tr R. C.ft.y vie.~'"' ... O-..llf M...., n ...... .:..'l'ff ·-TlllfflM A. M..,W .. M11111l • MffW a.rt .. H. LHI llt.Jiar4 '· N.11 ""'1NMt MIMI ... .....,. -~--, ·~.'l':r'"-' ........, IMdtJ ... • ••••• , ..,._.e.dlt ntflw•A.,.... I ' fl '':r ._... t191a.tti ..,.,,...., -~ 11 ..... 91CM!Mft1MI f N It I IJ14) '4MD1 a r I .Wear I I '°"ll ,,..~._ ...... L-...•-4-,,_ .......... c..r c ............ _, .. • ---- l!lt.V Tr_agedy Repeats Itself .25 ,years Later By L. PETER KRIEG Of 11i1t CMISty ,.,._. lf1f\, In 1947 two Newport Beach dory fishermen were caught in a raging storm. They were brothers. Their boat was never fond. For the pa3t ZS years the dorymen who silt a living from \be sea have ek.irted tragedy. There were anxious moments but no lives were Jost. Until yestt:r'day, Alien Knight took his S-year .. ld daughter Pabicla with hlm to move some lobster pots. From P•9e l DORY ... have pulled him under once he was in the water. Davis contacted J{untington Beach lifeguards who begain an intensi ve search of the water a quarter mile south of the pier. Lifeguards reported they found a child's life jacket in the boat. Later in the afternoon, another dory flsherman found a child's parka in the water near 56th street in Newport Beach. The <livers involved in the search were in the water unfil dusk wheo poor vlsibU· ity made the search impossible. Lifeguard Captain Douglas D' A mall saJ<I today there were no more plans to continue the underwater search, but beach patrols would continue . Knight was described by police as a veteran doryman. They said hls wife told them it was not unusual for him to take one of t.be.lr children ou t on his Jobsler runs. Ton~hes Tea~h Parents Can Ruin Future Marriages SACRAMENTO (AP) -Pan!llta who don't touch each oilier In front of I.belt children may be aettlng up sexually ina<klquate future marriages, a team of aexuaJ lheraplsta lw t.old ltBte employes here . "The most eUectlve method ol. sex education is what goies on eve!')' min- ute," Dr. Thomas P. Lowry of the Mll<lenJohnson clinic In St. Louis, Mo., said Tu...Uy. "ONE OF T1JE FEW universals ls that patients were raised in a fomlly whtre people never touched each other," Lowry said. Lowry and hl.s Vr'lfe Anthe• condu~ a 1tminar for employcs ot the State Department of Mental Hygiene on the UH of aelU&l therapy u a. dlvorct preventalive. THE COUPLE SUGGESTED th•t stxually lnadcquato peraon• qull worn" Ing about it and do what comes naturally. • "Just lorgel about II. A man ahould stop being the P61J>Ctual wllnesa to hls own failure. Jfe ahould just think about hl1 wlfe11 beautiful form," Lowry aaJd. Bueb Dtmoctat who ran agaltult Republican Andrtw J . lllnsha'll! for the '9th eon,_. toUt n .111: Otto Lacayo, lll,ll04, and Ted Sbipkt, 14,1193. Llca)'O ran alalnal Incumbent state Sen. Jamts E. Whetmore and Shlpjte op- pollOlj ll""IJ1lbenl Al!elllbbman John V. BrlqL The bitterness of the Battin·Wenke bat- tle continued Tuesday. In a . statement Issued by Cella and O'Neill they accused the Wenke camp of a smear campaJgn, Wenke's campaign manager Carlos A ftrst Ever ·, Galindo called lbe atate:ment. "aa tt· tension of lho bij lie ~· used in Cattio 'a cam~lp so wtll." Pr<vinusly rtJIOrled wen tampalcJ\ u · pens .. of 114,m b¥ l!ln&blw, "lld *"·nz by Incumbent Sith DiJtrlct COl.\BT'tsaman Richard Hanna. Cory spent .'90,473. Brigg•, 114,666; Assemblyman Robert Bad.ham ( R • Newport Beach ) $ 3 5 , 0 O 9 and Assembl)'lll&ll Robert Burke (R·HUD· tington Beach}, 128,044. Icy · Storm Halts St. Louis Mail By United Prtn rnternatfon1l For the first time in the memory of st. Louis poalal workers, the U.S. Postal Service _ hu canceled rtsldentlal 'mall st:rviet, despite the postman's motto that ••fleither snow, nor rain, nor beat, nor gloom of night shall stay these couriers from the swift completion of their a~ pointed rounds." NoWng was belQg done swiftly Tues- cJ.ay as a tNachenxil storm of snow and Ice !>obbled Chicago and St. Louis and aimed lea paralymg blows ' at oth<r cities from the Plains to fht I.fiddle Atlantic States. (Related stof'f, Page 4). Mall ddiveries' ""' hallo!! In the St. Loufs ·area attef more· than 5.e l)Oltm en reported they "'"' injured in !alls on the glassllke surfaces. An Ice-laden 1nO' lnllch · Claimed the life of Bimill E.-White;•1. White was kiOed wberi'.& btariCh fell on hiril ~s ~attempted to '" ·a tree on his lann in Pi.Per Cilf,> m. -' . In ,Chifi'(o, ~reds' ol t bou111nds of OOllUllU!e" .were.,)iii( 1or :wortt. Some Chicago area e-0mmuten: spent up to 3'n hours huffing and puffing to work Tues· day, then struggled through ice and slusb.clogged streets to get home. Hundreds of 11chools wert closed in the ~1id..,:est because buses were unable to make their runs or ofOclals cbo6e not to subject children to the storln's · whltry wrath. .. The NaUonal Weather Service Hported that the storm in Mls90url ·represented "one of the major ice storms of the cfu. tury ." · Ice-laden tree branches and .,power Jines continued to fall today In -the St. Louis area as strong winds buffeted the area. Iowa got 10 Inches of snow Tuesday and snow·slicked roads were blamecf for the death of a mother and her two children killed in a car-truck accident on U.S. 10 near West Unk>n. Iowa. The storm ln the Midwest su.&lded to- day and moved to New England, where It was expected to pas! quickly, causing lit· tie major damage. $71,697,712 Left in Estate • • • and Sportswomen c I l Basketball Footballs Volley balls Soecer bans Tennis balls Gott balls HandbaRs Archeiy sets Badminton sets Ping Pq sets T llllis Rackets Handbal Glaves Tennis Shoes ' 37 /' a Tennis Dresses Tennis Shorts & Shirts Skate Boards Dock Feet Fins oart ·e~s Frisbees . Back Packs Sleeping Bags Warm Up Suits Sweat Suits Nylon lackef s BasebaB Shoes frack Shoes • J . l'relMPflfle'.I APOLLO •• found In otbor lunar aarnp1es In .... qcllllliU. ·-.. ....., "" "'4 -bin•Uon wtildi ........ ~ .-... •• A final determillatloo '"°'It iw.o ti> await laboltl01')' uamlnalian on wth, ht said. The 0"'1Ce aoll WU the -alp!J!- eant discovery of the aeven-hour, :rt. minute OXQ!r•ion, the second of Apollo 17'1 planned three . While Ceman and Schmitt motored on 1 the moon, their crewmate, ~d It. Evans, labor~ la lho ...,,...,. ""IP America orbWu, crredll.p ~Enru, 11 operating an .array of illtOo. la- . struments whlCli iie .......... pllloc and probing large aUcts el the moon. l Cem>n and $chmltt .... to ieaft tile moon's sui'lace Tliunodo)', 1*"' ·s..I. I in the "'mmand 'alllp lllid beflba lho journey home tonnl :0 Dec: II splashdown in the Pad.fie. Evans, on ,. CUHm:nt rest cycle freol his crewmates, awoke from an eight-hour n:st at 5:30 a.m. PST. Olftelal! sald>bia exploraton from orbit was g o I n g smoothly and that he spotted formations in three localions that could be evidence of once-active volcanoes on the moon. Ceman, the 38-yeaHld mission o.'111\. mander, and Sclunltt, 37, pbolographed the orapae material 111 color from several angles and the~ took bit acoop aarnplt1. Ceman also drove twoJcore tubel Jnto the materlal to get deeper. samples. The soil, he said, "looks just like an ot· idized desert soil." He said it could have been an "altera- tioo" caused by a fumarole, the conelike vent of a volcano. But, pmoed by lime,' the astrooalits ~'tl'e not able to stay longer and fiDd what Schmitt said could have been evidenCi! of volcanic action from the moon's more rectllt geologic past. The astroriauts boarded tbdr car and moved on, but time after time the.Ir talk, charged with the v.·onder of It all, return- ed to Shorty Crater and Its depoeit ol coi-- orlul soil. l't'OlllP ... l COOPER .. . 646-1919 'C. :::-: = WresUing Shoes Speedo SWirn SUits Tennis sweaters Sireat Sox Letterman Jackets BasketllaH Shirts SWirn Trunlls Stop Watd!es Bicycles ' Bleycle Acc8ssarils l ' s OAILV PllOT <f At Your Ser.vice Supervisors Vote-ThemsClves-a Raise By JACll BROBACK 6t IM Ollly ,,_ ltaff 0rongt County aupervtaors with but a •liaht show of hesitancy voted W Tues- day to raise their salaries lo 124,500 a yoar. ..., Tbe fl ,000 raise was approved after .-about a one-hour dlscuuioo period In which most speakers from the audienct favored the move.. The new scale tak~ effe<t in GO daya. Take Bike B•ck DEAR J'AT' Lao! Christmas we OOught our son 1 10-epeed Motobocane btcfcle at the Costa Mesa Bike Shop. After about four months , the paint started to bubble and peel . My son .never rode the bike to school and washed it with mild soap each time his ~ad washed the car. The sOOp took the bike back and we thought our problem was taken care or, but once again the paint is bubbling and peellng. What can we do? D.C., Cotta Men 11ao l>amasce, owner of the Co&ta l-1esa Blke Sbop, wants to see dsat you r:e aalJafied. Brtag tl•e blke beet te Ills slaop •t your coaveateoce, ud he will aead K bad< to the lactory, The bib la para.ltted •&•last" 4efects. DEAR PAT: There are l¥i.'O beatutiful plants I'd love to have in the back yard of an abandoned house in Costa Mesa. They are going to die if someone doesn't transplant them soon. There is no ad- dress on the house and I'd like to know if there's any way I can find the naine of the owner? J.P., Costa Meta •. You can ftpre out die addreH by cllecklof the -ben of .,......,,hll boo• •nd yoa mlpt wut lo •sk people nvi., la tbe .,.. H tlley lmow the ewaer's name. U you stW ca't Identify lite .,,., , take tlae address Ce tM coaDty u&e1Mt'1 office, ISt N. Br~y, Suta AM. Wllh the belp of office penouel, you may be able lo locate Ute owner'• •me by cbectlq" thnMz1la lllldres•• Usted la the tas rolls. No Re1pon1e Cula Ref11itdf!fl , DEAR PAT' I ordered a mJ. lrom the May Company In Los Angelerillfing October. When a•dress s'-sizel'too anal1 arrived, I malled it back tbe ..,.. day and asked for a refund since I'd paid ror it by COD. I haven't received my refUnd 0< any kind ol j:OlllllluokatlCll lrom the store, even iliougb I wrote to the manager. I know the p.1ckage arrived because It was insured. 1 L.B., Coltl Meu Only Supervi<or Robert w. Battin WBS totally opposed. Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers voted against it but It was more of a protest against the other board members refusing to heed hla request to bold off action for another week. During tbe lengthy di8cu.uloo; Csspers said be favored "about $25,CXKI." Battin said that rema~' ,made by people ia biJ district caused · to oppose the raise. Battin said t during the recent cam· paign in which he won reelection, cort- stitutents had told blrn that they thought Newsman · Say Press Attack Hurts Public ' the current $17,500 salary was adequate. ''They oppose elected officials getting patd more than they earn," he staled. 'l'be comparatively quiet &e&Sion was in sharp coo.trast ~ a hearing two ye1t.n ago when board members finally in- croased tbejr pay from 115,000 to lt7,!00. Tba' move bad been proceeded by a clos- ed door meeting in which they inforn1ally agreed to boost their pay to that of municipal court Judges -at tbat time 12\1,000. ~ 1970 move was followed by an abortive attempt to recall three board members. 'IUeaday only three persons spoke against the pay raise. Five spoke in ravor. Opposing were Cliff F~r or Santa Ana Ind Claire Kelley of Hunlington Beach. Fraizer, a regular opponent of most board actions COl'IC!ming money spending, urged that the issue be put to a vote of. the people. : More than $66 million was spent in Orange County by the federal Veterans Administration during fiscal im. ac- cording to Gordon R. Elliott, director ror the Loa Angeles area regional office. Veterans, their dependents a n d beneficiaries received $3S million ror COQlpensttiOD and pensions, million fCI" for Vocationil rehabilitation, and $7.2 miJ.: Uon In iosUrance and indemnities. Elliott c:ompllmented Or8nge County Veterans Service OfOcer Ben deLeon on his "splendJd cooperation." Even tltough yoa t111Ure a pACltqe, tbat doe1D't mean It etia.'t let 10lt la 1Mi mall. However, your ,.Sqe wtl rtctlv· ad ud lbe relud 11 belac malled. Tbe most tHlckal WI)' to -delayed ..-1romarusto<e1llle ....... bY t.,..._ wttb IM dire'• emla•er Nixon Gallery w::.~-___ .... II bY llioD le IM1"' ....... lllof eompooy, IM bllyer II die ........ __ ........ ....-....... Pilot Photo Displily at Airport ---.. Ila .... 1p1·beftn uy cn.itt lldjllsemeM or can .rtfDI adortatloo II ltlll la tile Kl--df,.._. Boyess '.ea ••• aa 11 J ntdotll: rthlntfld mere la• 1dt1 e ..-..ic.-u ... lo,..,-.-. A 1tlectloo of pholocnlphl of President Nb<oo, at"°"" and at p1.,-, u an Or•O&• Coast J"9lddeilt and "tourilt" -all shot by I>AILY PILOT,~ -are Cll display ~ al on.go County ~·preoldenllal picture pUery Is located al tbo -tlld ee tbe tennlnal ~ID<..._,CMMpermanently t&nsky Released ~~U.. Newport.~ ... Ulilllod Ran ....... aUmpoo1 ol tbe Pruldent MIAMI aEACll (UPI) -Reputed Include ~al>ha of Nllillll in oolt..ol· 11nglud f1iure Meyer IAnllll' wu ed .-and IPOria oolflt waving from released Tu•~ liom tit!. Slull H01pltol tbe deck of 1 ~wport Beach ylldlt, a 111*< be w11 WldertOlng trMtmeot for• "family album" \)'pe photogapll of Mr. lk .t ailment., Linak)' fo.,. 111, ..,.. and Mn. Nb<oo poolna ID front of La oplracy and contempt ciwi<s In Mlarnl, . .C Pacllb (tl!ll Wtllem W)lile ~I Lat v• ""' 11..i )'ork 111\lolvbi& Jilt ' It tbel tlmt k ... (lllr<ho!Od In the alleged uncforworld acllvltles. 1pri0& ot Itel and a rec.nl hellcoplenkle chat with Henry Kllsinger on one of Klsslngtt's frequent vlsltl to San Clemente. The display wUI remain at the airport. through the holiday period and tben will become a ••ttavtllng pw." making ap- peannoetl In public placts tbrouahoot the Orange Coast are'l. SIAll photographers Lee P a 1 n e , Rlchlrd Koehler and PaU:lck O'Doollell made the photographs tn the display, a Jona with John Valtena, the DAILY PlLOT reporter In San Clemente. Anolher group of photographl ol thi Pres ident, s:1mlla: '.o the. airport grour,, I< oo d~play In the Classlliod Adverutns Depertmllnt ol the DAilrY PILO'I"• Cc:ista Mtsa Afice , 330 W. Bay St., Co:!lla ~lr.sa. ' Liter be llJU'Sled that b O I r d m'°"ben should set rallel bued oo bow much they had cut apeodlng. Mn. Kelley called th8 pooiliolll "part time" and told the supervison, .. You ahoolJ 1pe•d 1 ... time lecJslatinl which only costs the publlc more." Mrs. Al.Ice Frasier or Huntington Beoch ag•eed end decriei! tbe eoostanUy increaacd cost ol govemment aod the AC-- companying climb ln tu rates. Supporting the pay raise was Robert Green of San Juan Capistrano, Gilbert Ferguson , publlc relations counselor of Newport Beach; attorney Rodger Howell ; Jerry Patterson, SAnta Ana city COWlcilman W James Stott. Previous to Tuesday's action the Grand Jury had recommended that the supervisors pa) be increased to the level of municipal court judges -now $32.%73, as did the Orange County Chamber of Commerce. 11le Grand Jury had two additional A PUBLIC DIAMOND MINE The largest diamond ever di_s. -J covered in the United States is the 40.23 carat "Uncle Sam," dug up Jn 1924 in America's only diamond- bearing area, the so-called Crater of Diamonds, near Murfreesboro, Arkansas. Commercial development of this uniq ue area was attempted by such tycoons as GleM L. Martin, Henry Ford and the Rockefellers. Martin made the last attempt • sinking $700,000 into a venture whic produced only $985 worth of diamonds in a year of operation. Last March 14th the State of Arkansas bought the area, opened II lo the public, charging diamond hunters $2.00 a day and offering free appraisal s. Although one lucky digger, in 1964, found the blue "Star of Mur- freesboro, n 34.25 carat diamond of excellent quality, most of the stones found In the Mea are small and low grade. So If you're looking for a truly beautl!u1 diamond, you 'll be far better off to let your local Ind .. pendent jeweler find exactly what you want. • ' tt00mmencblions ~'hich were n o t diJaaled Tueaday. The juror• aaid the job ohould be full time with the board members holdlns no outside jobs and that lhey should oot be paid r~ for servlna on other agency boards such as the Sanitation Districts or the county Transit Dislrict. Green, Ferguson, Howell and Patterson all recommended that the board vote themselves salaries equlva1eot to municipal court judges or above. Green said he was amaz.ed that Fraizer and "1rs. Kelley or anyone would oppose the pay raise. "l think you should get $50,000 a year." Howell said a study by the Orange County Chamber or Commerce had determined that lhe salary pald in· fiuences the caliber of candidates for the posts. Supervisor Ralph Clark first proposed the "under $25,000 " figure, stiggesUng $24,900. Outgoing Supervisor William Phillips thought S27 ,500 was lhe nglu figure, Baker named the adopted figure. "The average of othe r elected coun ty or!iclals is $24,500. I suggest that figure." Caspers, urging caution pointed to ex· periences in Qmtr a Costa an d Riven1ide counties where supervisors raised their pay and then low ered it in response to public reaclion. "I think v.·e should hold thi s over until a week from Wednesday to allow more lime for public input illld to avoid a negative reaction," the Nev.'port Beacti superviso r said . "We will get the reaction no matter what we do," Baker replied. "\Ve shouJd make the decision now." Clark said 90 pe rcent of the telephone calls to his ofiice favored the $.3:2,273 figure. Caspers moved for anothe r public hearing but he got support only from Ballin. High Rise Amendm4'nts Board Adopts-ehanges In Area Building Code siderably more hi h rise than v.·e do v.'111 adopt simila r reg ations," he added. Mel.ell.an WflS ha: Coun1y Fire Warden Carl Downs and F;,;· ~hrmatt----' Wally Trotter. Trotter said the county's fire fighting forces were "at the crossroads. It takes four to six times as many firemen to fight a high rise blaze." •• Christmas gifts that endure OMEGA BRACELET WATCHES al 10(' ,,.riow or v.~:·• pold bo•~ d•Jipl'I brott"l•f SynonymQuS wilh luxury orld quQliry. "'1;11<11. 011tdocK. .)32i_ And if your practical ilde needs '}u$11ficotion, con.sider (~ing or1 Omega. She11 hovo a wolch for a liforl'" or f)rO\ld possoulon. _,. b) 141:: 'l'ftllnw gold, ~ e110-1Clt Oii Nrol. V JO.. r:I 1~( y9'\aw oo!d ~ tit'JOu. tlial)9Cl ca• M4t\'I b1oce!•I. -·--~ J. {~ ~JJumphrie:! Je11 1p /er:! 1821 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS 27 YEARS IN THE SAM~ LOCATION l111kA1111rlt1rd -M11ter Ch•1t• PHONE S41-J401 • I I , • n.QlY 'llOT Wtd-. Dtce• 1.1, 1972 ., .. mile.. You're ' 6n the Coast ' I • l IJoUIE! OF s~~EPT~ Back bi . ltt1' Depnosstm Yem along this best o(-, El possiblt coasts, tlie .~ lolb wbo ~. ~ yeaNround residents bad problems r· ~h the economy. The pattern seemed to ~the sarne ..every year. · [:First, you •had• •pring aa4 the school'·:. acatlon boom ·th.t br..igfit· ltudenti and • . ldOUlrl st,..ming to the Orange CoasL J\ai IUllUD'<?Jtl ip, an<l'.lhe beach bCSom waa really oo. 'Iten1&bot Day came Ind ' tiruptly, the bot!Oin dropped out ol 'our <>Urist«iented econom.v. l!Y Yulellde, lhlngs looked pretty ble,k· our CNSt l1ne. ~ al the outfits particularly vexed by ups and downs of oor dollar flow \Vas loosely Jmititx>oster organiz.p.tion kndwn the Orange County Coast Association. was tunposed ef reprtsentatives from all our cities (rom Seal Beach downcoast \o San Clemente. I SO DURING ONE of those bleak ~u1etides, tbe-Coast Association shakers 11nd movers-decided they should come up ~• "th some ' promotion to bring a bit or ng Green flow in g back to the coastli ne ring the long , cold winter~ The lat, William H. '.'Bill" GallieMe of unti,ngton Beach, also koown as "El GeneralissJioo>" was generally credited }Vith the original brainstOrm. t "Why don't we light up the entire f08Stline for Christmas and have a com-'f tition between all the cities . and owns.'' he asked. ".We oould call it "For- y Miles of Christmas Smiles." ' . , GENERAUSSIMO REASONED that not ~ly would this make the Yuletide pretty ,or the home folks but it wduld attract JlWJY visitors from the inland flatlands )Vho woold drive down to view the Christmas finery. '. While here along the coast. they might Pl.so purchase a bowl 9f be~n soup, a cou- -r V olcatao l' entf Orange Color , _ . Stirs Experts ' " • SPACE CENTER, Hooston (AP) -Wlek• Dl8C1Yery of Ol'llnge-colored soil on the lunar ~surface by Apollo 17 111tronaut1 { ( / Tu~ nlgbt created great excitement ,,. on the earth aa wdl u on the moon. / HanilOll H. "Jack" Schmitt and Eugene Ceman weni_ieostatic In their ex- clamations when Ibey silhted the colorful material ne• a crater called Shorty. And at-the-Maened-Spacecraft. Centtr, a leading scientist called it "one of the most Important fmds" of the Apollo missions. Scllmitt, a geologist, immediately saw the orange uea as slgnifying a possible vGlcanic vent, or. fumarole . •• .. ASTRONAUT 'EUGENE CERNAN STANDS ON TOP OF RUST COVERID CRATER Discovery H•s Touc"9d Off fndllcat'en1 of PeUlll\• Velc1nlc Vent DR. ROBIN BRE1T, chief geocbemist at the centar who dlacusaed the !ind with newsmen, said ftom the initial evidence the orange material might have resulted from the moon's "last gaseous gasp of volcanism," or volcanic acti¥ijY. The reason fOr the excltemeht Is that If the phenomenon did result from a rumarole it woUJ.d be the first one round on the moon and would gl\te scientists clues in their search for missing knowledge of the moon's evoluUon. Timetable • 'Fa~tastic, Sports Fans' Brett and other 9Clentists who briefed newsmen during the astronauts' second For Today e:xcunloo on the surface of the moon SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) - were cautious about their interpretations, Today's timetable of Apollo 17 (all times but clearly saw a fumarole as a ~and subject to change). Wliat Astronauts Said When They First Saw 0 -range SPACE CENTER, Houston CAP) - Here is a brief text of the conversatians of Apollo 17 astronauts Eugene Cernan and Jack Schmitt as they discovered. orange !Oil on the moon Tuesday. • Schmitt and scientists on the ground speculated that the rind was a fumarole or volcanic vent, indicating the· last stages of volcanism. Ceman: Oh. Hey. Schmitt : Wait a minute. What? Cernan: There is orange soil. .. Schmitt: Well, don't move it unW I see· it. . ceman : It's aU over. Orange. Schmitt: Don't move it till I see u, Ceman: I've stirred it up with myJeel., Schmitt: Hey, it is! l cq see it frorii here. lt':S orange. Walt a mtnute1 let me put my visor up. Il'a ttill oreie. Ceman: Sure it is, crazy. Schmitt: I've got to dlf a trench, Houston .•• Hey, he's not 'IOing out of his wits, it reaUy Is. It's about 102 (Camera frame number.). Almost the ti ti * * * * Cernan Speeds at 7 MPH; Shakes Up His Partner same color as the decal on my camera. posslbUity. 2:33 p.m. -Gene Ceman and Jack Ceman: 'lbat is orange, Jack. Schmitt begin third moooawalk. Scbmlll: Zap me with a litUe cold CONPJRMATION MUST await return ,..,_ water. of materials collected at the site to earth 2:53 p.m. -Ceman starts mooo ~~ Ceman: Oily, I think I gave you ll:rl or so they can be studied in laboratories. 2:58 p.m. -Telecast of IDOCll'l't&1& ~·like tllal Brett noted that the presence of a starts. ~tt: F.,ntasUc, spoits fans . It's rumarole in the Shorty area was 3:09 p.m.-Ceman and Schmitt drive to trench Ume. -predicted as a "low probability" even the site of an experiment which Ceman: You can see this in your color before the mission, based on photographs measures electromagneUc charac- televlaion, I'll betcha. of the area taken on earlier missions. teristlcs. Sctunitt : That is really orange. It's This was one reason ror the visit to the 3:18 p.m. -They drive 2Y• mlles to the been ant.lied. Go around and get the area. base of North Massif, a mountain r!Jing lunar lander over·b~: lt lookS just like While Schmitt might have been able to a mile above the Taurus-Llltrow Valley. an oxidized desert soil. That's exactly confirm his original impressian if he had 3:45 p.m. -Anive at the base of right. Well, I'm g~ clean your tonger to study the site, Brett said It was North Massif and begin taking pictures, glasses. Can you wait a minute on that unlikely that plans would be changed for making geological ob&ervaliool aod tak· pan yau had? You know, that orange is the third moonwalk today. ing soil samples . along a line, Geno, along ttie rim creast. But be also gave a "low probability" 4:32 p.m. -Leave North Massif for. Alan, if there ever was -I'm not gonna that a fumarole is present around the another nearby rock collectin& site 492 aa,y it -but if there ever was .90mething Victory Crater in the area to be explored feet to the east. that kloked like a fumarole alteration -1·n the thlrd and final moonwalk ol the th! · ·1 Let · 5:30 p.m. -Drive one-quuter mile man, s 18 1 . me give you a . . . mission. , southeast to the hue or SCulptured. Hills What's wrong with the TV, aren't you lt y.•as -Ceman. who saw the orange for more pictures and samples. watching? first. He excitedly summooed Schmitt. Mission Control : We're having tilt the fU"St professional scientist on an 6:30 p.m. -Drive sllghily more than• 1 ' =' 1 of gallons of Gilmore Red Lion soline am! maybe everr shop for a fe1v •. ~ .. . SPA€E CENTER. HOUllton (.UPI ) __._ Busier than a pi t crew at a speedway. the Apollo 17 astronauts patcbed up their busted buggy with paper and tape and took off on a z.ig-zag ride trailing rooster tails of black moon dust. fix.ed it..-.as-best lhe.y could..-- Gelling some advice from back on Earth, they tore unneeded plastic-coated maps from their fight plan and fashion- ed a makeshift fender, held together with <1 couple of clamps they borrowed from a telescope. problems with the TV. American space flight. quarter mile to a sharp rimmed crater Schmitt: Well stand-by. "Man lf tbete ever was -l'pl not covered_by a dark man~U~•-~------ Schmitt : Okay &li, I-see a trend of the going to say It -but if there ever was 7: 16 p.m. -Travel about 300 yards to Indeed, Gallienne had struck upon the perfect double-edged sword to serve the economy and beauty of the coa stline all at the same time. C.00.stal leaders bent lo the task with enthusiasm. THERE WERE ~NY olhers from our other towns .helped' tnake the Forty Miles of Clirlittnas Smiles. There were people like Joe B0ek and Harry \Velch in Newport Beach. Harold Reed in Lagwul, and my .own grandfather, 1 'm proud to say, down San Cl'emente way. Gallienoe's notion was for each city to handle its,own Yule lighting show but to tie tt all jogetber into a coast-wide pro- motion. He aicceeded with ~ usual pro- motional flair. Right from the start, competition was hot between cities. Newport Harbor came up1'With a boat flotiUa known as "'lbe Fdtival of Lights" which is ,today the Christmas Boat Parade. Laguna lit the hills ind San Clemente was ablaie in Spanish Village type Yule lights. GALLIENNE, NOT to be outdone in Huntington Beach, c1me up with "The World's Largest Christmas Tree" which was actu11ly hundreds of trees on an oil derrick. Sllnta's sleigh and reindeer bob- bed up arid down on the oil pumps. Just a ff.!w years back , the Forty ·Miles faded a bit when folks felt we no longer needed such a promotion for economic pu~s. But we missed those miles of srriilis-ourselves. So today, the com- petition is. back stronger than ever under the Association with some aid from our newspaper. So the contest will determine which ci- ty wil l win as "Olristcnasville, 197%." It was Laguna in 1970 and San Clemente in 71. AND ONCE AGAIN, Christmas is et:lebrated in a blue of light along this, the best of all PoSSible coasts. Spinning out in the highbanked lunar turns, a lead-footed Gene Cernan hit speed!~trp to ·? milts an hour Tuesday, sometimes scaring the pant~ off his backseat driver. J ack Schmitt. "Watch out,". Schmitt yelled at one point as they barreled toWard Naneen Crater. "You got a hole in !root of you." But Cernan. a former Navy fighter pilot., drove with the cool confid ence of a Richard Petty. .i·t·think l come up here to a hard left t'urn." he \\'amed Schmitt. "You un- buckle your belt and you'll roll do,vn to Naneen." ll was a ride the astrona uts were not sure they were going to take. The day before, Schmitt had accidentally bumped the rover and a fender !ell off. But like shade tree mechanics on a Sunday when the stores are closed. they DAILY PllOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtlivtry of tht Daily Pilot •S 9~arantted M•oHl1r·~<lllllJ: It r1u •• ltOI ~l•t •Our '""'.,. ''lf •·"'" tl ll ~n• yMr co~y .,,1, M tr.•1 It y111, Ci llo l •t !1-t11 ""''I ,,,. iJ.."'· Sll11,,_1, llfl4 , ...... ,, II Y•v h n•t roct:,, .-U• t ••r '' t •·"'· 1.rvr•1r. Ir I "·"'· Su ... 1,, Cl ll I nd I <llY "'Ill ........ ,,,, !• ytt. Cati\ 1r1 11_.., unht u "·"'· MOii OQnge County ....... , ',.2.4JJ1 Northw.sl HunllfllllOn lluch 1nct wntmlnlltr •• 5'40·1220 !>111 Clemtnll, C111l11r1n11 BHth. S... Jlllll'I C.pl1tr1nri. 0.11o1 Point, 5outlt L.a911111, L~unt Hi91191 ••2·4420 -.... ,. '. Fire Breaks Out On Ra11ger; N(l.vy To Make Probe SAIGON (AP) -Fire broke out in 1he machinery room of the U.S. carrier Ranger today four day1 aftel: it arrived off the Vietnamese coast, the U.S. Com· manda~. It said the ship's D,re crew quickly brought the blaze Wlder control and it 'vas cont inuing flight opert&ioDI off lhe South Vietnamese coast. Eight crewmen were Created for smoke inhalation but later returned to duty. No other casualties were reported. A Navy spokesman ~ed the fire was under lnvesligaUon, but there was "no indication the fire was caused by any malicious act." Pumps and electric ;wiring were bum· ed, but the full extent of the damage was not immediately a s sessed , the spo kesman added. The 78,(XX)..ton attack carrier has been plagued by sabota1e, and its departure .tor Vielnam was delayed for three months while dry dock repairs were Ocing made in the United States. About two doze n incidents of sabotage oceurred aboard the ship, and one seaman was charged with · disabling the gears of an engine. Ice Storm Travels East Freeziiig Rains Glaze Southern Ne ·w E1igland yellow -and orange -there is light something that looked like a fumarole a block field northeast ol Sbedock grey material on either side. Ob man, alteration -man, this is it," Schmitt Crater. that's incredible.'' said. -8:16 p.m.--·Drive back to Cballqer~ I --.c1HE WOllUi1i GIDISTWHl8Kff i PRESENT9 THE WORLD'S OLDIST MAIL DO I REMEMBER THE FIRST SANTA CLAUS? READY FOR A ·SHOCK? HE HAD A SLED PULLED BY SIX DINOSAURS. AND ONE OF THEM WAS NAMED MARVIN. HE WORE GLASSES I THE FIRsT GIFT? A MAMMOTH TUSK IN THE SHAPE OF WHAT MUCH LATER TURNED OUT TO BE A DESOTO ! 1 GOT IT FROM A NEANDERTHAL NAMED QUINCY J • THE FIRST HOLIDAY GOOD CHEER? 'WtlUHG 8USNMl&.LS. A GREAT WHISKEY J I STILL CALL IT VOUHCI BUSNMIU..S. AFTER ALL, !T1S ONLY 364 YEARS OLD ! • • • , Wtdnt'4J, -1', 1972 Olli, Y PILOT /S 'lme'!rtia l Group' '"~ - Ellshe:r.g's Jury . - 'Lo SI Freedoms' ' I . LOS ANGELES (UPI) po1ipqned pending n hearing The Pentaiion Papers Jury~ Thureday on a d e fen s e dlsml.sed Tuesday to make challenge or the ebtlre jury way for a new one., com-panel. . S lw W o -. 'Suit Biit Lost Life BERKELEY [AP) -A' 1 woman who won $500,000 in a suit against the physlclao- mayor of ~ledmont for fa11 lng to diagnose her cancer has died of the disease. 1 LaVeme Simmons died CALIFOIMIA LOS i\llGELES CAP) - ,,,,... of' ilie lour membert of a prominent San Dte&o family > ac<oted or tirlblng federal ~ jlllltjala for . 1e1 aod ~ other fiifort tor two family· ~embel'i held rn prtaon wtrt to surrender to authorities In 'San Diego today. The FBI said two ronner prlJOn off1clals indic,ted in tt¥ matrer iJso will surrender. The federal grand jury here pan>led late .. •t alltr ..,... Ing 114 modthi ol a one-year sente.noe on a similar con- vlclloG. ' ., ! NAMED Mm Santiago and Morgan u reclpienta o f Aleuio'. fawn were pri8on of- flclala Curtl!o L. Phll!ips and lloy Goddard . Phillipa and Goddard Wert not indicted. However, Goddard w a s suspended from duty with ' I: ' 8anfiaso •t Lompoc wbeft Oe grand jury began ltt In- vestigation la!t Marcb. ; The lndlctmenla allege tbl.t the two brothers bad Klfll relations with women ~­ panlons wlthbl the LomllCIC prlson on June 21, 1971, apd lhat on aeveral otber ~­ casioos the brothers ..,..e allowed ,to leave the prbon and its supervision for almllar 1 activ ities. pl•l.ned Jtl freedoms were Defense aUoroey1 oonteM tlken away durtl1(-the-four-the panel doea ~ -coolafo montb rtce11 wh e n ,enough 18-to 21.year--old "everybody e1M ln the world voters who are eligible \o Monday at Alta Bates Hospital "--------" -three days after an Alameda County Su-per for Court Jury rilled against Dr. Tuesday accused Jotin Alessio, 1r=====:;;;::=============='"''=; 82, bis aon Dominic, 36, and brothers Angelo, SS, and Ton)\ ~. of comp~ing to de!toud the United States while John and Angelo were serving sentences at Lompoc and Terminal Island f e d e r a I prlsoos in California on con- victions of tax evasion. .... able to ... a"'"t die C81e ...-ve as jurors fnr the flrit Drink, Lee' r' bat , 111.'' tilne . ~ TbO lla'~ia ~·~ ti du-EU.berg ond RU!so, former 1• ~ ... ' Gilbert Cochrane in a 14-day trial. . If by-i'.1l . .' 1lWrit'i. Court asoociatosat the'Rand Corp. · B N J ... lifatl Byn\l!Wlll earlier "think tank," are charged Rould Beaty, SS, was • Te u...,_. G•Ht 11 Ut Ot d«:loi;od a, -Ill !or defen· with violating sections of the caetured all the Bay , • SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Peler daqt1·Dr. lloalel 'El!lbei'rand Espionage Act in the alleged Bntlge TUl!'!llay, t h·ir Bohmer, center Of a cootrov-h ~ .... ...,. an •P-theft and possession or the end oI two mo ~ ersy that cost him his San Toget er peals CCIUrt.'\adnlOll !bat It _.,t govvrunetJt documents fr e e do m after Jlil, Diego Slato teaching job would ... ·~"• ,ri:::: which w.... leaked to the news .,.C.pe<1 In an am-, t earlier this year, has been SACRAMENTO (UPI) to trill '!ltti i' jurf Jected media "1 July, 1971. t h at killed a p~ . l"'nvicted of ob.• Ir u c,p n g "You can still ,.. dirty shows to long de;la.111 ~ If ByrDe rules against the ~ He is a me' ~ -· hlbyad tr,acks m an aritiwar In Cal" · y till at '.'We were t111 orf"lnal jlley." defense cballenae', selection of ' -~ •·enceremo' • " lll!m. ~atlon. • ,,.orrua. ou can 9 e -·• 1ie"wllJla F e Vl v and, drink. You just can't do said pa1~ m~'m r m · a new jury could begin bext ol ti · . .· ~r, ZS, of ~n Die,gq ·bolh ·at once." Abata, If maintenance worker week. · u, ooary group. and William &iiOO'iie, 38, · of at·a tire company-, 'tibo satd be --ChulifVista, were found guilty That wa s California At· spoke for fellow Jurors. by a jury Tuesday after nea rly tomey General E v e 11 e • Id Younger's capsule analysis of ~~'fJ:'."tY;.:'or • Man ,ffeld i-n 3·rd Set three days of dellberatlon. ~!rt w~~: o~~bs~:: ~1e or a more lm~artlal • ~•Death• Probed • r-r tertainment. group of people," he sat . "We • .. SAN FRANCI~ (AP) -~e-beollc .. swarne· .• ¥.o~:~.'l:~ Of Capital Slayings ~~~t~ri:',~=~ ·:l~::£p'.Ze~::;~ un: ;J . of murder anCl mutilation in f prohibit "bottorrllesa'' dancing ABATA SAID THAT the jury was instructed many times not to watch television, hear the news. read the newspaper or talk to anyone about the case. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A man armed with a 9mm pistol has been arrested in con- about 18 miles near the hamlet the fatal shooting 0 two men and so-called "adult" movies. of Rescue. about 18 miles at a Mission Distr ic t Younger· said Tuesday that from the Sacramento County restaurant~ance hall. the Alcoholic Bevere'ge Con- line , said Eamie Carlson, Police said they arrested trol regulations sustained by nection With S a c r a m e n t o sheriff of El Dorado County. Manuel I. Antonio, 2&, at his the court dealt only with bars County's third double s1ayi.Dg The bodies were sent to home Tuesday after receiving and private cluM w b e re in eight days, Sheriff Duane Sacramento (or an autopsy. infonnaUon volunteered by alcohol was sold for con- SECRET indictment s returned In San Diogo last week and announced Tuesday Charged Dominic, Angelo and .Tony w:ltb similar offeqses. Counts also were returned agahtst former prison ad- ministrators Daniel Morgan and Anthony Santiago, ac- cusing them of granting the Alessio brothers favors. JOhn Alessio is the former general manager of Caliente. Raoe Tract in Tijuana, Mex- ico, and mi l lionaire businessman in San Diego. John Alessio nmains i n federal prison at McNen Island, Wash., whert he is serving a three-year sentence for inconle tax evasion handed down in 1971. His brother Angelo was "So tf that's not ta.king your freedoms away, I don't know what Is," he said. "Everybody else in the world \.'as able to talk about the case bUt us.'" Lowe says. Discovery of the bodies members of the Filipino com-sumptioo on the. premises. Lowe said Tuesday Eddy followeQ....the finding of two ID unity· 1piiii;iii:iiiiiii;;ii;;~;i;i;i;;.ii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0i_. Lee Earle. 22, was arrested in sets of men's £1othing, blood-• C~tlt~S potQMf Selection of a new jury was IT EASED THE HURT a hotel room for ia-.:estigation stained and ~with ~' · i . ....,0 , • of murder alter the disoovery in the trash can of a car wash Y 0 S EMJTE NA1 1 NAL of the nude bodies or two men in north Sacramento. PARK (AP) -C 1 o th Ing in shallow graves in nearby El Loft told reporters at, a recovered after a wOman was Dorado County. news conference I\. appeare4 •awep~ .oYer Upper Yqsemlte An ~vestigation was under the vie$Jms were shqt to delth Ji Falls ~ lll; air" apparent ·double way to determine i( Earle and in the car wash Sunday iilghf sillclle 11 dayl ago 'Wa! ten- the victims were involved in a and transported to El Dorado tatively identified Tuesday as drug smuggling o p e r a t I o n County for burial. that of a Chico area w~. betw e en Mexico and A park spokesman sai(I the California, Lowe added. EARLE WAS armed with a clothing was believed to have MINNR'S SHIP CHANDLERY Se--S~lps W .. els Nautical laaks -Slllps Lamps FINE SHIP MODELS Marl .. Prim -Slilp Clacks • ' THE COLLEC'i'ION COLOR DIAMOND The boy, the girl, the diemond, At limple as that? Not quite, for diamonds...,• diffennt 11 the special people who buy them Ind -them. You're invbd to aelect from • _.,special collection of diomonclt .. af-the finm color .. We eel them "Collection Color" cl8i11Mds. We hrte them in many shepes, sizee, mid pricel, oc,. of which will meet your budgetl You llllT individually seCect your mounting and your opec:W Collection Color diamond, or choooe from styles we have Cf8lte.d ••• for someone you lave. Do Something Beeutlful,,. C ... 1'9' A-ti lll\llftlll -AllMrkMI E1"'"' ....... ~ -M.Mt9' aia,.., .... ' He said tbe victims were 9mm automatic pistol wbtn' belonged to Lorraine Sutton, tentatively identified as Mex-arrested, Lowe said. He also 20,edForestberRanchf ~t;:.: =-SLA.:vJCK'S ican nationals. was in possession of ·~a tifi by a · Y L•ri• S.IMtfen of Niutlul ' in tt<itdibaards substance'' that was being -has not been recovered but a Dec•riter Item• & Gttts .Jewelers S ce 1917 A TIPSTER gave the sher-checked as a possible narcotic. Mtbologist W&!!I able to ~ 18 FASHION ISLAND iff's office infonnatioo which Capt. Jerry Saulter of the reconstruct the woman's size, ~ Of>•M •v••111toa -Tuu. TH•u u.T. -'Tit. 1• NEWPORT BEACH -6'44-1 JIO led to unearthing of t b e Sacramento County sheriff's weight and coloring through a 111_ ..... ~. . MINNll"S SHIP <Cl,tANDUlT "..,_ ...., - bodies Sunday night, Lowe office said in a separate ease portion of a leg found at the ,. 2537 West Coast HJtlrw-y o,.. ......., ...,. ~ • ..... • •1• , ... SACRAMENTO (UPI) -state legislative can· dkiate WJll Slocum of the Peaee and Freedom Party today reported spending ooly $34.10 Of biJ total 144.44. ,On his spending report. Slocum w r o t e , "Surplus U5ed for a few friendly jugs of muscatel." lie Jost bis.. ---race. .said. The victims had been Monday nia:ht, narcotics were base of the 1 , 4 3 0-f o o t J48-4192 !Nat ~~~-:!:MrHt, wittr ioc.iior. A~:r:~.!.~ar~'~ v~;.. u HArL dead only a short time. foµnd in an apartment bl, ~w~a~terf~all~.:.,. _____ _J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===========:;:========::! Ttie two b0dfe!lfm-stde1Jy---whtcb~Ear1e-was Usted as oc-1-t . ~ side in 18-incb-deep graves cupant. ' .. i l H , fl ,., F'ir.e;.Qr~v~s .2 ·;_~\~ep~s )}-~--~5-1-·· ~.-. .,)--~----:_ __ -... _. _ .. _ ..... ~ ... ,.. ... _ .. _ --------~ 0uv-~bsi<ask~ for-shoes Mq\<e f~~ 1~~C.f jit+ 11' 1 · ... >lAA~ \AP) - ' Twi> me8 'luive been ai'resled in a burning apartment building for investigation of bank robbery after police fired a tear gas barrage. While bundredl of spec- tators gathered nearby, about so Sacramento police oCficers and sheriff's deputies sur- rowded a two-story apart- ment building near t he downtown area . The officers gathered Tuesday after a car was spotted that answered the description ol the one U!ed by bandits who help up the Placer National Bank ln nearby Citrus Heights about two ... ... -' "'" . bours'earlier. · '< • · .,Iff'1 1Pf>kesman· .st~khaJ!fl Officers began firing ·tear Jobs Id, 3.1, walked 'but .. of tli'e gas canisters into a second-burning building and sur- floor ape.rtmeot after ordering rendered. He g a v e a two men inside to surrende'r. Sacramento hotel as bis home Everyone else was ordered to address, the spokesman said. evacuate. A second man WaS rescued Smoke· and names started from the names by poHe6 who pouring_aut oL the b!lildlng U!ed a ladder to carry him to shortly after the tear gas safety after he C1Jllapsed at a volley began, witnesses said, window. and spread to an adjacent He was identified as Casey t b re e-stor y apartment Dueber, 39, wb> could not im- building. mediately give a home ad- POLICE HAD to move squad cars out of. their way to let firemen get to the blues. witnesse! said. A man identified by a sher- dress. ,, Sheriff's spokesman 8 I 11 Miller said DuclMt' w. a s treated at a hospital 'fO, smoke inhalation and bui'ns. The fire's cause was imknown. 1G011 tH[ INVl&IM.[, •o\LTIMORt. MO., PAOOUCT OF U.U. 60 PllCIO', UOU£Utl. ·.\ : ' ' I . ~. \ ., .. • ... , -. • • • -me \M:tllabee ' llie adidas &:t\lle.+ h~h O\"' low Ma:fe.l ~V\d O'(" octk.IVOOd cdo'r" -"4..1ll.$.i%J2,.-:. __ I .. -----. ti\e. :sportshoe -fov- ~mi~ or-st-Yee+wtctv -""'1.1 I si i.es 44 fashion Island, newport center 644·5070 " . • ~--··-===============:::i::============:;;;:=============================== ' ). 'I ) - i . . . ' • DAO;y PROT EDJTOBLU. PAGE Pool Support Strong DOlzens of volunteert in the C.ptstrano Unified School District find themselves on the brlnlc of victory thia week in a l 2-month effort to find enough petition d gnatures to warrant a special district to pay for a pair of blgh school swimming pools. More than 4,800 registered voters in the area signed the documents which wtU be used to pu.sh for a cllattict that \fill raise enough caab in two year• to bUUd the recreational piungea at San Clemente and Dana Hilla !Ugh sclioois. The odds agalrut success were stibstantlal, for the project Involved convincing taxpayers to allow a 9-<ent hllce in Ill ntes. · Alter the signatures were gathered, the parents had yet another tuk: convincing trustees and city coun· cllmen to. endorse the project before county supervlsort give the final permission to form the district. !jome San Clemente councilmen ballted al endors- ing the district without a public" ..,te, but finally agreed to support the plan. San Juan C.plstrano councilmen also wiU be wed to endorse. the project. Orange County .Upervlsors then caat the final decision . The cost is minimal, the need is obvious and cit!· zens have shown solid support. The project should go through. Better Use of Space Laguna Beach is now otudylng the po6Slble turn· over of the council chambers for use in the day-to-day running of the city, an action that appears to make good sense. The chambers now stand empty and unused most hours every day while the mundane activities that ac- tually make the city go are crowded tntq tight quarters. The police depulmtnt ID pll'tlcular Is In erut n-.1 ~ more room. Nlgbt meetings now held In the council room could be moved IO some other public auditorium -1111 Forum Theater haa been suggeited as one poulble pl .... There may be scbedullng cllllicultles in">l•ed. but none llkely so cllfficult that the matter could not be worked out. The council ought to hold a meelinf at a p"'6)lectlve "chambers" to see if it nta the needi, too. Use of the chamben by city services ,..uld ·be economically preferable to purchasing ar Ieaatne addl· tlonal olliC<! space. . · Christmas Spirit Lags Although they project some gains In the 1llt low days of their cam~gns, volunteers from two South Coaat area United Campaign ellort. sWJ are alzuUlini to meet their goals. In the Capistrano Bay area, the campaJ&n wl11 'of· liclally end this week, perhai>s '26,000 sliort al. tt.s· Joa! of $64,400. In Laguna Be~ch, the goal Is $76,200 and oo far about hall bas been met. The campaign problems are curious. The Capistrano Bay area effort bu shown the small· business and pral.essional communities caring llttle about donating. One San Clemente pral.essional group'• members laughed when uked by volunteers to contribute. Small businessmen throughout the d e e p South Coast bave donated only '800 all !Gld so far. Laguna officials predict some strong Jain• before their Christmas weekend windup. But unless the Cbristmu spirit jogs some donors, both funds -ak>ng with the dozens of charitable agen· cles they support -wl11 have to mike do wttb much less this coming year. • .. s , Study Slwws Some Tricks Of Memory Bow Bouton Ffll'U Witlaotct a Zoaing Code FNEYJ.H~ Spealtlng or the "work of tbe im- a,tnaUoo," as I was, recently reminded me of a psychological esperiment coo· ducted some. yeora __ aaq_J!I .. -~d Carmlchlel and two of-bis coONgUeS. Dear Gloomy Gus The n1:in in the main will be "JUlt in. the Plain." • M. W. n.1. '"""" refltcft .......... ....... ... -l'ltr ............. w .... , ... Mt ........... ....., ... °"" ...... They showed a group bf studenta a list of 12 line drawings, 'Wblcb the students Brili1b psychologist, points out that v.1ete a_$l~ tQ rtl>f9duce from memory. almost inv~ "we ln~ret Cl'K' The figures \Yer e -Present e.xperiences-in ~~itth shown one at a time. ot.r own interests, attitudes , hopes and privately, to e a c h expectations." subject. Before each M an example, be goes on. "it bu 1hcvl'ina:. the esperl-been found that, as compared with people menter would say: who Te&ard Negroes in a ravora~Ie or un- "'llle lollowlnr lig· prefudlced light, tmse with anti-Negro urt: resembles ... " attitudes find it dillicult in di stinguishing But while all the one Negro from amther. They see a tubjectl saw the Negro in somewhat the same way 11 the same fi.suru half were given one set cf average person sees a sheep -not u an Ttrbal labela: and baU anotbu set. The individual with unique characteristics, fl!'St drawing was labeled a "beehive" bl.1: me.re1y as a member of an un- fcr 90me; and a "hat" for *1's: these-differentiated clw." cond WU called an "hour glass" for ON AN0111ER LEVEL Dr Hunter aome , and a "table" for~-. says, "there is the fact thai if w'e show a Obvloul!Y. the ~ in do mg this -blurred and indistinct picture to a hungry ~th ambiguous drawmp that ~ be man, be is more likely to see it as Ulterpttted either way -WU to direct reireaenting food or some object relating by ::mlon the 1Ubject's rtproductioo to lood than is a man wbo Is not hungry." of ea n,ut'e. . . y, ls not merely beauty that lies in the The .rf.lltllt wu startling : ll1 87 percent eye of the beholder, but much of what we of the ClleS, tt was found ~t the draw-call "reality" '.'.:~If. Our lmagination, un- lng-.. were sha~ly distorted 1n the d~ der enema! or internal suggestion, sup- tlon of the pa~tcular ve rbal Ja~I wh.1cb plies the "meaning" to peopl e as well as had been provM!ed~1What ~~e subjects 1m-to pictures or drawinp. we fill in lht agir.ed was their recall turned out to details based on our accumulation of be based on what they were told the past d,periences and training The figures "resembled," rather than on "in5CM.ltable" Chtnese, lf.he Uvetl iiext to what they actually saw. you as a uel&bbor, would turn out to be 111: COMMENTING on thfs uperiment, _ as scrutable as Archie Bunker -and in his interesting book, "Memory : E•cl!I probably just as prejudiced the other a: l Fallacies," Dr. Ian 1.1. L. Hunter, the way. Congressional B enefits By GEORGE J. MARDER ............... ...,..tllMI Newly elected members of OJagred may be happy to fmd out abGut a cash or carry l}'lttm for their stationery allowance. The allowance for House members wu upped from 13,IOO lo $4,250 a year jlut bflore the last sesskln of eon,ress •d- journed. But the amount Is not as in- tertstin& as the way the money is handl- ed. STARTING wtth the first day of the .. sesskln Jan. 3, the M,250 allowance will be crodlted to each oonarCSSINl/.1~ the HOUie llatlonery s10re -• ll!ol> ,.., l)te any other ercepl that the pricM'are low- er aod only conareumt:o and thefr lllff1 can bu)'. And there are no ules tu.es. ~n can carry away from the -. '""' atallooery supplles !or tbelr o!· licet up to the arnoonl ol the allowllll'!e. Or Ibey can draw all ., l"l'I or the -In calh -no questiOft! - 'Ille UIUl!lptloo la • that if a -sr-• doeln1 lll<e wbol M CID If! llolll tllo -..... -Old he Clll .. t l'.t':t:7 ~~~~ -dlpt ~.,.,,Ille caab .... buyeta- D' .. WINI' ... -. lla'd .... tb IN!1 _.. --Illa moo"' "'°"' sup-plleo ID the 11oo11 ,..,_ ii llie lowest In Ille ........ luntilllool ol -ii -.. .....-10011.llthe~ _.. 1111o -pctiel.lar Item he can -t1io s10re-• dlllerml brlnd, '° .... u 11 bu to do, Jrilb tu olflce. (GUE.ST REPORT) A few years ago, one congressman had the alalionery store buy automobile tires for him from bli stationery allowance, saying he needed them to get around to his constituents. That isn't don e any more, but there 11 nothing to stop a congressman from dr1wlng the cash to buy tires at regular c ommer cia l establlslµnenta under the carry~ash pri> vision. ANOOm:!t FRINGE bendll for meinbers ii the lrtt trlp home. There WIS a tfme Wbeo Congrtss merely patd ~ gtt tbe conpft!lften to Washington for a ttnion and then send them back when the JeUion w1a over. Now, howevt:r, it'• lelt important !or the lawmaUrs to k.,p In !ouch. And Jual btlo<e the last 1<1Slon eoded, the llouao t'alled the free tnfft allowance !or """"....,.,, !Min Ill lo 31 IOUDd trips every two-yw period. 'lbal would permit Ibo ...,....,man to ma.Ito Jujlo about cme 1,.. trip home o.,ry t .. ~ 1111.-, boftvtr, ... low of the ll'ee tr1po the Ont ,..,, aavm, tbem inltead for the second year -they--. The Houte 1ilo upped the travel allowanCe for employe1 o( congreumen. Fonntrly, House 1t1Uen were allowed up to lour lrM round trfpo lo Ille membm' distrfd per eon.,.. ... T ha t h11 been raised to ill atarttna with nut Coo""'. \ ' Is Land Zoning a Waste of Time? Bernard B. Slegan is an infnquenl mao wbo wa!U out of step and questlana comfortably settled fOrtgone conclualona. He Js a real estate lawyer and a reaearcb fellow at the University of Chicago who; alter taking a long and tecbnloa!IY care!ul look bas decided Ille beat thlnr we could do for our· &elves is to j u n k land-use ZOlling of allt!ncls. -Most-bl:meowner-1--~'..,J.-/­ suffer from the de- lusicn that it's zoo. ing whlch saves rrom---slumifJeatlon -- and savage depreci· ation the door spot ol earth on which they make the monthly payments. No so. lt'a true that some home owners can get more !or their property becau.oe zoning tampers with a free real estate mart.et so as to reward sorne people with hl&her values by legislative fiat, but that's the luck of the draw, not a system far pro-- tectlng property values. What Slegl}ll did was to go to Houston, Texas, the only large city In America wit.bout a zoning code, and see bow tbe folks there were faring in this horrific condition of non-governmental regulation. (Siegan's book, Lull UH W~ 7AM>- ln1, D.C. Heath and Company, is first (VON HOFFMAN ,) rat e, but the leclmlcalltlos al law and eoonomlcll c1ooi mU8 it an eaq reeder.) Hou-have -be<n riven a chance lo •-lholr ~-on this Issue and -docistvety wled ,..,. ingc!Own bi>Oi:uiiiil. THE RESULn hlven'I been anything like wb.al city planllen and other oorts o! shyster vi!looaries would ·have yoo think. Oil refineries and Cokmel S&nders chicken sbacks hlvtn't Invaded the city's better residential n e lg b bo rho o d 1. Siegan'1 evidence shows that Houston ii at least u nice or no more be1ll.sh a city to live In than any otbtr. Nor does the absence.or zoning mean that you can uae your property to daltoy the value ol other people's. The city has la111 requiring apartment houses to hive ott-sttett parking, ii bu a bulldin' code, and other regulations that prevent a property owner from making tht neiehborbood uninhabitable. But it has no 1.0lling. '11leoretictlly, you can put up a SO.ttory office bu.Ud1na or shopplnr center rlrtit in the middle of a lealY community of i>w1rsioW1. but ii _, b.lppen, because it mabl no eooncmic 1 ens e. S1epn f1nda that IOrD9 o t b e r very --,ood things do happen. For e t: a m p I e:, rents in Houston are alentficantly lower than they are lo the companbte city or Dallas - wbero Ibey hive a traditional r.oniog set· up. THE REAllON is that a r.onlog code artil!caJJy and ar!Jltrariiy removes large amounta of land lrom the -that might be uaed !or aputment buildings. The price o! the rem11o1og·1anc1 JOlled !or mutU.family occupancy !a lor<ed up and so, lneloctlbly, are the rents. Jn-~zoncd Houston, apartmenl-bouae land costs !en than aingle !amlly-liause fand, tbu1 mak· ing lower tents pouible while preserving lhe borne owners' investment. 7.oolog not only mm. a hash out or -la! land use, but a mess out of •verytbing el1<. Sometimes land is oet aside for ·1nc1umy wldcb lndw.lr)' c1oesni wan~ but becauae of the r.onlog evorybody eiae is maid lo buy it. THE PLANNERS wbo draw up these !Oiling ordinances aimply hive m ac- curate way ol knowing who wants to do what with land, and, lacking that In- formation, zoning Is 1 maddening ~ cumbnnce 11 well as a serious in- !rlngement on property rights. Chicago, for example, bu 1even dif- fertnt buainess ~ mnes. Areu zoned B·l, Slegan point• ou~ permit bather sbopo but not 1tallowy 1iol'OI, bakeries but not hardware stores. cleaners but not gllt abopo, and eo forth and so on. Altbougb that aeems lmboclllc:. Chicago zoning Is considered pretty pod in the trade. 'Ille ml)' known raliooal wry we have for finding out how a piece ol land should be used is by ,..;ng wbo11 pay Ibo most lo use It arid thee watdJlnr to see what use be puts it to. JN THE LAST F~ t~'::., ;"' liberals, de•p&Jring of·~ . lo accept bleW. have llarttd ..marfdng that zoning acis as a ractally tt· clu&ionary device. Slegan argue, that all zoning is uclusionary. not on)y of race, bul many, many other thlnp, Including "'vonu .. produclng ~Y that many jUrisdlctJons badly need. 1.oni:ng does, however, confer 10me bendill. It provide• a lot of city planners with jobs, It generates an enonnou! amount of expensively unnecessary llUgation -thereby emicblng entln! woil packs or lawyers -and it la the lariest and steadiest 90Ul'Ce of graft available to town, village, city and county p>litician! tbe country over. With tbeae advantage&. let 's ignore Siegan and fight lo bep it. Mother Supports All-year School To the Editor : This Is con~min1 the change proposed in our ICbooJ year from a regular nlne- montb attendance to a run year, ex· eluding August and ooe week in Sep- tember. The schedule: would be nine '~•eeks attendance -three weeks vaca- tion, barring adjustments for holidays. The children would be attending the same number of days. AS A MOTHER of four children, t'wo in upper' gradts and two at Harper in co.ta Mesa, I overwbebningly supJX)tt this program because of the definite ad· vantages to my cmldren, u follows: There would be no Iona review after returnini lo school because ol ieamlng loss over the tbro.\.omontb vacation. Tbis woold be a dlstloct advantage for botb tbe child who doesn't retain lftl1, and the one wbo does. . Accordlo& 1o documented lactl from a pradiclng school in Hayward, CIU!. 1Chool marks are up, readlllg 11 up eid by the time-children reach intennedlate levels they are an average of one and one-half years ahead . There it a posslbility of tutoring on a one to one basts from our high 1ebool 1ludents on a three-month vaca.Uon. THIS 'AIL ADDS ~c.~ a lino program for our· chlldrtn at mosl receptl•t yt!ars of leamlng. What wlil this mean to the parent! and [1tUUy? 1bia will depend I lt'tal deaJ on bow 1iiid we make It for ourselves, but [ MAILBOX ) Letters from rtOdcr" art wtlconu. Normally writtr• 1hould conve11 tM'r messagea in 300 word.s or teas. TM right to cond<!ISI ic!Url to fit !JJOC< or elim.i'llatt libtl is rutrotd. AU lettera must indUdt tignature and mailing address, btif name• ma11 tie withMld on rtquuf if S'Uflidtnt rtason i.t appaf'tftt. Pottf'fl toill not be publish«!. belnr vuy realtstlc. It will mean an sd- jultz!lenl -eopeclally !or those havtnc children fn two or more levels. 'l'hll ls DOI. all bad, however, as we can at leut cive mote of outael'lt.I lo the children wbo aro out al scboel at dillol' tnt times. OUR VACATIONS mJiht suffer • Utlie lt we have chUdren colng to dlUerent schools, but they are renenlly In the last part ol the sllmlll« ii the children aro atlendinf swnmer acltool. II you hlvo on- ly 1"'rper SCboo! ,~dr<n, that would be mat -•acallom Ill ytar 11ioa. There la a tenllli•• pla6 lot ell)' can at the achoo! !or a very small sum for the '''"klnr molber. Whet a wond<ifuJ tblns to aee oar children learn and O'OW lo such a ..------Bt1 George·-----· Du r Georro: How did you 1•t lo be an odvlce columnist, anyhow? How did you even get Into the newspaper business? PUZZLED Otar Ptmled: I used lo deliver paper toweia to the newspaper offlce unut one day somebody slol• my puabcarf. I've been doint this column for yean, lr)'in11 to aave up enoil11h !or the down payment on another pushcart . • Otar °""'1" Do you think a !ew dttnb rtl8Ses 1 man before dlnnet? F.J. Otar F.J.: It 111n1 doea. My brothcl'in-laW starts dl!llkloJ r1cbl a It er breakfast and 1el! "' r<laaod he haan't had dinoer 1lnce l.9M. (8'nd your prol>lems to o..,.. and lei-liim rive )'OU the benelll of his horrible u •mpie.) positive manner. Let's DOl think of why we cannot -let's concentrate on why We can. A positive thinker usally wins. MllS. CHAS. POMO ' Tiie U""""' To the Edit«: Tbe new library ... I watched It belnr lluitt. It -bard to· tell whether ti .... going to be an oveMWi chicken coop, a warehouse ror retired steam locomotives, or a replica of the bo1 that Disneyland came in. It turned out to be all three. It's a Junkyard with books. you approach the !l.ruclurt. lt11 tit easier that way. And hopefully insldl scrneone will have had the ,good sense " include a section devoted to architectui'& GEORGE WM Soel•I Sffllritv To the Edilo" Isn't it great that the SGcial SecuritJ ben_efit payments have been increased b] 20 percent? BUT, It lsn'l so great tba! the Social Seeurlty ta1. is also being in ~uect. Here Is a comporllcn ol the amount q SOclal Security tu an employee and hi' THE MAIN ENl'RANCB mnlnds me employer will _. poy !or emplo,.... ol. one I saw batk east. It was the en-· eaJ"llin& $9,000, $10,llO aDd $12,000 • iranc. to a .:lubbou,. built by some IO. ~. yeAN>lda In a .....,, lot. The l<ida' Yearly design obvloosly -detarmined by the Ware 1m !I'll alxe and shape of ocrapo ol lmnber they $ 9,000.00 .-.oo $4116.0 could pic1I up from the house ~ con-!0,800.00 t88.00 MH.O struction In the r.::t block. Al 1eU1 Ibey !2,000.00 411.00 MM.O• had an u:..:uae. Don't rein -thlti v.-on't be the last lo • The bhJeorints and ·~ must have crease. been In tnllie. Tbe ilto Aubrey St. Clalr, c. c. MOSELE1 wbo 1avo Laguna Beach architeelural beaul,\I and dignity In his deaian of the City Hall, would tum over ln fils gmve. To ll!Jn, and lo otheni of llient and taste, i~ -1d ~ a ClllOon too sad lo be '-· _'l1IB NIW LlllW\Y bu ooe tb!nr ..,ru, b' tt. 11•1 lar _,.., alf tbo ttlCl\ft1 ao that not too many -"' will -it. A belier aile -.Id ha... be<n back ID the biU1 where nobooly """1d see It. Aeyway, !her• u -· • powerful 1J11111M11t for abortloli. I can aee II -· l~t nproduced on a pootor diapia)'ed In elch junior high ochooi cJasarOOlll When! ~"1 11 the. subJect. The cap,Uon sa)'I, "Don't lei !Illa boppen lo :l'>U· • TRI WMllEll yard bu more charm. By --thl• monat,..lty makes tbe Taco Bell' lool< Ilk• the Tomple of Alllelta. Good lock klcla. The booll can~ burl you. But ~ ..... to C1-your Oyel IS OaANO I COAST DAILY PILOT Robe rt N. Weld, Pkblilhtr ThC1mo1 Ktrvil, Editor Borbon:t Krt,bfc1t. Editorial P09e EdUor Th<' t'd ltorlal Pft~e of lhe DI.Uy Pilot i1ttk1 to Inform and 1tlmu- i.te rtfldtol"I by r~llnr thla ,I ntw1pr1pcr'1 opinion• an~ com- mental')' l)n topics or lntdct.t and ; 11an1n~~. by provldlna: a forum 1or tht exPt'talon ot our readert' ~pinion& and b,y-prv1ent1na lht dl'ieth vtewpOftltt of Informed ob- ·~.Ml'll •nd 1pokttmtn on toplt'I of the doy. Wednesday, ·Dec. ts, 1972 Wtdnesday, DKtmber 13, 1~72 DAIL V PILOT 7 Cancer Finding i.ed Vitamin Overdose 2 ·Police ·Chiefs I .Fl>A Ciros A, D, Bad Effects, I .Cu t Dou1n • WASlllNQTON (UPI) -doaage of vitamin A. G'l'OJllCAP)-'!11e The~~D{UI Tfie makers or :. ·~ ~:':f.~1,.: ~ •'1-;~~ =;ta:i::.1.:;rn to ba.:',':,,p~ say'o !l li>Jaii§ to eYIJIJa ~ 'e:mtns'T and•i~. -~p:.:. with the new limits, the FDA I "°i!l riew' leadJ In ca 'JlO!ed new fUlet lo nin!t the ~~t .:uf!/Pi:.,~f;= 1 ·rt . ~lnl front" an amouht of 1ucb vital'llins 1n "VJtaminl A and D are , ~\~ n~h ~.t~prf In A10J>prescrtptlon products.', known to be. tox(c; and they I ~I~~· ti...-"ilf , Of the The FDA said the thhut of are beavl)y Jl<Om'oted iq high 1 1 1 • k 1'!'1f.,"" , lta propoW would fall on -. lo the ~er, aod w~ Sabi:' ll.ir ,.,,,,';" "''or~rtal mulUple fdl'lnula Yl!Aq continue to a cc am u I ate Jf'P -.. , 9J>U ;;or some of w,hich now have 80 e\lk!ence ol adverse ~ts ·--times the recommendtd daUy 1 trOm eicelSlVe J.nlate:" ,,.. • · " ' . ~ ·allowance ol vitamin D and 10 FDA CommiJSloDer ~q__ ' •BRIEFS times the recommended E. Edwards. •4 •1-rS· ~ . ' polio ' acctne. Both · sclenl~to hav bllen working, ·with ''herpes sirn- ple1" vlnl.set that caiise com- mon cold ,sores ln bumans, the f\l'CI said. · • " The ItaUan &cientlst ts Dr. - -Eagleton ,Mf air . . ~ Sad:-McGover):i I • '• GiullO Tarro of th&, University of Naples, ahd the llCI said II is inviflnl him to the United States to work Jn i'n Institute laboratory to confirm hlw most recent. findings . .. j '"' NEW TORJC: (AP) -Sen. ~hetpfe :..:. M!!!·'ll ;~ould ha~e Geprge S. McGovetn ·bas cill· ~~·test tasue m tbe.:cam I"'~ ed the Thomas Eagleton affair ..... ...., 1 th ,, dd ,, ol ... _ MllllRY peo...., aever orgave e Curbs l.ifted SEOUL (UPI) -T h e govemment l}QDOunced today it will lift a naUdawlde state of martial law imposed 5' dlU'I e •¥ est part .. · ~ ma·fl!!> ttia~ -11e c0ntlnued, "I unsuccessful presidential c~ thou«M I )"al acting in tbe na4 palgn and he questioned the ~·, lnte!'est, but many Misaowl "'l"'lor:• ,c!ecldm to . th6ugbt I w~ not." accept the ~ntla\ The senator said he thought DOllllnatlon withOut II r' 1 t that the presidency might be dlvu1gtng bia 1 •11 e r Io u s' ' the "one office where a medical hlltory. serious illness ahould he a , ago by President Pa r-k , Chung-hee effective at 7 a.rn. PST. Martial law was decreed Oct. 17 u a...iprelPd.e to swee~ ing reforms Park sakf were needed to cope with In- ternational and d o m es t I c <developments, IncluBJ:ng the current negotlatloos w l t h North Korea. e Deados Rtllftl . ANCHORAGE, Aluka (AP) - A presumptive de Ill th venllet /or Jlllsslng U.S. Rep. Nick lle$kll aod two ~ has been returned by a jury, b\Jt the judge has declined to sign a death certillcate fm.. mediately. ' Arttt about 20 minutes of dellberations 1\J.esdi.y, the sl1- member jury said It may "be ·fairly presumed" that Begich, Russell L. Brown and pilot D6n E. Jonz have "suf£ered death" since the disappear- • ance of a light plane Oct. 16. i AJso aboard the Cessna !!10 ~ was House Democratic Leader ' Hale Boggs, but he was not in- . eluded in the bearing "at lhe request of the family," of- ficials said. '··Air Pi..Gq, ' ·" • ST. LOUIS, Mo. (OP() - Martin J. McNally became the . eighth person convicted of an extortion • hijacking when a federal court jury found him guilty on two coun ts of air piracy late Tuesday. · McNally, 28, Wyandotte, · Mich., will be sent to the · federal medical center at \ Springfield, Mo., for an e1- 1·amination before sentencing • by U.S. District Judge John K. Regan. He faces 1 seotence of • 20 yean to life in prison on each count for hijacking an American Airlines 127 jet la.st June 23. McGovern said .in a taped decisive condition." appearance Tuesday night on ABC.TV's "Dick Cavett Show" that he himself would oot run for the "second hlgbe.st office in the land" without first 1n-• formlnt his running mate about bis past medical record. TIIE C AN DIDATE , McGovern said, bas "some obligation to be candid •bout It and make it clear what your medical history Is In ad- vance." Eagleton was picked by the South Dakota Senator as his vice-presidential candida~ but was dropped after it was ]earned he had b e e n hospitalized and given slJock treatments for me n t a J deprtssion. McGOVERN, W B 0 ap- peared tanned and """"' alter 10 days In the , Virgin Islands said, he .... not -ter" toward Eagleton. However, J4cGovem ~bis campaign_ alao -1'1 ha,!• been burl If be ... d de</de!f ,to tttalll Ea-gl~~ He said be gJmply did not ,know what declslon lo male eveh after consultatiOn with psychlatruts. "If he had stayed on we would have had great r.Bging debeteo among psychlalrim about the coosequences with people pro and con -would It 'YOU Sec:tion' -There's somethlnjr fw YOU in the "YOU Section'' of. tbe DAILY PILOT evuy SUnday. Check tts per90llal appeal for you and yours. FINANCED BY LAGUNA FEDERAL SAVINGS YOU'LL LOVE .LF S HOME LOANS ' t; ,, Our higbly qualified loan and C8clow pollDlllle1 In oar tluec local full service offices, stand Rady to 8llist Orango County home buyers, home builders and our real estate fri ends. Be sure to contact them aboutoar:- LQ W REDUCING INTEREST RA'l'm • FAST LOAN COMMITMENTS SYMPATHETIC FRIENDLY SERVICE Oronge Oiunty'a Largest, Fim aad Stron&est lndcpcndeDIFedenl SAN Cl.EMENT'E BRANCH eo1 No11n a eamm ir;a1 &an Clemenle, CaUf. 82672 Tolo~1'>1\t! ~92-1195 ,, ' ' ' .. • .. ~ . .. 0 TBE FDA h as concluded, therefore, tbat consumer sale-i!Y r.qulres the aetliin ,.,. .. ~ ' taking," he aaid. Too much vitamin A, the FDA said, can increase pressure within the human skull, creating symptoms not unlike those created by a WORLD & NATION prain tumor. Large doses have '---------"' also been known to retard growth in children. Vitamin D, the .FDA said, has been sh.@wn to retard men· tat and physical growth of children when too much iii taken over e1tended per~. ' THE AGENCY said many multivitamins oow on the ~ket have 'amounts of vitamin A llld D be1ow the proposed llmlts, but it said others were far over the tecommended d&lly · aUow- ancet. I • t , "Reports of misuse of large doses (Jf both vitamins A and D have· prompted medical groups and FDA . to ..tseek limitations on them," the FDA• ,aid In announcing the action. "Widespread 'promotion or both vitamins has resulted in excessive use for condillons such as acne, night bllndness and arthritis. Neither vitamin A nor D are proven effective for these conditions jn well nourished people." .Baez H eads For Hanoi NEW YORK (AP) -FOip' .J;!ieace acpvists l n c I u ding singer Joan Baez, Plan to leave here t o d a y for ~ y.iitb the North Viet· namese. The party plans to travel to Hanoi and return to the United States Dec. 24 or 25, according to a spokesman. for the Com· mittee of Liaison w i t h Families of Servicemen De- tained in .North Vietnam . Also in the travel party,. the committee said, are former Army general Telford Taylor, the Rev. Michael Allen, and Barry Romo, who is national chairman of the Vietnam Veterans Against War. • MANCHESTER, Vt. (AP ) -• l'owu Police Chief Dana Thompson, 62, was shot dead and village Police Chief Fra,,. CJs Hoag, 45, was wounded when ~n attempted burglary in this resort vill age erupted into a gun battle. Hoag was reported ln poor condition today at Putnam Memorial Hospital in Ben- nington. Al so wounded 1n t h e • shootings Tuesday was one of two men police say were attempting to burglarize a ·drugstore, !Alward Battick. 25 of Manchester. '11le Ben- nington hospita1 said today be was In poor condition after un- dergoing surgery . The other man accused or being involved, Brian O'Keefe, 24, also of Manchester, was captured early today at a remote camp in Manchester, state police said. State's Attorney Nell Mos.s of Bennington County med charges of accessory t o murder in the rirst degree against O'Keefe this morning at an arraignment at Vermont District C.ourt in Benninfl:tOn. ,._.;.-, •• -/j£_Dr•Wno's ~rf'.. i • 'CY f'f'HPtnltJt (!/mt-;, DINNER DANCE _ 8 p M Ma&rine ~esta ura~t· Empire Room A Hew \'e1r'1 £'It Part 'I 1oannet dinner choice J JOU 1 11tv1r for1et- rl b a. • lobster, s/11t or Pritnt $35 oo· llhPttfll::::, d1nc/n1, •vtrythinrl • f:""P•lclJ R"rll'V•llon1 ttu & ... tulty lncludl(f) f9QU .. IM; --625-2057 Carousel.~?.~~ uv< """c COCKTAILS FROM : ... ~·oRs FOR All ·so p41r(:CK)Pl•liw~~~.ct1 $17 • 1u11. • ll'1'11tt t eompl•mt"led wilh includes: Mldrtl&hl COid Bu •. ser-.ed al ,ou1 Pblt s .. ~,~· Ch"'"''&2s-2os 7 ...• 1*1.inted. ._... DEL WEBB'S Nl.WPORTER INN LIDO LOUNGE Cocktllls D11icln1 to Uvt Mulk: Ho Covtr-•o MlnimaM • • The court clerk said O'Keefe pleaded innocent before Judge John P. Morrissey, who ordered him held without bail and examined for competency •• 1 • 1107 J1mbor11 Road , 'l: Ntwport Buch, C.lifornl1 92660 ~'7Q..Q-P n:>ecn.• to stand trial. , • -~ I 4f • As~ci~ioff~rj~ the l ,~ · .. holi<fay $l)mtof 76. , . .. . . -. , , oi · ~ ~, •, . ,• \·fl 1 'cj • " I N!>w ~uy all--the ~ses y~u want . :·-• wtthJustonegasolinepur~hase. ·1 1 ., Andthey're.beputiful glasses-your set easily. The se glasses the same gold''toned Sunburst a re'a pretty Scandinavian,de.- stemwai'ewft've been offering sign that's perfeetf or·every ... for weeks • ..Now, a s a holiday thirig from iced tea to sherbet. special, you can buy a s .many A perfect gift, too. Our supply glasse,.., ~~· y ant for just 39<:' , is limited, though, and the offer each wilh ~gle 8-ll:&J,Io'n , ."ends~n. So"vislty<il&pa!'tiol"' P.urchase.I ou've alreaayllQi-,. patµig On\oii,76. i/,e&.le~.~Y,-: Jeeted 1111me;now you can finish , And have a happy holiday. ' . The spiritof'i6 liws at uruOn Oil " " ' .' ,, ..... ,. . ! l '. ' ,.,. ...... , . ' , •· ~!J~· t.•, .• ,.,,...,. ... ');•r~..,;~1 l .,,., I ' ' • ..... ,_.,...... .. -:;: ~ ... ..,. ·' , .,;-"· \,.:- • \' fl: ·' , • it·~-;,1, "r!j, Jf..,t I} h<:f~' ' It 'I (,,,,., w 1.~ ., ~~· '1.¥':.t ,\ I" •Ji.. .,. ol' .,. . "' . :.. ~ .. . • .. •• - ' ' ·' " .. I -' I I' DAILV PllOf , Five Law .;'\,. . ' 1 'Students Sue Hotel \ Pregiiancy Kits 'Not -Relia·ble • WASHINGTON (..y') -manufactured by La Mar and are resolved. ' non prescrl!':t.... ~-oL.tht--kits 1t.W are m the Pregnancy test kits judg<d Distributed-through d r u J "On the basis o! lho tests test kit, a ~;,,.., added. market, tho FDA said. ,,.,.liable and gonorfhea test s (.-OJ' e • b 'y • F ~ i 1 d a , which the oompany"-<d, Tho olber recall Involves Lui AtJCllll, lhe F D A kits lacking proof &! saCoty Laboratories o[ Hiiiside, N.J. Faraday Laboratories believes oearly 15,000 Gonodeclen test pu-a "'""°'*1 It hopes and ,ef(«;tive ... are being Tho FDA sat tl!at I\! Its rfi. <bat Ova 11 Is ....,ate and, kits for llOJforrbea, manolac-will lead to uniform labe!ln& recalled·ntlOiiwtde. the Food quest, tbe u.~. attorney 's of· rcliablo .. when -' • • tored by lhe·Medlcll l'nldllela IJl!I. remw' of tho <otlmaled and Drug Administration bas fice in Ne• Jeraey seized.'-directed, Suresky ,aaJd. Dtvlslcn fl. U.S. Packagblg 4,000 nledica1 dlagnostlc kill announced. more than 8,000 Ova u kits He said the product ~c-Corp. at La Porte, Ind. ' belng sold In the UJ!ltecl stateo ' , ' J SAN FRANCISCO !AP\ - FiYe University of CaliforniR law students have filed suit against the CUfl Hotel alleging any woman who recenUy used testing the seizure. of the flrm'• business. nlE FDA conternb the nqn-Plans_ call for fonnation or ' CA ~ ~ L ft The agency said Tuesday last May. Faraday is con-counted for about 12 percent by '3ln& ~firms. J an Ova II test kit should "see The kits attempt to pre sct'lpt·l'on ll:lta are an edvl9?'r oornmlttee and '-11'1 I Ulf\X her physician immediately ror NEVERTHELESS, Faradaf determine whether a woman misbranded because they lack cl.a»by-dw review of the WllJCUfP Pl.AZA bthey were barred from its posh Redwood Room because of their appearance. The Super1or CoW"l co1,,... plaint claimed thaL on Sept. 24 11.. .. 1,the five, all editors of the Vt school's California Law Review, were refu.sed service , 1 _ only became tbelr hair ex- accurate methods of detecting President Arnold Suresky said ls pregnant by anatyzing tl?r documented proof that they prod'Ucb, similar to that under flllWNll8 lllM pregnancy." -~the~co;m;pan]y~wou~~ld~vjo~lun~tar~i~ly~;ur~in~e~bu~t;res~ul~ts~should~~~no;t;be~jWQ~rrk.~~TJh~e;·~ma5nu1~ac:ture~;r JYl~ay;:r~or~t~he~:h~undreds~:~o~r~1~7"~l~•~:-~~Mo~·~.,..;·~·~··~·~·~ The kits, sold w it ho u t withdraw the kit "until the relied upon,the FDA said. 1be agreed to ba it "productiOO lut 'thouonds of over•tbe-eounter Mea,.r .._.. prescription and advertised in questions raised by the FDA agency knows or no reliable ~ J\lly but est.i mates to percent drugs. , newspapers and w o m e n ' s tended "slightly below" their • collars. ,, ·• Escape Bid " IT SAID ttie five young men magazines with the slogan "When you want to be the ftrSt to know," an: , considered ih- accurate, unreliable and prone to give fal se results, the FDA • ' ... _ and three of their wives had Corrections officer Don reservations, were well behav-Avila shows how 20 ... 1 ed and the mel'I were "neatly inmates recenUy broke · ·· attired" In jacllets, shirts and glass on cell door to "' ties. open lock with key to • , ~ suit said the hotel's another 180 men in J · "anchronistic view of pi-o-Concord, Mass., Re- tr priety" violates a section of formatory. All were ii~~ibut~~~.:~ ye~·:·i~~ c H RI s r · MA ·s . ·( D E S·. : ~~~~o ~:. m".:~~::i~:; _A_ .. R. E. AT-·-P'E-.. -N" I ; N~ · ,E· ·y·' ' s· -•· .. .- Irving Ros;en, manager of . ' California's p u b 1 i c ac-later returned to their "! _ 1 commodations statute a n d cells. asks $250 damages each as ;:--=-=========; La J\1ar Laboratories a t Oceanside, N.Y., said pro- duction and distribution in- formation is confidential. I_, well as a court order pro- hibiting A 11 i e d Properties, Inc., owner of the hotel. from doin& the same tblng to them KIDS LIKE UNCLE LEN La Mar manufactures and dstributes LPT Pregnancy test kits for professional use. The identical Ova It kits are again. Ma lee yesterday's papers today's burning issues. The new Elizat>Qlh Burner is a hearth-warming discovery. By using a unique movable grate, you can bum wood or pressed logs for a cozy hearth fire. With an easy change of the grids it be- comes a friendly indoor barbecue. And for a real in· novation just move the adaptable grate to convert discarded newspapers into a very cheerful fire with very little effort A great way to dispose of old newspapers and save on fuel costs, too. Easy to install, to use, to. clean. The Elizabeth Burner, • .. • Con•••....,. tor berbecun. 1995 Panasonic Deluxe "ShUtter Seal" toaster with slid- ing s hade control ;F~ft\lraa·1e111y-to-c lean flip ope'),~ ·. ~··~ .......... crumb tray. easy grasp coritoured .hand1et • ..Jl4anu•!.~tt~~· · . control lets you closetop 'when not 1n use. ·."-1S:~~ ~ .. . • • '1- "&hutter .,i·: P(••• down the. lever and a shutter ~utd'malically closes'. '*er the bins and sells in•the heat to speed up toasting. '!.. '• ' ·-~ Slidinil Sh.ado Co~ITol . SlmJ)ly slide tho seiictor among a complet,\f lnge of shade po'sttlon$ P,lus · special pastry settingi. .. Cord Rew.ind. A.speoja.J · .,, ,R_.Oiant,Control.,Seneor1. handle lets you qulokly,, ·~ aqtu.ill_y"read_"the1ur- and eailly adjust the !!lt-, 1. 1!9,ce of th• to.1st.and Vllry act amount of cord you tHe ,tiri1eto1ultthetypeof need. bread. 12ss .. , .. 'Panasonic Five Grade Ice Crusher Five precision settings rrom coarse to fine. Features poW•rful non-stall motor, rugged stainlna sleet cut· ting blades. In.whit':. avocado or Panasonic "Flip 'n Style" fold away portllbll hair dryer. The compact, lightweight hand 1molded dryer folds·away with a flick of th~ wrist to sltde in your purse and go anywfiera. Handy carrylng'case lncludod. I brown. · ·.• ' " ' ' ,''Panabr.tor'' mauagtr featurn vlf1J able Yibr~fon1 control and long reaFh design. H11 4ong r•.Ch""ll foot cord. JCPen n~Y~····-.. ··~ .... , .. _151s ~ P~nuonic steam and dry iron, Instant aloam at tho puoh of a butt0f1, llngor- tip fab~c 11l1ctor. Cord on rear'of Iron switches to either right or left.hand ose. The Christ.,.' ~::• L Shop Sunday at the foltow1ng stores: ' -... l'A:SRION ISLAND, New port Boo ch (7 I 4) IM-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER. 1-juntington Buch, 17,1.4) 8~2·7771. . HARBOl\' .. CENT~R , Coit• Mo1<1 {7 14) ~5021 . I I • • or The ......... 'fM..,....t--r~o-bit SANTA ANA' -A lleCOlld TllS turr Jo· a tell .... A Disaster ·,. • ' v I .~cordj Measure Motorist Sentenced In Death .. " I ti , nil ..Ulo apprllool flnn wW IOlal ol • ~ _. . ANAllEDI _ PUIODI ti Olla be lilied to ~ VII-" ei nW 1bi1t ,...a.;. lo wboat bomol, .._ or SANTA ANA ....: A one-yU( 0 !.j /tla-!:.»tJflL, of propertl" ~ Up-, t11t eounll'bu • cllfmfnl tbe1 Ir Ind-are lhr<atmed Orange County Jall term -r. m e per Newport Bay fa -1loa ·= loll ya u e by flood waten 1t11Y ordered 'l'lloaday for an El , , , with fawlUlta filed by _.fy ol commercJal jet purd>aae aandbap from Toro Marine w1-dtunlten ' . o -""·oc-• •-n· -·' the. Oruge County Flood driving •·• IO ·~ •··th of a · .. """'1"flitf 4' '"" DmUllQ Control District for 25 ORANGE COUNTY DAJLV PJLOJ . , Settlement Okay¢ SANTA ANA -Payment of dNgs were uied JD tret.tlna '300,000 damages in a het while she waa a paUent ln malprec:tl9e suit flied against! ~t~be;ln~st~ltu;tlo~n~.;;;;iii Oranp. C«mty Medical Center II wa.s approved Tuesday by th<> county· Boon! ol 'Supervlsoo The suit filed .. be- hall or Darlene MihoJevlch SJked f0< $1 ,rulllon. ll llleged that improper and harmful •CURI C••lolt l"9 '6Ctl i. tw IMI at HOAG HOSPITAL y .............. . tflb_., ........ . Adverl!Mmtnl . I ·~.,-~.,.--~_. ,-r owners clalinlng devaluation . ~ ---~ ~wUl ~ ·~ - , "" a;.;.\.l 1, from jet aJrplane -. be -u -.-. the -~· •••b Costa Mesa woman. ,..,....,, M. ~ ,t,ntt.y Or ....-.,..., """' l' ... CJ.\.iJ -• ·~-·M·'"""' .. '""· 1111" County .,.loon county bind Wolllle1ey. The ,bag• will be SuperlorCourtJuilgeFrank ---------' o1 ~~r.T~ ~i:"J'Jf. ,._ voted to h1rt tbe Sbattuck O:im-Mloclatet for •,a for the available 1t the flood con-DomenJcblni suspended the What do doctors recommend ll'Wlit.'M11t.1Wt M .... wi1119n1 c, PIDY to •!:lilt 1n tbe. ~ Ame wart. trot diltrlct's K a t e 11 a state priJon term be could • ·"""=~--~ ......., tton ol the """'IY·• Clle C-13' 0.-1 Ad r I a D A....,. malntenaoce yanl hive Im--' m David Lee -.......,.ul'Om. Maritvn J.,.. Ml °'" against the ault filed by 10 1tiaJDef aplaiDed &bit a ,.. near Anaheim stadium or ......_... ~Notn'19'1d Al11wt .,. o.1or" property ownen slated to coftcf firm wu necemary to at any county station. Grancer. 30, for five years and ~~'G:n,_. e .... 1n _. B•rt>11•• come to trial next spring. cbect cm the nncunp of the Flood Control Dlstrlct ordered the convicted Marine c1.1,.. flrlt firm and to carry out a Chief ErclDeer George to ob.wrve strk:t probation War...,, Ltt'I• F~Y• and l>M'ld lll\I. ~~...a ...-1. .. 1 Osborne --•• the la P•"""-· P•trkl• c. enct K.nnetti 11.. s more ~~ve •!¥--. -... w regu11Uon1 during that tlme. AvMJot, S.lly Marl.e ......i L~ "· tat• ,_,,ents UM! dl!trict from Manhllll, ·-T. and N01Tt1 A. wn --·-... .j 11 r"'· One of the provisl~ ls that JGll<J~M. P1!'1cl1 c. ~ 1Cet1nettl ll. la:Eo AP ... ---.. w ... viM the be.0 • away. wr1et11. L•w•ffK• an11 ,..1r1c:1• M. see• to de'·~-u any true ~ _ ... the T..trtct 19 .Granger. stay away from all T1rr1nus. Roy 1.i1t1n incl Marv Lou. a. WC:lllUIJOC: ;·-'!· ""-'1K ~ ol I-'·" be Ptttrv, c1>ervl JOM9hl,.. •!Id 11.11pn property dMnqe bu ICCUlftd ce11.ts each. fonna a \."\.IUA.IC verages ,....... Locatw· n because°' the jet "'·btl"""' 0s· borne. said bag margin 111d estatilisbmenta where th•y Jl'tlnlno1. Glori• JM11 Ind Cherin ..... ed Knol!. · 0r.anse eoonty Airport. . _,.......,,.__ muat ·supply are serv . 811UM"d. M¥V Mn and lrlen Dou!ll••· .,.... .......,... " GrlDg; arrested last ~J~':c!i ::i·i:= ¢r...,.nfln ... Kuyper •llkl that not only .:t¥r O!fp ~-... J'ulV~y~Mrt. ElaJne L .. forl, Marl ...... •l'ld 0.\0.cf G. st 'd . 'd tbe ~ of tbe, pWbtl$ ' l. ~UV , YI •-·"-'·'"""'"'"· U' Yln Wobld"be' a-'-' bilfiibo rarter,fl, ofll!5'Bcibe.' ay, H••rd. Wllla•CI "· •ncl J-M•rhl. lie; n--'"" r~ t M··· d'ed at the in Pritt, Lorr•lne c. al'ld CIW~ F. tHat l ~ hundreds of lllf'o _ .....,s a ~. I -,-oncec1. Marci• J. an11 •r111ur e. 1 rouqil1ac -....tlie 1n Uie 1 '*'i' -.;...-.... Edi.tor tersectior. of Fairview Street B•ktr. Jacll and 1C11totr1iw. SANTA ANA A-·-aame' .. ~rr-r-~ Ji ~-and .Pa-1 • ..._. Avenue -when 8111fOI, LIMI L .. ll'd Giibert J . -I'":"'~• --· ,_. ...,..,., Mlll•.Pe,11vJ••n1nCIJack~. by about 40 -LL-M _l. the -... ............... &t--, ......-... .D1'1Tr~N -·Jim Gr ... r'a car rammed, her. Dlofll. Danna LYM and Gto"'Y All..,. , •"QJllft:Ul!jt, CJ( aUllS ~ a1aU ._.,...,... r U~lU rtb~-~ to a.ffi'llV, Mar}Olr• Loul" •!Id Rot1er1 north Tustin area against the m~ a IOUnd detection BeDIOO, a 22-yeir-old .enlor no JNWM au • ... :; E,,.iyn 1nc1 Vllfnlln. favored location. for 1 neW firm to jWOYlde Uta· on the o:-maJorin1 ln. English and am-Police uJd Granger could 011110r1. Sha•on o. •!Id DIH!IWM L. -·-~ al. noise ex-muDlcatians has bef:n named ~not remember the accident ~;i.._Rldlanl 1!1-.d, -i JOIMI Orange ··Co~ty fire •lion peti.m· . ., -time livtnc edttor of~ Dally Titan ltu-and wu Jncapa* of mswer- =:·s!:'r"Eil'ld~..;::.!;.. ~~1~tecf ~ ~ ~'?: .w tr.."~ pattern of ~ newspaper at Cal State ~--~!!A~the colllsifor aome Wtnut, Robert"""""•'" Elltn lM l --.uuug of a ""fDll""ee w tbe Urp>rt:.-. ' 'Ftillerton. uuwa maa-on. ~~~ "'~ AilM ll'ld AMI 0. study tbt fitatltkm. , ' ' ' • Hup1< ltalpt. J...,.. MM!lyM Y. Su....:...-Raf"" Clar' •• wm JeMw •R~...i Shll'T1' ~·--.-.., N!::'111r, E.~,.j;:r.' y~-JJtlle whose fourth district IDc:Judel /Me. .. f ... ~,; the proposed fire station loca- .. _. . ... -.. ti ed fi -···--of Hccle. Lw1i.: i AltltV fna,.Jr. on, nam ve ~YI ••s -...... the are.a, and tbrtie oounty of .. ''"'" --4 . ficials to mediate the deblle. ~':.'f;·~w :.:#,~Fd· Seven sites were studied by s.1 ... ••• · ..,.. ,..,... · _. the county's Real Property -· .,.....Ml ·l'ri<•• Servicel DeparlmonL H9a*:,· ~.,.;;. U.. · ··~ o--..n. owners polnled out ~· __ f;t • 1, .. <lo•"!"""' •J ai.11, ~· ~ ~ .. cWot that the site selected is en- M:-;:i,, ~~ .-.1111hl.1)' t.inly surrounded by single Plro1t1. J · o . •l'ld Tz~~ & famil)" homes. ArClll•. Ed 6 ~' ;• HlldlOl'and,~I· f"r'; M' • lt~ey Previously, the county bad s.~~~· •• ·1lr~ .id ~-'°~~ •. " recommended another site Htndry. .... _,,-.ii within the city of Tustin, but WlllOll. /\•'th ' •·• H•VML R ••••• ., e city government protelicu, Koebl111, J-M. f, , .._ l ino. SlllQI Mt ' t , · Sla!nllf, J-1111• al'ld 'lilll:''lf Sldm. Ounlll J. Mid David M... , 8-H. Deflrll1 F. lflll C°'"" M,,. , Gemtlrt, Elltn 1'#rt'1 lfld Jolln RW:•f • l(er.nedy, Oorollly , _ _. ROii' 111-.. 11-. 1 Armaf•Ollll, 81,....ly Jl"rQI and RIQlrd '-· ROIK!\, Cyn"'ll H1111t Cl1rt. '"' . ....,., Solton. P•ula A. tnd ltkflll"CI R. Mfilldl119, J-M. 1M Chari .. II. Homer,~ ..... Wlltll(" F. Rkll. EIOIM Mii Ml9U191 A. Ice Plant _Schedule(} )ior l'IN4L NC••U .-:.-'• .t ... ...., DK•inW 4 l''--A ANA -. OP!s. Cha,,_ K. MM! MaMfl E. · ~~-· ("!"'-. • Golaflfld, Mltdt'M E\Ollyft and Her-. -in be -'-ted OD~ 'u~_o.:.. MorM. Jwry Gllft, ... 1M Dom J9A' "w ~ .~-P~ l•Aley, C•nil L. 4lfld &enlard 0 . \,tho $anta An8 • Rlftl\~jlj'oiii1fl C ........ , 11~,CS~nd ~llel M. • ,\ • _. :.\J ""lmlll'Tts. "'" ••Cl nc..,..· ti · ibe tnna j Mesa FOtlfttain w:r'~:s. ,.-ari, "· -~-· "· Valley.flurttingtoo.BeaciJ.'Uea 8ak.-, Elltalletll ltllltl Ind U RW W. . • Sl\oelrt, Rllbert Shorft •nd Lal1 Cl1ltw~ 111 a:_ jlroject sponaored by the BalMm. Gftll J. and O.elt•1• M. -· n-..:... n.. .. -ty G · b It 1Uyitn.JK11H.•nc1~thtrtMP. · ..,,~e'-"""I• r~en e vwr.11, 5endf1 JNn illll'OiMnl1'aattr. • • N1t11N1. 111c1w1n1 K. 11'111 Maro11m M. comnuttee, according lo coun- Col\eft, Gweldlne M. Md H•""-"· ty G be!' t ~--~•-·•·r n~ BC>Yll, R-1 MkllHI •nd Dorris Ann. reen """'l'W.UCMU .l\UU .5mltrl. ~ l"IO'r Ind Rtmrt i.., Sackett. --=--:--:-,.--.• ~-'-• ..,,..:--->I • , Sacbtt Bild ll la hoped the De•tll NMJeiN' . .~ can. 1et under way by ' ' • · .,.. 'Jtn. U: Sludeols from /r ' Ji~ Est8nc!fa Ht~I ln O>ata t':~118:~t!'~=-~~ Mesa, Girl~ Scouts o.cftftM' ia. .,.~...... ,...... bY -;1,., and "'~~· 11 UlulMi. -. Mn I<, If ~·· le , . ~~-=~ Jfuw. -A. '° ~~tnt'i;i!.: parficipa ,9 . ;t • _, BHct11 ""°"""'' ......_ · Gerdftl SaCkett ··.•Nut lDo • HNd, N-I """9111"1 CCII. ~ '---_:n pl ,-. 111.tw.W .Ja:... :., llJ.ock. H-Oftl. Yllh111on. =tti"· wora.ei a WW 8D• ~ ~ y r:~~~ AM ~ ~~ nilles of levee. 'Jbe ti'OJetCt'Ja } . u+I SmltflS• ' ~· , expected to late eight io 10 -~ E:&~t· ~ -=-~~ 'fteb. ..... -·~--f"r'Mltl. w~ ; -. •n •lil Mact1Ylah. P~1 ..,. DrO 1 tM-G ""~' -~--~· -.... , "'""•antee QfwdchUd. Gr1.,..Jdto .. w-._.. ....., todaVL'!/_llClflOHd4i,v1.J. PM. ,. l1ln View c ...... _,,, All-. lhtt tlroadwl'I • • f: 1· • Mortverv. DlrKlvn. ·-, ...... ...::.. "' """' " On ' Water' Coi.la Metli. Oat. of dNfll, l>«tmber ¥. 1m S11rvlv9d bv wite, Vl1'91nl•r ••-•· . ' • , Tlmolhy . •l'ld Vktw ,..,..,..,.,,,, C11111 P•melt Jovca, 1dlllo Fl 11 Ill.... ... Mew1 Sh-. EdwWdl, Ta<om11 Ifft>-E la, d' "~Mff< <•""' ,..,,_, cm" ,,_, xp •ne . 11r•ndclll~1 lol1tw , DorOI y t -. Prlvl!• lll"Vlcls -. llllCI 11 lllU· I ~iron Funeral H-, C01l1 MIM. • SANTA lNA .!~ }iOtt~ ARBUCKLE & SON water I& nol always IU~.lo WESTCLIFF MORTUARY the ...,. purity ttandu1b 11 •-E 17th .; ' ~--"-u-• tap·w.ter ailohbould thalal«e -· • • .... ~ -not be promoted' Oil. U.balla • · that tap water is unaafe. ao- BALTZ-BllRGZRON cording ·to Oeonll . McClaln, FUNERAL DOME gene<ll __ ,1Danager of I be Corona dtl M8r 17s.tf51 Municipai Water Dl!trlct of Costa Mesa l*-UU Orange Coonty. e Federal surveillance BELL BROADWAY methods used 00 pibllc MORTUARY water supplies are not uled oe ' tit Br -~ MO!A , ,~~!':· !::"1.io..ui:: ~ ·}~~~ , .... ·~ ............ purity. M CK' LAGUNA. -·: tbt- BEA MORTUARY '· ' "~ • 1715 ~ ~111•. Rd. Mtifa~r. Case ~~ -· ,, ' ~=L~• · 'For W~inan Cem....,. ,Meit•.,t • a..,., -· Gets' D la mp Pacific View o,ln ' e. y N~ Btad1 Clltfond1 • ~ .• 114-ml SANTA -ANA -Ao elibt-rif[! -'< delay Im been .,..ted coioNIAL~ • ~ ~ ~-~ ~---. ROME -G.....,.-,,.,lli:uolll~ , 7111 -Ave. Ing her meolally W-ter llllSZI b<o4ber. • Presiding IUdai .e,,,.. &im-sMJTBS• MORTUARY ,,.,. onlmd 'if'n. Ann ie Ill -SI. • ,, Daa:olltr lncllml, •• to-. • _,,,,_ -.. 'ltli -IS I J& Ii fw "9• .. · · .,... .., . ., lie mil on ':;:;;::;:;;::;::;::;E:;;=:=:;:::J · ...... •lb a.I sllB .... a ;:. baoeball bot to beet ~ . ' Dorie by Dunn · Pat ~ gets thlnp done. nirow her your challenge and,-. how ahe flandles It In SUM.:y'a ••At Your Service'' column. James Moyt, C, to deoth Aq. •• Police wlto amoled Mn. Krscbun at her homo laid tbty louod Moye'• botl7i bound. brulled lld 4»+• ta ....................... backyan!. • ·-. Give a.Renney diamond ; . · for Christmas. -And-you've said it all. • • ' ' ' " .20 ct. dlamond ~Ilaire with single diamond 14K bind. Matching man's band'.'$35 .. 157.50 144.00 5--<tlamond -·•ring In 1'4k gofd dome mounting. 262.50 "~lamond coctrtaft ring ' " In 141< whit• gold Mltlng. Thlrt~a(nOnd cocktail ring In 14K gotd awl rt Mtting. 300.00 Double row~ ring In 141< gold aattlng, tef! d(amond1. . 895.00 One caret diamond eolital,. 1n.1<1K gold ootttng. Dllmond earrings In 1-4K gold, .... pierced eara. Whf1dimftOftdfroMP1M!'1' ~, , """"9ya Independent 01.-.eo11lilll11111.aiiamlnt1 and oPP,_ eYery Penney dlamOftcJtwlQI.-bolOM . mounting and 1Qaln,.ttter, !<>~-==-wHll high qUlllt)' 1tan11<11.it oHtlllllohod by .UT T .. ung Center, You can -qonflclenct ln a.aiy "'""°'diamond, 1' ·for good COIOr and ctlftty, p..c-cutting and accurate_ · -,..1ght. ""'~Diamond Certlftcato ll glYtn to • ' -.ydtllmOnd--.Petoie11tllotl!M'D'11mondTl9dHI "'*" g!YM rou l!O opportunity to_, a blgllO( dlnond.; • • J,.!1~7 I ~y '""'CldltiiLI '91 C& ---' J ~ ~ lltitt-.fo.llowlng ltOrM: .... FASHION ISLAND, N•"f'Clri luch (71'4) 644-2313. l-IUNTINGTON'CENTER, Htmtington'''-:h {714j m .n11 . f Boy Sco11ts for patients in pain? Name Four Doctors all over the country dispense over !j(),000,000 of these tablets to their (latients each year. tona iecommend niGll than NY other leadinr tablet. There are many medications a phy1ici&n or dentiiot can pre· SANTA ANA -Four acrihe for pain. Some are n.A- Orange Coast residents have cotic, ~ are availab4e. only on pre9Cnption. But lhere l8 one been elected to the board of pain reliever, available without dire<:tors of the Orange County prescription, docton1 diapena:e Coun il f the Boy sCouts 0£ qain and again ... A~in. c o Each yur, docton1 11ve over America. 50,000,000 .t:nacin tablet. to " their patienllln pain. ll_doc:tora They are: Maj. Gen . Homes think enough about Anacin to S. Hill of El Toro and Louis dispense all these tablets, what "Bud" Heilig Roy C. LaHue better recommenda.tion ~you . ' . a1k when you are 1n pain? and Marvm R1mland, all of You 1ee, Anacin contains Newport Beach. more o( the pain reliever doc· 1-:leadache and dental pain la relieved incredibly rut: minor 1>ain1 or arthritUi are depend- ably eased for hour1; ewn the aches and paina of colds and flu respond to Anacia. So the ten- 1ion and depreeaion tMt can be caUMed by such pain will be re- lieved too, And millions take Anacin without atOm.ch upeet. When you're i'n P•in, why don't you follow the practice of ao many docton and take the . 1 tablet a doctor mi1ht five you in hUi own office. 'Dlke Aucinil, Pickup great savings at our flexside ' ·1uggage sale. Sale 1528 Reg.17.98.15"Tote'Bag. Adjustable shoulder strap. Green blue, orange or gold. Sale 1953 R'ag. 22.1115" Beauty case with mirror, removable tray and pocket. Green, blue, orange or gold. Sale 1953 Rag. 22.98./24" Weeken d.er for overnlqht trips and "quick-to-get-at" lterris • Green, gold, blue or orange. Sale 3058 1 Rag. 35 .91. Women's 25" Flexside pullman. Features deeply embossed heavy gauge vinyl over Bontex® shell, Green , blue. orange or gold . Aag, 19.N Pennys own tote baO w ith nylon 2fpper. In red with bl1ckvJnyl trim. Sal~ 1953 Reg.~." 21 " WMk•nder. F11tures spring tteel frame, nylon zipper 1Two-way open- ing). R-.i with black vinyl trim. ~ ~ s~~e22•• Rao, 21.N 24'"1'\lllmln. Large dou· bi e vlnyl handle will •:give" to pack extra or. bulky Items. Red with block vinyl trim. Sale 25 48 llag. 21.11 29" pullman. Big •nouiJh for a long atay way. Red with black vinyl trim. Sale 22°• Rag~21. ~ ........ ,.,,.-Gar carrl., for suits or 1e1. Red' with bi•ck vinyl trim. JC Penney ii. ait1e111 .. Piece. Sale 2913 Reg. 34.98. Men's 2-sulter features a padded rayon Un-- ing. Deep olive or black. Sale 21 23 Rog. 24.91 Men's 21 '' comp1nlon. -&ali prlcaa oflecttv•· '1/uo~eh lat~(lla(.J' Shop Sunday at the toll owing Ito'": FASHION ISLAND, Newpon k•di [714) 644-DIJ. HUNTIN610N CENTER , Huntlngton ... ~h (7141 192-7"71. • . ' •' • T I I DAILY PILOT WK!ntldJf, Dtttmbtt 13, 1972 Wtdntsdar. C>Ktmber 13, 19n Shoppers in New.port Go on Spree Spectacuu~r Cliristmas Business Reported by Mercliants By WIWAM SCHREIBER spending more money on bet· peOp&e get real upset about VmGINJA KEYS, o\vner of "We are selling a larger °' ,... o.11y ,.. , .. tt 1er q_uality merchandise than in past years." it." The Book Shop on the Island, amount of cased Uquor this The early snow in nearby 306 ?i.tarine Ave ., Balboa yea r lhan ever before and ' .. Looser purse strings are , 1 tending people on what may ~ a record shopping spree this Christmas S•C a s o n . NewPort Beach merchants ·• reJ>Orted today. "Buslntss i! spectacular but things will improve even more before Christmi.! is here," sakl an enthusiastic Reg Jones, cxecutl•e director '(){ the Fashion I s l a n d l-terchants Association. "We've had a tremendous month with large increases OVi!I' la st year." he said. It started off slowly, ac· cording to Carter J\lcDona!d. manager of Robinson 's Department StCU'e, a mainstay of Fashion Island . i.eur CUSTOMERS art coming in in record numbers, now," he said. He said population growth is having a bolstering effecl on all area stores and shops. Merchants in smaller stores citywide are also reporting record sales volumes and most have high hopes things will get even better. mountains has made business fewer single botlles,'' he said. llOOSE SAID there are *\\'O good for sportlng goods shops. Island, says her business has e-xtra se lling da ys this year '"Our ski equip1nent sales already been great but ABOUT THE ONLY areas because Christm as falls on a predicts a bigger boom when where sales haven't been too ~ Monday. school lets out. great are sailboats ·and "Th.at can only help the 'Btdlness is 1pee• "My best sellers are girt powerboats. small merchants because a lot taet•Jar, bttt things photo books and p:ipular "They haven't been exactly of people shop at the last 10111 Improve.' children's storles," she sald. beating down the doors ," said minute: and don't want to b!lt· Liquor sales have not yet Ron Newman, a salesman at lie the crowd!I and long waits ~ hit their peak: 001 John Werlie Hobie Newport on Coast in big department stores," he aregoingsofast\lo·ecanhard· of Ye Grog Shop 200 Marine llighway. ''But I hope·things · said. ly keep up with them." said Ave., Balboa Island, says the will pick up ." C cl I Cl t*---" .. Unless it snov.•s o r Steve lliestand. a salesman last week before Christmas He speculated that chilly Olffmff ft fl ~·- something, thls should be a for Nearl's Sporting Goods in promises to be the best ever winter weather niakes boating Scenes such as this conglomeration or signs in Anaheim have sparked drives rea lly big Christmas',' he ad-Fashion Island. this year. .. somewhat less than popular. throughout Orange County for establi!fbing controls in commercial areas. ded. 1~~~~..,..,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--CC~~~--CC~~--'~~~~~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~ Bill Berning. as sis tan t manager of llickory Farms at \Veslcliff Pjaza. said his business is really booming because people are giving more and more giilopacked food as presents. TOY SALES -especially the ones advertised heavily on television -are also up sharply. according to Mrs . John McNeilly. owner of The Toy Sh<lp, 3HH E. Coast Highway , in Corona del Mar. LON.G BEACH GRAND . OPENING OURWAREHO AND STORES OVlR-lO • MUST MOY NOW • uni1ngs have been great," said Clint Hoose, owner of Rion Hardware at Westclif f Plata. "People seem to be ';P.ly business is good year round but Christmas is best er all," she said. "The only trou· ble is, it is hard to keep all lbose TV toys in stock and ' THOUSANDS OF ROLLS OF THI FINIST CARPD ON SALi! ALL NJuu llllA.NDSI SHAGSI YILYDSl TIP•SHlnl.RIDI Hl•LOW!SI KODIL POLYISTIR, HIRCULONI .. ' ' MORE A~RM. ~ _DAILY ' Huntington Beach Spenders Let Go By TERRY S. COVILLE I Of ftM D911r .. , ... Stiff• The "tight" money situation in Huntington Beach has ap- parently relaxed considerably this Christmas season. Merchanl!I at the Huntington Center Man· reports a 15-20 percent boost in Christmas sales over the 1971 holiday shopping season. One &ignificant change in· volves an increase in the sale of luxury Items, r e po r t s Howard "Bud" Matheny," manager of the Montgomery Ward & Co. outlet. "PEOPLE ARE buying the so-called 1 u x u r y items, jewelry, sporting goods, home entertainment, c I o t h e s , ' ' Mathelly says. "'l'bey ere not just saving for necessities." George West, manager cf Penney's, says bicycles are still a big Christmas item this year. Thia difference is that last year thty were all gone by this time. We9t says more bikes are In stock, and the competition bu lowered prices. ''The unusual cold weather has also boosted the sales in heavier cold weather clothing, such as coats," West says. HOW A RD WHITAKF.R, general manager of the Hun- tington Center complex, said shoppers will have an extra weekend of shopping prior to this Christmas which should also boost sales considerably. "That weekend just before Christmas will have to be a record weekend," Whitaker said. The traffic· has been such at Huntington Center that cne day it was mentioned on radio traffic sig alerts because of proximity to the San Diego Freeway. The Huntington Center parking lot holds 4,000 cars and bas been nearly full every day. A NEW ENTRANCE to the center, off Gothard Street, to the shopping center's rear, is expected to relieve S()Ole of the traffic jam on Edinger Avenue, Whitaker said. 'nle new entrance ls sup- posed to open Saturday. Clese Mugln Firm Guarantees Checks Won't Fail By CURTIS J. SITOMER CMltlM ldtM9 ....... ltrrift The finn is doing well now. but some problems may lie ahead . LOS ANGELES -A young womu pushed a cartload of Olarlie's operates oo a close groceries to the check-out profit margin, about 2 percent. lland In Charil•'• Market, Had this $90 cheek bounced, It prHe!Ud a payroll check for would need lo sell about 14.000 '90.20, and asked that it be worth of grocerie9 to recoup c;ubed " and used 1n part for its Joss. So this store virtually payment of lw!r purchases. buys a "check guarantee" The clerk asked for ber service from Telecredll. tr Telecredit computers OK a California driver's license and check and It turns out to be Immediately telephoned an bad, Telecredit foots the entire acros&-town number, where _ loss. 8be was "pluaed lnto" Elsa 11 an IBM computer. Within 11 teCOnda, a readoot came: "No negative check In· formatJon." The customer got her groceries -and extra cash. Charlie'• Market was a91ured Jt wasn't taking a bad check. ' , And Telecredit, a unique f)rivale oulllt that protects retail concerns from dishonut 6.lllomers1 made a verltlca- tion and a commlask>n. FOR TELECREDIT, thil call wu routlne. Cbar1Je'1, a "monwmd-pop" market In 10Uth«ntraJ Loi Angt.I~. Is one of ltJ smaller account.II. other cu1tomer1 Include ma· jor b • n k 1 , supermarkets de~t 1tores, 111 n d varlout retail out 1 et s ~t Callrornla. All avatl tblm1e.lvt1 of any number ol Telecre<lll w•1tt1, ., tfbJdl lnclucle check veriflca· tloo, oollldloil ..,, recovery. Md .........,... conuol todtnlquiel. I I AFJ'ER A DECADE or false starts that pot It nearly on the brink or banknlptcy. thb ''stop-the--bad~heck'' business gained firm footing early last year. The concept was actually conceived in the early 60's with an exclusive focus oo check verification. The com- pany introduced the nation'• flnt check guarantee card, which Wat sponsored by 17 ll1lall banks. Bui the program quickly failed due lo lack or backing !rom major financial ln31itutlons. Wt.I come 1 Check, another T~lecredit service w h I c h afsumed the check-cashing funcUon In belter than 60 J>'r· cent or Southern call!ornla supermarkets, promised to put tM company Jn the black In 196l But the plan had a major '°rt spot. A 10-ctnt charge levied on au cheek~ cashed for a greater ~ 1tmount than the purchase price was challenged in •Ille COUrU. BUY NOW! GUARANTEED INSTAJlATION BEIOR.E CHR.ISTMAS ON AIL ~AR.PET IN OUR. HUGE INVENTORY. . <-::C!I:: II le.·~---~ , .~-.i;-.t ·lncloor-Outcloor CAR-PET' NYLON Rl·LOW by Ozlte"' IDEAL FOR FAMILY ROOMS, PLAYROOMS AND DENS. AVAILABLE IN MANY NEW EXCITING COLORS. NOW SALE PRICED 99 SQ. TD.· SAVI $3.00 l 00% CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. POPULAR NYLON HI -LOW THAT COMBINES BEAUTY AND DURABILITY, MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. NOW SALE PRICED 99. SQ. YD. SAVE $2.00 COMPARABLE RETAIL ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $4.99 RETAIL •.••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $4.99 _Carpet Your ENTIRE HOM.E YOUR CHOICll • DU PONT NYLON $ • POPCORN DESIGN • HHCULON IASlD OM 60 itUAtl TAIDS COMPLETELY INSTALLED OVER LUXURIOUS FOAM PADDING • '"l"!'lP!!!!i ,. ~ HERCULON 111·LOW . . ' -00°!.ITERCULON OlEfl~ PttE!"· N~ - • MIRACLE FIBER. STAIN AND W~R~ESIS· TANT. BEAUTIFUL DECORATOR LOLORS. NOW SALE PRICED COMPARABLE RETAIL ,,_..' •••••• $4,99 DUPONT TRI-COLOR SHAG ' 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. DEEP, RICH, DURABLE ~HAG. BEAUTIFUL, NEW THREE COLOR DESI GNS. NOW SAU PRICED COMPARABLE REATIL ••••••••••• $4.99 DACRON® SHAG l 00% DACRON POLYESTER PILE. BEAU- TIFUL NEW DEEP SHAG WITH A FULL DEEP PILE. MANY NEW DECO RA TOR COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. NOW SAU PRICED COMPARABLU 'RETAIL .... ,, •• ,,$7.99 100% KODEL POLYESTER PILE. RICH. DEEP. LUX- URIOUSLY THICK PILE. MANY NEW HI STYLE DICORATOR THREE COLOR SHAG TO SELECT • FROM. RESISTS DIRT AND SOIL STAINS. . NOW SALE PRICED COMPARABLE RETAIL .,, •••••••• $8.99 ALLIED NYLON SHAI DUPONT DACRON " . TRl·COLOR SHAG 100% KODEI. POlY!SlER Pill lWQ.COlOR TWEED. STYlE ACCENTS AWf HOME. CHOOSE FROM !Mt('( OEC· ORA TO~ COlOl\.I, NOW S4ll PllCID SQ. YO. SAVI IUO COMPAIAIU llTAll ............. .$7.ff KODEL SCULPTURED 100% IC00£l POlvtSlER l>llE. ltlCH, lUXUR.IOUSlY THICK PIL E. NEW OECO RATOlt COLORS. NOW SAU PltClli 99 so.Ya. SAY[ S3;.00 •• ;i,ar1w;t;.<., ii)MQN ,t:m' ~ rAfi.• N£W, 8fAUflflll SHAG. SM£D 10 AOD BEAUTY TO ANY HOME. D£CORAT0tt COl~ NOW~IALI PRIC'ID 99 SQ.YD, ·SAVI $3.00 COMPAIAIU llTAIL ..... ., ..... $7.'9 AlllED NYJ.011 SHAG ,99 so. , •. SAVI , si.oo too% OACAON POlY[ST£l Pll£. BEAUllf UL, NEW DUP SHAG. (ASV TO MAINTAIN, MANY NEW DECORATO R COt.OflS 10 CHOOSE fl!OM. NOW SALi PllCED 99 SQ.YD. SAYl , .... ' ' CDMPAIAILI llTAIL ............. ,$1.•• NEW, HEAVY, DE~'r SHAG, STYLED 10 AOD 8tJOiUTY 10 ANY HOM(, OECOR,.lOR COLORS. NGfflAlll'llC~D COMPAlAlll llTAtl ....... $10.ff FREE SHOP-AT-HOME • San Carias Anoh einl 30-6D·90 DAYS Millbrae W. los Angeres • West Covin• ' Whlltitr S.I N: l•t'lif St. 151111.1n111...-1 CARPET SERVICE E BE· Coll At Tho Store Niortll You HO INTIRIST CONYINIENT cmn PWIS I & li\Hl l(IMS M'AIWlt VISIT OU• CUSTOM OUPEIY Of PUIMENT • • ' . -. 3H U ta111l•t letl 14111112-!ill SAN fllAl<tlSCO AP!A r r 131 U C1•l•t ltlf 14111 ltl-1111 SAN FRANCISCO AREA • • • . 11141 Wih~lrt l lfi l521 l. W1r•11u1 '''· 411•5S2S lll·Jl74 . 96$·4411 14J.llll Son Dif(Jo frttwriy to 2 blocks North of Son 811rMrd1no I rwY 1 bloc.k toll of w~ W1l~hire We~f. T 11rn· Sonrn Ano FrN?WOV on to C11ru~ ~r 3 II/ks. c ... ,,... •• ! oH 6 hlotks Wt$t on ~utl1d. Atros~ from No on (llrus to Work.· W1lshrre. chi. fed. "''" . , • • • .. 1 • • . , ' , . .. ·' ' ;, ' PILOT·AOVERTISER Wrdrtn<Uiy, Otcembtr 13, 1972 Wrdntsday, D«fmbfr 13, l 972 Avocado .Prices Plummet J ess Unruh Bu sy even during a large crop year~ A ~ ID •YPl'"'fo-prr... suppl)' of avocado& perilap1 .la ~ ~ ~Y . 'to 10 exceeds consumer dem1nd. .;,~~;it~ )IOlng plac-Hlill pr\OCI Jul IUl\Ulltl' ed Imo ~ ellannel• c r • • l e d COllJldtrable con-btforJ~ haVe'had •n ·~ rea!Jtenco lo avocado •Opp.r!illlJ~-. •~Ju•l buy~' . p u r e b a • es , and many be lower tomorrow. This, however, has only t<nded to agsr8Ylle the decline further, by jamming diatlibullon ohen- ne l lnvenlorles, the board said. Wlth both California ll:lld Florida having large crops, these three months make up a critical marketing p e r i o d , particularly f o r Callfornla growers. lle's Candidate for Mayor of LA " . r-, l\ouaew!ves almpl)' s&o_pped hablls to .·-..,,~ .. sl'"I of buying avqcadoi at prevailing Tbe committee feela it is bnporttnt for a v o c a d o growers lo study the projectad volume of mov1p1ent for the f'fl'lt tbree montba of the cur· rent crop year, for boUl Cllllornla and Arilona. the 1m.73 ·'ffe/U91'ni• ~p, prices, the boil'd 11!d. says the Nel!POrt B8'<ll>b&lad · It tans time lo win these Grower R.l~looa Oomm\llee consumers back, the com- of lht ~ •vocado mlltee noted. MY!~ -· 1· l 'l')lis ,I , ;the Ix.mm ttee " AT THE SAlolE llµie , It lot,.. the cawornla av0cado lakes itme lot· \htM con- lM\lllrY • lla1 b e ~ nJ <X-•\Ill\~ to ' rtalite· t b a t perlencln&, a drutlo dJlp In avocailos art no longer "blgh marlrAll -piices during Its prioed," the boanl llJd. ' changeover from a pm-k>d of Meanwhile, with prices fall· extremely short avocado su~ Ing rapidly, growers have ply -with high retail prlces, tended to rush fruit to market. to a ·period of rapilfly In· feeling that lt is better to sell creasing volume in wh1ch the today because the price may FLORID.\ HAS a big erop this ,year, the committee rtports, and must move more than 56 peroent of Its tm.-73 1 crop year volume during November, December a n d January. ~'RPEt· TILES ~Vitt• ~1u·~.~~LF OUTWIUS OTMft UJIPIT EASY TO IMSTAU• • • l 00% NYLOlt PILI • STAIN ~ESISTANT i 00% At IJiN• POU'4Slllt PllL fXl,t.\ tlfMN.""1HIC(. .ATTE ~flrl E I Otsi Ci H. ilJGGEO, bUl!Alltf AHDWY TO .IM1NTAIN • • ~Of WITH Hf W COlfT ll."ous ~JAVUfil f'OlYISTfl. MOW SAU PRICID 99 SQ. YD. SAV[ $3.00 Hl.rtorically, California has moved 19 percent of its crop volume during this period - ' OPED SUNDA'YS AND EVENINGS • BUY DOW! • .... ..,. SAVINGS EVIR '1 QO~ l\ntron nylon • pile .. luxurious milient dense pile ca rpet is easy· to core for with rich, new patterns in exc'iting color combino-- tions. NOW SALi PtlCID .. , ' 99 $Q. YD, SAVE $3.00 COMPAIAILE RnA!L .... $11 .99 LLIED NYLON SHAG KODEL ® QI .. LUSH SllA& a~;<+-­,~..,...,·-. 99 Pnlyester pile. A new deep, lush carpet cj.,. signed with o new poly- ester fibe r for a luxuri· 99 ~4'N )IEW, DEEP lU,XURIOIJS PILE $TYlEO TO Mo BENJTY TO SQ. YD. SAVI $$.00 ous appearance an d SQ.YD. performance. Now in SAVE many colors. NOW IAU PRICED $5.00 • IJ(( HOME. NOW· SW PRICED 'COMPARABU: 11EtAIL '------------111.99 • • COMPAWLI RllJAIL •••••••••••• $1•.99 ANTRONll 100% Antro n II pile' is a rich, rt!Silient dense pile carpet that resists wear ond retains· its new look -even under heavy usage. N0\11 SAU PtlCID, •• Clm'MAIUllTAl.$11.tt .. ' SPECIAt SALi ' .. CUSTOM DRAPERIES Professionally Modt Cusiom Oroperies:YourChoice of Fabrics. ' • SPICIALS $ 77 • $3,S~4;50 PAlllCS • SUPERB . WORKMANSHIP' ' O•LY ... lEDUCED FIOM OUR RllULAR lOW PRICEi • • v ...... YD. Pa sai1111a SrNCE FLORIDA grov.•ers will market an estimated 22.5 million pounds ol avocados during these three rrtonths, the grower relati<>ns ·committee said it is "vital" t h a t California growers hold their volume in check and not overpick. The growth in fruit size dur· ing this period may well even increase per acre returns for growers ·who selectively pick. and bold more fruit on the trees, the committee said. • ETHICS STUDENT Jess M. Unru h Ca pitol News Service SACRAMENTO -Jeu ~1 . Unruh is a busy man these d-"ys. The one-lime assembly speaker, ~ polttlcal boss and "Big Daddy" or CalHomla 's lower legislaUve house is pow, among other things, nmnlng for mayor of Los An geles. This in itstlf might be con· sidered unusual, because In his days as a super·power \n California politics, he was the assemblyman from Inglewood. a suburb of the city of the Angeles. The job of mayor of Inglewood, Mwever. does no t carry wtlh it the clout that goes with the top spot in the DuP.nt50I Ozate ® · NYLON • 100% CONTINUOUS FILA- MENT NYLON PIL[ THE MOST DURABLE, ECONOMICAL CAR- PffS AVAILABLE ... SELEC- ·noITTJfBEA1JTIFUL COLORS • KllCHEN . CARPETS NOW SAU PRICED 99 NAME BRANDS - fl"llST QUAllTY NAME BRANDS. NEW DE- S I GN ER DESlGNS. HJ, DENSITY FOAM BACK. GREAT FOR KITCHEN S, PATIOS, POOL DECKS, ETC. ·sQ:vo. SAVE $3~0-0 ~,~--H~G . ' 100% AVLIN POLYESTER PILE, BEAUTIFUL HEAVY SHAG THAT'S RUGGED, DUAABLE, EA~Y-TO MAIN-, TAIN. MANY NEW COLORS TO SELECT FROM. r NOW SAL~ P!llC.ED .99 A\rll"'•" i••t' Tiii ot I.MC Cttt. 1000$ _OF REMNANTS LARGE 60 SMALL · -.. '" . SAVINGS % SAVINGS 8·0% UP TO •• ~ I .UP TO ••• ., 1Livmg Room, Dmnig Room. Bedrooms. _ Hallways , Bolhs. Co rs. E•c. BRING YO.,.-IOOM MEASUREMENTS LAWN SCAPE Synthetic Turf S YIAA MOll·PAH &UAllAllTH NATURAL GREEN SYNTHETIC Tl!RF DESIGNED • FOR PATIOS, POOLS, PUTIING GREENS, AND ,., SUNDECKS. RESISTS WATER, MILDEW, AND •1 Ozlte • 99 SQ. YD • SAVE 1 $3.00 . • CHEMICALS. NOW SALE PRICED.:. • C oMPARA1L1 a11A1L ••• ~ ••••••••• i ................ $1.99 sQ. YD. BATHROOM CARPET PITAL PUPP PLUSH l 00% NYLON DEEP PILE CARPET ADDS WARMTH ANO COLOR TO YOUR BAT~ OR BEDROOM OECORATING. BUILT-IN CUSH- ION BACK C0.116TRUCTJON, PLUS DIRT AND STAIN-RESIST~NT QUALITY MAKES THIS AN IDEAl CARPET FOR ANY HOME. / NOW SALE P'RICID ... 99 SQ. YD. COMPAltAILI llTAIL •••••••·••••••••i••••·•••••••Sl0.99 IQ, YD Hollywood c ...... , •• , ' ..... , =•h No. Hellywood Costa Mt1a Los Ant eles , .. I w 11'4. ZJll•L lfllt IL 1111 ...... f::l" •• , 2110 (, C1l111ll1 1111. 11'5 N 'l'triattl Att. 110JI Si;1fl11-Wat 11 1' ··:::~ 11'4. list k~tft llN. 41t·ll>4 141-1111 •l·I 511·19" "'·14\\ J41-1J34 fl14J I S.>IH 111-M l , ~ Bloc~s Wtst of Holtywood frHWOY to I~ Co/0todo Blvd. ol 2 Bib. nor1h of Hol!r V~wa·t~ lo ff,twpwt BMl.ot 171hS1. t. r w-r\.W(•1 ~I fo•rto11 ~Dltoof...,..YIO 811 f1owtr Blvd. Turnoff. 1't PO!i\lSon ....... Shtrmon Woy. la't to San GobrMI Blvd. • wood Blvd. on V•r Con0¢'AVf,. onl'l 10 Horth on BtlllkrNtr. Laurtl ~onyon Blvd. """'-$Mrmon Woy. rlliri right 2 blocli" . . • . ' ' . ' . ' I -- suite's largest cJty. In 1970, alter IS years in the Assembly, the la.st seven as speaker, Unruh ran f o r governor. There were !hose who Lhought he was moving too fast, that his chances would be better if he waited untll 1974, when R on a I d Reagan would have two tem1s behind him and. by his 011•n prediction, would not be run· ning again. UNRUH RAN anyway - and Jost. Some time after that. \\'hile still remaining in his old Assembly district. he moved his residence just into the city of L<ls Angeles. More recently. he moved again, this lime to the Los Feliz Hill§ area, midway between downtown Los Angeles and I h e Hollywood district. This led some Angeleno politicians to tag him a "carpetbagger," with what etfect remains lo be seen come the April primary. But that isn't all Unruh is doing these days. He is also busy, albeit from s o rn e distance, at Rutgers, lhe state university of New Jersey, where he is associated with the Eagleton Institute of Politics, nol, be -assured, n.am· ed for the man who, briefly, was Sen. George McGovern's running mate this year. It is in this capacity that Unruh, who V.'hi!e in office lis ted his profession as ··economist," has been writing to newsmen ~ the state capital, askint: "\heir help in what be terms "legislative upgrading." there are many ot!Mr ex- planations for leglsh1tl ve con duct whlch ls Jess tha n honorable or behavior which, a/1hough not strictly Immoral or illegal, tends to cast a bad reflection on the legislature as an institution." He enclosed a long (ti-page. 52-multlple choice question 1 questionnaire, noting he sent a "similar'' one to members or the Legislature and saying he "does oot intend to quole any individual by name. . . .does not intend to write a 'leis and tell' journal." TlllS IS TI.IE first indication in the long (one legal.-sized sheet, single-spaced) letter that he intends to publish a report on what he sees as a legislative "gray area." Several fnitial questions deal with members of t h e Legislatute acting as "paid lobbyists," and whet.her this in the opinion of the newsman answertng is a connict of in- terests. Next come questions dealing with legislators taki.ng j-Obs dealing with governmental bodies after they leave office -and lining up ~h jobs while in office -and whether lhia is a oonOict or interests. Other questioos deal with · such matten as who in- fluences most a legislator ~ere his vote is coocemed, er legi.aJators, lobbyists, nstituents, media, etc . , whether newsmen b e I i e v c legislators carry bi.Us for cam- paJgn contlibQl<>rs, a n d ~imilar subjects. IN IDS 11 years in the IN HIS LETTER, which Legislature, "Big Daddy" was reads as though it w.ere to be given "credit" !or many sent only to Sacramento cbalur;es that bu' s e e n statehouse newsmen, Unruh Jeglsfatlve costs -to .the tax· said, "This year the Carnegie payer triple while the number Foundation has made it possi· of bills turned O;lfl in any given ble for the Eagleton Institute session r'emamed about the of Politics to conduct an in· same. tensive study of the entire pnr-If he were intent on. writing blem of legislative ethics and "a 'kiss and tell' jo~," campaign financing." Unruh says in the leu,r l!C· As a result, he Is asking the companying his questionnaitt, "members of the Gapitol " .... it would be easier fer Presa Corps, thole men and me to simply relate some or women whose job it is to my own experiences." oOOerve, report and C\'aiuate Unruh, in the letter, praised legislati~1lctioos, to help me the press for belng "an i.o· ... " in a atudy of. legislative valuable ally In, and catalyst ethics and financing. for, legislaUve reform." This, he says, is a "gray There are more than 600 area .... a number of people "leglslatlYe advocates " as 1 theor~ t!Ja\ most of the pro-lobbyists pre ofllclally known, ' blems that arile in tbis.-area1: -·r·e gl11-t·e red ··with ,· the ~ do so beCa~ of campaign Legislature; of these, 20 Are 'financing. While I subscribe former members of th e somewhat ti> this theory, I find Legjslature . . Blacks May Not Support Bradley By CURTIS J . SITOMER LOS ANGELES -If Los the support of the black minority community, a bloc he depended heavily oo in 11169. Angeles is to have a black CAUFORNIA STATE Sen. mayor, he may have to win "fervyo PYD\allY, bead of this without the solid support of state's blact caueus and the minority community that perhaps 'the most influential launched his PoliUcaJ career black politician io the West. here. . 1 bu announcect·bJJ bacting for To the surprise o1 few, tall , Unruh. Dymall)' obarges thal dapper ex·police o f f i c e r Bradley has failed In the past Thomas Bradley tossed his hat to campaign for black can· into the Los Angeles mayoral didates. ' ring. "Bradley ha.!1° never oon· Already in the fray are sldered race as a criterion for former California Assembly malting any political spea k:e_t, tnd form e r decision," the blBck leader Democratic gubernatorial can--/"laid in coming out fer the didate Jeu ynruh .and ex.L<is former Assembly speaker. Ange!es Police Chief Thomas However, th is criticism. Reddin. 'fbree..t~ Mayor some Bradley strategists con-- Samuel W, Yorty. 18 .to an· fide, couJd be an important nounce !or re-electiOn m J~ ,...._1 ,, f t In tU the' uaray .,.us ac or ge ng 1r The· lastest to enter the candidate elected mayor. race ls rormer television In 11169, Bradley was often personality Robert K. Dornan, tabbed the ''black candidate" 39. for mayor. Many politico sa\• In 1969, Bradley -longtime this greatly hindered his city l'OWlcUman -surpris--chances. ingly 1ed a f)eld of 13 can· didates in the tnayoral primary here. But h~ was nar· rowly beaten in a bitter runoff "''ith Yorty . LIBERAL ELEMENTS of the Bradley camp charged "racism" In the wake of the election. But Yorty 11upporters hotly denied such charges. Councilmen Bradley Is back. but wilh new campaign focus and strategy, and unlike nn· l960, be la now well known locally and even nationally Polls h ere show 95 percent of Lot Angele s residents recogrtlu him lodav. Four years ago, he was only ldentlned by 7 percont In a similar pubUc-cpinion llOUDd· Ing. Also, the mayoral hopeful hea juat beeo elected fll'lt •lce-presl-ol Ille National NOW mE "MODERATE'" black strongly hints he will nm a much broader·based campaign, trying to establish h~lf as a mlddle-<if·the-- road .. candidate. He will likely shun ties with ullralibcrals and s t re s s estabUshment Issues -Including ~ a f e streets, consumer protection, aid for senior citizens, and public transportaUoo. Some sa:, Bndley even will try to run a little to tbe rlibt of Unruh, who already has amaued a coalition of Youf,h, mlnoriUet, and procressive business Interests. The mayoral h Qp e ru I ei;timates h.ls campai,&n will cost It mllllon. Heads Fund League of, CltleJ -• ar:ouP SANT6 ANA -Hl lTY that rnl4 II , 0 0 0 Dalton, .. nor ii mat\oler 1111c1 ::i::11et.~ ~It iboot~ =· Vic!> pr~t ~ t • e th• !tague'1 ll~t black l"'!O~ C.IJl!)fnla Alli<!•, nas boon dent. ,. ·-" 1 ..,..S C,llalrmta 1~C tl)o .1173 But even with thlt new «ind drive rl. \le Orince poHUcal V\llbllity Br. d I ty County Braocll o( Illa Al1llrllil may lronlcally looe much ol l'oondaUon. I .\ 11. '!. . . . . Will Pinch-hit, Says Kim Novak; Miranda Gets Parole Actrtta K..lm. Novak has Oown to London, claiming that she hu taken~ ovtr the star-- ring role in a Brllish movie after Rita HaywwQt stormed out in a rumpus with the pro. du<>en. But Miss Novak's agent in Londpn, Donald Bradley , told neWSJ'ftlel'l as he met.the blonde star tha't ''she has come to London for talks about the film, just talks." Ho\yever, as embarrassed aides edged Miss N o v a k toward a limousine, she in- sisted: "I'm here to take Mm Hayworth's part. on the film. I "'as asked about a Week ago." A few days ago, Miss Hayworth. 53, walked out of the production. "Tales That Witness Madness," being shot at Sbepperton Studios. 'Ibe movie also stars Joan CoUlns, Jack Hawkins and l\.11cbaf:I Jayston.. * Eraesl A. Mlruda, lthose 1963 kidQlping·rape conviction was overturned by the U.S. Suprane Court in one of the its mqst celebrated rulings, has bea gr8nted a parole from ~ State Prison. Miranda, SI, was sentenced to 20 to 30 years for the kid- n~ and rape and a con· curfent 20 to 25 years for an unrelated robbery .in which he ~POLAROID ~TYPE #108 ft RLM • ··~ ' ... • UPIT ....... ARCTIC SURVIVOR - Bush Pilot Martin Hart- well, 45, rests in ho& pita! in Yellowknife, Northwest TelTitories, after <rash in arctic wasteland. Three other persons aboard plane on medical mercy lllght died. too1t SS from a woman al knifepoint. The high court reversed the kidnape;-rape conviction in 1966 on ground that bis confession was inadmissible as evidence ..... 0. s.... .... ADAMS ~T BROOKHURST HUNTINGTON llACH •• J E'"'Yfhlnl't elegant but the -·All S.ll<D watchtsare automation-made, IO )'OU pay only for Illa llmoj>lece, not 1llo tllnt It -to molio 11. Como c1-. a l.>dy S.ll<D~ f110rlte lady. Schroder's JEWELERS ..... ""' .. _ " ~--64Me41 ,,... .......... ,....,,.,.., ' ...., ,,.. •1 ......,. " ... ........ -nc.n. -MHtw c ....... \ ' Uf'I T.._..,. COLD COUNTRY - This San Francisco girl might well be a refugee of the cold Midwest. She's bundled up as ·temperatures In mid 20's and le>w 30's numbed Bay Area. pie, who have two chlldren, pllm an intimate weddlng.,•lth Ollly family and cloi!e ltlencla present early in the New " ., ..... Patrlc:lt Nusent and their two chllcu.n, aald abe alJo has a bearin( problem In her right .... but that It could probably not be corrected. • * Salvador Dill has created a ' • bypeMA11Tealist" &ix-foot· long ooucb In the form of a mouth which be calls the "8alivieofa." 1be divan put on display In Paris is a development of a liJnllar wori< In 19.11 by the ·surrealist arli!~ Jean-Michel Frank, according to . I he mustachioed Spanish artist. "Hla was surrealist, mine is llypeNurr<allst. It · is a perfect lmitation of a mouth with the fissure in the skin, agoolzing, c!lsquleting and ter- ribly beautiful." Dali said. * Slightly more Britons ap- prove of Prtactu Anne.'1 riding to the hounds than disapprove, according to a Gallup ·poll Jl'lbllshed In the London Daily TelgraPb. UPI~ CHICAGO CRASH - Wilbur Erickson, 58, president of Federal Land Bank, Omaha, Neb., is a llW'Vivor ol last......w~k's Chicago p I a n e disaster. He crawle4 through flame~ to safety. The 21-year-old p r i n c e s s came· under fire from animal lovers and some members of parliament last !no.nth for joining a lox huntoru·frl<nd's dinllel' 1"1~.S~·yea r-.. l'd estate. ~ lJTI&l1 flve da~ !!> But ol 1,ID adliltl uUd by jail eftll though he ate 1be t~ pollsters wMtber the evidence. Howen! Joblllon'•, charged with delraudlnl an innkeeper 11beo he could oot produce 1:11.50 for food he had eaten . Andenon, who ate the four meals at ..,. allllng, said he wu "cold, broke and hunaJ'Y." .. ·* Actor Gre"'1 Pecll lefl Tel ' ' I , . I • . • i.-: .. ' Earlier this year, friends quoted Cordobel u saying he would ma"'Y Frenchwoman Martine if she bore him a son. She gave birth to a boy last month. princess we rtgh~ or wrong, Dale Aodenoa. of Alameda 43 per<ent said right. and 97 was arrested In a Peoria (m.) per«nt wrong. The rest had.-~~~~~~~~--'-~::::::::::::=-...=::::::::::;::o:=.....=c:..:..~;::..::::c._~~­oo opiniori. * Dr. S. L Hayakawa, semo- tics espert and outgoing p,,.. dent of San Francisco State, '* --Doi Cooallllty; f~a~agobyanre acute dUJeut of the IM!r'90lll ayst<m, la back at work -dayi alter a nearly Ii.di recovery. ( -) Courtney w a 1 rushed to P.'Eo,n'LE Peralta Hospital from a C. restaurant Dec. 10, 1971, will> "'---------'~ what was diagnosed as the Guillain·Batre Syndrome. He was· in the ~·s inteiislve care unit 72 days, nearly paralyzed and unable t o breathe without a respirator. "I'm lucky to. be alive," said the 6l·yea«1ld Courtney, ·an administrative director with the Oakland Raiders, re!J>OllSfble, a m on g other things, for halnime shows at home games. * The L. Neun! Nlxoa, residents ol. a Southington, Cooo. trailer parl<. gave l50 to the re-<leClioo campaign of / Democratk (loqressw_. Ella Grasso, state records ahowed. * Two lhrimp l'OCktails, two bottles of cbarnpagn~. two roast beef dinners, one roast turkey and one rib eye steak MON Security Wllh - FALSE TEETH At AnyTione Afraid fda teet!I wUl drop ... t1w wroq tame? A denture adlai .. cu Wp. P.ASTEETH• Powder ciYm .. twtil • loarw. !rmer, ..r.4ier bold. Wb b9 embur.-df Por mar. 11eurlt7 and eoi:~t!t u•e FAS-TIETH Debt\lftl n Powder. DentuNI that tit ar1 ~till to .... ~ 8el 70Clt deatiA N(l,llarb-, "Largest Selection of Clocks in California" OFFICl4~ FACTORY SALIS . & SERVICE • FOR MOST MAJOR BRANDS ' Fea1urin1: 1rr• t • Bvwid: • Colonial • HttM'hede • ~ • Setlt Tltomu • Atm-.Le Coultre • Ri,.way \ l LAYAWA"t r-tutk ~of t..ae.1 TILL cmUsTMAS Im...... S...._Jiallu m""" bo.s.es. •• OPIUI -cwu.s.~ r •l'Clf&S 01'1 DISl'U y, 11111 W . I.A-RWY. ---a lllOADWAT rn ....;.: ..... ..s.t.t :Jl .. t-S....J .. ·6. ft ~1MtlHI .... ~ • Serving Sacramento, San Francleco, Oakland, San Joee, Ontario, Palm Springe, San Di.go and Orange CountyJ • • • ,. ' _, -I ., • i 4 I I • ' ' •• .. . 1:· " ·. •' I ••• • • •• • • • I I * .... # -. '... . . '• . . . ' ·' .. . . . . .. .. . . . .. . . . ~ .. . . . • • / ...... . ' I • • . ·. ........ . . . . . . . . · .. . ... . ' .-. ' ... ~~"'····· I '• ••,t1 t •.•-.•~•' -.•.'• •''\ • • • • • ... . . . . . . . ,.. -. .. . . . ' t . . , • •• . "' . ·~··· ';'; . ' , . . AT ADAMS ~ AND BROOKHUBST -CENTER ' > .. . It's easy in the Holiday rush .to overlook somedne special. Go over your list again and make sure you 've remembered everyone •. In. case you haven't, come down today and see our complete se{ectiori of · gifts for everyone. ~ MAGIC DOW1NE,~.. .A.' RTlSTIC . HA1R JE VAU~.:s Duds N' Suds H rt MIRROR SAYINGS SH.ACK WALLPAPr;R WASH . T G & y tt · Jl4Y.1t ~ ~ ;'.: .. ) ,. !, Hqul . : -~A,iBER '& .& VARIETY N ~ s~~M , . ~-\ LOAN . .. , LEANE s -· sHoP suPPL1Es DRY STORE ~ ~ PIUA I ·PIC ' • YOUR ":· THE SHOE MARIA'S ~N ~ PALACE A·PET ;,.,. . DAISY HONDA ARTISTRY M . . PET SHOP . . ,._BE"UTY PATCH JEW' ELERS REPAIR IN . " FUN·llll.PIDA 4llOOMIN. . SUPPL y OILS ~ FASHIONS MA~KET O' SEWING SHEA; MR. FISH 1 FASHION BEE DIUCA~lll P-ASTRY & CHIPS t,\ M WOMlll'S •••••O•• DISCOUNT •• o.. SHOPPE n WOMI NS, ,, I-. M_ DRU ID ·SPOOTSWIAI FOi TH I FAMILY FASHIONl"\I , FA ... lq ,• PAm l NS l 1STA 1 UIAHT TAii OUT llSTAUIANT tt ~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~n::.H!,~~~~~g~~~1 • -.i ~ · r • • • i • ' I ~ ' . . ~ • ' \ • I ;,-:;,-~. -~ .... ii . ··Oifl ''·~· .~13.=PAJ.S · . ~ . 'TIL CHRISThl'As· . _ ' , '"" i '• 1.t~ I 'a!'Llil'\P .. : '. ' ' '. ~ ' . .,. . ' ... ·· .~ '.\. :, TODAY ! //.;. .. ~-., .. ----•... . 24 FRIENDLY MERCHANTS to SERVE YOU Brookburst: Streets:-Huntington Beach , Just Minutes From· ' fountain Valley -Costa Mesa -Newport leach -. -~ ' -• .. , • . ..,. .... . ... . -·L.---!:!.. "'4~ -~ ·' -, . . ,·, , I • DAILY PILOT J 3 • " ' 1' I ' - 12 oz. SIZE SCOPE •• MOUTHWASH and GARGLE ' ~ 77c Sor. POND'S Dreamf lower Lactona TOOTHBRUSHES FOR ADULTS Natural u Nylon REMINGTON "MIST-AIR" Hot Comb DRYER/STYLER New built-in pre-dampener with stepped-up:-air . & heat fkiw~ Two combs & a 15 99 brush to give hair more body. 1 Rec. 11.95 #HW4 • 99c REMINGTON "Hot Comb" DRYER/STYLER Electronically lleated · • CQlllb·blower puts hair •in plac. ·in 'oo;onds. 11 99 J llf.13.95 . #HWl •· ,-~" . ., · ,.,M,NG,oN Mark 111: · i-.... ELECTRIC SHAVER . ~· Micro Slot· shavt~g he¥! al\d blade sys- tem. Famous replace- able blade feature. 23 44 • , ·full ·width ,.tri mmer. · . ~ Rec. 26.95 • ~~~ .. ~­ I . I: . ,!for The HOLIDAY,$ DIHHlion gee ! 11. size 1r Hi·B1111D ll."Size . PIK OF 25 "· ' . l!E£Vfl -Dou ble aluminum closure, scuff and stain , resistant vinyl covers, quilted lining. Popular colors , sure 'lo please a lady .. •C111HticCu1 4.49 • ;1"W11koor 4.49 SAVE! ' -Gel all 3 Pieces tor ONU • 24" 1'1111111 5. 49 13.99 • • I t VI SINE EYE DROPS j In .Plastic Bottles "Gets the Red Out!" Rer. 1.21 Rec. 2.Zt Y, OZ. loL ~ 99c 1.89 f · .. ·~ . .. "'--< ,.~t~ ' { '£' : ".'l ,· ""''-",' ~ ~·h • •· ',;~~·=#.'..{':r.~.11\i'-:J .. I i~ ~~:Wil , __ . -~--.... '!·' CO~NING•WARI '\ "Corelle" Dinnerware SERVICE FOR FOUR New "Old. ToWri .... Th• :le~latory you just smooth on & rlnsa off. lec. 1.19 .. I • • GR EAT '• Place~ro s"°9)1 ·! ·t.r ..... : . ~~.;~. ·• * ' ,: . ~·~,· .. ·· .. """ . ; ,.~~~~Tawl r. -•r Stef.n Iron ., ... · 1.iuer1~:.~ sTUM &•ilYllON . Fi!~ ~re. CPf. lotsofsteam f0[88SI • orYt ~IA_t/eam~ itnnirig. C1ea,C'-Y!~w ' c~~#1061~'; heel . ·~slarilinf " •· . ' ,-~,.;: )3Zl2· . . . ·. ·c~~;:::a"' ··:a· a· : 1i~Al • • '< • • , "· , ! Can Opeder New designer look, .• brijhl & breezy! 6 95 :1)pens c.ns fast. Clic k1 n clean. lid /liffet."1d cocd storace. ,. lef. I.II .; · 2-Slice Toaster · ' Gift . -OhocoJates' IWCFIRD'S ~ A deljghttul assortment of milk and dark chocblates packed ·in a speci~I gift box. lll.1.95 · 2LI. 3.95 . . . LUD•N;s Cho~Q.Ja~es "Mis!Y Rose" -A.ljig0 assortment of fine caqdies incl11di11g~ f9il 1· 88 •rapped"pieces. HojidaJ~.ft · . wrapped. Ref. 2.29 2 • ' , . r " .. BIA CH'S Hard 1:andies • 1ra1i11Niclts1111, 111. 37c • Filled Raspberries, IY.t 1z. • C11Rock, tu. •·HolidarMi" 11 u . ' • callft Ca1ies ··TIM'S ••• Individ- ually wrapped. JY.u . 37c HO'S -·Tray of I0 1oil 4~· wrapped chocolate covered Santas. 3·7/1 oz. . , t arauN Dominoes 'Uouhle ~· s white & . black In a vinyl case. With instructions. · Ref. 3.71 -• '' 3.59 , PILOT-ADV~RTISER Crow wAs 11.1• •••••• 11 49 it Fniof · ' V. Gal. • · -~m~~ , ~ 1W6AS 119,199 86 Proof 'h Gal. • Willdsor CANAD;AN wAs •. 5• ·Wlllsly . 5 59 80 Proof_ Qt. • Bacardi ~·i"'' ,... w1s11, ~!1ber. . Y2 Gal. l 0.99 . . . ' WIS U ·IUllDY . 11 I 7 so Proof ~'Gal. ' . , Canadian Mist WllSKY 80 Proo1 I . - ' ' Pll •• PllOJ-lOfERTISER Wtdntsda~. Decembtr 13, 1912 'Ii GAUON Listerine· • ANTISEPnc ) fir De11rll Oral Hniue • 2~66 • ' . • 3.39 I (; .MATJEL -She has rooted hair and a painted face. She repeats 12 diflerent phrases at random! She ·has 2 telephones, one for her and one for you. VOIT Tetherball 1 &·PoJellT Q"litJ while, '"'· C reststaRt ball with nylon rope attached. Ercihng game for · small areas. . 4.95 DAILY PILOT J 5 3.6 01. SIZE LOTION ~e-~ hou(ders SHAMPOO ' ·'t.r'Elft~jwe DH~rufl Cantrol ! ...... Ml'INY J9' lOWlllCI I ' 2.7 01. SIZE TUil Head & ShouJders , . SHAMfiOO' For Effective Dandruff Chtrol! 9.99 16!'%.SIZE -/ •'.' .· Parsoris'~~ AMMONIA DOLL Lemon or Sudsy 9.99 H 01. SIU · PAuAOO~E . I Rap1iShave2, Regular, Menthol Mint or Lime Amelicao lo!ian sty~ jewelry io turquoise wi~ silvtr trim. • • 11111 • S••ll Crts• _ .• ,. .. ri...... '' Elrrh111 • Dr111 Pierce• Earri11s ' 881; 1 • lrlcfflts , .... , .. . ""' Elrrl111•1 ·7· 7 .... ,Elniop , ... r. . • ' ~- I • l • .. ~:, .,1~ :.-,;. • f>. 1 l , ,.,i1 r. • • SPiii MISTCGLOCNE 111. 1.19 1 69 21z. • • I A GREAT 4.00 Brut 33 SPLASH.Ofl.LOTIOll lite Refresher! ~.?t 99c ~i l.' 69 l~IL hL a s,1as1-11 Laf111 JY211. 2 39 CllMI SIHI I hz. • . ., _, • 4"· 3.50 llVLO,N ''PUB'' lllSK AnlR SHAVE Cr11l1j for 111 Mii •Ill 4~00 I ltl If lltill II j1! ............................. n1 Mn Fr11r11ct for lloffnl Ct1lorl111 Wit Wilt 11 11111 Ml1t117 IOMAN BRIO .•. 1 zest ftr liYlq ••. a tlair for s,.n ... 1 ,aul11 for 1J11sur1. Ytur "•t·Nt" will 1111 II! Ami SHAVE .,. t.H . .,_ COLOGNE 111. 2.21 41L 1.'69 1.99 "" "' .. llllMlll. 5111 f11M1M11! s,ray Mist T11r on, 2y, 1z. 3.85 • DOUIU DIAMO~ACIT , · Gift Basket • .ll5oz. Plrf1• s,.., • 11'1 ll. !11 j1 T1ll1t11 Jean Nate 2-PC. Gin SET Refreshing, citrvsy friction pour le Btin and a round yel~w box of llatb l'owde1 •ncased in 1 lovely gill box. fritllH 4 00 ltlr It l1i15 tL~ 1111 Plnor hL • PILOT-AOVERTISER 7 MAX FACTOI "Hypnotique" ~-~r.' 7-i~~·~~~·~~~--"'-','.: ..... " English Leatller" · sNuLroN secai .. "HE" """'= ·· Old Spice .Ille veiy besll ., AFTH SHAVE · Tbe all·lime favorite' 411. ltr., .... 2.50 4.00 ; ·. Ami "' • I ~. • :' .. ~~~· 4l4 ... Brut Jr. SPRAT LOTION 3 75 114 "· • LOTION 3 50 II\ IL a Brut SPUTS Hlndsorne in clelf pied-ease. LDTIDN J.Z "· SPRAT LDTIDN l IL 6.40 · 6.40 Ill I Corj 7J ll. , · · • ' 1.39 2.09 ' 4!4 ll. ~:'s!~d~Dr~ift". ?t cGLGUEl.59 2.79 . ~~~. ~ ;,;~·;:1.19 m · 5.00 CDLGCNE Sl4 "· Jl411. 4.00 6.00 . . ;; :. . . . . .. , • ~~, • I I • • ~ ' 'ffistoric Church Closes N, Mus. (AP) -delllruCllol! of the land illelf." Men's and Young Women's e Late Ritual Church In Newton, I The res.olutloo, passed by a MutWll Improvement AsaoclA· PHILADELPHIA ( 1) p I ) Id -"'sh hartered llJ&.lo.4 vote 41lr1nB the coo-Uons, whlcb glvo leadershlp lo . ...... c (erente'• annual meeting here th and no adults Hand Harry Gilbert, 83, ~ retired « _.a afler the PUgrims •-called I "j , anci )'Oii you_ accountant, 11ys 1t w a 1 IOlldoo!. baa beld Ila last a~ or 1 "" will ilye Increased priesthood "great" lo be · bar mitzvlibed servWa: • , ldentltt to the acU0v1ty pro-even though he: postponed lJ.e Aftrellorta lo morge with· ( .RELJG.,.~ J gram1. · , INdffienalJewiolvceremonyol two QjlJer United ' Church el A.V•J 1 Cl!oeen 11 {"'w 3: "~ r • ~ "becotnlll(a man for ,70 years. Cbrlat" parllhes failed, Fi'!' · P~Y or oung , He said be was toe> poor lo °"""' vot.d lo sell ila, Me"' ~ · -President nave ~ tUual perfoMl)ed In buildilil to the Gree If· • sUn1 peace! with stability Robert L. Backman, a aeoond • Ht:m, naU-ve Poland in 1902 -Ev811C~Cal Church and gl .. rand freedo!n lot ~II the na· -lor lh Hie previous Vfpen he .turned I~ a bar Ila ,..,.. lo several ooclal and f lions and peoples of Southeast prosldency; and. <ounaelors riiltW,li.h's usual age -so his relfc:lliil programa, iacluding Asla." LeGrand R. Curtis and Jack children gave him one for his SllO,• to the nallollal office · And It said "all possible con· H. Goaslind Jr. recent blt1hday. ol the<UnltedOlurch of Qlrilt. slderatioo must be glveo lo ~ T. Hollis III, a those young men who, because deaeoil, aald the clwrch had to of aertous cooscleotlous belle! cloee . beca111e Ila members refused to participate in t h e have become too old and too war." few. e W•r Resolution • W"AlllllNGTON (l\P) Ti1jl Nat.ialiil Con f e ~' n e'e of Calllol!C Bllhopl hu:t:alled for botll'lidea m.. ~ VJ.tldm<war lo hallithe "bomb,~ter­,....., "'1lch are &UCh 1oW or civilliii Ur . and , ' ' S.•lt~!I Ulrike Footer, 9, bugs faiher in Alma, Michi· gan. Ulricke bad been liying in German orph· ailages with her two l ifSter. after death al. niother. • -. ' •,I The resolutiori also aald the United States ''.must be unstin- ting in e~ our resources and technical skills oo beboll ol th e people ol Soutl)east Asia who have suf· ferecf so lgtievoosly'." eGocl 'AH-' ~ NEW HAVEN; i;o;,._ ;(AP) -Lt. Cmdr. Stephen R. Har· . ris, the chief intelligence of- ficer aboard tbe·U.S.S. Pueblo, says a deep belief in God help- ed the ship's 8Z .crewmen sur- vive their 11-month Unprfson. ment in North Korea r i v e years ago. ~ "Among our crew, God was '"Vef"/ much alive,".Harris, now with the lleparjmenl of the Navy in Washbil1on, said ·in an interview. 'I1le "Pueblo and its crew were seized Jan. 23, 1968, by North Korea. whic~ said the ship violated.. territorial waters. · Barris silid be returned for his Bible "in .. the confused moments when capture seem- ed imminent," but it was im· mediately·ta~ from him "at. the'point of.a haYooet." --·~ eYouth Programs SALT LAKE Crl'i (AP) - Youth-activity ~ or the Olurch of Jesus Ctidlt of Latter-day Saints (Mormonl. have tmdergooe cburch-wide changes in organizailon and leadership, the clwreh has an- nounced. ' A spakesman said ; t be changes • resulted lil li reorganizaticin of the smera1 presidencies of the Touna . . I t .ti• i"i -.-- ' . 1 ...... the open toe -. . . ~ ,. • • t • I ••• • • - ' " and the classic ........ , • 1\ For the nolidpy whirl, our opened-up l . "1'ollette qn • sliqht ri sl> heel , ooour toll- 1 ~ tongued pump with o tailo red omoment. t. A.Madeira, novy, camel, red or block- ~ colf.ki"or block potent, 20.00. 1 ,.._ B. Porad~. novy, cof'\)el or • ~Rroudpas~ a peifect i;~sent " . . ~Tbewinra r~ Boorboa is altclressed up for tbt Halidl)'a. So gift. Afttw • ..,, ~" -... wnipwitt!_ told NII' ... fifh, .. ~In h ......ina look~ tJ/lftl~ttil ~·wfftl'idWf bOW.~rt tv•ll$1t ·: .. •.Ve • ..-...ast wltla santa! .. 1 ~S...Z"::°" ' ' 'block potent, :H.001 ; ~ Fashion Sn~· .. 8' -. ~ Include.1 biltfet breakfu t, . gifts ror the children from &ult.a'• bag, magic lhow, Osrtstmas music. l•t., Dec. '' ......... Die. JS, Huntington: Beach, 9 to 10 a.m. Onmge, 9~0::!0 a. • I 11l lliIDJJP!Pw" lli<ID~·.: . M.CI~~ +w H. E11iehll '47 F•thlo11 ltlefMil 11.l1 Etllater' A'"'"• • JJOO N. Tu\tlfi Str•el 100) lo1 C."lt11t Mell 'I ANAHEIM N!WPORT HUNTINGTON llACH OR.ANGE. MALL OF ORANGE , CERRITOS ~L114l IJMl:ll 17141 644-12rt 17141 ltl.tJll 1"'141ttl•l311 12131 160\0411 I SHOP 9:l0 A.M. to 10100 P.M. MONDAY THll.OUG}i SATURDAY. SUNDAY I 1:00 A.M. to 6 P.M. I . ' >· I I • ·- • -WolntJdq, -13. 1972 OAILY P!UIT J[ er , el~Two•Bit" /':Bus Line How can a bus be Santa'• Little Helper?-By being there when you (Santa) want to go shopping, by giving you fast, economrcal service (25c for a one-way fare), by providing plenty of storage space for those special packages that are coming from the North Pole,' by eliminating overcrowded parking problems, and by allowing FREE one-way transfers. ' Santa's Little Helper is your little helper for your holiday transportation needs. Oh, by the way, any resemblance between our friendly bus drivera and elves is purely coincidental. ..... --------.,..., .......... ~ VIA COl1'A ....... ~ C<MIT ,i~l.WN .. ~-- For information or bus schedules, write "Th• TWo-ltt Bua Lin•" at 1126 E. Washington Ave., Santa Ana, California, 92701, or call (714) 547-8004. ' • I, I • & DAILY P1LOT ' ,. ,1 •• American Male ~Oppressed' Author Says Men Slaves, W 01nen Their Expl.oiters 400 Win Back Pay Clpllol New• S<nlce SACRAMENTO -Mer e l~;;;;;;;;::;:;::;~ LONDON (AP) -The Ame;lcan male publicity tour In the United States. telli1ent lhougbts frl&httn him. He seeks thin 400 emplqyts of the !;..._ b lbe most oppressed man in the wescem Regarding tbe American trip, MW the st<:urity of the enslaved Qd marries. California Youth Authority "\ ' world, lllJ'l Ibo author of a bool< \bat al50 Vilar said in a interview: Cl>ndllioned by his ~ r-will receive f/10,llOO In back PRE.CHRIST argues men are really slaves and women "Sometimes l'm afraid. But 1 have 10 eh1kh>od to believe tha) be ls smart and overtime pay as the re.ult of 8 • JEWI RY lboir .,.plo!tera. do it. II you ate soing to ~e things I08PM<lbl0 and that girls '"' Incapable setliament announced by lhe , Either Vilar, author of • •T h e you have w change things ln America. and helpless, he easily assumes his Callfornla State Employee• '$ A L I • =pulaled Man," also thinks that American is 80 inlluentlal. You have 10 responsiblUties. He la therefore bound for AllOC. taUon. t . 1 en ·-llupld and -ttin mo-so he 11 " Ille in stultllylng Jobs, For. the Amedcan ..... .~ 8. '" go to I on. . . . th The agency will make ad· · every day ; lhal men 8"' brlJIJtpt bot Miss Vilar ~ually wrote the book In male ts 11 all COlllJlO'llldad by Ibo high dlllenal half·tline payments • WATCHIS ~ locked into stultifying joba; th It New York almoet two years q o during a atandard of living and the emphasis on for overtime worked bttwetn • ••N•S I bousewMk i5 1 pleasure and men .,. live-month visit in which she lived in an success. Jan. 17 and June 30, 19'0. • ua llltlU l deprived of it, and that all of this stems East Village hotel and made research um no other country do mothers so Empklyes were paid "ltraighl • HAcnjn !l. from mothen who condition ·their !rips to su burbia. pitile~ly train the male infant to time" for the work In ques-11 l • HNOAMn children into manipulative and aillve perform. No other iOCiety exists where llon. =. l e' lfAMONOS """ !\ . roles. THE BOOK, SHE SAID, is an illustra-the male sexual drive is exploited for a e LMKTllS m \i The book was originally publiahed in tion of a theory she calls, "the pleasure money so unscruPulously," she wrote. ! • .. INI JIWIUY •. J · Gennany where U made the best stll4r Of non-freedom." She says she would have R I llst before it was launched in seven olber written the book even if there had been no GIRLS, TB9lJGH BORN intelligent, ..... 0 001..,.. 250/ 0 Off I. ~ QM1tries. women 's movement but she cboae her Miu Vlla.r ta~ are taught they don't .,. v-c,.... ~ le words wjlh tile thought ol making a riave !$_ dt!M, Mi:ause men .,. going to ~ '.,! C: I! IN LONDON, NOVEµi'r IUllplar ohange be<auie ol it. w...t t"': lllait. 'lllelr i'>al Is to find a ~ ~ :y.J! .~ lu l Amis cal led It ."TotoI Twsddlo" llld one "'Ille lil>!""1ooisi. were very IO\ld and maq lo4!1Wl. • 4' '!'AYJtE ORR 1 I reviewer wrote "to tnow ber is tQ hate so thls had '· lbe verv loud or 00......... some. WCllll!il may wort or go to col: ber." · . · · would notlcejif. 11 wu very llJ>Po~ ~\\Ul, '!l'lJ 10A,make lhtmselves at· ,. : ~~ J(Wri rn • r But othen praised thl! book as the best that ~Y notice If because t really &hint ~ .t4 *°t ,'t'bey may even \pro-llU ~ argument yet against women's lib. they_ are wroq." ' claint that ~rt ii drudgery and " ...,. "" qiii. . .. I 1 ~ that" the JMle__tt_ fLllfllJed becaue he •"' 1. '"" n.. • JJ~ · ~ rtt St., ,c:.. Now Miss Vilar has added a special Bai&Cally her theory is that the male is woib outskie.tite home but in fact, they '"'C:,.'\:=-tlMlllM-. ,..._... .._. · ~ chapter devoted to the Ameri can male brilliant and, capable of doing great know housewo~ i5 easy and they really hpert W•• • Cletli ~ ~ Real C'harmer u'' T•1•,,,.i. 1s_n_d_is_:p_rc.:pa_r_in..:~:_l_or_a_le_c_tu_re __ an_d __ thin_._,l:.:'__::w..._it..._h _bls:..=__f..._reed=:.'m:::_::.bu:_t__::h=ls__::in-:__:lhink::· ::.:i:t _:is:_:•:_P~l~ea:::'.:"'~•:_· ______ _l_ ______ .:::. __ ~11-~-~'""~""!•~-~~-~~~·~·~,;:i I • Snakes aren't onJy things Toni Helfer charms - she's an expert al dealing out affection to animals at 'Mar ine World-Africa USA, a wildlife recreation park in San Francisco. Her husband developed ani- mal technique called "affection training." Stewardesses Attack 'Sexism' NEW YOHK (UPI) -With a combined mcznbcrship or 70. two mi Ji tan t ste wardesse s organizations have begun a drive to organize their 48,000 airborne sisters against "selC· ist" commercials, booka and movies which they say have a certain effect on some male passengers. "We are grabbed. pinched, relt and even slapped ." Mrs. Judi Lindsey of Sle"·ardesses for Women's Rights. said Tuesday. SHE SAID the airlines pro- hib1' the offended stewardess from objecting because the paSMJnger might be c o m e ang~ and choose another carrier next time. "We are guilty until proven innocent,'' Mrs. Lindsey said. "We are always wrong and the passenger ts always right - no matter what." of the ·Stewardess Anti -·~ft. Defamation Defense League, J\ complained a b o u t com-~ mercials that say "Fly Me" or ~~ "She'll Serve You All the n Way," and "books that in· struct us 1n 'How to Make a ... Good Airline Stewardess' and ~ o::: movi~ that show us, t hm· e .... 'Swinimg Stewardesses,' ~ glorious X·rated color." 1i MRS. CHA.PLAN, who is on u maternity leave from her l~ airline -she refused to say · jf which one -said, "It is all Jf ~ 'We are graflbed, plnehed, felt •IMI .,. even slapped.' very annoying and degradina .. Especjally bad is thal bOf!k which ~ an especially lewd and suggestive title." JoaMa Chaplan, organizer ~ Mrs. LiDdlel_ ~ 80ll1e ail'-~ lines arscnm.1na1e a g a I n s t ii stewardesses in tbe following I ways: ~ -Requiring physica l ·• Vocalist Has Baby LOS ANGELES (APl - Vocali!I Helen R e d d y • who&e latest hit song is "I Am Woman," has given birth to an 8-pound, + ounce boy at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital. Miss Reddy, 31, and her husband and per son a I manager, Jeff W-1d , nam- ed their son. b o r n Tuesday, Jordan Som· men. qualifications for stewardesses "- but not men. -Forcing stewardesses to share crew quarters while men have single quarters. -Sometimes ~fuslng to blre married women while alwa ys hiring qualified mar· ¥"' ried men. -Requiring women to undergo underwear in-i spections. •• Mrs. Cbe:Plln satd '"we want to get across that we are ' dedicated, hard-working girls . who resent being labeled as anything else by idiola. who are making money by slander- ing us." the prof essienal camera for everyone! canon· n'11l FEATURll;jG • ThrougtHtte-l1nt Spot Meter SINGLE-LENS REFLEX CAMERA -.. -• M -11 ,, MM, • Wkt•Optn or Stopped-Down Metering UI 1n1n l'O 1M1. .... IMfl>« <-. S.H 1111,•. • • • FM! QL FMrn lffdlng Sytl•m • Breech-lock Lent Mountlno IOM .. If.I • ,. .. , MJcroprltm F'ocu•lno • 1 to 1/1 CKIO 8'c&nd Shutttr • Md La• """' Drop In for • demonetr1tlon ~366'l . ....... """tfM.• ot ftilt tine oamer.. HAR80R PHOTO -JUI I. c-t Hwy~ Ml .... ... lrAmorl-Moot.or Choote 67M'70 I ) • ' . 2GALL0N -.,., PLASTIC "\\:v: TRASH CAN , PJMlf2f'tl:CU~Wl20fMI~~ CQUl'OH.~-• ~~-·~;mm··m,· ·:%:: VALVOLINI MOTOR OIL . .. 20 • '° ........ , ..... ~ ......... d•-r.t· "..,. .......... '"'"~--· -M!ne_rt -·..-n:r.:r.::i:.~ --' BIRNl·O·MA TICll PROPANITAN ,.,_.. .......... ~ ' . . ' .. .....,..... . ~ -M..ITll·'· coMP.ut .t.l I.•• IA. - J I t 7 ", SCOTCH PINE <---Cltrlstmas AUllALT •OOF COA~lllG fin .. t q1K11ity. fvll 90lton-li1e. OUI HG. ... 11)01 30.INCH . READY. TO-FINISH c ,, BAR STOOL '3 ::t:. ' SLllPING BAG ..., b -·.,;.. ...... . II" • 1'1' Mult .. ........ W 'U(lii-. IM. '12-1$0. OUI HG. 1.79 FACMllY G.OSl-OVT "Ma.icolor" ~~Ifs JU,Ml9-IOROUPKG. CHRISTMAS W•APPlllGS 120"1. It ... .... ... ift,INttlht .... . ..., ....... IO MOuHMnewde· ....... _OUlllG. 2.39 ,, ... TRIES ......... ...wioc. -----............ c-----_ _._ -· II~~ out llG. 11 .99 #'4-flOS nLo . "llWlllSET" LOCK SET ·-.--·-,leek. with t+m My94 _.,, leek. Pre...W.. ......, UM1 lffllrit, ,_ ,... ..... OUI no. . ... !~~ ' lllTERMA TIC "TIMI.ALL" ,.,..._,...;, ...... ::J, I! .. .............. JI ~~. ._..........,_ ...... _...... .. - out llG . •••• ,.., . .,.,. c n ..• an. Pre-fini1hed Vinyl Blond .ELM PANELING t:""V= ,.,,. ....... ---....... SHllT fACT01r •ur. 01/T/ C9YSTAL SWAGLAM"S • .............. .:t'.i ,. ~ "-· f:::: ................... . u...ii.t ~tity ... """' ........ ~. VALUES '~~ TO 29.9S 81Ci4•CH BENCH , VISE 13"SH•UB AllDHIDGI TRIMMER '''°' 11·· OlllY tltl AT AllGflS IACH OPEN 7 -DA YI A Wllll MON •• FRI. 9 to 9 IA T •• su11 •• to 6 • K MCHfft •POMONA • SAN ~lllfAIOlfllO " lfOIWAll ltttel.e........, •ti NO.Mii.iS *'40IAMNlttOWIO. Mft10tKk VI. , ........ -..... _, _ .. '·"' .. ll\IOI ....... ··-" --· --M .............. _ • GAIHN GIOYl •MUNllN$tON llA<M • WOOltANO MILLS •SANTA ANA liMtCMMM•lfAW. '"'KllNOf• ttMl\'Kl'OI' llV.. J ......... _, .... --·-· --..:..~-t! .. -·~ ... ""' .... ·--.. • tlYlHIM ·G•tttttlo • WNITTlll lONO tl•<i ,,,,. ........... ,,_ '°· "'"'""' l l)JflW..lllMIO. ,,, , •• Ditti ti. • 0:::::0.:r I ':.."lw:.t" ·i:c=· ..... _ ----· ' ' .,.... -1'1 ..... 4. ' ·- ' , t I ' I . . ' ' I ' ,_ < • ' • 3 PILOT-AOVERTISER Scenic Beauty Th.is beautiful nature trail in a California park is c\mflar to scores of others that conservationists ire trying to preserv e on local, mite and national levels. . Press Will Hold ~~Benefit for Farr A tradi tional Orange County Press t1ub' "Blooper Night" and Christmas party Friday at Newport Beach's Ba Ibo a l'avilion has n new name and 4 new purpoS.c for ~e benefit. 'lfinds raised. I · '"Farr Out Night" proceedB : 1'ill gQ. to the legal defense for \jailed Los Arigeles Trmes ,.ljeporter Bill f'arr. a longtime ~er county newsman. ' if freed from his unspecified sentence on conviction of con· tempt of court charges -it Jt'OUld be three years -Farr ' rill a en ~ , . . ' ... ~. ~THE P C '.AS· invited, to tl\O 5,:J) to 8'80 p.m. tldirdn·type show, an event 7.iWhich includes news media awards fer the funniest 1972 . :~phlca\ and editing _,.. 'fbts Which a ppenred. "'.-.-A film cdllection of visual "~d verbal goofs clip}>ed from l b vie" and tele~islon filming -Ble past 40 years ~ that the ~lie never saw -will also ,.~kl shown. No reservations or ad· 1\li.Ssion charges are reqllired ir the "Blooper NI g ht '' ivity to be held upstairs r the Tale &f the Whale • taurant, an event whicll aptua1ly draws sane 300 or \!bore persons. • ~Orange County Press Club fJtr2 President Arthur R. \!lrise~ of the DAILY PILOT Jf~ff, Doted the club's boer<I of ~!rectors voted unanimously to assist Farr financially in his ~gal battle. .. • HE BEGAN servi ng his 1.,t;• sentence Nov. 27 for refustng to divulge who among six at- torneys involved in t h e f\.1anson family murder trial provided him information for a story which angered the judge. The U.S. Supreme CoUrt refused to bear his appeal ih the case, which has national implications. J·im Coop e r , co _munications director of Clian- nel fiO, Orange County's first television s t a t i o n • and "Blooper Night" master o cereI50l'l1est <0iDtef!9\eWed Farr Saludla)". fii''lfts 1 Ml Angeles County Jai1 cell~ -· Farr is a -pa ''llf"Sident of the Orange County Press Club. "I am dff-ply grateful for the almost un.&Qimous support from fellow reporters and from much of the general public," saW:.Farr. "ALL I HAVE done is main· lain a principle that any reporter worth JU sail woold have done," be. added. A Regiirter ,.P.r1ar !or i2 years before joining the Los Ange 1 es Herald-Examiner, Farr later joined the Los Angeles County District At- torney 's staff.as press officer following 'the controversial ~1anson trial coverage in the Herald Examiner. He then quit and joined the Times' staff, but J u d g e Charles H. OJifer pressed con- tempt prosecution after that, claiming ~afr • ~Ost his cort- sUtutlonal right t<I pn>teot his news sources , by leafing the news media . lllVater Expert Assernblyman Porter . , 1~~ Mourned by Friends · i-Clpltol NeWJ Service :: SAC RAM EN T O Califoi'nia laid to rest this rweek one of it.s most reipected •lawmakers. 1,;' Carley V.. Port tr, a 1M o d•e r a lW-'D e mo or a t. • presented tbe c o ~R a o 11 • . ,Paramount area ii\ t h e ;;'fAssembly since voters picked .. him lfi a special election In '}949. He died last week at a )ias~gton conference . -.._ e was possessed with ~rched Southern California. 'Later, working with ~ (now appellate judge) Gordon Cologhe, a Riverside , RepubJican, Porter was able to gain approval of the' Water QuaUty Control Ac_t which hit _ been-called the rriost effecdve tool used against water polhl• . Uon. "Carley," a:s he was called , by associates, also served the Legislature well a9 a n arbitrator d disputes. • lal exdertlle In wat.e matters. ANNUALLY, HE was ap- • Not an engineer or 1 DOlnted to the J oint eon. hydrologist, Porter was a • ltrence COmmittee on the ·L1C11ool ttaclltr when elected, Budget because of bil abWty J bUt took to water as hiJ field to calm heated tern~ and 1 llke the ~al duel<. Ond way1 lo get all •ideil of an "I_ Issue to compromise. ,J\.1ANY PEOPLE JI v e , But opponents conceded t mer Gov. Edmu O. there "aa nothing soft about "•~Pat" Brown credit for the Cotnpton lawmaker. •te -evelopmeot of the muJU· eoWd be as tough wltll .j llllon dollar California Waler JJlOltlben of his own party as -Plan, bUt tlle kudos l'OOld go wltll tlle ''loyal opposition." , ,also lo !he quiet, unassuming Porter hu been praised b'y ;i,-assemblyman from C.Om1pton. governors from Earl Warren :i t In 19591 lawmakers ap-through Ronald Reagan. \•'Proved the Porter-Bums Act On hearlllR of ftorter's death E. when ratified by tlle whlle atlendmg tlle Republican l>eeame the slatcwlde Goven>Or? Con!.,..,.. In that thla yea r Is Arltona, Reagan sold the dellvcrlng the !kst Northern walar qualllq act bearing hll California water. to normally name I.I a fitting memori11l. .. Parents "' Warned Parents h a v e the mponslbUlty al keeping their children out of trou- ble during tlle upcoming Christmas \l'acatlon from !K:hool , says Evette J . Younger, state attorney general. He advises parents to know where their ctiUdren are at all times, urge them to participate in schooJ a nd recreatton department programs and caution them not to hitchhike. • ' ·ANIMAlogic¥~- ~ '!'. Wednesday, Dtctfl'lbtt 13, 197l OAILV PILOT 18 ~ ..... , .................. ... --- Coast Area Men in Service \ ~ ........... -............ -.. Army Private P.1ark A. Ho- tai11, son of l\1r . and Mrs. Eugene B. Hutain. 6 11 6 Shawnee Road, Westminster, recently completed e i g h t weeks of basis training at the U.S. Anny Trainlng Center, Infantry, Ft. Polk , La. 11e received instruction in drill and ceremonies, weapons, n1ap rea ding, combat tactics. military Cflurtesy, military justice, first aid, and Army history and traditions. Pvt. l!utain received his training with Company 0, 3rd Battalion of the 2nd Brigade. Army Private James F. Downing Jr., whose parents live at 6391 Brown Circle. Huntington Beach. recenlly completed eight \veeks of ad- vanced individual training at the U.S. Anny Armor Center , Ft. Knox , Ky. wile, Kathy, llve at 21212 Carl L. DUMD, son af Mr. and Richmond Clrde, Huntington ~trs. Gerald 0. Dubin, 17281 Beach. recenlly was assigned Palm St., Fountain Valley, to the 75th Field Artillery in Germany. recently was assigned to the Pvt. J ebb la is serving as a 3rd Armored Dlviaion in cook with Battery B or the Gcr1nany . artillery's 2nd Battalion at Pvt. Dubin is a recon- llanau . lie entered the Army naissance specialist with Com· in March, completed basic bat Support Campany of the training at Ft. Ord , Calif., and division's 3rd Battalion. He was last stationed at Ft. Knox , entered the Anny in June, Army Private Paul D. Ky. rectived basic training at Ft. Jeb!>le, whose paren1s, l\1r. Ord, and was last stationed at and l\1rs. Fehx J. Jcbbia, and Army Priavate First Class Ft. Knox, Ky. -'-~~~_:_~~~~~~~~~'--''--~~~- .... ICES El'l'ECTIVE: DEC. 1<&th, 19th, 1e1h & 17th SPORTY1 JACKETS " FOR . SAVE $5.88 TO $6 A. M'EN'S CORDUROY B-29 aviator lacket 100% laminated cotton corduroy""!"'two lsge lined potteets with pile trim. Wide pile collar. Ouilt lined. Sizes S-M·L-XL. Reg. 13.99 B. MEN'S CGTTON SUEDE B-52 aviator lacket - Sherpa trim on collar, cuffs and waistband. Ouilt lined. Sizes S-M·L·XL. Reg. 13.87 . C. MEN'S QUILT LINED corduroy lbomber Knit collar and cuffs with zi pper front. Laminated corduroy:'Gold~ rust or brown in sizes S-M-L'Xl. Rag. 13.87 your choice 99 • - • GOLETA-688S.Hollister Ave. .• SAN BERN'tftOIN0-1055 W. 21st. Stre"t •GARDEN GROVE,12100 Harbor .Blvd. ' •SOUTH GAl'E-'S.700 Firestone Blvd.• •HUNTINGTON BEACH'-!i882~•ms Street • NORWALK-11600 'E, Alondra 81\ld . • NO RTH R I DG~-8999 Batbbi fflvd. • LONG B£ACH!..227b Bellflower Bl vd. ,• ALHAMBAA-2120 W. Main Street• •EAST LOS ANGELES-5600 E. Whittier Blvd.• •MANHATTAN BEACH -1200 N: Sa~ulved~_Blvd, •• •CULVER q lTV,-1QllZO Jeffe<Son Blvd._ • TORRANCE-3433 Sepulveda Blvd. 1 • (••OP EN WEEK DAYS 9:30am-10pm) MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10am-9pm SUNDAY 10am-7pm ("OPEN WEEK DAYS TILL 10pml / I ( \ ' ' I I ' 1 , 20 DAILY PILOT * Plavan .. • By JOHN ZALLER Of .. o.tflr .......... •t Plavan Scbool, whlch semis 10 ~. ' physically lwldlclpped children fJom I :. '" througbout Weal Or1Qge County and the '\o'.1 Harbor area. ls ~L to become Oranfe '-' County's fourth all-year school on Feb. 5. t-~· The FoW'ltain Yaney School Board t··i·1 voted un a nimously to install the ·~·I new school calendar at Plavan as \ • ' soon as preparations can be completed. •t" Trustees made the decision on the '" basis ol a 9S to 42 parent vote -et.5 per- , , cent approval -to try tbe all-year caJen. School Gets All-year Status Fe dar. The school serves 390 chlldren, of w-57 are ortbopedlcllly handicapped and 1% are mulU-bandlcapped. Tnl!t«s ordered tho dtstrtct stall to provide transpOttaUcn to 1Cbool1 on a traditlaoal calendar for students whose parents don't want to be lnvolvtd. For h&ndicapped children, this will mean a return to on 111-handlcopped ICbool In Santa Ana. School officlals say Plav1n ii the only school in the atate that teeb to integrate handicapped a n d noo-bandicapped children. · "The Plavan community ls ready for this plan," Dixie Stebbins, president of the Plavan PTO group, told trustees. Only one other parent from Plavan spoke at tbe meeting, and she also urged approval for the all-year plan. "1 "Our child la mulU-ba.ndlcapped an!! for her all-year schools are almoet a nece!lsity," said Clara Ford. "Even a long weekend i.! enough for her to forget." Trustees stressed in approving the plan that they were trying all-year schools for educational reasons only, and not as a method for conserving space. Unlike the other three county schools on the all-year plan, Fountain Valley will DOl stagger the attendance period of children in the school. All children will CtJme into school at one time for the start of a nine-week clan session, and all will leave together for the three-week vaca- tions. They will repeal this cycle four times a year, attending school 180 days tota1, the same number as children on tbe tradi- tional calendar. Trustees hope that elimination of the three-month 111Jmmer will cu~ · wn "summer learnlng loss " 1~ ~ educaton feel can be the 0 eqlQvilent of two manlhl wortlul prgrtsl. In 1ddi!Wa, they uid the ui<>ro treouent vacatlolia under the lll·Y"!" pion shout~ cut down the weariness end tenskms that build up during a niDe-rbootb scbOOI ye~'r: · "This is not some kind of ego lrip•ror us," said Trustee Fred Voss. "We're doing this because there is substantial evidence that it i.s better for children." He cited evidenCe showing that children with tbe. poorest grades sbo'.! • ' .. J, ,. Pft IC•S · RPPllCTIY RI 1 ' • '· ' t . •: First Boat S~ . : . 1 ..... San Francisco,'~;bQrat show, tne ~ of the season, opened Tuesday with sbow queen Angela May and ~ Claus teaming up for· some promotion. The qUeen arrived at Aquatic Park in an outboard pow- ered boat then jumped on Santa's back with a hag of toys for him before he was towed away on water skis by a ... plane. The show runs through Ile<:. 21. · .~mall Craft Warnings Now Called 'AdVisory' • ' \ • Sm:all craft operators who have ventured out to sea in the face of the familiar red triangular peMant. snapping from harbo r inltallations can now do so with less guilt of cnnscience -but maybe not ~safely. 'li>e pennant -or red Hght .-, pjght -~ no longer a ·~·" II will henceforth w~ an "-advl.9ory." 1'at'• the word from the Nltloilal Weather S1e r \I fc e whldi .believes tne n e w ~ogy wilJ reflect more~ ac:a.wateJy the true nature of lh& weather conditions - -----of J&.33 knots and/or ~w seas. ~, .. Ala> "WKAT is the advice? ~. thet il you see the red .pennant flying it will serve as an advisory to tune in on the latest weather forecast. Then knots. Then et~ the storm warning predicting winds of 41 to 63 knots, and finally, the dreaded hurricane wam!Dp denoting winds of 64 knoll or more produced by a tropical cyclone.I All but the small Cflfl'Wllrn- ing 'are bUed on 'l"IJ-dellned meteorloglcal condlliona. and wiU remain the same. The small craft wamlngs · are less preciJe· and vary in meaning from one 1oe.aUty to another. In ~ to mariners' objec\lonl about the viigueness and vadlbllity, the Weather Serv.ice Uld it was switching from !be word ''w1lrninl"to"~tbus lnfqnnlng -to <leclde for themselV<l·whethor the omer:ved condltlo111 or forecast con!titute a reel danfer. you can decide if you are ex-HERE IS a sample or the perlenced enough in boat Srnlll Craft Advisory as II wlU handling and if your boat is 'be issued over If.he Weather seaworthy enough to ~pe with Service's t.f~,drculta:, the expected weather -or "Small Craft" Advisor)r fn whether you had better stay in Effect. wtndl nortbe6St. zo to port. · · '° koolt;lhiraftemeen -llhif. '!be new terminology will ting to nortliftit 311 to 30 tab effect for salt l'Bll!r.....w.ots..IDlllil>tcapl JWO Jmots sailors Jan; 1. lt was 1n-Wednesday." troduced to Great Lakes boot. owners in 1971. ' 11Je Weather Service -. a cmn~t of \be--C:Ommerce Deportment'• 16tional Ocean and Atmospheric "Mminiatra- tioo -bas an ascending series of alerting messages for mariners. They are keyed to lncrelsingly hazardous weath- er. THE LOWES'll rung on lhe ladder bas always been the "Small Craft Wantlngs." Next In ~ ii the gale warn- ings Jot 1rinds 0,l M to 47 Hobie Title Regatta Set For Hawaii ·------ Some· 50 skippers from IS countries are expected to com. pete in' the first HOble Cat World Championship Regatta in Hawall, Jan. 15 ·ttroach Jan. n. ~tothe~ ~ there wlll be nve sklJiil.en! from the UD1ted Sia.-, 11 .. eoch from Jopon, Australii and H1wall ; three each from South America and ,Puerto Rico. two each ftom • • Australian Ton Leader SYDNEY, Austnlla (API -France and the Blhamas. and The AU1tral11n yacht Pilgrim one each frotn Germany, WMt belt the Gama111's Ydn by ·Germany, Switzerland, Saudi fOUl' nliautes 59 ~ Tue9-Arabia and New Gulnea. daJ to Win .. lleond race in To insure close compdjtion, tbe On6 Tllo ,C1f11 sertes ·and Cout Catamaran, bullders of late 1 narrow overall Point& thl Hobie Cat, is sNps)in1 54 1...i. lf-_,.. to Hawlll for the 'lbt 131Mnlle ,..,. carrlf!d 1.5 compellUon. All ol Ille hoots bmU JM*11a lo pq P1Jcrim 1 hive been lnspeci.d, mllched :I!"' '1Z.,~¥·l bJ ~equl~ alike Ind .; t1n thlld r dMiilCO belts,~ -_..i flipi1h, followed bJ tt6 nal. ,,, . ~ Utlfled Slates' Bullett ond llrl-· Pon .. ponts lrt apeoled to ...,., Bocapode. stsrt arriving In Honolulu Jin . l ....... ICUr Umtotf· StsiiM IS. -wlllldrawn after • 11lley 'lbere will he • qUJll!yfng ·-WIS damopd In ,1 reratts Jan . 17 and the flrol ,,..., ..... ~-!.'!'Id the 'clwnpionshlp ww-·~ Jon. II. ). l \ . D•C .. t4'1h, llllh, . ' ?lllh & t .71h • DISCOUNT ' . ' . I ' • DEPAJ:ITIVIENT " I . ~· ' . . " ., r • ·' ~ r STORES • \ j l ~ • . ' SAVE $3 ... /fin p'ortable. raclio DELUXE SOLID STAJE E AC/DC. Bun.in ""' oonl. Model No. FLV-14. . , SAVE $4 • ·o.,~er cleluxe ' ·SAV.E -~4 PRE.STO' fry~pan 8 SPEED BLEN.DER HIGH DOME COVER New, hard surf1ce. Completely submenibfe. Oet1ch1ble contr~. Model No. XFPT11. S ca.ip cootatner. 3 contron.d cvtlo1pooilr. Modol No. 841 12!! ............... -. ,......., -1- ...... • " •• •• purr ·:--.,-· r.·' ' I ' . ~ ... • TOILETRIES DEPT. THE POWER DE -TANGLER BY 9SILLETTE, O.t1ngle1 wet or dry hair. · Leaves hair arnooth ind healthy I 1 98 lookinlJ, Helps pr.went h1ir I"" , • demogo. REG .. 18;91t-" SCHICK SAVE $10 •Rug adjuttment position • 3·position handle • Converts easily for cleaning attach- ments. Mode~ No. 707 upright YGCUUlll cleaner HO..O.Y..ER CONVERTIBLE SAVE $4 • styllng clryer 97 Model No. 336. ' • ., REG. 14.97 2 speeds for faster drying.1•. 87 RIG, 19.87 " •GOLETA-6865 Ho!Hstlt' Avt. •GARDE Ill GROVE-12100 Horbor Blvd. •HUNTINGTON BEACH-9882 Ad1m1 StrHt • NORTHRIDGE-8999 B1lbo1 Blvd. • ALHAMBRA-2120 W. Main Street• •MANHATTAN BEACH-1200 N. S.pulvtd1 Blvd.•• • •SAN BERNARDtN0-1055 W. 21st. StrHI •SOUTH GATE-5700 Firestone Blvd~• • NORWALK-11600 E. Alondre Blvd. • LONG BEAOt:i-2270 Bellflower Blvd • •EAST LOS ANGELES-5GOO E.'Whitti•r Blvd.• •CULVER CITY-10820 Jellerson Blvd. • • TORRANCE-3433 Sepulveda Blvd. " (''OPEN WEEK DllYS 9:30am-10pml MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10am·-9pm SUNDAY 1Dam-7pm ('OPEN WEEK DAYS TILL 10pm) .. ., ' I ' I l < .. " ' " ' '~, Dtcemblr u, 1972 PtlOT-ADVERTISEJI IS 9t "Mommy, a lady from some store soys the doll house you ordered is in." All-Je•r l' acation . Tiburon House Overhangs Bay • ) Christion Scilme Mani.tor Service ~ . 'l'JBURO~ -How WQUld yoy like to live in a vacation -the year round? How v.iillct you like It ID be just 30 minutes .away from the city you enjoy most, like San ri-tac:o, wtth all lb archit.ectural charm and cultural mjl business activittes? \,Bob ud Pll ·GMz opted for those features when he ~ ud built their many-led coolemporary house -. whlcb literally overhangs San Francis<o Bay. '!be reclM>Od atructure barely touches land at all, but b sup-s the water by poured ooocrete piers and pilings. to Its spectacu1ar water views and distant the house has solid side walb for privacy from nOiilibcirtrwz houses, numerouo decks fO<" ootdoo< living, J la piti of Ks own for e<sy boating and waterskling. ). . , THE GOETZl!S DECIDED they wanted their first ~.to be their aCond, as wel}, the desired all-in-one, the but of -ud city., ''The nice thing about choosing Tiburon," says archi- tect ~. "b that once yoo come off Golden Gate Bridge, • · ''l'~e'• t-Muc• llr••• going on • ·• • tee •••If •1,.... to ..,•tc•, -4 ~ •11cfl sea fife te ohse,..,.,. T .... ~-cll•nge~ •l-te •• 111iaute.' ""'8t')s~ or~tros. on the ferry with its panoramj.c views. yOlr are in a ~ almoopbe~ where .peopl< boat, bike, play ten-* One! otberwtse eojoy the pk:asur<s ol small·t""1, sea- !)lving." )--·-boll> aummer Obd winter, Ille Goetzes enjoy the moot ol alt ·1n ,,_ w.-r, they like ll<llhing ~ thm l11Clf<>ltc\eting ottr to Sall'!OlllAi !gr breakfast. l'j1iin' their windows. they watch the lilbtiJ of San Fran- eliiio .fUcW In the dlstoooe and <heck the boal traffic "" tlw•wate!', incllldlng glint.aircraft carriers, ocean liners, ""' ll!lall sailing craf\. ; "'.'WE REALLY DON'T . HAVE . much tl~ to look at TV," Bob comment!. "There's too much drama going on ooilllde ID take aw-atlentlon, too many binls ID watch. IDd 1 too much sea IHe to observe. The scene changes mmute by minute and is never the same." An ill ardlite<I, wtth olfk:es in Oakland and San ~. Goelz spedallzea in coodomiDlum and cl,wter- _,, design. . Pat Goetz with tv.·o yoang neighbor friends -Joanne -and 0..rry Noble -three yean ago organized Llbop l!p<dolhlng in bandicralb and art, called. Shore Bltds. They repreaent, on coaslgnment the W1rk of more thin' IO craftamen and numerous artists of the area. ,'Ille !hop has not ooly given Pat Goelz an outlet for her ~al talmts, but als> a source for many of the ll!;dem poinlJ!Jgs and bandlcrafb with which sbe ae«s- ..r&ts ber home. :·A THREE-DIMENSIONAL woven rnacrame s~pture bmm dl.rectly over the baby grand piano. , r An4 Ibo ludiclously mtus family antiquea, ~ding -~llak......,; wnh modern metal and glass ta : Ttie Wills are W!Ute, which contrast strikingly with dirt otain. ~ wood )!elms, llUPl!'lrt PQ!lls, and WOQdwot"k, Seuhell1 llulte an effective contr1butloD as dEiOOratioo, too. 'Jbe GOetue: refer to Tiburon as a "fantastic place to live," ud say they eooldn't Imagine living anywhere ebe.-lnifinter they olten sit in h"'1t ol_a_cozy fire and listen to a raging !tonn ouUide. Waves lap or surf ~ds bentath them. With ita uncerlain elements and nusts, winter is a favorite season w1th P..at.. BQBGOETZ was archltect foe the boos< and be.blew ...U the 'lamlly needs It had lo serve. He liad thtte sons ud his \.tie had three daughten, by previous marriages. Only """ teen-age daughters live at IM>me now, but he hid ID ileolgn a house that woold ...Uy ac<OllllllOdate vfllb !rOm all the childn<I ud their &tends. , The IMol bit ol plannlrig ho ever did, he says now, was ID give <N« the whole """""' floor tA> d!lldren'• bedrooms , and thelo own sitting room where they would look at u..1r own TV pl bed d""1 their lrtends. ,Re ~ the master ·bedroom, bath, and a separate -deck .. the l1nt noor where he and bis wile eoold roaut ID privacy and quiet. lie thinks the arrange-~ mfY well have saved tbeir sanity a few times In the put. Boll ,AL!IO RAS a small 91udy-den where he can work al -He terms the kltcllen, dining room and living lOOll'l as111famlly community rooma." ' 'Jber9 11 no family room, as such, he says, but "we don't mlf!) it alt Wt hofeWbat we need." ··~' euy-maI-.ce by the .use ol natural ma 1-ndwood dllW 1elt to weather gracefully, illln&le , llld wood ...... and windows. He avoided ...... "inelal -.... -Ill salt air. r 00e iJ1 ._ days, he ays, he'll paint the ooly thing \Ml -it -the --· I Remapping Ordered . ' DAILY PILOT ! . :Phenoharbita:I Dangers Emphasizea Bjl DR. STEINCROHN Dear Dr. Slelncrohn : ~1y daJJgllttr baa been taking barbituales as 1leeplog pilll f,.. the, past threo years. She is a mother or rour very active children and says she needs ber rest at night. I wlil with her years ago when her doctor prescribed only one pill to be taken only occaslonallr at night. I know she hasn't seen him since, so I suppose that she has Increased the dosage herseli. What do you think of a 36- year-old ll'Oman laking as many as three and four pills at night! That's what she ad- mits to taking now. -Alra. G. CoMMENT: The answer is evident: too many. Some peo- ple graduall)I slip into the habit of taking more than they should. This Is also true of li- qbor, cigarettes, excessive ex- ercise, overiating and all the other habits that try our nerve and will. I believe insomnia should be overconie if possible. An oc- casion.al sleeping pill prescril>- ed by a physician is the answer to the problem for many lhtusallds of persons. nut there are others who de- pend on them so that they demand m6re and m o r e DOC'l'OR IN THE HOUSE phenobarbital to give U1em rest at night. I'm sure her doctor hasn't prescribed unliniited amounts of the drug. So the question is: Where is she getting all those tablets? Some patients like your daughter manage to iet them witbout their doctor 's sanction and al last become addicted to phenobarbital. They can't get along without It because they take doses that are loo high. When this hap- ,PeOB1 s\Jdden withdrawal may cause ''tin comfort ab I c symptoms. T he r efore, I suggest you try to c:onvince your daughter to see her physician again, confess her dilemma, and be will find a way in whlch she can painlessly slop taking so much phenobarbital. Dear Dr. Stcincrohn: I would like a lillle advice about my ~year-()ld husband wbo has just been examined aOO i:s a hea lthy man. Although his doctor 1ay1 his cholesterol is normal. I am worried about it because he has been eating the following breakfast ror years: two eggs with bacon or sausage, two pieces of to..-ist with butter, a glass nf grapefruit juice and sometimes a little pastry. His doclor sa ys t h is breakfast is all right. but 1 keep wondering. lsn 't too moch cholesterol in the diet detngerous for the heart? - Mrs. C. C0ft1ft1ENT : I agree with his doctor. Your hU5band has done well for 68 yean, and I ~·ou.ldn't change the, game plan of his Ufe at this time. As I keep saying, there's too m u c h cholesterolophobia around anyway. I think that so1ne doctors have frightened patients too much about •hat they should and should not eat. Frankly, we still aren't sure a b o ut the actual relationship between cholesterol and heart attack!. DEC . 14th, 19th, i:;;;;;;;;;;;~ii~;;;;~~.AVALON .. SA:VE 33%' , Ide.al'• ltlne•ltane· ltolne sklll set TM ilDu-..cilly 'llrhatcMml toy with ft bint • ,.,..., 90llnd. As...,. on T.V. ltottle & lue cuttlne kit An· exciting new hobby craft fit'1 f1sc:in1'tin11 6 fun. ' ' 499 south ltend's ' doll coach . PNtty pink candy P9tl t-.: A' muc far any ......... SAVE 403 Ideal's tornado ltowl Set up your pins, releue the tomado lop • , . and the tf11iu:y Mf!iltf,. 297 SAVE 503 SAVE 25% coleco comma.I'd cont!~l;.f~!~ 9 !.! t.c:k -.... you contrat thl .... -.... -=·~=-==!507::6:. :::~~;;---~·:~":.~~!!!~ SAVE 4.52 <OOJ) -s.t ... r. team " e11•IP111e•t ltelt1 Ac1 1• ..... dthy Wt, Model 3001. --.......... 2'7 ...iooc1•U unl•toe,AGT • ....... lift__.......-t .,..._ f~I tMrilti. fl'REVl~L V SOLD FOA 7 .41 SAVE 2.00 radio let ••eon Hewy ........... _. "'""lllt11\1.1ei:ll P4•;u 11c ti"" Rmt 11alsl*1ri r....,.., , •!.?. , .... ' ' i' kenner'• mad cap molly ' • SAVE 3.47<00J) s.t.a.r. team •P•ce ltoot• , ....... p&.\i6, • aMhionrtd boQU., •Ith "lPjO" blndln.., ' !Ind '-"'· i.,.~-­tor t:.ction. Modl4 3003-1 1•1 ' -PREVlolsL SOLD FOR 5.44 , GOLETA-6865 Hollltt• Ave. •SAN BERNARDINd-1055 W. 21'st. Stroer •GARDEN GRDVE-12100 Harbor Blv.d. •SOUTH GATE-6700 Firestone Blvd.• · MEGO'S action lack son 8" tall and rNdy for action. 99c REG. 1.19 radio "rodeo" stake wawon :.::. ...... :::: . .:::.:: 15'' fut ... rNWy. Colllol -ltrTiH Oymally (l>-1"8 Angeles), and MCiUMENTO -Elahi slgned~'ill-by:.,_Oo.:.:,_v·:_:,R_:o_:n.::a.:..l d., __ Calllornla cities that elect Reaoi counclbnen by -1natlons ol CIUes affected are 0.kland, ·dlltrlct 1nd'1l·ilrp syaten11; Albambrl, Poaadena, Santa llld t1tablllh C<lW!Cilmanic Anl, San Diego, San Leandro, dlltrlcts by registered voter CompWll and Pomono. •HUNTINGTON BEACH-9882 Ad1ms StrMt • NORlllALK-11600 E. Alondra Blvd. •'NORTHRIDG0-8999 Balbo• Blvd. • LONG BEACH-227oBellflo wer B1'd. ' • ALHAMBRA-2120 W. Miin Strtet • •EAST LOS ANGELES-5600 E. Whittier Bl'ld. • ~ ··••<• _-''' -i., will hive ID redistrict San Diego and Pomona hovo .. the bult ol populallon .. alreody • ndillr1cted vol111> die ....it of a now law "" tarlly oo the ·blsl> of -'8· aulhored by Sen. Me"71' on. •MANHATTAN BEACH-1200 N, Sepulveda Blvd.•• •CULVER CITY-10820 Jefferson Blvd. ~· ' ' • TORRANCE-3433 Sepulveda Blvd.•• \••OPEN WEEK DAYS 9 :30am-10p'!'I NDAY THRO'SATURDAY 10am-9pm SUNDAY 10.m-7pm ('OPEN WEEK OAYS TILL 'Op inl ....,. _______________ ., I p 'l -'r • • • ' • ' DAtLY PILOT WedlJt!dQ, °""""" U , 1972 PILOT ·AOVERnSER J f Wrecking Crews Love Their Jobs Be Choosy • Ill Writing for Job'·t tnodest price. Ctnmlly speakinr, a Jetter writlni caropalgn u Ume COO· sumlng and costly In clerical expenoe and postage. I would use It as a backstop, rather UWt as a primary tool such iB newspaper want ads anii employment agencies. Still, a6 a long shot, writing to com- panies has paid aft for too many applicants to Ignore: n. as one way ol finding a gooG job. If your job intOl'Vi.,.. dwtnd1e, It's time to get tb know your reference Ubrarlall better -who, by the-way. would be pleasantly surp<iaed to receive a thank you note ii he (or she) goes out of his way to help )'OU. • f'tle "" to • .,., .. -· •t•rt ........ ing ,, ., ., .... ., ,.., couldn't destro11 • f»ulldin9.' crunchers in the West claim- ing a $100 million share, CaJlfonlia Business said. In the infant stages of the industry, most wreckers were former Anny demolition men. Nowadays, they're m o s t I y unskilled laborers who come up through the ranks. A3 another spolresman puts it, "There's no college degree in breaking windows." Most of the men say they enjoy their work, "but not to the point of sadism. I've yet to see a man start abaking because be couldn't destroy a building," points out one wrecker in San Francisco. "People love to destroy things. You'll always see more peopl~ at a destruction site than you wUl at 1 construction site." Destruction workers had better enjoy their work -it's anything but. a safe )ob. With compeUtion so keen._ safety is often overlooked. IN THE SAN Francisco Bay area alone, in the past tour years there have been three worker fatalities. Last year one wrecker dropped a five- story brick wall on a busy thoroqbfare. Luckily. t w o trolley wins were the onJy victim!'. Becau.w of a history of recilea btbavioc, insurance coots have skyrocketed fol: the industry, !hi! publicat!On .. id. As a mull, an unskilled laborer coltl a wrecking com- pany more than $100 a day. ·-~ii that on more than to 7llie jObs, it'' financ y imPolsl'ble to take !hi! time to salvage maf<rlala. Despite lhe rain, wbkh tends to dampen destruction work, and general holida y se-. inactivity, the wreckers say they keep busier than their construction w o r k e r counterpart!. "People are always wreck- ing hou.ses and redevelopment agencies clear 1 1 n d con- stantly," says John Salli van, estimator for Cleveland Wreckini CO. lJl San Fran- cisco. With 15 nati<ml facilltie<, c. W C u the "grandadcy" of !hi! home wreckers. AFl'ER CHRISTMAS , destruction really piclui up, he says. Ownen: then begin deatroying with a penchant to beat the March 1 deadline to Job Pla1i Praised COpltol /40Ws Service SACRAMEN'ro The state'& wellare--to-work pro- gram is sbiiWing good resulll, ornctals say. The program, lnll<lduced four months ago under which employable welfare recipient.! are assigned to public oenice work or training in rebn for ... 11.,.. grants 11 regular jobl can't be found, was termed a success in the ail coaUea tn which It ., .. tlat1'd. · Results lhowed lhlt 11 per· cent ol the wellllre recipients who had been classified as omployoble t1lOftd • i n t o ......... Jobs Jn the Pri••I< -· .. -f : To Play .Fin.le • 0 • T.M. FOLD AND ROLL TABLE TIENNIS TABLE DILUXI 4-PLAnR TA.all TINNll SIT 'S" "h" wood-pro top with lore-free, lawn green finish and regulation white striping. Folds and rolls H TROM 10'' SIDEWALK BIKE Red enamel finish with cobra fenders. Vinyl guard grips with , streamers. Adjustable handlebars and seat. Nylon bearing wheels with white line tires. 9••· HEDSTROM 10'' TRICYCLE Cobra fendtr, chromed handle bar with white vinyl grips. Adj~stoblt seat. Bearing front wheel. 6'' SUGAR RAY ROBINSON aOXING GLOYll Fully lined ond bound with padding . ,,, , .. 51%1 SALl •o"'• 5·1 yrs. 3.H 9·12 yrs • ..... 12·Aduit 1.49 24"Wll0UOHT IRON aARITOOL forsafety. SAY~ 1.50 1.50 1.50 Heavy wrought 1ron bar stool with 3" pqdded seat. Great stool for your holiday need1. 10.ROLL CHRISTMAS PAPER AND FOIL COMBO Combo consists of JO rolls o{ exciting Christmas wrap. 6 rolls of paper, 30"x62", and 4 rolls of embossed foil, 30"x28".,. A total of 100 square feet. 99 7 PC. PORCILAIN INAMIL COOKWARllD Decorative ~ookware in bright color porcelain with "design. &>rcelain on steel for better cooking and. #C032/33, easier cleaning. 19'' WISTBIND 30-CUP PARTYPIRK Makes. 30 cups C?f delicious ~·•· looks at its best for all table settings. Brews coffee automatically. Coffee stays at servinr"I tem~roture. ® .. .. 9•• WARING AUTOMATIC CAN OPENER AND KNIFE SHARPINIR 'Complete blade assembly pops out for easy cleaning. Heavy duty mdgnet lid holders • Knife 6'' sharpener keeps cutlery at itt best. PITIWIATIR Keep your dog warm 1hi1 winter with this 100% Orlon* acrytic knit sweater. It's completely washable and dries quickly. ,.--------. .FROM BUILDIRS IMPORIUM 7·FT. DILUXI ARTIFICIAL SCOTCH PINE #3d7.0l SO RIAL THAT IYIN SANTA CAN'T TILLH· Rich and full bodied green tree. Ever so easy to assemble. Use it year ofter year. Price includes 1trong, sturdy stand. u ·SiJJ!·1'1 N • "INSJA SHAPI" ARftPICIAL CHRISTMAS TRIE You've seen it on TV, now see it at B.E. An exceptionally rich and full bodied, realistic, downswept poiy hristmoa tree. This big and beautiful tree assembles instant! . DILUXI 19'' CHRllTMAI TREE STAND Without a doubt., the most beautiful tree stand at such a low price!Enomeled in Christmas colors of green and red Generous size water container. Two prongs to hold tree straight. HOLDS TRIES 3V•'" TRUNK I'' CHRISTMAS PIT STOCKING Give your dog·a treat for Christmas. This t colorful Christmas wrapped stocking comes complete with chew bone, squeaky toys i.~~-:L· s~~::~:.; 1 ••· ~· I .Jc 9'' 10" avo;lable. '--------' ~ -----===~-A"'\IMERICA'S GREATEST H~RDWARE . STORESr----------. 1212........ WISTMINSn· • u11warMttmn•vL ••• .. •p••" -v•unY11Ws1. ILTORO ..... llOClftllD •aoaLOfMWhilTAVL ATIOlDDWUTn. ...~ .. ... ATUIKOLIAYI. ATBTOIOID. llUaCI ·~~~VJ. LAllA8RA m•.~·.tt.~:::.'wt. PULURTON f,~.~~~=:.~. COSTAMI~ uW~~r:.~~L LONG BEACH •VAN.NIJYS e ilVEllSIDE e CQVINA.• LA CRESCE.HTA:• THOUSAND 'OAKS •SIMI e LANCASTER e CHATSWORTH e TARZAN A• UPLAND •SAUGUS •CHUI.A VISTA • •GOLETA •VISALIA •YICT~UE •GRANA!) .. ",HILLS .. • SAN BERNARDINO !I CAMARILLO ·e !1AKU$FIElD •.HACIENDA HEIGHTSeSANTA MARIA •SANTA CLARA.• CORONA •ESCONDIDO• SPRING. VALLEY• LADERA HEIGHtU ~SEO~• EAST LOS ANGELES •DEL AMO • . ' • PILOT-ADVERTISER (( By Phil lnterlandi Wtdntsday Oeetmbtt 13, 1972 DAil V PILOT 23': Busing Foe Hits No Enforcement QUEENIE Newest Solons 'Initiated' • C&pttol Nm llenlce SACRAMENTO -Sixteen new lawmakers will journey to Sacramen4t. Wt January to try to handle the problems of the biggest state in the nation. One lawmaker who made tile trip four years ago ~lob­ byists put it together alter each election} said he learned more about gourmet dining, drinking and politics than he ever learned about the state as a whole. pcrt unity for these men to become acquainted wlth the state and ils problems." guess l said what J meant, T told her 'J feel just like a pro- stitute'," he said, "and l did." C&pltol N..,. Service SACRAMENTO Assembl yman Floyd Wake fie Id !R-Huntlnaton Put) wants to know why State Supt. of Public Instruc- tion WU.On RU~ isn't en- forcing proviliol)S of Prop. 21 , the anU.lorced busing in- itiaUve approved by nearly n.. milll!!!> Cal~ornla voten a inoi\th ago. --- - Watelleld, who spearheaded the initiative drive, claims each school board member who (personally) now violates the law under Prop. 21 is su~ ject to a taxpayer's lawsuit for using public monies to bu8 studeqts or implementing the Bagley Act In any way. Prop. 21 repealed the Bagley Act and aded a section to the F.ducation Code wblcb says, "No public school student ~. becaus~ Qt_ race, creed, or color, be ~igned to or be required to attend a particular school.'' W AK.EFIELD S A Y s ac· cordlng to the slate Constitu· tlon, the propOl!tlon should have gone into effect the day after the Nov. 7 election. l;lowever, apparently some sebopl districts with busing programs in effect h a v e elected to await the outcome of a test IBlllit fl.led Nov. 29 by the NatlODjll Asociation for the Advancement of Colored People against the Sacramen· to Clly School District. The NAACP petition to Superior Court seeks to have the in- itiative de c la re d un- constitutional. At best, it will be weeks before a court decision. and it could be months. Meanwhile, WakeDeld says, school boards do not have the right or the authority to ovemile the man- date of the people by refusing to comply with Prop. 2t. In an open letter to Riles, be said, "l would remind you that you, as the elected Superin- tendent of public instruction for the state of California, are respooslble for the moral and legal actions of any and all ICbool boards under your j~·'' 'II' AJtEirIEw RAS promis- ed to take the case to the U.S. supreme Court, if necessary, to protect the wishes of the voters, 'lbe..,..,palgn to qualify the initiative and urge voter ap- proval possibly cost less lbl\O any other on the November ballot. Wakefield says only $1(1,000 to $21,000 WU Cl· pended for the entire opera- tion. lt was a total volunteer ef-' fort. he added. Volunteers col- lected approximately 400,000 330,000 quallfying. The NAACP le~al challenge to Prop. 21 was filed by Sacramento at torney Nathanlel S. C<>lloy on behaU of Erman J. A-1ason. a poverti - program director, and his two daughters, Lo rlasbone, 6, and Ema)eah. JZ:--Botb a 1 e students at Camelia Elemen- tary School which , the -petition mates, has an enrollment 90 per<e11t black. 'I1IE PmTION states the Wakefield Initiative forbids the school district from taking affinnative action to end segregation. It also contends th e measure could cut off federal dollars to the district, because under Its provisions it is impoMible for the district to comply with its own non· dt9«.!rtmlnatlon agreementwith the Department or Health , Education and Welfare. The petitioners also dema'hd that the Sacramento School Board immediately adopt a plan to eliminate or all eviate racial segregation and racial imbalance. They want the plan to become effective not later than Jan. 31. ~ The district is ordered to answer at a hearing on Dec. 14. Department S~pported Capitol News Service SACRAMENTO -The state Deplrtment of Consumer Af· fairs and Bureau of Collection and Investigative Se r v i c e :s were upheld by a decision or the California District Court of Appeals in an action to rtn)l)Ve a San Jose woman from tbe coltectlon agency business for abusive treatment of del>tofl, Mn. Jeanette KarcUn, an emjloye iii a liow defunct' San JoM conection ~cettcy, w•s ·-by the bure•• In 1968 and 1970 ol alx separate counts ol mega! coll..Uon practlctt. These Included representing hertelf as the secretary of an attorney, using a false na me, thrutenlng a debtor with ar- rest •and improperly threaten- inlf wage garnishments and at- tachments. ' ln another developmeqt the author of California's .schools integration guidtllnes law has asked the state Supreme Court to rule Prop. 21 un- constitutional. Assemblyman W i 11 i a m Bagley (R-8an Rafael), said the proposition nulllfies the Jaw he wrote which was in- tended to provide orderly in~ tegration without having to . resort to busing. PROPOSmoN ZI , he said is a friend of the court brief, strips school boards of the tools they need to carry out their "CODStitutlonal duty to eliminate segregation.'' The res1J!~ he said, is that t:i;;;:;f;Jl~/).i:' the courts wit be "forced to 1;.-13 order busing." @ O.F'-~-.·1t'2.Y.W· ..... --. Bagley said his recom-"Your ewants to take you tbdinner.,, and she say.s mendation was in a brief filed not to forget yOur credit card."· in the case of the Santa ~------------------­ Barb8ra School D i s tr t c-t against the Santa Barbara Try Saturday's News Quiz Superior Court. CAlll TABLE LAMP YOUR CHOICE OF WALNUT, NATURAL OR GREEN.,, 1499 . - AUTOMAnC 24-HOUR TIMIR aYINtHMATIC Don'tentii:e burglars! Keep your home safe iiii~.;~wh_en you are away. Keep a light on ot night This timer automaticolfy turns lights on and off at whatever time you desire. Half of this group of "fresh men" started 0 f r rttenUy by accepting the offe'r of lobbyists to take a two-day junket from one end o( California to the other. Stops on tbe charter tour In- cluded Sacramento, Eureka, OakJand, San Diego, La Jolla. San Onofre, San Clemente and Los Angeles. SUBJECTS COVERED in- cluded resources and en· vironmental issues, state and federal water projects, timber and agricultural problems, "wild rivers" (fight over the · Eel Rlver ), Sacra mento-San Joaquin Delta and Nortb Coast flood control projects, urban problems, revenue sharing, educ at io n, housin.g, oceanography, nuclear power generation, hospitals a n d airports (noise a n d con4 gestion). SHOPCUn 3/8'' DRILL ' "Hell," he said. "I can1- (NEWS ANALYSIS) paigned in 1968 on a platform of property tax reform, and it took us until the I Ith hour of the last legislative day four years later to approve it." TOUR COORDINATOR th.is year was Francis J. Connors, legislative advocate for the California State Chamber of Commerce. eonnon didn't take kindly to intimations that the trip for lawmakers was a junket. "If the slate paid for it, they'd say lt was a junket, but with private suwoct-it's not," the chamber rft>resentative declared . "It's a fantastic op- 50% more drilling power. Double reduction gears and burnout protected moto r. SCHEDULED TO make the trip were Assemblymen-elect Louis J. Pappan ( 0 ·San Mateo \, Ray Gomales iD- BakersfieldJ, Robert P. Nim- mo lR-Bak.ersfield), John E. Thurman Jr. (D-Stanislaus1. Mike O. Antonovich (R-G len- dale), Julian C. Dixon and Frank Holoman ( D -L o s Angeles), and Law r c n cc Kapllo£f (D-San Diego). The new lawmakers ha\'e been in and out or Sacra1nento since e1ection day with brief- ings, housekeeping d u t i r s . sceretarial interviC\\'S and the like. Some have already been the target for attention fron1 the "third house" (lobbyists). One of those newly elected was invited to dinner by a 100. byist during his recent stay in the capital. "WHEN DINNER was.over. and .my wife and l left the restaurant, she turned to me and asked just how I felt. I Why all this attention for t~ new, somewb.at bewildered legislators when there is no pl'nd1ng legislation in fron l of eiU;er house? . The answer is simple. Bu'.f' the man a drink, help him find an apartment, give him SOm4! airline tic kets. make certain he has a nice Christmas present, and, hopefully, he'll be a vote in your pocket whe11 the lime comes. Foot Clinic Scheduled A foot clinic will be con- ducted today for mort than 50 students at the Methodi,st Church of Hun- tington Beach Nursery School. Sponsored by the Orange County Podiatry Association. these free examinations can be requested by any county group. For more details, call 174-1700 or 633-0040. 0 ~·········•••.27.SO ••• 2o "pc. 1/4" AND w· DllYE :soc1<nm STANDARD OR METRIC YOUR CHOICE • •• mAtKAY 'SPEAKHS, PAIR ••••••• 4.99 H211ANGUP SPJAl(lRS, PAIR ••••••• 4.99 SIP DUAL OIL FILTER • Meets rigid performance specifications • Exceeds all listed equipment and/or warranty specifications,. • Uncon ditionally g uaranteed 1'9 #ll7f1162M • -) COLoar1y ANTENNA All -channel VHF/UHF/FM . Receives stereo, FM and monaural. {Most and wire not included.) SD n. rt 59c wt11--- SAVl30C CUSTO~IJI"" FIREICREIN --·- So easy. We will hove the factory make a screen to your exact specificqtionsl Up to 50,.. wide. 13'9 WORKBENCH OR DISK 4'8"x2N'x36" siza. Mode of $turdy particle board. ' Great for use in the garage, or cut it to desk heig ht for a Christmas g ift for all. 711 EADY TO ASSEMBLE'--------' IR DEFLECTOR WITHF For forced.air heating systems. Can be used for either high or low wall registers. Deflects air downward, keeping rooms and floors warmer. Vent not included, 1•9 #52'---'=~---./ IMP RIAL DISHMASTE.- Take the drudgery out of her holiday dishwashing. Wall or deck mount unit. Washes and rinses in one easy motion. Cleans dishes, pots and pans. PRICE PflSftR IHOWIRHIAD Fully adjustable for gentle flow or invigorating spr!)y. Afford younelf the luxury of a refreshing shower. 5'9 SPANA WALL DECOR Beautifu lly prefinis hed in dork walnut. Ea sy to install. Just one screw or a single nail holds each single or multiple support bracket. SHUYES SAU SAYE BRACKETS SALE SAVE 3 FT, 3.97 2.02 SINGLE 2.99 1.00 4 "· 6.77 1.22 DOUBLE 6.77 1.22 8.77 2.72 TRIPLE 9.99 3.00 'VO"XD YD"S. MASKING TAPE Top quality masking tape, JA." wide by 60 yards long, for all of your do-i t-yourself needs. -23c COLUMBINE SPRAY PAINT ·Holi day colors just in lime. For interior and exterior use. ••• 33c AMERICA'S GREATEST HARDWARE STORES r-~~~~~~~~ TU.n. 121211v1M111w. --MIMSnR •n1waTlil;::iAvL auu&PARK .... vAWTvllWsr. ,.,,,..'"""" • ••O<.U.orMIWPOITAVI. -..:••• ATiOLDlll n~ • AYUICOLIAYL IL TORO AT(Lto101D. OIUUI.. 1»iaLnmuA~ LAHA. 8·aa m1w.LA1A&U1LYD, ., 24'SLCllAPMAlllAVL 2nL1nMsT • .... ______ ...,;•;,:.T{,;.TU;;;•,;,;••;;.•;;.YL;,;.. __ __. ,ATllACllllYD. PULUR10" lTITATICOUfflllYO. COSlAMISA ATIUTAAMAAVL 'LONG BEACH •VAN NOYS• RIVERSIDE •COV!NA.•lA CRESCENTA•THOUSAND "OAKS •SIMI• LANCASTER •CHATSWORTH •TARZAN>.• UPLAND •SAUGUS •CHULA VISTA •GOLETA •VISAL~ •VICTOR.VILLE• \)RANA!>> '.HILLS'• S~N BERNARDINO It CAMARILLO·• ~AKE~SflELD •.HACl~NDA HElGHTS eSANTA MARIA •SANTAClAllA1•CORONA •ESCONDIDO•SPRJNCl VAU.iYi•IADQAHEIGHTS•USEDA ·~.LOSANGELES .DEL AMO ' I'' .. • f I I I • , ' ~ • J • <I DAILY PILOT Midwifery Resurging I Crowing Demar1d Re ported in California l ~ SACRAMENTO ~UPI• -The arl of since, under the watchful e.)'t! 0( tbe stale nlngham, chief of the Bureau of Maternal imidwUer)'. outh1y,·ed 111 C:ilirorn ia since Board of Medical Exan:Uners. Chll<l.,lleaJth ln tbe state Public llealth 1949. is making a L'Ofl1C'b.1ck and may be But in ~Jareb be was convicted on Department. "And we are aware ol the on the verge or rebirt h ln the natioo's three counts of practicing medicine IJ1"6Uting intenst in home births." 1nost populous state. \\'ilhout a license and was placed on pro-•·-··-· A new. gr0.,.,.i11g demand for midwives bation wilh the condition he would 11-fanY, states now permit midwives to h..'ls been generated by the desire of engage in no more midwifery. deliver a baby unaided but require that many couples for "natural" childbirths. "No doctor will do home deliveries the midwife be a nurse with 1pec1&1 !he shortage of doctors -particularly in nowadlQ's," be said, 11But the demand is training in the field. rural areas -and iht' 1\•tsh or some hish. So with the ind ivldualt.sllc-type pa· The number of licensed midwives na· \\'Qml.'n's !iber;11 ion1sts to a\'Oid male Uents. some doctors say, "Well, I know tionwide bas increased rrom 400 a decade obstetricians. or a nlid\\'ife. · .' " ago to about t,200 t.oday, and tht demand Anolher fac1or is 1ha1 rnld11·ives pro-SOME EVIDENCE EXISTS of other for more midwives is mushrooming, ac· vide 1nore individualized care than most forms of apparent illegal midwifery in .. cording to the In.temational Con- physicians and ean spend 111ore time 1vith California. federation of Midwives. the mother before. during and after childbirth. ''We do know a certain amount of iJ. "'n>e business of having a baby now in . b legal midwifery is being practiced in the an ordinary hospital is an expensive and ··0ot·tors are J\.\•fully busy wrt h" . " "d Dr G A.. f .1 ....... ""... • "-surgeries and other medical things and, ippie communes, 581 · eorge ._.,. requenwy impersonal e.t""'...,nce.' "wr if you spend a little more time with the • · ningham said. "Many doctors are mothe1·s. it"s much better for them' -overworke:d and bru.,que io their ip- the)' feel at C:iSC," said c. harlotle proach., We see midwifery as a way to humanize childbirth." Alarcon . a 62-year-otd Los Angeles n1ld" 1fe \1 ho h;1s deh1·cred about 580 babies. A t'ULL..Tli\1E NURSE and a grandmother. ~1.rs. Alarcon is one of t\\·o 1nidwives still allvc and working >n'ho were permitted by the Legislature to keep a midwife's license \\'hen the law ·was repealed 23 years ago. Th(' olher rc1naining midwife is Marie L>r Alcn1:1ny. 72. Los Angeles. All otht'r n11d1r1ves practicing in l!M9 have since died or gone out of business. ~trs. Alacron said in an lnterview that il "·ould be "a "'ondcrful idea'' if the Lt>gislalure "·ould revi\'e the old midwife licensing law. Just such a move is afoot and appears to have a good chance ol success. :\ssemblyman Gordon W. Duffy, a llanford Republican respected for his e:ri:- !1t.'rl1sc in the nursi ng field, said he 1Yill 111tre>duct' u bil l in the 1973 session lo 11·1dt>n lht• st·o pc of the legal fun<.·tions nu rse~ tnay f)t'rform. including normal tlu!db1r1h ONE CALIFORl\1Arl \\•ho y.·ould be pan1c:ularly pleased if midwifery was legalized is Norman Casserly, the only 1nale mid"•ife in the state. The 4ft..year-old Lakeside bachelor says he has ··officiated'' at the birth of about 3.;,QO babies "·it hout any serious com- plications. He b;is neve.r resorted to su.rgcry. drugs or forceps. Twenty years ago, he quit medical school because he .refused to speed l:hildbir1h by artificial means and has been ··officiating'' at child births ever UPIT.._..... J,lquer Ll•dt Oregon Alcohol Safety official holds "Blood Alrobol Calucu· lator" that is designed to "guide" drinker on what his limit is for safe driving. ltem is sold at all ltquor stores. A SURVEY OF THE state's hospitals indicated that about 500 midwives could be employed immediately if the ancient art were revived, CUnnlngham said. U midwifery II legalized, tt's not likely that the "granny ·midwife" of the frontier days will be called back to action. "We're avoiding the Idea ol a •granny midwife'," Qmningbam said'. 0 1'he grannies were self-taught and dldn' seek the help of physicians. "What we're talking about ii a nurse- midwife, .who would .. perl.orm. " the dellveries in balpitals and be ftll-trained . and --.. refer critlcal -lo fulJ.lledg!'i.-." ... lald. "We don't ebCOUl'lrP bome blrtbl," ~ added. "It Is r<alJy a kind of cop-out. Medical rlSu ett not always that predjctab1e in deUvery." DR. EDWARD QUllLIGAN, chief of the obstetrics ward at the Los Angeles County-USC MedicaJ Center, where about 10,000 babies are born each year, said about 75 percent of all births are un-- compllcated and could easily be bandied by nurse-midwives. Quilligan, who II 8DIOllJ tbe gn>wing number of physicians who want to begin using nurse-midwives for all normal deliveries, said the quallty d. care would be enhanced for pregnant women because obstetriciam cou1d coocentrate on the tru1y trooblesome case3. As midwife Casserly put it, cblldblrtb isn •t a disease or an illness and shouldn't require the presence of a doctor. • Computer Mix.es ! Cocktails ... DOUGLAS, Ariz. (AP) Remember the bar\ellder wha could ml% yoor favorite drink the w., you liked it and Uaten to your troubles at the ume time? WeJJ, tM GAd.olen Hotel hero~llu inllalled a barttnder who II all action and no talt. The Gad1den•1 new bartender ts a computer, an electronic system th.It miles cocktails automatlcallf ·'as It records purchases. "A FEW CUSTOMERS have -plained they don't .like the way the computer mixes 'We .wlU ••ee t e"' e r mutalces, ..... .,.Ulqe,-_ .. .-• ·~.,., more people.• drinks, but most people are fascinated with the Idea," said hole! .....,. Ken 'Slrandbi!rg. The Natfooal Clab Register machine bas reduced the price or liquor llrinka by about 20 percent, said Strandberg. "We will have f e w e r mistakes, leas spillage and be able'" to• serve more persons with fe-tmployes," he aid. '!be 1NICllln<! can mate !I drlnb ml II pnlCl'lmmed to provide even the sophisticated dri~r with such a variation as regular, extra-dry o r premium martinis. IT TAKES 13.4 seconds for the dr)nk lo appear in the glass or shaker. While the rnacbine Ls pOuring, a cash ....--·up""" dat.. the bar'• record of drinks aold while a small cottiputer hook· ed to the machine keepa track ol total sales and subtracts the amount used from total liquor inventory. Of course. the machine. has not totally done away with the barl<nder. He's still around in case IOIOeCm wants "special lies." •1n Forefruai' Reagan. Backs Pot Laws Happiness Is . • • SACRAMENTO CAP) -c.mom1a II in "the en· Ughtenetl foNtont" oo moriJuana laws, and probably dde8Q1 need w Uberallze lbom ill)' more, Gov. Rllnaid ROqan uya. A GIFT FROM 'Ille Repltblloan -refused to comment Tues- day oO whether be -nto a bUI eliminating felony prcoeculi<ln of flnt-timO marijuana d.fenden. lie .....,.red that qtlestioo wUl1 a liat of "Uberallilng" Jf.Oln lnhG chang,. In California mat!Jl!aDO laws. w .... ntt,... "--..... ,,,..~ .... N.....,, •-*' lie said sudl things as the preoent law giving judges diacretion to eansider firat marijuana cases as either mis- domeol)Orl or felonies and wluntary ,.babilibltloo pro- -'.'pul Callfom!• in the~-forefront." -~~~~~~~~~ Kn't lhl ,.-fed WIJ to llllh "'* _,or *llfitits da ...,_.., 1 y ............ ....i __ .,. ............ .. .... .,,......_. __ 2 ....... _.._di·. ................ ,. ·-----. 3 .., ___ tt.. ....... . ti ...... __.., ... _.. ,...~ ....... . ' ........... ._ .. ,... _ ... .. If this soands b• r h •.• c.0 IMIY for Uit IJHplrlillC alDry of Kwc Memorial HtsJJltafs "'Four flsillHi Plus for QiWIC". You wi1 "'""'·--Tllephooe, 645-8600 r-....111 ,.. fot ThoMn Stadl-~-... -- HOA6 MEMORIAL HOSPITAL 30t Newport Soul•vM'd Nowport Beaoh, CA8211i!O •· OF COSTA MESA a delightful budge t salon where beaut if ut hair styles be gin. PRICE LIST MONDAY THRU THURSDAY FRIDAY, SATURD"Y, SUNDAY PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER Shampoo anel Set ·············--·-·---······-··-···-····--······· $2.50 Parmanent Wave ·-···················--··-···-----·-····--·-··· 7.50 Tint ·····-·-··-··--·-·-·--·--··-···········-···•-·-······-····------s.so Bleach Touch.up····-.. ·-··-·----.. ··-··-····-·--····----··---10.IO Frosting -·····--------··-··--···-·--··---·-······-·····-···-·-·· 14.00 Semi Parmartant Lashes ·-··-···-··--········· .. ······---10.00 haircuts •t.50 1695 Irvine Ave. -Costa Mesa Comer of Eaat 17th St.-Above La Cave Restaurant 645-1050 548.9986 Open 1 Days a WMk end Most Evenl"I• '. "Take the •. '" IAllllAIHllWI Ele-ter'' ft --! ~ s w ! ~ a ~ .. g w ! I About this time every year, the ad-visors in the ~ ~ DAILY PILOT Classified Advertising Department I ~ really become Santa's Helpers. They're ready l I now to help you write an ad that will sell the I ~ surplus things you have accumulated. I v ! ~ I ~ !! • Our Santa's Helpers have a wagonload of ideas • ~ ~ ~ lohelp you fill Santa's wagon -or to come up I W 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 ta write to .the North Pole. i ! ~ I ~ ! ~ Tell Santa's Helper What i I -You Want To Sell I I I I . • I Use The Dl~t Line I i '""·--··,.....of----For DAILY PILOT 642•567 ·'I I -----..... -...... , I i Clauffled Advertising · ~ R ' I L...-~--··-.... ··---------·--·----..... ----·--·•·•·----···---···--·--•---••••••··-------···--L' • • , I I ., • ... •• , .. • .. • • .. .. • 'T .. • I' " ,, 'l '• • . • PUBLIC NOO'ICE ... t l r. ~ I f I• I I ' " ' . I . ' -'· ! • • .... ~ • , '. ; .. : •tl ' ) " ... ~~¥i~· ~}'¥·to>; ..... '. • Penn Central Case • SEC ·suspending B~pk~age. Sales ' ,, • " . , . .., • -· W. Kenne Butcher, Edward P. Bromley, Jr., James ~1cAtee and John Richter, also drew suspension far 25 days or less. ALL EXCEPT Richter were charged with violation of an- tifraud provisions of federtl securities law between April 1960 and July 19'ro. According to the SEC, Butcher and Sherrerd had loog urged customers to purchase Penn Central common stock. But it said that in May, 1970, the brokerage house changed its recommendillion f r o m "buy" to "sell" but only relayed this advice "on a selected basis to certain preferred customers and not to others who still he!H sl)ares of the stock wtlich they bad purchased on, t the · f i r m ' s recommendation.•• * * * Railroad Seeks· Halt " T R"· o 'a1ses ' PHILADELP!IlA (UPI) - Trustees of the bankrupt Penn Central Railroad Tuesday as~ ed a federal court for a thr~ month postponement of wag~ increases scheduled Jan. 1 to about 44,000 employes. They said the railroad might have to shut down unless some relief could be afforded. In a court brief, the trustees said lite railroad had 27 labor' agreement!: which call for $61.1 million in increased wages next year and $70.3 million in 1974. '111ey asked Federal Judge John P. Fullam, who is overseeing reorganization, to defer those increases called for in the agreement Jan. 1 for members ol the six unions. 1, • • , • . .. ._..,,,.., .. .,,........r-·-·· ·~ ' ~ •' .. ' ' . ' DAILY PILOT Z5 They Don't Look Like Business Gifts . . . Maybe That's Why They're Such Good Ones INOTM IEllT fAIM All re• r t1worilt tam. IN"•....,•• •1111 Jelll" . 1111•'*' .,,,._.,t. Gi¥t tllt llftffl, 11¥• K.Mrtl trern tllt ,-i.wtr M•1'1tl, 17731 BEACH BLVD. Flow•r1. Pl111h. Unu1u•I •• b .. 1i11111 9jfh? y ••. Mee11 in9ful, pet10111I 111d im19in1tiv11 Alio, v11. For 1omeone'1 home 11 well 11 oflic17 A91i11, Y11. E1iy lo d11iv1r7 Y11 ju1t c1ll u111147-9614 ind w•tl do lh1 rid. G ;vt 111 1 li1t of your 1ptci1I p1opl1 111d 11 l1ct ih1 flow111 111d pl111h, Yo.i 9;., vour ditnh f111h id111 111 y11r, why 1low down now. DELICIOUS DllED FIUIT tht llltld C•lif9nolil'I 11- IO•, moulll w•lt,iftil, 1•111 "'"Pllftt, Glv1 lllt folli1 ~ 1:•11 1 lrwt 11'11¥ ""'"'' .. ,... .... • .. _ .. ,, IM"k... llll,.. """' lnchld ... PHONE 847· 9614 personal radio pag er • TONE or VOICE • . ~ow COST • NEW COMPACT POCKET UNIT • MONTH to MONTH RENTAL BASIS • OllA ~Gf COUNTY RAOIOlfllPHONE SERVICE I .. ( 401 So. S.... h , s-t. A11• Try Saturday's Neivs Quiz ' • • • . ., i . .. •' I 1 ' I ' ' " '= 'Ibis is the closestmanypeople come to financial planning. \..• . Great.-WestLifewouldlike to·belp • datatAu1i:hievethese gnala. We will give Weaakoomeprettybaaic quOBtiona; :iou get yollt financial plana in perspec· you in return a deWled document that qU..Uona you 1hould be uking you,..lf. tfve.. Give you an idea where you stand • Y{ill.teU yo~just how you're doing. If you lf)'Ou arecorurideringyour pmonal oo~ouil know a litt!a better where you're -· m •hbrt of your objective, the computer ' ' f\Jiilncjal p"'81"8Jll and you accept our ,omg. Tudothl• we're wJl1ing to pit our will show3ou how much 1ife inauranCe, feoommendatiom,·Great.West Life can computer against your fortune cookie. ret.irerdent:benefits, or disabilit>.: inaur· provide the extensive range of services All ,)'QU have to do ii answer a few ance you need to make up the difference. you need. Whatever you do, take the tat. ' plequfftlona telling us what you If you're in good shape it will let you You nevt'r know, your fortune cookie .. out or Ute and what you've done to know that too. mOJI have been right all along. liven If you weren't plannlnc to ~. -., 1Jle !ntvranoe ottltari a Nttrem.at-..,. •. ~ , .. ., . ~.you ahould II')' the teat anyway. I f , T..J .. BERNARDY, C.L.U. A ASSOCIATES Suite 300, 1020 N. Broadway St.root Santa Ana Tel.: 835-l!712 T.J . Bernardy, C.L.U. Branch Manager R.K. Patton~Oroup.Representative G-m Oreat•West: L i fe lhl Insurance lnnov1tor1 Clait1a-DetUed Xerox Monopoly Chai·ged ·by FTC "'ASlllNGTON I A Pl -Tht f'edtral ir:ide Comm1ss 1on announced 1'ut'sday it wUI issue a co1nphunt charging that Xerox Corp . ha s monopolized the Sl.7 billion of· fice copier induslr. by engag· ing in unfair marketinR and patent practices, The pr op o s ~ d complaint alle~es also that Xerox hns foreclosed its foreign affiliates from winpeting 'A"ilh it in the United States. THE PROPOSED con1p!aint does not represen: <1 finding of fact b~· the commission. Such a conlp!aint is issued ,when the f'"TC hfls reason to believe th;:it the law has been violated. Xerox may elect to contest thl' action at hearings before the commission and in the c.."Ourts or it may negotia te a consent setUement. C. Peter )1 cCo I o u g h, chairman or the board and chief exC'Cutive (lfficer of Xerox, said in a slatement issued in Stamford. Conn., that the complaint was "iU· founded and without merit." McColough said "Xerox will defend the action vigorously and will establi sh fully the correctness of its practices •.. We are not bein.; accused of any impropriety in securing any of our patents .. . What is being challenged b)' !l'le FTC is the very basis of the patent system -the concept that an investor should be av:arded exclusive rights to his invention for a-" limited period of time." THE COMPLAINT drawn up by the commission staff says that the office copier market Includes a submarket in plain paper machi n es amounting to $1 billion yearly. It says Xerox accounted for about 95 per<ent of all uvenues generated by the submarket, approrimately 60 percent of all revenues in the over-all office copier market and approximately 86 percent of revenues from the lease and sale of machines in the total market in 1971. The pr o po s e d complaint specifies ',hat Xerox shall divest itself of the stock of Rank Xerox, Ltd., a British corporation which di9tributes office copier machines and supplies WOrldwide except in the United States and Canada. The proposed relief also in- cludes: DISENCHANTED WITH MVTUAL FUNDS IN KEOGH? ,...., C"H " ..... ••Ill 117 Call aatT VANCE CMf'dJ¥r.d (:.IPll•I CMflltlM1'1 540-7115 c.~.~M~!~ I O.C. 1t7Z RAJ.Ef(;H SPORTS Model DL22 FINANCE ) ' ·. OVER THE COUNTER COMPl,E'J'E NEW YORK STOCK\IJST • •• • . ' ' .... • • ~D:::«<::::mbtr=._:·..:l:.;t11;.::_ _ _;S:;·o_ __ _:OAIL Y l'MT Tuesday's C1o8ing Prices-Complete Ne,v York Stock Exchange List • • Profit Takers Dampe:n Market ' NEW YORK (AP)-~k market prlcef ed&ed Jl>wer Tuesday Ill a generally drifting mar~el Analysts put the blame on eeDeral profit talc· Ing and ~nlcal conlid1!*11on1. I' ' '1 ' -r- \ ' f IWLV PILOT WedMsday, oe<:embtr U , 1972 Soundesign AM-FM · digital clock radio Buflt:-in pillow speaker. 60 minute sleep switch, slide rule tuning dial, AFC. (Model #3483) 39.95 • . Soundesign ·stereo . 8-track cartridge p~ , ~operation, slide rule tu.n1ng. stereo t.iadphone jacks, With speakers, llRtenna (Model #4983) --s9.95 • .,. 'NOOQM ~J • _ .. ·--·-.... - • '' -- Soundeslgn stereo record player .full alie eSR changer 8" duocone wide range ' speakers, duslcover. 45 RPM Qdapter. (Model #42361608) 69.·95 ttt A'lftLLS 18000 Cha.II worth 51. WOOOUND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd II~ 3520 Tyler St • SANTA ANA 3900 South Bllilol SI. + o,.. •Hk~•r• t 130to 1or00s."4.•r•1• te lOaOO l . I I WtdMfdU, °""""" 13, 1972 PILOT -ADVERTISE R Soundesign stereo . 8-track b!lpe player, AM-FM radio Automatic or manUa1 channel • selection, slide rule conlrols, jaci<s for stereo he3dpl\o'nes and pl1onO input. (MddOi #484-01606) 69.95 TOllllANCE 5epul\leda and HawtllOrnt ~=000....Carson St. a.nd Ptramount Blvd OR PARK Beach and Orangelhorpe • ANGE-Garden Grove Blvd and-Mancllester .......... I ... • I • _., .. , 'Soundesigil ~ . digHal c!ock radio . WOJt.e to music with reliable...ad sta1e circui~Wtt~in antennae. ' .22wainut~ Ciliinec - ." .. . ... ·as· . "' . . . ;' ' . , c.oo~·Ni.' FM •~*"°·:. ' . • I • , ' • ~-on clrcullrjl.llOmlfttAt · ·• sleep switCh. .,..,._ bujton. , confrols: bllltt In Af'C on FM.'(Model 11'$480) ,29.95 . .. ; " -. . - ·, - ... ,....,_ • fl' ' .. .,. ... . . .... ~r· • 'j I - ' • .. I I / " 4. ' • Coin• ·s·lt.·&.aa:i1·~--~. . ... in th~.cir~~~d6;L:rt •. ~ ,--· ·aJL.rireW:ty .d:ecor.a.t~d~.,Catou-· • i, I . .... . ~ ,.. . . 'l , r all day from ,'10t0i,;});'p Jm} .. •1.·. , "s·el·~ourt. Tine li·ne tb:see ., 1, even Sunday, 1ltai:S.:;:tt's :a-:";\· ; ! ar::ita is r.ie.ver"tqo long, s0 ., .... plea.sant visit be,tause tne·, '· ;qf~lflg ·the .chil¢r(;}n. ~0!-J :can · ~-' · joll'yol9 ·man .i.s.r:~gh.tzr.iext ·tGc. l ·ev6!t1J;i1aVetl)~tpictl\lre tak-· "· · DAILY PILOT ;9 \ ;· . ' -• - our gaily deco~<;Y~ :O'aJ<l>tJ~ : :elil.._wJtn ·~~ i(,y0u like. f :A . ·.-i : sel and .in them1~1l~e:&fr~~r · ; ··~~~~,.~ 1stma~~ve~yonel! .~-... ~-·T~DllOORIEYAY.OOSl'AIWA : j OVER 85 FINE STORES ANcSsaw~··"'" DEPfoRiEN'"C'STOR~!'. May Co. • ~e.~fs • WoMEN'SApP~~-..• Albert!wHoefery• Alroe • Mr. Elliot's• Chris' Fashiona _ , · • Finn's • Gene'.s • Greta's• l'lo'lfM'<rl' ""'~ l-juP.b<1!:/ •Judy:~ l.t.e ,Bryant• Lillian's• Joseph Megnin • r.,i¥,lene'Fabriqye •·flll,i'ss Hew~ji •Sabrina •The Wet Seal •Youns· Maternity• Zelig's Casuel Fasfiklnll,.~'SAPf'j\.RE ••• Cere'i's • ¥sin's• Gentry,'Ltd. • Har.ris& Frank'• Ho.elsc~er's • Prep.Sh~p • Rebel·Shop •Tie Ra.ck• CHILDREN'S :· ,APPAR!:!L , .• Be•gstrom's Sel>yi,N-s •'FA.MIC:Y SHpES... es-Garnett'• Innes Shoes• Ttiom McAn ,..WQMEN'S SHOE$,, ••. C .. H;Baker • Oemeo •Field's• Joyce Shoe ,. Tree • Leed 's •CHILDREN'S 8ffOl!S ~ 1• ~'CaBdt' • H1o1MEFU ISHINGS ••• Golden Need!et• House 0f FabfiCs'" Singer• Udoff's •VARIETY-DRUGS ... South Coast Drug ' ' i ' ' . h ) ' ~ . ....\.. •'F. W. Woolworth• JEWELRY,.:O Flli1 .• cp icAocessories • alleon •Jewels byJoseph • KovenJewelers•.Qeorge._Murrey, • PaCcl{Settler • .... ;ot India• Raj International• Sunset Rouse• Weisfield's • FOOD-CANDY ..• Hickory Farms• Lihdbe,rg Nutrition• See's• RESTAURANTS ... Coaches Corner• Harvest House• Hungryliger • Kaplaci'a . • LePetit Cafe • Riviera,• SPECIAL TY St"10PS ... A Le s;ard • Cline's • Decorator Line • House oCTerry • Pickwick Bookshop • Rooten's Luggage • Sports Plate • Tinder Box • Toy Center• Wallichs •\'{Instead Cameras• S~VICES •.• Bak Portrait Studio• Better Sarbers • Cro!(>'nin g Glory Beauty Salon• House of Tailoring• On the Go Travel • Op~ometrlst •Regis Beauty Salon• FINANCIAL, .Avco Savings & Loan • Bank of America • Crocker Bank• First Western Bank • Household Finance • Pacific Savings • U.S. National Bank• THl!ATRES ••• South Coast Plaza I and II Theaters·• United Artist Cinemas I, II and Ill. • " • I 'I I • " 3 DAILY PILOT w .... ...,. -ll, 1972 Puppeteers Added • Christmas Plaza Events at to ''· l Ship model built at cost of $85,000 to promote the film , "Poseidon Adventure," gets close attention from Sandy Ward, South Coast Plaza II Theater manager, and Allan Edwards, assistant theater manager. The film is expected to have Jong run in Orange County. MESSIAll Oeorp Fridertc llandel'1 "Meaaiahi'' atill popular t1> ·ur, wu nm pmMted ill Dublin In 1742. Handel .... born on Feb. 23, u• m· Halle, °""""1Y. and cooclui:ied a RotY Wool< concert of ''Mel- lllah" the day before be died In Londod )n 1759. EGG SEOREOATION To separate an egg yolk from Uie white, shake the un- craclced egg so !hat the yolk flips down toward the ~ end. Then break a small hOle in the pointed end, shake downwards gently. and out comes only the white. The yolk Is left all by Itself In the Shell. ROHS ·FOR CHRISTMAS fest Selection Now! ------·Loww'-l.S-...... ..0, •• .....,~ .... ~.....,..._,.... J46.2IN THE VILLAGE PUPPETEERS READY TO PERFORM IN CAROUSEL COURT Lisa Lowery, Teri Cr1 mblet, C1rol Villeneuve, Kristi Yount 1nd Friends t Puppeteers Klomp-it Up at Yttietime With Vieiu Master Game' ' \ . J ·• To Present Plaza Show The "Village Puppeteers" consisting of four girls from Tustin, 13 through 16, will be entertaining South Coast Plaza shoppers dally Dec. 18 through 22 in the Carousel Court with their Christmas rendition or "The Lazy Teenage Rein- deer." ' Don't forget to check your left receiving the viewer, the Christmas list twice to be sure die is throwt to start the next a new View-Master K1omp-It tum. game is on it. As the game progresses The game, for 2, 3, or 4 you'll be able to catch plenty players -consists of two of giggles and you'll probably View-Master stereo reels, four be tempted to try to play, too. Klomp-U game cards and four "ntat is, if the children will let Klompefs..suction cqps. you. , ~~~;~~~~~ BOO_KS pl;~~mi:· die is thrown. BOOKS The players then diet the viewers the ' number of times The girls, Terri Cramblet, shown on the die. Looking at BOOKS 14; Carol Villeneuve, l&; Lisa their viewers together, they call out the names of the car· Lowery, 13 and Kristi Yount, toon character they see and BOOKS 14., together with Mrs. Keith try to be the first to "KJomp" te .zig.zag sewing Model 257 with 575 car- SJt!Q~R and participating approved dealer• Cramblet and Mrs. David such characters as Mickey1----------1 L.:;''.:;'-==:::~.::"'::o'.:;":::"°"'"':::"°"='""'=·------------------J Mouse, Donald Duck and auti•lllT lMDf "oo: ~ -Villenueve first organized others. Tbe game, from GAF, PJCIWJCI For lddml of~ ordl• nnreet you. ... thll y.llow peglilundtr SEW1NG MACHINEI thelr efforts last year to celebrate the 'Daisy Clipper continues with players also BOOISBOPS COSTA •••· 1 w a ...,.._ .,..,..._,, "-•• being able to ' ' K I o m p ' ' ,_ c.. ~· .... MUNTtfrfOTON a1ACM ••• 1 ., '-' """" <llY" ,..,.., ........ Pony Club's armual Crristmas. character cards from each ~'! (7!4'! u.-rnio · con a .M • ......_. .. .,..,. ..,... """""""' ._.. <••· m-1tn e.aaoi• """._.,,,, ~ The girls performed for the other. As the vie .. er s SOUTH COAST PlAIA 0.-...... c.t.r, Cl .. 11 ..• .) o....,. (....,. pi.u., UMIM 85 families who belong to the ...'ai!Jlt:<:ernrll_8_1at::e,~w~i~tb1_p~l~ay~er~on~th~e~'';!•'!;,",!;""~M;,;:· ·~·~·1~-~"!;!":=' ·=-1e~"'.::l!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!'!!!i!'!i!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!'!!!l!llI!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!~!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!! club and were ra::eived so we1i1 · that they were encouraged by Mrs. Villeneuve, owner or two pre-schools in Orange County, ' to give creative e"Jpresion to their abilities. With this Im· petus she led the 11ri. tnto developing a uniqU;e story revolvbig around a "Luy Teenage Reindeer." The stage and stagin'g was constructed by Mr. Vlllen'\aeve, in<:ludtng the stage llgi!ling which brightens and dimS as directed by the puppeteers. • SCULPTURES OF SINGER Year-End E FABRIC CLEARANC &-Al.El LIGHT .. Captu~ by the miracle of fibtt optic1 theM f0Klnotln9 dew-drop like lamps er.ate di1ploys of 9~ ful spidery light thot dazzle the imoglnation. · Truly excitlno and vnvwol gifts - 111'.4 POLYflTlJI' DOUBLE KNITS · Pleo9 ""'9cl J~ laviMr colors mid dnlgn& 51/&IT wids. Mtchin9 .......... -drylble, • SALE 2.99,t ' ftlblnl. In l)flntt tod 9!111!!9. 6onlt 11!iak 'n thin, IOO'!I. ::::.. ........... 4414'" 9 7 c SALE - 1M POLYESTIJI ASST'D KNITS P'finh tnd tolids --JKQU••dt.,,. -- .!ALE 2.66 COST.t,. 'W.S" 1'1'1"t1 G.btl 1~ Acty1ic • ea" wi09. MM:l'lin9 w~ , , , •, S:4LE 2.22 u.· 20 .STYLES FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE -= METAL ART SCULPTURES CrMtloM ofwt:hnlical iunk S(lllptvres, (we col th"" spring thin91), to btovtiful combt· ncrtioM of bro•, coppw & 1tffl .• _ pres.,b o ..-.ry intlfnling & unique coll.ctior. priced from SA . .50 to $.40.00')'ou'll find them lo be ortot gift 1tem1. WALL DECORATIONS MUGS A l'llOlt un~11ol H+«tion of 1ton-ore Cf'90tloM , •• M1191 ofld tanko(ds wlt)I ~.onaMty ond chofOCtlt )'OU won'I b911~.,. rtolly gr.m gift it9"1, for you'h fitid on• to wit ..,.1ryon1. A f9W or• 1hown betdw. $7.SO to $10.00 lni,lirtid by America's pask......_ Bristol and Sunflowet,•South Co1st Plau 5@'2'31 , ·'.L, I ,., T I I I I BOOKS BOOKS Bbols . BOOKS . ROBES FOR CHRlstMAS Best Selection Now! THE HOUSE OF Soutlt toast ?fan KAPLAN'S extends HOLIDAY GREETINGS to all our CUSTOMERS! RESTAURANT -54(1.9022 BAKERY -54(1.7581 3333 BRISTOL ot Son Diego Fwy.-COSTA MESA a..... &.111 ···~ ...... ~ c.. Top Players Here's ooe last look at "action board" displays for the 1972 football season. They were taken down at the oon~ dusioo or Player-Of· the-Month program at South Coast Plaza in which 18 area schools participared. The 54 winners were selected by popular vote. Quick Gift Ideas for your liule· homesewer Cutting Boards ............. . Pressing H11rns • . . . . . . •... Wiss Sheers ...... . Pinking Sheers .... . Swing Baskets ...... . Vogue Sewing Book .. . Hem Marker ...... . .... Sleeveboerds .... . . ... Needleboa rds .... . Goolden Needle $4.00 3.98 9.25 9.95 3.98 ..... 15.00 ~-50 4.00 6.95 Gift Cet11ficat1 .. .. .. .. .. 7 with-lots-more sewing notiom to choose· from ' 1 ~~ ~ FABRICS ~~OUTH COAST PLAZA • CAROUSIL LEVEl- ·o~~N EVININOS a SUNDAYS \ . • •• .. .:,. \ i ".:,it._. ~/.\-;: ·• . ·-t, . -.v "1.0T ii I ' , -~ .. i .. '\"' ,. ; ' ' ,. , .. .,. .. :. . .. · .. ·.·.- ' ''•; ~ G•ol•owm Will_"_ .. . . ·, ... 0... nloctlon of Royal Doullon fl..,,.. ii -1allr complOlo thh year. 0.. 50 in stock, t.om 15.DOIO 10,DO. Gwoldino ••• SO.DO • ' • by Collegian A good lesson in g ift selecting for that special person is provided to you with these polyester cr~e blouses available In nine colors. Sizes 5 to 15. Shirt Style $18, Turtleneck Top $1.t. ~.1t·oa' "-""' ~/~· -' ~-... ,,..Jf!I Welcome the Holldcry season with ihese impeeeoble polye1ter 1eersucker knits, they' re irresistible for - Christmas partying or Christmas giving I Avo floble in sizes 6 to 16. Jacket #38, Pont $26, Skirt $18 · wel lglft wrap it! ·*' ,32Yeonoffasb;ooUid'IJ'Ship SOUTH COAS'F PCA1A- '(\. . ,_ Cl"l"IY A "'"'"' Spo1idin9 hrmlckut lead crystal ""'pat9 by Stuart, Efttland's finest. 6" '9ff -· ~ • •. 20.DO . ...... , . J--· has kin mode In England for over 200 yton. Cam.o broc;teh, ma..inted in gold ... 45.00 5" taU vose . • • 12.50 "'l!i"' wide box •• 11.95 C.tler Clossk TM sterling lplit-ring · kl')' ring has imort O'l'OI tab/ fftO'f be engrcrted. E1&e.a.nt for her or him ••• 1.50, engraved ••• 10.50 Stortlo1H•1U .. 0... fcmtoty ""'"""' by_ or• hondmodt in T 0111co ••• ....... bwl lyC,WS from tho woocla"d colltdlon, "'~ H toM ••• i0.00. Jun OM of ovr lorge ..Mction1 of llmhod odhlori porcololnoOfld plot ... I . - 7.DO-h.Oth"'to II.DO • •' ; • .. . • . • • '· • • • .. ·! • . ' • 1 • + DAJLV PILO T ___ Wtdnnday, Otttmbfr ll, 1'12 40 Finish Hostes s Training Forty airline stewardess trainees and one steward lrainec.> fron1 Orange Coast College ha ve recei ved wing awards for romplr.tion or com- rnunity servlrc work . They are : Costa ~fe,a : llen1her Blake, Gayla Burton. Patricia Carter., "' carol Davis, Shawnee Hinton, Pamela t-.1urdock , K a n d is R.a vmond. Erit•a Rincon, Mary 'l'hiasher, ~tirlam Van Orden and Julie \Vood. Fountain \'alley: Sherryl Fulton, Theresa L a n g e , Kathryn Sellers. Huntin gton Beach: Dawn Bene Bender, Car l een Bohaboy , Rene Ca fare 11 i , Syivia Cappello. Chery I DeLuca, Barbara lladland, Debra l·lataluk , De s Ire e Howard . Charlene Johnson. Cy nthia Lillard, Ca r o I Loughery. Kathy Macke. Nan· cy Morris, Denice Murrell , 'Nancy Nelson , Cyntllis Oergel, •• '. 11 19~ Fi11a11c•t> • Police Site, Not Shelt er Civil Defe1ise Offer Tuned Dowri iii Newport By L. P~"'TER KRIEG 01 .. o.ur "1"' 11a1t Newport Beach police will make their new headquarters available in case of nuclcnr disa ster, but officials said today they 're making no special effort tv design it as an air raid shelter. is now in the design stage. A1(0ANll.'L said the money aoqailable for the project -about $1 million - precluded any ext ra space or special con- struction. ·· 1t eouldn 'I be designed. for that purpose," he sald, "we clo"ri!t have the At'Chitect Robinson said he asked the Departme.nt of the Anny t:> give lhe structure a Civil Defense rating, but said he did oot take advantage ol tbe offer ol desjgn assistance beeause that wasn't in- cluded in the design criteria. "Nothing was asked for," Robinson said. "There were no criteria in the in-, ltial design to tnake it safe tor any cer- tain type of disaster " "\Ve're building a public building and in case of disaster, there are facllities for \" people." said Poliet! Lt. Ke Is on • '· f\1cDaniel . · 'It telll he1'e slr-h1eh 1oalls and a si.r-lnch cell- 1119 1olth n1etal slab and it will be '"'" 1111dt>r- 9rou11d.' He said the securit~ or the struct.ure is a relative thing. But be said the department will not ac- cept a recent offer by the federal Civil Defense Preparedness Agency to provide free! design consultation. John E. Davis. director of the federal agency , had wrilten both City Clerk Laura Lagios and James Rob inson. square footage -or the money to work architect for the project, making the of-with." fer. -He noted that, because of nature of the building. it will not be totally useless in DAVIS SAID the building "may have the event of nuclear attack or natural life-protecting poJential in time of disaster, however. disaster." He said the entire first floor of the lie urged application of a "lotal-design building, including the jail. the riflb concept for proteclion fro 1n en-range. locker rooms and t"n1ploye vironmental hazards including nuclear lounges, would afford considerable pro- disaster. tection. "The greatest benefits can be realized when considered at the beginning o( the "IT'LL BE about as bomb-proof as deslgn stage," Davis sa id. anything in town," he said . "It will have The new station. planned on Jamboree six-inch wa lls and a six-inch ceiling with "IF THE ENTIRE UCI campus con· verged on the building , I don 't think you could stop them -short of killing them all," he said. "'But if someope was standing some distance away intent to do damag,e, there is no great expan.se ol windows to throw Molotov cocktails through," he ,said~ Newport Beach Police Chief .e . James Glavas is tfte titular dvil defense direc- tor for tile city . G Deed Pe~ m the scene Sundays in the DAILY PILOT SLEEP FASHION • • . ~ A,s~ for . ~I ~oliPQP ". Stretch Tei'ry, Footed s• -JS% ''""' ...... ~ P'9~..,. Ifft, f11H ,,, ........ ~ ........ ..., ceMw•d......... · 1 i. ,/\. COLOIS: $ I R•d •"" Whit• Sti;"p.... ., l lu• 111d Wll if• Strip•, Orchid, Rad. Aqua, Ye llow •t1d f'i11k ••lid, -' SIDS: p1lit1, tm11l m1dl11fl'I, 1119•. THE --HOUSE OF LOW!l 1"°1EL, SIA.IS IND OF MALL. ,DI UCnY ACROSS FI OM WOOLWOITHS SOUTH COAST ·PLAZA Cost• Me s• ~~Pineda, l\farian Rezen- da, Joanne ShyQian, Janel Wilder and.Cheryl Wilderman. Newport Beach : B e t s y Brennan, Debbie Green , Deb- bie JacksOn, Carmen Sam- brano, Antia Santangtlo and 1-oe Soothartl. Former U.S. Secretary of Treasury John Con- nally displays s o I i d silver ingot reproduc- tion of out-of-print $1 ,000 Federal Re· serve Note. It \1.:as pre- sented to Connally by The Silver Coal iti on . Road next to the new fire station. is a metal slab and it 'A'ill be half un- ~sc~h~ed~w~ed~f~oc'...."'co~m~p~le~t'~~~n~in~J~u~ly~,~1~~~4·~'~'-~de~cg~c~o~un~d~."~' ~he~sa~id~.-------~=============:=:=:=:=::::...c..::::::::::~~:::~~::::::""".'""".'""".'""".'""".'""".'""".':::::::::::::::~ ' FOR CHRISTMAS- .... One Of The Popular Food Gift Paks From Hickory Farms of Ohio , .FAMILY FAVORrt'E $7.a .' 1 Jb. BEEF STICK Summer Sauaage, Swlel· Jlot Mustard. Smoky {smoked cheese bar), Gouda, Belle Fleur Cheese, Horse-- radish Sauce plus imported candies for decora tive purpO!es. --·-- PLEASURE PAK A PLEASURE IN GOOD EATI! -·· ALi. CHl!J!SE PLUS ..... Belle Fleur Cbeeae, Botleri ICaeM Cteese. Edam Btr, Smoky {arnoked cheeae bar), four O:ieeu Spreada, two Goudas. Old· Fashioned Crackers, Cheese Stkia plua imported candies, Many Other Paks For Y 0 u 1 To See In O ur Gift Dis.plru1 " · Take with yqu;:._or .'we 'll malt:;· . tt~t~~t1 ~~!~!'® ' U.S. NATIONAL BANK POI" llt1JT1•t• ace••• to RICIOlt PAUi tak• ilri1tol Stf'I;{ 1ntrtno1 ••••'n lo•t.ed. ''"'" tl'Oll .. rw1.1 ..... . ~ ~ ........... • ..... ~ fl,_.r -COSTA MllA °"" ..., • ....,. ....... c.dl "" • ··"'·' -"""" ~ IBl/lll/.,., 111111111111 'YOU'LL flN'D GREAT HOUDAY -GlfTI, fOR 'EVIRYONl ·4T- .."1.-"'!i. ' South·Coast.Pla·za --Costa Mesa l __!!rlotol at the San :ID!so Fceeway '• • ~ •. a~:;,s.:.~: 'I'.~~ DAILY 10 -9 p.m . .• OIDAY, DICllllE.11 • ·, HONEfflEll PE NTAX 2 5 ·~!£ SPO'l'MATIC II with Fl.8 LENS 349 ·50 . .· •. , · FUJICl 701, "·b ~!~.af~~'~At' ' •Most Co111pact 35nl• Sklt"t t •New Transl~lor Tg, Slllco.-l'tleloc•ll •111000 Ste SIMlttw ',-,.. • M Brlthll!lr 1Jn1p • P1nt1x )i!Mllit • .s.u Tfl!lff I . . ' " I .. . 17981' "'~ ~~ ... _I;.;, .. " ' KA UllAR SI 100 SLR CA.MIRA FULL TWO YEAR liiLIARA.NTEE ' ' • Acc,pts .Stand"•d 3J.-~ .. tt•s ' t 'focat r1an1 S"""8f, 'flJJt flalh S1nch at l/JO Ste • Standard Lins Ac*tur1 Rania F:2 to F:15 79 95 with CASE SHOP . __........__ ~EARL.Y ~ · . S1v1 Tlt11 '' Later ASFA 500 OPTIMA w~h CASE . • •• Nlw ll1tlflc F111h A11tom1tlc s ~ 96 • l'•1ti~Shutt1r VlO-J/500 Sec. ....---., Aifa 1Cotor Apolar 1/2.1 42 mm e Quic k Lo1dln1 SJlltm and Fast ft1wlnd REG PRICE 19.95 • HOC SllOt: Contact " O· BELLE.HOW ELL llO"IE PROJECTOR a B ELLE.HOWELL MOYIE CANEllA 1 td [l1elrle Eya r •~ F11t 1/1.! Pow1r Zoom L1n1 1 foe111 Malle Vivitar. 251 ELECTRONIC .llfROBE • A11toiastlc Flash Control Op11at11 frott 2 to 13 P'1tt ••,ltld T11l1d Gulde H11111blt of ll wllh Kod1ctlro1111 II 1 o,_atts on 2 AA ·~k•llnt llattttla.s ii Stil'liarf AC Currant ' 36.85 • Ttwtiotbl-Ulf• ~f111 Vl1wln& • fltctrk Fll111 Drlvt HAMlll AR 135•• f2.I "A1t1" TD.iJ'BOTO LENS wltl P.utn M111t ·, 1 Foe111. Ra1111 rt•m litflnlty la ).J , •Pltltl Mal• 11 ·a:•.~ SHOP EARLY Save T111111 Lalar HANIMEX PRAICTICA LTL with Fl.8 LENS and CASE • Ocul• Mount 111ilh Flt1~n1 lor Acc111orl11 • Wllh or Wllhout Built-In S.11 Tl1111r 1 Auto E1po1ur1 Conllol • lnttn.11 Mlttrl111 • Mllal-11 .. • focal·,.11111 Slllutt• ~ • 1 Ste to J/1000 SK • Built 111 Hot Shoe 119!'!E . 199 .95 f .. llfh SUPER TELE 135mm . TIFTELEPHOTO 1'NS -T-°-'"" --. s1_g9so 84.97 • Comp1et • LlltrtWlllhl • Eeono111leal • Naon lndtc•tdr Uaht Whtn thl •Unit Is ftallly for U11 HONEY WELL 3&0 AtJTO STIO.BONA.ll •Ml Calct1l1llt111 RE& PRICE .139.95 4.&a RU PRICE 21.15 eft1chtf1•• In •lnult•4~9 m!. •O.pllal r11hl '8'9 U' oV•llllo Ronq IU PllC£ ·II.IS Ill PRICE 14i,lii5••iiiitilill~·--RH P E 41 .tl ' Mllilllllll! 1 "( ' • • '\ DAIL V PILOT '3 Meetings Set Meetin( dat.. lhrough the l month of January have been By Capitol New• Servi~ mcnt made 43,615 placements "'Set by the Board of Trustees SACRAMENTO -One out that month. Ecology Pleas Spurned ' ' Deprived Receive Jobs • Attorneys Turn D'»."n Small~scale Complain~ of lbe ~t Community of three job placements made lie explained that dltad· College District. in October by the state 's vantaged are "those oo the The Board will meet Dec. Department of Hu m a n fringe of the labor market by 20, and January 10 and 24 at 8 Reaources DeveJopo1ent was a reason of lack of schoolinJ. .. ,_ H•p for Blli.d By~D-~ ARNOLD f'J\IEljMAN Some eo.,,.. bo-ri llvlng near a dragstrip ~ motorcype race track say they're ""'8tlll!llY IUU!OYed by the Intense nighttime ~ ' A stooe qualrJ opf<IS In the ~les Natlooal Forett 1!9rth of 1"" Angtles and residents hi the thlnly--1•ted area complaih that the dust and fumes it creates are damigbtg theJr health and property. Twelve homeownln in 80Utheastem Im AngelOs Qiunty .... disturlled because the llate Divistoo of Hlpways ~ aboUt to eOostruct a freewiy off-ramp .ear their h<ia!es wilhout first Jilaklnc... . envlrorunental .tmpct study. ' Aside from f11'o1Vlng aspects of the err ' vironment, what do all these problem! have in common? of the envirOnmenial unit for state Atty. Gen. Evelle J, Young~r. ~ since most small-scale en- v~ental e11ses aren 't lucrative, he sald ln an inteniew, few private at- tome'ys will devo(e their time to pro- secuting them. In fact, only tbe six Southland members ol Yost's wiit and the sli: SOUTHERN tALIFORNIA FOCUS • 1ayO'ers Of the West Los Angeles' -based Ceiiter for Law irf the Putilic Interest wort {Ull~time on environmental cases in the region, according to Yost and at- torneys at the law center. • Of cou~ some law finns take on en- -~!J~ . · virOnmerital cases occasionally as a IN-EACH-OF"l'llESE-relatlvei)'""llTllll .. sfdeJ@il,til lielr regular specialties when scale cases, the ~le who clabned toi~ the cneni,. ~ afford the ii: fees or lf a suffering an abuse Said they Mt 1-0 ~ I "'i)artfcular complaint would have public '•ttld<lnts, at 'lolaBsl!ChU· setts Institute of Tech· nology. Made of plastic, th~ ll)•P • ahows cam- pus geography on top and gives lnforma- 11on {n braille on bot· ~ tom. only environmental attorney they could alll>$1 find -and were tµmed awiy beca~ ~ ' ' · the cases weren't significant. enough to . ~DTI;IOllALLY, LARGE Jaw firms saUsfy the tawyers. 1 ~ill sometimes allow their attorneys who "There ls a real shortage of (su~ldlJ· · hirve the interest to donate work on ~m- ed) envlronmentaJ attorneys in Soutbt;rp pany time• tor small-scale cases hke California,': says Nicholas C. Yost, chief those cited above. rCq_u ~~;y1 IJ~~~r :_(]"~~~ Appr<;mei! ! • ~ I ' ' ' . ' i;tilltlo of' a •eoopera~Ye !onne_d, would l1e ·gove"'9!1 by -Q.rll!c9,County-Clties Dtsuter ~.cba~ of-the~ of earUzatlon ha.s been a~ Supervisor's and a represen- ved by ~ Board · of tative of each member city. ~sors. Needed to ~ The CCKfnty agrees to keep ,.Uvate the new agency is the an iqvealm'Y of all emergency 11q>proval of a majority of the equipment ·available and pro- ifOUnty•s 26 cities. · vide assistance in the event or , 1be plan calla for a a mm-made or n a t u r a I toonllnCition-.fthe·county·plan-disasll!!. " ----- with -ol indl•ldual Citi,., Cities and the county would ,The county has offered to ,po-0. ret&n avtborily In handle vide training 'lnd 1o aoalot <1iSas1fJ lndel>M<len\IY. 'In :mmmupitleshlobtalu'lnJ tbeirownj~ t' f<denl financial aid .. sarpluS ' )"~I;' 'fi."::: ~ Loan R~~ed ' &ram, the cttJes would be' .ask-• eel lo I'8Y half the coots of the Capitol News Servi<e pouniy'1 tlllq of Emergency REDDING -Approval of ,a &vices, prarated,.on a basis $tl,~001r1m1rto help establWl ~valuation llllll • motel ... employ 125 -" '" 1il ..._Reclduig has been ail-.- ', ~. !1<11!>1 ~. '~ ii!' 1\0llert A. Podes'!', 'l!o< ty .~ "'a•lllM• ~ of Com-,!>e County Admllltslrllla· -~ 1or .... nomic deve1op-.J1ce, h¥ ·said .tJui\I•' 1)1 ',n;..t >'Jl>el;»an is part .i Jflf the cities have lnforma . Pr...,..~ NllDD's program !<\ . :iiidlcated they W<IUld approve ' "'"""""" j>Hvate enterprise the ~live plan. to expand ,and create new , Tlie joinl organizaUoo, when jobs, . Pm m. the D'·tn"cl Bu'1ldin• at dl.sadvantaaed 1·ob-seeker. skill. cultural or econonuc !!u• a -kes--'or the • -· Angeles · · 13 " e " -,.... ·-· l' UU111 1370 A'·ms "Ave In ~--t.. Sigurd I. Hansen, aaency deprivation and r a c I a l County Bar Asloclation said most finnl M uo ., ~ director, said that the d:part· discrimination." only permit their attomey1 to spend ar;:;:esa=.========;:======~:==----=--=====::::,­llmited amount or tltne on sucb "pro1, . bono" cases. The Sootbem CalUomia sltuaUon is in marke.d contrast to Northern Callfomia, where four major foundation-funded organizatioos wo~ on envlronmenlall l==~:it=J.l;&I cases. The four , all headquartered in San Francisco, are the Sierra Club Legal Dereruie Fund, Public Advocates Inc., the Natural Resources Defense Council and 1----------1 ~ the Envlrorunenlal Defense Fwld. Of these four, only the Sierra Club's af· fillate has beoo involved in Southern Calitotnla actions, and then only in large- scale or wide-ranging cases. . "ONE PROBLEM JS mAT most plaintiffs basically CllflOOl a{ford legal fees," adds Carlyle W. Hall, a founder of the public interest law center, w.hichJs funded bf tOO Ford Foundation.· • 0 "We tend to tum down run-0f-tbe-mill cases where someone wants to put up an apartment complex and the neighbors want him k> do an environmental impact study." ·Both the attorney general's office and the law center look for cases which might set landmark precedents. .1a9.1ce SOUTH COAIT PLAZA -COSTA MESA SHOE 11REE U.•IO L.VEL -......,, Open SunOav, Neon to s p.m, MON. 1tw SAT. IO-t • Sln1lt·C••I 0,..1ti• • Autori1Uc: -Ln•I C..tr.i • hlll·l11 latt«y bc:i..s111 Clrc:1it smile. you're in candid CAMERA • -.JC»~~~ S2J. •• 1 t. f f. l • • . ' s • ;. . • .. .: • ,. •' ~ . .. •' l I l . • ~ J • 1 • t • • t . • -2J95 c:JCA.I c;: ~ SDUOSYITIM Wlda .·•Track • lllillllllltH llttlrJ/hc::M l1f/T ..... I Wlcahr eS.11tltlM ~Fll it.lie •lultt·h1c..-. .... ~ Aut ... uc si.orr at E.Jllll fl ~ ' ' • • ' . • • • Tki nk Of Christnias Think , of Accutrbn• by "Bulova • I RU' PRICE 34.IS . T•pe PlaJtr c .. ,, ... w1111 c ... 11111 ca •• 1 UL A,,,.vt4 RKttar11r • Adds •ll1tlllpllt1•Subr1Cll •Dl•IHI • fill Y111-l1r11ftl1 • P'KMt Slit with Dtllt T., P1rrwu1tte 11995 REI PllCE 41.15 ~· c:; STIIEll SYSTEM • ! ~ ' • ' . • . . • . ' j Farming Volunteer~ Sought Ml Fonner Peace Corps worker Tcm Jacobi will • be in- l<r'flewlng applicants from 9 •.)IL to S p.m. Thunday at the Orange Coast College Student Center in aearch ol volunteers with uperience in agriculture. Persons with experieoce or degrees bl forestry, agronomy, crop tcience, horticulture and agriculture education a r e being sough\ naUoowide by the Peace Co.po to fJ&ht malnutri- tion In 47 devel<>Plnl countrles. Volunteers mtist 'be at,least l& year• old, U.S. cltlzenl and In good health to be assigned t~year farm projects overseas. SEE SANTA DAILY 10 to 9 CAROUSEL COURT . I ' More Bahia ''18,WaWeek~ On Isle of Wight Woman Gets Jail Term 'RYDE, lJle of Wlgbl (UPI) -Tbe blo • ol Wight hu .. •l!lbarnllllDI baby boom. The babies' motben aren't ~ ried. -I ' ' In Bookmaking Trial illlnd officials lllld M~ tbe1 l!lll lnveatlgale staUsli<l lhowtng that nearly A Los Alamitos woman who admitted ooe o1 every IQ babies born on the partlclpotlng In what Newport Beach Englllh Cluumel Island Ibis JW' ts ll· pollce Nid was a '1Q,000 a week l<alllmate. "Tbe real problem Is when Island girts bookmlklng racket hu been or<lered have love alfajn with ,..tbs oo boll-to ame 10 days In Orange COUnly Ja\I. of Mrs. Krutch, earl Rebkowltl, 41, '1111 Center St., Coota Meu, and James J, . Scolella, 47, iAoC Beach. Rebkowitz WU ~ IO!llenced lo 45 days in county jall IDd a three-ynr pro- beUon term. &ooh& ..,. a llklay jail epell alJI threO ,..,. prollatloa. ' 5oatlt toast ?Ian day," ·1 aocial -ui-aaid, ''the1 ..,.er Superior Court Judie WWlam Murray ========--tbelr babies' fathen again ofter lbt onlered the jail tam for Mrs. Barbara brief romancet." Jeon Krutcb, 15, and ·placed her oo three A1Telling Nooporl ~ ldeatllled' -··as the prlne!IJl! ol • .,..,,,..,. operation that --In tbelr ma allhollgl! he maintained bis hearlquarlers ii\ Jbe offices ol. bU Haw.U,U G~ I Christmas Headqu ar ters for Pipe Lovers! Batane Olp IJPl<t' $9.95 SOUTH COAST PLAZA lower 1 .. .i -..zt to llloy Oo •• Oolta Mesa e Suren I .. ·;.'.;j.J/lt 4 .. .• • Champ or Denmark Available from $15 lo 1115 Sept.ember's CSF Grads Announced Two NewPQrt Be a ch Sliiifents reeerv.a~tiii> bciilori among the 31 0ranp Coal graduateS of Cal · Sta·te Fullerton for September. Aura J . Norl<ll, a political !Cience major from Newport Beach, earned at least a 3.85 grade point average during ·her four college years. Curtis L. McComb<, a pbilosopby major Ir om Newport Beach, waa honored for a fOUl'-JW' grOde point avenge between 3.Siand J.M. September ~ are: Try 'Saturday's News Quiz / -• ... -~-- ·I -· Put -·r best foot fwwerd ',,-" 't \ . . w!th confo.e. Y oli'I r•ly profit ..with N.n...a...h Shoes from Hoels~her's. Make y-selection now. • J \Anti~~ "Brown, Bl.ck or White ---·········-' ,26.00 I , b. 1Brown or Bl•ck •....... $21.00 c. ~rown two-tone ···-··· $26.00 ~--"--. 'S · . ' ' - l I I ,_ -.... t South Coast Plaza .-Costa Mesa (714):540-4940 . tol Street -Ph l:! .... mJ --\ ' Health olfi<er Douglaa Quantrill aalcl a years pn>batloo aftor abe pleaded .,Wty more liberal atUtude· among older to bookmaldoc allegaUoos filed June I. lsfandera on abertion and birth -1 . Judge Murray'> ac:llml cl-. the file woold help .... the problem. . that .... ..-thal dale with the arrest novelly co-. PRE-CHRISTMAS . SAL£ \ 8111tif ul ·Decorative , ~=·,. ·; '*· 1 · I I I .. ~~-:/f.!"f:'; ..... ~ ~~:Qfel candle sets with ba1utiful Chri1tm11 ,;,.gs ~Q :.,.-__ 23nl $3"...: '4~ -$4ts 1-1i.ri1e 1111wm11t1on11 ,_.. Ontrn , ............... ..,, DRESS SALE ALL SPANISH WOOD AND SPANISH WROUGHT lltON Ubl If .... _,I :::•::.i:::,c>i.9~~~~ ......... SJ.II ..... , ·-s1.11.s11.11 ::=-:::~: •............... 111.11 ."' e "' G I I " I . . . SO. COAST PWA COITA MBA 540--6424 540 6404 c~ _ llfts tn.-aai at hiia kd1preecf1, 1...,.... DNtan, lr•hw•re, M11tlc 1 ..... lmpomd &ifn'of all ty,_. · ·'- CIHistllls Cifts DI Raj lntematlenaf ~If-/ of !fiulio. 11lkfnaifo11aL e. .............. ,. ...... .._ ..... ClteM s .... v ..... IM· ,. ..... tifh of an,..,,... OUR MAN -SIZEP C"Rl$l~DHUSJ-. ... J. I -· .,."''-t ;, t,. Just in! 4300 excitingly new doublHnlts from tl.e linen meliei' in A~ica ,And -.....,..,, ' pricing policy ~iU save you • buncllel Rally eround the ·~··Bunch: We have ,,_ ·~ .. best now look, at the very least 11pendilure. Juat lik any of ,.;;;,., cu•lomeri! DOUBLE KNITS Femou• Makori v.st Selection Fectory Fresh \ '$60,00 Coats • • • 44.00 $75.00 Coats • • • 54.00 $88.00 Coats ••• 61.00 -mo.oo coats . . . 74:00 - $95.00 Suits ••• 69.00 $100.00 Suits ••• 77.00 $135.00 Suits ••• 104.00 $27.50 Slacks';~ •• 19.95 $35.00 Slacks '. ••• 24.95 .. Sp1c;,1 crtcllt •ccowMI 1¥1ll1bl1 or lt11k1m1ric1rd a M•t•r a.,,. .. c:;r -----«n•• ••'"' LOS ANGILll --*" ......... , .. --inn f'!..,.. ' • I • , 'HUNTINGTON HACH ~·-·· 0 .... ,, ........... c.-r -·-• 17141 .......,4 P£14111NA: ... , .... ,,, ... ,, ..... IUlllSA cn,1 ""pu \ ·.-~ ~· ' -, • , ! ' ANAHEIM ORANGl <- Ho&ICHll'S ~ 2114 M, 0...,. M.U Moll .. _ HOILSCHll'I ...... _ 1714) .... w,. GLINDALI HOIUCMJl'I ictrl~ 211...,..'et••1t1 A.,,., _.._ lllJI 1171 ... , ...... ....... • Ill c.... ,,,., " ... ,,, -... ' - • . . . WedntWJ', Drcember 13, 1'~~72 ....,All Y PILOT 3 . Water Crisis BeaehW•m- CapJlol News Suvlce Delay Granted 'Rose' Schedules on Sale FRESNO -The critical need for establlshing statewide prtoriUes for w a t e r con- servation projects, taking into account depleted San Joaquin Valley agricultural water and the pressing needs of the Delta and Southern California, is being discussed here by water leaders with the assistance of Rep. B. F. Sisk {l).Fresno). 'S unday Dinner' Murder Figute Faces Diagnosis It} w CSt County The offici •I ~173 Tourna-Southern California . me.qt of Ro.ses.,. Parade and Grocery cha ins partiripallng Haskel, Pant ry, R a I p hit. Safeway, Shopping Bag, Food King. Thriftimart and Von's. PURE ALL URE Mm·der lria} Football Program will be sold selling the •1 programs are: beginning Tbursday in food Alexanders. Apha 8 e t a . A delay baJ I r ..a~J_e d }B markets lo benefit B i g Boys, Food Compa ny. Gelsons, The Big Brothers program palrs fatherless boys with mtn for lxltb compan!ooship and counseling. the Or an g e CQwity .su~rior Court Brother activities throughout Hughes , Jorda nos, Ma rk e t trial of a man atciWd or killing his e.1----------------------------- tranged wife 1,11d ~ ma1e compan)qp in her Fountalft V~,y . hom~ and, the later slaying of bit lt81s girl friend· fu • A oo.day dlagnootlc '!tudy lw be<n or- dered for a Huntington Beach woman convicted of manslaughter in a case that came . to be known in Orange County Superior Court as the 0 Sunday dinner killing." Mr!. Poslh cou1d be committed to state prison for up to five years for her role in the death on June 13, 1971, of Robert Posth, 41. Postb died from stab wounds In the chest, lollicted at the height of a quarrel between the couple over the hamburgers he brought home for Sunday dinner. Westminster. Presiding Judge 'Bruce Sumner granted the delay and ordered that Amos Lewis Ratcllff, 50, of. Anabl!lm , be tJ!turned to hJa courtroom Jan . 17, for assignment to a trial court . RatcUif, an unemployed aerospace worker, was arrested July 8'. INDOOR WINDOW SHOPPING SEE OUR ALL-NEW CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS South Coast ?tua Judge John Flynn Jr. ordered lbe test for Mrs. Maxine Posth, 51, 8352 Alvarado St., and will study the outcome of tesl3 to be . conducted at Frootera State Prison for Women when be sentences the silvcr- haired defendant ln Marl:lt. • Mrs. Posth, who told tbe jury· her hu>- band often bebav~ in a brutal manner; testified tbat ho hn>UBht the food ralher than the chicken she wanted to deliheratelll' ahnoy her. It Is alleged Ula!' Ratcliff .shot Mn-1--~--<·------------------------ Carew abortly after he shot his estranged • White Voters JOHANNESBURG, Sou t·lt Africa CAP) -Aliltouglt the law does.not require a national election before 1975, a door-to- door campaign ii under way to register South A f~ i ca' a estimated 21iii million white voters. The blacks have no vote. CLOSED SUNDAY WI WILL II PWSID TO SllYI YOU SIX DAYS A WIEI( MONDAY throu9h FRIDAY ~:1ie:~,'\;.i;ni.;;,~~.;~~,~·1n~ Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers Glory Ave., Fountatn V~lley; ! I -L.M. Boyd Englishmen Most Faithful Mates THAT THE MARRIED Englishman Is that ltWJband least likely to stray has been claimed by numerou,s u:- perts oo life among Ille married. And the LaUn husband, they say, is most likely. Question arises as to whether climate has anythin.g to do With this matter, Doubtlessly not, says our Love and War Dian. The married lriShmen, geographic nelgbbQr of the Epglimder, is rarely identified as the coostant bu!band. • .... . , STILL, THE TOOTHIEST law at band to fight cirrhosis o( the rivers, it's said, is a llne of. legislation written in 1899 to keep the channels clear for boa!J. .J<n. VAN HaJsEN Great Outerwear ·Gifts for A M'n ! VELVETY CORDUROY 47 50 NORFOLK JACKETS I DESIGNER ORIGINAL: our very own th11tn wit with 1 major in dr1mtl ~ufflld jtcklt Gvtr sllfWIHS Nltlf. R1Von chtllis, 10 a.m. -9:30 p.m. SATURDAY 10 a.m. -9 p.m. THE HOUsE Of WOMEN ARE MUCH more sensitive to nicotine than are man. Or so some medicos claim. That's why It's hanler for women to quit smoking, they say. Q. OWJIERB is it that no ·touple under 30 can marry without parental Our No. 1 Best Seller in Cotton Cordu- roy Jackets. Smooth, Ve Ivel Cul ordu- roy wilh deep Pile fur coll~; an lining. • Desig ned with complele full It and two deep lower pockels. Color : Beige THE ENSEMBLE $52 far the flilhiOfMWIN J to 11 , \\\)US8 qf nine· -WfW...,el - 50. COAST P'~ll MK9 •rllltl II SH oi..,. ,....,, Leeds PACER ..... H....cvlefdt(TM) lflfll-,,,...., <rK,.,...,, dll,...,....., "'911. la -ut,.·i.rwe lntwttr. s- '~ .... (llr1fl'llMI ~ 9f !MM lftolill-tl Ill )'Wt Cl"IWll. ,_...,_,,_ ~ ..... -L9wer i.-1, s..s EM Of Men, Dirwctly Ac,_ ,.... .w ......... ,.._ 14'-ZN' llNJ.041 l-L/1"-wid1 P~Mr .... -"k• $22.00 s. .. ·,... $17.60 !INJ-05 ) 5".wid1 Pecff letitl• Ptkit $24-00 Solt' PricCt S1 t .21 ROOTEN'S/ LUGGAGE SOUTH COAST PLAZA • • San Diego Fwy. •t Brisfol t.l~l•ICUI _ Costa M.ts_• ~ 540-3110 .. ..... ...... M . 10 .... • t :lO p. .. ; Sat. 10 e.-. · 6rp.-. consent?" A. That's the law of the Nether- lands. SIZE OF VNIVERSE -1 Speed ol light is 186,000 miles a second. Say you -id -el that fut on a·n>ek<t It would take you ooJy one and one-third seconds to pus the moon, five hours to get out of our solar system, four years to reach the nearest star. Sizable, this universe, what? YOU KNOW THOSE recli.-with vibratora In them? ~ lpforined by .• f~ ~ who deals In "'!" lhat nliio.A!6J>f. IO men,~ ooaoiderable plwure with Ulat chattering di8lr whllerune oat of 10 women say they - don't like it a\ all. The why of. this, r~ mysterious. A SHOT OF liquor won't warm you up. On tbe con- trary. It can actually trigger the Joss ol some body beat. Clip of coffee might warm up a little, though. Tea, t.oo. But those medical fellows who make a study of such matters say it's not wise to belt 8 bit or booze just before going out in the cold. COMMON TREES-Four trees most commonly planted by individuals are the elm. maple, oak and sycamore ... MOTHERS LIVE longer than childless wives, statistically ... DID I MENTION you usually get mor~ juice from a long lemon than from a round ooe? _ •. CLAIM IS only one Olinese in 10 can read . • . AND MORE DIRT bas been moved to bury pipelines than In dig all the canals In ~ry . A VERA GE MAN !ka'fes· five ti.mes a week, gets a haircut 18 times a year. Does that sound right? Research- ers so observe. I shave sil time8 a week, get a haircut 21 tbnes a.year, SUne tf)e shoes eight times a month, shower daily, aM trim my teenaill every, never mind, let's move , .... THE LADYFRIEND says so far she hasn't run across uy spaghetti sauce in push button cans on the super- market shelves around here. Odd. Such is a popular com- modity now in 'taly. MUST REPORT, too, the generally recognized special ring . to he worn on the third-linger-left-hand ol the di- vorcee is a gold band with X's all around it. IT'S ALSO KNOWN more women than men have trouble getting to sleep at night ..• Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. O~ Box 1875, Ntur port Beach, Calif. 92660 . or Brown. WESTERN RIBLESS CORDUROY JACKETS Fash ioned with deep AC'rylic Pile Collar and Lining ... 100% Cotton Corduroy Shell. A Deluxe gilt for that man in your life. Two handsome colors : Brown or Beige. NOW-at all Harris & Frank stores! Open A Harris & Frank.Open-End Credit Account ' BonkAmericord Master Charge Or American Express Card OPEN NIGHTS 'TIL 9 P.M.- SUNDAYS NOON 'TIL 5 P.M. -.~. Harris & Frank ' -MALL OF OltANGE HONER PLAZA 0RAN6E SANT A ANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA HUNTINGTON CENTER COSTA MESA HUNTIN~TON IEACH IUENA PARK SHOPPING CENTER IUENA PARK OLD FASHIONED Daguerrochrome it UDOf FS Pre ents the newest mos~ comfortable ,. ) FOR 'll'HAT SPECIAL " . SOMEO"E Y.OU LOVE ••• 1-3r4 CAMIP· !N NATURAL' COLOR 2 POSIS TAICIN. RWY WHILI YoU WAIT A VARfETY OF BEAUTIFUL FRAMES AVAILABLE BAK Studio SO. COAST PLAZA 549-2103 • ' I I _, ' . I ~· l JUMBO SIZE I' BEAN BAG CHAIRS ' • RANCHERO VINYL •WET LOOK VINYL • LUXURA VINYL NOW $2500 ONLY -~ . All Beon Bags top stitched to insure longweor. Relax in c omfort wothlng TV, read ing or juit Rloln loafing. Decorative covers to fit in to any decor·fllled with styrofoom beads to mold to your· Bo'dy Contours. Buy Severo! for the who le family-See them todoyl • Useyovr CRIDIT CAID< Of'(•••Hl .. t~TtnM '. OPll IVIMtttlS MOM. TMH SAT. ~-"-..-·"...- SUIDA'f 'lH. S (OI AJllGI STOii 'ti! •J. ~· .I . . • • • •• ·-" " ' ' . -l ··~ •• • • " ! • . ... " t • • • ' I I' I .. • • .. . -' ' \ . . DAIL• 11LOT Pll~T-~DVUTISI~ Q Peaee View All Stons Celebrate GrCllCI ()pe11i11CJ -of Our New Store, 3325 Bristol, at MacArthur Blvd .. Santa Alla ·n~ Ki#MtfJer front,,.,._ Thfrt ',. having anoU- fiMI• talk. ' County Airport Official Resigns SANT" ANA -James Gilmore of Santa Ana. vice chairman of the Orange Coun- ty Airport Commission has resigned his post effective upon the appointment of a replacement. Following Gilmore's ao- nouoccmtnt, the commission voted him chairman Of the group in honor ol his years of service. Gilmore has been.. vice chairman or the commission for three terms. His resigbation lrl::aves two vacancies 00-tbe five-member commission:" -Commissioner Roger Slates :resigned earlier lo accept appointment to the Orange County Planning Com- mission. • The vacancies-will be rilled hy Second District Supervisor David L. Baker'in Slates case and in the case,of Gilmore, by first District Supervisor Robert Battin. e l11dlan Tak SANTA ANA--R~ Dawn, a Santee Sioux lridian and member of the anthropology (IN SHORT ... ) dl'partment at C~ State Fullerton,~·n speak on the "Shakalo ntal of the Zuni lndi " here-Dec. 20. The talk wU I beglll at 7::W p.m. at the Bower's Museum. 2002 N. Main St. nit public is invited. e Trinf Set SANT A ANA· -A Santa Ana carpenter Who allegedly ended a barroom .diSPJJle on ekrlion day by emptytng his hUnting rine into a patron named Nix· on has been ordered to face trial Feb. U 1n Orange Coanty Superior Court. Presiding Judge Bruce Sum- rter set the trial date fOr G. W. Crust. 44. 'and ordtted the defendant to return to court Dec. 8 for a hearing on a plea for bail. Crust was arrested at the Oasis bar in Garden Grove shortly after he alleged- ly shot and killed Ralph C. Nixon. 35. of,..&nta Ana. Police said witnesses told them the two men quarreled and that Crust left 1the bar. They said he returned with his "·ife and used _bis ·~1.p1t}ng rifle 10 cut down Nuwn. . e Dls11e11 A.,..r1b A-NAl·IErA!-=orangc CO"un- ty organizations ™"'e until Jan. 5 to sUbmli a notit'f: of in- tent. receiVe their official ap- plications and submit the ap- plications (or Disneyland's Community Service Awards. The 41 c8J5h awards to be anoounoeJ in ~1arch 1973 offer a total of $50,000. For more in- formatiOn. call 533-4456. e Less l'~•red PLACENTIA -Placentia Unified Si!hoOI • Oiet.r1ct ad- ministraton have stated the district could Jose' $113,000 in state funds if ill average dally • QUEENIE attendance contin ue11 lo decrease. The number of students who c om g I e t e d graduati~n re· quirement.s early and left scbool at mklterm could.rea ch 93 by the eod of the year. the number 11\at would .cause the loss of state aid . • • ·~·Slated FULLER10N -Art students at Cal State Fullerlon will be sej,Jiog and displayng their ba·nifalade: pottery . ceramics. jewelry' leather goods ·a~ paintings at an art sale and show from 9-a.m. to I p.m. Wednesda~gh Fd· day. at the Quad 'area on cam· pul. ,\ .. e Stud1rSet · SANJ' A ANA -~aria! skills will be taug~ ~o bilingual persons four times ' week beginning Feb'. 5' at San-- ta Ana College. 1 A four-unit class for begin- ners will meet from I p.i.n.-lo 3 p.m. Mondays, \Yednesdays and Fridays and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays_. The course is de5igned to provide ~ntry level skills for jobs requiring knoW)edge or English and Spanish. Applications are available at the admissions office at tile college. ·Seventeenth. and Bristol Streets, ~7-95&1. e Garqe OK'd SANTN ANA -Santa Ana city · COl!flCilmen haVe ap- proved plans for a S.555.000 underground parking garage adjo!tJing 'the new city hall. Tile' «intra ct to be put out to bid win lndude the completion of the Plaza o( the Fountains in the Central area of the city- county center. Ill 'the joint financing pro- gram. betW~. tbe county and the city, the city will pay $345,llOO ·or:· the -cost and the roullty f!IQ.000. ' ... e IM>nl· Re:oned 1 . WESTMINSTER -T h e \\'estnimster Village shopping center heft no longer bas the threat of competition from future deyelopmenl across the street .as. the result of a city coUncil action. Gouncilrifen approved lhe 1 rezoning of 17 acres on the north _sid~ of Westminster Avtllue Cre:m a commercial to a single-famil y restdential zone, noting the change would contorm wUb present develop- ment on -effliefsiae or t h e property. e De•rt .fleeting SANTA ANA -Persons who have undergooe heart surgery are invited to attend an organizational meeting of the Orange County chapt.er of the ~1eoded Hearts, Inc. here Dec. ... The meeting will begin at 7: 30 p.m. at the Orange coun- ty Heart Association office, !!H3 Civic Center Drive West. fnlerested ~rsons must call the AMOCiati8n at 547-3001 in -advarice of' the event . 8y Phil lnterlandi ulj\'tS don't dare goof."' I ' Rene Bouchard . :Chpm~ ... , ' •" or t . . Cold Duck , ...... ·1·49 fltt• . ••Kt• " -" i . ' ' ---... Slllcl•lr " Scotdl Wlllslry . . •33~ ~ Fltttl ...... ..... . ·~· .. -... Soarldes with the exciteinrnt °f the Hdidoys ! ( -~ Jalta • vo·' ~· ' .llGif ltH•n · ~·66 Try Joi ta Vodka thenntJirM ' )'OU rn hc: re ,fovoritti drink. .. _ sl~ .H•tene ·; • ~ -\ .-1--c .. ~ - Nifomia ~ndy •29?· '""' ..... . ' I t s19'5. va1a11 Tensor ..: Aluminum · ·:Tennis Racket i •1-3~9 *'. Terrific gift fori~ Stiffu ~ .st.et fot1 gr9clter c:Ontrol- Strung with top q.iollty, block. crOSl nylon ... strel"IO!heneid to elirninote problems. ' . . Your Cboj'" 1Yrtz. .. lltl"r life, tf'• al., vo·s ·••IR +· . . DREMSS-. ... . . . ~ ' , .. • Oigitol dial fM dir-.:-t • reading -matt popu- lar feature on a clock! , Hancbome ebony col~ 0 cos., ooldtorle d i o ~r ' ~let, ea1y ta ,..,_ o 50.J OI . . .... $17'' va1~1eampmastlr aac.k Pack ., Fram• ~ . $·10" DiscoUnt ·Price } • I ,· t .Reg;~:: ~~!~ings ·-· ·elders Glove. ~ -'4"- I ' l for hikefS I in. r Sonta speoo . ith , Cd£' P*rlect-bock pack. w _..., f~ of qUOlity ak.iminum, - ju1table Podded nflon 1trap1, 1ie-dotw1 packets. SIB.II Yaliltl Col••• prop111 La11tm WI"' LP ... "'mi<IO•.:Ji6'1 included. 15121, Cllltllil D111lll1 ~ ':!"!,1o, $14" doY stretcher. l210F; ColllU• Dlll11 2·""9f "''' • Fl~iP ..... ~. ''"' ., ... ·tt~. I. I 3G. j., ·'i ~: QUICK DRY Styler Dryer .. ~held • :i:.~''' $1211 ~ g'1phon-( .... -~P2600 - R Tch hot ll ............. qufck. ei:Wn•' .. I fo rtobja. , lhow. , . . ,-. •• o 1dec( atock- lng stuff-.,.. ' ' T 1 ' :l1 PILOf·ADVERTIS!~ • .. , .. ~.,. __. ... ,,. "' ,-PIMTANll YAU.IY -t1'1t .......... M. ft ,...,. ,,. tqff.,...,~ • ..,.. ......... .. ,.,.,,Uf 'l"l;Lrt -.......... ~ .... ....., '#tSTMNftt•• -av w-.i ' ra .. .,.._ W.t -' . 3 •UWT1 ..... MACH -tNt _..,.It l:UWall ltUNTINOTOll ••ACM -till' 1-.0 l lwt . "f 4tlMU ltUflltl ... fON llAClt -tMI WifMf l&NtA AifA -._ W,......, ........... tL j •" TOltO -11 ftf'I M ltlCMi* .... MUWTINOTO• 1U:CN -n M•IH .. C.tllt l ~i,,,. .. f •• . " $11111 ltnl a . ~atlolt "'''~ ., ~··to-.... , . .,a..... yaritt.I lonolily I ........ ., . ·' '2'7 . 'ft.olL ,.-:tt•-. ,. .,.,.,. . v-• • ck1. • ,1: "1*:" 0 • •.;.... v'~ f -• Gill_.. free · . ·· ornaments ;f. • '• • t· :11,,. •••• '20-Light s111• ·• ~,· .. ,. • 'c ce1 .. , ' ''"'' n . .... ' ~. . -T,.~;.;,..,..iJl"I oiooo·"' R.d.-Golil. Bl~. ~· GNtr'l liSf.Mrr, .. 2 ~-lnrit1lz.•:-Mo.ke onr tree Flashet;.Sels t ' • " '/Mldr.•t" ,. ,,, • ' C DllOlb t Ptlu · . , , IMf9 ~; Modit.rn_.u.s.A. Sa .... ' now! . , ;,. ~ " F°" all vin;I trMs ~'Indoor ~loo!·U. J · ... to~ tm o trM. Fkdh on ond off. Cool burning ' ' '.·,~ -C7 !> 15-U,,lot !o'·. $1.11 • • . ·". 8ottlt Of 24 T1Wets 9· 3c:· .' ··s] 1• DRISTAN " =::;;. -~~ Wte ef 1Go. THlets ~1 21 EXCEDRIN ". ...... ton "S1AY '¥-'IM" . S.""'9 Dish "''" v.i;.1 ''6' ..... 2 qt. ~th an- twdtridff, T•f-Jort ff lnt.rlor, R~Uni-'1. HAMILTON HACH ...... , t 4~ sp••d b-'.1\~~: '1 &•· Sh9tl'•rpt00f , 1 44 oz. ain- to• . f • • , -.. · f24 95 Value! ·• Famous Clairol _ D_ynel ~-\Yil!_ • 1 Hip.fashlel styles! -o uptnJpt Mellilr far Cftl Ctllftrt! .•Yt1'n Sell Tnta Amr· ' . ti~ " TY!' . s· 99 '1f'. . /' : ,. ' ~-'· . .It .. '· I "*'. ~ ~\14 ·It ,$16 .. Y alue~ :· lont.ijsfAaker · · (s..,,y, lut )¥~Can't ~nth. Name) Double K.nit Men's Fl•res -. SAVE 42%1010%-, •on s1z•s $ 99 IRE 30 '' 36 ·SOME SIZES ~· & 31 lYAILllLE ., :;// ' ~ ·~ . . • Popular MM'• Styles • No-Iron •o1Y .. 1er or Po~r & c.tton ...... , y ..... SU.I Sty!• wltft_Wldo loll Loops AJf flrii quoUty-no JriWQ\,ilairr or ·MC~ In this gr9Clt 1ale "group Of fOmol..-mialc.er ponb In ' popular doubleknlts so o:mfort- ' " oble to W9Qr and easy to core for. ~rtly toUOf9d•w1tt1 new• f!St folhlOn detblhng, Ontv ot Thrifty these conhmpon:iry ltyl- 11 at ~I• low, low prlc.. ' . ·~ .. ,. OAJl.Y PILOT 3 • l • J I I "' • • . . ' . ' ( 38 DAIL' PILOT ______ w_.i_......,_-'.C_' Ot_.;,_tt ____ llc_' _l 9_n Ru s·sian to Spurn $, Join Pro Net Group By Msoclated Press A. Soviet tennis ace is joining an Amencan-operated professional tour "strictly as an amateur," and if you're a true believer in the Commwtist way , that makes sense. To the surprise of millions, probably including millions of Russians. Alex f\1ctreveli. a 28--ycar-<>kt star, will join one of t"'O troupes opening the :rea90ll in January under the egls of World Cham- pion Tennis Inc. of Dallas. ~like Davies, executive director of \VCT, says that Metreveli will be paid any prize mooey he earns, and Davis couldn't care less what happens to the c<1sh thereafter. All 1his encourages some intriguing speculation. Have the Russians been unable lo resist the pleasant whiff of money from abroad? 1'here y,·as that highly exploited world champiooship chess match between Boris Spassky and Bobby Fischer for a whole lot of marbles, and there was I.hat recent Team Canadl'.SOv!et hockey series with Its promise of lucrative games yet to come against other teams. Are the Russians atxlut to expand a promising source of foreign exchange'! \\rtxi knoY.'S what could develop after chess (sbakhmat) and hockey (kh<lkkeJ) and now the tennis players(tennistil who knows but that some day it might be soc--= (futbol), basketball (beske lboli and even baseball (bezbolJ? If all this happens. none or the Soviet participants will be regarded as pros. In the time-honored phrase of Pravda, "It is well knov.-n" that there are no pro- fessional athletes in the Soviet Union . They are all pure amateurs whose prow· ess can be attributed to proper ··con1· munist education" and considered proof Protliro Post-morte m St. Louis Def eat Was a Nightmare LOS ANGELES (AP) -Coach Tommy Prothro surveyed a disappointing season by his Los Angeles Rams yet still figures there is a ctiance they could win the divisional title this weekend. "Odds are 4-1 against both San Fran· cisco and Atlanta losing," the coach ad· mitted. "And then we would have a tough game against Detroit." And the only wa y the Rams could go into the playoffs would be for San Fran· cisco to lose to Minnesota on Saturday and then Atlanta fall to Kansas City on Sunday with the Rams then beating Detroit. ' "Two weeks ago 1 thought Detroit was going to win its division. Then the Lions were murdenid by Green Bay and tied by Buffalo . ., said Prothro. "Still they have one of football's fine offenses." Los Angeles has both fullback Willie Ellison and offensive lineman Charlie Cowan on the injured list -the back with bruised ribs and the lineman with a pulled groin mW1Cle. Elli.son was listed as probably against the Lions -Cowan as only possible. · Prothro still seethed about t h e chemicals on the field in St. Louis which made it and the ball slick and &llppery. Yet his present worry goes ahead to this weekend. U San Fraociaco should win on Satur· day and thus capture the tttle and playoff, would the Rams ease up the next dc:y? "We 'll still be trying to win ," the coach replied. And does he think Minnesota and Kansas City, each already eliminated, will go all out against San Franciaco and Atlanta? "I'm sure they 're wanting to win," Prothro replied, "but if wanting to win does it, they wouldn't be out or the playoffs. J'm not sure a team plays with quite the same vigor when it knows it is 001. "I'm certainly not optimlstlc, but we're going to practice this week just as if we were playing for the championship. We'd never forgive ourselve1 if we overlooked the possibility if it came up." The Rams stl:nd-N=r with a club the coach had termed ln the fall as better Tolan Hon oI"ed, Still a Fatalist CINCINNATI, Ohlo lAPJ -Soft. spoken Bobby Tolan. honored Tuesday fOf' his coortge in conquering two rtps of his right Achilles tendon, remains a con- fumed fatalllt ln the wake of continued rtcocnitM>n. "I just try not to get too involved and let thmg.oi worry me too much," the C~ cinoati Reds' centerfielder said hours after being named winner of the 1972 Hutch Al''ard for courage. The Hutch Award is given annually by a &ports writers and broadwlers oraaniwtion to the major league baseball player who best cx:emplifies the courage of the late pitcher and manager, Fred Jiutchlnson, who died of cancer in November 1964, Tolan, who missed the entire 1'11 seuon after two operations to repair his Injured leg but who returned to hit .113 anc;t steal 42 base$ for the Redl tut !euon, earlier wa.'1 honoft!d as the Na. tJoftaI League comeback player of the year. than that of last season which finished one-half game behind division winner San Francisco. Has he been disappointed? "I've been both disappointed in our performance in some games and in the breaks we got - both," he answered. ''We've had a lot or games when a Jot of us didn't do well. T1ils disappointed me in the performance. Then in three or four games we played well enough to win and didn't win." The 24-14 loss to St. Looi! topped the list. "Thal was a nightmare," said Prothro. "We have no excuses for losing but we could have won it very one-sidedly very easily." . A dropped pass, fumbles, wide cut on a dash for the end zone and frequent slip- ping and sliding -all contributed to the defeat. Koreans ~P Bay Clobbers In Volleyball • Dy HOWARD L HANDY Of ftHi D•lty l"li.t Stiff ... Tom Read spiked a ball through the middle of the Korea Anny volfeyball team to give the Balboa Bay Club a third game victory, 17-15, Tuesday night in the Edison High gym before 900 fan s. But Ole sLDa:le game victory wasn't enough to curtail the 1tar·studded Korean visitors who won the match, 3-l. A U.S. w0men's all-star team likewise won a single game, 18-16, while losing its match. J.l. Three members of the Korean Olympic team plus the top spiker in that country who was injured during the Munich Games, were in the visitors' starting lineup. Cho Jae Hak made spiking a ball a -symphonic art and before the match, had the fans che«ing wild1y as he soared high above the net to pound the ball hard OOllJe court. During th~ game·, he was equally effective. gracefully spiking the ball with a deft movement while high above his foes. He was aided by Chong Dong Ki, Kim Chung Han and Yi Yong Kwan . all members of the Olympic contingent from Korea. COach Jim Keane's Balboa Bay squad gave up a string of II straight points in lhe first game, losing I~. BBC opened in front in the secdhd game before fall · ing. 1S.7. In the third game, BBC was downM... before a rally with Read, Spence' Noteboom, Toshi Toyoda and Bill lmwaJle leading the way, pulled out a victory. The final game went to Korea, 15-7. "We play defense at the net . with a blocking attempt as opposed to their full court defense," Keane said. "We also de- peod on a good service." The Korean women's contingent drop- ped the second game, 18-16, but won the other three, IM, lS-9 and 15-13. Both Korean teams. being shorter than their American counterparts, used JI roundhoute serve while the BBC llnd all· $tar teams served OYtrhead. of the superiority or lhe Soviet system and the "new Soviet man.'' Soviet athletes surprised e v e n themselves wilb the ir performances :it the Olympic Games in Munich. which ·in-- el uded winning their firat gold medal ever in basketball. An analysis of the Olympic sho wing by Radio Liberty disclosed I h a t 162 members of Soviet teams were from army and navy sports clubs directly under control and supervision o f OOSAAF, tbe initials for an organization dedicated to cooperating with the anny, navy and air force. ' OOSAAF is run by an anny general. It has the combined fun ction of selecting and training Soviet athletes. It just happens that any Soviet athlete of any importance will have been developed and trained at the expense of the state while living high on the Soviet hog and assigned to some snap of a job that won't occupy much of his or her time. These "amateurs" are pampered and privileged in comparison with ordinary S<wiet mortals. So the Soviet amateur·profcssiona1 has a good deal of incentive. He is not un· mindful of the idea that the party people dislike to see a Soviet team on the losing side of the contest with Weslem amateurs. They probably would be just as unhap- py if their: men lost to crass, capit.alist· minded Western professionals-who play for sordid money. Soviet athletes owe a lot of status and privilege to the fact that they do their utmost for the glory of the Soviet banner in the arena of competition with foreigners. The "new Soviet man" is keenly aware of what is exwcted of him. Money is no object. He is an "atr1.ateur." DAlt.Y !"IL.OT l"llO!ot llr l"I~ O"DMIMU CHO JAE HAK DRILLS A SPIKE INTO THE BALBOA BAY CLUB TEAM. LAUREL BRASSEY (5), NANCY OW EN (1) AND BARBARA PERRY OF THE U.S. WATCH A KOREAN SHOT. i,atrston Injured Boxing's Dirty Official Den ies Chicago Charges' Irate Last-second B ask e t PHILADELPHIA (AP) -\Vhile the Los AnReles Laker.i readied to meet the Philadelphia 76ers tonight , their forward Happy Hairston returned home for e:ii:· amination of a badly twisted knee that could keep him out of action indefinitely. l-Iairston went dOwn in the second quarter of the Lakers' wild 106-105 overtime victory over the Bulls in Cllieago Tuesday night. The Chicago team doctor Jooked at the lert knee, and while he did not say how serious he thodaht the injury might be he commented "fhey will not have to operate." The game ended in confusion when nn apparent wlnnlng basket by Cllet Walker as time ran out was disallowed. Walker had a pair of free lhrOY.'S with two seconds left in overtime and made the first lo put the score at 10&-105 Los Angeles. The second shot missed and bounced back to Walker. who rolled to hia right ond threw in a SO.footer that of- ficials ruled left his hands after time ran -out. With Hairston playing, coach Bill Sharman said he felt he had the best re· boondlng combination In the National Basketball Association. Los Angeles had a di!!icult tJme a.gainst the Bulls, even before Haintoo was hurt, but managed a 4744 halftime lead after traili"8 by eight points at one Ume Jo the first. half. Mike Quarry MIAMI BEACH IAP) -Mike Quarry bolted out of the ring and threatened to retire Tuesday night after being beld to a 10--round draw by Frankie Evans, the Te,;as light heavyweight champion. "I've put in my career," said Quarry, 21, of Bakersfield, who broke Into sob.1 ln his locker room after the bout. "I'm going to retire. Boxing is too dirty for me. l'm going back to school.'' Quarry, who weighed t81'n, four pQund.s more than Evans, said he thouabt he had won every round as he sought hit 36tb victory. His only loss was to Bob Foster in a light heavyweight cham· plonslilp fight 1191 June. He had-never drawn. The referee, Eddie Eckert, scored it a 46-46 draw. When Judge Barry Pearlman scored It 47-45 Evans, Quarry stormed out of the ring, before the 48-16 Quarry decision by Judge Bunny Lovett was an- nounffil. Wrong Material Bla111ed ~ The Lakers pulled out to their biggest ~ead, 96-92, with 2:4.5 left to play in the game but were then be.Id scoreless for the rest of the regulation play as the Bull$ tied lt 98-98 rorcina the game Into a five mlnute overtime with two lree throws by Walker as the fourth 9uarter ended. Los Angeles, now leading Colden State by 6"1 games. retuma home aflC:r playing Philadelphia •"\1 plays Booton Friday night. "I won 10 out of 1011 saJd a a')'ing Quarry, nrtl>ranl<ed light heavywtikht ac«>rdlng to tho World BoxlJli A&soC!a· tlon. "Thai·1 my la&t fight." Quarry failed to pt liiside to pummel Evans, 24, of Port Arthur, Tex., who Is now 20-13-1. "It was hll style-," said Quarry. "His teet were too tar apart. l couldn 't work inside.'' Evan81 wbo suf· fercd a ten eye cut In the first round, succe1t1fully protected . the eye far the rest or u~· fight. ST. LOUIS (AP) -The wrong kind or drylJli matertol wa pla<td oo lhe lleld at Busch SUlcflwn here last week, caus- lnf severe llur'lll and bndles to players in 1..tbe SL Louil cantaul·l.0 AtlgP.les RtCml ra.me 9-dl1, a cbemlcat firm spt)knmln Uld ~. ~ numbel al p1.,.. ~ aficr the pme 1'hlclJ SI. ~ -IHI. lhot tl"1 oulf.,. ....,,. -tlllJ came in -wllh tho Odd llltl dial the ball 111111*1· chomleal CIJled U,.. II ally·~ ed. to tr'tat tbe field to remove let and snow, but the matntennnce crew nn out of the chemJcal and used calcium chloride, 11 causUc aubstnnce used to remove lee and mow from street~ end sidewalks. "Urea ls totally harmles1 and fs used tn food atu.ffs. cosmetics a n d pharm&ceutlcall/' nid a apokesman for MonJanto Co., which product• Urea. "Calcium ctllortde lsA:ery call!llc material and wtll p'"'"f" bums 8nd lesions . . . We do not recommend its use.'' The spe>k.csman said the determinat ion that calcium chloride. had !>«!en used was made by a laboratory analysts. He said the calcium chloride will have to be removed by Roodlng the lleld with water when temperlllUrtt rile above freezing. The National Weather Service h" forect1st oome readings In 1tile mid· 30s for St.---too~.SUnd•y'h pme asainst the Phila Jhia Eagles et Bu&eh Stadium. . L.e1 A"f'I" UNI tlllc: ... llNI 0 "' T 0 ,,i: T H1 lr11on 1 M 2 Awltf ' 0-0 ' M~lffllln I 11 10 Ht•rO J 1·1 1 Cf1tunti.rl1tn J J..J I 11:1,.. ,l M I W111 11 "' 2t Love 1 .S.' If Go6d'rl~ U '-1 >' fll'f S D·' ID ltlCMllO!I D ~ 0 'V•flLH r I W \' 8rldvft 1 .. 5 t W1lll.tl' S P.ID lf c.ut'lll 2 ,., ' WtiM ' 14 ,, Tofllll 41n411N Te«ilt 41lM10f ~~ 112t27t• •-106 ClllC.-ot '2 :tt 21 M 1 -lN "'°"ltd ou! -"'°"" 'TOl~I loul\ l.O'I A.!191J1ft 2.), (l'llc.t\IO b A, 11 ...... MKI 11,tl2. "l 0 felt I won Jt all tht'! way," Evans said. "I Wll IO IUR J woWd take him OUL any rouod l wanted to." Qllarry said ht wanttd to try to gel the dtclslO!}ehangC!d and If he succeeded, he would ~ his mlrKI about retiring. Wilhelm To Manage For Braves ATLANTA -Hoyt Wiiheim was Mmed manager of Atlant:i's fann club in Greenwood, S.C .. for Ille 1973 bueball season, the Bravn announced 'l'Ueld•Y· Wilhelm, 4.9, who was re1eued by the Los Anaeles Dodgers mld way in the 1972 SM!Orl, ""holds tbe major league record for moat appearances by a pitcher, fltli!bJ.ng his Zl-year career with 1,070. Golf Nut Gift OKLAHOMA CITY -This city has come up with a Christmas present for the real golf nut -free golf on the three municipal COUl'Se!. The Oklahoma Cily Golf Commission said-the clubhouses at the eoones would be closed on Christmas and New Year's Day. But it said any tiardy golfer who wants to can tee off and play all he wants thos<! two days without paying green fees. Wilson to Retire ST. LOUIS -Veternn defensive back Larry Wilson of the St. Louis Cardinals, who doubled this year as a player-coach, will retire at the end of the current Na· lional Football League season, the team announced Tuesday. The Cardinals al.5o announced they are retiring Wilson's No. 8 jersey following the game Sunday in St. l.ools aplnal Philadelphia. Wilson , 34, is a IS-year veteran with the Cardinals from Utah. Wilson was named to lhe Pro Bow! game in eight of the past JO seuons: He played in a team record 1~7 games prior to tbe start of this sea.son. Stolz MSU-Coach EAST LANSING, Mich. -Dennis Stolz, born , reared and trained in football skills in this central Michigtn area, was confirmed today as Michigan State University's new head coach. The MSU Board of Trustees voted ~ at a five-minute meeting to hlre the '9- year-old Stolz fer a $25,000.a·year salary. ABA to Expand LOUISVIILE, Ky. -The Arneri<au Basketball Aasociation owners, more confident than ever in their league's survival, have taken steps to expand into two. new clUes..nut season.. ..,... _ ABA Commissioner Robert Carlson said tbe owners voted Tuesday to accept applications for the additional francbltes and he said the trustees hope to expand the league into larger television martet areas. He named Los Angeles, Chicago, Philadelphia, Jersey MeadQ"-'3 and Honolulu as strong possibilities.. Bench Improves CINCINNATI -Flnal tests on a lesion removed Monday from the right lung of Cincinnati Rros' catcher J ohnny Bench verify the inflammation was benign, Reds' team physician Dr. George .Ballou announced today. "The permanent microscopic section of the tissue removed has confirmed that there was no evidence of any malignan- cy," Ballou said in a terse statement issued at Christ Hospital this nlorning .. Ballou also sald Bench wa.s being removed from the intensive care ward and placed in a private room. Penalty Killer LOS ANCZLES -Jinuny Peters likely \Viii not be on the ice for the opening face off of tonight's Los Angeles Kings- Cbicago Black Hawks National Hockey _League_ con.test. _ 1 But the 28oyear-old Kings center will be on hand when tbe Kings' penalty killing unit is needed. Peters ls a specialist whose duty it is to see that the opposition does not score while his teammatea are in the penally box. Killebrew Surgery MINNEAPOLIS -Home run slugger Hannon Killebrew of lhe Mlnne!Ota Twins was scheduled for surgery today to have a benign bone leslon remoW?d from the big toe,d his right root. Surgeons also ·were to correct a ~ lem ln the second toe or his root during the operation at St. Marys Hospital. The 36-year-old Killebrew. who has been bothered by leg and, foot problems while hitting 28 homers In 1971 and 26 Jn 1972, bad varicose veins remoYed from his leg this fall. Mrs. Lombar di Dies llAZLET, N.J . -Mn. MaUJda Lorn· bard! of lltulett, the mother or the 1ate professional football coach Vince Lom- bardi, died Tuesday. She wu IL Vln<e Lorn banfl died or ...... In September, 1970, 1:t 57. Danek H onored --. PRAGUE -Dilcua thrower Ludvik Danek, who won a ;old medlll at the 1972 , Olympics In Munich, was ~lecttd C!echoslovaltla's athlete of the year Tllffdoy. OndreJ Nepela, the 21·year-old figure 1kaUng cbamploo at the Winter Gameo ln SapPoro. w8' •ecan<J In the ballotln( b9' sport.swrlttr11 Another Munich Olym. plan1 Gtte0-Roin.an wrealler VltezJav Macha, wat lhlrT. )Ian Kodca , lhe .n•llon 'a top tl'flllio i>llYer. flnl•hod 10th ln the Poll. -··r • Indy Up ,A:llocation " For Fuel INDIANAPOLIS (AP) '1110 lndianapoijJ M o t o r Speedway acted W<bw to cor- rect a oltuatlon wblch In pert could have cost driver Jerry Grant and car owner Pin Gurney aliout $70,000 In the llldy NO taat May lll. 'Ille Speedway added l> gallons ol fltd· to the DIU· tmwn for the 1!1'13 race by Jn. ~ the pit atorage tonk limlt from 250 to 2'15 galloos, in addition to the amount car- ried in the can at the start ·Of the race. ' Wtd-. -13, 1~72 In BB Tourney CdM, New por t To p Cage Fo es , DAILY PILOT Cage Wars Get Hotter Tonight Four Orange Coast area By ROGER CARLSON the winners as Glllis' crew teams take their cracka at a or t11e o.i1r ,,._. si.rt was cold from the field in the No. 1 seeded Corona del Mar first hair, hitting 12 of 38 at-semifinals berth in the 44th and rival Newport Harbor m-tempts from the field for an annual Huntington B e a c h ed into the quarterfinals of lbe icy ll.6 percent. Invitational basketball tourna- 44th annual Huntington Beach CdM finished with 25 of 63 ment with doubleheaders bW- basketbe..11 tourney Tuesday for 39.7 percent. ed for Huntington Beach and night at HWltlngton Beach Wharton 's man in the CdM Edison high schools •nnl .. ht. High. man-~man defense was Steve -.._ ~at H u n ;;":g 1 0 n and ,.._ Friar, the Pacific League's •uc uua Coach T Y Gillis' \,Ajrona t I bl pt 1 st Beach Oilers or coach Elmer del Mar Sea Kings knocked mos va ua e ayer a Pacific League representative season. Combs take on the challenge Arcadia into the consolation Friar scored 1(1 Points-of Monrovia in the 8:30 tussle bracket with a SH5 victory, Although they lost, the Hun-at Huntington Beach !ollowlog tington Beach junior varsity Most can corry a Utile Jmdu '1$,g~ • Grant w a a i!pl!cillcally while Newport did likewise to was probably the most pro-Edison's confrontation with Huntington Beach's j 11 n I o r ducUve of any team Tuesday No. 2 seeded Long Beach varsity, 60-47. night "--the to • defen-ln other first round ""'Ion Wuauu, urncy s pen&liz&l lor refueling from a h=~ st:,i~.._a •1i:i.ifi·i-=·::::==':JUDG~=E~S:;EL:,:l:MO:'Bf"UD':;.,...F'-'RAN=;;.-K-;LcclN,:._:S.:,TA=RT'-S A-'BO~Y_S_C~LcUc__;~c..B_A~SK_l:~LL ENCOUNTER. was ifliiiiii<:eiil iiilila&e ao that Grant still had fuel left in -.:• COacb Glenn B e c k er ' s ding champio"n. Tustin trampled Servi~ BHl, quintet battled heavily ravored At Edison it's Newport-Mesa and War:ren advanced with a Newport Harbor on nearly District rivals Corona del Mar bye. -even ler-Tni and refused-tokwilt-and Newport at 8:-30 following Coron30el Mar eased lO its in the face of overwhelming the 7 o'clock tiff between War· hl,s. regular tank. . A Speedway official aa1d the question of whether any fuel remi.tned never llad been verified. Grant finlsbed Second to M.-t Donohue In the 1972 event but officials cancelled all of bis lapo alta' be refueled from teammate Bobby Unaer's pit tank on the 138tb of the 200 lapo. That dropped Graot from 2, which then paid Al $95J57, to No. 12, whb:b 123,SSZ. At record speeds, the racers gulped so much fuel this year that both Mario Andretti ahd Dick Simon ran out and failed to finish . New Speedway rules also In- crease' the size of each driver's crew from eight to nine, but the ninth man must stay behind the track wall as a signal man. The '73 rules also require that car numbers be displayed on both top and bottom of the rear airfoil in additlon lO the standard nwnbers on the nose and both sides. Tustin Coach Trotter Quits , , Tustin High School baSl<et- ball coach George Trotter has restcned bis position effective at the end of the curroot cam- valRn. the DAILY PILOT l!]ls teamed exclusively. Taking over for Trotter will be junior varsity coach Gary Larson. Trotter, 50, wlll continue to teach at Tustin. ntls is Trotter's 17th year at the Tillers' helm and seven of his last 16 teams have earned berths In the CIF playoffs. His 19156 team won the Crestview League tiUe with a w record and two other teams g a i n e d co-cham· piomhlps with Laguna Beach and Brea ln the Orange t.ague. Eag! : > , .. I~y In 62 4 7 •• < Basketball ,Loop Area Fives In Action fourth straight victory of the experience. ren and Tustin. ' campaign behind the nice Newport, perhaps with an Consolation games include Kids Get Chance shooting, defensive prowess eye on tonight's confrontation Villa Park and Ramona at and board work of Jerf with Corona de! Mar, was Huntington Beach and Arcadia Wharton. unable to put the jun¥>r Oilers and Huntington Beach's junior Wharton, a 64 senior, sank away untiJ 2:02 remained varsity at Edi.son, both 4:30 10 attempts fr om the field in when Jim Swick put in one clashes. Reversal gaining 21 points and rrom inside to give coach Dale Coach Dale Ra ge Y 's whenever Corona seemed to Hagey's Sailors a ninf.-point Newport Harbor Sailors pose a Marina High School, an easy be finding itself 90me trouble, .advantage (S2-43). , . serious threat to the unbeaten V • B Cl b first-round winner in the it was Wharton who was on Huntington Beach led only and No. i seeded Corona del la oys U Alhambra basketball tourna-the spot to bail the Sea Kings brieny in the first period at S:.7 Mar quintet with Jim Swick, • ment, will get a stiller test out. on Doug Moll's 20-footer. Curt Spreen and Jaime By HANK WESCH Arcadia's Apaches had only Paul Gassman was th~ Holmes in the front line and Of ... D11ty ,. ... saH tonight at 8 against a high]y a loss lo La "---,....,; .. 1 .. g Ungto ~ J v D L. HANDY tch. f th n ~110 ""'""" leading scorer for Hun n two quJck gua1\IS, ae a. Emlncla High's Eagle.6, in-By HOW AR wa mg one o ese seve regarded Pasadena team. their record F. appeared to :-,... Altma'.n and Brian O'Flaherty consistent and cold &hooting Df ... DMtt '1"' stiff year olds pushing that ball up The BuUdogs, CIF finalists have the potential to knock off ,BeaNech,wpowi:.s~ ~ts-line of in the lineup. "-··'-·t the ........... fell to Their height is hardly up to tOward the basket," 0 n e last year, defeated Sierra 67-4.l Orange r •.• ~•s No. I rated •• ......,.. •~ I f but th " I observer points out. "'Ibere is Tuesd · ................. ,. Swick, CUrt Spreen and Jaime The Corona trio that causes La Quinta, 6J..47, in JlGQ.· eague seven eet e,, Pay ay everung. team in the early going. H I t k d t f the most of the damage is Casey basketball action Tuesday at basketball ·With a determina-a real contrast between the se Five Orange Coast area It was tied six times in the o mes oo a van age o ' Jooes, Jeff Wharton and Matt La-Quinta. . Uon.. 'that is seldom seen On_ young boys and those in the teams will be in Bction in the early stages but Wharton got inside game a n d Newport s Coach Dave C a r·I ill e ~a players in the proressional l8-ye~-old b~acket. That con· San C I e m e n t e tournament the Sea Kings on top for good papl:ntyof o1u~~kvvygu~~~e:'sw~ K~egh.Ollers blitzed through Estancia team was shaken by ranks. trast 15 beautiful to watch." 'I1lursd ay. w1'th a !"footer w1'th 4·.35 left h fi -• . There are 12 youngsters on T . 1 d . 1 d "' dealing with Corona de! Mar. Ramona in t e ll'St rvuuu' a La Quinta full court press in 1be game is ~e same and . each teain and more than 500 earns invo ve Inc u e in the half to snap a 16-all tie. Guard Jack Altman, a left~ behind the nifty play of Jim the first quarter and bit only the baskets are m the. same involved in the program at the Mission Viejo, Costa Mesa. The·advantage swelled to six handed whiz, scored 10 points Weir. one fleJd goal in the 98COnd ~ace as: those of thetr col-i two clubs. They play four San Clemente, Estancia and at the hall and that was as while mate Brian O'Flaherty Weir scored 30 to pace the quarter .in dropping its leCOllct' leglate brethren, yet these evenings each week (Tuesday Laguna Beach. close as Arcadia was lo get added 21 counters. Oilers. game in four starts this y~gsten are seven year ol.ds through Friday) and aJI day In other P:eP games .Thurs· the rest of the night. -'---------::-"----------season. 1 playing for the first time ln m-Saturifay. d~y, Fountatp!Valley w1~I play , 1be ;Sea Kings asswned a La Quinta profited from the tramural leagues for the 1be competition is open to Righetti at ,{30 p.m. m the 17~Pollit bulge at 44-27 with press, and also beat the Harbor Area Boys Club. bo · the Or Co st ~nla Ma fi I a Tou~ent l:f7 Jeft in the third period Eagles on ihe boards In cnd5-'J'beir abbreviated height is :!a. !n:f joinhman~e te!m Laguna Beach will open San · bef(lrej Arcadia whittled the ing to a 22-15 advantage after exfended when two of the best assures him of playing a por~ Clemente ~ent ~l'y at tead to nine early in the fourth one quarter, and opened up a .face a tipoff and go as high as ,tion of every game. Mem~ S:~ p.~ .. aga.~ Ganesba qdarter. 35-20 lead whidl-could-have their young legs_ ~carry -benfUP;s sz:so per-year-(trom-while MissK>n V1e,t0-and Costa~ft8-that-.-the Sea Kings beeoeven Wi~a~bllttlme. ~l.nquest ofo:intrnllingthe the date be joins) and it en-Mesa play at 5, Estancia and traded baskets in between Est.Jncia missed 1J: lbot:a In U,. nieti' extended fingertips titles him to all prtvileg'l!I of Pacifica at 6130, San Clemente eatiJig up the ck>ck with their succession qefore i'ftm Pirtle!• .., -rwtI to almost RveD tie dub for that period of and Saddle1>4c\. at 8.. -outstanding 'b a 11 handling. jumper with !:IS left ID the -•time. .Dana Hi\!!' Oedgling .team 1~· committed only siX first balJ. ~ la Ille 1llt Cllllrol doe!m'I alw<JI llelailo on the basl<etb.1111 will travel "" tilt Soulb _Bay tiJmtitrs against the Arcadia period the EaDI' ...., In !';_, Cllltlnll. In flld, pngram as. well a! oilier area for th~ knoo~ ~-""~'-. on three ·rree titwa!.11i11Qt'ta plmren ......._ Jbe ,-. of. ta club's 'acti,vWes ment, playmg~. Michaels at • Dllpite the easy win, it Quinta tallied lite i-Cll i. l'iCJ -..._.. tn may be -Inn es> , 7 p.m. • { ' ., {iarticularl,y artistic !or layupo and sbilrtji 15 -.. !llO -.i. to -~ ~._!: &utive ....,. 1.aG Yantom •cl • • •. , .,r.,. .A. · DlmlnuUv• &ilord ll ~lt 6'I Is wa~ raU... ~ oLl&ll'IZ. ' ' . · • Q . ,,.. 11rennan was .-ta Qallt( ~tho tip 111 -!!Pe<talln .,.,,_s!A>p by any .; '" """ll:JN!N1IS , c..... ::-· W' " ,, ringleader, ICOl'f!1I L ll!IM court. ~ tit'Ot-dl8 &U!ll8 Ire playtftg ;1 ..,.._._ •• ~ , ·Slllt 9 I ~ 1: high 17 pointa -·~ • 11<11 tt makes llltle dll· llJ>ll'.;waldl_lbO youtll ol .lhe TO U .. "' "M'• ENlr •it.'' l ! 1' i several steaJs arul: usists tor fenmce. ..... ~'~e· game of·~ . ru14 !f l~l l '• the Aztecs. ~ ~ lft PartlClpating tn tbe . ~ ·WhO knows ff , •u~. 2 11 t Breiinan ~ o~.• ·::;,~:,ind~! tbt thing that -yoU'ie iucky, the ~ven-Year-~!issfon Viejo's recreation :~Trt 8 ~ A I basket and three_ ... as La, • for well\jamwttln u · oldl ~even.be en ttie floor. centers Will sj>Onsor the city's Tot•4• • 1c-!'l ~,..~ H "' Quinta outscored E:stancil lft-1 Ibey begin 8 ~-career j • ' first juniOr fennis tournament -=~r Mir 1~ 1~ l! ll = n in the opening rninUtes of the ander roles and regUlatons Dec. 18-21 at tbe Marguerite Hpt1nt10t1 ''J/" J~ HJ~ 'I third period, aod aJtbaug'h the that Mte each youngster p· ' 1 • Tetmis Center. ~~n 3 ~ ~ Eagles DeVeP ••Ye trn they mUlt tit in the game far a cer'• atr1ots The tournament Will have Gusman 6 J 1 151 .~ .. 11 •-l--~ -I ti.m h tim 81rrll'Qef' l I t were never wiuun"l0 pomts of w.w t-""" w e eac e both singles ~d doubles play $CUW1m11.1 • 1 : ~ 1) .J their opponentJ4hei;.t of the bis team plays. f be and is open to boys and girls Tott!& liltw"'1 H•~ /1"1 Jf way. Of' course, &ll 0 t In £: 039 in elementary, junior high and O'Fillltf'tV t ~ l r Both learnt eqiployed t.0ne Y~ .at the boys cl~ '" UO-high school. . t~l:~ f 3 o 1 defenses, but Lo Quinta's was aren't seven yean old. There • Entry fee will be iz.50 for ~ 1 , l l much more aggressive JOO are many leagues for youths high school $;l for Junior high 1 l : 11 forced the Eagles to ~t in the area an the way to 18 Tr·I•umph and s1so ' for elementary " "-;rd ! ~ I from outside most or the and the older ones may not be ~--1 s= 2 •, ,•, I ' 't ood lt to ak in.--ilUU • T*I• fi l .0 game. Pirtle was the bqttest. qthw. e higg. h ~f team m bu~ For infompttioo, call 837· """'°"' s='~ 1,•1!r'12 »-411 ol the Estancia shooten. and etr IC s B DE'~'IS CAMP. 'B""" .-4084. Huntington e1ac11 u 1 10 ,.......,., wound up with a team high 13 still have a yen for playing the Y Of ~-"""' .... ~ points Mike Magner bad 12 game oC basketball. Unbeoten Lowell il;gb School poin~ moot ol them on bdlde That opportunity affords , jumpers , ltaeH at the boys club on upper used overwhehning rebo<1 ndf!t& ~la shot only ta per-bey as well u the central ~h to smother vbliting cent for the Dlghl, while brancll. wea1•er 83-39 Tuesday La Quinta hit on 16 per<ent ·Of The boys get expert advice h bo I ill field goal attempts. from men such as former .UC nig t in basket .1 - ' Irvine basketball mentor Dan The Patriots, 4-0 for the •stMCll ,.,., ft " Rogers. Rogers is also a coach season, start a front line of 6-S :;:::,: T , , 1 • of one ol the teams and enjoys Brad Wood and 6-5 Jeff "-1' lfll the responae of the boys Parker at forwards and 6-10 ~!':fl':-_ • _playlng.undecllis CMJmand -~=~=~ W'S 1 oft-Umes more th.an th e Pete GibSOn at center for one T•I• ·..,. w o-n-1• n 11 .a premae of college cOacbing. ~amC:.ange County's tall~ ~=.,· ll 1! U lt::l "Whal makes It so cute is That trio dominated the boards ror Lowell. T b e ' I COME INTO "BIG Prices lffloctl'9 Dae. 14 te 17. Giant Ski SALE I FIEE I "OLYMPIC Wltll hr<lwe of e M1rbr Standard Toe • Marker Tdmat Heel at Reg. Price • Jllllallat!H lllclacled 72" WOOD SKI OS200 PLASTIWRAP SKI PACKAGE • Marker stucfard Toe • Martef Telmat Beel • Inatallatlon Included • Wooden Core Gla11 wrapped 81111 Made In Austria Save $U.40 s5590 a.1. $7Utl SKIER "T" SHIRTS SKI DESIGNS SKI USA KASTLE ROSSI SKI Sl'ONED ..... $7.00 $581 NO.W Prep Wrestling Powers Listed Patriota bad second and third shots at the basket rlearly / every time down court and limited t be i r Westminster 'Collnterpe.rts to one try at a time. MONEY" a..,. $5.00 NOW $3 11 -FASWON RIGHT-• Fill FASHIONm FLORAL BIB OYERAU Tliree Coast Area Teams in Top 5 The Lions sorely m.lued 6-S senior Gary Andrews, oq the bench with a bad back. Andrews is the leading Westminster rebounder and acortS at an 18-point-Per-game clip. Orange County prep· wrestling coadtes have polled together a TOp 10 for their sport and tnnge O>e.9t area teams are epparMtly highly reprded In the O!"'S ol tltelr peers. ~ ol tile top five oootlngenta ore from Ille Orange COast ..,. with Fountain Va~ ley second, Qm\a de! Mar third and West- minster fifth behind' No. I Pl<Ulea. 'l1ie bolance of tho top 10 lncludee Buena ROGER CARI.SON Park (fourth), Boloa Grande, Ranah> Ala· 11ilto1, O>lta Mooa, El Dorado aftd El Modena. Padnca nabbed all b.ut one IJrst place v<M •IROlli tile II coecl!et lnV<>lved. * * * Llpna· -RIP'• -• .,.. coutry raMr Erle lllllt IWl9" ..... • t11e ... y 1oa :::z-..... . n.s.11,1 -,,, •••: .... bit >\A n..11 ,._ at Ml. •• -Col-lop, _, eqalvalut of Aft.CIP llnl t lllll u 1 frultm11. r Halal {iioed lo a lt:lt clo<kln1 ud the Jal --to qaallfy ... flnt -all· CIF Cf'Oll country runner W'IB Lompoc'• Terry WWlamt. The Marina mgll -I echedule for non-league games will be the same In 11173 -El R8lich<> and Eataocla. And wbea II Com Mesa going IO Id I breok 11 CIF water polo playoff competllloa7 SeelDI ••trl' year the Ma1taap are pllll>1 beat by everyone escept Ille -II. It appean things are oot cul and dried al Eltlncla mgh School wbeno a replace- -la In need for retired football coach Phil Brown. ' 81..Pul mp Mt Ille bell defensive..., ....... ,.. CD' -13 ....... allowed lo u .,._, ... ___ . And .-al Im mdll mut ,. to a tz<. mendrlll MCI ' •J. Ytl Mt oere Swttdlmen ....... all-Alp!• 1-II-. In th< deleulvoliaeUWd. The closest period waa. the first when Lowell edged Out to a ZG-14 lead. But Wealnllnster never got closer as ttJe taner Patriots began dominating the backboards against the Lions. The first qual"ter was the only s t an 1 a tn 'wtdch Westminster could iicore in double figures while \,owell hit for 20 point.I in each of the first three periods. The scoring dropped off con- siderably in the linal quarter when both coadles unloaded lh~lr bet!chet . With 1>7 guard Randy Forgelle running the show, tho Patriots conslsrently worked the &tn inside to one-or their big frontllners ror short-range And Oll6 ar-t County newspaper shots, named a Mater Del cJeJenstve back to lt.s All· ~ Wn11111"'!_"° ,,., ~ If ._ °"'N• County leom,, Yet be did oot mn w:~"i. I ! ,j rectlve ~. mention In his own • I '! i-II ..iocted bf' the '(lOOchoS, •= llWl'lc;k • Stranp? Nol 1'00!1,y. Things are like tliat ni,-J In the Angol111 \""cue where e11en the"loop's .;r:a: 1 ,! Cl'Oal country fln..11 1Ue _Jt_Jd known untU tt . s~ n o..mn -boun bo-the lt.IM'I,. r'::\,"i'M1" i .! " l::ll BORROWING· U P. T 0 $10 ,000 ls•cured by r••I • n ·d p•rsonal prop•rty I could b• th• sound•st &. C. HICKI mone..j fn•n•g•m•nt deci- sion· you m•'• this year. Property ¥•1ues continue to increase •nd ch•nces ere that ycu1r home is velued 1t • lot more thtn your pres· •nt mor+9 •CJ•· HOMEMAKiRS ct o .. lho.w. y.ou. h.ow .to. .. convert t his differ1nc1 I which lyyour ".quity") into BI G MONEY dght naw. ~Q POINTS NO COMMISSIONS! Just thinlr whit you ctn do with up to SI0,000. Add on tn e11trt room or Pftio. Group your debts tnd cleen them up tll at once, which mty leevt you with ONE Smeller monthly payment thtt your budget can more ••~ify' handle l•lmost like getting t rtise in your paych1clr1 . Ttke care of. other "816 MONEY" needs et the same time. Pletse telephone me Dr visit our offlc, ..ow. HOM l..t.lnu LOAN • CONSUMU DISCO.Ulft_ CO. A Sub1ldl~ry of .~neral leCtric red it C.OIW'OMtlOW ' I Qt 1411alllOUll• LEN DE I 17612: IMtJll ,..,, Hunt!--C.IH, .... , 147·2"1 o Orlgtnal Btlt St!wear of Audria. 0% vlrgia wool, 48% nylon, and 4% span· des. • Over-tbe-boot style; cttt- ler wained b e l t and boCkle: nylon rmow, euff1. Ezclth!J ucl electric col· •fl· 8'plar Ill s39•• CUSTOM FOAM-FIT BOOTS Srte flt.lt s7400 Tlio Aartrer lo Problont Ftt. Eljty "BIPPJ Feet" Fwover. Reg. SUt "SAPPORO" PARKA Save fl.It s27'1 ......... COMPLETE RENTAL PRO&RAM Ovor 200 polr of olti1 and lloots avtlloblo. Skis, liooh, ond polos. AS LOW AS $4 PER DAY 103 DISCOUNT Ta Ski Club -.bora ro:::j Soutb Coast Plaq -~1-Coltl "':.!""" ---""' ~ ._...,, c- .. '' ' '• ,. ' 40 DAILY Pit.DI Start Your Engines! WITH DEKE HOULGATE On July 1 a law went into eff~ that requires off·road ve- hicles to be registered in callfomia. other states are studying the California results lo detennine whether or oot to follow suit. Fees are directed to be spent developing parks for OJtV owners lo U9C. "Ibere bas been widespread discontent that not a single park has been :¥.rted oc even plaruled in the nearly six montM regist rttion has been in effect. This is to report that so far the program is a failure. In the period ending Oct. 31 the Department of A1otor Vehicles registered only 36.2'J2' ORVs and collected only $574.845. ~. • • I -Aroand Bw.-p t Trall • OCC Sets Swimathon For Dollars The~PalmerMethod I Schools Honor Athletes nntN HEAD UNDD TO . SIGHT TARGET • • Jim Young earned the top MOii Tmprov•d: Tom The way f°" tam .,Oat htld honors Tu<Sday nJP1 ; al Macl..ean; MOii Inspirational : lo look al the llfs<t bas a &r<at Newport Harbor Hillt. ~·· Joe Mel.,_, Puerto Rico i5 the goal or deal to do with tht: WI.)' you w~ awards banquet ror ~ ftter ~·· ~ the Orange Coast College move your tbotid.den durin& your polo team. t ca_,•bl ltfth ruce· Most Young was nam"" the ,.,.. ' = ' · water polo team and members actual.1win1. teamis .most valuable~player Val~abl~in; Most of the squad will atempt to I've noticed that iolfert who f1' Improved :, ; Most ~ whlle .Keith Wall was cboien In 1 p'~11 a L t·o n : Richard swim 200 laps each Thursday lutn their head on ,_ relatively team captain night to raise money for the horizontal planewbncbeckin&lhe V~ty ~. ·• trip lo the national AAU Wpt" (ill•ration fl) tend lo Captain: Keith waft..; Most Llft:y Siaette ~ LNua championships. 1win1 their lhouldcponasimllarly Valuable: Jim Yoong;, Molt ..... JllO, 9dml I~ as Thursday'S s w i mm in g flat plane duria1 tJiCir dqwnswiq:. Improved·: Greg Horman. · ' \be ••~ team'"s most JRlllor varal11 ..iuable ' . ~plains . '1. J-'V"'111 Most Valuable: MI k • Benson ; Most Iri\proVed1. Tom O'Hara ; Co-Caplabtl: ~· .B•naoo and Dan J-. · Ft-~· , Most Valuablo: Rab Po!IB; Mosl tmprov<d : Jim i;:vans: Cc>-Captalns: Cliff Amsden and Phil Morr•ale. UalVentty lll&lt~ fPolball, ~roilS counlry arid water polo ·teams wJI! )>e ltanored lot\libl with.a sporlll •l"!!'b ~t al the ocbool't mulU-Anticipating land office busin.ess, the department had printed 750,000 registration stickers. known to the deser1 riding buffs as "greegies" because of their color. OMV also printed huge quantities of registration forms and . brochures explaining the new law , and they are gathering dust due to the lack of cus- tomers. marathon will be•in at 5 Such a shoulder tam olltn bl'inp---Ca~n: John Diekeyi Mott' ~ a,itt .... Ne-a J o'clock with 15 metnbenll.!l( tllCd'f.bbead acrouthetaraetlinc, Valuable: Mare Kalariln; 1'flCeivtil llamrs tbe polo squad allowed £~ from ou1side to inside, durioa im· Most Im~':~~~ Dobrott. at th& banqi:~~ -~ · ~':'stivitles iet under WU at bouts In whieh to complete 20I pact. T~ normal result is a slice, r•v.~ 7 laps of the p 0 0 l (&Pi a pull or a pull.book:, dependiq Captain: Greg Fulll:i . Mo,t ·! · MOit Valuable: Larry $,bet· · ·• · · -nrnxlma• .. h·:ee miles). ·,-~ 'on where the dubfacc .is lookin1 Valuable: George Newland; te; Most fmpr'O'feli': ~ete .. F.outaJa Valltf ll.IP'lef'OS5 ,... ,, lq.f Most Impr;oved: Frank Morton; ~: '.l'om country and water pe1o teams Coach Ja FuDerU>n an4 when it Urik.et lhe bf.II. T Anderson. • -Redwltz and · ~· >Ainsden; will be honored ·wttb~i aports Estimates of the number of motorcycles used only off-the- road in the state start at 500,000 and go up. Estimatei of un· registered dune buggies and snown1obiles are at least in fi ve fig_~s. Obviously~ ORV owners have not beat a path to their local OMV offices. . · his pla.yers a{e attempting td Ideally your dubhcJd should , ~~ta Afesa High SchOol:s Coacb's Award: ~~tte ; • award banquet tonJgl:j 1!1-\he raise $6,000 for the trjp to movealoq, ratberthanaerosa:~the Bl'et Ross was named most Best Spor.lsn)e~t'"" ':ohn school' cafeteria ·begihotiia at Puerto Rico with i.z·,500 target line. It willmovealonathe ~b~ .Wells[ty. · ,.t=,' -6:30. ..# t already in the till. liDC onlY ilYOur ..... ihouldcr1-are '8ter polo tea:n Tuesday -, What's more. If tl1ey did rush to sign up, lhe OMV might not be able to handle the business. AcC<>rding to Russ Sanford. the lobbyist who looks after interests of motorcycle owners in Sacramento, ''Some persons are still enC<>untering difficulty in registering their (vehicles) _ .. because some of the OMV per- sonnel are not yet fully trained." The Pirates finished the turning on a auffacienlly tilted Q) night. Other honors went to GRAN. D PRIX season es Galifornia state plane. An-4 your 1bouldcr1 will be Mike. Hollister (captain), Dick • . ' ~ l'kel ch I "Edenholm (most improved) water polo cf-.mplons with a ... ore 1 y to turn on su a p ane nd Ch. McA ( . . ( 31)-l rd nd had r if you turn your head on a similar a ip 1 · neney nlutlt in· \ '"" • · tti .. • 1 • _. ......... '"' -.. .,...,. He estimates that it is currently costhlg the state about $10 to collect each $5 registration fee. That would seem to mean the state has spent about $1 million already with litUe to show for it. reco a 8 per ect spirationa ). '122 ·: :_ .,,.:;M"'::., r111y ....... --• .:_. ~.o k -•-t ·1 plane as your sight the target y...... -~ mar agQU1S commun1 y ~ , ....... ~.l' • 1 , "' "-"• -"-.-""' .,.. • .. w•"-tti'•• t ••-ball ('I Capt · M'k H Ill te • •1a ._... *""1111 .,. T & L. .,,..... .., • college competition. The IK It ... up o .~ISO 1 • am: 1 e o . s r; ,r . ., .,...., ,......,..,, 11 !111111 .... • .-,. •• lustration 11). tt. o HAn.._.,.._ _ Most Val uable: Bret · Ross; . Mb .. •NKLUDIN• 1 v1A11-.... Ml. WAlltAMY Puerto Rico eHeir is schedul-Most I m p r 0 v e d : Dick ed Dec 27 31 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Part of the reason ORV O\\'llers are not nocking in to obey the law is an inborn skept icism that "the establishment" will not do what it says il will, says Chuck Clayton, publisher of The . . · I IRON OUT THOSE IRON SHOTS! Arnold P1lm1r's boolllet "Hitting Edenholm; Af o st lnspira-z-tt.rMr Costa Mesa city counci tti1 Irons" gh11S ch1mpion1hlp tips to help shar1>1n your Iron-shot tional: Chip McAnehey. · ~ ..., • f.W-Dr .. C-.. ._ recently passed a resolution WChniQu1. Send 20• and a shlmP1d, return 1n111lope to Arnold Junior Vanity LILUl DlllCT-P.4CTOIT AvntOllZD DIAUI COm-·ndi·ng the OCC wat ..... Patmer,·inca,..ofthisnlWipa...... MINl.-P"rt..t•»•s:a • Nt.a •-· ~- Cycle News. ..... .....---.~ •----=-="""=··=·=--------' Captain: Chuck Br a g g ; •r poloteamfuribseason. ·r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~M~os~t~V~al~ua~b~le~:...':'G~re~g_:Cane~~:~~~~~~~R~n~DOIA~~"~~·~4'~"~17~~~~~~ * * * The ·re.solutfon concluded, Clayton claims there was an Initial rush to get •bikes regis-"Be it resolved that the city tertd and after the flrst wave of signups the rest of California's couocil of the 1Cily-of Costa cyclists sat back and waited to see when the state ~,.oald begin Mesa wishes the OCC water building ORV parks. When oothing happened, they Simply lg· polo squad ·every; success at nored the Jaw. the National ,.,AAUJ t.bam1>- U then are iodttd haH a million ·or so ORV owners who · iohships ln Pllertoi Rico and haveai't paid their fees yet, an almost Impossible laW enforce-that the pUtiliB be urged to n1ent situation has been created. It means a sizeable s~gment make contilbtlti:ins to the Or-', of tbc population Is openly defying the law, and it recalls the ange Coast Foundation -wa- ProhibiUon Era lhat spawned the lawlessness that still plagues ter polo." the nation today. The swimmers are hopeful Sanford suggested that the stale could belp eliminate the Orange Coast area citizens snafu by opening two or. &llree sites for off'fl8d ridiag .. hamed-will support th• marathon by iately and thus break doWn the tefi..istance that bas beell :=eel· pledging '8 fixed amount of He asks those in favor of biii idea to ~-.WJami· Clll\ money lor eacti lepgth of the ltlott, Jr., Director, .State Parks an(Recreattaa; P.O. Box , , , pool a swimmer' completes. Sacramen&o, t581l urg'lag immediate ,..ag of titte'." :patU.. \ '"I'hat means if someone . r.1eany)Ue, Sanford Iii: dlampk>Dinc a. bjll that 'ftlitld dl\·ert wants to pledge two l:ents a an esUm.llifed $1 "miluon ln gas tu aoney Into Ole OR.V ,part' lap on a particilar swtmmer, fund, Tim ainout Is wbat ORV Gwnet'S are-~.....!~~ be JJl!IY• lhat'!I ~ ~ pledge ~ that log in gascllne taxes that p.ey doo't c~ HiieOt frOm, swl~ completes~his 3Xl because they dol't ase public ?9ldlJ -~ ' · ·.• lengths," Ful1ertoo said. "Ten · * r /I 1 • .a.; . · ) ., cents per length is a $20 • ' 1 • 'l"~ piedg~.'{ I ' S.Ule ·M8"~ w L'-rts 1 Full~~·l .. ys pledges .can Skir • .:.. ... , •• be ' ~-· ,~,-~ and 1. "' e11· 1 be madol a 1be marathon or . ...,.......,. ~ tw~ """m<;I .,~~ . r~rea ~ v 1c e by k!le~,to the oc;x:: water enthusl8Sts over th! ngbt to 'Use J;m>lic land ,ba8 ,moVed lo the polO ce av 884-5768. courtroom ,ror· ""°t. ""'1. ~ -Iar_g• .and flllQI battle. M \ -OC<;!,I. '. . ...., .• :.Ir I ) ' •• ' Receolly ~ IJIJ. ~u Iii !Md Management arulOlidi!<d·' wa!(r\~<> · 1 •ltempl • new polii;y, . Iii '<ba\il"'i a ft!lll!I lee 1'> raCllt(> assodat'*is to "' te 1'Q p\i, bi-1f . wlw:> stages~ ~"SLM~ reQ~~tJtti in.Surance bind And·)s ' ~\O ave ~one ,.t '- U> pay any dillrgoi, iitjd,in,, lf\Olj¥hal 1s diiiltenied.oo constl-offer a bif!rageriDg-lilt i tulional grounds it iinpMtl•BR a'OdUional $1 tu oq every partict. bis chariCes oi .• pletiµg the pant entered. r · . · . ' · 1 . The El Cajon Mota:~Je Club decided to_ challenge BLM 's' swrf 0 rm er All-American nght to ~harge~ the public for use o! land that in theory the pu~ swimmer at Salita~Monica City lie owns .• Ann<N~ in adv~.~ that it would defy the ~LM-by College, .,Fullerton admits it not pa~tng ~ SL ~ad. tu. ii~y drew an ihJ~ion, has been awhile sin~ ~e bas fought .1t and-won. · r\. .• .., , attempted that distanC$\ nu,.~ the sta1e fol' the most. 5;1~nt de_sert race ever "It's been five t'~~since held. Using a course near Plaster City .in Im.penal Ya11ey, the I've been over 2Q la.iis '' be club ~ed a race . it bas held f!'lery )leQI' since 1959 over a says. "I'm not !aYmi I'll course th.a' lS clearly tmrked and has never changed. make it but I'll sure give ~t a J. Russell Penney, dirl'Ctor of the BLM in California, ,was lry." ' · oo hand to watch the race, and so -were televi.!ion cre'tJ!S, ,ndio Tax deductible contributions ~ ~d newspapermen. Cameramen were flown ov~ the \vi ii also be accepted by mak· race 111 helicopters so they could get good footage of the dam-ing checks payable to Orange · age being done to the environment. No damage resulted. Coast Co 11 e g e Foundation, * * * water polo. Ote<ks $oald l>e It was 'aLM'• contentlo• that \~ rklers 'wollld dtattrate malled to the OCX:: Water·PQ!o , the India• latagllos~ an arClteologbl treasure &beat. 31 miles Office, 2701 Fairvifw Rciadt £rem the race sl&e. Tbe race~ ltowever/ iilappotated iall 1,be. Costa Mesa 92626. i· militant ecologis11 by DOt 1trayloi 38 miles oit tk. ctar5t. 1 Oooors cootribuliN · After Ute race BLM went back to contt with an 1cU&1 than $50 will be bOOOred ·Wtth agalrui& the cl'ub cbarglag tre1passlng ud refusal to .obey Jts their llllffieil inJcribed on a order. _ special water polo plaque. The cjub COltepds that It paid the .,edAit ud posted the reql.lred lnsuraDCe but It deliberately reflised to pay the $1 "bead tu" on comttbdlonal grounds. Thtre, are 19 mUll~ acres of open federal land ln Calllornta. Unfortunately, there h'v~~n many abu.fes of the prlvtlege to use federal land by dune buggy; driver" Md motorcycle riders, iDif Jus:r-.·s unfortanalelYUiefeDV'i'ittir.Ragnmt exampfet of irrespo111lble reporting'. ' . * * * In a copyrighted story, Johll Fialka of tDe Washington star· News wrote that 2,tllllO deeert racers "slashed across 10 mile!: ol phehistmic Indian mounds containing some pan or the hi.s- tory al man's eariest origins in, America1' dUring a recent Bar· stow.to-Las-Vegas race. There Is oo baais in fact for that charge. Two archeological sites, ne\ther one o( which were closer than three-<iuarters of a mile from the race coune, were carefully blocked olf. Not me rider came oear either one o( them. In fact aceord.lng to John Maxwell, referee-o( the recent Barstow-to-~ 1. Vegas, the BL~f praised his organization for tis CO-Opff'&,tion, eartiul layout of the course and cleanup after lite event. Handball Tournament • ~ ... w.1 Cbrlst1112s 4-""11 handball tournament at UC Irvine g<ls fuider way Friday and ruta .through Sunday •lib a large entry list in both 1ingl<I' .,. ...,Its ready ror play. Top ~ p.!yers mct.ie Ha"?ld 1~~M iljlcft s;ngles; JerrJ ~ .... Bo!( in open dotJbiMf Cornell in masters imp. and Gobe ErwiQue1 aJlll ,...i Aqullan lnlllUlerl~ AL ad.m!lllitD ..,_ ,or $1 ftlr lclulll 11111 It conll !or ........ and~wUlbo i:Mlpl l'rldof *'1wi!ay wllll illmda1'• .Jinoll fl !or --·· 2 '11•*'1 Area Prep Wrestling. ' Jllltlw V11'\lty Unlftnll'I' '"I J"' C•l'l'll• .. ,-PHrson (U rww wltfl O\llle!"· l'Y ~I. -M, • ,J1. 2-0:" kli.tlollrl IC) lf«t G1rcl1 12 -Orled l'I Mc. K-it.11. f.2. 170 -MeNtl Ul O.C. GM .. 1 CCJ, ·~· 111 -RlnlOll CCl ollWlld An'ltwfl ~~!r.'~S1k11tt IC) oC~ T"""° lUI, «'/~l :'i1.MCN1!1'1 !UJ olnnld lllCklll .S -M11WlC1ue1 IUI oltc.. W.W., (C), 14.0. U4 -M11lnldl: IUJ clec:. 1"1111 jCI, 2-0, lM -w.;111-v CUI lll!mtcl RIM (CJ, 1:ns -°''•PP iu1 Pit\ntcl \Lac:Tol• "~ 1:0 . ' . I -BlrlcMr (UI olnlltd Mcot.,ltt !C 1 :5$, j'·~: wt -er-{UJ dee. Gtlftrl(Cl, •· .. .. " ' . • • ••• . . • ' .. .. ' t"..·, . ·• l f' , •"'' ~ • '). j t NOw:thru i~et;>.12 ·1:~Mq~~ ~~·Saf .. 7;;~,J1;:~ ~~ ' \ ' . \' ., " 'Some '.Of Thei ·~ ' Recdrds . . r me ' r . ' . . : ,S ·w . p, .. . . . . ,lµWEAff BAR ·ao 48 5 BYC>t! ilRD 14 . 9 3 CH~RGf~BAR 18 ' ·13 2 ' .JETCH RGER 30 13 4 O.SAGE flOCKET .. 23 .12 \5 COME SIX . 21 1~ 4 ALAMITOS ANGEL 2~ \ 10 ·s CALLMEMYOH 8 .t 1 WHATAWAY TO 90 35 17 4 SO"!E Klf"DA.M~N • 17 '9 . 2 PARRFA~I! . 29 9 . Ji , 11 • GO CHICKIE 00 10 6 3 · ROCKY DENUEDO 4 4 ' ' 0 I • ' . . . ' ' " ' s $~rton 3 319,1.Jl , 2.62 ,264 3 208,817 4 185,918 1 183,712 2 159,1193 2 14.8,966 2 t 1'40,375' . 2 107,174 ' 9~,362 ' 3 3 64,058 0 ' 58,881 0 30,910 '· Heilf9d Grandstand and Clu~se'.:Great turf Terrace dining~ · For r1!.5ervations (213) 431·0922 or (71'4) p27"4471. ' _Tickets-& infonrlation (213).431-1,361 or (714) 995-1234. • LOS~on K81e11a Nlllt.605.FWV J " ,. • Prep Hoop , ToQrDey . .P .• • . s . . :' ~.. ~·~ ' )llUnal' Ullli • School bas &ion, -l<l)Ol1d '. lo 1be 11. li . ~l!>ua· Covloa bUkoll>all t,'.i.i~ . ~ • ..i lo begin, !ta .'$f!.'fl" 'ltth rear -. *-, ' ~ vitbiP · Will p 1 a·y l'iclldl+lew al NorikVleW at 1 Dlll '.._,l.._tkYr •. ''i!O;i~ eovi.a w beet) . 9'0llo!l-'nni' while def~ r.... ,AiiOJos' l:l\y ~nlplon Je~ fu lieai' 'Medod thlnf. other top l<aina biducle tlllllf1W•cb M!Dlkan, Poway ol ......... and Banoll\l•ol ~. "" .. 'le" (Doc. It) . 8111.0llriol. vs;Loo Alainitos -.1:31 p.m. . • ,' 114 ...... 'vs Ca\HorTIIa - .l ...... m. -/ . loll Jcs'.da• Ya. ~ <?Qvlna -r 12,p.tn. ~¥~~,JS.Cb·Llill.U....~ ·: 1:30 p.m. . i ~D~ay vs.FlJl~n-3; p.m., · 1 'I • illair·V. ~ Te\:h -4:30 ~-; J!l·lfl t'W·O 0 d VI 5oulh 1 ~-lun. < ~VINorthvlew-1 I p.m., • . ' ' . ~~V:-J~~!-' 9 Sl!ORTFIN ·CROAKER CATCH. t.m.• .. ly'CdM's lreite Umberh•rn. MJililtan vs ·San Marino ----------.,..----------10:30 1.m. GcoJ va LeuzJncer -II p.m. Domi!llU<Z vs Muir -1:30 Deep Sea Fishing Report p.m. . .. ··Fairfax VI Slnta Ana -3 ·~~ .... ~:::.en: "· nKk COii. p.m IM ,:~,~~~! c::-NIWl"OllT CArn ~) -37 Fishing Oqtlook Sunday is l'DtlE>Af Wtdne~. Dec;embf r l), 1972 OIJL V PILOT 41 011 t-.e Are. 'Greem Pro Scores . Weather W a~hes Out Play shoot today with a full field partictpatlile. .._ Ranelto SJ Jim beVogler (')f Irvine scored a hole-in-one at n,ncho San JOaquin golf c o u r s e recently. OeVogler scored his ace on ' lhe 15th hole using a four-iron to traverse the 17$ yard!. He. was playing In the company of Don A1odle, l«>y Jones and Roger Breton. 'The Rancho SJ men's cluh v•IHj ttage a turkey shoot Saturday. Have A Happy Holiday PLAN YOUR FUTURI! NOW ENJOY THI! HOLIDAYSATHOME See your Ioctl Army Rept1sentativ1 about th~.m1ny opportunities 1v1il1~1 in Todty's Army. H1v1 him tell you about tht m1ny choices open to you. Choice• you probably didn't know existed . A choice of job tr1i,nint (Over 300 jobs to choose from) A choict of world wide places to servt. (Europe, Hawaii, Alaskt, etc.) A Delayed Entry Option (YoU caR enlist now and report after the Holiday1, or up to six months later) All of this it GUARANTEED in writing. before you·enli1t, if you qualify. Aod thtr1's a lot mor1-..,od 11lary, food, '1'1•.dical and dental cart; even educational assistance·-·. Have a HAPPY HOLIDAY with your future stcure- Call your local Army 1'epresentativt now ...•... C.11. 645-1163-542 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa 5.42'6169-1718 N. Main St., Santo Ant •--dla vs M--'-4·30 ,.,., ~ _..,,: ~ 11tto .. ,., 1u rt1C11 ""'· n.n;;i1 ..,.ll"!Y .. -. c: MAtZ ..., -l2 -ien: llAL llACH -n -1 .. 1; 4U nii:k ' p.m. ~;·~~-~[r~~~~~· r_:·~·:_;'"'~· ;"~""~""~·~"~""~·=~:.::'.:._!:::::::~in~t11e~~··~r;i~11~··~1~11~·1~1!_~ Montebello vs Rosemead _ 1 OKH411tD -21 '"°""' .ee rec11. •· ••DOMDO -1• •llCll.,.., 6'(fNI coe1. n -'*'· i llnt"eod. ~ 1111~. 1>4 rOck'<Od.. ========-="-'-"-'"-'-"--'-----'----------------------~:~ p.m. . Today's Army wants to join you. Slnta Fe ·vs COvlna -8 p.m. CoN -and Foollilil hlih ocllools will oquare off at 5 p.m. Deci 27 in the fitst rowid ol play lo the Orange Buketball Tournament a t Ontiao llJcb Scbool. <iQola ,,_ ii l!rad<eted wtt11 G ..... Grew. and Savai> na and the Mustanp will play tht wltmtt or IOltr ot that g.m., depedlic upon the out- come ot the Mesa-Foothill con- test. • A1 Oralle <°"'· rn Gvden Gl'Oft VI Slvama -·3:18 p.m. Cotta Mesa va Foothill -5 J>.111. l!'.llllda-vl La --7 p.m. Lowell vs Orange -g,30 p.m. ! Three• .Or..,.. CQast area high .ocltool balketball teams -W-...,..,F•••tala Vlllty ... llllh:onliJ -will be'ln lbe Sanllaio Tournament bollnnlnl o.c. 17. Wtotmlnoler will draw Ken-nedf _,.. team tliol beat the Llilito lo onrtlme to bft!ln the W~Uarioa Tourna- maltt -,at S::J!) p.m .. Fountain Valley wjll,play Bolla Grande It s p.m. and 11n1 .... 1ty will IDfll Tuoll!! It 7 p.m .. In first. !'GUiid action. Al ........ (Doc. 171 ICf;nnedy •• Wntmlnster - !:18' p.m. l!'ountaln V llley vs Bolsa Grande-lp.m. 'l\litln VI UDl •mllY -7 P·titlago vs IJutDa Park - 1:18 p.m. New,.rt'e.\lr -· ~ hu draWD Sota Monico 11 Ill lll"it.-n>und --Ji> . Iii Hol!daY Bubtboll CJUsic It Glel\dile 1ljlll Btltool '11'<. :{!: 111o ~Lthe _..,.. liriCliti Wlili~~ dale; wlll ploy· 11 I n.m. H Nft)loH •• -1-'\t. will olay the""" dafll l :Jl>:J!.m.: ii it lolel; NO•potlWill lilOY at a:ao p.m. 1 ' Glendale Vi 'LA ·Lincoln - 1:18 nm. N~ Harbor VI Santa Monlcl -4 p.m. P~ena vs Mira Colla - 5i90 o.m. !Jell vs C.....nta Valley -7 S~J '.fops USD; 7"/~67' ' ,. , I • ,_, ... • .. 'fCIU.,, mi ftlllf nl'll "'"""' 1 g0Ul,NIL0wl'flld '•tt.._.,..... .... ,...lfll. .. .,.,"' .......... ......... ... wuMN•u•TflflCAft1UI llMICWAl.LI UM L- VOU 1-1 .. ,::-&WI -... , ,,,,. .. ... 1111' Pl ~· .,.... 'llEll .. 11 • •, .................. ............. "' UW040 " IUEN ..... ..... -~""' • .. \lpltk ..... 12•11110 1/ " TUNE UP SPECIALS I ALL--tmllll UlllT ~AUii~& WHEEL IAWICE , .. rs•• . .......... D8£~ ~"\1 ,u:; i¥,== .vcoan•1~ ... .,.. ... ,........,,,.,. .. -· ·::::---...... ' : =...... CHAllG« m .,.. ........ ~ . , . .. COSTA • .sAltllAll · ~-.:---· ··~ ............ ....... ,, .1•.• ·-~ 141ml" I .> 114'-1IJ~ • ' • , I • • , ... CHARQl IT! • • • ' ' WESTMINSTER . . -,_,_. ...... .... ............ lln • lft·lOll • 'I "" I • DAILY PILOT w-.r,Dtambttu,19n PIJBUC NO'l1CE PUBLIC NOl'ICE I TONIGHT'S TV IDGID.IGHTS TV DAILY LOG I APOLLO 17 COftlMt: NI ,,..,..lie II llw.ct ti .... wlCMwt ......... s ......... ,., ottthilM --.. "' -.. -17. '"'aoummm-oo Ctt suit fJ Wiid Wild Wat m1•-..... .,..USMC ~-­&!Mi--m ,...,.,,.., 1-11t a_.,. 10--m-- 111 --m crt ...... w. 1et ,,.. ""' to Tllm? Report from S111 Fri~ citcO Oft modttlll 011 tri..,ortl· 'lion. m LMtui U"1 m-lil"""' (lk) -.... lool" (corn) '47-Eleinor P1rUt, ......... '''°Diii!!!* ... _ .,._ .,......cMlll111 •!Ml Wfft "Titmlf Times Two" P.oc\ Hudson sb11 in 1 clu1I rolt In 1 clnlm1 In wllich Commlssion1r McMiiian la kid· nipped and 11pt1old witn Ill Iden- tical .... who"" ... w. .. "'~·--·-u mrn moe ... _ .... ,(C){W)_ ... _ OM" (C'Om) '72-4DllM, ~ ... ""'"-'!.""' -c. ... w.,..,,,.,...,~- tect 111,.. ~-..... Int IPfnst filiJ lllllllf ,..(111111 ......... _....,,_ llllO I battle of thl ... m---111_.,.,.,<ftl ......... • Darid~ Diaha1111 No Hat.e Mail lor lme"acial UnUm. BJ LINDA Dl!!1JTSCll HOLLYWOOD (AP) En1er1a1ner David Frost ay1 be and his brldM .. be, linlor-actreu DtUann Carron. are •'ecstatic" about their ..wing plans, and their r ... -m to approve, too. 11People'1 good wilhel have been wonderf'Ul,,. 11)'1 Frost, co.needing that be and Mia Carroll hid expected 11!>111" "hate mall" becaUll their marriage wW be tnterndal. He Is .white. Miii Cam>ll Is blact. --"It's-a great tribute to America that we dldn1 gel tbatldnd or mall," Ill'• Fl'Oll. "People !eel that It's· just two people and that's it." · 1"" wedding Is planned !or Easter Sunday~ 1m. ln Fl'Olt's homeland, England. But marriage won~ change Frost's frintlc tranaaUanttc lifestyle u a TV star and prcr ducer In both England the GWC Band In Concert Thursday The 60-piece Golden West College Band, directed by Thomas Hernandez., w 1 I I perform a lr<e Qirlstmas concert Thursday at 8 p.m., tn the community theater. Opening the program will be Joltann Seba511an 114clt's "Jesu. Joy fl. Man's Desiring," one of 295 cantatas by Bach written in 1716 when the corn· poser was 31 years old . Featured in Edward J. Mad~ den's Flutes, Flutes, Flutes," will be Kathy Smith, Susan Valasek, and Sue John.son on first Buie, Jan Ea-Ivy JObamen, Pat Winkler and' Bob Huebnel' on second, and So!tia 'l'hompann, ponna eor- doza, Melody Finley, and Alan Pekins on third part. Bill Smith will be the Fr<nch born oololst in the clango" by Frank Perltlns. Trombone soloists r 0 r "Lassw: TrombQne" by Henry Fillmore will be S b e r y l Tnmiclt, F.d Mantsch, Ka Hedgecook. and John Sellle. Vnllod aai.. It may llml1 laugh at ~ \Illa ,.... )Illa Clmll'1 TV corn· pie UW*. ••. 'llllfO 11• p:ool ml-11 liDce the couple luslla& ror lltlre -·" plaJlf to ~..i toc<ther .. -DOWly ---much u pnollhkt. -~ ~. "lfe'll prolllbl1: make _.,... In the ...,... 11111 ..... _. -I -ID a holding tr<\f01if,'"1liilioJ ii ..,.<llliJ:,. pattern -X an n e d y great llaueo' lot &llllni .nan. Airport.• ho ...... People Clll'I eV... -.DD Fr011 1111 IJlal It-addition bow to spell I~"~ FrVot .• to Illa ......._ .. bis •••• 'l1>e perlpotellc Froll 11 alti> and Ylrilty -. be'I ·~ pjunllli to ~ a ~ nillC a two ' • NYIVll ·<ii the IWrlnc Miii Carroll, :tl)ildl, -tlllt -blm ,_, will be Ollllod In JamalCo,.., -1111 -""'°t W• 'l1>e ,.. can ever ,flod ~ Weot ThotWaa." Tllo orislDal time." """'' a mislk, ~'!,=;========;;:; vle-irtlllbt-'r-.- a hll In~ ID lllD. ,,_ brought II bere, but It °"Pl*! alter ·a aeuon. ThiJi llmi lllOllDd. aya Frost, lie'll do two opedll• - "Thal Wu 'l1>e Vear That Wu" and "This ls Tbt Year 1bat Will Be," sclleduled for January .. "Satire's time has ·come," says Frost. "Thele is a tremendously rich vein of humor here, and Americans are probably. more able to · 2tlll AT IOTH t!NIMAS JOHN WAYNE· MAX \'OH SYOOW TON OOTON · SIONIY POITl!J SHlllEY WllltlRS HEAil DOUG .CLARK ON ITU. • CHANMIL I SUNDAY • till A.M, ·--~ .. ,......, • t P.M. W1•11I .. • f tJO P.M. Jiil ""'91 ti TM .. IP n. .......... , 1 ..... -- •TMIATll #l .......... :.:."!Ill: EDWARDS Cl"f \1 \ Cf"\Tf R t-. .. ~6vfl .. 1 A0Aa.!~ CO~TA 1.1(~,ti • 9 79414 1 • • • Sauphooiat Gordon Keams will be featured in "Cardu -Menti." A sophomore who bu been playing with the band two yean, Kearns plays JU the reed instwnents as well u Ute alto .... the 30IQ Jn. strument in Csanlas. He plans to transfer next fall to the University of Southern Calllemia. ACADIMf 'A.WAID-II llST A<Tot : Other oelecllons bv the band will include .. Nabucco," a _libretto by Verdi w h I c b became a tunUna point In his career; 11Tlllsa;•-, B a c h ' • "Tocatta and F\Jge." the Morton Gould atr~ment of "Jiru!;le Belli," and Andel'S(fl'I "Sleigh Ride." .. !CTtTIOUS IUIUf .. S •&JM " ... , ... .,. "" ......... """' ........ .,.,.... H I ti OEL. COflOfilADO l'OOOS. ti OEL GOll;Of'IADO CO., JI Dl!:L COltOtlADO #1110, co., ·-v.... ...... ......., IHtfl, Cf ff, . O. M, .,....iflflm. «10 VI ......... "~ -..Cfl, Cttltl. Na Ttilt ... ,.. It MlllO C'Ofldllc.IM W all lrldl't!cl(,111 ....... --Tl'll• ttfi.mtftl lfltd 'Wtltl ftlt ~ CWll el °'"* C•tv an: o.c.meet lt. tm. Wl?.LIAM •· tf JOHN, COUNTY Cllltlt. l't' lelltf'IY J. ~ o.pvry, ' "11ftit PlllllltM4 °"""°' c-1 o.oy l"llol, Dlcfl"'MI 11, '°' ti', ~ JflWMY t. 1m } JOfo7t ' ---·---· 2""tOtRATlll BURT REYNOLDS "FUZZ" RACQUfl WELCH NOW AT IOTH CINEMAS NS • fllW w.rl in "Tlllll'S • .. 1• MY sour• fDWAAlJS I I' f II\ I f' If R H A l&li~ A f A {J ,ti ~ ,_(J)l ,. ~I.• •• ,,') 4 4 1 • • l:HAlll.H. .. DlllllN ,, ''flll MEHRllllC" '.,..;--- /!;;; lr;A$ • -1 i.g1:./}.1 · Pl.UI AlAN ~k!M IN y I ' • DAILY PILOT :J Theater Notes "TANGO " 'Spoon River' to Return !i~~t~I HELD OVER WlO. • YHUU. I• 1,,.,. .. , ~ "MOOf~CillLDREN" A eofl'ledv bw ... By TOM TITUS Of Ille DeifY Pllflf ,,.,, It's all over for Orange County's community theaters tn 1972 after this weekend as five local producUons batten thelr 'hatches in prep4'ratlon for the tw<>week hoUday hiatus. And while South Coast Repertory, the Jrvlne Com~\ munlty Theater, the Laguna Moulton Playhouae, The Santa Ana Community Players and the Placentia Playhouse 1take their final curtaln calls, the Huntington Beach Playhouse ~ llghtl up again for two extra days with a touring production by the Pacific Group 'nleater. FALi.iN SPAR.ROWS -Diane Traylior Oeft) and Sharyn tCase extol their virtUe, or 1.ack ol 1it,,iJ:>, a scene from J>acific Group Theater's ''The· People , of/Spoon River," playing Friday and Saturday al the Huntington Beach Playhouse, - PGT will move into the Huntington Beach theater Fri· day night for two more performances QC "The People of Spoon River,•• the . special . : • GALA PREMIERE TOMORROW Sl'ONSOREO $V THE HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE of NEWPORT BEACH F .. l'<elnoo•I T.cll.•lt ....i lnlor .... 1-.C•H Mt·IJ!il .. •h·l311 P6t.erdroole. ·Sophia wren and James Coco dfeamlhe Impossible.Dream' in an Arthur Hiller Alm l .. Man oft II Mancha BOX OFFICE OPEN NOON TO 9:00 PM. SPECIALAR~FORGROUP50f 250RMORE; FOR OtSCOUNTS NiO 1NFO CONTACT JIM~ Gf0.JPSAL.£S 3001 W. CHNIMN\I AVE. ORN\IGE. 'CA. (714 SJ2·37'97 ANTHONY QUINN • YAPHU KOi ii ... ANTHONY FRANCmll ;r.:i RAU'KS!=~ADSAJD t:.Ntiw Pnld\Ql'I ANTHotfY QUINN 11111 BARRY SHEAR Sc1 ..... y 'bJ L\1T!ilR DAVIS I I .,.... L -............. WALLVnRRIS """"°"""llARRVSH&AR I .R . ""'f.!.~.:::c"'",. ... , llm.MOVoU141mMS...C,~ 11111111•1 ,, STAlTii-- ,llDAY IS --·~·--'t,.)llTJ ...... 1147.eo11 T"' ,. I I • \ adaptation or "Spoon River Anthology" which the Newport Beach group staged last month in the Lido l!le Clubhouse. TRE TOURING production is under the direction and musical supervision of Irving Kimber, who staged "The Amorous Flea" ror the Irvine Community Theater I a st season. It Is the fir st of a series of projects planned by the Newport Beach company which functions as a repertory unit. ENTERTAINMENT Fillastre, Paul Steele and Shl(lee Roberti. Cllrtaln time is 8:30 for "Otar Friends" al the lluilanities Hall Playhouse on the UC rrvine ca nlpus. Reservations 646-3178. I THE LAGUNA Moulton 'Pla}thouse heads lnto its se- cof¥f and final week: with Gian Carlo Menotti's Christmas opera "Amahl and the Night Visitors." Jerry McCuJlough dir~ts the traditional pro- duction, with Doris Shields serVing as musical director. TM Newest Of Tho Ski Epics - W1rren Miiier'• "THIS IS SKIING" • ... Tllk 'htlller ~ Cl•H• llllr "SNOW JOB" ,,Iii CHt. Sv•. f.-0111. 2 -~~ ~~~ W9k• hr "'NTI! AND TILLIE" ... ,,,u,11.,1 w,11,, M..,.,. A..lli..c. DIC. 1et tt.111 DIC. 11 .. Fii., $AT,. SUN. I ,,Mr. ' "\I',._ 114 6CO 13111 • • p 'i"' .AJfJliJ ( u,1 ,1 /?, / • , r '')1 "This ada pta tion of 'Spoon '---------...; ~ver' is idetll for our actors," Kimber ooted. "Not ooly does David Ruiz plays the title' f ;:::::::::s:::=:=:=::;f f role of the shepherd boy , while Jane Westbrook and Lucille Van Beeber alternate es his NATIONAc GENERAL THEATRES It challenge each actor to develop a variety of distinctly diffe~t characters (there are 72 in the play), but since tb~re are no stars or featured players, it becomes a true ensemble production." Cast member!: of the PGT production , li ste d alphabetically, are H i I d a Allen, Elaine Barnard, Frank Ballotta, Donna Bruce, Sharyn Case, William Cullen, Richard Dow. Gino Gaudio. Gloria Maddock, V al Mailander, Thomas Roman and Diane Traynor. Performances of "The Peo- ple of SfX100 River" will be given Friday and Saturday evenings at 8:SO at the playhouse, 2110 Main St., Hun- tington Beach. Reservations 536-4446. THE DOUBLE feature cur· rently being offered by South Coast Repertory comes to a close this weekend with final performances o r "Tango" tonight and Thursday, and M$ilQM: llllw•fsl'" J lu••aJ .. LemO<I SI. S2S.3S2S TWO.W.flMllllAHI 10 COMMANDMENTS (G) + GHATESTSTORY "Moonchildren" wlndin.; up its run Friday, Saturday and Sun- day. David Emmes directs ''Tango," an absurdist comedy of a conventional son trying to concert his bohemian family. while Martin Benson is staging ''Moonchlldren," a look at communal lire: among college students in the 1960s. Ronald Boussom, Cameron Young, Steve deNaut, Diane ~fyers and Gary Bell are among the "Moonchildren," while Richard Doyle , H. J . Parks, Don Tuche, Hal Landon and Leslie Jones head the cast for the "Tango." A 11 performances are at 8 o'clOC'k in the Third SJ:ep Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-136.1. "DEAR FRIENDS," the R e J'i n a 1 d Rose drama transformed from television to the stage, completes a three- weekend run for the Irvine Co mmunity Theater with final performances Friday a n d Saturday evenings. Director Tom Titus steps in- to the cast of the show for the la1t two nights, reolacing Alan Levy. Others in the company are Barbara Garlich, Gary Saderup, Barbara Warburton, John Loughman, Noel The Future Is here. THXll38 mother. Otho Budd, Richard11;~~~~~~~~~1:1 Sutliff, William Sandige and Carlos Gallo complete the La'gl.llla cast. Final performance!'.l will be given Thursday and Friday at 8:30 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday at 2:30 in the playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna B e a c h . Reservations 494-0743. WNG BEACH'S Studio Theater concludes its opening product.ions of ' • T we I r t h Night" this weekend with performances of the Shakespearean comedy ---~ .. "), SFAOIUM I ,\•.: '~i"'"1CKL":7_:mio - -. __ r.r.-~ SrAotuM 1 1.1 ·~~ ----r.1-:-0 SrA01uM-1 · '-!~"• ·--·----- -·-... UT1'11l,.LllS All.E I'll.EE'" & "TMElll't.A G\11.L IN MY SOUP" "THE TEN COMMANDMINTS'" ... ''TMS lllLI." tonight, Friday, Saturday and ell•<* 1...._ Sunday evenings. The group "TMI VALACHI ......... Ill'" Ill) also is offering "Androc1es "TM IE ~:'!w .. 11H and the Lion" Saturday and _ _:~~=~=~~~~~~~=~~===~~ Sunday afternoons. Curtain is 7:30 for "TweUth Night," under the direction of Kerry Johnson, A cast of col- lege students performs the "Llon" comedy at a o'clock. PerformanCi!s are given in the upstairs Studio Theater of the Long Beach Community Playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim St., Long Beach. Reservations (213) 432-962.l.iiiiiiiiiiiil Jtinnlhr O'N•ll Chry Orhnu "SUMMEI OF '42" -Alto - Warren lffny Jull• Chrl1tle "McCAii & MRS. MIWl" leth Color-«ated {It} ·MAJOR STUDIO Pillft'IEW e 'IAT,I UNITll? AkTISTS e SANTA A!fA e ,,. 1',M . Ill ~fll l ... WilEKI ''THE MECHANIC" "MAGNll'ICIENT 7 JUDIE" till telrtr a ... ...,, ...... Shew l"°"I "COUNTLESS Dlti.CULA" "VAM1'11ll ClllCUS" hffl Ill C.WI C~OI EVER TO;:LD~G:i:> =;~ IL======== lln<:Dltl ,. ••• W••I el Mnoll 5'7·2Z2l ........ "'"· _ ... •tHll l lW .. 147·SSl 1 T,I WHO Wl1SURVIVE-II-OF1HE IMllEST ESCAPE ADVBllUIB EVD I CGiobi•• lllo Tlln111' 15 ~Award Wm.1 STARTS FRIDAY 15 EXCLUSIVELY AT THESE THEATRES II' ORANGE COUNTTI r.o.,1<a_:JH£ POSlllXKi AIMlllUlr ..... GCNUW»IAN · f.RNfSI WIHt · lfll llJmjS, C/JO; loo.Y-IW1t' MdXJillN,l Sl!UASIB lli£Y \\1N1l!IS ' "1llmi'j .llOUW!9'.JI• flM!lA Si{ MAl!l\N ·ARllUI ~NHHJll: ~fAlnd lWE HiflS!Jj·n.~' I AaiAl1l !IJM[ ilm ·.)IOll.<li ~-­f,;;;;;;;;:,1~ lllWJI lllJM[ ' ""'"If Sli!IJllJ gll$11T Ind MJIOOl 111)1S ' M "'"""If fllll Will ' -If .Qll lllWlllS • -• lllDll•-~ --. .. ' I • • DAltV PILOT . BRAf!D NEW 1972 BRAND 'NEW '1973 E·200VAN TORINO 2 DOOR HARDTOP . LARGE SELECTION Cruise-o-motic, Colifomio Emission Sys-V-8, re or door gloss,_gouge.s, We.stern_ mirrors. posseoge~ seot, extra cooling tern. AM radio, Tinted gloss;WSW tirts;- .. radiator, rodio. {t24GHQ25688) • .$fftl FULL PRICE $2894 ~. · ... Pl•s T•x & LiCens• PLUS T,lX I, LICENSE ..• 'IMMEDtATE ~LIVEJiY ORDER YOURS .TODAY .. BllAND NIW 1972 BRAND NEW 1973 • 'FORD·COURIER PINTO 1i~cc .engine,. Chr~e Front Bumpe;, America's popular small etonomy car, Full i1oot;Kft.,;hite Woll Tires· · ·<SGTMICT9138) · factory equipment, California Emis~ion , System. '.;.·;:·· FULL PRICE · '·'· ! FULL PRICE ·, '$20 ' 94 $1894 -. . \ ¥• ----- Plus Dealer Preparation Plus Tax & license --Cha1'9tS & Tax & license IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ORDER YOURS TODAY • • • '69 FORD Gcilaxie ' -i , • $,"1'177 "$0014 Dr. V~. ~to.·~~·ltter-· ··ii ' ' jng.todia.~(ZXJa5J)'. · .. .! , .. . . . . . ' -. .. - '6'JMUSTANG ·.~9ll . VI, stick shift, rod"IO, htofer.·(TKW-800) l ~ , ~ . . • 'I! .•1""', • ,.. I '70 MAVERICK ;·; ',. ; $ ·3u· ' °"'· 0.1,,1 ;m.,;O,""" .,. .. .,; ... · 1 . ',,;;1,. ~. dia,htof•,white,wolls.(ZQY649) ,,.. ... ~ 1 .... 1 ~ • ' -• •t \ • ' 9 FORD L,.,_,. ... ,.;;' . , . , ...•.. ,. ' ' .$ ·' . . .. (IMiltry. Squire Wagbn, V-8, outo trari'S:.f , . '; nid lo. heolor, powe< ·"~· foct:.ot .. ' 1 r -6~ luggage rock. (YQB468) 1 • If; · "' :::-" '72 GRAN TORINO...:. 2 or. H•rchop. v1. •11to., •·--=..;.., .,.,;$3·3.77- pow•r 1t1111rin9, pow11r br•k•s, r•d(o,. . ' , h••t•r, 11inY.I roof. 1357 OT21, " '71 DATSUN "'CKUP •. 4 •PHd. rodlo, heoler~1777- (9S4CTN) . . • '70FU•Ylll . ·. $1577 ' 2 Dr. H.T. V8, Auto. trans .. foctary air .. pOwrsttlriflg, rodio, htot.r. (S88 APB) . ' - • PILOT~DVERTJS[R 8 500 ,I • -DOWN -- on • ' .$f1M~ tr•"'111is,ion. c1"· $ Radio, Colif. ernjuion·~WSW tires. virijt"seat. "• I • · . • ·· fULL'PRlci 1 approied lmisSion System. 2000 cc rt-credit g;,,., rr1igllt & 01'eltr ,...,,, ChanJ•. An~13 rnr. fl. DIK ~ I ; ORDER YOURS TOD,A Y PER 'MONTH 67 ·FALCON . . . .. t ;rir. VI,· •ut.o., f,c~ry •;r; power ... ri119._ 11inyl r.of • .tTYW IOdl lo11•· ly ~/,bi~ Jin Ii~~- • . $1/77' . . I 1-'68'1to .. tiiiic~VeJdVr• ..... ' I • $8.,1' 4 Door. V8, ou1omotic trans .. fac!Ory air, paw· /· ' lf"SMring, ~.heater. (420BEN) , ----·---~ ·'68 .. CAIYJIO. : .. · . · 1 • , ,. ·r '1121'1J f I ~ ! ". ; i. Stick slrift, ftctory ~-r-tdi .. 1h~, . l CVUTl,S> ' .. ~ • t • .. . . ..... . . . Wll&IYIOUlllOWllPATflarr --~Jlll'mJ AVA lf'fOll,(AI .......... .. l' l '\ . . • • r • [e c~·n i que Unscram ..... f e_-· By JO '01.80N on it for ·lliree· )'ellrs. Theie'a a lot of Costa Mesa factory and kjtchen. "Once , , 1ot .. o.iiv '""" s1.n , Um~ • and. a Jot of mo n e y in-It's in your blood, you ~stop," ht e.z.. O>l; &Utdfn' iDay·haye ,~vered. lhe vested." Omelets,, Batilln . feels, are a plains. ·~.Ill Qie .. >p of 6S, iit ~wport "14'1 'food" apd,hav~.a lol more glamoor Amoog new ........ d. st•"' under -ps leach'• llol>"Bttdin.7.t@S "one-upPed'' the t''""l,M,;la lf ... a KeDtlick>: _gent: fie .di.scovered the egg theµ scrambl~ or fried eggs. are a bread for fondue, a sandwich • wbenfbe ,was 67. ~rd.in's .1oi::i~ .~r tn !ood began tn that Cllfl be heated In the toaster and a knotJp ,fnttceftt.years as uThe Omelet ~~tg9'0ery, AJa.,.when he was only 12. new kind of beef jerky. liq)~' .Bardin ·hil invented a s~ial pan ··He would get up at ~ a.m., go to work He is _an avid cookbook reader and for:'~ omeJetl that guarantees sue-operating the first bread wrapping always bas at least one checked out of =·~et~} the, ·r,nosr ~~.ted ·macbine ·ln· the United States, then-go to ·the libfary. Dining out, or course, is a ........., -• -: • •• T • -• v • class~at I. . favorite activity with bis wife, Alline, and II ~ ·reCtallilllar, made' ol beili>y •••t he gaduated, he "worked al 1_00 -fishing occupies part of his time. Te;fl~~ ~laJumirillDl ·and,d)vided ·y~ · . In the <middle., With a DJct ,o( the left jobol' and wound up going Into the food • Bardin spends part of almost every WJis!,~~ !S Wted_~~ egg~s J!p.s~ in Lo~ Angeles in 1931,_during ..day in b.is _Uttle "cubbyhole" researeblng · fi'OirimeWflfintQanotlier.Tbe~.is the -f~t part of the depi;ession (~_he 1 new food products, 'demonstrating ms ~-<MJl,,the.(illing,iipt ln!arid then Ule could bve on the salesmen~ samples, be omelet pan and teacbing anyone who is f ~;__~~~'WttlY tw:oed ~ut ~\lf.it~ a special la.ughs.)· .' tnte~M how to prepare a orooc;I omelet. r,•,m;raper,,, '.;i, ! j;•j I,· 4f"" ... ,. Iii • ~ ~ fo~r' ~thcturer ·Cf He st8rted making peariut butter aiid ~No -a~ts 'are necessary for · .. ~-i~,_ista,.tea ,exper~g .with -"<:racker p.ndwicbes,· whic}J were band-le.$800S, be'says. "U,my car's here, they , ,~ts because ••1t ·was,a '4*1~e.•I · bt.ittered and wrapped by hand. Potato can come-in." 14 cµp vegetab!e oil 2 tabl-tap water I teaspoon bot aauce (Ta~. « equivalenl) l . M'ix Jngredlenta well. 'COok into .1 thin crepes. SaDCe 21h: tabletpOOD.1 comsta.rdl % teaspoon paprika I teaspo<11 granulated mlon 11> caiis chicken brolb '{U% ounce size) Stir cornstardl, pa~ llld ·ookn lnt.o broth. BrlllJI to~ boll, atln1ng COOllanUy. Simmer tibout 2 minutes lndlet·cool. flllJng I 4<lw1ce can diced green,chileJ ~"I CQuJd never inak.e a gQOd omeJet," ~P!J -~ere ilext._ ~n ether ~ '#. HisPintost;a~wagonistbelandmark be--sayr."'t-wenrto1be-Eggcmd:ttre--Eye -~·~w~-a-p1oneer In-corn chips.-1 --because cf -ltsr>-license plate:--it--reads. ..W. ~,_seat near the -kitchen (which I was the inventor of the tortilla-type chip OMELET, of ccurse. 1 cup cnJlbed com chlpa (Dot too fine) 4 = ~ sharp Cheddar I> ol l 1$-0UDCe can SpanlJh rice ~--1 • • • , afways do) 'and Watched the cooks. I apd Davored chips. l was also the first to Here is one of Bardin's recipes: said, 'There must be an easier way,' and v3cutlm-can snacks," he says. ~ is wpat I came up with. I,O!:.,OF TIME ..nu, is not a toy. I've been working NEW PRODl,!CTS He "ostensibly retired" in 1960, but is still busy iri.ventiilg new products in his CHILES REILENOS Egg Wrapper 6 large eggs Thi: omelet men hes found e new career end a new challenge in th11 egg. Mix all Ingredients together . Fill wrilppen with prepared filling. Roll into baking dish. Cover with sauce. Bake in 400-degree oven tmtll heated through. During last five minutes, coyer with shredded Jack or o.eddar cbeele. Dealrate with pimiento stripl. ~~-ptl(lr ...,1 h •\; (; ... ;l!flt.!1 .: : J,e: . ·- BEA ANDERSON, Editor w.-..ay, ~ IJ. 1m , ..... ~traight . T~lk . .. ~G~y 'Life ---·-·-··--··-.. -~~~---.:+·~.-=-" D 'f ·''' .r1, ·,,·fr,., e. a· .. "·:''.-' "· .. ' ·' ,.. . ' " . .. ,".,.~t(.(~~-r. ·q; 'I r #· .... Ji ' ..-:.,. . i~NN~~~r;7! ~ __ -~~; .. I:~· · · ::··~ , <makes excuses for it. I would like to ~ ! . ~: '1 · -~~-t"on. t~ ·letter from the young ~ ,,._. 'J" .... "'~~-"' ·bomosemal wflo .. signed himself "On ........ ~. '·· ·\ . .'Edge." ..., -... • '.4.~ .... ,. .. r,, I'.'" _..- -: 'He asked you to help persuade his , DEAR ANN .~m;illl&"<liia~ , filehd to Jet bilfi.move ollt ,o{ his pareqt's' the most persistP.Dl· Source of )'our OOr. h9me·tnto his place. The.friend bal~,on. roHJV\ndence seem. tO be fron\ the lhort the grounds that two single guys hvmg -I"-''I"'"' would tw~·miC~t i~ as_ well. post a si@, leg of the matrirnooial triangle, I · 'We are g~y." }'our a,!lvice was "You like to propose the !ollo\fing ·theorem: ·'J!aw all-the problems you can handle. · The ratio ·or sjjouses< tl111aiUillll ·w. the , Don!t a~d anotber"by trying to move in 1 marriage contract by tbe •ovek a-;:t of ' '"'"n1R ... : te Get commission -is ~y propdrtionll• to Jlfiµt @II ~"'~c rqomma · -8 the numbe'r of fti•inses •unfaitbful io··tbe ·)licel.of ·your-own." · ......... -r 1 · beartily . agree that the young man mani~ge contra~ by the c:overt'. act of 5'.l!'t;,Dd a P,Llact of bis own, but I take 0i:: :·start~ ~s.t o_f'"C!>vert .acts~· 11Jth .. ~. asstnnplion that a by (lvinlf ~ou aa•,Wpnple. · , . , "' j~~ombecaat~_!lyheb~~ene,? ~-1. Pallive-MllilDWion-IS~ n~t ~ , ems -· use 1s· ga,. . . 1 ol ' I d. 's' ..;...,_ I on. Ann, do you. really beli~ve to being out !"'"'· t· oe 1NWW.1g or ' -~ ~:~ ~;~~· .~ .,i1:';!· with ~:pn>lil imdve ts pros- . else True our ' lives aren~ au •titution._,J_ know Jbecause I'm, there now. · bes)nd·Ctea.;,~fthenwbosels? -OVERT SPpll~E BUT NOT 'BY Piece de resistance for the Christmas season' is thil\ classic French dessert, Buc:he de Noel. • ' ~ 1 • • .. .. ' ,,; > ,-,. ' ... '" · ..... • !loPe you <WUJ, dlaabl>Be the pjlblic of CHOICE , · ''tbe'':'oid \.:mYtb t~t homOlemalS 'are . oiA.R OVERT: Yoar'tk eo r~m , I .~""!wretched and miserab~e: Please help tear . translated into •tk ~ E;qllsb, II: ¥ L ·' ~~w'!,Jl#~-.. :-~VI~ .l.H~wllo«>l1tatdo 10bee•.,. -u--e o-g· ~ , 1 , • • their wtvet are de9d frodl-tberaecll:.bo*b '"' . • . l ~~·,_ ~·J~-f•r • . "'·~ .... 1 / · · . ~vi· ' :"( , , 1_..__ • • • ~· ·~4f,: Jt.11 'a~\· make~•• " i it ,~,~ ~!to tffer... ia&~ If'.'! '-rl~l ~ '~ • I '.?.J, •• ~.U~· ...... ;of ~NY ·.~~ boHI for .. beJ'"'"t~..._... ~' 1 • _ t • ll • 1 Warm·s Hospital,it ~ " .. ,,..,, w.w!W. ~ .• fl('vori. tlljllli. ut'~mlie·lliP--~ ··Enrr • ...t, ..C:C. ii\ lier .life, abould · F)ll<!ly chopped pjllachios edgeo rrom cake. Starting with a narTOW .: ·---~ Uiata!.Y.WaJs • fe ........... ....,.,,.. dellllf>l'lamlly and _,with the very~ Llne .thutiered shallow bakjng.pan (10 end ol the cake, roll ... te and wwel ,.. •• _.....:;. .,__ ' .. W " U.t aie ~ '¥ •· ~ ~· ......,.. ltitlfe, Bucbe de )loet -the Fl<nch, by 15'bY J'tnc6J with waxed jliiper, then together. Let stand unlll jUst 'cool. · r-~ ..,.. wllll 1Jlll!I'" ~·~!.a_ Utt. ~ vfrtety· ii uletlsfac. .Clristmas favot!te. , butter the paper. In~a l'<luart ~aucepan, carefully unroll the •· nmov.ing the ..-I I null .,.. DO -I'" lor)'.. • · ' · ' heat milk: adcll butter. Cool. • towel. Spread the oofhe . .O•\'Ored butter ~~l=m"'=~.:; ' N'fllJlte mettts al.,,... f'r~i~ DE NO: · • fn a ftlislng bowl, beat eggsiJj!IUI very • cream filllntl·over the.°""; then gently _ d ·IM .,1181· , Ille lodlvl\lll!l ID-' •( ~T,ale Loe •l ..,_ ltilck Md lemon colore<l. Gradually add reroll lt.,Place cake «1 ~board or ' ·~· · ~ . ieD. ~·•,.t lhiskr, . .in cup.at ' ;sugar and COtilinue ·belting untU smooth. plate. . &~-~ ... ,..,.. eot ..... 111• '2i&bleoPo!*shutter '1Add vanjlla. Siii loeether flour, baldng At\Ocha·baellede,NeeldecoraUngUp .._ 1 ''94••~. *-1•1 a•1a-,1111!111t 1 (ll-l'llllmt .....-..-powder ,)>ndaalt:grlduallyaddtoegg (Oatononealde,rid(eden.theotber)to W ... •1 .... 'ftrTl!Mlll -0..11.... • -em.-·-· nilstur'e ai>d mix only wim blended. Add a )ll•ltY bag, then ·on It w!th the , • ..,. W: 1 _., ..... .. ....... [. ml1• '-! ·cup ..,ar milt, sUrrlnJ 9ulctl)' only ll!'lll batter is cJ>Ocolate butter cream..lllllllng. Pipe the Tl'~ 'ii::;::~~; •;11 '""!~""~ ---~ :~"''*'~"'!.-·~ ::°~"be_!hin).1'ourln~prepared -=:if.=..i·••i:::.~~~,:i!~ .. ' ~ .. ' Sprinkle pistachios over ends ID() oreaDd bale to olnlulale moss. This cake may be made I or I dorjo adVlllCO. i;hlJl jt IDIW Ille 11'11 .iij la firm, then co""r lightly with folli;i vent It llool abeorb!n( ottier food in tile retrig<rat.or. !dlkel t t.o Ii<'· lnp. . . -er-,........ .. ""'"" )'.Olki ID() I tee-vallla • Beat I cup (I-) aoft'lB Graduolly bell! ln1 lit c:upo Iii fecttooen' lllllllr-II..-141 ot ture, and to it add 2 1111 t•t t · :v: .?1 ~ • ~~~tit 1dD ~;ste . 14. ::r..,...11a1110c pOWdeo Bake fn a 321 degree ovm for 18 to 2(l motl"'1lb,,_bleU..rlnpIn1 cut Jog. -1'IW, _, .... ifo ~8"1 · T , J 'j' rs• -; • ed ~ .; 11 , · minulff ·'llhtil, cake spring• back when ' Ot, ~ad fn11tlng w!UI a 'ipatuls, then '11111 ....... .., d n .. liy . -It> Get !lore ," ..-'," " \Ouched. llghlly. Loosen: ccte £rom sidl!s simulftle the lesturo ol )>erk b1 running a ~~ .. ._._ Z Ill i. Clltld ~ ~·--..,. CCIII~ 1111~ of I"'!! S.cUu~ out ..... cleao towel \but · !on. over the ~ llllf-!J: coffee ~ f!loliii~ boidnJ :water, dim -~ niJalift.; . .. 11; :aw JM . :i11tll.' 9-1 ll i.. ii'at .-~ ' 1!tllllor' ..,... ~ 1111 llJJJiit ~ °T"'' di!sled_ w\th l""'fecuonors' wlah, ,dec;onio, Ille ~.,..... "·" · pllj'-111..,._.Jo Ud 1 , .. ••111 (~lollowl) _... · -"-cherries, piping ....,. ~· o..· .,..11ng • ! envelope to tbe DAILY i>filiif. Clndied dlerriet ' Peel olf wand paper and trim crl~ around them te roM11J1e -, ·-··1 ' 4-< • r ' ...-i ~ ... ,,_... ~ :;c...;~ well. -'~ • ' I • lnT~ TOASTED -Mrs.· John Vittrup Oeft) and Mrs. Nonnan Clrkle, presi· 11 ~ent of Harbor Key, off.er their congratulations to Carl Neisser who was named ., 1be dub's Gumliaa Angel for 1972. : fiJ eisser of Newport ~Harbor Angel Heralded e earl Neis!er of Newport ifl!<och has earned the "Guar· M"dl~ Angel" title from Harbor 11.Key of the Child Guidance ~ter ol Orange County. ,e_ The award, honoring com- ~unity involvement and _ ~tvice to the non-profit, low- cost "PSythlatrlc cltnic for 411ffaotionally disturbed children ;ljdolescents. was • ed by last year'a win- • John J. l\JcKerren. '"'','~eisser ill a past. director of the guidance center and the Mental Health Association ol Orange County. An active member of the Navy League for 12 years, he served as president of the Orange County Council and I Ith regicm and was a nation81 vice president. He gerved his tour of duljl In Ille Philippines, Neisaer Is in charge of the Advanced Technology Opera- tions of Beckman Instruments., lnC'. in Fullerton. He graduated from University, which two sons now attend. and studied UCLA Graduate Scliool of Business. Past "Guardian Angels" are 0. \V. Richard, Walter Bur- roughs, Harry Babbitt, Andy Devine, Drs. Tom ~ and Daniel G. Aldrich Jr.; Arthur McKenzie, Robert N. \Veed and John Rau. ere Comes Santa Claus delebrating the holiday season with a dinner dance will be members of Balboa 'Eht Club when they ani•e at the clubhouse at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 16. ving earJ,y to spread some cheer is Santa who is helped out of the cbin1· by Mrs. MOrr:ie Kil'k. •• ·f (Ji (fi'6 Pla,ttu~ Helpin.g Hand Bringing Ho 81 PATRICIA MC CORl\IAClt thenpy and rebabllltaUon." NEW YORK (UPI) -For :IO years, Belle Leach has helped splice broken 11r&Dds or life. Miss Leach sakl Maud Booth, co-founder of I he volWlteers, was a pioneer in prbon refonn. The beneficiaries of her at- tentions are ln prisons. They include homeleSI men on skid .rows everywhere. They range from lhe nearly helpless elderly living alone on the fringes of poverty to unwed mothers -and youngsters in trouble. "Maud was inst<umental In changes In the •!lent treat. ment in pri.sons. Her approach was very interesUng. -Miss Le.ach is nalional social \\'E!lfare secretary for the VOA. She is a lieutenant colonel in t~ VOA, an ex-teacher with a masters in social service from Tulane University. She knows a belping hand. extended tenderly, gives the down and out hope., "I have seen the most ln· spiring things happen," she said. "The tendeme83 with which the volunteers help Is Verf healing to those in despair. "Our slogan is no creed but Christ and no law but love. What really makes t h e Volunteers of Amer i,c a distinctive Is the quality or . caring for the individual." More than two million of the despairing feel that tender touch annually, many through the VOA's 600 service centers. For those on the downside of file, Miss Leach thinks thlnp are a lot better these days than they were 30 years ago. "Today we have a better un- dentandlng ol circumstances creating problems and are not quite so fast to judge in- dividuals," she said. "And there are new at· titudes when looking at old problems." In the latter cate&nrY Is alcoholism. "It's not totally a moral problem." she said. "It is a medical problem. An alcoholic is a sick person who needs "She told the prisoners - 'you start where yoU' are, you Start facing the fact that you are in jail for a rea.30n, you &tart changing right there. 'No matter how caged. and depressing, look up end hope. See the sky through the bars.' " When Mrs. Booth visited prisom and pressed f o r reform many prisonets were chained lo walls and otherwise confined. She and the volunteers pushed for rehabilitation and pro- bation and parole. They got libraries started in prisons. "There is too m u e b tokenism In prison," Miss Leach said. "There is tokeh training, for one. "Most wardens would be pleased if they could Improve the schools. the libraries and the traJning facilities . "They are as aware as anyone about injustices in sentencing. It is recognized that people from poverty end up in pri son more than other people." So1nc of the good things going on were cited by Miss Leach. She Included pre-rel..,., centers. These are places where a prisoner tries out a job and is oriented to com. munity and family ties that have broken. The probation and parole system is an lmproveinent over the prisons of the days when the VOA first got in· t.rested In the plight of those in jail. "But there are difficulties " Mt.st< Leach said. ' ' T h1 e caieloads are too large for the probation and parole oCfi~. Overpopulated prisons also are a problem." For children who are pre- delinquent, Miss Leach said the VOA 's group homes are taking the place ot re!onn schools. Children in trouble are placed in homes with UptT ........ VOLUNTEER -LI. Col. Belle U!ach, naUonal so- cial welfare secretary of the Volunteers of Alnerlcaj chats with youngsters at a VOA camp in New York. The ex·teacher has spent 30 years in services for poor, youth, elderly and even the incarcerated. house parents. Six lo eight children stay In each house. They are not mov· ed from institution to m. stituUon. The group houses are ca11ed invisible iir sUtutions. How much good do they do? "It is hard to tell case by case what )'Oil have prevented by providing needs," Jlliss Leach said. "We think that when children a r e l:leaded for further dlfficulUes with the law and we supply certain basic needs we mlght be preventing deeper troubles.'' Your Horoscope Tomorrow Capricorn: Eliminate Hazards THURSDAY DECEM~R 14 By SYDNEY OMARR Scol]lio can be shrewd, Jn. -mi_.• groat 11..i , for Ule. ScoJ:]lio women often ' mury men younger than 1 tbelpselves. Scorpio men have a .knack of getting the most Wt of efforts, including in- vestments and personal rela. -po. &upio can make 1!!t"'")' with Sagittarius and Gemini. Scorpio Individuals often are concerned witb psyddc•jili!ijOmena and -a Jeme or destiny. Morie Poniall Bethel· 313 Under New Reign During the 27th INtallaUon ceremOOies, conducted by Job's Daughters, Bethel 313 of Newport Beach, Merle Ann Parrish became the new bouored queen. The daugbte< of Mr. and Mrs. Riebanl Parrish of Costa Mesa Is a 11172 Empire debutante, a graduate of. Estancia High Schol and now majors tn nursery school education at Orange Coast C.Ollege. Serving with her a r e Deborah Hebert, sent or princess; Coonie Ashby, junior princess: Alice Parrish, guide, and K=n Ashby, marabal. AlllE8 (Mareb 21.,\pril 19): Old ways, prooedunlll could be caat -· Be ready !or new start In differenl direclioo. -OrlglnalltJ. Bi'iDi forlli c:reOuve """""'"'-Empbame ~. personal I.I>' pearanoe.. Wear bright colors. TAUllVS (April 21).May 20): Unuaual .aituaUon exists In connectlcn with employment, dependent& SoalNbing prob- ably la OC<UrriDg , behind """""'-Don' rush to judg- lllEnt. Weigh varlOU8 factors. Time ls m your side. Y-0u could be m brink of di9covery. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Friendship takes unusual turn. Don't take people too sel'iotu- ly. In alfalnl ol heart, ..... prove fickle. Maintain balance and humor. Avoid scattering f"""'"-Light touch wins. CANCER (Jwie 21.July 22): Stick to facts. Let rumors go -insist on valid information, not rwnor. Essential now to be •ware of basics. Fancy techn.i· ques will not suffice. Key is to dig deop and gel lo heart of matten. Ll!lO (July :IS-Aug. ZI): Hold off on journeys, m a j o r deciJioDS. Obtain bJnt from Cacer message. Gel Pazzje pieces together, Analyzo and aynthesize. Find reasons. Re- ject IUperflclallty. U ponio. tent, needed idormalloo la ob- tained. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): Different approach ts necessary in coonection with tmdentanding With one at top who bolds views contrary to ,..,,. own. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. II): Hold oil on major declltlom. You r<qui"' more time to absorb available in. forinotlon. Anolber Aquartu Is likely lo be In Pl!'ture. Op. position comes from relative who may be tra.ve.Jing. , PISCES (Feb. lil-Man:b 20): Study AqarUs me 1 I age • Guard a I I et.. yaluables, especially while In tnmlt. Social contacts now are fine but buslnes!i proopecb ""f1Jlre review. Be flexible. in v e s·t men ts. financlallJ-~----------------- transactions. Home, family ' '~ commitments sbouid be con-~ ·~ llidered. You gain through J-~ ~. Persuade key \t ~~~rs.;~~: D fib . 01 · ·b ~ ~£~~ .= n .. .l T,e w18I~.r1 ~ Get -a cc 0 u n ting. Count ~ 1~1ide the lo1rdw1lk-Shr>ppiftg C111fer, Hu11n119to11 H1rbour M change. Mate, partner may~ \l: 1,141 ALM>N9UIN, HUNTINGTON IUCH 146.7271 l\ :o;m~ ~, ~~ ~~ A s1e·1gh Full ~ ~~O ~=:::.:SI~ ' ~ 1!~a19~ of the Unusual ~ yourself. Check •fll>Olntmenta, HUMMEL FIGURINES t,t including me<1tca1, dental. You ~~ ADVENT WINDMIW ~ may be called upon to perfonn W ~ un~irr~s <Nov. 12-~ NATIVITIES l\ Dec.21):Morepersonsa.rea~ DECORATED CANDLES ond ORNAMENTS J.t tracte<i 1o yoo. You gain STOCKING STUFFERS 1\ universal appeal Now l! time ?-~:. ~ ::.. ': ~,!.~~~...'!.~.!!!.!'!.!!!~ ~ yooforadvice.r.:"Jnperoonal~oNLY 12 DAYS UNTIL ~ life, there could be lovers' L:w~wwa-.Jdllffill(B.:lllll:IW!Mw.!111&'. q~RJOORN (Dec. 22.Jan. " . ';j~,':;;f~!,-:;~':;Hf,~ 19): New start indicated; ac- cent Is on ucuri\y, building, elimination .()( safety hazards. Leo coold p I a y important role. Key now is to reach TOYS & Glm FOR CHILDREN Of.AU AGES Is • • • A Mloctocl cleolor for ~ Creative Pl~ythlngs ,~ • + ,._ U'5WING<TM) CLIMIEl, rope end wood 2 + ,._ HELJCOPTI~ "' AIRPLANE ,.~~ ... JWl;[ENNEYRE, LAGUNA BEACH = I ) l ,.., . ••• • -- • ' ·-DAJLY PllOT Battery Causes Recharged By ALLISON DEERR OI tN 0.llW 'll•t lltft Abused children are the vic- tims of victims . Parents who abuAe their children were almost always abused themselves - physically, emotionally and in some cases set:ually. And these are the mothers and fathers who probably shouldn't have become par- ents. These were the £eelings of three abusive mothers who round help and guidance through Parents Anonymous, a self-hi!lp organir.alion. They talked with member~ of the UCl AJumnl Association at the first lecture series coordinated by psychiatric teacher Miriam Spear. Parents Anonymous was Christmas Leftovers Donated Nothing is as useless ,as a cut Christmas tree left on the lot the day after Christmas. Lloyds Nursery in C.Osta Mesa in the past few years has begun a program to make sure few trees become . left· overs. Decking Hospital Halls During the last rew days be£ore Christmas, trees are available at no charge to churches, philanthropic groups and individuals who know of hardship cases. A nativity scene is created on t11e balcony of Ho~g Memorial Hosp~tal, Pres-' bytertan by Nightingale Chapter decorations ch air me n Oeft to right) Mrs. Thomas Boler and Mrs. Sterling Wolf. Members of the chapter and Candy- str:ipers are decorating the hospital wings for the season. Arrangements for a free tree can be made by calling the nursery. A Visit From Santa M.ark and Donnie Dul· fer greet Santa look- alike in anticipation of an early visit from San· ta T u esday through Thursday, Dec. 19-21, to homes in Laguna Ni- guel on the invitation of Les Petites Fleurs Auxiliary, Children's llome Society. Proceeds will go to CHS pro- grams including foster care, day care and group home services. Tributes Treed The Christmas tree had its beginning in one of the oldest -;::=============================::; forms or worship known to I · mankind, lhat of s p i r i t worship. ID .the Black Forest of JOUth'A'estem Germany, each winter tribesmen would cut down and bring ·into their homes an oak in tribute to the god Odin. His spirit was said to Inhabit the tree. In the eighth century, at the urging of St. Boniface, an F.nilbh missionary to Germany, the oak tree was ~ed. bt' a fir tree in booor ol !ht Christ Child. . I ' ·Turkey Tip ' , When choosing the holiday ~turkey allow about one-half pound per serving of cooked blni. Then add more for sec- ond helping~. ARTIQUES SALE 20 to 40°/o OFF Saturday • Sunday 12. 4 · 7~ · W•tmlnster Avenue Ntstmlnttff. Cl. (714\ 892·7591 \ Discover the power of Musk Oil. I Sears I ••• Ule•ve KOt CIFT id£n• The exciting erogenous scent that has stimulated passion since time began. • Prices Effective 1brJJ December 19 ••• ' It ~ {;:: >! ' ~ " ~ , ~ ~ Now-today-you command its provocative power in full strength Musk Oil by Jovan. Earthy, sensual. Musk Oil is the newest rage in perfumes. Just a drop behind the ear, at the base of the throat, back of the knee wil l set pulses racing. Suddenly you're more female. And, while you scarcely notice its subtle scent, hewllll Why not put ltsmagnetlcattradlon to w~rk foryou? JQVAN MUSK OIL ~ oz.$5.00 I " -~ ~. ~ ·-·-.... -·--...!--""' ' ........ , lO!lt•oqo .,,_ ----...--:;;:----·-~-........... """"""---°"" -~-' I ..., • begun by another abusive mother wbo couldn't find help when she was ready to admit she needed it. Her ··ch1tdhood'1 included more than 1 0 0 placements In instituti<lns and fo..ster home!. TEENAGER She spent four years in "solitary" in her teen years and had "allllO.!ll every kind of abuse there is.'' When she married and had her own children she con- tinued the pattern uptil she was afraid she would kill them. She turned to psychiatrists, social worker s and doctors until she frnally found one who helped: She then founded t h e organization first n a m e d l\tothers Anonymous t h e n renamed PA because "both parents are responsible even if one ls just a silent partner who alloWs things to happen.'' In telling their own stories, each of the young· mothers linked the way they were treated by their parents to the way they treat their own ®ildren. Among the trio there are nine children, with another on the way. NO ANSWE R They admit the problem is not licked. They haven't found THE answer, but they have ·developed ways to cope V.'ith and understand their positive and negative feelings toward their offspring. One of the young mothers was her father's on1y :i.nd favorite daughter. For him, she thought, she had to be perfect. "No child sh o u Id have that burden,'' the group decided. ''Children need to misbehave." The mother of five said that Yule Concert Perfonning at 4 p.m. Fri· day, Dec. 15, in Fashion Island will be Henry Curtis, pianist, David Pirkle, violinist, and Charles Curtis, cellist. They will be joined by John Schneidermann, banjo player. in a ragtime rendition of "Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer." 'I she is abusive to only her "scapegoat child." She read evuy book available trying to discover why she felt the way she did about this one child and nothin g helped until PA forml'd an Orange County chapter last February. What were once dally in- cidents have d.,.,·indled to only rare instances. "Only through PA can this child and J begin to talk lo each other, tale this .step log ether." ' DIVORCED A divorced mother of two related that her own mother• had been married three times and that she never knew her real rather and got along bad· ly with her stepfathers. She lert home and married an ajooholic. When her children came she Bells ·Ringing got no help from her husband who couldn't understand why little things upset her so much. Now she is Jeaming to cope. One of the PA speakers ad- mitted that she probably shouldn't have had children at all. "I'd probably have been a great little wife a n d housekeeper without children. I just can't juggle k.eeping my husband happy, the children happy and the house clean. One always suffers ." The mother of five. once a compulsive housekeeper, now lets the house get messy. WHAT'S NATURAL ··1 am a v.·oman,'' one said, "but not necessarily a natural mother. All I kno\v about ·mothering is what my Piii'~ gave me.'' Mrs . Spear noted ~ Europe, women. are f have children or not them , and be oomfo either way. American w pre still under social pres to have children to "com them as a woman," children suUer. The J:ipeakers noted thiit pbyslcal abuse is only a stllil part of the pioblem. 1 peopel Jeel they ® DOI a their children because bruises don°t show. But g could help many parents verbally abuse their childr- "We hope•to reach while they are at tru.·~·ruld~ before they strike the':' end abuse before it worse." > ... . ' . . . Weddings Solemnized ~ ECHAN-GONSER Barbara Anne Gonser and, T'erence M.lchael Echan ex· changed vows be.fore the Rev. Chuck Smit!( in the Calvary Chapel, C..ta Mesa. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Gonser of Costa Mesa, was attended by Mrs. Michael Cotner. BrJdesmaJds ...,.. Miss Nancy The Rev. Dr. Charles Dierenfield performed t h e ceremony £or the daughter of !\.tr. and Mrs. Charles Cassube of Costa P.1esa and the son of Mr . and Mrs. Walter Haase of Irvine. Attendants were Mn. Ray- mond Gomez, D e b b l e Brothers, Polly Sc of i·e l d. Janice Adams, Dottie Brothers, Linda B r o l;: Michael Brown, Ken d r· Brown, Ben Brothers, Smith, Mark Cornelius Jeff Cole. The bride is a gradu Estancia High School and husband ia a gradua Newport Harbor High Both are attending Coast CoUege. Bernardy and the Mmes. Ran--------------------"'8 dy Warren, Anthony Berger • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • an~Be;ri~~.:OOm, son of Mr.. ''INCHES·A·WAY'' and Mrs. George Echan Sr. of • Sa11ta Ana, asked George • Echan to be his best man. • Ushers were Ron-Umbaugh, Robert Nolasco, M I c h a e I • Cotner and Tim Koger . • The bride is a graduate or • Saddleback High School and • her husband is a graduate of Santa Ana Valley High School. • • HAASE,CASSUBE • MINERAL WRAP METHOD HOLIDAY SPECIAL $ 10 OFF With Th;, Ad 5 INCH LOSS FIRST VISIT St. An:irew's Presbyterian • IGUARANTEEDI • •, • • • • • Church. Newport Beach was • JEANS INCHES-A-WAY the setting for the marriage • • linking Penny Ann Cassube • 1799 Newport Blvd., Co sta Mosa • and Richard IV. Haase. PHONE 645-8890 • . ' ~····················~ 'I • . • ' I ' • ) ' ' I ' ' ' l -~ ' ' ·k fl DAILY PILOT Wtdne~J, Oeeen1btr 13. 19 /2 Holiday Parties Editor's Note : 11 colu rr1n devored to Newport Dtacll. Costa A'Iesa. Lugiota Beocl~ cn1d !tfi.ssio1l Vte)o pare11t· uiacher organizations will . '" •• <1ppear in Lilt D.·llLY Pl· LOT eal'lt 1vec l:. /11/or'tna· litHl must be received by tl1e won1e11 '.s r.lel)(lrtnie11t or !tt rs. Cared Smith, 1746 Ct11tella PLace, Beacl1 b11 5 p.1n. for publication doy. Newport Tl1ur~day \Ved11es· . . . • ' ' • I • • ' Herald Christmas ·vacation Adams PT A ~frs. Wendell Wllllam1 Presldtnt COMING UP : Studenll in fourth and fifth grades wUI present a holiday program at the association meeting tonight at 7: 30. Miss Karen Millar and Fred Grade will direct ... Primary students will present a Christmas program Friday, Dec. lS, climaxed by a visit from Santa. A living Christmas tree decorated by • t h e _______§tudents will be__planted on the school grounds. : 'Let Us in Song ... ' ! The sights and sounds of Christmas 'vill blend into a n1erry evening Thursday, : Dec. 22. \!.l.1~.!l Costa l\·Iesa l:ligh School musical groups perform. Decorating ~ the Lyceun1 for the 7:30 p.m. concert are (left to right) Donna Vestre, Rod f 1\lcclain and l\like S1njth. . Bea r PFO Mrt. Robert BaUJnger- Presldent .. COMING UP': Christmas pro- gram at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the multipurpose room. ~'i.J Two centel'pieces will be raffled following the pro- gram . . . Volunteers are needed for the learning ''' center. Mrs. Roy Nichols may be contacted at ~7·1084 by interested persons. College Pk . PT A Mrs. Thurman Brannon President COli.1ING UP: Christmas pro- gram for the student body will be presented at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow and at 1 p.m. for parents. ~tudents in kindergarten through third grade will sing carols and those in fourth through sixth gra de will pre se nt "Scroog e," a play. CM High PTSA Mrs. Carl Rotman President • COMING UP: Members will furnish Christmas pastries for the Teachers' Goodie Table Friday, Dec. 15. in the faculty lounge. Per so n s wishing to donate baked goods may call h1rs. Carl Rotman at m2699. Holiday Merchandise Priced Ju st Right Eastbluff PFO ~trs. Eugene Kovach President COMING UP: Students in all grades will present a Christmas program at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow and at 9:30 No shopper's budget wil be strained during the Christmas Shopping Night at Victoria School Wednesday, Dec. 13, beginning at 8:30 a.m. Child· respective languages at 7 p.m. tomorrow . Pau larino PTA Mrs. Paul Dumaln Presid"ent ren will buy gifts fo,r their families at $1 and under. Making early selections are (left to r ight) Debb:e · Robinson, Steve Stanfield and Mrs. Ton1 Lutcavish. Sonora PTA J\l rs. Thomas Elicker President • f I 'Tis the Season ~ a.m. Friday, Dec. 15. REPORTS : Plans for the father-son day and a skaling party were discussed at th e board meeting ... Receipts from the November book fair totaled $141 . COMING UP: Aluminum pate in a districtwide pro- gram in March. Winners were Joanna Eddy, Paul Polizzi. Jim Kilday, Audrey Pellicciotti, Wayne Sheffield and Rosalind Pelliccotti. COMING UP: Christmas pro- gram with the theme Music Jn Action will be presented at · 7 tonight ·by· students· in <111 grades. Flag ceremony will be led by Girl Scou t Troop 440 ... Bicycle safe· ty progra1n will-be con· ducted by Costa Mesa police officers at 9 a.m. Friday, Dec. 15. Christmas parties will be hosted by room mothers in the afternoon. I I I Yuletide's Festive Altrusa Altrusa Clubs of Laguna Beach and Saddleback Valley will have a joint Christmas party in Ben Brown 's restaurant, Laguna Beach at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 17. Entertainment will be pro- vided by guitarist Trish Clark Of Laguna Beach. NC L National Charity League . South Coast Chapter members and husbands will have a holi· day get-together at 5 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 17. in the Hun- tington Beach home of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Siehl. Following cocktails _ t h e group will join the ~ of Lights, sponsored by the Hun· tington HarboUr· Philharmonic society. Seniors Harbor Senior Citlrens will celebrate lhe Christmas season with a dinner Monday. Dec . 18. in the Z on ta Clubhouse , Newport Beach. The evening will conclude with a program of Christmas son~s by the club's chorus, under the direction of Mrs. J ames Sawyer. Affi lia tes A luncheon and card party arc planned [or the Affilia tes of Laguna Beach Art Associa· lion at noon Monday, Dec. 18, in the Art Museum. Each al· tending Is asked to bring a gift for a child "·hich later will be distributed Uy the Marine Corps at El Toro. Mo hday Cl ub A Christmas musicale will be presented by the Laguna Beach High School choral group for the Monday Morning Club of Laguna Beach. Members, their husbands and guests will gather at 6:30 Wh eel Turning fo r Fund.s -. . . p.m . ~Ionday. Dec. 18 . in the Balboa Bay Club for the din- ner party. Business Wome n The annual Ch rist m as celebration o!I the Newport Beach Chapter. American Business WQIT!&IJ's Association \viii take place Tuesday. Dec. 19. The group will meet at 6 p.m. in the Balboa Bay Club for coc ktails. Dinner and view- ing the Christmas bOat patiUle ~ will conclude the evening. Pa nhel lenic; Conviviality will reign when Newpo rt Harbor Panhellenic members gather around a Yuletide P\lllCh bowl at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 20, in the Corona del Mar borf'le of Mrs. William P. Camp1*Jl A gift exchange will highlight the holiday get·togelher. ~ A four-day carnival has been sel•cted as the C-01. William Cabe! <;hapter, DAR'• Cuna.raising event. Hours will be from 4 to 10 p.m., 3·10 p.m., 10 a.m.· IO p.m. and noon·lO p.m.J'hudday through Sunday, Dec 14-17, on the Har- bor C.nter parking lot. Ad.milUng the first two customers, Kent and Eliza· • _beth Snyder. is Mrs. Stanley D. Statla. Kaiser PTA l\trs. Charles l\1cGavran President COMING UP:' Eighth grade dance from 7 to 9 p.m. tomorrow and dance for slJ:th and seventh grade 11~nts from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, Dec. 15 Christmas program con- sisting of choral music will take place tomorrow during the school hours. REPORTS: Nominating C<llll- miltee was elected and a preview of the family life 'film was shown at the board meeting. Mo nte Vista PTA Mn. Thomas Remdon President CQMJNG UP: Annual _pro- gram , Holiday Around the World , featuring Songs from other lands sung in tbe.ir Newport Ele . PT A Mrs. Roger Early President COMING UP: Christmas pro- gram will be presented tomorrow. Hours are 9:15 to 10 a.m. for kindergarten through third grade an~ 10:15 to 11 a.m. for fourth through sixth. Newport Hts . PTA Ml'J, James G. Blain President COMING UP : A nnu a I Christmas program will be presented at 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. Program .Mil feature dances, skits -and songs. Ba\eryrtems will be sold at Santa's kitchen. Public is invited. drive Friday, Dec. 15 fron1 7 to 10 a.m. Crushed cans. TV diMer trays and foil should be brought to school in plastic bags. Scale for weighing will be located near the gate on Coolidge St. An ecology certificate from the Rayell Co. will be presented to each child in each winn ing room ... Vacation skating party at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 20, at Harbor Roller Rink . REPORTS : Mrs. Richard Culver announced that can- ned goods drive brought in 259 it.ems . . Sales from the Christmas Thrift Shop netted $125. Several items are still available and Mrs. Gary Rhodus may be called at 549-3634 for further infor· mation . . . Mrs. Norman Polizzi reported that the six winners from the bicycle safety program will partici· Pre sidio PTA Atrs. Hugh Thompson President COMING UP: Unit meeting at .7:30 tonight in room 6. Students in fourth and fifth grades will present a holida y program. REPORTS: Mrs. John Pavin, ways and means chalnnan reported that $570 . was realized from the EJr Shelf Holiday Boutique 81'd Bake Sale. Rea PTA Mrs. V'"i:g· Mollao President --. COMING UP: Home for the Holidays is the theme of the program drama 'and music departments will present at 7 tonight in the multipurpose room. Refreshments wilt be served. Victoria PTA Mrs. Tom Lutca\•lsh President CO~fING UP: Students in all grades will present the Christmas program tonight at 7 p.nL in th e mu It i p u r po se room. Refreshments will be serv· ed. REPORTS : Mrs. Rick Wells' class won the December paper drive. Proceeds were 176. Caro·lrng Highlights School Programs Editor's Note: A column devoted to Fountain Valley, Huntftlgton Beacl1, Ocean Vilw and Se a i Becicl~ School D i s t r i c t parent- teacher organizatlons wili appear in the DAILY PILOT each week. I nforma· tion mwt be received ' by Mr!. Gilbert Turnbull, 5671 Mangr'um Drive, Hunting· tan Beach by 5 p.m. Thurs· day for publication Wed· nesdau. Eader PTA Mrs. Arthu r Melvin President COMING UP: Christmas Sing· a·long is the theme of the unit meeting tonight at 7:30 in G i s 1 e r Intermediate School. Fourth graders will lead the singing, and Santa CJaus will be a special visitor. Refreshments will be provided by mothers of kin4,ergart.e_neu an_!!_ first graders . , . Christmas parties Will be presented in all clallSl'OOma Friday, Dec. 151 by the room mothers. tn c~rge are Mrs. Joseph Jfonoali:o, chairman; a n d Mra. Larry Burson. Edison PTSA Mro. V.O. Hlnlde PRESll>ENT REPORTS: -pt bake sale nitted more than $60, ac· cord.Jog tQ Mrs. 'l'homa11 . Pelle. weya and means rhalrman. Mtmbers also sell refrt1~nt1 to adult educaUon students: e 11 c h Tuesday and Thur sday. Proceeds will De placed in the unit'• acholarahlp fund ... Unit bu donated fun~~ to the student welfare fund . Gisl er Inter. PTA· Mt1. Ralpll Alcal• Prt11d<nt COMING UP: School choral groups will perform at unit meetin g tomorro1v night at 7. Following the n1eeting, the unit will co'1duct a b3ke sale . . Luncheon feo facu lty and ~taff members \Vill be presented by the unit tomorrow. Lake View Pi='G Mrs. Dick Backst.rorn President COM ING UP: i"il!h and si!<th graders will present a Christmas program at unit meeting Friday, Dec. 1"1. at 7:30 p.m ... Room mothers 'vill host classroom parties Friday. Dec. 15. REPORTS: Unit is collecting Nancv Drew books for the schOOI library ... Addhional volunteers are needed to check math tests: a n d "·orksheets. F u r t )1 e r in· formation can be obtained by contacting t.he school. La nd PTA Mrs. James Ferguson President COMING UP: Unit has made arrangements for t h e primary and upper grade choirs to slng Christmas carols throughout the school attendance area tonlp:ht. Students will be transported by bus l!ind will return to the school for refreshm~ts. In cbarge of the trip Is Steve Held, proeram chaiMTlan ... Plans are under WRY lor a father and son night . . . Unit will partlcloate in the ~torch of Dimes fund-raising drive. Moi ol a PTO A1rs. Robert Edwards President REPORTS: Madrigal tlngers and advanced and beglMlng chotn perfo'rmed at genernl meeting la11t night. Mu!'iC director was Don Lindstrom. Th inking of ·Oth ers r Partlclpatln~ in Operation Merry Christmas are LeBard School students who are contributing .canned goods for holiday baskets for the needy. Adding lo the stack ale Su!an Scbyvlng (left) and Lisa Roth. _ .-- 1--r---- { ·1 . , .1 I •• I .. WAl:Nu:tS M>D CRUNCH TO COOKIES ' . ---1t' , ' . •• ' ; Easy to Prepare Cooks Delight . w -ith Cookies Next time you feel a sweet pearances and ones with tooth cree ping up on you, curb smooth surfaces for even that urge with these two new browning. Tbe C hoc o 1 ~ t e cookies. The rich chocolate Walnut Balls are really an flavor is a natural for the adaptation of an Italian recipe clean taste and nutcracker sans the walnuts. freshness of walnuts that are _ En~~i~ Toffee ~uares. are· lavish in both these recipes. a . m1n1mum. of ingredients with a maXJmum of navor. M~st everyone ~ws that They are also 8 minimu m of cookies are the eas 1e~t food .to time and effort for the max· prepare. The measuring of in-imum goodness that results. gredii;nts need not be . that These are double good with , exactiag so that. even w1t_h a plenty of chunky pieces ol litUe more of this or a little walnuts in the easy cookie less of that, you are sure of a "crust" and a liberal sprink1· su~sful produ<:'. Ev~ ~ ing of finely chopped walnuts beginning cook will dehght m covering the cbocolate to~ the delicioUs results that these ping. will bring. CHOCOLATE WALNUT The first is a crisp, tender cookie molded into novel balls BALLS about the size of in-the-shell ~~ cup walnuts walnuts. You'll want uniform· 2/3 cup shortening 2 egg yolks 1/4 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 cups sifted all-purpcse 2 cups sifted all-purpose fiour pour 1 • 6 ounce package seml- 1/3 cup ground cocoa sweet chocolate morsels 1 teaspoon salt Chop 1 cup walnuts coarsely 1,z teaspoon baking powder for cookies; 1 cup fine for to~ 2 tablespoons milk ping. Cream butter, brown Glaze sugar, egg yolk, vanilla and Chop walnuts medium-fine. salt together. Blend in fiour. Cream shortf!ning, sugar, egg Mix in the coarsely chopped yolks and vanilla together walnuts, and pat mixture into well. Resift flour with cocoa, shallow 10x15xl-inch baking salt and baking powder. Blend pan. :~ ~~ur;iJ:i~::: Bake at 300 degrees about 35 minutes, until very lightly Shape dough into small balls, browned. Let stand about 5 about l l/• inches in diameter. minutes, then sprinkle with ' WHnHclay, DtGembtr 1.3, 1CJ72 DAIL V PILOtl 48 Fondue Flairs Finale ' Any hostess with a Oalr for drama knows that a spec. tacuJar deuert winds up the dmner party in per f e c 't fashion. And spectacular is just the .word for a group of new deSltert fondues. In addition to the fun or table cOokery, the dishes are as delicious as you couJd wish, just too kind ol food that most impresses guests. The fondue pot is an in- valuable adjunct to the swing- ing party. Larger than the chafing-dish blazer, it oblig- ingly holds more of a QU':lfltily. And depending on the type of burner you own, it may be fueledowith Stemo canned heat or liquid ..•. both of them courteously smokeless. Sterno' canned heat Is odorless"-liquid Sterno for use in hplders desi~ for liquid fuel ·has a pleasant light lemon scent. VANILLA DE.5SERT FONDUE BLING BOIL and thickens, Add cognac. Spear cake cubes and remaining in· gredlents with fondue forks or long picks and dip into vanilla fondue Yield : 4 servings. STRAWBERRY DESSERT FONDUE heat and quickly beat in eggs, CARMEL DESSERT one at a itme, beating with a FONDYE spoon until smooth alter each 22 vanilla caramels addition. After last egg has 2 tablespoons milk been added, beat until mixture 18 teupoon allspice , has satinlike sheen. I large or 2: small apples. Turn mixture into pastry cut into bite-size pieces bag with plain tip . .Pi.take very 2 bananas, sliced ~~ tiny mowlds (about 112 tea-Seedless grapes · )II 2 packages (10 ounces each) spoon each) on greased cookie Place car~mels, milk -!Pd frozen sliced strawberries sheet. Bake in 425 degrees allspice in fondue sa~ in syrup, thawed oven l5 minutes. Cool and stir directly <YVer veq·-~ 4 teaspoons cornstarch ~ote : This recipe mak~ a SternQ flame until melted ~d 2: tablespooos cold water very . large quantity o ! smooth. Spear appl.e tabl k• h miniature putts. Half may be banana pieces· and grapes 1 espoon irsc frozen, then crisped in a 250 !ondue forks or long piclt-• Cream puffs ~~ Sweetened whipped cream degrees oven for another dip in to caramel f Puree strawberries i n iiiimoe_al::. ===:::;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;;;=::;;::::Y;:ie;:ld='=• =ser=v>:"ln:"g='·==--; blender or press through a f strainer; turn into a smaU saucepan. Blend cornSiarCh wilh cold water; stir into strawberry puree. Cook, stir- ring constantlY, wltil mixture thickens aiid' comeS-to. a boil. Add IQ~ 1'i.mwto !on<!~• sallc~J W > PL!ce direcfl,Y. Dl!L CK>US MOUTH WATERING..:. • .,. $1.5'·-I.qi. 12120/11. over low ~ name. sp:ea,. BRAUllSCHWAGER ' Cl]!lm_Ji!!lf!Ll'lthl•ruf~O (ork, _ * ft _ _ ~--'b Clip into sttawberry·fondue and HAllD !T'ALIAN -Reg. Sl.rt -E•P· 12/20/n then itiW ' w.~d cream. SALAMI I package (3Y• ounces) Yielcf:; fu.6.serV!ngs. varillla pudding and pie CREAM PUFFS ou• OWN HOMl!MADE -a1aec1 en Pr•iMn filling mix ··' "' cup bU!ter or margarine CHRISTMAS COOKIES 2 cups milk i "Ctlp, water 2 tablespoons butter or :j>ite.isl!oon salt fl '1'. iJ. ITALIAN DELl, e ·llJllj:E margarine !•cup silted all-purpose flour ol..ucci eLJeli RESTAURANT ~ l 'tablespoon cognac 4 ms. uitbeaten 8911 Adams at Magnolia, Huntington ·Buch, •. Po.undcake cubes ID .. rnedium saucepan heat one ot tn• 1arp11 0eu o,er•tien• 1n c•u"'rn1i. sun 111 a.naen. •we• 21 Ladyfinger pieces butter ·with water 0;ver high Dally 10-1: Ftl. 10.t; Su. IM: Closed M~;l,t61o44U Maraschino cherries with • heat until butter melts and I""-"""""""""~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~~~"""~ stems mixture comes to a boil. Turn Tangerine sections heat to ii>w .. add salt and flour Walnut halves 1ilJ afonce and stir vigorously· Mix pudding, milk and but~ over" JOw~ 'heat, until mixture ter in f.ondue saucepan. Stir . ~~~ si!feS Of ~,and .forms dip into strawberry fondue and a smooth'. compact &all . 1 ture comes to a FULL BUB-:_lrQm~telY~ remove. from Nearly Everyone Listens . to Landers SPICIALS THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, DECEMIEI 14 ·15·16 Golden Ripe ,BANANAS 2:-25' Buy now to send for Christmas NATURAL DATES 1112 lb. Christmas Mailer 7t.m~• ly shaped cookies for best ap-~ cup granulated sugar Bake on ungreased cookie chocolate morsels. Let stand sheet at 375 degrees F. ~ to 10 until chocolate is soft, then minutes. Remove from oven spread to cover, using a small and cool. Dip each cookie int.o spatula. SprinkJe with the fme- the glaze and drain on wire Iy chopped walnuts. Let stand racks. When glar.e is set, store until chocolate is set then cut in.airtight containers. Makes 5 into small squares. Makes 4 -o,.. f •·•· to 6:30-p ... -7 ·0.,. • W..t We NWTft rtie •ltht to lhnlt ciuo11tlfles. Ope!' t •·"'· to 6:JO P·"'· -7 Doyi • w.- to 5~ dozen cookies. ~d<Yl~en"._'l~l'<~-inch~·~~sq~u~ar~es:·~~.!!-"""""".""""""""".""""""~·~,~·~·""""""~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""'~ Ta~ts Toasted Kitchens are always the beating well after each, ad· busiest places during the dition ; stir in pecans. holidays. For weeks they are Roll pastry dough "k-inch filled with the heady aroma of thick. Cut into 4 dot.en 3-inch good pungS baking !ti the circles wtth biscUit cutter and oven: cakes, pies •. cookies and fit into 1~ inch muffin cups. tart!. It Is these l(aditional Fill about 2/3 full with tea- Glue: Beat 2 egg whites _ with a fork just until foamy. Blend in 2 cups sifted powdered sugar and ~ teas- poon vanilla. ENGLISH TOFFEE SQUARES 2 cups walnuts 1 cut butter ... l cup brown sugar, packed I egg yolk 1 teaspoon vanilla delicacies shared with family pecan mixture. and friends at your ownj00i;,.--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;;;;; ______ ~I hearth With,.a1warming cup of tea that make this time of the year memorable. Here~ ad e I ig h ~f u l l•Y oldfashicined recipe from The Lipton Kitchens for miniature Pecan·Tea Tartlets yoU'll find perfect for the holidays. The sweet pecan filling ht the delicate pastry shells i s flavored with instant tea powder which gives them a mom unusual and delectable taste. BlUTOtlil $PECfAL . MIX VARITIE.S.ANY WAY YOU CHOOSE 25c . IMPORTEO Plt901lli5SO•l"URE- This recipe makes 4 dozen tartlets which should take care of all your holiday com· pany. Lipton Instant Tea Powder i's featu;red. OUVE OIL s4.19 •• , PECAN TEA TARTLETS y., cup butter or.margkrine, softened 1' cup Sllgar 3 tablespoons Instant Tea powder 1/, teaspoon salt 1 cup light eorn syrup 3 eggs t "2 cups coarsely 'broken pecans , Favorite pas~ for 2 double- crust pies .. ~heal o•en lo'JSO de&rees. ! In large bowl, cream l>bttef 'and JIUgar. Beat In i~othea powder, Ult, and then syrup. Add eggs, o~ at a time1 t .xaom ,~~· ' )Jleiiq JDarrq Gift Pack AT YOUR PAYORfTI ll'Ofll ' • rtAUAN _, ...... 'I 1H14._.11t 8la ' ,lllldlq1~ .... 'ffMJlZ T ..... ,,.,,,, 11 t.11'1.• 1• ..... l'rl.A .... U .. lll.•l i•"'""-. kl!. •11 ...._•;I '°'"' 0..-~ . ' ,, I ' "Bigger, meatier rib chops... ~ Thals what I ·like aboul"LAMB" • ' , "When I spied these lamb rib chops at the meat cou·nter I knew they'd satisfy my husband's demand for a sizable serving of meat. I was right. He was pleased and appeased. Shopping tomorrow? B.ring home several bigger, meatier Cuts of fresh, young American lam bl"' ORIENTAlj LAMB RIB CHOPS (Makes'4 servings) 2 tea~Kikkoman Soy Sauce 8 lainb rib chops. 3/4 to 1 inch thick 1/4cuphbn'y 4slicesofonion 1/4 cup i;Mon lu!ce Combine sbys;1uce~honey and l&mon·juiee; mix well.Add lamb and chill 1 hour. turnil)g cX:casionally.if'e!Tiove'lamb; r8s9rve honeymixtureJBroil lamb 3 to 4 inches from soui'ce of heat or cook en outdOor grlll, 5 to 7 minutes:-Turn, 1op with onion sl ices and cooks 10 7 m.inuteS"inore. Brus~ tambwilh honeYmixtu,..,frec:iuentl1ldlJfing oooRing . l Formoreitee11Jmbt9Cipes, wrile: american lamb council • Def;J. L·1212. 200 Clayton Street • DenWY. Colorado 80206 •Offer good in US. on/y. ' . ' I ·, • • :· •,• ·' ' . . ' v -- ' • 50 DAILY PILOT Rutherford: By JOHNA BL"' !~OU YWOOD A n n Rutherford Is a crazy Jad v, u taiter-day "Auntie t.1ainl'" \\1to is a gad&til nut (she owns htr own stamping machine and even prints up her own menus\. She lo\'es lift, dotes on gi v· inc big parties celebrating tb!ngs like Groundhog Duy , and doei; more than her Marc or lht rooking as wl'!ll as the plannin(:. Her favorite "at-beach" dish Is a mixed vegetable casserole she flTst called ··sludge" but graduated to "Jazz in the Basket!" "When 1 started making it a~ our beach house, I put It in a casserole but changed to a lined basket as• it got larger aad larger. Finally 1 bought one of those minature wash baskets to hold it because our dinners had become so big." As she spoke, decked out in what she called "early Mar· Jorie Main'' - a s"·eater oC her g~wn daughter she had grab- ~ off a hook in the garage "aged" wedgies, denim skirt ~ rumpled !>louse befitting her role as t'he sheriff's wife in "They Always Kill Their M~sters" -the years faded away. It was her character Poll y Benedict from the famous Andy Hardy series speaking again, with the lustrous big ~wn eyes and shiny brov.·n hair! ·"Jazz in the Baske t '' bf.came a stock vegetable dish to serve with barbecue steak or, chicken, she said. "Actually I found out later it i!\ · nol unlike ratatouille. The di.sh consists of everything ctlopped: summer sq u ash . 7.Ucchini. lots of celery. butter or olive oil. herbs, and a good spritz or wine. "But my crowning discovery came v.•hen I wanted something to make the dish looser in texture. the way my , sludge alwa ys is. I had some bloody mary mix and threw tQat in and it '"' a s marvelous!·' Ann's beach dinners take place in a wonderful house perched on stilts so when the tide is in, guests can fish from the deck or dive off for a swim. Ann is a ce l ebra ted 1-Jollywood bostess. "I'm a I wa ys fascinated when people talk so darkly a bout thqee Hollywood parties. rye heard about the wild dan- ciJJg in the streets and e~body being tossed-in-the- pool type parties. I've never been at one. ''OUr favorite kind of en- t~ i s comfort:iblt! clatbes and every b-o d y patticipoles. c;.lt'1 a clnch, of coorse: our b8edL house spoiled us - ~e w:as never any problem wiat to do ·after dinner becaUle we had a pool table inside whilo otller3 lbhed off the balooey or walked in the sand on the beach." Now Ann gives tent parties rot llP to 250 to !OD guests. "Oui favorite party of the Tr eats Trim med ~ l'ar h:is alws~·s been on Gruundllog Day. It's the on!~· untaken vacation day in the year. ''Food 1s served constant!\•. starting with the Orst guest'•s a1Tiv1l1 That's one thing I've leamed: the party starts at 7:30 ind goos on until the last guest leaves -there's no lime limit. ''l only have food that will stay hot and, if I have a salad. it's never a mixed salad, but something that won't will, like slice d tomatoes and cucumbers. It must be something that will hold and still be appetWng. "I'm very large on braziers and electric hot trays beeause 1 think it's an imp()Sitk>n to drag peoople out of their homes for dinner or luncheon and give them food that's less appetizing than they would get at home." Her favorite dessert is "Dir- ty Dessert!" "My guests are always flat- tered by it. It's an outgrowth of something I used to do for the klds when they were small. ln fact, I used to do theirs in a flower pot and It was charming." Ann buys lotus-shaped in- dividual serving bowls and packs each with black coffee ice cream. "You can do this for 50 peo- ple at a time and make it a week ahead. Fill them up to the fluting with the ice cream -that's lhe soil -and slam them in tbe freezer. "Then get English toffee (chocolate-covered, dusted with ground nuts) and put it through a food gr inder. I didn't say a blender because that wi ll give you peanut but- ter~" She laughed. "Use the large blade on your food grind er and grind the tof- fee until it looks like dirt! Mix it with some wonderful , ground , bitter Dutch chocolate until it really looks Hke dirt and cover the ice cream in each bowl with ii and put back in your freezer ! "The day of your party, call your florist and buy as many sweetheart roses as you ha ve Jillie JXltS. Ask him to send toothpicks with wires on them. I( he doesn't have them, you can do it yourself using round- ed tooth picks and a little bit of floral tape. ''Break off the stem of the ro!le so it's in proportion to the base. (Prepare l'08es in ad- vance, wrap in damp cloth un- til ready to serve.) I've done · 150 of these for Groundhog Day "When it comes time to serve them, place the dishes on a silver tray and have one rose in each standing up in the foliage! They look so pretty when they 're carried in on a huge silver tray or even serv- ed at a buffet. "The combination of English toffee, bitter cbocolate and the black coffee ice cream is wild!" JAZZ IN A BASKET II pound fresh mushrooms (or I can, 6 bl a oun<:es) sliced 6 ribs celery Simple Supper U you are planning a tree- trimming supper for Ille nigh! before Cluiltmas make the main """"" Ught ·and euy to prepare. 'Thl! way you'll have time to bake a batch or C1n- namoo Oatmeal Bars for delaert. 'Ibese cookies tastef best fresh from the oven so J that ii why we suggest you mUe balll1f Uiem a las~ minute affair. For the main course you might d'°°8e cream of tomato soup and bacon rolls. After that serve the cookies with a bowl of red apples and tangerines. 1 Use canned tomato soup but dilute it wllh cream :ind add a ilUer or dry a;herry. ThiJ way o( tJXlng the IOU'p came to us from 1 rwng Prmchmao and lt'1 a great combimtioll. For the blo::ll r o 111 , cut frantluner rolll In balf, bult<r Ibo cul tides ..........,, and ·-In !ht ..... Piil Ille rv!IJ t..,..i..r •pia -plenty o! abpiJ ""*<d -Serve tbo ""'P and n>lll togdbtr. aNNillON OA1'KE.U. BARS ll ..... butter ... marprine lfa ..., firmly JIOd<ed brown -, .. J"llb I t.tllk-brandy Jll CU(ll .ui.d flour I cup qulcl:-.. ooll Topping, -below Iii 1 8*lum mlllnc bowl Clfflll bullet Ind llJPI"; add ta yolb and brandy; beat Mii. Add floul\ atlrrlng untll • combined. Stir In oats. Tum tolo an ungreased jelly-roll pan -15 by 10 by I inch. Wllb a narrow or medium-wide spatula spread evenJy. Bate in a preheated 350- deg?ee oven for 15 minutes. Remove from oo,ren, but keep the oven heat on. Spread with Topping. Reb&m to 350-degree oven and bake an addiUonal 15 minutes. Cool sllghUy. Cut into ban. With a metal spatula remove ban to wire rack to cool completely. TOPPING (For Cinnamon Oat m e a J Bars} 2\~ cups chopped (medium-- fine ) pecans or walnuts 1,1,: cup granulated sugar II cup 11nnly packed brown sugar 1 lh teaspoons cinnamon -4 egg whites Into a medium saucePJn tum the pecans, sugars and clruwnon: stir in unbeaten ea whites. Cook over low be1t, atlning constantly, until lllglr diUo.lves. C o n t I n u e cooking, 1tlrring often, for 5 minutes. Use as directed In Cimwnon oatmeal B a r recipe. 'Sunday is .F'lltlE>AY • • Modern Mame 3 ear:» corn 113 L'\JP onlot\ nakl'! 3 tablespoons water Rinse. 'Ptlt dry. and islite and aucchlnl, aaule 2 minutes fresh mushrooms (or drain mort. Admitted 6 tablespoons butter (or olnc oil) 2 cups sliced zucchini 2 cups chopped tomatoes I tablespoon parsley flakes 2 teaspoons sa1t cwtned mushf'(l()MJ ). Rin$e Stir -toma•-.. u.u, .....a~ and trim celery ribs; cut ·mto parsley, la.It, balll, thyme aod !·inch chunks. Cut kernels blaci peppu. Cover, 1tmmer S from corn (makes about 2¥.i minutes (or uritll veg~ablee cups). Sel vegetables aside. are crisp-tender). Rehydrate onion Oakes In stir in rff wine. Heat ODl:y 'crazy lady' Ann Rutherford loves party planning. water for 10 minutes. until piping llot. Arrange Jn a large saucepan (or Dul· vegetables ln basket (lined ch oven ). melt butter. Add with aluminum foil ). 2 teaspoons basil leaves ~11 teaspoon thyme leaves 11 teaspoon ground blnt"k pepper onion and saute 2 minutes. Makes 6 to 8 servings - a Add mushrooms and saute 2 terrific side dish wit b · \4 cup dry red wine 1ninutes longer. Stir in celieryiiibariibeciiiuediiiichiiiciteniioriistiiei"'iti. iiiiiiiiiiiiiii . EVERYDAY SPECIAL PRICES ON OUR FINEST PRO DUCE Avocados Fuerte, 11rue 4 for $1 For Guacamole -Holid•y salads Celery Large, fancy bunch 2 5~ For raw vegetable dips-or stuffed with chee1e Cabbage Fresh sol id head• lb. 9¢ Scoop out centers and fill with party dip Oranges sweet juicy va1ent1• 6 lbs. $1 1/lscrf Rump Roast Bone -in 1009 lb. Serve sliced for a Holiday Buffet Beef Stew tender for Beef Fondue 1.29 lb. Bacon Former John ' g. or thick Ground Beef 89¢ lb. 73¢ lb. For Ginger Meat Balls or Swedish Meat Balli Round Steak CANDLELIGHT MEATS Stuffed Chicken Breast P•nl•y dr•ni~9 Beef Roulad es with Almond dre11in9 HOLIDAY SEAFOOD Del ightful Hors d'oeuvres additions 1.39 lb. 1.19 lb. 1.29 lb. Smoked Albacore ... , .. ,, ''"';~, 2.39 lb. Green Shrimp o, ... .,.,,,. m,..;,. 2.49 lb. 5,,.,, with T•rr•9on M•vo11•h1 HAVING A DINNER PARTYl We're happy to do a Crown Roast or Cut Ste•ks to your order--Just ask! International VeRetables " ••. Bird, Ev•, •II 9 •••i•ti•t, ••ch i" • tpKi•l thc•. Orange Juice Spaghetti and Meat Bavarian Cream Puffs Su"kitt, 6 oL Morto"'•· I 01. Rich'1, I 'h 01. 39c 5 for $1 5 for $1 39c For you r Christm•s p•rty -We can make • me•t or che••e tr•y, hor ' d'oeuvre1 or bake a ham or roast a turkey. Order E•rlyl Natural Swiss Cheese ';''"'·· Slice n' Bake Cookies p;u,,,,., Choo1• S119•r or Chocolate Chip Salami or Bologna H•br•w N,tion•I Ke1h1r Slic•• 16 OJ.. 6 01. Christm as -a time to shar• with friends and family -and good food is part of the fun. BACON ROLLUPS: All iorts of tidbits can be m•de with • strip of bacon -wrap up • stuffed gr•en olive, • ripe olive stuffed with minced onion, • piece of wetermelon pickle •nd • pec•n h•lf, or make rumaki. So e•sy to m•ke •he•d •nd pop in• 350 degree oyen as needed! ORIENTA L SHRIMP: Dip coolted sh rimp in Soy Sauce and roll in. toasted sesame seeds end sp8ar with a cocktail pick. COCKTAIL MACADAM IAS -in shallow baking pan, toss 7 01. !jar ) Ma ca damia Nuts in 2T. melted butter, v~ tsp. tabaseo, '/1 tsp . seasoned salt, If• tsp. paprik a and b•ke I 0 min. •t 375 degrees. Drain on paper towel and sprinkle with 1/• tsp. garlic salt. <fr0esrg Yellow Cling Peaches Del Mont• 29 01. Choose sliced peaches or peac:h halv•s. Top with brandied whipp ing cream! Springfield Sugar 5 lb. bag BiSqUiCk Time to bake good things for christmu 40 OL Clam Chowder Snow's New England. Quick supper! 15 OL 3 Imperial Margarine I lb. Roya le Facial Ti ssue !15 ct. 4 for $1 Royale Bathroom Tissue i pk. 4 for $1 Wishbone Italian Dressing 16 01. 59c Maxim Freeze Dried Coffee 4 01. 98c Libbys Tomato Juice Qt. D•c•"t•r BoHl.t 3 for $1 ' Ivory Liquid Detergent " "· 43c Nabisco Vanil la Wafers 12 ••• 39c Jif Peanut Butter " ••• 89c Vie wer l~0/Y 59¢ 53¢ for $1 ·39¢ Macadamia Nuts •• ,,, H •• ,;;,. '.,, 01. 1.19 lb. 49c 59c 1.89 CHRISTMAS FLOWER GIFTS -Glorious •rrangements of festive pine, iu niper and holly with colorful flowers. For yourself -or to say Merry Christmas •cross the miles. SEND FLOWER GIFTS BY F.T.D. Apple Danish Pastry Chuck Wagon Bread German Chocolate Cake Clover Lea f Dinner Rolls HOLIDAY LIQUORS Gordon's London Dry Gin ·• ,,, Myers's Rumcrock •·· • ..... ,, ""'' Vandermint .a, • o.1k c.,. 2 for 37c 55c 2.89 76c 9.99 + r,. 11.99 + r •• 8.99 + T•ll: ~~ LIDO CENTER 343~ Vi a Lido, Newport Beach OP.EN DAILY 9 -7, SUN. 9 -6 673-{>)60 ORDER NOW FOR PROMPT DELIVERY! AD PRICES GOOD DEC. f f.f6 "'12.~ HARBOR VIEW 1660 Mac Arthur, Newport Beach OPEN l;IAILY 9 -8, SUN. 9 - 6 673·21SS ' ' ' . -. -• ...... , ............ ~---··-···-... • --· • I Old Kid Glove Peels Easily Here's a little riddle about the fa vorite hollddy fruit call· ed tangerine. Who first called tangerines the "kid glove'' orange? The United Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Associatlcn tells us that It was Colonel G. L. Oan- an early Florida grower, referred to the fruit in way because of ita Joos e, eoaily-peeled rind . The nickname continues to lie widely used. Tangerines play a delightful Jllrl in holiday celebrating and ~ e y contribute Important •ltamln "C". Have plenty ll'OWld for eating out of band. "°There are very special at.hes for the holidays made 1iilh this bright fruit wllh ~he ~lque flavor that will gladden IJests, and even provide a ~easant homemade gift. Everyone likes very speclAl hes for entertaining at th.is '1Jle of year. Try Tangerine eet-and-Sour Pork served Chinese noodles and fresh ll for a dinner to delight sis. Tangerine juice forms the se for lhe sWfft and sour puce and fruit sections are ~tel just before serving. Remove garlic and dllcard. Strain cooking Ilijuld and reserve for sauce. Mix sugar and cornstarch in medium saucepan; add vinegar and stir until smooth. Gradually sir in reserved liq- uid. Cook over medium heat, stirring constanUy, until sauce thickens and comes to a boil. · Add peppers and onion; slm· mer 10 minutes. Add meat and tangerine sections; heat thoroughly. Serve in & or 8 portions with Chinese noodles and fresh broccoli. 'To prepare tangerine Juice, cut tangerine in half and squeeze on reamer. •-ro prepare tangerine sec- tions, pull off peel and remove "strings". Make small cut in center of each section and push out any seeds. F1.AllllNG TANGElllNE SAUCE FOR ICE CREAM 213 cup tangerine juice (6 tangerines) lf.11 cup sugar 1 tablespoon Cilrnstarch 2 tangerines, sectioned and seeded 3 tablespoons brandy 6 sooops vanilla ice cream To prepare tangerine juice, cut tangerines .fn hall and sgl,ICeze on reamer. Cranberries, or11n9 es, rice and nuts brighten holiday ham WIG from MALLIE'S 10% OFF! ON ALL MERCHANDISE .!'.!Jll~ASED FROM MAl.LIE'S ! e WITH THIS COUPON e loffw 9ood thru Dec. 30, 1f721 • Show--0ff desserts are much ~ demand during the holidays. , Flaming Tangerine Sauce fOr Ice Cream is very easy to prepare yet dazzling to serve. Quests' eyet wtll shine with c:ijoyment as you darken the bm and Ignite the sauce . Mix sugar and cornstarch in a small saucepan. Stir in tangerine juice; cook, stirring constantly, until m Ix tu re comes to a boll; simmer 1 minute. Add sections. CRANBERRIES COLOR. THE BUFFET And now for a lovely gift to ~ke with tangerines. It's Jresh Tangerine Manna1ade to put up in attractive jars for )"OUr favorite people. This is the real, old·fashioned kind of P,ulrmalade that is becoming a JOst art. Heat brandy in a small cup, ignite and add to saucepan. Pour over ice cream. Makes 6 servings. FRESH TANGERINE MARMALADE Ham Rolled Sweetly 12 tangerines 6 cups sugar TANGERINE SWEET AND SOUR PORK Remove peel from 2 pounds Jean pork shoulder, tangerines and reserve . cut into !fl-inch cubes Remove seeds from sections 1 1/3 cups tangerine juice• and discard. Puree sections (4 or 5 tangerines) and peel in electric blender or 1113 cups water food mill. There should be 6 '•1'12 teaspoOns salt cups puree. ~. y, cup soy sauce Combine puree and sugar in .;: t clove garlic a large kettle. Place over -; ~ cup sugar moderate heat and bring slow- Jt. cup cornstarch Jy to a boil, stirring fre.. 1/4 cup cider vinegar quently. l grffn sweet pepper, cut in-Boil gently for 35 minutes, to strips stirring frequently, unW the I red sweet ~pper, cut Into mixture passes the jelly test slrips ' by reaching 220 degrees F. on 1 onkm, sliced a candy lhermomeler and 2 tangerines, sectioned and sheeting from a metal spoon. ~ aeeded. •• ' Remove from heat. Skim off Combine pork c u b e s , foam and ladle immediately (a;;gerine juice, water, salt, into seven 8-ounce hot jelly '!Q'Y sauce and garlic in large jars or canning jars. Fill to uucepan. Bring lo a boil, within 14 inch of top: screw i:educe heat, cover and slln-cap on evenly and tightly. .jier 1 hour or, until meat is Invert for a few seconds and fender. stand jars upright to cool. Oanberries and oranges are great with ham. Add fluffy rice and crunchy toasted almonds, and you have a dish that's simply scrumptious. Roll slices of ham around Beef It Up Flavorful beef provides the outdoor chef in California with a wide choice of menu items. Of course, steak is the most popular beef cut for the grill and there's ooe for every budget. Add e new twist to an old favorite and marinate chuck steaks In a flavorful combination of olive oil, lemon juice, fresh garlic, thyme and rosemary. Serve with grilled tomatoes, corn on the cob and hot buttered biscuits. the rice-orange-nut mixture; and top it off with tangy cranberry orange sauce. Serve it piping hot to an enthusiastic diner-table crowd. HAM ROLL'l WITH CRANBERRY ORANGE SAUCE 2 cups well-drained hot cook- ed seasoned rice 1' cup well-drained diced Mandarin or fresh orange sections. 1/4 cup toasted slivered almonds 8 allces tull'y cooked ham, cut l/4" thick 3 tablespoons butter or margarine Cranberry Orang~ Sauce Combine first 3 Ingredients; mix carefully. Sj>ooo about Ill cup rice mixture over a nar- row end of each ham slice. JF==·===========================i • ., ~ •' ; • l . • • • The exquiaite, nutlike Ravor of thia legendary American Indian delicacy aaya ••rounnet'' to everything it touchea. Simply follow the simple preparation. in- atructiona and serve it in 1oupa, salads, and dreaainga. For extra elegance, aerve It aa a buttered aide diah. Old Fort i1 like no other Wild Rice you've known. Haneated exclusively in the Minnesota Great Lakea region, true birthplace of this fabled grain, it is painstakingly cleaned, graded and processed to preaerve every bit of its natural Ravor and dis- tinctive texture. In whole kernel or the new, convenient instant. And to tempt you further-IS< off for tryinr it now. HAND -WllD RICE 'J . • . • Roll up ; secure with small metal skewers or wooden picks. CRANBERRY ORANGE SAUCE All Styl" &"colors Melt butler or margarine in large covered frying pan. Add ham rolls. Cover; place over low heat and bring to serving temperature, ab o u t 15 minutes. 1 package (10 ounce) frozen cranberry with orange relish, thawed $4.95 " I d i;1 We urry Vl•IQ WMdlrd CH..,.11<'1 r~ cup orange marma a e 1 •ncl TOUPllS FROM $24.tS 1 · lncludlrtt ""• -11911 ......... (lplff• ... ,""° wit• ' 3 tablespoons orange juice I 1n A~ lh cup well~ained Man-• ' darin or fresh orange sec-a te .1 ·tions ~ WIG and BEAUTY SALON Transrer to serving dish : remove skewers and spoon '1-t cup of the Cranberry Orange Sauce over rolls. Serve re- maining sauce with meat. Yield: 8 servings. Combine relish, marmalade I 250.0 East 17th St. -Hillgren Sq,Ulre and orange juice in saucepan ; ~ Costa Mesa 548-3446 1 heat. F?ld in orange sections; · ~ M_., a.. I heat. Yield: 2 cups. . --~M~MMDlMJt!!M..,.M_,.._j , Whil e the price,pf everything one est food i.';;w.ing.Jlp, w<:Ive ]Q\\lere.d the ~eally ~biit~r t ' priceo!Calo Entree. We want wunl to give you 7¢ off on a can ·to malie sureyourcutsti)I has the · (at our new low price)"" your cut very highest quality cal food cun try it. al'Ound, without your having lo ~ This may be the best thing to pay the highest piices. ' happen to yow· cat since yo u · Just in oase you dotl't know Calo ·•qime along. Enlree. arn:l may won<l~r whether · r SAVE 7¢0N CAW ENTREE _ r.-.------_ ..... _________________ _ I "7A This coupon is worth 7¢ toward the purchase "7A 1 I ,,_ ofanyCaloEntreevariety. /,_I f ~ Mr.Gruewr: Calowlll redeem thitewpm for 'l't' plus :te ror !.fl I I lwlndllng ~ submlttkd .. part ...,.nent (or 1 C9ft of<:.i.1 ~ FJ\l"""-All 11tlal W mt&!ll he paid ht t'ClfllUITM!r. Inv~ 0 I I , lli'M:Mirc~...n1nentmt.ldt'°~l'Ull!l"l'IJl1"1M\ ;:a I I be~ on rfQUM.Couiiun voldtn Mt IUllAI whan! t.axll(!. Cij JJl'lllilhlUtdorrwtriludb)'.,w.<AlpoM""111Gt t.a.•~ 8 I I 5!3 ~ trwwf • ..__ emd bJ '°"...:...~ ~1n ... U.8 .• ~~ Y9!1» V20 c: I I ~-•. ,w ,.,_,_,._ ·-~1o .... 1 .... -.,, I 621.fi. Offer ~"'* 6"S'V73. Good a11J Oii OWo Enlreol. 0 I Any~-~kut.fr.ucL z I 1-..,n Liver & Chicken, Kidney & Chicken, Chicken1'artS, "7A If.;~ I ,,_ TnstyMeatBy-Product.s,andPet'freat. 'g11c /'I-..._ .L.:--":""'------------------T-=----1 ... ~f-i I -~f-- ' I • ' ' I • • • 52 DAILY PILOT Wodntlda>', -IJ, 1172 ·Holiday .Season Parties ~parke d . Sweetly r , ·;: Amid lhe hustle of the margarine NO-OOOK CHRlstl\1AS Juice concentr1iti tba'."f4 UD-4 dOlin can&e1. sectJocs thickens and coats a met~ ' ME~GUE n.oln .. Cbrbtmas season there 's I cup confectloners' sugar CANDY diluted " 1'4"QERINE EGG NOQ Scald milk Jn large heavy apoon. 1 12 eu wbitea .. :·· llw~, time to throw a party. Ii teaspoon grated oranae J oupo Crushed ,anllJa 1h "large bOWl \n ill • qtlltli mill' -;au..,pao. llMt" egg )'O!lcl 'Ith Remove from heat and add Ii cup llugar ·:~Whether It's a tree-trinuning rind 1 wafen -gredients ire opt -Ueg)'Qlb ouur; a1lr In about 1 cup of vanilla; chill. Add undiluted Butcggwhlt .. uffiy. ctHoeetber, a festive dinner J 'cups cortectioners' sugar fecti9tters' sugar. 'Form ,mto ' r cup..,_ • bot milk. Quickly ltlr into r., taaceriDe 1-C0nct.:Atl:ate. Pour.,.,, 4d Will!I'. 2 tablea ta ... • ·or a i:hildren'1 P a r t Y , 2 tablespoons orange juice • 12 ounce. (214 cups) whole balls r aboul ~lrttb i n 2 tta.,one vanilla "" maJni:n« •to.ilk. QWctdy 'atl\ · Into punch bewl aria !OP with time, end contin11e Un-- Christmas time products a ln small mixing bowl beat blanced almonds, ground diameter. Chill several bOu.n. l ean (t ounce•) fror.en into rem'iifnlng hot milk and Mttingue FJoata:. Garnish wilh lll <011J:ture stands ltf iab...,. orray of aw...., !or together all ingredients until , '4 cup li~ht corn syrup ' Roll ~11 ot. tladleo In con-tangerine Jal<:<! concentrate, cook, illlr)'lng constanUy, over tangerine, sections. Yi e Id :> peeks. Pl•!" a dollop cb ' to ienjoy. smooth. · a tablespoons frozen orat1ge f~Uonefs' _,ugar. 'VJeJd •bou.t th•'fi'ed, YD(tiluted tange.rlne very 1 ,heat until mixture 161h:-cu. p !eJ'Vings. . · e.~g nog serving. • 'l . Cookies. candies and drinks,-----------"---'-------=--"------=-----'-.....:.-------'----'--'-r-------':'"""---'------~------'-f:!- , take on holiday personalilie$ ' · J, , , as they're dressed up with Col J7f.1 'CIO fw loc..t*t of_...,._... Y9"'· Call colltct if to• I . party colors and navors. And • ~ /. , what better Oavors does .. ~tmas offer than those of .. ~ fresh oranges and tangerines. ~ 'Ibey"¥e naturally festive and crate a lart-sweet sparkle in boll!fly foods. Candy canes are a fWI traOi· t tion and even more fun are -;,• Orange Candy Cane Cookies. ~~ Cookie dough flavored with ~ grated orange rind is rolled ., out and cut into candy cane ~ shapes. After baking, it's ~ frosted and striped w I t h ~~ Orange Frosting for a real "" Ri<l.Y_!oo.<..__ - • Orange Lebkuchen, a ~itrus ~ flavored honey and spice cake, ~ makes a superb Christmas r;:;. party delicacy. Lebkuchen ~· originated in Germany and ~ • this type of cake was con-~ sidered a real luxury in ~ Medie•al Europe. ~ ft contained spices and CP: almonds which were too ex- MEN'S SHOl<:T St.EEVE ~DRESS 'SHIRTS (,~~ Pol~••e<, )~"•CG• ..... p.,,..., P~"-S•tt• I~-17. p_.ia~allS-. ~-~•••'fl1Mlins~ t-Bone Steak s • 49 CU5JQN..TIWIUilifO, llAN .... •• •• I ta. !~~.!!..~· ... s' ~ "~_..!l!!. !~!!! .. ~t~.~~s t 9! Boneless Rnd.s • 29 RAVOlfU.. llC't'<SlfAlS" ....... z I ll. ~~11!~~1'!5.69: ut pcy, SWEET • ~ pensive to me every day oand could only be afforded on ~ holiday&. 'Il1is firm textured ~•• cake iJ frosted with a light • Orange Glaze and cut ~nto ~ small diamond shapes. """ ... 1.,; .. c .... ' I ~t!!~.~.5.St 2! Cucumbers L8:i •• lOM). caw. T!NJEI ,,,,. Salacflettuce ;;. Orange Lebkuchen has a ~~ rich. restive navor and brings E; a little Old World charm to ~:·.Christmas entertaining. ~;!: Candy is every-.i.·here at this ii!!·· time. It's 2-tavorite to hang on if" the tree, to stuff into a ~; Chrlstrnrui stocking and to nib- ~~ ble on. You can make your ~ own easily with no cooking re· • quired . : It's called No-Cook i!'::,; Christmas Candy and it's ~ made with crushed vanilla fa wafers navored wilh ground ~· almonds and orange Juice. ~ T!;e mixture is fonned into ~ little balls and chilled so that i~ the navors blend into a rich I;. tasting confection. No--Cook ~ Christmas Candy goes well as ,...~ a party treat or you can pack ~ it into pretty tirus to give to ~ friends. No Christmas party is com- ~ plete without egg nog, just as ~ this season isn't complete ~~ without the fragrance or ~ tangerines permeating tbe air. ~ Combine the two and you've ~ got Tangerine Egg Nog, a rich ~ creamy drink accented with I~~ the refreshing flavor 0 r tangerine juice concentrate-. ·' ORANGE .: CANDY CANE COOKIES ~ ~ 1 ~soft butter or i t ,!:~:.: s::ge E? Ii 1easpooo sa1t !if. 2 l/J cupa WISifted aJl.pur. ~ x/i:'p ~I. cream butler [~ witb confectioners' s u g a r . i:;'~"il. Beat 1n egg. Blend in orange ~ rind, salt and flour. Cbill until Bl dough is still enough to haJl. ll die. ~ RoD M dough ~~ inch thick. f:J With cookie cutter, or cutting ~ around -pattern, cut out candy cane· Shapes and place on ungreased baking sheet. ~ Bate In 375 degrees oven 12 to 15 minutes, until I i g h t I y ~ browuet.I at edges. ~ Remove to cooling rack. Wben cool. frost with Orange Frosting. Tint a.bout ;ts cup of frolling oranae and make stripm on trosted cookies. Yiekl: 60 cookies. ORANG!! FR08TING IA cup soft butler or margarine Boneless Chuck Roast .. 98:. ' aONf llSS R••P Roast !iiio.I .. ~ 'l" ~ ··~" .. I IOlllD 1' OoaONt: IONllfSS Shoulder Clod Chucj< Roast Round Roast USDA o<M" ~r1'tt m;;J·".'1'1'0"' 95c 1 U~O , .. ,~,H tlOIC( t0•1t ,,: CR81Cl 1-0 ... lf+!.~ltt ,.,,, " Ublly Ptltnpkln Potato Buds :rt-01, "" 23• 59• PIN EAPP LE 31 c .i UICE I' llllil Lt11oa Lt1111n J1ic1 .::. 58' Pled&e Fumlture Wai s:::· 95' NIBLETS Corn Sweet· Pickles lil·Ho Crackers lleitle s Morsels Hawaiian Punch ' FRESH GROUND BEEf .. ~'2'.'.~ ... 69~. llfO Cit IUT TfJ •• ' • .• ' • • • • Persimmons CORNISH GAME HENS ~~;o:::~. 79 ~. RATH SLICED BACON ""::~.~ 89• fANCY, ~WU:T ••.• , •• , ••• Navel Oranies • gc . Sl..N06T. »Cf, $Wfll •• • • ••. •• • I • ~ls.!~!., ... N .. G 49c COO KID I JUMIO . SAUSAGE I oaimES :i:~~~~~~-~ ~::~~.~~~~~ ~~~~-98~ . i.~s s I ~.~ 119' 39' GOLD MEDAL lour ~~ .. ""'.,-···~ (~PMJ __ , Karo White Syrup Durkt1 Coconut . EVERFRESH I Crinkle Cut 89' 55' POTATO 49c CHIPS . BIRDS EYE 32c PEAS Chocolate Cherries Stewed Tomatoes ' 59' Birds Eye lwilce 22' Vons Beef Stew 33' 39' SUM PRICE I WHITE KING Detergent ORANGE .GERBER'S . Bread WHITE_:. WHEAT -SAl'!l>WKH Juice Baby Food STIAINED VEGETABLES&' .l.ICES PAPER I Towels ... · "-=-"'~~~~ ..... ~,.._ I !,!~!~!,.,~.1211 Maxwell House 1 ~~119c 1o.c1LJ0 0 _0... ... '°-...... 0.. o.i,o..~ .. '-" I FANCY FARMS Pears HAL 'IES OR StlCED 2 213 CUIB' atned COllfection- ers' qar . 1 teaspoon grated orange q~ ---:-.,~ .... rind s tablespoons orange juice In small bowl, cream buttet until aofl aild Duffy. Beat in confecUonen' sugar1 orange rind and juice. ORANGE LEBKUCDEN 2 eggs ~ cup sugar 2Y• cups unsifted a 11 - purpooe flour \0 teaspoon baking powder Ii; teaspoon cinnamon \4 teaspoon nutmeg ~ teaspoon cloves 1 I cup ground btaochcd -tcuphooey .. .,. CUI' orange JWce 1 tablespoon grated orange rind • In amoll bowl beat -Wl· Ill llpt. Gnclually beat in l _ ... __ battinc .... iuot 'la'IU ~ WWy, IO l'r .. Hoff GtL ........ S-$1.10 .. 111.3f WAWI mt llGit, 5". -· 16 l'r. Hoff GtL ......... S..o 5°' .. IUS C10WN MSE v .. ., 11 Pt, M1H G& ••••••••••••••••• Save 41c •• $8.118 --M l'r. ltoff Gol. ..................... :s-lie •• .$9.99 . ... . ' ID polo In color. Mh together : ~~!~~ I !~lf~!!u~~,P.~~e s1a1 .............. -In 400 D l.tj,11 ~ "'"""-""' ......... '2.49 .. '••-Ulollmtaut.1. •l'allllnHll"••paptooC010"""m•'4.H OlilL J'nllt wttb 0 r ang! · · .• ,, , . ·"' CANNED~· S H4MS ~~.5:!N 19 '"" Dnf•· Sour Cr11111 :.,""':' "· CJH,.., .. 2 lc ~"'"' --""''" B111td. Fniff Mix · ' 49 lfONS, IWTl.1,-0 IAHO It. a., .. , •• ,.., 2-& c.. .._ . •· ., ...... ' ... "otl''-"""""'' --•• '" ... _ . ...,. ........ _ .. ... l "' .. !. ""'*' .::::-~ ""'=\ t-- • • l ' I =~=~= 11 1 Malls Aw., at . ffuntingtoa Beach 22 Etln(er Ave., at Sprlnpale, Huntiligton Beacll · 21082 · Bllcb Blft., llu1illlttlM Bam •""" GIAzg DA...a. I I t: J 1 • lol.I buU.r or 34111 llalleay Park Drtn. e.istFano ~ 17951 Magnolia, fmntain h llf ' · Lapna His Pim, El Toro - I • -I \.l)\)JJ _ • .. 1 DAILY ftlLOT : Club Sodo • Colli111 • Vodko • Wink • GinfM-Alo•--,----..., ~ JERSEYMAID FllESH • PINTS COTTAGE CHEESE •CREAMED • LOW-CALORIE • f ARMER STYLE ' , ...... ~ 59c JERSEYMAID SHERBET •• :-:~·~:-;-... · D ·"QMouR VIENNA SAUSAGES •••• :~21" IJ Ai'Po CHICKEN PARTS :·i·:.r.'+. •••• .25' D SMART & FINAL COFFEE •••••• :r~~:.75' . FRESH EGG NOG ~~~ ••••••••••• ~~ 7gc D DOLE PlllEAPPLE JUICE •••••••• ~ .29' -o ENGLISH rllJFFINS. ~{~A??!"~~?:. 4r · D 1'0RTON'S PIES •••••• ~;':-~~ ••••• 33' I iUID SH-·~~:. ..... ?. $1 89 IM:tlUl'lr 0 PARTY SNACK ROLLS, ;;.~•'.-'i';:'"':~q~ .39' ·o FRESH YllURT :~::~?: ......... .5r . : D GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ."iii~: ......•.. '!'.59' ' GOLD -MEDAL FLOUR ............. ~~ 57c D PET WlllP JOPl'ING •• ., ........ ~~·.'.39' D GREEJI GIANT CASSEROLES ••••• ·~~t-.44' .... •..xitQU~•OMrl'IM.Ull Wf'llJJltKX)Mj' l~U Sl'P.11$/.UGLQ'" ·--- We Are Determined To CharceLeu On KARAS OV s I' 9 80 PROOF FIFTH SUNDERLAND DRY ·GIN 80 PllOOF-••••••• ,,w1M $'2.99 D SCOTS MIST 811° SCOTCH ••••••• ~·:·. 1311 D LINn: WHISKY .=.~.:::.~. "'™ 13n Dnl' •••••••••••••••••• D C-1111• WHISKY ~.g:1:r:~ "'~1"" M • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .i--• . ,--~~--------------------~· I" •· BOURBON 10 :~f*·0~~:.~o f I • -msKEY llfNDfO •• ""°' I I ...,. . Hill llVllt . I ftARK RUM ION DflfON I ' I • ~ llGHT . 80 PIOOP I I Yoar $J 49 I 1 Choicer FIFTHS • I J-----~-------------------0 PORTUGUESE BRANDY . ~:1:::~0:£·~ .. 13" tJ . DOii PACO 80' TEQUILA ••••••••• :·~~ 1391 0 Al.NIN 11n1 WINES .::i:«:i::l:'~.l'!. 12"' , "'~n. • • • • • . • • • • • • 0 BA....._ ... ,S MIXES ~~::::~..:::· go111: , II~ ••••••••···~~~ ·spring Beer 6 iz~~89_c ' ' • . SUNSHINE STATE FROZEN . SHORTENING . T ·IDE ~ ORANGE JUICE CRISCO 6-0Z. TIN CONCENTaAT-ED- lo\Al<tS 2•·0Z. Of J UICE ~ -all FROZEN 111·0.Z •. PKG. · GREEN GIANT VEGETABLES ' IN BUTIER SAUCE z NIBLETS CORN . OR MEDIUM SWEET PEAS 1 ·LB. PKG, ~ - HUNT'S SKILLET DINNERS ALL VARIETIES e .HUNT'S TOMATO SAUCE, 15-0 :r., ! for $1 ~) -.~JIOVLI)~ .LamDRoast SLICED BACON H'l<~ll>OEIJ "BEl OR 75c ~-1l'>•J""S CQ S P ~!l [ • 1 tB •·'A • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • &:. D FRESH FILLETS ROCK DOD • '!":":'i' ••• ar ~· :o OSCAR MA YER BACON :.~:~:,.:;::·: ••• 95' D FRESH FILLETS OCEAN PERCH •••• 98\. D THIN SLICED BACON • .°;F,:;f: .•.. 97' D FRESH FILLETS DOYER SOLE ••••• 11 ~. D SMOKIE LINKS mf-:'.: ........... 85' D GREEN SHRIMP ~~'t8~::f.'. ...... 12','. D LITTLE FRIERS ~:;~·: ••••••••••• 98' D IMO DRESSING FOR FOODS •••••• :':'.37' BEEF RAVIOLI '."~;'/:•~: ............. 79c· D M.J.B. COfFEE .~·:c.r;~~-~ •...•••.•• 85c D WALNUTS OR PECANS-t"!'~~~ ••• .79< HUNT'S CHILI BEANS •••••••• :·.~::.5 f~,$1 D TURKEY ROAST .~ir.~..:.~:.., 130 •••••••••••• r" ••••• Fresh Fruits & Vegetables , At Discount PUJIE GOLD FANCY . : LARGE • CALJFORN~ NAVEL : FUERTE .,RANGE$! CADOS 10~:· i ·Z . !. · F lower Department · D DEuclOUS APPLES ~:::':.~49' I ··~ . 69•1 FLOWER IOUQUETS ••••••••• -. ••••• I •• i I t1.1.1nwv.. ·~ f•St J 1 POlllSITTA PUllTS ........ '...... A 1 D TAllERlllES ~!?t~,'i: •••••••••• 19f~. D GIEEll CABBAGE :-:~~· ....... 8f. t MOOloirOUftlOOl IM...,. •• ,.: I SPI DER PUlllS •••••••••••• ~~ -I L----------=------------J D OSCAR MAYER JUBILEE HAM ••••• '~·.1411 D STIX PAK CHEESE!::!~:i:~ ••••••••• 119' 0 CORONET SALAD ~;:.;:;rJ::-........•• ec D BLUE BONNET MARGARINE .::=!;~ •• 45' M • h 'it ""' Wt DE anise ew Z M••IUM 29c ,, Noodles ... \. .... :·;>; :~<:· . Redeem Any One or All Three Coupons with a s3oo Minimum Purchase · , 2701 HARBOR .BLVD., COSTA MESA \ e . 5858-WARNER , H . . . ( r r. I t I f ' I I ' I' 1 I • Wtdntsday, Otambtf ll, 1972 • STATlllROI: · M-Y BACll GUAIA9,ltU -QUALITY •ATS tVUY PttdOJ MEAT 15 UNCONOtTIOWAU Y GUAl4HTl.IO TO ~lAU·YOU . _ .OI YOUIMONIY WAL 11.cHllWUU. Y ltffUNDfD ' . . I - -____..___ L.._ OSCAR MAYiR SL ICED 57c , 8°7c BOLOGNA ~~~Ta.oz. 1i.ciz.• I · o scAR M•YER S.LIC ED Cftc anc BOLOGltA :ii ... •·OZ .,., . U -OZ. .,- OSC-R MAVER 8°7c ALL MEAT WIENERS . '''LB. ' ~SCAR MA VEA 3nc ;1Ll BEEF WIENERS . ta. '1 BAY•. . ........ . '-~ 73• BAUAM IHAM ... •can INAY DIODOttAllT j ....... TABLITI ,,.. •159 W•W 74• ·--· ·-79-· GIUITTI c '; LB. :All.MEAT WIENERS MA ... A'l'I'~ ·59.~ ALLlllfW&W .......... 11 ..... stc SllCED..BOlOGNA 79. MOllllll.U c .......... , ......... ,........ ' . • W~mday, Oecembrr 13, 1972 $ ( PILQT~DVE@SER -~ ' . CHUCK .. SIEAK ~-.<.5<T-f-Aftll lllOS. C.TIFIED lllF • GUAIANTllD c . SLICED. BACON MIAL'TIMI ftAND 1'-POUND PACKAGE SJ' ATER BROS. CERTIFIED BJEF BLADE CUT . ' .La. ROUND STEAK ~ .. ttt 11·a· .. 1-1.:.TH • • 11/f ST:ATlt_.tos:caTIFIED ..___ ·,· IEIP•IOMIN' LB. Prices Effe'ttive Fu/17 -Days Thurs. thru Wed., December 14th-20th ' c La. llVDI ---Li $1.'ll ROAS•·· sT A TEI! iaos. ca1111D BEEF •·GUAIANYllD • ~ c La. J. ' 1.st'-s.n• ·---Ll.·$1.1' -. 1 ....,.._CVT•GUAIA....... 79' Q .. llWt5--CVf .... -'-' ··~· ROUND BO• RO.UT .... ia. . SYIAKS a.• •cu-. ............ ia. • IT•,.--·--·-"""o••-·s I o3 IT•1'!!!"".!,CMllW-·-..... . . • 1s:s ROLLED ROAST ................. T-BOltlSTIAK ................. . STATWllOS.cel..,_•IO*IN ~ . 98c .NOTAM.S•WIU.lltlMMID•TINDU•GU#fltANTE8) •• ,. RUMP ROAST ....................... -~ ' P.ADTIR·HSEs:rEAK ...... Lt.". ... ,...-. ..... _ .... .....,_ 83' ;i ... =-~---·-IAHt\"' ' $ f 83 7;;BONE •OAST .............. .... . TiOP SIRLOIN IT~ll .. ~--- WillTllMM••,..,.•OUAIANT'llo ' g9c l ~.0.T•1 .. ~l'ACICA1i" . . gc RIB STEAKS ............................. ~ .·$I.ICED BACON ............ L•.... • . • U.S. NO. 1 RED VELVET . PRICES EFFEC. 7-FULL DAYS• THURS. thru WED., DECEM t4HO *•· lrffllt•nt Aw., w .. ti.11 .. ,., . • '? • 707 W• Na...1111 .. ltrMt, c: .... M.. 1100 .._ c.r ... A.._, o..1it . 2164 w..t '"-'w.,.. A•1'slM . , ... ....., • ......, " ... ..,.. .. ....,. 1111 w .... .....,....., wwWw••r 2110 N..,_. ..... C~~:· .._., J"1W..leus1•s••·....., ..... AH J'llWnru..t.A,....•"91ulu 1171 ......... , ~. --·-.... -· _.....,.___ ··14111 ... 11111•......,, ...... ' ll!fNd_A_...,.__,. lqO-1'11-'_.__ 14111M'-A-,""'""' ·- 2 PILOT-ADVERTISER , • Old Grand Dad $6'' • i{lore'a.apopular bourbon, popular price! Quart bottle. Grant' i Scotch $.7•• Bacardi Rum . . . s10" S... 400 oo tho halt pllon! Cordial Set . . . . . • *7" v ... c1ormw ... groat,ut'Cora,couple! ' I El Rancho will have all the things you'll want for ..• your holiday dinner ... but, while you look ahead, •. we hav.en.!t forgotten this week 's meal planning! • l OIN END ... 3 TO 4 POUND AVERAGE •••• Pricn in tf(f<t 7'1Ur. IMowlh Wed,. V.c 14·Dfo lip No 1aln to ilNlm 9pen dai()l 9 to 9 ... Sunday JO to:7 Freahneu mak11 the difference in flavor and crispy 1oodneu! Dellcotessen Speciafsl Franks oscAR MAYER ......... 7 ~ , Choooe allbeet or all melt, and 0-you'ro J•ttin1 the beat! lib. pkg. • • -Sauerkraut . . . JJ• Biscu it 0:1=~ . . 1oc • 'Homeade, 22 oz. Gre1t with franbl Sweet or buttermilk ... 8 oz . tube Corned Beef . . 59' Laughing Cow . 59!: · Or putrami •.• Vitnna brand ••• 3 m. ~h ~In 6a1. pack.qo • •. $harp Cheddar . 69' Goudasor Edams 59,k Cncklt Burel, 8 0.. (12 OI •••• •¥ !Uoliana Klub .•. 7 ounce ti• · C< . . I I I •' (1 ' , I I .. r .< I I J $8 DAIL V PILOT Wtdnt$Cl1y, Deutnber 13, 1912 Roast Cooks While Wife's at Work By BARBARA GlBBONS all day (overnight) in the minutes to cook a nank steak, per and a dash of the cold skillet. Heat it over thin, diagonal sUces, against tersootcb slices, otange nut refrigerator. even ll it'• &or.en, so be sure Worecstershire sauce, if YOJJ highest name. 1be liquid will the grafrt A n.ice, big salad drops, hennlts ... .for these A nice hot dlnner after a r I r to have everything ready. like. Broil on a rack in a broll· help melt the few bits of fat with low-calor1e draslng ts all and 0 t h er calorie-reduced hard day at the office Is 3 ~~iu'r~ ·~~ual~~~~:i-!:oc,~ Flank can be broiled under ing pan under highest heat, clinging tQ the steak's surface. you need t.o CQ.mplete the snacks, send a stamped, aelf- somethlng most husbands take flank still-frozen or partially· high })eat. ... or, l! you have a four to five minutes per side. When It evaporates the meal! Each four-ounce IE!rv· adressed envelope and 25 for granted.·· .but what ab®t thawed fo.r a hurry·up steak big-enough skillet, it can be PAN-FRIED FLANK steak will brown in Its own fat. illg ot fiank steak will be 222 cents to SLIM GOURMET work ing wives? that 's sure to be rare nnd very pan·fried to perfection ! Add a tablespoon of water or ... about four or five minutes calories. COOKIE RECrPES, in care of If you've been "liberated" tender. LONDON BROIL red wine to a nonstick skillet. per side. Steak should be rare. the Daily Pilot, 50 West Shore lnl.o the 9-lo-6 routine, you It takes only Jess than 10 Sprinkle wl~h salt and peJ>-Season the steak and put it in To serve, cut the steak in (Chocolate chip cookies, but· Trail, Sparta, N.J. 07871.) deserve to rtnd dinner ready , _ _'.'._'.'.'~'_:'.'.'.'.:__'.'.:':..._::::_:::__:'.".:::::::::__:::::::...:::::...:::::~:':___:::::::=:_=-==-=~::..:.:_:__::___::_.:_:::::_.:::_.::.:::__::_.:_::=__::_ __ __::_:=c::.c:....:c..:::..::::_::..::.:._ ___ .:._:_-',--------"---------- and waiting, too. You can do it with our Slim Goormel all-day pot roast. It's done with the super·s1o.w method of cookery, a new-old technique that's had a revival of interest lately. The advantages to the work· ing wife are obvious: she can put dinner oo in the mon1ing and be greeted by the savory aroma of a perfecUy-coo.ked meal at day's end. If she gets caught up in the commuter crush, no matter ... the supeMlow temperatures won't mind an extra hour . or "'· But super-slow cooking ha! another advantage that's often overlooked .... It's ideal for the least-fattening cuts of meat, the dhes that are also lowest In cholesterol. Since many of the less--ex- pensive cuts arc in this category, slow-simmer cook· ing I! pellhywise as well as poondWU.! The ideal way ta slow-cook a pot-roast dinner is in your oven. in a heavy covered pot or caSSerole, with the tern· perature · set very low : 200 degrees. nus way the heat is evenly distributed on all sides of the <001dng vessel. SINCE GO.IV (With top-of-the-range cook- ing the heat comes only from the bottom. And the uneven heat is difficult to control and ca n lead ·to scorching.) Because the tetnperature is below boiling, none oJ the moisture evaporates. Th e meat won't shrink and the ve getabl es won't ' turn shapeless and mushy. Nutri· tianaJ value! are maintained ... along with ~ navor ! LAZY ALL-DAY POT ROAST 3 pounds boneleu round or beef, trimmed. of all fat 8 or 7 carrot!, fresh or frozen 2 pitatoes 2 onions ~i cup water, beef bouillon ex: red wine . Garlic salt and popper S!:n!po Ibo com>ll ond cut in tllree;lnch ~-Peel the Potafoes and onions; cut in quart.rs. Put baH of the vegetables in the bottom of the pot. Season the meat with garlic saJ~ and pepper. Add all re- D)a~ Ingredients and cq_ver tlgntly. . (J)oll:'t choose an ovenize po!'-1LBhould be at least two- th!nll lull when all ingredients ... odded.)" . . . Set on the middle rack ln the centm' of your oven. Set the heat at 200 degrees and forget it. DUmer ril be ready tn eight ho to hours. Use a oolb- type baster to strain any fat before. lerVing. Makes eight aervings, 288 calories each. German style: Add three or four mediwn dlll pickles, ch>p- ped and 1 teasoon dlllweed - 295 calories per serving. Italian style: Add one cup plain tom•to sauce anrt (ll'le t.eupoon oregano or Italian sealOnings. ()-nit potatnes n:ld camita -S25 calories per serving. FrenctHityle: Add one CUD musbrooma. Use red wine in place of nter. Add a pinch of thyme. Omit potaloel -26t caforie! per serving. Plank steak is a tender boneless piece or beef averag- ing around two pounds, and you get twice as many serv-inlu per pound as you \\rould with fattv bonv slf:l\k~! However, flank lake!! !t"eeiAI care to reach its delectably tender notenllal. Here'• a cli~and-s•v,. v,uide to 1ulCV-f'll'f'i f111>nlc steak: PllRPECI' FLANK Flank has a d e finit e characterlstlc "grain" of long meat fibers. The high "heat of eoo.l1.ng wlll cause your steak to shrlrik and 1hrlvel unless you cut through the surface fibers before cooking. ~ So you'll want to "score" YOW' flank steak in a diamonQ pattern on both side• before cooking. Here'a how: spread the 1teitk OI\ a cutting board ao4 mike very shall ow diagOnal 11icu, about an inch apirt." .. first in one direction and then In tbe o\her. · Tum the steak over 3nd scort tho bther side. too. Both 8idoe lhould JC>Qk-llle t11e· lat on a fancy baked ham. But don 't ma~e the cuts too 4i:GP' yoo just want lo · P/nilr•to tbe upper layer ol tbe'llloll. """ lo11111tetendt'""'8, ,,.._ botll otdeo llberolly -~Adda aprMJ'e of garlic 11,,.. 1111•. SjlrtDllle Ill!> steak wllb a 111· U. 'lrllao lo IC)tvato tho I I. MM. ltf the / IMjlt ..... •" 1 .. 11 .1 ... 1 .. 1...,11",_ wmpontilre; or ' I => ... C> .. >-... ... ~ .. ~ ... .c -... .. ... ~ ~ ""'" ~ a . -IL-_ _,_ tOM.E aE.a.urY, ,..""N. w.a.SH1NGroN , ,... FLORAL ouAun FANCY D' AllJOU & WHITER llELIS 1 PEARS ii -----~~- • . 89 FRESH AID UP FRUIT BOWLS & FRUIT BASKETS 98 EACH HUNT'S .KETCHUP !! WllOLESUI.. FROZEN CONCENTRAtE ORANGE JUICE THERE IS A MARKET BASKET M.8. DISC iOUNT FOOD STORE NEAR YOU 4 • AllAHIA,22701.l1k1 lt1. • CAIO,APAIM, •751 FelMHk A••· • fOl!ITA•YAWJ tlltCerfltW • UllOI, 1oatt1ew.-,..aw. • •WNITllACll, 11stlnlMAwe. • PASADllA, 11Stt. w,.._...,.~ • S • AllAMUl, 1121 S ...... M lfff, • CATMHALCITY,61401~ ... ,111 • fUU.ltfH, t2t W.~ ....... Att: • lOIK llACll, lOJO 1.ldflt..,. It.II.· • .WNll aACtl, Jiff ..... 11w4. • PASAlllA, tl•O I. L..ltt Att. ' • S • AUMIJl. ltlS.lwflW SI, • COMPTH, 1100 I . l ... •"ell II••· • 'AllllUOVI, tlt •1 IMtt Aw1. • lOIK llACJI, 1110 I. AMfttiM • IOlfl ltOUYWOOI, lltlS V•O.t" St. 9 NMGIA, 16•S W ..... Awe. ' '~. : ~ • AIAMIM, ,,,, •. s1.11 ( ..... tt••· • COSTA MISA, lt7$ MffM! 1"4. • ,, .... GIOVI, 1Jff1 ,...._~--•••• • LOICi llACM lotO s~.,... . IOIWALI, ,.,,. s. ~"''" • lltllRS I ISO .. "~"..... " • ams1a, 11700 •. lllr•St. • COVllA, tJ11.1.;1n.a... • •• , ..... •1"'""21.~i...;.11 ••.• LOS AMIUi,••••::::r:··"· .......... IMtl............. • Uto1tol1ac11, 1 .. 1 ...... ~llif"~ • • UlULOWlt, lt111 S. Mflt•tf 11'4. • COV•A. •4t W. Seti ,,,.,;IM 1111. • MHTNKJOI llAQl1 77.tlHl!ttff e LOS AICIUS, 1120 11'4. • PALatlSllT171M111wy. 111 • · • 11VtlSIM Jtll We ... St. • S • MIAll, 61J •• YWtHj 11'4. • (II.VII CITY, JIJ7 Cllfw•r <•11l•r • lA M•AIA, 1.tt.tt MtHe It. • MALllU, JJJSt Pedfk (Hit ••W• • PAUi SPlllKS, JC.ZS T ... i1r-llc(ollur1t • IOLLllK liittS Ill., 117 lltt•r S,... fiat: • S • CAMAllll0,12Q&fM4114. • llSICUltO 121 "·'''""'··· • lAHAIA, 140141 •• ...,.,.. • MOllGV1Atl20W • .......,.11 .... • ,, .. , ..... •2t1w. fhlrtlSt. .• IOWLAllMllC•lS1 114tO<•·~; ! s • UIOCAPAll, 20121V•0.... St. • FOUITAll VALU1', llllln11r' lrHILMint • LAIClSTl .. 1112 W. AwtMt "J" • MOITlllY PAIK, 2201 S.At5-tk llwL • PASAIUA. IMl I. fMtllll llw4. • SAlllUAUllO, 14tW • .tott. Stflfl j . . • . - .. • \ i ) \ . . . Cake's in the Red For Holiday Meals WtdnesdaJ, Ofumbtr 13, l91_2 ____ _:D::"'::L.:..V.cl'Jl.Jf 57 I thought everyone must sifted cake Dour, I cup but· 31).35 minutes . llO n ot Now ror the frolting. You TIUj Is beautiful with red have the red velvet cake by termilk, l tea.spoon Mii, I overbake. will need 3 tablespoons llour, I velvet coke. Even those wbn now but I am gettlng requests table!poon vinegtr, 1 teasPQOn~ Yoo may d1\•\de batter cup mllk, 1 cup butter, I cup could never make Io o d for it all over agaln. soda. between three 8-lnch cake sugar and 1 teaspoon vanilla. frosUnc before do nne with It isn't u cbocolate.y as Cream ahortenJng and sugar pans. Combine flour and milk 10 1hls one. Jt 11 Ivory.colored some others but h is a well . Add Wlbeaten eggs and A red paste color usually make a smooth paste. C.ook rather than pure white, but Jt beautiful shade of red, has vanilla. Beat well. ' does a better }ob than over bolling water, stirring never crack.a or hardena. good flavor , especially with In sepa1ate di.sh blend cocoa ordinary liquid types. Few frequently, until mliture Is Of course the cake must be the recommended icing. It is and food coloring. Add to first groceries stock the paste kind, thick and c!lltard-like: Cover refrigerated aft.er cuttln& into. especially beaut I tu I at mixture. Add flour and salt but you can order it from a immedialely to prevent top Do not try to r~ It aft.er it Christmas. · plus buttetm~lk al tem'\tely. Minnea119lis 'liaking supply film from forming. Set aside 15 frosted . In all the years l You will need '1i cup Mix soda and vinegar in a cup firm, (Maido of Scandinavia). to cool. have given It J nave bad only shortening, llh cups sugar, 2 and ad. The last I knew I heir Cream butter, sugar and one recent complalnt. eggs, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 2 Pour In two s.;nch cake catalogue was 50 cents but vanilla well. Combine creamed ounces red food coloring, 3 pans, greased and floured . well worUt it with lots of color mixture with custard. Beat ro~! ~';=io~e=~k 8~~:~~ -----------------------------ta=b"'=':'.:poo:::::ns::__:coc=oa::·:_:2_::1'._:::cu~ps:_.::B::•k=e_:•::t.:350:_:d::cgr~ee::s_::fo:::r_:•:::bo:::•::t--".pa::g~e::•· _______ _:w:.:•:::ll_.:to:.:s~p::re::•d:::in~g:.:co::n::•::~::te::ncy:c:,. the way, but do not use the IOW All MAIKn IASKET STORES AIE M.I. ID)~@(g@l1!J[f!Jif HIRE ARE JUST A FEW 01 THE THOUSAIDS Of DISCOUIT PRICES AVAILAIU TO Yoa. ~1.ETE COST OF YOUR ENTIRE DISCOUNT FOOD ORDER~ ··IET BASKET WITH ANY OT ER FOOD STORE! PARTS .lE ZEE BAT~RUOOM TISS E ii . ' • SAi CU11111t1, 2717 Vfl C,U•• • sounl PAS~H hlr 0..1 A••· • su~•Mf l.1....._.ltt .. • S1=1.M.c 111•11115 -a.:.:_, • SQ,...., stl s..tti Wtey St. • I Clti1.' _. .. .,.. 1 • SAllTA AIA, tll W. 171Ut. • ---·•'"•>:.!::, 't'..i .. _ t 1 • SAITA AU, Jl11 S. lfktel St. • O • SAllTUl-,llSHT-pJ.~l., _lff~-. • '~":A:.··~ ,,, ........ hi. • ""'*' IJltt I. WWHltrlhl. • s OA .1•r1s-, ........... •Wllnmtt .. StLWMnltrlh4. • SOITIIUTl.llt•~I... •:WU-TOI, 11tLi..lt•lh4· 1 ' 09 DOLE FRUIT COCKTAll fl! HILLCRE$T , SUGAR WATCH YOUR MAIL BOX •••• no... on loot o 1tw of "'° """"'"' of LOW PllClS ''" wll f~ lot .., •It M'A" MAIUI TllfS WOK! If ,.. W. Ml lfll ... --· let ,_ _.., ..,. ........ sttrt m••I'' ..... Mii •• wM ... tltel fW ... ' • • • U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS SPENCER STEAK 'USDA CHOICE 1, 'r • LETS ASK THE COOK ., !Un Y(ley type of llour that pours almost like sugar,· I have made the frosting too many times for it to be anything but success(ul ' If you 're up the cteet on gift suguUom, remember il11t no one ever objects to fGod, especially son;telhlng from your OWD kltchu. JeJUes or jams ere tspeclaUy popalar. r knbw it'• too late for moat or you to make tltose, but there are a number of aJl.yur selections. Tllal't .. y I b> eluded. 11 muy 11 I could sgaeeze Lato one of my moet rtee11t booklets "Can Your Owa Goarmet Wluen!' I especially like the wine jellies. They are so nk,e with all kinds of meats and fowl. Where possible, it is nJce to in· elude tbe recipe and an in- expensive cutting board (for ho~ bread ) or wha~ver ls appropriate. Now for the man in your life, consider an item that hit the market in mos& areas just last summer. You may have seen it advertised in national magazines. · It's a meat srDoker that comes With elngle or dou~le grills, manual or eloctric. Yoo have your choice of several .colors -acocado , harvest gold or orange. . One thing that is so great is that you literally have yoor own liWe smoke houJe and, like the crock-type pot It C.Oks slowly. You can leave the meat for as IOllg as I hours dependlng on size. In moat cues you use hickory chips or blocb, no brlquets. tr you can latch onto a little apple wood1 to usa along with the hlebry, "' much the betttt. There !1 rio constant fen- ding, refueling, r o t I e s I n g , basting or turning, no foll· wrap. Just put the meat In and let 'er go. An:>ther item I saw last summer at the Kansai City gift show is a plezil11ss cut· ting board. Yoo may'htve lrtn either clw' or pebbled ellect. Nomatter what surface you place It on tho oolor lhtnes through. I love the thing. It ii so handy I« tliclng bread, cheese, tomato.« whatever. No matter bow you loot at it, both smoker and cutting board are good invntments. You should be able to find either one at boulewares departments or paaibly sme of the heme wln&omaktng IUJ" ply shops. You'll find valuable sue· gestions ind reclpee 1n Nan Wlley'1 amnlng. booklet, evea if you're an old hand at home canning. If you would like to have "Can Your Own Gourmet Winnen" leDd 25 cenll and 1 self-addressed, s ta m p e d envelope with your request to her in care of the DAILY PILOT. Please allow three weeks ror. delivery. Shortcuts Revealed CIIlNESE VEAL DISH 11• cup salad (not olive) oil I poond thin Ilia.. lender veal, cut in 'ii-Inch wide 1trlps 1 small onion. cut In thl11 strips 1 clove garlic, crushed 1 t.e.upooo salt Pepper to taste ~~ of a to.ounce package frozen tiny fll'OOI peos, thawed I drained canned pimientos, cut tn \I-Inch wide llripo I cup chicken boWJ!on SealODlng Sauce. ,.. below In a llMncb aldllol beat the oil; add the veal aoo cook over moderate heat, turnin1 meat over as necessary, unt11 it looes Its nod tolor. Add oolon, Plm!e-and bouU!oct: cover and 11mm<t 10< 5 mlnut.t. Add &!1IOtllri& Sauce and cook, 11= °""' stantly, unUI thlc ind clear. Serve It once, -I aer•ln&•· -l•i Sauce: In a cup ( stir. qtllior untll tmooll\ l tablespoono comstarob, l tab'°'JIOOOI "1'/ sauce 1nd y, cup Cold water. ' 1 • I ' I I I 1 I I\ I I ,1 I J I • .. U DAIL V PILOT Sunny Salad Mold Capture the br ight spirit or the holiday season with a rol· orfW gelatin salad that 's a merry visiqn of sunny yell0\11', dramatic .red, snowy white and clear green. The tested recipe features a lemon yel101v gelatin that's combined with cream clieese fn one layer, and with sparkling r e d cranben-ies, and b r 111 i .a n t pineapple Li db.its in the other. Crisp fresh California walnuts go into both layers. · The result is a shimmering salad perfect to se. ve for holi- day mearus. Try it with baked ham, J>9l'k roast, beef, goose or turk,y. The salad is doubly good when the walnuts are toasted. You'll find plenty of California walnuts for this recipe (from the Diamond Walnut Kitchen) and all your holiday baking and candy making. Look for walnuts already shelled in recipe size clear bags, or in-the-shell in cellophane bags. t FESTIVE WALNtrr SALAD '14. cup California walnuts, chopped 1 cu p uncooked cranberries 'I• cup granulated sugar 2 3-ounce packages lemon flavored gelatin 1% cups boiling water 3 lablespoons lemon juice ¥4 teaspoon salt 1 81h~unce can pineapple tidbits . l Hk1unce bottle lemon·lirne carbonated beverage 1 8-ounce package cream cheese, softened Toast wi!'lnuts at 300 degrees F. for about 10 minutes. Set aside to cool . Chop cranberries coarsely, and mix with sugar. Let st.and while preparing salad. Dissolve gelatin in boil· ing water. Stir in lemon juice and salt. Drain syrup f r o m pineapple into gelatin mixture. Cool thorougbly. Stir in chilled carbonated beverage, and cool until thickened. Set aside 1 Yl cups for cheese layer. Stir cranberries, pineapple and lh: the walnuts Into remaining clear gelatin. Spoon into a 6- cup mold, and c h i I I. Meanwhile, soften c r e a m cheese, and graduall y blend in reserved gelatin. Stir in ~ maining walnuts. When fruited. layer is almost set, carefully spoon creamy mixture over it. Cb.ill for several hours or overnight, unUl salad U: fiml Unmold onto salad greens to serve. Makes about eight serv· lngs. Pudding ·Updated In the 16lb Century and for some time thereafter, recipes for Frangipane called for a particular jasmine perfume that had been named for a faitldious Italian nobleman, Marquis Frangipani. Nothing so exo,tic is called for in this modern version of the classic almond pudding. Macarooh crumbs are an es· sential ingredient and it's well worth a trip to a good bakery to buy a few almond macanr ons if o.nJ.y to make this pud· ding: but everything else ahould be readily available wherever you shop. One taste and you '11 know why Frangipane has delighted gourmets for four centuries~ FRANGIPANE 2ii cup 1Ugar 1/4 teaspoon salt S tablespoons cornstarch 2 cups scalded milk, hot 3 eggs 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 3 tabelspoons a I m o n d macaroon en1mbs 1114 teaspoon vanilla extract ~ii teaspoon almond extract 1/S cup allvered almoods. toasted Bltod sugar, salt and <.'OT'· ~ lhoroughly. Stir Int~ .ptlll, place over bolling water a:nd l:oo~ 20 minules, •tlrrlng ll<quenlly. Beal .eaa lftll:-combine wllb • llltle hot mlllturt. thcr\ lldd to puckUnc i nd continue """""" .... itlrrlull -3 1o t mntes. -fmn 1iNt llld' mt. In butler, crumbl And ••· trocll . .cool. 1 11 r rl n ' oc---Jly. JUll bef°'" ..mn1. otlr In ~ d. almond•; lllJflnkle re-•>W over to'8 Of llcb par-a.. -... IOnlnp. . 1 • STOil HOUIS: MON .·FRI. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. SAT. & SUN. 10 A.M. In 7 P.M. • . .. . . 1 ' -• 1 I I l ' FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY OAY """ ... --.... rAN TASTIC lliSCOU !rt l') EVERY OA 1 """ .... --"'" IAHTA SllC OISCOUHTS EVERY OAY "= f~"t !A\lf:., 01 LOt NIS l T'ERY [,Ay r,.,.A 1, o., liU lrt lS l llk f ;J AY ........ -= BOXED ~~t~" ~ CHRISTMAS CARDS 99c 1 '' Fii.OM TO CHRISTMAS GIR WRAP 30" Rori. 8 ROU PAPER ASST. 1" 8 Rt!U Foll l>•int Allt. 1.11 8 Roll Foll/Po09r ..._,, , ... 36" Roll JUMBO ROU 1•• PAPER OR FOIL PRINT 26" Roll JUMBO ROLL aa• PAPER OR FOIL 30" Rolls 88' 3 ROLL PAPER ASST. Fooltton. 1'.t.st. Foll, So!+d Al.st. 36·Co..,t • p,...T;..cS sa• BAG 0 BOWS 12QO...C.oui-11 ec. 581 SILVER TINSn 13-<n_ .-.rlMOI Con 391 SPRAT SNOW PWsH ANIMAL TOYS "°" 1 ft © oooix'FOOi smY 12s ~· . EST TABLETS 891 ~ 1::: bpotwn 994 -126-KODACOLOl FILM • ciii SYlvANlfMAGl_CUBES 14' 8 Prinh . POLAROIO 1118 3•s COLORPAK ALM ~AltNude •~ HAPPY LEGS 77c PANTYHOSE I ~~~~H:.~~0REAM .,. 69' DIXIE REFIU CUPS <§> 1 I -01. • M..,thol NO;mMASl!ave Cream 851 q-our.c., Bott,. 73c DISOLYE ASPIRIN 1 3-0z. N!'OIOI •Reg.• X·Hold PROTEIN 21 ~ l It HAIR SPRAY 'b.I 6-o..nc• Can • Froxen MINUTI MAIO LIMEADE Jl.-OL &ti. • C~at• • Reg. or Gropoi HAWAIIAN PUNCH 16-0x. Botti. • ~ ~'~~·~'· ZJPLQC,GAUON BAGS ·AEm'rusit'tr~·0 ~ ...... ,. ................. . PEPSOOENT TOOTHBRUSll ""°™"'' en.ti. TOolhbnMt ~ tWii:i . 'ii"'«""" . AS ICE SllAIPOO • ULT SPECIAL PERMANENT PW! Button P~ ~ 12-cc.-t 8o1< NEW REEDOM SAlllTARY NAPKINS ~, ....... ,« . VASELINE INTENSIVE CHECRfAM 39• 294 71 1 971 251 55• 561 15c 91' ... 391 1n 29' ... 79c J.47 2ac 1os oliAMCE'iGICE BLEND <'BiM'ODREsSiNi ~ 16-()unce c-tal"9t l'B lMPERiA°L 'M'.A'R6AR1NE ~ hnpet"ioJ Diet~ 1ca f1t11h•ed-KNX l'-lldlo l <t-Oi:. Pockooe • lmoorl~ DANOLA SLICED HAM 3-0utic• POC~OQlt McCOY SLICED PASTI!AMI 4-0urw;• Jor USCCO SHRIMP COCKTAIL Otcor Moyer • 1..0x. PockOQ9 ,All MEAT BOLOGllA All ... , 8ologno OKor Moy., • 8-0x. Pac:koQ9 LIVER CHEESE I.OX. Tlbll • Bllttumilk ~Us'B'Uiiv'inscu1Ts Comotion • 15.5..0Z. Can CHUNK LIGHT TUNA 9.25-0.rice Can 1 2.5'~ Can ~ 32-0l.nal Box \!!:::::;:I S1nnsdown Cab F111r t:i:::\, ILrll llTI 8-Pock ~CINNAMON ROLLS ,,_ MINIATURE FRUIT CAKE 2 .. .0...C. llo• RlPlll BETll FRUIT CAKE ~ lllrkholm'• • 115-0x Pk,e. ~LEMON PASTRY l'B PAN'cA'KE'sYRuP'· '"· 'M' 2 ... 0.-. Botti• ~ 10.S-Ot. Pkg.• 15 Varlet)" ~TOAST EM's POP UP ---------------- J 63' 79• 891 1 '' r&-·-. '"°"""' J« ~DIJON MUSf,ARO YCM.lk AUW. IETA MU;MIOMOOO IUTCHEI mtE lllM I" 'nl!. llD Al'llON) l'tlOUOt.Y OffD:l1 c u. !UTCHEll'S PIUDE MEATS MllTS·1DU'LL IE PftDUD'TD llftYI QUNJTY SATISFACTION GUWll1tlD • OISCOOllT Pl!ICUI FRESH'FROZEN . U,S.0.A. INSPECTED GENUINE SPRING IEW ZEALAID UMB SHOULDER ROAST R ESH F}IOlEM ~ I LI 1tOU. c u. ' T-IOlll ... llU CUIDAU.'I ~ IROUllD DAU TUUIYMUT , •• ~~:ex-68' 101u 1ss 1n GROUND BEEF · LL Rll STUl LI. STAIDllG WOE 114 CH UCl 8t-"lE 69 c RIB ROAST ENO LL ROAST wr LI. nu1 I-OZ. PMO: • llllLUS pi.,,,,, .. Jon SAUSAIE LINKS kAM>'S ~ 1£AT & £AT I'' "STE~ ............ lllEADED · ;-:t;~ aa- ,_,.,11 PltlctS lmnMllR. 1•11. -··nn····•"•······IH·R·l·1'1.1· •• LL•n•wn•••ili· DOUlll DKCOUNT1 MIAN DOUMJ , SAVINGS Al MPHA WA o..iw ............ ,.,,. ....i,. 111 .i41t1_.. .. -....... """ .__flt ~. ,...., .,. ... ,...iw.. It, ... ,,,err ,..rt.._ ... u ... -"'-,... -1111t.tt-· ~ tMt • .,. ........ ,..N .., .. •I I - .... a7c 21 1 ... .,,.,.... I-lb. Can • Dri. •...., (ltcfflc ,......,. .. 1111 COFm: l~Jot Mii INSTANT COFm: 40' @M~i;~;t;;ic'G'ii'11 .... e SUNSHINE -- 16' 12• ,\71 • 1 ~ CHRISTMAS -!l:Z.a.rd ... '"" lfTI CHRISTMAS MIX CANOY ' IJ..(Nlq Bae . • 111111 lllTI CANDY WlllTIIQRWI TWISTS 16~•'°0 621 571 ... 33' .:_; GHEEZ-IT -·•Oc BRACH'S ASSORTID FlllED CANDY 15~•1 HERSHEY ILK 5 7c ~ 21).()x. Can• Whitl • Y•llow . "' \!!:::::I JOLLmME POPCORN 62' 16.o-c. c.iio 100 111111. IETI WWIUTS 101 •.O....Con ORTIGA DICED CHILIS l'B WPPY PfT STEW ~ 2 .. .0U"Ce c- 381 (8 f fira;tN'OooLES . Sk ~ Outdl Style Mood"" ;,c C§LJPrliit"cuPA SOUP 17-0....C:• Con 41 1 KOUNTRY KlS)" PEAS 12-0L Con • Whole....,,..,~ 149 ~ffllem~~. 1., ~ ........... """'-""" ~CARROT JUICE s.•• 381 /:::&::::\ MilorH • 8-0unc• Bottle \!!:::::;:11890 French Dressint: ~ 5-0unc. Bott .. ~A·l SAUCE 15·0unc• Bottle ~ Ciiiii' i:oii'CARitE' 'ji;ii W/BEANS .. LARGE SIZE 3r 1" 221 "' 461 ... - 594 • ~CDUTIKISSES ~ 13-0wM.lao•1'-oukr • ..,.. IOI TDllTIW CHIPS ~ loNiwiN'l · ... WILD llCE " aa• .·' · aa• 15' 33c ... 34• 21• 21' ' 22• 71' "' 21•. 28' 13' 42c 291 39• ... 40' FRESH EHPLANT 10! :::i~~CY ·~ HAWAIIAN .PAPAYAS 3 01' $1 swnTRIP£ 5c.._. PERSllllMONS toUTllfltfll OOUI • PUii' • , 89' 541 \63C \ 73• ~ 49' 55• 321 ... 40' 1• ~ .. .,. 47• ... 19c 461 IRGWN 88C ~=RJ'::' 45c ...-.Jll MUSHROOMS 11. ,.....,.., IT. o~~ ~-JDMi-~ falFT • ~~~ 1 ~ , "MCK '-' 8l00M 2,., POINSmt.1$ "' '" II" PACKS or Gin WWPIO 2'7 CAl.JF~• PIMD IUllS "' -·~ FTIDH CllT 121 SUHttD mm CAltfATIDIU ..... PAClll ,.. IMIUllll TAR-Pltllll ll!K"" 11R. 1+11.-. .... --.... COITA M•IA -,.1 a. IP!h It. COSTA MllA -nM H11"Mr l lW, HUHTIHOTON llACH -"* Alll~l'M HlllofrlH•TOH llACH -lMll N, M.1111 II, HUHT IHOT~ llAC"--214U l rwot!llVnf f'OUNTAIH VALLft -Int W.,..... C.AliUNA HILLI -2lMI c1nt .... lllha -lltVINI -1 ... c.!Ht, U11t¥ ... ly P1rti ... U,H 1.AOUHA -11121 I. l'M&I H1911Wtl • j ti ti r c I .. • ' 0 r d ,. • d I 0 • I • • •' ; • I • to • Apple PIZZA I package pie crust mix (for t<:nlst pie) 11' cup.confectioners' sugar Ice water I package (8 ounces) cream ch .... l ean sweetened condensed milk 1·3 cup freshly squeezed le~ juice It easpoon vanilla I can (15 ·ounces) apPle ~ ii_. cup ftnnly packed dark llrown sugar 1,i, ,CUJ1'·cllopped mi.Jed can- died frui ts Red and green glacee cher- ' ries Pecan baJves (optional) Combine piecrust mix and sugar; then stir in the Jee . wattr as called for · in the package directions. Ro 11 between sheet1 of wax papier into a rectangle 11 by 14 in- ches. Place on a-U-by-1$ tncb bak· ing sheet. remove paper, and bake at 350 deiuees for 20 minutes . or until go 1 den brown. Cool. Blend cheese. condensed milk, lemon juice and vanilla. Spread on crust. Chill Combine apple sauce, brown sugar and candied fruits in a small saucepan. Bring lo a boil and slmmer for aboot 1$ minutes. or until thickened. Cool. Spread on cheese top- ping. • Garnish with glacee cherries end pecan halves . Makes 12 to lf 3ervings. •Pudding ,'Paired Dina hel~ 1ive delicate <or. APPLE BREAD PUDDING . . ' B~NANAS DATES GOLDEN RIPE 11/2 LB. PKG. 11~ AVOCADOS L<"RGE FUERTE 5/St • ·-.. . l4_~~~!~~~. JUICY CUCUMBERS LONG GREEN CANAffiAN . WHISKEY FULL 9UART · U5Kt AIHY ·SCOTCH 16 PIOOf DlmUU & IUNOID IN SCOTLAND SILYll PUOS TEQUILA IEG. $559 $6.Sf $559 FULL 9T. $399 '" 9UAIT . ( LYNDEN FARMS . 4/$1 BAG VEGETABLES F1mily s;,._1 v, Lb. YOUR CHOICE ..... SPRINGFIELD ICE ·CREAM lh Gal. Squ•re C1rton ..... SPRINGFIELD 5/$1 ORANGE JUICE 6 Oz. Cons ............. . • GALA PAPER TOWELS BIG ROLLS C. REDDl·LOGS .. 59¢ ea. , HI-HO CRACKERS BIG 1 LB. BO X REGULAR 49c E•. • OAJLV PILOT :i:J ,CREMORA REG. BSc 59~ CANADA DltT 16 o.. Ju . . . . . . MIXES FULL 9TS 3 /~ , HEAlTH o, BEAUTY AIDS ~""""" NA.llSCO 69 c PREMIUM ·.~: 35' CREST TOOTHPASTE TOUlt CHOICE FAMILY Siil 1 01. TUii SALTINES LlllY'S 25' 69' PUMPKIN u•G• ,,,, oz. c•• __ ' __ _ ~~~ ..... -----SPRINGft~~~/, oz. CANS 3/$1 ii YAMS U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS , U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS YAMI DIPS AVOCADO .................. .. 43' ILUI CHllSI, G-AILIC, Cl.AM, 3 /$1 011 Fl.INCH ONION • EASTERN LARGE LOIN I ' ' . . . . . . . . . ' ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GROUND .SHOULDER BEEF PATIIES . . .. . . . .. S LB. BOX . BAR M BULK STYLE WIENERS ······················'····· I MIX.• MATCHJ , •..........••............ --- FOREMOST ••LL 49' FRESH EGG NOG 9• .. , Prices Effective: Thursday thru Sunday Dec. 14, 15, 16, 17 I Pricn subject to stock °" hcmd. WE GLADLY ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS WI GIYI ILUI CHI" STAMPS' 't · 19th and Placentia 710 w. Chaina11 I .. 8 DAIL V PILOT !. }; •' MEDITERRANEAN MIXTURE MELLOWS Stews Stretch Food Budgets Feed 12 people with 2 pounds or stewing beef and some chopped ham'! Stews have always been budget stretchers, and thi s classic Spani!h recipe is no exception. It is unique thou gh, since the stretching ingredient is a delightful dried bean known as chick pea or garbanzo. Acorn·shaped, small , with a creamy color and wrinkled ap- pearance, they are used by Spanish cooks in many ways .. .. especially in souPs or stews. As with all dried beans, garbanzos are rich in protein . They make meat go further without diluting the food value of the clish. Another very t y p i c a t Spanish ingredient is olive oil. In (act. the aroma and fla vor so often associated with Spain comes from this ve ry special o.il .... and the way it is used. Cocido (pronounced KQ-f. SEE· D 0 UG11 ) can be prepared ahead or time and ttheeted when needed. In fact. it tastes even better when the navors blend ovcmight. COCJDO 2 pounds stewing beef l/.a cup olive oil 3 or 4 large onions. chopped or sliced 2 cloves garlic. minced % tomatoes. quartered ·~ cup minced parsley I cup chopped ham I ham bone 4 chicken wings (or 2 wings, back and neck) 1 pound dried chick peas (garbanzos) 2 quarts cold waler I tablespoon salt 4 carrots, sliced In 5-<1uart Dutch oven brown meat in olive oil ove r high heat . Lower heat , add re- maining ingredient!, turn heat as low as possible, bring slow· ly to a boil, then .simmer very gently, covered for 3 hours. Add more Uquid as it cooks, if needed as the chick pea s must be well -cove r ed throughout the cooking period Crunchy SEVEN-INGREDIENT CEREA L U'a bcmemade granola! 2\i CUpt old-rashloned oat~ 'ii cup ahreded coconut \ii cup chopped nut• 'I• cup sesame 9ttd ll cup firmly packed liglll brown tuear \0 cup corn oll II ~1'9111NI In 1 e miltng boWI mix tofelher be oats, coconut mill ond -llttd. Stir In --.-...,,oll un- tll ..u --Spreod 00 2 JeUJroll -Bike In a pre-llolted ~ oven. stir- ' rtof -&ltaalb', unlll lilhllY • Wt••• -to minutes. Rllnoft hm own. MlJ in -""'•a Clftal wilh in11t. Keep In a Ul)JUy CODlalntr ln rolrl ..... t.r. MU.. abou I poand -• tupa. (but they need not be soaked. before cooking). Makes 12 to 15 servings. Garbanzos may also be served as a vegetable ( ln place of potatoes). This recipe uses the canned garbanzos and just takes a few minutes to prepare. GARBANZOS I or 2 garlic cloves 2 tablespoons olive oil I medium onion , thinly sliced 2 pimientos, chopped I can (20 ounces ) garbanzos (chick peas), drained ~'" teaspoon salt V" cup minced parsley Freshly ground black pepper Brown the whole garlic in the olive oil, remove and discard. Add the onion and pi· miento: cook in until onion is soft. Add garbanzos. salt , pa rsl ey and pepper; simmer, covered. over lowesl heat for S to 10 minutes. Makes 4 servings. Chicken Fondued Answering to entertaining at a price within one's means is to serve delicious chicken and present it in interesting ways. Chicken Fondue shows your fla ir for fine cooking yet never lets on about its reasonable cost. The fun or fondu es came to us from Swit2erland, with a basic cheese fondue . But the technique has now been ex· tended to cover many table rookery recipes. and this is one of the n1ost imaginati ve. 1'he chicken pieces are speared by guests on fond ue forks. cooked brleny a nd then dipped in a delightful sour cream apricot sauce. CllJCKEN FO~DUE 2 whole broiler-fryer ch icken breasts, boned, skinned 113 cup flour 1 egg, beaten t cup Eine dry bread crumbs 3 cups salad oil Cut ·chicken breasts in half. Cut each breast half into about 14 bite-size pieces. Coat each piect into Dour, dip in egg. and then coat wilh bread crumbs. Jn saucepan heat oil to 375 de~s F.: pour into metal fond'ue saucepan and place directly over namc. • Spear pieces of chicken with fondue forks and hold In hot oU mixture until golden brown. Remove from fondue fork and cool allghlly, S.rve In 4 por. tions with Sour Cream Apricot Sauce or chill sauce. SOUR CRF.AM APRICOT SAUCE % cup sour cream \0 Clip aprlC(lt jam 3 tablespoons rlljon musta ni tn small bowl mix IJOUr l cream, apricot jam a n d l mustard. Serve chillt'<I FROZEN FOODS TR EESWEET JUICE •••••....... 12~'ti'f: 55 ' oriE GG RO LLS. ................. ~".";,·;~ 69 ' SHRI MP . CHIC~!N. lOSSllR O'S PIZZA OHUXE COM!INAl~N 87 ' GIN ............ , .... lO OZ PKG CHEESE PIZZA ... : ....•........ "g;~~i 67 ' MUFFIN ROUNDS ............ '·~~!~~i 46 ' BHJEBERRY. CINHAMON, RA~IN ONION RINGS ................... ~~~';fo 34 ' oriGREEN GIANT RICE~?'.".'.°.':i;g,~~g 53 ' REAL WHIP TOPPING ........• .'J;41 • &REEi &lllT PEAS 17.0UNCl CAN 22c F OR ADDI T IONAL SAVINGS VEGETABLES BIROIEYE COMBINAmN 41 ' •••••••••••••••••••• 90°ZC1N BABY LIMAS W!TH 'SEASOHEO SAUCE, PEAS & CAULIROWER WllH CREAM ~AUCE FRENCH TOAST. .............. 0i'it~J~~:i 45 ' LEMONADE ..•..••......•••.... ~:~f~rti~ 29 ' P!N~. RfGU lAll: ORANGE PLUS DRINK 'i':."Wc',C:~ 57 ' CREAM PIES ..................... ,':'M~l 28' BANANA. CHOCOLATE, COCONUT. lfMOM. SfRAW881RY SNACKWICHES ............... ".".\"o~~ 37 ' CH£E'il BURGER, CH£E~ & HAM. GIUUED CHE BE, Pt:PPEROH I PIZZA. PIZZA. SlOf'PY JOE BIRDSEYE BEANS ........... '.'.~~l~& 28 ' WAFFLES .•...•.•............... :'.".',~~~:!:~ 45 ' BtlTTERMtl.X, REGUlAlt SOLE FILLETS .••.•........ ~·;~;::":',~'::':~ 78 ' FRIED SHRIMP. CERTl-FRBHIOUTllRH 96 ' ••••••••••••••••••60ZPKG SWISS MISS PIES ................. :'.'~l 31' OCERll:Y, APPlf , MINCE. PUMPKIN BUllDT CAKE lllES PILLSBURY ~vAa1m1s 10.3/lOOZPKG 7gc F OR A DDITIONA L SAVINGS CANNE D FOODS oriASPARAGLIS SPEARS .. ?'.:\•,~t: 73 ' oAMUSHROOMS ............ ~'·~a~': 52 ' WHOlf , SllC£0 oAMIXED BEAN SALAD ... 11·.a~:.~ 45' oABIG JOHN BEANS ....... ,., .. ~~~ 34 ' GREEN BEANS ................ ?'.:r,;'~ 26 ' KfTOtfN sucro f"RiNCH STYli oAROGERS PETIT PEAS .•.•.•• :~; 28 ' oALADY LEE SPINACH ......... ~Ji 25 ' oARE*LEMON JUICE ........ ,.~'!':\~ 53 ' oASUNSWEET JUICE ......... ,,;:~~ 50 ' oAWELCH 'S COCKTAIL ... ~':~l~~: 69 ' t!ILLS ~ .,. --/ CANNED FOODS - AXIM tOFF~E ~'.~'.~!~.~r.,: 1.79 !INSTANT GOFFEE .~il~~f.1 1.16 HILLS BROS. ............. ,.,~~: 86 ' EllCTRIC PERK, REGILU. OIUP HILLS BROS ............ ~f~: 2.52 ElfCTlllC PEJIC OR RJGULAR ' ' . KEY BUY TOllTO JUICE LIUY'S A.OUNCE CAN 2gc F'OR ADDIT IONAL S AVIN GS , I 800fll1f 7 ' STRAINED BABY FOOD ....• v.aZJ AR STRAINED JUICE .............. m;'~ 7' JUNIOR BABY FOOD .......• ,~~ 11 ' oriTOMATO JU ICE ............. ~r'd~ 32 ' ' oriTOMATO DRINK ......... ~J,~~ 57 ' SLICED TOMATOES .•.•• :'.".':t.~~·~,'t!~ 29 ' PEANUT BUTTER .............. 'i.1~\~ 98 ' ClflAM Y CHUN!CY ' lrlBEVERAGE MIXERS .. ~i'~~r::l 20 ' SWEET PICKLES OIL MONTI! MIDOR 12-0ZJAR 5gc oABEVERAGE MIXERS .. ,':"~0a~':i: 'l9 ' ~OUR VARIETlfS orlQUININE WATER ...... :~·~~z':i: 35 ' orlCRISCO SALAD OI L ..... t.: 2.25 DOLE PINEAPPLE ................ :'Ji 39 ' CHUNKS. CRUSHED. S\ICED ' HOUSEHOLD ITEMS orl KLEENEX TOWELS .. -.. ~~-'?;~;28 ' C 0 0 K I N G BAGS .....••.... ~o'c"'a1..':'~~ 4 9 ' CANNING WAX. .....•..•...... ::~~~~ 25 ' oriMR . CLEAN CLEANER .. ,.~~:~~ 69 ' SPIC & SPAN ............. ".".".~~.'~r:g: 97 ' BIZ PRE-SOAK. ............ ':'."~;.~: 1.07 LAVA HAND SOAP. ............. '.:e:l 14 ' IVORY BAR SOAP. .............. ~:~~ 12 ' PIE FILLllll COMSTOCK CHE HY 21.0ZCAN 4gc . ' -LOOK FOii THE lllY IUYll "K•y Buyt " 01'9 extra soVlfl.91 made possible ~y . manufacturers ' tern· porOry promotlonal ollowonce1. NII KARATE AFTER SHIVE HIGH SEAS AFTER SHIVE BRUT 33 SPLASH 011 A maacullne fr og· 7 OZ.. ranee preferred $ 219 by many athlete•. $139 4 oz. 40Z. COLOGIE 5 I 9\ A brisk ne'.J, sce nt with the tong of the high 1901. 4 oz.$143 SPRI Y 7.ox. DEODORllT s 129 1LADIES' PRO HAIR BRUSH SETS AQUA VELYI anER SHIVE A fresh , clean scent of $199 I~ gr.at outdoors. AQUA VELVA COLO&IE SJ 37 ~ '·' . ~FLICKER LADY ·f ; )l S~~~. ~.~~!,~R hair, not skin. s 111 COSMETIC BIG S 68' ' ' I . ' Set con1it1 of a tapered comb and matching Mlrbrush with • 67' curved brittles for brushing tn'li noturol·lookinO."fllp." OLD SPICE BLICK OR BROWll .• ~. l!.!E~z. ~Hll~~ ~-·· ~~~.~~~~~.s ~ for glamor •v••· '••\loo O LD I PICl ---COLOGIE s1 s1 -77' 4.7 SOZ. ' ' PACKAGED GOODS oriSNAtK (:RACKERS .. ~.·~'.".'.'1~,V.1;'J 46 ' -~ICE CHEX CER_EAL .•....... ,:~:g:49 • orillPTON'S MIX ........... .'~~1°6,'°:0 34' ONION, TOMATO, BR"F HOODU. 041CKtN MOODl.E, PIA DEL MONTE PRUNES ........ \~'t,'~ 53' 1 KRAFT SNACKS. ............ :~'.'.'.~l'i.~ 41' II BACON . GARllC. HICKOllY WOKf, SHARP PET FOODS I DOG CANDY. .......•........... '.~'~,~~ 'l9' oASKIPPY PET STEW ........... '.~ 16' oAKIBBLED FIVES. .... ~~:.,~~= 34' 'TOillTO SAUCE HUNTS 11.QUNCl 1 •CAN 1sc F-OR ADDITIONAL '-,/'l VING.._, DAIRY PRODUCTS oriROD'S DRESSING .•••• ?:':-:'.~~ 39' oriSOFT ~ARGARINE. .... '.~'.~~ 47' PREMIUM ICE CREAM .•••• ~:;:79• BEV ERAGES • SPIRITS GOLD SEAL GIN. ..••••.•..•. ,."'....~7.11 • .. PIOOf 8 "" GOLD SEAL RUM ........... v.GAtm • .1."" llQll . GOLD '"' SCOTCH WHISKY .... .,-'?.'~':t9 ,77 LUCKY VODKA .............. ~i:i:7.11 LUCKY BOURBON ... ~:-i'ifJ;~~[C} .99 CANADIAN WHISKY .,.,O:~'tl 9 .44 AVAllABLE AT AU STOllES Wmt UQUOll D(PT. . LADY LEE llYOllllSE 32.QUNCI JAi 53c FOR A D D ITIONAL SAVlf'..IGS w~Van de ~amp·s­ FRESH PIES • CAKES • ROLLS •AID BREAD 00 'llllll~WWWJ \YHWJ'WllJllJ LIQUID ~ AJAX CLEANER An oll i>utflO'• cloon•• 40.()% 11 C for floor. refrigerator, IOTTU · and oth.r turfoc:es . . . ·~ . I THE FOlllll& ~ AJAX CLEANSER • With special bleaching 21 C agents to remove tough 1c7""..z , spots a nd stains. A -----------------------CHRISTMAS TREES .FINEST QUALITY, · FRESHL' CUT I I • .DO~fttASs 1 ss IS LOW IS ••• OTHER V•RllTIES IYllLllLE IT LOW DISCOUIT PRIOES elohlt Fir • Sootoh Pint • S'hiart~ 8011111 FRESH FRIERS . 01112 ·· WNOl.I 100'1' • f. ' C.NIO:INl UNCONOITIOlllALL Y 9 c IOftDIO J'•·ILISA.VO, LI CHUCK ROAST UNC:~?:i~~!LlY 68 c 90NOl!D,Olt QUALITY ANO LI IU.VO ll: " ·VVfDITRUEa . . PPJQNG /IV EVERY DEPT. LADT UI SLICED IAC81 1-LI ,.ICO ' PORK LOii ..... ,.. 98 LAllGI! EWD liNCONDITIONALLY c IONOEO FOii OU•LITY·AH D LI ,L.VOI; , lXJR AEW P/la<AIL . ' ~ .. LET~ YOU SE~ MOST OF THE-SLICED Ow"-LADY Lii .... ..; ..... 1 ....... _ ... _ ... , oi ~ --· y .. . __ ,.,. __ -.... .,..__, ...... ROUND STEAK 98~ Cl!NTelt cut -.90fill UI, U•CottOITIONALL y at>NDIO ,Oii: QUALITY AND f"U.VOlt. FRYERS CUT UP l'lUMI' ANO JUICY, UIOICONOITIONALLY IONOllD lfOlt DUALITY ANO l"LAVOlt. : 34~ Cunr.11111·,01 Tll BE THE FINE ST DUALITY AVAILAB LE Fresh ... Discount Priced Deli Items ·otlQU""Ban·anas FRESH 1E11 sP11ouTs LB 19 cCHEESE sP1uu . ..::.:cY~1,. ·IMHO ., .. \ FORYOURFAVORtTECHINESEOISHES . ltDIVIOOAlLY.~D SllQS .. l-Ll ~G GOLDEN.,.. 11 c . HARVEST BAY BISCUITS •• CREAM CHEESE PHIU.DflPWlA ••••••• , , •• , •• &-OZ PKG FONDUE CHEESE '~~s I" BUNCHES aurrEftMJUC_()R SWEET MILK ••• l-<IZ ruu L• 11R&E CUC~llEllS 12c IATH SLICED HAM , CROWN Bit.AHO FROM SWITZERLAND • , .• , U.S.N0.1 Potatoes nESH,CRISP·FORTASTYSALADS ••. EA '""'o·'°'"NOWK"" ·····"°'""'12 RUSSET . 3-lb CANNED HAM '4" · ITILIAI DllJ = SALllE 10 58 C FIESI IUSlllOOIS .. ~'"'"" ········o;c;;·,..,;; ::.G I~ OUR LOW Dl~COUNT PRICE ...... LB 88 C Ul!~~I !~•ACK ..• ~ .. 1",'..lf:g S J lS s .. . -.0% otUI . " • . I 1 $.0% CHUI ••. SJ 62 la.1/2O:totUI 12" UllOI CYCLE ·10~SPEEP llCJCLE 10..pffd gear. racing hondi.bor j)l'lcl .al:Wle, centerpull handbrokff, t•'~ great feotu'!5- \· $66 97 IAIT llA1 •• , tl.a7 ' ' POP.Viar polo type toddle ~I~ 26" broce • com• tn glltter white colOr. s491 CllROIE ELEC. 10111 SJ27 WHm IALANCBI DELUIE 2-IULI &EIElllTOR SET 2 lxilbt w/dlm •witch, chrome tail lonip w/ruby reflector, dlrome heavy-duty dynamo. a 111,'I SIAYE SET BY MINER Plold ,.ny1 k• hOlduofo toy s 1 s1 rnorP'uso••t. 1roomlng Items. -. Clllll llEICTIOI I V IRADlEY Magnetic punt. game by Milton lroefley ; fu n for kids & odult1. .\it'" IEllEl'S YlllETJ PICK Set of .i bottle• of Mennen Skin $197 Bracer In gift pok. DISIEJ DOUI I Y CHEM TOY Complete with molcb, ln1tructlon• for S J 57 rnoklng popular Walt Ol1ney charocter1. W~T DISNEY l'ttOOUCTIONS ' ClllllSTIAS &OLDEI llOKS IY WEnlRN PUI. 3 2 chooae from 011orted C Chrlttmot 1totl ... IEllEl'S PHOTO .CUBE l'lo1tic photo cube hos 3 bottles of Skin Bracer. SJl9 IY Pl A YSKOOL Rugged bong bench w/motlet and 8 s 1 '' poundl{lg peg1. ClllllSTllS COLIR IOOKS IY WESTERN l'UI. 151/z"PLUSH STOCKll& To fill with trinket. and other. goadle1. 14" HOT PANTS $ J 29 Cht11tm9s hong-up ., .• ,.,,, 14" U.CJ.TllMMID S J 2' Hot Pont• hang-vp •. , , • , , , , ,. .. JA-111 S J 29 Chrl1tmo1 h,ong-up •• , • , •• , APRIL SHOWEllS Fragrance Trio • 79 C Sachet, •proy, perfume gift set, . DISlft JLOWD 01n sn ..• tl.M ISSOllTED KllT HEIDWUI . Ill &LIYES l oy•' knit heodweor In o votlety of •tyle1 I cOlor1. s121 J(Nn OLOYll In 111•• 3..6 and 1l1e1 .. 14. A11t'dChrl1trno1plc· 32c tur .. to color or foUow-tM-dots. s32• lil.lllllllll.;;; .... 11111!!1"'1' .............................. ,l~ .. ~:::~~:J:~~~-~~~ .... ~-i:.~ .. ~M::-.u~•~l.~Q:it:=~.~-~ ... ~~: .. ::: .... ,. .......... L ' .. Ou lAOlltA •U • "''' 'lMONiti . 4• I. 11rMf fttlTll , 1J1" ~ ""'· .t 111 SI, th.,. ' •. n11r ' -• • • \A MIUIA . u ....... Ctt, SAN llllUIDM . U74J ...... St, W8x..q(. ,, .. u--. ... , Wlllll -I l l Sit. s ... < .. lh1; ••••• . ,,. •. lt ,.. ..... • ..... ,,, 1: .... ~ '""" IMI• Piil . lit•...._ •L CMIOOA 'All • 1tM ...... l ¥t. "c1,..1 ..... ...,...a.. l .................. IM. ....... GIOVI • 1Mt$ 1.clW St. GAIOIM GIO'fl • 11'11 M..-.11' it. OUMNll • llSS W. tlltMke It ... GUl .. ll • ; .. s.. <•llllel ••• , MIGMMD P•ll • 1JI, W. "''· 41 •nMGTM MAC•· tMI Atliilt9 ,,,.,,. ""'1t"''°" IUC• • , ... hlM c•k• It. • ' lAllWOOI • \lk1 .... Siii ....... Ctll. -Jt7l -M l ..... ••. 14411 S1. Mewthnit ...... l.IAMGAN lll·fU l.l11T-tlW. WWI • l , .. SAN j)&DfO • 16M Urit It. WBTMlllTll • ............. ., UMMOl • '°"' ,,.It 11 ••• M•t• A•• • JJ1't "· '"'''' '""m• ~ IMSS ... ,, "''· lTNWOOO • 1•72! Alllt1tk Att. SAMIA MMICA . 2627 llltcttil ... , nTmt • J 17M I. ........ ~ .. • IOMG II.KN • 6JJ$ I. 5'fliit SI, .. IOI nt .. • .. I. IOS MOlln • J40S (. ltffli"tt 1-..e. SOUnt OATl • J21 I flrt11-..... WUM* • 1 . ' MOM~IA • 4J2 W. Ht..ft"lft• Dft" """'° ltACM • 111S .,,.. ..... WIOIU• •W • ~Wlltwf ltt4,. -"'"" ·"' "· "''" :::l!:t: :!: ~"""',....!.":.:.''· STDllES OPEi 10 Al JtCMIWAll • 11t2t a1t• lhL • ' t SERVE lfAM PRETTILY A SECOND TIME Planned Overs A Budget-saver A glazed whole baked ham need not be an extravagance. For leftover ham is surely one of the most versatile of all meats when it comes tQ making salads, casseroles and sandwiches. It's good for a COU'ple of family meals and for the ma.in dish of a holiday party, too. When buying a whole or half ham, it's a good idea to have a recipe-for a party main dish already in mind for holiday entertaining. This makes for more economical use of the ham. A fruited r ice salad and a wine flavored sauce may be ser\'ed with sliced ham and are ideal for party service. Slices of ham may be ar- ranged arou nd the ring or cor· nucoplas of ham slices with pineapple may fill the center. The gourmet type sauce is made with mayonnaise and whipped cream and is flavored with guava or currant jelly, sherry wine and a judicious blend of other seasonings. FRUITED RICE RING 4 cups cold cooked rice 2 call8 ( 8 v, ounces) crushed pineapple, drained 2 firm bananas. diced 2/3 cup chopped celery 213 cup m1I mayonnaise 2 teaspoons lemon juice I teaspoon ground ginger Dash salt Dash pepper 8 slices ham (abo;ut 1 pound) Pineapple spears (optional) Toss together rice, pl.neap.. pie. banana and celery. Mix together mayonnaise, lemon juice. ginger, salt and pepper; toss with rice mixture. Pack rice salad into 8-inch ring mold. Press down. Chill. Invert and unmold. Serve with sliced tu\m or with ham cornucopiu filled with pineapple spears . Garnish as desired. lt1akes a servings. FLUFFY SHERRY MEAT SAUCE ~2 cup real mayonnaise 2 tablespoo.M lxirseradish 2 tablespoons guava or cur· rant jelly I tablespoon tarragon vinegar 1 teaspoon prepared mustard Dash salt Dash Tabasco sauce 1.2 cup heavy cream, whip- ped I tablespoon dry sherry f\fix m a~ n n a·i s e and horseradis Stir jelly to soften ; ad to ma}'(¥UUllse mixture. Stir in vinegar, mustard, sail and Tabasco sauce. Fold in whipped cream. Just hfofnre serving add sherry. S0 • .. ,. with hot or cold sliced ha~ :-,l'lkes I~ cups. From little Acorns, Tempting Dish Grows Colorful, plentiful, nutritious and economical. T h a t ' s squash. This perennial vegetable favorite can have a special new look. Top ihJck, golden s1ices of acorn squash with I i g h t sausage stuffing, a moist mi1:- ture of herb seasoned croutons and crumbled sausage. 1be croutom add a special blend of eight btrbt and spices to the zeSty sausage navor. M a final touch, crisscross pimiento Strips over each stull- fing mound. The result is an Ideal luncheon entree o r vegetable combo. SAUSAGE Sl1JFFED ACORN SQUASH 2 medium-size acorn squash, 5 inches In diameter 1 lb. bull; pork sausage J~ cups hot water or broth 5 cups herb seasoned Cn>Ulms Pimiento strips Wub squash: remove ends. CUI each Mjtwh Into 3 ~ices crostwlR; remove seeds and flben. Place slices o n ungrused baking sheet. llalte In 319 dqree oven about 30 mll'lllel. - MtlDWhlle, cook sausage in large frypan over medium heal unill ll&blly browned, crumbllll& WIUJ fqrk, Remove lrom hut. Stir In hot waler. Adil herb teasoned croutom, "'8ttng gently' unll1 croutono an ~ and lhorooghly molltalell. Sel hide. · Remove . ~sh ftt'.lm oven: 11 turn baked slices over. Lightly pack stuffing into I cup Por· tions. using dry measure. Place sau.sage-crootons mix- ture in center of each slice. Return stuffed squash to oven; bake 30 minutes kmger or until squash is tender when tested with fork. Serve hot, garnished with pimiento .strips crisscrossed over top. Eggs-pert Snacking DILL EGG SNACKS 2 hard-oooked eggs, chopped I dill pickle ,chopped Dill pickle Uquid 2 tca!!poons spicy brown prepared mu!ltard \ti teupoon onion powder Dash taba.sco lit pound' medium mushrooms or i rlt. celery · Mis egp, pickle, 1 tealpoOll pickle llquid, mUllard, onion powder and tabaoc:o; chlD. Remo ve 1tem1 from mushrooms ind dip e1ps ln dill pickle UqWd; u 1 e mushroom stems tn tome other recipe. FIJI mushroom CIPI w1lh egg mla.ture, or spread, mix· ture over wtde end of ceWy cut to 4-lnch leng\11. About 17 calories !or a llul· fed mushroom and ll calorlel !or the celery snack.) . :t [1 I ;, . II ' I.' ~' i', l .. • I • ' • . . I • I • • I • I • I I ' • • l I • i r ' • ' 1 • t • • • • • ' . • ' . • • • . . .. .. • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • • .. • . ~ ' • • ' • ~ ~ ~ ~ • ' • ~ 1 • a ' . 82 D41LYPJL0l WtdntSday, Otctmber lJ, 1912 Wedntsday, December 13, l'Jn PILOT.ADVERTISER Home News and Views , Somethin' From Oven M·ay Not Say Lovin' If You Overeat ,, U)' DOROTHY WENCK time -that 1s. v.·hat they will the baking proces:s by using cooling. Then slide on a new cookies baked we.II ahead oJ simpler and requires less cookies soft. How should they mlnutes. A wedce of apple do and how they will do it. cont inuously as possible to sheet of foll with cookies for Christmas week, but um freezer !!pact, but you will be stored? tutked into the contalntr wlU OraoKt. County llomt Advbor Also , take time at the begin· s;ive fuel nnd llme. For ex· the next batch. wondering if they will taste then have to take lhe time to A. Soft cookies and crisp help keep sotl cookies to/t. Cookies are lo\'c. Cookies ning to organize your work ample, if you have only two This , way you can work lresb, Would It be better to bake the cookies sometime cookJes should not be stored Q h ld .,_, are Christmas. And cookies areas so that you will have coo!.:ie sheets you can speed up ahead by preparing several belore Ute holidays. Baked together. For each type use a · l ave llll O coo- everything thats' needed the daking process by using foil sheets of cooJdes. The foil freeu them? cookies khould be carefully separate container with a tight recipe whJch call! for cake are calories. f I ml f ·1 t d ed be ed A F . d h l Sho fjM•r. I ••n'I f•'nd •••• nM•• In [ ·r th t d' rolling, plan to use the oven as sheets o a u nu1n 01 . cu to oos not ne to grcas . . rcez1ng oes e p main-packagllA and wrapped for fitting Ud. ( rtening cans ,... ... -........ In niany ami •es e ra 1• you begin. If several tasks 1trc fit the cookie sheets. When the cookies are cool they tairl the freshness or cookies, lreezing"":flO that they won't get and. plastic ice cream con-the 1tore.' Could I \lie ftaular lion of baking Christmas gWng on at once -like mix-Place the cookies to be bak· will peel right off and the foil and most cookies (except bro1ttn_1tn the freezer. Coo.kies tai.ners make good c<l;Okle con-flour lnstesd? cooklcs is one which the whole ing, rolling and cutting, and ed on the foil and slide the can be reused . take a!JOUt 10 to 15 mlnutl!s to taioer1.) A. In place of cake flOur YOU:, f meringue tyeps) freeze W>ll. .n famlly enjoys. For them cookie rosting -set up separate \vhote sheet on the cookie thaw. U crisp cookies soften you. can use sifted .,.. ~ baking offers an outlet for centers for each .,.,'Orker. sheet for baking. When the QUEST 1 0 NS \VE Altt: You can freeze cookies either can recrisp them by popping flQtJr. Measure 1 cup o( lifted creative skills for children as SAVINGS cookies are done, immediately ASKED baked or unbaked. Q. I havt a problem keeping them into a preheated 300 all purpoM flour, then remove well as for mother and pro-As your production line gels pull the foil and cookies Qff for Q. I would like to get my Freez.ing the dO:Ugh i s crisp cookies crisp and soft degree oven for a few 2 level tablespooru1. vides a supply of "caring"l----....:...---==------:_::.---'--------'---=-----''----'----"---.:...::.--'--'--'-_:..:---=....::._------_:..::.::=:......---_:----------------_;,----- gifls for family and friends. In other families the cookie making tradition may have become a time consuming burden during an already over;;busy time. And the huge 'batches of cookies -while they are eaten and enjoyed - supply many more calories than family members really need. If )'1)ur family is in the sec· ond category, m a y b e you should reevaluate your holiday tookie making tradition . Perhaps this )'ear you should select ji:.st a rew recipes or the cookies that are the real favorites. Making f e w e r cookies will save you both time and calories. SAVE CALORIES If your family is in the first category, you may want to streamline vour cookie pro- duction svstE?m to save time and eneriY. You save calories by giving the cookies to some- one else to eat! Begin yoUr cookie pro- duction by carefully selecting good recipes. Then make a list of all the required ingredients and check your supplies so that you get everything you need before yau start baking . Nothing is worse than to run out of some vital ingredient in the middle or the job . DOVETAIL TASKS The next step Is to make some kind of a plan for your order or work so that you can combine and dovetail tasks. For example , if sever a I recipes call for chopped nuts . why not gel all of the nu! chopping out of the way first ~ven the night before. And if .J:>me dough needs chilling ~ore rolling and cut· ting, this should be made first and put into the refrigerator to chill while you mix up other batches. If you have helpers, include their la;slts in your work plan. Be sure that they know what's expected of them ahead of Beef Tips Simmered ' Thin slices of tender beef and !resh mushrooms are served forth in a stylish sauce in this recipe designed by the Beef Council cooking experts. Apple and banana give the mildly seasoned curried sauce an intriguing flavor. Two pounds of protein-rich beef will amply serve six when fix· ed in this delectable way . GOURMET FILET TIPS 1h c up each diced onion and celery 1 apple, diced with peeling 2 bananas, peeled and sliced 11-i teaspoons curry powder ~~ cup butter 1(4 cup flour 2 beef boulllon cubes 2 cups hot water 3 teaspoons !alt 'A teaspoon pepper 2 pounds beef filet tips '4 cup cooking oil 1 Y.z cups sliced mushrooms 2 tablespoons dry sherry (optional) Slowly cook onion. celery, apple. banana and curry powder in butter until tender. _Add flour . Cook, stirring con· stantly 4 minute!. Add bouillon cubes dissolved in water. I leaspoon salt and pepper. Cook, stirring 5 minutes. Put sauce through sieve or whirl in • blend er until smooth. Slice beef thinly. Brown quickly in hot oil. Remove from skillet and sprinkle with remaining 2 teaspoon salt. Saute mushrooms. Co mbine with beef, sherry and sauce. Serve over rice. Serves 6. Beef Basics Ttle protein and mineral cooi.nt or beef II high and ~ ln the dlell of your family. C.lifornla Beef Council uperts su11e1t watchln& the newspaper ads !or lhe best buyl or the week. Sumptuous beet Joaf ls always popular ind la perfect for -I luneh llllflwlcllfo, Try. Ulll1 -bolll and ollsple<! - In '°"' ta-lie bulc re<lpe 1otr .. lnlrliiilnl 11 a v o r cba• liolidav meat master meats caiiior~an Tom Turkey .•• 33 Come to Ralphs for a Complete selection of holiday meats-from poultry It.ems, including fresh or fr ozen turkeys, to ham and roast beef. AJl J{alphs turkeys, leg of lamb and rib roast come v.1ith pop-up cooking gauges for perfect roasting . Csllfomllll Hen lll'lley ... 87 ~ . ----- V.l.OA 0.... A-f--will'I o..rvtM ••cloo.n.. &lolllot G- Ralphs Premlann Tom Turkey II-Prlmlln Hens Beel Shoulder , ... 98 Round Bone Roast Lean Tender 8••1 Roast , .. 1.09 Boneless Chuck Beet Rump with Pop Up Tender TlmH Boneless Roast ••. 1.29 HlifDoi on • Stick "' .79 Com Dogs Karo'•-H••I 'n E•I R>. .59 Fish Sticks Gins & Uodhas Ralphs E1clu1lve Sandra Vodka .. ,.2.99 80 Proof Smimoff Vodka IO Proof Kamchatka Vodka IO Proof Crown Russe Vodka Ralphs Exclu!IJV• Lakeshire Gin London Dry-to Proof Gllbeys Gin lniport•d-14 Prool Beefeater Gin ••• 5.09 ,, .. 3.89 ftfth 3;79 ,,.,2.99 l;fth 4.89 f;fth 8.88 Blended Whishies S&agram's ''7'' crown 5.39 II Ptoof Kesslers 4.75 10 Proof Fleishmann's PreferTed .... 4.85 IO Proof Sunnybrook ... _ four Roses ..,_ Walkers Imperial llfth 4.19 ••• 5.39 lff\h 4.99 ::M~\(\l~d1l1~l1l.l{\!l!WMM£~'£f, """ ,,., ~ ....... ;M Wiit! CcMlpon ,;::: .... AJax "'"' ""' 12 ,,... ..... .... ~ Clelnlar 11 OL • ~ ~ pkg. tp.... :fi OftlyOMCo.pOCl,.~Cu1tom~ ~ ...:::;. Coupon Etfeclf.,. Dec. 1f..Dec. 20 §:::--~ ''lii'! ' . ~ Biii~iiim .. 1.39 Bv111111 Hm llcea .. 1.88 - ... 37 ii¥;Jealiiii'Tiiitffii-kir-:45 .. A1 Savory llaltld .._ Tll'lllY ... 49 Beef Rib "' 1.59 U.S.D.A. Gl'lde A-&o.rttHn Club Steak Fryers ... .29 Bonele•• Beel Grade A-Daya Freahar Top Sirloin Steak "" 1.88 •hole .37 Cslif. Fryers ... Beef Loin Norbe•t-Young-Grade A Bottom Sirloin Steak ... 1.79 .39 Turkey Hindquarter ... _._._,i_tend.ertoln -Whole lb, 2.89 '• Armour-Gtade A-10-12 lb. •VI· Fillet Mignon Stuffed Turkey lb. .69 Jimmy Dean-1 lb. roll Honeysuclde-Orede A Fresh Sausage • ... 93 Turkey Breast lb. .89 liolidav Spirits Ralphs is your Holida y Hospitality Headquarters. See us first for your Holiday needs. A complete selectio n of imported and domestic \Yines and champagnes for the Holiday seMon. Buy an assorted case of 12 or more quarts or fifths and saYP 10%. ... _ Bourbons Straight Bourbon Jim Beam ,, .. 5.39 t8 Proof ISoutbon Earfyllmes R•1Ph• &Clual••-S8 Proof Kentucky Squire 88 Ptoof Bourbon Ancient Age 80 Proof-I Year Old Old Glenwood Walketa -111 Ptoot Ten High II Proal Old Crow Ofth 5,49 ••• 4.19 ••• 5.38 .... 3.79 ... 4.46 nnn 5.39 Canadian Whiskies II.I Proof Saagrams v.o. ftfth 8.95 H .8Prool Canadian Club ••• 8.95 80 Ptool Black Velvet . lff\h 5.39 IO Proof Windsor Canadian ~6.59 Wines & Champagnes Rtgul•r-Pink-Cold Duak Chataau Padta Champagne 1.89 LeDomalne G 8 Champagne ... '· 7 Jacque• Bonet Champagne Cht1tt11n Broth•r1 Champagne Regul1r, Pink or Cold Duck Lejon Cham·-pagi-ie ChabH .. hrgundJ,hutem .. Roae, Pink Cltabll• Old Momerey Wine ... 1.88 ... 4.28 ... 2.48 .~r 1.96 Rum & Brandies Light or Dark Bacardi Rum Ralph• EJ:clu1t.1 Don Juan Rum Br•ndy Christian S.O. Rtilphl Ezdnfye Montclair Brandy ... 4.99 ... 8.69 """6.49 .... 8.88 A fine selection of Beef Roasts Frw•h Ealt9m-mlde Cid Pork Chops .... 78 LuerFl'Uh-loz. pkg. UnkSausage .... 38 Sllced-tlb. pkg. Rath Bacon .... 84 Rath-,_ett Tr:IJtt Smoked Dalntee .. 1.48 WMtem Stfte-lmett Cooked Shrimp 10.1.88 lialf Gallon Specials S••• .50 Old Crow Bourbon ,. ... 11.49 s ••• .50 Ten High Bourbon Se\te 1.00 Scoresby Scotch ...... 9.86 .... ,9.96 S•Ye .41 Crown Russe Vodka "•"" 8.88 ..... 1.00 Christian Bros. Brandy,.'1'11.97 S•v• .ti Kamchatka Vodka .... L 8.88 ••••2..00 Cutty Sark Scotch \lgoL 18.89 Scotches Ralph• ExchillM-lt Proof Royal Regiment ... 4.49 ....... Cutty Sark ..,, 7.78 II ProOf Lauders Scotch R•lplle b:clu11ve-eo Proof Sandy MacAllister II PtOOf J&BScotch 11.IProol Cluny Scotch II.I Proof Johnnie Walker Red ·~B.29 ·'~6.68 ftlth 7.80 ... 8.58 ... 7.80 Suaer hol. vii shes· ' RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: aao E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA; 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 s. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER; STORE HOURS: 9-lU DAILY, 9-9 SUNDAY 17261 17th ST., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM LA~UNA HILLS, 24167 PASEO OE VALENCIA , " -. (, \ 1 ,_ - WtdntWy, 0.C~r l), 1972 DAILY PILOT 6 :1 Kentucky's Burgoo T·una Fills Quick Stew CANNED TUNA: A CONVENIENT TIME-SAVER Holiday Baherv Ralphs Super Bakery has captured the spirit of· Christnlas with plum puddings and otberfestivesurprises. 111•19h•-2 LAiy.,-r Santa Claus Cakes .... 2.39 Ralphs-Dlnn•rTr••t Brown 'n Serve Rolls Ralpha-Fruh Baked Pumpkin Pjes Ralpha-L.Joht or Dark Fruit Cakes pkg. of12 •• ,,,. .35 .79 Ratph1-Hollday Favorlt• Pfeffemuesse Cookies·~:~ .98 Ralpha-Fresh Baked a• Mince Pies ...... 79 Whit• or Wheat. S•ndwk:h Of Spllt Top Ralphs Bread .::.~~ .37 R1lphs-Assorted i.:.-..2.0 1 89 Holiday Butter CooM::..:~: • Ra~ha-Oki Fasl'lloned Rye Bread A1lphs-Dellc5o111 24oz. loaf Lemon Delight Cakes .... Ralphs-Christmas Holly Coffee Cakes . ..,. .39 .89 .59 Holiday Deli Ralphs Super Deli is filled with everything ·vou'l l need foi' holiday meals and parties. Ready to serve salads, cheeses, cold cuts, dips, egg nog and lot• of other festive foods. Ralph•-C,..my Rich Montlrey Jack Cheese .... 98 Dubuqu•-Oval canned Ham .... 9.98 Rath-King She All Meat Franks .· 11b. .79 Country Styfe or B~k: Pillsbury Biscuits • OL .10 Hk:tlOfJ Smoked-Serve wtth Dolt Plnnppl• 8 19 Rath Canned Ham .... • Danota-lmported. PNIMCI Sliced Ham .... Maxola-4 Stieb Regular Margarine , ... Flal.chm1nk-2Tuba Soft Margarine ' '"· kraft-AB Ali.on-Whipped Cream Cheese ••• fioliday Dairy A•al0kl'Tlm9Goodneu Ralphs Egg Nog ..... Vita P•kl-Pure Orange Juice .. ... .49 .48 .48 .35 .47 .83 The French have lheir bouillabaisse; the Hungariam their goulash, and Kentuckians have their burgoo. This delicious stew of mixed meals and vegclables takes hours to prepare ln the tradi- tional manner. Bul tuna brings a navorful burgoo to your table in minutes. Tuna comes right from tbe can with no waste. Vegetables for the slew are sauteed in Fresh Flowers Holly f"rnh Pack•ged Mistletoe ....• 25 4 to5 Bloom-Foll Wr•pp•d with Bow 6'' Potted Poinsettias FolfWr•pped 4" Potted Poinsettias Fon W111PPed with Bow 6'' Potted Mums Foil Wrapped with Bow 6'' Potted Azaleas Fresh Cut carnations Beautllul Holiday Mixed Bouquets Colorful Marguerite Daisies .... 2.87 .... 1.47 .... 2.97 .... 8.97 buoch 1.27 ..... 1.21 bunch .97 FrH-Lemon L••f wtth Purch••• of Fr••h Cut Flow1tt Holiday Decorations Chrlsbnas 2•u•••••"-LightS ~~.:!'""~:~2.99 15 Ugh 0 t Sets-From GeMl'lla.ctrlc-lncloof 2 28 Chnstmas Lights ... • Aero•ol Can -U.L ApproYed Spray Snow 130L .38 ... Your Chokti-.51 Yalu• FoM Icicles-Angel H1lr-Plastlc11nHI Tree Decorations pkg •• 38 canned tuna 's own 0 11. Tuna Burgoo is an in- expensive treal, too. Even when tuna is not on sale, it ls still a low cost food. And it contains tbe same com- plete protein as that found in lean meat -an important consideration \\'hen planning meals! TUNA BURGOO 2 cans (6'h or 7 ounces each) tuna in vegetable oil I medium onion, sliced ·~ cup chopped celery I can t I pound; slewed Lo1natoes I can (IO'tl; tu 11 ounces) condensed Sc1.llch broth I cup water I t ea s po 'O 11 1nonosod1u1n glutamate I.Ii teaspoon salt I package (IO oncesl frozen okra, or l package 110 ounces frozen green beans fioliday Produce ,SnetJuicy r.;elos Del~loua C:O.Chella Whtie Grapefruit Large St•lk1 Fresh, Crisp Celery Large Slze-Callloml• Fuerte Avocados AU Purpose Callfomf• Pippin Apples Freeh, Tops Removed CaJTots Fresh loc•llJ Grown Romaine lb. .10 ..... 10 ..... 19 ..... 29 "· .19 ..... 10 ..... 15 Thick Y•llow Meet.cl Banana Squash , ... 07 ~~~ r;"'~~o;;J...'?./.';/,.. 0 r~F#YO~~ _lfl BER RALPHS 0 ~ GIFT CBITIRCATES NOW IN AMOUNT & QUANTITY OF YOUR CHOICE THE SUPER GIFT CALL MR. LOVE• 487-0011 EXT 300 Ralphs combination of SUPER BUYS and EVERYDAY LOW PRICES is the best way we know to keep your grocery bili down. Oceen SpraJ Str.!Md or Whole Cranberry Sauce ",~~.24 HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS A~ular Dial Spray Deodorant NN-Paln R1ll1I Disolve Aspirin ~:; .49 "'' 71 ...... liquid Movtltw1NI 24 oz. 1 48 Scope boltl• • NoD1ma-P191., M9'tlflol"orUrne 11 oz. 87 Medicated Shave "" • Clalrul-N°""1ll Olly Het1>al Shampoo LOftt I Siiky Conditioner Lotion Te...,...ary ledu,ed Price. Mle• cta1rul-H11rooJoflng •-lactoren Special ~llowan<e. Shampoo Fonnula • _____________ _. h. Otyor PowcMf-SPl'•J' . An1d Anti-Pe!splrant .:~ 1.18 .::; 1.58 .... 1.58 •.: 1.28 .AtfOrlM FlaYWS Gelatin Jello Desserts ...• 11 ..... FROZEN FOODS Pal Rltz-Appl1, Mlftteor Pumpkin Pies 8lrd1ay1-Swtggi. Cool Whip G1pn Glllnt-MrlmW casseroles SlmP'of:-Huh ero.. Potatoes ....... Macaroni & Cheese 01• SO¥tti-AleortM Fruit Cobblers Cert! F,..1h-Br91'def Fish Sticks Simplot-Pot.ton Tater Gems .. ""' ...... .... ..... .... 1foz. .... .... .... , ... p~g. ,. ... .... ,. ... pkg. .34 .55 .45 .25 . 39 .89 .87 .25 GotdM WholeKMlll Mb lets Corn 1:ZOL ... PANTRY FILLERS Hma-An Grlltd• Ground Coffee Eicept Oulnfn• water Canada Dry Mixers Heln1-Whola Sweet Pickles Depoatt Bottle Coca Cola Heln1-011a1 Al'Mf1cen Tomato Soup Go6den0raln Macaronl & Cheese Honnel-Wlth 11ar11 Chili Con Came Hlll1-A11 Qftndl Ground Coffee , ... "" .. ... -..... ..... .79 .29 .89 .22 150L 23 .... .19 ".: .85 !.".; 2.31 Prices Effective Dec.14 Thru Dec. 20,1972 . . f&'-EVERYI>AY LOW PRICES HOUSEHOLDNEEDS BarSMp Irish Spril)g Dettrg•nt Cold Power , .... Ajax Cleaner 14 Co11nl-WlthShMPMW Crayolas Vlnyl-Le1ttt.r Ut• Photo Albums Protea Af•lnst Gr••se Splatter Screen W•arE'l'lt~CMf AY«Mo Of Gold Teflon Fry Pan WMlf'l'er-lupwOlaf A'fOUdo or Gold Telloft Super Pot & Cover comp.ala. 15 .. .. ~::: .70 ~.55 ..... 88 -· 1.89 •Kit .88 10"1b•3.88 ·~ ... 9 88 all:• • HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS FROZEN FOOD PANTRY FILLERS PANTRY FILLERS PANTRY FILLERS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS ---Kotex T1mpon1 --.... MO>_• .. H-Shavin9 Exp•rl•nce ·~-Rln•• or Sh1mpoo -Colgoto 100 -· ... l-DeHrt Flower -BabJ LoUon °':::1.19 ,~~ .93 .::,; .95 a:.:, ..II .::.n ..::.12 N-Whlpptd Topping C:ffll"'••-...... Fried Sole ---Meat Ple1 lrl.U'.-·--Frult Drinks Doz 01..0 HotSl/ees _...,.. __ Round Shrimp ",::: ..39 1!;: .71 !: .19 ·= .10 -..:: ,41 ... .:._1.4t -·-C1s• Sw•rn• Yams lltlll•Dn. C A H Brown Sug1r -B••fTemal•• l-U.-.- Brown Gr1v1 Mix ·-"""' Pe1nut Butter .,,., _ ... ar..- Dog Food .... 1• ·=-·:: .11 the .l!lm:r market ' ' o.1111"~,... • Hird Candy C:•H-~ Powd•red Sug1r ,.,c_... .. - W•••on 011 °'IOtM.. • S1rdlne1 -.c..--..... Tuna He~rs _ ... __ _ S1l1d Dl'ftelng ~ ... ~.11 =:.11 ~.: .31 "',; .55 ..:.: .47 ·-Rill Cr•ckera ..,,..,.., __ Cinnamon _...._Ir~ Saltine Cr1cktr9 ..., __ tf!I Coffff -Chopped Him ,._~ .. ,,... Gr1vy Makin• Mix ".;Al '~.: ..31 -.:: .38 •: 1.11 u,: .es ",:: .23 c....,__._ Dinner N1pkln1 """"'°-"'"'"'°"'Y Aluminum Foll . ..,..._,.~.,~ Liquid D•t•rg•nt ·--Z•• P1p•rTowel• --Bla•Ch --Zn Ton1t nnue ~.43 ,.~A7 ::; .45 "::.32 ..:: .37 '.: .37 ::li1l~~U\(\(\(i(~,(,!AD!lll£\(\f~M!~1i~lf ~ ---....:;:: S••• .20 WICtl Coupon ~ ~ Sflwc..-1 "°"",.,,. °' .::;--~ ~n 7·9 ~ ~p.... -. ~ ~ IH ,q. ~ ~ Otlly OM COlipoft '°' C111to1111, ?-.. 'WWil'i _ .......... ,, .. ..._,. • RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 3aO E. 17111 ST., COSTA MESA; 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMl!mll; STORE "HOURS: 9-10 DAILY, 9.9. SUNDAY 17261 17111 ST., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEM LAGUllA HILLS, 2416 ~ 11£ YAIPtCIA I' I - /! . ' l l ' • -· I package (Ill ounces ) tro£cn mixed vegl!lubles Drain 011 fru m I c11n ul tun11 into large saucepan. Add onion and celery; c:ook until 1ende, but noL brown. Add stewed tomatoes, undi luted S l' o t 11 broth. water. Ac'cent and sal1 ::i1mn1cr 5 rn1nu1t•s Slice okra ; add to ~uccpa n \\ ith mixed vegc·tables and luna. SimmC'r until vci.:e1 able!t are tender. about 10 1n111utc:-. f\1akc s ~ to 6 Sci'\ 1ngs Holiday Treats Rolled Persimrnons <ire "mu:;ts" among food s for the fest1v1· season. Even if they weren't so good to eat, you could keep the ni around to be decorative. Bul they arc delicious and add a11 exotic touch to breakfast for two or dessert for twenty. Persimmons arc \' c r ~ perishable when ripe and that's why your chances of finding eating-ripe oocs in th.- market are nearjy noncx· istent. However, persin1mons: ripen just as well off the tree as on it so the only probl em is you r wait between buying and eating. A ,t;. BUt here, you are in ~~ They ripen best at i"'OOh:!' temperatW'e, so let them color up the fruit bowl for a fey,· days. , . or a week ... ·.until they are soft , How soft is soft-for-eating: persimmons? For slicing in salads and fruit cup, as soft as a ripe tomato. But for scoop· ing out the ··n1eat" wlth o spoon, very soft and almo::;t jelly-like is just righl. You may never h.ave cooked persimmons. bul many good cooks use the pulp like ap-- plesauce in baked goods. Your blender is ideal for n1aki ng persimmon pulp . Wash , stem and quarte r the fruit and swish it into pulp. No blender? Use a food mill or rub persi mmons through a colander. Cooking persin1mons doesn"t appeal l.tJ you? Try a Persitn· mon Roll. \Vrappcd a n cl refrigerated, it keeps for days. .. weeks even. HOUDA Y PERSiw.10N ROLL I cup persi mn1on pulp 21'z cups graham cracker crumbs !.-\: cup chopped nuts 1 ~ cup flaked coconut IO dates. chopped fine 1use oiled knife or kilcl"M.!n shears) 20 miniature marshmallows, snipped in half 1 J cup mixed candied fruit Reserve one · ha Ir cu11 crumbs for coating. Mix re- maining crumbs and other in- gredients, working fruits and nuts evenly throughout. Spread reserve crumbs on waxed paper; turn fruit mix · ture onto crumbs; shape int o roll . aboul three inches in diameter, <.'Oating with crumbs as you work. ,wrap roll in waxed paper. re£rigerate and chill at lca.1;\ two hours. Slice and scr\'l" with hard sauce or whippr.d topping. l\1akes 10 10 12 ser\. ings. Meats Have A Nutty Top \Vc'\'c kept Apncot-Aln1untl Sauce \n Ollr file O( favori t1• meat sauces. but actually ii"-" a good dessert sauce. too. Serve it ovror plain custards. toastt'<i pound ca ke slicC's or vn nilla ll'r 1:rc;in1 for tJ delicious ho1nc-styJc dcsserl. As an cntrct~ snuct', it's best with fowl , hum or pork. APRtCOT-ALlttONO SAUCE 2 tnblcspoons sug:tr I tablespoon com.starch 'ii teri-spoon "!:!It I ran ~ 12 ounct!sl apricot n('('!ar 2 labl cspoom lemon juice 1 or 2 ta blespoons butter or 1nargarine 1·3 cup sllvtrcd al~nd~. toasted ~llx sugur. cornstnrch nnd sR ll in saucepan. Blend In apricot ncclnr. Cook , stlrrin1 O\"Cr 1ncdlu1n heet until n1i:o;· turc comes to boll and it thlckened. Stir In lemon Juice, butter and almonds. Se.nit wlth, chicken 01 turkey. or baked ham or roa.t pork. Mak.el .1 ~ CUp:t llUCI. ,, [ ,, • ( • • . • • • • ~ ·. . . • • • • • ' I I lj I l ' ' J . . • . . • • • • I I ' , . :· • • ' t • I ' ' l ' ! t r ' OAIL Y PILOr W~ay, Dtttrnbtt 1). ltn We believe we have . the best meat and the · IOwest meat prices. i I ·' \ FRYERS " - @) 1/4 SLICED PORK LOIN 11 to 14 CHOPS-CENTER CUTS AllD EID CHOPS MIXED 89~. FRESH GRADI A . 2 1 /2 to 3 lb. AVG. WJS. WHOLE BODY c lb. GROUND BEEF GOOD SO MAIT WAYS 69~ 3 lbs. 01 MORE 67c lb. RUMP ROAST ............... ,. ____ ............................ ,. 99c T·BONE STEAK ....... "'"""""·-·--·· .. --............. $1.59 7 -BONE R 0 As T ·--"""" CUT PDT '"'"·-.. -...... _ ••• "· 7 9 c PORK STEAKS ........ "'" CUT QUOC< , .......... --................. 88 c CUT-UP FRYERS,. ... ,.,,.,'" """--........ -.......... 3 5 c c HUCK s TE AK._ .... ""' CUT ........ "'" .... EtUE .... _ .. _ 7 9 c SLICED BACON REG ...... 98 c OSCAll MAYEll WAFEll THIN 'l °'······ TOP SIRLOIN STEAK $19S 80H£LES5 ..................................... lll. BEEF SHORTRIBS 64 c I.lit( Oft IAAISE. •••.•.•••••••••••.•••••••• 111. • ~.t~~l!_,~S ....... $124 BEEF STEW MEAT 98c I OJ<tELESS ................................... 111. CHUCK ROAST Sl 06 BOHELESS EXTRA LEAN ............. .ltt .. ~-~~-~!.R~§E!1c~~G~t>w~1b 79 c ~~Ef .. ~~.,0~,~,T~·~·~·· i 15 8 may_fair-p_riced produce ' . WASH. STATE IED 01 GO\DEI DELICIOUS . APPLES 5 lbs.sl ICEBERG LETTUCE WESTEllN GllOWN ........... ff ......... . TOMATOES CHIQUITA BANANAS. 11~. ' . ....... 29c FRESH CELERY . .CHUC ROUND ROAST ST£AK.1 ILADE CUTS PAM FIT 01 SWISS ~ POT ROAST OF IEEF IOlll 11 68f. 99f. HEN TURKEYS FROlEll u.s.D.A. INSPECTED 10to 121b. 3 9j. AVG. WT. " •• !2,~~~~!.~ .. tl~'!1~ . . ... ~ 11 s £." .. 9..~!~!.~~-~-o.~~! .. _ ..... -.. --~ 114 fo.~l§,tl,,ocP.96,ISuc~~~.~!... .. • S 8 C ~~~":_2: !;AM.~ ..... .... ··-· ... 9 8 c ~&_j)C PORK SPARERIB.S MEDIUM SIZE 8..U:E Oii •All8ECUE ....................................... . ~!~!~Ys R.t~ .. ~H.~~~-~~f !Lo 011 11E~L -'"·--............ -.... --......... --... ~.98 C !.~!'!KL§~§. '!a~ . .S.P.~f.J ... '"-·· .. . . ___ ::.:._. $15 6 BONELESS PORK ROAST 83c BOSTON BUTT GllEAT l"Oll llOTISSElllE ...• ,. .. , .. _., •••. ,. ·-···"'""""•"···-·-.................. !ti. LARGE GREEN SHillMP ...... _ ............ -... GOUllMET TAEAT ..................... .lb.S2.98 COOKED AND PEELED SHRIMP ..... fQft SALAD 011 COCICTAIL$ ........... lb.S2.44 FRESH OYSTERS ......... __ ................ _ ... 10 o •. J.a.11s MEDtuM s111 ••• -., ....... _, __ 98c ADVERTISEO PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS THURSDAY DEC. 14 THRU WEDNESDAY DEC. 20 RUSSET POTATOES 10 49~-POUllD CELLO IAG lb. SUlllUST NAVEL ORANGES. . 8 lbs.sl ~!'~N,1~~ ()~1~~~ ................ 2 •.. 29c ILICIHQ 1121 ........................... . ..........•. 29c llEO IAl«I ................ ft ........ -_ ............ , ........... 1sc ... 1oc ~l!~tU.'!~.1! .. _ ....................... 8 .!;. 79c FUl:Rl'E AVOCADOS 4 jl CAL I,, GllOWtol .• 1...... , ..... .................. FOFI BUNCH GOODS SALE! ]~RNIPS, BEETS, SPINACH 2 · 29C MUSTARD, SWISS CHARD, COLLA•OS au. CUCUMBE-RS LOHO GllEfN ................................. .. . ORLANDO TANGERINES 19c .JUM80 MZE ..... ft,.,,, .... , ................................... _ i., f.~~!!.~.~'.11'~~...... . ........ 1oc NAVEL ORANGES SWIE"T AHO .AJICY ................ . 8 .: .. 89c .•. sc !?,~,!;..C.Y.,CZ.,~!!i.~!'~""· .. •· ---... •. 29c ~~.?,~~~J.S ,., ...... . ... . ........ $119 We've .cut prices on 7.~42 items· :~~:~n~~t ~~~c~~ on mdeat, on product and ~n f f ousan s of canned goods . r~zen . oods and other grocery items We'v~ cu prices on 7,542 of the things most eo le ti bul most every tim'! they shop. But wetfave':.•t ~~ corners on service andwehaven'tcutqual-~ett~~. meat and produce . If anything, they're I11lfY.filir-P-riced .gmcery 1 . . . . . DEL MONTE Pine/Fruit Ori,. 46 Oz .• 35 , •' iMUCKl:tf 0....,.. Mil'TNlade 20 oi .. 50 Ii.ICED sMucKn 'Str•wblny ....... "". DOLE PINEAPPll: 18" 20 oz. · · ................... ·· ........ 1.!1 , cAH ....... : .................... • • SMUCKER Buttencotch Toppin1 •· 120z ................................ 31 CONTAOINA Tom•to P•ste 6 Oz ••• , •• 15 SMUCKER C•r•mel Topplnc 12 Oz •• , .31 REGINA Red Vlnea:•r 12 Oz, .•••••• ,, .28 SMUCKER Choe Fud11 Topplftl MILK BONE Fl•vor Snack 14 Oz .•••••• 28 12 Oz ....... , ...... , ................. 31 GORTON Minced Clams 61/;z Oz.,,, ••• 33 ~SMUCKER Pine•pplt Topplna: 12 Oz . .31 oc........ . 22 SMUCKER s1 .. wbe"Y Toppins 12 Or .• 3' ~~~~'!!l~s .. ·-···•, &~i ii&v TF'o'O"D'0 07 HORMEL T•rn.Je 15 O 33 • t.(IZ,.M.11 ...................... • L ••••••••·••• • ~· . ~ug;~.~~~ ~:r.'.~~ .~~~. ~.·.~~ ... .as ~~~~~~.~-~-~~~. ~~~-r. ·~ ••.. ~"Ti PILLSBURY C~M.caroon Sundt HUNT'S Skillet Stroc•noff DinMr ,,,, C.k•290z .......................... 15 170z. ····························-· .77 PILLSBURY Fud&t Nut Sundt C..kt HUHf'S Sklllet H•w•ilan Dinner . . 23 1A Oz ..•.••••••.••••••••••••••••• .85 15.1 Oz •....••...•...•.......•••••••• 77 ~~ f.~~~~:. __ ···-·• 5_5 ~~r~. ~~:::m~:':.~'.'. ....... ·" SUGAR TWIN Sweeter-.er 2.85 ••••••• .38 o"'R'A"NGE"jUiCE 23 NONE SUCH Ml~ Me•t 28 Oz. ,, • , • ,59 P 'ROWAX l Gol · 24 l·OZ. ······························• . .. ..................... . GOL~N GRAIN Noodle Rom•noff VAN DE CAMP' Enchll•dlis Bfff, 6 Oz ..•• , • , .. , , , .. , •... , .•. , .. , , • , , , .38 C.,.._, Chk:Un 71h o,. , ..... : ...... 37 GOLDEN GRAIN Noodle Parm 6 Oz. , .38 DOWNYFtAkE French Toast 11 lh Oz •• 45 KRAn Mlnlatu ... Marshmallows BANQUET Whole Fried Chicken 2# • J.55 101/2 Oz .•••••.••••••••••••..• •••· ••. 23 TREETOP Appia Juke 12 Oz .......... 45 GHIRADELLI 35 HAWAIIAN Red P'unch 12 Oz .••••••••• d CHOCOLATE CHIPS BIRDS EYE Oranp Plus 9 Oz •••••••• 51 NUC:•::·~:;~:~-;·~~:.:.~ ..... 37 ··::~heeH PlrH lO 38 ~~~~:=.~~:=2~~3.:::::::.~~:! ~ ~o~~~-.~~~-~~······• MAYFRESH Peaches Slic.d 21h ····· .31 MAYFRESH Apple Juice Gal. •..•••• 1.19 MAYFRESH Plr-.eapptt Juk:e 46 OL •• .29 VAN CAMP'S Pork Ii Beans 21/;z •.•••• .28 MAYFRESH w~ Kernel Com 12 Oz ... 19 MAYFR£SH Spinach 21h . , , , , , • , .... .30 &flEEtil GOODE SS 3 5 7 SEAS DRESSING l.(IZ, ··~· ... ~ .. ~·········· .. ········· • BEST FOODS Mayonlltise 16 Oz. , •••• 43 BEST FOODS Mayonn.ise Qt •••••••• a FRENCH Mustard '9 Oz. , , •••• , •• , , , , .21 MAYFRESH Oil 24,0z ••••• ,, •••••••• , .49 CHICKEN OF SEA Lt Chunk TUM 'h .. 42 STAR·KIST Lt Chunk Tun• 1/2 •••••••• 42 M~YFRESH Lt Chunk Tuna 1/2 ,,,,, , •• 40 HORMEL Spam 12 Oz .••••••• , .... , • .63 '""""" 23 CATSUP TOMATO !4·02 .....................................• CARNATION Evapor1ted Milk Tall • , , .20 GERBER Stnlned S.by Food • , , •••••. 08 GAINES Prime 72 Oz. , , ........... , 1.67 KEN·l·RATION Spec Cuts P1ttie5 48 Oz .•..... , ........ , .......... ,. 1.43 SKIPPY Dog Food Wet 15 Oz .••••••••• 11 PURINA LNer Ooa Chow 10 lb ••••• 1.48 MINUTE RICE 14 Oz .• , •.••• ,., .... , •. 53 NESTEA. 3 Oz. , ••••••• ,, •• ,,, •••••• 1.29 ' llEO, GllA"E 34 HAWAIIAN PUNCH ~-01 ................................... . BETTY CROCKER Cheeseburpr Mic Hambul'Jer Helpers 8 Oz •• , • , •.•• , , , ,5!5 BETTY CROCKER Betf Ndl Dinner 7 Ot ..••...........•..•••••.•••••••• .55 • BETTY CROCKER ChlH Tom Dinner 8 Oz .••.........••....••••.•••••••••• !1!5 BETTY CROCKER H1ah Dinner a Oz. , .!55 BETTY CROCKER Pot SVognf Dinner ' 7 Oz .•••.. , ..........•......•.••• , ••• 5!5 ".•".'""~". oilOWHEAT "OUl TRY 44 =:.:v ~~~~~,~~. • BETTY CROCKER Rice Or~ntal 61h Oz ........ , ..................... 5!5 WHEATIES 18 Oz .••••••••••••• ,, , , ••• !58 RICE KRISPIES 13 Or •••••••••••••••• !57 KELLOGGS Supr Frosted 20 Oz .• , . , .65 @)~[MP~~....... .24 . BISQUICK 40 Oz .• , ................. .56 MORTON Salt Pain Round 26 OL , •• ,13 CIH Grllnulat.d SU11r 2 Lb ......... .34 GOLDEN GRIDDLE Meple Syrup 240z .••...••••............•••••••••• n MAYFR£SH Gr8pe Jelly 20 Oz .•.••••• .o&3 MAYFRESH Rea & Drip Coffee l lb .•• 78 BRIM f,..n Dried Coffff 4 Oz .•.•• 1.25 MAYFAIR Green liquid Dish Dtt . 32 Oz, ............................... 49 - MAYfltESH Canned levereps 811ck Cherry, Che"Y Cola, Cot•, Grape, lemon llmt, Oraona•. Root Bffr, Troplcal '11nch 12 Oz ••••••. 10/.99 OAIRY ITEMS ~·t~~~~~ ... 4 7 ARDEN CotUil• pt •••••••••••••• , •• .37 • ARDEN lutt.r 1 lb, , •••••• n ., ••..•. Al • ARDEN tmftatlon tct Milk lf.t Gtl ••• , •• 37 ; ARDEN ~ Mnp Juice Qt ••.• , • , , .49 ARDEN Yoturt lf2 Pt ............... , .21 SWANSON TY Dinner, Sptattettl I Me1t lall112 OL • ,, ••.•.•• ,,,,,, • .!t Beans I Fr8nks 12 Oz.. , •••••• , •••••• .39 GREEN GIANT S.nctwtch Snick• 4 Oz . .37 BIRDS EYE hrtemaUonal Vec All Varieties 10 Oz ..................•. C9' MAYFRESH R .. Cut Green Be1ns 9 Oz ..........••....... · · · ··•· · · ···• .25 MAYFRESH French Cut leans 9 Oz .• .2S HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS \ SCHICK Platlnum Plus D/E lO's ••• J.J'~ l TECHMATIC Adjust Refill• !5'• •••••••• 79 ms Fem Hn: Spr.y Powder 3 Oz ••• 1.20 • FDS Ftm Hft Spny Ex Str 3 Oz .• ,. l.20.. ms Fem Hn: Spniy Rqular 3 Oz .•• 1.20 TAMPAX Rqular I O's ......... , ••••• .39 TAMPAX Suoer lO's ............. ,. , .39 LYSOL Sptty 21 Oz ............... , 1.79 SMA Liqukl: Baby Fomtula 13 Oz .••.• .33· ENFAMIL Re•dy-To-Use 6 Pack ... , I .Of VITA FRESH Vitamin c 100 Ma lOO's .!59 PALS Chew.ble Vitami ns For Children lOO's · ............................. 2.71 COLGATE F1mlly Toothptlte 1 Oz •••• 76'. CREST Ex L•ra:e Toothptst• Rec. 5 Oz .•.••.•.••.•••.•.•.....•..•••••• A7 CREST Ex Llirwt Toothpaste Mint 5 Oz ......•....•......•..... , . , • , ••• ,fit GUEM Toothp.ste &Lara:• 5 Oz .•••• 17 CLOSE·UP Toothptste Med Rqul1r 3 Oz ..•........................•.•••. 5t ClOSf·UP Toothpaste Med Mint 3 Oz .• 59 PEARL DROPS Tooth Polish Spe•rmlnt ......................... 1.17 PEARL DROPS Tooth Polish fh1ular 1.17 NYQUIL Cotd Medklne 6 Oz .••.•••• 1.11 CONTAC CapsuJes lO's .............. 9fi ALKA SELTZER Cold Tablets 20·s , •••• 99 VICKS fomtula 44 31A Oz .......... , .9!5 VICKS Va po Rub 3 Oz .......... , , •••• 9!5 Pl!Rl\JSSIN "us Cold Medicine 4 Oz ............................... 1.11 LISTERINE Thro•t Lo:rena:•s ...•...... 6] LISTERINE Throat Lozenlff lm Mint .63 LISTERINE Thrott lozena:es Or•na:e , .6) ST. JOSEPH Aspfrln For Children 36's .32 J I J Biby Powder 14 Oz ......... ......._ .79 Ji. J Baby 01110 Oz., ............. 1.11 VASELINE lntensiV'I C... Baby Powder 9 Oz ................................. 71 SAVAGE After Shen !5.5 Oz ........ 1.43 SRUT 33 Spl1sh ltn 7 Oz ....•.. , •• 1.79 OLO SPICE After Stt."9 ............ 1.39 MENNEN Skin Br1cer 6 Oz ........... 93 AQUA NET H /Sprty Rea:iJar 13 Oz ..• 49 AQUA NETH /Spray S/Hold 13 Oz .•. A9 AQUA NETH/Spray Un1e 13 Oz ..... ,49 1, AQUA NETH/Spray Moisture Shield . .4t DELICATESSEN OSCAR MAYER Fr8nks AJI Meat 16 Oz. pkg. , ....••..••••.•••••••. aa .• 81 KRAfT ProcesHd Chee .. O.lu1e1 Sliced, American, Pimiento, !wls1 e Oz ....................... ea .• !55 LAKE TO LAKE Cheddar Cheeaa N1tur8I Miid 9 Oz ..... , , .. , ..•• , :&l...A9'. FARMER JOHN Him Section •nd I Formed 5 Oz ...... , ...• _ ..... , ... te .• !55 LIQUOR VORINOFF Vodka Chirco.I FllttrM, IO-P'roof Halt Gallon , .............. l..9t BERWICKS Gin Extr. Smooth,. ao.l'foof Half Gallon ........... , ••• I .ff Sl'ltlNQ Hill BlencMd Whiskey JO Years otd, SO.Proof Half Gallon , Lff WHYTE I M1cKAYS Scotch Gift , Wrapped, 86-Proof Fifth . , ..•.•....• 3.H ROYAL OCCAStON Bourbon 10 Y11rs Oki, 86-Proof Quart ....... o&.99 CHATlAU LA REINE Cold Dock , end Chlmpqne 3 Fill ht : •••• , , • , , I .DO "YIHYA"--(Yow letl luy) Fifth .............. 1.t7 "LA MANCHA" Sl)lnlth w1.,.. C.bemet .. Wiman, itlnot •1anc, ,I~ Nolr, Qren1eM Rnt Fifth , , .. 1.!St . 175 EAST 17th STREET COSTA MESA e.OPEN 14 HOUR,S \ I • ti • ·i*j .• !!O •.. 65 .•. 31 ••• 31 •.• 31 . .3\ •• 3.C 7 , .• 77 ... n 3 .•. 37 z .. 45 1.55 .AS .. a .. .57 •. 95 8 .... .... . .37 ... , . .2S • .25 I 1 ... i, •• 79 1.211· 1.20. 1.20 .... . .39 1.79 . .33· 1.09 I .59 2.71 •• 76 • S7 .. 5• .• 59 1.17 1.17 1.11 .. 96 .... .. 95 •• 95 1.11 .. 63 t.63 .. 61 I .32 ' .79 .11 .. 76 1.43 1.79 1.39 .. 93 . ·'' . ... • ,4f I . ·"'' .... .• !IS ·1 .. 55 .... .... .... 3.99 .... s.oo l.'7 1.59 . [ DTCK TRACY MUTI AND JEFF RGMENTS NANCY FWfTY ,HO.SE M!YI T\115 OLD 51LACOI! IS 50l'T ~-rootG, WHY SHOIJ~P I RUN FOR CHIEF?l'M A~RfAP't' CH/ff! ANO TIEN I SAID~ 'I DON'T SEE WHY I Sl-«U.DtJ'T GET JIJ5T AS MJCM AS~!· TODAY'S CIDSSlllD PVULI ACROSS 1 Alcoholic drinks 5 C1ncel: Sllrig 10 Semite 14 Wupon 1 S Uttnrv torm 18 Aelln na1loru Comb. form 17 Defamed 19 Prepo1itlon 2Q flrvvidetor 21 Grounds lot l1g&l •ction 23 ForkPltU 25 Eutetn n•m• 2e "gtMrMnt 29 Hot w•ther drink 34 :._ ........ Binner'' 35 Nor1em1n's n1me J7 Criminal 38 NM Ze1l1nd tree 39 Moet Mliou• 41 Piece of pre1peny 42. O«urriog ~hhln .. """"""' 46 Soul'ld of mind 41 One going ~ck over 1 .. .. 48 Ptffenbly ( • fJO Gl'fflt ll'ttw 51 F1dal Ill~ 53 Sink 57 Hiving 1 m"Y l --81 "Tllmnkl· _, .. 82 Mutcut 6' -·gin 65 Twig of I wlllow I 86 The "A" o "A.O." Q ti1 Emp~yee 68 sman brooQ ee Film unit DOWN 1 Tot1•up 2 StNd 3 Bird1 4 Dirt S Runner 6 Lihlng devic1 7 Undergo decompotJ.. """ 8 Utlliza a SceneofWUd uproer 10 Foolish 11 Coating on , ..... 12 Poker mite 13 Unmannered ... '°" 18 Obtain 22 Wey up high 24 Thin pieon 43 Bu~t 26 Moving 45 Conailtingof · about at1r1 27 Diamond, 47 Synaoogue e.g. soloist 28 ..•.. John 49 Of wings New :.-~ Oilplay by Brunswick Poling . 53 Kind of race 3J Str11n1 to fill 54 F•mlnlne ~· 31 Islam auprem• being n1me 55 In the hmtcf11te ...... 32 "Loml-• 58 Mt.Amaz 33 Gllln 58 Lvtton tllttance hllf0il)9 se: ExpreNgreet 59 Dodgerlot 1ppree!ation Expo1 39 Furnace p•rl 60 Chtmieal 40 Cenaln !)flint compoorid brushes 83 Nothing' I /' ----···= - PEANUTS . - JUDGE PARKER by Chester Gould by Tom K. Ryan AN~'THAT'S · IMPOITTANllO A 1Y!WJI by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Emie lushmiller ~~~ ~~ & Pl.EASE, A&BEV ••• DON'T MEET WITH ROCKY~ HE't.L CONVINCE YOU 11'\AT I 'M HYSTER.~ THAT HE'S BEEM NOTHING &uT A MODEl. HUSaAND! MISS PEACH I I j foOTMLL -_,AT•t P•i -l::EU..'/ -~s­l.IN(OLll -- 1!""·-- l PERKINS \ • 1 .. .,,, . . --.. DOOLEY'S WORLD T/.IQ!S~ A80Y IN SCJIOOL. ""'°SAYS HF POGSN'r B);VFVF II'( SANDf. CJ.Al/S SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS . . WELL -1r .:!OS" Ml&Hr HA'/e 5C!JE'IHllJ€> TO DO \IJl111 1'le: FICT TM~T <,JOO e.a!SLE UP~~ TI'IES TO ~f C~06E. TO <.'00 ! W/;"/.L-rr COUt..D 8£ wt>R's.E-. . . . DAI LY PILOT 65 by Gus Arriola by ROCJ•r BoDen • i ME~1 I! ~~T!.-~ - • . ! J ' by Charles M. Schulz THE GIRLS ..... ~~~~~~~~ 'lw~~ qpL~· ,, by Mell "nlfM THAT'S WHY. ~ DON'T HAVf A r>eleNr WINTIJl !PAT. I \ I J ~ '-\:• .. ·~ ':. .. -... .)' ( ..... ..._, by John Miles •• ~ IZ•IJ. "Keep drh>iJll llnllllld Ille blo<k. u...,._..1.,,. plcbd DUI artstmu cards for an oar frleDds bvt Mn. PQ•'• pu&11C8& bu me stamped." I I I I 'I I I \ ' I , . ' I ' ' l I - I ' •• . ' ) ; •' - I I . ' I . i • ' • I I " • • ' ' ' • ' • • ' l 11 • I ' . . • • • • • ' • . . . • • ' . • • • • ' • • • • • • • ' ' ' I ' I • I ' • • I ' ' I • ! • l i : • • • , , . . " ' . , . • . • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • 3 ~ ·I ~ ( I ' • l . ! ~ J DAILY PILOT ANOTHER Ntw . I ' "SAFEWAY DISCOUNT . .,,,. OPENED IN IRYllE 14417 CULVU llllVE' WALNUT VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER MEDIUM I AA' EGGS Cream 0' the Crop S9C . arge 61c l ·DoL Site Doz. Ctt . Quarts (Pl11s De,osil) 8 BAIHR.OOM ·· TISSUE Facello Rayole-Soft & Absorbeat . ..c· HEALTH & BEAUTY AID S •: " ... & shoulchn $1·sa Shftmpoo ,,.... · a~ .. :·99c Ji!iK Mouthwash 11' fi Dial Anti-perspirant ~$111 Int 33 Splash On Lotion ~ ~27 Extra llrve ....... ' .....,,,.-- Sweet Apd ·a lb . Juicy,-,With ' -• Easy .to P.iel lag Skins. · I I • @,ooo l11cH1t Stral1td YorieliH 8-0z. . ... . Crill .·c "1'"' ~·· "'~· ,, · Ice Cream"'"':.""-"i:' 75•. Bel-air Peas 2 ~ 59« 'Bel-air Wtdff es '::' 35• . Eskimo Pies tt.:: ,,., SS• BAKERY BUYS -AT DISCOUNT · A Algel foodCake 39c -Mn. --,_ 11-1• A Schnecken 3· 9c "'-.... .........,.... ..... ..... .·.• fl. Raisi1 Bread . = 3 .= •1· Spice Cab ·~=~ i::-•1" C lort•Sl1t Delitious And Nutritious- Rich In Vitamins & Mlner11ls. I I I l ·- ~I . I · · . · tiiH1· ; /. ~ I · PrHll!Ui-f ... hMlt fl-' 1-~ ... c SAFEWAY SUPER SAVERS A Hefty Lias, $129 Jil!'.. F•Trllll CW ._.-.ft&.1121 · .8. ?::!'=--i:: 2Jc fi. 61inate Rice Mixes . ._31• fl, SIJffe!l'Ollves i:::' ":49' ' . ' . . ...... 0'A'hOlhy, Plump, Tender ~~ u.-2 1o1. r.. .. ' ., . .. . 38-0z., ltl. ·U~A .Cklc1 ......... FlaYO((vl And "J'!lo;v Piit•Roost · r.w.'c11t : DlieiM9tPric1I ll , -~i ___ ' • • " I . . .. • We4nrd"•'~ lJ, 197.2 DAILY PILOT .CJ'.: -.. ¥'t ... .. ' .. Hl~PY . H·O~LIDA YS! -· I 1• • '/ • • ..... -··--T ' And 'they will be 'happy w en you spend them in a home' of your own. I. ";:Ne' take pride in the fact that we have so many-exclusive offerings •f hom~·s ,for. sale. C9rne in to ooe of'' our .6 local offi.ees. You will find • . wer I t1amed salespeople to hplp you fond 11 home for your partieu- 1 r .nee s •. .,a'home ~he re you 'ca!'.' •p~nd many happy holidays . ·"' R member, we are the l1trgest .. loci.lfy owned reel estate firm in the • ·• Ot~ng e'.. Coast 'area.! 'We'·re yoor ·neighbors, we sincerely want to -.-i.e1p. • ~ -· · -- ' . :.'rDOlfT"P~J · . . EAGW NE51' • . .. . . ... . .LA!'"'~~" . MIL.Ii SQUARE PARK ·, ,,; :i nuni .,>Ii:. r;;,.,..oi..-'.•,_,:". }u ,10UIJ011 1t11< re~i;fi,fs_)llte< .. vlngs',_accoitnt · • . WRAI' IT UI' · FOR CHRISTMAS . .. . I ,..,8', ;~ w~ . IJ"' -~-;Tiot, i~! Bht have the easy life mi th.I&-fo1,1.r bedroom ~with· fonnal -dining area, •·~ 'klrtg 9f au you: IQJ'Yey"1J And thet'i -~~ ol • • 2% baths, .JOVer 'iSoo Square feet:. i.ocated in and live happily. ever after in tills beautiful 3 bedroom plus den home. ?i.todcnl kitchen u·ith built-in breakfast bar, 1% baths. patio. Lof:ated In desifable Huntingtori Beach location, It's a g:lft at $24.950. 847"6010. ;tile. ~~'lfJUNGr .Y<iu.'lf'oW?i1 the land and t"':'!" , ownership .2 ~ Condo near the '9 . , ot lU:xutio\ls Dvlng space lacluding -.f beach. witl\l prlvate. pools. a;t. large-~n q_uiet neigbbol'hood just nortti of Mile> Square , S blft"and!>other fea.uire:a· ~ )'qU room. Just *1100 down and ~00 per JllOftlb; P~i:_k: If you · "".81:'} tO, buY ~I. owner says he'll ·~ •u,,t .. &ee. A combinatton ot, steps ~ Pm. 64~711'1-1 ••. , ~1 ,. ~ -• -consuler. OnlY-$30,900.' can 546·2313. , ... ...., ~-.¥0\< ~''"" )Ilg Corona. qII ,;:"";:·~· ~;;=·==;·:· === ;:::========== ~to ... what 'IQO ... ru lfuy. ' t '"' . • ' • f' ' , • I~ ' ' 'I\~ ~~ • .,. , . -;.. '. ' • \: .. ... ~ J,. I It .· ~ t "'"'"" -' .• ~ .. WEST~UFF ·Alu:..L & :. ' •. ·I •, ~ .I r •1 ' ; ';. , •• • . , $391950,".'"' LlR¢1lt>, .-. W~ -r'-1JiEY· LEFT BEHIND IS Y9'11t ~ND 1 · ,.,_,!lUM,P~· •OoM-~L Jµst tiedns 'lo tell~ the f!IJory about this .A morning fresh 3 bedroom, .2 bath home N ·rt i'll-ch NwMo ,exctttna lstde with a v.•arm fireplace, and ~.very private a=phe~thiiTff~~h !~large rear y~rd with a, sparkling' pooJ., Jacuzzi, • n.rfl1PU*"room with •fb'et>lat:e and ;i~'; down Pillfl a ooiy p.s BBQ pit. It's empty and BE ."HOME" FOR CHRISTMAS in this dellghtfuJ-homc· Jodated nc>ar fl1ea- dow Lark Golf Course. This riear new 2 bedroom home is a great starter for "thl? young couple. -Loca\e(j on !arge cornl?r lolf Priced at $27,990. c;an 847-6010.' .fW"E( bU. Hu 3 ~ .:ca.u 646-7171. -waiting for you at only $34,950. Call 646· • • 1 ..; .11>-• .1111. PICTURE Tt11S HOME ON · .. · · . , , • .'. YOUR CHRISTMAS CARDS SEtJ, YOURi !-AWN. WER V~CAN'.'I" Designed -and built. by a prominent build" --! . l _..n ·and well ,maint&Wed 'by its present owner. "Take weeiendi 'ott. ~ ..... ca<'; MOVE IN IY CHRISTMAS This 2.40il .... ft. home ''"'"""' spaclo"" ot '· lnclul'lin~ftla~ ~ outside painting, Decorat£! yoW" Cbriltmas tree ,in your new living room, large kitchen with bre,akfast poo1, recreatlon.i' fl4ric' 8bd park roturig ho Be Uf I 4 •~--2 bath horn arcll. c.,;,,. .. -tc formal dining room, large ·' bills. -•, I= ~-•• i with .cathedral me. au u _.....vum, e ~..-.. .. n ' ""3 'andvv a· ;. r.... 0 -) with ad~ on;epcI.-..f patio. ~antastlc en-family rOOm with fireplace. Assume 6 %. v~ ee tn'gr, ~s oa".s. . .ne-· · tertalnment;' '1lfve fiz.eat Cbftstmas, call.. loan. $49,500. cau 847-6010. Bedroom down "11 blt ._ den for ~~ ....___,,___..i, 1 a .......... .,,. .. ~Ca11 &il-1'1U' ~·• , . i 1 us now"1 ~m $2'1.IOOJ.,!ll ~· O'lol' • ......,.,. : ;.-....... • .. ~~ • ' • • Y<f<I" ··~·-(. INVEST YOUR. •. I .,..1 , "· .. I ' .t: ' .. . ···~ RS .._. . .. HE .ti : , · ·: TAX, DOUA ! I • • IOAL~ 'WELCOME MY ADI Income ""' dQllan give you oothlng In . , -· · • return! Why not divert them to a good 1-. -~ · · F-'·~~lmft' .~, \ •ftjjg fol-hlln:~raotiatb'~nrl'UiP srnall'for Mesa prqperty Js a1w8ys rented. F~atures · t, " T'Wg 7' · ltfftiAJ$-· , , . / tne .• I abdut }drdpped , my_ bi;\cKs when I 4. 4 2~bedro0rrt units and .has bt.--en refurbished (G'!L' .._,..._ 11'.. ~'Tr:µ.· . J·MY ow~11:ioeptflt fori~ .. use rm, too :teal1estate,jnW&tment·' 'J'h1s.,F.aataide Costa , t_1 t .I ~.!''._~ · ""!'.~, ~ . found 1'ollt n\Yf'ptlce.> He's ~nly Mking and up~ded4 throughouL Full price is ' "'-':'-Sii ·We have ~ c~·~~>~toQ'l )i .~,000•, He ""9, -tha~· "".llY 1he:U only have $66,900,· With' e)l:cf!tlent .financing available. :F"'ftmrttt:7:" 3 ~Y, ~'9l~ aod.}&-~e t .. to bli)1' .me ona,.a?:-1 ~~ ftlflli.',a tightwad, · Please phone 54 -~13 for additional lnfot .. ' ';.;''!f• , ttew:eom..,.et~"'· h '~sepa· andhethreJ!.tenedtothrowmeottmycor• 'million. 1 ••• • :.I.Ao..,..~-·~ ~ wl~trldock# ner ·Jot Rescue me from'· t.hts 'tyrant!! • ' that :~ .. m,.wte. two '?S"tt. ts. p~·· . mA-VA-5% temi. Ca:ll Ntiw:..·842-~ -•ft~ )oeot...-.n. ...iu;lf"'""'"°~a.:..se . -.. · .-•. . , , ' '' pan11 .. 0 UNTINGTON call -6~ tor vjewing appoiil.tm and , i; · ;~ ' "'""' r" · <· ~~~1 ~;0oo. .. · i e-..rAll r · "l;tELMSMAN" TRILEYEL .. •. .. ,_,.' ~-~ $49900 .. '':'*Lf~· · T vig:w ·~of.nil!s \ Y\lJr.:.:eonMi:' ~ ~~P,·~!':m': :,v;i .. ~ ~~~ ··~ 8 ~ t".-l c ~ ·~a~~·~:· '~it-~t ~.'hca1t~ex Is also placement cost! Features large ste~n •.... • · ..i..;o.;;· .... .-i... r--~ ·i~n -rrom ll;l'f • one»f'the~t wt,tb ~'l!An'lf!ts new tamily,roqn With-nreplaee, breakt•t nook, •,ttuJ.1.t..,..~·~~ se •• _~1 Co cus. 1 ·'paint .1-• i&M" ;wt. tiu)twnr&rKi ~,six fo:rll8-I dining, 2'1' baths.:...... all-' in ·super· • ..,,~ ..... !'! prop?~~. n rona ~,~-r-rt:'":':~ l,tS • u.o bedrooms 5bilip condiUohr Situated on· m owrslztd ,.. . Jdu ~ ~ 189.500.1~ latK\.\Qillo81b.f ---·mr~·~.:. 1}1'1..:......,~...;--,..ddl1 tan-·to ~Um Jntt c1ose: to beeeh-aDd 1hoppln.g. ~dl141 Of ·our ~enced rea1 m,~ ~ U111u -"""-"""ll!J'' S ''><> l • ,..,,, _, , 2.~.J in ~ • ~.:!'q; fu~~~talla and an~t-· l{ttle <;oto~~o. trjpl_l!'l:es avallab• at':'' $4'6::=.tQ.WJ,Jm.f rmaUOfl p..,-ase ,phone ~~tpspoct.P,u.~~. £t:-t ' t $"[5·'¥ea~.~~·~·,\ ·· · · .,.~ ·"~ .. "r.~'t.J..:· \-1;"· ... r.t· i1·'A;"' ; ~-~~ ·.~it-I! . · '·lff ·THE · '..' · aHRmMAIS :~ .. ~· 5;.t· ; i ~~5~ "!f'I'_.: . , · ~.cut!i>~s•c "9 · -i • • D~"!...H~E L:ive on a "Qtiiet "'11.de--sac 'n<!ar schools, -:.-':.Movt tr\\o UUs A)eeuty ~fore • tis~I If ypulhave &!en lobl~,~11unlque spa· beach and shoppin~ ._and ~l neighbors. ,~BR.overlooklng'Meadow!arkGonCourse-\, ciou_, ~ome with all' the extras '-I've got This two·)ltory home feature& 4 bedrooms, r ,M ted ~ wltli 'jacuz:d. .. So cled )IOU.Can.II", it, E~s Include a la.rge'lot, ~ bedroO"" large family room v.1ith flreRlace, formal j st move In tpd&y and have a ~ty to-t extra large living~ roc,n >Yi'i'! firctAace.. dining and 3 baths. Owneri trans~rred to night. A year rolir)d gif( for ·.tf.t· w~ole4, covered patio and many tnorc e~tras,·Leu. Northe111 callfomla and wahts' to sell .family . Just $39,150.110% down. can • thao $2,<XXl total•'d~'wn.' '35,750. call qulekly, Price $40,900. Please phone '842-2535. . ~ 847~10. . ,t• • ' . 546-2313. ···-.. r.,.... , ,. -. l !•{:I " · 1 •• • j . ·' ,. ,. ,, .. .. ' ·~-.·· . • ' I . r -~-· ' ,. . ·~ii'• ... 1.-u-i.M 147410 .. ' · "HUGE YARD" 4 iEDltOOM, 2 BAJH ' HOME l • ..... Neat as a pin and· safe tor the kids -this home ' ~ IOC&ted. on an extremely lov.'~traffie street. i Your. family . will · enjoy the comfortable floor plan and the wide Opt'nc. spaCC'S. $37,000. Call 546-2313.· . . ELEGANT. S~~NrrY ' ' • • • ' ' • . ' )" "<: ja a fitting descriJ?tion fOr this charming 4 bed- 'room home In Corona de! Mar. Sweeping view of ocean and bo.y plus patio and JX>Ol entertaining. You must see to appreciate. By appointment" .only. $25,000. 673--8550. • ,. ·~ 1 '• :, l ~"~~~ .· ~:,~"'*'W'>:;;-:;;-l·:·· ,,, ,J.~ ... ,,. WHAT DOES ''5" , MEAN TO YOl,I? .. It may mean a fantastic ~nl? 8tbry S bedroom, 2 bath home within o~-b&oek of..~ of the more . progressive grade schools In Callfomia. If you have a large grouping family and want a pn!S· tige neighborhood !or only $38,500. call nov.•. 842-2535. • . ' • . • ~NBUm 1m1 ~ llttfi 6014 w...,.. _... .. 141-ZUI 147 ... H ·()ORONA· DEi.. MAil ~2 M-ir..tl• ' 673.eHO INTI18TDNTS 21'tl ........... lolto201 c:-..... J46.1600 . ' '. ' i . ·I '· Ii I ( ~ ' II , .. • • • • . ' • • ~ c ~ • . • . . ; . • • I I ,_ 1 ' • DAILY PILOT PILOT-ADVERTISER !B . Everyone Has •r '---«-cnnething That Someon e Else Wants DAllY PILOT GlASSIFIED 1'DS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It Wi th. a Wa rN AJ • 'The .Biggest Marketplace on the O~nge Coast-Dial .642-5618 for Fast Results, • ~~~-Slll/d, ~ lllOASSOCIATIS ' South of , REALTORS 2828 EAST C0AsT HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR. CALI~. 644·7270· * the highway . • • ... Corona del Mar -Two blocks from the beach. 2 Bedroom with 1'Molher·in·law'' bedroom and bath upstairs. Vacant and ready to sell _. _ ........ $72,500. * Corona del Mar ..• 60 FT. ELEGANT BAYFRONT Custom 4 bdrm. home of superior design & construction. Located on one of the most in· teresting parts of Newport Harbor, where land values are continually increasing. Please call us for further details The area's top professionals arc at your service. 675-3000 10111\I I Ol,O\ -· ~ ~ con AGE NEAR OCEAN Why continue to rent? For $230 per month )'(Ill can own a cozy 2 bedroom home less ... • •• '""'""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!"!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I than one year old. Velvet Duplex1=G 1 gr'C('n la"'·n surrounds !his enera General dream home, fenced yard, Spanish architecture prevails in this delight· ' .. -ful DUPLEX -TRI-LEVEL, 4 Bedroom, 2\<, :bath, fireplace, built-in kitchen. BACK .: UNIT 1 Bedroom, 1 bath. Enjoy your 3 ter- -; raced porches. This is a beauty for only -;":.: .......... '.' ....................... $78,500. * Charming Condo ... •.. in the Bluffs THE NEW SECTION -This Beautifully rated (compleiely upgraded) 3 bedroom, .. •-formal dining room, a fireplace, 21h baths, 2 patios plus a solarium, on the gorgeous • !!'eenbelt ...................... $62,500. * ... Duplex :Watch the SUNSETS from your SUNDECK! -:lminacula\e duplex, all newly refurbished. ·~bedroom upper and 1 bedroom lower. Right ~~n the sandy beach. BEST RENTAL AREA .... -........... _ ............ $110,000. * AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES . ' 644-7270 o;n;,.1 General * * * * * ,. TAYLOR CO. ·r IRVINE TERRACE -$150,000 lncludint The Land i M_agnjficent view of bay, ocean ~ Catalina! ~ most elegant home of charm &: quality ..mnsiating of a huge family room, 2 master bedroom suites plus a third bedrm & bath. Fisher stereo tbruout, 2 fireplaces many ex- tras in kitchen, huge workshop off garage. Lovely free--form pool in private front court- Yard & many rare plants. A real beauty! 'r.;, ''Our 27th Veer'' !'SLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton · 2111 Si n Jooquln Hiiis Ro.d PORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 hoo<ol General 'f'!TAKE A TRIP __ 6_B_e_d-roo_m_s_ "if.O-SAN JUAN Assume-6 '/•0/o 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil nice patio, fonna.1 dining 11 aren, like new wall to wall A U~IClUI: ti()MJ: A UNIQUE 4 BEDROOM HOME that goes on-and on-and on! The master bedroom suite is ' spacious. The living room--0.ining room-kitchen is scrumptious and the front elevation is the finest, with Mexican tile, grape ivy and a meticulously manicured lawn. See this one if it's space, storage, satisfaction and snobbery you want. (In beauWul Baycresl') $79,500 UNl9UE HOM lS OF NEWPORT llACH, •45·65GD A lbtlitt of LP.,. lwl .. U~l()UI: li()Ml:S "REALTORS 42x118 Pr. LOT * R·2 * CdM and ... on the ocean side of the hwy., plus a jewel o( a cottage! This outstanding offer· ing has space for an extra large second unit. Shown by app'l only. $59,900 CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 carpets and custom drapes. A5sume high balance V /I loan -a value for onry $28,~. co: Ts ' WALLACE REALTORS -->54 .. 6 ... 4141- (0ptn Evenings) FURNISHED Townehouse $34,750 2 STORY BARGAIN! Con- venient Newport Riviera area. 3 bedroom. FAMILY ROO?o.1! 2 story Palos Verdes lireplace. Vaulted ceilings. CO!o.fPLETELY F U R N - lSHED at this LOW, LO\V PRICE! OLYMPIC SIZE comm. pool, Putting green. Extremely anxious • try 101A- down! Call today 66-0303. IOHl\I I Ol\O\ : ~ . . HOME WITH POOL PWS DUPLEX located on large Eastsidc Costa Mesa lot with room tor 3 more units. Investor's debpt with loads of Poten- tial. Home needs remodel- ing, so bring your hammer and paint brush. caJJ us for l""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!"!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I complete detai1s, but hurry, General General won't last long. 1.::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1546-5880 (Open Eves.} #2 HARBOR ISLAND Lovely 5 BR., 5\-2 baths, waterfront home. bge. living rm. & family rm., just redecor· ated. Pier, float and sandy beach. Beautiful yard w/lge. shade tree & swimming pool. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR •. HERITAGE REALTORS BARGAIN 4 ·R-Family $295 Wow! Quiet tree lined slreet. Portico entry. 4 queen site l'.:""'"~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~"'"""!!!!!"'"""""""""""'"i bedrooms. Separate fam· General GetMrll IJy room hosls crackling l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ---------·! Swedlsh fireplace.· Large 675-4161 341 Beyside Or., Suite 1, N.B. I' Uqu,ldating yard wi1• g;an1 colld'• ploy- 10 UNITS house. ONLY $295 BUYS 1.09 Acres roe qualifioo buytt. Aot EASTSIDE $9950 Down! '.~~-prko 129.soo. can $145,000. c, .... buill 4 bOOroom • 5 Consi!ltcnl incomC" or $1£i60. bath. Secluded LARGE All in{lividua! houses \\•ilh GUEST l-!Of.1E! Professioo- garnJ?;cs, on I arre. Cnll ror <ti TENNJS 01URT! AU lo- dctail.s on hO\V to buy. cnlcd on 1.09 acr~ of prime H·l land. 01vncr is liquidat- •' I 01!1\I I. Ol \O\ <'[A~ ~OP\ Newport ing lhis property. TAKEi•i0iii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiOii ADVANTAGE! $9,950 BUYS • SELLER PAYS BUYER'S com~ Act now • call 64.>0303. at f•lrvlew 646-8111 lanytlm•) I O~l 'I I. 01\(1\ ,.,, ' ,. ) ,,, ) Macnab-Irvine Really Coml18'1l' w.. ...uy m•an San Juan Pool • Beach :::i.IJ:\e In the }Ovf!ty MESA WAU< TO BEACJfl Wroughl1------------------,~ MAR section elate to iroe encl06ed front yard. • ,.ii---anc1 chopping. c-.,,.d ""v""'""· S1a1noo BACK BAY NEWLY LISTED SHORECLIFFS . 4 BR •1 3 bath • FR -VIEW • $185,000 CAMEO SHORES • 3 BR • 3 btt.th • poot • VIEW . $138,500 BAYCREST • R·l LOT at $33,50il. Plus many mon'.!I Elaine Svedeed 642,.82.15 (S22) This bl&: 2 1llxy home hlM" ~plus Hied entry. Fam-BEAUTY :4 tiedJ'ooma. aeparate 4lllo, 11)' room. 6 bedrooms. Realty Company l'JCltchen/eattna: area. 'PWS Sparkling blue pool wlth SPECTACULAR Elegant 3 BR le family home Macnab-Irvine ~ =Gl~~ !~c~ ,1:;;u~k8in:~~~j~ Lido Isle Bayfront ~r ,~e~~~~er"!:~u~?s ~ 642-1235 6tU200 '\)O Mwn PQ.Ymem. lO vets. ASSUME $27 000 GI LOAN . The ultimate In prlvac-y & ble fire pl ow bltin11, ~ 1-Ptlced to aeD-ai $40,500. 6"-,.k INTEREST. $292 luxury living arc comblnl'."d flag1tt1ne e~tl')'. tuSh Jdscpg $194 PER MOftiH monlh. Act fast. CaU In thla 5000 sq. ft. home w/ and much more. $39 950 64&-0303. Indoor pool &: garden. The 2'290 Redlands Dr., N.s.' · P:r ~tfs'~eft:l' \~ U!C of glass -brli·k -lttl· CAIL 642-lm tldY little starter horac wtth " ........ ... I 0111 \I L OI \0\ lage & mellow \l.•alnut fkxir 3 fii create a new•r 10 bi' forgot-Ontu uge bedroom.I and good ten home. Pier&: ~llp. 2 BR II/' alzed yard for children and • $375,000. Barbara Aune '1'21 pcl.1. lJow about gcltln«i &42·8235. ($16) ~ ~~~ULlutlnt~f :;: -~=~===--1 -~ I I own home for Chrl&tma.1' ' ' A ' ' <' ,,_ ' FIVE UNITS ;. EASTSIDE 641-1135 644-6200 -------1 , ~ "POSSISllON COSTA MESA • JULY 4TH !'-'" . 'I ' I f' " I ' I ...... ·1 ... , ' • "" DOWN INV£S'l'OR'S PARAJ)JSK . 5 ---J.;,t toudl ·~ -.e: Separate ~· MtUed In Indeprtndence. f).o.y atart1 .lt...o. lat ' .,.. IJlls htqte Jt)t. Gnat tax when YotJ lnvnt ln thl• 3 ~family "1t(JllD. "\r ~ Dlter and potent 1 a J unit lnvcator'1 lltartet •t _\t'enclOted paflo, 11 bllldl\ powth. Eich uni~ wtlh '32,500. Income $345 month- cbtn wltb ""' . "*rl 91p&rale • .,,.,., )'&rd and l;y. , CJooe • -me! laundry .,.._ lot> of CALL ANYTIME --..-. ~'1511. privacy, qoo..-and al-~192' MS -clMalll 9il1 fMll)'hml. CA.LL ua for tun There ta a reuon U41.. OPrn E\'tll. <Wtall-. Alldrt1 '16,!500. IS ycar1 aame locaUon CALL 540-U&t Open 'Eves. r-1 Lachenmyer R ~,110• ,.. ' Macnab -Irvine -ljll-77ll 2lU l\'~otcll!I Drlw RW1y Company Opttj 'HU t PM Big C1nyon H-. PRiV."/£Y PLUS 1 For th. H<llkl•Y• EXECIJTlVI AREA LoY<d »r fl.moodio A botter Preslta""" -rnunlt)i olltn IJ\aft new. ; BR (00' 3 • ultlrna°' In ltdo>too. '!'bl> den), FR. fonnll Ott. i home ftlQl'M m _9 de r n carp.QP.~dec-arcblteetu1al dclfCn orated A lindieaped. nm open-ot:padQua lt Itch en, UL TJMA TE ClIT. Jade va.u_ltt'Sf ~athedral celU11fP, HCl'Mill. 644oOXI. (Sl.1) l\lllken Roman btth, thla Macnab · Irvine hoJn~ hU been nta;leeted and nc«l:1 attiern.l ClCRfl·llpr Owner ls reallt!Jcl Ca.II Jor 64WU5--644-62GO .............. fl« c ...... llttl-~- I ) • •. f_ .. HERITAGE REALTORS 4 Bdrm Beauty NEAR BEACH ' $41,500. lmmaculale thrtout. Lath &. associated ll~tl ll.E~"'-J.IE/\l TORS l02~ W Balhco l,]J Jl.6) plaster walls, new crptg, up. 1 .,~~~:!"l:~'!'I!!'!'""" graded, like new. Fanni 1 $23,000 2 BR, l B• dining • PatkJ. Choice loc. "" Xlnt terms. To &ee drop in ~ clean & ttBct,y for at occupancy, ju.st right lor 1733 \Vestclltt Dr., N.B. )'OU r@nters to get started. 645-7221 C8.rpet.s I: drapes thruout. PRESTIO& BEST AREA Huge kitchen with au $27,250 ~-Country atrnosph'""" 3 spacioua ~ed,oom!I,' now. 4. BR., fam, nit, fonn. din., quality cpts, drps, wall coverings: lush Ianmcaping, serving bar to patio. You OWJJ the land. ,f19,500. Gary Knox CboerlW IMng ro o•in " handsome fireplace, buil\·in kitchen, dish\\•uher. Patkl. Freshly painted inside &.: out. Like new-carpe~-~t. Mil.ate park-like gtp.mcts. 54(}-1720. ' TARBELL 2953 Harbor. Cotta Mesa HARBOR VIEW In Nev.'J)Ort Heights. Rustic Cape Cod 3 story with 3 car Realtors SG-0465 Open Eves. 4 bcdrm., dining_ room, entry hall, custom ceramic tile, lndlrect Hghtlng, natural wood cabinets, prime OOme area, 541r1120 TARBELL COLDWEU.. BANKER. ReaJton 644-2430 m.Q700 550 NeWport Center-Dr. '"I 1 1 ·r · Iii I 1•1iil. ·-1, I ----I I'll 1111' "SINGE 1984" ht Western Bank Blcfr. Univenrity Park. lrvloe Dlys S.52·-Nlthfa DUPLEX-BY OWNER 108 LatlapOr, mnodeJed " ready to move ln. Sbutters, beautiful new kHchen, blth tt. ,,.,,,.,_ Ooen Sim 14 DREAM NO MORE $111,500. S'B-1~; Si'S-7616. For aa little as $37,750 )'00 gy O w n e r • Soectacuiar can own a 4 bdrm. home ln 2$5 Harbor, C.OSta Mesa Spyglaa HUI forever view Irvine. Pool-sized lot, green- Jr'Om this luxurlous, new 4 belt locations and sprinklers n•-u-••11 bo-• 0 -p front and rear. A b>g. valuo NEWPORT ISLAND ="· ,_. .._ ~. garage, large Jot & fruit 1 -~~~~._ ......... trees with Jt('eat ocean and harbor view. A storybook home with that chann that's so hard to find. Owner v.•ill take 10% down payment. Realtcn &16-'m.l 2043 WeMcliff Dtive Open 'till 9 P~ DUPLEX ~'"rofo""'"'" $99,ll!i).5.1>-~ i ,• ed".".all Jl'hlce.,. ,, Pride of ownenhip; 1-bdrm., Cost• Meta 1 ba. ea. unit. Chriabnas 1.:;.;.:.;.:...;.;;.;.;.:_ ___ _ gift price of 554.500. EASTSIDE· $29,950 Call: ~ 673-6688 Eves. Country size yard, deep shag .REALTY c.rptg, comer stone firepl, Univ. Put Center, Irvine associated beaut dee. SPflJ'klin&' bltins OH~ ~~lM ~PM & double detached garage. •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!l,..111!.,,I Hard-lo-find 3 BR, 2 BA. home at this price. Call L •··ch $25,950 -SOUTH COASr =lf:.:cUM.;.;:...;o.-=,;._--l B<•ulilul 3 bodroom. Elegant $30 900 .;REAL="'ro~RS.'i-----THE BR O~E N S-~t A t TOR~ 202S W SaThca 673-31>61 fu-eplooe. Large ! am ii y . _ • 2 HouHI ltilch<n bulMn range, oven 4 bdrm., duruog room, en1ey Both only $31,000 BIG ONE & dillhwasher. Beautiful hall , custo!ll ~mlc \lie, Xln't rentals or live ln 1 That will be )'Our first im- patio and a park·llke ya.td. ind.ired. .lighting, natural (Re t the the) 2 BR each0 ~-ession, wb.en you see thh 540,,1720. wood cabinets, prime home n o r . ACIOUS 2 STORY · an:a ~lm ertvate.. rards. aee _nnt--at TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa ..Mea OWNER DESPERATE FURNITURE INCIM!>ED -$26',90CI Value of a 1yettme! 3 large bedrpoms--2 baths, bc4111-in kitchen, I~ fenced yard, all terms a\la!lable • Hurry -won't lasti call Red Cari>et RealtOMJ 546-8640. $27,250 3 spaciou.!I bedrooms. Cheerful livtng r o o m , ha.nd!iOmc fireplace. Built-in kitchen, dishwasber. Patio. Freshly painted 'lnaide & Out. Like .new carpeting, Jr. estate park-like """"""· 54CH7'0. TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa EASTS I DE SPANISH OELIGHT • $12,950 Thi! hOme ii Double ah a r p--d e'e·Ced: a g, CJl:l. tbroughout, 3 ~ big master 1u1 t e, quiet cu1--de--sa.c I atreet. Spanish arch way to ~a.N en- t~. firepJace, ~!Mn. etc. hOme ls only 2% yrs Old. See it, can Red carpet Real ton St!Hl640. $_27,250 3 spacious b e ct-r o o m • . Cheerfu1 llvtng r o o m , IU\nd11etme fireplace. built-ln kitchen, dishwasher. Patio. FrelblY palnted inlide & OUL Like ~ carpetinl. Jr. estate park-like IJ'l)Ubdl:. 541J..17'0. , TARBELL ' 428 Hamilton st., tMn call: HOME. BUU.T ON l~ 642-1000 If interested. LOTS, ntAT OFFER A * OPEN HOUSE OAil..Y 'f S(.!ENIC VIEW OF 'IHE TARBELL Q\:EAN' Detailed_ all wood ~ Harbor, Ollta Mesa 11 AM to 4 PM only exterior in claSllc La&una 337 Mapolia, C.M. archllectural szy"-w,.. * 4 UNITS * EASTSID~· 4 or, 2 ba, ""°'· ounporch<s e~ wltb Near Town & Country in frplc, et11i blt, cptB, drps, post & rails. Orange. Big 3 BR. 2 ha., liJtns, tel calll!I lD Arn.B pm SPRAWLING 4 BDRM. I: owner's w/trpl + 3 2·BR. lOi dn, $39.~. Ownr 6t2-8310 DEN .. .:.~ PUN has -GEM CUTE Cot .... -' Br. Neotl· :SZ, ~~"'/fuJ~; 1610 W Coaat Hwy NB ed in t:rtts. $24$1. Lot .... BIL~ JN GE • REALTORS ·oo..m 140'xG9', R-2. Prln. only. ,... • O:intact Jim, ~3509 or OVEN, DISH W SH R ., $53,750 -VIEW =67>-~303=1·-::-:=-:;-,;,:--..-;o: =VED~ ol ol6; Newport Beach BY Owner nice 3 Br 1 Ba STAINED MAH 0 GAN Y Bea.utilu.I custom built J:aome •tarter home. $750 .di,, $225 CABINETS. 4 bedrooms, 3 batl;\ll, dining mn. $23,500. 83.l-UOO:, evee: Open ltairca.se leads to 2nd room, huge family rm, park •·,;:64>-;:..:23U=--=-,.-,== lewl, wn bdrms., bath A. like yard, brk, 5«}.lttl. 1"; ~ LARGE DEN, APPROX. 23 TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa 51;4°/o FHA 8.: ........ }1".a·,~.ru!·, FT. wrnt DBL. SLIDING -""•.. ....,.~ .... GI.A$ WALLS THAT sngi·sty ~ BR hm lil Mesa OPEN TO SUNDECK W/ del Mar. $38,SOO. 549--1857. OCEAN VIEW. TIIIS Dover Shore1 SPAClOUS HOME JS A !~~~~~~~;;;;;;;I DECORATOR DREAM. I ' Custom . draperiel Uu-u~. PRIVATE BEACH Thero b"' botter 1>ey 1n all Vacant, ready for the holi-OREA.Tl y REDUCED of the "Vll.LAGE" for onzy days. Only Sl.56. mo. PITI · .__ 900 FULL PRICE 3 B" ~· BA rondo / 9l' On the bay. UU. outltan-..-, • .., ""~ w pvt, ding lot, with a .mile sandy HURRY ON nfIS ONE! yard & dbl ""'· 125,50il. bMch, has , . .,. ..... ...tuo-MISSION REAL TY BKR. 557"4130. BUSIN~SS IS GOOD, ed; $49,500. Exclusive 985 So. Coa.st: Hwy.:,_ µ.lnlD8. NEEO SUPER ne;ghbomoocl & a.,.., vlow. Phone 1~14) 494-0731 SALESMEN!· °"c;ll'$~' Bonl.'.oore\. VIEW l'LUS $25,950 Re~"'il..:~ ... ~ . -.privacy. Thia 3 bdrm .. 2 BeautUul 3 betlroom. El@tant I ~!!!!~-~!!""!!!!!!!!!!!I ~ho'hi, ~th on a! ~ ' fireplace. Large 1aml1 y Fountain Valley dance of mature trres .ur- kltC'ben.. built-in range, oven 1-----.... .,..:-:~ rounding it lo cre&te the A dishw"'""· Beautltul $25,750 3 BR 2 BA calm, peaceful almotp ...... -·~~ a park-like ya.rd. Sunshine plush and sunshine A vtew that won'! quit! Call fresh, Wall to wall carpets Bryan Mace. $52,000. and drapes T/O. Pretty ~_,,-I tree-llnoo """'· Take <>v<r .,./T 0 e,~ -TARBELL the VA loan. $164 per mo. H;tr~ ""5 Harbor, Coat&,..,. ..,. all. REAL ESTATE Custom Dllplex U90 Glennoyre St. On large Jot-. 494-9473 549-0316 with room to expand Rce..lton M?>-0465 OCEANFRONT % Blk. ta ocean. $69,500. Open Eves. COMMUNITY G.orge Wllllamson Huntington Bach LOE. tam.Uy hotne, ocean· Realtor front ne:ighborhood. 5 BR., 3 * 541-4570 * ha. Huge living rm . , CCXJNTRY LIVING $25,950. w//rpk. FonnaJ din nn. 4 BR vacant . 8 y,.. ntW. 1'1 1'<>· .. 11 e<lull'P'd """"°"· $2.5,SOO matter JSU!to ~pvt BA, ·~!rally located. R.ecrH- '"111 one won't tut. lt'• a 3 w/w crpta It. 4tl>•, tmJ lrw tkm nn. OVer S,000 Ml· ft. on bedim home on a large lot llv ;rm, klt/flm rm j.'Ofnbo, one level, surrounded fly 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa wtU11 all tc~. available. blt·ln rMJrf, dbl oven, eat-riice garden & patio areu. LlnCe ESTATE Just peintedr!W'd read>' to tng bar, ovtnbed dbl gar. A Very tu.nctlonal, wtll 1l be llved In--Call Red , planni'd home. Room fer $2.s•::: C~t, ReaJtor1 546-861), Xlnt IOc, &ee today, pool. $92,500. Dtcelle.nt ea~ t 1 l de loc. o:. =~w:~ l'llPIH·--.* .c99-2800 * .=u··~ 11:.' = ~ ~-'""· ... 44711 ::::.1Mil1& ~ 1oi-pm.., aec1-. """ ~ 'i:.."ia 'r ~ buy mt.the mark<! at $23,!IOO f!!"'*!" " ' 1 SMALL CAPE C 0 D =-see tt ->'OU'U k>Ve it -Red 1 :: , • • ;: bome aunny BR cosy _ _._....,. .... _,..,,,,...--1 C.::~ 1;ton ;· ' .. ,..._. Dr; ....,. pa11o,' Copper Ketll8 QUIC" -;..SH -.N _ _.-· '""°"' I< -· _, Klfcben rock 11,.._ " "" De.:::.::.:..'="-~ =:.:.~~ plajl9, 1-ake over dex· THROUIH A • -"~ 3 bau.s, Mo!!!f nit. ""'"'· , --JoUn; loan. Un et room, """" tam Uy nn. ""'l , nOa!bl.. 914.ii'.'°lllllrald •tll5. a mo. Not W • like yard, brk, _s.to..1r.11 Wd.hi. from ocean. Must 1ett lW•NT AD n~Wll!Lf;.. BA~ b y 12 I 2 5. ~K R. M •·ll'JONowport~Dr. '82-Mll aJll~78-For that llem under $31),.lt)' .. , _ l9ll! H.-, Colla -ClwUlod Ada , , • Hi-M18 lhe 1'>""1 Ptnclter, --_;:::;:=::::;.::=i;:,.:::..__ TARBELL 29 Pl~OT ·ADVERTISER w~. DamlMr u , 1m · DAILY PILOT VINMSdlJ, Dfctmbrr 13, 1<172 ------------·-·--lril I -·- HoulH U.m.m. [ ·_ ..... l~ L -"' .. "~F-.... J~I ~ l~ I l1Go~njjojjr•iilmmm~;;~1~N~oiiwpomiirtiiiii!lii•ii1<~hiiii::iii~~N~Oweorf~~~l~o~o~ch~;;,;;;;1;C~om~ma~rc~l~•~I -~~~1 BuslnH1 1--------1-:=::i:::.:...::::::.; __ ..;.;;;;==;.;.;....;..;. ____ l1_P ... • ... •.,.. ... _r1y_,_ ___ 1_sa _o_,P"-1>-•rt_u_n_ll.._Y ___ 200 Cott• Mesa )~1~1 ~-~~ .. ;;;-~;;;.;~!~~I _ ... _ J~J~I .. ~M'"-;;,;;;t·"""';;;;'" ~ 305 House1 Unfurn. 305 Townh>U1• Unfurn. 335 Apta. Furn. ·-=.;.......;..:...c..---1 4.2 .1.3.3 .. -..... 2-8athl ' t 1-Ciutom Fireplace J.M11e. to Beach 3·Mile1 ID s.o. Freeway Truly a Home of Color and Comlort. Almoat New ear.. pellng. B/J Gu K1tchcn wi th Dishwasher. Sprlnk· terii, Covered Patio, Room ior Pool. Home ii unoccu- pied and In Live-in Condi- tion. Sll,850. Call Anytime, -· PARK LIDO TOWNHOUSES 3 Bedroom 2~ Bath, 3 car gar{lges, 1e:rge u!llity room5, Ioi1bitl and lnlormal eating areas, sparkling pools, fee land. • from $32,900. Call 6~7225. PRESTIGE 4-PLEX • Irvin• Santa Ana ':01t1 NM Pre.-Grend Opening Sale! RIST TIME Mu.le 110 ... .-... •1u~~~ :..ti 5l:i: OFFllED eoue. ahop, term.a • . . $85 •1 .• BR. 2 ba, Univ Parle oft Culver Or. Ava.II Jan. 1. GJ.l.a393 ext I&l wl«b'I; Ml-9314 Sat • Sun. DELUXE 1'011t'nhouse, 3 Bit. LRG. Clean 1 BR. Pool. .11ni BA. Crpta, drol, bh·im, Aul11 <>Vet 35. tL2$ ulll c\d. Jge pvt. Plbo. dbl 1ar. Nr. ~3394 or 5'18-2.401'. ·"I ·-$51 ;495 - • Lofty llvlng awaits you! Act sW'lfllY to select yo9own Newport Beach condomlnlom. Visit the temporary ollices of the Newport Crest rnrormalion Center, convenlently located el 2400 West Coast Highway Suite B, Newport Beach. Open oa11y 10 a.m. to sunset. 17141 645-6141 ' On• OMA dance ttudJo ALA' R-~.1 •• U< -4 St .... ·In .. A11>11• Bell Fun•ll.;;.."";\ ... B,..t sal~ -· _,,~ etnlet'. ll3,200 .,..., • HOLLAND S T~.... 2 B SllARP 3 BR , 2 BA, almost 11ev,., Great loc. near p:~rk. $255/l\lo. Call LllITy or ao. Cout P1ua. m-918<. H I unt n9ton •uple1Ce1 \Jnfurn. 350 $)04,000 Owner will cnfT)' UI. I •• e ?tlOVE·IJt ......,-. r. 15% at 8"Ai for 30 yean, 1116" Orange, CM 6-e-4170 Fnr..'CI yrd. Encl gar. Kids Agent. f1S. 722 5. $1250. le~ beer Bar Ir ptli. $150. $145 -SIM Corona del Mar Bach<>lor & 1 BR. pa __ 0o_ro_rh~'~·-i'o''&-5'l!0~·,=·----1 SPAC'3ar. 2 Ba, 21, ..-ar laguna Be•ch ~ar. Oc:oettn \'ll, priv ,bch CLEAN, LEVEL, Cafe, ruily '"'"'" & .oady ALA Rontol• • 64S.3'00 to go. San Clem!'nte area. S H A R P , CLEAN, 3 :READY. 492<22'l6 °' ""'a>. BEDROOM. L a r g e 3 Aetts .,Cl Costa Mesa. On Money to Lo•n 240 yard, children o.k. Baker oft Bristol. $2.50 per $210. per mo. -no fee. !';.;'-.,=';;",!i1,"~,.,,. 1st TD Loans Heritage, Reauors. Buy 'OR LEASE Ml).1151 6:i. % INTEREST 2 TD L · EASTSJDE 4 Br, 2 Ba, frpJ , Gr<at 80'x100' C·I l<>t • use nd oans bltru;, o.hwh<, n•w ct'Pt & your imagination and make palnt. Encl dbl gar. Close to money he.re Agent 675-7225. sch ls. No pets; 64f)-4220. Lowest rates Ora~e Co. Condominiums. "WE BUY ro·s" sm. c .... 3 Bil, 2 BA, htd for ul• 160 pool. Lri· game nn. Frplc. S•ttler Mtg. Co. 8ltn11. v"/w carpet, drapes. NEWPORT FllVrERA-ALL 642·2171 545-0611 College Park. 545-5-138. prlvl. $350 mo. Wkdys aft 7. 1 BR, 2 BA. 2 Story. 180 67;r32m. degrcl" \•lew. $335 1no. 1st and last. 51~91, 673--1&11. :ost• Meu 2 BR. larg~ fencrn yard & LGE 2 BR. Nice & ('lean. gam&>e, Sl llO. Garage & privacy. "'•ter 49-Hl&lt pd. Adults. Nr sOOp'g. $145 ~i s~ion Vi•la mo. 2178 PI ac e n t i a , 548-0051. 2 B.R, 1 BA, fant homie In the LARGE 2 BR Duplex, cpts, foothilla w/view. lilichael drapes, bll·inll, ''"a 1 her , M. MoritolJ Bier 586-3650 dryer. yard & garage. No Newport Beach pet.a. SI75. 646--238.5. Huntintton S..ch ON 1 rt.OOR. Lrg. dJILlShly Serv\na. Harbor atta 21 yn. S14D - 2 BR. Stove, refrig, crpt'd, 3 l};R:, 2 BA, in nn, 1nd TRUST DEED LOANS gar, kids/pet/singles. IMMED. OCCUPANCY !rplc, !Ox'40 prlv. pall<>. 2 BEACON * 64S.Olll CAREFREE LIVING N•w 3 Br •Pl• 1250. mo. THE BLUFFS car pr. Pool, rec. nna, etc. * =J&U: Tru1t~J1 * .. , IN NEWPORT'S Dbl garage, dshw!hr ~.500. OWnel'/Agt 644--8814 AWARD-WI NNING 334 Portland Circle, Ji.B. or 642-3073. Open Sat & SUn. $165 • 3 BR. 1~~ BA. Bl1ns, a>MP.IUNITY 5364118 See dlrecsory. crpts, drps, kids ok. * 3 BR, 2 ·Ba. tri·level $350 "!!!'!"'!"~~~~!!!!!!~ rrp1c ··· prlv. s;arqeis. Divided bath & l_?~-1\' cloaet11. Rtt hall, pooi ... pool tabl@s, &aWla ba · • See for )'Ol.ll'11Clf. 17 1 Keell!Dn Ln. (1 blk W. of Deach, 1 blk N. ol Slattt). , Ol>-1848 CT.n'E 1-Br. duplex. Av&11. Now! Small priv. yard; Small child OK. Re\'•· $1 f\!o. 536-8900 2r !J3.-Xl6 MEN -Small beach hoteli Apts $85/mo. Ro o m S21.50/'4•k. S36-7m6 $115 -FURNISHED 2 Bdrnl. Near 11ore11. Clean Realonomlcs, Bkr. 675 IBR, ocean vu, gas &: wat pd . S14 0 per mo , 21:!: 436-7843 b L1gun• Be•ch SPACIOUS ·ll ltory 2 BR. 1% I ·...._t.'Rtnt Ii It! J BEACON * 645-0lll * 3 BR,· den, 2-sty .... $400 NEW 2 Br, 1~~ Ba triplex. BA. BIHna, f.rplc. Separate "· BR C\lt.c! fenced cottage. * 4 BR, 2~2 ba. vacant $425 Bit •-J t d I • 77 3 2 v· n range, u v, crp, rps. garage. Poo, recreatlOn ,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii <Pool avail. S200/mo. l E. * BR, ba. 1ew ••• , S500 No ch Id r n In 0 pet,;. eves rOOm, laundry facilities. I 22nd St., C.M. 642-3645. * 3 BR, 2'11 ba. "New", $525 $190/mo. 609 20th St. JiB. * * Studio, near beach, Quiet adults 4'.lnly. No Houtff Furnished 300 LGE 2 Br homf! ,.....ts d""" * 3 BR, 2\2 ba., custom $525 673-0473. pl· OK. 1130. UJll !urn. children o~r 15. 2'.100 Eden, · ' ""t' ' ·.--. Furn, av•il. to $600 Mo. " c M 9fi3..2187 $21900 G I stave, retrig, !nCd yd, gar. 494-7413 • . . . • . •n•r• $175. 615--1827, 673-6an. Sh~rt or long term Westminster Lido Isle .. Income Property 166 BIG BEAR. nr chair 1ift, * 3 BR, 2 BA, dbl gar, bltns ~ --•.:.;..=:.c..-,,----[ .::.c::.;;..;.;c;:._ ____ ...;,j TAX SHiL1J~ITS ::7. ~~~~. f:_~~alet, ~: ~~';'.,~38'15~1c, fncd [a ~~t~~eff' '!~~li$~~~:~~:~ 1 1B~J~ft~· ~tll:e~·tfr:o: 1639 M Bolboo Island 3 BR. 2 BA. "'""'" yard. ii$( 'ffJ_.J u I i~5Jl>.~aII~3.~~~~=~ I rr•Y. m-0837. 32 UNITS Family only. S250/mo. ~~wport S..ch S395 M FURN 4 BR, Bay front, $350. • Agent, 837-1271 * , t" ren l)" _ 15% down. Wesa:ide C.i\f, ~ .. in~r,·, 642E -167<1/ k-.P a YI' 2 BR. l98!J.C -Ch a r I e. ~.'.' I •----· ._.,.. ll W} 4parkBR,. 2 /bal_:.· 2Acaalrl ,,.-; FOR INVESTOR .,.. "°" ve~""' uull. $145/MO. No dogs. 2414 Vi!la del Oro ..._,.,..,, ... ,.,. 11:. w ..... ry. v · ~~1 Newport Heights, All 2 Bed· t:-GOOD MGMENT Costa ••---642-2259. 6'&-7017 Newport Beach 3 BR, 2 ba-furnls~ St~.JS ~ 3 Br horn•. •=. Ea•t••d•. --~"°"~~Uoc33~AN_,_YT=l">~IE~-ocean .................. ,,,. rooms. Ideal for owner oc-Sal•/Ex•hang• Up. _,,., .. " " 3 BR 2 Ba ~ .. New .crpt11 & lresh1y painted. EASTBLUFF Apts.' Furn. 360 ' ... '''' .. '' .• _,, Extra Large. Enclosed ar-Ownr/Brk FURNISHED-man on I y. .._ "' O"t0-~•00 Separate house, unusual \Ve Have Winter Rentals cupancy for one UniGt is Lagun• hach NewPort BMch 673-5221, 673--7670, 64$.23'19 1 BEDRM.. l BATH , Frpl•. Ob'· gar. "" _ l:"-c:---:-....,..----2 BR, l Ba, Penin ... · .. S250l agn. P0811b:le to own for NEW HOME WA~K TO BEACH . INVESTORS Ea.stslde. Eves, 673-4i77. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Fenced large 4 bedroom or 3 &: den, 1B_a:-l'-"°"--P-•_n_in_s_u_I•___ \Viii Take Student.I . lO';ii In.ilia.I Investment. • • , poola il tennla from this , "'""'S In H tl ... Buch yard:-'Dbl garage. $220/mo. Family room plus Iara:e MODERN • 3 BR, 2 Ba. Npt Al.lo Oceant'l'onll Avail,, $90,CM». Call Anytime 3 bedroom, 2 bath. up graded ' BR. ·2\i J>a., lge. liv. nn., TWO 4-P~ , x t retui,:n.1_u_n_n-'"'-'o_n_____ 549-2846. formal dining room. Com· CALL: 673-3663 • Ito ~· carpet1ng thruout , breath· blt·ln kitch. wl.th dining onJy $47,500, each. $4750. plete privacy with enclosed Bch Duplex. to share taking view o( lights & area. $42 500, down. Call 842-1418. \Valk to water, sni;::lJ · Bach 2 BR, 1 BA, crpts, driis, rear and front yard!!. Lovely w/1traight mall'. F'q:llc, • · COfLSt line. start the J1(!W CAYWOOD REALTY • l\llm • $90. Also SUO sngls. UtU pd. disposal 'Immcd. occu'p. No garden. Available December blln.11," dabW.11' J j blk to ,,,.,., ... ~ year with a lovely new-*-'~•• 1290 * WAual Rent..A.-HouH 979-8430 pets. $165/mo. ti73-2918. IS. No pef!I. $475 per month . 6~ch, $00/mo. Yearly. ,,. ~ hL\I home. Minimum upkctp. --MMmAn Lido Isle-Fount•in Valley Call 673-6568 or 546-3688. 7877· } , , • Call 675-7225 to bey. -·=RM~::.,,~ o :a•".; mn Bead> BJ,d.; H.B WINTER RENTAL' Until 4 BR, 2~ balM, fam rm., VIEW 2 B d ~.£,:;.'· ~~~ H1!'.1~£.',; '"'' 101 A 1 ' °' "*' ; d'11y. 2024 Port Pi'Ovence Garden Grove: 12 units. 2 den &· 2 BA $325. per mo. Huntington-a..cn lease of $375. Realtor, • $25 Wk&: Up On Ocean 1 ~:: c ii den. All extra& . .Jmmed. BY OWNER June 30th 1973 4BR, den, 31i1 Irplc., bltns, incl dshwshr. . . • e rooms, uUI. ·~ COLWEU. co. -~ h Oocup. Fee land. Open 1-5 TO SE'M'LE ESTATE BA. $450. per mo. OR 1 BR, $285 mo. 968-3635. 2 Bath, den, yearly Call 6T:>-5172 · '.f.-! ~. .Place. 64+-6249 afternoons. BR, mostly studio, + Jge BARRETT RE ALTY -:r 6447270 Lovely Bat:h . 1 BR·Rooms VIEW HILLS -t· FINEST & moat beautifUI 3 BR.12'A! ba owntr'11. Xlnt 642-5200 VACANT -walk to Maid Service -Pool -Util Pd evenings. HARBOR 101£101-.1' OJ nu. cm\inu co. home on the v.'8.tcrfront. SJ!p cond. $150,000. 827': existing Newport Beach beach. 3 BR, 2 BA, 'H"•-r'bo,.-r"'v=;o"'w"'H°'o:-m:.-:-o-• Call 675--874'1 • 3n1~~c=';r"-1 ~need-,:;:edc;--<1or=,-.•1=· Lovely 4 ~room. one story. lido Isle for 00' boat. Prestige loea-loan LS!lwnable. 539·9544: "Calif. Classic'\ all 4 BEDROOM I BEACll Apt. Beaut. closed townhse in Par!< N '.t sparkling kitchen and rant-Uon In Newport Beach. Eves 64>2209. \VATERFRONT • PIER & bit-ins, firepl, hrdwd -year Y porch & patio. 1 Br Ulil $1.22.SO/mo + $91 ..., , ily room!! areas look out to Owner. 2131623-&581. EASTSIDE, 4 plex, 2 BR FLOAT· 3 BR, formal din-h lease $475. mo. Avail-Incl. Open hollM!. 207 E. depos. }.tave in 12n1. a magnificent yard and on PRIVATE BEACHES, Ntiwport Heights units. $58l per mo. income. Ing rm. 2 baths, w/w crpt., floors & lus carpets. able December 15th. Balboa Blvd., Balboa. 64<>-1673, Dayg ~1401 l<JD-; 10 1 tv.'O ac-re park. Beaull· TENNIS & CLUB $52,000. 546-2018 bet 11 AM: ftrepl., dbl garage. Yearly $275/mo. move in now · REALTOR, 644-7270. STUDIO $115, 1 BR. Sl75, 2 ne. 833--0780, Ann. ' fut comet \ocatiOn. $88,500 ·Lido values: 1. Chann. 3 BR. ** $32,950 ** 54&-~ Bob Olson. Realtor. lease o!l.ly. Furnished S500 Bkr. 962--5511 BR. $235 to $300. NEW 2 BEDR Call 675-Tm. on St. to St. $11,500. 2. TY,,, 4 BR. + Maid's or guest rm. Industrial Property 1'8 ~~. U~~~t ~~~I ;;,..-;;;;;-~'!'!~~~~ n:~R~~~S ~-,t=anha=="'--'-R'-''="~ty~~·~•-~= 1 2 ba;hs: double • story ' BR., F .D.R. & Pecky paneling, shag CaJ"ll·'---:-:-::-"'.:".7::-'.:''-:--" .... "'.. IMMED. OCCUPANCY ro~OOMINIUti.f \'Mrly Le&Se $300.. • beams rf'C,500. 3. u ... .-nt MO!ll outatanding bu;y ln 1. * SAN DIEGO * 6~~ Costa Mesa ' · "'v ~ .. ., h H . h 2 New 3 Br $250. mo. Dc11irable floor plan, Jrg l"'.'."'.'::'.::'."."."'.':-7:7::='.": 421 E. Bay Ave., Bal lit~''' 111~·-Sifl~.3~e~~~i.! ;lL':s1QffAyu~~P. ~~!itri~~~·. ~;:1 :: N=~ :e::~ntay&~ 3.14o~:ec~:,·s~~B. :C"j!~11~s.~t~lk~ WEEKLY-MONTHLY $29.SOPer:::: Up. l D. -··-' -i·r• COLD\VELL, BANKER * 64).7491 ;ft 20,800 Sq. Ft. Triple n<!t 536-1111 mo, By owner. 644-0m Executive Suites 2 BR & bachelors. Color~ • • .:.I • l Realtors 644-2436 833-0700 IPLE>C lease. Prine. only. OWners no small chlkir@n, or peta. 2080 Newport Blvd. I ~-M .r . ;i. 550 Newport Center Dr. Tl. 640-0030. P.O. Box 409, _BO-RK7.".~-~C7:::-' -,,=-;-;::-* BEACON BAY * Costa Mesa maid serv., poo · • "'" wnl Co M C l 93325 Walk to \Valer, $1-10. Also 3 BR/ xlnt cond. 2 Ba. Fully 3 BR., 3 ba., ele<:. kit, rt'f. 415 N. Nev.iport Blvd., N~: •v1s101AkT OJ nu (0\ co. * CHOICE t; First time on markel rona del ar, a · C.M. Mob, $l15. Alao Beach crpt d & !Jl'p'd Executive Di 8 h "'hr . , cptsfdrapei. 642·2611 64&-9681 . • •· 3 2·Bdrms. xlnt cond., ~ Mou ta· 0.Hrt neighborhood. Walle to 3 Garden. NO PETS. $525 Mo. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S 2 BR tower duplex. 1 blk' ~ Nord Corner ot tocation. Pricro to !ICU! n in, ' 174 S125. ALL UTIL PD. sch.Ls. ~ ml. to oei!an. $300 yearly lea!IC, Incl. utilitict1 beach. Yrly or winter $2Z HOME + INCOME 5 Bdrms., 3~ baths plus din MORGAN REALTY Rtsorf Rent..A·fiOUM 979-8430 7m::;;;o·c..::'"':<'·c::;:""-c-c51l;;:'6:;.;:---;;::; HOPE GERRIE Rlly64$-4400 : ~~~ ~~~l~~s or $250 mo. 130 4Gth St. Seti rnl. plus lge. sundcck. 673-6642 675-6459 BIG BEAR Lake, our lovely HouNs Unfurn. 305 4 Br. Condo. Crpts. drps, 3 BR, 3 ba, pvt course view. •Full Kitchl!n Nov 24-26 or phon-o-1\\•o [)(!luxe llomes, Close to $79,SOO 3 Br 2 story mountain honie bltr_is. _refrig,_pool & clubhSc. See t A ·1 213 /285-4215. Nl!\\·port Helght11. Each are LIDO REAL TY San Clemente in w'inter wonderland. Dec. Generil $22.J. 548-140.J. $545 ~o 8~7':.os vai now. • Heated Pool VJNTER Re 1 11822 W 2 Bedrooms. One bas 1% 3377 Via Lido, "N'pt. Beach BY . sacrlflce 2 BR "17th lhru 25th. I ---------3 BR House, 2 ~; Blks, Ocean. . . ho . 2 B d • Leundl'y Facil itie,) 'ealho Bl d n 3a B 2 BA Baths, Dining Room 'and * 673.7300 * w/-~wnern d..;.k ocean ·view 2 (U4) 585-2919 LANDLORDS! Ju."lt redec. Couples only NEWPORT S res r, en, e TV & mald serv avail s~~ •,no trl ·June ris. w!li 1''ireplace-3 Garages Sharp ... '"""' • ' 1802 al 3 30 2 Ba. pool & club privl. Nr. e Phone Service ""' C ndlll n · Prime ~ation BY Owner, just remodeled, car garage. Owner .. 111 RNI Estate W•nted 114 \\'e Specialize In Newport $235. mo. 96S-I : bch. $300. 213: 681-1213. I "--;o.-..;;;;.-;;;-e",.--take students. Ph: morn-·~ OOO 0 · Call Anytlnie, new bltn kit., 4 BR, beaut finance. Ph. 492-0638. • Beach e C.orona del Mt.r • 5BR, 2 BA. bltins. Children Santa Ana *30 WEEK & UP ings, M&--0279. ~. patio, reduced s 18. 0 ° 0 •1 University· P•rk * fi>u1ck Cash * .. Laguna. OUr Rental Ser-OK. $285. per mo. AGT • Studio & l BR Apt• l BLK to bch, l br liTh--0839 or 673-llfiS. Will buy your property. All vice .Is FREE lo You~ Try 962-4471 546-8103. * $5()-BONUS. 6 yn. nu 4 • TV & Maid Service Aval! k!d11/pets OK 'tll July 111. , ........ 1 Lind• Isle 4 BR. TOWNHOUSE cash within 72 hrs. Call ~J.Vl~W RENTALS 3m~~·ciw8trenbl~s. i!2:· dK~ :::. 2 n~A~~f:.t•~~: : ~~~r'~~tH:!t1:'1 ;~~~=furn apt,; Bil ; 0 H UniVenlJy Parl< -nke loc•· 11 6734030 or 494·324& ACT 962-4171/,,...103 673-""I o< 962-151l2. 2316 Nowport BJ,d., CM the Bay $200 ...... I I~ 1~~ Linda Isle tagoon 1ion. Juat 11ep11 to pool & all I EASTBLUFF · · S.S.9755 or 645-3967 :n-5-135:). · ~ New 5 BR-~~ on auoc. achoo. Xlnt family 1.. l"I Irvine * 3 BDJU..f, near airport $120 month 1 up. P exclusive Linda. Isle. Lge. home· owners gay l'lCll! I Separate hou!ll', U n usu a 1 ;;;;:;;;;;;:;:;;;:;;;;:;;:;;;:;;;, w/fireplace and pool. $250. TIJI• ad cood for $5 on rent. WINTER: Bach. SlZ; 2 BR. , .:.( C family nnutif, ~.~1~ 2 v.,.-et Contact "Oiuck" Lev.:N 'E.,,R largeu' bedroom, "'13 &: d,en. 2 BR. 2 Ba. Air/cond ... $2£5 per nw. Ph: 645-1528. IOO) SQ, IT. gracious living. =t; 1kR~rf'r· ~ -~ bars. Bea -v '""'"rat · COLDWELL. BA K _ iliiillill-Fani Y room Pus arge or· 3 BR. 2 Ba. air/cond .. $2115 HouHI Furn. or 2 B 11~ Ba di mob so1s101"1' Of 1Ht <IXWlll co. with custom pane)ing & Realtors 644-2430 833--0700 BROKERS INC. mal dining room. Comple1e 3 BR. 2 Ba. air tcrnm ... $310 Unfurn. 310 hom!'. ~/w 'crpt~ aut~ Aet. Unfum. ~ wa.ilpapers. Eileen Hudson 5r50 NC'A'J)Ort Center Dr. privacy 1vith enclosed rear 3 BR. ~ ba. Alrium , · ... $.'WO d!Uiwhr, comp! tum. Htd "·coal LD~ .. ~~ .... ~~ 962.a851 and front 11Y•bnl ''0e· Lo-.·~~Y 3 BR. 2 Ba. Atrium .... $365 Corona del M•r pool. f\tature adlts. No pets. ,_Bo_lboo __ P_o_n_ln_s_u_l• __ _ HARBOR VIEW ·~ ton .,......._.., .........,,,.,., Wostcllff garden. 1\va a e cemuo:r 6 BR 3 o. r •A7S ----------~~1 4 Se . _,, 550 Ne"-Center Dr. PRIVATE party wants amall !5. No pero. l4"" ""r inon!h. · oa. am. rm. ··"' ••• ,,mo. asom 1, ~ HOMES "t"-"' "' r~ 2BR. 3710 Scaview, l blk N•·pt «• •-• BALBOA beach cottagff •· bachelor $100 util ind • I ZZZ~~~~~== home w/lncome units in Call 673-6568 or 546-3688. · ~ The popular Somerset 4 oi:-sl' . ENTERTAINING??? Corona det Mar. In iµea -'::=..==-----~~ 0~i5n~~$i;,,o ~~ CHRISTMAS SPECIAL. bedroom 2 story home with LINDA ISLE You will love to in this 4 Dec. 23-30. Write R.B .Soot!, per mo on 1 yr leai;e. * FREE RENT. * Coron• d•I Mlir sunken living room, hugie Herc ls a perfect home; BR., fol'flUll D.R. hon1e. General Delivery, L os Posses11ion Jan 1. Owner, • SlO-OH on I Wk'11 Re nt l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ kiteh{'n and family room beautiful .& spac~, for SUPER LARGE FAMILY Altos, Ca. 94022: (408) eves 213 :282-52.'>2 • SJ()-Off on 5 \Vk's Rent 673-4987 . 'tt bar formal din-gracious living. Magic touch RM. w/wet bar -BBQ -11 ~73&-4871.~~~·~~~~~~~I """'""'="':-:-:;:----12376 Newport Blvd .. C.M. · ~ ~eaa, V.: tiekutllul back In the decor. Asking only trpl &. pool table,. SEE IT "SINCE 1946., Newport 1Be•ch 6'&3967 ...y ng__. ror:::·lovely pool great $195,000. Jim Muller YOU'LL BUY IT. Bud BACHELOR apt, $135/mo. ~ ya.u w il l • F a>LDWELL, BANKER Auslln [ lsl Western Bank Bldg. LIDO Sands 3 Br, 2 Ba, + dcp. Utll pd. New i;hag ...,. _... for acll\'t.' lam es. rom Realtors 833--0700 644-2430 COLDWELL, BANKER FNncill mw.1tthCOSTAMESA ~nivergitv Park , Irvine frpl c, lge patio. $350. Isl'. crpt'g. Nr. frwy & shop'io:. S74,fl00. Call 675-7225. 550 Newport Center Dr. Realtors 644-2430 833--0700 1~;;;;;;·--;;.~;;;; Days 552-7000 Nights 5600 River Ave 646-ThSS 998 El Camino, Apt l, CM, 500 N•wport Center Dr. NEAR SOUTH COAST Condominiums ~.,, "'~ N rt -h . PLAZA 4 bedrm & ........,i. •we! BuslnHs !am, bltins, enclosed 2 BR. l '4 bii ........... $2£5 1 __ U_nf_u_r_n_. ____ n_o UNIQUE opportunity for 1na· 4 BED•"'OMS ~ Opportuni!l 200 patio. $255. per mo. 2 BR. 2 Ba ............. $300 Cosio Mesa t .... 1cntloman. Le• b<d/ ~ I 3 BR. 2 ba. • . S325 .sitting nn., kit., bath, pvt FAMILY ROOM --Flllil LAUNDROMAT Buy, rent or lease w/ 4 BR. 2 ba. Brnadmoor ~18S MONTIC&.LLO ••tr, "" "qd. $125 mo. ON TF.:N ACRES Apts. furn .1unrurn. Lellie Fireplace / prlv. patlol Pools Tennis Conlnt'I ~ ~ 900 Sea Lan, Cd~t "4-WJ· t MatAr1hur nr Coast HW( ~ POOL ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;!Wash, -Dry, -Fluff, option. Heritage, Real· I BR. 2 oo, Jam <m 1400 CONDO. Uttl pd. &aide. 548-'355. • -Fold typo loundry tor i. 546-1151 8 eel h·11 ADULT SECTION * $25 PER WEEK * ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 .= ru. co. 9Jarmina: :-i~tom b ~~ t Meell• HemH & cl .. ning service, C• Coron• del M•r r 1, 2 BDRM.. SPLIT-LEVEL A Up. Pool &: maidM """Tahlk• 0 · RTOWxi floor. $350 pr~, home, d;. ... '5 rm., uu.r;e Por $a&. 125 rOM del Mar on Coast c..;..;.._______ I~1MEO. OCCUP. Kitchens llVlil. otel plua !lpacious 1 family nn., 2~ beth& -. CdM 3 BR 2 BA 3 Jr PER MO lvmer Harbor.-& Victoria. UPflfaln: with prl:vale ' • -BEDROOMS Modem bltn Isl·-• kitchen, ·Mltar Name Rentalf Hwy .... , .... Includes OLD ' ' -· · h eou 6 ...,.... ...,. '-I l vr lac ., .. :.n n10 n70 RLTR • SHADY ~· ••• • POOL • trPJ1(.-e. S200 pr nlOflt • ' bltn. •-p ~--·. 0 --utl!ul· all ~l~t. PETE .. ,.,,. ,. · -· REALTY • ~ ~·-,_ ... J ......., ~ oo:a 673--0191 e Adult• Poolilde fl«I up units next to • -l•-Jrteal for the Couple ust ly decorated A 'Jandacaped BAR E REAL TY Univ. Park Center, Irvine E-SlDE I br, conv. den. • Children l'l(!](t bJock call BRiley 6 Mt.• Starting or gohl&' to Rettre. le a cov~ ~Uo beside a SALIS A LEASING * '42-4353 * CHARMING larzt studio .., Call Anytime. 833-0820 Frplc, bltns, pool., rec. Ia.cu. 177 E 22nd St CM 642-3845 CORON A DEL MAR'S BE!r' ~1a.ulve Brick Fireplace. spa.rkllnc pool. $52,500. tull 9el'Yb rllttltty -home, Bayside Dr., dble Office hours 8 AM lo 6 PP.1 $115 mo. 64.2-1550. • '• LOCATION 3 Bedroorri •.' ~r ~~~~b~~ CALA~J.';"" Dallllar Matar llomes N«d • "l'ad"! Piao< an .. , """ S400 mo. 6T.J-ll97 --· ,.___ lrvlno I~ •• ~,!;, l~dh Bi; ~~kiln< now. ~' Unita. $28,000. Call Any· r.. n QO ~~ ~t,;rse MH633. 2 bedrooms each. BldQa.~ time 646-0055. Nt•r N~,.~" .. 11 ortlet 531•68 C..//Q-0 -FURN. 2 BR. Apt. Pool . carpet. & drapes, d:IO~lt!r ~~ ~ Cloae to shops. Adults, no location. ~ase $200 ; $32,500 4 BR 2 BA The Pu••le with the Built-In Chuckle """· 1160/m,. month. Call 673-™ RL_. In ll<»•lilUI Coll~ Park r .... ....... 11•1 •• 194J PomoM, C.M. SPAC. duplex, 4 BR, 2}; llA. II U-~ Sho Cen ' the CORNER TRlPLEX. 2 Br. !!ep dining clolct ID bch, ten~ Ii~' 1~-near~ PP . GtMrll O~:r':mb~·'!wo,~ be-,-....,..-m--,.----oriv. patio. Furn Sl&S. ·;i1,--barlr.: .sSl5/~o . I ~ ~f~il~~~ ~~.I :::::iiiiiii~liil tow to forJI\ fOltl' 11~1e 'word-. \Jnfum. $1SO. 247 E. 18th St ~------ M ill Pl? ntA « you name Jt New ·1-.. I nl1 I YEARLY leue. NEW 2 Br, 2 613-tlm. SPAcrbUs 2 BR. 2 *" xc• t . _on market. better hifty1 ,~;·we 152 I T A K B E s Biii. on Golf C.out1111. $300 Furn. Bach. i 1 Br. Ex~ w/frplc. CdM Rllh svsMt1a1YorTH1cOLwru.co. 1 ----:-"'.":'."'.".~-:---I I I' I I mo. caum-2tJXI. ception•llY nice. 2110 1 ~11j?i=tn ~tr~vaJ~ * 20 UNITS * . . . . . Mission VlolO Newport Blvd., C.M. • =1 $1,s 000 ~ 1 BR. Cn>ts, ..,rpt, *>ve Realton $f$.9191 , • • NE\V 1 It 2 BR'• rrom St90 to diepou.l. lrs. c.'OV'd diet; CORONA DEL MAR ()pin Evn:. tum. tmmac. Slx 2·BR. 14-1 I F I G E R I j 3b1~! pool2 8:;ivt?.1'~t ld~=:t $23). Nr. beach " •hop'g. Jrnmed. oecup. no .l t-jAR80lll: VllW =~··eBx ~rB unlt1 . $29,%;0.,. I I' I 1 I '•"" mo'1 rent S 2 3 5 1 mo , 114. E. bh, ~· ~137. 673-2918. -'>-' Duplex. 2 cut< unUs 151,950 14QMES RED CARPET RNlton . . . . • • • 830--0871. NICE I br d.,... Qu~t. Se~. • GREAT v:w~.= ~~:.is . 3 . 2 ~79,9!50 2~M1!.. ~ denk, llttuJcbl !""n • • KWMl * Townhovte Otli\trn. SU ~o r~l~Nwer-. fiolCUnbltNiH-a.M. "" I ~u. -··1 -• I c u D I L I '· "-_.,,. __ ........ ___ -$210 ~ Home • 3 Bedroo.m, -. l>inr-rm. Uy rm •/trplc A Commercl•I . • Huntin..ton S..ch PLEASANT~ 1 1!1'.i pool, 2 BDRM. 2 car c:ownd partf.. aoo ""'"' '°""' 172,llOO v.ulted «lllnJI, Lu>!urtowo p,...r1y 15' I Ii Ii I A comic's odmlHlo<>. "lltit •· •dulta, "'pe1a. Utll po. 1184 ''" root 1210 Jnd4'tr Cameo Shore1 ~ 3 bedroo1 ;tioo carpeta tbru out. Extenlive ~ -L l ahow is really In bod shape. NlCE ctean 2 BDRM Monrovta. ~ \\'llter. Ph. m.1m 1 • 3 baill btlluty ~· patio. Landacaped. By Own· COMMERCIAL ::~::::::'.~====-. Even,hochonnglrlsore-." 1ownh0ust, 1% hll. bltna, t BR. Furn. Abt. $140/mo. Cott• Mesa "m\!:1:~~ 1102,0oo "· .... ..., r·llOO. 644.em • WITH HOME. I K A T R E N I ;,·I! IV/0, W/W ~· a dl'f>O. No peta or chUd ... n. Im ' call fi15.'J:J25 COMING. SOON 1914, Nt!Wpo<t Bhld. Lot "1' x ~~~-.,,.-T""-r--1 0 c-'"' ;,, <h""' "'"td 1180. To ..c ca I 96H181 Center St., c .M. 641-5848. · ...,_.,.._8 .. 9 fl 16.1. Price $84.100. I ~ j' I I bv 1;111,,; 111 the 1t1luln9 word Newport Be•ch ~· sunny 2 BR. ClrD, $150 ~-u !'11 w~\ch ~ ~·mi:nt 40G Ltr.FOR·Afli -I . vou dev1lop from -•P No. 3 b«low. Ync matTied pref. Infant TWO • 2 Bdrm. • ••••• , rg II II P rpQuld< II PR INT NUM~ERED lETTERS TRl·Ll'.~EL ~ BR, l BA, ok. 6464226: Beautiful lptl. w/pr1dif ~fritv~ aA~l(~R C.I. If~ IN THESE SQUARES ~J· ~lll"~~"bft~ vtcisrz~• OAC1tELOR ap' -Util paid. f!t.io., lll'llf?, Jr.1 -, Realtors s:u.oTOO 6"--2~ ~'!'bi I I 1 I . I I I j mn l.Aey, or m 0 n" th 11 . Mtle achllt oi1Jy. $110tmo. eh Clll'dllJ ': ·th. 6IO Nowoott Center Or. .... UNSCRAMaLE LUURS 10 rn•· Ext lltl. $11 Center SL 54&-:lm, "' poll. ~ -• V GET ANSWflt * COMPLETELY fumllhl>d * _,_,... • DuD\t!IH...nur..th!..ocean l l'I a l)n!!ettt ••• .111!1! ~ . SS ~c ON ao~ 0..111 Pllot Wlnt-Adl haw 1 BR..~A'Pt------AduJte only. A load want"td •• Mt1es0·· L ~~ -. ,... "•""' with -· -DillJI SCRJ.fif.UfS ;t;NSWERS IN CLA I ATI " """'"'"' ••""'· 11z 1mo. 1<1>11181 ·"""""'""""="'::..· --~-.. ~ Pilot CWtlOod. 64Hm8. -I , \ ~·,1,l·\ 1, ~··""''' ,_ ' J' I ' I I I I I I \ ' - " • ·A Classified Ad Could Help Fi.II S~n-ta' s JWagon About this time every year, the ad-visors in the DAILY PILOT Classified 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. • .. ' I ' I I i (Mey, kldt. ...,.., •.... ,.of s.tCI 0...'"'.,.. •Jtlll •l•J col..,_. aftet' Mo• Hd DM "4111 tMl ellll Our Santa's Helpers have a wagonload of ideas to help you fill Santa's wagon -or to come up wi h e~tra holiday cash for whatever your needs m11ght be. Look around and see what you have fo sell. Then dial the direct line for help. I / I ~ Tell Santa's Helpers W·tlat You Want To .Sell I .. ·' i u Use The Direct Line~ -DAILY PILOT.: Classified ' - ' ,t I .~ -- • J PICOT-ADVERTISER --· ...... ll•H -"'- EL CORDOVA AnS. Fr°"' $145 1&2Bed-'I HUNTINGTON, BEACH'S flHEST Spanish Country Estate Livinl Dtsh1V18het • Shag C~g • Walk·in CIO&- e!s, Forced Alr Heat . Extra Laree Roo1111 • BeauUful Game Room • Heated Pool • BBQ' .. Enclosed Garages. Quiet surrounding. and close lo shopping. (Nr Harbor & Hamlllon St) 2 Acres. BeaullJul park-like surroundings. Su~en Pool. Sparkling Spanish Fountains. •1 Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining Adult Liv ing . No l'9ls. 2077 Cherie St., Cott• MoJO 642-4470 1 • Walle in Closets • Home-like Kitchens & Cablnels VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. 1 Furnished & Unfumlshod 1 J!DRM. Unfurn. $165. Furn. $185. 2 \BDRM. Unfurn. $185. Furn. $215. Adult Living 842-9622 T~WNHOUSE 2 BR, l\<!iBa., 1400 sq. ft. I Unfurnished $200. Dishwasher color coordinated appliances • Plush shag carpet . mirrored wardrobe door .. indirect ilghtlng in kitchen • breakfast bar • huge private fenced patio • plush landScap. Ing • brick Bar-be-Ques -large biat,M pools & !anal. Air conditioning. 3101 So. Brlslol St., S•nt• An• · 557-8200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT ----- (So. on Beach Blvd. ott San Diego Frwy, 1 blk . ..., Edlnge.r lO Start. E. to Malap, tum right). Mod~te Income Quallficotion OUPLEX-Immac. 2 Br. patio, new drpl:, crpt, bl priv. dbl gar. Love l ~. Water It. prdene paid. Resp. marr1ed cpl (adults). $165. No pets. 1 ALL UTILITIES FREE Walle lo Huntington Center Adults, No pets lA QUINTA HERMOSA 16211 P•rklido Lone, H.B. 714: 847-5441 365 ~· % Mi. mrth of Huntington s. So. of San Diego Frwy. on Beach, Cott• MoN ee..,h. 11'0. 2 BR. mtm, W. on Holt to 162ll Parkside Lane). i;A:i.f;..t;.. • ..::U,;;•;..fu:.:.r:.:.•·:......· _ _o:.3=.45 Apt. Unfurn. l·Ciiostiiii•iiiiMoiiii,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 I "--------I crpts, drpo, pool, play-yan!.l;.~!\'t!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. II EXTRA LARGE 1 BR $155. lndry facil & carports. Cpl l'.l Utils pd, Retrig, range, cpt,l·~&ifj2~s~ml~~~~n~o~k.~N:o~~~r!~~=~365~ Apts.. HARBOR GREEJIS Furnished & Unfurnished From $130 to $215 mo Bachelors e 1 Bdrm• 2 Bdrm• • 3 Bdrm1 I ~ or 2 Full B•lh• ~aster slze bedrooms w/ high beam ceilings, large living room w/gas or "'OOd burning fireplac<!. Convenient laundry area oU kitchen. Enclosed pa- tio$. 2 swimming pools, 88Wl&, recreation facili- lies. Security guard. No pets. Models Open 10 Ill 7 pm 2700 Poter'°" W•y, CM nr Horbor Blvd & Ad•m• 546.0370 drps, Htd Pool. Mature pe~s. Call 80-4664. Fum. or Unfurn. 370 Adults. lntant ok, oo pets. WALK TO BEACH 1------.;.;...- Walk to shop&. 18 8 7 ' • Huntington Beach Monrovia, 645-4267. , New 1 & 2 Br. cpt/drp, , Yea 'ly-Bayfront QUI ET-DELUXE dswshr, frpl. n 5 16th. 3 · ely new unfurn. apt.s. 1 BR., 1 blk to beach. g 847-3957. 3 > 2 B , 2 ba. oach. Pier -Ind •--~~ I & 2 BR. APTS. t crp1g, -~· '>' -· -Pvt. Patios * Hid. Pools 2 \\/EEKS FREE RENT! 1 l ~p. M y extras. lmmed. 3)2 ]4th St. 536-<C52. Nr Shop'g * Adult• Only ~·,1 Fi'J>.!t1.,~r. t>;~· $1~. oc~,.,,-~ • ..,,_ Im San'" "Ana A C M ....,.. ~ ""'"• .,..., pm. Call1 673· ... ve.' . . wkda.Ys. ., Mgr. Apt. 113 646-$42 NEW d!x 2 br dplx. Cpt, 2 BR. upstairs, bar, bltnl!I, drpl, D/W, bltnl!I. $115. 218 crpts, $165/n'Jl1. Uttl Paid. K~n ox v t-11 e • 5 3 6-7633;-135 Alberi Pl. call Mr. 53&-2652. \Vhlte (%13) !J95..4436 or aft 6 LARGE I BR H'- -I~ Rooms 400 pm, 962-3.172. -nr .. "THE GABLES" H~. New shag, gar., ATTRAC quiet rm & batll. 2 1" Ba / Adi'· dshWshr. $1!iO mo. No pets. Pool prvtl. Pvt resld. Nr Br. n w gar. ...,. 675--3439 ~lux Back Bay, CM. Bus or prof Crpts, _drl'*, bltnll, lncd yrd BEAt!f 2 Br 2 Ba db: 2 Batfil. woman. $100/mo. 646-8502. wl patio. Wtr pd. 63&-fm. · • • . ri-k.ce 2437 Orange Ave No. D.$16(1. poolside nr 1!cl'· $155 tow p;,jv · ROOMS $18 Wk up w/kit. 1 -BR. Carport, priv. patio, dep. %320 Flonda. ~3976. ~ ta Ana Ave. $30 wk up apls. 2376 New· d ll I WALK to ocean 2 BR, newly port Blvd., CM. 548-9755. new crpts. rps. A e ec. ' · BALBD ~ nin Pt. 1 blk Resp. adults anly, no dee cpts, drps, bllinS. from Beaut mod apts. Nprll~.~k;=th, ~.; ~.: chll1;I or pet&. Consider child 536-61S5. 2 br· l hr, yrly, Blilts. ...,... _,. MB-· 2 BR. PUUally furn. Close to Ews 9, pm or wknds, ~'c..-3=.:;•·=m= . ..o6'J3.-0289=""=;·-.,,.-- 2 BR Stove. retrig, crpts, &: park. , $140fmo. Cal 1 1 ;~673-~~~l~~~s~ e QUIET. CIOlle in. For con-dflliS. Attach. gar. Fmced ~1010 Mr. Smith. genial employed man. 0!1 "!.':"'1322· No pets. $150. KING-SlZE~Attractlve 1 Br. ba.L • ~ ~ .. ~ "::-.~parldng~. -M-O~NTllL~· ~--v-1598.~,-b·-lk-.• -.. -~ · BU·i.ns. Drapes. Carpets. ~-~ip,s, dulls only no pets. ....,., • AVAIL Now-2 Br, 11,> Ba, $130. 847-5384. A~. . J, $225 per mo. Beach. Call 613-6210 or refrig. b\tnB, li!w shag crpL 548-1533 1 ~,...0~~'7."aok"'i-"'"'°'"r"B"ud"-=~ I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' I ~nt. Pool. No pets. L"llun• Beech .N-=E=w-•• -2=B=E~D-R-OOM~~s Hotels, Motels 410 How's Your Budget? ** BEAlM'IFUL 1 & 2 BR. UNIQUE Laguna CMtle Apt. 2 bttba, double garage, WEEKLY rates -Waterbeda, Great, "'hen )IOU get your money'ii v.·orth at the Ven. dome. Handy lOC&tion with lots of nearby activities for the kids • , . pl.us play and pool area. Inside: Wkle ocean views acres of .__ Y'earl Lease ~. Color 'IV Kllcbe 1 .,_. Contemporary Garden Apts. .... ...t..ns. Cose to' beach & 427 E. B Ave., Balboa • m. wvo;a. Patios, frl>lc., pool. $1S> :t;>p"", ..... 2 s• 2 Ba.· ,_ Itso to bee.ch. NeWpOrt Beach llBO -Ca11-567--03lll. ' • .,,, • ~--'""==~:;,::::.._......,_ ,....,.Lodge, 6'>-<252. · . nns. -Ii &~. -CU&tOm SEACLIFF Manor 1Apts. 1 G st H 415 2 BR, crpts, dfpa, bl~; w a I !papen. chandeUen, BR. $1"3. , Pool, Crpts. 1 ,;;;uo;;;;;;;;°'"";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; lndry room on prerruses mosaic tile, Rutten. $450 drJl8t bltna,. b d• 1525 $156/mo. 646-6961 or Mo. partially f\tr:n. Mature Piacentia , 0A.sk about * 1500 9Quare !eel * 3 Bedrooms * Big living room with fireplace 646-1246 adults only~ avail. our ~t MS-2682. * Priv•te Room * NEWLY ~r 2. BR, l "Ai ba llOOb, other I a~ $250 2 BR. Y~. $3Xllmo. 1h for studio. Pvt patio. Cb.lid ok, to $650 mo. By PP t. only blk to Oetan. I> a t Io . Ambulatory Lady or Man no ~ PS:,.~ Joann. 494-4653. Garage. Addita. IO pets. Good, nutritious Food. Yours, from $195 • . . a new ille at 5'15-,,..., or 2 BR apt, w/w cpt,<drps, kit. 673-81l18. . Nice, cheerful atmosphere. $140 up spac 2 br/3 br l'IS be. turn., ocean ~w.)cbe to NEW 3 BR, 2 ba~ Duplex, * Call ~-475.1 * pool, cpt/drp, bltn, plygrnd, ~""'ni~ .. ~ tif_ the Ground floor. tt7 33'rd SL·~~""!!~!""'!!!!~'!""!!!! 1845 Anaheim A\·enue 1996 Map1e, No. l ••• &f2..3813 .,......... _. .... '6.Mr YJ'. $215/mo. Yearb-. IJl3:9558 1: can Mrs. Phillips 540-0781 2212 College, No. 5 ... 6*-4273 round, $190 mo. ·Brach, OCEANVIEW ~· duplex-PRIVATE Rooms • Men or THE VENDOME I~~~~~~-=~~ J1;=;BR.""'=;A;;:p;-t.'-'::wj'/-:;•"""':;::'& 494-7447. 2 BR, 1 ba. $250. ~~ ~ Women. XI n t nutrlUous DELUXE re.frig. $12S/mo. See, n7 w. Me111 Verde 6'2-3639 ' ~Conwiete care. Ph. APARTMENTS 18th St. No. A or call I YEARLY· 4 Br ~· 2 Br Air Cond • Frplc's . 3 Swim· 646-6391 eves or l\'knds. DELUXE 2 &. 3 Br, 21 Ba. apt, on ~ater; ·3 J:t, aPt. · Rentals to Shere 430 ming Pools • Health Spa • LRG 2 Br. $150 car {)rps, Encl gar, $160 up. lWlta.I ABBEY REALTY! 642-3850. MAN t hare •-··--•. Tennis Courts -Game and 1tve, prlv fmxl yard, kids Otc., 3095 Mace Ave. , o wt' th 2 ......-• ex- Billiard Room. OK, no pets. W. side, Sts-1034. Apts. perun bl "~"-"~!,n. ~ 1 BR. From $160 673-n78 F • U I• 370 reuona e. ~,, ....,..._ 1 BR. &. Den From $185 DELUX ~ 1ri 1 BR. a.pt Pffwport BNch um. or n 1m . ~M= .... ~=------ MEOITERRANEAN in t.plex, Clooe to South Bolboo Nnlnsull FEMALE to •hare my VIL GE Cout Center. Adlta, no pets. C"' •N bea.utiful home. Pvt room. LA $155. 557-5529 0 .... and • NEW • 3 BR, 2 Ba. svl $100 mo. 54&-1TI3. 2400 Harbor Blvd .• C.M. 2 BR, 2 BA ""'~ -bltM HARBOR VIEW oow to June ro. Flpk, bit. GAL to ..... """"' near (714) 5S7-80at wwimyei.-hookup-pa.Ho' __ J ns, dshW1hr. $Z5hno. 929 OC'C. Uttl pd $87.50. 545-6177 RENTAL OFFICE gar. l child/no pe°t. $170'. ''Where ~lalrty W. BilbOa Blvd; l213r =oo.•..054!Hl9=.cocl2~.'-=--,.--= OPEN 10 AM to 6 PM ' 181-H Del Mar 5t8-a78 Prev11lf1'' 694-ll83. Gar.,.. for Rent 435 N2e:'r.~~l':w~:~• 1ti6s ne:O 2 :~~n. ~O ~~U: a=:u tt!6.~:! Corona ctei Mar Garage for Storqe. Families Welcome pets. Jo9 Monte Vista perb house .security, exclu· SPACIOUS 2 BR.; beamed 1959 Maple Ave., Costa Mesa Shag cpl/drps, patio, 548-3003 alve ~enJaJIJe!I Club and ctll's. Pool. So. of Hwy. Manager, Apt 5. beam ~il., garages. • BRAND NEW 2 Bedroom pool ~th Wlique Aqu.e.bar, $193.50 Month. Adults • l'IO Office Rental 440 From $1BO uJ fountains and fonnal gar.. pds. Broker 6'4-t848 , C M Upper Apt. No peta. Ad ts dens. All p&l't <H the South PRE~IGE OFFICES,· Air· 622 llamUton, . . Only Ph· ... ~-e·-s & I o• See Af&r. f\.1r. & Mrs. lloban wkncis · J'JQ"'V.uo ·~ Coast's . finest apartment Coi l.a Melli port, cptii. drps, alr oond, 543-2062 · community. dally maint. Exec bldg. l0iiii0ii0oiiii;iiiiiii0iii0-f * SHADY ELMS -PCX>L * 1 Bedroom/studios from $19S THE EXCITING l 833-8350. ADULTS e Adults Poolatde $140 up 2 Bedroom from $305 PALM MESA APTS o"'F'=FI=:CE:'--,.-,.,."1..,.--o-,--:d ...... .,. e Children next b1ock Models open 9 A.M. til d\llk MINt!I'ES 'IO NP!' BCH • ipace. Handy to San Diego l &: 2 Bedroom apartments On the East skle Only I year o1a In nicely lancbcaped setting Swimming pool, built-Jn11 carpets & enclosed garages From $160. Stop by 177 E. 22nd St., CM 6C2-3645 ~ ~.OR UNFUJrn. . Freeway Laguna Niauel LARGE 2 BR. crpts. drps, UnbelJnably Iaree apts, 831·1Q'.I ' . nr Estancia Hi school. Older huge ~l, Jacuci elect blt-==,.-· ,..-.,.-=,....,=-=-pref. $135 673-8145 eves. ' Ins shai crpts drps saun• Sl'ORE • front offlce, 500 sq NEW l & 2 BR's trom $170 to ON THE BLUFFS etc'. Adlik:i, no'pets.' ft. Dntown H.B. corner will $190. Nr. beach It shop'g. AT 'NEWPORT SINGLES From $150 renovate. ~ 114 E. Db, CM. 548--0137. 1 BEDRM. Frum $16CI 400 SQ Fi' Newport Blvd, Adul BA y From Jiewport Blvd turn at 2 BEDRM. From $1~ center Costa Mesa. Carpet 2.1ll Elden Ave. 2 ~WSts,~tt,. W Hospital Rond <'i block Unfum Apt! Avail Fronl $10' & A/C. 642-3230 Bay St., CM. 646-0073. • :.='~ ~~· ~.!~ ~( tbey'"' under-QUICK CASH 2 BR unrutn. Crpta, drps, N~ B'lllch Ca 92660 ' priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. 1 """"''°"""• ,..1r1g, No peto. Telephoneo <nil &i:;oooo • (5 blks from Nowport Blvd.) THROUGH A SI40tmo. 968-1455. ~ I AD SPACIOUS 2 "'· ' Ba. "'· CLASSIF ED ' ochoots, -·· & ........ No PARK NEWPORT 642-5671 1"'"'""""~~-!"!!'!·I ...,. $1651mo. -APARTMENTS e NEWPORT e NEAT/clean/"1>td I BR. the e APARTMENTS e ~· ~~213-0~1=: Lllxur)' °'!partmenl~ ov-P1111car11 4: 2450 Newport Blvd .• Of llftt ., . l I. 2 BR. Fum & Unf. 2 Br. 2 Ba, crpVdrpl, end erlooking the water. Enjoy IWll Children's Sections. g a~ a t l o/yrd. $165. f75(1,000 health sl::'h T awlm· ~~~ Ull 't,ff, MUST SEE! Yr. $128' 546 OI' 545--949! John. ~~~~· 7 1 11< tooil tcn1• 111ct lO l1otl1der.oo.d ALL UTIUTIES PAID 2 BR 11,i BA Jtudio. 111• .,.....,.,., P WI m es 0 tlrN1111wltti tllflllllllftl CalJ 646-1038 SlOO/nW. 651% w'. 18th St. bicycle trail•: putting, shu,'· w1t1rl1U1 crt•I• I CM. 6'l5-fM8 aft 5 pm. tleboard, croquet. Junior 1 • rtl••ln1 Mttln& tor )'Ollt tt 3 Br., 1 VJ ba. ** D Pol t fJ'om $174.SO monthly ;. allo I 1lltMPttlou1 1· or 1-lltfroom L~e, newly d«or. encl ana n llDd 2-bildroom plant and 1p1rlmtt1t. ''°"' tl65. DICOf•lor· p&bo. bltm, crpt, drp#, 2-ltory town homes. Elec-liftt filrflltlh P1CM111 tltlltltlt, C•--to --~ltlna 1\70 OCEAN bluU, 1 BR, w/w ,_,_kl!,..._ -.. · uoo r1lrtll'W1td., Costa Mt&1. "--"'"""'"' . . tri ""u.: ,,...,...,,, ,.. •• ate pa. ,. ,_ 'M5--UOO mo, 880 Center St., CM. Ca.II c:pt11. drps, re ig-_1_ •love, or MJconlet Carpctina, dr&· ;,.c~'"' -,--· ..--.--· I •ft 4, ro PIO w-all day "'11• I drye., "'°· mo, """"' SUbi.mnoall P8dr· Hvntlnghln Boach wknids, &4U340. 496-5903. Ina with l'leva.ton. Optlonall"'-=--''------ *LA PARISIENNE* HuntlnflOn e-h maid oeivlce. Just '""'" or BRANO NEW 'BR., 2 BA. rum A Un!llrn. MO'~ IN TODAY * Fhhlol\Jsland at Jombo<ec QUO VADIS Il l $190 &-$225. Fl.rtplace. Htd. * "~ and San JoaqUln HUia Road. Lux~ Garden A~. Pool, Adu~1268~ Spac. l1'f 3 \:.'~ 4-plex. T:~r:i (~~!:I~ Ba.cb.esii$ ~ ~& 8 'a. Ac;:~ ~:m ~ ~:,se =~t"~ :~. ~; * 2 WEEKS FREE * ~~~.J::'°r=I Charm'-2 Br. $165 wel-•. ..,,,,. 1139. Set Vista del M-Adulto Only • No Pots "'" .J.li<. l731'Ut.elson_'.'.B'".J 't..G&RllEN 110¥ES BRING IN. THIS AD & Duplex. eWly redCl':. E'.ncl blli: w. o< Beac:h Blvd. off mvtNE AVE. AT ME:&\ ASK ABc:ilY:-fiREE patio. At1a.ched garage. Sia! r. J68.1510 'W 847""4260. Move In w/dcposita oriY DICE .. B•R llN"'I Pv..rk·likc "ardPn awTOund· 1 -'=-~~~--= . i200 ""' ,_. 1 .... Maiure ..iu1t1 only. * FRESH AIR '~l1~Jaht S<Jc.;.:•·"'°1 ll!993 >1'11da st."'-~. Walk S blocb to Bnch i;•ountalna. Rtc. Didi. w} (~ bUc. W. of Gu1Wd VERY CLEAN apartment LIR 2 A 1 81t. A,ptl. Newly exttt.be rm, blll\.lrdl. cal· llWl 9tacb Bl\od.) w/2 tpacklu• bedroortl3. dN:Orated, w/w crpta, drpi:, or TV. Ea. Apt. hu dl.P· HUl'tl'INGTON a a r d en• 11.. butldlng -LOVEvY. bltno, -f'OMJ!. $16I A wuher ,.,..,,, lhq cpt, A Apta. Jl<IU at 1!olM Cl!lca. SHAG CARPETS. Vacant sm. No ~ no pett. f!l eiiio or deck ~ 14t-1323. Oxnpue .. See now ,.at $'17'0 per mo. Call S:.1711. C ff 0 r CE OC£ANFl\ONT .mat >W're rnlaln&'· Fr . The DAILY PILOT RANGE I leading ....,t. 51M141. NE1" b<och aptt, 4:184111 St. 1.,.,.. 3 Br 2 both on $130 • PIJ . • TROPIC\L POOL • ' bl""ks from ... ..,. I BR Sc>tbo<o Dr. W/,.....11'nEL'="UXE~'"'° . .,. ... ::-. -=pr°'lv-. -:pa°"11o-.1 Mal.k-tplace Br ot!Xllo, II> Ba. "J>ll,l l!Orl 11!5 ~ 2 BR $1lll mo, 3 f!' ... torcod air hca4 .,.,lcl6 poolo ......_ l•Mlt, r lltttale. Gu A wtr. . i45 BR """" mer. TOOtn Rtalty, ytarly only 61Wf34 or ·tl.30. ;:,pAC.k>u• Po o I 1 Ide K 11th No. 9, 54U . Ille. 84l-3371. 7b-S302 ' o/"!"low $150. 841Hl259. I WHlllttUJ, Otumbtr 13, 1972 DAIL 'V PILOT Are You Letting · Cash Slip Through_ Your Hands See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY Pl 'LOT WANT AD Will Sell Fast! I. Sto .. 29. Bicycl e 57. Electric Train 2. Gu~1r 30. Typewriter 58. Kitten 3. Boby Crib 31. Bar Stools 59. Classic Auto 4. EloctT lc Sow 32. Encyclopodlo 60. Colfff Tobie 5. C1mer1 33. Vacuum Cleaner 61 . Motorcycle 6. WHher 34. Tropical Fish 62. Accordion 7. Outboord Motor 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 63. Skis 8. Stereo Set 36. File Cabinet 64. TV S.t 9. Couch 37. Golf Club5 65. Work Bench 10. Clarinet 38. Sterllng Sliver 66. Dlomond Wotch 11 . Refrigerator 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-Kart 12. Pickup Truck 40. Jlodroom S.t 68. Ironer. 13. Sewing Machine 41. Slide Projector 69. Camping Trailer 14. Surlboord 42. Lawn Mow.,. 70. Antique Fumiture 15, Machin• Tools 43. Pool Tobie 71. Tape Recorder 16. Dlshw1sher 44. Tirff 72. S.llboot 17. Puppy 45. Pla no 73. Spor1t Car 18. Cabin Cruiser 46. Fur Coat 74. M1ttre11 Box Spg1 19. Goll Cort 47. Drapes 75. Inboard Spoodboot 20. Blrometer 21. Stomp Coll ection 22. Dinette S.t 23. Ploy Pon 24. Bowling Boll 25. Water Skis 26. FrHHr 27. Suite• .. 28. Clock 48. Li nens 49. Horn. SO. Airplane 51. Orvon 52. Exercycfe 53. 'Rare Books 54. Ski Boots 55. High Choir 56. Coins 76. Shotgun 77. Soddlo 78. Dart Game 19. Punching S.g 80. Boby Corrlogo 81. Drums 82. Rmo 83. Dosk 84. SC UBA Goer These or any other extra things around th• house can be turned into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD So • • • Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT . ' 642-5678 '· . ( • ' . . ----------- I J ' ·I ' ! i J ' ' !l a 1. t r " ,l ' I .. . • OAILV PILOT ~-;;;~l~~I ~[ _._ ..... ~1~~1 :1---·--..::1~;;1 [ -... -J E :ts;: .. l[Il] [ a $} FIA 2 ' • P!LOT·AD'IUTISU U m , 0 ' I l[ll) 1;0Hlce::.:,:=..ll:;:on::;:;ta::.l __ :;.C..O;: I Personels 530 L::•:.:•;.._l ____ .;;Sl;;.;S Gardonlnt Help W...,., M lo P 710 Nol! W ........ M & I' nl !1o!p 'If ...... M & p n1 CORONA DEL MAR • HINDUsPIRITUAlJST• Sll·-.... !t"luc~klo ··i•h 'f8~8WcG * .. ~-. ·-'-""' _ i.0 .!'!.9 ~ G~~ t~ ~SEW017.RK--.d~ll ... A ,~N.1Tf!~~ = a:&D-O rT NOW f Appn\X.. 12lO -.. ft. ru11ce Let thlt: ad CilillJIKC your •.:• ... "' Re1lde11llll1 a Commttclal 01: ''" .... ..... "" -._,_ ~wn •,.. • ~ ~ -. · ""'-b•..a~ .....,. lex •~t tpate lallortd to )'Ollt "'hole outlook on life for the l~e. black lni • l&rKt Irvine Industrial div. w/Uft\lted oo Job txPef'. u--. • • --tV. M4-11t ~ .. comp • ~ WeW on the move and need det1&n. N1 ltC'Urity b&da. OOller Proleuh>nal advla.• "Y . etotlMld wtth a "1"' Complexe1. to \\-Ork ln coat f:C."OOWtina ~ _ .. Yr .... f!.L ¥_~ ~TiNT JOBS MANACE?ilENT tn1ntt -Mlp! It )'OU wamt a Profu. • w/ample 1)8.l'klila. ort life. Lie. Rending~ daily. plus s.ml.11 "B". Low In 55l-4299 after 5pm. a.rt'a tor Jlt'On\tlMtit ~ -A-,tJTS.8 -_. ... *"• ~~ton ~ ~ ~. am~ aa• ak>naJ Clti!er _ not Jllll a Allie for Chr1Jtlnc 10 AM-10 PM. 4.92-9136. va.11,11}. xlta hleb ln teftll. paey. w .. A. =t.Eooloo A Health \If. Starting llJArY> to job .al)Cit.r.!;wiWMtomake 80\"0 REALTORS 6'ffi-!".~30 "9:1-9034, l12 No. El Camino n1ental va.luir. One of I PROBLEM SOLVER • l{eJen SchaUer CPLE-ove:r :IS ~ 30 We train you, 000 a mo. C&U boQ w... e. Succtu Commltmftlt, I PRBfE Costa ~fesa medieal Real, San Clenwnll'. niatching Olir, ·can not be ProL gardener. Tttt work. P~.-.omel AaencY untta. CM. apt + AJQy, p/tlme·or Catffl' _.,, MHOOO. .want to l~ to YOU. Look apace, mw available vi'ith GIRL requires ride lrom l't':~-Rrll'Al'd. Ci.11 g:intnv:. ~runing,~. 4262 Compua Drtve, NB ~ or 213: .... oppOi. ~1' Call US.-52$.3. MAN1cunIS1' !or Newport al lhe beMfits • e~ lntmed ~. Nt'W Balboa Is. to o.c, A\rport &15-21.42 alt 5 ,.m . or · llnup&. rt'Orge, • SUila .B-4. 567-1111 CREDIT CHECkl!R iNJiJinON TFX:HNICIAN 8"ch Menr N.alr &eon. ALt Dtpartimnll. PWS cpta, drpe .I pa'_Jnt. 2 \'r Ce111er. t.eav'g-around 8 6421567830 ;x~·l 323, < to ll:lO EXPCom.pleHteawag~~-n Gard1 e ~t!I• .· ACCT. Cl.ERK _ lntiere.Unc Exper prerd. Coita Mua ~·• fUll t I ma, 646-2716 New HOOlel Sllet1 fou.ri new 1eue min. Phone 11r. am, returning al'otlnd 5 pn1. o!C°':,,' ,:;'~""'~"'-=-,,--,= IU'-"'" ~ poe1Uon In Trull Ai.wtlt eec--area. ca 11 c 0 11 e c t ~l dept, H 0 a a MASSEUSES needed a c theta! !:J:::° 00&1Uont ~ Hocgee 9fi8.-l0fl 4MB. ~l~t~ ~~"::J~~ cru~·l~epe~e::: 1&t a~ G::~:~1s=.·,&f2.133'f. ~~ O~l~ni;nc;:!. <>:::·, 2ll/181$50. Hofltll, _Newport Bel.Ch. ~~ ~=68~ ~,;:nteed ~: pe~ D~ \\'ili'~~t= aft 6. Bilk'-'t & Bl'iatol, C.M. exp. Mmt haw ioocl Milli DELIVERY ol DA I LY ~ 11).5. cent hi).,., pakl vacations, at $5 nm. AnswerlnD 1ervlce AAA QlEDIT F..S'TABl.JSll· \Vould like to tee our child CHRISTMAS lights not up?" in tf«unt -.'Ork It: ~. ~11.0T, SUNDAY ONLY, to D.11111..E ""°',..;....,,_.._ lt"t MATURE a·', PIT CM )QI. Medlcal and Ute In.sure.nee. ... ED OR RE S TORED hapPY again in Ume for Reach lor the phone. Call Pll: 64H360. newspaper curitta. Re-"'-~•....._ n:J\.')\Jl~l~t.~ .. Do It NOW! tt's YoUt move! , ~:~~1.?o,,11:!:-=~: wmtJN 30 DAYS. Guarn. Cbristnwi. Pleue help.. Handyman & Ille up your Apt/Conclomlnum C ~v':. ~~~ ttOUW""'tt....,,rc .. tr'\/ ~~ ~P.~:utty ~ ~: CaUJ:B:~~fUR. DESK 1pat"1! available $50 program. Fl"e. Appl. only. Re~·ard. 545-7497· home. 546-97%3. Davelopera Harry Seeley, 330 West Bay .A.IV"~~"C\.. 1 munlcate a. mu.st. Da,ys • SEYMOUR mo. Will provide fuml.~ No ph. information. Con· ST. BERNARD puppy lost H•ull"f Newport Beach bued equJty St., Costa Mesa. Sales Manage:r to $UKl.-!;'!:!3C7~:..· ------ ',. A . .. · fidential. 540-0682. nr. Costa Mesa. ~tal. 4 Ital ,. -•th ~-'d •-•-Rep to llOK MEDICAL ·-••~ / -b 1ty & 1-m,.nt a -mo. llS\\•ern\g rv1ce Mrrn.-... ck C'ap llTn w1 mlll)' DENTAL A&siltant "C"-'d Jn "'""' """'"""""'!' ......... ~-T • ~..... 1\81 available. 222 Forest Ave., PREGNANT? Thinking mo. Has stomach • <>nu-WADER It dump tru lltl'ge project& tbl'ougboul oral """"'" Snlet Order Ofak to $900 cept.loru.t. Good 1YDiat. t ....... na BeaC'h, 494·9466. AbortJon? Kno\~1 aU the ~s treatment. Ha.• 1t.'Orlr. Concrete, aspha!t, he US 1 X-rays .l e\'tllcuaUon, Abovtrequire,know~ Exp'ct..-.1~ wrtome knOWl·l--R~-•• (i-:E~ .. ~---,...S~o-lo,:...1-·/ 1 ,.;:-~·=,.,::::;o.:o..==O'--I !acts fht! Call Life Linc, anyone ~n? Pleue call tawln(c, breaJdn&. 84&-lliO ~rif'~ r ~:!.xfu~' ~ ~-of t~cornm'.J adhes1vet edge J'~ otnce. Quay -nrtr $27 & UP. Incl util. Some u hrs,. 541-SSZ! early :nn. 6 4 6-7 2 2 2 YARD, pnee cleanuPt-dcYt!lop major FHA • oon· DENTAL-Orthodontic aulsf:i P~tu. Followup to = G. P. Htg., Beach ~ rau ~:~ ava&t.r Z1f'1~ Socl•I Clubs 535 REWARD! ~mcM! trees, dirt, Ivy. ventionally finabced PtO" ·-• Aae-»-40;-E.Tp'd. 8t6-923.i ~~~ ~ S600' !84'1~·=~·=----~--..,-1 ~~Ph. 63~ or 1---Do-n-.-, -Be-A-to-,-,--''i;'~o"r:~~ rGoe~rnan =. .::::..::.~· 847-2M6. ~:~naibilitiea w i1 l in-o~6.:Lpin.AM11tant-Exp'd, ~f~~fc (Sat,o ~1~~~~~ 'tic: i::. . Lt_,~ .Jmr~ft~y ror the llolidays! brown/blck. while throat, I ~;;.::;::::;::;,:~~---I • Site selcctlob & ac-chainlde. F/Ume. X-n,y Girl F'rfA• .. ·/sh to S550 Type 4-0 wpm. X-ray ........... F•-.. .''..,.li...,., .......... ,_.. ... .,,...., Pn.OFESSJONAL Suite rc.'lldy OISCOVER )Ml nr Fairvie\\', beN.'n D·of. c ........ , Ciunin11 qu.lsiUoo eertitlcate req'd. M!HH75. AJP In......, Con I sao oM: Al\ F -r,;,:-. -·--"""'-' ..,... __ • ..,~ to &'O· Hell at Bolsa Chica, Baker & Adam!!. CM, ·~ • -• e Prol joct plannlnc 1p pro-"---tol •·ilst ... t • ven tro Pf!L. Aee _.._ · "V· avaUable thra 1'artlel.I Q)m, H.B._ $275/mo. 846-1'.l.23. Di1covery • 3218 R rd A1aO 'wtndaw11 &: floor care. cess ng lo#9f1 ,_ Clerk 'fypl!t/PUJ'l'bUe '460 !JD..f'i669 pany. Appllcaoti tuJJ,Y re-- -71.f.835-688.5 213-387-339.1 S4;r-ewa · Call Dutch 537·1508. e Zoning, envtronniental &: -Newpor:t Beach 646--2615 Prod. Control O erk $460 MEN for earl,y AM lmburaed ""'°° qualillcatioll. 8'usines.s Rental «S Travel 540 /sbc~~ c1"i1 ~u~Ma'~i,,Z, HOUSE OF CLEAN utilities requirement DINNER COOK Med FmUBc:~P?fc s:1~ newspe.per delivery to New ar experienced sales AVAILABLE ?-.tar. l~t Ct.It.I. I poodle/terrier, grey wfl!lm F'oor, wlndow1. c:rpt, walls, • Interim &. permanent Experienced ~:cierk/Ty:e $375 horoes iJ.i N'pt Beach. $250 people. Openlbp a:vatt.ble. 2550 Sq. ft (.'Orner sh"ll't'. blck streak on b!lck. Ans to _! )Tt. In o.rea. 642-6824. •fin=ectw'al &: builder • BLUE DOLPHIN • ~ E. 17th Cal hvine) Q.1 roo. (part tbne). L.A. Compltte tr,alaiD& P"Olr'Un· Present te~anl, Cann!-!11 & I "Tasha". 540-9529 eves. HOUSECLEANING. ·y,1anted selection. 3355 Via Udo, NB •642-1470 Tlmem, 642-4lDI. = ~~.,~ Olatfin. 105 lln fl chsplay SET SAIL t-1 good references. Call ASHER .-.. MOTEL maid M.on·Frl wtndov.·s. <Ml ft. facing Coa."1 I HF.LP! Blk & Tan em Long term growth potential: * D 1 SH W • ex· ~ ........._ ' • m.541>TA. llELL llwy., 65 f1. !!Ide street & TAHITI Dolk'rman "'earing red flea 545-8177 Wed. & Thurs. Travel reqtdred, Sal&l')o' bd· perlenced. Appty to Chet JANITORS-Part Ume ottice r-n:fer mature P er• on · g!l.rden, patkina;. 40<' sq. ft. Grand '.l. Mast('(I Si.-hoon<'1' rollar Inst nr Lake & 10th eves. only. ed on qualifications 6 ex· before 2,or a.ftC'J' 5prn, Bahia cleaning, evn, La a: u n a Laau~ Beach. 494-85Zt Also oUlce swte, 650 SQ fl C"r<'\\' i: 11;ues1 Rh. c:osls. 118. Ulv'-' hC'r ,·ery much. 1'.tESA Oeaning, . carpela, perlence. \Vl"\te QasaifJcd Corinttllan Yacht Oub, 1601 Nlguel It Mission Vk1<> NATI~ co. openhic local 35e. Ren!ed "'fsrorc or (213) 371-1239 RE\VAR.D! fi7M507. wiridows, floors, etc. Resid/ Ad No, 511, % Dail Pilot Bayside Dr., 004 areu. Hush It wile te~ branch ottice. in Mission RIA\. TORS separately. C.\V. r.tast'-'r~. fu\P.jQ"'i'CD, mule, all .white, corn.m'I. 557-0742, 548-4111. P.O. Box No. 15$) Costa O.K., car I: )>hone a mt.tit. Viejo.Dana pt. area need11 R. E SALES Realtor. 673-4120. lost in Ml"Sa del J.1ar. Pls Xlnt Housecleaning Mesa, Calif. 9262?. Dry cleaning • Mature ~ Call m-6558. , 2 rMn le 2 women willing to Earnings of $~ or more Store or Offit'(' in 1-LB. avail call aft s:JO. 540-8510. By Day. Own Transponation for countei: sale11. :txp d JANJTORIAL help needed, leam our business. Reta as per month ls euy the Jan .. 1, 500 SQ ft will * 836--0048 * A/RK•iveble Ct.rk only. Must JM In aru. Top experience nee. Put-time, to lnttKrltJ.' It retpOM. need· Larw\n way. We furaj.sh renovate. B\fl_g heing l[S] I Dedicated Cleaning 10 Key adder. Lite type -~2843~ ~ ~ nite -Wlllic Oflb. Call btwn ed. Ca1J. ~-listinp--1.sellingtractrefer . • re~ed. Cu!rtomer pr~. U.t MMI Found 111• J *WE 00 EVERYTHING * NIGUEL 6_... .. ,. l.2-1 or4:3<K, ~3652. . ral Jee.di. Hl&h advertising ACJ'('&; fmm City Hall on lnttructiort Personnel AfMcy pm. JANn'OR, . mature. Men . NCR Q;P!R.ATOR budget, k>ta of Ooor tinle, busy corner. 5.17-6006 Refs. Free ei.i. 646-2S39. 27635 Forbes Rd. ELECTRON!& Verde Conv. Romp, 661 The I.Nine ComJMU)Y needs bonu.a· procram, monthly NEAR. alrpOrt (2) 16x40' Found {free aids) 550 HAULING & cleanup by EX11 Laguna Ni,RUel CenW' St CM. ~ experienced NCR Operator coote11S medlc:al Lnaur stores fl or both I in bustl· Schools & college student. lge Irk. 131 .. 1477 TECHNICIAN be.twn 7 ani. ~ 3pM. who can type 50 w,.p.m. It paJd. Can fJJt" app't. LoU irlg shop·g center. Costa . STS. 534-1&46 or 53f-2'16f. JOBS use JO k<'-' add' ..... machine c:: ......... -ano. in1truc:t1on1 1 .. .., ..__._.."'"' Mesa. }"or lejisc informa!lon FOUND ....:::.::::..::.:;,;.:;,;~--"--URGEN'Il...Y NEEDED OI' calculator. ~tion in· l•rwln rulty Inc. call Toni And1-e1,•s, 5-16-9556 TENNIS INSTRUCTION ... M:;;•::i::;n:;;le::n::;•;:•::;<:.:e _____ AliSISTANT ':r.' It TROUBLE SHOOT TAPE e Secretaries \'Olwa heavy machme book· 96M405 ~M Hours) 0, ·-1·.,,..,. a Mft that is n1enningf"I -main!----fo • RTS IN UNIT• k ... 1-a. ...... 1.1 ""-nl ...,,. """ ... Group or irxliv. X l n I e ..... ......., coupe • TRANSPO . • e ~ ()pera,tcn ee..,... • _.ng _,._ and lasting . a Chris!mas ,,.,., F'LOAT MAINTENANCE 1 .. -complex in Costa STEMS TEST e Irie r lh <entl'lll Jed R~eption,_ lDEAL Costa file.a IO<". ... t . ·r Christmas gift. 536-9.>UO. Pa•'nt & d-rot -·'·· 13 -...s.. SY . e trial n a o e . · -...-. 1nem ..... ,rs i1p or a g1 t cer-._, ... ...,.... Mesa ' Som formal t'd t Ole/store. 1200 sq. ft. Days, llric:ate to the Orange Coa11t GUITAR le Bass tnstuct, by ye a rs experience. • 6f2...8970 ' IOMEC • .B~ng Clerk Typist . ' ger. ·· ~-uca J<m Day or nJght, Full or put ~3437. ~s-7icis <'ves & ,. Mc A "~""""" Professional Musician. $3."'l 54,3-m7 R.E. \Vhlttemore Irvinie 5t:J..4450 in acoountlnc desltabl17 Ex· time. No exper. nee., \\'.e wknds. · · · · ""·=iv. 1 847 ll&i • · An&beim 533-2322 ce:llent worll:lng cooa1Uons train. N~ t.YPine, 00 Sllf, FOR lease C-1. centr11I Jocn-I :~pe~'~""°~"~~-~~·~~~:P1o~ln;li;ng;&;~L--AUTO -SALESMAN NEY'ER A FEE AT~TEMPQ I: comp&ny btnetlts. etc.· Apply m p(oraon. Any tion. 1~7 Park Ave, C.Jl.t FND. S1nall s1ra"1lle1T)' Peperhanging Full or Part Time u.lesman DATASTOR DIVISION Tempp Temponry Help Cell '44 l31t an. or eves at 29.1) West l 'l!iO sq ft. All or part. Ph: blonde fml tt-rrier. \\'('II I ·~ ... -1 wanted~ fast moving _auto · 1511 E McF....,_ JUNIOR Saleanen: 10-J.5. p,etween 8 am le 12 noon Cout Hwy, NB. 646-88ll ACT. middle-Ried trained. Vir. --CUSTOM PAINTING lot. Expenence not required. • F.am $J>..$40 per~ aet· RECIPTIONIST SMALL Shop, prestige loca· Gothard & Wanier, H.B.1 :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~;::1 InterfExter. Unfurn. inter. Call or Apply in penon to Sent• AM, ft70S tire~ CtlStomtta for the NEED girl 18 or older to BeaulHul new modem oUice tion, fixtures avail. 335S Via Can't keep, S.16-7863· spec. p-lce. Free oolor con--TED~S MOTORS 714/as-.1M3 DAILY PILOT. Th" b: mt a come to Sun Valley w/111: u needm your Jovel)' penona.1. ,,._ NB Ba k r Bl"e FOUND: Fem. approx 7 suiting & esl. Uc. lm. ELDERLY-Lady ~-U·~·n ~-.... 6 _ .. doH .itter mid Dec -end of 1 ~--·-~ J.;tUU, • • c: 0 Ans-ring S.rvice/ w 't be nd bid "A" ~ 2014 Hafbo!o, Costa Mesa · ..... .. .. -J £..,....., .,.., I*-...;.... ty. ui..:.t ·-·et;y spot. Dolphin. Call 673-R74ll mos, German Shep & Collie, ..... ./~ · on u er · ~ MS ,644 helper lor Ute bBekeeplng It not . colt~ or Jan. ~ta. •..u. Bonus every 3 mo'a. CAii Industrial Rent1t 450 B1k & Brown. Vic: Darrell &. Equip./ 11* Phones No Wasting ' simple cooking. Car req'd. dellverln&, Tn.nsport ii NEED older woman ·com· Sally Hart. 540«&. OoutaJ WU'''"· C.M. .... ..,.. *DIVERT.A.MATIC *WALLPAPER * AtrroMOBµ Le 811ng Room 6 beud + $22Smo. 5 ~ ~"'!!, :-pen1'm, Uve In, fnr eldttty Pe..,onnell.aency,:rnlOH&r- 6'10 Sq. Fl. J phase pwr. $95. FOUND: Black male dog pl/ LA LINES ONLY $55/ll-fO \Vh en you call "Mac:'' Sa I esmu, Experienced, da.y week. Call; 673--27S4. Saturda.y, We haw 0 on woman. Ute du~. F.V. bor Blvd., CM. 1280 sq. fl. 110 & 220 pwr. Setter, pt-Lab. vie 19th St., SAVE OVER $l500JYEAR MS-1444 · 646-lnt Ma~ment Opp. Guaran-EXPER.. cable TV un--for FouhtalD VAiiey 9D-Ol.73 REC!PTIOH1ST Pvt. oUice, plenty parking. C.M. 497-1638. Divert Calla Airer Hours PAINTING & PAPERING, ty, Car, MedicaJ Ina. Ralph ~~~:!!°1~~]_i:_:_.• _ H 1 un-y ,,.ustacbbeareut Q'>ol OF~ICE "'NAG&R for apartment complex.' Ex· C. ROBERT NATTRESS. 1'~0: fl1ale ttd Dachshund To Any Pbone-$25.50!Mo 19 yrs. ln Harbor area. Uc Williams Leasing, Inc. (n4.) u.=au'tOU. ,,...,"'°"' .......,..,IU':l""• y. OU Of ou r '""" Ute oU:lce wotk Rltr., C.M. &-12-M&.l. ini." vie. Adams & Mag. * MOBILE TELEPHONES & bonded. Rt-f's fu.m. 633--34.lQ 12Q>.J4lt'84ll. · 6 t.2~;t26Q._.l'el~t\U~ttf -achool:--bY 1---PM-t o -Medlc&l...Must.be~t..typilt. -:-P tl'fi'ir.t'ff S.A. nr \Vmx'r. 2.3j()O sq ft nolia. 1£.B. 968-539.') aft 6. $1.25/Day! 4/12 Charu1('! '"'"'''-·=2356.=·=--------BABYSJTI'ER wanted. Girls Equal Oppor. E'mplo)'er. participate, ~ Ute bookkeepUlg. Hvy Sat A SUn 11 to 7:Xl. $2.SO · units & 1400 sq It, rear FOUND; German Shc'p, nel\t' PTI.. Comm Systems 979-1234 INT. & Exler. Ac:oous. cell· 5 & 8. 7:~11:!0 am &: 2 to 6 ~jn pr or It y. phones. Ina. 1orm$, Med.le.al per hour ' loading. Paul Christ Chapman & Placentia, on 57 in11:.o; sprayed. Lie., Ins. pm, 5 ~Y home. CdM FACTORY .iiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiim/ ~pcr~l~~ $350. Ph MUm ;:,1-?!WJNEBWKRS.. . '"-t Frwy. Describe, 524-2.\45. Babysitting Loc:a1 re!a. 645-0lm, Chuclt. c::;.=•:::Y_,:SJ:.:TT::.=ER=-fo-,-,-~---2 Keypuncbtr $t60 ~~ · ID Fee/iiiii8iiii'•••llil&;o.j ..,., -units in ~a.. £'1ALL girl's purse toun<I at INT .& EXT painting, paper ""'T"> • \' n-•• ·~ NIGUEL Rntaurant M * Licensed ~ .... ...; ... ;.. tural d yn: & 2 mo old. JD:30 to Allsistan ~eeper ~ · TONIO'S csa. • 177 Heller Park, C.M. 64S.-Ziall. ·-""6• na woo •---·-ci·-* * * ~pt/---·-·~ p I .o-53'1-1346 or &t5-6 FOUND in Baycrest area· Beby·Sitter * finishing MS-1905. ~'e;'.::;30;•;,M;;oo-:;;:f'rl~,~-::!:~'--""'""'" ··• .,..,...~-J -ersonne .....--Y WANTED: M-1 500 to 700 sq Male black & tan Collie mix Day care for .l child. Infant PROF'. Painting, a.lao roofs, BARMAID. part time. ap-t:J~~tary ~ ~ Forbes ltd. An exciting new Lewry'• tt unit in Costa Mesa area. dog approx 4-6 mo. 543-'1226 -4 yrs. full tim'-'. Prefer accous. cell. inttrlexter. prox 32 bn. Call between 10 ..}(,~~ q. £ Tax SecretUi S57S ~1~ .... A ssocitt•d Re1teur•nt Call 6f2.....SGI. working for teachers. Lie/Ins. Free est. 645-5l9L &: 6. Ask for Sa.m 962-0022 • Ad-me;_. Sec'y $650 OPENING ~ R I W .__. 460 FOUND: Basset Hound, vie 1'~enc:ed yard & 2 playmateL BARTENDER • BLUE 6 U tr 6 .... ..:.\t-' $425 "10 N rt C I ~ ente I an1.u Santa Ana Ave &: Wilson, Hot lunc:h, snacks. Vista INT & Ext pain~ceilirca BEET $l5 per shUt. Call ti •rvs OPTOMETJUC usistal'!t • .. ewpo en •r '"· EXECUTIVE FAMILY C.P.I. Call·00-6847. View Sc:hool Distr1c:t. FV. :ii:.~&-~:;:G. spec. 6'13-W'.M. j ~~nb~ to= M111t . Ltw in are1. Fashion Island, N'pt lch need to lea!;(' 4 or 5 BR. FND sv.'eCI fml puppy. Just south ol Edinger oft BOAT BUiLDERS F C Bookl<eeper $650 Ma . T-8910 aft 10 am. • \V•.-.-~"' boosc or Condo. Eruitbluff/ ~l~.P~ ~~~hildren ~~~i~~: San Diego APT. Interior Painting, Car-Exper. versatile men needed New Lite Industrial Exec. Sec'y/land &\' $700 X to $500 • H~ Wettclirf area. Hom'-' soft! • ~ ~e cleaning. Reta. for qU&llty 158.ilboat ma.nu!. Division For Women l'"'rtt & Fee Paaltions Fet-I . In.spiring view. • BARTENDER Xlnt c:are of yours. By Jan YNG male gray/Wht ea.I -GRAND1'.10THER c:an give -"'"'-"":::.::'.=· -----Carpentry, plumbing & elec-. ts . th 'NEWPORT ofc: caterinfr · ro e BUS BOYS 10th. 968-6104. Very friendly. Flee Collar. love & playmates anytime Pleiter, P1ttch, Rea.Ir trical talent w/aupervisory • Many auq:nmen in c ParlonMI ~ wfflytY. clients letkl at· • KITCHEN~PERSONNEL Vic: Lincoln Hilh 6-'M-()139 dayJnite. Meals & gd care, r--capability. , Newport Bea.ch, ln.1ne, San· •33 n-··r Dr N tractive receptlQni.st .. Fun A~·· In p-WANT 2 car garage for FOUND St n -_ _.. Exper & refs. &45-5469. Westsa.il r... ........ -Uon ta Ana It Co&ta lt1esa arcns • ....,..... ., , , ...,.!Jon ~-~~•· indiv . ~ ··-· Electronics v.-or kshop.O>sta : · ...,m ... u, on *PATCH PLAS"l'ERING' ....... ...,... e Ex-*""'~&tra.ineePo-..____ 1"'" ....... .....,. ·Mon throFri Uamto3pm Palisades, 546-7308 or l!,Jiear old high school <>lrl All ~ "--t 1626 Placentia Ave., CM .,....~........ --1• Call Kim 83.J...%700 Abo Fee ' • lty · Mesa. Call 557-3322jii;' iiiiiiil .. type1 . .,.""" esu.u ... es .,~ .. ...,.... •i•·:....· Exceu~ .. t e • ...,;.,...,_ !""'!~~~~~!!'!!''l"''"'/ J..Jo.-, ,_ ~~c. p An eq"'1 .. ~~-~lllS"'5==77~·------babysit while you do Call ~ ~.1. ........... °""'' -·-y ....,., DeM .. & .....,._.. er--~-· PART Persian orange c:at • Christmas 11 ho PP i ng · BOB'S Exxon, part time help Weekly pe.ycheckJ. :JCEVPUNCHERS ltOl'lnl':I A&ency of li'Yine, emplo)er l 'VCl'Y large ~-ith loud purr. Roberta 646-0818. Plumbing wanted, 3003 NeWpOrt Blvd, Needed... lrntnediateJ,y. .All -2>12~~or...-14 N ,.,..oNI& Will love you, 673-9357. MOTIIER of 1 will babysit ;..;.;..;.;;;;,;."'------C<Mlt& M~ 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. shins, muat h.a:ve ttpet. PEOPLE GREETiR 3 11 .. ,.~.: ·=-· C\-1. •"° · iiiiiiii [ In! I & toddl DRAINS nc:log ed $750 Xlnt eamingl to . ._... wu .. .i-.n .....,. Person•11 530 VERY large part Persian cat an 5 en, my u g • · CAREER -TRAVJl,.. Irvine 133.1441 ~y tn' Person Ladle., part-time dally, 10 per shift, Santa Al\&. 8Jis. v.·/l beauUlul kitte.ns with OOine, Laguna Bch. Sewer line to 100' • $15 Guys, -Gals 18-23 Sinde Na· K LLY GIRL ti) 2. No weekenda. No tell· to) Conv Hospital ~1966.. blue eyes. 673-9l57. 494-5514. * 549-2502 * · tional Pub. Co. bas opentna lni· Xbrt wqes. Cntral RN 3 to u, full time A part PROBLE?i.I Pregnancy. Cotr BEAGLE puppy, n\Qle. ror. LIC'D mother for 2-4 yr. PLUMBING REPAIR for 7 young people tree to FACTORY 2061 8u1lnu1 Ctr. Dr. Orange Co. area. lrtten'iews tfn'ie Aho part~ 1 to! f.ideJrt, ayn1pathe.tl c Fen Way & St. Aru\'s, olds. lt1eals. fenced. yd. No job too small traVE.1 U.S.&: abroad with Irvine daily. Mr. Wood, l2'J64 Hunfb'lgton Beach are a'. prtJnar>cy counst'llng. Abor· Laguna Beach. 494-l403. Heller PklNpt Ha h t a, * 642-3128 * unique bu.sineu group. No Between 9 am·U noon Woodruft Ave., Downey, 80-5551 tlon & adoptions ref. AP· 645--£547. Sawing/Alterati.,,n1 exp n!C. Exp. paid training TRAIN££S 833-1441. POWER Sewlna MacbiDe !'.?"'°°"'"'"c:o~---~-1 CARE. &l2-4tl6. MALEColle-Pe::::1!reaf~,, .. ~n WlU. babysit hourly whlle pArognbove m .• ~ .• ~~~ ... "..· -*.,-""M=A""'C=H"'l"N"'l"'S:oT=-1 Operator, l'Jn-R Monrovia RNPa_!~ A llH·.,.7, f/tbn1'• 17CU9 ~ ... ~ · · .,...... .... ,.,. you co ahoppini:c. !\fon·Fr!. Vicki's Ort-inal1 ·--~ """"'16" Av CM. 645--7411 """"" · ·• • • MALE. 33, 5'10 nonsmoker loll 555 N"''-"="'ccho.::•o.H::•::'· ::........,:::.::=·=---'V Must be able to leave No Exper. Neceuary • !lone ~~ Vertl•le ·• • Delaware, HB. 84)-0611. enjovs dancing & Indoor :: Prof. designing, tailorini I: immediately, For interview '-'f"'-'•"'•• .. S ... =~ \\·,:;:1! !~~~ LOST Small brow n :'.:•::.l'flO,;;:;".:.'.:e::.r_____ re1tyling. 64.')....U25. call; $3523 10-5:00. VOLT : ~ (B PROOF Repre1mtati! needed for wtth. S.1<Hl996. Burmese c:at. Lost between LARGE OR SMALL Altar•tiont-642-S84S Instant Penonnel e 2 ACW fl: s Oiuc:ken Oranae c.ounty temtOl')'. S11.nta Ana Ave. & Orange Neat, aecurate. 20 years exp. CLERK TYPIST T :'b,Selvlee e p• • Ch ... ~~ old •·'--· PALM • CARD REAOINGS Ave. Otr --r 'la' St. All rupe' '"0'' C"t <too-PURCHASING DEPT empo -~""· .... ,...... 56 yr coai~. ,,__J, 1 ,...... " 'J' .. • "" Tel•viiion Repair • 3848 C.ampus . ., Suite 106 • Hydraulic AMemblen MACHINE ron1miulonm, bonus Ir other Put, present & fulu~. -REWARD. C.M. &12-970j. ptll)el, remod, finish, frame, 1------'----Newport Beach 54&-474.1 e Turftt La.the Oper, 1 lrin&e benefits. For appoint· Advlct It help in many mat· LOST: Rcv.·ard. Black Fen1. repairs, etc. 9G2-l.96l. COLOR TV Cal-Tronics Purchal!ling or t:na.t'l control Equal Opper. Employer •Maintenance Me<*anic ment call 842-7960 ~tr. ttts. %13: 694-1350. Fully lic. Coekapoo. Laguna Niguel, World's Be.st ·carpe11ter 769 \V. 2nth, Costa Mesa exper. belptuJ. 60 w.p.m. Day It: Eveniml: Shifts OPERATOR M.,.t>. S'WlNGING SINGLES chlld's pet 831-W or Small Jobs • Reference& Service Call $10. 64&--0412 elec. ~ter. M\!Jlt ha\>e FEMALE Cuhler, part time., Xlnt Fringe liend.lta .!!""'!!:.-------! ci!J Jim, 2 lo &-p.m. 6,14-7575. (714l 645--7588 l ~!!!!!!~~!!~!~I top clerical akil.ls. nltet, op'd tn ttstaurant with OYertime SALES Clerkl & ~· 5.19-31.22 REO.bk>nd Cocker Span. lost AlL types of Carpentry, big foc>d checking. Newporter (No phone <:all'• please) some ~ AMIYv.. .. ~ (QJUPLES PARTIES C &. small. 1[11] call For App!. rnn, Ja mb ore e Rd., Interview 2 to 5 pm dally Openlnt In Sent• An• penon. l'l"'Aqfo:t_"!'I_""'.'"• j Call Phil, 2 10 8 PM ~tm1:S i~Joulr.1. bi~~ 53&-1648 ~-"-"-"°-'-'_1• __ J f' Industrial Relations N5'C': Beach. 644-l'l'tm ext Ga.tn.on Jbdraulks, Inc. 111 E. l9th Sf., t CK. 539-3344 Re~'ard. &12-5439. Corpe! •·-i'ce 17141 ~M ~I 525 appt. 1 2321 So. Pullman, Sanla Ana w. heve .., Interest-/lii-iiiiiiiiiirll•••••/ ALCOHOLICS Anonymo"', LOST AJgM.n Hoo,d, blonde, -· • ~,.. GEL COAT TOUCH-UP MA~ Sal Ing pooltlon lmmocll-SICRITARY ~ 542-7217 or write vie. Center SI., c. M. JOHN 'S Carpet Ir. UphobU>ry Job wa nted, Female 702 TELONIC Experienced J~ Co ._ ~ ately •v•lleble for • 1.J';:.O;·;;Box::2;;\~223=, Co~·~·~';'";;:· ~Re:;;"";:;"';;·;"";;;;-;2484:;;;;:~54~3-;;;391;;7~.~I Dri·Shampoo Ir e·e Scof. · Boat Manufacturer ~1im, ~·· e proof rftMhlM oper• I et,...... !Soil Relmt.u>ts). NEED betp at home? We INDUSTRIES -' tor. To quollly, you'll bDerignghteane~ ~ 10all mcolln,oter have Aides, Nurses, L a.--L , ~ opportunity emploJer MAID WANTED., wi..putN ttme, -" to be • hi...1..~ •" .,. Housekeepers, Companions, .....,.. ~ H 0 lJSEKtG'ER, live-In, b' mot • C-'POrt ... bleach for white carpet&. Homemaken, Up j ·o h n , . pt\tate rooaa TV, $.llO per BeaCh. f15..3& •ccur• .. perlOft w ~:e= ~:.y ~I 58J'e~ ~54~H::;zi681,,;·~~----I ,.,;Equ;;;;;al;;;mOmpBporB'ii'iiEmm!:p!iloiiy,;";,.,. mo., ...,.,1 ~ pretd. MAID work In excha¥ for ~Ir for "'to.th, We Trader's Paradise -· • lines times dollars • Jiving rm.. dlnlng nn. It C L E A N I N G w o me n l' tl:)-.Cl3 apt • .2376 Nwpoi't BM!!, C.M. .,.. ... '!r •t est 6 hall $1S. Any rm. $7.50, available, ~1alure. own Clerical HOUSEKEEPER, Uve In, 5 ~I'll'-"'·"'-""''"""-----· / menih;..:r.:rlence on couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. transp. & I u n ch . ~-ul'ft....ev Neeclecl dQ" wt. MOO"'Frl. O#n Siii the old aun bu1' tbe new NCR machine. exp. ts what counts. not P'-'rienccd. 87()-8444 '"'lll,..'''7 tr.QI, Lldo lJle. 67S-S24t staff l'.'~1.1~-oi""'o1. my9'\L EXPERIENCED AIDS • SENC-RETA~R .. IES ....._W•-· M & , 710 Htlp,Wan!W, M lo jl 711 Came In oncl find out vuuu kct>p hou~ · care for eldef,ro. .. ............ •bout our flne stert- ly. M2-t 459. =:rt;w ' Ing saS.rlei, excell.nt MATURE v.·oman deslres.2-3 1 • beneffh hrs \\'Ork daily. ,.,....... c• . new peckaee Pho"" r.;..zr,s mW ~ " M. e n d ---m,...ory Cement, Coner ... PATIOS.PLANTERS 1\U Concrete work. Brick, alumpatone wk. 894..J5l3. "'----------------.llPATIOS, walkll, drive.. Saw. RAVE ~· ~ens ~·e-r crui.cr tree It clear. V.\lue SSllJO. !°;;l(cblulp tor 3 or 4 ~m honie.. Ask for Carl, "*4015, evem 544-6144. . '"""• -.. -·~'-I Help Wonted, M & F 710 642-752J ~ -~ .. ,. onv ""'"""'· Jnt..'Vlewin&f.llAJ.. 2 HOUR AIWTn'llftl: ANTIQUE 1lelgh. Mlg. by break, remove &: replace Sturde.vant A La.ratn! N. Y. concrcle. 548--8668 for est. l!lOO's. Fnd In barn at lnler-CU&'TOM CEMENT WORK C'OUtse, Pa. !Re!ll.} Trd lor Drives, WALKS, patlo11. hoat or? 531--3374/645--7554. Pool lkcb. Don, 64)-Sj14. Accounting Clerti 'E4Ual °C"· eTT' · a Kr" 111 ~ TEST ftllS ., ... Kil ""'ll•l1 , .. lll'l •IMf•llM VAC . 2 acres Yucca Valll'Y CEMENT \VOR.K nr wattr, 3 ml from c'-'nl of Rsnbl ralea. town nr West. Estate UmJ1. ~=*~::516:::::3::1.:41'.-'.*L­ MI tor tnJck, etc. CJS •• l1)). Ch lld C•re· mlt. Rlty, 548-ms. Chr\1. ' WILL tnde top quality oil CHILD Care. Licensed. Goot1 A/PayAbl!!, A/R.ectivar>t., palntin&s. landacaoes, .ea· t'('ft. lfot meals. Ulla of at· P*YroU J\l'lY or all :e~. ICapes, In)' liU!I for An)'· .tenUon. 968-0B87. consldl'red. Some typlns thing of valu~.L.~ amall Contrector pref'd. Xlnl eamlnp, Shof't Coco's LACIUNA H~~LS Hu lmmocllo!e Optn4o,. FOC' J I ' WAID ' ~•c::lll::.· .:trall<t:;;=·.c"""":::;:::::'::.· --I t e r m tcmpor1ey a11W. ORANCE Co. flfOl.lntaln JACK T11ulane -Repn.ir nlent. Immediate placot-Eveni.rll SbU\ Ranch .l Acreq;e. Ideal remod., addlt. 20 )'I'll. t'Xp. mflnt. APIV tfll PwlOn ~ fPf ch!U'Ch, Llc'd. My Waz Ch. $ff.-OJ38, Apply In Perton UOOI AW. De teearflota ...., • ., """'· Tn.de fer E/ectrlul 2061 Buslnon Ctr. Dr. J.,quno 11111t IMC home , dolert1' 83M85l lrvlne (At the Ei Toro olf nmp, 3 -Palm Sprinp EUX:TR/CAL / ll£PA11t I 133-14'1 S.D; fn<woY) home for home C'ofla Ateu REA-JODEL I 2> )Tl. ~ IU"!a. S.U.CQI VAJUI' • 80~ ,•,-",::"'.:,·c;64&Ql:;:.=::.l. ____ ,, V11.canclH COit. rnone:J'l w COC*-ldlChln J.::1pl'I'. )OfJI, "·'%.~"'· EL!:(.TR!CIAN, lie•"""· ,.., hnll•, apt., '!\: ~ ... v·: ~:J~'. bonded. SmrJI Jobs. malnt blda.1 rte. thru ., Daib' P a.-:t, am 4 • .... ,,., 54MSIJI. a-M . , ~-!!!l-~"!!!!.!!.:!!'.!!!f--- ~ I I I •• ·'-1' folMI•, 11 ••• ·, ... 101 .. , ... It "' ltlt1 G.i '"Y l1l911h1 --....... ,...·~ ~ ..... 1 l" •• lltll 1•• , ..... ""' wt+t l ,....,, rt•ll1 •wl•tO '- ~ .. ill ., 11tt -'IN At# rtott ' I I D /sTATfS All FOICI AIR fOllCI RICllUITINO MPICI 542 W. 1'1h /Jt., Colla MtM ,.......,...__ '"' Appolntn-1 Call Barber• C•mmern (7141 644-tllS Mon-Fri, 10 •1114 pm SECURITY PACIFIC IAllll 'l'be ,....,. Com-...... aecrettry w/mln. Q yn ex· Pf:'t'. 'l'yplna 60 w.p.m. Sh 80 w.p.m. 1Jackaro""4 In con- trot ot ottlce furniture & .. -belplul. D«eJ. lent. woddal .ooDdklonl A com~ benefii.. tioll '44 ,,., Be.tween I am • 12 noon -The DAILY P'IL.OT ORANGE COAST'S leading ' - I ' • ' ' . . . ' . ' . . . . . ' - 'ILOT·AOV!l!TIS ER WedNtdlf, -13, 1971 w~, Dectnlbtr u, lm DAILY PILOT 13 I al 1 a n ]~ [ ilwPol '.· l[Il] [ ·mi [ •Ill\.-I[§] ~[ _•d•_,·,,~J~ILI ~·~• ·~l~~~[~-~~l~;;~~I~[ -~·-~-~-~·1~~1 ~-~'i~:.:.'..~· ~ l~~~i!ii~~;~1 ~----m;~;~1 ;;; .. ~~~~;~1 liiiii . -· I){. L'. •Ip Wo-, M I. F 111 Holp Wa-, M 6 ~ 710 Holp Wonted, M I. II 71t l'umltv;. 810 Mlsc•llanoous tit -icol lnot....-1 m TV, R•dlo, HIFI, Hor'" 856 Boats, Powor ~ -r,:;;~~~~~;;;; ln OPI HERE l'I' 15 \\'OMAN over 35 for ldtclwln lfiDk·bed couch ${l; 2 gold PllJLCO Sl'ttO Component St.reo ti 836 GIRL hor&eahoelng uslsta; 31' 01Rts Cabin Cruilcr. 10\) ,., rr•nnARY "CGUnltt: wwt.. Ot.Y.f. Oon· wlvet k>u.nge chairs S.lO l"ll ; for Sale. Many Outatandlna CHRISTMAS-sPECIAL ZENrM{ &: RCA TV Ale 11.t wanted. J.tust ~ willifla lo abape, 1wln eng. radio, I Allfttl, GUYS & GALS tact Ouia or ~ . Ottoman $'25; 2 marhli··top Vataq at om-+ to%. 6 PC. CROWN DRUM ~-OralW<! County'• iargffl work fluctuatllti: hour s atcreo, d<-pUI finder, full ,, SUmme:r Time \Vlnll'r Tlinc. AU the Tl.me, Earn your PliY the Krlly Girl Way: Just S.. .J(.f~ yr1 ' l Thm Plck The Hour•. D:cys, Lertiith or Employm('l\l IJ'hat Fill Your Needs Yoo'U Wert For Us •On Our P~roll In Our C'l..lll:omttt' Office!!! Apply In P•r1on 2061 8u1l~11· Ctr, Dr. ~ lrvlne /'.'• UJ..1441 10 OJ)Cnl..nga to tnffi We• 8.f7.36$l -"'-'\ end t.ables S7J t>a. 7:i" Pric..-s ahu11na at $19.95. JAc:e:llmt t.'Ollt.I. ~ pl')CC dealer. All avail. modelt ln uncle~ somctirm'll halardous p.lley, n\W\)' xtras,_ ~~J.M' em U.S. & ll11iw&U. Mutt l ~. mirror, he11dboo.r1l Philco color TV, BSft Sl95'. Call 644-139S. atock. Pr:ief!d below the dll-working condltions for vl'!ry fn comfort. $9915. fl5-HliTI . be single & 18-23. A.Pitt In $%1(): Wurlit:u·r elt·c 11iano change!"$£ 8 tnlCk ptayttt cow11etf. w/3 yr plciu.re minimal flftY-M.ust bl· I:.>' CHRIS 1960 T/S, V-8, 1-8$ promotion & order dept. No 1 • J~ ~ ~-Alao good Rtect1on pt re-ROGER'S DRUM SET. dou· tube, I yr pruU a: l yr depenMl1I~ ~•rld v.•1Uhlg •o h.p. Buy y0t.ir w If~ exp. nt."C. 2 wk t.ralnlnJ pro-' •d• I White Vi 1 frig. Models at low 1ale blc llklnntd, 2 tom.11, 1 snare, service:. CaJlb 90 or tuna to ltarn. If YoU can oon1-"Chtltlniaa ptttent. I did! gr~m. All traoJP, !urn. . ny · a ~ &. Mutetr 1 floor drum, chrome 1paos, 36 n10. Fac.1...... authothed municate well vdth hOrll'" u 0w 0,v11 2. Mwit au.crlflct. ' Eanl 1)~1150 wkJv A up. ' Couch, 7 Ft. 11rit.-ea. '-" "I 5 Z·"~· ha'-11--·, '·· ABC ··• •· I l f I " W" " Charg~--~erlcan Expreu & ,,..., .... cym UJ, .-u. 11eivice on _prem-.'I. .,., nave a o o IPGJ't' $4&-7SL, Snlary + bonuaea. See C. :£ $50. * 6'\2-00:?'J '. or t~•tone Revolvlne .Call 21~: 234-3952 aft 6. Cc..lor TV, SO'll AtUnta at titn~. "-'nd co1nplett• resu1nf' 22 .. 56 Chrla Crall ChtSAic 2!ucthmaryl CUllght MQtel, AntlqUfl . 'lewelry 815 Service. KUSTOM 100 Amp. padded ?i.t11.gnolla, H.B. 91)8....,1329. ~"~Ro~¥>elng, P.O. &cl"-! PC'rfect. Bay bo&L Ukc nu, ,.71 Beacn Blvd. Blll'na . FIRESTONE STORE Naugal\yde. Green sparkle. STEREO, deluxe 19'l'J Gar· L~. Laguna Re•ch. A I r.lu..;I sell. 5-tli-10.i6. -J1aiX, lo.ti pn1. W;;f 4 Thw-• Indian 1'nlders -Howlti WEDDING BELLS Beaut. Must. see $300. rard model, ta-pro-92652· 5 -;-;-----.;al n-• Chatt • Quistopher Cates •• • 415 E. 17th St .. CM -.. ~ Boats ell umy. PreteDt 4 Ouiatmu Sale )Von't Pe 1·!ngi11g for me & M&-2444 54!H!!IM. fesslonal c.Nlnter, Jensen R.EGH.,,'l::ltl::D & unro-xu .. --'-'-------Switchbo<lrd Opr. American Indian Jewelry. my gal, so must sell beaut. H.ENEREDON c 0 m P 1 e t e AMERICAN Bandstand air suspens.lon 1peakmi, 220 t1•1W quarter horse!!, I •LIDO 14 No ~76 Kelly Girl ~-18tb & 17lh • % carat di&mQnd ring, 1-lla bedroom aet. cane bead· Trumpet w/catie. Used only Wa~ AM/FM MP X 12 yr ol? mare. aorrel , ? yr \\'/triulct. l mmac~lale! Ni-eds ..,..., tor short lf'rm 10 AM· 6 PM, both da.ya • &: lfers wedding bands, ,__ _ _. (Yellow) box •P""" 1 achool year, $75. call receiver, tape deck. Brand old geldu1g, dark bay, 1 1 ~ yr 1 6-6-05R5 J...... Z nl bh1.vaJo§anto ~ t hit / I] Id Sa $75 iN&U\I ·--.. ''""' ..... ~w & gU&ranleed, "''&S left 0111 filly, black, 6 yr old t1•n1porary asxlgnml'nts. u ·dry ill be Ue:red tor ~ w e Y~ ow go · ve · &. mattress, nearly new, ~·ul5. unclaimed. Now s 17 ~. man', sorrel, 9 yr old mlU"e, KITE No. 809 -2 Ails, J'R<'ln~ Alust have exper. Xlnt ;:re · w;.u.antJJ HoUda.v lhave bill of sale & guar-tdlinc-cbJ!st. $375. Lady JUST io time for Christmas! Terma. Credit de p 1. 91ln"f'l. So'<' at Lake Fot'(':-;t riggin,;,cus1om jam clete, v.·orking cond!;. TQP earn-Jnne inw~.' 10740 ~tee Qf quality _from 10Cif Schwinn 3 sp. bicycle good Sac. accordian, like nc!W. 893-0501. Saddt<' Club, 25201 Trabuco yard dolly. S700. 6T:>-720l. ings. Weekly paycheck. wuitilre Blvd. 6 blocks Ea.st JeWCl,el'sJ. A:r.king S28S. cond. $50, Ampex stereo, U> baas: Contello. Asking RE-CONDITIONED Rd .. El Toro. 837-0101. CORONADO 27 1 one yr old. Apply In Person of the •-· o•--' ,.,.,_,,_w'"'· They rC'_ really very hand· $100. ~'lBl.4 ~· $150. Paid $300, 540-2526.. -· si· N 8 1-0ILI• ~~ ,,,i.,.,, ..., ood bu TV's 9 YR old reg. Pinto ~elding, Dt.•b.e in!. IP 111 · · ••vu 2061 Bu.In ••• Cl'-Dr. Suite -For lntonnaOOn -'Orne rings & a g Y· ff 714 ~, -·-",... 546-571D & k nds fb ,.._1 St Blk & White. S.100. 9 ' yr oh! Pal~tinl) or o er, : 00..0-,..,,., eves. lrvr:ne call: 213-732-8605 or · eves we r * AUCTION * Offlct Furniture/ ....... or, eroo, . . m•ce $300. Y•a<l•og HOBIE CA'!' I'' 83• "44 888-lHB. ' atpp't.-NO CHECKS · CASH E I 824 > ro ir"'11 26 Rrvic1ng ., ,,..1 1 Muter Oiarge accePted ONL'{. Fine l''urnlture 9u P• Fran~ S:hroth;TV Servk.,; palo1nino pin!o $150 .. Will X1nt rond. ' 1--~ ............... ---=-;-;-;-=.,,--cc----c-:-'ii. & Appliances 36X72" Waln 837 W l9th CM 548-3l86 ta,kc offers. 546-tln aft 6 fi::S-6310 roran~,.l SECRETARY T:;;, ~ w~p':. ~"ft SCRAU ·LETS i:~~: di!:1c,~ !k~ Auctioni. 1-Tiday, 7:30 p.m. If~ de~ 2 matchi~ · ' · ~ pni. I HORTE CAT . 16' Openlnas 1n N"eWpOrt ir Seal time incl Sat & Swl. Ill"' wetch & pocket watth. Windy's Auction Barn ui;;hi4trd Aide chi's $40 ea. or FRENCH Prov. 5~ agna~x PALO~llNO, Crntle Quarto:•r ;\ mo. old. SHiOJ .. Beach for exper. 1eere-Bayside f'ish Market, 2800 ANSWERS ~ 2trl5~ Nr,vport., CM 646-11686 2/f15 Like nu. 642-5'77Q. ~9s ve:rY co ' Hol'Sl'. Rt•terit vet check. 673'--7613 or GT.t--7268 _ tarles. Newport Blvd, N.B: ft FOR· Sale: Diamond set. ap. Behind Tony's Bldg Met'I SEC din *~ wood desks $37S. 675-44l7 aft 5:30. 17' Sloop, 11.'d/flbrl' · glai.s. ,. l· Apply In Penion ·w S600 sell $300 I S •-S:ZO.:SO, star cab S40, 1167 W. SHETLAND Ponirs {2) $125 Cabin, 0 .0 . ishol'\' n~oorln~ 1~ ~-to.lain, $. A. TRAINEE OPENINGS Baaket -Grief -Lucid -prai : ' -· Indian Jew• ry a.. 19th CM Pierce 6(2-MOS. for both. 9~7571 betwn 12 $12.iO./Tradl'. &lG-60;,il. Rm. 201-Betwn 9 am&: 3 pm Tanker -KICKING 497-t23l. alt G:30. Running Bear Sllveraniith ' ' [ 11 1 & 5 or 835--0105 aft 5. 14 • HO BIE CAT--So, Calif. 1st We will trnin ·you to become. A comic's admlssion: "This Machinery · 816 RESERVATION PRICES • /0 826 free to You Nation•I Bank ~urbra~c.~~=~Ao!ch:~~ shcnv ta really In bad shape. THUR. Jo~ru. SAT. 10-5 P1enos rgans i ,v11rall1>1·. 645-3467 ed train;., ... p.........,,m will Even the chOnl8 girls are 12''Cometradialaawonhvy ROSAUE:'SANTIQUES ORGAN HOBBY 3 LIMt,2Tlmes,.$2.o0 I ......... ~J;,~ Jl•Jil;l ] 42' Cross Tri-r.1 ar:in .. Equal Oppor. Employer ~... •v.,... KICKING." metal stand. Z'l.fj.y, N~ds 1252 N. Glaasell -•,. 1C. sacrifice. $2,300 or offer. give you training & ex· ch · mlnOr welding. i l 0 0. & Katella, Orange. J-lurry! 61 J-1628. SECRET,1,.'iy· •· "'merln't""", budgi~ o,,Uici?-·~J, . ..,. ... ANTIQUE Victorian all', 54(H705 HAVE YOU HEARD Don't buy any c'..gan unU1 1 PUPPIES, 1. wks, need v.-----,,...-....,-:--:5;;-k-;-, -:9:;:11 AK ... v...'°" spinet desk. Dlnina: rm set, 1 , N pl hamcs ror Oir1stmwi. Part 900 4ats, Spted & 1 R.eaiOnaI ottlce ()( national business promotion and 6 chrs, hutch & table, BLUE brocade Lawson 2-Jerry Hall's new CO.ta Mesa you can P a,y. on-ayers Lab/Beagle 5 3 6 _ 4 3 7 3 Boats General CO.. haa spot ror gal w/good penonnel supervision. Ex· 1nahog & antique white. Dry cus~n quilted sofa. Good song! Try it. You'll like ii! welcome to attend free work aeytime ' MUST sell 14' Ski boat .ft typlq & sh. 4 Day wk. oellent employee benefits sink c.Ullt made, Gone with cond. 5&-3171 On sale at music stores in shOps. For information · 12-ft fiat bottom Jon P· ... 1. Trailer. StllUy to $550. call Jen and regular salary in-lhe Wind lamp, antique oak Miscell•neous 818 the Newport Beach area or C.Ontact: Torn Dieterlc.h CUTE f e nl . pupp y, Aluminum. 71,3 b.p. motor. 5.'\J -216~. 548-R995 ~aa:t. M0-&>55, Coastal Per. creases based on your pro-chest, small. 6 Pc .Uver al Jerry Hall Tire Co. 1762 642-2151 ; hoo~brokl'n, goc>d wotch· , &ood cOndilion, $250. 633-92tH 14. SKI BOAT, good t_'fli}(i. -•-ncy, 2790 Harbor &resl· caster ~t. an~ china, FULL barrel complete beer Npt. Blvd., C.M. Coast Music hrvke dog. Nl'Cds some 0 n e · (Orange) after 5. . Evinrude 55. Best offer. Call ,..'"' APPROVED FOR silver A bric·a-=ac. 548-9760 1 -847-8078 Blvd., €M. tapper &)'Item. re~ig. C0-2 SHAG carpet, broWn .t anld, •NewP,Ort Blvd. •! !arbor Bo1ts, Power 906 eves, 531-8970 Ve..,aM Gft the job PAINTINGS, prlv c.olleCtion. mech. A door spigot. $110. 35 sq yds nearly new $2.50 ~ta ... ~ LOVABLE gray-white yr old ~~~~~~~~~~' Ii~ =~e,srs f: tr•lniftt Mntfits. ~J;beai~~~=;rf~ Ted 5'3--7988, ~. ---yd..J'oani pad 24 '"' )'ds. *PIANOS*PflGANS* ~~ra= ~'Us~:f~~ ".ut SEtD1 BOAT SAC~1-,50 : j\11t) ~/T)'pllf. _.75 PACIPl(FINANCE ~ .,, ATTN: Colle c tors! ·ss.OO~ink stole, Autumn Hammo~. Wurlitzer, many t ['.w-~r.'. .......... _. [ * 1000/o FREE * 1111 Newport mvd. Artitlts. Also 1 ni P 0 rt ant Ouistmas Plates, 1sti Edi· Haze $150. ClrJls Bike, as otheni. Pr&-se&llOll-specials, CHRISTMAS CALICO. KIT-Hobie 14, f8;lr cond , • '5!0-TranspertatlOft Cost. Mesa ~m1 ~ ~~~ 1~~!,"tsHtMif:: llons I ~ is, $15. ~aft 6 pm. tnodcl close-oot& Piano A TENS. Cati an yt 1 me, Hobie 16', fair .cond •. $1150.1 ~-;;mmmm;.;~;1 ' Uz Rel.oder'• Agtt:ncy F.qual Opportunity Emplo~r .,..., MIUlY kili!s I 538-'f@S POOL tabfe AMF, full size. Organ rentals. Money sav· 64&-3573. H~bie 16'. ,3 Demos, $1450u_p 11 4500. Campug Or. \::::::;;;;;;:;;;::::; 1 :1U~~-2: =1!~e., POOL Tables , _ Freight' A-l cond, .'$150. Wooclsman ing barga!ns are here right YOUNG adult ma.le Black Clipper 21 w-trlr · •· • $2595. Cimpers, Si le/Rent 920 5*-2113 Newport Beach -damaged. AU szs. S49 to I n'd l.a n C y c I e '6 7 now at: Cat. AffecUona1e, sOOts. Clipper 26', 3 mos • · · • S4450. SECRETARY wJ~ recent OAK chrs (6), rockina chr,, s 19 9, c b r is t mas ldlsauembled} reblt e.ng. Wallichs Music City neutered. 673-7229 Columbia ~: lnbrd w-trlr Slide !n camper s!ttf)('r., Ille & disability lnsuranee TYPIST telee, ~.n xlnt. Oak lee box, La,.y-A-~ay, . , $150. Exercllor •'SI 1 m EXTREMELY 1ge male cat, New condition ••. ·•• $6125. INSULATED. experieftce for 4 da.y wk. twin bran bed!I, brass crib, BRADB~ $250. n1aster", A-1, $15. 64t--0420. South Coast Plam 540·28:!0 vl.'l'y gentle 546-7308 or All these anrl new boats $295. ·• !St~~ up to $550. chrml~~.llelm:?.!"',,· Bbeevleol~ Rare , • $225, ROTJSSIERE Toastmaster, *PIAN~ORGANS 875-7739. . Ava ilable at Hobie Ne\\•por1 . 531-.2304 ~.. Lade-""...,... ........ ,..,., El h J Se~ "' B · . . 1700 W. Coast 1-liwy 645-2062 C I B"k "~·~ 54·7 •• .,...l!!i'~ .. ~_._, ~A~-(),/ whOlesale, ss l esme n s' DaU Sl!?i PicassoS75. Pvt. ect le an1 na sun Going Out.for USUless 3 male pupp1e11, Momma · yces, 1 es, &t"t•. -· • 'J ' · • aamples. By appt. 646-7317. pty· ~ lamp, Elect ahaver, cord-Best_ quality • prlee1, · seiv. Cock-.a-poo, 6 wks Wt\I hold 40' CRUlSER.-GMC 6 11 'Scooters 7~ SECRETARY I ·Bookkeeper. cc 5.S G "to A •.. c 1 1 le_r, Liquor travelcase, ice Kawai-Steinway-Baldwin, etc. ·for Christmas 58&-oo23. de.isel, S.S., fath, . r.d.f. ~ For 4 girl ottloe. Meth RESTORED antiques. oak A r-gupirn. omp c e bucket, clothing, M 1 s c Player Pianos & Rolls d ho "·-"· le $14,500. Mooring avail. Pvt QUTCK sale. '71 HONDA CL •~ted, ,.,_ of caJcu•-. lamp table $95. Cherry-mar-~t-up. l)miite , ~.tand. filter, itcmr. 847--0310 Re .... W B "'-'I To g me, ~poo r-ptu 714/675-2381 '"' cc. 1300. Xlnt cond . ~~· ...,,. "" bl SEc'lVi lb! $125 Call arr heatei'° J)lants rocks nuo.m · •····· c UY·= rier, male. l yrs. all shots. 'J· • l\ona. 5 Yl"I eXJle'f'. or All etop l1K . . ~ $69 s(s.:146'7' 'STilJ.. ln box Goldak metal Dally 10-6 SUn 12-5 Ge! wfch:ldm ~M 26' FA I RLINER Twn 1 .:e&l"2--054="'0'10.,..~-..,--;-"0":>I buslneu college: training. T~::ct!::f.°"~eam~~ for appt. 6'13-fi615. ~~~ , ·3 I drawer office locater. r>..:..r edger & FIELD'S PIA.i'IJOS ' · · Chryalers, Good cond. SJOO:l. SCHWINN boy's J s p d 'm> Newport mvd, N.B. top skills. Let Kelly Girl • INTERIOR DECORATOR rotary mower. \Yill dis-Costa Mesa (714) 66-3250 Also good Johnson 18, $125. Slingray is xlnt cond. S50. 815-3551 start yoo with your best toot • Speclali2:1ng 1n Antiques dl'sk. SSO. ·lf"·f:. 18th St., count ell. Near new, sn1. BEAlJTIFUL Italian ~vin-[ ll'LJ I 644-5084 Ph· ~8219 ' ,.,. SF..CU:l'ARY/Assistant to forward on the work assign-Reaa. piioea ~28ll S.A. C.M. 5#-4485 bar_ si:re re!rig .. used lO" dal Hammond H-1&2 organ Pett 9nd Supp6ies 1' Dally Pilot Want Ads have A good want ad Is a Kood ia- dlredor of Sules & ment of your choice. Sta.rt Applianees . · -~ radial arm 11aw, 646-l45G. for sale by owner. Will. oon-. · bargains galore, vestment. ~~M&uatl~ha~e~ work ·immediately. ii.reraowx the wor1Ts ie::i ~i., =· ';!, A:=N& B~~ t~:!,~-·= =~~t.~ u ,.. ___ I l50 ••••••••••• ·-.-.-.-.-._,·,..·-=--·c=-::· aaqme retlpOnl bllfty. Thls r Apply In Person tfuest vacuum cleaner. See Cost $2400, Now '4 7 5. mies. sw1-..... Ann_ le ·<bil BUY· a P"-· p;--,_ Pets, ~r• .. -•Uon Sal 2061 Business Ctr. Dr·. all l ,. ,,.,,.. .......=: ...... ...,_. <>UV v~ a C8l"ttr ...,... · ary the ~ au oma ic· vv;r-,,,,.J. needs love from little girl Christmas. David T. PAIR checkered rabbits $5. -"n~~m..~.1. ... w_/µp ..... -t···----;:l.r:xlo.~--~1-model,-J.a .w/powcr-noi:d.e. H.EJRLOOP.I Glass Boxe. (only) 10 ~nnles !E1l· $10,95 Dupree, 2940 u c..race La,., Checkered doe $3. Free ,.......,......._,., m1441 / &: rug wBllher atta~mcnts. mfg to yqu. M,ape to of(ler. ca. Hurry. HlUT)I. '644-245. CM 545-4650 Food. 546-9965. SJilrrY _ ftetept. Acct& pay I "!"!!!!"':!~~~~!!!!~ For a free ~me trial call Lowest Plices. West Coast GIN .. t """"'""'""""'=--.::::-c::;;: I ~'-""'-"""""----:co. &. rttV. Exp'd. """erviews * TYPISTS * 542-4749. Appointments Day \Vood Sper-ialtiei 893-1512. A .LYU: l~GH ORI ......., UPRIGIIT Piruto for sale. Cats Frt ,... or eves are mt1.de lby our -. . 01~. pa!~~ ¥,Old frame, rPtlvate party. S150: Call1---------~3ss7~ed, 1 O - 1 2 · Register for bond~ repre~An~~UvAealsoon a o;~ .. ~ii~ r!,em~lsoga~ ~o~t>~ll ~h r?s": ~~ 646-3632 or 66-1791 P_:~s1~1ki1 ·1ho10 1 od•. 1 cF AXm"i·· a 1en1porary job no obligation............. • t.'O. • · · WANTED· Piano in good "'""s, w1 or as. SERVICE Station Atl~nt. today expanding Its local • salrs chairs & T y p e w r i t e r . present. 646-0818. mllllical Conct. 1 will pay up $75. 892-2970 .. A CONvtNIENT 910f'PING AND SEWING CUtOE FOR THE CAL ON rne co. P/time eves &: wknd&. Lite Intel'V\\'S: 9-12 force -nicn & women in· 645-1476. PORTJlAITS for Christmas, to $200. Pis c.all 675-3838 RED Pe~Gn male kilten. =~A;· ~~t ,s:; We Need All t~edad~e:e ~'t: s't: 23Ch~UIS diamond~· ~~tet $1~.hv;~~u PIANO •. ~nch ~~I Shots, ,f.Y'A. papers, $50. Nf-'""rt81vd.,C.M. OriiceSkills ~ ... ta~An · • Liii!~ net.J:_~~t ''" avail·. •M ••n J--Jo"---1pinet, like new. C a l l .1 546-9!!65 .... ~t"" EqW\l Oppor. Employer .,..n a. plant, 8' .r . .,,;=o 1 ~e e. NV""'IW ...... .... G15-0380 al 6 ! ~ For an ad In Woman's Wor!d Call Mary Beth 642-5678, ext 330 SERVICE Station Attendant ?>.lalc & Female PHILCO W A SH E R ' &: ~3959. ninp. t pm. "fVljls -!-Top ~-/com G ' I I DRYER TWIN U bed •""" THOMAS transistor, 2 keY . .. ~..... ...._~y m, Western 1r nc. GE Musaplo nic AM/FM sz ro away • ~· boards •. foot pedals t ':!11n?1 SILKY Terrier pup, male, 14 Apply Chevron Statk>n, 60il 466 MacArthur Blvd. for sale radio $20. Portable 17.. Pr of Andlroru; $10. Port. ,n,1 Q<l'k , "'A"~-wkl., shots, sired by .No. I 854 To Size 48! Knit Wardrobe ~Coast Hwy, Lag. Bcil. 540-0025 · * 546-1621 * tilack ind ,.vbite TV $20. Royal type.writer $ 3 0. yr ~d, 1 e nu. ~., ..... -Silky Jn nation. Jo'an1as1ii;.: SJ:fAMPOO ~lrl & assistant n'PIST, full time 10 \VOrk 20 CORNING Ware slip In ' 646-0818. Metal typewriter thl $15. WURLITZER M a•h' o & an Y pet a real Christmas buy, NI time Salary & com· hrs wk fur large com-r~ng~, brand new, st!U in ~ Sq. yds, gola nylon Hy-Lo 673-4369. Spinet. ~autitu1 f·i n i 11 h . 49~. · mission Apply In Per.:)n municatiot1$ linn. Salary shipping crate, S 4 5 5. carpel>·'~ cord. Call WATERBEDS -~Ing $95. $375. Ca,ll 5481-4338., AKC miniature Dachshund-~ HaJr West 3303 NewpOrt $110 wk. Call 1Il4) 8IH)263 ~750. ~ 54€H032'attl2~30. ' 1 Super twin $85. Complete * SPINET PIANO, 1 year mos shots c hampion Blvd .. N.B. I. ask for Debbi. •OVER 200 washers, dryers, ANXIOUS to sell NttWJIOl't w/pedestal, baUled mat.· old. dnt cOnd. $350. blooc1i1ne11. 'w111 hOld Iii ~ Presser. vcper. or U · I N decl retrigeratora-from $39.$. Beach T en nis Club tresses, linen & pads. * 536-1182 * Christmas. SIOO firm. Call ~J 11 Ir a l.n a PP I Y rqent Y ee 545--0780. <Membenhip. 64().(1570.. 543-7467 PiANo, Silvertonc, short aft 4 pm, 96&-9332 ~ tcr'ners, ll28 Unskilled $&> 1 YR. guarn, de\ & in-D~IGNER Raggedy Ann N' SINGER 9!1K sew Ing ke)lboard. Nice for begin-THE only 4 HallO\\'een born ' · • pm. C.lerks & sKf,&101:...._:!'~·-~hc;. ~1cycl.e t.nd)''s Giant size. 4• tall mach1ne allachments ~ oer, $40. 646-3.515. min Poodle puppies. Ready & a Pack """'" ,.....,,. • ........---l778 $15. 60-6889. I eluded ~. Murray tricycle Sll.VERTON~~organ, for Christmas giving. 3 SEXT.ANT en • DISHWASHERS. washers, o·~ end M~rritt ~-$15. 968-5329. xlnt cond .. ft!. s~. $125. males, 1 ?i.1s. $15 ea. RESTAURANT NEVER. A FEE dcyen, · reblt, guarn & wfshe<, Good <yndlboo. J75. f.LUORESCENT f'lxfu...,, 54H96S ~"~'=-""='·~~-,,,-=-I Interim drlv'd. 839-'lSro: 54&-5218. 631-s:'IM (0raf13!) afler.s. Comple1e w/lamp lrom WURLITZER Organ, almost RESERVE adorable Silky EhMORE t 0 a 11 C S<l.95. Genl Surplus, 1658 ""W "·-t oiler G.G. Puppy for C h r I s t m a a . -I I I I p -• r--·· K au m GRAY Persian l -"'mb. coat, ••--·~ · ~ ' "'" 1 n erv ew "I ersonftwt ~ICe washer, 3 speed, 3 temp. w/<n>au mink 'oouar, 314 Superior, Costa iu-. 531-7796/839--9506. Champ 1 . bl. line, $....,.$ 75. For Experienced 0th C M N $125 &t2-0022 ,......., Miscellaneous I Goods 830 &l<Hil 8 Deli Personnel • Fry Cooks Wa.ltren M&T· • WaJtrecses Hostesses -Bus Boys Colmter Girla: • Dishwashers PIXlne or apply Mon. thru Sat. between 9 & ~ 771 W. 2 , . • ear new . . length, perf. crnf. 831)..558.l. W•nlod 820 Sport "11 A c~KC~.~co=LL~IE~~u-,,.-.~,~J -w~k,-.,"' '42·7523 546-2592 REFRIGERATOR, 5 fc!an DRUM set, metal 1,,,nk beds. _ _. l50M •-bl hlle ~-·-Equal Oppor. Erilplover old. automatic ~-~ two t....11.. board, an•r.~e trunk SKJS, Head standwus. • .,,.. e & w . ~.!.._,,. u " d Ilk atr.t-":IUbU "'"UJ '-"1 W ALNtrr Contemp chlna Salomon bindings, S 2 0 . Delivery ..--...287 WAITRESSES Full & oor, e new, · + much more! 536-0ISS. cabinet & match'g buffet. Rossignol . Strato 1 70 M, AKC SAMOYED Pu:fplcs 14 p/lime. appif, Colony DLX model W h 1r 1 P 001 NEAR new, firm box spring Consolidatedf.,ld by Sean marker bindings, S 3 0 · wla!. will hol i or KI t c. h Ii! n J S$n J uan washer f a1'i6 ~· & mattress. S50. ll8 E. 18th within la,st yr, WW -~ 548-7467 Christmas. 962-80t.l Cap~trano, Z1142 Ortega Sm. rerr g. · ~ C.M. 54H485. • ~ cash, call !It 6, ~lr9390. SURFBOARDS J No dings. MALE Irish Setter 16 m011. Hwy. 2 Door rettlgerator/t'ree'zer SACRIFICE beaut Autumn PRIVATE PARTY WANTS Palrillo Path ~·inders: Red old shots AKC.' Femit.le WAITRESSES (2) lifexican avocado. Xlnt cond, movirig. Hue mink stoic. $150. rt> BUY PIANO FbR G'7", $40. White 7'7", $40. Setter 3 'mos old, AKC. ~ 630 Newport Center Dr. food &1110 t Hostess. Exp'q. $100. 979-749'1'. Perfect cond. 5.51-5930. · CASH 548--7467 846-3994. ' "" NewportBeacb644-7804 OVtt 21.·A.Pply 3201 Coast \VESTINGHOUSEdlx NEED CASJ-r -S1 ~2'17! LANGE oomp ski boots.SPRINGER PuJll, t-.f & F. ''rial(. e?,_._ l:::lll:lliilliiiii::ZO!:i:ZO!:ii:![ Hwy, CdM. Rutomatic elec dryer, ·like mlnkiitole.~selt--for • WANTED: S'TR I NG man's 112 10, hardly used, AKC, 7 wks, $75. to $100. • ~ t!il'r;' \VAITRESS-Dinner bowK! ex-new, copper. $75. 675--7656 7, 645-0790. BASS, reasonable. $130. 54&:1l21 ~Iii; 494---3216 Hunt/Sbow/Pt!L L v I w h ~ ~:.I (D· @ STEN ~rienc.e prd. Must be over Camera• l 4x8 Antique lit)'1e custom Call 646-3866 eves/wkrids.. 49&-4536 '?] ·Apply in person only, 843 Equipment 808 made pool taple. Like new. LANGE SlO BOOTS KASI'LE snow skis. 210'1, F E J\I A L E Doberman \18 \@ W. 19th St., C.M. ARGUS Su..,. .. 8 l>.tov>e' C8m· 551-5277 anytime. Nl!w pro OI' old competition. with Nev~~ ~!~.!'f'· Pinscher, 14 moa. old. · ~ ._ WAITRESS •-• EhGIJSH Bab ~ N Size 12 543-4193. Perfect co~"h...,.,. ~ 539-'ll!n -~--era w/tt»m lena & projec-Y .-... m. ew _ ~· Food and cocktail, Blue tor, $100. ror both. Call condition. 0rtg $125. Ask'g Bongo or b•lance bo•rd 357 Magnum. ' 6" be.rftl. sn.KY TERRIER Beet, 673--9904. 492-7242 before 2 PAt. $50. 644-4355. * Call 6'75-57SI ·* ~~°'!Al1.-rs~. M-l Beautiful AKC female, 1 810 REGINA FI001' Polisher, Musical Instruments n2 . ._.. . mos.-$150. 615-5745· $..anta Ane Area 7034 ""~ '8.-tU WESTCLIFF Furniture Buller, rug shampooer, new Store, Restaurant, BRIARD PuPI. AKC, shag. 907 4 Per1onnel A ..... ncy GORGEOUS Spanish oak condition S2S. 644-4355. GUITARS-.G~ild & Lyle Bar 132 i>'· French aheep dog11. Quick knit n ~lan1oro1.u1 .,.... .J. _ _ (ZlJ 69&-769 698-9436 StZES .... ·an:lrobe for htr doll. -. You'll '"joy the many lntaroatlnt d u t I • • thlit •r• involvMf with : the positions we havt •Y•ll•ble for ttenos wlth at least 4 months rvlous •xptrlenct. .Previous Hnk ex.- ~ pe,Jtnce It dtslrable, but not roqulr~. Cooatr. Sec'y tv S6.50 table & Six red velvt!t chain TR.AlN table w/mtps, 80 REASONABLE Price. RESTAURANT Equip. Walk-< } l or · Knit• haw "give .. _ ca'ly Exec. Secretary S600 $499. Wrt lron,/wood eng, 10 cars, $60. 8' child's 644-7344 In reach-in box B'xlD', MINIA. Sc.hnaUU:r. male . 8 3-(...d for• child to dreM doll! Gal Frid~ ~ Chandelier $250. Gold/white 'race car bed. $25. 552-7869. BAJ\fl'ONE sax 0 phone. Rettig. pie case & otha' wka, C'bamp. 1itcd. Top ..,.,,. .:'f1T Use left over yarn lor dreu, , 1 General Office $450 bureau & nighl atand SlS-USED BICYCLES Everett Scherferfby Buffet. mlsc. equip, 675-1001 or Quall()r. &f&-6385. I. .. t•l"'-i"'" tn~i'.... bathing suit, shorts. dackll, Admln. Sccre~ $650 4.9-H025. ' All types 642-1272 , Excel, Atk'I $325. 842-81'.rJJ 494-3521. 409 28th St., Nwpt DACHSHUND Pupplel "'f 3-QC. suJt tor U~S" let>n doll. . j ff you •r• well groomod I. hon good ';flf! ,.. typl"f 1klll1, Ceme In and t•lk t9 'h ~le ,i Security .. . n ' We offtr fine starting Nlarlea, excel~t loontfltS • ..,. ..... "' wwklng'~t ond omplo opporMll· tyi for Mvancemtf1t, •,' p=~·ll F.. ,,,.,., .. ~: Jack llolr ~ (7M) IA•S tlECUllTY PACIFIC IANK . .. 2043 Westcliff Or., NB STORE fixtures for sale. c lnls M/F Red JUfil' 3 MAIN 'PARTS -Ptdtern 7034.: n..~ dlr«>-·' 2 I Nt.'Cd a .. Pad"? Place an ad! Sell Idle lhm11 .•. M2-5678 Bch. AK , M ture. · •~ _,~ klm · 64$-770 wall fixturea, gondo U. I. or hlk & tan Shots. 5..18-iiT11. whJp up th ... "'~P s in Uons. .. ,1 tiler misc store llxture11 an hour or two and save SEVEHTY·'fl'IVE CE~ WHO W ~'TO WORK? Store 'gn. (proscrtntlnnJ' * S50-$-125. Purebred Spring-dollal"ll! II'• perfect the year for each pattern -add Z'i DRIVE A ,CABI 31~ E"c t H 'c""dM' E._.'ttM.¥_ er Spsnlels. Nr. South 'round Jn carefr«? bleod!t. cents fof each pattern for ;! CHOOSE your hours. \YOrk s1i:s110 oa!I wy, ' ~~ s TAR GAZ ~r· ... Coast Plaza. 546-190'1. Print~ PAttem 9074: m ;w Alr Mltlt a:nd Special Handl· fol' yoor&elt, be your own A.CLNfJlPOLLi\N 1 ·-· 1 : CHRlSTMAS~·ShtJtk't. "Lit· \Vomeh'11 Sizes 31, 36,,38, 40, in~: othccw.lte U!.lrd-cllllll ;: boss Men or women. Can bo *** Sora & malchln& low jl Alta •1'f: ;'-.._..._ ~~Oolcl.-"-M. ...,~u-~ He Lassies." S125-S200. A.KC 42 44 46 48 Sitt 36 (l)u11t dellV<l'rY wlU t.t.ke tl\ree •1 1ll~htJy handialppeth ~ta. seaf1 oeve.e'\lsed. Bout$l.GO. w M'AA.Jf y •Oft-v,.~n ... , 1 y • S45-0ln 5f6.2848. 4d1 t~keS 2 °7/8 yards 39-weeks or mclft. Send to ; retired. Age 21 to 70, sup-Usually home, ~'19111.J-»i, tt l Ac~rOlllg 10 tli• Slon. oct. ti inch fabric. Altce Brookl, lhe DAlLV pltm&trt )'O\ll' Income. Drive MATCHING velvet .tOJas, 1 ·8-IO: To deWIOJ:I ~ for T hursday, IJ.27 * AKC Mini Sc.hMuze:r PllJll, PILOT, l05, Needlecraft a cab 6 bn or more a day. formica table· .t cha1h &: • o1"'!.~.lcoi1~·,,.·~.d1,:0to,.,,.,. • 4-~ .. ' Jcma 1 1e. Ca 11 8En:Jn"\'·mr!l q;!"'8 25 • Dept.. Box lGl, Old Che~• A-•· In~ 'Ye\16w Cab · af 6 ,--:" ANll -rm .... ~_(Orange . for e3Ch pattern .. avu S••,U••, N-· y-~, N. t't'Y_ • mite. 6'75=-7942 ter pm, I '--"• JF't.t• ti lit h 1t-...._ -"'" "'"" ""-"' CO., UIS , 16th St., Costa MA-nNG maple tablt. 6 .. t::"" --12~ '2• AKC Collie Pups. Ready to oenta for eacg..!! .. ,"":;:_•.:-10011. Prlnt Name. AlldftA. Mega. 1 ... " 1 "' ..,,d 33 C>ie 6J Wll'I gu Chrtatmu. Call after 6 Alr Mall and ..-...-nt11•>U1• i&p, Pliftenll Nwn1*". · • chrl, and buffet. $55. Sterw ~ ~--,.. ~ 64 pi.. pm er Sat I: SUn ~ Ing; otbfrt'Wlse thlrcklUI N E E D LE CR.An' .. 12L _ WOMAN or mtt'I trom Jan. ti AM/FM $25. S.1&-9702 5 ,,..,. 3' Rulir ., ... delivery will take threCI ""~ lml ~ ~ ' ileadY job wrappifla. «mal BDRM ,.,, dblc bed, box •Oii..rs 3'~ t6'Til9 SCJINAUZER Pup&. ~IJI. wetks or more. ~nd to C'roc·~:...._ ,.,.!• _.,.. r•-= P&ckalN -~ 'mAh\talnhlf 7¥--., ;JJ.., lila-.... WW hOl~d ifor Ou1Jtmu. Marian fo.f.artin, the OAU.Y d..,.'"",~•t" ·.;::::·_ ...... ,._ .... tlb. -_Some POlilh or IPl'I & matt. 2 nlte stands, IA-1o• 31Patf 61~ T ,_ .... _ -. Cze~ovak lCDOwl~ ln Good cond. $31). 642-0280 ,r.... l9A 69~ enns. . PILOT, 442. P8ttttn ~t., Buie, taney knoll, Pit· l"C!l41~...,. ~oa HEAVY PSI top cofit'* iff:"1· ~ ,ri>~io ~f1.:tf0r~1~: ~en. We~.Y~1mf·· ~ t~=~.~·~t Boot _ nece--. , tabk, wltb aold leaf bue. 12-..,...., H"""' G-•·· ·~~19 ,,._ •noo·~· with lct ~· . 3 .., _ ~ ,.,..,,..,,., _...,. · "'-• au ~ Leam b~ p utell Pal· l'INt. Li&VD& B e I c h , $7S. ~. 1 'fatt Urol If !lP SIZE and STYLEt'1trno. -·-•.m -~pm bed ~"bl 1•T• "''"-. r POODLE PUPPIES. W\11 '• $1.. , c~::.:..=•••;..:..=.-71..,,_•-.:..<•=· -SOFA bed, bunk • """"' e. ~'-•5..~ ?Sit """'1"' h I t NUMDF.K. n..-.p1e1 lmtut Olft -• -chalrt.,._ '~"HGM 7•~ ·~forCr1rn11 . SEE_,MORE Quick""""" e QUICK CASH bed, d:relRI', · 171, •1~ ~S::.. Chocotai.I: SI.Ivor. 64>--7317. Fuhiollll a.nd ~ one -more than 100 aUts "': C:-~.~t~ aood Cl)~ ,..-t:~ ~.~ "w "!!:~~Pu• ppie1, AKC, ~"""' .,,. cir?~-oorAll s~peeto a rpu .,_ $15. »Wllh sol..rit 10n-........ p. ....... dam. rlnc.stunmer •-· si.oo. . ,. TH.OUIH A ditlon, call. 548-l568 , 21Y.,. 31Tod!Pf llArrd ' 548-0063 zttl ()nl)' S)c, II l lflt ... aeot. . *• it .22\l!<lo £........ :Jor..':: BEAGLE pUpo, AK C . INSTANT SEWING BOOK -o1 it ,.,. ,.u11-, • COUNTRY Frencft din. l"m 23 °'*"" 'S4,rOIWl'I MTo,,... Del)Mtl will hold t 11 !leW today, ~tomorrow. l!Oc. PAily PILOT .et, G chn. 1$1$0. ,Call ~~ •• 1 as ,."'~."'"~--" ii.~g --ctttlmnas. $15. 897-1'39 SL Qulh laok 1 .. 16 oottttm. r ~. .... l~ .... *"' 4 66ii,._,,_. ,_ ;.:.o DARLING UtUe. Chrl.stma.s INSTANT FASH I 0 N ~· ' 9 .._ __ w/rnirror u ........., 17 NM 0 11. ,.., BOOK -..-----Hllndreda o t -"""df --1 '' WA llT AD I' -· ,.... • ,._ ...... ....... ... ........ $1 '64~18, AF· ,._ .. ~. f ~ 11 _., --II S6S. Brown Cl01'11tt rrou.. Alie. JI 2'.... Mlitoff "~ TER 6 pm atU 53+-38115. _.....,.. ·"··· ~ -Mc. $40. 6*Q86. '°~ '°""" ~~l~.l!, DALMATIAN ltpptr:s 1 Nfl'd a 01Pad.'1? Pllt11 Ill N.1! Quilt§ fOfl Today._ uv1-. &42-5878 Movl1>gf Ea<I~ Am...,.,ao ,,fJ;Gd ®~'""' •.1N~ .,..0 125. 64M&l8, AFTER Coll -Ill ""'1"tlful pottmio. l!Oc. "" IOfa $60. ·After 5. CaU 6 pm. cl\ll $.1f.-3115. • Ma-5013 * ,. • • ' \ i t i f I I ' ' ' r • . • • ' • • • • ., • , . • ~ ,• • • ,• , • , • • .. . , < ' ·I • • .. • l i .: • ' ' " " ' ., • • " • .. .I • .. " " • DAILY PILOT YEAR-END INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE OVER 70 CADILLACS & Select Trade-Ins TO CHOOSE FROM TREMENDOUS ONCE-A-YEAR SAVINGS Just a few Examples OlD 71 "441" COfJN , ••• ,i.... C..t!ow, l .... ""' ....... ..... "' .,;, <Hclltlooli ........ ,....., . li,000 .r .... ,._ ·-""· .,._ •t dft< bto~ .......... lrOftO,, WSW, •l•Yt io., ¥1ioyt 111,.i..t _,., All./ PM rH!., ~ ,_1..., wt.Ml, -· -k. •Ml•lel• -lihll. C145EOJ) $37'77 MllCUltY 72 MARQUIS ....... ~., • dht ho1dl<op, l<!<IOty •h ...,dlrlo~l•1. foll pew..-•1•"1 +.p, dllal <•,,.lo<t _,,, toll ..--1. •'-'M . ..._. i.c~. _, •I••• .,. troo I._,., lew .,11o1. (61lEAft ,O,b- ,.1.i.11 ...... -.. ,, .. ~ 1~ ... ,. -Y. I ll ,.,.Int• Thi• ......... o~I>. SAU l'lllCI CADIUAC 72 UOUG+tAM L •• .,,1 .... ri.. .... ..,., ,._., •Ir, .. 1.,1 ,.,, ton i......, r,...,; .. , ...,.i ,_,.fl -... ,1 .... , -i.u., ".1 .......... 1. ...... 1 .... , ••"•· 1611fAC). T,.1 .. ti.. -,.1-•I ... 1 .. 1 .. ,.1 ....... t.dlll.c'• 11-1 -·· $6777 CAotlUC 'T2 SID. DI YllU l•n lhlln 12,000 ,.1i,.,, IO<IOf'I olf ·-111 ... 1 .. , ,1.,.,, "'" ,.,,,. ,,... tot;.. wit• ......,, .. .,1"" -· •!•,I '""· hlli -· .,_ wlltr '-dM:~. -~~" cr•IN ...,tool, lit~• -11-1, """i; IOct, _, _., "'"ffi•ob!• ••'•• ,.. t~h -•Ill· ...,, ••fe,...bft.. fS1'9flAI SAU PlllCI 1971 WIUAC Coupe a vtne '· ...... -............ " s47 77 .. 11~ locte1y ... COR<lltio~"'9. '•" -•r. ,~:,. ~ 1 .. ,114, ..-'"-"" I•· 1 .. 1 ... s ...... door le<~•, <•oi,. <••· 1 .. 1,. •I<., •"· COSOCXVJ Ao 14• • CAD. 71 II ~ c,._ 1 .. , 111-11.)00 ... 1i... !..:iv;,;,. le-bl0<k, ~-Yl•rl '""• .... INIW !" .... "°'· /\IN ,._,,,.~, ,...., ,....,, mo •"" "'l•K•i>l• ,,..,_ 101, "boolw,.ly lto•t.... (S.r. .i;ott71) SAU l'lllCI CADtUAC 71 llOUOMAM u • ..-,i...o-.11 ,,.;,~ ····-ly ...... ,.1._, f.c..,y o!• <-111 ... . I ... , YIO\'I ,.p, f\ol! ho•ll• .. 1 .... 1 .. wl•h tlMI •ro.f..t -to, oil -·· •-wit!> -tle<ll. -locb, 111•1 -11 .. 1, tilt & N'--P'i< _,., & •booolwloly • ......., loolalo • ...,11 tl02(Ht1 SAll l'lllCI CADtu.AC 70 llOUOMAM ..... 111"1 11,..rolu pelM wllh foll ,.,,,...,. I•..,;.,, hol ...,....., -·· •l•\'I Np, '-11 -· tlh I. NIO-OCHlc •-f•1. ,,._, ,,.1,. ....,. 1 .. 1. li1M _11,..1, '"""' ell ••to.•. fOlJALIYI $3999 IUICX 70 c.-14 ~ ' -,.....,,.., lwct.tT .r • ..,._ .noi...i .... foll -· >l•\'I .... t.U •l•tl lolO!iw. Iii! 1•Mtlo1, whl, M•1 "'hN delv .. •00ro1 I. l•tl -~hi!. CIMIAff) $2333 CADllUC 7t sm. DI YIW 7 le .-.-i.t/,. el <-'-rs. All wltt. I..-, e1• c..wlill..,lllt. foll pe-. cloei<• el loo!M.-., r_t,., l•!•rllM, oNtM, ..... 1-.b, llh I. l•l-eel< •-l .. , uiolN --· et< .• ••c. 1~30CIIJ, Jlo .... • $477'7 CAO. '7f R. DOU.DO '°""•rtlll!.. ,.,, '""" 11,000 .. 11 ••• ''""'" .1 ...... u11 ... i... . ....,rtt.t • .....,,;.., blc11:t wit-b!odi I .. & r1do lull rff i..11>-. lai.oiof. •w11 ,._, AJAJ•14 '''""· Hit & i.r.. oce.p!c ol-1•1. -• ell delw•• CodiliG< •Or• & .-.kti.I, 1"-w• ..... , ... h 101\do .... t. (S. •• # ..... ,., $6333 CADILUC 70 OI. DI VN.U .... ~i..e1 ........ ,. . ""' ,.;, CMtllll<Hl'Me. o.i. " -lr'J'., "'II ........ """'!.., fvll ,.. __ l ilt • "i..c.,I' -n... -loch, 1ler•, ""·· .-:. l\M· AUl(J Ao l<ow ., '3••• CADIU.AC 70 & DoaADOI s-.n.t te ._... '-· ,._., Oii• IOHWlltleelfoe ,,._..,, -.............. .. !oleflof, i.n -· ....,,.., .... 1 .. 1u ..... 1 .. _, .. 1, -· -· vln\'I 19to, AM l•-ut.M & low 1-i -~. f"71QO) ......, .. ~ SALi ,.ICI OTHER SELECT TRADl·INS CAD. '6' 11 Donn&. Cpe. '•"NY •I• <M<lhl.,.I ... l 11:k;"11 ....,_, ro!lew wllh .. 1 .. •1•'4 ..... & -111•1 .. ,.. f\ott IM-ln- IMI.,, fell -· lllt I. ,.i.,ouok 11 ... 1..,, ....... t-, ,,._' -~ .. i,., tleluq .,,,,.., v.,., 1 .... i.jl.,1 !Y0ll2Jt SAU PRICI CADIUAC '64 ,10. 01 vtW ~7"i:.:::,.~ .. :~:~""l."'i ... ~~~"'1:: i..1 ... ou••. ,.,.. .. , ,..,1., _,.,, -11 ........ ,.,.i.-1 •• , •• M •o.upti.,,el l•w .,Ice. l~liJl $1666 CAD. '62 CONYll1'111.I AJ• .-1t1 .. lft1, fyll ............. .. wttlto .tt• w~I .. i.., ..... IM!~ .. '"'""'-'• AM/rM 1~. ,.1.w • ..,. .iii... IHOYf,.I •••• CADIUAC '61 SID, DI VW focterY -1< ...,...,-.,1.,.. fufl pe-, •l•"I ...... hll IMI.,_ 1 • ......-, mt ... i...:.~. ·-1 ... ,..,,,. ..... •••. tvoram M•ot i.. -& ...-1 ..... 1"11• _1 .... $2222 CADIUAC '61 n DOI.ADO r • ...., ol• ..,.oii•lo•l"11, "'II .. -. •••-. hi!! IMI .... lft,..i•r, podtletl lo•, -!.<ll, lilt I. IOi....,.lc 11-l"f, .... 1)1,UY) $2777 MllC. '6t ST. WAGON ' ---c..1...., ,.. •. foll -· "'· 1-.i..., .i. -;oi...1..,, .1•'4 ..... Iv-•ocl. i...M.11 (ZS51•11 $2222 Nabers Codilla~ 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa • -540-9100 t • Open eves. & Sunday -. ~ I • 1§1 [ ...!,..... _ .... ·!i~J l _A_LF_A_R_o_ME_o_, !iii•iiiiiiiiii;;~~.1~-~~ii!i;;~~I Alfa ~ ... : ][i] [ n~1 1 -·-- Cy<los, Int• Motor H-~· R-•tll . T""*' 962 Aulol Wlftted NI Aulol W-NI "•I Scoot..-. 925 S.lo/Ront ._ Vohl<I• 956 1--------I ...:.;;;.;~--=-1-"'----1 ---__;;;;: '7J Chwrolot REWARD '73 o .. Clltlaa .• Blcy<Ole ......... $6795. STREET·ll"AY • -of • ~. Vans Sup-' 10-.pd Hallan Conos -klnd Body, 1800 CC vw. ••••- Assembled 1 belOwwh1 s I ,73 Pace Anow Mllit sell! ee.u alt g pm Stock Auto 'n'ana. Air Co/>d, Vin.YI s;\;'is.~I ~i~' ~:: 18V2 ft, Motor Home T=· 96~ How'A":opc':. .. ,.. WILL PAY .OYER Roof, $90.16 .,,....u. oa NoWJIOl't lleocn Kelly Blue Book + ,. .., mo. ALL terrain ~. Honda 173 Tlonn ·53 Pontiac •m'""--. ......,. MaA"_. ...... .._ '"' l...-Bl d F I t --'-I ~ n 36 o E 305 "'''.a speed. disc brks, '7-cond, Best one~ ......... ""1'-u,-e~ti.n-= v or " • rnvu., ~" • mo. • .L. sa.rld tires, spare motor, l 8Y2 ft. Motor Home 490-1601 ..,..... low miluge domes--fmmecllt!te O.lfvery also trailer. 1973 reltlstra-Off SUSON SALi PllCI ,59 FORD Pickup V-4 4 pd •n TOYOTA' ift* Jux truck, tics, imports, truck1 or LEASING 11on. S600 « trade. ~2-9633. ORDER NOW u • · s • R/H, Big tiru, st e P campers. ALL MODELS runs we . $475. Pvt pt)', bum~ 15 000 . ml n100 '11 YAMAl1A Mini Enduro & SAVE must sell 9«3--1152 r-· • • · Call and ask for Buyer AND MAKES MX clean & "'"'" '"' for C • '_!IJH5!9~"i::-07;;:-:~-:-; DAY[ ROSS SM.... f'.,J;f • de!K'rt or track. $200 finn. rev1er Motors FOR SALE: '(JS FORD %: T. 1 '61 Dodge % TOI\ Pickup, V-uuwllll '""' Ortlla 675--?M9 BMW p.up. w/traller hitch.1 Pric-8, Auto Trans, Power Stee:r--1 ll...U.- 1970 Sachs. Nt!W alloy cyl. & n \V. 1st, Santa Ana lil).3111 ed lo l(!JI. Call ~lS'lO. ing, Heavy Duty, Tires. Ex· PONTIAC st nGUUlldl head, .shlf1 kit, 1orque low T .1 T I 945 * '65 CHEV. Fieetslde 1A T. ceUent O>rid. $S!S, m-5317. Bank leasing' pipe & up pipe $400. rii •rs, rave P/U. Low mileage. $800. '57 GMC, 4 wbl drive plckup . .. o ·~ c u "·"'---~ 2408 Harbor Blvd. =~O'~.C..,"'· -=-;,;;:-,--.,,= '67 15· travel trlr-Srove, ice a .......-----...,.,.... good running oond. Must Dll Michelson Drive '70 Yamaha, Zill, rrr-1. Good retrlg, potty, WHICr tank, '58 Ford pickup truck, % ton. sell $600. or best offer. Costa Mesa ~17 (Corner Of MacArthur) cond., xtras. $425. or Best awning. 646-4045 $:100. 645-226L WE PAY TOP Irvlne, Calif. ~ Offer. H.B. 968-2738. Auto Service, Perts 949 4~1601 Vans 963 CASH 71-<t/833-863'.) 2131627-0.167 '70 Honda 350 .street/dirt. MUST Sell, 1948 Ford WE PAY TOP 00!.LAR 5-spd, elt>C start. Pvt pty. VW ,A1otors, completely reblt, Pickup, Excel oond. See to 19n CHEVY Short Van, V-8 FOR TOP ·uSED CARS Brady, 646-0364, 540-1998. Inst. & Guar. $290 & up Ei.:· apprt'C. Best offer, 545--2124. stick, comp!. pan'ld, stereo. If your car ta extra clean, HONDA, S 00, 1$6. Ex· change'. Also see us for '56 OIEVY paneled truck. 2 rew tires. Like new. Best for used cars &: trucks. ju.st see us first. ffilent condition. Sacrl.lice, Tune Ups & Yalve Jobs; Good cond. $600.-offer. 832-4911. call us for.free "estimate11. BAUER BUICK 5115. 96S-l802 all 3:30. Vince Automotive. 1366 K 67:Hi580 '66 CHEV. Van. Char'ey GROTH. CHEVROLET 2925 Harbor Blvd. =7.""""'""~~...,,.~-· I Logan Ave,, Costa Mesa, 1971 D Pick --• Cpt'd pa-•-• ""'I ~-·1a Mesa -~ BOY'S Sch~·inn ShngPay, M.?-0177. etsun up ""'°"'• • '""""'-'• "' .....,,. .,,,.•--~;;7'3$25. Xlnt cond. Calll'M7c"'AD~A00A°'IS~B-m-,-. -,-ul_o_bod_y Sl450 firm. p.t5-3.'1)1 ~l.~ radiator, Stl!reo Ask for Sales Manager Autos, Imported 970 · & painUng-COmplele pa.int 1968 Ford Pick Up %. T. 4 "lU Ford Super Van, windows tSZU Beach Blvd. '68 HONDA 450 cc. jobs & minor dents $85. speed. Radio. Clean. $1550. all nd · top Huntington Beach . ' ., ALFA ROMEO rebuilt engine $400 or best 645-7400. 1643 Placentia, 548-8165, or 1-528-X67. hvy ~ty ';,nE~s 0~ 847-6081 KI 9-33.'ll offer, can 979-47"6. CM. early AM. 1m 4/33?-5435 IMPORTS WAl\'TED '69 Spyder Conv. Xln't cond. 1 1969 Kawasaki, 90, 5 spd,l4'"'0N~,w-~Good~ye-ar_po_ly~gl~as Ci)UICK CASH ,67 FORD VAN Orange County's Neat Christmas gift! S.2350. Radk>, Hcattt, i.Spd, P.S., Like new. MUST SELL. tires. 1'"'60x15 and 15" x g·· 646-0622 TOP S BUYER Call for aPPt. 646-0742 or Factory Air Cond. S}fteo '72 Bavaria ""'" s:m. 642-33!16. Che,,. Co"""' nm,, all ., THROUGH A BILL 'IA"":Y TOYOTA 642-1331. Ra<lio cm, o~ . . 1970 HUSKAVARNA 360-8 part S350 inVC'Slcd, sell tor DAILY PILO. T .• ·~ Dodge Sports V9.n-V8, l~l B~cn Blv ~. Vacancies cost-money! Rent s.st1 : spd. Xlnt shape. 2 tanks. 1st $280. 893-6460. ~~! ~~..;.,.~ Paint· H. Beach Ph. 841-8555 your house, apl, store ROY CAR"'"' I $800. takes! 673-1658. It's a breeze, sell your items WANT AD ... -..., .............,. bldg.,-etc. thrv a Dally Pilot ·~ nc. 1970 SUZUKI 50. with .e~e. use Daily Pilot CALL 642-5678 Sell idle Items now! Call Sell the old stuff. Buy the ClassU\ed Ad. 642~5678. 234 E. 17th St. : Low mileage. Good oond. Class1l1ed. 642-56Tlt 642-5678 Now! new stuff. Sell idle items . . ~ Costa Mesa 546-4144 * Call 842-3M6 * Autos, New 980 A~~ New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9IO Auto., New ·" WO 1970 HONDA 70. New rt'"<lr1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;i:;iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;t;;.! lire. J speed. Xlnt cone!. I $175. Call 552-7015. • M 'TI Honda SL.150 Kl Excellent oond. $495. * 493-1018 * 1971 Suzuki, 400 CC, pet1ect condition, Make of- fer. 963-53li5 1971 YAMAHA 125C:C Xlnt , COfl. Lo n1ileage. $475/offer '16-3fo61 MINI BIKE Jtj, HP. Hardly used. SlOO • Call 549-1047 1971 YAMAHA 90 MX Asking $350. 552-9766 •n Suzuki, ro. Like new Low mlleage. Extras. --'Tl Honda CL 350, Absolutely must sell. Neal cash. 644-72'22. '71 KAWASAKI100 Trail . Xlnt cond. Low mileage. $300. c.u 644-0068 ·BOY'S red Schwinn Stingray w/gears. Excellent con- dition. $45. 675-3912 . SUZUKI 00, Built for dirt. Very fast. Best oUer. 613-3512 'Iii' '-GIRL'S 3:1" Bike good conditfon, best ouir/over $15. Call 5.1!Hl82 . MolorHomn Sole/ Rent 940 BRAND NEW '73 Explorer 20 Fully Self Contained Coach includes an oven, range, tinted glass, wind- shield curtain, dual wheels, shower, holding tank, heat, etc. And driving is easy with auto. tram., pwr. steer., pwr. brakes, & con- tains dual butane tanks. ALL THE COlllFORTS OF HOME #26094. HIGHEST TRADE-INS on your car, truck, van, motor home or anything that doesn't eat. $699 5 PLUS TAX & UC. $699.50 DOWN $113 68 MO. ror 84 months. Cash price incl. tax & '73 lie., is $7489.75. Deterred pmt. price is S10,2'J8.54. Annual percentage rate is 10.23%. On approved credit. e Sales e Service e Rent•l1 EXPLORER OF HUNTINGTON BEACH 18801 BPach Blvd. 842-8803 HUNTINGTON BEACH 27' TRAVt'O 25' 01.SCOVERER W'-22' CONTINENTALS 20' PRIDE & JOYS VAN CONVERSIONS :'.ales • Service e Rentals * Danmar Inc. * 13801 1-larbor Blvd., G.G. 5.11-0800 Next to G.C. Damn BEAtmFUL 35' nexlbJc Cl· ty Bus, 195!1 xlnt for motor t.ome. Parually converted.. Engine out. Sacri f i ce everything, 111 Ui, $800. 1.l4; 52lHl220 mornlngB; or 2U: 593-S25.7 eves, ask for Louil Mootl' ' "' JUST GO MOTOR HOME "ft.ENTALS Or. Cniy ~~i:li"w n ... LIN WI ~TES 604 N. •1arbor Blvd. -Ro~I AM0tot' Ho""' for your VKOtlon *-' * P'RE-CHRISTMAS I CLEA RANCE NEW & U1SE·o $966 =~~~E ss e. D N TAKE YOUR CHOICE S36.46 MONTH , "'· ·~. ~~s.,~.B "'"·I ;6~ .. ~re~~ .~cl2~!..,. '!~ .. ~~~~ f•ctory •ir co1u:I., fi.iU Pll'"•" f•ct11ry oir colld., P.S., P.I.. v.1, •11to. tr•111., f•"tory ,;, P.S., f .I .. r•dio, h••t•r. IXTF-,,J;o, fie•f1r, fi11l•d gl'''• L•n~ co11d., P.5., r•clio, h•1tor. !715 5221 · d•u top. !517 AfVl EIM I "" k tot11 M. Pftlt. ond ~"' It let•• pyrnt. i.r • rnn. "" '""'· cl"Odn. Olf91Ted "'""· ,.-1a tlUt• ll'tl. I••· 111 ~111111 dlllrteL ANNUAL P'ERCENTAOE RATE II. 11'L sl 296 =~~~E S66 DOWN TAKE YOUR CHOICE $48.54 MONTH '69 Dodge '70 C~evy Bel Air I '70 Ford LTD I s.a.11, Y-1, '"to. tr•11•., fief-H.T., Y-1, f•cfory 11ir concl., ory •ir cond., P.S., r1dio, h••f-P.S., P.I., ••dio. ho1t1r, whit1 or. 1526 IFEJ w•ll fir••· 1600 DL5 l sum 1u 2 Dr. H.T. !29'4 AND I ... If Nl•I .. ""'· .... Mii~ " ..... ""· pyrnt. fir. mOL "" •lltM'-,,.....,_ DlflfY'llll .,.m1, priCI SI~ Incl. t•i.. lie.. •II o:.rfYll'I dllH'9ft. ANNUAL P'ERCEN1'AGI RATE 11.11"11... 'i7 CAMERO coun R•dio, h1•t1r, ¥inyl intorior. •ITQN9'" '67 MERC STATION WA•ON V-1, •llt•. ~•M.. f•cfory •ir colld., P.S., r•4io, ho•t1r, (lJJA 2161. '70 TOYOTA 4 tpcl ., r•dio, k1•f1r. 111 4 AZJ I '66 FORD Yi TON rtc111• I f•ctory E:q11lpt. llJJ9261 / $666 . • . j '66 CHM STATION WAM>N Y-1, f•ctory 1ir cd!ld., P.S., r1- clio, l.11t•r. 1115 AGE i 5366 '67 FORD 1 DOOl ·v.1, •uto. tr•111., P.S., r1dio, ho•ter. IUJE 412 ) BUY WHERE THE SAVINGS ARE ! . / ... ,, I I \ ' •' < ' ' ' •• • . \ -I I \ All NEW 1973 ~EGA JUST \ 524" \ ONLY $166 DO~N-\ ' . ONLY $63.24 PER MONTlfi ' • MOffrMI $166 i1 tot•I cl11. pyrnt. •lief $61.2'\i• tot1l 9lo. py111t. for 41 11101 • 011 •ppr. cr.cli.t. O.ferrad PYfllf. pri.c• $1201.52 l"cl, f••• lie., •I( "•rryi119 ch•rgo5. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE It.ATE 10.'I'°· DRIVE IT HOME TODAY ! \ . VISIT OUR LARGE : RECREATIONAL VEHICLE • . DEPT. NEW GMC TRUC~ LARGE 5EUCTION OF \ USED VANS AND TRUCIJ;S\ ALL PERSONALLY I SELECTED FOR YOU ' ' Phone Us Now Fer A 5 Minute Credit Clleck If you •re new in the state'·· If you owt on your preMnt ·car e ff you are new on the lob · e If you h•v• little or no credit. PHO NJ 540-9640 Let us tel~ your fln1nclrtg to your pertol'tll Mee:IL I ' . \ I •• • 1.3.i PILOT-ADVEOTISU w~. -·u , 1172 I Wod-. Dt<tmbt< 13, 1972 DAI LY PILOT -~-~-~~~~~~~~---,~~~!~~~,~~~~~~~~~ · --.. §J I ..... ..,.... l§J f ,_..,u. lrel ·1 ~...... J§l l --.. .l§J I ---11?1 .;ml ;;;-"';;; .. ;;;;l §~~ I --Uo l§J I ........... 1§1 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Import" 970 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, U...s 990 Autos, \ked 990 Autos, lked 990 Autos, UMCI i---....:.,.M~W-.;c...._:_ PORSCHE ::::: :~~~~K ::1 -C-ADJ_L_LA_C_ -CHEVROLET l---'co'"""NTI..;...N_E_NT_AL- . vi.1t ..,, ""' "°'"'' ·12 PORliCltE 91• '69 spec. Dix. • •i. 1act .it. YOUR ONLY '73 M nt c rt '69 eonu.,.,,1a1 r,1a<k m. 0 Wl mUe1, xlnt cond . .loa'1~ P&/pb, xlnt cond. $1491. O e a O Xlnt cond. NfM' ttrff. Fully ~·:/cxtr~'· day 84Er2211 : t4H l51 639-2170. a FACTORY S Cpe loaded. Stereo tape deck. "" 002-:n-,g, 002..-CADILLAC AUTHORIZED Auto '.!'ran•, Air Cond. Faot°" Alr. Sil""' GTOy '"' 912. kpd, Sharp. • CADILLAC $89.88 w/hlk vinyl top. Prlv oaMY. AM/FM. all ~bit, new _,SJ,,,.,,,950=·oc213=:...:59>-!ml.=.~=-.-~. ' y CARVER, Inc polnt. $2500/olr. 673-3'"5 '72 Eldorado DEALER +lax .. , mo. 1971 Lincoln Condnon1al • %If l:, 17111 St. l<eep ~rylng. Lnrge~t srlecUon ol Cftdll· 36 mo. 0 .E.L. Coupe. Xlnt cond. AU Ex· ~a Mesa ~.4.i.14 ll\fM.\CUl.ATE "7'0 91l:T· r.nlls Roy~-e Trade-in, Full lacs in Orange Coun1y. Immediate Dellv•ry b'a!. $4100 or beSt of(er . ,..~_, -One owner. See at Design f'oii·er 15 000 mill'S su.:les-Leasing. LEASING Cell 644-&WO weekdays. vuuu Ael<>i.:tton o! Plata 2·10 Nt!WDOrt Center ' $' 7295 ALL MODELS '66 Cont'l Conv. Maroon WIC!<I ll.l\f\\"s Dr. o; call 644-8199 Nabers AND MAKES w/nu blk top. Eng xln't & PO RSCIIE '68. 912, Good ROY CARVER, Inc. Cad'il'--$o th Cafi:i • 4 al\""'· Ida•• otr. 64&-2>15. coo<li1;,,,, Koni obocla.Bes• :I.l4 E. 111h St. """ U em nOrma 1970 CONT. Q>e fUll p~ & orrcr, 5-11-0120. Cost' Mesa 546-4444 2600 HARBOR BL. air, IN!\\' Urea. Orf&, Owner. 1970 Porsche 911-T '69 El Dorado. Bllc. Vi· COSTA MESA 1st National s=. CORVAIR847-0597 >spd. $47'00. 615-ts.40 Dyl top, teal blue body, 540·9Ul0 Open Sunday . Sale•. s.cv1c ... Le"'"" '68 PoTSChe 912-15.ooo mi. black int. Loaded, all CHEVROLET ~ w. 1st St., Santa Ana ~~i~:s&Js-~~:6 ~~me xtras. Need .a quick Good ~=~ Days CREVIER BMW ·eank Leasing 990 Autos, Used "' PLYMOUTH FORD '72 Maverick Grabber V-8, Aoro Tran11, P.S., FaC' Air Con<I , 7,000 miles, !864- EYJ l $2895 ROY CARVER, Inc. 2'34 E. 17th SI, Costa l\lesa ~164444 1966 FORD 8-paM Country Squi r e. Pis. P/b, P/v.·ndws, P /seat. radio, heatt-r & air cond. $825. 673-1229 1956 1-~ont Fa.lrlane., good engine. uses no oU, radio, heater. Crea: transportaHon car. $150. 837-lf:>J or 494-2116 after 6. JEEP -------1963 Scout, tx4, mechanically sood, Bes1 offer~ 53IHl522 MERCURY '69 Marquis 4 Dr Sedan, Factory Air Cond. Exct!ptional Cond, 1988 Plymoulh VIP o4 <Ir. vinyl roof. radio, heater, alr cond ltionll'I(, pwr •teerinJ I brakes. New 1 ire1 le brakeC xtnt cond &. just ~.000 ndles. KelJy sug &es t e 4 r c t a 11 $1,350 ..•. price Sll50. 837-4238. P.ONTIAC (ZNl..h24 1 '70 Grand Prix-Xlnt oond> $ 1795 Fu.II pov.i:r, stereo AM/t~ric, vtnyl top, Rally whit, Eve& ROY CARYllR, Inc. •"-'""'· °"ls 67H161. 234 E. 17th St. '68 FIREBIRD, tully equlJ. Costa fl.1esa 5"46-W44 ped, extremely iood oond. '65 MERCURY Colony Parle $!400. 673-5507. 9 p.,., W"""". GOOD ttAMILER SHAPE! $6SO. 548-1627 -' I--------- MUSTANG l,.----083,,_5-.,..,31~7,,_l~--I PORSCHE "rtl 9t4-6 cyl. Low sale. $3400. George '67 ~Miut aell im· 2001 MichPlllOn Drive 892-4TI6, eves BSf--1429. '• :r CAPRI miles. $4650. Private Party. 962--5511 med! Very &d cond, new (Corner o! MacArthur) e '69 FORD LTD-Auto, air, '---------l -P"'h"-'-'646-00lS~~"''==---1·'=-"""',-,"""':=:-:== brakes, full warr, aU xtnu. Irvine, Calif. 92664 CORVmE vinyl lop. Tip.top shape. '67 Mustang VS Futback, 1965 RAMBLER AIT)l!r\can, Xlnl cond. ~ or best ~ !er. 549-0833 , ·~ TOYOTA '68 Cad. nevme, Flo'em1st 54&-5121 n<1833-8620. 2t3!6Z1-0.167 ---------1 83t-t<00 aoo<I """'" 1 ...,,.,, have · n• Capri VS-2600 Spt c-brown. Radials, speed con-· ---' 19 7 5 C.: ~ • ,...... ......,.,,. '71 El Ca · all" / b lo FORD '67 '-'"a \Vag., air, auto . ~~~~ •~u. · 1---------"Autnm., air, decor gtOUp, --------I trol, FM ltereo ..,..,.,, m1no, , ps P • 1971 VEGA 2-iir hatchback 1960 CoNette i Mint cond. ~ °IJT'",H,JQ **'S9 T·Bird. Full equip. T·BIRD ~~ereo, .aid~ 1noldings, steel TOYOTA'S ~/642-4476. mi, )"('!low/brown int. $300). c~. Mag whls,. vlhyl top, New white paint. Rat uphol. trans., radial tin!ll, $695. ~~-·------Good '-'<>nd I ,u 1 r;,ttl'd Ure-. 7-400 111ilC1J. Jn **'69 EL DORADO. VERY 61-1-8693, 546-1653. FM stereo radio, 4 spd. 2 lops. 3-spd. 283 eng. Never Priv ~-644--0530. '66 Mustang, auto trans. Air, men!. · 1900. Ca ·--ot 64° mo ICE Bl .,,~ '10 K' -~ 9 $1799. 962-1886. raced $950 · 6 7 3 ~ 3 912 '69 LTD Bronaham, 4 dr HT, P/S. 1 owner. 60,COO ml. 675--5744 ........... y. ~. N . ue . .,......,.,, ~ pass wag., · ,,,,;_,,c<ti\ -. M<J\ 5't8--lli6 1972 Capri V--6. $100 & Take '73'S •837-9517• disc b , pwr strg, aii, lugg =me; ..,...,....,_, d»"s Mr. rlh. fa ct air, AM/FM, vin •'""'· · Over Payments. C•ll Rkk, '65 CAD 10, we. BEST OF· '"'· S : 833-0153. CHRYSLER =='~· ------top. pb/p•, $l600. 847-32911 OLDSMOBILE st&-5141 aft 5. FER TAKES' '71 Chev. Townsman Wa~. .'68 Corvette Stinin-ay Cpe, 4 '72 Ford Courier w/Camper DATSUN Now at '72 Prices! Call 84&-3793. Full pwr + air cond X1n t '68 ChrygJer New Yorker 4 spd, full pwr. $2200 or bst shell, still under 12,COO mi. MANY. MODELS ,64 Cad CdV, nu tires, muf-cond. Lo mi's. 673-1010. Dr HT Beautiful Ugh! Blue .:;•=fr'-.4"94-""5"="~··==~--Warr. $1945. ~l-4275. ~\!~1~~7 =~bu~84 de!: & COLORS flen, lrikell, full pwr & lie. 1968 I~, white w/vinyl finish with Tan Interior, FALCON '72 LTD Country Squire, sedan. Power steering, 0 ---nd -0 •..,_......,.. lop n'JQC: _,,.J>,,_ Auto Trans, P.S., P.B .. P. • ---------PIS PIB AIC xlnt -nd ~ak lmmedl•ate . UUU<1 ... .., • .,.,.,.,, O't<r',"'" or fil7-7680 ·~Pty· .v•.:rvw• Seats, P~W .. Cruise Control, i· , • ' .. v . power u• es. Excellent Vacancies cost money Rent Factory Air, Split Bench 1969 Fa.Icon Futura wgn 842-£162 after 7 p.m. condition. Only 61,000 miles. VEGA '72 VEGA GT. Orange. 4 spd. Stereo. Xlnt cond. $23iG. 494--0Til btwn IJ & 4 pm. '72 VEGA GT 1-latchh&ck - Brown. Xlnl cond, Lo ml. Holly 979'1633 or 6'5-1187. Like to trade! OUr Trader't: .. ' NEWPORT DATSUN DeRvery )'tlur hou!e, apt., -store 'fllN. E.1 ~~~· $1195D-. CaU Seat, Reclinlni Pua Scat, V8, auto, Pi s, P/b, air. Put a 111tle "loot .. in your Ca11 ~7670 evenings. bldg., etc. thru a Dally Pilot ties _,..........,.., a Y s AM/FM Radio, pl re 11 i New brks & batt. Tires Levis-sell those baubles for 1970 Toronado, xlnt, every AT Clu.sltled Ad. Sell idle Items 644-2465. Tires, Drives like new $1495. ok. 1 owner. $l350. 673-1875. "bucks". Call Cluslfied xtra, 36,000 mi, emera: sale Paradlle collUnD is for you! 5 Jinel, 5 da.ys tor $5. can ~ day .. • 642,1678 8ef" It · You'U Buy It now! Call 642-5678 Now! f!ecd a "Pad"? Place an ad! ~. V/ant ad results ... 642-5678 642-5678. 1 below book, 493.5264. ~~~~~--~~ l l • ) ' I I ' • •I • ·i • • " Now Open ·~ • NEWPORT BEACH 1000 W. 'Coast Hwy. 645-6400 ' ' Wl!:_.lt(IVE THE .Na'IJEST OF DAl'SUNS IN INVl!NTORY FOR YOUR-SELECTION l!l66 Harbor, C.M. 646.9303 '69 TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr. Mlcbelln Ures. Sharp con- dition! $940. Pvt P t y . (1 )636-2399 1!169 Toyota Corolla. Good lran.<1p. car. $600. or offer, 551-3898. VOLKSW,AGEN '11 Super Bug Radio, Heater, -4 Spd, 1 yr warranty (345CII) $1595 ROY CARVER, Ille. 234 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 54M444 "1!l VW Bug. U-ble cond. New paint (Poncbe brnl. tape • .new mags &: Scmperit tad. tirea. 25.<X» ml. Make offer. 644-8993 ·~ • TWO 1970 VW BUGS. Must ------·-ij * '72 HJ Z. ~ sell. 1435· N." Coast Hwy., 1 ~ Auto/Air/Map. Pr Iv ate Apt!. 10 or 16, Laguna ' Party. 6'15-4S58 or 6T:>"'8882. Beach. . ' ! • ' ' ' ' • ' l • • I ' ' ' l • • ' • • ' ' • • • • ' I ' I I l 1911 DATSUN :141).Z. N@Yo' '63 VW camper, Sundial, Ures, good cood. Extru. custom top, reblt trans, new $4.COO. 546-2524 or 968-9386. paint & lx'ada. 0 ff ti r 1966 DATSUN PICK· UP 646-8137 MANY EXTRAS. call da)'l 1··69~~vw=-K-o-m~ .. -. -Bus~-,-.. -,." 892-4716, eves 894--1429. tires. · )xld, gd co n d. FIAT Desperate! U400. Offer. 8.1.'l-2130. vw l35hp, very Wt. 3'100 70 Flat 1~4 Spider, air, mi's on eng. Must sell this mags, c ar c oveT ~ wk. Take best offe r . SACRIFICE. Xlnt cond. =llT>-C'--'35'01'°2.0---===== II ir49H36c..c"'c1·,..,-==-=---1'72 V W SQUAREBACK. JAGUAR Sa I es man 's private demonstrator, full~ wmty t-1910--J-A_G_U_A_R_XJ __ -,_-p,-,..-cc-,·. I avail. 494-3925. 24.COO miles. Red. $.iSOO. 1962 VW BUG, re bu 11 t cal.I 642-C91 or &U-2789. engine, good shape, $3!1;, KARMANN GHIA ca1i 96>-1439 pn. pty. '66 V\V BUG 64 Karman Ghia ConvE"rt. good ~i:n: $5()0 very good shape, new paint -------~~ 11 & top, ~-646-8769 '67 VW Camper, reblt 19:11 MAZDA ~~t cnnd. 552-9214 °' '69 VW BUS * AJ * Good """'· s16SO. _, I\ ·~.B~a:~l!v!~ LAST • • • AUTOMATIC ROTARYS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Needs new trans. 646-4231. * '69 VW BUG •. Xlnt oond • Car cover, chalns. Best Of-' ter. 675-5942 eves. '60 VW Bus w/'65 engine &: trans. Runs great. $400. 673-7613 or 673-73)8. SUPER -'69 VW BUG. SUNROOF. snoo. Call 673-7133 '69 V\V Bus. Cnstom inter., I newly reblt. engine. Good cond. $18lll. 4~1208 aft 5. '66 VW Bug. Xlnt co~. 1964 DJ SE Mercedes Bcn:i Alr/Cond. X!N cond. Bell oiler rea:. m-3948, bws 642-94'10. • MG Very Oeant $575. • 962-8317 * '73's · 1l61l MGC/GT. Prl .... party 'HERE NOW! l mull ..nt Ru'!' excollenL Come In test Drive crlJlce $1..450. D a)" s • ftftl ·~· ..... 113).9121. • T-Y! MGI SO. I~• YOU'U B°" It rJ.t . utos, UM<! 990 Autos, \ked 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 -. -·, 1 f I 11 Y t .. ' ALL MARK'S and CONTINENTALS Are Now Being Offered at APPRECIABLE SAVINGS '71 Continental -- couPE SAL Ii PRICED Step Up_ To 1LQXURY ••• SPARKLING exterior finish with lljunaculate interior. Landau, Luxury equipped thru--0ut. Full power, a uto. temp. air, AM ·FM stereo, Wt wheel, power door ipcts. Drives like new. (809210) $4575 I • '69 Continental Excellent Select\on 10f Owned Mark III'~ l3Jld Previously Mark IV's HARDTOP COUPE BEAUTJFULLY maintained inside and out. Equipment with landau, power steering, power brakes, power windows, power seats, radio, heater, factory air cond. (641FYV) I • '71 El Dorado SALE PRICED Luxury equipped, full power, factory air cond., 6 v•ay power front s1>at, landau roof plus many more luxury Items. Priced for quick sale, (693471Q41663) $567~ '70 Malibu H.T. Cpe 1 OWNEl-20.000 MIL~ TlilS beautiful cer is like new thruout. The best of care Is «"0ected In seeing and driving V..S, auto. ~ .. radio. heater, power stttrlng, power brakes, factory air cond. Landau roof. (ZSJ488). $2675 '69 Merclll'y Marquis 4 DOOR 'ttAltOTOft -SUPER SEDAN \ Immaculate inside. and out. Full power including 6 1vay scat. factory air, AM·FM stereo radio, Landau roof. This beautiful car 1hows excellenl care. (YX\V 397) $2275 \ SEE ONE • ••• .. ' 4 • • '. i $2775 '71 Mark III EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN -2$,000 MILES Fully Luxury equipped including climate control .air"llJl!.PQwer including 6 way seat, _ AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, landau $65 75:: ~ay. ~ '68 Cadillac SEDAN DE VILLE AITRACTIVE thruout, full power equipped \\"..th factory air, &-way seat, door locks, tilt &. tele wheel, landau roof. Excellent tires. (XTA3541. $2375 '67 Olds 98 4-DOOR HARDTOP \Vhite with burgundy tnterior, full power, factory air cond .. landau. (XD093). Sale priced $1075 '69 Marquis Brougham HARDTOP COl'PI, -SALE PRICED EQUIPPED with the finest equipment lncludlna: f\lll pow· er, 6 way lndlviduaJ front seat.<i, factory air cond., A1'1· 1o~r,.1 stc1·eo radio, tilt wheel. landau roof. (323DRB). $2375 '70 Sedan Deyille EXQUISITI Bc&.utifuJ inside and out. 1be best of luxury, full poYo~r. climate control air. 6 "1lY power seat, landau roof. See today and drive. (480BEK). $4175 '67 Cad. Hardtop Sedan. IEST IUY BEIGE "·Ith parthment Interior, full pl\\·er, factory lir cond. jT\VP400). $1675 '70 Mercury COLONY PARK WAGON 10 pMScnger. Beautifully malnt&ined. Fully ~lllpDl!d Jn· eluding factory air cond., power steering, power hraket. lugpge rack. {982 BIM) ·" $3175 • TRY ONE ' • • • • BUY ONE •••• TODAY!----, • . • • Romo Of 'l1Mt Ntw c.. ••• "61eWM l'••:dl'" . . . NEW 1973 DUSTER COUPE ,_ ' NEW 1973 SATELLITE COUPE • $?4~5/ • NEW 1973 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4,~, Hardtop luxuriously Equipped HOLIDAY USED CAa SPECIALS . rtment welcomes Atlas Service Oepa II Chrysler Corpora-and hortors • d . uiring service an tion vehicles req f .. Regardless o n 1ywor11.. warra d Wo ' chase · h car was Pu w ere BankAmeri· h Master Chargt, onor . Ex· h American d Cart• Blanc e, car , press and Din ers Club . . . . -· ' f -. ' '68 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ...... Ault, Tr1nt., ltHlo, Air '*·· P.S" •• P.a., P.w ...... .., Low Mii"· (WQMlttJ $1195 '/D PLYMOUTH FURY II 4 or. led•n. v... A. r.. , ...... .... !«, P.S., WSW, Air. Cf1>4) $1295 '67 FORD GALAXIE 500 4 Dr. lotf, v ... Awt.. Tr•111., ,.. .... h .. lltt, P.S., WSW, AW C•lld. (Ul(Ct:ttJ 5695 We recently purchased the·· ' entire inventory of a founer Chrysler • Plymouth Dealer. T r u I y outstondi119 savings are being passed qn to you, because of our money sav- ing Special Purchase. At Atfas, this really ''Tis The Season To Be Savin"! LUXURIOUSLY E(j)UIPPED '69 PONTIAC t Or. HT, v ... Ault. Trans .. ••· dlo, 11 .. i.r, P.S., P.a., WSW, Air CllnO., Vlnyl Top. (XNHJ.20 $1095 '69 PONTIAC CATALINA ' PUS. STA. WAGOH V'4, Allt!l. TAU.1 radie, l!Nltf', P.S~ P.a •• WSW, Air teM .. L ...... ll:Kk. (J:WSlS1J $1695 '70 CHRYSLER· NEY(PORTER • Dr. Seel..,, v... Alltt. r,....,,, rHle, hMl1ttt. _P.S., IP •• , P.W., Air C..il. (-...JIV) $1495 • '68 MERCURY MONTE GO ..,.,., Avt9, Tr1111., rHle, ,,......,., P.S.. WSW, AJr, Vlnrl T1p, CXDAW). $895 " '68 DODGE DART C1111w .. 6 cyt., ......, Tr-. All'9, l\eal1t1', P.S., WSW. CWP,fl:Jtl) $.95 '69 CROWN IMPERIAL • 0r. s.u., v ... ......_ r-. ,...... llMttr, ...... ...... '· keta. "·"t .. WSW,l'MtlfY Air c...... YMf& T.,_ X'#t91) $16 5 ATLAS 111 .lntern~nq_t Recreational Truck and Vehicle Country. TREMINDOUS -HOLIDAY SAYl...S Aal YOUU ON ALL Of oua HMAINJNG ltn INTlllNA; TIO NA LS. - • NEW 1972 IN.llllMATIONAL TRAVELALL: ... MAlllU,AC• TOll•lls su.e•sn:o ltaTAIL ...-_ PlllC& - IMMEDIATE DELIVERY •• Ser, No. AIJllOG51571J NEW 1972 INTERNAnoNAL sc:our ' • • • l • ,, I • . . ' .. ·- · I'll ffi BE HOME ~ ~ FOR ' CHRISTMAS ' IN A NEW FORD • (lxu,t ...... , SO GALLONS FREE GAS ' --·To-MIKE THE TRIP LTD SQUlltE WHEN YOU BUY YOUR NEW '73 FORD"Af THEOOORE ROBINS ~~::::--, FORD ' " ' A 17-Jewel, Custom Made uPlnto" Wrist Watch Value $59.95 ' . With The Purchase 1'111._. ·Of A 1973 SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY. You Wiii Like Our Price Our Servlce And Your New Pinto Watch! ,,... o.c. ... tin tr-· 31st, 1t72 PUT A T·BIRD SALE • WAGON SALE / 6 AVAILABLE-'70 to '72 MODELS 20 AVAILABLE-'62 to '72 .MODELS . . BRAND NEW AS OF •. -~-.. SEPT. 11111, ltn ! OUR A•· f WARRANTY IS GOOD AS GOLD· FROM COAST TO COAST ! Whtll VOii buv • used Cir witfl tfl. lllW A-I w.,. r111ty, you 111¥1 yotrr wonl.S 111 yovr ford 011/: 1r'1 door1l1p. Her1'1 why. Nit the frnt Jn cl..,. or 2;000 mil•• your fol'l.:I " D••l•r 1u•r•n .. •1 to p•y 100'4 for 111y rnajor For the 11ext 24 months, your FoN D•aler guar•n· t111 • 15 '4 dl1cou11t on r•p•ira co••red und1r the .. n.w A·I W1rranty, You 11t A-I protutio11 when you're out of town . tool In •••ry Sttt, of the Union you'lf find p1rticl0 ~atln9 ford Dffler• wflo )llrtl/I promptly enil •~rt•· ously honor •tM 24 rno11th prorilio1 of your A·I Warr•nty, · Corne IN 011r 1electlol of A·I Warrant.eel u1.d cara tocfayl Wa're A·I Warranty h11dqu1rt•r1 In tt.11 •r•• ••• th• cle•l•r•hip Wh•r• you r •• .,. your err! .. 011 •et .loont1p. • -2 -•• -·$3496' .....~. •· --'71 T.-'- ......... -.. t -----· , ............. ,125· • CCMJ · .. , t '68 FUllY ~factory equippt>d. Radio, hMter, etc. Good miles. ( 128- AYDI 71 MA YERICI( 2 door. Radio, heater, 6 cyl~ inder, body 1ide mldg1., w1w, wheel cover1, low mi le1. 1722COLJ 69 LTD H.T. Ra~io, heater, <1u"tem•tic .• pow~ er steering, air conditionin g, good miles. IZSS43 8} . . . 51496 '67 TOYOTA LAND CRUIS~R· 4 Wheel Drive, 6 cyl., Good Miles, New P•rnto l674DZKI 51796 FOIDS -CHIYIOLIT -DONI ~ TOYOTA - Y.W. -DATWN -MlaCUIY '67 COUGAR X.7 Full power, air cond., vinyl roof, good miles, (VGA 1921 TRUCKS .& VANS 15 TO CHOOSE FllOflt ·Exem ple: '69 Dodge Sport V•n. R•dio, he•ter, 1utom•tic1 good miles. fYCU917J '67 FIAT 850 R•dio, He•ter, 4 spd., Good I.Wes , I U08075 I. • \ 51396 BEAT THE '73 PRICE RISE! WE HAVE A BIG SELECTION OF NEW '73 CARS AND TRUCKS THAT WERE PRICED BEFORE DEC. 1 PRICE INCREASE. ' . ' YOU ·Gn EXTRA SAVINGS WHILE --THEY LAST! IMPORTS -13 TO CHOOSE v .w .'-TOYOTA'S-DATSUNS-OPELS-FIATS !63 MERC. STATION WAGON Col. Prlc. Full power, •i°r cond .. liJOod miles. IDJW 5071 5496 '65 MUSTANG HARDTOP Fully f1ctory equipped. R1dio, ·he•ter, etc. Good miles. IOSX- 856) 57.96 '67 MERCURY MONTCLAIR 2 Dr. H.T., Radio, He•ter, Auto. T r•ns., Power Steering, A ir Cond., Good Miles. fVOGl8b) ~ ______ ,,, --~. -....... llCA .. -- ' 5896 ' ~ . - • ' • I 1 ' . . . . ~ DAILY PILOT "The LITTLE RED RADIO WAGON" . ~ .. ·• . ~ . . DKK WllSOlf . . .. ·SAYS: • t WITH A·BRAND NEW CROSS COUNTRY I ' DELUXE CAI OVH tAMPI S# 7799 1 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1973 RANCHERO 500 302 CID V-8. Select shift cruise-o-matic tronsmi~sion, belted !ires, deluxe bumper group. 3A47F137463 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $ llAND NEW FOR~·coURIER 1/z TON PICKUP ,.. WITH A NEW LITE LI NE CAMP ER SHELL COMPLETE PACKAGE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY " • 95 ~~ (SGTAMC224 19) $illOG • TOTAL ,£".J7 ,DOWN 12'2'.IS ii .... -(llri(• ifttl. ... ' lie.. Dtftmd ,nc1 $3032.60 lid. ttx lie. & Oii fiflllllCI C ..... I fef' '41 IMI. • Ill IP· ...... milt . ..,..,,.71 % ~, '· • .. 1/2 Ton Pickup $ Runs· excellent. l icenst 659920 '69FORD PICKUP '' · , V-11., loogtbed,.style/idt, $ low m~eage. lictllSt N~ 44773l ~ NEWPORl • • " · · • V-8, outot.tron,s-.,. taC\01y oit s· · conditioning; poWer· Steerinf, ra dio, heoter, lo ndou top. li- cense No. XIX329 '72FO WAGON 10 Poss., V-1, auto, Irons .. factory Oir condi- tionino, powtr Stfff'ing, P•WW book.0, PO!(« $ Jeiltate'Wi.a..... ~­OOMl'lldr. 231Dk\il' . ' ·- . . w-.u,, Dtcttl-13,, 1'172 ' ' A~L ., NEW' ' v.a. focflfy oir,.c~- motic· .t~siol\.-power llHring ' brukts. btlted w IS tittle. dtkJ11e bun1* gt'Ol.IJI, whMI coven, radio, tint~~ V"'ttJnterior~ (3J63H126991) • PILOT-ADVERTISER p ' • ; IMA\EDIATE Dii1vr1Y • l...i,d ind. f•Cll!•Y.oi<. (.164370T163393) $-.. -l6f'-7--• PlltMOll'lll' ' f0130MOllTHS DOWN -·~ • \ • ' \ -- Saa Clemente (;apisirano VOL. 65, NO. 348, 6 SECTIONS, 100 PAGES • - ' . ORANGE COUNTY, 'CALIFORNIA•· • • • . . ... --- T ... y's Flaal N.Y. Stoeks . • , WEflNESDA Y, DECEMIEfl TEN CENtS ~ . I Nixon · to, -Reveal .. -Future , ' Library Site Soon By JOHN V ALTEllZA °' .................. A loog·awalted · ...........,..t by l'nlldOnt Ninn on his choi.!e !or tbe site 'oi tbe Nlnn Library -a spol which lqco). '!""tees claim is In San Clemente - 1 expected to ,. come. froril the ' White '"°"" within a matter ol d.iya. • And It could possibly be "'1l10W1ced dur1l!c ·tbe President's. planned winter working. vacation In Son Clerilente which us. • ~ -..... ! ... .,~--...... .tna~ :Cll'_.R ~I' -.... ~ .... ·~ ~ " . ' . w om.an Named' -' t • "\ -~ To:.'l'op-Chamher ~ , ' Job in Clemente - • will ltart IOOO after ·OJliltpw, It was ieaml!d1hla-k. Hlgbly reliable local aourt<I said the Pi;esid«>t ilad Mrt. Nbrpn plao to stay In s.n ·Clemente be,,..i the New x~·· T(eekmcl In tl\elr Drst'trip tO the SOUth Coast since !ht iandlllde victory last November: • Some local pttparalk)ns for the visit already are belnc maclO: The library announcement is being keenly awaited by commwilty leaders • .. ' .. -wbo -.qulolly-eoncedelt tbll.aD the jn. i.....t1nn palDta In iht ·-ol a lite In tlie OQlltheily portlpn Iii tllo city. Lut JndeReodeooe Doy, while loeo) clU-~brated ~ Fourth at Vlstil Bahia stadium, l'!:ooldent Nil<Oll maqe. two aepar&te secret ti:lps to a, hilltop ne.,-by and walked· over an :area which appears to be his cbolCe for the library which will <lOlllaln oll tbe memorabilia and clOcumen1& of bl.I adminiJtralion, Orlginljily, his aideii said, •!"!'ag< beld ec Ill . - Nixon Asks Host .Group To Ball . - . In trust adjocent to La Casa Pacifica was intended as a library site, but some tbeorl'es hold that It might be too do« to tbe. residence Wbere tlie NlxOllS plao to Jive' when tie !eaves ~. . "l'he bllly ·"P'os be'1lnd Visto Bahia could be. oerved by tbe existing road ·1eodlng lrom Son Clemente to C>mp Pendleton. , . Although severol purcbaoes of laod h11.ve been cmsummated in recent months ln the area,. the NJxon Foundation (tbe entity which will build tbe library) is . not among tbe list. One purchaser of land In the-area, San Clemente buslqeosman Ray Campbt)ll . said Tuesday that be has heard nothing about an exact site for the library. If local expectations bear fruit, the library ...Wd """"te hnndreda of thousands ol tourists a year and could be a boon to local business. A subtle campaign to win local .selec- tiOI.. has gone on for more than a year. Cycle Gang Leader Held For Assault By RUDI NIEl>Ztl!UXJ °' .. ..,, "" ""' Cqsta1 M.eaa police late ~Y tilgbt arrested a 11-yelJ'1>1d cycle gang leader they oJ!e,se attempted to shoot and' kl11 lrilne i>OUce Ollicer Sfephen T. Nash du!!N a.l)islittbn -iall Oct. ZI. ··-5""'1111iil .. todl!llobert • ~'.lof" 1111 ·w. ' OriilP ·s~. ~; 11, awolt1Pc ~t at Coill Men City Jill todlly on a ~ ol -ult w!th. lntalt to commit murder. A Ufe-si2ed broo2e bu>! of the Presi- dent, oow on display at the civic center, was liought from thousands of dollars In local contributions. And the ~al compiittee spe~ading the effort annOunced Uiat one rcaaon for the fWld-r&islng campaign was to , show the Ni:J:ans that San_ C1emente cltheos wish tbe library to be built in tl)O dty. Ultimately, said members of the com- mittee, they hope the bust would. 'be on pcnnanent display in the institution~ I •IRVINlf Slill'ING SUSPICT . LoalloR:Pmra . . : .H~ ~Id ill ~nf.tl · . • q ,!!111 "~ pallco :~ ~w blite club around the time of the lfli!pd amilusb near Je!Jrey Road and Barnnca Road. -' .. ' , ' - . ' Bal Isle Fir.DI Wm Ask -...----....,· ~ ~ I .{ • . :::s=r ,:.-~ "'11..· Ii> --.-..i..r. --ad alliltpl1"111 tho ,..,.... , . l'iii<lu. ·~"I! lie the ~ly elecled lftllderil or 111e1 Oratil• OMiolr ~ cbpte<ol the -motl>re,do ..... offered no resistance durlng the raid. Costa Mesa Detective c a p t. E. H. Glasgow said P~' mes! climued a loo( lnvestlgatloo . between Costa Mesa aod Orange 'Police olficera Into the ac· Uv!Ues of Cle Heaalaoa. · "We've .been loieolng the Hessians ~surieil.lance-tcrTaome-time and questlooing some ol them over and over and doing thlnp ol that nature," Glasgow explained. He added thaf Peters was believed to have taken over the presidency of the '1'1111 night ol!lcer, Nash ,,.. on 1!11ro1 In lfflne '!hell a car cont•lnln( two ~ .. mm approached blm and told him ol an Injured man · In' tite roadwa)'. ~ ~ Nash, :lil, spe ' to, the '!""\"'• tite IUp- pooed 'victhn, lying f'""' ilown, ~ into a crouch and fir.ed at tbe "{fiGer through tite windahield of the sqaad Cat. Nash flUlllled hiJ car In an atteny>t'to run down his assailant but was bij; 4'D-fbe faet by a bullet fragment. · ~The bwohwhacker escaped by running ·Into a nearby conifleld. Clpt;-Glaqo..-said-the·amall-<allber revolver ollegeJly ...;ed In.lite 'IJlcl: 'q. not recovered from , Peters' apar_tibent: "We're looklno for it thougb,'" he ll\liled: Police would rd say Wbetlier-~m (See SOS!'ECI', Pip Z) I f Capo Cwses Loop~Wf _ .. Open Space Red£f.i,W<[ -~i . Qty councilmen in San J u 1 n Capistrano this week eUmlnated a loophole used by developers or clUlter communities and declared tiiat no 1-1' oouid builders count private rtrffb, potiol and driveway& u part of tlle_pro- jecl~ open apace. ' The ·naw in tite city codes was pointed out MaJclay nigbt by Ille plaMbi( ataU and caused councilmen to woe .an ..,.~, ordlnlll<e :for1>14<1inc the Ille of lhO,_.-;and IUch .. pat\, Iii the open -h!qu1r9ment ilL planned .,..,. Im¥UPes. .$udl a PfOdlce, rtressecf City Mantger Donald. Weldnor, was not allowed In the conventicmal subdiviaioo rules, bu t builders of ~ and con- domlnlwnl were rtlll allowed 19 sneak In the u:tra "open apace." ."In our· ellimltion/' Weidner told c:<Mmellmen," private ltnelB, pa UGI and {be like far from CODltltate open space, but lnrtead m nothing but lndlcatlonl of ul'banlzltloo." In cluster community p r o p o 1· a l s ,. . , PILOT A.D BlfINGS HOM E GOOD NEfrS • • ' ~ ·1 ' D,\fLY PILOT cJwlOed w111t1 id.I brine home good neW.. , Here'• & 1 ti;ue , story: . . Parrot -Balboa Pen. Htod, ' ,brevt, neck orabge, bodJ , onqe /creen, m •DD Reward. • That o-r called to lfl1 tba~ ~ 1tilnl Wll back Jn hand the flnf clay me '\<! ran) U )'OU have 1IO\\d ol fart ,...111, dltl ec.l9n and place • DAILY PILal' cilasiWed want *'-, ' I ' I cfevel.P.~ are al,,.ted to gloUp Clftn. ings in· 10me a~ -~ the density In any glvOn lncalloo -. baf Ihm must make ·~{!or it by PlOflfi>c ~ta and omer ppeo areu. T!>e raliP )>et,.6,n the 11\IP1!>ef.!'1'lsl2e of units In clu!Jers and !Ile J>P!!1 lplCe, -·determines the spedllc ~ ol the total pnjett, '°I 'I With tho ""' rules 8'\ up tiiJo woe)[, the developer jw!ll liave' lo [Nffldo pt a litUe more o~ apec;e llillio • CW1bt ~ .. Jou" of1P1Uf, ~rf\oe 9'11 Md·llt*tl. . ' ., ~. ·~· ~ .. • • ' I 4• ~ _, • ' -.. ,. . • • '." ~::2'.:::0AJ="=·=IL:O:T=:..:='_;c==--Wtdncw1. ~ u, l972 . Trai11. Derails; TO'Wlt 'Lit Up' TUKA. Jll . (llPJ) -Fort y-one cars of a frtight !rain cllrrying namm1bJe and explosive materials derailed today. li&htlng up this Southern Illlnois tov.rn "bright as hell ,'' Md forcing evacuatlons or home9 as firemen fought blazing railroad cars. There were no injuries either to townsfolk or the traln crew In the e1plmlon and fire that raged after the derailn1ent of a 6 9 . c a r Baltimore & Oh io Railroad train Jl. hmUnated lhe early morning skieg over Iuka, a 1..-omn1unitv of 600 ~nions, and the s u r roU n d Ing farmlands. Elk Cliases Big Christnias Tre e In San Cl.ernerite Nothing, it seems. is sacred among thieves -not even Christmas trees. Police and a mem'.>er or the San Clemente Elks Lodge "'itnessed that fact early today after two men in an imported pickup truck v:ere spotted stealing a large, expensive ChristJnas tree from the rear of a La Casa Verde nursery. A member of the lodge next ~,r first noticed the incident and gave chue lO the truck as it sped north on El Camino Real. The pursuer lost the vehicle in the area of Dana Point. then caHed police. Officers said it appeared that more than one tree was missing from th e nursery at 1527 S. El Camino. They ad· ded that the witness provided them with a license number on the trurk. Taxicab Service In Capo Delayed ne operator of a taxicab service tn the Saddleback •.ralley ran into a short delay this week In a bid to officially expand' in· to San Juan Capistrano. Councilmen Monday agreed tq hold off ea granting offic1a1 permission to Tony ·F1ort1 to operate in the city lo allow the city staff time to ~what other cities require for insurance. · ·. Flora told councilmen he already car· ries the normal amount and that a tenta- tive requirement by City Manager Dooald \Veidoer for half·mlllion-Oollar coverage would not be practical. • Be's In flace 'U'I Te~ ReP'. Bob Wilson (R·Cal il.) says he will seek r~lection next n1onth to his seventh term as chairman of the National Re. publican Congressional Com· n1ittee. ----------- From Page J DORY •.. in tbe vicinity af Bealji Boulevard. Davis said he thought the man was div· ing but then noticed the dory was travel· ing in a small circle next to the man in th'! v•ater. Lifeguan:ts on the scene said the heavy fishennen boots v.-om by Knight might ha\'e pulled him under once he was in lhe v.·ater. Davis con~cted Huntington Beach lifeguards Y.l:io . begain an intensive search of the water a quarter mile south of the pier. Lifeguards reported they found a child's We jacket in the boat. Later in the afternoon, another dory fisherman found a child's parka in the water near 56th street in Newport Beach. The divers involvef.t;in the search were ln the water until dusk when poor visibil· ity made the search impossible. Li feguard Captain Douglas D' Arnall said today there were no more plans to continue the wtdcrwater search, but beach patrols would continue. Knight was described by police as a veteran doryman. They said his wile told them it 'i\'BS not unusuaJ for him \o take one of their children out on bis lobster runs. - Battin T~p Spender In Campaign First District Supervisor Robert Battin was the top spender in rec en. t supervisorial campaigns. lie reported $130,903 spent in lhe general election. The bi ggest chunk of the money came from a $1iQ,000 loan and a $5,000 donation from Dr. Louis Ce.Ila pf Santa Ana and Richard J. O'Neill , Mission Viejo. In tota l, four candidates f o r supervisors reported spending $346,656. This compares with $38(1,980 spent by It aspirants for lhe h1.·o jobs ln the June primary. William Wenke, Santa A n a attorney who opposed Battin in the runoff, said he spent $89,352; Ralph Diedrich. who defeated incumbent William Phillips In the 'Third District $86,376 and Phillips, ~.025. Phillips said he had a defi cit, reporting contributions of only $26,464. He had received contributions of $57.289 In June when Diedrich led him by 10,000 votes. The reported spending Is believed to be well below actuaJ outlays as only cam- paign contributions of $$00 or more must be reported. But even t h e reported costs we.rt astronomical compared with those af a few years a~ Only Board Cbalnnan Ronald Caspers of ~wport 80ach •P- p.roached the figures. He reported spend· ing $81,69$ in 1970, mostly bls 0 W D money. Candidates of other afnces reporting by the deadline Tuesday inclOOed \\'illiam Dannemeyer, who tried to unseat Assemblyman Ken Cory (o.Garde.n Grove ), fTl,646; John Black. Newi>ort Bea<:b Democrat who ·ran !lllail1st Republload Andre"·J . llimhaw.for the 39th Coogre8slonal seal, '7,llli: OUo Lacayo, $tl,OIJI, and Tod Shijllle, $1,113. Lacayo ran against incuriibt'int state Sen. James E. Whelmore and~Shipte op- posed incumbent Assemblyman John V. Briggs. The bltlernes9 of the Battin-Wenke ba~ tie continued Tuesday. Ill a statement Issued by Cella and O'Neill they. accused tbe Wenke camp of a smear campaign. Wenke (s <'ampaicn manager C&rlos C:alindo cailod the stat.men~ "an ex· tension of the big lie technique used In ~attln'1 campaign so well." Previously reported were campaign ex- penses of 164.m by lllmhaw. and $35. 7112 by incumbent 34th District Congressman Richard Hanna. , Cory spent $90,473, Briggs,· $14.,'6S; Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R. Newport Beach) 13 & , 0 0 9 and Assemblyman Jtobert Burke (R·Hun- tlngton Beach), $28,Mt. . . He'll fltilt Pait \Villiam P. Clements Jr. says that if and when he's con· firmed as deputy secretary of defense, he is goin~ to '"re- sign ... walk away• as bead of his large oil well drilling company, but he's not going to sell his stock. Doctor's Office Entered; Hypos, . . Needles Stolen Huodr~ds 0£ _ Sl'J'inges,, ~.res of l\YpcJjlennlc needles and blank P<'Scrip- Uon:a . were. di900vered missing from a San Clemente physician's officH Tues- day. Police fll'SI investlped the breakln the Dtihl before when a janitor ..,,.,-led an open door at the 'olMis ol Dr. Robert Dy<r at·IOO S. EI Camtno Real. But notb~ wu noted to be missing . during 1 quiclc ch«k of the premlseJ, police said. On Tuesday, however, the physician discovered the loss. Officers said the items abvlously were Intended for use in illlcit narcotics ac- tivity and.were worth about $50. Besides the paraphernalia, the burglars also stole several via1J and pills. Moet, however, contained on I y water:· or vitamins. Discoverv Citefl ' • Moonlnen Re~dy For . Final· Walk SPACE CENTER, Houston (APJ - Two juMlant American ad\tentu~ prepared today for a fareweil lw1ar ex· ploration. Bui already • aboard their lander Cltallqer wu a ·Dew dlsoovuy - sample> of intriguing orange soil p05slbly dating to the la.st fiery gaspi of a dying moon (See related picture, stories, Page 4) "'Astronauts Eugene A. Ceman and Har. rlson H. -sdhmltt, Jn 1heJr last leoloCY field trip in the moon valley of Tlurus- Liltrow today, were to take 8J eight-mile drive along the base of a hlgb mountain and at the foot of Minkled hills, using an electric car with a patched fender. The astronnuts, saying they "like to cover n e w ground," traveltd a mile farther than planned TUcsday nlgbt, gathering many bags of lunar samples, ·including scoops of the orange dust oever b~~ore found on th~ moon. The orange material was found during exploration of an ancient avalanche, 4.4 miles rrom the landing camp in Taurus· Litlro\v vaUey. By coincidenc!, it was found by Cernan, not Schmitt, a geologist and America's first professional scientist in space. ·"Hey,'' .:!xclaimed ceman as he stum~into the soi1 at the rim of a er c led Shorty. "\Vait a m.lnute ... there is ange soil." ''Well, don't move until 1 see It,'' said lhe llarvard-educated Schmitt. "It's all over," Ceman went on ez:- ciledJy_ "Orange. I've stiJTed it up with my feet. "Hey, it is," shouted Schmitt. "I can see 11 from here. It's oranif/' On eart.H. scientlst.s were also e1clted by the discovery, though cuat.kiua in their evaluation. They aaJd the' or•.-te son may have orig~~ "Ilia last ga..OUS & .. Pol VO "~JllOOO. Dr. Hoblit B ~ o! the geochemlitry branch at t I. e Pitanned Spacecraft Center, said the mat!!:rlal possibly could be: rust -which has been foimd ln oUler -lunar samples ln minute quantities -or some chemical com· bination which assumes a reddish color. A fmal detennination would have to await laboratory examinaUon on earth , he said. The~ orange soil was the most signifi· cant discovery . of the seven-hour, 37· minute excUrsion, the second of Apollo 17's planned three. While Ceman and Schmitt motored oo the moon, their crewmate, Ronald E. Evans , labored in the command &hip America orbiting overhead. Evans is operating an array of science In· struments which are photographing and probing large slices or the moon . . Ceman arid-Scbmllt ate to leave the moon's aurface Thursday, rejoin Evans In the command lhip and begin the journey Jlome toward a Dec. , 19 splashdown in the P~i!ic. Evans, on a different rest cycle from his crtWt'flates, awoke from an eight-hour rest at 5:30 a.m. PST. Of!icials said his exploraton from orbit v.•as go I n g smoothly and that he spotted formations in three locations that could be evidence: of once-active volcanoes on the moon. Touehes Teaeh Parents Can Ruin Future Marriages SACRAMENTO (AP) -Parenls who, don\ touch each other In frool o1 their children may be setting up sexuaUy Jnadeql&ate futurt marriages, a team or sexual t.huapfsts has told state employes ~. • "The most effective method of sex education is what goes on every Jnin. ute," Dr. Thomas P. Lowry of the ilaster&Johnson clln~ Jn St. Louis, Mo., said Tuesday. "ONE OF THE FEW univeraal.s is that patients were raised in a family where poop le never touched each other." Lowry sJid. ... Lowry and bis wife Anthea oonducted a seminar for employes of the State Department of Mental Hygjtne on the use of sexual lh<rapy ,u, a cltoroe preventative, Councilmen in essence agreed that whatever tbe average amount would be, they would setU~ for-the figure and cast a decision at their Dec. 2S rqeetlng, Florea aperates the Saddleback Taxi Service. * 1947 Tragedy t • r1;..r Repeats Miss Ah-Ah-Ah-ehoo . r . r_:-1t RICHLAND, Wash. (UPIJ -c<~~ Becky AJuander bu been nl!lled WuhlDilOft Wheat Queen. She is allercic lo wbeal. • • From Pagel TRACT •.. parking space to make up [or the loss of curb. --Continued deliberation an the amounls 'l'o'bich mJ,gbt be plugged into a new parks fee ordinance. The code, as Jd ccotalning no dollar amounls. is being revised and would r e q u i r e developers to pay set fees ta go toward parks if they do not choose to donate land ta serve the additional population brought in by their projects. l'rontPag•J SUSPECT ... had been positive1y identified b y Patrolman Nash, a former Costa Mesa officer who was assigned to the Irvine · beat Sept. 1 wben Costa ti.ten took over ~ duties in Irvine on a contract Meanwhile, police nre still on the lookout for the l'l""' other men who helped Peten with the alleged ambush. OMHI COAST K DAI LY PILOT 'T"9 °""'9 c..t DAll..'I' 'ILO'f, wfftol ~ .............. ...,." ..... MflllMll ,,, ttw 0r'"'9 Qrre!Jt ~1111'"9 C\lfYINny, Stl*- ntt .......... w ........... ,_.y ...._. ,rtlNy, fW C•I• ....... Htw.-t ltHll, """'"""" '"°"'tvntllll IJ1lley. ........... ..... .,.._,,~ ....... 11 C"-"W S. .lllWI c..i.tr-A t'"-'9 nt!M9f .. It ... " ......... kfWlltVt _. s.-..,. TN ,rtiKIMI ....... l'ltnl 11 11 JlO W.sl My ''""'; C..11 ~ C.lllttrill. ,,.,,., l•Hrt N.'W.~ -... -J.ck A. i,u.~,•J Viet ,.,..... .... ....... n....1C ... 11 ..... TlteMH A,. M~ifll ~tdl!Or a.dee H. lMt AitMr4 ,, Nin AllllfMtt ~ fcllloln .. a. ... ,. OM&:• HI Hri ll C1mi1t• 1.,.1, t 267J --a.. Mltli m WW llY l tl'lll ......,. ~1 ** ......,.,. .... ,..,,.,,. .......,,..., _.. '"" .... lflll•••.....i L...-..... , .. ,.,. .... ... 111• ... •• C714t '4MQ1 ·Cl aw ••1:11a11t ....... ,. ... C' IS Al .., I 111Jt Y f $ f I 4fl.44Jt -· ..... ..__, --......,, ,.. ""' ........ ltM!r111111&. ...... ~.,.,...........,..,.,..._ ~ • ••• •oC41111 WI"-' _.i:W lllf' ..... ".,...,. -.. ...... cs. ,.... ..., .. Geett ..... c.11"""'6.,. Mllcri.t..... IW Wtltf GAt ~I lor 1M11 P .lf mtl'lffllYI f'lllllttrJ" ..................... '• ;. L.------------' " I < t l Itself 25 Years Later By L. PETER KRIEG Of '" Dal~ ,,. ltMf In 1947 two Newport Beach dory fisbennen were caught in a raging storm. They were brothers. Their boat was never fond. For the past 25 years the dorymen who sift a living from the sea have skirted tragedy. Then: were an.rious moments but no lives were lost. Until yesterday. Allen Knight took his 3-year-old daughter Patricia with him to move -. lobsler pots. Allen Knight was always taking his children with him. "He was the only one who'd ever do it." said Charles Russeli, a longtime friend . "He'd take his whole family out. He had a littlt trap for eacl. 01 the kids and they 'd take turns going out." Bob Turley, like most of the other dorymen, isn't fishing today. He said he doesn't feel like it. He and Allen Knight shared one of the weatherbeaten lockeni on the sand where the dorymen stash their gear. They were good friends. Turley, exhausted alter hour& or searching for hi! friend, slouched against an overturned dory. There were. no tears and there were few words. Turley stared at the sea. "He must be gooe. There'll no chanct. He was a great guy. He rtarted fi.!lhing about 25 years ago in my dad's boat. Allen probably was the. mo st well known Dorymeri Start Up Collection Allen Knight and hi! prt:lty daughter Patricia are dead and the men of the Newport Beach dory fishing fleet are grieving. Knl&ht leaves • wife and four other children with very little money. They d6o't have much them.9elve1 but they have atarted a collectlon for the Knlghl fomlly. The dorymen are ul<IDg other people to help. "They could either b r I n g somethJng down here, or man tt to fl.fr1. KWghl," 1Ald Bob Turley, Knlghl'• locker partner. The dory Oeet puts In mld-allernoon by Newport Pier. The Knlihts' ad· dress is 224 .N. Newport Blvd., Apt. 2, Newport Beach. of all the dory fishermen," Turley said. He couldn't believe that no one had gone to that little house behind the Arches where Allen lived with hil wife, Dora, and -five ~ehildren -to break the news. · "Sbe came down here Joottnc for him.'' Rlll!<ll Hid. "And then IOmebody told her." Police and Wegulldo uy 11\ey don't know for oure what happened. But the dorymen biow. "Tricia must have fallen overboard and Allen went right ID eller ·her. He must have left his boots on," Russell said. "And they pulled him rlgbt to the bottom." "Allen's a very atroog swinmler," Turley said "and they weren't so far out that he couldn't have made It to shore with her normally." Gas and Elecb·ic Firm to Finance Buried Utilities The San· Diego Gas and Electric Com· pany will give more than $76,000 this coming year to two South Coast com· munitles -funds which will help pay for urderground utility projects.. Aldel for :he firm said the utillly will pay more than evt!r thls coming year as its slate-ordered &hare of underground costs . 'l1le tot..l bill In the utUlty'1 entire service territory Involving thrd' counties is 13:7 million. San Clemente will receive $62,080, and San Juan Ca~lstrano will fet $11.580 to apply to projects In their conUnunltiea. Generally, the funds pay for a port\on of any Individual underground project. The bulli of lhe costa are paid for through apeclal assessment dlslrlcts • Cash, Credit Cards Taken in Capistrano Burgfan wllo pried open 1 ..,...,, and a window to flln entry 1ooll $I'll In Cllh and ' number of credit cords Tue!day night from • San 'Juan Caplslnno warehouse, Orana:e County Sbutff't of· ficera said . Deputies 1ald lbe cash wu taken from • safety deposit box In the otnces of Spaulding Equlpment Compony, !f232 Pa,.. Adelanto. '!be bruldn 11 under In• \·esllg1t lon today. I • CWl:M tvnY Jiit• 'TIL XMAI . . • • 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA • • • and Sportswomen Basketball Footballs Volley balls . Soccer baDs Temis baUs Gott balls Hanealls ArchlllJ sets Badminton sets Ping Pq sets T enlis llacbts Halllbal·.Gloyas Tennis Shoes > • • Tennis Dresses Temis Shorts & Shirts Skate Boards Duck Feet rrns Dart Boards Frisllees Back Packs Sleepinz BIES • Wann Up Suits ....... SWeat Saits llJ*t Jacktts Basebal $1taes Track Shoes • Wrestling Sboes Speedo SWin Suits Tennis Sweaters Swiat Sox Lettenaan Jackets Basketball Shirts Swill Truris Stop Watches Bicycles "Blqele Accessaries ~-· -• , I J I t I .wo II .. • t " T f • ' • L L • • . ' ' ' ' T PUBUC NO'nCB .. Penta Centr~I Case SEC Suspending • • B.rok~:rag~ Sales • .. W. Kenne Butcher, Edward P. Bromley, Jr., James McAtee and John Richter, also drew suspension for 25 days or less. ALL EXCEPT Richter"1ere charged wllh viola tion of an- tifraud provisions of federal &eCUrities law ~tween April ,-1960 and July 1970. According to the SEC, Butcher and Sherrerd had long · urged customers lo purchase PeM Central common stock. But it said that in May, 1970, the brokerage house changed its recorilmendaUon f r o m "buy" to "sell" but only retayed this advice "on a selected basls to certain preferred customers and not to .others who still held shares of. the stock which thtr had purchased on the t I m ' s recommendation." Railroad Seeks Halt To Raises PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Trustees or the bankrupt Perm Central Railroad Tuesday ask~ ed a federal court for a lhr._ month postpOnement of wait increases scheduled Jan. 1 to ~bout 44,000 employes. They said the railroad mlght have to shut down unless some relief C<Juld be afforded. In a court brief, the trustees said the railroad had 27 labor agreements whicJ:t· call for Sfil.1 million ln increased wages next year and f70~3 mlllion in 1974. They asked Federal Judge John P. Fullam, who ls overseeing reorganization, to defer those increases called for in the agreement Jan. 1 for members of the six unions. ··~~~ --·~ ¥' ., ,. . ' • . ' • DAILY "LOT .Z5 They Don't Look Like Bi1sigess Gifts . . . Maybe That's Why They're Such Good Ones INOTM llllY fAlllM F!o"''''· Pl•11tt. Unu111•I 11 budn•tl 91ftt? Y11. M•t11l119f1i1I, ~·1011•1 111d im19l11etl•e1 Alto, v••· For 10,..10111'1 ho1111 •t well 11 offlc11 A9~i11, Y11! E11y lo d1llv117 Y11 ju1t c111111at141·9614 111d we'll clo tl!1 rttf. G 1v1 111 1 lltt of your •P9Citl ptopl1 111d 11l1ct th1 fl•-•• ind plt11t1. You 9f•1 y9'Ur cli111b fr11h ,,.,,, tll y11r, why 1low down now. DILICIOUS DlllD FIUn AH y t tr 1•.,,.rilt fMCl ln, ,..._,..... Holl J1Lll11 • • • SllfJ... •11yw1H1rt. Olwt ltlt 11 ... 11, 91Vt ll:Mltt trtlll llM P'lawtr Mart.f, n. kkld C•I~ ,.,..._ ,., . -n. ••ftrilll, , .... ,, ... ,.,..,, .,.. llM ,.lln ... l!nt • ,,.., lliln _.. ..,. ......... My~. lfll ... .. lllCllNIH. 17731 BEACH BLVD., personal radio p(L ger • TONE or VOICE • . LOW COST ' . • NEW COMPACT · POCKET UNIT • . MONTH. to MONTH RENT AL BASIS • OllA~Gf CUUN7Y RMllOHl lPHON[ S£RVll:E 1 .. t 401 So. 5ute h, $eaN ..... PHONE 847· 9614 •••••OW II Try Saturday's New s Qui z . • ' t • I T.J.BERNARDY., CL.U. 6 ASSOCIATES Sui14 SOO, 1020 N. Broadway Street Sanl4 Ana Tel.: 8;15-8712 T J . Bernardy, C.L.U: Branch.Man- R.K. PattA>n, Group IU!-ntatlve ' ' - ·' • • • • ' . _,,2,,1._:.;DAl-'L'-V'-P-'IL:.;Dc_T ___ _:S:;:Cc__W ...... ., o.c.-ll. 1'172 Claim Denied Xe1·ox Monopoly Cha1·ged by FTC \\'ASlll NGTO:"i' 1AP 1 -The FL'<ieral Tr11de Co1nnlJS!ilo n announced Tt1('sday 11 v.1lll is~ue a CQn1plalnt charging that Xero'I'. (.'orp. ha s n1onopoli1.ed th11 Sl 7 billion of· flee copi€'r 1ndu,tr. b\' en~11~· 1n11: in unfrur marketing and patent pr:ict1ct' 11lt' pr op U,. e d ron1pl:11nt alleges al\(l 1h:i1 x~rox has forte~f'd 11s fot"f'ij!.n .afftlia!es from rom~l\ng v.-11h 1t 1n the Lnitcd States. THE PROPOSED co.mpla1:'lt does not represen~ a rinding of facl by the commission. Such ;1 coniplaint is issued v.•hen the FTC has reason to believe th nl the lav.· has been violated. Xerox inay elect to contest thf' action at heari ngs hefore U1c co1nmiss1un and in the courts or it may negotiate a consent settlement. C. Peter r-.t cCo l oug·h , chairm:in of the board and chief executive office r of Xerox, said in a statement issued in Stamford. Conn .• that the complaint was "ill· founded and without merit." McColough said "Xerox wiU defend the action vigorously and will establish full y the correct ness of ilS practices ... \Ve are not beir..; accused of any im propriety in securing any of our pa'lents .. . \Vhat is being challenged by !he FTC is the very basis of the patent system -the concept tha t an investor should be awarded exclusive· rights to his invention for a lim ited period of time.'' THE COMPLAINT drawn up by the commissio n staf( says that the office co pier market includes a sub market in plain paper machines amounting to $1 billion yearly. It says Xerox accounted for about 93 i;er<ent of all revenues generated by the submarkel , approximately 60 percent of all revenues in the o\·er·all office copier market and approximately 86 percent of revenues from the lease and sale of machines in the total market in 1971. The proposed complaint specifies '.hat Xerox shall divest Itself of the stock of Rank Xerox . Ltd., a British corporation which distributes ofrice copier machines and supplies worldwide except in the United States and Canada. The proposed relief also in· eludes: DISENCHANTED WITH MUTUAL FUNDS IN KEOGH? • Wllll CM 1M Mfte 1"9irt \If c;1• a•ltT YAHC:I. CMrfll\llM C:•ttlUI com ... n111t1 540-7115 NUMBER COMllMI" lefi">"" o.c. 1972 I RAJ.Ek:HI SPORTS Model DL22 FINANCE • • OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST • .. \ I I I I I l ~ I I • • • • .. p " "' E : : • • • E • • • • E : • ~ • p • • • • ~ • p • E p • ~ • ' p E • • • • • p p p • ' p • • • • • • • p • • p p ) I I t ' \ I ' 'I ! I · I I I } I I ' I I • Wulntwf,y, 0twnbt1 lJ, 1972 Wedn~day's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Peace Snarls ' Hurt Market- I •. NllW YORK (AP) -. Stocka,declln.d Wed\! ... da'y, prom(ll"4 partly by lack of procress towaiil - pe'""' and )la'rtly by ln'veatpn' cashltti Jn on galns made during the · market'•· lonf upward marth of the put two monthJ. -· PresldcnUll adVls.,: Henry A. Kissinger was ,,,. ported flying home from Pll'is amid a general as- sumption that no Vietnam ctase-ftre agreement bad been concluded. I • SC OAILV flLOT f7 KIDS LOVE ' UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN 1HE DAILY PILOT ... • -· DAILY PJl.OT Soundesign AM-FM digital clock radio Built-in ~Uow speaker, 60 minute sleep switch, shde rule tuning dial. AFC. (Model #3483) 39.95 Soundesign stereo 8-track cartridge player · I '''''"'h•11r .... 3-"".ay operation, slide rule ru.ning , stereo headphone jacks, with spea~ ai:itenna (Model #4983) 89.95 . --- 0 Soundeslgn stereo record player Full size BSR changer, 8" duocone wide r8nge spea~. dustcover. 45 RPM adapter. (M~ #4Zl6/608) 69.95 1 I • :~A HIUll 1IOOO Chataworth St. lllVERIND~ 35~1~~ Victory 81.V<I. IANT A At~A 3900 South Brltl~I SI. Op .. •Hkli•JI t 130tt 10100 l•_fltl•rt_10tt10i00 Soundeslgn stereo 8-track tape player, AM-FM radio Automatic or manual channel selection. slide rule controls, jacks for stereo headphones and' phono Input (M~ #4840/606) 69.95 TDllRANC! 5eP<1IY9da and Hawtl>Orno LAKEWOOD Carson $1. end·Paremou.nt Slvd. BUENA PARK Beach and Oran'gethorpe ~RANGE Oerdon Grove Bl vd. end Monchcs1cr - l .. , w.:; . .-,. -J ...... l f ...... ' .. . f''• ' r , ii j ' .. ., ' I ! I ,, I' \ ' Lag a Beaeh Today's Fl•al .N. Y. Steeb V9L. 6~, NO. 348, 6 S~ONS~ 100 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAttFORNIA--·-·WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1972 TEN CENTS -Trus(~~s Hear History al Mate· Nude BJ REDEllICK SCllOEMEBL OI .. DflltY Hiit I .. 'ntroulbout blstoJl' the male nude bas been a symbol of art and ~ athleti.ca, a UC · lrvllle proleaor told tiust ... of the Lquno Beach Unified School District Tuooc1a:1·n1111t-. Dr. Dovld 'i'11Qm8IOl1, a professor of clullcs, appeared before the board to cllocua lhe· lmpllcatlorjl of the male nµde at tho' requeot of Bruce Hopplnc of the Kaloa Kagalhos Foundation. The presentatior. came in the wake of a ' . declslon 6y high school ofllelals not to alWw the foundttion'a logo -a pliOfograj)liO!BiiiileJ!OOe ICulpt~. -· to appear on the program for a water polo awards banquet Kiios ~agatbos supports "aquath- letlcs" and subscribes to the Greek 'pbi!oaopby of health. tn both body and mind. 'l'hornuon, illustrating his remarks witb ... alides, said there ls a fundamental dlstlnctian 'between U>e use of the word "nudity' 'and the word "naked." • "We will c.all a worl: tl ut a nude OCY!P!llre.-but never call it _.,jiak'!f man," noted' Tbomaion, sPeatN with a crisp English accent. -"We ~ belwoen the ~cntally naked !!'>Ci the purpoaefully nude.;• ~ • -The ancient Gi'eeks .. he said,-wert: the firat to require nudity for partlclpallon In certain sporls and , looked doWn upon barool1ana who attired tbelmelves with lolnclotba. . He showed several example. of Greek us Ill . .:..:::.;. . ' 'Ba\hroom' Smokers OniheEhh? Slnllldnl In the high :icbool bathrooms -1 ~ ~. for school of. liciala --to)lie on the ebb In ! ....... ~ Ille -ol F4uc<otioll .... ..,._.,. nlPl . A ~ from prtoc!pol Dooold Haugl>t llatfl •; .. the -ol -'11111 'ln mt -• ,., Ibis ,... ... Ileen ljp1Clmll1 "°' tlJu Jul ,.ar &.cause "'We iii · . .....- Jild.7• ~ r' tvt " .,_ .... Ille i"'M lW!, ....... , i:rp1r .,i., !lit ·~ WIJ: :. ....... ~ al.Ille bllb -IOllool. ml llrllbl. 11 to " """'rilllll oi!!Mwtll that .....-.., II not _ aoOifW'-.~-" . Bricl>I ... """' ,to --""" ..... -.mawJo-·-by -the 1>lfelldoro iii4 -........ "~wo •down 0< lllmlJtlla anok· lnl • .._.. Jt ..... kiill --.., olf -p•i ta ....... " the ASB pnlidenl • mt~ ie... Clmpllll to -elm-. q llmdl, blllAlli)< I very small Jlllllher -DJo. Clltduael Ill .-.., be added, J --, , • Whee, It'• ftree • .. .. ~...-q,. they "'!lllO -to for a < I (f &Qi allcJUt 'their ·kid's IQ.'l9king wlll a;y '11'1 ap to .J\1lmnY to stop smok-lnl' :.;!..,¥'..,. ll 1111 kid.......,,.:· LagLina l!e&d.> municipal ~ ·~ oH~g tr.e..rk!M-'llll •all•routes Ali! __ throii&li o.c:· 22. The P.N>Pl!'9"e0w0red ~ ,cln{-!;.:it·at,o Brf1bt llllcl lie -b ·:or 1 change ln Leisure Worl~, Honai:cJii ~.PJ!!I a""!'ftd4be'.~·bllW't\) . . . s llltO low ,..... .,ia allow loco! school Top. oI-. the-·,World, ·AJi adilli! Service. now. If"' ~,i;a~k. bOlnb to -wllOtllet-atcodents could perha1p,s-pedf~j~bockf lhe_"Wbillorld' resf<!enb· ~7 . <~.INt'f'e In mllOke Csurtas ICboo1 briun and designate " awe o g a .. up . · " • · -.. , ... 1 1oc111on11«1molilng. ~~~-=-....:....::.._~....:..~~~~~-'--~~-.~~~~~~~ "A·]!PI lib tldll falle\l lhla year, but It :wlll eOilllDulD.Y be bloupt up and ml,ht ' -. tn the flllun," be said. ~ tlonnli Browne said lh't real problom wltb b1cJt ieloaol bllhroolns may not be .-.i ac\IVlty, but fear on the po11 of -~ to enter the ~ Mc:IU!lf GI ''°5tility and thiS Nixon.Library.r~e~isinn • -~-·" -Browne wu critical of a pQrtlon of Haulbt'• ft!POI"&:, which read: ''to date, .. have 1111-~ tucben lo stand ...,.i da,11 •I lwloli . . . lo supe<Vlse Expect,ed Within· Days rtltfooml 0~: • to we their ' • .. . lellon! entrl7 IDr • pnpermg ,, • ond lh canfeiencln& with -•.. By JOHN VAJ.TEllZA Of • Dllf'f' ........ A loog-ewaited-announcement by Preside>\ Nixon ao his chold for the •te of the Nixon 'Llbm)' -1 'apot whlclt local JOU re-es claim ii iii sah ~Clemente -Is expecled •to ...,.. ,from •• the Wblte House Within a ma1tet o( days. He ~ thll teadlerl, In addlllon to O>elr pn>f~ -lbilities, could "P-~"·tbenllelves to the prollleml. "I'm a protnslobal, too, but l sweep the floor wben,j\ "DMds lt/1 said Browne, · (llee·llllOllNG, Plte I) - And Jt could possibly be announced during the Preaidellt's plllllled winter working "vacallon In San Clemente which .. Tooehes Teach · • '} Pare~ Can Aid Future Marriages SACRAMllNTO (AP) -Parenti who don1 touch 111cb other In front of their cblldren may be letllni up sexually Inadequate fllture marrlageo, a team · ot ....W therapist.I bu told stale employes here. "'l'lle .-.-UVe method of ,.. edllcatloo. la what goes on mry min- ute ," Dr. '11iiill-P. DSwry Of Qi Ma.!tert.Johnltln clinic in St. Louis, Ato., Aid TtlUcJly, ''ONE Oii' Tllll l'BW' l!lllvmals Is Ihat paUenls were.rolled In ·a famlly wi.. people -IOllcbed e1clt other," Lowry said. Lowry 111<14111 wUe Antl!ea conducted a semhW for employ., ol fl>e State Deplrtment ol Mlntll J1Y11ene on the use of oexual thera~ aa a • dl•orce prnelilaUve. , TlllJ: OOllPLlli SuOOllSTllD that sexually Inadequate perions quit worry-m, about it ..i do what come1 nolurally. "Just fOIPI lbout 11. A man lbould stop being the porpelual wltnw to hil ' wn fallure. fie matd Just thlnk about his wife's beauutul form," Lowry 1ald. , ' . ' ' -· • ~ will 1tart1 aOon. ~Cbristmu,. it was leamed t.bis week. • • ' - lllghiy -reliable 11><.~· ,.,.,.,.. 'Ald Ille Presid<tlt and )in. ~ plan to atq In San C:Umente bey<inll' tile -New v..-; weekend In their fint trtp lo the llooth Coast a1nc& the Jindsllde victory lut November. _._ Some loc'1 preparaUons for ·the visit already 11'1' ~mile. The llbrari< -~~nt Is bel!!I keenly awaited 1!l' community leaden who have~--that all the In- formation polnt.s'to tbe selection of a alte In the 10Utberly porUoo of the city. , LLst In~ Day, while loca1 citizens cele the Fourth at Vilt.a Bahia i tadiwn, President Nixon made (Set NIXPN, P11e !) PILOT AD BRII'{~S HOME GOOD NEWS ,. ' I , DAILY PILOT lanlfied wan't ads brlng home godd . oews.,..Htrt111 a true story: , , "" Parrot -Balboa Pen. Read. . breast, beci 91""ge, body .... orange I gt"eeD. XU·Jtn Reward. That OJ'll<r <ailed to say that the bird was back tn hand tM fint day the td ran. lfl'OIJ ha•• need of fast nosults, dial 642-1671 ~nd place a DAI~ Y PILOT claaUled want ad. , • ' .. .L - • 11CUlpture and palnltnc depicting uncloth- ed athletea. According to Tboawon, Greek artists . ' wont to• the IJllUWluma and' uaed the athletes lo< mode1'·thua· creating a inar- rlsge, In a sense, 'of nudity In art and athlet.lcs. . '.The root wtrd of. g,y'm n as l um , Thomason aai..:, is •gymnos• and is the G""'k equ!vllent to the Engllsb word, 'naked.' Nudity wu ;rominent in the Olympics, Lagunan's Finger Lost In Dogfight and he showed several examples with slides of _dilJCWI throwers. 1'onanlo Da Vinci and Michelangelo uaed ·the male. nude In their works of art, stressing proporilqos of the body. Thoma.son concluded his remarks with 8.n anecdote that went like thls: Wiien Mlchelanujo was painting the celllhg of pie Sistine Chapel, the Pope • and a, ~relate happened by. . :."How do yoo feel' about the painting we're having done," the Pope asked. a ' IRVllW SNIPING· SUl.PECT, Leollelt.-- ' • C" '{ 'I ~ ·' .... , Diit-'ymalJ.; .,_, ir ~1 F~ar~d-lh~~d > Off Huntingtlin By MICHAEL Gj)ODRICll 1 Of .. DMfJ ....., ..... ·Huntington Beach lifeguanls are scour- ing the local strands today, searching' f~r the bodies of a Newport Beach dory fisherman and hl9 J..year-old daulhter who di&appeared Tuesday ofisbore lrolJ\ the Edison pGWer plant. Newport Beach and Hun t·i n gt on lifeguards searched chilly oce,en waler.I all Tuesday afternoon, after the empty dory boat of Allan Vaughn KnJght, ~. of 224 Newport Blvd,, Newport Beach, was spotted from shore. Police helicopters also were used in Tuesday's search. Knight, and his daug/lter, . Patricia, : • (ljee DOR1(, r•r II I ' "Well, these disgusllng flgum would fit better in tbe ~m." replied the prelate. An lnceMed MJcbeJangelo eyed the prelate lhen returned to his work and painted a nude figure of the prel1te in tl:.: throes of the devils of bell. "All this goes to show," said Thvmason, "that the artist Will always have the last word on this matter."' · Trustees received the presentation \Vithout comment. Cycle Gang ' Leader Held For Assault By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of lie Delly Pl* stliff Costa Mesa police late Tuesday night arrested a· Zl-year~ld cycle gang leader they allege attempted to shoot and kill Irvine police officer Stephen T; Nuh during a nig.bttim ambmh Wt Oct. 2S. 'lbe suspect, identified as Leslie Robert Peters, of 566 N. Orange St., · ~e, is aweJting arraignment at Costa Mesa Clty Jail today on a charge of assault with intent to ccmmit murder. He la being held lo lieu of '180,llGI bail. A combined force of l5 Costa Meaa and Orange police officers arrested the unemployed press loader at bil apart- ment late Tuesday. Police dalmetl to have uncovend ntne loaded rtllel and shotguns In the j>rocess. Peters, purpc>rted to be the newly elected presidelit of the Orange County cL.tpter ot the Hessians·motorcycle gang, offered no resistance during the-raid. COsta Mesa Detective C a p t. E. H. Glasgow said Peters' arrest climaxed a long investigation between Costa Mesa and Orange police offteer3 into the ac- tivities of :je Hess!ar" "We've been keeping t h e Hessians under surveillance for -some ,time and questioning some of them over and over and doing things of that nature," Glasgow eap!atned. He added that Peters was believed to have taken over the presidency ol. the outlaw bike club around the lime ol the alleged ambuoh near Jeffrey Road · and Barranca Road. · Gillette, Linke Appqinte<l That night officer Na.sh waa on patrol in Irvine when a car conla.lning two "clean-cul" men approached him and told him ol an Injured man In the roadway. As Nash, ZS, spei.' to the acene, the sup.. posed victlnl, lying lace down, jumped into a crouch and rirec1 at Q>e officer" through the windshield of the squad car. • . ' To Discipline Study Unit Laguna Besch Board of EducaUqn members Patricia GilltUe and Gerald lJDke were appointed-'l'Uelday night to a iptclal IUbocmmlttee to study the dllclpqne code "°" In 1ffect In the scl\001 ~trkt, I '. -, ; ' 1 ', Serving on the suticommlttee wi!b the two trusleel wtll be principals from tagun;a'1 five schools. Concern over the discipline ci>de, said Supl. William Ullom, has been etjiressed NO\V -Chapie'r -Slates . ' . ChampagD.e , Function .A ~-party 1po1110red by the Laguna Beacb chapter of N atlonal Org .. liatlon foc Women (l'iOW) wtll be held al I o'clock tonlgbt at lllOO Rlmrock ~;:..i ~Oil ~i;11oali and ~ will be held with Par!ldPallon iii .Joy COliners, )ll'Oltdent cl '!be Orange 'c;oanty NOi\', Mona Stelfl,. Ind Delores Femn, prtlldont of·the Loi1GJ1 challter .. JocaI ..-0 lild - l NUDEI> 11tEH RM!& b l'UT ME II '1Mf ~IT-lf<P , l"lf '°1 Cil«.V MC1CE· 1111'/S-Left. !JIU. -•I , • . I in the· EducaUoool Prtsirlt~ study Com- mittee 1'epOrt •qd bu been <liJcussed from time ·10 tI!i>e "In retanl to· the perforinance atandards of my job." , The ~·pojlcy•wlllCh' tipell1,«11 the ~ ... ~~';==: Nomnber, 1181."'Jt -·-loid OUI •by a similar subcc;mmlttee. ~ 1 Trustee 'Gillette Mid Involvement of the principals from ...ii fJf the ICllools would be valual>le for "speclflc ldeuo'~ ~ Trustees Jane Boyd and Nonnon Bi:owne cauttooed agalost too PlflDY s))tclfic,s. in. any new poJlcy. 11 J.1 tbink you will nnd there are speclncs at each schoOI," ·Browne said. Mrs. Gillette 5'ld the di4c1pllne code -now four years old -0 1s not exactly cur- rent" and may need updating. The aJ!POlntmeot of Mn .. Glll!Jlla,and . Linke to' the commlttee was m.ilii by board president William ~ . who asked the board who would ~~ed in serving. ,, ' ,- Thief Ge1&.-Presenl$, " Pistot$d ·Jewelry <:. . A '""ii csllber automatic pistol lt1d '4lt'-111 j<.-.Jry and Chrillmu proeentt wm ~ ·•tolen TueldlY to Laaun• Beach police In two nelgbborlxM>d ·' burglaries. Tile .31 caliber p~tol was taken from tile home of Gres Stone, IM Bluebird can- yon Drive. Noorby at the m Bia.bird Canyon home of, Dan Preltoll &ldricfae, Ille house wu .....,.eked and U\e jewelry and preJimtl taken. • • ,, __ ...... ,...._ . Nash gunned his car in.. an attempt to nm down· bis assailant but was bit on the fact by a bullet fragntt.11t . The bll>hwbaclter escaped by running IDto a nearby Cornfield. capt. Glasgow aald the amall caliber revolver allegeJl}-....eel in the attack was bot recovered from P'Urtmenl. "We're Jookin,a: {or it tholJ&h, tt added. Police wouia not say Peters bad been positively l~ied )> y Patrolman Nash, a~o Costa ,,Mesa officer who was ISll to th6 lrv.ine (Set SUSP , Piii" II / , Weadter Sunny sklol are on the ....,.. Jor Thursday, 1'ith llJahUy "'""' er temp<rature.. llJgbl ol SI It the beaches, rialng to fl 1nimJ Lows tonight In the Illa, · INSmE TOD& 'l' Ofonge C01111ty'1 I ht a t t \. grou,,, cdll II a llfOr ,Qflcr tllil IDH/cnd; lfhlJ f OM towftog productlo!I r•IVtna for aa n. con. SH Ell1trtolo1"""~ ""'1o ·43. LM...,. • -· ....... " ~---= ... ---I ~ II c....... • .. _. .... ._, c..... .. --c-.. ' er...... .... "• • --·--............ ' °'·''' .. .. .................... ... =-. ....... ... ~-..,--.: ...... •••• -...w " --··---..... . ............. , • I• • . : • Bob Battin Spends Most .... ·$139,,03 Ul"IT.-...... De's ha R ace Rep. Bob Wilson (R·Calif.) says he will seek re-election next 1nonth to his seventh term as chairman of the National Rei- publican Congressional Com- mittee. From Page l DORY ... we~ alone in the boat, checkin g his lobster traps about 200 yards offshore. police said. Lffeguards believe both druwnecl. Hunlington Beacq lifeguard ~fike Mos.,Jer said he firSI noticed Knight's ~boat moving south from the pier about 20 yard! from the shore. Ile said Knight \\·as standing in the rear of the boat cradling his daughter in his anns while he tried to steer the boat by shifting his v•eight from side to side. Knight u•:1s <lpparentl y returning from checking his lobster traps ;11hich v.·ere in the Bolsa Chica Bluffs area. according to one lifeguard. Minutes later Daniel C. Davis, ot 218 Chicago St., Huntington Bench, said he saw a man in the '''ater next to the dory in the viciniry of Beach Boulevard. - Davis said he thought the man was div- ing but then noticed the dory was travel· ing in a small circle next to the man in the water. LUeguards on the scene said the heavy fishermen boots worn by Knight might ha\.·e pulled him under onei! he was in the water. Davis cootacted Huntington Beach llleguatds who begain an intensive search of the water a quarter mile south of the pier. Ufeguards reported they lmmd a child's life jacket in the boat. Lat.tr in the "1e"""'11, anolller dory fisherman fouod a child's parka in the water near 56lh street in Newport Beach. The divers involved In the search were in the wa ter until dusk when poor visibil- ity made the search impossible. Ufegwinl Captain Douglas D' Amati said today there were no more plans to continue the widerwater search, but beach patrols would continue. Knight was described by police as a veteran doryman. They said his wife told I.hem it was not unusual for Ji!m to take one ol their children out on his lobster rum. Finl District Supervi>or Roboti Battin was the top ~ l.n recent IUptn'iaorlal campilcm. Jle ~ IUO,IOI spent In tbt 1-tledloil. The biggest chunll ol the --from a lll0.000 loan and 1 1$,000 donation from Dr. Louis Cella of Santa AM and fticti,ard J. O'Neill, 1'11.sslon Vl_ejo. lrl"' total, four candidates f o r suptr\'isors reported spendln& $344,656. This compares with $380,980 spent by 11 aspirants for the two jobs in the Jl.Ule primary. Wtlllam Wtolle, Sant.a A n I attom<y wbo opposed Ba.ttln In tbt nmofl, aUI he spent 1811.m; Ralph Dledr1cb, wbo dtlealed ---l'llUlll" In the Tblrd ~ -.m .... Pll1Dlj)I, 141>.02$. Phillips said he had a deficit, "'porting contributions of only $21.48~. He had received contributions or $57,289 tn June when Diedrich led him by 10,000 votes. The reponed spending 11 believed to be well below actual ootlaya u only cam-- palgn contributions of $500 or more must Lagu11 a R-eceives Y uletime Gift in Government Green ' A nice 110,•ernment.green check for $46,587, Laguna Beach's first inslallmenl of federal Revenue Sharing monles was tucked securely away in the bank Tues- da y. A special trust will be set up for the federal dollars. Another two payments belie\'ed to be of lhe same amounts as the check received TUesday. v.·ill JXlUr nearly $140,00(\ into Laguna coffers. . .\t present. City Hall plans to use the federaJ funds to replace municipal 11enera1 fund dollars. and tQ place the ci- ty money in a reserve. - Study sessions discussions by the city council ·indicate there is support for a special program of evaluating com- niunity goals and needs, prior to spend· ing the "new money." Councilmen have pointed out that many communities have drawn up shop- ping lists of Jtema the cities appear to need. But the council was loath to adopt that approach for the Ari Colony, believ· ing a thorough examination of com- munity desires was required fmt. Tax relief, probably a priority com- mwlity desire, ought not be an item of co~sideratlon,_ acoordlng to the ' federal feedback on use or the money, City htanager La,rry Rose explained at 1 study session. ROR explained the formula used to det.enntne the funds eacb city would receive evaluated the local "taxing ef. fort," based on city per capita income and the local la.I rate. If federal monies are used to relieve 1"""1 taxes, the I.axing effort would be less, and the not year, less federal money would be paued down to the city. Rose also stressed that cities have been pleading with the U.S. Government for grant monles to cure local ills. I( m. Policeman H el.d In The lt of TVs ' SAlj ANSELMO (AP) - T w o policemen arrested on charges of st.ea!· ing nine color television sets from a 1-0cal department store told their chief Ibey "thought it woukl be nice to have color TVs for.Christmas," the chief says. Polic!e"Chlef Raymond Bucbiganl, tenning the indd<nt "a-dark day In San Anselmo," fired Sgt. Edwin silvia, 38, a nine-year veteran of the. force, and Eugene SaporetU, 24, a reserve officer who had been working fulltlm.e for several months. stead of increasing the effort at doc- toring cximmunity dlfficultie1t t h e municipality cuts taxes, Congress may not be inclined to keep subsldlzlng local government, he explained. Homophile Group To Hold : Benefit A \Aguna Beach homosexual organiza.· tion.1.be Concerned Citizens Group, Inc., announced-today that proceeds troll\ a Cbr~tmas supper held Monday night will be donated..to Fairview St.ala Hospltoj, Costa Ateu. .,; ''The gay oommuntty" said .IP9h8man Ray Beierle, "wants to take part in the entire community. We want the. town to know we are doing sometbtng COD'" structive." Beierle said the Christmas dinner at the Coast Inn attracted .....,.. of loc;ll gays. In addition, he said, "several hundred dollars .. raised at a recent nap meet will be donated to the mental hospital. "We hope to provide Christmas gi£ts and parties for at least two of the wards. Perblps other wards if we have enougb money," u»d Beierle. The Concerned Citizens Group, Inc. was fonned in May to fonn1Uy proteat alleged police department "entrapment" of gaya In Heisltr Park and along the Main Beach. Second Lie Test Set for. Lag11n~ . ' Youth in Thefts A second polygraph Ille detector) t<sl hu been 1Cbedu1ed for a }$.year-old Laguna Beach youth In the Investigation of some 2$ Temple Hil1I area burglaries. Laguna Beach Del Alex Jimenez aatd today a lest given "'-lay •t the District Attorney's Office wu not com- plete and the further session is required. FroMPageJ The youth was apprehf.nded near a hcxne that bad been fon:lbly entered. He was found to have a nylon .1tocking his poswslon and assertedly tlJrew away a pair of gloves. NIXON LIBRARY •.• l\\.'O separate secret trips lo a hilltop nearby and walked over an area which appears to be his choice for the library which will contain all the memorabilia and documents of his administration. Originally, his aides said, acreage held in trust adjacent lo La Casa Pacifica was intended as a library site, but some theories hold that it might be too close to the residenei! where the Nixons plan to live when be leaves office. The hilly areas behind Vista Bahia could be served by the existing road leading from San Clemente to Camp OIAMM COAST LI DAILY PILOT 1l'9 0....-C-. twlY l"llOT, wllh WMdrl .......... ~.ls~tiy .. a... Oltd '*""'"" °"'"""· s.. nt9 ........... p,ibl~' ""*"'"' ,_rvugh ,ftN'(, .... ~ Mn1, H9WPHI 8MCll, . ........ I a.dtl'"-!tln Ytllrf, l..tf!.- ..... JNIMl.lllllck .,.,.. ,,,, Cltmtn!V IM .hlM CtP1$1f'"°" A tlfllko ,..-.. ...... h .... llMd Selllf'llM erd ...,....,._ 1llt fl'lllC:lr»f .-rlllltrif llMt"' ft 11 m wat ..., '""'• CMM~ ~ Q111on11 .. taa.,. ltoM!t H. WeM .. ,.. .... .,.. """" ..... J • .si: R. c.nr, VQ ~ llM' o.n.r.i M-oet TkM•• Ke...sl -n.,,,.., A. M.it,tMM Miii .... u..... a.rin H. Lfft ltialrl ... f, H•A AMltllMt M ..... 9111,.,. ---122 ,.,.,. "'""" Moln'f J,M...,, ,,0, ....... t Jllt "'--'*- Ctlf9 ,_._., -.... ..,. """' a.odll -......,. ''" ..... ... lllMfl': »WJ·•• ''""'*' ... • ..... c..-.... Tai p D t <nit, MMJJt a ,, , ....,,,, ... , MWJI __ ... _ 0 ,,. •t .t:;;; =· ::2-~-~.,..,.--= ..... .. .. Ill" _,.... .. -..r1 ......... ...... fl'lfY .. , ... --,,..... .... ,... ......................... ti ••• 1~== ....... = ':: ....... , w ~s. """'*' ...., .......... ........,. .. .. ' Pendleton. Although !everal purclwes of land hove been consummated in recent months in the area. the Nixon Fowtdation <the entity which -·HJ build the library) Is not among the list. One purchaser of land in the area, San Clemente businessman Ray Campbell, said Tuesday that he has heard nothing about an u:act site for lbe library. If local eX"peCtations bear fruit, the library could generate hundreds of thousands of tourists a year and oould be a boon to local business. A subtle campaign to win local selec· lio1. has gone on for more than a year. A life-sized bronze bust df the Pres!· dent, now on display at the civic center, was bought from thousand! of dollars in local contributions . And the local commJttee spearheading the effort armoW'ICed lhat one reason for the fund·r11lslng campaign was to show the Nlxons that San Clemente citizens wish the library to be built in the city. ·Ultimately, said members of the com· mittee, they hope the bust would be on permanent display In the institution. F rom Pagel SMOKI NG ... • dentlsl Other board members echoed agreement. , Trustee Patricia Gillette thanked Brighi for his report and noted "You've obVlously devoted talent to sotving the problem." SpeaJtlng from tho audlcnc<, Bruce Hopping, ch1irman of U.. K 1 I o s Kagatbot Foundation, Hid he 1'0Uld be willing to collaborate with the IChool diatri.ct ' In diatlm.lnattng tnfonnatton from the American Cancer Joclety. Such a program, said Hopping, met With success three yean ago. James W11lace, commlsaloner of assembUet at the high ochool, said that the American cancer Society program ts alreadx under conslderaUon and may be given Jn January. \ The youth has lnisted he Is in-ent of any wrongdoing. Dog Confined 7 4 Day s in Auto · STATELINE. Nev. (UPI) -When sherlfrs deputies opened the car door, the emaciated dog was too weak to lift her head. Cindy, a black poodle tem.r, had lost 24 pounds and was "just skin and bones" alter being locked in the car .for (4 days without food or water. Dcputlea freed the animal, whlCh weighed only sil pounds, gave It milk and called its owners, Mr. and MrJ. E-t tJechvatal ol San Leandro. They caught a bwl and claimed tbelr pet and their car, whkjt7 Ibey r<ported stolen Sept. 28 from a pmbllng e;asfno parking lot in this CalifonJa-Nevad& border town . Singapore Police Cl1anging Tactics SINGAPORE (UPll -A changeover from traditional Brltlah methods to the American shoot-from.the-hip 1tyl1 has proved Itself convincingly among the poUCt of Singaport, a police spokesman said today. ln ahootouts since July, JO of 11 criminals ipvolved were killed or brought down wounded Dy police since they began employing American FBI gwihandling procedures . the spokwnan 11td:- ,......PflffflJ SUSPECT ... be&.l Sep\, J when Costa Mesa took over pollct duUes ln lrvtne on a c:ontrll.ct bull. ' l\IQ!)_wblle. pollco '" aUD Oft the lookoul for !be I"' other tn<n wbo helped P•ten "1th lhe al!•ged ambush . be r<ported. But even t b e rtp0rtM costs were utronomlc>t comparOd wltb tbqse of 1 few years ago. Oaiy Board Chairman Ronald eaipen ol Newport Beach IP-~ the 11..,... Re reported spend,· mg $81 ,695 In 1970, mostly his own money. Candidates of other offices reporting by tbe deadline TUesday included William Dannemeyer, \vho tried to unseat Aslfemblyman Ken Cory (J>.Ganlen Grove), $77,M&; John Black. Newport lleaclj Dernocr•t wbo rift against RetoUbliooo AndreW I . n-.. for the stth ~ --~ 'fl•• 'Olio Lacayo, $11,004, and Ted ~pile, 14,813. Lacayo ran agalnlt Incumbent at1te Sen. James E. Wbetmore anCI Slilpke 01> posed Incumbent AssembJtynan John V. Briggs. 1'he bltterneu of the Battin·W.enke bat· tle continued Tuesday. In a statement Issued by Cella and O'Neill they accuied the Wenke camp of a smear campal,go. \Yenke'a: campaign m11nager Carlos· • C:alindo callee( the statement, "an H · t.anslon of the bl& U. lecbhlqua IBld ln !:1ttin'1 campalan ., well." Previoualy reported. were campaian ex· pemes ol $84,97S by Hinshaw, and $35,182 by. incumbent J4th District Congressman Richard Hanna . • • Cory spent $90.473, Brlgg1, $14,1166: AsaemblYman Robert Badhitm (. R • Newport Beach ) , H , o 09 and ,\ssemhtymnn RobeJ:t , ,llllrlt4; (II-Hun- tington Beach), $28,0ft \ ' . ~ . •.• Orange Soil -May Hold Secret w Moon 's Death. Be'U"flaritPe.t William P. ctimeni. Jr. says that If and when ~e's con· firmed I!; ~ufy secretary of defense, he 1S go4l.1 to 11re- sign •. • . walk tta(' as. bead of bis large oil ~ell drllling Company, but hes not going to sell his stock. Husband .Kills • Man, Him.sell SAN DIEGO CAP) -Police said .an angry husband carried a shotgun to the home of his estranged wile and shot a man: t death belo,. k1llin([ bimHll. IDV!Stigators quoted d>efYte Clemetson, 28, 8' saying the shots were fired by Howard Arthur CJemetson, 31, from wbom she separated last March. The "'!'!'" m311 .11'81 i41Dlllle4 '1Y ~ aa l\lilCbil s. K1*!,'37.f ! ~ ~ r SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) - Tu·u • jubilant Amerlcan adve11.ttittrs prepared today for a farewe:t lunar ex. ploration. But already ps'ard ·their lander Challenger was a new discovery - samples of intriguing" orange soil ~lbly dating to the la5' fiery gasps Of "! dying moon (See related pictw-e, stories, Page 1) Astronauts Eugene A. Ceman and Har-- riaoo H. Schmitt, in their last geology field trip in the moon valley of ·Taurus· Littrow today, were to take ar elgbt-mile drive along the base of a high mountain and at the foot of wrinkled hills, using an electric car with a patched fender. The astron£iuts, saying they "like to cover n e w ground,'' traveled a mile farther than planned Tlleaday ntgbl, gatberlng many bags of lunar 111mples. including scoops of ihe orange dust Qever b; •ore found on !he moon. The orange material was found during exploration of an ancient avalanche, 4.4 miles from the landing camp in Tal.tt'\15-- Littrow valley, By coincldenei!,· it was fotllld by Ceman, not Schmitt, a geologist and America's first prolesslooal scientist in space. "Hey," .?Xclaimed Ceman as be stumbled into .the soil at the rim of a cr.111ter called ~y. "Wait a minute ... there is orange soil." "Well, dOn't move until J see it," said the Harvard-educated Schmitt. "It's all over," Ceman went on ex- citedly. "Orange. I've stirred it.up with my feet. "Hey, i\ is," shouted Schmitt. "I cah see it Crom here. It's orange.'; Cerilao and Schmitt were awakened at it':20 a.ii),. to1he1alralm,ol tbei,Teus A&J.I ligllt soog. Growid control told them their ·~ craft was in good' shape and everything wu.eet for tonitht'a moonwalk.• by Jlle discovarY. U..b cautious In their • Oa. eartla, ICientilb ·were •allo acited by the dis\lovery,-thoqh C't""'81ln their . ' . evaluation. 'rhey said the orange aoil may have or111inated from "the last gaseous" gasp of volcanism" on the moon. Dr. Robin Br<tt, chief ol the geochemistry branch at t I. e ?ttanned Spacecraft Center, said the material possibly could be rust -which has been found in other lunar samples tn minute quantities -or some cbemlcal com- bination which assumes a reddish color. A final clet<rmlnollon -..uJd have to awaJt labontory u~tion •OD earth, "" said. -The-orange soil was the most signifi· cant discovery of lhe seven-hour, 37· minute excursion, the second of Apollo 17's planned three. While Ceman and Schmitt motored on the moon. their crewmate, Rooald ,E. ~vans, labored in the command alllp America orbiting overhead. ~ it: operating.......aD-arr:ay_ . ..of scienee_Jn7 struments which are photographing and probing large -slices of the moon. Ti1n Leary Gets \ u Walking Papers GENEVA (UPI) -American drug cultist Timolby Leary has been given a final deadline or Dec. 31 to leave Switzerland and ts looking for 8 "suitable country," his Swlu lawyer said today. Lawyer Horace Mastronardi aaid theft is no question of Leary being extradited to the United States. "We don't know yet where he will go. We are lpoklng for a suitable country,'' the Iawyi-r said. Leary fled prison In Calllornta In 1970. He wr~lng a one-.to 10:¥f.ll' sentence for po~ion of dru&• ~t.er being ar- resle<!, In Lagwia Beach,~ !Im wenl to Ml~, ml lben. In 1J'!l came to SW1twl1D11. ' m • ' ~1111 llVlllT lillTI 'Tll XMAS 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA 646-1919 • • • • • ·and Sportswomen BasketbaA Footllalls Yoley balls Sot:cer balls T ms baDs • Archery sets Balinton sets Pifll Pong sets Tiiiis Rackets ! ! . ' .. Hadal Glum . \ Tellis Shaes ' . • • I . Tennis Dresses Tennis Shorts r. Shirts Skate Boards Duck Feet Fins Dart Boards . Frisbees Back Packs SJeepq eacs Wann Up Soils SWeat Suits Nylon Jackets Basebal Sllaes Track Shoes ,. Wrestling Shoes Speedil Swim Suits Telllis Sweaters . Sweat 'Sox Lettemian Jackets Basketllall Shirts SWlm Trunks Stop. Watclles Bicycles Bicycle Accessories ' J 7 ' 7 ' f I --.. --......... Saddlebaek Today's Fhlal ' EDITION ~.Y. St.eeks ' VOL. 65, NO. 348, 6 SECTIONS, 100 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1972 TEN CENTS . County Delays Canada Foothill·s-Last Time ·111 CANDANCE PEARSON ot ... DWtr ......... Onlnce County P t an n I n g' C!>m- mlalonm Tuesday again postponed a deciskln -f9r the last time, they promo bed -on the controvenlal Canadl . Foothills planned community z o n e clianJe Jn fi1 Toro, alter -hearing ob- jecllim to a companion amendment to the master Plan of arterial blgtnirlQ'S. In a 3-1 vote, the commlssloo llCheduled· another public hearing on the project !or Jan.1, 1973, ai 1:30 p.rn. Commlssloo chairman Ff<d Jelfel'llOll and C'.ommissiooer Woodrow W. Butter. field "'1Jted against any further delay. 1bey wanted to approve the development Tuelllay. Tbe commission must voje on three things: the environmental Impact 1tatO- _, (EIS) on the project, ~ zone change lrom agricultural to planned community and amendments to the El 'Toro area general plan and the master • plan of arterial highways. Three of the commissioners -But- terfield , who ba$ s~id ~ is resigning , and Jellerson and Dan Foley, whose terms will nm out -will probably be replaced 'by Jan. 9. · "It tri>uld be a crime to bold all these hearings and not be able to vote (on lhe project)." B•tterfield said. Canada Foothills. liounded Jn part by El Toro and Trabuco Roads and adjacent 11 the El Toro Marine Corps Air SlaUon, Ill DiSCOVet]f (;ited ·· Moonmen Ready For Final Walk &PACI': cgin'ER, Hooston (AP) -01) earth, sdentim, were al!o HCited 'l'll'o • jubilant Am¢can adventurers b:" the di!covery, tboogh cuaUous Jn their pftPllted today fo: a fareweil lunar ex· evaluation. 'they said the orange soil plorilioa-_ , may bave originated lrom "'the !..t' BUI olready aboard their ·11nder gaseous ga.p ol volcarilsm" an the moon. awJencer WU a new ~ -Dr. Robin Brott, cbltl . ol the ...... ol ~ -IOI l)Olllbly geod!emfstry brwb at t L e M""1"! dattq to the !"' fiery llUJlS of a dying Spaeecrafl Center, ll8ld the materlll -(See nlated ~. llOriel, Page , poilibly coold I>< -"'irblch bu boen f ) .-· lound in othi'r lunot II'?! bi ~ , =-A. 0.-and Bir-q~ -tr ...... .:i;.,.IM ,. a ID -1a1i ..... lilnatlali--=--a NllclllltCGll • ru!!' -....,.., ,._.... A lllill Mm I 11111 ...W n •to ~~'TJlo1'":"~ :~ldor~ .xam-·.., OirG!; and. at Iba lool ol wrtoklad Uliog 111 The ol'lllge aoll wu the most slgnlll· eleclric car wltll a potcl*I · , 1 cont dlacov$!Y of . the ae...,.1-, 11· l'be_WOO!lm, Nylng lbq "like IO _minute .. cun1oo. the -of Apollo ..,... new ptllld." tra:nJed,. a ~ 17'• ~--• -- lmhu tllD pllllned ~ -n1g111,.-Whll• Cemla and Schmitt -motored ... ........ -bQs ol 1-r ampleo; the -, tbtir cniwmale, 1laMld E. Jnd!"lnl -po of the onnge dust nevel' Evans. lahorod in !be command ship b<~ort -on Ille mooa. Am<dca.-cxlit"!f erohead. Evans Is The -ala'lal -10i1ii1 dilrlni operating an arny ol IClence in- exDloratlaa al • IJICienl -· 4.f stnllDtllta -... pbotDcrapblq and milor frml the luding -ta Tauruo-prcblng large o1ice1 o1 the ._.,_ Ultrow valley. By~ it WU lo.md 11J Cemon, not Sclualt~ a geologist Be'llflaltP,Nt ~ ~-.P. Ci&Qlenl.s .Jr~ says illit If and '!Vhen he's con- • hnned' as 4eputy1 secretary of ' defe~ he is •g_oing to "re- . sign_,.._._.-w.alk..away" as head of hirlarge oil well drilling company, but he's not going to ,Mll bls stock; • and America's first profeakNl scientist in.~ ...claimed Ceman .. he ~ jnlo the soil at the rim ol a cnater ealled-Sborly. "Walt a minute .•• tbere.'iJ orua.-e mi1." City of Irvine ~xp~~~-· _: _. • ff•,,,. ..... I\~ •• .. Well, doa'j, move wiW I see it," aaid the !larvmHducated Schmitt. 1'1t•1 aU . over/' Ceman went on ex- ciieClly. 610rllp. I've stirred it up with "my lee!. Jo Keep Impact Policy··: "Hey, It ts," ahouted SchmiU! 111 can , The city of Irvine will continue to re- 111 It from here. lt's orange." quire most developers to provide at least Ceman and Schmitt were awa~ed short f Iron tal Im t rt at 11:20 a.m. to the strains of the Texai orm env men pac repc s despite a recently approved state law .Al<M fight aong. . Ground c:oatrol told them their space-allowing cities tn Californ1a1 to Ignore a cnlt was JD good llhape and •vel'}'lhlng State Supreme Court decision. was set for-tonight's moonwBlk. Tbe high court action on the Frjends of ,. · t'-• ,. .......... -........ _ .. ,........... · ·· · Mammoth Case extended the impact • ' 1 -/' report requirements of the 1970 Environ-- Sixth GraJhrs At Turtle Rock .. Will Give Plny mental Quality Act to privat.e as well as public projecta. Alter Lt. Gov. Ed Reln<cb signad AB 889 into law last week however, cities would be required to take "affirmatlv&. action" to require the environmental reports of private developers, City At- torney James Erickaon explained Tues. dB)" night. Councilmen approved on a 4 tq 1 vote a motio°"by ·Henry Quigley: to. continue the city's present policy including a· . . emptions for business and commercial development in the Irvine ·lnudstrlal Compleo. Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor who raised the issue as she questioned a 55.S- acre indwitrial tract of 25 lots which had been placed on the council'• consent calendar, opposed the extension of the impact report requirement She said she opposed -COl!tliiiiliig the blanket es- empt!Olll In the industrial comp! ... Mayor William Fischbach, who sup- ported Henry Qulilef'• bid for the cm- tinualion ol the city's policy laid he might In the luture rethink hisj>Olltion II similarly large tracts of land are to be developed in the induStrial part. is now pltymed for 9,670 dwelling wlll! and a popUlation of 34·,400 persons, where orlglna1 proposals called for about 36,600 persons. Aboot 40 percent of the homes planned ln the project lie in are;is of noise at or above the 65 dba (decibels) level, judged the maximum by Uie state to which residences should be exposed. County planning staff Tuesday again recommended that the EIS be found in· adequate, that the zo~e change be denied ' Nixon Due For Choice On Library By JOHN VALTERZA Ot .... l»ltr , ......... A Ione·awaited announcement by PresidenfNlion on his choire fOr·the site JI the Nl%on Library -•-~·which local """""' claim is In San Olemente -.,.~, '9!c•l' to come .fi'tnn.. lheWbite HbUie Within a matter of dayS. :a:c~a== 1fil1 ~.'lion after Christmas, it Wal tli!J ~ • ~ local· """""'. ~ the . and Mn. Nixon plan. to.stay In San q....,,.e beyond the New:Y..,.'s weelceod .In their first trip to-.lhe south - C.OSSt •itlee the landslide victory last November. · .... Some k>cal preparations for the visit already are being made. The lib~ry announcement is being keenly a~aited br communiJl...~ders who hive quietly conceded that all the ln- formation points to the selection of a site in the southerly portion of the city. wt lndepeJ-.e 0ay, while 1oca1 citize:la celebrated the Fourth at Vista Bahia stadium, President Nixon made two separate secret trips to a hilltop nearby and walked over an area which appears to be bis-choice for the library whidi will CUllaJn all the memorabilia and documents of his administraUon. Originally, his aides said, acreage held in trust adjacent to La Casa Pacifica was intended as a library site, but some theories hold that it might be too close to the mldeoce where the Nii:ons plan to llve when he leaves office. The hilly areas beWnd Vista BahJa could be •served by the existing road leading from San Clemente to Camp Pendleton. Although several purchases of land tu.w been consummated in recent months-in the area, the Nixon Foundation (the entity which will build the library) is . not among the list. one purchaser of land in the area, San Clemente busineS9mall Ray campbell, said Tuesday that he baa heard nothing about an e:1act site for the library. If local expectations bear fruit, the library could generote hundreds ol thousands of tourists a year and could be a boon to local business. A subtle cimpftign to win locai se1ec- tlo1. has gone on for more than a year. and any general plan amendments defer· re<'. until a comprehensive study and revision are undertaken. ~th the planners and County Counsel Ralph Benson said they could not recom- mend changing the general plan for one project which doesn't confiirms. Benson added that what the commission was doing is not "llJe'gal per se." But it was c:onc:ernu~ressed by city of Irvine planning director Bruce War· ren, Irvine Company planner G9rdon • . . l~VlllE SNll'IN41 SUSPECT LMl!e R ..... .,. •. Doryman ,' Gitl Feared lJrmiJ~d ; . Off Hu~f!,ngton By MIOllAEIJ GOQDWCH Of .. .,...,. ..... , ''"" Huntington Beach li:feguards are scour- ing. the ~ strands today~arching for the bodies of a Newport1 Beach dory fisherman and his S.year-i!ld daughter who disappeared Tuesday offshore from the Edison pcwer p1apt. Newport Beach and Huntington UfeguardJ searched chilly ocean waters aU Tuesday afternoon, after the empty dory boat of Allan Vaughn Knight, 43, of 224 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, was spotted from $0r8~ Police hell~· also were used in Tu~ay's searcfi. · Knight, and his daughter, Patricia, were atone Jn;. the, bqC, checking bis lobster traps about 200 yards offshore, police said.. Lifeguards believe both dJVwned. Huntlniton Beach Weguard Mike Mossier said he first noticed Knlaht's boat moving 50lllb from the pier aDout 20 yards from the shore. He said Knight was standing in the rear of the boat cradling his daughter in his arms while be tried to steer lhe boat by shifting hls weight from side to side . Knight was apparently returning. from checking tu} lobster traps which were in the llolJa Chict Blulb area, according to one lifeguard. Minutes later baruet C. Devi.I, of 218 Chicago St., Huntington Budi, said he saw a man in tbe water llext to tba. d!:>ry in the vicinity ol Beach Boulevard. Davis said he thoQght the mM 'tf&s div- ing biJt then noticed tbe dory was travel· (See DORY, Pqe I) SI.Ith grat1e students I~ a soecfal. drama wortshop at Turtle Rock Scliool In Jrvine will pnoent the. holiday aeuon classic, "A Christmas carol" 1>)' Charle;S Okken• Thursday ai 1 p.m. ·and 7:30 p.m. at· the Con«rt Hall Jn the Fine Arts VOlago at UC lrvlne. The production wlll be ,.pealed Fri· PILOT AD BRINGS HOME GQQD NEWS DAIL V PILOT cluslfied want ads bring home good news. Here's a true School Speedup Pressed day, Saturday and Sundly at S p.m. - Admis&lon b lret. The i public is welcqme but because ol llrnlted seating, ..... rvatlonl throuih the ecliool (132- 00) are encouraged. The play and the workahop are directed by Luther ·c . Whltaitt, a certl!lod ele.-tarr ochool teacher now '-~pletlnf gnduate work In dramatic at11 al UC!. . Whitlftt, who hal professional clramellc erporlence. beJan t b e ...mhop last Soptember. The opcclal clul II 1po!llOl<d by the UC! dram• and tducaUon deportments and a~ by the sa.i Joaquin School DiltttCl. : story: · Parrot -Bafboa Pen. Head, brea~, neck oranae, body orange I gceen. xu-un Reward. That owner called to BIY that the bird was. back Jn band the Ill"' day the ad ran. II you have need ol llSt ...Wlsi dial 142-5878 and ploce a DAILY P LOT daS1lfied -t ad . I NEEll£P 'llfES£ fwa!S 1b MME !N '!HE 51'1RIT~AMP 1"1£ &OT ONLY U MOR! ~s l»l·1b 5HOP. Saddleback Valley Trust,ees Begi1i Plnnni11.g Saddleback Valley Uoilied .Scbool District trustees 'l'ue!Ulay night began a plamlni ~ tlle1 bope wlll Bpeed up construcllon of a new high ICboot by elgbt to u months, allowing tt to open by September " 1'14. • The ,,... dlstrtct'• only higb ocbool, ldi.._ion Viejo, Ls -ly overcrowded, aervq 1,000 lllilmta lo a plant built !or ~IOO. Trultea' plans ,depend on lhe pasoage of tbe-dbtrlct'• $11 mlll.lon bond and Ill mllll011 ,..te "9P0rtlonment. election Feb. !. . going the lradltlonal rvtll twOtlld take up 1,ogg ha• ideotllled the dlslrlct~ most to a year more. The idea Ii to start pres:ilng housing needs as a new blgh lpeCil1c reYlsiono ol 'th plans, ,..ta school and c • n t r a I admlolslratlon appmval ol Ille and Initial construction lacilitles. ,..po 111or Fib. I. · 1 . • , . Saddleback,., along with lrvlae ml Ardll~lor lllw lllcll achools 1\Jstln Unlned Scbool Diatricta, wQI -..,.. ,built ·ta ,a.-, -In crealad.ln.•unillcatlon e1ectJon lall June Pico lllvwa and .0. 'Jn Walimt Cfttk, and wlll -fully operallonal July I, both atlll W1Cler eooilNetloo -were 1m. · -Tbunday nlCllUI --~-. ln'tne Wiii lnllerit qfllcea ll'orn the membm ol tba·-111 c-llaallni lhen4efunct ·San Jolquln D1slrtct and commlhee, repn111t.ttna ~.a Tu1tln kom1lhe1'ullin UniOn lllsb.Scbool studenta at Mlaaloo VIiia lllsJt and Dlslricl. But Saddleback, r 1 m o v e cl1 Jones and Marine C.Orps repruentalive Ed Janz that their ageocies bad not been 1 consulted on the proposed road change that finaUy caused the del{IY. The amendment to the arterial highways plan wiuld in part create a new "transportation corridor," basically a freeway from El Toro Road northeast to the Irvine Ranch line, the future city limits of Irvine. Another new alignment shifts Baker (See CANADA. Page ZI Cycle Gang Leader Held For Assault By lum NIEDZIEl.'lKI ~ .... Deity ,lltt '''" Costa Mesa police late Tuesday night arrested a 21~ear-o!.:.I cycle gang leader they allege attempted to shoot and kill Irvine police officer Stephen T. Nash during a nighttime ambush last Oct. 23. The suspect, identified as .I;eslie-Robert Peters, of 566 N. Orange St. . Orange. is awaiting arraignment at Costa Mesa City Jail today on a charge . of assault with intent to commit murder. He ii being held in lieu of $100,000 bail. A combined force of 15 Costa Mesa and Orange police officers· arrested the unemployed press loader at his apart- menl late _Tuesday, Police claimed to have unctV~ruf nioe loaded rifles and shotguno Jn the process. Peters, purported to be the newly elected president of the Orange County cl.Jpter of the Hessians motorcycle gang, offered no resistance during the raid. Costa Mesa Detective C a p t. E. H. Glasgow said Peters' arrest climaxed a long investigation between Costa Mesa and Orange police offlcen into the ac- tivities of ::ie Hessians. "We've been keeping t h e Hessians under surveillance for some time and questioning some of them over and over and doing things of that nature,'' Glasgow explained. He added that Peters was believed to have taken over the presidency of the outlaw bike club around the time of the alleged ambush near Jeffrey RGad and Barranca Road . That night officer Nash was on patrol in Irvine when a car containing two ''clearKut" men approached• him and told him of an inj\ftd man in the roadway . As Nash, :!3, sper1 to the scene, the sup. posed victim, lying lace down, jumped into a crouch and fired at the officer through the windshield ol the squad car . Nash gunned his car In an attempt to run down his assailant but was bit on the faet: by a bullet fragment. The bw.hwhacker escaped by running into a nearby cornfield. Capt. Glasgow said the small caliber revolver alleieJly ....ed in tbe auack was not recOvered from Peters' apartment "We're looking for It thought'' he added. Police would not say Whettier Peters had been •positively klentUied b y Patrolman Nash, a former Costa Mesa offii=er who was assigned to the Irvine (Sec SUSPECT, Page !) Orange Weu .. er Sunny skies are on the qmda for Tbunday, with aUgbtly warm- er temperatures. Highs ot S7 1t the beachel, rising to 17 blland. Lows t<lllght Jn the 30!, INSWE TODAY Prtmoe .Cdlmtv'• t ",a. t,.,. gT011P' coU II rr<ar-.rfln "t111t ,.,,k...,,, 10 h II < ... tollriwg prodwcdon nN(M /or cm m.. COT'e. Sec EntertaintMttt, Pooc 4J. : == ....... .: . -. ..... ..... ,~ --. na J ,1 Stildanta meet after llChool Oil Mondays WedneldaY and Frlday1 1..-the clals, which wlll llO all ,.hool yeor. In addlUOll to ,ettlng practical acting uporlenc<!, the lluclenta ero sttllfylng theater bllloey, and literature and the art ol llor)'-tollln&. "A QirlltmU Ciro!" Is their l\r1I prodUcUon. • • • • • • • o• • • • 0 • 0 •• • .• Cl Within lilt nm t1'<> 1reeks, tn11tee1 want to adopt .an ~plable, nlreally· drawn archttect'1 plan for another hllh ochool, rother thin commissioning their own otliloal planl. Ml,.lon pdnolpol R'*9t Brr • ' geographically, ·wtu have-to supjlly IU- . Thi Oldll-.1 s: I n·c own. : . =lladooi \"'!!', lllf '!bl' Feb. I tpecl!al election _ lo aakjq ' llltl, SlllftJ • • • ... ~v~ " .. ..w.., ~ locol )laoda. A11od1i. and ond 1or c:OnltnlclloD and lot Ill ddllJm bar, ~-. • (511 ICllOOL, .... II tr~· --=-.. , Superliilende~t '-WOiiam 7.oQ tald .• I ~. \. ' ' - I I 0"1L Y PILOT IS 'Battn1Top ~_5_pende1· In Campaign 1'lrst District Supervisor Robert Batu n was ,the top spender in r e c ' n t supervisorial campaigns. He rtporte<i $130.903 spent in the general ele<:tion. The biggest chunk ot tht mont"y ci.int' from a $60.000 loan and a SS.000 don31..oti from Dr. Louis Cella of Santa AJ\3 aM Richard J O'Neill. Missioo \"M"ju. In total, lour canclid.stt.S f o r supenisors re td .i;pl"!lding $34..&Sl. 1bb tm'IS-'Cltt5 wt:h ~ s~t tir \\ ~ fut t!lrt ~ 1o..'l:-$ ~ tbc-June pin:, ~ "4 «i .. '1r'"J \~J ,i~'\t!lt.'I •i?u '1ff:\.~ ~:-'" .? ~! ~ ..... ....:t'! ~ ht WW'!lt lit! .. ~. .-\.J l.'I' !:°lt.'cr'IO:!l.. rt.'1.Wlat tn."Jm1h:'•lf Vr ·Jl:.J.1!1 F~U'!~ ii nu '''hl""J :1sr·1.:•. i:ti -~ .mJ ~ 1'W, .CZ::.. ''l1illtr.-"Ill hi t'J'l I re1l\.'ll. :!." ~ ->.JltV"ttNUQlt~. A 1\UY ~-.,,, !ie ?i.;! ... ,-_.1,eu; ".liJlt:lNU\)m >t S':i': ll if! ~ ~l~I .h::J.u-1\..!l N 1:111 •, ti l.N '1,1(~ ~ ..... I !'fol 't-'i:clt,o ~ 2 't•l.i!VN 'IJ )!.> ft:tl ~-;j.•t;..a~ .uJ;,i•~ I~ .m.)' .,'"ilrt- ~l"Oo,; -' • ' ~ .If nott 'ttUS ~t "di q. N .uiU-\"ef'e ::>•"'\.'l'fl)rtb\!<U ua·t.~ -''CJ .Dl:lr$!' ili J '!W" '°9~ ~· 1'llJ" 9ut'1 ~ -~ • 'f<wport _,. ..,. I~ .H~~~ l'.~ 'L ,.jb -m . ~r :m ..-' , " r e~ lrl'll!Ol.l~.. • ~ lt~ ttpUl !Ing ~ ..:aot0;-l'l~ay mcill'll'f!tt \\!.:..l:!J; )~'ft". \flU ~ to '™ -..~~-.n:Otrmm · -.1 l'".lr! fD-Gilrdeai t.irm<e•, !+7.AI: John Bladt. ~ ~oc'l ~°':r:tt vho r.m ag;ainst Repub!I= ""°"'w J l!imlmr fl>{ the .::9th Congf"l!'!SSIOl12J seat. $7.!.!6: Otto !.acayo. 111.00<, and Tod Sl>ipte, IU93. Lacayo ran against incumbent state Sen. James E. Wbetmore and Shipke op- posed incumbent Assemblyman John V. Briggs. The bitterness of the Battin-Wenke bat- tle continued Tuesday. In a statement issued by Cella mftt O'Neill they accused the Wenke camp of a smear campaign. Wenke's campaign manager Carlos Galindo called the statement, "an ex- tension of the big lie technique used in ~attln's campaign so well." Previously reported were campaign ex- pomes ol IM,i75 by Hlnshaw, and ~.m by incumbent 34th District C.Ongressman lilchahl !Wma. Cory spenl $90,473, Briggs, 114,166; "Alsemblyman Robert Badham ( R - Newport Beach) I 3 5, O O 9 and Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Huir tington Beach), 128,044. Driver Files Suit After Car Crasl1 A ThouJand Oaks man who was seriOU!ly injured last April when his car ran into a grove of eucalyptus trees In the Irvine area has sued the city of Irvine and Orange County for $.53,000. Donald Robert Stail"'! charge! both agencies with neglect leading to hl5 in- ability to s:pot the trees immediately after be negortated the road Where repalr wort was being carried out at the in· tersection of CUiver and Irvine roads. He states in his Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that his car was demoUshed and he received serioWJ: ~ juries. An earlier claim filed with the ci- ty and \he county has been denied. JuryTrial Waived I SAN DIEGO (API -Stanley Harlan Speck waived his right to a jury trial on the Issue of 11&nlty Tuesda y, and a con- servator wu named, allowing the Stan- ford University graduate charged with air hijacking to be placed In a mental hospital. Speck, 31. ls charged with seiz· ing an airliner with 8S passengers last April . • OUJlll COAST IS DAILY PILOT TM°'*""' CMlt OAll.Y ,.tlDT, wlltl wMdl k_......tM..._ ................. b't' ... cw.,.. C..lt "*lllfllfW QolnpMy. '-- n .... It ... ere "'*4111*1, MM111., ttll'llVfh "'liNY• ... C•I• MtW, Ncwpwl 1uc11. Hflln...... ~l'l/~lllln v1ri..,. LIO- ...... lrvlMIS.ddl.ti.ldr. Mid s,,,. ~I ltlt Nin CtlkttrN. A tint.. ftlOtonitl •1tlwl II putilllMll hlwft,.. .rid Svrld~ J"9 lll'lnci,.I pulllllflilll pWil II. •t DI WWII ..... II,..., C•I• M .. , Qlllomllr, Q:W. lo~ert N. W* P'rcslllfftt •1111 ,.......,. J1ck R. C11tlcy ~ ...... INlll 9M Oenft"•I MIMfw ThM•.t Koo•ll ICllW Th.Mii A. M11tplth11 ~._,.,,r*" Ctt1rl•' H. L"'' Atelt•"' r. H•ll "'"'lt-MtMtlnii 1.c11-. °""" Qett ...... t D Wist..., .... ... ......, 9"dll Im .................. . -l.19¥M ,_., m """' ... ,,.... "-ttlNIWI a..ctl1 1JIPS IMdl .......,. ... CWNl!ttl -...,.. .. ~·­,.. ,, • cncJ MMUI ctu 'N ....._1 f I '41-UJI S. Cl1 ...,, Al Do, al IF• f;1fl1t II 4f2..400 ~ 1m. OrMto CMlt .. , ............ . ~. ... 1'99" ...... ""'""' .... •tiiritf rNtlfr .,, ~· --..,. ill( ........ ,, .... ,.,. ........ ., ..,,..., """" ..................... ~-.... ~ ~"" w cartilt 12.45 MllfltftlYi ... ,,... \N·'' """"""'' ......... ..... 1 I li.Aij """"""' • • Train Derails; To1cn 'Lit Up' IUKA, Ill. (UPI) -Fort)"""" -·-'-Clc&-ol a. freight tNln carryh\c flammabl e and apk>d'~ 1n1teriall derailed today, Jilb~ up lllls Soulll<m Illinoll ,..,. 'brictlt • hell," Ind '""'"" ·--.. homH as firemen fouchl blnllc rallroad can. Thv'i: "t'rt no injurhos toilhtt m 10 ..... ·nsfolk or th~ U'&U\ crew 1n tba ~x plos100 and fin that na,pd antr :l'k' ~r3ilment of a I' -c-a r ~ltun..'N' &-otnu !U!lr"l.'<ad 1raui I}. tu.nun.at'° tbt ~rtv monunc ..... )~tr luk:1 a rommunal;y « rtNOOS. cJ tbt s ur :-au nd \a.a f..lll~. F,..•Pase I ~(J-IOOLS ... , .... ~:.; :_sr.-.~ ~:r ~t"t sclxlol building ,,,, t""":C! JO.~ ~ ~ ls am- ~-"~ ~'O \"'wjo High offlci&b are .... ,"'·c::e1.:~ ~in portables and ::t'~ ~"Cl ot an exttnded day, ""~ ~ ~a ~to school as late J:$ I ":1 11. J.!'\i S p l'.D. ~ ~on plans for a new !littb $.-bi.'i w"tD tat' place at the board's ~u!r ~ ~y at 7:30 p.m. in Eh ~ room at Los Aliso s ~"t 5.:bool, 25171 P.foor Ave .. El M . lnine Employes ,-oted Pay Hikes By City Council Paychecks for all city of Irvine employe3 in 1973 v;ill be four percent fat- ter, while some key staffers will enjoy ·even higher increase!. C!ty COll!l<:ilmen Tuesday night ap- proved a pay package calling for an acn>6S-lbf:..board increase o( four percent for all employes. Additiooally, Deputy C!ly Clerk Carol Flynn will receive an extra 7 .5 perctnt boost recognizing the added responsibilities of her job in view of the fact Irvine City P.tanager William \Voollett Jr. is the nominal city·clerk. Mrs. Flynn, however, Woollett said Tuesday, does most of the work which ordinarily would be handled by a full- time city clerk. Othen ln line for extra five percent boosts, are Woollett'a secretary, the planning and adminl.strative services secretaries and recreation coordinator l\1. Froome Gayle. Irvine Basketball Deadline Monday ~tonday is the deadline for Irvine men and women to !ign up for the city 1973 basketball leagues. Froome Gayle. city r e c r e a I i o n coordinator, said three leagues are being formed, one for women and two for men. One men's league will involve players who are over six feet tall. The other is for men under sil feet. Official Hints • • Annex ·Policy At ~ast one city councilman thinkt It might be necessary tor Irvine to annex ArHS wJthln il s sphere Of influence lo in· $U~ <.'00$\lltatlon on highway planning rlwla ... COunc!lman Henry Quigley said Tllc<- d'l' n!Pt be wonderod wt.y the county "10ld 1<! a burlng proposing cbangts In tht ~laster Plan or Arterial Hlghways 111hicb affect Irvine, without noticing the ntW city. '!be roadways In qut.Stloo ...,. """""' mended for change Tuesday before a hearing of the Clnln!:• County PlaMing Commission. 1be changes ~-ould be re- quired if the Canada Foothills plaMed C'Ommunity zoning is appro"fd. If the 30,006-person community is ap- pro\ff!d for the 2:,900 acns near El Toro f\larine Corpe Air Station, two highways within Irvint.'s sphere of influence could be relocated and a "'mass transit cor-- ridor" of freeway width mlgbt. be built, aimed directly at the ~ part of Irvine. Holrever. the potential freeway presently connects with no other artery at the point of its juncture wllh the future boundary of the city of Irvine. Quigley said, "J-guess<We ought to con- sider an annes:atkm to man sure we have something to 181 about those changes." He added, it is apparent to him the city's sph,re of Influence filing with the Local Agency Formation Commission means litUe to other county departments, since the 'hew clty was not noticed, even · lhouch it requested aotice of p,_.i county planning acllons ..Uled lo the neighboring development. Ptleanwhile. Councilwoman Gabrielle Pr)oor, •ilo alt.oded Tuesdl,y's hearing, said she did not address the hlgbway issue. She also recited the minutes of an earlier council acUoo regarding dlttc- tions to staff and planning com- miMk>ners regarding any Irvine orticlal concern over the development The minutes showed the council allow· ed the commlH!on lo forward lt.s ljsl of envtromnental cooCema to the ~ mbslon and 1uggested a planning -· missioner appear at the Tuesday hearing to present those concems. . Planning Director Bruce Warren, who also attended the county hearing, said "there isn't enough time between now and the next hearing. to obtain a council· •JIP"'vod •land oo the proposed highway dlaniea." Frot1tPf1ffeJ CANADA FOOTHILLS •••• Parkw:ty off property now owned by Canada princlpaJs onto property owned by tbe trVlne ~pany. Two other.shifts "·ould extend ma)Or roads onto land in the new city's "sphere of influenct." The county road department map of the changes shows the new corridor or freeway just dead-ending at Valencia Avenue on the west. A major ellension of Trnbuco Road would go onto Marine C:Orps land. Col. Jam said the extension drawn goes right through an ammunilioo storage dump and "affects us adversely -in fact it may be unsafe. 1 don 't know "·hat you're about to do -but I hope you don 't do it." A road department official said the current system of roads in the area ~·ould be "overloaded" if Canada Foothills was built. Commisslont'r Ron Yeo said changing one part of an all-county road plan might not be wise. Testimony against the ZODe c~e or the amendnWnt.a was al.so be h'om Irvine reslderll Mariua Brand, 'roro resident Robert Snyder and represen· tatives of the Orange Co u n t y Envlronmen!al Coalition and \be Orange Homeowner'• Aslociat~ The landowners of the · 2,924: acres testified for two-and-a-half hours. Led by Rodger Howett. they said they could take no more delays, criticized planning staff, claimed they had mitigated "a !Jell of 8 lot" and at times suggested the Marine Corps, not the development, was the cause of the problems. Howell said the major chaoget In the proposal are: ochooh for the area.. 'nll! stale depart· menl ol educat!On sOJd'filndi"ll'.wooJld not be avall1ble,for .cliooli Iii oe~Ji'lm· pacted ....; or •bc!l!t five -<i!Jlio lites suggested fm' Canada. -· _ ~ Col. Janrrussur.ct lllt.~rs lhal "the Marine Car1ll II: ber!'JD 'llJY- Thtro are about WI IUCh butl ll'Ound the country. Nol aD ol lbem will fl! In the desert." Yeo uked Ille pllM!ng stall lo prtplll'O an EIS on thfl arterial blghway amend- ment for the Jan. 2 meeting. Last October, Yeo was · the lone no vote against approving the project, That COD\" mission vote was later invalldated· by county counsel, who said proper p-to.. cedures weren't followed. -Hijacker Lives ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) - A woman hijacker lurvived a C\DI battle th an alrtlntr om Ethiopia last' J..~ Pollco saJcl tocta,. ReporU ~ that slx bJJacbn, Incl-, -wointn, Wm! killed In the llghl wtlb Ethiopian secur!IJI ,...n1s llJd a ~b!J~ev also a woman, wu inortllly ~ "" ' ' 0 -Whee, It's 'Free Laguna Beach municipal buses are offering free rides on all routes through Dec. 22. The propane-po\\•ered mini-carriers chug out to Leisure World, l\1onarch Bay and ascend the steep hills to Laguna's Top of the 'V-0rld. An added service now is a bicycle-carrying rack, perhaps for Top of the World residents who coast down but are in a\\'e of pedaling back uphill. From Page I DORY ... ing in a small circle next to the man in th~ l\'ater. Lifeguards on the scene said the heavy fishe.nneu boots worn by Knight might have pulled bim under ooce he "''as in the y,·ater. Davis contacted Huntington Beach lifeguards ~·ho bcgain an intensive search of the \li'ater a quarter mile south of the pier. Life~rds reported they found a child's life jacket in the boat. Later in the afternoon, another dory fisberman found a child's parka in the water ocar S&th sireet 'Iii Newpart' Beach. · The dlven lovolved in the search Wert in the water tmti.1 dwit when poor vlslbil- ily,made lhe .. arth lttpc>jojljle. , l.llqulnl Captain ~Ooilgllis D'Aman said 10day. there yttrtl no mm pl ... to ooatlnue 11Mi lllldenllter oearch, but beach patrols would continue. Chrisbuas Lighting, Paint Sprayer Taken Strings of Christmas lights and a paint sprayer joinUy Valued by the Mission \'ie}o Q>rnpany at $250 were stolen Tues- day night from 1. model home 1n the Madrid . Homes sector of Miuion Viejo, Orang~ County Sheriff's officers said. Deputies ~aid the lights and equipment \\'ere taken fro'll the garage of the model home by intruders who swung open the unlocked garage door to gain entry. Fro1nP8ffeJ SUSPECT ••. beat Sept,.,,,l when Costa Mesa took over noli<e clliUes. ,Jn Irvine "" a colllracl basil. . • '< ·!~ 1 I M,..wllllo. poljce are lllD on lbe lootM.forilie t.... other men who belped P•tOrs 1'\lh the alleged ambqah. • All scbedtlled games· will be oo hali- court with three playerJ on each team. Each team will play an average of three games per night, Gayle said. -AgTeement to defer building In Ill< high noise zones until lht nolae.problel!lS are solved in some way or lessened. -Creation of an architectural review commlttet composed of resldenu and propert,y o"1M!n. 538 CENTER STRE T-COSTA~EsA=~-1919-"C:-='l-::O:· League play begins in January at University High School with Monday nighta set aside for men'• play a n d \vomen's games set for Thursdays. Interested persons may rigister at city hall or call Gayle at 833-3840 for in· fonnatlon . l\'liss Ah-Ah·Ah-choo RICHLAND, Wash. (UPI ) -Teen-ager Becky Alexander has been named Washington Wheat Queen. She is allergic to wheat. -Phasing development so 20 percent of the total dwelling units ot-1b0 · li"'Jecl y,-ouJd be built yearly. -A l"ductlon In averagt denlllty ptr residential acre trom 5.1 units to 5.1 onitJ (The general plan for the area calls for a still lower density). Bari Sptnd-, president of lilt Sad- dleback Area CoordinaUng Council, aald these provisions eliminate most of that group's opposition to Canada. Only traf- fic Impact remained a concern, he said. Roger Slates. a new commtuioner, said he was worried about the noise prob- lem and particularly oo its effects on lrvineJ:ouncil Action Here in capsule form are the major actions taken Tuesday night by the Irvine City Council : Oll. DRU.UNG CONTROLS, Enacted an urgency law requiring plaMlng commission approval of a conditional use permit before any oil exploraUon or extraction may be done In Irvine. WALNUT ARTS CO~IPLEX: Directed the city starr to estimale city ~t3 of a joint powers agreement with the Irvine Unified Scbool District to provide a 10,000 square-foot, 400-seat multipurpose audltoriwn on the CUiver-Moulton school :ilte. ,. ~AY RAISES: Approved a four percent acTOJs the board pay raise for all city employcs and an additional 7.S percent for the deputy city clerk and an extra five per~t for three department secretaries and the recreation co- ordinator. B1PAcr REPORTS: Acted to continue to require envtronmental imp11ct statements for most private devt"lopmcnt in the city, despite new state low allowtng cities to Ignore State Supreme Court rulin& in the FrieDdJ of P.1am- moth Case . Bn.LBOARD HAN' Delayed action on Presley O.velopmcnt Company'• appeal of a sign removal order for t'>'"O weeka at wtucb time COlmCilmen will conlidtr • law rtqulrtn1 all ~fonning 11gns in the clty to be removtd by April, tm, one year earlier thAn now required. · TURTI.E ROCllJIOADS,J>ln:cted city lltaff lo lhllly rtalicnmenl ol CUiver ~ve aouth of Cam~DMve to meet dty 1tandard1 llnd urged stafr cooper•· t1on with the lrvlne Company on plans to extend Bonita Canyon Drive to pro-- vlde 11nolher atre.::t a~51 to hillside community. l.ARW!N, AYRES ZONfNC , Continued lo flrtl regular mccllng In Febru· nry ~ considerations of two residential monln11 approved by county gov. ernment more than 1 yur a,o, before Incorporation. < • ' • • • and Sportswomen Basketball FootbaOs Vally baUs Soccer . balls Tennis balls Handballs Archery sets Ba.ilton sets Tennis Dresses Tennis Shorts & Shirts ' -Skate Boards Duck Feet Fins Dart Boards Fns• '• ' Back Packs- Sft~ng Bags Wann Up Sutts SWeat Sails . NPIR Jackets BasebaD Shaes Track Shoes • Wresting Shoes Speel!o Swim Suits ' Tennis Sweaters Sweat Sax Letterman Jackets Basketball Sti'll'ts Swim Truris Slap Watches Bicycles Bicycle Accessaries • I I I ' ' I I I ~ .. I • I I 7 ' \ I " I • .,. .. l p'-~~ .. ,-~ . GrOtl -Won Ell berg's.Jury 'Lost F.reed ms' \ I BERJCELEY (AP) -A ,.woman who won '500,000 'ln a LOS ANGELES (UPI) postponed ~ • bearing Sult against the physician· The Pentagon Papua jury, Thunday on a d e fen 1 e mayor of Piedmont !pr fallb\I' dilmlued Tuead1¥ to mailt challence o! the entire Jury to diagnose her -r hu way for a new one, com-panel. ··~ • died of the dlaease. • I • CAl,IOlllA plained Ill freedoms were Defense attorney1 coattnd 1:.aVertlf Slmrnom died f4llen .,.., durln& the lour-the panel does not contain Monday at Alla Batel lloopllal' "-------<t mo n lb rec e a t w b e n enough :!tr to J2l·yew-old -three daya after an "everybetl)" .... lnolho WO{Ja voters who are eligible lo Al.aroe<la County Supe,tor -11111e1ollll:.,,..t11oeilo '"""e"' jW'On ror .the llr.i Court Jury ruled qatmt Dr .• Drink, Leer .-...:_. time. .. -Gilbert Cochrane In a lf.<lay ly ~:::ii c:t Ellsberg and Rusio, tonner 111.c•••flJ' ·.c;:.·· trial. ff earlier ~~.~ arellandcha~ •11W111 .ty -~n e 'l'Nt!her Gtdlt• I -.i II( do!.,,_ with violating sections of the \ tuNcl -'\bii ·i!ij SAN DIEGO {AP) ...: Peller ....,. and £.!>l>ionoge Act In the alleged ' .;fdge Tueed.lj lllf Bohmer, center of a Cont!ov· But Not ' w~.,. D1clm"' 13, 1'172 • DAii. Y PILOT :j D Fanl.ily Arreste4 ,LOS ANGELES (AP) -puolod late In 1171 after strv· Santlqo al Lompoc when ~ -=:~~~~Jr :i:i:. ~ ~i:.:i::: ~-=at~rytut ~ itt r -~o111c· of~brlbrorh" fedorllnd ¥ittloo. The 1n<11ctmeot1 alltg~' t P• -,.. 8 the two brolllerl had Olher lavon two famllr N.umi> lflTll Santiago and relations with woD>eo 'membi!rs held In prbon ....,.. ~· aa , .,.Cipients o f panioJll wltbliJ !tie Lorn rto IU~er to autborltiM 41 Aleaio ftvon were prison of. prison on JUne 28, 1'11, San Diego loday. llclala CUrtis L: PhllliJ>ll and that on ,.veral other , The FBI said two ronntr Roy Goddard. , Phillips and caslons the brotbert were priaon officials Indicted In -the Goddard were_ 'DOt indicted. allowed to leave the prison matter illao will BWTender. However, Goddard was and Us supervlllon for limllar 1 ~ The federal grand jury here' IUlpezfded Jrom duty with activltlel. , > 1 "ruesday accused John Alesslo,lr:::::;;;:;:::=:;====:::::::::::::::======;, ' 62, bis ..., Domlnk'i 3$, and brothers Angelo, 55, and Tony, 53, Of conspiring to defraud the United States while John and Angelo were serving' sentences at Lompoc and Terminal Island f e d e r a 1 prisons in California oo con- victions 0( lax evasion. ~ Ill*' 4la .,,. tlielt and popession o! the 'ind of two m~-jl( · ersy that cost .!tlJ1l his Sa~ peall ~~~-Jl 'lecret gv,.nment documents • I r i e d o m iiler')w. Diego Slate laachlng., job woul4-"• . 'lfhlcbwerelealtedtothenews ~IClped Jn an ambliali • earlier this year, hu,be<n ·SACJ\AMEN'OO (UPI) SECRET indictments to trial~.• . medialnJuly,1!171. that kiUed « ~ • '"'!!!'lil:!edofobstrucilng "Youcao.UUseedirtyshows returned In San Diego last Together to,!;:~ origlftafjury," .J.!""'~. ~~ ~" gu8'4. 11,-is a mt!m 'f ~1 ~' ~~~Uwar In Ca!Hornla. You can .UU ea\ ~.::i~~~~~~ , . ulil panel member Willlam F: a on Jul'J eoald begin next oflll~~~c_:;:emor>eV-, ·• · 'BollJn<r;· II: 'Irr sen-ael61 ~~"'.'.':"Just can't do Tony with similar offemes; Abati,' a maintenance ~er week. . ~ · I 0 .,~,, ,-,..oup. and William Mahone, 38, of Counts also were returned • at a Ure company, who saMI he • Chula Vista, were found -·11ty That was California At· against foimer prison ad-........_ f !low j ' ·• · • ~-tomey · General E v e 11 e ~~ fo,: e urore. • . _ . . ,. by a jury Tuesd~ after-nearly ' Younger's capsule analysis of ministrators Daniel Morgan · i·l.ion·~~ lliatlO!l'f91ild·· M · n ld :· .._9 ' d S t th;ee days of deliberation. last w .. k's u.s. Supreme and · Anthony santligo, ac- !i'Ave !OOoct &I better gjooijp' o(' an ' e "" 0 r . e • n--t .. p-L-.> Court, ruling On obscene en-CUSing them Of granting the people or a more lmparttaJ · · ...,. • •'""• t rt t Alessio brothers favors. groupbfpeople,:'flesald."We · . t .. . 1 SA?j FRAN~~~ (AP) -e~mtml~. beldtb t t, John Alessio is the fonner 1Wen19'bllinanilwe~ Af ~ •.,,,. Sl 1 • An:'Unenlployeddi'aftsmanhu QO J,}IP , esaes gene.ralmanagerofcaliente ll.3:'-°casebiM." tile ones-who botrd V t.:tapiu..i ay.ings . been boOk~and· t'or lnvalltllatlongattonln • :;:~.;!;:1 ;\:'~~ andirud~ Race Track In Tijuana, Mex· we of T urder . mu . prohibit "bottomless" dancing ico, and m i 11 i o n a i r e SACRAMENTO (AP) -A about 18 miles near the hamlet tbe fatal d>ootlni of. two men. and ao-called "adult"· movies. businessman In. San Diego. ABATA SAID THAT the Jury WU Instructed many times not to watch television~ Mar the news, read the newspaper or talk to anyope about the case. "'So if tb;it'; no\ toking }'9!lT freedoms away, I don't mow what is ," he said. "Everybody else in the world was able to talk about the case but us." Selection of a new jury was IT .EASED _,,,. -· . . THE HURT ' -SA~~uv.<~ man armed with a Imm pistol of Rescue. about 18 miles at a Mission ·DI strict Y~ said Tuesday that John Alessio remains in bu been arrested in con-from the Sacramento CoUnty restaurant-dance hall. the AicObollc Beverage Con-federal prison at McNeil line, said Earnle Carlaon, Police said they aJTeSted trol regulations sustained by Island, Wash., where he is nection with Sacramento sheriff of El Dorado County. Manuel I. Anto~. M, at his the. court dealt only with bars serving a three-year sentence County's third double slaying The bodies were sent to home Tuesday after receiving and private clubs w be re for income tax evasion banded in eight days, Sheriff Duane Sacramerfto fof an autopsy. ' tntonnBtion vol~~ by alcohol was sold f91" con-down in 1971. Lowe says. Discovery of the bodies mem~ of the FtHpmo eom-sumption on the premises. His brother Angelo was Lowe · said 'l'uesdJiy Eddy ronowed 'the !indlng of two muruty. ,,.iiijiii;iiiii;;iii.i;iii;;ii;iiiiii·ii;i;i----------"ill ~rJ'~·f;a~~=:::.: ,.;, or :f~t,:J;.!=: e c1od11!~ JlotHNI • MINNEY'S of murder alter tbe·dl!COvery fn't.'1 tmh•can o! a car wash YO S EMJTE • NATIONAL LE. RY o! tbe nude bod)es o! two men in north '881:famento. . PARK (AP) -CI o th Ing SHIP CHAND in shallow graves in ntarby·EI ··1..awe tuld reparters at a reco~ed after a woman was Dondo County. , -~ C(IQ!erence It appemd awept over Upper Yooemlte Ari investigation was under the ~ were that' to death Falls .in ,_ an apparent double way·'to determine II Earle and In the car wash SUridaY nl(lil 111lclde. a days a&°' waa' ten- the victims were involved in a and transported to Ei Dorado · tativ!ly identified Tuesday u drug smuggling opera l .i on C.ounty for bmiaJ. that of a Otico area woman. . b e t w e e n ·M e•x i co a n ct A park 8PO.kesman said the ·,California, Lowe added. EARLE WAS armed with a clotlµng was believ~ to have S.xtaots -Slllps - FINE SHIP MODELS ' @l!t'lM ~ts -SWp Clocks . . ' THE COLLECTION COLOR DIAMOND The boy, the girl, ~ dlemoncl, M *1ple as that? Not quite, for diamonds 1n1 • ~t .. the special~ who.bur 6*11 llld _.them. You're lnvll..i to -from • _., special collectlori of tfl«n~~ec::.~"::d:'~~-I• them in many $1Japas, aizea, ...i prlcea. one . of which will meet yoor budpet. You may ~ individu1lty select your mounting and' yoor ..,.CW .. Collection Color diamond. or chooM from atyles we '/18"8 croeted ••• for someone y<>u love. Do Something Beautiful.,. Clla,... ""-" lll'VllM -A-rlca11 lt:x,..... a...u,IMl'lunl ... ~lw Ch11"99, .... did.ate Will Slocum of the Peace and FreedOm Porty loday r<ported spending """1 134.40 of his total He said tlie victims were 9mm automatic pistol when belonged ~ Lorraine Suttop, .tentatively identified as M.,ex-arrested, Lowe said: He also · 20, Foteot Ranch. II was Iden-, SLA VICK'S lean nationals. was in ~km of .'1a tified by her father. 'The body Laro• Selection ., N•vtlc•I 1 • Htltdltio_. bstance" ,•'-·t w... •·Ing bas not been recovered but a Jewelers Since 1917 Wll uc Dec:or•tor Item• & Gifts ~ A TIPSTER gave the sher ked as a ~ble narcotic. pathologist was -able t·o ~ · 18 FASHION ISLAND .. iff's office information which pt. Jerry Saulter of the reconstruct the woman's slze, ~~·°"n,.;~;•cts -TPa.ITMtu SAT. -'TIL 1• ~EWPORT BEACH -644-1380 Jed-to uneii'lhiiig of t h e ~to Cqunty sheriff's weight and coloring through a -' MIHNEY'S SH• CHANDLEIY ",.._ ._. _ ''44-44. 'on hjl' seenctJng report, Slocum w-r~o t-e-, "Surplus med for 1 f!W rrlen'Cl1y ' jugs 'of muscateL" Jre lost bis r9et. ~. • •. "bodies SW:day night, Lowe olnCe silii!'"ln a Sepafate case · po~ of a leg found at the , 2537 West Cwt Hltls••t o... MeMIT ,..., • ....,..., 11 LM. •ti•'·"'" Jaid. 1be victims had been Monday ~ narcoticl were:l.~ba~se~of~the=-1=··~·~3~0~·~1 o~o~t1!!!!!!!54l;;;8;;4;1~9;2~!!!!!!!!!!~';";~"·~··;r'°";.:-';"~OA<•;•;"••;r;';'!!!!!!!!!!~ll,,,=,,,,;'"'~"~-~~~"'~:'~, :T~!:"~.,~=--~·~°'~ .. 7~'.""~~~vC-~ff~"~"~"'~"~"";;;,· ·~=J deOd only a -time. · fotlld In in apartment In waterfill.' ' .. -· , The two bodies were side by which Earle was listed 11 oc-.: side in 11-lndHleep eraves, cunanl. . ' J • J I r ---11 , •• 'tl1, n a. !; ~ 1 -;~~;tl ftJ~ 2' ' ~-1 ~Ju ,J I if~'•• 1 1•t " •' I· ... .,,. ' ... , "J.~,·-'"""'l . r "' 'f-( I' • ,jT ~ ·;;-' .. -,,._. • , ' ~ ..-boUls'earlier. · ...., 1i:ff's apokeml ar-Bar .. "'"" ll'lle:metl' i... been Umted-" Olllcers began .. firlng tear -~-. IS, walked 01J1 of: the in 1 :i:' ·a p 1--r-1 me n l...-gas canisters into a 5econdr-burnµlg bulldbtg 8Dd IW'· . floor apartment after ordering reodered. He: , .,. v e a building for investigation ol two men inSkit -1.o surrender. Sacramento &eel ·as-his: home bank n>l!liery after police fired Everyone else was ordered to addreaa, the ~"' aald. a tear gas bamge. evacuate. A leCODd man was nscued Wblle hundreds of spec-Smoke and !lai!>es, 8larU!d !rom the names by police who talon 1!llhend nearby, about pouring oot of the hulldlng used a ladder 'to carry him to 50 Socramento police ollioerl shortly alter the laor gu safety alter be collapoed at a and sheriff'• depuUes aur-volley began, witneslles aaid, wt;xlQw. .. rounded a IW<Htory apart. and spread to 1111 adjacent He waa ldeoUfled aa Casey ment buUdinc near t b e t b r e e -a t o r y apartment -Ducbl!r,-39, who catdd not tm- -ar<a. Tbe officers building. mediat.ly give a IM>me ad-gauired Tuesday after a car dreu .. waa llpotted that anawered the POLICE HAD to move SherUl's ~ B ~ 11 tl-riplloo of the one used by squad cars oot of their way to MllUr said -llucbel-w a s bandlls who help up the Placer let firemen get to the bl...,, trealad at a IJoopilaJ !or Natloftal Bank In nearlly witnesses said. ..-inhalatton...ond burns. Citrus Relgbts ab&lf ~o • A m4n identified by a Sher-The firt's cause was unknown. .o0.. MM11t.r. tA.lnMOU. uo. tfltrOOUiCTOF uAA~ f4I Pll(l)ll", uQttWW. ~ • .. ... ·' .. '. ••• ..... .. .. '.• • . ' . .. ·' . ' . • t ' .. -.. ~ •• -~>-. ...... ' ...... l\·~'i Q.w-low Mocfd Sqt\d Ot" OQkllJOOd cdoy Q II -size"=>- ·-··-- .... :,. ' ' • . tke. :sportshoe f'oy- -1-e.mi~ or" stye~+ VJta.V' al\ Sli.e'$t 44 faehlon Island, newport center 844·5070 ' , • • • ' ~tvod<c;1. lhls ~ Vil'ot.,ou use . !~OJ sea-et...,,, spirit. It gM!s oronge&-ei1Cl-ness lt'01's oll lt-elr OM\ />rd ~a ~~bJCl'\'bt lhe~t~ 1gcr ~ lr-Msbie. but rot Wl'le ~. ittn • .. . . • • DAU,y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE City Engineer Needed Filling all of the key administrative posts necessfry to give the new city of Irvine the staff it needs bas not been as ea&y as once anticipated. Although a small. competent staff has been at· tracted in a short period of tin1e, one important area of expertise in particular is lacking. Councilmen have yet to select a public \Vorks di· rector. That means the ne\v Ptanning department and specifically Planning Director Bruce \V arren h ~ve no ctty-paid engineer to consult \\'ith on matters 1n that field . One pressing issue facing the city is a decisi~n on the Can1pus Drive extension from University Dnve to Jamboree Boulevard across the San Joaquin marsh. Thursday night, planning commissioners \vill review a draft environmental impact report prepared by con· Sultant Ed Ha,vorth. That report deals with the environ- mental aspects of the proposed roadway which must be appraved by the city prior to Dec. 13 if the county is to pay up to hall of the cost.· But another study of the project is required to up- date the estimates of the project costs or those of any alternatives the city council m~ght "'ish to seek. That's \vhere a public works director or ci ty engi- neer is needed. . Other similar projects such as the extension of Bonita Canyon Road await the day city staff has talent to make reasoned recommendations to councilmen on a public works priority list. . In the in terim, the council approved the selection of three firms to aid the planning director in meeting deadlines for certain projects. In doing so. the council set an unfortunate prec.e· dent. Pla nning Director Warren and City 11tanager \Vil· liam \Voollett Jr. are certainly competent to judge the quality of consultants needed to co mplete assignments from the council. Councllmen need not have spent sev- ral hours debating Ille menu of Ille firms. Further, Ille final choice of picklng 1 :"Jarate firms to handle each project handicaps Ille pf• ng funcUon since it does not recognize the need for JU> Interim, multi· purpose engineering firm to advise Warren on points not large enough to warrant bidding. By authorlrlng Ille retention of a single firm until the ctty publlc works department is func!lonlng, coun- cilmen would bolster lhe quality of advice iii planning department would be able to offer and at the same time ease the load of the planning staff. Toward Better Schools Now taking a break for the holiday aeason, the Irvine Unified School District's steering committee got ~ff to an auspicious start recenUy with an initial mee~ mg that drew about 100 residents. They'll me;et again Jan. 6 for an all-day confer- ence With putside educators who will present different methods a school district can use to find out what its goals should be. Supt. Stan Corey bas high hopes for Ibis plan, although he's never tried il before. The steering committee ls not charged with de- termining what the new district's goals and objectives are, just with deciding how to find them. This In itself is a difficult task. Irvine residents on the whole have voiced support for sch-Ools, but this is the first chance they'll have locally to say what those schools will be. Agreeing with the principle of better schools and quality education is fairly easy. ' · But working out the specifics of what those cllcbes mean is an involved process. The steering committee's first step is an important one and will be interesting to watch. • SI I ~~t~ Study Slwws Some Tricks Of Memory Bow Houston Fares Wit .. otlt a Zoning Code ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ ' Speaking or the "work of the im- agination ,'' as I was recently reminded me of a psychological u:perimenl con- ducted some yean a~o by Lemard Carmichael and two ol his colleagues. They sho\ved a group of studEnts a list or 12 line drawings, which. the students we1 e asked 'to reproduce from memory . The figures w e r e shown one at a time. privately. to e a c h subject. Before each showing, the expe.rl· menter would say_; _ "The following fig- ure resembles ... " · But while all the subjects saw the same figures, hair were given one set of verbal labels, and half another set. The first drawing y,•as labeled a "beehive" for some, and a "hat" for others; the se- cond y,·aa called an "hour glass" for some. and &--!-!table!' for others. ObvioualY, the purpose in doing this - with ambiguous drawings that could be interpreted either way -v.'as to direct by suggestion the subject's reproduction of each flgure. The result \Vas startling : in r1 percent of the cases. it was found that the draw· ing. v.·ere sharply distorted in the di rec- tion of lbe particular verbal label which had been provided. What the subjects im· agir:ed was their "recall" turned out to be based on what they were told the figures "resembled." rather than on what they actually sa\\1• ~: COM G on this experiment, in his inter ting book. "Memory : Facts a. J Fatl ac· s," Dr. Ian ~1. L. liunter, the Dear Gloomy Gus The ra in in the main will be "Just in the Plain." M. W. Tll~ fllltu.. ttl'llctt ...... ,,. ....... - MCa.rltJ' .................... ... y-"" ..... ..,. 19 ............. '*"' ,,...,. British psychologist. points cut that alr.1ost invariably· j•\ve interpret our present experiences in acccrdanCe With ci..r own interests, attitudes, hopes and expectations." As an example, he goes on, "It· has been fowld that, as compared witli people who regard Nelroes. In a favorable or'un- prejudiced light, those wilh anti-Negro attitudes find it di!ricult in distinguishing one Negro from noother. They see a Negro in somewhat the same '"ay a!I the average person.sees a sheep -not as an individual with unique characteristics, brl me.rely as a member of an un- ditrerentiated class." ON ANOTHER LEVEL, Dr. Hunter S ays , "there 1s l.he fact tbat-11 .we ehow...a blurred and indistinct picture to a hungry n\an , he iJ mcre likely to see it as representing food ur some cbject relating to food than iJ a man who is not hungry." I. is oot merely beauty that lies In the eye of the tebo1der, but much of what we call "reality" ···~If. Our imagination. un- der external or internal suggestion, sup- plies the '"meaning" to people as well as tO"" pictures. or drawings. We rut In tlie details, based on OJI?' accumulation of past experiences and training. The "inscrutable" Chinese, ii be livecl. next to you as a neighbor, would tam out to be as scrutable as Archie Bunker -and probably just as prejudiced the other \\'ay. Congressional Benefits • By GEORGE J . MARDER U ..... '°'"' ....... lltMI Newly elected members of Congress may be happy to find out about a cash or carry sysiem for their statioDel)' allowance. The allowance tor House members was upped from $3.500 to $4.250 a year just before tbe la!He!ston-ef-GorlgreS!I ad- journed. But the amount is not as in- tereallng as, the way the money ·is handl- ed. STARnNG with the first day of the sestklo Jan. 3, the f'.250 allowance will bo cnd!ted lo each ""lressman at the House stationer)' 1tore -a shop juat like any other except that the prices are low· er end mly eooareumcn and their stafft can bu,y. Arid there are no sales taxes. Cona:reMrnen can can): away from the store free ltaUoriery supplies for thtir of· Ocet up tO the amount 0/., the allowan-:e. O. lhey can draw all or part of the lllow•noe Jn cull -no questlQOa uked. Tiie _..,.loo lo that II a am- -,,. -\ 1111.o ,..,.. bo can get. -Lbo-lilft-...S boCID &•t =::f :::;-;,•.,~ma .. ~ _, dl!*-11<.,.*" thecaoh and · 11111 -hero. ---::::::~ Bii WSNT eloO•'lere lle'tl have to ' --die priee ol.ol!ke •Ill>' tltiol bl tho Houoo otore l1~bo io,.m tn U. ...... M' Wat whit 1itQwn as -I Clllll. II the ooricr-man :i;;~ Ulle -particular Item be can boft Ille llor< order I difler"11 bnad, _, Ioac 11 It ho lo do wltb bis olf1ce. (GUEST REPORT) A few years ago, one congressman had the staticnery store buy automobile tires for him....lro_m his stationery allowance, saying he needed them to ~et around t<> his coostituents. That isn't done any more. but there Is nothing to 1top a congressman from drawlng the cash to buy tires at regular c omm erci al e3tabllstfinehts under the carry-<:asb pro- viJton. , ANOTHER FRINGE benefit f o r members is the free trip home. There was a lime when Congress merely pa.id to Rtt the congressmen to \Vashington for a se1i5ion and then send them back when the seulon was over. Now. however, lt'1 felt tmponant for the lawmakers to keep In· toucti. And just b<fore the la11 11-0SS!on ended , tbc llol&9e raised the free tnvel allowance for congressmen from 28 to 31 round trips tvery lwo-year period. That would permit the c<lllgressman lo make just about one frle trip honie every two weeks. The vtterana, hoWeYer, usa few of the free trips the first y~ar, aavina them lnltead for the teCDOd. year when they face -lectlon. The llOUI<. aloo upped the tl'8V<I allowance for employea of congreMmen. Fonnerly. llouse 1tafrers were allowt.d up to four free round tri1>3 to lhe members' dl1trkt pe:r CongretS. T h a t ha1 been ral.sed to six star1lng '.\1th next l;oogress. • Is Land Zoning .-.a . Waste of Time? Bernan! B. Slegan is an infrequent man who walb out of step and questiont comfort.ably settled fortgooe conclus!ona. Be IS a real estate lawyer and a research fellow at the University oI Chicago who, after taking ·a !orig and teclmlcally careful look has decided the be.st thin& we could do for our· selves is tO j u n k land-use zoning of all kinds. Most home owners suffer from the de- Jusion that lt's zon· ing which saves ·from slumifiCatlon and savage depreci- ation the dear spot of earth oo which they make the monthl)' payments. No so. It's true that some hOme owners can get more, for their property because zoning tampers with a free real estate market so as lo reward some people with hi~ values by legislative fiat , but that's the luck of the draw , not a system for prt>- lecting property values. Whal Slegan did was lo go to Houston, Texas, the only large city in America "rithout a zoning code, and see bow the folks there were faring in this horrific condition of non-governmental regulation. (Siegan'• boolr,i...11..U-t 7.on- ing, D.C. Beath and Oompaoy, b first ( VON HOFFMAN ) . j • rate • ..fxrt the tecboictlltles of law .00 economics don't ~II an easy"""'.) Houstonites have lwlee • llv.. a c!umce lo ..._, '\heir prefeftDce · 0n this issue and hlft decllively voted i.on- lng down both ilmes. THE RESULTS haven't been anythirig like. what city planners and other BOrta of shyster visionaries Would have you think. Oil refineries · and Colonel Sandera chicken !hacks haven't invaded the clty'a better rtlidentlal ii e 1 g b b o r h o o d a • Siegan'i evidence shows that Houston is at leist as nice or no more hellish a clty to live in than any llther. Nor does the absenct of zoning Di~ that 10'J can me your properly lo d-.iy the value ol other ·people's. The city ha5 laws ,.quiring apartment houses to ~e <>ff-street parking, it has a buildini;: code, and other regulations that prevent a property owner from makina: the oelihborhood uninhabitable. · But it has no zcning. ~etlCllly, you can puLll!!..!..._ 50-<IDcy oll!ce bull4ini or shopping center rlgbt-Jn-tbe-mlddlo.of_a leafy commwtity of ~alows, but it .,._, happoo, becauae ii maw llO eoooomic s e 11 s e. Siegan f.lndl that aome o t h e r very good things do happen. Fo"r exam p It, renta in Houston are, signlflcantly lower than they are in the comparable city of Dallu - where they have a traditional ZODiDg set· up. THE REASQN ii that a zoning code artiflc:aJJy ...S arbitrarily l'OliloVes large amounts of land from the marllel !bat mlgbt be med for apartmtnt buildings. The price of the remaining ~ned for muW.family oc<Upo.ijcy_ II ~ · up and SO, Ineluctably, ltt the rents. In IJIHODOd HOlllloa, apUtment·hoilse land -less than single famlly--land, thus !lilt· lng lower rents pos.sible while preserving the home owners' investment. ZOn~ not only makes a hasb out of residelJUal land use, but a mess out of everything .else. -· land b set aalde .for industry which Jndu.try cfoesn1 want, but ~ause of the zoning everybody else ls afraid to buy it. THE PLANNElt.S who draw up these 7.0llinr ordlnlnces almply have rm ac- cunote way ol knowing Wbo wanta to do 1"bal with land, and, lacking that in- formation, zoning is a maddening en-- cumbrance u wdl as a serious tn- frlngemenl oa property rights. Cl1icago, far eumplo, flU ,.... di!· ferent buslnesa land..,. -. Areas IOll<d 11-1, Slegan Points out, pormit barber shops but not slaltol:ery stom, bakeries but oot hardware atcns. cleanen but ool &111 shops, and ao forth and so on. Al\hougb that seem.1 lmbocillc. ~o zooliig ii considered pretty 8'JOd in the trade. The ooiy !mown raUoaal way we have for finding out bow a p1eco of land should be used ts by seelllg Wbo11 pay the most to use it and thtr. watcbiq 1o ,.. what uae he puts n lo. . IN "'!.'-~~' l@J!•~' _. nborats, ... .,..,..~r f....,.c~ 1o amapt -. 11a ... llirted r.mutlng that IOtling acfa U I racla117 U· c!uslooary devlco, Slogan lfll>eJ! that all llOlling ls -~. not only of"""· but many, many othor lhlnp. JnctudJng ~= ~ that many 1.oning doea, however, confer IOlne benefits. It provides a 10! of city plmmm with j()bs, it generates an enqrmous amcunt of expenalvely . UJUl8CUWY llUgatton -thereby enriching eollre wolf pacu of lawyer1 -...i tt ii the tarpst ...i atadlest aourco of graft avallable lo town, 'flllage, city and county=ans the c«mtry over. Wltb these • es, lei's Igneri Slegan and fight lo kaip t: Mother Supports All-year ~hool To the Editor: This ii concerning the change proposed In our school year from a recufar nJne. month attendance to a full year, ei:· eluding August and one week in Sep- tember. The schedule would be nine weeks attendance -three weeks vaca- tion, barring adjustments for hclldays. The children would be ·attending the s:;me numl;»er of days. AS A fttOTRER of four children, two in upper grades and two at Harper in Costa ~fess, I <>"V"ttwhelmlngly support this pn;>gram because of the definite ad- vantages &o m)' chJdren, u follows: There wotild be no long review after returning lo ·achoo! be<'a•DO ~ )earning Joss over the thr&..'-IDODth vacation. Thia would be a distinct advantage far both the child who doesn1t retain well, tnd the one who does. According to documented facu from a ~--Bt1 George --- Dear George : How dla you get lo be an advice col umnist, anyhow! How did "'° even get into the ne~ business? ' P.U~ Dear Puzzled: l used to deliver paper towel.I to the newspaper offict until one day aoroeboel$ at.Die my pushcart. I've dobti thla oolumn for yean, trying lo ,.., up enough for the down payment on another pusbcart. Deir Geotle: Do you t!i'tok a few drinks reluu a man before dinner? F.J . Dear F.J .: It "'l' doea. My brolberoln-law starts drinkin& rigbl 1 f I er breakfa~t and gets 10 relaxed he hasn't had dinner since 1954. (Stnd your problems: to UC"rge • and let him give you the benefit of his horrible t'xample.) ( MAILBOX ) LetterJ from reader1 are welcome. Normally writers 1hould conue11 their messages i1t 300 words or ~''· Tht right to conde:ns• ittters to fit tpOCe or eUmtnate libtl ii reaerwd. All letters mu.st tndude 1£Qnature oncl mailtna address, bue namea mau be witltheld on r1quest tf sufficient reason is appartnt. Po<lrt/ toll! ,,.t be publuh<d. pncljcJng school in Hayward, Calif. school marlc1 are up, reading Is up and by the lime children reach Intermediate levels they are an avera11e of one and one-hall years ahead. There is a poalbfllly of tutorin& on a one to one basis trom O\J?' h!Jh school ttudent1 en a three-month vacation. ' THIS ALL ADDS ~c.~ a ltne ~ for our children at moll receptive Y"" of leamJns. What will thil mUn to the Jlll"ll!ll •nd famllY? Thil will depend • pl cleai oa how hard we mala It for ciihelvea, but being very reallsUc, It will mean an a+ juatment -especially for -bavbti children in two or mor. levtla. Thia Is not all bad, however as we can at least give more of ~vet ao the chlldron who are ttll of acl>Qof 11 ljJIJer· enttlmea: OllR VACATIONS mlchl 111f(et· a Utile U we ha~ childreu fl!ilnl to dilfttent ochoob, but thq aru genoriU)I Jn the lut part of the -if the ehlldren are attendJnC summer achool. 11 JOtl have.., ly Harper SdJool clllldren, tbot would be great -va°'tlons all 1e&r' king. ~e Ii a tentative plan for da.y care at the 4Chool for a very t DM\11 sum for the l!Otllng mother. 1 What a wonderflll Jhln& lo ... our chJldrtn learn and 11n>w Jn such a potltive manner. Let'• not think of why \ we canoot -let's concentrate on why we can. A positive thinker usually wins. MRS. CHAS. POMO OppcMes TftllJ To the Ecltor: I feel *bat tt ii time for youf. newapaper· Md the citizens tD hear 'from. the oppollnc lidl of the w .. t Newport Bicycle Tr all coalroverly, aJnce you seem lo bavt taken a politk:ln oq a situa- tion that hu not been thoroogbly researched. ' THE WEST NB1IPORT beacb en- vironm!at is now attrecdte to thousands of people for the fOlldw!nt -= t. 1lle7 can eocape the llOlae ...S danger of tbe bicycle riders and the lllp. pery, UDllY sldewllu. 2. All typea of beach spom are available without tbe• tnff1c problems in- volved ln driving lo the wid<r beaches Jn central Newport. \ 3. ni,; ... walk on the beach at nlpl and enlcir.the IW1 and the luminescent 1urf, .1itllcb cannot be seen In the In- tolerable pre of ..-l!gbll. TllE 11UL EXPERTS oa ant: ancl high tide condlt!ons In Wl!!t Newport an ,-!"'ldents who have lived with the piW. lem for 10 or more yean. t don't be1!fte you could limply that Mllyor ~ ii playil( favoriltl with Wpt Ne1!PO't II 1'I" bad -1ted' witb ally one' o1 uaem. Two uamploa: 1) the regularflt with which City wlloYl>oll courta Oii the boocll are washed a,...y, even thaulll there .... polns; 2) the - dlUoll " !ho ~ks ~·-,Ibo pier aodlMlillreetfrmlthe lut l .. -of rain ad wiod. • · By .-native -lhert· att IOI> lo 1,000 ...,tdenta oo the ocean !root botll'llii 31th and 74\h atr .. 11. Thil n, .... Could iully ,..preaent 50 per<ent of the realdenla wbo recularly ride blcyclel ~~ the beach. Thal lo """111' a 11hiftcIIUt•.1 or a "tow'' people living on the beach, as you atate Jn iour editorial. ,THE llBACll IS oot the u cluatve ~p­ ertY of -who happtn lo tide bicycle!. '1'hls "handflJI" o! bicycle ' I ~ entlwllaets , alreadY bove fllly concrete nmi>lnc'acrosa at least 75 """""t of ocr pncloul beaches, Why should we ~ tbem to destroy the mt of that .... v-~ the narrowest aectloa of beacb that ii moat accessible lo the blic' pu .CAROLINE RANDOLPH CLUCAS ) Soda~ Stt11rlt11 To the Editor: !ant II grell· that the SOcial Security benefit P"-" bave been increued by 20 ~ BUT, It Isn't 10 great that the Sodil Secui!ty tu lo also being in- creased. 'llelO ii a comflarl* ol the amount of SOdal Security tu ID elflployee and hb employer . will -pay for employees 4'11mlng lf,000, flo,800 and 112,000 • year. Yoarly w... 1rn 1m $ 1,000.00 $111.00 $4ts.ro 10,IOO.OO 41&00 SM.oo· IJ,000.00 . 468.00 184.00 Don't rtlu -tbla wm't bt I.he lut In' crease. C. C. MOSELEY oa.ANOI COAIT DAILY PILOT RobeO'f N. '\''"'· Publi1hsr TMma1 Kttvll, Editor Barbaro. Krtibich EdiCorial Page Editor Th01 editorial JHl.le O( th• Dally Pllctl M!ek1 to Inform And ttlmu· latt rtadeni by preacnllna thtl ntWll)lptt'I opirlkua •n<' com · rnfntat)' on ~ of lntekltt and 1lrnlflcanc:.. b1 pr.J>VMSiBJ a forum '°" the eic~Son ·Of our rnden' opJnlons, and by pr8entlng thl! dlttrte vfewpnlntt of Informed C)b· ACnrti"rl'nd""lpok~on to11'e11 or the OA)'. Wedllesday, Dec •. 13, 1972 ' I I I I I I I i I 7 -• Huntington Beaeh Today's Final • Foun1ain Valley N.Y. Stoeks VQL 65, NO. 348, 6 SECTIONS, 100 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1972 TEN CENTS H~tingtOn Survey on High Rise Considered • By TERRY COVIl.LE OI 1111 O.ltr Plllt Stnt Huntington Beach voters may yet . be asked if they want high rise structures In their city, and if so, where and how. ~ur Knox, chairman of a citit.ens h1&h rile study comm1ttee, suggested to . city planning • oommls$ioners Tuesday that a public vote on high rise might be desJrable. • l'Our committee bas not made a deflni.te ,deeisioh on the need for a public -· or Ir.vitae Shooting vote," Knox sald. ''But we are con-draft of the proposed hlgt ~ ordinance, city councilmen would decide which siderlng It." . . which staff members call a multi-story areas in the city might be suitable for "Th1s (high rise) is ~bly the moat suffix. high rise development.~ planning staff significant pJece of piannlng legislation ln essence. the proposal establishes hopes to have a revised · high rise pro- tbe city has had in 10 years. We f~l a ground rules for the c6nstruCtion of hJgh posal back for further oorrunlssk>n study good law will get voter approva• all.d a rise in commercial, industrial, pro-bY, J~n. 9. · bad law .wod't." . ._ fessional and resjdeDU81 'Zones. . The Knox: committee had several &mall Commissioners gave no clear in· The proposed 111" sell forth the crltl~lmns of the p'roposal, but it! major dicatlon bow they felt ~bout a public vole amount of ·ground l high rise structure objeCtion involves tbe greater density on high .rise.•·Knox indicated, bis com-can cover, the amount· of landleaping it ,allowed high rise in the Town Lot area. mittee would return with a specllic needs, and aays hOw parking aroUnd It · Dick Harlowe, assistant plpning di.rec· recommendaUon on that. shou1d be handled . tor, argued that greater densiUes must Tuesday, commissioners reviewed a At a future date, co'mm~lonlr~ the Town Lots to e • man, Ir consolidation of the smaller lots. The Town Lots were once smothered with hundreds of tiny oil operations which have left the area from the downtown to Golden West St r e e t pockmarked with small, clut~red lots. City planners believe the only way good projects can be built there is if big develo~ put large chunks of property together. . Know told commlsJ;ioners bis com- mittee belJeves the city. ought to Stick to the standard density for the Town Lots. ' "I think we can seek an allernativt, such as limiting the bedrooms to help keep the population down," Rarl~we · today. flarlowe said the staff is ta · the high rise law back .to the drawing bo rds to make several mioor revision:; Jn it and work on the Town Lot section . "Commissioners also want us to bu.ild some high rise models :so we can graphically sho~ what such structures would loor like under our rules," he er· Plained. Huntington : Cyclist Charged Search On For Bodies In Police · Death By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OI .. DIMp PllM , ... Costa Mesa pollu late Tuesday night aM"eSted a 21-year"ld cycle gang leader !hoy illep. -pied IA'. -and till ll"fllle polJCe ~ Stepbon T. !lull during a nlgbttllne am-last Oct. IS. '!be llUBP,eCI, -twed u LellJe Robtrl ~ ~ .. 'II. orq.~ st, Oronfe, JI ...... ~( COiia -Cll7 Jail lodq OD a . ,, .... -..... -.11 . He b befnc beld bi Ueu of ftod,OIJO·liilt' A comblneil force ol 15 Costa Mesa Ind Orange police ofllcm arrested the anemPJoyed PftS' loader at bis apart. ment 'late Tuesday. Police. clalmod to ' • have uocov~rt.d nine loaded rifiel ad Harry Tru.man Hotding His Own, Doct9rs Report KANSAS' CITY (AP) -llany S Trvman's1 doctor iald today the 18-year- old former President was "holding his own" as be remained in serious condition with heart and respiratory problems. Tnunan's vital signs of blood pressure, pulJe and temperature continued to fluc- tuate and were elevated ovtmight, a spokesman for Re.search Hospital and Medical Center said. But his pulse was 88, blood pressure 11"6 and temperature 101 -all Within normal limits -this morning. The hospital 8pokesrnt1n said Truman's hNJ1 condition remained unchanged from Tuesday when It wa& noted as stronger than earlier In the week. IDs kidney fUncUon was described as ade- quate. ' sbotllUftl bi the process. Peters, purported to be the newly -pr<sldent ot the Onnge County -cWpter of tho Hessl1ns motorcycle gang, offered 1\9 reiistance durinl the raid. COiia Mesa Detectlft Cap t E. H. Gl~ow said Peta' arrest clin'llRd a looi lnvesllgatlan 1ie1Weea Colla Mlll8 and. Oronge po!lce olllcen bito the a<· ' tlvit!es of . ·:e Healan!. --''We'Ve ~ -t !i-e Heu:!ami under surveillanee lor -80mt time and questioning some of them over and over and dding thlnu of that nature," Glasgow explainea. He added that Peters was believed to have taken over the presidency of the outlaw bike club around the Ume of the , allege<I ambush neer Jeffrey Road and Barranca Road. 'Illa! night lllflcer !lash was on patrol In Irvine when a car~ cantainitig two "clean<ut" men approached him and told him of an Injured man In the roadway. As Nash, :.3, spe ' to the scene, the suir posed victim, lying face down, jumped into a crouch and fired at the officer through the windshield of the squad car. Nash gunned his car in an attempt to ru., down bis assailant but was hit on the faet by a bullet fragment. The bu~hwhacker escaped by nqming into a nearby cornfield. Capt. Glasgo.w sajd'ltie small caliber revolver allegeJll -ed in the attack was not recovered from Peters' apartment. "We're looking for tt though," he added. (See SUSPECT, Page Z) ..... _. .,.-M il Y l"ILOT ....,,,,.... SANTA tiSTENS TO CHRISTMAS WISHES AT FOUHTAIN VALLEY'S GISLER SCHOOL Chlldron of T1l1vl1lon Goneraffon GrMI Mr. CloUl'Wtth Skepticism -ot First ~~~~~~~~~~~ By llllCHAEL GOODRICH Of .. Dally f"llet Slaff Huntington Beach lifeguards are scour- ing the local strands today. searching for the bodies of a Newport Beach dory fisherman and his 3-year~ld daughter who disappeared Tuesday offshore from the Edison power plant. Newport Beach and Huntinriton lifeguards searched chilly ocean waten all Tuesday afternoon; after the empty dOl)' boat of Allan Vauglm Knight, 43, of 224 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, was apotted from ahore' .. Police bellcoptetll also were used ill Tue.9day1s search. -· Knight, and his daughter. Patricia, were alone in the boat, checking bis lobster traps about 200 yards offshore, police said. Llfegual'ds believe both drc.wned. . Huntington Beach lif(lguard Mike Mossier said be first notlced Knight's boat moving south from the pier aboUt 20 yards from the shore . He said Knight was standing In the rear of the boat cradling his daughter in S ' ~ et ~ H • A•..] his arms while he tried to steer the boat -an a ~e ... .untington1ue-by..shiltlng.llis weigbUrom side~~ . . -~ ~ Knight was apparently returrung froift · N d L y checking his lobster traps which were ill y ,;.11: p .. ils "·Ji'· . s . N'ck alile uy orty tbeBolsaCbieaBluflsarea,accordlng to ~y· . 'llP ' "isit aint i T . v :... 'I.'' ' . "'T ' ~ on~u:,~~h.r Daniel c. Davis, ol 211 I 0 LCO ogy U fill Chicago St., HIDltin&ton Beach, said be By JORN ZAUEft from the mothers of the. Gisler Pro. So . · · ·. / : saw a m~ in the water next· to the dory I ot .. ...., ....., ,,..., he really looked the part. Huntington Beach ~c:lllJ}an .-J~~~ in the vicinity of Belch BoWevard, . ! A warm IJld kindly Saini Wick WU "Oii," squealed one delighted little girl Green has been appointed by Los . .Ailaeles in~~::: !':t~tl'! ~;:.::.:-: jl greeted with a certaip skepticism Tues-when she saw him. "Look at aU the hair Mayor Sam Yorty to fill that city.'1 new ing in a small circle next to the man in day by many of the 100 first and second coming out of his face." other children post as general manager · of en-t~ water. 1 graders at Gisler School in Fountain seemed equally Impressed. vironmental quality. Lifeguards on the scene said the heavy I Valley. And U further proof of authenticity was made the . _ Tu-.1 fishermen boots worn by Knight might f required, Santa combined just the right Yorty appomtment ~ay, bave pulled him uncle be ~ ••-It was an odd thing to happen to Santa, f •·--• G • r once was "" ....., . amounts o "Ho Ho Ho" jolliness with ua~ on reen s top srore n a com-water. I because he visits Gisler every Ouistmas firm warnings that ''You'd better be good petitive civil service exam. The Los Davis contacted HunUngton Beach r and usually his reception is good. because I'll be watcbq yoo vel'V closely I Co il ed lif ~. ho be 1 1n•--·• And this year -more than any year In from now until Christmas." .,, Ange es City uoo· wu expect to egua1 ua w ga n au --ve i the past -be had eve~ -·son to be confirm lhe appointment today. search of the water a quarter mile south 1 .,, ..... But the children of the television f •• · trusted. G , I ill be ~ _ r o u1e pier. generation, .Santa found out, are not as reen s sa ary w .,.,_, pe IJfeguards po led the f d I Tbe children had all written Santa let-re r Y 0\111 a ters three weeks earlier, and when be easily won as their parent:s !ere·. month. He currently earns $1,400 per child's life jacket in tbe boat. Later in ' ~.~. be ~ ht 1 •• him "We know who you are," shouted one month as director ~f the CO&chella Valley the afternoon, another dory fJSbennan I came 1.uquay, ·uroug w LU a class, ."you're not Santa, you're Mr. Regional Anti-Pollution Author l t y found a child's part:a_ln ~ water near . personal written r~sponse for each ol Bill:" (Mr. BUI Is the school custodian.) 501~ ·~ 1n Newport Beach. , them. 'Ibat alone should have _J@L.._lo.nr "No I'm not," Santa lnststed, and to (RAPA ) in Pahil Springs. The diven involved in the search were , way toward establilbing bis credibility. prove It, be caUed Mr. Bill into the room Mayor Yorty recently organized the in the water until dust when poor visibil· i Also, Santa was elected out in a brand and let the children see for themselves. environmental quality department in Los (See new suit, hnuah! with special assistance c•·· SANTA, Pare ') DORY, I'll• I) --~-= • Angeles to tie togcUter the city's anti· poUution eUorts. · I . Truman responds to verbal stimuli b\lt did not talk during the night, )he spokesman aal<h· He qplained that Utis meant Truman was aware be was being •poken to but did not necesoarlly reply. Dr. Wallace Graham, Truman' s pmonal J>i>yslc!an, D!<I Tuesday the rormet clilel e:xecuUve's conditior. would Ouctuate within the serious classillcation for some time. Peters Seeks Publicity? Green wu amq 70 ort&inal ap- plicants for the post, 14 ot <Whom toot the civil service eum after eitensive in- terviews. Oraage l . I PILOT AD BRINGS HO ME GOOD NEWS DAILY PILOT claalfled want adl brlna borne good neWB. Here's a true 110ey: Pam>t -Balboo Peft. Held, breast, neck orange, bocly orange I grt!tn. nt·llll ~ward. That owner called to aay Utat the bird WU back In hliDd tho finl dly the ad ron. II )'OU hlvu1eed of wt mulla.._d!.8! llHm and piece a DAILY P1wT cJu8lfied want ad. Ps ycliiatrist Says Trial Gives Susp ect \ a 'Soapbox' Dy TOM BARLEY °' .. ~ ....... ,... A psychiatrlsttestified today that it was "entirely possible" that Gig Peters returned to Callfomla to face a murder trial because It would provide what the prosecution called lh1I morning "a soap box and a publicity vehicle for his a~ la<:k.s oo the establWunent, • Dr. Daniel CuWle agmd that the Idea could f¥ve led PeWrs, 23, 10 rteroa the Mczlcan ~er he had Cl'OOled 14 houtll before on Aprll 21, 111'71, lhorily after he killed hta parenta at tllcJr HuntlnglOn Beach home. And he JOlllinned lot pl'OIOCutor Pat Brian on earlier dlqnoaia that Pclon was psychotic -he murdered Charles Peters, 55, and FSora Peter81 M, a · teacher at Llncobi School In Cotont1 de! Mar. "But he wu mentally capoble o1 plan- ~ .. nlng their klllin(, .. he added. Pclera was ;· wned by his father oo the ."You can't call 1 man psychotic juat day before kllllng ihorUy after the because he says he's in .communication wtth God?'' Brian o;isked cast\lle. defendant was found guilty in a San '!be psycltiatrltt 'aireed and piMed Diego ~ 1•1 drll( cborges that could wtUt ..Vera! merllbers of the Oraiwe have broug,. him a pr100D term ol five to County superior Court jury 81 Brian ex-20 ~rs.. t . plalnOd: "'After all, th6 pope say1 he's bi CUtille ~ ~glcM • 11 'Mrs 'second communlcatlan witb God and I doo't SUpertor ·~ lrlal• llliilod1 llJ end t t Utlnk ... can '811 him poychotlc." the dtfendlhl told blm In 1111 llltervl It la do!enee ~ Barry Tarlow'• that 11" fel;tqwanls 1\11 la\her. contention that Poten mental ttate at He llao' 'lliif Peteri belle • the time ol the murder calla for 1 jury that what -rnlcht lie poaed verdict of jjdlmitiilbed capadl)'.11 on him he be a Pree man Within Brian today confirmed that"ho wa11ta a two yean w tho "CO!lllnl revolnUoo" V<tdlcl ol fil'llt dl-ee murder in the would liberate \aO OCCU}>lnll of the na· belld..that Petert Inned lbe kWh1(1 ol lion'• jlllt. hb }>ln!lll ..... lefl bis San Dietl• ---la ~ -.i.tchalr County deter! commune IJld tramed-lo --~-rai. ~ lltla ""'""'14 u llunllnCIOD Deach 14 hours before the Bn.i. ~-• • "......tl'eril•tY kllllt1(1. .... ci......, lritllY!dltol ............ tbul · 8tlaa hOd reminded the jury that cs.e PArllill, .,,.._,, - I • ~ ,. The *yelU'Old Green Wa5 fli'st elected to tbe Huntin&ton Beach ctty Council in llltl6 IJld woo .. easy ....ie.tlon In 1970. lie was lnayor of lhe city.in 1969-70. Green said in an earlier interview M- wuo't""" how the Loi Anaeles appoint· ment might afiett his tenure u a city councilman. He is up for re-election Jri April', 1974. The Loi Angeles CilJI charter g1..,. all new department heads 24 monthi to move ihto the city, so Green might com- plete his current COlmcll term. · ' • I NEEJl£P WESE fLN(E~ !'UT ME '" 1'HE SP!RJT. J) I'VE GOT ONL'/ ll Dill'S LEFf.·b 5140P, , • • • • • • o o• • • ' O• • 0 •• 0 • Weatller SUMY sltlt1 are on the .qenda for Thursday, with slightly wann.. er temiieratures. Hlgha ol 57 lit the beaches, risina, to ftt inland. Low1 tonight In Ute IOI. INSWE TeDA 'Y Ora1111< C-ty'•, t h • • I e r Q1'0Up& call it Q ~Qr <r/Wr lhh W<ekt'nd, ID h 11 < °"" loVitlg production rtCVr.ni Jot. cm etk COTI. See Emertilhtmfftt, Poge 43. .......... 1t -... --"' ............. , --. "• . _,, .... 0...11:•=-• ---·-. - --. ~ ....... . .... ...... ., • ..._..,. • I • . J • • • 1 041.LV PILOT H • Peace Wtdltttilf, OfcrmOtr U, 1972 Session Ends Dorymen Swrt Up Collection l • Neither Side Gives Hi!f,t of Agreement. Allen Knlabl and blJ pretty daupter Palricla .... -ud'tbl nlen of the N..-port lltldt dory llJhln& llett ... lritVh>I· PARIS {AP) -Jlen ry A Kissinger and Le Due Tho endcd tbeir crucial peace ttilks session -1oday v.· i 1 b o u t an- nouncement of any agree1ncnt on ending the Vietnam wor. KW.lnger prepared to fly I o Washington to report to Presi dent Nixon follow.l~g a six-hour meeting with Tho. C.Ommunist and other sources sald ma· jor potnts of difference still ~main to be Ironed out twtween the tv.·o top negotiators. Presidential press seeretary Rona.Id L. Ziegler told newsmen in \\'ashington the In H 1111t i119to11 two delogata at tbll .......... ~ pe11« talks, WWltllD' J. -of Ille Ultlted States aod XU.. 'llllly t1 HOilh Vietnam, would ooodNJt m e • t 1 n g 1M>r1odieal!y to dlscu.n tflclmical aspects of a r'Q$Sible future agreement. Ziegler said Kissinger will confer w1th Nixoo Thursday. and remain tn com~ 1nunication wilh Tho. Any decision reaardlng f u r ' h • r m .. tings or Ute two top negotlalors- would be made jointly by both s1c1 .. through an exchange or messages, Z1rgler added. Do11bl e Sessio11 s Planned Fo1~ J11nior High Schools The 2.700 junior high students in the lfuntington Bc<'lch C11y (elementary) School District \1'ill be on a double stUion schedule for at least two months nest fall. 'nle ~ason : The district's new Sowers Intermediate School 1~·on't be finished un- ti! November 1973. Final approval for th e double session schedule di C islcr and D w y e r Jntennedi ate Schools \\'as given Tuesday nlght by district trustee!. Actually, the two-shift setup i s Ex-ma gazine Official Nam ed To U.S. Position· neces\ary at only one of the intermediate schools. Gisler is the one under the plan ,,·orked out by school officials. However, students at Dwy er Int ermediate SchOol will go to classes on the same type of schedule "just to keep eve rything balanced," according to district Superintendent Al MoffetL The schedule calls for a six-period day. For the first shi ft or about 900 students at Gisler, classes will run from 7:30 a.m. to noon. The second group of 900 will at- tend from noon to 4:.15 p.m. At Dwyer School. the same six-period day will start at 9 a.m., with school letting out at 2:20 p.m. The new Sowers Intennedlate School is now scbeduled for completion i n November, 1973 -just two tDCllths after double sessions begin. When it opens, double .sessions at the other two in· tennedial< llC!tools will end. Moffett sild that once this happens, the three intennediate schools will all be able to switch to a schedule offering WASHTNGTON (AP ) -President Nix· students an eight-period day on a 9 a.m. on announced today he will name James to 3 p.m. basis. Keogh . a form er executive editor of Time H~ stressed that . even on . double Magazine, to head the U.S. Informatio~SSlons, s~ents \\'Ill be ~etttng ~ Agency, replacing-f"rank J. Shakespeare legally required number of minutes of 10- Jr. st ruction ea~, . ·In another round of changes in high-"We've got no altemativ; right now ~vel posts for his eeconcl term, Nl~on but to consider double sess.iom," Moffett tlesiinated the dean or the Duke Law said. "If we ooly have to do It for ·two Scb:>ol. Jose~h T. Sneed, $2, or Durhim, months, lt ahouldn't bwt1us too badfY·!' N.C., to be deputy attorney general. · At prumt, there are about L,100 Sneed would succeed Ralph E. Erick· studentl at Dwyer aod ·about 1.300 at 111111, who, the While House said, will be Gisler. Both ICboola an designed for offered a judicial post. about 850. Ronald H. Walker, 35, a special aS5i.5· Next fall, the an~ted enrollment of la.Ill. to NiJ:on who bas been saving as an 2,700 wilt be divided into thirds. One •dvance man on presidential trips, wu group -will attend Dwyer on a ref1lar pamed to be the new .director of the Na-sc~. The ""'"4 pip -destined to tional Park Service. He would succeed stay at GI.lier .... Sowers opens -wtll George B. Hertzog Jr., relieved of bis attend class in the mornings at Gisler. ®ties by Nixon. And the thlrci'gfoup -destined to move Remaining tr. a top-level post he has to Sowers In ·November -will attend ~ld since early in the Nixon ad-ctqJeS lo the aftemooo. at Gisler. inlralstration, is 44-year-old William H. Thus when the tbne to move comes, Brown m, c.bairrnan oI the Equal teachen and students will stay together. Employment Opportunity Commission. thus m!nlml%1ng the dl!ruption , accor<llDg Tbe panel has been given new ~ by to Moffett. C6ngresa to conibat job discrimination of "We've looked at the problem carefully an types. A native of Philadelphia. and this is the best solulioo we can come Arown was first named to the EEOC by up with," l\ioffett sakl. President Lyndon B. Johnson and was Attendance boundaries have not yet kept on by Ni100. been decided, but some students now ~gh, · a-56-year::<>ld _natl_ye of going to Dwyer will be transfened to Nebraska, was a member of Nixon'i1968 Glsler.-Mottett said the ·on1y-students campaign stall and later Joined the Whi~ who can be sure they will not be Uouae staff aa chief of research and transferred are tho.le living within walk.- writing. The agency be will bead ing dlstaooe or Dwyer. present> ·the U.S. Image It tbt -id. Final atlendance boundaries will be set Keogh, with Time Magatine for almost in June. 20 years, is the author of two books, one Sowers will be the district's 10th wriUen ln 19!54 entitled "This Is NIIon" school. and another published tbls year on "Nit· "We saw this overcrowding coming on and the Press." long ago," l\ioffett said, "but we couldn't Press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler was justify the st.art of construction to the asked if Nixon shares the vie ws about the state until we actually had the students news media that Keogh expressed in enrolled." "Nixon and the Press." "You could say \\'e were a victim of 'l1lt ..... ~ ,...a DOI Ill' ' nauy that lurther Paris talU .,.. .... templated, but hh language suggeated that they are likely. There was no immediate indlcatlon of the points of disagreement which led lo renewed suspension of the talks. Before the President'• natlooal oecuri· ty Jdvi.ser and 'Ibo met in a IUburban villa, a 11.1bcomm1ttee of. erpetb held a 9().mlnute session to discuss details of a settlement. At the end of_ the meeting, Klasinger, as host, ucorted nX> to hil car and the negotiatort parted with their usual cor- dial handshake. A junior official held on umbrella over them to protect them from the Icy rain that fell most of the day. After Tho'• ~ Klsalll&er drove back to the down"""' U.S. Emf>wy re.id...,. where be, bas been llllylq since the ta1U ~ The air crew of Klsslnger'1 plane ar- r ived at Orly a few minutes fater and began pn!paring tor deparltln!. French press reports: said lgrtement was near on the issue blocking a cease- fi re aetord, the withdrawal of North Vietnamese troops from South Vietnam. Le Na tion predicted agreement in "a matter of hours." KnJ&hl loava a wife and four othu chlldrell with v.ry 11Ule money. They don't have much the.mlelvu but they have started • collecllon for the Knl1bt family . The do<ymen are asltiDg other people to help. "TM-y could either bring something down here, or mall-it to Mn. Knlpt," said Bob 1'1rley, Knight's locker partner. nit dory n..t pub ID mid-anemoon by Newport Pier. The Knights' ad- dress Is 224 N. Newport Blvd., Apt. 2, Newport Beach. F rot11P,..eJ DORY ..• ily made the search Impossible. wogum1 Captatn Doug1u P 'Amall said today there were no more plans to continue the underwatu search, but beach patrols would continue. Knight was described by police as a veteran doryman. They said his wife told then'. it "'as not unusual for him to take one of I.heir children out on his lobster runs . * * * 1947 Tragedy Repeats Itself 25 Years Later Prom Page J SANTA ••• Their jaws dropped. "The kids couldn't undmlaDd II," ex· plained their teacher, lttra. Keat Moder. "Mr. Bill bas done thil kind ol tbiDg bcfo~ and the children knew It." ••I• rtt:•Y MITI 'TIL. XMAI Dbeove1•1 £.ltetl Moon.men . Ready . . For Final Walk SPAq; CENTER, Houston <APr - 1\1,·1,, Jubllant American adventurtrs prepared today ro:-11 fareweil lunar el· ploratlon. Jlul almdy a~t!_ their laodtr OWJencer wu a new ~ - sample.t or Intriguing otan1• llllJ -po.ilbly datlni to the w. fiery 1a1P1 or • cbtna Distri9 Seeks ' Teachel''s Joh In Morals Ca se Hun~ Beach Union HJg!I School Dl!trlct trustees are ..ulna I h e dl!mlssal through Orange C o u n' I y Superior court action 'of a teacher ac- cused of 15 counts of immoral conduct. Suspended teacher J8Ples H. Matthews is charged In the lawsuit with making improper advances. to 13 female :students and the mo~ or a stt.ident. SChool autboriUes allege that on ooe occasion Matthews, a teacher at Bun· tinstoo Bead! lllgb School, took borne a female student who wu, the liwsuit states:, "already high on plils." The complaint states that Matthews got the girl drunk on vodka but she was able to resist his advances and reported his alleged conduct. She is one of 13 students listed in the law.suit. It is also alleged that Matthews uttered obscenities in class and that on ooe oc- casion he taped an obscene message on a recording device that was part of the school'• communications system. Matthews w.. suspended by tbe diatrtct board !all Oct. 2$. His llwyer hu asl<ed tblt the boaid bold a hearing Into the allegaUons filed against the teacher. It Is additionally alleged in the Superior Court action that Matthews offered forg- ed references when · he applied for employment with the district. From Page 1 SUSPECT ••• moon !Set related plct~ stories. Pap f) .. .:: Altronauu· Eugene A. Cemal\ aod Hal' rtaon H. Sclunlll, In t~ ~ #.;.OIY _fteld..lrlp-Jo the-. .. Uttrow tocl411 wf:re to .ta r itilltCUe drive alcog~ the bue ot-0. JdO'lllOUlltaln and at tho fool ol wrmtleil 'liilli, uslni .. electric car with·• petcbed rendtt. The astro.,.ut>, sar,Jng they "like to cover p ~ VI ground, ' traveled a mile farthar than plsnn~ Tu..Oay night, gathering many bags of lunar samples, including scoops of ,t"he orange dust never b ·ore found on the moon. The orange malerlal was found during esploratlon ~ an ancient avalancbe, 4.4 miles from the lail\llrtC caQ!p lo Taorm." !Jtln>w v~y. By. calncldence, ii wu fo.ipd by Cemao, no\ -·~ • geo'lcpt and America'• flnt priileasiOllil odentill in SJ>Ke. "Hey," .i1clalmed Ceman as be stumbled Into the 1011 at the rim of a craiter called Shorty. "Wait a minute ••. there is ora.n~e soil." "Well, don't move Wltil 1 see U/' said the Hjl'nrd-educaltd Sch¢ll. "K'S all over," Ceman went on O · clltdly. "Orange. l'Ve stimd It up with my f .. t. "Hey, tt bl," ahouted Schmitt. .. I can see it fmm here. It's orange." Cernaa and Schmitt we1' awakened at 11:20 a.m. to lhe strains or the Texas A&M fight song. Ground control told them their space- craft was in good shape and everything was set ror tonight's moonwalk. On earth, Sf.:lentistJ were als:o excited by Ute discovery1 though ~tious ioJbelr. evalUiUon.-'t'hey said the orange IOU may have originated from "the last gaseous gasp ol volcanism" on the moo••· Dr. Robin Brett, chlel of tbll geochemistry branch at I L e Matmed Spacecrlft center, llid tbt material possibly could b< rust -wblcb hu been found in other lunar samples in minute quantities -or some chemical com· blnation which aaumes a reddish color. A final determination would baYe to await Jabonlory eumination on earth. he said. Ft'oM P .. e J PETERS ••• . • __ ... D«:. 11"il ' - Ziegler 1aid it would be stretching ci rcumstance because of the way the things to draw such an association and stale allows us to build new schools," he added: "When President Nixon has said. Santa handled bis next challenge just as easily. Suspiciously eyeing the street shoes Santa was wearing tmder b\s black boot leggings. the chlldren demanded to know if this was adequate protection from snow. • • • and Sportswomen something to say about the press he'll Previously, the state allowed dist ricts say It on his own." ...-> to justify new scbools on the basis of enrollment projections. .. DAILY PILOT 1'le ~ c...t°'41L.Y I'll.OT wtlti 'Ml~ ............ ,... '"'"'"'-.. ~ lly .,.. 0r.,... ce.v .... .,. .... ~. 5-.,.. ,. .. .rllllOM -JIUlllll!oM, MonU• Dlf'ouSlll .,....,., fw COi"° Mne, Ntwlltl't "-dt. Hllftl\ftOloll 9uc:h·F-Ulll Vf ti..,. L"-..n. ..... fMM/$.l•in.ct I/Id S.11 ('~ SM -., c.piUrlfl6. A 1l11tle ,........, Wllllln ls pub!Wlell-.............. ~ T"' pr1nc!MI puOlleMfte IMlfll 'h •l ~ 'Nest ••• arr.tt, c;..,. ~ C.lllOl'nlt. tlt2f. ft•b•rt N. W114 l'rfJidft'l·Mt ~ J•clt R. C11rl1, VI«,,. • ....,,, .rid OtnwM ~ Tll•"'" K...;/ ...... Tllom•• A.. M11rphln1 _..., ...... I a .rtn H. i..... •1cti1r4 '· Ntll Ntllflfll Mfnfflllf lldltors T lf't'Y Covllle W•I Or..,.. c.ii, Etlltor ,......,.. __ l 17171 •••cft lkvl ..... ...t MtUftlt A44N1t1 ,.0 . lea 7t0. •2'41 °""'-...... llldl• ID ....... A-. Celle ,...., .... .., .,,..... ~ a.dl1 Ult ,...._. M!i!llWNI IM.,.CillNalel * Hwttl II C11N111 11:111 T••••••• rn4> Mt .. 111 Cf I UW .Usa~ '42·1671 ,,.. ......... c..., Ce::il ..... _, .. ClltJ+t ""'· 1m. °""" c..e , ...... .. I ~. ... .... •IW!llo .... "'"9N. _.... ......... ~-=..r:-..... , ... , .. ......,, ... ~.,..,... ..... . • ...., cJnl ........... o.t9 ~ ~ lllllll-=:• ': •• =-,.,.:,, ....,,llor!M ... tl I ...,,.. ..... ...., ,...,...,,,,. - I < A more recent ruling, restricts districts to counting students toward new construction only after they already are enrolled in classes. This means that a district must be overcrowded by the equivalent of nearl y one fUll school before new construction can begiD. Large dlztricts ean sometimes absorb such overcrowding with little strain. but the city school district could not because it baa: only two lntermed.11te campuaes, school officials caid. "Oh. that dots need ra1n1," Sanll ad· mitted. "I've bttn wearing: them for many 31ears now, but I've been ao busy with toys tblt Mrs. Santa llun'I had a chance lo mend them." It wu just what the chlldrtn wanted to hear, and with !bot respoaae. their suspJ., clon dlmlved. So Santa lnvited them one by ooe to whls.per in his ear their llst or goodies wanted for Onistmu. Timidly -perhapo now asbamtd by their early mls!JUJI= they.filed w> and confided their fondest wlJbts. Tou~hes Tea~h Parents Ca1i Aid Fu ture Marriages SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Parents who don't touch each other In front ol their children may be aetUng up selUllily Inadequate future marriaaee, a tum of sexual theraplata ha.a told stat.e employes here. "The moll ellecllve method of aex education ii whit '°" oo mry mln-ul<," Dr. Thomu P. Lowry of the Msai.r.J-cUolc In SI. Louil, lolo., said Tucaday. "ONE OF TUE FEW unlvt11al4 is that patitnll were l'lieed In 1 fll!llly where peopio nevor touched t1ch other," Lowry said. Lowry and blJ wlle AnU..1 COl1d11Cltd 1 oemlnlr for 1~ of the State Department of Mental ll)oslcne on th< uoe ol .. 11111 lber1py u 1 cllYOl'<I preventltlve. THE-COUPLE SUGGESTED that seJV&lly lnadcquato perms quit worry • in& about It and do what comes naturally. "Just forget about It. A man shoold •top belna the petl)etual wt~ to hil ; own lallutt. lie should just think •bou t his w~l'.1 boautilul ronn," Lowry IOld. ' • • BasketbaU Tennis Dmses foetflalls Tennis Shorts & Shirts "- Volley bans Skate Boards Soccer baAs Duck Feet Fins Wrestrq Slloes T enlis llals Dart Boards Spaedo SWin Saits Gott bans I Frisbees 11a11111ans Back Packs T enlis. Swaaters Sweat Sox Archery sets Sleetirll Bats Lettennan Jackets Bllbilt. sets Wami Up Suits BasketbaU Shirts Pini Pq sets Swat Slits Swim Trunks Tllis llCbts Nylon Jackets Stop Watcbes . Hanlal GIMs Basebal Sllaes Bicycles · T llllis Slim Track Shoes . -Accessories • ' ) • \ l I I ' I I I I I \ I I I l ' Ir ' . I ' ' At Your Service A Swlda7 and WecloeHa7 Fulue Of Ille D~Y P ' I Got a ,,,.obr.m1 Thn !Dfi!f Pat Dunn. Pat will cu t rtd tapt, Ott tht • 01~ri and action 11 o u nee d to ~ iolw fnequt. -.a.: tit• -,ft 11°"' ernment 4nd ~neaa. Mail your qui· ttotU Co Pat Du"" I At A First fiver Icy Storm Halt s St. -Louis Mail By Untted Pren JD&enlatlooal For the first time In the memory of st. Campaign Spender Jo~lrst District Supervisor Robert Battin "'as the top spender in r e c e n t supervtsorial campaigns. He reported $130,90.1 spent In the general election. Wtdnnd17, Dtctmbf't u . 1_q_n ___ H ____ o_AI_L_V_Pl_LO_T~:t Said Fair In Decision By JACK BROBACK Of fM C.I" P'it.t Sleff Your Snvict, Otitngt COCJ.1i Daily Pfroc, P.O. Bo:r 1560, Costa Mt1<1. Co.,, 9%626. lulu.de ~r telephone numbtr. Take Bike BG4'k DEAR, PAT: Last Christmas we bought our son a 1().speed lt1otobocane bicycle at the COsta Mesa Bille Sh0p. After about four months, the paint started to bubble and peel. My son never rode the bike to school ind washed it with mild soap each time his l!acl. washed the car. The shop took Qle bike back and we thought our probltm was taken care of, but once again the paint Is· bubbling and peeling. Whal can we do? Louis postal workers, the U.S. Postal Service has canceled residential mail service, despite the postman's motto that "oeither snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor gloom of night shall stay these couriers from the swift completion or their ap- polnted rounds." Nothing was being done swiftly Tues- day as a treacherous storm of snow and ice hobbled Chicago and SL Louls and ·almed less paralyiing blows at other cities from the Plains to the Middle Atlantic States. (Related story, Pake 4). The biggest chunk of the money came from a $611,000 loan and a $5,000 donation . !rom Dr. Louis Cella of Santa Ana and Richard J . O'Neill, Mission Vi~;o. Orange County superviSOl"!I with but a slight show of hesitancy voted 3·2 Tues· day to raise their salaries to $24.500 a year. The $7,000 raise was approved after about a one-hour discussion period in which most speakers from the audience favored the move. The new scale takes effect in 60 days. D.C .. Costa Mesa Tlno Damatce1, owner ef the Costa :ftitna Bike Shep, wuta to see tUt you r.e satldled. Briq tlte bike back to kis shop at YOGI' coavenience, and lte will ...i lt bock to tM laclory. Tbe bike ls patUt<ed aplnlt deftcta. Wiie Liee• Tiie~? DEAR PAT: There an two beatutiful plants I'd love to have in the back yard of an abandoned house In COsta Mesa . They a~ going to die if someone doesn't transplant them soon. There is no ad- dress on the house and I'd Hke to know If there's any way I can firxl the name o( the owner? J.P., CHLa Mesa .. Y oa caa fl.pre out tbe acktreu by checking the numben of itelPbonhlg bcMlltl ud you mlgllt ;wan& to ask people living ln the area U tbey know the owner's aame. U yoa slW caa'i klentlfy ibe owner, tat ... tbe Hdrest to lite cow&ty assessor's off tee, 131 N. Broadway, Sallta Ana. Wltb tbe help of omce ptl'SCNlMI, yoa may be able to locate tile owite_rj• name by doecktog tmugl addr<1sn listed lD tbt tax rolls. No R espoaM DEAR PAT ' Help! I mailed a dleck for $1U ta J. C. ,Wbltnoy OmlJ>ll'Y in Chicago on Sept. 10 orderirW part! for ·• Jt56 Austfll>HOl!ey, Som<' ol Ula par!& were sent, tait '80.St wartlt were not. 'J sent two letters wblcb were not ar.-red. 11>on I malled a certllled let· ter on Nof, IS. SUrely, a cimJ111ter can1': 11~ for a e<rtlfled letler, oo whY ba•~nll. we gotten any action? · v:w .. --It foots like Ille p<rsdi •if ilc* f~ your letter didn't know W1t.M to do wltl' Jt. Tbere's no rte0rd at J. C. ~y of uy lllq•lr)' ft•m you. ff 'YOQ'd ao~. ... -J, c. \Vlllhley ..... u....,. pro- l»em pdlted ta the Nov. ll ~'~t Yoar Service" eohu:n11, yoa •....W ..,e co. ~ed Miss Reyes Avtal, \'stomer itfilCe n4i1'tleatitfftfO'rlMI ftmr;""'antt- -ded coplu of all prevtous cor· respoadenee ud Invoices. Miss Avlu irill''little to )'Oii and' get ,..., pn>blem llinlgbtelied . oat U the parts are nol available, a refuad will be mailed to you. P oetrg for Sa le ' News ma n Say Press Attack Hurts Public LOS ANGELES (AP) -With one chair left empty for imprisoned newsman William Farr, five reporters who have faced legal charges for refusing to disch:>.5e secret sources said that a moon· ting attack on press freedom is actually an attack on the public's right to know. The press has become a scapegoa t for vindictive judges and g o v e r n m e n t authorities seeking to cover up their own mistakes, the newsmen charged Tues- day. The reporters -Earl Caldwell of the New York Times; Peter Bridge, of the now defunct Newark Eventng1News: Joe Weiler of the Memphis CommerCial·Ap-- peal, Vl Murphy of the San Diego Union and Ron Ridenour of the Los Angeles Free Press -a1so blamed news media for not taking a strong enougtt stand to defend themselves. The reporters spoke Tuesday night at a USC panel discussion entitled "The Death of the Flrst Amendment." (Relaled story, Page 19.) Caldwell, whose case produced a re- cent U.S. Supreme Court decision that reporters should testify before grand juries, said, "The issue in my case ·was very simple -whether l could funCtion as a reporter or whether I would have to be a govemment agent or a spy." Mail deliveries were halted In the St. Louis area after more than 50 postmen reported they were injured fn falls on the glasslikc surfaces. An ice-Jadel\ tree branch claimed the life of Burrell E. White, 61. White was killed when a branch fell on him ns he attempted to trim a tree on hts farm in Piper City. DI. Jn Chicago, hundreds of thousands of commuters were late for work. Some Chicago area commuters spent up to 31n hours huffing ~nd puffing to work Tues- day, then struggled through ice and slush-clogged streets to get home. Hundreds of schools were closed in the Midwest because buses were unable to make their runs or officials chose not to subject children to the storm's wintry wrath. The National Weather Service reported that the storm in Missouri /epresented ''one of the major ice storms or the cen- tury." $71,697,712 Le ft in E state REDWOOD CITY (AP) -Ralph K. Davies, the one-time office boy who became board chairman Qf American President Lines and the Natomas Co. before he died last year, left an estate w o r t h $71,697.712, inheritance reco rd s have disclooed. ' The govermnant demanded 1 t h a t Caldwell, a black reporter, turn over hil notes and lape recordi!!r. of interviews will! mem~ri5 of IJ:le Bl11ck Panther parr ty. He said to give such lnfonnaOOO would deatroy his credibility in tbe black """"""11trl Faif; wliO bid been acheltuled to'•~ pear, i.s in his third week of an lndtflnite- jail sentence ~ by Charles Mansont muriler trial jujie Chailes Older. f;an' ·;. has ielused .19 say wl)lch attorney In llioJ., , case.gave him infonnation lor a story_· Da vies. who died in September. 197 1. at his half-million dollar .,tstate in Woodside, owned 720,398 ··~res of Natomas stock valued at more than $58 million. act1ltding to an lrivt,Dtory ¥~ ,11ppraJaal filed l'ue!day by a state lnhedtance· tu appraiser. Survivors included his wife, Louise K. Davies, three daughters and fiVe grandchildren. • • • me,. Bise Am~n..._.~,ts Bbard . Ai]O.~·;t hanges Amendments to the Orange County building code were adopted unanimously by the Board of Supervisors Tuesday · With costly restrictions on future high rise bWldlngs. 'The measure was adopted as an ertlergency ordinance which makes it ef- fective immediately. -• ... J:· Spthlkler sys tem. ' 1 McLellan said that Orange County w,P to his knowledge the first place in the na- tion to adopt the new sa fety measures. "You can't eva.cuate people from the upper noors of buildings over five stories tall ," McLellan said. "You must fight the fire with the people remaining there." Additional safety features written into Jn total, four candidates f o r su~isors reported spending $346,656. Thlt.·compares with $380.960 spent by ll aspirants for the two jobs in the June primary. William Wenke, Santa An a attorney who opposed Battin in tbe runoff. said he spent ~.3S2; Ralph Diedrich, who defeated incumbent William Phillips in the Third District $86,376 and Phillips, $40,025. Phillips said he had a deficit, reporting contributions of only fU;,464. He had received contributions of $57,289 in June when Diedrich Jed him by 10,000 votes. The reported sperxling is believed to be wen below actual outlays as only cam- paign contributions of $500 or more must be reported. But even t b e reported costs were astronomJcal compared with those of a few years ago. Only Board Chairman Ronald Caspers o! Newport Beach a~ proached the figures. He-reported spend- ing $81 ,695 in 1970, mostly his own money. Candidates of other offices reporting by the deadline Tuesday included William DaMemeyer, who tried to unseat Assemblyman Ken Cory CD-Garden Grove ), $77,646; John Black, Newport Beach Democrat who ran against Republican Andrew J . Hinshaw !or the 39th Congressional seat. $7 ,926; otto Lacayo, $16,0M, and Ted Shipke, $4,893. LacaYo ran against incumbent state Sen. James E. Whetmore and Shtpke o~ posed incumbent Assemblyman John V. Briggs. The bitterness of the Battin-Wenke bat- tle continued Tuesday. In a statement issued by Cella and O'Neill they accused the Wenke camp of a smear campaign. Wmi!>'• c~!llPaign manager Carlqs (!allndo called the statement, "an ex- tension of the big He technique used in ~atUn's campaign so well."· .Pl'eYiomly reported were campaign ex- penses of '64,975 by Hinshaw, and '35,782 by 1ncumbent 34th District Congressman Rlchiril. llamia: Cory spent' $90,473, Brigg!, 114,1116: Assemblyman Robert Badham ( {'. • Newpcrt Beach) $! 5 , 0 0 9 and Asstmblyman Robert Burke (R-H1m- tlngton Beach), $28,044. Pati en t Dies in Fire ONTARIO {AP) -A 22-year-0ld men- tally retarded woman, rescued from a fire in the home where she was a patient, ran beck 1n looking for her caretaktr and was killed Tuesday authorities said. GEfJI TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRIES 11 ' ~ .. ~ ' I· " . I Returu • Home Pulitzer and Nobel prize-win- ning author Pearl Buck has re- turned to her home in Burling- ton, Vt., after an illness that confined her to a hospital !or more than two months. Nixon to Reveal Site of Library 111 Near F uttrre By JOHN VALTERZA 01 rt.1 DlllY P'llll SI•" A long-awaited announ cement by President Nixon on his choice for the site of the Nixon Library - a spot which local sources claim is in San Clemente - is expected to come from• the White House with in a matter of days. And it could possibly be announced during the President's planned winter working vacation in San Clemente which will !tart soon after Christmas, it was learned this week. Highly reliable local sources said the President and Mrs. Nixon plan to stay in San Clemente-beyond the New Year's weekend in their .nrst trip to the South Coast since the Jandsl.ide victory last November. Some local p,.pantlons for tho vttil already are be!Dg made. The library announcement ls being keenly awaited by community leaders who have quietly conceded that all the in- formation points to the selection of a site in the southerly portion of the city. Li.st Independence Day, while Joe.RI citizens celebrated the Fourth at Vista Bahia stadium, President Nixon made two , separate secret trips to a hilltop nearby and walked over an area which appears to be his choice for the library which wW contain aU the memorabilia and documents of his administratioo. ,1 ' .. Only SupervisOr Robert W. Battin was totally opposed. Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers voted against it but it was more of a protest against the other board mem bers refusing to heed his req uest to hold off action {or another week. 01Jring the lengthy discussion, Caspers said he favored "about $25,000." Battin said that remarks made by people in his district caused him to oppo&e the raise. Battin said that during the recent cam- paign in which he won re-election, co• stitutents had told him that they thought the current $17 ,500 salary was adequate.. "They oppose elected officials getting paid more than they earn," he stated. The comparatively quiet session was in sharp contrast to a hearing two yeJ!;rs ago when board member'3 finally in-- creased their pay from $15,000 to $17 ,500. lhlftmove-h.!td-been proceeded_ bl a ck>e- ed door·meeting in which they in!OMii~ - agreed to boost their pay to that Of municipal court judges -at that time $29.000. • : The 1970 move was followed by an· abortive attempt to recall· three boa.rd members. : Tuesday only three persons spoke against the pay raise . Five spoke .. in favor. Opposing "'ere Cliff Jo~raizer of Sa:rU Ana and 'Claire Kelley of Huntington Beach. Fraizer, a regular oppone11t ..o( most board actions conce rning money spending, urged that the issue be put to a vote of the people. Later he suggested that b o a r d members should get raises ~sed on how muuh they-bad cut spending. Mrs. Kelley called the positions "part time" and told the supervisors, "You shoulJ spend less time legisl ating wmr:h only costs the public more." Mrs . Alice Frailer of Huntin~ Beach agrwl and.~ecrlod the coostant'l lncrtascd cost of government and the ae: companying climb in tax rates. ·• ' Suppo~ing the pay raise were Robe~ Green of San Juan Capistrano, Gilbert Ferguson, public relations coun:ielor or Newwrt, Beach; attorney Rod gt: f Howell; Jerry Patterson, Santa Ana tjff councilman and James Stott. Previous to Tuesday's action the Grand Jury had recommended that t-h 1 supervisors pa) be increased to the le~ o! municipal court judges -oow $32,.2'?3, as did the Orange County Chamber. ol Commerce. DEAR PAT: I have been writing iioetry tof Ye'8rl and have been urged by lriends and lamlly to get my work pt:blished. 1\would like to do this, but don't know how to go about it. 1 need some basici nformation and hope you can provide it. A.D .. Newport Beach County Director of Building and Safety Floyd McLellan admitted the urgency was dictated by a planned twin, 14-story towers project in Laguna Hills Leisure World. the building code include fire alarm box-II<:=---"",..,....., ___ ~ es, fire detectors, smoke controls, 'i t. Ask your Ubrariaa for the Writer's ~1arket and Writer's llandbook. Theie book• Ust pablldlen' names, addresses, rates and lwforoation for ubmlttlng material. Cash R efMNded DEAR PAT : 1 ordered a dres,, from the l\1ay Company in Los Angelea during October. When a dress s=-sizes too mutll arrived. 1 malled It back the iame day and asked for a rerund since I'd paid for It by COD. I haven't received my refund or any kind of conunuhicaUon from t6e store, even though l wrote to the manager. I know lhe package arrived because it was Insured. L.B., Cotta Meu He reminded supervisors of the tragic fire recenUy ih Atlanta which took several lives in a senior citizens multi· storied structure. The amendments affecting high rise construction call for a mandatory com- mucicatioos $fSlem so that firemen can talk to persons in the upper stories of skyscrapers to htlp avoid panic. Offered as options w e r e com· partmented construdlon so that if fire breaks out in 'one Rction of the floor oc- cupants can move 'to another area which would ·.e sealed off with fire retardant walls. If this Is not done, the skyscraper would be required to have an automatic standby power and light sources and cen- tral controls. McLellan admitted the p r' o p o s e d features would be costly but reminded supervisors that they were talking about saving lives. The building chief told his listenen; that the new nstrictions would apply on- ly to unincorporated areas. ''But I hope some of the cities which have con- siderably more high rise than we do wiH adopt s!milar regulations," be added. McLeUan .ti'&S backed by County Fin! Warden Car! Dowrui and Fire Marshan Wally Trotter. Trotter said the county•; fire fighting forces were "at the crossroad8. lt takes four to six times as many firemen to fight a high rise blaze." Even though you ln1ure a p1cka1e, that doesn1pean H eu't set l0tt bt the mall. llowev~, your ptckage was ncelv- ed and · the refand 11 belna malled. Tbe most efflclent way tG balllle clelayed rtflUMls from arta itores 18 to laqatre by &elepbone wllb tbt store's CW1tomer -deparUll<llL W1ltG -.llllldll< ft rttvrned by man to tbe Loi Aqelet May Co<npaay, Ille buyer 111 t1le depart• meat wllere &lie ,.,Out wu made mid ocbowledc• lit rteelp( ~ PY credit .._Mt or caU. nfud .~ ll 1e9t e.· de eccsullae ..e:,..rtmttt. Buytn • e e I I I • I • 11 )' otedooll: tttl:J'Md m e r e ~ • • d I s e achewtedcemeota, u 1a --. Nixon Gallery Pilot Plioto Displ.ay at Airport A !clectloa 'If pho!Qgrapbs of President Nixon, at wort and at play, r1 e.n Orange Coast rt1ldent and "tourlttn -all shot by DAILY PllDI' ~apben -ore on dilplay today at Ormge County .,_ ·-~....... . Tbe prtaldentlal p!cturf 1allery is located at tbe i10rtb eqd of tbe terminal bulldlJ!i In 'kplay cuts pormanenUy Lansky Released :1i!~~b~ N .. pon.Mesa unmed , Rare camera a:Umpsea of the President • MIAMI BEACll (UEI) -R<puted Include photographs or Nixon In 90ft·Oll· gangland figure Meyer Lanlky w~s ed shoes and 11>9ttl ou.tflt wavlng Crom ...iea.ed Tueoday from Mt. Sinai Hoopllal , · the deck of. a Nowport lkach yachl, a where he wH undergoln( treatment for a "family •lbum" type photograph of Mr. h<-:t ailment. LwllY facet tu, con· and Mrs .. Nixon pooinlf ln Iron! of La !(lfiaCI' JD<1 contempt cbars<I lo Miami. C Paclllca (tho Waotero ll'hlto HOUIC) Utr Vegas and NeW· Yotk lnvOtvlng his al tlle limo 11 'woa 'purchose<l tn the alleged underworld activities. spring of t96t and a recent l\tllC()ptfl:nldc: chat with Henry Kissinger on one of Kissinger's frtquent visits to San Clemente. • Tbe diaplay wUl remau• at lhe airport lhrougb tbe bcliday period and tben wm beco~ a "traveling $bow." making ap- pearances In public places throughout the Orange Coast are1. • Staff photogr3pbers tee P a y n e , Richard Koehld and Patrick O'Donnell made the photographs in the display, al<»lfl-Wlth John Valterza, the DAlLY l'"MT re·porter ln San Clemente . Another group of photographs of the President, slmlla: lo the airport group, Is on d!Splay In the Cln,,llle<l AdverUsinlf DeP&rtment of tho DAILY "1'1LOT'I Costa Mesa .Wet, 330 IV. Bay SL , Cosln Mesa. • A PUBLIC DIAMOND MINE ,. The largest dia mond ever dis- covered in the United States is the 4-0.23 carat "Uncle Sam," dug up ~ in 1924 in America's only diamond- bearing area, the S&-Called Crater o1 Diamonds, near Murfreesboro, Arkansas. Commercial development o( Lhis unique area -was attempted by ~ such tycoo'ns a s Glenn L. Martin, .1 Henry Ford an d the Rockefellers. h{artin made the last attempt. sinking $700,000 into a venture t! whic produced only $965 worth o! ~ diamonds in a year o( operation. Last March 14th the State o! Arkansas bought the area, opened it to the publlc, charging diamond hunters $2.00 a day and offering free appraisals. Although one lucky dlgger. In 1964, found the blue "Star of Mui' ,, " freejlboro, a 34.25 carat diamond of '' excellent quality, most of the stones fou nd in the a.rea are small and low grade. So U you're looking for a lplly beautiful diamond, you'll be far better oU to let yc.ur local inde- Jl<lndent Jeweler find exacily what you want. Ch ri stmas gifts that endure OMEGA BRACELET WATCHES Synonymous wirh lvnJrV o.nd qVolity. And ' if your proc~col side Mads 1Wificot1on,, considGr choosing art Omega. She'll have a watch for a l1fe1imo of proud posses.sion. J.(~ o) lll:: ,.!low OI' 'Whll• gold bort d1ils• brot.i1t "'°1cll. Cllt d<QL , $325,, hi l•K .,.now gold. 32 d;Ofl'IOnd1 °" beael. S1l0. c) l•K ~ell°"' gold '°""" n.iaw .-hopo1d ca1 .. M .. ti broeel1r. --.$354. • I Ill NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TEIMS 11 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION ••rt•A,..rlc•rd -M••t•r-G•tt• PHONl 141-1 401 ~ i ., I -4:.A:ilWWW r • --.;.----..:i f; • D~LY PllD! •. ,:Smile, You're r ~~ 10n the Coast • • · MILES OF SrttlLES DEPT. -Back in lthe DepressiQn Years along this best ol !an possible coasts. lhe hardy folks who 1 v.·ere year-around residents had problems ~wllh tbe economy. The pattern seemed to :bf the same every year. : First, you had spring and the school ~'·acation boom that brought students and ;dollars streaming lo the Orange Coast. :Then sumrner set in, and the beach boom '.was really on. Then Labor Day came and • :abru ptly, the bottom dropped out of our •tourist-0riented economy. : By Yuletide, things looked pretty bleak !along our coastline. : One of the outfits particularly vexed by lht ups and doons of our doUar flow was a loosely kn it booster organization kn0\\11 ~s the Orange County Corut Associat ion. ~t v.·as corrlposed of representatives from ;all our cities from Seal Beach doY.11coast ,o San Clemente. SO DURING ONE of those bleak 0Yuletides. the Coast Association shak ers end mov~rs decided they should come up :"·ith some promotion to bring a bit of Long Green flowing back to the coastline during the long, cold "'inter. The late \\'illiam ll ·'Bi ll" GaJlienne of l luntington Beac h. also known as "El Generalissimo." was generall y credited v"ith 1he original brainstor m. •·\Vhy don't \\'C light up the entire coastline fo r Christmas and have a com- petition bet\\·een all the cities and tO\rns." be asked. "We could call it "For· ty Miles-of Christmas Smiles." GENERALJSS[l\10 REASON ED that not only \\•oold this make the Yuletide pretty for !he home folks but it "'Ollld attract many visitors from the inland flatlands 1\'ho \vould drive down to vie\V the Christmas finery. i Yi'hile here along the coast. they might ~lso purchase a bowl of bean soup. a cou- ple of gallons of Gilmore Red Lion ,:asoline and maybe even shop for a few gifts. -lnd~. Gallienne had struck upon the perfect double-edged sword to serve the economy and beauty of the coastline all at the same time. Coastal leaders bent to the task with enthusiasm . THERE WERE P.lA NY others from our other town.s wbo helped make the Forty Miles of Chri11tmas Smiles. There were people Like Joe Beek and Harry \Velch in Newport Beach, Harold Reed in Laguna, and my ov;n grandfather, I'm proud to say, dowrl San Clemente way. Gallienne's notion was for each city to hindle its own Yule lighting show but to tie it all toeether mto a coast·wide pro- motion. He suceeeded "·ith his usual pro- motional fia ir. Right from the start. competition was hot between cities. Newport Harbor came up .,.,.ith a boat no1illa knO\\'ll as "The Festival 0£ Lights" which is today !he Christmas Boat Parade. Laguna li t the hills and San Clemente was ablaze in Spanish Village type Yule lights. GALLJENNE, NOT to be outdone in llll.O!ing!oo Beach, came up with "The \\'or\d's Largest Christ mas Tree'' which .... as actually hundreds of trees on an oil derrick. Santa's sleigh and reindeer bot>- bed up and down on the o\I pumps. Just a few years back, the Forty Miles raded a bit when folks felt we no longer needed such a promotion for economi c pu rposes. But \\'e missed thole miles of smiles ourselves. So today, the com- pel it ion is back stronaer than ever under the Association with some aid from our newspaper. So the contest will determine which ci· tv will "·in as "Chrlstmasville, 1972. '' II \~•as Laguna in 1970 and San Clemente in '7 l. ANO ONCE AGAIJli , Christmas is celebrated in a blare of light along this. 1he best of all possible roa sts. • Cl t ...... l'fle .. \'i.Uf'I -• l' o lcano l' ent? • Orange (;olor · S~irs Experts· . ' SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP! - Discovery or orange-colored aoil on the lunar surface by Apollo 17 astronauts 'I\iesday night created great excitement on the earth as well as on the moon. HanUon }I. ~"'Jack" S(hmtU and ~ne Ceman were ecstatic In their ex· clamatlons wheii they sighted the colorful material near a crater called Shorty. And at the Manned Spacecraft Center, a· leadin& acientist called it "one of the most impo!Unt flnc!S" ol the Apollo missions. Schmitt, a geologist, iirunediately saw !he orange c.rea as 1ignifying a possij)le volcanic vent, or fumarole. ~ . • ASTRONAUT EUGENE CERNAN STANDS ON TOP OF RUST COVERED CRATER Discovery Has Touched Off lftdllc•tfont of Poulble Vole41nlc Vent DR. ROBIN BRETT, chief geocbemist ;1t the center who discussed the find with newsmen , said from the initial evidence the orange material might have resulted from the moon's "last gaseous gasp of volcanism," or volcanic activity. The reason for the excitement is tha t if the phenomenon did result from a fuma role it would be the first one found on the moon and would give scientists clues in their search for missing knowledge of the moon's-evoluticm. Timetable 'Fantastic, Sports Fans' Brett and other scientists who briefed newsmen during the astronauts' second excursion on the surface of tbe moon were cautious about their lnterpretaUons, but clearly saw a fumarole as a ttistlnct possibility. For Toda1 W hat Astronauts Said Wlie1i Tliey First Saw Orange SPACE CENTER. Houston (Ul>I) - Today's timetable of Apollo 17 (all times PST and subject to change ). SPACE CE'.\'TER . Houston (AP \ - Here is a brief text of the conversation s of Apollo 17 astronauts Eu gene Ceman and Jack Schmitt as they discovered orange soil on the moon Tuesday. Schmit t and scientists on the ground speculated that the fi nd "''as a fumarole or volcanic vent, indicating the last stages of volcanism. Cernan: Oh. Hey. Schmitt : Wait a minute. What ? Cernan : There is orange soil. ' it. Schmitt: Well, don 't mo\·e it until I see Ceman : It's all over. Orange. Schmitt: Don't move it till I see it. Cernan: I've stirred it up with my feel. Schmitt: Hey , it is! 1 ·can see it trom here. It's orange: Wait a 'IJlinute, let me put my visor up:lt's stlU orane;e . Ceman: Sure it Is, crazy. Schmitt: I've got to dig .a treqch. Houston . ' .• Hey, he's "not -going out of his wits, it really is. "lL's abOut 102 fCamera frame number). Alµlqs t the * * * * * * Cernan Speeds at 7 MPH; Sl1akes Up His Partner SPACE CENTER. Houston IUPI) - Busier than a pit crew at a speedway. the Apollo 17 astronauts patched up the ir busted buggy with pa per and tape and · too k off on a zig-zag ride trailing roosllt tails of black moon dust. Spinning out in the: hi ghbanked lunar turns. a lead-footed Gene Cernan hit speeds up t.o 7 mil.es an hour Tuesday, sometimes Scaring the pants off his backseat driver, Jack Schmitt. "Watch outr" Schmitt yelled at one po int as they barreled toward Naneen Crater. "You got a bole in front of you." But Ccrnan. a !orme.r Navy figh te r pilot. drove ,with the coot confidence or a Richard Petty. "l think I come up here to a hard left turn.'' he wamed Schmitt. "You un- buckle your belt and you'll roll down to Naneen.'.' It was a ride the astronauts "''ere not sure they were going to take. The day before, Schmitt had accidentally bumped the rover and a fender fell off. But like shade tree mechanics on ;1 · Sunday when the stores are closed , they DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE OrliYtry of t~~ Daily Pilot 1~ ~u~ra11trt'd MoM••·'•.011: U ••o •1 ,,.t ~ ... ''"' '""' or S:H ''"'" <•II IM '~"' CfOY ••U M .......... , II ylV, Cllll ••t ll'tfl ""''' l :H ''"'· !<lhll'lar -n4 S-1y: II y.., .. ""! •1e•:•1 your <t lY ty t "·"'· Sllw•'••· ., ' ...... S.."t1r, <I ll •~t I tll"f. •In 1-e l•IY9M If llY. (111• lrt IMfll tlfthl 1' l .m. T tlrphont~ MDII Or•"Ot County -.re.a1 •4l-4J11 NClflJ!Wftl Hu"ll"91D" 8 .. tll ar.o Wes1..,ln1!t r • 540·1 2ZO San Clemwue. CaP-1•1r1n11 Bt1t n. Se" Ju1n C1Plt lr1n11, 01n1 Point, Sol.II~ LIOWll, Li-gU"I Nlg"'"I 49Z.44!0 fixed It as best they could. Getting some advice from 'back on Earth. they tore unneeded plastic-coated maps from their filgllt plan and fashion· ed a makeshift fender, held together with a couple of clamps they borrowed from a telescope. Fire Breaks O.ut On Ra1iger; Navy • To Make Probe • SAIGON (AP ) -Fire broke'A>Ut in .the machinery room of the U.S. carrier Ranger today fOW' days after it arrived off the Vietnamese ~ the U.S. Com- mand annom1ced. It said 'the ship's fire Crew quickly brought the blaze WldcW cootrol and ii was continuing rugbt oPentiOOa. off the Sout h Vietnamese coast. Eight crewmen were treated for smoke inhalation but later retumed to dUty. No " other casualties were reported. A Navy spokesman reported tbe fi re ....·as under investigatkll, but tpere wu "no indication the Ore was caused by any malicious act." 1 Pumps and. electric wiring were burn- ed. but the full exttnt ol the damage was not immediately a s s e s s e d , the spokesman added. The 78,000-ton attack carrier has been pla gued by sabotage, and its departure for Vietnam was delayed for three months while dry dock repairs were being made in the UrUted States. About two dozen incidents .of sabotage occurred aboard the ship, and one seaman was charged with disabling the gears of an engine. same color as the decal on my camera. Ceman : That is orange, Jack. Schmitt : Zap me wiUt a little cold waler. Ceman: Okay. I think I gave you 102 or something like that. lclun.l tt: Fantastic. spOrts fans. It's trench time. Ceman: You can see this in your color television, I'U be tcha . Schmitt : That is really orange. It's been oxidized. Go around and get the lunar la nder over here. It looks just like an oxidized desert soil. That's exactly right. Wefl, I'm gonna clean your glasses. Can you wait a 1lli.nute on that pan you had? You know, that orange is along a line, Geno, a.Jong the rim creast. Man, i£ there e.\'er was -I'm not gonna say it -but if ¥,e ever was something that looked like:a fumarole alteration - man, this ls it. Let me give you a . . . What's wrong with the TV, aren't you watching? Miss.i.90 Control: We 're having ti lt problems with the TV. Schm itt:· Well staOO·by . Schmitt: Okay Bob, I see a trend qf the yellow -and orange -there is ~ight grey material on either side. Oh man. that's incredible." CONFIRMATION &tuST await retUrn of materials collected at the site to earth so they C"1 be studied in Jaboratories. Brett noted that the presence of a fumarole In the Shorty area was predicted as a "low probability" even before the mission, based on photographs of the area taken on earlier missions. This was one reason for the visit to the area. While Schmitt might have been able to confirm his original impression if be bad longer to study the site, lfttt said it WI..! unlikely that pl'"" would be changed for the third moonwalk today. But be alto gave a "low probability" that a fwnarole is present around the Victory Crater in the area to be~lored_ in the third and final moonwalk Ol._,_tbe mission. •;' It was Ceman who saw the orange first. He excitedly summoned Schmitt, the first professional scientist on an American space flight. "Afan if there ever was -I'm not going to say it -but if there ever was something that .. Jooked like a fumarole alteration -man , this is it ," Schmitt said. 2:33 p.m. -Gene Ceman and Jack Schmitt begin third mooouwalk. 2:53 p.m. -Ceman star!! moon ·buai" 2:58 p.m. -Telecast of moonwalk starts. - 3: 09 p.m.-ceman and SChmitt drive to the site of an _ iµ:periment which m e a s u r e s electromagnetic charac- teristics. 3:18 p.m. -They drive 2¥• miles to tht base of North Massif, a m6untaln N1nJ a mile above the Taurus-Lltlrow Valley. 3:45 p.m. -Arrive at the base of North Massif and begin taking pictures, making geological observatioll& and tak- ing soil samples. 4:32 p.m. -Leave Nortb Musil for another nearby rock collecting site 492 feet to the east. 5:30 p.m. -DriVe one-quarter mile soutbeut to the base o! SCulptured Hllls for more pictures and samples. 6:30 p.m. -Drive sligbily more than a quarter mile to a sharp rimmed crater covered by a dark mantle. 7:16 p.IJI. -Travel about 300 yanb to a block field northeast of Sherlock Crater. -- - 8:11 p.m. -Dri ve back to Challenger. THE WORDl'S ·omd• WHISDY PRISENI. THE WORLD'S OLDEST MAIL DO I REMEMBER THE FIRST SANTA CLAUS ? READY FOR A SHOCK? HE HAD A SLED PULLED BY SIX DINOSAURS. AND ONE OF THEM WAS ~MED MARVIN. HE WORE G LASSES j THE FIRST GIFT ? A MAMMOTH TUSK IN THE SHAPE OF WHAT MUCH LATER TURNED OUT TO BE A DESOTO! I GOT IT FROM A NEANDERTHAL NAMED QUINCY! • THE FIRST HOLIDAY GOOD CHEER? "A:IUHG 8USMMll.LS. A GREAT WHISKEY J I STILL CAL L IT VOUHCI BUSMMll.~S. AFTER A LL, IT'S ONL~ 364-YEARS bLD ! Ice Storm Travels East Freezi1ig Rains Glaze Southern Ne ·w England M~HOMAl WIA1Mll $f 1VIC I fOtlCA~I •• 7AM !$1 U -I~· 11 • I I ' . ' I I l • \ I ! -.. WtdfteldlJ, -"" 13, 1972 DAILY ~!LOT S 'lmpertl•I Groap' EH berg'~jury , She Won Suit But Lost Life SD Family Arrested, . 'k ) ~ 4NCEU:S CAP ) -11C111f11 ~l!j.1111 Iller ttrV· s.ntllgo at Lompoc wtieo' !1lrtie ei,a;._.., .,.,,,... o1 loc' 5* llJIPllll!i.d a poe.year grand jury boi•n Ill ' • a~ 11111 Diet!• famil)> ~ Oil a aJmiW con-veotigaUon Jut ~ .......i of kiblog federal Ylclloil. · The indlctmwu aDece • P"-orpctaJs for In aod tbO two btotban bad BE:RKELEY (AP) -A othtr favon fqr two family NAJO:ll 1'J'ftl; SanUago and relations wllll 'wo- woman wbo woo !500,000 In a lllllDbm held In priJao ...re MorPa aa ft<lplentt of paam wtil_llil ·llJO· ~'Lost E e~oms'. I • • • . . LOS ANGELES CUPll -poal]IOnld poGdln( • bearing suit against the phyaician-Id ~r to autbor!U.. In Ale9afO fa-. _. prison of-prison on JllM' 21, lJ7l, Tho PeolalOll Papers jury, 'l'hunjloy oo a def• n s • mayor of Piedmont for falling .,.,.,~today. , ~ Cqrtta i.. Phillips and that on aeveral oilier r- cllemll8od Tu-, to mn., challooce of the entire 'Jury to diagnose her"cancer )111· : • '!'¥ r ol said two former !l<!Y ~ Phillips and casriiiis the lntherl were w., !or a new one, com-panel. died of the diaeaae. ' CAlJm prl101r,!l!lcl~ llldlcted lb lhe Godtlallf were not Indicted. allowed to leave the prllon plained ltl treedoml were Defense attorneys contend La Verne Simmons d I e d tnatter also will slll'l'tftder. Howe'"· Goddard wa s and Its aupervilloQ for aimllar l4Ua away durlal the foor· the panel dOeC hot C<llllalll Monday at Alta Bales Hospital • 'Ille federal grand jury hn· ~~~"'11~..,~~+ied~~-~~d~ut~y~w~lth~~ac~u~·v~IU~es.~====4~ I montb .rlce11, when enough J~ to '21-year-dd .:... three days after 10 TuesdayBCCQSedJobnAtesaSo,lf "Herybody elu In ltle wodd voters w1>o are eligible to Alameda County su.,~rlor 12,•hls son Dominic; M, and .--1otalk.-t11ec ... -serve os jurors for the !list "Court Jury ruled:rgalnsl Dr. n_:·_,1; T·':..-r ·brothersAngelo,55,ilndTony. bu\ 111." time. · • · • '~""''' Gilbert Cocbraoe In a It-day· v,t..uui., .iA::e 53, of consp~ing to defraud ~ ,_,. wit NllHell of du-Ellsherg and ·Russo /former la c.ei .._ . trial. the United states while Jolm ,, .... v.~a. ~ Court UIOCiales al the Rand eorp. . • r--L-,,.._Utw But No· t ~~ . ...!:'..geloat wLo ... mpoc .. rvlngand =-~ W1iO tarlltr "think tank," ale charged ftoDilil lleaty, 31; Wll ~-...,...... -·~·~ a111111!1aJ for -with violating sections 9f the el~ GI) the '!1&1 SAN DIECO .(,\P) -Peter Terminal Island fed• r a I Ill'. llllllel Jl!lll!>lrrud Espionage Acl In the al1eged Jlddge Tut!lidl1, & II• Bohmer, center-of a cmtrov-T th prisons In California on con-~lb111io -• ap-. lheR aod pouession of lhe ead ot two monllll-d ersy that cosl him his San oge er vlcUoos ol tax evasioo. peola eabrt' ilpllilaD • thtll. (!. ...... 1 -mnent documeota f·r e e do m allot= Diego state tN<hlng· Job ~~~.:.to ~ Which wse luked to Ille oews Oll'lpecl in ail aD1 • earlier this Y..,., bu. t.;en SACRAMENTO (UPI) SECRET I n d l c Im en Is lo , ~ .. , IUbjectotl medlalnJuly,1'11' that kllled ,a IO'lVll:ledofobslrucllna "'looeansUllaeedlrtysbows returned In San Diego laal to lon(.W.,S: " If Byroe 'nlles against ·the -·-' He ia a me..-allrt>ad lricb In an Bnl!war in California. Yoo can sUll eat week and annoonced Tu<adol' "We were the or'"'"ai j·""•, defense ~-"-e, ae•~•oo of •-•· -= ·~~~...... ' ·•·· ed Domlnl •••elo ·°'' uld l t>erwmta';,'p ~-. =• ., of the l(eoceremot""' --·wm• ""'"" · • ' -aod..irtnL Yoo just can'.t do ~-g c, -.. """ . pane mem • a new jury eo,uld begin next. oltltionary..,111rnup. "\''BOhmer, i23, ~,...'Sari~.· both at once.'' Tony with slmilar offense/: ,Abata, a maintenance worker week. · ' -~---"'~ ----and W~liam MahOne, 38,, of That was califomia At· Counts also were returned at • tire company, wbo said he Chula Vtsta, were f°'!Jld guijty . tome •General E'v e l l e ag_a':Jlst former prison ad-spo~ for fellow Juron. .... 'tf-" by a jury Tuesday ~ter ~AflX YO~"s ·capsule analysis of · m1rustrators Daniel Morgan •' t'J. doil"t ""'nlc tbat·you eould M · . H ld • 3 ,;J s t three days of deliberation. .laal week'• U.S. Supreme and Anthony Santiago, ac-lliv• fodtid"";, belter·group·61 . an e . in tu e • D-•L-p ..... _ .... Court ruling on obacene en-cusing tbem of granting the people or a more impartial ~ ...-.::... ~ Alessio brothers favors. - groop ~people,"~ ,aid. "We . ' 1 • ' . SAN FRAN:::ISCO' (AP) -ie:;:.tnm,e,;!· aj>bold' state's John Alessio Is the fomier ..,..._ 1n llltl ... sbol!l4. n1 Cap;tal Slayi·ngs Anunemployedclr~hai •.• ~<Pty .• l --"·ta n··'" liener•I manager of ~te ~ .... -.. :Iii" onu wbo llPrd.· ~ . " . · been )>oOked for ~tlonllol>ln -:,";~~ ~;;=;· and~ Race Track In Tijuana. Mes· -of mttrder and .--prnblblt "bolloniless" danclng !co, and m 1111 o n a tr• AilATA SAID THAT the jury was ~structed nlany times not to watch televislon, ~ the newst read the newspa_per or talk to anyone about the case. .1 uSo if that's not toking your SACRAMENTO (AIP) - A ahool 11 miles near the hamlet the fatal sboollng of two mea ind ~ "adult"· movies businessman In San Diego. man armed with a lhnlll pistol of Reacue, ahool II ,.u.. at a Mission DI s 1' 1 c ~ y...,ger said Tuet4ay tbai · John Alessio remains In bas been arrtSted In con-from the Sacramento County restaurant~ ball. the A1cobolle Beverage eon. federal prison at McNeil line, said Earnle Carlson, Police said Ibey arrested trol regulations sustained by Island, Wasb., where he is nection with S a c r a m e n t o sheriff of Et Dorado County. Manuel I. Antonio, 21, a~ !1i8 the court dealt · onJy With bars serving a three-year sentence County'S third double slaying The bodies were sent to ~me Tu_esday after-receiving and priVate clubs where for income tax evasion band~ in eight days, S~iH Duane Sacramento for an-autopsy. information volunt~ed by alcohol was sold_ fur con-down in 1971 . THE COLLECTION COLOR. DIAMOND The boy. the girl, the diafn9nd. As lirnple as that? Not quite. I<>< diemondl.,. • different .. the special people who buy them and W9ll' them. You're invited to . select from • very special collection of ·. -~1tlrieed6ms away, I don1.know what is," he said. "Everybc!dy else in the world was able to ti.It about1be case but us." J.owe says. Discovery of the bodies mem~ of the Filipmo com-sumption op the premises. HiJ brother Angelo was Lowe-said-'\"'<sday-Eddy-followed--lbec.flndi!lg_Qf two__31Wllly. l~~:ii::ii;;'iii;ii~i;iii~ii;;i;-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;i;.,iiiii-;ill Lee Earle, 22, was a,rresled in sets of men's clo\!!lng, blood-e Clotlles l'O.IMI MINNEY'S ~ a hotel room for lnvesUlatlon sta-and pierced With bolt!I, · . " ·. . of murdef after the dlscovety in the trash Can of a car waall Y 0 SEMITE NATIONAL "'LERY oflhenudebodiesoftwomeo in north Sacramento. PARK CAP) -Clolh_lng SHIP CH/.Nu diamonds~ the finest color,. We call them "Collection Colar" diamonds. We ha111 them in many shapet. liml. 8nd prlcoo. one of which wHI meet your budgot. You mav " Selectlon of a ne,w jury wU indlvfdullly select your.moantfog and Vo11f ll'8Clll iri lballow graves in nearby El tQwe ~told reporters at a recovered after a woman.·l'was Dorado County. 'llOWI' .-renc. it a~ swept over Upper Ytltemlte * ' Collection Color diamond; or"'-from ·'' I'{',EASED I THE H.VRT s..t.ta -Ships WllHll An lnvesUlaUon .., under ' the' vkt1mJ were !bot to dealll Falla In an appateol double way to· determine If Earle. ind In-the-car 'wash Sunilly n"'n ~'II d8ys ago"lrt1'1tn-. the vlcUms were Involved In a and transported -to EJ Dorado • tal(vely identified Tuddar as . . 11-'cat looks -Slllps Lamps drug smuggling operation C.ounty for burlal. ' that of a Olico area woman. be;tween Mexico, and A park spokesman aid the California, Lowe added. EARLE WAS armed wltb a clothing was believed to haye , RNE SHIP MODELS l!i!• '"""' -Ship Clocks • • --He said the victima were tmm automatic pistol when beJooged to Lor:ralne !llttOn, tentatively identified as Mex-arTested , Lowe said. He also 20, Forest Ranch. It was ~n- ican nationals.' · was in possession of "a tified by her father. The body Lar .. S~Ktlon of Nautical substance" that was being ha~ not been recovered but a O.Cctrator Ihm• & GI~ ifrs office information which Capt. Jerry Saulter of the reoonstrµd. the woman's &ize, ~~·°'liN~llYR--~ 'l:MltU SAT. -""· 11 A l'iPSfER gave the sher-check~ as a possible narcotic. patbok>gi.st was able t o ~ led to unearthing of the Sacramento County s11erur, weight.and coloring through a ~-.. --.. ~~· ' • MlllMET'S SHIP 'CHANDUIY styles we have 'creoted ••• fO< tlOlll8009 you ~­ Do Something Beautlful._ CM .... Ac~lt klVltMI -.U.rkM .. ,, .. a1,..inerlclnl 1111111 M.11ler Clla,.... .... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-lllO CllrlHMH' "-" -°""' MllMay ... ~ • ··"" .. ,,. ,. ... SAcilAMENTO , (UPI) -State ,legislaUV:e can- , i!idale Will Slocum of the Peaee•aoo Freedom Party loday reported spending only 131.IO of his total $4U4. Oli his spendllJg report, Slocum w r o t e , .. Surplus med for a few lrlendly jugs of mmcatel." Be lost his ..... .. bodies Sunday nigh~ Lowe . office said In 1 separate case portion of a 'leg found at the 2537 Wiit C:-_ HI ... ., said. The vlctlms bad been Monday lllgbl,-narcotlao "'"'1-~bl~se~~of~the=-~1~·~4~1~t.:_· f~o~o~l~!!!!!~54;;';-4;1~9~2~~!!!!!~1-:;•;":-'~.,.;;-;;..,..~•;;• ;'";;' ~~~ deacl onlj a short time. • found ln m aportmenl In waterrm; ' ·· · ._ . The two bodies wert side by wbtcb Earlt'<WU listed as OC- AIM: SM Diego Mii LM ......... Wltll loutleftt ot: TlllT..-.ce, Or•nee. U Cl'n'\1'111, U "9bre. side In !Mncl><leep graves cupanl. · I ,. . , ~I .. " ., :I. -,) .. f~~nJ.Y.e8 .·~~~ts ~~.~~; i .. \ ! ~i.,.. •1• l "' ,-··' ' ~Q\AMBm{) • ..(AP.).. ... ..,. bOui:s 'eerlier. --.. .. l '''"" .... ~ ~ .. ~ 1 .... , . ~ Hrs apokesmM ail Burkii:!ril Jobsk:l, S3, walked out or the ·burning buildlt)c and sur- rendered. He g·a J if ·a Sacramento hotel as hii: home address, the apokesmao uld. -Two· men have been arrested \ Officers begatt-firing tem:,. in ·a burning apartment building for investlg8tJon of bank robbery alter police fired a tear gas balTage. • Whllo llwldreds ol spec- tators gathered nearby, about llO Sacnmeoto police ollicers and lhertff's deputies SU{- .roooded a 1-..toey apart- . ment bulliling near t h e downtown area. 'Ibe officen gathered Tuesday alter a car .... apotted that answered ~ del<riptlon ol "" ... used by bandits wilt help up the Placet Nallaoal Bank In oearby Cilnll Ri!lghls ahoot two gas c!fii§.tW ..,.._lfil_Q a secoM: floor apartmen~ after orderina: two men hiside to surTender. Everyone else was Ol;dered to evacqate. , Smoke and names started pouring out of the building shortly af\er the tear gas volley began, witnesses said, and spre~ tp @ 1l4ja<:e11t thre e-s to ry apartment building. POUCE HAD to move squad cars out of their·way to let 1firemen 8'1 to tl}J blaies, witnesses 1$id. A man identified by a sher· '°" nttij'Mst!U. IAL•r. Mo., "'°°'-'Ctor U.SA.. eo "'°°'·'.UQU[\Jlt; ~ I-• • . r ' , ' A second man, was nocued from, the film'!!'· by pqlJco wbo used a ladder lo CairY him to salsy after he collapoed al a ~ .. r ... . Ho was xtemined as ~ _ l>ucher; it, wbo could not in> mediately give a home ad- dres!. Slier!U'i spokesmao B 111 Miller said JJucher -w a s treated ' at a holpltal for smoke lnhalaUon and burns. 'nle fire 's ca_µse waa wtknown. • .. • " .. • ;. ·, T • i • . , ' . ·""" ' ...... rl• ' . ' . . ' l\~'i OW" OW M~ $qV\d ot" 04k wood oolov- . atl -si%e~ The. Topsider" Ell<.. \ ·' • I • • . ii\e. sportshoe -ro~ -1-emi-~ or sh-e~+ 11Jta.V' atl siz.es I 44 fashion ISiand, newport center 844-5070 • . ' . ' . - • • ' . • -. • " ·' ,., l ... " ... " ... ' • • I., ·~~-·"============================,==================================::;::======== I ' t .. , I ' DAD.Y PU..OT EDITORIAL PAGE .Facts and Fantasie s , • • The question of all-year schooling seldom draws uru· versal praise -or universal disapproval. With the iss ue under discussion 1n \Vest Orange County, some of the arguments seem to have gotteo out of band and it's tin1e more perspective was placed on the matter. Foes of all-year proposals in the Ocean View, Hun· .. ~lington Beach Union High and Fountain Valley school districts have charged, for example, that all-year schools are "an attack on the American family," "undemocratic," and more like an "all-year vacation.'' Such claims are baseless. There are two basic reasons for all-year schools: -It saves money through a better use of school fa· cil\lles. . -Educational benefits for students are posSible. The financial angle is best applied to the high school district \\'here implementation of an ~I-rear ~ys­ tem could save the construction of a $15 m1ll1on high school campus. The educational benefits might \Veil accrue to all youngsters. though most significanUy for elementary age stu'dents. Educators generally agree that at least the younger students suffer a "learning loss" over the long summer vacation; that is, part of the new school year is \\'asted in review. The proposed elementary sys t e ms wo~d have youngsters attending class in 45-day quarters, with three-- "'eek vacations bet\veen each quarter. Opponents ~ve the impression this means . more vacation. less school. It doesn't. The stale requires a minimun1 of 175 days in school for each student. That doesn't change. Th e high school proposal. called the riuinmester 5)'Slem, simply divides the year into five quartel'ses· stona. The students determine which quarter se&Slon they want to use for a vacation. Students who want to finish school a year early can lake all five quarwta. Those wbo want to work, c111 try to pick a vacation quarter when the job market will be be>1. There are now 18 districts in California experiment· ing with all-year systems. The Hayward District in the San Francisco Bay area has featured all-year schools since 1968, and reports significant "learning increa9es" in elementary students, especially the previously "slow" learners. Other ·c11 .. tri.cta report favorable parental and student response to their programs. The move lo all·)'<!ar systems is worthwhile -U certain guidelines are followed. The experimental pro- grams in selected schools must be totally Voluntary, with stuaenls allowed to attend a traditional system U they or their parents so desire. All parents at a given school must be allowed to vote on an all-year system and a·solid majority (at least two--thirds) must approve it. A restudy of each experimental program should be conducted annually to determine its success. The only real opposition to all-year schools comes from its break from the traditional summer vacation. This does affect parents, and they have a right to be concerned, but the effect. U a program Is voluntary and well-structured, should be minimal. The potential benefit to students is subolantlal. If opponents and proponents can tone do\lm the emotional battle, sit down and reasonably discuss their dUferences, perhaps those who oppose all-year schools can be satll- lied. If the schools slow down their pace, maybe op. ponents won't feel it is such a threat. ' ~~·~ ' H • Study Shows Some Tricks Of Me mory Dear Gloomy Gus Bow Bouton f'•rf?• Widaout a Zofting <:ode ' ' ' ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Speaking of he "work of tbe im- agination ," as I was recently reminded me of a psychological experiment co~ ducted some years ago by Leonard Carmichael and two of bis colleagues. They showed a group of students a list of 12 line drawings. 'vhlch the students were asked to reproduce from memory. 1be figures 1\1 e r e shOWTI one :.it a time . privately, to t! a c h subject. Before each sho"·ing. the experi- menter would sa y: "The following fig- ure. resembles .... , But whlle all the subj«ts 5a\\' the same figures, half were given one set of verbal labels, and half another set. The fit!!. drawing was labeled a "bethive" for some. and a·"hat" for others: the se- cond v:as called an "hour glass" for some, and a "table" for otben. Obviously. the purpose in doing this - 1vith ambiguous dra1vings that coul~ be interpreted either way -was tq direct by suggestion the subjett's reproduction of eac h figure . The result was startling: in 87 percent or the cases. it was found that the draw- ing:.. y,·ere 1hartfly distorted in the direc- lion of the particular verbal label which had been provided. \Vhat the subjects im· agir.ed wu their ··recall" turned .out to be based on what they were told the figures "resembled." rather than on "'hal they actuall y saw. IN C0!'.1MENTING on this experiment. in his interesting lxlok. "Memory: Facts a1.i Fallacies ... Dr. Ian ll-1. L. Hunter, the Could the Code of Ethics being written for the City CoWtcilmen include a code that will control their mouths? For too long they have been allowed to talk to the citizenry any \\'ay they choose - yelling, swearing, and belittling. Enough is enough. F. E. D. Tllb IHIW't ~laeh f'Qfrfrl' ¥'hlN. .t ftM-•llY .... .. .. -•11r. SN -Mt .....,. fl ~ Gn. DeltJ l'IMt. Bril is h psychologist. 1 points out that ahnost invariably ·•,ve interpret our present experiences in accordance with our own interests, attitudes, hopes and expectations.'' As an example, he goes on, "it has been round that, as compared with people \vho regard Negroes in a favorable or un- prejudiced Hgbt, those with anti-Negro attitudes find.it dillicuJt in distingui!bing one Negro £rom another. They see a Negrp in somewhat the same way as the average person sees a sheep -not as an individual with unique charaeterisUcs, but merely as a member of an un- differentiated class." ON ANOTHER LEVEL, Or. Hunter says. "there is the fact that if we show a blurred and indistinct picture to a hungry man, he is more likely to sec it as · representing food or some object relating to food than is a man who is not hungry." I. is not merely beauty that lies in the eye of the beholder, but much of what ~e call "reality" :·.:elf. OJr imagination , un· der external or internal suggestion, sup- plies the "meaning'' to people ·as well as to pictures or drawings. We fill in the details, based on our acew:nulation of past experien~ and training. The "inscrutable" Chinese, if he lived nell'.t to you as a neighbor, would tum out to be as scrutable as Archie Bunker -and probably just as prejudiced the other way. .Cong ress ional B ene fi ts By GEORG E J . MARDER """*' ,._ 111...,..ti..1 l'jewly elecfed members of Congress may be happy to find out about a cash or carry system for their stationery allowance. (GUEST REPORT J Is Land Bernard B. Siegan is an in!requent man who walks out of step and questions comfortably setUed foregone conclusions. He is a real estate lawyer and a research fellow at lhe University of Chicago who, after taking a loog and teclmically careful look has decided the best thing we could do for our- selves is to j u n k laod-use zooin& Of all lttnds. Most ~ owners suffer from the de- lusion that it's zon- ing which saves from !lumificatlon and savage depreci· ation the dear spot Of .. rth Oil which 1hey make the month1y payments. No so. It's true that some home owners can get more for their property because zoning tafupers with a free real estate market so as to reward some people with higher values by legislative fiat, but that's fhe luck of the draw, not a system for pro- tecting property values. What Siegan djd was IO go to Houston, . Texas; the only large .city in America without a zoning code, and see how the folks there were faring in this horrific condition or non-govermnental regulation. (Siegan's book, Lud U• Wklloat Zon- ing, D.C. Heath and Company, is first on1ng a Waste of Time? . . ( VON HOFFMAN ) • rate, but the . ...,lmlcatltleo ol law and economics-don't mate it an easy .reader.} H0111tonites have twlc9 been 11.... a . ' cliance to ~P••H )llllr pr<! ........ Oii this issue ani.l Ute, deci1Jvely voted zon.. ing down boUI -· THE RESULTS haven't been anything like what city pJIMel'I and olher sorts of shyster visionaries would have you think. Oil refineries and O>lonel Sanders chicken shacks haven't invaded the dty•1· better residenUal neighborhoods . Slegan's evidence shows that Houston is at least as nice or no more hellish a city to live in than any .other. Nor" does the absence or zoning mean that you can use your property to destroy tM value Cl offier people's. The city bas laws requlrtng apartment houses to have oft'-ttreet parklhg, it bas a bulldlni; code, and Olber regulaUons that prevent a property owner from making the ne\gbbotbood uninhabitable. • But it has no zoning. Theoretically, you ·can put up a 50-story ·office· building or sbopping center right in the middle of a leafy community of bungalows, but it doem~ happen, because it makes no ecoaOm.ic a e n s e. Siegan flnds that IODle o t b e r very good things do happen. For e x a zh p 1 e. rent.. in Houston are slgnlficanUy lower than they are in the comparable city of Dallas - where they b4ve a traditional m~ing set· up. THE REASON Is that a ""1ina code artillcally and arbitrarily removes large amounts of land from the market that might be uoed for apartment bulldlnga. The price of the r.emalning land zoned for muill.famUy occupancy' ii forced up and ao, ineluctably,.are the re.dts. In WHOned Houatoo, ~t-booae lalld -.,,z.u than single family·houoe land; tbu1 malt· 1ng lower renls posslbJe wbile preserving tbe home owners' investment. Zoning not only makes a huh out . of residential land use, but a mess out or everything else .. Somet1me1 land 1s aet aside for Industry wblch lodu>try doesn't want. but because of the r.oning everybody ebe Is afraid w buy It. . THE PLANNERS who draw up these r.oning ordinances atmply have oo ac- curate way of knowing who wants to do whit with · land, and, lacking that in- formation, t.OD1ng is a maddening en- cumbrance as well as a· serious in· fringemeol on property rights. Orlcago, for example, bu seven dif- ferent business land-use zones. Areu zoned 11-1, Slegan points out, permtt barber shops but not statkn:ery ·-· bakeries but not hardware stores, clean<rs but not gilt lhope, and "' lortb and so on . Allhough that seems Imbecilic. Chicago Ulllfng Is coosld<red pr<tty pl in the trade. nie only mown rattooal way we have for finding-out how a ptece of land should be u!<d iJ by aeel11g wbo1t pay the most to use .it and ther. Watcblng 14 see what.use he pull It to. IN THE LAST F~W some Jlberata, deapalriag llr'I ' ll)lbur!Jo lb accept blacb, have ~ ftlllllldlli that· zoning acts as a raclllly ez. clusionary device. Siegan argues that an zonintl; is exclusionary, not only of race. but many, many otbef thJnp, lncludlng revenu .. produclog property that maoy jurtsdictioos badly need.' Zoning does, however, confer aome 1 benefits. ft provldlS a lot of cltr plaM<r1 with Jobs, It generates an et¥JltDOQS amount of expensively unnecenary lltigalioo -tbtreby earlcltlng ent!M 11111! pa<ks of lawyers· -and It iJ the largeJt and "'8cliest """""' of grall1Yallabl.-to town, vllloge, city and countr polltlclam . the country over. Wltb these ~. let's ignore Slegan and llgbt to keep tt. Mother Supports All-year School To the Editor : This is concerning t~ change proposed in our school year from a regular nine- montb attendance to a full year, ex· eluding August and ooe week in Sep- tember. The scbedule would be nine "'eeks attendance -three weeks vaca· tion, barring adjustments for holida ys. The children would be attending the s~me number of days. AS A MOTHER of four children, two in upper grades and two at Harper in Costa ,\tesa. I overwhelmingly support tllis program because of tbe definite ad- vantages lo my children, aa follows: There would be no long rov1... ofter returning to IChool because ol leorning loss over the ~'-month vacation. TbiJ '""·ould be a dlstinct advantage for both · the ehlld who doe!n't retaln well, and tho one who does. , [ MAILBOX J Letters from reetdns orl!l welcome. Nomu:Jll11 writtT• should conveu thtir messages in 300 word.I or le.ti. The right to condtme lttlln to fjl ,pace or eltmtn.qu JibeJ fl resn11ed. AU letter a • mu.sl inclMdt tignature and mailing addreu, ht names mau ~ withheld on reque1t •t 1ufficil14t reoscm U apparent. P0tt11/ unii not bt puoluh•d. . b:elnl very realiltic, ft will mean an ad- jultmlal -especlailJ for 0-bavltlfl cbUdrln 1n two or more levels. · Thll 11 not all bad, bowever t aa we can •I teut gtve more ol .....,,., to the cbiJdren wbo are out ol ocbool al dlffer. ent limes. positive manner. Let's not think of wby ed by what the JDljority of partDtl want y,·e cannot -let's concentrate on why we · 1n any of the attendance aftas:. : can. A positive thinker ~wins. _. 1 AM PERSONALLY neither for nor • MRS. CHAS. POMO aa-t all·year IChool programs. I would ' ' like the opporlunlty ol bearing all die D-t -4 Falr pros and c:oos. Uke most .,.,..1s, 1 - questions. I think it is very dectnt and also very correct and fair that ow SChool board wants to provide the oPlf>rlunlly fer all parents to receive lnfonnation, to ask questions and to expre" opinions. To the FAiior: I om wrttlq In ,_ise 14 a state- ment mad• by Mr. Jooeph Mastropaolo, as reported in uie DAILY PD..01' on Dec. 8, covering a meeting of thole opposing all-Y.ear ~I programs. At thia meetlq, lite article nports, Mr. Maslroi>d>' Nld, "I tlllnt we need to elect deceot people to Ute ICbool board, peopl~ who will n.... tp' tbo P8""" wben they express tbelr concem1 u lltl'oDlly 8111" have oun." I believe thli 1entleawi II .. 1err1ng 14 ljle·meeting of the ocean Vie• ICbool !»trd on Monday, Dec. 4, where .,.,..bl uprease<! t1UCh concerns. ' moeE WHO ""ftOW op~ all-year schools -.ve every rlgbt to feel as they do and e..., rtghl to spress their con· cems. l betleve thlt and would never take exception 14 tt. I do take exception w the lmpllcatltin that 'I'" board members are not decent people; when t1'aOIC members are only extending io- qulry so that as many parents and teachers as possible rn1y be given the -14 "'P-tbemHlnl allo. 1 feel that our school board deserves our commendation for their fairnes.\ and The allowance for House memben was upped from $3.500 lo $4:,250 a year just helore the last session of Congress ad· journed. But the amount is not as in· terestlng as lhe way the money Is hand!· ed.• gf'A.RTtNG with the fi rst day ol the session Jan. 3. the $4.,250 allowance will be credited to each congressman at the House stationery store -a 5boP, just like an)' other except that the priCes' are low- er Md oply congressmen and their staffs can buy. ADd there are no sales taxes. A iew years ago. one congressman had the stationery store buy automobile tires for him irom llis stationery allowance, saying he needed them to get around to his constituents. That isn't done any more, but there is nolhlng to stop a congresmnan from drawing the cash to buy ·urcs at regular c o m m e r c i a I establiahments under the carry-cash pro- vision. According to documented fact.I from a practicing school in Hayward, CIUf. school marks are up, reading ls up and by the time children reach ln tennedllte leve ls they are an average of one and one-half years ahead . OUR VACATIONS might sulfei-a little . U 'I'll have cbildron a<>ln& 14 dlHerenl- scilooll, but they m len<raUy 1o the tut poi! ·ol tho aummor II the ch1ltlreo are atlend!Qfl llOlllller acbool. U You have on- ly lllrper Sdloof cW!dron, thot wwld ho grut -......... all,..,. torts. I, TOO, .UC a parmt with children aL- tendlng a ochool in . tbo ocean View Scbotil Dlltrlt:I. I alteaded the school for performing their prime dutr -tbat , of COmmlimeol 14 tbt total cqmmuolty ~gretStncn can carry away from tM: store f1'!e stalionc.ry supplies for their of· rices up to the amount of the allowan-:e/ Or they can draw all or part of the 11llowance ltl cash -no questions asked. 1be auwnpUon is th1t If a con- JrePITl&n doesn 't like what tie can a~t rrom I.be l:louJe It.Ore -and be can aet everylltlni from penonal, cust_om-mlcle letlf'b<ad natlmiery to desk pens and paper clips -bt can draw tbo cuh and lklY dlewbc"': l IF H.11 WENT elsewhere bt'd have to pay mono bee:•-the price ol ofllee aup-PI let lo the Houle sto111 Is the low.st U> Ille -. fwmMt at wbat ta known u .... .,.._,, COii. If tbo ... , ......... dooa't lllle ICline J>*rllclllar Item he can llavf u. ...,.. onltr • dlffmnt brand, oo looJ .. It bu to do witW his omco. . . ' • I . • • ANOTHER FRINGE benefit f o r mtmben is the free trip home. Theft was a time when Congres9 merely tutid to get the congressmen to Washington for a session and then 1CJ1d them back when the seaslon was over. No"'• howe\·er. lt't felt bnportanl for the lawmaken to keep in touch. And Just before the last session ended, the Houee railed the tree travel allowan<t for .,.,.,,._. from 26 14 33 roond tripe every ..,..year period. ' 'Illa! -d permit the congressman to make just about me free lrtp home every tt;O weeks. The 'fele.nns, however, l1le few of the tree tripl lbe (Int year, saving &hem tn.itad for the &Ccond year When Ibey fa<t re-election. The lloU"se 11lso upped the travel allowance ror employcs of rongressmen. Formerly, llouse stirrers we.re allowr.d up_ to four free round trips ~o the members' dlstrQ . per' Corigress. T h 1 t has been raised to atx startlna wltb next Congress. / There is a posstbillty of tutorlnt on a one to one basis from our b\gh acbool students on a three-month vacation. ' THIS ALL ADDS up 14 a One P!'O(lram for our chlldren at thelr moll ri«pUVe years of \taming, What will this mean to the parentl and famll y? This wlU depend a great deal on how hard we mike It for ounelves, lxit There II a tentaUve plan for clay care at the school for a Yll'Y small IW1t for the workln1 mother. What a wonderf\JI tlllnc to ... our children learn and fP'OW In such • .------Bfl George-----1 Dear Georse: How did you eet to be an advice columnist. anyhow? How did you even get Into the newspaper buslne5s? PUZZLED De&r Puzzled: I used to deliver paper towels to the newspaper office until one day somebody stole my pushcart. I've bc!tn doin1 thlt column for years, trying to uve up tnougb for the do\\'n pnyment on 11nother pushcart. Doar G<crge: Do you tltlak a few drtnkl rtluet a man before dlmior1 . , Fw. ' Dear P.J.: ~ Jl _, doU. l\ly brothtrln-)aW 1ta1'11 •tlrlnldnl rtght If te r breakfast and 1ebl oo "1aud he bsso't bad dlnller atnce (i61, (Sead )'Olll' problelnl to lieOrP and Jet him give you tho benefit of his horrible ,..mple. l , g,m1---and -Ute pro-_.,, .. Mr. Lyday had -~. and was granled, a place on the ...,.ia. Ha ~ Iii' tbotlt 20 minutes, eqiea!Dj ~ ;ePPOSlllon to all-year school pro- Th< IChool boll!! aloo tfewted an time of Wo•lmately throe liur 8lrtbei' oplnlaao and queo. --'1111-. ' IT sc• WI le 'me tftal the bolrd ---ID be botb dec:<GI and . flit b)'-lllljr illl•to1llJ -tho lllDOUlll ol -pm -ID tho...,._ 111<1 Oplnltik a -· fllttlllr. t1ta1 the)' .... -........... fo\o. iltla boerd bad Jlftllllllld only to -...,, .. Ute lee!· "" -an.,.., school programs In Ocela View attendaOce. mu where lidtool --illttrttled. They did not -to Initiate any all·year P"'lramJt and Ull --ataled that tlley would DOI do ao In any ocbool 1tltlldance atti = maJort11 ol tlte oommunlly are , It -tltal our ocboOl board IJ)low lod will -IA> !Iatan 14 parenbl; tbolr ~wit! be detern>bt- -. .the.y serve. MAIUANNE BLANK DAILY PILOT •' Robert N. \Vecd, PubtUh.tr Th.,... k,..;~ Edilor Barbara. Krfibicll Editorlal Page Editor Tht> ,c:dltorlal pt1.ge or the O.Jly Pilot ~ to Lnromi and 1tlmu· l•t• ttl,l'krs by pt'ftcnttni: thb n•W•l'l'Pff'• oplnionB ·~ com· mentary on .toplct ol ln teklt •.nd sl1nlfit1ntt-1 b)' provkltng • forum .- tor the expresalon 9t our rtldtn' ttplnlont. and by ~ting the dtvene vltwpnintll ot-tnform~ ob- M?rvet'! end 1poke1men on toplcs of th" day • Wtldne1day, Dec., 13, 19'/2 i I \ 7 , - --· . - • ·Orange Coast r EDITION Today's Fl•al - N.Y. Stoeks · • VOL 65, NO. 348, 6 SECTIONS, 100 PAGES . ' I • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~SDAY, DECNBER 13, 1'72 H TEN CENTS Wildlife Monitoring Urged for Upper · Bay 17 WILLIAM ~ER Of .. DMtr' ''Ott ..... ~ environmental consultant has ~ lltepo ~· County abouJd take to olDd3' Upper Newport Bay's en-vhonineot belOre any future develOPJtH!Dt of Ille bay Is pemlltted. · Jn a Hport prepired at1he direction of tlit ....,ly llOard of• Super\'bQrJ, ·CDlf Ino.'o!/Puodeu tOld 'members of the Newport Bay Project OoliunJt1'e that ex· tensfve annual monitoring of bay life and · ' environmental c:ondltloN abould ba slarted Immediately. Tbe -committee, made up of ~ talive1 of lbe Orange Coonty Heilltb Deportment and lbe niod Control District, responded Tuesday by aaklng the county Harbor C.mmlsolon for $183,000 in tidelands money to atart the monitoring 'J><Oll'MI. BUI COmmlJlllOl10J'I, who &a!4 ·they needed more time to review the con- sultant 'a report, refused to act on the re- quest until alter the IJrat of the yeer. Tile environmental monitoring plan propooed by CDll coven a wide range of concerna. .ThfM IQclude aucb lhingi as wale< quality &ltd cbemioal makeup; pollutants present in .the bay, ·such u dete.rgenta and1l'lldioactivity; the bioqieal capacity -aDlmal contenl-·bay·Bll!l·hatbor and ·a . study· of· llle ,io the • marine sediments. · The monitoring plan also recommends . • that water quality and 'oedlments ba tested around the barbor boatyards at least four limes a year at 10 dillerent locatlooJ. The boatymls bave been a target of the baaltb department and the Santa Ana Regiooal Water Qulllly ·Cootrol Board. Tl)ey claim the yarda are major con- trlbulo}'s to hlg!i concentrallonp of heavy metall· and other pollutants in the harbor. Testing at other statkms around the harbor should talce _plllce about eight times a yur, accordlDg· to the conslilt· ant'• report. The report also recommends findings he made of bow conditions change In the tvenj of a big storm or extremes tn temperature. A number of tentatJve sampling sites ,from which matertal8'1hould ba taken for laboratofy analysis were alJo listed. Theae Include: tbe 'barbor entrance channel~ Harbor Island Reach, the tum- • or man, Ir lmne Slaooting Cyclist Charged In Cop Shooting ' II)' llUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of -Dllltr ...... ""' Q>ata Me18 poltce late Tuesday night arTested a 11-year-old cycle gang leader tbl)I ailql attempt.eel 10 -and kill ~ pOllee -........ T. NUii --. =·h·· =· IMt Oct. 21 "'LI --I' IL-II Lallo Robert '*". of • N. ~. _1!., 0..., II nollllic arralpmeol al ~-QIJ Jolt ..., ... cllarie ,of s=·• llllll • i!i!"• -•r. Bt,~ ........ " ~ boll .. .... ... Ooola_and ~ ....... lbidl!ll the .. ~ .. --al l1ts apert- ment late . liee have uncov~ <.d nine loa l!lbotguna in l process. ... claimed to rifles and Peters, pu ed to be the newly elected president of 1111 ~ County cLipter ol l!>o Hesilam motorcycle sans, c*fend DO -d!lrilll tbe raid, -~ .. D1te~·C•P.L E. H. G......, iojd ·Peten' -Climued a ·Jona inftltJptkn bttwem O>lta Mesa ... Orullt P!llice """*" llllo Ille ..,. tivfUtl of ~ Pt Id•• "Wo ... - -1~1 H4illfts -~ 1or-..... tlm( ud ljiwllan"c-. ol a.m oiir ...i...., and doflll fhlnp . of dial Dllure," GW&o!o uplalncd, Ne_gp~~rs End Peace Be aClded that .Peters wu believed to bate taken QVer Ille preoldeney o( the outlur bike club around the time ol Ille ~ambush-neor Jelfr<Y Road and -. -Bil raw Road. Talk Session That .Wbt officer Nalb was on pa!rl>I in lrvtbe -when a car coatalil.hlg two "cle~" 'men aJll)llOICbed 1'im and -told him of an lajurtd-n!lill-11.-lbe roadwq. . PARIS (AP) -Henry A. Klatnger and 1.4' ~ Tho ended tbalr erucla1 peace Wb -today w-ltbout an-noweement of any agreement on ending the Vietnam war. K1alnpr lftportd to Dy Io WMb.,.._ to nP.ort lb President Naon --....... -....-Tbo. Coo•-and otber soorcea aald.Plftl Jar polllla of dlllelence allll .-In to be' Ironed · out between the two top -llaton. . Preildlnllal presa ......tary Ronald L. ·~ told qewsmen In Wasblngton tbe' \,.; cteJ.cat« al ·lbe regular semipublic peace. to1b, William J . Porter, of the Unl!ed 'States and Xuan Thuy of ,North ~. woukf· ·continue m e e t l n g 'piriodlcally to 'dlacuaa IA!cbnlcal aspect! o1 • roosiblf 11Jture agreement Zie(Jer aald Kissinger will confer with NWwt Thursday, and remain in com- inunlcalion with Tbo. Any decision regarding I u r t h e r moetlnp of the two top negoUaton would 1>r made jolnUy by both sides lhroutlh an "change of messages, Zieder added. . A3 Nash, :.3, 1pe." lo the aoene, the aup- ISee SUSPECT, Pqe I) Newport Visitors Ro bbed of $960 A Guam couple visiting Newport Beach was robbed of '9SO in casb early Tuesday morning u they .slept in the.Ir room at tbe Newporter Inn. Ricardo Bordallo, 45, and his wife, Madcljhe, told police Tuesday they went to bed at about 2 a.m., leaving a sliding glass patio door to their room open but tbe ~ cloe<ld and locked. Police aald file burglars apparenUy wtrked the scre<n open, crept into the room while the couple WIS sleepina' and stole $920 from a wallet in Bord"allo's pants pocket and J40 from his wife's purse on a nearby chest. Seourity guards at lbe botel reported ootrunc unusual near the Bordallo's room, which fronb on the hotel golf course. Bordallo told police be discovered the theft later Tue9day morning when he and his wile awoke for breakfast. ijarry Truman . . Holding His Own, . Dbctois ·Report . KANSAS CITY (AP) -Harry S Tnmlan's doctor said today ttie SS.year- old former rr.s!di!nl was "bolding his -°"°" as he remained 1D. aeriou1 condition wltli heart and ,..,Piratory problems. Tj=ao'•. vilal signs of blood preastm!, pulse and tempei:ature corllinued to l!Uc- tuate" .and were elevated ovtrnlght. a spokesman for Research Hoojiltal and Medlcal C:..ter said. But his pulse waa 8'. blood pressure 114-51 and temperature .1'111 ~ .q within normal limlla -Ibis mornllll!i ' ~\,··;.1;--1 I ~I • '" ' . IT :sN.o:w.s AG/tlN : IN'-' SACRA.MENTO • Dory Tragedy Children Accompanied. Father ' • 1. ~ By L. PETER KRIEG searching for his friend, slouched against or 11e oau., ,. ..... ,..,. an <lverturned dory. In 1947 two Newport Beach dory 'Ihere were no tears and there were !iShennen were caught in a raging few wordJ. storm. They were brothers. Their boat Tur1ey stared at the sea. "He must be gone. There's no chance. was never found. He was a great guy. He started fishing For the past 25 years the dorymen who about 25 years ago in my dad's boat. sift a living from the sea b4ve skirted Allen probably was the most well known .tragedy. There were anxious tJ}Oments ()fall the dory fishermen,•\ Turley said. but no lives were lost. He couldn't believe that no one . Until Tuetday. . bad ..,. to !bat Utile hou!e behind the -Allen -Kllldit tool<. l!lp . :S:,.,..,id Arches wbaft Alleu llved with bio wile, d'!llhl•" POlrlcia with lilnl .to move nor., ad five dllldrl!n to break tbO --·pols.. . ...... Allen ·Ki!iilil· wa• .ihran ·laking ms· "She ..,,,, dgwD bet<"'""' r.r 111m." . cli*"" wltii him. ' :. .' RuSIOll,uld. "And ·tbm ~ !Old · ':'lM" WU' :&ht ooly J.e W"OO'd ever do ber.111 '-4 · I~"-~amlts'~ ·a lomgtlme Pollco and~ •. lbe~'I friend. ''lle'd take ._ -·fmiJiy out. know for llll't wbat ~ · BQI the He bail a little trap filr eact. •'-ibe ldds · dorymelt -· ' &1111 !f>e!'d lake llD'lll goill&.out."· "Trlci. mull have fallen ov<rboard Doti Turley, like moll QI Ille other and ·Allen went rtpl 1" alllr ber. He doeymen, Isn't fishing today. lie llid lie muat.-bave left i)lo biJola on," Ruasell doelo'l leel llke it. . ., aald. "And Ibey ',Pulled hbn right to the He and Allen Knignr shired one of the bottom." weatherbeaten Jockers on the sand where /'Allen's a very strong swimmer," the dorymen stash their gear. They were fw.ley said 0 and they weren't-so far out good friends. ~ that he couldn't have made it to shore Turley, emausted after hours of with her normally." • Orange Soil May HoUl -----Secret w Moon's Death .. SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) Tv;11 jubilant American adventurers prepared today fo:-a farewell lunar ex· ploratlon. But already aboard their lander Challenger was a new discovery - 8t1Dlp1e! of intriguing orange soil possibly datlJll to the lis~ fiery gasps of a dying moon (See relate.cl picture, stories, Page 4) Astronauts Eugene A. Cernan and lJ.er· rison H. SchmJtt, ln their last geology field trip in the moon valley of Taurus- Llttrow today, were to take ar eight-mile drive along the base <lf a high mountain · and at the loot of wrinkled bills, using an electric car with a pat~ fender. The aslrorllluts, saytng they "like to cover n e w ground,'' traveled a mile farther than planned -Y night, gathering many bags of lunar samples, -lnc:luding..ICOCps...olthe or4J11e dua.t neY.er b·'ore found on the mooo. "nie orange material was found during exploration of an ancient avalanche, f.4 mllel from the landln8 camp In Taurus- Lltttow •aDert"BX coincldeoce, Jt was 'fo.md by 'c:.man.·not Schmitt, a geologisl ,and America's flnt profesalonal scientist in apace. 'lbe Jl'eSS spokesman would not say Dally thal 'lurlbOI: P3iia talks are con- templated, but l1ts lllnguage suggested thal Ibey ... likely. -There wu no lmmedlllle Indication of Ille [IQlntl of disagreement which led to renewed upem:lon of the talks. Before the President's national aecurl- tY, adviler and Tho met In a suburban v~ •· 111bcornmlttee, of .experts held a flO.minute sessloe ·to discuss details of a aetUement. Peters Seeks Publicity?_ "Bey " a:claimed Ceman u be stuinbl~ into the IOll at the rim (If a cnater called Shr:rty. "Walt a minute ••. there Js o~e aoU." 0 Well, don't move untU I see lt,'' aald the Harvard-educated Scbmitt. PILOT AD BRINGS . , HOME GOOD NEWS DAILY PILOT clnllfied want ads brins home good news. Here'• a true atory: P•mt -Balboa Pen. Head, brealt, neck orange, body orange I green. :u:x-mx Reward. That cnmor called to aay !hat the bird WU back In band lbe lint dai, !lie ad ·ran. If JOU ba" n<ed of fut re1Ulla, dial 11Wm and place a DAILY PILOT claaaliled want ad. Psychiatrist Says Trial Gives Suspect a 'Soapbox' "It's all aver," Ceman went on ex- citedly ... Orange. I've stirred It up with my feet. "Hey, it.. ls,'' lhouted Schmitt. "I can see It from here. It's orange." By TOM BARLEY nlng their killing," he added. Of .. .,,..... PW,._., "You can't call a man paycbotlc just A psychialrlsttestlfled today that it because he says he's in communication was "entirely poaible" that Gig Peters with God?" Brian :ated Castille. returned to Cllllornla to lace • murder Tile psyci\lalrlat agreed and pinned trial because t would provide what tba with several m=llera of the Oran&• proaeculloo called llila momlng "a aoap County !!:!perlor Courl jury as Brian ex· box and • pulillclty yehlcle for bis ~t-' plajneil: 'Aller au, U!e pope aaya ba'• In tacka on the eatobllshment." communication wilh God and I don't. Dr. Daniel Castllle qr~lhal the Idea thir.k we C"1 call him poycbotic." could have led Peten 13, to rocroaa the !I IJ ' delenlo attorney Barry Tarlow'• Mexican 'bordeT lie ba'd croesed 24 boun oootentlon that Pel.rs' mental atale at before on Aprll 111 1971, abortly after lie the Ume di lhe murder call! for a jury kllled blll -p:>ranla al· lheJr Huntington verdlel ill "illmln!Jhtd capo ell)." Beach home. Brian today conftnned tba1 he wants a And he :onfinned for prosecutor Pat verdict o[ first degree rnurder in the Brian an earlier dlqnoala that Peters ballot tilal Pifu.J planned the killing of was peycbotle when he murdered Charles his pertllts wti.n be left his San Dlcao . Peter11 !1S1 and Fllora Peten, 64, a County· desert commuM and ..traveled to teacher at Lincoln Sc1lOOi In C.rona del Huntington n.acb 14 hours bafora tho - Mar. killing. ' "llut ba was mooteQy oapoble ol plan-Brfllll had rentbided llie lW7 that '. I ... Peters was disowned by hi! f.ather on the day before the kllllng abortly alter the defendant was found guilty In a San . Dle&o court of drus cbargea !bat cOuld have brought him • prtoon term ol five to 20 yeara. Castille agreed aa Pttm · -.id Superior Court trial nmM lb end that the ·dotendanl tol4 lolm-In "" taw.lew that ba felt -towards bis latber. "" iloo leilllled' !hilt Petort ~ed that whatever oentetc• mlllllt be posMd on him be would ba..a free 111111 "•llhln tW'O yean wb...n the "comJnl ftVOhltlon" would liberate all ooc•panls <il ·Ille na· tlon'1 Jail>. Peten leanod back 1n· hll w1*eldlair and pv1,4 J'llt amlJe..this.rnomJna u ,Btlao COndonlned blm•aa •1111 etlremely da....,... lndivfdllli Wht hto been thus [ (Boo,PISTCM, ,...,J) ' ,\ Ceman and SChntltt were-awakened at 11:20 a.m. to the straint of lhe Texas A&M lighl-. Ground control told them lbelr apae»- crall was In good lbape and Ov.eylbing WU let for !O!Jllbl'a ""'°"walk. ~lats were' also excited by the dilCOVtl'J, tboqb caulloul In their evaluation. 'rhey aald the ....... IO)l may baV<! originated from "lbe lul gaseous gasp of volcanlsm" o;n the mooJ. Dr. #Obin Brett. cblel of the geocheiills(ry bunch at IL• Manned Spacecraft Center, aald the maWf!al poaalbly could be n11t -which bas .....,_ found in other lunar aamplel In minute quanUUes -or IOme chctnka1 CIOID- binat!olrwhlcb .......,-a rtcldilh color. A final determlnal)on would liave to await l•boratory -1nall,,. Oii earth, lie 11lcl. ~ ·-·-----·----........... ,.,\-..... •.l. •• ing basin In Udo Channel, '3rd Street beach, Upper Bay bridge, oil Newport Dunes, ()ff. North Star Beach, at lbe ski basin in the Upper B8y and near the lower dike in the Upper Bay. Tile conaultant'I report aays the sampl- ing progr3m should include monthly teating. ol water quality and silt in lbe major tributirles feeding Into the harbor and tba Upper Bay. ' These Include: San Diego Creek at (See.UPPER BAY, Page%) Huntington Search On For Bodies By MICHAEL GOODRICH ~ Of ... O.Uy ,,., '"" Huntington Beach lifeguards are scour- ing the local strands today, searching for the bodies of a Newport Beach dory fisherman "and his S-year-old daughter wbq disappeared Tuesday oltshore ffOm the EdisOn power plant. Newport Beach and Huntington lifeguards aearcbed cbllly ocean watera all Tuesday atterDoo., alter the empty dory boat of Allao Vaughn Knight, 43, of %24 Newport Blvd, Newport Beach, was spotted from abore. Police bellcoplen also were IJ!ed In Tuesday's aeirdi. Knlgh~ .and bis dauchter, Patricia, were alone 1n the boat, cbeckhlg hi• lobster trapa about 200 yards offshore , police said. Lifeguards believe both drowned. Huntington Beach lifeguard Mike f\.fossler said he first notJced Knia:ht's boat moving soulb from the pier about 20 yards from the shore. He said Knight WIS st.andiDg in the rear of the boat cradline bis daughter in his arms while he tried to steer the boat • (See DORY, Pl(e I) Dorymen Start V p Collection Allen Knl&hl and ~ pretty daughte< Palrlcla are deld.aad lbe men of the Newport Beach dory fishing. Deel are grloving, Knight leaves a wife and foor. other children with very liWe money. They don't have much themBelves but they have started a collection for the .Knight family. The dorymen are asking olher people to balp. "™y could either b r In g something down here, or mall it to Mn. Knight," llid Bob Turley, Kiiigl>rs lOCier partiitt: n;e Clory n~t puta in mid-afternoon by Newport Pier. n, Knlibts' ad- dr<sa is :DI N. Newport Blvd., Apt. %, Newport Beach. (;ealt Weadler SUnny skies are on the qenda for Thursday, with 1llghlly .,..,.. er temperatures.-lllgha of l'I II lbe beachea, rising to 17 lnlaod. Lows tonight in the 3tlL JNSmE TODAY Ol'i!ftgr Counti'1 t ~ 4 o I 1 r ' '1!'0Upl oaU ii • tt<•• •fin ~ tD .. Und, tO h 11 I ... IOwlttg ~itetio" .,.etuim Jor an '"" c01e. Stt Etttntainmnt, •"Poor 43. ( • • I ~ UAILY PILOl • ~- N;ude Story Presented To Board By FRt'DERICK SCllOEMEHL 0t ""' o.llV Pllet Slttt Titroughou! hi!'tory the n1alc nude has been a symbol of art and the athletics, a UC Irvine professor told trustees of the ~guna Beach Vnificd SL·hool otstrict Tuesday night. Or. David Thomason. a professo r of classics, appeared before the board to dbcus,, the implications of the male nude at the request of Bruce Hopping of the Kalos Kagathos Foundation. The presentatio1. came in the "'ake of a decision by high school officials not to aU~w the found r.tion's logo -a pbolograph of a male nude sculpture - to appear on the program for a water polo awards banquet. . Halos Kagatbo:I support~ '.'aquath· letlcs" and subscribes to the Greek philosophy of heallh in both body and mind. Thomason, :llustrating his remarks with slides. sa\d there is a fundament al dtstinetlon between -the use of the word •'nudity' 'and the word "naked." "We will call a work of art a nude scuiplure, but never call it a naked man," noted Thomason, speak ing \\<ith a criSp English accent. "We disli.nguish be(ween the accidenta lly naked and the purposefull y nude." 'nle ancient G. eeks. he said. \\"Cr.? the first to requ ire nudity for participati on in certain sports and Joohed do1•1n upon barbarians who attired themselves \rith loincloths. Be showed scvcrai examples of Greek sculpture and pa inting depicting uncloth- ed atbletes. Aecord..inrs" to Thomason. Greek artists went to the gymnasiums and used the athletes for model s, thus creating a mar· riage. in a sense, or nudity 111 art and athletics. The root word of gymna si um. Thomason sai. .. , is 'gymnos' and is the Greek equivalent to the English 11·ord, 'naked.' Nudity \\'as :on1inent in the Oly1npics. and he showed several examples '''ith slides of discus throwers. ·Leonardo Da Vinci and l\lichelangelo u,Se.d the male nude in their "'orks of art, stressing proportions of the body. Thomason concluded his remarks with r. an aneedote that went like this: When Michelangelo was painting the ctillng of the Sistine Chapel, the Pope and a prelate hlfpPf:ned by: "How di> you 10.I about the painting wl!"re having done." the Pope asked. .'-'Well, these disgusting figures would fit better in the washroom," replied the prelate. An incensed ~1ichelangelo eyed the prelate then returned to bi5 work ~d painted a nude figure of the pre.late m tbe throes of the devils of bell. County Rece ives Federal Clwck For $4,311,181 Board of Supervisor.i Chairman Ronald clapers of Newport Beach P!Oudly displayed a $4~11.181 che<k from the federal goverrunent to Orange County at Tuesday's board session. It is tbe first blstallment of an expected $14 ·million in revenue sharing funds the county will CJ!Ceive during calendar year 1973. ~County Treasurer Ivan Swanger and ~uditor-Controller Vic lleim were on hand for the ceremony. SWanger said the money will be invested In government Securities until the supervisors decided how to spend it. It will eam interest of · !WO a day, r '- • Board members ~~~i..e_e_~ listened for two hours while re~ntatives of ()rganizations and Individuals told them bow to spend the money. The suggestions ranged al the way from property tax reduction to flew sewer lines. • OIANal COAIT • DAILY PILOT TM°"""" C-t OAtL'f' Ptl..OT, wffl wfMdl i. ~ tllt N-.~-Is ,....,...,,.. by ,.. °'""" UNt Pllllllitlllnl c..nio-rw. le!M-' ... ,. .,"..,. .,.. ~1'Md. MllMAy ttwwon ,........,, fW at.. M.,_. Hewoort ltltdl, Hllntl..-IHCtll'"-'"lt'I \11llrf, l.Agu&w ._., eMIW'8ddletlKk ft lln ~J ltfl ,luu C1D11"9ne A Mnl"' rfOIDMI 9dltlM .. SNOlkllell .. lurdl"P eM Sund.Jy5. tl'M prlnclp91 pW.lltf!lftl ,i.nt Is II .llO W~st .. , ,,,..,, a.at M ... ,--c.m0tni•, t2'1'. • •, • Roai..rt N. 'WtH ~IMl!t .,,, h!Mltllct' J1c;k R. Cu1loy ¥kil ~· llMI ~., MM-otf Titefll•t KMll'il ••w Tkmt1 A. MurJlltill• MllNltlill E•l1w L P'•t•r Ktl•1 .....,.,.. llttdl CltY ldllDr .... ,.... .... om. JllJ H"'r-" ... , ....... M• .. ,...,._,P.O. ha 1171. t2'6J --c.11' .... , ....... ""1n.t _..._....,.._ .... (~ *""'"'·· """' 17115 ...... .... 1M OIMWltt: »J '""" II C.l'l\IM, lllMI T .. apt 1 t714l '4MJt1 .Cl• ... .UMfl I I MW'tt • ·~t. 1m. °"..... t:.... , .......... ~Y. H• t Mwl ,..,.., ha'tl"""-.....,,.f 1Nl19" ., ..... ,.........,... .......... ""' .. ......... wtllltllt ~ ,.,.. t •• .......... ~ ........ . a..M c ............... ., c.tt .... C..H..rnllo. klllcrltllltftlll lri c:.rrW tuS, """'"''' "' -11 u .11 "*'"lln ....,,..,,. -lbNIW tlM "*"""'• .. I DA.ti. Y PILOT J"'H Plttll Clirist1nas Palm Several years ago, this palm tree sprouted through the pavement cov· cring the center divider on Coast Highway at Goldenrod Avenue in Corona del Mar. Local n1erchants prevailed upon city workers to leave the sprout alone and it has thrived. And, every year, someone decorates it for Christmas. lt is Corona del Mar's own special Christ· mas tree. Yule Season f Auction Set Ip Newport To parapbrale a t lme·honored Cbrlltma1 ta«!. on the 18th day ol December, that's thlJ Saturday, the Newport Beach Police Departme('lt Auc- tion will offer you: -Six hundred and el1b t y -lour restaurant kn.ivtlt apoom: and,forka. -Seventy blcyeles and one tricycle. -Twenty-sl:r: wristwatches. -Twenty wine goblets. -Seven coals. -Six surfboards. -And (ooe each) pair o( cam<! colored hotpanls, a case of Aju the foaming clellllel' and a left-banded baseball • fielder's mJtt. The ooly thing that '"'°'I go on-the auction block Saturday at 10 a.m. in the city yard at 592 Superior Ave., is a partrktge In a pear tree. A totally Iteml2ed Ust of lost or mien and nnclaimed items available to Chrlstma..OOpper> totals 376, Including furs, jewelry, housewares and ap. pliances. Sports equipment, clothing aDd, for the cleanlinesHnlnded, l'VtD an electric toothbrush. bath scrub brush -soap In- cluded -..., avallable, along with cameras and stereos. S o m e policeman's sound-deadening earmuff.c:: for use on the pistol practke range which got turned in to the Lost and Found Department will also be 90ld. No guarantees are made for any merchandise sold, police note , and all sales are final since the money goes into the city's general fund for various municipal uses. Fl'OlllP.,,el Tonehes :£ea h. Parerits mi Ai.d Fmure Mqrri.agu . SACIWIENl'O (AP) -PINlll wtio doo1 ..... --111 -ol their cblldhn lll01 be ..W.C ilP ..-11 llladequall bllllN marrla .. , a team ol 11t.tual Ulerlplall bu told lllla employta hero. "Tile most effidl\'e method ol ,.. tducatloo lt what I* oo every min· ute," Dr-. 'l'Jlomu P. l<>wry of lhe Muli>tWdmson clinic In St. Louis, Mo., a.aid Tuelday. ' "ON11 OF THE FBW lllllvonala 11 that patient' we,.. raised-la ~ family wbere people never touched each other," Lowry aald: 1 • l<>wry and bis wife Anthea oonduc:tod a seminar for employee ol·tlle ~to Dtpartment of Mental HyJlleno on the u,. of ,.xual tboraw I! • ~ preventative. ; · ·~ l: . Tiii! COUPLE SIJOOl!STED that aeiually inadequato ~qla WOl"r)' ing about it and do what comes naturally. "Just forget about IL A man should stop being the ~rpetual w11n.,s to his owa failure. Be should just r k a boat his wife's beautiful form, It Lowry gARI;-- Ex-Time MagaZine Editor Selected · for Nixon Post , __ WASHINGTON (AP) -Pnsident NI" on announced today be lflll name James Keogh, a former eiecutlve editor of Time Afagazine, to held the U.S. Information .;.gency, replaclng Frink J. Shakespeare President Lyndon B. Johnson and was kept on by Nixon. Jr. . In another niund ol cbontes In hlgb- level pasta for bll aecond term, Nixon deslgnat.d the dean ol the Dute Law School. Jose~h T. Sneed, sz. of Durham , N.C., to be deputy attorney ceneral. Sneed would succeed Ralph E. Erick· son, who, the White House said, will be offered a judicial post. Keough, a 56-year-old· nattve of Nebraska, w8$ a member of Nl~oo11 11168 campaign staff and later :lolDed the1Wblte House staff u chief ol mearcb and writing. Tbe agency he will bead preset\ts the U.S. lJnaf• tel the world. Keogh, with Time Magattne for 1Imcm 2() years,' is the author of two boots, one written in 1956 entitled "Thls Is Nixon" and another published this year on "Nix- on and tbe Press." Press secretary Rooald L. Ziegler was asked if Nixon shares the views about the n.,.. media that Keogh upreaed ln "Nixon and the Press." Prosecutor Asks Guilt Ronald H. Walker, 35, a special assis- tant to Nixon who has been serving as an advance man ou prcsklential trips, was named to be tbe new director of the Na· tional Park Service. He would llUCCeed G<crge B. llertzofl Jr., relieved of his duties by Nl2on. SUSPECT Ran•lnlng Ir. a toi>-l<Vel pool be bal • • • \1ild since early tn the Nixon ad- Ziegler said it would be lllOl<blng things to draw such an aslOdaUon and added: "When Pftoldent Niml bat IOl!lelblng to aay about lhe pre9 he'll say it on bis own." The White Hoose uld Sbake.peere u- pnssed a desire to return to private Ute and would short1y be armounctna hll !uture plans. . ' Findi11g in Crane Case Prosecutor Jim Stotler today asked an Orange C.Ounty Superior Court jury to find Trinldad "Trini" Crane guilty of first degree murder for Y.'hat he said was School Trustee Trial Scheduled On Bookmaking Saddleback Community Co 11 e g e District trustee A1yn M. Brannon and oo- defcndant Robert Emmett Kelly or Ntwport Beach were ordered Tuesday to 'face trial March 12 on multiple charges of bookmakint; and conspiracy to commit extortion. the deliberate killing of Lionel "Johnny" l\tartinez in his Costa 11-lesa apartment Stotler told the jury in Judge Robert Kneeland'• courtroom that "there oould be no other verdict" in tbe light of the testimony offered qainsl the attractive de(endaot Ill her ,~woelt lrial · That tesilli>/iny; the ~ aid, clearIY ·-that Mn. c:n.e, '°· plunged the knife into her loter'a c:hest last June 3 shortly alter she bad challenged the ea.ta Mesi area atbJete about the girl be bi!d been dallllg tllat night. • Martine%, 13, O( m N. Mllslob SL, died on the way to a local bolpitol. Mr>. ~ earlier tesUlled that 1he ·had no recollection of seeing the knife before It fell from Martinez' body and she realized that he was mortally wound· ed. But the de.ad man's roommate, a key prosecution witness wbo was ]at.er label· ed. by another wltness "as bananas," testified that the angry w om a n deliberately stabbed bLs friend as the pair quarreled over the earlier incident mlr1lstration, is 44-year-old William H. posed vict.lm, lyfnJ lace dawtt, jumped Brown Ill. chairman ol the Equal into a crouch and fired at the offictr E111ployment Opportunity Q:imm.Wion. through the wlncbhleld of the oquad car. The panel bas been given new powers by Nash gunned bis car in an attei;npt to Congress to oon•bat job discrlminatkm of run down his usailant but was hit on the all types. A native of Philadelphia. fact: by • buUel frapnent. The Brown was first named to the EEOC by bu;bwbacker escaped by runnlDi Into a nearby oomfleld. caot. Giugow oald the small callher revolver allepJly ...iedin the atlack was not rooovored lnlm Pttal' -t. "We're looldna for ll t!JouO." be lidded. Pollee -iii DOI '"1 · 'lillllher ~ liad beeo pooitlnb'' Id ... ~111 Pa-ftlJb, a ..,_ Oolta -. olficu who wa,o •wiped to the !nine beat Sept. I when Colla lllesa took over police duties in Irvine on a cmtract basis. Meanw!Jlle, poUco att lllll on the loo tout fOC" tbe.,.. olbar .... "!'» b<lped !'<ten wl1' II"' alleltll ....,..... . From Pqe l PETERS ••• labeled by ..-thu ... llOY<l>latri•t." l'llarl mO)' .,.nd lhenst OI flll Ult In that wbeek:balr u the malt of -. sulfued ooe :ioar qo .me. he tried to escape from the ..,,,. courtroom durlnl his fint trial. .... . + Pderl .... shot Ill tbie tlliM •• be llNaled with I balllfl In tJIO -r leild!llC to tlie Jail elefaw. •· Sneed, 52, a native of Calvert, Te:r., has ~D a professor of Law tt Cornell, Stanford and the University or Teus. Walker became a special asslatant to President Nixon after 9Cn'ing as an assistant lo Walter HJckel, former secretary ot the Interior. Hijacker Lives I.ODIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) - A woman hijacker sumv.d."I ""'"batlla In an lirliner over Etblo!>i• last ...t. police uid ~. 1l¢to rrt~ llild that ... ~."In~!Udln&-....... w.... k!M! 'in' Ille' ., 'ollh .l!lllflipllll ~«Ji',audl·"'1 ...... ...,..,,, "alJo•1'tloiDail _ ....... ___ , o UNS~,1 . , • • Superior c.ourt Judge William J\.lurray set the trial date and pretrial sessions for Jan. 19 and Feb. 23 after Brannon, 41 , of Saota Ana and Kelly, S4. of 83S Seagull Lane. Newport Beach, pleaded innocent or charges contained ln a Grand Jury indictment. Brannon 'vas arrested Aug . 28 after he allegedly attempted to enforce set· tlement or a gambling debt from a man identified by police as a regular patron of t'.1 .. school board member. Judge Kneeland will Instruct the jury and send it to ii. dtliberalloos later fo. day after defense attorney Al Stokke haJ delivered his final argument ER STREET-COST.A MESA .. 646 1919 Police said the man owed Brannon $2 ,800. And they further alleged that Brannon·s operations in the Harbor Area produced takings of at least $25,000 a week. Kelly \\'as urrcsted six weeks later after a wealthy Newport Beach businc.ss- man told polict that an eight-inch hunt· ing knife was hurled into his front door as part of the pressures employed to col- lect his gaming debts. From PC11Je l DORY ... by shifling his weight from side to side. Knight was apparently returning fro!fl checking bis lobster traps which were 1n the BoJsa Chica Bluffs area, according ta one lifeguard. ~1inutes later Daniel C. Davis, ol 218 Chicago St., Huntington Beach, said he saw a man in tbe water next to the dory in the vicinity of Beach Boulevard. Davis said he thought t:1e man was div· ing but then noticed the dory v.•as lravel- lng in a ·small circle next to the man in tht! water. Lifeguards on the scene said the heavy fi shermen boots \\'Orn by Knight might ha\·e pulled him under once he v.·as in ttic water. Davis contacted Huntington Beach lifeguards who begain an Intensive M?arch or the water a quarter mile south of the pier, l.lfeguanb reported they foond • child's life jacket In the boat Later In the afternoon, aoot.her dory fishennan found a child's parka ln the water near ~rttt In Newport 8<11ch. 1be dfverililVOlvtd ln"tb1:rtNrch were In the water untU dusk wben poor vi.sibil· lty made the 11earch lmposatble. Ufeguard Captain Dou~lai O'Ama11 saic! todAy there wert no more plnns to continue the underwater search. but beach patrols would continue. Knight wns described by police as a veten1n doryman. They 1Ja!d l'lls wife told them It w~s not unusual for him to tnkc one o~_tbclr children out" on hl11 lobster runs. • • ,.,.._Pagel UPPER BAY. • • Jamboree Road, Peters· canyon Wash at Navy Way, and the Santa Ana-Delhi Channel at 1\lstin Avenue. Boatyard owners who have contested health department pollution claims say most of the pollutants are waabed lnto the bay and harbor by runoff from the rest of the oounty. The consultant abo. st.roogly recom· mended a mathematical model of the Upper Bay and surrounding '"'"' be prepared to give aperts-a britier Idea of v.·hat they can a:pect under various types of coodiUoos and developc:nenll. But the mathematical model, which would consist ol a computer procram- med with all available data on the bay. could not be prepared without some of the testing result!, the oonaultant added. A number of groups, including the CX.'Canic Researth Institute and the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commertt, have been. lobbying to win county ap- proval of a $1.5 million ~1 -tnt buln which would do the same job as a mathematical model. The test basin would be a miniature reproduction of the Upper Bay, Newport Harbor and lhe surrounding terrain and potential developments couJd be test~ small scale before being approved. Since the money requested for the flrlit year of Upper Bay environment teatlng would come from Udelands U5e fee revtnues, harbor eommia&ionera will ba"' to make a re«l!DDlelldatloo to Ille county supervtson who will lake final ac- tion. Launch Brightens Sky V ANDENBE!\G AIR FORCE BASE (APl - A colorful aerial dJsplay -liken- ed by ofle observer to ... chUd'' craron ocrawlingJ" -hl&bllghtcd Southern California akies after a Strategic Air COmmnM mi!s:lle test•launch from this coastal bate. A Mtnuttman tn wu fired by a SAC combat mw from Grand l'ork• Air Force Bue. N.D., Tueod&y night as one of a aeries of operitklnal te sts, .the Air Force •Pokesman Miid. •••• and Sportswomen Basbtliall Faotllalls VollJ baDs Saccer baUs • T llllis bals Golf balls HandbaDs ArdlerJ sets ••1111t11 sets /· - "" "" sets Tiiiis Rackets llanAall Stam Telllis Sllaes Tennis Dresses Tennis Shorts & Shits Skate Boards Duck feet fins Dart Beards Frisbees Back ·Packs· sfeepq Ba1s Wann " SUHs swat Sitts Nylan Jacbts BasebaA Shoes Track Shoes Wrestlnc Shoes Speedo SWin Sutts TelRli~ Sweaters Sweat Sox Lettennan Jackets Basket11a11 Sblrts SWin Tiiiis Stop Watclies Bicycles • Bicycle Accessaries ' I • I I .· WL v Pttar s 'Impartial Gt-oup' Ellshe~g's She Won ....,., ' Suit But ~D--Family, Arreste-~ 'Lost Freedoms' ; I LOS At/G!LIS (UPI) -poslplald pndlng a bearing 1be Peata,aqn Paper1 'Jury, Thursday on 1 defen.se dilm!IMd 'l'uelday to mtke .,challqe of the entire .jury war for a ner ono, co'tri·' 'panel. plalned ill fl:eedo'ms were .Defense attorneys eon1lnd taken .....,, during the four-the panel -not contain uto n t b re e e 11 when enough 18-to 21.year-old "eruybody olM In the w<irld voters 1'bo . are elJilble to YIU able lo loll: llllllt tl\6 cue serve aa Jiuwa for tbe llrsl blot •.• . flrne. - . < .~ ...... "'du· Elhberg and Ruuo,,forinell f• c ...... , ty llJ..'J.i::"= Court -.1e1 11 tbe Rand Oorp. ' . ,.l.'"11 -u.r "think ~·· are charged Bonlld llMty, Ws cl.iiftl • 1or dolm-with vlo!Otlair sections ot the captlll'ld ·GD !;! '1111 .._Dr.!>oiJlolllllobqand Blplonqe Ad In the alleged Bridge Tltllllll.Y),tlle' Ar» $J a-llter a IP' lbelt and -sslon of the end of two m..,. 'ilr 1peabi .. ~ ClfDlioa dilt1 lt tecret go'8'1UDint documents ' fr e e d o m aftetr a-' would '° ·~i;b" to ~· which...,. leaked lo the news escaped In an ambasll • 1otr!ll-a,)lril .1111>Jec!M .mec1ialnJl/11.197L . that killed a prbon lo.!°"' delan.' . .. "'· U Byroe 1'111., agajnsl the igulrd. He lJ a meoiber: . We weft.the or1g1nal Jury, -iiefense cbaµwe, setection of of the Venceremos rn. ,said pimel member Willian> F, a 'new jury ,could begin next · ohiUon•-p · Abeta, a maintenance work~ ·week. • , r --grou · at a tire company, who said he t• ' spoke for fellow jurors. 1 ,~ • ~ . ~d:ii~.,::.>';.....""'!l Man Held · in 3r'd Set people or a more impartial , , . · s=:=~:rf: 01 · Capital Sla'y" ings the case." Lost Life UIS ANGELES .(AP) -perolld lllo ID !flt alltr ....,. San1t1io at Lompoc w~ _... If Ille foor ... be!'I of ,_ 114o -of a -year grand jury began lta I ......... t 11111 llleco laJnlly ;::,_,_ !mil' V Utatlon laat March. _.._.., ol .._...._. federal _.,. Oil a I ar COO· ----The lndldmep ~e pdooo CllllcWa foe sez lDd · • • the two b~. '1ioci BERKELEY (APl -A -111..,. !or two lamilY NAlrllD WITll Santiago lDd rdatlonl wttb ,..,,,.. woman who """ ISGO,llllt ia a members beld In orioo!I wore . 1liJrpn, 1 u -nciplents o f ~ wllhill · Ille suit aplnst the l111Yal&n--io-lluj'reoder to alltborltlu In ,\lau1o faV«'I _.. prison of-prJsOn on JW10 ZI, 1971,""'1 mayor o1 Piedmont !of falllag o.Dllto:~. , . llo;lo1a CUrlls t; Phillips and that Oii aeveral o11Jer !l!JC· to dlagno1e her cancer hu 'Ile" Flll nld two fomiar Roy qoctdal<I: Phillips and asJQos the tirotbel'• *'" died of tbe dlleise. CAL.-, ~· lndlcteil In Ille GOdilaid were not lndiclld. allowed ·to leave the prison La.Verne Slmmolll d I e d --alto will 1urrender. Howievtt. • Goddard wa s and tts supervision for similar Mond•Y. at Alla llalel Hospital '-----..-..:..-.1_ , The federal grand jury~ ~·;;:-~;;'"'~<i.;;:d:;;1 ~.froin;:;;~du~ty~w~ll~h~a;:;ctii:i'vl;;U~ea~.:::;:::===~'~·j,; I -three daya alter an ~ Tuflilay accused John Aleaflo, Ii Alameda County Sup e rt o r c, bis IOI) Dominic,, 35, .. Court Jury ruled apJnst. Dr. Dn'nk, Leer'. brothers Angelo, ss, and~. .Giibert Cochrane In a If.day ___ 53, of conspiring lo dernila trial the UOlted 8111'1 while John erece11er61111t, But Not ~1~t "i:.i:~ SAN DIEGO (AP) -Pete Terminal Island federal Bohmer, ~ ot a c..'Olltrov· T th prisons in Califonlla on coo- ersy that cost him hla San oge er, vlctioos of tax evasioo. Dlet6 Slate \ach1"i job earlier this year, bU~ been SACRAMnm:> (UPJ) SECRET ind I ct men ts ~Victed of-o b .• tr u ct I n g 1•vou can still see dirty shows -returned in · San Diego last ~1~ tracks man an.Uwar in CalUornia. You can still eat week and announced Tuesday d-•l)on· . • · ~ drink. You just can't do charged Dominic, Angelo 4.DI! • • ~. 18, ~-Sim,_·~,\. both at oocei" rr . , ·Tony with similar offen1e1. and · William Maborie, SI; Of 1bat was C&llfornia At-COOnls also were returned O.ul~ Vista, were found _Jl1'.11Jr. •lorney Geoe,'1 ,Eve l l e against fonner prison ad· by a JU!'Y Tuesday. alter_,,.. YN•n•er's ca}l!ule anazysii ol minlstraton Daniel Morgan tllree days of deliberalkl!. 1.;r week's ·u.s. supreme and Anthony Santiago, ae- oblcene cuslng them of granting the e Beat .. Prellell Court ruling on en-Al..,.lo brothers lavon. --• .,~',,,.. (AP) tertainment. , SAN • ~'""""' -:. T1\e qilllrl upheld • state'• John A!01Sio Is tlte former ABATA SAID THAT the Jury was instructed many times DOt to watch television, hear the news, read the newspeper or talk to anyone about the case. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A man anned with a 9mm pistol has been arrested -in . con- nection with Sacramento County's third double slaying in eight dayf, Sheriff Duane Lowe says. Ao unempio,ad.clrolbma!\ ~ ·'outllbrity . to ,...ilate nude ,._.r manager of Callente heon booked for lateatlptlott ...-m.nt· ln bin and ti> Race Tl'lck In Tijuana, Mez. of murder and mutllallon In prohibit "boUomless" dancing !co, and m 1111 on a I re about 18 miles near the hamlet the fatal shooting of two men and IO-Called oadult"•:movies. businessman in San Diego. of Rescue. about 18 .miles at a Mission D ls tr l ct Y~er 'said Tueadaf thati John Alessio remah'll In THE COLLECTION COLOR DIAMOND '•1So if that's not toking your freed«11s away, I don't know what is," he said. 11Everybody elJe in the world was able to talk about the case but us." from the Sacramento County restaurant-dance ball. the Alcoholic Beverage ' Con-federal prison at McNeil line, said Earnie Carlson, Police !8id thet arrHted trol regl,llations sustained by Island, Wash., where be is sheriff of El Dorado County. Manuel I. Antonio, 28• at h!.s the court dealt only with bars serving a three-year sentence The 'bodies were sent to home Tuesdaf.after receiving and private clubs where for income tax evasion banded Sacramerito for an autopsy. information vol~~ by alcohol was sold for con-down in 1971. Discovery of the bodies mem~ of the Filipmo com-~su~m~ption~· ~o~n~the~prenmes~~-~·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Hiiiisii;;;;;i;broiiiitberiiii;;;An;;;;iig;;;el;;;oiiiiiwas followed ·the finding ol two munity. Ii "" of men's clothing, blood-• Clotlles Fettttll ~ ;:f.1!.,"':t:: 1:Ti; Yo SEMITE NATIONAL The boy. the girl, the diamond. At limple as that? Not qutte, for d'10monds or. a different as the special people whO buy thorn and_. them. You're lnvitoc:I to IOloct from· I -V special collection 9f diamondl 9f the finest color. We con Selection of a new jury wa~ IT-EASED · Lowe ·said Tuesday Eddy Lee Earle, 22, was arrested in Lhotel room for ~ of murder alter Ille clllcovery of the ~ bodies of two men in aballow graves in nearby El Dorado County. Ao lnVf9tigatlon waa ynder way to determine if Earle aid the victims were involved in a drugsmuggllngo per at ton between Mexico and California, Lowe .added. In north Sacramento. PARK (AP) -Clothing Jpwe told reporters at a recovered after a woman was news <Ollference tt _..,.i swept over Upper Yolemlte Ille vjctbDs were,abot to -Falls In aa ·-.,.i double In Ille car waah -Y ntpt sulCide 11 days .., wu,ttn- and transported lo El Dondo taUvely ldenttlled Tuesday aa MINNR'S SHIP CHANDLERY Se--Slllpo - Neutlcel looks ""'." Slllpo i...po them "ColleCtion Color" ...._,... We 1-. them In ,_,., lhlpoe, lizol. llld priceo, .... of which will meet yollr budget. You moy individUllly IOlec:t your mounting ll1d your tipeJ.r ', · ·Collection Color diamond..or "-from · 1 ., styles we have Cflllod • THE HURT SACRAMENTO (UPI) -State legislative can- didate Will Slocum of the Peace and freedom Party today ..ported spending mlly 134.to of h!s total 144.44. On his •pending report:; Qocum w r o t e , "lb'plus used for a few friendly jugs of muscatel." Be lolt hls race. • k .......... '., He said the victims were tentatively identified as Mex- ican nallonals. A 'l'IPn'ER gave the sber- ifrs office information which led to unearthing of t h e bodies Sunday nigh~ Lowe said. The victims had been dead only a short time. The two bodlel. were side by side in 11-incb-deep sravu County for burial. that of a au.co area woman. A p,ark 1po~ said the FINE SHIP MODELS • .• for someone you love. Do Something Beautiful.,. Clla,,. ACCOl,llltl lllVI ... -~rka• .. ,.. .... 8111U.rnerlalrd llMll MHlw CMtr9L '"· EARLE WAS a~ with 1 · clothirig wu believed to have !!mm automatic pistol when belonged to Lorriine Sutton, arrested, Lowe said. He also IO, Forest Ranch. It was Iden· SLAVICK 'S was in poasessk>D of "a ti&t by ber father. 1be bQdy --La'l•·Selectlon-of ... utlcal l s· 1917 . M..iH """' -Slilp Clocks H9tchbo.ch . ~ ...... ft.......... that was ~1ng •-· not been recovered but a Jewe ers mce .. ...,..Mii,_,. uc me Decorahr lhma & Glfta checked Bl a possible narcotic. pathologist waa able to ~ 18 FASHION ISLAND Capt. Jerry saulter of the reccnstruct the woman's size,~ OHNr•VINNteS -TU•s. TH11tu SAT. -'Tit. 1• NEWPORT BEACH -644-1180 Sacramento County aberiff's weight and coloring through a frl-11•.i::i.' MlilNErS SH• ,cHAl!DlllY '"'""" -. _ office said In a sepera\e cue portion of a leg f~ at the -... · 2537 West c...t Hltllw., °'" MMM\' nn .........., 11 a."" " •1• .... Monday nlgbt. aarcot1cs were1_Jb8~~~se~ol~lhe=-~l~,~·~3~Q~· f~o~o~t~!""!~54:8:-4;:;1~9~2~!""!·!""!;""';;~;~~·.,.;"oa~~:;·~-:c";;;'"';;!""!!""!Jb=~wr~~~..,~·...,~'!:"~,~:,::.,_~DI~"'~· .,,~ ... ~-~ ... ~· u~"~t::;~,;,,.~u~H-~.=~J In •• ....... •t terfall ( I I $ found . an a.,...~ in wa , Which Earle WU listed U ~ . ' cu pant. ' JF. .... . . , ' .. .. • I".'' ,., •• !. y .. "' ~· "'. (AJ>) .... "TW menllave been amsted .... iR a blifulng ap•-rtment bulldlilg !Or lnvestijfation of ban); robbery afler police fired a tear ·gas barrage. bours~hier. · .. '."1 ~;.. ,il'r11 ~emJ;t •'"~khan! Officers began fillng teal Joilol( ·33, ftlbd out of the gas canisters into a secom. buming building and lut· noor apkrlment -after--Ol'dering r:encserect. He g...a v. • -a two men \nside to surrender:. Sacramento hotel u his home Everyone else was ordered to address, tfle lpO~ ~. evacuate. A se(.'ODd man wu rtlCUed Smoke and Dames started • from t!ie fiamea by police Who pouring out of the lMJlldlng • used a ladder to CllT)' him' to Shortly after the tear gu safety after be collapoed at a volley bejan, witnesses said, window. '· ~~1:i "Our-Mbsf.d~kedfu~ skoes 1 ·-·MCI\<~ 'tke 1'fkv-fec.f 8if+ 11, ~ ' ' . lite ~llabee ~e adidas ~\lie.+ . ' .. , While hWldreds of spee- tatora. ptbtred nearby, about 50 Sacramento police officera and lheriH's deputies sur· ""'8lled a twwtory apart· men! bolUding near t h e downtown area. The officers gathered Tuelday after a car was spotted that answered the .-.;pt1on ol the one u:ied by bmdlll wllo help up the Placer Nallonal Bank In nearby CIUus llelghta about two , • ' I'·~ I • f _,_ , . • and spread to an adjacent He was identified as 'Casey ,.. thr e e · s tor y apartment Dueber, 39, who could mt jm.. building. .mediately give a borne ad- POUCE HAD to move sq1»1d cars out of their way to let firemen get to ·the blazes, witnesses said. A man ident.illed by a sher- dress. Sheriff's apotesmaa B i 11 Miller Mid Dueber w a s treated at a . hospilal for smoke inhalation and burnl. The fire's cause was tmknown. ·' . . . • h~l\ ow-low Mc:::ic:fd SA~d Of" 04k111ood cdo\"' Q 1.1 'Si%~~ ' --fne. ~k~ '!fC>v-~LI I ,$:!QSO!f\S '" • , .. l\~kOY"' IOVJ ~Q..l • ·~~«OW OV". VJ!df. . ' ~ ~ t.l ·->iz.e:-s · · • t .. . ii\e spor+shoe -fo'°" fe.hVli-:. or-sh-e~+ 11JtaY al I 'Sii.es 644-5070 • .. .. •• " -... ' '"· •, • • • • ~--:•:~===============================================:;==:::::::= , • I' .... • DAU,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Children The battle over school boundaries 1n thC' hjUs above Corona dcl Mar has been reopened by the recent approv· al of an extension or Jiarbor \1ie\\' Homes. As the OOundaries are no'v dra\vn. the children in 119 homes in the ne\vest portion of the Donald Bren tract will have to take a bus ride of 14 miles or more to get to school in the Irvine Unified $chool District. Just across the line, in the older porlion of the same tract childfen will be able to \Valk to the Newport· Alesa' district's new Roy 0. Andersen school when it is finished next fall. Newport Beach planning commissioners approved the new tract with full knowledge of the school bound- ary problem because the same thing happened before in the nearby Spyglass I-fill tract. li1 that instance, not only is the tract split .in half by the boundary, but the line actually bisects a number of homes. The Irvine Uniiied School Di strict really has noth· ing to gain by hanging onto the Bren tract extension . It will be a break-even proposition at best in tax income vs. educational and transportation costs. Tbe Newport-Mesa Unified School District has al· ready said it can handle the added influx of students even if it means filling Andersen School to capac· tty a little sooner than planned. Spyglass Hill is another matter. The homes there are valuable enough to make the tract a revenue-booster for the school district, and Irvine school officials will be understandably more reluctant to give it up. \Vhat it will probably take in both cases, ho,vever, is continuing protests from parents \vhose children have to travel so far to school each day. Since the Irvine district ha s no planS to build in these areas. it may eventually get tired of cooing with upset parents and become interested in a solution. ..As of now. neither school district nor the developer Politics I has shown much concern for solving the problem , how· ever. It also would help mittert U the city of Newport Beach would someday got around to dect!llllg where Its ultimate boundary ls going to be in that area so the school districts can establlsn their own. Districts jealously guard their own territories but there is little doubt sucb boundary disputes prove the need for lines that are coterminal with the cities aerved, at least In this instance. At the very least, the fact that JOO or mon young students are lacing long bus rides should spark some- body into taking positive action to resolve the problem. Alter all, it is the children who are auppooecl to be of paramount importance, not political arguments or projected tax revenues. Hard to Please Everyone After many delays, the Irvine Company hopes New- port Beach councilmen finally will be able . to study the Jasmine Creek townhouse project. in Corona del Mar. They also hope that plans for the project, which have been revised several times, finally will satisfy wary homeowners who have raised the many objectiona that have caused so long a delay. Company engineers and officials have spent bun· dreds of man hours poring. over project plans with homeowners and have attempted. to resolve the sltua· tions residents found objectionable. They lowered building pads up to 15 feet In some cases. cut second stories off several buildings and moved others. They also did detailed traffic studies to prove the roads can handle the influx of new people. The project is certai71ly not indiscriminate develop- ment. The company's \villingness to \\!Ork .:with home- O\rners and respond to their complaints wi th costly action proves ft . N Study Shows Some Tricks Of Memory Bow BOUBtotf Fares Wiillout a Zoning Code . ' ~U>~Y J. HARRI~ , Speaking of the "work of the im- ... 9 agination," as I was recently reminded me of a psychological experiment coo- ducted some years ago by Leonard Carmichael and two or his colleagues. They sbowed a group of students a list of 12 line drawings , which the students \l"ete asked to reproduce from memory. 11ie figures \Ver c sho\vn one at a time, privately, to e a c h subject. Before each sho\\·ing. the experi- 1nenter \\"Ould say: "'The followlng fig· ure resembles . . . " But while all the subjects saw the same figures, half were given one set of verbal labels, and half another set. The first drawing was labeled a "beehive" for some, and a "hat 1' for oUf'ers: the se- cond waa called an "hour glass" for some . and a "table." for others. Obviously. the purpose in doing this - \Vith ambiguous drawings that could be interpreted either way -was to direct by suggestion the subject's rE:J)roduclion of each figure . The result was s1artling: in 87 percent of the cases, it was found that the draw- ings were sharply distorted in the direc· lion of tbe particular verbal label which had been provided. What the :;ubjects im- agined was their "recall" turned out to be based on what they were told the figures "resembled," rather than on what they actually Sa\\'. 11": COM~1ENT1J'1,;G on this experiment. in his interesting book . '"r..1emory: Facts and FaUacies." Dr. Ian !\I. L. Hunter. the Dear Gloomy Gus Why did the City of Newport Beach install that elaborate traffic sig- nal at Jamboree and San Joaquin Hills Road. The darn thing never works at peak traffic hours . B. T. B. Til11 tdlvA l'lflectt rtldUT ¥iewt,. '"'' lltCHUrltt ftlOM .. lllt ........... MIMI l'tur HI _.... M 0"'9mr G•~ DMtt Plltt. British psycbologist. points out that <1h.1ost in\'Briably ··"'e interpret our present experienei!s in accordance 'vith our O\l'Tl interests. atti tudes. hqpes and expectations .'' As-an e:icample. he goes on. "it has been found that, as compared with people "·ho regard Negroes In a favorable or un- prejudiced llght , those with anti-Negro attitudes find It difficult in di!llti nguishing one Negro from another. They see a Negro in somewhat the same way as the averag€"J>erson sees a sheep -not as an individual with unique characteristics. bl:t merely as a member of an un· differentiated class." ON ANOTHER LEVEL. Dr. Hunter says, "there is the fact that if we show a blurred and indistinct picture to a hungry man , he is more likely to see it as representing food .,,r some object relating lo food than is a man who is not hungry ." It is not merely beauty that lies in the eye of lhe. l:eholder, but much of what v:e call "reality" it.self. Our imagination, un- der external or internal suggeSlion. su~ pli es the "meaning" to people as well as to pictures or drawings. We fill in the details, besed on our accumulation or past experiences and training. The "inscrutable"' Chinese, if he livec' next lo you as a neighbor. would tum out to be as. scrutable 11s Archie Bunker -and probably just as prejudiced the other \\•ay. Congressional Benefits ..__..._ By GEORGE J . MARDER V .... Prus !11MnllllltMI : Newly elected members of Congr~s may be bap.py to find out 11.bout a cash Or carry system for their stationery illowanoe. Tbe allowance for House members was Upped from $3,SOO to $4.250 a yea r just before the last session of Congress ad· _loumed. But the ·amount is not as in· teresting as lhe way the. money is hand!· fd. (GUEST REPORT J A few years ago. one r:ongressman had the stationery store buy automobile tires for him from his stationery allowance. saying he netded them to get around to his conslituen ta. That isn't done any more, but there Is nothing to stop a congressman from drawing the cash to buy tires at regular c o m m e r c i n I establishments under the carry-cash pro· vlsioq .• STARTING with the first day of the Session Jan. 3, the $4,250 allowmce will be crtdlted to each congresunan at the House rlltlonerY store -a lhop just like any other e1cept that the prlcts are low-ANOTHER FRINGE benelit t o r er and ely congressmen md_their staffs members 11 the free trip home. There flll buy. And there arc no salts taxes. wu a Ume \\'hen Congress merely paid Coo«rtamen can carry away from the to get the!. congressmen to Washington for ltore fret ¥tationery suppUes for their of-a session and then send them back when (Ices up to the amounl ot the allowano:-e. the session was over. Now, howeve r. It's Or tbef can draw all or part of the felt bnportant for the lawmakers 10 keep ~-(jJ cash -DO qi!alllons Biked. [II touch. And Jllll before the last 8ell!c\D The -itoo la that 11 a -ended. the tt ..... 1'8iaed the rree travel -9 -·t like wbot bo can 1et allowance for <»II~ from 26 to 38 Jiom tho -llont -llld be CID le~ ' l1lWld trlfl' every !WO>)'•ar per1od. ~ -perocc'1, ......,..,,Ide That woold permit the coogrcssmM to ~ Ila~ to Mt!< re! one!· make J\lst about one free trlp home ,.,.-dipl -be can dntiw fie cash and t'ltl')' two •eeU. Tba veterans, howevtr, ..., ellewbere. us..: few of the frtt trips lhe fint. year. "BB WENT elsewhere fle'd bave to ~..,...-.,. ... the price '11 off«e IUP' lllo lo a. --.tort 11 tbe· JowesHn .. .... , fumllWd at. •t II known as ~ ""'l II th! congmsman ,.._"I a. -parUcular ltqn be can _ ....... -..I -1 flrllld, SO 1111 • 11'1111 to do wttb ldl ollloe. aavlng lhtm lnateld for the aecond year when they h1ce re-electk>n. The lloust,. also ~ the travel allowance for emJ>loyea of congressmen. ••ormerty, lkMlse 1tiltfers were Allow•!d up to rour rr.. l'Clll!d tripo ro the mem~rs· dlstrkt per ConlJ'tlB. Tb ll t hu ~ ralltd to llJ.1 atartlng with 'Deal Congr.. Is Land Zoning ~ Waste of Time? Bernard B. Siegan is an infrequent n1an woo walks out of step and questions comfortably settled foregone conclusions. He is a real estate lawyer and a research fellow at the University of Chicago who, after taking a long and technically careful look has decided the. best thing we could do for our- selves is to 1 u n k t17if'· land-use zoning of • \ all kinds . ~,. Most home· owners ~ ... suffer from the de-- • I us ion that it 's zoo- ing \V h i c h save! from slum ification and savage depreci- ation the dear spot of earth on which they make the m'onthlf payments. No so. tt's true that some home owners can get more fol their property because zoning tampers with a free real estate market so as to reward some people with higher values by legislative flat, but that's the luck of the draw, not a system for pro- tecting property vnlues. What Siegan did was to go to Houstoo, Texas. the only large city ln America without a zoning code, and see how the folks there were faring in this horrific condition of non-governmental regulation. (Siegan's book, Land Use Wltltoul Zon- ing, D.C. Heath and Company, is first ( VON HOFFMAN J rat•, but th< teclmJealltiel of liw IPd economica don't mate It an easy reader.) Hoostooltes !lave twice been given a .chance to expma their prtfemiiol an this Issue and have declsivelyvoted lon- ing down both times. 'J:UE RESULTS haven't been anything like what city planners and other 80rts of shyster visionaries would have you th.ink. Oil refineries and Colonel Sanders ~hicken shacks haven't invaded the dty's better rt,Sldential neighborhoo ds . Slegan's evidence shows that Houston Js at least as nice or no more hellish a dty to live in than any .:ither. Nor does the "absence of zoning mean thaijOu can UH your J)roperty to destroy the valued other' people's. The city ha.I laws ··rtqUlrtna: apartment houses to have off-ltrtet parking, it has a bnlktlnt; code, and otbtr regulations that prevent a property owner from mating the neJabborbood uninhabitable. But it has no zoning . Theoretically, you ean put up a 50-story office building or shopping center right in the middle of a leafy co~unity of bun,galow!'i, but it doun't happen, because it makes no economic s e n s e. Siegan fmds that 90me o t h e r very good things do happen. For e :s: a m p I e, rents in Houston are significantly lower than they are in the comparable city of Dallu - wbert they have a tradltionnl zoning set- up. THE REASON la tbat 1 zoning code artlfically and arbitrarily removes large 11110W1ta of land frcm !he market tbat might be used for apartment t.llldlngs. Tht price of the remaining land r.oned for multl-ramily occuparley Is forced·up l!ld IO, ineluctably, are tbe rents. fn tllHOl>ecJ Houston, apartment-house land costs less than single famlly·bouse land, tbus mak· ing lower rents possible while preserving the home owners' investment. Zonllll not only 11\al< .. a hash out ol resldential land use, but a ~ out or everylhlnf else. Sometime• land IJ set aside for Industry which lndw.lr) doesn't Win~ but becaOSO ol th< zoning everybody elJe Is afraid to buy It. THE PLANNERI who draw up these zoning ordinanees simply bave no ac- curate way of knowing who wants to do what with land, and, lacking that in- formation, zoolng Is a maddening en- cumbrance as well as a serious in· fringement on property rights. Chicago, for example, bas aeven dif- ferent buslnes.t laod-use zones. Areas zoned B-1, SJegan PoiDlS out, permjt barber shops but not st.atior:ery stores, bakeries but DOI t..udwlr< ll«<s. cleonen but not glll lhopo, l!ld so lotth aod so on. Although that seems 1mbec1Uc, Cblcogo zooing Is considered Jiretty good In the trade. '!be ool1 lmowu rallonal way we have for llJl!llng OU! how a piece of land should be used ls by seelni wbo11 pay the most to use it and ther. watching to see what ""' ho pull It to . IN THE LAST FEW yen IOme liberals, despalrlng,ol fOldlll """" to accept hlacta, have atarted ,fe!!llJ'king that zoning acts, as a. raclally U:· clusionary device. Siegan argues that all r.oning is exclualooary, not only of. race, but many' many otber thinp, lncllidlng revenu .. produclng property tbat many Jurlldlctlons bldly Deed. . 2imliig does, however, COl)ler · nne benefita. It provides 1 lot ol city planners with jobs, It generates an flllOnDOWI :;nt!n ~I the~~ 1::0~ packs of lawyera -l!ld II la tbe 1-st and steadiest ....,.. of graft 1valloble to town. vW.ge, city ind county pollllcltM the coontry over. WUb tbete advantages, let's ignore Sieaan and fight to keep It Varying Views of Ocean Bike Trail To the Editor : So far I've not been made aware of much positive action toward providing an ocean front bicycle trail The talk as reported seems only to delay im- plementation. Perhaps "obfuscation" is a better word to describe the action. YOUR PAPER has several times stated that -the existing trail extends from 39th Street to E street. 1 live at the cor- ner Of •tb Street on the ocean aide of Seashore Drive. When I look out my front window (see nothing but sand unUl ,16th Street where the beach front walk begins. Wber'e Is the tra1I between 16th and 39th Streets? I do not cooaider tile reported 00. jections to an extended beach front bicy .. cle trail to be as· wt.lgbty u IOIDI would have us believe. Windblown sand would be a problem as it iJ now on the preaent walk. Water on the trail would be a rart. ty unless the trail were constructed IO far out it would cross the endi of the groins. The clash between pede1trlanl and cyclists is likely to be an inloluble problem Without 1evere rtstrictJon whlcb ..... 'Ould negate the whole purpose. There always seems to be room for volleyblll but the footballers do require mort than their ·fair share or anllabl& splCe on •·good" days. 'Mle same '' true of the Frisbee sa..ilen:. SlNCE THE newspaper will reach all those who are interested f would like to MAILBOX Letters from rtader1 are welcmM. Normally writer1 1hould conve11 their messages in 300 tDOrdl or les1. The right to condens1 Uttns t.o fit ipace or eliminate t~btl is renrwd. All letteTs must include signature and mailing addre1s, but Mmfl may bt withheld on r1que1I If rufficlenl reruon U apparent. PotttJI tDiU M1 be publlshtd. their garage doors on the wut 1ide of the street as they do now. KENNETH E. WATKINS I Opposes Troll ' To the Editor: 1 feel that It is time for your nenp1,per r.nd tbe ciUrens to hear from the oppostng 'aide ol the w .. 1 Newl)Ort Bicycle Trail contl'O'V'eny, since you seem tD have taken a posttkln on a sltua· lioo tbal Jw not been tbon>ugbly -· m WiSI' NriPORT beach •n- vironment Js 'now atlrlcilve to thousands or people for the rolJowlng reuons: · J. 'JbeY can escape the r.otse and use tl>il spoce to ~· suggeotloq tlanpr cl UJe bicycle rt<len and the ellf>' wbfdt,may also allect tnllk: planoilllJ: A pery, IUllJ.~· · '\llttp of S...bort Drive Jbould be 2. All l1POI ol beadl IJ!lOrlS are designated os Bicycle Trail trorn ll2nd available witboot tbeltrllf1c pr<:blems in- SU..t westward one! estended to the volved lo driving to tho -~ beecbel in rtver. Much ol Seashore Drive ls ctr· central Ntwport. tatnly weU-used 111 bicycle trail now. If 1. Tbe1 can walk on th< beach at nilht the street ends OCfllDward fl'Cl1l Seashore and enJof' b atar11 tod the lumineace.nt Drive to the beach (about 75 feel) were surf, Wbldl oannot ·be llOOn tn the in- pavtd, oddllklnal porklng Ind 11pea1 tor tolerlile llare ol -11clU· bike rackl -be provided. If THE llSAL EXPERTll .. surf IPd Seashore Drive were to be made -way blgh lldti coodit10111 Jn w .. t Newport are from 3lnd Streel,to 4lth ---who bave lived wltb the prolr lrom lhe l"'\lnSUIO' ~ bt lmpnvtd. ~ tor 10 or IDfln y .. n . I !loo't There would llllll 1"' rvom !or 1:urb potlt· -you COOlcl 'Imply tbat Mlyor ing on the east olde o1 tbe stnet. twe Mdlmll ls ~)Jll faviirlt., with West lanes of automobli...trafllc Ind tho bib """Newpel1 lf-,.U bid _-with..., trail. Roid<nts cauld atW park ln ""11 ol one of 1b1m. Two uampla: I) tbe wthuslaatl already -U&ll' "'""'* running ....,. at leost 75 per«lll of oor I precious beachel. Wby should ·we allow them to destroy the rest ol !bot ·en-' vironment, the narrowest sectlon ti beach that Js meet accesslbJe to tbe public? CAROLINE RANDOLPH CLUCAS Soeial Secllrit9 rto the EdJtor: · lsn' It great Ulal th< Social Securily lleneflt paymenta bave been incttased by 20 pe.-! BUT,-lt lou't ao great tbat the Sodll ;s.curt1y tu ls also being in-. creased. Here ls a comparlloa ot the amount of Soclal 5ecurity tax an• employee and his employer wlll ac~ pay for employees WD1ng 11,IOO, $10,l!OO IPd $11,000 a year. Yoorly w... 1m ms · ' 9,000.00 ... 00 $415.00od ' 10,IOO.OO 4811.00 504. U,000.llO 411.00 184.00 ' Don1 ,.1u -tbla won't be the last in· . crease. C. C. MOSELEY OltAHOI COAIT DA ILY PILOT .-----B11 George--.....----. rqularftJ wttb wlllch Clly volltybolJ coar11 an UJe ~an wui.:1 away, even~ .,.mo; 2) UJe con- dltlm al ihe otdlw between UJe pier Robtri N. \Vecd . PubU.shcr Thomos Kt1t7il, Editor Barbara Kreibfeh Editorial Page EdilOT o .. r George: Recently )'OU printed a letter of mine tak1na to task your silly lltUe column for wasting the public's lime with foolishness Y.'hen newspaper space would be. better Jstd for more se.rloui mattert. You replied. "(to IOak .)'()Ur head.'' I con.81.dc.r lha an lnlult and In poor taste. C.V.B . Dcnr C.V.8.: - Get -1 thought you WANTED n serl-Ous, lincere reply. Othe:l'Vt'lsc, I ~ woold bave ,.Id !OlllOtbi"l .itlY. Dear George : I've seen noUce1 lboul triterinC Jeorge'101'91C. Contatl. I've written you I -Umeo ror Wonn•UOl!c on lhls conl 1t! What do l 6>? EXAS,Pl;.l;\ATED Dear Exuptrated ~ .,....! You lole. The \fl.nnt.t wrote in 17 times for coat.est lnform•ttorl. Bet· tcr luck nei;t time . , . be sure ind rm out the cOllpon below. one! 11111 1tree1 Inn> tho tut two -of ndD and wind. The t'dltorl&.I fll~e or the DJl\y BJ COMerVatlve esUmatel there art P'\lot llftk• \o lnforJn and 1Umu· • to 1,000 reskSeotsi on tbe ocean troat Jt1e tHdcra b)o presc.htln1 t.hll w,.,.. INl aod 74tb 1tr~ll. Tbl1 n1ure =~~:~~ t:Z.i:.lo:; ln~:h.t ~ could tiull1 reprtsent 50 percent of tl)e .,,1wnlflttncw, ~ provk1lng a forum telidml• wbo reiUlarly riae blcyclts tor the expreulon of ovr readen' akmc lt. beleh. Thlt ll batdlJ I u 1lhlvna, and tiy-prtisenUnc the "baoid611" or a "low'' people llvtn1:.0tl'lhe•-t--dh,....-.<""1""""""·""--_ ~ 117W •to In your tdltorfil1 ~rvel'I and l(X"lkl'ilrrl<'n on toPMll • ' ollhedof. Tiii ••at • 111 the ucluol.v• PtOP' er17 ·a1-...,.. ~' ~F" to ride Wednelday, Dec. 11, Jiii ........ '11111 ' • ' ol blcyclt .. ' l ( ,, ( Orange Coast Today's Fl•al EDITION N.Y. St.eek t .VoL ~5, NO. 348, 7 SECTIONS, 104 PAGES ORANGE COUNT(, CALIFORNIA-c TEN· CENTS Are Elderly in High Bise l!;ire Trapsi> 7 I ( hcllrJl 1overnment administrators cilman-, P,inkley says the absence of n DOI doing their jobl In protecllng autornaue sprlnklers and other safety 1 1Lt1t1C1 of Bethel Towers.type building features made them "fire trap1." --deaths by lltt. O>lbl Me11 He Is plllll1ing to go to WISblngtoo this Qty Couocllman Alvin Pinkley charged ~th to ask Senator Alan Cr1Dston ((). today. · calilornil) and U.S. Rep. Rlclw<I T. Pinkley declared he Will go to · IWma (().Westminster) to lntereede with w~ th an e!lort to glln higher admlolslr1tots of the 1le!>9rtmenl of lllety llandanfs from Congreu. HooJslng anll Urban Development for pro-Cllinl tragic caaes of death In AU1Dta, tectton of the elderly. • Ne9'1,0rleens and in C.Osta Mesa's high-The Department,:he Insists, offel'f low- riie apartments for the eld~rly, Coun-cost 1fim.nc!:ing for ._the· apartment com-. . • p1e1es but exercises a disregard for the -ta by not Insisting on safety features such as sprinklers and adequate elevators. The unsprlnklered 18-stor)' Bethel 'ftw. era has been the sjta· of el(ht nr.s, in- cluding three ,,,.,... blat.e"s Udrooe fatal- ity. Plans for a se<ODd l(\ivef at the 19th Street location were rejecttd by local of- llc)als h<cause of inadequa~ Ill~ features. . Pinkley said he visited the Capitol last • year to.persuade HUD administrators to require fire sprlnkllllg systenu but that he waa rebuffed . "I'.ril a tiille uptigh~ because the one in AUanta, wbett'Dloe people were axpbyx- lated and 31 injuftd last l!IClllth, was ap- proved for conatruclloo by !JUD after I was there .to beg for the sprinklers," says Pinkley. "There was a cc;irpplete tie-in with the fire death In Costa Me~ and ~ in us ec Ill Prosecution Says Crane 'Guilty' ; .,,_.tor Jim Stolle!' today asked ID ilraoft Ooaqty Stqiorior Coar! jury to ~ Trlnld.d "Trlni" Crane guilty of ant .~ JD~ for what be said was . ~ ......... killing of Llooel "Jobnoy" IUrdns'ln hil Costa Mesa apartment. . 8lolJer told the jury lo Jqe Robert · r ri 'Md~ eou.rtncm .tblt ¥theft could .. 'lto ....... .-act'' lo Ille 11(1111 "' the lillljlq-apllllllM~va l , -~ lo her -·-trill. , ,,. test "J•W(J' the PJ'Ol'C.'Utor said, delil7 -tbal lijs. er-, 30, !lllqed . ----·-~·...,···bad p:~a::.-=..u: •• s .. ...,~., Jl(artfDo!.111 of we N. lllllllcD St., !lied 'A driver peers through hi& ~d covered with a substance un- aa tba ~-1 Joca1 ~. fa'!'i li•r .to Bay Area resident.!, ~namely snow. It snowed Tuesday in Mn. Ck'w ~ IM~' tbal Ibo Marin County, u well as other spots in tlte 'ire a in the worst stretch ~~;M":!' :.::::t :,~ __ of'-cold~-wea_ther_· _th_e_re_in_S_O..:ye_ar_•. ___ · ____ ::::_-____ _ Ibo realised that be was mortally -.id- Doryman, Daughter Disappear By MICHAEL GOODRICH Of lie Dlll'I l"ltif Staff Huntington Beach lifeguards are scour· ing the local strands toda}', seard:rlng for the bodies of a NewpQrt Beacll dory fi~herqian and his 3-~r-otd datWiter wha d~ Tuesdai effsboro hm the FAiSciii pi>wtr plant. '.~ lluollo aod ,ljb'.ti.ttnatoo u~ leUCIJOcl chllly,-w1ten •IL~.( altelnooo, alter the empty dory 1>oll Of' .\tlao Va.pi Knight, ~ of 224 f!wpart Q!vd., N011por! Bea;;b;. waa spot~ lliora---+ .. ~.....,- . Polioa belicopters aJao wert uaed in ~·-.JCllil!I~ llld hla daughter, Pajrlcla, wen elime in the boat, dieCidiili bis lobsi.r tr.pa abollt 200 yOrda oll.ilore, (See DORY, Page Z) ecl But .the deed man's roommate, 1 key pneef'al"'a whneu whlnrU later labe1· ed by lllOtber witnell "'as blnlnas," lelljlled tllat the 111111)' w6 m • n Moon Adventurers Make Dor y in.en Start Up Col"lection deJ!benteJy lllabl>ed hla fri<md IS the pllr --..., the earlier lncid"'l Judp Kaeelanil will lostr)ICt the jury llld ....S 1t to its clellberatloos liter to- clay alter deleme attorney Al stokke bas dell-hla final argumeol lltst Lunar Exploration Allen KnJgbt and hla pretty dauPter·Patrlda are deld·l!Jld the men of the ·Newport BeaCb dory llablng Oeet are grieving. Kiilibt ·1e.Ves 1 wife and four other children .with very litUe mooey. They dop 't have much themselves but they bave started a collection for the KnighHsmlly. Harry Truman· lfold,ing His Own, Doof:O;rs Report KANSAS CITY (AP) -Harry S Truman'• doctor 'aald today the 88-year- o!d funner ~ WU "holding his own'' u be remained in serious condition with heart and resplrltory probleml. Truman's vital signs of blood pressure, piihe.and temperature continued to ·lluc- tulte and ftl'e elevated oVt:nUgbt, a spolrtsman for Resean:h Hospital and Modlcal Center said. Bui hla pulse wu II, blood Jll"""'" UHi and le~ 101 -all within normal Umil• -thla morning. The hoepltal spokesman said Truman's helrl coodltlon .... lined unchanged froi;n Tuesday when It was noted as stronger than earlier In the week. His kidney fUnction was 4escribcd as ade- quate. 'l'rumlD responds to verbal ·stimuli but did oqt ·talk during ' the night, the 1~1mln said. He explained that this mlant Truman was aware he was being Ol\OkeD ID but did not necenarily reply. br. Wallace Graham, T r u m a n ' 1 ......,.i · pl>yalclao, said 1'lesday the !«mer chief execuUn'• condltior: would llucluate within tho .. r1ou1 classificaUon foe some time. 1 NEEO£P l!lE5£ flAl<ES 1tl PIJT ME IN 1'14f Sf'IRIT-AHD I''lf &oT ONLV II Ma!! Dll'IS lEJ"(·1b SHOP. SPACE q:NTER, Houston (AP) -Twv · julinant American adventurers prepared today fO!' a faN!weiJ lunar ex· plora-? ' But alftady aboard their la!1der Chollenger waa a new dlscoffry - SMlplea of intriguing oe1D1e aoil possibly dating lo .the hB< fiery gaaps of a dying moon (See related picture, stories, Page 4) Astro~ Eugene A. Ceman and Har- rts.o H. Sdlmltl, in their last geology field trip in ,the moon valley of Taurus. Llttrow today, were to take m eight..mlle drive along the base of a high mountain and at the fool of wrinkled hills, using an electric car with a patched fertder. 1be astronauts, saytng they "like to cover n e w ground," traveled a mile farther than planned Tuesday nigbt. Homophile Group • • • To H6Jd1 Benefit For Mesa Hospital A Laguna Beach homosexual organiza· lion, tbe Concerned Citizens Group, tnc., announced today that proceeds rrom a Christmas supper held Monday night will be donated to Fairview Stat<. Hospital, Costa Mesa. "'Ibe gay community" sald spokesman Ray Beierle, "W1Dts to tab part in the entire community. We want the town to know we are doing something con- structive." Beierle said the Cbrlstriw. dinner at the coast Ion 1tlracled ......, of local ga)'I. Jn addltJoo, be sal>I, .... V'1"al hundred do1lara'' raised at a receM ·nap meet will be donated to the mental hospital. "We hope to provide t;hrlstmas gilts and parties for at least two f! tbe wlnfs. 0 • • • • Perhaps other war'ds If I.re ·have enough • o o • • money/' said Belttle. • ~ • • 0 • 0• The Coocerped Citizens Group, Inc. gathering many begs· of lunar samples, lnclOOing BCDOps of tho orange dual never b--~ore found on tbe moon. ni8 orqa inat'.erlal W• 1fouod during exploration :ol1 ID .ancl<!nt a'ralaoc!be, U miles bun tho laDdlng • .,...P in •Taunis-~-·nuey. By; C9~e, ill was fo.md bi Cernao,;not Sclurult, ~ geologill and America's.first profesSional scientist in space. "Hey,", ~claimed Ceman as be stumbled jnto, tbt: soil at the rim or a crater called Mlorty. "Wilt a minute ... (See APOILO, Page Z), The dorymen are asking other people to help. "They could either b r i n g· something down here, or ·mail it to Mrs. Knight,.. said . Bob Turley, Knlgbt's locker ~. The dory fleet puts in mid-alterooon by Newport Pier. The Knlohts' ad- dress ts 224 N. Newport Blvd., Apt. 2, Newport Beacb. Dory Tragedy ~~.ildren Accompanied Father By L PETER KRIEG searchlnt! for his friend, slouched against °' .. .,..,, ,., 1..-an overturned dory. Jn 1947 two Newport Beach dory The.re were no tean and there were flehennen were caught in a raging few words. ~ storm. They were • brothers. Their boat Turley stared at the sea. ~ was never found" "He must be gone. There's DO cHance. He was a great guy. He started fishing For the past 25 yeara the dorymen who about 25 years ago tn my dad'a boat. sift a living from the sea have skirted Allen probably was the moat well known tragedy. There were anxious moments of all the dory fishermen," Turley said. but no lives were lost. He couldn't believe ·that no one Until Tue,oday. bad gone ID that lltUe bou>e behind the Allen KnJgbt took his 3-year-old Archea where Allen llved1 with Illa wtfe, daughter Patricia with him to move Dora, and five children to break the some lobs~ pot&. news. Allen Knigbt wa1 1lw1ys taking hla "Sheeamedown·bere~forllilp," children with him. Ruaae11 said. "And then ' IOlllObody told . "He wu tbe only one who'd ever do ber .. 11 It," sakt Qwiea Russeli, a longtlme Police and lifeguard.I 11y they don't friend. "He'd take hla wbo)e family out. know for """' wbat bappoood, Bui the He bad a Httlt trap lot eact. o' the kids dorjmeo blow. '· and thty'd'fake turns going oul." 11Trtcl1 1llUlt bave fallen i>ttrboard Bob Turley, like moat of the other snd Allen WUJ1 rllhl In afte!' her. He dorymeo, lanl nlhing teda,y. He 111d be mu8t have leR hla boob ... " Russell doeao't feel Ute it, ~. "And they pulled him riShl to the He and Allen Knight 1bared~ne of the bottom." · weatherbeaten )oek6rlon the saod where 11~'1 1 very 1strons . rwimmer," tho dorytnen aWl1 tJ\etr gear. They""" Turl01, said "and they wmt0'I 19 far out good !rle!1{la. Iba( lie «>uldnl hive made It 19~ •bore Turley,' exhausted ·after hourt of with her nonna!lj>." • . u~~:=f~:q::-~,,;.,.;o~-'-~"a' !orttt_~r..loanally..$0t"t If---_,; K Q..._ o a ejia=-j>OUCe-~t 0 eotrapment" ~ 0 ~--• ol gays in Hel1ler Park and alon1 lbe ,. • .,... ......-. Mabt Beach. • - ,, I f ' ' ------1'-·-------~-~ ~~~~~~ / " -• J' . . ·' Atlanta. Their lives would have· betn sav- ed, or at least had a 99 percent chance of being saved." BeSides the absence of sprinl1lng systems, Pin~ey crltlciz<s the HUD financed buildings' for other areas of safety neglect. · The manner in whlcli the win~ws are stacked on top of each other creates the possibility that the apreadirig Of Ore from one Door to another is Increased. This . - • a ~ .... ' . ' would be Iese probable Jl the windows were staggered accordlng to Pinkley. Further, he insists that the two elevators serving Bethel Towers' 270 apartments are not l!!XlUgb. Both elevators are in constant use, creating a maintenance problem. 'n.e fr e l 1 b t elevator does QOt have a "demand key" and therefore cannot be called lo a particular floor if needed during an emergency. 1be elevator Is allowed to tSt:e ELDERLY, Paget) Cycle Gang Leader Held For As sault By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of .. DMtr ........... COSta Mesa poli~ late Tuesday night arrested a 21-year-old cycle gang leader tl'iey allege attempted to shoot and kill 1rvine police officer Stephen T. Nash during a nighttime ambush last Oct. 23 . ' The suspect, ldentUied as Leslie Robert Peters; of 516 N. Orance St.. Orange, is awaiting arraignment at. Costa Mesa City Jail today on a charge ~ .of assault wilh Intent to commit murder. Witness ·Hin.ts . e " Peters .ftetnttted :. ' For Publicity . By TOM kAllUJY ' • Of .. --Plitt ,...,. A psycblatrlst ie1ilfied·ioday'lhat it . was "entirely pos81ble" 'that Gif Peters returned to California to face a murder . trial because ft )lllllld. proVtde wbat the prosecution catleG th.la morning "'a toap box and a pubUCltY ·vehicle for bis at· tacks oo the estabUsbment." Dr. Daolel ·Cutllle agfeed that the Idea could have fed" l'eten, 23, .,. l'e1:ml8 the- M-.O border be b8cl ClU!Oed 24 ·houri before on Aiirl! 21, 1171, shortly after be killed his p3ttnts at their Huntington B<ach home. • And "be -"lllllmuld for •prosecutor Pat Brian an earlier df8gn0sis that Peters wa1 psychotic when be murdered Charles Peters, 55, and li'Sora Peters, 54, a teacher at Lincoln School lo Con'JOa del Mar. · "But he was mentally capable ~ plan- ning their kiUine," he· a&1et1. , ".You can't can· a .lll,8n.~c-'jUst 11eeaUse :11e, .. .,. ~·s •in c.~e.t1on wllh God?" B1idn wiked Clstllle: ". · The psychiatilst agreed .wt· gili_m<d with several mcr .. bers of tbe Oninge County Superior Court jury aa Brian ex- plalOOd:: "Alter 11ll._the pope-11ys1iii'a in oommunlcatloo wito God and I •c!oti•t think we can "4ll him psycliOUc." It i1 defense attorney Deny Tarlow's contention that Peten' menlal state at the time of the murder calla for a Jliry yenflct ol "dlmintalled capacif;!' - Brian today confirmed that be WIDls a verdict of first degree murder in the belief that Peter. planned the . l!llllnl of his Plf'l!la -be left bla Sao Diego County deoert ·<Otnm-and'fraveled to Runtinltnn -M•lldttia<.before the killing. I"... ~ Brion . had remlodod the jury that Peters WBI diao~ by hla faOiei 9D the day before the killing ahoru, after the defendant was ..COUD<f guilty In a San Dleto court of drug cbatgea that could have brought him" prtJon tetm•of flve to 2Q years. 1 C...Ulle agreed as Peters ,...nd (See eETERS, P ... l) PILOT A.D _BRINGS HOME GOOD NEWS DAILY PILOT c1Usi1Jod want ads bring home good oeWI. lien'• a' true Ito?)': ' Parrot -Balboa Pto. Head, breast, neck OraJtil, bodY ·orange I green. UX-·UXI Reward. That owntr calThd to llY that the bird waa back in hand the first day the ad ran. If you have need of fast·.resu!ta, dlll 642-5171 and placo a• DAILY l'ILOT cl1881fied WIDt ad. ' . ' He Is being held in lleu of $UIO,IJllO ball. A combined force of 15 Costa Mesa and Orqe police officers aneated the uoe,mployed -loader at his 1part. meftt-1•1<1 Tueed'1. -Police--to have uncov.?ruf nine loaded riOn and sbot&uns lo the proceas. Paiel's, purportec! ID be tho newly I eJeoted preSlcleiil of the Orange County c!...lpter of the Healans,motorcycle gang, ~tiered no resistance during the ·raJd. Cos\& Meu Detective ca p ~ E. B . Glasgow said Pewn' aJTeSt climaxed a long inveatlgatioO between Costa Mesa and Orange police officers into the ac· tivitiee of '.'.ie Hesei8J1S. "We've been keeping the Hessians under surveillance for some Ume and questioning some of them over and over and doing things of that nature," Glasgow .explained. He 'added that Petien was believed to have taken over the presidency of tbe ouUaw bike club around the time of the alleged ambush near Jeffrey· Road and Barranca Road. J That nlgbt officer Nash waa on. patrol I in Irvine when-a car containina: two "clean-cut" men approached him and told him of an injured man in the roadway. AJ N~b. ;J, spe • to the scene, the sup- posed victim, IYinl face down, jumped into a crouch and fired at the otfi~ tbrougb the windshield of the oquad car. Nash gunned his car In an attempt to ru., down his assailant but was hit oo the fact: by a bullet fragment. The bw.bwhacker escaped by runn.in& into a nearby oornfleld. Cap!. Glasgow said the small caliber revolver allege.il3 ....ed. in the attack was not recovered from Peters' apartment. ..We're looklna for Jt though ," he added. Police wou.1.a not aay wbetber Peters bad been· positively identified b y Patrolman Nub, a former Costa Mesa officer who was assigned to the Irvine beat Sept, 1 when Costa Mesa toot over (See SUSPECT, Pace ZI Weulter SUony aides are on the •ll"ftda for Thursday, with slightly warm. er temperatures. Hlgh1 cl. $7 at the be>cbel; rts1ns to rr lolaod •• Lows tonight la the 1111. INSm E TODAY . €>range Covntu'• th e o e e r groups c:ofl lt • veor <tfkr Wa tOetk.md, ID h jf I ON fOWfftg produc:tfon rthl"" for .,. .. core. St1 E•Urtal!uMft~ 1"'flC 4J, ...... __. . ~-. ·' c....,.,.. .,.,. -M ·=-·~-, ........ '"""'*'•n•• 00 ·--"'=·:r . Mtlfl I I .. ... ............... -. ............ " -. ---. ............ 4., --' ... . M,~-: ---,.. ,_ . ~-"I" t4 ·._~~~-~~-~~ ......... l I I l • DAil V PILOT .· • Touehes Teaeh I Parents Ca1i Aid Fu.tur e Marriages ' '" llACllAM&N'ro (Al') -Parenll wbo doo' 1""ch each otba: In l'lml GI ~:!hot cblldren may he 1e111n1 up IU1ll!ly inadequate Mun mmlq.., a fMlll <ll OOX11al therapist• lw told state omploy .. hen. "The most effective method or sex education la what goes oa every lftilt. ute," Dr. Thomas P. Lowry of the M.,ter..,,.,.,.,. clinic In SI. IANJJ, Mo .. aald Tuesday, "ONE O•" THI:: FEW lmiversals is that patients were ro.ised fn • family where people never touched each other,'' Lowry said. · Lowry and his wife Anthea conducte<! a seminar for employes of the State Department of Men I.al J lygiene on the use ot sexual iherapy as a divorce preventative. TUE COUPLE SUGGESrED thnt sexually inadequate penon.s quit v.'orry· Ing about it and do what comes naturally. "Just forget about it. A man should stop being the perpetual witnes,, to blJ own failure. He should just think about his wife 's beau1i!u1 form," Lowry said. Fro111Pagel APOLLO ... . lbere ts orani;e soil ." "Well, don't n1ove until t see it," said the: Harvafd.;educated Schmitt. • "It's all over.'' Cernan went on ex- Sitedly. "Orange. I've stirred it up ·with my feet. • l!Hey, it Is ," shouted Schmitt. HI can see it from here. It's orange.•· C~ and SChmitt were awakened -3t. 'tt:JO a.JD. to the strains of the Texas AliM fight !IOllg. Ground control told them their space- craft was tn good shape and everything was set for tonight's moonwalk. ·On earth. &.ienlists "·ere also excited ·iy the discovery, though cautious in thei r eValuation. !"hey said the orange soil Jhay have originated from "the last ga~us gasp of volcan ism" on the moo:i. Dr. Robin Brett. ch ief of the geochemistry branch at t I. e r.tanned Spacecraft Center. said the material paasibJy could be: rust -which has been joan.d in other lunar samples in minute Ruantitles -or some chemical com- ·bination which assumes a reddish color. A final determination would have to await laboratory examination on earth, be said. From Page l ELDERL Y ... slop al every floor going both up and down. "' ~al fire department officials, the first in Orange County to adopt a tough P.Olicy on sprinkler systems for taU :.i.,.udiogs, believe the federal government allould requite automellC -aprinklera In any hulldlnp ••ceeding Ill feet in liolght. • • They ay that hulldinp hliher than ll0- 1 (iet ClllllOt be adequately nacbed with 'ladders and that firemen cannot carry · eqwpm<nl beyond thls limit. · • Fire Chief John Marshan wa~ adamant 1(1ft the. sprlnk1ers earlier this year when l,n>llday Inn applied for penlllts I'! con- StruCt a new hotel 'near sOuth Coast ·Plaza. He Insisted on the sprinklers ~leSpltt the company's threat not to build ··lh• hotel. · · Councilman Pinkley believes that the ·cos1 of sprinkl<rs '.about 2.5 percent the ' oOot of the building) can be amortized . (!Ver a 20 to 25 year perk>d because of ;lawer fire insurance rates. : • '·'lt'1 probably the fault of all of us that · .. didn't require them of the Bethel :a"owers in the first place," he says_ "But -F ......,. when they bulld an !JI.story building with federal funds I.bey would do 1:ateadequate job or proU!cting the lives of • j& occupanls. But they did not do an !:adequate job." ~ "I realJze that It's too late to help my :.,,wn people here but if I can raise enough ~ 'llell about this, maybe we can save the • Uves of e>ther people around the coun-·lry .. i" . • • . From P agel 'SUSPECT ... ~police duties in Jrvinc on a contract '.basis. From Pagel DORY ... Police 5aid. drowned. Lifeguards believe both Huntington Beach ti!eguanl ttike r.toss1er said he fi rst noticed Knight's boat moving south from the pier about 20 yards from the shore. He said Knight was standing ~e rea r of the boat cradling bis daughter in · his arms while be tried to steer the boat by shifting his weight from side to side. Knight was apparently returning from checking his lobster traps v.•hich v.-ere in the Bolsa Chica Bluffs are;i, according lo one lifeguard. lllinutes. later Daniel C. Davis, of 218 Chicago St, Huntington Beach, said he saw a man in the water next to the dory in the vicinity of Beach &ulevard. " Davis said be thought the man was div· ing but then noticed the dory vs travel· ing in a am.all circle De1t to the man Jn th~ water. Lifeguards on the soene lllid the heavy !isbermeo boots worn by Knight mlgbl have pullfd him under once be was In the water. DavJS contacted Huotlngtdb Beach lifeguards who begain an intensive search of the water a quarter mile aouth of the pier. Lifeguards reported they found a child's life jacket ln the boat. Later in the afternoon, another dory fisherman found a cblld's parka in the water near 56tb street in Newport Beach. The divecs involved in the searth were in tbe water until dust·wben poor visibil· lty made the IUl'Cll Jmoo5'ible. Llfei>!ard Captain Jlooglu D'Amall said today there were no moni plans to continue the underwater sean:h, but beach, patrols would continue. Kniiht was described by police as a veteran doryman. They said his wife told them it was aot UDU$ll~I for him t.o take one of their children out on his lobster runs. Fl'OMPagel PETERS •.. Superior Court .trial neared it1 end that the defendant told him in an interview that be felt anger towards his father. He also !estified that Pet.en believed that w~tever sentence might be passed on -him 6e would he a U.. man within llifO ye.an wb..n the "coming revolution" would liberate all occupanls ol the na- Uon'a jails. Peters leaned back in his wheelchair and gave a rare nnile fhis morning as Brian coodemned him as "an extremely dangerous individual wbo baa been thus labele4 by more than one psycbiatrlsl" Peters may spend lhe rest of his life in that v.-heelchair IS the result O( ~mmds suffered one year ago when he tried to escape from the same courtroom during his first trial. Peters was shot In the spine as he struggled with a bailiff in lhe corrido r lei.ding to the jail elevator. Peace Talk ' Results • Kept :M;um A t~t .helieV<d by Oran&• County Sberlll s oflkm fO he a majo!' dealer in marijuana wu arrested in lllldway City Tuesday nlgbt with more than 1.000 pounds of the !llid1 weed allegedly in his --. . Deputies booked Rohen Lyle Thorpe, 26, wboee last mown bomee·~ere ln San Diego and San Francisco oo charges of possession of marijuana and j)olsesslng marijuana with intent to sen. . They said a search of ttie_ prage at 8252 Flight Ave. yielded 235 tightly pack· cd "bricks" of marijuana - a total of 1,070 powlds o! the importod drug • Sherill's Capt. James Broadhelt aald he will oeek a complaint against 'lborpe loday from the district attorney'• office. :· Meanwhile, police arc still on the ·.lookout for the t· ... olher men v.·ho helped ~~fters with I.be alleged ambush. OJMMICOAST ::: DAILY PILOT ·- History of Mak Nude Presented to Trustees .. f 'TM 0...,.. C-.t DAILY PtUJT, w\tlt Wldl ',.; .. ..,..,.., .. ,,.~ .. ~~ .., • or.,.. CIMf' hlllllltlf!I ~. ie,.. ~ note edHIM$ .,.. ,_lit.I, Mo!ld•'I' ~ ~ Mfey, "-' Oliltl Mwe, ......,... a..ett, H1111,.,,,._.. Bffd\/FOlll!ttlln Vtli..,, utune ... ...at. tntr..'~cll: .m .... ClllMnMf ~ 5tn JwH CllP!s•r-. II. slnvl9 ""9Mt ·~ , •Hllln hi Pllblholwd ....... )'& tt!11 SIMM'tl. ~ T?llo Pl'lnel,,.I pi;bll.._ Pl_, .. •t )JI W..t ,. ... S1tff'f, C-tt ~ C:.Ufofl'tlt, ff'lf. • Rehert H. W•e' ,.rflfdcint •Ill Plltlll9ht!I' J•c~ R. Cerl•Y Vke '""9l1Hnl enll G-.a M'"'9W n.;.., Ke..,il ldl,.,. lhem•I A. M1rphl11e M•IWll9"-ldltor Ch•tlet ti. Leo• IUct!W P. Nell At1l11Mt ~11111 r.11..,,, c....M ... OMM llO Wilt lty Street M•lll"f "'''''': ,.o. le11 1160, 92626 ..___ . ........, •ffdti im,,.....,, ......,..., L..-, IHdlt "' ,....., .• ._ """""'* •••d1: lJIJ'J letdl ................ . "" ,,.,.._,.: JU fril«fll ~ tamlnt .... '"lfll•• 111 41 Mi-401 Cl1r1•1• AIN:tli*t M:l·U7t ~ 1f'2. ~· ~-' ~lllllftf ~. ,.. ...,. •*"*· m11ttr•lllM. I ...... , IMlll•'. tr .. ....,,~ .... ""'" .. r~ WI"*" #Kiel ,_. ,,.... .. ~-. ......, tleU ,_,... •If tf C..11 -.., C.11""7114 ~-9Y ee•fllr GM .........,!\', w ,,... 1111 f!MtlTtllyi Mltff.,, ...... ,. OM fNllll!frrf'. • By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL Of IJle O.lf'I' '1111 Shlf Throughout hiltory the male nude has been a symbol of art and the at hletics. a UC Irvine professor told trustees of the La.guna Beach Uriified School {District Tuesday night. Dr. David 11lomason. a professor of classics, appeared before the board to discuss the implications of the male nude at the request of Bruce Hopping or the Kalos Kagatho! Foundation. nie preseatatior. came in the wake of a dectaion by high BChool officials not to all('IW the foundt1lon'1 logo -a. photograph of a male nude .!ICUlpture - to appear on the program for a water Polo awards banquet Kalos Kagathot support. "1qualh- letics" and rublcrlbts to the Greek phliMophy of health in both body and mind. Thomuon, lllustraUng hi~ rrmarks wilh slides, sa!d lhtre Is a fundame ntal distinction bet\i.'ttn the lL!e of the "·ord "nudity' 'and the V.'Ord "naked." ·:we will call a work of art a nude SCUipture, bul never call It a naked man.'' noted Thoma!IOn, 1peaklng with a crisp English accent. "We distinguish be tween the accfrlcntally naked and tbe puroosefully nude." The sncient Grt ek!, he sold. wer~ the • first to require nudity for portidpalion ID certain gport1 and looked doWa upon barbarians who attired themselves ·with loincloths: He lhowed ....,..; uamples of Greek sculpture and painting deplct1nl unck>tJ>. ed athletes:. Accord ing to Thomason, Greek artists v>'enl to the gymnasiums and used the athletes for model.t, thus crtatln1 a mar- riage, in a: sense, of nudity in art and alhleUCs. The rCIOi word c>f gymnasium, Tbomuon aal.:, LI 'gym.nos' and 11 tfle Greek equivalent to the English word , 'naked.' Nudlcy WU • o'Olllinenl In the Olympics. and he showed ... en1 eumplea with J slide• ol dlacul tbrowen. C Leonardo Da Vmd Mid 141dtelqelo ~ uaed the male nude ID 1belr -of ~ •rt. •trealn( pnll>Ortioos of the body. Thomaaon con<I-hll remarkl with an •t>e<doto that -Uh Utll: Whe1I Mlcbelangelo ..... paintinl the ceilJn& of the Sl&tlne Oulpel, the Pope and a preJat.e baooeoed by. "How do you Itel aboul the palnllna wc'rt bavtn& d.,ae," the Pope asked. "Well. lhese disgusting 'fl111res -Id flt better ln tht wa1hroom:1 re:ptlm lbe .~ prelate . An Jncenied Mlchetongelo eyed the prelate Lhcn retumect to hta work and painted a nude figure of the prtlate in tho 11>1'l>el of the davtll of hell . • Upper Bay Mo1rito1·ing P1·oposed • • • and Sportswomen Basketball Footballs • Volley balls Soccer bans T emris balls GoH bans Handballs An:tlety sets Badnril1tun sets Tennis Sboef Tennis Dresses Tennis Shorts & Shirts Skate Boards Duck Feet Fins Dart Boards Frisbees Back Packs Sleepirt Ba&s warm Up suits SWeat -s.tts~ Nylon Jackets Baseball Shoes Track Shoes • - William P. Clements •Jr. aays that if and when he's con· finned as deputy secremy of defense, he 'Is going to ''re- sign ... walk away" is head o! his large oil well drillli\g company, but he's not going to sell his stock. SEAliLE (AP) -News week ~1agazine, worried by the Clifiord lrvlpg boa..'t, decided al the la:t minute to kltl a -• Wrestr1111 Shoes Speedo SWim Suits Tennis Sweaters Sweat Sox Letterman Jackets Baske~U Sllirts 1 .. Swim Tlllllks Stop Watdles Bicycles Bicycle Accessories • ' /' ' I • • o~v eu.or 1 'Impartial Grotsp' She Won ~ Suit But Famjly Arrest.e Ellsherg's JtµJ Sallia10 at Lompoc whl"!'llle ff1IJJd jury began "" vestlcatlon laxt March. 'Lost Freedoms' Lost Life =J:.Ey (AP) -'~ The lndictmenll all!C•' U., two brothell bad. r;at1oos with~ women pani<loJ wlfhYl the prtlon on Juoe 29, im 1 that on 11veral otber caslons the brothers po1tpwd P"""•r • hearing Tburidly on a defen1e ~ of 1114! • Jury pone!. . Delenst atll>mtya cooten4 · the paMI doa ,DOI "'°tala enough • 18-lo Jl-f•ar<>ld , voters Wbo are '"'1ble lo atr11e u jmon !or the first lime. • ......... EDlberg and, Ruuo, former la f.ne!W · ._1ate1 II the Rand Corp. . • "think lanl:," ... charged . llollll4 Beaty, ........ Wllll mratlni lectlons ol the • captuted ·on tbe llay ' llp1-e Acl ln the alleged Bridge TueodlJ,. t b.e llielt and pouesslon ol the end ol two montllt ti _.1 -t documents freedom atw • which were leaked to the news eJClped in Ill am'""" media ill July, 1971. t bat killed . a ~· who won tlOO,~ In •. suit aftlnst the pbyaldan-' ... )'Or of ~I loi falling to diagnose her ~-bU died ol the dlaense, ' LaVeme Slmmona died Monday at Alta Bates Hospltel '---------' -three day1 afttr an ., ~ Alameda County Sup e r1 o r Court Jury ruled agalml Dr. Gllbul Cochrane In a !May trial. x e reae~ Gel~ SAN DIEGO (AP) -Peter ·Drink, Leer · But Not · Bohmer, center o1 • .....,... T th ersy that cost Ji!m his San oge er Diego State· tead!lng job · · · ear)J<r this year, bas i.,en . SACRAMENTO • (UPI) conVlcted of o b a tr u ct i n g "You can still aee dirty shows l railroad tr~ h\ an anUwar in Calilornia. You can still eat ._4emonstr.atlon. , and drink. You just can 't ·do ... _Bobmer, 2f, ~( Slit '~ both. at:OJICCJ! allowed to Jeive the 1 n and Us supervision tor similar 1 actlvltitf. .. If S,,.,, ru1.,: again..! th• guard. He ii a memb# defense challenge, Sel~tJon ol of the VeoeeremOI rev .... ~ jury cOuld begm.t ex\ olutlonary sroup .• at a tire company, who said.be • , • , spoke for fellow )uron. -;. • . ,. .. · ., ... arid William ·Mam~ SS. Of That ;..Js caliiomia At· Chula Vista, were totiJ14 ,guilty tomey General, E v e 11 e by a jury Tuesday after pear}Jl Younger'• capsule analysis of three days of dellberatloo. last ~·i U.S. Supreme SECRET indi c tment s returned in San Diego last week and announced Tuesday charged Dominic, Angelo aod Tony .Wfth 81milar offenses . Counts also were returned against former prison . ad- ministrators Danlel Morgan and Anthony Santiago, ac-cusing them of granting the Alessio brothen favon, ~~T~~~ ·Man H~ld ·jn:S.ril Set peiiple er. a men hnpirllll . , • , . e Beet .. Pre•e• ~~ on obscene en- graup Of~" be Mid. "We . ·• "' . 1 ,~g.:.=:.= Of ·C<tp~tfl:Smyings SAN FRANCILCO (AP) -The --upheld the slate's An unemployed drolbmaD has I """'• , John Alessio Is the former i!"10'al manaier ol ,Caliente Race Track In Tijuana, Mex· ABATA SAID !!'HAT the Jury was Instructed many ·· ' Umes not fo witch television, .bear the news. , nad the newspiper ·or tali: to anyone about the case. "So if thal's not t.king your freedoms' away, I don't know what is," be said. "Everybody else in the world was able to talk about the case but us ." Selection of a new jury was ~IT E.4.SED , -Tl!E HURT • SACRAMENTO (UPI) -State legislative cair · dldate Will.Slocum of the ' , Pl!ioce, .U.. Freedom Party today reported spending , ooJy. $14.411 ol his total fK,jf, On his cpendlng re!pon. Slocum w ,. o t e • "Surplus uJtd for a few . frhndty jugs of mUBCate1." •e lO&;t his -·· SACRAMENro , (,W). ~ A about 18 ]lues near the hamlet man armed with a Imm pistol of Rescue, about II miles has tRert arre!ted in con-from the sacramento Co\Dlty lioe, said Earnie Carlson, nectiori with S a c r a m e n to sheriff of El Dorado County . County•I third double slaying The bodies were sent to in eight days, Sheriff Duane Sacramento for an, autopsy. been booked !O< ~ ~··~ty .. t6 ..,W.te nude of .~ -~ -~·-·~ In .... ~ In bars and to mW\ler -.uu .u..i..-wuu prohibit "bottomless" dancing the fatal ~booting of two men and so-called "adult" movies. al a Mi!aion Di st r 1 c ~ Younger said Tuesday. that. resta':ll'ant-dalw;e hall .• • the >Joobblic Beverage Con- ~m~l~n~~o~ John Alessio nmains i n federal prlsoo . at McNeil Island, Wash., where be is ~rving a three-year sentence for income tax evasion handed down in 1971 . His brother Ange1o was Lowe says. Di~ytr)'. of the bodies Lowe said Tuesday Eddy followed the finding of two Lee· Earle, 22, was arrested in sets of men's clothing, blood· a hotel room f!Jl 1nveotiP.!!On stained aDd plereecf With bol'9, of murder after the dtscOV!ry • in the ~trash can of a car wash of the nude bodies of two men in north Sacramento. Pohce said they 8rrested trol regulations sustained by Manuel I. Antonio, 21, at !'.ls UJ.e court dealt only with ·bars home Tuesday ll:(ter recel~g and private clubs w h e r e information votu~~ by alcohol was sold for con- members of the F1bp1no com-sumpUDn on the premises. muntty. 1riiiiiiiiiiiioiii;;;;i;i;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ e Cletlaft ,.__. Y 0 S EMITE' NATIONAL ' • MINNR'S SHIP CHANDLERY in lhallow graves in nearby El towe• told repotters at a Denio County. news cmfett-~ appemN. An lnvm!gatlon .... under the vlcthns wenollhot 'to deeth way lo cletermlne U Earle and In the car wash &mday nlcht the victims were involved in a and transported to El Dorado~ drug smuggling o p e r at I o n County for b\U'iaJ. between Mexico. and California, Lowe added. PARK (AP) -C'lolhlng recovered after. a woman was rqpt over upper v...-..ite Falls In an ~ double suicide 11 day• ...... ten- tatively ldenUlied Tuesday as that of a Chico area womari. A park spokesman said the ' s.1,ij,11 -Slllps - Nautical ... ks -Slllps Lamps FINE SHIP MODELS ' Marlu Prim -Slllp Clock• , » t 'it........; ... He said the v~lms were tentatively identified as Mex- ican nationals. EARLE WAS anned with a clothing was beli~ved to liave 8mm automatic pistol when llelonged to Lorraine Sutton, arrested, LOWe said. He also 20, Forest ·Ranch. It was iden- was in poaession of "a tified. by her father· The body Large S•l.ctlon of N•utkal substance" that was being has not been recovered but a Decorator Item• & Gifts ' checked as a possible narcotic. pathologist was able t o ~ Capt. Jerry Saulter o1 the reconstruct the woman's siZe, ~ Of'1J:'.•'.'•M!M!' -'rUIS.J.'M_11:.u Sf:~· -"Tii: 11 Sacra!llento .. Coonty sberlll's weight aod coloring through a ~-····~· . ~ NfMl.llY:S SH• .jC~NDU~T A nl'S'tER gave the she:f- iff's office informaUon which led to unearthing of I b e bodies Sunday nigl\t, Lowe salcl The victhni bad been dead OIJ!y • shcrt time. . The two bodies were illde by side in lS..lncb-deep graves office 'said in a separate caie portion ol a leg found al the Z5l7 W.., C.a.t lfltliway Monday tilgbt, narcotica ware l-~ba~,.~~ol~the=-~1~,~4~1 ~8-~f~o~o~l~!!!!!~5;4;1;4~1~9~2~!!!!!~';-;;;;:-;..,~-;;·,.;•;'~~·;·;•~• !!!!!~ found In ·an aparlmenl ln waterlall. . , which Eir1e was listed as oc- cupant. . ~ . ' ' " ~ THE COUECTION COLOR DIMM>ND The boy. the girl, the diamond. Aa *""' es that? Not quite, for diamonds ere• different es the special people-w!IO buy them and -ll)!m. You'"' ;witet1.to -from • VflfY apocial collection of diamonds of lhe·finllt.cofar. We call them "ColleC:tion Color" dllmoncio. We hMI "' " them In mony lhapeo. --·811d~pricet,-..,:i; of which will meet your·budget; You m.y indiv1dual(y l8fecl your mounting Ind your II*"'· ,·: Collection Color dlamdnd. er~ from · . ,, ,. llyl•-hMI~ •.. for someone you lova. Do Something Booutiful.w Cllf'91 Ace-h tlWli.. -Amtrk•11 IEi~ ••MAIMriP ... Ml Mill!• Olar ..... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 Cll~ ""'1- 0IH M9flMY •nr ll""'"Y 1t ...... tt t 1• 11.l'll. Also: *-" 01 ... ltld'Lae V•1. w1111 11:Katlafl1 tt: Ton~ ?';Wiii• u cerr1i... u Hffra. ···~1 .··~ ., ·' . J v~· '> ~ .... ~nects'.:~tl11•.j(.­~J 11: .. ~ -~ 1 • ' .. ' • 1 ' • . .I " 1·0ut' MOsf '.<A~k~fuv-shoes ·~Qk~i+l1e.·1 ~C.f 3tt+ II' ' .. ' ., ., ., , "(AP) -,. ~~~~~~:e~befD ai-tested :lD a~ apartment buiJding for investigation of bank robbery IJ!er police fired a tear au bamge. •I While hundreds o1 apec- I " taton rather"'1 nearby, about 50 -poli!>! oflioers and lherifri deputies sur· ro1mdecf a t.....tory apart· meot bulldlnc near t b e downtown area. The officers gathered Tuesday after a car -spotted that answered the deocriptloo ol the ... used by bandiU wbo help up die Placer National Bani: in nearby C""'8 Heights about PY• I • • ,, ' " . .. , • ,9: • ---· hours •"!'liet. ! JfrJ• .i1&:""""':'.0'.,8'rkbard Officers began Orilig tear Jobokl, 131 wallied bot ol the gaa canisters into a. sec<:lld-bu.ming DUUding and sur· floor aperlmOnt ¥ter 'orderlnl .......ie...r. u.-fa•• a two men inside to .~nder. ,Sacramento hotel as biJ bOme Everyone else was ordered to address, the •spnkesrrutn aa.kl. evacuate. A second man was rescued Smoke and flames tJlarled f:rom the lliiJnos by pollce who pouring out ol the bulJdlng used a.ladder to catey bhn to .OOrtly after the tear gas safe\)' after be colla(l6ed at a volley began, witneMes said, window. and spread to an adjacent He wu ·Identified u CUey three· story apartment Dueber, 3Sl1 who could not im- building. mediately give a home ad- dress. POUCE HAD to move squad cars out of their way to let llremen g.t to the blazes, wilne.1Ses salcl Sheriff'• s]lol<esman, B i 11 Miller Aid Dueber w a s !Mated at a ~Ital for · >, .-. Inhalation and hmm. A J11B.P identified by a sher-The fire's cat11e was unknown. • • • " • "' 1He'\M:tlla~~~ :, llie Qdidas ~\lie.+ • "~" OW" low Mc::dd ~~d Of' OQkllJOOd oolo't" qll 'Si%~~ lhe Topsidi. .... Ell<. ~ ~koo fow-~ ll ~SOY\"'.> .. , " . ~t\:teik O\'"' IOVJ W(:XiciJ ' • ,,.._.JiQ(YC)w ov-wic:t~ ,, qi~ '!SiZLS . .. ·-· . - ~ ........ -.. . " . ~"-'""". ,' • • • --rt'• , , . . .. .. -.... ___ .. . . ..._ • • • • • • • • • . tke :sports£.\oe -f'ov- -1-e.hW'! i ~ Cl" srre~ + "'tdw- a 1 Is i z..es . . CID a@@~@ . . , ' ..... .. • ... l • 44 fashion Island, newport ~ 844-5070 . ' • • ... ,, ' ··';£• . .. "' "' ,i.,. rt , .. •, .) , . " , .• ·'· ',-..; ... , .. ,•. " ,. • , . .-.......-.•============================c=============:;::=:============:::c= •, -------~1 --- I • . ' DA.U,y PILOT EDITORIAL PA..,E • 'Copters The city of Colla Me a appears to be entering 1973 with an urgent desire to Improve Its looks. Som~Umes these improvement programs emwle from the city haU , such as a proposed sign ordin'iiKe and another statute wh.ich will provide all Costa Mesans with more parks by forcing apartment developers to contribute a greater share of park funds. But sometimes suggestions from the grass roots level -simple as they may be -ca n have as much impact on the appearance o! th e city as the carefully· studied programs advanced by the administrators. Such a simple idea was advan ce d recently by the Costa Mesa Beautification Committee. "Let's get started by cleaning up the trash," Its members suggested succinctly. , Fortunately, members or lhe city council saw merit in such a simple idea and backed the Beautification Committee's "Cleanup Spree in 1973" with a $6 ,000 .. subsidy .. Beginning this J anuary, the Beautification Commit· tee will be scouting for vacant lots which have been used as midnight dumping grounds and a repositOry for discarded objects. J The commit~ plans to ferret out the dirty lots by surveying Costa Mesa with the police helicopter. The idea behind thil aerial observation is a posi· live one. Once !he dirty lots have been selected, lhe property owners will be contacted and asked for per- mission to clean them. U the answer is favorable, city crews augmented by volunteer workers will clean the ., lots on Saturdays at no cost to the property owners. ~1embers of the committee have recognized that one of the reasons tor debris build·up in residential yards is Utat city trash collectors do not accept certain types of refuse. And the person who neither owns nor has access to a truck tends to neglect taking such items to a dum p. Phase two of the <;:leanup Spree will focus on get· ting rid of this unwanted backyard debris· by provid· Aid Cleanup ing homeo wners wllh convenient local droJ>O{f places. From then on, there will be periodic rubbhb runa by city trucb lo pick up further refuse at a home- owner'& curb. AU parts o! the program are commendf.ble and ap- i>"&r so simple and baste lhat, with •reasoJtble lollow- tbrougb, they just have to work. Mesa's Cttltural Image During last April's Costa Mesa City Council elec- tion, several candidates raised the issue of improving the city's cultural image. 1. The candidates who campaigned for cultural Im- provement were not elected. But they served to point out to those who did that there is a serious deficiency which needs to be rectified. Seven months later when city councilmen had $1.8 million in city surplus and federal revenue sharing !unds to dispose of -and the possibility of doing some- thing about that need -other urgenUy·needed proj- ects once again forced culture into the background. However, Mayor Jack Hammett suggested that one of the alms mentioned by lhe defeated candidates - a cultural or community center -could be financed joinUy by a non-profit corporation involving both res!· dents and the City of Costa Mesa. Such a group is the newly formed Bicentennial Commitlee which baa rel itself the goal of bulldlnl a comm unity complex in time for the 1978 celebration of America's 200th birthday. It would contain meeting rooms, museum space, and a larger area ror commun- ity events. U the council is indeed serious about making "cul- tural improvement" more than just a platitude, it mJR:bt consider giving its moral and financtal support to the Bicentennial Committee. -- And a good time to get started on that project would be 1973. I I . I I c Study Slwws Some Tricks Of Memory ' How Bouton Fares Withotlt a Zoniag €ode ~YD NEY J. HARBI~ .Speaking of the "11:ork of the im· aglnation," as I was recently reminded me ot a psychologiCll ~t co& ducted some yean ago 'by Leonard Clrmicbael and two ol his coQeagues. They showed a group ~ studenta a list of 12 line drawings, which Q!e students "''e1 e asked to reproduce from memory. The figures "' e r e shown one at a 1inle. privately. to e a r h su bject. Before each showing. the experl -' me nter would say: ·'The following ftg. u~ reSembles ... " , But while all the S\Jbjects saw the Sfllle figures. half were given one ·set of v~I labels, and half another set. The rilst drawing was labeled a "beehive" for some, and a "bat" for otberl; the se- cOnd was called an "hour glass" for sOme. and a "table" for others. Obviously , the purpose in doing this - With ambiguous drawings that could be iQterpre1ed either way -was to direct bf suggestion the subiect's reproduction of each figure. .. The result wns startling : in 87 percent of the cases, it was found that the draw- i~ we.re -sharply distorted in the direc· t'°'1 of the particular verbal label which h8d bee{!. provided. What the subjects im- aii.ned Was their "recall" turned out to tie based on what they were told the figures "resembled," rather than on "'hat they actually saw. : 1r: COMr.1ENTING on this experiment. i~ his interesting book, "Memory: Facts ahd Fallacies.'· Or. Ian~ f\1. L. Hunter. the Dear Gloon1y Gus Let 's hear it for the law makers! -1'bey have made it possible for the Costa~esa police detectives to re- turn to the serious business of the stake-outs at the Fire House. Sure makes me feel safer ... J. H. t111• '""',.. ~" ru.&tn' .,-., Mt _ _..., .............. .... ,_ ... _ ... ...,. ... ~, ... . British psychologist. points out that a!r.1ost invariably '"we interpret our present experiences in accordance 'vitb our on'n inter('sts. altitudes. hopes and expectations." As an example. he goes on. "it has been found that, as compared with people w"ho-regard Negroes in a favorable or un- prejudiced light, those with anti-Negro attitudes find It difficult in distinguishing one Negro from another . They see a Negro in somew hat the same way as the average person sees a sbeep -not as an individual with unique characteristics, brt merely as a member of an un- differentiated class.''· ON ANOTHER LEVEL. Dr. Hunter says, "there is the fact that if we show a blurreQ and indistinct picture to a hungry man, be is more Likely to see it as representing food ur some object relating to food than is a man \Vho is not hungry.·· It is not merely beauty that lies in the eye of the t:eho\der, but much of what v:c call "reality'' itself. Our imagination. un· der exfernaJ or Internal suggestion, sup- plies the "meaning" to people as well as to pictures or drawings. We fill in the details, baled on our accumulation of past expeflences and training. The "inscrutable" Chinese, if he liver. next to you as a neighbor, would turn out to be as scrutable as Archie Bunker -and probably just as prejudiced the olhcr y,·ay. Congressional Benefits ' \ By GEORGE ·J. MARDER U.... ,,.._ tm ..... tltMI ' Newly elected members of Congress rhay be hippy to find out about a cub or CllrTY system for their stationery allowance. 1 The atlowance for House members was ~ from $3,500 to $4:.250 a year just bfilore the last session of Congress ad· jOumed. But the amount is not as in· ttrestlng as the w11y the money Is handl· oil. ' f STARTING whh the first day of the ~Ion Jan. 3, the $4,250 allowance will ~ credited to e11ch conareuman at the Ho!iot stationery srore -a •ha!> ju.I like any other except that the prices are low· er and only congressmen and their stairs can boy. And there are ne sales taxes. Congressmen can carry away from the s~ free ·staUonf!ry supplies ror their of· f1rol up te the amoont of the alloWM'?t. Or ~Y can draw all .or part ol 11tt allowance in cash -oo quesUcm asked. The auumplloa Is lllllt If a -,.....,.,, .. _, like '!l'bat be can pt from the llotJle 111xO -and be cu pt el'erything from perlOOAI, CU1tam-mlde lljl .. thetd 1iatloMrY to ... Jiii!• ltld peper clips -he .., draw lhe cub lllld bUY e!sewbett. •"' IF HE WENT o1 .. -. ~· hove to pay more because the price~ om._ .,~ :::.-.~~~11::"J.t ls:.:: .. gmrnment cott. u the coogrouman -·111M 10me particular Item he CID """' Ille lllore onler a dlllenml brand. oo tone u « hos to do with his - .. (GUEST REPORT) A few years ago. one congressman had the stationery store buy automobile tires for him from his stationery allowance. saying he needed them to get around to his constituents. That Isn't don c any more. but there is nothing to stop a congressman from drawing the cash to buy tires at regular commer_cia l establlshmmts under the carry~ash orer vi.sion. ANOTHER FRINGE benefit f o r members ls the free trip home. There was a time when Congrtss merely paid to get the congressmen to Washington for a session and then send them back when the SCS!lon was over. Now, however, it's felt lmportant for the lawmakers to keep in touch. And jUJt before lbe last sessk>a ended, the Hotl90 nl!ltd the free ttavet allowance for coagressmen from 211 lo 38 ...., trips evdy two-yeer period. 'Jhlt would .pennlt the-c:ongreumM lo 'make )ust oDout one f~e ~ trjp home ewry two .....,ks. nJe ~ 'iiowevu. ~ 1few of lhe fm: trlPs the lint year. 11.tna lhem ingtead for the leCOOd year w!len they face ~l~tton. The , llouSt: also upped the travel •ftowance for employes of congres9men. Formerly, lloose att1ffcrs were allowr.d up t~our fr~ round trips to the membt ' district per Congress. T h a t hit raised to six starting wtlh neit C<lllgms. Is · Land Zoning a Waste of Ti:gie? Bernard B. Siegan is an infrequent n1an who walks out of step and questions comfortably settled foregone conclusions. He is a real estate lawyer and a research fellow at the Univerlity or Chicago who, after taking a long and technically careful look has decided tht best thing we could do for our· selves Is to j u n k land-use IOlling of all kindl. Most home owners suffer from the de- ILLSion that it's zon- ing \v hlch saves from sluntification and savage depreci- ation the dear spot of earth on which I.bey make the monthly payments. No so. It's true that some home owners can get more for their property because zoning tampers with a free real estate market so as to reward some people with higher values by legislative fiat, but that's the luck of the draw, not a system for pro- tecting property values. What Siegan did was to go to Houston, Texas. the only large city in America without a zoning code, and see how the folks there were faring in this horrific condition of no~govemmenlal regulation. (Siegan's book, Land Use Wkltout Zon- ing, D.C. Heath and c.ompany, is first ( VON HOFFMAN:) rate, but the teclmlcalitiea of law: and economics don't make it an euy reader.) Houstonilff· h"e twloe been gt... a cJ1ance to express Jbejr prefam On this issue and hive deci1tvely Wted mn- ing down bollr ltu\oo. THE RESULTS haven't been anything like what city plaMers and other sorts of shyster visionaries would have you think. Oil refineries and Colonel Sanden chicken shacks haven't invaded the city's beUer residential nei g hbor.hood s. Slegan's evidence shows that Houston is at least as nice or no more hellish a city to live in than any ->ther. Nor does the absence of zoning mean that you can use yoor property Ill destroy the value Iii either people's. The city has laws requiring apartment . houses to have off-street parking, it has a bulldlni; code, and other regu latiohs that prevent a property· owner from making the neighborhood uninhabitable. But it has no zoning. Theoretically, you can put up a 50-story office building or shopping cenler right in the middle of a -lt!:aijr community of oongalows, but Jt doelil't happen. because· it makes no economic s e n s e. Slegan find! that iolne o t h e r very good things de bappen. For e x a m p I e, rents in Houston are significantly lower than they are in the comparable city of Dallas - where they have a traditional mnlng set· up. THE REASON i1 that a 1.0ning code arlifically and arbltrarlly removH large amounta of land from the ~ that might be used for apartment buildings. The price. of the rem.ainiJtl.land mood for multi-family occupancy ~Joz,:ecl,up and ao, ineluctably, are the rents. in Wl-~ Houston, apart.ment·hoase land costs less than single family·bouse land, thus mak- ing lower rents possible while preserving the home owners ' investment. Zoning not only makes a bash out of residential land use, but a meJ• out of everything else. SOmetinie,& !ind ll set aside for induatry wbleb lollw.ll) doesn't want, but because of the zoning everybody else Is afraid to buy ti. THE PLANNERS "ho draw up these zoning ordinances simply have no ac- curate way of knowing who wants to do what with land, and, lacklng that in- formation, zoning is a maddening en· cumbrance as weJI as a serious in· fringement on property rights. Chicago, for example, bas seven dif- ferent business land-Use zones. Areu zoned B·l, Slegan points ou~ permit barber shops but not stalior.ery 1-. bakeries but not J'.ardware It.ores, cleaners but nol gift sbopo, and IO f<lltb and so on. Although that -'IS hobecWc. Chicago wning is cooslderecl pretty flOOd in the trade. '!lie <lily --way we have for finding out how 1 p6eoe of land should be u.sed ls by ....,. wbo'll pay the most to use it and thee watching to see what uae be pul8 1t Ill. _IN THE LASf FEW yelr}, 1JC1!DO liberals, despalrlnl,"« n.IJitl -to accept blackl, have llarfed nmarting that zoning act& , as • ndallJ ds cluslonary device. Siegan argUM that all zoning ls exclusionary, not OllJ1 of nee, but many, many other tbin&t. 1ncludJng revenq .. produclng ·property that .- juriJdlclions badly -.I. 7.oning' does, boWever, confl!' tome benefits. It pro-. a lot ol ell)' pt_.. with jobs, It generates .U diclmow amount of expensiveJ;y lllll'« 11,1ry litigation -thereby enrlebfllC -wolf packs of lawyers -and It is lhe larpsl and st..dlelt aource ol graft avallalile to town, villqe, c1j,y and county polllld111s the counb'y ov.r. With these advantqes, let's Ignore Slegan and ftgllt to keep ~ Mother ~upports All-year School To tho Editor: 'l'his is concerning the change proposed in our school year from a regular nine. mont h attendance to a full year' exs eluding August and' one week in Sep- tembe r. The schedule would be nine v.·ecks attendance -three weeks vaca· lion, barring adjustments ror holidays. The children would be attending the s~me number o( days. AS A MOTHER of four children, two in upper grades and two at Harper In Costa l\1csa, I overwhelmingly support this program because of the definite ad· va ntages \o my cbJdren, u follows : There would be no long review after returning to school beca~ of learping lots over the three-month vacaUon. Th1a would be a distinct advantage fot both the child who doesn'l retain nil, and the one who does. According ;.o documented facll from a B11 Ge01'f1e --- Dear George : How did you get to be an advice columnist, anyhow? How dld you even get into the news'pa.per business? PUZZLED Dear Puzzled : I used to deliver paper towels to tlle newspaper office until one day somebody stole my pushcart. · 1•ve been doing this column for years, tfying to aave up enough for the down piymtnl on another pushcart. Dear Oeorae : Do you thlnk a few drinks relaxes a man before dinner? F.J. Deer F.J .: It IW'e does. Aty brolber,iD·law st1uu drinking right • rt e r breakfast and gets so relaxed he hun't had dinner since 156'. (Send your problems lo Uet>rge and let him give you the'~efit of his horrible ex:imple.) [..__MA_IL_n_o_x_-JJ Letters from reader1 are welcome". Norn1al Ly writer1 1hould convey t1leir mes1ages in 300 toorm or less. The right to conde.-e letters to fit space or eliminate libdl i3 reseroed. Alt Letters must inc(ude signature and maiUng address, but names may be withlu:ld on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be published. we cannot -let's concentrate on why we can. A )X>litive thinker usually wlM. · MRS. CHAS. POMO Opposes Trall To lhe Editor: eutbnsi•stt .alreadY have utlY concnM runnlna ....,. at least 7' percent o! oar preclowl beaches. W]\y abould we allOlf them to destroy the rest of that m- vlromnent, the nartow"Ut aection Of beach that ii most accessible to h public! CARQLINE RANDOLPH <;f,,UCAS Social Seellritt1 To the F.dltor: Isn't it great tbat lbe Social Security heotllt pa~ have been increased by 20 °per<Ol!I! BUT, ti Isn't so great that THE WEST NEWPOBT beach en-the Social Security lu ls also being tn- vironment is now attractive to thou.sands creued I feel that it is time for your newspaper :'J1d the citizens to bear from the op)Xlsing tide o( the WJ!St Newport Bicycle Trail controversy, since you seem to have taken a position on a sltua· Uon that has not been tbOroi!ibly r<>earell«I. or people for the followina ...,..., . I!'"' is a oompariaan ol lhe amount of 1. They <an ..cape ·the noile arid ·Soda) Securttr tax an employee and bis practicing school in Hayward, caur. Clanger of the bicycle rlders...and the· tllp-,_ employer wU eacll. pay for employees ICbooJ marks are up, reading is up and , pery, aaody sidewalks. eamtne $9,000, fI0,800 and Sl.2,000 a hy the ttme children reach 1nlef!11edlate 2. All types of , beach sport.I are year. • levels they are an average of one and available without the traf6c ~cblems In· Yearly o~hall years ~· volved•lll driving Ill the wider lleaohea in Wara ., 11'11 tm There la a po!Siblllty of tulllring on a central Ne\fl>Orl· f 9,000.00 flll.1111 1416.00 one to oneDasls from our high school 3. T~ can ~lk.on the beach at n\lht. lO;llO.OO 418.00 SM.00 students on a three-month vacation. and en)Oy the ttars and tbe luminescent· 12 000 00 4'8,90 594.00 surf, which cannot ~-seen In the llr 'Don;t relax -this "on'l be tbe last ln· THIS AU. ADDS up to a fine program for our cblldren at lheir most recept:lVe years ol learning. What will thiJ mean to lhe pattn1' and family! 'l1lil will del>end a .,..t deol on how ha·rd we matl it for ounelvet, but being very ··eallstlc, it will mean an ad-- jusbnenl -••peciill)' !or lhooe hayinS children In two or more levels. 'MllJ ls not •ll bad, however, a9 •e can •t lwt rive mors of ounelves to the children wtio are oat ol ICbool at differ- ent times. OUR VACATIONS might lllllet' a little if we have chlldren golna &o dl[(uent ochools, but the)' u. generally' In the lul . • pllrt ol lhe 1R1111Der If the children are attending -lchool. 11 you have on-ly Harper Sdlool childm>, that would be grea~ va~tlool •ll year lone. Thclre Is • tentttlve plan for day care at the echoOI tor a very amall tum for lhe working rnoth<r. What a wooderlut thina lo-lie our children' !cam Ind rrow in such a positive manDel'. Let'• not think of why toleralile glare of streel lights. THE 11.JW, EXPERTS on sur! and high tide coodltlons in West NeW]!O?I are ruldenls wbo have lived with tl\e prob, 1em for 10 or more years. I don't believe you could lmply that Mayor .M<:lllnla~:.playln& !4V11tltes wl\11 .)'iest Newport U •)'OU 'bid ....Wied with tl\y one Of lliem. Two eumplel: I) the recuJarliy witll wblch City vo)leyball oourtl on the belch are washed aWay, oven thou&b there m .,.tm; )) h con- dition ol tlie aldewi.lb botweln Iba Pier ind 31th street from the last two ,,..ks of rale ltld wind. , By coneervatlve ciltimltu there 11'8 SOI) to ',000 rttldcnll on the oceao front bet_,. 31th and 7•th •ttotl.s. Thll fiJllll" could eully repmenl 50 P!'""nt ol the resldmia wbo regularly ride blcyclH aloni the beach. That la hntly a "handful" er a "few" people llvlng oo the be:ach, u you ttate In your edltorlil. TUB BBACll 18 nol tho exclusiV&.P!'>i> erty or u-who llappeo to ride bicycles. Thll "hand£ul" ol btcyclc crease. "C. C. MOSEtEY OIANOI COAlf DA ILY PILOT ' ~ Robert f'f· Weed, Publilher ThQm4.t KcrvU, .Editor Barbara Krribkll Editorial Page Editor 1hc cdltortet 1,.ge of the Dally Piiot 1el'k1 to lnfornl an(l ttlm-. late reJdnn by orc•cnttn1 ltll_. M~~(I op\nfonl II~ t"Om• mtfntll") un toplca'"of ln1t}ctt •nd stantncenct, by provtdlna ' forum for the e)lpretalon ~f our rttdtn.' uplnlons, lll'ld b)' &Jt'ftentln1 th" dlvcl'Jle vlcv.•pnlnl.l of lnfGrmcd ob- scf\o·ert and 1poke1m&n on topics ol thti day,· W~neaday, Dec. IS, 1972 . . I I' I •