HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-12-10 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa'
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, .. l.n ·Police ·Mate 98 Beath . ' . lUESOAY AFTERNOON, DECEMIQ t0.'!19'1' '
VOL. M, ....... I llC'nOMI. tf P,M91
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Newport Calls for U.S. Drug Study
No Reque st
T~F~y
Shut Border
' ·;Foghou._a .. Kids ., . -' .... , ' • r l ~ ' . . ;
B7 Jl!IROl!IE P. CoIUNI .. ' ... , ....... ~~,..~-._...,
k°evqiQi:I Beacb.'clty , ~ ... Mpn-
day · nlgbl ' uiwjlmously called for
CoosreasJonal hearings. on the traffic
hr ~OUC5 aDd ~angerous di-up' ffoln
Mexico to cawom1a.
The adopted resolbt!On did not, u pro-
pooed earller, tir,. that tbe beilring•
determine whether the border 1boulr'
be cIOled .to UDtSCOrled nlhiarJ (node
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~d, at Councilman D o n a 1 t
Mclnnll' inslltence, It was reworded to
read' .
, "l'be Congress, in conducting ~ch -=, .. t;. ur&ed to 11lve.stigaite
ally the traffic In narcoUCI by
m.lnors and to consider the 'dtablbbment
of specific border controls in ~ation
with the Maican Government u wouJd
assist in the elimination of this IOUl'ce
of the pr/)blem." · ·
Mclnnil· two weeks ago forced a delay
In acUon 'on the resolution. when .. he '
objected to its Implied recommendation
to close the border to minors . He said
that would solve nothing, and w9uld
meaninglessly restrict young people who
now go to Baja CaWornla just to enjoy
lb scenic, .cultural l!ld reautlonol ·ad·
vantages.
At Monday's I tu d 1 aeulon, be
personally rephrased the resoluUon,
striking out all , dir.ect references to
blK-der closurt.
The new· wording wu aceepled without
argument by other cooncllmen, Including
a:·Mayor Paul J . Gruber, w~ two weeks
.,.. had cluhed bitterly with Mcinnis
over the issue. ·Gruber aakt then thal
~ have no busln<ss pol ond pill-~In Mexico.
Councilman Howanl Rogen pointed out
Monday that tht revis«l reso1uUoa stUl
expresses tht city'• support of a recently
adopted League of Calllornla CIUea
resolution on the narcotics traffic pro-
blem. The League doc:unienl, uld
Rogers, asks Congress to consider closiDg
the border to minors without adult --
Masked Bandit
Holds Up Bar
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. ·'Wl;'.t.T"RAPPl~ED ,TD SCHOOL BUST '
J o!Ty Crllill1; TGm1 Alvoru. PMr Throuth-FOi
School Bus, C'=1r Crash
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As Fog Bla ~kets C~t
Sheriff'• patrol car In a rear-end common
on BUer Street, with minor lnjurlel,
but detalll wera still aketcby near noon.
Huntington Beacll police uld 55 ochool
chfldmi ...,. jolled about 1 a.m., when
lbtlr bul •u rammed in a three car
colUsk>n It Adlml A venue I D d
Brookhunl Street.
They .... merely late. to school, but
wltb -uclllq news for thdr clawmata. •
Nixon
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: ; Woman Given
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.J-15 Years
I ' , ·.In Spouse Killing
. A, Garden Grove woman who shot
1 and kllled her. police sergeant husband
11 in ·a beClroom fracas wo sentenced to
.1 to 11 years In lllate pruon Monday
·Jn SUperlor Court.
. Judge, WllDarn Speirl h'llided the jail
. t-lo Eble ·Morine Wlcl;man, 39, after
.stueyln( nporll comp I led by
-psychlatriatl during her recent !»<lay
observaUoa commitment She pleaded
guilty lo Involuntary manalaughter.
Judge Robert Gantner had earlier
dented her attorney'• M t11at Mn.
Wlclnnan, who hal been held In fli8tody
since laat April 7, be nleued oo strolgbt
prohaUon wilhollt further jail or pt1son
Ume.
Gai-den Grove police arrested Mn.
Wichman lut April 7 after ahe 'llhot
her busband, Sgt. Henry D. Wlcliman,
twlco. In t h e chest during a pre-<llown
qwnenL
Attempt Murder
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Cha.rge Dropped
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I JUYIDOe cotirt autborltlet b a V e
-cbargCI ol 1H""""'1 murder 1galnlt a Founlaln Valley IDgb flchool
Jllrl arruted lfter ahe oJlepdly ·~
l<mptad lo ~ her --The l~ld girl ha been mode
a WW of coort pendlng I flnol • &poof,
lion ol tho -Dec. Ill. No further crimln.aI octlon w 111 be laRn opimt
her, court iiftd1J1 said.
Amltlnr .olllcen uld the 1111'•
mother co1lld them to tho --
obe nollc..l lllil her[ --Coft'Oe
had I ....... -· The -pO( 1 n d lb contento...,. llUn fcr llllb>il·
but the raulb ol that determhllllon
havo aol -mode p®Uc.
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Eying Shriver . '
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Third · S·itspeet , Capl;(it~~
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In Elsinore Skull Death
A third suspect In U\e murder . or
·a Hayward.· man whose body was foupd
near )!lllnore 30 daYI· ago by .three
Cos.ta Meaa nbbit hW1ter11was en route
to Riverside today, followin& · h1I capture
in Tular'e County. · 1
Bobby G. Crow, 18, formerly ~
Elltnore, was arrested Jn Vlsa1!1 and
booted lnlo Tulare County Jail Frlcla,y,
prior lo hll relunl lo the Southland
to face murder c:hlrges.
Alrudy arraigned Sw>day In Riverside
Mmi!c1pa1 COUrt, wltb preliminary ~
1ng.,.;t Dec. 11, are Roland J. Perry,
21, and Timothy lkmln, 11, bolh ol
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No bail baa bee• aet for the thnie
suspecta In \be,pbootlng death of ((enl
D. Datil, JI, ol Hayward, Calif., some
time laat April, apparenUr in a narcotlal
tnvol~t of ·~e 10rt. '
All three suspecta have rtc0nf1 of
put narootlca brUahea, according lo
Rlveralde Coonty SberUf'a Sgt. llblil
W~w;i.;t,.~ ~er:~~ be
arrl!gned today, U be II returned !tom
Tulare County In time. · c0.ta Meia bro&hen David ztmmann,
24, of • Moote VIiia An., and Pau1
~ 11, of,2400 Elden Avep llbocked·
loca1 P-"Uce Nov. 11 when tbey brol\&hl,
O.vll 1 bulJet.blallled stuil to the otatloll. CoolllDild In the plliUc bq' wt,ii It
;... the -·· -· ved -!di lnltlalo. 'wlllch bel-;;li ~ hll'
ldmlity,' II well II tlmip l'ICinl of
<lentil '""""11. .
' -... rotrfoveil --and -"'~-· lihbelow lonely Rollnod. ~ , 'b:: near Eloln<ri, .. Wllll I aw 'btber ocrapo •
ol clael '. tO tlie vlclbll'I ldtntlty and ' --.. · ' . They tbeorlJed he WU Jl!W'Cltred lfter C0mJnc tn tho 8oullllud Iii W)J April
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-on an errancl aol ,yet dlacloied -
and hll body • dumped for predatoiw to ~ of In !!»re-., forl'l\O<l:aru.
. A car belon&IDC to the vtctlm'1 f.u..;r
wu found abendoned 15 miles from
the hooUd!le ..,.,,.. !ail April, but ~
•eotiJaton Aid DOlhln( about It 1111111 bavu• rernam. ha<! beeil ldeatllled.
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• ·-et Talks Reopen to Get Paris Parley Going
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"..it .. r..-Di'i;= =-:="-c.s .. ~.rt.F. .. o::
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30,000 u~s. Men
Dead in Viet War
: Withdr dwal in 40 Days
~-= ,1,IJ!'I ... = T 1r-.JJbiilitJl8.-rill
Bwl ... 6e --,... ... Ill ~--~--... -·~ "" .. \ ....,,., !loll .... -r i9"ll!rfW I .... tlof--
fhil . ..... ... -.. l'lrlf .... ..... _ . ...,._ .... . , ............... .-
--i .. )$ _..,... ... ... , •. , :..,.. .. .,...., : ....... ., ..
••1 I IWJ' # f P f Pl" -
-... ··--.... -llilm'e Pl ''N 1<1•• -
r'g'f ..... ~.la.•
te Pl t 'rt I I "* ,. IL lftlm.. "I_ ...... _lnlbe-•
""' .. utol .. -.. ~ -~ -~-~ ..... """' !,:'#¥," J.~~~-=
ol ,,_ In -poriod.. lllit allllri nded GUI a "uollll8'a1 -.. ..,. °" ~ ,..... lie mi~'"' .. J t ..... lie-""" Vie! R _., llllllJ ......... tf
J-'1 Oct. II bait In Ille ._ ....
ol Ille -.. -""""' thnqb .. _......_ ... _¥' ... -. -,,
ftln' -....... -"' ......
t1A11Y i'llfJ I
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KEEPPNG cJ'-
-In -York
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NIXON •••
Suit Testing Bay Swap
Filed by wunty., Irvine
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. Ciiin hUle· Nbon · Fltfli
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Yorba Linda., WJ&itder Agrep to Share, 'Ho~' HoPOrs
~E Clalses Held Despite
' Mirwr Camom lncident,s
Woman Victim
Of Purse Snatch
Teens for Christ .
Tr~p88fing
Trial on Jan.9
lot "'fL.i lzVJi.=. lot m...; .,:t !iJ T..,. ---"llllisd<-
-diaria .... been !el for Jan. 9 in Weot ~-County
Municipal Qut_
The young militants Mood<y pleaded
iooocent lo the clwges of 1btai<ring
with the peacelul coodud of -• .,. l!vities at Gol~ West College in Hun-
lingtoo Be3cb and l1!fusiac ta leave the campus when asked to do~ao. ·
Aboul ~ memhin If. g,;, ~ ~ grogp's hr' atW tam sat
IA Jl>f&e Pliilip Mc6rp'1 "axablMtl
during the arraignment prncerdin,ga ."
.. °"!!id"· small bands of !be aell..tyled
Christian revolutiooari.es" pid:eted in
!root _ of Westminslor City llalJ, which
u adJacent to court facilities. Relr.ased ~ . iheir .q reoipi1a•!Ci!
were Jooatbaa Berg, 19, soo. ol the
group's "spiritual advisor" Daft Berg·
Nancy Dewar, JJ; Joseph Lang!onl, 11 : ~glas Toerpor, 11, ml Jamm ljlrh,
A sixth lllelDbor of the group ..,.....
at the college, Marian Tortortlla. 18,
was bailed out Fri4&Y evening lbortly
after ...... -...i. lier ~· ii set lot Dee. I~ -
For nearly two lllOlllhs the sect has
been making surprise oisits .. county
cburdl la'Vices. Friday, members of
the group were ea tbe Golden West
C(illqe campus llandilJi out reJiijoos !rads irbeo the ~ toot place.
Saturday is
DOUBLE FEATURE
DAY
Starting Det. 14 tll
. /UatV Mn.\V
'1le ................... c ........ ...... 11 .. """' .... -· outhon. color, ..,,.,,.1 ...
......t, ...,..., rtfitPt! ~ tlt.~lfltt c1"'*:w:Aary
"' ""' "'"' ... ryltil.. ... "' w!!I .. ,.... Sotvrdoy pocbgo.
TV
WEEK
Now Two Gteat Magazines
Brifht111 11p t/le 'New' Weekeai
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D 1'ntingion . ·:Peaeh
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' VOL 6f, NO: 2~, t--SECTIONSr l~ PA6ES
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' DAJ\.T Jil\.OT ,_. W I.le Pmit
WHAT ~PENED TO SCHOOL llUS?
J irry Cribbs, Tom Alv erex, Pear Thr~gh F09
SF Classes Held D~
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Minor Campus Incidents
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Rainswopl
$an Frani:lsco . Stat.e College had two
minor wastebasket flres W,da)'. after Mon-
day's disorder in · which a crowd of
1 000 smashed · windoWs wilh rocks and ~as dispened by mounted police.
(Related Story, Page 5).
The demonstration followed a pattern
that has become familiar during the
five-week student strike.
It began with a noon rally. After
a series of speeches, the demonstrators
began chanting "On Strike? Shut it
Down!" as they marched -in a steady
drizzle -on the business and social
science and the administration buildings.
Most of the students have continued
their classell despite the demonstratioos.
About 200 policemen on foot forced
the demonstrators off the 18,000-student
campus. AJJ the crowd reached 1Mh and
llolloway avenues , just off campus, 18
policemen on horses Jed other officers
in clearing the streets for three blocks.
This was the first time the department's
mounted unit was used.
Officers were showered with rocks.
Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, acting presi<k;nl.
later told a news conference: "I think
I'm on the right track. I'm confident
that what I'm doing is right."
Monday wa1 the seventh day since
classes resumed under an emerg~ncy
decree by Hayakawa, a noted semanticist
with no previous adminlstrativ~ ~x
perlence.
Strikers led by the Black Students
Union th~ Third World Liberation Front
and the Students for a Democratic Socie-
ty, have rejected concessions made by
Hayakawa, who succeeded Robert R. ·
Smith Nov. 26.
Hayakawa announre:l formaUon of a
black ltudles department with 11 Negro
profes.wrs, but the strikers want an
ethnic studies school with 50 professors.
Hayakawa offered further concessiorui
Monday. lte 1aid students arrested or
su~ed for violating his "state of
emergency" regulations m'ay go back
to classe! pending a hearing by a
disciplinary board.
The strikers wanl amnes ty for all
arrested as well as adntissi~n of ail
nonwhite applicanls, promotion of some
teachers and firing of others and
reinstatement of twice-suspended Black
Panther George Murray, a part-time
instructor who urged Negroes to carry
gun~.
Nine J oin Board
Of Beach CofC
M.ne new directors have been elected
to the board of Ute llunUngton Beach
Chamber of Commerce and will be in·
stalled on Jan. 'rl.
New three-year directors are J . S.
Botelho, General Telephone Co.; C.
William Carlson, local attorney; James
DeGuelle, DeGuelle and Sons Glass Co.;
Peter Horton, McDonnell 0 o u g 1 a s
Astronautics C or p.; Ralph Kl s e r,
Southern CaWornla Edison Co.; Leonard
Shane, Mercucy Savings, and George
West, J . C. Penney Co.
Dr. Russ Morgan will serve a two
year term and A. C. ~farioo, an oil
operator, will serve a one-year term.
Four more directors are lo be elected
by the board to !Jerve one-year terms.
Election of oUicen is scheduled lor
Jan. 6.
D4lUY .Paper . -' ORANGE COU~. CALIFORNIA :TUESOA Y1 DEC8AIER IO, 196' 1E,N aNrs -' ..
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Fog Ch~k~ COast Road~
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Beach School -B;us Hit ·in Three•Car Accident -' .. . •,
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worst fog ~ of the 11111 winter season choked trafOC to a near lllandttlll
aloog the Orange Coast today, brJnclng s<ora of mloor accidenta and making
crowds' of cbildrtn late to school.
Althoogh tt .... Vlrtually lmJl"ISlbl•
to esUmate the number of accidents
as barasled traffic officers prowled
from scene to sceille, Costa Mesa police
logged 1i within two boun.
One of them involved Oranae County
3herlll'1 patrol car iD a rear-end colliaion
Nixon Seeking
Denwcrat for
U.N. Envoy ..
NEW YORK (AP) -President-elect
Nixon apparently is determined to a~
point a blg-name Democrat as U.S.
Ambassador to the United Nations and
a source ln the Nil:on camp indicated
today the job would go to Sargent
Shriver.
Shriver, currently ambassador to Fran--
ce, flew here hurriedly and conferttd
wiUt Nixon for more than two hours
Sunday. On M:orx:lay Sbriver then went
to Waahington when> be met with his
brolher·in·law. Sen. Edward M. llame<ly,
D-Mass.
Then be returned to New York where
he boarded an Air France plane back
to Paris. At Kennedy Airport, be delayed
the flight for sevtral minutes while he
made telephone calls to other memben
of the Kenned)' family.
Asked if be woo1d remain as an am-
tiaasador Jo the tfim\., •dm!Q,i*1tiaa,
Shriver 81,jd! '1Tbat: WoUJd be .a pod queilion to~~-
Shriver ,.. •lie -"'*'-'time to ..... ., othei: questions , '
Ronpld L. Zi~gler, Nl>on'1 press
spokMman, announced Jast week that v• President Hubert. H. Humphrey had
declined a firm offer from Nixon for
the U.N. post.
Ziegler declined to comment on the
possibility that Shriver now was In llne
for the U .N. job ·but a aource close
to NLl:on hinted strongly that such was
the .case.
Recent tradition bas been for envoys
to the United Nations to represent the
same political faith u the president
However, fonner President Harry S.
Truman, a Democrat, chose a prominent
Vermonl Republican, Sen. Warren
Austin, to be U.N. ambassador during
his administration which encompassed
the earliest years of the world organiza·
lion's history.
Nixon announced two more ap-
pointments to his personal staH today :
-James Keogh, 52:, of Greenwich ,
Coon., who has been ·on leave of. absence
as executive editor of Time magazine,
will be special usistant and "managing
editor" in the preparation of speeches,
messages to Congress and the like.
-Dr. Martin Anderson, 32, an associate
profeSSOT at C o 1 u m bi a University's
Graduate School of Business, will be
special ass!stant -one of several -
concentrating on "program and policy
development."
Both men were closely associated with
lhe Nixon campaign. Keogh serving as
chief of campaign """1'Ch and writing
and Anderson specializing in research.
· Nixon, meanwhile, joked Monday night
that he may be getting the Hong Kong
flu but was described as onb' u1neezing
a lltUe" and flt for a national televlsion-
radio appearance Wednesday i n
W ashlngtoo to announce hill Cabinet.
Addressing the board of directors ol
the Boys' Clubs of America, Nixon said
he knew his audience would like to
learn about the members of his Cabinet,
but that he would withhold the disclosure
until Wednesday, assuming he wa!I not
coming down with Ule Ou.
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' · · U•!IT ....... K~P JNG coot.; .
NlaM 'In ·flow • York
Sunset Beach
Zoning Plan
Compromise Due
A compromise zoning plan will be
suggested at the Orange C.OUOty Planning
Commission meeti1,1g W$esday on the
proposed duple!: .ap'artment project on
the former Pa'ciflc Electric right-of-way
in Sunset Beach.
The proposal 'to build apartments ·in
the one mile long , Ill-foot wide stretch
has been before the commission for more
than six months. ' . . Residents Of the Sunset Beach area
have objected to the project arguing
that the space is needed for parking.
Carlton BUllder1 of Beverly HillJ has
a lease from the Southern Pl\clfic
Railroad and has oUered to provide
additional parking spaces for residents.
Property owners ol the area bad al·
tempted tO f o r m a . unique boulevard
district to take over the property, but
tills was turned ·down by the Looal
Agency Formation Commissi·JD (LAFC)
and the Board of Supervllors.
Supervisors, however, expressed con-
cern over adequate parking fot the beaeh
area.
a whale crop of mlnar accldenta, mostly
In the central county rtgion.
"lt'1 strlcUy the fender-bender aturf,
a. CHP officer commented. "and ~there
ha.a been UtUe Improvement In the Santa
Ana irea olncl!earty this mornJnc."
Sherlfl'1 officers bad the 111111 llory
to tell -c1r11t1ng patchy roe that fre-
quently dosed In to bring motori.ta to
a grinding bait -U not Into another
car or cars.
GWC Incident
...
,..But we've found everyone to be es·
tremely cauUOUJ and very cooperat!ve;"
a spokesman s • I d, "we'•e bad ~
mloor COlllsiOlll than UIUll, but DO lo,
juries and no major di!ruption of traf·
fie."
Fountain V llley police rtpCi"ted five
accldents during the early morninl
hours, but Westminster police lop
only one minor crash, while Huntington
(See FOG, Pop I)
Teens .for Christ
Trial Set Jan. 9
Jury trial for five of tlle six Teens
tor Christ arrested last week on misde-
meanor trespuslng charges baa been
ll!lt for Jan. 9 in West Orange County
Municipal Court.
The young militanta Monday pleaded
innocent to the charges of Interfering
wUh the peaceful conduct of school ac-
tivities at Goldeo West ~e in Hun·
lington Beach and refUslng to leave
~ catnPUS wben~asked to dO '°·
About · 20 meml>ers 'of the Huntington
Beach-baaed group's leadenbip team sal
in Judge Phlllp McGraw's courtroom
during the arral8nment proceedingL
Outalde, llJllall bands of the ·oeU-ctyted
"Christian revoluUonaries" picketed in
froot of West.minster Cill' Hall, wblch
ls adjacent to court (acillllea.
Released on their own r~
were Joriathan Berg, It, son of the
group's "splrltual advlaor" Davt Berc;
Nancy Dewar, 18; J oseph Langford, 11:
Douglas Toerper, 19, and James Burtt,
27. I
A sixth member of the group arrested
at the college, Marian Tortorella, 18,
was bailed out Friday evenlilg shortly
after being booked: Her arraignment
is set for Dec. 111.
For nearly two ' months the aect has
been maldnc surprl" vislta to county
cburcb services. Friday, members of
the group were on the Goideo Weit
College ClmJlllll binding out. ',reII&lioi
tracta when the arreall took p!ICe. : . ,.\ .
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H~ntingtonGroup's Goal
~tter cornqiunicaUon among the more
than 80 organiutlons and civij: groups
in Huntington Beach is the goal of the
1969 membership drive of t h e
Coordinating Council, Chairman Roger
Beltsworth said otday.
T h e council w a ! created one year
ago as an outgrowth of the Chamber
of Commerce-sponsored Community Con-
gress. Its main function is sharing in-
formation on what varioos groups a r •
doing and to determine the needs or
services not b e i n g met by ~isling
groups.
Membership in lbe council is composed
of one delegate from each organizaUon,
public or private. Each member group
will be asked to contribute $5 to CllJT)'
on the work of the council.
Groups interested in participating art
invited to contact Rev. Bettsworth at
the Community Methodist Church, 6662
Heil Ave.
Aiding Rev. Betl3worth is Mrs. Dar·
Woman Given
Pris on Sen tence
I n Spouse K illing
A Garden Grove woman who shot an~ killed her )Xllice sergeant husband
in a bedroom fracas was sentenced to
I to 15 years in state prison Monday
Jn Superior Court.
rtlyn StoclieU, secretary of We..eoundl.
Next meeting of the cotmell _.ii at
noon on Jan. e in the Compiunlty ~
at Golden Wen College in Hunlingtoll
Beach.
Witness Sought
To Fatal Crash
Westminster police today requested
any witness to the double fatal collision
Saturday at Bolsa Avenue and Magmlli
Street to contact the tl1lfflC 'diYisiaa
of tbe police department, 193-4511. " · .
"We are partlcuJarly looking for ah
older model maroon Rambler seen m
Bolsa in the left hand turn pocket an
to Ma~olla," said Sgt. Joe Woods.
Killed in the three-car crasll wbkh
oceurred at 4:05' p.m. Were Doriald
Parson, 21, of 12622 Lorna St., Gafden
Grove, and his companion Loma Jeanne
Richardson, 20. of. 13222 IllinolJ St.,
Westminster.
' Orange
Weathe r
Had enough fog? Well, we're
due for more Wednesday -alone
with a 50 percent cluwe of show·
ers and cooler (IO degrea)
weather along the coast.
INSlDE TODAY ·
,
Barnyard Slayer
Draws Life Term
Orderl11 Accused
Judge William Spein handed the jail
term to Elsie Morine Wichman, 39, alter
studying re.ports · comp I I e d '1>y
psychiatrists during her recent l)G.day
observation corilmitmenL She pleaded
guilty lo Involuntary manslaughter.
. 11,' •• •'l"cltd, PreridOn~
tltct Nixon namtt Rep. MtlvhJ
Laid 1ecretarv of dt/tmt ht"U
be breaking another prtcedent.
Page 5.
CHARLESTON. Ill. (UPI) -Thom"
Charle1 Fuller ll, 11. was sentenced
to from 140 to 1• years i.n prison
today for the barnyard slaylnes " tte
five brothers and iliters of hfJ rormer
girl friend.
Circuit Court Judge Harry I. Hoonah
n:jt<Ud · tllO ir-uU00'1 d<mand for
o death ... tence -I penalty Wblch
hH not been Jm)JOIOCI in Dlloola ~pon
a peno:1 who pleaded citlltY for nearly
20 years.
Tbt judge cited Fulltt'• ~ lack
of ,erlmlnal record aDd pgyclilatric
bacqround and said , ••the court does
not dftm this to be lbe proper caae
tor lht death penalty."
' '
t..!.. .... _ .... -...:>-.-.--............ ,...
' '
Burglary, Rape Tri~l Opeµs
Trial openod Monday In Oranre County
Superior Court for a Santa Ana hospital
orderly accmed of a series of burglaries
and rapel wblch ended in a struggle
at a Weatmlnlter D01Jceman'1 apartment.
Ronald I. Ball, 77. fee<:.'! 14 lelooy
counts, includin& !Ive burglaries and four
rapes which occurred In Westminster,
HunUngt.on Beach and Garden Grove.
Vle&tminsler pO:Uce offim-Ch&rles
Thorpe surprised and captured Hall in
his own a.partmerit Oct.. $, mstlinc
two auns from the suspect in the pt"OCMS.
•
~ . '
Thorpe'• sister slept In a nearby
bedroom, both she and the intruder ap-
parently unaware of each other'• ......-.
Durint testimoey In Superior Court
Monday, • pretty, 2Z-year-old bruneUe
told the seven-woman, five-man jury that
Holl tore her frilly nil)>tgown.
"No matter what happem now l>Jby,
don't say a word or 111 kill you/'
ahe quoted the intruder as saylng, before
he. lashed her wrists together and cover-
ed her head wtth a 'J>lllow c·ase.
He alao threeteoed her at iWlPQint,
•he testified.
The vicUm-wbo 1hared an apartment
with a girl lrlend ..., lald she ~'ll'lzed
Han u an employ• (/I th. Palm Harbor
Hospital In Gardeo Grove durinC the
time she worked there.
Deputy Dlllrtet Attomey Jolin Garrett
b condudlJ prOMCUllon of the alleged
burgtar-rapiSl, wlllfl he .hr repr-ted
by Deputy Public Ocfend<r Russell
Serbe'.
Judge Howal'd Cameron Ui hearing• the
COIC.
Judgti Robert Gardner had earlier
denied her aUOrney'1 plea that Mn.
Wichman, who has been beJd In custody
since Jut April r. be releued on straight
probaUon without further Jail or prilon
time.
Garden Grove pallce a•esled Mn.
Wichman lul April 1 after she 1hnl
her husbond, Sgt. Henry D. Wlchnuon,
twice In t h e chest during a pr'e-dawn
aflumenl.
Her attomey'1 defen.ae was that Mn.
Wichman had suffered n u m e r o u 1
beatingJ II the hand! of her husband
In recent yean. And be argued lhlt
the dytng &ergeant, a 10.yt.ar veteran
of tho Giiden Grove force hod told
fellow otncers repeatedly that "It was
an aectdent" before he aucewt1bcd to
h1s wound1. .,
' '
'
• "
H' T-.-10,1961
ecretTalk
.~. '
t1SC Pledge
•. .
S"tahhed at. ·, .... _
Fraternity
~ ~ Fnm Wlre servlca
'l'hN m111 (~8'a'1'1d a lrataWt·
plollfl I[-n . a .. ,. .. """"": u ..,...i,.. lha vssil.Y ol SouUlel
Call!Gla'•.~ Row.
Bryan a..r,·11,-Gf • Ullll<d Alrlln<
execuUve, su1ftred a severed artery ne
his heart In the slabbing outsld< h ·
fraternity bouae, Phi Delta Theta.
'Ibe victim was running an erranc
£or" a. fraternity member and as h hit.keel wt of a c.ar where be wen:
In pick 111' a Jackel, -unld<ntilie· --him. 'WI •• Aid oat of tbt trio Junce.
at aa,. la tbe ..... fled.
Police aaJd all three assailants wm
Negroes.
nto
?
•
•
t Paris Parley Going
' '
3.0,000 U.S. Men
•
Dead in Viet War ---&\IGOll-1" ........... ~
-la _ ....... tio-1 ··•' u..s. ~ -..... todaJ. Nearl1
hall -cllod Illa ,...
Ollklal ~ -Vlalnam f!lbllls ...,. Ja 1, 1111. bed tillld
:z;;. A.--llnllP -· a 11m Ibo U.S. ........... -aid lbe ---.-lbe---'ftl d19:• n w •a. U.S. Qm. m111111 nparW Q-nu• lqt WUircl
aplaal .. m111brJ --VW.S
oa - -~SaJcoo ...i ...._ bscllr lllMllll WMcb .aw lt .......... -'It. VWwa de&Ull WI a-•••M .......
IJ -Ille 11,111 U.S. -tilled An elderly coople who wjtaessed th<-
~ and fraternity memben triod
lo-._ Qay'a bl..noc. ·
Tbo .ic11m •• 1ea1 -an 1-1ater after emergency aurgery Ill Central
REPEAT Of THIS KENE EXPIECTUI AT GIMllltAL TllLEPHONE-DAILY PILOT SHOW
Srn1hlfy Wiii Wln F,_""""" c.I 1_., • M• tw Durint Fovr~ay Evanl lntht--.-'-----loll. Ollklal ....... -mm!r ball ollbe..,._ __ ~wll'
8""eiving Hospital.
.fie was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwan!Clafol-,
Attempt Murder • Charge Dropped ·
.ilMtlllO --b •• e d!1m'• dlarll' ol -pl.ell mlll<ler
agalnlt a Fountain Valley lllah Scllool
Iii!! -alter Illa aJleaod1J at-
t ..... to poloon bar mol!Mr.
·'!'Ila a.,oar-old Pl ..... ..... mllk
• nnl ol -pendinl • final dlspool-
tlolf .. the -Dec. .. No -c<tmlnll -will bo Wm aplml bet j oamt olfidall said. • '
Arresting offlcm aald the girl's
moCllor called them to the --non
-·-lbal --~bad • .._ -,,. -pol a n d its cootenb were ~ for analysis
but the resulla of that delamination
bave not beea made public.
Masked Bandit
Holds Up Bar
A bandit maabd with a woman~
!ltocklng pulled ...,. hla bead held up
a Stanton barmaid early this roomin«
and got away with about $130.
Sylvia Harding of 9615 Nightingale
Ave., P'OUDtain Vllley, barmaid at 'the
Casbah, 11111 Beach BM!., told police
that after all pat:rona had evidenUy left
lhe WU m1nttn1 the da,J'a receipts.
A mm camo oul ol the ...-.
--her with a pistol and ordered
her to "'" blm the mmey. Allor tulq the cllllb, be farad the
bannald llllD • raoli.... and told her
to Illy then. Slit -him 1ea ..
by a f'llll' doar and drive an;y in
a car.
Window Washer Falls
LONG BEACH (AP) -'Frank 1'>mes·
aak loll JJ atorlea to his death lloodly
-his ufel1 roPO parted aa he 'lfUh. Id windon. TGIM'Pk 'WU '12 yean old.
DAil\ P1lOT
...... H. w ••• ............... .....,l""'
........ c..i..
Vice f"rtl'*"' .... o--.J Mll'll'lt' Th·-· k...,. .....
T••••t A. M""'Ml11t ,._,,.,. 11i11Mr
iJ\.wt w. ••••• w.m •• •••' ... _ .. ,. tMlllMton ....
f.dlltr C11y E.itw .. .. ..........
Jot Ith Str.1t Mtlliet A114,.n1 P.O. tu. no, 9tMI --....,. .... :'211Wltl ............. """' .-.1 • """' ..., ...... i.... ~ nt , ........ .,....
OM,.'f' Pt\OT, ......... k ~ .. ........ " ........ ...,_. .....
-.. ...,.. .-i. ..,. I :;;' :':: .._. .... QlM ..... ............ "....... . =! • .-..o...c;.., ~--· -....................... ...... lll'Wl.Cllltl ......
t ';£ m•• Mt-4m ,.. ..,.. · = c.-'41-tm p T&J MiarW I '4W1I
& ......... c... ......... ....... ,., .... ·~••bu4 ........ -...i ........ ...... .... 1&Niwr ...... 9'(MI .... ,., • ........... -.. .. . ____ ,, __
-cw-..~•; .., ..... ., --~ ...... ,., .... _n..-...-. _, ... 1 ...,. ........ .
• •
From Pagel
FOG •••
_., 1aily hit, aeven, witll tbnt In-
juries.
Seo) -..,... aid °""' lolled ,., -II doe to q, wblcb ,..
nlalhel1 llgbl bJ -.. Ille .., --o111io.....i, .
W.uTRD BOOllS
--"""_, lbiall1 ...
up ud -their .., --up to t11re baun Ill spats f o I ll<i1<lol
buses to -llnuab Ille .-.
llelrpart-Mesa ~ -llblrict ...... _,, !we ....... !ale and .....
-lo the ~ vi... Scbool Diltrkl of -Huntington Beach weren't given the
green light for'l'thtee bouts.
~~~.~~t~-
iseell. here,"' said John MOrmon, who
held up the Newport-Mesa bus fleet for
the first time in his 15 years •'on the
job.
Elmer • B e q u e tt e , trampn1atioo
sopervtsor fer the Ocean View otmict
in Huntington Beach, waited until 10: 15
am.1 practically balfway through the
"""" dOJ -. lmdlDr lbe Deel oat.
"nils .ill the .. -. • be aid, -· tbet IO ml_. la the ._ wait
far 1 bad fog ciOJ.
ENCORE DUB
111e b I i n d i n g fOI which Ybtually
obliterated the Orange ~ this mom·
ing will be back for an encore on Wednes-
day -accompanied by more eremilm
from tbe weatherman.'1 Pandora's box.
Rain and eblllr temperllura .....
pr.dieted far the -.ta! ania and mud!
<i Santhem Cllllornla Wed-31 at
the Southland l"'fl'l'ed far wimr,
discomforts.
The heavy mist. which cloled Orange
County Alrpod toda;r, was upeded to
continne through the night. Rain pn>-
specb for Wednesday were tabbed •t
so percent
Temperatures wen -apected to drop
into the low IO'a alon& the Orange Coast
Wedneaday, with slighlly blgber reodlnp
in the lnlaD:d areas.
Bequette said, "Some of lhe kids
waited at the 00. -· all that Ume." Morrison said Newport-Mesa bus drivers
told him they ended up carrying about
one-fourth of their oormal load.
The Ocean View Dlstr1cl contacl<!d
two county radio station! which broad·
cast the news the ~ were delayed
and i.ter that they were ""1lnl-
Morison said, ''We have a little boot
of rules and regulations ~ It SQJ
in cue of roe, 10 heme and return
to the bus stop in one hour and repeat
that procedure. . . .
"I'm not sure an the kids would know
about it lhougb," he remarked.
In the Huntington Beach Cltr District
·~ start!d on time but flnf$!!d a
ball hour late because ol slow driving .
FollnlalP Valley achoo! 00.es abo left
on time and ran lat<.
LAGUNA umrr
'fedq'a r.c wun, u heavy in Laguna
B e a c b. But a achoo! tnnspertation
-who said abo uoed lo work for Newport-II-commented :
"Boy ii must baT& been awp up there
becauoe -dtMn are not cowanla bl UJ "ffi.u
Israel, Egypt Jets
Fight Over Red Sea
-Tilt. AVIV (.t.P) -llnell and Egyp-
tian jet flcl>lorl bellled .... the -nedl .. the Red Sea loda, and the
lftdl 11'1111' claimed one EiYJ>llan
MIGll wu ahol down.
A opoilnmAA aald a second EiYJ>llao
MIG WU u.., to be hlt" and helded
back to ball. Ha stated all llnolf jela
nturnodufely.
• • --~ ~ ..
el.iiih.gfttit~~ter -. 1"'9 - -Illa 1'l"t~ ...... -· ---U.&a-baft -~--1.-... -•1Dilliolla-rreaplmed.
Win Your Stock Share °"" --.. llonday, Cam-
--tried but lalled -
At Pilot's Mall Show McBride Assumes
allef of Staff
Hospital Duties Tiie DAILY PILOT. collbndillc Ille
fa<t 11111 n will 11e able to dellftr
''todlTa -todaJ" Ill aD -edi·
lilm ol the --iaru.c -14oadaJ, will -Ill Win YOIJR Sime
-.__, ... the maB .. --
llnllm °"*"· MeDc ti· ~ Alb• ''" Co.,
tbe H>d ..... Van.,'I .... ....,., -" ... *' J• "C"lc!t~' ... Ille d•••111 lbclw t.,· ,ri C9 -.re ol-111111 ........ __ _
non °""II" Omp.
otber lbaret of l!lb:d: 1epr 01 a iUnc a
""* -ol Calllwnla -..... selectedudwlllbo"'"'11bedas"""
pr1-..,. -.. (lo., Inc.. -.aim -~ --.......... firm. -•0o. . ..-wm-1s
:!Smeallbln Bid•• ..... -
1ai.r lbla ........ -f-different
·-.. """' priJles. The DAILY PILOT will ...iribute the
show's grand prbe. a .U. anniversary
edition of the ·Encyclopedia Britannica
worth $500.
Also on the mall during the four-day
DAIL Y PILOT show, Wednellday through
Satunlay, wt II bo a majof-ezllll>tt ..t
up by th e General Telephooe Co. ol
California. General will give. away ODI
long distance telephone call to .nywhere
in the cootineota1 United States every
30 mimlles throogbwt the show.
Beth Ille DAILY PILOT and Geooral
Telephone Co. show will be open daily
from 1 to I p.m.
stocb to be given away include one
&bare of:
-Whittaker Corp., parent company of
Columbia Yacht Corp., Costl Mesa, one
ol the besl-lmowo boat building firms
on the West Coast.
-Sargent Industries, a group of
manufacturing companies which make
Postal Worker,
Youth Injured
A 17-year-cld Huntington Beach youth
and 1 driver cl. a Post Office truck
weni hljured Monday afternoon ln a
rear end coUlskln on Warner Avenue
In Huntlngt<s> Beach.
William F. Sigunl!On <i S'I02 Sonoma
Drive, sufferwl a broken leg in the
4:30 p.m. crash. He was rep<t'ted today
in good condWoo .at lluntlngtoo In·
ter<ommunlty Hospital.
Driver of the truck, Douglas Fuller,
21 , of 1&8111 Newland St., Huntington
Beach, was gjven emergency treabnent
and released from the hospital.
Driver Injured
,. & •\. ... -
In Mesa ·Crash
Rivenide County developer Lou
Laramore escaped injury Joie lfooctay
when bla car crashed Into the rur
of another at a O>sta Mesa lnler!ectloo,
-,. tta -to the boopltal. Richard R. Ray, .... lit w. Baj
St., WU truted for muacle spam.I in
the neck and back and rel<ased fmn
Colla ll-lfemorial llosi>ltal •
Laramore, ti, <i Riwnlde, told pellc:e
he woa approochlng Barbor Boulevard
In westbound lanes of WUson Street when
tbe Olhor car ltopped at Ille tnter.uoo
failed to start up ln time .
=
-lo! and llYdraa1ic equl~ far
the --and -tool -Ill -k -Ont -In HM am! wu -laal Je&r Ibo
"bal>y blDe c:blp --all ---the-counter mu.. In Calllornla bJ I b e
S<curilJ A11a1Job A---Ori!llana Qll·. °"11-.· ...... ud
devolope< of lbltqton Biocb•a a-
cl~· « '-~ mmnMll'tt7 o(
Huallnilon·-· '
The spread of -wiD gr.. wlnnen
ol the pr1-.. In-In the _.
race, recreallon, real estate and fndu.*J',
1be DAILY PILOT Win YOUR ShaA
Show, In addition to ollerin( more tllan
$600 in prizes, will Include dlaplaya and
..trlhlta sbowin« how the -per Is
able to produce the c:m>plole I t 0 C k
malhtt-1ooitafinam:e_.wtthlo
I e 11 than !we boun after Ille mamta
close OD Wall Street in New York Qty.
Dataspeed JD1CNnes wblcb speed the
day's -news. aauis Ille country
via teleplme lines wW bo lo operatloo
al the show. The: macblnes "t.ltt' to
each olbor at the rata <i l,OIO -per minute.
Dr. G...-ge Deny, cldef of ml! at
Huntington lntercommunity Hospital,
Morulay ni&ht turned ...,. Ibo duties
he baa bold -the bolpllal wa taill1 In 191? to Dr. Pool P. llcllrlde ..
PartlcipaUng tn the ceremony at the
Sheraton-Beach Inn was Ad·
minlstrator Rotierl D. J licobs, whO came
to "the boopilal !nJm St J-b HOlpitel
of Kobmo, Ind., where be bad served
for nine years.
· Dr. McBride is an obstetrician and
~ He wW he aided during
the -.,... "' Dr. Jobn· Lee. ..
orthopedic --will ""'e .. vice cblel ol atel!. S0crelar1 la Dr. 1lenl1 -... ........ jiiriti.n.r.
Dr. llerrJ', I _.at atid tboraclc
surpon. 'w'al awanled a plaque "1 the
medical Ital! noU111 hil ellGrla lo
organfzlng the stalf following oP'!ling
ol the hospital to mid 1917.
The ho.1pltel lw 141 bedJ and ZIO
pbyslclam on the stall.
Five on Coast
In Flag Finals
Five ~ Cooat bilh school sludmts
are amonr elgM ftnallsb tn the -ct:m-
peUti9n to create an Orange County
flag. . . ,
Selection of the official flag will be
announced Wednesday by c o an I y
"'"'""""'· Finailsts from the Orange Coast are
Susan Blacketer and Salli Shattuck of
Laguna~ High School; Laura
Shernaman and Dennis Baater o1 FOWl-
tain Valley Higb Scbool and Owmalne
llendennn ol Corona de! Mar H18b
Scbool.
Other flnallsts are Rob Sanden ud
Christopher Runco ol La Habra Higb
School and Stanley Webber o1 Garden
Grove High School
Orange County's new nag wm be flown
for the first time at the dedtcatiori
Jan. JO of the new countJ courtbouse.
Saturday is
DOUBLE FEATURE
DAY
Starting Dec. 14th
Famil,y~~
TM n.tion'1 faatest growil'll colortravu ... l'MI ..
tine ldch "Wt n•me" authon, cekNf entertaln-
mtnt, humor, recipes ind ln~•pth comment1ry
on Just •bout everything In the wor kl to our
S1turd1y ptckege •
TV
WEEK
f!ow · Two Gieat Magazines
.Br!ghten up the 'New' Weekend
< •
Q 7 1 I aGiZEl""'t' I *-·
•
BY
WILLIAM
REEO
........
In the Wind
HWttington Harbour awimm~rs
missed winning by a scant five
point! the team championship in
the Newport Beach Tennis Club's
invitational meet, ·according to
Rich Martin.
He said the club was represented
by 60 swimm~s and placed s~nd
in team slandmgs with 233 pomts
behind Los Altos Swim Club of
Long Beach.
Leading the winners for the Hun·
tington Harbour Club were swim·
mers in the 6 and under age group.
High points also were scored m
the 11-12 bracket and in the 13-14
group. Next meet will be 'saturday
at the Balboa Bay Club.
* December winners of the Student
of the Month honors at Huntington
Center are Susie Jew, Fountain
Valley High School ; Sandra
Brawn, Huntington Beach H~gb
School ;. Barbara Hansen, Manna
High School ; Sylvia P i t t a c k ,
Westminster High School; Linda
Camino, Bolsa Grande Hi g h
School, and Joe Usary, Garden
Grove High School.
Charles Davis, Pacifica High
School ; Karol King, Ra n ch o
Alamitos High School ;. and
Christine Marine Weisner, San·
tiago High School, received a $6
cash award from the shopping
center merchants association and
will spend four hours of oc ..
cupational exploration at the shoP'"
ping center.
Each student of the month is
in contention for a $500 scholarship
to be awarded in May. Candidates
are seniors selected by faculty
members of the business education
departments on the basis of
grades, personality and personal
appearance.
* I'm informed that the boat which
trapped Art Wadleigh of the Seal
Beach Yacht Club was actually
a Columbia 22, and not a Santana
22 as had been reported.
The yacht club bulletin and I
certainly agree that we hate to
see Art boolr:ed this way. I know
1vhat's facing him because I haft
,ne of the Columbia 22'1 too.
)
•
1\'ewport Atta~ •
Chotiner Tabbed
For Nixon Post?
By EVELYN SllRRWOOD
Of .. Qllfr ... lllft
It appeon olmost certain 'loday that
Newport Beach attorney Murray Cbot.lner
will be appointtd to a hJab 1overnment
post in the Nbcoc admlnl.otraUop.
~. 59, lndJcated aa inueh in
letters to bis' local · clients In recent
days.
He noutied Ulem that he will keep
valuable papen aDd wills in~ a trustee
boz "Blnce I will not_!>~ padictng law
in California and will be living in the
East in lhe foreseeable future."
Cbotiner h a 1 quieUy denied that he
will be named to a cabinet posiUoo
by President-elect Richard Nixon, a long·
Ume personal friend. i
But speculation continues that be will
be appointed 10liclW-generll or to a
limilar blglwanklni poll
ClloUner ta...,,. In New York, htadlng
up the tuk of putUng together a lJat
ci 11thank you's" from Nb:on to those
who helped In the prealdeatta.I cam~
On completion o1 lhe Job Cllotiner will
be free to accept a government pos!Uoo.
He got bbl own feet wet once 1n
lhe pollUcal;arena In Beverly Hills and
came to the conclusion be was not "eJ6c-
table.'"
A ·man of ' many tma.ges, he is a
brilliant lawyer and speech-maker.
Cbotlner ·hu been clotely linked "'
Nixon .u friol!d l"1<i llMsor 'during 1he
en~pollUCll coner of lhe Presldea~ "
elecl
Liner Survives .
Takeoff. Crash
• •
Park Bond Vote
On Board Agenda
. The Recreation and Parks Commission
meet,, at 7:30 p.m. Wedneaday in Hun·
tington Beach City Council chambers,
5th Street and Pecan Avenue.
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (PU!) -A chart-
ered airliner taking 96 Tezam home to
Ft. Worth from a weekend tour crashed
on takeoff from McCarren International
Airport Monday night ' when an engine .
faile'd and the landing gear co~.
Only five persons suffered minor in-
juries as the four-engine Lockheed Su·
per Constellation skidded on its belly
500 feet down ntnJ¥8Y Np. l5.
Boys Build su·b
' Cancer Program
Of $1.3 Million
Discussion of a possible special election
for park bonds in May or June is on
the agenda. Commissioners have been
asked to come up with a detailed plan
of what they would like to do on a
park program and to determine how
much it will cost.
The airliner, which carried a crew of
eight including two tour directors, was
gathering speed to take off when the
flight engineer suddenly ordered pilot
Dick Robinson to abort because th e
righ\ inside engine quit.
Wally (left) and Bill Haworth, University ol' Washington students,
are elated after 50-minute underwater maiden voya'e in their home-
made minisub Sunday. The brother! took the 3,000-pound converted
float for submarine nets down 156 ·feet into Puget Sound. The 57-
inch sphere is equipped with a tw~way f&dio and .powered bY. 'car. '
starter motors. It took a year to build at a cost ol' $2,000.
Faculty to Investigate UCI Ties
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of tlle Dll!Y l'lllt stiff
A question on UC Irvine ties with
the defense industry will be raised
Wednesday at a meeting of the faculty
Academic Senate.
An investigation of UCI Industrial
Associates will be aSked by Assistant
Professor of History Spen<:i!r C. Olin
Jr., who will introduce resolutions signed
by 18 faculty members.
The issue, according to Olin, is whether
the university is endorsing war industry
values and goals by formal alliance
with aerospaei! firms .
He will introduei! two resolutions -
one asking that a faculty committee
be formed to keep tabs on solicitation
and receipt of non-state funds by UC
Irvin!, and the second to make t..Tst
order of business of the committee in-
vestigation of UCI Industrial Associates.
Opposed to Olin's proposal is Associate
Dean of Physical Sciences Bernard R
Gelbaum who says he and Professor
of Chemistry Robert W. Taft will in-
troduce an alternative resolution. They
propose the committee be created to
monitor solicitation qf any non-state
funds, with no reference to Industrial
Associates.
Gelbaurn said he regrets Ute im-
plication there might be an undesirable
connection between the university and
the industrial group. "I think that any
belief of that nature is based upon a
Jack of information," he said.
UCI Industrial Associates is comprlsed
of firms which pay lr'1'na1 dues between
$250 and •IO,oro depenU.iug on the nun,ber
of their scientific and management
employes, according to its president John
Rau.
Its purpose Is to link the university
and industry in mutually beneficial ways
-at root exchange of university ex-
pertise for industry money with some
other lesser benefits also accruing to
the university.
Olin says he has very little concern
that Industrial Associates will dictate
t h e course of research to a n y facility
member. Rather, he said, hia concern
is that the university may be endorsing
the war industry.
"The university should at least remain
neutral. This ia oot a neutral act,"
he said.
One of lhe signers of his resolutions,
OrganismJc Biology Chairman Grover C.
Stephens, said he believes "It ia perfectly
all right for us to execute military
and industry contracts provided they
are made public. But th1I vague good
will reJaUonshJp bothers me."
Gelbaum, prlncipal campua organizer
of Industrial Associates and now the
group's secretary, counters that the Pf1r
gram does not involve only aerospace.
He points out that mllll campus Jn.
teraction with industry does involve
schools of engineering, administration
and the sciences. BUt benefits of the
Industr!al Associates program will be
spread tc. all departments, be said.
He said the only diSbursements have
been $250 giyep to each' school dean,
including humanities Md fine arts.
SPECIAL FOR THE HOLIDAYS! SAVE 126.00
ON INTERNATIONAL" DEEP SILVE~
82-PC. SERVICE FOR TWELVE JUST 150.00
Select flam six pa'!:!ms lo complement yoor modern OI traditional table
settings. Take advootage of this offer and save 126.00 over open slotk
prices: And, just In lime for holiday family gatherings. -5er.vice includes
twelve S.pc . place settings, 12 iced Leverage spoons plus 10 essential
serving pieces. Now 1511.00. Chest ll.llG.
silverware,
0 K' d for County.;
•'. ,
The California Committee f0< J1eskn1 ·
Medical Programs hu approved a $U
million c.;omprehenaive cancer program
for Orange County and Long Beach.·
Chairman of the committee'• oubcom-
mittee on cancer, Dr. E. R. Jermin8:1.i
aald the program now aoes to Wlll>lnl-
ton for a final' decision on funding.
The program will be 1ponlDl'Od 1iJ:
the UC! College of Medictne.
Jennins, cllrector. of patholol)' al
Memorial llolpitsl at Long Beacb, aald
the program will be designed to bar-•
.... joint ellorll of boop1ilala, pi>yll-
clans, denUsll and cancer, medical and
dental 80Cletiea In the Long Beach-Or-
ange County area.
The proposal would be comprised ~ a
four point program over • tbree-yw:
period.
-ConUnuing education of pbyslclmm
and dentists in dtagnoalt, care and r&-
habilltailon of cancer patients. .
-Special training of paramedical per.
sonnel, such u nurses, X-ray teebnl-
clana, medical technologllll, therapists
and cyt<>techru>logi!la.
-<::omputerlzing and cenlrallzlng dala -
on all patients with cancer in LQnc
Beach and Orange County -_pe:t. :
odic reports to pbyalclana. .
~Estab-.g a regtooal public Ill-·
formation progr&m for early del:ldlon,
of cancer. ·
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IUFFUllS SILVER CLUI lllTIRNATIOIAL DllP SILVIR U·PC.11.RYICI POlt U IOI 1••
Noth in& Down -No lnteiest-No Carrying Charge
5.00 per mooth on purchases up lo 120.00
7.00 per mooth on purchases up lo 160.00
10.00 per mooth on purchases up to 240.00
As long as two years to pay
u u ms '.\;;;;;,I
12 T911poons ,
l2 f'lke Forkt
12 Knlws
12 PllCI Spoons
12 Said Forkt
12 tc1d e.wr•1t Spoon•
1 Dtsatrt S.-wr
I )Javy LMle
1 Cold Miit '°"' 1 .. IT)' $pOcn
2Tdltl~ .
2 ~treed TtbletPNn•
t aitttr Slrvln& t<nlf•
1 SUllr 5'IOOft
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ALL STOllES OPEii EYEllY •IGHT UNTIL CHRISTMAS
-.
NEWPORT CENTER #1 FASHION ISLAND • 644-2200 • MON. THRU SAT. 10:00 A.M. TILL 9:30 P.~·
I • I
'-~--~~·
--;a;:;::::::=::::-;:;:=------::::::=~------·===:;;;===:;====~=====--.... -------
Powell May Regain .HQ~se Seat Fighti~g
· · · Rages in Federal GJ"fJIMi lll!Y Refuses t<J, Indict -Harlem Congr~sman ..
wASlllNG'l'Olf~ -A ... '"llII' ...... _ ........ t -clld !IOI .. ~ ~tfm." . llU .. ..-ol tilt .,,,., ..n... Tha; '-nd
-~· aad 0 d e1 I • IL • .a _. It Aid llolN\•, ft ""1lt _...,. to ~ 11~ P<!weD.';,. °.:::! :! 111lf.& ..,_,_.~• __. ....,, ~'-"II-""'" I• ,,,. llladylllt-lodleennlMVU.. ni.1-lawmaker.ald i~ "wWtew._ 1 •-,_,, _.,..,.__ .,;: "" wu1117dvilact!ootbllcooldbelalt"1 the admhmlratlon' o1 Prtlldent-e~·
?tfllsll lo --a -• 'lllllWH(ll ..... '19!,p._..rect ogalnltlheNe,.York.rptni..,--po1111c1an. Rlclwd M. Nino lo empsnd)IJIOlhet
....... ., ........... dklmeot11a1M1Adoma.,tom-.. 11 ~~4'j u,.._...,,._ c;...., hi a lliwr ..._, dll! not grand l"'1 to lnvallpte Po..U 'alter
11ep. H. 11. Groea (fl.1-1•.:!' *"" lllOl · fl!! ~--tenure offer evidence of ..........,, by l'iM!<D Nixon la lltlu&uf•ted Jan. :Ill •.
.. alleiopt lo block -m ~ 1' at lloloi,e l!dacUloo but !llJd be w11 ouln&l!d the ~ "'l'be c:bar'°' opinot l'olldl are far
the -...i lowblcb lie WOI....,... ,..,. o:.::..:.Commlllet, ~tod Jury whlch cOndueted' an ln~~Uot\ too -• lo pennll· llU cue ta, be
J Cuatoms police in Bangkok re-
ported they oonlllcaled .imo..l a Joo of deer horn being smuggled in
fJml eoounwut ctLna for Tbals
1"ho belleve It !I a powerful aphro-
OJ,slac. Tho police sC4 their uld
on , 1l9at anchored about 200 yardl
pH Die eoasf. aloo aetted a quantity
pf ginseng, a Korean wino which
~en think gives th em,
In Nmmber, ~ It -~ l!lilblle ._ 11¥ ~ alaf!. j>topJe wbo of "lllUed embmlemenl and fraud': swept uodei \!,.rug," Grou .,,..fuded.
1lllbearol of for a cnmd Jfil7 to' • aid llO m. ,. · bad dlaDanded wltboul• taklnC a vote Fellow llome meml>en '1fl>o.lnV01Uiat·
dkml .... befon tt ,_i.act U. • Tbt J,... ~t -a three-lo either in<llct or ¥.!-<;; ed the chart! .. qalnst Powell 'In Feliru-
tt WU lilUd lo invalli•le. • ...... , ~ 3~ -the ··"'!'be CO.,.... mid the .Ameil<:an )lOO-al'y of ·llG7 clecldil &!>at hla conduct Wat• Tbegroadjufy'1deciltmicle.nd-Mttj ._, ofJllle lfOD!I ,,....., -pie ltan ~ 1'llftl lo bow the....-. ranted ~t bul ~be llll!uld
a mojor obalcle Wblcb n>l&l>I ... ,. ,,.,._ li bid "-111!1'tf ',l\lallaliie for tbU ..._ ud '"''"'al 'llctlao, be seated. ·
• • • •
~ Mobile proclalmecJ a day 'of
inoumin& as a proteSt by cll,y of,
licia!s against an Alabama 'S1>: preme Court ruling. that the con;
Everslal film. "The Fox" could
shown.-Flags were flown at
all-staff and black ribbon adorn-
ed.the doors of City Hall.
..... -~. ".
Rolnrt Sharman, 4, pnned a 1 iettu io Santo Clatu asking
• "pleaie bring mt a. crane, a Jit-
;i. tnlck and -f .. fjTQnd-
.._ ...... Grandma, 55, of Brockfl<ll, !);1111~ . hopes Santa do<sn'I ~~ "I'w oot nov.g1' .mi ·~ liand. Ilda Chriamw )Ojlll-Qtd. cm~n.o like that,• alle
trDi·
: ,,. . .
~-~ 'of . Des Moioes,: ~II. ""5uccessful candi4ate for
Qliignu. tiled ·a campal&n ""' • --o rt with ·the Secretary ot C.s~llllice . lislidg •'overtime
~g ·on etegbant." Mahon, a
:R!ipubllcan, .Sed ti life-sized repli-
ca-of an el<n>bant in l)i! oompai&n• ~ etl!Ph1111i. «•i:!ed Oil, a trailer,
_. left' standiilg-too long at one1 .;atbr,.._ ,..: . ' . ' , .. "~.i;._ • , .. -~-. . " ... : . ; .. ·"'J\wo men who -rode to a st. LoU!S
&lo. liquor store in a .cab and tried ti J>o!d ij l'P were &mltlled 8ll they
-· getting inll! the cab for the gijawll)', police said. The driver
told· police that Nichol•• Plotoa,
23, of Orange, N.J., and Jooeph
$avi1rio, 24, of Baltimore, asked
him to wait outside for them. He
said he did not lmoW -the $125 holdup. -• Michae1 Grost
_, atlend his
~ en ..
moniu last weeJc.
end. He uw too
hrJI takl1lg a l<d
fO? a malheTnatia
teem. Thia 15-ynw-
okl ii 1t0t ;u.st a
..... rt bov gradu-
ating a ftw years
-· from high school -he tooS
Qnld114l<d f1'am
Michigan State Un·
foenity.
• • Susy the Nanny mel England's
Queen Mother and then gobbled up
a roy·a1. bouquet. Susy is a pet at
a borne for the elderly in London
Queen Mother Elizabeth visited.
'Ibe goat lunged for the royal nose-
gay even before official introduc-
tions were finished. -.
North Ir.eland
1Vear Chaos~
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·'· • , , i.. •
IJ~ti•liely !.··
Premier Says Train Derails i": SpecUP, Press _
' · PHU BAI, Vietnam (AP) - A South Vietnamese train&ow-BELFAS'I', Nortbehf ,lreland (UPI) -ing off for a'Party of newsmen ran into a. U.S. mmtary, p-u . a
'Ibo.voice Wll!!,.... with emotion. "'"" ·~-"-n•. th half ;r.::_ ;:&.!and "W• ~ 00 the brink o1 ""-· • the cro& • ._ ..,....y, ""'1WWg one car wi a a ""..., new•m-w
prime m!nlaltir of Northern Ireland told •dozen U.S. and Vieblamese military men aboard:. Nobody w~urt;
Jlis nstion. The U.S. Mission had invited the Salgoo press <-orps to ~
Capt, T.......,. ,O'Nelll --for .IS tii.· wort being done Oil ·-Vietnam'• railroad. About lO i!Cilires·
mlnutos on nsUouwldo tilevlion and ~'°"" aJ!d photographers accepted. ·;<: · ·
radio Monday tilg!>t lo appeal ·for an • About 18 miles sou1h of Hue, a military diesel tanker'!;rtlck
end to two menth!t of stnet diaon!en pulled onto a grade crossing as Ille 14-car train came alon~The
be'tween · Roman · Ca t ho 11 c • and e.giDe was In tbe rear pushing the train, and 8n open gondo\ii car ~=~ u the dlsorderl dld not · warln front with a half a dozen newsmen and a dozen .Am~can
stop be would quit and~Vietnamese military men aboard. .;r
"U you 'ffant 8 sepu:ate inward·loo~ .. The Vietnamese. trainman blew hia whistle and wavedt .. no
iog; dlvided and ,.lllsb-ohtor jWD J!I'\· .. avall: Both were going slow and the collision was rather soft, lJ!Ut it
m...i see1t 1 .. othen ·lo lud 'you alooi, · 'wu, enough to knock the gondola off the trsck. II bounced alouir for
that road," lie said. - -· ; .' alMlilt 200 yards before it came to a ball on the edge ol an emllllnl::-"l am Dot a man &1ven to extravagar)l }Dehl "~
~e, "_ be ~ . •'ftu! f_·m~. UY. '.-t.0 you that our condoct over the coming •
days and weeks wilJ decide our fu~ • .. ,
We are on. the brink of ctwoa. wiled .. ·• ...., ....... • :s~:=:=:~: Poverty Program Depends
government bas dlscr,imi.nated against. · , •
Catholics, particularly in housing and '
!a:~mai.i~ ~;::,ga;ou~ On Officials Agnew Say: s
The wmst riotlnJ! was tW1I weeu i&o ' .
in Armagh wbe~ followera ef the JU,.
fan PaiSley, a ,rlgltt-wlng Protostant
minister, clUhed. >vlth Roman Csthollca
wbo held a mar!ti: The Proteatant groap liaf'• · thlie'lllraatAiilil :to' take .-Jhe
~ people· ~ not merely u-
tre!ilists," O'NeiD said or the Protestant
group. "They .,. lunaUcs."
.. The bully bOy tactics we 11w in
Armagh are no answer," O'Neill aaid.
.. 'Ibey incur for UI the contempt of
Britain and the world and such contempt
iCthe greatest threat to Ulster ...
Rocky to Run
Again in 1970
NEW YORK (UPI! -Gov. Nelson
A. Rockefeller, senior governor in the
nation 'in terms of service, saya he
will seek a fourth four-year term in
19'10. -
Rockefeller's preu secretary, Leslie
Slote. said Monday night the governor
plans "to run again ... as of the moment,
subject to further change."
U he wins in 1970, the fiO.year-old
Rockefeller will set a record for service
as governor of New York . Former Gov.
Thomas E. Dewey served three turns,
from 1943 until 1955.
Fire Suicide Victim
Succumbs to Burns
TORRANCE (AP) -A Lon g Beach
man, who polic:e said soaked himself
in gasoline and set bimielf afire, died
today at Harbor General Hoopital.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -V I c e
·~ Spiro T. Agnew says eloded I olficials, not the . poor, should
have the "final word _ oo policies and
priorities in the nation's poverty pro-
grams.
"Let us not aee an absence of com·
paaion in an irurisil!nc"JI: OD o:mpettoct,n
the Maryland governor told more than
2,!100 olflclala ol the nation's cities Mon-
day. "Let us encourage par4".idpation
of . the poor where they can make an
effective eoobibution.
"But Jet us not coof'U9e the dbclosutt
of symptoms as a substitute for the
wisdom ol trained professionals. nett
ls ample oppcrtunity and need for each."
Agnew, a luncbeoo speaker at the Bf).
nual Congross ol Cities said both state
and k>cal governments at limes "have
been t!ltorl circutted by an increasing,
disturbing trend ol federal aid grants
to non governmental entities."
Afterwards, at a news conference,
Agnew said he was refening primarily
to so-called community action programs
-a major vehiclt during the Johnson
administration for participation by the
poor in the poverty war.
"I'm not relating to nongovernmental
entitles tbal are ...U ~ii'"", .w~ . ~ ejid that~·~-~ .. ~ .
for doing what is ~. such as
ho!pital units a n d that sort of thing,"
Agnew said.
not criticWng their motives,: ... I am
critieizlnc the ellectlvenes1 of ~ spen-
ding!' .? . .. •
llBn)' W. Diebold had tbinklegr,..
burns over 100 pe~nt of his body,
He had been hospitalized sin~ Dec.
2. Police said he had been despondent
over ill health.
"I'm talking about the community ac.
tioo programs that loo irequeDUy tn-
volve aranta tif money to newly formed · , •r lndifidlia!S .. 11o ·-·--" • -.. ~-·'' lofty purpose without e q u i v a I e n t
knowledge of bow to accomplish iL I'm
"
Arctic Air Grips N~~_theast_ '
5 Below U.S. Low Recorded at BradforiL, Pennsylvania '
·--Allenle
BUersfleld
::i::""" .... ~ "'-Cll'lclnnttl
Clew I.end ..,._
Nitti .... l'nc. B H .. . .. . .. " " . • • n " .. " 11 u ·°" J7 ,,
" "
Philadelphians: ::
Given Rude
' Aw~lling:·· ':
' P!IlLADll'Umu UP=-&n...uth-
qq.W ~"7 .. ~~.nu .. in~aa~":: lar11
.todoy, roililii~~~ tbtit ~
but ~-~~-1~ f
De. i'.'M. LOVii( dlttc!or .i Uie Fels
Planetarl4m at t b • Frantlkr InSUtute,
said the quake was "cen~tered veor close"
to the seismograph at the tnstttute. He
said it registered ·,.Some'what more than
3 on the Richter Scale." • f
lie &aid '!her< w:ai a sirigle shock
at 4:13 a.m. and the waves lasted about
30RCOllds.
SUrprised residents of the area jam-
med police, rire, and news media switch-
board,, with calls, seeking information on
w b a t they described as a .. boom,"
"clap o( thunder" or a "rumble,"
Police aaid n~ ~ of d'.a,mage were
received. Toll boOThs on both the Ben-
jamin Franklin and Walt Whitman
Bridges trembled but appa rently there
was no damage to the spans over the
Delaware River between Phlladelphia
and New Jersey.
Levitt said the quake was the 18th
felt in and around the Philade1pbia area
since 1800. The last one was on Junt
14, 111>2 and was similar In )l!tensi!Y
to today's quake. ' .,; . .. • •• ~1
PRAGUE (UPI) -,'!be Kremlin -
the pressures on Czechoslovakia '1n
weekend talks at Kiev by a~c
the new lough Commwlisl Party line
and agreeing to halt publicaUon ·or 1he
pro-Soviet occupation newspaper Z~,
Czechoslovak Party sources said todq.
The party newspaper Rude Pravo '.jn..
dicated also that the KJev negoti1t$ops
produced agreement on strengtheDing
Czechoslovakia's economic ties wltb 1be
rest of the Communist bloc. ·
The party .sources sald the SoYtet
leaden promised to stop the.distributl~
of the Czech-language Zpravy by :tbe
end of the year. The newspaper appeair,d
with tbe arrival of the Soviet-Jed invuion.
forces in August but was officially ban-
ned for "insulting" Ciecho:dovak lead-
ers. It cocitinued to circulate here, hOw·
ever.
Open a Full Service Savings Account now at
United State• National Bank with only $50 ••• or
add $50 to your present account. You'll receive your
first five piece place setting FREE! This beau1iful silverplate,
by Oneida Ltd. Siiversmiths, is the lovely "Flowertime" pattern
••• an exclusive design for U.S. Nallonal Bank. Slart building
your sitverware service · now ..... or chcx>sa from many fine
·service units. Each additional place setting or service unit
cosls onlyS2.75 (includes sales tax),,, with an additional $50
deposit to your savings.
See the handsome Oneida "Flowertime" silverplata displays
el our offices now •.•• then get your very own for holiday en ..
tartaining and givJng.
Thi• offer expire• January 31, 1969.
~/,)~~~:_>. ... ~,~~.: ...
.......
Eurtlle
'"' """' ·-·--·· ·-~ ke11se1 (flY
., 51 •• " . " ~ ~ " (-{:.~C;>:::1"~) And wlllle JOG'iw,at II, tin -'f • _,.lrff Chtlllmn llonu1-for
nollf ,_. Joie -Cllrl-Club nort. II'• /tan • p/•n lot • ..,, budget
-lncludlllfl -fllel lees""' own a/Wwpl•te .. pour "''llfl• ororr/
lrlldfard. P• .. lillllS h w.t ,...._
lf'f ... fllll N"°"' I -...,
n. ...... ... .. """"" •"""""'" .... of ~ ...... flH'tll • .. '""*" <Mii ,..,... .,.... ...
AtWlllc; C:..t "' .. _.,_. ....
aiwr-1 ~ " ............. -......... ,...
............. ~If ..... ......... --.~ ,._. ... _ .........
........................... v ..
_. PllRMNMI. -"""""" Atltflt. N -" .................... .....
All •• ._ E• 0..1 ,... cme. --........ .-wa"" .......... -"'•II 0.'f, -
.....,,. ""' .,,, ---.. rt .. !tot .Mhtl•"""' flfw.r ... ac.llerH f...,.,... au-"'t """"' M""""' ,. "" ........ ~"'° .....
c: ... c.i
E1rtr fllerlllfll clwllll 1tMI *-
-it.I flll~Nrrllw~
....,. Wlnlll ,....tertv, lt ts M m .. .fll.
ftlh .,,.,_, T...,., P!llfl. G t. a, Y....,,...,... ~lllfw r111111f
"-•flllllrllff'91Md4._
""' """""'""' "'--It .. "· Tiie .. ,.. ..._.."" ........ -Swa, M-'l'ltla
TV"°"T ~..,,,. ........ 11;1JIA....,
IK'9N ... 1;11 "'"" u W•DN•SDA'l' "'"" l'lltll ........... J:tl ,,.,., 1.r
l"lnl '°"" , ......... •:Jt 1.m. ll
SemN Plltfl .. .. • .. • • 1t1,. ''"" , ...
StcOllll ._ •.• ...... •1• "·"" ... ... .. ... •:tt "·"'· .... 111• .......
-..... 6:.U 11.IJI. .... •:• "·""
• l
<>•-Ml.mt leK!I M .. _,
Ml--"· _.._ _ ... ......
°"""' f'eM llD!ble$ .... ,_. -.,_ -... (.,,. ..... ,,,,. ·-~ .. .._
Sell uq. c""
"" -$efl l"fllll<ltu ''"''-~ ... .. --"""'"" ..... _
" " .. .. .... . " .. " .. " " . " a " . Jt 51 •• . " " a . " ,. a
It ·IJ M ... , .. ...
B • A .. " " n " .. " .. a " " a ..... ., 41
SJ (I Al a it .• ... .. "
L
UNITED
152 Fu" SJrY/ce Offices SMW1111 Southem·Callfoml• S'JM'ES
'
--NAT-/ONAL
BANK
...... """"' DilpeilJt ........ ClatiJIOl ..... ootl..., Mtrlf ...... '111• ,.
•
•
~o~~,~ - - - --- - - -' -
•. •' --••• -----_..__ , _DMLY fUJ ';f
' Monday's . Closing Piitt.s ...-.. • .
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i
DAILY PILOT •ma!!Y. PA.GS I .
F r.eeWtty ;:s. . M:~anings 'They want a table for four tftat'• neithe;
square, round, rectangular nor triangular!'
•
'!'be Saa Pl•~ FrMway 11~-llliili .. -ore ',tJ,r....,. llsan Ult '"nsilllln1 falall!W, decided lit
than 25 yean after ila ~ 111p5, 1'" i:.,t e!Jlll-cut do:J':.i lllftlld&' blJa oalu. ,
mile, .sitit-lane lin1t fnliif~ ~~'lo Ille Santa It e m. are In the 20 p,rcent bracl<il, ;
/!Pa Freeway ,11ear .El "'°10-•Ill .~\e\1 llmt J!"r¥aY Whal ~ the o~r ,/lfJ percenl! Uljllty Poles? Sign
,oJld will open to lrafllc.'bY llit pd .li,tlll' moolll. • . supportal Concme ~enta too c!Qlo to the treew
. . '111e ,~pleted' ribJioa •of 1"1ncf!!18 ,....., j,,: 'tho Too iiridg~_t· •,t \ •
longelt, Mil.lest ~eelV.,, Ji> ~· ~ Loll Angeles · Sh 't ~y..,.~on dictate relll<\ving the 80 peJt, ,
couitlies.,Co$tlng ·l3$5 rollllon,-lfJ00pg ll•l0ilt1 ·fh>n:i · ' CW!I·~· _'!Q&:-tffe destruction a0;a last relucta,Dt '
5an Fernando arooµul ; ~ AniClfit.' !iill ·~. Or&11gll , , : • ,~~~~~Ii'~ ilttional, experl'l/!ce? f,.
County to San Diego Coun~ .. · • ' "' '· :.: "t-· • -• 1&
·San .Diego Freewa,.~ !arm jllpl!Iqlnoe II tbai it' ' -· • -j,' c · · .. ": · ' -.......
will eventually conn~ 2'. oihtr W.w~ya .iii!• pas$ing · JI. ·' ~ of-the )M ~ " ): . • -
near or thro1.1gb niore than 2S1cominuni-. • ; .,~ .. tt .~·~
ru. significance to the 'ora.!ge, Coast It 11.1.i 11~1 · ''Mfll!i: ~·"'4 spirit" is a phrue lorij pu\ •ionii i· •
together more closely ,the ·~, coast&! comm=ty, ., a lkiCa4 ·fOJ ,ovlilopment of tbl l"hoUo ,ptQiba'.;. Too'
f"1fll Seal Beach to San Peme..n!4.Mlb..anolller stroo& often one""--·~J!od,Y, ill athletics -baa~ fOi.' • ' '
bood -the .bond of"""1J,inlercommunicatiO!I pnMd; t-'to the neglect bf the other lwo, at leas!,JD Ille '
ed by qulcl<er an4 ...., travel. • -' · arOO"of public honors. ,. -. "
' ,.. ' Now Orang~ County bas an Ac8"1!lnic Dec~~ •
Competitors are tested in It -•cademld,fieldi. l'll!!Y.'.-" :
cballeugect ilr l.bei.r abUilies to handle 11;rilten ueitlhnt : ,
in 8 wfdlii ~~-of1cl~sroom· 1iUb,Wcta 81 well 14s Those Historic· •Whi\e Oaks
I T • ' ' •
A row of 28 majestic; wl)ita AU'lrees .~ by
the late James Irvine; Jr."lo-the•lltllOt·at"a lleautil!ca·
lion project-along a dirt ioecl ·-.El CUiUJ9'.llOal, routa
between missions of the..F(uclscan j)lldres -have
been destroyed on the qu,s1jon4ble .:theotr. that they
somehow menaced traffic ca., the abov'O'<liJ~sed San
to COIDD)~1"' qr.iJ? in each area. ' . ~-~ !· ahf,f, th ~e categories1 -ho.Doh:, 'i>r ~ · 1uperlor::n~~W_.;.ldlbllistic, for rapid: learJ!e?s, ·and ' varsity,~r avera~ ._\Ji' -, •
Diego Freeway. ~· .
Jan· ~E· ·
1
;li0fl9r• winner frl>lll Ne'!Porl • · Harbor Higlj 1 ' ' S!Jli'ley S~~ glrll-veJ'< 1 ;
sity wlnnei:_ fto~1._ .Ilion V,iejo Hig~: ScliOOl, b~ght · ;
the Orang~ .. Qla , ·a '.U.proportionata ·'1h•thfn,I M, the' ; When the Santa Ana Freeway section between CUI·
ver Drive and Sand ~anyon .Rhad , was openlid, l,n 1958,
the trees were left 11111A>uched They stood some three
honors won tbrou Out"'tb.e county. · ..
They (!'es~e--all' Ill• accolades accorded a!l!letlc
winilets: inCluding actons, award dinners, sweBteft
with school letter&. 'and perhaps miulature lamps of feet fiom the free.iwp'4-·ioutlit•edge. . '. :
Statistics hav'e now reared Ihm ugly helid. The
state Division of Highway,, ,noting that, national)y,one
of every five motorists wtio hill! a roadside object· finds
it to be a tree, and ijnpact in ~ucb accidents account.<
learning cast in gofd. -. ·~ . ·
SUcb recognitioll ~d be theirs for they ell>; in
truth, typify the hope.:;~ the future in a world whore
ltnowledge i& explodillg ai nevlor before. .
.Militancy on f:ollege Cam~es 'Viownce ls
Sum Is Collective FutiHty '":No W~! to I Get·] ob Done' The presence of massed policemen
on college campuses where imminent
threat of violence exists, and even when
sporadic violence i1 occurring, ia an
utremeJy complex question, but nothing
will be gained by ducking IL . _ ___ _ , . . _ . _
Dueking it meam you are either-· .. "Which. :daily -bedevil them is In somt
intimidated into doing nothing, lest the doubt when they fill a large auditorium
situati?n be wo~ed., or you act to thrash out those problems. The Negro
precipitately, lgnormg alternatives to \be mili"··ts 'th _.,, 1 uch use of force. ...... . w1 a sr-uc p an are m
The problem prevails generally ·in more articulate than are white students
Ameri ll loda and •-M•-· and professors, wbo appear C<>llfused can co eg,. y, _, by the ' plighl and ~ lo · schoola u well. ~ ' .,ven tr·
l
Tbert is considerable validity to the relevancies. _Tbe sum of th e s e
argument that intervention oI the pellet ~tmen,ts 18 a kl n d or co~ve ''Dll'I I ClilcWIKt.
authority ln smouldering situations where futility , ~hich does no~ attack the ov~-all (-. 9'J ltiy"ifllb at t9
an ~losion is indicated, may incitt problem,butkeepshmavacuum. ~-'f<"_.J·~@ ~~'" .. ,
to an explosion which· would not OccUr · THE 1.ntl•aERED demands cl'1 ~: ~ ~~~~':• without the intervention. In cases where '""'"lll ~ · . . .. 1. ·1e lo · nd ind ashin militants in tone and content offer ah $tlLrt · GU a, far as they typewrJ r-ssing a w ow sm g air of bravado which seerris dtm-a.a dare in thffiit.eni"''"" violence, and aver has been clu'onic, an intervention could ~ ''6 add lo the gravity or the disorder. The more to impress a mlllioil televUion that whatever -violence they choose to
que.sUon is therefore one or degree, which viewers than a handful of,coll~g· ~-commit, the wuce may not step in
Is a common denominator of all hmnan Not all the demands are· absurd, but to suppress it. This is mob rule, and
strife, in warfare as well as in civil enough are to-infect the mOre reasonable · diflm' .only from a lynching in that
prote!t. · ones, and they radiate lthe total effect t:tNF:end, ·ii not really intended to be
of Adoll Hitler at Nuremburg nerci!IQc · lethlf · · -,' : ·. 1<>-• -
THE TROUBLE IS . t h at while lb e
militants willing to resort to violence
comprise but a small percentage of the
student body, larger segments of stu-
dents and oflen of tht facuhy give them
moral support, either out of fear, or in a
belief their grievan«:s against the ct>llege
authority \ti!: be hastened toward
redress.
But that the larger segments fully
understand l h e problems of educa¥on
bi1 ine:rorable will. ·' · ,' :But <the · t(lt: ft , the_', .Jc. The police
The black5 may have a case, for · Caft~ll a~;~Jnteryention under
instance in their demand for eqWtable threat of vto~. &ut repeat~ acts
treatment on all campuses, or for courses of violence, when they reach a trigger
dealing with their racial history. But state, must be sUppressed lest they
if more of the e:rorbitant demands must escalate by mob excitement to grave
be met by impairment of the educational incidents of mayhem, arson and even
life of a large majority, or if the price death.
of not meeting them all is the shutdown We have been -perilously close to
o( a large college, then lhe price is tragedy on some of our campuses, and
intolerable. we don't want ~· · :
Mystery of Kremlin Aims
WASHINGTON -With an anxious
eye on Eastern Eilrope, authorities hert
and in capital! abroad agai~ are play·
ing an old and familiar guessln~ game: ·:/, "What's going on in the Kremlin?" ,
Speculation about the Soviet power
structure has lncteased in the uncertain
wake of lhe Soviet-led blitz. into Czecht>-
slovakia. Both th"e direc!_i>n •nd the durability of the Kosygin-Brezlnev lead-
ership are now m· question.
In recent wee~ touring U.S. law·
makers have had • chance to lrade
theories with afficlala, U.S. and for-
eign, in ~tern Europe. When and il
President Johnson meets with Soviet
Premier Alexei Kosygin he will have a
chance for a persroal appraisal.
Presldent~lect Nlxon, who spoke dur-
ing the campaign of a series of meet-
ing.s with Russian leaders, may prefer
to defer his summlt'ry until the Jong-
range view gels a little clearer.
MANY EXPERTS believe. as we
previously reported, that Russia's long·
range intentions are now masked by a
desire to calm anxieties arounsed by the
move into Czectloslovakia. Sharp reac·
lion, e.specl.ally the reacllm af Commu-
--~~
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 11168
n. cdllMlal PDfl• of th< Dollr
• niJt parties oui.slde Russia, has, in this
view, discOncerted the Kremlin.
Two theories are emerging, however,
with respect to long-range trench :
-A shift to the right i! developing in
Soviet policy, toward the hard-lint, Stal-
inist coocepts. Thi! view Is rather widely
held among senators and congressmen
returning here from travels abroad.
-'Ibe now fluid situation could meaJl a 'power struggle and even a change
in the Kremlin's top leadership. This
idea is not so wideiy helci, but it has it..::.
strong supj)Orters.
POLICY -In his one hour and 40 min-
ute talk with Sen. Albert Gore, t>-Tenn .•
and CJaiborne Pell, O.R.I ., Kosygl~ gav.e
a tough outline of the newly enunciated
"socialist commonwealth doctrine" -the
idea that Russia is lo determine wheth-
er a Communist sister state ls followina
the doctrines of Mar:r and Lenin.
Neither senator Is a hard·line.r oo U.S.
Pollcies toward Russia. Gore, a prop>
nent of a U.S.-Russlan detente, was
quoted after the interview as slating
that the road to such an accommodation
between East and West would be "a
longer, rougher road than I had hoped."
PrivateJy, Gore has since stated that
Kosygin gave a it.ark and 1lmple sum-
mary ol lhe ccmrnonwelllth doctrtnt:
wants to move out of the Russian Com-
munbt orbit?" asked Mundt. "Will Rus-
sia se:id troops?"
At the Brussels NATO mttting Sen.
John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., told the
assembly's military committee that,
''The Invasion and subsequent declara-
tions of policy rai.se questiol'l.'i of great..
concern to NATO.
''BAS THERE been a change in So-
viet leadership or policy, or both, which
would cause the Soviet Union by design,
or because of fear, misapprehension or
mlscaJculatlon, to undertake military
acUon or harassment of NATO mem-
bers?" asked Cooper.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wasb., was
more positive in talking of the unpredict·
able course of Russian policy before the
same gathering:
"'The uncertainties we confront are
compounded by the RC)SSlbility of further
shifts within the Kre.mlln's power struc-
ture, where there is already evideice of
a move toward the-hard-hners," Jack.-
son declared.
By ftobert S, Allen
and John A. Gold1ml ..
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
• PlloC MIU lo Inf°"" and lllm-olat. ....,,.,,, bf pre1m~1111 tbU
__.., oplnlom and <Of»
t-~-1---11-_,.,...., on-1opicr al fnlnm
and dplflton«, bf providing •
"'""" fOf' IJlo aprtuion Of
"No naUoo now ln the Communist orbit: will be permlt'ted lo leave IL If troops
-are nee srrryr we-(the Ruaiant) will
UR them." What if they gave 1 riot and no-
body came! • ..., ,._,, opinlolll, and br
prnnthtg CM: dhJtr.r• trit'to-
p¢11U al mfonnt4 ol>Hn"" aftcl ipok11m.,. °" topki Of IM
d4J.
Roben N. Weed, Pub!W>er
'
' "
TUE POSSl8LE implications of such
a policy lot the Uniled Stoles could be
very serious. Sen. Karl E. ~!undt, R·
S.D., a member with Gorie and Pell ot
thie Senile Fore1p Relatiom Commlttet:,
referred to one of them after returning
(rom the November meeting of lhe
NA'IO A.alembly ln Brussels.
"What docs the policy mean if Cuba
-R.R. D.
,,.. .__ ~ ,......,.. , ..... ""
,.. • ..,,.... "'"' .. tllt -·-· ~ ,..., "' -" • ._.. .... °"' ....
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To the Editor:
I recently r~eived a letter from a
friend who is a student at San Francisco
State College in which he describes his
reactions to the turmoil on the campus.
Since be is close to the scene it occurred
to me that It might be worthwhile to
share his comments with your readers.
Here is what he had to say:
< •
"AS FOR MY VIEWS on the San
Francisco State situation, I'm afrald I'm
so wound up about it that I could carry
on for pages; t>ut I promise to hold
it down to this page.
"It will be four week5 tomorrow since
I have had normal class instruction,
but 1 am on1y one of 18,000 in the
aame boat, at least 90 percent of whom
deplore and resent this. Another 5 per.
cent are in a gray area, uncertain.
"I was in a class of 30 the first
day of the strike when about 15 strikers
barged in and disrupted the instruction,
issued threats, and othernise used tactics
of intimidation.
"BY THE THIRD DAY, 'with com-
paratively liUle response, the strike ap-
peared to be ebbing fast; but then some
of the faculty seized this as an op.
portwUty to grind some of their own
axes, and the one contingent fed off
the other mutually until things got clear
out of hand .
"Smith, trying to satisfy evecybody,
was tot.ally ineffective, and ~by bas
pre.vailed. In my opinion, a .great deal
of the blame can be laid at µ>e faculty
door -those who joined with the strikers
plus those who were intimidated and
did not meet their classes.
"IT IS IN~REDIBLE to me that the
school has been shut down this long
-or even at all. One forceful leader
perhaps could have carried tbt day.
Now, Hayakawa bas inherited a real
mess; but I'm impressed witb .b.lm -
if for no other reason than that he
speaks my language. I back him 100
percent on the face of what he has
said publicly, now and even . before he
was appointed. He takes, as the news
media say, a "bard line." So do L
"Well, tomorrow morning the school
opens, then we'll see what happens next
But the revoluUon is here, so we'd
all better figure out what side we are
00.
'"TIUS DOES NOT mean to say that
the oppressed minm'Jties should not con-
tinue to press ror redresses to their
lcgiUmote grieva~s, and that I do
not sympathite in many ways ; what
I do mean to say is that violence or
thre1t of violence is; not the way to
get the job done, ~use It past needs
be met )IVlth greater vloJerw:e •hicb can-
not be a"'lded If the tntemts ol the
whole are not to be sacrificed for thoM
of a small part."
TULLY 8. SEYMOUR
Lttkr.t from rtadtr1 art welcomt.
NoTT110U11 writers should conoe11 their
mtasaoe in JOO U10T'tts or i.s1. Th.t
rlgJ1t to cmw!.lnae le tttt1 to fit space
or tll'71inatt libtl is reserved. AlJ
lttttr" muit inclaidc ''onaturc and
malll110 addre1.t1 but nomt1 may be
withheld on tt"qucst if suffidtnt rt"O·
1011 1$ (lpparent.
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II
New Forces Will ;1
Manipulate Man
Thought.I at Large:
· Wilhin the illetlme of our children,
not ority man's environqient ~ut man
himself will -beconie increasingly con-
trolled and manipulated by the new
forces of biochemistry and molecular ment officials.
biology, changtng both OW' personal and • • •
our genetic natures, with unpr~ented The Ruhr river, flowing through West
possibilities for creating either a heaven Germany's JTlQst industrialized region
or a hell on earth. is 1eu pollaled tbaa It wu zt ye~
• • • aio, since a cooperative agreement
The great study that has yet to be aJl'\ODg 250 towns and 2,200 lndu.!lries
done ~ling. qo . the. gen.ius of a · along the· ri'(,er to charge "effluent rees"
future, Jia.:ifJ~ -11 on th--1:.._t.o t b •. o s e ~ing pollution· why can't
"pathology of~iit"bmtian af~~~~n rtter towns begin' to do the
a studJ.'t!eJ!'.IY .~atillg ilhe limits · same befotl'.11 is too late?
the risks, and ~ • dangers of sociaJ' . , • • •
a!M1 poll~cal pow~. and helping us to The best and briefest description of
dif[erentlate between the .healthy, pro-the conflict that racks the church today
ductive use and the sick, destructive was expressed by the Rev. E. Stanley
use of power. J~nes last mouth: "An individual gospel
• • • w1thou~. a IOciaJ ,gospel is a soul without
The traditlonal .cliche.~of:lhe·~.S. u a.~' and a social gospel without
a "melting-poi" bas always been a grou an inalvlcJual, gospel is a body without
misnomer; ~ has· been no . true a. son( one la a ghost and the ol.her
melting-pot in •APterican.~ cl&., ~and.~ is a COfp6e :-.Yoo. ca~ take ~our choice."
various ethnJc groups bave mi.I~~' A! long a.s we continue o u r
their identities and dual ' allegia'cces for preposterous policy or under-taxing land
generations, trying to get as much -a! and over-taxing improvements, our urban problem! will grow grimmer and our possible out of both worlds at once. cities continue to decay, w hi 1 t:
• • • speculators get rich aod home-ownen; Cultural lag between the· geoetations · move away.
is nowhere more ludicrws ,and PQ.tbetic:. • • •
than in the modem ,.~ .w)IO-proudly , The i:rison guard is but another kinii
offers his collqe-age child a t!rink' .ol. ?f capttv~; ,one who goes home at night
liquor on equal terms -When &tie: dlUd in ~. but whose spoirit is as much
has ~,gone far be)'OOd iqUor--to: chained u those he leaves behind him. hallucmoeeu! · . -, "· • • • • • • ~ Bea . utifal women are often dissatisfied How obeolett, In these dafl when ·
decisions must be made with fut1dus '
urgency, to trait four )Uri for· a.o etec-
tion, .so that the le RH of . the couµtry
can be lelt arid Policl<4 turned around
-when, ~ a telei>hlJOe ·System' lllt-
ched to , ,~ve icorftp,Jter, we. could
have "vOtirig OJachinell"-Hgister popular
sentim~t at least once a month as
reguiatorY "retdbact" to high goVern-,
~1th their looks, witty people are often
discontented wlth their wit, rich people
are often restless and anxious about
their money -and, absurd as it seems
to those without such attributes it i!J
certain1 that nothing we have 'brings
os happiness, but only what we are,
what we feel about oursleves ,what we
believe to be essentially worthwhile in
the core of our character.
MU:ltiple .Use of Land
~ t
Dur!iii Uta. cloojna ""9• of the lest
sessien l1', ~' vast_ !le" tnl.ct*
of west.em Jandl 1we:re added to• federal
wilderness and recreation areas. They
included the Red"·oods National Park
io northern Callfomla, a half-ml11ion acre
national park in the North Cascade!
ol Washington State, and establishment
of a national wildemcse area in the
central Oregon Cascades.
These regions are now set aside for
the sole use or recrealionlsts. As Popula-
tion growth puts more pressure on land
resources, there will no doubt be
demands for the ' natlona11iaUon Of
Umbcrlands on an lncruaing acaJe.
AS rutE GO~ on, if the economic
base of Umber producing regioos is to
be preserved, people must become aware
of the' DeCQiity •. as well as the ad-
vantageB, Of multt»h: land use. The form
producis !OdutlrY' r. a basic employer
and ta:rpayer. Trees are a renewable
natural rtsource that are Converttd into
hundrtdl ol Uf!lul aod llliblJ<.~
ptoi!ucis.
Under mu1Uple u!re of f~Jands,
major timbei' c o m pa n·l·t s are
demonstraUng that we can ha" forest
producta, as well as perpetuation or
recreauon and.wildlife.
THESE OO~IPANJ~ hive opened up
pri vate lands to meet tncreQed recrea·
lion . demands. Thr:y ha ve e1t1blillhed
facilities for the convenience of visitors
-and have run into the ume trouble
. --
that national and state parks are en.-
cou.n~ring. Van~als often wreck the
facilitjes. The Umber cornpanies also
~port ~aliciou.s damage to heavy log· ging equipment.
The public -or at least a segment ?f it -lags behind the timber induslrj
in a proper understanding of the wordil
"conservation" and "preservaUon,'' jWJf.
as some of the more extreme cor1-
servationists fail to recognize that broact:.
ly-based private o"·nersblp and multiple
use of the land are foundation stones
of economic independe~ and seJL-
governmenl
ladustrtal NeWJ &vlew-
Bfl George ---.
Dear George.
Yeo A)"""Wrlte lo George t/o -this neMpaper." I have wriUen
lo you oeveral times but I k<ep
getting the l<tter back marked i..
sufficient address. Are YoU sure
the name of your paper ia "'lbls
Newspaper"?
J . CIBBY Dear J. Gibby:
How did ycu finally gtl in toudl
with mt? l've simply got to pl\Ji :
that loophole. •
" •
·-1.o~""".;. ..................... liiiiiiiii .............. i...;,~·-·;...~~~--''---"-_:.--'"'-"''""----='------~~· .. --~-~ . ---~-------'--'==-----
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Reaeh·
' .. EDITION
VOL. 61, NO. 216, 1 SE,CTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, l)ECEMle, 10, 1968
' • ors '
Art-is ts Fight Fee
.
' '
Minimum Figure ·Called Too Low
A pn>poSa! to charge a 115 business
license. fee of Laguna Beach artists mak-
ing $3000 aruwally from their work may
come under fire at the adjourned council
m<eling Wednesday.
City MBnager James D. Wheaton sald
today that artl&ta represented by artist
Harold Pastorus will make a presen-
tation asking that the minimum be raised
to a higher figure_
Businessmen working with a council
coounittee decided Jut week that artists
Copter Flies
Rare Blood
To Save Two
A helicopter rushed seven life-saving
pints of rare blood to South Coast Com-
munity Hospital in South Laguna Mon-
day after psysicians used ajl the availa-
ble local supply in a double surgical
emergency.
A bospita1 spokesmen said the blood
was neede(L__!o sa•e the lives o£ two
elderly male patients who began hem-
orrhaging d u r I n g surgery. Bath were
bleeding excessively. And both bad rare
O Negative blood types.
Six pints of the blood wer~ rushed
to the hosplta1 from Santa Ana at noon
by a sheriff's car. ·
At 3 p.m. the ho_spital needed 16 more
pints for the patients, <lne 65 and the
<lther 83 years old. However, only nine
more pints were avallable in Santa Ana.
The nine pints arrived by sheriff'& car
in 20 minutes.
The. addiUonal seven pints were found
in Los Angeles and were delivered to
the hospital by Los Angeles County
Sheriff's Office helicopter.
They arrived at 3:45 p.m. on the
hospital..parking lot. The patients. neither
of whom 'was identlDed by name, were
expected to recover today after receiving
the blood.
Cleaver Now
Sought by FBI
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The FBI
today entered the hunt for Black Panther
leader Eldridge Cleaver, who is being
sought as a parole violator.
Cleaver's failure Nov. 27 to return
voluntarily to custody was made a
federal case by the filing of a complaint
charging the Negro writer with unlawful
flight to escape prosecution.
U.S. Atty. Cecil Poole. also a Negro,
said new evidence developed indicating
that Cleaver, the Peace and Freedom
party's 19&8 presidential candidate, had
crossed state or naUonal borders.
earning from '3,000 to $12,000 8Mu'ally
from sale of their work should pay
a $15 business license tu. Arlisll gross-
ing less than '3,000 would not be charged.
Wheaton said that artista have objected
to the $3,000 breakoff point noting that
it is the "federal poverty level." In
the past Laguna Beach artists have
not been required to pay a business
license for sale of their own work.
In the ordinance proposals to be con-
sidered at the 5 p.m. meeting, artists
grossing $12,000 or more would pay the
By Next Year
same-rates as a retail blJ$ess.
The peak gross ls $2 mlllli>n. Buslnessea
or artista .grossing $2 million or more
annua11y would pay a '200 license tab. ·
Exceptions to t h e sliding scale a r e
under flat rates. A handwriting anatySls
business would be required to pay $20
per day. 'lbe same would be charged
for "persooality readings". A tan
business would be required. to pay poo
for the flrlt car, $50 for the second
and $25 for ·each additional lui.
•
New Meters, Rate Boost
Due for Laguna Parking
A new type meter and higher parking
rates far the central business district
of Laguna Beach may be in the <lffing
next year. · .
City Manager James' D. Wheaton said
today that Ule Downtown. ~e.ss
Lagmia ~tarting
Plans for Annual
Patriots Parade
Preparations for Laguna's third annual
Patriots Day Parade Feb. 22 are off
to a snappy start:
The first band enlry rece.Jved this
year w;m that of Glendale High School
which will field 160 uniformed young
musicians. The fir.it noat entry w a s
from Walter Knott of Knott's Berry
Farm.
Roy Flitterer, president of the Ex·
chang& Club, said the 1969 parade will
have 18 dl!Ierent classlflcat.klns com-
pared to four in the first two patriots
day parades.
There will be a sweepmke trophy
foc the best musical unit. a theme trophy
f 0 r the best noat an'cl trophies to a 11
first, second and third place winners.
There will also be participation awards
for each entry.
"Not oaly are the bands and drlll
teams larger than those In previoua
years," said Fitterer, "but they ~
coming from greater distances Including
some of the {!nest bands and marching
groups in lhe Stale."
Of seven perpetual trophies, five have
been subscribed to. Contributors of $100
or more include Dean Witter Co., Robert
Scott, United California Bank, Steffre
& Associates and Kiwanis Club. Fitterer
said mort financial assistance is needed.
He can be contacted at Unlled California
Bank.
By Phil lntorl•ndl
Association is investigating Ute posslblll·
ty of using token system meters of the
type being tried iD Van Nuys.
Under the system, parkers get a token
and . can ·get bis meter money . back
frorri partlcipalirig merchants.
Merchants a I i o feel lt would be n..,.....,, to raise Ille parking llW!
downtOwn from a nickel per hour to
a dime, said Wheaton.
'l1lo hllher . -• 1pply to 113 parltlng spaces . of ~ 571 downtown
metered spaces. It would be in ~
a r e a: roughly boonded by Coast High-
way, Broadway, Forest Avenue and
Glenneyre to one way Park Avenue.
Wheaton said it would alllO be
necessary to change street parking from
one to two hours.
Funds raised from the higher parking
charge, possibly. $20,000 to $30,000 p e r
year, would be. set aside in an off
street parking fund to help finance a
parking structure.
Wheaton said merchants want to talk
lo merchanta in Van Nuys to see how
the system is working before making
a recommendation lo the COUDCI1.
Five on Coast
In Flag Fin,als
Five Orange Coast high school atudenls
are among eight finallst.t in the com-
peUUon to create an Orange County
flag.
Selection of the official flag will be
announced Wednesday by c o u n t y
superviaors.
Flnalists from the Orange Coast are
Susan Blacketer and Salli Shattuck of
Laguna Beach High Scbool; Laur a
Shernaman and Dennis Baxter of Fo~
taln Valley High School and Channaine
Hendenon of Corona del Mar High
School.
. Other finalists are Rob Sander.i and
Christopher Runa> of La Habra High
School and Stacley Webber of Garden
Grove Hlgb School.
Stock MarJceta
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
eased a bit in fairly active trading
late this afternoon. (See quotaUons,
Pages 10-11).
•
Pla11house Progresses
. •
s
OAll Y l"llOT lt.rl ,Mlt
Workmen erect steel frame for new $450,000 Laguna·Moulton Play·
house at site adjacent U> Festival of Arts grounds. Tiie 350-seat
facility, due for completioo next spring, will replace old playhouse
on Ocean Avenue which bas served. local theater goers for 40 years.
OCC .Studente Ask Laguna
Permission to Build Reef
' Four Oranr:e Coast College students and nylon lashing and marked with a
aren't trying to make waves but they buoy.
would like to build a small reef <lff Wheaton said the student applicants,
Laguna Beach. taking a marine science course, are
Purpose of the reef, said City Manager Mike Hawkins, Al Melanson, Richard Duarte and Jules Gambino. Their pro-
James D. Wheaton, would lie to observe fessor of marine science, Lewis A.
the t y p e or sea life t h a t establishes Follansbee, h a s recommended the pro-
itself and to attempt to transplant sea jeet and written that the studeol.s will
life. dismantle the reef when the project
The matter will come before city COWJ. is completed in two years.
cllmen· Wednesday at the ~ p.m. ad-Wheaton said the matter was put on
journed meeUng. the adjourned meeting because <lf the
The reel would be made of worn lime element.. The students need to write
out auto tires and would be in 10 fathoms a first phase report by semester's eod.
(60 feet ) o.l water off Crescent Bay The city manager saJd they must also
beach. It would be rooghly seven-feet secure pen'nlss.ion from the state and
wide, 14-feet long and two feet wide . U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers. However,
The reel would be located 200 feet this wW apparently hinge on city per·
from shore, secured with cement blocks mission.
$25,000 Windfall
Laguna Schools 'Surprised'
''Don't Argue Art With Me -I L1ve In L•gun•I''
• •
Aller casting for cuh from the Na-
Uooal Defense Eduction Act (NOEAI
In March, Laguna Beach Unified School
Dl!trict got an wiespected windfall.
Owen Tall, -tuperlnteodent of
achools, said lo!laY '5,000 oo the NDEA
applications was aUlboriz.ed for the
dlJlrlct In July but .. unapectod id-
cllfional 125,000 came through last week.
"You never know which wa,y the NDEA
ls going to come through," said Tail
"You often set a litile blt In December
or January over what was approved
In July but I really didn't expect 125,000."
-------------------------
Tait uld the funds will be uUlhed
ror audlo visual equipment and science
laboratory equlpmenl They art allocated
on a matching fund basis with the district
~ Id match NOE;_A hmds used. '
Tait uld the !nlUal $5,000 went toward
construction ot tbe' new 1 c I enc e
laboratory 1t the high ld>ool.
Tait II to rtpor! oo the NDEA !1'"ll'al!I
to ochool tlusteea tonight:
Tile board u alao upect~ to approve
appUcaUon to Che State Department of
EducaUon undl!r Lhf: !lcmentary and
Secondary '.Educallon Acl for ·1117,341
,
to purchase library boot& and reference
materials. .
Items &pecified In tho oppllcatlon, said
Tall, lnclOO.-11,000 bookl, 1110 .micro
lllm reela, 100 4-tt, 100 !llm llrlps,
490 m:ordlnga, 591 .!Idea or transparm-
ciel and IOO charta ad IJ'~ In ·-buJlnesa, IChool ~: '
. -WW receive 1 d!Jeat 'ti. 1 law ·that
becalJIO 'eu~ve No~. ~ Olilch 'perm1t1
achool b<)a<dl ml oti)e'r (ll\bUc agencl~
to hotd cloaed otAI®', lil\h nopreaen·
tatlvea of emploYe or a: an t·z at Ion 1
• (Seti t!CllOOLS, P11e I)
N.Y. Steeb
TEN CENTS
Laguna
'Blanket~ --
Not as Bad
,Worst fog condltlona of tho 191111 winier
aeason choked tr'aa1C to a.near 1tandltlll
along Ille Orange~· today, bringing
scores of mlnor accidents and maklnc
crowds of children late to acbool.
The worst accldent waa a spectacular,
five-car chain collision touched off lboct
7 a.m. at the Newport Beadi'inte'ledlor,
when a house trallef jack-tnlfed ar.J
piled up In the foe.
Police said another car rammed the
wreckage at Jamboroe Road and
Eastbluff Drive, bringing patrol cars
to the :secne with sirens 8CreaDling.
Once-on the scene, flare pattern. were
I aid out, but three more can plied
up when the blazing torehel caUled traf-
fic to slow quickly, injuring one driver.
Alfred Ganadra, 31, of Norwalk, wa""
t a k en to. Hoag Memorial Hmpltal In
serious condiUon, with bead injuries and
facial lacerations.
Although !t waa vlrtua!IY lmpoaibh
to estimate the number of accidents
as harassed traffic Offlcen prowled
from scene to scene, Cost.a Mesa police
logged 13 within two hours. ,
One of them involved Orange County
Sheriff's patrol car in ~ rear-eod col.li&ion
on Baker Street, with m1nor injuries,
but details were still 1~etcby near noon.
11-.igloll Beach pOIJce said !iO ld>ool
children were jolted about &: a.m., when
their bus was rammed. in • three car
co1lial.on at Adams Avenue a n d
Brookbunl Streel
They were merely late to school, but
w I t h some eicillng news f o r their
classmates.
Ca!Uomia Highway Patrol offl<m In
Santa Ana said the swirling fog produced
a whole crop ol minor accldenta. mosUy
Jn the central county region.
"It's stricUy the fender-bender ttu!i,
a CHP officer commented, "and ,ther.:·
has been lltUe Improvement in the Sant::
Ana area aince early lhlll morning.;•
Sherifi'1 ollicers had the ~ ~·
to tell -drifting patchy fog that frt'·
quenUy closed in to bring motOrlitl to
(See FOG COVERS, P11e II
2 Youths Injured
In Laguna Wreck
Two 16-year-<lld boys were injured In
Laguna Beach Monday when their car
·collided with another.
Police said the driver, Frank Schiller
111, 23312 La Vaca, El Toro, and hi s
passenger, Mike Anderson, 24082 Salero.
Mission Viejo, we.re taken to South Coast
Community Hospital for first aid.
Police said the aceident occurred on
Broadway near the Ward & Harrington
Lumber Co. when a car driven by Bran·
don Wentworth, 63, of 460 Oak St., pulled
onto Broadway.
He was also injured and was to let:
his own physiclan, olficera said.
Orange I <:oasc ·
WeaU.er
Had enough fog? Well, we·re
due for more Wednesday -along
with a SO pereent chance of abow·
ers and cooler (60 degrees)
weather along the coast.
INSmE TODAY
If, aa tzpected, Prtridnt-
elect Nixon aamei Rep. Mcdtrln
Laid secretary of defeme ht'U
be breaking another prtcedtnt.
Page 5.
~· ~ -' =:::---; ............ Jt .............. ,, ...... ....,, -" AMIL_..,. 11 .. ,.... 11 """"'" ~.
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• O.Ul v l'lun' c
3~d Suspect
In Skull ' '
Slaying Held
~·u A thin! IUll*I la Ibo --.
a Hayward man whole body was fOund
near EWnor< 30 day• ago by three
Coma Mesa rabbit hunl.en wu en rotip
to ruv..-today, fotlowln( his Clf'IU!O
in Tulare County. .
Bobby G. Crow, 18, formerly of
Elsinore was arrested In Viaalla and
booked into Tulare Coounty Jail Friday,
-lo hil ...... lo the -ia~lace murder charges.
· Atreldy arraigned Sunday In 1111'enide
Mlin!ctpal Court, with prollmlnary bear·
'ing set Dec. 11, are Roland J. Perry. C. Timothy ll4ron, 11, both o'.
No ball bu be<n Bet for the threo
lllSpeds Jn the shooting delth of Ken· o: Davis, 21, of Hayward, Calif., IOm"
lime last April, apparently ~ a narcotic
involvement of IOme IOl"L
. All three suspects have records 1
.put IW'COli<I brushes, according I
Riverside CouJlly Sllerlll'1 Sgl Virg
Woodward, of the homicide detail
• Sgl Woodward said Ctow would I
. arraigned todly, If be la -lro!
Tulare County in Ume.
Costa Mesa brothen Dsvld Zlmmanr
24, of S89 Monte Vista Ave., and Pau
Zimmann.11, of 2400 Elden Ave., &bocked
local police !lov. ti when they brought
Davil'1 bullet-blasted aklill to the atation.
Contained Jn the plllll!c bag with ti
wu the victim'• watch, engraved with
his Initials, wbkb helped detennlne his
idenUty, u well as through tracing of
dental recordl.
Dei.cttva n!lrleved other bones and
shredl of clothh1g from a wash be.law
looely Railroad Cuyoo Dlln near
Elalnon!, o]oag with a few other ecraps
of clues to the vidlln'• tdentily and
home area.
They theorimJ he WU murdered after comlDi to the Southland In early April.
Woman Victim
Of Purse Snatch
A purse snatch at Laguna'1 Heisler
Park Monday night netted about 130
and credit cards from a 84-year-old woman.
Tht pune Wll wrenched from the
arm of Isabel G. Ziegler, 1915 Glermeyre
Sl, as she and a friend walked in
the 500 block of C1lfi Drive.
Police said the thief, accompanied by
l!1Dtber man, Ded toward the beach.
In another theft, Skrer C a b 1 e
Televlaioo Co., 32S GI.....,,.. St.,
repcwted a two-w17 radio slolm from
a truck after the wlndwing was forced
open. The Joa WU ltlO.
Mlcbad Lachner, 1280 Blueblnl Cuyon
Drive, r.ported the theft ct firewood
6llcked In !root of his garsge.
Shriver in Paris
PARIS (UPI) -U.S. Ambwador
8aqeat -&w -lo Parts from WllbbJctoa today II lime for lunch with Pr~ OJerls de Gaulle at the
Elyxe Palaco.
.! I :.1LQT
01U1111M ~ .........., .. COIM'AHY
...., N. w."" ---, ... L c-t.y
VIGI ..,...... ... o-.1 MMl'llt
'"-· 1e .. ,11 ·-n •••• A. u.,,1ri1 •• -·-llcft,"4 P. Nill P111I Nl111" ...... ._
(ltr ....... "==" __ Of ...
222 F1r11f A.,1.
M•lflat .Ydr1111 P.O. 111 6&6, t2lll --Cltfl ,..., -w..t lly ltfMt ~ 9eKll: JJ11 W•I ..... 911/IWlnll ............ htdll ., ,.,.....,
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,._ .. , IT ....... OJ91191<-' ~o'UPlc ... .......-'"""--.. " ll'llWW .... ~ ....... ...... -.c...-..
'ft a' s ·C114l 4f4ot4'6 Aud r' ...,_ 6U.4Jl1
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-.. •abV ......... ""' ............. _.. ..... ~_...,_.,._. ....
... c.. .... ~·· ........ .. ..... •1.11......., ·-........... . ....., ..... , ...... _..
"
•
DAILY PILOT ..... h' LM ,.,._
WHAT HAPPENED TO SCHOOL BUS?
Jerry Cribbs, Tom Alvar•~ PHr Through Fot
Fro'" Page l
FOG COVERS COAST.
a grinding halt -if not into another car or cara. ..,
"But we've found everyone to be ex.
tremely cauUous and very cooperative,"
a spobsman a a l d, "we've had more
minor colllsions than usual, but no ln-
jurie1 and no major dlsrupilon ol traf.
fie."
Fountain Valley police reported five
accidents during the early morning
hours, but Westminster police Jogged
only one minor crash, while Huntington
Beach's tally hit seven, with three in-
juries,
Seal Beach-police said they logged
no ffcldenta due to fog, which was
relaUvely llght by !Ul1Up In the far
westem area of the county.
W AlTRD HOURS
School children who didn't finally give
up and grope their way .home waited
up to thre houri in spots f of school
buses ta loom through lhe gloom.
Newport-Mesa Untiled School District
buses were two hours late and aome
buse.s In the Ocean View School DIJt.rict
of Huntington Beach weren't given the
green light for three hours.
Elsewhere, delays were shorter.
"This Is the worst morning I've ever
seen here," said John Morrison, who
held up the Newpi>rt-Mesa bus fleet for
the first Ume In hi! 15 years on the
job.
Elmer B e q u e t t e , transportation
supervisor for the Ocean View DI.strict
in Huntington Beach, walled until 10:15
a.m., practically halfway through the
school day befote sending the aeet out.
"This is the wor;it," he said, noting
that 30 mlnules is the average wait
for a bad fog day.
ENCORE DUE
The b 11 n d I n g fog which virtually
obliterated the Orange Coast this m<rn-
ing wW be back for an encore on Wedrles-
day -accompanied by more grern1Jn3
from the weatherman's Pandora's bo:r.
Rain al\d chilly tcm~ratures were
predicted for the coastal a!ea and much
of Southern Callfornla Wednesday as
the Southland prtpared for wintry
discomforts .
'lbe heavy misl, which closed Orange
County Airport today, wu espected to
continue through the night. Rain pro-
spects f o r Wednesda)' were tabbed at
lO perc:<nl
Temperatum:. were' expected .lo drop
lnlo the low fO'I along the Orange Coast
Wednesday, with stlgbtly higher readlngJ
Jn the Inland areu.
Bequette uJd, "Some of the kids
waited at the bul stops all that Unf. ''
Morrlloo Aid Newport·MeA bul driven
told him Ibey ended up clllT)'inl about
....fourth ol their normal load.
Tbe Ocoln View Diltrlel conladed
two county radio 1tail0111 which brold-wt !ht nawa the bulcl were delayed
and later Iha! they were rolllng.
Morlloo Aid, "We baVI a Utile book
l
of rules and regulailona here. It says
in caae of fog, go home and return
to the bus atop in one hour and repeat
that procedure.
"I'm not sure all the kids wOuld know
about it though," he remarked.
In the Hunilngloo Beach City Dlatrtct
buses Jtarted on Ume but finished a
half hour late becau,se of slow driving.
Fountain Valley school buses also left
on Ume and ran late.
LAGUNA umrr
Today's fog wasn't as heavy in Laguna
B e a c b. But a school transportation
worker who said she used to work for
Newport-Mesa commented: ,
"Boy it must have been soup up there
because those drivers are not cowards
in any way."
Capo Studies
Water J)istrict
The San Juan Capistrano City Council
has moved forward in the community's
plan to lake over Orange County
Waterworks District No. 4.
The council has proposed that the
di.strict be merged w i t h the c i t y or
made a city subsidiary. The proposal
will now go to the Local Agency Forma-
tion Commission (LAFC).
The city comprises 89 percent of the
water district and wants control shifted
from the Board of Supervisors to the
City Council.
The city's "public works director also acts as manager of the district. ·
Under city operation, a five-man ad-
vl90ry board Is proposed, made up of
three from San Juan, one from Dana
Knolls and the fifth from the district's
northerly alla outside the city'• bowKI·
aries.
Fron• Page l
SCHOOLS ...
(negotiators) regarding salaries and
fringe benefits for employes.
-Are espeded to accept the gilt of
a 1959 Chevrolet f r o m Mn. Beverly
Thomas of -South Lagu~. lt will be
repaired by euto shop student. lo<
distrid 'use. • . .
-WUI be aJked to approve hlrinl
Daniel M. Sekulovlch, speech and bearing
therapist, beginnina: Jan. e at a salary
or $5,029 .
-An expected to accept l2lO from
the Rotary Club of Laguna Bellch f0<
matettala to provide a trnphy area for
the Auociated Studeot Body •
-Will hear a r.port from Instructor
Charles Schiller on an English conference
attended in Mllwauket, Wla.
-Will bear a report from lnltructor
Barbara Wrtgltl on the 1-11 pr<11ram.
L
·1 Paris Parley Going ·
bombq .... ~ ....... ,.""'
Jhe 1lll!llbtr " tM 852 IOrtleo bis tripled.
He said !he 1181 atlacb. ""'" tho! the
U.S. govemmetlt ts "c:ontlnulng lo Jn1eb.
11fy the-·" He elalmed,that 1Jw 11Anl
U.S. 1tnteglc boml>crt dropped mor.
thao 1,000 locl of bombs near Da Nang
Mohday and "ldlled many old people,
women and chlldten with poi., o gaa and
chemical product.s."
"
' American Deaths • Ill War
• .. •
Approaching Korea Total
,.,_Wire_
SAIGON -Tbe number ol Americana
~ In Vle!!WJI bat ' pasoed 3_,ooo,
U.S. mjll~ wq<ioday. Nearly
hall have died this year.
Official reports showed V i e t n a m
fighting dli:e · Jan. 1. 1911~ hail ldlled
29,1165 Americam througb Nov. 30. But
the U.S. headquarters sources· said the
number hM bow paued the 30,000 Jl1ll'k.
The disclosure came as the U.S. Com-
mand reported Communist shellings
qainst nine mllilary camps and villag.,
on three sides of Saigon and Cambodian
border fighting which killed H American
soldlers.
The Vietnam death loll mounted steadi·
ly toward the 33,1129" U.S. soldlers ldlled
in the Korean war, America's fourth
Spanish Music
Program · to Aid
Playhouse Fund
The FesUval of Arts Chorale, under
the dlrectlon of Marilyn lnterlandi, will
present a program of Spanish music
Friday and Saturday in the Laguna
Beach Playhouse.
Highlight of t b e concert will be the
35 -m e m b er chorale's spirited
performance of the dynamic "Misa
Criolla," an Argentinian folk mass by
Ariel Ramirez.
Featured soloists ~ill be tenors John
Allerdlce and Rick Gower. Percussive
instruments, some imported from Spain,
will be used with harpsichord and guitar
in the accompaniment ta emphasiz.e the
marked Latin rhythms.
PorUons of the ~ork will be given
visual interpretaUons by the Lynn Morris
Dancers.
The cho(jlles will also _ol;fer . the 16Jh.
c:entury Sp8nish Cbristm11 carola, Mex·
lean folk songs and "Alleluia" from
"BrarJllan Psalm" by Jean Berger.
'I'1le p r o gr a m will include guest
performances by the Concert Singers;
Paul Karadyl, piano; Margery Winter,
harpsichord; and Antonia Morales, guitar
and castlnets.
Proceeds of the concert will go to
the Laguna-Moulton Playhouu building
fund. Tickets, available at the door,
are priced at '2 for adults and Sl
for students
Both the Friday and Saturday
performances begin at 8:30 p.m.
Family Week{r
, .....
CO!llllP ,... In ll"' loot. •
OlllcW lllllilllos ~-·near Ir blllf
of the Amorleln Vldnam lasses :... nearly
U,000, ...._ dled .tbia ~-For the war,
more tban:~•iOm'"U.S. servlcemeQ, hjve
be<n 'llotlDdad anti ·another .UOO are
ltsted u lnlsilng fll actton or·e1ptured;
Over :North" VletDam Monday, Corn· nnnlJ.it;~ .!'"led ,but failed "with
,' . .
the Communist nation since the Nov.
1 bombing halt.-Todly beadqnartera iden-
tilled one of the two pilots rescued
Monday 11 Air Force Maj. Robert L.
McCann of Dedham, Mass.
The series of shellings against outposts
near Saigon was the second in five
days, headquarters &aid.
Swell 'Swim111er.
'
Laguna Girl Breaks 4 Records
Debbie Simmons of Emera1d Bay was
really in the swim of things Monday.
She broke four records and helped
tie another one in the junior high girls
division of the 12th annual Laguna Beach
Recreation Department swim meet.
Norman Borucki, recreation director,
said Debbie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Al 0 . Simmons Jr., 1107 Emerald Bay,
won and set a record in the 25-yard
breaststroke tn 18.8 seconds .
She also won and set records In the
25-yard backstroke (16.7), the 2S-yard
butterfiy (15.9), and the 25-yard fre<style
(13.8).
Debbie and team mates Lauri Dodge
and Lynda Penney also won and set
a new record in the 75-yard medley~ -
relay with a winning ~e of 54 seconds ..
AnoUter record in the 75-yard medley
relay was .tied at 51 .4 by the junior
high boys team of Dan Brotherton, Neal
Amsden and Tim Taylor.
Other winners were :
-Robert Ao.Ike, junior high boys 25-
yard b..-ke.
-Becky Evans, senior girls, 25-yard
breaststroke.
-Charlie Ware, senior high boys •50-
yard breaststroke.
-Dan Brotherton, junior high boys,
2.5-yard backstroke.
-Barbara Alllson, senior high girls,
25-yard backstroke.
-Charlie Ware, senior high boys, 50-
yard backstroke.
-Peter Morton, junior high boys, 25-
yard butterfly.
-Donita Ltnoyd, senior hi&h girls, ~
yard butterfly.
-Charlie Ware, senior high boys , 50-
yard butterfly.
-Peter Morton, junior high boys , 25-
yard freestyle .
-Donita Lloyd, senior high girls, 25-
yard freestyle.
-Scott Sumner, senior high boys, SO.
yard fr~le.
RECORD BREAKER
Swimmer Simmons
In diving competition, Mary O'Connell
took first in junior high girls diving
from the low hoard. Alex Zech was
first for jtln!or high boys and Cathy
Dunn for senior high girls. Hal Proppe
was first for senior high boys low board.
ln the high board competition, Lisa
Robertson was fir st for junior girls and
John Upham was first for junior high
boys. Cathy Dunn was first for senior
high girls and Hal Proppe was first
in the senior high boys class.
Saturday is
DOUBLE FEATURE
DAY
Starting Det. 14th
The n1tlon'1 f11test growing color9r1vur1 mag ..
zlne Mids nblg n•me" 1uthors, color, enterteln-
ment, humor, recipes and In-depth commentary
on ju1t •bout everything In the world to our
Saturday package.
TV
WEEK
•
Now Two Great Magazines
,Brighten up the 'New' Weekend
I
--------~ ----
•• ...
ed
L.
rts
ve
ell
ng
as
hy
pe
I.
sa
od
gh
or
·st
•
'
Nixon Eyes
Top .. Demo ·
For UN Post ..
NEW YORK (AP) -President-elect
Nixon apparenUy ii detennl.ned to ap-
palnt a big-name Democrat u U.S.
Ambassador to lbe United Nations and
a source in the Nlx!lQ ~ indicated
today lhe job woukl go to Sargent
Shrive.r. ,
Shriver, cwteptly ambassador to Fran-
ce, Dew here hurriedly and conferred.
with Nixon for more than two houri
Sunday. On Monday. Shriver then went
to Washington where be met with h1a
brother-in-law, Sen. Edward ltt. Kennedy,
D-Mass.
Then he returned to New York where
be boarded an Air France plane back
to Paris. At Kennedy Airport, be delayed
the flight for several minutes while be
made telephone calls to other members
oI the Kennedy family.
Asked if he would remain as an am~
bassador in the Nil.on adminlstr11tion.
Shriver said: "That would be a good
question to ask the.President-elect"
Shriver said he did no\ have time
to answer otller questions.
Ronald L. Ziegler, Nixon's press
spokesman, announced last week that
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey bad
declined a firm offer from Nixon for
the U.N. posl.
Ziegler declined to conunent on the
possibility that Shriver now was in line
for the U.N. job but a source close
to Nixoo hinted strongly that such w.as
the case.
Recent tradition ti.as been for envoys
to lhe United Nations to represent the
same political faith as the president.
However, former President Harry S.
Truman, a Democrat, chose a prominent
Vermont Republican, Sen. Warren
Austin, to be U.N. ambassador during
his administration which encompassed
the earliest years or the world organiza-
Uon's history.
Nixun announced two more ap-
pointments to his personal staff today:
-James Keogh, 52, of Greenwich,
Conn., who has been on leave of absence
as executive editor of Time magazine,
will be special assistant and "managing
editor" in the preparation of speeches,
messages to Congress and the lik~.
-Dr. Martin Anderson, 32, an associate
·:irofessor at C o l u m b i a University's
raduate School of Busµiess, will be
-:eclal assistant -one of several -
ncentrating on "program and policy
velopment."
3oth men were closely associated with
e Nixon campaign, Keogh serving as
tlef of campaip. research and writing
• 1 ;:I Anderson specializing in research.
Nixon, meanwhile, Joked. Monday night
r·1t he may be getting the Hong Kong
f .1 but was described 11 only "sneezing
a li ttle" and fit for a national television·
rzdio appearance Wednesday 1 D
\Vashington to announce bis Cabinet.·
NEWPORT CENTER
~.
UPITt..,.._
KEEPING COOL
Nixon In New York
Woman Given
Prison Sentence
In Spouse Killing
A Garden Grove woman who shot
and killed her police sergeant husband
in a bedroom fracas was sentenced to
1 to 15 years in state prison Monday
in Superior Court.
Judge William Speirs handed the jail
term to Elsie Morine Wichman, 39, aft.er
studying reports c o m p i 1 e d by
psychiatrists during her recent !Kklay
observation C<1mmitment. She pleaded
guilty to involuntary manslaughter.
Judge Robert Gardner had earlier
denied her attorney's plea that Mrs.
Wichman, who has been held in custody
since last April 7, be released on straight
probation wilhout further jail or prison
time.
Garden Grove police arrested Mrs.
Wichman last April 7 after she shot
her husband, Sgt. Henry D. Wichman,
twice in t h e chest during a pre-dawn
argument.
• •
• I ,IAILY-" =
Viet T:roop Pullouf in 40 Days.'
Clifford Sees Chance for Mutual Reduction •
j\IASHING'!ON (\JP!) -Def.,,..
Secretary Cluk M. CllHonl foruaw
Tuesday 11an opportunity to agree wtth
Banot upon the' mutual reduction of
lloops" In Soutb Vletdam wltbln the
ne~ 4q days.
He stressed, though, that he wu eJ·
pressing "my. personal desire lhat such
progress -would be made in Paris that
In the next 40 dayi; Qr 60 or m· days
I hope we would be able to rtach
agreement in Paris so there , would be
a mutual withdrawal of troops."
The 4G-day period was cited by the
defense secretary at a Pentagon news
conference because tha( is how much
time remains belore President Johnson
relinquishes the White ttouse .. cul. ""
to President-elect Richard M. Nixon.
Chlirch Hippie
Group Facing
Trial Jan. 9
Jury trial for five of the aix Teena
for Christ arrested last week on misde-
meanor trespas.sing charges has been
set for Jan. 9 in West Orange County
Municipal Court .
The young militants Monday pleaded
innocent to the charges -of interfering
with the peaceful conduct of school ac-
tivities at Gold~ West College in Hun-
tington Beach and refusing to leave
the campus when asked to do so.
About 20 members or the Huntington
Beach-based group's leadership team sat
in Judge Philip McGraw's C<1urtroom
during the arraignment proceedings.
Outside, small bands of the sell-styled
"Christian revolutionaries" picketed in
front of Westminster City Hall, which
is adjacent to C<lurt facilities.
Released on their own recognizance
were Jonathan Berg, 19, son of the
group's ''spiritual advisor" Dave Berg;
Nancy Dewar, 18; Joseph Langford , 18;
Douglas Toerper, 19, and James Burke,
27.
A sixth member of the · group arrested
at the college, Marian Tortorella, 18,
was bailed. out Friday evening shortly
after being booked. Her arraignment
is set for Dec. 16.
For nearly two months the sect has
been making surprise visits to county
church services. Friday, members of
the group were on the Golden West
College campus handing out religious
tracts when the arrests took place.
"I "°"Id llko to ... in Ille nm ti
dayc lho start ol •Ille return o1 American
troops from Vietnam,'' be said, uand
I tblnk there la 111 oJ>Plll'IW>ill' to qreo
with Hanoi upon the muwal withdrawal
of troops in that period.'' ·
But Cllffoa:~ niled out a "unllalaral
withdrawal" by the United. Statet. He
said· lbere was no indication the North
Vietnamese were. taldnJ advantap. of
Johnson'• Oct. 31 ball in the bolllbing
of Ille nortb to inDllrate lloopo thto!lp
the demilitarized zoni into South Viet.
nam.
Thero has "piobably not been ooe
provable" incident of Communist ahelOOg
of Allied troops from the DMZ for .about
I moniti, be saii
_ "Apparent.l;J• there bu no& been an)'
inftHraUoo '04 troops ilawn 1bnMJa11 tllit
DMZ wblcb lrooJd lncrelM the jeopardy
of our troopo in the ~ I
Corpo," Ille area ol Soutll Yletllom just bdow the lix..U. wide ...,.,
It WU fear fl. such tnflltr1tlon thlt
led Jobnaon to aoet i'lortli Vlobwnele acreement to eod "abwle" of! the DMZ
belore be 'ended the bomblnfl, CllHord
laid. '
On lnolhor matter, the c1e1 ....
aecrelary laid the cllmala Is rJPt for
opening lalb witll Ille Soviet \Jnloo Oil
"the limilalion and ulllmala reduction
of strategic nuclear misalltl" in both
nations. Such talks, he noted, would
carry over into the Nixon administration.
"There la ID attitude on the part
of botll countries .,.,. thal could produoo
anuoua1---. .. Qlfl'Gl)I ........ = i:;1::"":..r.::·.=
Premier Aleul !Calylln ·ID -'• I . ftnal llap towud I _. JIUC>lflll
world before !>e qulfl ~ proalcftoet~
Cllfford said Only that ' It would be
up to Ille two C<JUlllrllo (to cltddo •>
what level the lalu lbould bo." ;:
"ll such lalb .....,. fo "" --in thla preseol adminlllrallon I _,y
favor that," Clifford said, ''beclUll tbe
aooner Ille lalloi start the belier ,rf
the world would be.,.
A start now, he said. would ")11"1Y91&
a lag" between Jobllloo'• departure Pd
the time when the Nixon admlnlalrltion
would. be ttady to Ollllll• in COllll'lol<
and bichJy ledin!r.a) &alkl. .•
USC Pledge Knifed Wastebasket • •
" ...
Boy Dies in Fraternity Row Stabbing Fires Started
At SF State
.......
• c
From "'Wire Services
Three men fatally stabbed a fraternity
pledge Monday night as he wu ~ ...
an errand on the University of Southern
California's Fraternity Row.
Bryan Clay, 18, son of a United Airlines
executive, suffered a severed artery near
his heart in the stabbing outside hla
fraternity house, Phi Delta Thela.
The vicUm was running ID errand
for a fraternity member · and as he
backed out of a car where he went
to pick up a jacket. three unidentified
men accosted him.
Witnesses said one of the trio lunged
at Clay. then the assallant.a fled.
Police said all three auailants were
Negroes,
An elderly couple who wl~essed. the
stabbing and fraternity members tried
to stop Clay'1 bleeding.
The victim dled lesa_than an hour.
later alter emergency surgery at Central
Receiving Hospllal.
He was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Clay of Honolulu.
:~·
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Ralrun!ept
San Francisco State College had two
minor wastebasket fire. today after r.{.qo.
day's disorder in whlcb a crowd ·.of
1,000 smashed windon with rocU . .,..
was dlsperoed by mounted J>Ol!C'!•
(Related Story, Page 5>. ,
The demonstration followed a pattern
that has becmne familiar durlnf the
five-week: student strike.
YorhaLinda, Whittier Call It began with a noon rally. After
a series of speeches, the demonstrators
began chanting "On Strike! Shut tt
Down ! " aa they marched -in a steady
driizie -on tbe businesa and IOcla1
science and the admlniatraUon buildings.
Most of the students have conUnued Truc~Will Share Nixon
From Win Services
Yorba Linda and Whit~ have agreed
to share Richard M. Nixon.
Tourist-conscious businessmen from
the two towns reached an agreement
Monday whereby Whittier would officially
be known as the "hometown of Richard
M. Nixon." Yorba Linda receives the
title of "birthplace of Richard M. Nixon.''
Nixon was born in Yorba Linda on
January 9, 1913, but moved. to Whittier
when he was 9, and after he was elected
president, a dispute developed over which
town could properly claim him.
The President-elect grew up in Whi_tlier
a n d listed it as his hometown when he
ran for. Congress in 1946. After losing
the election for . governor of California
in 1962 he moved his official residence
their classes despite the demonstratiom.
to New York City. About 200 policemen on · foot forced
After last November'• election, Whit-the demonstrators off th& 18,000-Stude:nt
tier put up a algn proclaiming Itself camJ>UJ. As the crowd reached UKh and
Nixon'• hometown. The Whittier Nixon Holloway avenue.!, just oH campu1. 11
FoundaUon waa assigned. to perpetuate policemen ·on horses led other officer• the Nixon family history.
In Yorba Llnda the Nixon Birthplact in clearing the street.a for three blocb.
Foundation was set up to preserve the Thia was the first Ume the department's
modest white frame house in which Nb: on mounted. unit .was used. ·
was born. To date, no public buildings Officers were show.ered with rocks.
have been named for the Pre!ident~lect, Dr. S. L Hayakawa, acting president,
but there are plana. later told a newa conference: "I think
After the dispute developed, civic I'm on ihe right track. I'm · coofldeot
leaden of the two towns set up meetings that what I'm doing is rlghl"
to clear up the 1ltuatlon. ~ Monday was the ·seventh day alnce
After Mondly'a meettng Whittler classes resumed under an emergency
banker Hubert Perry said, "It was just decree by Hayakawa, a noted semanticilt
an unfortunate misunderstanding -no with no previOlll administrative Ii·
great difference." perience.
SPECIAL FOR THE HOLIDAYS! SAVE 126.00
ON INTERNATION~L" DEEP SILVER
82-PC. SERVICE FOR TWELVE JUST 150.00
Select from six patterns to complement your modem or traditional table
settings. Take advantage of this offei and save 126.00 over open stock
prices; And, just in lime for holiday family gatherings. Service includes
lwelve 5-pc. place sellings, 12 iced l.eve1age spoons plus rn essential
serving pieces. Now 1110.oa. Chest 11.!IO.
Silverware,
IUFFUMS SILVEll CLUI INTtRllATIONAL oei:I' llLY!R 11-l'C. llRYICll POil: u NOi' 1st.•
Notlling Down -No lnteiest-Ho Carryina Charge
5.00 per montll on purchases up to 120.00
7.00 per monltl on purchases up lo 160.00
12 Tila1poon1
12 P1KI Forkl
12 Knlw1
12 Plac1 Spoons
12 Sllad FOl'ks "
i em Ladt•
1 Cold Malt FOi\
1 e.ny Spoc.
2 TablaPoons
2 P111c.d Ta!Ml1poon1
1 auu.r serv1n1 Knit•
1 &upr SpOOfl
_ 10.00 per monltl on purchases up to 240.00
As Iona as lwo years to pay
u umS'---
ALL STOllU OPEii EVEllY ltDHT UNTIL CHRISTMAS :
12 ked ..... , ... Spoon"-
1 D1111rt S.wr
• • • •
-
•
'
i
'
-• • • I -• • • -.
• •
#1 FASHIO)l ISLAND • 644-2200 • MOM. THRU SAT. 10:00 A.M. TILL 9:30 P.M~
1.
'
I
I
I '
I
I
• : Mobilt proclaimed a day cl.
qioumillg u a: protest by city ol.-
fjci8ls against an Alabama SU. wem• Court ruline lbat lbe ...,.,
ti<Jvenill lilm ''De Foz" could lie shown. .Ffags "ft?e Down al
Jiall·staf! and black ribbon adorn-
"1 tbe dOO{S o( City Hall. . . ' .-..
. .. • p.. . Mehon. of Des Moines, Jltwa. unsuccos.<lul ca,ndldate for
~; l!led a campBlgn ex-
iNll!Se !"!'{Jolt .with tbe Secretary of
State'.S ~ Ottlce ~g . 0 overtime pinln' <NI eli!gbAnl" Mahon, a RepabL:'. used a life-sized repli-
ca ol. an olepilanl in biJ campaign.
'Die olepban~ carted on a trailer,
wa1 left st .. dioC loo 1'JQg ~ one ...u,. • ~ men wllo rode lo a st. Loois
Mo. liquor stqre in a cab and tried
to bold it·llp were llft"'S\ed u they
mre &etling Iulo the cob lor·. the. cetaway. police •aid. The driver
told· poll0o that Nlchol11 Platos,
23, .JJf. Qrwe,• N..J., al\() J-.ih'
Sa•1rlo.' %4, of Baltimore, asked
bim lo wait outside fnr them. He
said he did not kllow about tbe $l2S
holdup. • Michael Groat
didn't attend his
graduation are·
monie.s last week·
end. He was too
busv takmg a test
for o matMmat:ics
team. This 15-1/far·
old U not ;tut a
smart boy gradu·
atinn o few yeaY!
"1arl11 from. high
3chnol -he was
graduated from
Michipan. State Un·
iwrrity.
• Sw;y tbe Nanny met England 's
Queen Mother and tben gobbled up
a royal bouquet. Susy IJ a pet at
a home for the elderly in London
Queen Mother Elizabeth visited.
The goat lunged for the royal nose-
gay even before official introduc·
tioos were finished.
North lre14.-,,,d ~ ..
· ·:tJnti1l1ely (;rash. Philade!'-~~~ .
Glven1f:u e -" Near Chaos « .. ·
' . '
Premier Says
Rocky to Run
Again in 1970
NEW YORK (UPI) -Gov. Nelson
A. Rockefeller, senior governor in the
nation in ttnns of service, says be
will seek a fourth four-year term in
1970.
Rockefeller's press secretary, Leslie
Slote·, said Mooday night the governor
plan& "to run again ... as of tbt moment,
subject to furthe!' change." u he wins in 19711, Ibo ~
Rockefeller will set a record for JerVlct
as governor of New York. Former Gov.
Thomas E. Dewey served three terms,
from 194.1 until 1965.
Fire Suicide Victim
Succun1hs to Burns
TORRANCE JAP) -A Long Beach
man, who police said I08ked bbmelf
in gasoline and set ~ 111n. :H
today at Harbor General.Hospital •
Harry W. Diebold bad ~
burns over JOO percent o{ h1s OOdy.
He bad been hospltallr.ed slnee Dee.
2. Polk>e said he bad -d<opondalt
over ill htalth. ·
' Train Deraib in Special Press R~n
PHU BAI, Vietnam (AP) -A SoliUi V1eln"'1..., lraill jljlow-
iug off·lor a party ol newsmen ran into a .U.S. 111iti.tary ~a
Cl'OISiJlg lodaJ, deralllng -CM with a half a dozen newsmen and
a dozen U.S. and Vietnamese militaiy men aboard. Nobody was li:urt. ·
Tbe U.S.·Mluicm bad invited the Saigon press· corps to~
the wort being -.., South Vietnam's railroad. About ® clirres-.
pond-and photographers accepted. '."'
About 18 miles -o( Hue, a military diesel tanker tj:uck
pu1leol odo a srade cn>1sln& as tbe lkar tn!n came akmg.-'nie
..,P was in the nor puabing the train, and an open gondola' car
waa ,Ill frODI wltb a 11111 a !lol4'i ne"""ea and a dozen Amerltan
and Vi~ lllllillly -a]loard. "The Vleln•rnese tr.i•man blow bis wbil!lle and waved $<! no
avail.. Bolb wen ....,,.,low and the cqllWon was ralher IOft, but ii
waa. enough lo knock the gondola off tbe track. II bounced along-for
ahoul 2lO yards -re It came to a ball on tbe edge Oil an embank-ment. '
Poverty Program Depends
On Officials, Agnew Says
Aw~~nin.g . -~ ~
PlllLAD&PllU 'illPI> -Ai';;Ru.-
quake -• --==.llilloo In clla....tor,la....... •If
todq, ~ ·r if rt• trcm .U.tr-.&cll hllt _ ................ +==-i -l., •• ~""!!"I' • .......-..... i;;.
Dr. ii.,~ *'eolilf .r 111117*
P--Al!,lbe ......... ~
said the quUe ... ·-"'1-" to the ..i.nograp11 al the Institute. He
said it regilUred ~ mm-e than
.
Kiev~ Talks .Ea8e
P~~~:by ·R~ .. ·. On Czechoslovaks 3 on the~ Seale."· •
He said there was a $1gle shock 'Ibe Kremlill ~
at 4:13 a.m. and the waves lasted about PRAGUE {lJPt) -... ""'""" the ~· bn CJee!loolankia ' bl
30 secondl. weekend talks at lllev by -••Joa
&uprised residents of the area jam-the new lol!ch Cctnmunlst Pstr tine
med polie<, fire, and oews media switcb-and _.,g to halt publlcalleo of lie
boards with ea11s, ..utng inlonnatlao 00 pro&viet OC<Upatim newspoper Zpra'l',
" b a t they described as a ''boom,,, Czecbo,,lovak Part, sources said todlJ' •
nie parlj< newspaper Rude ""'"" fn. .. clap of thunder" or a .. rumble." dlcated a130 that the Kiev negotiatkina
Palico said no noporla ol domai" .,... produced agretment on stmiglheM>g
received. Toll booths on both the Ben--CJechoslov'akia's economic ties with the
iunin Franklin and Walt -real ol lhe Communist bJoe,
Brldpo trembled but appu<ntly ~ n.. party IO\I,.., aid thl· SoYltt
was oo damage to the 1paos over the leaders pramlaed to stop tht ~
Delaware River between Pblladelsmla of the c.ed>lulguage ZJ>r•'l' by Ibo
and New Jersey. end of tht year. The nenpapw ap~
Levitt said tbe quake was the lath with tt.e mrrl•al of the Soviet.Jed invadon.
,. relt in and around the Philadelphia area forces In AlJIUM tKJt wu clDelatlJ .,_,
Nn ORLEANS (AP) -V l c e rd crilici11ng their motives.· l am since tat. The last ane was on June ned for "'lnluhlnl'' CMchoelovat 'IUd-
criticiiin& the efftcti'ftna5S oi tbil IPf:ll'-14, 1952 and was similar la brteo1!11tJ en. It emtinUld lo clrcuJate here, hiw· ~ Spiro T. Apew say• .... " to •M••' -···· eloclod ""k:ilh, aot 1be pqci:, lbould I-,.....~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.....,~-'-''--~~·~~~~~~~-""'~-·~~--'~~~~~~~
haft Ille fiool -... polidea and
grlorttios In the -·· pov<t\}' pro-_....,..
"La OS not Ml P ablence of COlfto
pamim in an in•atec. on eompetence.'1
u. ~ ..... -told .... than
t9QI oft!rials of the natloo's cltia Mon-
day. ''Ut DI -· ll'!if.¥;!PIU"'I
of Ibo --tiJof ... -. .. .aee11w...a-.
"lat let .. llllt confmt tht dilclos1N
of symptoms as a substitute: for the
wisdCKD of trained professionals. There
IJ ample opportunity and need for each.''
Agnew, a hmcbeon speaker. at the an-
nual Coogres.<i of Cities said bolb stale
and local governments at times "have
been short ciratlted by an increasing,
disturbing -of federal aid grants
to non governmental entiUes."
Afterwards, at a news conlere:nce,
"""" a1c1 .,. .... r.i.mnc pr11nari1y
to so-called communJty action programs
-a major vehicle during the Johnson
IKhniolJtration ((Ir parlldpation · by the
poor in the poverty ....
"'I'm not relating to nongovernmentaJ
-ll>ol Al< Woll alalllilbe<I. Woll
-and lhet ha .. ..,.UV ........
for doing what is necessary, such as
hmpital units a n d that sort of thlng,"
Ap.wuid. •
"I'm talking about the community ae-
tloll --that toe frequently Jn. volvt IP'anls of money to newly formed
pwp1 of lndividuall who espouse a lof\7 p.q'P03e 'fl'Ubo\ll t q u i v a I e n l .
"'1owledgo d how to -.mplilll ll I'm
' ....
•
Arctic Air Grips Northeast
Open a Full Service Sayings Account now at
United Stalel National B1nt with only $50 ••• or
add $50 to JOU!' present 1ccount. You'll receive your
first five pieet place setting FREEi This beautiful silverplate,
by Oneida Lid. Sllversmilht, Is the lovely "Flowertime" pattern
••• an exclusive doslgn for U.S. National Bank. Start building
your silverware servtce· now ••• or choose from many fine
Mrvice units. Each 1dditlonal place setting or service unit
cosls only $2. 75 (incl udes sales lax) , •• with an additional $50
deposit lo your savings.
5 Below U.S. Low Recorded at Bradford., Pennsylvania
• \
..,., _... dol.-... .,.
CM"9I ............. Min' ... ~
._., Wllldl ~ 1 ... M "'-""'
ttlla ....,._, 'Tatel"I hltt\. 6f te tl.
Y•lwtll"t "'-"•II.Ira r•"••ll ...... .,..,,, ................. ...
..... --·"""-,_ -1t .. "· "" ................. -... -
s..... tlllfl n:ue ..... o
1ecW ... 7:U """" U W•DMUDAT
Flnt -.... . " .......... >!ti ..... J.1
flnt ... . ............. l :• •.M. "
..... ...... ............ lt:1' '""' u
llarllll ..., ' .......... •=• 11.11'1. .. . ,._ •• •:n '""· hft 11:t1 a.111o ... -taO a.M. .... 4:41 --.m.
I
Al\llnt1 ... -......... ..... -O>-
ClnclrwMltl
C'-lenlll ....... .....
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f'ort Werlll ·--........ -... ...... "'' l.11 vwtes --·-" Mirta .... --..... Yeftl = l'no ll:able1
Pllll..iitOt1 .. -~--boN City ....... -S..a u -· St, Uotlls .. _ ............ ... --·-.... ..._ ..... = w-
-.... -. " 0 H .... . " u • • • • • » H f7 u .15
" n " " " 511 •• " . .. . • • . " a M • • • • .... M V . " . ..
n ' ~ " . • • ... . " ...
t2 ·1) .to ,. • 1.JI
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'1 " A ~ -" .... " . . "
t
Seo the handsome Oneida "Flowertlme" sllverplate displays
at our offices now ••• then get your very own for holiday en·
lerlllnlng 1¥1d givi ng.
Tiii• offer lll)llm January 31, 1969.
(~~~;;'.)::;:-1-}~ And -pofl'N at I, fl/ft,.,.,,..,,•~ Chtl-hnus-lor
nut .,... Jobi -c:Arlstu• Clall -· Wt lint • p/M lot ._, budget
-1nc1tM11nt one 11111 ,... ,.,. ""'" "'"""* u row .... ,,..1
UNITBD
52 Full SetYlct OlllcH Sorvlng SOutltMn·c.Jfloml• ST.K/'ES
NATIONAL
BANK .......................... -..................
l
... t:
!\lit Dl1"
oin Jiu ,_.,
pro.
(
!IS
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/,
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----------~--·------.. ---= *' --·-- --.._...~ ....... ,.. ....... ~--------·-··-· -.................... _,, ______________ _, .. ...,,. .. , .
I For. ff'he llecord
~. ' -·
BALTZ lolQRTUARllll
Cortaa ~ l\lar Oii J.9151
Cotll lol... 1111 Miii
11ELt BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 _....,,, ~ "'"' i.tW<A
DILDAY BROTBEllS ~Volley 1o1-.,
l'ltll--. u..11a.--1C-mt
. PACU'IC VIEW
lo!DIORIAL PAM
~ • llhrtul1
Qopel lilt Poolllc View Ddff
Nowpcri .. oll,~ -~r~.
. 1IOlolli
1111-Aw.
w .. -......
SM1Tll'I MO!mWIY ., ........ ..............
1.11.-
W&m:LIP'F MOaTUAllY
411 s. n• 11., Oooll ..,. .....
Featherly
Honor Set
..•. ~art today!
,,..:,"'}
On Bonu< Accounts (lrUnimum $1,000 in,$1,000 multiples)
we P•Y the 5:11 current annual rate quarterly plu1.1/4ll annual bonus if h<:ld th""' ye.,. or longer. This rate is
dttennined quarterty, The safety of your savings Insured
lo $15,000.
Let US ~•nl/11 Y"o/ ICCOUO~ Wt hlnd/e I/I dtl1//r.
ANAHEIM SAVINGS
'
• llNC% ;;c LOAN ASSOCIATION --. AIWlltM -tMnut0TOfll lfACH ... w:.H.'"""... I ir:.:r-I :u::.-
FllQ; COf!Vll!IM P~lfQ AT 1<11. I IOCATI!lNI
'
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--C~---·-------------· -------•-------------~
OOWN
1 lns•e: SI .
2 Kl::J'or
' i'll':r.hat•
''"' 1114 ~•t••lftt t fort
WUHu's ,IJle 9·1om uns!tfl!llJ ft ·hlne,..
1 ~V.'3~1·
dlntt
5
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' .
OSXAR WERNER
., BARBA.RA. FERRIS ,..
"' lii a
I Pulled . t Sp. form of
address 10 Treat a _ sore throat
11 "For want of .. -": 2 words 1! Llg·num-
U African animal
U Edlble
tuberous root
i Staple food
Bind again Orlental slfvant
21 Instrument 29 F1ult 30 Pvtook of beverages 3C Asian nation 3S Emily-: Can. Artist . st Exhort
•
"' . ../ vf<:<rcd 'T7fcJtJ
' IV " '. Ill •1,.l
~ '"" >L • .11 '" '
' -ACAIEMY IWllD 'WINNER ..... ~.-· ....... ~9IJIM I. uwr.-.
-NICHOl,8, .
1HEiliADUiir
IK""l-Rlf 't'Ot.~ -----PLUS
Dwi. c...,
"WHIRi Wiii YOU WHIM
THI LIGHTS WINT OUTr,.
NA110NM. GaMPAL. CX>Rf'l(IM,.,,.
Fiiiibts
HELD OVER!,
2nd BIG WllKI
PAUL NEWMAN ,,
The SocNI
W1r of
Htrry Frln
IN COLOll
Jotnne Wood..,erd ,,
Rachel 0 llachol
., -
•
-NATALIE WOOD RICHARD BMifER·RUSSTAMBI. 'tN
RITA MORENO • GEOftGE aw<1R11
·----~'= AIM Pl.,tq
"AROUND THI WOILD
IN 10 DAYS" '
•M·'i"'""
Ike. 11., ...... 1 (•,,-
4(1,~it ......... ~ ............. . . .
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AUO HILD OVll
.. EXCWSIVE
' 116A61MEKT
• -...
DAVID 0. SILZIUC&'S .. a I ...... ··:n. ll"ltaW.'9
.GONE wiii 1i1'11N1
lf'~'flOliWO(l.m .......
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i '
-
I
TtindrJ, D1octmber 10, 1961
Unemployment, Disillflation
• . .
'T.radeofr Seen Wiih Nixon
111 s,tYla -
'lb< .... In tllo bllyUic -
of the U.S. dollar In the '"" yean GI the ,Jobn1oa
Mmiolslratloo, JanuatJ lllO-
January 19111, will eornl to
• drtadful 11 cents.
Thll ls the wont WlatloD
record aince the World War
II Admlhlstrallons of Franklin
Roosevelt 1nd Rarey Tnunan,
a period of global war on
a scale dwarllnl anytbU!«
ever seen before or tlnce. Thll
is a much steeper erosion than
the dollar suller.d even dwil1(
the Truman Administration
whicb spanned the K....,,
war. In that period, January
1949 to JAllllatJ 1951, the loss
in the doUar's bl.lying power
was 9.1 cents.
THE DOu.All which bouihl
too centa of goods and ~ces
in Jaauary 1165, will buy only
81 ceots of aimilar goods and
JetVices lhia coming January.
The dollar which was worth
100 cents in the market place
in 1939 is now worth a puny
39 cents ; lhe 100 cent dollar
of 00'.I decade! ago is down
to a mere 49 cents; the 100
cent dollar of only one decade
ago is down to 86 cents; and.
I repeat, the 100 cent dollar
in the month Lyndon B.
Johnson took office four yean
ago will be an 81 cent dollar
in the month be leave!.
This is an inflaUon far mon
'STARTING OEC.16
teYfre than most cf US U·
peeled, Ind that .... '"' ...
pella In Waihlnlton. In Wall
Slttiel, in busineu, ln our
u~ltlos. We did no1 eipoc1
that the 1..... In buylnc
power would be as 1-rp as
thbl . . , lo many month! an.r the anU•lnllaUon Income
tu aun:hat(O wen! ln\O effect.
IN OCTOBER,
G<lvernment'a Consumer Price
lndeJ was climbtnl at an an-
nual rate or 7.2 pereent, hr·
lnglng the yeaNo-year riae
lo 4.6 percent. ln the words
of one dismayed Oovmunent
otllclal, "everything wMt up
more than we dreamed possi-
ble.. We had no idea tt would rut 'like tbl." ·
the
Eveo ii the rise now
moderata, the 1 t f I ex·
pen.~ is clearly intoler•ble
In tfie lei:ding flnandal ,owtr
of the ·world. In the. words
of Dr. Paul W. McCral:ken,
just chosell to be the chalmum
of the CouncU of Economic
Advisers under President N°lX·
on, "thls , cannot be allowed
to continue.
"We must cool down the
recent inflation" . . . and
McCracken adds most
siiJlilicanily, "withoul pro-
ducing a large and sustained
rise in unemployment."· The
qualifying words saying lhat
the unemployment must not
become "large and sustained"
New!PSA . •
l-ono Beach·
San 'Francisoo
In Gas Cost
514.85
E.~Hutton
&Company
Inc. MEMBf:R NEW YORK STOCk EXCHANGE,
AMERJCAN STOCK EXCHANGE,
ANO PRINCIPAL COMMODITY EXCHANGES
11 OF'FICES COAST·TO-COA$T AND IN HAWAII
1•1 NOii.TH MAIN STll.EET
SANTA ANA, '47·0101
2Jt EAST IROADW~Y
LOH5' IUCH, •J7·1•7~
NIU
ASSETS OVER
'425.000,000.00
HEAOOfftCE
31.5 Eatt Cotot1tdo Boulev•
~,,.. C.ltfomla 11109
• , ,
•
-C-
'
INGS *"' bill !st of ~ lllOntll Gii f!mds !Mhll lly tie IOffC
• ~ iltlt of rftlipt the
tt '9h of wiaidtMI °" tuHI
OTI-4ER BRANCH OFFICES lllt9=··--,. W..t Arudl• • Covina • Iii ,; q111fer'1 • o .. nc1.s.
" , •
,,
" ' • ' ' • • '
' . '
' ,
• "
•
....... __ ---·------
•
~. -'"' )0, 1961
.. t,
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•
... • I
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE •
Freew.ay's
~they want a tobl~ for fovl'>· that's neither
square, round, rectani11lar nor '1riangul~,1· ' .
Tbe San Diego Freeway i.. linally finished -,more
than 25 years after It. planning bega.,. The 1 .. 1 eight..
mile, eight.lane link fnlm MacArthur Blvd. to the Santa
Ana Froeway near Et Toro w., dedicated last Friday
and will open ti> traffic by the end Of thlsmonth.
The completed ritibop of con.;rete rahksi ps the
longest, CO:.West lreewfiY In Oranie and Lo• Angeles
counlles. Cosllhg ~. inilllon, ~ l~ , 94 piUos from
San Fernando 'around Los Angeles antFlhrough Orange
County to San Diego Cbunty.
San Diego Freeway's Uu'ger significance Is that It
will eventually connect 29 other fi:eeways while passing
near or through more than .f.5 communities.
lts slgnltl.cance to the Orange Coast 'is that It knits
together more 'closely the ,entire coastal community,
from Seal Beech to San Clemente with another strong
bond -the bond of ready intercommunication provid·
eel by qwcker and easier travel
Those Historic White Oaks
A row of 28 majesti~ white oak trees planted by
Uie late James Irvine, Jr. in the 1890s as a beautifies·
tion project along a dirt road -El Camino Real, route
between missions of the Franciscan' padres -have
been destroyed on the questionable theory that they
somehow menaced traffic on the above-discussed San
Diego Freeway.
. When the Santa Ana Free~ay section b~ween, Cul·
ver Drive and Sand Canyon R;oad wa~ opened in 1958,
the trees were left untouched. They stood some three
feet from the freeway's south edge.
Statistics have now reared . their ugly head. The
state Division of Highways, ·noting that, nationally, one
of every five motorists who bits a roadside object finds
it to be a tree, and impact in such accidents accounts
lor JQOre than halt lbe resuJUng lataUUes, decided to
"'"t down lh'e. liisti>ric wbita oaks.
II J'Ollls(de trees .,.. in the 2ll percent bracket,
wbat abqut the olber 80 p'ercent? Ut1llty pol ! Sign / supporu! Concrete abutment.. too close to the freeway!
Too narrow bri4ges! •
•
Shoul<ln'I sweet ,....,. dictate rempv\ng lh• 80 pel'
cent first, lea..villl! •tree destruction •• a last reluctant ·• act based q,n. jocW, ·not national, 8l<per!ence?
,.. ,.:_1_1
Aihletee of the Mind ' .
"Mind, body and spirit" ts a phrase Jong put fortll
as a slogan for development of the whole person. Too
often one -usually body, in qthletics -has been fos-
tered to tbe neglect of the other two,. at least 'in the
area of public honors.
Now Orange County bas an Academic Decathlon.
Competitors are tested in 10 academic fields. They're
challenged In their abilities to handle written questions
in a wide assortment of classroom subjects as well as
to communicate orally in each area.
Winners are in three categories -honors, for
superior stu~e~ts; scho4tstic, for rapid learners. and
varsity, for average students.
Jan S<;hwartz, girl honors winner from Newport
Harbor High School, and Shirley Steinberg, girl var-
sity winner from Mission Viejo High School, brought
the Orange. Coast a disproportionate one-third oJ the
honors won1 tbwugbout the county .
. They deserve all the accolades accorded athletic
winners, ii>,clading scrolls, award dinners, sweaters
with schoollletters, and perhaps miniature lamps of
learning cas" Iii gold.
Such recognition should be theirs for they do, in
truth, typify the hope of the future in a world where
knowledge is '?Pioding as never before.
·I
Militancy on College Catrapuses 'Violence ls
No Way to
Get Job Done'
Sum Is Collective Futility
The presence of massed policemen
on college campuses where imminent
threat of violence exists, and even wQen
sporadic violence is occurring, is an
extremely complex question, but nothing
will be gained by ducking it. .
Ducking It means you are either
intimidated into doing nothing, lest the
situation be worsened, or you act
precipitately, ignoring altemaUves to the
use or force.
The problem prevails generally in
American colleges today, and secondary
schools as well.
There is considerable validity lo the
argument that intervention of the police
aut.hority in smouldering situations where
an explosion is indicated, may ineite
to an explGSion which would oot occur
Without the intervention. In cases where
typewriter·lossing and window smashing
has been chronic, an intervention could
add to the gravity of the disorder. The
question is therefore one of degree, which
ts a common denominator of an human
strife , in warfare as well as in civil
protest.
THE TROUBLE IS t h a t while l h e
militants willing to resort lo violence
comprise but a 11mall ·percentage or the
student body, Jarger segments of stu~
dents and often of the faculty give.them
moral support, either out of !ear, or in a
belief their grievances against the college-
aulhority wil: be hastened toward .
redress.
But that the larger segments fully
understand t h e problems of educatiori
which daily bedevil them is in some
doubt when they fill a large auditorium
to Ulrash out those problems. The Negro
militants with a specific plan are much
more articulate than are white student3
aod ~rofessors, who appear confused
by their plight, and given to ir-
relevancies. The sum of these
presentments !s a k i n d of collective
futility, which does not attack the over-all
problem, but keeps it in a vacuum.
'"THE NUMBERED demands of the
militants in tone and... content offer an
air of bravado which seems designed
m 0 re to impress a million television
viewers than a handful of college officers.
Not all the demands are absurd, but
enough are lo infect the more reasonable
ones, and they radiate the total effect
of Adolf Hitler at Nuremburg exercising
his inexorable will.
The blacks may have a case, for
instance in . their demand for equitable
treatment on all campuses, or for courses
dealing with their racial history. But
if more of the exorbitant demands must
be met by impairment of the educational
llie of a large niajority, or if the price
of not meeting them all ls t.he shutdown
of a large college, then the price is
intolerable.
I
1
••TUt's 1 col11cid11ce.
lly boy riots 11 tho u••
nive11ity J"
l 11\S·MJUTANTS GO u far as they aafe ln~ threatening violence, EK! aver
that whatever violence tb.ey choose to
commit, the police may not step in
to suppress it. This is mob rule, and
differs only from a lynching in that
the end is not really ·intended to be
lethal. · '·
But the test Is the act. The police
. can well abstain Crom intervention under
threat of violence. But repeated acts
of violence, when they reach a trigger
state, must be suppressed lest they
escalate by mob ·excitement to grave
incidents of mayhem, arson and even
. death. Y/e have be.en perilously close to
tragedy on some of our campuses, and
we don'l want aoy.
Mystery of Kremlin Aims
\\'ASHING TON -With an anxiou5
eye on Eastern Europe, authorities here
and in capitab: abroad agah are play·
ing an old and familiar guessin' game :
"What's going on in the Kremlm'!"
Speculation about the Soviet power
structure has increased In the uncertain
wake of the Soviet-led blitz into Czecho-
slovakia. Both the direction and the
durabilily ol the Kosygin·BrezOOev lead•
ership are now in question.
ln recent weeks, to\iring U.S. law·
makers have had a chance to trade
theories with olficlals, U.S. and for·
eign. in Eastern Europe. When and if
President Johnson meets with Soviet·
Premier Alexei Kosygin he will have a
chance for a persooal appraisal
President-elect. Nixon, wbo spoke dur-
ing the campaign of a series of meet·
ings with Russian leaders, may prefer
to defer his summitry until the long·
range view gets a little clearer.
MANY EXPERTS believe, as we
prevfbully reported, fuat Russia's long·
range lntentlorui are now masked by a
dealre to calm anxieties arounsed by the
move into Czectioslovalda. Sharp reac-
tion. especially the reactioo of Commu·
,, ,
nist parties outside Russia, has, in this
view, disconcerted the Kremlin.
Two theories are emerging, however,
with respect to Ieng-range trends:
-A shift -to the right is developing in
Sovtet policy, toward the hard-line, Stal-
inist conce~. This view is rather widely
held aa\ong senators and congressmen
retutni.ng here from travels abroad.
-The now fluid situation could mean
a power struggle and even a change
In the Kremlin's top leadership. This
idea is not so wideiy helti, but it has ii~
strong supporters.
POL.ICY -In lib one hour and 40 min-
ute talk wilh Sen. Alber\ Gore, 0-Tenn ..
and Claiborne Pell, D-R.I., Kosygk1 gave
a tough ouUlne of the newly enunciated
"soclallst commonwealth doctrine " -the
idea that Russia is to detennine wheth ...
er a Communist sister stat'e is following
the doctri.nea of Man: and Lenin.
Neither senator ls a hard-Uner on U.S.
po1icie.'I toward Russia. Gore, a propo-
nent of a U.S.·Russtan detente, wu
quoted after the interview as stating
tha( tbe road lo such an accommodation
between East and West would be "a
longer, rougher road than I bad hoped."
-Privatdy, Gott hu alnc< stated that
Kosyp gave a dark and simple sum-mary or lhe comn')!OOwealth doctrine :
4'No nation now 111 the Communi!t orbit
wW be Permitted to l~ve il Jf troops
are oecessary, we (the Russians) wlll
Ult them."
THE POSSIBLE lmpllatlons of llUCb
a ~ for Ibo .Ulllted States could be my serlout. Sm. Karl E. Mund~ 11-
S.D. 1 member with Gort and Pt.ti of
the ~ate Forelen Relations Commm ...
referred tb one of them after returning
from me November meetlq or the
NATO Assembly In Bruuels.
"What d°" Ult Policy meon II Cubl
wants to move out or the RuSBian Com·
futini.st orbit?" asked Mundt. "Will Rus-
sia se~ut troops'!"
At the Brussels NATO meeting Sen.
John Sherman Cooper, R·Ky., told the
assembly's military committee that,
"The invasion and subsequent declara-
tions of policy raise questiom of great
L'OtlCtrn to NATO.
•'HA.$. THERE been a changP. in So-
viet l"'denhip or policy, or both, which
woUld cause the Soviet Union by design,
or becaµse of fear, misapprehe.islon or
miscalculation, to undertake military
action ot harassment of NATO mem-
berS'!11 asked Cooper.
-Sen. llenry M. Jacboo, 0-Wash., was
more positive in talking of the unpredict-
able course of Russian policy before the
same gathering:
"The uncertainties we confront art
compoUnded by the possibility of further
shifts within the Kremlin's power struc-
ture, where then: is already evid~ce of
a move toward the hard-liners," Jack·
son declared.
By Robert S. Allen
and Job& A. Goldsmllb
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Wbal ff they gave a riot and no-
body amel
-ll R. D.
fll!ft ....... ""9Ktt ""'"'" ''"" -.... ...-11, ....... "" ~·-· ..... .... "' -• .._, 0.... Deh ,lltt.
To t.he Editor:
I recently received a letter from a
friend who is a student al San Francisco
State College in which he describes his
reactions to the turmoil on the campus.
Since he is close lo the scene it occurred
lo me that it might be worthwhile to
share his comments with your readers.
Here ia what he had to say:
.. AS FOR MY VIEWS on the San
Fraaiclsco State situation, I'm afraid I'm
so wound up about it that I could carry
on for pages ; but I promise to bold
it down to this page.
"It will be .four weeks tomorrow since
1 have had normal class instruction,
but I am only one of 18,000 in the
same boat, at least 90 percent o( whom
deplore and resent Utls. Another $ per-
cent are in a gray area, uncertain.
"I was in a class of 30 the first
day of the strike when about IS strikers
barged in and disrupted the instruction,
issued threats, and otherwise use<f tactics
or Intimidation.
.. BY mE TlURD DAY' with com-
paratively litUe response, the strike a~
peared to be ebbing fast ; but then some
of the faculty seized this as an op-
portunity lo grind some of their own
axes, and the one conUngent fed off
the other mutually until things got clear
out of.Jland.
"Smit.h, trying to satisfy everybody,
was totally ineffective, and anarchy has
prevailed. In my opinion, a great deal
of the blame can be laid at the faculty
door -those who joined with the strikers
plus those who were intimidated and
did not meet their classes.
"IT IS INCREDIBLE lo me that the
school has been shut down this long
-or even at all. One forceful leader
perhaps could have carried the day.
Now, Hayakawa has inherited a real
mess; but I'm impressed with him -
if for no other reason than that be
speak.! my language. I back him 100
percent on the face of what he has
said publicly, now and even before he
was appointed. He takes, as the news
media say, a "hard line." So do I.
"Well, tomorrow morning the school
opens, then we'll see what happens next.
But the revolution is here, so we'd
all better figure out what side we are
on.
1inns DOES NOT mean to say that
the oppressed minorities should not con-
tinue lo pres,, for redresses to their
legitimate grievances, and that I do
not sympathize in many ways; what
I do mean to say is that violence or
threat of violence is not the way to
get the job done, because it must needs
be met wlt.h greater violence wttlch can-
not be avoided if the interests of the
whole are not to be sacrificed f« those
of 1 small part."
TULLY ff. SEYMOUR
Wttcr1 from rC"aders ore welcome.
Normall11 writer• 1hould conve11 thttr
mtuao• in JOO toordl or ~''· The
right to ccmdens11 litter• to fit .space
or eliminate libel ii reserwd. AU
letttf't miut Include 1ignaturt and
mailing oddres.t, but names mav be
toithhtld on requt.tt if tuf/ident rea·
ion U appartnC..
New Forces Will
Manipulate Man
Thoughts at Large:
Within the lifetime of our children,
not on1y man's environment but man
himself will become increasingly con-
trolled and manipulated by the new
forces of biochemistry and molecular
biology, changing both our personal and
our genetic natures, with unprecedented
possibilities for creating either a heaven
or a hell on earth. • • •
The great study that has yet to · be
done -calling on the genius of a
future Darwin or Freud -is on the
"pathology of power" in human affairs;
a study clearly delineating the limits,
the risks, and the dangers of social
and political power, and helping us to
differentiate belween the healtb.y, pro-
ductive use and the sick, destructive
use of power.
• • •
Th e traditional cliche of the U.S. as
a "melting-pol" has ruways be.en a gross
misnomer; there has be.en no true
melting-pot in American cities, and the
various ethnic groups have maintained
their identities and dual allegiances for
generations, trying lo get as much as
possible out of both worlds at once.
• • •
Cultural lag between the generations
is nowhere more ludicrous and pathetic
Lhan in the modem father who proudly
offers his college-age child a drink of
liquor on equal terms -when the child
has already gone far beyond liquor to
hallucinogens! • • •
How obsolete, in these days wlien
decisiom mUBt be made with furious
urgency, to wait four years for an elec-
tion, so that the sense of the country
can be felt and policies turned around
-when, using a telephone system hit--
ched to a maSBive computer, we could
have "voting machines" register popular
sentiment at least once a month as
regulatory "feedback" to high govern-
ment officials. • • •
The Ruhr river, flowing through West
Germany's most Industrialized region,
is Jess polluted than it wat it years
ago, since a cooperative agreement
among 250 towns and 2,200 industries
a1ong the river to charge "effluent fees"
to those causing polluUon; why can't
American river towm begin to do t h e
same before it is too late? • • •
The be.st and briefest description of
the conflict that rack!! the church. today
was expressed by the Rev. E. Stanley
Jones last month: "An individual gospel
without a social gospel ls a soul without
a body, and a social gospel without
an individual gospel is a body without
a soul. One ls a ghost and the other
is a corpse -you can take your choice." • • •
.A3 long as we continue o u r
preposterous policy of under-taxing land
and over-taring improvements our urban
problems will grow grimme~ and our
tjlies continue to decay, w h i 1 e
speculators get rich and home-0wners
move away.
• • • •
The prison guard is but another kind ~f captive; one who goes home at night
m body, but whose spoirit is as much
chained as those he leaves behind him. • • •
Beautiful women are ofttn dissatisfied
w.ith their loo~, witty people are often
discontented with their wit, rich people
are often restless and anxious about
their money -and, absurd as it seems
to t~ose without such attributes, it is
certam that nothing we have brings
us happiness, but only what we are,
what we feel about oursleves what we
believe to be essentially worthwhile in
the core of our character.
Multiple Use of Land
During the closing weeks of the . last
session of Congress, vast new tracts
or western lands were added lo federal
wilderness and recreation areas. They
included the Redwoodl National Part
in northern California, a hall-mi11ion acre
national park In the North Cascades
of Washington State, and establishment
of a national wilderness area in the
central Oregon Cascades.
These regforu1 art now set aside fur
the sole use of recreationisls. AJJ popula-
tion growth put.II more pressure on land
resources, there will no doubt be
demands for the nationalization of
Umberlands on an increasing scale.
AS TIME GOES cm, If the economic
base of Umber producing regions is to
be preserved, people must become aware:
of the nec6Slty, as well as the ad-
vantages, of multiple land use. The forest
products industry is a basic employer
and taxpayer. Trees are a renewable
natural resource 'that are converted into
hundreds of u.seful and highly essential
products.
Under multiple use of forest land&,
major timber companlea art
demonstrating that we can have forest
producll, al Well II perpetu1tion of
recrtatlon and wildllfti.
THElE COMPANIE! have opened up
private lands to meet incrt&Jed recrea-
tion demands. Thty have established
facilities for the convenience of visitors
-and have ruo Into lhe same trouble
G11est Editorial
that national and state parks are en-
countering. Vandals often wreck the
facilities. The timber companies also
r~port malicious damage to heavy Jog-
gmg equlpment.
The public -or at leut a segment
?f it -lags behind the timber Industry
m a proper understanding of the words
••conservation" and "preservaUon," jU!t
as some of the more extreme con-
servaUonists fail to recognize that broad.
ly based private ownership and multiple
use of the land are foundation stones
of economic independence and seU.
eovernmenl
Indu1tr1aJ Netn Review
By George
Dear Georg"
You say "Wri1~ to George. c/o this newspaper. J have written
to you several times but I keep
gelling the i<tter beet mart.<! ln-
mfficlent 1ddreu. Are you sure
Ibo namo of your paper 11 "'lbll Newspaper"?
Desr J. Gibby : J. GIBBY
How did YoU nn1Dy get tn touch
with me? I've ~Imply got to plus U..t loophole.
T -..----------------~-
...tr ... ·~=-.... ~J
PROBLEM PRESENTED -When wrapping a bulky top truck
becomes a problem for Mrs. James A. Martin (center), chairman
of Laguna Beach Panhellenic's holiday luncheon, she calls for
help from her commitle:e members (left) Mrs. Frank Z~arney
and (right) Mrs. William D. Bini Jr. The chairman is getting
her gift ready to bring to the Juncheon tomorrow in Laguna Beach
Country Club. Festivities will begin with an 11 :30 a.m. social
session.
The Laguna Line
Holiday Party Hosted
By Mrs. A.D. Cowley
By JEAN COX
OI fM Dallr l'IJel 11..,
MRS. ARClllBALD D .
Cowley of Emerald B! a y
celebrated the holiday season
by hosting ~ party for her
friends Sunday evening in the
Irvine Coast Country Club.
Guests of honor were Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Forsythe
of Laguna Beach and Lt. Col.
and Mrs. Robert P. Nimmo
of Sacramento, Lt. Col. Nim-
mo has just assumed com·
mand of the Stale National
Guard CEimp, San Luis Obispo.
Other guests include the
1'-1essrs. and Mmes. H. Jean
Bedell, Paul Dodds. Donald
Hou seman, Arthur Wiley, John
Weld, William Fox . John
Sharer, Herbert Shefflin, Ross
Miller, Roy Smith, LeRoy
Brown.
More were District
Supervisor A1ton A11en and his
wife. Judge and Mrs. Ray·
mond Thom pron, U.S. Army
Gen . (ret.) and Mrs. James
Loome, Dr. and Mrs. Henry
Roberts, Dr. and Mrs. Robert
Stackenberg , and Dr. and Mrs.
George Hahn. .
The Leisure
World resident
recenUy added
a new novel to
her list of al-
ready publish·
ed books. "A
Place Called ~· J Saturday." The
• novel was pub-
id liahed in Octo-
'EAN cox ber and already
has appeared on several top-
selling book lists in the na·
tion.
Miss Astor entered the film
world via silent films where
she was seen with actors such
as John Barrymore and Doug-
las Fairbanks.
Her list of films after the
advent of "talkies" include
"Meet Me in St. Louis:' "Cass
Timberland," ."The Maltese
Falcoci, ·• "Return to Peyton
Place'' and "Hush Hush Swee!
Charlotte."
ANOTHER ,A.UTHORESS
who stepped Into the lime-
light recently was Mrs. Adri-
enne (Richard M.) Jones of
Laguna Niguel.
working on an adult novel
about a Russian outpost at
Fort Ross, Galifornia during
the 19th century.
ANOTHER AREA woman in
the news was South Laguna
artist Marguerite Atcheson.
She was applauded by artists
and historians during her one-
day exhibit, featuring pain-
tings of South Africa and rock
art. in the Roy Rogers Apple
Valley Inn.
During the day she was in-
terviewed by Fannie Dun-
nicliff of KA VR radio and was
guest of honor at a brunch.
Her appearance at the inn
was sponsored by the Vic-
torville-Apple Valley Branch,
National League of American
Pen Women.
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JIAN cox. --I •
·Greeks Rally,
Gifts
'
Bew.,, of Greeks beartnc gifts?
Not when tbe Greeb aro members of Lacuna Beach Panbellenle
and lb~ gifts are for tbe Hope Haven Scbooll 'run by Orange Count)'
Association for Retarded Chlldren. ....
Women will be bringing wrapped presents to tbe gniup'1 holiday
luncheon tomorrow at 11:30 a.m. in tbe Laguna Beach Country Club.
, Luncheon will . be served at noon and !be program wjll feature a
choir of 75 coeds from Tl\1!J'Slon Intermediate School directed by Jeff
Foster, head of choral and instrumental m,uaic.
Members also will hl>ve tbe opportunil)' to uerclae their vocal
chonls in a communll)' &Ing accompanied by Mrs. LouUe Rlchanbon._
Mrs. James A. Martin, chairman of !be day, will be u1lated by
tbe Mmes. William D. Bird Jr., Arthur Hagge and Fr8llk Zelarney.
AD members of national sororities are llivlted to attend, and mq
obtain reservations by caHing Mrs. Mildred Sillstrop, 4M-38'17.
Led by Mrs. Harold Ives, tbe 100 members in tbe 'roup repre-
sent 21 of the 27 sororities in National Panhellenic Congress.
The group supports tbe American Field Service and presents aii
annual scbolarahi~ to a graduating coed at Laguna Beach High ScbooL
Meetings typically are scheduled tbe first Wednesday of every
month, however the January meeting will not take place.
Catholic Women
Cheer Spread
Over Luncheon
Holiday cheer will be spread liberally amtlllC st.
Catherine'• Council of Catholic Women memben i.nd
their guests today.
The occasion is a festive Christmas luncheon and
can! party. which will take place in the Lacuna BeaCh
Woman's Clubho111e beginning at 12 :30'p.m.
Gold and silver combined with traditional Christ.
mu greens, will be used by Mn. J . Wllliam Devaney,
decoratioDJ chairman, to glamorize the clUbbome
1etting.
More glitter will come in the form of lndivlclual
topiary treet wblcb were designed by Mrs. David
Erikson and handcrafted by her decoration1 commit-
tee members. These will center each of the 30 luncheon
tables and later will be awarded u prizes for bridle
and canasta game1.
Welcomes and good wishes for the 1euon will be
extended by president Miss Ann Reilly and a·h .. pitallty
committee conaiating of council membera whose tut
names begin wltb tbe initiala a tbroogb k.
Ml11 Laura Manetta, 'f'•Y• and meana chairman,
Is in charge of !lie gourmet luncheon being prepar9d
for the event. Assisting her are committee members
!be Mmea. Joseph Bush, Sllas Chaney, S. S. Fnnch,
Philip Hopkins and Jobn Kenny.
Tickets are '3.50 a person and may be obtained
from Mra. Frank Streff,. council . treuui'er, 494-3152.
Women wishing to ~e reaervaiiom mo may call
Mrs. Martin Poldermans at 494-6M.1. .-
Also attending were William
Martin, Mrs. Mary Foster,
~1rs. Helen Penniman. Jack
Schnelder and Willard Winder.
She was the guest of honor
at a reception and autograph-
ed her most recent children's
book, "Sail calypso!" at an
open house in 8. Dalton's
Book Store, Fashion Island.
Following an a flernoon
punch bowl reception, she
gave i talk on the history
of B\Jshmen which she
researched during her 15
years or residence in South
Africa and pointed on a large
map to the areas where rock
paintings have been \Jncovered
by archeologists. Her own
paintings are created from
color photographs of these
original rock paintings.
DESIGNER -Mrs. David Erikson checks over
one of the topiary trees she designed to center
tables at the Christmas luncheon and card party
for St. Catherine's Council of Catholic Women.
The council, through its many social projects,
raises funds to fulflll its obllgaUons to !be parish wblcb
include provding altar linens and supp_lies,. 1cholarablp1,
viaiting service to !be sick and parlldpation In Alcli·
diocesan and community projecta. MOVIE GOERS remember
her as Mary Astor the movie
star, but to book lovers she
also is Mary Astor the
authoress.
Mrs. Jones has writte:l four
other children's books and
also Is the author of two sus-
pense novels. Currently she is
During Christmas the artist
is planning to entertain Mr.
and Mrs. Loren E. Edwards
who were her hosts during
her stay in Apple Valley.
Keeping Mouth Shut Doesn't Always Close Door on Pro.ble
UNDERSTANDING HELPS ....... ,.._ ..... _
....... -lllhcl. -~ .... ---·
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DEAR ANN : I was Interested In the
letter rrom ABC, I.he teenage girl whose
father was cheating on her mother. You
told her to keep her mouth shut and
suggested the possibility that her mother
probably knew what was going on and
pretended not to see. You added. "When
a mother is confronted with such in-
formation she may be fcrced to ask
for a divorce which she doesn't' want,
as a matter of pride."
ANN LANDERS
DEAR UNDERSTANDING: I odmlre
tH brncUb tf yoar udentandb1 ud
the able.,.., ol lttlttuty. Not every wife
could .ccommodate to sacll a 1ltGaiU.,
but 1pp1re.nLly you Uve wl!!IJbed and
meu11.1ed ud made your ctedllom oa
lht bul1 ol what lt belt f1r 1• u4
,.., rllDlll,)'. Coqralalau ....
her husband hid been uked by anothor
C<lbple to Mlp oelebrato tho& woddlnf
analveruey.) I r<luled to dlanp rtrf
mind, bowevtr.
A couple days later I loond out U.
girl and her busbond took the baby
with them aad Id\ him In the bacl:
tt···--·~-*~ ................. _
poltet ..... IMll-l----tell .. -... 11111 ... io 11-/11-.,;..
I wu glad you gave !hot advice,
Ann. becluse r am the frlfeOf 1 chu.tine
husband and my cblldren are aware
of their ratber's unfaithfulneu. Several
weeks ago t overheard my l~year-old
daughtu tell her 17·year~ld brother
ahe saw Daddy's car again -parked
.
on a Ride atreet bJ Mn. J'1 Muse.
But they've never said anything to me.
I appreciate my children's silence
more lban they'll ever know. It ahowa
strong ~acter and genuine con-
aideratlon. I am aware, too, that just
because a man iR u?ITaithful· does not
mean be is rotten to the core and
deserve1 to be thrown oul My husband
happens to be a wonderful father and
he has many tine qualit le1.
Unfortunately, he's not quite grown up
In some waya, This Is not his first
affair. The poor fellow tw been involved
with at leut three other young women.
Like so many other immature males,
he uses extramarital su: as a prop
for his sagging ego.
Llving wllh the problem is not easy,
but It's better than the allemative. -
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Ti!' woman
(I should say girl) upataln , asked U
I wOlj}d watch her baby Tuel4ay nlghl
I bad 1 bowling date and didn~t want
to break it to I u id no. She trled
ber bat to tall: me 1n!o IL (Sbe and
·'
IUI of the csr while Ibey wenl froni'
tovem to tovem. They lfOI -al J a.m. .
If ~hid happaid to lbal baby I wwld .....,.-havo IOl'llveo rtr1odl.
I am a nervOU1 wreclt jutl thlnldnc
ahOut ll. What can be done aboui parento
like !hot! -MIDDLETOWN, N. Y.
DEAJI MIDDU:l'OWN: If ... poltet ... _ .. ..., ..... _,,
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Potluck, Concert Plannecl
Ebell' s Parties Open
·Christmas Festivities
. For Aspiring Thespian•
Workshop Planned
ALL I WANT FOR CHRISTMAS IS -Just in case her husband is lacking in
· ideas on what to get her 'or Christmas, '1rs. Vin ~org~nsen is whispe~g her
I own suggestions which inc1ude \fte floor length white mink bathrobe which .~an
he restyled tnto 'a coet, which sh~ is modeling. But her husband Isn't making
any promises.
Cll Ir' porliol tu. 1111 ....... ,.. Ibo Doll Club ........ -..
• .-ol fllllvlliel . .,... .. .........,_ ..
uua.._....IDtbt
JfaapGl't 9llClll llaml If Mn. Pnne11i Gloclbl , llr 1111 PM lllc:IM. Tbt ........ wUI be
-byllllad>IOltol ;Jiiiii ud a&C ol bollday -by ,.,_, (lo.
..,,,, 7 .. , ... Mmel.
'~ ·~ Cedl Sllln!
mdArllu.-W, .L .IDol< IOdbi-1 wm mMI
al I pJn. tllai aner-In
1111 c.r-·de! Mar -...
oll(n.0.Z.--.A
an-f:·;:c1"· will lollml, .... • ud coif ..
bolled lit' lln: . R o w a r d
Plrta', Mn!. Jolln Meador
ud Mn. lloberll!Oa.
lljlOl' -I bu IChedul-ed Iii porty lor 11:!0 p.m.
niol : 'l'bllndal In tbe bome
o1 . Mn. J. 'Jay Juoolcy, -· . .
!De·thier .,
·Betrothal
Announced
'• . • ,,,. belrothll ol Smanne
~eth Delbltt and Gary w. Ji>llllllon bu been ....
Mmced by \be bridH!ecl'a
,]IU'Oldl('!h'· and Mn. Geranl
Dothler M Coola M-.· . Misa D e t h le. r graduated
from Corolla del Mar High
School and attended San Dte10
State eopege, where lhe af •.
fillated· with-. Sigma Kappa
sorority. She presently Is
empIOy~ u a TWA alrllne
steward ea.
Her fiance, son of former
. '
• -Counllrl moelinl .. fr1411 In tbe Ebell ClubbolliO
wtll bePI lbolr Clll'lltn>u
porlJ It -. Sandwlcba1
ullll ud -will be
-by lfta'Dooil brldll> lie':. Burm ;,:ur.:,i:.
ol Bool< ~ t pthar for
a dinner porly at 1:11 p.m.
Dae. It. Mn.J. y.Blac:ldnan,
ebalrmaa, lllld aUdes ol Mn.
llorl>ert Ford's ~ trip
will be lllown lfter .U.... a..ma11on1 may be mad<
by caJllng Mn. N e I 1 o n
Holmwood at tK-711'1.
Frldaiy 1 Dec'. 30, members
ol-Sectloalwillmeel
' Do J1>U have an uplrlllc 'actor Ill lilt family! .
If IO, wJIY DOI nsislor him Ill lilt Cllildnn's '!beater Guild cl. N-
pc)lt Han.or'• drama workahop.,
The board, meitla1 Ill lhi hoale of Nro. !Adlolaw Reday, prllident,
announced 1pedal npetratioo I-Or preacllool lhrougl\ ~lhlh irad' cbll-
will takt 1>laca on &ldlmlty, pee. 14, and MODday, Dae. 16. 4 . Setlirdl)' 1'9llllllatlop will take plllee from 10 a.II), to noon at Gull
Headquai-lers, .aJI Niwpoi't Blvd., C..W Masa. Headquarters, also, wUI k
· open fer-.egli!rau.ft from 4 lo$ p,m. oa Dec. 16.-·
!5. . Clu ... ~ .,. 1cheduled once 1 week for 10 w..U will begin Jan.
More lnfoqull,on may he obtatne4•1'1 Callin1 the Guild o!!llce at
~ or Mn, Dtlmd Carr at &4M089. • · . •
-Guild memberl mav resister the.If dllldren at the Cbl!stma1 IUJld>.
eon meeting pl8nne4,for io a.m. 'Phl.\l'sday,.Dac. 12 in1he Lido Ille home of
Mrs. Ralph TandbW~y. , 7
MOlllhera will preview "The Musicians ot Bl:emoll," • short play
which will he tro!lped ,j<> schools, boipita11 and Ub~aritt throupout lht
coming year. ~ 1 ~ • ,
' The Cban!eu'!" from Newport.Harbor High School will present• pro-
gram of Chrtstma! music, The groiip ;. directed by Les Van Dyke.
at 'the EbeD Clubhoule In
Ba1boo for a holiday potluck ,
lnncbeoo and QChanae ol stfll. An orpo copcert by
Mn. Nell WUllama 11 ola!>ntd-~will lnc1ucio 'the L....-------~---'·-------7:-;-7---~ Mmel. Maraaret HamplOD. ... ... -..~ .. 1 •.
Ro)'lllGlld Wood and Lellli
Ptlin. .. ,
SUZANNE ·OETHIER
Brld ... lect
Viking Club.·fo ,Mark HB·W'omen
.··Yule in ·:·'Sw~d,i·sh Style Pl~99ing
On Dec. II, the iongel\ night
ol the year accordb!8 to' the
Swedish calendar, Lucia will
appear at ·the Scandinavian
• Cout Viking Club, Yulebanl
(Chri-.s table) aoclal.
Legend ay1 IJ>af · Lucia
Star Club " Installing .
emerging from ibO darlmeal
drelaed in a white gown wlth
lltlhled oandles In a wreath
of ~ on her bead Is
a lymbol of the returning
Ugbt., ,
After a prograzn,of holiday
songs, the club's L u c l a ,
Krllllna Raymood, will lead
lbe :children in the traditional
Long Dani around t b e
Chrlatrii.u tree.
The Mmes. George Fo:a:, Qea
Martin and Charles Sidnam
wUI lead the children In the
carols. Mr11. Orville Mith.oil
will accompany.
Donations
llonallolll to the Boyl' Club
of Huntington Buch, Operas
lioo Merry Cbrlltmu and
Jcplln'• Boy's Ranch have
beeo authorized by memben
of the Huntlnilon Beach
Woman's Club. '
Tile club also will present
coupon boob to Loni Beach
Veteran'• Hospital, and gifts
and a donaUon to· Melba
Man.!field, lb adopted girl at
the hospital. There alao will
be a coUedion of clothlnl for
Danny Davey in addition to
fun~ for the rtpatr of his
automobile.
I White Mink Bathrobe
f Tops Yule Dream List
February
Nuptials
Scheduled
Newport Beach residents Mr.---------
and Mrs. Robert P. Johnson
Star Club members, Laguna
Beach Order of the Eastern
Star, will install officers dur-
ing their annual Christmas
party at 7:30 tomorrow night
in Laguna Federal Savings
and Loan building.
Women taking over
More information about the
event, which will take place
in the Ebell Clubhouse in
Newport Beach, may be o~
tained from Mrs. Ray Nielsen
at-.
Club memben were ~
tertalned during a Cbrislmu
program reaturln& the
Cboraleers from Westmlnlter
High . School, and M rs .
Gertrude Catching offered a
special resdlng durln& lun-
cheon today In the clubboule. t Ask a woman what she'd sleeves. a patch poc~el which ~like for Chrl!tmu and nine can be removed easily and a
of ldyDwild, attended Newport
Harbor Hip School a n d
Orange Coast College. He cur-
rently ia·servtng with the U.S.
Marine Corps in Vietnam.
No dale has been set for
the wedding.
~ 11.it cl 10 will quip, "A mint lie belt. . t :oal, what else?" • The bathrobe ls on dlSplay • The engagement of Orange Sisterl-tood
t But how many would think ln the C<ita M~ store Dank· Coast College students 1Jnda
, ,. o say a ml:ik bathrobe' ed by several pictures made • Id T--i Sharon' Slaterbood S Th who ihtnk that a inmk by a fUrtler which shows how Elliott and Stephen Paw.tows ...-.... ~e 1 1!·1ath~e is something to be the ~ ~ be restyled inlQ bas been announced liy the ·~-the~~~~!
ti found under the Cijristmu ... •. COfll, Which~ would do bride-e\ect's parents, Mr. and Sharon Rell..iou.s School, Colt& ~tree of a Mn .. Rocteleller « ln addttl~ ~o ch:anging the Mrs. Robert D. Elliott of Hun-••
Trouser Coat
Described
A trooser C1)8.t, ln case
anyone ask.s, Is a fingertip
length coat with a lot of
unbelted yardage, dropping
gathered from a yoke.
It'• meant to wear with
p&nt.s and was seen in the
spring collection of Marquise,
a New York firm.
leadership of the group.Include
the Mmes. Pblllis Williams,
president; Beulah Smith, vice
president; John Williams,
secretary, and Elgin Burke,
treasurer.
Mrs. Bernice Franke will
lead the meeUng and new
clothes and toys will be col-
lected for Indiam.
Give to Your
United Fund
The women's auxiliary will
meet at 1 p.m. Dec. 18 in
the Santa Ana home of Mrs.
Dana Christinsen.
r;;a Mrs. Onwis are wraag. 1kiing JI deslted. . Mesa, at· I p.m. ~There just might be one un-Harold Ward, a merchan-llngton Beach. , i"",:;;;:;;~~;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:===========;;::;;;:-~der the tree of an Orange dise manager for ~e .~uth The couple will be married ~ast resident. Coast Pia~ ~re :581d, Nor-Feb. 15 In St. Bonaventure n -For the woman who has mall)" mllik LS disj)liyed ln ~verythlng, Sean, South Coast showcues only, b~t we have: . Catholic Church. . ~laza. is offering a while mink set up a new mmk def.art-The bridegroom-lo-be, son ~throbe with a velvet llnlng. ment with $150,QOO retail of of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph ~e floor length crtaUoo ls merchandJse, which ls more 1 , ~ade of fully let out skins of mink atoct than any other Pawlowski of H u n t n g 'o n ~MBA Jasmlne mink, bleach-Sean store on the West Beach, graduated from ~to snow white luster. Lined Coast." Included in the stock Marina High School. Hll ~th a riym velvet, 11 fea· ls a full length coat, strollen fiancee also graduated from i:iun.. three CJll'M iellgth and 1toles. Msrina.
~ I Escape From Tension, Family
~~forces Trend for Elegant Bath i By GAY PAtlLEY
!! NllW YORK· (UPI) -Th< »1aaitlcs f<D tbe story of a
jjr-e$1 that'• emeried ln the aJnJ!<d SlateS OoiJy In the last
ttve years. ~ Ii'\s the trend to the eleaant ~th. Not just to get clean,
.to loll and l>!lax In the
~ of fragrant waters. The
eYololioo ol bldllni traces
-lmlpll ol old In tubs
atlrasb witb roee petals, to
Clooootra dipping In milk ln-lliaa ol ·water, to the
ema gence .. today of t h e
utlllt.rlan ljalhr<>om whtta the dfldren'• toyl, father's shav-
inl -· a han>per ol lauiidry and a bq ol )latr curlen
coiiu>tte for apoce. ~ lhla Uul1taria'n concept
la i::bon11nf rapidly, report tbe
pepple interested In sales of
babi._ product.I. I n d u 1 t r y
117 that last year
womb."
Joy Leslie, a ptotivational
research c'on1ultant to
Houbigant Perfumes.• h a s
amasaed an amazing .amount
of. material on history of the
bath, even researched the ef·
fects of color ln the company's
line of. batb producU: and their
packagillfa
Red, for imtance, is because
it's ''dynamic", bas a sym-bolisation of good heallh and
magic healing. White was
chosen for its symbollzalion
ol Ugh~ purity and puce,
and gold for 11'1 wocialloo
with richness, glory and lpi<n·
dor.
water . President J ohn Qu1ney
Adams had to sneak out of
his mansion before dawn to
dip in the Potomac. -
M late as 1840, baths ln
private homes were denounced
as repugnant to the American
way. And the White House
was not fitted with a bathtub
until 1851. and then only tn
the teeth of intense opposition.
And Lord Tredt1ar, a
Britisher in Washington ob-
v Io u s 1 y t horoughly
Americanized. sacrificed the
opportunity of being host to
KJ ng Ed"ard VII ratbet than
iMtalJ I bathroom "In his '
home.
The Idea of bllhln& b com-
pantl•ely new to Am~. Kids Like to
"""' Uioogb U.ey 1""i ha.. Ask Andy preached the cleanliness next .
lo · godliness lule. But ontyJ';::========.I
a couple of centuries ago, It
was considered scandalous to
Immerse the entire body In
LET'S BE FRIENDl Y
'°'"' •~ million was ~iidiOnoiiiiiWiiiiiiiiin;j .......... produdill!
, an Increase of
U you h&VI! llflW nelghbon
or know of anyone moving
to our a.re&. plf!f!se tell ua
so that we may extend a
friendly welcome and help
them to become acquainted
ln their new 1urtoundinp.
lillJllon ... 1961.
'American women ,...,..t ol the& IOla1
ii~*'--c1o1Jan OD bslh pn> ......, lhe moot popilar Items
...... dustlni powder, bllh
bod!> oila, f-mllll
llldfrqranco-hu cauted the lbari>
! w....., finally hove
7 I .. d olf the Victorian
-llJdil)>, ., the . For tbeln, t h •
llmllly olfrn tlll =oonctuuy '""" -and famlly lnlrulloo.
... _.,. .. ,. that "tl>o
-,tocahn-
• lqd an"1elia • 11-..i11 ... ldoc
Aad the lub -.
•tlllcreat-pe, ~ ........... to tllt
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SANTA CLAUS '
. HAllO
VROllS
' Huntington Beach
Visitor
536-962.6
Costa Mesa Yisffor
642~i4
So. Coast Visitor
4...o179
Harbor Visitor
675-M33
YOUI PUICHASI
•IPT WlAPPll -·
HOlLVWOOD
The real elegance of coor-
dination p I u s th 1 reahy
famous Vassarette fit. Antron®
nylon tr i c o t slip, luxuriously
lac•,•ppli•ued, lined lace hem.
Nylon lice bra fiberfill con!ou....I
with low scoop spandex sides and
beck. Leg pantie in mere ounces of nyk>n·
Lycra® spandex ov1rl1id with lace. In Brown
Frost witlt Plttinum Mist loco; also Gardenia
with Misty Boi9a !tee; eft White.
snp in dem i 3().36 , short 32,36, ••. 32-40 $9.00
Bra 4346, ABC 32,36, $6. l:o9 Pantie 148. S,M,L, $10
•
1717 L C.-Mwf., C.... .. M•
._... 671·1fl0 ...................... c-.. .. , ..... .._Loe-..
•
• •
a fresh ·
slant on _
dishwashing
'1.JJ...--~.-~.'."'_. l 'llllfinl.
I TU.I WAIU.NTT
9trfldltl ...............
l•1tur•• 1 lower trolll· .. ••k• loltdhtl •••I• ._
ever. No other dlsh-.her II
qune Ilk• It. Powerful Su,.,.
Suro• WUhlng Action oetil
d\ltMts lhowtr-c411n. um.
or no pr ... rln1lng ne9ded.
Aleo a cttoto. of tour ....,..
mallc cycl1s plu1 1' rtn"
condtUon•r dlspenMr tMt
llelpe •lfmln•t• 01111 ...., oil--
BUlLT·IN STYU DHHWASHfR
e 11.oll-out ,,,., f.,. ••rt
loolll i"f·
e Littl• •r 110 pr ..
rintin9.
e A"'1il"tlY "vi.+
op1r•ti•"· e 14 t1hlo to ttl119
c1,11fty IAHAM1
e S..por "'''' wothl"t •c:ffo1t.
Our ow11 f1ctory tr1l"o4 hc:h~;t.J111t Orto yOllr Ott•r•11c:o
of prompt, officio"t ,_lc:o '" 1..,.ff.!119 fM Mf.
22 YEARS IN THE HARllOlt ARIA
@[)AVIS BROWN
411 E. 17th St.
Oally 9.9, Sat 9-4
COSTA MESA
646-1614
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VOL l>I , NO. 2Ml; 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
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O~NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA:· •
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• N.Y. Stoeks
.TUESD».'1!; 'OECEMBEJrto. ·19 .. • TEN CENTS
" ..
Newport Won't Ast·
By JERPME F. COLLINS
Of•·Dallt' ........
Newport Beach dty couoellmm Mon-
day night unanlmoualy called· fw
Congressional hearinp .. the traffic
in no;cotics ancl dqereus drugs from
Menco lo Calllornla.
The adopled reaoluUon did Jl\'I'. as pro-
posed earlier, 111'8e· that the hearllli'
determlbe whether the botd'1' should
be closed to uneacart<d mlnon (under
21). .
. lnltead', al Councilman Do o a I d
Nclnnla' lmistence, it WU reworded to
fead: ' .
"The Congress, In conducting auch
bearing!, is urged to i n v e 1 t i 111 t e
specllJcaHy the' traffic in narcotlcil by
minors and to consid~ the establlshment
ol specific border controls ln CooperaUon
with the Mexican Government aa would
O.&ILV PILOT l'llele IW 1M 1"11ii.
WHAT HAPPENED TO SCHOOL BUS?
Jerry Cribbs, Tom Alvaru PHr Through Fog
Priority Urged
Council Asks New Laws
On 'Bootleg Rentals'
Newport Beach city ct1uncilmen want
lo add some clout to lheir announc:ed
crackdown on bootlegged rental units.
They directed the city staff Monday
to come up with proposed new laws
ctesJgned to make enforcement of zoning
regulations easier.
"Let's give this priority," said Coun-
cilman Robert Shelton. "The stall should
look at the subject with the intent of
suggesting corrective legisla~lon. We
must get rid of the fw:ziness COl)OO'D.lng
what constitutes a zoning violation."
He said too many property owners
are tak1ng advantage of loopholes in
laws now on the books.
City Attorney Tully Seymour warned
it would be difficult to develop legislation
that is "poliUcally and ..dally" ac-
ceptable to the community. "But we
can present the council with ~ array
of choices without considering whether
lbey al'f totally .,.iatable to the com-
rriunily."
Among these, he said, might be pro-
posals Ughtening parking •pact re-
qulrements and re-defining the i.nn
"famllf' when referring to a "family
unit."
Seymour said because " the need for clarity in pr....t Ian, the dty
NEW YORlt (AP) -tht stock market
,...., a bit In fairly acuv. trading
late thla afternoon. (See quotaUom,
Pages IHI).
is bogged dawn ln a case-by-case court
batUe agairuit alleged violations, most
of whlch involve more than two famUies
living on R·2 properties.
Be pointed out that Municipal Judge
Donald Dungan last week eOOorsed the
city's efforts to enfartt the zoning laws.
"What we are trying to do," slUd
Seymour, "ii to take the ~fit out
of cheating." He indicated the word
is getting around to the town's booUeg
developers.
"l think I can see, so to speak, light
at the end of the tunnel," he !aid.
"What we need now is new legjsJe.Uon
that might shorten that tunnel," said
Shelon. His coUeagues 8greed.
Seymour said he would report back
as soon as posalble with various pro-posala. .
Pair An·ested
On Drug Co1mt
Two Northern califomia men w e re
arrested in Corona del Mar today alt·
er Newport Beach police who pulled
them over for a routine. traffic citation
said they discovered U iJOWldl of marl·
juana in the car.
Narcot.ics Detect.I~ Al Epstein esti-
mated that the neatly-brlckeid marijuana
haul could bring up to $8,000 if broken
down int> lndlv!dual 'tigartltes and IOld
on the Wldl marloet.
SUapects Jn the aieizure were Identified
u Robert Malone Jf., or Oakland, and
Henchel 11\Jdlon, 2~ of Benecla.
The a'l'trl&CI litld fairly nrm With
Mnall loaes, bu( for .the first time
In ttM aesslon dtcllncs ol indlvklual issues
lopped advanca.
I
A police tr.me officer pulled the pair
over on Eut Coast Highway about 5
_l ,m .• sfter which the. orficer allegedly
!he six bricli w<lglllnf about two
pounds each ...,.. diacov.nil. d
•
'assist In the ellmlnaUon of this IOUl'te
of the problem." '
Mclnnla two weeb ago forced a delay
in action on the resolution when be
objected to its implied recommendation
to close · the border to mlnon: · He said
that would solve nothing, and would
meaninglesaly restrict young people who
now go to Baja callfornla just to enjoy
Its scenic, cultural and recr.aUonal ad·
yantqes.
"
aeeming iDconllatencJ.
The Newport resolUtioD follow1 1imllar,
actloo by other Southern California clUea, ....
among them ~. Upland and N ..
Uonal City.
~-Mesa city cooncllmen lasl moolh d~ to ll1'8t ilOllng Ille border to
mJnora. ,lnslud, the)' urpd tb!ol tbe
United Slates purclwe Baja Calllornla.
The NiJon admlnl.straUon ii yet to ~
ment.
I ' • ,' ! ,,
Worst F c)g of '63 Chokes Coast1
' Triggers Big Fiv~-carCrask a,t Newport Intersection
• I , •• • • ' • Worst fog conditions of the 1961 winter
season choked traffic to a near standsUll
aiong the Orange Coast today, bringing
scores of minor accidents and making
crowds of·chlldreJl late to school. ·
'Ibe worst accident was a spectacular,
five-car chain collision touched off about
7 a.m. at the Newport Beach intersection,
when a house trailer jack-knifed and
piled up In the log.
Police said another car rammed the
wreckage at Jamboree Road and
Edward Cook
Heads Upper
Bay Group
tc1wan1. w: coot: 11a :i..¥...a.t
,.Lane. was elected President of the New·
port Upper 11'1 AaOdadon 1olOi1dl1
niaht. At the same meeting as5(1Clatlrin
members learned of "ftirtnef eI(orts to
oppose: the lncreased . noise from jels
over the Newport area.
Guest speaker Dan Emory, chief
spokesman of the Airport Noise Abate-
ment Committee, aaid llis IJ"OUP bu
mailed some 3,500 "Ban ,the jets" bump-
er ~~ to; Orange Couqty, resl:dents.
The stickers were accompanied by
"inrtant complaint J>O:St q.rds" that can
be mailed to the Federal Aviation Age~
cy in Los Angeles, he aaid.
Emory reviewed the recent hearings
Jn Los Angeles by the Assembly Com-
miUee on TransportaUon and Com·
merce. He pointed out that his commit-
tee recognizes the integral part air
transportation plays in the California
transportation Sflt'em. However, he said
the increasing adverse effects of jet
noise are of such mal¢tude that cor-
rective action must be taken.· '''"'"
(See BAN, Page I)
Another County
Air Noise Suit
Asks $10 Million
Orange County today was 1ued for
more Ulan $10 mUllon ·wtth the filing
of the third of a lel'ies ol complaints
charging the county with reaponslblllty
for damage caused by low flying jet
aircraft ualng Orange County Airport.
In today11 complaint, 347 Harbor Area
homeowners added their objections to
the arguments listed by a other property
owners in the two earlier acUons.
Damages in today's su.it are pegged
at ll0,%12,4'11.llS. This brings the total
o( damages assessed against the county
lO $11,945,966.65.
No dales for hearing of any of the
three actions have yet been set by
Superior Court officials.
Complaints by a further 1 , 0 0 O
homeowners in the Corona del Mar,
Cost.a Mesa and Newport. Beach areas
are CUJTenUy being prepared, Orange
County Airport Noise Abatement Com·
mittce representatives state. Tiley are
expected to total more than $27 million.
Tqday's claims, u in the previous
actions, have all previously been denied
by county supervisors.
All three aWts addiUonally call for
the granting of an injunction which would
bar jet aircraft from Orange COUnty
Airport.
Damages listed tn the complaint.I are
usesaed from the dates that two jet
services launched operations at Orange
County Airport; Air West on Sept. I,
1967 and AJr California on May I, 1961.
The actiont charge that the home1
listed are directly under or within sound
of fUght paths uaed by both airlines.
The 390 ~meownen claim that their
properties have been subjected to "great
vibrations, deafening no~e. emi.saion of
nauwtln&, 1moke. vapor., dust. soot
Ind oil."
~lufl' Urive, bririg!ng patrol 'cars
to the ~e_ with ·~ns screaming.
Once on the.scene, flate pattefns were
1 a I d -out, bilt three m';o re cars piled
up· Wbin' the blazmg lo'tclies' cauaed traJ.
UC to :alow.quickly, injurihg one dtiVer. •
Alfred Ganadra, JI, of' Norwalk, was
t a k eo · to . Hoag Memorial Hospital in
serloua condJUon, with head .injuries and
facial l&eerattons.
'Altbdugh .It, was ~ally Impossible to estimate the number-. of accidents
' . t. • ••
as 'har.Ssed. tralllc, oltic"" ·~~led
fl;'om . .scene ~ a<:ef\e, eo,,ta Mesa :iJi?nce
Ioggeil 13.wlth ln two.hoW's.
· one of thlci11rtV11Iv<d· Qlanl• C91inty ~urs !"'l«i\ ca; 10: a lear~ !'Q.ljlsloo 'l" ·~alr.!r , Street,' 1flth ·mmdf ' lrtW\es.
.bu( details w'ere'stlll sketchy n~ noon.
HimlinittPo B¢ach police iujlil SS '<hool
tjill.dren ·were jolted about'.a 1.ih..',.when
tbelr bu! wu rammed in a Qtree car
co~ at Adairul Avenue an d BnibkhQn! Streel
• . ; ' r
•'-• , DrllLY ll,IL.OI' ·lt•h ...... NEWPOR'f CHIEi', NEW .AIDE HUDDL~ · •
Aa1l1tant Chief 'NolHn. (L)·;'chlof'O'lovu . .
Assistant Police Chief .,
Meets Newport Leaders
The head• of the Loa Angele.. PoUct
Department vice squad showed up at
Newport Beach City Hall Monday.
Capt. Harry Nel!on. newly hired
Newport a.sslslant pollee chief, met his
new bosses1 Mayor Doreen Marshall and
her all city councilmen.
Nelson, 49, was introduced by City
Manager Harvey L. Hurrburt, who noted
that the veta:an taw en!otcement · of•
ficer'a LAPD }ob saw hkn headin&: up
a 200-man divialon, working dtrecU7
under Chief Tom Reddln.
By contras~ the enUre Newport police
force ha about 100 members; Including
clerkt. ' , • ·
out %6 years service. Hf!"said he would
join the Newport 'depai:tment Immediate-
ly after, oh Jan. 1 or 1.
The oew auislant chief wa1 ~tected
Cot tile $15,000 yearly .post from some
. 30 applicant&, acrordlng to Hurlburt. He
pl.teed first in teats.
He recenUy was among the leacfen
ol what Los An~lu CbI~f Reddin aod
Sherif! Pete Pitcheu lumed "the lageat
vice invest!kaUon qe.r conducted ill
Callfotnla." It 1eci, iut m<inth, to. (lrand
Jury lndlcUDents aplmfll penona.
"Capt. NelsGo, !w. lotlg IDd broad
elJ>erfence." >18Jd · Hurtburt. '"'t think C . ty Airp t 'B ·· ' we're VOQ' .. fortunate "' have a man Oun or usy
of b1a caliber::' • .
Nelson;· whO -like New~ OJ!et ~ore thin, 500~ ~ moveme11;Lt
B. Jamei .f&vaa -'towcr1 well over • were r-.led In. !he P;IOt 12 months
six feet, told ~' "I'm ~ b7 IJ1e Orange County Airport control
forward Ip !he opporiun!11 ol worilnc lb-, It..., reportec1 today. The tnfflc
lo · Newpotl. ' , , , VRl'me ~· ~ alrvart Is JlO)t the lie •<¥ "'!lll'\ ,fr9111 . !\ie. Loo .ifip~ tt,..th,1'faJUl lo,ll>t naUoa.·Lall· year, f°X 1t Qi< illil ol llie .~ cloa1l!I U -riiibd-UO.:,, , : .. , ~ tf"• .• ..... J
• •
. • •
. • They were merely !alt lo schoo~ b\d
w I th some exciting aeWs f o r tbeit
classmatq. .
Ca11lornla lllg)lway Patrol ollic<n hi
S..Ia Ana aaid the swirling f"I prodo<eci
a whole crop of minor accidents, mosUy
m.~. ~m-~Yco:tyr~:-bender stuff,
a CHP officer commented, "and there
bas been liWe improvement in the santa
(See FOG COVERS, Page I)
Suit to Test ,
Bay Land Swap
Awaits.Hearing
Legal'aclfoii'iul..d at '...:b.. ~ ~
-ty of Orange County'• ..,,.
P*d nap of Upper Newport 8-1 land
lrtlh the Irvine Compal1l iJ awaiting bearing today !rt SuJlerlor coon. , ·
. Fu.l! iomtty by the COUJ1tj ind the
Irvine c.ompany, the lawsuit naines coun-
ty audltor-controUer V. A. Heim u defeo--dan~ It uo that Heim be ordered
to J!ly a 113,lfl claim by lrvl!le to·
covei: costo .ol engin""ing IJ!d ao~ teits
a!rea<IY carried oul;iJo the Upper~·
Htlm '• earlier retual ol the bfil wu
calculaled lo. enable the comity Jni1
1rvlne to t..i the legal stallll of ·the
propooed trade. .
County l1JpeMaon have raWled the
trading of 157 acres of Udellnd1 for
4.50 acres of lrv1ne sborelioe 'property.
CriUcism of the deal led Irvine t~
(See surr, Pqe I)
Cleaver Now
Soug4t by FBI
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The FBI
today entered' the hunt for Black Panther
leader E1drktge Cleaver, wbo · 11 being
sought as a parole violator.
Cleaver'• failure Nov. r1 to return
voluntarily to custody ·wu made a
federal ...., by the filing ol a complain!
charging the Negro writer with unlawM
flight lo eacape prosecutjon.
U.S. Alty. Cecil Poole0 also a Negro,
said new evidence developed lndlcating
that Cleaver, the Peace and Freedom
party'• 11161 presidenUal candldale, bad
crossed state' or naUonat borders.
Orange
Weather
Had enough fog? Well. we're
due for more Wednesday -a1on1
with a 50 percent chance of show.
era ~ cooler . (80. dwees)
weather aloog fbe coast.
INSmE' TODAY ' . If, a.t ezprc&ed, Prtridini..
elect Ni.zOn names Rep. Mehn"
Laid 1ecretcrv Of dtftme ,he'U
be br~ng another pttcedent.
Pao• 5.
==-: --" ....... """ ... ~ --. h'Me,.,,. ,. = ~ :t: .... _....,..ti -. -. -. --..
ti
•
....... ~
2 DAILY Pll.DT •
•
' '
• .
SecretT
PAlllll -'l!lt U-Slot. bJdll'
. ...,,....i """"' -. lallil . wUh North -.... illftrl lo .. Ille
--conference under ~· No ~ ,... achieved and
Ihm ·-.. -Ille talks wGUJd 1\irt IOOIL U.S. delepUm offldall said Amero 1cai1 deputy neg~ Cyrus Vance
met In I Plril -With OoL 'Ila Van ~
' ~Jfe.ee-.i. Win ht
CdM's One-~ay ·
Plan .. Ahand.oned
,,
• • A plan lo convert mqgt ol lowef CorOna
del Mar's residential streets into a one·
way system was abandoned ,b>; N:ewport
Beach city \:ouncilmen Moiiday night.
The action was no. surprlte. It came
"In r-lo overwbelminc ob)'f'!lcN ·
• lo the p r· op o 1 a l lrom merchanll and · residents. f
-, Five letters of support of tbe plan
·'were received at City Hall.
' Six letters and petitions bearing close
·lo .oo llpturea were received In op-
pasition.
On Robert Shelton's motion, the council
'1 unanimously voted to "discontinue Con-
"alderatioa ot the one-way atreet plan
at tllil time." '
1• Shelton, much of whose dlatrtct would
,.have been aHected by Ille proposal,
· appeared lo lpeAk for the entire council
1w1"" be Aid: .
'FUIL OPPOSITION
"'There lW been alm..t 11111 percent
opposition lo lhls. Some of it lW been
· uDlnformed; some of it well-informed.
Many have told me the plan has merit,
.but it ls premature. The demand is
simply not there."
City Traffic Engineer Robert Jaffe
· 'also recmnmended aga.inlt further COP.
'sideraUon of the proposal, which was
aimed at smoothing the norlb..soutb trar.
fie fiow between Fifth A venue and the ....
JaHe noted lhal aome 4,000 homeown-
etl had been advised on the pro! and
com of the plan in a city water bill mail·
iog. "'!be· purposl! of the inaulog has
been achieved," he said. '"The lnfonna-
tlon has been .transmitted and the reac-
tion OOterved. It dofs not have the aup-
port of the abutting mldenll and prop-
erty owners." He Aid Ille plan 1bould be shelved
"until such time u the council sees
evidence of need, coupled with com-
munity desire for change."
The council vote was 7-0.
Dl141'T llES()LUTIO~
Munldpal lawmakers did not turn their
bacb entirely on Corona de! Mar's traf·
fie flow problem, however. On Jaffe's
recommendailon, they directed the staff
to draft reaolutlons that wou1d:
-Prohibit parking the year-round on
.the ocean 1ide of Sea.view Avenue, west
of· $argumte Aveob.. · "
-Extend llUJllll1er parking mtr!dlon1
on realdentlal streets 80\lth of E. Coast
Highway to every day of the week from
May lO lo Oct. 15. In the past, the
restrictkms havi! been In force ~ only On
summer weekends and holidays.
The proposals were among several
traffic control suggesUons made by Cor-
ona del Mar civic leader Mary Burton.
Mrs. Burton, an attorney, was among
thoee nppooed lo coovei'llng IJ r..tdeullal
~ll~!nlo olle-iray 11neta, u ~
propoeed by 1M city.'
~mcllman Shelton empbulfJ!d that
bll moilnn calling for Ille reaoluttone
doe1 not conimlt the city lo any course
of a~ t lo a. •iwe'll await ~e public
reapome," be aaid.
OCC St~de~ts ·As~.;L~?
'... :> • ~ '" • • • ' ' -. •'1'1 j,Qf I
Permission to Build Reef
Four Orange Coast C.Ollege students
IU'fD't trying to make waves bill they
would lite to build a amall reef off
Lquna Beach.
p,,,_ <i Ille reel, IOld City Manqer
James D. Wbealoo, would be lo obeerve
Ille I J p e of eea !He I h a t estabU.hes
!llell and lo attempt io tramplant ...
life.
Tbe matter will come before city coun..
cilmen Wednesday at the 5 p.m. ad·
joumed meeting.
The reef woWd be made of worn
out auto iu.. and would be In lo lathoD11
(80 feel) d water off Crescent Bay
beacb. n 'OIJUld be roughly eeven-leet
wide, JUeet loag and two feet wide.
'!be reef would be located 200 feet
from -.. ll!Clll'ed with cement blockl
and ll)llon loahiq and marked with a
buoy.
WbeaJm Aid tho student applicants,
tllcln& a marine lcience courte, are
Mlb llawldllll, Al Melamon, Richlrd
Du111e and Jules GamhlnO. Tbelr pro-
feuor of marine lclence, Lewill A.
Follambee. h a 1 -ended the pro-
jeet and -that the llud-will dllmaDlla tho reef when the project
DAILY PILO I .
ORANG& COAST PUlllMUNQ UJMl>AN't
l•Mtt H. W•M ""'*"' ... Putlllftr
J•l1< .. c..t.t Vlc9 ~ .. 0..11 ~
T\•iw•• ....... .... n.111 .. A. M1rMIM ·--J.,.. .. f. C.lllM P111I Nrffell ............ ..... .... c"' NW OWtcfiM' ... .,... ........ °""' 1i11 w .. t ••H••• 1.,, ... ,..
Maltlftt A.limat P.O .... 1171, tJW --c.. ...,: m w..t a.y ttrtet &...-.._,.IMl,.,..A,....
HWilhiilM IMdH .. Jiil lll'llt
·-·-·
,
is completed 1n two years.
Wheaton Aid the matter wu put on
the adjourned meeting becauae of Ille
time QemenL The lludenll need lo write
a 111'11 plWe nport by 1•mie1ter'1 and.
30-day Notice
To Be Required
For Motorcades
Parade and mol<ftade plannera 1oon
will have lo llvo IO dl1I notloe lo
Newport Beach police before winding
tbelr W1J throulb Ille comnum!ty.
Excluded from Ille new rqulationa,
approved on llnt readlq by cllf COW>
cllmen Mmday night m funeral pro-
ceaalona.
"It would be touah, 11 aald Councllman
Howard Rogers, "to .gtve 30 day1 noUce
OD 8 funeral 11 •
1'Regardlea," a 1 reed COunc1lman
Robert Sbeltim, 0 of the number of car1."
Motorcada of 25 or more can will
be affected by the new law, and all
foot pmd.,, roglrdlw of length.
The ordinance, prepared by City At·
tomey Tully Seymour, requires parade
and motorcade sponsors to apply to
police for a permit, 30 days before
and purpose of the parade must be
given.
Traffic control ls the principal purpose
of the law, Seymour said. Its second
and final reading will be Dec. 2..1.
From P119e I
SUIT •..
withdraw from the proposed contract.
But Irvin<· rtneWed Ill Interest In the
project lul mooth when the county bolrd
voted t lo I lo go ahead with Ille
land nap.
Irvine Cotr\PlnY officials have accepted
county. tenns lor a Joint drediing agree-
ment and tax rt)le !program.
Envlilooed by the county and Irvine
II Ille creailon d two llll'le regional a on the 1horalina of U-Newport
and the creailoo ol a mu!U-mllllon •·aeconc1 harbor" out or the Back
Bay nmdlla1'.
Two .. parate dn.lglng prejecll pro-
poeed In bact Bay waten Will be com-
bined at an llllmaled 11'11111 of 11
millioo.
Tbe '511 ...... of Irvin< uplandl IUl·
rounding the bay whlcll the ranch will
!ride for 157 acres of county Udclandl
will be moved from l'.ax relll pending
I court rulJni.
II II apected thet it will takt two
yeara I« the courll lo reach a declllnn
on lbe cum:ot action.
- -----·----------
. .
Pre• Pqe J
FOG .. ~.
-area llnoe earJ.y lhls morning."
. -~ ollkerl bad the ume llory
lo tell -drjltlng petdly los that fre-
quently closed In lo brlnfl lllj)Jarllll lo
a grinding bait -u not lnlo another
car or Cl!'-" ~ , ·\ -,
'•Buf "8~v•· fGulld ev'l'folit lo be t:r· · tremelJ llll!UOUI end vtrj> '"°per1Uve," a apokemntn s a 1 d, ''we've bad more
minor co1lll!ons than U8!lal, hut no 1"'
jurle1 and no ma~ dilruptlon of tral·
fie."
Fountain Valley police reported five
accidents during the early morning
hours, but Westmlnster police logged
on\y one minor cruh, whlle Hunlingloii
·Belcb's tally hit &even, with three 1"''
juries •
Seal Beach police said they Jogged
no secidents due to fog, which was
relaUvely light by sunup In the far
western area oI the county.
WArl'P!D HOURS
School children who didn't finally pve
up and grope their way home waited
up lo thre hours In opota Io I ochool
bules lo loom throogh the gloom.
Nowport.Meaa •Unified School Dlalrlct
.bulea ,..,_ 'lwo">hour:l! late" ani 10me
llUM1 In Ille Ocein Vlew 'School Dlalrlc:I
of HlDlttngton Beach weren't pven the
green light for three houri.
EIJewhere, delays were aborter.
~Tbla ii. :the worst morning I've ever
seen here," said John Morrison, who
held up the Newport-Mesa bul ll<el for
the f1rlt time in his 15 years on the
job.
Elmer B e q u e t t e , transportation
111pervlaor 10< 1he Ocean View J>iltrict
In Hunllnslon .. Beach, .. Wal~ Jllllll 10: 15
Liil.; )l<8Cllcally ' ballwO)' "lbrouib Ille
IC!Jool day belcre lelldlnl the ll<el out.
"Thia 11 the .wont," be aald, noting
thet lO minutes la Ille average wait
for a bad log day.
i!NCORE DUE
Tbe b II n d Ing tog whkh vJrtually
obliterated the Orange Coul lhls morn-
ing will be back for an"""°"' on WedMB-
day -._npanled by more gremlins
lr..,i lhe w;oalberman'• l!and\lt~·· box.
-Rain and chilly tempera-• were
predicted !0< the coutal aree and much
of Soutbern catllornla Weclnelday Ill
the Southland pnpared for wintry
dllcomlorll.
11le heavy mllt, whkh clooed Orange
County Airport today, WU expected lo
continue through Ille night. Rain pro-
opecta lo r Wednesday were tabbed at
IOpercmL
Ttmperalm'el wera expected lo drop
Jnlo the law 80'1 along Ille Orange Coul
Wednesday, with allibtly hlgber readings
In the Inland lll'W. ,
Bequette said, "llome of Ille kids
waited al the bul llopl all that time."
Morrison said Newport..Me11 bul drivers
lold him they ended up carrying about
one-fourth of their normal load.
The Ocein "1'.W: Qlltrlct ~tacted
1wo counti• radio ltatlool whkh bread·
cul Ille -Ille -were delayed and later thal Ibey ftN rolling.
Morloon laid, ''We have I little book
. of rWel and rqulatlool bert. It layl
In cue of log, 10 home and retum
lo thil bul otop In one hour and repeet
thel procedure.
"I'm not '""' all Ille klde would know
about It tboUgb," he remarked.
In the Hunt!nglon Belch City Dlalrlct
busea at.arted on Ume but fln1abed •
hall hour late becaUIO of llow drlvbli·
Fountain Valley llchool buleo alao left
-on ume and ran late.
LAGUNA UGBT
Today's fog wasn't as heavy ln Laguna
B e a c b. But a school transportation
worker who said she used to work for
Newpiort-Meaa commented:
"Boy it must have betin soup up there
because those drivers are not cowards
in any way."
From P119e I
BAN •..
intend to keep the pressure on,'' he
said.
Emory said that the instrument land·
l"lg faclllUea the 'COWlly is installing
will lower the ceiling lo 200 feet. "And
we feet this ts not acceptable and we
are worldn~ to get an ILS for an 81»-
loot celling. •
Jn addition to Cooki other officers of
the association elected include: Waltu
Wll!on, vice pruldent; Mrs. Edw1rd
Cook, secretary-~asurer: Harold Gam-
sey, retiring r.:Sldent and new member of the execu e board. Other execuUve
board membe are Pat Shepard, J.,.ph
Morris, Md Sherman Wicker.
Israel, Egypt Jets
Fight Over Red Sea
TEL AVIV (AP) -Israeli and EJJYP"
Uan jet f!ihten halUed over Ille norlbem
neck of Ille Red Sea today and the
Israeli ll'llll' claimed one El1Pllan MIG17 WU shot dowe.
A apokmnan said a second Egyptian
MIG WU "aeea to be hlt" and ne:aded
hack lo bale. He ltated all Israeli jell
rtturnedllfely. '
....... _ --------
.. I' • • f
Vm ilil li..i
prejella over mllllary American ·1~. VleJnam ue l.ispidt,e liirOos 1n .mllllng .. ........, .. 111an the
1111
tripled.
prolelled agalnat the coo-!te lil¢ats. • He a1ao deliiBndM the
tinu'4 North Vietnamese attaca oo United States !""""' Jt&,Sa~ ally aod
unainied 17.s. nconaa&aance planeS. ~! J:!,:.'~~ ~.Iii : )bf Viet Lau pretemd agatnat allied bonlbiru< .,,.... IUe!Tillal
anii-&lielJlngs' on '?!Orth Vletnam'Ne posf. '!bi --·11!4t""lll!c:si'Pl'eslilent
He aaid Use, attack! pi:ove that th•
U.S. goyermnent ii "conUnutng lo Inten-
sify Ille war.'! He claimed that th< giant
u:s. ·~· -drop~ -. ' thL' i,000 1on1 OI bombi .W Da N.l!JI&. Monday and "k11led many old people1 women and cblldrt!i wltb pois. -q gas ina
chemlcal products."
llom iJt Ille demllltarlzed 1.0\le. Johltlm1-1>t:dOC*I the of North
Duong Dinh Tbao, depUly leader d . ~~ ~ nilmbg U.B; BS2a ~· . \ . , . .
American ·Deaths • ,' 'wr
,_,_._
SAIGON -N nUmber of Americans
.killed tn Vietnam; bu puaed a ,000,
U.S. military sources said toda}r. Nearly
half have died this year.
Official reports showed v j e I p a m
fighting llnce Jan. I, 1961, bad killed
:111,865 Amerlcaill throngh Nov. IO. But
the U.S.' beadquarten IOUrctl, Aid , the
nuinber }las now passed the 30,00o mark.
The disclosure came as the U.S. Com-
mand reported Communist shelllng.s
against -military camps and villages
Ill · rw ~ar
. . .• • • i j . .' ' ~
oli im.,oidelt,of &l(m eDI Caml»dlan 1 muntst gunners tried hut lalled with
border fli!hting which ldlled ~t 'American the Communist nation llnce Ille Nov.
10ldlen. · · · · I bombing bait. Today headquarters Iden-
,,.; Vietnam dealhioU mounted steadi· tllled one of the two pUi>ts reacued
Jy ~toward-the· 3';62t ·U,8;-80ldien ·killed Monday as Air Forte Maj. Robert L.
in the Korean war, America.is fourth McCaan of Dedham, Mass.
~ war In .. 11v .. ::;. • -The -ol shelllng.s agalnat outpoats 0~~me:0'1v'Ltnmn:..., ~~ near Saigon was Ille second In five
. tl,OOll -dled , lhls yW:·For the .w1r, days, heldquartm Aid.
more lban llO,ooO U.S • ..rn~ have Then! bu been fierce Ulnnlshlng
been wounded and .another 1,200 are along the Cambodian border In the put
listed u ml"'"' Ip act1oa or captured. two weekl u U.S. Infantry try lo bring
Over North Vlelnam Monday, Con> part of !hi. force lo battle.
Five From Newport Held
Tbe enemy II In postuon for a quick
strike southward toward Saigon and
Amiiican attempts to penetrate the ~
ea have brought on fighting with North
Vietnamese troops.
In Wave of Burg~ri~s Five o.n Coast
In Flag Finals Three adult• and two juveniles, all
of Newport Belch, were arreJted llfonday
and charged with suspicion of burglary
in connection with a series of local
residential thefts in the past two months.
Gregoiy Allen Ribblett, 20, Murray
Colby Belshe. 3Q, and Robert William
Smith, 18, all of Ille ~ Front Hotel,
2306 Qcean P:ropt. lace arr~t Wed·
nesday in Newport·Mesa Municipal
Court.
The two juvenilea, one 17 years old
and the other 14 years old, were taken
to juvenile hall. The three adults are
being held in the city jail.
Newport detectlve1 said they recovered
•
"
• stolen property ranging from televlalon
seta, stereo tape recorders and rad.10I
lo jewelry. Detecilve A. G. Campbell
said Ille value of the property mliy
be In ...,... of 15.000.
Campbell IOld 19 .eparate burpary
cases are involved 1n the CWTent in·
veaUgaUon.
11le mode of operation used In all
II burglarlee wu the aeme, Campbell
said. Someone would knock on a door.
U smneoae answered, · the person would
be uked If a ficticlOUI penon lived
there. U no one tlDIWered, a means
of enle!1ng the realdence would be found,
Campbell IOld.
Five Orange Coast high lchool atUdents
are among eight llnallats In Ille com·
pet1Uon to create an Orange County
!!Jig.
Selection . of ... ~ 9fflclal flag will be
J!llllOUl1ced . Wedneadly by c o u n I y iupervllqfi: . .
Ftnallsts. f r o m the Orange Coast are
Susan Blllckeler and Salli Sbattuck of
Laguna Belch High SchO\)l; Laur a
Shernaman and Dennis Buter of Faun·
lain Valley High School and Charmaine
Hendenon of Ooron1 del Mar High
School
Orderlu ·Accused • " ,.
-, , I ~ . ..-, I
Burglary, Rape Tri:alOpens
Trial opened Monday ln Orange County
Superior Court for a Santa Ana hospital
orderly accused of a series of burglarles
and rapes which ended In a lllruggle
it a Westminster policeman's apan'ment.
Ronald L. Hall, 27, faecs 14 felony
counts, 1ncluding five burglaries and four
rapes which occurred in Westminster,
Huntington Beach and Garden Grove.
Westminster police officer Charles
Thorpe surprised and captured Hall 1n
his own aparttnent Oct. 5, wrestllng
two JJUM from the iuspecf In the proceu.
Fani4W ffil~
~'• lilt.er slept 1n a nearby
bedrooJJ!,' both ebe and the Intruder ap-parentJY·· ,µi:i.aware of. :~¢b· other'•
pr=·'~ In ·'su~ot Oourt
Monday, a·pretty, 11-,_.-old brunette
told the !leYen·Woman, five-man jury that
Hall tore· her frilly nightgown.
"No matter what happens now baby,
don't say a word or I'll kill you,"
she quoted the intruder as saying, before
he lashed her wrists together and cover-
ed her head with a pillow case.
He also threatened her at gunpoint,
she lestllled.
'lbe victim-who lhared an apartment
with a girl friend -said she recognized
)Ian u an employe of the Palm Harbor
J!oopltal In Gilden Greve during the
time !he worked there.
Qeputy Dlstricl Attorney John Garrett
is conducti~ prosecution of the alleged
blD'glar·rapist, while he is represented
by, Deputy Publlc Defender Russell
Serber.
Judge Howard Cameron is bearing the
case.
$aturtlay is
DOUBLE FEATURE
DAY
Starting Det. 14th
Tht nation's f11tnt growing colorgr1vur1 m19•
dnt adds ''big n1me" 1uthors, color, 1nt1rt1in-
m1nt, hvmor, rtci,.. 1nct In-depth comnwntary
on lust about tvtrylhlng In tho wwld to our
Sltvrcl1y pock-
TV
WEEK
Now · Two Great Magazines .
,Brighten up the 'New'· Weekend
•
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llA. ANOlllSON,· lillttt
'Halls Decked .
. BY Auxiliary
• •
Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian ls all decl:ed out In Ill· ho Ilda _:,;;
finery, thilnks to HSanta'a helpers," member• ct the ~pital's Aµxiliary ~
Arriving patients and visitors will be greete<f by the pine smell of;~
· flocked tree In the lobby which has been. donated by the Kiwanl1 Club. •j
Halls have been decorated with boughs of holly resplendent with red bows \1
and• colored halls. ' ·);·
In 'pediatrica a beautiAllly spot-lighted creche will catch the eye a)>ovo;,,-
the nurses' station, and a Christmas tree and · appropriate mobiles, also~
will be featured . 1:y.
On the second lloor wtil be Christmu wall hangings In the halls with .
each room having a bow ornamented with glittering greenery and colorful
ornaments. The maternity floor, appropriately, will have wre8th1·1wi~·
pii1k and blue halls, angels and a large tree to be seen at the end.of-tlio·, ,·
· hall. Even the e"Jl"ctant lather will. find his waiting room decorated .to"·
keep him in the holiday spirit as be "paces the floor." · ~~
The Jlllghtingale .C~apter, as over-all planners,.have had' tile . Mines. ·'
Sterling Wolle and Paul ·Campbell as cb~en . The , HUnter Cb8.pter'1 .1.
chairman, Mrs. Doiothy Stanw~ and the Mmes. Charles ,Holli&ter, -
1 Jam~s Hines and Edward Rogers have OJ.ided thiJ chapter in decoratin& .
· the third floor maternity wing. •
Affiliant chapter's Mrs. Carl Kymla, assisted by the Mmes. James :-:
HANDIWORK ADMIRED -Nursi> Marforie Kelley brings two
of her "charges" to view the "creche near the nurses' station in
the pediatrics wing of Hoag Memorial H06pital, Presbyterian. Ad-
miring the work done by members of the Toy.Committee of the
hospital's Auxiliary are (!ell to I'ighl) Steven Gilloon, 13 and An·
drew Buie,_ 5. ,
'
Blixt and Robert Brownsberger were in charge of decorating the second -~
floor. The Conference Center received attention from the Candystrlper1 · ·
under the direction of Miss Beth Goldstein, chairman and Miss Vicki· Cox,
holiday chairman. '!'be Toy Committee, headed by Mts: PauI-a..Fuiton. '
once again supervised. the decoration of the pe4iatri!'.=S wing. . . , ·., . ;.,'i~~-; I"~
TRADITIO.NAL°. WALTZ
Suun Turnbull ind Dr. FrMritk ·lvrnbull
'"'
Lidoite Presented
At Coronet Ball
Miss Susan Aubrey Turnbull, d·augbter of
Dr. an:d Mrs. Frederick Myles Turnbull of
Lido . Isle, was among 34 white goWned
Coronet Debutantes who were presented at
the annual Coronet Debutante Ball in the
International Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton
Hotel.
After making their graceful bows within
the frame of a 12-foot filigree coronet, the
new deOOtantes joined their fathers in a
promenade around the floor. Allen Tilden
Chase was presentor.
Each debutante carried a pink satin and
velvet muff covered with fresh pink carna-
tions, traditional since the first Coronet Ball
in 1949. The only jewelry worn by each was
a gold coronet on a white velvet ribbon. The
coronets were presented by their mothers at
the Coronet Tea in August to symbolize the
close association in the philanthropic endeav-ors of the National <:.:harity League, Los An-
geles Founder Chapter.
Joe Moshay and his orchestra accom-
panied each debutante's presentation and
promanade with her favorite song <¥1d later,
played for dancing. After the father-daughter
waltz, the debutantes were claimed by their
escorts. Miss Turnbull's eScort was William
Phillips. .
After the ball, debutantes and escorts at-
tend~ a party in the Hilton's Star on the
Roof where there waa dancing to 'the soundi
ol The Entertainers.
'Bows of Holly'·for Balboa Yacht Club
Holly won't be the . only thing used to decorate
"bows" this season. Commodore Ralph Deaver and
his wife (left) are using a Christmas tree and orna-
ments being handed to them by Staff CommOdore
and Mrs. Carrol Hudson. Decorajions of all types
will abound In the Balboa Yacht Club's headquar-
Keeping Mouth Shut Doesn't Alw.ays Close Door on Preble "
DEAR ANN : I was lnte&eSted in the
letter·from ABC, the teenage girl wbost
ratber·waitcheatlng on her mother. You
told her to keep her mouth ·abut -aDd
111ggested Ille possibility that her mother
probablJ bew' whit wu going on and
pretended not to see. You added, "When
1 mother Is confronied with such ln-
ANN LANDERS ~
formaUon she may bl forood 'to .all< on ·• • side ltr..t by Mn. J '1 house.
for a divorce wh;c.b she doesn't want. But tl)ey\te oever all anything to me.
as a matter of pride." I appreciate my chllctren'a sllenct
I WU clad you ,pvt ,that 8dvke, . 1QOre limn they'U ever mow. It ahowl Ann~ becluae I am the wi:le<Of a;.~Ullg ~~ . cbaracter and gel'iUlne con-
hwiband and my cltldren are aware 'i.lderalion. I am aware. too, lb.at just
of their father'• unfaithfulo&I." $everal btcauae ·a man 11 unfaithful doe• not
weeks ago t overbeJ!d my 1$-year~ld mean he ls rbtten to the core and
daughter tell her 17-year-OJd brother de!lerves to be. thrown out. My hw:band
ahe aaw Dadd)''• car q;aln -parked happtni to be a Wonderful father and
l
he ~ many fine ~ • 1 llJ I u ._
uotommattly, he'• not qultt .,._, up
in tofne ways. Thia la not hll' first
affair. The poor fellow haJ been Involved
with at lea$ three other young women.
Uke so many other lmmatutt males,
he uses extramarital 11e.1 11 a prop
for his sagging ego.
Uvlng with Ille problem Is not essy,
but it'a better than the alternative. -
UNDERSTANDING HELPS her husband had been asked by IDOther
DEAR 1.JNDEBSTANDING: I ~ covple to help celebratt lheJr Weddinl
tbe -el .,_ ~ ud annivenary.) I refuaed to change my
tbe uiaC. ·ec:-i;. Net ...,. wilt mind, however.
eoald ..,..,,,.,....,. tt -.• lllilo-, A <00ple days lster I found oat lht
bat •JIPll"llil1 yH un wd&bed ud girl ll1d her bulblM 1oo1t lht boi>y
...-...i ud made yoar <k<lll• ,. with lhem ll1d left him In the baclt
. , -~-=, • -of tbt .., while Ibey ----~ ,lluls ~ Whal ii beil-fiir YR -Javern to Javern. They aot -It .,_ flmllJ. c.a1ntu1111-a 1.m.
-ll aJl1lhlni had .happend to lhlt baby
·DEAR ANN LANDEJ!S: The woman I would oever hive forgiven my..U.
(! should lfY ·girt) upown asked 11 I 1m • oervou.s wreck Jual lblnklng
I would witch lier baby Tutiod~ nighl 1boul fl. Whit can he doae 1bout parms
I"h1d. 1 bowllnc dale Md cltcih't wanl llke lhlt?-MIDDLETOWN, N.Y.
to ' brui" It so I said no .. She fried DEAR MIDDLETOWN di tbe poUcc
her'ba\ to ~·mt Into li. (She and u.i· f,.... IUt lllby la tbe -ol .. •••
•
• . . . . .. .. . -•
•
->• . . . . ···~ . . .
'
Potluclc, C0nc.n Planned
Parties O~ Ebell' s
Christmas Festivities
Q$lmll ..... .. ... -Coo*t-... ....... Ill' ~ Dll CM rrta./lo 1111-Clu-1(~-=-........ wlll .. Ill* ~ ..,._,,.__ .. Potl1 al-·~
11 a~. ,....... la Ille aallid and -will ,
'""""'" .... -of Mn. follOwed by altemoon bridfl. rniidl G-for Ille PM Bob Blln>I ~uraril wW
< For Aipiring Thespians
Workshop .Planned
Do )'OU !lava on uplrtac octor lll lbe lamll)'!
U aa, why not ~ bJ.in in tllo Children'• Th .. ter Guild ot Ntw•
pori Harllor'a drama worbbOP. · 'lb• board, mtfllln& Ill the home ot Mn. Laclilla"' Reday, president,
announced 9pec:la1 refllatrallon for pNIChool tbroqh olShlh 11'4• children
wlli take Jllace on Safurday, Dec. 14, and M~, Dec.15.
Saljinlay relll•!tatlon will take !!lace Imm 10 a.m. to noon at Guild
Headqual-ters, 151! Newport Blvd., C..ta Mesa. Headquarters, also, will be
open for regiltratlon from 4 to 5 p.m. on Dec. 18. • '
ci..,a .. wblcb are scheduled once a week for 10 weeka wlli begin Jan •
8adkn. Tba -w1ll be be Ille lldllna wh<o meml>ert .
. IOllolred 117 Ille -.,. of ol Boal: lloollao 4 •ather for ~Ulla-olbolidO)I •a dinner party a( l:IO p,m.
..... ~ lllt Qell-"-. Co-Dec. 14. Mn. J. V. Bilcaiu,
• lr!llOllOli -iba -· chaintwt, said -ol Mn .•• ' CllUtia J(ellar1 Cedl lllllnr Horbert Ford's ~ trip
.... -II-wlll be lbo!Vn -dim>er.
a . Ml/re information may be obtained by celling Ibo Guild ottllct at
846-688ll .~r Mn. Donald Carr at 54MQ89 • , ""* -I wlll meet Re1erY1U001 'may be made II I' p.m. 111111 aa..-In by calllnrl Mn. N o l 1 o 11
Ibo Oolea .. 'Mir ..adeace Holmwood at lfl.71it.
fll. lln. O. Z. -. A ' Friday, Doe. 10, -· ail~ e,;:m-will ol Book Sec1lon I wlll meet
tolloif tllt and eoff.. at Ille Ebell Clubhouae In ~ bl' Jin. How a r d Balboa for a bOUday potluck ~. ~· J*' Meailcw (µncbeoa • and erci>•DC• .ol
and llri. -l!lfla. An or... concert by
.. Guild members may reglller their cl!ilclren at the Christmas lunch-
eon m=& planned for 10 a.m. Thuraday~Dec. 12 in the Lido Isle home of
Mn. Tandowsky. . , • -. .._ _ 1
M ben will preview "The Mtl!iclans of Brem"'1," a short play
Which will be trouped to scliOolo, hospiWs and llbrariet throughout the
coming_y,eat. ' .
The Chantelle• from Newport .Harbor High School will present a pro-
gram of (;hristmas music. The poup ii 'clirocted by Les Van Dyke.
~ lecda\l I hal -Mn. llell Wllliam.s " 1J]annod. • •
• ed l~ party l<r JJ:IO. p.m. co.booteaaea wfll lndude the'--------------~--'-----------'•'--_.. nm • 'l!m111da1 la •Ille home MJnaa. Marprtl llan\poon,
ol Mi, .. J •• •Joy JUoakJ, Raymood Wood and Lealle
cbaJrmu.. p~
'
··oethier'
Viking Club to . Mark HB .Women
Yule in Swedish Style Pledging
'. ALL I WANT FOR QlRISTMAS IS -Just lb case her husband is lacking in
ideas on what 1x:> get her for Christmas, Mrs. Vin Jorgensen is whispering her
1 own 1t1ggestlons, which include the floor length white mink bathrobe which can
' be reatyled Into a coat, wmch she is modeling. But her husband isn't making
: any promlaes.
., ' . .
Betrothal
Announced
Tbe ·be-" -~ lletNe< and Gil')' w. Joimaoo 1111 been ....
... _ '" Ille bridHlect'•
......... Mr. mi Mn. Gerard
lleQder, ol.c..ta M$
N!a·l>Klbter graduated
from Corooa c(el Mar High School and atleniieit San Diego
Stele College, wbero she af.
flllated with Sigma Kappa
BO«lrily. Sbe presenily la
:!~"!.u a TWA airline SUZANNE OETHIER
On Doe. U, Ille !ongeat night
ol the year accordtni to Ille
Swedlab calendar, Lucia wW
appear al the Sc:andlnavlan
COut Viking Club, Yul-.!
(Cbrlltmu teble) acx:W.
Legend says that Lucia
Star Club ..
' Installing
emerging from the darlmea
dressed in a white gown with Donations
lighted .,.,.n,. In a wreath Dooatlnnl to the Boys' Club
ol greenery oo her head la of Huntingtoo Beach, Opera-
• symbol . of Ille returning lion Merry Cbr11bJw and
light Joplin'• Boy's Rancb havo
After • program ol holiday· been authorized by memben
eongs, the club's L u c 1 a , of the Huntiqton Be.acb
Kristina Raymond, wfll lead WOIDl8'•• Club.
the children in the traditional The c:lub aJao will prttent
Long Dans aroond t h e coupon boolr.s to Long Beach
Chrlatmas tree. Veteran's Ho.!pltal, and gtftl
The Mmes. George Fox, ae& and a donation to Melba
Martin and Charles Sidnam Mansfield, its adopted girl at
~ will lead the children in the the hospital. There also will
Slar Club members, Laguna carob, Mrs. Orville Mith.off be a collection of clothln& for
Beach Order of the ·Eastern will accompany. Danny Davey ln addltloa to
Star• will install oHlcen dur· More infonnaUon about the funds for the repatr of bis
ing their annual Christmas event which will tak I au•·mobile . -·~y at 7:30 tomorrow night , e pace w .,..... • in · lhe Ebe.ll · Clubhouse in Club memben were en-
. White ·Mink Bathrobe ~d 1t!1:abu~=-al Savings Newport Beach, may be ob-tertained during a ChrlStmas
Women ta k Ing over tained from Mrs. Ray Nielsen program feat u r Ing the al ~ Choraleers from Westminster:
Her flance, 10D ol. former ____ a_r_ld_M_l•_ct __ _
F b !jewport B<ach r.aldenla Mr. e ruary and Mrs. Rbbert P. Joluuon of ldyllwtid, attended Newport . I Harbor High School a D d Trouser Coat -
Described
leadership of the group include The won:;en's auxlllary will High School, and M. r 1•
the Mmes. Phlllls Wlll1ams, eet - -·Tops Yule Dream List N U Pt·, a · 5 Orange Cout College. He cur·
rtntly is serviq: with the U.S.
Marine Corpl!I in Vietnam.
President.· Beulah Smith, vice m at 1 p.m. Dec. 18 in Gettrude catcblug offered • the Santa Ana home of Mrs. speclal reading during lun-
president ; John Willi8Jlll!I, Dall{l Christinsen. cheon today in the clubbouae..
aecretary, and Elgin Burke, •• ;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~i;i;;ii;ii~~~~
Ask a woman what she'd deevel, a patch J><>Ck:et wblch s h d I d No date bu been aet for A trouse r coat, in case
lib for Oirlatmu and nine c:an be removed wily and a c e u e the wedding. anyone asks, la a fingertip
out ol 10 will quip. "A mlnlt tie beh.
treasurer. 11
Mrs. Bernice Franke will
lead the meeting and new
clothes and toys will be col·
lected for Indians.
,coat. whit else?' The bathrobe ls on dilplay The engagement of_ Orange length coat with a lot ot
. But bow ~.':.!".!!t think In the Costa Mesa store flank-Coast College lludeota .Linda Sisterlioo·d unbelted yardage, dropping ·to~•,:,~ "'thlt"";~ ,:}!?rur~ wJ~m=-Elliott and Stephen Pawlowttd ·, Temple Shar'Ol2'1 Sllterbood gathered from a. yoke.
:bothrobe " ~ fo 1-. the_'.'*' Can be restyled into •. has .been ..-117 the •Oleet&· Ille. fourth Wedoeaday !l's meant to wear with Give to Your
found under the a.rtatm.u a cOa\", · 'ffhich 'Sean would do tiridHlect'i parent.I, Mr. and ,of ·, the month in Temple pants and was .seen in the
-ol a Mn. Rocltefellar or ii) addition to chanslni the Mr Robert D EWott of H Sharon Rellgioua Sc:bool, Costa spring collection or Marquise, u n"1ted Fund a Mrl. Onasa1ll are wrorig. Baine if desired. 1• · un-Mesa, at I p.m. a New York finn.
·There just mlgilt be one ,.,. fHaroid Ward, a mercban-tington Beach. •:;~iiiiiiC::::;::;::;;;::;;::::;::;::;=;;:;;;:;==;;::;;::;;::;;::;;;;;:::==:;:;;:--
'.der the tree of an Orange dlse manager fOl" ·the South The couple will be marrtedl
;eout reeldent. Coast Plaza store said, "Nor-In 8 B · ~ For the woman who bu mally nllnk 11 displayed in Feb. ~5 t. onaventurt
levemhina, Sean, South c.oui showcases only, but we have Catholic .Church. !Pt..a la cillerinc a white mlnlt .. r up a new m1n1t depart· The brldegroom-l<>l>e, "'"
,:bathrobe with a velvet finln.I!. ment with fl!tl,000 retail of ol Mr. and Mn ... J ... pb (?be Ooor leoatb creation Ts mercbandile, which LI more . ""8de " fully let out -ol mlnlt stoclt than any other Pawiowakl of Hu D ti DI I 0 D ~A Jumlne mint, blea~ Se.an store on the west Beach, graduated . fr 'O' m
ied to"""" white lulter. Lined Coast." Included In the stock Marina High School. !llJ f'rith a rayon velvet, It fu-Ls a full length coat. strollen fia~ also eraduat.ed from f""' three quuier length and stoles. Manna.
I Escape From Tension, Family
~ ... ' ~ &hforces Trend for Elegant Bath Ii . . ' ~ > BJ G.lY PAULEY womb." water. President John Quincy
"""' Joy Leslie, a motivational Adami had to sneak out of *' YORK (vrl) -The research c 0 n 1 u It a 0 t to his mansion before dawn to ~!'illcs ten the lltorJ of a Houbigant Perfumes, h a , dip In the Potomac. that'• emqed ln the amassed an amazing amount Aa late as 1840, baths ln
ded Stat.el Ol'l1y in the last of mate~al on history of the private homes were denounced
va,.yean. bath, even researched the ef-as repugnant to the American
ll)I the trend to the elegant fects of color in the company's way. And the White House
fb. Not just to get Clean, line of bath products and their wl! not fitted with a bathtub ~to loll and relax ln the packaging. until 1851, and then only in
hmlr1 ol fraerant waten. The Red, for instance, ls betau.se the teeth of intense opposition.
riolut1on of bathing traces it's .,dynamlc", has 8 aym-And Lord Tredegar, a f>ioP1 lr:ntgbta of old In tube bo"··"--f ood b·-'th Brltlaher In Washington ol> .. with roee petals, to lU.oaMUll 0 I ~ and vlou1ly thoro ug:hly
dlpptnc In milk h>-magic bealing. Whit• "" Americanized, sacrtflced Ille
ol water, to t h e choeen f0< Ila symbollzation op~""'~ of being hoot to of lig!ll, purity and peace, .... __ ,,
~----,.. today ol. the and l(lld for ita association King Edward VII rather than
utlBtar1an bathroom where the with richness, glory and splen-imtall a bathroom ln bis
~·· ~ fatherof •1~,::;adryv· dor. _ho_m_e_. ------u;g &ear, a ~·per 1be idea of bathing is com-
9*'-a bli of hair curlers parattvely new to Americans, Kids Like to e>lu!pete for IJll"O. even thougb -Oley long have 1J!it thla uUlltarlan C011<0pl pruched the cleanllnesa next Ask Andy IJ<~ rapidly, report the to godliness rule. But only ;;=========.I ~ tnterested tn Illes of a couple of centuries ago, It 1 products. I n d U It r Y was rCOMidered scaf14alous to
say that last year immerse the entire body in
I01ll8 $120 million was '
oo fr":'t: products r.••--• ~;,.,:: 1111.reaso or I .:.mA CLAUS .
~ 11 ~their WO::,: W11 .-lookll!fl at
clollanooblthpn>-Ha-
111e -~Items _,,
-.. powder, hath LOURS .... bodr .a.. foamy mut VE
...... aDd frqrance -· . !!1>111 Ml ......i the o1wp I ..,.._! w-llDall1 haft
llliicllad oft Ille V1ctariml
-_,.,..,Ille F« -. the
••*:?;':'-°'=,= ....... 11111 lamlly ........
.... -......,,. .. ,. tblt-''the
-11 Y"4 to ealm -Jf,0.,1) ticlhl • te ---lei .. ' Hr II WBtlall1 wtinl
....... And the tab...... w.tdllf'11 ..
.... • llll-1fl0Clpe. ,;-----·· ......... .... .._ ..... nlura to the ..
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lfl'S BE FRIENDl Y
If you h11.ve new ncl..:hbon
or know or 11.nyone movin&
to our area. please tell us
so that we may ~Dd a
friendly welcome and help
them to become acquainted
In their new 1urroundhigs.
Huntington Beach
Visitor
536-9626
Costa Mesa Vislfor
642-'014
So. Coast Visitor
494-0579
Harbor Visitor
675-3433
YOUI PUICHASI .. ,,. ......... ... ,
HOLLYWOOD
The real elegance of coor-
dinotion p I u s the reolly
famous Vesserette fit. Antron®
nylon tr i c o t dip, luxuriously
lac ... ppli•uod, lined lace ham.
Nylon loce bra fiberfill contoured
with low scoop spandex sides end
beck. Leg pantie in mere ounces of nylon-
L ycro® spondax overlaid with lace. In Brown
Frost with Platinum Mist lace; aho Gordonio
with Misty Beige lace; aD White.
Slip tn d111111-3°'~-;-slr..tt2-36,--.v:-32"40 $9.00
Bra 43'46, ABC 32-36, $6. Leg Pantie 1'48 S.M·l, $10
i---
J1)J L c.-t Hwy., C.... _. Mw
..... •n-1t11
• a.lA....tcw4 ... ...., a.. ,., ......... ~
a fresh
slant on
dishwashing
teOtOr-.1..-.. ' ----$19 8 88 ,. ... ,., • lower tro111 to
••k• loNJat •• .. er th•• ...... No oth9r dtltrnlMr la
quite like It. PowerM SUptr-
SUrge WuhJng Actk>11 gttt
I YIAR WAllANTY dtahn aho'ftr•lft. Uttle
or no Pf•rln1lno nnded.
Alto a cholo9 ot ·tour auto-
1n1tlc cycles plua a rln••
oondtUontir dltpen"r thlt
helPt 1llrnlnat1 , .... and ..,. .•. _ .....
BUILT-IN STYlE Dl·SHWASHER
e Roll -out r•ch for •••Y
loodint.
e littlo or "o pr•·
rin1in1J . e Arno1i119ly qulot
oporotiOft. e 14 t1bfo 1ot+l111
copochy (AHAMJ
e S11p., '"'I' w11hi119
octlon.
Our ow11 foctory tnlnM kcl111h:l1111 1"9 ,_ 0111r11tco
of pro111pt, offlcioflt 1ervlco .,. •...,tlil111 Y" My.
22 YEARS IN THE HAltlOR AREA
~DAVI S -BRO WN
411 E. 17th St.
Dally 9-9, Sat 9-6
COSTA MISA
646-1614
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b • d • • b
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b • a
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. Today'•. Cloab{g
.eo1t10.N N. Y. Stoek.8
.. . '. vor.:. 61, NO. 286, 3 SECTJONS, 28 Pi\GES . . ' 'I I ·:"J ~ •
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ORANGE· COUNTY; CAl.ff,ORNIA
' 1\JESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1968 TEN 'CENTS •
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of s ·hrouds Coast
' . ' ' '
Traffic Nears Sianilstill-as Accidents Mount . . ' .
OAK.Y PU.OT ..... W lM ...,._
WQ 11!1 <UICl!ilCo• o(the •tlif~
,,,.... choked -to • near.-.UU
alorig the Orange Coal! todaj, brlng!ng
scores ·of minor accidents and making
"rowm of cblldren late to school.'
Thi woral ~enqru.a\specleculaf, tiv.ar diaJn ·CGUislOD toacbed 'oft..lf:M>Ul
7 a.m. at tjie NelVJIOlt ~cb !n~Uon.
when a bnuse trailer jack·kiill~ end
piled up In the l•f· Police llfd another cu . rammed tbe wr.W.O · iii. -Jamboroe. 1lolij -· llDll :.:...:-
Third Suspect
In Elsinore
Slaying Held
A third iruspect In the murder of
a Hayward man whose body waa found
near E1s1nore ~ days ago by three
Costa Mesa rabbit bunters waa en route
to Riverside today, following his capture
In Tulare County.
Bobby G. Crow, II, formerly of
Elsinoce, waa arrested in Vj.salla and
booked Into Tulare Counfy Jafr Friday,
prior lo bis re-lo the Soulhland
to face murder charges.
Already arraigned Sunday In Riverside
Municipal Court, with preliminary hear·
ing set Dec. 18, are Roland J . Perry,
21, and Timothy H.:rron, 19, both of
Elsinore.
No bail has been set !or the lbree 3UIP'dS In the .-ng death of Kent
D. Davis, 21, of Hayward, Calif., some
time last April, apparently in a narcotics
involvement of sqne sort.
WHAT HAPPENED. TO"iCHOo lli)$f
All three suspects have records of
past naro>llas /b~ilr aC<:Ol'<l!nl lo
Riverside. ~ · ' S&l..:Ylrilll Woodward, of the lionnic!de dell&.
Jerry Cri~b1, Tom AlY•r•z of Cost• Mt~ PHr Through Fog Sgt. Woodward said Crow · wooJd be
arraigned today, if be is returhed from
Tulare County in time.
Secret Talks Reopened
To Push Paris Parley
Costa Mesa brothers David Zimmann,
24, of 369 Monte Visti Ave., and Paul
Zimmann, 21, of 2400 EUlen Ave., shocked
local poliCe Nov. 11 when they brought
Davis's bullet-blasted skull to the station.
Contained in the plastic bag with it
was tile vtctim•s watch, en.graved with
his lnitlals, which helped detennine his
Jdentity, 88 well as through tracing of
dental records.
From ·wire Services
PARIS -The United States today
reopened private, secret talks with
North Vietnam in a.'I. effort to get the
broadened Vielnam conference under
way. No progress was achieved and
there appeared no chance the talks
would start soon.
U.S. delegation o!licials said Arner·
Another County
Air Noise Suit
Asks $10 Million
Orange ~iy today was sued (or
more than SHf million wilb the fl.ling
of the third of a series of complaints
charging the county with responsibility
for damage caused by low· flying jet
aircraft U!ing Orange County Alrporl
In today's complaint, 347 Harbor Area
homeowners added their objectiom to
the AfiU111enta Usted by 43 other property
owner:.s in the two earlier ldiona.
Damages ln-ioday!a....sult are .pegged
nt IIUIZ,!M.65. Thil brlnp the total
of damages assessed against tbe county
to tll,9'5,966.65.
No dates for hearing of any ol. the
(See JET SUITS, PIP I)
lean deputy negotlatcr Cyrwl Vance
met in a Paris office wij.b Gol. Ha Van
Lau, the second-raritL11g member of the
Hanois delegation. It was the first meet-
ing between the two sidel since Jase
Wednesday when Lau laid down a
series of Communist ground ruJes for
the expanded talks.
Vance and Lau met today agaimt a
background ·of Viet Cong charges that
the United States was coounlttiog
"worse crimes than the HiUerite fas-
cists" in Vietaam. This and ether Com-
munist propaganda statement.a were
helping kill any chances for an imme-
diate start to the talks.
•:No questions have been resolved," a
high U.S. source said after today's two
hour meeting. ''There baa been no
progress."
Informed diplomatic source! said the
North Wttnamese had again insiste<t on
seating arrangements granting the Viet c.ong equal status with other partici-
pants. 'lbe Saigon government flatly
-Ibis dema.ld.
Stoel< Merlua
NEW YORK (AP) -The llock market ...a 1 bit 1n fairly active trading !ale this a!temocm.k(See qucitallom, .
PageJ 10-11).
Tbe averages held laJrly firm with
small bses, but for the f1rat time
In Ibo MSS!oo declines of lndivldllll !slues
loJll'Od' odvancer.
· Detectives retrieved other bones and
shreds of clothing from a wuh below
lonely Railroad Canyon Dam near
Elsinore, along with a few other acrap1
~f clues to the victim's identity and
riome area.
They theorized he was murdered after
coming to the Southland in early April
.Highway Heist
Nets $833,000
TOKYO .(UPI) - A young man disguis-
ed as a traffic policeman today tricked
four bank employes out of '83!,000 in
Christmas bonus money and used their
automobile to get away with what police
called the greatest JUibway l)lbhery in
Japanese 'blstory. ,
Not a shot wu fired nor 8 threa!
made in· the ~·on • ~ road
behind Tokyo'o FiJcbn Prllon.
The bindit, wearing the white helmet
and black leather Jackel of a traffic
o!ficer, rode I lllolm .Wlllle motorbike
up to .a bank-car carrying the bonUI
money !er emeIO)'et of tiie fOlblba Ele<>
trio Co. He't<ild the bank men he-had
lolormatton dynamite wu planted In
the car.
When the lour &<JI out, the bandit
got in and drove away wllh the car
and lhriii nielal bom full of bank
notes with unrecorded serial numbers.
Church School Approved
Planners OK Facility Near Orange Comt Campus
A condlUonal ,,.. permit !or a SUi,llOt
Up.JI educatlonll fadUty oar the
Ing! cast ColJ .. e campu1 WU ~ru..ncled !or approval Monday by
Colla Me11 P-1n(~.
'Ibo permit -... lo the City
nesl Moado! !or llni1 -er1Uon, llut no pn1>J.mo ert o:pecfed
tbe Church of Jdlll Olrbt <t: Letter-
Salnll llC!llty. •
"" located In tempenrJ' iiulden the 1lte at Ill Mmtmac W11, the
!er will Include !Ive of!lc<!t, a
·lounge, mulU·purpose room.
ea llpd other related !edllllea. •
MOst of the ' lllmJlJl1l!lna w ta zoned Contractor Gerald Terhune, of Ml !orino!iimlonal and rlitreallooal UR, llamlltln -st:. flllall1-h-o ar d com.
II £Ofng into an llijacenl pared of land. ment development at that addrea ! alu...,p 1 m.uoit apartment pnijecl mWtonen recommend bis Ilkmlt 'Cit
PJannlna D!r<dcr WIIlllnl L. Dunn denial, Monday, alter several
u!d ,p!aw 11111 draw!np llhow that the delay1.
Momm -I center lboold blend Charging discrimlnatlon, Terhune w!O m ...u -Ibo Cllllpu>-aparlmellt .... cerlaJnl7 take bis srgwnenta lo the City Yh....,.m In Ibo area. Coanci1 In en e!!orl lo IOCUlO pennllslon
-Fl>tlr other ,.,-ltet111 ICheduled lo bulld IO bacbekr aparlme!Ill onl7
for dl9"!Aloa ~m1nl Monday'• fairly ' of Z,088 squar .. !eet ..ch.
brief-meetlnf were continued, among Terhune would then have a total of
them a motel, restaur1nt and lounge; 16 such unitl on the property and has
five apartment unlll and a IOl'Vic:e st. llld In Prior IJIPW'a,,.,.. tblt they ere
lion. l( (Ilea PLANNEBS, P"e I)
>) I f .J...
· l i..t-.. r , . ... .. ' • i
Eastblull Drive, briqlq~-can to the ... ~1rUh llrtDI , _, j'""':;
Once .,.~·~11are . ..-• _ t~efe
1 a I d out,. bdt t!lreO m' o t e can 'PJJad
~~:~t;bl~~-AlfrOa< ~ I ' iiik.~iii' t·~~~ -.. _ . F-.. in serl ' ~ ,~ ~· · ·
facial laoeraUOMo J, ... ' ·' AltbooP ·Il ..... ~~
1o ~llili~:u1 · · ':::z::;gj#£Qf 4¥@
JOINS MISS TINSEL PANEL
Actreu Slilnn . . ' ,:.. . .... . .~':'! ..
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11 I llf • :Y #· ..
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L~ApS BEAu;rv JUDGE$
Hollyw .... '1 Bet;lcm•n
" '
Hollywood"Stars 'to Judge . ' .
Costa Mesa's Miss Tinsel
Hollywood pe~naULies are due lo..ar-,
rive :ir; Costa Mesa Friday to iook oVer
seven glrls wlth ltara in their eyes.
One pf the girls will become a I~
celebrity.
The occasion is the annual Junior Miss-
Mlss Tinsel contest, sponsored by the
Costa Mesa Jwtior Chamber of Com-
merce. It starts at 8 p.m. in the Estancia
High SchO?l auditorium.
Winner of the glittering competition
will reign as Miss Tinsel for the 11th
Annual Community Christmas Decoration
Contest awarda program Dec. 19' to 'the
Costa Mesa Civic Center. '
She will also be the Jaycees' Junior ·
Miss delegate to district, perhaps state,
and possibly the national contest finals
in Mobile, AJa., aceording to chair.mW!
Lon Maurer.
PotenUaJ winners to ap~ befo~
judges and the general pu&llc Friday
are the fo11owipg high school girls:
Chris Wllsori, Dianne Elllbtt, Dianne
Rosa, Sukari Reed, M1cbele Fatrbatrn,
Kay' Pe4!~ and Rosemary _Szabo.
Judges for the event ·will be led by
Henry Beckman, currenUy starring in
"Here Come the Brides," aa Capt.
Charley Clancy, oays Junior Mi?
Pageant ·Chairman Maurer.
James Best, head of Screen Gems
New Talent Program, is another judge.
Margaret Shinn, known for "The Doc-
tors," "Naked City", "EB.3~ Side, West
Side," and several off-Broadway sbon
will also sit on the pane].
Hollywood beauty shop owner Toriy
Viscarra -who ha1 done hair styles
for Marilyn Monroe, Kathy Crosby, Tues-
day Weld, Princess Soraya, Sandy Dennis
and Janet Blair -will be on hand .
19o.
1.-0cal personallUes , on the panel will
be Mrs. Alvin L. Pinkley, wile of Costa
Me!a's mayor ; Olympic hammer Uitow-
er Ed Burke ol Costa .1ttesa and Mrs.
Arleen Abbott oC the John Robert Powers
Modeling School, Santa Ana.
No Fo .ul Play Indicated
In Woman's Fire Death
'l'.esta are conUnul?!i today as co~··
deputies s e e t the cause. of the death
of a Cotta Mesa woman whoie bead
wu Incinerated u she lay in a blazing
flreplace at ~r apartment Saturday. .
Police Lt. Glenn Walker said he bopee
for a' detennlnaUon by the erid of the
week, but said so far nothing lndicates
foul ·play In the death of Mn. DOrothy
C. Davis. 12, of 2S8 E. Illjh Place.
The vicUm waa (ouna S&turds:y evtninl
by her estranged busbind, Ben R. Dabis,
49, of the JllycW! Motel, 45$ N. Newport
Blvd .• Newoprt Beach.
"The pi'oblem Is, sbe .... .. badl1
burned tb11t ·we can'( tell just wbat
happened "' her," Lt. ·Wallcer esplalned
today.
InvesUeaton who arrived at the bomt
after Davll uked•nefMbl>ors "' call police
said t1fe v!dim WU lndnerited by tbt
~:!:!,.}llmu In; tbe oel!~
-i!Wnl m..tt; ..... -_....
bod1 """Mrs. Davll',lwo black.poodle .
dogS, •cconl!ni . lo lnVesllialon who
-u.; hot, fllmHllled tobm. L\. Wa!i<er Aid ~ tba1 ~tb;n 11' no wplciOri' or110m1cld0 .Jn the ~e:ath
ol. Mn/ Devb, end t1ttte detOctlves are ..,I~ to qucsUon !rleads ·and ao-qu~tances ..
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One o! the 11IOll . lmJioriant points "'
be determined now, he said, is whether
she bad I history of medical prol/llDll
and II oo, just what kind.
No f l r e waa found 1n the residencf:
other than 1n the fireplace, bJVeetigatort.
said, and apparently nothing was disturb-
ed or liken from the premisea. • • Davis and his wile went to Palm i
SpringJ just alter TbanQg!v!ng and
slibsequenily 1eparaled, pOll<:e I at cl. ~
which Ume be moved biro the Newport
Beacb mold.
Oeaver Now
Sought by FBI
SAlf PR.\NCISCO ll!l'll _:. The FIJI
today eoteied tbi bunt !or llJad< Panther
leader l\Iilridge Cleaver', who II lielnl
l<iught u 1 parole violator. .Cle••er'1 !allure Jllov, 21 ·to return
vqlunlar:IJy lo cUlt6dy wu mO<!• 1
federal cue by the llllN! o£ a complaint
dta<llrii tbe NelP.')l .l!lil<r with unlawful
IUIJtf 1o· r pn>RCUl!on. . I '
Tbey were mqrtly late to, aqioo1. bct-
w i ( b 10IDe u;g:iling news for ~
classmates.
California Highway Patrol officers tn
Senta Ana said the <Wi<Ung fQI i>roducod
a' whole crop of minor accidents. moetl.Y
in the central county region.
"It's strictly the fendet·bender ltuU,
1 CHP of!I<:er commented, .. and Ibero
baa been Utlle Improvement In the Santa
(See FOG COVERS, P•C• I)
Wide Search
Still Goes On
For Lost Pilot
' Searchers Oying out of San Fernando
and Hemet-Ryan alrport.s today conUnued
the hunt !or a mtas!ng Colla Meoa
machine shop owner and his wife, eight
d a y s overdue on a Oigbt to Orange
County Airport.
, Hope is dimming for George W. Pape,
49, and his wife Grace, 46, of 1901
Skyline Drive, bowevei, since so much
rugged territory bas ,already been
coveftd without a trace of the couple.
They left Lake Havasu City Alrport
Dec. I, after watching a champioiuh!p
outboard motorboat race, In which a
friend, driver Mira Slovak, waa to com-
pete.
Flying weather w a s rough over t h c
approximate retnm route, and the Pa~.
who have four children w~tlng at bome,
Dever arrived at their destinaUon.
· Civil Air Patrol Col. Paul Klog, con·
!acted at El Monte Alrport, ll8!d toc\aY
tbal 1Carcb ptiuies ari llllI Dying over
'"tbe desert and mountaJn terrain, bu!
prospects are bad ~
Pape did not Ille a fight ]Jlan shoir!ng
his intended route over the fogged area,
which is the graveyard of many planes
and pilots, .some never found. •
Col. King said there ls no actual closing
date for the searoh, but It will be
called oU when cooperatlng agencies feel
they must await further development:L
Pape operated the George W. Pape·
Machine ,Co., 709 Randolph Ave., Cost.a
Mesa for the past three )'tan,, according
to his 'brother Lewis, of Paloa Verdes
&tat.es.
Pape, he said, was an experifl)Ct(!
flyer.
College Holds
-Concert Tonight
Southern California College In Co3W
Mesa will present ib annual Christmas
Concert at 7:30 o'clock . tonight in lbc
campus• chlipel auditorium.
.Camille Saint-Saens • • C h r i st m a s
Oratorio" will be the featured work
by the SO-voice college cholr. SoloJ1ts
will be Dianna. Shockley, Eleanor San-
derson, Donna Phelpa, Lyle Countryman,
Lew Wicks !ind Dan Ferris.
The prelude and .,..Uude will he played
by tbe brass enoemble.
The campus is located at 2525 Newport
Blvd. AdmlA!on will be ir.e.
Oruige
Weadler
Had enough fog? Well, we're 1 due f~ mor.e Wednesday -along
with a 50,percent chance of llhow·
en Ind cooler (Ill degr..,)
weather alone ·the coasl
INSWE TODA.Y
1/, cu etptcttd, Prtddmf..
elect ·Nizon name1 Rep. Mtltlfn
Laid 1tCTetarr of d.r/eNe ht'U
W breaking onollin prec..i.n(
' Page S~
= ...: ~:iC:u:i : --' -' ..... ·-" 1•"411 SI 1f ..... ,.,,
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Alllt.......,, 1:t .... _ " """'*' ........ '
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:;::' ,:...... J = -it:: =....-.... "'': -' -. --..
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I rwu 1!11.0T
a.i·Noa...re Bays~
~ewport . U:rgee Suit Set
Probe· of Border l!or Court
By JEROME 11' • COILINll spec:Ulcally the trattrc lii narcotlcl oy Legal •¥ almed-.t tatiDg the _.
..... -.... -- . mlnon and lo COllJlder the establlsbmcnl au1otlorJlllli' of Orange County'• pro-
Newporl Beach city ®uncumt11 MOD-ol speclllc border·controll In cooperalion poaed nap ol Upper Newport BC)' land
day mpt unanll!IOIJ8ly called for with the Mexican Government u would w!th lbe Irvine Company ii awalilng
CongrelllOUI hearlDp on lbe trallk: ::· ~°:... ~Uoo Of t1111 aource hearing today In Superior r.oun.
In ll&'<Oticl aJ¥1 ~ clrup from Mcbinls IWo ,...ill ago forced a delay FUed jointly by the county aod lbe
Muico to CalHornla. in •cti.on on the resoluUon when be · Itvine Conip&nJ, th\ lawau.lt namee coun-.
The adooted mo!llUon did no(, = obJecled lo Ill Implied recommendation ty auditor-controller V. A. Helm u defeo-
poaed ear1ler, urge lbet lbe· be lo close the border lo mlnon. He said dant. It asks that Helm be ordered
determine wbether the border. that woujd solve nothing, aod would to pay a llS,19'1 claim by Irvtne to
be closed lo UDeJCOrled _mlnon ('!1'4er meaninglessly re!lrlet young people who cover cosll of en&1rieerlng and 80ll tes11
11). . now go to Baja CelHornia JUI! to enjOy already carried-out b> the Upper Bey.
, ·Jnatead, at CouncllnWI D •. n a I d Ill acenlc, cultural aod ri!creatlonal ad· Helm's earlier relulial of the bW was
Mchmla' lnliJt.Dce, It wu reworded lo vantages. calculaled lo enable the county aod
read: _ At Monday's • t u d y session, he Jrvloe to test the legal otatus of the
'"lbe eon,rea, In conducliDll IUch •-peraonally "Phrased the reoolutlon, jiroposed trade.
bearlnp, ii urged to ID v I 11 [ & a I e llrWpg out aU direct rtferencea to County _ _._..._ have ratified lhe border Clo.stll"t, . owyg ·~· 1'11e """ wordiD& wu acCeJlled trilhoul trading ol )S7 ai;rea of Ude~ for
OCC Stwhnts
Hope .to Build
Laguna Reef
Four Orange cOut College atudenil
aren't trying to make waves but they
would like to build a ll!lall feel oil
Laguna Beocb. •
Purpooe ol the reel, Aid City Manager
James D. Wheaton, would be to observe
Iha t1pe ol aea lile lhat establlabea
lt•ell and to attemPt to tranoplant sea
Ille.
'I1le matter wW come before city coun-
cllmen Wedneaday at the I p.m. ad-
journed meeting.
1be reef would be made of worn
argllDle!lf,.. other 'COllllcllmen, •--ludlng 450 acres of lrvtne '1Jorellne property. M "' ~ Crltlclam of lbe deaf Jed lrvtne to ex-ayor Paul J. Gruber, who two weeks withdraw from the proposed contract.
ago had <lulled bitterly with Mclnnla But lrvlne renewed Ill .lni.rest In lbe
over the issue, Gruber said then thal project Ja.s1 mooth wben the county board
leenageni have no business pol and pW· voled 4 lo I to go ahead with the shopping In M..ico.
Counclllilan Howard Roieni pointed out land swap. Moad Iha Jrvloe Company officlalt bave """"Pted ay t the revl!ed reoolutlon aun county lermB for a joint dredging agree.
expresses the city's support of a recently ment and tu relle fprogram.
adopled Leagoe of Calllornla Cities Envialooed by the county and lrvlne
reooluUon on lbe narcotlca tralllc pro-ii the creaUon of two larp regional
blem. The League documen~ said parks oo the aborellne of Upper Newport
Rogers, asks Coogrm to comlder do.Ing Bay and the creaUon of a multl-mllllon
the border to mlnora without adult dollar "second harbor" out of the Back
escOrta. · Bay mudflall.
MclDDll 111\1 he didn't object lo· lbe Two aeparate dredging prolecti pro-
seeming iDcoDsilteDcy. pooed In bacl: Bay waters Will be com-
The Newport resoluUon follows tlmllar blned Ill an tstlmaled savinp of It
action by other Southern Calilornla cltlea, m1lllon.
among them COrona, Upland and Na~ "Th8 450 acre.a of lrvlne uplands lllr~
Uonal City. rounding the bay wblch the ranch will
Costa Meaa city COUDcilmen lul month trade for 157 acrea of c:Ounty tidelands
declined to urge cloolng the border to will be moved from tu rolls pending
mlnon. lmtead, they ·urged that the a court rullng.
UDHed Statet j!U1'chase Baja Calllomla. It ii espected lbet It wW lake two
The Nbon administration 1& yet to com-years for the courts to reach a decision
out auto tires and would be in 10 fathoms ment. on the curreilt action.
(IO feet) of water oH Crescent Bay /
beach. It would be roughly seven-feet
wide, If.feet Jong aod two feet wide.
The reel would be localed 200 feet
from shore, secured with cement blocks
and DJlon luhlnf and marked with I
buoy.
Wbeatoa Aid Ibo student applicants,
taking a marine aclence course, are
Mike Hawklna, Al Melanson, Richard
Duarte and Jules Gambino. TbeJr pro-
fessor of marine science, Lewis A.
Follansbee, h Is recommended ;be pro-
ject and wrlllen thal the atudenta wW
diamanlle the reel wbeo the project·
ii completed In two )'earl.
WbealoD Aid the matter was pul .on
lbe adjourned me.Ung because of lbe
lime element. The -need to write
a lfnt pllaR report by llelDeSler'a end.
Five on Coast
In Flag Finals
Five Orange.Coast hlgb acbooJ atudenta
are amoq eight l1nalilta In lhe com-
peUUon to create an Orange County
flag.
Selection of the ofnclal flag will be
announced Wednesday by ca u n t y
BUperViaora.
F1naliltl f r o m the Orange Cout are
Susan Blacketer aruI SaUl Shattuck of
Laguna Beach High School: Laura
Shemaman and Dermis Buter of Foun-
tain Valley High School and Cbarmalne
Hendenoo of Corona del Mar High
ScbooL
County Airport 'Busy'
Mtre th.Ill I00,000 aircraft movements
...,. rec«<led In the put U montha
by the Orange County Airport control
tower, It was reported today. The !raffle
volume DlWll the airport ls now the
seventh bu!le.st in the nation. Last year,
ft W81 ranked utb.
DAii Y PllDI
OIWtGI'. C«MrT rulllSHINO COWMY
hMrt H. W•M ---Jtcli: L c.t.,
~,,....,,,,.,...,. MIM.-
"'-•• rMYll ·-~i:=1 ..
.... Mr .... -----JJO Witt lq StNtit
M.m.,-..., r.o. ... 11" tun --~ ..._..._,unw.t ....... llf .... u.-. 9"0!1 Ill p.,.. ~ """""""-...,., -"" .,,.,.
I.
From Page 1
FOG BLANKETS COAST. • •
Ana area aince·early tb1a momlitg.11
Sberlll'a officera had the same Blory
to tell -drifting patchy log that fre-
quently closed In to bring motorlata to
a grinding bait -II not Into another
car or cars.
"But we've found everyone to be ex-
tremely cauUouJ and very cooperative,"
a spokesman s a I d, "we've had more
minor collisions than usual, but no in--
juries and no major dlsrupUon of traf·
fie."
FOUDtaln Valley police reporled live
accidents during the early mornlng
hours, but Westminster police logged·
only one minor craah, while Huntington
Beach'• tally bit seven, with three in-
juries.
Seal Beach police said they logged
no sccldents du~ to fog, which was
relatJvely Ugbt by sunup Jn the far
western area of the county.
WA!TF,D HOUHB
Scbool cblldren wbo didn't finally give
up and grope their way home waited
up to lhre hours In spots f o I school
buses to loom through the gloom.
Newport.Meaa Unified Scbool District
buses were two hours late and some
bU!el In the Ocean View School lltstrlcl
ol Huntington Beach weren't given the
green llgbt for three hours.
Elsewhere, delays were shorter.
"Thia ii the worst morning I've ever
seen here," said John Morrison, who
held up the Newport.Mesa bus Deel for
the first time in bis 15 years on the
job.
Elmer B e q u et t e , transportation
supervisor for the Ocean View Dbtrict
in Huntington Beach, waited unW 10: IS a.m., practically halfway through the
school day before sending the 8eet out.
"This ls the worst, 11 he said, noting
that 30 minutes is the average wait
for a bad fog day.
ENCORE DUE
The b 11 n d I n g fog which virtually
obliterated the Orange Coast trus mom·
ing will be back for an encore on Wednes-
day -accompanied by more gremlln.s
from the weatherman's Pandora's box.
Rain and cbllly temperatures Were
predicted for the coastal area and much
of Southern CalUomia Wednesday as
the Southland prepared for wintry
Woman Driver
•
Injured as Car
Stalls in Fog
A Costa Mesa woman trying lo otart
her suddenly ·llalJed car In dense log
wu allgblly tnjuftd today when rammed
In the rear by an Orange Coonty sheriff's
deputy on a subpoena wvlng errand.
Mn. Mildren -Stevens; '5, ol 31121
CooUdge llrlve, .dered bnllaea In lhe
minor mishap on miMraped Baker
Street near Fembeath Lane, according
to Costa Mesa Pollceman Paul Alex·
ander. •
Deputy DonoJd Mendenhall, SI, o1
Anaheim, waa drl'llnl ftll on Baker
Stnct when Mn. Stovma' car suddenly
appeared In the IOI and be couldn't
atop In tlmt, accordlng to poU.. reporta.
The woman told Olflc<r Alexander she
wu drlvlni along when ber car'• eqlne
llUddenJy ltalled and she WU irYlna
to llart It leal thao so -fat.r irbeDhl~ ~
dtacomlorta.
The beavy mil~ which cloeed Orange
County Airport today, w .. espected to
continue throuib the Digbt. Rahl pro-
spects for Wednesday were tabbed at
50 percent.
Temperatures were eJPeCted to drop
into the low M's along the Orange Coast
Wednesday, with •llgbUy higher readings
in the lnland areas.
Bequette said, "Some of the kid!
waited at the bus stops all that tlme.t•
Morrison said Newport-Mesa bus driven:
told him they ended up carrying about
one-fourth of their normal load.
The Ocean Vlew District contacted
two county radlo ttations which broad·
cast the news the buses were delayed
and later that they were rolling.
Morbon said, "We have a little book
of rules and regulaUom here. It says
in case Of fog, go home and return
to the bus atop in one hour and repeat
that procedure.
"I'm not B!D'e all the kids would know
about it though," be remarked.
In the Huntington Beach City lltstrlct
buses started on time but. finlsbed a
hall bour late beca11!1! of slow driving.
Fountain Valley school bUlles also left
on time and ran late.
LAGUNA LIGHT
Today's fog wam't as heavy in Laguna,
B e a c b. But a school transportaUon
worker who said she used to work for
Newport.Mesa commented:
"Boy lt must have been aoup up there
because those drivers are not cowards
in any way."
From Page 1
JET SUITS ...
three actions have yet been set by
Superior Cow1 officials.
Complaints by a further I , 0 0 0
homeowners in the Corona del Mar,
Costa Mesa and· Newport Beach areas:
are currently being prepared, Orange
County Airport Noise Abatement Com-
mittee representaUves state. They are
expected to total more than $27 mlWon.
Today's claims, as in the previous
actions, have all previously been denied
by county supervisors.
All three suita additionally call for
the granting af an lnjuncUon which would
bar jet aircraft from Orange 'County
Airport.
Damages listed in the complaints are
assessed Crom the aates that two jet
services laWlched operaUons at Orange
County Airport; Air W esl on SepL I,
1961 arul Air Calllornla on May I, 1961.
The actions charge that the homes
listed are directJy under or within S0W1d
of Dlgbt paths used by both airlines.
The 3911 bomeowoera claim that their
properties have been subjected to "great
vibrations, deafening noise, embsion ol
naW1eatlng, smolre, vapon, duJt, IOOI
and oU."
From Page 1
PLANNERS ••• 1
lmmenaely popular due lo llmlted -
aod .... In upkeep, with .. -factor. .
Thl--PlaDlllni Con>milalon. mwever,
offered the Opfllloo lbet the llifo ii more
lllllted lo I molal unit thao I peraoul
residence and wantl the unlll either
IDcnued ID lbe or ac:rapped. ,·
---------------
American D'eaths War . • Ill
r
App oachi11;g .· Korea To ... u.l '
From Win Servlcet
SAIGON .;. 'l\O DluiiJ>er' o1 ~
killed_ ID Yletiwn hu · ~s~ooo.
U.S. mllitary llOUl'Ctl Aid today. Nearly
ball have died thls,year. .
Olllclal reporll showed 1111 '• a m
flshfllli lln<e Jan. I, 1961, 'had lc11led
29,865 Americans through Nov. 30. But
Ibo U.S. f!eadquarlers sources Aid Ibo
number hu now passed the 30,000 mark.
'rbe disclosure came as the U.S. Com·
mand reJ>Oried . Communist -'lbelllDgl
against nine mllitary camps and vtllages
on three Gdea of SaJg0. and Cambodian
border flihtlng which killed 14 American
aoldlers. Monday aa Air F.,.. Maj. Robert L.
Tbe Vietnam dtath toll ll10\J!'1ed iteadJ-Mc:Cann of Dedham M8!1.
Jy toward the 31,m U.S. oolinen killed The lea ol ·'·',',.. ·•-~-·....,ts tn the Korean war, America'• . fourth -aer .......,.....s -a~ --t-
costllest war 1n Uvet lost. near Saigon was the second In five
Official statlslics allowed -Jy ball days, beadquarler: said.
of the Amerlcao Vletaam loasea -nearly · llllere bas been llerce skirmishing
,U,000 ~died this jOar. For the war, along Ibo Cambodian border In the past
more thao 1901llOO U.S. wvlcemen have two -ks .. u s Wantry try to bring
been wouodea. and 'IDOther I.JOO are • • • llaled .. !Dlulnl In action or captured. part of this ,_ to batUe.
Over NGl'tb 'lietnain Monday, Com-The enemy is in position for a quick
munist gunners tried but failed with strike southward towar'd Saigon an\i
the Commgnisj. nation sinee lbe Nov.. American attempts to penetrate the ar-
1 bomblni bait. Today ~uarten Iden-ea have brouibt on flshtm& with North
tilled one ol lhe two• pilots reJCUed Vletlwnese troops.
Trial Begins for Order1y
On _Theft, Rape C_harges
Edward Cook
Heads Upper
Bay Group
Trlal opened Mooday In Orange Coonty'
Superior eourt for a Santa Ana boepltal
orderly accused of a series of burglaries
and rapes whlcll ended in a struggle
at a Westminster policeman's apartment.
Ronald L. Hall, 27, faecs 14 felony
Dance Saturday
Only for Eagles
Students from other .high schools are
not invited to trus Saturday's dance at
Estancia High School alter all.
Last week, Carl Stevena Jr., president
of the aophomore class at Estancia,
announced that the dance would be open
to students from Costa Mesa, Corona
del Mar and Newport Harbor !Ugh
Schools.
·However, E$tncia High officials said
today it was all a mistake and that
the invitation was issued w i tho u t
authorization.
Mrs. GeOrgtana McLeod, an ad-
mlnlstratlve aJde at the school. said
a capacity crowd of Estancia students
is expected for the dance and there
simply won't be room for guests from
nelgbborlng acbools.
Invitation cancelled.
Foreign Study
Fibn Planned
A Foreign Study League film will be
showo Wednesday Digbt by Newport.
Mesa Unified School District, which plans
a first educational trip to Europe next
summer.
The film will be shown at 7 :30 p.m.
al Newport Helgbta School, 15th Stre.t
and Santa Ana Avenue.
It will give students interested ln the
summer study tour an idea of what
lo espect, according lo Dr. John Dean,
district curriculum director who will lead
the tour.
. The tour, for which 10 units of gradua-
tion credit will be given, will be called
"ComparaUve Culture."
Famtl;y Week.{y
coiinta, ~ding five burglarl<s aod four
rapes whlch occurred In Westminster,
HuntlngloD Beach and Garden Grove.
Westminster police officei; Charles
Thorpe surprised and caplured Hall In
bis own apartment OcL 5, wrestling
two guns from the suspect in the process.
1borpe't Bister slept 1n . a nearby
bedroom, both she and the intruder ap-
parenUy unaware of each other'a
presence.
During testimony In Superior Court
Monday, a pretty, 22-year~ld brunette
told the seven-woman, five-man jury that
Hall tore ber frilly Digbtgown.
"No matter wbat happens now baby,
don't say a word or I'll kill you,"
she quoted the intnider as saying, before
he lashed her wrist! together and cover ..
~-her bead with a pillow case.
He also threatened her al guopoln~
she testified.
The victim-who abared an apartment
with a girl friend -said abe recognlr.ed
Hall as •ID omploye of the Palm Harbor
Hospilal in Garden Grove during the
time !he wort'ed there.
Deputy Dlslrlcl Atlorney John Garrett
is conducllg prooecullon of the aUeged
burglar-rapist, while be is represented
by Deputy Public Delender Russell
Serber.
Judge Howard Camaron lo bearing the
case.
-. Rites Conducted
For Mrs. Lawver
Graveside services were conducted
Monday at Fairhaven Memorial Park
for Nora E. Lawver, a resident of Costa
Mesa since 1925.
Mrs. Lawver, wife of a pioneer Costa
Mesa realtor, died last Friday at her
home, 592 W. Hamilton . St., after a
short illness. She was 90.
She is survived by a daughter·in-law,
Pearl Lawver; three .grandchildren and
13 great·graodcblldren.
Edward W. Cook, 2149 Aonlversary Lane, wu elected President of the New-
port Upper Bay Aasocl!Uon Monday
night. At the :iame meeting association
members learned of further efforts to
oppose the increased noise from jets
over the Newport area.
Guest speaker Dan Emory, cblef
•pokesmen of the Airport Noise Abate-
ment Committee, said his group has
mailed some 3,500 "Ban the Je"ts" bumP""
er stickers to Orange County residents.-
The stickers were accompanied by "instant complaint post cards" tba( can
be mailed to the Federal Aviation Agen-
cy in Los Angeles, he said.
Emory 'reviewed the recent bearings
In Loe Angeles by the &.-lY Com-
mittee on Transportation anG Com-
merce. He pointed out tba( his commit-
tee recognizes the Integral part air
transportation plays In the California
trans~rtaUon sysiem. However_. be_ &aid
the lncreiismg adveise etreas -Of-jet
noise are oL such .magnitude that cor-
rective action must be taken. ''We !':J:d to ~P the pressure on," be
· Einory Aid that the instrument land-l'1g facllltles the couuty Is lnstalllng
will lower t;be ceiling to ,200 feet, 11 And
we feel tbJj ls not acceptable and we
are working tO get an 11.S for an &
foot ceillnf,11 •
In additfon to Cook, other ofllcen 'of
the assoctatlon elected include: Walter
Wilson, vice preS!dept; Mn. Edward
Cook, •ecrelary-treaJUrer; Harold Garn-
sey, retiring president and new member
of the execuUve board. Other executive
board members are Pat Shepard, Joseph
Morris, aod Sherman Wicker.
I
Novelist Steinbeck
Said 'Seriously' ID
NEW YORK (UPI) -John Steinbeck,
winner of the Nobel and Pulitzer Prizes
for his novels and plays, was 'reported
to be seriously ill today at bis Manhattan
borne.
A source close to the 66-year-old author
said Steinbeck was suffering a heart
condition. Steinbeck underwent spinal
Slll'gery last year to correct a condition
that was impeding his activities u a
roving journalist.
Saturday is
DOUBLE FEATURE
DAY
Starting Det. 14th
The nation's f11test growing colorgr1vure mag ..
1ine adds "big n•m•" authors, color, entertain-
ment, humor, rtclpes and In-depth commentary
on lust about avorythlng In the -fd to our
S1tunf1y picka~.
TV
WEEK
Now Two Great Magazlnes
B1ighten up the 'New' Weekend
'
I
'
L.
sis
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ast
Ing
ick
md
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ary
·ew·
day
tlon
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blel ate-
has
mp-
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by
can
ien-
ngs
om-
om-nit-
air ma
lllid
let cor-
1We
he
md-
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IMl5-
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Im-
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'
" . '
BY
,,WILLIAM
,R;Eo
-..
' .
In the. Wind . ' . ' • • I ' :
' Huntington · H8'bour . swimmtp"S
· sed winning by a ' sc.apt fl;"•
in!S the team ch~ionsblp i!I
e ·Ne'!'PQrl Beach. Teimis 'Club's
vitatiOn~ · ~eet, according ~
ch Martin.
He said the club .was repr;esented
y 60 swimmers and placed second
team .standiogs. with . 233 points
blhd' Los Altos Swim Club •of
Long Beach.
~a~g the Winners for the H~·
ijngton Harbour Club were SW!Dl•
mers in the a ·and under a'ge group:
I;ligh pqints also were scored ·m
the 11·12 bracket, ~d in. the 13-14
group. Next meet will be Saturday
at the Balboa' Bay Club. ' ' .
* December winners of the Student
of the Month .honors at Huntington
c.!nter are Susie Jew, Fountain
Valley High School; Sand! a
Brawn, Hunt~on Beach High
SclioOI; Barbara Hansen, Marina
High School: Sylvia P i t t a c k ,
Westminster High· School; Linda
CB.mino, · Bolsa Grande H·i g h
School, and Joe Usary, Garden
Grove· High School. '
Charles DaviS, · Pacifica High·
School; Karol King, R ,a n c·h o.
Alaiirltos High . School; a n d
Christine Marine Weisner, San-
tiago High School, received a $6
casD award {rom the _ shoppltlg
center merchants association and
will spend · four · hours -of oc·
cu~ational exploration· at the.shop-.
ping center.
Each · student ·of ··the · month ·~is
in contention ·for· a .$50() scholarship
to be ·awarded= in May. Candida.tes .
are sepiors selected · by faCUlty
members of the •.business education
departments · on 'the ·basis of
grades, personality ·· and, personal
appearance. •
* I'm informed that·the· boat-which
trapped Art Wadleigh .of the Seal
Beach Yacht Club was actually
a Columbia 22, and not a Santana
22 as had been reported.
The yacht club bulletin and I
certainly agree that we hate to
see Art hoolt:ed this way. I know
what's facing him because I have
one of the Columbia 22's too.
NEWPORT CENTER
'
1\Te:wpoi:t A~
•
Chotin.er Ta'hbed
+ (" ~ • ' ' .. '
.For' ·Nixon .. ·P.ost?
' .
. , -By EVELYN SlllRWOOD . . ~ .. °'-'" ,... ..... .
. It ·•-" almoot cerlaln toda,y that
Newport Beach attorney _,..,.CbOtlaei
wW -be,appol,nted 1o· a higli 'government
' • , ' I post In !he !!-·admlnlltraUon. , ' . Chotlner, 59, indJcated as ._ muclt· in
l<ttera to hla . local . cllenbl In recent •
days.
He noWled · them that he w1ll keep
valuable papen aod wlllB ·Jn·•· lrustee
bolc '"•lnce 1.w111 nol tie practlchii law
In CBIUonila and . w1ll he living In. lhi
Esst In the foreseeable lllture." • .
Cbotlner•h aa ·quietly denk!d ,that '.he
will be riamed' to a · cabbiet posltlon
by Preaident~lect Richard Nb:oo, a long·
Unie ·pmOnaJJ riend. · '
But opeculation. continues . tbal, he ·w1ll
Park 'Bond · Vote -. .
On Board Agenda
The Recreation and PJrka Commlaslon
Uteets at 7:30 p.m .. Wednesday 1in ·Hun-
tington Beach City Council chambers,
Sth Street and Pecan Avenue.
' Discussion oi a possible special election
for park bonds in May or June Is on·
the agenda: Commissioners' have been
asked to come up with a detailed plan
of what they would like to. do on a.
park. prograqi and . to. determine . bow
much it will· cost.
he appointed IOll~aJ ... to .•
aJmllar blgh-ranklnl l!Oll· .
Chotlner la llOW In, N•I!' Yort, headlna
up the task · al t>ultlna 'logether •· Uil of "thank ·you's" from Nb:on to thole
who helped in the. l\l'tl!deollal campaign.
On . completion of !he '.job Cbcitiner wm
be free to accept a government position.
. He got his own, ,fee~ wet • once in
the poUtical arena In Jl!!verly. H1l1a and
came to the concluaion be was not ue1eo-
tabte."
· A man of many· images, he is a
brUllant lawyer aod speech-maker.
Oiotiner has been closely linked to
NI.On u friend and -advisor during the
entire p:illUcal career Qf the President--elect. . .
Liner Survives,
Takeoff Crash
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (PU!) -A·chart-
ered airliner taking 96 Texans home to
Ft. Worth .from a w~nd tour crashed
on takeoff from McCarren International
Airport Monday night when an engine
fall~ and the landing gear collapsed.
Only five persoos suffered minor In-
juries as the four~n.g1ne Lockheed Su-
per· Constetlation skidded on its belly
500 feet down runway No. 25.
The airllher, which carried a crew of
eight including two tour directors, was
gathering speed to take . off when the
lllgJlt engin!U suddenly ordered . fllot
Dick Roblmon to abort because h e
right. inside engine quit.
r
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Wally · (left)' and Bill•'Haworth, University of Washington students,
are elated.'after 50-minui'e.underwater maiden· voyage in-their home..·
mgde minlsub• Silnday. The brothers took the 3,000-pound converted
float : for submal'lhe nets 'down 156 :feet· Into ·Puget ·Sound. The 57-
inch•sphere ·is equipped with ·a·tw<>:.way radio and powered .by car .
starter motors. It took a year·!& build·at a 'cost of $2;0QO. .
IfNl.V-·
Second Unit
Joins Shore
.UseH~
' ,· r • ' Cancer Program ..
Of $1.3 · Mil~ion .
OK'd f~r Cou;uty
The Calllomla Committee lw ~ciial
Medical Progruni bu opjlroved a fl.I
million comprtlienalve · ClDl:tr procram·
for Oranie County. aod,IAilc lleaCb. · .
Cbalnnan of the commiUee'1 l'11Joom..
mittee OD cancer, Dr. E. it Jenntno,
lllid the program now -·to· Waahln(-
. . ton for a final dedllon on fundinc, . . Facu!ty to In vestiga~e · UCI Ties · · r2f.~$~
I the ~ w1ll he d~ to l!ar-
By:THOMAS FOR'l'Vim '. order of 1 business of 'the committee in-of their scientific ~and -,managemeht s.tephens, said be'believes'"lt ls per!~'." nesa:. 'joint efforta of bolpll~, f Pll:Yll-. """''" clans, dentlatl1and cancer, med1Ca1 IDd 'ot"" o.11r 1"1i.t.1t1H vestigation·of UCI Industrial Assoclates. employes, according to,i'ts president John an · right ·for 'us ·to 'exeC~ mllltaly dentil. aocletlea Jn the' Lon, Beac:b.()r..
A quesUon on UC Irvine ties with QPposed ·to Olin's proposal is Associate Rau.· 8lld -industry -contracts··provided they ange County Jl'U.
the ·defense ·-industry .. will ; be raised Dean W Physical Sciences Bernard R. Its plll'pOSe -is to link the unlv.ersity are-made publlc:-But-uifs-r'va·gue-good-· 'l!he propoaal-woald~be-~~of"-r-
W,ednesday· at a meeting ·of the faculty Gelbaum who says he and Professor and industry in mutually beneficial ways will relationshJp bothers me." four point prop'llD over a three-year:
Academic Senate. of Chemistry· Robert W. Taft will in--'at foot · excbaiige · of' university ei:-. , , period; .
·An investigation of UCI ·Industrial troduce an alternative .resolution. They pertise for industry mdney with some · . Gelbaum, principal <:81llPl,ll otganizer -Continuing education, of pbyaidUe
Associates will be asked by• Assistant propose the committee be created to other lesser ,benefits also ·accruing to . of Industrial . ~tea and now the· and dentists In dlainflN, care and ,.
Professor of History Spencer c. Olin monitor-solicitation of any non-state the uhiversity. . .. group's secretary, counters that the pro-babilltati911 of cancer ·~uents.
Jr., who will ·introduce resolutions signed funds, with no reference to Industrial Olin .says be ha s very . little coocern gram does not involve only aerOapace. · -Speclal training of paramedlcaJ per.
by 18 faculty members. Aasociates. that Industrial Associates will dictate llOllDel, IUCb al nune., X-ray teclmf..
The issue, according to Olin, Ls whether Gelbaum said he regrets the ·im-t h e co.urse of research to a n y facility He polnts ·out that mMt campus fn.. clans, medical tecbnologlatl, tberapilta
the university is endorsing war industry plication there might be an undesirable member. Rather; he saJd, his concern teracUon with. industry does Involve and cy»tecbnologlstl. ·
values and goals by formal alliance connection between the university and Is that the university may be endorsing schools of engineering, admi.nimraUoo ·-COmputerizlnl" and ceDtrallzlnc a.ta
with aerospace firms. the industrial gi'oup. "I think that any, the war industry. and the sciences. But ·benefits of the on an · patienta with eanca" Jn ,IAng
He will Introduce two resolutions -belief of that nature is based upon a "The university should at least remain Industrial Associates program will be Beach and Orange County wlth pert.
one asking that a facu1ty committee lack of information," he said. neutral. This ls not a neutral act," spread le all departments, be aald. odic rei)orta to pbyatclani.
be formed to keep tabs on solicitation UCI Industrial Associates is comprised he said. He said the only disbursements have -Eitabl.lah1ng a regional ~ fn.
and receipt of non-state funds by UC of firms whicb pay aoo11al dues between. One of the signers of his resolutions, been $250 given to each school dean, formation proaram for early. defection
Irvine. and the ~ to make ftrst $250 and •10,000 depending on the nun;ber Organismic Biology Cbalnnan Grover C. including ~ties and fine arts. pf cancer.
SPECJAL FOR THE HOLIDAYS! SAVE 126.00
ON INT~RNATIONAL® DEEP SILVER
82-PC._ SERVICE FOR TWELVE JUST 150.00
Select from six patterns to complement your modlirn or traditional table
settings, Take advantage of this offer and save 126.QO over open stock
prices: And, just in time for holiday family gatherings. Service includes
twelve 5-pc. place settings,.12 iced beverage spoons plus 10 e5sentlal
serving pieces. Now l&0.00. Chest 11.&0.
snverwa!ll,
. .
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-,.
··:
IUFFUllS SILVER CLUB IMTlRMATIDMAL Dll.P llLY!R 12-PC. llltVICI POil lf IOI l•M
Nothing Down -No Interest· No Carrying Charge
5.00 per mmtb on ptirchases up .to 120.00
7 .00 pet mmUt on purchases up to 160.00 ,
10.00 per mmlh on purchases up lo 240,00
As long as two years to pay
12 ll11poons
12 Place Forkl
12 Knives
12 Pia.:. Spoons
12 Sllld Forks
12 lotd eiwrQe S900n1
1 De111rt • ...,
• ••w Ladl• l COid Miit Ark
1 ..... -tTtbtee_.
21'1•cedT•llll....., 1-• .... -l_r_ ' ' ' " '
:1.
' ' •
• . -~
u -
-4 ' --f • ·-' • • !
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ALL STORES OPD EVERY MIGHT UNTIL CHRISTMAS :
81 FASmmtrSLANO • • MOH. THRU SAT. 10:00 A.l;"TfLL ,_JO P.~: •
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May Regain House Seat Figh""!
R(lges in Federal Grand Jury Refuses w Indict Harlem Congressma.n
Thailand
. .
:Mobil• prpclaim.d a ~Y qr ~ ..... ~by dly oi-,
· fioia1I acawt 111 Alal>a!Da Su.-
'"""" Court ruling th• 11111 ...... troversl.al fllm "The Fox" could
be sh.own.. Ftags went· ftown at1
half-staff and black ribbon adorn-
ed the doon of Cl!Y Hall.
• •
·-~ • •• .-. :.:11on M.,.;.,., of Del Molne1,
..... ~ candi.dale for
~N111 • !1Je4 !a campaign OX•
P.remier Says
BELFAST, Noilborn inlud (UPI) -Tbe..ic.wu __ _
''We.,. 111 tbe brink qi. ........ tbe
irlmt mini• qi. NwU..'D 1relaDd tOld·
hll oauan.
Cap1. ·-O'Nt!D lpok lor IS
-... -teleY1-end radio Moodl;J nllbt lo lppeol for an
end lo 111" lllOll!b-of -dborden between Romon C'albol"lc1 and
Proteslanls.
O'Neill "'1d H tbe. dilonl(R did nal
rlop lie ~ qall.
"If you want a .,ant.e.. bnrard-look·
Ing. divided and oolllm Uls!B, lhen ,..
mllll se$ for -. lo leld YOll olooC
tbal road." bo Aid.
"I am not a mon V9"!' lo -••acam
l•IJ1111p," be Mid. ".But 1 mull 111
to you that our conduct over the com1nC
daya and weeu will decide our future.
We are m the brink of ct.., where
neighbor could be ..... -neighbor." The naU1X1'1 lloln111 Cothollo mlnorlly
contends the pred<>mlnontly PnJ1ea1an1
government bas d.lscrimlnated against
Calhollca. particularly In housing end
Jobi. 'Ibo .......... el -Calbo'la m,.. !qlpl1'd . aJlfiy Ujll!alnp hr
Pro!Ostanls.
Tbo -riotlol w• ... -.... In AnnlP wblN fol!bwwa qi. Ibo llo<.
1Jnti111.ely Crash
Train Der~ in SpecUil Pre1.1 Run . .
PHU BAI, Vietnam (AP) - A South Vletnlllll ... ,train Bbow..
Ing of! for a pany cl newsm• ran Into a U.S. D!illtary lrucl( at a croub>i lclday, denlllnc oat car with a half a c19zen newsmen and
a doan V.S. am! VI--military D1C1 aboud. Nollo4y WU llu1L .
'!be U.S. Mlalon· had invited lhe Belgon pna1 corpt to h\IPect
the wort beln( clOGt on South Vietnam's nllrood, About 40 ~
pondanta and photo1rapllera accepted. ·
~ II mn.. south ol Hue, a .m11tarr cl! .. el taQ:er ll:µck
pull~ Olllo a grade ·crou1ng u the lkar tnUn came along. The
engiDt wu In ti!• rear pualling the train, and an ope!> gondola .car
wu In front with a hall a dozen newimen and a do<E!D Am,.tcan
and Vlolnam ... mllltary men aboerd,
'!be Vietnamese trainman blew, hll whlatle and waved IA> no
avail. Both ·were going 1low and the collllllon was ralhOI' soft, but It
wae enougla to knock the gondola oil the tnck. It bounced al<m( for
·-200 yards before It came to a bait on the edge ol an emblnk· -
·Poverty Program Depends
On Officials, Agnew Says
Philadel~
(;-iven aude
Awakening
PlllLA!l'4J'l!IA (UPJ), -An earl!>
quW ollool< an lfOI 111Cft thD IO 1l)lloa
1n illametet 1n ;rute< Philadelphia e.r11
todoy, ....,11ng neldenls. from \heir -
l!ul !'lllli!l1'lltt1''dam•
Dr. I. M. Levi!~ dlroclor of the Fell
Pl~iarlmn at t It ~ Jl'ranilln Institute,
aid the quake WU "~ YUJ cloee"
lo the ~pla at tbe ~lute. He
1111•. u ~ .. ...,..ut ..... lban
s qn tjM ~tel" Scale... '
Kiev .Talks Ease
Pressure by R1188
On Czechoslovw
He Mid -wu 1 llngle -PRAGUE (UPI) -Tllo Kmnltn ...,.S· at t :lJ a.m. and the waves laJled aboqt the preaattel on Ci.echoslovakla jn
311 oeconcls. """kencl WU al Kiev by a~
SUrprlsed ..,.ldenll of !be eree jun. tlje "'" lnllgb Communllt Party. Dile
med police, fire, and news media mid>-and agnelq lo baU publl'"lloO el Ilia
boards with calls, seeking lnformaUon on Jtl'(H)o~ oc:cupatlon ~ ZPr&V~
what tbey described u a "boom," "Czeclios~'...,Jo\lal,PertYeourcuNld~
"clap of thunder" -e .... _,le." Tbe party. new~ Rude Pn.Y.Q -·-..., diooted also U>a.1 lht !Qev ne&QUatlool
Polloo Mid DO ._-ta qi. dama&• were produced •K!".-"'t .., str~
received. Toll booths on both the Ben-Cieehoslovakla's ecooondc ~ wWl. tbi
Jamin Franklin and Walt Whitman r~ q( \I!• Co-UWst ~loo,
Bridges -bill &pl"""QU, ther• Tho ll'1'Y -Mid ~ -
wu no dall\lllll lo· Ibo. -over the 1...t.. pronJloed ·1o ~ ti, cialrlbaOm Delaware · River ~tw"" Pll!ladelplda of tb8 C!ecl>lonpap Zpravy i.y Illa
aodNewJeney. ' end<ltbe1ear.TbeDeW1---
Levttl Mid tbe ouU• w11 tho llllh wWI tlle intval qi. the !loYJel.led liiv-i~ w!lll ~ Secretary of
I ¢lice llllliM "o~e .,; ·tj.~~· Mahon, a
can, UJeil a 'Ul,_slz¢ repll· ~·.., elepllant ln hi• campaign. tlie all:IJll'l!'t. C4$d on a trailer, .. "le!!".oiandlng 'too long at ooe
i9Jly.
Ian Paliley, o rilJ>l.'linl --~. clfobed with lloman Colbollos Who held • -The __ , 11'11"11
for ·• time thiutened to tu:e over the .town.
felt in and around die Phllade)phia ai.a for.ce.s In August but we olflddy bmt-
NJCW ORI.BANS (AP) -VI c 1 not critidzlng theJr motiveL I am since 1800. The last one was 0. June ned far "lnluklng'1 C!ucbg!IJovak lead-
-Spiro T. Agnew ll)'I c:rHlc:l%lng tbe effeclivelieoa of tbla 11pe1>-11, 1111 Incl wu almllllr 111 lntenslly ers. It cooUnued lo cln:ulale here. -
:!-< • ~men who rode fp a st. Loul5
...,_ Jlguor store In a <;ab and tried
tiilcld.lt qp were urealed u \bey we gotllng into the cab for the lii.iant,· pOllce aald. '!be driver
told po!j.~ that Nlcholos Plotes,
23; ot orance, N.J., and Jot°"'
S.v•ri.. 24. ol BoMlmoi:e, asked him to nii ootaldo !or them. He
said he did not know .-11111 $125
boldup.
elected offlelall. not the poor, ahould 1-dl~ng~.'-'~~~~~~~~~~~lo_toda~-y-'1_q_u_ake~·~~~~~~~-•-•_er_·~~~~~~~~~~
have the final wcrd on pollcla and
• Mf<:ha<I Gros!
-~ alWld hil or,adualion ctrr-
monit1 last wttk-
end. He WOI too
b1ll!I lakl1ag a uit
fm'•!llGtllctnali<: uam. Thll 1511,., ..
cild U not jurt a
l!llG11 bav grodu.
Citing a fttD 11tan earl» from hloh
tcllool -ho ""' grod1"11<d from
Mf<:lllQGn Stal< U"'
lwnflv.
•
''Tbeoe -le are not . mereJ:r u-trenil.m." O'Neill Mid qi. the ProlesWll
.''Tbeyarellmo!lCll." ~ bQ(1y bof tactics we aw In
Armagb are DO anner." O'NeOJ uld.
'"Ibey Incur for 111 Ibo -qi. BrltaiD and the world and mcb c:mtompl
. ls the ~ -lo Ulalnr."
Rocky to Run
Again in 1970
NEW YORK (UPI) -Gov. Nelson
A. Rockefeller, senior governor In the
naUori In terms of service, says be
wlD seek a fourth four-year term In
19'111.
Roctefeller'• press aecretar}', Le:slle
Slate, said Monday nlghl the governor
plans "to nm again. •. e of the moment,
subject to further change."
If be wins In 19'111, the 80-yoor<lld
Rockefeller wiD "at a ~ for ~
as govenxr of New York. Former Gov.
Thomas E. Dewey oerved three terms,
from lMS unW 1155.
3 Children Perish
In Boston Hdme Fire
priorities In the nation"• poverty pro-
grama.
. "Lil us not ., an ~ of ccm-
pullan bl an hwl._. on competence,•
the Marylu4 I'-!old mon than
2.11111 olfldall <I tbe utlan'• dlles Mm-
day. "Lei us .....,..... par'Jclp&lloo
qi. !Ila -when !boy ... -· .. -.. -"llut lot 111 nal coofme the dllclosure
of. IJDlP(oml u a IUbltitute fOf' the
wlldom · qi. trained prof...tonals. Tber<
la ample opportunity and need for each."
Agnew, a luncheon 'Speaker at the an-
nual Congress of Cities laid both state
and local governments at times "have
been short c:lrculted by an !ncr<aslng,
dlslurbinl trend of lederal aid K!"IDll
to non governmental enUties."
Afterwards, at a news conference,
Agnew 111c1 11e waa merrlni pr1mar11y
to ....,.lled community action prosrlllill
-1 major vehicle during the Johmon
.rtmlnlPnUoa fer pKticlpatJon by \he
poor lo the pava1)' wer.
"'I'm not rellUng to nongovernmental
SUsy the Nanny met England's
Queen Mother and then gobbled up
a royal bouquet. Swy i. a pet at
a home for the elderly In London
Queen Mother Elizabeth visited.
'lb.e goat lunged for the royal nose-
gay even before official introduc--
tions were finished..
TORRANCE (AP) -A Lon I Beacb
man, wbo police said -ed btma<li
Jn gasollnt and set htmRlf aflN1 died
today el Harbor General HosplW.
·-tbal 11'1 well llllblla!>'d. nil tnlnld ml tbal bon pecWler upldlao
for doing Whal ls neceaary, such U
hospital units a D d that sort of thing,"
Apew. said.
Harry W. Diebold bod thin!_..
bums over 100 peret.nt o( hla bQdy,
Be bad been bospitalllld alncit Dee.
2. Police said he had been dnpoodfol
over m health.
"I'm taiklng about the community ac-
lloo _.,.. !hat too rreq.-IJ lo-
volve gian\t of. IJIOO"Y to newly f0f11led pwpa of illdl161uala wbO _,. •
lofty purpose wit.hoot e q u l v a l e n t
mowl<d8e of bow to !IOOOlllplilb IL I'm
Arctic Air Grips Northeast
5 Below U.S. Low Recorded at Bradford., Pennsylvania
. ..
--~ ................ ....
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NMlll'k e..t tit .. _.,... ....
....,... ,.m -...... ,., .... ................
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1 ........ -------.,.....,.,..,....1.-i. .. v.. .,... .......................... .... ..........................
..., ............... .... ...... ................ ., .,,.,,...
......... .....,., ......... JN ...
11111 ......_ "*"' """" • "' ... y.......,., ........ ,.,... r • 111 • C ............. ,. ........ ..
~ ........... ,..... .. 11 ... 11.
"" ... tr ,,,...,, -" ... ..... s-. M-, !'Wes "'" ... ... ...... Mlilfil ............ 1hU ..-. U
................. y1'll••.M.U
~ 111111 ............. a:" '·"" u
""" .................... •1• l.rll. u ,_.. 111'11 ............ l!tlt•.1'11.U
..... Jew ............. •:• •.M. .. ,
lfllillll ·-t:W ·-.. 111• e.M. .. • ...... """ ... •i•-.....
-------=:=..-==-------..::.
T-persCtlrft
·-·-·---"'-ClndtN" ·--.._
"""" Eurtll;f ~"1 Worftl ·-::: .. -...... "" ... -·--M ... _ ,,..., .... --· NewY.t -~ .... ......... ---·-"" ........ ·-.........
St. Lwtt .. _
... ~ C'llY ... _ .... -...... ..-...... --=....
_,__
a " a H .... . " " . • • • • .. .. l7 1• ... " .. . " '2 • .• " .. .... .. . . " . .. .... • • . .. =·: • • .. ' .. ..... . .. " .. . " " .. n ·11 .• "' . , .. . ..
9 9 A • • a D .. . .... .... " .. . . ... " . D o A . ... • • . "
Open • Full Service Sayings Account now •t
United Stai. National Bank with only $50 ••• or
•dd $50 to JOllr present -..nt. You'll receive your
flf1I five piece plane setting FREEi Thi• beautiful sllvarplale,
by Oneida Ltd. Sllvellmllhs, ii Iha lovely "Aowertlme" pattern
••• an exclusive detlgn fOr U.S. National Bank. Start building
yctir UIVerware service · now ••• or -choole from many flne
BlfVloe units. Each addttlonel place setting or service uni!
costs only $2.75 (lncludeasalet tax), •• wilh an addilional $50
deposit lo your savings.
See the handsome Of1elda "Flowertlme" sllverplate displays
al our offices now ••• then get your very owo for holiday en·
tertolnlng and giving.
Thi. offer _.,..January 31, 1969 •
'{:.~~J:::::"f~ An4 wllllt ,..,,,. ., ir, ,m '°"*" • _,,.-Cltrllfl1ln fionu1 -for
. ..., ,... --Cflt ...... c;,.. -· ....... ,,. ,.,, _, ""'11/ff _.,..... ......... ,.. .............. ~ ••h• ,,..,
UNITED
Q Full Senloa omo. Setvlng Soulham·Calttomle STATES
N~'!lRr
.......... Dllml .__ ..... ,_ ...... ,...... .............
• , . '
--~ ::·__: ~-· ·_··.':_.:_' ~· .!•'..__ __ _. ___________________ _._
'
' ~rl~~ee In ~•1'". , •
SAlr& wus . Laird Expert ~n Military W11 -n lookl11t at .
DAVID STYll"
COCIJAIS \
-WHERE ON EA.R'TH ARE
THESE PEOPLE GOING?
• •
New York, C~icago, London,· Paris
Could be anywher•, but we k~ow the first, stop is LA International
Airport. We fly there •nd . back 9 times •Y•ry day from Oran9•
County ~irport , •. , in 19-passenger T-j•ts, It only takes 20 minutes
which · leaves plenty of time to m•ka • connecting flight to another
de.itination., The fare: $7.95 !One way plus ta x) '
Next tim.e you plan a trip to Los Angeles or beyond, think of us.
Call your travel agent or'Golden West Airlines at 17141 540-7010.
11/T SURE BEATS DRIVING"
Golden West Airlines
LBJ Honors
Combat Units
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Pr~ident Johnson awarded
the presidential citation Tues-
day to six Army combat units
that turned back a Communist
as.'8.ult March 19, 1967 in Viet-
nam despite b e i n g out-
numbered 10 to one.
Honored . were elemenl! of
the 3rd squadron of the 5th
Cavalry and units of the 7th
battalion of the 9th Artillery.
AF~ID tHIERE'S
NO SANTA Ct.AUS?
1 Share
. Fun & Profit
•
Drop by and say ''Stock It To . Me!''
We Just Might Do it at the
1 Share·; · · · · •
Fun & Profit
DAILY PILOT Win YO·UR Share Show
In Cooperation with General . Telephone Company
_Ji_'EJ_f_. ----. Dec. 11 through 14-0pen .D:qily 1 to 9 p~m.
·ON THE MALL At HUNTINGTON CE.NTER Working modol1 of Dataopood mochlnn
"talk" to ••ch other at tbe rate of 1,050 words.
per minute. They -" .Och d.,Y.1 11o<k
market reports from W•ll Street 1cro11 t~
notion to tho DAILY PILOT plant via tol•
phone llnOI. Loorn how tho DAILY PILOT
prints your ho1M-dellverec:I Mlltlon cont1lnln9
today's ftnal stocks only two hours after the
stock 1xch1ng11 ·.cio .. 3,000 -mlles 1way in
Now York City:
Win Valuable Prizes
. .
7777 Edinger Avenue, Huntington Beach . . .
I Share Stock in Whittaker Corp. (Columbia Yacht) F.urnished by Kroe~en & Co., Inc.,
Huntington Harbour, Worth Approx. $75-$80
I Share Stock in McDonnell Douglas Corp. furnished by McDonnell Douglas Astronau-
tics Co., Huntington Bea~h, Worth Approx. $·50-$55 · · ·
I Share Stock in Sargent Industries Furnished by Ktoesen & Co.,.lnc., Huntington Har-
bour, Worth Approx. $15
·1 Share Stock in Christiana Oil Corp. (Huntington ,Harbour owner-developer I
Furnished by Kroesen & Co., Inc., Worth Approx. $I 0 .
1 Share
·Fun & Profit GRAND PRIZE 23-Volume Set of 200th Anniversar-i Edition
Encyclopaedia Brittanica Furnished by Th,
DAILY PILOT, Worth $500
1 Share
Fun & Profit
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'RO~~!NO l!IN llOWI"' llllP~YID .
ttouMwlh ~ ~ ff-NM W\111 •" Dlnidont1
/
Rating, New1man· Says
.
80 Mtnen
Re1eued
•
Ship HqJiday
For Onouia
Jfolitlag pe1'10Mlitlf1
~se our moneyl
V® don't n• wltlsk••• ~nd a 1'd •ult w 111.y
~•Ii c11u&. Tiltfa whit 1111r11 r11n -v·11
1Qr. vo~ 11111 llom>w from •too to~ or min.
for holiday shopping, ~Ill con~ldatlon, holiday
lrivtl, any 1110d r9'1111n, Pa1mtnlt Mhtd1tltd to
frt your income. Wi\11 IPRrOVll yqu ml)' hive
YQUr mqney the day you apply. Wo repayment
for41id~
IMIOI.£ "II~~ Mlll\llllY ""ti CASH Payment& Months l64!\ I 411,N 121 11 ~~•uw 11,illll Ill ,.
11.lllft "' Ii ... , ..... '" " Credit lift •nd dl&ablllty ln1uranct •v•ll•bl•.
'\
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Theo~ogian
Karl Barth
IW!EL, Swltzer!aP.4 (Al') -
!WI Barth, the " • ' U ' I , lll!dlng Prot¢ant llleolopn,
died early IQdaf 11 blf li<lPlf II! Dasi. Ill wtl q,
A naUYf QI ~. 1i11t1i
was prai(od 11 U.1 !ll<l!I
l!"!ilVe Prolestont tiieoloilu
l!lnce Jobi\ eavuv, II• ilill
Was V~ tlllM'4 U I lloreUc, a ~
Wblicist a n d an atheist In
disguise -but • v. ft -ti hls critics called h!lll •'Iha
~ monumental appearance
jn our period."
~ gave the world of
ft!igloos thougbt IO fat tomes,
•boraUng a formidable and
lnb'icate Protestantism that
"""5ed the spiritual nature o1 true religion -faith in Clirist. the cburcli m Clµist
IPd the Bible u Bit wilneJo.
Kennedy Near Tear•
At School Dedication
• ¥~, \11, Vo.
("") -~. Edward M. Ken-
1*'1 ,..iurqod IQ Ill!! bllll @I
w..it. Vlr(lnla to dedicale a =r Ii="'~.....:: =w\th~Ul\O aft $h1 •iaffection1•
~ lwld "" Ille """ K""'"1 (!}~1P·l1 Mll1 "1-
ty. 0.. ~ CW1 ilea~~
ceremonies dec!icaUng th e
llol!trl , ' l\"1111t!dY y Plllll
C.ttr •• ~ "' "'1Y• ln trouble Pianne<! wblle Robert
Kennedy wt1 Attorney Genq
"~ lllllo. Ultlt people
•'!'I 11111 llllt l!avt had a
very 1PQ1t11 ~euiN' for my
family~• ~ lf'W\or said.
"Our liveo lllve been UgbUy
entertwined with yours.''
"My ~rothen ll@Vlf forgot
t!1ch' trov~ here," he otld
In ·a qulverlng voJce. 1"ftle
"'"" that passed --you and them w~-e direct ..
1-1." Ill• ~ of IM
!alt l'Nsideot Jo!l!i F. K•
net!Y uld.
I~ ll!eO, Jqlm lllll'Jledy's >loo
tor Jin !he 1~1t·1 ·J>emoorallo
P"'"'lell"ll ~ gave !\Im
a big boost toward w~
the parijr's presid en till
nomination. That campaign If•
fort, which evenlually led to
the White House, was direc\ld
by Robert Kennedy.
And Robert Kennedy c~
palgned for the Democr~\lo
ticket here last spring, shor\I;'
before he was killed by lft
assassin's bullet in Lo I
Angelfl.
AIRPORT-BOUND?
Al!U'ORT HllYICli, In,. ~ T!i~ SVMIOL · OF
llllUHll!ttl 1911 '1'!'· IXCILUNT llllVICI
hrvtllf All Afrll111t '""" Tht Wt1I """'' Ct. Art1
With Dll'Ht llll'!.f'I Ct11h hrvl1t ·Tt
LOI A~•ILU INT'L Allll'OllT
ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT
LONG RAC" AtlU'ORT
"'ONTARIO INTL AIRPORT I IURIANK AlllPOllT
___ .:.:~ca_!!' ~rv~ ~II_!_ fo..!:_ 8 ~ ~r~~~ __ """ ·~~ ............. "
Frem The Long Beach Area Alon&--ln T~t Pill
17 Y eer> Airport Service Has-
CIO~pa111.,•INN 0Yw 6,000,000 Jus t.4P11
C.mttl Owl' 1 .100,000 hssenlJM
Wll~ II Tot1I Of "9.000.000 r-n~ l!llles It An A1MI ~-':...!:..~~
w
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DAILY PILOT 7
Uneasy-Calm Reigns
Over V ~lley Campus ·
..
11'1-""' " ....
. '
Shoot.Out wlth Pollee
llTAlil'OllD (,\11)-'i'°'I•
''"''-'il.llllllJ ....
WM mtll'td I tmlp!au~
'II litlll 1111 Otl. I, died
11-Y lliltl '-' 11Hf0111 !11111\fal Cenler.
Mrf. WHO Mi!lfWl!ll th9
Doomed Hopi Castle
Saved by Businessmen
• •nur•lh~ i. t1
''P<ll@llt!li a wbol@ nlrlwl of
Poomed lan$1&:1'~" He ~~
Y ll'H '! flgpl l'l!!l>li castlt
wllllld lw m111vA~ llllll opeq,
@II It 1M jllllll!c U Ill lndlall Pl-Y'f!!•, a !Pl!'! 1!111 «• oentrlu 1rlil~ IPl!ll41g ~ ~ \XIDllllUI]lty !II mil~
~· pl Loo ~ .. ltl 1913, Iii tlilll 111 llli, . .
A WI ~I al New. !muwlml dh!9vw. l 9. ~ ~ ~111111, Ym1 l>@pn b\llldln~
Iii.I Wiii In !!If, mUinB 11
""' Ill l'\l>tfd •• @d•~ MloU 1111! r~d llfs. II
w111 h~ llrMm Utilt II would w dfy l>tollm1 Ill JndlaJi
museum.
Bid f<ll' Strik11
At SF City F1tll~
IWi FllAlf~ (111'1) .~
S!llfll 11911P1 ti U I I •
llllUIPll lllvtllfd 1be\lt ~
tlwn 111HN@m! ti Pllf
~" 9f lill rr.oom ~-1 U!•llia alpdents to
beyooH elaasts in sympathy
wlih strlklng ftu<l•nli al Iii!
FrlJ!Clsco ~!.ste Qolle~@,
'111 I cily coner ofllcl@1
llt4 Iller• was li!tlt !.._
kl 1111 wp!kout Plea @1111 llial
ftt iltllllN W!I' dlffl!lu!IJ,_
STERIO SENSATION!
Tiie ....,,.., sound of _ ~
ONll• Cauntr M11s1c .. ,. ..
RADIO l<OCM 10!.1 FM
From 1'11hlon l1l1nd, N•w1>ort Boa(:lh
' lnsta11t Chris·tmas Cub . .................... .
~Aacawtt~
I
·'
.; ""· "" ....
'f
,,
' .
• 1!11111! .••••••••
' Wbet"C to ., )'Ollf Chrtatliw ~· a.nit. lh1Nu-J>o1111~Applie\d1m IO tl!t 1'1li1 Wt11tmhrln@k
w}l~rt Y91l h1~ ! ~litoWl!J lllO@lll!I. A Ph@okinJ iir
llO\llll f~ lltoflW')'; IQ if ii: don't ltiv. Olli willl \lit
dHlp 111 Ill)' one of ol!l' o ilft\I we'll hMtdlo t!UDP
from lhm.Uyo11111"1 !!l\ll!Cf• 'Ive \Vaill ygll to know
wt m1help.11111 wli$1htryo11 tlo orygµ dOn't, wowlsll
· yo11J~ood<l!lmtmlian!la
'!IP<>tl year. Wt WNll.Y9\I Ill
~aw tl!at, too. . . · t l•'ir ·.I
1~:11 11.
-· -., -·
No!l!boilnce ...
Account .....
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GIRL GUIDE -Joey BiJhop, above, with friend,
demonstrates tile playboy tedmiqu~ on "Gulde to
the Swinging Bachelor" tonight in color at 8:30 on
Channel 7. Other guests Include Dean Jooes, .Shel·
ley Benn!"', Larry storcll, Noel Harrison and sev·
era! playboy bunnies. · ·
TELEVISION . VIEWS
Diversified
Two Specials
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -It is bard to . complain
about a lack -o[ diversity in television program·
ming when, within an hour, the vieWer ~an v.;-~t<:b
the SupPemes ·tossing out "Mrs. Robms.on 10
close karmony and move without pa'use :..to a dra-
matic reci>n>truction of the baWe \>f Gettysburg
by merely turning a dial. . '.
So it was with two special programs·Monday
night, one on NBC and the other on ,ABQ. .
· '!'he Supremes, led by Diana Ross an.d .BJded by
another excellent singing group, ·the .. all-male
Temptations took over the NBC hour. The show
was called ,;'J'.CB," whicti stands for "TE Care
of Business.'' presumably given to , the show for
policy reasons since it really .starred the andsome
Miss Ross, backed up by the other two members
of her group and the male quintet. ·
THE SHOW was taped on '~bat looked·llke an
outsize roffee table with a clear plastic top that
Served as their stage, and an enthusiastic audience
of young people surrounded them. There· was al-
most no dialogue or Conversation -just singing
aod fots aod lots of costume changes.
The mood ranged from flip to .romantic and
even when the song was old, 1he sound was new
aod compelling. The color of the backgroun:ds and
of the costumes were visual delight:;, and" $0 was
the music. . . .
"The Road to Gettysburg" which followed was
a sort of cram course on the cause and eady pl'1r
gress of the war between the states. fro,m' ,1860 to
lll63 when the North-South ~r: op·tb~ fields
of Gettysburg left 51,000 casualties.
THERE SEEMED no particular reason·for the
program -no meaningful anniversary· -=-but John
Secondari, the producer, is a Civil War · student.
However, in that conflict of a century ago, therr
was a reminder that even wars fought With whai
now seem to be primitive weapons resuJted in grea ·
carnage, suffering, loss of life and destruction ci
property. ·
The location· shots at Gettysbur-g were' magnL
icently photographed aod the technique Of recon-
structing batUe scenes by men in silhouette 'and by
a shot of a.hat lying in the mud or a musket lying
in the grass was effectively employed.
The producer himself handled the narration
but used two actors, Kevin McCarthy ·and David
Carradine to read excerpts from diaries 8nd let-
ters of Northern and Southern soldiers who 'partici-
pated in the battle. Portions of the narration, too.
were illustrated by old battlefield photographs and
paintings.
At the conclusion, Secondari read -Lincoln's
Gettysburg Address as the camera panned the
military graveyard -aod :ifter the briefing given
the TV audience, the familiar words assumed ne"'·
and deeper meaning.
NBC AND CBS continue to run a tigbt ratings .
race. In the most recent Nielsen report, for the
week of Nov. 25 through Dec. 1, NBC bad an· aver·
age of 20.6, aod CBS, 20.5. ABC trailed with 14.8.
Denni• the Menfif!e
~· (
PERKINS
' t I I '
JUDGE PARKER
MOON MUWNS
, .
TUMBLEWEEDS
· WEU. LOOK WHO'S <m\IN'l-rT'S MllLE·EYE ! : FREE LANCE SCOOT,
11\MED JNPWll F161!Tl;R, PH l#IJ-
ABOOr • nlE -Wtl.DERNESS!
Mun AND JEFF
'TWln' HERMIT WHO~INl<S
+\E's A STONE N:.E MAN
IS STILL LIVING ON
~Ill' 'PROPE~!
WHA1''LL WE DO?
GORDO
IWSS PEACH
'
ly Cliarfes M. Sdi* . . . . . . . . . . .. . ··oP······~· ··w . ··~· .... . . ~ .. . : . ·~· .,. .. ~: .. ••• .._ •• o•"f • ··• 0 • • •• • • • ~.
• • • • • •• ,.• • !.,...
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• • • • • • 0. • •
•
••• • • • o, ••• ·. --..... 0. • _,Off •• •
• • • • • •• 0.
• • • • • • •• 0 • • •• • • • • Ill 0 • • •',"t1o '• • .. •' • • • • • • • • • ... • 0 •• 0 0.. • 0 •• 0 • .. • ... • • -.o ••• t
•• 0 • • • •• • 0 ••• • ~ • • • • • .. • • 0 •• 0 0.. • • 0 •••• ••••••••••••• . .. ~· ······~
ly ·Kea lahl
By John MRes.
, By Harold Le Don
~IF 'tOl"rE SHOl'T OFCA!iU,l'U..
Sl'AICE Q AX WHN£Y8t 'JOI WMT!
Q CM llST SMStl AM I.al. I.NP "'V
ME WHBI 'IOll 06ET 10 nfE MW 10-
WJRKOW ! WHAT" PO lt)I WNIT -
AVE •• TBI 6l!JfPllllAAU: ff'!
By Ferd Johnson
ly Tom K. Ryan
Wl4AT BRINGS YOU TO GAIMY ·
GULCH? RUNNIN'LOW ON SUPPUES7 l'M DOWN TO
MY LAST PINT ~~ OF Pll>SMA
ly Al Smith
By Gus Arrliila
ly Men
-N>KJ ONE GOOO THING ABOUT HAN61~ AROUND
WrTH ~ IS, yOU NEVER H4\'I! TO WORRY ABOUT FANQl!O
Sldl&HTS OR IW\BINARY FEl!UNo;5 OF lll!Jl!C.TION···
....... _...,_
--·
l' U l ' I· ~ Y
1131 D lljllC ... ..., <Cl (IOl
•• ,_ ...,..(!OJ) Ill•-.... -..... ... (Cl (60)
llil .......... ._ _ (30)
"Glttlnt RMllJ To , Ru•." A·CllSS
of tlrat artdm !urn '°"lllh ltld recornlz• .ordl. 111-.. (C).
(~AIC-(C)
7:110ll9(1)CIS I-NM (C) (lO) Wtltir Cronkltt. ·
....... "'liM!'(Cj (301
m-·tc> <301
lfEl ,..,,. flll ... '""' . ~) ""ComdnUs Ill ltqu11p... Dr.
Jam• Bosfli11 1mpliflls tht 1"111·
In& behind t ·apull« Of. wrltlf'1
dlOicl fl worda.
('2') TMll • C1111•1•• (C)
7:lOBQ!HIJ'-CC> <"'l "°" findt himutf succumbi.nl to tfl•
wllts of 1 lonly tirl "'9o hu :mn·
vlnced tht Unc111 shl ii In Cttl·
· tomlt ta dtapose of th1 111bmnti1I
ut.t1 owntd bJ II« lltt ,&nnd-
father. 8ren4a Scott pllJs Glory
Collier, th• .ch1nnln1 xhemtf.
fiJ ID <Il ""1 .....,. <Cl (601
Comedienne Totit Fitlds jolM The
O.mond Brvthe11 ind speci1l 1uut
O IHI m <~ ,...., Ut II:) (Ill)'
"'iqbbJ'sP'lnk Slip." ._ loell
hil job to I CDfllpulll'. l'tlh SliYtn.
f'1ul Ford, and 11cait' y.,.... and
YIW Carr lld "--(30! mJ ......... N .. (C)(IO)
llJ D .. fljn .. -(Cl
Dionne W1rwict. 11t'10 B Mowil: "lllltltltrt" (dril'IW) 'It
11 lAill 111 Spa (C) (&0) -Alec lilulnnw, I~ Dunnt.
D@ClJ(42) ........ (C
(10) 'tcw1." Rltumlnt to hb old
BevertJ Hills nelahborllood Oft 1
Cllfl, Pitt flrlds tiil favorite cousin
Ill trouble with tht IN. Dian•
Ewlnt m1h1 her T'I Mbllt n Ktren 11:00 II DD llJl "-' ft') ~
Weltp!MI, tnd N\1111 Foch f1181b as -a-.. MMcilc:l (301 , .. h• mothtr, Vira:tnll. ~ _.... i.,..
D Mlllilll $ lllwll: "'lM ii * AlitfllOlll" (comedy) '57 -Ga;,
Coo11«, Audret" Hepbum. Maurice
Chmli.<. Tht dlurtiter of hili cle·
tectiw, lntr11Utd with her father'
flit on 1 wufflty b1ttht!or lnvolftd
ii h•rt tfflirs. Wltfll hllrl •bout
111 lt1t1 husblnd ••• ind succ:eedl
in intriilthll him.
11)-M (C) · m1m11" Col•••nm (C) (30)
ThrM """ ptTtidpah i~ lllsketbll~ baseban and footbtll hits to prow
tltelr llhldic 'prowe:sa. tl:SO 11 lllMil: ~ (ld>twltur1) '55-Yld:of MeUt111. ltlchar4 Ctri-m ..... , ... u. ce> <eoi -..
fl:) -... -(10) .,_
u m ... (C) <'">
m na rreMi a11 (30l Juli•
Ciirld PftPlnt bllf Jn rM wine. 111---D l17J Cll <"l"" -fCI
m Mowil: <e> ..,.,, • w ....
(mptery) '51-fr11nt Lo¥ejoJ, Lloyd ........
ueam•• ..-(C) <60) Oizit 1J""H1rnrt /'flls:>n tuOll. l1:Z5 D lltN-: "'Stnlln .... CHJ" (dr11rna) '6Z-Roblft Gentile, Camllo
D ID Cil J11il <Cl (30) "T1le Sond Delpdo. Brua Snow Job." A medical supply
ulesman, lelminl Uiat n11111 J11ij1
Bakll' llandltt purchuin£ trlts ro-ll:JO m 71 ,... ...
m1M11 ta lend 1n order. Pett<
Lttdl, ltoftlnl SilllOl'I autst.
n-•._IC> <JOI
fJ OJI (1) (U) IJPICfAI A Cll41
t. tllt iihfh!t 8ttMtor (C) (60)
A utirk:tl vltw of the slnalt milt,
how ht Hm, ttiinkl ind l\'Old1 the
tandtr trap of marri11e. Host Joey
Bishop I• jointd bJ Dun Jones,
ShtlllJ Btll!'Mln, Ltrry Storch, Noel
H1:rr11011 and 12 Pl•Jbo1 M11uint
°'Plt)'!lllttt of tllt Yur." Comedi·
.nnu Ann Morpn Guilbert end
Emlh1Hn1 HtnrJ •re on hand for
a ctmlO tpptlUlllCI.
W EDNESDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
"30D(C) ............
B 111w1c "1)1 ~ lllr.
l'mrn" (c:omlMIJ) '6S-l1n Clrml·
di11I, Join G11enwood.
ONIWS (C)
1:1511 C.••nltl ltlletil h'"1 CC>
l:JO m frlll 1111 llllldt Oil (Q
l:SOBN .. A
t:• m Al-lllM aw: "Th• Women fl
Wliit•," "Th• Amntu111 " Doft Coyott" ltld "'Timlllb1t."
l&.OI 1!J (Cl ._ ""° ..,.. -
edy) '!17-Vhtorto de Sica, M1l11n1 ......
m .,..., ........ cd111111> ·u -Jt• Wfnllll. -.t ......,..
(d~IM) ~7--"'"'
<drlma> 'SZ-&ther W11111-. Vic-Z:10 m ...... a. ,.._.. c•,.->
tor lllatlrl. '51 ht\:to Btrf, M1r)Drte ltlodet.
l:OOO-..,. <••.,> '39-4:0IB<CI ...,. 1.c.r (nml)
W1nll111 Mokitn. 8trtma SUnrc:t. '60-.llm. Ganllf, flltlllt Woo4
• JOB PRINTING
• PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
U11 WIST IAUOA ILYD • NIWf'OllT llACH
"' ., ... • "' ..
1117
IH ... ... .. ...
... ... ... ... ..
... ... ... • 11o1 ...
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.....
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Mr.
1rmi·
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,, .
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now you earn
.... start today!
.
On Benus Acc_quots..(rpl•lmum Sl,QQO in~11QQO m!!lliP,l~s) we pay tho 5J1 current annual rate q-ly plus 1/Al'
annuili bonu1 ii .._.1 thr. yeari or lonser. This rate is .
deaanlned quartotly. the saf«ty of your savi•s• lnliUl'ed
to $15,000.
Let"' llnflf 1"" ICCOUlll, ... hllxl/t I// delalts.
ANAHEIM SAVINGS
_ AND LOAN AS80Cl!ATIQN
'
--111'1;1 lHl t · ' -1-I NUJmMcn°" •UOt . ir.::.., ..... "'I :=ot"-::.·.-=.-~ , ..
____ _, .... IW IZll!lll!Cf ~Ill~ I l.Ol\\T1!lffl --.,--,,...,.../
____________________ .,u.,. ----~ ----
' ..
•
Puzzle· . . .
I Pulled ts,. forM of addrt11 lt Trttt a sore throat ll "For WIJ?l of·-': Z words tt L1o·nu111-ll Afrlcm
anlm1I ZJ Edlblt
B ~:,, ..
Staplt food
Bind aoalo
Orltntal
1tn'ant
211nstru111ent 2 Fault 3 Partook of beverages .... 1 .. ~ r nation
31 E•ll1-: 1 C111. Artist Jt Exhort
-~'----·-~ ..... ~~----
--°'' • :ACAlllMY AWAUS
-------I Dori• Day
"'WHlll Wiii YOU WHIM
THI U•HTI WINT ourr
HELD qVDI
2nd BIG WEQ:I
PAUL NIWM~
lo •
The Secret
W1r of
Horry Frln
IN COlOk
Jotnno Yfood~ ..
Rochol·bchol
·--~ .... ".,... "'AlOUND THI WOILD
IN 10 DA.ft"
--NATALIE \\l:lOO
RICHARD BEYMSl·-T-'111 RfTAMORENO • GEORM.atlllm
l•·' 1,. ,., , ,,, •
MIWPOlf IWtl -M ... ..,.._ ...................... ~ IN NIW SCIUN
WUlllClll
lt~YAWMll _ -.0.l'f'ID 0.tlLZIQtn: ........ ., .,., '*'™"
CID mii1l111 ·-....... x··--.. wfA-
I 0 I ...._,._ ...... n
II',,, t ;= ..... ........... _ , ............... ,..
-~·--·-......,.,, ...........
,
I
Escape the holiday crowd to San Francisco. Fly
PSA from Long Beach. 5 flights a day. More on week·
ends. Same flying time as L.A. International Same
Super 7XT end 737 Jets. ilut: .• no congestion. Save
airport driving time. Plenty of low cost, cloae In perk·
Ing. And tho crowd hasn't found 11 yel Call your
travel agent or PSA for a holiday lift from Long
Beach. 429-2447 .or ne-0125. l'Mol•w,..;. ••
E.FHutton
&Company
I n C 11£118(11 NEW YOflK STOCK DCHAllQ[,
AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANCE.
• AND "UMCll'AL COllllDDITT' DCHANG£S
IU NORTH MAIN STRIET
SANTA AHA. 147-0101
lit WT IROADWAY
LOH6 llACH. 417·2t7t
..
MUTU
"'5SE'ISOVER
.-n,000,000.00
I
• • ·,I
INGS
• cmO 8RANCtl Cl'PICQ ---Como Glendolo
. . -
.,
; I
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I
BAD.Y PILOT EDITO&IAL PAGE
~ree~ay~~. ~.· . .
'T'9•i want a tabl• for four that'• neither
~quare, roun~, r,ctangular nor trlangularl'
• . '
' -
' I
for ll)Ore ,llwl bait Ille resulting falallUes, deciilid to
cu& clol!D U..-~ white oeks.
U rooldllda -are In tbe llO percent bracket,
wbat llloul the other IO percent! UWllY po!e1T Still •UFP«U1 c.oerete111>atm0Dtt too cloee to tbe freewll)IT
Top nan;ow brllll(ea? , .
Sboukl•'t 1wael -·dictate rert\Ol'ln( the 80 pel'-
ceni tint,' leaWlg tree destlud!on ·u · a .Jut reluctant
act buod Oil local, nOt.natlonal, expetleoceT ,
• . ' Athletes of the Mind
"Mind, body and rplrit" 11 a phrase long pUt foxih
u • t1oa111· far dev~o~nt of the whole peraon. · T90 •
of.la ..,. :.... usually body, In atblet!ca -bl\ been fo1-
iered tO the ....,.eel ol. the other two, at least In Iba aree ol. publlc 1><m9n. • . . . . · N'ow, 01'11111•. Cowrty baa 1111 AcaderD!C Decathlon.
Those Historic Whlte Oaks
Competlton. are·teotec1In10 academic field&~'i'hey·re
chall1111ed In their abilities.to bandle writteb questi"onl
In a wide /llSOrtment of cialaroom .. bjects 81 Weil u • A row ol. 211 majestic white oak U-plaJ>le4 l>1
Ille late Jamae Irvine, Jr. In the 18901 aa a beauUfica·
!ion project along a dirt. 10&d -El Camino Real; route
between misslOlll ol. the Franciscan padres -bave
been destrOyed on the que5tlbnable ll!eory tliat they
oomehow menaced traffic on th~ abov&<llscuaaed San
Diego l'reeway. ·
to communicate oraJly in each area. • •
)Vlnners are In three categories -bonon, for
superior atudents; scbolasttc, for rapid learners, and .
varsity, for average atudents. . . . '
Jan Scbwarjz, git! honors wlnnar from Newport
Harbor Hlgli Schoo~ and Sblrley steinberg, gl;l var-·
sity wlpner. from Mission Viejo High School, brought
the Orange Coast a dlspropQrtlonate on .. tblrd of the .
honors won throughout the cowity. When the Santa Ana Freeway section between Cul·
ver Drive and Sand Canyon'Roed was opened In 1958,
the txees were Jett untoucbed. They stood some three
feet from the freeway's south edge.
They deser><e all the aeco!ildes ac<iorded atbletlc
winnera1 inclw:ti:ng ·serous, award diDnets, sweaters
with acbool letters, and perhaps mlliiature lamps of
Stathtlca bave now ttared their ugly head. The
state'.Dlvlslon ol Hlgbwaya, JlO'l:lng that, nationally, Oii•
of ·every five motorists who bits a roadside object finds
it to be a tree, and im~act In .. ch accidents accounts
leemlng cast In gold. . ·
Such recognitlcm should be theirs for Ibey do, in
trutb, typify the hope of the future In a world where
knowledge fs exploding as' never before.
ltfilitaney on College Campuses 'Viol.ence ls
No Way to
Get Job Done'
Sum Is Collective Futil~ty
Tho pr-.ce o! masaed policemen
. on college campusea wbere immlneut
threat of. violence exists, and even when
~a(Hc violenct ii octurring, ls an
..tremely complex question, but nothing
will be gained by ducking ll
Dueking it means you ere either
intimldated into doing nolhlng, lest the
situation be worsened, er you act
predpitately, ignoring alternatives to the
use of force.
Tiie problem pnvaill generally in
American colleges today, and secondary
schools as well.
There is coosiderable validity to Che
argument that intervention of the police
authority in smouldering situations where
an explosion is indicated, may incite
to in 9J>losion which would not occur
without the intervention. In cases where
typewrit.er~tossing and window smashing
has been chronic. an i.ntervenUon could
add to the gravity of the disorder. The
question ii therefore one o! degree, which
ls a common denominator of all human
strife, in warfare u well u Jn dvil
protest.
THE TROUBLE IS t h a l while t b e
militants willing to reoort to vtolenct
comprise but a small perctnlage of the
student body, larger segments of stu·
dents and often of the faculty give them
moral support. either out of fear, or in a
belief their grievances against the college
authority will be hastened toward
redress.
Bul that the larger segments fully
understand t b e problema rJ!. educaUoo
which dally bedevil them ii in IOllll
doubt when they fill a large auditorlmn
to thrash out those problems. The Negro
militants with a specific plan are much
more artlcu.late than are white students
and professon, who · appear confused
by their plight, and given to ir-
relevancies. The sum of t b e 1 e
preseiltments ii 1 k i n d ci. collective
futility, which does not attack the over-all
problem, but teepe it in a vacuum.
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., ..., r1lll It 1111 -11tm11Jr'
To the Editor :
I recently received a Jetter from .a
friend who is a student at San Francisco
State College in which be describes bis
reactions to the tunnoil on the campus.
Since be is close to the scene it occurred
to me that it might be wortllwhtle to
share his comments with your readers.
Here is what be bad to say:
THE NUMBERED demands of the ,
mllitanta in tone and content offer an THE MIUTANTS GO as far as they "AS FOR MY VIEWS on the San
air of bravado which seems designed · 'dare in th;reatenlng violence, and aver Francisco State situation, I'm afraid I'm
m ore to Impress a mlllion televfslon that lJ'hatever .violence they chOOse to ound bou th viewers than a handful of co\lep off1cett. , comm.it, the police may not step in so w up a t it at I .could c.arry
Not JU the demands are a~ bot to suppress ll Tbis .is mob rule and on for pages; tlut I proDllSe to hold
enough are to infect the more reaonab1e diHers only from al lynching m' that it down to this page.
ones; and they radiate~~ ~tw;l.,., ~.~~not r~.lp~ed to be ·, "It wW ,b:e four 'reeks tomorrow.a.ince
ol Adolf muer at N~ eym:Wnc • 1eUi'aL · · ,. t I have had normal class' i.nstruction,
his inexorable will Btlt the. test ii the act. The police but 1 on! of The blackl may have a case, for can well abstain from intervention under am Y one 11,000 in the
instance in their demand . far equitable threat ol vtolJDCe. But repeated acts same boat, at least 90 pereent of wbOm
treatment on all campuses, or for courses of violence, when they reach a trigger deplore and resent th.is. Another 5 per·
dealing with their racial bi.story. But ' state, must be suppressed lest tbey cent are in a gray area, uncertain.
if more of the exorbitant demands must 11Calate by mob Ucitement to grave "I was in a class of. 30 the first
be met by impairment of the· educational lncldenta of mayhem, arson and even day of the strike when about lS strikers
life ol • large majority, or U the price death. of not meeting them all 11 the abutdown We have been ):>eriloualy close to barged in and disrupted the instruction,
of a large college, then the price is tragedy on some of our campuses, and issued threats, and otherwise used tacUcs
intolerable. we doo't want Gy. of intimidaUon.
Mystery of Kremlin Aims
•'Jly THE THIRD DAY, with com-
paratively little response, the strike ap-
peared to be ebbing fast; but theii some
of the faculty seized this as an op-
portunity to grind some of their own
u:es, and the one contingent fed off
the other mutually unW things got clear
out of hand.
WASHINGTON -With an anxious
eye on Eastern J!)Jrope, •utborities here
and in capit'.als abroad agm are play·
ing an old and familiar gu~ RllDO:
"What's going on in the Kremlin?"
SpeculaUon about the Soviet powu
structure has inoreaJed In the uncertain wake of the Soviet-led blitz into Czecho.
slovakia. Both tbe direction and the
durabillfy ol the Kosygin-Brezboev lead-
ership are DOW in quesUon.
In recent weeb, touring U.S. law-
maktn have bad a cbanct to trade
theoriei witb olficials, U.S. and for·
elgn, in Eastel1I Europe. When and il
President Jobmon meets with Soviet
Premier Aiaei Kosygin he wW have a
char>ee for a ~ appraiJal.
Pmldent-elect N1--spoke dur· ing the campaign ol a 9eries o{ meet-
ings with Russi.an leaden, may prefer
to defer hi8 sununiU'J until the Joog·
range view gets a little clearer.
MANY EXPERTS believe, as we
previously reported, that Russia's loog-
range intentions are now masked by a
desire to calm anxieUes ll'OWllf.d by the
move into Czedlcslovakla. Sharp reac·
Uon, especially the reactloo ol Commu-
ni:it parties outside Russia, has, 1n this
view, disconcerted the Kremlin.
Two tbeorieJ are emerging, however ,
with mpect to long.range trends:
-A shift to the right Is developing in
Soviet policy, toward the har~line, Stal-
inist coocepCs. This view ls rather widely
held among senators and congressmen
returning here from travels abroad.
-The now nuid situation coufd mean
a power struggle and even a change
in the Knmlin's top leadership. This
idea ls not so wideiy helci, but it has Its
strong supporten.
POUCY -In his one hour and 40 min-
ute lalk with Sen. Alben: Gore, D-Tenn.,
aod Claiborne Pel~ D-R.l, K051g.l!i gave
a :tough outline of the newly enunciated
''soclalist commonwealth doctrine''-the
Idea that Russia la to determine wbelh-
er a Communist sllllter state is following
the doctrines ol Man and Lenin.
Neither senator ls • bard-liner on U.S.
poUcles toward Russia. Gore, a propo-
oent ol a U.S.-Russian detente, wu
quoted after the interview u stating
that' the road to such an accommodation
between East and West would be "•
longer, rougher road than 1 had hoped."
Privately, Gore bas since stated that
Kocygln gave a stark .00 simple sum·
mary of the commonwealth doctrine:
"No nation now in the Communist orbit
wUt be pennh'ted to leave tl 1f troops
are aeceuary, we (the Russians) wW
Ull Ulan."
THE POSSlllLJI: lmpllcaUont of such
I pollq lo< the Unlled Stalel could bo
""' IOrloul. Sen. Karl E. Mundt, 11-S.D., a member with 0... and Pell al
Ille >mat<! Foreign R<latlonl Committee,
refl!IT'Od to one al them a!ler retumlng
!Jotn the November moetlnl ol the
NATO Aliembly In Bnaseh.
"What doa the polley mean il CUba
wants to move out of the Russian Com·
munist orbit?" asked Mundt. "Will Rus-
sia s~ troops?"
At the Brussels NATO meeting Sen.
John Shennan Cooper, R-Ky., told the
assembly's military committee Wt,
"The invasion and subsequent declara·
Uons of policy raise questions of great
concern to NATO.
"HAS THERE been a change in &>.
viet leadership or policy, or both, which
would cause the Soviet Union by design.
or because of fear, misapprehension or
miscalculation, to undertake milllary
action or harassment of NATO mem·
bers?" asked Cooper.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., was
more positive in talking of the unpredict·
able course of Russian policy before the
same gathering:
''The uncertainties we confront are
compounded by the poosiblllly of further
shifts within the Kremlin's power struc-
ture, where there is already evide=ice of
a move toward the hard-liners," J•ck-
son declared.
By Robert S. Allen
and John A. Go1d1mJU.
Dear
Gloomy
GUI!:
What H they II"" I riot and ...
body camel
-R. R. D.
"Smith, trying to satisfy evecybody,
was totally inelfectlve, and anarchy has
prevailed. In my opinion, a great deal
of the blame can be laid at the faculty
door -those who joined with the strikers
plu.s those who were intimidated and
did not meet their classes.
.. IT IS INCREDIBLE to me that the
school has been shut down this long
-or even at all. One forceful leader
perhaps could have carried the day.
Now, Hayakawa bas inherited a real
mesa; but I'm impressed with him -
If for no other reason than tbat he
speaks my language. I back him 100
percent on the face of what be has
said publicly, now and even bef0re be
was appointed. He takes, u the news
media say, a "hard line." So do I.
"Well, tomorrow morhing the school
opens, Ulen we'll see what happens next.
But the revolution ls here, so we'd
all better rigure out what side we are on.
"THIS OOES NOT mean to say that
the oppressed minorities shouJd not con-
tinue to press for redresses to their
legitimate grievances, and that I do
not sympathize in many way1; what
I do mean to say is that violence or
threat of violence is not the way to
get the job done, because it must needs
be met with greater violence which can-
not be avoided U the interest! of the
whole are not to be sacrificed for those
of a small part."
TUILY H. SEYMOUR
Letttrs from reG<Ur1 ere wtlcomt.
NormallJI writer.r should conve11 their
nwsaogt in 300 toOTdJ or leu. Tht
right to oondtnst lttttri to fit tpaet
or climfnott Ubtl ii testrotd. AU
lctttn must inclMdt rignatur11 and
mailing cd4rt11, b1tt name1 maw-be
toithhtld on req114s& If nt/fieiffl.t rea-
son i.r appartn.t.
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New Forces Will
Manipulate Man
Tbougbta at Large:
Within the lifeUme of our children,
not only man's environment but man
himself wm become incre8.,ingly '°"'
trolled and manlpulaled by the new
forces of biochemistry and molecular
biology, ·changing both our persooal and
our genetic naturea, with unprecedented
possibilities for creating either a heaven
or a bell on earth. • • •
ment officials. • • •
'l1le Ruhr river, fiowing through West
Gennany's most industrialized region,
is le11 polluted tbu H Wu zt yeara
ago, since a cooperative agreement
Tiie greal study that. bos yet to be among 2SO towns and %,200 industries
done -calling on lqt gerilus of a along the river to charge "effluent fees"
future Darwin or"Rreud _,is on the to those.causing pollution; why c8n't
"pathology of pow~" jn,human affairs; Amedcan. river; towm begin t.o do t be
a study clearly . d~ealing ~e limits, same before it ii too late?
the ~~ Md ~ dangers of soci.i • • •
and · politicaJ power, ·m:1 Jlelping us to The best and briefest description of
diffei:entiate betw~ the healthy, pro-the cOnru.ct that racks the church today
ductive .use aod the sic\:, destructive was expressed by the Rev. E. Stanley
use ol. power. Jones last month : "Ao individual gospel
• • • without a social gospel ls a soul without ~ '.Nu traditlod cliche ·oMlt< U.Sc d .~a lio<IY. 'and a social gospel without
a 4•melting-po\" 1\8: alW(IYS beeij, a grosi .an individual gospel is a bod)' without
misnolller; there has 'been no true . ~ IOOI •. One ii a ghost and the o~r
elling l · Am .. ··:A~ nd. the · ll.a corpse;-you.can take your choice. m -po m erlCaft Cli-K:ii, a · · • • •
various ethnic .grOµps · bave maintained As loag u we continue . our
· their identitie,, and dual allegiances for prepooterous policy of under·taxing land
· generations, tryiQg to ~ as much as and ove:r·~ improvei;nents, our nrban . problems will grow gnmmer Md our possible out of both worlds ·at once. cities conUiiue to decay, w h 1 J e
• • • · speculators get rich and home-owners Cultural lag between the generationa move away.
is nowhere mare JUCUCrouS and {latbeilc'-• · • •
than ln the moderD father who prOudlj ~ 'I1le prison guard is but another kind
offers bis college.age child a drink of of captive; one who goes home at night
liquor on equal terms -when the child in body, but whose spolrit ls as much
has already .gooe far .beyond liqtu to chained as those be leaves behind him.
halli.iclnogens! · · ' · • • •
• • • BeauWul. women are often dissatWied
How ob3oJete, in these days when· with their loob, witty people are often
decisions must -be made with 'fwious _discontented with their wit, rich people
urgency, to wait lour yean for an.elec-are oftep ·restless and anxious about
tion. so that the , sense of the country their money -and, absurd a.s it seems
c.an be felt and policies t\!rned around ·to thOse without such attributes, It i.s
-when, uaing a telephone -systenl ·hif· • certain that nothing we Uve brings
ched to a massive computer, we cOuld us happiness, but only what we ue,
have "voting machines" rerri.tar """'"·· h •--• --......,...... w at we ,_,, about oursleves ,what we sentim~t at lean once a. month as belJevt to be essenUally worthwhile in
regulatory "feedback'r to big~ ,govern-the core of our character.
Multiple Use of Land
During the closing weeks of the last
session of Congress, vast new tracts
of western lands were added to federal
wild~mess and ·recreation areas. They
included the Redwoods National Park
in northern Ca!Homla, a half-.inllllon acre
national park in the North Cascades
• of Washington State, and establlsbment
of a naUonal wilderness area in the
central Oregon Cascades.
These regions are now set .:Ude for
the sole use of recreationlsta. M popula-
tion growth puts more pressure on land
resources, there will no · doubt be
demands for the natiooalizalion of
Umberland.s on an increasing scale.
AS TIME GOES on, il the ecooomie
base of timber producing reglorm ts to
be preserved, people must becomt aware
of the ,,..,.,,11y, as well as the ad-
vantages, of multiple land use. The forest
products industry ls a basic employer
and t.upayer. Trees are a renewable
natural resource that are converted into
bund1'dl ot useful and higbly essential
producta.
Under mulUple me of forest lands
major timber comp1nie1 ~
demonstraUna that we can have forest
products, as well as perpetuation ol
recrcaUon aod wtldllfe.
THESE COMPANIES have opened up
prtvate lands to meet increased rterea-
Uon demands. TS'ey have established
fadliUes for the convenience of. vts:tton
-and have nm Into the aame trouble
that nalional and state parks are en-
countering. Vandals often wreck the
fadliUes. 1be timber companies also
report malicioua damage to heavy log-
ging equipment
~ public -or at least a segment
of It -lags behind the timber lndusby
1n a proper finderstanding ol the words
"conservation" and "preservalion," just
as some of the more eltrtme con-
servationists fall to recognize that broad-
ly ~ private ownership and multiple
use ol the land are fOWldation stones
of economic independence and self.
government.
• lnduatrl91 News Review
By George --...,
Dear Ge<qe:
You say "Write to George, c/o
this newspaper." I have written
to you teveral Umes but I keep "1tln& the loiter boct marted in-
IUHlclent addrea. Are you IUl't
the name of your paper Ia ''Tbh
N0W3paper"l
Dw J. Gibby: J. GIBBY
Bow dld you finally get In tooch
with me! I've simply got to pl111
that loophole.
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.ic>DEAN HAITI-. MMD
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Q·u·iet Pace
Members of the A.ssistanC<! League of Huntington Beadl have a mg-
gestion ~weary 9'>oPPets \Vh9 are tired of-crowds and aching feet. \
•· : ,' · Come to .tJlelr gift shop, located in the. main lobby of Huntington Inter-
Community H""l'ital at im2 Beach Blvd.
• -·A multi(ude 'of interesting it!'DU, something for everyone -0n yoor
, c}iiSlmas ~ ean be found attractively dlsp~yed on ~e~ shelves far from
' trafilc snarls and jostling crowds. Fine jelfelry and fragrances, \oys, ltuft.
!'fl, afimaI!. ,stationery goods, fresh and artifidl'i flower arrangements, and
accessories for the home made of silver and china are only & few of 1he
items on display.· .
A profusioo of items suitable for s1Dcking stutters, bridge winners or
club exchange gifts also are available. All of these are aupplemented by
items to suit needs of hospital patients .•. and all bave a low price tag.
Gift shop hours are from lO·a .m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday through Fri-
day, ei:eept for the dinner hour, 5 to 6 p.m., and from l·to 5 p.m. on week·
ends. Cheeriul blue-uniformed volunteers are Oil hand to ultat you.
Not· only will shoppers be solvtng their Christmas prob le.ms by m&f·
ing purchases at the gift shop, but they also will be assisting their commu-
nity since 9Jl proceeds from gift shop sales are used by the Assistance
League to aid families within Huntington Beach.·
• . _,_
Active and provisional merpbers of the group .alternate as shop per·
sonn~l; those with ,special responsibilities in the enterprise are the Mmes.
Ri chard Burgess, Fred McCarl, Duane Carlson, Leland Valentine; Joe Jr ..
vine, Harry LeBard, F1etcher Dart, Ray Lamoureux and Jake Stewart.
C.tlRISTMAS STOC ING -That's · . at members of the
Msis:t:ance League of Huntington Bea,ch are tryirig to do for holi·
day shoppers by stocking their gift shop in Hun!lngton Inter-Com-
munity Hospital with the gayest most appealing gifts possible. Re-
itiicking a shelf iri pr"'aration for the Christmllli rush are (left,
rlgbt) Mrs. Duruie. Carlson, Mrs. Rlchard Burgess and Mrs. Jla7 >
!SINNER'S PROGRESSING -All .ready far the, progressive dinner to be stag-
ed by the Huntington Beach IDJh School FacuJfy Wives,Club are (left to right)
Mrs. Kenneth Moats, Mrs. Thomas Harlow and Mrs. Darrell Stillwagon. The
event will take plilce Sunday, Dec. 15 at four differml hemes. A gift exchange
will be a hig!tllght of the evelllng,
Faculty Wives
Partyltne
'Buzzing'
• 'Tis the ...... to be jolly. .
'Tis also the IWOll when
everyone'1 party line 11 bu:z..
Ing with acllvity.
Not · to be outdone 11'1
members of the Huntington
Beach Hiib School Faculty
Wives Club who are planning
their ..n porly for tbe bolldi,
season.
Good things to eat will be
the main atncilon at the
group's progressive dinner
Sunday, Dec. 15.
Starting at Ule Zamora Lane
home of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Walker for appetiun, the
members and suem will pro-
ce<d to salad at tbe Palm
Avenue borne ol Mr. and Mrs.
Walt Winters. The m a I n
courte will be served at the
IJth Street abode of Mr. and
Mrs. K"1 Moata and de!Se?I
will be Mjoyed at tbe Knigbta
Clrcle home of Mr. and Mrs.
Pat Jorgenson.
Chairman of the committee
b Mrs. Moall, asslsttd by
the Mmes. Charles Weaver,
James Axton, Thonw Harlow,
Vernon Vallercamp, and Dar-
rell SUllwagcm. •
Altu dinner there will be
I while elephant gift H•
dwJi<.
Lamoureux. · ., ...
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Club Seats New President·
ATLANTA HOME
Mrs. Olin Hordy
Members of the Fountain Valley Woman's
Club will be seeing a new face in tile presi-
dent's chair.
Assuming offiee in a ceretnooy yesterday
wu Mrs. William J. Ballard w!lo is taldng
ov~ the duties of Mrs. Olin Hardy,. who ts
moving with ber family to AUanta, Ge.
Mrs. Hardy was feted by close friends at a
party given by Mr. and Mn. William Pul-
ford and also ns guest of honor ~t a lunch-
eon ho<ted by her board officera in the home
of Mrs. IAurence M. Erwin, where· she was
presented with an avocado ilu• dish 1121d
ca"4lebolden.
During yesterday's meeUng, she rec<ived
an engraved silver bowl ·and ber historian'&
book.
The new president brings. a background of
travel and service to her ofllce. Sjle has ser-
ved the. club as l!rst and second vice presl-
'dent and ·conservation chairman.
. Having traveled all over the world' wtlh
her husband, WUllam, a retired lieutenant
colonel in the Air Force, Mrs. Ballard haa
lived in Japan, Newfoundland and ·uawali in
addition to teVeral bases in the United States.
Wllile in Hawaii, she wu chairman of all
Air Force Red Cross volunteers, including
Gray 1Adie1, •Canteen and staH Aide units.
She is the mother of three children, ·Wendy,
William and Debra:
llCEIVIS GAVEL
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Pro·blem Keepi .ng Mou-th Shut Doesn·'t Always .Close Door o_n· . ' . ' .
DEAR ANN : .I. wu "1taested In tbe
letter from ABC, tbe i-a,e c1r1 wboee
father wu cbeat1na cm her mother. You
,told her to keep her. mouth linrt and
suggested the possibility that ber mother
probably -what .... going Oil and .pr<lended not to -x_ ... added, "Wbeo
a mother is coofnlllJtd with iuch in-
formation she may be forced lo ask
for a dlvort• wblcb abe doemt't want.
as a matter of pride."
I WU liad you -that od'fke. Ann1 becauae I am the wife d. a cbeatlne
hu.oband and Dl1 children are aware
of their lather'• unllithlulnell. s.v.nt
weeb l(O I ...meant my l~yur-old
daughter tell her · 17-year-old brilther
1he "" Daddy's Car' sgaln -ported
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•# ---··-v ·---,r_:, .,. ANN LANDERS . ·~
on a dde llreet by Mn. J'1 bouae.
But they've never Wd anY,thlng to me.
. I appreclata . D1J cblidren'I lllence men -than they'll ner know. It sbon
ltroal charader and gtlllline ....
lklerallon. I am ........ too, that just
beeaU11 a man 11 unfaithful doel not
-be ii rotUn to the core and d._ to be thrown out. My husband
boppa11 to be a wonclerlul lather and
he has 1111111 fine q U I ii ti el •
UnfortunatelJ, be'a not quite grown up
In 10me wayt: Tlita ii not hil lint
alfalr. 1be poor fellow hu been Involved
with at least three other young women.
Uke 10 ~ other Jmm1ture males,
be uses extramarltaJ 1e1 u a prop
!or hil AQlng ego.
UY1ng with the problem II not euy,
but it'1 better than the iltemaUve. -
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UNDERSTANDING HELPS
DEAR UNDF.!18'1;\NDING: I admire
!be -" y-............. , ....
the ableoc:o ol litoWJi,. Nol e_, wH•
coakl ICC01Xllllldate 'to ndl • altaad•,
Mt aj>poruUy yoo bve wdilied llld
meanred ud~ mlde Jftr -.eaa1oa •
!be bull ol wbat II best for yoo llld
yov family. Coqnllliallom.
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DEAR AllN LANDE!lS : 1be woman
(I llbould ay clrl) upitaln uked H
I would Rd\ bfr biby,Tu...iay nlgbt.
!'bad a bowlli>c date and dlcln1 want
to lnak tt 10 1 'said no. She trted
her beat to talk me Into IL (She and
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her bulband bad bf1!1 asked by -
COljPI•, to belp ~te their weddlnc
aonlvenary.) I ,.,_ to change Dl1
· mind, however.
A eoople dayl later I found out the
clrl and her bulboad toolt tbe baby
with them and left blrn In tbe bocl:
... t of the car wi>llt they went from
tavein to tavern. They gol home al
s a.m. .
11 onylblng'had happeod to that boby
I Wou!il nner ban· forgiven myleil.
I am a "'"""' wrect just thinkln( about IL What can be clone about por..U
Ille thaf! -MIDDLETOWN, N.Y.
D~ MIDDUTOWN: 11 tbe peUco .... ,_ l.llal ~ la tbe ... 1 al
..
J
,
' . I •
I
I
I
I
•
I
White Mink Bathrobe
Tops Yule Dream List
Ask a -ljbal Ibo'~ sleev ... a patch po<UI ,.tllch
like for 01rbtmal and nln8 can be removed easily aDd a
out ol 10 will quip, "A mint Ue bell coa~ w\lal ~!" J'be batlq'obe is oo display
But bow many wtllld tbinl; In the dOsta Mesa store flank.
to say a mbk bathrobe? ed by several pi$ made
Tb05tl Wbe tbinl; !hat a mint ~y ~ (1\rri~ which . . l"ed howlo balhrobo la ~ to be th• robe can bo m
found under the ~ • ~• '""""' ~ would cto
tree of a ~-~dle{O.. .i:i Jil41.«Wio · <#Jigina the
a Mrs. Onassis are ~· ~ if desire4
There just mlghl be one im-· !l'lrold Ward, a merohan-
der the U.. of 111 Orqe dise mana&u fOf tbe Sooth
Coast resldenl Coast Plaza store ~d. "Nor-
For the woman 'Who bu mallY 'lDillk ii' diapla'yed in
everytbipa, Seara, 8outll ~ @11~ onlf1 :~ ~ bave
r1az& 11 Olfer!NI • w!llte m !i<tl y~ a m !lepart· bathrobe with a velvet lining. ment wi~ f15',~ re?D of
The floor lenltb c:reatioo Ii merchanduut, whidl ii more
made ol lully let oot skil1s ol mink stock lhan w other
EMBA Jasmine -•·> bleach-Sean store oo the West
ed lo snow whlte 'i2: on.a lliWt... llicludeif in tlie 1!ock
with a Jl.YOD velvet. it f~ ii a fUll Iqtb coat, atrollen
tures tbne ljU/lfW' lenilb and stoles.
Escape From Tension,
February
Nuptials
Scheduled
-·oethier
Betrothal ·
Announced
'.!f!t """ IUZANN& D'THIER
· lirlil..lect.' ·
Trouser Coat
Described
A trouser coat, in case
anyone ans. " a filljertip
of 0.. len(lh """' 1'i\h • lot of The engagement aD8• . Si•tedi1111CI_ unlidled yardage, dropp!ng Coul Collq1 lludoqtl Li1ldf •
I
-For Aspicing Thespian• , ,
Work hop ~anned
~
fl:"iiV~~~ =-~=: ~ilf Qulld of N..,_
port H'flio~N;1~~-11orae of t.111. JAdl•!•• Reday, fmld1111~
annouipd speclal rei!sihtion for preschool through •lblh crade chlldreq
will lab lllagt.1111 lialllnlu, tltl:. I~ illll.MMllllJLllil:' !UL. ' . SOturaiY registr•!IAil will \Nj plll~I m111 1( a.m. "' noou et Gull4
Headquarters, 1')8 NflrHrt, Blvfi ~l41 Mm. ijeadquartera, also, will bt
open for reglslratjoti' h«ii · ( U) 5 p.m. on bee. 18.~ ·
Classes which are scheduled once a week for 10 week~ will begin ,Jan. a . . -
More lpf~rmallon IJIJY, be pbtalne<! by ':"'lLls!g 111• Gull~ o!lllce al
848-61111 ol<~. W4 C"1' at~. --• ll,l'llct..meii\~IJ !ll8l' feg\fier their l'hildren •I lh• Chrjslma• luncb-eon meil!nf j>Tuined for 10 a.Iii: Thursday ;-Dec. 'ii In Uie l.ido life borne el
Mrs. Ralph Tandowsky. -
Members \lliil preview "The Musicians of Bremen," a abort play
;whic!l will be trouped Ill Hhools, hospitals i!'d llbramt l!=Ueh•ul lh4 coming y..,... . . .
Tl]9~~~anttU~ !!om Newport ~; llicb Scjloql will present a pro-
P'am o( ellltl!m,, !!!l~ic. '!'lie group ·14 ffif'°1"'1 ~114' YMI Dyke .
Star Clua ' .
ln~tcillin9
EWott and SleJ>llltl l'awlowA\ ~ ~·1 llsterbood gathered from • yoke.
i.a. -··~ bJ the ..-·11it fc!llrlll widnesda, 11'! !!!!'!!!! \!! ~ wi!h Glvt to Yo"• lect' llr • ..i of lllf lDll'llll In Temple panjl m Wll 1C011 In the ", brldH 1 parents, · ,.... ~ Ral!Pol lcbool, Costa •Prinl collection of Marquise, .J
Mr•. lloblrl o, ~Cl! uua-.f""'M:;;""'m' .~.· ,.!.!,..;;;;;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;•;;ll~"';;YGr;;;;,• ;;llm;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;U;;n;;lh;;'d;.P;;u;;n;;"I~ tiJlllo!! Beach. ••
The couple wm bt !llm!ld
Feb. II In Bl Boclf.venlllf'I
COthQllc Church.
Thi brjclqroom--. ...
ol llr. 1D<j Mrs. J11141'4!
PawlowUi ofH u n t la 1-toJ' Beacm. eraduated fr 0 Ill
Marina lillh ljcbooL Ills nancee a1ao !l'aduated lrom •
Marina.
Family
· Enforces Trend . for Elegant Bath
''Feminique1'
feeling!.
•
0 NEW YORK (UPI) -The ~ statistics teU the 1tory ot. a
~ trend that'• emeried In the
: United States only In the lut
' five years.
: lt ls the trend to the eleaant
' bath. Not just lo 1et clean,
•-but to loll and relu In the
!usury of !rljl'1Ult wlllen. The
evo1uUon of bath.in& traces
from knl!lhll ol old In tuba
awash w!th ,_ petals, lo
Cleopatra dlpplnf In mlll: ....
stead fl w1ter, ta t b e
emergence kMJ,Q' "-t b e
utilltariatl batlti'oom where the
chlldrtn'1 toya, father'• w,.
!ng gear, a ham(lef ol laundry
and • ba1 "' ha\r -compete tor. apace.
But thll uWltariatl ....,.pt
Is chanlinl rapldly, nport the
people !n1ar<sted In ~ ti
bath products. I n d u s t r 1
lources say that lali year
aJooe. some $120 mllllon was
·spent on ~ pn>ducll
..... bathing, •• -ol
.. mlJllao ..... 1•
~ ~':-""'t:i h(rance dollan .. bath ..... ='='='\:\\: _. ...., . • loalllJ' milk
-... frairance -.......... Ille ll!art ..,._, ._ ftaall1 hsv1
.jllieW ftlf Ille ~ .. .... 1111111 .-u,. .., Iha
~ r. -. the
... -~ ollen the
!!:.!.! ,:rz:r=· ~=r~ EI rr,~...,.:: r:.•.i:::. .... Pl -
Ille llpllllollc -lo the '
' " '
womb."
~., Lollie, • motl••\lonal
research <onlul!anl lo
Houbipnt Perf\lnlM, ~ a s
ama~ an amutrw an\OUnt
of material on bi1t<i!J ol the
bath, .... mearchod the ef·
fecll of color in the !Qll!JllllY'S
line of bath producits and thei'
packa&llw.
Red, for inl&anct, ii bluuse
it'I Udynamic", bu I l}'ID·
bolilatioo ol &OOt! health and
mqic hpllq. White was
.-lw ill !)'IDllolbation
ol ll&bt. -ad poace, and ,.id ior !ta .-atlon
with ~ """ and splen-dor.
The ljlea "' botll!lll io -· pal'll!ve!y -lo -..,., .... lllouJll !hoy ... hive
preoclled the c]eanll-om
lo ll'!'ili-rule. But only
a cilipf1-ol centuries ago, It
"'" 00!1§i!lere<I scandalous to Immerse the entire body In
WTA Ct.AUS
, Waa !"'" lookll'I 11
• \
HAllO
YUM$
watlf. Prelldenl John Quincy
Ad&mlll had to sneak out of
hls mansion before ,S.wn t9
dip In the Potomac.
Ju. late as 1840, bath& tn
private homes were denounced
as repugnant to the American
way. AJMl Iha While ll•"'8
WU oot fi""" "1th a b,,tub "!'-' ":!;..· •<--~ . unill OIU, miu wen o y lD
lhe teeth of inteme opposition.
.\!'!I l<!>nl 1\'.!1£1~' • Britisher in Wehington of>.
vlau'lly tbor0--uih1J .._........... ........... the -"""'~' ~~\" . opportunity of beiq ~ Ill
King Ed'fard vn rather than
install • bathroom In blti
ho ....
l<ld1 l.ik• to
Ask Andy
LET'S 9f RllillDLY
It you haw new nelgbbon
or know or anyone ~J
to oor area. please tell U1
IO that 1" mt,y exteq&1 "
f>il>'l!'l> ~ 01 llelP.
them to become acqualnt.ed
tn t.helr new aurroundlnp.
Hulllll!lfon a-.~
Vis ff er
51Ut26
C9Jf• Me.-Vlsff or
'4M014
Se. Co1st Visitor
4944579
H1rhr Visitor
411-U»
' '
-lhe reol elegance of coor-
dinolion p I u s I h o really
famous V1111'rttlo fit. Anfrqll®
Pl4~ t rl c qt ~i~, l~riq!llfy
l•~l!-<!epll<u.1d, r.119t1 laf• h1111-
Nylon lace bra fiberfill contoured
with k>w scoop spandex sides and
!>eek. log p~nt!~ in mere ounces of nylon-
l w~<il ~"'1'dts ~·""414.!"itll ~ I~ gp
Frost witlo . f'!<illn!'!" M'rst laco1 aho &orclet.lo
with Misty Boigo lace; aR Whit. .
sr.I' In demi ~0-361 s/iort ~~-~~. , •. 32-40 ,9,~
~· 41*· 41~ 3i,-3., $6. Lei P1Ati~ 14Q ~M-L, SJO
J!IJL -""'·'-91111«
~ ~'!·~··· ' ·~ •111.,.......,.
II .... " ..,_ '-""
t· \
• 111,11~1111 rt•\1 fv .... !•ill•t . e Utfle ..-1111 ,,._
ri111l111.
• ~M•11f11tly t11Vlet ,_'"~tl··· t I~ '!loll "ftl!I •t1••1tj 1~~111 • s.," '""' ,, ....... •ft!••·
-·
On 50th Anniversary -
'
olclaziers -Hanored
More tbu 140 frleodl and Mn. Colcl ..... 1 lllW, lln.
rdadvt1 -Mr. and -w.-llDll .. 1i'":!:
Mil.' Arthur L. Colclaler .. -lrOm llelle¥lllt, ;
their IOth ..-,, ...Ufto. ..... Ula -. <( """'"'
&ar)': • " Kan., """ lln. J., -
The Colcllllen, who ... -Ud lamD1, --
married In . llclDdlo, x.n., .... -
have lived lo CorwJa <lei Mor '
alnce 1117.
Fiji n....,. ,--Illa
Fellmnblp Hall ol the Col'OQA
dd Mar Comnlulllty CIUn:b
where the opea house WU
h O I t I d by the ColcJ•JJen'
daugbter, Mn. Leslle J: Gor-
ner, and her -...S.
Assisting """ Mn. Elaine Ou'lstailen, ~ N a d I Do
Whllman,:lbe-' pnd-
daul!hlen; ' llri. DllGll R.
Rooie, and Mn. B .JC. hole.
Out;ol..Ul<I IUUll Included
,
Grab· Bag
Attracts
~as Olas
A cnh hq Oir!atmlo pro.
sramwillhe~
momben ol Lii 0 Ja I
-Club ol llw> tln8'm · Beadl meet at 7:311
p.m. ~' Iii: tbe
Men:ury Savtnp and loin --An memhen wUl partlclpate
' ' In charades, and Mn. Gary
Giles, second vice president
and memhenhlp chllrmln,
wUl Induct Mn. Carolyn
Woodburn, a new meinher.
KAlHLEEN McMAHON
Cost• Me1an
Wedding
Mn. Rowan Adai!ll Wm lead
table topics, and Mrs. Wtlllam
Woodruff, Oraoie C·o u n t y
Toutm1str!:ss Club, will
evaluate the ..........
Addltlooal lnlormatlan for
-wlshlJll to attend may he obtained by calUq ldn.
Calvin Olcott, 147-1181. .
St. Nick,
Trojans
Team Up
•
Needing a ·Push in Right Direction
Girl Scouts from Corona d"1 Mat Troop 830 gave special attention to the pedia-
trics playroom on a tour of'Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterlll!l. The. girls
d0nated hand-made puppets to the hospital. Liz Healy lllld Mrs. William Bon.
• • •
Horoscope .
Gemini: Check . Reports
• WEONESDA 'j: • ......, an -..eel• Jlelalls who leao '"' r:"; Y• ar>
OECEM•E"' f f' unfold, W h tire pulzleineat IDOi! ~ *II IC ' • " prevalled tbeie II ...,. ld@d .. ~ for lcned -A
, By SYDlllY' OMAllll eon~ Ycu)'llo!r wbft . qe1' fl>~ II ~J.
--~-~·-... wi """can't be dQOe., , ilao men ...._.,., ·-w-....... WYW ·~ ·~(Feb. 11-Marc'h 211): . miNmw. ~: =!JY·: .Alll'oloo\>OIDl'lhl Your abilll1 r to ,be; 1111>~~ Oycle 'hlcb d or VIRGO,
ARlJ!ll (llarobD-Afril 11): -you .'llldl ~l, ;tou. i LIBRA. 8peda1 ...i to '
Yaat-,dlnctloolllub--~toputfingiirOl],pillae TAURUS: Talla Uma.la ma1'· J: :,.._ ~llP .. i:.= =~ YfpA ~··~~;_'11d' cooilplace
llltlbodl, coaceptl. W Of ll • tOUcbbe" h•~ • D ~ f • t , . ~ to fllMll wt """" .._ • ,... ._ ..cs.a•-miy act tn ec-•9Y~~, bl money .,. ............. ~ ""*"" ...., • Otnarr'1 tlooltllt, .. s.c ..... ""'" , .• ceakic manner. Be fledble. IP TODAY Ii fOUll ,,.,~.,., w.,..,,. .., . ....,,.
A awprlle meuap ii due. BIRTUD,AY you 8rt1 lntuitf.vfi, 1 ::...: ..:"t,.1t-v ~1-.. ~~
-TAUIWI (April JO.M11 JO):. 1dGJlstlc. Yod attract•people g~~:-\.:t,,.• •ttM. ..... Y.n. Y~I may feel llnoar1td bylipiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiij;;i;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1
oae who appeara .overly cau-. • 1· tlml.Anlveat~
A change II due. But you DANE!CER •
doo\ have to nub Into ll
Clllld clllml attentkm. Be fair
but llnn. GRANDFA. THER CLOCK · 1·1: -GEMlill (May D'..June m): • i.
Allodate lries lo Impart
meaqe Jn a subile manner. I ·
l(oep mind open. • p le c. ~ t ·.' toctther puzzle. Yoa IUCCeed ,
U willtog to put Jn ·estra Ume.
First nPorta lhould he cbeclt· I '
ed. More facta available. i 1
CANCER (June 21-July D): i ,
Fallo flalterl' II your ad· '1" \oenary today. Gel at llijth
-«Ulcard IOlt IOIP.· Rela\Jve ' ''.
may not be !µUy Informed. I
Know thll -do some cbeclt·
Ing on your own.
LEO (July IS-Aq. D): Hold
oil m large ~tqre. El .. men! of deception could eziat.
See situation 1n reall5Uc llaht
-lnvolvea property worth.
Qeck Yalµea. Investment G·
pert llhouJd he coosulted.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. D):
' Delay journey u practlcll
' OOblulioG -)o d«nlnate: Ywr cyde II hlcb-'J'b... II
.. -to he pushed, -or -Obtain blnt from LEO message..
!•
'J I i•
i' " ,
I ' I I·
I' ,
I ' j1
l I
News told
, ner, troop leader; push Paula McNamee in the toy engine around the 'play· St. Nick and the Trojan ·
LIBllA (Sep\. 2lo-Oct. D):
'I'tiere are ·bidden factors. You
could he In !or l"fPl'lle. A
proJecl II e«npleted. Many
aeeQl to know i.rore you are
llilormed. Matol<lln "dignity. ! '
I . room. Junior Auxiliary. wlD join------------'~---------------Dciil't he caupt off guard.
SCORPIO (Oct. ZS.No~. 21):
forces Dec. 20 to aid the Mr. and Mrs. James L. McMahon Jr. of Costa Mesa University · fl. Sou t be r o
have announced the engage-Callfornia'a tutorial project.
ment of thelr d a u g b t e r , That is .the night the aux·
KaUtletn 'M c M. ah OD , to 11iary will spomor its annual
Ricb&nl Scott Spomer· Cbrtstmu party lo the. Jntoe
Vows, Rings Exchanged
Aura. of glamour llllTOlllldJ
you. Be d1tcreet. Don't wear
~ oa sleeve. Some may
ll'y to wur you down. Heed
'lbe brid~~lect, SOD of Coast Club
the r~ II. .,_ ol Counll'y · • :1 ·-•• .,...,.ers. ·The •dmlsatm fee le< --~ c..ta Meaa, II serving with ~
your own c:oumel Not wlle
to depend too much on
uaoclate.
· SAGmARIUS (Nov. U. Nu.ptial Mass ·Recited Dec. 21): Fulfll1 ambition OD
your o..0. Study SCORPIO
Bridesmaids were Jo an Whittler, asked bis brother message. One behind the
Figaro, Eileen M a ch a d o , Timothy Lewia fo serve u 1CeDe1 could be cauae of IOI·
Catherine R l c h a r d 1 0 n best man, ~ u.shen were sip. ~ aelf·rellant. Today JOU
the U.S. Amrf in Vietnam. couple will be ICbool IUppUes Patrlcla Jane Fratello and
He eraduated from Compton and tors 1'hlch will be ~ted 1 Gary Michael L e w l s ex-
COllege. to the tutorial ptoject .t the changed their wedding vows Mlsa McMahon attended _. _ _. durln ial Orange Coast College.. Avalon Center. . and .u,... g a nupt
No wedding date bu been Mn Paie pafbr of C«ODI mass conducted by the Rev.
.. • . , . dd ~ u. •••"""--Vincent Molthen Jn St. Mary
-.;;;';;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;an;;;;;;area;;;;;;;;;,....;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;'! of the Assumption Catbo!lc r Church, WhltUer.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
eChests in the Ntw1:
Young lady wants an ~
expensive cedar cheat. . •
here's a beauttful antlqut
trunk, restored, white with
aoJ.d leafuw, and hand-
palnted on the oriahW em-
boaed metal. with bowed
top. What a fabuloua aift
tor yoUt bride to be. • •
anothe~ cbttt. of. walml.t,
brand new, and cu.tmn
made -lltled with cedar. e Y·AK. •• YAK. •• YAK. , •
N°" yoU Cl.II he pa.Id for
~ )'OUl' favcr1.t•
pastime, ladin. • .be a
telephone IOUcltor, receiv-
ing a .... oalacy plos
bonus. • .dial amy your
debts!
• lkalt Cardi. • .BninnJna:
Draft card.I. or anythinl
elae on thl.s draftlnc ma·
dllne. by BninnJna, with
' scales, for~ ftrm $85.
'lbe 'bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mn. Angelo P. Fratello
of Huntington Beach, was
escorted to the altar by her
father. She was attired in a
floor-length sheath of peau de
eoie encaged in rosepoint lace
wbJch covered the bodice and
opened down the front with
a ocalloped, pearl-lrlmmed
edge. Tbe gown featured long
poin'ted lace sleeves and a
chapel trato, and her Illusion ·
veil fell from a crown of
pearls. She carried a bouquet
of white orcbJd.s, roses, carna-
Uoos and baby'• breath.
Her sister, Mia Marie
Fratello, served as maid of
honor. Her gown wu a royal
blue A-line accented I n
avocado and she carried a
colorful.mixed bouquet.
Peering
Around
SUSAN PARKER, daughter
of Mr. and Mn. Edward H.
Parker of Costa Mesa, will
celebrste hu 11th birthday
on Friday, Dec. 13 with a
family party at the Stull Shirt
...tauraol Miu Suaan Lesh
alloa will attend.
' Darrel and Robert Lewis, pin ~' lorlhrl&hL E>prua
Katherine Rasor, Susan Por-cousins· Vaughn FI J tin 1 views frankly.
razzo and Cynthia Pasta. 1At-¥ Robert 'Hardine, Randall Saj CAPRICORN (Deo. nJ"an .
tired in a gown Identical to and Jerry Yost. 19): You tend today to CIOu
the bridal attendanta was Followiri'g the wedding, the over flaws, mistakes. You
Elaina DI Meo who served ' couple received · 425 JUestl ~. dumth~y ~houu ~~~j as flower girl. ' during a sit-down luncheon In ,,., •.
The bridegroom, aon of Mr. the G<ildeR Welt' Ballroom, J>l'.lctlcel. you will~ be dilap-
and Mrs. Donald J. Lewis of Norwalk where an Italian · pointed. othuwlse, you pay.
grand .;_..ch blgbllghted the AQU~S (Jan. :BG-Feb.
Mothers
Celebrate
At Social
Members and prospeeUve
members of the Orange Coast
Mothers of Twins Club will
celebrate the Yule season
during a Christmas dinner
meeting tomorrow in the Kona
Kai restaurant, Huntington
Beach.
Following a social hour at 7
p.m. and di.'IJler at 8 p.m., a
special program in keeping
with the holidays will be pre-
sented, and members might
discover some surprise talent
during the firs( Christmu
soCial.
Other activities planned in-
clude carol singing and a gift
exchange.
All mothers of twin! In the
Orange Coast area are invited
to attend the dv.mer meeting,
and reservations may be
made until 10 a.m. tomorrow
by calling Mrs. Richard Clif-ton, MZ-302J,
festivities. ~ 18): You receive more aoUd
Asitsting at' ltle reception lndJcaUom where property,
were Mra. Ralph Glmblna,
godmother or the bride. 'lbe
newlyweds will make their
home ln Downe1 foUowtna: a
wedding: trip to S a n t a
Barbara.
The new Mn. Lewis II a
graduate of ,Sl Paul Hl&h
School and Dominican. College,
San Rafael. Her 'hull>&od, a
graduate of St. Paul, attended
Cerritos College and llerved
two years In the U.S. Army
including a year In Vietnam.
Harborite Aids
Symphony. Unit
Pianist Mrs. A. C. Stoneman
of Newport Beach w 11 J
autograph recordings of piano
music at the Anaheim
Symphony Gulld'1 Noel
Brunch:
Nezt Thursday'1 program in
the Disneyland Hotel will
f~ture Faahlom and Music.
Mrs. William James Kelly 1s
coordlnatlJ>i the fashion show.
Philharmonic
Associates
Plan Meeting
Christmas music will set the
mood when .the Eastbluff
Pbilbarmonic Asaoclates meet
at 11 a.m. tomorrow.
The mUJic will be provided
by the Newport Harbor High
School Chantelles under the
direction of Lei Van Dyke .
Mrs. John · Harding,
chal(Inan, will conduct the
business meeting in the home
of Mrs. Rodney Jones. A aalad
luncheon will be served.
llgun1 Beach School of Art and D'esign
R<cordJ and holiday Item•
wUl he sold Iller the bnmcb.
Proe<<da will be donated to
the Symphony Orcheatra of
Orange County • ....
WINTER PROGRAM SANTA ClAUS
JAN. 6-MAR. 7 w .. ...., looklnt at
D.,11.-.. C'-
Tli• l•nlOft 11 • w•ight dri'+'•n W•1tf!'li111t•r Chime clocl
with th• molf m•lodiou1 ton• qu1lity you''+'• •'+'Ir h••rd.
A 1olld br1n t•mpu1 fugit 'di•I and • l•rg• gl111 door
th•t brl11g1 to '+'l•w fhre1 b1a11tiful br111 w•lghh, and •
'wlngl11g p111dufum, contribut• to the pop'ul•rlty of thl1
clock, Th• c111 i1 of di1tro111d woodt •f m•h•g1y,
ch•rry, m•pl• or w1ln111t: 011e of ih• mo1t treaaur•d •tlfhi
fer Chri1tm11. S•e 011r Ml•ctio11 11ow f•r Chrilhn•t
;.u .. .,.Model Shown s339so
C.... Mno'I Olint ..._ o...11
F•Nll•• SfCIN 1
aoan IUNTZ
IAYID ICHM.Un
IOHI AIMSTIOH
AINOLD ICHININ
IUTH OS.CO•
JON StOUSIAIT
GINA
BLAZERS , Th• watchword ls Gl~cln•
Throe perfect exomples olthe Glytlne,touch.
ROYAL MARINE
SHIP'S BELL CLOCK
$90.00
S+rlkT111 ffi• f'll. •Ill t.•if hwt 11 •riMatk Al~'i Mii f..W...
r.llt.ht4 IM-•• .... whtri • .,... 12 K: l11ct. 41._ .... Wfftln
1hlp'• wtt•el. r.-1.i: .. 4 J--I t t1ay ,...,.lfltlflt. 1,..,.,w MM
w ... 4hnii•"Y·
"
LUIC AND ADVANCED COUISES
DU.WIN•
COLOI & DDl•N
OIL PAINnM•
ICULPTUU
WATDCOl.01
UN DIA.WIN•
CllAllllCI
~ .,,..... ..,,, ........ ,.._
6Jt ....... C..,.. IMll-17141 4t4-1120
' .
••• -IM ........
In the new mlnl·braceitl sfyle, all. 14 karat gold.
OVal with gold meehbend, $135. Square clltand rotft\d
dlamondt comblne with gold woven band, $425.
Bracelet cover lift• to reveal the petite Glycine, ~5. '
y.., ch•rt• Mc .. id•h wt1clfll9 -a.111r.AMtl¢.1r4,. M•thr Q••• fM sf...wrcn " • J1wtlt1n SIH•o:i '''' '
II Fo.Jtlon l1ioncl·
Nowpo.t IHeh -644-1310
OPEN FNl!NIN&l UHTIL CHlllSTMAs
,,
i II
j;
I. ,
'' f · I· . I
!
J
Jt lllLY .... , n.Mlr." 1 t r•&M
. .
'Rte Day Ran . Out for G:meen · -B ,ay
"
Six Officials
Suspended
By Rozelle
The ab<-man .......... lll'd .... -
day'1 lol An1~l11 ~
Bean football -.. .. Collllo7Fll
lw been -~ "1 ,.. leolblll -
m1111-Pet. -. wbo -!!led tbeY had made .. "emir" m ..,..
1111 Raml a dmnU!_'lllo llna1 -" ,iay.
slloRll• wd 11117 .... wlll "" ...
!!!' opportunity lo -.., _. ~ 9euoo gamea ud wm't bl ,,,.....
lo any ol the....--_.
ii Ille NJl'L and Supor -.. .. ~.,,;.-..-... ..,.._
Included referee Nono Sclwc.,._, """*' ;foe ·Ccnnen, bead llJI 1 mm Burl TW,
llno judge Jack Feltt ,bad< ...... Mo
rlan Burk and field Joldta <loarlo J:Qlo.
"'""' Raml 1-0lll tbl -.... llllJ bid a llnt-and-10 •ltuatlcll al tho Baan'
12-yard line with » -lell lo
elay.
· 'Quarterback Roman Gallrlel -aa
lncomplet. pass, but .. -dlar(td Ille Raml with a boNlnr ~ •
the play, ab< yard.I bollla4 Ibo llFia ti
ocrtinmage.
After the olllclala m...;bad oll ..
penalty, the Rams -.. al lllolr
own 47 and the down-nad -ilown. It abould ..... _.... -
down .
Gabriel then t1nw -_. ... complete pasoes aad Qdealo niplMd
the ball and w• tho -If-II lo
knock the Raml eul " tho ~ Division Race.
Rozelle said, "AD lb: SUM .........,.
are equally resptmlbla far -.... tndl: of the c1owns. Tho ..... wllidl-adldalod -
the game ia ....-._ 1111-
competent in pro foatbal].."
Earlier this aea-. Wa1Jt,ta1l••
11o<bkin coach Olio Graham --$2,500 by llozel!e ~ ho e1'°'1<!1 tho
ume cnw ol olftclala "ltale a PIM
!tom m" aallnll lbt Dallaa C9wboJ•· The ollidall _.., tbl OlllJ ....
who fwaot aw lbt mla1'11 ....,,
agaillll~
'lbe Ram CNCblftl llaff, intmt -\he few reruining leCGlldl left tin U.
clocl, were not aware that they bad
lost a down u \be Rllu cave up
1lie ball will! fift -left In tbl came. ,
'Rmelle'• llUlpOllalon ol the olllclall,
however, doesn' alter the rtm1lta d.
the game and Ram fans will nevtr
know il Loo Angeles could 1111.. pulletl
.--""' ol 111 bolmol.
Italian Stuns
Graebner
With Upset
,
CIDCAGO (AP) -W-~· COliimlasloner al tbl llallo(ial ~e
Alioclatloo, Wd -.a, bt tlpalil'I u-
Uclpa~ any blddlni war !tr t1le WY!cea
o1 -UCLA's Lew ~ wf!1p l!l'
becomes e!Jslble fer ibO player ii'~
"The NBA alwa)'I U, pa1'I nil alljf
the team that tlralll ~ wlD bt
~lo pay a l!l>d!J ....... 11:--ty
Wd.
'"nlere wlD be Ill blcMla( • .,. ,,,...
..... , lul ,.., -.. drajlall lbt
G•nae of EmotiOP
........................ ............................
"Pod ......... ~ ............. . ·~--..... -=. • lliVll. I -., r r_
.. aU • ·= ?.,, Al • ·-.1_ ..... ...,.. ... •ladr---•-.11111• ., .. _ ..... ,..mu• -------............... , ....
-wflrp, ... • t 1 ·= J, ..... srlS'E , _.. tf•WUee .......... =----. llr -•• ,,.., •• , ..,
.., la<ll II-'
F.-by the cam~a, lhOll• four NQI11twe~m fll!I Colorado bas.
totball players are a sludr IP "9"~enlnlt!on as they follow lhe filght
cl _lhe ball. From left are lam~! ~· (N), Ren Smith (C), Dan
1 ............... ....
I Ill I al! .. -· '1'1111 -_,,...,. Ill' Nlo -II ""' • ""1f ,,,! I rt, -, ,.._, ....... ,. ....
I ._, -wo Ollllll. WI!. ... ........ Qolll ...... ..
.. -....... -u-i .,.. .. _ ......... bn
..... hr..._ I wa1 ,.UU.. .. _.., ......
-_, ., ,, ..... 'II/I --.1-.. -... 1o..u .................... ~ ................... _ ,1--.1·,-·
•.
. .
•
• ' • 7 • , "\I 0 1 J ... IJ ,I 1
Davia (N) and Cliff Meely (C). Northwestern won lhe llQll·C®fer-
ence game in Ev8l\_ston1 Ill., U-68.
UCLA· Cagers.
Voted No. I
In Both Polls
Disagrees With Laker Coach
Wilt Still Having Troubles
LOS ANGELF;S (AP) -Wilt Cham-
? berlain'• cl~ will! hla ~ !lav!ll'I
NBW YOllJt (lJl'I) -UCLA boo M lllded with hla '1!~ tq t!>e Loo '.\nle!U -1 In colltp bub41>all. , Labn, at lie and BID vaa Broda kollf
'lllal'I tho --tod'1 lly art h1villjl diaa&roomenll in a ..Ulllan
lbt --\IOltad !'NI -el lllronl ~'"'-"'"'"' ~ lloard lnll Ibo ~lod Qvef lhl wtu.>d, yaa 8"da ltolll
..... pOll ~ ~ l1llfd Ibo bl U'!Wer to a reporter'~ ~uutiqn, OW
~ 11 Ibo 1nP eolltco . balhlball Cham!>erl'1!! W~S!\1 RW!nr mclll' at
...., bl lllo -. )le wante<l.
. v' Pl •-••--'!'lie hlll>waritd, au:s1ar "at er ~-· ntorttd with crltiel!m el tbl -1-....
·-!
ra
'! • I
Tnubleo with ct,.ui~rlaln and bl•
~ ... ~ -· Ha lw bod lllem ""''lwsty with Alex H!U1D1118 and Dolph lelaa1tl upong otben.
RAMS' INJURIES
ARE NOT SERIOUS
LOS ANGELES (Af') ~ Loo Angeles
Raml ~back """'"' Gobriel and
runninl -~ 11-did not
suffer -lnjnrieo !a -.i.•1 17-tl
1oa to the Clblcago Bean.
Both "~ hoapllllbol ,.,. tall aller
bein& ~-out d1lflnl the ,.,..,
but a Ral!ll --uld .. -.... proved nenu.t.
Allhololli !I !111 ftrll bellevtd 11-
sullcnid a -" a Imel ioj11r7, tbl apol-fald thla WU llOI the .....
Alts the Lakers, CWTently leadin1
the National Basketball AssociaU00'1
Weatern Dlvialon had downed San D!•ao.
132-lJI Sunday ni1bt, van Breda Kolif
wu uktd U Qwnberlain ever w'ouJd
play the way the coach wanted. "n,.t', a v~ gelicat~ qu~Ofl," came the reply. 11 auesa you ·can aay
that only time will tell .
"Llke l've said all aloog, I think
Wilt hu p to come out further IQ
11t 'piUI IO eur players can wheel
around him. He's just Bot to move ._. ..
Dou1 ~ of t h e Loo Angeles
Herald-Et•mlM:r wrote tbal Cham.
berlain wu told or the statement.
The big "R\efY r<Plle<!. "I disagree.
J don't think I should eome out any
further than I Uvt tMma."
He a~ i111JNI q 1 ~ old t13ft't
W h e n we play four games back-to-back
like we just finished doing, we are n o t
much of a f Pl-breaking team.
"In fact, I tkln't think we are much
of a fut·bre~ team, period. We
don't have the \Jpe al players conducive
to this type ti ~· ..
With hit llW!lcl! lo the Latten from
Philadelphia last wint•, lllamborlain
joined supentara Elgin !laYlor oncl Jerry
Weal for w!\tl -ftriirld ....W lit an all·po•erf\11 tlu~
It hasn't worked out uactty that way
aadlllonbo .. ----
Breda l(olll lw benclltd ~
Last Tburtday qalnol 8-Jtinwo lit sal
out the entire foorlli quarlar u !lit
Lalten loll 1-"I'va aid it ~" 111ertt•
Chamberlain. "It'• ~ • "" to be taken out. I llllnk r. 1*llr
when I pllJ ~ wQDJe pma.''
No one "'11! all tbl blama • CU.
li<f!;i!J! for tbe Llhrl' f"1Jon lo "'1
u • -.. unit 'ID lo lldl ...... but tho lad ..... a1no Iha\ llleJ ... _,,
TONIGHT'S WSER
MAY BE FINISHED
W4SHINGTON (~) -Tonlgbl~ boi-!nl match at :s.itlmore bet wt• n
hea.ywelghf SonnJ Lialon and "1Mi
"Big Train" Llncolo mlgbt m '' ~ ,. eod of a career for 1t\l loser.
'l1!o winner ...W set a Ulle shot
wil!! I ~ t ~amp!• In sl! states, Joe Fr--
Say> U-in: "I lhra~a lell •Yro'l>@llJ
I'm I!," Ito lhea adinlllt!! I!! ~ 11
yean old. And """' uW llow 1'7111
it will be before I!! gel! a Ulle ftg-hi;
~ usumed Ibo• far .. :~ a.,.
dru!lllng type ~on and """' ,.t lo 1et ti --I can't wall mQCll Jon&tr."
I
_.._;L,. ____ ...... ____ ,. • ' ... _.., ..
u~rs HECQAN
PLAYER OF WB~W: -
Frazier 2-1
Choice Over
Bonavena
Tars Slloot
ForCIF
' -Polo Crown
lly GLENN '11111'1'11 °' ...............
LONG BEACH. -Newparl Jlartlar
Hlgb -for Ill MCOlld llrlllbl CIJ:
weler polo cbamplonohlp toatpl -
the Sallore oquare off aplnll Lakewood
High'• Lancers at 1:11 In -Pim
Olympic Pool, here.
In the l :IO·pnllmlnarJ It'll be Corona
del ¥at qalmt Downey Jn I ap&
for third place boool'I.
Newport holdl an early -Ylctarf over coach Kf.D Hamdorf'a Lancen, S.S.
Since then Lakewood ~ lmprwed
tr<mendously -evidenced bJ Ila M
verdict over Corona de! Mar Ill Jul
week's aemtDMls, EarUer Corona h I d
trampled the Lancen, JU and $-I.
Lakewood 11,a jlr<mg, good IWlmmlnc
«1tflt--<>De which Tar coach BW Bar-
nett lllYI II quite 11mllar to Newport
wlth It& 1tyle ol play.
"I e~ I vtr)' clOR, lo"° IJCOrinc
game," be states. '"Ibey play ..,ec11n,y
tough delenae and I'm 1111re they'll put
their big man (Steve Jenner) on Eric
(Lindroth). I doo't ezpect Eric to be
able to do much ICOdng with Jenner
on him." ' ·
Lindroth II a leading CIF player of
the year candidate and wu recenUy
eu!Ojiled by Downey bolf Bill Sexl<ia
u "the 0 . J. Simpson of water polo."
Newport ellmlnaled Downey lr<lm
charnploD1hlp conlenlloo, H, In the otba'
hall of the aemla.
1be Tars have one of the1r aces,
Jolm Wikoi:, weakened from a siege
of the fiu. However, be expe<b to play
tonight
Season recordl:
* 1
Monarchs Eye
Santa Ana's
Cage Crown
Two games in Orange Coast area prep
basketball are on tap torught when Mater
Del and Mlllton Viejo play bolt to
invading teams.
Mater Del will be seeking to wrap
up the mythical Santa Ana city cbam-
plonshlp when the Monarchs baWe Santa
Ana Valley.
Mission Viejo wW be tryiq to make
It two in a row with HI ·tat with
Pactnca ol the Garden Grove Leque.
Both games are at 7.
TONrttefr Slated
Entries are being accepted for UC
Irvine'• """"" lllllllal Cbrl'1tnu """" wall handball touma.'M:nt, scheduled for
Dec. 2().21·22.
Over 200 competitors are ei:pected to
be ... bfnct for -In -11ng1-. doublea, and mutera llngle1 and doubles.
Entry fonna ""' obtainable al UC! bJ calUng H4 ooa. Enlriel close at
l10llft Friday, Dec. IJ. Drawlnp will
be held the followlni day.
Cqe E-C 0peu
Laguna Beac:ll and San ctelneote High
SChooil Invade FaDbrook today for fin!
round adlon In the annual 1".allbnlol:
High buketbaD toomlmenl
Laguna tacklt1 Comiado· High In the
4:45 feature while San Clemente and
Poway High meet tn the I p.m. pme.
Wedneaday'1 action lncludet th e
Fallbrook-San Marcol t!tle and Perrill
and Carlsbad. Action resumet Friday. -~ C"""""' w ..._., UI lM-INdl n C..... {4:41) __ ,,
""•!tbNok n 11111 .,.,_ Ill
"""" " (.,...... (4:.u)
"
•
-
Sighting IJp AnotJaer Goal
, -f ... 4 1t::•·-·-··
DAll.V 1'1111' JI
Fer laftwed Cow..,
Little. Daughter's Qui
Perfect Cure for Blires
DALLAS (AP) -!'or DllloY lleOV-.
II wu tbe lauCI> ho noeded to fl&bl
off tbe ~ of , ...ins an .. ur.
NaUoaal 1"o6thatl Logue -IO -the drain. . ' -
The DaUu cow1ioyi" poi>uJir · hillbacJt
WU lyfn& '"1 bla back In Baylor Hoapltal
!ollowiol Jmee lllI1"Y 10< two toni
Jlgamenll and a ripped, carttlap.
ffll !tg WU fn a cul. .He had tbe
bluea.
In bounced bubbly Dana Reeve•, hll
cute S.)'HN!d daughter.
·11Dadd)', who hurt you?" lhe uted.
"Honey' I aot hurt while I WU p1.,-tng
against St..-Louil {Oct. 15)," WU the
reply. ''Who did It?" lbe asked. "Lonnie
Sanden."
She paused a moment and then Aid
rather sternly: "Boy, I bet bis 'mama
really whipped him when he got home:"
Reeva, the unknown quatterback~from
Sooth Carolina who became Ibo mosl
deadly halfback puaer ·Jn the NFL · In
but four abort aeasons, needed tbe tenalon
breaker. •
Tbt ln1cl"1ty ti. tbl -II allrtlDll to bug Reeva.
"Pam (h,11 w I le) llllnlal !ti nlea ....
I'm arouoll more cllrlftl /oOll>aD -but I tell y..i ll't g1'1ng me Ibo WOO...
J don't Ukt to bt lbut in," ....... llld. . ~... i }
· "Payc:llologlcally It botben mo. libJ',
I doo't even get nervous belon a COWllof
1ame now,11 be aald. ,
Reevll Cln now: be 1e1111t1Cbt Dllld
gam,. carrylnc 1 cllplioord alOUOd, llolpo
Ing diqram enemy deteulve •"I•••,.,&" to cerlaln COWboy formaljgol. •
"At leall I feel ~ I'm more ti.
the t e • m. but I belle•• I c • D came
all tbe way back. I J'OD't ,be a qqlllor.Ji
You won't find many !rte agenla
have made It In the NFL tbal ...,
Barry's 'Lead
Sliced Down
•
111 f e I t llke this would be the y e a 11
I would be a big part of the COWboy By. Hawkins . . r offense," ·Reeves aald. o11
0 1 was hlttlng the hole 1. quieter. . , .1• flf
Everytbfn& WU falling Into place -MIN!IEAPOLIS ' (AP) -Mlnnelola'i
then boom, the f'&aon Wu over.'' Reev• Connie-Hawtina-became the flmi player
hu been Joillnl the pa,>I l"0 weelal Jn • American Butetball "-1a11GQ
and Jlltlng welgbll. But Ibero la no hlltory to top 00 poln,. twice whlq
way be can be ready for the playoffs. ~bit 53 at Denver lul Thuraday.
Orange Coast College's high-scoring water polo
star Dan Christy geta ready to fire a shot in the
final game of the California junior college playoffs
against DeAnza College. Christy and his Pirate
teammates won a 6-4 decision in double-overtime
to win the sta!A! title.
In fact, be just hopes there'• a tomorrow. Just the week before, on Nov. lli'i
"I never figured I would even play Haw~--·~ In 57 q-•-~ N-. Yor. In the NFL," Reeves aald. "I was lucky IWllJ ....-cu .wo• """·
to get the chance. You know, I was to set 1 league ICOdng record. M
a free qent when tbe Cowho71 picked ABA llatlsltca releued Monday ""°" ,. I the Mlnneaota 1barJ>abooter bu booeteiJ
For-..er f.agle Sob
Doore Finds Success
In Channel League
There were those who thought privately
a while back that the door was closed
for E3tancJa IDgb SChool'a Irvine t..eague
varal!y loolball cbamplosuhlp drearDI
before tbe RUOD ever started.
Ollef reuon. WU I Door(e). DenniJ
Doore, Iba! II. ilellllls was a second
stringer al •EatancJa IDgh u a junior,
but had an tbe maklnp.of a top prospect.
But lt'1 bard to beat out the senior
QB who bu been ·lllartlng atnce be
was a sophomore. 1 ,
1bla, however, WU to be Doore's big
year at Estancia. At ·1eut that's what moot Eolaoda .,......, thought untfl
suddenly .. the· famllj' mo\fed· to Ventura
In.June. , . .
And with them. weht E$nela's season.
n•a ·no ......i !bat Eslancl& !lnlahed ~ In league a~. ·
The Eagles tiad an · all-veteran line
and an adequateouliPIY of running backl.
But ·when tile vital vacancy 11t
•-•-•" ·• -,.-••• ·r, n n"
·ROGER
CARLSON ........... .. , ...
cordln1 to the Oran1e C o a n t y
Sportswrllen A!!oclaUOI!, certainly dese-
rves a great dul ti. the endit in leld.lag
bit Su:oa football team to "Ute CIF
champlomldp llaall.
We 111' Loara ht IU second game
ef tbe year wben the S"axou tripped
ap Orange, 1M, in a· non.league e:a-
coanter at Sall Au St.diam.
T1ae Su:ou, to be fruk, were anlm~
preulve lo the ID-point win over Oruge
Oruge 1lad just come off a lf.'1
lost to Costa Mesa and but for • couple
flf breW, nUgbt ·bave belten Loara.
The Su:om fnterce..-i GD a brokn
pau play and returned·tt tome 5G yardJ
f o r the 10 abeai TD in t b e second
· ball 'and then were forced to bold off
10me .lmpM1lve num.IDg ·by Or1nge in
the final qarir .to· pill It oaL
IC·apPeared, detplte dte victory, Loar•
wwi't 1obrc to be tbe power It bad
beat in recW , yean in the 1rvlae
Le1pe.
Prelenlly, the Anaheim power ii 1U
overall after defeat1n1 1ucla teatnJ u
SO.Ill Puadena, Magnolia and Rolling
Jlllhj am-. others.
Now ·die Su:om fact Saa Marino
(11+1> Friday. nl&bt at Cerritos College
for all the marbles.
RoUtnc Billi cave tbe lmprt11ion It
wu tbe ~ to beat in tbe AAA playoffs
alter ....... Lapna ·Beach, C.1', the
week before.
Tbe Su:ODI, indeed, have come a
loac way since opebing ap with a 1S-1J
me up. I've been fortunate even u his scoring , averige from 31.5 to M.t
never PlJY another ~own. ' . in ~ last 10 d1y1 to pull within strlk:iQg
Screaming
Fans Irked
Aussie Boxer
"I wOold like to go tnto.coachlng IQlllO-dlitance of pace<ietilni Rick Dairy .o.r
day. But I'm )'OUD8 (24). 1 can come ' Oaldand, who tea•-the ABA with" a back from tlils." . uo 1 34. 7 average. Reeves said hls .injury Wu. similar , . • . •
to the one suffered ,bJ Chlcqo'a .eieai The first bead-on clash between Barry
back Gale Sayer• and Hawkllll comes Friday nlglit w~ ••The ·injtlriet ~~e ·~ idenUcal Oakland and. Minnesota ·meet In the
only he waa going to hll. teit · anij 1' Oakland~ Arena. :·
waa goina to my .lnl.t !' ·Reev• Aldo. BOth lbet ow and-the Plperl! won
a-·~ !. !..-· · -· --three-OUt-ol-lOU?-games_last week-•
Coast Ra~gers
Trim Fullerton
Soccer Ouh, 6-1
MELBOURNE, Australla (AP)
World bantamweight boxing champion
Lionel Rose and bis manager Jack ~
Die, are "tired of screammi Japanese
and screaming Melicana," Rennie said
when they returned here today after
the champlon'1 successful ·uue defeMe
against Mexico's Cbuc:l1¥ Castillo In Loo Angeles Friday nlgbt Undefeated Coast Rangen ad d.e d
. "Nert Ume I want. to defend my another victim to their growing list of
UUe in Australia," Rose said. "Next · conquesta as they thrashed Fullerton,
Ume I would Uke· to have some scream-6-1, ln • Paclflc Soccer League contest
Ing Australlang -end plenty of them." at Newport .Be0cb'1 Marliien Park, SW>
Rose is adamant .that he does not day. -1 '
want to. fight in Los Angeles again And the unbeaten Rangu .reserves
unle13 there Is more police protection. trimmed Fullerton subl, 5-2. ~ext Sunday
" He at.o claimed that tlie ""'"''~·--Ibo ·Ranpn ·IN!<.·to Rowley Part In
. him no · protection Friday against wti&t Gardena1 to . baltle Dfnubia in a key
be said was CasUllo's kidney punchhig. game. .
"My lddrii?ys are still sore," he said A bit :or nifty peraonnel adjustment
'Rennie iepea(ed an earlier staterrient by coach 'Brlan7McCaughey turned the
by -Rose -that he·wculd net flght -CSsWlo trick In the vlctOry over'll'Wlerton:' '
again. . McCaughey nloved ; Jbn Mcwilliams
"Castillo ls . finished as, far aa I am to center forward ·lfter .tielng held to
concerned,'' Rennie said.' a 1·1 draw at haltUme. The strategy
"He could not take bis defeat ,_ be worked perfectlt 11 : McWilllllDI ·filed
Is a bad sport. . in three goals ~ last 45 minutes.
"He'had his chance and1Uiat'1 il". J.Jckie Oeilvie a:ot bis mates off to
Rennie .said he will llarl conaidertng a 1-0 lead with a penalty goal alter
offers for Rose's ·next UUe defense· within 19 minutes.
a few days. Then McWllllams pUt the-~en
"A.group of-Loi Angeles busine3S!Dan ahead for a goOd one m,11tute Into .the
has offered us $90,000 tax , free, ·which aecond half on a nifty 15-yard boot.
is $15,000 more than we got from .George Harry OaUvle picked up two ·other
Parnassus, who promoted the I~ fight," a:oais for the vlcton. ·
Rennie said. Scoring for the Ranger· r~e:s were
"B u t if the . fight g6es to Uie United Steve Johnson (2); Owen. Gorman,
States, I would like Parnassus to promote Alfredo Moran and Joba Atkinson each ~·· ~~~ . .
Oakland ran it.s J'i!COrd to 19--3 1n tbe
Western Div~on and Minnesota upped
its mark to 15-5 in the Eastern Division.
Oakland ii seven games ahead of eecood-
p!Oce Denver and j\ie Plpera bava ·~
five-game lead over Kentucky.
Indiana's. Me'! Daniell. continues to Set
th& paOe in rebounds, while Mlam111
Don Frteman is the top pliymaker with
135.uS!!ts and a 1.8 av~age.
Oakland is the ABA'1 highest scorin&
team. with an average of 131.1 points
per game.
• ... l'T .,.. • .,..
22 ,.. "' ,... "" • 2a 1n '° J,1.2
21 ... "' Ml "l 2fl 1411 UI D 27.0
11 117 101 .as 22.6
:111 . nt t1' ...-n .. 20 us 1» a 21.1
• '" 101 Gt !1.6 20 1$1 n •1•s
14 .. !Qt 211 JO.~
NH -Bowlel!s Win . '
Three teams. representing the ,Newpol't
Harbor Lawn Bow Ung Club ,repelled UM;
cballenge1 .Of • • to;imB · from Laguna
Beach, Santa Ana 8l)d Glen Haven to
win the Swanberger Trophy.·
The trophy goes to the club ..,..tng
the highest nU!Dl>er, of points in a tourna·
ment for Orange Codnty lawn boWJ.lng clubs. · -·
Membera of the winning team. In-
cluded: Team No. 1 -Geoffrey
Grayalon, Donald Slyh and L. E. Morri-
son. Team No. 2. -Dr. Adriaa. Irvine,
Asel Taber and Frank Vennall. Team
No. 3. :__,Stanley Le.Uevre, LawrliiCe
Klyn ad CbarlOI Shull. , '
quarterback.appeared, coacli.Jobn Lowry
ended .up wlth a couple -of candidates
wbo bad never played a minute of vanity
ball. win ovtr Garden Grove and tbe bard-won • --------------------------•••••••••••••• Both came through capably during the
season, but it was evident that they
were a year or two away from their
top performances.
Meanwhile, up at Buena High ln Ven·
tura, Doore was passing his mates tu
tbe runnerup spot In tbe AAAA ranked
Channel League to perennial champion
Santa Barbara. I
In tbe procea, hen are som~ of
the lndhldUll honors plcJted up by the
one-time Estancia sub.
decision over Orange.
Hill, you'll recall, 11 the coacla wbo
directed the North to the 4M rout of
the South in the annual North-South
All-Star prep game la1t August at Orange
Cout College's LeBard Stadium.
' Orange Coast Fetes Gridder~
Lemoine, Jenkins, Grady Reap Horwrs
the 19SJ Pirate oqued whlc:ll pooled a
M record.
Lemoine, who broke all Orange Coast
Bingle season and career pesslng marlal
the put. two teasm1, was namitt the.
1Chool'1 moat valuable player.
,,
ol the llWIOft when Lemoine wu tnJmedi,
WU named "Pirate of the Year." ;.
Grady, • two:-year all-conference Ital'.
WU tbe winner of •tbO,Ri>d'Goulr Pepe~
Ull award which 1oea to the player
who aocumullled the most playing tlml.
He was selected flnt team offense
In the Channel League, MOii Valuabln
Player ol b1I own team, and was named
co-player of the Year In tbe Channel
League along with Sam Cunningham of
the champion Santa Barbara Dons' team.
He pused for !,Ill yarda and 1'
t,ouchdowm during the campaign and
ran for IDOtber ab: toucbdowm.
West Stars
Boast Speed,
Top Receiver
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The West
will have a defenalve wllt sprinkled with
All-Americans and a speedy backfield
when It takes the fteJd Dec. 28 for
the 44Ut &Mual Shrine Game.
Quarterback Paul Lemoine, defensive
back Bill Jenkins and tackle Kevin Grady
cornered most of the honors passed
out Monday night at Orange Coast
College'• foolball banquet held in the
campus student center.
The three senior playen were elected bJ their teammatea ., e<><:aptalna of
Jenkins, Orqe Cout'1 t a,l e n t e.d
delena!ve back who filled In at
.quarterback durq tbe lul two -
Linebacker Jim Barauk waa tbe rec(, ·
plent of tbe DAILY PILOT'• Ray ~
Award lu: leading' lbe ~ In ~ckJ.ee. 1
By coinddence, E!tancla WU lhlrt out
four tlmet -l o u r in a row in league -This corner viewed Denni.I Doore run-ninl and PANfnl at will In Pop Warner
football pma In Ibo fall of 1911 In
Santa An.a. It wu obvious then that
be .w11 beaded for bettar thlnp.
Banquet Changed
Laguna Beach mp S<boo!'• footbaD
awards banquet bonorinC Ill cratvlew
Loq\lo cbamp!olllblp focitball team bu ba1f a nltc:ll In lltlo.
Tbe banquet ii at 1:11 p.m. Tbunday.
-of Ibo Outrtac .Reatamnt. Ibo dlnDer and awti'di pnirram will
be held In tbe atria' ""' .. tbe Laguna lleacllcampua.
A ttmtted tmnber ot tlcftla an
anllable al $3.71 at Sporllworkl and
Siu A.ta 11111'1 Clotbinfl In ....,_ -. '
The West squad, announced Sunday bJ Shrine game olllclail will alln enjoy
the talents of receiver Stanford flanker
Gene Wuhington, who rewrote Pacific-I
pass catching records this past season.
Middle guard Ed White of Calilomla,
tackle Joe Greene of North Te:1u State
and back Al Worley, each an Aubciated
Preu first team All-Amerlta oelectlon,
andu the Wtlt'a defente.
They'll get -from Ron Prltc:llard of ArtJooa Stale, an AP !leCOlld team All-America pick.
ne.td'" the fleet Wu!IJnilo!),, the Wat
wlJI have Wu1I "Speedf" TbClmU of
Utah and awtfl flanker Gene Huey of
.Wyoming to call upcm lu: backfield dulJ'.
'lllelr speed lbouJd com~ bull-I J t e cllarl.et of BilJ " "
Enyart, llG-polmd IUllhack from "'"8"' State, who aet nwneroua Beaver NlhlnC
record• durlq hll tbree-year ...... Wllhlncfmi and 'the real of Ibo p ....
catcbfna corpe will be on the rfftlvlng
end of -from quarierback Brookl
Dawtoo of Ta.,.,S Puo an d ~HlnnieJolwooof Oklahoma
•
KIVIN , ORADY
Spoclll Aw•rd
PAUL LIMOINa
Mott ValuaWe Pleyw
.,.
I
I
\
• • •
A~UMllll DI". -F-'Dr-<:.-C-.1 .... 1Nok Fr.,. Wolroth urrled tho NII · tJ .,_ .Nr
........ """9'11111 "TT ';, .................... ·-............ . . -w-..-1our11oi._.lfi,w1or.._s,.;.... .... ,...... .
Mater Dei in Tourney
.... Doi~ .... •• I·--Wiii -_ ... .....,,_lJt'M!IOI!
~-~ ... ....................
111111 at S:IO p.m. ftti '? ...........
Lobol lnm the City ol
lndultey 11 Bltb<Jp Amat
Hlah'I ""' Riie -iclloD . ·jl:ra. --......,., II Ill --.
""' ......... ~""' ..... ,..,_ ... "' ""'di""" ....... , ................... .
.~ ........ -....... .... . . , ............. ...,.,. =.tt.··---· .... ... £ 0 9 2 .,, .,,..
f ! It I Ss ..... ::1 .. .. ........ _ ..... .. ............... _ ...
.... ~ ......_. _ .... _.
•
,_ -... I""'. .... . s 'el It tho~ ... S.. ................. ,... .. l"f. ..... ...
' .... 1lol!i ... "' ..
-I ... ,..., ...... ,,r, 1•7,,-:;" al .... ...
..... ,
t
4JaJ I ... 0
•
I
& CIF Flnal•
Saxons · Awalt
Titan Rematch
~ ~-~ ~ Braves,
18-26. •
Cum callt SL Job Bosco
u., too&b!!ll -hil oquad
bu met llut olao ncolled bat-
IJ"'! ~Ill. !k'!!ll !'~~"!' (14-
!;) o.Jlll Ti:n>~ C!ty (21,7).
~ -fCO"od ,, polots
In !Ill ·-~ ... nail
dowu .1111 ~ City v1....y.
!"ow U'• !,<>Or~ tho, 'nl8N
lllllQ (ace. One COllUl!'lll op-
_. _ btlo """'· -Pasadena.
~ . !lerb !JIJI'• loif!!"I
trlj>pe4 S!!!ltll l'"l'i!~"'· 11-14,
In preleague aclloo wbUe SID
11ar1aD wu IPlllC Ille Tlgen
"" hro pulllll later.
Cum isoya ibe clbo,esl ......
~·.be wi mile '"'th Loar& II la hll · feom. c· . ~ .. . !"!"
' ''TIJ.ey b_ove iQOd ~ve
l!ne ~ alld 1ood
quickness. We 4o a lo! of
the .,.,. llulf tboy do. Their
q~ is ap outstandiag
runner ahd they have a VlfY
mobile defense.
''1bis ta whf we're so much
alike."
Pirate Trio
On Polo
All-Stars . . ...
~ Orange Cout College
water polo playen, ~~4'd 'bJ
aoall• a ~•~ ·81:!la~ir.
bovo boeo ~lo the
coacbel A·ll ~S•utb41ra
CaiUornio ..... polO'team.
Jolnlt!I ~'!"'l>u!J Pll tjle
11's1 l<asn wi:re ~teve w._
ud "'kl Wlllfn. i·*·· ;*· c'*' llfr!I T-
DoolJ ll<h4"1"..,,. ooc
Steve W-0raog, QAa$
Mlke Wl)loo Onogo Coll!
Bob Shupp em:itosi
Freel Belfcht!; l'ulJertoo
Joe Godbout · Chaffey
Obip O'Boarkt ~
G"ali Vlnoenl ~
Oict Wiliil • Long Beodl
Mlke MoWln .p, Cenilm
Phil McMal>oo -Camloo --pan Christy. Orange ~
'
Mfke NeltOn Saitta Ana li•ioop g,.&rtfey <!-
Mite A11briP1 <>ronge COUI.
Don N~ Rio Ho!Mlo
ll<1') Bh'l!!od . 'qiilhy
Gery ll!"eol Go~ ..... Bruce MacGlly Santa Aaa
Steve Oliver CWrttu
Dave Buckley Cerrtto.
Trey ReUrh l'uHerloa
Bob Ri~I Qialley
•
Vilcel Down Clf Cha:mp•, ..
Win Wreatling Tour®ment
'
. '
Barons P.in · 4 F Oell . "' . . -. '
In · Jf restling Event
.
d!i"41111 r,.r· the OU..··~
1'"""'2d clUI. '
~ toi.ia.. .•. .,'"""
lo Ylew .. .,,.. al r-.m
v.Her llJp.
:.tl:I:
·~· !"l C:i::l'I.~~ -· cr:'J".i' -u
l'.llllf m~'98 have 'descended.
And 'her lll8d ypur c;ar.
Wliwe does that leave you?
111883' ~r Ford Rent-A-Car deai,r, ltl•fl wt..c
RMll ~ ,_ F~rcl, Mustan11o or Torino for a claJ, ""8k. qt m~. Low rates .•• Insurance Included.
11 RJGKJS DAH.Y
~,.,
The Titans rely on the
lfOUll.-.i l'1Ulllinj game
prtrg.arily, although
DeLorlmler has throw'n f0r 11
toochdowo passes.
His top runner, Andy Har-
rah wu loif for the season
ln the Temple City game with
a broken ankle, but senior
Rlck Gartner bu filled ln
capobly lor him, overaglng u ,..,. per carry.
Lightweight Baskethall ""' ...... 1-.11.1111 ~"'"" A!!f
Oil City Banquet
Jl&aUnllOO Bllch Hl,b
sc:Door win bold 111 fllll """'
awarda banquet Wtdoeld1y nllbl 11 Ibo ochool caleterlo
liarlln( ot 1:20.
~ la football, wotor ...., 11111 CNI couotzy will
bo -·the allflr.
~ll .lrcl\dll
I! §AA G~rld
SS LYJ!~
13 El ~r'Jldo
'8DulN
1' South Pasadena
II Temple City
SS Le Clnade
· 21 Bell Gardens
llO Puller1oo
II Claremont
II St. Jolla Booco
JUNIOll. VAIMTT
LffllM (411 "-""'-c•I
OWll?lben t'l F UU Wllltldofl JKkR'I {11ij F Cl) eti."9Jn
AllWf (OJ C m .......
·--1•1 o 111 ~w MCMurnr 0 G · ltJ frry
Scarl"'I tubl: L•--T•bour 7, 0 "ldllly 4.. k1i.l~Jt• 1. Stl* :t. S.nclln 10. 1 H•lnl'"' _.., llCA .. 1\1 ll. UW111 11
\S
13
~
12
7
7
13
0
8
26
~ in llm\dball Action
" •
Did< Klela, Lew Goddlleld,
Bill su.ud, Roa GrUlln,
li'QDt -. illl Wernn,
llln'J 1..i~tor.
a.. G: llgn Wh y te.
1UcUn1 Warne r, Tom M-, P1lo Pe11uM, Bob
:::::""' Jiff Tum, Art
CloaD:Rlcilord-="'"' Monw, Jalio Coyne: 'fl'lr'DW', tr. McBride,
,.... Job.aaoa, Steve
~Y'!b.,81.'fill! l')cter, Sieve
--":::"!" Bllnpied, Dick ~· iloirJ Westoo, Ed Martmon.
••11 c."11r -~
I olloW. Sanw • • •
$ea · -~~ $'ehtub,q
~
..........
' '
>
-
-SCH.WINN_;
... Qil_.,... .,.... c. ••!r" ~ DtJij f·f-JllL ,0-2
1
--
~OCA!,: II<_"_,....._ ........ ,., ................ , ....... "' .... """+ °"""' c-1 fl!• " 11,A!kY rtl#f,
'· ;.
-
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2H '· 17llil ... ~ t;4M
-{~1 ·1 ·~ J.'il '-
Ol,'Nlll '®ti.TY~, ·
. ,1,ARGffr , '
2H '1· 171!1 $1. ~,. J .p ·'&'·DIN
• loalllo, J' ftr<!>la.... J!Jtlo
I BllQ.,,,doubJ,, . "8')! .. • ~(loota ·m .... Uuit all lleQ>rt ..... u p;,oa,
-·~·· .. Well>Ml:~irdi., Rltn.
1'IO k'""' Btfll,, CJ<,
.... 1?,l9 r ·-•1 ------==~
$ff THI NIW '
IUCC.01.4
BUILT HO~
16th & Twtln, C.ft\.
I A f 8'I · !30,lllO ., 111.lllO . ..
Wh!lt-
-
OAY!DJOfi' ~ · S20250 ' . q...,. J """" on """° lot. Cioseio......._ .•.
IUtr. ~ ~ IB, ClM --·-
I! ' ' ' ' No Ma""r. What It Ii .. ·
•
VQ.~ c~
SEU. IT ·
WI,,.. A
. ·' •
1
' ·.DAILY PILOT
:\f~ A~r . I , ·!
•I ' ~ ~
F.,. Fast seMee• I
&pert Aalit•-
" ,.
' ' •
-•
•
•
' i I
j
1
l
,,
I
DAILY NUil' 'r-., IM-~ W, 'l W +
;aJiii i'Oil LUI HOUiii l'Oi SALi HOUSl!SP'OllSALE HOUSESl'OllSALE ,HOUSISl'OllSALE llNTALS RINTALI llNTALS RJ!NT,AU
-l lGOOGoneral 1 .. Gewal 1000 c--,1100 L .. , .... ';'" ·IUI Ito 7111 Puml"'"4 H-UllfumhhM Aii!L UnfumW.0. Apt1. Unfllrn}J1'td
1.:;;;~;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~~~1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; -QUICK Puu n: ~ tr. B;, -THIS IS ITI loU-:U00 N~ri INch '2GO Hut1tl ...... INch ~Hunt! ...... Beech 5400
I LOCAL PREVIEWlll Executive Manion -t ...,.. .,,... 123.00I) i-i. -s Br, 11111, • OCSAHl'R()N'/'. • auNA <PYE ' ------
.. B···• l,IOO _.. ... , ol --nlA. -OI. l&-l!IM 18& -Lo/to patio, 1111· I Br 1 BL la -Oa Ibo bay wtlb _...Yin. 1 ~ . llANCHO,L.'CUISTA,atllam!llon ....,. ....,..,, ... ..._llvfne.• 3 BDRM_,,_ Home. w, 11'\11<. nu home l'llOilo.t1J1P1eis.-v.., _,.,. _...,.. rM DIATE OCCi:UPANOY '
ard Ill Hun~ Jleacb., IUIDOllllcet lbe P.... 1utO bedroomt. s bolbs. 14< ltootd ;vd, ...... II> ~I ....... $02,... ono. PYL bob. Depat f ' JUSlf COMPLllTED '
\'iew ol'fl'llll of UNIT S. Tllll opening ls ~ '.'.""1"p1~~= t! ""'* SIJ,500 -Jalw> Rhll>· ~.,,_.. a.lllN lolllMI 2:155 yr o1c1 s 1111. 1 BA drwn e ONE BEDROOM e 2 BEDROOMS
local bilyert only before adYerllslni Ill tho ~n. ua -· ~ ey. mao --"°'"" 1n ........ ....i. i.u.. ·
Loe Angeles papen. ;:':=lb,,..-1ttt c.i!!P loork 1115 u.i.-a...s _ I.ill Ill IMI , tdf teatura _, 1act' FROM '$135 MONTH '
;Beoutiflll oom. prl<.ed mm t«.995 lo· ~~~·~bod' ymtn~ 4'Blt~~..., ..-11o. ~· w~.;;;...,.~., 2 BR. 2 i..°.!. -~-lllrn'. :..~ .. ~~.::'.2 ~ UNFURNISHED -FURNISHED $3:i 795. Jl'eaturlllg: eJj>OOtd beams Ill living .. ~-• _ .. '°" °" ~--dm "»'<-lClnt ~~ su,, s ~ i 11e1111· lfplc • -IZO v ,111 W· -.L -ar ......._ • !ooh.~.· o=o~'&!·r:io.~,or2S :...~~ ~ Qie~lr~ ·~ 121"°"..,, .....,, -. p1 .... ..-'"""doyo ).., 151h. .... Only.fl><lbl very particular •• CARPm -'ADULTS41~ ~':!,u
• • drl lrC • l • Iba ·-.. ~· IHI.GOO Mn. ~ . Jmmed, -1-. PYl e POOL • UIYAU MTIO e~""S.::.~·~~ ar.;:,';.!~eap:,.n~ ..:w. ~:~~ ud:Ou·~ Nowf!Ort leach l200 14\~V~~ ~--...:..._._ _ l'IY· l1Ml83 e llCRf.ATIOll :<RIA e HOTl'Oll(T APPLIANCES
:.u.iom build tor you. Move hi by May 1969. :'..~..::!~= A llalcony Seat · ~ 1:,. ~ :,..IU\;.! 1:!li HUNTl'NGTON SEVILLE
•)!QdelLJU!aaUllo.!1, & Bu4b~d, H.B. '°" OWN 1n lbl clti' ol for Ibo a.n.tmu P.....it ol Hontllltfpn Beach 1400 C.WWell Ww & Ce.' -· <15-2)01 or >4Ml68 UI 12 Sltor Leno 147-7461 Huntir1t•n Beach
$24,995. to $32.795 N•wport s-b, an -yachta, -wtlb thll B&y · "" it -•-N-rt Hel hit '2lO I ht Signal WHt of Buoh off Edlngot.
VA A Conventlon1I ' good value at ~ $52,00). Avtnu! Gem. 1'hlff bed-5, ~% •:ti':lln...._otc.~ ...... '"" I , . ec.ro•s from Broadway Center I
CALLf61.2929ANYDAY MtwMn 10 l 6 Sul»nlt 1""--~twobolbl,wanre.-...oldGlloupayable . • s a I Ba. HM 6 •2 ~
onourcuaranteeaaleplan. plJce tor Sarita:. Near $134 Pf!' D)OS)tb lncludloa: ... e:NTAL~ Br.OoeanVuaptXlntloc. R~NTALS Kt:l'lifAL~
llANCH ·aAMBL!R-
PlESTIGE AREA little Island Thi& home bu the chum and ........,.,, ol • Swtu
Cottap. -u"'1 brick
fireplace. that dominate• tht
UVina room, family room A
kitchen. Ru.atic throua:hout
\".OU'U bl! delia:bted with the
e)(pOSl!d spadoua:• ~· and bole 20x20 FAMlLY
ROOM. You're .,aurtd of
prtvaey tn this ·qulelj ,beau.Ho
ful Newport Beach location.
Fast passessJon and offered
at only $39,950.
Larae Famlly Home
2790 Harbor Blvd.
545-9491 Open till 9 PM
cllurcheo, bea-. .~~~ taxU. NI prl<:e $23,!!<lO. 3 H-Unfurnl-nr. l<bls A tnna. 54&-m!I Aim. fumlshed Aplt. furnllh..,i_ ......_A Olrlotmu -Bit ll> botba F..<. beat,!-~-'-------~-----1-.;..::;=...:..:==..;...-·I·-'-'='-'---"
at 1<7.500. built.Jn nDge ~ o-car. O.nerel · ' ·3000 Eut Bluff ·• "3242 Cast• M-4100 Huntington Beach 4400
BURR WHITE, Roaltar pell, dra..,, cut-de·aac Tot . · --:=::-0'1'.EL:=:llXE:=:--1.;;.o;;;;;..;;,=:....---'.;.;.'I~-'--::..."."".· ----1
:J901 Nowport Blvd., N.B. .,,mplolo~ tenced. FULLERTO!I Clean 4 BR, 'llr ;":; ..... fur.._ $25 Wk. Up 2 BEDROOMS carpet,
2043 WESl'a.JFF DRIVE 671-4630 Evft 673-0991 .•• ~s •• ' I ~ pool. tro patio, ....... ea.;...., dra.... !lttpta ... : • studio " Bid• ..... ~~· .... 1 blk lo
646-77ll Open Eves. '~---drpa. nr State CoUeae P60 All el@e blt..tns. Double •Incl utllt I: Phone !fl"· $130 Sl11Mcl $6~0()0 1'T1-. mo. • t _, garage, fentel! patio. Neu • Maki Servb ·TY avail. Key at 7681 Elli.a:, Apt o.
Palat!al .. -• fee land. CHRIS,.....AS • (n4) il23.o5!4 "'°Pl>""'· churches A big~ •New Cate A Bar 642-2835 or fl2.a303 HARD TO f1ND
VA MO DOWll
DI,..... toroe. oa1e ol lbtt • "l' • lft 122S: 4 BR, 2 BA, !ncd yd. tthool. Avallablo 1/IS/69, 237& Nowport Blvd. 54Ul5S =,..:.;.~;;...::..,.c~..;...~
4 bed?Oom ·den -'" Bay· YOU8 OWn Home 1r1>1c. oailo, chll<jr<n. pet 644--033S wn.soN wr:sr .-U,:· 2Bo':, •i;.,';;,!""'=
crest. Area of $80.000 homes Lovely 4 BR· 214 bi.thl, car-O~ Bkr 53f..69a:l 2 STY. Uv. nn., ti;lcon.Y: 1 BR. turn. uttL pd. Htd. ~brary. no cblldren or pct&. ~ $30.000 lua. pets. drapes & heavy shake $180; 3 BR. 2 BA. Condo, s Br. 2 Ba. condo; subleue IJOC>t. Adults· 6 4 8 - 5 216. 526 Main. Sll)..1'396
lf YoU're a VET & ·are ~·, ~ root PrlCed below the mar· ac, frpJc, w/w, dishwuh!-r, u;o Mo. 644-0551 eves. ggg..1140
looking for a home lo .., SPRING kol al 124;500 • no down ID pet OK Bkr -' 3 BR, 2 BA, trl-tev6J, NEW charming 1 Br. ""' RENTALS
fit a budpt: -OIECK ~""tJ" REAL mv Vets. Wh7 not give your.tam. $140; , 2 BR. w/w, blt-lna, condo. tubleUe. S2S) mo. fUrn. Must tee 1o apprec. Aph. Unfurnlihed
Tlll8. 3 bdrms, 2 botbl, .,.,.. 'i .l 14' a homo for Chrlstnwo. !ncd yanf. gar.,' garde"" e 614<l557 e Adulta only $1S) mo. m>
dining room. SHARP, • .. ANYTDIJ:" P1ul JonH Rulty. paid. Broker 534-6980 Elden, C.M. 645--1251 Gen1r1I 5000
SHARP. ~ price 847·1266 Eves. 536-1124 Corona clel Mar 3250 DELUXE 2 BR studJo&, I i;iiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
$24,450. No dowa· pay-, 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 20 ACRES Costa Mtae 3100 CHlllK-roVE oupell, drape•, pool. It VEN.DOME
ment to Vets -pay.. DIEA.M conAGI 11TC!.l.1 T.I. CALIF. 2 larm . ' On the bey with ocean view. Unfurn avall. 1 Child OK.
mentso1$200permonth ON THE oe••N ·-"·" ·~ ··-..,.. all, or, FHA 1o -"°"""' mocl•rn w/Grad,.A COLLEGE PARK v.,, prlvatr In exclullve --a,nyone with $l950 down Full·slze ~·2 lot, large dairy, irrigated and crou Immaculate HOUie • 3,Bed-area. Pvt bcb., Ell'gant '4 1 BR. htd pool DO pets or
1HI". K BIG -$197 per monlb ..,.. living' rm., dbl. ........ l•""<I· All •!arm oqulp. ln-........ 2 bolbs, ........ w yr old • BR. .. BA dttam -$120. :u .. pd. 1llOl.
aH. HURRY HURRY!! 1bdrm.,1~ bath (#lOtCJ eluded. Only $51;500. Call drQtl, a_vaUable tmmedl· boUst in tmmae cond. Lux· Whittiu St. 646-6222
' ' Mr & Mn. co•W ~·000 now. ' &teij>.' Adults preferred, no urybl ... ~ea~·-.. thruout lhicl FURNISHED Bachelor" Apt
IMMActr. .ATE APl'S!
IMMl';D. ~CY.
Cl ... la Shappl"f, Perle
e Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba
"'"""' houae """"""at tbe • • ~ •• PIOPERTiES WUT BRASHEAR REAL TY pell, 1185 mo. Call m"68 t-.~ ~ nnw usb 165 per mo. Utll pd., oober, ~ams tcytng to a.ccomodate Executive & 675 .. 130 847.asa1 540-65.52 5(1.2442 eve~ a.ad week-ends. cptg., cent. heattngr 2 car no pets. 548-Z57 or M8--415'l
i'>ur grow1ng family! eon. WALLACE ~ 1-===!iZ~==~=:j gar. Beaut !um"'..-, ' sJder Ibis larger home with Here is the borne you ha.ve Rl!ALTOltS NEW &:: ready for im· Liquidation CIOMOut 1• Only for the very partij:uiar. SHARP! C.ompact 1 Br ..
• 2 BR. widen or ofc. e Swim Pool, Put/ green
• >)pl. lndlv lln<ry lac'ls
1845 Anaheim Ava.
('OST .A: MESA 642-2824 S• bdrml, 3% baths, WKe been looking" for. Deslped 546 4141-mediate o ccupa ney VACANT. $795 down. 4 BR. $210 MONTH ' Immed poss.. Leut. Pvt. quiet bldg. Adults only. $125 st!parate. dining I: pl a Y for formal 81 well a.a casual CUstomized Broadmoor Tur· Only 3 hom" le.ft. Deafr. pty. 615-4593 mo. st6-491'f aft 6 or wknds.
rpoms. Built by' builder tor entertaining at its ~ (Open EvenlnttJ t1e Rock. 4 BR, 1 story able area:. 3 BR. 1amlJy 2 bath NEW Deluxe Gold Medallion 1-BR., IUlldeck -aarue. $135; 2 BR, 1 BA w/w,
own use: Drive by & then ~ ~ ~~ and~~~~~~~~~! p!an. Cartpeta, drapes. HAFFDAt. REALTY bomelnc.ollep~k. uppers Br. dplx; 2 ba., 174MonteVl.sta stove,retrtg,eoclgar.,Bkr.
call to see. b aktast 2 bedroom.I -R2 + HOUSE OWNER will sell at his "Home to Match Income" Bkr 646-8811 L-Uv. rm., din. area, tam. Costa Mesa 534-6980
411. Fanclsco Dr., NB P~ 1~a~ter suite. cost. Call 546--6925, U no 8740 Wamer 842-4400 • rm., serv. porch; frplc., ;145. LOVELY 2 Br. UtlL $150,::;c.;; "-2:.:;B~R-.~1-B~A-gor-, ~lnod~I .. Guest powder room. Hea.ted Smaller older house in ex· ans. 546-5170 Move In By Chrl1tm11 LOVELY 2 bdrm home epts., drpt, 1300 Mo., )Tl,y. pd. mk. K·Mart. sn Joann patio, w/w, children A pets
and flltett'd pool, 2% car cellent Coat& Mesa ne~ . BARGAIN BY OWNER! Delightful 4 BR 2 ba home. w/1% ba., f.am rm w/blt 600 Irla 613-8450 Adults. 548--0787; 548-3932 OK. Bkr 534-6980 l p~N garage. Finest Baycrest borhood -Room for units $36,000 Newport Bade Bay Vac. Sol Vista. Blt-lrui. in BBQ, frplc Xlnt loc Will 2 BR, clean u a whistle LARGE tum 2 ·bdrm apt.
1
_________
1 area. See all this value for and owner wW help &a.nee area. cu.tom 3 Br., frplc, 16632 RHONE LANE leue ot lease option., $265 walk to lhoppl!W Ir beach, Utll paid, frplc, terrace, Cotta Melli . .,...... .... . ........... 5100 $56,950. =~· 64&-71n d1ll rm, lrg tam rm. 3 car Must sell at FHA appra1lal mo. Call Propertlea Weat, Don V. ~ Realtor $215. Phone 646-6547 ( I O.a... & (O gar, shops, ottko. VACANr. $25,900. Owner. 615"4130 m-2222 ISO rnCi.. utl1. Small apt 1 j;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;j
F 0 esw I lllf I OPEN EVES. 'TIL ~ Xnlt loan available. 837·5178 or 847-3880 EASTSIDE 2 Bedroom home adult nr. 15th " "Newport. Excellent, perk • like sur--
* 642-lnl Anytlma *
642·1177 THE~EAL
ESTATERS
* 673-6559 * * BEACH HOME * bulltln range and oveh. Huntington IUch 3400 6U.s583 roundtni• for adults requlzl-
john macnab 1904 Harbor Blvd., C.M. BEAUTIFUL, & Cuatom. built Roomy 4 BR older home Walk to 17th Street Shopa, • 1ng Peace Ir quiet.
Lg 2 BR & Fam rm, 2 close to beach. $16,000. $150 a month. 1 Cblld O.K FREE RENTAL BOOK Newpert Beich 4200 Diac.rlminattve Tenants
ha & room for addition Coastline 53S-3m, ~1366 No pets. 64&-re55 Bkr. or Drop In A: Browse 1, 2 & 3 BDRM. APrS.
wAovely vlow. 2518 Vla L •• h 1705 64&-l258 Wa Iker & Lee· lprlBRva•· fum.bea•b.~'!. ~Incl· POOL. NO am.DREN
Open Eves.
BAYFRONT n ft. Pier and Slip, 5 Bdrm,
.................... -500
OPEN DAILY
SHARP WTSIDE
HOME A DEQ,ARATION Marina. Owner. 1!42-3219 •gun• -•• _ 2 BR. ~ ....... patio, orpll, utfl, ~ .,.'67>-:l;OO Mr. MARTINUjlUE
LARGE Liv ,rm & din nn, Handyman Speclalt dl1>I. stoyo & ""I g. 7682 Edinger McPhonon GARDEN •m .
312 EVENING srAR can for appointment Of INDfPBtDEIKE trplc, crpta, drp1, elec kitch, Tropical setting for adults 8424455 Open Ewa 54().5140 c;;;· ;';;'""ii';;::-;=::-;= ~ 2 bdr, den. Can bid another Income ~nits 1 blk to ahop,s A tranap · Yru.Y -2 Br. Upper Dlxe. 18th A Santa Ana. C.M.
1714) 642-1235
881 Dover Drive, SUite 101
M&a:oRealtyOo ......
Newport Beach
5 Bclrms. • $20,950
on quiet ttreel S + fam..
ily room, 30' living room
with ftrepl.ace, quality car-
pets & drapes, good sized
bedrooma, fenced rear yard
with lovely patio. ReOecta
prlde ot ownenblp. 0 n 1 y
$22,500.
unit Low dn FHA or VA. Loe. on Oceanai!ie QI Hwy, $140 mo. 544-4780 3 BR, 2 ba. near scboola, Married cple only. $150. mo.
$23 500 Owner 642-4441 150 yds from Beach. 4 Jge nice yard. $165. Rltr. Blk:. ocean &: stores, Quiet
from yard work and house. • · • Apt. unlb:, needs paint & 3 BR 2 bath Monticello Con-536-3m 536-'l'J82 530-136& 2ll% 29th st N.B.
cleaning can be youn if YoU LUXURY 3 BR 2 aty, Bay good general cleanup. pQ. dominiwn, ear pet 1 • 1..,======== I ;;;i;iT.:;'-;"'=,..:..,:'-;;;:-=
buy thla immaculate 2 BR View Town Home, pool,, TENTIAL IN co ME EX-drapes. $189/mo. Call LaJ'... Lagunl Belch 3705 OCEAN Vlew, 1 Br. large
1% bath, pool·slde condomi· golf etc. Consid. trade. CEEDING $l0,000 ANNUAL-ry or Dave M0-1151 {open Apt. furn. patio, $130. Inc.
rtlum just atepa from the 645-llll , LY Price $G9,950. eves) Heritage Real Estate MONARCH BAY AREA utils. Winttr, 673--808S
Oub House, lovely grounds NO. 62 Balboe. Coves, 3 Br. MISSION REALn-494-0'l3l 2 BR house $150 month. LOVELY OCEAN VIEW 1 BDRM Furn, year round,
.Ii: putting green, Top loca· waterfront. $60,000. Would 985 So. Coa1t, Laguna No ~frig or dtapeL 2306 2 Bdnna. A: IUlU'OOm pool, octan view. SU),
CaU Mrs. H-640'542
1m Santa Ana, Apt lll, C.M.
$145 MONTH
2 BR t baths deluxe apt.
In Meaa Verde . ru ...
only $150 down required to
move Into tbia: large family
home. Cloee to lhopptng,
1'\l L•\\11111
-· 111\111 \\
tlon. Only $25,500 -make prefer to trade for acreaa:e. WESTERN AWARD Elden. 531·1723 Ad~i: ~~L~~th™ 548-2035 or 6"--0631 eves
offer. LI 8-7771 3 & 4 Br. Semi CWstom IMMACULATE 1 BR, FURN 2 bdrm % blk to I 'N'.!!)J~C:t'!E~lndi".'.!!vld".'ual~!!-!!!!~us!!•"·I !J:tlt I' II I.· II Ill II ~( \H\ \II\\
...... l<l ,\1 1,!!l
* EXCEPTIONAL Fee lot, Hom.ea from $35.450.00 Now garage, $10q. 131 E. 2ht ABOVE High school, ~ BR, beach. $175 mo. Call
bQ-view, 85 x 195 w/plana.. under constructlon. Located St, CM. 548-B!IM rustic charm. $140> Leue, ~ after I 'I: wkends Carpet,, drapes, tr P 1 c •
Owne o:Ao ""A" 11:Ao ·--•M Show J·• 3 .. ....,, T -garaie.' No pets. $130. 2652 schools and chun:hea. Just 1093 Bam, C.M.
~.,... It I \ l 1 ' ! ''
put on the ·market. this one • .r • .....,...,_or.,._........., on Mountain View Drive, oH OIDER 4 Br. House noo .1.~. .... ' o.i ..... 1 BOR on the Penninsula Orange ·Ave. 548-8428 .
DUPLEX nr. bay&: ocean Tyrol Drive. per mo. 760 W. Wijaon CM. "V"'lsta=Drlve==;:--:==-f $120 yrly. Contact Jim, 675-1093 Baker, C.M. 546-5440 $46,500.'Principals only A.P.I. SALES AGENTS 5411--6731 OCEANFRONT. Large, 4130 -1 BR. grdn apt. fpL epts.
220 34tb N.B. 673-5536 Phone 714-892-7701 for ''o"P"°LX""'2:-bdrm,..,--, -.. -w""ti'-d°'"oon ..... r. charm. 3 BR. s BA. $350. =· ~:a~~ ~ts~'.
won't Last. $163 per month
includes taxes A: ina:uranoe! Sometimes •••
Owning l'l!ntals CaD ave )'OU
taxes. Here ii a aarnple o%
some that are available:
REDUCED $4500
IA.CK IAY HOME
~=-=:=:;=:===;;;;:;J,_,,~lurthe~~·~inf~o~nna~tlon~-Concen loc; no petl. Older Lease. Owner. 494«67 Corona cl•I Mir 4250 ~63 Newport Hgh. 1210 4 BDRM, 3 bath. Top of cpl pref. $145 549-3532 2 BR&: blt·tna, refri&", ~ BREATHTAKING View, uni· 2 BR wmnn, carpeta,
2>13 WESTCLIFF DRIVE Units Prlce Completely custom in every
detail on ' spaclous 75 x 245
estate me lot~ Bedrooms,
214 bathl and extra larp
living room. $55,000 -Try
10% down.
--'--------1 World. Oce11n & mountain petlng, dn.pea. Adulb: only. quely tum. 1 BR., ctinv. drapes, blt·lns, wall paneU. '
3 BR. 1%. BA. Din rm .. view. $37,500. 540-7366 Me11 Verde 3110 837-8242 after 4 d . ~M B A 'L nly ·--_ .. .,.. \, fl'>C
646-7711 o Eves. 2 Seuh>re Drive ··•· ·$39,SOQ sunken den, 2 ftreplaces.l:----'-~-----:-:::::::1=""--"'=:....-----" I en; ..,..,.,. Y PP 0 · .,15, I .u....... o.., ...,,..,.
Bullt-lns, d/w., s er v 1 c e L19un1 Niguel 1707 NICE 4 bdrm & tam.lly rm, L1gun1 Niguel , 3707 237 carnation 644--0906 ,"'62-""65'="=----=~ •~--~---,..~-2 A.tvarado Place •••• $49,500
Custem Beycr•t Home 2 Near Yacht Cub ··· 67,500
Spacioua 3 bedroomA, ptua 3 Ptninaula Point •••• 79,500 huce tam11y room. 2 huge 3 Balboa. Blvd .••••••• 87,500
bricJc flrepla.cea, 13x16 work 4 Balboa Bayb'Ont •• 165,000
shop perfect for the man of 5 Balboa Blvd •••••••• 69,500 ho~. Large yard, room f'11' 8 Bay Avenue • •• ••••• 62,500
additions, boat, trailer, and 6 Balboa mvd .•••••• ns,ooo
plenty of apace left over tor BURR WHITE, Reeltor
porch. 2 car pr. 2000 aq. NEW 4 BR 3 BA tam fenced, dble garaa;e. Kida -$225. DELUXE, tpaclous, 1 3 BR. crptB, .drpl, blt.lnl.
tt. $37,500. John. ~1460 formal dlnlng, 1: ....... v~ ok. $200. 642-5583 NEW 4 BR. Laguna Niguel. Br, 1% Ba., trplc, prlvacy. Children OK. $150. 1998
-.. ~ View! flJ5 per mo, lease. No pets, S. Hwy. 675-4859 Maple. 548-7158
Baycr11t 1223 lot. $36,000. $2,IXKI dOwn. Newport Be1Ch 3200 213/244-78t5 OPEN 12/15 2 B bltnl
THE~EAL
E:.STATERS
OWNER . 2131244-7845 ==..-~-----1 81lboa 4300 ; r., ' G RENTALS. =="------w/w cptg., prlv. pats .. ~/~: 4 ~Ba, ttt!i Duplexet for Sile 1975 · 8/B A.ph. Furni1hed CLEAN Bachelor Apts. 646---8746 Wkdy bef 12:30
fam rm w/~c. Beautiful NEWPORT ~lex for sale. TOWNHOUSES Geniril 4QOO All utll lnd $T5 up 1. 2 &: 3 Bdrml, no peb:,
pool. Call for appointment. 2901 NeWPOrt Blvd., N.B.
den w/wet bar, aquarium 200' to beach. Or will trade 2 BR., 2 BA, 2 car carport 315 E. Balboa Blvd. near O.c:c. $12l.·U45.-$180. DUPLEX & frplc, la'e heated & equity for good Laguna 3 BR., 2% Ba, 2 car carport RENT BALBOA 673-9945 546-5019 or 546-0451.
filtered pool, Fee simple, residential 101. P. 0. Box $200 • $250 mo. 3 R F It 1 BEDROOM, furnished apt. 2 BR. bltns, lovely patio,
Near Beach -well kept con-$62,500. 1423, Hun~ B e a eh . Pools -Adults only ooms urn ure Garq:e. $115 Month. gar . Nr. occ & shopll.
JEAN SMITH 675-4630 ...-
Oteanview Income $21,500 dltloo. Reot oo ,..1y or,... WAU<ER RL'IY 675-6200 (714) 84&<00. Owoel' Bay & Beach $25 Month . 499-3465 Adoltl 1115 mo. ll4S-0008
....t buis, $34,950. RENTALS FULL OPl'ION TO BUY NEW ' -, 2 Br cpta •-Geo,...e WUllamaon University P1rk , 1237 , Re1lty, lne. · h """" •.....,. · " " .... .,.., ·•Realtor HouMt Fuml1hed 2025 W. Balboa Blvd., NB (Refrigerators Avalltble) Huntington le1c ......_ bltns. Quiet! No ·children
5 Units on 2 M Ids, walk· 4 BR 2 bath home ready tor 673-4350 Eves· 673-1564 3 BR. Fam rm. 1 yr old. 673-9'l00 Eves. 54U966 No deposit o.a.c. UTILITIES PAID or pets 642-2864 fiic distance to <kean. all Veteran with eltgl.billty ' A great low maintenance Rentals to Share 2005 H.F.R.C. Furn. Bach. and 2 BR. !um.
witb preps. certifk:ate. No down pay-patio on a green belL va. NEW Br. studio w/ ba. Sep LEASE, Lease / option or Furniture Rant1l1 AND un1Um. Htd. pool.
CORBIN MARnN m•$nl173 MONTH Coste Mesa 1100 """' w/ now paint & polilh. from hse. Matun woman S.ll. 4 BR. 2 BA Luxuey 511 w.191b, CM. ~ !Ol Knoxville, Apt. D, H.B.
· • Priced right at $29,000. only. $65 mo. 646-6817 aft condominium, Back Bay. 1568 W. lltcln, Anbm 11'"--• 536-2914 • LARGE 1 BR du p I ex.
REALTORS ~11 l pm. ' • (!1') -.... fur app't BOUD&Y PLAZA ~Q:;;U;;l'-E'=T--,,ri:a"'EA=u"T"1F"u"L Spacious yard. Stove.
VERY nice 2 Br., new epta.,
drapes. bltns. Adu.Its, no peb. $125 • ...._
,:036 E. Cont Hwy, CdM Newport EASTSIDE -Immaculate 3 1250 1 NICE girl would desire 4 BR. 3 ba, crpta, drpa, DELUXE, Spacioua l·Bdrm. Adults only. 2 BR, P 0 0 L !;"'="""'=="'="'='=· =54=8-361=9==-• I '6.75.1662 Anytime at bdnn+diningarea.Cholce Carone delMlr same to ahatt CM apt 2 Frpcla, blt·lns, on Fum. apt. $135 Plut util. l?6T8Cameron. 841.m:s
-Costa Mesa Eastakte tree-' $60 ~ aft waterfront, Lease or will Heated pool. Ample parldn&: Newport Buch 5200 V,A & PHA IUV9n Vlctorl1 lined 1treet. Large well B ~ • .t-(dM 4 per mo. leaaewithoption.673-81.M No children-No pets 61lX12: 2 BR. mobll bom.e,1 _________ 1
·-· ---lot lo all•y. """"' In ruaumoor' 1965 Potn<>aa, CM -l>osch loc. 1 Child 0.K. $160 $125 M h ~will aeU. beautitul 646-1111 $23.950. MALE roomate wtd 1hare DIAL d:lrect ~5678. 0i.arg9 $95 • BAOl apt, encl patio. !4c>. pl111 util. 538-8061 ont
'dult. _ .. 1~ B~" ~~ ~ 5C6·6880 4 BR Mme w/flnetl:t water 2 bdrm apt ln N.B. ~. ')'O'lr ad. thtn llt back and Utll paid. Avail now. mer. Fer Daib' Pllot Want Adi. ~Tine A'dimn, area + Jge {nureltlema thutrt) View beautiful c a r Pe t I, 871-4848 ext ll63 lllten to the oiboDe rin&! ~ Dial &Q..fi678
;:.:,::(i d::.18,..:;:;: Bes! ltlysilore Buy I~~~~~~ draFihmorris Raelty Coste Mesa 2100 General 4000General 4000Ge-•I 4000
Opl)i: $24,500. 673-9010 LOVELY new 2 story 4
Rttr. 16f6.!928 Eve. 8GOl85 Architect deailbed m prime bdrm, 2 ha. beaut1ful.cy -'-" '"CHEN MYER family UvinJ f lldml, extra SOCK-IT• TO·ME luml&lied. D Is h e 1, linens,
;JlfliiA Irr tam rm : Hi bHJn ceJl.. Make an offer on this SPEC $10,000 DOWN Wftlher/dr)'er, nr Ml,f Co. ttwa. extl!lllJ.V't UM ot wood IAL OF THE WEEK: three Movu you into th1' 3 BR. 4 Catbolic Scbool. $300. Mo . • , IQADMOOR I: tile • 2 11m .Bl)t Beachel bedrooma, two baths, fam. tam, rm., 2 ba.tb home. On C.roups we I come. 976
. &: boat facllltlel •••• $49,500 D,y room, PLUS heated, fll. 45' lot near tbe Beach. Denver Or., C.M. 714:
u b Vi Cd'' Mn Haney """' -w .. l&lde.121,950 Or•• Cosst Properly Sf0.>442
~$7,000 REDUCTION 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. Completely turn la he d.
"'ar or 11ew, . M ........ " BURR WHITE, R••ltor S32 Mup.erlte, CdM 673-8550 EXTRA==......,Sbarp==-..,&:-"'c1"°•an.~1
: Tri-Lewi Model 675-4630 Evas 673-0859 Balboa Peninsula 1300 Adulll only, "' may .,...
• Encuttve s Bedroom , ....... .,, I -•ir & c. """ 1 clilld. s bdnns, 2 ---: DAVE GAMllK.L ""'u" ,.r --• . INCOMli bolhl. $235 ..,-....,lb. Art. ! • 6"-0020 • ~3"1 .::-THIS WON'T BE Near Beach a: partta1 Ocean 5*-UU .
"' ,... OVER YOUR HEAD I View 2. 2 BR Units 1: Guest SMAU.. roomy, wry quiet
, 50 EASY 'TO aU"f. Only $11 .. 000 Apt. Well·blt ~block 1n rear. No children or pets. aioot da!rabl< 4 Bit 3 llelb Wanted 2" H-fur 3 BR & '*"' rm. Well-bit _.,..... IM.!00. No aarage. oa 'lllltln nr.
Mme on let lot. Beautlf\l1br Side: by '¥!: i.e. a.ta Mela'• ~ home on wide lot Eut Appredatlon on tb.11 property .~l!th.==-~,.;,,,,..,~~~-I
...,,._ wllb all Ille lox-Eulllldo, Jllll blodt -Magnolla St. boa be<a IUOO per ,_ 1Jl<e LEASE M BM Ba" Furn.
.,. ,..._ bop taml4' na. --· 11ower or Graham Realtv clock """' Incl. """'""'· rnr. -· ....., -1111ua1. ~ Fut 1Jth a. 2 .. s BR. N..,, N.B. Poat Oto. M&-fu• Grahom Realtv ma .• retna. Nortbeu• c..ta
to lltJe -OWner ·flnurw. mu.st bt In pod ciondJtlon. Neu N.B. PoSt ore. MG-!4t4 Meta. st&-2499
Poto a..-a..11y Hove Ccnlt Iner ~~'1:;~·~ N-n Beech 2200
l'OOWmclil!Dr.NBsc.sm Ernie C....,.nol •'•· MACULATE OONDiTtON. KIDDIES KAPER --·-.
l'l'OQl.N-fMfOO 6454111 lw.'*4579 o.n.-..out ........ wllbjoy he Ibey th!IDECORATORS -utlful
4 "E · ~ hu priced 1ot lmmedilte w n ...... _ w Bluffs bomt. Dec 15tWtll l~!""'DD.,RM-ffO """n 4 llEDltM-f23,750 sale SUbmltanyttumable OCEANJ'RONTFI bed ~~ <th. 3 Br. Adults. $375. r to a Vet! ~ • ,. ... .. ....... w rooma, • ...., ., .... a 873-0961
beN Irr -lamllt *Of" DOWN ......._ ~ --(optn MU bolbs, 1W 1.one. Move,1,,-,==-.-......,,..,,-.,,,,.,, -I bolbo. 1'an>ll> 1 _.. .. !».Ibo. J'omW dJA. evu.) Herl .... Reol ,Eatate 1ni. this for tbe best Ou1Jt. 0coaa ,_~ 2 Br. H-""'°""" ""'-Ins ,..,. "" ~ &'!-LOVELY -2 .....,., • mu ol lbom all. $02,!!00 !um. Wlntir $115.
1or mtmn. BMtod nm.eu,.ted.Sptth,,1 bdrm,2b<,...,.May.Oo. BURlWHITE,Realtor Ullpeld,adul1>onl:y.md ft!-pool -Joodl al ......_ lfallY add..t foatura. A Catbolk Sohool. Bl...... 290\ Nowport Blvd., N.B. LIKE New 2 BR, 2 BA oondo
A P<tlo .,_ le-No down G.L 5IOJ7'0 ntt. cab. Malat a I hr· 675-4630 Eves 675-025' >)pl~ patio, pool, !um. or
..................
SCUM-LETS ANSWBt IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 TAR111U. ms Harbor _, ...... $2!0 • .,.._ ....
-~----~-·-~~---~~~~~----~-------.. • I
' 1. •
____ ... _
Oncl. all utllltl•l
2 BR upst&.lrs apt., partly
!um. Ccl1eae studenll OK
(DO pnge). Nr. Hoaa Hos-
pital. Rltr. -~ new 2 Br. unit; full
vi.w .. Bsok Bay from
llv. rm. A nut. Br. Hu
everything!· PG Mo. 125
-Dr.NBS4Wl82
WANTED: Adult O:luplea fot
modetQ, extra tarae 2 Br
ba I: den, Drapet, bee.m
ceiling, block to beach. <>1111
$195. 67>-1909 • -
HOMEY attt Dr. Duplex,
2 Br. Beam ce~ br1dc
frplc. $l65 mo 1 e a 1 e ,
54&-7391
Un!Um $195, -IJllO 3 BR. ~ blk tv beach
116\1 40lb St. N.B. ms.320
2 BR 2 BA. EncloMd av, blma, $168 mo. 00 Hllarla
W1.3. 5f0.0093
NEW Westclitt $185 2 br 2
ba patio trpl gar, 1 atoey.
1665 lnlne 642-0239 adll
LARGE I BR 2 BA.
LEASE l160 -Westcllff 5230
$145; J BJ\., beam cell., htd.
pool Avail. Dec. 11 t ,
Adults, no pets. &12-2514
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11 DAILY PILOT T.....,, D1 ta 10, lM
.IUD a WLOT-fl• :KliS & IMi'iOoYMlih JO•> & IMl'\.OYMIN1' IOU &-IMl'LOYMINT. MllCN.UIDlll POI MIRCKAHDISI l'QI ,, MlllCMANOISI '°a MDCHANDISI l'OR ~ -
500 A >dto. -a hh -· w-7'CIO -SAi.i AND ~I , IALI DIQ JUDI , SALi AND nADi SALE AND TAADI WICK
.Jaa. Miili. w-. 7SOOJabi Mel\. WWft. --'I ~-7SSO AaottMr ,uml...,... .............. , ... ..._ ~Dl;pp ll30 MbcellH•UI "!! ,
ICN
Hat JUI 'mo•ed i.bto ill new loc1llon at
Imne JndUJlrlal port and bu ,
Openings For
• &Klltlft Secretary
• • •
e Crecllt MaMger
• General Ledcjef Bookkeeper
• Receptionist
Ettellent growth opportWlltles with one of
America'• tastes!. growing Corp.
Call for Appointment ·
nremier ,-~-
AHNCT ' ' ~ L 17111 II.•
••C.....IM-. _,
1114 L 17ttl St. ..........
IC7.f721
FEMALE
Fee by appllcant
Mlt. lllT x J " JUSJ' IH TIMI • 1968 Ont -• .....,.. ~ ' ' ' ~ "* -Gift 11 All l'Oll ntl HOLIDA)'S
CLIANDS ~"" Spnz'• -· ':..-.. '-oly Otftl c-'4.i.... . .... ,.,..... . ~..=:'4~-=~i'~11: Clearance at~ c;:' lllw'1 ....... -.....iv-1 'II ~·~ lllllplM Nn l"m-......, ........ I ~ch, JD cs. Tllm-e Alt O ~--I /11 -8-1 - - -~ , •••• .. ••••••••••. ISO ...,._PO-. •llll&ll llnD-lie DllCOUNTI OM • NII'~ a• Wood caned arm di.an, IC· dllll'• chair ..,. -wd -.. llO t~o:.,w1ne1, .,._ -Old ,.., 1TUOOLlll
e. wm Trabl Quoll1led or lo•e .C. I Ped~~.~~~ dhr •I I ~ ,:-,.:-~·:: :: JJa<n. ;,.:::., -;:-:: Limited pumber .::. but
AJPl'certts For W/black or &f'OCI o uawsu .C~·· 8 Pc Bil * SPF.01AL * · ' ~ eom,plcto: Mar \In I u ""' bi.ve UM model ' "t,. »<Ir Mr. .. Mn. ~·. IC mlnw, s u..a Hammond B wltli '--...... -~· ~ Wan1 -You'll nev· cOmmodu, decorau .. ~dbOard Ill ""··•·II;' lie ........... ···~· .. $1495 _,.:.._ ....... -...:; .. !Ind • blrror dll-
oa'k deolin with matcllillc-b6:t apmip~i,. ep.;,-~ -• 1ow ~ s,111'.W an.. e ::;:\.Ri~ ·~ ,
tress • frlme. f ' .f _ • J -Slmda114 p.m. ' cata. , ,
1i-SoW lndl¥iol"lly • 'I 'HI OINlmu h -ANljtl.U, """"'1 '""-•iw.s • 9-1961, . $1!9pAround-llefol'9Y!lllbuv-USI • ~~ mode stoneware ........
·~ e Sala Ghio
• Silk Flnllhon
Mlu Roblnoon 133-2500
lnlemlioul Chemlal & Nuclur Corp.
For bltvvlew call' VALUI $1095.9$_.:.FULL PlllCf $529.95 ., COllOllA!>EL MAR Fio.ctoey •·to the public. DEUl\llftlUTMt'
Mr. Bergstrom ort1rmsaslOWM$4.66perWMll: 28ME. CoUtiHwy m4930 Once a )'tU' Only, 509' to Q'IVIUIUIVIU
Clarlc T.._ $529 m.>306 No Down-Use Our SIDt'!I Charge Plan • 80~ &:punt 00 w.,.,
Typo 35. "'°" m&!b A Enc· or Al>l>IY ln Pe"°" No Fancy Froat.-BUT Quallty'Valueo lnslda PIANOS & OllGANS ~ ~ ~ Manaon A: S&lesmen'1
pe-rsonal c a r • marked
way down. No bla.r
dlacounta U D t 11 neat ,..,, ~ .....,.i ofllco I ·*,.---'~---....* APPROVED FURNIJURE '~Name llnDda 3llh. Noon lo 4 PM only,
Coo.. 2159 HAlllOR. COSTA MESA -u= =....m. -Sun ma ea.,.. Dr., 2721 C•Mpul Dr~ Irvine, C1Uf. 92664
\
I !!!!!!!!!!~Aa~";·;~~~°'~'!'~""~·~"'~'~ .. ,;• '!·~!!!!~~ 1,.... C*k to $391 r , Mlllt know blue ahleJd I:
Holp Wan!M , Halp W•-medlcaft forms. Type 50,
Women 7400 Women 7400 ~t,y of dutiea.
J.C PENNEY CO.
FASJUON ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
H11 full time
position open
In the
Monty Room
Prevlouo ........... ln band!·
Ing larie amounts of c.ash,
and ~ dail;J' Mies
preferred.
Competatlw wages, go o d
worklne c:oodlf,ion and out·
"ltaro!"" ,,. ......
APPLY 10 to 9:30 P.M.
,.J. C. PENNEY CO.
24 Fashion Island
An equal opportwlity
employer
• Secretary
Opportunlty for aggres-
sive individual In sales
dept of small manufac-
-turing firm. Must pos·
aess good 1horthand, t.yp.
-lng, dlctaphone skilla,
ability to perform adutin-
-1stratlve duties, handle
heavy work load. Prefer
several yean expert.
once.
STACOr INC.
1139 Baker s ·t.
COSTA MESA
549-3041
An equal O]>porlunity,
employer
EXPERIENCED
e COMMERCIAL
TE<LLER
UNITEI;> CALIFORNIA
• BANK
2712 W. Coast Hwy.
Newport Be•ch
646-2431
An equal opportunity
employer
* WAITRfSS *
Immediate Opening
CALL WARREN DEN'I'Z ·
644-1100
NEWPORTER INll
1107 J•mborM Rd.
Newport B .. ch
Banking
Experienced Teller
FOR OUR NEW
NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE
Secretary
Interesttnc position In
our purchaSlnl' depart·
ment, requl.rinr: one to
three years ottl.oe expert..
e~. pleasant personal·
lty plus ac:curate 1kllla:
on electric: typewriter &: --Apply ln penion
or call
546-8030
ATLANTIC
RESEARCH
CORPORATION
A Division ot
The Suaquohanna Corp.
3333 Harbor Blvd.
Cotti Mesa, C•llf.
An equal opportunity
empleyer -
WAITRESSES
WANlB>
Must be able to terve
alcoholic beverages. Re-
port .. ,
RfUBBI l LEE
STERHWHEElfR
151 E. Coast Highway
Newport Beach
Clerk Typist
Stock Brokerage ottlee.
Shearson. Hammill Co.
901 Dover Drive
Newport Beach
642-4<l!O
WEIL Groomed Young Lady
to assist In unique dress
shop, full or part time.
Rlgbl girl will be -for future Interest I n
""""""· 546-""5
• • Experienced Gelcoater
• • Experienced Sanden Apply; MA NU PLASTICS.
Bldg B, 1943 Placentia Av,
C.osta Mesa
GIRL Friday, Ute office,
knowledge ot parts helpful.
Over 30. 2740% Coast Hwy,
N.B. 548-9617 8:30-5 p.m.
OPERATORS -Sing!~ nee-
dle, sports wear. 4001-G
Birch St. NB. Nr 0.C.
Pleape apply in per90n abl>crt
UNION BAN K , MEXICAN Housek""''· English speaking. Single un-
Maln at La.Veta., O~ der 35, 962-5274
F.qual opportunity employer I 'w=ANTED==,--,La"'d°"y,-,Coo=k=-. ""u e MORNING e rooo to 8 PM. 6 "'1 week.
WAITRESS Sun ott. 543-8234
Experience Preferred DAY Bar Maid, ll-6:P.M.
Apply ln perwn NO Oean. Neat Bar
2 to 4 P.M. Golden Anchor, N.B. 67l-9609
COCO'S BABYSITI'ER. Full -· , 2131 Westdi!:f., N.B. )"OUl' bome or mine.
STATISTICAL CLERK * 49f-8642 *
Jteqlllred for t1nancl.al report DENTAL ASSISTANT colculatlon ... typlntr. JO ,,.,,.,...,.. ,,..,.,..,.,,
Kay calculator; Experience * 6t2-8814 *
not ~ but he~ful. HSKPR 5 days 1·7 p.m. $40 Cell Peter Andrews of .. ....__ al lncl. JOHN BAR.RY I: ASSOC'S. per Wa. .D-.me
C'll.41 675-3557 546-3580 a.m..
• (
Rocpt/Typlst to $450
Shorthand or speed wrtttna'
helpful but not nettuary,
type 60 IBM Exec. Mature
judgement & well lfOOmed.
Commercl•I Riter
Tral-to $325
An excdlent opportunity for
older woman to ret Ill a
well pald fteld. Ftgui-e aptt·
!Ude.
Legal Socly $475
Type 80, lhorlband 100,
front office appearance.
Would like M>meone with
experience ln trlal dept, but
will """ oharp pl.
Public R•l•llon1 $450
Will be wrltlnr p11bllc tt-
leasea would like 89lQeone
with experience In small
newspaper or related field.
Racpt/S•cty $450
Type 60, some shorthand,
knowledge or terminology of
construction, Secretary to
V.P. and act u ~Hon
Ut l·gal office.
F•ctory Worker
$2.15 hr+
One year experience :In har-
neu wiring and Ddering
or rela~ work exputence.
Will ~ more for a highly
quallfied woman.
Tal•typa Opar $375
1 or 2 yean experience,
accuracy more lmportant
!ban ......
Clork to $390
:for body &hop. Type 50,
some bUllng, talk to custo-
mers on phone.
Secretary to $550
Type 70, shorthand 90, Lota
ot typln&". nm 1-rlrl office.
Very lJ&'ht bookkeeptna:.
Must have resume.
Fee Paid
OMV Bkkpr $550
Know all phases of OMV
lnrnui, tremendous com·
pa.ny benefits and excellent
opportunity to advance.
MALE
Fee Paid
Account•nt
(Construction} $1000
BS degree in bullnesa ad-
mlnlstrat:lon or acaiuntlnJ.
Responsible for operational
audltlr!i: or manutacturl.ng
facilities. Able to commwU·
cate wrbally with all levels
of management
Fee by applicant
Claims Adju1ter
Tralnff $525.
2 years c:olle~. military
complete or deferred, an
excellent opportunity to get
Into a Kood paytng tield.
Tr1fflc & WarehouN
Supervisor to $1100.
5 to 10 years shippfna and
receiving & wharehouse ex·
perlence. 2 yelU'll expert.
ence u suprvia;or.
Lab Toeh
Ant Tr"" $537
2 yellrl collea:e sc:lence en-
gtneerlll&' or math major
includlna: 1 year chemistry,
phys1ca or math.
Expadllor In
Production Control
$550 _.... ln _.,,.
mschlnopuU.
Tlmokaapar
Trol-$2.30 hr """ -....... --... and """"' .,.. Unote.
Accll Poy.wbla
Suponl1or $6SO
Maintain a.ccounta and su.
penile subordinates.
M.tterlal Control
Pl•nnei: to $1000.
!5 yean experlenct 1n p~
nlfw, colle,t education Pf'9. -·
I '
BRAND Nl!W 1'6f -12 Year1 11111t locaU--.llllO owners GouW Mwlc.C-,.ny ~ v-St. Clll..
~.::z ~,2!J ::"' .. N~"':r~ * •uc~oN * . au1 .. K . 54-9660 • .llal4o'llJ·•-s.•·t11s,,. 11.,....m.en ..... I~'.'! .1 -ll lo ~ .... """"' a ,,,. -:::::~.::==~~=~~~~~~~ Auctioftl Fridq T:30 p.m. EXCELLENT OPPORTUNI· • · Tolavlslon l205 Windy'• Auction Barn
11os ......
TIES AND WORIQNG CON· .,
DmONs. -Fumlturo 1000 Muslcol Inst. 1125 llENT TV $10 S.hlnd TonJ''• W4 Man :---:-:---,.,~ ·No 0-1 ',..... dell...,. 201$\I N""""'-CM_. VB, autcmad~ pow,.r Full Time
APPLY IN PERSON
9 to !5 p.in.
ROSEWOOD Fnndl bdrm. Fender Gllltor .......... $60 ~W or m.9110 HARBOR DRIVE IN steering, radio, heater,
aulte, collectors I~ $1000. Fender Revert> ••• ••••••• $65 . 1 -• delu.xe w he el cov~ =~n:~:-'$25o~= ~u~~;;.;;·+ '125 ~ ~~ SWAP MEET ~~arec':!t,~~dard
REUBEN E. l£f top pier desk $400. Dfnlng Stand ••••••••••• ••·•••• $311 cabinet (213) ~ ~-• , equip. 92105ll8
•t. nearl,y new $75. Couch Everything for on1f -PORTABLE ll" TV set. Every 4Hlt • Sun
151 E. Coal! Highway
Newport Bo1ch
$25. 3 pole lampo 15 eeeb. $225 -••mdlllon $IO. Call Comer o! Harbor Blvd $2985 Drum table $50. Maple COi'-6M'l29 after 5 PM A McFadden, Santa Ana
ner hu~h A delk $75 each. • Ph. 54().3171 531-1272 •ft 7
an.. bh'd .... $2. Other ~co.. .~::i-'"'. 196Sb' HI-Fl • st-1210 CHRISTMAS ......... AN. * *
*COOK*
OVERIB
EXPERIENCED
PREFERRED
APPLY IN PERSON
2. 5 P.M. DAILY
SNACK SHOP #1
2305 E. C..11 Hwy.
Coron• del Mar
673-9050
RE SALES
Item&. Call 64M943 aft 10 nauw~ -TA'S WORKSHOP." Dec.
a.m. Model A. tendttb' used $525.. etmns MAnns AM/FM Uth 1. 14th. Garage Sale-
YEAR END SALE ~2G29NB n.dJo. ~Steno. TV combo. Specialty Glft1 -·Item1
Rental furnlture reh.tm!d ~ Ideal xlnt Ste! $200. 145-Nr4 made to order, Baked
from model apt Like new! Vox Electric GWtar. STER.EX> • 1969 Solid State goodies! 2976 Anilros St. Cott
Unbelievable pricel, or you W/a». New $225. now $100 con.,i, atereo. Nev@!' uted. Baker) 1n Mesa Verde,
may rent thil fUrnlture witb or best offtt. m..1144 Sacriftoel $85.. MS-72S> e REGISTER NOWI ~
option to buy. H.F.R.C 511 XLNT Le Blane Carl.net $300 , claases after Jan l 1 t I
w. 19th st., Costa Mesa. or best~· ~t ~. C•meras& Equlp1 8300 Czyko1hl's Custom
548-3481 5'0-1.MC evea. . Upholstery Sehl. European
Heritage Pecan coffee table 1 FENDER Reverb Amp. KEYSTONE-Ct aft 1 mans h Ip. 1831
$65. Bela:e Damask lbve .eat for aale. $210. 12" Speaker IMM PROJECTOR Newport Blvd. O>ata Mesa.
$100. Round wht leather ot-2 dlanndl. l'13-4tM needs minor repair. $30. 642-1454.
toman $25. New TV chair CLASSICAL Guitar, almost 53&8563 after 6 P.M. -Kll\B==y"v'°'A"'CUUM=,,.---
$100. 642-0116 new, beautiful tone, $15 , CLEANERS
QUALITY Klngsize bed w/ * 64-7227 * Sporting Goods 1500 I have aeveraJ. repossessed
beautlfully quilted mattreu, -f Io or mode I s lt
spllt foundaHon, bullt In Pl•not & Organs 1130 DAD! Fix 11P DUI standard demonstrators. Some are
N ··---" ~. me Pool table !or •the kids like new. C.all 53>7280
l!OIJDIATI
DlLIVIRY • ••••••• JAGUAR
HEADQUARTERS!
Complete Sele1. S1rv·
lee o1nd P1rt1 D1p•ti·
m•nt for JAGUARS.
s •• n. hclff119
_ 1969 .J•guer Tod1y •••••••• NFN r69 OPEU
Men-Women
Expanding egaJn -O!fl<e #
4 • Openings available for
experleoced men -women.
Inatant Income & training.
Sprlna Rlty • Mr, Galnmer
frame. ever ....,..., .,.... tor Xmu. Good buy •~
Worth l'SQ. 84H539 ANNIVERSARY · ~· HAND crochol<d lac• Roody For Dollvory
BEDROOM .SET $35, SALE ~ xfn~~~ tablecloth. 56" x 77", brand w.111c111•1 yo11 , •• ny r•th•r
• 536-9595 • $30. 536-8653 After 6 PM new. A beautiful iltt lnr h••• 1110,.. he•d r•om, le1 Wt are celebn.tina our 7th that special lady In ·)'OUI' roo111, ihould•r rotm, h•r••
Office Equipment 8011 Ann!venazy with fabulous CHRISTMAS special • a tew life $75. 540-9162 po••r & 1tylln9 fir th•
discount! 1n·an departments. new Wlndanaea abort b:tards =~=;-<c:;;::::-;;:::ll •• 111• •111ount 1f mlWI..,. •. 54<>-4824 HERMES electric
typewriter, Exec. Model,
legal slz.e carrlage. $175.
615-3832
Bnv i'low.•t nle prices 1-.at $105. 64&ln8 HUSBANDS, Falben. Boy •••n 1•111 .. ' Fi:lends. Sb.unped for an and lay • •way for M·l GARAND Rifle. 30.o&. everlaatin& ch r 11 t mas New 169 Opel Coupe HAIR STYLIST with parl:lal
following, need CdM salon.
646-3523. 613-1159
Chrlstm1s delivery. Military. Good condition. Present! Beautiful new, 21
$90. !143.mB ouotom. band mad• walnut $191 9
Schools-lnstruction 7600 ADDRESS MACHINE
Elec. full auto. TI~
NO PAYMENT
TILL FEBRUARY cedar chest. 545-6574. ...~ I C M Mlscell•neout 1600 2 MINK atoles, male skins, ........ ,. • .n ...
"""'""" ""~ lypewrltlng. Otlldren, a:randc:hlldren, or Cafe, Restaur•nt 1014
REST A URAN'T equ:lpmut
for ule, ke machine, pie
case, refrlgen.tcft. & etc:.
Must sell bJ Fl1da,y! Call
549-3745 for appointment
Largest aelection of fine re-
conditioned grand pi.anm CHRISTMAS FOR HER fully let out Eric Homo Fiillr 1q11lpp.d lncl11din1
21%" deep $600 Autumn d11• ,,_., .. , ~lnd1r llr•k•
Mlnk 1to!e, worn few times Haze 23.. deep 'Cabac:hon syt•m, redio, ~•ef•r, whlt1 yourseU! Individually tutof'-
ed Otllcoat 10 lessons typing
school. 173 Del Mar, CM,
548-2859
e SPINETS e CONSOLES Colt Sl<nl. 9ell for $375. $500 Certified t of w•ll1, d11•I tp91d wh1d· * 5'8-20Sl * ' proo 1hi1ld w I p • I' 1, w•rnint Franc:hlscd dea!er for
Y1mah•
Kimball
value. 675-5545 AU. WOOL W.tktri fl11h•r, •fc .. 1tc. .m pe car-QUALITY Klngshe bed 9103411
EXPERT PIANO INSTR
Popular &: J llZZ Slory & Clork
Kohlor & Campbell
Caast Music
1139 N•wport Blvd., CM
646-0271
~\:1:2° .::U~ =o ~~ w lbee.utifully quilted mat· All 1969 Models and
tble w/whlte cutfis. $150. tress, apllt foundation. built Colors Here •.•
• 646-7028. Garage S•lti 1022 54S-6657 eves. In frame. Never used, $98. . Ready to Drive I
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
Fumiture 8000
''S•nta's Workshop''
GARAGE SALE
Worth $250. 842-6S38
POOL TABLES.SLATE 1 FRIGIDAIRE, top troe,.r,
New genuine alate -from 3 piece bdnn set, dining
$395 • incl. acceuorles, set· rm table & 4 chairs, desk,
up and d~lvery, 642-4236 & mlsc:l, all in good c:ond.
BEAUTIFUL toR p Ink 548-1242
'66 T·llRD
Full power, f1ctory •Ir,
tSK8119)
$2495 CANCELLED
Houseful of O.cor•tor
Furniture
December 13th and 14.th
Speciality Gltta and Itemt-
Made to order. Everything
done with LOVING HAND
CARE. Abo ~!al t'OOK·
ING AND BAKING Goodies.
Shop here for last minute
114 S. El Camino Raal ·
S•n Clemente
492-4642 ladles full length all wool w""o"R"L;-;;Dc;e>o;;-;;O-;;K~CHii'iiii"LOn::. ll--,,-5-0_L_D_S_D_E_L_T_A_
coat, never Vt"Orn. Orlginal CR.An' set, 15 vol., '66 $75. ..,...,~~~~~;;;;;;;;I rost $50. Now $30. 540-91.62 Also Cycle-Teacher $25. Aho ss 4 Dr. H.T. l0,000 ,.,r.
MOVING NEW bronze ~--'~ light l4xl8' be1-acrllan, used 6 A111to., R&H. PS, f•cfory ,_.... 16"' 1Jr. ISAl~17) fixture cost $89, now $40. mo. $85, 54-0587 PM $1995
"""' . s.,.nish Renaiss•nce & * * *
Mediterr•nean "SEE SANTA'S ELVES
WAS ORIG. $1698.00 ""~W~"f.~ Baku)
MUST SACRIFICE ln Mesa Verde ! ! SALE ! ! 2 coach lamps 20" blk I: 21 DIAMOND CU!tom Dinner
braa, pr. $15. 675--0338 tin& $1B5. 3 d i a mo n d 11 ·--.,..,--=c==--
COLUMBIA 29 "Qu<rlda" Prince" rlna \! ct. $'15. '61 T·llRD $685.00
ITEMS AS FOU.OWS: BAR, 2 1tools, dining table, We're moving to larler quaJ1.
ten and we have a lot ot
pianos and organs we don't
want to move. Some are
wants 3rd partner. Sharp! 540-3178 C•11p•, Full pow•r, f1cf0f'J'
Sleeps 6. $4,000. See Balboa 56 OLDS, good working car •Ir, 10,000 111il11. IXSR· Gorgeous 8 ft. Spanish aota lamps, bird ct.8':S, dw-es,
and Match t n r Olalr. cookware, odds and ends. Marina. 642.-3295 $50. Buffet $25. Stereo $15 I Ill
Naw Mlnk J•ckot Polly chalr $1.50 2 dining $4195
Best otter. 536-0153 chn $3. 548-2746 CUstom q u 11 t e d with =89'1=-W.=O======c: used· some demos·• 10me carved wood trim R. 10 ft ~; aome ~tlnued
Seville Carved veivet sora: Appll•nc.. 1100 models. and all have been --------POWER Singer Sewing ''7 JAGUAR 420
heavy Dark oak end tables drutlcally $llscounted to .ell l--F-E_E_T_O __ Y_O_U __ I Machlne. $125. 642-8741 or 4 Dr. RIH, 111forri•tlc, PS,
and match:lng cocktail ta-GAS Range. Apt llR, like lmmedlatelyl You must not __ R _______
1
-."';;;3-;;;tm.-o:;;",;;;;;;o.;::;:;::-;: f•ctory ,;,, pow1r wl....,
hie. 8 Piece King alte Med· new. Cost $'16. Will tell $20. mlss this really-apectacular 2 BEAUT. Kittena, lonesome, MUsr Sell IBM Selectric for .lows. ITXS752l
fterTallean oak panelled 2040 • Apt B • Orange, Cos-sale. Bqy with no money wUd. 1 all white Iona: fiutt;y $250, Yachlc:a·D Rel I ex . $4295
bedroom suite with full I ~la=M='"==,...,.-.,.,-,:::-; down 0.A.C. I: 5 years bl hair, one every color, fair ~"""'""'::"'=,,-=.,-.,--· 11--------II
King size box aprlnga I GAFFLER'S &: Sat l I er'• pay. tastic. They were hungry, St•uffer Reducing '68 RIVIERA
mattress. Large Spanisolh range w/rotlsserle &: grldd· WIBOlARDN~~CM ~12 I fed them. Help me catch Machin• $85. f11111 pow•r •nil fictorv •Ir decor dining room. G d die. $150. Xlnt con • .. .. ""'... ·• .............., .. _ --" the ·' lea.1 Spanish table lamps. Open Sunday attemoon1 t • ..,.m anu Y are youn. 548-4753 conditioning, IYTMl99J
Hanging '"'8 lamps, otc., GOOlhlll33E W••hl-M a • h I n • """""' U/lO FIREWOOD $449 5 Ea b · be · · .... ... .. ' CHRI~... Gilt • Ham· MINIATURE Schnauzer FOR SALE etc. c p1eee can pur-almost new, $100. Coldspol ., •• ~ ale
chased lnd.Jvidually. chest freezer, make otter! mend.Steinway • Yam.aha • mixed m , deserted at e 540-9887 e
Terms available 531_7936 new &: used pianos of all boardlrc kennel. Cute, af· DRY Flrc Wood, eucalyptus, Newcomen to CaIU. makes. Best beys in So. fectlonate, companion. orange and mixed. Free
Credit appro~ immediately PHILCO Refrigerator top Calif. rla;ht here. Needs someone to love. d 11 835-11)19
RE freezer. Excellent c:ondltlon SCHMIDT MUSIC co.. 5t6--038T 12!10 ·=',.,""="'""'°· -=.,,,--..,= RD FURNrTU $50. 64>-5396 1907 N. Main, SABLE • Whl ma I• HOL1J>AY Health Sp a
IN THE WAREHOUSE FRIGIDAIRE l double Santa Ana She-•~ ~• .. -, l w old. Membership 1% yn, t.o. 1844 NEWPORT BLVD ' """ •---===---~~·• ~ ,. 7tti • door, retrlgeration/tttezer , -ORGANS .._ Llkea c:blldren, shots and ~ 540-5
COSTA MESA combination. $75. 646-8658 PIANOS llc:enM 80-Q14 aft g HEADMASTER Skies, poles
Every night 'tll 9 --e Pl.ayer Pianos P.M. lltu 6 boots, Xlnt cond Sac! call
Wed., Sat & Sun 1tll 6 Antiques 8110 r..ARGESI' SELECTION OF FREE Kitten, •hart. haired, 675-0123
DANISH MODERN ' Sota, MERRY CHRISTMAS W~ ~~CITY m>ut • lovloe. Lone haired FIREWOOD chair, eJat bench, 2 lamps. Antiques Ampersand C 85 calico cat looJdna t.or lldn:r'I)' 631-6841
Make otter. 2856 Corvo Pl. the 3400 Bri.ttol. .M. 540-31 I a p , We 11 t r a I n e d . LOVELY W"edding &:OW'l run
CM. 545-3855 Unusuallorlltll ~·--LARGE Tw\r.man, Artisan ~1878 12/10 Je-h lilt! a llke new •AC, antique ver -....., -The Orlan with Bells ....... _.. YOUNG couple aoon to ~ 3 Butcher blocks, 2 roU atre ORGANIC Fmllizer, qed Call 842-8313 ..
need turnlture of aU kinds. top deska, 2 oak tee boxes, and Sound mtem. HaU horse manure combined FIREWoop FOR. SALE
11 you have any to aive 6 hall seata. arti. cost.· $2500 Tmm. with wood sbavl.np. Good % Cord $22 50 del 54J.-04m
away, please call 638-0535 2624 Newport Blvd., CM Prlv. pty, 6f4.-0105, Ews. mulch. 833-5332 between 8 · ·
NEW Ba.by furniture aet ./ * 642-3069 * WANTED: Electric home a: 5 Mon thru Frt. 12/31 Ml W•nfH 8610 crib, stroller &: ca.rriage. l""v".xr=-:,:::1ocl<=-Am=er,,..-•-=-Eur"· orvan. late model. Cash or YOUNG, Male, Persian cat.1-"'•c. ______ __ "~:,,."''-Nr..,.a;;:~::613--0583;:-' •P>0-:: . .,"";;;:--;36;;:1h;-I ' ~ ~=~. L;~~: ~:vs prty only. =~:e ~m~ ~ W A N J E D
RCA Black i white TV, Newp<rt Blvd., CM. HAMMOND Spinet 0rpn. aft. S P.M. 12/12 WE netd quallty (no junk
''5 CHRYSLER JOO
H1rdtop. F111l power •"-'
f1,fory •It c111dltl•nlnt.
INIZ5461
$1595
'H CONTINENTAL
4 Dr. H.T. l•n.111 tip, f111ll
p•w•r, f•ef•ry •Ir, ITES..
~541
$1695
'H LI SAIH
2 Dr. H.T. A11to,,.1H1, P-·
•r tft•rlnt I llr1ke .. f1c-
tory 1lr. IRYVl99l
$2195
'61 IUICI SIYl.ARI
4 Dr. H.T. A11toM•tlc, r•·
di•, 1111 .. r, p-•r tte1,..
Tftt. 9,000 1111. tXSSIJll
$2995 maple col'tlOle with UHF Xlnt c:ond~ OIJUSTMAS Kittens 2 % pleue) • Furniture, color
attacbment $65. Ev •s. !_•wln9 Mlchln.. 8120 moa.. Ta~ twins, would 'IV', st~""appUances, ''1 COlVAll MCNaa
54&-llliB J.967 SINGER. oomplete with PLAYER PIANO i 200 rolls like to 1tQ to 1 • th e r • tools 'I: ottlee ~mf!ftl Ciwp1. 4 "P'H .,..,.,,.,1 .. COlablU~-~eCo. ~ir, la2blendu. wal. conmle. Due to :Illness :--pmaale. $500. M&-81ll aft 545-18'11 12/lO TOP CASH IN 30 Mhrutes tlon, r1dl1 •rHll h11+.r. .... • -= forced repo. Balance $41.75 ' l FREE stud eervict, tD 531·1212 * ~ OCOZl10l
nbigerator.lll&-2535 or........, $4.25 mo. ZI& HAMMOND Orzu K·S, p,_, whllo ........... -1,::========ll $595 HAWAll Bound, beauilul llv ag automatically, touch-o-Qirmy. Gqod cond. $550. die. W-6391. 12112 Machlnery, etc. 1700
rm .. dln. rm., 1S68 Admiral ma.tic, button boles, blind Call after 8. l'J5....3&U 4Mos. FemeJe Sbephenl,
refr1r.; Mlle. ~2905 "-...., cuts without ~ta;--~"""' Stnube part Col1la. 3(11 Moolo V>m. p~ ~'";,g>'e.. ~ 234 f, 171h SJ,
LADIES: See to appreciate, attach. Guarantll: OK. F1nt ........ Pl&lV wl.tb c:arvlnr. Apt C., c.:.ta Mesa 11/12 lb moblle llll --lb ~--t J 16 •m. Call l'lrt11 ~-.,..... ••-. -(TMI IUICK COlNlll New extra 1rg band ""''-· • "~ an. • -· -· -8>( F•m. doe. mixed ro.d, pnou. Carl< -llll, "' CQCT I MESA walnutctdarche1l~74 anytime530-121.2orl9M4f.f SMALL Sb:o:t keyboard 1"'° )'l'I.. Vf!f'J Id. with built $1650. cn4) 6:§....~ :llA
NAUGAllYDE wbllt oouch 1967 SINGER. aulo da .... Plano. Ne::;!!!" $295. dill-64U4ll3 12/12 ..., 891-2'33 548•7765
$50. or beat otter. See 1174 wal. cablnet llx:lr. Repo, --,--...,...;~:"'.'-;;;;;;;----GfiRE.<iE>iiT'"iiDene;;;;\, ima1o;;;Ll;1y;,.,.;,l'=:=:,;,=:===::.ll
Boiae Way C.M. 5'9-2.'JSO eve will tell fir $38 cub «' KAHY 1'0NDmn1L OP. old -needs low. atlf'ntlon. Stor... •ns M ............... ',..
. t.ab OY'l!lt' 12 ~nu of -""--••£ ... -12110•1--""-------ll 2 PC. couch, Pd lllp coven, $3.7& mo. Nnt pymt J'u ~~-u"ed"" ._u...3 ..... ~! .. hffDAl4'. Very pn.._ ..... i.__ DOUBLE rarqes for nnt, ~......,I--',..
good cond. $25 • .J bar stools J 10i 1969, Dots ewrythlns ™'~ .111 ~-Op. ELECTRIC n> V ~r. pa mo. Pallaadn: Rd., near _..,. 10 _... pnl
$10. li'IM96l I :i:u~~~;:.;: :'.=..""""'ba"' ... "'dr,-·-~'-.:ow"-c.;..' -...,,.-s:~ ~k doc :~ o.c. abp:lrt. 541-«N• t'J\ __ -. L llllGl.I
Dial ~ tor RESULTS atill good. Call 5)1..66J.t White elephants! Dhne+&t Bunneee cat MS-'1549 12/12 SOCK rr TO 'EM! ~
---,,r--~--"----1--~
.~-~-~-~~~-"-'-""~~~~--'~·-·~·~·~~·~-~~~·-..:....._~·~..11 .... m .. •m""'i•'•·.a>e .... ·r•<'P""'••••••'•"""''•••h"'"~'~>•fl-..,•1 ... +.""r?n~· ... ••ea..n..:.•a·~·••":...• ... 1w1
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II, ltl
hon•
• tho
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DUpe
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ltr1k1
whlf1
whu:l-
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and . !I .
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1ctory
-
1c:tory
lXSA·
·20
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lllCll
•
ANCHOR
MOTOlll ·-.
1111 HA~Ol ILYp. 546-IOIO
. COSTA M!SA
• ...
Tr•nsportation 5p1•!,l1
• IVPI IF 'you 11AV1i IHll IANKRUPl • liViN
IP, -'#Cl\! tiAtl A RE~bSSE~SION t £VliN IF YQ4
A~E Nf,V llj Tli~ A~EA • N9 ~Ep TAP£ e liV~
IF '¥01! H.ii\1& NG CREDIT e plv91ic;;E9 ti '
.
t NO CR~JllT '-ROILEMS .
tt WI WllY otl OW11
' CONTRACTS
•
. '
469 TOVOTfl CGRQNA H•~I· $1997 #HV, ,, ... ••r,'m••r "'!'~
NEW '68·. ~~~,f~~11"~ '2697
'61 FORP ·~t11~~tt,tiT .
• '65 vw R<l!lffl, · l'!!r!!:
· ..P11t LllllU .
• 111!1QRT§
TOY OT J(, VOLVO
•• -A
A~Dle•lll
¥~" "'' !llHC> •IP'!
•
9TOYOTA9
''.WE'VE GOT 'EM"
OVER SI NEW 1969 TOYOTAI
· · TO CHOOSE FROM!
,
WI ARE OFFERING FOR THE hi Tlt,11
5-1ti9 TQYOTA Demonstrators
LOW MILEAGE
Al ~U,$TA~11~L 5~ Y!t<l~S!I
. ~ • l.lSY ro •UY '
JJM SLEMONS
•
• ... --lJ), l"8
l
OJILY
.14
DAYS TIL
XJAASl
•
l'
-'
•
•
··'
•'
~.
•
)f -.v PILOT
NABERS CADILLAC
·HAS THE
LARGEST SELECTION
OF LATE MO{>EL PREVIOUSLY OWl\IEO
CADl.LLACS
IN AU OF SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
11ISE CADIUACS ARE All
SPECIAU Y PRICED NOW
FOR THE ENTIRE HOLIDAY SEA.SON
SEE US TODAY!
NABERS
2600 HARBOR BLVD. 540-9100
COSTA MESA
PLUS
2 DOORS, 4 DOORS AND CAMPERS
Aro Hort Now For
DELIVERY TODAY!
DOT DATSUN
18835 BliOI BOULEVARD
HUll11N6TON BEACH
UZ-771.1 or 5a·0442
I am"9 pm -.Frtes.t I am-5,30 pmeC.losad Sun
I I
I ~ -~
$1297 • 66 MPG
KOSTA KUSTQM KARS
1980 HARBOR BLVD.
646-5484 8·9 DAILY
COMPLITI FOllls.M CAI SllYICI
WE ·ARE LOADED
• . WITH BRAND NEW
1·969 TRUCKS ,
AT
HUGE DISCOUNTS
.... ' '99 .... • • • ,._ T• & um. • • • O.A.C.
, ANY TR.llCK IN STOCK . . '
T.--.lous Selection 'of Pickups, Vons, Sub-
urWns, et Hugo Oiscourm. Shop todoy et
c-ol, Chovrolet.
----CONNELL--
CHEVROLET
Jl21 HAuOI BLVD. COSTA MESA
~ 146-1203~546-1200
•
I •
Yo Go
.IEGIN YOUI ~LIDAY IY SfiOPPING
THIS GUIDI OF NIW Ir USED AUTOS &
GIMITMAI om 1DD1• .ccES5911p. a ust
GEORGE
ZIMMERMAN
IS PLAYIN6 • SANTA CLAUS
Het•'• A Sa"'r'• of
Our Flf10 Soloctlo111 ........... ..,.. $39" .......... -~ H_,_ 1149" ............... $141
IA.DEi WHE~ '195
SANTA
CLAUS
SPECIALS
AT THE
DATSUN
CORNER
... "2000 srom IOADSTllS"
10.000 .cfHI ..... '2595
'1795
'1595
'61 DATSUN
4 Dr. SMn. o..._ .. 1-.ce '' f.ctor:r ••IJ'Oltfy.
'67 DA.DUN
4 Dr. Sdn. ts, Hfl•. A Hrtl t•991' cm,
free Key-lobs for looki"I et 't+i• "'"" D1tsu11 Li11e.
ZIMM·ERMAN . .
DA:rSU·N· SALES lo
SERVICE
2854 HaiborBlvd. C. M. Phane 540-641 0 . '
HERE NOW! .
Tllo ""°'""'le 'l-
AUSTIN AMERICA $1·8. ·95 Fully Equipped
IKfudlot
AUTOMATIC
JRANSMUSION
NEWPORT IMPORTS LTD.
3100 .W~ COAST HWY.
NEWPORT· BEACH
642-9405 .CLOSID ~UNDAYI 540-1764
' FACTORf CLEARANCE SA~!
Of Shalby CObrnl GT-350'/GT·SOO
THE '69's ARE COMING!
As Orange Coonty's-only Shelby American Dealer,
we are cooperating wi"th the factory to clear the
last of .the '686 at .
Discaunis Never Beta.re Offered On
America's No. 1 H.igh Perfonnanc:e Car!
' $3995
, 428 V-8 Cobre 1n9in1,
1utorn1tic, 1p1ei1I tir•1
· ind wh••l eoveri, teeh.,
oil ·91u91, con1ol1, ro11 ber,
. hem••• '"d beth, 11rill lighl1,
top of 't+i1 lin•! Ex1cutiv1 cir
11•v0!:•. r19j1t1r•d, wiffi 1111 tt,,"
4,000 11'111•. Full 111w ctr Wi t·
re11ty.
THEODORE FORD RO.BINS
2060 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA
Phone 642·0010
SERVING THE HARBOR AREA SINCE 1921
HOLIDAY DISCOUNTS
LOOK AT THI SA VIN5Sll .
'61 "T' lllD '1195 hll ,._ & .Jr 1en4ltlelll ... IYl437.
'lJ CONTININTAL '1595 ....... ,.,,,... ................
Uc. PIMOtl.
''4 COMnNINTAL '1795 .... ,._ • .....,., .... u.. tozoJ. .
'61 CONTININTAL '2595 4 ..... ,,.11,_...,....,.
+..W"'"-
'U Pl.nrlOUJN ·ITATIOM WA90M '895 ' ,... , .............. _ ........ ,._ ......
l"" ,...._ ........ ..._ FWJt4.
JOHNSON & SON
LINCOLN-MERCURY
COSTA MESA BRANCH .
1941 HARIOl 11.VD. COSTA MESA '42·7050
· MISSION IMPOSSIBL
IOI AT Bil MAE TOYOTA
DES(RIPTIOll ' ...... k.\ •":r
ii299
l •) '..,. .....
'65 BUIC~ Le Sabre . .s2p75 $12 it 4r ...... lr-con41flot1l ... (SYDIJOI
'66 PONT •. Le Mails \
$1125 ~l'tt luckot 1ott1, 1flck •" fir, ISVF5t7)
'65 PLYt.IOUTH Fury · $1515 $999 4 dt, with olr cond. l P~H7561
• ' -.,-.-
.' 61 ~!'»~,~~ ~6MNHt ~299
v~~,,~~~~~,Gro~:~·~ $1615 1 $.9991 #60 !:~~IOJ ·~-
:~!o~~"~!.;6:~.~o~~~' > I $1395 I $999 I 60' '~. D . ' . , $,
FORD
Falrlaoo WINJOO, Y·I, SHKI 17
EASY TO REACH AT GARFIELD lo BEACH ALL 'PRICES IMCTIVI! tlit\t 'llluntloy: Doc. 12, IHI
18881 BEACH BLVD. Ph. 947.9555
HUNTINGTON BEACH
' J Ml. Nortll , .t P,JIClfk CMlt HWJ ... IMdl '"'"" .
YOUR dR -it must laat UI another
six yearal" ~
CO\lld group avte Insur-ance help reduce prem1W111
as group life and accldmt insurance have cloner It's
now being tried out by one
firm on a llmlted wa)'. If it
works, relief might be in
sight.
by Louis R. Benny
Wron1 w•y flyor 11 the
tllY who comes down your
side of the r o ad. Usually
th1a driver la stone drunk. Best de(ense Is to pull way
,off· the road· and give him
the whole thing. It this isn't
possible, pull oft on the oth·
..-er ' •Ide (flash llghta, •ound
horn.
President
UNIYWITY OIDS
2850 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
546.1550'
Se,..r•f'9 • t o·p •nd tall llgbta, now superlmposed ,
over each other, are coming
soon. The separate locations
will mean ~ater SIJ,fety. Variable intensity stoplight&,
brighter during the day than
at night are alao 'in work,
but present tougher engi-
neering problems.
"It's not so gra~ In •P"
pe•r•nc• -has the usual gadgets and gears;· but :for
us it'• the car or the future
Llk• to clrlv• on Old1m•
1111•, but can't quite make
tl;tose new Olds paymenta?
Don't despair, look ln our
lot full of new-car trade in
,Olds. Many one year old
that give you llptUI'f, '~
pendablll ty, comfort, con-·
venience -all at tnuch leu
than a new 0 1 d s. Come to UNIVERSITY OLDSMO-
BILE in Costa Mesa, "We
are never ntldled , · .. Un-
til you are."
M•k• y • u r ar .. ,..,
cMc:k tttt. detroeten, whk:b can be Ute savers. They
c a n become dlsconnected and sometimes s p 11 t and
tear. So check them each
fall to be aure they an working. --~,... ·
LEASE DIRECT
e LARGE SELECTION
e CHOICE OF COLORS
· e MODELS & EQUIPMENT
e FAST DELIVERY
e FAST SERVICE
ORDER YOUR 1$9
CADILLAC
NOW!
NABERS
2600 HARBOR BLVD. 540-91 00
COSTA MESA
Wa'r• playl119 s.it. Ciaos
with tt.ne k>w, low, low
USED CAR PRICES
SANTA'S IHT
POUCHES,
YW·BUGS &
CAMPERS
• 75 •
USED VW1 sm TO S1tft
e PORSCHES e
'61 PORSCHE ''' AUTO. '61 PORSCHE S-714 srD.
'66 PORSCHE 912 Ii SPD. '67 POlSCHE •1 2 I Sl'D.
'II PORSCHE SP'ST 4 S'°. '66 P'ORSCHE •12 I SP'D. 'It PORSCHE Cl'E 4 Sl'P.
,.,. PORSCHE SPR •o 4 Sl'D. '62 PORSCHE SUI' 71 4 Sl'D. ,
C•mpers ·Transporters· P•MI•
'61 V.W.' l'ASS IUS '64 V.W. CAUPll
'65 V.W, IUS 'W V,W. DLX
'64 V.W. IUS SUNROOF t l'ASS IUS
'67 V.W. DLX t P'ASS IUS '67 V.W. CAMPil
OH WHAT FUN
IT ·IS
TO RIDE IN
ONE OF OUR
GUARANTEED
USfD CARS ,
1t70 HAllOlt IOULIYAID COSTA MUA Mt .. Jll
AUTO DISCOUNT mmR,
2004 llartior . Cosla Mesa
'll Y·W
CQNNELL CHEYROLET'S USED'
CAR CENTE!l "SPECIALS"
2 Door, redio •l'Jd h11ter. Cl1111. Uc. No. IAY670
"
''6 MUnAN•. '1095 H1r~top.Coup1, 6 cyli11d1t, 1t111d1td shift, r1dio
I ht:1t1r, Sliver w/lilflck Yf.yl 1111. Uc. No. SVYJ-41 · ·
'IS .AllACUDA ..J-$ 1395 1-:f.T. coup•. VB, 1utor111tic, redio-, l\e1f1r, t11x1do
bl1clc with gold vinyl int~rlor. tNQZ49SJ
'H IAM,Ul '695 St1lion wegon, 6 cylind1r, 1t1nd1rd shift,
t1dlo, h11t1r. ll'CS907)
'U DAlT f!.T. '1095 H1rdtop coupe. 6 cylind1r, 111tor111tic, r1dlo, h11t·
Ir,
0
rn1dh11M bl111 wi~ blue Yinyl trim. '
"61 THUNDl;lllU s795
H.T. Coop•. Full po,,,..r, fedof"'I' 1ir, ·
r1dl.,, heetar, torch t.d wfth whltl top. ... ....... s 5 .
Cu1ht111 c011pe, F11ll ph'M encl feetory 329
1it coMJtlo11f119. R1dlo •11d he1t1r.
'H IMPALA '2595 4 Door hetdtop-. VI, 111to1111tic, pow1r
•t .. r!119, re-ilo, h11t1r.
--CONNELL--
CHEVROLET .
2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA
SHOPPIN5 TO D07 •
LIT CHICK IYERSON.
HD.I' YOUI
......... effh ... ,. ....... ~
'
"Sh.ti.." 'C1iro1111 SKI-RACK ·r4 p1lr for your v.'w .. , S14.tl h.l~h;flo.~• l11th1r STRNG, WHL. COVERS, l1c1 011 •• $6.JI
cqc9~·~f$, l'lriety COio,... COVlt full floor e t11, from $16,fi
Ler9ll'.4llwt1in of h111d rubbef 101icl welnut
~~R ·St+IFT KNOIS , , , , • , , ••••• , •••• ,, ••• , ... , Sl.11 K•~iil• ~••torn 600" W#X KIT, the "'l"'I' l:.11t •••••••• $1".ot
Po'?clte ,i:f11rcli" Qu1litj WOOD STEERING WHEEL · •• $tl;Of :
Po"•h••CC>COA .MATS, verlety of colors ••••• , , ••••• $20.tS·
"MG> Mm1N" C..r Co111r for ell VW'a ind Porschea,
• • ',j. • froll't ••• , •• $27.11
"L1itz" chr~rn•·.~~l~C~;{4 pelr) for 911 I 912 PoPJch1 $11.tl
" ; . , ,. ACCEPT
· S,.nliAi!l1ric1rd--M1st1r Ch•rtt-Am1tie1n bpt1•s : , .. .
· " NEWPORT ltVD.
• SPYfCI
IS
011 .... ,.
CONClltf -, ~IUla
234 E. 17th St.
llllitWdC....J
COSTA MBA
541-7765 .......... _ ... ,,. ...... ..,, ........ ,.
~11....&p•
at llND STRm
NEWPORT , ............... ,
VI, awtom"itlc p9WW
1taerl119 ,rfflo, h••t-
1r, cl•lulfl w~1el ea""
ers, heetl rMh' pl•• 1M
of th• f•ctotY tt•a-J
tleN ~111,, t21Hlll
52985
IVMmAll .
HUmT •
.,
•
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•
•
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f ~ -. ', ,. ' , ·. ' , I ' ~ : · -: . • , .: · • • To E .... ::b, a~tJea·-... :.sF ... :·sa ~ 4i--Dl . :· ' -. ; . -. . ·~ -'
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•
•
1 I .. 1 • . . • • -.., . -
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' ·I ' , . -~ . . ' . . .
~ • .. " ' ,. ·. ' ' .
• • Bolsa Isle Site
'' . -~ ~O~ ctf . D:r~kMj
.ilout'.: .jQi.:~G•". : .. JTa~·_;.:_·,:·.
:HitAgaiu
From Wire Services
SAN FRANCISCO -Pickets chanting
strike slogans tried today to dlsrupl
cl~ at embattled San Francisco St.ate
College as weather turned fair following
a tWo-day rainstorm.
· About 30 piCketl appeared on the cam-
lJlll je!Ung,. "On strike, .imt it down."
They also ·carried signs which read:
~'Black studie! or no studies.' '
"lnsUtutional racism must go," and
:'Make college serve the people.''
: The: demonstrators fled as a tqUad or '40 ol!ieen moved mto lhe campus.
· 'llto-piCl<ets, including 14 girls, -
later lind reoumod their •llli•SOOC chants.
They di!persed wbeo the officefJ again
· matthed ooto_ the caJllllll>. •
A storm discouraged dea>onatrations
Tuesday but today the weather was
clear and coot , , _
Strikers trying to c1o&e ,the 11,000 stu-
dent umpu1 have •' up :with 1lx
(Seo SF 'STATE, Pop I)
Mailman ~d.mits ·
Slaying Pretty
Mesa Waitress
. By TOM BARLEY
Ofl'!_e_,,, .........
Levester A. Coley ll>day pleaded guilty
to . lhe gunshot alaying of · ptttly Costa
Mesa coctltll waitress !lose Marie
Weidner.
But there will be "' death penalty
for lhe JJ-yur-old Fullerton mljllman.
who admits be pumped four 11K11s Into
. the attractive Costa Mesa woman last
Ocl 17 u she returned home from
Work.
Superibr Judge William Speirs &en-
tenctd the obviously distressed Coley
to life Imprisonment on , the recom·
mendaUon Cl Depu\y Diltrid Attorney
Mike c.p!UI.
J\adie Speln.-also granltd Capiui's
~ that Cokf reoeive psychiatric
lroatment In state priaoo.
Tho poulhllltJ that Coley waa Involved fn "otber major crimes" wu. aired in
the' courtroom today. eaplDI 1o1d Joo'"
Speln that Co1ey11 1'.poafble implicaUan"
In oilier crimet ""'I being lnvallgaltd
by tbe dlatrict alfmney's o(flce.
"II we do lndOed llnd that Coley was
fe.!porWbJe for the actions we are in-. r COLEY, Paat I) '
. •• . ' '.
STATE
, Willi•m P. R.ogers
TRIASURY
David-Kamody
HEW ·s·EcltETARY
Robtrt'H. Finch
U~IT ..........
TRANSPORTATION
John /.. Volpe
URBAN, HOUSING
O.Orga M. Romney
LABOR
Jamn J . Raynolds
NiXon Announces 'Mayo
Federal Budget Director
From Wire Sen1cet
NEW YORK -Prealdent-eled"NiJoo
annotinced today a !ideral budget direc-
tor -Qiica10 banter Robert Mayo
-before• OylJll to WUlllnflon to an-
lllC!ll with nine years In pilvate hanking. wlli 'llt..conslderecl. "a ·top member of
lhe cablnel team" Jnd wtll atlend au
~ of. that bo<b'-
Nlllln •""1a7 lomiau, advlaed kcJ
Republlcair lawmakers or hll C.hlnel
Pruid<llWl<cl Niz<nt/1 aiyiounce-eeledlo!11, lncludq WUUam P. Jlo&m
m<11I tonight of hit dlbinri' wf1I b< u llCRtary ol. sla1e and MelTln JI.
<arlled' lioc at17 J>-"'-l!n' otL 'qll ~ aa MCrelaiy of. def .....
thr<"1 nehoolkl. , ". ilacoll Js a fann<r altomt)' ....,,,
~ I I l
City ·Says {Jil Could
. . . B, JDoB r. ooi.r:lNJ
• < -.· ... .,...,., .....
Newpoli • Bellcb·-11 fretful about• the
jiroopecl or ottm. ou drilling polluting
lta ~ Iron!, state assembl)'l!len pro-
bing al>orellne'U!fO w... told today.
Testifying at an •all-day hearing at
NewpOrt City Hall, Qty ~er lllriey
L. Hurlbllrl 'pieaded for support by the
Beer Bars Plan . ' .
. To .'Boost . Pr.ices . . . .
hi Costa Mesa ·
Earthquai:e pr0,i1ctiom, in~ational
· tensions °IDd crime Jn the 1treeta are
obviously real worrlet, ·bu~ lnllaUon is
bloating the beer bar busineSs and the
price ii now abwt to go up too, it
was reveaJed TuesC!ay, '
Meeting at the· Colla Mesa Moose..
Lodj:e, representaUves of 23• taverns-fn. lhH!>""' dlscu.ued .the Imminent price
ftlte Monday night, but came lo no
definite .declslnn.
"We have oo choice," upJained Bonnie
Forguson, of The Highlander, . '36 E.
17th SI., saytn1 'lnllaUon la. the basil
of the llai'tior fo.rea problem just aa
in any other~-·
Cocklall loonges and , .. go bm, >y)lich
nonniolty dlarge higher pr!..., lo'r a
glasa of beer than ordinary, spots, are
pot Included In · the anUclpAled prlci
raise. : t • · "We're trylbg tb decide now on prices
o[ beer and when they will lDcreast/'
aald Mrs. F<frguoon, wbooe hll&hancl, Jim,
la cine. of. two 1potesmen lo< the 1-1y-
knit association.
Price of a ciau or c1o....uc tap ,!raw
Is . now abollt 25J.10.,ll! ceoll, bolt the lncW8e 'being .COllll"ered baau~ bee!!
iev"1e4 y~t. . · ·
· ''Tbe)I 'told me ·oot 'to, but tt ~n·t
Jlrut.lc,'.' said Mr1. ForgulOl'I.
"Nob0dy'1 making any 11\onex •. O\lr
)lcenae bu doubled this yur ahd the """*'11 .tuea on leuea IJI' alJn_oot
.evel')'t>Ot wmt op," A uplalned. '
: Wg" -'b4lntllldl -ulda floln 11111 C!"bate· ailo' 10110 op' ~ the llOI!
7ea.r, alOOi ·'lil1b Ille -.i rime· ol
poll\ Uri!>& ,!'1'1 being la' lml• 'loi; la 1be ~ •dmlnlatratioo. Lain!
noonce 1111 cabinet chelcts lo the natim II 11 -,JllDObllcaa 1Jjaate member
too.lgl)t.: · ..., • • ·..: · 1 ~vohtil) wtth <41 e f • n 1 e • A~lng ~fore p<.i~ ii hlf~l,r-' ,
,. llbtel 'hHdquarltft 'ln '1'ew ·Y<iik, • tile ca-~1 com-r
Nixon uld that Mayo, w-boc)ll'aund mun!Caltd to the GOP <0nrreaaJonal
·~~~~m~i.a by~ W. lJoqr ~ M ~ Mrs: ~~~II~== couplelll'fel?lbrl!le'l'I 7Deport•J '(iloo'<lAllNET,,.-i) ~ -thatlJ., rnaJOrri;;.d..!lltlori wtD1appq. ~
-----------· .. . .. ----=·· -,,, I' 'lt ---· ... --....... ...
'· .l
.. ) ,,. . }"
., 'J "~~. ;;,): -· • Getting ~19,w~er la ~
sklered -.. the _WOolhennail
1 can. for~" ' clouds and. u. I ' • W"""!"' . ~ 'l'J\Ur.l<!aY,
, but wllh .-. guoty, wlnda in
the oil. -r ,._ .. .
llll· 'If' .. •
JNSmlf ;TOnA y
•
,
' .
. I
'
•
•
I Diil v Ill.IT
Loss of j)Iain Blade Caused 2nd CW,pper, Ci:aSb
p,... P•e J
•
I ~ .:+-
"'tM ........... ..... --.11111111. .. ~-"" .......... ··-I I 11 ..... Ill& :.r .. di lllli .. .,. ........ 111'""1
--., lbe °""""' MWD 11r11er 1111 ·,... paid-to 1be
-tlJO,GllO In onler to maintain °" . l:l,chl of way -Bolla Chica stall Beach for the causeway to carry desalted water inland to lbe Robert Deemer filtra-
tion plut In Yorba Linda.
Dil1don oboerftd that they bave
alrudJ oun11 -IU inllllaa Into Id·
VIDCO plumJtlc for Ille dealt!DC pllnt.
fOOT Ill DOOll ~ -Qior)el ~ llldloolod Ibo
mlval of 'tlie pl4n -bl~ a root 1n lbe door, t .. p1nc tlil pi.n
alive m1~ the 1970'1 or t•'• when mon water 1' needed.
.. u··~~of ·~~I"'
A pri>i-1 olte at San Onofre and
llOUlh al San Ono!re'" five . ridlU · -been Cllllldlrtd, bol ·bolll ,,.. re-
licted Tu<adaJ "1 1111 -. Ill favor if the Hunlttlatea Btadulte.
Mills said ihlt UJookfng ahead to1the par 1990 or 2000 or beyood, 1111,...nital
~t, MWD have a Iara:e demaaatraUon
'9eN1tlng plant In opvaUon not later
~ li80."
'!'be plant II p.,..,i o11.-e llome
I.GOO feet from Warns. Avenue in the iiPrthwtll llOCllon of Huntlngtoo Beach.
pty leadm bal¥d tho news thal tho
l""Jecl bad bolll mtved aa "aood • .,.. l"r. the city ud ,,.. all u. peoplo
the county," .
·HUNTINGTON llACH NUCLIAR . l'l.AHT llTI RIVIVED
MWD -DI_,. Doc:larM ..... lale 'Moel· L ..... I l'Mn'
FNlll P .. e .1.
OIL FEARS •.• ' . . , .. ... .. .
• ........... p J " .......... •e
SF.-STATE •••
' ' -dlmalldl lo :,. wlllt lhalr· ll""lolll
II. •
Alter a rainy Tutaday -relaUvdy
calm.and Int ol amlll -spokesman
for !be lllllok SU!Ciila Ualon and the
Third Wor14 LI~ Fronl ol DOt>
Negro m1nor111et; IJlllOUJlCed ,._.
dltions to negotiation" that Include
HmOVal of police !rom campus, amnesty
for all atrNled In the past da:s of
"turinail, Uflini el all student IUlpOlllfonl
and doolng·tbe campus during dl!cusslon
between strlkert1 and lloll eoUege
bustees.
Amoq earll• de!Qlllds, 1V e r e
•ll•blllliioltll of'an etbnio studlaa Course wtlicl! would OllC<lllipul a blact.1tudies deparlmant, admlllion ·al all minority
•ppl-1 l'llardliill of qllllll!calions
and relnstatement ol George Murray,
a part.time English lnmuctor who urged
Ntgroe.1 to bring guns to school.
Tlie strlketa place their number at -· -·l.IMlt......,.... with oll1or •1mpt.s of trom 70 fo 300. They have
njected an oUer from acUng President
L L Hayakawa for a blact ltudlu
department.
t SUBPECTED
Hayakawa, noted semanticist named
Nov. 26 to replace Robert R. Smith, &!lo said l!U!pended or arrOl!ed studente
can atteod cl.,... PODdiDI heariltls be-fore a disciplinary-board: .Ha aald II
have been suspended.
.Hayakawa walked out ol a televised
DIWI conference with local newsmen
TuOlday nlgbt.
~ --.,. ·-~,. ,.... -Wflen "Parley Starts
-N.ort1'1'F~~iia.r,i R~lid~
... . ' .. -. -·ro.~Jqlk Troop rf;Jillnut
I ., I , \ "''t.... 'I' • .~
PW (UP!)"..: "Nonli'Vletuam said reany-admitted thlr ·hod "var.at
today it is ready to di.saw the ~utual divisions in South Vietnam fl&hUng on
withdrawal of troops from South V1etnam the side of the Viet Cmg, !4il Hanoi's
u 100D u UM Paril confereoce on read1MEI to d1scla . Cllaord11 -Vietnam ls convened. gestlons could mean [!l:inpl:y they were
Nguyen Than Le, the chief Hanoi willing to dlscuSs the pillout of ·U.S.
spokesman in Paris, tol ' smen: troops. Clifford spoke of a J:OUtual
"11Mi Americans be able to raise withdrawal.
this ud uy 9 question -but first On tbe poslUve •Ide, t;orth V1ttJllDI
the coiife"nce ltarl." was belie'vtd to havt witbdraWD aoai.e
Two maJor 11U>aclll today again made o! Ill troopa llun Iha SouUl as an
starl of the tallll problem1Ucal. South unpubliclJod goodwill lfOsl""J altboush Vllbtlm rejecled dlrlOI VlelnllJll tallll this bas not been o!ficlally connnned.
wilh the Viet Cong and the North Viet-At the same ttme, the North V1tt-
namese were reported to have cold namese spokesman accused the United
shouldered French medi~tion efforts.. . States and Saigoo of "stepping up the
Le made the remark in commenting war." He also reaffirmed North Viet-
on a statement by U.S. Defense Secretary nam's demands the Viet Cong be granted
Clar~ Cl!!!anl Tuuday !bat Waahlnatoll equal llllul wttb Utl Uallld lltalll,
and Hanoi might start withdrawing tneir South Vietnam and North Vietnam.
troops from Boulh Vietnam within ~
days.
Le wu ol!l11u1d In hll reply, bul North
Vietnamue IOUl'Cll uld he meant Ult
matter would be open for discuss.Ion.
The source dJd not say the North Viet4
namese would be willing to offer a11y
compromise.
Le aaid Ibo problem of .. 11bdrawal or troopo Ill 'South vtelnlm bad not
been dhM:!u8led to far.
He said the private meetings had been
devoted to working out procedural pro-
blems for a broadened ronference, which
would include \M S.igon government
and Ille N1Uonal LlberoUon Front (NFL)
or Ibo Viet Cou.
The North \rietnamese have never
Boy, 15, Cleared
Of Murder Rap.
In Skull Slaying
The Riverside Dlllrlct Atlorney't Of.
!ice baa dropped murder charg" agalnsl
a 15-yUM]d Std.co Hills youth, one of
lour arrt!led In colll)ectlon with tbe
dlacoveey of human. bOOes near Elsinore
Nov. 10 by two O>lta Mesa rabbit bun-ters . , ...... r ... :c
:COLEY • .' .•
Commission In October that ll lntenda pbout rectealj®ll usage ol Ill pub119
.-:O:'°:dJ~to~ ~~~·~,..bu ""Jr:i~=
Just north of Newport. . with the -.:ae in populaUon. "
The 62-year-old upert said he wu "setting tired of rumen"' wbtn IUed
about claims that bla moYM Ill dictated bf~ au!hori~. He ace.used .....,.,, of ernpllaslzfilf Ibo acls or
Utl dJaaiden!I and ilDorlal WCI like one, be said~ Moftday :•-when
•tudeots applaudf;d" the appearance of 2 Young Bandits
Roh Tie Toe Store
nl'l'he y_outb, who was arr~.Tb~ gh~ ~ nleued .. roqueit to """"1e
court by Ille Rlversute County D!lirtct Attom~y'a offlcf. SedL'O Hills ls ' near
··~""" titt -wb1cll "' =:GJ:·'ll:..=r:,.w1tb
~ He ref'ued 1o elaborate on hiJ
fefereoce to 1'otber crime."
;. Clplal aa1d Coley'• mental coodlUoo
~ayed a big part Ill the arrangemenll
ade botrion hll o!ll<e and da!en11 wyer Matthew KurWch. He refuaed lo Cmnment on the mailman'• actual liooolol lloto otbar Iba to aay that toloY ,._a lol ol -t." t ColtiJ, llrll'lnl dolplratol1 to mainllin a ....,_., wu ijuaatloi>td c:arelUlly
al lqlll today by Juqe Speirs
~,. '~ the p>SllbWty that promiMI had
" • 1 madt to him to persuade him cllqt 1111 prevlawl plea of not pllty.
' New Blow Shakes
(
,rench Economy
~ ~PARIS (UPI) -l'felidClll Clar1"' \to Gaulle 11111 1i11 .. w 1oc1&1 dlsuiae4 !be Ial<ll blew to Fniice'• olr<iodr'til\UJr *"""""" -• drullC PP l>elileeii 'Im· iCll1a and f2]IO<ll. t 'Illa '31111 tDll1lotl . l{ade .dallclt ,,. ·~ -n-t11·for N...,.btr wu !be
~ -Ille dlallroul llril<Mldden' ijiontM "Mq aDd JllllO al Ulll yaar.
'
DAI LY P!lOT
....,.,. .... .:.#--c.n· .....
:;toe\ -. .~ll::;..; CMIJJlllA . O«AHG• '°"" PUl\.llMl#O COl#Ntt
••"" "· w..J ................
JMI II. c..t., . .,,...... ....... ,.....,
n •••••• .,.n ·-n.:::.:.:. W'"
lttill NI ....
.Af;I ...... ---2:':.!'£!i.ll'~'::.".':I.-'" .... c m,...~ llwllWI IMGlf "' M lirM
+----
DEEPLY CONCERNED , ~ He uld tbt City Cowicll l'OCftllly ba1
"W• are datply -over Iha. takeA .• I '<lumbar ol lllpa t b 11
throal " di1lllnl oft ... -~ .. Rurlburl -.irolt .. totontllied -Ill
~'~ .. ~~:::::,: Elsinore, .
emphulzed, "We are llJl8lterably OJ>'. llU.bllc 1111 o! beach and iJa1. ""1•11( J)OSed to the presence of surface on them:
~II and tbal t IO to •" percent
ofUtl-llanaltolldlng-Rivel'Jido Sharilf'a Sgt. V Ir 111
Woodward, who bas huded tbe 1"'
Two )'OWlg bandits, both armed with vestigation of Jhe murder, sa'.id that
structures on the tidelands. It would
destroy the scenic beauty of the coast,
present an addiUonal haaard to boallnfl
and could reoull In pollution or the
beache1.11
He told the Assembly Subcommittee
on Baacbto and ConllrVaUon: "W• bope that wt can count on your
inipport In P"'serYlng Ulll -· ol Iha eoutlllM !or Iha publle't ruu ...
joymenl"
Purpou of Iha llwiJl4, lrlOlber of
which la to he bald Friday Ill San
Diego, II In lake testimony !bat could
point to lftualfnnl nqulrlng -..ctlve
legislation, subcommittee members said.
The built o! Hurlburt'• test=~ which hid betn IODe over very
by Mayor Dorean Marlhall and oll1tr councllman be!ONband, dlllt Wftb Iha
city'• stewor!lslJlp ·of ill public l!horellne.
N~')'µYGllOTJND
. Ne!)lorl, 1he City -•aer Indicated,
la 'ffi-~'9 pi&1(t'ouad '" 111• ·wMlthJ. In'fM!t, ht uld; It b -na)Oili'• plaJltOUDd ~ to the tune of seven million
btiich )rid bay vlliton each )'ear.
N•wpor\'1 llforll to UIUl'I inulmum
public ,... of btachhoet and ba)'front, IJt; Mi4 'll now coaUnt Ille city about mo.ooo ·,....11, Luo 1lian ball of !bat,
bl lfOlad. lanlUnltd ln VarlOUI tldalandl
......,.., ~from IW'lboard llcanaa
fees to kicom• ·~'city.owned
leaa<holdl, lllCl! ~the l!llboa Bay Club. A IJll,000 d"'1dl, ·Hurlburt Aid, II m.s. up ll'onl tha ...... ii fund (property
tas). !JI add!Uen to t!tlt )'<orly n ·
~ for such "'"""' u lllqull'dl, illalltenance, !Ire ad pollco oporallona,
Utl altr ~baa opeot'3Qll,llllt aukl·· 1'0CUI !or erool<lll con1ro1.r.t.0ta..
-. "It 1o -~ .. "' aald, "ililriiil cllJ,~ contnlistlll( -·bit .....
.-y to the ldminlstriltoll I lt d
-ol Ito 'ln!st Iandl Iba Ibo Iandlan~lndirtolrtVlnUI.
TRAll"IC INCllEAll
"Per eumpll, lncrulld trallio Ill Utl
bNdt mu creataa additional -!or
publio rlcl>l al way and IUbMquontlJ
b!gher road coostructlon Ind malDo
tenlDce CGltl."
Hurlburt lllUrtd Aaalmblyman Al4n
Steroly'I (D.ltv .. lr llilll) Btacbll and
OoalOrtaUoa -tee. Joined for
tltt ........ "' 1111 -~ --:~ 11\11 !bl dtr .........
Ill .,... commi-te." bol -aid -..-!or capital Im· .,....... .. 11.
AlllGlll -projtcll, be aald, ....
porting ladlltltt and tmproVtd -..... "to ll'lallY ........... publlc
-ol nttural' ......_
"'!be cltJ," he aatd, "bu had IClml ..., ateeiiolial uparllacll w!Ul Utl
-In put ...... u.. ~ -• c.r... del -· ..... beacll, and our -II !or c:oa!Jmtad clGOI ~~GID
'Ille d'1 ........ actnowlodpd that ,.... ... a. cl1' .... 1111 COll<!lnlOd
I
-Recent Inclusion or a one-year
cancellaUon cl&Ule in moat renewed
leaaes of waterfront propv17.
-''Careful'' Jtudy ud evaluation of
applicaUon1 lor extension of existing
long-term lt1111. Tht &wo . lnOlf. recent
extension requata -AmariUJ1 Legion
Hall and Beaoon BIY -""' denied.
Fro'" r ... J
CABINET •.•
pl1tola, Wok mort than '800 from a his office canlltnd no connecU.on of Beae. b Helicops dark at the Tio Tock Market 11 1111 the <eenaaer to the ,.,e ozeept 111e ' Pomona Ave., In I holdup ahorUy afier possibWtJ that bt WU I wttne11, ''and ml~ht this morntn1. not an eyewttnesa." Seeking Namo"1. Pollet reported that the two, bolh The Costa Mesa hunters made the
~ aetmlna to be In their early 1<111, entered discovery of a skull and other bona
1111 !Ion just belorl cloalna. Each picked from the body of Kent J)w~ Davis,
Hllllilll(totl -Police Chlll John up a loft drink and a condy bar. They 21, or Hayward and look hll Uull tn ~m':1 •~..ril'llldend!!.~ ~ tbon approached Utl clerk, drow pllto~ a bag inlo the Costa 11 ... poll,. deparl.
U1 -Cl .. .,.. -..tnt I and to1d him to "&ive ua all the money ment.
btllcopt.tr patrol )'OU hive, 11 police rtportl lndlcated. After inve1Usalion, IUvenide Sheriff
Tba City Cowlcll l'ICllltly approved The clerk, Hanry Be1wlck, 39, opened lnvesUaalon arre•led two Oranae Cowtty
Utl Plll'CbaM al one hlllcopter !or pollca a noor aa!e and tbt cash re1!1ter and re1ldento and an Ellhlorl youUl en
UM 1n tbt city. 11vt tbt men the loot. murder char1e1. "Htll-" bu •1-...tu been .. ,. _ _.-" Th ... ,. , .. _ Oed I poll Th t or··• ~· ... -t .~.-0:::.=:!,_ wu""?!._...,, • .-·-on oot, co e wo county d ~Nania · m -· --·~ ,~-·.., -nu aald. Rowlan<f Joo Berry, IO, of llanla Ana leaden by telephone from Nixon's New rectived. Stltur pa1nttd out the itdUal and Timothy Herron, ti, ot Guden
York headquarter1 were: hellc:optor palrol pn>IJ'1!11started11111111 Grove.
8-llrJ o1 t1oo Trlanrf -David lnL1tewoedwunamedtbe"Skyknt1bl Sahah Visits Johnson Robbie Go"' Crow. 11, ol Sllllloro,
M. K•onedf, chalnneo of the Coatlnontal Project." WI! arrested In Vllalla Jl"rtdi)I -llllnpli ,~"'oaal J!tt* and Tntal Co. Ill IUiflellld tbc llllll• obould be WASllINGTON (AP) -Pr.,ident ond 'r8I nlumed under l\Wd for ar·
'..\......,. --John N. MllchaU. dllllllollvt ol U. buclt city and "boll~ J-utended 1 !onnll welcome to-ral-nt jo Rlwtlkle Tuaad11.
a partner •.ln Milon'• New York law ~--d17 to Amir Shaikh Sablll ol !Cuwatt, Invesi!1atorw Aid Iha -lritli flnn -.""'lllllli'll """1pllp manaaer. namil lholtld be lllalled to Iha Jul of 200 he1d1 o! 11111 Johnm abotlt '800 In bt1 poet.~ CUii• to tbe
Secrelor)r .r··Haaltli, llldomtloo u. obn liar, chlll ol r.1,"• P.O. Boa wW ontorlaln In hit ftv1 yun In of!lct. Elolnoro .,.. to bll1 narcol!cl, but Utl
WeUare -Jtobei:t IL Ftnch, lleutenut ~-~~ 'p~ll>:. ~ ~,ruluar 0!.1!!! .. ~;!'ich.,~~!. Pmlan •uopecll bad no !ntenUon ol lllllna aovornor or caatomla. · -w ----DI Oii ~ ·--. a ~....., of!lotll llll'COUot, and dlclded to roll 1111
..... ...,. II~ ...... t1rbu L.::~=="==llllar===·====::::::::::::::::::::::::vlll=::t.==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:H=•yw==ard:::;;;;mu;;;;;;:ln=•=•=•d;.::::======i oe..-..t -,OOY. Oeorp llolltMY rr
ol Mlchl1ift. ' . . .
8-111')' II !Mer-Geor(I P, Sbulll,
dean of the gradnata ochool of buaitleu,
Univerolty or Chlc~o.
llemlu)" 91. ~porlaUoa -Gov.
John A. V0fpo ol ·'loi~chuoetll.
~ " Oii laterltr -°"'· Waite j, lllCkal or llluta. . .s.cm..,. al c.m.... -l\laurlco
Stano, New Yon.ln'futment banUr 11111 IOnilet, bltdpt cllrlctbr.
ltcrll0\7, 'ti .t*klllton -Cll!!onl i,I: llM!lh, chan.enGr or Utl Univenltr
al 'Nebruu. : '
Poallnuter Getten1 -W. M. (lied) Blount. prealdlnt o1 Iba Uolted Stalll
Challlbti' ol Comtneroe.
Nbi:on ta scheduled to formalJy ••
nounc:e his cabinet cholceo Ill W aslllnaton
al 7 p.m. PllT tonl(!lt.
Perbapo Utl blgest Nl'prloo wu tba
choice ol Rolen to held Iha No. I
apot In Iha cabll!l't, aecntlal'f ol tt&te. Jlo&en' formal dlplomauc uperl111tt
WM In 19'! u U. S. rtprelallaUvt to Iha Uallld Nallonl G<neral Al!etnblJ
and, dunn1 Iha "'"' period, I s a member ol lhe U. fl. ad hoc commlltee
on South Mrtc1.
Mayo wound up hla Treuury ..,,.,
lq Utl Dwlibl D. Ellenhower ado
mllllltraUon u IJlllllnt to lbe oecmor,
!O< debl llWlagOmlD\ and In 1J10 jolllDll
1111 Coollnea!al llllnola Nalloaal Bank
• Trull Co. al Chlcqo, wllart .ht baa
.......i u • vice praldect.
Nlr4n met aa:llar wllll Vlco Pnltdlnlo
allct Sjiln> T. Aptw to pa him an
ldVIDCO loot It tba ctblllel rwW. To
,_i.n, Iba Prllldonl-o!oct aald ht lhlllb hll cbolcl• .... ''bl& -. lll'lltl(
111111 I nil' on." 111 aal4 II wooi be
a cahlllll bulctU, ol "111 -. •
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for a memorable ~istmas
0
OMEGA
J. C. ..Jlump/u.i~ 'Jewet,,
I Ill NIWPOU A VE., COST A MISA
2J Y Nrt lw fltt S11ttt Loc1tl•rt
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VQL:. 61, NO. 287, Ii S6CTIONS/64 PAGES . '
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<?RANGE cou~: CALIF9RNIA
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WEDNESDA Y,1 DECEMBER H,. 1968 '
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Dally ~~per
• l ' ' TEN· CENTS
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• • • . ' • l a:n · .ev1v·e
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Budget Chief Set
Nixon to Announce_ Cabinet Tonight
TREASURY
D•vid Kennedy
HEW SECRETARY
Robert H. Finch
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Ul"IT....._·
TRANSPORTATION
Jolin' A; Vo.lpe
URBAN, HOUSING
George M. 'Romftey
LABOR J•rri•• J. Rey~lds
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April 15 Sei
Special Election Called
For Beach School Bonds
A special building bond election will
be held bn Ap~il 15 fn the Huntington
Beach Union High School District with
the voters being asked to approve a
$12 rfilllion package.
'nle election was ordered concurre!'lt
with thl'! trustee .election and the amount
the same as the dislrict asked the voters
to approve on Nov. 5. Trustees Matthew
Weyuker and Dr. Joseph Ribal voted
against the election proposition Tuesday
nighl
The -decl!ion came near the end of
a long meeting and near midnight after
trustees had wrestled with the boundary
lines for 1969-70 and with the ~ibillty
that Huntington Beach High School inay
not be sare in case of an earthquake.
Voters failed to give the $12 million
package more than a majority vote,
leaving it far short or the needed two-
thlrtb majority In November.
The bond proposal cont.ains $1.5 millioD
for possible repairs it Huntington Beach
High School in order to make the facility
meet the anti-earthquake standards of
the state Field Act.
Trustee Weyuker at first argued that
the $1.5 mllllon should be eliminated
untll a definite plan for the repalrs
has been developed. He ceased arguing
the point after Dr. Forney pointed out
that U the school needs repairs and
there is no bond money available,
trustees would have to levy a lCk:ent
increase in the tax rate over a three-year
period to pay for repairs.
District critic Joseph Ferm, chairman
of a group calling lt!eU the "Property
Owners Protective Leegue" argued that
"there is already money in lhe budjet
for a new school site."
Refuted by the admlni.n'raton, Ferm
(See BOND, Pap Z)
From Wilt Smtlet:t
NEW YORK -President-elect Nixon
announced today a federal budget dlrf<-
tor -Chicago banker Robert Mayo
-before flying to Wasblngton to an-
Pn:rident-tltct Nizon'1 announce-
m<nt tonight of hil cabinet will 'bt
carried Hvt at 7 p.m. PST on ell
three network$.
nounce his cabinet chaice8 to the nation
tonight.
Appearing bef'!re nersmen at his Pil!!'~
re Hotel headquarters in New York,
NIIon oald that Mayo, whose background
couples 18 years in the Treasury Depart·
ment with nine years in private banking,
will be considered 0 a top member or
the cabinet team" and will attend all
m .. tlngs of that body.
Nixon today formally advised tey
Republican lawmakers of hil Cabinet
selectiobl, including William P. Rogers
as secret&rJ of state · and Melvin R.
Lain! .. secretary of defense.
Rogers is a .former aliOrney-1eneral
in the Eisenhower admlniatraUon. Laird
ii a aenior .Republican BOUie member
cloee?f _ iny~lved . ~.def ~·n 11 ap-
~ ·~,.. •' l1if 't.f.ri.
munlcated -to Ifie · 'GOP-~l0nal ·r. ..... ,., ... ~till 111 ..... •NeW . '!"~. ~'!--~~) ' < ;. • ''""" 4 ' . or ....:;ilU 1 were : , . , . . . (~ .. ' ' " . M=. :l,.irmjln "::teo~!~
Illinois NaUqoal 11aJ1k and 'l'rllst Co.
AUonley Generali... John N. Mitchell,
a partner In !'lixon's New York. Ia,w
firm and NIIOn'• campal,n manager,
Secrellry af 'HeaJlll, Eda .. tton ud
WelflJ'e -~ H. Finch, lleutenapt
governor of.CaWornla.
Seeretary af Houlai ' ud Urbu
Development -Gov. Geora:e . Romney of Michigan. '
Secretary of Labor -Georae P. ShuJtz,
dean of the graduate school of ~
University of Chicago. ·
SeCretary af Trauporiatloo -Gov.
John A. Volpe of MassachUJetta.
lecretary ol Ult --Gov.
Walter J. Hlckel ol. AlukL
Secntary · ol Commen:e -Maurice
Stans, New. York lnvOl!m<nt banker and
former. bud1et dJreCtor.
lleeretary of Arricullun -CllHonl
M. Hardih, chancellor of the Univeral.17
of Nebraska. ·
Postma1ter General -W. M. (Red)
BloonL. president of the Uolied States
Chamber of Commerce.
Nixqn is scheduled to formally an-
nounce hla cabinet choices in W uhinglon
at 7 p.m. PST toolghL
Perhaps tl;le blggut aurprise was the
choice of Rogers to hold the No. 1
spot to the cablne~ secretary of state.
Rogm'_.Jormal dJplomaUc experience
came in 1967 u U. S. representaU1e
to the Unlted NaUoos General A.wmbly and, during the same period, u a
member of the U. N. ad hoc committee
on South Africa.
Mayo woand up hil Treasury carttr
In the Dwight D. Eisenhower 8'1-
miniBtration u uaistant to the secrtt.ary
for debt management aod in 1960 joined
(!et CABINET, Pa&e Z)
Trustee Matthew Weyuker, apparently
favoring reduction of the amount. said
that "the voters were trying to tell
us something, but "I'm afraid we are
all hearing the words dillerenily."
Huntington Carving
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I' ' J DA\LTPli.OT'MWl'J ~·
NEW JUN'!d~.MISS '
.Jaddt BtOlngton ·
Expen,Sive .Stai;ups
· LONDON CAP) -A pair of ~anadlan
t2-penny black 1tampi1 iaslJed· in ·1as1
weft sold today at Christla, the Lmdoo
1uctloner1, for $40,PI. ·
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. A 'dmllnJ,~kkie Blllh!glon,' 17,year·
'old ie)llo<''from l)\artna !llgb. SOboOI,
:Hu .~ pie~~ '.''iliiiittn1ton Be~dl·s
,JUIOOi Mi88 of~· · 1 .... ·
The peUte, blue-eyed ~onde .~on , tqp
rhonota1 Friday iU .. the" annual contest
'lpOiisored hy the. •!)!''i, J'unloriCl!amb<r
of Commerce.
, Mqre thllri "ISO persons were on ~nd
1n ·the HBHS audltorlwn for Jackie's
crowntna by laat year's Junior Miu
Karen CuWer.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orchard
Ben1ngton of flOl Gumm Drive, l,lL58
. llrilncton · relgnOd 'as· Marlna'I 11163
Homecoinrng 1Queen and 11 a' varaity
Hng leader.
. ~~in~• atr~ght "A" a'"'.e.riis~
and . bopea lo al\end ,,eliji't Slal\ford
. u~v~l!Y or Pomona ~conege 1t0Do.wiflg
· , graduaUon.
Tbe new Junior Mlas said she aspired
to become .a pllyllcifn. Sbe baa been
the recipient ol \oP. bOno,ra ,fpi-· her wort
In ilJplogy ancf malhemaUC.. • J\ldges 'rated coiltelltaifta lfii terbil ~on, 0
Poile,' tateht, ~;...,..;. ·..a Jill,Y•lw·ntnea. Miss· • · w1>o
lias maliitali>ed •a ·~ ' 'In
dancing and acrobatlca added sbe belle,;.
eel "kindnm ud a ...,.. olrse!E mpect•
.are t"'° rt """"'"'~' lumlmental in. gredients. · . ·
Named ~nnen up were Sara Martin,
17, ·of :;11uot1nli!On.• Beach High· School
and Claudia Orllsld, 17, .of· Marina. ~
Lyme-Jphn6op, 17, ef J:{untintton Beacti
High Sch\>01 took • the Mis' Frlendahlp
Awanl• . " · ·
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Richard Wilson argued that the district
needs a new hlgh school in order to
be able to cure problems such as the
boundary !ltualion, bul the major em-
phasis ol hfJ .argun)ellt wu that the
district should buy lites before the land
is used for housing tracta.
Parents ·Lash Propos·ed School M~:Ve's
District Supt. Dr. Mu Forney said
thal the $12 million was the least amount
of bond money which would can: for
the district'• bu1ldlni! needl over the
-three )'Ul'I and -that all ff the money ls needed.
.. "If it Isn't used, It can be used to
~uct the size ol I Mure bond ia&ue
l'f!q\Jest," he said.
College Barricaded
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) -Members
of the Black Student Union barricaded
the second floor of lhe admlnistraUon
buildlng at Reed College today In what
the college descfibed Ill 1 symbollc pro-
le!L
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Carving new att.endance boundaries .ror
five high schools tA> be open to S<ptember
1969 in the !luntlngton Buch Unloa Blah
Sd>ool District brought ourlJ 100
pareniI oat Tuesd•y night to "'""' the! their chllclttn shoukl DOI ba" to cbange
adlooll.
Nearly 500 atudenta won't be changtng
schoob after all becaUJe the parents
did make their· comptalnfl tA> lnii\Oel
in the auditorium of Huntlnllton Belch
High School where the averflOw crowd
moved after di.strict headquarters would
not bold all wbo attended.
Trustees erdcred certain change11 to
be considered by the 1dmlnJW1Uon, call-
ed a special study asslon with the
adminlstration and promleed to ha ve
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the Entire mailer leltled at Lhe ne't
meeting. .
l'llat meetlni will be at 7:30 p.m.
on Doc. 23 at Fountain Valley High
School.
Complalnts from parents ceotered on
having to sever children either I"'!"
1ehoota they are now attending or frotn
1Chooll attended by friends or oldtr
bn>then Ind llilten. I
" Jn addJllon, earenta ... were coocerntd
about changing · from attendlog 1Cbop1
· In the city· llbere they live tA> another
cUy.
Aller more Uwi Ill boon ol publlc
hearing, trusteeo Indicated they would
favor all chlldren from the Huntington
Harbour •nd Sugset B"'ch area 1ttendiol
the lllDt lchool, eltber Mll'IDI Hlill
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Plant Gets
MWD 'Nod
By WlLUAM REED
• ' Of .... Dal·" '"J"' stiff
Plana foc. constructJoa of tbe world'.:
largest nuclear desallln( plant .., an
artificial lllalld off the illmtington Beach coast an hack oo the drawlq boanls
again today. ·
The amblUous project wu 'pulled rtr
the lhell Tu...ray hy.Mem.polltan Wll<r
District dJrecton. It bad be.en ICOttled
wt September bee•-flf hlgb .coata.
M .. Unt In Los Angell!o, the MWD
chiefs rejected two other sltes whlch
had been suggested by utility companies
and concluded the proposed.Bolla Ialand
alte off Huntlngtoo Beach is "the only
logical one." ,
A new timetable for the plant calls
for construction of a 41)..acre artificial lsl'!llll and a nuclear desaJUng plant
capable of producing 50 million gallons
of desalted water per day late ln the
1970's so the plant can be in produCtlon
in 1980.
In announcing the decision, .MWD
directors said they are prepared to "&o
Jt alone" in construction of the planl
No mention ws,s made of cost, the
factor which led to withdrawal from
the proWC\ by the Sou)hern Callfcnd•
Ed1sClll <;o, 'San Diego Gas and Eteclric
Co. alid the Los Angeles Deparlmenl
of Water and Power Sept. 30.
TJle ;:ost bad Iner~ lrom ~ ·firtl ~ af '444 iaiJi!wi to 1"115 ril1lllco.
bU\ ill~lude the ' eO.t of equipment ti>,._ " electrk-'jiowef 11 weir IS
W~lf).i~ ~ ~~ or:. iou
ohcapadt7 befotld :Ill' inJ~·~·~· gii\l""5. 9'' .dBY., T1io ~ was
for' \Otil capacl,11, oi•\50 i'n!IP\11\ lljlli'!'
per qay. . . ~ ( .• t . .1 •. MWDGeneralMu~erl!e!l'Y%.MW; (See llOLSA SITE,. P. IJ .
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'l'oys for 'Tot~.
Pi;ogram Started
In Westminster
~Is for new er repairable toy~
for the · M.aribe Corp1'· 't'oys .for Totli
program hive been placed . in ·four dH·
fer:ent Iocatlons1 in W,estmlmt.-, report~
City Clerk Kay HOITT>er tm"\ .
, One barrel f is in the k>bby of Uic
Civic c.enl!i-·Administralon Pui~, 120Q
.Wes~ ,Av,e. Tlie..~Wklliig''is opin
8 a.~: to s·p.m. 'Wee~days. · '.J'~e ~amber of'CommerCe has pla'~
other barrels · al •shopping 'centers · ~
·1471 weSimhister · A•e. • 8nd. 8970 Bolia
Ave .. and iD ·, OOwtilig al\eY at !Miil
BeaCh Bl~d.: • ' 1 •
Las\ collection will be Qec. 14. · The
lo~ will be dlslrlbuted' IO Jmderpnviieged
'children liflng In U1e ilrea. ' . ,
or..,• Coua
...
Weatlter . . ' ' '
Gettln( badt to whatevtr 11 """
aid""" qorinal, .the' -~ ..
calls for decreaalng cll>lldl and
warmer temperatures ; Tburma,y,
but w114. "'°"'" gusty windl ta • the ofllng. . ' : ' · INSmE TODA 'l'
?" olri' lcut CMnce to ree a live
lhio(<t J>!O<IU<Uoii' ho , OrcmJJf
Coun111 ·o.11 J/•qr, •mi,>••· up WI
10e1Qnd. See . Enttrtoitirntnt, Pag• u. · · •
... • 4 • -· ~ ..... _ .. -. ~. ==·--· C~· ~· ........ ---,-• _... . = .. :1 . j ~· ~ t. 1: -"""'1 .. =--.. -··-. --''" •:1s t h J .,. .... ....,. 114' , ............. ..
"" C-., .. '! "*""""-• ~ .. ,........ . -·~ ,, -.. ............
j
1
·-"~---..;;,. ___ .;...._ ................ -·-·-·--~----...--. - ----------••~·-~•~w -.... __ .. -· --' ~ ' -----,
I .... ., ..., ttF.W•• ., b1t11 .... 'l~ lt61
LossofM
Bolsa lslancl
Could ~prov~:
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~d CMpper-Crash .
T ' 1Uoo of the ether f°"' bladtl
atiU attached and l!IO Jaqltf JUID rotor
•111blJ -111NC111 on nm•'"'fl4 LAA
hollooptlro lllir the --II _Jed_..., ... _ ln,.lallr-.._
of tbe1ieartni~ ~ •. j
Queltlonlng began today wtlh Stanley
,Brown, LAA ouperlntand~t "engineer-
1111 and overhaul 1Ybo "°' oa1Jed first ....... belora<ovvlnllrou>•tllnm. ~ 1--. "'""'-· .... IChlduled fD follow, l
Ona ol ...,..'o more oiplllclnl...,.
njatl WU that main rotor oplndJeo
llw .. -.:-pr.old ..
4 ~ I ~ '!be --.di number"" ~ ,........ r"'I" hlllcapltrJ ~~ m!fdal cop11r tr**' In the u.s; ""'"•.,.....i.i ~~-...... of. llOd ~a ~-'"C.~..UbJJa-..ri.r;: mt1o.r•pati '"'tht,..,. -...-"""'i:. -. :T!":..==.ii~ " 'll>e .I'"" ~ ' 11'11&!>1 -0.7. .. • :
1,000 f!<ll,,""!f~ 1!14 lUlf Ul\dtr NAYOR VICl'IM ~ ·
1,000 ~-~ llld durlllC Vk:tl!nl 11\Cluded the _.. el I . ""1••·~ :.ii£ _ ,\ · .lllUf!, callltrnlt, u•ellred MD'l""liiifi.' J\:."fi -:"1"" -· ~.:_~I 1111'~ wltt, -
J!r;jE'for ·~ ~~-~~~f~.= -~o;. -~ hilhail-~.,-~iwo. ~· guallij''• .....,.iUreilD.yitS!lonl\t: aerosplce ~
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~House'· Own-e = S~nten~ed·
HarborChances f.
'A~ -WOllllll, ebUged ~lt~~PIM wy.Jillt ~; ~·u,.wtillt'i!n. Baill1Uwa1 .
• wltb malntatntog a house of proaUtutjon apllio , the' delenda}ll ~~·•dmllol°" ~ ~~. dile In, court OD •
by uolnl the Eli le Sauna bath of Costa m ·aey idvll suit ballad upon o• growing The enSe' · In 1 · l))ltrllt A~
If the Metropolitan Wator D1atrlcl .,..
ahead "tlh Coaotrueltoo o1 lhe Jlolaa Island nuclear desal~S plant u m-nounced by dlrectora Tuesday, It could
improve the cbaDces for construction
ol the Bo!A Bay blfbor now under·
study by the U.S. Ar'to1 Corps ol
Eqlnoen.
A lar(er Inland llarher hU been .,,,.
piled al Bolaa Chica State Boacb wtt1>
• jelly nltMlni out to .... If Bolaa
hlancl II built, It eould "'"' u the
breUwater for the jelly and harbor.
If the project II not !iollt, a II mllllon
breakwater would ~ required . for tbe !Jotbor. ' . . . ' The Bolla 1111 harbor would ., a
jotal of lllA· mlltlcm 'wld!oul a _.1e
-.1er, ~ by Koebil -111<1
Kollbli Inc., ""1olm mUlni I> llDdY
ol the hlrbor. plana In Hunlll!lioo Buch
and Seal Boaeh, is ... lrilaml mir)Da
publidy -· ·and · • lari• ll!l1!na community privately. 9W1"d at jl<llaa
Bay. . , '
Both the bay projept and Bo1aa 14land
would require pfefiwdl aolzlll. beach
tnlllon and the MWD u.ad, bu been
deaignated aa reponslble by state law
for tbe invenUon ol beach eroll111 abould
the llland be bull~
l're1ll P .. e I
BOLSA SITE. • •
llld 11111 the dlrecton "hope that ..
coutal ottea far nuclear !llanll clllappear
thin will be pooolbllidea openln1 for new partnenhff)I. ''
·' Thll II leaving 1!be door open lo
JIOf!lclpaUon by llll!l· privall uUUUes
lhould Ibey chanP lbefr mind, bo .1ald.
Dlr<don are uneertiln about the
pafucipatlbn, of 1the' federal government
in tbe.raduced ·plan, mu a.aid they will
continue IO ·aeik Iha m million already
autborlzed.by the eon,resa ..
MWD earlier this year paid to the
state 1120,llOIHn , order lo maintain the
rlPI of way -Bolla Chica Stato Boacb "'the cauaeway lo carry desalted
water Inland lo the ~ Deemer Wtra-
lloo planl In Yorba Linda.
Directors observed that they have
already sunk aome $2.5 miUllll inlo ad-
vailce planning for the desa1tlng planL
FOOT IN DOOR
DI.rector Oiarles Pearson indicated the
nvlval of the plan could ho "keeping
a foot 1n the door, keeping the plan
alive un.W the 197011 or 1980'1 when
iDore water II needed.
: .. It'• aaurbJc ounelves of a new water
pu:'Ct: In tbl ruture ...
A proposed Ille al San Onoln 1111!1
... -of San Onoln 11'• '.ll'llei ha</. been conaldere( bul both ..... ~
jected Tueaday by the·:~. In 11 ....
ol the Hlllllinllon Beidulte.
Mllll llld that "iooldiig abud lei the
yow 11111 or .illO or beyond, It 11 esaenllal
\!Jal MWD bava a larl• demollltradon .
desalting planl In operaUon not latar
Uwl lllO." ~-
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leMrt H. Weff -o-:-J•ck L .Cerl.., v... ,,. ............. ~ ,,,,_..,.
n....x • .,.n ·-n.111nAo'tifril11• ... _ .....
Alltert W. l•t•t Wim1111 l114
"rli:' ~~~WI! " ................ JOt ltli Str••f
M•ltr111 A44Nu: r.o. In 7'0, '1&41 --........ '-dl1mlWtlf1.1111t1 .... llMNI
Celll MIMI i» Witt a., ..... ....-. ...., m. ,_., A¥tfW/f
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ROMANCI IRIAKS A COUNTY RICORD
Lau..-o ld!uotor, Linda Abraham
~o~ky IO!l0001h
Whirlwind Courtship Sets Record
When Laurence ScbuBter launched hit cu,;se . rRr mind," lfinned Linda.
whirlwind courtabip of pretty Linda "Maybe I dldii'l·},n<iw wbat I wu aettlng
Abraham sll WeeU qo, ho .had no ,. 'liio ota weelis¥," quipped llOf flU!bed
Idea that be'd fa~en the.flgl 11eJ> low~ ilance. ·· •
a ~~~'l:.~~ cbang~-'~ BoQi b.....,.y agreed rat th•il1!
their mind• ai>ouf their ma11tal ptaN ' lneetlng o1x "weeks ago In lht home
Tuesday when they found a battery .al of mutual, frlendJ wu 0 Jove at first
cameras waiting · for them In Coun\)' sigh~ ,,,.., funny thing la," added
Clerk William St John's maniage Schuster., "that I introduced those friends
licenses division. to each other before they married nine
SchU1ter, 28/ot Buena Part and Llnda, year• ago."
25, of Anaheim are the 10,oooth couple Their honeymoon mllll wait, they
to complete marrlaae appllcaUona la agreed. It'• back to wart Monday for
1968. It'• the flnt Um& that Iha bU!Ulng the 18,llOOth couple ol 1968 wbo plan
county departmenl hU dont buslnao lo "tab that _,.,... a Utile lator
in five figurel. ' ca." ~
Scbuator II a mechanic wttl> N..U. "lloeoni the fact that you're our
American AvlaUlll at Downey, Linda 10,llOOlb cuatomm IOrl ol put a lltlle
Ls a social worker with the Oran&e gloa oa UU. happy occulon7° St John
County WeUare Department. uted Laurence and Llnda.
It's the first marriage for botH and "Well," mnlled the happy aoclal
they intend to wed Saturday at Garden wort er, ''-right now I'd. be a whole lot
Grave Community Church. happier ll f eould juot be plain old
"Unless this ordeal loday makes me 9,999."
West County Elementm]
·yo~ths ·ffit .!by ·FJli ::Ojig
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BJ' JOID McNABB JR.
• Of "" Dlltr '''" "'"
• The ~ -1.!r apparenUy )W bitten ~:.o96Pol cblldren bul left biib ,-~· report olllclail at four Hunllliatoo !*ch area achoo! d!ltrlell today. .• :
Attendance ~I It Ocean Vlew,
Fountain Van.t. and · the Htmtlnlton
Beach elemenllty dislrlcl 117 ablel>
t.e!Jin. baa -· ~y rising With ;Ihm> iuntJll In ~ noc.d over the 1llil two weeb. -' A, wbopplng IS per<enl ol the' l;G7
'cblldlel t<glllered In the H~ lieacb elementary dlstrlCt were-8Ut1Ut F:rl«ay, up from :IO pereent two and
a ball wee&~· ago,. • 11ys Mrs. Velda-
Pabst, persorinel olflclal.
High School Superintendent M a x
Forney said biJ office has received no
reports of 0 any untllllll abaenteelsm"
from the four blp ochooll under bis
jurladleUon. "We've continued to stay
at our •five to 10 percent level, wh!cb
is about average," be aald.
County Health llepartment olllclals llY
U)ll)' aren't 1111'9 whether Ult climbing
W-rate can be allrlbuled lo the
"Hone Kool vtrua" ahbou&h IOIDI wt,.
f're• r.,. I
CABINET.;.
tho OWlwiW 1IJlnoU Natloaal -
• 'l'r1lll °'· °'a·-be _ _.....ua\'lco
Nb:O. met ear wttl> Viet Pretlden~
a1ec1 , SpliO T. Apel!' to gin "1m ...
tldnnC<! ~ at the tablnol nater. To reporters. Iha Presldenl .. lect llld be
llllnb bil cbolou are ~~I men, -zn.tn 1 rett CID... Ht It ~WOO 'l be
& cablDet bulcaJJy ol 0 )1f:l'mell."
~
brab ·ha..:·~ In Ol'lqe
County, aald -:~ spok-.
'riia doctor ·~ ~'.J'lpldly changing
weather pattenr'if:rcml sun to fog and
rain, often wltb UIYllly wann days
paralleling cold: nipr,, u factors for
the upper reoPJralory ·Infection keepinl
children at home.
Wbethe< lf~.cat)ed ·iju or a bad cold,
the Iofeclloa•la ln'llranit CounlJ', pro-
bably 1.-tlio '.~allon ol lht winter,
be l)IOllleled. : ••
Encl ~ :rireia't available from ~:Yiew: ml Foantaln Valley ICbool
· diaJrlcl o(liCel but apokesmen laid Illness
ritel. ,.... on the tile not only with
students but with teachers as ftll.
"We've been employing an unusually
large ntlmber of subBUtute teachers over
lhe 1ut few Weeki," Aid a repreaen-
taUVt for Ocean View SUpt. Clarenct
Hall
Arson Suspected
In Hotel Blaze
M.,,. u a IJCllt, pleaded .no contest oulroi .·U!J~' : "IM!.":~¥o!>, !!'" crimlnal toriley's 1ny,.ui,i~ •:i . Costa M~
tothecbarp1'ulldf1lnH1rborl>Jltrlct ~ bat. ,.",'.I! ..U~ .,!, •Bl!l•~';_~ubUc lllhl ~·
Judldal CoUr1. · · 'J\W,i;j\le ;Jfiitli>:it~~I" schedul-l!u~ Balley'•. apPucatlou' fit' f ~
Mn. Tatluko Balley, 26, of 10272 Pua ed fe>r:Jbry""trlal next week on lesser diUonal use permit for the sauna came
Drive, was flned fUO and placed on vice charges were crested Sept. 20 before the City Council.
one year'• llUlllllW'J probaUon, in ber at the l!Jlte Sauna, -Newport Blvd., Capt Robert, Moody told tht OOUQCll ·~ before Judie Calvin M. alter a 1,...weet 1nv .. u,auon. that action 8hould be dalayed unlD vice
SchlnJdl. Cblrged only • wtth proaUtuUon "" charges 11alnll Mn-s.lley and two
Under Section 1011 of tht California MIU. Pildloon, 115._ of 17121 Koledo emploY"" were resolved In court
P..,.i Code, lbt Latin term nojo ..,. Line, Huntington 11eacb and Mn-OUtoome of the three cua will line
leodrt, at no con~, II defined In thli Marilyn Ball, 12, ol 1735 Labrador Ilrlve, a dlttd bearln1 on whether the permit
manner: Cotta Meaa: to be in the 1aW11 businesl 1' ll'IDted "Tbe Ie1al effect of IUCb plea lhall Mro. Pridgeon ii currenUy acheduled wben It cornea before the City l:ouncil
be the ume aa that o1 a plea of lo go before Judie Schmidt for jury In January.
,.,,_. P .. e I
BOND •••
then Aid that be doea not believe that
the dlatrlcl noedl 10 llChool 1llel and
that "ellJbl will do.
"I don't think Dr. Forney baa con-
aldered the effect ol Iha pUI on tbll
dlstrlct," Ferm quJpped at Dr. Forney'•
lnalatance thal 10 ICbools will be needed.
"H we don't bu;y1 tbt land now It
wm'& be available when we need It.
U tbe Vietnam war ends IOOll, tbia
area wtl1 be flooded With YOUDI ·people
. plil or no plil," morted Board Preoidellt
John Bendey. .
Weyukar polnted out that the d!ltrlcl alreedJ OWDI three unuaed sllel, bolding
them for future achooll. "We ebould
buUd on ant of them and the one at
Golden West Skeet .,Mt Wamer Avenue
11 the one w~ woul~ do ua the most ........ qr.ni ,,_ • -1.,, .. ··~ '' > l ••• ' ' ID•· porlner ·fl-oppootns llie call far
an elecUon, Dr. RlbaJ, did not enter
lnlO the debate.
, * * *
Here Are Bond
Program Items
Here lJ a breakdown on what ii in-
cluded In a. lhree,year building bond
program which Will go to the voters
in April. lt takes a two-thirds majority
of voters within the Si.square mile Hun--
·llnllon Beach Union Jtigh &:hool llistrict
for passage.
Acqulalilon of one &i.te and required
planning $2,000,000
field Act cooling~ l,lll0,000 wistm. ·lll&h School library 35,ooo w-. llJ&h School clamooma 35,000 Werin. IDih Scbookonvert 1'll garage
to clumJOllll 30,000
lllatrltl offtco expansion lB0,000
Bulld and equip biib llcbool I 7,590,000
lnllaUonary conllngeney fund ll0,000
Total $12,000,000 -·
,.._
or ,.u°" r-= -.,... ...
HOME Group 'Influence'
Blasted by Beach Trustee
Posaibllity of "undue influence" by
members of the Huntington Beach HOME
Council ln the Citizens Advisory · Com-
mittee .oo Maximum Uaa of School
Facllltleo wu ralaed Tuesday night by
Matthew Weyuker, a member of the
board of Hunlinllon Beach Union ltip
School Dlotrlct.
His charges were rejected by the board
on a 3-2 vote with Trustee Raymond
Schmitt joining with Weyuker In ealllng
for the HOME Council to have but
a aln&Je vote In Iha eommiltee.
Ttultee.I· voted to seat 20 members
of the commlltee lndudlng five ltated
u members of the council which ls .
com~ of rep~ntatlves of home-
ownet Usoclatloil. •
Weyuker argued unsucceS!fully that
'11 don't see Why there are ao many
from the HOME Council. It ohouldn't
have any more lnfiuence than the League
of Women Voters."
Truatee Joseph Ribal nrped lbat
Weyuker'I remarks were "an obvious
insult to the group."
Tbe aUack on the HOME Council could
be Iba openJrig claab In the 11169 truatoe
election. Weyuker, who is believed to
Blaze Demolishes
County Eatery
Fire which broke oul at 5 a.m. today
destroyed the Acapulco reslaurant, 614
W. Ith St., Sanlt Ana.
Firemen eaid the two story building
was a tota1 loss. The roof caved in
during the blaze. Damage was estimated
at '20,000. · '
Cause of the fire Is under ln...uption,
Flreme.n were able to confine the ~ to the one building. But pcllce evacuated
residents of nelghborin& ipartmenb as
a precauUon.
be grooming a candidate for a pos!Uon
on the board, at first asked Dr. Rlbal,
"Don't yQU see the danger (of the com-
miltee being packed by HOME Council
memben who may be backfnl a ctn-
dldate of their own)?"
He quickly added, "Tbat'o the problem,
you do see the danger."
The seals of Board President John
BeoUe7 and TrusleeJ Richard Wilson and
Raymond Scbmltt are up for electJon
In AprtL None baa Indicated wbetber
be wW nm or not.
Seal Beach Man ·
Gets Prison Term
For Rape AttemP.t ,
' A Seal Beach man who aUamplid
to rape· a 20-year-old girl In a Cypress
parking Jot baa been aenltnced lo aM
to 20 years ln state prisoil.
Superior Court Judge WiWam Speirs
ardered that jail tmn for Perl Huellp,
33, of 115 8th SL He accepted Haz~lip's
amended plea of assault with inient
to rape and dismissed earlier counts
of kidnap, assault with a dead1y weapon
and attempted forcible rape.
Hazelip admilted that last Aug. 13
he attacked the victim as she got out
of her car near a Cypress re!taurant
and forced her to the ground after
a prolonged struggle around the parklu
·loL ·The Trl.tne.sll· tokl omcera thlt ·sht
finally pre~ed to ·submit lo Haaellp~i ,
advances after be llad puUed oll aeVtlll ·
ltqins of her clothing but then , broke
away and ran screaming to the
restaurant ---...
fo~a· memorable ~tmas . 0
·QM .EGA
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.1111 NEWPORT A VI., COSTA M&SA
2t Y•ttl In T\e S•lfi• loc1tlon
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