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1968-12-27 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
• r • . . mojby • Lea Fa • • • • ~:IJ~~4 p4~a ~;Jt~p Men From the Moon · . ' Bye .f06tl'H L MYLER ·wASimiGTON (UPI) Now AmericaDI ana. indeed, humln beings cverywJiere. '1Can" .atand a few fuches taller." · For, said Dr~ ~wfl'd C. WelU today, tile .plqnificeo~, vOyage of ApoUo 8 wa::: not iolel1 an~ &nerican triumph . . )l w• a '..trJijmph of the liuman spirit and Ult, htUnaD triind, and it •as shared b'Y eveeybody in the world who ha1· access to newspapers, radio,. o 1 television. • We~ ls euculive secretary 'of thr· Natioail Aeronautics and Space Q;luncll • • I .. irRWA~1 ArnWooN.'. QECE!'-1 ~li'~T. !~9ff.b~ ,', < •. ,J •~ I '' VO.,, fl•HO. WI, 4,NCTIL'Mtlo~" ;; 1 ·~ '$. f ..-· ... ' • ' • • ' f ' "' • • ' DAllY PILOT ... " llJ(&Jl I .... ' ........ 1ii~ ..... ........................ --CAIWIJMA .iJ.:. --· ·-: ' --- . ' . .: * ., * 'if .. -•, : Lovell Gives 8 Sailors Oath • . - ... Fr8n! Pllfe ) FEATURING: HENREDON'S FONTAIN COLLECTION .. ' . .. LEARY ••• .._.,.... .... tllilt .. ~ ........... -. .us ...... to a' • .rzP wftll '" ._. . . ~ ....... _ .. _,.....,., •11'..-....... -... . . . --· . --.. . AL$0 FlO~ HENltEDON: FOLIO THREE GROUP, PLUS CARMEL BEDROOM. HENREDONS UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE 15°/., Off. . . -AL$0 ON SALE .- ' Dl~'S DIMODA, GUILDHAl,L. RAPPORT, AND COLLAGE. GROUPS. ' j I ·• . • I " FROM HERITAGE-ON SALE:.... GRAND 'tOliR COLLECTION FIRST EOITION . . . ALSO ~ IE INCLUJ>ED: SO~AS, C!:iAIRS, LAMPS, ACCESSORIES F R 0 M OTHER OUTSTANDING MANUFACTURERS. ,,, · • . . .IXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOR: HINllDON-DllXIL-HDITAGI 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TlllMS AVAii.Ml.i ON lil'PIOVID ~Df'I'. . . ' . NIWPOllT HACH .. .. , 1727 W'l'idlfl °"•· 64~ __ ... , _, ·fc . ... .. • -' I I I I I I , I i I I i I I I , I I I I • . -. • ·----. ~· \ . VOL 41 Ll'!O. 301, <t SECTIONS, J4 ·PA~' ' ~ II -, ""-• - FRIDA!, DECEMBER .21; 1968 ? ~· . , -. -....... 1 . : SuccesSful . . . I\ ' • .\. . •• Shot Haileci J "Man Gets 45 Days ' . --' ' iJri, C.Ounty Jail :For Bookmaking ; • • • .. -..... """t: .... Perfect • • . . " ' 87 JOSEPH L. loll'LEJ\ . progra1111. Tbe pride aod joy be voiced nation, loo,'119 WU. d!Aller. WASHINGTON (UPI) -NOW .... un1 ..... 1.-. todloy. "*'.'the Y<lO' drew · ta • close, . .._ ...i, Jadiod, 111unon. belnp Sold Sovlol ._ lclentill Leonid 1. bi; ~. urn. llfibl o1 Apollo 1 ::.!•.•,!•-. ''ei!I t!aod • '"" ~ 'Seo!OV .. ,~I began 111 -anl ta ,•""''-, cOlestlol hndv .._._ aa a ' -,...,,.,, I ~;iiiii~•:u., llPirl"i?OI~, 11111, For, said Dr. BdJanl C. Weloh today, ''This event -beyond Ille llmllil per11opr'b«aldhl&. a · blppler 11J11o ta the magnlllcerit "°'age of Apollo I wu of a naUanal acblevcnent and m1rlll Ci:.qi.· llOl ~an A...i-~ a llqe -.m-tho .. ....,.,.., ol tho ''Jlio ~ wllh whld; a 'tapt 11111 " ll:JnOJI lrtumph o1 tho ~ spirit unlvenol illltUre Cll-wllli,..." : laiclnale1hiorlol walchod the --Jd. aodlhohan!lll'J!ll!!diandll-illared II haa--,.,,_<ii --lylra .. ltol-Frantll«mall, l)y ml'l'boct1 In the wwld wbo bad --)ror lho United Stalao, Wallii J10¥9 , L9ft11, .-"'d '1llllllllL Andon -to > . I f' ~--~·U.mootpra,_Wu llUllllltllod uld"Wlllb," ........ tmvllloo. . • ,,t . • ' r ' fiM In Ou. ." n a11o ._ ~~ ou1 10< oamtlbliic ta 1>o .... It_,. • .,." ... •tCtllt _.,,, __ ·~~·"' ' ;,; • Notional -Ind Space Collndl, ' calamitous. II been • ~ ii ~ Mid<: wlllt •lh Ila.Ille -' . a. !Ji11e -......,. enoted to keep Uon1 and rloll, of w"lf ..0 • ~l!I ,of • 6Jl)llo J'• 'll'l'S• tho Pr-Inf.---U.S. IJllCO prokat. 1'« 1111111 ~·i,lli !MW;~,~ ,V Ii 1 • ~· TEN ·aNl'S ' . . . ' ' .. •r.~ . Thal nt15er~weekend weather ,. Cloudy wllli • rtlurft ., Ill!> wtl stuff -II oo ~ for ~ 'Otinp c..St, with l!Jll....._ lllll mired in tbl lo1f •'a. INSIDE ·ftDA.Y ' • I I I ! I ' . ' JDAii.Y-PlLOT I> Fr,""1, Oocimbor 21;1968 5 'IC: J ' ' ',, • • < l1 P,u-ehlu --t-C-rew , ----~ .. . . Leary Hel~ ,, . On ·~a ' nmg·Rap :.·· 11J RlaWUI P •. NALL .... ~ .......... ~ LSD cult leader Dr. TimolhY Lea• WU · ·~ aklq 'Wiih hfs Wif< Rastmary and ... Jelln, In Lagun· Beach tale Thursday night on nareot.icr charges. · Pollet. ~ Ibey oeised ailaal on· poupd of marijuana · and 1pproi:lmatel~· two oonces .. of b8'1llab' after. &tdpplng the Leary slalicm Wag<ill: Leary, 48, a fmmer-Harvard dinieal psycl\OlOIJl.SI ~ the arr..t, "con· liJllled polkoe ·provocation and bafu>- meDL" JJ• told -a rep<rier be hid four appeala pending In bJpee courla wblcb might invalidate marijuana lawL ' DAILY PM.OT lhft PMtf • . I o· Serious .De.f·e~·s', . . . ,, ,_ : ' ' • J . ~-... ·~· :' '°'" ship. Navy oWcl•"'.iald UJat only ... ship's Btlp~Cmdr-LIOy<t M. Bue'*, could give •• • delalls. Bucher, ..-. is ill, was present. -1 ~ At l,ha,aame newi'"Cotlf'lrfice, 1 Naty N 51, resented an elhauallfO ~ wl!!ch oald conl'P!..ced the ~aty t. U.: 1J?Uel)o was" no-cloaer thal\ l!'naltllcol mil., from "the nearest Nort~ Korean l~ben ft WIS t.aken. t " CapC"V t ThOm.,, publlc affaih officer' oNlle PacllbFleet, said, "there lo j,) dallllt tl>al lbe'Nortb Kottllt all•&•· · Uon tbal.lbe·wis sebe!! IJI Norlh_ Kort!IJ· claimed lerritorial wllm is • complst• fabrication." ,, J Mexi~o to Buy Mesa? . ' . Group Offers $1-60 for City-$320 Without Council . ' ... ) 1-' A Mexican pollUcal groop bu hlmed tablea on the Cl1y of Coata Meaa and haa offered lo biJy the lair · dty for fllO. A.lnerlcan. An4 !be group ,says it wllj double that 8JDOIUlt H tbe Coota Meu . City Coundl doem~ come witb She deal. .' "For example, H in acquiring the City of Co&ta Me.sa we are relieved of the feSpootiblllty of also •=l'l!!!J !Is pr ... ent City CO<lncU, we °" willing In pay f,000 Pesos." ... GutUerez concludes, "We ~k to be f orglven for , IOl"faJlling I h 1 s com- terproposal to a newapaper rather UMn to some competent authority in Costa Mesa, but, unfortunately, we don't know any competent authorities in Colla Mesa." . 1;-, n A political action group of young Ti· · jwma men, La Frente'ReglOhalde Accion Polllkl, or FRAP (1 branch of the • powerful naUonal PRI Party in Mexlco), wanta to "offer to pay the sum of 1,000 p...,. lo acquire the City of Costa. Mesa as a recreitional att:a. ·:. • I!' a letter lo f9e DAILY P.IL(n: ec!tt<i FRAP Preaident Alfr<do Lopez Guttierez with dry wit llUbmlUed hi. group's "counterproposal" to a resolution Nov Slispect Leads .Police To Bo_dy oi Girl, 10 " II by the Costa ¥eoa Cllf~ urlini . . DES lllOINES, l"l'a (AP) -A fugitive the1J. S. GoV~~t to_ .Purchase the from a Missouri mental hospilal has Mexican stale ~ Ba)'l Calif?¢.•· been charged wllb murder afler leading ''.l'flat we ,did ool ~d lo this police lo the frozen body of 11).year-old Idea earlier ~~ecta neither . a lack of Pamela Powers, missing since Christmas interest, ·nor a lact Of consideration on Eve. our part," he writes, "~t is simply that · A self-styled minister who identified we. whl.ied. .to take~ time to prepare himself as Anthony Ert.hell Williams, ®;;.counter propo1al . 24, a Negro, wordlessly directed. detec- " the anlomobile trip from Davenpaat. Iowa, where WHllamo bad turned hlmMlf iii '11lursday morning. : . . . After hls arraignment on an · open charge of murder under heavy guafd at the Des Moines police !tattoo 'l1nJn,. Jia¥. Williams spoke ooJy lo Ills Jawyer, llenry.T. McXnigbt.of Iles MoineL ; The llOl!ior Leary wu bookecl-oa "!'Pl· cion-·of -~ ... of marlj-.Ills attr.etive wife, ~.·st. a former model and . ..-.; and loo, ~i>lln. m, were boo~ on llJISPl<IQQ of~ cf ll!llijuna with lnlenl,!O .. ii:: • · LEARY F,INDS NO PEACE IN LAGUNA Cult LHdtr and F•mlly Arruted W~ are now i;eady to announce it lives to Pamela's half~lothed body, In the same gracious and enlightened wedged between a culvert and the side spirit of inter-Aml!!rican cooperation of a snow-covered 15--foot embankment displayed by the Costa Mesa City Cowr Thursday. ' Nichols sald officer• . did not p...,S Williams for details of the' OtriatrnP Eve -abduetioit or slaying under tenp& of an agreement wllh McKnight f!D Will~s' surrendi;r. · -; Pollce uaerled that UHi bulk al the marijuana and lwhlsb was Principally in .......... of .. Jolm Leary (00 hi. peraoo) and ilDlemary Leary, in a.lmWI JJU111 inalde. a ltaL .. Polloe LL Jolm Zelko .ate! llle.IAary -........ ti 1115 mod01 wllli baUerOd side, calll!hl lba llllallloo cf poUca ollliier Neil Puroell becauae It WU lllopped In lba cmter of lba :ioo bJoct of Woodllnd Drlv"4 jrilb ·lba llit.!i1I Clll. at. I~:'° 11,m. Lelry cJ•llNlll'I that tbe car wil legaDy porked and that lit. :fOd. hi. wile J'.,O &aYloC ~lo tlielr ..... All .• ,.,. a IUrll · near Hemet, aid ·lo be a ranch. .. ig~,~~.=mtc In jail overnlghL Tiley uaerfA!d'); wu under the influence of 10methlna. - The young man waa chlrged Jail-""' w1th :bOlll.ll,widit 'tba ,lnlJ,_. OI ~ tnei' a 'fi' O li 1 e W .t f e · cOmpl~lneC:t' on Than=~ of 1967 .that a YOWi& man ""' JtraoceQ' oii her porch. .. CltarJlel . qal..t . Youn& LelJ1< ...,.. thrown, out of court a few months ago when t!>e court beld be w~, 1101 In • public place. • He was repr9ented _by cri~ .at- lnmoy fJeorse Qlula of Santa Alla al lba tDnO. .. 4D --''" of Clmll, ""9roey lllanin •• ,pi.per, arrived at dty jail this. moriiUii 1o talk with Jobn IAary and aid be eJilOCl<d be WQllJd r<praeol ltlm. . The -Le&r11 .,. lo be 11Talped ln mUnlclpal · com! Jan. 9. An ·ar· rafcnmenl dale for young Leirr WU upeeted lo ·be •l by lba"""" lodaJ. Ni.Ion Back ill Florida KEY BISCAYNE Fla. (AP) -Preai· denW!eCI Nixon, ~ al Ills 1'eY 'llis- cayne hideaway after a flying visit 1o a private hlUcl In the Baltamu: plan- ned iinqlbar day of reot 'beloro a Satlll'- day conference with foreign polfey ad· vilen. , OA llY PILOT ' ' ORANOI CWT l'Ull.llHllfO COMl"ANV ll:oHrt N. w • .d ,,......, -,...,.. . J•c• l. ~~ Vic.I Prlli_, --_,._, Ttiom11 9t1nll .... Th•111•• A. Mwrpltl111 Mllnltf"'11 fdllw Albtrt W. l&te1 W!Hi1111 R11d A..ac:l•le ...,111111111o11 ••di l.dllW Clfy Editor .... , ............ Offke . JOt Ith $ti.it.'.. Malllrit Addre111 P.O. 10. 790, t2641 _ ...... _ N~ ~t .,t .,_, .. ._ ._,...,. • Qlt9 ...... , * .... , ..., $frMt w.u-'-dl1 m l"wv! .. ....,. Ft'om Page l APOLLO FLIGHT ENDS ••• ., " bits of it charred away. Tbe oompuler, -ting nawteas, rolled tbe spacecraft lite a lop, as planned, 11v1ng·1t llft enou!lb lo extend.the fight as·tt Balbed'fSVf!t the Aalan·landmau .. On board, the utronauta•....-e 1JUt of ; mch with grGUDd. controllers more lhU lhrJe Jllin1!1<5, aa lba d\s)tlrbance 'i!:~ ~ ~.~Y~. "01"· ' ' ... J'-f'afle J A~ALYSIS ••• ·~ '; tho· oee&D' of space? For one thing It makes credlbl•· the fanlastio notion that men rat yur ac- llWIY. Wjl1 ,ljti><! on the moon -and brlng back ~ea Of Ill BOIL This ~. ·lbnb lo tlie &rand performance of Apollo a. conceivably could come in May, eisht years to the month from. the, lime President John F, K"1oe!IY. _,uttod the n1ti011 lo the task of puutng men on llie moon in th1a deca_de. · · In any: euie, 'Welsh said ··drily, "It will put a more solid foundaUon" under bud,et ,reqq'es,t.., of the N· a t I o n a l Aefonautics and Space Administration (NASA) for "3eol \9'111. Al .a departing member of 1he Johnson Administration, Welsb added that It also will make It more difficul~ for the new Preaident, Richard M. ,NlxOn, lo make new cull in the civilian space proll'am. GIANT STEP Apollo 8's greatest contribution to science, Welsh feels, is that, in addition to tbe new color _pbotogra~ p]ten by the -..iauta, il!JW bean al~l atep towarxt the-forlboolllinl lunar landing. Near!;> l<iO -in lbis;'ud other coontrl!t' are i;93ld lo 111Jdy the mooa soil sampiel upected nut year. For . the f\a1.ber. future, Welsh. uid, perba)ll ' lhlll ~ -cetta.ln11 the grandest "planned ' exploration" ever undtrlakeo -·"'11 help "!. brln( .aboul a meaaure of, _l)rotherbooil. -the notiona of eartli, thai:thlclni &lobe which .,irooaut Lovell. look!"f back !lorn the moon, .ducrlbed u a 'atand oasis In the ireat va.st.oess ot 1pacl." Ondllie, Rage . . . Leading Race m~~.J.!flslQop l':: 11111 Ilia 'IUOCl! keldl Oudlne II-were ~-'a tllriUlnl ,doe! for the i...i In lhO 6tlll mUe ;81dney lo llobar1 oc:oan pdll ,.., • 17 · <mlellllltl baWtd tbelr Wi'/ Cio'"1I AUICralla's Eu! Cout IOllth cil SydJte; 1'liufldaY nl&h~ Rage, which toot: the lead oul of Sydne7, wu overltaul«! b7 Ondine In lba aflernoon bot fought back 1o hold a t"""1le lead qain u Ibey raced put KWno, ahaql 'IQ mtla ooulb of Sydney_ • Tbl lhlrd~ yach~· Rapture, hu Donni . . of N"".I"" Beacb aboard u ufJlol muter. As the atmosphere gave an invisible brake on the spacecraft's speed, the astronauts, wearing the loose coveralls they had worn since just after launch, end~ forces of up to six times the t9rce of gravity for short moments. Then, just as the spacecraft dropped past the 24,000-foot altitude, mari:,. a heat shield covering · the apex of the cone-shaped spacecraft fell away and lwo .amall paracbulea popped Into the rU1hlng JiJ:. . . The amall. <hulea stabilized the craft for seve~al seconds Sild then three huge orange and white parachutes blo~med .and thEi spa~aft descend~ af 22 miles an hour, ,.Pll,shing, in i)ie dark of the .-pr~awn PaQfiC at ·7:~1 -a:nr. PST.· It w¥ dri2Zllng slightly, but Yorktown ,&a1lor$ could ·see the spacecraft beacon flash . A1TACllED COLLAll • Frogmen jumped into the OCWI besiile the moonship at r.rst Ught and attached 1 notatJon collar and inflated a rubber raft. .. : 1ben, one at a Ume, the astroD11.1ta left their apace &helter -DOW I charred 1111d tieJpless metal cone -and got lnto the raft. , A net anai<ed from the hovering helicopter and the spacemen .were lifted one by one out of the rift. On board the cho-. Borman sr.•l>bed a electric razor and removed six days of beard growth as the plane churned toward the Yorktown. : Tho hel(copler landed on the broad fUJb.t deck of the carrier and Borman, grinning tod wavlnc, led his two bearded crewmates through the choppers hitch to a .waiting red carpet. Sailors, weari_!lJ their Navy whJtes and crowding the lllght dock In the oarly light, Cheered as the spacemen, moving easily but unsteadily at f1rlt, walked to the ship's officers. Borman, 1nvtted to use a wa!Ung microphone, thanked the ship's company for.. the recovtry OJ>e!ai9n. "~'nt~very haPpy to be· here. with yau,•t. be-said. ''We IPPl"'Ciate your ef. forts. We know you had to stay out here over Christmas. It seems that Jim LoY1'll and I aiWllj'I ~ lo fly In December," reforrlng to the 11-d"I' GtmJnJ 7 of 198> • "We are wry proud lo be part of this great achievement," the Air Force Colonel said, "We're proud of ·it and ' we appreciate the part you played In getting us back ." GOT CAPS A Navy officer then gave each of the astronaut! Navy blue Yorktown baseltall'8tyle capa, bearlna lbalr nameo and the . carrier's nickname: 11The Flgbllng Lady." The space trio was then whbked~ into sick bay where one of the first penom lo greet them WU ·a flight - wllb a needle. Blood.umP1el. and M'IJ'• were taken quietly In the • lint round ln I ioog serlea of pcya!col amlnalJons. Later, tbe utrooaut1 oat dolm lo a brukfut Borman bad onlend u Ibey """' Ooating In lhelr _.it -ataak and eggs. U was the same food they Ile before thtJr launch U da71 boforo. Nigeria Ends Truce • LAGOS , Nigeria (llPI) -Maj. 0... YI~ Gow0n aaid hil Ni(ertan Rln> es '""'Id """"" fllhUnc to(!q delolte a ronllnl\lng holiday cwe-llrt Called' b1 rebel Btlfrans In lba 11-moolh dllll w11r. f ~-;;tter ad~. "ID the kind words Police ~aired results of an autOJEY o{ one Costa Mesa Couni:ilman (Willard to deternune how the blonde, blue-eyed T. Jordan), we think advantages would fourtb-gr~er died and . bow. long .•he Officers who accompanied Williams .and the two detectives to the i\fl's body sald'. Wllllams showed no slgttl of emo, t1on. · · 1 be obtained not ·only for Mexico, but had !>een In the spot ~ar Mitchellville, for Costa Mesa aa well. Wbetber· Costa 10 miles east of Des Moines on Interstate Mesans resent WI or not, we don't know, 80. altbougb they seem to be a gentle peo-Des Moines Police Chief Wendell ple." Nichols said Williams agreed to disclose He 1ald hill group la willlna to negoUate the place to detective Capt. Cleatus various aspects of tbt: oiler. . Leaming and Lt. Wallace Nelaon during His ,.turn lo Des Molnea pollce hellil; quarten -only four block> !tom tbe YMCA building where Parnell disap- peared Tuesday -WU cooducled under heavy ..... uy after police recel•ed -tdepliooe calls lbreatening Williams' life. " M'l .. D- W·INTER FEATUklNG: HENREDON'S FONTAIN COLLECTION .. . . ' ................... llc'kl-..., wlll nt9fld '° o:" • .:' wt!ti l'lll'll) ,._ MofilJe __., I Mlllt fat _,. ~., 1 l'I" op.ado ... a JIB• ~I - ALSO PROM HENREDON: FOLIO THREE GROUP, PLUS CARMEl BEDROOM. HENREDONS UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE 15°/o Off. -ALSO ON SALE - DREXEL'S DIMODA, GUILDHALL, RAPPORT, AND COLLAGE GROUPS. FROM HERITAGE-ON SALE-GRAND TOUR COLLECTION FIRST EDITION. ALSO TO BE INCLUDED: SOFAS, CHAIRS, LAMPS, ACCESSORIES F RO M OTHER OUTSTANDING MANUFACTURERS. EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL -HIRITAOI 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON Al'PROVED CUDIT ·7.1111111· N~llT•IAQI 1n7 Wootdlff Dr. 6'2-2050 ONM PIJIAT "T1L t INTlllOIS LAGUNA llACH HS Nol1h CoMt Hwy. ProfffS&oNI ln .. rfor Avalla~D-NSID OPDI NIDAY 'llL t ,.._ Tel ,,_ .._ ef 0.-W. C.-y .... lJO 1 I . l ... --~ -- • . ' .. . - -. - ~ . ... .,-·r· ....,._ . -.. . ' 1 voi.:.ti1 N0::301, 4 ~iONS, 34: PAGES ---,, .... .. -. ' . • ~· ·- .. . -. ~· . -.Successful ; • • .. .. .. -· • Shot Hailed r ' . ..... By Douglas Afan Gets 45 Days ,In Q;ruity. J~ :tpr Bookmaking '' , . A malfunction of the traffic lights at Beach Boulevard and Adams Avenue early tllls-momlni·callo!ed the H1"1thlgton Beach Pollee Department to station an oracer at °"' lnlmtttlon to dlrect traf- fic. Police said there was no accident at the iDteraecti<n-Scattered Dares were used to warn motorists approdching the interaection. . News Analysis ' . . ~-.. --~01,fc10 • pronouriced dead on arrival at 10 p.rn. at Huntington lntemniununity HoopltaL ffe was·,ltruck "bJ' "t µr ;nven by lloW!.l!e\e:A.-of 1'1~ MlltlQZ,l!Ved :11 .tl>IJ.obot . ...,p, 111.1St Gothard SL His body was taken to Smltb Mortuary <>I lllmtin(lo< Beacb. No funeral arrangements· have betil made yet and no relatives have befill found.•, . -' -. ' , P~~feci La,~~i,ll~ E~ij.d~ Long. Trf p NEW• YOIUt (AP) -· Tbe llock mar• 'lcel ibandOned a 1Ugllt early lead and ltlUed 1meu1ar11 lower 'late this alt.er- nocn. Trdng wu moderate. (Ste quota· -· P1&<1 li!-lil). · - BAN i"RANCISCO (UPI) ~ Ten "hip- pie typel" were booked' on murder c11arg,.· 1oc1ay In the 'dutb or a teen- •l!'d girl wbo wu beaten _llid.raped-hl a .-.iiour otgy or vloleilc< at a !lalgh~ Ashliury apartment. -' . one of three per&oila arreMed on bookmaking charges following a two- montb investlgaUon ol. alleged bet-taking at • Los Alan\llOll restaurint wa! sen· hlnl1!d Thursday to 45 days · In Orange COUl>ly jail: 'St'lllerior Court Judge Robert Gardner '<fflhd Joi:in R Trozzi, 41, of Cypress ftj that timf' on the work fur· program and then serve lhree pn>b&Uoo. Troul pleaded guilty coont ol bootmalcin( and rilne were dismi.w!d. ~polio Tri~ll~Ph f?r Man • • ... p PolJce ordend an autopsy to deter· mined the exact cause of death of the girt, tentauvely 'ldenUfied, ai 'Ann lilll- inez, 19, of ,SeetUe. • ' lnspeclon BW AnnltrOllg llid Dave Tolhl uJd )ljo IUBpecil dr1181ed the girl lrOm Mr apartment ~ nipt and look her to another ""°"' In tb• aanle . ~llllq. '!be homicide ofllcm -tbetl lllr!pped, .... ~ lllcW and raped .... *'l>Jecled her to -JD, dlpllJOI and -.-ltd --oo her ,.... boll)' wllb ll(llllct. That miserafile weekend' weather -cloudy Wltb a rf,tum, o{, the wet stafl ..;.Ja. Oil tap !or the O..ange CoUt, Wltb tem)IOl'aturel ' atlll mired in the I~ 8011. alleged cgmpanions of ~ln 'police said wu a "very actl'JI" ' aking ri!>g centered Oil 1111 f'lld. rcsflW'anl in Los Alamitol'lace In Supttt0< Court. Joseplt'BombOla, ~ii 30U Ae«a Drive. Loo Alaml""' b io" to tr1al Monday ... Gloria Yege, ~ (J' Lak"'ood will g6 'lo trlal"Feb, II. A lourth cldeMillt idenuned by Jio11ce ~ Goldberg, 46, ol San FrlJlcip 11 being SOllgnt by authorltle1. Judge · earlier issued a $5,000 · bench . "lll'.l•nt ~.bis amst. A!I rour ..--eel Jut May It end 12, foll"' 1&ld Mn. Yege had betting sljpa. Uiped to her abdomen at the time or arrest. By JOSEPH L. MYLER WASlll!IGTON (\IPll ~ Now ~ IDd, -buman beinp eftf)W'*t '°CIP itllld I fft indm t.Der." ,,. .. ~ <; For, said Dr. Edward c. Wel>h today, the JnalPl)ll"'1r voyap of A1>ollo I was not IOlely an Alnerlcan trl~ lt·•• a triumph ot, lbt'hlman spirit and the l\uman 111lnd, Ind JI w• obared by emybody In the World who had &ccea io nenpapen:, ndle, o r television . Wliill Jo -ve ""'1tW'y of the NaUonal AeronauUc1 and Space Council. a White House agency created to keep the Presldtnt Informed aboot U. S. •pace " ~---...:...-·...._.._ ...--.-' ... . .-• progr::.:'Jlipr~ end joy be volJI .-;,loo, 1111 waaa dlwter. were emot1ma today. ~ u · the year drew to a -cloee, -Sald<So~ &paee lcl..iwt Leonid"!. 1ho ~ Ume fUghl of AJ10ll<> I SOdoY ao ~,OUO ! began lb bomewaid lo llDCilher' cel...Ual bocty cime as a i.....,: lol\lc, WUna Ille 1p~lu <>I 1men, and. "'Ibis <Vent ,... _beyond the Umis perhaJ*, betaidlal a happier lime ·1o or a naUooa.l achievement and mar • a llai•• In ,Uie ~I ,Of, · , unlvtnalcultOn ol-~ · 1t'nu, -a M,.,t_.,. ldl!rW-• contraato. 'Jloi the Uillted .,tata, W~, uJd, 1"8 bu been utfJe fDOlt Pl'OJptUJt year 'ln out bllloi'1." 1r Ille • 1ietri ~ OM Of CBi--.,., 1111 .. ·<A°'tht moe:t J!il calamitoo1. It bu been 1 year ot 11ssuslnatlON1 and riotl, of war • crime and prolal. For m81Qo' . ' FrI.m draa<d her bock to ber own • ...--l>oarl later. Tiley called polloe . illOr '-.u(ully it)'llll lo revtv. hlr. -.J. • r · ln od4111Gn/lo the 11 ._ In -'*· liic!adfu(-Qnt ........... ~ ,...pt .....ai -wb.11 w~ la ~ out ol l!M apartmool and kJo1< )lll'I in the attact. • • Tbit aa•l'P)'. rouowad a flllo, ~ jlop .Mlfl Jlolli!a ~ ..., • ,,,.it, ol ~ llooli, \Mi':ltl-'"'4-l • JNSmB TODAY T~ DAU.Y 1'li.dr'1 DilU,.. 'V'rialwd 1'tr/fmMr>ift -·-flJI lhtoln -Ill• ~·I II> d4;o I• U.. ' WIUINDP .. 1nim.11m. eol"""" N• l1. =-... -.. .,....., ,, ~·· =.... ... ' J: :;. -=.="::: ..g I -.. ="-J ... --c-.--,.,----.,.-,,...------------------------ -- - -------------- :f 0-'ILV PILOT l?uehlo SAN DIEGO !AP) -The Naiy it cooduclina lnteos)ve qoostloning ol the freed .,....,.. <I the USS Pueblo eftet . -\ ' examlnlng·d-reported llndlng no aerious dtlects, olher than malnutrition. A team of more than JOO intelligence apeciallats btgan tllkiDa with crewmen Tbunday afternoon in what will become one of the most exhaustive invesUgationa <t i !oil of 1 olltp In Navy hlatory, olficJals Wd. I The lnmti&•ton want io. know prtdatb' how -h -Uve el«lronic equlpmO!ll may hava !Jeen 10!\· Intact when Ibo Norlll Koruns took amtrol <t Iha lnlelllieoco vessel.. Leary Held On Laguna Drug Rap By RICllAllD P. NALL Of IM Dll~ PllM llaff LSD ,cult leader Dr. Ttmotby Lear was arrested along with hi! wife, Rosemary and son John, In Lagun:- Beach late Thursday night on narcotics charges. Police allege they Hlzed about on~ pound or marijuana and approJ:imatel,v two ounces of ba.shish alter Jtopping the Le8.l'J statim wagon. Leary, 48, a fonner Harvard cllnlca 1 psychologist, called the arrest, 0 con· tinued polioe provocaUon and harus· ment." He told a reporter he bad four appeab pending In hlaber courts which might invalidate marijuana Jaws. The ·semor Leary was booked on IUSpi- cion of poaesslon 9f marijuana. His attractive wife, Rosemary, 34, a former model and actreaa, and son, John, JO, were booked on suspicion of possession ol marijuana with Intent to sell It. Police werted that the bulk of tho marljlWUI and haablah was pr1nclpally In posaeialon of John Leary (on hia person) and Roaemary Leary, In a ""all par,. fnalde a hat. . Pollce Lt." John Zelko l8id the Leary otatlon wagco, a 1165 model with battmd olde, caught the attention ol police officer Nell Purcell becaUJe ft waa stopped In the center of the 200 block of Woocfland Drive ~.the: llg)rta on at 11;so:p.m. Ltary clalmed that the car waa legally parked and that he and bis wife were sa,yiq goodbye. ti> ;thdr aon. All .gave a rural addrtss .. near Hemet, said lo be a ranch. Leary aod hia wife werp j llOOll ,lree ... $1.500 bill each but pol* apt' John in jail overnight They asstrted ht: WU under the Influence of something. The young man was charged last Je&r with belilg under tbe lnfiuence of dnlgs afler a h o u s e w l f e complalned on Thanksgiving of 1967 that a young man was _ac.tlni llrangefy oo her porclL Chatg.. agaln!t young Leary were thrown out of court a few months ago when. tbe .cOurt held he was not ln a public place. He was represented by criminal al· torney George Chula ol Santa Ana at the time. An uooctate of Cbula, attorney Marrin F. Cooper, arrived at clly jail lhia ·mom!ng to talk with John Leary and uld be expected he would repment him. • The &eitior Learys are to be arraigned ln muntclpal court Jan. 9. An ar- raignment date for young Leary was expected to be set by the court today. Nixon Back in Florida KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -Presi- den~ect Nixon, back at hia Key Bis- cayne hideaway after a flylna: visit to a private Wand In the Bahamas, plan· ned another day of rest before a Satur- day conference with foreign policy ad- viaen. DAILY PllOT Olt,AMGI! COA51 PVILISHING COMl'ANY Rob.rt N. w,,4 f'Allldtnf •nd l'\ltJlllW J•tk 11:, Curley Vlt• Pr-etldertt t!lf Olnttal Mt1111"' Tho111•• Ke•vll fOl!Or Tho111a1 A, Murphln• "'-,...•ln1 Ed!lor Alh•rf W. laf1t William R•ad A1..,.;l1'-Hw11!!119t0fl 11 .. tll (OllOr Clfy l!dl!(w H••tl"lfe• IMdi OMa lOt Ith lfh•t M•ifi~g Adcfreu: P.O. 1011 7•.o, ,2,41 .,__ N...,_, ... Cfl; 2211 W.t hlbot huJilYaHI C.-1 Milsat "' """" '" .,,...., Lffu,... tH<lli 222 Forut A¥tnue CreW:~ Suffe'fing ~No Serious Defects' 'l!IO clrclllllltanct ol lbe Jao. JI cap. tun 111\d trulment ol lbe ~ -. ......, -illt .quellflonen Ill 11111 ~ '· . . The word on the health of the 82 crewmen. retwned to the United Stites la.st Tuesday after 11 months capUvlty in NoMh Korea, came in a news con- ference Thursday from Rear Adm. Horace D. Warden, commanding ofncr ol the U. S. Naval Hospital here. "All of them show effects of matnutri· tlon • • • iriatal>Uiiy in balloce • • • and no do u b t there are other dell· (lendet which we have· not yel had time to study Jn depth,'' Warden sald. . UNI! DD'll, be ·eald, lhere l>av•'-, ~.,;the bHdgt whm the Pueblo ...... detedl nOted. : •...... a .. a ~* .ii llf.•wallfl. ~ ,~1 • · , -~ ·~ than at beeirPbYilcally mtstrealed. Ttim"""' tlila~eta 4e.""'8~'lllts, no signs ol tuberculosis, be·oald. dOY.1?fd ne~en bf _ ~tety '*~- Warden sa!d the men also are W)o his ' "orth · ~ ~pftn"~ ~..,tbi7 dergolng P-')'Chologtcal testing oin« "~I .;!meed "him to draw charlt'l!IJI gave · • · -the l!ueblo'a "°'--Nortfr-perS011J who have undergone an. ol'deil watera at the 'time ot the capture. such as these men are sub)ect te "f 1'ant.ed '° )lllle ~ Uicre were l")'Chologl<al prwures and chaJ1',_. We eeoogh lnaco)aro&s l1f. what I was must evaluate it.'' saying to be identified,'' ML11'Ph1~ said. of the most inlenaive debri will One of the men to und=r some be the ih!p's Uecuuve , LL Edward R. Murphy Jr., wbo WN · He said tho ~ortl> K.,... olllcet "who l\ad to prove the whole farce" had ~ narliaUonal aperieoc:e and allowed -Obvious errors to pw. The 11.ytllMld Ueul!natlt Iran San Deigo said tilt errors Included poo!UOM that would have required a speed of 2,500 knof.:a to maintain, aDd another ' . ·-. ... ....... . .. positiQll ·~ lllilP Jnlmt; :.:l{e ,llf)d he pl>nnid the tilaocUricl<ll:"10-"l Giiiw to the world that 11Je ~-w-.46ctored by the llortb x ... .n.: ~. "There, ·11. a1>so1utiti· no · ... in my mlad and .IU lllbla .or11·mw or of llii•(!lptaln lllirllllrlnlt. 'lime did we -iairua.1nto'lbo.:c.mi.flilt"iiatera of Nortb,KOrea. At 'l'olotultfy nO'llme," Murphy 1&1d. "We never 101 anywllere near tbelr Writorial watera." Murphy WU not allowed to talk In detall about the actuM ·-<•Pt"" o1 tilt ship. Navy otllcbla said that oilly th• ship's skipper, Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, could give those details. Bucher, who is ill, was not present. , At tbe same nfws conftr.ence, a Navy spoke!lman presen{ed · an exhau.stlve study '1'hich he .said couvinced I.he Navy tbit the elifblq WOJS 00 clo_.ser !.han 16 nautical miles from the nearest North Korean land when lt wu taken. Capt. Vinceot Thomas, public. affairs oilicet of the PaciUc Fleet, said.-''there is no dQubt that lhe North K()(Un allega· tion lblt she was seind in North Korean. clai~ territorial Waters ls a complete fabrication." Mexi~o to Buy Mesa? DAILY PILOT ltatf '""' Group Offers $160 for City-$320 Without Council ,. A Mexlcao poliUcal group has turned table• on the City of Costa Mesa and hu ollered to buy the fair city for 1180 American. And the group siys it wtll double tbat amount ii llie Coota Meu City COUncll doesn't come with the deal. . A poutlcM acUoo group of young Tl· juan.a men, La Frenle Regional de Nxlon PollUca, or FRAP . (a branch of . the powerful naUonal PRI Party In Mexico), want.a, to "offer to pay the sum of 2,000 Pesos to acquire the City of Costa Meu u a r~a~ art~." In a Jetter In the DAILY PILOT <dltor FRAP Prealdent Alfredo Lope2 Gutllertz with dry wit 1111bmlt""1 bla ~oup's ·"counte:propoaal" to a rttolution Nov. II by the CoN Meaa Cliy Council urging the U. S. GOvernment to purcllaie the Merican stale ol Baja Ca!Uornla. "That we did not respond to this idee earlier. reflects neither a lack of interts:t. nor a lack of cooslderatlon on our part," .he writes, "It is simply that we wilt.Jed to take time. to prepare 1>U1' counter propcsal. "For eumple, if ln acquiring the City of Costa Mesa we are relieved ol lhe responsibility of allo aceepttna Its pres-- ' ent' City CoUnclJ, we are willing to pay 4,000 Pesos." Guttlefez concludes, "We ask to be forgiven · for fotwarding t h i a cO\VI; terproposal to a newapaper rather than to sorne competent authorily in Costa ri.1esa, but, unfortunately, we don't know any competent authorities in Costa Mesa." Suspect Leads Police To Body of Girl, 10 DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - A fugitive from a Mi!IOUrl inent81 hospital has been charged with murder after leading police to the frozen _body of 10.year-old Pamela Powen, missing since Chriltmas Eve. the automobile trip from Davenport~ Iowa, where Williams had turned himself in Thursday morning. After his arraignment on an open charge of murder under heavy guard at the Des Moines police sta.Uon Thur,.. day, WJWams spoke onJy to his lawyer, Henry T. McKnight ol Des Moines. LEARY FINDS NO PEACE IN LAGUNA Cult Luder •nd F11mily Arrested "We are now ready to announce it In the same gracious and enllghtened spirit of inter-American cooperation displayed by the Costa Mesa City Coun- cilmen." A sell-styled minister who idenUfied himseU ., Anthony Erlhell Williams, 24, a Negro, wordlessly directed detec- tives to Pamela's half-clothed body, wedged between a culvert and the side of a snow-covered lS.foot embankment, Thursday. Nichols aaid officers did not press Wllllams for details of the Christmu Eve abduction or slaying under terms of an agreement with McKnight on .Williams' aurrcnder. From P119e 1 APOLLO FLIGHT ENDS • • • bits of it charted away •. The computer, working flawless, rolled the spacecraft like a top, as planned, giving 11 lift enough to extend the flight as lt flashed over the Asian land mw. On board, the astronauts were out of touch with ground controllers more than three minutM, as the disturbance ol . the high lpeeda deatroyed com· municatloni • · From Page 1 ANALYSIS ••• \be ocean of· space? For one thing It makes credible the fantastic notion that men nelt year ac-- tually will land on the moon -and bring back aa.mples of its soil. Thia JandlJ>i, !hang to llie ~and performance of Apollo 8, conceivably could come in May, eight years to the month from tbe lime President John F. Kennedy com.m1tted the nation lo the task or putting men on the moon in thJs decade. In any case, Welsh said drily, "It will put a more aolld foundation" under budget requesta of the Nat 1 on a I Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) for fiscal 1970. As a deparUng member of the Johnson AdminiltraUon, Welsh added that it also wW make It mort dlfilcult for the new Prealdent, Richard M. Nixon, to make new cuts in the clvJllan space program. GIANT STEP Apollo 8's greatest contribution to science, Welsh feeJs, is that. in addition to the new color photographs taken by the a!tronau~ it baa been. a giant step toward the forthcoming lunar landing. NearlJ 200 scientists lb thJs and other countries are poised to study the moon soil samples expected next year. For the further future, Welsh said, perhaps this journey -certaWy the grandest "planned exploration" ever undertaken -will help to bring about a measure of brotherhood among lhe nations of earth, that shlnin& globe which astronaut Lovell, looking back from the moon. deacribed u a "arand oaala in the great vastness or apace." Ondine, Rage Leading Race SYDNEY, Auatralla (AP) -Two American y=la-th• 13-foot sloop Rage and I.be 73-lcctcll OndJne ll-were fightlnjJ a Una duel !or llie lead In the 600 mile Sydney to Hobart ocean yacht race u 87 contestants battled their wr.y down Australia'& Eut c.oast aouth of Sydney Thureday nighi. Rage, which took the lead out of Sydney, wu overhauled by Oodlne in the afternoon but fought back to hold a two-mile lead qaln as they raced peal KJama, about 70 miles llOUlh of Sydnty, Tbe th1nl Amelican y~bt, Rapture, has Dtnny EWott or Newport Beach aboard as ulllng master. Al lbe atmosphere gave an tnvlalble brake on the spacecraft's speed, the astronauts, wearing the loose coverallf- they had wom since just after launch, endured forces of up to slx t.imea the force of gravity for short-moments. Then, just as the spacecraft dropped past the 24,~ioot altitude mark, a heat shield covering the apex of the cone-shaped spacecraft fell away and two small parachutes popped into the rushing air. The small chutes stabilized the craft for several seconds and t.hen three huge orange and white parachutes blossomed and the spacecraft descended at 12 miles an hour, splasbing in the dark of the · prc-daWn Padflc at 7:61 a.m. PST. It was drizzling slightly, but Yorktown sailors could see the spacecraft beacon flash. ATTACHED COLLAR Frogmen jumped into the ocean beaide the moonship at first light and attadled a flotaUon collar and inflated a rubber raft. Then, one at a time, the astronauts left thel: space shelter -now a charred and helpless metal cone -and got into the raft. A net snaked from the hovering helicopter and the spacemen were lilted one by one out of the raft. On board the chopper, Borman Fahbed a electric razor and removed six days of beard growth as the plane cbiirned toward the Yorktown. The helicopter landed on the broad flight deck of the carrier and Borman, ~Inning and waving, led bla two bearded crewmates through the choppers hatch to a wailing red carpet. Sailors, wearing their Navy whites and crowding the flight deck In the early light, cheered as the spacemen, moving easlly but unsteadily at flnt, walked to the ship's officers. Borman, invited to use a waiting microphone, thanked the ahip's company for the recovery .operalon. • "We're very happy to be bore With you," he sald ... W• appredlte ytm t!f. forts. We know you had to 5tay out here over Christmas. It setms that Jim Lovell and I a1way1 seem to Oy in Decembet," referring to the If.day O.minl 7 of 11165. "We are very proud to be part or this great achievement," the Air Force Colonel said. "We're proud of It and we appreciate the part you played in getting us back." GOT CAPS A Navy officer then gave each of the astronauts Navy blue Yorktown baseball-style cape:, bearing tbet.r names and the carrier'• nickname: 1'Tbe l'"ightlng Lady ... The space trio was then whisked into sick bay where one of the first per90M to greet them was a fligbt wrpon with a need,le. Blood aamplu and s-rays were taken quickly in the am rowxl In a long seriet of pbyltcal examlnaUoM. Later, the astronauts ut down to a breakfut Borman had ordered u they wm: Doating In their spacecraft -steak •nd eaas. tt wat the ume food they ate before tbelr 1&~ llx dl)'I before. Nigeria Ends Truce LAGOS,_ Nigeria (UPI) -Maj. Gen. Yakabu liowon said bis NigetllO fore- .. would ........ fl&btlnjJ -:.rt.lta • continuing holiday .. ....,,,.. • bJ rebel Btalrw in the lt-moolli vll war. I The lettef adda, "ln the kind words of one Co!Jta Mesa Councilman (Willard T. Jordan), we think advantages would be obtained not only for Mexico, but for Costa Mesa u welt Whether Costa MU&DJ resent us or not, we don't bow, althou&h lliey oeem to be a genUe peo- ple." He said hia group Is willlnll to negotiate various aspects of the oU:er. Police waited results of an autopsy to determine how the blonde, blUHyed fourth-grader died and haw long she had been fn the spot near Mitchellville, 10 miles east of Des Moines on Interstate 80. Des Moines Police Chief Wendell Nichols said Williams agreed to disclose the place to detective Capl Cleatus Leaming and Lt Wallace Nelson during Officers who accompanied Wllli8J1111 and the two detecUves to the girl's body sald WUllams showed no algns of emo- tion. His return to Des Moines police bead· quarters -only four blocks from the YMCA building where Pamela dl1ap- peared Tuesday -was conducted under heavy 1ecurlty after poUce reeelved anonymous telephone calls threatening WHUama' life. M.ID- WINTER FEATURING: HENREDON'S FONTAIN COLLECTION ~ ' ..... ,..... ......... d .. 4'1r1MW, wm .-.., a.' iru" wtth """ 1.-. Mr::ibllt ..... -lot _,. ....... •rt' ........ ~JS}S·~ - ALSO FROM HENIEDON: FOLIO THREE GROUP, PLUS CARMEtBEOROOM. HENREDONS UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE 15°/o Off. -ALSO ON SALE - DREXEL'S DIMODA, GUILDHALL, RAPPORT, AND COLLAGE GROUPS. FROM HERITAGE-ON SALE -GRAND TOUR COLLECTION FIRST EDITION. ALSO TO BE INCLUDED: SOFAS, CHAIRS, LAMPS, ACCESSORIES F R 0 M OTHER OUTSTANDING MANUFACTURERS. EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HIRITAGI 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVID CfllDIT INTEllOU ' Nl'Wf!OllT BIA.CH Pruf111fonel tnt.rtor LAGUNA llACH 1717 -cliff Dr. 642-2050 Dool...... 34$ -c-Hwy. ·-1 \ OPWI fllllAT "l1L t Av1U1w.......-AID-HSID OfPf NIMT Tl\ t ' ........ & .... 7~ ................ 7,7 ........... w ...... ~ ......, .....,~1~:111m .... 1a .. 1 "" ....... ~:111111 ...... 11111~' , ' I ~ r ~ I t. n ' ' i· e r I t • • ' •• .YOL:.61, NO. lOi, I SECTIONS, 34 P.(GES-. . - ' -. ~. :: • . teary ·11 e 1~ •• By RICHARD P. NALL I.; Of ... ~ ,. .. &left' . . . LSI) cutt .Jeader1'r. Timothy Leary wu arremd alao,g with bJs wile, llOoemai}/ and son John, In ~ ileoch ~ Thursday nllht on narcollcl c!w'll!! :-• • . Pollce_:alleJe Ibey. aeim! aboul ooe pound m marij .... and apprvximalely two ounces ol hashish after stopping the Leary ·station wagon. Leary, 48, a former Harvaril cllnlcaJ LugunaBoy Hit, Killed On Freeway Nineteen-year-old Hamilton "Craig'' Longwell, of Laguna Beach, was kiUed th.is morning when struck by an automobile on a freeway in San Diego. He was a passenger in a car driven by Russell Williams, 18, also ot LaKUM, that ran out of gas. Longwell, ~ graduate of Lquna Beach High last June aod>-ol 8oddleblck College, ls survived by lf~'parent!. Mr. aQd Mrs. Hamilton C. Lon.pell, 1647 HUicrest Drive. San Diego pollce aald Lo,,...U wu standing by a Oare when nilclt by a car, thrown 32 feet and then dragged another 70 feet. He was dead on arrival at a San Diego hospital. Williams, 1325 Cirtle Way, Laguna Beach, was not hurt. · The youths' car was parked southbound <>i' Interstate 5 when t~e accident OC• ct_DTed at 5:45 a.m., police said. l>river of the car that slruck Longwell was James Ware Jr., 21, a sailor sta· Uoned aboard the USS Ticonderoga. Al l.agWla High, Longwell was on the varsity water polo team and a Umber or the Key Club, Ski Club, and Lettermen's Club. Funeral arrangements are pending. ---~·Koard Cancels ·Rock Festival There will be no Christmas Festival a!ld Freak Fair on the Orange County Fairgrounds Sunday, Glenn Adams, statioli manager and program director for FM elation KTBT In Garden Grove said toda:Y he had half an hour to go before his tlme ran out to find 20 legall y sworn policemen to supervise the staUon-sl)OOSOt'ed, rock· band show. a"Jd "We have exhausted every possible resource and come up l h nothing." air Manager Alfred l.AJtjeans offtci- y announced the fate of the show at lt:l5 p.m., saying he had been author--lltd by the board to announce the can- cellation. He said the board "announces with regret that the festival will not be he1d at' this time." paycho1ocist. called the arrut, uco.,.. tlm~ pollce provocation and harw- metrt.'' He told Y.porter he, had four appeala pending Iii tiJgber court& which might Invalidate .marijuana lawa. '!be seoJor Wrf~wu book_ed on suspi-cion 91 ~""' m marijuana. His aUracttve Ylfe. JJosemary, M, a former mC!kl end actress, and •01>, Jojln, 20, were bookecf on suspicion of possession of marijuana with intent to sell it. P612e asserted 'that the bulk of the 3rd Time Lucky? Viet Tot's Mom Ho pes fo r 'Go' Of all the many greetings she's receiv- ed o\ter the "feati.ve season, Le Thi Lan Hkes best the smiling comment made l:iy a ~ Hospital nurse Thursday -"third time lucky." For, the slim, aUractive Vietnamese woman learned that day that the hospital's he,.rt. surgery team will operate on "Suzie" on Jan. 2. And she's fervenUy hoping that no new infection will crop up to again delay vitally needed surgery for her 22-month-old daughter. Earlier scheduled surgery was postpon. ed when Suzie contracted an ear infection and a high fever. Doctors then set surgery a second lime only for Dr. John M. Sawyer, a key unit in the open heart surgery team, to -come down wi th nu. "All sys tems are go again," com- mented a hospital spokesman, "Sutie is just about as good as we'll get her and the surgery team is eager to carry out wh at should be a Ure-saving pro- cedure. '' ' • 'u'oday's C:lostag JI.. EDITION ORANSE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OECEMBEll 21, i96' TEN CENTS -:: -~ ::-: :~ on Laguri~ Drug Count marijuana ud· hashish wu principally in -1on ol Joho Leary ("!' hio -tlJl\I J!ooeil>'fl' Ltary, ln a ...._n purse ·tilaide a-·hat. .... Police Lt. John Zelko said the Leary station ,'!'llj~ 1965 model with battered side, ~ ffie attentitn ol police otficir Nell Piir<ell -l>ecau8e • It w8' 111.ppM in tile ~er of the 2® block of Woodland Drive with· the lights on at 11:30 p.m. LeBr1 Claimed that-the car wu lep.IJJ parked,:nd ibal be .and his Wile WetO ' . . ' aaylng goodbye to their son'. All . cave a rur~ tddtt.a ne,r Heme1. •llld ,\o be:. a ranch. ·~ .Leary ,100 hls wUe were soon rree on $21~ ball ea~h but police kept John In jail overnight. They asserted be was under Ute lnOUence ot something. The young man was charged last year with ~ under the influence of druas ~r a housewife complained on 'l'binbllvlni of lM? that a young man was ldlng lllrangely on ber porch. , Moon of Cheese t . . . . . . . ' .. ABO<'ffiD. USS Y.OJ\KTOWN -While killing a.bi! of lime In. pre- dawn ..boars, l;lotibing in the Pacilic aboard Apollo 8, astronauts chatted via radio with the helicopt_er tf9v~r.ing·overheed. · · Dlltiilg -radio conversation, helicopter Commander D9nald S. JoneS o! Madison, Wis., asked the. astronauts what the moon was made of. · ~ "It's not made or green cheese at all/' replied Air Force Col. Frank Borman. . "It's IDade out Of Americiln cbeese:1• · Susp ec t Leads Po lice To Body of Gi rl, 10 DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -A fugiti ve from a Mis.souri mental hospital has been charged with murder after leading police to the frozen body of 10-year-old Pamela Powers , missing since Christmas EVe. A sell-styled minister who identified himself as Anthony Erthel\ Williams, 24, a Negro. wordles!!ly directed delec· tlves to Pamela's hall-clotbed body, I .,.,·edged between a culvert and the side of a snow-covered IS-foot embankment, Thursday. Police wailed results .of an autopsy to determine how the blonde, blue-eyed fourth-grader died and how long she had been in the spot near MitchellviUe, 10 miles east of. Des Moine& on Interstate 80. Char1es against youna Leary were thrown out of court a fA" months ago when the court held he wu not in a public place. lie was representW by criminal at- torney George Chula · ot Santa Ana at the time. An associate of Chula, attorney Marvin F. Cooper, arrived at city Jail lhis morning to talk with John lAary and &aid be upected be would represent bim. • The Jenior Ltlll')'I ate to be ~ -· Success fn municipal court Jan. t. An ar· raignment date for )'tllfDg Leary was eipecled to be eet by IJte 'court loday. Dr. Leary, who holds a doclorale fn psychology from the Urdverail:y oC California at Berkeley, wu honey- mooning with his bride In Lacuna Beach a little more than a year ago. He WU fired from Harvard In 1183 when bis experiments with LSD nceedttl !Set LEARY, Pagt I) Shared By Whole W o Id ABOARD USS YORJCT{)WN (AP) -Apollo 8 returned from ils hall· million mile voyage to the moon Friday, burning through the atmos-- phere to a pinpoint landing in the dark oil gently rolling tropical seas 1,000 miles south of Hawaii: Air Force Col. Frank Borman, Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr. and Air Force Maj. William A. Anders, history's first moon mariners, :rode tbelr" spacecraft lhnlugb the holt<el and fastest return from apace over to a landing only 5,000 yarii. from tha walling recovery carrier, tbe USS Yorktown. SO accurate wu the return bellcopter . : ~l:~ltjl!!Q~~- tn tbe prHIWn dark U I ~ under lt• IJ>ree"bup w~ iDil onpge -P"..mlt:il;,,-w .. uka n~ that went before lt: flawleu. '!be ~i started at the precise second planned. (AddtUGml Stories, Photol, Pqes 1-3) 7:51 a.m. EST last Saturday, and ended within seConds of the planned time, almoat ~actly 1•1 hours later. Borman and his crew stayed aboard lhelr' 1pa<e<:rart, bobbing· g.nuy 1n 'fl+e- foot Waves, until dawn erased the darkne~ around them. A helicopter, like a rqecbcanfcal mother' hen; hovered over the moonship, waiting for first light. Borman chatted amiably wllh the chop. per pll~t, Cmdr, Qonqld. S. Jones of Madison, Wis., and was obviously elated at the Succtas of his space adventutt. . In a recorded meuage.~ be dell~ered to the astronauts later, President Johnson sent the Apollo 8 crew "congratulations from all your fellow countrymen and all peace-loving peoples in the world. Well done ." "You made us feel kin to those Eurcr peans five centuries ago who first heard ~ews of the New Work!," the President said. "You've seen what man bu never aeen before." He dis closed the White House used the Soviet·U.S. hot line to keep the (S.. APOU.O FUGHT, Pare I) * ;, * Collins Radio Of Newport Puts 'Voice' in Flight * * * So viets Give U.S. Praise F,or Apollo "1i&row <uPti -The news ct tbe safe laodlrlg of Apollo 8 wu distributed to Soviet newspapers by the ofiiclal Tass news agency within \Jlinutea after the splashdown. Moscow radio's various services uSld the news as their first Item on the 7 p.m. newscut, unuSu.ally fast· reporting b1 a country where e•ery news item must be checied by various autboritle!J The rapidity of rePQrlfng reflecllng the huge interest the Apollo Olgbt bad arous.- ed •ii\ ~ highly apace.<:o!ISCiou nallon. Westerners were beiog,$pped in Mos-- cow streets today and asked when the spacecraft was scheduled to return to earµi. '.I'he questlQn w1;5 invariably fol .. lowed by obviosuly sillcere expressions ol congratulations and best wishes on the historic American achievement •. The early Tass reports. were complete- ly factual. It said the Apollo I came down "near Christmas 'Island In the Pacific,'' landing 4,500 meters from the aircraft carrier Yorktown. NY Fuel Oil Crisis Easing NEW YORK tUPl) - A city olliclal said today Ule crlsis caused by last week's fuel oil drivers' strike appeared to be easing, bUt an estnnated 10,000 seriously ill NeW York.eh wett said lo be still without he:at. No Pueblo Injuries Found Des Moines Police Chief Wendell Nichol s said Williams agreed to disclose the place to detective Capt. Cleatus Leaming and Lt. Wallace Ne.Ison during the automobile lrip from Davenport, Iowa, where Williams had turned himself in Thuraday morning. After his arralgnmes.. on an open charge of murder under heavy guard at the Des Moines police station Thurs- day, Williams spoke only to his lawyer, Heney .T. McKnight of Des Moines. Earth and the men · aboard the Apollo 8 were connected by invisible links ot radio waves transmitted by electrical components manufacttired by Newport Beach's Collins Radio Co. ' Collins has been ttsponaible for all the ''voices rrom !pact" &Ince the begin- ning of th.is country's manned 1pace errort. Deputy Mayor Timothy W. Costello, speaking in the absence of Mayor John V. Lindsay who le(t foc a vacation in the Bahamas Thursday, said "We are cutting sharply Into the priority list for emergency deliveries of fuel oil. I would say the crisis is definitely easing.'' Doctors Say Crewmen 0 K Despite Malnutrition 'SAN . DIEGO (AP J -The Navy Is , cooducting intensive questioning of the freed crewmen of the USS Pueblo after eumining doctors reported finding no 3etious defects. other than malnlltrttion. A team of """" than 180 Intelligence spedaUsts began talking willt crewmen 'I)uraday afternoon in what will h,come one of the most exhaustive JnvtatJptions o( a loo of a ship In Nat')'-hlstory, officials said. The investigators want to know inclsely how much sensitive eiedronlc equipnlent may ha ve been left iotact when the. North K0rtans toot control of the lnte.Oigencc vessel The circumstances of lhf: JllJT. !3 CAP. tri .and treatment of lhe AmerScau alJo coocem the quesllonen In great degree. The word "I' (he heRilh of the 12 a-ewmen, tttumed to the tJnited States hast Tuesdly after I J months captivity ln Narlb Korea. came in a news con- • ference Thursday from Rear Adm. Horact!: D. Wa~en. commanding offii;r of the U. S. NavaJ Hospital here. "All of them sbow effects of malnutri- tion • • . tnst.abWty in baJaoce . . . and no d o·u b t tbfft are other den- citnclu whkh we have not yet had time to> atudy in depth." Warden said. UnUI now, he aald, there have been QO aerio~ defects ~-. lie aald Ill ......... eurnln<cf had been phyalcally mllereated. There wore no slgns of tuben:ulosis, he said. Warden aaid th1 men also are un· dergoing peychologlcaJ testing since ''all per80'1! who ha ve undergone an onleal ruch as these men are 5'1bject to psy<:bologlcal ~ Ind chaogu. Wo must ev.aluete ill' • One ot the men to undergo aome of the mDlt intenidvt debrie.finc will be the ship's erearttve orrlcer, Lt. Edward R. Murphy Jr.. wbo was navigator on lbe bridge when lhe Pueblo WU captured, Murphy, looking more rested than at this fiQ!t stateside 0'1S conference TUes- day, told newsmen be deliberately mlsled his North Korean captors when they forced . !)Im to draw charts that pve the Pueblo'a-posjton Inside North Korean waters Ill the time ol tbe captun. • 111 w~ted. lo make sure there were enough lnlccuracies in what l was llYil>& to be identified," Murphy sild. He 8ald the North Korean officer "who had to peO.e the wbole farce" had no navlptional erperlence and aU...ed obvious erron to pas!I. <• , ~ 3t_·year-old lieutenant from San ~ 18ld t})O em>n Included poatlloM lhat '""1ld have required a speed of %,JOtl botof ta-. and anolher potlUOO a lllilet' fhland. He aald he planned the inacwrlciet to ""1w to the world Iha! tbe avldence wu doctored by lhe North Ko..ana. ''There is ab.'!Olute.ly no qllttllion in my mind and the mlrulo of the c:mo IS.. PllEBLO, PIC' II Nicholl said offlcer1 did not press Wllllam.9 for details' of the Chri!tmas Eve abduction or slaying under terms df an agreement with McKnight on Williams' BUrrender. , Oflk:o,rs "1lo accompaaled ·Wllliam• and lhe two delecllvel to tbe sirl '• body said WilllamJ abowed no signs of emo- Uon. . ' Hie return to . Des Moloei police head- quarters -only four blocb rrom lhc YMCA buUdlng where Pamela. dlaap- pear«l Tuesday -wu condueted under heavy aecurlty after p<iUce roi:aved anooymous telephone calls lhrealenlng Wllllaml' life. Stock Merfuu Products from the Newport firm are responalble for recovery communicaUon, television transmission. communication between astronautl, and the workl·wlde grouM tracking system. Company materials Clew with the astronauts around tbe moon. "l"1 tbe space craft, we supplied the tWO-W8¥ .vcict and handi@d all the '1at1 going back and forth -aU trannnlalona to and from the. spa(:1 Cflft.h a Collins lj)Oblman &aid. "We , alao manufachae the electronic comj)Mlnta tllat make .up the ·ground communications n e t w or k , ' ' lhe spokmnan explalntd. The network Includes 14 radar stations ~Ith bla d1sh antenMe, the iupplemental ship and alrcran trackins uriJta. The syoJem .... pla«d IU'OUlld ll>e world to provide conllmlous tnformltion . NEW YORK (AP) -The sto<k mar· about lhe Apollo 1pactcran and• Ila !hr<• .kol ablo-• allgbl wly lead and occupanla. ldllod lrrelUlarly lower !al> lhlt after· The Newport plant' II lhe largul of Weatlter 'fhat miserable Weekend weather -cloudy with a return of the wet stuff ~ IJ on tap for tbe Orange C.OUt, with temperatures still mired ln the low &O's. INSmE -~DAY Th< DA/LY PILOT'1 DllU• gutahed ~ ta commun· 1111 tht•tn. W:. the spollfght ..,. 0011 in Ill< WEEKBND£R '1 Intermission coh:c.mn, Page 17. C1ll9ntlll 1 &.":-~ -,, °""',.... 11 -=-. ........... " """"' .... ,, -. ,_ '-' I = ,: -" ~.Tr&<llng wu moderate.'1$ef·quotao three Colllna plaull. Otben are In Iowa ~ P~.a llW3). . . IQll TWL ""-.. '----------' . . . . .. ..----~-----~---------------- I j !: OA.tl Y F:LOI L .Wives Give . Prayers On Return ... SEABROOKE. Te"' f\lPI) -The Apollo 8· wives w~spered prayers ol thanks for the safe return of their •Plef'" men today then toasted their moon m,is. sion with big, green bottles of champ- agne. "Let's make this ooe a prayer of thanksgiving," said Valerie Anden, the \\'ife of rookie astronaut William Anders. A Calholic mass was celebrated at the Anders' nine-room two-story brick home just seven mintes alter ' the Apollo 8 splashdown in the Pacific. Thick, green Christmas trees stood tall in the living rooms at the Anders' house and at the homes of fellow astro- nauts Frank Borman and James Lovell. The three families waited lo celebrate a last Christmas with the astronauts \Vho circled the moon 10 times on their hoUday trip into untrave1ed space. President Johnson talked with the three wives in a conference telephone call ZS minutes after splashdown. He aaid the astronauts and their families "had been in the personal prayers cf Mrs. Johnson and me during the fllgbt." said WaIIA!r Frulaod, NASA prolooll Officer. "The President told them how the whole country and its prayers bad been trying to insure the success of the mis-, sion," Fruland aaid. "Thank you, Mr. President," said Susan Borman. I think it's a well de- served victory. Than you for your thoughtfulness." The three wives Thursday night al· tended a party traditionally held i ~ the course of every manned flight, a' tended by wives of all NASA astrona1· * * * 'Hot Line' Use< To Tell Sovietr Of Apollo Trip WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presid Johnson tDda,y !old Ille Apollo asl> nauls in a telephone call that the h line to Moscow had been uaed to ket the Kremlin infprmed of all major dl . velopments in their historic moon flight . In a direct call to the carrier York - town, he advised the apace heroes the Soviets were "very solicitous about the welfare of you astronauts and express- ed great interest in the success of the Oighl" "I had a memorandum a short Ume ago from the men who handled ~e Washington -Moscow hoUlne, '' Johnson said. "I thought you would be Interested in a portion of that memorandum to the President. · "It said that due to the Interest of the Soviets in the Apollo program, we We:l them alter we beard from them on Apollo 7 if they wood be Interested tn being informed of developments In Apollo 8. "The hotline personnel in Moscow reti• ponded enthusiastically and asked us to keep them posted. So we informally here '01 the hotline ln W ashlngton relayed Information In regard to the most im· portant upects of your flight ••• " Johnson told the astronauts: "We all knoW' that you men were supported by an elaborate technical apparatus by man:Y brilliant and devott.d men and women here on the ground." "We salute all of them," Johnson add· ed, "as we salute you." Then, Johnson told the astronauts in cooclmton: "Well done." Nixon Back in Florida KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -Presi- dent-elect Nixon, back at his Key Bis- cayne hideaway after a flying visit to a private is1and in the Bahamas, plan- ned another day of re.st before a Satur- day conference with foreign palicy ad- visers. . DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST PUBltSHIHG COMPANY Rob1tt H. W11d l"Tftldll'll tnd Putlll ..... J1c~ R. C•rlty Vlc;:e ""91cllftt Ind GeMI'" .. ~"t Thom•• kMvil .. ., Thorn11 A. Murphin• MlnfflM EGllOI' ltlch1rd P. Nill P1ul Hi111" Lltvnl ~ldl Adwrllllng cu., ecmor Olrfetw Lep1• IMcli Offlu 222 Forfll Av1. , M1ili"9 Add•111: P.O. lo• 666, 92652 0--CotM Mal: no Wnt a.., SlrMI H~ lfld'I, m1 w .. 1 ""'-lou1tV1n1 }' HllMllWtOn 8IKll: aot tltl Sir.t ' . THANKS PRESIDENT Mrs. Borm•n A PRAYER, A TOAST Mrs. Lov•ll --,.,. .... r.,,e J ... ".!.; C#EIMRY : .. . . .• • tile -loa!od b.Olmdl. Lary bu dneo been the ·eonr.r of a ttotm. '<ii CODt.roveny with his relerlnCI j ~ 1'lle ot LSD as a religious sacrament .. '1!1 Jill. PelbJ ;Jluing ol the social .. ~· ' -... e "has said in tnierviews that he • . LSI> more than· fOO Umeli and ·~~d. he wa.s ,llnt, "~on" 11Y an ti~thro\"'Iog~ .ai tile Unlverslty or Mex- ~· · • • . 0: ..• ~, L• · •• '.::.. l>elr1 eta.,. that he has been slopped ~and semhed 23 time ln the last 13 •;·-tbs. He and his jllfe ,,..,. lodged •· "1!ay In I small Lag\INl llea<b hotel ..... ! { . .... - Johnson Say~~ • ·Talks Speedup Forecast Soon WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Johnson said today be baa been told by one of· the U.S. peace negotiators in Paris that "substanU\'e talks" can get going soon on the bogged-down Vie,tnam ·:!iegotlations. (Earlief atoi-r •. Page 4) Before flying to his Texas ranch for a New Year's Holiday, Johnson told an itnprornptu new~ conference that it was 1 his hope also lhaf'.there can be ."some ·progress in PariM." It was his wish, he said, that there could be a "truce in Vietnam" and other substantial progress toward peace before he leaves t'1e White House Jan. 20. Johnson said Cyrus Vance, one of the two Paris negotiators who bas been in Washington for consultation, gave 'him the optimistic report before returning . to the French Capital. - "Vance .said he believes we can get _going on substantive talks after his re- turn there," the PresideD.t said. Johnson expressed impatience at the procedural matters which have blocked the start of serious peace discussions. Without meetioning any side, Johnson ·said he hoped the participants could "cut out all this dilly-dallying -who talks first and where do you sit al the table." Nigeria Ends Truce . . LAGOS, Nigeria '(IJPI) ~ Maj. Gen. Yakabu Gowon said hiS Nigerian fore· es ·would resume fighting today despite a continuing holiday cease-fire called by ~ebel,_Biafrans ~ ~e;lS.month ctvn·war. DAILY PILOT Sll'lf Pl!$ LEARY FINDS NO PEACE IN LAGUNA Cult Lead•r and FamUy Arrested ~J Viejo Girl:s Condition . . 4 •• ... • 'Fair' Followng Wreck . . Officials at SL Joseph Hospital, Or· ange, today described as "fair" the condiLion of a 16-year-old girl driver who lost control of her car Thursday on Ir- vine Boulevard. Debbie Susan Parker, 25891 Via Viento Drive, Mission Viejo, was at the wheel oI the family car when it veered off Station Transmits Apolloin Space SAN FRANC!SQO (UPI) -E;dµ~at\on al teleV111on station K~ED•transm1tted what it said was the first Jive telecast of a manned vehii;le in outer space Tiwrs· day night. Scientists at the Lick observatory (If the University of California first photo- graphed Apollo II Jhroogb a large tele- !;Cope then hrD<cast the pictures ()Yer the stalion. Irvine betWeen Jeffrey ROad and Cul· ver Drive, a California Patrolman sa~d. The girl's injuries include a broken right haOO and leg, a fractured Jeft shoulder and multiple cuts and bruises. Treated at the same hospital and re- leased that day were the girl's mother. Dolores M. Parker, 45, and her twai brothers, John Wm. Jr., 4, and Joseph H. Parker, 2. Mrs. Parker suffered ex· tensive cuts to the scalp and nose al'ld both boys were cut about the head and face, Officers said the crash occurred w~n Miss Parker attempted to overtake a car while driving westbound on Irvine. Her mother, believing the car to be too close to the overtaken auto, grabbed the wheel and the girl lost control. Jt wis reported. Officers described damaged to tl'le. Parker auto as "extensive." The car came to rest at the side of the road after hitting a telephone pale and an avocado tree. ' MRS. ANDERS, CHILDREN TALK TO NEWSMEN Husband'• S•fe Return Brings Joy M ~ID WINTER Fro,m Page 1 . APOLLO FLIGHT ENDS ••• Russlan oHicials ·informed of the pro- gress of the flight. "The Soviets were very solicitous about the weUare ol your astronauts aad ex· pressed great interest," Johnsoo said. Apollo 8's flight-man's ·fastest, ighest and riskiest -went in its ent· ireity like a well-rehearsec!, well-perform· ed drama. The re-entry, ending a half-million mile coast from an orbit around the moon, began aa the crew separated their tiny commabd module from their service module, the spacecraft's "supply room", and flilshed on toward the atmosphere. Borman turned the command module blunt end forward and let an on-board computer take control. Within seconds, t h e spacecraft w a s flashing into the atmosphere at 24,500 miles an hour -almost seven miles a second. Heal, from the friction of the spacecraft colliding at high speed with the atmosphere, built up to 5,000 degrees and the heat shield covering the craft's blunt end glowed red as Hits Of it charred away. The computer, worktng llawleas, rolled the spacecraft like a top, as planned, givinc ii lift enough to extend the flight as it flashed over the Asian land mass. On board, the astronauts were out of touch wilh ground controllers more than three minutes, as Ole disturbance of the high speeds destroyed com· munlcations. As the aunosphere gave an invisi ble brake on the spacecraft's speed, the astronauts, wearing the loose CQVeralls they had worn since just after lsunch. endured forces of up to six times the force of gravity for short moments. Then, just. as the spacecraft ttropped put the 24,~foot altitude mark, a hut shleld covering the apex of the cone-shaped 11pacecraft fell away and two small parachutes popped intt> the ruslilng air. 'lbe am.all chutes stabilized the craft for aeveral aeconds and then three huge orahge and white parachutes bl0&90med and the spacecraft descended at 22 mile! an hour, sptuhlng in the dark or the pre-dawn Paciftc at '1:51 a.m. PST. tt was driWlng slightly, but Yorktown sailors could see the spacecraft beacon flash. ATTACHED COLLAR Fropion jumped lnlo the oooan beside the moonsbJp at first light and attached a flotlUoo collar and lnllated a rubber raft. 11\tn, one at a tlmt, the astronauts left their opoce shelter -now a charred and helpless metal cone -and got into the raft. A net snaked from the hovering helicopter and the spacemen were lifted one by one out of the raft. On board the chopper, Borman gra~Qed a electrid razor and removed six days of beard growth as the plane churned toward the York town. The helicopter landed on the broad flight deck of the carrier and Borman, grinning and waving, led his two bearded crewma1es through the choppers hatch to a waiting red carpet. Sailors, wearing their Navy whites and crowding the flight deck in the early light, cheered as the spacemen, moving easily but unsteadily at first, walked to the ship 's officers. Borman, invited to use a waiting microphone, thanked the ship's company for the recovery operaion . "We're very happy to be here with you," he said. "We appreciate your ef- forts. We know you had to stay out here over Christmas. It seems that Jim . Lovell and I always seem to fly in December,'' referrlng to· the 14-day Gemini 7 af l 965. "We are very proud to be part of this great achievement," the Air Force Colonel said. "We're proud of it and we appreciate the part· you olayed in getting us back." · From Page 1 PUEBLO ... or of the captain that during no t!me did we intrude into the territorial waters of North Korea. At absolutely no time," Murphy said. ••we never got anywhere near their territorial waters." Murphy was not allowed to talk In detail about the act1ial capture of the ship. Navy offlciala said that only the ship's skipper, Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, could give those det.alls. Bucbet\ who is ill, was not present. At lhe same ne.ws conference, • Navy spakeman· present"ed an e1hauslive study which he said convinced the Navy that the Pueblo was no closer than 16 nautical miles from the nearest NorUl Korean land when it was taken. Capt. Vincent Thomas, public affairs officer of the Pacific Fleet, said, "there is no doobt that tbe North Korean aJ>tp. lion that ahe wu seized ln Nor1b Koftan. clalmed territorial waters ta. a complete fabrlcaUon. .. I • FEATURING: HENREDON'S FONTAIN COLLECTION 10!.ll'ld ~11. dtnf"t t.ble itct' In cn-.t.r, wlll mend to a• a c• lf'ldt two l•- Mobnt -•• ,.... '°' _, ~ .... •n·.~.-~~·~1 - ALSO FROM HENREDON: FOLIO THREE GROUP, PLUS CARMEL BEDROO~. HENREOONS UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE 15°/o OFF. -ALSO ON SALE - DREXEL'S DIMODA, GUILDHALL, RAPPORT, AND COLLAGE GROUPS. FROM HERITAGE-ON SALE-GRAND TOUR COLLECTION FIRST EDITION. ALSO TO BE INCLUDED: SOFAS, CHAIRS, LAMPS, ACCESSORIES FR 0 M OTHER OUTSTANDING MANUFACTURERS. EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FOil: HENREDON-DREXEL -HERITAGE 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TERMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CUDIT NEWPORT BEACH 1 n7 w .. tcllff Dr,.. 642-2050 OPIN NIDAY Tll. t INTERIORS Proffftional Interior , .LAGUNA BEACH Oesign•rt 345 Notih Cotat Hwy. 4944551 AY1llabl9-Al~$ID OPP fl.IDAT 'TIL f """' , ............ " 0..-.. c..., Mt-1241 (L) ollo C~l.led Triumph f .or· All Human Beings , -' " ·* .. " ' ·-" . - A . • ~, D , . 1nerI~l\ s . . . -:.: ay Space Center Displays Patriotism . . SPACE CENTER. .llow""1 !UPI) - er<>ytr Ute display· panel on which con- Jrollen had watched Apollo B go to tilt moon and back hung o huge 4American flag. From lhe "squawk bo•" ~ the roUing strains of the "Star- 1S~led BaMer." ~ oD every console smaUer flags ~. The room r,ocked wtt.h chef:rs. .. It wa,s AJner;ica's .dar ia space. • , • • "We ha.re in the ;.control center a diiplay or emotion tbat )''t ba,·e never "'M!et1 in our history," said Paul Haney, ! voice of Apollo cOntrol.' "All thfM Dig ht co~ner shirts arc in the room';" and all the officials," Haney Baid. ''We're absolutely jammed in here." Smoli:e from the traditional after- splashdown cigars began to fill the usually antiseptic room. lfaney said the only other similar demonstration of patriotic spirit came when Gemini 6 rendezvoused with Gemini 7, "and that didn't touch this." Astronauts Frank Bonnan and Jim Lov.elt flew Gemini_. 7. the craft that set'.the record !0< llJIMI 'In !plCO and the Apollo 8 Oight save Lovell the un- dllputeil world tlm.IJHplee roconl. The fiiS}lt coab'ol room -. the nerve ..Dter ol the ,.,..,.rtliht -ftlltd with (l<r&ons u the display cOO!ole at the ft'Olll of lh& room began sh:>wing some of the congr1tu1atory m~ges that flooded iD from all over the worki. It. was a touclliog moment -because it \vas clearly a United St.ales space triumph and the first really major vic- tory for American astronaut.s. Jr. the tense days in the past, lhe or.Iv area that the U.S. could boast firSts were lhe rendezvous and docking techniques done for the first time during the Gemlnl 6 and 7 lllght. But it was more than an American day. Messages from all over the world -from Uong Kong lo Sa:IUaod, from Canada and uErope -bad been flooding into the manned spacecraft center for days. APOLLO I ASTRONAUT CAPS JOURNEY Capt. Lovell Tries on Yorktown Het Minority Profs to Attencl UCI as Graduate Students Space Champion Lovell Now Has 572 Hours Out SPACE CENTER, Howton (UPI).- Fwty-year-old James Lovell Jr., who did not make the United StateS astronaut team his first time out, today strength- ened his grip on the world's tim&-in- space championship. The Apollo I night WU scheduled for 147 hours 3 minutes. Both Borman and Lovell were mem· bers of the "Second Generatlon" cf Amercian aslronauts. Lovell was reject· ed the first Ume he applied. Minority race professors at Cal State Long Bqch will be atW>dlng graduate school at UC J;vine, it was ~ today by Cal Long Beach President Carl W. Mcintosh. Mcintosh said up to 20 minority mem· bcrs will be recruited for next fall and 11:iven half time teaching duties while working for advanced degrees, some at UCI and some at Claremont College. The plan for on-the-job training of pro- fessors while givi:"lg them full faculty stalus will be the first of its kind in the United Slates, Mcintosh said. The lost, half time teaching load will be made up by other professors. "What our faculty is saying," Mcin- tosh remarked. "is that while al.ready faced with tremendous problems of growth they are v;illing to work yet even a little harder in order to realize the American--dream of equaMty of opportu- nity." : The new program is to be achieved without additional ejpense lihflie st1\e, the college presiden! pointed ...,out. · Comm~ted Dr. m.Jden T. Cox, dean cf the School of Letters and Science, whc conceived. the ~rogram ::! "Asking that a Q1!nority ~rsoo be- come full y qualified 6efore -we:..hlfi.bim is not a workable procedure. The 111i· nority person must be hired and then helped to become better qualified." President Mcintosh said jtUn ago as a graduate student he became aw.pre, of the tremendous difficulties facing young men who seek i:i many cases to support a family while completing w~ for ll!I NY Fuel Oil ' Crisis Eas4ig NEW YORK (UPI) -A city official said today the crisi~ caused by last week 's fuel oil drivers' strike appea-red to be easing, but an esljmated 10,000 seriously ill New Yortfn were said to be still without heat. Deputy Mayor Timothy W. Costello, speaking in the absen« of Mayor John V. Lindsay who left for a vacation in the Bahamas Thursday, said "We are cutUng sharply into the priority list for emergency deliveries of ruel oil. l would say the crisis is definitely easing.·• advanced degree. Added to these ordinary difficulties is the extra hardship of racial discrimina- tion, ~ch 8! securing. adequate hous- ing. he noted. Q:illege officials a'iso plan later to ex- tend the program to take in non-teach- ing staff members from mi~oritr races for on-lhe-job training. Additiona fund!, not now available, \Viii be need, hO\\" ever. Chinese Detonate Nuclear Device; Shows 3Megatons WASHINGTON (A P) -Communist China detonated early today a nuclear device v.·ith a yield of about three megatons or three million tons of TNT, Ute Atomic Energy Commission an- -td. ~:AEC said the atmospheric test, the e18bth detected by the United States, «curftd in the Lop Nor area. ~ .. last nuclear blast deted:ed from ;flhina occurred Christmas Eve 1967. It :was ~ sevenUr since 1964 ·and was equal in force to about 20,000 tons of TNT, the AEC said then. Tbe bla,t toda.v contained about the ~ amount of. force as the sixth Cb'""'.se test. on June 17, 1967, the .AEC ~. • TM United States is still awaiting the first Chinese Jong-range missile lest which is . mcre than a year overdue. In anticipation of the Chinese developing a force or intercontinental missiles with nuclear warheads by the mid-19705. the United States has started on a antimiasile defense system. LA Councilman Says He'll Run for Mayor LOS ANGELES (AP) -City Couocil· man Robert M. WHkinson says he's . 1 candidate for mayor -whether or not Mayor Sam Yorty decides to try for a third term. With his announcement Thursday, Wil- kbson became lhe second councilman to declare his candidacy, joining Thom· as Bradley, a Negro. The A:pollo a flight gave Lovell more than 57% hours of space travel. His closest competitor is Frank Borman, the Apollo 8 commander who has nearly 478 hours. Bonnan and Lovell registered most or their time during the Gemini Vll flight In December 1965. That flight is sUll the longest in history. having run 200 revolutions around the earth in 330 hours, 35 minutes and one second. Lovell added another 94 hours 34 min· utes and 3l seconds during the Ge mini 13 night in Noveember 1966. The Apollo I fiight was the first in space for Wi!Uam Anders. Lovell and Walter ?.f. Schirra Jr. are the ooly two astronauts ever lo make three apace fllghta . Schirra, lhe only man to fly in the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs, has logged 29~ hours. 13 rr1inutes afl!I tO secondi; in space, the third greatest amount. A total of 22 differ ent astronauts have flo\1•n in the United States mann~ flights since they started wilh Alan B. Shepard's 15-minutc sub-crbital flight in May 19&1. County Supervisors Ask Pay Boost to $20,000 Orange ~ supervisors, an. the verle of geU a )ay raise from $13,JOO a }'ear' to ·• •• ., voted Thursday to support a st.a "de move that would boost their salµie:s ~ at least $20,000. Tht ""au~'' pay has been. an- chtftd -at $1,100 a month for the last six years and will go up to $15,000 a year on Jan. l through legislaUon passed this yar. ~upervisors' salaries in all countiel are~ set by th~ state legislature. The board voted to support two of six proposed salary schedules which will be discussed today by the Government Operations Committee of the County Supervisors Association of California (CSAC). Supe;v isor David L. Baker will represent the board at the i;ession in Sacramento today. ' Under the two proposals endorsed the supervisors would get : -A base annual salary of $20.000. -Add $2,000 (10 percent of salary) to that amount where 1t1pervlsora are fuJI time and do not engage in other work. -Add an addilional $1 in salary' for each $1 million in assessed vaJuaUon. This" would equal $2,975 in Orange COUn- ty. The CSAC Committee is scheduled to dlscQSS the: various proposals today and follow with a meeting with the state legislature's Local Gcvemment Oxn- mittee. t Orange County supervisors 1ot their last pay rai5e of "100 a monl.h on Jan. 1, 1963. Additional salary increase., sug. geSted each year following by the county Grand Jury .failed to get approval of the Legislature when the county'• legislature delegation would n o t unanknously support t h e recom• mendations. Many county officers and judges cut• rently receive salaries far in excess of the superv:isors. Verne Said Son Would See It TOULON, France (UPI) -The grand· son of French author JuJes Verne, who wrote about a voyage to the moon. aald Thursday his grandfather told b1m be would see men go to the moon. Jean Jules Verne, a retired judge, said his grandf.ather confided him shortly before he died in 1905 the manll5Crlpt of his classic "From the Earth lo the Moon" and told him he would see this come about. Verne, who recently \vrote a sequel to his grandfather's novaJ "Michael Stro- goff" said he had followed with great in- terest on television and in newspapers the flight of Apollo 8. Poli~e TV Syste1n: Boon or (Editor's Note: The City of Newport Beach earlier this year considered and rejected a system of closed-circuit TV police surveillance. The following report by the Associated Press relates the ex* perience of one city which has tried it.) By ERIC M. SHARP OLEAN, N.'\'. IAP ) -White shoppers look in \\'indows along Union Street, pblicen1cn look at the shoppers on closed- circuit tele vision -a practice that has arous~ both laughter and anger among Olean's residents. The eight television cameras. mounted 20 feel above the street on ltghtpo&ts, survey lhe five·bloc:k-lon.g business center of this city of 22,000 cupped • in tbe Allegheny uplands 70 miles soUlheast of Buffalo. In pollce headquarters, a desk sergeanl commands a view of eight television receivers that show pl~tures of Union Street from various angles. Opponents: of the sy11tem have one major comph1int -It nasn't. worked well 11inct It .,.., turned on 5ept. 27. "They've got the cameru in the wrong places," said • bartender. "111ey watch the l)'ontl or the stores, and any bw11ar with half an ~ of sense wlll co In the back." His comment Is backed up by the A person wilking along a lk!ewalt It fact that two break-ins have been made night cannot be seen. a\ Union Street stores since the cameras Michael Arnold, creator of the syirttm were erected. In each case, entry was and general manager of Olean 's AJlbaod made al a camera blind spot , and the Cablevision Inc. which Installed It, .cl- police didn't find out about it for some milted there are blgs, but said they hours . will be corrected soon. A shoe store operator pointed out "We've learned a lot in 1his early another bug : "You can·t see a thing period, and we're. going to modify the on the televisions at night.•· system to make ll more effective," be Those Who favor television surveillance said. -including Mayor Harvey Shneiderma.n "We'll change the locaUon of lhe -' say its faults are technical and cameras lo cover back 1Uey1 and blind can be eliminated through better eqlip-spots, and our new cameras will be meot and experimentaUon . equipped with zoom Jense1 and Piii from "U this dOu no more than control side lo side." our traffic problem, then it's a boon.'' Arnold demonstrated one of the new Shneidmnan Wd. "New equipment win zoom 1ena camera&. make UWi system a highly effective He llmed it out a window of his Grime delemn~ and,· I! we Ue 11 In olllce a..i tt focuaed ......,.Ucati, "" With our bUrgtar arnfOre alarm l)'llemJ, • botJso about 100 ylll'd• awoy. A picture *it will be fft¥aluable." · Of U\e house appeared on a televillon AJ It stands now, t et e' 1 s Io n.. set hooked up with the~·· surveillance by po1ice is not very ef-Arnold pressed the zoom IWltch. and fectlve. the teteocoplc teno """'11ht the - In the daytime the picture rattly In IO ~ that only • om•ll portion Is clear enough 'to ldeoll!y rac.s at of the roof was di!playtd on the """'1!. dl.stancea of more lhan SO or SO feel "Yau can read l()meOne's watch at At nltht, the loW<r hall ol each 1Cre<n 700 !o!t with lhll thing," he grinned. dlsploys • pattern or curvtna b!act and He said the problemt of nighttime while lines, pod the upper half showa televising COOJ!d be eliminated by ullJli UtUe more than au\omobUe headlight.a. camena with more JlghWenstUve Je:mes \ and changing from an aluminum-coated cable lo a plullc-coated one. The older policemen on Olean's 33-man force believe the system is a waste of time. The younger men are more ready to give It a chance Md think it can be made to work. Police Chief Ml chael Luty said Olean doesn't have much of a crime problenl and believes television "will work bt:!tter as a er~ deterrent than anything else. Once it's working properly, a burglar is going to think twice about enlerln& a building when he !mows the polioe can see him go ln." U. added that the televllioa .,...,,, could frte two patrolmen from walking a beat and lncreaae the ab!Uty or patrol cars to react to a reported crime. Many of Otean11 clllr.ens setm to repro television surveillance as a joke. They say the city does not have enough crime to warrJnl It and think" UWl pro- blems encountered so Car are not worth the effort lo straighten oul So lat. tbe television upertrnent ha:! not cost the city a cent. "We pay !or It when we accept I~ and we doo't accept It unUI It's working to our uti!rlCtlon," Sbnddennan ukt. "When tt doel go Into effect, It wtll cost the city a little ovtr fS,500 • year, which u •boot the A1ary ol .,,. Success Sha.r.ed • By Wh~le ~ World .. By JOSEPH L. lfTLD W ASHJNG'l'ON (UPI) -"ti o w Americans: and, indeed, human btlngs everywhere •·can stand a few inches taller." For, said Or. Edward C. Wel&h today, the magnificent voyage of ApoUo 8 was not solely an American triumph. It was &. triumph of tbe bwn1n spirit and the hurrian mind, and it was ebared by everybody in the world who bad access to newspapers, radio, or television. Welib ii e.xecuUve secretary cf the NaUonal Aeronautics and Space Council, a White House agency created to keep the President informed about 11. S. space programs. The pride and joy hei voic:ed were universal emoUons today. Said Soviet space ~eatld Leonid I. Sedov as Apollo 8 began !la bomcnrd jouroey: "This event goes beyond the llb'tita of a national achievement and· mi'rks a stage in the development -ol the universal culture of earthmen." lt has been a yeti of bewildering contraslJI. For the United States, Welsh said, 1968 bas been "the most prosperous yelp' Ill our history." It also hu been one of the unhappiest, one of the most calamitous. It· has been a year of .assa.ss.inaUons and riota, ·of.· war and crime and protest For many another naUon, too, 1968 waa: a di.!ll.!lter. But as the year drew to a close. the Cllri<tmas 11me flight or .\pollo s to another celesUal body came as a tonk, Wting the spirits of mm, and, perhaps, heralding a happier lllllf to come. The eagerness With which ·a rapt and fasclnJted world watched the otherworld- ly travels of astronauts Frank Borman, Jame1 Lovell, and William Anders manifested, said Welsh, " a grasping aod reaching out for something to be pleased by." Emotion aside, what will bt the sober conscquencu of Apollo S's voyage in the ocean of apace? For one thing it makes Cl'Jdible the fantasUc noUon that men next year ac- tually will land oil the moon -and bring baclt IBlnples al 111·""1· · nu. tandbt, tilitliO ·w· 1111, arand performance cf Apollo 8, ~ably coold come in May, elg~ y~ to the month from ,!be fi!I!<. JlhaJiWill .~hn F. Kennedy Conuiitttei!J '1Uil~ to the task of patting ·men oa tbl moon in UUs decade. 10 Hippie Types Held in 'Orgy' • Murder of Girl SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Ten "hip- pie types" were booked on murder charges today in the death of a teen- aged girl who w~ beaten and raped in a three-hour orgy cf violence at a Haight,.. Ashbury apartqient. Pobce ordered an autopsy to deter· mined the '!:tact cauae of death of lhe girl, tenlatively identified as Ann Jlm~ Inez, 19, of SeatUe. ln.!lpectors Bill Armstrong and Dave Toshi said the .tuspecta dragged the • girl from her apartment Thursday night and took her to another room in the same building. The homicide officers said they .!ltripped1 beat, kicked and raped her, subjected her to senial In· dignities and scrawled obscenities on her nude body with lipstick. Friends dragged her back lo her own apartment three hours later. They called police after unsuccessfully trying to revive her. Joke? patrolman. OnJy, the televis:lon cameras don 't need vacaUons, get sict or go for coffee breaks." Arnold admitted Allbaod ls losing money on thla experiment.. but said the lnYestment Is worth it. Arnold said television surveillance might be more valuable in high crime rate areas of large cities than as a generll tool In small ones. "You wouJdn'& have lo put cameras everywhere," he saJd. "Just In those places you thlnk they are needed. Mount the receivers In the precinct houses, and a policeman could keep an eye on the area." Some cilliens complain ttlevillon- survelllance: i1 an tnvulon cf privacy, but moot people shrug oil thal Idea. "Hell, It sees lesa: lhln a cop walk.Inc his beat doea," a garage tnedwllc pointed out. "I mean, a cop can look into 1 restaurant where you're eating or look in a store window and see you trytna: on a coal The TV just Jookl at the street." Shneidttman agretd with this view* polat, aaylng : "We're watchln.g a public thoroughfare. I don't tee bow anyone can compl1ln we're Invading thefr privacy when they're on view to bundrtds of people waalni aJona the slreot. • In any c.,., We(sb aald drtzy, "II wlll put a more solid foundaUon" under budget requests of the N a t I o n a f AeronauUcs and Space AdmlntstraUon (NASA) !or fi!cal ll'IO. loJJ a departing member of the Johnson Administreiioo, Welsh added that It nlso will make it more difficult for the new President. Richard M. NJxon, to make new cuts in the civilian space program. Douglas Crew Rejoices Over Apollo Success Happy, excited engineers at the Mc- Donnell D<iuglas Astronautics Corp. in Huntington Beach aOC North. American Space Division in Seal Beach met tbe .successful end of the moon fiight ct Apollo 8 with shouts of joy this morning, "We feel just great. It's wonderfuL We knew it all along. It was just perfect and we are damn happy," were same o.I the comments from the crews respc:lOli- ble for building the second and third sta~es of the Saturn rocket Just as happy, but more down to ealiti was a secretary who joyfully -that the sgacecralt landed within a few thou- sand yards of its pickup ship, adding, "The handle fell off the door of my car this morning. With all of our space ability you'd think they could get ID1. door handle to work." Even as the engl.neen ·expressed com~ plete satisfaction wiUt the operation ol the "bird" manufactured in Huntington Beach and Sea] Beach, they were pre- paring for even greater space feats. NEXT FLIGHT North American engineers were con. templatlntr the nm ntght, Apollo I, which will ho an-oarth orb(t In P'ebnJ. ary lo lest the lunar module which 'Coo!d land men on the mOCI\ nm: APrU or May. ' TM Manned Orbl!lng Laboratory (MOL) currently ii (JC(!Upyfng tbe taJ. eats ot ·the engineers at McDonoell Pougl8!. The engineering crews believe that the MOL project some di)" will be hailed as one of m.111'1 greateat 1pace achievements. But right now the McDonnell Douglu crtw at HunUngton Beach ls happy with ,Jta contribution to the succes.s m Apollo 8. Tbat conlrlbuUon u the S.IVB r<>cltet. the thlrd ataga wblch sent the Apollo crew to the moon. After liftoff tbe first two stages ol the Saturn V rocket boo&ted Apolk> 8 to a speed or 14,000 miles per bour. Follow· Ing separation from the second stage, made at North American in SeaJ Beach,, the S-IVB was fired for 2.6 minutes in- creasing Apollo speed to 17,400 miles per hour and inserting it into a parking orbit around the earth. MESSAGE TO CREW "Two hours later after aJI systems of the spacecraft were checked completely a message was given to the Apollo I crew," said H. E. Bauer, director or the Saturn Apollo program for McDonnell Douglas. 'I1le message was-"S-IVB is go fOl" transJunar injection " and the first man. ned mission restart of a rocket engine in space followed. Approximately 25 minute. after sl.art of the translunar night the spaetcraft separated from the S-IVB stage and witlt a veloclty given by the rocket mantJ.t factured in West Orange County head~ away from earth toward its rendezvous with the mooo. Lovell Gives 8 Sailors Oath After Recovery ABOARD YORKTOWN (UPI) -For eight sailors aboard the carri~r York· town, re-enlistment brought a historic bonus today. · They were sworn in by ooe of the first n1en ever lo circle the moon -Navy Capt. James Lovell Jr., command pilot and navigator aboard ApoUc I. Lovell, along with ast'ronaut.s Frank Bormcv.! and Wllli1m Anders., were plucked from the waten: ol tbe Pacific by the Yorktown, after Apollo I ip1ubtd ilown in the Pacific aarUer today. Lo•ell administered the reG!latment oath to the ei,ght sailors in the carrier'• hanger after recovery. Tlie Milon are Sen\or Chief Boat· swain's Mite Edward S. c.orrte, 48, oC San Pedro, Calif.; Senior Chief BoUef"'" man Robert A. Grovt.!I, 38, of Qru.11 Vl!.- la, Call!.; Ship Fitter Le. Arthur Wood- wan!L.!9• ol Norfolk, Va.: Eallntman I.e. wullam F. 0.tuod, 16, ll ' Long Beach. Calli .. lladloma.• I.e. lloymond J. Kiusler, 1$, or lla•allan Gardens, Cali!.: Bollmnan I.e. Rayu\ond ScoU, 21, ol Btk<rs(lold, Callf.: and Aviation Electronics Tochnlclan I.e. Woyne E. Spicier, or Cot!a(le Grove, MJan. 1 - Fricf'1, -21, l'H>S Wiiiem J•mff Fr•nk Noel Hop- mens will not likely forget tho his- toric Apollo 8 Chrlsbljas voyage to the moon for as Jong aa he lives. The baby's parents ol Bergen op ZOom, Holland decided to name him alter America's three Apollo 8 astronauts and Noel !or Christ· mas, as be was born on Christmas Eve . • Armed wiU1 a shotgun, a man burst into a London liquor store Chrillbna• Day and·olubbed one of three shopkeepers:,, .. , the bead. He fired a shot into the ceiling, than fled with one bottle of brandy. But, a salesman Said, it could have been wor.se. '1It was not a brand~· ot ~or quality," he said. I ·::-... ... . -.~.· A ·<Soun m<mbt;s of B'Mj B1ri0. in Portland, Maint, did patrOl car duty and clerical 1D0Tk I at ·tQ.e police station Chriltmai 1 Day. to give poUcemtn estra , kours 9ff d~ty, One of the men : Saigorl Assails VC-French Talks PARIS (UPI) -Salioa'a war talkl delesauon chaled IOday at Fr8ll(t'• dls- cusstoo wUh lbe Viet Cong on lbe politi- csl luture ol 60old> Vietnam. 'l1le s.;g.,. oegot!allng chief, Pham Dang Lam, denoonced French Forelan Minllter Mlchet Debre's moeUng Thun- day "1th Trln Bw Klem, the top Viet Cong at the stalled Paris talk._ North Vletlllm and the Viet Cong C011111'nd with a communique dmwid· ing the immediate optning of negotia· Uons around a cin::uJar table. It said Saigon was trying to sabotage peace effort&. . Ki• einer&:ed from his conference with Debre and announced "It remains onii. for ~ details to be fixed" before the Viet Cong release three captive Gls in .South Vietnam as promised. Denounctnl the Kiem-Debre session, the Saigon leader ssld the French foreign minister "his prejudged the nature of tbe' (peace) coaference to be held and its final outcome." "It seems ·dlfficuii not to lint Tran Buu 'ltleni'• eflorls to be received by the French forel&n minister with the effort put up ' by qie ~mmunist side with a view of winDina:, for the (Viet Cong) a certain status ·for the forthcoming Paris conference," Lam said. ·.#One of the primary issues blocking the be&innini ol expanded talks la Saigon's refusal to aceqt the Viet Cong as a separate entiq at the bargaining table. * *"* Allies Slam Guerrillas' Supply Lines ' SAIGON (UPI) -U. S. warplalle5 and Sooth Vietnamese loot saldlen llam- med into the Commun.I.st troops and su.J)ply buildup threatening Saigon and dealt the guerrillas a heavy blow. military spokesmen said today. American 852 stratoforts, d 1 v e bombers and helicopter g u n 1 h I p s destroyed 125 Communist bunkers., 55 fortifications and za sampans in raids Thursday tbat triggered IO flreblll1 In t he guerrilla supply network toward Saigon. South Vietnamese infantrymen cap. tured 49 Viet Cong trainees in a camp 20 miles north of the capital and sel!ed two tons of hidden Communist TNT and arms south in the Mekong Delta, military spokesmen said. · jlltigned to a pa,Wol car tmth. a r.tQUlar pOlicemqn saw action • 'd-uring .his tour. He directed ~ traffic at the scene of on acci-~ dtnt. ~ · Debre was ti)e first French cabinet member to m.eet wftb a Viet Cong rep- U.S. headquarters Intelligence reports, meanwhUe, showed the euerrillas had not used the allies' 24-bour Christmas cease-fire to move closer to Saigon for the expected winter-spring offensive. ~.;·m a'Jl:T .Jn CJiqnillo, Stove Blast Fire Sweeps it cin be confusion. Take, for ex~ ample, Bald Mountain. There are at least. a dozen ~d Mountains_~~ . . • h ~~i~:.~!t1~~~i:r.·· Through Home; 6 Peris in mountain, Mount Baldy, and Garfield County has a Baldy moun- tain. There's Bald Hill in P a r k county and Bald Knob in La Plata County. • At The Animal Industry HaU at tht' California Mu.seum of Science ond tn4ustrv in E%p0Sition Park the 1988 uear is viewed a.s a "'reat turktt1," and 1969 U seen as "for the bird.~ too:• Thi& giant 70-pound turkey and a 4-da.y-oid chick were picked °"' rep- resentatives of the old and new year.~. • The fairways thieves have struck again. Armed robbers held up " golfer and his caddy near bole No. 6 of the Holiday Hills Goll and Country Club in Manila in the sec- , ond robbery on the go 1 f course 1 Within the past month. The victim 1 and his caddy were tied to a tree r and the thieves fled with cash and ; valdables estimate<! at $125. GRANYILLE, N.Y. (AP) -Fire from an exploding wood stove roared through a two-story frame house near this east- . em New York ctmmunity early today, killing six persons. only two persons . -a 29-year-old " woman and her ~year-old son -escap- ed the blau. The boy, Thomas Bushee .fled the home when be was awakened Dy an explogion an d saW a mushroom· ,,Ing ..... ,li,1111elhe,,1Ui$en .• ~· ,, . EUta1>eth · Bulbee jumped from a . second·Door window and sprinted through. the mow and 20-<tegree.below zero cold- \ to 1wpmoo ~ neicbbor, W-al!en pqt!er. ' Bulfi!.r an-1ved to find Thotnas Bushee ·standing in his underclothing, barefoot, calling into the house, by then complete· ly enveloped in flames. "The boy saJd, 'I can't go until my father comes,' "Buller said. Butler pick- ed him up and led hlm away. "I knew nobody could be allve in there." he said. The boy and hls mother were hospital- ized, suffering from frostbite, shock, cuts and bruises. Four bodies had been recovered short- ly before 10· a.m., as police and firemen set up a makeshift morgue tent on the lawn of the home. The house, fn the Washington County hamlet of RaceviUe, north of here near the Vennont border, was burned to the ground. The dead were Joseph Bushee, 32, owner of the home, his brother, Edward, 36, Nellie Williams, 68, Fred Steele, 65, Ruth Jane Sumner, 5, and Walter Carl Sumner, IO. Mr1. Williams was Joseph Bushet's motber·in·law. The Sumner children were grandchil- dren of Mrs. Williams. Pollce said the Sumner children were staying at the home because their mother was hospitalized, and In grave condition, at a Glens Falls, N. Y. hospi· ta!. Fire Heroine Dies 7-year-old Rescued Sisters, Brother UTICA. N.Y. (AP) -Wendy Lerch, 7, was kiUed in a fire In her home short- '1y before midnight Thunday after res- cuing her four sisters and a brother. · Her mother, Mrs, JoM Lerch, sat hysterical on the sidewalk in a straight· back wooden kitchen chair, wrapped in borrowed boob and blankets as fire- men ·-fighting In subzero weather their *lxth major fire of the night -put out the flames and then searched for Wen· dy's body. Mrs. Lerch had rtscued her crippled husband, confined to a wheelchair t h c last three years, while Wendy got Pat· ty, Pearl, Ricky, Rmee and Linda away from tbeir Conk.Jing Avenue home. Fire officials said the fire was started by a fauJty heater under Lerch's bed. He and one of the children were taken to 'a hospital for treatment of mlnor burns. Wendy returned to the blazing house lo make sure au of her famlly w as safe and was trapped on the second floor at the top oI the stairs. The Lerch family lost a son i:t Vietnam !>out a year ago. North Plains Snow Belt Record Breaking 21-below Registered at Burlington, Vt. Calllorttl• Tem11eratt1re• Coutlll Molllt., tttr .,,.. .c•tttrtd c"""i. -k>dl"r ~ $tfllrNy, WhWI -"'*'"'Wt'r .. iS '",-JI. l••I"• 11••to• Y.......,..·~~ ~ ,,. • """ ,, .......... 1 ... 11111111 lilcOLMI ........... wtt IP .. •J. f,. water .....,..."'" ... N .) •· -· ''"'" StaM """' .,,,. '·"'· , , ._.. low '''° ...... '·' ,,,., """ ,,,.., low ._..... """ _ .. '"''"' -., .. 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Albv•IMirt1~' ""t~~·••t At11..t1 llt•tt1flt lG 11..,.,1rtk '"" llc:i!~ll C~lcato Clntlnn1!1 Cl1v1i.no11 o.nvt' °"' MOl,.,,,t 0.!roll . .., ...... , l'ort Worll! fl ...... ""~ ..... , H-tori K•nMI Cl!'f 1. .. v .... ,_ --Ml11T1I kMl'I Mllw1111t .. Ml1111t1110tlt ~ °''"._ Hew vn ... ..... °"''"' ..... "°''" P~llMlll!tlll.I -· ~-... .... , ... 11 .. -ClfY It.cl •tvtt ·-Se<•lmtntill SI. t.eul1 a.u...-. S.lt t.••• ,,,., s... oi..o S." l'rencl.c:o """ l•rbtr• Se1n 1t SllQll<IM Tiii""'! .,,...llltlOll Mltll LIW rtt<. " ,, .:io H I " ,.. ' .. ~1 .11 1' $ .OS 40 :If .01 • • 34 Jl .151 ,. ).I ,.11 n l1 .01 ~ " )7 u 07 ,. ?J .01 '° '° •,GJ Ji " .. J! .01 11 •6 .Ol " u I• U ... " w SJ 4 .42 " .. ~ 11 .l, n 11 .OJ ., "' ,01 ,) ti JI 43 .U " " n • ?$ IJ Ml • ·'' ,, ,, ,co .. " .. , JI It .Col ~ " " " M » " .. ,, JI U .~ . " tf. •1 .I? Jt 4 '°' Jt JJ ,1J " :u ·°' n tt .ti ti II . " • • I • _, ' Sciles ' and _· cl~nces . after Christmas ; year-end sale of Sealy mattresses ' Once a year May Co and Sealy bring you. extra-special savings on luxurious· mattresses, bo~ springs and sleep 'ensembles. Y ou'Jl find a large assor1ment of sizes: firmnesses, consituct!on and tickings to choose from. Quanli!ies ar~ llmlled, so shop .early ·for th~ best choice, Seaiy,.3 and !Piece bedding ensembles rog.199.96 and 219.00 159.00 i. twin size mattresses a nd 2 matching box springs •Hundreds of highly tempered steel coils • No-sag pre-built borders • Many layers of thick cotton felt and sisal insulators for firmness and comfort ..Uol Sealy quilted mallrell or box aprlng 39.99 twin or tul l rog. 49.9l Deeply quilted ticking, hundreds of steel coils. Collon fell over sisal insulators. Vertically quilt- ed no-sag borders. Fresh a ir ventilators. 2-pc. queen set 129.00. 3-pc. king set, IS9.00. giant 6'x7' king size mattress and 2 matchinq 3'x7' box springs •King size mahr~Gs has a specially reinforced center section to prevent body roll •Box springs are engineerec to provide body-balanced support for your back sale! Sealy Flrm,Guard mattr111 or box ·1prlllg 59.99 twln or full ,.,, 79.9l Beautiful quilted mu11t·needle maltress with 312 coils, edge guard conslruction with body bracers, soft cotton felt for extra comfort. 2-pc. queen set, 169.00. 3-pc. king· set, 249.00. · sleep equipment 145 no down payment months lo pay on May.Time co .. may co soutll coast plaza, san diego freeway at bristol, costa mtSO: 546·9321 lhop monday l'hroUCJh saturday, 10:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. r I l I I l .,... n · -'!.Or'. . ' IVASlllNGTON !AP) ~ B..Joiu-. ..,,- . e tb1nJ she's bappi<Jt about ·a'vloc behind after five yeart • 1 Ille Whitt Jlowe are all he 11rly ""'"1111. often ·mlnoul. tole~ calla to the ~. , '"!11t !limnckAil l1Dc " that :elepbone It ' •'pock tbal cliap )'GU 1o --end )'GU -Oii , tbe . other end tllat It 11 ,_thing, ~plflolitt," Mn, Jilhnson 1&11-11And it ii .never: 1ood when It rlnga at that tlme. "It la the atn.se o f l<IJIOOlll>Ully. It ii not my rupbnlibWt7 but it does spill over into the whole' climate of your We." • ' Mr~ J.rui-,illo -.... will be~ .. 'JeoyeJlthlnd tbe diiidl.... .. . end tbe Preildenl CGDllliiil,·,... ""' tbe 1"llolir wart .i.,t. "\.'7 1be Ont UldJ , ..... ; ~ commenta in · a l-a p t ,d televtslao , Interview w 11 b Howard K. -.to.be'lhown at 7:30 p.m.'_n ... :the American BrollfcUlin& • Oo. 'network. · '" U,S,. C_ONCJ MIET..:. Dlacussing the negotiation for ,!hereleue of three U.S. pri1011ers, Lt. Col. Johll V. .!llb!)ey (c'nler), of Cl"'ll:W•!er, Fla., U.S. delega· lion cblof ilnd Maj. Jean Sauvegaot (left) of Akron, . . Ohio, talk with Viet Cong representatives in a field six miles south of TfaY Mi~h, South Vietnam. Maj. Sauvegeot speaks fluent Vietnamese. Mrs. Johnson say1 the President, like other meft across the nation. brings the problems of his job home with him. And he also brings home unexpectedly the people be works with. Viet C:ong C:lalm U.S. Bombs Laos Trails During Y ttle .. She said, however, ibe wanted the President to bring the burdens home to her after a long day in office~ ' Protocol Preventing Release "When be comes. alone, he brings the problellll alld, you know, I would' f8el tbit' Jt w a s -I would feel somehow I had failed if he didn't," she said. "Btcaue where eJR can he feel men relaxed about thtm and more-where would he have II)· audience better suited ta 11e.rinc about them quite prlvatalf and quite honesUy?" • . One of the most. dlfficult thinga for her to leave behind, Mn:. Johnlon said, la what she calls the magnetism or the White House. SAIGON (UP!) -The Viet Cong iaJ4 today tbe three . American war prisoners wbose . relwe they promised to aegouate on Chrtstmu Day were not released because l:l .S. Negotiators refused to dlscu~ procedures. "i'be claim was made on Uberation Jladio, the Viet Cong's clandestine radio, and· mOnitored in Saigon. Thursday In Paris a Viet Cong spokesman said only final details remaintd to be worked out before the release. A Viet Cong broadcast Dec. 23 said the three Americans had been released on Dec. 2Z, but this apparently was erroneous. U.S. offlclals said they knew nothing of such placed fixed the U.S. represen- a release and ..later broadcasts ta_ Una . met the represen· tall'fet o1 the Eastern (Vet Q\&de Jt clear ~ priJoners ·Q:iltg) Command but would were ~ in guerTil1a ·hands. oor atftee to discuss the pro. American spokesmen said cedures which is why the the Viet Cong . negotiating meeting did not bring . any team they met on a Jul\lle.t results." : battlefield Christmas Day told A ~. spokesman .said : they !fid not have the authority Most of the two hour and to specify the date, Ume or a half meeting was taken up locality for the release of the by a discussion of "protocol," three prisoners. and observers believed this The Viet Cong broadcast to-meant the Viet Cong were day said : asking for some sort or "The Poular Forces Armed recognition. ·Forces Command bed given A U.S. spokesman said lo· the time and place to meet day "We are open for representatives of the U.S. anything" in meeting the Viet Command in South Vietnam Cong to arrange the release on Dec. 25. On the time and of captive Gls. SAIGON (UPI) -American 852 bomben uaed the 21-hour Christmas cease.fire in South Vietnam lo lace North Viet- namese traffic ln Laos with a record number <lf raids, in- formed allied sources said to- day. During the 24-hour period spanning Christmas Eve and Christmd.8 Day, I.he bomb.ors dumped more than two ·mil- lion pounds of bombs in about a dozen raids along the Ho Chi Minh Trail !n Laos, the sources said. Volpe Backs . 'Mass Transit * * * * * Since the bombing halt, the allies have blasted Commu- nist-controlled roads ln Laos three to five times dally wtth the deadly stratofortresses. Ab:out seven raids was' cotll!i- de~ to be a day's record. Hove Tired of War~ WASHING TON (AP) •:-.f John A. Volpe, Presldent~lect L _ ~ . ..J T M z Nixon's choice !or transport&· · Uu;u,S roop 1 Ora e tlon secretary, say1 mQZ't emphasis must be put on.mar DONG TAM, Vietnam (UPI) transportation sy11tema to· c0t>e with the nation's Urban tfifg~ -Bob Hope todaj' lndlC~ prob! he ls tired of the Viefo.~"' ems. ·-.. ~u The MaS!achusetts ·govemor war, but will keep entertaiulng said Thursday in his ttrll-news the tl"Cl'Jps no matter . wisat conference since appointed by M.ppens;-• Nixon that :·highways alone "1 agree n was lmpofta'ilt won't do the Job." , Tbe emphasis on , public to st~p the Comm~ts ag· transportalion .came as a, bit , gress10n here, but 1t seems of a aurprlse since Volpe has to have dragged on and on." gained a reputation as a man he said. "I want to do who believes In highways. As some nice peaceful shows federal highway administrator without I.he sound of artillery in I.he Eisenhower ad- ministration he directed the in the background." start of the g11antic interstate Hope made the remark in road system and he founded a backstage interview at this a construction company thet Mekong Delta combat base, has built thousands of miles 11 the air vibrated with the of highways. Rapid transit systems may not prove feasible in some areas, Volpe said, but there will be others where "you can't bulld any more hJghways without tearing a city apart." roar of Cobra helicopter gunships and the thunder or arUllery. Hope, visibly exhausted by his tour of the war zone, was not all glum. He said his respect for the morale ot the American troops serv- ing In the war had risen. "They somehow seem to be in much better shape this .year," he said. • 0 Hope's weariness from 15· hour days was not reflected in the shows he presented in the country. Most men view him as Vietnam's answer to Santa Claus and he dki not disappoint them. Daily the 65-y car. o Id performer appeared before the troops with an ever<hang· ing routine of topical jokes and a lot of "Hope." Combat soldiers, their boots still stain- ed with mud and , sometimes, blood sat for up to 18 hours lo await his arrival, "Hope ls Christmas," one soldier said. "It makes com· Ing to Vietnam seem a little worthwhile." Fr4nkAbuse i{~eNowUp ·To ' Congress WASljlNGTON !UPI) - The. Past Office Deparlmenl. whJch last October claimed ~ ·RDbert P. Griffin (R· Mich ), ~-might owe the . tax· payers $25,000 in postage, an· The unannounced strike into Laos were not considered to be a break in the U.S. agree- ment to stop the war over Christmas. Th much • violated agreement cove.red opera· lions only in South Vie;tnam. The uninterrupted raids into Laos appeared to be based on allied fears that the Commu- nists are preparing to launch another nationwide offensive from their Cambodian sanctu~ arles.' · nounced today it will not try1;=========:::; to collect. Here's Where The department issued a I new policy involving the use : It's At! ot congressional franking : I privileges -the method through which members of Congress may mail their cor· I respondence free of charge. I~LE The new policy &ays tha t Congress, as individuals or as I a body, from now on will I have the responsibility ofl deciding whet.her s u c h JC A -~ L ft privileges are being abµsecl.! U#'I I '-UJ\X Previously, the depar1Jllent1 w .. icllH 1"11u N•WMrtw 11111 has issued rulings on suchll ui-HH """'* possible violations. _ --····-- ·------...--------iiiiiiiii.-...--------- 9to.rt 7he IJ1ew lf ear Rtg!tt I • Open your new savings account or add to your savings where you 81rn the nation's highest rate of Interest on Insured savings .•• Anahelm Sl'llngs end Loan Assoclaijon. Interest is compounded dally and pai~ from tho 1 at whan funds are received by tho 10th. Funds eam to date of withdrawal when held for 90 days. 5% current annual rate yields 5.13% on funds held for one year. 5.25% on bonus accounts held for 3 years-$1000.00 minimum amount. Accounts are insured to $15,000.00 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation and protected by Anaheim's 100% record of safety since founding in 1921. Serving the Orange County area from our three offices . , . Anaheim, Huntington Beach end Brea. 5.003 5 ·.253 ~arn 5.13% when our :urrent annual rate Is :ompounded dally and maintained for a year. Current annual rate on 3-year bonus accounts. Minimum $1000 v Flu Widespread; Deaths Doubling·., DJ.11.Y PILOT $ ·WHERE ON'EARTH ARE···.~~ THESE PEOPLE GOING?~ New York ,. Chicago, Lonc:lon, Paris . " Could b• •nywh•re, but we know the firtf sfci:p is LA lntern•tion•I Airport. W• fly thtre •nd beck 9 times~ every d•y from Oreng• County Airport •. , in 19-p•s-enci•~ T-jets. It only tekes 20 min.ut•1 which l••v•• pl•nty of time lo me~t • conntctin9 fli9ht to another de1tin1tion. The fere: $7.95 One way plus tex I Ntwt time you plan a trip to Los An9el11 or beyond, think of us. Cell your trtvtl agtnt or Goldel'I West Airlint• et 171"4) 540-7010. "IT SURE BEATS DRIVING" ~ ~ Golden West Airlines ANAHEIM SAVINGS IMltn I/Oii ,.. ' to 1c1 tel. tkilled craftamen ditpl.ty their rar• talent& In the THE ART OF OLAISBLOWING ANAHllM 117 W lllleO!n /WI. l"A 2·1 !>:111 Exhibit• O«monatr1.tion January 2nd. thN 10th. '"IA I HUNTINGTON llACM l"70 I . lrM l lYG. "411 M.rn ftrMI ..tA ..... ?I l•HlfOI SINCE IHI fftll CONVINllNT PAllllNG AT AU. a L.oCATlc;.,.:i; ' • I jo~v PILOT EDITO~ P~GE j Find a Middle Ground .. Detest of a variance application last week for 15 additional u.alu on a Laguna Beech motel complex again brought up a municipal shortcoming . Laguna's proposed commercial-hotel (C·H) .one fared ratber badly on 1ts first go-around. It took a drubbing from both commercial and aesthetic inter· ...is. But there seems a definite need for some such ordlnance palatable to both groups. The spectrum of opinion on such matters In Laguna Beach is a wide one with many hues. Some, at one ex- treme, favor unfettered hotel development to broaden the tax base and bustle the tourist dollar. Others would as soon see Laguna Beach become a bedroom community. There must be a solid workable middle groWld in which hotel development 'vith reasonable controls can be an asset to Laguna aesthetically and economically. Planners, hotel people and tho.ff active in protect- ing aesthetics should bend every effort to find this ground. In the meantime, adoption of the proposed C·H zone on an interim basis should be considered pending completion of the town's master plan. Laguna Wins Big Laguna Beach covered itsell with glory last week in annual Forty Miles of Christmas Smiles judging by lne Orange County Coast Association. The community captured the Sweepstakes Award \1•hich for the last t'vo years had gone to neighboring San Clerhente. The award was given oo the basis of the all..out community Christmas lighting effort. Fartng well in other areas, the . .\rt Colony proved its . mettle by capturing a special award for "Best Ah Yes, Courage Is the Thing lly EU.SWORTH L. RICllARDSON Minister The Nel&bborhood ConlJ'ladoul Cllardt Laguna Beach James Barrie said, "Courage is the lhina . . _ lhe lovely virtue. All goes if courqe goes." Alt yes, courage is the lhlni ! On. t ~ e niakien voyq;e of t be S. S. Hesperian, ~for Boston; Dr. Samuel M. Undaa~· a pwM!Slltt. ln mid-- Atlantic lh6 ablp" encountered the heaviest aeu that Dr. Lindsay bad ever ~ .i,ny of the 1¥!1tllgers doubted ~ '9Jip -now five days behind sch'4de -would eVer make tt. Some became hysterical, ye( the crew remained calm. One terrifying aftunoon wben the ship was rolling fearfully, Dr. l:JDdsay asked a deckltand, "Doesn't the storm worry yoti?" "NO.'' HE REPLIED. "'She's a Ught Mllp, and why should 1 worry when Captaln Barr is on the bridge?" The deckhand had faith in the ship, and faith in lhe captain at the helm. The little ship that each one or us sails at times is buffeted by heavy aeu. We bob like a cork on the tempest of easily rufned emotions. Different personalities assail us. \Ye feel like a sbuWecock on a hadminton cwrt! Back arxl forth in the air. hit by opposing forces! But only if we could stand as the Rock of Gibraltar! U only we had the faith of the deckhand who said, . .,, • ~f it-.: "''" ' .. ' < . ' ' I -"Why should'! worry when Captain Barr is on the bridge'!'' GOD IS OUR PILOT. Our faith is in him! God ha! his eye on .the sparrow ! Robert Frost has a few lines in his poem, "Chooslng Somethlng Like a Star'·. which seems so appropriate. Addressing the star he says: "Say ·something to us we <:an learn By heart and when alone repeat. Say something! And it says, 'l bum!'" Continuing .t.he conversation, Frost goes on to say: .. "It asks a little of us here. rt asb of us a certain height. So when at times the mob is swayed To carry praise or, blame too far , We ma}'·claoose S01Dething like a star II'o stay our ·m~d$ .on and be staid.·· MAY I SUGGEST that we choose something like a star -"to stay our minds · on and be staid"? What better star at Utis season of the year could we choose -than the star of BethJehem~ Facing the New Year. what better words could we choose than these! "Let courage rise with danger and strength to Strength oppose." "Courage Is the lovely virtue .•• it is the thing!" Abused Word: ·'Freedom' I think lhere ought ln be a moratorium on the use or the word "freedom" for a full year. No American would be allOW'ed 'to use the word, or any synonym such as "Ubefty" and ''rights." Instead, we would be compelled to state specifk:ally what ~·e want or do not want in any given situation. That abstraction known as "frttdom·· hu never been satisfactorily defined (much less agreed upon) by the greatest phUoeopben the world has ever toown. It means as many different thlnp ·to aJ many peopSe as "happiness" -and is just u subjective in most people's mind>. n'PICAL IS THE letter I received Crom a woman recently, saying, "I guess I'm just old·faahi.oned enough to believe in Law and Order and that the majority rule!." In the next sentence, she says. "I belona to that silent majority or citizeoJ who feel we should hold our Freedoms even more iealous.ly in these Mod Umea of 'give-aways' .. .'' Could aitythlng be more confu!ling or self<mtrldiciof)' than these statements placed 1.ogtlher? How are we holding our frfltldama by denying demonslrlton tbe ~ to P111test? Jf the majority rules, ~ about minortty right!? If La• .. Order <her capltall) come B11 Geerge Dw'O-..,.' What do )'OU think is causi ng tbe eem,muokatlont gap between )'(UlllifBOPle and U>tir elders' C. T. Dur j:, T., M •11 a1 I can dctcrmi~. ihe "'* trouble jl lbat old" P«> pie .,. eo ~ pbl>in& about the .......,icatlOnl pp tha t kid• can1 .. •w"9io•Wloe. • before Justice uny capitals ), then Hitler and Stalin ~hould have bten upheld. mE PLAIN FACT of lhe 1natter is that we are for "liberty" when it suits our purpo&es, and against it when it seems to thn!aten our self·interest. We are for upholding Jaw when the law favors us, Md ror subverting It when It seems lo handicap us. We are for order wben the order preserves what we have, and against order when it seems to perpetuate an unjust status quo. There is distressingly little lntellecfual clarity or emotional honesty in most polltt<:al <:atCh·phrases. whether o( left , righ?, or center. All such abstraction~ as 'freedom" are telf·servlng most of the time -like the palheUcally absurd pcop~e ho believe in the "freedom" lO s house lo anyone you like, but the "freedom'' of anyone to buy your hOt1le who ean afford It! WORDS, AS SOME Frenchmah has said, are uwa!ly used lo cell<Oll lhoughls and reenngs, rather than to exprns them. We n e e d a thorough semanUc cleans.lng of our verbal itables, for ~·e are waJkiq troc.rtd hip.deep In the ordurt of our !pedal "ocab11larlt$. And no one, of course, can dt':tect hill O\\'n ran.knWJ, for he is too close to it, as the drover cannot know he reeks of cattle. Confuctu.s said that the good slllte begins (not ends) wllh tht': rlghl use of ~·ords. and he was not far ort the mark. Untll we cnn agree on wh11I ••frffdain" abould mean, we merely "°1n" poUixl error by lllht& II. Christmas Theme." This was given on the balla of the 1Ptdacullr stained gws wtnd.W at the F..Uval ot Ar& grc)unds and on North and South Coast hljhways. A vl.tltot Can't get Into Laeuna without being treat.cl lo a stained glass window. City Hall took second again' In tbo best lighted pub- lic building category. ' Laguna took first for the best outdoor Christmas tree on the basis of. the majestic star ptne on Coast Highway between Chiquita and Cliff. Dr. Richard J. DuM9u~el, 3151High Drive, placed second in this category for"bJs a.rtlficially created tree. The community did itsell proud. Lagunans and neighbors who haven't yet Inspected Ille 1own at night olve themselves that tour. Equity for Both Parties With bargaining sessions for teacher ap.laries and benefits just around the comer, the Laguna school board would agree to pay for a hike in Blue Cross pay· ments only on a mooUHc>-month basis. Reading between the lines, the reason seemed to be · that trust.... want every chip they can throw Into the bargaining pile. The going may be rough. It has been predicted that teacher salary negoti- ations throughout Orange County will be a more mili· 1ant affair in the corning year. The days or hat-in·hant\. requests for sala.ry increases are over. By the same token, the days of automatic voter approval of increas- ed sC'hool financing also are over. The pressure will be bard. School boards and teach· ers will need tact and understanding to bring equity to both teacher and taxpayer without undue l>nti ses or disruption of the educational proces.s. (l) .. GESUNt>l-IEIT !' Sex Education ls Negwcted By Parents _ Nobody Has All the Answers Nmv To the Edilor: Sex F.ducation: Whose ResponsJbility~ . " As clinic director for the Planned Par- enthood Assn. of San Diego County I would like to share some of the facts which come across my desk : In U.S. alone, every hour, 'n out· of -wedlock babies are born. A quarter of a million American babies, one baby in 17, are born each year to unwed mothers. Forty percent of fuest': mothers are between 15 and 19 years of age, plus those with fa1sified birth certificates. plus the num· her o( criminal abortions. AN EDUCATED guess is that one in five pregnancies is terminated by abor-• . ' tion. Filly percent of high school girls are prlegnant before they get married. The U.S. Census Bureau indicates that divorce in teenage n1arriage is three times higher lhan for couples between ages Z1 and 25. In the age group 12 to 19 years of age, syphilis has increased ZOO perc~t in the last six years. Gonor- rhea reported. in Sa.n Diego County in 1967 an all time high , 1,382 cases. In l968, 1,896. For lhe month of October, 1968-248 reported cases. It is estimated that only one-fifth or the real number is reported. AS A PARENT I must ask myself are we accepting our responsibility to our children? Are we relating to our children in such a way that they have the values i:istilled 1D them whi ch will make for their happiness? Do we accept our own sexuallt)' and in turn do we educate our young people to accept the responsi· b.ility for their sexuality ? Are we educat- ing our young people as to how easily young girls become pregnant? Do we educate our young people to the fact that promiscuity and venereal disease go hand in hand? Do we educate our r oung people to the dangers and risk involved In having a criminal abortion~ As a clinic director I can aruiwer these questions: "No, \\'e are not fulf illing our responsibility as pare!1ts." And if we as parents 1\•ill not -or do not -who will~ DOLORES J_ REYBURN, R.N. He'll Boycott To the F.dilor : Re your article on ''meter.feeding" in the downtown area of Laguna Beach : As a professional man headquartered In this area it is necessary for me to ha\'e . quick access to my car. To 1\·11lk a half mile to accommodate local "merchants" is simply not feasible. As for the monolithic, monopallstic, 11on--competiUve "merchants," may they not ~·orry about 1vhere I park when shopping -it ""·ill not be in Laguna Beach. 'l'oo 1nany nearby shopping centers olfer free parking and fair prices lo be ignored. I shall boycott downtown l..aguna '1ores until reasonable parking arrangements can be made. HOWARD D. DAWSON L..,_ni fr-. ,..,.., --lal'M. ~ wrlMni .... -""'"" Mn-'" ---........ ,,,. ti.tit ,. ~ ittt.ni ,. "' INCi • .i ... ntl~ llbM 11 ~ All ........ ..._. "'-"'* 119..arurt w ""61n.,. Mt.1~1. "' -.....,. ii. w!lfll'ltlf Of\ ,_ u wffl<:W ,..... .. ....,..,.,., Quotes Vlrsinla f\farie Rodandl, So. S.F. - "lovt': i~ the goal v.1hk:h 1ives men mcanin11 to their lives.'' Assemblyman R4bert !'If on a g an • Stockton -"I agree with whoever it was salt that 'Anyone'• rf&ht ·'° awing bi1 fiat coda wbert rD:/ DOK ~ • " Stopping the Drug Flood On.e simple fact emerges from all the discussion about the drug merulce amon& young ... people: Nobody tt31ty koow~ what to do abput it. So the heartaches continue. Youilg, peo-- plc, unaware of the dangers or perhaps aware bu,t uncaring, go on experimenting wlth the stuff. They get picked up by the poHce, thrown out of school and are cast adrift at a formati..:e time in their lives. A few die if they get bold of the lethal . type of drugs. or take lo sniffing inhalants. Others came close to· death, saved perhaps by quicl medicar treat· mcnt or their own wits. ·• ~fOST KNOW e~b to avoid -the well-publicized addiclve drugs. But•they IXlP pllla or smoke marijuana, 1Wh.ich is illega1. They get arrested anq. at an early age have a police record which probably will make things miserable for them the rest of their. :uves. • What can be said to a mother whose son nearly dies after taking drugs offered by a ,''friend "? Or to:"the mother, whose son suffered p,erma~nt brain damage by tnhaling toxic fumes? Last month there M'ere 30 students expelled from Grossmont Uniori High School Dist.Tiet schools for variotis drug offenses. This month there were 19. Last year there were 70. Where does it stop? TllE TRUSTEES sincerely believe their unequivocal policy of mandatory expulsion for drug users acts as a.deter· rent. They think the situation would be much worse if the policy ,we~ relaxed. Who knows if they are right or wrong? Nobody. Some parents whose children have been ..expelled disagree with the policy. They don 't lii.e the idea of having their , son or daqghter miss school. They think the temptations to further troub~e are too great if a student is kicked out of school. They argue that exj>ulsion is not an effective deterrent, citing the fact that more kids are involved tio\v than ever before. OTHER· PARENTS whose children haven't been involved-in drug offenses, at lea&t not .yet, defend the policy. They view it as protection. They don't want their children associaUng with. the drug users. They regard exp lusion as a jwit penalty for activity that is both illegal and physlOioilcally or peychologically harmful ' there is at least one ol;vious point : The drug menace is never going to be substant..ially reduced until more ef· fectlve action is taken to stop the flood of illegal and dangerous drugs coming across thf' border. TOO MUCH OF the stuff is getting across. And the more that gets in , the greater lhe number of young people like ly to be exposed to drugs. Ao education program probably helps, but it doesn't help enough. There are studeots who don 't learn to write or spell, even th.ougb they are in class every day of the year, and there are students who would ignore the best in· struction on drugs. 1'he penalties probably deter many s\udents, bUt obviously they do not deter all So a merely punitive policy has its limitations. ·AT LEAST ONE parent is so concerned about the drug problem that she is thinking seriously of waging a campaigri to close the border. others are suggesting that tbe age limit for crossing be UJ'Pfd from 18 to 11. Ml. Miguel High School is forming a spec ial committee of doc:· tors, psychologisls, e d u c a to r s 1 phannacists and parents to get some answers. It is encouraging that action has begun. An aroused community can d<> a lot if its citizens work together toward a commoo objective. And stopping the flow of dangerous drugs to our young people js certainly a cause worth a fighl THE SUGGESTION that the border be closed might seem like an extreme remedy. But it is also true that drug abuse is an extremely serioU.s problem. Any ideas that might contribu(e to a solution ought ti> be fully explored because it's obvious nobody has all the answers OO\\'. The Dally Californian El Cajon 'Objectivity' • ID Reporting Opinl ons offered in a talk to journalism studenls: One of the n1ore damaging of the ice-age newspaper axioms (anything pre. about-1940) was one . greatly revered in Its time. City editors glibly offered il lo cubs: "Write as if you are writing for the Kamas City milkman." (It was, of course, possible .to substitute the milkman of any town. Somehow, though, the Kansas City ver:s.lon was the one most frequently beard. Ne ver having done research on the miltmen of Kansas City, I do not know whether they were in any sense special.) ' THIS ASININE advice and olher pearls like it were responsible for some very dull journalism. If the Kansas City milkman read it he must have fowld It dull going. "Objectivity" was an idol before which young journalists were re- quired to bow , Much incense in the form of sanctimonious speeches was of- fered heatedly by speakers. Net effect ol Utis was to make newspapers and newspaper men and won1en conformists. Dear Gloomy Gm: ' A rotten banana to the gorilla at MacArthur and Pacific Coast Hlgh- way because I IPWed a sign.al walcbln.g him. T. R. rll!• tu,_ ttflMft, ,._...,., VI.wt _, ~""" " ... -·-· s.w. ,.... Mt ...... ft 0'-' 0 .... 0.h Ll'!i.t. ' Objectivity, per se, is, of course, a necessary ingredient of SCK:alled hard or straight news, although those who use the words are never able to define exactly what they mean, except lo u.y defensively, "You know -hard news -that's what." FOR DECADES, city editors, manag- ing editors and schools of journalism Laught their own pe.rsonal versions of objecttvtty. 'lbe history of journalism, especially that of the yellow journalism years when the alleged titans were foun- ding dynutieJ, empires and legends, includes very little objectivity as the dictionary defines it. But newspapers were exclUng aod they wett read. Too ma ny school I" of journalism, and maybe too many city room titans have, I think, focused on, imparting a set of skills rather than on creating a human being full of curlQSlty about people and lite and an Itch lo know the "why" of things and not merely whit. whttt and when . WE SEE AT LEAST some <if tbe newsp,apers today waking to the fact that much of the writing ln their papers must have a point of view. ThiJ is especially true in the so-called "in depth'' or "Interpretive" or "analyila" articles that 11re such DecUsary elements of today's newspaper. Writers who can do superb Jobs on such artlcle11 in politics, reli gion. education, poverty. the 1enera· lion gap. and so on, can't be "edu-- cated" to do to. Nor <:an the mere 11cquirement ol skills make it possible. The human being mu!t somehow be a prtlduct of the processes of learning. A RECENT ARTICLE in the Author"s Guild Bulletin commented oo the fact Uuit many of the major Amerlttn wrhttt ol tlJlJ _,., "'-•rl~ ... """ used extensively in secondary schools and colleges, never completed a college education. Some never made any attempt to attend college. Hemingway and Sherwood Anderson belong in the latter category. Eug~ne O'Neill and Fitzgerald \\'ere dismissed from Princeton. Dreiser was a dropout from Indiana University. Robert Frost left Dartmouth and Harvard and took up fanning. Faulkner had little education past high school. Steinbeck dropped out at Stanford in his freshman year. Jack London, Mark Twain, Joseph Conrad, Herman itelville, William Dean •towells and Stephen Crane from an earlier era had no college training. LATER CAME the now literary heroes -most of them coUege educated. Norman Mailer, for example, has a Harvard degree. But, again, the pen- dulum begins to swing. Unless an education provided much more than vocat1onal skills, it will be of little htlp of becoming a newspaper man ot woman' - or a writer or poems or "boob." -----Friday, Dec. 27, 1968 The edttorlal page of the Dafl11 Pilot siekl to inform and 1tim. Ml.ate rtadtrt bJ prescnling thf.i newspapn's optni07l$ ond ('<»tl- mtnfm}t cm topict of interest end lfgni/iccmct, bu providing o fonnn for th< •"l>l'"rion of our rtadtn" opfnlon!I, and bt1 pre1entb1g Ure dtvei .~r vlt1~ poi.mt of informtd observtrs and rpoktnntn on fopicJ of the d-0~. Robert N. Weed, Publlaher ----• ' , • ,, '· . ·Fighting th_e Syndrqme • Ebell ·club -· 'Lets Down' The holiday seuon Is area~ until its over. Then the remnants of tinsel must be peeled painfully off the car· pet and the grim reailties of llfe faced. There are taxes, bills to be paid, weight to be lost and all the tasks which have bet!n put off for a month to be completed. Facing the post Christmas syndrome with bravado, Laguna Beach Ebell Club members will congregate in the Emerald Bay home of Mrs. Ho.ward Hinrich! Mon- , day, Jan, 6, at 7:30 p.m. for theli: annual I.et Down Partr. The object is relaxation, and ~embers, dressed m their most comfort.able attire, will siP' punch and ex· change gills. In addition they will make plans for a future rum· mage oale, s~heduled for Jan. 31 to Feb. I in the Laguna Beech Women's Club., , . , , . . Mrs. Edward Nell and Mrs·. "Stanley E1chstaedl are in charge of the sale and rummage coDection already is underway. ~ ' ,\_. ·~ "" . ' . Mrs. Howard Hinrichs. All members~ lriJl<"get a -chance to revile from the season at a I.et Down Party to .iate place Monday, Jan. 6, · · ·ifoney from the sale and other _proj~ts enable ~e club'to carry on ils philanthropie Jir~Jects which include the granting of six $500 scbolanhi~ to Laguna.Beach High SChnol students and a otu4e~t;loan fund. Plans fo r the party are being Q!lidl!' by Mrs.' ijoward Hlnricbs with the aid of the Mmes,'.l!oy ·Marcom, Lloyd Seilset and Earl Steer. in the Emerald Bay home of Mrs. Hinricb'.s. ; ' . ' . -~·l""·· .. .. • ..:··.,:.:~;: 4 • ,_. .., ...... 1 .. ,., -:? The Laguna Line .. 1 .. : 41. _, ._ , , · tt·"' ; ~:r' •¢. ., .. •• ' Nary a 'Bah Humbug' Voiced 'i By J EAN COX • 1 Of the Dl lt' Piiot Sl11f Tis the season to be jolly, and party-loving Lagunans cwtaillly are-taking full advantage of the situation. THE CHRISTMAS spirit was in full bloom wh~n Sam and Leota Garst hosted about 35 friends in theii Irvine Cove home last weekend for a cqcktail buf- fet party. , .. , .. '. " Guests included the Garsts'. new rteJ\.!.:door neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Qufun. 'The .cOt.iple, form erly of Corona del fvlar, just completed build- ing their new Irvine Cove residence. · • Newport Beach residents attending. included Mri. George Thomas, Mr. ·and Mrs. _George ·s.ott. Mrs. Audrey Schaeffer and Mr. and Mrs.· George Brown. - Otllers attending were Mr. and Mrs. H. '.)'. Mc- Lean from Lake Arrowhead, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Morgan and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Calvin of Leisure World, Col. and 1itrs. William H. Bruggere from ~fonarch Bay and Mr. and Ms. Robert Dependah l, the Garsts' daughter and son-in-Jaw. from Riverside. ~ Lagunans joining the party included the Messrs. and Mmes. Leo Gassman, A. K. Kroch . Page Got- san, Don Houseman, Robert Linderman, Donald Vanderbilt, William Imhoff, Eugene James, Gerald Farmer, Leslie Weldon and sisters Miss Ann Meiz- leur and Mrs. Eleanor Christensen. Also-present were Dr. and Mrs. Norman Nixon and Miss Fem Radolph of Laguna Beach and Mr. and Mrs. John Foster and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Northcott of Irvine Cove. MISS METZL EUR and Mrs. Christensen recsit- Jy hosted a small dinner party which featured . orange glazed cornish hen as the main course, Guests included George \Yettsein ·of San Fran- cisco, Mrs. Loyette Martin of Laguna Beach, Mr. and Mr.s. Hans Banneis of Laguna Beach and Mr. and Mrs. B. Franklin Metzleur, ~e sisters' brother and his wife from Capistrano :Be~ch_.-·. PARTY-GOER S ATTENDINt the recent bash hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Charles McCall of Blue- bird canyon last weekend sure1y must have broken a record for endurance. Festivities at the cocktail buffet began at 12 : 30 in the afternoon, and the last guest left at about 1:45 a.m. ~ . . Among the 150 people present were Lagunillts the Ors. and Mmes. Robert Ralston, Edward Nell and Robert Roper. ·· {)!hers· included.Mayor Glenn Vedder and·-U>e . . . Messrs. and Mmes. Jpe Sweeney, Frank eorren, Larry Hun4 Jack Penney and Ed.'!'atum. AmCJlll! ·out-of-town guests were '.Mr. and' Mrs. James l\{c· Calla, the hosts• mother and father froJll Tustin I". The party'also was enjoyed by many of the"couple'S fo nner classmates from Tustin High School. THE DON MUL LERS of Three Arch Bay invited about 60 o! their fonner and present neighbors fo r an open house Christmas Day. THE KROCH S are having a quiet but enjoyable Christmas season with the help of their son and daughter-in-law from Chicago, Carl and Jeanette Kroch. The couple arrived last Sunday and plan to stay with their parents until Jan. 7. THE AMIGOS CLUB a 5"!1ior service group at Mis- sion Viejo High School last week brought Christ. mas cheer to chil<lren who had to spend their holi- days in Children's Hospital.of Orange Coonty. In addition to providin~ refreshments and party favors, the seniors presen"Jed a play, '4'Rudolph' the Red>hosed Reindeer'' which starred Bill· Gross as Santa Claus. . - TIS THE SEASON -Thanks to many partie .. and a Sw..,pstakes Award in the Forty Miles o/ Christmas Smiles, almost everyone is smiling in !.aguna. Among the many Christmas parties being talked about wos the one given by Mr. and Mrs. Sam Garst of Irrine Cove laot weekend. Mrs. Garst serves her husband and one of her guests, Mn. Page Golsan, during the cocktail buffet affair. Bloodhound Tactics Give Divorcee New 'Leash' on Life DE:AR ANN LANDERS: I C<lllld kiss you for printing the letter from "Smartened Up Ex-wife." She urged every divorced w.oman to keep houoding tile rat until she geta lhe support money ordered by the court. I'm a divorcee who raised four children. I've bttn in court so many limes I CQuld conduct lhe hearings my~lr. Some women who can't arford to hire a laW)i!r give up because they don 't know their righLs. Tell them again, Ann -they can get help from the district attorney. Every county has one. If the bum is .in the military, she: can 10 to the chaplair, and find out what hor legal rights are. ' ANN LANDERS Major Ups : Make sure the ori.J:inal divorce papen: elate the eract amount of payment, plus changes -such as an lncreast when the chlldren reach high 1ehool ag~. or an increase if the bum should get a pay raise or strikea oil in hls backyard. And don't think it can't happen, It happened to me. -LUCKY LEE DEAR WCKY: CollplalaUoas-nol Oii tbe dJVCll'Ct, .. Ute •ll, bonty. Jf1 alee to hive 10methlng &o poar oe tlttM troubkid nten. TbanU for writing. DEAR ANN LANDERS : My 1$-year-old granddaugbter ia unhappy at home. June must share a room wlth her 13-ye~ siste r. The poor child mUst Help vllt'b the younger cffildren, doe• part of the ironing, cooking and cleaning. 1 know she'd be happier here and 11d be dellghted to have her. Her fllrents refuse to let her come. I have a lovely home, two servant&, and June could spend her time studying or doing whltever she withed. I could give her an easier life a:nd introdoce her to • better class or people. It would be wonderful for me, too, because I am looely. Will you speak for her -and for me? -J .L. DEAR J .L.: No. Your grudclaugbter belonp la Mr p1renta' llome. Of coune 1b6 wantl .. come! Aay 15-year-eld gtr1 woahf r•lhtr loaf al • er grandm0Uter11 thin tcntb, ekt.1 and lroa and 1lllre a roem whJI 1 yoanier lfller. Your 111eneroa111 offer aoand• llk• _.,dll ......... ~. La7 olf. DEAR ,ANN: I am a maid In a very well-tnown motel A party of roor peoplo just lelt Ibis ,_ _ wblch looU like a cyclone bit IL 'l'lleJ loft .-pmnles oothedrwer. Why Is It tllat the bartender UtJ a lip for mixing ~ drink, the waUrtaS geta a Up ror brlnalnl food, U the engineei: cornea in Wtt.6 a new llght bulb, be usually aell a quarter or 50 cenll. ~ maid get& nolhiz>c. Yet she Is the one who rully doa the dirty work. 11 this falr? You are a friend to the worklna people. WW you 117 a word for us! -PASSED UP DEAR PASSED UP: U.ppy lo. A peal -people lrtvel laday, ... ...... of ,..._, ...... bow tlliey ...... lelv.e, m-., for tM makL St -1'111 lelboc llNim -.... ud -· "'1 euts • mfaM fer o.e penoa II .._. rlgllt. Ooe dtllar H !Mft an !wt .. more ti th room. An,..e "'° cu"t allord tMt ·-Up -llay -- Ann Landen' new book, "Truth It Stranger. • ., " lhartl secrets of her practical phllooopby. Priced fl.Iii at boola\oru. Ann Landen will be aJad to http ,.. with your problmio.' Send thenl to her In can of the DA!L Y PILOlf encloolng a atamped, ..U-addr- enffiope. I r I I I .· ' ·.':.! Je DAJlV PIL.OT Frld<y, -27, 1968 C~rls Grow Into Big Gir·ls' Waves ... - • . I ~ .... •·" • cuila grow up Into lq lit! llyle lnlo the Qiryy .Look· w a v e 1 tor the w r n t e r a.,. •PP.Ut fq 1DIQ1 ol .....,. ehead. And, just u the -11;1"', but --lo with bif lkla. the empbull be moot ~ty lllOd for wtD be cio curvee, lll1l10UnCOll day. I'll< eftl>lni<, 1111111 o1 the OUiclal Hair FMbion the wa'1eCl llldl w.:n combed ' c..nmJltee ol the Natlooal ·up and.,olf die f-lo ~-gt~ tho.,.. od a.....,,.. This balr ~ authority. broW full ""•Y over the ol the l>eauty • proleaallia hU fealum. termed 'the new look In hair How.ever, wbeR balrU.. r .. styles, the Curvy Look. , · q-la dlclale the need • II la iPPIJO(ll that we -l~r ~ •. or whtte facial all aoinf on • faah.lon spree ' 1 • 1 l u r e 1 suq,et the of waves. A qt1ick alance.. at ilf.airabillty of their use, bangs the audience allowed tbal the C"'1Unue lo be a 1>'rl ol the playful, and ~ ..,.. picture. ii'!~ ..... they .... bunctlous curll th.It were to • wawct ban&a1 soft undulations popular during !ala summer that Dow ..,.., the t..w with and fall, have been genlled an Invariable lliJ>llP cf the down lot winter into a tOtt hair ends. sweep of. waves that give the'" Hair lengtN continue lo be head a Ctll'V)' •llbooette. 11 relatively short, &nee tW wet u a flowing eue ln the Curvy Look is a gracefully movemen.t W,wave pattema. molded small head lool. The word. "aoft" was one Neverthelesa, hair at the of the most ~uently used k>wer crown aru is a litU111 tenru descrfbing the general !ulJer, although' it curves in appearanefi! of the new st:·Jes. to hug the head at the nape. To come on in fashion this The crown Itself bu finally winter, ~your hair stylfll will settled home -on the bead. just have to convey a feeling Where an increased volume of soltnes3 to the eye of tbe Is de1irecl, such as for an beholder, as well as to the opulent look for P.vening, hair hand. pieces are used with grvt ~ partings art definitely dramaUe effectiv~ess. ~se . ~ ~· :stablished aS a part of the are uaually fa.Woned mto * ·· ··· 1ashion picture. They actually compositions of curls 0 r w?i-,· ' play a highly important role eadogans, suclJ as George ~s·· •n,:1· iI. that they allow a complete Waahington once wore. On ·.• ' ~~ change in direcUon of the most JD.odels, thue were,plac-l' ~ ~~, *. • .. ~. --' . .. I ·-~ ,. .; . .• ·-· '-'1 ..•. ~ ' • ,1. ge ntly defined wave ed .~ below the crown i 1_ •• ~.1r movements._ This gives the at tbe1 back of the head, but . . textural patterns of your hair when they were worn lower EVENING LOOK -The versatile beauty of the new Curv~y Look lll h~r .• ·. ' . . t , • ~le a vitality that still re-at the nape. the look was fashions is apparent in this alert and vitally spirited evemng style which tatns an understated ele:,ance. newer. casts a romantic look. Featured for the new year are soft curves and a na-_, DAY WEAR -Soft waves which flow genUy above a serene brow are dis- .. :l tJ.nctive features of this Curvy Look hair style~ The easy flow of wave patterns and the curvy silhouette of the bead give this style a classic appearance and understated· elegance. EsSentia.llr, the new hair Hair coloring for the winter tural height at the crown. styles continue the look of sea 1 on has been &Often-____ ::.__ ____ ~-------------------- the small, neaUy poised bead, ed into a a: en t I e spec- though .the hair in the lower trum of tones that harmonize crown --. hU a fuller look. with the general feeling of To establish the e I a 1 1 i c feminine graoefulness in the balance of.this look, yoar balr ,.....,, laabloos. lnt.osilJ in Horoscope .... .. Top Interest South Probe Coast Yule Juniors Activities must be shaped for your all hues has " heen subdned, particular requirements. In bill the underlying richness this r e g a r d , r.oMideraUon ii retained to 1lilmmer in the must be given in the shape IOft and sllkY sheen tha1 all ct yo0r bead and faclal struc-hair must have thla winlar . ture, ln addiUon tea the texture, · In make-up, skin tones will volume and quality of your have a fresh qwlllty, refl.ecilng hair. , soft pinks and rose, sometimes Gemini: Analyze Fear -. '· -.>. t .. . • • ; . ~( ·~ . ·"' -..... ... -~ • c. - , .... __ ..... I I . :'!• 9484 . . :'' --SIZES 10\S-201> ~: ,,., 11r ..... i ... 11TA.\T" ... ;. -.. Architectural Interest builds "· ... up at the top 01. a sleek skim- mer destined for big doings thla spring. Sew It In breezy fl knl4 liD••i. • Printed Pattern MM: New HaU Sim 1011, 1211, 1411. 1111, 1111, 2011. Sire ltll (buat 37) !aka 2% ydl. 35-ln. SIXTY·FIVE CENTS in ooinl for each pattern -add 15 c<nta for eldl pallanl !or flnklul ma1llng and speelal bandliq; otberw1se third-class delivery wDI take three weeks Jiil or more. Send to Marian • '•~Martin, the DAILY PILOT, ·: ··"';:" tc, Pat1m1 0ep1., m w .. t 18\b SL, New York; N. Y. • 100U. Print NAME, AD· Dltm with ZIP, BlZB ant: llTYUl: NIJHllER. Wllal~ new for -1 107 .,,.,.... In oar FalHllnte Pa1leru cataJoc. "'-podern c:oupon In Cotalog. Send 50 Membera ol the South Qiasl Junior Woman'• Club have been busy with myriad ac· tlvities during the holiday season. Several women participated in a group carol sing for gerialrlcs patients al Loog Beach General Hospital. Members of Gtrl Scout Troop 868 of Huntington Beach joine4 the Juniors for the eveat· which entr:talned more lhaD SO petienfl. The ICOUl.I made <lnistmu cards to distribute lo approilmalely 160 patienls In the wards en.r . the caroling. Cognlzanl ol another aspect of the holiday oUIOn, a lesa cheerful one, bas been Mra. Robert Morten, a South Coul junior and Los Cerritos Dlstrld Safety chalnnan. Mn. Marten atlonded the Instructor development course SATURDAY DECEMBER 28 By SYDNEY OMARR The new ltyleA also ~ nearly peach.~ Eyes have a in de(ensive driving, hosted a soft and gentle permanent bright-eyed, lovely open look, by the Greater Los Angeles wave, one that is particu.Jarly but this, too, Is 8 soft look. "The wise man controls his chapter of the National Safety prescribed for your hair. This lJrw have equal importl!nce destiny ... Astrology points Council in the California ,... the way." will not only help enhance with the eyes, aided by the Highway Patrol Zone 5 Head-the quality, te:1ture and ricliJJeM of the bright n.ew ARIES (March 21-April 19): quarters in Los Angeles. The substance of your hair. but transparent colors, ranging Be receptive to money sug-8-hour course on defensive .......i ... lru gestion , Listen to f a c t s ; driving included additional also will give it an ease of from light • cvs to ~.ue e discard ri.pnors. Welcome aid care, as well all an ease to reds. hours of pracUce teching. Mrs. of ooe with experience. You 1'.1arten will be able to teach can have fun tonight. But the course or fully explain """"'~~_. ...... milL::..·~.o;'41'A":::W.-•~ -.:.~· · avoid extravagance. You need it to clubs in her di.trict. a ' some rest. Tbe club is workmg to in-, TAURUS (April 26-May 20): creue home aaf'7, ¥ we¥-New contact is made at social In March. poison ...... ti/Jo Debut' ante Feted galllering. Pro•es beneficial. cbartl wW be avatlable. Cycle high. You can suc- Four member1 of t be cessfully propose or I g in a I Jun.Ion attended the ideas. Take initiative. Christmas party for board 1 Personality sparkles. Give at· membera of Lps Cerritos Af p b II Party . tention to appearance. Dl!lrict In Ille borne of Mr1. re Q GEMINI (May 21.June 20), Tbol'D41 Chrinlan90D. Present Analyze doubt, fear. You may were the Mmes. Marten; Bond find that only a minor detail Thompson, president; Dick Mr. and Mrs. Ira Warren Smith, parents holds you back. Be thorough. Trodlck, di!trlct Pub 11cIt1 of Miss Georgene Smith, are among the Break though to progress. Ex- cbainnan, and wuuam Hayes, many who will anticipate their daughter's cellent for attending theater, distrtct president. presentation with a preball party before the dining out. Children's Home Society Debutante Ball to-CANCER (June 2I~uly 22): Relax -get together with morrow evening. G!<:MINI individual. Develop Those attending the party in the Balboa contacts, friendships. OuUine New Year's Eve Dance Single Adults Invited All •inll• adulla In the area ere invited lo join the big New Ye.ar's Eve Dance belna: slaged hy Orange Co aa 1 chapter, Perenta \\I 11 h o u I Partners. Tbe dance, lo lalli place in the Sheraton Beach IM, lllmliD81oo Beach, w 111 celohrate one of the lllOll suc- cessful yeara In the fl!Wp'• hi>lory, sald Jim Ward, presi· dent. FestiViUes will begin at t p.m. and contJnue into the new year. Special Jrlhute to I h • cllapter". will he paid by mem1>en of other P"'°ta Wltbqul'Parlnerl fllWJlS from t b e MeJican border &o S a n Luis Olllspo. parents who are divorced, widowed or unmarried. Further infonnatlon may be oblalned by calling Mn. Grace Brenner, $f8.4'105 or Barney IDllman after 5 p.m. at 17U'IM. OC Single Bees Tbe second and fourth Fri- day of the mcmth Orange C-OunlJ Single Bees galhor in Doig School, Garden Grove. ActMUes begin at I p.m. CM Auxiliary Tbe lint Thunday of the month members of th e American Logion Auxiliary, Costa Mesa Unll 456, gathlO' In the American Legion HID , Bay Club Include tile debutante's godparents hopes, wishes. If analytical, d Rob rt B f p d you could come up , with Mr. an Mrs. e arry 0 asa ena. valuable answers. Welcome The Smiths also will welcome Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harold of Pasadena and Mr. and Mrs. Alex MacGlllivray of Laguna Niguel. Harbor Area guests indude Councilman and Mrs. Edgar Hirth and the Messrs. and Mmes. Robert McFarren, Charles Peyton, George Wiseman, Charles Sutherland and Chester Pureell. Also attending will be Mr. and Mrs. George Yule, parents of Miss Smith's escort, John Treadwell Yule. Other guests will be Mrs. William Adams, pre<ident of the Newport Harbor Auxiliary of CHS, a:id her husband ; Mrs. George Gurr, ball president, and her husband, and Mr. and Mrs. Merton Cameron. GOURMET SPECIALTIES change, varlety. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' Protect prestige. S o m e o n e may try to trap you with nattery. Be reali s tic . Strengthen family ties. Don't risk something ot value for nothing. Check values. Live up to potenllal. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Future plana can be profitably discussed. Applies especially to travel, advertising, publishing. C o m b i n e prac- ticality w I t h imagination. Avoid tendency toward self· decepUon. LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 22), S t re ngthen communication lines wHh one who handles finances . Express affection. Give of yoorself. No day to at 8 p.m. Parenla .Wlthoul Partoen ls an lntemaUonal n o n p r o f I t organization and its mein- bersbip, ls open lo all single : .• ;..C . Cl!llll. ·;in======~nnn"Ni\Mir.:====:i1 :;~~;: GOOD NEWS---/ FOR YOUR HOLIDAY ENlIRTAINING ,. ..... • Opening Monday, January 27th , Shoe Service New Location CIUT VllW CINTll ·~ 17th & IRYINE ,.,. CHOOSE Nat Kentucky Fried Chicken FROM ALL THE LA TEST STYLES hold back. Build on solld base. Examine fiscal status. Assets could provide surprise. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)' You may be reminded of pro- mises, obligations. Stick with what you know. Some may · encoorage you to skip essen· tials. Best to adhere to legal regulations. Spotlight on mate, partner. SAGmARJUS . (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ); Avoi d excess. Start lining up sensible resolutions . Remember promises to yourself concerning health. Get together with one who shares your interests. Fine for being with ce>-worker. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. Fashion Freedom 'Fl i rtE;?d' The "freedom first" fashion trend that made mini skirts de rlguer from Omaha to Oahu soon will have average women wearing 011e1>iece, neck-to.toe garments a n d even flirting with the nude look, says Hen- ry V. Kobin, head of U. S. ln'dustries Apparel and Acces- sory Group. "Of course, it is going to be awhile yet before you'll see housewives walking down the streets of Ke<>kuk, Iowa, in body~tockings or see-through blouses. But the demand for greater convenience and comfort in women's wear is finnly estab- lished now, and we expect it will have a long run." 'The head of one of the na- tion's largest apparel produc· crs also sees I.he following em- erging trend.9 taking hold : bra-dresses eJiminating need for foundations ; he-she coor- dinates, and greater empha- sis on pants for women. HAVE A LOVELY TIME 19): Good lunar aapect today coincides with news con· ceming opposite sex. Children may demand attention. Conflict of interest could arist. Fulfill prior obligations. Then you relall.. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-feb. 18): llemember fa mi I y member \\'ho may be observ. ing anniversary. Review basic values, relationships. Pleasure indicated through social ac· livily. Forces tend to be scat· tered. Take one thing at a time. PISC~ (Feb. 19-March 20) Many plans discussed; involve party, holiday celebration. supersensitive. Don't com· pound error. Obtain hint fron1 AQUARIUS message. Display sense of humor. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you possess original ideas -you are a natural pioneer. Your feelings are often locked within. felf persons know the real you. Recent en terprise c 1> u l d blossom. GENERAL TENDENCIES' Cycle high for TAURUS , GEMINI. Special word to PISCES: avoid unnecessary lra\',,1 . To order S\dMV Orn.lrr's ~pl" booO;,ltt, Tiit 1'11111 Aboul A'trokl&Y. ~•llCI SO tent! lo Omtrr &ooO;lt!i Tl>t DAILY PLOT. 8oJC 12<1'.111 GrtOG Centr1I 5!9Jlon, NIW Va~ N.Y. 10011. Here'• It's Where At! SALE WHtdifl P!~" ··=·14 .. ALL WORK DONE PERSONNALL Y R•ttyl• yGur old Corono def Mar • SEAFOOD Deviled Crab, Scalloponc, Curri· cd Shrimp CutU?t.s, Scampi, Quenetles St. Jae· qt~l, Stuffed Sole, Boned Trout with Crab Meat. Cre~s Cro5 Meat Alaska, Abalone • POULTRY I A La K~v. Cordon Bl.e¥, Wild Rice, Lucullw, B11rgu.nd11, Wlnol.t:ts, Cre~s, Liver Pate • BAKERY I Patty Shells, all lizes; C~e1e Stieb, All Hot Hors d'Oeum"es, Bi.!et1it Tortoni, Cf'q)el S¥ietu, Frangfpmce . and ma"V other cwtom made itcml Flair has 1 flair for making beautiful clocks. An feature 71ewel movement with alarm. Round with large numerals, $17.95. The column, $22.95. ( ... 3 CONVENIENT SHOPS e 3401 E. COAST HWY. Co.one de! Mu ... 67!·4640 .. e .JOJ VIA LIDO N.wpo.t IH<h .•. 67l-t620 e 74 FASHION ISLAND N°%rt IHch ... 644. 7551 t11i1 & I -Hftf fO fl;tntvclry ''*' CMcl'MI 1ho•1 tG the new round look. Brin9 us your problem tnd we 'I ~ give your tho•s • n•w le>ok. Langlois Fancy Fro1en Foods, Inc. 211'4 lagun1 Canyon Road Laguna Beach 494-2020 The medallion w;ih wreath, S 19.50 SLAVICK'S Jewe..,Sira 1917 18 Fashion Island Nawport B•ach -644· I )80 :- 1y ·- 1· ,, '· ··. • '· . '" ' " ·' ·-a. y ,. ,. .;.- IC . r ., ·1 " (. l a )) . , 1. :~ l· u •Y :: R } s a :s w J. ~ d .i· i: :t r ;, .1 ~ ·y .. .. . ~ '· ~ - COSMETICS SAYE ON DANA SPRAY COLOGNES 1.75 -Onw Ta.bu, rich and ulrra-liogcring; flowery, Light and lilting Ambwb or de-pot 20.C:U..u. Eadl in d.IKioctiu spray bottles, all at ooe low prier. SAYE ONE-HALF ON MAX FACTOI SKIN.CARE AIDS Ac tive fi.{oUruriu:r, 6-oz.. reg. 5.00 ............. 2.50 Asuingen.c. 12-oz.. n:g. 3.50 ..............•... 1.75 Moisru.rizing Oeansiag Oum. 9 oz.. reg. ~.50 ..•. 1.75 Moism.re .f.s5enc.t Night (.mm. 3.7 oz., reg. 4.00 .. 2.00 SPRAYGRANCE COLOGNE DE COIDAY 2.25 I. 4-o>. Toujours Moi. Fame. Poaes.s.ion ••. trio ol most beloml fragrana:s in an 'tnmnciQ8 spray dispmxr. STAnONERY Ouistnu.s auds, reg. 2.00 bm ............. , ......... 75 Christma.s cards from famow bOOJeS in ,...Mic a.mrtment. reg. 1.00-10.00 box ..............................• 50.5.00 OiriMW gift wraps in flat 1httts, roll\ reg .. 2~-3.00 .... , . 2/.25 .. 1.50 aose-ouc boxed gift snriooay, rtg .. 59 to 5.00 .....• 3faJ,4t Boscd su.riooery and notcs .in regular or lighnvcight. Good selection of colon and pt.ttcrn1 ... , . , .. 2/1.5t cad 2/2.00 =1~';r~cs~~'.~~~~ ~-~ ~.1'.1~~ -~~~M Eaton's Crysal Shett in opea stock with matching en•dopu Whitt:, laveod&r, pink. green, yellow or bliw. Oub si.Jr shem. reg. 1.00, .ff; EnTclopcs, reg. .,9 ...................... 4S Crystal Sheer double bot: cootl.im 96 single ahcets, 48 whitt· lined en'ftlopes, reg. 2.19 ......................... 1.79 Mm.I picrutc frames in 1ilvcr or pd finish. !Lil<nd, filigret and .bad.ow box styles in ...:in:ed sizu frcm 2~x3 .. ro t l .. :11-4·, reg. 2.00.10.00 ............................ 1.49 to 7.49 Wedding inviwion ttar of pofubcd gold oc rbociium finUh. 3*'"x'!4 .. opmin& with Tclvttttti pad bade for ut u my . With ring and h2ndles, rq. S.,o .................... 1.lt Groovies -decorative colored wall mun.ls in ptymcdelic moods. Stick-on t.k.. Cut·ap or we as spcctaatlat splash ol color oo walls, can, UlSh blllrels. reg. 4.00 ............ 1." Litter bl.gs keep a.rs and higb"fl tidy. Ideal in-or organiJer f0t maps, appoiotm:ot boob. IJUO gJ.wes. M&tCh ar inm-iors with this weighted plastic buket. reg. 2.00 ............ 1.49 INFANTS' SHOP 1969 COLOR.COORDINATED ENSEMILE IS IY PETERSON IN CATALINA ILUE AUTOMATIC FOLD PLAY YARD bu no buttons ro pu.!h. DO brackcu ro tdeue, oo DCql to remove pad. yn sides cannot accidentally drop while bahf ii inside. Htal'J'·duty coostruction, 6-Jcg lllpport.. reg. 29.00 22.99 SlFST A STROLLER features CXllllfy be.dttst, mark.rt bl.sket. adjunble foom:sr 111d canopy, tray &nd beads. A stroller, sleeper, walker, all-in-<nt, ttg. 2,.<n-... 19.tt POLDA-TR.I-Oi.AIR folds flu with the u" of ODI!: lw>d. FOIUD podd<d '"" and bock, ...whl< upboOOry, rowel and bib rack. safety belt. Made with DO aumb- ati:hing coroctS. Connrts to yooth, then to atility chair, «&-1s.oo ............................... 14.n W ALICER-JUMPER with spring arm adjUJt1 tension f0t a he&viet b.br or taller roddltt. Eml. large wbeeb, mnonble tr1y. Folds flat for tron.ge, reg. 8.00 .. l.tt Klcinett Dunlice waterproof pants at ooc.e-a.-ycar •vings. Gauutttr:l fot 6 mot.. Infant pull-on, reg. 1.00 ~ 2/1.69 Toddlo< pull-on, "'8-I.2l <><h .... ·-· ........... 2/2.1' Infant taap<X'I, reg. 125 each ................... 2/2.19 Gmmtiblt: cocnforttr hr W1tnsuna is full·1ix comfonu when open. s.ipt dosed for perfect sleeping()( pram bag. Won- derland dW.li1 print matchn lheas, pillow axs and btankns, tt~ 7.lO ........................................ 4.n R.«eiving blankm in pastels, atripcs art ~O:r40~, reg. 1.00 .79 Special putdwc! lnfanu· IUD.SU.its from a famow maker. Fin· $'. quality canbai rotton IC'Ct.der ita wipes, c:heW. plaids. ..:me: with appliqucs. ttg. 4.,0 t0 5.00 ............... 2.49 Jnfmu' lhim bf C'Artu, OCTU·befc.n: offtftd at I. -.Je P!°i.ct'! Your dx:Ma ol tryln: Jiffon, reg. 2/1.29 ........ J/1.00 Double-breuttd snap AJlt., rrJ. 2/2.00 .......... 2/1.SO GIRLS' SHOP SAYE! FAMOUS MAKERS' DRESSES FOi ~IRLS 4.49 and 5.49 reg. 6.00 to 12'.00 Euy-ore lottons., Daaoo• poly~ ~ cott~ ble~ in "Yles f<>< pony and ochonl. SIUfts, A·lineo. dimdb. f>t and flair. Gay pricu Mtd. dids, a... 7 ., 1-4. stEEPWEA1l by s.u., -ia -...i ., ... u.... fbaocl<m: a< challli"""' "'pojuno ill prims""'"""' CDlan. N'"' uiloring. daiory 1rim. ttg, 4.00 10 <>OO •.•...•. 149 'SUPS BY HER W.]ESTY widi grow-...i., odiuable ohoul· d<r """" Of nyloo witb ullottd aia1, tt~ 2.00 .... 2{1.IO P ANllES BY HER MAJES'IY of nyk>n tticot with nylon lace trim. Smoothly finUhed .te11N for ccmlon; flat daaic traitl:· band. la whitt', sUes 4 tO 14, ttg. If} ...... , ..... J/1.H STil.E1'CH NYLON AND CO'ITON SOCICS widl ....oi cull• Si= S, M, I., tt3 .. 69 I"· ............. I ,,.. 1 At . ' CARDIGAN AND PUILOVER SWEATERS of 100% nrtoo 1rt' machiM wa.shable. In faYOrjte colon and classic wbiic. Perf«t for skins or jumpus, reg. ,.00 to 9.00 3.99 to S.t9 JEANS BY WR.ANGLER. of 10-ooncc Saoforiz.tdiS cotton dmi.m in bright and puce! colon, Girls' sitt'I 4 ro 14, reg. 2.50 !O 4.00 ...................... , ... l .H mcl 2.tf KNEE-HJGH SCX:KS ftO!l1 a famous m1ker in white and w111ttd colors, reg. 1.00 to 1.25 ....................• 77 SKlRTS AND JUMPERS in fine wool ancl Ori~ acrylic bltods. OISSic and mod pla.idJ 'n' checks. solid colors. ldesl foe size 7 ro 14, ttg. 7.00 to 12.00 .. , . , . , ..... l .ff·S.H UTILE SHAVER SHOP CREST UNDERWEAR FOR UTILE SHAVERS Blll.EPS wi1b fly front, double aeac, elu:ic wai.stbtod.. Of whi1e, Sa.ciforized* combed. c0tt00, 1il!CI 4 &nd 6, reg. 3/2.,0 3/2.00 T-SHIRT JtY1e undmbitt with crew neck and. short sleeves. Of white combed conoa. nyloo reinforced ar nec\c 111d sleeve. s;,., 4 ...i 6, "''· 3/2.7l ...................... l/2.25 SOLID COLOR.. PEIMANENT·PR FSS PAJAMAS in popu· Ju 1nog .i..-.,, loog t•g "Yle; 6l% ~ poly""', 3l% conoo blend nf:ft'r needs irooing. Little Shaver 1iJtS 4 to 7. reg. 4.00 ...................................... 2.59 KNIT SHIRTS in asxxted stripes and d..id colors for Little Shaven. Short 1leew, mock twtlenedc styling. Completely washable coooo. Sil.CS 4 to 7, reg. 3.00 1.69 PILE UNED JACKET of O:rford weave nylon with zippered. ac.:.a. attached hood; Jtripe on sltt"Te. Gret.t colors. Sizes 4 to ·~1200 ~ STORE FOR ·aovs t-IIPSTER JACKET by famous maker is of wa1erproof nylon with pile lining. Sc:and-up collar conctals hood. Cuffs 1.te knit. l n ercelleot col~ 1i2:e1 8 to 20, ttg. t '·00 ro 17 .00 .. 1 1 .99 OUR OWN CRm UNDERWEAR FOR BOYS BRIEF with double scat, rW<ic waistband, fly front. Of San· foti~ white com~ rorron, sizies 8-12, reg. 3/2.,0 l/2.00 sizn 14 to 18, ttg. 3/2.7' ...................... 3/2.25 UNDERSHIR.T in popular abort-sleeve, cr"'-n«k style. Of white ccmbed cotton. Smfor~ in 1im: 8 to 12, ttg. 3/2.75 l /2.25 si?.n 14 co 18, ttg. 3/3.00 • . . . ........... 1/Z.50 PAJAMAS I<>< boys-o<'ttt o"'1 ironing. Blend of 6l% O.· croo• polyester, 3'.5% ronoa in woned 10lid rolors l.onR sleeve, long leg 1tyle, s.im 8 to 16, reg. '.5.00 ........ : .2.9t KNIT SHIRT wirh OU1 own Oest label lw mock rurtlen«k, short '1«YtS. In aSIOmd tcripes and IOI.id&. c.omplei:ely wash· 1ble cottoru to fit sir.a 8 to 18, reg. 3.50 ............ 1.tt BULKY HOSE a.rrio rut qual.ity ~ label. Quicl::-drying nylon and Orlon• acrylic blend in many colors To fit sizes 8~-t t, reg. 1.00 ..........•.... 6/4.19 To fit sizes 10-13, reg. 1.25 . . . .............. 6/5.lt IOYS' LINK STITCH CARDl~AN REDUCED! 5.99 ttg, 9.00 Made just Jik~ dad"1 f0t boy1 and litrk $havers. Popular bell-slee-toe style in machine--wubable Otlon18' acrylic link sticch. Sim: 8 to 12. ) Sizes I4; to 20, teg. J t.00 .................... 7.H Siics 4 to 7, reg. 6.00 ............•....... , .1.99 CHILDREN'S SHOES SAYE! GIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES 6.88 •il.Cl12~t04,reg.11 .00 Ilressy·looki.og T-strap is lt\ll"dy eoough for IChool and play. Neat in red or black with fine-rippled rubbr:t JOle. Sias 8~·12, reg. 10.00 ..................... l.U YOUN~ MEN'S DRESS SHOES IY CROSIY SCj)UARE REDUCED 20°/o OFF "& 12.00., 1100 Ct>oo,e .tog rip brogue or lighnreight dms lhoe. Entire SfOC:k is reduced for a once•·year ••ings. Smooth and grajn leathr-ri id bl.ck or brown; 6-8. STORE FOR MEN OUR OWN CREST Cj)UALITY IN MEN'S FINE FURNISHINGS PAJAMAS in populo< .,....,. "J'I.. Pmnmeo<·P"" blmd of Dactoo• polymer and roroo in 1 wide rsnge of .ol.K1 rolor1. Si>a A. B, C. D , ttg. 6.00 .............. 4.H « 2/9.00 PAJAMAS in uadiUonal !orig leg. loo& slttVe eoat lfJle. Per· maneat·prea blend ol Oaaoo9 polyesrrr and cottoo in 1ohd colon. Sizn A, B, C, D, «g. 8.00 ....... 6.H °' 2/12.50 BOXER SHORTS i:hlt ntYa oad lrooinsl Bleod ol. Dsaon• polytan" uid ainon. Wide ela.cic waiteband.. Solid mlon or whl1o. SOC. lO m 44, r<g, 2.00 .......... 1.Jt w 1/4.00 UNDERSHIR 'fS in populu rib-knit oi combed o:itton. Nylon <tinforad nerkbond. Pull-cur t.np, S. M. L, XL, ttS. 3/300 6/1.00 KNIT Bl.lEF of combed c:om:in with double 1eat. Waistband guuom=i. Sizn lO ., «. «s. l /l .00 .......... 6/5.00 BOXER. SHOR.TS oi cotton bro.dcloch with 1 wath·n·wnr fioi.sb. White and ....ortcd p1ttmu; guan.ntttd _..Utbe.od. Si"' lO IO 44, ttg, 115 "''h . . .. ...... 6/6.00 NEWPORT CENTER #1 FASHION ISLAND • T-SHIRTS oi combed wh i1e cooon with aew a«k, raped skoulden. Si ur S, M, I.., XL. tt-g. ~/}.75 , ...• 19 ., 6/S.00 Handken:hiefs of fine c:onon lawn in full 18" mquare with hand rolled Qems. Soft and loog-wwing. Package of 13, ttg. 6.,0. ............... . . . . . . . . . . . ........... 4.10 Hi.bulk Orlon& acrylic hose m t0lid colors. Rib style with elastic rop. Machine wuhable, machine dryable. Lnn&-wearins: in siz.es IO Vi ro 13, ttg. 1.50 .............. 1.19 or 1/ 3.00 Stmch anklet of wool and nylon blend is gUl.Rlltttd mach.Uk 9.'ash:able. In black. brown. olive, navy or grey, ttg. 1.50 ..... 1.19 or l/l.00 Ovu-the-a.lf 1tretch bCR oi ma.chi.oe-,..ashable wool and nylon blend in same col.on as uiklcr, reg. 2.00 ..... 1.H « J/4.00 Fine s.illc. neckwcar in 1 wide range al curm:it rol~ pattms, ug. 3.50.4.00 .......................... 1.7' °' l/5.IO Designer na:hrear .Ui distinctively different, unmi.Uably de- signer·inspired. Reg. '.5 .00 to 7.50 ...... 1.91 • 3/11.00 OUTSTANDING BUYS IN OUR Im SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 3.89 or 3 fl I .00 reg. 6.00 Pid:: favori1e coUat St}'~ in wbitt, sOOd. colon oc oovd· fJ p;nems. Lurury blend oi 80% J)racroQ• polresrer and 20% COttOn needs no iroclli& nu S~ 14¥2-17. FAME-NAME SPORT COATS Plaids, checks and IO!id. colon in sporu c.'Ol.tt and blu.ers. Wool, Dacronill polyesttr and wool blends in two ind. 3-bunon styling · reg. soJe reg. Mle ,0.00 spocts loots 43.00 115 .00 Sl]OrtS lOrats H.00 55.00 sports coats 46.00 12,.00 1pons coars 106.00 65.00 sporu coars 54.00 135.00 spons cmtt 115.00 75.()() lportJ COllCS 63.0Q 145.00 Sportl O»b 12J,00 90.00 sport! COQts 76.00 1''·00 sports coats 111.00 110.00 sports coots 93.00 BIGGEST SALE OF THE YEAR! ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN'S SUITS TWorcd for tht man of discriminaring CJ.ft by such fine makers u Hickey.frcc:r:nan, Stein Bkx:h, MichAth Sttrn, :and our own Oest ~L Two and 3·buttoo models with center or 1ide·•enr styling, in finttr flhrks, of coonie. reg. SCI.. 1'.5'.5.00 lllits .... 132.00 85.00 1ui11 •••• 7J.OO 16,.00 111it1 .•.. 140.00 89.9'.5 suiis •. , , 77.00 185.00 1ui11 , •.• 157.00 110.00 suiu • , •. 94.00 19'.00 suit& • , •. 1U.OO l l '.5.00 suits ..•. 98.00 200.00 Aiits . , , .170.00 125.00 sui11 •.•. 106.00 210.00 suits •••• 1IO.DO 13,.00 JUits ..•. 115.00 21,.00 1Uit1 ,,,,11J.OO 145.00 ruits .... 123.00 225.00 auits .... 1to.OO 1,0.00 1uits .... 128.00 245.00 1uits .... 20l.OO ENTIRE STOCK REDUCED! MEN'S DRESS SLACKS Savt money now, a•e even mcn wbea you buy nvo pairs! We've reduttd all our reguh.r tu.it ltOd: in all wool wornoU, 2-p(y wup oluh Plald.. and chcd., hop- sad: wcsves; bclc loop, tal>lide and ttgular nt lull top podc:ct models. reg. scM reg. .. 20.00 "''"' $16 .. 2/$11 3).00 .i.w $29., 2/$17 22.9l •t.W Sii « 2/$15 37.lO O.W SlO « 2/$5' 2l.9l •t.ch $21 .. 2/$41 40.00 .i.w $12 .. 2/$61 27.95 ""'"' $Zl « 2/$45 4~l0 O.W $15 « 2/$69 30.oo docks $25 « 2/$49 4l.OO olrls SH« J/$71 100% ORLON LINK smcH SWEATER 11.99 reg. 17.00 fa\•oruc: lh1.Ss1c cardigan in machine w~shable 100~0 Orlon~ acrylic link stitch. Choose .t.everal in mcwt· wanted c.oloB, now. Siz.es S, M, L. XL • I 00% ORLON LINK STITCH SHIRT 6.99 reg. 11.00 Mock tunic scylia& io popular link 1ti1ch Orlon• acrylic shirt in bancUome foe casual attire. In a wide ICl«rioa ol wuhable colon. Silt'S S, M, I.., XL TW"tJeoeclc knic ihirts with long sieC'Yft ta.ken from OW' rt&· ula.r stOdc. ~ from fi~ wool cx pure conon Dia in 1 ,ltOOd color selection, ttg. 11.00 to 15.00 . . . 7.H V ARSi fY SHOP MOCKTURTLE KNIT SHIRTS 7.99 reg. 12.00 JOU~D Orlon* IKl'fliC with a lunuy look, yet complrttly nu.chine washable, dryable. Jn blue, c.menJd, n•'1· pt.prika or 'f'lnillL All with short sltnrs. Once-a-y~ 11.vinss on 1U our traditional JUics, sporta jacket• snd. '"1acb. C.hoose from a fine am.r of all wool wOl'llClll. ~ polyott:r aod wool bkod &bria in lw.ndl(IGM' IOIMI. colon ud. pannns. Come io orly f« bat 1elmionl surrs Our entire stock reg. ICll• rrg. .. 60.oo.6l.OO ..... 49.00 89.l0.9l.00 ..... 7'.00 69.l<l-71.00 ..... H .00 79J0.8l.OO H .00 • 100.00 ........ ·"·" 115.00 .• ::.: ... n.oo 12i.oo ........ 1n.oo S,-ORTS COATS Our enutt 1tock. aupt fOI bluers 39.l~0.00 ..... ZS.00 ll.00-60.00 ..... 45.00 <l .()().l0.00 ..... JS.00 • MON., THURS., FRI. 10:00 Till 9:30 • '- DAU. Y 'ILOf Jf . SLACI$ Ouc anU. ood 17.9l·20.00 ...... 14.llO 2l00 ........... 1'.0o 30.00 ........... - l!.50 ........... 21• 27.50 ........... Jl.00 MEN'S SHOES ~ -·--------------LON~ WING TIP IRO.UE 19.99 "B· 2l.OO J111uary al~ nlue in a hlndsome: grain '-her dre. lhoe.. &cepciooal ft!ue from OU1 rcgu.lu tmek. Mmr: ma in your cboitt ol blMt or brown. ~==========:: IUCIJ.E.STRAP DRESS SHOE I 16.99 ""22.lO Y ows u ••.i.op foi: me look of Whion. 5ry1ec1 ia po1. iWd bbd pin louhe< wirh pl&in ..., odjulubk bud<· le !tnp. Men's ii.Jn 8 to 13. SILVERWARE HEIRLOOM STERLING SA.LEI SAYE 30% S& Ye on au:ri.ia.g pjcc:a. open aock, pUa: attiap or Jen'ia: for a.DJ number. Four pattemll rerhad 309' nmr -Sentimental. Y owig lo•e, l.altiag Sptinc GI" Suntoo H.lt, Mloml poncnu by """"' m!amm. PAUL REYW IOWLS Eight sius bJ Websttr Wilc:ar, lilmpktrd by ln.ttr· national Silver Co. Red, blue, dtu tMeD&las imm linings foe'· 7, 8, 9" 1iu-s. 4" sii.c, rtg. 7.,0 ........................... l.00 5· sii.c, n:g. 8.,0 .... , ....... , , , ..... , , , .... 6.IO 6 .. 1izr, n:g. 11.00 •••...•. , , .. , , , , , , • , •• , ••. 7..IO 7" size, reg. 12.10 . , .•.•..•.••••••.••..••••. t.M 8 .. s.i?C, reg. I 5.00 .. , ..... , ... , ..• , •...••• 10.00 9" 1i1e, reg. 17.,0 .......•.. , ..••.•••••.•. 12.00 l er .ur, reg. 40.00 · .....•.•.•.••••.•••..••. 21.aa 1,~ .. 1iie, ttg. 60.00 ...................•.. 40.00 lmttnatiooaJ ltaio.lal tabJcwarc at •Ying! Cbcil»t ftom. l 0 l*••m" Qu«m F""!'. AUiomh<a, Qner, N"' a-... Amttiaa ROie, .AJhford, lmpin.tioc, Nam Sanam or T~ <hr. 2l·po. "' In< 4 ................... ,. ...... Jl'llo OXI hTOC'ire panmu Jbou.Jd be ordered before Maida ta fat summer 1969 de!Mry. Pill in or add co your &TOriat fllnrv• itt pm:iom Settling silft!I", . ,. , •• TABLE LINENS lYILIT Sft.IHDOI &ll·»nyl cloth. 1'we wbi.,, .,.-,.. tern rett:mb1u cunrork. A pnctial, midlloe-wubable dca with formal air '4rl4'" si.u, reg. 4.00 ...........••. 2.ft 54:r:72" sii.c, ttg. ,.oo 3.n CiO:r:I08" obloag. 60x90" obl00& ot cm!, "8-8.00 ..... ·'·" ,.,~ 1.00 ...... s.n 70"round,ttg, 1.00 1.n CUSTOM TAIL! PADS and matchiog lea•a at 11Tinp. Oloic.e of J17toqlin roatcd Jeatherme wirh -.iccbcd cdp. at finea rinyl. Wood tone1, coordinated felt t.cks, in•kud. Pree meuurin& 11nicc .................. rat 11• 11Cf. KITCHIN INSDllLI cl """'xd ""'T ;, "'-widi • .,,,.. lnak. Pri-.1 ill pnpnru kirdlm colon. mu. D•llp, Por Pourri J"'1<ftl" Towel, ttg. 1.00 ................ :It Apron. ttg. 2.00 .... 1.7' Diohdorh, ttg. 2/1.00 Potholdtt, ''I-2/1.00 _. .H .... J9 O.m Mitt, reg. 1.00 M CALAIS robkcJoth by Progms iJ 6l% Iltaoo* ..,.,_, 35% combed """"' widi _._._ ~ !if>. I isb. SWm coo:w ow: in normd wubio.g. Solid. mka widll matehing Ila border. l0x71Y', "B-1.00 ... 6.n 67'1191Y' oblno,ii a< on!, ttg. ll.00 .... ID. n 67xl08" nblno.c. tt&-16.00 .. ' . 12.'1 50xl0", ..... 6.00 •. ·"'" • 68" 1-.1, ttg. 11.00 9." 11x1r lll!Pki.., ttg. 1.ll ...... ·" CAIMIL ~--•• ul*dorh br Calif. Hand Priau is ~ m>iroa. With m::lwi.-e Cal--prim: mil --.. Solid colon. R<>und., anh widi nt-draf fri.,., -llllf. frinA«L 52xl2", "8-l .00 ........................ J." 52x70", ttg, 7.00 ... I.ff ('8" round, J'CI. 11.00 '·" 60r84", "& 1100 .. 9.n 6h<)O" onl, 601102", .. ,.12.00 "·" ""14.llO •..• 11" N•pki°' J'CI. 1.00 .. M 111..wl LllllN ll!hklodu br Fllllml Mid Cdm Ille ,...i for the fir« time nu! Vat-dyed, ~ IOi1 ma. linen in oii't't, antiqut' gold. whi«, with p..ia. bclil. l 2., 2" .. ,,, "& 6.00 ... " 68" round, lh71T.U.,u1.9.00 7.n ,...1i.oo .. -11.n 60x90• 1i1e, (JOd'" owl. "l ll.00 .... 12.n ~ ll.00 .... IJ.tl 60r!08 ""· Napkin• ttg. 1.00 .. M tt,11'.. 18.00 ..• '''·" GLASSWAIE OTHER DAYS 10:00 Till 5:l> I 14 DAILY ~!LOT (HI LEGAL HO'nCE ...... Cllltf111'1CAft ~ •UtlHSQ llCTITJOVS KAM• The "'*'" .. ,... _.. cenlf'I' *"" b ~"" • ....._ ti .,. w. 1ftl'I. C_,. M1w. CIL!fonll.. .,..., fht ft(· 111..... Htn1 -ef &EL.ECTIYI! ILHGL.li W Iha! .-W llmt lit CM>· ......, .. ,,... fl:lllOwlllt ..,_, ""'- fl,lrne In fllll _,. •I-of ,..io..-It •• IDllO'n.l LI .. W• Mllllon. 1'* .. .._... AW., C•lt Mal. C.lllor"'-. O.IW ~IMf' 11, ,...._ i11 .. ti Olltornltl. Or ..... C-IY: Oii Dec:. II, 1 .... ~ ""' I ...,..., Pullll( lfl .... tor Nl<I S11k, ,__Ill! •-•N ui. """" Mot1'°" ~ ,. nw 10 bf lilt Nf"llOll ""'*-l'lllftt 1, 1¥11M:•lbl4 ,. tti. wllhlrl IMt,_t '""' 9dl.,_litltttd .iit: uecuttd mt u,,.... \OF FICIAL $EALI MerYlt.~ "kll•<T Put1ltc:<1mriornll Prlllc:INI Office lft .,._ """" Mr c-•uio.. ea;..,, No~. , •• 111t r..1111.i...1 Of1np CM1I 0.lh' PllDI, On. U. 10. JI, INI A!IO:I J.,,. '- 196' JllUI LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE r rldaJ, Dewnber 'l1, l 968 You1• /ti oner'• Wori Ja By SYLVIA PORTER LEGAL NOTICE f)ttlOl1a) Income going for food la 40 ceota: In the Unll<d Kinplom, u·. • ctnls. In -..ioped J.nds, ll'I far hllb<r. -Only about 1 • cents o( )'OW' .. •11.u-tu dollar goea (or food 7ou eat al home, -aialru:t · more Uian 16 cents as recently u ll80. A signlflcant pro- portion of the moolb-to-mooth overall rood prict rlse lhh year lw reflected tht rising cow oC eating out, due large!Y to mounting labor costs 1n restaurants . -Per capita afler-tax in- come in lhe U.S. in the th ird quarter was running 7 ~cent ahead of last year CQmpared with a 4 percent rise in lhe cost of good eaten at home. llOW, THEN, can I explain the squeeze yoll feel in your food market basket? It's cer· tainly not all in your lm· agination ! One explanation Is lhal you're driving up your own rood costs by sharply lifting your standards in food buying. For instance, y o u r con- sumption of beef, on a per person basis, has soared from 59 pounds a year in 1945 to 106 pounds. Your ravenous ap- petite for meat. up to the hlghest-priced types and cuts, ls a major factor behind re· cent meat price increases. Also, you are choosing and paying for costly convenience foods on an unprecederited scale. Since 1947, per capita consumption of fresh fruits has plunged from 140 to 79 pounds per year while con- sumplion or processed fruit s has climbed from 41 lo 52 pounds: While some con- venien ce foods (frozen orange juice, many canned and frozen vegetables) are cheaper than their do-it·yourself coun- terparts, most convenience foods still are far more ex- pensive than similar foods we prepare at home. ANOTIIER explanation is that you are going in for the fanciest home entertainment 6usine ss Join s OCC In Marketing Club Mutual Funds • I • ' . • ... . . ... . • • • • • . ... • • • I • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • .• , • • z ~ h . • . • • •• • li " ... " •• " ., .. v. " ., " ' •• •• • •• .. ., " " " " • •• • v. h ~ •• .. •• • ,, " •• •• " " " " " +;1 •• .. •• " '• •• . , " " " .. ..• '• " •• • .. •• " " .. " .. " •• .. .. .. "• it: •• I~ •• " " '" " • .. '• " • .. " ~ .. •• '• •• .. " •• '• ' . ... •• "• .. .. " .. " ' •• •• •• .. '• " '• •• ,., .. .. • • '• '• .. " . . , •• '. •• .. .. '• .. " " •• '• •• " " I ' . • . . t. • .. ., 1 '>'• I -.. . . ~r1d11, DKtmbtt 27, 1968 CHI New York Stock Exchange List .. DAILY PtlDT \ l • .. " • ' ' .. • • ·! • • ' .1 ,, • I ( I t• NILY I'll.OT ' ' . ' I I " --------·------------------------------.. FridoJ, -17, 1961 $ OILY PLUS 1AX & LIClhSE ,• l • ' •. ' WE OFFER GUARANTEE> AllTO PAYMENT PIAN tf Y" 1011 your job ind 1n out of wort 30 dayl or more through FIRID-STRIKE or IAY-OFF 'The BEACH CITY DOOGE GUAAAMTaE> AUTO PAY- MENT l'LAN _.. ~ 'PGUr rnontMr ...,....... \1111'11 ""' SAVE! -·,~=~~£~~ .. ., SAVE! On Transportation & Foreign Cars! ~~.'t. $399 1966 CHEVROLET Bal Air 1962 CHEVROLET -*O•c1Mi.V.._ ........... ,w•1 lcn._._... -~ ........ Lk.Nl.LHM•. s19 Dn. s19... ;;:'.. $499 1963 RAMBLER Station Wagon 1962 CORVAIR loma kY!lnclfl>. -*"-lie "'-llslort. m;o ..... ......,., l!c. ...... FXT Md. Full Price 1961 FIAT "124" ~ ~-Full fadol'y MUI""""', lie.. No. TRS l'll. s52Dn.s52,,,. ~~~ s1499 1963 PONT. GRAND PRIX MODr ,...,,.., V.f. Avtometlc "-"'-Ion. -llftflng, -wllllicnn, Ill' (Grodltlon .... LIC. IGCE4'3 s2s ... s2s.... ~.~. S699 1961 SUNBEAM Alpiaa , c CYilftdat •~ trw111"11i1sloi'I. -,,_Int, rtdle Ind ht11«, Lie NP. OKL M l. • 110.t,OS?f;R ......., 1-..119 11N1 ~. 8/'ltlltl 1.-cf"' G._ , t•1'Jv~~ ""' wllll ~Mil Intl'!'. Slm1>1Y l'lunnlM! Lie. ~~i~• $399 1961 POITIAC Boaaavilla v.a.~.,._ .. _...._..., ..... Lk. flo. Sl(C m. ;;!. s399 1111 YIUHA qlll' ICMW' NJ. 1* II ,... ..... ._. low milute - -~--Lle.Ma.l1t-... . Fvl Pri,. $63 Dn. $63 Mo. ~:!:, s 1799 1964 CHEVY MALIBU 2..cloor hlrdlol>. v.a. ~ Trll'ISml•kwl, Rtdlo " IM.lle<', Air Ounalllut~1•, Uc. fl(JK.6Qf $36.._ $36w •. ~~ $999 1164 DODIE o.rr k'f'I. ~ ~. 11.otdll etllll ....... LIC. "''· 01'1 ,.,, • • . . FANTAsrrt ' SAVIN ' ' Ofl All OUR NEW & GS. irs lllVEllTORY TAJ TIME . USED CARS! LIQUIDATE OVER 200-' ' • AID WE MUST . CARS DURlllG T•IS SALEJ . . 19&& DODGE Dari Mw.tl' '~· a"'9. tr-., r.clki & -!« Lie. No. RDZ·llJ $§0 . $§0 Full $1399 Dn. Mo. Pric• - 1966 FORD 4 Dr. Sedan s19Dn.s19,,,._ ~~ s499 1968 VW TRAMSPORTER ' WE DARE rou 10 COMPARE THESE PR/t:Esr ...;----- 18&f PLYMOUTH Sport Sellai =-~ ... -~."'!!'!•~Mlon. -.....-ina. r.dlo _. $47 Dn.$47 Mo. ~~ $1299 · 1965 RAIBLER 600 i.;,-.,.... 1Counlrt 51.tloft V.:eton. V-1. •loltomMlc llW'lt., ~ .,.,......,,. Lie.. No. SHA1225. $33Dn. $33Mo. :~~ $899 · 1964 CADIWC DIRECTIONS: l'MJ .. 11"1 ID """' Wl)Wbin. Jlllt toke I.be Saa J)lep ..._ID .. -Bhd. -IO -w mn.-.11111,...,." -at,. I>oclio. -540.l'600I 141-9631 -llAl.Y'l1L lOP.11,lllO-Sllllo\Y ' ' r I • r • • .. -. -• Today's CJlOlblg f ·D 1.fJO N, • I yot 41, NO..:i.JO I r 4 SEfTIONS, 3 AGES ~N!i~ CQ.UNTY, CA~if..ORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, '1961: • TE!'! CENTS ·--...... ----- • .. . . • ~eafy.Held . . p~~aguna ·· Drug ~ap By RICHARD P. NALL. • ·Of Ille Delfr '""' Sh" LSD cult leadtr Dr. Tlmolhy Leary 11'&8 muted along with hia wife, Rosemary and son John, In Laguna Beach late Thursday night on narcotics cJwges._ Police allege they seized about one paund of marijuana and approximately two ounces of hashish. after stopping I.bl Lury Stati.00 wagon. teary, 48, 11 former Harvard clinical peiychologist, called the arrest, '1con- llilued police provocation and harass- menl" He told a reporter he bad four appeals pending in.higher courta which m;gbt invalidate marijuana laws. \'J'be senior Leary. was booked on suspi- cion Of possession of marijuana. Hi! attraet!Vt wife, Rosemary, 34, a former m8del and-actress, and son, John, 20, wtll'e booked on suspicion of posses&on o(.marijuana with intent to sell it. "" .... ·Police asserted that the bulk of the marijuana and hashish was principally in posgsslon of John Leary (on his person) and Rosemary Leary, in a small purst .lmide a hat. ·P&lice• Lt. John Zelko said the Leary statim-wagon, a 1965 model with battered side, caught the attention of poli<!e-officer Neil Purcell because it· was stoppesl: in the center of the 200 block of Woodland Dl!lve will> Ibo Uglltll cm al ll!Jl:p . .._ Leary claimed that the car was Jqally pll'ted and that he and his wife were sQ!ng aoodi>Ye lo .tlieir . lotl. All gave a hiral address near Hemet, said to bt 'a ranch. •J:.eary and his' wife were soon frt:e oa(ti,500 bail each but police tept John hf1jall ovemighL They asserted he n1 uiltler the influella! of something. lJ'he young man wu charged tan )'tt.r w:tlh being under the inOuence of drugs .. r a housewife complaiMd on 'Ibanksgiving of 1967 that a young man was acting strangely on her porch. <!(;harges against young Leary were ttttown out of court a few months "'° wkn the court held he was not in a~blic place. ''He was represented by criininal at- tdlney George Chula of Santa Ana 1t tlle time. An associate of Chu1a1 attorney Mirvin F. Cooper, arrived at city jail t&s morning to talk with John Leary aJ¥I said he expected he would represent 1te senior Learys are to be arraigned 1_, municipal court Jan. 9. An ar- nrlgnment date for young Leary was e.lfi>ecled to be set by the court today. 't>r. Leary, who hold! ,a doctorate in ~chology from the UnlverSity of omia at Berkeley, was honey- ing with his bride In Laguna Bea'ch le more than a year ago. ijje was fired from Harvard in 1963 When his experiment! with LSD exceeded Ui sanctioned bounds. .J.eary has since been the center of {SH LEARY, Page Z) ., .• . . ... _ • P .erf ect Landin.g Ends ·Long Trip ABOARD USS YORKTOWN (AP) -Apollo 8 returned from its halt- mllllon mile voyage lo the" moon Friday, burning through the atmos- fbere to a pinpoint Jancluig ·In. Ute dark on genUy rolling tropical seas ,000 miles south of Hawall. Air Force Col. Frank f!oiman , Navy Capt. James A. Lovell Jr. and Air Force Maj. Willillm A. Anders, _,_ _,_ _,._ history's first moon mariners, rode · H w H • :lllliiia~~· U P I T 1 """'9 APOLLO I ASTRONAUTS MERE EARTHINGS AGAIN AFTER HISTOl\IC MOON FLIGHT Space Voyagers Borman, Anders and Lovell <!rom ltft) In Svcct11ful Spl.a1hdown • their spacecraft thrOOp Ille holtelt and fastest return from ,P.ce over' to a landing only l ,000 yards fMm the waJtlng reccwery c'arrler, the USS Yorktown. So accurate was tbe return heHcopter pilot;, hoverlilg near the ezpecled !anding point, were able to see the spacecraft in the pre-dawn ·dark as tt descended under lta three huge white and orailge parchutea. The landing wu like all ol the flight that weDt before it: flawless. The ru,ht started at the preci.., ae<:ond planned, Soviets Give U.S. Praise F<J1' Apollo Collins Radio h Moon of Cheese MOSCOW (UPI) -The news ol the safe )anding Of"Apollo • WU diatrfbuttd to Sov1et newap'ipen by the offlclal Tau (Addllloaal Stories, Pbotot, Page; Wf news agency wtthln· minute. Btter the 7:51 8.rit. EST last Saturday, Ind ended splashdown. within JeCOnds of the planned flrne, MOSCOW radio's variou! aervJces used ' Of Newport Puts 'Voice' in Flight almost eiacUy 147 hours later. · the news as their !irst item on tlie 7 p.m. t Borman and bis crew stayed aboard newscast, unusuany fast reparting in a • ABOARD USS YORKTOWN -While killing a }l~l of time in pre-their spacecraft, bobbing gently In five-country where •••'l' news item ·must be dawn hours, bobbing. in the Pacific aboard ApOllo 8, astronauts foot waves, unW dawn erased the checked-by various autboritie!. chatted via radio with the helicopter hovering overhead. :~:ruar:=· ~ heU' hov~·!!: The rapidity of reporting reflecting· the Earth ahd the men aboard the Apollo . Durllig.. radio conversation, helicopter Commander Donald S. the ri:toonshJp, Waiting ft!_r first Ugbt. huge interest the Apollo rught had anius. a were connected by inVisible links of Jones of Madison, .Wis., ·asked the astronauts what the moon was Borman chatted amiably with the chop-ed in thiS' highly space-e:onscious nation. radio · waves transmitted by electrical ~ made of. 1 per pilot. Qndr. llonaSd s. Jont1 of W~era were·bebJ8 iloppecl in Ma. coDi.PonentB · nia.nWacturtd ' by NeWport ~ Fra~t~:;.ade iof green cheese at all,'' replied Air Force Col. Mad~ Wls.,.and wu ob~l)' e~ted CINl;.m;-. · · ~, W asked When the BeachlsColllnsRadloeo. _ "Jtt''•ma. _d ~<>Ut. Am . ,, ... ~~\...... atlbe~ofhll--turi. , was .~ltd to return ti> ~-... -u•I,...,. 'for all' ·1t~:;;;.:~~¥'J1if'~:·~·~w;·~~"fl~CU:·~··-=·=--~"""""'=· ~·· ==~~·;;;;;~t"'~~uts . at eei1I.. '!'he qyeotlon m ~ fol· the "voiCOll from spaee" stnce the hegln· J"""°'l :!e!lt lbe~ApoDo I · lowed by obvloouly 1fucere ~ ning of this_ country's m~ned !pace "~tw.ti~. f. o~ coogra(uf.1\ioni p>d be3t wishes .m .11..c.· ·-.,... .,.-.. ~ D':tct"·~ "'r· ·.-.s .. Fm· -~ M/o·" .. it!e .. i:n .• ou.""'s·· ... ~~litd.il . °" l!!;iortc Am•rtci!t achlevemi!nt. ~ from the Newport firm are U U lU 1, 1 ~1 in,~ wotJd, Will done-'.' ' · · The early Tw reports We i:oniP~ res~e for recovery cmnmunication, Yoo made US .feel kin to thOst Euro-ly1actual. It uid the· AjJollo 11 came down t I ·~-Ir · · -·-1"'atfo11 peans five centuria sgG who first heard " t . j, e evaawri ansnuss1on , comuwiu~ news or Uie New World, II Uie President near Christmas rsland In the Paclftc. between' astronauls, and the wOrld-witlo In• e • p bl c said. "You've seen what man has ntver landing 4,500 meters fl'qm the iirCraft grounc;I tracking system.. J'l'l ..... es m ue 0 rew seen before." carrieiYorktown. . Clll'l>PtJ!Y materials flew with the I.LI: .I. . He dlaclosed the While HOUJe ll!ed astronauts around the moon. the Sovtet-U.S. hot line to keep the "I!! the space craft, we supplied the Russ:lan officials WGtmed of the pro- two-way voice and handled all the data SAN DIEGO (-AP) -The Navy is Warden 11aid ttJe men ~bo ar~ un-greaa of.the fligh t. going back and forth -all traMJT1issioos conducting · lnten&ive quetd.ioniog ol the dergoing psychological testing since "all "Th So · ta ll ltou bout to anCt !run the space craft," a Collins e vie were very so c s a spokesman sild., freed 'Crewmen Gf ~UM Pueblo after persons · woo baVe Undergone an ordeal the Welfare of you astronauts and ex- "We also manufacture I.he electronic examining· doctGr1 -reported finding no sucb:· as these men are subject tn pressed great interest," Johnson said. coml>boenb that make uP ·1he ground serious defects; olher"than malnutrition. psychological pressures and change!. We Apollo B's nJght-man's fastest, communicatloqs network , ' ' the A team of more than 100 inteUJgence muSt 'ev81Uate it.'' highest and riskiest -went in Its ent- spokelman ~plhlned. specialists began talkihg wilh crewmen One of the men to undergo some lrety like a well·rehearsed, well·perforrn- Tbe network includes 14 radar stations Thursday afternoon in w•·t will •·-·me f the • . ed drama. with bt ••~ •---th I t I ,.. ~ o moat 1ntens1ve debriefing will g gq;u ani.c1u ... e, e supp emen a be •'--The re-entry, ending a halt-million mile ship and al aft tr k' ·ts one of the most exhaustive investigations uic ablp's e.1ecutive officer, Lt. The _,.!! ac lmcedg um . d the of a loss of a llhlp in Navy history, Edward R. Murphy Jr., who was coast from an orbit around the moon, 0 1 ........ was Pa aroun officJ·•· '"''d. · began as the crew separated their tlny world lo provide continuous information iUll navigator on the bridge when the Pueblo command module from their llerVtce boul the Apollo af• and ·i. •L.--The investigators wanl to knOw was captuttd. a spacecr •· J uuci:: 1,. L.~ "·lurpb 1 L.:-module. the ispacecraft's "supply room", hi pre<llsey 111,nf much sensitive electronic 1• y, OOa.u1g more rested than at occupan ' I equipment may' have been left Intact this first stateside news conference Tue9-and flashed on toward the atmosphere. The NeWport plant is the argest of Borman turned the c<lmmand module ·~-'Col"-· plants ~·-· r when ..... N...aL. K-eans too• con~! day told newsm-he deliberately m1'sled uu-.;i;. wur. • ~i. are ID owa ... "":' ""'"' .... .. ... u ' ..... blunt end forward and let an on-board and T of the inte111 -. , vessel. his North Korean ca.,..,_ when they exu. "6~~ t' ..... ;> computer take control . The circumstaJ1ces of the Jan. 23 cap-forced him to draw charts that gave ' M •· lure and treatment of the Americana lhe' Pueblo's positon inside North Korean Wllhln seconds, th • spacecraft w a a · Steele arnet• also concern the questlonen in ~t waters at the time or the capture. nashlng into the atmosphere a't 24,'°° NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mar- kel abandoned a slight earl)' lead and setUed irr!pllarly lower late Chis after· noon. Trading wa! moderate. (See quota- tionS, Pages 22-23). degree: "I wanted to make sure there were miles an hour -almost seven miles The word on the health ot the 82 enoup inaccuracies in what I was a !eCODd. Heat, from the friction of crewmen, returned to the United States saying to be ldentlfied," Murphy said. the spacecraft coWdJng at high speed Jut Tuesday after 11 monlhl captivity He said the North Korean officer "who with the atmosphere, ballt up to 5,000 In North Korea, came In a news con-had to prove the whole farce" had degrees and the beat !hidd covering ference Thunday from Rear Adm. no navigational experience and allowed the craft's blunt end glowed red u Horace 0. Warden, 'commanding oWcr obviOUJ em>r! to pass. bits of it charred away. of·tbe U.S. Naval Hospital here. The St-year-old lieutenant Crom San The compuler, working nawlessly, roTI· "All of them show effects ol malnutr:I-Deigo said the erron lncluded pos!Uona ed the apacecraft like a top, as planned, tion . • . instability in balMCe . • . that would have required a speed of giving it lift enough to extend the flight and no d o u b t the.re are other defl-2,500 knots to maintain, and another aJ it flallhed over the Asian land mus. ciencies which we have not yet bad PoSltlon 32 miles inland. He said he On board, UM! astronauts wei;e out time to study in depth," Warden Atd. planned the inaccuracies to show to of touch ·with ground aontrOUen nwre UnUl now, .he sakl;t there" have been the world that the evidenct: was doctored th an three: ..minutes, as U>e dllturbaDce no serious defects noted. . by the North Korans. of the hlgb speeds destroyed com- He isaid an crewmen examined had "ntere ls absolutely no question in munk:ationa. been physically mistruted. There were my mind and the minds of the cttW As the alfl)OSpbtre g•~e an invlslble no signs of tuberculosis, he said. (See PUEBW, Page I) (See APOLLO FUGBT, P•it I) 'Jac.k' Slapped in Ne.wport . Homeowners _Protest Hamburger Sta11d Approval, By JEllOMB P. COWNS .,r,.. Otf)y '"" ,,.,. Twenty Centril Ntwport homeowners today demanded that Jack be put back In hll..!Jor. Proposed by Foodmaker, Tnc., the. two- •to'J', redwoocklded rutaurant " to he located at'IOOO W. Bliboo• Blvd. The protest petltloo userta the li>cation is a bad ooe becaiw: -It ..ur ~ to the "intolerable" sumzqer tlqle t.ra!llc congestion. , -It will Ch!ate the adclltlooal hazard Mother Fears No Civic Official L. Louise Lindsley Houghton, of 51111~ W. Btty Ave., Balboa, has lodged a claim for less: thr.i '20 ·against the clly of Newport Beach. The claim Is for damages to Mrt. Houghton's car allegedly resulting from a minor collision with a city truck. City . councilmen routinely turned the claim over to the cit'y's Insurance earner. Vice Mayor Undsley Parsons abstain- ed from the council action. Mrs. Houghton is Pa'rsona' ??other. Only Kitcheµ Sink Remains After Theft Jerry Adams of 10!! 31st St., Newport Beach, was left with h1I tltcben sink, bdt lost his atove, psnetlq, tools, surfboard and golf clubs in a $1,300 burglary Thursday. The items were taken Crom Adams' garage, police said. The paneling an(! the stove· were due to be installed in the houite. Weaalel' Tbat miserable weekend ·weather -cloudy with a retllt1l of the wet stuff -II on tap for the Orange Coast., with temperatures· llill mired In the low •'•· INsmE> TODA "l' Th< DAILY PILOT't Dlttifl· gut.shed Ptf'jormni m commun- 11~ lheallf' tak<! lh~ JpOIIiph! .f.o. 1 daV In lh< WEEK!NDER'r lnll'!"fariori cOtumn,' Pao1 11. In an angrily worded petition, Ibey ptWeated· rec.ot Plannlni CommlMlon a-al oC a Jack-ln-U...Bor hamburger siind lri their neighborhood. clalminJ it will downgrade the arM. ol -" attempting to cniss Balboa Bbulevlr'd to get to and from the beach. City aides pointed out th•t the Fooil- maker stmcture II not at 'all lib .dlber Jack • in • the • llores t h a t pnillferate thnxl&hout ·the coynty. The N • w p or t ptructun· was dellgnocl opeclllcally •loo 'lhe dty. All the company'a standmlilod Sil!M had 'to be redellgned to mtot ·city ratrtctlanl. " ll C...... r ,.,,...,,_. M Q-lio, a thrff.fOOl 111 will tep&rate.. a.... ._ fhlMll• .._. ..,. c;w Cleric Laura Lagl\oo said a Polllc !iWlnC Oil -the aj>peal Will be he1'I ·be· iot .. lbe City Counctl on ·Jill. D. I' Thoma H)1811B, 117 ltth St .. .tmlated the petltton. -·-• ' l --!--- It declares that planning .......... <r1 "l'fO'.UlUted" tbdr lll!ltlloM' In ar> """'"' the tallo«lt;. dri..:thnlUgh res-taurant on Dec. $. · ~"fl bamburger stand In the at.a " . plannlnS and will ·cootrlbfJte to die • ltlon ol ·the OCt!M front ." n.,· -tuOn claJmi that r.tttaurant1 such u nearby Woody'• Wharl and the Crpb Cooker a~ "more deslrab}e." in., pedtionerJ· mit ha•e In ""'111! m:.,1n ~lbellitmns-~lon ,. . ·r s~allr. tnffic ltom t.bt'" • .mo...w. eua • c..kl ' • ar..,.. c..r 11 .... c.._. 11 ,..._. t lJr~~~klg,~.i .... ~L· ..Ja-IW.~ ~I. ' ~-=-'l Z-:t ::: ..:: -~ I""!'~ ... .. ..... ,... " ,...,.. ... rector, &add . t 'no mat 1' 1WMf .... , , ,,...._ 14!-U _..,. .... If COf'dlrUcttcf &he llC\'tn-..a...:..I ~" . Y ~I ; .. ...... ,-... ..... Gt\ V-~ Afllit t 1T ......... ii -now the ·site ·of a beer blr--tr le -.... • ,.....,... n would locnue. ......_ 1~ .__. • "Trafnc wUI not be lmpro\ltd b;,.itdpJ J ~ · 11 :':~ • .::·• 1~, plnf tills deftlopment," llO llld.' • ' ,.-------~--' . I . .. . . . . t ---~·---------....... "'-"=- • I 2 DAILY PILOT H Wives Give Prayers On Return ... SEABROOKE, Tex, (\)Pl) -The Apollo 8 wives whispered prayers of thank! for the safe return of their space-- men tod•f then touted Uaetr moon mis- sion with bi g, green bottles of champ- agne. · .. Let 's make this ooe a prayer or lllank>&i~·" said Valerie Anden, the ~ of e astronaut William Anders. A Catholic mass was celebrated at the Anders' nine-room two-story brick home just seven rnintes after the Apollo a splashdown in the Pacific. Thick, green Christmas trees stood tall in the livilll rooms at the Anders' house and at the homes of fellow utro- n1ut3 Frink Bonnan and James Lovell. The three f1milies waited to celebrate a last Christmas with the astf"onl.uts who circled the moon 10 times on their holiday trip into untravele<l space. President Johnson talked with the three wives in a .conference telephone call 25 minutes after splaahdown. He 18..id the astronauts and thei r families "had been In the persanal prayers of Mrs. Jobnaoo and me during the flight," said Walter Fruland, NASA protocol officer. "The President told them how the whole country and its prayers had been trying to lnsun! the success of the mis· sion," Fruland said. ''Thank you, Mr. President," said Susan Borman. l think it's a well de- served \li.ctory. Than you for your thoughtfulness." The three wives Thur9day night at- tended a party traditionally heJd iri the course of every mann«! fllCht, at- tended by wtve. ol all NASA aatronauts. Land Investor Sigfred Johnson Collapses,· Dies Land Investor and yachlamai> :sitfred "Bud" Johmon l\lf!er!'i a fatal heart auack Thursday while Ueing up.~ boat in Newport Beach.-. Mr. Johnson, who wu 64, collapsed on the dock at the ba)'llde -Ups ci the Cban- nel Reef Apartment building. . Efforts by Dr. Anglll Wrl&ht, a mi- dmt of the apartment house, to reY!ve him failed . Dr. wlfght per1oimec1 111 emerceocy heart ~e at the.~. but Mr. J -did nol respond. He wu dead on arrival at Hoag Hos- pital shortly aft.er t ':XI a.m. Mr. John.son moved to Udo Isle with hi! family about t years ago atte:r re- tiring a.s president of a Glendale ft- tall bakery firm. He remained acUve, however, ln the land btvesbnent IN.si· ness and in boating actlvttles. He was an avid yachtsman until a heart condition compelled him to give up aalllng craft for 1 cabin crtdatz. He and bis wife, Ruth, ~Uy moved to 1525 Ocean Blvd., In Corona del Mar. He was president o( the Lido Isle Wine & Food Sodety, a Shriner and a member of the BaJboa Bay Club. Services will be held Saturday al 9:30 a.m. at Pacific View Memorial Park. In addition to biJ wife, of the home addres.., his survivors include daughters, Judith Bums of Udo Isle, and Sandy Dahlquist of San Francisco; a son, Bud JollNon of Pebble Beach, and grand- child, Tamra Lynn Burns of Udo Isle. Nixon Back in Florida KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -Pre!i- dent-elect. Nixon, back at his Key Bis- cayne hideaway afler a !lying visit to a private island in the Bahamas, plan- ned another day of rest before a Satur- day conference with foreign policy ad· vistra. DAILY PllOT 0111:.1.HCiE COA~T PUBL!IHING COMl"ANY Rob.rt N. Wttd ,.,...,.,.,, aftd ,llbll~ • Jtclr It C.rl1y VM ,.,...ldlr\l tlld O-ral MliN9tf Thomtt K11~il .... Thomtt A. M••PhiG• Ma111101,_ Editor Jerome F. Collini Poul Ni111" H..-1 awt11 Ad,,.r!lll"' Cll't' Editor Olrecl°'" H•.,.... ~ Offtn 2211 W11t l1lbot lo11lt•t11I M1lll11Mld1011:1'.0 . lo• 1171, t266) .......... C.• Mne: DD W..t a.y $tl'H'I L...-hectl: m "-'"• ,.........,.. HuntiMllofl 8"dl: ..... '"" • THANK S P RESIDENT Mrs. Borman -- A PRAYER, A TOAST Mrt. Lovtll MRS. ANDERS, CHILDREN TALK TO NEWSMEN Husband's Saft Rtturn Brings Joy .From Page 1 J\POLLO FLIGHT ENDS • • • brake on the 6pacecraft's speed, the astronauts, wearing the loose coveralls they had worn slnC!: just after launch, endured forces of up to six limes the force of gravity for short moments. Then, just as the spacecraft dropped past Uie 24,000.fool altitude mark, a heat shiel:j covering the apex of the cone-shaped spacecraft fell away and two small parachutes popped into the rushing air. The small chutes stabilized the craft for several seconds and then three huge orange and white parachutes blossomed and the spacecraft descended at 22 miles an hour, splashing in the dark of the pre-dawn Pacific at 7:51 a.m. PST. It was drizzling slightly, but Yorktown sa1lors could see the spacecraft beae<>n flash. ATrACHED CO!LAR Frogmen jumped into the ocean beside the moonship at first light and attached a flotation collar and inflated 1 rubber raft. Then, one at a time, the ut.ronauta left ther-space shelter -now a charred and beJplesa metal cone -and got into the raft. A net snaked from the hovering helicopter and the spaa!men were lifted one by one out of the raft. On board the chopper, Borman vabbed a electric razor and removed 11x days of beard growth as \he plane churned toward the Yorktown. The helicopter landed on the broad flight deck of the carrier and Borman, grinning and waving, led his two bearded crewmates through the choppers hatch to a waiting red carpel Sallors, wearing their Navy whites and crowding the flight deck in the early light, cheen!d u the spacemen, moving easily but unsteadily at first, •liked to the ship's office.rs. Borman, invited to use a waitinc: microphone, thanked the ship's company for the recovery open.Ion. "We're very happy to be ~ with you," be 1atd. "'We appreciate your ef- forts. We know you Md to atay out here onr Cbriatmas. It seerm that Jlm Lovell and 1 1lw1y1 seem to fly tn December,'' referring to the l f..day G<mlni 7 ol 1165- "We are very proud \o be part of th11 great tchlwement," the AJr Force Colontl II.Id. "We"re proud of lt Ind we aPlft'clale the psrt you played In getllna us back." GOf CAPS A Navy offlctt then gave each of the astronaut! N1vy blue Yor~own baseball·style caps, beating Uttir names and the carrier's nickname : "The Fighting Lady." The space trio was then whisked into sick bay where one of the first persons to greet them was a flight Surgeon with a needle. Blood sample:i: and x-rays were taken quickly 1n the first round in a long series of physical euminaUons. Later, the astronauts sat down to a breakfast Bonnan had ordered as they were floating in their spacecraft -:11teak and eggs. It was the aame food they ate before thelr launch six days before. * * * 'Hot Line' Used To Tell Soviets Of Apollo Trip WASHINGTON (UPI) ..:. Pre&idenl Johnson today told the Apollo utro. nauts in a telephone call that the hot Hne to Moscow had been used to keep the Kremlin informed of all major de- velopments In their historic moon flight. In a direct call to the carrier York· town, he advised the space heroes the Soviets were "very solicitous about the welfare of you astronauts and express- ed great interest in the success of the fiight.11 "I had a memorandum ~ short Ume ago from the men who handled the Washington· Moscow hotline," Johnson said. "I thou&bt you would be interested In a portion of that memorandum to the Presldenl .from Page 1 LEAR Y ••• a storm or controversy wtlb his ttference to use of LSD as a reU«ious sacrament ond his gleeful liiiing of the IOdll order. He has said in interv1ew1 that he used LSD more than 400 times and said he was lint "turned on'' by an anthropologist at the Univenity DC Mei· ico. Leary staled that he bu been Mopped and aearchcd S3 time in the Jaat 13 months. lie and his wife were kldaed today in a &mall LaiUDa Beach hotel. . . ·Mesa's~i Freak .Pai r Off " .: Promoter Cancels 'Hoek S how-No Policemen ~ . By JOllN VALTEllZA laid do\ni'bl' fair dlrecton •. ot 1111 1191tr '*' Steff 1be diredon established the lime -!~ ... ~'Jhere wlll be ·no chrts$mu Festival limit a! • apecil.l meeUD1 Tbunday aod Freakda ~ the Orange qou.ty during wblch It seem«I the fe1Uv1l oould airg:roun . · go <& u Dlanoed pr9Yided the HCWity Gleim Adams; station manaier and requfiebieAtJ't wtrll met •. Jll'Oltttn d1"ctor for FM station KTBT The failure to muster the police clOl!les Iii Gerden Grove said today he hid half the curtain on two WMb of conlr'OVeny arr hour to 10 before hia tlm• nn out over the festival dutlo« which the Cosla .. t't find 20 legally sworn policemen to Meaa City 'Councll NIUsed to grant an lQpervlse tbe atatlon-spon3ored, .,rock-entertaiament licenle •to the ptOllKltm, bind show, aod "We have ~tecl • despite approval of tbe event by the fair eJ<r1 poostble ""°""" and -" up board. , \ .rib nolhlnl." . • •· '-'"..:: · Adams said he had eonlac~· .. very Fair Manager Alfred iutleni~~ici-· law enforcement agenoy in the oounty a11y announced the fate of -n;~ at-to no avail. "We got blanket negative U: 15 p.m .• sal'inR be had been~ respon1e1 from all of them aOO most ized by t.'w: bOard" to announce the can-just said it "u their polJcy not to pro- celladon. He said the oo.rd .. ........,.. vido olflcen. Some /1Ut fi1Uy relu!ed withe regnl jhlt lhe festival wl1\ DOI be wllb no eiplanltlon.' held at thiJ time." -Costa M ... Polle< Chief Roger E. Thunday, the station was Ii..., :14 Neth aald Thursday promoters of the houn to muster enough off-duty police • s h ow 'faced J>OU!b"Je misdemeanor offlctn to satisfy security requirements · charges if they put ~ sho~w on SUnday -~auio the cltY.. qd lliJt granted !he festival an entertainment" permit. Iroalcally, a aimilar festival , featur· 4rll popular music groups in. a.. festi val format, h8s ~ into diffiCurt.Y In Ven· tura., where falr offlr)al1 .have •pproved ttie Show, tentaviely scheduled"ior next June. However, city offici4Ls; alarmed at the Pouibtllt.y 'of trouble at the af-fa ir, ha..,, ~lected violently . One-councifman declared th'.at lt would require the NationaJ Guard tu keep order al the affair. The issue there is at an impasse, with no decision ·e1pected un- til next month. The spectre of the tumultuous, two- day Newport Pop F"Uval held at the Orange County Fairgrounds last August hovered over the two-week controversy here. Sunday's show would have featuttd ?S Orange Couuty high-achool-•ge groups seeking initial exposure t9 audieneea. !Three Newport ,Mesa Police Ask Help Sailors on SC In Findi~g Holdup Gun Sugar Regatta Three Newport sailors and one from New Orleans will comprise the USC &a11· ing team which goes 1n1o actioa Monday In the Sugar.-Bewl Regatta 1t New Or- leans. · The Trojan aallora will be Tim Hogan, MgJle Campbell, Bob .Mctiaire -all from Newport Beach -and Foofu Del- ahmlt · New Orleans. Hogan Js a product of Newport Harbor Yacht Club, Campbell came up through the ranll of Balboa Yacht'Club, and Mc- Clalre is from a well known Lido Isle ,Yacht Club boating family. Hogl\" and Campbell were both named e8rller this year on the All-American sailing team of ~e lntercollegiate Yacht Racing Mso- ciaUon of North America. · · · Hogan will be 1klppef ·or the UliC "A" team and Campbell will skipper the ''B" team. McClaire has been named as crew for Hogan, and Delahusi will be crew for The ·Sugar Bowl Regatta was orlan- iied averal years ago aJ a prelude to Tulane University's famed Sugar Bowl football classic. USC sailing teams by Scott Allan won the SUgar Bowl Rqatta In JB65 and 1966. Coe1-M'!ll poll!'!' loday appealed to residents of the WestclW area of New- port Beach to help find 1 loaded, sawed· oil lhotgun polllbly lelt behind by a pair ol robbuy IUapecll before their 1r- rest. · Police Detective Gerry Tbompeon .said the loaded gm ia believed to be in the area, perhap1 left behind by Eugene Crist, 29, and his wife, Carol, 25, sus- pects in the $200 bold . up of a Costa Mesa bar Monday. The couple was arrested in Westclilf after a wild pursuit Monday morning. Thompson said do:.ens of officers walk· ed the entlre route of the chase and the area of the arrest in an attempt to Jo. cate the weapon, but fai led to find it. He expressed feara that the .410-tauge weapon sawed to a two-root length might get into the hands of children. Tbompeon said pouession of a aawed- off shotgun ts a felony. He urged persons who might fmd the gun to leave it un- disturbed unlil police arrive. Anyone finding the gun should noUfy police at 831-5252. Officers already have found two live shells of the iame eauie tn a planter of the Westclllf Sboppins Center. The shells were believed to have been dis-- carded by lb• 11111pects, • -. The Crista face a preliminary hearlng. Monday on cahrges of holding up the Royal Crest, 1700 Placentia Ave., Cosl<l Mesa. .From Page 1 PUEBLO ... or of the captain that during no thnc did we intrude into the territorial watera of North Korea . At absolutely no· time," Murphy aaid. "We never got anywhm: near their territorial waters." ~ Murphy was not allowed to talk ... ln detail about the actual capture of the ship. Navy officiaJs said that ·only the ship's skipper, Cmdr. Lloyd M. Buctir, could give those de~s. Bucher, 1P"bo is ill, was not present. ) At the same news conference, a N~;vy spokesman presented an ezhaust1ve study which he said convince(!: the Navy that the Pueblo was no closer tNm 16 nautical miles from the nearest North Korean land when jt ,...., taken. \. MID- WINTER · FEATURING: HENREDON'S FONTAIN COUECTION -.o-ts ' 11 n taMt.11.cz'•._..i .ct__, IO~•a!wtdl tft h- Mll6ftl --.1 _fllf_,~-.' . .,,. ..-, "'~ -~~ -. . , ALSO FROM HENREDON: FOLIO THREE GROUP, PLUS CARME~ BEDROOM. ~ HENR EDONS UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE 15°/o Off. 1 -ALSO ON SALE - DREXEL'S DIMODA, GUILDHALL, RAPPOR T, '.AND COLLAGE GROUPS. . . . FRc;>M ·H~ITAGE -ON SALE-GRAND TOUR COLLECTION FIRST EDI TION. ALSO TO IE INCLUDED: SOFAS, CHAIRS •. LAMPS, :,..ccESSORIES FR 0 M OTHER OUTSTANDING MANUFACTURERS. IEXCLUSM: DEALl lS POlt: -·--DUXIL -HHITAGE 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LCNCllilt TOMS AVAJLAal.1 ON APPROVED C~IT Prtif1a1t.Mil le:llcW -LAGUNA llAOf -:~7=-:.·l!!!!"!!!,.,!l··.~_ ...... ~.u,;..st·l·'·.·:.~ ....... • _-_-.. J • t Lady.: Bird llefletts for :TV "- , ,, .& § , WASHINGTON · (AP) ~ LyJl'lOo e. J.oiwon says ·~·tldng ~he's hippiest about 1 3lltnc behlnd 1f'ter five yean 'n the , "1ilte Hoose are all .he .... 1,-"""'""· oflal ominauo. ~plMnil caU. to the ~ ,, "Tllo~""' ol ,lbat telephioe -i 4 · •'doclt'· that mp 'yoo•to ~ and )'ooi .lriow oo .Ille' cother end • ~ Jt l• -thing ~t." Mr1. Jobnaon ..,.. ·"Md ii ia ...... 1ood wbeli It rinp at that time. · · "It it Ute aena o r rupomiblUty, It Is not my .._,iblllty but ·it does 91>1U over ·Into the whole clima~ o/ )'«Ir We." ' Mn. Jclmlon wo 1ay11.,,!he will be happy ta;~ ~ the dcadllnU ... and the Pmtdeot C0111taatly rad!. the la.liour wort clays. : The llr'ot lady IDlde ~. commlnta in I ~J.: P.: l ·d , • ~ r • ~ ·'-• television in~w . with .·u·• c....,.MIET .'....o!iciui :;;,tlie ·neg'' oUaUonfor Howard K. smith fo:;be llhoWli •' .~ •• ~ 8JlII ~ at 7:SO p.m. ::'ll!'r•' th . !Ji,t rJI .... of~ U.~< pri'!J!lllfl. LI. Col. John V. American e~, Co .• -. tibney (center), ,l>(ICl91!.r,tf•I"", Fla., U.S: delega· Ohio, talk with Viet Cong representatives in a field six miles south of Tily Minh, South Vietnam. Maj. Sauv~geot speaks flu'ent Vietnamese. network. ' ·· !kin chle~ l¢d Mat. Jead Siuvegeo! (left) of Akron. ~· ,, .. ~ Mrs. Johnoon llY• ifi'e ,;. · . '-'. ·• • . ·" ; Pruident, like other men . . I.... ~ . I •, • across the nation, brings the Vl~t · (:ong Claim problems of his job home witti _ · U.S. Bombs Laos Trails ·During Yule him. And he also brings home unexpectedly the people he works with. She said, hoWever,. 1he wanted the President to brirlg the burdens home to her after a Jong day in ofrice: "When be comer alone, he bring,& the problema and, ·YOU kno\v, I would reel tbit it w a s -I would feel somehow I had failed if he didn't," she aaid. "Because where else can ~e feel more relued about them and more -where would he have an audience better suited to hearing about them quite private!)' and quite honestly?" One of the most difficult thing1 for her to leave behind, ~1rs. Jobnson eaid, 111 what ahe calls the magnetism o[ the White House. Volpe Backs Mass 1,'ransit WASHINGTON (AP) John A. Volpe, President-elect Nixon's choice for transporta· tion secretary, says mo~ emphasis must be put on mus . transportation systems to cope with the nation's urban traffic problems. The Massachusetts governor said ThUraday in hia flrst newt conference since appolnted by Nixon that "highways alone won't do the job." The emphasis on public transportation came JS 1 bit of a surprl!e strice Volpe has gained a reputation as a man who believes in highways. As federal highway administrator in the Eisenhower ad- ministration he directed the start of the gigantic interstate road 1yatem arid he fcil&nded a constructiori company that has built thousands of miles of highways. Rapid transit systems may not prove feasible in some areas, Volpe said, but there will be others where "you can't build any more highways without tearinJ a city apart." -- Pro~ocol Preventing Release ' ' SAIGON (UPl)1-The Viet Coag &aid .. today the lhree Amerlcart wat prlioner11 whose rilease they promised to-negotiate on Chrlstmas Day were not released because U.S. Negotiators reiused to di!cuss procedures. The claim was . made on Uberation Radio, the Viet Cong's clandestine radio, and monitored in Saigon. Thursday in Paris a Viet Cong spokesman said only final details remained to be worked out before the release. l1. Viet Cong broadcast Dec. 23 said I.he tbree Americans had been released on Dec. 22, but this apparently was erroneous. U.S. olficials said they knew nothing of such a.release and later broadcasts Q'l.&de jt clear th~ prisoners were still in guerrilla hands. American spokesmen said tbe Viet Cong negotiating team they met on a ju.ngle battarield Christmas Day told they did not have the authority to specify the date, lime Of locality for the release of the three prisoners. The Viet Cong broadcast ~~ day said : ''The Poular Forces Armed Forces Command had given the time and place to meet representatives of the U.S. Command in South Vietnam on Dec. %5. On the time and placed fixed the U.S. represcn· tatives met the represen- tatives of the Eastern (Vet gm,) Command but would not atnJe to discuss the pro· cedu res which is why the mee.tiog did not bring any results.'~ A U.S. spokesman ill.id : Most of the two hour , and a hall meeting was taken up by a discussion of "protocol.'' and observers believed , this meant the Viet Cong :.were asking for some sort of recognition . A U.S. spokesman said lo· day. "We are open for ~ng" in meeting the Viet Cong to , arrange the r~leasc of capUve Gls. SAIGON (UPI) -American B5Z ·bombers used the 24-bour Christmas ctase..fire in South Vietnam to lace North ·Vlet· namese traffic in Laos with a record number' of raids. in- formed allied sources said t~ day. During the 24:·hour period spanning Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, the bombers dumped more than two mil· lion poq.nds ol bombs in abeut a dozen raids along the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos, the sources said. * * * * * Hope Tired of War, · rt . f , Frttnk AhU8e . ' RuieNowUp Since the bombing halt, the allies have blasted Commu- nist-controlled road!: in Laos three to five lime! daily with the deadly stratofortre~, Abblit seven· raids was consi- dered to be a day's record." The un&MOUnced strike into LaoS were not con!idered to be a break !n the U.S. a,ree- ment to stop the war over Christmas. Th much -violated agreement covered opera- tions only In South Vietnam. Lauds Troop Morale To : Congress DONG TAM, Vietnam CUP!) -Bob Hope today in!dicated be i!: tired of the .Vietnam War, but will_ keep ei;itertalning the troops no matter what happens. . , ...... "I agree it was important to stop the Communi!ts' ag- aression here, but it seems ·to-h8.ve dragged on and on," he said. "I want to do some nice peaceful shows without the sound of artillery in the back1round ." Hope made lhe remark in a bacUt.a.,ge interview at this Mekong Delta combat base, as the air vibrated with the roar of Cobra helicopter gunships and the thunder of artillery. Hope, visibly exhausted by his tour of the war zone, was not all glum. He said bis respect for the morale of the American troops Wv- ing In the war had risen. • "They somehow ·seem lo be in much bettt.r shape this .Year," he .said. Hope's weariness from 15· hour days was not reflected in the shows he presented in the country. Most men view him as Vietnam's aruwer to Santa Claus and he did not disappoint them. Daily the 65-year-old performer appeared before the troops with an ever-chang- ing routine of topical jokes and a lot of "Hope." Combat soldiers, their boots still stain· ed with mud and, sometimes, blood sat for up to 18 hours lo await his arrival. ''Hope is Christmas," one !oldler said. "It makes com- ing to VJetnam seem a little worthwhile." . ... WASHi'NGTON (UPI) - The ~I Office Departl\lent, which 1;..,t October claimed A ' s ... , ,)lobert P. Griffin '(R- Mich ), might owe the tai:· payers $25,000 in postage, an· The uninterrupted raids into Laos appeared to be ba.sed on allied fears that the Commu- nists are preparing to launch another naUonwidt offensive from their Cambodian sancu,i. aries. nounced ,today it will not tryl;=========== '°collect.· Here's Where ' The department issued • 1 new policy involving the use It's At! or congres!ional franking , privileges -the method through which members of Congress may mail their cor- respondence tree of charge. The new policy says that Congress, all individuals Qr as a body, from now on wil1 1 have the responsibility of l deciding whether s u c h privileges are being ab111ed.' Previously, the departmentl has iuued ruling! on such Possible violations. -----· - Open your new savings account or add to your savings where you Nrn tha natior1'1 highett rete of lnter11t on Jnoured savings,..Anehtlm SaVlngs and Loan Auoclotlon. Interest Is compounded doily and paid from the 1st when funds are recei\led by the 10th. Fundo earn to dote of withdrawal when held for 90 days. 5% current annual rote yields 5.13% on fundt held for one yHr. 5.25% on bonus accounts held for 3 yeirs-$1000.00 minimum amount. Accounts are insured to $15,000.00 by Iha F1deral Saving• and loan Insurance Corporation and protected by Anaheim's 100% record of "ftty tinca· founding Jn 1921. S.rving the Orange County area from our three offices ... Anaheim, Huntington Beach and 8re1. \ lhlllY ~ILOT S " -Flit Wi/lespread;- • Deaths Doub.ling WHERE ON EARTH ARE . .' . THESE PEOPLE GOING? New York, Chicago, London, Paris Could b• any~h•r•, but •• kn~w th• first stop is LA lrit•rnational Airport. w. fly th•r• and beck 9 tim•s •tt•ry d1y from Oring• County Airport .•• in 19-pa11•i\gtr T-!•ts. It only tak•1 20 minut•s which ltatt•s pl•nty of tim• to mali:t a conn•cting flight to anoth•r cl•sfination. Th• f1r1: $'1.95 IOn• Wey plus taxi Ntxt timt you pltn a trip to Los An9tl•1 or btyond, think of us. Call your tr•Y•I agent or Gold•n W•st Airlines 1t 1714) 540·7010. "IT SURE BEATS DRIVING" ' ~ ~ Golden West Airlines . -. . . ANAHEIM SAVINGS lntlllu 11"" to to <ch •killed er.,_,. dlsplov their rare talsnt. /II t1ie THI AllT OF GLASSILOWING E•hiblt It Demonstration January 2nd. thru 10th. . ' ··ES.DD% 5~253 ANAHEIM SAVINGS Eam 5.13% when our current annual rate Is compounded dally and maintained for a year . Current annual rate on 3-year bonus accounts. Minimum $1000 I ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION lil~ltl Offt9 ANAHllM I ..... I HUNTINOTOM llACH 187 W. l lf'IWI" ,.,., 110 I. If.a llYd. 4t1 Mtl" 8trMI f'IR 2·1532 .l•to4f7f ll t .. 9fl IJllCZ JU) fl'lll CON¥1NllHT , ........ AT A\t. J LOC.t.t •~ - • I I 1• I I , I ---. l DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I F oundatiOn Too . Shaky?· On Jan. 9, it will be exacUy two years from tbe port·Balboa ~ulal ~ day tbe Newport Beach munlcipal stall submitted to Accordingly, Ibo Clt,y Council'• pres<Gt ·commit. city councilmen an SO.page report recommending a new ment to Newport Center "!JL prtn<;!Jlle~· rather !ban In aovemm"'1tal complex. fact, may provide tbe county will! loo abaky a fci<µlda- Since then, additional studies have been undertak-lion on which to ':,f~• Ila ultimate Choice of a court lite. en by paid outside consultants and by unpaid citizen Newport om s, obViousJy, can at.rengthen that leaders. f0W1dalion ouly by making up tbeir minds -eltber !or These studies, some ol which are yet incomplete, so Newport Center.or not. • far lead to the conclusion that if a new civic center-is But the declsloo on !he !'II~ hall ajte sbOOld not be built, ii should be built at Newport Center. rather tban contingent on tbe locaUon of the ccwta. It should he ba>- at the present site. ed on economics and on providing the best serv'ice to As a consequence, the City Council recently endor· the community -not just in the ne:rt decade but into 1ed the Newport Center location "in principle" -b4t the next ceptury. "" only thal. The council no\v plans to ask the county to relocate U 0 ' Co l8 M municipal court facilities at Newport Center. on the pr 81' Ill S es8 basis that joint use of the site with the city would save The Ghost of Pop Festival Past raised its well-re- the county money. membered head .over the Harbor Area during the holi- That may well be -but only if th~ city is there to day season, creating a storm of unseas.onal emotion jointly use it. and alarm. With estimated valuations of;both the City Hall and Re.oalliJ)g that tile Pop FesUval of 18.jl August al- Newport Center properties now. undergOtng revision, most got out of hand, Costa Mesa's mayor and some there yet could be a softening of the city's enthusiasm o councilmen reacted apoplectically to plans for a for Newport Center. "Christmas F~ival and Freak Fair" this Sunday. Jt was originally estimated that the city would rea-They refused to give its promoter5 a city permit. lize savings of $1,069,000 by building at Newport Center It appears now that the show may go on anyway_ instead of at the present site. The new figures may cut \vi thout Costa Mesa's sanction. that savings in hall. The savings still would be very It may be just as well. The show, in actuality, is .sizable. And other advantages of relocating municipal proclaimed to be a showcase for amateur teenage musi- offices there instead of rebuilding at the present site cal talent and shouldn't be much like the widely dis- wou1d remain significant, of course. cussed Pop Festi.vaJ, at aJI. These include shifting with the center of population, The crux of the controversy was the fairgrounds with its transportBtion savings tcf citizens and city em-management's failure to tactfully inform the s how's plores. and having the· room to build a more functional plans to Costa Mesa City Hall before the program was ciV1c and cultural complex. ·. booked. Nevertheless, a decrease in what the city thought it The \\'bole uproar might thus have been avoided, in- could get by selling. the present site and an increase in eluding Newport Beach's temporary suspension of its the cost ol Newport Center land will very likely provide mutual assistance pact with Cost.a Mesa during the ammunition for those opposing the rpove from the New-course of the "Free.k Fair." N ' / "GESUNt>\-\EIT I' , • ' ' I ' I I ' " ' . -( t ' I ' ( I r I ( Ah Yes·, ·Coo.rage Sex Education ls Neglected By Parents Nobody Has All the Answers Now }, ! ~ -:.. ~~ ... Is_ the Thing By EW>WORTH L. RICH~ Mlnls.., . De Neighborhood Conare11tl61DI Q vrcli. · • Laguna Beach James Barrie said, "Courage is the thing . . • the lovely virtue. All goes if courage goes." Ah yes, courage is the thina! On t be maiden voyage af th e S. S. Hesperian, bound for Boston, Dr. Samuel M. liDdaay WU • ~er. In mid- Atlantic the shilo1.Jf.r\00untered the heaviest ~~ bl. Undsay had ever uperienced. '.llany ol the passengm doubted that tbe ship -now five days behind ~ ~ would ever make tt. Some becalne hysterical, yet the crew remained calm. Ooe terrifying afternoon when the ship was rolling fearfully, Dr. Linda1y asked a deckhand, "Doesn't the storm worry you?" •·NO," HE Rl:PLIED. "She's a light ship, and wti'y should I worry when Captain Barr is on the bridge?" The deckhand had faith in the ship, and faith In the captain at the helm . r -:: ,. "Why ilfool4 I worry when Captain Barr is on the bridge?" GOD IS OUR PILOT. Our faith ii in him! God has his eye oo &be ii.row I Robert Frost has a , ... !in .. In his poem, "CM>osing Sometbing Like • star". which seems so appropriate. Addressing the star he says: "Say somethinl ta us we can learn By heart and when alone repeat. Say something! And it says, 'I burn!'" Continuing the conversation, Frost goes on to say : ''It asks a little of us here. It asks of us a certain height. So when at limes the mob is swayed To carry praise or blame too far, We may choose something like a star To stay oar minds an and be staid." To the EdJtor : Sex ¥ucation: Whose Responaft)Jllty? As clhtic directer for the Planned Par- enthood Assn. of San Diego County r would Jike to share same al the facts which come across my desk: In U.S. alone, every hour, 27 oot -of. wedlock babie.s are born. A quarter of a mllllan American babies, one baby in 17, ate barn each year to unwed mothers. Forty percent of these mothert are between IS and .19 years af age, plus those with falsified blrtb certificates, plus the num- ber at.~criml11al abortions. ' > ' ~, 1 ~ !.. AN~·El>UCATED guess is'ilhat':.ooe In five lftgnancies is terminatt.d"bf'-.bor· lion. Fl(ty percent af high school girls are prt:cnant before they get married. The U.S. Census Bureau indicates th1t divorce in teenage marriage is three times · !Ughey' than for couples between ages 21 an'd 25. In the age group 12 to 19 years af age, syphilis baS increued 200 perceat in the last six years. Gonor- rhea reported in San Diego County in 1967 an all time high, 1,382 cues. In 1968, J,196. For the month of October, - 1968-24& reported cases. It is estimated that only one-fifth af the real number is reported. Stopping the Drug Flood One simple fact emerges fram all the discussion about the drug menace arnang young people: Nobody really knows what ta do about it. So·tbe heartaches continue. Young peo- ple, unaware ol the dangers ar perhaps aware but uncaring, go on experimenfing- with the stuff. They get picked up by the palice. thrown out of school and are cast adrift at a formative time in theiri lives. A le\r dJe il Ibey get hold ol the lethal type ol drugs ar tate ta sniffing inhalants. Others come clo.5e to death, saved perhaps by qlllck medical treat- ment ar their own wits. P.10ST KNOW enough to avoid . tbe well-publici24d addictive drugs. But tiler pop pills or smote marijuana, which is illega1. 'I)ley get arrested and at an ~l_y are have 1 ppllce record wbich probablJ will make things miserable for them the rest (If their lives. Whal can be said ta a mother whose son nearly dies after taking drugs offered by a "friend"? Or to the mother whose son suffered ~iJ:rmanent brain datnage by ln!;1fling toxic fumes? ·Last month there were 30 students expelfed from Grossmont Union High School District schools for various drug offeMes. This month there were lJ. Lut year there were 70. Where does it stop? THE TRUSTEES sincerely believe their unequivocal policy af mandatory expulsion for drug users acts as a deter- rent They think the situation woo1d be much worse if the policy were re1a:r:ed. Who knows if they are right or wrong? Nobody. Some parents whose children have been expelled disagree wltb the policy. They don't liU the idea of having their son of daughter miss school. They think the temptations ta further trouble are too great if a student Is kicked out of school. They argue lbat expulsion is not an effective deterrent, ciUng the f1ct that more kids are involved nOw than ever before. OTHER PARENTS whose children havtn't been involved in drug affenses, at least not ytil, defend the policy. They view jt as protection. They don't want their children associating with the drug users. They regard explusion as a just penalty for activity that is both illegal and physiologically ar psychologically harmful There is at least one obvious point: The drug menace is never going to be substantially reduced uni.ii more ef· fective action is taken ta stop the nooct of illegal and dangeroWJ drugs coming across the border. TOO MUCH OF the stuff is getting across. And the more that gets in, the greater the number af young people likely to be expoBed to drugs. An education program probably hel~ but it doem't help enough. There are students who don't learn to write ct. spell, even though they are in class every day of the year, and there are students who woo1d Ignore the best in- struction on drugs. The peaa1lies prabably deter many students, but obviooaly they do not deter all. So a merely punitive policy ba.IJ its limitations. AT LEAST ONE parent is SCI coottrned about the drug problem that she is thinking seriously af waging a campaign to clase the border. others are suggesting that the age limit for crossing be uppec:l from 18 lo ZJ. Ml Mlgud High scliodl' is forming a s-peclal committee af doc· tors, psycbologisl!I, e d u c 1 t a rs , pharmacists and parents to get some answers. It is encouraging that acUon has begun. An aroused community can do a lot if its citizens work together toward a common objective. And stopping the flaw of dangerous drugs to our young people js certainly a cause worth a fight. " ' THE SUGGESTION that the harder be closed might seem like an extreme remedy. But it is also true that dru9 abuse is an extremely &erious problem. AIIy ideas that might conlribW to a solution · aught · to be fully explored becaµse it'• obvious nobody bu all the answers now. Tire Daily Calllon!all El Cajon ' Tbt little ship that each ane of us sails at times is buffeted by heavy seas. We bob like a cork on the tempest o! easily ruffled emotions. Different penonalities assail us. We feel like a ahuttlecoct an a badminton court! Back and forth in the air, hit by apposing forces! But only if we could stand as the Rock af Gibraltar! If only we had the faith of the deckhand who said, "MAY I SUGG~ that we choose something like a star -"to stay our minds on and be staid"? What better star at this season of the year could we choose-than the star af Bethlehem? Facing the New Year, what better words could we choose than these? "Let courage rise with danger and strength to strength oppose." "Courage Is the lovely virtue ... it is the thing!'' Abused Word: "Freedom' AS A PARENT I must ask myself are we accepting our responsibility . to our children? Are we relating lo our children In such a way that they have the values i:istilled in them which will make for their happiness? Do we accept our own sexuality and in turn do we educate our yrung people to accept the responsi- bility for their sexuality ? Are we educat- ing aur young people as to how easily young girls become pregnant? Do v.·e educate our young people to the fact that promiscuity and venereal disease go hand v.i. hnnd? Do we educate our young people lo the dangers and risk involved in havhlg a criminal abortion? 'O hjectivity' • Ill Reporting ... I think there ought. to be a moratorium on the use · o! the word "freedom" for a full year. No American would be allowed lo use the word, or any synonym such as "liberty" and "rights." Instead, we would be compelled lo state specl.fically what we want or do not want in any given situation. That abstraction known as "freedom'' haa never been satisfactorily defined (much less agreed upon ) by the greatest phil~ the world has ever known. )t means as many different things to a.a many people as ''happiness" -and is just u subjective in most people's minds. TYPJCAL IS THE leller I received from a woman recently, saying. "I guess I 'm just old·fashioncd enough to believe in Law and Order and that the majority rules." ln the nert sentence, she says, ''I belona: ta that silent majority of citizens .who feel we should hold our Freedoms even more zealously in thtse Mod ti.ma ol 'ei•e-aways'. .... Could anything be more confusing ar self~tndictory than these statemenl!I placed tasetber! How are we holding our fTeedoma by denying demonstrators the riSht to protest? U the majority rules, whl.t about minority rights~ If LI• and Order (her capitalsi come ---811 G-rte Dear c:-a<: . Whal do you !hint ii COOiing the c11111nnmJcat.i"'11 pp betwttn YOUDI people ind lhtlr elden? C. T. Dear C, T.: A.a QNT]y 11 I can det.ermint. the main troublo 11 th« older Jl'O' pie are IO busy 11bbin1 about the _.,unlcaUons pp that klds can\,.. a won! In fd&ewl ... before Justice (my capitals), then JHUer and Stalin should have been Upheld. THE PLAL~ FACT of the mailer is that we are for "liberty" when it suil.'l our purpc>6el. and againat it when it seems ta threaten our self-Interest. We are for upholding law when the law favors us, and fer subverting It "'hen it seems lo handicap us. We are for order when the Ofder preserves what we have, and &gaiost CJrder when it seems to perpetuate an unjust status quo. There is distressingly little intellecfual clarity ar emoUoaal honesty in most palllical catch-phrases, whether of left, right, or center. AU such abstractions as "Creedom" are 'self-serving most af the time -like the pathetically absurd people who believe. In tht "freedom'' ta sell your hause ta anyont you like, but not in the 1'£reedom" of anyone to buy your house who ean a!ford it' WORDS, AS SOr.IE Frenchman has said, are usually used to conceal thoughts and feelings, rather than to expreu them. We n e e d a lharough semantic cleansing of our verbal stables, for we art wa1kinJ around hip-deep in the ordure cl our special vocabl1larles. And no ont, or course, can detect his awn rankness. for he Is too close to it. 3S the drover cannot know he reek.I of caittle. Confucius said 1h1t the goad state begin.'! I not ends) wilh the right u~e of "-'Ord~. and he ~·aJ not far off the 111ark. Until we can agree on what "lr«'dom" 6hould mean, we merely com· pound trror liy uslnr it. ' As ~ clinic director I can aruwer tbese questions: "No, we are not fulfilling our responsibility as pareits." And if we as parents will not -ar do not -who will? DOLORES J. REYBURN, R.N. T hrllt..d b y Cl1or11• To the Editor : Parents and friends were privileged and thrilled Dec. 19 lo hear the wark of our choral department af Corona de! li-1ar High School, under the dirtcUon of Mr. Haneke, prEisent their Christmas program. I just wish Uiat there were .,?ome way to expose our whole comm1U1lty to the beauWul expression of these young people and their direetor. THE AUDIENCE seemed &pellbound, especially with their presentation of "The Chri!tmas Stary:• lt was indeed en· lhraUing. We are extremely fartunate to have ~lr. Haneke in lhis area. The wort of the choral teachers with our young ptop~ i., tremendous. We awe them our stoc.Tre apprttiaUon and 1lqlpl)TL MRS. TlMBtllbAKE Ltttwn lrwl\ '"'"" ••• -. .,,.,..llt' ~ lloovlll ~ llltl• ,,,.. ....... -_... .. '"' ,,. tllM llJ ~ le!Wrt • '" ..c. ... tllml- 11•M llbfof It ........... All Mtt.rt l'f!oUll ~ '""'II.IN •nd .... u1tot 91Hrtu.. Wt -• "'" tot •t?tlllelll Oii ,_, It """lcltnl rM110n " e~. Quotes \1lrglnh1 flt1rfe. Rodandl. Sa. S,F". - ''Love is the goal which gi\•es men mtanin~ to UIC!lr livts.." Opinions olfered in a talk to journalism students: One of the more damaging or the ice-age newspaper a1.ioms (anything pre- about-1940) was (100 greatly revered in Us time. Clty editors glibly oUered it to cubs: "Write as if you are writing for the Kansas City milkman." (It was, of course, possible to substitute the milkman af any town. Somehow, though, the Kansas City version was the ooe most !requently beard. Never having done research on the milkmen of Kansas City, I do not know whether they were in any sense special.) THIS ASININE advice lllOd other -pearls llke it were responsible for some very dull journalism. If I.he Kansas City milkman read it he must have found it duR going. "Objectlvtty" was an idol belare which young journalists were re- quired to bow. Much incense ia the fortn of sanctimoniaus speeches was af- fered heatedly by speakers. Net ~feet ar this was to make newspapers and newipaper men and woolen conformists. Dear Gloomy Gus: Wby dan 't tht street tues go to work on Balboa tzland and the alley.a in Corona del Mar? -F. S. J . fllll ... """' ....-c.. ,......,... ........ .., tl9'ftl.,ll' ll!ftt .. IM M-•-· ..... \'tVI' "' """ • 0""""'1 G ... D.U,, ,.1r.1. Objectivity, per se. la, af course, a necessary lngrtd)ent of so.called · batd or straight news, although those who use the words are never able to define exactly what they mean, except to say defensively, "You know -hard ntwS -that's what." FOR DECADES, city editors. manag· ing editars and schools of joumalisrn taught I.heir Ol'D personal venkm of objectivity. Tbe history ol j..rnallam, especially that or the yellow journalism years wftln the allqed Utans were fOIJD- diog dyoasti,., empltts and legends, includes very little objectlvif.¥ as the dictionary defines It. But newspapera were exclUng and they w~ read. Too many schOols ,of journa1i"1-'ud m1ybe too many cliy roan\ Utans !\ave,· 1 ·.lhl~. i focused ari imparting a set ·of 1kiHs rather than'an creaUng a human~behi& full of cutjoolly .a!>OOI ~pie and Ille and aft itt!l to kn<nf the "why" of things ada not merely what. where. and when. A WE SEE AT LEAST some '.<I the newspapers today waking to the ' fact that much of the writing In their papers must have a point of view. 11:fls i.s especially !Ju~ in the so-called "In depth" or "ltiterpret!ve" or "analysis'' articles that are such necessary elements of lnday's neWspiper. Wrlt<ra wbo cu do superb Jobi on ouch articles In poutlcl, religion, educadon, poverty, the genu• lion gap, and so on, can'.t be "edu- cated" to ~ so. Nar can the mere acqulremerit ~ skills make it poalble. The htnnan bill\f must samehow be o product af the processe!I ar lta.rnlng. A R~CENT ARTICLE in the Author's Guild Bulletin comnlenled on the fact I.hat man1 of the major Amertcan writ~ of this century, whoae wr!Un.p are now used extensively in .secondary schools and colleges, oever completed a collegt education. Sornu never made any attempt to attend college. Hemingway and' Sherwood Anderson belong in the latter category. Eu&tQe O'Neill and Fitzgerald were dlsmiJsed from Prioceton. Drelset: was a dropout from Indiana University. Robert Frost left Dartmouth and Harvard aod took up farming. Faulkner had little education past high school. Steinbetk dropped out al Stanford in bb . .freshman year. Jack Landon, Mart Twain, Joseph Conrad, Herma n Mtlville, William Dean Howells and Ste~ Crane rrom an earlier era had no college tr~. U TER CAME the now literary heroes -mart of them college educated. Norman Mailer, for example, has a Harilnl. degree. But, again, the pen- dolwn begins to swing. Unlait an education provided much more than 't'OC8tkmal skllls, it will be ol llllle help ol becoming a nempaper man or WtlmlD -or 1 writer ar pae:ms or "botb." -~--. ' Friday, Dec. 27, 1968 TM cdUoria1 page of the Dea~ PUot 1eeb to inform and 1tfm.. ulalc .-"' "'""""'° thio ~· """"°"' and co.. ""1lta1tl °" topics ot intcrtst "*' llgnlffoanc<, ~,provtdlno o forvm for U..' nprudon of our Nadna' opitsions, and b~ prUC1ttiaQ Che dt0t1"1t vftw- pcNnti of ln/onntd obstr~r• ond rpok.tltMft on. topics of tht day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher ----------------~-~ ----,-_;;:---• -- --· .. • • r ... ay'.s C::IOlfng ' ---~-·-~Df!l~N, • -• -..-::r:;:' -~~ = . . -. -N.Y9: S(ee~ .. -. -.. ~; _. ----. • .-.... -i:::; vo!S6r, NG.-30~4 ,SECTIONS, 3!3PAGES == .... • ........ . --.... ~ ~ ~ QRANG°l: COUNTY, CAl:ll'ORRIA---·-. . =--'.,;: ~ -FRIDAY, ·oECEMBE-R 2i, 19~a ___ · --- TEN CENTS ---_. -_,.. _, ""'f' • • .. • ·--~· -_ __,,_ . _._ ... -..__ ___ -.----... "" . --.... -· .... --.... No Police By JOHN VALTERZA Of fll• 0.llY Piiot Slaff ,. '1cre will be DO Christmas Festivr · Freak Fair on the Orange Coun' ~ .. ;·grounds Sunday. ·:Jenn Adams, station manager an t>gram director for FM 5tation KTB'i 1 Garden Grove said today he had haJ -;l hour lQ go before his fune .rao out · 1 find 20 legally sworn policemen to "llpervise the station-sPOMOTed. rock- Jlhd show, a.11d "We have exhausted <!Vtry possible: resource and come up ·.vlth nothing." . J'alr Manag~r Alfred Lutjeans offici- ally announced the fate or the show at U:JS p.tn., saying he had been author- ized by the board to ~ounce the can- cellation. He said the board "annoooces wilh regret that the festival will not be held at this time." ,'fhur3day, the station was given 24 boors to muster enough off-duty police officers to satisfy security requirements ~d down by fair directors. T.he directors established the time limit at a special meeting Thursday during which it seemed the festival coold i;o. on as planned provided the security requirements were met. Xhe failure to muster the police closes the curtain on two weeks of controversy over the festival durklg which · the Costa Mesa City Council refused to grant an entertainment license to the promoters. despit'e approval of the event by the fair board. Adams said be had contacted every law enforcement agency in t¥ county to ... oo avail. "We got blanket negative riilpomes from all of them a!lit most jdst said it was their pgUay not .to ~ die officers. Some! just flatly refused with no e.1planation." .Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger E. Neth said Thlp'sday promoters of the t-h i:> w faced possible misdemeanor Cbarges if they pot the show on Sunday because the cijy bad Mt granted the festival an entertainment perm]L · Ironically, a similar festival, featur- lq popular music groups in a festival .omiat, has fU.'1 into difficulty in Ven- tilta, where fair offici4]s tu!,ve approved ale; 6how, tentaviely schedtiled for ne.1t Jutie. However, city official!, alarmed at ··the possibility of trouble at the af. fair, have objected violently. -One councilman declared that it would rtqttire tile National Guard to keep order at1'1he affair. The issue there is at an impasse, with no decision expecied un- tlt next month. ~The spectre of the tumultuous, two-~)"·Newport Pop Festival held at the Orange County Fair~ la:it August , ~~ over the two-week con.troversy &mday's show would 1 hive featured ~ Orange County high-school-age groups seeking initial e.1posure to alldWices. Mesa Wife Gets f. : Jail Sentence (ii Bar Shooting I (ftscencia M. Lakes of COsla Mesa must serve six months in Orange County Jlil-for the barroom shooting of her hult>lnd, ·a .superior Court Judge ruled ThUf8day. JUllge Robert Gardner suspended a five-year state prison term and ordered Mr8f Lakes, 39, to serve that period olf -J!r'obation for her conviction on cJiM.ies of assault with intent to commit rmitjJF. NIP· Lakes, 2659 Orange Ave., wrui ~ by c..ta Mesa police last Oct. Ye Ole Inn, 2376 Newport Blvd .. arter the angry woman unseated sband from bis bar stool with lade of shot3. Monte Lakes, 30, wu-Areated for bullet wounds in the abdtmen and buttocks. Mictrs aaitl Lakes was ·seated at U.·Nr drinking. when the angry wlfe entered the crowded tavt!m during the "llm>Y Hour:· They .aid she coolly ~ up to the bar and ordettd a drtnl:, after shooting her lw!band and ~med it while waiting for: tbe_police te m1ve. ' "'' Stock M•rkcu N!lW yoftK (AP) -The llOck mar- kl!t''lll!andoned a alight early lead Ind ~ irregularly Sower Tate Utf~ after- noail.. Tr&din(was moderate. (See quota~ lior<,Pqeo :ZWS). , I ' ' .. . --.. -·. -. . . -. ., ,. . Vl'I Tttwlttlt , APOLLO 8 ASTRONAUTS MERE EARTHING$ AG~IN Af"TER HISTORIC MOON FLIGHT Spece Voyagers Borman, Anders •nd LoVtll (from leftJ In Succeasful Splashdown desa Police Ask R.esidents Help I Moon of Cheese·· , ~' ABOARD USS YORKTOWN -While kllling a bit of time Jn pre- f F 'nd • G I dawn hours, bobbing Jn the J;'acific aboard Apollo 8, astronauts .. rt i ln g Ult · • chatted via radio with the lle1lcopter hovering over heed. 1 . During radio conversation; helicopter ,Commander Donald S. Costa Mesa police today appealed 1.o Jones 'of Madison, Wi1., a1ked the astronauts·wbat the moon was reslderitJ (Jf Uie lf~l area of Ne~'-tnad.e o(. porJ'~-· ,. ' ·~·loaded_, sawed· 0 1t's vnpt made of green•cheese at aU,''.replied -Air Force CoL . off · oittm , t behind by a Frank -Borman;""~ -~· ~· :1 ' ~ pair ot robbery .before t!Jeir ar· "lt's made oµt of Atnericait~ehe~o:'f.J, :, , tl. <+ . ~ -• ; ' • , '. I .;lJtr11, , . ·, J , ·:" ,: • re .. ., ·, . . 1 1•,.;m~tllt"'!lilll•ill..,.rillm•IMitlllilt~iliiii•~il':lir..=""'=mm• Police ~ve aettr Tboml*D' aa1d ~ ... -• • · * -• thtf'W b bellevtlfi to be in the ~ -"-t' .. ~ • ... ~ 29, and ~eft wl7.~aro6r. :a:: TL..~1· 6is Find '.l\."ro; .. ·.~e· rio' us pett, in the $200 hold up ol a Costa v~ ' ": 1 ~·I ~ Mesa bar Monday. The couple was arrested in Westcliff after a wild purouit Monday morrtlng. Thompson said dozens of officer& walk- ed the entire route of the chaae and tbt area of the arrest in an attempt to lo- cate the weapon, but failed to find it. .li\j~es ht Pueblo Crew. He npre.ssed fears that the .4-10-gauge SAN · DIEGO , <A?J . -; T~e Navy is weapon sawed to a two-foot length might conducUng tntensiye que$llcning ol the get into the bands of children. freed crewmen of the USS Pueblo after Thompson said possession or a sawed-exariihUni dOc:tors reported finding no . off ibotgun is a felony. He urged peraona serious defecta~ o.t.b;_er than malnutrition. wild m.Jght find the gun to· Ieave·tt 'Un" ' A ~-Or'~ .htn 100 intelligence disturbed until police arrive. Anfone firullng the gun should notify police at specialists began talking with crewmen llU6252. Thursday afternoon in what will become Officers already have found two live one of the most exhaustive Investigations shells of the same gauge in a planter of a loss of a ship in Navy hi$ry, of .the Weatcllff Shopping Center. The offlclab said shella ,wtre believed to have been dis-Tbt In ·., tor 1 1 L . cardeil _b)' the SUBpeCts. ~es~ga s w~ o AIW.W The Cristi face a pl'eljminary hearini:, ., pr~ ~ much sensitive elecirQn1c Mohday on cahriea of holding up the -equipmd may have been left intact Royal Crest, 1700 Placentia Ave.,.Cost'a ~when· the North Koreans took control Mesa: ·'.: • of tlie' fn1elllgeaCe vessel. , ~ The clrc1mloiances of the Jan. 23 .cap· tlll't q4 W,,tment of the American:ri aJao,. conoeru ,the questioners in ll'Cat degree.·.\· , Mi>ther : Fears No Civic Official L. Louise Lindsley Houghton, or 5181".! W. Bay Ave., Balboa, has lodged a claim for less tha'l $20 against the city of Newport Beath. The claim is for damages to f1'frs. Houghton'• car allegedly resulting from a minor coUision with a city truck. City councilmen rJ)Utinely turned the claim over to the cit)'.'• Insurance carrier. Vioe Ma.Yer Lindsley Parsons abstain· ed from the COWlcll action. Mrs. Hough~Of! is Parsons' mother. The wiinl On the health of the 12 crewmen, ft\urned to the United Slates Jut Tuesdatl)'after 11 montlu captJvily in NOrth KOrta, came in a news con- ference ~ay from Rear N;lm. Horace D. WV<Jen, comn;widing officr ol llie U.S. Nllfal Hospital here. ".All of thelftt_·show effects of malnulri· tion • . h inlti.blllty in bala!lce • • . and no d e u b t there are other deli· clenciea wbich we have not yet had lime to st1ldy ill\ depth," Warden aaid. Unlll . hOW, ~~:sild, there have bieen no. serloat ~noted. He 1ald atr ·CHwu1en ~a.mined bad been physically mistreated. There were no &:ign11 of ~uberculosis, he aald. Warden said ,µi~, n;ien also ~e '':'Jl· dergoing psychological testing since "all ~sons ·who have undergone "11 ordeal such .as· ~ men are subject to psychological press.ates and change&:. We ·mus\ evaluate ·it." · One . of the men to undergo some of the most intensive debriefing will be the ship's e.1ecutive officer, Lt. Edward R. Murphy Jr., who was navigator on the brldgf: when the Pueblo was captlll'i!d~ Murphy, looking more res\tjd than at this Cirst stateside news conference Tues- day, told newsmen he deliberately misled hls North Korean captors when Ufey forced · blm to ' draw charts tha,t gave the Puebki'i po8Itan inside North Korean 'Waters a~ Ute time of th~ capture. "I wanted to make sure there were enough inaccuracles in what · l ·was saying to ,be identified," Mijrphy said. He said'the North Korean officer "who had to. prove the whole farce" bad no navigatlonat experience and allowed ob,ious errors to paJJs. The 31-year~ld lieutenant from San l>elgO lltid the errors included positions that w6'l]d :have required a speed of 2,500 knots to {Mintain, and another positiQn S2 miles inland. He said he planned the inaccuracies to show to the world thit the evidence was doctored by the North Koreans. · 1 "There ts absolutely no questV>n in my m¥!d and the minds of the1tcrew (See PUEBLO, Page I) Mexi~o 10: ·auy Mesa? Group Offers $160 fi>r .City-$320 With8ut Council A Me.lican poliUcal group hu turned tablet!~ on the Ctty of Costa Me!a and hu olf<ftd to biiY ·lhe lolr city for 11641 Amertcu. ·Anl!"tht liJ'OOl(> · aay1 it wUI doublt that amounl ll the Coata Mesa City ColincU doesn't oome with the deal. A polllleal..liCl!on •group e('yOW1i Ti- juana -., to Fn!rite ll41iona! de Acct.in Polltlca. or FRAP (a bnlnch of the powerful natlon'1 PRI Party Jn Mexico), wants to "oiler to pay the sum of 1,000 p..., lo' acqulre the <lily of Colla Mesa u • recrutJonal area." 1n • letter to Ult! DAILY PlLC7I' editor FRAP Pmldent Allredo.Lopcz Gutlierei with dry wit submitted h1s group's "COWl~" to a rtlolutioo Nqv, r , . . 13 by the Costa Mesa City Council urging the U: S. Go""'m11mt• to purchue the Mellcan .we <>1 Balo Calllornia. "Tlial we 'did7 DOI respond to this idea earlltr ref1ectl neither a lack of inttrelt;,. n« a lack of conaJderatke on our _part," ht writes, "It.ls 1bnply that wt wW.. lo taJce lime to propare our ~' propooal. "We are now ready to announct It in the 1&me graclou1 and enllghtaned spirit of ,IDW~Am.erlcan cooperation dlrplay"1 by !ht Costa Mm Clty C....- cilmen. '' The letter lddt, "Tii the kind words of one Coat.a Mesa Councilman (WlUard T. Jordan), we think advantAlll wou1d be obtained DOI lllllt fia'"Motlco, bat tor C6sta Mesa as well. 'Whether Costa MeS111s resent us or not. we don't know, lllthough they seem to be a gentle 'peo- ple." · lie'uid hill group ls willing to negotfate varloua upecta: ·ot the offer. "1otl example, tf in ltcquiring t.he City of Colli Mesa-h are relieved of the ~l!llY10L1laq, 1eceplin~ I~ ll'.,. ent.Cley C.UOCll.,we.a"' willing "l'fl"Y 4,000 Pesoe:." · · • GUtUeNt C011Cludes, "'We a.•k to be foratven for fonmilJ.ftl ' h I • C<Jt&o' l<rprOpo$al to a ...-..paper rather llftn to 101De comp&tent authority in i. M-but, uofO<tunately, "" doo'I 1f11 -pttent authorlUet In a M..._, I . - Perfect-Land·ing En~s Long Trip·· • ,. _ABOARD USS'YORKTOWN {AP) -Apollo 8 returned from its half· millicih mile ·voyage to the lllllOD Friday, burning through the atmoo- phere to a pinpoint J~.lrl.1be dal"k on genUy rolling tropical seas 1,000 m.Qes south of'}faWl.i£! ·~ · Air Forc.e Col. Frank Borman, Nary Capt. James A. Lovell Jr. and Air Force Mlj. Wllllam'A. .Anders, history's first moon martDerr. toide their spacecraft lhfougb • .the holt,a~ fastest return from ~ over · fa a landing ooly 5,llOO yards from the woJtlng recoVery ca.mer, the USS YorktoWn: So accµraie. waa ·the return h·eifcopter pilot!, boVerh!a near the eq>f<ttd landing point,~ JJere , able to. see 'the .apeteeraft In tht pr&<lawn dark u Ii '.detcended UD(ler;JU three huge white and orange parchlltea. " ' ' ..The tandlng was like all ol the filgbt lhat went before It: Dawl"8. The flllhl : itar.ted. at the prtclse seColid ' planned, (Ad4lllonal Slorit1, PholGI, P"11t1 '4) ·-. 7:51 a.m. EST lut Saturday, and ended within · -of the planned, llme, alm9st uacUy 1'7 hours later. BeimAn Ind hi! crew atayed aboard their rpacecral~ hobbing gently In nve- foot waves, until dawn erased the darkness around them. A bellci:>pter 1 like a mechanical.mother hen, hovered over the mOOMhip, wolllng for flrsl IJibt ~ ¢1•1\ed llllllably w\th the chop. per ·1111!>1, ~· Donald.' s .. J-ol M~,~~,and WU ·~'.tlaled ,~Iii• 1=wa ·•.i1.•·ici to the . UliOaaoitl ~ ~· Jobnoou ,.1 ~the Al>"lltl • ""IE"1· .. !i!t'. ··-~ fninl ilt ... co~ W:lll. peaoe.lorl!ll' ; in the world. Well done." '\You made us feel kin to those Euro- peans ·nve cet!turles aro who fint heard news Of ·the New · World," the President said. "You've seen what man has never seen before." He diaclosed the White House used tbe .S.,vlet-U.S. hot line to keep the RU¥ian officials Informed of the pro- gre.Ss ·of the IUght. · · ·~The.Soviets were very solicitous about the welfare of you astronaut.. and ex· pressed . griat interest,'' JotlnBOD said. Apollo B's flight-man's fastest, highest, and riskiest -went in it.& entire- ty like a well-rehearsed, well·perfotm- ed drapia. The re-entry, ending~ hall-million mile coast from an orbit around the ijloon, began· as the crew separated tPeir tiny command moduJe from tbe1r service module, the apacecrart'a "1UppJy rqom", !See APOU.0 FIJODT, Pqo I) Funeral ~eryi~ stated fQr · ru~h · Mesa Recluse Funeral services bl;ve been scheduled for a wealthy Colla Mesa wiClower who died Dec. %3 Jn apparent poverty. Grayeslde me. wW be held at 1 p.m. Monday ll Harbor .Rest M<mortlll Park, Co.!ta Mesa, ~ J'amea T. PeskuJe, 77, of 3S4. Magnolia St. Mr. ,Peskule died of natural causes in ·eosla Mesa Memorial Hospital. A search of the seedy, littered home by public . admini&trator's investigators reveaied'the presence of $13,000 in United Stolts Sav(ngs Bondi Ind bank boob which reflected balances tota1ling anoth· er $21,..o:l. Subsequent checks of the ·accounts - two in the Costa Mesa branch of Un1ted State National B a n k of America - revealed actual deposits of $14,<m. Public Administrator James V. Heim says there are two pc>Aible ~wn claimants to the $21,000 eat.ate. A niece, Eleonor Zilil18ld of Bensonyllle, m,, wW nol. ~ ,present at the funeral ""vice, he aaid. but there is a '"s~ pollibWlj!" .lhat.ldr. Peatu)e'a 89-iear- old ~liw, ', Mra. T. M .. TtpDU or Loe ArigeJei. will altO!ld. • AdditlOnal usets In the Ptlkule'1 estate Include the rundown ·home Wl\leh Helm valuOI oJ llJ,llOO tO fll,000. "Mr. Peskult dla Ml leave a will Ind dlrpool- tion of lhe estate will have to dtpend, on court -.mlnalloo of the lawful ne'lt of kin+'' he said. Mrs. ,J>MtuJe came to C.O.ta Mtaa 12 years 11go after rtlli'lng from bla. Job as a postman . In Clcoro, Ill. He hod lived alone II the Mqnolla Slrffl addrtll &I.nee bis .wife, Belle, died theie last June, at, Soviets Give U.S. Praise For Apolw MOSCOW (UPI) -The news ol the sale landing of Apollo I WIJ.I distributed to Soviet ..,..papen by the olficW Tm news agency within minutes after the splashdown. -· · Moscow radio'a various services UJed the neY's u their lint item on the 7 p.m. newscast, unusu.8Uy fast reporting in a country where eV'try news item mult be checked by variOUS" authorities. The rapidity of reporting renecllnl the huge Interest the Apollo fiigb\ hid·.,,.,. ed In this highly ~. liiUOn. weate-· were ~,~pped In Moo- "'"' ... todaJ ~ oUed when tho ·~rift was acbedl&led to mum to 'tll1ll'.l,'llie quesilon .... ~ly fol· lowed lo!'"Ob~y sincere ~· of cumalulafiool anol•'beol wbfidl• the hlilSic· Alntrlca ' lail.....ebl · 'll\O Wly· Tau nporil w.re'complete- ly £actual. It said the Apollo 8 came duwn "Mar Chfl!tmas.Island ln-Oie Paclflc." landing 4,!00 , melen from the aircraft carrier Yorktown. Atheist Ccdls For Prayer Ban In Outer Space ' AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -Madalyn Mill' ray :o'llalr, Am"erica's most fain.OWi atheist, has extended her "catnpaign agalnst religion to outer space. · After hearing the Apollo 8 crew bfoatt. cast prayers and Bible Pas:!!akes from their spacecraft as it · cirtJed the mootl this week, Mr11. O'Hair announced she would register a protest with NASA an~ start a mall canjpalgl> qllnst future use of prayer on spar.efllghts. Mn. O'Hair, who tenne her'self "the m01t ' hated woman in. ·u.e , .world" for her · auccessful suit apinlt p-ayer in Anitriean pbbli« o!hotll, .aia 'fhllrldllY ChriSUanlty "11 a minor'rellglon. .. 1 '"I'bere are more MoSieins th4n C?iris- tians. There are more Hindus than ·ChriJ. tians. There art more Buddhistl ·than Christians," she said._ "And . this, in a sense, broadCasijng to tbe entire world, was slanderi!;tg other rtligiens, slandering those persons 'who do not accept re- ligion." · She termed the prayer and Bible readings by tbe Apollo 8 astronauta "ex~ tremely Ill-advised and m o 1 l un· fortunate.'' Orange Cout Weadaer • That miserable wetkend w,.thtt -cloudy with a return of the wet stuff -Is on Iii> for the Orange Coast, • with temperatureo llill mired lo tbe low eora. JNsms TODAY The DAILY Pl/JOT'• Viad,.. gui.rhtd Per/Ofmn• in commun- ily u. .. i.r take th• 1PO.l1'9~t to- day I• U.. WEl::KENDER '• JntnmUrion column. PoQt 11. --M ., ................. Clt'Mff'c.i.lf n ......... . ,,,.,.. ...... • 14 h&f'l.... .. •• -· .. .. -· .... .. Stl(t: .MwtW 1 .. ll T9tm.... tt -n l"MtMr • --.. ......... tMt . . ' • .._. ..... ,_ ... , ~ .,._ I 'f'""-. • ... .__ .• .;;,:..:~;:;-:;:_=..,.=-.. ·~..dl.O.. ....... _____________ _ • I ' • ' 2 DAILY PILOT c Wives Give Prayers ' On Return • SEABROOKE, Tex~ (UPI) -The Apollo 8 wives whispered prayera of thanks for the aafe retum of their apaCe- men today then toasted their moon mis- sion with big, green bottles ol cham~ agne. "Let'• make this one a prl)'tt of lhankqivlng," oald Valerio Andera, lhe wife of rookie astronaut Wllllam Andera. A catholic mass was celebrated at the Anders' nine-room two-story brick home just seven mintes after the Apollo a splashdown in the Pacific. Thick, green Christml! trees stood tall tn the li'fin& rooms at the Anders' house and at th• homes of feliow astro- nauts Frank Bonnan and James Lovell. The three families waited to celebrate a last Christmas with the astronauts who circled the moon 10 times on~ their holiday trip into untraveled space. President Johnson talked wilh the three wivts in a ainference telephone call 25 minutes after splashdown. He said the astronauts and their families "had been in the personal p-ayers of Mrs. Johnson and me during the fli&hl," said Walter Fruland, NASA protocol officer. "The President told them how the \\'hole country and ill prayers had been trying to Insure the success of the mis- sion," Fruland said. "Thank you, Mr. President," said Susan Borman ... t think it's a we 11 de- served victory. Thank y o u for your lhougbtfulness." The three wives Thursday night at- tended a party traditionally held in the course of every manned pigbt, at- teDcied by w:lvea of all NASA aatronauts. * * * 'Hot Line' Used To Tell Soviets Of Apollo Trip. WASIUNGTON (UPI) -President Johnaon today told tbe Apollo utro- nauls in a telephone can that the hot line to MOICOW had been um! to. toep the Kremlin Warmed <lf all major de- velopmenta in their hiltoric moon flight. In a direct call to the carrier York· town, be advised the space heroes the Soviets were "very sollcltoull about the weUare of you astronauts and express- f'd great lnterest in the wccess of the flight." "I had a memorandum a short time ago from the men who handled the Waablngton ·Moscow boWne," Johnson said. 111 thought )'CIU •Would be interested in a portion of thaC memorandmn .to the President. "It said that due to the interest of the SovietJ in the Apollo program, we asked them after we heard from them on Apollo 7 il they woud be Interested in being Wormed of developments in Ap:illo 8. "The botllne personnel in Moscow re!· ponded enthus.iasUcally and uked us to keep them posted. So we informally here at the hotline in Washington relayed Information in regard to the most im- portant aspects of your flight , • . " Jobmion told the utronauts: "We all know that you men were supported by an elaborate technical apparatus by many brilllanl and devoted men and women here on Ule ground." "We salute all of them," Johnson add- ed, "u we salute you." Then. Johnson told the astronauts in conchWon: "Well done." Nixon Back in Florida KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -Presi· dent-elect Nbm, back at h1s Key Bis- cayne hideaway after a flying visit to a prtvai. Wand in pie Bahamu, plan- ned another day of rest before a Satur· day cooference with fo'reign policy ad- vi.ser3. OAllY PllOT OllANGt: COM. ~UILISHING CON#AAY Rebtorl N. W••d ~nt ..... 1 •rid ~lll:lllthlr J•t• R. Curl•v Via PrH!~I l l!d G4!Mr1! M.1111ttr Tho"'•' k1•"il ldl~r T~o"'I' A. Mvrphin• Mlt'lfflnl l~l!Gr P•ul Nluen Advertl1ln1 01..-ctor C•n ..... OHk• llO W•1t l1y Sir••' M1ilin9 Adclr•11: P.O. lo• lli,O, t2'2' .,_....,... ~ hec:ll: %211 W•I lllbol loult'tl,,. L•11UN '"Kl'>: m 1"-t A~Hlll'lll111ton ... ell: M Mii $1rfft THANKS P)lESIDENT Mrs. Borm•n • ....___ "'' ,...,..... A PRAYER, A TOAST. Mrs. Lov1U \11'1 Tl"""" MRS. ANDERS, CHILDREN TALK TO NEWSMEN Hu1b•nd'1 Safi R1turn Bring• Joy From Page 1 '.APOLLO FLIGHT ENDS ••• and flashed on toward the atmosphere. Borman turned the command module blunt end forward and let an on-board computer take control. Within seconds, t h e spacecraft w a s flashing into the atmosphere at 24,500 miles an hour -almost seven mlle5 a ·second. Heat, from the friction of the spacecraft t'Olliding at high 11peed with the atlllMJ>here, built up lo 5,000 degrees and the heat shield covering the craft's blunt end glowed red as bits of it charred away. The computer, working flawlessly, roll- ed the spacecraft like a lop, as planned, giving it lilt enough to eltend the fllgbl as it 011shed over the Asian land mass. On board, the astronauts were out of lou~h with ground conttollers more than three minutes, as the disturbance of the high speeds destroyed com- munications. As the atmorphere gave an lnvi!ible brake on the spacecraft's speed, the astronauts, wearing the loose coveralls they had worn since just after launch, endured forees of up to sii Umea the faret of gravity for abort moments. Then, just as the spacecraft dropped past the 24,000.foot altitude mark, a heat shle1d covering the apex of the cone-shaped spacecraft fell away and two small parachutes popped into the rnahing air. 1be small chutes alabllized the craft for several seconds aru:I then three huge orange and while parachutes blossomed and the spa~aft descended at 22 miles an hour, !plashing in the dark of the pre-dawn Pacllic at 7:61 a.m. PST. It was d.ri.uling slightly, but Yorktown sailors could see tbe spacecraft beacon flash. A1TACHED COLLAR Fn>cm<n jumped into the ocean l>Wde the moooahlp at first light and attached a flotation collar and lnflated a rubber nil Then, one at a time, the utronautll kit UieJ:r spact sbetter -now a charred and btlple51 metal cone -and aot Into lbe nil A net mated from the hovering helicopta and lbe 1pacemen were IUled one by one out of the rafl On board the chopper, Borman grabbed a electric razor and removed &Ix days of beard growth u lbe plane churned towanl tile Yotklown. The hellcopU!r landed on the broad flight deck of the clITier and Donnan, grinning and waving, led hil two be1nled crewmateR through the chopper• hatch to a waiting red carpet. Sailors, wearing their Navy whitu: and crowding the flight deck in the early light, cheered as the spacemen, moving easily but unsteadily at first, walked to the ship's officers. Borman, invited to use a waJting microphone, thanked the ship's company for tbe recovery operaion. "We're very happy to De here with you," he said. "We appreciate your ef- fort!. We know you had to stay out here over Christmas. It seems that Jim Lovell and I always seem to ny in ))e(ember,'1 referring to the l~ay Gemini 7 of 1965. "We are very proud to be part or this great achlevement," the Air For~ Colonel said. "We're proud of it and we appreciate the part you played in getting us back." GOT CAPS A Navy officer then gave each of the astronauts Navy blue Yorktown baseball-style caps, bearing their names and the carrier's nickname: "The Fighting Lady." The space trio 9'aa theil wbislDld lato sick bay where one of the first Persom to greet them was a flight surgeon with a needle. Blood samples and :1-rays were taken quickly in the tint round in a long series of physical euminaUona. Later, the astronaut. sat down to a breakfast Borman had ordered as they "'ere floating in their 21pacecraft -steak and eggs. It was the same food they ate before theil; launch sit days before. From Page 1 PUEBLO •.. or ot lhe captain tbal dllJini no time did we intrude into lht territorial waters of Norlh Korea. At absolutely no timt," Murphy said. "We never got anywhere near their territorial waters." ?tflU'phy wu not allowed to talk in detail about lbe actual capture ol the ship. Navy olflclals 1ald that only lbe shlp'i 1klpper, Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, could give those deWla. Bucher, who is Ill, WU not present. At the same oewa conference, • Navy spoke.sman presented an exhaustlVI!! study which he said oonvinc:ed the Navy tha l the Pueblo wu no . clOlel' t.llln 16 nautical miles from U>e: nearest North Korean land when it wu taken . I SE._..., ~Held ~ · <;ln Laguna . . ' ' ~~gRap By .IU(Jll~!ll> P. N~LL . . °' '!"' ,.,,, "" ..... .':tslr cult; -·.-0r, 'l'lmolh), Leary · 'I" ~ ~ong 'lr\lh lila wife, llolemory Ind , oon Jollil1 in Laguna l!each late 1ltunday ntlljl on .,jrcotics charg... ~--;: Police allege they ~ t ""'I pound of marijuana and a ately two ounces of hashish arier~.li>pping the Leary station wagon. Leary, 41, a former Harvard clinlc:al psychologtJt, called the ~ .. _ tlnued police .i><OVoc:allon and-i\ar- menL" He told a reporter be bl.if four •ppeala pending In higbor cour1a which mlibl invalldate marijuana i.wa. 1lte "'110< Leary waa booied on ausp1. clon ol -1on of marijuana. Illa attracUve wile, Roaemar)', M, a former model and actress, and son, John, 20, were booked on SU1picion of PoUtaSlon of martjuana-.with .intenUo .. u it;• Pcilk:e ... ~cl Iha! the •hi!jk o1 lhe marijuana and haahlsb was Principally Jn poaaealoo of John Leary (on hil penoo) and Rosemary Leary, In a amaD Pll"" lnalde a bal , Police Lt. John Z<lto hid Ibo Leary ataUoo wagon, a 19115 model with battered •Ide, caught the attention of police offlcu Neil Purcell becauoe It wa. atopped in the center of !be 200 block'Gf Woodland !2 4 . . ii 4 4 a 3 4 E !5£ • DA!lY0PILOT 11.tf PPltM . . . LEARY.FINDS NO PEACE IN· LAGUNA Cult Lped1r and Family Arr11ted • Suspect L~ads Police . . .. To Body of Girl, 10 Drive with the Ughta oa•ll 11:30 p.m. . DES M. oft~• I . • .u,i;:.o, ~a (AP} - A ftigitive lowa, whi!.re Williams had turned hlmscil Leary clabried that the eaiWu legally from a Missouri mental hospital has parked and that' be aocf'bis wife were in Thursday morning. saying goodbye to their ·.00. All gave been charged with murder after lt.ading Aft~r his ai-raignmept on an open a rural addres! near Beni'et, said to police to the frozen .body of 10-year-old ch.arge of murder under heavy ............ be a ranch. Pamela Powers, missing aioce Christmas &'¥" .. Leary antf his wife were . soon free Eve. al the Des Moines police station Ttwrs- on " 500 bail each •·-' poli·ce • pt John day, Willams spoke only to his la um er, ...,, oui ae A Self-styled minister who identified .. , in jail overnight. They asserted he was Henry T. McKnight o( Des Moil)es. under the lnfl.uence of something. himself' as Anthony Erthell Williams, Nichols said officers did not press The young man was charged last year 24• • Negro, wordlessly directed delec· Williams for details of the Christma:t with being under the lnfluence of drugs tives to Pamela's half-cl9thed l>ody, E It h · f I·'··• wedged betw-· a culvert and the ·d ve abduction or slaylng under term. s a er a ousew1 e comp11.1.1M:U on "~' . s1 e Thanks~iv41g of 1967 that a young man of a snow-covered 15-foot embankment,, of an agreement with McKnight 011 W¥ acting ~trlnjely Ottber porcll. Thursday. Williams' surrender. Charges against YO\Dll 'Leary were Ponce waited results of an autopsy Officers who accompanied Williams thrown out o[ court i. few months ago lo determine how the blonde. blue-eyed and the two detectives to the girl's body when the court held he was not in fourth-grader died and trow long she s.ald Williams showed no signs of e!Jlo- a public place. had been in the spot near Mitchellville, uon. He wu represented. by criminal at-10 miles east of Des Moines on Interstate His return to Des Moines police head· torney George.-Olula of S.apta Ana at 80· . ' ; ' · quarters -only four blocks from rLhe · tbe"Urne . An usoda'b! 'Of Chiila; attorney Dea Moines Police Chief Wendell YMCA building where Pamela ctisap. liarrin F. Cooper, mived at city jail Nichols said WlllDnM agr~ to di!close peared Tuesday -was conducted under thla morning to talk with John Leary the plaee to det«tlv6 Q.pt. Cleatus heavy security after police received and said he expected he would repr:sent Leaming and Lt. Wallace Nelson during anonymous telephone ca!Js threatttdng ·1hin\ , • '" •119 -.· the automobile trip from Davenport, Williams' life. •:. · r-----; <I • ~~~~~~~:._:....:.:;__:....:_:.;;;;:::.:;__~~==:....::::.:::~~~~~~~•·- •·· MID- . WINTER FEATURING: HEN RE DON'S FONTAIN COLLECTION . ·' ., "' .,., , ' ' •11· " T " ---• ALSO FROM HENREDON: FOLIO THREE GROUP, PLUS CARMEC BEDROOM.' .. HENREDONS UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE 15°/o Off. .:: -ALSO ON SALE - ' ; '·' DREXIL'S DIMODA', GUILDHALL, RAPPORT, AND COLLAGE GROUPS. " AtOMHERITAGE-ONSALE-GRAND TOUR COLLECTION FIRST EDITION. ALSO TO IE INCLUDED: SOFAS, CHAIRS, LAMPS, .ACCESSORIES FROM OTHER OUTSTANDING MANUFACTURERS. NIWl'ORT BEACH 1721 WMtclllf Dr,. 642-2050 OftM PU9AY '11&. t i"refetaleMI l11twler Dlot ...... LAGUNA BEACH 145 North Coa1t Hwy. A••ll•bi.--.AID-NSID 0"1I NIDAY 'TIL f ,.._ Tel ,._ .... tif 0..,.: C..., l40.1Jtl i 494-6551 ' I I tidy Bird leflecte ·(·Flu Widesp~ead;. -·· 11· -~ ··or · . IV"ASHrNOTON iAP I • L7ndon 8. 'olm'°n •!II e lltln1 she's hippiest about ·~avlna behind arier five yeltf J' U.. 1'htte ffouse are all lie earl)', ""'"1ng, oflttl '~, ·~ealls to the 'rtlldolll. . '"1'1111.ho!Tendoile riilc ol l\>lt '~at,• o•~ lhal c1r ... · .... lo~· aM · ,.0 lalow f1li lhi olher oitd . U..1 JI lo IOIMU>int ~ant," Mn. JDhnson ..,i: .. And It I! ~.; goe(I wllon It rlnp at that time. 41lt it the 9'111& 0 f ~ II lo J\ot my o( 1°"' Uf•." but It doea spill wlt<>le climate Mn. Joluiloli aJoil! uy1.W wtn i,. bam folllvi liblnd the dtad1lntl iliUDd llit Praldent ...-i1 """ ID(; the lf.lt<>ur -· diY•· . The first ladf 'made . Mr commtnta h> a. taped . ~~:':'K. ="1>0 ~ · u.s'., coN6 MEiT '-Dlt'cussing• the negolialion for at 7,30 P.J!I· ~ the. -~eiof~eottJINe .U.S. priO<lfterr, Lt. Col. John Y. ~merican eroe<fe~· Co. ~1bn.,-,(ctillt~), OfCl~.ater.,Fla., U.S. delega- network. , • !Jon clil,t a,n4 Maf. Jian )lauvl;Oot (left) of Akron . • Mrs. Johnson say1 the .. ' Viet Cong l;lalm Ohio, talk with Viet Cong rePres~Dt8.tives in a field six miles south of Tay Minh, South Vietilam. Maj. Sauvegeot speaks fluent Vietnamese. Pre&Jdent, like other men across the nation, brings the problems of his job home with him. And he also bring's home unexpectedly the people he workg with. She said, hoW"e\'.er, she wanted the PreSiderit to bring the burdens home to htr after a long day in office. . Pro.tocol Preventing Release U.S. Bombs Laos Trails During Y ttle "When ht comet alone, he brlngl the problemr and; you kno\\', J would fetl that it w a s -I would feel somehow I had failed if he didn 't," she said. "Because wbett etse can he feel more retUed about them and mori -where would he have an &udlence better l!luited to heari!ll about them quite private)y and quite honestly?" One of the most difficult things for her to leave behind, Mrs. Johnaon saJd, is what she calls the magnetism of the White House. SAIGoN (UPI) -The Viet COog said lodiy tht three Amerlcarf war p·r i 1 oner s '#beee releue they promised 'to negotiate on Christmas Day were not released because U.S. NegOUak>n mruied to discuss P.J'(ICedurta. · The claini wae made on Liberation Radio, the Yiet Cong's clandestine radio, and monitored in Saigon. Thursd'ay in Paris a Viet C o n g spokesman said onJy thia1 details remained to be worked out before the: release. · A Viet Cong broa~cast Dec. 23 said the three Americans had been relea!!ltd on Dec. 22, but this appartntly was erroneous. U.S. officials a&id they knew nothing of such a release and later broadcasts m·adf ·it clear the prisoners wt!re still in guelrili'a hands. American spokestn.en said the Viet Cong . negotiating team they met on a. jungle batUefield Christmas Day told they did not have the authorit y to specify the date, time or locality for the release of the three prisoners. The Viet Cong broadcast to- day said: "The Poular Forces Armed Forces comm.and had given the time and place to meet represer\tativea of the U.S. Command in South Vietnam on Dec. 25. On the time and Volpe Backs Mass Transit tr * fr u tr Hope Tired of War, WASHINGTON (AP) John A. Volpe, President-elect Nixon's choice for tran!poi'ta· lion secretary, says more Lauds Troop 1tlorale emphasis must be put on mus DONG TAM, Vie~ (UPI ) transportation syattms to cope with the nation's ui'ban traffic -Bob Hope toda1' indicated problems. ' he ill tired <lf the Vietnam The Massachusetts 1overnor war, but Will keep entertaining said Thursday in his ftrst news the troops no matter wliat conference since appol11ted by happens. Nixon that "highways alone "I agree it was important won't do the job." The emphui• on public to stop the Communists' ag· tran1p<Jrtatlon eame aa a bit · greasion here, but it seems of a surprise since Volpe has to have dragged on and on," gained a reputation as a man he said. "I want to do wbc beUeves in highways. As some nice peaceful shows federal highway administrator withoul the sound of artillery in the Eisenhower ad-ministration he directed the in the backgroul)d." s\;8rt of the gigantic interstate Hope mlde the remark in road -system and he founded a backstage interview at thi s a COMtruction company that Mekong Delta combat base, he built thousands of miles as the air vibrated with the of highways. roar of Cobra helicopter Rapid transit systems may not provt feasible in some gunships and the thunder of aree, Vclpe said, but there artillery, will be othen where "you Hope, visJbly exhausted by can't build any more highways his tour of. the war zone , without tearint a city aiiart." was not all 1lum. He said his respect for the morale of the American troops 1etv· ing in the war had risen. "They tomehow seem to be in much better shape this year," he said . Hope's weariness trom IS· hour days was not renected in the shows he presented in the country. Most men view him as Vietnam's answer to Santa Claus and he did not aisappoint them . Daily the 6 S· ye a r. o Id performer appeared before the troops with an ever-chang· ing routine of topical jokes and a lot of "Hope." Combat soldiers, their boots still stain- ed with mud and, sometimes. blood sat for up to 18 hours to await his arrival. "Hope is Christmas," one soldier said. "It makes com- ing to Vietham seem a little worthwhtle.'' placed tiXed the U.S. represen- tatives met UJe represen-tati~s of the Eastern _ (Vet c;tmg) Command but would not agi(ee to discuss the· pre· cedures which is why the .meeting , did not bring any results." A U.S. spokesman said : ~1ost of the two hour , and a half meeting was tak~ up by a discw;sion of "protpcol," and observers believed this meant the Viet Cong 1 ,.,ere asking for some sort. of recognition. t'. A U.S. spokesman saiil to- day "We are open ·1 or anytbjng!' in meeting the Viet Cong to arrange the re{easc of captive GJs. ' ; Fr,WC Ah~e RideNowUp SAIGON (UPI) -American BS2-'bon\bers used"the 24·hour • Christm~ cease.fire in South Vietnam to lace North Viet· namese traffic in Laos with a record number of raids, in- . forme<I a11ied sources sald to- day. During the 24-hour period sp~ng Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, the bombers dumped more than two nµI· lion pounds ()f bombs in about a dozen raid~ along the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos, the s'ources said. Since the bombing halt, the allies h3ve blasted Commu- nist-controlled roads in Laos three to five times daily wltli the deadlr. stratofortresses. Ab0u1' 31::VeD raids was corlsi~ de~· ib be' 3· day's reco"rd." The unaMounced strik! into LAOs were not Considered to be a breakJn the U.S. agre~ ment to stop the war over T -,--, ...... Christmas. Th much -violated 0 ~ngress . aweement covered opera· tions on\y in South Vietnam. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Pos~ Office Department . which llBt October claimed Sen . Robert P. Griffin (R· The uninterrupted raids into Laos appeared h> be based on allied fears that the Commu· nists are preparing to launch another nationwide offensive Mich), might owe the tax-f~m· their i;::ambodi11:n sanctu• payers $25,000 in postage, an· aries. nounced today it will not try 1 ,;========== to collect. Here's Whore The department issued a I new policy involving the use 1 It's At! o{ congressional franking 1 privileges -the method through which members of Congress may mail their cor· respondenee free of charge. The new Policy says that Congress, as individuals or as a body, from now on will have the reSponsibility of deciding whether s u c h ·JC A .,.. privileges are being abuptd.I UAl'I I Previoualy, the department! w111c1111 ~1111 has issued rulings on BUch ,.,_144.1 possible violations. I _____ _ Start 7he IJ1w l/ear Right/ . Open your new savings account or add to your savings where you eiirn the nition's·highfst rite of interest on insured savings ••• Anaheim Savings and Lotn Association. Interest is compounded dolly and peid'from the 1st when lunds are received by the 10th. Funds eam to dote of withdrawal when held for 90 days . 5% current annual rate yields 5.13% on funds held for one year. 5.25% on bonus accounts held for 3 years-$1000.00 minimum amount. Accounts are insured to $15.000.00 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation and protected by Anaheim's 100% record of safely eince founding In 1921. Serving the Orange Counl\i area from our three offices .•. Anaheim, Huntington Beach and Brea. -Deaths Doubling · WHERE ON EARTH ARE THESE PEOPLE GOING?,· New York, Chicago, London, Paris Could b• •nywhtrt, but we know th• first stop is LA lnter11•tion•I Airport, We fly th•re •nd back 9 times •v•ry day from brenge County Airport •. , in 19.,isseng•r T·j•ts. It only t1ke1 20 minutes which l••V•s pl•nty of ,time to m1k• • conn•cfing flight to •noth•r destinetion. The fire: S7.95 !One wey p_lus teil N•xt time you plan 1 trip to Los An9•l•1 or beyond, think of us. C•ll your fr•v•I agent or Golden West Airlin•• et 17141 540.7010. "IT SURE BEATS DRIVING" ~ ~ Golden West Airlines . ' ANAHEIM SAVIN~S lllelfef ~OU to "' tel• 1killcd craj#IMn al.!p'4v their rare talent1 In the THI AflT OF GLASSBLOWING &hlblt & Oem<>nJtratlon l•nuuy :l!ld. thnr 10th. I , S.003 5~253 ANAHEIM SAVINGS ' earn 5.13% when our :urrent annual rate is :ompounded dally and maintained for a year. .. Current annual rate on 3·Y.ar bonus account s. MlnlrtHim $1000 --------- • ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION 11.-ili O"!Ct ANAHllM I ,,.,. I HUHT1NOT0N 11AcH 1IJW,U11COl11"'1t, 7701.lfHI'°"', ' •1tMtfliltr .. f ll'i.:1°tl32. JAMt71 LlM511 SINCE lt2l Fi.II CONVINllNT PAllUUNl'~T All J LOCAflw,, J ··-------- • • G = joAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I A Storm of Emotion The Ghost of Pop Festival Past raised !u well·re- memben>d head over Costa Mesa during the holiday MUOD, creating a storm of unseasona1 emotion and alarm. Lilce any apparition, it vanished, but left behind 1everel hard facts to be considered, the most critical of will.ch is that it never sbouJd have happened. Pop Festival Past, of course, is that ding-dong show that drew an attendance of more than 100,000 during iU two-day run at the Orange County Fairgrounds In Costa Mesa last summer. It left in ils wake a violent reactiDn from the Costa Mesa City CoWlcU -and from many Costa Mesa citizens w~ figure tba~ their com- munity couJd just as well do without becoming a mecca for the nation's hard rock and acid rock bands and their devoted followers. The 1968 Pop Festival didn 't get out of hand. But it came close. So close that even a mention of the event understandably drew hard stares and cold reactions in the Co.rta Mesa City Hall. It was hardly surprising, then, that the mayor and some councilmen reacted apoplect,ically when their ~x of Christmas cheer contained a surprise -a "Christ- mas Festival and Freak Fair" already organized and being promoted. for the fairgrounds this coming \Vee k- ood . It didn't help matters that a signboard advertising the show aJready was on display at the fairgrounds or that the sponsoring Garden Grove radio station was on a night..and-day pTQmotion campaign. _ . The council voted 3-2 not to grant a buSUiess licen se to the show's promoter. The show is proclaimed to be a sboWcase for ama· teur teenage musical talent and presumably isn't much like the widely.<fisculSed pop festival of last summer. lt may not have deserved the instant judgment awarded by tbe city's police and .c'ouncilmen. . Emotion aside, the city did have policing and fire protection problems that are difficult to resolve on such sbort notice. Even U they were favorably so!tened up on the subject; Oolta Meaa'1 municipal !f8dets "ould hav~ bee!! hard·pressed to produce tho protecllon and semces reqllired.. It appears tbe show may go oo anyway -without the city's sanction. Tbu1~ the scb.lsm wJdens. A grave lack of communlcaUon from fairgrounds lllllll8gement tO l!Je city lies at the vecy crux of the matter. Comlng Ol!IY week• after a let's-get-togeO>er session between fair and city leader1, the latest chapter in m.i6undei:atandlng ls all the more unlortunate. The City Council may have over-reacted in deny- ing a license for the show. !Jf,IO, tt seems clear that a tactlul transmission from 'lhi fairgrounds of the show's plans, before tbe •how IV3ll booked, would have left councilmen in a much better position to react on tbe basis of fact. And it would have given the police and other affected city department.. a better opporturuty to prepare. After all, the fairgrounds and the civic center are only across the street from each other. Drainage That Works A rainy, drizzling Christmas brought Costa Mesans a present recognized by few of Its 75,000 citizens - streets and intersections that carried off the rainwater almost as fast as it fell. It wasn't always thus. A wide street-and-drainage improve~ent program o:'anized 10 . years ago has brought 1t about and the citizens who financed it shouJd applaud the efforts they're paying for. After all, it works. . Before next Christmas, maybe the city can sbo'v the state highway people how to drain Newport Boule- varcl in a couple of places -southbound near Bristol St. and southbound near 19th SI. In front of the old police station. c .. GESUNl>+\EIT /' • , I I ' I Ah Yes,. Courage Estancia's Concert Wins High Praise Nobody Has All tlae Answers Now ~ Is the Thing By EU.SWORtll L. RICHARDSON Minister Tbe Nelgbborbood Coqreptloul Church Loi'"'" Buch James Barrie said, "Courage is the thing . . . the lovely virtue. All goes if courage goes." Ah yes, courage is tbt thing! On t he maiden voyage of l b e S. S. Hesperian, botlnd for Boston, Dr. Samuel M. Li.nd5ay 3'~ .... a .pasaenger, In mid· AUantic the"' !!ilp enoountered the heaviest seal'tbat Dr. Lindsay had ever erperienced. Many of the passengers doubted that the ahip -now five days behind schedUie1'...... would ever make it. Some becaMe-hysterical, yet the crew remained calm. One terrifying afternoon when the ship Was rolling fearfully, Dr_ Lindsay asked a deckhand, ''Doesn't the atorm worry you ?" "NO," llE REPLIED. "She's a tight ahip, and why should I worry when Captain Barr is on the bridge?" 'I'he deckhand had faith in the ship, and faith in the captain at the helm . The little ship that each one of us sails at times is buffeted by heavy seas. We bob like a cork on the tempest of easily ruffled emotions. Different pen;on.alities assail us We feel like a lhuUlecock on a badminton court! Back and forth in the air, hit by opposing rorces! But only if we could stand as the Rock of Gibraltar! Tf only we had the faith cf the deckhand who said, ' "Why should l worry when Captain Bart i~ on the tlrtdge7" To the Editor : While.: tbe "Perple1ed Pink and the Frustrated Four" are tearing their hair in shocked dismay over another Pop Concert, the youth of Estancia High proved that they have skill and ap- preciation in the area of the classics. I am no music critic -just an ordinary mother whose 11).year~ld son has been going around the house the past few weeks singing snatches of . "Alleluia" (Bach) or "et nunc et sem· GOD IS OUR Pll.01'. Our faith ts per" from the "Magnificat" by Gabrielli. in him! God bu his eye on the lpaml'\1'~.-,. _ Ro~ Fro~ has a few Ones in ~.s MY SON IJJVES the big beat of ~ay's poem, Oloosing Something Like a Star . rock as much as the next kid' but which seems so appropriate. Addressing · the star be says: "Say somethiru!: to us we c.an learn By heart aDd w1len alone-repeat. Say something! And it says, 'I burn!'" Continuing the conversation, Frost goes on to say : "It asks a little of us here. It asks of u.s a certain height So when at times the mob is swayed To carry praise or blame too far , \Ve may cboose something like a star To stay our mi':lds on and be staid." MAY I SUGGEST that we choose something like a star -"lo stay our minds on and be staid"? What better star at this season of the year could we choose -than the star of Bethlehem7 Facing the New Year, what better words could we choose than these? "Let courage rise with danger and strength lo strength oppose.'' "Courage is the lovely virtue .. , it is the thing!" due to a fine tnusical department and two sensitive, discerning directors (Mr . Olson and Mr. Brightbill) my son and other kids of the big beat generation sang and played some difficult, glorious music. The Chri stmas concert did not draw 10,000 people as a Pop Concert will probably do, but there \•:ere enough pea-- pie in the forum to literally crowd the walls aside so the spill over coulCI be seated if! part of the "quad.'' Abused Word: 'Freedom' !\IV HAT IS OFF to the Estancia musicians, for the excellent job they did, to the instrumental ensembles. to the fine viOlinists, to lhe trumpet solo by Christopher Eckert -to all. They have encouraged me. They handled great music like "pros." Thanzto Estancia High fur presenting <1 lovely nd inspiring Chrislnlas concert. I think there ought. to be a moratorium on the use of the word "freedom" for a full year. No American would be allowed to wie the word, or any synonym 11ucb as "liberty" and "rights." ln.!tead, v.·e would be compelled to state specifically what we wanl or do not want in any given situation. That abstraction known as "freedom " has oever been satisfactorily defined (much less agreed upon) by the greatest philosophers the world has ever known. It means as many different things 1o as many people as "happiness" -and is just as subjecth1e in mOO people 's minds. TYPICAL IS THE leUer I recei\'ed from a wo;nan recently; saying, "I guess I'm just old-fashioned enough to believe in Law and Order and thal the majority rules." ln the next sentenct, she says. "I belong to that aUent majority or citizens who feel we should bold our Freedoml even more zealOU!ly in these Mod timea cf 'give-aways'. , . " Could anything: be more confusing or stll~tradlciory than thelit statements placed together? How are we holding our freedoms by denying demonstrators the right lo protnt? U the majority rules, what about mioority rights ? If Law and Order (ht:r capitals) come •11 G.,..r1e ~ar George: What do yov thint ia causing U.e cooununicaUon1 gap btt.wcea )'IUll people and their elders? C. T. Door C. T., M ,..,.b' u I can determine, Che maill trwble Is thqt older peo- p .. Afl; .. bUly £Rbb1nJ1 about the ccimmunlCIUona gap that kids CIO'I .. a word .la edgell'iflt. before Juslice (my capitals). Hitler and Stalin should have upheld. then been THE PL.AlN FACT of lhe matter i~ that we are for "liberty'' when 1t suits our pul'p!J6e&, and against it when it seems to threaten our self-interest. We are for upholding law 1vhen the law favors us, and for subverting it when it seems to handicap us. We are for order when the order preserves what we have, and against order when il seems to perpetuate an unjust status quo. There i~ distressingly little intellectUal clarity or emot..ional honesty ln most polltJcal catch-phrases, whether of left, right, or center. All such abstraction~ as "freedom " ere iielf..gerving most o{ the time -like the pat.belically absurd people who believe in the "freedom'' to sell your house to anyone you like, but not In the "freedom" or anyone to buy your hOuse whO can afford It? WORDS, AS SOME Frenctunan ~s sajd, are usually used to conceal thoughts and Jee.tings, rather than lo dprt:ll them. We n e e d a thorough scmnnlic cleans[ng ol our verbal stables, for we are walk.Int around hlJHleep in the onlure II oa,r spedel vocabt•laries. And no Ont. or coarse, can detect his oy,·n rankneu. for he U: too close to ii, as lht drover caMOt know he rtti.s of cattle. Confuclus aaid that the a:ood i;tatc bts1ns loot ends) wilh the right use of v.•ords, and he Wa.i not far cff tht mark. \..otll wt ctn agrff on whal "frftldoJn•• &bouJd mun. we me.rely co1n- poomd ...... by ..... it. BARBARA KING hoterest11111 Stu11011 To the Editor : I'm wriUng in regard to the article in your paper about KTBT . It seems to me anyone with a broad enough mind can accept this lype of broadcast. It's getting a little ridiculous when the youths of today must be deprived or a liberal radio station. The obJecting woman may have lived here 711 years but I've lived here 10. I've grown up tn th.is town and I think the station is difftrent and interesting. I'm not the only person who feels this way I know brilliant people three limes m.i age who are llltelllgent enough to acce pt' th e youth o( today for what ii is -trying to help us instead of tearing us down. HARRIET JONES Letter~ f ro m rtader1 are welcom e. Normolf11 writers should convey their nltssage in 300 words or less. Tile rigl1t to condense letters to fit :i:pace tJt eli minate libel 1.t restrvtd. AU lettc1'.t triust inch.de signature and nuuli11g address, but name.s mov be wHhhtld' on rcq~si if sufficient reo· '°" is opparent. Quotes Vlrtlnla Marie Rodaodl. So. S.F. - "Lo1·e b lhe goal which glvts men 1neanin~ to their lives." Asstmblym_.n Robtrt ~I 11 n • a • n • St.ocklf)n -"I agree u1ith whoever it was sale! lh.1t 'Anyone's right lo swi11¥ hls fist endi where my nose begins.• " Stopping the Drug Flood One simple fact emerges from all the discussion about the drug menace among •young people: Nobody reaUy knows What lo do about it. ~ tbe heartaches continue. Young peo.- ple, unaware of the dangers or perhaps awire>Wt ut1caring, go on experimenting with the' stuff. They get picked up by the police, thrown out of school and are cut adrift at a formati ve time in thtir.Mves. A few die if they get hold of the lethal iJpe of drugs or take to sniffing inhalants. Others come close to death, saved perhaps by quick medical ·treat- 1nent or their own wits. !\IOST KNOW enoUgh to avoid Ute well-publicized addicttre drugs. But they pop "¢Ila or smoke marijuana. whlch is illegai. ·They get arrested and at an early .aee' .. ave a pplict record w)licP probably wlll make thing s miserable for them the rest of their lives. ' What can be said to a mother whose son nearly dies after taking drugs offered by a "fri end"? Or to the mother whose son suffered permanept brain damage by inhaling toxic fumes ? Last monlh there were 30 Students expelled from Grossmont Union High School District schools for various drug offenses. This month there were 19. Last year there y;ere 70. \Vhere does it stop? TllE TRUSTEF.S sincerely bel~ve their unequivocal policy of mandatory expulsion for drug users acts as a deter· rent. They think the situation would be much worse if Lhe policy were relaxed. Who knows if they are rignt or wrong? Nobody. "Some parents whose children have been Spelled dis8.gree with the policy. They don't like the idea of having their son or dau~ter miss school. They think the temfitatioos to further trouble are too great if a student is kicked oat of school. They argue that expulsion is not an effective deterrent, citing the fact that more klds are: invol\'ed n0\1' tbcln eve1 beforr. OTHER PA RENTS whose children haven't been involved in drug offenses, at least not yet, defend the poli~y. They view it as protection. They don't want their children associating with the drug users. They regard explusion as a just penalty for activity that is both illegal and physiologically or psychologically harmful There is at least one obvious point: The drug menace is never going to be substantially reduced until more ef- fective action is taken lo stop the flood of illegal and dangerous drugs coming across the border. TOO rt1UCH OF the stuff is getting across. And the more that gets in, the greater the number of young people likely to be exposed to drugs. An education program probably helps, but it doesn't help enough. There are students who don't. learn to write oe. spell, even though they are in cl~· every day of the year, and there are students who would ignore the best in- struction on drugs. The pena1ties probably deter many students, but obviously they do not deter all. So a merely punitive policy has its limitations. AT LEAST ONE parent is so concerned about the drug problem that she is lhinking .Jietiously of waging a campaign to close the border. Others are suggesting that thr. age limit for crossing be 1:1pped from 18 to 21. Mt. Miguel ffigh Schoo! Is forming a special committee ol doc- tors, psychologi. e d u c a tor s , pharmacists and parents to get some answers. It is encouraging that a~tlon bas begun'. An aroused com1nunity can do a I~ if its ciUzens work together toward 'a common objective. And stopping the flow of dangerous drugs to our young .people is certainly a cause worth a fight. 1 THE SUGGDTION that the border be closed might seem like an extr~m~ remedy. But it is also true that ~ abuse is an extremely serious problem. Any idea.s that might cootrlbute to a .solution ought to be fully explored because it's obviO\lj nobody has all tDe _ 1nsv.·ers now. Tbe DalJy CalUonlan EfCIJ~• 'Objectivity' • Ill ·Reporting Opinions oflered in a talk to journalism student s: One of the more damaging of the ice-age newspaper axioms (anything pre- about-1940) was one greatly revered in its time. City editors glibly oHered it to cubs: "Write as if you are writing for the Kansas City milkman." (It was, of courst, possible to substitute the milk man of any town. Somehow, though, the Kansas City version wa s the one most frequently beard. Never having done research on the miHtmen of Kansas City, I do nol know whether they were in any sense special.) TIUS ASININE advice and other pearls like it were responsible for some very dull journalism . If the Kansas City milkman read it he must have found it dull going. "Objectivity" was an idol be.fore which young Journalists were re- quired to bow. Much incense in the form of sanctimonious speeches w&s of· fered heatedl.y by speakers. Net eUect of this was ..to make newspaper$ and newspaper men and women conformiBU. Dear Gloomy Gus: Your ht~e writer is a real square. llil head ' MESA <XlUN· Cl~ STILL MUM ON JAZZ BAND FREAK-OUT. 'I'bts ht an IMU)t lo j au musicians who are R£AL muak:lans Ind noL thref>-ch<u'4 ama- leur9. The mmtcal trash called rock, ~Uc. et.c., Is no more. jau than McGuffey's reader! are Sh~kespeare tonncts. -J.M. ObjecUvlty, per .sc, is, of cowse, a necessary ingredient of so-called hard or slraJght news, although those ?.·ho use the words are never able to define exactly what they mean, euept to say defensively, "You know -hard news -that's what." FOR DECACF.S, city ed.itors, manag- ing editors and schools of journalism taught their own personal versions o! obj•dMty. The ]llstory oI journati."11, especially ·that of the yellow journalism yeara wben I.be alleged titans were foun- ding d)<l.1slies. mnplres and logend.<, includes w:ry Uttle objectivity as the dictionary defines ll But newspaptn: were e:rclttn1 and Uiey.JJm r,ad. Too many scboola o! )oumalllm, ·~ ma)'!>< too many clty'room titans have. I· think, focused o.n imparting a set of skills rather th1.u11 oo creating a human belng full of curJo&ty about P.tJOple and llfe and an itch to know the "why" cf. things and not merel y wha.l, where and when. \VE SEE AT LEAST w6me of the newspapers today waking to U. ~ that much of the wrl\lilg in t.belt papers must have a point of view. tb1s is espociaUy true in the oo-called "In doplh" or "lnterpttllve" or "analysUI" articles that art sud\ ntctSSlty elements of t.odai~ nftspaptr. Wrtte('I wbo CID do superb jobs «rsuch articles tn potit\cs, religion, tduc•Uon, poverty, the genera· tion ff•P. and so on, can't be '1edu- catcd to 4o '°· Nor can the mere acquiremmt ol aktl!J mah it poalble. The hUmn ·befnlJ must somehow be a prodoct of the proceBSell of learn.Ina:. A RECENT ARTICL& in the Author's Guild BulJeUn commented oo thf: fact that man1 of the major Amcrk:an wrttm ol thb conlul1. wboot wrtllnas m now • used extensively in secondE&t)' iCboo~ - and coDecti, ne.ver completed a collqe educaUon. Som1:. never made any attempt to attend college. Hemingway and Sherwood Anderson belong lD the latter category. Eugene O'Neill and Fitzgerald were dismissed from Princeton. Drill& was a dropout from Indiana Unlversitj. Robert Frost left Dartmouth and Harvard and took up farming. Faulkner had little education past high school. St.elnbeck dropped out at Stanford in his freshman year. Jack London, Mark Twain , Joseph Conrad, Herman Melville, William Dean Howells and Stephen Crane from an earlier era had no college training. LATER CAME the now literary heroes -mo5l of them college educated. Norman Mailer, for e1ample, has a Harfard degree. But, agaln, the pen· dulum beglnl 14 swing. Unlnl· .an educaUoo provided much rnoA •tbAn,rvotiUontl sk.llls, it will bt ·o! Dtlle holp, of.11ecomlng a "'""PIP'' man or-womiu -or a writer of poems or ''boc>kr." --oi1W- Friday, Dec. Tl, 1968 Thi .dl&orial paoc of tht Daitv Pilot •••ks to inform a.nd 1tim- ~ ttadm bll' prrt.entlnQ thil """fPCIPf'r'• opfakml and com- runtary on top(a of lnttrtst ond li(lfllfi«lncc, ""' ,,....,,..,, •• f0f"1ifm for tM jf"qtres.tion of OVt' ncdln' opinions, ond bu prt1tndfta· tM diverse vitw- poifttt of htformed obstrvt1'J and rpoktnnen on loplrs of the doy. Robul N. \Veed, Publ1sher 1 I ' I I I I I I I \ . ' .. I ' I ' " r- f~ l ; 1 ' . •• •• ,. " •• ,,. >Y ,,. " ld is Ill og ld ~( e- " lC n. cit . • .. '" ·le er ]~ ,. "' ~ .. ~ 11{ ce . Ip\ nd ler 110 ~ ry. nd otr ol. in ork '" md !Id ,.. ed. • en· ich be '" "" I Ait West to Vote ~~:;. ... ;..~ ' • .. ( J" • , . ti'.H~es Off er ~. .w:f . dlanp -fourth &hara .n" -llGitt ..... _ lloc:k for -Ill.re ol Air· · llAO:· to vote on ill! 1 Wiii eommon. '!bat wolllil .~{6.•1!0jolld ~~I>; .> -toQIJlperAlrWeit> <..,.,.'~ll>Old au : -. on tbe ~ o I ··~·aillllon,,,.. 11Wnday'• marl:et 'i' wJte,a I """~II " . I Nortbwtst ·~ al •i up .vp ~I· cub I l~. •• 1 ;~~"'··~ ~ d....,,I '. In a prozy 1tatement daied wn~:IDIQ'• w ·~· • Dec. 2 Air Weal> lllted ·al mMtrnc aotll ., .,.._' ' · 'l>otlllr ........ '. S,791,840 shares oulatandlof ....,.,_ " , , Oct. S!. A majority ol U.-4'19' ..,,..,,_,,, , ·~ abartS must. be ,v o t e.d Alr!lltM tao '18 ~. • favorably for a ~ IO HIJlbea . ' ~~P'~'!O.. -otlet ...... _ Wt ' ' . ,, I '~"''· ktmbtr 27, 1968 Olll Y PILDT 'f Hill ~Feucl-ing~.-Here? • Ranger, Owners Exchange 'Pot.1hot1~ BRECKENRIDGE MOUN· F<nlt ~ Jim Bai.t TAIN (.IP) -'Ibo moun-ao4, cabin owuen atop this !-1neen IDd the *"v-t ruqed paak bave be<n oquab- man are feuding Qilp. · bll!I( tor weeb about whether -tlnoe U'1 Doi 1n th• bill& ot Kentucky or 't'en-the ~. smack in the middle ntuee, but on 7 , 5 4 4. f o o t of Sequolri NitfonaJ Forest, Breckenridge Mountain, S3 Is a private a_qbdivlaioo or miles eui of Baterafield. /federal propertf.'. I Out of 4 Si~k Flu Up, Crime Down Ranter Bates aitd two cabin owneril weree xch 101 in g verb&! pollhota Thuraday. "Come oo fellows, b e re1SOD1ble," said Bates. "How CID' I aection of I U.S. forest be part, ol a private sub- d.lvlllon? You can1 sulldlvtde a NaUonal fonst." ' "But tbla JI a 1ubdMllon," babied William R. Gnleman, a Bakersfield Insurance man . "It 's been ltgally laid out u a sulxUvislon aince lnt." The c!at»n QWDll'I are &RcrY becauae ~ uy -Forest Senrtce workers rl~ out gMtes blocking their private roadl , tore down ' ' N 1 trespauine" aigna, toot away their bone meadow• and thrtaia>ed to I h U t O!f the water supply. '.. '· ·. ' ._,,;. ,: ..... "" AUCUll IDd uplres """1aY -; .,. ' ~ . w i .,/" 'after.a mcmth'a extension. LOS ANGELES (UPJ) -But one bright note was M"' -V , Not D'l(lre than 200 of Air The Oµ lM:II bas bitten o~e annOWlced by the Loll ~ . ·a· T~~!~~ .. !~.~~~~ OJ'e e flS.'. > West'1 12,000 fn d I v.l du a 1. out ol every foor adults m Police llepattment when tt ' . ..;: . ~ ;~!~•:< ll&ockbolden wen expeetecl Loa Angelea County, the Coun-listed prelimlnary figurq ID-p : ~ ~'--_ g "lor today's session at the ty Heallh 0 e p 1 rt men t dicating criminals allo m ' ~!.or H U'D:fl,e8f• Sheraton Thunderbird Motel . reported Thursday. subject "'tbe flu. :· ''"i • · .. \~ -~ lo 1-· near San Fr 1ncI1 co .In-Ot. Gerald S. H~dbreder Crimes committed In the . . i.(is -Al!Gllhl!.'l (Al') o_ ttrnatlanal Airporl. , uld that in addltloft Ill the week ending la!,t Saturday · -· · · -' , • .~--""· tban.f16 -Robert Henry, who oppoaes 40 caw of pneumonia were over those committed In the ·/ .r.."':~j ..... ~... ':~. '! ._,_ ~·ii·"· i,.;.i intbl · · r.;.;, ·tbeliu&het:'bid,hulodicated reported dtfring Christmas pr~_week although •11tire Herb.r Are• 617 West H•lllltt.•, C.. W.. All .IMllll '-nll• "" ~ .. felll .. II nlJ 't'WJ!f lfUIT SAllATH IYININ• s11v1cn 'p11bAY ~ l11f '·"'· Inlow 1'111 fine •l11•ln1 ol ~ Ttlnl'le SMAii Cllelr Mid file •rm ttllo'lnl'llp ol our °""• SNllel ll•thfrtt!M ,., w1-.. a ~ SC'-' ...-llPlll 'nlf•r, octfftr 11 c.11: '46-1111., 141·14JJ . ; .• _ -· ... -. -" · .. , • • : ; 1'fntl..l.i.. ... aa.rw...i Air West President G. outbreak ol Hona KOO( Ou, sl\Owed a decided deereue ·-~ ... -l~ .... . ... ~ .... ':'., "'ti~'".t "'· ... -; . Vpstrips ·.,.;: hewlllseekadjournmenttmtll 'weet.Thefigurelstwicethe crimes for the year lo date Hfa·r:'"''J:'a'-ia.O ~p:1-1• .....(_,::~, h .1_.': ',"', ,Jtinl deve~ · shareholders are acquainted qumber ,normally reported .~showed a marked increase 1 ~ ~ , ·~}f· '"' llU~1-' U ,1 ;.: 1 .... K · etiiaP. owner a(~~ ~wltb~~N~ortb~w~e~at'~1~bl~d£ . .:..:_:.___-~d~ur~inl~tb~e~pert~~od.~---__'.'.•'~er~100~1~.-----_!!~~~===~~~~====~~~~=~ '• ~ · ... '~f:,R· .,. . "•. ". ,·;~"'k~~._-,-·d .. ~~ay·· '.l-UJOUt:.'i?i1. ·~· . ...n~. . .~:'.i:·.iO \' '!be~~ , . . , • ,'!',,. <'"\'! . • ., · · • -~ illllbP;'lllll pay fao;11be pijme · SAN FRAN9ISCO (u1=Jt~ ·~;,~~~ka~;~~:~-~~~~~in~ 1!l::: With 10 days or ChriitrM.s-.. Hate a btd~olcSitft/ 'and (Dillion and In "eight filtnl. II Yacatioi!_~-ahead or hlrn , aulb~~ already on the state Katlmlan quoted Huabei an opt1 . Dr. S. l sources u saying the I.and Hawakawa icted Tl-.!!rs-faculty, had· b@il chosen lo would be used to build a 2,000 ctay that San Francisco State head the new di;partment. · room hotel and 1 shopping College can reopen Jan. 6 Hayakawa also r~veal~ center. "without fear of violence.'' th~t .• a threatened fmanc~al The , property package in· The 62-year-old acting 'prUI.-crlSl! had been &alved w~ eludes the e.ur. lite-of the dent told newsmen he had the aid of St.ate Golleges Cfwt. okf EI Rancho Vegas hotel higb .hopes th9 kind ;· ol· cellor GleM Qumie. and about 30 acres between ''mass.Ive police intervention•'\ He said the sdb:>I . had the Sahara and Thunderbird that oocurred or! Campus thi received "a tind Of Chritrtmas Hotel.$. first two weeks of l)ecember present" from Dumke's office The sale is subject :to ap- would not be necessary. v.•hich, in effect, provides ap-proval of the U. S. Justice He made it clear however proximately $300,000. Deparbnent which has quu- thal if the turmoil resume~ Hayakawa said a feared tioned anti-trust implicatiom ho would provide "whatever deficit of that amount would in Hughei' Nevada holdinp . protection is requ~d for the have forced the. ~tback . ~ -------people who want to teach and 120 fa culty positions and Uie attend classes." discontinuing of a I a r g e Buy Her HADLEY 1iayakawa was obviOUlly en-number of courses . c~raged by lhe progress Because of the progress You'll love Her M1dly made since Dec. 13 -when already made in meeUng .1W. tht school closed a week early dent demands Hayakawa su&· for vacation -in resolving gested that "any further -a.: demand! of lhe Black Students penditure loward striking 1for Union and the Third World increased minor I to)' ·op- Liberatioo Front. portunity is clearly 1 e 1 f • Be reported the ad-defeating." mjnistrative work to create Hayakawa said he had been ;\ black studies department in touch with the BSU and is now accomplished. Such a the Third World group. "Tbe department, headed and staf-mere fact that we have fed by Negro personnel, wa! some chat.! is one reason why a major demand or student I feel optimlltic," he ez. act,ivhta. plained •. "We are prepared to begin~1p;~;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; the first four-year course leading to a degree In black studies," at the start of the new seme~. he said. , . Well to Be Reopened GRANADA 1!ILLS (AP) - .Fire fighters have reopened a gas well capped Tuesday al\t;r a week-Jong fire. Members of the famed "R!ll-fighters" oil fire fighting crew of Houston, Te:s:., reopen- ed the well Thursday to repair leaks discovered on Christmas Day. ;, ¥ Authoritiel said two metal shields ip the well's main valve 1rJ not working pro- pe);ly. Flril!'en _may lhul off lhe undtqr'OUnd leaks by pouring ihiilnl into tbe · oofer casing ol tbe'well. Olfloiall of Golly Oil Co., which operates the well, t11a.ld the,..-dl will blow open without a .proper valve. ... ' I See by Today's Want Ads e New Year Cheer: Start it oU rl&ht with a new home to love. , .check the OPEN 1-IOUSE dlrectocy for tht best buys. e Look What We Fourid! Several beautiful rentah: An unusual "A" frame, with 3 bedrooms, an in- terior patio, atrium, and beautiful location, be- lween Newport Bay and the beach -must l!ltt to helieve. , .Here'• a quiet 2 bedroom duplex, ~v"ly redecora.t~, a n d very clean .•. Big family home, .. bedrooms,, 2 baths.: with 1·arptts_ drapes, and fire- place .•• Or a deluxe mod· em 2 IJol)', S ~ 2 ti.u., wtth me or 2 bl&. pool.. recnation area, tot .... and .,,q ... block trom. •. tbt bHt beach ••• Anothef.duples, with .... Uo. am aa atrwt·~; onJ.v ~ block from the ~aeh -aee It now. STEREO SENSATIONI Tiie colqrful sound of . Orange County Music RADIO KOCM 103-1 FM .. ' . From Fashion Island-,. Newport Beach GAS CLOTllS DRYBI WITH AIR ROW DRYING! ' • l!llCE INCLUDES - Dtllvery and normal ln1t1llat1on. ltmt'' modtls available In Avocado 1hd Ceppe...i.' tona. WALJ'; 'THROlJGHI WA$ijDAY WITH A GAS DRYER .,. . . .... '-l' SUNSHINE FRESH DRYIN&~AT ECONOMY PRICES! I ' This large capacity dryer has a high speed drying syat Porcelain enamel drum and top. Variable time con.tror. Separate atart switch. Flutt cycle? Four way venting to eni lnetallatlon. Big cepaclty .llnttrap ••• All the teaw necessary to give yuar round-tiMng convenienuyrr· - . ~ 95 TV AND APPLIANCE CENTER HARBOR CENTER STORE HOURS: w ... ~' am to 9pm Sa11r'cfc!ys 9 am to 6 p111 i~oo .•••• , 11Yt1;· Ce1ta Me .. Phone s40.1i31 ", ' -• I • ' I l a llAILY I'll.GT ' ZENITH Gl4NT·SCREiN 23,.INCH HAN_DCRAFTEID~ COLOR TV . ... .. ,. ~~---. " . -: PAMO•I l!IA'.l'IONALL Y. ADYIRTISED ... PORTABLE COLOR TY rl~s-U_P_IR~0-0-LD~TV~lla~R~,, . f AUTO~nc Pl• 1UlllllO ·1 Our Lo•••t $ Prlte IYul! •l' •• ··•Y n · · • · · ,Two •.511.13~ ttiffli-cqn-. ~atc,rs for true fidelity sOund •Charmi~OJ'EQclY AM.r~an design in maple •Zenith automatic fine-tuning control electronically . ~unes in perfect c9lor -insta.ntly •29.5 sq. in. viewable picture area, world's largest color TV Picturel . ; · • • • • ·~ •• -....... f.• ~ . ~ . . Our 359.9.5 value Price IYer:I Lowott·$23 .. 8, I BIG 14" SCRllll I •Slimline waln11t grain•.d cabin•t •.Precision-engineered chaui1 incorporates the n•-•t electronic de¥elopmenh and ~rfonnance feo!ure1 to aswre e:11ceptionol rwception •All 82-channel'UHf/VHF • Pri'tale -arphone and fadt ·e 102 tq. in. pictvre Cl~ WESTINGHOUSE ATrACHi 12",PE .. SG.NAL PORTABLE TY W._ITINGB•ll WAlNUT CONSOLI WITll AM Pa.Pli'·sTERiO RADIO . . WISTINGHOUIE MINl·COMBO 12" TY, PHONO & AM·FM RADIO $6.8 Our Compare at 99.95 Lewe1! Price . , ' . ·1 ............. 1 ·,· . ~ompare at 229.95 _ Our LowMt Price Evert $158 Zody• •,•s~la~prlce 191.17 $138 ' . ' •Fro~l·mounted 3-Jnch full fidelity 1p.a.k9f •High voltage pith.Ir. power for greater contro11 • 12-inch diagonal pictu,. with tolid 1tote po-r supply •All 12-chcinnel tuning VHF/UHF -all on Oft• died ..-•!lim featherweight-weigh~. l.s1 fttan 16 lbs .. . , •AM/FM/FM Stereo radio with : Af.C for d riJt·fre• FM ~ • 4-1p•ed ovtOmotic record c:honger • Delu:11e tone orm •Two 8" w90fer1 •Two 4" fweeter1 •Record 1toroge oreo • Hondsome cobinet with lovely wolnut fini1h WESTINGHOUSE FAMILY SIZE · 2·DOOR REFRIGERATOR·FREEZER W STINGHOUSI TWO·CYCJ.I AUTOM"TIC WASHER Comst.are at 229.95 Our lowest Price Evitrf I BIO 12 cu; n. I • Automotic d'frqi1t!ng ••~lion - never need1 defrott.ing •Full width, full depth 1helve1-two po1ition 1helf odju1h • Plu1, butter k~.JMf, "'99 1toroge, eosy--open d~r lokhe• • RlfRIGERATORS . 16 CU. FT. FROST-FREE 2 DOOR $2 DILUXl TOP FREEZER • • .. .. • • • • • .. 58 11 CU. FT. FROST-FREE 2 DOOR ,298 155 LB. TOP FREEZER ............ . • • 19.2 CU. FT. SIDE"BY-SIDE FROST•FRH WITH ICE MAKER , ••••• *438 22. CU. FT. FROST·FRH DELUXE S SIDl·BY-SIDE MODEL .... . . . • • • • . • 458 BIO-FAMILY SIZE SINGLE DOOR REFRIGERATOR ••• ,, 1138 16 CU. FT. FROST-FRIE WITH AUTOMATIC ICE MAKER ••••••••••• 1298 WASlllRS 3 CYCLE HEAVY DUTY DELUXE MODIL AUTOMATIC •. , .••• , •••... '168 2 SPUD DELUXE HEAVY-DUTY AUTOMATIC ................ , .... '178 FULLY AUTOMATIC PUSH-IUTTON I CYCLE DELUXE MODEL ••••••• , •• '218 FRONT LOADING, MULTI-SPIED AUTOMATIC WASHER ,.~ •••• , •• ,. *218 DRYERS 2 TEMPERATURE AUTO(l\ATIC HEAVY-DUTY GAS DRYIR •• , .....• '138 AUTOMATIC HEAVY·DUTY 2 HEAT ELECTRIC DRYER ,., .•..... *118 FREEZERS LARGE 315 LI. UPRIGHT WITH FAST-FREEZE SJIELVES ............ *138 16.1 CU, FT. All FROST·FREE UPRIGHT HOLDS 565 LBS •••• , .... 1238 RAllGIS LARGE OVEN ALL PORCELAIN GAS-All COLORS .......... ,.... *88 • 30'" PORCELAIN LARGE OVEN ELECTRIC WITH LIFT-Off DOOR •.•. SI 28 ELECTRIC EYE·LEVEL 30" DELUXE OVEN, MAlilY FEATURES ••••••••.• *328 30" GAS, 2 EYE-llVEl OVENS HAfURE·PACllED, All COLORS .,,. *258 . . WATER HEATIRs 30 GALLON GLASS UNID ••• , •• , • • '38 Compare-at 119.95 Our Lowe1t Price Evert $.138 " HIAYY·DUH' I . •Porcvloin enomel tub · •"Two "water temperolure-wo5h cycl• 1election1 includin9 hot WO$h ond worm prewo,h •fam~• double action woih 'tleovy duty lron1m i11ion • Sofety lid lock AIR COllDITIOlllRS ·l DELUXE UNIT DESIGNED roa. SLIDING WINDOWS, S,SOO ITU •• , '138 LIG.HTWEIGHT, THERMOSTAT, $ EASY TO INSTALl, 5,500 ITU ••• ,.. 108 MULTl-·ROOM UNIT, FEATURE LOADED, 26,000 BTU ., ........ ,., s31• DISHWASHERS BIG CAPACITY, ,OWER STREAM DUAL-RINSE, PORTABLE .......... SI 28. TOP QUALITY FRONT LOADING CONVERTIBLE PORTABLE ••••••••• *168 BUILT-IN WITH POWER TURRET WASH ACTION; MUCH MORE ,., ••• *148· PORTABLE TY 9·1NCH SOLID STATE AC/DC UHF/VHF 31 SQ. IN. VIEWAILE PICTURE , LIGHTWEIGHT ••••• ,.... '88 BIG SCRHN 19-INCH 114 SQ. IN. PICTURE, .llM·LINE STYLING , • • • • • '98 GIANT 2MNcH SCREEN DELUXE UHF/VH f tOADED WITH FEATURES INCLUDES ITS bWN STAND •..•.•• *128 • ln1tont-on TV WITH 74 1q, in • picture oreo " •Solid 1tote AM./fM 10 transistor radio with wtike-to-•usic or olorm buzier •Four 1peed oulomotic phonograph ploy. 16, 331/3, 4.5 and eYen 78'1 •Changer wilh o"'tomotic intermi1t ond 1hut-off •Slumber control turn• TV or rodio off aft•r you're o.leep HAl!IDWICK DELUXE 30'' 'QUALITY GAS RANGE Compare at 119.95 . Our lowe1t Price Iver! ,,-,; -$148 - I CLOCK & TIMER I •Four gionl burner1 lop of the t(lnge • Lift·up/lifl-off, drip-proof top • 100% effective broiling oreo •Oven ho1 140 lo-temp c:ontlol • hutonl outomotic: oven i9nition • In otl decorotor colon COLOR TY BfG SCREEN 11-INCH PORTABLE LOADED WITH FEATURES ••.••••••• '298 29S SQ. IN. WORLD'S LARGEST COLOR PICTURE CONSOLETTE •••• , '398 295 SQ. IN. DELUXE 23·1N, WALNUT GRAIN, CONTEMPORllRY. '458 ' lJG SCREEN 23-INCH MEDITERRA- NEAN, PECAN WOOD CONSOLE ••• '498 295 SQ. IN. EARLY AMERICAN ,468 MAPLE, FEATURE LOADED ••••••••• WALNUT COMBINATION, AM/fM S 98 RADIO-STEREO-COLOR TV • • . . . . . • 7 ····.-· ' CONTIMPORARY WALNUT WITH AM/FM/FM STEREO RADIO •••••••• , '248 '. EARLY AMERICAN MAPLE 60 WAn AM/FM/FM STEREO RADIO, •• '2-78 . ' MEDITERRANEAN DARK OAK OR PECAN-SOLID STATE WITH DELUXE RADIO AND CONTROLS ••• *238 300 WATT STEREO-WORLD'S FINEST CHOICE Of STYLES S AND WOODS ..... • • ......... • • • • 5 71 ... WALK llOllTll LOH BIACll All .... IM•PUU.IU .. 'WIST COYlllA AIUIA AYI. AT PUINTI NoaTHIHHI •1oomo BIACll IMHl,ALMWt. AT ITUDllA•I• L &OUIN ITIUJ AT CNl•IT OIANOITNOl:PlllfLIMOlil llllN tL~D. AT DIYOMINl•I MAWTNOIHI IL YD.Al 10.IAT UNTI• llUtlTIHTOll •IACll OOLDIN WllT4 IDIN•ll fe9111'.Alll YALLIY LON• BIACH ..... at.Ye. "' llHNell LOI COTOftl,IPltNO & WOODlu•• SAlll'AAllA II. OIAN9 AYL Af 1 JtM &TlllT •ARDlll GROYI CHAPMAN & llOOICMUIST , •UBAllK CAllOGA PA•K SAN J(INANDO ILYD. At IUl~ANK TOPA NGA CANTON ILYD. AT IOHOI " 9BOlt ~D IAYI AT ZODYS DAILY 10 TO 9 P.M., IAT. A SUN.JO TO 7 P.M. ••• SATll•ACTION GUAllANTllDI I ' . ' ' ' I ' " ' .......... In the Wind •1col...;... _________ _, " · CbriJtmu came a little ea;ly for the class .of Mrs. Emily Glblpn of Seal Beach who teaches 1l1lnl grade at the Eastwood School I• Westminster. . '!be youngsters met the famed Oceanographer Capt. Jacques-Yves Cousteau and had an opportunity to tour the research vessel'C~ypso last \veek. I) During the past I wo 1ears this class has Studied the mlgration of the gray whale, made wee.kly tri_ps to tidepools to search for sea life and have foUOwed. ~oseJy the work of Cousteau. * During the tour James Cogan and Mitchell Cohen, both 8, shook hands wiU!. the famed underwater explorer. Both were heard to ex- Jaim that they "would never wash this hand again." Brian Winnor was so impressed by shaking hands with the c,aptain and taking his picture that he promptly dropped his c a m e r a overboard in tiis excitement. • .... 1 These youngsters live · near the ,~Sea and their teacher has managed to fire them with enthusJann for the life of the sea. The clB.83 has hatched grunion eggs · ( Y e • , Virginia there are grunion, really), hatched octopus eggs, and main· tained a sea aquar\wn. · * . One parent during a recent fishing trip discovered an octopus "in a discarded bottle and brought ·· it to the class. Tbe youngsters · J>romptly dubbed It "Miss Glob.'' ;i;:ggs were collected from the' crea· J.ure and place\I in the aqu~um. 'Ibey hatched and the youn~sters , bad an opportunity t.o watch the babies for a few days until one by one the other occupants of the aquarium had lunch and the babies were gone. Capf. Cousteau gave t h e youngsters an autographed picture which said "Good Luck to the New Underwater Generation." * Wj~ .. entht'!'iBSJX& iUPire4 bf. Mtl.' Gibion and glven'll"hero like ~aptain Cousteau, it is entirely tf>OSSible that one or more of these #ludenls could be. the UDderwater . . . ~ . h'wo GWC Pi:rofs 2 ~ - :Pen TextboOks " :OUe in January .._ Two Golden West College facalty mem- have written textbooks 'which are olf the presses in January: · · ' . .t Dr. James. L. .Catanzaro; social ..waences divwon chaaman, ))as written lhe 425-page volume ''The Wesfem ·lntellectual Tradition." -· : Lee J. Rosch, political science leaceyer ~t the college in Huntington Beach, has jo.authored 1 high school text in gavem- inent and cltizenshlp with Grant T. Ball, ·o:balrman ol the i;octal· lltiences -tWepartment at Newport Harbor 'H!gb 9chool. 1 'lbe 750-page volume, published by •ollett Publishing Co. of Chicago, is limed at slow learners and students Ii ca.lturaUy depri•ed areas. • Dr. Catanzaro's book wu written .for tollege students and, at'COrdlng to the thor, is "an attempt· to break 1way blghly stylized texts on the •ubject create one in which the history treated direct, immediale intere:it to ents." OM. 't PILOT """' ., hie ......, SWEEP OF EMPTY SAND AND ABANDONED SHACKS MARK SALT CREEK BEACH County Abindonment of RN~ to Beach. Br ings Ou11tion11-from Publk, L91l1l11tor1 Laguna Ro·ad Loss Opposed Public Access, Ownership Debat;ed at Hearing By RICIUJID P. NALL Of 11111 NJ Pllft Stiff ~nment of the last section of Salt Cieelt Road to the Laguna Niguel Qirporitlon has raised questlom of both legality and propriety. .'!be, March abandonment action of the Ofange County Board ol Supervisors ~ to go largely unnoticed at first. But It was brought Into sharp public focus thl.a.month ,in Newport Beach dur- ing a hearing of the Asaembly Sub-com- mittee on Beaches, and Conservation. Mrs. Helen Keeley, f9nner Laguna Beach vi~ mayor, testified at the time: "}Vith this plttemeal abandonment of Salt Creek R4ad it appears to me that the Orange County Board of Supervisors a"'1 the Or111Se County RA>ad Department have lotally diattg!llded the needs or the public by totally disregarding the coupty'1 .own (1949} Ma.ster Plan for ~~velopm.nt." · '!'he publicly owned tideland .,... in· volvtd b oceanward ' or the ·mean blgh ~ llDe (abotlt.mld·beacl!J.1""" Three Ard1; Bay to Dwia Point. Mrs. Keeley tol,d Ulemblymen It was a vaJI, febllc ~· Local surfers aeem to agree. ~"'· w~ H. Beck, ezecuti .. rice ptesi<!ent <il Lasuna Niguel Corpora· Uon, f.as pointed out that ~e was JlO . gdbtic aJStm all the way to the -1aods., sect's position was coot8ined in a Dec. 18 letter to Aso<mblymao Alan Simity, wllo chaired the Newport Beach hWin(. Releiring to Mrs. Keeley's testimony, be wrote in part: "Assuning tliat this prw report is a ~ queitaUon or lhe., teitlmony, It . then ls ·incumbent upon us t'o polnt out thlt the statement i.s in error, for thett never hal' been public access to the ·beach at Salt Creek nor has there ever 'been public ownership of lands abutting or cgntfguous to · any portion oflhe1S<•Creei: Road right of way. · PRIVATE OWNERS "I have P,enOnal• knowledge that the land bu been held in private ownershlp and.. In)' use was predicated on the payment to the~ then owners of ~ir agents of a fee for the daylight use of . an}" portion of these privately held larids. In all Instances, admlllslon to arid llSe of the area was on 1 controlled bi.sill. ''nlil Corporation has, 1ince uswning control or those lllll<b, ·continued this policy." The distance between the ·miter line . or the abaodooed 100.fool l'Olld rtpt ,of way and mean high tide line on the beach is about 300 reet, accordlne to the county Plannint department. Stuart Balley, aisislanl planning direc- tor, said the March abandonment 1ctkrt of the last. section of the road was not reletred to the PtaMins deparlmenl Earlier abandooment In llGO and 1911 had been referred to·county planntrs, ABANDON Q=ON Opponents of the abandonment quesUon the legality of board action pointing to a government code section which states: "A vacation ol. an easement shall not be ordered within the area for which a master plu is adop~ ·UJIW the ,rp.. posed vacaUon lnntbmltled to a"'1 adod upcn by the plamling .. mmlNlon." Another ·~ent code section makes ttie iame ~lftt staUn& Qiat · m rel! ·property, partlcul1rly oo -In a master ptanoed -llhall be vaCalod befol:e -to the planning ... mlssjon. •• . The'l!Qard of Supervisors acted under a sedlcin ol the Siole Street and llil!>WIY Code 1i!J1 di! not ban • specific rullpJ fro\n'lllo CGWt!Y',""*'8et'• ollloe. Such a ruling 1\11 reportedly m..,. been called for u county ollidab belin taklng.a,Joqer loot at the matter. . Wllllam Wlli:oRo, Laguna Buch a~ lonley, polnta oot. that whether pi._ie land separated Ille road rtpl a"'1 #le ilci<lands, Ille property had never b!!en UDAvailU!e to the public unW late Wa: year. , REPRESENTS BOARD WJicoxen represent• the five-run Capistrano Par.II: and Recreation Diatdct ' Security Plan Set At New _(:pnfefence TWent>'four. bour i;ec11rlty will be & vided for the new county courthWle following action of.the stipervllon Tues- day. " The ,board· voted tQ add three securliy o!ficers· briJliislg the . total to seven. At tbe preaent Ume aecurlty 0Uicer1 ~e oo duty on)¥ from II :30 p.m. lo ~<JO a.m. Uader the new plan an evening sblft and 14-bour gusrd duty on weekends will be provldod. board which submitted 1 resolution at the subcommittee bearing urging llate action to UNre access to the Laguna Niguel tidelands. He m"aintains that the private section between road and tidelands Is one issue. Wil~en sees as a separate Wue the •l?andonment of a 100-foot wide public right-ol-:way to a corporation without comperwtlon or benefit of pubUc bear· Ines. Ho said .the rlg!lt al way was and b bJg enough for a scenic view point and a turr.around area. WIICOM:D bas suggested Supervllor Alton Allen that the gUt ol ibis mudt pUWe property, Silt Crttt Road, would be dtfficult to raUonalize unless it .11 m.,.ly o abiltlog ol public rlibts from ~place to lnotber. He menUoned street eDCf accttS to beai:tios requlred In NIW{l'rt, LoPna 8pd cotl!ll,Y ..... In llouth 19• 'and San' ClemOllte otattnc aucb --benqulred ol new de9el-enta. · aTESCODE Wilcoxen abo poinb to a aeotioD of the caiilomlo Coostltution (Ari. 15, S..L 2F which stltes the people shall always have aCesas to navigable waten. It stat.s that no Individual, partnerablp or corporation iA pol.1elllon of lands of a harbor, ·bay, inlet, estuary or other navigable water shall be permitted to exclude the right of way to auch water whenever it ii reqU:.irtd for any public purpooe. The att«ney ooncede1 there might be itome interest.!ni law involved' if the matter becomes a mil He pointed out, for instance, th1t an old dlvtllon line al :satt Criek separated a Spanlah land grant from publJc lands deeded by Preal- dent Grant in 187.4. It ii · coocelvute, sald · Wllco-that public riehll m. one part or ll)e beach ml~ be dJllerent than Oil another. · Wlk:oolen conceded that • pork and recreation district ·would not nonnaU,. involve ttself with road abandonmerit matters. · BOARD OONCEllN But be Slid the board Is concerned about . re:cnauon ·and beach recreation is involved . He aakl he did not know what the board's slandlng would · be relaUve to filing 1 law IUit Jn ·the matter. He added, 0 They have not . paid me a dime or eipended uiy fund& relative to the nad." or l-oli~e TV System: Boon • • 1: (FAitor's Note: The City of Newport &each earlier this year coosldered and tejeded a system «. cloled-drcult TV tollce surveillance. The foUowina: nport. liy the As.wciated Press relates tbe ex· r.rence of one city whlch hu tried ~ By ERIC M. SHARP ~OLEAN , N.Y. (AP) -While •hoppers k in windows alon1 Union Street, Ucemen look at lhe shoppers on closed· rt\Ht television -a practice that hu I"'"""' both laughter and anger 1mong lean'• residents. · ~ 'lbe eight televWon cameru. mounted t reet •bo"' the street on lightp>sU, a,irvey the five-block-long bustneu center fl tbts dty of %2,000 cupped In the •negtimy 111>land• 70 miles aouthwt ttl Buffalo. • 1n polk:t headqu1rttr11, a deU w-geant IOIDlll8lldl • m.. o1 dgbl a.1<v111on -.:e!Yln that -plc!wu ol Union areet rrom variouJ qles. Opponent. II I.be aysttm hive one mQr complaint A. tt twn\ worl<ed wdl llnce tt wu lllrned on S.pt. 27. ""Thty've IOl the cameru ln tht wron1 ," said 1 bartender. "They witch ronts or the store!, and any burglar half an ounce of sense will eo In the Met." His comment is backed up by the fad that two break-ins have been made at Union Street llloreS since the cameras were erected. In each case, entry was made at a camera blind spol, and the police didn't find out about lt Ior some hours. A shoe store operator pointed out another bug: "You can't &ee a thing on the Ltlevtsiona at night." Those who favor television l!lurvtillance -including Mayor Harvey Shneiderman -say Its faults are teclmlcal and CIR be ellmlnated through better eqilp. ment and erperlmentation. "li this does no more than control our trafOc problem, then it's a boon," Sbnelderman said. "New equipment will make lhit sy11tem a highly e(fect.ive crlm< dd""'11, lllll, 11 we Ue H In w:IUt our burglar and tire ala.rm l)'ltemi, It will M lnvaJu1ble. '1 '· As It ltaods now, lelevl1 Jan airve.illanct by po11~ i$ not VU'/ tf· fective. In tht dlytlme, the plcturt nrtly Is clear enough lO l~y [ICU at disUncea of more than 5CI ~ to feet. At night. the lo•er hllf or each screen displayc • pattern of eurvin& black and white lilles, and the upper half shows Wiit ...... thlll. alllomobUo hewill114 . , A person . walkln& a Iona: a sidewalk' 1t nlglll cannot·lle ...... Michael Am>ld, ereal« ol the systiom and general manq:er of otean'1 Allbmd C.blovilloo Inc: Which lnatalled It, iid· milted there "" bup, bot uid !My will be ccrrected soon. ''We'vt learned a lot ln thia eafly perlod.,and we·,. pln1 to modify lhe 1}'!tm1 to make it more effeeUve,'' •be S$id, I "We11 . chana< lbe location ol lhe cameru ·to covtr back aDey11 and bllbcl spots, and oar new •J!t.meru wlD tbe equipped with zoom ltn.!ts and pan hilro side lO aide." AmoJd demonstrated one or the ""' zoom· fena,c•meras. J:le aimed it out 1 window cl Q. oflico• •nd It locustd lltlt~ a 1'ltJ9e abotlt 100 yanta away. A pietln ai·U.. -appeared oo a a.tevt.lon Mt hooked Up wit.h 'the CIJtltf•. A1'IOld pmoed the """' swtkh, lb! the t.let<Opic lens brov&bl the - In: "' clooo that anl)' • mail"""""' ol J!>e ....,, ,. .. dlspilyod .. lbe ........ °'Y(IU ·can ttld 10m«mt'1 watch at 700 r .. t with ibis thing," he grinned. He Nld the problems of ntgbttfme televising could be eliminated b)' u11lng cameras wllb.-. Ugllt-tlve'louel and changln( from 1111 liumlnum-coated cable to 1 pl.a:sthx:oaled one. Thie older polictmen on Olean'• 33-man for~ believe the system is a wute of time. 'nle younger Jll(!n are mc:n ready to give tt • cbanct: and think It can be made to wort. Police Chief Michael Loly Aid Olean doesn't have much of a crtme problem and btlieva television "will work better u a crime deterrent than anything else. Once Jt•a working properly, • bura:Jar ii going to Ullnk twict about tnterinl a building when be knows the police can aee, him go in." He added that the tilevtaliln ,ya1em could free two patrolmen !nm walklng: a boat and Iner,... the abillty .or pab'OI can to retn to a rtpot1ed <lrime. Many of Olea:n's citiiem seem to reprd ttkMlton aurvelllance 11 a jeke. They llJI the c)ly does not ha .. enqh crime lo wmant It and think the pro- bltm1 lftCOUnterfd 10 r1r ll"t D0t worttJ the eflort to llrligblen out. So far, the television uperlment has not coet .the city a cent. "We pa1 for it when we KCtpt It. and ,.. don't accept It unlit It 't ·-tin( to our utldactlon," stmektermln NJd. ••Whtft It doe1 go .Into effect. It will coat the city a little ovtr M,&00 • year. -la abc>J\ the lllilry <il ... !SI IWLV Pit.OT 3 . llnder•ta...illlfl-~ouf1tt -Valley·· an.fl _ Wa~~ • • • -~ • 1· Schoolmen -Meet~ ' ~ ....... .... ... .... ~ .. Artvalot School In ·-· ll!iddle ctus Fovotaln ya11ey. hOl a aloter ~ ltllld Stnet School, in tbe black s)ietto taDed WatU. . · Teachers and parerill lrom Arevaloo have met with teacberl and po-. from IOlllcl Street In a~ ... counter between .. ~ a"'1 the giletlo. The IOI l<18<ther occurred ... ,....I -kf!lld In the Sao -Moan-taJns. It Wiii I quiet ·one. "There usually ii IO much Ian!.,. and IO little acUcll," GplalDecl AleYaJOI Principal lloben Llndatrom, wbo Slid Chilean Duo .. Drive Length Of Americas LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Two ~ adventurers determined to drive the length ol the weatern bemllpbere lo AJaska have arrived ·tn Lot. Angeles, vlcliml of an au.ct by Colombian guer- rillas, a colllsim w:IUi a ~-tr~ rig and a theft wblch tell theol penntlaa. ... . . , - be ''*"' '!'· ~bllclly 1111' !be -acll6ol J>l'Oll"&ID. J ~. ID bit qut&<"w01, la ...... lq Oitabllol> ..mUict --·-...i blac!: commlllllll<li that be bopos wlll !Ollerundmtandllll: wei!UND SDIJNAJl He lblnb that bepa lo baJ>llell al the !Int weete111 MDlnat, ottendod i,,. 12 teacbert a"'1 three parents -Af'e.VaJOI, and. U teacben, and U.. pall!tlla from !«Ind Street School. . "There' are some .real 1...i lhlnp comlna ovt ol just taltlni to each olber," be said. ''This ii • peopte.~le "I" proach." ' U. 10ld It was learned by emnpleo given that many lhingl wbla. - MY .turn block pet8llllS Vfrf bltlu. It liso was dllCOVm<j, IJe lllicl, . that ~ !ram both ~ haVI -In common In doallng with llludtnU. P....m., too, hav. lhe. -e . w0tlj01 pltin( children dreooOd and lo -on time, and dealing with bom.,...t, be sald. SEEKll>IG PAllBNTS Undltrom said the ,nut -....... tallvely b llcheduled. for Febuary. lie hopes to Involve more parenll ~ time. Arie! Be-. 23, and l\Oberlo Schmidlin, 22, IOilfed 29,6311 miles In . their . 1929 automobile bef>n. tbeir llopov.er Jim alnce !Qyjq -home In Concepcion last M1y 5. He sald the !du bepn to ci<veloP. !all tprlng when be taJbd Ille AnTalol Parent-Tud>er OrPhlzation I PT 0) boll'd. Tben be mot'O.... KM<. -fA· a Watts ec:hicatkl'ial · complex, at a -con1~. . . KDOi: dlnctid.~ lo Wamn ~ printlpai al -~-and lililP and Llndilrom had h111cb to(<lher. FRU FACILl'i'IES They had their money a"'1 prevt$na stolen 1n Eucador, forcing them to live on monkey me1t and banuas In tbe juogle. Their only drlntlnll water was from the car radiator, wtUcb ''tided better than the water in .orne pJaceJ." admitted Betsncourt. Still, Betancourt said, "We have been lucty." Alter perrlllaa ("llalldilol, "'' with machine fWUI") were coavlDced by the youths they had no maaey. a"'1 had to eat monkey meat In Ille JW!ll•, the bandit lead<r handed.them •!iOotl!O. "Now· you have money," ~,aid~ . . Further good fortune, llUJi>olb s!lCl't llved,.has.bl<saod the travelere• ' In Barranquilla, Colombia. ao artist friend 1ave them a ptJntinc· lo ·rlfDe of! for funds. "It w• tied to .the .top ct the car," Betancol)rl Mid. "~Q, gone." . Tiie' -theo · ... vt ·lblm .. .... l>llDlinl ""''""" ... 11!1> .... -b1 lotliry. :M ai!dllklnal ca\!llll'Ollile. -bowmr, wu avened wbm tM,.. dePled ,not 10 1tay 'in . Mulco City '1isW· tho J>r• Otympjcl .rioll. . , , ""They tried lo tel ~ car M fin. They said we are }JJppJes. We are not hlpplet," aald Bet41JcOtD'L BetallC'l'lfl al1d SclunilVln .are , In Clitfomla !or the secood time lince their sojourn be&an. Tbey spent three moolill in Santa Morla -partly In a hospital -after tbeh· car wu struck by a truck a"'1 trailer ril oo the blgbway last AIJSull. .Voluo._.., Dreman baclc home, the Chileans tr.qaentty have been guuta of flttmen who have come to thtll' aid. Oo a britf otopover hen!, tlley uJd they are u detmmned n ever to 'IOI In Aluta. Tumble Injury .· Brings Claim, · A woman who Id •nd wu ·IDjured In the Orange Coonly Ftnanee Building Dec. 1, Tll!eday flied a · '2t.000 claim with the Board or S4Jpetv1atn. Theresaa Miller of Denver,· COio., old she was waltclng Io tho cmldor aod fell wbeo she bit a sUppeey spot. She aats $2,1100 !or modlca! care, $1,IOO for fUture medlc1J care and $21~ ceneral dadges. Supervisors denietl tbe claim and rt!er- red II lo the couoty .., .... L Joke? patrolman. Onl1, the televilion camer1s don't need vacations, get skt or go for coffee brtata." • Arnold admitted Allhand Is IOl!ng money on this experiment, but said the inveatlnent 11 wort!> lt. Arnold Wet tdevWon aurveillance might be more valuable in hJgb crime rate areas of lar1e cities than u a generli tool In lrmall ones. "Yoo wo.ikfn't hive to put cameru everywhere,'' he aa.ld. "Just in those plaet• you think they are needed. Mount the receivers In the• precinct. houles, Ind a policeman coukl keep ID eye on the m1." Some cltluna complain televillon- "'""'lliln<e Is an l~vasion ol privacy, bot moot people lhru( off that Idea. "Hen, It .... lea than • cop ·wattinJ his beat doet," a 1ara1e mechanic pointed out. "I mean, o cop C111 loot Into a ra&aurant when you 're nUna or loot In a ...,... window and • .,. )'00 tryln& Oil a CO<t. The tv jlllt )ooka It the ltreel" Shneldennan agroed with tllia view· point, 11J11n1: "We'ro waldllna a public l1torou.lhfan. I don't ,.. hoir -con oomplaln ...... Invading their pi•oey -~·ro on Yiew to llundftdl ol people w.-,....,tho......,_~ The seminar wu held wuftnd before tut at C.Ulomla Teachm Aaaocl- (cr/\) center at Lake Amwbeod. F.aclllUes·..,... qp!led floe by the crA aod crout> dynamics experts to lud the dlKuaatoo were jlald for by tho Keta.rinc.'Foimdallon, Lindllr<im Slid. 11e 'mnart..i' be ii ·bopellll 'the rDto. 1"'9 -eventua!IY may be irled by otller IUborban -II wftb' tho Art'vliol eitperlenoe med u a model. Sobie ol the IMCllen ha.. decided to· haw their' 11114enta wr11e each . o111er u pen pall, Lillditrom uld. He said there are no plans for villta between the oohoola. "We're U1lng Jo achieve understandtn1, not force tn. teantton, .. he Nkl. ' Pekiil · 'Atteni ts I t ~I ~i.g_, J.i t)I p ' ' > r Hanoi 'f.omebaek' I. ~•l ~ ,1,, \ , ,•11 Sidles Up ' to .Ho LOl'illON <UPI) -Pekloi k ' lrJllic a "-t· ID lll!not. by aidllnr qp to the ·blnlilne lactlon'ln ~ Ho Chi l\llnh'• ..-nment, diploaui!lo rtPOlta lllid1oday. . 1be lmoft~.ll.•hitfndred to 1$1D:flir Peking 'llOl!lt ol · ·\¥. loot ~ ;,, Hanoi where tbi 11.ovleta n ·· -aubSllntta! ilroWld lo ..-it mOoihi wllh ~ ..._1 for a oecot1ated oe!Uemeol ol·the Vietnam war. . Tbe-.rtporli said ao !or ll8nol baa ~ the new. approachel a a d -from· Red Cblaa wblcll· ot>Pi-llle Parts ne(OIIailtlllo and ·W-Norlb Vietnam lo Ogbt lo tho -tad. . Al ol now,. the diplomatic ....,... laid, llano! ii resolved to continue peace ellorll In P.arta delpite their tact ol Jll"lll esa. Petin( has, at leut to dale, f~ to mUe· a new tmpaet ·on t&e regime aod to lway ill count ·11eap11. a nportild JD1rtecl" llOwc»wn in C'dn1• 11Upplia lo •Ille No111i • VIetnamao ·1a retaUatloo for lfo'l'lndepeodent Polley. I .The ... por11 Slid Hanoi In e/IOCI 11 ~Jn pr;inciple .to •We ''ev~" fot a. eompromJ14, however, on ,the bull or two Ry prlnCiple1" A. coalition IOVein-ment in· saigon onil an · Anlerlciln wtlhdnlwli, .ltlmty laid down In in asr...i time table or a pha>od pull out. The ..,,.,.. -that the -lnfluenoe In Rlnot · wu at one time vlrb/all,y, oecllilbt• bot la now on. a . larger llCale. · · · Moaw clJIDOt and does not dictate llllY specific pollciel. But ill couDIOI b , ')OW ~ taken more cle&\'ly 'b!to COtlilderaU/Jo by HllllOI and ·Iii sua- gealloni for moderation beard, tho aources said . The RUJSiana appear convinced tbat Hanoi wants a settJtment and even may be prepared lo pay a price, lholJlb 1 modest one. Fountain Valley Sets Basketball League for Youth Younc bo.tt"etball proej)ect. in IP'-1-1 caJI allft up !or ~ Fountain VllJey Parts and Reerootion Dep"1meol'1 1• JunlorBaatetbllJ~Jan.11. BoYI In t1-fll'atles who Hve In lbe ICbool boiiiidarlel ol. either Fountain Va!Jl:y 111&1> Schi>ol 0< Loo Amigos. fllcb Scilool ... elt&lbl• lo play. Prolj>ecUve playtra can &llJ"I up al the l'<luntalh Valley Cl!Y HAU, 11111111 Slalar An., or at Jlie F0<mlaio Valq Hll)l Sd!ool Gym on Jon. u, ·U. flnl day ol pt<llCllce. A butetblU c1i!>1c will bt betd al Potmtain Viii<)' lll&h School Jan. 11 and -at Loo Ami&Oa. Jan. ta. toquo play bepll Ju. a. r ...... '"' the 1uaut will ba formed by _. with dlffmnt lraclceta fll' .,...._ . • • • I frld.iJ, DtUn\Dtr "£/, 1968 Wiiiem James Frenk Noel Hop- man' will not likely forget the his- toric Apollo 8 Chrislmlls voyage to the moon for as long as be lives. Tha baby's parents of Be!jen op Zoom, -Holland c!eelded to name him after America's three Apollo 8 astronauts and Noel for Chri&t- maS, as he was born on Christmas Eve. ' • Armed with a shotgun, a man. burst into a London liquor store Chrisll"aa Day Bild clubbed one of three Shopkeepers ·over the head. He fired a 'Shot into the ceiling, then fled with one bottle of brandy. But, a salesman said , 1t could have been worse. "It was not a brandy of superior qua1ity," he said. " · -.. • A ..do:fn mtmb1ra of B·~ B'rnh_:jn ~Prtland, Maine, did patrol tQJ: dsttt pnd clerical ioor k at 1M Police Jt.ation Chriltmas I Daw -to gloe policmtt"n e::rtra " ho•rs off duty. One of the men ~ as.rign1d to a patrol car wit1' a • rfgular poliefm41\. . saw action . I during hi! tour. He directed t traffic at the scene of an acct- ~ dnt. •c 1 ..-a wwwwa#:'h't"·..,, ' -Saigon ·Assails V C-F r en ~h Talks PARIS (UPI) -Sal&on's war talks delegation chafed today at France's dls· cussion with the Viet Cong on the pollti· cal future oI South Vietnam. The Sataon negoll1Ung chief, Pham Dang Lam, denounced French Foreign Minilter M1che.I Debee's meeting Thurs· day with Tran Buu Kiem, the -top Viet Cong at the stalled Parl.a tali!. North Vietnam and the Viet Cong ~~t~. wl~ .. a communique demand· Ing the lmmedlfte opening of nogotl•· Uons "around il circular table. It sa1d Saigon ... was trying to s11botage peace efforts .• Kiem emerged from his conference with Qpbre and announced hit remains only t>r the details to be. fixed" before the Viet Cong release three captive Gls in ioulh Vietnam as promised. Dtoouocing tbe JS,.iem-Debre session, the Saigon leader said the French'forelgn minister "has prejudged the nature of the (j>eace} conf~ence to be held and its final outcome." - "Jt .&:eem.s dUUcult not to link Tran 'Bu~ KiWi·s etrotti--to be received by the Frerich lot;eign ~ter with the effort put up 'bY lhe .COmn1unist side with a view or winning for the (Viet Cong) a certain atatuJ lot the forthcooting Paris conference," Lain said. · One ot the primary Issues blockil\I the beg!nn!ng ot apal)ded talks Is Saigon .. refusal tO •accejit.:the Viet Cong aJ a separate entity:,t the bargainl.ng table . Debre Was tbe first French cabinel · member to meet with a Viet Cong rep- reaentatlve1 -a mttUn,a lhat pvt U. guerrlllu • ·-andJ boool In lbolr- demand for otfli:Jal re<opitlon. * * * A llies Slam Guerrillas' Supply Lines SAIGON (UPI) -u. s. warplanu and South Vlelnameae fool !Oli!!en 111111>- med Into the Commwl1ol ~ and supply buildup thuatenlng Salcdn and dealt the perrlllu a heavy blow, mU!tary spokelmen Hid today. _ . American B52 stratofortl, d ·1 v & · bomber• and hellcopler I u •• h I p I deltroyed us Commuhlal bunken, 16 forUfications and 28 sampans in raids Thursday that triggered 10 fireballs in t h e guerrilla supply network toward Saigon. South Vie tnamese Infantrymen CIJ>" lured 49 Viet Cong trainees in a camp 20 miles north of the capital and sti.r.ed two tons of hidden Com muniat TNT aod ant11 south IA the Mekoog Delta, military spokesmen said. U. S. headquarters intelligence reports, meanwhile, showed the guerrilla$ bad not used the allies' 24-hour Chrl&lmls cease-fire to move clour to Saison for the expe<:ted winter-spring offensive. . Whit'~ in • .!.~ in co1ora,;;,;: ;Stove Blast Fire Sweeps it can be confusion. Take, for ex· ample, Bald Mountain. There are at least a dozen Ba1d Mountains Uic,. • • . • h Colorado • two in Boulder County Th h H . e. 6 p lS alone. Gunnison county has a COUS· roug om ' er in mountain, Mount Baldy, a n d Garlleld County has a Baldy moun· lain. There's Bald Hill IA Pa r k County and Bald Knob in La Plato County. • ,.. At The Animal lnd'IU'tf'U Hail at U1 e Co.lifornia MU!eum. of Science and tnduatrv i n Erpo.rition Park the 1968 y~r i.s tritwtd as a "real turMJI," and 1969 ii aeen a1 "for tht birds too." Thi& gicmt 7().pound turMy and a 4-dav-old chick were picked as rep- resentatives of the old and new years. • The fairways thieves have struck again. Armed robbers held up a golfer and his caddy near hole No. 6 of the Holiday Hills Golf and Country Club in Manila In the sec- ond robbery on the g o I f course within the past month. The victim and bis caddy were tied to a tree and the thJeves fled 'with casb and valuables estimated at $125. • GRANVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -Ftrt from The boy and bis mother were holpttal- an exploding wood stove roared through lzed, Suffering from frostbite, shock, a two-story frame house near this east· cuts and bruises .. ern New Yort communHy early today, Four bodies had been recovered abort- killfng six persons. ly before IO a.m., u police and firemen • On1y lWo persons _ a &year-old set up a maktahift morgue teat oo the v.·oman and her 9-year~ld son _ escap-lawn of the bome. The house, in the 1ed the blaze. The boy, Thomas Busbee Washington County hamlet of Raceville, fled the home when he was awakened north of here near the Vermont border, b:t an ezplosion and saw a mushroom-was burned to the ground. ·lng fire in the kitchen. r ~ 1dead were Joseph Busbee, 32, _ Elliabeth~ jumped fram •~.-owner of the ~me, bis brother, Edward, second-lloor window and ~ lhiouah ··-~·.!'-Williams, 68, Fred Steele, 65, 'th<! snow and 2G-degne-b<!Oii~~ J .... -· 5, and Walter Carl t e1 hbo W Ball Sumner, 10. o summon a ti g r, arren er. Mrs. Williams was Joseph Buahee's Bu~er .arrived to find Thomas Bushee mother-in-law. slandin~ in h1s underclothing, barefoot, The Sumner children were grandchil· calling into the house, by then complete-dren of Mrs. WilUams • . ly enveloped in flames. Police. said the Sumner children were "The boy said, 'I can't go unW my staying at the home because their father <;omes,' "Butler said. Butler pick-mother was hospitallzed and in grave ed him up and led him away. "I knew condJUon, at a Glen1 Falls, N. Y. hospi- nobody could be alive tn there." he said. ta!. Fire Heroine Dies 7-year-old Rescued Sisters , Brother UTICA, N. Y. !AP) -Wendy Lerch. 7, was killed in a fire in her b<me ahort· ly before midnight Thursday after res· cuing ~r £our sisters and a brother. Mer tnoUJer, Mrs. Jotm Lerch, sa t hysterical on the 1idewalk ln a straight- back wooden kitchen chair, wrapped in bOrro;.d boots and blankets as fire - men r fighting In subzero weather their sixth major fire of the njght -put out the flam~ and then searched for Wen- dy'• body. · Mra. Lerch had rescued her crippled busband, confined lo a wheelchair t h c last three year.&:, while Wendy cot Pat- ty, Pearl, Ricky, il«1ee and Linda away from lbelr Conkling Avenue bcmt. Fire oatcials said the fire wu 1tarted by a faulty heater under Lerch'• bed. He and One of the cl)ildren wer taken to a hospital for t~ent o minor bums. - Wendy returned to the blazing hou1e io make sure all of her family w a 1 safe and was trapped on the second Ooor at the (op of the stairs. The Lerch fi.mily lost n son !:'I Vietnam nbout a year ago. North Plains Snow Belt Record Breaking 2 1:belo1f_Re_gistered .~t Burlington, Vt. -" Ca llfontla 'l'ea_.ara S11My lkllt rlll;rMd to $0uttw:r11 C.llfwnl• lodlJ l «lln!Nllllcl bJ -rft'OlllO ,,..., .. """· "'!toll!• ~ rn1fnM <OOI. Tht Ill... 1! Lia An9e1t1 w11 i~. !fir* d"rll!t 1bcYf T1>11r1<11r1 m•~ lm11rn. 1'ht \.os Al\ffln e,1111 w• ,,.. of ·--....... , w'"' 'unnv wllll !11th• nt.ar '° •lllf • w11tr lt~•lur• Ill Joi. Hitt. 1tli) .. r111;rn •f ll*!ni.1~ ,,,. sort ''"* """"' In Ille olt'1 wf!lle *"'" ..,., Yl lltya -rt nf•r ... ,llC .... lll>t C!t•ud1 WI"' ,,.. CIWlnc• r "' •11111! fl" lltlll r1111 bv 1119 .. 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MIMN•llt ,..,. °' ....... Ntw Yori! OHl•lld ..... • u " " " " " " .. " " .. ... ·" _ .. aMr .... ceDI 1.,19111. I.ow IO, I~ _ ... ~ illll,..1v. Ct..n« o1 ....... llthl r•l1> JO ""''"' '"' '-"""· ..,. ""''°'' .0. CQUTM. A"D INlll:MeDtAll VAU.IYJ -CIMr •11111 -llllllW ...,ire ~ ........ 1..-• N •. IN:rMtlt>t .... ~. ""-" .. OrlnW. "' """ l'lllrt """"""~ Wl!lwl l•'1 Sll11r• ........... ltMW'l•i.u. MOUNTAIN Alt!AI -CIMr 1 "I -........,, ,.,... ... 41ouct1 ,., ..... ..... l.aiif .......... ""'' lllft ~ .... ~ ...... ..,.,.. I~·-AfllD OlllJtl llf'G-tONf"" .... "-"" Wiim' 11'111 1r1t111tv """" a.f\ll'llY ""' ~ inu..11nt SttW'flt ~· ........ •1•11! It ti ti o.tfWi V.tlft ... " .... ~··· .................... '*"'' .. ~ Jti U9lltt "''"" ...... '°' ....., "1•· ...... . . I """' • 19 ._ v ........ ~Ill ... ,_., INm • h~ ., U 19 • low Ill Mo 11'-.... ,..., .. ,.iw. t9fllt .... 17 .. ~J. nit w•t~r """'°1h1re -· M.I W-·-Sous, n!oon, 'IUe• fltrtt N.ii Ill"' lew -"'' . .... , IKorld IOw •• ' ' • •w•v • ''t1.m.I ' 11:to' •·"'· o.• •~•! •·"'· l.I 111• "·"'· 1.0 "'"' Pl!•~ J:fl ··"'· 1.4 fllrtl lf'or ,,,.,.... lt:4t 11.m. O.J S.C:OllCI tiltJll ... , .. , 1·U 11.m. lf ..... ...,..,. ......... 11:" '·"'· 1.a ~ .,.._,. ..... tllill .... ~ .,...,. .-let-' """' Olt~ • "'. T~:1111 to Ille A#tKfli.,.., 1'.......... ..,.,.... ..,. 111 efr.c:t for 111 .. bordltlM C•MW '"'"' lhll -.on ..... ""' ... ""' .._,.. .,,. • ,,......, ...... wttdl .... Ill ..,., ., ,,, -~ ., """'"'· 1.lohl --. 1t1I l lOl'lt h uo1t.I fl•cl!lc: NorllwlMI tM I """" 1,.. ltM 1-.d ,,_ Clftr lfll llOl'tllttn Jlodlltt. "rllld Att.lk 11t' e....r 1+tw I!,... ltM 1rWlield l'lllUf• ,..,I~, I,.. cllldlllO • rkft '"Mll\I tl••ll'W rttllttrltl 11 lurlll!l'hlf>. VI, cr..r. ,,.,. Mlllltr w•i "'"'''"' I~ ITWdl of lfWo kull'lffcl •nd kulfl-1, lht avtltoll ,,IO•v Wll for l'\Ort el 11'1 tlmt, lottlfON •T~ .. ~ rt«lv- lnt ••'" IM .,_ W'llt ~IYf mort 1111 111ow 1re1t rnlll'!'!nt 1!•1wnt .,.,..,,..r wll ~ .. De "'"' "'"'"• ,, .. lllllt• fl'llll ........ -· flllttUt.I""' -llt1tll CltY II" l f\lfl ·-Sac:r•""""' ''· l-* a.u,... a.tt ... ~. (lly S..11 PIM• kn jr,..llCl'M.• 111111 ltrlltrt h l llls !e!.~, w;;,;;;;,.. ·" "· ., ,11 g n " u u .. • .11 n l• .t11 ... , ... ,, 11 ... u " n " .. u .... '1 M ... _,, -~ .. ., .07 ....... Jt 11 .n q .. ,., n n ,01 •I n . .. • • . ' -.. ., ~ ~ , ... .,. • year:-end sal~·· Ql . - ( .· • Sealy m Qttre.~"Se i. -once a year·May Co and Sealy bring you aiira-special savings on luxurloµs !llaltreSS9S, box springs and sleep eiise\jlbles. You'll find a large assortment of sizes, firmnesses, construction and t!clc!ng s to . . . choose from. Ouantiti es are limit~r . '° sh~n e:ulv fo r 1he best choice. Sealy 3 ,.,,d 4 piece bedding ensemble~ reg.199.9(; ""~ •••.00 159.00 .. twin size mattresses a nd 2 matching box springs •Hu ndreds of highly tempered steel coils • No-sag pre-built borders •Many layers of thick cotton felt and sisal insulators for firmness and comfort ... 1alel Sealy quilted matt.-.11 or box 1prln~ 39.99 lwla or full reg. 49.95 Deeply quilted ticking, hundreds of steel coils. Colton felt over sisal Insulators. Vertically quilt- ed no-sag borders. Fresh air ventilators. 2-pc. queen set, 1118.00. 3-pc. k;no set, 159.il" giant 6'x7 ' king size mattress and 2 malchino 3'y7' box springs •King size mail, ... ;::; 1.us :..i specially reinforced. center section to prevent body roll •Box springs are engineerer lo provide body-balanced support for your back -..... sale! Sealy Firm Guard mattre11 or box lprlng 59.99 . twln or full rr-9. ~ o~ cleautiful quilted : .. c. •••.• v::Ki;e mattress with 312 co1ls, edge gua rd construction with body bracers, ·soft cotton fell for -extra comfort. 2-pc. queen sel, 169,00. .., nc. kincr set, ?.4~ !'In .. • ... .;&µ wqu1pment !~::> .1...i uvwn payment. months to pay on May·T1 m9 co -- may co south coast plala , san dl1190 freeway at bristol, coita . mtiaf '.146·9321 shop monday lflrou9h saturday, 10:00 a.m . to 9130 -p.m. • ·-·--.. .. j = c = • • • 1 • I ' 1 i - j = = : ii .. .. • I • '~ j ' ,, I i • ; • • ' 1 j ' Lady Bird-· Reflects For .T,Z· WASHINGTON (AP) AJn,, Lyndon B. Johnsoo ·~ ll!e'lliln1 !ht'• ~ppl"t abovi leavlnc behind after five yeart Jn the Wh1le HOuse are all the urly ipornlng, often ominhll. telepbooe calls to the Pruldllll "Tbt -1'1111 of that ~ at 4 o'clock that drql · yau to canacloulneu ..a yau ...., on lbe other encl that H ii IJOlnlthlng llglllllcan~" 'Mn. Johnaon aaya. 0 And tl It never good When H rlnp at that time. •11t 11 the sense o f it-.Ublllty. It I• not my rapooalblllty but It doea spill over Into the whole climate of youi'llle." Mrs. Jolmeoll eilo 18)'8 she will be lioi!PY to ~ve ~nd the deadlliiea •• and the Prelldeol ccmatanUJ face and the le-hour wort day" . 'Ille . llrat iady m..i. ber commenta In a t a p t d tdavillon lntervjew • .,, I t h Howard K. Slfttth to be lhown at 7' 30 P<ill> OV1>t I h e American Broadcutlna: ,Co. network. :. Mrs. JGhnson aaya • the President, like other men acrou tht nation, brings. the problems or his job home with him. And he also brings home unexpectedly the people he works with. She said, however, she wanted the President to bring the burdens home to her after a long day in office. ·"When he comes alone, ht brings the problems .and, you know, I would feel that it w a s -I would feel somehow I had failed if he didn't," she said. "Because where else can be feel more relued about thtm and more-where would be have AD audience better suited to heiring about !ham quite privately and quite honestly?" ·• ' One of the mOlt difficult things for her to leave behind, Mr11. Johnson 11aJd, Js what she calls the magnetism of the White House. Volpe Backs Mass Transit WASHINGTON (AP) John A. Volpe, President-elect Nixon's choice for lrlDlport&· tlon secretary, says . more emphasis must be put on mu& transportation aystefnl to top& with the nation's urban traffic problems. Tbe Massachuaetlll aovemor said Thursday in hll ftrat news conftrenee !inct appointed by· Nixon that "highways alone won't do the job." The empbuis on public transportation came as a bit or a surprile since Volpe baa gained a reputation as a man who believes in highways . As federal highway administrator in the Eisenhower ad· ministration be directed the start of the glganUc interstate road 111tem and he founded a construcUon company that hu built thousands of miles of highways. Rapid transit sy1tems m1y not prove feasible in some areu, Volpe said, but there will be othera whtre "you can't build any more hi8hways without ~eartnc a city apart." ~---- • u.s,, CON~ Ml.IT -Dlicuseing the neg~Ualion for ' the rele11e of three U.S. prisonen, Lt. Col. John V. Gibney (cltiter); of Cleirwater, Fla., u:.s. delega- l!on chief.and ~aj. Je&J! Salivegeot (left) of Akron, Viet ~ong Claim Ohio, talk with Viet Cong representatives in a field six miles south of Tay Minh, SOUlh Vietnam . Maj. Sauvegeot speaks nuent Vietnamese. .. Protocol Preventii:igRelease U.S. Bombs Laos Trails Du:Fing Yule SAIGON (UPI) -The Viet COog · aaid today the three American war priaoners whole release they promised to negotiate on Christmas Day were not released because U.S. Negotiators refused to discuss procedures. The claim was made on Liberation Radio, the Viet Cong's clandestine radio, and mon!tored In Saigon. Thursday in Paria a Vlet Cong spokeaman said only final details remained to be worked out before the release. A Viet Cong broadcast Dec. 23 said the three Americans had been nleued on Dec. 22, but this apparently was erroneous. U.S. officials said they knew nothing of such a release and later bl'iladcalts made it clear the prisoners were still in guerrilla hands. American spokesmen said the Viet Cong negotiating team they met on a jungle baUlefleld Christmas Day told they did not have the authority to specify the date, time or locality for the release cf the three prisoners. The Viet Cone broadcu.t t.o. day said: · "The Poular Forces Armed Forces Command had given the time and place to meet representatives of the U.S. Command in South Vietnam on Dec. 25. On the time and * * * * * * Hope Tired of War, ' Lauds Troop Morale DONG TAM, Vietoam (UPI) -Bob Hope today indicated be b tired of the Vietnam war, but will keep entertainhlg the troops no matter wliat happens. "I agree it was imp()rt&nt lo stop the COmmuniats' •1· greHlon here, but it seems to hive dragged on and on," he said. "I want to do .some nice peaceful shows without the sound of arUllery in the background." liope made the remark in a backstage interview at this Mekong Delta combat base, as the air vibrated with the roar of Cobra helicopter gwish.ips &net the thunder of artillery. Hope, vldbly exhaqJled by his tour of the w1r zone, waa not all glum. He said his reapect ror the morale of the American troops serv· ing in the war had risen. "They somehow seem to be Jn mueb better shape this year," he nld. Hope's weariness ·from 15- hour days was not reflected in the shows he presented in the country. Most men view him as Vietnam's answer to Santa Claus and he did not disappaint them. Daily the 6S·year-old performer appeared beJore the troopa with an ever-ching· ing rouUne of topical j~es and a lot of 11Hope." Combat soldiers, their boots still stain· ed with mud and, sometimes, blood sat for up to 18 hours to await his arrival. "Hope is Christmas," one soldier said. "It makea com- ing to Vietnam seem 1 little worthwhile." placed fixed the U.S. represen· taUves .. met the ' .re'presen· 41tlyh 'or tbe !~tern (Vot Cong) Command but would oot agree to discuss the pnr ced ures which is why the meeting did not bring any reauhS." _ · A U.S. spokesman seJ,d: Most of the two hour and a· half meeting was taken ·up by a d1SCUS!liOn of "protoc:Ol." and observers believed !-Jlia meant the Viet COng were asking for some IOrt of recognition. A U.S. spokesman said to- day ''\Ve are open f o r anything" in meeun1 the Viet Cong to arrange the release of captive Gls. ~rank Abuse RtileNowUp To · Congress WASHINGTON (UPI) - The· ~Oat Office Department, which 1a,i October claimed San. Robert P. GrlU!n (R- Mlch), mllht owe the tu· payers $25,000 In postaae, an· SAIGON (UPI) -American ...... ' 852 bbmbel1 uled the ti-hour Christmas cease.fire in South Vietnam to lace North Viet· namese tr'1flc in LaOI ¥'Ith' a record num~~ of 'raids. ln- fonned allied sources said to- day. During the 24-hour period sp_arming Christmas Eve and Cbrlitma.s Day, the bombers dulnped more than two mil· lion po~nds of bombs In about a dor.en raids along the Ho Cbi Minh Trail ln Laos, tbe sources said. · Since the bombing halt, the allies have blasted Com.mu· nls\.controlled roads in Laos three to five times daily with the deadly !ltratofortressea. About seven raids wa! · Cdnil- dtred to be a. day's recO\id. Theunannouncedslr~emto i.a,oa were not considered to be a break In the U.S. agree. ment to stop the war over Christmas. Th much -violated agreement covered opera· tlons onJy In South Vietnam. The uninterrupted ralda Into Laos appeared to be baaed on allied fears that the COmmu· nists are preparing to launch another nationwide offensive from their c&mbodlan aanctu- aries. • · nounced today it will not try l;:::========= tocollect.•· · ' Here's Where The department Juued . a new policy lnvolving the use It's At! of congressional franking privileges -the method through whlch inembers of Congr~aa m41 mail tbeJt cor· mponlleJ!ie ti'ea of cliarge .. The hew pcllcy aays tbat Congrf:ll, a1 individuals or as a body, from now on will have the responsibility ()f deciding whether 5 u c h privileges are being abuled.! PreV:loutly, the department I has lasued rulln&• on such pos&Jbie violations. I I 9tart 7/ie 11ew fjear Jag ht I • Open your new uvinga account or add to your saving• where you earn the nation's highest nt• of Inter.at on Insured savings ... Anahelm SIWIG• ind Loarr Allocistion. Interest • la compounded dally ind paid from Iha 1st when funda ore received by the 10th. Funds 11rn to date of withdraw a I when held for 90 days. 6% current 1npual rate yields 6.13% on funds held fol' one year. 5.26% on bonus accounts held • • for 3 yesrs-$1000.00 minimum ampunt .. Accounts are insured to $16,000.00 by tho Federal Savings ••;u Loan ln1urance Corporation and protected by An1haim'1100'!' record of safety olnc:e founding In 1921. Serving the Orange County area from our three offices ... Anaheim, Huntington Beach and 8;rea . • frldtJ, Dtctmbtt 27, lM OAILV •ILOT $ • f " • l Fltt P E ) I 1 I I Widesp~~fld; Siiow Saves Deaths Doubling· ., · Passengers WHERE ON EARTH A'RE THESE PEOPLE GOING'?;; New York, Chicago, London, Paris Could b• anywhtr•, but Wt know the first sfqp i1 LA lnttrnation•I Airport. Wt fly there and b•ck 9 times tvtry day from Or'an9• County Airport , •• in 19-ptsitnger T-j1t1, It only t1k11 20 minutes which l1ave1 plenty of time to make •-conntcting fllght to fnothar de1tln1tion. The fart: $7.91 (Ont w1y plus ftxl N111t time you plan • trip to Loi An91la1 or beyond, think of us. Call your frtvtl a91nt or Golden Wait Airlines at 17141 5'40·7010. "IT SURE BEATS DRIVING" ' ~ ~ .. Golden West Airlines . ' ' ' ,. ANAHEIM SAVINGS inoltu you fo · cra/f&men dU,,'fuy lh•lr rate talenl1 in the i'HI; ART OF GLASSBLOWING hhlblt • Dtmonttratfon January 2nd. thru 10th. •• 5.DD3 5.E!E53 Earn 5.13% when our current annual rate Is compo1.1nded dally and mllntelned for a year. Current annual rate on ' 3.year bonus accounts. Mlnlmum $1000 ANAHEIM §/!t)!!~!!:! "lJ 11 1" •· -.. • -r ... >. ~I -~-\ " ' . ~ .,,., . ., ·-.. , . • --ANAHllM ~T,f~~n ~. I ""IA I HUNTINCITON llACH 7101..,_ l lvd, 411 Mill" ie,.11 ..14 .... 11 LI H &9l SINCJ JHl '"'' COHVINJINT M•JU .. I A'f ALL I LOCA, ' . -- I• ------ --------------------------------------------- • --• It ' I DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I I The Teens for Chri·st· Each Sunday mom1tJi for the pest several weeks the Teoos !Or Christ, a -ol. roligloua ....Joi& •eek!ng an end to what they call eypocrisy to organized rellglon, have came out o! their headquarter& in Huntington Beach to visit near1>y cburches. Some churchg:oen have shown outrlgbt fe&r as the 40 to liO members of the band. dressed in hippie-like garb, disrupt services with shouts and pass out tracU. Others have attempted to accept and underatand the youthJ . The band bas tried to distribute tracts at Golden West College. After several memben were arrested 1t the college on trespassing charge., they organized a picketing campaign at the high schools In Huntington Beach. The Teens appear to be serious in their ministry and do not consider their actions to be radical and so far have attempted to avoid viole~, Thus far no one has had to can police to usher the Teens from the dlurches they hjlve visltedi Jn fact, the band has received some invi~s to; attend church services. Other churches maintain that they have a right to worship as they please without interlere.oce from the Teens or anyone else. They are not inviting those who want to disrupt services. Headquarters !Or the Teens Is in the old Light Club on lower Main Street In Huntington Beach. Here the Teem meet daily with sellers and users of illegal drugs, youngsters with serious emotional problems and those jwt on a tart. '!be Teens, dressed as they are in the 1111I1e garb a5 the yooth who flow through the rundown area, have shown signs of success among these troubled yoangoten. Wandering out to the cburcbes of the atea has pre- sented a problem, me which cou1: 0 r:r, Into violence. The Teems may have stirred org ~ of the Weot Orange County area, but In -chul'ches the Ah Yes, Courage ,.. Is the Thing B7 EU.!WORTH L. RIQIAIUlflON -,... Ndploor- ~ a..rdi Lqau Buell James Barrie said, "Courage ill the lhln& • • • the lovely virtue. All goes if courqe aoes... Ah yes, coorage is tbe lhJn&I Oa the maiden voyap of the S.S. llaperian, -.... -Dr. Samuel II. Undlay ..... a -· In mid-= .:=i:r·~= .__....., . .c ~ • -= ablp ... -!!ff,~, beblnd -~ ever make It. Some beclD by,tetleial, yet the crew .......... cUn. One turlfylng afternoon when the BhlP"•u rolling fwfully, Dr. Lindsay ul!N a deckhand, "Doemi the ltorm worry you?" "NO," HE KEPI.JED. "She's a tlght ship, &Dd why should I worry when Captain Barr ii on the bridge?" The deckhand bad faith in the ship, and faith in tbe captain at the behn. 1be liWe abip that each one <>l us uJll at times is buffeted by heavy eeu. We bob like a cork on the tempest d euily ruffled emotions. Different penonalit.lea assail us. We fetl like a lhQttlecock on a badmintm court! Back and forth in !he air, hit by oppoolng forces! But only if we could stand as the Rock of Gibra1tar! If only we bad tbe faith cf the deckhand who said, "Whi', should I worry when Captain Barr is OD the ~e?" GOD IS OUR PILOT; Our filth b in blm.l Goel baa bis eye on tbe IJ'm'0•-1 -,..... lw • few lines lo bis -"°""'""'-~IJb a lllli!\\-wlliclt ltelllS so approprtar.. A~ the star he says: . "Say IDIDethine to us we can learn By heart and when alone repeat. Say something! And it says. 'J bum!'" Continuing the conversation, Frost goes on to aay: "It ask.! a litUe of Wi he.re. Jt uks of m a certain heigh!. So w~ at limes the mob U: swayed To c&m7 praise or blame too far, We mQ;tj¥>ose something like a star To stay «Q' mlad:I on and be staid." . . . . MAY' 'I SVGGDT lhat we choose somelhing like a star -"to stay our minds. on aJ!d . be staid"? What better star a~· this season ot the year could we cbJose -than the star of Bethlehem? Facing the New Year, what better words coold we choose than these? "Let courage rise with danger and strength to strength oppose." "Courq:e Is the lovely virtue ••• ft is the thing !" Abused Word: 'Freedom' J lhint there ought t.o be.a moratorium on the use of the word "freedom" for a full year. No American wou1d be allowed to me the word, or any syoonym sJCh u ••liberty" and "rights." Jmtead, we would be compelled. to ttate apedfically what we want or do not want in any given situation. That abstraction known as "freedom" has never been satiafactorny defined (much lea agreed ""°") by the greattst llbil......, the world bu ever known. 1t meana as many dillerent things to u m.any people as "bapptnea'' -and ii just u subjed,jve ln most people's min&. before Justice (my capita.ls), Hitler and Stalin should have upheld. !hen h«n THE PLAIN FACT of the matter is that we are for "liberty" wbtn it suits our purposes. and q:aimt il 'f'ben it seems to tbreateD our aelf-IDtertst. We are for upholding: Jaw when the Jaw favors us. and for subverting it when it seems te handicap us. We are for TYPICAL IS THE letter I received order when tile order preserves what tram a woman recently, aaying, "l gues,, we have, and again.st order when it l'm just okJ..faahioned enough to believe seems to perl*t'o.ate an unjust status in Law and Order and that the majority quo. nile.s." Jn the nelt senitncc, abe Hys, There is distrtssingly little i.DtellecCual "I belong to th.at silent majority of clarity or emotional booesty in most c1tiunl who feel we should hold our · political catcb-pbrasea, whether of left. Frttdoml even more zeaJously in U>tse · right, or center. All such abstractions Modtilnmof'~ve-aW1y1' ••. " . as "~om'.'.~ self.serving most ot Could anything be mort confusini or the time -~ ~ pathetically absurd Sflf-cootndlctory lh1n these ll<.ements people whO MlleVe in the "freedom'' placed tapther? H°": art! we holdlag to sell your house to anyone you like , our f:reedolna by denying demonstratcra but not in the "freedom" of anyme to lbe ~ to protest? If the majority buy your house who can afford H! ruin, -aboul minority rlptl! If X..w and Order (her capltala) come WORDS, AS SOME Fttnchman 11ao said.""' usually tued to~ ihoughU and foellop, rather tbm to •llJ'ftSS them. We n e t: d a tborOugb ltfl&ntlc cleansing ol. our verbal stables, for we ""' .. alklng lrouod hip.deep •• !be ordure ol IOI'. •pedal vocallularln, And 1 no one, d coarse, can detect hla own rantness.. for be la too c'°-'e lO il. u the drover cannot know he rttb of caUJe. Conludua uld lhllt the cood slate begilu (not ends) wl!h !he ri&hl use of words, and he was not far off th• mark. tJnUI we an aaree. on what "fretdom'' ~mean, we merely com- pound mot bf min& IL • novelty I.I w~· all. Pi.... to cope wltb 'poulble future inva&km. ai:.e bein( C(IDlidered. ' II the 'teens !or Chr1lt have a 'rellgloul m .. _,, Ibey !eel coiiipe!Jed'to share w:itholben, well and &ood. But they'll do well to temember that tbelr freedom to worship does not tlldow them with tbt moral or le(al right to ol>slnlct Uie 'wonblp <Jf otben. Spectacle bu a Wll)' of oblcarinl 111botan<:e -or la<:t o! it. A lll:lle las tpe(:iacUW-approach . may eo- able the )IOQllJ peoplli·to perform a '"8ter service. Surface Harrllyt Touched The 1969 ,edition ol CGl!pea1 Jor Community Pro- gress Is In the pianii•ne &taco.by members o1 the Hunt- ington Beach C)tamber o! COmmerco llllll Mardi 22 bas been set !or the -loot at eammunlt)' problems. The fim was held at G<lden Weot CGUero In Janu- ary. It bas been nearly a year ·llnce ~.community leaders took a loot at the city and pondered some of its problems. · • In the year wblch followed much ,effort bas been expended toward solving some of thole problems :which lace the community. But the surfa<:o has lianlly been touched. , Dr. R. Dudley Boyce and bis ccmmttt.ee ye prepar- ing now to tal:e the leCOlld look knowing that tlie c:lty still has many of the, plJyslcal problems which It .faced at the beginning of 1968. It has social problems too, which have come into focus during the year as a result of. the avenues of com~ munication opened durtog the first Community Con- gress. Once begun, the refonpation o! social aspects of the community is difficult if not lmpo .. lble to reverse, "Community Congress 2 <*~22" will find heavy pre~ sure for moving . abeod to fu/tklng tlUs a ~ng com· munity both physically and socially. (SJ "GESUNl>HEIT/' . Sex Education ls Neg~cred By Par.ents No~y Has All the Answers Now To the Editor: Sa:',llducatloo: -.llelpcmUiWty? Aa cllnlc -for: tbe PlumOd p.,.. enlbood Assn. of San Dteco Cooaty I would lite to share .-. of the facts which come across my desk: In U.S. alone, every hour, 27 out· of -wedlock bables 'art born. A quarter of a million American babies, one baby in 17, au born each year to unwed mothers. Forty percent of these mothen are between 15 and 19 years of age, pl111 those w!!h falsified birth certificates, p!111 the BUin· her of ttimioal abortions. , . '·; · ~ Mt EDUCATED guess b !hat one in five _pregnancies is terminated' by' ibor- '!1 ' 1;. t ~ lion. flfty percent of high school girls are pregnant before they get married. The U.S. Census Bureau lndlcates that divorce in teen&ie marriage is three times" hicl_l;er than for couples between ages a1-aiid 2.$. Jn the age group lJ to 19 years ell age, syphill! has .increased 200 perc.mt in the last six yean.. Gooor- rhea reported in San Diego County in 1967 an all time high, 1,312 cases. Jn 1988, 1,896. For the mouth of October, 1968-248 reparted cases. It Is estirD.ated that' only one-fifth of the rea1 number is reported. . AS A fARENT I must ask myself are we a~ our responsibility to our childfehT Are we relating to our children in su~_. ·way that they have the values i'llWleil, 1h them which will make for their ~? Do we accept our own sexua1Ji1'rand in tarn do we educate our young people to accept the responsi· billty far thelr sexuality? Are we educat· 1ng our }'lMJDI people as to how easily young girls become pregnant? Do we educate oor yoong people to the fact that promiscuity and venereal disease go hand kl band? Do we educat'e our young · ~le to the dang era and rill!: involved 'lri ha'ving a criminal abortion? As a cllnfc director I can answer these questions: "No, we are not falflllini our respomibWty as par~ts." And if we as parents will not -or do not -who will? DOLORES J. REYBURN. R.N. J11terestin9 Station To the Editor: I'm writing in regard to the articlei in your paper about KTBT. It seems to me anyone with a broad enough. mind can accept tl:Us tipe of broadcdl; lt's gtUing a little rld.iculou1 ,whtn th< yOQtbl of today must be de'privtd of a llDeral radio ataUon. The objecting woman·may have lived here 7'ii yurs but I've-Jived here 10. I've grown up in this town and I think the station Lo dutmnt and interWJng. I'm not the only person who feels thll way. I !mow brllllant people ihrft times 11\1 age who art lot'11i&..,t enough lo accept• tho youth .C toUJ for what It b -trying lo help U1 lnitUd ol tearing us down. Quotes VlrataJa Mule Rodllldt, s.. s.r. - "Love ls the coal which ctvu men ....ru.,1o lbelru-.• Stppping the Drug Flood One aimple fact emerges from all the dilcuBlioD about the drug•' menace .,,.,.. young people: Nobody really -wbatto<!o-IL . ' •So·tbe beartacbes ponUnue. Young-peo- ple, ·unaware of the dangers or· jlerbaps awlre but uncaring, go on aperlmentiµg with the' stuff. They 1et picked op by the jioll<e, thrown out of scbonl and are cUt adrift at a fonnatlVe time in Uiiir"· lives. A r.... die il Ibey get bold of the letbal type of drup or take to sniffing inhalants. Othen cane clo8e bi'·dealh, saved perhaps by quick med.k2f treat· men~ or their own wits. , ; MOIT KNOW enough to avoid · !he weJliitibllci>ed addlclm. drugs. Bot they . pop pilli "' smolt~ marl~· 1'h!cl) Is lllep.. They gel arrested .: and •at an ~.age bave a poUce record.ll;lli~ probabiy will make tblngs misei:~1• !or them Ole rest of their. lives. What can be said to a mother· whose son nearly dies after taking cfrup.ofiered by a "friend"? Or to the mother whose 8(ln ~ed ~nt brain 'damage by Jnhaling tnJIC fumes? .La.st month there were 30 , students . expelied from Grol$nont Union High School Diltrtct schools for varidus drug offenset. ThiJ tnODtb there w.ere 19. Lut, year there were 70. Where does it stop? THE TRUSTEES sincerely believe their unequivocal policy of m~atory expu)slon for dnJg usera acb as·a deter· rent. !bey think the aituation' • wbuJd be much worse if the policy were relaxed. Who knows if they are right or wrong? Nobody. ' ' Some.parents whose children have been .ppelled disagree with the policy. They &>n't like the idea of having their son M daughter miss school. 'Ibey think the teipptatiorui: to further trouble are too grbt if a student. is kicked ont of school. They argue that expulsion is not an effective deterrent, citing the fact that more kids are iDvolved nbw tbaD ever before . OTHER PARENTS whose children havbn't been involv~. in drug offe~s. at least·not yet; dei.nd the policy'. Tbey view it as prot;ection. They don't want their children associating with the drug uSers .. They regard explusion as a just penalty for activity that is both illegal and physiologically or psycbologica.lly harmful · , There is at least one obvious point: The drug menace is never going to be substantiaDy reduced unW more ef- fective action is taken to stop the flood of illegal and dangerous drugs coming across the border. TOO MUCH OF the stuff is getting across. And the more that gets in, the greater the number of young people likely to be nposed to drugs. An education program probably heJps, but it doesn't help enough. There are students wbo doo't learn to write ot ,11pell, eveD though they are in clad every day of the year, amt there are students who would ignore the best io- struct.ion on dru8:s. The penalties probably deter ma~ students, but obviously they do not deter all. So a merely punitive poli<:y ~ its limitations. AT LEAST ONE parent is so conettned about the drug problem that she iJ thinking seriousJy of waging a campalgi;a to close the border. Others are sugge.&:Ung that the age linUt for crossing be upped from 18 to 21. Ml. Miguel High Schoo! is forming a spedal committee of doc- tors, psychologists, e d u c a to r s' 0 pharmacists and parents to get 80me answers. It is encouraging that action has begun. An ar~ community can do a lOt if its etUzens work together toward a common objective. And stopping the fJoW of dangerous drugs to our young people is certainly a cause worth a [ighl THE SUGGESTION that the border be closed might .seem like an extreme remedy. But it is also true that drtg abuse is an extremely serious problem. 11 Any ideas that might cootribute to a solution ought to be fully e1plored because it's obvious nobody bas all the answers now. ne Dally Callfomlan El Cajon 'Objectivity' in Reporting Opinions offered in a talk to journalism students: One ol the more damq:lng of the ice-age newspaper aiioma (anything pre- about-lhO) was one greaUy revered in Its Ume. City ednora glibly ,pffered it to cubs: "Write as If you are Writing for lhe Kansas City milkman." (It was, of course, possible to substitute tbe mlll<man of any town. Somehow, tbougb, the k.ansu City vtrsloo was tbe one most lreq\lentq bun!. Never bating dOlle research on ihe milkmen of Kansas City, I do not know whether they were in any sense special.) , TIDS ASININE advice and other pearls like Jt were respons.lb)e for acme very dull journal!Jm. 11 lbe Kansu Cily milkman read it be must hlv,e found il ·dnll going. "Objecttvtty" was an Idol before which young. Journalists .wtre re- ~~ to bow. Much inceme ln the ol santttmonlous speecbe11 was of· fertd heatllldly by speakers. N~ effect of this was to make newspapers and hnnplper ·men and women confon:nists. Dear Gloomy Gus: .. W111n I nm !hit Vlllca ld- wu restcnlnr to manage • speed- w.111, 1rerec14u.11 wasn't a bkl for a -blil the speoc! with ~ M WU OITqed surPriaed even me! • -l'. M. Objectivity_, per ae, is, of courat, a necesSary Ingredient of so-called bard or straight news, although those who use the words are never able to define exacUy what they mean, except to say defensively, "You know -hard news -that's what." FOR DECAD~, city edit.on, rnanq· Ing editora and schools or journali.!In taught , p,eir qwn personal versions of objei:tlvlty. 'Ille history ol joomalim1, especlaf.ly ·that of the yellow journalism yeal'i ~ the alleged 1.itans were foun- ding dyoasltes, empires and legends, includes very llWe objectiyity as the dictionary definei it. But Dewspapers were ezdlinf.Cd'th~y were-read. Too many ~ ot'journ~, and maybe loo many cily nSom tftinl~J\ave, l thin\ focused on imparting a set of sltUb rather U)&n on creaUng a human being full of. CS1ti9sity, a)lout people and lUe and attt.'Jttb to know the "why" of thing~ Dot merely what, where and 1vhen.:' ~·· • , ' WE SEE AT LEAST some of the newspapers today waking to the fact that much of the wriUng In their Jll'Ptrs must have a point oI view. This ls especially true In the ~ailed "in depth" or "interpretive" or ''analysiJ" article$ that are IUCh necessary elements of today's ~· Writers who can do 9llperb jobs on such arUcles in politics, rellgion, education, poverty, the genera· lion ~ap, and so on, can't be "edu· cat'ed to do so. Nor can the mere acqtdrt.lnlitnt ot.11kllls make it possible. The burhan_..., beln.g must somehow be a product of the proceues of learning. A RECENT ARTICLE ln the Author'3 Guild Bulletin t.-Omment.ed on the fact that many ol the major American writua of !his century, wi-.mt1n1s are now used extensively in secondary schoOls' and colleges, never completed a colleie education. Some never made any attempt to attend college. Hemingway and Sherwood Anderson belong in the lat~t category. Eugene O'Neill and Fitzgerald were dlmlssed from Prlncet.on. ~t was a dropout from Indiana Universitf. Robert Frost left Dartmouth and Harvard and took up farming. Faulkner had litUe education past high school. stein.beck dropped out at Stanford in bis ,freshman year. Jack London, Mark Twain, Jmeph Conrad, H e r m a n Melville, William Dean Howolls and stepl;»en Crane from an earlier era had no college training, LATER CAME the now literary heroes -most of them college educated. N~ Mailer, for example, bas a Hari'ard degree. But, again, the pen· dulwn begins to swing. Unless an educaUon provided much more than vocaUonaJ skills, it wlll be .of little help . of becbming a newspaper man or woman -or a writer of poems or "boob." --WWW- Frt day, Dec. Tl, 1968 Th< <ditorl41 page of "" Daau Pikl& 1eeki to inform and attm. ulatl rtadcr1 br prtsnUng thti .... ipapcn .,,...,,., mid co... menta~ mt topicl of intert1i ond ng1dflcon«, l>V providing • fonmi for Oic ._.,no.. o/ our _. oplftloiu, and by prcffft:tmg ~ dfvtt!e vietD- pobttt o/ U.f~d ob1trver1 end IJ)Okumnl cm topic1 of th1 day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher I I • I I I • l • DAIL V OILOT 'f .. .. .. ... _WOIUJ ... ... Air We~t.to Vote ; -' . . Hill 'Feu.di~g' ;Here? .. , On Hug ·es Off er .Ranger, Owners Exchange 'Pot.shots' ' , > ' BllECKENJuDGE MQIJN· Famt .. 1\1-. Jim Baltl dlvl&lon? ·you can1 1Ubcll'1.lo MILLBRAE, Call!; (Al't '"' . ~· .... rourth s!Jan,ol Its TAill (AP) -The ....... IDd pl>ln -. atop thia a N1Uonal !drat .. , ' ,, J • -'Ir Wiii ......... • ' . . it.ck for eoch . ~ at· Air ' 1Alneert Ind the 10.......ent nlQ1ld pell< batl bttn 1qua)>. "But thio 11 • subcuvlllon," , ~ to voie '"1 •1 w--.-. Thal would 111111 ore [...ti .. ••ain. •--•--' W""--Jl ar~--' -:""" -b"·• l<r· w-lhoo, t whether •~m= ~ --· bJ !iWWd llulbe•,.J!', . iiinoont.toC45perAirWat • Th1o limo Hs not .In the ""' allakordleldlllluranceman . . t!ie: eJ#montlMld ...... ,... ...... on the bl&ll o I , hilla ol Kailucky or; Ten-the oroa, 11naddp the mlddla "It's been legally laid out u _ Q~·'95million. ' 'l!buraday'1 uwk't 'f b•• n~. but on 7 .54 4-lqo t of 6-quota N1Uonal Fores\, ·1 subdlvlllon atnce 1128.'' , B•I. _..nta o1 the~ ~orthwost c~ 11 19,. ~p l,l~<nridae Mounta1o: Ji! ls a private suhdlylsion or Tho cabin owners are.angry v-· bUUonalre'• cuh 111 · .. ·· 1 mU u1 o1 n-·-~·eld. ... ~-. . . , , • ,. • ~~.. llderal properly. boca.., ...,y aay "°'"' . • ol fll • slJan· """ ~ · Jn 1 prozy st.tenieni dato<t · Ranger Bates Ind two cabin Service woiken ripped out .,. with-moves to delay ~ Dec. s, Air Weal Hated owners were e x c ban g 1 n g aates bl~ their private ·~ tllo m<tUng until. a COii!' 3 7'1,MIJ shires ~ ·1 Out oi 4 s.· flk verbal _pobtiots 'l'hunctay. ,. roBdJ~' !Ore down '' N. tletlnf ""."' mado 'Jllll -Oct. u. A majority of1he.i · ._ ''Come oil fellows, 'b o · trespW!ng" algrlll,'took aw1y -~•»Ht by N_~rt;a..,. .. ,,, itwes must be voted reuonable,"1aidBatu."How their horae D:itijlowa and -~~';#1o~-~=b~~~~e:Ju81: .· Flu U,p, Crime Down . :i;:u~·:r~~:i.'~l:. =-=:P1~16 "1 °'11h• • . . ' August Ind aplres Tue3day l,:;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~~;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;:;;, '1c *• ·' * aHer a mootb'.a extemion. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -~ut one llrigbt noi:e wu , ' M' ,. y · ' Nol .,... tba!l 200 al Alr 'llio na bug bU' bitten one am11•••'ed by the Loo Apleles Ore; . egm ~"West's 12,000 1ndiv1 d U•l I . oot of ' every lout adu!U In Pollce Deportment -tt • ' • • I stockbolden were . elq>ICled Los Anples County' Ille Coon-listed preliminary r,,.... ' 1 .. F H L ~ #'it.· for today's session at the ty Health Department dicatlng crlminals alto are or ugru:Sf Shenton TbunQerblrd Motel ,~ 1~ura<1ay. aubJect to the nu. . near San F r 1 n c i s co In-Dt ~ -e,erald s. Heidbreder Crimea committed ln the LOS ANGELES (AP),.~ ternattonal ~-. " ,said-.liJal in addition to . the . week ~ last ~lmdoy BtruooAire Howard IJUI~ Air West Pr~derif G. outbreak of Hong Kong flu, showed a decided dec;re.ase wtn i>aY inore tKiD '10 mmfon Robut: Henry, who op~s 40 ca~ of pneumonia were over those committed In the • • " for' ,. , """* lh •&Po'., bwt· d. the liugbel' bid, has il)dlc:Jll!d. reported dufin.11 Christmas preceding week a It b o u g h ' .I'-Sttljl,, lie wllhoek adjoumaiettf unUJ week. ·n;e i1j\u1! ls twice Ille crimes , for tho year to date . . All Jewtlll ,_.... In ~ It 1t111 w 11111 ll'ulr _,.., .. SAib.TH mMltte ill'flCU PlliAY fll t:ft P.M •• ' ' •Ilk¥ h ftM 1Nlfit flf ""' T-"' Shlran Cllolr _,.. 11'11 ... nn M"-'fll' Gil t1.1r OM• tn.~t ............... ~ .......... ~ .. lllltl ,1'MIUY. OcttW 11 Ctlt 14WIU w 14 .. l4ll Ha' , ak , , Op!• •s· t" ~ ~;{:~ ~~ sharebolden' are acqu'ainted-nurri&er ' nOtmany reporteC! showed a marked lncreaae 'y awa ' ' lllll IC . -~.u... ... ·= ol tho ~.~w~ltb~N~orth~w'.!.eat~'!_• !'!bld~ . .:_-~.d~ur~lng~the!!per~l~od!::• ___ ~ov~er:.· ~196~':..· ----~~=l:::::==~~~===:=:=!::~::::':====::: ertla ' Aboji~ :SF 'Reopeqing' .~.~~ . ' , · , Nev• rUl estale, but be SAN F~CISCO>(UPI) '.-Hayakawa said Dr. Na.lllan .aid 1( wu in -"5 of $10 With lO days or Christmas 'l-lare, a black .lifcloJOg~:ibd mllllon and In "e1'ght £fauree." vacatloh still ahead of him, author already on the state KaUeinan quoted Huahea an optimistic Or. S. I. ., sources u saying the Jand Hawakawa predicted Th:.irs-faculty, had been chosen to would be \lied to build a 2,000 day that San Francisco Siate head I.be new department. ~tn hotel and ·a lhopplng College can reopen Jan. 6 Hayakawa also revealed cent.er. · "without fear of violence." lhat a threatened f1nancla1 'lbe: property packqe in· , The fi2.year-old acting presi-crisis had been solved ~~ cludea the 40-acre lite or the dent told newsmen he had the aid of State Colleges Chan-old El Rancho Vegas hotel hlgh hopes the kind of cellor Glenn Dumke. ·and about SO acres betwten "massive police intervention" He said the achoof, had the Sahara and Thunderbird that occurred on campus the received "a tind·ofthristmas Hotels. first two weeks of December present" from Dumke's office. The sale is subject to ap- would not be necessary. which, in effect, provides ap-proval of the U. S. Justice He made It clear, however, prolimately $300,000. Department which has que• that if the turmoil resumes Hayakawa said a feared tioned anti-trust impllcatlons he would provide "whatever deficit of that amount would ln Hughes• Nevada holdlnp. protection is required for the have forced the cutback of ~------.u. people who want ID teach and 120 faculty positions and the I · -~ alteod classes." discootinuing of a I a r g • Buy Her HADLEY Hayakawa was -obviously en-number of courses. couraged by the progress Because of the progress You'll love Her Maclly made since Dec. 13 -when already made in meeting a~ Ute schOol closed a week early dent demands Hayakawa sug- f<1r vacation -in resolving gested that "any further m:- demands: of the Black Students penditure toward striking for Union and the Third World increased minor It y op- LiberaUon Front. portunity is clearly s e I f -I He reported t h e ad-defeating." I ministrative work to create Hayakawa said he had been a, black studies department in touch with the BSU and f! now accomplished. Such a tile Third World group. "The deparUri.ent, beaded and staf-mere fact tlfat we have bad ft;d by Negro personnel, w1s some ebat.1 ls ooe reason why a. majcX' demand ol student I feel optimlatic," he a- .iFtivist.s. ~p~la~l!led.~;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'i;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~-~1 "We are prepared to beginli Ille fin1t lour-year course I See by Tod•y's )iadin& to a degree in black u ,ludi .. :' ,, lb• start or lb• Want Ads llfW semester, be aaid. ' Well to Be " Reopened . ..GRANADA H1U.S (AP) - l'lre fighters have reopened a gas well capped Tuesday after a week-long fire. Members of the famed "Hell-fighters" oil fire fighting crew of Houston, Tex., reopen- ed the well Thursday to repair leaks discovered on Christmas Day. Authorities said two metal shields in the well 's main valve are not working pro- perly. Firemen may shut oU the undergrOund leaki: by J')ouring sea&.nt into the outer cuing of the well. Olficlall of Getty Oil Co., which operates the well, said U. well will blow open without a proper valve. e New Year O"ieer: Start it ' off rla:ht with a nt"IV home to love. • .cbtc11: the OPEN HOUSE directory for the ........... e Look What We Found! Several beautltul rentah: An unU!Ual "A" frame, with 3 bedroom1, a.ri In- terior patio, atrium, and bt!autllul location, ~ rn-een Newport Bay and the beach -mUlf. see to believe. • .Here's a quiet 2 bedroom duplex, newly redecorated, a n d very clean. • .Bl1 family home, 4 bedrooma, 2 baths, with carpets, drapes, and fire- place ... Or a deluxe mod- ern 2 1toey, 3 bedrooml. 2 bath&, wttb Ull! of 2 blc poolt. recreation area. tot lo!, ~ cmJy one block ...... qi. .... bucb. ' • Anothtt d,,.,.., with pa. tlo, .... oil--· only % block """' "" beach -see It flO'N. STEREO SENSATION! Tiie -=otorrul sound of Oranae county Music RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM -From Fashion Island . Newport Be~ch .. · : Mol•I CIG4514U GAS aoltlfS DRYER ' ' WITH AIR FLOW DRYING! Stlflct your own C!l}'ln1 -~raturt. nun stlecticn; .............. ...,, .. "'"' f« ........... MN fiibl1cs. l.#11 apsity tllMlll ~ dMn for •11 •llld loCs. FuU 1ldllt door •!Ion •ISY loadiq ... -... ' ' . .,, ' •• .l'Rl~E INCWD£5 - 0.llYtry ind normal ln1t1l11tlon.· S.,,. mod1la av11l1ble In AvocMl0 '1!14 C-6 ton.. ' WAIJZ lMROUGHi Y(ASHDAY WITt:f A. G'AS DRYER ~1 SUNSHINE FRESH DRYINGfA\. · ' {ECONOMY PRICES! I· '. · . : · •. · ' -·,M••11,._.. J Tttis large capacity fill!.•,!•!!!'!. . • $Y"!G , Porcelain enmnel drum. ln{.~...;,.y~i6ie .. ~me · SepM\119 atart IWllcli; FIUtJ!~FOUf.W#Y Van ng ..Ylhtil1at10n. Bid~~ lni,,·~ All the " nece9t!8ry to plw yeer round drying comenlenttyi 95 ... ., .. HIGH SPEt:D DRYER WITH . PERMANENT PRESS CYCLE.f ""'*"' .. -... will! "'9111 '"""Joi hnl *' J'llO '*I ttle ~ rr.. crdf. llly!r ..... .,,, .... _ ... _tr_ .... _1, .,., """ • .,...i. r ... .,.. -r .. -,, .,... ....... 1411-· L __ TV AND APPLIANCE .CENTER HARBOR CENTER ~300 Harltor lln: C:oata M111i =·:::·:::··. Ph••• 540.7131 r '"' .. " • 1 • • t•• • I • DAil Y PJUIT 'I. ... • f FAMO'' IJl~TIO,N,4LLY_l'DYaTlllD PORTABLE COLOR TY .... ....,......,,..... _________ ..... '·1 • ,,. - •Two 5':x3" twin'ICOl'i.~ 1~akers for true fidelity sound •Charming EaTlyAm"etican design in maple •Zenith automatic fine·tuning control electronically tunes in perfect color -instantly •295 sq. in. viewable picture area, world's largest col or TV p icture! · 3S9.95 valuo $238 ' BIG , 4" SCRIEN I •Slimline walnut 9roifted cabinet •Precision-engineered cho11i1 incorporate' lhe newest electronic deYelopmenb ond performance feoture1 to ou1.1re exceptional rlt.cepllon •A.JI 82-channel UHF/VHF •Private earphone and jock ·• 102 1q. in. picture oreo WllTINGHOUSE ATTACHE 12" PERSONAL PORTABLE TY WESTINGHOUSE WALNUT CONSOLE Wl~H AM·F .. FM·ITERIO RADIO WESTINGHOUSE MINl·COMBO 12" TY, PHONO & AM·FM RADIO Zodys regular price 198.87 $138 Compare at 99.95 o •• lpwetf Price lverl $68 f "74 SQ. 'INClllS I •ffonl·mounted 3-inclri full fld•lity speaker •High YGltoge pic:hlre power for greoter c:onlroll • l 2·inch diagonal . picture .,,.ith solid · stale power supply .it.Alt 82-chonnel hlning VHF/UHF -all on one dial •Slim featherweight-weigh• less than 16 lbs. I DIAMOllD .... ~ I Compare at 229.9$ Our Lowest Price Ever! $158 •AM/FM/FM Stereo radio with AFC for drift-free FM • 4-speed a utomatic record ·changer •Deluxe tone orm •Two 8" woofers •Two ("tweeters •Record storage area • Handtome cabinet with loYel y walnut finish WESTINGHOUSE F~MIL Y SIZE 2·DOOR REFRIGERATOR·FREEZER WESTINGHOUSE TWO·CYCLE AUTOMATIC WASHER Compare at 229.95 Our Lowest Price Ever! $168 I a1G 12 cu. n. I •Automatic defrosting 1ection - .. neYer nee-ds defrosting •Full width, full depth ,helye1-two position 1helf adjust. •Plus: butttr keeper, egg 1toroge, easy-open door latche1 illfRIGERATORS 16 CU. FT. FROST-FREE 2 DOOR ,258 DILUXE TOP FREEZER ••.•••••••••• 11 CU. FT. FROST-FREE 2 DOOR ,298 155 LI. TOP FREEZER............. . 19.2 CU. FT. SIDE·BY·SIDE ,438 fROST-FREE WITH ICE MAKER .• , , , . 22 CU. FT. FROST-FREE DELUXE $ 51DE·IY·SIDE MODEL .. , .... , . , . , , 458 llG-fAMILY SIZE 51NGLI DOOR REFRIGERATOR •••• , 5138 16 CU. FT. FROST-FREE WITH AUTOMATIC ICE MAKER ••••••••••. 5298 WASHERS 3 CYCU HIAVY DUTY DELUXE MODIL AUTOMATIC ••••••••. ,,,,, Sl68 2 5PHD DILUXE HIAVY-DUTY AUTOMATIC ..................... fl 78 FULLY AUTOMATIC PUSH -BUTTON I CYCLE DELUXE MODEL •••••..... 5218 FRONf LOADING, MULTI-SPEED S AUTOMATIC WAIHll ............ 218 DRYERS 2 TEMPERATURE AUTOMATIC HEAVY-DUTY GAS DRYIR •••...... •· d 38 AUTOMATIC HEAVY-DUTY 2 HEAT ELECTRIC DRYER , ......... '118 FREUIRS LARGE 315 LB. UPRIGHT WITH FAST-FREEZE SJIELVIS ••••••••...• fl 38 16.1 CU. FT. All FROST·FRlE UPRIGHT HOLDS S65 LBS •••••.... '238 RAHGES LARGE OVIN ALL PORCELAIN GAS-ALL COLORS ............... •aa 30" PORCELAIN LARGE OVEN ELECTRIC WITH LIFT-OFF DOOR .... fl28 ELECTRIC EYl•llVEL 30" DELUXE OVEN, MANY FIATURES., •••••••• '328 ' 30" GAS , 2 EYE·LIVIL OVENS HATURE·PACKID, All COLORS •••• f258 WATER HEATIRS 30 GALLON GLAU UNED ••.•• , • • • 538 • Compare at 189.95 Our Lowe st Price Ever! $138 · HEAYY·DUTY I •Porcelain enamel tub •Two water temperature-wgsh cyt:le selections including h11t wash ond worm prewash •Fam0\11 d11uble action wo1h •HeoyY duty tron1mi11ion •Safety lid lock AIR CONDnlONERS DELUXE UNIT DESIGNED FOR SLIDING WINDOWS, 5,500 ITU ••• 5138 LIGHTWEIGHT, THERMOSTAT, EASY TO INSTALL, 5,500 BTU ••.••• 5108 MULTl·ROOM UNIT, HATURE LOADED, 26,000 BTU .......•..•• 5318 DISHWASHERS BIG CAPACITY, POWER STREAM DUAL-RINSE, PORTABLE •.••••.•.. fl28 TOP QUALITY FRONT LOADING CONVERTIBLE PORTABLE ••••.•••• 516- BUILT-IN WITH POWER TURRET WASH ACTION , MUCH MORE ••••.. 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WORLD'S LARGEST COLOR PICTURE CONSOLETTE ••.•. 5398 295 SQ. IN. DELUXE 23·1N. WALNUT GRAIN, CONTEMPORARY. 5458 llG SCREEN 23·1NCH MEDITERRA· NIAN, PECAN WOOD CONSOLI ••• f498 295 SQ. IN. EARLY AMERICAN MAPLE,,FIATURE LOADED ......... f468 WALNUT COMBINATION, AM/FM S RADIO•ITEREO·COLOR TV........ ff8 "STIRIO CONTEMPORARY WALNUT WITH AM/FM/FM STEREO RADIO •• •••• ••• '248 EARLY AMIRlt_AN MAPLE 60 WATT AM/FM/FM STEREO RADIO ••• '271 MEDITERRANEAN DARK OAK OR PECAN -SOLID STATE WITH DELUXE RADIO AND CONTROLS •.• $238 300 WATT STEREO-WORLD'S ~1~:s~~~:~c·E· ~~. ~~~~~~ ......... '571 .... WALK NOllTll LOH alACll ANA•IM·aUltlA PARK ANA•IM•PllLUllTOll WIST COVINA NORTHRIDGI REDONDO alACH IM,llfAI. MWY. Af lfUDllAJtll I. IOUIN lflUl Al CNlllY llACM ll'ID. & UNCOlN OIANOlfMCM,I AT 1.IMON AIUSA AYI, AT 'UIHTl llSIDA llYD. AT DIVONSHlll MAWTMOINI ll'IO. Af SO.IAf CINTll POUllTAlll YAWY ..... alACH NUNTINOTON IACll S AANA GARDIN GROYI auR•ANK CANOGA PARK . MAllOI: II.YD. Af IDIN•ll LOI COYOftl, IPllNO & WOODIUrr GOLDIN WIST & IDINOll N. OIA'ND A'IL Af I 7TM ITIUT CHA,MAN & llOOICMUlll SAN rllNANDO llYD. AT IUllANIC TO,ANOA CANYDN llYO. AT IOICOI •••AND IAYI AT ZODYI DAILY 10 TO 9 P.M., IAT. & UN.10 TO 7 P.M. ••• IAT PACTION GUARANTllDI ' . I ' ·~------.. ------·~--~·~· ... ,--...,..~ ...... ,,.. ..... _..,... • • • • • . ,, ............. '~~--,... .... ~~ .... ~....i .c · • • ,.,, ---11. ,... • ..... De·bs Earn Medallions .. : ----=----~---------' Climaxing their first Christmas vacation from college will be the most excttring moment of their life -making their formal bow to 'll'Clely. r •Priol\ ¥> this momentous occasion~ the 20 yollllg Harbor Area ". wome'!l who' have been selected as 1968 Children's Home Society debutantes will be entertained at a preball party tomorrow evenina in the BalbOO Bay Club with their escorts. · Afterward, their presenlation will be made during the 15th an· nual ball, also to take place in the Bay Club. Sponsoring organization of the ball and party is the Newport Jiarbor Auxiliary of CHS. During the party, the auxiliary will Qresent each debutante with the society's gold medallion, suspended on a white velvet ribbon. These will be worn during their presentation and will be their only jewelry. Debutantes are the Misses Kristine Boyd , Christine Sue Callis, Qarol F.dith Carver, Cathy Jo Clar~n, Nancy Evans Creamer, Georgeanne Hanna, Sally Holstein, Pa.tricia Ann Huddleston , Judy Ann Hylton and Kathl~n Allison Kelley. Others are the Misses Isabel Elizabeth Law son, Linda Kristine Nissen, Deborah Porter, Roxanne Elizabeth Ray, Georgene Lunde ~Katherine Louise Smith, Linda Christine Stabler, Anne Storch, Allcia ~Stanley Turner and Susan Ann Vernon. Their parents are Dr. and Mrs. Edward Angle Boyd, Mrs. John Malcomson, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Logan Carver, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Henderson Clarkson, Mrs. Hatfield'Creamer, and the Messrs. and Mmes. Paul Hanna, George Meade Holstein III, Donald Insley Huddleston, Leonard Irving Hylton and Porter Allison Kelley. More parents are Mrs . Randall Felix Geddes and the Messrs. and Mmes. Howard Beasley Lawson, Paul Nissen, J ohn Fredrick Porter, James David Ray, Ira Warren Smiih, William Laird Stabler, John Arthur Storch, ROeer ~ Turnel"'alld Richard €alnuui Vernon. ~ ~·*' ';1 J. I'· . . Guest of Honor Director Saluted After 25 years of dedicated service, Clyde Getz i1l retiring as ei:ecutivtdfreC.. tor of Children's Home .Society. · Wben he took the helm of CHS fewer than 600 children in California .each. year were being saleguanled by the pro-, tedions of a liei!nsed adoption agency Rn'i<e. Gels belped. build the Society hito the oalic91'1 ~ prlvalely supported adop. lion ageOOj-. He offered the le8d.t.h!p . and auppcrt to the ..iabllsho>ent ol . pUbIJc and other private adoption prG. grams, wilh the result that more than 8,500 children this year will be placed by California agencies. And, almost 2,000 of these youngsters will begin building new lives in happy adoptive homes through Children's Home Society, because cl Getz and his inspired leadersip. The Newport Harbor AlWllary of Children's Home Society as an expression of their appreciation and gratitude have -the retired di1'dor to be their booond guest at the Debutanle Ball pnoentatlm. During the evening's festlvlUes he will be preomted u honorary memberstup into the auxlllatr. CHS DIRECTOR Clydo Gotz TO THE BALL -El!l!e.rly anticipating the 15th amiual Children"s Home Society •D@:b\t(inte •Ball tomorrow evening in the Balboa Bay Club_ are ile!t to right) Mr. and Mrs. William C. Ad"f's and -., ., ' Mr. and Mrs. George W. Gurr Jr. Mrs. Adams .Js president of the sponsoring organization, the Newport Harbor Auxiliary ot CHS and .Mrs. Gurr is baU ch.airman. . .; ' -. ~ C· ~- Parents Parties Preface Ball ' ' \ While 1968 Children's Home Society debutantes and their escorts are being entertained at a preball party by the ball's spon soring organization, parents will be host· ing private parties as they await the start of festivities and the exciting moment when their daughters bow to society. • Mr, and Mrs. William Laird . Stabler, parents of debutante Miss Linda Christine Stabler, will host a cocktail party in the Balboa Bay Club. Their invited guests include the Messrs. and Mmes. Laird AJexandel' Stabler, John Wallace, Joseph Rosen· er Jr., Hanns V.: Baumann, Willard W. Bertuleit, War· ren T. Merrill, Hal ~an , Carl Neisser, John P . Stadler, Percy R. Guth, Frank L. Williams Jr., Jack Marshall, Ward ChamberUn, Gerald Louis McClaire, J. E. T. Rutter; Wffiiam R. Scholle and Charles Donald Roberts. CELEBRATION At the. John Frederick· Porter home guests will join in the C#ebration bonortng: the Porters' debutante daughter, Miss Deborah Porter. • Attending will be the Messrs. and Mmes . Glen S. Hogle, Jolin B. Parker, Guy K. Claire and Y. M. Posthuma, Miss Melanie Hogle and Mark Hogle. At another gathering in the Balboa Bay Club, deb- ut.ante Miss Georgene Smith's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Warren Smith, will entertain the Messrs. and Mmes. Robert McFarren, Alex J . MacGillivray, Chester F. ' Pun:eU, Edgar F. Hirth, Charles R Peyton, George Wi seman, George P . Yule, Robert J. Barry and Robert Harold. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nissen, parents of debutante Miss Linda Kristine Nissen, will entertain in their home. Guests iriclude the Messrs. and Mmes. Walter Burroughs, Hugh Springer, Jolin T. Castle, Arthur E. .. Thronson , John J . Remington, Joseph C. Humphries and Philip S. Doene. The Richard Vernon home will be the setting for' another preball party given to honor their debutanter daughter Miss Susan Ahn Vernon. Guests will be Mr. and Mrs. John Bradfonl Crow, the preSentee's grandparents and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Arthur Reimers and Mr. and Mrs. John Bradford Crow Jr., her aunts and uncles who will drive from Pasadena and San Marino for the festivities. RELATIVES ARRIVE Others are Mrs. Ruth Alexander Vernon, }\er pater• nal grandmother, 8:¢ the Messrs. and Mmes. ~bert E.1 Jackson, Don,ald D. Pee~, Walter R Gayner, Davie( Morphy and.Edmund Jussen and Miss Karen Jackson, Erick Jwsen,. Peter Burns, Milten Arthur Reimers Jr. and Bradford 'Hamilton Reimers. Entertaining •In their home will be Mr. and Mrs. Shipley Bayless 'in hOnor of debutante Miss Katherine Louise Smith ; daughter' and' stepdaugb\er ol Mr. and .· Mrs. Ra,ndall Felfx Gedd•s. ' -. PARTY ·GUESTS Coming'from Pacific'PaJis'ades will be Miss S1nith's, aunt, uncle pd cousin, Mr. and 'Mrs-Sen..-o Soria and' Peter Sorta·. · Others invited are Mr. and Mrs. John Johnson,, Mrs. Qonald Sampson, Matthew Arko, Daniel La· F1amme, Rouli Swenson, Miss Mary Jo Sampson, Mist Sandra Smith, Keith Collins and Christopher Muff. Al· so attendiJi,g will be the presentees' sisters and post debutantes, Miss Sara Smith and Miss Courtenay Geddes. TaklnJ. a room al the Balboa Bay Club to entertain are Mr. aild Mrs. Joseph Clarkson, parents of debu· tarrte Miss Cathy Jo Clarkson. Atteo\dlng will be Mr. and Mrs. Victor Leo Harri• and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kelsey of Encino; Mr. and Mn. William Farnsworth, Mr. and Mrs. Wymett BedaJI. Jr. and Mrs. Michael McClellan of Newport Beach, and Mr. and Mrs. William Symes of Arcadia, parents of the debutante'!I escort, John Charles Symes II. Bloodhound Tactics Give Divorcee New 'Leash' on Life DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I cwld lliss you for printing the letter from "Smnt.eoed Up E'l·WHe." She urged every divorced woman to keep bouDdinK the rat until Pe get.a the support money ordered by the court. I'm a divorcff who raised four children. I'n: been ln court 90 many times I cou kl conduct the bearings myseU. Some women who can't afford to hire a Jawy• &Ive up because they don't k:Dew I.heir rlghtl. Tell tbem again, Ann ..... Oley can 1et help from the district attorney. fmry county has ant. If the bum 11 in the military, the can go to the chaplain and find out what her lqal rilbta "''· ANN LANDERS Major lipe : Make: 1UJ"'I! the oriainal divorce papers stale ~the e•act amount of payment, plus changes -such a11 an increaae when the children reach high school age, or an increase if the bum should get a pay raise oc. strikes oil in his backyard. And don 'I think It can't happen. It happened to me. -LUCKY LEE DEAR LUCKY: Coagra&ulallon11 -not Oft the dlvora:, on &he oll, honey. 1&'1 alee to blft IOMt!tldll te ,_, 111 tbosl( • -bled walen. 1'llub 111< wrltlq. DEAR ANN LANDERS ' My lf>.yur .. 1<1 granddaughter la .unhappy at borne. June must share a r<Jttm with her 13·year.cld sister. The poor child must help with the younger children, doe.a part of the ironing, cooking and cleuing. t know she'd be happier htre anct l 'd be delighted to have her. Her parents refuse to let her come. I have a lovely home , two servants, and .line could apeod her time lludying or doing whatever she wished. I aiuld give her an easier life and intlvduce her to a better cllSI of people. It would be wonderful for me, too , because I am lonely. WW you apeak for her -and for me?-J.L. DEAR J,1., No. YOW' gnndd1•pler 'belonp la her parent.I' home.. Of coone ne wui. le come! Any t~r~•r-old ltrl would . nthtr loaf at b e: r p-andmollle.r'1 than 1crub, clean and ll'09 ud Wrt • room wfib • younier &11&cr. Your "geoerout" offer 10U11r'! Uke poorlJ dlsplsed 1eUIUllet1. Lay off. DEAR ANN: I am a maid in a very well·known motel. A pady of four people just lelt this room wbJch looks like a cyclone hit Jt. 1bey left three peMies on the dre&ser. Why i.a it that the bartender gels a Up let miting a drink, tbe waltre.u gets a Up for brlngin,. (ood, if the engineer comes in with a new liaht bulb, he usually ge~ • quaner or 50 cenu. The maid gelli nothl1Ji. )'et she Is the one who really does t6e dirty work. 111 th!s fair! · You are:• friend to the working people. WiU you say a word for u11? -PASSED UP DEAR PAMED ur , Happy to. A p-eat ma.ay people: travel today, an4 IOme ti them doa't bow they dMIJd leave IDOllef for the m11icl. S. -f'lp lellfq them -llere ud now. FUty eeata a alpt fw tite ptr1011 11 &boat n&bL Oae dollar H U.... -tn or more 1n tbe room. All)'Oae wlto cq't allord'W. m-~ Up -stay bome. Ann ~ndors' .... book. "Trulh 1lr Sb'anaer. . ., " lhBnl aoctats o1 her pracllcll pbilOll<lphy. Priced IU5 11 bookstores. AM Landel'I wlll be glad to help you Wilh yoor problems. Send tl\eni to lier ln cart of the DAil.Y PILOT, enclosing a stamped, sell-addreued envelope..• . , I, .· JO IWLV PILOT ,rid.,, -21, 1968 Curls .Grow Into Big Girls' Waves °""' -Ill' lnle> big cirl .ll)'le Into the eur.,. Look. waves for tbili .wi•Qtt:r 8a.Qp.appe.ar Jn~ of . ...... abqd. .Mil, lii!I .. the ..... llyl ... l>ut ... lo with big girls, the ..,Pl'"'' be most &.queolty Olfld for will be on eurves, lllliloUnces day. For ....,.,_, lllany of the Olllcill Hair Fublan the ... Wld "-._.Combe<! .Cwnlllillee ol the NaUooal up IJld oll Ifie ~ lo ' Coometologlsla AssoclaUon. live Ibo ~ II;.! a =ene '11111 half lublon • .;uthottiy brow , run -' orir the ol the belllllf •prollllioo • leatuns, A lermed the new lout In bllr iro*ever, wt>ero halrlln< ,., stylea, the Cl!rvY Loot. qulremenls dlolate lbi need 11 .II IJlP&l'omt tl!at 'I" ""' · f0< """8, or wbere laeial ,tn going CID a: fQhlcn .-I e a t _u .l e 1 fUQ1et; the ol wa..,, A 'cju14 Jlance at . deslflll>!llty ol lhO!r' uoe, bangs the audience sbowM tlult<the eon!Jnue lo be a 1'11'1 of the plvful, and ,someUmes ram-plc:ture. But, mw they are ~ tui'll that were so waved bangs, IO(ft undulations popular during late summer that Dow acroa the brow with and fall, have been geniled an invariable flijHlp of. the down for winter into a soft hair ends. sweep of waves that give the' Bair J~ ~iitinue to be head a curvy sflhouette, Is . ftlaUvely sbort, since thi. .. wet. as a flowing ease in the Curvy Look Js a gracefully movement of wave patterns. molded small head look. The word "soft" was one Nevertheless, .bait . at the of the most frequenUy ,used lower crown areA la a Utthi term! describing the (eneral fuller, although it curves in appearance of the new st:·le.s. to hug the head at the·nape. To come on in fa)Uon this The crown itself ~ finally winter, your hair stylf! will sett!;! home -.on tbe head. just have to convey a feeling Where an increased volume of softness to the eye o( the is desired, such as for an beholder, as well as to the opulent look for evening, hair band. pieces are uaed with gre;it -- , Hair partings are definitely draqiatic effectiveness. These established as a part of the are usually fa'lbioned into Jashion picb.Are. TbeY actually compositions of curls ci r play a hl&hl1 important role cadogans, such as George ir. that they allow a complete Waablngton once . wo~. On change in directiOn of the most models, these. were plac- g en t 1 y def 1 n e d .. w av, e ed di.rectly below the crown .1 t· I 1 . l ! I "1 ' movements. This gi"'e.s .the at the back of tbi:.head, t'tut ~' ·""' textural patterns of your hair When they were wOm lower EVENING LOOK -The versatile beauty of the new Curvey Look in h~r style a vitality that sWJ ·re-at the nape, the look was fashions is apparent in this alert and vitally spirited evening style which ta.ins an und~ted ele:..i.n~. newer. casts a romantic look. Featured for the new year are soft curves and a na~ DAY WEAR -Soft waves which flow gently above a serene brow are di&- tinctive features of this Curvy Look hair style. The easy flow of wave patterns and the curvy silhouette of the bead gi"·e this style a classic apperu-ance and tmderstated elegance. Top Interest South Probe Coast Yule Juniors Activities Members of the South Coast Junior Woman's Club have been busy wilh -myriad ac- tivities during the holiday season. several women participai«I in a group carol sing for gerlabics patients at Long Beach General Hospilal. in defensive driving, hosted by the Greater Los Angel" chapter Of the National Safety Council In the · CalUornla Highway Patrol.zone 5 Head· quarters in Los Angeles. The 8-hour course on defensive driving included additional hours of practice teching. Mrs. ~1arten will be able to teach E~tially,_ the new. hair Hair coloriag for tbe winter turaJ height at the crown. styles continue Ute look of.. s e a s on has been soften-__ :........:.:-"C:;_:;_:::.:_.::;:.:__.:__ ____________________ _ the small; neatly poised head, ed into a g e.n t le spec- though the hair in the 1ower trum of tones thal harmorjzc crown area has a fuller look. wilh the general feeling of To establish the 'c I ass l c feminine gracefulness in the balance of tbl3 ·look, your hair seasori's fashiot1s. liitef\!ity in must be shaped far your all hues has heen subd11ed, particular requirements. In but lhe underlying richl'Je:.s this r e g a r d , c.onslderation is retained to shimmer .in the must be given to the shape soft and silky sheen that nil of your head and facial struc-hafr must have this winter. ture, ln addlUon to the teiture,. In make-up,. akin tones will volume and quality of your have a fresh quftlity, reflecting hair. _., soft pinks and rose, sometimes '!be new styles also "nec!id nearly peach. Eyes have a a soft and genUe pettDanetit bright-eyed, lovely opeo look, wave, one that is particularly but this, too, ts· a· fOft look. prescribed for.your hair.~ Ups have equal" lmpor!1111ce will not only help enhance with the eyes, aiaed .by the the quality. texture and tjcbness of the brighl new stibstance of your hair, bu_t transparent Colors, rmiging also will give it an ease of from light reds to the true care, as wen. as an ease to reds. Horoscope Gemini: Analyze Fear SATURDAY DECEMBER 28 By SYDNEY OMARR "The wise man controls his destiny . . • Astrology points the way." ARIES (March 2l·April 19): Be receptive to money sug- gestion. Listen to fa c t s ; discard rumors. Welcome aid of one wilh experience. You hold back. Build on solid base. Examine fiscal status. Assets could provide surprise. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): YDu may be reminded of pro- mises, obligations. Stick wilh what You know. Some may encourage you to skip essen- tials. Best lo adhere to legal regulations. Spotlight on mate, partner. 19): Good lunar aspect today coincides with news con· cerning opposite sex. Children may demand attention. Conflict of interest could arise. Fuliill prior obligations. Then you relax. Members of Girl Seoul Troop 868 of Huntington Beach joined the Juniors for the event which entertained more than SO patients. The scoots made Christmas cards to distribute to approximately 160 patients in the wards alter the caroling. the cours' ., fully explain r "'"" >.llL.i it to clu~ in her district. - Tbe club is wor!Qng to in-- can have fun tonight. But avoid extravagance. You need some rest. TAURUS (April 20-Maf'20): SAGITTARIUS 1Nov. 2'.!· Dec. 21 ): Avoid excess. Start lining up sensible resolutions. Remember promises to yo urself concerning health. Get together with one who shares your interests. Fine for being with co-worker. AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 18): Remember ram i ly member who may be observ· ing anniversary. Review basic values, relationships. Pleasure indicated through social ac· tivity. Forces tend to be scat· tered. Take one thing at a time. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Many plans discussed; involve party, holiday celebration. supersensitive. Don't com· pound error. Obtain hint from AQUARIUS message. Display sense of humor. 9484 .._'--' SIZES IOY,.20Y, ~ 1lf ,..j..., 1lf,.."t' ... Archilectural interest builds up at the top ~ a sleek skim- mer destined for big doings this !ipring. Sew it in breezy knit, linen. Printed Pattern 9484: New Half Sizes lO'h, 12lfi, 14 Lh . 161h, 181h, 201h. Size 14lfz (bust 37) takes 2~ yds. 35-in. SIXTY·m'E CENTS i n coins for each pattern -add 15 cents for each pattem for first-class mailing and special handling; otherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to ·Marian Martin, the DAILY PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept., 232 West I8til St., New York. N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, AD· DRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NmIBER. What's new for now~ 107 answers in our Fall·Winter Cognizant of another aspect of lbe holiday season, a less cheerful one, has been Mrs. Robert Marten, a South Coast junior and Los Cerritos District Safety chairman. Mrs. Marten attended the instructor development course crease home safety, as we11. In March, poison prevention charts wiU be available. Four members of L b e Juniors attended the Christm~ party for board members of Los Cerritos District in the horn!'! of Mrs. : Thomas Christianson. Present were the ~1mes. Marten; Bond ; Thompson, president; Dick Troclick, district publicity chairman, and William Hayes, district presldenl New Year's Eve Dance Single Adults Invited All single adults in the area are invited to join the big New Year's Eve Dance being st.aged by Orange C o a s t chapter, Parents Without Partners. The dance, to lake place in the Sheraton Beach Inn, Huntington Beach, w i I I celebrate one of the most suc- cessful )eal'S in the group's history, said Jim Ward, presi- dent. Festivities will begin at 9 p.1n. and continue into the new year. Special tribute to th e chapter wi.U be paid by rrw!mbers Df other Parents \\'ilhout Partners groups from t h e Mexican border to S a n Luis Obispo. parents v.·ho are divorced, widowed or unmarried. Further information may be obtained by calling Mrs. Grace Brenner, 548-3705 or Barney Hillman after 5 p.m. at 673-0764. OC Single Bees The second aod fourth Fri· day of the month Orange County Single BEies gather in Doig School, Garden Grove. Activities begin at 8 p.m. CM Auxiliary Debutante Feted At Preball Party Mr. and Mrs. Ira Warren Smith, parenls of Miss Georgene Smith, ar~ among tl~c many who will anticipate their daughter s presentation \Vith a preball party before the Children"S Home Society Debutante Ball to. morrow evening. Those attending the party in the Balboa Bay Club include the debutante's godparents Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barry of Pasadena. The Smiths also will welcome Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harold of Pasadena and Mr. and Mrs. Alex MacGillivray of Laguna Niguel. Harbor Area guests include Councilman and Mrs. Edgar Hirth and the Messrs. and 'Mmes. Robert McFarren, Charles Peyton, George Wiseman, Charles Sutherland and Chester Purcell. Also attending \Vill be :r..1r. and Mrs. George Yule, parents of l\il iss Smith's escort, John Tread\vell Yule. Other guests will be Mrs. William Adams, president of the Newport Harbor Auxiliary of . CHS, and her husband; Mrs. George Gurr, ball president. and her husband, and Mr. and Mrs. Merton Cameron. l'\ew contact is made at social It 1 galhering. Proves beneficial. 1 Cycle high. You can sue- ; cessfully propose o r i g i n a I ideas. Take initiative. f ' Personality sparkles. Give at- tention to appearance. GE!\11NI 1r..1av 21.June 20): Analyze doubt, fear. You may find that only a minor detail holds you back. Be thorough. Break though to progress. Ex- C'cllent for attending theater, dining out. CANOER (June 21-July 22): Relax -get together with G.":MlNI individual. Develop contacts, friendships. Outline hopes, \Vishes. If analytical, " you could come up wilh ~'n, valuable answers. Welcome change, variety. I LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' Protect prestige. S o m e o n e may try to trap you wilh flattery. Be realistic. Strengthen family ties. Don't risk something of value for nothing. Check values. Live up to potential. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Future plans can be profitably discussed. Applies especially to ,travel, advertising, publishing. C o m b i n e prac· licality w I t h imagination. Avoid tendency toward seU- decepl.ion. ~.' LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22)' S t re ngthen communication lines with one who handles finances. Express affection. iiiii[iijiijiiji~ Give of yourself. No day to CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. Fashion Freedom 'Flirted' The "freedom first" fashion trend that made mini skirts de riguer from Omaha to Oahu soon will have average women wearing one-piece, neck-to-toe gannents a n d even flirting with the nude look, says Hen· ry V. Kobin, head of U. S. Intlustries Apparel and Acces· sory Group. "Of course, it i.c; going to be awhile yet before you'll see housewives walking down the streets of Keokuk, Iowa , in body-stockings or see-through blouses. But the demand for greater convenience and comfort in women's wear is firmly estab- lished now, and we expect it will have a Jong run." The head of one of the na- tion's largest apparel produc- ers also sees the following em· erging trends taking hold: bra-dresses eliminating need for foundaUons: he-she coor- dinates, and greater empha· sis on pants for women. JF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you possess original ideas -you are a natural pioneer. Your feelings are often locked within. Few persons know the real you. Recent enterprise c o u I d blossom. GENERAL TENDENCIES' Cycle high for TAURUS, GEMINI. Special word to PISCES: avoid unnecessary travel. To 0<de• Sydn'" Oml!rr'~ SI).~" booklfl, TM Trutll .... bou! A1tro , ••!Id 50 c!nll lu Om;irr Book t, Tiie DAILY PILOT. Bot :iuo, Gr11\d c,nrr11 S111ian, Nl'W Yon<, N. Y. 10017. Here's Where It's At! 1¥nkllff PllD 442-MM SALE 'I ~ .. ' I ' 1 ·• 1 • Pattern Ca.la.Jog. Free pattern coupon in Catalog. Send 50 cents. Parenti Without Partners is an international n on p r o ! i t organiialion and its mern- bershlp is open to all single The first Thursday of the month membeni of t h e American Legion Auxiliary, Costa Mesa Unit 455, gather in the American Legion Hall, at 8 p.m. GOURMET SPECIALTIES GOOD NEWS--- Opening Monday, January 27th k4-i-,,'A. Shoe Service New Location ;~f,... CllST VIEW CENnR 17th & IRVINE Nut Kentucky Frl.d Chicken All WORK DONE PERSONNALL Y Coron• def Mor 3 CONVENIENT SHOPS e HO I E. COAST HWY. Corona d•I M•r .•• 67).4640 e l4J3 VIA LIDO Newport BHch • , . 67l08620 e 74 FASH ION ISLAND N.wDOrl Beach.,. 644.7551 1711t A f..W.-N ... I m K .. Tucn ,,led Ctlldceft CHOOSE FROM ALL THE LA TEST STYLES R•1tyl• your old 1ho•s to th• new round look. 8rin9 us your problem and we 'II 9iv• your sho•s e new look. FOR YOUR HOUDAY EHTfRTAINING • SEAFOOD Deviled Crab, Scallopone, Curri· ed S/ir.imp Cutlets, Scampi, Quenelles St. Jae· ques, Stuffed Sole, Boned Trout with Crab Meat, Crtpe.s Crab Meat Alaska, Abalone • POULTRY I A La Kiev. Cordo11 Bleu, Wild Rice, Lt1cullus, B11rg1.01dy, \Vinglets, Crepes, Liver Pate • BAKE:RY I Patty Shells, all s izes: CMese Sticks, AU Ho t Hors d'Oeuvres, Biscu it Tortoni, Crepes Si+zette, Frangipane. and many Dther custom made ittmi La1iglois Fancy Froten Fooo;_ Inc. - HAVE A LOVELY TIME Flair has a flair for making beautiful clocks. All feature 7-jewel movement with alann. Round with large numerals, $17.95. The column, $22.95. The medallion with wreath, $19.50. SLAVICK'S 2114' Laguna Canyon Road J-.1ms1"" 1•11 Laguna Beach 494-2020 1 18 Fuh;., "1'"d -. .............................. .,.l!___,~~~~--~-N-•w_p_o_n_a._._'h~_M_•_-_1J_a_o_· ________ . l , , ' - l ' l f t s • ' • j '• ' v • '• i • -_, --.---....... -·--. ' Favoritism Charged After Rezone Denied Ry JACK BROBACK OI tti. D•ll, r 11ot 51efl SANTA ANA -Cowity supervisors incurred the ire of a landowner Thursday "'hen they tumed down his rezone application and approved a similar one for the lrvinc Company. Denied was the pelition of Lyman Farwell, Tuslin area citrus grower, to rezone 38 acres from agricultural to single family home use. The property is located east of Culver Road north of the San- J\1AC BOYLE All•n 0, M•cllavle. 82 H C•!I,. Ar,>- 9on, l•gun" Hiii>. Prh••I,. !"Vire~ Wer,. htlO •I Bell BrD<'ldway Morru••v. Interment, Fore1t l•wn. PESKULE Ja~s J. Pe'l~u1 ... l\~ MaQnolia SI .• Cos1• Mew. G••ve'l;de .... rvic•s, M90. day. 1 1>.m .. H11rbor RM! M""Otla l Par~. Dirl!Cle<I by Bell 6'1> ... dWAV Mo.rtu11r,r, 110 BrO<'ldw•v. Co11" Mc1~. WETHERB EE Rov S. Weath"'"""· Aq~ 75. of 1;.o1 Colby Pl1ce. Co,!& M~••· Survov"<I by wire, Aubvn; son, ll:od: thrc,. sl~l~r.; ""' 11randchll<1. Servires, S~!urdaY. 10 a.m.. Waverly Churc~ W•!h ll:tv. Loren FHc~inger 11!ficTat1ng, tn. ferment, Fairhaven Me"1ori•I PA•k. Directed by Be!! Broadway Morlv- arv, 110 llro.idway, Costa Mc1a. BELLE\V LOOJis E'. Bdlfw. 33l E. l&lh s1 .. Co<- 1& Mesi . Survived by ~on, Loui• F. Belltw. Jri d•ugMer, ~h•ron Rr.,1~1. L•r1'11•1'""; bro!her, Vernon, of tow•! fwo $1.ie,., Mrs. Margaret Pa"~" Cmt• Mttl; Mrs. Marv WM!, SAn•a Ana; and two 9randchiklren. !'ie•V•<•s. lod1y. Fr!dav. l 11.m., Pacific V•~w Ch.i>el. Interment, Pacmc View Me- morial P1rk, Direcled b• 8 ~ 11 ll•O<'ICWIV Mor!u1rv, 110 6r""oway, Co•l1 Mesa. \\'H ITE Caroli.., While. 39! La P•rl• Lano, ( o t 11 Mt~. A~P 87, 5UtV<VM by bro'"ers, George F .. RobPr!, Edward •nd N elsori Metke, 111 cl (M!1> Me>~• fwo ";"'""· Mrs. 0 . F, Erickson •nd Mro. WBh"""'"" Mann, Servlcei ~odln11. Bell Broadway Mor!uarv, 1 1~ 8 ro-dw1Y, (0511 Mesa. COVALT •oc:tiel~ V. Covi tt. U:M Superior. NeWPorl Stach. Dale of de11h. Dec. 24. Survlvrd bY daughters, C ! a r a Smith. Corona del Mar, Althea E. Norberg, NeWllOl'I 6ee<:h; ~nd Le""a Devent>er11, E•c""d!do; 11 gran<1chll- drett a<>d 24 9re1f-11randch•ldren. Serv· lees will b,. held SlllJ•d•v. l P.m .. Pe- cUic View Chapel. w.tn Mr. Calvin Ochsner officl1!ing, 1n!erme.nl, P~cihc Vl•w Memorial Pff•k. Directed bv Pa- 'ific \,/Jew Morlu•rv. JOHNSON Siglred (6ud) Jol1nson, 2~?1 Oc•~n Blvd .• Ao1. E-6, Cor~ d~I MAr. Date of death, Dec. 16. s.,rviYed bv wife, llutt11 two dau11h!erJ, Mrs. J11dv Burns • of Lido Isle; Mrs. Sandra Oahl<1ulsl. Burlln9a,,...; Min, Bud Jolln:.on, Peb- ble Beach; ~ brotner and one. si~· !!or. Service.. wlll be hold Salurd~v. 1l a.m .. P1cltic View Chapel, w i I h Rev. Norman L. flrown otrltiahnn. Interment, Pacific View M~mor.•l Par!<. F~milv •UllQ•!IO !ho~ wi•hinq to m1k• memon•I contriby•ion,, please. <""lrlb\Jle lo the Plym<111lh CO/\gl'1!9atlonal Cnurch lluild,ng Funn, 32&1 BrOl!ld SI .. NPW<r<Jr! S•atn. O·· rec!!ld by Pacllit View Mo•!uarv. BERUBE Danielle N.Y. Berub!!. 1'60? A;.ocn Clrt~. HunHnglon Brach. Survlvrd hv 111rent1, Mr. and Mrs. Andr~ Benil!I" bro1tler. Al•in; sis!er. J'*'anne 6•,v-bel 9randmother, Mr1. Gilbert llrru· be. Groveslde ~~•vices wc•e nel<! 1~ d•V. Frldev. at G<Kld She<>herd C•n"· ler,r, Hun!ln~!on Beet~. Dlrect•d t 1 Peek Family Colonla !Funeral Home ORLAUSKI Wllllam Nathan Qrlau1k1. 11'1 ; r l'11is..de$ RDl!d, ~anta Ana, 11.~0 4 '; 1>1SH<I •way Dec. 2!. Surviw d b• wife, M•!i. Nallia T. Or(ausH; '"" Qot>erl; mother. Mrs. Mary Orlausk,; sh!er, Mn. Nellle Hor.en. txttn ol M•s11dluset1s. Scrvkcs and in!~r· menl will be neld In Ma .. schu•ell,, w~11tt . c~apel Mortu1r,r, 6--16-•ea!, torw1rdlng dlredo". BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona dcl J\1ar OR 3-9450 Costa l\1esa 1\11 6-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Cos la J\-1esa LI 8-34'3 DILDAY BROTH ERS Huntington Valley J\lortua ry 17911 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842-7771 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e l\1ortuary Cbapel 3500 Pacific \'iew Dril'C icwport Beach, California 644-2100 PEEK FA ~llL Y COLONIAL FUNERAi HO~fE 1801 Bol11a Ave. Westminster 393.3;; S~IJTil'S MORTUAR\ m 1'1a.in St. fluotln{ton Beach LE 61539 WESTCLIFF MORTUA RY m E-nllt St., Co11a Mc•• - ta Ana Free"'ay. Approved was an Irvine Company petition ror a similar rezone of I 11 acres no rU1 of the San Diego Frecv;ay and west of Culver Road. Attorney Roclger Jlowell, representing Farwell, charged discrilnination against h is client .ind intin1ated favoritism to the "large lan- do1vner," Crux of the argument was that neither area has yet been included in the cou n ty's Shortage Of Water Predicted SANTA ANI\ -Orange County <lnd !he s11rrounding south co<lst ;irca of Southern Ca!ifor11ia \Viii be short of necessary \l'alcr in 17 years predicts Langdon \V, Owen, director of the Orange County \V<lter District (OC\VD). 01ven·s grim prediction this week was coupled ·with con- g rat u J a t ions to the ~tclropolitan \Valer District (~f\VDJ for its determination tn go .'.lht<Jd \Vith plans for a sca\\•atcr desalting plant off J-luntlngto n Beach. 0 C \\/ D directors urged the MWD lo proceed with aH possible speed. 01vcn said lhe California \Val:!r JJrOJe<'t 1vould bring needed supplies lo the south coast area in 1971. but added that by 198~ there would be a shortage of \vatcr despite Lhe increase from lhe north . masl.tr plaq. SuperTl>bra agreed with a p I a n n i n c commlis!on con- tention that Farwell'• develop- ment would set the pattern for 900 acres in the central Irvine Ranch area. Richard Reese, Irvine ex· ecut.ive, argued successfully for the lrvine petition, poin- ting out that the planned development adjoJns l h e similar University Park home area just south of the San Diego Freeway. He said the company had submitted a general plan of the area lvhe n the plan for UC Irvine and its envivens 1\·as proposed. A week ago supervisors split 2·2 on the Farwell rezone. Supervisor Alton E, ALLEN WA SABSENT. Allen cast the deciding vote Thursday in the 3-2 deeision. He sa id planning was a necessity for tht: sout hern part of the county which he represents. PROPOSAL FA VO RED Only supervisors C. M. "Cye" Featherly and William J, Phillips favored Farwell's proposal. Joining Allen in op- position were David L. Baker and Willia m H. Hirstein. Another argument fa voring the Irvine development was that sewer and water lines \vere readily available while the Far\.\·e!J land was far removed from the nearest connections. 1-lowell argued, however, that Farwell had entered into agreements to bring both wa ter and dewer lines to his pro!X'rly at considerable ex- pense. Farwell said he had lost $6,000 on the Orange crop on his 38 acres last year end edh been losing money for several years in the face of risi ng taxes. The county Planning J)eparlment, represented by Assistant Director Stuart W. Bailey, promi sed a general plan study of the 900 acres surrou nding FarweU's pro- perty as soon as possible. Meetings FlllDAY M•r Vlsl1 Mas«1lc Lodge, Me!lllnlc lemPle. 1.io1 15!n Street, Newll'l!rt Be•cn. 7;](1 o.m. NewPOrt Am•1eur Radio Sodlly, R~creal!on Bid~., 1114 8111»1 Blvd., NewPOrt Beach, 1:00 p.m. UC! F o I k Dancing, C1m1>~1 Hill. Univ~rs•IY cf Calllornla, tr¥1nt, 7:l0 P.m. S•furdlY (~•1•111" Buslnessmen'1 Committff, Balboil Bav Cl~b, NIWl'Pllfl Beacn, 1:30 a.m. Crossword Puzzle AC ROS. 43 Australiari anima l l Food 44 Zodiac sigri preparation 45 Exacted 6 Jewistl satisfac tion prophE>t ~7 Canadian 10 Passed politicia n . quickly Sl Site of 14 Not Vatican inanlm:it. Cl!y 15 Russian SZ Thinks city 54 Joined 16 Building together material 53 Ankle: 17 Hammer-like Comb. fi;, device 59 Fruit 12/27168 18 Nouri 61 ltern or en!li11g cowboy gear lJ Computed a ~O--tif 19 BreaU1ir ~2 Alaska's medialvalue f',ll\~cllon:j sound first 10 Thorough~ 20 "What !lOvemor fare difference: --!": oJ Revelers' 11 Instrument 2 words 2 words "'I 12 Feminine 4 2 It. s 'ap;ort 22 Somethin y ~4 Deposit ;. nam e .\J Lower fn that is the eart'r '3 Develof' status heeling ovc· &5 Santa-· of stee :4 Cl:t,or 24 Hue t&Atlof plow Sas -26 Newspapc~ buiing a !. Compas~ 46 Promise section: se lrng point 47 Unit of 2 words ~1 Tormc1 1l 3 sr:sorshi~ capacity 27 Certain 5 S n~et .it8 Insect stage serformaiicts DOWN 7 Ha oween 49 Ruby 31 cat! device spfnel 32 On the wJy l Pro se 2a Genus of so Penntsslon 33 Artlsts' narrative succulents lo do subjects 2 Larg_e 29 Show sometltlng 35 Germ: l11Jnun g clo business 53 Ancl!flt Informal of old award Greek 38 Composition 3 Vital 30 Of extra lin . structure 39 Fffiured out 4 Turning i uallty 55 comrter's be orehand aside 34 iscourage ''"' 40 Gamblln!J 5 Digging 35 Loud 56 "Yous-"; '""' Into noise You are: tf l. Low island 6 Supplemrn< 36 Incite ''· 42 Head 7 Metal 37 Meat grade 57 Be unafraid covering 8 Tire 39 Claim ed 60 Fish ' ' J • ' ·~ 7 I " " " ,,. " ,, " " " ~ ... ,, " " ' il:'l" .. ~~ I~! " " ~ " .. i1 "" "' l:Yc, " -.. " 1..m '' :•< " ~ ~ .. "' " -•• ' "' ' " ~ " " lvi:. " " . " .. 'Jj " " "' ' .. ;--1-.. f,,.li " ' --- ••••••• S<nlllfl ..... .... ANNUAi. Ylffl'll SALi SAVI UP TO soo/o ON 1AfAOUI slllAND NAMI TOILEf'.111 q . ' ' •149 • Value! Folcllng Beel $111 DAILY Pll.Ot 11 lcn-Kodacolor or 'lllrffty llock l · White 126-120. 127-620 wt~ u.cb roll tit MU brought m · :ror developing! and prln U n ~ Reg.f11• Sylva nia Flashcubes p lv's 12 fl11aheal Never Before At These Low Prices! Hazel' Bishop Cosmetic Sale • WIMff Ilse .. Tlor!fly Could You Gtt A ljlt. of V'p6a for Thi• Price! Full Qua rt H'arkoff Vodka trurry, tor l im!t&d \Uno o nly t hle Harki>tt Vod· ka ii .!)riced e•u 10,,cr t h a n ou t' evt!l'J'da1 low p_r lte o ! ~89:· Stonewo" ... 1Ctt11'11cky Srrolg:ht Bonded Bouittlln ""' $319 GDllM Chaten Fleur Whit• or Pf11k Champagne ""' $249 .. .. , .. Bein Mhor 100 proof Scotch .... "4"' ""'" Olvera Whlt9 or Gold Teq•lla $ ~:\tN ~399 li.i J'ff 49 Dlstllle r'a Choice 86 Proof Bourll- ""' $349 ..... Julolle• Rum & Brandy ~=" IJ399 Jehnny MagH Scokh Whisky :\lN 1J449 Bouchard l111portff JrltllCh Brandy ••• $369 GellM Key of K.-cky .Blended Whiskey ~': •• $319 Jlm .. am Kentucky Straight louittlln ~N•1199 Monog ram Straight Bourbon 6·Year•O,ld ' =.. $ 99 ~u'!tlh"t -... !I?' a Umlted t ime. j:trlcell e'lien iowel' than; 0 11r -~dqlow :p_r Jee ot ..... , 'Reg.69' .First ljluallty Seamless .Nylons 79'Cannon Bath Towels Reg. 15• • 25• ea. 29c e Son• Prl ... w SITlptS ·1~ eotton tin! a oa.llJ'" bi~~ tow•11 • ..itct,... ~ eoJ o r .. re• up 7 o or ba\htOOm •• ( -or 1111.kh •en 57' . w MATCM!llG WA!M ct.onits .19t Tumblers Popular Swirl Doslg•• ,,......, t''"10 $1 r=~~~~· ~ )'OU" ~lu I '""' 11 • .... Jlofn K11lt or Ml.,..MHhl I . r • • I I JI OAll.Y rtl.OT Frid.tJ, Oect:mbw 27, 1961 RIR SALON Uat sp«ia1a io aatunl mink! All Sllc ptic~! Bou ....................................... lt.00 Pull.W. mrunJ mink """ • . • • • . . . • . . • • • • • • . • . 44.00 -•.......................•.....•....... J2l.OO c.pa '""' double f., ro!Ws ..•..........••••. J».OO Sn:K:s wirb dou1*: fu.t coUan ..••••.•.••••••... Jn .00 Jdm with •edd.in& ring coiluJ ..•.•.•.••••... m .oo ~·"""' .............................. UJ.00 Jidm: with double fut collar! ....• , ....•.•.•••. 555.00 ~ 1eogth saolln: coau •.•.••...•.•••. "6.00 Blod-d,..I mink full.i..p "'"" ............... m.oo a.IJ.OJt-A-KJND ltJltS including ha.YU, bn::md~ pro- -lomb, abk. spxicd "" squiml, '"""""· p.,,,.., lamb ... ...,-fu.. fun .............. 1/J f91/2 off ................. -...... "' ......... ,_.,., COAT AND SUIT SHOP SPECIAL PURCHASI! UC. LISMfl I A INIT SUITS 44.00 tcJ. 60.00 to 70.00 values °"""' &om "" aciria& l!""'P of =gl< bnssml, dou· bla breuml and cardigan styles ia 100% wool doub!e- knit .um. Imported from Holl& Kong by w.hdla in .U mw lpriQ8 mkn. Sizes 8 ro 16. DISIGNERS' CIRCU Cl .t.SS!C: AND COUTUll snu --DAml• DllSSIS - JLOO "' 180.00 Origioal.lr 76.00 m 200.00 drcni:s yoo'•e admired. in the ~t. ate oow itnpommif tt:dumi You'll find mwui. mma you. lmow for quality and daign. Coat wl cmt" mmvno i.o. !Olid toon and novelry wesws of •ool Md •lN#rincs, orig. 90.00 to 200.00 :41.00 ~ 100.~ Collectioa of ax:krail dresses and aittr-five fuh1on. ong. 76.00 m 22).00 ...................... JLOO,. 112.00 DRESS SHOP HALP-SIZI DllESSIS 1S.f9 ttg. 28.00 to 46.00 A W.ioo CXJillctioo ol dresac:s in wool knits. silk pnnts, ~ knitt aod euy•care Amei3 rri&CCWC jttsey. Mlar n.a.no, .,i .. ;. bol[ • .u.._ MISSIS' DRISSIS 19.99 "8-36.00 to l6.00 A col.kaiOQ of dreacs for rown or tn.w:l in euy-cue polyt:MU .m wool lcnit md. other fine ft.bria. Many 117* .m maor colon. Mi., sizes. Gimp oi wdl·mode .i.a..,. •oclU<fu>& l·p= kniu; 12 \lz to :ro~. rq. 46.00 to 76.00 ............... 21" IO "'-" LAllGB COll.OCilON OP BETTim DR.ESSES in rmny falxia. iocJDdin& aitet·fi'N styits; rniJa' sizu. Rq. 40.00 .. 70.00 ............................ 21" .. Jt,9' l'amcDI tab i.lf.slJ.e drtUel in wool. and wool jaqlJlfd ,......, uad nordry ~ lcniu, reg. 50.00 10 70.00 ..... . U.9',. 46.9' Wcrnc:a'1 t.Jf We dttun, rrg. 28.00 to 40.00 ..•... 15.9t Botur drmn a.od cmruma ior hail si:a:; 121h ro 22\.-2, rtg.. l:'-00 ... 11>.00 ................ ' ..•. ' .1 ~·" .. """ Sf*cW group o#. nm.es· dzeau; SIUI 6 tO ~rtg. 26.00 10 -40.00 . . . • • • . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. ............. ll.9' .,..,._, dtaa &iza 6 to 18. reg. 40.00 10 )6.00 .... 1 t.tt Btt1u ~ .ad cmmrt:1e1; .!i::&a 6 10 1 S. reg. 28.00 t0 76.00 17.9' .. Jt.9' ACCESSORY SHOP FASHION SWEATERS 9.99 reg. l~.00 t0 17.00 Warm wooden ro Ji"rT i11 a.nd enjoy .. Wuluble Odon-II aurlic or wool cud.igan aod rufJovtt 1ry1es i11 whitt &ad lubion colors. Sila 36 10 ·ll. •ALA PANT TOPS 4.99 Tt8-7.00 10 J l .00 Lttsutt lOW:ires! Shins t.nd 1unia io coaoo, actrstt, n1loa or ac.mai icmr. Bright prina aod did colors. fuhioa·brigltt, pnad ript. Sirs 10 to 18. llST IUT IN PANTS S.99 tt g. 7.00 IO J 1.00 What I.JI. &tml'1J!XOtl Pull-00,, front-lip And back•ILp •ttim 1n sa'e'ldl •nd ri.8id Hbria. Nylon. Orloo.J :aayl· ic, ncwdtf n.yoo bkods.. &dring tarura and rinems in po~ colon. Sias 8 ta IS. SUNCHARM SPORTSWEAR 1 5ftCIAL SAU OF PIUNTtD WOOL swums 8.99 J.q. 17.00. Printed •wimn. JOmt with mode 1wtlb- aor;k' 1tr1ia& t.dt 2ippu a1 nedt for <'.UC Jn 1lippl~ oo. MM with Jon~ slllCftll. SI., -36 to 40. f •DGtl' DRESSES YOUN~ C:~r""'",. SHOPS YOUN• CAUl'OINIA SPORTSWEAR l/3 "' 1/2 Off! Cboo5e f1om • wide array ol teptnces, mix and mau.h swa.ten. puiu; •laea: !i to I}, wee 11.00 ro 28.00. JUNIOR, PETITE DRESSES 12.99 a.a. 17.00 ro 23.00 dresses in cueet l.nd air.et-five styles. favorite Kfles from regular ltOCk in tnnted fabncs ....i oolon. JUNIOR PEA COAT REDUCID! 21.00 reg. 28.00 Sa.ve a wbopp1a' 7.00 on all-wool Mcleon peacoar 1n camel-brown cc grey. Juaior sizes !i to l!i. SHOE SALON IUffUMS' 6RIA T SHOI SALE 1/l Off DRBSS SHOES ................... 1.'7 ,. 23.'7 Reg. 14.00 ro 36.00. Best lld«rion net in lint d~ shoos !rem -f>moos aWias " And:ow G<l!d. o. u.. Doh.. Jop ....i =r om. ... Hunr in for 1- Rieaioa in the sryJa: and a::>lors you wanr! CASUAL SHOES ................. 1!'7 f9 14.'7 Reg. 13.00 m 23.00. SwiOBing young fathions, fine wa.lktng shoes from Capaio, Amalfi and odlm. HOSIElY Agilonb i»nt)' hOK, made fOI' Suffum&' alone in off white, camel, duli (brown), 3fCY• oavr oc bld Shon:, medium, m..Uum wl, ..i~..,. J.00 .............. :tat .. 2/5.00 Slippers ftCKn fimow mak~ in ILSIOmd ayln dw fold for tra,.cl, CMW in own•pJuric big. Mtny col0ts in .. ., S, M. Ml, l, XL. r<g. 4.00 M>d l.00 •........•.......... l .H Agilon9 hMery in off whirc. camel. chili, grey or navy. 8~- 10 shon, 81h-ll medium or 9!.1·11 tall, reg. l.6S .. , ..... 1.l9 .. 3/3.IO ~YES Dreuy gloves: ol wubabk-, double--wo't'CD ('l)ftOn are • , •-e:wn, Qocm 4-bmton or shonie, embroidery or a lloPfd trirn sryln ;n ""' 6-8, ,.g. J.00.3.lO........... .. . .. 2.lt HANDIA&S PASHION-STYUD HANDBA•S Rl!G. 11.0I TO 40.00. NOW 1/3 Ol'I' 6. 97 "' 21. 97 Clwk .i..pn. p»dla ....i -.....iop.., "'"' and sbou1da' stnp sryin,,. nm Wlottd. and after· five haadbags ue iDdaded ia thil ltl«tloa. And, you can cbcole fran c&.lf, Setca leubet, &llilJlllOr or nutle-par- tttned calf, pactm, tapettry<OYtttd, IUIW OCJTdrln, ftillcs, beaded bags tt plutiCI with a leather look. COSTUME JEWELRY COSTUME JEWELRY 1 /2 PRICE Dnigners' coUectioo at rematbble sa-ringi! Qne-of4. kind pins, nec:klaca. cUriDgl. bncell!'t1. Fabuloo. fuhinn coilectioa ro brigbtta your ward~. hdP. y.ou .ptrkk. FOUNDATION SALON ao1u.1t "Aa1r" bn i.o. nylon 11« with thin fiberfill lining. \Vhn:'C'; A, B, C. cups, reg. ,,00 ........•....... , ......... i.n "Flaic" bn cl. nyloa crrpe 1ricot with fiberfill lining. White; A. a c. "'"" ,.,.. l.oo .......................... J.9' 'Flair" undenvire bn. ol. ny\oo crepe tric«. Jo white; B, C. D, reog. 5.00 . , ,. , ........... , ........ , .........•.. l." "ADJWtettt'' contour bra with floating pMls ('() allow for pt1:· fttt acljusancot. Jn white, A. ~ C cups. rt~ 4.00 ..... JAt "Anl"ll'nTm:~ pt.nry girdle• of nylon and Lyaa• spudcx h•¥t diMgona! ianct t.nds clw: unootb 1.nd conaol In whi R", s..M,t . ATtragt leg ~ty. rrg. 10.00 . , .................. , . 8.4t Loog les in rwo body !cogdu.S, M. L,XL.seg.12.00 . ·'·" "Ntw1a:" lOQg leg panty of shcu nykln and Lycn• spandex ponmec is double·t.yered for rouintum t'OOtl'OL White, $, M. !., "8· 11.00 ............................ 11.9' Sm.iglu gitdle, «.!-12.lO ....................... 10." -· "Suddtlll.ly Slim" loog leg f'IDt)' wich dooblC"·f:thr1c, shm·hi\' ~ ~. ~:~ .~:. ~~~~. ~~ .~i'.~·. ~~·.111 :at MAIDIMllOI .. Ttic-o-luci'9 taa tudcmu bra has 1oida: 1.00 back Jn • umch bleod cl nybt and Lym9 sp1-ndn: foe actiw comhur. B ud C CUPI, reg. 400, .. , .. , . , ...... , , , , , ••••• ... , . , .l .lf D cap, reg. ,.00 ......................•........ J.9t Coac:atina9 Jong·~ rt"" hu 1ct100 iQlf'IT •r Wll!lr: bark, From sad b.d: panch ire firm. hpt and •lunm1ng. Jn wtiilr, , .... M, l. XI.'~ 11.00 ....................... ·'·" .. ._ SdotH.slw.p< btu In ti""' belMcll!n& ..,a for diff=m ••s· Wll' ~One i.t fot you/ Solt n1p Illa!. bra with l1bttfltl un- dttlxut far lift. Ju. white. A.AC CUPJ. <:oo<out cup tao: bn in ~-tint, Nlf;. cu~ or pddtd LtiCI bra in white, A ud B tiips. AU wttb ad~ Jtmeb atnps. rt&,. !i,00 ... , ....... l .tt S.ka•.shipe f""'Y iudl<o of nylon •nd L1.,... spu>d<lt i-· <'met with reinformi rummy 1.od r.d: pe.nds. •~ ba l<"g trim. Wbitt, S, M.1 -A"'"<!< l't! °'long k& reg. 10.00 7.9' #1 FASHION ISLAND • 644-2200 HOLLTWOOMASUllTTI Sole CUP,~ of ny lon 1ac.o hu Whirlpx>JdJ' 9titehtd CUp!, pow· ;~: ~. ~t~ .. ~~ .~~i.'~ .":. ~~.~~. ~~· .~ ·~·d· ~. ~~:~·1~f\ Bra wirh :Bln-Jon8 ltc• <up of n1lon and nylon and Lycra'~ spt.ndn: jlOW<'mtt body. Adjustable stretch straps; whit<" nr p;oldtn haze. Band C cups, reg. 4.~0 . . . . . . . ....... J.49 Contoured bra of bias CUt lace has fib.otfill lined cups for A lilted, t'Oundtd look. Jn whiie w/stttteh .ttnps, reg. ~.00 J.99 "ShaP"-"allcer" psnry girdi.M of nylon and Lyc:rae .spandex: have petal-tt.~ onderpanels for control; stretch lace cuffs. Jn i:!lt~e: ~~ ~ .. ~~.~. ~.~~·.~e. l.e~ .~~·. ~·~'. ~.·~~; .L~.\f Brief kg panry of nylon ind Lycra8 s1>9ndex powernet wifh lace front pdlnel. Knirrtd Yr.Ii~ and Jc.g bi\n<ls. Jn whir<" or gold· en hue, S. M. L, reg. 8.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. S. 99 SAROW. "Cro.yoor-He&n" design bra improves fir a.ad separation. Elasric aides and back for ease of movement. With stretch 1rt.1ps. In whi1t, B and C CUJ>!I, reg. S.00 ............. 3.99 Jn Jong.line, reg. 7.00 ............... , ... ,,,, ... ,. 5.99 rountCIA".CHAIM'" Undtrwire be.tideau of Ctt~ with srretch sides and back minim.iaes t'he fullct figutt. Whit<'. B or C cup, reg. 600 4.49 ~~u~~:tii:~.~·!~· ~ ii·k~· ~~f 'ti~~ b~;· ;~·11y· ~~s:~ meot1 1n one, P1berfill hM'd cup:i;, A,B,C lllzt:1 Evy ro s1tp into in whitr, beige, yeUow, reg. 7.50....... . . . 4." ""'' ... Padded T1t'llJUI'« fiberfill bra '>''1th cup ~110011 of drip-dry ~tistt. Hooeycomb undemips.. Jn white, A and B cups, res. •.OO . . .. .. . .. . . . .. . . .. . . ... . . .. . . .. . .. . . .2.H Lace bn. with wide-~r ""f>S. rrmlW'.lble bust pads his cup-1op of nylon md 3cra8 sptndrll' rhat conform~ ro body cootours. In white, B C cups. reg. 6.00. . . . . . , ...... 4.49 "Provocari~'" ~g-leg ptnty of nylon and Lycralll' ~pani::kx powemrt hu inner bftnd5 that add control, $Ubrract inche!i. Lice front panel Jn white, S,MJ.., reg. I 5 00 .......... 11. 99 JllOIMJllltT N~·Jon lace btndeau with undetbon bend of nylon and Lrcra" .~pt.Ilda. Jn white or yellow. B or C CUJ>\ rrg. .1 ~O .... l .59 Nyloa ~ front panel in this pretty pAnty m1rrh~ btnrl<"3u. Of nylon ind Lycra® 'J'*ndn: powcmr'r 1n whirr or yellow S.M,l, l'g. 8.00 . . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . . .. . ... 6.J9 High-rise, Jong.~g puny slim.s :ind finn.t for aU-O\'!'t control in c/oeer-ro-bod r dothtt, or nylon and l~ spendt"X p<'IW"r· ntt in whitt. M,L,XL, ~ 13.50.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.79 LINGERIE AND ROBES VASSAllETrl GOWNS, REG. 10.00 5.99 Pn:rt'-flo wlng. ench1Ultit1g gowns with lunuious m-rrf•ys of oyton chiffon.. Cbooec-•qua, blue, yellow, odlt'I' pestd colors in pnite, small, medium ind !arS" $f~. Shift gown1 of nylon rriax in m•nr stylM wirh latt,-mibroid· ery rri.m. S,M,L .................................. 3." Nyton trlrnt aJip from ft.m0u~ lTidkN \Vi1h lace rrim\ appli· qucs. Shott l.nd avtr•git' length• in s.iz" 32 10 40 ....... 3.H Penislip1 of nylon criror from • famoo$ m&ket. Deep lacr hems, appl iq11ed lea uim on short or avenge length~. White, nude, puttb, S,M,L, ...... 2.St Of Z/S.OO, l.59 or 2/7.00 T1i10ttd btfefs 1.nd bikini briefs ol opaque nylon 1riror satin. Brwhtd nylon gu.un i' t'Itr1-soft and canfomble. Si:te5 4 10 7, >p<d'11y pi«d ....................... "• ., 6 / 5.80 Brief• trimmed with la~ and m'lbroidtty. Of white and pe!n"I nylon trim: •tin with matehing or ronrr11.5ting trim. EWti• Wlistbaod Juts for life of garmmr. Sizit$ 4 10 7, rc-g. 2 00 and 2.~o pt. , .. 1ue .••............•••..•• 1.39 or l /4.00 Ontance of robn and loungewear .• , ••. 1 /l to 1 /2 off RAINWEAR S~ : Pl1rch~Mt \'Vet-wet.th« COit$ that ihi1'r 1n ~1<"rm~' r~sh '• 1lin~insi:r.t"l81018,reg.14.001o :?OOO 10.99 COSMETICS S.v<' 1n;portantly on thcM bnury 1ids frClln RC"Vlnn lntimatr Spray Mi•, OOCM·ynr special, Jimired 1imt" •. 2.50 lntim1rt Moi1rutt Uxion for hflnd1 and body. Lulluriou~. moi~i1in& fr1.pnt. Once-a·yrll r sproeial, 2.95 v1lur ., .1.85 Sllicatt prorect.h-e l<Mlon for hands and body in an t"l'f·M-U:!IC:' bottle with flfJ>.rop spout, 12 oun<:H. 2.50 \·alur ........ 1.50 Supa.fle .Aqua.marine Shampoo, ru"om fortrn1l1ttd l0t all 1Jpt'I of hilt. 2.}0 V~\le ... , . , , , ......• , . , . 1.2§ E1rtr1-prntectf'tt formul•, Anti·P~rinnt and Drodor.nt, 4 on \aJUe . . . . . . . . • , . . ... , , . . . . . . . • 3.00 Hi,dl md Or'f n:rr.J JrY droduranr 5pny, 2 00 Yl!ur , , , 1.50 :-ipl'C1a1 offer, Clan 1od Clnr r1n~-off detosin~ loti0t1, ·3.00 \·~J\I~ .•..•...•• ' • • . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . .•• 2.00 Ft1ocu Datm-y M'olri-1.ayer Moimiri7.tt, rrg.. 8 50 ...... 5.00 MAJA BY MYRUGIA MIST 3.50 with free ha.n<l ~p Spain's rnOM ~ing fngranct, ftYOf't'd iht .,.·orlJ tlV('f. t-f~j• CA'llO,~ne 1pt1y mb1 now vdth a bu of inimi- IAbie Mira Op, luxuriout olive niJ f'lii:ir for )'001 skin. 0 1rillfian Dior 2-oz. cologM wit h 11n.>mi"'r in Mi~ D1Pr, Diaitdrno. Sr«1aJ .. l.SO 8uffwnt' Cokl Crnm Solp. • n11.ld cornpkx_ioo VJ&p, CXIT'lt• ridl wkh rnkl crnm. free from 11Titanng 1Jlc:1h. 1drtl for~ ,_itive !>k in. Pf'rf«t f(lt t.Jl-ovcr drin·bn.uty. Ddietttlf rinttd, fr.8~nr in ~. plM, J1..,tod1.r, bouquet or !('fnon v~•. f\m" of 1 l ~tne'f0t1'; ,1tt t:.rs, r~. -~.00, ltOW 3 Mxes 5.00 N<"tlt~ Spt'Ci•l < .. pi(k, 6 regular I 00 ban, f~¥0ri1t for troubled &kin . . . • • . ... . . . . . . . . . . . ..... par,. 4.ts JOHN ROlllT POwt•s COSMETICS Priviltgt, ll(t\lf.Jly makes your .i.lcirt "Ctn'L y0tmget. u~ nightly, re8-10.00 . , .. , . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6.00 Eff Lift Cttt.m, &Jtd Btdcitnf' Bt.ury Set. • b,ghc film ~pplitd btfott reritin& to heir fOtl l~tt more glowin& 1n the momin,g. J 1.)0 value . . , . , , 7.SO Ck.nsin.-: Facial, Srin <nc" l.nflon 11 rwl Qutclr: Firm f.rr. aU Crt'ltt'd ro ~fq> fOW' rnm~ifin. re,t. l J )0, l .IO Duo of 5P'CiW from Ba.lmain! l 'odc1 \\~ •. :n 1ttta:rrive ~rr1y mi" bottles: Miss Balmain, 1.6-oz. 3.50; Rep ligue by Raphae~ I~-m ..... , . . . . . .. 3.00 Sandia An~i:in ~foimire Crrun or Locion-uY rhe crr:uTI "t night, the kxion in rhe d1ytimr. Stt your .skin reacr to rhis 8tC'Ut:IC!S beauty bcmr. Specially priced ar 6.00 FRAGRANT SPECIALS from HOUBIGANT in lamOUJI Ch!ntilly or Quelqur fl<"urs . Chancilly liquid ~in n chet /ptrfum ~r. reg liOO .. J .00 Quelqut Fleur! hand and body lotion, tep, ) 00 .. 2.50 Chantilly liquid .\kin ~chtt/parfum 5et, res () 00 .. 3.00 Chantilly deodorarn, ttg. I .SO 1.00 SpeciRI? 2-or. ~ires of spr3y colognr by .t.farcrl Rnc:has :it rhe~ ~pecial pricM: Femme--a c]aj5ic, long rhe fJvorir<' of rhc ~phi~t1c\te .. 3.50 . ].50 .. l .00 7'ffld1unt Roc:hn-the nrv:e~t fl.fOIU!'fl.ChC"-rhe finest, (re:i ri:'d in France fnr rhr men YEAR·END SPECIAL! EAU DE TOILmE "Y" MIST FROM YVES SAINT ·LAURENT 2-o,.) 5.00 For che fir~ rime! A ~P<fia\ 3emsol C0T1ra11'lct crc:ittd for rhis lim ircd rime offrr.l \"Xlh:it 1 ~·onderfu! l\'JY ro gtt acqu1inted with rhis great ragrnnce Minor·, Eau d" Crtpr: de inc in Jn elegant gntd.Jcaf bri1rle wi th ac~! !pray. P an~\\'M' for J1rtle gif1s. 2-oz. size-, r<'g. 5.SO . . . . . . . . l.00 Ariza ··sright Eyn" cyr makeup rC'1T1ovcr p:id5. 65 pa.d.!. tc"g. 1.50 .. .. .. . . .. .. .. .. . . . . . . .............. 1.00 Aziz:a ''Bright EyM" t"Yt drop5. reg. I Z5 . . • . .. .85 POL YDERM SKIN BEAUTY Trcannent produets rh3t "kno11· .. every \V01n:m·~ sk111. No~. for a limited rime, at important .mving~. Normtlirin,') (.IC'ln5ing (r(':lm, f<',~. {50 ......... 1.75 Nonntlizing Skin Frl""hrner, reg. l ':5" .....•.... 1.00 Normal i2ing (re3m , R:g. ~ 00 . . ...... 2.00 Sh<'tt ESSt11ce of \Vind Sonµ;. ( rt1ldcn Autumn, Pmphccy or .Beloved from Prince Matclur.bclli, smoothe~ . .!Oh<'ns, ailkrru. Specially pldagcd with fm: di3penxT pump.. . . . . . . . 3.00 "lb.no Pf'rlumt'd bath oil npsulM'. rhe pill for 1he fngr:intly IX'flutiful bl.th. By Princr flf:itrhabclli. ·10-raprule OOx .. 2.00 100-n:psulr jar 4.00 HELENA RUBINSTEIN ULTRA FEMININE" SPECIALS E\'tf}' woman hu e\'ety ri.qht 10 look younger 1h1n 'he i5. Ultra Frmininrlf' hr!~ achin·e th:tt look' E~trogcnic hormone OC'<lm 11•ith pro')rSt<"rnne. nr erno!- limt moistutitin,~ rniu!~icrn: S 00 1-?;lue<. 5.00 Hand Jorion, \ ~O v:ilu" 2.00 CARON SPRAY SPECIAL '2-01. 4.00 Fltuf" Je ROC1.illr, J:kllod,i:;iJ. "fuir j!e f'."ocl In .J 1no~t elegant fluted crr~nillioe Mrtlr . .;.•rengthrned .:nlf'l/?fle formula h:is special Jaoq-in.t; J>O"·c·r lrlMI 1 r~,·c1 ~i:r- DOROTHY GRAY SKIN C<IRE AI DS Ctllognt Hormone Cre1m. re~. (.Oil 3.50 Ski n care clas!ic at sa-,.ings. <~omplr1e u1mrlrY1f'ln tt(':LI - intnr for a sof1rr, freiht-r k~k of \'r"11hful heau11·. Take two 1httr \t"lvcr h~•i(k< tn :r.n}' of 19 di fferent 'h:ide~' "Double ·r~ke" Lipstick:'! reF. l lS <'3 ............. 2/1.25 Hormone han<l ctC'lm, re,1;. 2 SO .. , .............. 1.50 Moisrurizin~ hand rtt'lm. rt,!<!.}. SO . . . . . . . . . . . 1.50 lJry .~kin lorion ~P«"i:ll, re.c:. '~1'1 ........•. 1.00 Dry skin lntirm. r~I:· '.,(\ 1.75 SALE! WIND AND WEATHER BY TU SSY! lotion, rr,::. 2 00 .. .. 1.00 1<'.I;. ·1 00 .................... 2.00 I !Jnd Crttm, rrg. ZOU . . . . . . .......... .. 1.25 !f11nd Crctm. 1nrroduc1on-111hr .. 1.00 ARDEN HAND LOTION, BODY CREAM Hand lotion, reg. 4 <iO l.00 Body Uttm. re,g. j 00 l .50 Soothe 9"'':1.f wintry rh~N>ir1J.t, Rrltl thf' !r:i_c:r·1nl't' •if Bh1" Gn!1. June \Jtt!U!ium or M<"mn1re ('hrr·t' h~nd l<'t1nn smooth ynu r bocly wilh bnc:h· \ rt;im SAVE ON BONNE BELL PLUS 30 Phi~ 30 Hormone Lotion t•r (·t{',1m Lotioo. re~. 1n00 . . . . .. .5.00 f('~. h 00 . .......... . . . 3.00 ('.ream. t<'[:. ~<Xi ... 2.50 Don't lt"t your f.tt:t" 1ell 11 mc. PhH ;f) <tr-.1m .ir nir.h•, lotion 1n • .-!aytirne h<"I~ n1•11n,h rc'n~lirc l•'Ut ~kin ANNUAL SALE! DESERT R.OWEfl BEAUTY AIDS So-Dry Cretm or Ro!l-on .50 .SO.Ory At'Nm'I 'P"' 1.25 Ncw fr0m hnlmn ar nn~~·Tl!'lr ""l'l'in~! ~o-IJ11· c!""· don.ntt ~nd ami -~innn irr .i.i;htly -..Ynrt'li, n~"<'r hum clothin~. 1.25 4·o.&. 'Dct.oty lhrh . R-a1 8ntffY Btth ... 2.50 J.11rnry by 1hc (.1rfuJ <lt ,J\'•11J:1. New ~-Hrty 1'mcrrr from Shtllron moi~11tri~. i.of1en~ :'Ind lc-:t'l'1'~ • t!N:r~N· atnm1 tlMt IJ.St'I for ht'!l1M T-. n ~ffle_,,,. • ~ ' I I ' I ' ' • MON., THURS., FRI . 10:00 TILL 9:30 OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL 5:30 COSMETtcs SAVE ON DANA SPRAY COLOGN!S 1.75 - Choost T.ibu, rich and ultn·Lingtting; flowt'ry, light and /itring Ambu5h or elegant 20-Utats. Each in dlstinetivc spray bottles, all ar one low prict. SAVE ONE-H.f,LF ON MAX FACTOR SKIN-CARE AIDS AC11\e f.foisnuizer, 6-oz.., reg. 5.00 . . . . . , • , 2.SO As1ringcnt, J:!-oz., reg. 3.50 .............. , ... 1.71 P.foisruriziog Cl~sing Cream, 9 oz., reg. 3.50 .... t.75 l-fois rure Essence Night Cretm, 3.7 oz., reg. 4.00 .. 2.00 SPRAVGRANCE COLOGNE DE COllDAY z.zs 1.4-o<. ·rou1l)Urs P.foi, fa.me, Possession .•. crio or most bclavtd fr.?gr1nCl':S in ;1.n enrnncing sp~y disprnS(:t. STp.bNEllY ( hr.,1m.1s <.:JtJ~. reg. 2.00 box .........• ,7$ t hrirunas Cltds from famous hOUKs in v;ide usortmcru:, reg. I 00-1 0 00 bo> . . ..• !0.1.00 Christmas gift ,.,-raps in flat ~hC('(S, rol4, reg .. 2~-J.00 ..... . 2/ .2! .. 1.!0 CICKt"-out bn:x:ed gifc stattonery, rrg .. 59 to 5.00 .....• 19·3.4' Box<."d stauoocry and nor<.'s in r<.'gula.r ot lightw<."ight. GooJ ~lC'ction of colors and patterns ........ 2/1.59 and Z/2.00 ~~a~l;c;r~~cs ~ ~'.~~·~~~~ ~~--~~ ~ .s~I~~~ .i~~f,c\O Ea.ton's Crystal Sheer in o~n stock with matching t:nvclope~ White, [Jveodlr. pink, green, yellow or blue, Club si:r.r shm!, rc.i;. 1.00, .8'; Envelopes, reg. _,9 . . . . . . ............. 45 Cry~tal Sherr <lou blt bo:r contains 96 jingle shttts, 48 whltc- 1 incd <.'nY<.'10pes, reg. 2 19 . . . . . . ....... 1. 79 '-frul r icrurc fra.m<.'s in sllvn-or gold finish. Tailort"d, filiycc t nd ~hadow box styles in amn.cd 1i1cs from 2"x3n ro ll"xl4", re-g 2.00.1 o 00 . . . . . . . . . 1.49 to 7 .49 \'Vcddiog invi~tion r~y of polished gold ot rhodium finish . J ~'4"':r51f4'" opening with velveteen p;.d bad:'. for u5t: as ttty. \V1th ring and h.mdlcs, rr:g. 5.~0.. .. .. . . . . .... J.n r:rom·iC"i -dccor.tti ve rolor('d wall murals in psychedelic moods. Sti rk·tln b:iclc. Cur-up or use a.s ~~acu!1r splash of color on ,..':l lls, c~n:. 1rash barrels, reg. 4.00 .. , ......... 1.'9 l.ittcr b~gs ket'p ars and high,..·ays tidy. Ides! in<Ar organiur for maps, appoinr~nt books, run glasses. Match cat int~iors "·irh this "(':eighted. pl1J1:it basket. reg. 2.00 . . ... 1.49 INFANTS' SHOP 1969 CO~OR-COOllDINATED ENSEMIU! IS BY PETERSON IN CATALINA BLUE AUl'Of\fATIC POLO .PLAY YARD has no buttons to rush, no brackets ro rdct.SC, no~ to remove pad, yet side$ caon0t •ccidcntally drop while baby is insldt. Heavy-Jury consttuctlon, 6-leg support, reg. 29.00 22.99 SlEST A STROLLER fct.turcs comfy hc-adreJt. mukct b;iskct, 11djustable footrtlt and canopy, tray and btMl.s. A ~rroUer, slecrer. ~·:ilker, ill-in-one, reg. 2~.00 ... 19.ff FOLDA-TRl -CHAIR foldJ flat wirh the uiie of one hind. foom ptdded seat a.nd bt.clc, v.·tshablc upholstery, to,..·cl and bib rarlc, ~fety belt. Made with no cromt> ca«:hins cornerJ. Converts ro yoorh, then ro uriliry chair, reg. lS.00 ............................. 14.99 \V.A.LKER·JUMPER wi1h spring arm ad ju.ns tension for a h~vier ~by or 11!1("f' toddler. Extra Ja.rge whce4. remO\':\hle ir~y. Fold~ flat for 3torage, reg. 8.00 .. 5.,9 Klei nrrr Ilur.Jlirr ""aterproof j)9flt~ at oner-a-year ~\·ings. (jnara nrctd for li mos. Infant pull.on, reg. 1.00 r1 . 2/1.69 Toddlrr pull-on. reg. 12) t:ach .................. ,J/2.19 Infant snar>-on, reg. 1.2 ) each , .................. J/2.19 C..oovcrriblc comforttT by \Vl!Tl!llrtl iJ full -sii.r comforter v.·hai open. ti~ clcmd for perfect slttping or pram bag. Woo · derla.nd challis print matchn sheers, pillow cs~~ ind blankrt~ 1r,11:. 7.~o , . . . . . . . . . .............. 4.9 Rr:«"i,•ing bl an km in pastel(, stripes arc 30:r40", reg. 1.00 .79 ~pccial porch.a~'. l nfa nrs' sunsuits f~ a f_a.rnow mUrr. f;in- t K quality combed ronon sccrsud:r:r U1 srrr(>d. rMc.b, plaids. lO!Tlt ,..-irh arrliqucs, reg. 4 ~0 tO 5.00 . . ..... 2.4f tn!1n1~· shim tiy Cuter, OC'Vct-~ott offered lf a .~ J>!ice! '\'our choice of 1rylC1: Jiffon, reg. 2/1.19 •. , . , ... 2/1.00 Uoub!c-hrt:L1ted map $l}'le, reg. 2/2.00 ••....... 2/1.50 GIRLS' SHOP SAVE! FAMOUS MAKEllS' DRESSES F0tt GIRLS 4.49 and 5.49 ria. 6.00 to 12.00 I J•~ 1J:e l• ;run\ Dacron• poJye.tter a.nd <.onoo. blends 1n st~le~ fOC" ptny ind tehool. Shifu. A -liM~, dirndls, f it ancl (lair. (;iy ptinls and IOI.Ids, 1lztt 7 ro 14. !'1£EPWEAR.. by Sally Schrank-in d/IC'Ontloued ltfks. C'.orto1I I la:nne!cuc or ... halli1 pn Ot rtiamt ln prlnu and IOI id rotors. Nett tailoring, Jaiory trim, ttg. 4.00 ro 6.00 ..•..••. J.49 SUPS DY HT•R ldA]ESTY wlth JIOW·W1l1t, odjuatblt "'°"I' cler s1raps. Of nylon with uiloml trim, ttg. 2.00 •• , .Zf1.00 PANTIES BY 11£1l MA]f.STY ol nylon trlcoc with nrk>n laa trim. !'ro0t.1thly fini.i.btd seams f0c mnforr; fist dul:lc ....S. blnd. In ,..·hi1e, 11zcs 4 ro 14. reg .. 89 .... , ...... J/t.lt STRETO I NYlON AND COTION SOCXS •illl tunitd rnfh. 5,,.. S, M. I. r<g •• 69 pr .............. J ..... 1.4' ' CARDIGAN AND PULLOVER SWEATERS of 100'0 nylon are macbi~ -..-..shable. In f1vori te colors And dua.ic wbi~. Perlt:et for skins or jumpers, teg. ,_00 to 9.00 J.tt to S.tt JEANS BY WR.ANGLER ot ICk>uoce Sanforized& cotton denim in brigh1 ind pure! colors. GirU' sizes 4 to J4, tt:j. 2.50 to 4.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... 1." Gftd 2.99 KNEE-HIGH SOCKS from 1 famws m11ker in "'·hite and ,..·anted colors, reg. 1.00 to 1.25 ............. , ......• 77 SKIRTS ANO JUMPERS in fine wool and Orlon'3 1cr1lic blends. Ousic and mod pl1ids 'n' check s. ~lid colotf, Ideal for size 7 to 14, reg. 7.00 ro 1200 . . .... lJ.tf·S.99 LmLE SHAVER SHOP CR!ST UNDERWEAR FOii LmLE SHAVERS BRIEFS with fly (root, double .ear, elastic w1istba.od. Of white, San fori~ combed cocton, sizes 4 and 6, reJ. ;/2.50 l/2.00 T·SHillT style undcnhirc with crtw nt:ek &nd shoct sleeves. Of whirc combed cooon. nylon reinforced 1t neck and 11erw:. Si zes 4 and 6, reg. J/2.75 . . . . ............ 3/J.JS SOUD COLOR. PERJ.IANENT-PllESS PATAJ.lAS in popu· Jar long $1«'\·e, long Jrg srylc, 65% Dacron• polycsrn, 3'% corron blend never need~ ironing. Little Staver si:z.cs 4 ro 7, reg. 4.00 . . . ....................... Z.St .KNIT SHIRTS in 1ssor1N stripes and tolid colorJ foe Little Shavers. Shore slec\·e, mock ninleo«k atylin£, Completrly wi!.shable cotton. Sizes 4 to 7, reg. 3.00 1.6l Pill LINED JACKET of Oxford weave nylon wich aippcc~ tl66.a-1rtachcd hood; siripe on sleeve. Gresc colors. Sizes 4 to 1, t:f. 12 00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......•.• , STORE FOR BOYS rllPST CR JACKET by {Jmous maker is of ~·aierproof nylon v.1 rh pile lining. Stand·up co!l:ir coact:als hood. Coffs arc kn.it. Jn cxcctltnt colcm:. ~i1ei: 8 10 20, rep;. 1 ~00 10 17.00 .. 11.99 OUR OWN CREST UNDERWEAR FOR BOYS BRIEF "l\'llh <loub!.c SC"'.&t, C'lastiL "l\•ais1bancl, fl y froru. Of San· fpriz~ whitt: cornbcd couon, ~izes 8-12, reg. 3/2.'0 J /2.00 sizes 14 to 18, reg. J/2.7~ . . ... J/LJS UNDERS.HIR.T in popular ahon:·sl~ve, crn.i-n«k styk. Of "''hire combed cotton . Sanforii~ in sizes R to 12, reg. 3/l.7l J/2.25 sizes 14 to 18, reg. 313.00 .... Jf2.SO PAJ,.U..IA.S for boy.r-~rt need irooing. Bleod. of G~% Da. cron® polyrstei, 3~% cottan in LSSoned tolid colors. J..oQg sleeve, long leg 1ryle, sizes 8 10 16, reg.,_()() . , ·'· ...... Z.9' KNIT SHJRT .,irh ow own Crest b.bd has mock rurclencdc, shor; dttvcs. In 1550rtcd stripes and solids. Complctdr wub- ab/c conons to fi t sizes 8 10 18, reg. 3.~0 . . . ..... 1.H BUU.."Y HOSE carries oor qw.liry G-csc labe l. Qoick-drying n;·lon and Orlonl3 acrylic blend in many colort To fir siit:s 8~-11 , reg. 1.00 . . , , . , , , .. 6/4.lt To fit size~ 10.ll, reg. 1.2 ' .... BOYS' LINK STITCH CARDIGAN REDUCED! 5.9'1 rtg. 9.00 6/5.H Made juJ( like d.ul't Im boys 1od link shavt:rs. P.Jpulat beU-sieeve style in machine-wa.shable Orlon* 1crytic link .ulrch. Sizes 8 to 12. sues 14to20,reg.11 .00 . . .. ,,,,,,,, .... 7.tt Sizes 4 to 7, reg. 6.00 ............ ,,,,, •. , .. J.tt CHILDREN'S SHOES SA V!! GIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES 6.88 sizes12;.;:io4,rcg.1l.OO IJressy·looking 1'-stnp 1s srurdy eoougb foe JdM:x>I. and pay, Nca.t in mi or blad with fint:-rippled rW>bu 90\c. Sizn 8~-12, reg. 10.00 _ ........... , .... ,, .. S.11 YOUNG MEN'S DRESS S~Ol'S IY CROSBY SQUARE R!DUCEll 20•1. OFF "I> 12oo'°17.oo (h()('l.'oe wing tip brogt1<.' or lighrweighr drcu ,J,orc, Ro1 irr ~k is rcduceJ for 1 once-a-yea r saving!. Smooth ind grtiin lcathcn In bltd: or btowo; 6-8. STOftE FOli MEtf OUR OWN CREST QUALITY IN M!lf'S FINE FURNISHINGS PAJAMAS in popol1r thorry style. PetmAocnt-pms blend of D.cron~ polynter •nd 00100 in a wide ra.ngt of did cdot-1. Sim A, B, C. D, r<g. GOO . . .4.6' 0< 2/9.00 PAJA'-IAS in traditional loog leg. loog .slrcve CO&L iryLr:. Prr- m1ntnt·preu blt:nd ol O.croo• poly"'cr and cocton io IOlid tolors. SiJJCS A, 8, C. D, rrg. 8.00 . ,6.19 or Z/12.10 OOXER SHORTS that ncvrr Dtt<l ironing! Blrnd of Dlaoo'8 polyester and canon. Wide c.WUc w1iscband. Sof,id color1 oc white. Sizr1 30 m 44, tt~. 2 00 ........ 1.3' -l/4.00 UND.CRSJilRTS in popubr rib-knit of combed couoo. ~loft reinforced ncckbtnd. Pull <ut length, S, M, L. XL. reg. ~ l.00 ' 1.00 KNIT lJRJEF of combed ronon with double .m1t. \Vai•t.nd. gnanntttd. Siin .}() w -44, reg. 3/}.00 . . . , , ... 6/1.00 BOXER SHOR'r'S ol cocton bro&dcl0th with a wuh·n-ww f1t1i~. Whi1e ind WCKtcd pttttms; gu1n.ntttd Wl.iabaod. Sil!CS 30 io 4-4, ttR. I.2j ~ch ... 6/6.'00 #1 F)(Sf'hbN ISLAND • 644-2200 I •-------------r,.,....,..-~~~--~-~"•~•--n---~-------.,,., T-SHIRTS ol combed wbite ron:on with \J"CW ncx.l, uP9d shoulders. SittS S, M, I.., XL reg. J/3.7'i , , , .• If er 6/f.00 J-landhn:hirfs of fi.ac aitton U.wn in full 18" iquue wUh ~ -~1.1~.~-. ~-~-~~~~~~i~~ -~~~~~~-~{. ~~·410 Hi-bulk Crime wylic hose in JOJid colon. ll.ib ay1c witb. et.stic rop. M.adlioe wuhable, machine dry.btir. LoQs-weui.ft3 in 1izes 10ri to I}, reg. l .lO ... , . , ........ 1.19 or )/J.00 Suctch anklet of wool and ll)'lon blend iJ 81W'Mltrtd a cbinc "•a.shable. In b!&ek, brown, oli\'e, n1vy or grey, rra. 1.50 ..... 1.19., J/!.00 Ovu·thc-al! sucu:h hoit of machine-waihab!e wool and n7loo blend l.n ame colors u ankJcr, ttg. 2.00 ..... 1.Jt or J/4.00 Fiot" 1ilk ncd:wcar in • ~ide rangr: oi current roLon, Jl9UUGI, "8· J.l0-400 .......................... 1.79 or J/S.00 Designer ocdwear ii di•i.nct.lvtly diftcrmt. uomiu11!.,ably de- signcr-irupittd. Reg. ,.00 to 7.10 . , .. , .J.91 Of J/11 .00 OUTSTANDING auys IN OUR IEST SHORT SU!VE oms SHIRTS J.89 or J / 11.00 tt:g. 6.00 Pick fa\•orite coll&r srylcs in whi.te, djd colon oc llO'ftl- tJ patrems. LIWUJ' blend of 80% Dtcron~ pol.rcsttr ind 20% cottm .needs no itoo.ina, na Si.ICI 14Y.l-17. FAME-NAME SPORT COATS Plaids, checks and .xid colors in sportt cocaa and blaz.ers. Wool. Dactool5 polytstt:r and wool blends in rwo and 3-bunon ttylinR. rtg. ~ rrg. ... ~0.00 sports coat! 41.00 11,.00 ~pons cw.rs 91.00 ~5.00 sports COr;1.t1 46.DO 125.00 sports toats 10&.00 65.00 sporu coau 54.00 135.00spon•c:oau 111.00 7).QO Sports OO&tS Q.QO 145.()() lpClfU COIJI l~QO 90.00 sports rou1 76.00 1,5.00 sport, co.ts 132.00 11 0.00 sports toacs 93.00 111;Gis1' SAU OF THE ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN'S S Tailoted !ex die man of dia::riminat.ia& ~ bt .W. Loe mil.mu Hldq.f....,.n. Stcio Bled>, Micboda s..rn, ind our own Cmt ltbcl two Jnd !-buaco modtll wir.h center or sido--•mt srrlini:, in fi.oac (Wtia, of coucx. reg. tell. 1,5,00 suits •.•• 1U.00 85.00 rui11 7J,00 16,.00 1Uit1 • , •• 140.00 8995 suit~ .... 17,00 185.00 su.ics •. , .157.00 110.00 tuiu . . . . 94.00 195.00 suits , ••• 164.00 I I ).00 ruits . , . • t•.oo 200.00 rui11 , ••• 170,00 125.00 sui1s •••• 106.00 210.00 suics ,,,.ll0.00 13).00 au.its •.•. 111,00 21,.00 -.Jit1 , ·,,. llJ.00 14~.00 suits .... 123.00 225.00 suia ...• ttO.oO 150.00 suits . , .. 1%1.00 245.00 suitJ •... 201.DO ~'S ~~g ':1~W' Save mooey now, ••c even more when rou buy two pain! Wc'.-r reduttd all ®t regular suit atock in all wool wont..i.. 2-ply wup .i"4 P!Uh uid chcclu, bop- ack. WC11.vcs; btlr loop, tab-aide aod regulu or full top pocket modrh. reg. * rej. tale 20.00 .i.ci.. 516 « 2/$31 ll.00 ..i.ru Ut w 2JS'7 22.91 ,i.ci., Sll w if$l5 J7JO ..i.du SJO w 2/SH 219l ww $21 « 2/141 40.00 .ad• la2 « 2/SU 27.9l .i.ca w .. J/14& 42.lo .i.w saa • 2/fM J0.00 ,1.a, $25 or 2'1$49 1).00 .i.ocb SH or Z/171 100% ORLON LINK STITCH SWEATER 11.99 reg. 17.00 Fj\'Oriic <..lill.:oic cud.ig&n in roarbioc \OoJ.!ih~blc 100',V Odonll' acrylic link at.itch. ai~ JC\'ttal "' moo -,..1nted color-,. now. Si.zu S, M, l. XL. 100% ORLON LINK STITCH SHIRT 6.9'1 te,;. 11.00 Mock tunlc: stylin& in popular tick 5titt.h Or!oo® aayhc thin jn ~ foe wual 1ttire. In a wide sc:lccrion of w1aha.bk colOl"t.. Siz.cs S, M. L. XL. Tunlcoed knit abir" with Jong $ltCTn ta.kt-a frmJ our rca· ulu ll'OC!.. OlOOX ftom fine wool or pwr conon kniu io a ~ lO!or •election, reg. 1 LOO ro 15.00 . 7 .99 VARSITY SHOP MOCllTURlLI ICNIT SHIRTS 7.99 •es-12.00 100~0 Orloo• .ctJliC with a luxury look, )"t:t compkujr machine washable, dqJ.blc. Jo blue, unenld. • .,.,, pt.prib. w YIUlilla. AU with sbon s.lc:at:i. surrs Our entire t1ocl: "I> 60.00-6l.OO 69J0.7l.OO 79.10.Sl.OO ... ........ 00 ..... st.00 .... U.00 tt&-.. 89J0.9).00 ' .... ,, ... . 100.00 .. ' .. ~ ..... ... lll.00 ... , .... ',. ... lll.00 ........ 109.40 SPORTS COAT'S °'" aotiu '""'· ue<p1 !0< bl.,... J9Jo.40.00 ..... 21.GO , ll.00-60.00 ... 4!.40 41(1().lO.OO ..... JS.oo GAILY PILOT Jf SLACKS °"" ,.,;,. -~ l 7.9l-20.00 ..... .14-11 21.00 ........... 1'.IO l0.00 ........... ..... 32.lO ........... 27.tl 17.10 ........... 21.00 MEN'S SHOES LONG 'If." G 111' IROGUE 19.99" "'· ll.00 )ILDWl!t sale valur in & ~ ar-£n lcbCr d.tc.- sboc. b.ceptiom.I. uhie from cw rciulu trock. M:c. 5iKI i.D. your i:bWcc of black or browa. IU 'RISS S 16.99 ,.,. 12.lO Youn" ••lD,!> lo< the look ol ! ......... SqW i<> pol- iWd black grain lodw wilh plain toe, adjultlhle buck~ le scrsp. Men's Wea 8 to 13. , SIL 'IERWAllE PAUL fMlE IOWLS Eight ~ize• by Web:!rcr Wilcot, 1il11trplated by lot.ct· rwiooal Silver Co. !led, blue, cleu plniglu inttn lioiag.s for 5, 7, 8, 9" sitts. 4" 1ix, reg. 7.SO ............ -. , .... , , ..•••• I.GO 5• Uu:, ttg. 8.,0 ..•............••.......••. 6.0I r.· siie, rea. 11.00 •..•.••......•......•••••. 7 ... 7· size, reg. 12.$0 ,,.,, .•...... , •.......•••• t.llJ s· s.iz.r, reg. 1,,00 .............•..•..•.••. 10.Qtt 9~ ~iu, reg. 17.,0 .........••.... ,,,,., .•. 13.0G 10" 1ite, reg. 40.00 , . , , .. , , , , .• , • , , , , .. , • , .21.00 1 }~~-siu, rt&-60.00 .. _ ..... _ .•...•...•••• 40.00 COMMUNITY STAINLESS PLACE sris 5. 98 "8-8.9l 6-pica plact-JCCtin& .ioc.Judes 2 tcU~ ~ bile aad fed-, -.lad fuck, aoup lpoorl. la vcoctia•, Pf.al Rc.-ett•, Unw1•, FrOKfire•, Woadmeft• pttft'DS by Oneida Silver.smiths. lntct.D.&ti.ooal ll&iolea1 tthJewm at -.via.pl OxGI: from. lQ """""" Qumu Puq, Albaml><s, Corta, New Chum, Amcrkan ROK, .A.biord, Inapiruion, NOfaie iAAlm·« T• d1y. 2~-pc. Jet for .C •..••.••. , .• , .••••• ...-.. 21919 Old fa .. ociic panaru abouJd be: ordmd bclort lUrdJ. bl fot. swnmu 1969 dclivay. Fill in or .dd to your t..ori~ fluwue in precious Sttrling til•er. TABLE LINENS EYELET stUllDClll "11-vinyl tlod>. Pwo wloi.., .,..i.c .- 1ern 1etemhir1 CutWork. A practical, macbinr-washablc dolh wirll formal iUt '4:.:)4" tile, reg. 4,00 .....•••••.•.. Z.tt l4'72" '"'· "'" l .00 ,,,, 60.100" ob"'°" -601"90"obJot130C OTa.1, rta. &00 . •• ••·'-" "8· ).00 ...... 5.,, 70" round, "8-7.00 !.tt ' CUSTOM TAii.i PADS •od owdli .. I''"" " •riDs>o <Aoicc of pyrozylin cou.ed Ja.tbcmtc widi lciccbed edo. or finest Y.inyl. Wood toad, cootdina1rd felt btic.kl., ~ Free rncasurin1 lt'f"ficr __ ............... 11 .. rM 10%. KITCHIN INSDllLI ol ibcated =r i. "'-4~ vdftt Jook. Primed in populu kittben cdon. Frait · Pot Pourri p.uunr. Towel, rtg. 1.00 -···-·-·········At Apron, "I· 2.00 ...• 1.79 Di>hclo<h, "I· 2/1.00 Po1holder, reg. 2/1..00 a9M ,Jf Hdl .Jt Ovct1 Mitt, ttg. 1.00 .I' C.uAIS iablcclolh lo, P"'IJ<"' u 6l9' Doaoa* pol,_., Jl% «>mbcd "'""" wi!b ---.--ci.,... fin-ish. Suina <OG'I' ouc in normal washing. Solid c:obJ with nwch~ ~ border. i o.1a', iq. s.oo . .,,,,, 67$ obloo1 or oval, .... ll.00 .... 10." r,7,1os· oblong, rrJ(. 16.00 .... 1 J.tt IOo<lO", .... 6.00 •• ·"'" (>8" .....d, tog.11.00 '·" 17s:t r oapkiru, reg. 1.25 ·" CAIMI!. <unu<d·•"" ubloclod> br ealif. l!uid Priau i .. pnmttd oo-iroa. With csduA11e c.J.pn. DI .a.. Solid colcw&. .lowwls. a.W with Tlf-dyed frinar, odwn ~· fciopl llxll", ~ l.00 . . ................... , .J," lh 70", <q. 7.00 ... S.tt ,, .. """"" ... 11.00 '·" ('°'84", r<g. I t.00 .. '·" Ol"90" an!, 60.!0l", .. ,. ll .00 10.,, "" 14.00 •.•. 11." N1pkin, ttg. 1.00 •• .It lil.~lAN 'UNDI ~ i.,. F'""'1 ..00 Cd>a -. priced foe lbc fine: tilDI ~ct! V1t-41cd. penu•p::al, .oil rdn• liom ia olive, 1n1iqt.M" pd, white, with pWa hcmt.. ~l:ir,2~ .U.C, fC:J. 6.00 .... t {)8"' ~' IZ.70" oix. rt&-9.00 7,,, ,.._ ll.00 •••. 11." ('°1')0" .... f-Or!l" 01'i. .... ll.00 ' ... 12.,, ... ll.00 .... 1~ 60x!06" siu , Napkin1o, reg. I.00 . .n re1; 18.00 ., .. 15." GLASSWARE --- J.llE SIT • MON:, THURS., FRI.' 10:00 T1Ll -9l30 OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL 5:'30 • • I •• '14 DAILY PltOT * ISl Ftldiy, Ot<tmbct 27, 1968 LEGAL NOTICE Yotir 1'1oiaey's Worth •·111tt c••TtfllCAT• OP •u••M•JI l'!c:TITIOUI JiAMt: TM lll'*f'"""' i90I*' <t•ilt'I' '111' 11 ~1"9 1 t.nhwu ti SM W ltTI\, (•II Mt.If, (Joll!Orfllt , U"""1' 1M l]C• ,,,law llrm "'""' cl liELECTIV[ $1NQLEI ..... ttwt 11111 rlnn 11 - Food Prices-Up 01· Down? -Cit ..... f9lltwlnl --. ""'°"' ,..""' lfl t\111 -ti.a at .... ~ II '' t;J....,.. LUI ~~ MfllOll. IN:J ~IWl'll1 lr..vt .• CKll Mfo..,, C•lllg.rnll Dy SYLVIA PORTER You'll almost sure1y say l'm putting you on if I claim that uu.r rood costs actually are declining, parllcular\y U J say this while also reporting that our lotal food bill in 1968 will hit $101 million, up B fat 6 perce.nt from l11sl year and a full $31 billion higher than l!lGO. pmonaJ ~ ,..., '"' foocl Is 40 cents; In the Uilfted Otttd DKmlllt• ti, 1 .... Si.11 ot C111!9fnl1. °'"''" COl.lnrw: °" o.c. I!. Jtj,1, io.tl)rt "~ • "'°''"' 1•.,01.e 111 1no •o• .. ,d Si.Ir, --11~ •~llel!"' Liii Ml • M~ll"" llnown IO m• 10 tit rn• p,rwn wnott l\8fl\~ " 1~blottlblld lo 1111 wlltl;n 1n1trv..,.nl rno 1cll,ncw!t<l@tod >lie ~•e(~!lllCI 11\f' wmt. i' f F !CIAL SEAL l Kln&dom, lt'• :II -ts. 1h undetdrvelopod lands, ll'• hr hi&her. Merv IC. tie"'~ Nottfl/ PYl!llt·C•lllO"!I~ l'tll'l(loll 0111<.t '" O<ll'tle CDuftll' Mlf Commll>~C>n E •~1/t'f Now. 1•. ltr1 -Only •bout 14 m<ls ol ,.... alt.Max dollar -li>r food you eat at home, •c•iPtt mare than 11 ctntl as reCem.ly as 19!0. A lignlllcaot Jiil>' porUoo ol the mo0t!Ho-1D011lb overall food price rbe this But in relation t o our ex -year has reflected the rising "•·Cil•IW'<I 011,,,.• CO•I! Ol•lf P11QI. u. 711, 11, )~ol 1na Jin, l. ,, .... panding pay and fringe benefit C011ls of eating out , d ue largely c hecks. this is so. llere's the to mowttlng labor co.rts in LEGAL NOTICE evidenct to prove it: restaurants. ":121" -TODAY, you spend a bit p 'ta f••· ... · CEllTIFICAT i OF IUIUIESS - er cap1 a <e1..Wl Ul- FICTITIOUS MAME over 17 cents of_ your after·taX" come in the U.S. in the third ~· ufldtt••I•-' a-ou ''riuv 11t b income dollar for food, a quarter was runnino 7 nPrcent uucllflt I bvioMU 11 2700 P•let10n u s d ·~ r- . c oo.•• MH.e, c.m~nl•. u'*' iM retord low for t~ · · an ahead of last year compared 1 1•ou~ 11rm ,..,,,.. (I! CM ..t.PAATMENT oi proportion unequaJed by any "'t'th a • per-"t ~ •• 1·0 the ~INTENANCE COMPA NY (CM d " 'I ., .... , 1.- AATMENT MAINTENANCE) 11111 ""'' other naUon. In Greece an l·OSt of good eaten at home. J t!rm 11 c_...., ot lllt fo.llowl~ I h h f d' nn1::able .on. ~,e ,.,,me r~ 1u11 •"" "~'' Ita y, I e s are 0 18r~ ' HO\V, THEN, can I explain '~'o'::r I~·~ ~~";;~m11. '.» 1100 LEGAL NOTICF. I 1he squeeze you reel In your 'l~WP«f 8twd • S..•lt 705, l••WPQrl rood market basket? lt'S ('el'• fltac~. Celll. ll?e.Ml. NOTICE" OJ' lilolTENTION TO l!:llGAGE 1 ta•'nly OOt aU ,·0 your ,·m· O~!td 0.Ctmbtr f, 191>11 IN THli SALE OF AL(OllOl.ICI 11•r1 F. ll.••uch1m1>. 5• loEVEUGES ::Jflination! tf ol C1ll~"'l1. Drlr>11f Co.mrv· o oumt>er ?~. 1'6& o on OP<;ernbu 10. 1f611. ~·~·· me. To Wfl-Om u M~~ (gncern: One explanation Is Ngl•rv PYbllc In 11>11 ior u\ct Sl1!e, SublKt lo l•iu~nc• ct tr.t hten•• ,,.,.on•ll't' G-•·..i F1 o oer1 ~•1>Plltd lor. noll(e 11 her•tl'f' tlv•n !NII ~·ou're driving u p your own I ~~ucMmP lu>own lo l "" bf/I !~ IO !ht ul'><lt"lfln<'d pros>me• lo •f!I alcohollf food COSts by Shttrply " Jifljng .. ~<SM wl'IOs• nlll'r < su :c• ~ t>evt<'lll.. 111 1~, premisrs, oncrlbtll ' " wllt'lln ift•trume"I Ind It -How your Standards in food buying. rooecull'd lhe ""'1· ,n t,10 Flith S!rc•I. Hu,.i.n11111n Btoth ror instance, J 0 U r COil· FICl.O.L SE,AC0l b Pursuant !u ~uc!I 111ltftllon, 1!\c Uft· ~:;.~y i>u:i::~c:ll!Qr" a <1trslon1K1 ls ~polviMI lo lhf O~arhnf"I SUlllptiOn O( bee(, On a per Prtnc11>1I Ol!J,e in or Ak.OMlic eever119e Conuoi. 10' b su•11t: person basis, has soi:ired from O••n11e Co.intt bv rranUtr QI "" i lCOflchc t>evtr111 d . .. ,,bllilltd O<in111 coa.i oailv p,1c11. 11ctns• !er license-> !o• '""' ortml~s 59 poun S a year ln l!MS !O 13, 20, 11. 19o1 and 1an l. •s 1c11Qws: Ott·SALE BEER 106 pounds. Your ravenous ap- " 111Mt Anvone <1esiri"9 !c orotl'$! 1111' pclite for meat, up to the h.....,.x, cl w<n II~ may !i!c I . "-t . ed t ad LEGAL NOTICE 1 verm..i Pro•ei! wl1h •nv arliu 01 ugucS -p r 1c ypes a cuts. -----::::c:c-----'"" °"''rtment of Akaholic &ev1r•11t is a major factor behind r e· p,J2JU control. within 30 d.aYs 01 '"' Nt• cent meat pr •'ce 1'ncrea••s. CEll:Tll'IC..t.TE 01' llUllNESS !l>f ptOPOStd 1>rPmiSM werf llr"SI ...mf<I. =- FICTITIOUS NAME s1a1;,,. 11rounds •or oen••t as provkltd Also, you are choosiog and ;n, unoers•9nf<I llM1 cert,[tY ~ 1, b'r t•w. Tht o•emi..., •re no! now ra11ellf'll • ...,,,neu 01 '~ M1rs11111 Ileen-ior Ill! 1<11t ot •k°""11c paying for costly convenience orive. HYnllMton B•tch, Calllctnl1. un-bc••raves. Tht form ol weriflc111o<1 m.i• foods en an unprecedented U•r ti.. llCllllou• !lrm Mm. of JET·Alll be ot>•tlr\C'd trwri any atllc• ol mP ~ERv1cE 1nd 1n,. ••la''"" 11 c~ OH>•r•m•nr. scale. Since 1947, per capita Cl Thi lallowlng ocr.on, who<e ,,.me Jimmie Lee Lhrt••• consumption 0£ !resh fruits In lyll •nd pl1c1 al reslOenc:• 11 11 M.orv Elltn LlvPlf' , tallow•· Pubti °'"""' c ... s, 01°1• PllQI. has plunged from 14.0 to 79 HeiHI z11krou1. nn M•r<h1ll Orlw, oeum 21. 1~ nii~ pounds per year while con-Hunt1n111on 8t1th, C1lilornl1. 01t.:1 o.cemtit• 11, 19'1. sumption of processed fruits Slllt of Ht!mo~~::~:."11. CounlV: CEltTIFICATE OF aus•NESS has climbed from 41 to 52 On Dec. 11, 19'&, before mt, • rlol&tY FICTITIOUS NAME pounds. While some con- p.,otl(: In •nd for MIG Stott, ocri.oMllV 'rhe und•,.,gr\C'd CIO cc<1•1V -··~ . foods If ore orange •PPtl<l'd Helen Zlsl<roul kMWll ID me con<lucfon(I a t>u•ln~S at 1~) HarbOr VenJenCC r n lo tie IM ~'11Df1 whose n1m• 1• •u~sctlb-ll011levirc1, <:o•I• Mesa, c~1,1orn11. ul>dtr juice, many canned and fr ozen f'!I I a the within lnstrym~I I nd 1~ l!clltlous urm name al HARllOll. t bl I h th •<kMwlcdlled 1h• t•tcutt<:I the 11me. LIQUOR •~d th.i •••d !lrm 11 coml>D!.fd vege a es are C eaper an <OFF1c1.o.L SEAL > o1 rhe 1011awi"ll """oft1, wfl-Os• n1mes t heir do-it-your self coun-';;;t";..,."'· t1u°e:i;:-ea11lornl• in lull 1111;1 place• c• ... ioence "'' terparts, most con venie nce ' ' 0,,, I II lollow\: Pr 11.Clp,t, tt n cur111 A, Herr.er•s ano \ll•e!nl• L foods still are far more ex- O••lllle C011nty Hertle•" ff~ CliU 01l~t. f\laWPDrl · •t food MY Comml11lon E•olr~\ St&dl. (•lifornla pensive than Slffil a r S We NcvH»IN'• ,., 19n . 0111d O«ember 'XI. 191>11 p epare at home Pyblhhed 0Tl"4t Coe1! Dall"/ Po'°1, Cvrlis A. Ht.tlN'rh r ' O•c. 1J. 10. 11, 1w.1 •rid Jan. 1. vi 1 11 L Herti..1i. ANOTHER ex:planation is 1™ 11•1.u sTATE oF c.:1.~FoRN1A, lhal you are going in for the EGA NOTICE OR.ANGE COIJNTY; L L ' an OKtmt>er 20. 1961. i..to•e. .... ~. fanciest home entertainment ------,-,,c,-------la tfolarv Put>llc ;n and tor sald Sl•t•, P-J:ll74 <>ff!ONlllY M><>flll!d Cyrlf• A. Herbel'!' CE•TlFICA'tE OF I USINESS all!;! V1t;lt1ll L. He•btrt~, known ta that FICTll'IOIJ' NAME me lo be Ille ocrs~ whcst n1mt.1 T!lt u'ldff!)Qnfd -urt~¥ he ~ 1.,. 100.ulbcd 10 !l>e wiltlin lrn;lrYmt.n! COftCllKllno • 111/s!M.ss 11 P.O. 80• SIU. and ecknowl!'<lll..i 1"ev ••tcUlftl !ht. SaM1 ,...., Ct lllom\f, vnclf'" "'~ !1ttlliollS •~mt •·rm ntme ol $A00LEllACK CON· (01lot l1I Sl FIUCTION •nd thl! said form l• com. Business Joins OCC PO\l!d at ll'lf fojle,.i<>tl ""r'°", _,,. name In IY!! 1nd 1>lece or rt110tnce +s •• follows ; .-. s. ,,,._... 1171 i.oulh lier\!' Orlvt. S.n!I An•, Callfarnl1. Oiied Decfm~r 19, l,1>11. John s. Ml9fr• ~'''" ol C1llfa""~' Ora!'lltr COUftt•: Seal) Jo~h E o~~"' Nol•N Public • Celolorn;1 Pr!.Xol>~I 011;u l~ Qfiln!I~ CDunN Mv Cornmln •on E.to•Ui Jun<' 21, 1910 Pybli<~..i Or•"9t Co.as! Cally Piiot. Dfc....,t>er 21, 19611 •"" J1"1,111rv ~. 10, 11. u., nn.u In Marketing Club recognition or their talent!: -. ,._ ---.· ·OVER THE COUNTER NASO Lf1tin91 for Thursday, Daambor 26, tm ·•ld!tl.lr-'•'"'f!!"'°t•.•-"'"'W"">•·•Zlll•M .. "•&••>OW•'"t<9•·~""""'"'fijll!jill't,."I"" ff Mutual Funds o~ OMembf'" lt, 1'61. ~.,. me, • tflllarv Pyb11c 1n •no •or $Ila s111r. LEG1\L NOTICE Pt•WtllllY IPt>Nr~ John s. M•!le•I• ----,,cc=-:::--:::::::;;-;::;-;--- Orange Coast C o 11 e g e stude!lts interested in marketing are going to learn it from some of the best the aod to p romote underslanding 1..,.,..,,.tllllRl!I""'""'"'""'"""""'"" .. ""'"'""•..,..., and .appreciation for the I' ;n ~nown lo me to be lht "''""" wl'IOWI' NOTICE 'l'O C:llEOJTOlll n1mt 11 1VbKt!bl!d lo lht wlthl" In-SUPER IOll COURT OF THE 1l•ume11l and tcll;MWicdQPd l'>f C~ttulod STATE OF CAl..JFOll NIA FOlt lhp ~m•. THE COUNTY OF Oll..t.NGE !OFFICIAL SEAL\ NI. A•llllO Joseoh E. Dlvl> E~ll!f of El.MER 11, SMI TH, Deceased Nc!ar¥ Publk·Ca1.101n'• "IOTl(E IS HEAE8V GIVEN !a !hf Prlndpal Ol!lt~ In uf.'Cll!Or• 01 !~ ibo'<t name<! dt<;td•nl Orantf Counlv .. ~ •••rn> ••••-·• MV Commls.1lon E)P"ts !hit fll P~'"'"s ,,1v, .. g C "' J 11 1910 !he ~fd ~ect<:len! •rt re<iulr~ la ti}' Publle: o:engr (oft•' Oa11v Pllol them, w\lh !ht neteu1ry WO\JCMf1, in Otctfl'lber :10, 27, 1968 arid Jlnu1rv J. 10: Ille onice of !~e clerk cl lllt 1b0v' 196, ?l~>-U en!lllt!d tou,I. or to 1>tcsent !hem. wl!n ----·----------t•he ""'es••HV VOYC~... lo ,~, Un· det>Twntd fl Fr1n~lin end Fr~nklin, Al· !OfllCY$ ,, Law. 101 £. l!!h SIM CDSll --------------IMMI!. Celi!. t l&?7, wnlth 11 th .. 1>l1t' LEGAL NOTICE l'·J111S of bUllltlS of lht Uncl!f'IOnfd ln 11! Cf.l(fll'ICATE OF 11USINESS m~t1t•s otrtal"l"" lo "'e estate o! FICTITIOUS NAME ,11a dtccdtn!. wlltlin !our mon!hs lfltr Tht ynclerslgn..i -I certil¥ .n~ ;, file t.rsl P<1bllc1lion ct ]toil Mlle•. coridlKlll!I 1 bYtlMH 11 •21 O\llt Cortie, OilN:I Dec ?•. 191>11 Cosl• ~u, Cehlorn11, under the tic. Cracket·Clllten• 11lous lfrm n~mt ol JUPITER AD· NIH~I Ban~ VEllTISING '"" thll ·~·d Ur~ i• <Dm• a! the Wiii ol r~~ l>O!fd ol th1 IOl!owln11 pen.on. \llhcli.t atiove nam~ tlKl'd'"' name In IYll 1nd PlfC,. o! •"11d1!1\cP FRllNKLIN & Fll.ANICL1H " n 1o11ows· 111 E. lllfl s1 .. Mtrloft S. SHltv. 11• D91t Clrtte, CMll M"•· Ctl!lor~l1, '2'21 CMll MPMI. C1lilornl1 Ttl: H•ttSI 0•11!<1 Oecembtr 1:r. 1~ Allor,..,.. for l•«utor Merion S. 5ttll'• Publl'lhcd Orang• COl~I 0111¥ Pila!, S11t1 al C1Ulor11!1, Or1nee Couft!Y. oec....,btr n, 1061 end Janu1rv 1. 10. On DK. 1?, lf611, before mt. • NOii,., 17, 196'1 )1114 r ubllc lft 1nd IO< Slid Sl1te, 1>f'rson1ll•l----~~,-,.,-==:=--- •O<>flrf<I Merion S S.-elev kMwn !~ LEGAL f\OTICE '"~ lo be 1ne "'""°" whc!!.f' 111me, --=c:::::o,,.,-;c;:-:;c-;:::;::;;;;;--,, 'Ut>scrlbf<I to lht wllt'l•n in1!rvmtMI • . ~~ ~c~nowltclotd she ··~cul..i lh• ,,..,. CEllTIFICATE 01' llUSINEIS •llFFICIAL 5EAL 1 FICTITIOUS NAME Merv K. Henrv Tt-e unGfr1l9n"" doc• certify tit 1~ NolllrT Put>ll<·Calolorn'f HO"Ovct1n9 II l>\l'llneu Ill 146 W , '71~ Prlntll>Jll 0111" In ~!, llleo. E. Cc•!~ MM.I. <:~lllo,.,,la. Ortngp Coonrv vntler !tit !lclilloY> llrm "ame ol CON· My Commln!Qn £lgirn CRETE •llT FORMS. and 1hal said Nov. ,4, lfn llrm I• comP<'>lifd ot th~ !ofloW\"' PP•lOn, ~V~lllhl'd O••n~t Co•il DiilY Pllo!, whose ftlmt In full 1n<I Ill•<• al re1!dent8 ll, 'XI, )I. 1tl>I and J3n, 3. I> '' fallow>. nlt.61 Stv••I N•Wll<'omb. 116'• /lga!•, Balbc>ll LEGAL NOTICE l~IGncl, Call/. n6'' Cal~ Dcrem~r 16, 19'~ sruart NPwcomb STATE: OJ< CALIFOll.Nl..t., P·H14S OR.ANr:E COUNTY Cf:llTll'1CATE OF IUSINESi On CPttmt>er 26, 1968, bo-lu•t mr I l"ICTITIDUS NAME 11 Nole,.., Pybllc In end lo• Ylcl 51,,t•,1 Tfl• Yftdtrs!v'*' dOH ctrt11, ~ h "'-!IV a-a•l!d Stuart NPwcomb.I r·n<1yUlnt • busfnti.a at No. II Mon••th kMWft to me 1o be 1~• ocrocn who'• I • Pl111. 1..1gun1 Ni~uel. Ca!llornl1, n•ml' !\ suto.trlbcd' lo IN' wllhln In. und•r "'' !ittltloos llrm neml' ol F..t.llR.I· slryme~t a"O 1t~"°w"°9..i he t•KUltd CUIO ANO llOUT!QVE •"Cl th•! Slid th• umr •·rm h comPOWd Of th• lollo\lfln!I ""o'" {011lt11I Stell 1·11<1x Mme In tull •nd •l•ct ot rtllclel'KP JoM"" E. Da¥11 " •• follow• Notarv Public • C1~1f1ITT1l1 Jean lrfn' Arm•trOf'ti. ISOO Elon Prln(.l~I Ottke In Pltc•, Ne-11 ... ,~. C•lilornl1 O·.onoe Counl1 Oe!N Dfctmbcr '· 19'&. Mv comintni<lll £•Plf't'f J08n l'f"" Afl•lllr-June ,1. 1t111 '• a! Camornla. 0•1"'11' Coun!v Pvbtl~h'"<! Of•t1<11 Co111 Oa.llv Piiot, D" OKembfr 1, l9ol, btlOtf '"'' Qe(:einbcr 11. 1961 11nd J1nu11" ], 10, N!111•¥ Publlc 111 •~ tor 1.tld Stilt. 11, 1969 11l'IHI "<lf\lllY •-•rl!d JOln 1 • • n •l-'---==--o--,,c===::---11 ·11•11-~-ft to "'' 10 ~ 111e LEGAL NOTICE fll!f1 wi'Mlst 1141"'' " s~"'C"~ lo -wll!lln !ni;l•uro""! ~·•d •c~N>WltOtftl 1if'tYled th• , • ..,. Nt. P·10$1t -~ICIAL SEl,L! Cl!llTll'ICATE 01" llUSINE~S eon ... C.rU•I • l'ICTITIOUS ,lllM NAME Noll•lf Pub!\( fl\• undetslenfld do ~''"'lib• cer!llv St11t OI C•h!crn•• th'V ll"f COf'd>Jdln!I a ll\fllflf'•• ti 1!1• Prl,.cl1>1I Otllc' 111 N~WllOM &oul~1rf, (:ily OI CQt,lt MP!I. o,.net countv cou,.1v Of O•&noe. s111to o1 c.111.,..,1,, M• Comm1111on l ~1>t•c1 unOt• !I'll! fle!Ulo<J• 11r.., n4""' or onion•· Aueuil 10, 1f10 !lo<! whfcn OOf'' ""'' 1how lh• lrll" ··~bll1t>c<t O.u1tt COl•I 0 111, P!lol, n1mt' or n-ol IM"''°'" IM1rn11Kl i , 13. 16. 11, 1'~ 11:1H.t Jn ,..kl butr.,.n. io-wll: AM(:O IUtLOElt:S )V,Pl.. Y LEGAL NOTICE ..t.nd !hll 1•1d llnn It <(lm~IM ot "'~ fallQWI"' """°"'· wf>OM: n1m~ 11\d -------------IMtdr-n .,, '' IOll6W»l; NOTICE TO CllEOITORS llOl!!EllT 1..ANF.ANCO. 2111 N~fth lie. A-411f,l LOIJIN ... nil Al\t, C1l!l.,..nf1 SUl'e••o• COUllT 01' THE PAUL. HAYES. t41' C8mbt'!Ogf, STATI: 01' CALll"OllNIA FOil Cl/ortU. Cillf(>rnla THI: COVNTY 01' o•..t.NGI WITN£S' OU• """"' •hi• '2nd dtw C111i.o al NELLIE T Alt!IELl.. of~ 1 ... 3.C.H .. £1N£11. 1'1o ~-I• HELLI£ 1toef1tT i.AHFAAN(0 SC"ftElilolEll, D<i(••MCI PAUL H..t.VES K911a l1 neretrv 1iwf'! II) crMiftlO JT1,T£ OF CAL.IFOftNIA 11111lft,e Clllm.1 -.••n1! !ht wid dK-COUNTY Of' OftANGE I H. lo nit wkl cl4ilm1 !n "'°' oll'l<t (I! On "'" 11n11 .,.v o1 N~mbf•, Ao ""' Cltorti; « !l'f 1+or .... d Covrl, or 1tlt. betOl'I ,,.,., th~ u"°"'"....,._' • la ••-I ,,,_.,. lo ltw -~ '"'9f'I' hlil!k In i nd fat Mid Ceulllv 11 t11a lf'lla OI turr>s .. Hotllne1wt11. ..., $lllf ""'501"' l!'l+!t"fln ctuh' eont- t:IG HWllMll ·-· le ""' tlll' 01 ~i..Jarwll' -_,., __..11y -•tf ~ l•ICI\. C11il. tON. wt.ldl JtOllE•T L..t.Nl'•AN(O •"" l'AVL i.ttw Gffla k IM -i.ce .. b\111-HAYES "-a to n'llll i. bf h MnOf\l f1' ,.. UftOll'...... I~ IN """"" IOt'-""-n.1-. llY IUl»tt\bM to -t11oi1Ji1 flf Nlif tlll~ llKfl C111rM. """']" INlfllfMnl. 11'1!1 .Ckriow~ fo wilt' flll -rl' l'OUdl 01'L. MU1t bl. 1'!11' Illa! ~ t ¥KVlf't! .,,. """"' """' .,. ,,_!ft M •loff\•>d, -"1"'ht WITMl!SS mr hlll'MI lnO otfltll l IHI. JilUI" '""""" tf'ko' IPlf fh,1 ""'bHcatlall (Of"FICIAL .SU.1..1 fl/_ ..... llOl'IOl. P•lrltlt G. ,,,,_,.,., ~ 0.~•11• II. ,... Nor.,, PllDl!c-Ca•!forft\I ...,.., I . '1'1rlH'lf ftrltKINl Otlkt In ~ r11 !tie WIN Or ..... C:°"""1' tll UNI ll«edefll M• (Cll'MllH~ EXPlrn N..t.Ull a *"-''"'""'°""' JulY )t, lf17 ·-OOUOLAS 0. A'IOt C•ll' l4iMllo Ctllll, ~ A.-Y Al Lo• ...... '"" ... di ....... ,.. Swlt• • ~ Mwnllfll19~ ._.., c .11,. .. 1,, '16-CI 0nontot (toltl 011/t' 1'1fol, T·JMl1 0-C. .. JI, ,... .. Jffl, J, P\lblWI.., 0 -(,'.H!I 1"'1' j JlfMI 0.C...... t. IJ, ... 11. IHI Orange County business com- n1unity has to off/.!r. A new cJvb, called the "College Marketing Associa· tion" wiU make it possible for OCC marketing students to go into tbe com munity and study m arketing procedures firs t hand. Eleven members of lhe business community will act as· the club's exe<:utive ad- visory board. meeting with the students periodically to give them guidance in the field. Purposes of thr club are to familiarize students with the marketing profession; to acquaint s tudents with op- portunities i n advertising. merchandising, public rela- tions, design and related fields; to develop leadership 111 these fields; to identify marketing majors through Here 's Wher e It's At! W11lclltt "''11 4"fJ-N 4' responsibilities of citizenship. pne of the first sessions or the club, on Jan. 7, will brin& a n expert from the mar keting field to the OCC camp us to meet with students and a n swer ques tion s. Stud ents from other area col· leges wilt be invited to attend. T he club will also send members out into the business community to "sh adow" ex· perts in the field. The stUdenti will spend time with such peo- ple, obser ving their work first hand and getting id eas which they can use both in their course work and in their later career. Executive of:icers o( the t'lub include Don Reaser, Costa Mesa. pre1ident: Ron Griswold, Laguna Beach, vice president; Cyndi Coleman. Westminster, secretary, and Carol Johnson, Costa Mesa, treasurer. Businessmen serving on the advisory board include Mary l3ennett , V ineyar d Advert is- ing, Tustin; J irn Brown, Cac- tus Casuals, Fountain Valley; C'..eorge Clark, Buzza Cardozo, Anaheim: R i cha r d I ngle Marketing A ss oc I ates, Orange: Reg Jones, Fashion Is land. Newpart)Jeach. Barbara Kestle, Hoy l 's it arbor Engraver, Costa Mesa Marty Lockney Sr .• Guaran ty Chevrolet, Santa Ana; Hugh Mynatt, Ri chard's L i do Center, Newport B e a e h ; George Oatman, Alpha Beta, La Habra, and Pete Trivers, Pantry l.1arket.. Santa Ana. ~ '"'•~ NOW ACaPTlNG APPLICATIONS .... '!. FO~ THE SPRING SEMESTE~ : la ... ~ Evening Prognim 0 "' • COMMENCING JAN. 27th, 1969 • ,. l11istl'ltM111 JM. 23r4 I 24Ttl •A.,.,...MhrY•*- lg6' ORAN G E UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW Vincent S. Ool$irner, Deon A l\Off °"""' ... .._,,_ ..... IM ............. ...._ ..... (ot~ •• 'I.ti•• ... ~ ~ -._ • .,._ """·t...I 1''- -~ 1 ......... .., .. QoU~ St••• ... ,_,_, __ ~ ......... t.-.i .... .., JJ>, U11lo si.-J °""'" c.n .,. Yldt lilt._.. (7141531-1511 12345 WISTMINSm AvtHUI, SANTA AHA 1NV•ITINll Conv s,ec 1).2' 14.S2 hw lndlc 1J.7t 15.T7 Pflll'I Sq Uft1Ylll (OMl'ANIES Con• Lei lf.0( 11.'8 :~=I ~-~nlYtU ;~ll~\11 ll~~ n:Ii NEW vt»ll( (Al') Cntry Cao 15.t117.?1 MY! Ut11v1!! P\lor!m 11.]71).S'/ -T"-11Jnowln1 qvo-Crowt1 w 1,11 '·'' Stock u ... w111 PHO! t.1610,,, ' ' ... ,, .. -,, .. _, M .. '' • .,, Seit.::! u ... w•11 PIM SI U.9' 11.'9 I,...,;, IUll'll "' • ..., ..,, ""· Var PIY u ... w1 Plo""'r l!.7J 0 ,11 1111 Ntllonal AISOCI< Oec•t t!'IC u .Sl IS.Al hlY ltPSh 6.•1 1.00 Pl•" !nw 16.0117,51 1lloll al Sec~rllln Cle!11war~ 16.IOU.l6 111e1 ?0,5230.,l Prlu lFI 16.1'26.70 Ot1i.r~, r11e., ••• O.lta Tr •.•110,a' I~•" 11.1111.10 Pro 10.tl 11.11 the Drlct 1 11 wt>lch Dlvla S~r •.or •.•9 1wv 31.12 Jl.12 Prow1dnr 6.tO 7.4l t~eM IKUrlHtl Dow Th In I.JS t ,Ol JohnJtn 23.0J 2J.OJ Purlt1n 11 .• lJ.d tG<Jltl !'lt we •bff!> Drex•I 11.0J '21.01 Ktvsl<>flp Fllf'\ds: Putnem FIPl'ldl: sole! (bld) O!' bol;11t O•ey,,,s 1,,,, l&.lJ CUI Il l :!O.S51\.4 E•Ull 17.411'.0l Its.II~) Th11t1de11 E•lln .. Hcwlrll: Cus 81 7'1 .371(,JS Georg 17.0111.60 '" Al~ 8fl•n )2.63 13,7? CUI II• 10.Jl 11.ll Grth 13.211 ... « Aberdftn J.IS JM Gf'w'lh 11 ... 16,31 Cut Kl t.7510A~ lixom 10.4611.l.1 Adv™-""1 Un,v1ll Income t.10 t.91 CllS K2 6.7f 7.0 lnve1I f M f .to ..t.11111•"" t ,JJ a.OJ SHci.J:I 16.971,.5~ C:us SI 2J.2?U.:IJ Vl•I• 1(.1111,1' AtlNMr l.52 1.U Stock 11.3419.'2 Cu's' lJ.01U.10R1t1>Trtl'h I.It 7.4'1 Amc:IP 1.1s 7.,. Ebert! 1S.M 11.H C11• SJ t.lt 10.6, llt -.!te l.lnl Vlll Am eus l .U 1.tl E""'l Gr lS.tl 11.21 cus Sf 7.Jl 1.10 llosenlhl 10.10 11.tl Am Olwin 11.61 ll.lt Enerr1 16.:U u .;..r Polaris l.:it "" Schu11tr 11.•s 711.ll Al'n G•th 7.lf I.SO EMDrlH n.1713.;D ll:lllc~b a.11 '·'5 Scuctdflr FYnd•: Am Inv 11.1' 11.2' EQY11¥ 11.lt lJ.3'/ K'lick G!h l•.:!t 1S.6• lnl Inv U.f7 17,11 ,t,m Mui 11.f'I u.n Equll G!h 22.25 1•~ L••~ 11.M 17.n Sotd O.M ~II Am NGw l 77 4.11 EsH1t ll.tl 70.J3 Le~ ll~eh 11.1710.SI f11I II.I' \1.M Am Pee l.ll' l.ll'Ewtr~I !ft 10.?f11.97LlberlV t ,49 f.11 Com St 11.111,,7\ And1or Group: Ex1>lor 1tl.ll 311.1'l Life Slit J,17 1.16 Stoc Olw u~1wa1I C•P I0.7•11 .n Fal,I<! 16.1617.U LHe In• l.l7 t.1! Sic Ecrull \t.JJ11.ll Grwth 11.~ U ti l'mt !Mu U.11 U.61 Lint t.M 10.Sol Sec '"'" t.Sol 10.0 in. 10.ll ll:ts Fed Grin 11 . .S 17.tl Looml1 ~~11!1 Fd1 : Sell'c Am ll.6'll.t.ll Fd Inv \1.1'9 lJ.'7 Fld C•P 14.0l 1S.1l C1ned 41.41 41.41 Se! Sll«S 1t.4S 'Zl..U A»ocla!H 1.611.llFkl Fund11,0022.10 Ca~U 1._Mll.MSlema 11.'514,U A..e HOUllhlOl'I ; Fid Tl'T\d l'l.Y J.1.33 Miii 11.'7 11.0 Smith 8 11.1111 ll,00 Fune! A t,J?IO.M DYnm I.II t.11 MIMln 10.tG 11.,1 $W 1nwe'lt 10.'5 1l,J1 l"IJ<ld 11 11.57 U.51 lhdu1I S.6d •.211 Mesi Fnd !J.U 15.09 Sovtr lnw Un1¥t ll S~k 1.90 •• ~ lncorn I.SS ,.35 MISS G!h !l.16 1'.ll StFrrn Gth •. SJ Lil Stl (8 7.•l 1.1'9 F1! lnGth ll.IM l'l.1D MAASS $1111 .St 5* .. U SI.ta ll•bt.ori t.30 t .lO Fit lnSlk 12.1• 13.:111 Tr u.m lt." Steadm1n Fd1: !llut II.Id 15.11111.4 Fit Mutll 12.71 ll.H Miies Un1w1!1 Am Incl \S." 11 • .U !ond1tli Un1val1 l'ltt Cl• 11.1'7 , •• Mlll'\fr1 J1 .D0?1.0C Fl(Nc t ,lt 10.11 llosl Slk 10.ff 11.Sl' Flt! Fd 70.14 ,. McDon Untv11l Sc!fn 7.7) 1.'1 !IOJton t.11 10.51 1"11 GIP! 9.11 IO..t1 MktA Miii 7,lt 1.5! Sl~ln Roe Fund•• llroaa St 11.1111.ot Fncl LI •.oa 6,65 Mooclv (p ?O,ll 1l.2l 811 , •. 05 14.05 llYllock 11.711!.15 FO<lftcleri t.'9 10.l7 1-V'\ U.5111.11 lh!I 11.tD 11.to CG F~ 11.ll 12.25 FOIJ>SQ 15.41 !Lil Forton1 Fundj' Slock 1•.ICI l•.to CanMflan 19?1 JD.U Frftr>k!ln GrOlll>• Grwth 16.2111. 4 SYP lnGlt'I t\1 ,,t5 )!:I: i~ ::tt 1tfi ~c:l"-rc51k 1~·~ 1~:~~ !~~ i:ll 1::li ~~~· AC.,.th ~.ll1;:~ Cent Shr U.1'14.52 Ulll 1.sa I.JI l'lF Fd 71.9023 T11chr1 12,lt13.l5 Channing l'unds: lncOIJ' ,,,. 3.0S MIF Glh 4.n 1,16 TKhnot ,,~t 10.01 e 11en U.ltll5,tl FllftCI Am l:Z.ftll.lf Mui OG!tl 6.01 6.53 T1t11• Gt vn1v1ll Com Slk 7,31 2.Sll G"' SK 13.JO U.10 Mui Shr1 11.Jt 21.'9 TeJtat 13.JI 1'.49 Grwlh 10,DO IO.t3 Glbr1ll8r 17.70 U.70 Mi,tl Trvst ?.t• 3.00 Tr1n C:•P Un1vall lncom t.7• 10.67 Gl"Cl\IP See:: NE A Miii 12.3713,67 TwenC G!h 1.46 1.11 5Qfe!ll ... tt I . ,l,,.tt., SC 10.7211.7' Nft WSlc: 11 .4612.11 T'Nt'llC Inc •.olO '·" Ch•st Grou•: Com SI 15,'3 11.17 Nat Ind 13.M U.116 Uni! MYt \1,n 13, .. Fund ,._,, 15." l'ul Atl lii.11 11.05 Hal 1nwt1t 1.11 t.?:I Unlf'lf 11.SJ ll.61 Front 11 a,t7n1.tt GMh Incl 23,1021.11 N• Sec Ser: United Fufl!ls· $hr~ld lLITI 11.s.! GrYl>hon 23.6' 2.5.11 f11t1n 11 tt14.10 ..t.tcm I.It t .11 C...,,,lc11 1t,n 11 .01 Guardn 79.ll 1' 1l BOl'ld l .M 7.1' lncom 11.3/r 11.U tolOftlal , H&C Lew IS,01 11 23 OIVld I.DO 6.56 Sclt<'I t .90 lC.11 Eoul!V '·'! 6.13 H•m flda 6.33 t .9l Pl Stk 1.73 t .SI Unl'cl Cln UniVlll Fllfld U.21 U.JJ MlllCIWt" 1.)J 1.to fncom U6 1.11 Valut 1..lrie Fune!•; Gn¥1h 1.,1 f.14 lilr!Wp!f ll.O•l7'° Slocll 10.ltlLlt Val Lin 1~.IJll.8' ComSI lld S.74 1.7' Ht<l9f' 11 ta l..U Grw!tl 11.0J 13.11 lncom 7,.0 I,\\ C-lth F01: " Mlfln 11.ll ll.SJ ~It WP.t 1 Dl 7.70 S~I Sit 11.42 ll" C•• Fd 11.'° 17.57 Hu"""'1~ ll.JO U.10 N-rt~ lO.,s JO.f5 V•nd~ 10.n 1 .17 ,,,_.,, 11 ... 11.01 10s l'><llm U"'w11l flew Eng n.!12 n." V•..acl 1.~ 1.06 ,,.....,, H." "· SI C.th I.•• 7.SI N(IW Mo~ ll.• n.• Ver '"""' 6..J3 1.18 Stock H.:H n .)I ISi Ill< J,t, 1.n ~ Wlr:I 16 ... 11, lf VlklPiq 1.14 f.11 C'wl"' A&8 1.'l 1.tl Im. C•• UftllYlll ,._ 11.5510.$7 W1!1SI 111 ll.ll l•.t1 1111 Cl.O !.OI '·''I""' Git! u...,,en NorMst 11.111 11,IO w1m Mu 1J.Sl 1tt5 llJ'Jll.tt ni: Fncl l ._26 15.51 OCn9Qfl l0.'311-' Well'lllon lJ.JOll~ !Id 11.1$11.,11 Inc Fd II !·" l.ll Omet• l0.1511.6 Wnt Ind f,lJ 10.,, °""' Fd 11.tt 1"5 IT!dt"""' 1 .11 11.tl MG Fe! 11.1! lt.IO Wfllf'lo~U 1Llt 11.2J '"' 1.30 1." '"" l,.,nd is.a111.2' OoM Wm wl""!.of' :10.n n .SI OMOrd 10.1120.71 tndlll'V l.t• •. s 11.1011.10 Wlnfltld 11.51111.U ens Inv 11.7' IJ,,J 1n1!11I S" 1.11 7.11 O'tttn 1•.SJ '11.12 Wlocon Unevtll Cot11m lnw 1.# 7," lnw COAm U.lS 11.11 o-Mm t .,110.'4 Wartll 6.70 1.311 Business In Brief WASHINGTON (UPI) The Department or H ousing and Ur ban Development an· nounced It has sold $IS2.7 1nillion in temporary housing loan nolei to refund low-rent housing project bond.-;. The no1e'S: represented 72 tax~x· empt Issues by 7t Jocal hot.ls· ini 1uthotiti~. the HUD an· nouncement stated. W ASl!INGTON (UPI) Tbe N1tional AsJociation of Reel Estate boards is joining th• Departmtnt of Housing and Urban Development in sponsorlna: 1 one-du seminar in Philadclphla to discuss private sector involvtment In urban proble~. The Daily Pilot WASHINGTON iUPIJ Sales of new one·family homes reached an adjusted annua l ralt' of 523,000 durlng <ktobtr, the Commer~ Department reported. The sales rate was virtually unchanged f r o m September's level of !12fi,OOO units, but was & percent below the October, 1957, rate of 558,000, the department said. WASHINGTON (UPI) George C. Martin, vlce presi- dent for englneertng or the Boeing Co .• hu been elected chairman of the Aerospace. I n dust r i e JI Astoclation's Technical Council for 1969. Martin succeed~ Bernard D. Haber of North American Rockwell Corp. Covers Boating .... - ---- ·A· ~ • L ,, .. " .. '• .. ,, '• •• .. .. " '• .. .. . , •• .. .. '• •• ,, .. ,, ,'• •• " .. •• •• •• •• t: •• " 1-, ,, •• '• '· " ' ., '• •• •• 'i! ,, ... •• ' " •• . , ·lo " ,, ' " '. '• '• '• •• " ... •• 11• .. ·~ .. " • ·v.. '• " "' •• '(~ •• • '• ;~ •• ' ,. " 'i:. •• "' •• ... ;. ,;: "• .. •• '. '• " " i: '" •• ,, •• I" •• .. . , ,, It: ., " •• .. ~.~ " .. .. " " • , . • ,. " .. . , •• "• • " ,. '"' .. ,, ,, .. "' ' " •• . , .. • •• ~ " ~ •• " .. •• •• .. •• .. ,, •• '• '• "' "' ~ •• ~~ ,, .. •• .. ,, "' '• '" ~ .. • .. • •• • •• " " •• .. •• .. .. " '• .. '• .. " •• " '• " " ,, ' .. .. '• ,, .. . '• " " .. " " .. • • . • " ' ' l -·----------·---------·------------------------------------~-----------------~~ • • • '"""· °""""" 27, 1968 'I)lis be...uul II& ClJarger 2-dr. banltop is truly the ltmiry OB!' of the road. Even men beattiful and 11.IIUJ'iom than last year'• -~ and full lact<ry equipment and....,. -·-... tras. Serill No, XP29-B9BI99247. A car you'i be prood·to own. · $77 t... Tot1l Don $ OILY $77 . . Total Per Mo. -PLUS.TAX & llCINSlf ' ~ ... -' .. WE OFFER GUARANTEED AUTO PAYMENT PLAN If you 111• your i°' and an_ out of wri 30 diys or mort thro119h . FfREil.sTRIKE or LAT-Off ·· Thi llE.tr.G'ff crrr OOCGlii G~ AUTO PAY- MENT f"l..AH ... mftt; your~ """",,J;'N SAVE! -,=~=· ..... ~NT • SAVE! On Transportation · & Foreign 'Cars! 1963 FORD GALAXIE 500 COf!Yertlllle, 11·1. Auftmlllc Tr1rsml•1lon, -stter!"11. Lie. IWM-1.9$ :~.'t. $399 1966 CHEVROLET Bal Air V4 1ullon'llilik ff"~. redl9 MCI ........ A l'NI """"" --Uc. IW. ONE4:D. Nft Pric. 1962 CHEVROLET ~!I C«l\'ertlble, V.f, autometlc 1'r....,.,ltalon, -lift•· Inv, radio,,.._, Llr. Mo. LHff 000 . s19 Dn. s19 Mo. ~~. s499 1963 RAMBLER Station W1go1 ' Glt'lindlr 1"4lmlilk ~. -........ rllllf Md t.1tw. uc. i.o. on t6l. 1961 POJITIAC BonneYilla ....... automelic ""-·· -....,..... 911" and. Llc. ,.._Sit( '72. ••• Pri<O s399 1967 YADHA 1962 CORVAIR lonza k'tll:lll!r-.........,k "-'>l.slon. redlo ... '-"'r. Lie. No. FXT "'6. NII Prl~ 1967 FIAT "124" s52 Dn. s52 Mo ~'!. s 149' 1963 PONT. GR4ND PRIX 2-door JIM'dloP, V-L Alltomall.: trlMn'lfMlon, pgwtr stttrl"'CI, -wlndowi, 1lr eencllllonl"9. LIC, IGCl!-013 $25 ... $2511~ :~'t. $699 1967 SUNBEAM Alpl1a ~~ rMlo ...... '-W, &ftt\ltl ltlcllljl Q.r.,, ~Jvf"'M, _. .... bl.ell lnMf. knply ~I lie. S63 Dn. S63 Mo. :~ s 1799 1964 CHEVY MAUBU 1-GDgr ...,,.,,.,, v.1, AulOl'nM'le Trll<\lmlWao!, lttdki & Hul1r, Air (lllfldltlonlnl. Lk. flUlt.- $36 Do. $36M• :~~I $999 1964 DODGE ll«<t 6-eYI. A"""""lc t•W!iii 1•1n, ltMlie .... hNtw, Lk No. OIV '49, $25 Dn. s2s Mo. 7' '. -. :. -. ,i .::: , J. lJODGE Dari ~ :'",~l~.;.'19:.1r~ns., rfflo & ~lt.r LI,, No. RDZ-163 _ $'$9 p;,~ 'J.50 Mo . ~~!. $1399 . ' --' · : ·1i&6' FORD 4 Dr. Sedan FICklrY /IJir, No. NFV Ml, s19 s19 Foll s4· 99 On. • Mo. Price 1968 VW TRANSPORTER t-Pauenver BuJ. ._,_, AM/FM fl•cllp a. Healff. Llc. fWXG-61'5 " $75 D•. $75Mo. :~1't1 $2099 1966 DODGE Coronal . +h>r, .Wn. A~ ll'fnL, ~.illo 1r>CI I-*" Lie. No. PJB 13'. s44. ~.44 : '"" $1199 ~n. . Mo. Price IVE DARE rou 10 COlfi'AllE TllESE l'lllCEsr J.966 PLYMOUTH Sport Sedan ::-· :'ic.._Nl~lk lr'wwnlulon, -M-11111, rNlo ffOll lllf' G. l-351. . , s47 o •. s47 Mo. ~~i:_ s1299 1965 RAMBLER &00 1964CADIWC 0.-Yille, '14, •Ulo!Mllc h!IL. ~ Netw, -~' Lie. No ... ,.,,flf/, ... ',' $36 ' $36 , NII (ftftft , . ,Dn, >Mo. •nee ...,.777· DIRECTIONS: EuJ to ,.. to hun ~· Juot tab ll10 San .DiQ> J'rf>eway bo tbe !eadl Blvd tunHllf go one- i..u mile SotO and yoo"T9 at Beacti Cly" Dodit. . l'ltONE, 540.2660 OR 141-9631 bPIN DlllT 'Tll 10, M. INC!.UDIHG 5UHOAT ' J I I ! I ' I ' ' ' . . - . '---DE . ·:~~·~ _ffl!l,111 e ~e Gui tie ••• Where to go • •• What to do • •• DISNEYLAND 'llOY!>•Y-A wade all and t p.m. dally tbroogh Dec. 3t ts one or the major attractions In the area. Disney characters ~vorting, muslcian.s, dancing and enteHainment are ac:beduJed throujb Jan. S. On Dec. 3~~ wlJl•c!Qlell\\ _7 1!,Dl .. and 1JOI#. al ll::tO p.m., for 1J\e · ~ New Year1s'IM celebratfon~wll/aJ will oo c;appel! by fireworks al mldnlgllt. ' ' . . , LIGin'ED !fOME:j. -, ll•m!!O wblcb have -In C1>lllJ)elljjon for the . ':I! .llilel! ... a)on& lbe ~ ... e~ lrom Seal lltaoh to .San : " · ~ · ;•• ~1llr!iqab.Jan. 1 far."11 ,to .~y.;Raidenllal areu the '~ Udl Ii> eacb ol lbe cities are ,a spectacular lighted sight. . ·-. ' .... • • ' ' .. MATIDS IN CONCERT -Johnny Mathis will perfarm in concert at ~ Melody~ ~Ire in Anaheim Jjlrough Dec.<JJ. Petfonnimces are at 1:30 ~ nlghtl,y ucejl! s~,)leC. 28 and lleC .. II '!;hen 00 will give two perform-·~ 1 ances ··tilihur. On sta~-WJ.th Mathia are ~ youngsten ages tt and 16 ! • who l~W'CralgrHUi>dley Trio which hu '-called the "jazz pbeno-riienon .. of 1988." '· (5ee Gulde to Fu, rlP llJt .,....,J INTERMISSI0N By TOM TITUS Ho~ywood haJ its Oscars, television Its Efnmys and Broadway its Tonys. Virtually every phase of the en- tertalriment fudUstry annually honors ita own ~tstanding perto'"!llers. On.Ule community the.atel' level, .most of O,inge County's playhouses have their own awards -Laguna's Victor1, W~nsttr's Abbey1, Santa Ana's ldo:d-JesJqll: and the UM8J?led ' v a r J e t y pre9mted by the Costa Mesa and Hun- tington Beach theaters. ' , l'i~... bowe•er is-then ' coun-tywlQeaward, save the'110nor8b1t men-\Jo~' ...listed -in Jbls· column's yeanbd.· roundup over the })Mt three years. 'rod4Y the DAIL y Pnm offer1 ...... lastlnll tribute . ..!' suitable for ~l:ly1Dg on the ~telpiece -to the cream of coUAty th~pians. · After reviewing and re-re~wing lhe ~ year and some 60 'local stage OfferlD5s, the decisions -difficult ones to oo sure -have OOOl1 ~e. Tti'e envelopes, please. -• ' . --M:l'OB -· Rafpb.-•lliclnnond, Laguna Playboue,.-for .. "The Lion in Winter.~'.~delcribed as Orange Cow:i- 's anSwer 'to Rod Steiger, this excel- lent actor has been nulJlber tl'o on, th1& eolliriui'I 'Yearem list for the past two seasons for his Eddie 4rl>One , In two separate ~ ducUons of "A View Ftoni ·the Bridge.'' llALl'K 1t1cHMOMo This year tber.e was llttle doubt that his powertuJ portrayal f#. the agin5 K1ng Henry in the year's ~st producUon f u 11 y merited the top honor. , other outstanding perfonnances in this c:ategory were delivered durln5 the +ason by David PauJ in "Slow l>anae ~the Kllllng Ground," also at Lal'Jlll; JJon Lambert In ''The Petrilied Forest," J!unllngtoa Beach Playhou,.," and .AWi ijart, ·last· year's best actor, in the J!'ull~ F~Uighters' "The Night of the J(uana. BEST ACTRESS -Patty Broderick, ~n Clemen~, Qlmmun,ity Theater, for 'fl'he HdreSs." A newcomer in her first ~nty production, • llliss Broderick ~ livered a~, ~~,,., . woman oolra by • J~ve. The stiJl,wllh.. ~hich ahe · enactM· ' her emotional traa- sltions was partlcu- Jlrly memorable. f~~t~i ~ .. ~. gO.ies in whfcft to l'AfTv •lODllllCI( alngle out one indi· vldual performance, two other actressea merit sp«Jil 1pplauoe. They are Mat- lhella Randall lot "The Lion In Wink<" at Laguna and Rulh Wagner Cot "Me- dea" at the Orange $tlldlo '!J"•ter. Al· ' r so excellent waa 1Karen Freitas in Full· erton's "The Night of the Iguana." Btsr SUPPORTING ACTOR-James E. Srilith, HuntlJttoo Beach Playhouse, for "The Petrifi~ Forest." Already the well.8"' on. . ~ • receipient of a simi- lar award from the playhouse t t s e I f, Smith. rates further laurels for his suc- cessful "aging" in the role of Gramps. not to. mention the fact that he ls con- fined to .a wheel. chair offstage u Others deD 1 meritorious perfonnances in this category during 19A we.re Jdel Opper Jn "Medea" Jor the Orange ~tudio '11lea~; Clark f'arrell . "G~Uon1" Rancho Com· n1unffj' Pla)o"ers, mSct' Ken Kqrnweibel, "Tbe Lion in Winter," at Laguna. Jll!:sT SUPPORTING ACl'RESS--Pa~ ty N~, Colla Mesa Civic Ployboil,., for "Tba ·Dark at the Top -OI the Stairs." Like 1 SnliUt, Miss Needer- man also has been honored for her per- formance, winning. the Civic Play- house 's coveted Th~ian . .<wal\f.' A~ the tough7.bxt talk· ative Lottie, s h e skillfully .~vealed l'ATTY Nli!EOlllMAN the lonellneis and aesperation beneath what coold have OOOl1 palnted as purely a comic relief cbarac~. Among other conlellders for th.la award were two from the now' defunct Ortnge Studio Theater -Toni Shearer for "Medea"" and Carol Faulstick for "Nobody Loves an Albatross," along with Karen fllldreth, R a r. c ho Community Players, for '"The Crucible'.' and Betsy Hewett. Laguna Playhouse, for "Barefoot 1n the r ... k.'' There yru have it, the top performera ol 1968. And now I'd Uke to devote the rem.Jning parqrapbs to -top performer whose final curtain call last week.end came much' toq...aoon. Linda Baum Was a girl who had . ev'1'}'thln5 going for ber -youth, beauty and. ·talent in large measure. She was ~.l actress who took her avocation tenom)y and gave her full energy to tbe creatJon and interpretaUon of a role. I wu privileged to work closely with Linda in ber last pi.y, just two months agq. and I marveled at lhe sliinlrul' with wblcb ahe attaCucr lhe ~Jy dUflcull and clentanl!b>c role of 'Elnier' ~·1 "Drain GlrL" Certa.inlJ there wil"n6 liidl<atioa ~ thla vibrant and llplltlfng talent wooJd oo lllllffed out before CIJrillnw. Lind.a Baum.'1 untbtly •death wu· a brutal•-to -who worUd. with her al lhe Coota M ... CMc Playla-. s~ foe that "8ment of her llie, I can say IM will ff aoreJy mllaed. lQ!EUNDER INSIDE JJEATIJ*t:s If a ~lat for the "'"'"''" 111 Su.a l'lj!, tht ,..,,,. cocoon¥! i<lan<la, i< ~P"" _cup ~I ·!«J -or tf ll01I prr-~ d Muu ,bed on t1Mr ~~~ chee1' ov& Stan D1laplant on Pa.at 18 in toda~'1 Wee"'1tdlr Section. -. . ... _,. -~ Gald< to Fua Pqe II Td..Woo Loe Pap %J Tntd P1ge II QHeale Pap %J O.t 'N" Abooll P-lJ.111 Comlol Pop %J Motloa -'\'ec• ll TV Vkw1 Pop %J t ,..'" ,, 41 I; I -Hollywood Back Stage By BOB moMAS . _.._,...., "9u Wrllw HOt.LYWOOD (AP) -Thla -waa the year in Hollywood when ••• Cary Grant, the screen's P.'lrfect husband, w:ais accus-- ed by his wife of beating her whUe on LSD trips. The divorce revelations did notl\lng to diminish his popular)IY. JACK V ALENTl put acrosa a rating system for movies. Producers began vyl.ng for an X, which J;De.aDS a picture is unfit for children and hence enticing (or adults. 1be new status sym· bol anfong film attn became the million-do! tars.per-picture fee.· Liz Taylor and Richard Burton· welcomed new members to lhe club< J lllle Andrews, Lee Marvin,PaulNewr:oan. And Barbra Streisand Lii.,..,_ made that exclusive so- ciety belore beinR seen on tne screen. Two a.s.sassfnatfons prompted · Holly- wodd to search its soul abouf vloleoce on the ·screen. Fllm· makeis began brawling with each other over the issue. NUDITY IN rums hit new bottoms: Rod Steiger's, Charlton Heston·~ P au J Newman's, etc. • Barbra Streisand's husband struck a new note in press relations by alleged1y slugging a photographer for tallig t o o many pictures. ' The production code for, self-eensor. sb(p waa relaxed almost I<> lhe point of apathy. A populat new formula for mov- ie riots: boy meets girl, boy loses girt, gir gets Birl. 'GONE WITH' THE WIND' REVISITED -30 Y&ARS AFl'ER PREMIERE IN ATLANTA ·Vlvlen'L~1h .. 1Scarl1ttO'Hara, Cl•rk G•ble ••Rhett Butler And there was alinost ai much girl- glrl alld boy-boy tlalnir oil the screen as there. was of the wnial lind. 1 . Featured Movie Vanessa Redgrave paused : between making AmericaD-llnanced -to lead antl·American parades in London. Civil War Epic Revisited A NEW CANDOR waa souncleil In Inter• VieWll._ Lee Marvin talked 8*!bome. keeping with his girl friend. Ali: Cofd discussed his decision to marty Joanna Pettet fiefore the blnh· of tl:lelr•baby. -·1 have forgotten much, Cynara •• Cont with the wind." From Poem "Cynara'' By Ernest Dawson * Atlanta authoresa Mai::garet Mitchell hadn't come up with a name for her new novel on Ule day she was leafing throQgh a poetry anthology. Then she happened upon the lines of poet Ernest Dawson and she knew that Instant t b a t her fictional epic of the Civil W.ar would be called, "Gone With the Wind." Gooe With the Wind OO<ame the most famous book of ita day and certainly ilb J8ter adaptation wu one of the classic motion pictures of an time. TODAY, ALMOST lhree decades alter its original release, the picture Is again making Ute rounds playing to capacity audiences In a refurbished wide tcreen version with added stereophonic sound. In its original fonn, Ute novel and the movie catapulted a diminUUve Allan· ta housewife into fame and the limelight from which she fled the rest of her lite. MARGARl!.'I' MITCHELL was hailed by lhe Waahinglon Post upon her deaUt in 1949 as. "the greatest author of her generation, and perhaps the 20th cen- tury." Yet she never wrote another book. There are some who say she was thinking of writin5 a pl'ay based on her own eiperlencea 9f what fame does to a couple who want only to live quleUy. Tb1a sbe never got around to doing. "Gout With the Wind," the David O. seJ.mick producuon beaded by such stars as Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Olivia de Havilland and Leslie Howard, brings the Civil War days back to 8Jlother • Guide to Movies (Editor's Nott: This movie guide fJ prtpared by th·t films -committte of Harbor Council PTA. Mr•. Robert So- rensen is president and Mrs. Hart Swetney is committte chai"'\(ln. lt is inttndtd os a reftrenoe in determin- ing iuitable f i l m s for certain age 11f'OUps and will appear weekly. Y our views are solicited. MaU them to Mo- vie G'Uuu. care of•h• DAILY PILOT.) FAMILY Anand lhe WOl1cl In II D1y1 (EJ : Adventurous Londoner and his valet wager they can circle the earth in 80 • dayo In lhls deligbtful fantuy cllllak. Dector Doolittle (E -new review): Enchanting excursion for all ages into Uie fantaly world of Dr. Doolittle who p:efers to communicate with four-footed animals rather than the bumln kind. 1 with bmduJ 9011gB and aiperlative casL Hone la lhe Gray Flannd Salt (new review): Dimey cc>midy ol a '!>lendld gray horse which becomes a conleltant In the InternaUona1 horse ahow with the world's finest jumpers in action. Mn. Brown, Yoa've Got • l.ovely Dupler: Light.beaJ}ecf, Brit!ah.musical fet1tur1ng pop singers who struggle to finance their racU:ii creyhound. Paper Uoa: Humorous saga of George Plimptoo's trip through the Delrolt L!ons training camp lblnJy diAiWffd as a Harvard grid gree:L Tllo Sound of Mule (E): A JoYOI\'. happy, ooautllulty filmed rnuslcal adap- llllon of the allie plq. The Yellow Submarine: Sperklinj animated cartoon featuring the tpeeial humor and music of Beailes. TEENS AND ADULTS Camelot (E • new review): Lavlab, romantic, and dramatically moving screen version of Lerner and Loewe mustcal retelling the heroic legend of. King Arthur. Gone With too Wind (E ): Margaiel Mitchell's brilliant novel of Ute Old South, during the time of the Civil War, returnl to the screen. Private Navy ol Sgt. O'Farrell: Good- nature.d spoof on a lonely Pacific !Ile during :World War ll where beer is more Important than bull~ts. Romeo ud Jalltt (new review): • Shakespeare'• clwlc becomea 'rividly new with aplendor and enitement to the llaglog ol the YOWll Jover'• trqedy. - MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS For Love ol Ivy: Romantic comedy In which 2 teenagers decide their housekeeper needs male companlooahip. Gigi< Il<!l!sue Of the Lerner and Loewe musJcal of Patil in~the 1890s. Roclld, Raclleh Tender atudy of the spiMter school teacher trapped 1n her small town world. Sbalako : A western In which a countess goee on 1 hunting expedition iii New Mexico I880s. Weit SWe "4#7t' Re-i86Ue o: lbc modem dance oper<tta with Be':lSteln's haunting music. ~ --•""11al11Jjlm. generolioo. Releued again by Metro. Goldwyn-Mayer, Ute production Is wear· ing a new dress. This Ume, It is seen on Ute spectacular 70 mm wide screen. The results are even more exciting than they were ln 1939 when an AUanla turned out for tte brilliant premiere, Today, Margaret Mitchell · remalna a puzzle. Even her many friends ln Atlanta can't seem to agt'ee on tbe ·overall characterisUca of "Vttle Peggy.Mitchell." Some claim she was a shy and retlrtng as the Melahle Wolkes of her story. Others say she was outgoing, vibrant, in many ways more Uke Scarlett. The seed Utat later produced "Gone With the Wind" was planted one al· temoon when she wu ltiD. a small child. Her mother took l!Ot l<6 a buggy ride through the outaklrtt ol AUanta. Here she saw many of the old 8outbern plantations, some a ID8l8 ot crumbling ruins from the results, of the ctvll War, some rejuvenated and prosperiDg. "Thal Is the story of 'Goae With the Wind'" &he declared ~ lakr. "'It ls the story of tboee who survived, and Utose who didn't." It is only natural lhat she cJtose the Civil War yeara as background for the novel. (5ee GONE, Par• llJ. And just where wu II that Eddie Flah. er married Connie Stevens? ' Frank Sinatra gave up Mia Farrow and Elizabeth Taylor, the former in mar- riage, the latter in a movie. JacqueJinii Kennedy Onaaais ~ all the fll111 slan off the movie _. covers with her own ~ Zsa Zia Gabor Dung epithetl'.ai·hotfl4 keepen In .Madritl and Loncloti.-i\PPIJ' emly ]\er accommodaUoos wmaJ! I ~·e same as when she was wed to ·\;Ollftd Hilton.. l . . 1 .• TUl8 WAS also the year when 1111' Burtons bought a yacht for tbelJ\ clop, when Katharine Hepburn WQft aDotbr:r Oscir .rter a JS.year ~ape, wbeB Anna Magnant broke'. b<r loot kicking Anthony Quinn, when Lucille Ball put bar two chUdien to work, when· a Beatie and hlli girl friend appear..t on an album cover clothed only In millts. Some year! And ,..,,; 1169 la coming. Are you ready lot It? ' Comedians Reunited~ HOILYWOOD (UPI)· -Andy Grllflth and Doti Kliolls, for yun cq.stan In ''The Andy Griffith Show" on televilloo, will lie reunited In Unlnnal'• -movie. "Me and My Shadow.» Fanlily Fnn Tr-p Pasadena's Most Famous · Dq.y An explfng trip for lhe 1'bole famllY ll qno to lhe llOlh annual TGuntl>- rneal ol -In Paadella oa J....., L The parade with Bob Hope u -Grand ~. llarV' at l :IO a.m. on Orange Grove B<lulevord -at lbe lormail"'I m.: noar DO! Mar BouJemd.•.u ..., north on ()range ClrOft to Coloqido Baultvanl -oa OoJondo to Slalra Madre Boulevord, 11xm narlh on•SJtrr1 Madre to Vlc:t«y Part at Paloma su.et. There will' oo eo lloala, 21 bottdt and :llO equeoltalna In the ~· whlch is five and ooHall miles lona. rDOVfl at a speed of two and t'.lDMWI miles per hour and i¥aJd be flnlllied In two bourt and three mlnula tt all goes oo ldledula. .. -· To gel to lhe parade from O\BDI• County. lake lhe 8an Diaa0 ii'ft.. way to the Harbor Freeway, then north to lhe Puadena Freewq and fol- low It into Pasadena. From the Santa An• Freeway. one llllY join -the Golden Slate Fr<eway which connecta with lhe Puadena ~ ar lw'n off the Santa Ana,Freeway at AUantlc.No-and Ill norlh. At !l!mljllfo ton Drive. AUanUc becom,. U. Aobl" which 1J1JOS Into Puadena just a few blocks wt ot Orange Grove A venue. . . ... j ---------~ ------------------------ fl' O.t.llV PfLOT World .Travel · Y 011r· Guide" 1o Fun·. . ... \. DECEM!lER %'1 • II •----Wiiii Sttn Dolaplan•----UCI BASKl!.TBALL TO\JJ\NAMENT -Invitational baskelb~ CHILDREN SPECLW> -The Recreation and Paru llepartm<nt DECEMBER • • JANUARY a · l'lilV. a tlll lttft ulblf SU\nr>l~ In Suva, Fiji. tOW11at11ent playoffs will be held at 7 and 9 p.m., Dec. 27·28, ol Westminster is sponsoring special ·~.Ior children • Warm oodonUt Ill . air, n01 sy markets lull m the campus Hllll gymnulum, UC!, 760t Irvine Ave., Jr. durlni tbe holidays al Sigler Park, 'lllO Pim Sl; Bolla •• of fresh frt!lll a~il I 11!~ I out of the blue sea. On vine, Tia~ on sale •t !he Campus Hall box omC., $.I.SO Chica fvk, 13660 Uolvenlty Drive, and McFadden Park, ·a Fiji 1'ffl Ill!)' illll iilt 10 an occasional "pillar" general; SOc for students. Tickels at the ~oor. $2. 91111 McFadden Ave. in W~lnster. ,A llCllV-hunt dollar of the tOllunt 11!& went dow n with the brig -wlli be held at 1:30 p.m. Dec. 30 al SllJer Park; NO!' "Ellu." in 180I. ,' . DllCEMBP\ 17-!l · Year's partlea, .n.C. 11 at Bolla O>lcl) ~ McFadden I'd bet ·that wllll a melal detector you could f tnd use BASKETBALL TOUllNA~ -'!be Unlverilty of sooth-Paru al 11 tm· and al SJiler Pd~ a!, 11:111 something interesting. Suva living is about half ern California vs the UfttytsJ.ty of Tulaa: · Unlvenity of a.m. A teenage daqce wUl be beJd ·OUtakle at Mc..-addea \!.'bat it is here. Texas (El Paso), and "Mohtana Slate University tn their Park begbmlng at 2 p.m. There 1s no admission cbarp * annual invitational basketball tournament Dec. 27 and 28 to events. Phone 89S-e11. · at 1· ~ 9 p.m. in the Sporll Arena, 3939 S. Rigueroa, Los I've set up a houseboat for two we ek·s on the Angeles. P~one 1·(213)-749-6611. Thames. Las t year I only got ln . ~ few days and only a third of the 136 miles of c":11s1.$g waters. The river tow ns all have cozy, polished brass pubs serving smoked trout and English beer. Or you can tie up to any grassy bank and do your own cook~ DECEMBER II ing aboaid. · nre cruiser costs $125 a week. Other costs 1bout·equal to the U.S. * IN THE COMING YEAR I'd like to go back lo northern Spain . Basin g on .the Atlantic .coast. ~t Vigo or PoOtevedra. Jt's a mild 70 degrees m Sp~ s hot summer. Great blue inlets of sea between pine tree hills. Food is plain bu.t gQOd enough. They grow a strong red wine on the hillsides. One day on a back road in the mountains I came across tent.miles of Roman road. Snow mark· ers still standing. Chariot ruts in the pavement. A guard house at the pess~ There was a chill trout stream. And in a mea- dow full o( tiny white daisies, a man with pack horses stopped and gave me a great squirt of wine from a leather flash. Family _expenses, $16 a day. * "We plan a family trip to Europe. II must be summer because of school. Not too much money so we don't,. want to get into expensive countries .•. " There's a tourist route th.rough Eu.rope, and it's ALL expensive~ Last summer traveling with my family cost me almost double what I'd estimated. The tourist route is the main capitals -London, Paris Rome aOd so -on. Plus side trips to the Shak~sp~are county. To the French beaches. To Florericf. · · · HOTELS ARE CROW[)ED. Your reservations are good for just what you made. After that -out ! Somebody is. wailing for your bed: . l',ow I think you do better baSJng on one place. Or, if you move, try to move every Uiree ~eeks and bas~ on a new place. Preferably a pension wb~re meals are included in the price. It's' those famliy breakfa sts and ·tunches out everY1 day that murder -you. ,# ~.. . . ~ · This eliminates the constant tipping -and yor ~ can figure travel tipping adds · $20 to ~,$10C you spend. It seemed to me l travelOjl ,~gb a : continuing line of outstretched hands. ~E\'Ol'ybody : working· on the tobrist route lives _ort; tfps;;' ,An ·· · "rother, you're it. Welcome , stranger. f ; * ,1 . • : "At times you've advised sUlying in pensions. ' l-Iow do yoo go · about getting reset\Tations?'' You ~· don't. You reserve a room for two days in a tourist • hotel. Get a.tan by the boor. Go to the local tourist : office. Tb~'ll ·ve you a list bf peilsionS. Siart ' ' I 'tel · -:, shoppmg. , y. ~ . . * : "What' do you think ,are the ~heapest counlJ'ies DECEMBER %'1 • 30 CIRCUS -Trained animai,., clowns and high-wire aerialists with the Circus Maximlil will· pertonn Dec. 27·30 at the Forum, Manchester at Pr.uie, Inglewood. Tickets, '2, $3, 14 and 15, oo sale >I tho FQl'Um box office and Ucket agen· cies .. Phone 1·(213) m-1soo. DECEMBER fl · U JOHNNY MA'.l'lflS -Pc>pular ~ Johnny Mathis performs at Melodyland Theatre, 10 FrMdman Way, Anaheim, Dec. 27 through 31. P«formances nightly at 8:30 p.m. except Sol., Ille. 28 wbeo be will alng al 7 and 10 p.m. and !lee. 31, New Year's Eve, at 8 and Jl p.m. Tickets are $.1.50 to $6.50, one dollar more for the New Year's Eve concert, on saJe at Wallichs Music City store and Melodyland. Phone 1·776--7460. DECEMBER l1 • 31 DISNEYLAND PARTY -The aMual New Year's E\te party will take pJaee from 8:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. Dec. 31 at DJS!leyland, 1313 S. llarl>or Blvd., Anaheim. Tbe single ticket event will feature unlimited use of all attractions (except sboollng galleries); the Don Ellis Band ; E~mlty'a Children; Merrilee Rush and the Turnabouts, ·plus otl!er groupa to provide music r... listening and dllllclng tbrouiboul the park. A fireworks disp1ay will boom in the New Year at mldnight. Advance tickets, $9, on sale at Wallichl Music City stote, ,Disneyland and with BankAmericarda, at all branches of the Bank of America. If available tickets will be sold for $10 the night of the event. Phone l-53H456. Holiday houn: !lee. 11 • 30, I a.m. to midnight ; Dec. 31, 8 a.m". to 7 p.m., re-opening at 8:30 p.m. for the single ticket event ; Jan. 1, 10 a.m. to T p.m., aod Jan 2 • 4, 9 a.m. to midnight. Regular winter hours resume Jan. s. , \VHALE WATCHING -The l!larid Holiday boat will leave from JANUARY 1 • Z Dl;lvey's .Locker at the Balboa Pavilion, 400 ~a.in St., Balboa ROSES PARADE _ The solb annual Tournament of Hosea on a whale watchlng tour between the mainland and Cata-. . Una during the great mammals' migration season. Daily Parade will begin at 8:30 a.m., Jan. I on Orange Grove trips are scheduled through Dec. 3l at 1 p.m. Beginning Jan. Blvd., Pasadena. Parade route : North on Oranse Grove 4 trips will be only on weekends at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. Phone Blvd. to Colorado Blvd.; Ea~ on Colorado Blvd. to Sierra ~:,3.5245 Tickets $3 for adults $2 for children. Madre Blvd., Bf!d north on Sierra Madre Blvd, to Victory J • ' • Park. Floats will be on display at the park from J :30 to 9 DECEMBER 11 • JANUARY 1 CHRISTMAS SMILES -The 33rd annual "Forty Miles of Christ- mas Smiles'' decoration and lighting display cantest features cities aJOng the Orange Coast from Seal Beach to San Clemente festooned through Jan. 1. p.m., Jan. 1 and 9 a.rn. ~ 9 p.m. on Jan. 2. Parade will include 60 floats carrying out the theme, "A Tline to Re· member." JANUARY Z • II ICE SHOW -"Holiday en Ice," an ice show featw'lng tn- DECEMBER %7 • JANUARY II ternaUonal sllaUog slan wlli be at the Formn, Manchester i XICAN CHRISTMAS DRAMA -The Mexican Players at at Pi'airle, Inglewood, Jan .. 2 through 12. Performanca Padua Hills Theatre in Claremont present their traditional Mon. through Fri. at 8 p.m.; Sat., J, 5 and 9 p.m.1 song and dance drama of Christmas in Merlco tbrougb. Jan. and Sun., 1:30 and 5:30 p.m. Tickets, $2.50 to $5, on IL Performances: Wed~ 2:30 aod 8:30 p.m.; Thurs. and Fri.. sale· at Wallichs 'Music City store and the Forum box 8:30 p.m., and Sat. 2:30 and 8:~ p.m. Phone l (714) '83--0380 office. Reduced prices for juniors at selected performanCes. 'or further information. Phone 1·(213}· 673-1300. DECEMBER l1 • APRIL t, llQ JANUARY S • 5 HSE . RACES -TIJ.oroughbred horse racing at Santa Anita . . Race Park · 285 W. Huntington Dr., Arca<Ua. First Post THE DtJKE -Duke E~ and his orchestra plus singer Lou time Tues. 0thrpugh Sal., 12,30 p.m. Phone 1-(213) 447·2171. Rawl> will .per!!>nn .. al Melodyland Theater, 10 Freedman · Way, Anabeun. ~erformaoces: Jan. 3 at 8:30 p.m.; Jan. 4 DECEMBER za at 7 and 10 p.m., and Jan. 5 at 5 and 8:30 p.m. Ticketl, .!LOREN'S FILMS _ Four lll!ns .¢ 1n1eroau9nai loji ~i•1 ' 13.llO to 16.llO, on sale at the box office and Walliw Masi~ will be shown Sat., Dec. 28 from 10 to 11 a.m. at the · City. stpre. p~ 7!~74'0. ' Mariners tibnry, 200> Dovir Drive, Newport 1'each. All children are invited to '9iew "'The LltUe Match Girl" "l·'t ...J.&;NOARY 10" lJ from Denmark; "The Boy and the North . Wind" from' THEATER ~ ,.Wo evenings of experimental theater Will be 1 • Norway; "Nature Boy,"_ and "The Crying . Red Giant" pesented by the Neilvport1iarbor Art Museum in the Balboa · 1 both rrom Japan. There is no admJssion charge. Pavilion, 400 Main St., Balboa. Curtairi time 8:30 p.m: ' I DECEMBER Z9 . . . . -. kOREAN CIULDREN'S CONCERT -'lbe Korean Chlldren·s· Ch<ilr, ~by World Vlsioo, lnlaJlaUooal, wllLperform in the Aren"i of the Anaheim COnvention Center, 800 W. Katella, Anaheim at 3 p.m. on Sun., Dec. 29. There ls no ad· nii!sion charge. SHARP "The Trial of Anne Opie Wehrer and Unknown Accomplices for Crimes Against Humanity," a social comment play, will -be performed Fri., Jan, 10; "The Wolfman MotAJr City ~iew" complete with light show •. folk, bard rock and coUntry music, will be staged Sat.. Jan. 11. Ticketl, 13 for adults, $2.llO for Museum members, 13 for atudents, on sa1e at the Museum. Phone 675-3866. • . . E ,,, , •..,i0f Summer ln UfOpe • -• ' • 1f you'r1 1 1h•rp tr•d•r, VII ;. , .GREECE AND PORTUGAL are the ebeapest. · · thi DAILY PILOT'S f•mou1 • Next would be Spain and Ireland. Again, this Dl.m-.A-li.,.. ,IJuifiM • .u : doesn't mean Athens and Lisbon, l\fadrid iUJd Dub-S•turd41y~. M·~· • b1tt•r . Jin. You must stay oft that expen. sfVe.,touri,. route. d••1 • · • ..,.h.th•r you'r• ' 'f"" buyin9 or 11llln9. =~G~o~t~o~lh::,::e~co~un::::!ly,~rsid:':'.:~~.~_;;\_"~;L;·_·~_::~:...::;:~~~~=================1 • ADYAllCE SALE s9qp "'"" ' . ' Versailles Room -----1111> Starlite Theatre MITZI .GAYNOR SHECKY GREENE SHOW SONNY KING HOTEL(SHOW RESERVATIONS • PHONE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT WE DO THE WORK FOR YOU! We·,_t up •t 2:30 .ti .m. to carefully 1tlect your produce, We ru1h it back to our sto1*tfo deliver it to you "hours old.'' We ton your s•lads at 4-o1.m. every- day -fresh! We cer•fully pec:k your produce whether you want a dozen or I 0 cases. As we start the new year, we say "Thanks • Miiiion" for 'doin9 your P.•rt "payirtg the bills," ERNEST 01M1 SALLY CAMP Sincerely, ·-----r•-----~r::--•-•1 l tll~ YI.AR'S S,ECIAL I NEW YEAR'S Sfl'ICIAL NI'S YIAR'l ll'ICIAL RUaY UD ' I PDR GUACAMOLI I I LAROI, JUICY I I G~~f;ult 1 1 I Avocados I I LEMONS I I 1 0 ~,: 59' I I I "-~ I I . 1 oc u.. I I Limit 10 ' I Limit I I I Limit ... .._ I I With This c°"""' I J With T1thi Coupeftl • Witt. Thi• c.u,....1 ~--------~--------· . . . . COUPONS IXPtR• NIW YIAlt'S IVll . • . . ''· ' Th"" ,..taurantt tlem•nd the fl!Mlt hlr their cwtomen. Thlt's why tMy aM ..-... 200 otl.Wf buy their produce frt1m Newport Procf1Ke. Peffonlu thernl ChlttNI Chine. Josefl, Taco M ... , Vdlqe Inn, Th• Archff. PHONI: 673•1715 HOW ABOUT YOU CALLING US? NEWPORT PRODUCE Ortl'lle County'a ru'-f 261' Newpoot '""· ..... , ........ ' . --~·~"=·~~'-""-~-~~""-..;...._...:.._.....:-~·~~-"-"-'-.;_~.....;.--~-'-~--,_~.~;:;;:::;:::;;;;:;;;;......,.~O:row.::;l;n1;,.;P~rod:lK::,;;•~O;rp;;;•;l'"~tt~e~nU:.:: " NEW YfAR'S EYE ®~1.:-~01. Huntington ltMk, Ct51onot -· * • ....,... Fresh Fruit M•rlnttff In Port -····-P•tilt Marmite • Lo Soupt -···-Mixed Green S.l1d -***-ROAST PRIME Rll OF BE~ Duchosso Potatoes • Yorkshire Pudding or BROILED NEW YORK STEAK Duchosse Potatoes · Yorloshiro Pudding Ot LOBtTER NEWBURG Continental l!ict or IREAST OF CHICKEN A LA KIEV Duchosso Potatoes -***-CHAMPAGNE e CR(ME DE MENTHE PARFAIT e COFFEE e AFTER"'IllNNER DRINK OF YOUR CHOICE e HATS, HORNS AND FAVORS $15.00 por porson -···-Reservations ••• 536-1421 21112 0c-A•-· Hlllltl""'"' ...... e.tl,_r. 'tea.I• FAMILY STEAK HOUSES HUNTINGTON IEACH I COSTA MESA HILLGIU!"N SQUAJI:£ TOWN • COUNTJl:Y BEHIND TIXACO ITATION 1W2 kid! llYL HHfll If. 1m & hll• AMI '6Htl TOP SIRLOIN STEAK NEW YORK STEAK l11clvd1• l1k•d or Fr1rich Fri•d '•tafea,, Roll I: lut .. r • CHILDUN'S POITION I/a PllCI MAKI MONDAY NIGHT YOUI PAMILY Nl6HT slo' TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Only h1clud1J laked er Fr111ch Ftffd Pot•t .. 1, Roll I lutt1r. CHILDllN'S PORTION l/J PllCI .---Luncheon Speclals--- 11:00 AM. TO S:OO P.M. 'ROAST BEEF OR lncludint 79" HAM SAllDWKH Franch friH Sorvod on S-mo Roll TO GO ORDERS NOW OPEN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY FROM 9:00 P.M. BUFFET DINNER -CHAMPAGNE PUNCH PARTY FAVORS DANCING -ENTERTAINMENT $15,.,,.,...$30,..c .. ,i. OPIN IAJt-All yev c.,. elit anti tlrlnk RESERVATIONS IN THE DRIFTWOOD LOUNGE NIGHTLY In tho Dining Room-6 to 1:30 p.m. Direct from 1 S1v1n-Y1ar En91gement at L11 Veg•' ••• FABULOUS FLAMINGO THE BOB SIMS TRIO IN THE VELVET KNIGHT ROOM A RETURN ENGAGEMENT OF THE SILER BROTHEU 1:30 P.M. to 1:30 AM. WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY WEEKLY S.nlng Dlnnor -5 to 10 p.m. -Dan<lnt CLOSED MONDAYS NO COYER NO MINIMUM For l...,,,otlonr Col 675·0200 1045 Biyside Drive, Newport •• ~========~· FOR ADVERTISING IN I THE WEEKENDER PHONE 642--i321 , ,• I I I I I I I I I I ' I I I I I I I '· I I I I 'I ~..,--~':"."~-'."'. '!'. ~.-.!:.'!. "!.~. '!'. "!.'!'.!"'!'. "'!.'!'. !"!. '!'. -~~'!----~"!.~. '!'. •.--•,!"'!', "!,"!.!"-!". "!.-.. '!'. ~-~-!'!!l~."M.r.,!"":'. -i---,...-r. "!.~·"'·"'--:r~-~..,.:-. .,., ==--.,,-. .,, ,,._ ,------;-~,.-.._~--------·-----.. r~ rrldft, Otcc:mbtf 27, 1908 DAILY PJLOT J 9 • . ~ ,l our· ' N' ABO UT l ' .. lly ·t · I' WEEK ENDER . I NOB ~I STANLEY ' I O RANGE C OU NT Y'S RES T AURAN T, N IGH T CL UB AND EN TE RTAINM ENT SCENE • . IResolutiou s :.------,-- Resolved !or out 'rl' abo}.lting during 1969! To master the necessary French for in- terpreting those fancy menlJS. To not be intimidated by any maltre d'. To think about ulcers only alter dinner. 'fo tip in proportion to the quality of service -no automatic 15 percent for a careless job. To let the drunken slob in the next booth know he's not part of the entertainment. To return a veal cutlet that tastes like it's been sauted in soap. To eat esca rgots with total nonchalance. To learn to distinguish between Beaujolis St. Louis and Chateau11euf Du Pape. To bypass compiling any list of last year's 10 best restaurants -doomed to failure with the plethora of pl aces in Orange County. 1 No\v wait two weeks and see how many t remain unbroken . If you reach January 31 wjth as many as l\vo intact you're all set for a truly happy New Ye~r. Vi ll a !\f arina I ~ I I I I ' ~ l , I • When any establishment hangs out the shingle "Open Under New Management," the publiC is hopefully given assurance of changes that speak freshness and originality . .And that's precisely \\'hat's occurred through recent ~sttn;, of such notice at Newport's Villa M:arina. t · · ~ · ·As a matter of fact,.• out 'n' abouters who haven't hit here .,since ih~ change in operatiOn should take a look. There are many reasons but foremost is ah opportunity, tO take in the incredibly fine entertainment now on' tap. · oYfl~ I ~~ l! seeing is belleving, so is hearing ln his case. The cause for both is understated in three liWe words -Bob Sims Trio. BEAUTIFUL MUSI C Beyond all question, this group never has been surpassed by any other that's appeared on DO YOU LIKE THE SOUNDS OF -THE TIJUANA BRASS? -BURT BACHARACH? Then You'll Like The Soul\ds of r H• Tommy Mullinx Trend NOW APPEARING AT JHE r~\&~:~~3~ ~ Oanc;ing •rid Liste:ning-7:3 0-Closing . CLOSED SUNDAY 536-1421 21112 OCEAN AVENUE HUNTINGTON BEACH BEEF SPIRITS Lunc hes from 11 :30 Daily •xcept Sundey Dinner from 4:30 Nightly ENTERTAINMENT Nightly except Sund•y ' TONY FLORES Hi1 Songs •nd Guit•r ORU VERY SPECIAL BEEF DIP Fronch "'"or 95c t. cold crisp 11lad ..••• , ...•.••••.... 2691 Newport Blvd. Co1t1 Mesa 6JOI ~ • ll:OO ,.-. -DA.U.Y- 1320 Edinger Ave. S1nt1 An• 6:01 ....... t:tl ,. .. the South Coast. Further, it's almost inconceivable that so few people can account for the torent of sound OowiDg from lhe stand. Only gradually is it accepted that every note somehow emanates from just three performers -Sims on Piano, dram.mer Phil Fullerton and Ken Cervi on bass. /\.t the risk of extending kudos bordering on the grandiose, it must nonet.he.leSs b~ reckoned that Sims' talent and artistry is worthy of the concert st'age. For that's exactly 'vhere he'd be today if those inevitable whims of fate and choice hadn't taken him in other directions. CHILO P ROD IGY A native Oklahoman, Sims was a child pro- digy and started his musical career at ihe age of five. His teacher was dean of music at Oklahoma City University. At age 11 be played Gtrshwin's "Rhapsody In Blue" in Ok1ahoma City's Municipal Auditorium for an audience of -4 ,000. Later he temporarily abandoned the keyboard for the pigskin and a scholarship football career at the University of Texas al Arlington and Oklahoma A. & M. ~'lith his gridiron background and sheer physical size, it's not dillicult to un- derstand the force and power that characterize his playing. lt's tempting to compare Sims with Peter Nero or Oscar Peterson but to do so is to render a disservice to his own individuality and uniqueness. His blending of technique, mastery and rugged masculinity has developed into a personally distinctive style. H ART OF IT ALL Small wonder a t\VO-\veek contract ultimately let to a record seven and one-half year engagement at Las Vegas' Flamingo, where he performed up to the time C?f the move here. While in Vegas Sims played back-to-back witp a literal Who's Who Dining With an Ocean View SEAFOOD, STWS AND GOURMET BITREES * FROM $2.95 * Entertajnment and Dancing Nightly . AT THE PIANO fltANK MAITll ':JO te l :Jt p;M, IOI rn•ilM . t :JO M 1 :JO A.M, BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE PHONI I J6.JllS Jl7 OCUN AVI. HUNTINGTON llACH OVERLOOKING THE PAC IF1C OCEAN AT THE PIEl OPEN FOR LUNCH =;.:· 11 :30 to 2 p.m. DINNERS ~::.;"' 5.30 to 10 p.m. 9!;!~~ANT 540. 3641 C•rMrllflrrf ~ ........ C...Mti. NOW ftPEN IN NEWPORT'S °NIWEsr HIGH RISE LOOKING DOWN ON THE BAY FEATURING SEA FOOD AND LIVE MAINE LOBSTER LUNCH -DINNER SUNDAY BRUNCH ACJIOSS FllOM THE AllCHES AND NEXT DOOR TO VILLA NOVA 642 ·419• * NEW YEAR'S EVE CHAMPAGNE DINNERS St,..td 6 p.m. to Midni9ht $6.75 New York Steak -Stetk I Lobsttr -Pritnt Rilt lob1ter l t il -Top Sirloin -R.oa1t Young C.pon•tt• • Dinntr1 Include 61•1• •f Ch•11t11•t~S•11~S•ltd-l,ll1 I l1tttr OANCING -FUN -FAVORS 9:00 PM-2:00 AM 265.4 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 545-9471 of American entertainment -Harry James, Sarah Vaughn, Della Reese, Lionel Hampton, Freddie Marlin, Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Dizzie Gillespie, to name a few. Much of the tri\;'s entertainment value can be attributed to Sims' own arrangements. No matter how many pleasing arrangements you've heard of "Taste of Honey," you haven't heard the defmitive one until you hear his. Sims appears nightly' except Monday in the Driftwood Lounge of the Villa Marina, 1045 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. While you're t here, make it a double-barreled evening arid catch the sensa- tional Siler Brothers too. They perform from 8:30 to 1:30 a.m., Wed- nesday thro1:1gh Sunday, in the Velvet Knight Room. MAK E A NIGHT OF IT Afight as \Veil, in truth, make the night complete by going early enough for dinner. The Marina's English chef, Duncan Wilkes, prepares some fine dishes. Especially recommended are the New York cut sirlion, Bearnaise, $5.75; prime ribs of bee!, au jus, $4.95 ; seafood treasure chest, five different kinds of sea food, served on oak plank surrounded by a bouquet of fresh cooked vegetables, $10 • for two. Briny Bill's Latest extension to the booming fish and chips. industry in these parts is Briny Bill's, 295 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa. Missed the grand open- ing in mid-December but from all reports tbe wares . here genuintly provide something new and different in this field. Bill's fish and chips are aired as Canadian style -and are trumpeted as being quite unlike their English counterparts. For those ln the know there is a variance, of course, so first~timers should hasten to make the comparison. Table Service ~lFirfcR ·~ $'FfiIQ ~~ e e DINNERS e e 4tlt i. t P'.M, Top Slrloln StHk Wltll ..... C:119tq " $145 P'M1lffl., .... lie ...... CHATEAUlllAND FOR TWO Witt. l11M, C:llllQ ti ""''--••r11c: ...... ,., 842-6151 L-"-a-.. 111)11.1111. N •••"·"'· 5174 """"" ••• """""""" -· -Et1i1tt., •IMI lprlntdll• "Where It's Happening!" l lLL MARTINI COCKTAIL. LOUNGE COSTA MUA New Year's Eve Party FREE ....... ..'!...."";:"'~ CHEF MA TTIACCLA'S JPAGHITTI DINNll NO Reserv1tlons Cover -Minimum FlltST COM l-PIUT SllVID J'6 I\ ,itt€'J'C(,t• RESTAURANT v NOW HAS ENTERTAllMBIT & DANCING onM NIW YIAl'l IVI AND •MIW-YIAl'S DAT HOUSE SPECIALTIES TOP SIRLOIN , • • $2.25 • • • • $3.95 • PRIME RIB • • • lo Tht VISTA SHOPPING CEHTER 843 W. 19th St .. Costo Mesa 642..0712 GALA NEW YEAR"S EVE DINNER AND FESTIVITIES DANCING-ENTERTAINMENT-f=AVORS NO COYER NO MINIMUM QPEN 5:00 P.M. ~Tuffs~IR[ RBaTAURANT 2241 IV. C-t H i1hwar N1wport a. .. h (114) '41-~°'1 Long-standing Ian• of C4nadlan 1tyle llab apd cfllps can N!jolce foe owner Bill Haskins' decision to Introduce them locally. With all orders prepared to go, there's no reason to Jet the weekend pu:s without trying several generous portions. Ancient Mariner A formidable search is in store for anyone wanting to dine with a more scenic marine view than that allonled by the Ancient Mariner. 2607 West Coast Highway, Newort Beach. Its the sort of place that once settled down. you can't bear lo leave. In addition to the sight of bay and bo ats through a full expanse of celling to floor windows, the breezy nautical decor throughout is an ever present reminder of the locale. Combine these· sur· rounding& with superb food and you have what could easily become your home away from home. SELECT MENU For luncheon or dinner, the Mariner offers diners a menu at once small and select. Eight items on the midday bill of fare range from a low of $1.75 .for corn beef and Swiss on rye, to a high of $2.25 for tbe steak sandwich. In between are such choices as turkey and Swiss mariner. $1.~; mariner's hamburger, on a sourdough roll with lot! of melted cheese, $1.85: shrimp Louie, $1.95 ; teriyald top sirloin, on a skewer with onions and pineapple, $2.15. A like number of dinner entrees extend from beef kebab or shrimp leriyakl at $3.25, to a top of $5.95 for lobster. Others are swordfish, $3.50 ; · top sirloin, $3.95; teriyaki top sirloin, $4.25; New · York steak, $4.~; seafood combo, $3.50. You'll sav.or any choice but it's the steaks that have hit big s'ince Pete Siracusa and Diet Wandrocke opened the spot only six months ago. (S.. Out 'N' About, P•g• 20.1 VILLA ROMA Sptclollll., lo ITALIAN DINNllS IP'I CIAL-TAll:I OUT OML YI S'AGHETTI DtNNE•S Wllh our dtllcloul mt_. •l!Jce r'Y• 2 IMtt lMllll, u •11c tout Mid fllt 11 eff wllft tur I_.., N"""'n cMtte. Ko ordtr toa 1m111 ., ltr ... ~ In dit..111i. c1n'9l•r, • ~llhft fa WtlJI. . $1.45 Lobster Tails Scampi NY Sleak Piuailoa 14 Varieties Pizza 35 Varieties Pasta Prawns S<ampl Cioppino 12 Varieties Veal S<aloppiDe 8 Varieties Chicken 13 Varieties Sea Food DON JOSE Gala New Year's Eve Party! DANCINCi -FAYOH -No Cov•r Ch•r9• - .. • . •. MR. ENTERTAINMENT BILL McCLURE CoMEDY AND SONGS COCKTAILS e 111NNIR · totJ E. Ad•ma (al M•gnoll•) Hunt. lead! HZ.7tl1 · : Rx _for NEW YEAR'S MOURN JIT' m 1 SMART sn1 GIT m1 TO IE•l'AMl'EREI> 'THI NEWPORTER WAYI Watcb your favorite pme on our TV Seta -Enjoy a Leisurely Brunch on the 50-ya.rd Untf ,· $3.00 . lncludin1 70UP cholct ot • Bloody Atary or-ScrN'drlver. · ,.,... •:" ...... -iioo #-"'· · Rr8ERVA'l10NS, PLEASE! 644-1700, Ext 415 I HI Rd .. Newport B11cli • • _... .. _. JOSEF'S- G!ti· R YUR'S EYE PDTY I KAn e HORNS e HOISi MADRS NO COYll -NO MINIMUM i7l-11IO _.,_ ....... TED ROWE DUO ................... Or., J11 .$NII ••• W• .. , •• yM'll 1111• fll. "N-\ff ... • LUNCMIOM • l lNNll • LA.Tl IUPfU 2121 I. COAST HielfWAT Af THI .W.AICA INN ' j • ' •• r" --f". :· .. • m ·unclieon weekdays [I] inner .,. served in the Grand Manner • S11 S. MAIN, ORANGE Reservadom:: 542·3595 {Cosed Sunday) Friday, December tr, 1%8 YOU'LL ENJOY OUR MIDDAY F~El\ . SUNDAY 12 ]',~!. '1'0 .J. }'.,\\, !FM~ f111r /)ir1i11!1 5iitft /WlS 3M! [AST C.1AST I IKJll\\·Ar C.oRuNA orr. ~t,1.R, CAL1r11Rr..:1,1 f'llPi'lf: (714) 675~1 37-1 RIVIERA 11£5TAUllANT Co ntin•ntal Cuisine ·Cocktails Servi11g Ltoicheon and Dinner 1\.fonday through Saturday. Closed Sundat1! Open for Private Parties Only We are located on tho Bristol Str••f side be- tween Mullen and Bluett and the Mey Co. ]]]] S. l rilfol Costa Mno 540-3140 ' ••••••••••••••••••• ~~ . : BA : DA :, e . r e I . ,.. ., 11< • : ,'r~ •1 • 011 ., • PAVlbl ·: .. ! The Kistorlc-ra.vil~n :, • Swings Again... : . : NEW YEAR'S EVE : • NOISE MAKERS e HATS e FAVORS • • e DANCING e • • Df1"in9 o" lh1 moil intim•lt d'"'' floor in !he wotld! • : NO COVER • NO MI NIMUM • ·• NO ADVANCE IN PRICES • : Mo•t Spe<t""'" He<bo• View ;, Newpo.t : :•• "wh ne ,o..ction Sta : ere \ .. s1Nc:E 1oos rt~. I ·• • • : lltWl'O!T WCl! • BAJ.BOA PEXIKmA e .• Look for tbe Lighted Cupola e !e (we're directly under it) • •••••••••••••••••••• • I WEEKENDER ' I /' (Conllnuocl From P•g• 19) Principal cause for UW, unquestionably, is the exCl usive use of eastern corn-fed black Angus prime beef, with all steaks cut fresh daily on the premises. If there seems to be a young and healthy air to those serving you , don 't be surprised, it's all part of the master plan. And it's one for \vhich the owners s hould be commended. STUDENTS EMPLOYED NI employes are trained to the Mariner 's special requi~er:nents, with major consideration given to prov1d1ng employment for students and athletes. Whether you groove with all these bright outdoor faces as contemporaries in the twenties, or in rememberance of years long gone, it's a rejuvinating experience. / Manager Fred Reiser, not long out of colle• himsel f, wilf aJso be certain you take full advantage of still another house feature. That'• having salad, bread -and at dinner tbe addition of coffee. or tea -in the quantity 10f your desire. In ot,ber words, all you want, so nobody's turned out hungry here. Santa Ana is the home of an inland Ancient Mariner. You'll find it at 301 N. Tustin Ave., Fourth Street turnoff of the Newport Freeway. =---- ~= FAIULOU5 NIW alSTAUlAN1' At the La111na a.och C. C. u ..... -1 $peci•ltr t11.t.t. Osnc1,.v-T• .. ...,. C"!~ Trl9 CMf lh C..1.iri.-AM,. •• J•ffl ...... ..-i """ ..... , ....... 1 ... fa<fllt}H IO 2JO ro• Rl!i£1VATIONS-CAll (11•) 4tt·2'61 •• Vi1lt-i1IM c:...t H....,., lot. l-•• llqitr inrsr 1Jnu SPECIAL NEW YEAR'S EVE DINNER $6 PER PERSON COMPLETI DINNlll AND FAVOlS FllOM l :JO Lo1sr11 • Sri•• • l'llMI! lllH PLUS THE fAIULOUS "INN" MUSIC OF JOHNNY SMITH AND THE ALPHABETICAL$ \Ve Suggest Rt-st-rvations 3295 Newport Blvd. Newport Beach tOpposilt City H1 tl) .7J•IJ74 MAKE YOUR RESERVATION NOW FOR OUR Gala · New Year's Eve . Party CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT PARTY FAVORS . SPECIAL MENU Fun Fo r Everyo ne FROM 7,00 P.M. ON NO COVER NO MINIMUM ( Re9ul4r Dinner Menu , .. 5 to 7 p.m.) .MtLi Wno ...,,,,,. l "_t --------------------:.--. i Pietro's Utilizing his given name, Pietro Benlgini, owner of the posh Karam'a, has just opened · bis second Newport Beach bistro, called Pietro's, at 2500 Pacific Coast Highway. In an unusual price twist, he's offering 12 Italian dinner entrees at the uniform cost of $3.50. . 11Buoo mangiare, romanze e dolee vita" - "Good food, "/!ll&nce and the good life" ls the theme Benigni has selected to ~mbody the restaurant's operation. It is open every day except Monday from 5 p.m. for cocktails and dinner. Out 'n' abouler looks forward to doing a full account on the promising new Ptetro's in the near future. Cor al Reef A broasf variety of house specialties. all characterized by consistent quantjty and qualilr. insure a dining windfall at the Coral Reef in Costa Mesa. No one's liable to question the tab either, since everything is available at fairly moderate prices. Family dinner specials or the $1.75 children's plate, which offers a choice between chopped sirloin. bar-b-q ribs, halibut, shrimp, swordfish or scallops. also makes this an ideal spot to take the vvhole household. ~ After scanning more than 20 en trees, premier consideration should be given to bar-b-q spare DINE ON THE BAY FRONT STEAKS -SEA FOOD -RACK OF LAMB BUDDY ROHNER AT THE PIANO BAR NIGHTLY OPEN DAILY 11,30 A.M. to 2,00 A.M. 2b0 1 W. Co45t Hiw•y. Newport Beech -548-11 66 Real Cantonese food eat h1r1 or tek1 hom1 . STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st pl., Newport Beach ORlole l-9560 Open ,Year Round Dally 12·12 Fri anCI lat. 'Ill J 1.m. NOW APPEARING . .. .. . . . ; AUTHINTIC, EXOTIC Ml~EAST HAREM DANCERS FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS . ' - NO COVER -NO MINIMUM THE CASPIAN Chinese Restaurant ~ THE £' r1:• HOUSE ~(J of HYUN for Y111r · New Y1ar11 Eve Dinner I' ribs, Bara Bara, $3.25: New York cut steak, Bernaise, $4.75 ; Australian lobster tails, drawn butter, $4.75. THE MARINE RESTAURANT * Excellent Menu ' * Fine Service LUNCHEONS AHO DINNERS from 11 :30 A.M. Reservations recommended 644-1700, Ext. 445 MUSIC FOR YOU• LISTlNING. ANO DANCIN& 'LEASURE NIGHTLY, FROM 5:00 r.M. IN THE UDO LOIJNGE 1107 Jamboree ... Wl ..... ,... • ,. • .,...11. , ,,, NEW YEAR'S EVE 1.,,11 .. w ... __...,, .. ,.,.... Din-Mn'e4 fN111 6!00 P••· M•ll• l..n•tlo111 New PHONI (7141 lfJ.J JOI CletH N1.-y..,•, Derr KIYSTONI s9UAll-lffc• lty4. et Wntml111ter, W•ll•I...., Exciting Entertainment 1rl., ~~;' .; ;,.;.."-" 1lt Three~ CornparlJ"· P@ople ar1 l!ai\nr. ' "'S11perh mtertaiamot • •. • •'Giut t.aleht htmd ••• • "'Be!t'new rroap in ,..,. ... • Entft'tainmt11t and daM&llC 11irl!.Uy (e:w:cept Sttnd'q)·fra nine in. th• buutifttl !frlW• Ldunge. GRAND HOTEL ,, .......... w ••. --. ,.,..'"' Ptonto TAKE~Olll DllllUS, too k. ID E • .. __, - , a1 ' I I I I I , I 'I ~ ,, J .. . -..... --· .. . . . .. ·-:----=---,~=----------~ -. .... ' ...... · ... ,,.. ··--= . . I . ';~~~ .!~T~~!!!.~l ~~~~:.!~~~A!~~~~. ~E~~N I "I GREW VP wllll,llle CtyU a ria!ly d•nled It. tuiiiod out ,. bqflor Ila .... "The Youns RuDIWl)'I," War," abe llld. "I WU -\ 1'Tbett""ti no novtl," lbe Piii)' MJkbell along wltb the lmpromive ccotlnie<: .I ...,. . . ZULCll OALLEJ\Y -1111$ Ntwport Bjvd., Coola Meaa. Cllmn~ Jy 00 eJ!!Uill oil palollnp by Harlllld Y...,,_ Houri: 10 to I p.m., 'l'llol. tbroulh 5al: 1 to I p.m. SUD., •cJooed Meil. 1'itr9 11.JIO admlyton clw'gt. ncu:n' GALU:RY -14112 Via Lido, NtwpOrt lloacb. Hoon: 10 Lm. to $ p.m., Tua. 'tllrough Sal, c1,...i Sun. aod J\100. CUmllJy,.. uhlbl~ oil palntlnp i;y Yuu l&ucJ>l.1lo ad· -~1e. . MARINZR'S UBRARY -I006 Dover Drive, Newport Bach. On dllplay dllrlng re11111ar library hour• throulh Dectmbor. watottolot, i.1rpen ·Ind poncll lll'I W«'U. by.Johll w. Bur· COii of Elrip•., d""JI, 1111d automoilv~ ,oubJICl.I. . NEWPORT "A'l'iONAL BANK -lOeo ~ ·brtve, N~~ Beach. On uhlblt during recuJar bullneu boun, oil, palnl· . inl• by BoraJilld Lorin 'Stepbw. ' ; COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -26U E. Coesl llllhway, Corona del Mar. Houri: 11 1.m. to 3:1JO p.m. Mon. through • Sal No admbslilo· charge. Currently on exhlbll prillts by :· pholotlrapher Belll Kocb. 'Ille pllery Is sponaored by Ille Newport Harbor Service League. J Utorally ralaod In ll. A> a dtc:lared. tlon pi<Wn greall. chlld I llllened while baltlel Nut day, bowovw, al Ille In lMI, Margaret Mltcbell were fou&bt aa:a~ w h J I e iJ'lslstuice of her husband she IDd her husband were crosa- 1tratcgJ., ,..re rev!IWed. I took Iler collection bl manila Ing Peachlrff Slritl on Ille heard ev~"-· aboul ll .,. envelopeo (Complete wllll col-way to IO early.evening mo. ~,-.. tlon picture. An oU-duty lul etipt that lbe Confederacy lee markl, scribbled grocery drtver, careening down the loat.'l fee roarks, scribbled grocery The ·actual crptlon or lJsls aod recipes>. to Lalllam'• t•Gone With the Wind" wu hotel. SOUTll SW 'ff,ti(t d ,-'l1t(J (J I >'• •I ',,,. ..., >Hl'•' ''"'I • " "" LAST 5 DAYS ACADEMY AWARD WINNER = u unorthodox as the "It's Inc om Plett and -· "J ••• u•-ary .~• wirovlled.'' llht told him. "I ... _ • -v K;i; """.. had 1n tton of Ibo ••• TROPICAL FISH ...,. ,,, ........ ln ""'·-. In Ille flral place no ten w.,. 108" .... • • ~ _. It ;;.-~ Wpired by the It to anyone... t MIK~tCHOi.S'"~ burnhi.g desire ot an author Latham hati no aoooer left La.Jtest Selectlon of LAWR!NC! TUtWAN- to i•l prlcel..., and l•nc·l .. be· town lllae Ille re 1 u clan l Tropical Fill> & THE &ftADHAft remembered words co paper. autborell sou,ht to retrieve Supplies 1n the area. Ulllli It was, instead, a concesaton her envelope collection. M~MAIS't'PlM to her husband, attorney John "I've cbanatd my mind. 111w.tJ,~ ... ~~..,. c:tJ)t --• ,.:'-- Marsh (whom she married in Send lt back," lh6 wired. l.., ''IM9w Rd., ,...."" "ne n.-a... ,.,,..,.. F~d'1. -27, 1!68 1141LY '1LOT JJ • • • • mHMllT LUIGI na • ..._ 'W 11 PICKWrCK~ ;:!.-~ *i:' .: BOOKSHOPS _,.. who leavo -------year, la cumotly playlnc MNll_I -- In tlio grealtt Loi Aqeltl = ~ .... ..... ' EXCLUSIVE lN ORANGE COUNTY "THE FRESllllESS NlllHE:YOUTll Of ITS STARS IS THE GLORY iJf 'ROMEO AND AUl'I" -tlli• CHAU.IS GALLERY -l390 S. Coul Jli&bway, Lacuna Beach. Currenlly on oxhibl~ "'~or paintings by Frant Ham· llton. Haun: ll a.m. to s p,m. dally. No admlsaion ~ge. ·so. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L B.QIK -17122 Beach Blvd.,' Hunl· l.ngton 8eacb.. On exhlbit during regular buslness houri, oil palnilnga by Ella Fteberg. · ! - MESA VERDE LIBRAIIY -1919 Mesa Velde Drive Eaa~ Collla 1925) who had more faith in In return &he rtoe.Jved a ,~,~~·~~----N ..,1t1i .. hil: wUe's ability u a writer $5000.00 advance cbeck from1~~~~~~~:;·~~~~· ~s·~··~·="'~·~O~u~•11:::;F~··~o~-~-..,~1 than did she ••• and who Macmlll&n'a. lr- conolanlly prodded ber lo ONCE THE MANUIClllPI' write. At the tlme she was was accepted, tbe rtal work hobbling around the boU&e, an began. She devoted sb: months arthritic antle in a .cut. The to the rewrite, re-doing the accident to an ankle, already first chapter as pllnY as 70 wealtllled tbroup chlldlv!od tJmea and lNblequenl cbaptcn accldenll, c11111d her to c!ve man;y aa IO times. More houri up a 115.00 a weet job will> were apent fllllng ppo Illa! the Atlanta Journal. She was required research and com- twenty-six ye~ old, the ytU bing even the most minute waa 1926 and 1hill marted the det8J1e for historical accuracy. Um,e Margaret Mitchell ~t on many occasions she wu dOWn at the typewrl~ and asked if abe planned to write Mesa. Oil and watercolor painUnga liy "Soozy" Wt!!fl are curtenUy on. exhibit during regular library botu's. · :c. l\f, ART LEA.GUI'; GALLERY -513 Center St., Costa Mesa. Hours: Sat. and Swi.1, 1 to 5 p.m. COlltinuOUB elhiblt,of ,.n work in varioua media by Art League membera. No ad· mtulon charge. , ' :cALIF. FEDERAL SAVIN!ll! " LOAN -2700 l!Arbor !Blvd., · Costa Mesa. Currehtly on exhibit during regular bllliness houri, oll and acryµc paJntlng1 by Marcella Stanley. UNITED CALIF. BANK -30'l9 Harbor Blvd., C05ta Mesa. Folk art tn mlzed niedla by Nancy Lehorrthol; oils by Lucy Sanford; Rena Spencer's collages, and Joan Garrett's masalca are on display during regular business hours. ; SECURITY F1R8T NATIONAL BANK -196 .E. 17th Sl., Collla Mesa. Oil paintings by Marj«ie Smith, Betty McClellan and Florence Vlscette are currently on e.hlbit during regular bualness bour1. . , CROOKER ·CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK -Sorber Shopping Cenltt, 2300 l!Arbor Blvd ., Colla MOU. Putel abd oil animal portraitl and landscapia. by Ann BemeU are cur- rently on exhibit during regular business houn. · started to hammer out a noVel • another book. that ten years later wOIM "Lewey no." she answered. lake Ille na\l<>i> ~y 11<!1111. "i...k at all Ille misery th1a ''WHERE MOST au l b tr 1 ope hu caused me." w&lld 'i\art al tM'De&filntnl Wllh -111e 'ale ol 'tlle boOk and work toward the· end for moUon pictures, things got Margaret Mitchell reversed even worse. The entire coun· the procedurt. She started at try speculated on what stars the end the rift between would be cast in the varlow: Scarlett .ind ,Rhett, and work-rolea. It became a national . ed toward the beginning in guessing 1ame. M a r I a re t a hit-or-miss way. Mitchell was least interested She would write whatever of all Now for 'the first limo 1t~lan1rlcM. Direct,,:.,,, Its Road • Exclusive Ar11 Run • Pwkt"111•1&e1 • Do1tJ 111M:J0-7111o10 P·"'· • ....,. s.t. 41J0.7&Jf.10 , ... -of 3 A-·"I Awonlll -. TIQNCCIUJ'l9~PWGMWAMIR IROt.-uv!NAml chapter appealed to her at "I'LL HA VE NOTIUNG to the moment. tucking it away do with it," sbe told frlenda. in a manila envelope. The "My ta1te runs to Dona1d entire picture of the war was Duck and the Four Mi.rx ' ·· -NOW PLAYING -.. so familiar and so vivid, every Brothers, none of whom, I S,.c:lt1I P.T.A. S...nhrJ ......._ -1ZiJO P·•· battle, every hill, that she believe, could effecttvely playli=;===="IH::'":0:":":":•:•=-~~·~~·~•;;;~;;~~I worked for the most part Rhett or Scarlett." without research. Despite her desire to avoid MOW-INDS TUISDAY By 193-0 she had seemingly the hol llghl of publicity, lbe ~ALBOA STUDINTS sncw SHOW SAT. MOININO ,All. 4 .11 ·II· ts TICKm PUIC!WID AT H.S. • 'L COU. • COlllOI ·' Ured of lhe projed and put was pretalled upon to allend , J AIUI lhe manUICript aalde, working Ille P.J". :AU.nla Jll"mi•re of .....,.. on It ohly occasloriaUy diir.lng 14Gorie WUll the }find." She OPIN the next five years. It was proved. 'to be the '1belle or tbe 1:45 in 1931 th1t ltitold Latham, ball." Gone With the Wind 709 I. .. JMa a~repre.se.ctaUve of the Mac· stars c'lark Gable, Vivien .. , ... httl!"Ua. 19 Ac1d1my Awards 2 Fobulous Ent1rt1lnment1 millan Publlahln1 Company Leigh, 01!Tla de liavilland, visited Allula .,..king new and all \)I l!ollywOOd paid her talent. Someone told h1m of homage, , She was· the u.rt- a novel bein& written by "little dilputed "darling" of the Feagy MUcbellt' When he ap. crowds (ind they were "CSIC!tt I HELD illo OVER FOR THE . . HOLIDAYS MIWPOlf llAtlf .............. " loM.'-. ~ W. .. Cll. M3st . CLARK GABLE VIVIEN LEIGH LESUE HOWARD , . THE IOUI., •. HOLIDAY stlOW i ~l i ' Cei.tl111•11• D11t1 fro• 1 iJO I i I Phone 673-6260 EXCLUSIVE AREA ENG.AGEMENT Showlnp Nightly llATUI., 71 & 11: MqNKID .. 1:10 • Met. WM ...... S.a-J P.M. , 'r' OLIVIAdeHAVILLANl> . ~ .... -= . ...:._..__.~ A!UJICllfltlWDW.ftal.ll •ftJ'!JltUlftl •Ml-·~'MTfR. I ......... -·--9? ..,.__.,_ G"'"' I· are here·• i' • 836-6280 r ' • ~ • <" .._ N • .. L iv.JU.1z ti.L~'·' ...... •I "'9tlUI., .0-1 Juli. .-,1111tw11 e COLOll: e ''THI.SOUND OF MUSIC" W•tl DltMY'I "THI HAI COUNllT" • COLOll . ' . DlrMf .,_ . ............. .,..., ltu "-~ • COl.Otl e "DO<:TOI DOUTTLI" lo4: .._ • eot.oll • "THI PllVATI NAn OP MT. O',All:lnt"' -----. _., ...... I IJl·1211 ·-1119MN,., ...... , ll:lcM~ """' • cooo• • •CAMILOT" • ~tttr~ e COLOA e "I LOYI YOU, AUC:I I. TOA LAS" .__..... ........... . 51e¥t MdNffo! e CCX.OR e ''THI THOMAS CROWN AJlfAll'' D~ld flllftll e COLOll: e .... UDINCI AND THI "U" !"."::":4 ........ ,.,..,.lllt ........ ~, °"911 .._ • COU>l • "fHI HOUI IN THI CIU.1' n.ANNIL surr '"Wl.ffNll THI POOH'" "SNOW TllAIUll" fO~Nl .\lt, \,\L[[Y TN ......... ,,..._Jilltl ...,ILLOW IUIMA•INI" 1 e COlOll • l :«I Al.,, A.IN e COLO" t • COlO• e ''PAN:I UON" ~-W-0-TE_....::::=-.,.-llW•N~,,..-.-.-,-,...-"'W..t~hP-.--1•11•~ "SHOW c.i,..,. ... ...., .... ~·-.l211t ·~==•fil 11~~~~~~~~ ! ,.,,..., : ·-... -!J:JI• ..... ·~· 00 :-----------------'''--------" --·-·-· -LESLIE CARON MAURICE CHEVALIER LOUIS JOURDAN ~-NATAUEWOOD RICHARD SEYMER RU.SSTAMBlYN RITA MORENO GEORGE CHAJ(IRIS 11 <.lfhtt( ,_,,. "' St1ti1 W•cl., J•n. I -"DOc:TOI ZHIVAIO" TELEPHONE 541·1552 FO, !N•O•MATION SEASON'S GREmNGS FOR YOUR ENJOYMENT p,q<J,WI PCl\RS "1~TDIAI. _. 1111•"'6 ... lde .. loughlng ond lo\'log In J'Or uwe j ., •! 'TY 1 -B·--~ .a: ALSO THIS~ATThRACTION - Sean Coniiery Is SHALAKOI 8llAlAKO Maanil Action! Action Means Barootl C.:att11••• 11tew WH.t n.n .• S... "'"" 1 .... frM J p.-. °'"' De,. et 1 , .•. SPECIAL MATINEES Mt. ~nd SAT. at 2 p.m. ON THE STAGE 40 MINUTU OJ JUN. wm1n. MA•IC AND DaTIMINT WITH fHI llNOWfl' .. LEN WAYNE '" ..-ic • ...,. AND ON OUI IClllN "THE fMN CALLEO ,LINTSTONI" A140 MANY OTHll IUl,.IUI EVERYBODY ONLY 50c I IWIOtt at ADAMS. COSTA MESA, PHONE. 546'3102 Now for the tint time at populor prices. Direct from Its Road Show engagement. eDAILYe 1:10 4rl0 7:10 10t00 Winner of 3 Academy Awards! ! l~;~~M~·l·ij~~~J-rnt; I -""""-""ciM'Ewi'l"Wi jj\'l1Rlil'i. flEn<iil'lr-: .tii!Ur ,-;lf..- JO:ili r.USC4n r.;';',¥" ~·· '=1:1 ~-ll!Nlil II fllOERK)f lOEll'E. AlANJAYlERNER • .iooHIJ'ifum . JAi.K LWARNER • IKlllClllDl'l'UlllOI" flllll ....... 111111111,• I l~ciu1lv1 Aroa Walk·tn Thoatro ltVli 3 All Now Hits Continuous Dally --l-"""""" ____ ..,.._ ..... _ .... _ .... ----------~--·----~ ... ~.=.,,::::~= .. =,,:::-..... ~~~ Wlnnle"'•Fltoh ............. -----~--..... -- PLUS _,, ... _ "'-_,. __ -- I ' Jt:r.:ES giEf [~~~@~S 11Sl,OW . 'j'~EfiSU.ftE"' ,' ·, I I • ------·--. -----------. ft 0.UL V PILOT "Aren't you a liWe old to be doing 'yourOWDthial'f" · TELEVISION VIEWS Marie· Torre Had Courage • By RUDY CERNKOVIC PITTSBURGH (UPl)-As a ne_w~paper col~n· 1st, M.aiie Torre frequently crit1c1~ed teleV1S1?n news. Now that she is in the medium, she still maiiltains there is room for improvement. "I have a better understanding of ~elevision now that I am part of it," said the one-time tele- vision reviewer for the now-defunct New York Herald-Tribune. . "'Television news needs more experienced hand~d courage," she said. "It also needs more thooghtfulness.'' FOR THE PASl six years Marie has been appearing daily on news shows on KDKA-TV, a Westinghouse Broadcasting Co. sta¥on. She was the first woman in Pittsburgh to handle "Hard" news. Five mornings a week she also condu~ts "Con~c~,'' A show in which viewers at home qwz a spec1al1st in a particular field, . "Television has an advantage ove1 the print media because oi its immediacy and the added dimension of sight,'' Marie said. "In a news story quotes are sometimes diffi- rult to handle, they don't come across j~st ri~ht. But on television it is the person who is saying things-they are quoting." MARIE BELIEVES the most pressing need in television news is finding people who have a sound news background and producers with good visual experience. "But sometimes there is a tendency to pay too rt11ch attention to the visual and not enough to con- text," she said. "The importance of the spoken word should ~ be overlooked." She cited an instance when she went on an asstgnm t with a cameraman with little experi- ence. "When we ran the film in rehearsal, the produ- cer advised against using It because it was poor," she said. 11However, we needed the story and ran the film on silent footage while I gave the story. ''AFTERWARDS I was complimented by sever· al viewers for a good presentation of the event. It proves people do listen and watch at the same time." Marie believes there are more openings 1'but not enough good ones" for women newscasters on television. "Many women on television are doing woman- hood a disserve because they have an awareness of themselves-A consciousness of self," she said. "And many women have a built-in handicap-- their voices are not easy to listen to, they sound raspy." Marie admitted many viewers do not care to bear women broadcast the news. ''IT IS A matter of conditioning,'' she said. After a while most viewers become accustomed to it. I think Pauline Frederick, who does the U .N. news on a network, has convinced many viewers that wo- men are capable oi handling the news." Marie became a cause celebre nearly 10 years ago when she went to jail for 10 days because she refus~ in federal court to disclose a news source. She was charged with contempt. Insentencing her to jail, Judge Sylvester Ryan said she was the I< Joan of Arc'' of Journalism. During her stay in jail in Hudson County, N.J ., she received thousands of letters commending her action. Detanis the Menace PEANUTS Yl!ll.JIM IF mtt THE ClfU 'f M!OtCAL MAN STELLA O\RVrlL CAN 'lClERATf ••• n•s PRETTY Pl.Alt.I WHAT I'~ YO.JR COURSE. HAS 10 BE. TUMBLEWEEDS ... ~- Mun AND JEFf GORDO WIU1 ~, • MISS PEACH ' NI( HEARi" OOes oor 10 \i'.xi, LAD l .I L MYSEl..f, SOFFERED ."THAT VEJl.Y ii MISFOR!UNEA FEW MILES BACK, 1., AN'THIS CAAPCMIE10MYAIP! \WO AM 110 REFUSE A HElPING HAND! KMVGUEST! ~. -; ...... --~- . . . . . By Harold Le Dom: By Gus Aniola -WHAT ru. WAJoJT AND WHAT HAA\'ARO WIU. WANT ARE 1WQ Dl~FERSNT THIN65. -,, 1 fRIDAY S II T U R D A ' I ' • I I f.I ', j ', ( • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS PILOT PRINTING 2211 W1ST U.LIOA ILYD • NIWPOIT 11.ACH ' . ' r ' ' I ' t ' -----------------------------~--,.,,.---··~•-~•-••~••=w-~o•••••~·•w••-·-=<+~>-••-••-,,•=,,,_,,,..~ .,. .-..~~~~.-·~-·-.. ····~~- • Looked • Brig_hter to· Allen~- THESE HAPPY MOMENTS WERE RECORDED A YEAR AGO WHEN GEORGE ALLEN'S RAMS WON THE DIVISION AL TITLE BY STOMPING BALTIMORE AT THE COLISEUM. Allen _Firing No Surprise To Players LOS ANGELES (AP) -The firing of Los Angeles Rams' head coach George Allen left mO!t Ram followers puzzled and shocked today, but some players uy they weren't totally surprised. Allen, '6, was nrea Thufaday by·nan Reeves, president 8.nd poeral manager of the National Football League club. Reeves .S\lid a personality conllict led {o his decision. "It was probably mare my fault than bis," itaid Reeves. Allen called a news conference for today. . In three years with the Rams, after the Western Division team bad suffered seven straight losing seasons, Allen turn· ed LoS Angeles into a winner with seasons of 8-61 11·1·2 and 10-3-1 . The lint public bostillty between the quiet Allen and Reeves came after the Nov. 17 Ram game with the San Fran· cisco 49ers. The teams tied 20-20. After the game, Allen said the muddy field conditions were the worst he'd ever seen. Reeves called the comments unnecessary and ill-advised. "But we heard rumors in training camp," said Roman Gabriel, the No. 1 quarterback of the Rams under Allen. "We heard rumors that George Allen would be fired if we didn't win it all th Is year," Gabriel said. "And those rumors JlOpped up more onen as the season progressed . "Before Olil' last ball game with the Baltimore Colts, coach Allen said he wouldn't be back next year/' said or~ tensive guard and co-captain Joe Scribelli. Allen setms to always have com· manded the respect of his players. In 19&3, while a coach with lhe Chicago Bears, the team there presented him the championship game ball, an honor normally reserved for players. "!l's bard to realize that a man who's been a winner like George• Allen could be rlred," Gabriel said. "He gave more lo his. players than any other coach I've ever played for. ''lf he goes to another team, and he wants me to play fox: hlm," Gabriel said, "I might make it known I'd like to be traded. I've also thought about sitting out a year or even retlrlng." Allen came to the Rams the successor to ltarland Svare, who had a 4-10 record in 1965. ~vet fought a court battle with Chicago owner George Hallas for Allen, then gave his new coach a five· year, $40,000 a year contract. USC Duo Clinches Cup Win ADELAIDE' Australia CAP) -Harry Hopman's big gamble failed and the Davis Cup, the symbol of world tennis supremacy, is hea'ded back .to the United States for only the fourth time in the last 18 years. Stan Smith and Bob Lutz, a pair of collegians ftom the University of Soulhern California who perform together like precision dancers on a chorus 1ine, climaxed an eight-month American cam- paign by crusbi.ng Australia'& Ray Ruf- fels and.,17-~ld John Aleunder In the decUling cfoul!jes match M, 6-1, 6-2. ' .. West, Cracks NBA Barrier, :~1 Scores 16,000 DETROIT (AP) -:-In sports, the big men aren't alway1r the tall men. Jn the National Basket'ball Association, it can be a ~foot-3 guard with more than 16,000 polnts to hia credit. Few or those points were more brilliantly scored.than the last two Jerry West· made for the Los Angele!: Lakers on Thursday night in Detroit against the Pistons. Wilh the Lakers trailing by a point and nine seconds remaining, West grab- bed a missed Detroit shot, dribbltd three-- quarters of the length of the court, sailed into the air, twisted and shot. The ball went cleanly through the hoop and the Lakers had a 95--94 victory. West. who earlier in the game became only the eighUt NBA player in history to surpass the 16,000-point mark, wound up with 29 Points, second only to Detroit's Dave Blng who topped all scorers with 3L The game was a seesaw affair all the way with ~ score tied at 25-2& after the first period and 52·52 at the half. Detroit held 1 slim 75-74 lead going into the final Peri.od. LOI .t.NOl'lEt on•OIT • • T • • T 8•~1or • ... " k lltmv " H " c1wun~ri.1n • ... " lll"g " ,., " '"'"" ' ,., • Oldlrio-r ' •• • er-lord ' .. • Htlr'ston • ., " E11~ • ,., ' !(cm!""' ' '' ' Erltk$0!' ' ,., • M<L,mort ' ., • H_!,.. • .. • Mii" ' .. ' "'"'" • , .. " W11~er ' H • w,l, " , .. ~ Te>t1ls ~ ... " Tollls a ,.~ .. Le. A"'tlts " 21 12 21 -fj 0.lrolt " v " ,, -'' F""lfcl oul -~. Te!ll klvl1 -Lot ""Veit' 11, CtlTOlr " Alltnd1nc1 -t,'10. • The rout required only 67 minutes, giving the United States a 3.0 lead in the best--0£-5 match series and a chance to score the first S-0 sweep in 20 years. The doubles victory took tension and importance away from the final two singles matches today. Clark · Graebner meets Ruff els in the first match followed by a joust between Arthur Ashe Jr. and Australian champion Bill Bowrey. A three·hour, fiv~set victory by(iraeb~ ner over Boffrey and Ashe'a triumph over Ruffels in four sets put the Americans up for today's .:lo.ubles clincher. Hopman's gamble was In inserting teen-ager Alexander into the doubles although he and Ruffles played together only eight days except for the obscure tournament several weeks ago. Alexander became the youngest player in history to compete in the Challenge Round and his nervousness and inse<:urity were apparent as he lost Vital ser:vict8 to give the Americans the first two sels and wilted under ~e constant po~ dlng ol ' the two -· eiperienced Ainericlns. "Alexander and Ruffels were a bit tentative," Donald Dell, the U.S. captain said. "We had a big edge on teamwork. I thought It would be a much closer match," He said he thought thl.1 lack of coordination was due to the fact that they were a scratch pair put together officially only a few hours before the match. 'But I am not criUclzlng Hopman/' Dell aald. "I would have dooe the same thing under the'c:lrcumstancea. I think IlopmaD Bidding War Lo0111s Alcindor Would Guarantee Success of ABA--Barry NEW YORK (AP) -Will the initials ABA stand for Alcindor Basketball Association? Rick Barry hopes SG and he WGn't mind a bit playing second fiddle to the UCLA giant. "Il Lew AJcindor comes to the American Basketball Association it will guarantee the success of the league," Barry, the ABA's reigning superstar, said Thursday, "But if he. goes to the NBA, it will make it a long tough haul." The ABA is suffering growing pains: MICH IGAN NA.MES NEW GRID COACH in its second year of existence but I.he owners reportedly will chip in' and inake lhe 7-fobt Alclndor a fabulous offet to . keep him away ~:-vm the estah1lshed NBA. 1'1 don't know anything about that," said the 24-year-0ld Barry, the ABA's leading scorer who also owns 15 percent of the Oakland Oaks. -'I'd just like to see him playing in our league and 1 don't care wbich team he goes to. He'll make a.•Y team a contender and if he played on our team we could play for the NBA cham· pionship." The bidding war for Alcindor probably wm be tbe biggest In •Porls hlilory. money from our Houston team to go with the NBA he's a fool and 111 tell him so to his face. Prestige doesn't put food on your plate or money 1n your pocket. ••10 say there'll be no price war over Alcindor Is rid1cu1ou.s. And it AJclndor chooses the ABA he'd force a lot of intere!t.ing developments to take place In pro basketball. If he comes to the ABA something's got to take place, a merger or someUllng. • 'j A bidding war can't last, There's not enough money in ba9ketball for this to go on. I think the owners wouJd be pushing their luck to let it go on for more than two or three years." Barry Is happy with his new league and has an answer for lhose who downgrade fls caliber ol basketball. felt it was all he could do." Hopman aald he decided on the Rulll,.. AJexander comblnaUoo this mominc: and his move was partly dictated 6j the fact he felt Bowrey needed a dity'1 ml before lllckllni the great Allhe, holder of the U.S. Amateur and Open crowns and rated the best amateur ln the world. As the match turned out, it prQVed a faulty move and !<filed Ill!)' bope the tough Utile dl8clplanarlm I r o m Melbourne mlgbt ltave bad of bufldlq onto his legend as 1 mlncle ..._. Kings Seek Shorter Games LOS ANGELES (AP) -If hockey wu a 58-minut.e aame, the Los Angeles Kings would be wirmera today and part owners of second place tn the National Hockey League's West Division. . Uruortunately for the Klqs -and fortunately for Danny Grant and the Minnesota North Stars -a profe.sslonal hockey game lasts 60 minutes. It was: in those final two minutes that Grant scored Thursday night to Ue Los Angelu 44. Grant'a 16th goal of the season climax· ed a Minnesota rally that began late In the second period with the Kinp leading 4-1 on two goals by BID Flett and alngle scores by Dale Rolle and Eddie Joyal. The North Stars' Danny 0 1Shea opened the game's scoring on a firat-perlod Power play shot. He brought Minnesota to within two goal.! wfth 1:29 left in the second period, drilling a sbot by King netmlnder Geny. Desjardins. The Ue left the Klnp with an IHM record for 26 pointl, one leu than the ""ood-place Oakland Seals. ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -The University of Michigan has picked 39- year-old Bo Schembechler from Miami University of Ohio -a school known as the Cradle of Coaches -as ils new football coach . The Associated Press learned Thursday lhat Schembechler will succeed Chalmers "Bump" Elliott, who in tum will move up to the position of associate athletic director after 10 years at Michigan. ''He'll probably get a bigger salary than any first.year man in any sport,'' said Barry, who knows a little abou~ mooey blnt!tU since he left the NBA, where , he was making a base ~lary of f,80,000 two yean ago, to 1igli With the ABA for an estimated ~:a5.000 for three years. Barry's advice to college seniors is to grab the money while the bidding is reminiscent ol the recent pro football war. "When a player starts talking about the NBA's prestige he's being ab""'jutely foolish," Barry said. Trojan Cage Tourney Under Way Tonight Michigan Athletic Director Don Canham plans to announce the coaching change as well as other r~ganizaUonal changes at a news conference today. "l Jove basketball, but I'll play w!,i:re I have more chance to secure a future. It'a: a matter of dollars and cents. "If Elvin Hayes turned down more The spoUlghl Ifill be on the Los Anleles SPorls Arena atarllng tonight as the University of Southern California pla"y1 host to three tough teams in the Trojan lnvitational basketball classic. lmpremvt. i In Montana State, the Trojans wilh be ' facing I team wbldl Illa PoAlblY , one ol · the molt underrated bJg mtn : .In the country, 6-9 center Jack Gillespie. : UCI Battles Diahlos; Wins, 101-55 The .os)ening round games s• Tulia (M)'l!loeUng the Unlvenlty of Tej<u al El Paso (&-:) and USC c&-0 Pli!J'lnl Montana state (fil). The losers and winners will pJay another Satura,y night in the final rounds. OSU FORFEITS BOWL (BEEF) WfN i By EARL OUSTKEY Of "" 0.llY f'lllC '"" There were several high-octane of· lenses on display for the opening night of UC Irvine'• basketball tournament Thursday but It remained for the home town Anteaters to stage the janiest show of all. 4>ach Dick Divis' team ran Redlands rtgbt tnto the floor, 101-55,· UCI faces defending tourney champ Cal Slate'11 (I.A) Dtabloa In a umillnal bout tonilj)ll at t. lt'o Cal Sllllt (Long Beach) and EdlJ>. bono Sllllt In ·the other !tnilllnaj fOJIUre at 7. O..vls seemed somewhat ~artled after hi5 'rout. ''I didn't know what to expect because our two starting guards both missed our Monday and Tuesday workouts because of the flu," he said. "'Mlat's the first time we've played with that kind of confidence. t don't think there was any doubt about it from the start. Our gey1 went right out there and took charge." The tempo of Irvine's bana:·bang-.bang fast break reached such a state that UCI't Charley Howenstine drove In for a layup •l the wrong basket in the -l11lf. Redlands kept the ~re respectable for 'anJy five minutes. The Bulldogs were down by only 12·10 when lhrcc quick Ante.attr bucket& made It 16-IL With 8:25 left before the hall, Jeff Cunningham's seventh straight JIO,lnt gave UCI a IG-point le.ad, 29-19. With 4 :21 before lntermiasion. guard Mike Barnes' steal and layup made lt 13-13 but Irvine then wen! 2: 30 be!Ol1! scoring aglin. A Cunntn1ham ·free throw with 18:U Jen in the game made it 62--32 and Gene Zech's ·jumper made. it 79-!9 at the thrte-quatter pole. · Cal State (LA) set ltaelf up for tonight's UCJ encounter by beating Col4 lege of Southern Utah, 93-83. Cal Stat< <Loni Beacl1), powertd by atrlngbean sharpshooter Sam Robinson and a brilllant guard, Ray Gritton, blitzed OCcidental in the second halt to romp, ~ The 49er1 were up by only 35-31 at the half. The winners of tonighl's semUinal lnal<:hes collide Salurdi!J' nl1bt at 9 for the championship. UC ll"fhw Ofll """"' C""""nlMm ' 1 S U ~ •Mi. .... CQI """'" 2 I J I s."*" s e • 10 twn1 HfdclMll •• t ,, ""'"- (11rM1 2 2 J t Wlll .. '"11 S.blnt 4 t 1 1 I llOIJlll OltV!l\IMell S I l U ~lftft ~lllN ) 1 0 I "llO;ner Feotlt!U'I 2 J f 1 Wodl\trllt Ft,....11 J t 0 ' Ollt1 ""' l''' &.!1111 0 ' ' ' l J lJ ' J J 7 J • l ' ' 2 J It I J I 4 1 2 f ' 1 0 0 f 1 0 0 2 To1111 " '' u 111 ToUlt 21 11 l'O .. H•lltlrnt Kort: Utl n, lltdlf"CIJ 2'. Coach Don Ra!kl.ns' UTEP team, which won the NCAA champon$hlp 1n 1966, Is paced by a!I-foot JUflfcir guard Nal Archibald, who carries a 20 polnl per game average into the contest. Haskins. bu coached to Miners to a ll4-ll overall rocon! and alreody boasts a win th.ii year OVtr nationally ranlctd New Mexico, 71~. The Trojans are returning from a road trip during which tbey Idol two of three games. But they are undefeated at home In four garnet, Two of their wins came over CIDClnnaU1 and Houston, both nationally ranked teams. USC'• 7-t center, Ron TllJ'lor, hu been an ool.!landlna p!ayer at Ulnes and forward Ernie PoweD his also looked ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ol>lo Slllle'a ; participation in the Beef Bowl 'fiat CA1t-: celled Thursday becaute the Buckeye • football plaY"rs sre concenlntlni so : hard on the Rose Bowl. : A local restaurant annually invites, : pli!J'ers of each partldpatlng Bole B<nrl : squad to dinner on aeparate e~ The team comuming the most . ~ , rib ta adjudged the Beel Bowl ·-·' , , : Ohio Slllta was lo eat 'l'hund.,-r;g · but the restaurant ~cement tt : WU Informed the lqllad -I • lo so otrlct 1 practlct lchedule '· w · ool be able lo partlclpllo, · Southern cau!ontl!i Pll1en lasl wt alt 175 pounds. ... .1 ) Reads IJke Serooge MAXWIU ITU.as Sryl~s In Sports ••••••••••••••• dresllD& flt cranberry sauce Tbe guys 8laDdlng In the IOUP lines, wllb theb' -ape! 19 cblldren, are dcfemlve.<ooOb Hal Herring, who by -Is ...n marllU'led: backfield coach John Symank.; lp!us: Uinol llJ1ll<r Rams - ollenslve Urie C..Cli'Bob P'ry, linebacker coach Bill Jobko and receiver coach Jim (Red) PbJJllJ>!. Nm chapter in the &1ory Is anattempt at an interview with · Dutch by David Mol!il, a UPI sports writer In Atlanta. It leads' one to believe that before Van Brocklin departs from PeaC!h~'. Street. the. natives will be erecting monuments to General (War ls Hell) Sbennan li'ld electing the gh!>St of Hiram Ulysses Grut as gov'ner of Gi:oorgia, sub. . Molfit ~ that Nonn Van Bracklin said be ·~~onized" over his decision to fire an -of his assistants; but once the Atlanta Falcons coach made up his J-le's selling his home back in Min· nesota, a big tree-lined estate which fronts on a lake, and moving' tnto· SJ\ ultra-modern, four-level hiiwle overlook· ing the Cbat~boochee Rivei' in an U:· elusive section of Atlanta. Dutch said he stlD ·has some business intere~ts in ~innesota. He also has. a 1,200-acre Carro in Arizona. . 1:. "Call ft ·a fann, not a ranCh ... s3.id Van Broctilln. "We don't have 8ny cattle. We've got a sharecropper farming on about 250 acres of that land. The rest is sagebrush. "The place is in what's still the Old West. They've got a cattle rustling case coming up ~ out there. And, you have to keep your land fenced · or your OHLONE TO FACE neighbors'catUewilltakeilover." REA Jc TEAMS ·~ )l? . ·Dtitd> ll>ld the !JP! man he doosn't A . int'!'d to d_elve Into the job of reelaclng -. · . -Ms coacbes unUJ after Christmas, says . Oblooe College of Northern Caliform.8: , , he doe$D.'t even know whom he might mfades ~ Orfl!'lge Coast area th~ :i. even .consider. weekend for· a patr of basketball games The scribe didn't believe that tale. Phil Jorden Mllc1 FIMMttt !tllv• J~ Mlk• MCC4tofi~ Jim Kll'lfHlort Sttw Turi.v llldi Slld<elm1ler Rid! H•rdarove Dout' Aflen Jett Stratnl Tim SlllV11r Botl Sch1rmerllorn Toll If Mesa Loses, Faces Azusa PT " " " " • ,. " • • • • • '" " " ~ .. " " .. " ' "' against Stddleback and Golden We~ col·: He wrote that Van Brocklin has had r le~ebat;t. 2-5. on the season, will some .of his n~w assistants in mind In Tourney attempt to. get back on the wiMing for quite some time. , . trackag81DslObiWtocUgbtat·a·o1clock "'Let'• l&li about that latfll',,~. ;xN,. . ... .,. •... ~: . · ~, at Mls:!lo»,vteji> l!ltl(Sttiool'. · . it ~aaMI. "·l'Jie.gjll.to.catdl.,• ~~~,,COVIN,\;-~ M.P.lllih $chool'a Golden West the Orange eo..i .,..., There's • lot ol moving to J1o aDjl varsity baJl<etball ~ wu ftg)!li"4.!or wimlngest jay~ team with l e-1 rteord, \bat's ~ rrlatn eonce.rn· at this mOinenL" fRlr".1vaJ this mornftlg ln the 15th annital plays host to Uie northerners Saturday A few other people down tn AUanta Covma basketball tournament when the nigbt at a in Basil Peterson gymnastum have that same concern. Shennan again Mustangs took on ~-. on the campua of Orange Coast College. is marching to the aea. Col:cb Herb Uvsey 1 five dropped .oat Weekend TV Menti It's Ba.skethall Tonigh~ Then F oothall Steps In The tempo picks up Ulis weekend in pro foot.ball's race to the land of the greenbacks, the Super Bowl. The AFL entry will be determined Sunday beginning at 9:30 a.m. when Oakland aad New York lock horns at the Jets' Shea Stadium. Chaanel 4 tele- casta the game: Baltimore and Cleveland go at it at 11 a.m. over Channel 1 Sunday for th e NFL championship. The basketball front on TV is equally altractlve, with two games on the tube tonlgbl The firat one is an intersectional clash at the Sports Arena between U1 El Paso Sllr!nt O.me, Cl'IMI $c:Mnlctf, II.Id Wiiii;!-, Ktlltt J11dcJ,;n 'Jniltnl49 111 C1n1lieilldt P1rk In $.In Fr•ll- tlSQt, ' I p.m. J!)CT -IOW1.ING -Didi: Wtti.r, Nil~ llurton, Jr .. "'· Dive D1v11, 11!!1 Tlltltllr. 1:10 P.m. (4lCL -SANTA ANITA -$!0,000 c1n1. er~enf. St!llO:es kll' 2·YNr Oldl. Harry Htni;tn w111 c•"i 1tte r1~. 111 lie did fGr 11'11 ~•fl 11111 1now WIS on CBS. Gii Stra1ton's repl1CflTlenl 11 ysl lo be '""'°unad. 1:30 p,m, fS)CI"" -NFL CLtf>S -FrMI latt w""'end'1 Den•s·C~tlolnd al'ld Balflmore·M\nne-sor1 ~ J P.m. (ilCL -HOCKEY -LA ti Toronto. Jlgg$ McOor>llld kei.~ In Canada, ' $ P.m. {J.l)F -FUTBOL -!Lucha dt Sll«OI' die """~loo.) 7 P.m. (1llCT -COMMENTARY -UPl'I ltlo~ ll•Ms of lHf IPOl'h. I p.m, (ll)CT -BOXING -M1cfott"" vi. JC>f! Hempllsid, helV'f'W919h'li, Chudl: HUii, G.L Vlllo r l.....,1kle 11 Silver sn-In L•• v~111. 10 p.m. t.MJF -BAXEO -!AtrlJ'O dt 11 1emena. ~ Me~lcol !1 p,m, <SlCT -BASKETBALL -UCLA Bruin• v1. "" nltM'1 wlnrirr 111 Holld1v Fe111v1t. Diel. l'.Onbere covrt110i! 11 MadlJOn Squere Glf'dtn. SUNDAY f :JI •·'"· (()CL -AFL CHAMPIONSHIP -D.!ik· and Tulsa at 7 p.m. OVer Chaftnel 11. 1111111 ,f/f MN Y0111:, Curl c-d1, Kyl9 ltolll, Oitrlie Jone mlkttlde' 11! Shel Sla.!lum. The second is lhe 11 p.m. ChaMel 5 lO:;lO •• m. uicr -COMMENTARY -&·R- f th UCLA ~ 'd ....,..... Georte A~ pr•v!ewJ tocltY'l NFL dltmP-COVer&ge o e -..-,uv1 ence game lllhlNll ........ from N Y k , " ~u •·1'· 17!CL -_l'fFL CHA.MP!ONSHIP -&1 111· ew or . ' mo ... •t c1 ...... 111'1d, , • 1 •.m. ltlCF ...:..•.OUTDOORS -"Sic! CwnffY, U.S.A./' te11Urlnv top 1lt1•0 irt el"11 malar co1.,. '""o r~1orl1. Tulaa and El Paso are in USC'1 tour- nament and UCL.A is tbe favored entry in New York's Holiday Festival touma- rnent. ·, . Football and ho1"8' racing Oavor Satur· day'• television sports menu. The Blue- Gray game comes on at 10 a.m. over Channel 2 and tbe Ga\« Bowl from El Puo beams 1o at •tO :I> on Cbanntl ·1; 1bat me matches "AUbUrn and ' Artmna: l p.m. 12\CT -Nf'L ALL·PAO TEAM -™ 5'!1'1or clreuJl'1 22 ,btsl, "' pk.ked bV lht Pl•Yi'•I ll>em$tl ...... plus Pi.yer of Yttr, Defe,,.lvt P!tY•' cf Y•r ....:! Rookl• " Yetir 11w1rds. ' 4 P.11'1. ('lCF -DU1'000RS -Hl'h Lil(, fAut fhhlrit. I p.m. (ilCT -B,t,Sl(ET8,t,LL -HOll$1" ~ti. v11 wml·llntls, Diel< Enbefp II M.ildllO!I Garden !or UCLA vi. wt.om? 5 p,m, (-IOlF -COMMENTA.ltY -On IPOrll. S::IO p.m. (51CL -HOCKEY -LA 111 Clilctto. J ln1 MCO-ld lce$1d9 •I CrikllM Slllcl'lum. I:» p.m. (ltlCT ;-OUTDOORS -Ski r_.11 W 'f-11\1""9. of the champiQDShlp bracket with I fmt round Joss to Lakewood, 77-65, Thursday morning. Azusa was bumbled by powerful Muir, 40-21, to fall into the other half of the consolation test in the 32-team field. Jt was the second loss to Lakewood for Costa Mesa, The Mustangs had lost earlier to the Lancers .in the Hunt.i.D.if:on Beach lnvitatlonal, 87~1. · ' And, it was lost in u.e same.:pattern. The Green and White fell ' bthind at the end qf the first quarter in the first .encounter with Lakewood, 21-7, and this time around it was 24-10 It the end Of the stanza. . . , Pr~ton Spellmeyer . cllcled fer 21 · point! on six field goals and nine free throws to grab high-point honors for Mes~. Bob Austin, a junior up from tbe Bees~ came through with 11 r~ to lead Mesa in that de~eot, but the Lancers outdistanced Mesa in reo. bounding, 45-35. In ·other first round games, La Salle edged Cathedral, 71-70; Artadla beat St. Francis 86-&3; Edgewood tripped Pius X, 7S..7{)~ Glendora got by La Canada 51·42:. Rosemead bumped Nonhview ~ 52 ; San Gabriel whipped "South Pasade- na, 'lS-54; Long Beach Jordan squeezed by San MarinJ, SMS. Also Bishop Amat bombed Cantwell 71).59; Long Beach Millikan topped Serra, 74*1; Pasadena bree!ecl·ey·nett Gardem, 8W9; West Covina blasted Montebello, '4-43, and host Covina belted Loma, !HO. Coal• M11tt (U) lilt ..... 011 ,.C> ,.T P,. T' ,, PT ,,. f' ' Aua11n llNllrne'Vt'r Er)ll:lnt '"'" ·-O.vl1 , Ka:tlv -'di!l1on """' 0'" o ... )6112Lff~V '#5•11 6tJ218JttlOW DIS I lO S 6CtOOfeldN JJJ 7 J J J ll Lalloc~ut J ' ' n 101·11e0Mtt t7)ts !0121l•e 121• JOltJOf!nsot1 12!1 lllSSlewn1 0031 02 5 2H•lon 0110 002 2C1mi>Wll Oil 0 t o ! I Sl'dtrllolm .t J 3 t r e1b1 1'11 1!11t"'""' 1 0 1 ' i;~wn1 OtlO Toltll 2) JI l6 n -------------------- Conversion Attempt UC IrVine guard Mike Barnes appears to be attempting to boot this one in during An~ters' UC! tomnament·game with R¢Jands Thurs- day night. Barne&, a junior transfer from Riverside City College, scored six points and UC! trounced the Bulldogs, 101·55. Redlands' No. f2 here is Don Pope. Off the Area Greens Two Quartets D,eadlock In ICCC Tournament .,. " . Two quartets tJOd 1..-lir-·Sunday In a Jack and Jill mixed event at Irvine Coast Country· Club with a net score of 133. Ipcluded in the winner's circle was the foursome of Lamard and Sue Berg· hatiser and Bob and Phyllis Arnold .along witb the team of Ralph and Lorraine Butcher and Charles '8.nd P,hyllis ,\ndres. second place was ~on by Ev·Jmd Pat Morris and Roe and Carolyn Gray. Saturday's 'event - a betttr ban ·or partners in men's clQb actiGJJ --was w.on by ·Harland .Er1Ckson and Joe Ordway with a 61. Second place was won by Herb Wilson and Dr. Don Martin, who teamed up for a 68. · · Santa Ana . The annual Christmas Pro-shoot is scheduled Sunday with tee cff a tnoon. ii will be a scotch ball event with club pro! te4med up with meJ!1bers_ ot the m~~s club. -.. .~ set for acUon are pro Gerali Hall and member Pope Hilburn; prO Bud Calhoun and· member Dr. Tom Clark; pro Duke Stone ind member Bud Talmage ; and prO John Baldwin and member Jim Duggan. Costa itlesa Neal Hickman captured the low net honors In the men's club event over the weekend with a 77-U~. otaer finisl1er•·ln the. net .divlsioo .of • '" . .... ,. . .: .. the $1,000 Chr~ uey. were;~ack Brown (00.U-<;9), Russ Larsen (81-11-70) and Bill Wallace (8&-10-70). 0 Low gross was won by R. Darnellrs 77 with Jack Reed• (!'n) and Norman Patrich (79) following. Mesa Vet'de Keith Neal and Fred Smith teamed up to score a net 61 Saturday to win the men's club partneg,obeelt.:.ball event. .... Second place we'!t ,t.c> Ray and Ray J.r. Leitner with ~ ·152 While Tom Rico and Arthur Aune were third with 63. A mixed partner1 Mat ball event on Sunday was won by Paul and LJllian Robinson with a 62. John and Arlene Modeen were second with a 63 followed by AI and Jean To- bey's 64 . El Niguel ~r .~~wa11 the wiMer of a Beet 16 Hole tournament at El Niguel Coun- try Club in La&ma Nl'g\{e], posting a low net score of 5'1. • ·' Joe Cote was second with a 58, fol- lowed by third place flnisber Ron Di· zinno's 59. itllsslon Vlefc. The ninth hole-i~e at Mission Viejo Golf Club was recorded by Bob Smith of Orange. Smith, using a seven-iron, sank a 177- yard Dot on·4be 13th hole. Maravich Averages 4 7.4 NEW YORK (AP) -Pistol Pete Maravich of Louisiana State has widened his lead over Calvin MlD'phy of Niqara~ in the major college basketball iudlviduaJ' scoring race. . The latest wedly statis\Jci .flwn the Natio!laJ eoueg;ite sports S.rv1<es today showed Maravtch on top with llD average o~ 47.4 Mints in five game1 through last Saturday. Murphy ls second with a 37.1 average Jn severr-games. 3 fuUgik sc!:1!i~fa ~~~·~C::t by Spencer Haywood of Detroit at I0.8. Tbe East-West game from San Fran-' clsco Is scheduled for Channel 7 at l:IO: Tbe '50,000 Calif~~--.. for two · year· old& · Santa Anita -.. at .......... Channel .... Timeouts Key to 59-57· .Vi~~ Win Atll!r UCLA beats Providence, the Srullll will meet their -rqund foe.at 11 p.m. over OJ;annel 5 Saturday. Tbe ....,kend TV menu; ·• • • • By GLENN WHITE Of .... °"" ...... '"'" WHITrlER -Obvioualy, Marina High School basketball coacb Lute Olson is a man who knowa when to call a timeout and what to do w!M!n he cajl! it. Twice in Thursday'• 69-S7 triumph over Monrovia ln the Pioneer tou.rM· ment. Olson resorted to time.out& to pull hla forctS out of tense situations. Thus be'• 1n t.onlgbt's 7 o'clock semi!inals duel with tall Mira Costa at th< Pioneer 1lllh 1)'111. 'f h e lint occasion was in the thlrd quarter when the Wildcats had parred Marina'• Jead to 4147. ResuJt: The Vik-M went oo a tear. ripped aeveo ahJiht polnls through the nets, and seemingly had vlctoey in lhe bag. However, Monrovia came on with a surge Jn the last period and turned a lJ.. point deOclt into a .one-point !<ad (57· DIRECl'IONS · Take the Saa Diego ''.Fre;eway to tOS Treewa:J't go north on latU!r. Pioneer lligh ls on the right lidf: o( b ,hnYIY. jual south of the Wulllngton •)llvd. turnoff. ~·r ,, ' "' ' 56) with 2: 35 left In the a:ame. Marina ca me back to tie It on KJpp Baird's fr ee throw with 1:41 remaining. But the Wildcata bad pc>.UeSSion and things """ looking . dim ·I"' \b' Blue and Gold. ' ,, 't FottunattJy1 John Parltr-ol iMaarovta was fooled bJ, the subseqtM!it 'tct' of shooting and be blew both lll'•tls at- tempts with 1:23 ~10. . Marina 's ruck~, , rebounded a.nd Olson ordered a· · eout. He told' bil charges to .or ;'-I.I for one Jut shot and set U.e • . .,p .. MO!ller ...Wd talte I~ boph!c IV pld< up a fool or I basket. , ·• \ •. • , 'l\e Vikings . ........., ~per. tectiy and Mosler 'wound up With the ball with five seconds left. He put up 1 sOOt which was partially, deQttted. , But fortunaftly Ditk Ivie was "tbere to r<boond. Me j>lcked up the ball, had lnsJde 1dvbtNl1 *1. Ult Monrovian. guudlng him, whirled and put the ball through the hof/P jult aa the buner sounded.. \ . ' . "I wish ~ gQyS would learn to .. we Inr those,' 10 and t~int leads when we get u.em, •• was about an 0)800 could aay a/""'ard. Ivie "as bieb-acort:r for Marina with 22, desjJltf! playlng with four Coull against him ~;el the last ball. ~·nt1 .... "" l'Jalrd ·-...... TOl.t>I ' l'O n PfJ ff' ' ' 3 10 102•22 J J ' 1 2 I I $ s I 1 JJ 21 IJ ''"" • ' Mt11rft19' Ull ,,,,_ Wln\tmt ,""_ ,,,_, Pu11tt' "''""' ,_ .. lllf•lt .,.. ,.,. ""'' 0 • 1 0 0 t 1 t . • t\j' ' . . ', ..... s • 1} J ftf.:.: Oilers Trip •' !l\fD, 'att:Ie ' .. ' r.· .. r.;,. eers ,_ • I ' B;. llOG . Ill.SON • ot .. DtlW ·-...,. ·11~ -rolls into the -'t..m4 ol Iha -annual Jloacho Alamllol Invltat!ocal basketball touma· ment tol!lgbt with a data with f{ealtrn at 7:30. . n>e O 11 e r s made It on the ' basis of their 62-41 victory over Mater Del :I'hursday night. " '. ·~· The .~tbeM .o a, corw>1ftion btaoJctt g -af. temoon at 3:30 with Leuzinger, i..tr to Western by a 52-45 ta!Jy. ~ Clemente fell into the other balf of 1he consolation bracket alter loling out to Santa Ana Thursday afternoon, ~-52 .•. The Trltons will battte Los Alamitos, 102-68 loser to Rancho Alamitos. Coach Elmer Com~' Huntington five was hard pressed td come up· with a 25-25 tie at the half with Mater Dei but tbe sec6nd hall was another stoey. The Oilers put on a full~ JlftsS and proceeded tc rip the Monarchs at will. -Lee Walters took a feed from. Roy Miller with 1:23 left in the third period and turned it into a lhre&point j to make it 41-M and from that on it was, no contest. ~ · In fact, Mater Dei was unable t hit a aingle 0field goal from that po until the finish. The Monarchs were held to four grati .shots in tbe fourth quarter while H Ungton was running wild on the ~k .. 'Coach Jerry Tardie'& quintet had mad the Oilers look bad in the first h taking as much as a seven-point lead on three separate occasions. Ralpb Chandos was high point mari for Mater Dei with 15. When he fouled out in the fourtb quarter all Monarch hopes went wilh him. Walters led the Olien with 14 followed . by Mike Contreras (13) and Tony Bonwell (12). HontlMI• ... <fl 1'2)~ ,G ,.T ,, T, Mtttr Dtl (Ill 1 o o 2 Glbrrt o o 1 • H<!llon • I • IJ Norton w•~ Wtll:er Contrer•s Snyder PrlddY H•rt 8Q,,,...ll Miiier Welters FG l'T ,,. Tl' 2 3 l 1 D I I 1 0 2 1 2 l l s J ' l s 1j J t I • o D 1 o Ml;:Men1mln 1 I I 2 CIMU'ldo,. •t2tlles fQllli $ 2 I II W11i<tr S 1 I 11 thui>erl A 6 1 ll TolllS 2'101261 * * 1 • 1 ' 0 1 0 ' lJIS l641 S111 Cltmtnt. {$1) Stnll .t.nt 1111 l'G,.T,FTI' lMibardt 1 s ' 19 D~ Cftrbltn,•n 7 6 ~ 10 G11lt>ert BH>l•mln 2 o l ' Sletlt .t.llH> 2 0 S ~ Cltrk Dllmlnd'lllll D 0 J 0 INV G..i'"ll· «ii J I ,I I LMf Mllthell' 1 0 ' 2 · Totals Tohll• 20 U ll !2 fO l'T l'JI TP S S 2 IS 1 2 l ' 0 2 p a. 6 I 3 ll ' 5 , 17 J.42111 21 ltUtr EslAllcia, rv · Score Wins In . Tournament. By JOEL SCHWARZ "' Of 1119 O.IJy 'llot lt1fl Fountain Valley and Estancia high schools moved into todiy's semi-final round of ·the second annual Troy CbriJt .. mas Invitational basketball tournamf:Dt or. the strength of vasUy different per.. lormances Thursday afternoon in Fut. lerton. Coach John Kasser's Fountain Valley five blew Sonora off the court, 84-53, while Estancia was staggerin~ by SanY. Ana Vafley, 54-Sl, in a g1ame that ·bJ!F too much officiating ·and not enough basketball. · · , In tonight's action, Fountain Valley will meet Troy, a 61-58 winner o v e1r Servite al 8:30 while Estancia takes tin Katella, wbich posted a 69·53 victory over Keinedy, at 7 o'clock. · Thursday, Fountain Valley simply had too much fire-power, bail·hawking de. fense and poise to have any trouble with Sonora , The Barons, who wound up with five- pl.ay.er;s. ~~ lQ or more ~ts, ~ ed away to a U.12 lead in the cpenffig g,29 of firBt penod before baving a tem- porary lapse which enabled Sonora to· close the gap to 23-20 early in the RC· nnd period. But th.at was, the· last time the out-. cotne was in doubL In tbe next few mo--- Dlinls th< B8"ljlS 'Olltscor«! their foet. S:.'f and from there went on to open a !,$-point halltilne bulge, 11.zs. Leading the balan~ Barnn atlsck were Duane Diflle and, ~c Hammer . with 17 and 15 .poln\S. <i•lY Redmond • chipped in with 13 while Doug Wall<er and Dan Shaw had Jf and ltl. The Estancia -Santa' Ana Valley pme wu a comedy cf turnovers, with the officials calling 43 ballJlandling ,vl .. ola'tion1 on the1two chabl .. 'Center Skip WUU.ms· flced lbe Eagles ·With n points.. . ' lcwt • ., IMf'Ws £111111(1a 1 11 11 lt -u .... ht -'n• V1!1W 10 r If " -51 .... .._ fie) -Shh Au V11lky ,0 ,., Pll T, PG 'T ,.,. '" Bl'nltfl I 0 ' 2 Tl\on'.91 • 1 4 1• Wll!IM!sf 10 I H 9w'n"O ! J ' 1 Out• I t I It YINffli t t I 'I Ht~ J t • •=..3 J .... ,t ~it!. : :: ~ ! ~~'" : : :i1':1; ,.,.,.. • I t I ICIV t t l :. TOfllt n 10 11 S. w.ro• t I t " Hllhl 0t 2 "1 Tot•lt to II 11 ktf'I ., °""'" F-flll!I Vallt'f 2l II lt 24 So.tort II t 12 IS Jl .. 111111 Va!Wf IMI ·-· f!l) "•"";or,. r:on,, -'/ifdft 2 9 ) I ll!obl-l I 1 c,.,,m11r I o 1 1 Mor'll ' l 1 Dltlll 1 J J U Cl•tt\ 4 5 ) IJ H•m,,.,...J I 1 U llou ) I t 11 K111111JtJ4 Col-."'0 1 • II!..,_,, ' 1 I U ICl'f\"d'le I t 2 o S"'!lty' It l~O O 1 • W1llltr l 1 JH8otl!n o o 1 t ~1'1 tt lO H"""""t1 JJ To11!1 1' • It IM TOtllt I• ll 1' JI ------------------·---------..,...~--~_.....,-.. "" <"·'f "''"¥9">G .. ,.....,, -, ., ···-.·---.-·----·-------------------- • • --' • , , .. ' " . If, ' • • ·- .. . ~ ~· ' . ' cri..·:i~· ,., . ., .,.,... ,, ,.\" RAY VINES P.ESENl$ "YOU! All iHER :. ! • " ' ' ~"1;\'1(.'ltt ,; ' ·• '6 ' r&N "O U VER @r!F ' :.·: .,:..\! ' •! A '!69 CHRYSLER ''TOWN·;& .. CQUNTRY'~: ' ~ . . "STAT10'4 :,W,,AGON '• .' , ' . ' ' . ' "' • . . ... 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" '66 MERCURY STATION WAGON. Radio, heat· · er, white wall lites, Lie. VWP842. s99 s29" Mo. '· :D•-. . . ht 24 Me. O.A.C. · • lnc;!IHIN Taio; ........ LlcenM .. ..,, ....... 1 " '63 PLYMOUTH VS, sta·~ard trans, radio, heater, power ~leering. #5780. '99c . -'27'' ML Dew1 ht J4 Mc . O.A.C. . .. IMll:MIH TIW l .,, LlcenM . .... ., .• ~ " . :! . . " '" Siii " . '"" ....... 'I OPtN 7 DAYS A WEEK CASH o'r tllADE-:DlLIVERS ~i .. . ' .. ANY o• THI ca' u · ·a'aovE IRAND ·Nrw· + '•ru ond !Jc..i. °" ApproY..i °"411t · : • • ' • . .. ', • • ,. ci.J. • t '64 CHRYSLER . STATION WAGON. Automatic' transmission, radio, heater, pow- er steering & brakes. White waO , tires. #2364 . 1495 • '66 PONTIAC ' BROUGHAM. Full power, includ· ing electric windows & electric seats.· I.Jc.· R'FU1984 , · · '68 VALIANT 4 oo0r. Automatic transmission, . radio,. heater, white wails. Bat.- a nee of 'factory \varranty. Lie. UHS-904 ~66 CONTIN.ENTAL . :, · Fun power; factory 3.tr, ·1~ather · .. : · interior, Landau top. Lie. RTJ 207. ~-~ .. '· '63 T-BIRD Full power, electric--windows .&,; seat, air conditiontng. A nice car at a real nic~ price. Lie. CSG 096. . s·99 '45" Mo , . D•n ,., 24 M•. 0 .A.C. $895 '66 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill.· Automauc· tra~inis sian, radib, -beater, air cOnditlo~ . ing, white side wall tires. Lie. ·TCM 175 $1 59 5 . '• • 1-1 IOACI 1:30 A.M.· TO 10. P.M. 1 itt D_. wlll ~I"' fllelt ••J lllM tw..fN111 ... .,. ..... ti... 1t ··'' , . .. .. ' • • AT THE LAKEWOOD . TURNOFF OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY FROM ORANGE COUNTY 543 .. 6663 527-2341 .... ~ ....-::.-.-.., . . . . ' ' " ·RAY VINES "4201 WILLOW . " . Ll>NG BEACH . I ,_ H~. ' 426•7301 . ----..--....-.~·...:·~· ~·...:.· .;;....;.;~ ..>JCSr-...::Q.~..-._. .. _. .. ..,.,..,..,..,..._...,...,_,. • ... .. I • I . . ., ...,. • I • I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SA~L· HOUSES FOR SALE S FOR SAU HOUSES FOR SALE t HOUSES FOii SALi! ik>usES FQ.11 SALE ·;;i Geno~~ra~liiiijiiiijiiji~lOOCliiiiiiGeo~~,.~r~ali;;;;;iiiiiiiii~lOOOiiiiil;°";-;'°;;";1;;;;;;;;;;:;;1~000;Goill~;-;:;;•1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;;;000:;;1 ;Go;;MA;;;~l i!!!!iiiiiiiliii000;;11 Go:;;:;ne;;;r;;•l~~?=;;:;1;ilo;;;-O i::::=::::..---...iJ:::llllO:: WMlcllff 12!IJI Hunll!'f'!n BHch I • L"•SE/OPTIO;r avm B/B sv OWNER. 3 BR 2 ba, ~ nftlA excel cond. 2 blk• Wet ctlltf 4 BR, 3 balh Executive I e .. ·•· .. .. .. ,• pre:Jen/:J NEWLY AVAILABLE LIDO Choi<·e large corner location. 3 bdrn1s, 2 baths, dining room. Most unusual !or Lido -3 car garage + parking. Lovely sunny patio & max- imu1n privacy. $62,500 -by ap- pointment. SPECTACULAR BAY VIEW - DOVER SHORE.S BLUFF corner, 5 bdrm & 3 baths of custom luxury. Room for pooJ. Excellent terms tan be arranged \vith seller. Asking ,65.000. ':Open Saturday & Sunday 1605 WESTCUFF DR .. NB 642-5200 RART 1969 You Won't Believe A home could be this im- maculal('. From. llie-glean1· , , , r:•;:hl>P<:;::,:A;:-~;::;:-;::=;::.J w111eate<1 & ril1c1w s rn· HOMES OPEN HOUSE rn11l& pool, upgraded , g 0 GE E11tbluff 1242 carpet1, l'U8tom drape!<. I REALTY SUNDAY prtoe '"·'""' • 1330 ~•· VIEW =~iw:~ = FOR Sale by Owner. Con-010n1h. Open This Weekend Nt\V custcim Spanls.h home 1 TO 5 PM priced dominlum, EastbluU. 3 bdr. f '''ith room tor a pool. Spac-4066 Germiinder :!.etopment ~ 2 bath, built.ins. Fully 2946 MAUI PLACE iCIU5 Spuisb tile ~I')' Univer1ity Village Venk. Over 200 horn· carpeted, draped, 11 ea r opening to large ~ I!Virw 1 ..... ,_ ..... •vtr ,A Se••· 10 ... et a rd n g soon. IChooh and c bu r c be 1. in ~ Verde -exciting unusual new cus-.i: .. ._ ---=-~ • .._ ",.. "' -· .__ ..... ._,_;,,., ...... 644-1419 roon1, formal ....... ,. rm; Gmnainder) ...... ...,,.,. u ..... ,_ ... .,, II L=========:<. tom "just completed. Cathedral ceiling, "ele-richly l*l'lf"led t.arnlly .rm Si!lg1e story 3 Bdrm8 2~ ttie bldr .. draw pea.. vated" living & dining areas-very dillerent. wllh wljt bar, 2 fut.places,, Bath Tolwnhouse. Upgraded can Jim Wood 54fi..5992 115 MAGELLAN STREET and a wOnller kitchen in \vaJ· W/W Carpet,Cuslom DN.p.. nut. 4 btdrooms. 3Y. baths. es. Fireplace. Complete Vacant. Clean and neat as a pin. Greet 3+ Op1:n S•t & Sun Elec. Kitchen Bit-ins. va- family rm. in Mesa del -Mar wilh lg; well 1036 eesc1dor cant. Q u i c k Possession. ld!tpd. yard, shake roof, boat gate, etc. Price only .......... $71,lSO I -~~--==~ 117t MAU) CIRCLE LUXURY BAYFRONT 4Becr.m-"POOL" · ·~-v rd 1 e1y -·•to tr' l ·1 Bed......,, 4 '"'"'· poW<l« OPEN HOUSE $24,900 -"0$" DOWN tn ~ e &-OV \;u.l) m 1-evel new· roon1 • a 1-eaI magnificent ly re.decorated, ~ car garage-huge activity home witb ro ft. trontage, SUN • 1-5 PM to a G.l. "2 baths. Family room. Vae9, at-immediate possession. $169,00l. 1 room. Quality new carpet- CaD f 720 Canclt .. tlck L•n• ,UV; drapes, Det'Orator mir· 2905 ELLESMERE AVE. or appt. ~ Blycl'flt ~ rors. Lovely heated & filter- Sharp 3 + family rm, pins formal din . r1n. N~ YEAR'S \Take Sandalwood ol.f ed pool, Loads of decking & · th M V rd · ,...... Santiago to O).ndlestick) patio areas. ~1720 in e esa e e Cambndge series. Your SPECIAL Gracious 4 Bedroom 3 Bath TARBELL 2955 Hi1rbor choice oC ne\Y crpts. th.ruout. Sample on 4 bedrooms, dining nn. fam-Quality Home. Open beam- premises. Just painted inside and out. ily rm, 3 baths. A home ed ceiling in Living Rm, Lease 1500 Adams at Harbor, C .M. (near Cin<>ma Theatre) 546-5880 v.·ith a real warm quality Dining Rm, Kitchen & Fam-le 0 t• with a tradfHonaJ Frerrll Uy Room. All E1ec. Bit-ins. Of ase p IOft fireplace ii) fJ.shionable Bay· Heavy Duty Central Vac-3 Bedroom, 2 bath home plus crest for only $54,500. uwn System. 18x36 Heated 2 f3edroont view apL $52, 750 Call for appointment. & Filter Pool Ow-ner has George Willii1mson Corona dtil Mar 1250 OPEN SAT.& SUN OCEANVIEW 4 BR plu.a tarn rm, 2 tNt., only 7 )'l'S old •• new ~·· bit-ins, Bargain at $36.500. 506 Rockford Plaie«1 Cameo Hig!Uands, Cd M SCENIC PROPERTIES 675°S726 iiiiiiiiii:i I BROADMOOR }!arbor Viev.· beautiful •I bdrm former mOOel horne with fabulous view of Bay & Ocean. 2 • 4 BR's ll•rl, ·579:; d 11, no se<.\)ods. New paint. GpxJ area. 1 tlAFFDAL REALTY I 8140 Warner 812-4105 3 BR. 2%: ba. ulll rm, llm nn, lndscpd. shakr 1-Dol . $25,500. 01-.·ner t r a ri s . 8<7-555.1 I Laguna Beach . 'l~~!l •EAL ISTATE ......... (IUT - lAfUMA 6U.C:# '494·1177 17J)S I • ' In )'OOl" O"'n home. Tbis 3 BR + family rm. is vacar.t & wailing. Beaut. kept, Jols of shrubbery al);! b r i c k planters, Jg. side patio, l'IJ)rinlders front & rear. 2 BA. bit-ins. R1n. lor boat, Nr. ahopping an d sctila. Aakirtg only $26.500. 1°"' ... ing hardwood Ooors 10 the I'"""""""""""""'""""""""""""""'""""""""'"" park lik(' rear ya rd this Newport He'ights OPEN HOUSES VIEW -1324 Galaxy Dr. V JEW ·"" 1236 Polaris Dr. built aoother home • hence Realtor the good price of $65.COO. 673.4350 Eves: 673-1564 SliJ.500 Don Bird Associi1t•s 6/;;i.0907. ~7·70~1. 1138-6:i8l ~lONARCl-1 BAY · In • fhis home -shirle's. Traffic frtt streets are a haven Jar lhe Channer little ones. 1\vo large bed· 3 o~-2 bath · · ood ~-'-1. °"""'""'u. in pnme MOTHER-IN-LAW QUARifRS Bay & Beach DAVIDSON Realty R•alty, Inc. $8,000 Ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 2407 East Coost H1vy., CdJ\f Price unbelievable but !rue rooms, w ""'"'''6 .ire-Newport Beach area. Hard· place, dooNe ~tac.bed gar-wood floors. plaster. excel-~· a n d bright ttJUntry lent condition throughout. kitchen. An unbeatablE" East-Double garage 10x20 V.'Ork- This is an ideal set up in as much as the home is con- wrtible to fit your needs . The mother-in-Jav.• quarters can be a bachelor unit 11•ith john macnab Realty Company 675-3000 for this Vacant lot. Eastside R·2 LOT. 2 BR OOme ' =========: j location.. v."/poo.l Central Cdl\I. Forc-546-5460 Eves. 548-8584 de to seU. Days • 540-4469 private area, a mastcrpi,cc of Early California cle4,lgn creating a warn1 & grac@ius ocean vie\v hon1e, dralllftiC 2 story entry, tiled galletla, spacious open beamed li~g rm, large dining rm, 4. 1;9!d. rms (huge ntasler suile), den v,./FP, 4 balhs, healed pool. Golf course, OC.f,t·h clubhouse ,<: tennis c!;f.u·t available. Price -$179,oOO. side buy at $!!2,COO. shop & double' carport \\'i th S81 Dover Dr.. Suite 101 i\lacco Realty Co. Bldg. 642-8235 fMlt Colesworthy & Co. alky .,..,.,. ,., """' • "' trailer -$26,500 -\ OU n\8.ke the tenns. 642-T177 a hide-a·way bed or ofl<' of •··• f7!'3i't"ll' " ---~ the bedroorns in the main ltiiiil-iiiiiiiiiilimiit 1<$3 Baker. C.M. OPEN HOUSE Sat&SunltaS 1904 Harbor Blvd., c.~I. Open Eves. Easlside Spec. Buy 646-7171 546-2313 _THE eyEAL E.STATERS home could be llS('(j, The home has three bed rooms, living room, kitcht-n and din- ette area. Large covered patio, loads or cement work. double garage on alley and 2730 Albatross Dr. The largest home in this fine Mesa Verde area. Room to spare '1.ith S P-:!rooms. 3 batbs -wrought iron fence arounl Sun9et Pool with ex-tra Party me patio. -Ex· ecu,tive liviqg f o r W .500. Euy Terms or Trade. 1 block from goU cool'!k'. l f .. i0ii0iiOiiOii0ii0ii0ii0i•I access to rear yard. FULL BR fixe r upper on 7500 sq ft $Z0,9SO PRICE ONLY $24,750. How R·l lot. could you ask for more!! 646-7171 546-2313 . THEeyEAL E S TATER.S . ---- l9XIDOWN Fabulous euts*. location. 4 bedroomS. 2 llllhs. vacant, move-in tOOay. Price !lash· ed to $22.500. • "RING" 1l::tf.SPRING ····~ 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.t-.1. GUARANTEED INCOME For Real Estale licensees during training periOO in ac-- tive Harbor Area Office. For interview, Rad background " qualificatku to: SALES TRAINEE BOX P 654 DAILY Prwr $12,500 10% dn or make oiler. Newport •• Vic!oriai v.11-ae11 We hlvti 17 Unih on 11.i ac, do,\·n1m111 Costa Mes;i $152,000 ld Br .. dw•y 645.0181 2215 Irvine (Corner of H•ather) Open 11. S Unusual split level 4 bdrm home with delightful pool. Vacant & ttady for you. J•rry Fr•vd Charles Arnold :& E. 17th St., C.:'.I. Realtor:; &16-7755 Sharp 3 BR 2 bath Condo- minium in choice location, near pool & club house. This is the popular "Richmond" model. Call !lO\\' for appoint. ment to s.'<•. .. PEl=!i:!ON ·,:I -.C T.~ ...... ,~ .. * 642-lnl Anytime * Young, Energetic Real Es- tatt-sal('Sman to work in modem. aggressive office, Experienct> not necessan", Broker training available. Liberal Commissions -Pro- Leve\ vacant lot in fabulou.; Newport Beach area. EZ terms. Owner will ca r r y Joan. FANTASTIC' POTENT- IAL DRIVE BY TODAY. "Ting" 10 UNITS fit Sharing Pla.n. $23 950 JR ESTATE 8 "·· Ut. M. LaBORDE, Realtor I!\ SPRING ....... REALTY • • • on 3 lots._:' Jarent to VLt'tin· 2'10 E. lith SL 646-()'j:iS Small dov.n pa,ymcn!. 3 gen. front. $1.j;i,rol. •• "anytime" 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M. erou.s med bedrooms, 'l &.lboa R•al Estate Co. SCA ~~ly· F:U~~t:'e~ 700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa AM-LETS 673-4140 STORAGE GARAGE :;::~ ~,"°.;...::'°s:7,,o;i.............................. ANSWERS TARBELL 2955 H1rbor ffiARCE your want ad now. $20 MONTH Figure -Enemy -NOOll(' - General IDOOG.Mral 1000 Imbibe -BEEN BORN !.==================~ Everybody in favor of birth 403 Newport Bl\'d. Garage #1 Ope n for your inspection F.d Riddle Rellltor 646-8811 Coldwell, Banker OFFERS: Exquisite Hom• Dover Shores waterfront 3 Br's + di n rm. Lovely view liviogroom. Wet bar. Custom Spanish design $129,500 . Mrs. Raulston .- MIMJnificent Bayfront Private dock for large cruiser. Each Br has own bath + huge fam rm -powder room -wet bar -(ovely patio ... $119,000 \V. HBase 5 BR Udo-Cut $10,000 :·Elegant custom near new with formal D.R. & wet bar, slate entry. large tam rm. Re- duce<!. for quick sale. Owner n1oved, Now . .. .. .. . • . S79,500 Jae Clarbon ·. OFFICE OPEN SATURDAYS COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 2290 E. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH KIN35l , t"Ontrol has already BEEN BORN. Open Houses THIS WEEKEND x .. , ttriis ti.""r ~ wl" .,.. tM1 _.... •• , .... """' .............. leteatlen ........... . .. detcrlbH ........ ....,, by lllfnrtkl ... . ....,. le ........ DAILY PILOT WANT ADS, htnn ......... .,.. .............. ,. '"' -.,.,... i. lllt ... ..,.,....,._ t. fth: col•-H<• Frlcloy. HOUSES FOR SALE (3 Bedroom) 460 62nd St. (Newport Shores\ NB 642-4772 (Sat & Sun Aft. JO:AM) (3 Br. & family or Den) 1129 Pembroke Lane (Westcli!O NB 548-8281 (Sal & Sun 12-4) (4 Br. & Family or Den) 506 Rockford Place. Corona de! l\lar 675-5726 !Sat & Sun) •2215 Irvine !Cor. Heather) NB 646-7755 (DailY 11./i) * 1842 Santiaao OT. (Dover Shore6) NB 646-1550 (Daily 10-5) ' 2882 Stromboli (Mesa V<rde) CM 540-1720 (Sun 1-5) ..... ** W•twfntlt ** * .... ...i WeterfN!lt One of A Kindl 20C \VESTCLlFF DH.IV~ 646-ml Opr..'n Evt'll. A LOVE AFFAIR L" 1ncvilabl(' whC'n you see thi5 3 BR with it's lg. rum- pus rm. & lovely htd. pool am.id tropical ldscpg. - spac. liv. nn., expoged bean1 ceiling & firepl. 2 BR Design<'CI for entertaining. UnusuaJ decour. choice lo- ca!ion. Only $39,750. E·Z terms. .. 1003 Baker, C.l\l. VfTERANS NO . DOWN Beautiful Easi.siUe OOme liV· ed in by adults only. l BR 1% baths, living ....._ fa1nily room. Large rovered patio, double garage, profeaiona.l· ly landscaped. Only $24.,500 . Rltr. 646-3928 EV!'. &12.0lSS *LACHENMYER Duplex $24, 950 E."lSlside Costa !ltesa. Hard- wood floors &. double car garage separating un1Lc; (2 bdrms e rhl. Extn!r large kitchen area In l unit Wells-McC1rdl1, Rltrs. 1810 N•wport Blvit:, C.t.1. 548· 7729 Eves. '44-0fi.SJ H OLIDAY BONUS- Tak,. over low ii\t(ll"l'&:t 6r, FHA toe.ii. Pay only $181 per n1onth including ta."'t &: insurance. LiV!' in a bia: 3 + family Mesa Vertlt-home on a ftet.>.llned cuJ..<Je-sac. Amtk>wl owner uys quick ~ion. Ca I I 540-1151 (open eves) &ritage Rea! Dtatc 4 BED~23,750 f"rull trees, 1\.tsh planla, shrub11. LlLxutiotL'! kl!chcn. El~anl rinipl.11('(', ;,.IQ.172<! TARBELL 29SS Harbor DALLY PIUJJ' "'ANT ADS! WEED IT & REAP POOL 4 BRs. 2 baths, needs some TLC. But has a last years pri{'{' of only S26,95Q. Can be purchas- ed NO DOWN VA or LOW DOWN FHA. Hur· ry! Hum! ~ co:Ts ~WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pen Evenings) Havasu Lake or 83a-1062 eves. Costa Mesa 1100 _....;.,....;.,=:...--.:.:.:.: Balboa P•ninsula 1300 5 BDRM Mesa del t-.lar hon1e, ne('ds a little \l'o1·k but a steal at $24,500! No clO\\'ll GI or $23.950 con- ventional. Tarbell Pat O'Toole 040-1120 or 545-JffiS 4 BR 2 bath. $24:950. Existing Jo'HA. $160 Pm. Fin. flex- ible. Agt. 838-6341 Mesa Del Mar 110S SALE. lease. rent by owner · 3 BR, lam rm, 1~ BA. $26.00l. 549-2352 01" (213J 670-5000 Men Verde 1110 S BR. Republic Home, 3 Ba., family rm. Very Special! O\\·ner $47,500. 546-7868 Bug's Ear Cute A Gem on the "Point" 3 BR. 112 baths. fii-eplare & lwna.c., igi! dbl gar. Near public beach. E.xeel lent ron- dltion. ·king S~0.250. BURR WHITE, Realtor Z9Q1 Ne1rport Blvd., N.B. 67S-4630 Eves 673.0859 NJ::\V, VIE\V 110~1E -Nti-th side Lag u n a, attractive home with 5 large bedrtns, dining rm, dC'Juxe kitchl>n, 3 baths, Ju.xurious carP,e ls & drape~. sparkling crlan vie\\"S -~69/>!XJ_ TURNER ASSOCIAT S 682 !Ito. Coast Bh·tl. ' ! Investment & Income Laguna Beach !TI·ll 49 1-d.TI· 2 Homes & Guest Apt. well Handyman Speciall""" ' bit C<Jncrete block construe-Income Units : lion, near beach & partial Loe. on Occ-anside o{ I ~Y ocean view, $34,500 150 yds Uum Beach. 4 /g1 ! Graham Realty Apt, units, neC'ds paint! .~I Near N.B. Post Ofc. 641).241·1 good general clt'anup. '°.I ..,.""""""""""""""""'' f TENTIAL I N C 0 t.1 E i."\·. :::: CEEDING SI0.000 ANNUf.I.,.I on lhe California side of 1-lav-LY Price $69.950. l asu Lake. "All year" vaca-1--------I ;;;L;;id;;o;;;;ls;;le;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;1;;3;5;;1 I MISSION REALTY ~\; tion home in the water/ Newport Be,.ch 1200 [' 9&5 So. Coast, Laguna • desert ptayaround. Balbo• isl•nd Luxury · BAYFRONT WESTERN AWARd LOTS $3500 to $4200 1~ block from oct n, close Asking $115,000 DUPLEX w:ith 3 & 4 Br. Semi Cus~ Sho-.1111 by appoin!nll~nt only, lo shopping. 3 bdrm, l~ 3 BR, 2 baths up. 2 BR&: 1 Homes rrom $35,450.00 ?iJw· E. J. N•V. & Jack Bale bath. !\taster bdrm has own BA down, 2 Frplcs, Bayfont under construction. Locatrdi * HAVASU * bath. living rm trplc opens patio with room lo enlarge. on fl>Iountain View Drive, blf to lge patio w/all conveni-Walker Realty Tyrol Drive. 1 North Estates encea for entertaining. F .A. 1136 Via Lick. 675-5200 A.P.I. SALES AGENTS 1860 B Newport Blvd., C~I heat. Rm to bid addt'l. unit. Phone 714-89'1-7701 for 642-4994 or 545-3483 Bkrs. INo. 100.C) $55,000. PROP- ERTIES \VEST 675-<\J-O A HAPPY NEW YEAR ---,*~L"O°"T~R"···2-*c--"" further inI01·1natlon -132')(305'R·2 Nicc le\'el fand EasL<>ide C.osta Mesa -owner will take oiler subj~t to R·3 variance to build 20 uni1 s . priced at $45,000. Also an. other 66' X 300' contiguous lot available. Better a c t quick on this parcel. CHIL.i' ROBINETT REA,LTOR &45--0128 BROADMOOR French Provincial Jn !his deHghtful 2 bd, 2 b.'lth Cl be h & I homC'. Choice location on osc to ac s lcc>S. Large U-shaped fioor plan. piarza. Exrellent Terms. Terms. Owner. 893-7837 : Back Bay cul-de-sac. Pleas<--BDRM 3 bath T t II r "A"•• Call to :"e. $62.500. '* , . . op ,() t·a or appt. ""'1""Ttl 4 \V Id o & W R. C. GREER, Realty or . CT'an moun n LARGE Liv nn & din rm, frplc, crpts, drps, elec kitcb, 2 bdr, den. Can bid another unit. Low dn FHA or VA. S23.500. Owner 642-4.441. BEAUTIFUL & Custom built 3-116 Via Lido 6]3-9300 -"'v;=..,.=·='="=·500=.75"J.=7=366==:=, Huntington Beach 1400 Lagun1 Niguel 1707 RIPE! NEW 4 BR 3 BA, tam r;n. F or Quick. SalC'. $138 per formal dining, large view month includes all on ttlls lot . S36,000. $2.000 dO\vn. gori:;eous 3 bedroom jewel. OWNER 213/244-7'45 Featuring forn1al dining 1--------- HARBOR VIE\V Lg 2 r-& Fam rm, 2 CORON A DEL MAR ba . & room for addition room! Gracious living room with brick fireplace. LUX· urious carpeting and drapes. A.<J..ing $19,000. Duplexes Far 5i1le 1~ NEWPORT Duplex for sa)e. 200' to beacb. Or will tr.;lc equity for goad Lagima residential lot. P. 0. 8llt: 1423, Hunt.in1tton Be a ch . TRI-LEVEL MODEL w/lovely view. 2518 Via EXECUTIVE 4 BEDROOl\t l\1arina. Owner. 642-3219 Dave G•mbill BY OWNER 3 BR 2 ba. IH.J-0020 Excel. cond. 2 blks \\'estcliff TRADE 4 er& Pool shops & schools. 548-Ulll in Southgate for 3 Br {Costa BLUFF'S, E-Plan 3 + den, Mesa). Hm has 1900 sq ·• nearly new. Beautifully dee. bltns, hrdwd firs, pan. Oiv ,•='""o:;"~""=· ;,644-=:1;::529=== Newport Shores 1220 & din nn l 2 Ila, :! furncs. ;;. Lots/closets, dbl gar. 1\ppn: $6,0 eq. Call or write Alice Sv.·ehla Rltr, ' 10'l2'2 Calif. Southgate. 213/564-3377 WRAP IT UP ~ FOR th& NEW YEAR e Fish·Swim-Boat e 2 story, 3 Br. in exclusive Newport Shores. Call aft 5 pn1 1vkrlys. &l2-4Tn CHAR.GE IT! Walker & Lee 7682 Edinger 342-4456 Open Eves. 540-5140 NO DOWN GI Sharp Sol Vi.sta, large {'(lver- ed pa!io. block fcnre. shake roof. Close lo schools &. ma· jo. shopping. Just reduced to $2-1.500 for quirk sale. Piiul Jones R11lty 847-1266 Eves. 536-T124 Nero a tiarben:rtangl"~ Find i1 with 1 want 1d' (714) 84&-00ti Owner ' ' BUSIEST m<U"kt-tplace , u town. The DAILY PIL(n Clu!ilied sectinn. .sairt mortt')', Ume & e!Iort. i...aoll " BUS IFSI' marketplace tin town. Tbe DAD..Y Pn.br Classified srectiou. S a w • money time & ettort. 1..4'* 4 bdrm 3 ba. fam rrn hon1e. Atrlun1. pa.nora111ic view. Built by rv AN WELLS · Dov· er Shores. 11,\PPY HAPPY 10000.nerail IOOO'Gener•I 104(> R.oy J, Waird Co. 1842 Santiago Dr. 6.J&.l5:"i0 CALIFORNIA XMAS GIFT Give her this 2 bedroom and POOL home! Room to add on. boat yard, hnmedi.ate occupancy. Easts1d<' C.M Price S23.950. JEAN SMITH, R••ltor 400 E. 17th, C.l\t. !:i~;t:J."1 In Broadmoor, CdM 4 BR hqme w/finest v.a1('r View beautiful car p ct s. drapes. Fitzmorris Realty 613-901 • -$23;9sO·l-NO-DOWN- Pride Of (},vnenrhlp! Spac· laua bedroom!, 2 biitM. l"trttilace. Luxurlou:c built. In ·r:ai:we A oven. Landscap-~ lo pe.rlt'CUon ! 5'I01 i10 TAR&ELL 2955 Harbor WANTED 't'O BUY 3 or 4 bedloon\ hoU.w, lllkl' ovrr loan -payments unrlm- $13.1.00. ll.~vr 1"1111h 11'11' f"llUi· ty, Call ~~ ~Jter 5 ~ PM SOCK IT 1 u 'EM' S©\l~}il-~£~S" Solve 4Simple Scramblftl Word PU!Zlt for a c1iucklt O Rll!Orra11g• lrter5 cif !lie lour lla"Ombled words be-- low !o fOnn four simple words. tURIGE : I I I' I' INEYEM I . I' I' I [soNEo I L I I' I Everybody in foYOr of birth ..--------·-control hos already --. rM.:.;,;.I ;:.I .:;lp;I E:.--~-11 ll·::n I I' I I' I e c ... ,,.,. "'' ··-_... • . by lilli11g in ,,... 1111aing wordtr • )'OU dMop from ftp No. 3 --~ f' II t! !' ....... SCRAM·LETS ANSWER IN CLA,SIFICATION 9300 ·-----·--"'-"' ..... '"""'----~~ ---------------------------------------~-------------------··..--------~------·-----~---- , ,. Are Yot.J Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers? See If You Have Any Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD 1. Stove 2. Guitar 3. Baby Crib 4. Electric Saw S. Camera 6. W.tsher 7. Outboard Motor I. St1r110 Set' 9. Couct./ to. Clarln1t 11. Refrigerator 12. Pickup Truck 13. Sewing Machine 14. Surfboard lS. Machine Tools 16. Dishwasher 17. Puppy 18. C•bin Cruiser 19. Golf Cert 20. Barometer 21 . Stamp Collection 22. Dinette Set 23. Play Pen 24. Bowling Bill 2S . W1ter Skis 26. Free1er 27. Suitcase 28. Clock Will -Sell Fast! 29. Bicycle 30. Typewriter 31 . Bar Stools 32. En~yclopedi• 33. Vacuum Cleaner 34. Tropical Fish 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 36. File Cabinet 37. Golf Clubs 38. Sterling Silv•r 39. Victorian Mirror 40, Bedroom Set 41 . Slide Projector 42. Lawn Mower 43. Pool Table 44, Tires 45. Piano 46, Fur Coat 47. Drapes 48. linens 49. Horse SO. Airplane SI. Organ S2 . Exercycl1 S3. Rare Books S4. Ski Boots SS . High Chair 56. Coins S1. Electric Train 58. Kitten 59. Classic Auto l-0. Coffee T1bl11 61 . Motorcycle 61. Accordion 63. Skis 64. TV Set 6S. Workbench 66. Diamond Watch 61. Go-Kart 68. Ironer 69. Camping Trailer 70. Antique Furniture 71 . Tape Recorder 71. Sailboat 73 . Sports Car 74. Mattress, Box Spgt 1S. Inboard Speedboat 76. Shot9un 77. Saddle 78. Dart G3me 79, Punching Bag 80. Babv Carriage 81. Drums 82. Rifle 83. Desk 84. SCUBA Gear These or any other extra thin9s around the house may be turned into cash with a DAILY PILOT WANT-AD so • • • Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 CYOUR CREDIT IS GOOD> DAILY PILOT WANT ADS WILL WORK FOR YOU! , r rld&y, Otttmbfr 27, l %8 RENTALS 'lENTALS RENTALS Houu1~~rnl~ad Ap tL ~urnlthtd Apts. Unfurnl&f)ecl -------·I Coron• dtl ~~r-3~0 Balboa 4300 L1gun1 S.1ch 5705 RENTALS HouM.S Furnl1hed 2100 Costa Meu --------~ 2 Ult. '" den, 1'Mllkll!, cbsc l>UPL..E:X 3 ijH., 2 ha rrJ•!c, CLEAN &chek»r Apll. 100 CLIFF DRIVE 10 5hopplna;. DXl/mo t>Oln· cri>t&._ dt1Jlll>11, i:ar. 1~1tio All utU, lnci ''TS up LUXURY l'URN/UNFURN pletel,y twiu¥bed. Av111J,.Jan I S200 mo. 6~. 6TJ.'l.\.l6 315 £. 8alb0& Blvd. y, .. ..1 .. LOUe. l A 2 Bdr1111. P<>min RlJ,y "3-1771 --B4L80A ·" SU.960 1tr;.., to .,,._ A Shops ~=:"'.'.:=;;::'~"=:;;;;;~I !H~u~n~l!!l•~9!!:1on~_ll8e'!!'1e:_lh~34~00~1N·~£W~""'lc-;,Br,-.-,dplx-:--,.-,-.-,,..'11 Ocnnvtew from M!rl Apt. Newport Beach 'l200 FREE RENTAL BOOK ::,a;«;a ~to,._~~ no b'Ol:D ~r;.;P· ltaal! ~~~21~~~~5 Wa.Dlrokre'"rk &Rno\\'.<L' ee Laguna Blach 4705 AEG~E,,ST, ATE Ufil pd. Ad ults only. 613-:D!:! ,., ... Dalbo• lsl1nd 2355 7682 •. , 1'.lODERN Vk•w l\pt. north R 1 I W d .. . .. ll{•'l'r , <>nd, 2 i!tlory, 2 BR. l "'ii en 11 1nte 5990 ~·"' Open Ev~. ~ltJ..il !!l li:.i ') i;11ndc1:ks aar l blk · 'BRH SI= ··" 1 --'" '" • \YAN1ED Cut 11t•" 0< oui.. '"mo. wro 1·r. 3 BH, l' l<.1, l J\H Imm llllUl)PlJlli-bc&ch. Very plU!lh.. 0 I 1' I · b I ISLAND RF.ALTY, 67~1100 bltatll SJ~ lllO. :.i:!&-7744 S260 mo.~:.! uv c~ l'&,."" w nplwn uy. 1111.ys or C\'l'S. Allall l2/U ---Wrhr C'urtl~: ~ Villa .:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: l ---· RE NTALS Pacilic, Hntg Ek-Ji. 9'2646 ' ag una Beach 2705 llONEYMOON 1•0! I a~·· 11itp\cal sct11ng rM•ur ht•u• h. ! br, 11; bu. frp!!', pal1u, ""u"BRl' S'.!00 1nd. 49!l-19lli t BR hoU5l' 'A'/ 1-:Ul'!.il o..it!ai;o.• I ,, btllll. fJ'PI<·. lrg pr1 yi•d Sl65 1.;/ )T·~ ISt·. R<'fi-n·11 I Jfl+-55(),3 "\'~'S ' Ouplex•s Furn. 2975 11tJrLE:X: ~{I Block to i)l·a··h. l\1110. Off i,1rf!'l.•I 1>a.rku11: ltt•ft•rrnCl's ""luirt'll. It! . ..It h St. NB. 421.l! PH 1-::!111 ur l'.!13) LA 5-5248 ,NTALS Hous•s Unfurnished LIO:A~f: 3 ho.fr. ran1 rni, :i•; Apts. Unfurn i1htd J;;J.1PWYE'o lady want;-1 ha, tlu1 rni, ,;:an.I serv, Xlntl--'------'--t·url(I Sl7-~Y:.!i G I 5000 BR Un!urn Apt beach at'Ca ~ ----· -1;~eiiniieiiriiaiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol 10 SUIJ. Gur or ca.rporl rite 642-0086 al!/$ Santa An• Heights 3630 -.-LANDLORDS-.-VEN DOME OCEANF!lU'liT. 1. a r ~ r t•hnr111 3 Bil. .:; BA. S:O:iO. L\IMJ\CU' ATI•: APT~' l:\l .\1f>:O. OCX1JPA;<;(''( J"IU::E ltt:NTAL SERVICE Hrukrr :!34-6982 Laguna Beach 3705 Close to Shopping, Park Room s for Rent 5995 --;------;----~-• Sp.irlous 3 Ur's, 2 U.1 l BDR. kllohenette, TV, l\ION,~R?~ tlfl \ All~A e ~ RR. w/dl•n or oh•. hco.ih'ti poQ!, Maid Serv. $25. lAlVf>.L'l OC.t:AN VIE\V e Swun Pool, Put/grc...'n v.·k up 548--2129 t l{<lrn1.-._ & "un1w111 • f''l'Jl\. Ind1vllndry fac'ls Jz=°"·==c-===== I l'" Baths. sn:. ~lon111. 184S An•heim Ave. G t H s-s Aduhs 4!16-1'.!l:l lict. llJ.,• Pt.1 ("0~1'A f.IE!-:A Cl.!-1821 ues omes ..,.., AHOVI:: ll•gh S1·hool, t BR, ----PRNATE Room for f.'!dc rly rust ic «han11. $110. Ll'aSC, 11n1hulatory J ad y, l.ovi'ly n.'f-. ."hl•w Jc111. ~. ~.1 1..;1 Costa Mesa 51 00 c1u,.., good food . Ni<..'<' Vista Dn\r gard1•n surroun ding~ .__... e:xcrllru\, p:u k . 11l1e sur-Ava1labl<' llO\V. Cull 548-4753 General 3000 Laguna Niguel 3707 r oundings for edu.11s rt'1JUil' 8 . R 1 I 6060 --------~ ini: peace & qu il't. us1ness •n a J;ENT or lt•a."-1-. ~. Blt ~ I Bit, ,\\;ul nuw Sleo:, incl D1scri1uinative 'fenanl9 haU1, good co11d1ti4~n. Y.,1r,·r & 1rasl1 , l'ru1rip:1ls NE\Y builtl lnJt for lease. Pi·11nr location in Laguna Beneh. 2Hi0 sq It, v.•i!h or without e11u.iprnent. fffust !ICC lo appt'l:•ciatc. $•1·.r.1 C II I I 1 I & I l • 1 l. 2 & J BDIU\1. ,',J1TS. ~·JU rnu. II • a I' r y on Jt'. ...i a...i inu" rcn POOL. NO CIULDHEN ~J'I0-1151 llr~·i!ugc R r a J ... rl1•nning rlrposiL 9ll:i-65!1;., Estalc NE\V 4 BR, L;iguna Nti,:ucl MARTINl9UE Vir11·! tl7!i P<'r 1110. lca;;I', GARDEN APTS. Costa Me1a 3100 21:)/241~784~ ----------------·! JSth & Santa Ana, C.M. Shops. Newport Pier * <191·1036 * AITRAC .. llr rrpt .. rl. Ctd l 1\lr:s. ill'11drrson 64S-;i;J42 SlfiO mt1. rutr 67':-0860 fireplat'-'. bltn k11cW·11. 1111 RENTALS ln7 ~an111 Ana. Apl 113, C.~1. ---- pa!io. fncd, In: ifl,J \.!.u· Apts. Furnished Sl50 n10 yrs ISC'. i\v,11l t,..b G;;e-rai___ 4o0ol-"THE-GAB[ES"-Office Rental 6070 I. 494--0-134 bt1••n 4-S p111 ---------~--,.;;pa1·. :! Br., tta ba . ...,, priv LAGUNA BEACH 5 HR 2 ba, cpts/c!rps. hll·u1s. RENT 1.;.ir. ;irlul1s. rpts, Uq1s, bit-Air Conditioned Le11.Sf.! SZI0/1no. Cnll l\lr. rt~; 11r11·. pa!tos. Sl35. ON FOR~'i AVENUE Nelsun a40-1151 HerHace 3 Rooms Furniture 21:!7 ORl\Nr.i-~ Ol'Sk spaces available In Ro.·al !::stair. $25 Month 0 636-4120 e newest oftlce bu11d1ng a: ~ Bn 2-H-,-.-,-,-,,-,.,--p-1,.-"-'· J.'ULL OIYJ'JUN TU Bl "Y prime location in downtown avail 111 S:rofl. C 11 JI nf1f'r CRt•Jrn;rral•11·,; Av:ulable/ l~l'.:Rr.1UlJA Vl!.1.AGJ•: Laguna Beach. Air cond~ ti PJ\1. 642-6392 ~ti <!1']'<>~11 n.:i.c. S11:11'ious 2 ,r,, .1 Br. Apl.!l. Oont'd. caii>etl'd, beautiful 4 HR 2 baths. SIS:i/nl•Hi1h H.F.R.C. C'rpts, rtr)>S. tiltins. a~ tu panrlrd partitioning. Two Furniture Rent als shp'i.: & :.chis. C'hildn.•n OK. entrances: Frontage O!I Curpcls, drapt•s. l irt•plat·(·. $110 tip Forl'st Ave., renr leada to S:JS..6341, 546-8919 ~'1 7 \\ · ]!)th, C.:\l. 548-J.l~l 'J?J•I C0llC'J:!: • A · A \ 2. Mro1· J\1uncipal pa..L-l~n lots. r-11 ---i: "~'·:'~"~·;u~'~"~'"~· ~·'~"~1'"~'~1~'":::"~00~1~--~~~~'~'~"~· -.'~· ... ..,·,1 . -~ -NH 11(•11• 2 Br. u1sululo.•rJ, 1·plt1, _ per month !or space. Desk llq1s. S1ov1·, gar. A!!ul 1s 11c11.1DAY l'l.AZA NEWLY -DECORATED and chairs available k>r Si). Sl3."1. no p<'ts. &12--49!lli DE!.U,X~:. Sp;1rious l -Btlrm. i BR. SE'!). liontf' w/c;irport. 811.!lneu hours absWering 2 Git Duplex. Clean, 11¥[c•cor. ~'urn. l'lpt. St:lJ Plu.~ u!il. Sll!i .. D1sr1.; wa!er pnu!. y~ service avaih.b!EJ .f~ $10. Quiet 1,. conv lor·. Crnl!T lll•;Hed pool. An iplc pnrk1ng Blk. fron1 s"hool. All olllltlcs pald ' except 1. $1•0 r.•u ''""2 No (•hi!Urrn-No f11''" it'll . ··r1" Pl:,,.,.,,,,,., telept.onl', j!HJ', pa 10. . .,.,.,..,,,._, ;-~H~R~.--,,-001-. -,-.-(11!\ PI .1.~r1 Pomun:1._!'l\1 6,12·,jS~,S e 636-4120 e DAILY PJLOf I redrL'Orate<l $200/ruo. ~\!:I sri.:.. liTll. f\iu.l. I hdnn .. SQl1l'.:Al-:YCJ~1 -t;:' -1-.-1 222 FORFSI' AVENUE v.•/11', llrap"'· i\1'c1ll nu1v. . . , '1 ,is llU r LAGUNA BEACH t'luv.·cr St. RH. 1\11 2-2Z'l'2 .qor _ llU. I bath. built-n1 •"' ~= Jlkr 5,14-ti!>~i'I =-;J'ru<J 1 ---lntch .. 11, tu!!y carpe100 ;.:. Newport Beach 3200 S121l. UT!L l';ili!. Haehclur, l11i.r~ 1. Ju .. 1 pu1ntf'd insitt< Deluxe Offices "'"._ rh·apr~. l l'lii!•I nk. & 0111 s1:r1/mo. Ed Rirldlr SUITES or single oflires from CHINA COVE Hkr. \,,1~9Xll fU11· t;.IJi-'{'111 S:il. 0 1rprt.!1. air condition· L"r· tht• bay 11o1ith OCt'an virw. --- V I · 1 · 1----------rTklPLF:X 2 Br. BltnS, "fits. Ing. sccrrtarial s er V lee, l'ry pr vale LO ("'((' U!llVP Pv Costa Mesa 4100 drp" T'1>' p,,110 & i,:111· Sl2.i ft'ntn1l loca tion. Orange ;~~id 3 'BR~h:i i~e~r~~t~ -----1no. ·~1~1SG7 County Rnnk Bldg. 230 E. 11un1r in lmmar. t'tlll(l. Lux-.. •' SEA LARK v•:rtY-i"ou·r 2 Br .• new o.·pls., 171h St., 01· 642-l485 111·y fea!urrs thruoul 111!-1 ~~ df'ltpc!I, hltns. rarport: no 2 OF'"F'ICES: ~ &: 1l!IO sq IJIL·ins, hrend new lu;.;h ·;,--MOTEL ptibi.; ;r.dutts. $12.J. ~769 ft Parkini:;:, heal & private 1·rpti,:. ttnL heall~. 2 c•ir WEEKLY RATES , l<l' 1 ,---'"'~troom!I. :WO N. Newport ~ '· rrp ~. urps. i;:ir11g•', Pl 1 NB "-A"....._~ c.A-.,.,0A i.:;r.r. 8ealJ1, furn or unlurn. 2301 Newport Blvd. CM prt\'a!P \arrl 1i1 :'>l11n11· ...:..:::_1. . . U'tU"-'"'-'· v-oJ-....,.. Only for th~· vrry par11t·11!;11· e 646.7445 e' Vt.~t;1, <'.M. l COl.1MERC. -3otr Sq. fl. lmn1cd. po..:.~. Leasr. __ $ZS-Wk _U _ !'INCiJ::~~pt:""";W"ur :;hnpiiing: l !NOUST. -800 sq. fl. Priv;ilf' P11r1y fi7:H5.ti3 , p crnl< I' $Ill). ::i;: lllh 1,1 • &t6-Z130 • B/B TO\\o'NIUHJSJ-: Only 011c Vi u·ano ·.v I:: Ur, 2'J Bi\, 2 car CaqHorl S25IJ 1110. 1'11(11 -/\dull-; Onh Bay & Bl!Clch Realty, Inc. !11JJ lk11.·!'r Dr .. NB .-.:u11t· Zll lJ.l~:.1000 ~;l'f'"· ;,!K-6!l!if, ~ ........... --.... -1.1 :ASE.-1;;-~ 1 ;1pli11n ·;,. Sell. 4 BR. 2 BA Lu\lll') c"Ondomlnium, Ba!'k Ray, t7141 7'..i>-8(Xlll rvc~ for app'\ Newport H1lghts 3210 :; REDROOM, 11. h;1th,, f1rrplarr. t".i\. hr a I , d1shw:1Shf'r. dtJI garagt". fenced ycarrl. Cir.an, no 1 n<·ts. sm. fi7:~~1 2:1 * 3 Brt. 2 Ba. 11.~r /v. 2 • ~lud1u .I. •• "h :lf•l~. r .i\1. f.42-)!.J'Y.l e !nt·I L;1i1s .~· /'111111,. ~•'IV, !="--'·~-=~~===-==-Industrial Rental 6090 • ~laid S!•l"\'w" -TV .'lvr,11. Newport Beach S200 3000 SQ ft warehouse & oUicc • Nl'IV Ca ft' .~· n .. r + 6000 sq ft paved & fenl'eti ~::i!P N•'ll'fllll't Blvd. :,.J~-'17'.hl NI·:w \Vc:;tclirr $185 2 hr 2 . . --ba pr11ill frl'l J,:llr, 1 s!ui·y. yard. l l!ffi Laguna Canyon l\fo.1\lTTl~!ll.LY d1•c·riral!•1!. Hlti:i Jrvuw&1Z-02.19 acllt. tld. 714-494-8066 or 111•1\Jy furn. 2 Bn .. Blt·ub, 714-540..7680 l!!rl . Poro!. /\dulls. \Valk lo Nf.\V 1 Br. Z Ba. <!l!l J8tl1J "========= ~hnps. T!l'I. J\faph• ~:I. SI · N<'wpr>rt l~lanr!, $12:, Lots 6100 510-~fi6fi l\fll 67:'.--0<133: 675-5161 1---------- r.:1·:\V i·hannu1i.: 1 Hr. ll('w OCr:AN front 2 Bk apl .. A~JACENT 88 x 112' Wrs!- furn. i\lust ."l'I' Jn ;ippri•i·. up~!a1rs. hlt·1n11. i\dult11 011. cliff lots So. Santiago_ Dr. Arl11l1, "ill" Sl'.ill m" '!lJJJ ly. S?'tl/mu. Ci7~ N.B. ra. $35.000. 646-85G:1 l.Jd, 11, I' 1\I. •rr.-12;.i 1-.vrs. -----Citrus Groves 617S \\'llA'iON \\'ES · l ~C~o~r~o~n~o~d~o~l~Mii;;ar~~S2~$~0i/;;;;:~~;;~;;;~;;;;;; 1 BR. '""· ""!. pd. 1"d.1• RIVERSIDE J)OflL i\rlult" Ii /, c -;, 2 7 6. !U-11m (-5 · -COUNTY • N.\SSl\U PAL!llS • 'l1,. L6~:. l!:i Acre young navel riln1s l I<., 2 HP.. · Pr)<I.[ ,..~ gl"O\le on appro\ll'd rool stock 1i7 F. :!2nr1 SL t:.12-::61.i ON ffi~ ACR~.:<; in the Lake Mal~'s afl'a: $i:;-H1\Cf!rJ.oU:--1tl'h'1~no 1 & 2 Brt. f'urn & Unlurn all Wldl'r permanent sprlnk- kil1 IH·n l'!tl. f';ll'I. \\•1n1a11 F'rpll'.'5 I PM / Pnrioo / lers system. consiti('rl'd •1111} fi12· .(}\Ii f'I"'~. Pool~. T1'nnl~. Contnt'I Dk-fmi:;t.[I'('('; prkffi 11t only ="--"=..c=~==="-I f~t. !1 hnle i>utl/Gr<en. $4,000 pe r acre. For furtllt'r Br. Ocean Vu ar1t Xlril l1x:. Newport Beach 4200 (1(1() ~·a Lanr, ('d11 &I I 2fill injom1at1on, p Ir a s,. call nr. :ichls & trans. ;..is..7~.1~1 Ji\;f· rAr!hi c 111 1 Waltf'r f'rwk \\'i1h ·, BR. J.rg .vrd. Crp1...i, 1!rp:1, bltns. Xlnt view of Harbor. s22:i. &11>-1211 l BH. v.·1th JlOOl, 1m rtly furn, Rent S:Z.t'i I mo. + eleHnu11 frr.. 642-19-1.il \\'ATl·;HFrto~;T J;u ,••· •n1pl••>; 1 ' 1 ir nr. 11811 \VY Eckhoff & Asaoc., Inc. N1•11 riurT l~h· \\t·I li!H' I Q ---• I HI" \•• Ch • · 1.\l llLl, Ii .1pl 1 I•>~· t" ·~ •· apmAn 111•r. lt11!1·1, -:arai:' lo~•I d•olk lx•.i,h l adull. 1111 P''l'I Sl'l.71 Orange. Calif. oid11l1.". no p•·I" (,1 • 7~hl or 11111 ~ 1tl!'I ti li4o!-42!)!l or 541-26ll, F:vcs·wknds ~i.\~-5747 fi7:i--17.~-&1t-~~ .. i:, ----- 1~ f',/.()('1( \V. (h'<'anlrnnt. CG~:--·> 1 1 So II R f!ul'IH•lor kp1 Adul1 Ot}-t-•1 ~ ~ r . Vlt'I\ ' · wy esort Property 6205 , rrpl'. till-In.~. I' rp!.~/llrp.yl-----'--'-------·------1 ··111r 1•~'.·~ '\",~"'"~1'11'.-1 1 '.111 _,l~llJ. li7-:-6~ aft·, • FOR Rent !"urn. Mam-Newport Shore1 3220 fll'. 1.1 t.t\-o ,1 nr >11-h~I ~ --~--lh ''' eo-• 1 & __ _ _ 1 mo n. nuo. poo Ll'.:ASI': OPTIOt'> S2lo:, n1" :: Brinn. · ,\" J" r (j 1u , .. unusual ('Ol"tM'r lot lntrrinr r1oit111 .. atriu111 1lr1uhl·· garilg!' , , ho;1t 11orL '.:16 Cf'll11r St. li\f.-6'i2'9 IJF,LVXE Morfrrn 2 "hJry :: 'i P.1:. 2 P.A. Hl•~·k. 111 t ... ·~• brach. USt> of '/. hu.: rr•fll~. I l'l'<' art•a. tul 101, 1 !o ~:!1• U·11~ !m--0~71 1 Corona del Mar 3250 t ClllN1\ CO\'t, un 1hf' hny w11h 0t•rn11 vtf'w. Vt•ry pnv111,. 1n t'\('lusiv1• 11rt•11 Pvt heh f;JrRnnf 1 ~ r old '.1 Hit. ? (\,\ dr~am hou.s•· 111 in1n1nr f'f1rwl Lux· ury lr11luIT-; thn1.,1ll 111r! hll- 11111, l{l'llfWi Flf'W lu~h f"fllJ.:, Cf'nl. hr1tlin~. 2 f':lr i.:nr B,.aul utrn (Ir unfurn ()nly l11r thr vrry pertk:11h1r. i111- n1r1! fJOS". Li'.•""· l'r11ar,. 1•.1r11 r.;-.. 1.cn IT'S A 1{l:;Vt.UTION t~ many be.raainl you riot.I In C1t,t11lned Adi. Olt'Ck thfm """' YEAl~l.Y 01'l•:u1iro111 u, lu\l' Huntington Beach 5400 sauna. llltt~ 8. 540-2730 ;': bf'. 'l IJ;i . Ji.is 1•1·1•/'1 llung. :.;;;;::;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;1;;;;;;;&'i;;,";;;j-67j(j sn~ •. 1110 6i.:.-:t.~1: 1• Mount. & Desert 6210 · c --.--EXC LUSIVE · ---r,,, F/'1111 :--pa• • h1lrn11 ""' ,,, •. "'" ""1"~"'' ON-THE-BEACH CANYON CABIN h•~•I .~lip \\'1ntr h•'. lt12-H'T:~, 2 & 3 Bed A I II"'· 1 · b ---~ room p s. ....--a-,1ay nioun a1n ca in S110 :\trwlrrn Apt \ htt.rr.1 hr1Yo' f.U'\Ury liv!n~ lo plca.51• !he f)n 3 lf)IJI. Thr cabin is rool· flrf'un G. 1.;.1, ""'''" 11! him• 1nil!il rli.scrlminating. Nuw M. plun1bfofl l wim:I. hul 1.o1 li7~'(':17 ;1vn1!11bl!' 111 ' rn! Mmple!Prt. Plan~ go OCEAN \ 1·~1-1:.~ 1.,rxt Th H f' f 11o•11 11 ph~<i'. r uu prirl" s11,. /\pl !1ir11 1~11111, ~r:n. lne e Un Ing 00 ~i. Fl)r lurtt\Cr inform11!1on 11til~ \\ ori!• 1. 1;;•; •·1i-.:~ pJ,.a."" <·all Gh'nn Thon111110n --"''llh --Pacific lffi Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. Corona del Mar 4250 1'11"1 \\', O\apm;in 1\vt 2 Br: 1 ', ], •'h' f11m (Ir Orange. CaiJf "'l "'-~~n •v• 111" r11l ·:.!fi21, Ew~-wknd~ ,;.:,'l.t;(.!7 unfuin Duplr•\, 1or1v p:1l111 •· v..:.,..,," '· " ('nm11:1 lll1:til11n•h ~!.!.-,/nlh. '"'."--'·'·' ·' '.'.'"'-".'~',......,.1 •~12-:hl:.S or 1;1', :":!Ill r:: BUSINESS 1nd Sl :Z-1 ,r., SIJO. 2 ,.-3-BR. n ,\tll S.-1 1.1 r11o:h1•~!'1·i flpl: N!'11o·ly d,.ror., r ptJ;. FINANCIAL Q u 1 1 , C' I" :o n If n • ,i;, d1·p:1. 8111111 R••fr~ 11v11U. O .. pt:1t1'/rt rri fT. 1:·~1 t • .ti , ~ tlulrlrl'n O"-Nr. r~ach Bus. pportuf'11t1es 6300 Ht~r1. .t· l\lu1n. t·los•· to BRANCH MANAGER school~ & !IOOpp1ng, s.11-moo E d · ,. 1 ___ -----·-~pan 111g .mpnymrut 2 nn., 1'~ ha. Cpl". Drw l\J.!l"n<·y nrerls mnn or •1>- ----------r fllll'UI, \\it~hrr/drycr. C'ltJllJC man tn manage C'oslA ~lt'M Balboa 4300 ttt S.'ln D\rao f'wy. Slf(! Mo. br.\nrh offkf'. E)(Jl(':ncntt ----------r No rhilrlrrn or prts &17-2.196 "°' n¢C'l'ssar)'. wUI tratn. L \/((.~; I t..-ln•l f!l•r!ll IL1nl t rpl". hit 111~ SI I 1 1110 lr-a~c !;i:",_·,110 V~'i P.at•h --Apf ni<'n nnly .,~~f.177 l.~ \~ \\·1"-'in. ('n<1l;t :-011'•.8 2 BH L:p«tain: !'fow. refri1. S12-1 Adults only, i\11ul Jan 1 816 Palm. ~~~ S85r)J «il!lh inwstment re- quin'fl. 51\lary ~ per wecll In 5tnrt plus Mla.1'E' of proUIJ, ---For 11ppol11tmt'nt phone • LARt;J•; Nt-w 2 R.R. Palk>. f7l< ~· 1 NO m&rt"r ii·l'!;it j, IS. Y'OU r.·1r.1((1• BuiH~inot N I cc 1 ~lJ I Get In . On The Action ·Today! IS YOUR AD TN Cl.ASS!· ~lED! SomCOflt! will be I lnoklng for it. nlal 542.r,r,iS for qu!ck, tfllcient ft'SUlt.s IL-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- rt1n ~toll lt with 'I DAILY nn•a ,\rlult~ Sl«l 5:v;.-0174 ------~--- llA 11.v rr11 rr t 1n~~1fltt1, Dally Piiat Want AM' r "' I 1'<11' O.HlY l'!l<.t \Yant Ma. N~ a ~i•nal•! Oi:il &12-$18 Find It with • ftftt •di ~--"-'-~-!. . ..;:.::;:.c.:..:=..:c::.::::.::::._ • DAILY "LOT 27 ~~AYH :: f~ASHt : Read ·The DAILY PILOT c L A s 5 I f I E D •. .- ... • • ' . ,. . ' . " . .ORANGE . COAST'S leading Marketplace for Automobiles llEST RllYSI -~f =-. I I I ' • Opp I rtvntt!!' 6IQO IHC CID .... bltD 1or )'UW"ttlfT Qlol tact SAD.C. l SmAll -"""'-Q)) ... uptrt cou o ae l i nr. 1ldcbiee •naly 1l1• a Orpntaa&ml pl an n In I _.,,.., ... ....- IROW COOK -· To OS>f'l'le eatabliahed route wltb tt,.w.r tr ad l 111 CUltornen.. Guaranteed ~ eome will avenae about moo wtth no ctill.nc-. ho Set Bell;)' Bna at mi66Gxec A.Jeocy for Cmiret Clrl1 '10 w. °'"" """· "· 8. By •PJ~t. 6IN9l9 * NEWPORTERETTE HOSTESS Goln9 Into Bu1lne11? • Colden oppol'tunlly ln beach area. PhDllps 66 Service Station f ·• -ue; 1101 ~· t akiit ii. Marine Dr., Newport ~ 8-dl. Contact: E"'11ng Shift SEAFOOD RESTAURANT ... ""'· .....,, """ COin· million, Many 'company benenta lncludlna a I u e Croa, 81\H! ShlelU, l'tllm- ment p l a n, a coanpa.n;y finaneed C~lt plan. truck tumlahtd and e.xpenae1 Jntcrviewltc now fer al· tractive, YQWW 1aclia with fhorouah know5ed&e ol New- port Beach and adjacent Help Wanted areas. Wheddy• Wont? Whacldyo Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL 90RN SWAPPERS Speclol Rete REUBEN E. LEE _w_o_m_e"'n ___ __;1:._400;;;: I Nl'WJIOl'te.rette rlatf wW SUNSET HOUSE welcome hotel su· ta upon arrlVal at lobby or airport. 151 E. Cooot Hlghwey Newport Beech pald. i1 looklnt for an Apply tn pel'IOll o~, be- • a«JCK au>WDER '14! m.n10 nt: Tr'-llM! S Ll--5 times-5 bucks * * We need n1en who ani m.ar- llua.Wonted 630.S llULEl -AD MUST IMCl...VOI!! 1---------ried, Hl&h Sdlooi education •-wn.i 'tGU MW "' tTHe. :a-wti..1 ~ Wint Ill lf-. and abillt)l, bondable and willl 41: lo work, •nd learn our buaineu, to eo ahead In pe.y and/or reaponaiblllb . ,_,OUll ~ Inf/Or ~.. ........S 1111111 fit •d-lit•flt. CAREER OPPORTUNITY! YOUNG Sale1Execu ti Y l' ~OTHIMO FOii SALi!! -TllAOEl OHLYt : \\1th 15 yrs. ""I'· in t.'On-NU~ !I • I c s . mc~han di 1 in g, ~k·s mgml, PHONE 642-5671 To Place Your Tr•d•r'1 P1r1dlH Ad Join todays r11.ste~1 i:rt11\'inC Beilul 11•oodcd Wdg Juts, fr profession-Mutual Fund sale9 un yr-round river, pvd rds, No c.~eonre ntiJessary- p1~·r, We Succea, Perter. We tram· fuU or part time ville area. Trade 1or 6 place Mutual Fund Advisors 1drplane. Dor».do Dev'ml. Inc. ' 1TI6 Oranee Ave. C.t.'I Npl B. 1603 \\'estcldl 6t2-&122 empklye 1rainin~ elc, seeks Newport Dupkx, 200' to affiliation with local retail bef.cb, Will trade equity or wholesale concem on for good Laguna residen- partnership basis. SUbstan-tiaJ lot. P-0. Box 1423, ha.I capital l n v e !11 m c n t Huntington Beach. (714) availabk. ~ ddails 10ll6<X)l5 ::::::=..:°""'::.::::.;.· __ _ Box N'.all The Daily Pilot. Will trade 17 ft Perfoaner \VOMAN intere11ted in buyirw: outboard, Call fibefllaas) 5.rnlJI business in Coastal for full or part payment ; Orange Co. 536-2919 on new Cllfllet. drapes. 1-,;;;~..:;;;::==:=::::, I landscaping, black wall or •. Money to L°' •. " 6320 ! "! • Ptl"ne 642-4980 after 7 p.m. RETIRED COUPLE -"""------ Doll 1'-londay 9 Al'\1 lo 4 PM lt1r. Sylvester Je1vel Co. Inc. ITI41 774-4130 646-5'IE S.A. 1212 N. Broad\\·11y IMMEDIATE Oirona deJ Mar. steps to 547-3331 OPENINGS FOR: beach. 3 BR 2 ba. Vac l~M ---------e Men hi Mlxlnl: bept. equity. Want clear lot or • Utili~ Worker smaJl 2 BR home Ct.! atta. LAB TECHNICIAN APPLY 546-3928 Eve. 642--018S Bkr. Alert YOUl1f man 10 11·ork In Electro R•fractori•a ----=----1 ceramic labora&ory. Must be DI of F C Shp home \\'est Covina, H'l h Schoo.I graduate. Some Y, erro Orp. • Hu money to lend Oil lst I.: 2nd mortpaes. Call leased w/good Income, 3 br. kllO\\•ledge of ch!'mlst?y PN!· 11765 Flbei-glah Rd. nus SPACE RESERVED !n1 rm, blt·ins, crpts, drps, ft>rTed but not essential. Huntln9ton BNch FOR YOUR AD. PHONE ct(". Val $28. ~t Trade cq. & -Xld future-with benefiU R•af Estate Saleam•n Broktt 547-11\1 6'2·5678, TODAY. S for l!).40 cab cru!sr:r. for right peraon. APPLY Start lhe new year out right. 6340 968-4257 E19Ctro R•fracfories Joln ua now Ir. fit into our Assislint Ml111g1r We oUer excellent woritizw condil:iorui and tho flneat of Company paid beneDtJ. ll you &J<e interested, apply In person lo the nita.il 8tore at~ SUNSET HOUSE So. Coast Plua 3333 Bristo! St. Cotta Mesa Interview houn art from 10 am to 5 pm, aak 1or the Manager. WAITRESSES 18 TO l1 • FULL Tl~IE. NEAT APPEARANCE. NO EXPERIENCE NECES. SARY. APPLY IN PERSON :! TO 5 P.M, R .. I Eatlt• Loan• ·-* * * * * * Div. of Farro Corp. expansion proararn. Maxi· Our B•t HOME LOAN I "'!!f!l!!!!!l.!!!!!!J~!!!!l.!!!!!l.!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!J!!f!l!~~~!!f!l!!!I 1876S Fiborglou Rd. mum Conunialon •PU t. BOB'S BIG BOY tween U p.m., Monday thru Fridl,y • ~nera.I Man-...... NIWPORTER 1NN 1101 Jambcne Road Newport Beach RN or LYN NEEDED FULL TIME .\pply N•wport H•rbor Convalesctnt Hoaplt1I 646-7764 R•c•ptionist for S•rv- lc• O.pt./Cilr jockay. 2S or old•r. Must b9 ii good driver ilnd hold valid C1llf. Ile· en ... S.. Mr. Hlnlnilln *CARVER PONTIAC 292S Hnbor Blvd., C.M. TERMS Tod•y SERVICE DlRECTO.RY SERVICE DIRECTDRV Huntington Beech :;,"'~~~. plan. Apply J;J E. 11th St. 1st TDs 6.9% -30 years \\'ANTED, cooks, busboys &t LA BORDE REAL ESTATE l~=~""~'='•~M-""---•COSMETOLOGIST AND 6"'*'· case basis. Baby'litting 6550 Gard•nlng 6680 dishwubers for a r:ew 220 E. 17th st., Costa fl.1esa SALES LADY ror better 5 Da.)'s. Prefer \\'ith clientele, Call for details. 2nd TOii --"-----;;.;...:;;.;;;~---..:;:;:.:I opera Ii on. Applkation.!I \.\'Oman's wear. Ful or part but not necessary. Apply ln 890 int. FIVE years and &11 24 HOUR child care. 7 days ANTHONY'S taken beh\>ttn 1 p~f Ii 5 • DISHWASHER time. Permanent. Apply in perain other types of real eslah: a v.·k. 50c hi". per child Garden Service Pl'\! ltlonday & Tuesday, APPLY person: O'Brien's Specialt;y SHERATON BEACH financing, servin& Ol1lfW1I 2 adult sitters. one there 6"46-1948 Dec. 30th & 31st. See Mr. Newport Harbor Shop. 2525 E. Coast Hwy, County 18 years. at aU times. All n1eals in· LANDSCAPING Sch.ierhold al Mr. Steak, Yacht Cl.uh Cdt.t INN Sattler Mortpge C.o., Inc. eluded, fenced backyard, ~•QNTHLY •• .--ENAlNCE TJI;7 Fairview. Costa Mesa. Tltl \V. Bay Avt., Balboa 2lll2 Ocean Avenue 336 E. l7'th St.. Co&ta Mesa superviled play. Overnight ui nuui~ 1 642..-0732 (Closed Mc.n. Ir. Tuel.) co:r.mtNATION, Sharp Bar 00-2ln, SU-f'~ll or wke.nd children \velcome. Complete OH.nup. Reas. ?ttakls & Go Go Dancers. HunthJ&ton Beach Eves. 673-7865. 642-1157 ~1870 Exp horticulturist. \VANTED exper. male book· WANTED Young man 17-lS Top \vages $2.50-$3.50 to WORK IN CdM ~""'=-~~-~--I ·==========-I keeper for pharma cy. for steady. p/time, inside start. Ph. for int. 56-9983 MontER will care Jor your I · Pennanent nn.i•"'n S day• .. -orlc at food to ao eltab. SASSY LASSY, 290! u ..... , SECRETARY for Legal Jn.. ANNOUNCEMENTS · · E ~-ner1I •·rv1·-6682 .,..._ . ...., ' ...... • infant m my home. xp, ""' --.. Mon thru Fri. Reier. ap-500 \I.'. Coast Hwy N.B. CM 1urance & Mutu&I Fund d NOTICES capabl•, Westside C.M. $20 • , _ _. ...____ 1..:=..:::..::.=::.:.:::!:::..:::.__ · · work »....,,, __ .. _rthand & an wk. 642-8450 HEATING I.: Air C.ond. Serv precia..:u. ••ou.aporl. re-ASSEMBLY TRAINEES PBX for TELEP H 0 N E mUll ~;;~bility, SaJ. 6401 " repair. also Washer &. quired. All information con-MacGrqor Yacht Corp AN S\VERING SERVICE. Lost MAhTURld ,: .. womakn ~ sllkl dryer repair. 24 hr serv. lBoiden!~'~-Please lrtply to 1665 Babcock, C.M. Exper. preferred bu! not ~ ~ ~c~te:r.1:~~-c!?,,x . •• ~ black Labrador c 1 uu Wtt . ~..., w . oAl-7237 or 0•7 """' x .J<;U ..... rona de Mar. I------'----•~ t d I .,.., ""-..ooi a must. 11 PM · i AM. 92625 ma.le with Boxer face, ~. enc· yan.i, unches. H •INSTRUCTORS MAINT. Man, live-in, apt. "-'! 543--••-. 01,·v·• old M2--0679 A U L I N G , CI e an u p -Full , __ , .... _ .. A pl ......, """" "il"l> ""' RN p T Name ltanleJ, 8 mo. · prqes. odd Jobi etc. Free or/and part time. Neat ap-"""'~-P y: •rt ime '. Mi 15 1 n I day befort WIµ.. babysit IN YOUR est. Jim 518-5325. aD)'time pearance. Must be able · to 2376 Newport Blvd., CM ~Z:c~~rr;1':1!n =~ n!,~ U to 3:30 Mon. & T11eS. eves. . QJNtmu. Lie No. 130L HQMt any hour $1.25 hr.; meet and deal with the Park Lido Children'• pet. 494-9986 '\.hr. ra~ S«M389 H1ulfn.. 4130 public. eood tigure. Apply AgenciM. ·wOIMn 7300 ~ ~:s:~~U.!lt have Convalescent <inter LOST Black Wallet. iden-·-. in penon, Holiday Health --~=~----466 Flagship · tification papers etc. vie. Brick, Masonry, etc:. CLEAN Loll, gar&&es etc. Spa. 2300 Harbor Blvd., • \VAITRESS • Exp'd., Newport f3each 642·8044 Ancient Mariner Rest. 6560 Tree removal. dump, akip C.11-1. Joir\ th• N•wport over 21. Apply FI Ying REPUTABLE cleaninr lady. • Re"·ard. 540-6855. 673-2865 backhoe, fill, Irr ad e. c"u-STO--D-IAN--W-0-RK--Sl_•_ad_y Girl of the Y•1r Club. Butler, JlOl Newport Blvd. 1 day & week, prefer Fri- .' Merrick BRICK, C.oncrete, Carpentry 962-8745 men capable ol cle~ of· It you are intelligent. ikill· N.B. 673-0!ITI day. Collere Park area, Qiatom Cabinets. 'Sm 1 11 I=="'="'====== ., and · EXPERIENCED Sewing Costa ~!esa. 546-7817 after : LOST Female J>ui. An, to ~ OK ~ Est. 96Ui945 fice building &: bank in their cu attractive and want "Mandy." Vic Irvine & r-Houaecl .. ning 6735 leisure hours. Write name, to work on a temporary Machil'M" Operators. Few 6 p.m. • . Oa,y. N.B. 12/26. Reward! 6590 JACK'S Mkp" Fl .,.,,,..... and phone number to Box basil with the aame bene--trainet's being accepted. 1 'M--'OT_E_L-,-,.-,-D-S-. -tl-/p_t_t_im-o. 616-8(13) c..,.ntering &· r ............ "", M-608 Daily Pilot fill that pmnanerrt employ-2907 S. Oak. S. A. 7:30-3:30. staJ1 Sl.65 hr. Sea Lark crpt clean'r. Windows, etc.I~=~-~----ha M I ~ · LARGE. temale. SLameee : Jost Xmas day, vie. Mesa -'Verde Weit. C.t.1. answers ... !Jo<.54&--0483 Com phse clean'g. 548-'1243 DOORMAN _ Parking At· tt1 enjoy, we vt a sreat HOUSEKEEPER/cook, liw ote, """"l Ne\.\'J)Ort B!Yd. CARPENTRY 1-=======;=::I Wxlant. Start at Ol'lee, full plan for )'OU for 1969. Please l.n or out, 5¥.i days, 536-3017 C.M. M6-74<6 MINOR REPAIRS. No Job L•ndac:aping 6810 or pl time. Own tranc. ..,ts. call Jane64~~c)' · · WIG Stylist &t Salesgirl. Mwit TEACHERS want live In Too Small. Cabinet in gar--Phone M+-1700, Ext 444 be experienced. 893-7931 babyslller I housekeeper . OERMAN Shtphenl pup, female, bla.clc ~·ftan feet. vie. Beach Ii: Yorktown, H.B. 536-M09 Reward. qes & 0 t he r cabinets. BOB'S Land!IC&pe Service. N.wport Pvt nn, TV . Ph. SlJO. 5'6-81~ Eves. 64&2J?2 Days Desiarn, install &t maintain. DON'T JUSI' WISH for 8IHtl&o Paraonn•I Agency PLANNING to move"! You'll 842-7887 H. o. Anderson. Free est. 66-2*)33 ~I.!?_~ ~ ,."'"', .. • Temporary Dlvisk>n find an amazing oumber of .,..., .. -.. ...,.. s::: Dover Dr .. Newport Bch home1 in today's Claasifi.d VERY sma ll , male, .l>eekapoo. Vicinity 514 Jris, CdM. Pleue: call 646-Tin LOST Jemale Beagle Pup 4 ll)OS. vie F.utblu!f, gtten sweater. Reward. 644-1854 WHITE go.Id Persian cat Vic. Magnolia. A-Carroltml·n. Re--waro. 962-4539 REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS CABINETS, Any .siu-job. 25 yrs. exper. 548-0713 P•parh•nging day"1 Oassl.fied Adi. Ads. Ole<::k tbem now. 6405 · FRI. SINGLES Orchf:slra 8: JO lilt l SllURDAY "Y'all Came"' Yake your New Year's J::w RESERVATIONS A-I Cal'Jlf'nll')', any size job! Call Gordon 847-6745 c.m.nt, Concrete 6600 CEMENT work, no job too am.all . reasonable. Free estim. H. Stuflidt. 548-8615 e BESl' IN CONCREI'E Walks, pool decks, floors, Patios. Phone 64U514 NO job too J.arie or smalL Llcrmed k lnsum:l. Free est. 892-2!!00 or 526-4T:i6 CONCREI'E wort. all types. Pool dtocks & custom. Call 548-132< 542-9Di e CUSl'OM PATIOS e JCll,i So. Main, S.A. concrete A~&: removal Painting INT /EXT Paintlnr. Satisraction iuar. Free est. 30 yrs exp. 645-0809, 548--0405 INTER Tr Ext. PAINTING, IMMED. SERVICE. LDca1 rtl. FREE est. 548-1627 Plast•ring, Rep,air 6880 e PAT'S Plasterb:iar • all Types. Free estimate. Call - PLUMBING REPAffi No job too small • 64>-3ll8 . USE THIS HANDY POSTAGE PAID DAILY PILOT WANT AD ORDER BLANK AND REA..:H rHE ORANGE COAST'S BIGGEST MARKET 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 llNES ' tlMIS • ti MIS 7 TIMIS 12 ti MIS At Editvr St. State Uc. e 842-1010 I GOOFED -======l~s.w~;"!L--..!6~960!!1----l----l---·1---11---1----1---1---1--- ·PHwte-pqty bought some CentrKforl '620 ALTERATIONS & Cu1tom $4.50 $6.10 $10.65 $15.90 name brand EXERClSE e ROOMS ADDIDONS e Dremunaking. Very finel-----f----1-----1-----1·----1----l----!----·1---- LOUNGES (Adv. on T.V.I, L.T. OmS1J'uction wock. App'i. 548-7104 $S.10 $1.21 $13.10 $20.10 with the idea cf becoming• Fa~ily ~ kitchen or Alteration.........642·5145 1-----l·----l-----l-----l·----1----------.-----'·----~',· I .. :iOO I .~1 'l ,"', "', uni.ta. Sin&:le story or 2; ~N="='=· ='"'=:"="='•::;·o:"'::="'=:::·='::;'~';· i ----..L.----L----L---.L---_J_::$6:::.00::__J~$:,:9:,:.7:.6:._.L_:$:,:l:_S::;.5::S:_L.;$:;2::4:::.3::0:_ ume o .,...mons .... r. ua plans custom designed. For _ !!ell l OI" all at who!Hale, estimates &. layout phone TILE, Ceramic $6 ea. Resu1artY S89.95. e 847-lSll • 6974 ()riOna.I cartons. 542-5356. 2:114 No. Bonnie Brea. S.A. ENGLISH lnltnx:tor desftl to work as ~ member kr puaze lo Tahiti. Pleue contact : 93D Bloebinf, La&· B t-a c h , .......... Attrectm Expert YOUNG WOMAN Additions * Remodel~ FrPd H. Gerwick, Lie. 673-Q)U ... 549-2170 * Vern<', the Tile Man "* Cust. v.wk. Install & repairs. No job too small. Plaster patch. L e a k I n g Carpet Ca..ning 6625 =rep• Ir. 847-1957/ CARPET • Funt. cl.aning; I======== for 1 day sen" &.. quality Upholstery 6990 ;:;11: ~ for C"ZYKOSKl'S Olstam Uphol· dazar' will t9ch you all Electrical 6640 latnl stepa. Call Ardell 1tecy. European Craftaman. ahip. lOO';'ov Financlrw:. Furn. boats & auto'1. &Q..145.(.. l&ll Newport B!Vtl., C.M. 213: 591-453! 1-10 PM FLAG E!tttri.c, gen'! elec- PACIFIC SINGLES tricians. Come'!. res., JUts!) & E:MPLOYMENl PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 Pwbli1h fir ••••• , , • , .day1, IM9inn in1 ••••••••••• , , ••••• -, • , •••••• , •• • Cl111ifi(.tfi1e • , , • , , , • , , , , •• , •, , , • , , • •,,.,., •• , , , • , , • , ••••••••••• • N 1rl'll •••••••••••••••••·•••·••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••···• Ad4rau ••• , • , •• , • , , •• , • , •• , ••• , , • , •• , ••• , • , •••• , ••••• , , • , • , •• , , City··•••••••••••••••••••••••••• l'h•t1• •.•••••••••••••••••..•• , When! the altractiv... lilaioL Sm jobs we I c, p&rticu1a.r sin&:~ &J"C. ~1D45 Job W•nted, Min 70001------------·. CUT Hill -P'.UTI OH TOUI IHYILOP'I 5"46-1Sl4. a.ta Mesa. E LE CJ'RICIAN Licell.9ed, SIOO MO.; want writer or bonded. Sm.all jobs Ma.int. ertial to lhan!o hacienda. I .:"'=""""=;:::· =~=====:: .'Sep. •plS.; in Roarita I• -. 5l&m!i Genlenlng 66IO Ui AnanymoUI JAPANESE Garden e r PbcDt sa.mt • wrtte to Compltte Service. Exp. ~.o. BoX 1223 eo.t• ~ Rd\able. 642-4389 6412 C\11 Ir ~ Lawn lilaintena.nce. Llce:nsed 548-4808164&-23.10 a ft 4 C\1T It edge lawn oompl aer"\1Sce. Lie. 546-5l61 eve1 A: weeurm DAILY PllDI' DI>lE·A· LJNIS. Y1111 can DM thli!m far Jual ponolll • -.,. Diil 841'5Cll • D E PENDABLE rxN?uli~ Wido"wt!r <: ii p a b I e of maintenal'IC(', de1ircs reduc- ed l'l"nl deluxe unrurn uni1 lmmedlately for n1anager duties. DI.vis TI4-491)..9549 Domestic Help 7035 DOMESTICS AVAIL. MBC AGENCY 254 E. Isl \L.B. Bl .1 j,11-644<1 163 So. Western L.A. 388-03JJ Oiine1e Hve-lna. Oietttul P\?nnanent. Experie.ootd Far F.&st Agency &U-r1U3 ~· ... -7100 DRIVER ::lean drlvliig record. bond· ahl<'· Drl\~ VW 1'ruck, de- llwr to L.A .. Po1nona . .si.n 0~. $100 wk. QUI Andy, S41!·'rnl6 ARGUS AGENCIES 1369 c Ne"'·Pl'lrl Blvd .. c.~f . IUSINESS REPLY MAIL Hrtt Cla11 "'-" H• ti, c..t1 Miu, C.lli...ie Orange Coast DAILY PILOT P, O. lox 1560 Coda MtlO, Calif. 92626 CloulfW Dept. TO FIGUll COST Pwt onl~ one word it1 e1,h 1p1c.1 1bo•1. 1,,,f11d1 your eddren 1r ~hon• t1~rt1ber. Th1 (.01t of yo..ir 1d is 1t th1 ,,,d of th1 lit11 on which the l11t wo-NI 1f y1ut ad 11 wtil- t1t1. Add $2.00 ••tr• If you 41,,;,, u11 of DAil Y P'ILOT lo• 11...,ic1 with "'•"•d r•• pli 11. ·HAPPY NEW BUICK FROM MIKE McCARTHY '69 OPEL 53584 ~~:~. 51873 lncludll NII llOWY toui11me•o "'Ith 1'!1 Ille -$ttetl< 1H1We1. WM-llt; Mid ... ....., Ml' WIWY. Ordw naw. N.w Ci r N-111 Do..0 "" .. monltll P~S II• Ind NC.Mt: wi1'I l':ln'ft.lt 113 d,,... on -• cndlt. McCARTHY • QUALITY USED CARS '63 CONTINENTAL For JO Morltlls '61 MERCURY Monterer. H.nii., ...... 1UIMi.llc Wlllle well1. L"-QYE)ff $38':.. $38'~·- For j(t Mor>lhs '64 PONT. CATALINA FULL PRICE ~fl'«OP C..... V..I, Stldr.. Power Ste1J<in11. 11.1a:e. HHt..-. Uc. $'/'N •111. 55 Dn. $55 Mo. ;~~• $899 For 0..IJ ii -1111 '61 RAMBLER AMERICAN cu1i.m 2 cioor, ~uTC1rr'llllc 1..-....,.,,uiDn, rldlo. hee~r. wllite 1ide W.111. $22 D•. $22Me. '65 CHEV. MALIBU FUU PltlC:E l!idi• ...,., Miit..-. Sllclt -"In, LI-Na. TVT w . $52 On. $52Mo. ~:. $1199 For JO Mot. '65 MUSTANG H_,--.~. Srlc~ et>iU. 11.ldll: -"' M.rw. Whol.-w1l11. L.c;. ...,. Ho. VEH Oll. $56 Dn. $56 Mo. :~~• $1299 For lll M01. (.ia(Oen (.,rove bl~tl. G~rden Grove f 1eew;:iy '" Bolsa f.ve. Oi>EN MON ·FRI.' 1>..M. 'TIL ' i>.M U.T ' I>. M TO I ,..M. ~ ~ II.IN I~ l>.,M, 'l IL I ,.,M 15550 Beach Boulevard Westminster • I I 'I .,. P""'7, hctmbct IT, 19611 DAILY l'l\.9f TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT/ON TRANSPORTATl.QN TRANSPORT,4TION TRANSPORT,t.TION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ll<AN>PORTATION TRANSPOR A I UNd Cor~ 9900 UMd Can 9900UMd Can ~.U!"'f '\", , • 9900 UMd Can 9900UMd. Cars 990ClUMd Ca,. __ 9900 Uood Can 9900 UMd Ca,. CONNElL CHEVROLET'S USED CAR CENTER SP_ECIALS '67 MUSTANG ' Ha.rdto() coupe. V..S engine,. noor ahlft. ~ .... , i Rllll, Gold wlblack trim. 0. uo 12' $1795 '64 CORYETIE Fastback. Automatic trans, power win- dows, factory air cond,. power 1teering, AM-FM Tadio. Ermine white with red interior. Lie. No. UVR386 s2595 • '65 BARRACUDA H.T. coupe VS. automatic, radio, ~ter, tuxedo black y.·ith gold vinyl interior. CNOZ495J $1195 '68 IM ALA Custom Coupe. Super Sport equipment, factory air cond., power strg., automatic trans., radio &: heater-grotto blue with black vinyl interior. Lie. No. VRC413 $2995 N•w C•r Fact-wa,,.1ntv '65 IMPALA SuJ)C'r Sport Coupe. 321·V-S. A.T., P.S., factory air cond., R&H. Even1bfi orc:hld with black landcau top and w te vinyl interior. Stock No. Pli88 ~995 'OBS & EMPLOY MENl olp Wanted Jobs Men, Wom. 7500 Women 7400 W J\NTED, hostesses & wittresses for a new opera· tion. ApplicatiOflS t a k e n between 1 PM &c 5 PM 30th & 31st. Sec J\1r. Schierhold .at Mr. Sleak, 23>7 r~afrview, Costa 1.tcsa. 63-0132, *DRIVERS* No ExP.erienc:e Necessary! Mmt have clean California driving rerord. Apply YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th St Ca!ta M,.. '' '66 DODGE Sport Yan Auto, trans., rad~ helter, air condl· tiooed. lie. No. ·1-'\in3lO '63 DART G.T. Hardtop coupe. 6 cylinder, automatic, radio. healer, medlwn bluo with blue vinyl trim. $1095 Convertible. 427 V-8 eng., 4 speed trans., AM-FM radio, low mileage with factory new car warranty. Red with white top, 1·ed Interior. Lie. No. UES361 s3295 '66 RIVIERA Custon1 coupe, Full power and factory air condJUoning, Radio and heatc!r. '68 IMPALA 4 Door hardtop. VB, automatic, JlO\\"Cr steering, radio, healer. TRUCK • CENTER • '67 CHEVROLET V. ton pickup -step bumper -heater -ermine white -blue interior -, Factory Warranty. Lie. No. 8488A. $1295 '6"iCiiiVY'ViN 108 Series (Long Van), V·B engine, 2 seats, side doors, rear windows -low mileage, still under new car warranty. Lie. No. V94883 • $2295 '65iNiiiiNi'AL Pickup -V.S, Std. Shilt -Lie. 531194. No. '66 CHEV. Y2·Ton Pickup. V-8 eng., automatic trans, fac- tory air cond., radio & heater, extra nice. Lie. No. U41818. $1995 '6~n Pickup. 327·VB, turbobydramatic, H.D. camper equipment. custom interior, air condition, radio & heater. $AVE! 1495 '68 Corttte S~ V-8, ._._ trans.. AM·FK ndlo. Bo top&. Low mlleq:e with taetoey ~&r<o ranty, factory air eo~powu ateer~ 1'0mtlt areen. Uc. No. ZP7S9 s4595 '65 OLDS "98" LUX?.J1 Sedan. Full power, (actorr air condition, radio I: beater. Stock No. P1743B $1895 '65 FORD GALAXIE 500 H.T. Coufk. VS, auto., PS, factory air, R&H. Ye low with black vlnyl in-terior. (RUC363) $1495 '65 FORD LT.D. lt.T. Coupe V-8, AT, PS, Factor)' a1r condition, R&.H. Diamond blue. Low mileage, Uc. No, TYU375 51695 '65 RAMB.LER 770 4 Door. V8, automatic, power steering, radio, heater, white w/green trim. (FBB511) $795 '67 IMPALA ~t~C®pe S27 V.S, .AT, PS, factory condlUon, n~c. f.taroon with black Interior. Llc. No. TUX~9 ~195 '63 FALCON Station Wqon. 4-dr. dclun. Automatk: trana.. ndlo and beater. Desert belie wttb wtatcm vln,yl interior. Lie. No. FXFS30 $695 '65 THUNDERBIRD Landau Hardtop Coupe. Full poWt'r, fac- tory air condltlonlng. Turquoise with black vinyl roof. Uc. No. NNF531 . $1895 • . '64 CHRYSLER 300 Hardtop Coupe. Auto. trans.1 power steer., factory air cond. ~ with parchment in· terior. I.le. No. 11 ~495 '64 MALIBU Convt. Convertible V-8, auto. trans., power steer., radio and heater, Gothic Gold with saddl• interior. Lie. No. OMH557 ~295 ' ... • ... ·. .. CHEVROLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA .. ~!~ 546-1203 c~~ 546-1200:. MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRAOE SALE AND TRAOE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRAOE SALE AND TR>\DE Furniture 8000Furnlture 8000 Pi1nos & Org1ns 8130 Misc.ll1neous 8600Mftcell1neou1 l600 ''111 ALL FLOOR MODELS 0 * "" C<mo . • WW"lifre' • KMbo * PUBLIC AUCTI N ~ ONCE-A· YEAR PIANOS and ORGANS 5 D be 28th at 7 PM • • Y.o.0u"'R''°'c·•H·Ko'""1c .. e at-ec:em r Tax Liquidation Auction ONCE A YEAR 10°/o OFF STORE CLEARANCE One week only so1nc savings lo 30',~ SHOP EARLYI No do\.\'n • Easy terms • Delivery e Gould Music Company '"Since 1911 "" ::!045 N. Main, Santa Ana So. of Freeway, 547--0681 Daily 'til 9 -Sal 't.U 5:30 Sunday 12 lo 5 llAMP.10ND • Steinway • Ya- maha • new & used pianos or all 1nakes. Best buys in So. Calif. right hett. SCHMIDT MUSIC CO., 1907 N. Main, Santa Ana Television 8205 AOK must reduce $80,000 inventory in1med- iately; consisting of: MAPLE, SPANISH, MEDITERRANEAN, CONTEMPORARY, MODERN. .. 40 BR sets, new & used; 10 dining rooms; 50 living rooms; IOO's of Box ·~gs & mat- tresses; 10 fate model Color TVs; Many port· able TV's & stereos. 80 Refrigerators, all siz.. es: Ranges; deep freezes; washers & dryers. All appliances guaranteed. Very l1rge lot of ANTIQUES All 1968 Repossessions must be clooed out al this Auction. Inspection daily 9-5. Dealers welcomed. AU merchandise must be cleared out by Jan. 1st. Credit available. AOK AUCTION 7122 Garden Grove Blvd. 1/2 Block West of Beach, off G.G. Frwy. MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND TRAOE Powar Crul".r• 9020 25' TOU.YCRAFT • ' Mi1eell1neou1 8600 Hardtop C'lliser, blt "65.~2lil GOOD Kenmore IAte Modd HP VS. S.S. rad~ deplO Coppertone gas r 8 n c •, tinder, elec ref, auto baU~ Silvertone TV (maple) system, llOV •bore powe.1', cabinet) Works. Chain, foot bait tank. swim step. Cpl: •tools, kitchen •toot. sports & drps, lull covers, _me. equipment • Boy scout Sharp le in mint cood. Docl!- uniform _ Miscellaneowl ed in Newport, Sl:'r.iq. girl's cloth i n g, 963-4257 ·~ miscellaneous boy"• , clothing. Dishes. kn I c k Bolt Maintenance 90311 knacks, heater (eleclrlcJ EXPERIEN(£D.' 1 irons, waffle iron. Good chrome to'Nd rackB, curtaln SKIPPER. . ' rods. Lars:e alabs marble. Wants work. 548-3561' • 642-3526 PETS and LIVESTOCK Boat Slip Moorinv - C1t1 8820 8!-~tD ~·~Ide lie for boa~ SIAMESE. Aby, stud ser. I===*=.,,...,=='=*==::>. Siamese, Aby, Persian &r " :::r Russian Blue k itte ns , Bo1t1 Wanted W5U _;>f6.&Sl!o=;;;;===== e CASH for ""' bult 'do 25 to 50, 12 • 14' -~D,;,09,,;•:_ _____ 8_82_5 1 rowboats, O)ITlplete. Wri$e PUREBRED Cocker Pups. full into, Mr. Sieeel. f1D 2 male11 Jr.ft. v e r y s.. Beverly Or, Bever1jv Reasonable. 1 bile, 1 blonde. Hills, Ca1U. 90212 · 645-2964 • IRISH n~r Pups Beaut Aircraft ~1.00 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I AKC. Ready for Christmas. Pri. Pilot Courw -$100. up. 673-2975 alt 3 $75 dn, $20.16 mo. M~ HI-Fl & Stereo 8210 Mi1celt1neous '-"-'-'-'c..,;,;.:;;,,;;.:..._~ 8600 *AUCTION* lf you w\U sell or buy give Windy a lry Auctions Friday 7: 30 p.m. Windy's Auction Bern Beh.ind Tony'1 Bldg. Mat'! 2075~ Newport, CM 646-8686 KNlmD f ABRICS "'FOR SALE AKC Registered. Ain:nlt Sales. F M Pardo Irish Setter Puppies. Orange C o.u n t y AirP,ptt 5 w~ old. 646-1738 549--2666 or 546-1610 AKC Male, silver, miniature, . Poodle ups, 3 mo's, 548-1319 Mobile Homes TRANSPORTATION Boah & Yachts 9000 l~ FT. O!stom Fl.aniq:o Racer. Blue &nd gold. Trailer &: boat freshly painted. New white naugahyde. Upholsterv Three 16% hp Cha.mpkln engines. Complete w I t h seven.I tu.el &anb, atffrlng and cootrols. See at 2SOJ Lafayette. Newport Beach. BSTN. Whaler 14' elect '67 -40 &: 6 HP. Jhns.. Bow rail, run'g lites. trailer, (easy launch). Sida, 3 fuel tanks, canopy & extras. $1850 (like new). 637-7549 Cwt.GE IT! COSTA ' MESA'S OWN Mobile Home Show 12's 0 l6's • 20's Ii: 24 wides to 'IO' Soon a 34' wide ' CARCBBEE • CASA LOMA CELEBRITY • er· ,NEN.. TAL. FASHlON MANOR .. roRNEU. · FAlP. VIEW • RO:...LAWAY • -· DAU.Y PILOT WANT ADS! I I . ' ) ---------..... t•t•t'1( ••• . ... • t i ' ' • ' . ' .. ...... 'Fndor: o.CtiiM'tt; l!U ---No~·C1r1 9800 IW m t 800Nn Cm ,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::========:::::i:============= • l . . • .. • • BRAND NEW 1969 VALIANT 2 DR. SEDAN Vl21A9El2 1936 BRAND NEW PLYMOUTH FURY 2 DR. SEDAN HOLIDAY USED CAR SPECIALS . . Alf pr-le91 P ..... ~~ ar.d ~. Prk'M "'4id lhnNvh T,,_,.,.,,, ~JI, ltOll '67 DODGE Dart 2 door hardlop. Automalic, radio, hellter, power sleering, AIR CONOITIONINb (!GX660) $1795 '67 PLYMOUTH Fury. Autorn41ic, radio, heater, power steering. Factory air ton· ditioning. {Tlm76J. $1695 '66 T-BIRD Landau. Automatic, powtr .sleet· ing, pcl'Ner brakes, AIR CONOI· TIONING. (!Pl144 ) $2495 '67 PLYMOUTH Belvedere. Full Factory equipped including FACTORY AIR C.'ONOI· TIONING (XH00551 $1195 '66 Continental 2 Dr. H.T. Full power including FACTORY AIR CONOITl~ING. Luxurious Car. (S!LK496) $2595 Pf21F90186840 '66 CHRYSLER 300 coupe. Automatjc, radio, heater, power .steering, power brakes, air conditioning. (YCL· 301) $2395 '67 OLDS Della Cusfom. VS, auto., radio & heater, power steering & brakes, factory air, vinyl tcip. {TPK436) $2795 '67 FORD Galaxie .500 2-<lr. H.T. V-8, auto- matic, power steering, rad io, tieatar, landau top. (TD6613) $2095 •' --• -- TRANSPORTATION . Miitor~clos 9300 ----------------------.----------- TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION e Spot Cash I.Cr Imports We pay more fer a.ny import nprdleas of ~ar. make or condition. 1J")' us before you tell. ELMORE MO'roRS, 15Dl Stach Blvd. Wffbninrter. 8!M-332'l. Trucks 9500 =======I .---~--~- S.IH, SeNlce, Par Col:lll)leto new MG tnve11 See the new Auatio Arn Here Now! .BRAND NEW *SPORT5MEN5 VAN* CORTINA '67 FlAT, fastback, green. 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Xlnt int. new brakes, xlnt Newport Beach •. TRUCKS * They Aro All Hero At Engli sh Ford *YAMAHAS* mech. Low miles. 64Z..1D49 642-~ 540.!J# fantastic Discounts • $50 • Ready for immediate Complete salea. service 100 MPH, 32 ml per gal. Full five pass. sports styling. Autbomed MG Dealer i i KARMANN GHIA 1962 MG Midget New cluWi/, RTH. Good cond. .Asldltl delivery '63 GHIA 42.000 milee. red. $515. 53&-3497 1' $950 or best 'otter CASH. CORTI.NA * Deluxe 2 Door * BEACH CITY OVER COST DODGE "'-™' PORSCHE 1655.5 Beach mvd., {Hwy. 39) HERB FRIEDLANDER ttuntt:"eeooh 9b25 Garden Grove Blvd. P/UP Truck, '61 ~ ton. '67 HODA.KA. 'ex p an a ion Pwr brake•, new motor. chamber fiberglass tank & Top mechan. cone!. Need.a fender, rake bar & iork paint. Sac. $.595. 218 Ogle brace. The eood tttts. Make '"'642-4'=4°'86====== otter. 546--8T16 1 • '67 11tlUMPH Campers 9520 T-100 C 500 C.C. Xlnt con<J. Low mileage, $825. Pvt. ply • • 531-8387 • YAMAHA 80 Dtrt bike. Good cond, $150. * 644-lMS * BSA Vlcfol' '68-2"100 miles. W /trade for smaller bike, Tip top condition. 962-4018 HODAK.A 100 cc 5 spd. custom. Like new, 400 mi. Cost $650 sell $400. 642-6803 • HONDA • MINI BIKES CAMPER CLEARANCE of 1968 El Dorado, Four Winds, S"ot1m1n ind Gold- lin• mod1l1 at -Q-BIG DISCOUNTS-{i- All 1b9 modal1 now 1!1ra. S1"1 11tr1 $ on o~r Trudi:- Campar Pri"a1. 8-9·1 I ft. Mod1t,, Cti1,1ia Modals, Salf Containad Units, All C1mper· Aeell• 1ori•1 In Stoelc. *CAMPER RENTALS* 5 Year Financing On Approvad Cradit $1883 Immediate Delivery Over 50 2 doors, 4 doors, GTs, station wagorui In stock. Fully automatic or 4 speed . TOP TRADE FOR YOUR PRESENT CAR rHEODOR E Robins Ford 2060 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 642-0010 540-8211 Every 1968 demonstrator and company owned car in this ad is priced below original factory invoice! Serv · iced & ready to roll to-day 1968 TORONADO 1968 CUTLASS ..... ~ (2 To Choose From) (10 To Choose From) 'V-8, au tomatic trans., radio and heater, power brakes, power seat, full power, factory air condi- tioning. Serial No's. 621218 & 621436. V-8, automafic trans., radio, heater, power brakes, air conditioning and many oilier extras. Serial No's. 1298, 3172, 8314, 3240. 110810, 1759, 0668, 0306, 2631, 120900. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY + Tax & lie. $3196 + Tax & lie . COMPLETE LEASE AND DAILY RENTAL DEPARTMENT VALUE RATED USED CAR BARGAINS '62 CHEVROLET IMPALA Coupa. R&H, automatic, 1ir tond. Thi1 Chart i1 r11I nic1 111d n1ad1 a naw l!oma. IWAVB98) $799 '61 THUNDERBIRD R&H, ayto.. PS, PB. air, P-win· dow1, low mi111 end r11dy 1o 90, Don't miu thi1 buy, ISVX042 1 $699 '65 FORD LTD COUPE RIH, •uto., PS, PB, 1ir. 811utiful ni•roon with m1t"hing inl11ior. Showt good c1r1, IREJ865 J $1699 '67 OLDS DEL TA Cu,tom cpa. H11 a lot of equip· mt11t. R&H, auto., PS, PB, air. p. wi"dow' •nd buek1t 111 1$. ITUJ. 1721 $2950 '67 MERCURY COUGA R 811uliful blua/whi!1 , R&H, l 1pd. fUVBb29J. Thi1 is th1 way to 91t a lot o' car for only $1999 '67 TOYOTA CORON A 4 Door 11dan. 4 1p1td, R1dio and h11t1r, IVOG60ll $1599 '65 BUICK LE SABRE CUSTOM CPE. Thi1 e1r is a r11I b11uty a"d driva1 lik1 naw, Com• in and try this ont. fRGU6541 $1799 , '65 MARLIN COUPE R&H, A.T., P.S., air. Hara h a ctr that i1 a 11al buy af fhi1 t11I low prica. $1599 163 PONTIAC Bo nneville Cpa. 81aufiful powdar blu1, RIH, auto., PS, P!, air, Tlii1 e•t b1- long1 to , 1 lady freni C.M., •nd It'• iutl lika "'"· IHSS1b41 $1150 . .,7.z•E-L-r;.i\"-------YOW llllr -HARBOR AUTHORl?m GMC TRUCK SALES & SERVICE BLVD. COSTA MESA Now 546-.5550 Used 546-5553 '62 WITH only 13,000 ; on new '68 eraglne, tnN perfect, custom paint, .,. ceptional. Must st!('. Call tiir details. Private pty. 548.m& '62 PORSCHE Coupi. Orliinal. Immaculate ~ 673-3360, 548-S732 eves SUBARU • TOYOTA ' TOYOTA!, 15300 Beach Blvd., Wst:mNtr Phone 894-3322 \IQ. TRIUMPH ~ .,. '67 TRIUMPH . ~ Black Beauty. 4A-lR.S. D&. Wlre whls, AM-FM radlO. Owned by little, nld, scliiA»J teacher. Lo mileage. ~ cash or older trade. Will ~ ance pvt. ply. $1785 BaJaftiOe 494-9m or ~ VOLKSWAGEJ SALE vw 'u; --Bus & Camper1 ~ '65 V.W. 9 Pass Bll3 '65 V.W. Bus '64 V.W. Bus Sunroof ' '67 V.W. Dlx 9 Pass Bu.s '64 V.W. Camper '66 V.W. Dlx 9 Pass Bus '67 V.W. Camper 54f ·DDJ--47J.J 1 f0 ~;, 1970 HAllOR ILYD. . , COSTA MESA .,. 1967 V\V, blue, xlnt c.~. Low mi., new brake Hiiing & carb ovt'rhauled, $1*. 472 Costa Mesa St., CJtl. all day. ·,. '64 VW BUS $1400. w/feee 16' &ki boat •• trailer, 673-5456 lll67 VW ln1maculate. Ori: owner. Am-Fm radio, Best nUer. 642-0010 Del Montell. 1968 VW 1500 ENGINE $4ri!. Also '59 VW Van available, $100. 67&-3350 '63 VW Bus. New engine, new paint, new tires, $700. Phone 53G-2731 '67 V\V, exceptionally clean. S:JCIO equity, take over bank financing. 847-4011 '63 VW Bug. Super clean. $895. Xlnt cond. 644-0158 VOLVO VOLVO? Wo Havo Them Alll SEE US !Sf OR LAST BUT SEE US/ M LemiA IHPORTS OYOTA-VOLVO 1966 ll3.l.bor, C.M. 646-9303 * New Volvos * GET A BETTER DEAL Herb Friedlonder 1 13750 Beach Blvd . (II~ Y.ll 2 blks So. G.G. FY:y, 893-i""JI)) 53T-'i824 ITS WONDER.YUL the man) buy1 m appliances )'OU tiod In the Cllllll.fted AdL Che..".k ~now! ------· ----------------------------------------------------------~-- f!Wlt, -27, 1961 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANil'OllTATION TRANSl'OllTATION fAANSJiORTATIOH Uted Can =======:::::;::.:~__;:.=.:::=-.:::::.~--== 1969 CADILLAC 'IE.ct 'FR_.OJvf TJ-{E CR/fFISME'N ON DISPLAY AND READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY! .,._ ' ---OVER 80 QUALITY AUTOMOBILES TO SELEa FROM--- SALE $4333 PRICE '68 CAMARO ' Abi;olutely the sharpest one in town. A local 8,000 mile aut.omoblle. Finished in tan&"etine with bla.ck vinyl roof and matching interior. 327 VS engine, automaUc, power steering and brakes, factory air conditioning. Beautiful condition. (WWC965) SALE PRICED '67 CONTINENTAL A bc!autiful turquoise 4 door with turquoise leather interior. All the popular power assists tncludin1 power steering -brakes, \vindo\11s, seats, factory alt condittoning. This car is ab- solutely 1orgeous. (TGM771) SALE $3666 PRICE '67 CADILLAC Fleetwood Broui;:bam. Shimmering regal silver exterior with black padded top and black tap· astry and leather interior. All the powc1· equipment including steering, brakes, \Yln- dows, vent windows, trunk lid release. Stereo radio, tilt and telescopic steering wheel plus C.dillac's famous factory air conditioning. CUKV239) SALE $4999 PRICE '68 CADILLAC Thf! ever popui&r El Dorado. Finished In Ermine white with black and white hounds- tooth Cloth and leather interior. Equipped \\ith power steering, power brakes, power \vlndow&, power seat, factory air condition- ing, AM-FM radio, automatic cruise-control and other cadlllac accessories, Low miles and strictly original. Shows finest car. <No. 23441 SALE $6222 PRICE . ' '67 CADILLAC Thia: Jovel,y Coupe DeVWe ha1 all power assists including power 1temr11, braltts, w!ndowa, scat and dadUlac's famous factory air con- ditioning, stereo AM-FM, tilt wheel, twilight sent., Premium Double Ea&le tires. BeauWul locaJ 1 owner automobile. <VAX710l '67 CADILLAC Eldorado. Btautitul ermine wblte with black padded top and matchlna: interior, full)' Cad· iliac equipped with factory a1r condlUontna, power tlterlng, brako. windows, auto crulle control, rear window defoggu, AM·P'M radio. A local car 1howtng outstandin& care. (UQP- 9:541 ~r~) '68 CADILLAC De Villt-Convertible finished In beautiful Ivan- hoe green wth black top and black leather i.,lerior. Fully power equipped including fac- tory air conditioning, stereo AM-FM radio, automatic cruise<ontrol, tilt-telescopic steer- lni: wheel and even power vent windows, This Cadillac Is In superfluous condition. <XSP-694) SALE $5222 PRICE '61 CADILLAC Convertible coupe. Finished In medium blue exterior wlth black top and full leather interior. All power assists plus many otht-r Cadillac factory opUons. You must see and drive thi& one. (0HY762) SALE $555 PRICE '61 CONTINENTAL Powder blue with black and white leather tn- terior. Factory air conditioned and fully equipped with pQWer windows, steering, brakes, scat. Fine transportation. See and drive to appreciate. SALE $888 PRICE '65 FLEETWOOD Brougham. The epitome of fine automobile finished in Grecian white with black padded roof a nd hl!autilul embroidered Dl!:vei'aux cloth and leather interior. Factory air condi- tion, full pov>er and all the e:oCtras to comple· ment this car of cars. !HPD501) LARGEST SELECTION OF LATE MODEL, PREVIOUSLY OWNED CADILLACS IN ORANGE COUNTY FLHTWOOD BROUGH»IS ElDORADOS COUPE DE VIWS SEDAN DE VILLES COllVBUIBW We •110 heve •n excelle"t selectien '64 CADILLAC Coupe DeVllle. A beauUtul ermine wl\ite auto· mobile With black and white cloth and lea.tMr Interior. Powtt steertna, ~ brakes, power selits, poW'f!r windows, st1nal 1etklng radio, and of coune cadJUac's factory air conditlon- lnc. CRPJ488! SAl! $1999 PRICE '65 THUNDERBIRD Landau. A beautif'ul powder blue T-Blrd with the while landau root all vinyl intertoc. l'ull power equJpment 1ncludlng power brake.. power 1teeriq • power wlndoWI • power seat and ot course factory alr condltionlnr. Thl1 ls an oubtandlng car at outstanding &avin&s. Better hurry on this one. (MPP121) $1888 '66 BUICK Custom IA-Sabre 4 Door hardtop, Tttl blue with matching interior. Factocy alt condJ. tioninc, automatic tranamlulon, power steer- lnr. power brakH, radio, heater, etc. Truly a fine automobile, (SIW499) SALE $2333 PRICE '65 CADILLAC I th I K 1 Coupe DeVIUe. Olympic bronze •xWiot wtth o 0 •r popu er m• e • · · cloth arid leather Interior. Thll 24,000 mile. '68 TORINO -'68 CAMARO automobUe hu all of Cadillac'• power featurn Including power 1teertn1. brakes. windows, '65 OLDS VISTA CRUISER seat. and factory air condJllonlng. Also has '68 FIREBIRD -'6-4 OLDS SEDAN brand new Oval 90 tires. Simply Eora:eous. (3619) SALE PRICED '61 PONTIAC COUPE-'60 T-BIRD SALE PRICED SALi $5555 PlilCI '66 CADILLAC De V'tlle convertible. Lmt.erou1 autumn 1014 finllll w1lh biaek top and ,bi.ck l..,thtr In .. terlor. 1\llb' powtr eciul~ inelu4ln1 fa<:tory air condltlonlnr. AM .. J'M.radio and many Otb· er ca&llac acceuoril!:a. (SQV-913) SAU $2999 PRICI '67 CADILLAC Dl!:VWe convertible. Bu.ullful C&ineo belre w:ltb matchln& top and Ieathtr interior. T1lis Jew mlleqe car ii uceptlonally eqWpped with factory air condJUonins. ptWtr 1teer1n1. power brakff, power Ht.ta, poWtt wtndQwsJ tilt and tele1coplc wheel. AM ~ Flot: rad.10 am much more, lXSPS92) SALi $4333 PRICI '65 BUICK Wildcat C door hardto~ Spanlab Sllver finilh with ttd vinyl interior. Equipped wtt!1 AM-FH radio, tilt 1tel!:rln1 whel!:I, power truck lid re.. least-, wire wheel cov•rs, radio, heattr, auto- matic transmls1on, PC1Wff steering and power brake1. Very low mUea. (RRY-376) SALE PRICID '66 THUNDERBIRD TIM 1port;y 2 door hardtop fully equlppod wttla powu 1teertn1. power brtkn, poWt!' wtri· dowa, power 1eat and Ford'• tamow ~ atr conctitlonlnr. A btautU\11 aaUn dlvtr _es-tarlor with black vtnyl Interior. CJrl'U3.19) · SALi $2333 PRICI SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN------- SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1968 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 Pf.A SATURDAY and SUNDAY YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA NAB ·ERS 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa ;.;.:.;.:.:..;:.;.;;,..;..;.. __ ':".:"",7_00 ~;,;;_;.;._~~~'-'- NEED A CAR? TRANSPORTATION CAN'T BE FINANCED? e aonJauplT •"'1>•""'"1 CAR SAfE •Bad Cttdit? • I>lvorcedf eMilltary e Ne.,. In A.rut Credit problem? Sec us for Make Pa)oday Pl.JDll!!lta instant delivery, low prices, "-CARTHY MOTORS easy terms. We decide on '""" rour credit. Call or come 143> So. Main I: Ecbna:er 1n today. (2 blocb N. of Seonl 540-4392 Santa Ana Pb '°"""' ILUE CHIP W.,, B AUTO SALES I UJ 2145 Harbor, C"'ta M"• WE PAY CASH FOR YOUI' Volklwaten or Ponche YOUR CAR PAID 1: pay top dollarL Paid for FOR OR NOT ! or not. Call Ralph ======== 673-1190 L\WORTS \VANTED ~ C..ountits TOP S BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYO'rA 18881 Stach Blvd. tr. Beach. Ph. M?~ U-Md c ... • '67 cad Coupe de 22.000 mi. $4550. e '67 Coua:ar XR 7 11.IXXI ml. $ZT:i0 e E."<e.r-Cycle, new. CM! $528. !ltll $325. 540-4590 NOW'S THE CHEVROLET OIEVY Bd Air, 1962, 75.<XXI ml. One owner, fine con. dlUon, au ,power, air ron- dil., ndio, Ahock.1. $695 ca.sh-Phone OR S-8197 au '56 OlEV. 2 dr. sta wa1, \.\'ilh India rug, curtains, stereo tape. 546-5:1()8 1964 EL Camino, 327. $1095, very clean. Call 673-1398 eve~. CONTINENTAL * Prestl9e Automobile 1965 OONTINENT AL Sport Sed. Tastefully smart anti- qua green w/ rich naluraJ grt'f?n !inborn call skin inter. Air cond itioned and f u 11 po1v<'r eqpt. of COUf'M.'. IAI· most $8,000 l"l('\V) PKB954 NOW $25951 (lat car lot on Harbor Blvd.) JOHNSON & SON l..inc'Oln-Mercury Colt.a Mesa Branch '4.1 Harbor Blvd. 6C2·7m0 COllVAlll NEWCASTlf MOTORS 2116 Harbor Blvd. Costa Men '63 Corv1tlr Spider $599 642~ TIME FOR 9UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT 6 p.m. :::::======= WANT AD 1!167 OtEVELLE St a I 1 on DODGE Wagon. SlSOO. ~7 608 -------__ Verano Pl. IUCll lrvmc '62 CHEVY n, sulo, :oClnt rond. l ownf!t. J1.111l tuned. 47 ,000 ml. $395. 61J...4674 '61 Chargar $2800. 962.1211 ~ ol wktndfl. OOC'K IT TO 'EM! 1960 FORD + GALAXIE . * Not running, will SC!ll as parls or alt for best oUer. Call anytime before 3 p.m. * -· 1956 FORD 9 Passenaft. Station Wqen. Good ~ car. S2IXI or best oUer. Call anytlme M· fore 3 p.m. • * * M6-6.170 1967 4·DR. H·T air cond, J>OY.'tt SICC"r. le: brake., RAH. Perfect cond, $2.,500. Call Mfr.1481 l'ORD 1968 F1-XL 5Q'.J H.T .. 390 ~ ens. P/1, P/b, R/H. Low mUta, :dnt cond. ~1861 1965 For.: Cntry Squirt Wq:, )oaded, Xlr.L !1900. 615J2UI or mn76. '60 FORD Country Seda" Stick, R/H, 0.0.. iO(XI tires. $195. 6Ta-52&8 '!1 P'ORD Gal, 2 dr. Sedan. on,. owner, low -· x.lnt oond. Sf6-68 '57 FOl\D \Vagon, nHds work. Top appearance, xlnt paint I: interior. $ 7 5. ........,. MERCURY '67 COL Pk. air, p/w, p/b, p/s, 28 K mi. $2800. Veey clean! lf6.-0498 MERCURY '66 Colony Park. 9 pug, air, full pwr, AM-FM I: many extras. Prl party. $2500 545-t761 MUSTANG '65 MUSTANG 2+2. HI pu1.ormance m hp., 4 spd, dllC bnkn. 543-70M 540-9100 '!7 MUSTA.~G 2+2 3'0 GTA * "4" SPEED FUNI '64 l<A!qLER 640 a<arc ~·~/bl~l~~n~~ '67 MUSTAN~ V-8 ~~ :e.~r~:.·64~-·caib ct Full pwr. 12515, $"'11 fine. CPE. Foct. AIR. COND. , ==:::;==:!::::::::=I ,,._9912 °' •.....u .... :'~''!:'.de""~ •::,; ST\IDEIAl(P '65 CONY V-8, yti}OW w/blk walll, etc. "A lead Mustanc --...;;.--...,=--! Int. New trans&: tlret. Btat for a "He"-Manl" TNH«I& '63 Srudtbaker 14rk, 6 cyt. otter. 642-&>40 ONLY $24951 4 dr~ cond. $2$0. °' 11IE QUICIE'.R YOU CALL, lit car lot on Harbor Blvd. l:be::'::' ::::;;::::-::::::::;:::z::::::::I nlE QU!aa:R YQU SELL JOHNSON .. SON Lincoln-Mercury Co1ta Mtta Branch 00 -B!Yd. IG.'lll!O PLYMOUTH 'IO P1ymout!i Woion-Excop. tlona!ly aborp. s.. .. believe It. $G9. ~MOTORS *MR STYUSHI 1953 11-l'UNDERBmD HI). TOP CPE. ~te )'OU?' •U 1n this &mOOlb quiet run- nlna: ennine White be.t turn. tr with fact. alN:o$11~ izW. Comfort and all 8P&CI: ap power auilta. .Pttllli all bW:tt Yll\YI l!ttar. "!In' It-... --• UttJef" IYE4.1f ONLY $12951 Ut w )ot on Harbor BJvd. JOHNSON Ir SON Llrlooib-lftrauJ °'""--!Ml -Blvd, IG.llllO ·a T.aIRO. tun ;;;ii', ~. e1lltnt: t'.'Olld. New ft.1irt, n. hauit, ah6dcl. etc. ms. 511-19<1 ' I 11 l ' ) ---------------~--------·--·---.. . . . . . JI DAILY l"ILOT ~ . . . ' .. ~ . THIS IS THE TIME OF YEAR WHEN WE NORMALLY MAKE OUR MOST SUBSTANTIAL DISCOUNTS --...u OF THE YEAR IN ORDER TO REDUCE INVENTORY AND PREPARE FOR . THE NEW YEAR'S BUSINESS. THIS YEAR, BECAUSE OF THE MANY MORE NEW CARS ORDERED TO STOCK OUR HUGE NEW DEALERSHIP LOCATION, WE MUST SELL MORE ••• AND TO DO THAT, WE MUST DISCOUNT MORE! AND THAT'S WHAT WE ARE DOING ON NEW CARS AND USED ••• DISCOUNTING OUR NORMAUY LOW PRICES EVEN LOWER ••• BUY NOW AND SAVE! e ON ALL CARS ••• NEW AND USED ••• THESE ROCK-BOTTOM .PRICES WILL STAY IN EFFECT TO THE YEAR END. '68 I WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF 1968 COUGARS PRESENTLY IN STOCK ••• BRAND NEW & '68 I S • READY TO GO. WE HAVE LOWERED THE PRICES DRAMATICALLY ••• BUY NOW AND SAVE! S • 166 MERCURY Montclair 4 Dr. H.T. F11lly pow•r equipt., it h•1 ll1r•o t•p• sy1t1m. Powder bl11• ~Ith medium blu• int, Fie. 1 it cond., l1nd1u roof, Showl wonderful c:1r1, lie. TAW51.f. '65 T-BIRD COUPE Arlie gold ••'· w/m1td1, int., 111fo. lr1n1., _R&H, !uU pwr. 1lr., brk•., wind., 111t. Very 1ttr1c. m1in. S11 to 1ppr1u1l1, l ie. OWWlllo'I, SAFE IUT CllST WAllANTY '67 TORONADO (Deluxe) Gr1ci1n gold fini1h w/11tin b11ck int. 01111•• cp1., full pwr., fie. air contf. I own., like new. Show1 f11tidio111 c1r1. Stock Number 42•4A. '67 COUGAR 2 Dr. Hardtop botic: furquoh1 fini1h with "inyl inferior with m1tchin9 ltndtu roof, .lotdtd with •xlr11, 111!01 tr•n1., P.S., P.I ., rtdio w/it1r10 l1pt, h1tt1r, f•e. 1ir. 811utfully 'm1in. lie, TRH72l 166 COLONY PARK 9 p111, 111. w9n. Full pwr 1quip., 1ulo, lrtns., ftctory 1ir. R&H, l11u• tiful 1rctie white w/conlrtlfing \linyl inl1rior, 31,000 •ct. mil1i., I own1r, c1refully 11M1int1i111d. lie. StUB55. '67 PLYMOUTH Fury Ill 2 door h1rdlop. tle1uliful A1l1c gold, witk bleck ¥inyl 11phol1t1ry. Fully ftclory 1quipp1d, 1ulo., R&H, P.S., P.I .. ftc. 1ir, law mil11. Tr1decl by ori9in1I owner. Lie, 077. '67 MERCURY Colony Park 9 pin. 111 , w9n. Striking 1rctie white w/TurqYoi11 int., 11ta, 111111~ R&H, ,;, cond., P.S., P.I ., tilted whl. Ctr. fie. 3rd 111t, 11199. rick, d111I 1cl, t1il91la, I own1r car, mud 1ee lo tppreci1la. lie. UIH757 '67 CONTINENTAL H.T. Coupe · Attr1cliv1 C1meo grn, fin. w/contr. drk. ivy gold !either int. All lu•. f11,: auto, tr1n1., R I 1tr. t1p1, htr, 1uto, tefftf>. carit. 1ir cand., P.S., P.l., P.W., •·w1y pwr. 1e1t I own 20,00 mi. TEY9•0 '66 THUNDERBIRD Hardtop Coupe 811utiful gold bron1e exl1riar with caril11slin9 b1i91 inf1rlor, lu~ury 1quipp1d throughaul, Full power iric!uding 1ulom1lic tr1ri1.1 R&H, fie. 1ir. I owri1r, c1r1fully driv1n. Lie. SIN529 '68 BUICK Electra 225 Very 1ttr1etive light b1i91 fini1h with m1tchin9 int11ior ind l1ncl1u r1of, Auto. tr1n1., AM/FM, h11t1r, fully power 1quipp1cl I lu~ury 1ppalntiv1, f1clory 1it cand. Shown xlnt ctr•. l ie. PNl<t6 '68 OLDS Cutlass Supreme 2 Dr. H.T. 81tutiful 1191 gold 1rl1rior wiHi m1lchin9 buck1t 111t1 ind bleck l1nd1u roof. Fully fie. 1quippff plu1 auto. tr1n1 ., R&H, P.S .. P.8., f1~. 1ir. Oriv1ri on ly I •.OOO mile1 & c11r1fully main+•in1d by ari9in11I own•r. l ie, XOA412 '63 CONTINENTAL 4 Dr. Sedan Ennln. -whit. flnl1h with beautiful turquoi11 la1til•r int.rior. Auto, frant., R&H, full poW•r •quipped I ftc. •ir cond. On• of Iha better on• ewn1r tr1d .. in1. lie.. FNZ360 '68 MUSTANG 2 Dr. H.T. 8ri9ht -turquoite 1itl1rior with m1tchin9 inl•rior. Fully f1ctory 1quipp•d end 1uto. Irani., RIH, pwr. d11r~ 1lc. Attr1cliv1 incl econ•mic•l. lie, \'CK l77 :?.~ud~~eE~~ic 1.~rPo~w~~ m~~.~~~,~~~!;,, ~f,~.~tory equipped plu1 11110. h 1n1., RIH, P.S., P.B., fectory 1ir condition. l ie. NRl,6 '67 MERCURY Montclair 4 Dr. H.T. Ad•c gold fh1iih with m•fchin9 interior, 1uto. tr1n1., RIH, P.S., P.I ., fectory eir conditioning. Uc. TUVJl9 $2395 $2195 $3495 $2795 $2695 $2195 $2895 $3995 $2695 $3995 $3195 $1695 $2395 $1795 $2195 • AT 1941 HARBOR BOULEVARD LOCATION • '58 RENAULT 4 Dr. Sedan . Thrifty 4 clyinder with l sp••d. Lie. QIE191 '62 RAMBLER Station Wagon R•dio, h••t•r •nd •utom•tic. lie. GNM823 '62 CHEV 4 Dr. Impala Autom•tie, V-8, r•dio .. nd h••t•r. Lie. TEZ650 '62 PLYMOUTH Fury Station Wagon . ' Autom•tic, V-8, power st••ting, r•dio & heifer. l ie. FWV594 '62 KARMEN GHIA Convertible 14'-' \ ... N•w top, r•dio •nd h••t•r. Silver blu•. Lie, W\B~fl '64 PONTIAC Catalina Convertible Automatic, pow•r steering, power br•kes, r1di11 and heater. Lie. OLE917 '63 THUNDERBIRD 2 Dr. H.T. Full pow•r •nd •ir. Sh•rp! l ie, IYE437 '63 CHRYSLER 300 2 Dr. Coupe Autom•tic:, •ir, pow•r steering, power br•kes. NY0234 '64 CH~V Impala Automatic, •ir, power steerin9, pow•r brakes. Lie. KIZ745 '64 MERCURY Montclair H.T. Cpe. Autom1tie, air, power ste•rin9, power brak•s. Lie. IOX167 '64 CHRYSLER N.Y. 4 Dr. H.T. Full power and f•ctory •ir. AM/FM r•dio. Lie. NYS604 '64 LINCOLN Continental Full power with f•c:fory air. l ie. IOZ637 '65 OLDS 98 4 Dr. H.T. Full pow•r ind factory •ir. Lie. NBR792 166 CAPRICE 2 Dr. H.T. F1ctory •ir, power steering, power br1lres, •ufom1tie, red io ind h••+er. lie. RPL285 _._ $195 $295 $595 $695 $695 . $895 ' $1095 $1195 $1195 $1195 $1195 $1495 $1695 $1995 $1995 (L~~©@IL~ ©@~1J~~~~lf£(L D l&lffilK\ ma l~lffi©MlffiW a ©@M@&lffi t 2626 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA I !ID~@. D !ID (ID ~ ® ' • ' • . ' l • • ' • ' • r • ! r • l I ' i I ! . • I I T • • 1 ' .. ' " • I •• " ·~ ' .;. . )· ·' • l -----··----------------·--·------------------.... ----~-----. frldlf, Oettmbtr 27, 1966 DAILY PILOT 3,'; .. ' ·- THE YEAR,.·./.~. END . S~LE -. B&Gl·NS ! ' .-• ' .. ' .. • •. i • .:~•· 1'· ·' ':-i :-- ' .. ' ' • -·' . • ; ~ , I ··:'~1 1,!,:_.ll'iti'°:·· • •. •. •. ~ 'f, ·' EACH YEAR. AT, Tlt'S 1'1~E Yf~1¢~ ~f "oU«;10UTSTANDU\IG SA~ES RENT, OUR WIND-UP SALE OF THI YURI . " ., . '· ' ,, R . . I ., . . ' •• ' , .. ~ . ' ". . " " "' ' "lo,•, ' 'This beautiful lim'elile 9reen, hardtop coupe is equipped with Cordovan lop, Hy • . ~t!imatic, Push bution radio, power steering, power disc . brakes, eir condition·' · i~g, dlx seat belts, headrests, visor mirrors, soft-ray glass, power windows,>front floor mats, remote control outside mirror, hidden windshieli:l antenna, 400•cubic inch engine I 350 .hp, that i~), end ell the standard deluxe Grand Prix accessor· ies. No. 27b579P1,60850. Plus Lie. & Tax. '64 CHEVROLET IMPALA i Or. H.T. Vt, pow•rglicl~. P.S., R&H, WSW . (QXH'll'l l !!. $1617 s1~77 wo'~ NOW \, 1'J, . '65 CHEVROLET IMPALA • 2 Or. M.T. V~~{9llP•, pow•r 1t11rin,, r1d io, ~f'''• WSW, '''$'Y ~7 1 $ · " ... I// HOW 1777 '66 CHEV,,OLET CAPRICE . 2 Or. H.T. VI, Pf!"ll'glid1, power ite1rin9, 11dio, h11l1r, WSW, v1nyl top, f1,tor; air. tTRSl31 l • "" 52677 HOW s2377 '67 CHEVROLET CAPRICE 4 Or .. H.T. VI, hydr1m1lic, powtr 1t••rin9-br•l.;•1-111h- window1, ftclory 1ir. ITSS6l I ) wn s3177 NOW 52877 '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 Or. H.T. VB, hydr1m•lic, power 1lt•ring. pow-tr br1k1" r•dio, h••ter, W.SW. !XSP l 4Jl ••• 52877 NOW 52377 '64 THUNDERBIRD va, cr11itom1ti,, pow1r 1l11rin9.brak•1. r1dio, haa!1r. WSW, l1,tory ,;,, (1WS9161 , ... s2177 NOW s1777 -'65 FORD S9UIRE WAGON i. cy!. Forclomtlic, pwr. 1l1er . whit1 w1ll1. !PGF9!4 1 s 513. wo• 1677 NOW 77 '66 MUSTANG 1 Or. VI, '111homtfi,, power 1l•1rin9, r1dio, h11t1r, WSW, f1ctory •ir. I RSHl2 l) ... s2377 NOW s1977 '66 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE VI, crui1om1tic, GT eqll.ipp1d. IRSH562 J ... s2211 · NOW s1977 54444! '68 MUSTANG R<1dio i nd h1al1r, 3 •P••d tr1 n1m;u ion, f1clory w•rrcn- >y ~~"s25Ti' HOW . s221-/ '62 THUND.ERBIRD VI, cr1,1i10~1fi,, pow•r 1te•rin9, r1dio, li11fer, WSW, 49,150 mil11. IOLR 120 J -~ .s1111 NOW s977- '67 MERCURY cou·GAR VB. 4 1p1 1d h1n1., r•dio, h•1i1r. 9,000 ryijl11. (VfF620J woo $2877 NOW s2477 '66 OLDS CUTLASS 1 Or. H.T. VI , hydr•m•li,, power lf11rin9, r1dio, h1•t-1•. WSW, f1 ctory ,;,, !RSC672 1 "" 526 77 NOW 52277 '64 PLYMOUTH SIGNET 6 cyl. lorq11•fli11, ,pw1.-1l•1r., R&H. WSW. _(SDGS95 l ... 51477 HOW s1277 '66 . PLYMOUTH BARRACUDA ' VS, lorq11•flit1, power 1l•1r;n9, r1dto, healer, WSW, •i• conditioning. IT RHl24 ) ••• s2377 NOW 51877· . ---'66 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE 2 O•. H.T. VI, tor~111 flil•, power 1l11rin9; r•dio, ll11 t1r, V-/SW, landau lop. lSLU809 ) ••• s2377 NOW ~]877,_ '67 VOLKSWAGEN F1s+b1ck. R&H, 4 1p•td tt•n1mi11ion. !TIOI Al ... 51877 NOW S1677 . '63 VOLKSWAGEN l ug. R•dio i nd k11l•r, 4 lp•1d ir1n1mi1,ion. IVZS5ll J woo s1277 NOW S977 , • r . '68 ·PONTIAC LE MANS '68 FIREBIRD 400 VS, J1ydr1mlti,, pow1r 1t••rin9, redio, h11'i1r, WSW, f1clor"( WltrlAty .. t ,400 mu ••. IWX&ll•l. . ... s3377 HOW s2977 '68 PONTIAC GTO VI , h.fclr1., pwr. 111••., R&H, WSW, ftc. 1ir. !WIC0•71 _ S3677 •ow s3377 '68 CATALINA WAGON Hyd:•s·3977·H~:~· $]/,'fj" '68 'PONTIAC LE MANS 2 Dr .. H.T. VI, '4 .•!M'•d, r1dio •nd ll•1f1r. (WWN 21J J sm sm _3 . HOW2 '68 PONTIAC LE MANS 4 Or. H.T. YI, power 1l1•ring, pow•r br1k11, rtdio, 11111· er, WSW, f•ctory 1ir. IVVU79 0l s · s..,., •• 3477 NOW 2911 '67 FIREBIRD 400 2 Or,' VI, llyclr1m1tic,' power ~~ •• rin9, r1dio, h11!1r, WSW, vinyl top. [VTL26J l . $ $ . ..; 3177 HOW 2m '67 LE MANS 2 Oo9r h1rdt•p. VI , llydr1m1ti,, power 1l11 rint &- br•k11, r1dio, ll••f•r, WSW. ITYY799 I _ s2977 •ow s2477 '67 .PONTIAC GTO VI, hy4ir•m~, pwr. st••t., R&H , WSW, IVCJ lOtl "r s~m NOW s2711 , • ( .,, ,• • '67 BONNEVILLE '4 Or. H.T. VI, hy4ir11ft1f1,, pow•r tt••tlnt ·& br•ke1, ll••f· ... :w. s3177~ .;~o~·Hs2811 ·~ '66 PONTIAC GTO Tri·p•••rs•·" '"·· ,.,. ••••r. •i$ , •• ,. 1ssM2111,: -2677 NOW 2377 •) '66 BONNEVILLE ··• 4 Dr. M.T. My,.lrtl'l'lltlc:, pow•• 1l11rlng·br1k11•window1- 1••h, WSW, f1ctory 1ir, vJnyl top. ISQJ-4941 ,. , wu s2777 NOW '$2477 ,I '65 PON11AC CATALINA 4 Or. M.T. VI, hydr1m1tic, powtr 1f11rln9, r11U1, ll11t1r, WSW, 21,110 mll11 . INOZ50 1 ... s1977 NOW s1577 '65 GRAND PRIX Mydr1m1tic, powtr 1f••rlng, pow•r br••••. r•clio, h•1t1r, WSW, f1,fory 1lr. tNOZt7tl ... s2477 HOW s2111 . '64 BONNEVILLE '4 Door. t p1u. w19011. Hyclr1m1tic, pow•r tl••rint a' br1k11, r1clio, h•1t1r, WSW, f1,tory· tlr. lP46AI ... s1977 •OW s1577 · '65 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4 Or. H.T, VI, torqu•fllt•, power 1teeri119 l br1ke1,1 . .. s2577 •OW s1977 :. '64 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE • Hyclrem1tlc, p•w•r •'••rinf, pow•t iw•k•s, r•clio, h11t• er, WSW, f1ctery 1ir, !OLV562 J .• 2277 HOW S1677 '67 BENTLEY ~ . $ ' . Lou~ ow11H -.,4 clrl11en. 011tttel'Hlln9, (VIII II ) ~-15" ,.50 ~0\¥ 15. 950 '" ' '' . •· ~" A , ;. • • • " . SA VE ON EL DORADO FOUR WINDS GOLD LINE SCOTSMAN NEW 196~ y·~ N .• ; w y I A R .. TO. l CtJ~FER f 1\1;. F1'BREIOOH . rrr:1 T 1J.K u (.' ·1.i~~! PLUS TAX & LICENSE Scotsman camper is completely furn ished with ice box, stove, etc. Sleeps 6. F-250 pickup has 300 eng., amp & oil gauges, 1950 lb. rear springs (5) 8.00xl6.5 8-ply tubeless tires, de· luxe heater and defroster, etc. riany fo C~oo~e Frcm ot 1~15 f' ice! NOW OPiM. SUNDAYS SPORTSMEN'S SPECIAL Tuck·Away C1mp1r l1l11coplc With '66 Chevrol1t Pickup $56. Pe• Mo. 30 Months '64 Chevrolet Malibu Wgn. ltlCljsi1 W "' _, 11terlno.!OMJ 7'1l. 20". down or tr NI!. 'J (. ·~ FULL $29 p., 30 ' PRICE Months '63 Mercury Wagon Colony Pirkl ~ ... -. l<ultl' llOUIDOtd. DO-1lnrbit. focr,.v Ir;,... Uj',I." •:_ll 211! doMI w trodl. .. ,FUU $]1 Po•30 till t ,,,.., PRICE Months '61 Ford F350 Ct l .9.!i'Hls. IGl5111). :111% c1owoo tw lrfdl!. ·~6 If~ FUU. · $29 Po• 24 • !'RICI M.oths ,• NEW 1969 FALCON 2-DOOR . ' ... ' . , . ._, ~- '::.1 -"?!\ ~i ·i _, .. I . ~' Prloes' Includes 8/eck "Side Wells and Standard Hu~ Caps ORDER TODAY! NEW 1969 FAIRLANE 2 DOOR HARDTOP Prices Includes Black Sid8 Walls a nd Stand.iNI .Hu~ 'Caps OKDER T~DAYI NEW · 1969 MuSTANG 2 ·DOOR HARDTOP ' .. \ ... . . . Prices lnclude1 Bl•Ck Side W~JI~ · •nd St•nd•rd Hub C•ps ORDER TODAY! FACTOR Y CLEARANCE! SHELBY GT rta~D.~I The '69's are coming. And as Orange County's on ly iiuthor ized Shelby Cobra dea ler, we are cooperating directly with the factory to clean the lest of the '68's at t~e .greatest discouts we've ever o'ffered on America's number one high performance earl U 350'< -500'1 -500 KR'• 4 ;r f 1> f· 11'0 I ~t~, : , . '63 Pontiac Tempest Lo Mons 5'or't rnocle~ bl,odclt ~ • --3, (P~W U6). '°"' down I/It trill•. $4 0 5 FULL $23 p., 24 • 1t1 T PRICE Mol'llht '61 CORVAIR MONZA Au.oma11c, rMllO, heller, tulll' rcivl-a. (HlT 611) ~"'° iown or tr-. $3f}r; FULL $17 P" 24 ~ PRICE Month1 '63 Chevrolet Impala ! 000!" HardtoP,_¥-11 llllom&!lc. ra~lo l'>ll•!er. POWar 11,er· ·[119. (KFZ t ll l. ,...,;, °""'"or !r•~•- ~a."'.\c: FULL ,A ' ;;J PRICI $]Q Per 30 Months N-anro1l•I 15 t11r1 per WHk tho! <1111 lit rtlallell 111 wholtol11i.-1, 1119 publlc. 1101 th• ileolns \VE!' ... '., . .,. -,t 20 It dlo6H tr.m. "6" & "I n cytl!Mhrt, 4 1,...d1, 1111l•111atlu, S.111t winl ptw•r 11Htln1 & 11!1 ,_ dll1Mln9. 1165 ttlr11 1967 mod•1t, convetllbl••, lOVptt, tftd 2+2 fotfba<kl. IXAMPLI, C•11pt. Fvlly •11vlppMI, ovl•., l&H, PS. IATA·IJ:J) 20 % olown or ....0.. S"4'f.t. .... h FULL i • "-' PRICE s31 p.,30 Month• '67 Sunbeam Alplne Brltli.11 R<Kll'IO Crtt11, Eouloatd. IUOV Ull 20~ dawn ar tr Ide. 1 tin·' FUU • / •• PRICE s45 '" 36 Months '64 More. Wagon 10 Pass. ColDnY Park. Full _.,, tlr. CJlY 7'11. '°"' dOWll .,. tr• f ., ~ FUlL $40 Po• 30 f • l'RJCE Months '65 lntornatlonal V. Ton Pldl\111. CHUl71J, ~clown or Ir ..... ~ ;::" ~ FUU $32 Per 24 "' " ' PRICE Months G ,l Lo• Prices Includes Bli1ck Side Wells and Stendard. Hu~ Ceps ORDER TODAY I NEW 1969 T·BIRO 2. DOOR HARDTOP Prices Includes Black Side Walls end Standard Hub Caps ORDER TODAYI lS LOW AS '67 Me"""' Colony Pk. W•• ,, ""'..,.. fti11Y tc1UIP!ied. r.ctorY .1r,_factON ·~· tTSC 751) ~ ~ ar "ti•da. Sold Mw IUI' u.50. ,.._ FUU $85 Ptr 3t • PRICE Mentht '67 Ambassador 99'i)I'.,. low mllN ... fuM -· 1lr conclltlotl1"9, CUEX oa ,.,., •nor trlde. '.,/ , ~ fULL $53 '-•• 26 Pll:ICE Mont ht . '66 Ford 7 Litre S P•1~~tr Htrdtot<.Blt t!lflnt 11J1om.tlc, _elr conllltlenlfte, ~r 1!"'1r111. CS¥" 662). :J0% dawn or 1TNI, Blue Bocik .i:~~I ""'>'." .~ FUU $48 Po• 36 • l • • PRICE Months '63 Ford Falrlano PRICE $24 Per 30 Months 13 TO CHOOSI FROM ' "'""'I 4 ~ Sed ..... 14or<fl-. con...i10~1. W~!IOflt -w tit 111 tnd -11Nrln1. •64 P'OltD OALAXI• HI ~ 00011 V-1, 1~ f\Jlll' _I.,.,.,. (TWR 4.111. ~ dCIWfl tw tr.lie. ' ·~ OVER 40 IN STOCK 100 MPH e BUCKET SIATS 32 MPG e DISC nt.KIS 4 SPllq OR AUTO. TRANS. DILUXI 2 OR. SIOAN 2 DRS. -4 DRS. -WAGONS 'ORD PhRh c· 1 EP. 10,000 uiua .. IHI wltti "er llOCl,000 ln•.i!OIY ot •ll\lllM For; ~~ ' GO OOYfA R JIRE CHITER I ••in.cl COUllfflorl tlWIJJ lfldJ to he\1 YllV w1ttl llMPldrill •nd ln1ur1nc1. 'TH-OtlEY" .... Vi< ••• r: DI our •ltdric "lr.lltvl" lot lf!1or•Dlt "-Int ttwwvtfl DVIH' ac:rn ol MW Inf llllil-ellf'&I ' Ou1HES\ GU> •••• vie. . Dw mo6em llvHt 't11t1 -Y,,., to W f'rom "-· work.-Cll'•lll-, '"'I wtlllf l'OUf Cir 1'J iMlnl! ~-, 1 USED CAR SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE 72 HOURS UNLESS PREVIOUSLY SOLD. ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDIT. ' • ' • - . t. r I I