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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-12-30 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa. • :. .. • • • • ... ' • • •• • . . ~· ~~B·oy Son,·gJt-in fry • . • ,·~ • • • :.! • . ' -. To B:am.· Depn•T-~ . ' :- ' , .. ' ' . r·a ,' ·~ • • I•. : 'I: ' MONDAY AFTERNOON, l>ECEMJER 30, '1968' .. "CH.. 11, 9IO. •'a SlcTlottt. a ,~ffS ... ' . ., Second of Seri.es . -~ . --..... ' . :'? -~ . .. " . ' -. DA_ ·sees -eri11i-e i -. As Teen • • ow -. ' a1n s ' . :;. Youth Crime .. . ~:~sc~'-~· ~t Soviet Asks _. . ~ .. :~·l,ln'~ u.-s.~up of MOOO:" . · ..• ~t ·~~· ., lJ .N ·. ¥le.11 .: .. ·ii~n A ·seiie~es : ·Editor's NoU: 'Phis U the conciud· ~ article iu a two-part 1tric1 dis· 4iling the crime picture fn Orange -, ~wnty. ' said. "Loot at itittill' way: '"Ille grown nwi workJ at bi3 job, lryln& to •trdcl> bis salary to m,.t hi! family need! '!'!!! otherwise avoid conllldlJ ""'Uh ,the :ID. He h• rtached a matorlly whlcb'~.that ~ BJ TOM BARLEY is no e8Cape1rom occasional or freqUent a. ._ o.11r '"'*" 1.,. disappolntments and. th.tttfore, has . learned· to adjust llhilself to sudden ~ c•What's going on in the minds or .,changes~ hlJ fortunel." klda today that makes lhi! problem1 DEEP Tll(/UGQT . · 4)1!, · e_ c:;ei~..!°-:. ,uch , wo;se than l{lcks sa~ back lJ> hls chair, In· de<p .. ,,. .... , thougbt.· "$ur tl)e ·~ for ~··" t, · '"",·""'~ '· • ··C'e cl~-a>, . no he· murm-~-J. -"a-•~. In ... ~ own ' ' • · ~~Oil. 'liWi ' .. · C!riloe eyes, lar'=-b~· u= cs t'lre, t have sh n law -en-·' ~ lford · "esc•~" can · be ·~plied ' and ~heUon deaprtmoftls as lhe ,key to ·-of .the aJ>31ale · ·die ru.uoo to'~~-rf;doesn1 ' ..... rela'~hsuel•th'at -hlrle into ~ to llli"""'"""' · . ,.. -,,_.. I ""iifi"?llit. !Ill . the ~ , the bug .. juvenile jungle µiat c<infronts -= , ,._ .. ~ .::..-.. ""~ ~-otdouloll today,,Hkb believes,. . 0 ~··~-QU~ -''.f:Ook at' the camJIWI dlWnlera, the !W· :~'.~Qril n 'eoi:a~,'"he : 11ra1t·nM1 .... ..;ancJ ,tb&dro ,<>utS.fJ'om _1 ,f ''1'"''1 ~ • • ' •• • llfe·.~~~J."· ·Hieb :fd. "Rather than tblnlc about the future, many youths ~AS-T'S ·FUTURE f: ..:'~..t::. it by lnd\Jlilnl "So we see the pauern of 1;a:Ol' use 1-;0LD TUESDA. Y ~!an'!'":~ =.::.a:u ~alcul~~ ·The DAIL y PILOT takes a long look (See· TEEN tillME, Pqe %) JlHo 1• Tuesda'j wlth publlcaUon of -' :=:~~'i:~~ ~" B ... 'deh\Man Slaiii pt~ -of lndusirll! -growtb, -wey ..,.. , . ~ and burgeoning home3. ., · . . · :w~~:.nu::.to~r~: lil Street Figh~ ~ :rodyllJ;~d. It "". :. .hJ>We. : e~lic.C .Hoiu· six' - -' ~......,._._ ' ~~­, '<tlf~:.­,/ ~Jt Weatller ' Look for Smtta Ana winds to boost Lhe coastal lemptraturt to 1 M degrees Tuesday, while lnland ' areas bask in balmy 70-degree • weather. INSIDE TODAY He may be a" rc~Jed to0rld 1taterman. b1it, OCCOfdino to hil viii• of 40 ~·, p,.,. mitr Sato U a wife beater. Pooe s; ._ I "' ..... • - . "MA ~~llf'I T~ clustered craters are Magalhaens, lli:agalJ,aens I< and Colombo.A. Crater Goc1enius is about 40·miles in dtameter. I / .l •• .r -.; ~ ,, ~---'l . 'Attth~iity'- l(rom Wire llervfceo Arab gu!rrillai ·today vowed a "raln" . of revenge raJds for hrael's commando slrite at Beirut Airport. The Soviet Union called on the United Natlon1 to 111111 its authority" to make 'b:iael accePt the U. N. Mlddle,East resoluUcm. FIJ!hting erupted Sunday aloq I.....u:' Arab fronUera and Israel sa1cf one of · ' its teexi-ag_er girl soldiers wa.s tuled In one gubrwa at'tack. · · The Soviet government newspaper Izvestia denounci!lf the j.sraell allact as "internaUonl\l .banditry" designed to fuctlier bfcre8se tehslon . In the 1'llddlt East. It made no thttatenfng Matts but called on the · U. N. .to eofbrce its demands Israel withdraw from cap. lured terrllory. The United States and the Soviet Ulllon joined forces I" the U. _N. Se<:urlty CouJ>. 1. ell to lead International condemnaUon of the airport -whlch llr~U .­Mln!Jter Moshe lloyan defended at a "new dimensk>n .in Iarae1'1 deterrent policy" agallllt her Arab fl"'- Undeterred by mOIDltlng coodemnatlon from all sides of. its commando··r.ald Israel on ·Sunday promised furtha retaliation for Arab attacks. · . .l'temler .. j.evi f;sllkol ~ th!I . "'f ili'a<I' ';jjJ!' 'dl!lerill' .. M'ill'"affil!!if "iif. gression "In the place where it ls pl~ ' m;::ei;wdf mate i t Po~blfi ·;! the terror °''"\I' Ua to ..pnl%e Jr perpetrate li<.1I of temr bear · !IF responsibility tor aggr.es1lon, rfii:porilibiUty whk:b dley c an a ' disclaitrl/" he aaklJ !!'he Middle Eot'aJrlloe, chief l lfl the brief hrliell itril~ Sa ' reportee1·lrr J'rlnkfUrt, Germ , it back In full -alit1!i Iller c!iarter plloes from other companies 1 lo u, for the loss of eiih~ jets. IJ ' (See MIDEABT •TIJl\JIOU., Pqe I ' . . ' $ought · in Try f o Ram · Deputy· r .. I ! I I ' 1, 1' 1 • , _.,_ s Pl•• ...... J APOLW ••. ... ... !l!ljoll, ... lllil lloa I ..... ......... _ ....... lliill ...... -. ·r J ... --G<inilll ' ~--lmd-111--kial dDJ -the -.. .... --... -~ I '~"illiill'alll '~ a .tOliitr s ~ .... t"'··'. ,,::'::" ............ ~.-_ ....__to.•-In i..r -_,....,._._ ....... ,_ ... __ ..... __ d t ...... Wit~. the bU "" -. -lilt --the ~ ......... -..... --·-,.... .. -crtill.1!111.A!G•• t• tllll al a •P" till ..,.: ..... ~--· -, 'M n. pldlia i*ewdlll'tw -- ., ....... pilled -· Iha< --~ .. m mg1e W'acftog the borima _..,...Im. afrtqie.1 goH ball.. b:rtd Wal ttrm. by ""Otie ftll \WB t up bere-• *" moa It'• •• -r :•Be." . . . -.. ·u.s ... Cond • --• mns r Is nae I· I I L • • • . - Raid on 8eirut Airport Raises Indignatwn; -WASHINGTON roPtl _ Tbe Uoited _.. eel! Israel 60 F4 Phantom Jd fl&btas stats.-af llnel's--Jillbllc The hra<U JO!<lmn'"t ctalms the at· !or about l200 mJll.loo. 1 ...,_ Dice ... -M" 1 -· lod< -illlilW 11ecaua .vu ter· llraet baa IOlll 'lllld" ll ~ Ii., JUdiatc -. ...,. ... ----~ In the ,Kii lot delenslve -. ~ ....w..-1o tho~ -=· " 1.r 1 111 ...,...i. 1s!ieJ ul\I Uae rw ~U.. Sova!:: 0\:!"' ,J:.::, • nid C11 Bdnll'• c:triloo;!llrJ>ort,. •"Ill lnl 1$ ~to llilp pnJied. llraeli aJrcralt lo _.,._ -lull · ..... tra..... from ,,m.... like * one • "'t-"!" Prf:lidiem J._' -it be DflrD iD A&bem. um killed oa1 Saeli in the 1967 war. ' _ _, tlnoP hil ..... ·-llr LebaJIOn. however1 wu oot • putld. -Wlriy ....... Will W. P' I · ' ~•t In that war anG hal'-~ Bliolow. !hit be _. the _, , Tbe ioc!dai! ~ tbe Jolwon _..,.._ally as a m<>derale An!> ai&t' attack at tbe.lfhtrwa <'fl*l1 e+, ''t1albl ..... W It occurrtd only lnt.mnsofbostilityloo'an!hnd. as .. .aericm and uowile." a m, .. after comp1etloo of a deal to Jtoltow, inklvifwed on ldtYi5ion IYaa! the Nilioo -CIS), uid the Unllod Slalea could -llnel'• -..,. Ibo Arlll 181wbl -"nlunday on an El Al Airliner al Albms.. lSut be Wd the rdaliatory rakl was '1& p-avt mal1~r" Uid ... mr judgment .. oat Lato .. -In • stUle peac< ID the lllddle Eal!." ,.,...,. r .. e. 1 MIDEAST TURMOIL GROWS d Loudon ~ U would pay out $1.t millioa In dalal'I -II percent "' the -·· $11.f mi1lloa claim. IJr!&inal eslimatel put losses fnim 156 way." • • • • -.111111 • kmi -lqlb !ms, biUlil -.. ... large .,..... G«'z ' m4 ttWnl. .smallt:r aaters, ......... ·-_,. -af.,,, u&'llmu• af -mUn llifled the space -... llr1" .._ His _111.,.c. rdledoil a geneal &d- ine af indlpa"°" In Wuhing1on. Many U.S. ciDcials were said to feel Isnel's THE EARTH AS FEW·HAVE SEEN IT )_..., af 13 Ar.ab plaaes at the Apollo I Vlow of W-.. Hon.bpi..,.. Beirut Airport was a bearyhanded action --------------------------that was far out ci ~ to &be . llr)ab pnM><Otion. ' ' . millioa to $100 million. Premier Abdullah Y afi ol Lebanon sald today . the llraeli attact had failm to -Lebanon's 5Uppri af the Palestl· nilD Arab pr:rrillas IUdi u thole wbo atllrled ail llraeli El Al plane In Athens Friday, killing one person. From Callo. the Al Falah Arm~­ rilla organizatiro'1 radio anoounced tl]o shelling on an l!raeli settlement Sunday --0ne of more than hall a d<rz.en border incidents -marked "lbe flf'st of tho rain" of retaliatory attacks. 'Ibe radio .. voice of storm" said a shelling of the Israeli town of Beil Sheir1 caused heavy damage. In Jerusalem, Israeli officials said the Arabs Held four bazooka shells but did no damage. i: ...... the_ .. the 40-mile dlwnwtrr (.oclmim were several dildJ.. Die dep 'n. like • cbDd'• aimm draw' '' • • :·•; ~..,. 'n.. .. -fWmes af Ibis portlcalar cnla'. -daid pbotogJapber ... Ille County B'lnck Congress Sees Militant Stepup --· uid llae-lnnar-"Jaoq.,. -l"Q'. like dil17 -' -.... lot af ...... iab." Be -The -of Orange Coody'• Bladt porticipanlS. Id r.. di. 1lle ~ be ~ Cqreu which met over the -Amoog the key speaten, Oodlal aid, bd, boftV'er, Ud ID ldditkJnaJ Jel1ow at UC Irvine says Negro militula wUI were a Black Panther and a Black cad bee•• "-Apollo 8'1 fogged ... step up ~ activity in the months Muslim. In attendance. but not dowt. to come. participating, "'·ere representatives of lhe The most spectac:ular still coLor photo Thomas A. Crock.ttl spoke at a ntws more pacific NAACP and Southern Cbris- ol. &be lunar surface showed tht 86-nille c:onferatt Sunday ending a thrft.day lian Leadttship Conference. cUmnttn crater Langrenus at tht ~ Olllfereoce on blacl: unity from wbkh Crockett said black militants and edge of the S. ol Fertility. This huge white penoos were e:1duded. blacb advocating more peaceful solu· ciepressioo, with mountain peats in its He llid black people will be militant Uons would air their differeDCCI in center, 11 e I m I.be right-baud edge of .,to the~ of annthilatloo" to achieve priva&.e from now o:i. the ,_, •• face. their goola. ..,,,. -_.......,. ls Rldlanl Bailden, director of Uaiv«dty "111o walls al the cnl<r are ..,._ up tigbl. and our p<q>le" an 1'Ndy to gn.-, was lnstrumelllaJ In ""*""' -alKAJt 1 l x « RVei:I ternces • & he fil!d and die, ii necessary.• UCI'a Scieooe Lecture Hall · availll* way ·don," Lovell deatbed II lnim Polallog an acaWn& liapr at Onnge to the Bloclr Congress for the -.......,., lunar orbil County, be aa;d, "everything ddrlmentat He said he tried to argue Croctttl This wu one ol the landmarU ApoQo to black people in tbe West has ori&inated into opening the conference to white l's moon pilots m.cted toward an bn-bett." persom, but was not succes.Vul aginary landlnl site. . He cited 1oca.I suppcrl of comervative Baisden said ht invited the Black One movie sequence 1wept the eo1lro. ..,Utlcal candidata and _.tllon to Congr<ss to "" the campm building globe ol e.artb from top to bottom. fair housing legislation as enmples. anyway, because ·'J wa.s delighted a I b e 'f!O"I It -loolled to the .-c r • w lbe F?idly oiibl to Sunday COQltrellce miaorily, group would viea> Jhe..<ampws a mi_..... afl«"lbey ~<.it:-~ min. lban ;119. llerro u~placelbeywouldllbtocmrt."":-. of ...;a; -111111 ilaried the lol!I. -:." • -• • , --!'. • •• -~the -sphere. Fruan:lt:J5,llJO,. miios-.:"""-~md -~. . ._ ~ . F!'Mf' P .. e, J_ • . , outJllml'l:r . --------'%.~--~-- . -·. ·-.. __ _,. -· ,.;,... _____ .. 'Tlt.-P,i.i.llllJ.1114 the morte ~ ~i;'.ID~rl'T-n:N!7E'IX~.;..;~~;,,.;;;; ---........ _, ml. ""llllP-~..,.''l:JIU;LTI.Er.;l'll' .. ~'~ wee i1Qi1tY busy ttwn. but tbeJ'>o • • • . .z liliilPlfF!t. lat :.•~-7 •""iiiiti:~ ••-lltl lhla -~·llrlllit · ttti""*'1 ~"';;"~ cirllonilty. :..:'.::. ::~~' ¥ielr al lbl ,_. pealnsula and.tbe and lnlpired -_at Jua -~ • more and . """' -, ••. --:i!at ---,u. --8miD the .crocu of ~. dnli or or l elm) anticipate ......... om: JilM ....... oill Jldo ' ...... In 0.. lililO &timiiliot bat. 0 ~ -, .T • • • • ,'. -• ,. ', -,,_, ' . • :-: "~" lllcU01mrt on, ''.!rbn II~ , JllVllllJe crime ii only qt\. ~ af . loglc;lt Id ~ H apil ....i ...... ! a -of dllemmas_llaOI-,,.,,,_.,,...._ lryq--W ....... ~ -llon, JIJdie ---iln ~11o ."'"' '* •' * * ~--· hatd! -~ ..-..rlbe ..u. ''the critlcal)i'llo,,..... Jllilill preeeot'! ::: · · may etnbark ua oo m inttenible cmr. Apollo_ 8 Craft ABU QUllDllNI :=,~1~ ~ "! -"m• ... • ._ ...... miar I> lliil ~ .. Id .. And 1tl9 wW be the last .,_ af T girll di! ...,. pliq!nc -Ir ldo the ~ mtlea," be aid. "LIU.in Undergoes ests_ .....i eaiien-? IVbJ • ... -o. """' story it ...,. provide .. "illh -. .. muy ....... boy• declared Ii!' Olll' • endi1lg BOlfOWW (AP) -The Apollo _& ..-ir.n. lfillt lnm ... -af Pie ~It ......... NllVJ tw al P'!'ft -bdOft behi& llo!m to the -Amak:a• RoctweD Co. plant at IJolmer, c.aut., tar cloler euminaUon. n.. _.. carried -Frllik Bti-mm. Jam11 A. Lovell Jr., am. -A Andert to a optuhdowu in the Poclflc l"riUy, Alt« the lllnillmlll wen' .flown to Hwlton, Tu., for 1 --1belr lamllles. '!he iii*«Saft wn brcugbt but aboard &be ail;t'h(! can1er Yorktown. Jtm Slmant.e.I, recovery engineer for the NaUonal AeronluUcs and Space -· uld the IJ.toot-llJCh, CODHhaped ClpiUle WU "In fine COO- didaa. •• DAI LY PILOT ... ,.. ................. .... ~..... ,... . ..., c-.- CAUPOINIA OlltNtQ& co.ut l"UaL/SHINe "*'""" leiNfi H. W.M J11k a. c ... 1.., Vb 11'19ktlnl .... a-.. MMlmfft' - • c ouri1 to be~ w i& h duties to 8 ·~at." Nerun,. noted .Jld&e ltlppart tbelr llleil1111"" olbprlng u Sumner. lacing tbe blCbe!I we!ood In- ...., U lbeJ lei Ill& af hllb-? · ••· Su ~~ r..;... • ~ -"~ "l'lae -· • Aid lllcb, "II -· ~-~ Ill ·~ pee--' '• --We aD tilaan the bardel al reversing tbe -lreod. It does no good to llllOCK TBliiATMENT tell a ''*1pt.er 'Don't do Jhla' unitas lllatrlct All«ney Hieb belJewa that Ille adtlco cao be ......ned Ii!' graphic • a lonn of alloct tia-..-llDI -of what 1na1aJseoct! cao be out of the way in deallni -..lib the lead to." Juvenile ollmder. Tbere'• a kl& in that argument. a&reed ''I have a t.be«J." be &aid, "Chat C-Meu Police Ollel 8-Neth. If y~m• -•· tem•• .. to --'-t "I'm Ill I« that," be uld. "Look wlt~a or~ ~";bit for the cauae of tbla lra(lc muabroomlnc an lnllltutlon where addkb of ill -. In Juveolle crime and the --1, .... being treated, lt might just -· !aka you right Into the borne. JI parent. them up. choole to be las: 1n control ¥M1 dllclpllne "It might give them a picture of of their younpten then Ibey must accept tbenaelv" In the luture, ind11« them the fad that then'• an excellent chance -or frighten them.I -into falling that their chUdren will JOUie day flgun: back into the ranb of 'lqUAJ'el' who in the juvenile c:rtme statiltJca. have mabrl.ty enough to be afraJd of "But let~-that tbe kids w. type af-" d&l>I have -Ibey ..,.,... J.Udges, polJce <him; tho dislrict at· .. af '---... eth added. "And "1 ...... NJ lmiey -all pro'e-lqaals with 11q.,. 'Yt'Ubout yiuncllng pcmpow:, I Ulink that on the throbbing pulse of ·crime and .-e can only ~ d them what we all sincerely dedicated to cutting thls are ounelves. cancer from the ailing body of American INSPOlE KIDS &Ociety. And, better still, all equally "There's not much point in enrorcing willing to push caseloads and crime diaclpline and e:lpecting adherence to dossien: to one side and talk qWelly what may well be a perftttly sensible and frankly on applying the principle stt ol rules if you can't inspire the of "prevention is better th a n cure" kids' faith in your own conduct and to this mounting dilemma. display your own abilllf to adjust to But Jet an II-year-old Corona del Mar a dtlallnlf -Id." Neth u1c1. llrl ,..•u call Sally have the bat ..rd. "Male iio --ll. the chock: ~ -all -Juv"1il• crime. Ing of juvenile crime at ti. ......,. -She • been In Juv..Oe court three times ln the home _ It's a two-way street. on drugs and se:1 offenses and she got And I firmly believe that there are a solemn wamlng ftmn a Supreior Court very few tlda wbo wcn't re.act favwably judge last mool.h on wbat she'd get to a set ol -to wlllcb lbelt If she -up there again. pareoi. unlalllncJ1 Ollllform." SMOKE P<l'f n...·1 llllle to odd In that. com-Sally loosed her lon!J. blonde hair and m<nled Laguna Boadl Pollet Clliel Harry happily commented "'Big deal ! Loot, ~;, what K't all about," be aajd, 1 wanna smoke pot, I'll GnOke pot. "We can come un with all tlndJi of And l intend to do juat that tonigli~ <. habJ, IO why not nm bada In there lllX)' tbeoriel aDd aolutJODI but the and l<ll the ji.klgel" . bat 10lulloo af all ra11 right with SallY'• par""' are divorced. She liva tho ldda' paraitl. Wbll tbeJ could do, '· Ith •-U they'd mly -tho time and trouble -er » •ippooed to live -• ~ molber and t .. 0 --She to do I~ ls kill ju-1le crime rlll1t hu been louod, 00 ocnPonl, to be ~~~-...:::::,...wt;: litln,c with what 1 Newport BoadJ police ........ __ .... -" oflkf< pollt<ly delc:ribed ......... of .,.,.._ "1 tho filthy, I0111-hairod riB:rall that mW AN<mlllll WAY this Job bani work." Bui -IOlullolll could aime llllOtber "My mom'• pretty well glv'" up on •11, .._ J-1le Court Judie Bnace me," grinned Sally. "It'• a drq thm, s.mi-af Laguna Buch. TbeJ "will •he hu to wort and l"m pretty llck """' oolJ wllen )'Otlnl peopt. dodde of pllJ'ln& nunemaid to kid idll<n. I by -to put down dnap and vllft my dad oow and qlln but there peoplo ~ recopla all the are Um... when he"• had a clrlnl< or rilllliflc:alloo af • too papulaled ,. ... Id." two, that lt rellly U.'t ufo for me The only thlnf cerloln In 1111, Judllfi to "'Y around then, u 1'* -what Sumn« predldl, II that "young peopla I mun.• 1bat sentiment was tt:Ba:Sed at . &be Ualt.ed Natloos, w-U.S. Ambauadm' J'.' Ruuell Wiggins urged a special -of the aewrity COWICil to coo---·· --'"lbla council is nwtiiw DOW' on a ~ !Jradi >etlon which DJ1.""""" try lllroogly condemns." be said, adding thal-"il ls mtirely ddpi--to . tbe Id wbida ireoododoil-'' .. Pope 1'1111 VI toda]!. 4eplored llae Js- raell llllad< ... warnol lt "cmml1 ac· .,.... .... ~In the lllddle llist. !Ja 1 cable af oympo~ to. 1- Presidenl Charles Helou, the Pope urged Lebaooo to show restraiol. and not let it!ell. "be dragged oo the palb of ,.,...,. P .. e 1 SHOOTOUT. •• -8-ell E. AfeGrew_, JI, La ija~a. -Rklwd A. IJJKola. 21 , La Habra. Booked on suspicicn of grand theft auto ~ a resWt uf tne in,·estigation was Gary D. Rudolph, 19. Westminster, but police gavc-J>O deWb of the stolen car an~le.. • Wornea O\er t6e safely of her l:~,,,:Jwr. a woman not iqentµied by iD\'estigators tejepboaed Hamtln&loa -j>Oli"' San-dll)' night and tipped them oil lo trouble al the Alma Street address. NEW1 REL&vsii.' ; ! :: .. :. \ The news wu quickly relayed \0 Weatmlnster pot1cf a!!'i five Huntlngtoo ~'~J:.:=i~~ At about tbe same ~. a ...- ldentilied u =·Pt~ ~ the llw\tington . ,pO!ke deputmeol with • lraotlc (or,h<lp. ''They Just dragged ll!Y ilOI! out ol u,e ....,. and they're beatinc blml 'll>ey haw sum!," pollbe quokd,ber as ..,.m&. Pittman. Investigation dl4<10Md, had already Wed lor pl• ... J...,. police ·a1. llcer>' protecllon ilQlng be WU lo tlaalcer due to narcoUcl fuvolvement of some kind. . . . During curnnt ....., of .the tragic cue, Police u.id,.oo o.arcadcl have been recovered aod nothin& • waa found at the Alma Street addt!Ss to prove t.be druguped. NABCOl'I"" THEFt· A"""111ng to detecttves, the confron. t.atlno and oublequellt gunfight stemmed lrom the tbelt af • quantity af naraitlc3 from a HuntlnpJn Aftnue~ apartment In Huntingtoo Beach. They uld the llwatlngloo Beach aowd apperent)y bl.Mned tbe WHfmlnM fac- Uon and went after them to settle tbe ·matter, one way ot &be tltber. w..-·af!!oen armed• u the .-ng lllrled, but guns were drop- ped and tho 8IJ so far charged - &wo hurt -wrtt quk:tly rounded up. Shirley, bowevtr, la}' dead oa the Pl"" menl "We consider Arab commando action legal aod sacred actioo," he told lEWAldl aftel' a three-hour meeting of the National Defense and Foreign Affairs ParliammW'7 Committee. "Everyooe ............. lanil -••• , •fnlm hla!> . b!is u,e rllld to ngaln It In .., SOOth Says Reds . Must Renounce • Paris Demands ' PARIS <UPI) -South Vietnam said today North Vietnam had come to Paris only to extend. "their Communisl war or subversion·• on the diplomat ic front and iD a foreign coontry. •·Jr it sincerely "'·ants to engage in the serious negotiations it pretends, the Com· munist side must renounce its campaign ol subveni\'e propaganda and its into!· erable and rldicWowl demands," it said. The South V\etnamee de.legation in a strongly worded statement said demands for recognition of the Viet Cong v.•ere in- admissjble. It said Haooi not only want- ed independent status for the Viet Cong but equal status with the Saigon govern- ment . , '·No .,gqi.·ernment placed in lhe same situation coWd accept tbls, ·• the commun· iqut said. Unresolved ditficutties between Sout~ Vietnam and the United States over pro- cedural isili&es pre\~ed the U n i t c d States today ~om c.llil:'riRg inl.o secret bargaining with ai.:-Comrounist.s on ·how to get the conferenoa noder \ .. :ly. U.S. Ambaslador Ell,v·<>·th Bunker met in Saigon today , .. ·;11 ·Prc~lJcnt Nguyen Van Thieu •o Ir\' to ~ort n:it some of the differ~ Forc;itn J\11111:;- ter Tran Chanh Thanh at.tended lhe mce:- ing. Ex-Mesa · Bank Executive Dies Jack l!fcCord, a formr~ t·rii!r'-! California Bank ei:et:utive in lhe Costa Mesa area, died after a brief illness Friday. He was 45. JI.fr. Mc:Card, who had ser\·ed for severa1 years as manager of UCB brancbes in Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and I.on,: Beach, moved with his family to La Puf!nte two weeks ago after residing in Orange for several years. He leaves his widow, Mary. and two children. Services wert held this afternoon at Waverly Chapel of Fairhaven Memorial Park in Orange. Burial followed in the memorial park. ~ine But a j!eerlheba laradi military spokwnan said a teen-age girl IOldier was killed in a frontier setUement. at- lacUd jUlt belore midnlPt -~.!'. Aral> guerrlllaL ·,7be-.gUenU!aa llrifll lbeU. 1nto· the ~ af ~4 the Negev Deaert.below. the Dead • the spokesman said. They said • Israeli youngster lllffered Wounds Ill attack. .. 1he spurt of borcier incidents came oo. the heels ot the sirp«I raid. · : The Beirut ~ , ~ ·Jlliniil dpet'aUM! today. ~ P1f ·lbJil,..... to leave today alori'(lhe runways lintd with wreckage was an aircraft carrying a special Lebanese delegation to tbe United Nations to press their case against Israel. Jn Israel, troops enforced a curfew today in Hebron after a Sunday night clash with guerrillas in which one Arab was killed, Israeli spokesmen said. Jn Gaza, seized from Egypt in the war 18 months ago, the Israeli seoaity service said it had "broken the back" of an El Falah terror squad which had been plaguing the Israelis. It sald 17 guerrillas, 13 collaborators and "lacge quantities" of arms had been selud. Airlines in U.S. Asked to Assist Crippled Lebanon WASHINGTON /UPI ) -The State Department has approached several U.S. airlines asking them to provide transport assistance to the Lebanese government following the Israeli attack on Beirut TnternaUonal Airport, airline sources said today. One airline spokesman said his carrier h:i~ been approached thi s weekend by the S~ate Department and asked to work out an arrangement with the Lebanese government to help restore that country's crippled air services. Thirteen civil aircraft were destroyed in a reprisal raid by helicopter-borne Israeli co mmandos Saturday night. American Airlines and Pan-American \\'C'rC' ;ipprcached by the department. Other sources said AeroOot, the Sovjet airline. and Kuwait Airways had also offered to help th e ~1id East nal.ion. t;.S. airlines could offer four types of assistance rangin g from leasing whole planes and cre"'s to leasing cargo space on already booked flights . ~fOfit probable, the sources said. was an arrangemenl wher e U.S. airlines wlll lease planes "'ithout crews to Lebanon and block passenger and cargo space to the airlines "hlr!1 suffered the brunt of the lsraell attack. 0 OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR •ring• 1i1ed end repaired • diamond• end preciou• don•• remounted • peerl1 reotrung WE CuSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE ALC TYPES OF JEWELRY EJ IW~Ol'Pllll noo HADOI aw. COSTA MIU. 0,.. ...... """'-M. ll1I ' ...... :·, ·,. '., \ .... · ,...... •' .. ('· ), ' --. ~ HUNTINGTON CINlU HACH • IDINGO HUNTINITON HACH HZ.fSOI ' / . ~I '~ • ' ...... • ' I • l ~-- l • - • .... -. -........... "r"' • • • -E O,f,t.ION . ' .... ~ -.. VOL 6 I, NO. 303, 3 SECTIONS, :!IJ'.PA&ES .. ~ .. ,.. .6E COUNl'Y. C~' 'My . ' ., .. -~ . - .. . .. ' ~ . . !-. MONDAY, OECe:tlBt 30; "1961 ---·:.. ..... -. ·---·-• ? • -., ·--·- _.,.. __ -· . N.Y. StoeU-- :rEN·ciHfs eac ·• +-1-.ftS; ID·· . .• -. . -::I:' e-mo · 0 u · .. ·a·n·~ .. ' I • ' ' . . Beirut Attack Arab Guer.rillas Pledge From Wire Servlcu Arab guerrijlas today vowed a 0 raln" of revenge raids for Israel's commando alrllre at Beirut Airport. The Soviet Union called on the United Nations to "111e its authority" to make Israel accept th~ U. N. Middle East resolutions. . Fighting erupted Sunday along Israeh- Arab frontiers and Israel said one of its teen.age girl soldiers was tilled in one guerrilla attack. The Soviet government newspaper Jzvestla denounced the 13raell attack as "international banditry" designed to further increase tension in the Middle East. lt made no threatening remarks but called on the U. N. to enforce its' demands Israel withdraw from ca~ tured territory. . The United States and the Soviet Uruon joined fbrces in the U. N. Security~ cil to lead international conde~nation of the airport strike which Israeh De.fense Minister Moshe Dayan defended l5 a .. new dimension in Israel'• deten"tnt policy" against her Arab foes. Undetelred ~Y m""'lti!IJ condemn•tlon · from all sides of iU alrnm.lnd!> ra14. mael on S11nday promiled lur1ber ~Uon for Arab '&.tlack!. 1,>remier Levi Esh~ol decla1:fd that Israel will defend itself ~g~ aa:~ gresSion "in the place where it lll planned and carried out." I "States which make it possl~le ot .a,be terror organi:iations to organue and perpetrate acts of terror bear thl! responsibility for. a g g r e s s I o n , a responsibility which they c a n n o t disclldm," he said. 'The Middle East airlki.e, chief loser Beach Official Melwood Berry Succumbs at 53 Melwood A. "Mel " Berry, assistant finance director for the city of Hunting- ton Beach and a fonner trustee of the old Newport Beach elementary sch~t d~trict, died Saturday at Hoag Memonal Hospital at the age of 53. Funeral services are set for 1 p.m . Tuesday at st. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach, with ~urnment to follow at Pacific View MemonaJ Park, Corona del Mar. For the past three ye~rs, Mr .. Berry had served as assistant fmance director in charge of computer operations for the ci ty of Huntington Beach. An Orange Coast resident ~ 1941, he previously had been assoe1ated with the Lldo Tr~ding Co., a Newport Beach investment hnn; the House of Harmony, a Harbor Area music company, and Dielh Evans, a Sao.la Ana auditlng firm, Prior to his family's recent move to 11unlington Beach, Mr. Berry had betn (Sff BERRY, Pop I) Reve~ge ' In tbe bdal Iaraell strike SatunW, reported In Frankfurt, Germany. it was back in full operation after chartering planes from other companies to ~e up for the loss of elgbt jets. lJoyda: of London announced jt would pay out ~l mll1loo In da!p1ges -18 percent of the airline's· '17.4 million claim. Original estimates put losse.s from '56. million-lo ~ niUlioo. Pmiiler'Al>iiuniiii'va11 of Lebanon ..id lod1y tbe Israeli attack, bad felled lo weaken'Lebdoo'1 lupporl of tbe PolestJ. nlan Arab guaTutu IOCh as tho9e who · attacked an Israeli El Al plane in Athens Frjd,ay, kllllng o~ person. ''We conslder Arab cmnmand~ action legal and sacred action," he told newsmen after a,Jh~hour meeting of the National Defense and Foreign Affairs Parliamentary. CommiUee. "Everyone who . bu his 1ud taken away from bJp1 ha& the right. to regain it in any way." • 'Fra!n calro, lhe .AI Fol'.lh Anb fl"" . . lllllOIJJICOCI Ibo . . I Suodoy --elf--' a~­lncld<otl -~ "tbe finl of tho l "pl~,.~ ran,. , a .... <&, __ 1 .. The ' rai!lo · .,..., a llldlil!& ¢Jk !Jr~ W> ..Pl ll:Oli Shean .,._..Mll't 'danl;!IC';'IMOnlsalem, Israeli offlclall said ·.thii Arabs fired lour bazooka llhells but did no damage. Bui a Beersheba l!roeli military spokesman sald a teen-age iirl soldier was killed ln a frontier setilement at- tacked just before miclnlglrt Sunday by Arab guerrillas. The guerrlllu !Ired sbells into the settlement bf Tlofar in tht Negev Desert below the Dead Su, tbe spokesman said. They Aid a l«OJlll· Israeli yOUll(sttr llllf!ered WOODds In tbe attack. The spurt of boraer incidents came on tho tieeb of tbe airport raid. Former Mayor's Wife Succumbs Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret E. Talbert, a, widow of former Hl.lft- tingl.on Beach mayor Tom Talbert, will be coodJJcted at 2:38 p.m., Tuelday, in the chapel of Smiths Mortuary, Hun- tington-. Burial will follow at Wood 1 awn Cemetery In Compton. Mrs. Talbert of 109 Ith St., died Dec. 27 at the Garfield Convalescent Home. She was the widow of the late Tom Talbert, former mayor and a former Orange County aupervlsor, who died earlier th1I year. Mr1. Talbert was a resident of Hun- tington Beach foe II yara. She is 1urvived by her son Tim ; a stepson, Gordon Talbert, 738 Main St., Huntington Beach ; lour grandchildren, and three ere.at ifaJJdchlldren. DA Hicks' Theoru.. Editor's Note : Thia ii the conclud· i11g article in a two-part series dis· cussing the crime picture in Ora11ge County. . '. . __ .., __ _ ··-· ..... -.. -. Arson · Suspected To Hide Bnrglary At Shop Center · Arson·to covet a·burglary was blamed by fire department officials as the cause of the Thursday blaze that destroyed the Universal Beauty College, 8530 Beach BoulevardJn Huntlngton Beach. Police said $20 to P> wu stolen from the beauty college, located in the Town and Country shopping center. The owner of the store, Ben Curry, has not checked througb tbe ruins lo see What else may .have been taken, police said. Damages from.the fire were estimated at $40,000 by the fin dejiartment. Englpeer Tom Barnett IU!!ered cuts on the hand while bltUing the blaze which started about·l :fS .p.m. Thursday. There were no OCCUPfU!!ls in the building at the time of the fire. Plane Bodies Found TiiUANA, Me.lco (UPI) -The I~ bodies of LI penons!~ ,In ll)e er~ 'of a C!)rpOt'ate DC3 were cmied ou\ o! rQU.d 1ilouJDln country SUnday by Meidcan 10ldl11> Oil boneboclr. -·-···-..• ·--· --- ~ ..... - ..J.pr••r. .. ,n l . ~ - ----,~ --- . --~------- Moon Plwtos Tell Story Of 'Expanse of Nothing' SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo 8 moonfUght commander · Frank Borman reported from lunar orbit th a t the rii90n surface 69 miles below him was "a vast, lonely, forbidding ... ex- panse of nothln&." U the descripUve words he, James Lovell Md Wllllam Ander1 radioed back to earth during their epoch Cbristm.. Eve flight failed to convey t h e stark impact of the moon's forbidding Wasteland, the still and motion pictures they !bot.got the message across. The space agency released selected parts of the Apollo a crew's photographjc handiwork Sunday night, hours after the fll'st men to see the moon's backside arrived h o m e In HoustOn and received a tumultuous pre-dawn welcome. Most of the world'• major astronomical obsetvatorlea were on a list to receive hl.gh:re.sol.utlon prints from the Apollo 8 IUQar photos, the best man has eyer o~tained from t\ls nearest oelghbor in apace. These photographs, showing details as llttle.aa lOO ·f~t across, were expected to Ur.prove maps of the moon'• hidden back 1ide 20-fold and tell a1tronomers Costa Mesa Police duet Roger Neth. "l'm ;aJJ fer ,that,:•· he aaJd. "Look for the cause of th.la tragic muahroomlng In ju~crim< and tbe trali Inevitably takea )'OIJ n,bt lnlo tbe bome. If ponnts -lo be tu 1n control and discipline of tbelr y<lllllisters then they must accept tile fact \list tbm•1' BJ! ezc:eU..i chance lbat .. tbetr cbildr<n Will aome d11 !lgure In ,the jUV<nile ctizne staliltlc1. · "But let me-aay now that ·the t)4I ~t.have something wbtra they accuJe WO Of bypocriJy,". Neth :dded. "Aad wJthoul IOllndlng porripous, r think that we can only ei:pect of them what w• are ourselves. "Th<r<'• ·not m11<b point In enforclnl discipline and ei:pecUng a,lherence to what may well be • perfectly. atNible ..i of nde1 II you can't lnaplre the ' f.11111 in · 'IOI/" own -uct and .,_ ~ 6ijilJi)' lo ldJUJt to W«ld !li!lllsaJd; ' ,. · e .. a· 1 k•ab0Ut l0111o<l!e<l> 'ln("41 j11vohlle' ,,,.-Ill' Ill ..... .... ({ti n:mt ' hit '.I) J -~ three tlmd more aboot the moon's face than they khow now. · 'The aatronauts themselves spent Sun- day morning with thelr famillea. Anders took his wife and five Cbndren 'to Cjttholic Mass. It was their first daf at home since the filght, which started Dec. 21 and ended Friday wiUt a Pacific Ocean splashdown. The moonfliers planned to spend most of the1r free time at home during the next two weeks ei:cept for a trip to Houston's Astrodome Tuesday night to watch Oklahoma and Southern Metbodl!t University play in the Bluebonnet Bowl Sunday afternoon all three men began the first of ·many ''mind-picking"1R1Sions they will hold during the coming 14 (See APOU.O, Pqe I) Cities League . . Calls for End Of Harbor Unit By JEROME F. COLLINS Of tM DtlB' Plltt lltff The Orange County Itea~e' of CiLiea today asked all 24 cllles ·in tbe county to join a plan aimed at dislolvin& the County H11b0r District ·within ei&bt months. · ' Newport Beach, which would bear the brunt' of dlssOlution of the oot.mty-wide district, Is expected to. step uldt !ram the League program. But all other cities are expected to go along ?rith it. "It's inevitable,'' said N~ Vice Mayor Lindsley Parsons. • BU\ it's something we're going to ~ve to 11,and away from until wt baYe gµaranlets that . our Interests will. be protfded.'' .. Newport 'offlci-ls are ~ about the city getting .luck irlth 'loo large ,. tab for aisuming eerv1ctt now l;U). dertaien -·and flnan<ed -b)l . lllO HMbor District. ' ,, Leagu< of CIU., Pmldtnt DUn E. .Shull Jr., •li>'il mayor ol. La Hthtao has called few ttJOlutkh ti ., .. .,111or...,.......i ..... from tbe county'• c!Ua by tile· end of February. 'l'be League plaA, recommended by a Uve-member League committee after !Ive months of llUdy, ii toyed lo a propooed timetable culmlnltlnl· In • speclli county election In Aupsl. All county vottrt would be ell&ible to cait tio!lou In the ei.ctlan. w1-~,......~d be to canl1ml a dootUil • .... Board o! ll11J)tl'Yiam (Ill' fl. P1g:e I) ) • Police Booli 6 ·in ,Death, Hunt for 7th One man wu killed and two wuuoded Sunday night as w .. bnlnlter police - Upped of1 by a~ lliter-arrived on the ecene of an alleged dispute OYer stolen narcotics, too late to stop a l'1D battle .. Huntington Beach and Westminster dete<tiva, jolnUy working the cue overnight, bad booked Iii: men on su.spi· clon of murder by this morning and a seventh on !IUSplcioo of auto theft. Albert Shirley, 22, of Hunlinglon llelch, was btally wounded In tbe cboll -., the $ootoot 1t 1W2 Alta SI ., Westminster, abot down in the-ltreet outside, · · Donald D .. lJncoln, 22, of Whittler, also hit In tbe cheal. and Geoqo G, Brooklnll, 23, al Fullelon, struck by a blast in the burtpcks, were treated and booked Into the Orqe County Mediw Center prison wlmf. Sir.et ad-o!. tbe lour additional booked -murder -IUSpeCts were· not available due to the continuing ltatWI of the lnvestWaUoni .but police llstod them as: -~~ L. Pittman, J4, Weffmlmter. , -Gtiry M. lqnm, II, Crap, i -Ruaell E.·MeGrew, 19, La Bain. J 1 '~All" pl,l,U,La¥1, ~ on Mtildoii · o! crlii'1 ··1boft ajrto 'u· a ".!ji!f o1 tbe In......, wn :Gity.D. 1RilClo111!>, •II, •W_I_, b\11 poUqe ga ..... llelalla o! .... -car Wit .. ·-' ··-~ "....,._the_ of""'-· a• ..... ml notllilmll!ed by ln•Mll.-.'on 1etepllqned Huntington Beach pollce &JD. day nlitit and Upped them d[ lo trouble at tbe Alma stteet lddreu. Tbe news wu qulctly nlayed to Westminster police and five Jftm11natm Beach detecllves were Ibo dispatched on tbe !utile race agalnat-. At about the same time, a woman Identified " Lucy Pittm.n teleJ!!l?iO<l tbe Huntlngton Beacli police ~ with a frantJc pl~ for help. . · ''.They just di'agged my llOll out of Uie -and they're boatlnJ blml They have guns!,'' police quoted her u 1111n1.' Pittman, investigation. d'rlOled1 had already asked 'lot phllncloWes polk8 of. Ileen' protection saying he wu In danaer cfue' to narcotJCs invOlvement' 1 of ~ kind. . .. Durlni current lllqea of lhe lraglc case, police said, no. narcotica have been. recovered and nothing wu faund. at tbe Alma s~ addrw lo prove llie drug aspect. According lo delectlv.,, the COllfrm. taUon and 1Ubsequent gunflgbt lle\uned !roll! the theft of a quanlllJ of miCotics rrom a Huntington Avenue aptibnad (Sff SHOOTOUT, Pap I) COAST'S FUTURE TOLD TUESDAY The DAii.Y'.l'Jlm labl ~long look lnlo 1919 'llltldll1. With ~lloo ol Its annual Fu111rama -The special 1ecUon tells I h • lllor)f -In W«ds and piclllres -of Industrial gtowth, freeway patterns and burgeoning homes. From agriculture lo Api>llo'fnd beyond, It's the outlook "for the .Orange Coast's glowlna future. Read It Tuesllf lnlida tbe DAILY PILOT. ~-·· Weadter Look for Santa Ana wlndl lo l!ocist tbe CIJlalal tmperature to 64 degre., Tutlday, while Inland areas bask in balmy 70-degree weather. ~SIDE-TODAY ' He mav bf • n~Ud """"" 114te-btil; ~ to 1111 !Di/• of 40 !/<CTI. Japan'• ,.,.. mter Sato Is a IDif• lif<lltr. PllQC 6. • " ..... ,. ,._,: ... =-. ......... -·~ ., ............. .. ,, .... ,..., "' .. ..,... ......... ...... -" ir' .. ,. , .. ,, .. ~ .... j • ' ........... 1 AP.OUO ..• rll dtbrif'lfnl: a,z:Ja. It :;,aa llUJo wood« llormu, Lq)leU and~"-• ~-~ilhi .. good ~ .. with' tbii tm~ ~ =·=~.r"'~Jt'~ Om: -·!hoJ: ·'"ct ""1llt!I a~ "~~-ylthillrplle lll'li4fillow lunar .1torbQ1 ill t h o l"~. The eirth hwlg Uke a blue jewtllWth • dlstanco; IU brownWl;Jlad l!lllMo !limost. compjetety ~ by - fluffy wlilta ~ ' ,~ .eartb'I Y~', ... r.D#inf'~· ll.~-~· •lgnl!lomt. 1!io. UW·Borman and ti>nll shoold .bdlle'.ones to brillll this plcltn bact. -. .. ~ -Ille thol """' G<m1nl 1 {wba·ll«mln ~IAvell fle•di> eartll · orblk~'Qa) wlt1l -Ille ~-., ttie·]:l:qrw.r_. lhi moon ln ~tbe . bact&rOJuxl;'' 11kl Paul Haney, ~t Space Celtll:r spokuman. "Well, bere s the~-·.. -,·.. ' --··-floalA...U01 ~, on ~ ..... lll6oo, In lunar .orbit and i:Orrih\I home -were the ~ drama.Uc space films since those shot of Amerlcl'• first spacewalker, the late Ed White, as he floated ouUlde the Gem1nl 4: capsule In June of UNI$. From their vantage point in lWtar orbit tbe astronauts told of a celestial bod)' thal -aJl1thln& but lm>lt\ng to ........ 11>elr pictluoll ..-ll u • lumpy, pitted -that -wlien viewed "' an angle includin& the borlzon -loobd DU a m!Alllpen.IOll bill J.ovdl WU atnl<t by "tbe YUi Jonellnesa: up here. on the moon. It's awHnlplrlng.'' A lhol wtth a ionl! focal length lent, looking 10Utb at UM lar&e crater Goclenhll and several amaller crate.rs, looked }lke a mo• ICtne devoid of. any life. Tboulandt ot llmlller craten pitted the space between the larger hmar fe.aim'el. Hope Returns Governor Ronald Reagan, bullhorn in one hand and plaque h•Ji~';; sented to Bob Hope in other, was on band Sunday to greet com and troupe of 21 entertainers returning from Christmas tour to enter· tain U.S. troops in Far East. Hope will be Grand Marshal of 79th Tournament of Roses Parade Wednesday in Pasadena (see story page 4). From Page I '.(EEN CRIME ANALYZED. • • Spud -tba bottom or tba 40-mile diameter Goclenlua were several dltcho like cloprallonl, lib • child'• - drawiqp oo new-fallen snow. TtM!le are ~· futmu ·a1 thil partip.!ar ln the home -1111 a two-way l!ir~t tomey -all professional> with llngert crater. . And I fJnnJy btlieve that there qre on the throbbing pulse of crime and Anden, chief pbotogapher on, the very·few kJds who won 't react favor®ly all sincerely dedicated to cutting this moon mission, aa1d ~ '11d lunar surf.ca to a set of ·standards to which their ••Joota very wblUab grQ", like ditty btacb parents unfailingly conform." cancer from the ailing body of American sand wltb a lot of footprintl." He was There'•· little to add to that, com-society. And, better stillt all equally not far off. Tbt pictures he brought mented Laguna Beach Police Chief Harry willing to push caseloads and crime b~.~ever, ~ ~~ r~t: LaBrow.. . - ' dossiers to one side and tali quietly cast ;bel:.oUIO or A , .... I' 1°U.4t."I_ . ''n\il't \iW K't ell about" hi. iald. 111111 frankly on applying · the princlpla d'1Wf,;. i"./ ' · ' ·~:~ :.. ': .. · .. "m' --.:coisie:, • ..i:::witlJ ad k1ndl ·OI of "prev-"--is· •~ter ·t b a·n -·-" The ,_ apoct....tor..,. co~ " ·· " · ""' ' but · !lie ~· ~ ·~· al Iba ---... oci tbe .llO'Jlllle•• ::.v-:i~:~illbl ·in\h to 111!1 ~ dll'!™· dlamzf:t-al the~ tli&"klda' parft,ts What tbey CO!lld do , Bui l<t '" Ill-year-old Corona~ Mar eclP <11.Jllo S... ol , ....,, ; H 1bel"d ·lldl 'tats lht tlm ....,,. &Ir.I we'll call Sally liove ihe I.st won!. tk;i1)_l•!t.i .. ..wt~·' . ii.'Jlr." to ·:ao .jt, i1 .w juvenile e -~ . sa11r-tno~s· all a~t juvenile cr_ime. ..mor.~•1:01>-111! • Si#'· ·ln' II&-~,.;. the :1tom'i-:Wbile . l!Ms:lieen.111 Juvenile cwrl \ht« \imeO the ltiitiiilli '--""" '. . . ! .. ;~~Yit11er h'itoll '-' "'!!>-~jeI oil ...... ""1 II!~-~. '"'lbeA'llls OI the crattr are . . splc.uous by their \t:nce . ., ~ ·sat~Mn·warntia: trWn a !up~,TuQrt ~.11~._,._. ~an~~~ 't.': • 1udge last month c:in whM ebr:d get WI:/ u , llifMlll~ lt,.•, ~ ANOTHER WAY' ~~ ..... ":". "; ' if she sho\\'ed up tbfe': jgplh\ ~ ~ ·~;--·1 I · •• : ~.t~.:;';':"., ;;:: :.{ ~ But ~ solutiahs could come anoth~ Sally lossed her ~·nf,,.blonde hair and· ~~~·~.Janctinarb:.tpc>u..~· way, al'll!es Juvenile Court Judge.Bruce happil y commented ·'BIR' deal l _Look, 1'1 -·Pllelt~ .toWn IP Im-. Sumllej'.·:o1 Lag~· Beach. They "wilt I wanna smoke pot, !'ll. smote pOL a&ladl'J'r.lllilml ~· · come iily when ybung people decide And 1 intend to do ,Jun that tonlgbt. ~::..ir ,. _: l.:.-~. · by theiuelves ~put down drugs and baby, so why not run back ln there ~"4_~.17.·.: ·--~-.· 1:. 8 ;: • -people gtneralJY.. recognize all the and tell the judge?" ·•-1-r--.. J ___:-·: ramWcaUons f4,a,too populated world." :. '..t'...' . . •:t:..:.. The only llllZtl )'ertain In 111119, Jud.le ll: 1"-DDO·R • • Sumner.. predktl. ts that "young people ~l.l.J • .:.. : will c<IGtbwa to press for chahge and will gentrally conform to theJr own non· conformity. Drug abuse •• , wW get more and more attention . • • but l don't anticipate a solution next year to di.or .. 1111:..~-<lld di.tn.:t. . . . fll4lel rloclt1 wW< be aaed to .,.a· that !leclll<111'lll Jane, accordlnC-to 1111 Lequa-· - --.i;· --· that U>t: !l!tt, c:ocmtr • ....., .... IUe up the..:....~ wW bo .U. :Local-. .\g""'1 F,. __ Ccmm1alCa (LAFC). . .. . Fro111 Page I BERRY .•. aclive In a number of community ac- tivities in Newport Beach, ., ·u.s .. Condemiis Isra 'l i . . . ' • • ,.._ • t • ... l ~aUJ,.:on ~e~J.!t Ai11?!Jrt Ra~s lndigntttWn ~ ... ' w,lm.G1'0K (UPl) _ 'J'he' tlniled "a grave matter" that "in our judgment that "il ls entirely disproportionate lo ~ . d t bli does not lake ua ck>ser to a stable the act which preceded It." . 4 States, one o( lsr•el's most ar en pu c Pope Paul VI today deplored the ls* .. ; cldeoden ·llnce the IJlf/ w.ie..t wll', peaiJ: ~~.~/:=~ ... _..,; r .. ~ raelillluk en4 -:'""'1 tt "i;on only •c· ': Is reactlng with almn abd em-~avate" lel>lim Iii the Middle .Eul. '· barraamenl to the Israeli eomllllllClo log ·al Ind......,.. la-Waab\n&tolt-lianY r -, raid on Beirut's clvlllan airport. U.S. officllls were aaid to feel Israel'• In a cable" or !ympathy to ·Lebfnne PrU.ldtnt JohDSOn Jet it be ttnown destruct.kin or tS Arab p1anes ai the President Charles Helou, the ~pe uraed ) sunfl.)t thrOUib hil'tpeeial assistant ror Beirut Afrpcitt was~a.he!lvyhanded action Lebanon to show re3'.traint and not. let nat!Onal • tecuril}' alfairs, wait w. that was far ou( d 1proportiro to the itself "be dragged on the. path or Ro!tow, ttYit he reiards the Saturday Arab proyoca\ion... . violence." n 11.ight •uack at the Lebanete1· capital 'Mlat 54lntimeat waa renected ,,at .$bt , The laraell pvernmenl. clahns the at-.. · u "...-Jo\11.•nd unwise." United Notions; wber1 U.S. Am.,,,,ador tact wu jU!llfiell becouoe Arab i.... Roltow.. lnt~ed on teltvlllon J. Russell Wtq\ns urged a •speclll roriltl mae llleir headquarttta in the .. ·(Pioe . the Nlltioo _ CBS), lllid the ....ion ol the !OCllrttf council to coo-Leblnete capital. Israel salcl the raid United State.s could understand Israel's demn Israel's attack. al.so was intended to help protect LlraeU. anger over the Arab terrorist a.asault "This council is meeting now on a travelers from assaults like the one Thursday on an El AJ Airliner at Athens. regrettable Israeli action which 1ny coun· in Athens that killed one Israeli But be .said the retaliatory raid was try strongly condemns," he said, adding passenger. ·~ " * * * '.Airlines in U.S. Asked to Assist Crippled Lebanon W ASlllllGTON (UPI) -The State Department bu approached teVerll U.S. aJrl\nea Ut\na tbam to provido ~ •5slstaoce to the Leb&nell 1ovemmmt following the 1-11 attac:t CID Belnil latemalioall Alrpcrl, llrllne -aid today. One llrl\ne IPORlmln uJd his talTier hid been approoched lbil weetml by tho State Departmeol lllld ubd to wort out an arrlJllement with tbe Lebanese government to htlp .-. that c<11111try 's crippled aJr aerYiceL Thirteen civil oircralt were destroyed ln a reprilll raid bf bellcoelfr-borne Jsraell command01 Saturday night. American 1Jrllne1 and Pan-American were approached bf tbe cleparlmfDI. Other IOUl'CU tald Aeroflot, the &ovitt airline, and Kuwait Alnray1 had allo offered to help tha Mid Eut nallon. U.S. airlines could offer four types of asaliJtince r~&lng from leasliig whole planes en,:f crews to l~asl~g cargo. space on already booked fllgh1 s. Most probal:lle, t h e source!!I said, was an arrangement w h c re U.S. airlines will lease planu. without crews to Lebinc:ti.and bloc:k:pa&H:nger: and cargo ipaCe to the airlines which suffered the brunt of the J1raell attack. • • * • . . . . . . . . . l . . . ,J • From Page 1 SHOOTOUT. • • ln HWltlnglon Beach. They lia.id the llunUngton Beach crowd apparently bllllled the w~ fac- tion and went after them to settle the matter, one "'ay or ihe other: \Vestminster officers arrived jwt as the 11hootlng started, but guns were drop- ped and the siz: so far charged - two hurt -were quickly rounded up. Sh.lrley, however, Jay dead on the pave- ment. Huntington Man Pinned Under Car A rescue unit from the Huntington Btach Fire Department pulled a car from the cheat of Lyndon Jones, 401 Atlanta Ave., SUnday afternoon. County Black Congress Sees Militant Stepup The leader of Orange County's Plack Congress which met over the weekend at UC Irvine saya Negro militants wlll step up their activity ln the months to come. Thom88 A. Crockett spoke at a news conference Sunday ending a three-day conference on black unity from which white persons were excluded. He said blact people wll1 be militant -·to the point. of annihilation" to achieve their goals. "nte. bl:ock community is up Ught, and our people are ready to fight and die, il necessary." Pointing an accus.ing finger at Orange County, he said, "everything dttrlm.ntal to black people in the We.st bas originated Beach, Firemen Record 21 Calls Durin.g Weekend Firemen in HunlingtOri Beach recofded 21 calls over the weekend ranging from a structural fire to·an overflowing toilet. Officials of the department said today that six or _eight calls for a weekend are normal. The high number of calls came at a time wh~ the ranks of thf. firemen ha'le ~n· weakened by the nu . Friday, firemen be&an the day with report or a child stuck in a pile of dirt on Yorktown Avenue. In the ar. le.moon a"f!re in the wlrin cr or a caf.' was follo\Yed by <r gras:i firl'. a l:irge structure fire ar.J a \vlring ilhorl. In the middle of the n·ight firc1ncn rolled on a trash fire ;it " h1Jnll' on .Victoria Lane. In the morning, lh~re was a medical aid and a car fire Satur· day afternoon. Later In the afternoon fireme n in· vestigated a fire, put out an illegal bum and dashed out to the Huntingto•1 Harbour section of the city to check an overflowing toile t. Sunday morning began wilh in· vesligation of a natural gas leak rollo11 e.I by capping a bro ken fire hyri ranl r!;i1n a.t:· ed in an automobile accide1;t. A fe.1y minutes later. lhcr:.' 1·,as a car fire on Main Street near Cn:i~t Highway and seconds later a medical aid in the north part of the city. here." He cited local support of conservative political candidates and oppolitlon to fair housing legiSlatlon 83 example.a. The Friday night to Sunday conremicc c atlracted more than 500 N e g r o ~· participants. ~ .'. Among the key speakers, Crockett said,,. were a Black Panther and a Black ..: Musllm. In attendance, but n o t ~ participating, were representatives of the :- more pacific NAACP and Southern Chr~ tian Leadership Conference. Crockett said black militants a'Od ' blacks advocating more peaceful solu·.~ lions would air their differences inr. private from now oo. ,, Richard Baiaden, director or Unlvenlty Extension, was in.strumental in makln&··' UCI'a Sclence Lecture Hall available'. to the Black Coogress for the conference •. He said he tried to arpie Crockett· · into opening the conference to white' · persons, but was not iucce.ssful. . Baisden said he invited the Black:. Congress to use the campus buDdlng • anyway, because "I wa! delighted a\. minority group would view the campwr as a place they would like to come." Packard Selected . For Defense Spot-.. • By New Secretary, WASffiNGTON.1UPI ) -David Pack· atd, head of a Falo Alto, Calif., elec.,, tronics firm, today was named to ~ deputy defen se secretary in the Nixon adm inistration. 1' Defense Secretary-designate Melvin Laird announced the selection of Pack· ard to be his No. l deputy in the Penta·, gon. Packard, 56, is head of the Hewlett.. Packard Co., a defense contractor. Ha told a news conference that he wou14" place his 3.6 million shares in the firm. -1•·crth roughly $300 mi!Uon -into a special trus~ which would turn over all incon1e and profits from the stocks to educational and charitable. organizations. RMolutioos fnlm 1111 _.. cltles ' -~ cllaolullan .al . the cliltrtd wW be . m!ti,c! .to I.AFC po Mardi ll. 'The . II JNbllc Jilldna Oii· ljle -wUl be held Wori'UJl'C the lillofllill moolh -, U the LtquO Umetab\e lioldl. ~ ·it d,.. ~ votm "*"1• endlll& 11/0' .ll>tbor 'li/,iVlct In ,Au,..t, dlaolirtlon proc<ecllnp would b<I Im- plemented on Nov. l, the Leaiue official said. ')wenile crime ls only one aspect al a maze of dlleDIDLI! that demand 10lu- iloC1 ;Judge S\Jmner says, In what he callJ '.'the crUJcal J970s. years which may tmbatk"us on an 1n'eversible course towards sell destruction or continue the pooalbillty ol IUrflval. "And , 1999 will be the last year of tht aoarin• altties," he said. "Lllce an o .. Henry SlO!'J It may provide u1 with .i ...,,rue en4\ng. He served from 195S to 1964: as a trust~ of the Newport Beach City School District, which later was merged wltb two olhcr ltarbor Are school systems to form the Newport-Mesa Unified School Distr\ct. His It yean <11 tbe elern¢a'J board included two tenm u board pres).. dent. During his tenure on the school board, he also served for eight years 1s a member and chairman of the Oran~ County Committee on School District Reorganization. Jones was pinned underneath his car when it fell from a jack. He was taken to Hunti,ngton Intercomrounlty Hoapilal for x·rays and released tbe same af4 Lemoon. Chest X-ray Slated Just after-lunch, which many firemen said they really never got to. there was a stove fire and a medical aid some 16 minutes later. ~·o hours later there was a heavy rescue of a man trapped under his car when the jack failed to hold. Three more medical aids completed the EiC· tivities of the firemen with the excep\on of the hours of cleaning up needed in order to be prepared for the week's activJUes. Packard atSo told a news conferent't he 1vill resign as an officer of the Orn\ as "'ell as from offices he holds in a long list of other corporation• and or· ganitaUons, many of wh,\ch do business with the Defense Department. Amorl them is General Dynamics Corp., maf. er of the controversial Fill (TFX) fighter·bombe.r. Packard is a director of General Dynamics. At the same news confe rence , Laird" predicted that the Johnson adminlslr11t· tion will have to ask Congress to ap-1 prove a sup plemental appropriation or about $3.8 billion for the current fiscal year to cover Increased CO!lls of th! Vietnam war. r-· Shull today sent out letters, copies of the propostd timetable, copJes of propelled m-0lutt0111 and bacqn,und In- formation on the ls.sue to every City Council In the -'If. DAILi PILOT OttANGI COAST l'\,111..IMllfrtO COMl>..t.NY k.Mrt N. W.H f>l'tlNtfll ..... "*llllW J•c.k ._ C•'':T Via ,,_.din! Wlf 0... Meftltlr TlloM•• ICHTiT ·-lliofl'IOI A. t.Aor,ihl"' #.9119111119 ·~ ~lb.rt w. ..... Wll1l•111 "'" ~.. 111.11'111119klll ~ IEdllor City Edlkr .............. ~ Jot ltli Str-.1t Moilinf Mdmti r .O. 1 .. 1•0, 92641 --~ ...... Jfll W•t ..... ..,...,.,. C#t _.., DO w-t My trfwl UMIN '-"1 m fl«'tlf ~ 1'But t b at,'' ruefully n o t e d Judge Sumner, facing the highest caKeload in· crease in the Sllperior Court, "is unlike· ly." SHOCK TREATMENT District Altorney llicks believes that a form of shock treatment wou.ld not be out of the WQ in dealing wllh the javenile offender. "l havf: a Uaeory," be said, "lbat if young ~e tempted to u:periment with marijuana or alcohol could visit an institution where addicts of a11 sorts are being treated, it might ju~t wake them up. "It mighL give lhem a picture of themselves in the future , Induce thcn1 ...1. or frighten them! -Into falling back into the rank! of •squarea' who have maturity ~gh to be afraid of Ulla type of. deviation."' Judget, police cblell, the dlltrlct 1t- Anaheim Youth Sought in Try To Ram Deputy ~·1 oflicen today are hunting ID Anaheim teen-&gtr who allegedly tried to nm down 1 d!JNtY Sunday night tn an incident outside the youth'• home. orr1cors Nici the t!·f ...... ld youth elud- ed arns1iJ11 oUiotn who called It h I 1 boml. He ran to hll car. AJ Deputy 'I'bom.u Yates moved towards the auto, Ille boy dellberotely veered In hit dlr<oo- tion and ran ewer lht edge of one ti ldll aboM. 1he officer aald. Yl1tt, who WU unhurt, flred lbtte thnll a1 tile tlr• or the tpeedin& car. The al.do waa later round abandooed ....,.i bloca "''' with the 1u toiik pJllCl>p'ed. b The )'OUth w11 beln1 picked up 1 sheriff'• olllctn ror llleged vloi1U<11 or probation. ' For the past five years, he had ~ught evening college classes in small business management at Orange Coa!t College. He also taught Sunday school classes al St. Andrew's Presbyterian Churtb. In addiUon(_Mr. Berry waa a longtime member ol uie. Newport. Barbor Com· munity Playen. He served on the group'! board of directors for a number of years and served two tenns a1 its presi· dent. He also was sec retary for 10 years of Seafaring Masonic Lodge 708 of Newport Beach. A native of Alton. Ill., l\lr. Berry attended Shurtluf College in Alton and, later. \Vashington University, St. Louil, 1'1o. He was graduated from Orange Coast College and California State College at Fullerton. Mr. Berry lelva bil widow, Lillltn Bonni•, or tho family bomt, U&lJ Aragon Circle, HunUngton Beach. 0th er survivors include two sons, David and James; a daughter, Dianne, all of the family home: another IOI\, Marine ClpL Thomas Berry or Costa Mesa, a.nd two grandchildren. Al!O surviving are a brolber, Otis Berry oJ' AJton , Ill., and two liltm, Mrs. Charles M11.yhill Of AJton and Mn. RJchard Reddick ol Salem, Mo. The family has sugaested memorial contributions lo the Roaa Memorlll llospital Building Fund, or to the Shrlners' Cripplod Childttn1 Hoopltat through Seafaring Muonic Lodge 7111 of Newport Beach. Nixon Tickets Set free tickets to the homecomina: celebration Thursday for PresldenWlect Richard M. Nixon at the Anahelm Con- venUon Center are available at the Hun- ti ngton Beach Chamber of commerce office on the aecond floor of Ton and Country Shopping Center, B t I c .. Boulcvanl and Ell~ Avenue. A mobile chest X·ray unit will be in the Huntington Center parking lot at Edinger Avenue and Beach Boulevard from today through Saturday. Cost for the service Is •1.25 and the unit is open from noon until a p.m. "' • . ' • . • . . I • . • . • · • ' .. • I. ' t •• 0 • I • 0 OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR •ring• si1ad and repaired • diemond1 end precious stones remounted •pearls restrung WE CUSTOM D~IGN & MANUFACTURE AL~ TYPES OF JEWELRY HARIOR SHOPPINS CINTll noo HAUO• aw. COSTA MW 145-MH o,_ Moo., n...., M. 111 9 P""· ----- .,. HUNTINGTON CINTH 11.t.CH l EDINGH HUNTINGTON HACH H2·HOI , ' • . • , I ' -~~~,,.--,.-~~~~~.....,...._,,_.,.~~r:--.ni~~~-:-~'"!ffi~~~~c-----.,.---~ .. -.. .. , Fountai· :VOL. 61, NO. 303, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES . -. Ep;l,T19N . . . -. --.---~· ORANG!: COUNTY.-CAUl!ORN(.( •• . ... • ':r. .-1:.. ~ .. J , -A -• MONDAY; DECEMlil 30, ·19~ ·. --::. -: .l~ -. --. ·-. • -• " -· . eac an Beirut Attaek Arab Guerri·llas Pledge From Wirt Services Arab guerrillas today vowed a "rain" C>f revenge raids for Israel's commando &trike at Beirul Airport. The Soviet Union ' called on the · United Nations to ''use its authority" to make Israel accept the U. N. Middle E8!t resolutions. Fighting erupted Sunday along Israeli- Arab frontiers and Israel said one of tt.s teen-age girl soldiers was killed in one guerrilla attack. The Soviet government newspaper Jzvestia denounced the Israeli attack as "international band,itry" desi~ to further increase tension in the Midd1e East. It made no threatening remarks but called on the U. N. to enforce 1ts demands Israel withdraw from cap- tured territory. The United States and the Soviet Union joined forecs in the U. N. Security Coor>- cil to lead international condemnation of the airport strike wltich Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan defended as a ''new dimension in Israel's deterrent policy'' against :-ier Arab foes. Undeterred by moontµig condemnation from all sides of its commando raid Jsrael on Sunday promised further retaliation for Arab attacks. Premier Levi Eshkol declared that I!f'ael will defend itself 11gainst a&· gression "in the place where It ia planned and carried oot." "States which make it po!sible for the terror organization! to organize and .,erpetrate acts of terror ~ the resporuiibility for . a g g r e s s to n , a responsibility which they c a n n o t disclaim." he said. The Middle East airli:le, chief loser Beacl1 Official Melwood Berry Succumbs at 53 'fi.ielwood A. "Mel" Berry, assistant flnance director for the city of Hunting- ton Beach and a former trustee of the old Newport Beach elementary sc~I district, died Saturday at Hoag Memorial Hospital at the age of 53. Funeral services are· set for 1 p.m. Tuesday at St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church Newport Beach, with inurnment to folio~ at Pacific View Memorial Park, Corona del Mar. For the past three ye~rs, Mr .. Berry had served as assistant fi.naoce director in charge of computer operations for the city of Huntington Beach. An Orange Coast resident since 1§48, he previously had been associated with the Lido Trading Co., a Newport Beach investment firm; the House of Harmony , a Harbor Area music oompany, and Dielh Evans, a Sa!lta Ana auditing furn. Prior to his family 's recent move to Huntington Beach, Mr. Berry had been (See BERRY, Page %) Revenge in the brief Israeli strike Saturday, reported in Frankfurt, Germany, Jt was back in full operaUon after chartering planes from other companies to make up for , the loss of· eight jet&. IJoydl or London announced it would pay out $3.1 "m.Illioo in damages -11 percent of the airline's $17.4 million claim. Original estimates put losses from $S6 million to $100 million. Premler Abdullah Yafi of Lebanon saJd today the Israeli attack had failed to weaken Lebanon's support of the Pa1estj. nian Arab guenillas such as those who attacked an Israeli El Al plane in Athens Friday, killing one persori. "We cons&der Arab ·commando action legal and sacred action," he told newsmen alter a three-hour meeting of the NaUonal Defense and Foreign Affairs Parliamentary Committee. "Everyone who has his land taken away from him has the right to regain it in any way." From Cairo, the Al Falah Arab guer· rilla oi:ganiz.atloo's radio announced the shelling on an Israeli settlement Sunday -one ot more than ball a dozen border incidenb , ~ marked "the llrst of the rain'' ol retaliatory attacks. ™ ralllo "voice of llorm" said a "'!!~ .. ~""'el Bolt -callleli Jioil!11~-In Jmisakm, lsroell offlclals ii!H the Arabs fired four bazooka lheDJ but did no damage. But a Beersheba l.Yllell mllltaiy spokesman said a teen-age girl soldier was killed In a frontier settlement at· tacked just before 1:nldnlght Sunday by Arab guertillas. The guerrillas fired shells into ttie iiettltment of Tsofar In the Negev fieaeJ:t ~aW the Dead Sea, the spokesman said. 'nley said a second Israeli youngster suffered wounds in the attack. The spurl ol bordei" Incidents can>< Oil the heels of the alrpocl raid. Former Mayor's Wife Succumbs Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret E. Talbert, 82, widow of former Hun· Ungton Beach mayor Tom Ta1bert, wil1 be conducted at 2:30 p.m., Tuesday, in the chapel of Smiths Mortuary, Hun- tington Beach. Burial will follow at Wood l a w n Cemetery In Comptoo. Mn. Talbert of IOI Ith St., died De<. 27 at the Garfield Convalescent Home. Stie was the widow or the late Tom Talbert, tanner mayor and a former Orange County supervL!or, who died earlier this year. Mrs. Talbert was a resident of Hun· tingtoo. Beach for 56 years. She ii sui-viYed by her IOn Tim; a stepsoo, Gonl111 Talbert, 731 Maill St., Hon!ingtoo Beach; foor grandchildren, and three great grandchlldren. .PA HU!ks' Theory -----~----• = ---·-.. --- . ., .ttuA ~.v~,u~1 '?~.J cl1jS!e"9<1' <Alf~'; aM\ !d«galheeno Ill•~ A,. • and 'Colomlio.A. ,Crater Gdclerlius Is ·abou1'4fl miles· in' diameter. ' · . . ... .., .:. .: .. Arson Suspected To Hide Burglary At Shop Center. Moon Photos Tell Story Of 'Expanse of Nothing' Arson to.cover a burglary was blamed SPACE cEN'tER, Houston (UPI) _. by fire department ofriciala as the cause Apollo .1 moonfUght commander Frank of the nwi-sday blaze that destroy~ Borman reported from lunar orbit t h a t the Universal Beauty College, S$:Kl Beach the moon surface 69 miles below him Boulevard in Huntingtoo Beach. was "a vut, lonely, forbidding. , .e1• PoliC'e ·said $20 to $30 was stolen from panse of nothing." the beauty coUege, located in lhe Town u the descriptive words he, James and Country shopping center. Lovell and William Andera radioed back The owner of the store, Ben Curry, to eatth during· their epoch Christmas has not checked through the ruins to · , E've ' hight failed to convey t b e stark •-· h be itr\Pact .of the moon 's forbidding see what e13'1:' may ave . en U:ken,, wasteland, the 1Wl and motion pictures police said. they shot got the mes.sage across. Damages from the fire were esUmated The space agency released selected at $4-0,0XI by tbe fire depart.merit. parts of the Apollo a crew's photographic Engineer Tom llarnett iuHered cub handiwork Sunday night , hours after the on the band wtJJ1e battling the blue first men to , see , the moon's backside which started about·ll:45 p.m. Thursday. arrived h 0 me in Houston and rectlved There were no oecu~ts In tht building a tumultuous pre-dawn welcome. at the time of the fire. Most of the worJd'a major astronomical Plane Bodies Fotind Thl\JANA, Mexico (UPI) -The last bodlel-ef lJ -k!lled Jn the -crasb, of ~' c;orl'O"lle DCS: ....... cmil!d oot· of r)lgied mountain ccwHty -111 •Y Melic8n.lbldlers on borsebaclt. obser¥atoriea were (ll a list. to receive hlgh-ruolutton prjnts from the Apollo 8 lunar photos, the best man has ever obtaihcd from hls nearest neighbor In ap&c!. These photographs, showing detail> es little as 100 feet across, were upected tO 't!r,J)ra:ve maps of the moon'• bidden batk • slde •told and tell astronomers Utree time& l'l'Jore about the moon's face than they· know now. ·The astronauts themselves a:pent Sun- day morning wllh their. families. Anders took his wife and five Chil<lren to CatbolJe Mus. It wu their ·nm day at home since the fiight, which starteil Dec. 2t and ended Friday with a Pacific Ocean splashdoWn.· The moonfilers planned to •pend most of their free time at home during the next two weeks except for a trip to Houston's Aatfodome Tu~ lliibt .to watch Oklahoma and Southern Methodist University play In the Bluebonnet Bowl Sunday afternoon all three men.-began the first· of M{lllY "mind-pickiQI" sesaions they will hold during the coming 14 (Set APOLLO, Paa• I) . Cities League . . Calls for End Of Harbor Unit By JEROME F. cot.UNS Of rltt De1tr P'll" tltfl . Is Escape Key to Juveaile Crime? The Orange County Leaeue ol au .. today asked all 24 dties in the county to Join a plan aimed at dlasol~ ,the Coopt7 H~bor Distrl>t wilhJn ~t months. · ' Newport Beach, whlch would bear the brunt of dissolution of tile countr·wide district, is expected to mp. al4e tfi:q1n the IA!ague program. But all ·otnet cftlea are expected ,lo go aloog wltl\Jt. Editor's Note : Tllis is !11e conclud· fnfl art icle in a t!DO'part series di3· c 1iuirtQ the crime picturt. in OranQt. County. ' By TOM BARLEY Of .. °""' """ tlefl' ''Whal 's going on in the minds of kids today lhat makes lhi• problem (juvenile crime) so much worse than ever before in history'!" District Attorney C e c 11 Hlcb, no atranger ·to soaring juvmile crime s,tatlstlcs t h a t have shaken 1a1' en- fwcement and probation deaprtments around the nation to the core, doesn 'l II.ave the answer lo his quertlon. But he has theories oa the causes of the explosion in juvenile crime. "And I belleve the key word is escape," he said. "Look at It thi:I way : "The grown man worU 1t hi• job, trying to stretch hla salary to meet his family needa and Otherwise avoid cooflida with the IP. He has reachaf a maturity wbkh ~ that there ia no esctpe from occuiona1 or frequent ~ abd, therefore, hu learned to Id.lust bbnlett to sudden changt1 ID hla ~" Hlcb Ill bleli in hll chair. In deep thoulhl-"Biii: the IUlln,., yOUDgSten," be murmand, .. _.,,, in their own e~ far nxn bleit." 'Jbe word "t1eai>:e" can 6e applied_ u . Ibo to 1 fo .._ "'' the aeparate yot rila•_. liiuu 'lb a I combloe Into :::dt;ml;.ti::,- ''Lool< id lljt CllDpUI -" ... bie . draft prolosteif'and the cfl0p."1b from life and lbdetj,'' -mcb Nkt. '1\ither than lhlnt about the Murt, ma., ,.alhl .... ~ to' .....,. It by lndulglnt in '?KIP" ~ y "So W.. aoe..,c:.R&ttern ol U.uor 111e by mlllon. flMlllaffoo wlih mari- juana, 1lue IDl!Dn1, plfll, all calculated •t ' ' to cloud ihe brain, drive out reality, subit1lute a · fantpy world where evotybOcfy.fi a mUllooaire and cobluted and iAlptrid ....: -aE least as long u the ·elleoll .of· the drug --0r nar<Olic ..- 1Unlu1ant IUt: ' "And," Hlcti went at, "Where· ii tbe loaic in not trying It again and a1am, tryin& to create a ....pecnantnt escape h.otch from the .....,. na!itles ol the present' > · f I ''.Wiiy. are 10'ma!l1 ti-~ l11iear~ &1rlli and hol'I ~;.cl\lmly lnf<I 'iexllal ~llf"lflii ao we,fla1o • ""1'Y U.naae bo)'I dee~ by "'!" "'C'O !ift s lo;be falllql,.w·I th duUes .... !IU@Port -~:-o11spdn1 u -u they get out·ollllgll ochool! ' ""nle an1wtr," saldJIU:~. "is eteape: We all shm the bd!aen Ol ·r .. enfnC the cumn\ lnnd. ft . doea .. """ <tO tell 1 yOWlgller 'DoO' do th!~ iuiH.t the advice can be oupported by grapll\q dODICllllll""°"' GI whal ,IDduJ&eact , .... leaittoJ , . ..._ ' l •J., ..... • Tben't a lot In !hat arlUJllOlll, lifted I I Costa Me&i Poll>• C)llef Roger Neth. · /'l'.m all for that," he iald. ''Ldik '" !be cau>e of uiis trill! mushniomlhg . in juvenile crime and the triU Inevitably tak., )'tl<I rfiht into'the home. U palm!& choole to be IH le ·control aUd dlsclpllne of lhi!ir yOtinglterii then theymust accept · llje.fact .lhat Ihm'.• an.uee,llenl chance tbal·thefr .chlldren wfll ·IO!ne da:y figure 1n • 111e1 Juve!1Ilt crbne slaflrtJ"' "But let me· say now !hat t1'e klds qgtit have somethln'g l,Vhen th'ey actUSe · 1 us ·or· hypociiay," Heth added . "~ : without adundlng pompous,· I· think ·that ' I we can only expect of them what we are . ourselvu. • . • . ·~·s mt mUcb point in enlbtclng diaclpline and expecting adhennce to what -may well ·be a perfectly; senalble Rt ol roles tt pi can't tniptr. the kids' dallh in yoor .... condu<I and dllplay, .,oor OW11. abllJty ·to ldjuat to I a:d\odP>l,.orldj',Netb oald. , l''MoD 1¥1 11btalco about I~ the ~heck· ll)f1GI -JJIV'!!\Jlo owime at Ill soor"' - (Ste TUN CIUME, Pace II .1 "It's -!table," sifd N..,_ fkie Mayor [Jndsley Panol'lll. -; .r~f tt'• something we're going to have to stand away from. until ;we t baY.l,, fi,Mraot6- that our inter'f.lts WilLbe •. proitcitedC~ . NeWport oft'lciall are coDcerned ~ the city' getting 'llacl: -· tooJ;larJe a tab 10< assuming ""ltU -, ,,,._ dertaken -and •Dnanc:td 1 -1by, tho Harbor District.· . -League of Cltlea -~ent ,IJeon 1 E. Shull' Jr.,' who . 11 ~m1YW ·of., f.a' · JJabra, bu cal!l<I '" reool1UO..to(,~ !rpm ·the: county's 1dllM ,by ·Ur, llld ol Februaty. . : · ; , • ; Tbe Leaguo plan. · ncomrnended by a five-member Lea,pe cc.attnhtie After five monUla of studyJ 18 keyed, to • proposed llmetable Cuhnlnalfntl: Jn a 1peci.t coaaty electlan in• A,ltlUll. , AU , eounljl · vpters . wO<ll<I 1111 dli1blo to ~ut liollol!J In tfi& tl«tloo. w\ose sole~~bt-IQ~a decinm bY, the Boald ol liuPorvflors (See IWIBoK, ..... I) • r.tr , . • -~ - • Police Book , 6 in Deat~; . . . .. Huntfor7th One man was killed and two wounded Sunday nig)lt u Westminster pollce - tipped off by a worried sister -arrived on the acene of an alleged ditpute ovtr stolen narcotics, too We to atop . a gun baUle. Huntington Beach and Westminster detectives, jointly working the case overnight, bad booked six men on IUIPi· cion of murder by this mominc and a seventh on mspicioo of auto theft. Alber! Shirley; 12, of Hunlington Beach, was fatally wounded in the chest chuing the shootout at 14202 Aha S t • , Westminster, shot clown Jn lbe llrtet outside. Donald D. Lincoln, 12, ol Whllliu, also bit In the cheat. and G<orie G. Brookins, 23, of Fullerton, struck by a blast in the buttocks, were treated and booked Into .the Qranp eC.mty Medical Center prtsoo •Hnf. Street sddreues of the four addlllonal booked murder su.speeUI were not available due to the contlni.Wq: status of the invesUgatiDn, but police ~ them as: . ·-~ -Ev...U L Pittman, 14, W.,.,.tnster. -Guy M. lalram, 19,.0r-. '":"Ralell E. Mc:Gt:tw, 11, La a.bra. -IUcbnf A. Lbictla; II, La llabra- .llooted on llll(llclOO of grand lheft a~ ril a rel(Qlt .. ~ the ~~on WU Gil')' D. ~ )9, W~, but police gave no detaill of tbe iWea carqi._ -. Wi>rried over the aalety·ol bor;bnr!mr, a.woman nol ·fdentllled by lnveaflptcn tel'pboned Huntington Beach. llOllce &Jn. d111 nlibt and lfppOd than olf 14 lrouilfe at J!ie Alma Slreel -· . The news was quickly ~ to Westminster police and five Huntflwton Beach detectives Were al5o di9pJltCbed on the !utile race,agaip.t;~leoc!.·'"' At about the same ume, a . w.oman Identified as Lucy e;-tofopboned the Hunllnston Beach police ~I with a frantic plea for help. · "They Just c1taaaed my· ... 001 o1 the.house and tbeY're bellllni-1 They have guns!," police guoted ber u 117in1. Pittman, inve!Ugailon ~-bad alreally asked for plalnclotbes pollco flt. fiom' protection saying be -ln.danpr due to narcotics involvement of ' imDt kind. · "During current stages of the trqlc case, police Aki, no narcoUca bl.ve betrt recoYered and nolhlng wu found al the AIJlll ~ sddrtss to prqye the drug upect. Aocordlng 14 detectlv.. the -laUon and subsequent g,;;;/Jgbl stemmed from· tbe theft of a quanUty of DU'Cllticl from a Hunllngtoo Avenue ·~ !See SHOOTOUT, Pap I/ COAST'S FUTURE TOLD TUESDAY The DAILY PILOT tueo. a long look Into 1969 TIJesdi1 with pllllcalion ol Its ann~al Futunma ~ 'Ill!' speda1 Secti!"' !ells t h e story -!n wonls and picture! -of tndu.trjal· growth, ,,_,Y patterns and ilm'&eoning homes, From agricullure to Apollo lpd beymd. It's the ouUook for the orange Coast's glowing future . Read it Tuesday inside the DAll. Y PILOT. I , Or_ange Weada~r Look for Santa An.a ' wiDdl to booat the -'81 ·itmpeuhft 14 IK d°""" Tuoaday, wblte Jmland areas balk in balmy ~­weather. INSIDE TGDAY H• may b1 a rt.tptc:Ud tOOrld •tol<"'!"n, b•' .C....U., lo Ms !Djfe '0/ 40 V ...... JllpGfl'S J>r.- mier Salo ls o. •t• •bto~. 1!f111 ~. . .. ' .. • .... M " " • " .. ,, .. r. i ONLY raor " ·: ...... ,..,,e l APOLLO •.. .u. • .(Zondemn.s Isr ·~e.:I .i ·' ' dql'..U. ·Jhe .,.. wbo plinJ\«I thtlr fllllll.--·YMn ~ Will be llolt ..,, . Ott -these fml><*Wll dtllrldl0jks5looi. It -IJUlt wcqler -· Lovtll Md -f~ rdtned to Ibo "aood .wth." with the empbui( on •...i. durW:.lhelr slx-dl!I' vrzyqe wll!cb electttafd'·~ liorld. ' One """ 1MY"'broolll>I· -thowed a speclacu.lar "eai1hrlie ... wJth the p&le gray-yellOw: lun8t AoriJon in t b • f~, the ~adb hwlg like a. J>lue Jewel.bit he dis~, its brownish land musa olmost oomplelely shrouded by lluH1 white ckludl.J. ; .fo IJlo.Dl..,i.:. lnOoochn>,..UO I lunar ~pe, 'lllpU..,-oarll>'• .vamnr co Od 'tnvruiig'<lllde<d. IL •WU "1gnlfloaol, too, tbat Borman and Lovell t!hoold be the ones to bring this pictllit back. "~r ~ _ thol from G_eminl4 7 _ (wh!4 BanJwi and ~ell fltw In ~ orbll ..dllr:lni 1166) '!he e~ 111, the I&~' arid moon In the · background," said Paul Haney, chief Spa«·~ spok"'IWL "Well, here's the ....'.:.'~ii.-alMI' ;i.;. A Pollo, I - on' ih.;f:; fo ]llO. )Mon, In l1111ar ortilt and coming hOme -were the most dramatic space films sinct those shol d America's first. 1pacewalker, the late F.d White, as he fioated outaide the Gemlnl 4 capsule in June of 1965. Frofil.. ·&heir valiUlg'e point in lunar orbit the aatronautl told of a celestial body that WU anything but lnv!Ung to mank!M. 'l'beJr pictures pmenled It u a lumpy, pitted eipame that -when viewed a' an angle including the horizon -locked like, a misahapengoll bill. . l.ove.D .was struck l)y "the vast loneliness up her e on the moon. It's awe--inspb1ng." A abot with a long focal length lens, looking soutb at the large crater . Coclenius and several srDaller craters, looked like a snow scene devoid of '111 Ille: Thousands of smaller cralera plUed the RP8"' between the larger lunar features. U"IT ...... Hope Retunts . , . G<>vprno! Ronald Reagan, bullhorn in one band and plaque heprei- sented to Bob Hope in other, was on hand Sunday to greet comedian and troupe of 21 entertainers returning from Christmas tour to entere tain U.S. 1roops in Far East. Hope will be Grand Marshal of 79th Tournament of Rose s Parade Wednesday in Pasadena (see story page 4). From Page l Sproad ltnl88 the bottom of the 40-mlle diameter Goclenlw! were several ditch-. TEEN CRIME ANALYZED like depressiOlll, like a child's almless • • • drawings on new.fallen mow. 'lbese are dl5tincttve features of this particular In the home -It's a two-way streel crater. And I firmly be.lleve that there are Anders, chief photographer 00 the very few kids who won't react favorably moon mission, aakl the arid lunar surface to a set of ~ard5 to which their "'looti very 'Wh1tiab gray, like dirty beach parents anlaJUngly conform." ~ u.nd witb a lot Qf footprints:." He was There's lltue to add to that, com· not far off. Tbe plcturel be broogbt mented Laguna Beach Police Chief l!arry back, ~Vtr, had. 8Jl add,ilional yellow LaBro't' torney -all professionals with fingers vn the throbbing pulse of crime and all sincerely dedicated to cutting this cancer from the ailing body of American society. And, better still, all equally willing to push caseloads and crime dossiers to one side and tali quJeUy cut bee••,. of APQ!lo 8'1 ,foggol •wb>' ·, '""""'•);. '"'°;;:ii··;an bout" 11a· said dows~"':::~;r:. ,·: ·:·~···~· •·:=· :; -~~,~~.,,,• .• a . ,. . , · and frankly on. applying ~:princi~o . n..·.-.~acu11r11111 colo< Jlbolo · ~""' $.~~ J!i.' \vi~ u! 1~ ~ of "vreveatlon Is . better th 111,: ~- of thii~loH'aeo-ecl"tne IO'>nile ··=J·~1.1111on'" pl 'aR .. ~ . 'bl Ith to tbla mouoting-dllemma. . • ''·. dl~.eri(i::~~at the wtua .. · 1.bt ... ~:•_ -~t(I. ~h~~ th~yr~~uld "do,_ _-.But 17t an ' Ii-year-old ~rta; del.. Mar edllf'~-~·~·}'lrll!lty. Tbll !mp It 11li7~d l.i,,tbe the time and tri>®le ·girl we II call Sally have. tlie l1&t word. ""r!ll'Jlll~l!i!I ~~la 1\1'• 16. ~All,.-,,...,,.le '~" .. ·.)laljy. 1'noX(! ·~ abo\11 ·1··~·!~. <rlm,t, cell • ' 11 e I 'o• i!P\:a.d ..,.. VI In" u;, blrtbp\ace -the lioine 'l.iim • --·!n•J1f;enilt ·cliM'thNt llril8 the iDdon._ face, · , . dtselpline ·e.nd lood order are most con· ~on drugs and sex offenses ~ she got -·~~~~~&~~-· ~J>r tbe!r ~.. -= . · :i.Z~"'l~:·~:ti~~r::.;~~ way .~~~ it ~:· ANOTHER WAY if she sho.,..·ed up there again. 1 lunar:~.l.'.:;!--i_~ ~ -.. ' But \hose solutiontcould co111e·another Sally tossed her ~ng. 1llonde h.air a_nrl Tbo:Vai""aot~kl Apollo ' way, ~es Juv .. o.ilii Court Judde:.1:1-... e happily commented "Bia ·deal' '""•k l 's .-\-•11ell'.Ui0Jiil' toilrd Ill Im-~.,-• -~ ,•. ' -' --'--"-,.!it •• ·=". . .. Sum.et . f Laglll!I B<acb. They · "wnt '! .,...., smoke pot, 1 ll . "'10ke Pl'I· ~.r -~._ .. ~.· . ··~ -. come a6Jy when 1'0ung peOple deClde And· I Intend lo do just U'fat~ tontabt~ ,•· --•• ' by thenilelves to put down drugs and baby. so why not run back in thert :!"'.'." " ' 1' l people geoerally recognize all the and tell the judge?'' ·Pl' .. 1 .,.._ ramificaUOns of .. too populated world." ''"-.:.· ;7 · -The only 1hfDc certaJn in 1989, Judge ll :&'DD"O~D· Sumner predict.; Ji that "young .pe<1ple .I1..tt1\:D ~l. • • • wiU contJftue to press for change and • will generllly confonn to their own noo· to di81ve Ille ........ ~,, district. .,__ coofornilty. ilnli abuse ••• will get From Pflfle 1 BERRY .•• I I " I ... -I Raid ·on Beirii_t Airport Raj,ses Indignation ~ ~ • I ' wAIJflNG'l'Olf (0PI) -The United "a grave matter" that "h1 our judgment that "it ls enUrely disproportionate to :1 Stile$. cm o( Jsrae1 '1 moat ardent public does not -take us closer to a stable the act wtucb preceded it." ·I dtf'eoden slOce the 1917 Mideut war, peace in the Middle East." Pope Paul VJ today deplored the ts. :1 t1 rtac:Una wllh lllrm Ind em· His comment.I reflected a general feeJ.. raell attack and warned it ''can only aa-l barrusznent to UM! Iaraell commando Ing of indignation ln Wuhlngton. Many gta'{ate•: tenslm-ln the Middle East. . :a raid on Beirut's clvillen airport. U.S. oUJclals wete aald to feel Jsr1el'1 In ll cable of sympalhy to LeblQUe ' ~-· Johnloo -let It be known desb'uctlon·-of IS . Arab pla~s at •ebt President Charles Helou, the Pope urged ~ Su..tl)t UWough bJa ipeci1I 1ssl.rtant for Beirut AfP.ort waa a beavyhanded acUtQa Lebanon to show re.straint aod not,, )et J national 1eeurtt1 atfllr!, Walt W. that was fer out of proportiro to • itself "be dragged on the patb of Rollow, that ha 'ngarits the SllWl<!ay . Arab provteaUon. . , vlolance." IUgbt attack at the Lei>&D9 capital "nlat senUmtqt . waa reflected at the 'Ibe Jsrl!U government clalms tbe at· as "terl<M!. and ~\ftse." . · UnJted NatJons. ,.,,here U.S. Amblssa40r tack wd Justified because Arab tet-' 11M9w, IntervllWed oq talevlalon J. Ru...U ' Wlggina urged a •peclal rorlat& .make \btir headquarter• In Ille ·(Face the Nation -CBS), said the session of the seclirlty council to con-· Lebanese capital Israel said the raid• United Stites could understand Israel's demn Israel's attack. also was intended to help protect Wadi anger over the Arab terrorist assault ''This council is meetlng now on a travelers from assaults like the one Thunday on an El Al Airliner at Athens. regrettable Israeli action which my coun· in Athens that killed one Israeli But he said the retaliatory raJd was try strongly condenwr,11 he said, adding paasenger. * * * i\irlines in· U.S. Asked to ASsist Crippled Lebanon WASIIJNGTON (UPI) -The State Department has approached several U.S. alrllnes asking them to provide transport assistance to the Lebanese government following the lsr..U attack .. 'Beirut llllernational Alrport, airllne IOUrCU Ald todllj'. One airline spokeaman said hit carrier hid been approached lhll weekend by the State Department aiid as.keel to work out an arrll{lgement, with the Lebane&e government to help rt~ that country's crippled air letvlces._ Thirteen civil ain:raft were destroyed in a reprisal raid by helicopter-borne Israeli commandos Saturd1y night. American Airlines .and Pan-American were approached by the department. Other sources said Aeroflot. the Soviet airline, · and Kuwali Airways had aisD offered to help the Mkt East naUnn. U.S. airlines could offer foor types of assistance ranging from leasing whole planes and crews to leasing cargo space on already booked fligh ts. 1tfost probable, t h e sources said, was an arrangement where U.S. airlines will lease planea, without crews to Lebanon and block· pas.1enger and cargo apace to the airlines which suffered the brunt of the Jsraeli attack. . . .... . . From Page 1 SHOOTOUT ... 1n Huntlngton Beach. They said· the HunUngton Beach crowd apparently blamed lhe Weatmlnater fao. tion and went after them to seWe the matter, one way oi" the other. Westminster officers arrived just as the shooting started, but guns were drop- ped and the six so far charged - two hurt -were quickly rounded up. Shirley, however, lay dead on the pave- ment. Huntington Man Pinned Under Car County Black Congress Sees Militant Stepup Tbe leader of Orange County's Black Congress which met over the weekend at UC )fvtne says Negro militants will step up their acti\·ity in the monl.b.s to come. Thomas A. Crockett spoke at a news conference Sunday ending a three-day conference on black unity from which white persons were excluded, He said black people will be militant .. to the point of annihilation" to achieve their goals. ''The bl:ock community is up tight, and our people are relldy to fight and die, If necessary." Pointing an aceusing finger at Orange County, he said, "everything detrimental to black people in the West has originated Beach Firemen ~ecord 21 Calls Durin,g Weekend here." lfe cited local support of conserv •• tivc political candidates and opposlti<in tG fa ir housing legislation as examples. The Friday night to Sunday conference attracted more than 500 N e g r o • participants. Among the key speakers, Crockett said, ~ were a Black Pant.her and a Black · l\.fualim. In attendance, but n o t ~ participating, were representatives of the ; more pacific NAACP and Southern Chr\s.. tian Leadership Conference. Crockett said black militants and : blacks advGCaling more peaceful solu· lions would air their differences in private from now oo. Richard Baisden, director of University Extension, was instrumental in making · UCI's Science Lecture Hall available to the Black Congress for the conference. - He said he tried to argue Crockett : Into opening the conference to white persons, but was not successful. Baisden said he invited the Black Congress to use the campus building · anyway, because "I was delighted a minority group would view the campus as a place they Would like to come." Firemen in Huntington Beach recorded 21 calls over the weekend ranging from a structural fire lo an overflowing toilet. Ollicials or the department said loday Packard Selected thal six or eight calls for a \veeJ;end arc no rmal. The high number of calls came at a time \Vhen the ranks of F 01· Defense Spot thr firemen ha·1e been weakened by the flu. Friday, firemen began the day with By Ne. w Secretarv:-,· report or a child stuck in a plle of J ·r dirt on Yorktown Av'enue. In the •f-WASl-UNGTON (UPI) -David Pacli.- ternoon a fire in the Wiring of a car ard, head of a Palo Alto, Calif., elec· was followed by <t grass fire. a large tronics firm, today was named to be strµcture fire anJ <1 11.ilrtng !!hort. deputy defense secretary in the Nixon In the middle of the night fircincn adrninistration. rolled on a trash firr• :·f ;• hO!ll" on Defense Secretary-designate Melvin Victoria Lane. In the 1nurnl11!l, lh'.:!re Laird announced the selection of Pack· was a medical aid and a car fire Satur· ard to be Ns No. 1 deputy in the Penla· day afternoon. gon. Later In the afternoon firemen iri-Packard, 56, is head of the Hewlett- vestigated a fire, put out an illegal Packard Co., a derense contractor. He burn and dashed out to the Hunli ngt(u1 told a news conference that he Wc:JUld Harbour section or the city lo check place his 3.6 million shares in the firm an ove rflowing toilet. -\\·orth roughly $300 million -into a Su~~ will 'be asked to mah more and more attention • . . but ~~~'?I accordinl: to· lbe I d~~·t anticipate a solution next year Sunday morning began with i11-spe<:i.:1 trust which would turn over all active in a number of commlinlty IC-A rescue unit from the Huntington vestigation of a nalu11al gas !cali folio'." Pr incon1e and profits from the stocks to tivities in Newport Beach. Beach Fire Department puJ• a car by capping a broke n fire hydrant d'Jtnag· educational and chari!-able organizations. Slndl noted, t.uwev.-, that lb&. tint Juvenile crime ' ii only one aspect of couoty -1o, -1IP the ~-a.mua of dll011111l81 that demand IO!u· will be~ the .Local Agenct Fommt!on lion, Judg~ Swnner says, in what be Commlaloo (LAFt:). c~llB ''.the erlt)cal li70s, years which Resoluttmu -from the . county'• cities may embark us on an irreversible course &eekiDg diisoluUon of 4.be' distrlct wU1 • lQwAJVs ~U. deslruction or continue the be su6mitted. to W"'C on Marcb 12. P9.SS1bi,1Uy ot Sur\tival. , The: fint put¥lc t.&rlnl on the 1llue 1'And ·1989 wiU be the last year of will be heTd belON LAFC the following · Uie Soarioi Slxties," he said. "Like .11n m..ut-~if the Lea~ IJvlolahll boldi. · o' I! to It Id ·•• ... M_·-_Ing it aoes.··,-aod volm, ~ • enry I . ry m!!ly proV e US Wl~u ~ ,.,,)..6-• a· surprise. endfng. endlq, :~ Harbor ·ylMI"~ in Augua, "But t h at," 1'Uefully n o t e d Judge diuolutlon proceedings would be lm· smi\h4!r, · racmg· the highest caseload tn- plemented on Nov. l, the League official crease in the Superior Court, "L! unlike· oald. ly." Shull today sent out letters, copies of tht proposed timetable, copies of SHOCK TltEATMENT prol'.lOlld resolutions and b1ckgroond In· lorinatlon on the issue to every City Council In tl(O county. ) OA!I' PILOT OlflAHGI COMT .. Ull.ISHING COMf'AHY leMr+ N. WeM ~· end .. llbllJIW Jeck a. Curt•r VICI ,.,_ldwlt end Olne!"I M111et1r fhefl'l•I ICeeYil .... Tlte111e1 A. Murpki11e WM91fte Edllor AJMrt W. letet Wllll1111 Riff ~ "~'f"""'" ..... IE«w City fllltw " ............. °""" Jpt IHI Strtet Meifiitt A.t1tlr91u P.O. lex 7'0, t2"41 -""""" ......... e.dt1 l2TI Wtill ................. C1J11N MIMI aa Wftl ....,. ..,,.... &..-uni ._,,l m ,._, A- f; District Attorney Hicks believes that a form or shock treatment \vould not be out of the WI)' in dealing with the juvenile offender. "I have a tbe9ry," he said, "that ll young peOple temp'.ted to eiperlment w i t h marijuana or alcohol could visit an institution where addicts of all sorts are being treated, It might just wake them up. "It m!gbt give them a plch!te of themselves in the future, induct them -or frighten them! -into falling back into the ranks of 'squares' who have maturity enough to be afraid of th1s WPt of deviation." Judges, police chiefs, the dlllrict at· Anaheim Youth Sought in Try To Ram Deputy Sbfriff's officers today are hunting 1.n Anaheim teen-ager wbo allegedly tried to run down 1 deputy Sunday night in~ Jncldent outside the youth's home. Offken said the J7-year~ld youth elud-ed mmlnf ofllcen who <ailed at b I 1 home. lie ran to hi• car. ,.,. DopJt1 1bomat Yatea moved tonrdl the 1uto, the boy deliberately veered In his dlrec- Uon and nn cmr the edge of one ., bl> -· the wncer said. Vitti, who WN unhurt, fired three ahotl at the tiru: of the speeding cir. The auto wu later found abandoned leVll'Jl blocks away with the cu tank ..-,red. The youth ,.., bel111 picked up by 1herllf'1 olflcm for alle&'d vlolaUon of P<obatioa. He served from 1955 to 1984 as a from the chest of Lyndon Jones, 401 eel in 311 automobile llccldCnL Packard also told 8 news conference trustee of the Newport Beach City School Atlanta Ave., Sunday aFternoon. A few minutes later. ther~ \vas a he \1•i!1 resign as an officer of the firm District, which later wu merged with Jones was pinned underneath his car car fire on Main Street near C'l~.<:1 as well as from offices he ho lds in a two other Harbor Are school systems when it fell from a jack. He was taken Highway and seconds later a mcclir;il Jong list of other corporations and or· to form the Newporl·Mesa UnUled School to Huntington Intercommunlty HO!pital aid in the north part of the city. ganizations, many of whlch do business District. His 11 years on the elemenlary for x·rays and released" the same af-Just after lunch, which many firemen y,·ith the Defense Department. Among board included two tenM ~ bo&rd'}irui-ternoon. said they really never got t'l, there them is General Dynamics Corp.; mak· denL was a stove fire and a medical aid er of the controversial Fiil (TFX) During his tenure an the achool board, Cl X SI d some 16 minutes later. fighter-bornber. Packard is a director of he also served for eight years 111 a test -ray a le Two hours later there was a heavy General Dynamlcs. member and chairman of the Orange rescue ol a man trapped under his At the same news con ference. Laird County Committee on School District A mobile chest X·ray unit will be in car when the jack failed to hold. Three predicted that the Johnson administra- Reorganization. the HunUngton Center parking lot at more medical aids completed the ac· lion will have to ask Congress to ap- For the past five ye.ara, he had taught Edinger Avanue and Beach. Boul,vard tivities of the firemen with the excepion pro ve a supplemental appropriation or evening college cl.11sses in small business from today througll Saturday. Cost for of the hours of cleaning up needed about $3.8 billion for the current fiscal management at Orange Coast College. the service br $1.25 and lhe unit Ls open In order to be prepared for the week'! year to cover increased costs of the• He also taught Sunday ~boo! classes _f_ro_m_n_oo_n_u_n_u_1 _a_p_.m_. _______ •_ct_rv_1u_·e_•_· ___________ v_i_et_na_m_w_ar_. ________ _ at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. • In addition, Mr. Berry was a longtime member of the Newport Harbor Com- munity Players. He served on the group's board vf directors for a number of years and flerved two turns .u its prui· dent. He also was secretary for 10 years of Seafaring Masonic Lodge 708 of Newport Beach. A native of Allon, 111 ., fifr. Berry attended Shurtluf College in Alton and, la ter, Washington Univer!ity, St. Louis, fifo. He \\'as gi-aduated from Orange Coast College and California State College at Fullerton. Mr. Berry Jeavea bl.I widow, Ullian Bonnie, of the familJ lone, ·19111 Angon Cirele, HunUngton Beach. 0th er survivors include two sons, David and James; a daugbter, Dianne, all of the family home; another oon, Marloe C.pt. Tbomu Berry al Cc>sla Meoa, and two grandchildren. Also surviviag are a b~, Otis Berry of Alton, UL, and two slaten, Mr!. Charles Mayhill of Alton and Mra. Ri chard Reddick of Salem, Mo. The family has suqtlted memorial conlrlbuUons lo the Hoag Memorial Hospital Building Fund, or to the Shriner>' Crippled Chlldrena Hospital through Seafaring Masonic Locfae 'IOI of Newporl Beach. Nixon Tickets Set Free tic~ets to the 1 homecomlng ce.Jebration Thurtday for PrWdent.f:lect Richard M. Nixon at the Anaheim Con- vention Center are avaJJ1bJe at the Him- tington Beach Chamber of Commerce office on !be ae<ond fl...-ol Ton Md (.ountry Shopping Center, BI I ch Boulevard and Eft1a: Avenut.. n OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR •rings sized and repaired • diamonds and precious atones remounted •pearls restrung WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE All TYPES OF JEW ELRY HAUOI SHOl'PIN• Cllllll uoo llADql IN.YD. COSTA MISA IMJ.'411 • HUNTIN•TON CINTU llACH • ID!Nlill HUNTINIOTON BEACH 192·5101 • I ' ., ·-.. .., ·- '-. . ,. ' -.. EDITION· YQL. 61, NO. 303, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES -~-••• . ·- -. -- . . ----. . -MOND'AY~ OEC94Ei 30, 'lfta ~ ~· . ' . -.... . -~ ·-- . -, . ----· - an Beirut Attaek Arab Guerrillas Pledge From-Wire Services Arab guerrillas today vowed a "rain" of revenge raids for Israel's commando sl.rike at Beirut Airport. The Soviet Union called on the United Nat.ions to "wie its authority" to make Israel accept the U. N. Middle East resolutians. Fighting erupted Sunday along Israeli- Arab Irontiers and Israel said one of its teen-age girl soldiers was killed in one guerrilla attack . The Soviet government newspaper Izvestia denounced the Israeli attaCk as "inte~tional banditry" designed to further increase tension in the MidcJle East. It made no threatening remarks Revenge but called on the U. N. to enforce it.s demands Israel withdraw from cap- lured terrtlory. The United St.ates and the Soviet Union joined forces in lhe U. N. Security ColJn. · cil to lead International condemnation or the airport strike which Israeli Defense ~Unl!ter Moshe Dayan defended as a ··new dimension in Israel's deterrent policy" against :1er Arab foes. Undeterred by mounting condemnation rrom all sides of ils commando raid Israel on Sunday promiJed further retaliation for. Arab attacks. Premier Levi Eshkol dtclared that (See AUDEAST roRMOIL, Page Z) Dust to Smog French Exchange Student iii Laguna DAILY PILOT S11rr ""919 FRENCH VISITOR Lquna Hlgh's BauCfln COAST'S FUTURE TOLD TUESDAY The DAILY PILOT takes a long look Into 1969 Tuesday with publication of Its annual Futurarna sect.ion. The special section tella t h e story - i_n words and pi'ctures -of industria1 growth, freeway patterns and burgeoning homes. From 8griculture to Apollo and beyond, It 's the outlook for tbe Orange Coast's glowing future. Read it Tuesday inside lhe DAILY PILOT. By TOM GORMAN ot t111 0.llY Pllll Sl1!1 In the course of a 32 hour day, French student MtN Boydtn traveled from the milty 1t1e1 of · 1'aris to the lijlloggy skies of Im Angele!. . · Nolv, Mike i. ,...1dlng at the Laguna !>Orne ll! l!enry /.dluitt. ln Caiuni' he b&d to. acquaint himitlf · Wlth co.educa· 'tional high IChools, wineleu meals, bet· ter news broadcasts over television, big· ger breakfasb and stricter parents. Tbe l~year old first came to America about four monULs ago, under the auspice!: of the Youth For Understanding foreign exchange Qtganization. His flrst home was in Garden Grbve, before mov· ing to the Art Colony about two weeks ago. FIRST IMPRESSION His first impression · of Southern Calllornla, climaxing a 32 hour plane trip .topping at Amsterdam and Delroil. eu tbe. array of lights of Los Angeles he watched from the air. "I was sitting by the window ," he recalled, "and I saw squares of all different colors of lights. It looked like it had DO limit. My . first impression was very good.'' His aecond impression wasn't so good. THEN SMOG "The ne:it day," he said, ''I saw the smog. The air of Paris is not clean either, but It's 'dust rather htan gases." ";J'eens lead a whole different type of Ute in Paris. There are no co-educa· tional schools, there are no extra-cur· ritular acUvlUes like band or clubs." Was he bored? "It's kind of hard to~ bored In Paris," he sighed. He uplained that school is not the center of social life, but rather youth meet after school or at night in the city and "discuss." School goes from 8:30 a.m. lo 12:30 p.m., and from 2 to 5 p.m. '11 took the bwJ to 1ehool, (See FRENCH Sl'UDENT, Pa&e I) PA Hkks' Theory --------·· --------....-·---~ --. ---.... ~· .... .. ----..... ...... -··-. -. . ----.r.a:=-.,.... , .::s: ' .. ' . MAU., ..... ~ U•I T....,,,... • MOONSCAPE -This is~eoup view of moon clusterell· crateh are .M~'llhaens, .Ma&'!l!!•ena A 1 taken lrol)l Al!'!ll~J;f'il!L~o lenSI Large crat.-'< ""f'~·fli Cf'!it . ~plus Ls abOltt, 40.Q\ile;, ,1 er in foregroUiid .~.li'.GOcJ ~~·· m -.· . . , .. J . , •t·-,., thi.. •-. '• ~" · • > • ~ r • • -· • .,.i • • :-.• -...i;·'ctat"Gf~'P' en ... ,.i .... :-. r .... ·, .:·,,i:"-: .)·1•·: •.• :~ ,-', ...... ,''i ... 1'1r'r j ' '' ,,.., . ...,_,.,f;.-4.1 • ..;,~·1· •. \'ti ••·' •"'"''~·· 'r ' ' . . ' . . -· • ·"'!\ t •,.;.,: 1 " i-:\fi',..'!'J~ ~ Mobn :Phows Tell Story . '.FesfiV.al~ Ballot On 36 Proposals Set for .Tue.sday Deadline for re(urntng ballots ·to the Festival of Ar1s is 4 p.m. Tuesday. Appro1imately 1,300 ballots have .gone out to the membership covering phiposed chan&e' in the articl~ o flncorporaUon and bylaws. The mailings include a slatement in favor of the changes by William D. J\!artin, festiva1 board president, and a statement against by Clarence Upson Young, fonner board member. Young maintains that 24: of the . 36 amendments proposed serve no purpoae and that most of the rest are against. the interests of the membership. Young states that he will vote against all but two of the changes, one desJgned to prevent tampering wilk ballots and. !he olher changing the Festival' fiscal year dates. · · • In urging members ·k> .vote for the chan~es, Martin lists their purpoSe$ as permttting removal Of (Hr~tors onJy by vote or the membersbl.p; establlshinc procedures to assure secrecy of lhe · ballot; "'t~ the filca1 ·ysr lo -with seasonal operations; botaing the annual meetings after audited rep6rt.s 1 are completed; .el:iminatlng the aemHn-· nual meellng: lllld '.clarif7lac dutlea alid responalbllltia Of dl...ct:ors lllld Glllcen. 'Mle baDOla are lo"~ eounlod. Tburlday. ' Of 'Expanse of Nothing' .. SPACE CENTER, HOOJton (UPI) Apci!IO. ~· moonfllght commander Frank Bo~ reported ·from lunar orbit t h a t ' I ' • lhe • moon sqrlace ' 19 rnllea ~low him Wu ;1a V~· lonely, forbidding· .•. u· panse of nothing." · If the destripttve words he, . James Lovell and William Anders radioed back to earth c!urlng their epoch Ouistmas Eve flight failed to convey· t b e stark ~pad ·<>( the moon's forblddJne wastela.M, the st1U and motion pictures ' they lhot 1ot 1he mesaa,. acrou. .. ™ :'l.';"ce Mency release:! l!e!ected pirta cf the Apollo I crew'• photographic handiwork Sunday nlght, boUrs aftet the · first inen to see · tbe moon's-baetsli:le art1ved h ·om e 'In. Houston and received a tumultuous pre-dawn· welcome. Most of the wOrld'1 major astronomical ObserVatofles ·were on a I.ls&· to receive h~JutiOn .prtntt from the Apollo 8 lunar photos, the best man has ever obtained Crom his nearest neiahbor' in . space.· 1 • ' • · 'Mlese pi¥>lolniphl, lhowlns delalll aa , UWe u 100-feel acroa,. were upecled t;o lz:tprove mi,, ;ot the' mOon11 bidden back aid< ~·Id and lell aatronomen Uu-ee. limea more about the moon'• face lhan they know now. Th.e astronauts the.maelvei spent Sun- day m<rninc wilh their famillea. Andera took His wife and five children to Catholic Mass. · It· was their tint day at home alnce · the ffight, which ' started Dec. 21 and ended Friday with a PaclfJco Oceilll . splashdown. i- Tbe rnoonDien pilll!led' lo apend mDll of'thelr free time at home dUrlnj the n~ two wee.kl excep~ for a trip to Houston's Altrodome Tuesday nilht to walcl> Oilalloma and Southern Meihoilist · University play In the !lhlebonnet BOwl. SWldaf allemooo all three men llepn the first of many "rllbfd.p)ciioc" _..., they will bold. during the !!OO!ii>I If days with tbe men wb:> ·plailne(s their flight. New Yeara Oaf ,m be .their only day off from these . Important debriefing sessions. It was llWe wonder Botrnan, Lovell and .,ooen frequenuy referred to the «good earth," with the emphult on good,duling lhelr abt-day vor•I' which eiectrifkd. the world. . ·One shot they mugbt• bllct •bowed a apectacular "earthrlse" with the pale gray-yellow lunar horizon in t be foreground. 'n'8 earth hUlig Uke a blue jewel In t b e distance, ill brownish land """""" almost completely 'alriudad Of fluffy while 'cldu<ll. . . \ Is Escape Key to Juvenile Crime? Compafed to the bleak, ~aUc lunar landscape, mother earth's vaiylng color1 looked lnvittna indeed •. It WIS l'lignilicant, too, that Boiman and Lovell shOuid ~ lhe ooes lo brjng lhia picture i>act. . . Editor's Note.: This is the co11clud- ~nO articlt tn o two-port series di.!· etbsing tht crime picture in Orange county. By TOM BARLEY Of 11M 0.llY Plitt St.ff "What's going on in'.the minds of kida today that makes this problem (juvlnile crime• so much worse than ever before in historJT" Di$trict Attorney Ce C 11 Hlcts, DO 11"anger lo 1oaring juvenile crime 11t.adstics t b a t have shaken law m-1 forcement and probation deapr1;menta 11rwnd the naUon to the core, doesn't have the answer to his question. But he has theoriea on 'the causes of the explosion iJI juvenile crime. "And t believe the key word i! escape," he '8.id. "Look at it th~ way : •'the grown man work11 at his job, tryti>r lo slrelcb bJ.s ..iary lo meet • ) __.,., ------- his family needl and otherwise avoid conflicts with the law. He has reached a maturity which recOgnizes that there Is no escape from occasional or frequent disappointmenll and, therefore, bas learlled lo adJu!I h!mlell lo IUddeo cbangu In bit fixiunes." Hlcb aat lllct In Ills chair, 1n dffp tbougbt. "But tbt lUlun for youngsters," he nrunnured. "appear,, la their own eye1, far mqn. blelil' " n.. ....., •eocape:· ca ~ •Pt>liell u the keJ,_lo ...., cf .the aeparate ,.i related _.. l h 1 t mnblne Into lba Imp )uMfill '1unalt tlllt coolroall bit ~ loda)i, HlW btlleva. ''I.Golt ·11 tlle ...,p.. -ler .. lba draft ,...-. and lhe droP .oull from Ille lDd ""'"'7, ". ·llldl llld.. "llalher than thlnlt ohQul the' fulmo, many youlhl are aeetJni. lo 1..icr It b7 lndul(lns in escape mecbaD.ilml. "So we see the pattern of liquor use by minon, experimentation with mar;. Juans. slue IOilling. pills, all calcuJaled ( . • • "' . to cloud the brain, drive oot realfty, COsta MeSa Police Chlef Roeer Netb. aublUtutt a fintasy work! where "I'm Ill for . that," he uid. "Look everjbodf ii 8 millionaire aod contented for the cause of thil tragic mU8broomlng. and ·l~lred· •...:. at lea.It as long u in juvlRlle crime' and tlie.trail inevitably the ·effect.I of . the drug or narcotJC' •or takes 100 right into the home. U parenll •Umulallt laft,. . . choose lo ~ ill In contn>l and dlsclplloO "And,"·Hkb went cm, ""be:r! 11 .tbe of thei(...y~ then they must~ losic-ln Doi lrJlnr-lt .llaiD and apm, lhe ·lacf Iha lliere'a an.uceDenl"- trying to create a pmminent tlCape that tbtlr childrtn·wlll IOmf: day figure halth from the dre1r7 rul!Uea of ,llle in lhe juy~Je crime itatlatlcl. · , pr.,..li · -" ·"&!/lei *'° c•.aY:m .lbl.t )U)e·, "'' "Why are 90 ,ma:iy J$. and 11-yw-okl eight have·~ when they ICCU9e Sirls and boys ~J'ICklessiy !Oto , .. of , bJPOCrll)','' ·:Neth •dd<il •. "And IOluaJ exporiine1111! do we lpw 1 wllhoul ,soundioa•.polDpqUa, l !hint that. ,. many teenqe boys· Ired bf plzr we can ool7 upect .o1 them . wul we c o u r t 1 to ·be fatben. w l t b duUei to are ounelVes. · S1!PPOl1 lhelr iUepUmate olfsprtnc as ·".There'• Doi mu<!J polnt in enlO«lng '°"" as lhey II"' out cf lli{lll aohool! d1'clpllne and espOcuog adherence to. "The answer," a.14 Iqcb, "1-~pt. What may wen be a perfectly ~le We all share the burden of reveralng set of rule1 · lf . you can't lnspire the lhe current lrend. It lloea no good lo kid!' faith In )'O\lr °"" cooduct lllld tell a youngster 'Doni do lhia" wileaa dil~ own abWty lo adjuat to the advice can be 11.1Pf)Orted by cnpblc a c · workl," Neth aakL demonstrations of what lnduJgeDC1! ctn " e no miatate about It. the chect- lead lo." Ing cf juvenll< crl_"1! _at 11' IOI"<" - Thm'a a lot In that lf1Ulllent. qnad : (See -TEEN CIUME, P111 J) ' '); 'V .. -1 ;r~ • • I • • " -..... -.- "Rtmember the shot from Gemln1 1 (whicb1 Borman and Lovell flew m earth orbil durlns 111661 will) the ,earth In ttie f.oceground and the moon tn the bac.QrouM:'." said ' Paul , Haney, ch!tf . · (Set APOU.O; P11e Z) . Fund.S f Qr Signs, Brochures O~'a Fonda. for · signs apd ~ !Or !jlree new marlOe pr_.e1,ii.ve !-> approved.by O!"Mi• COonlJ ~· . The board hu, at the requm of Lasuna Beach Nayot Gierut Vedder, authorized expenditure of l\Ot more than ll.3SO /or alina and not m<n tllln IUQO for brodlllrU lo H dlstrtbuted lo l<hoOI•. Tb< btocbur11 will delcrlbiO resuJaUcina and boundarltl of ll>e preaervta at Newport'Bea<b, l.alUDI B..cll and Soulb Laguna. Tht:t wtre -up by llate Jegbillllon adopted tbia year . t . • • . ---• .. • N.Y.S~ TEN CENTS . ~ - ou· Folice -Book 6· in. Death, Hunt for 7th One man was killed and two ~ Sunday night as .w~ ~-~ tippe(I oU by a WMied sister -arrjved on the scene of an aDt!ged dispute over stolen. narcoU<;s, too late to stop a gtln balUe. . Huntington Beach and WestmiMter det.ecli.Vts; joinUy working the' . Case overnight, had boOked six men on IUlpi• cion of murder by this mol'llinl ..abd a seventh on IUSplcion of auto theft · Albert Shirley, 22,, of Huntington se.:h, was fatally wounded in the chat dwin&. the sh.ootout at lt202 Alta S t • , Westminster, ahot down in the street outside. , Donald D. Llncoln, 2:, of Wblttier. al.so hll In the· ches!, and George G, BrookinJ, %3, .• of FulJerioll. atrudc by a blast -in the buttocb, Wert: treated and booked 1nlo lba OraRi• County Medical Center prison ward. · s ... t .addreaata of .the four ~ boote,I mun!« _ s.uspeoU were not available due lo Uta contimJ1ns llatul or lhe invesU,.tion, but poUC. liatod them as; -EvereU L PIUman, 24:, )Veetmilllia'. -Gary M. "'"""' 19, Ol'Mi!·. -Rouaell B. ~. J,t,,ha !!*a, -~A.~u;r..1t11n. Book~ on auaplcllll! of cr)ll!d . ll!eft aµ<o ~ a n;J: investlption w~.Gl'Y D.' It. W-'*". "'1\ ll"l!l'. &a .1"! : of I!'< lfolen aw~ o•: the·aa1e11 .;.-Mow. • -not ldenlffJed by,,.__. =»:;t:&:r,J.~:: al the Alma Slreet addresa. The news was qulc.tJy rtlaye4 to Weatminster police ancl 11\>e' HanllaFa Beach detectives were ~ i1so MIPfii'W · on the futile ti.Ct against ~- Al aboul (M, ~.dime• i ·~ Identified as !Aley rnu1111 .. lelephoilid · lhe lllm\)nllon Beacti Police departmenl with a frantic plea.'f« help. ' . . Juat 'lirqged /iiy'. -· Giii el the and they're beating html'111eJ have 1," pollce quoted her aa lijq. Pi lnvesUgalloo dlacloolil, bad airwfy ed far plainclothes l>Ollce cf· ficen' R Ion ~yin( he waa In d.tnpr dae f.o tics mv9lvemeat ol IO!De tiqd. ' curreiit stageo cf tbl triclc • police aald. no o.arcotkl bavt hem ver<d and nothJni WU IOmld II lhe Alma Sired aadresl' lo prove 1he drug aspect. .Acrordlng lo delectiv~ ....-......._ talion ind subllecju.Ut · • ~ from lhe theft cf a ~ Ol ~ lrom a HllDtinglon A•etibe ·aparfmoat in lfUDtlnslon l!eacb.. They laid the ~Beadi ~ apparenUy blamed ·111e ·westnilnSter ,..,. lion and went after them to aeWe· the matter, 'one W!lY 'orthe' ~· · ,: Westmlnntt . ol!icen amved just u lhe shooting starWl!. but (llllll wm drop- ped and lhe ailc so · far chirp! - two hurt -:--were quictJy rounded up. Shirley, however, lay dead on the pa ... ment. • ..:. _ .... :-::,:. ... -"' . Oranie Wead!"' Look for Santa AU windl to boost lhe coaatal lempenll!J< lo 6t degroes lWadaJ:., 1lbilo lnl&id areas but In balmy· ~ weather. INSIDE • .:J'ODA 1f -. - He mav b;~a··,.,.,,e~ toorld 1ta:Uiman, but, atcordinO to hU wi.f• of 40 lfO!~, ~·s Pre- mler !°aJo ii a wff< beat<T. PIJfl• s. ·; --·· .. • ..... ... " " ' " .... " ... " ri?z' 1 &w,$ y• -I l f ., '' ' ·~--. , y Pl\.OT l .f'rollt ~e J AFOUO ... -a I ''e:u. '!WtlJ. ..... ......,. ._..___,,,"" : ' .. -. Tbe movl., <ho< from Apollo I - ., tho. way Jo the """¥'• In lunor .Clfbil Ind comlnc home -wm lbe moat tamauc space runls 51.nct! thole shot ii Anioflca'a Ont spa~walker, the late FA White, as he floated outsldc tbe "emioi 4 capsu1e in June of 1965. .-From their vantage point in lunar Cl'bil the aslronauta told of a cele.sUal body Uiat waa anything but inviUnc · l.O tiiaiiktna-'l'belr plclures -ted II< u a lumpy, pitted .-that -when viewed ., an angh tnc1ud1ng the horison -loolied tike a mblhapm soU bail. Lovell was ltnlck by. ..the ·rut JonelineA up h·e re oh tht moon. 11'' awe-inspiring." A shot with a long focal length lens, looking south at the large crater GocleniUI aDCt several smaller qate:rs, looUol tlqa.,.... """' devoid o1 11!1 IUe. Tffousands CJf !mailer craters-pitted the space between the larger lunar features. Spread ..-lhe botlA>m of the to-mile diameter G6eJ'.enlua were several ditch· Jik:e depruslons, like e child's alrnJeiS drawings on new·fallen snow. These are distinctive features of this partlculat cirater. . Andetl, chlel pllotographer on the moon ·mtsslon, said' the arid lunar surf ate "loob very whitish gray, like dirty beaeh 8an<I with a lot of"lool\'<inls." He was not far oil.. The ~ be brought back. bowenr, bad an add!Uooal ydlow tut be<au>e ol Apollo 8'• fogged win- dows. Tht most spectacular still cillor photo ol the lunar surface showed the !0-mlla diameter crater Langrenus at the eastern ~· o(the sea or ~.ertlllly. This. hug• depress.ion. with moantain peaks In its Center, 11e1 on the right·band edge of the moon's face. "1be walls of the crater are terraced ;_ ab<llt s 12' or seven terraces on t h e way down," Lovell described it from lunar orbit. This wu one of the landmarks Apollo 8'1 moon~ pilots 'tracked toward .an Im- aginary landing ~~· Uf'lf ....... I Dope Re:turns G<>vemor Ronald Reagan, bullhorn iri one hand and plaque he ·pre- sented to Bob Hope iri other, was on hand Sunday to greet comedian and troupe of 21 entertainers returning from Cbrisbnas tour to enter- tain U.S. troops ib Far East. Hope will be Grand Marshal of '19th Tournament of Roses Parade Wednesday in Pasadi?ba (see story page .•>: From Page. J TEEN CRIME ANALYZED. •• One movie sequence swept the entire globe of earth from top to bottom, fri the home -It's a two-way street. U young ~ple tempted to ~lment the way ft looked' to the moon ·crew And_ I firmly belie'n th8.t . there are with marijuana or aleobol could visit a few moments after ~1 blasted oat · · · of earth orbit and ftarted the lont coast very.few:Jdda who won't react.fa~ably an institution where addltll ,of ,u sortl toward the lunar spbere. From 11).ll,OOO to a set or stanclards to wbtch their are being treated, It might Ju!I wake mllout.,s•arp~wayy·.' CO!Jtlnenb~~ ocearis ~ ~ts@JU!lg_Jy._~onn~" _ ~m11 up .. ht .. hem let of 11 >fV 'There'11 little to add to that, com· rrug give t a P ure· •·rm surprised they had the mo v le mented Laguna Beacb Police Chle.f Harry themselves in the future, induce them camera set up," Haney said. "They L -or frighten them! -into falling : were n ..... bu~ .......... they're a aBrow. .. ...... into lbe .ranb of .·-· w!>o . "':"'-,:I:!.....,.._ .. , ., ·-_ '·:·~.:.=><>'.ch•"'""""..: iUI.-·1ia ··~-'·-="'··-:M.· Ji> 1ie ,.,..,. Gr ' lot mtn>il<rt--QIO,.. . . .. .._,...,., ... ~.. ...,,..,, . ., .. . ... • .!!-•"'-!,~ ~ ........... ;r,-::;: . s=·;11t11 ;c:olor~aphl'. -•. • .".Wi::-'cilr:'bii&i; ... ~Ith ..aD idlldl..lil .. ..,..~.iii ~•aUO!!-• • -.' • · .- this · • ll'dlst-)fi\iilllod • lllllili\• · · ·-:::.=::. ••· .-·; ' · Ifie" ·Judges, .PQllce chjef~ lJ!• ~ al· <il'.ui< Fliiriil& ""~·~-.fanot __ 'llOil;.aoluijoqs !>\]~ •II) . au rof ·~ ""11 liNI ~~ uie ·~;(' ~a .,,... i,;.:,~~'.1!'.~ res\j'-,/~-p g ~· oi...!rtM ~ ... ..-,"'.t ·~'-.• , , · •.•. :~:-!~\~~;:~·~~~ ·~ ~· ·· · ]l"';\iifl--=rj~ • , ,, ·# ·· ...... • '" ····~~'I': ·tm"tateru1~e " ~etY."...--An'a';'~bett~'"· "WJJ .. ~ • Jn its ~~~ -the home whe~ 'l\'llling Lo puSh caseloa!JS and pt:pe J~:-~! .:1t ~ · l~ ~ood .order 2'e most c(fl.-dosaieri to~ -~46· _ _. talk_ q~~} ~ ~-~)tf()n ·":::fc!• ~;1 · ~;~•c•"t:~,·;.~.r: -anii",1rankly ·~ ~la'fllie".'~ -··. ~."'.;" -;. ·=' : .. AN: WAf 'Z -·:'. .... .! of '"pr~veot10n ~ ·tieUU ·\11.!tll• ~ F -~· _ ... ..,. l@-•tuf· .. '"'.:': ,,. ~ .... ·-· to thJs mounlif!g dUernlna. ' ~ ~. -. • 11~-e.r . ~ . eS ... =• B .. ose sol~ tould torue auotbct B.iit -Jet an 13.year:Old Cororia dtl Mar ~-.~ .. :, ~. ~ f ~:.-way,,~ues Ju~e Court Judgt-,BJUCe . .girl we'll call Sally h~t_~,:~ Jast word. . :. , ·~ ~ .. .::._ , Sda···-I:' -: sum.-of Lagunl. Beach.::'nleY ~"1ll, Sally knows all abcn.it 'l!!l'~e-·~. ~-~-b t~ lo"' t dowl\'. · ·aw es ea m JU·~,~·, .. .l"J'I.;;;,. Y come-Iv whon ·JOlUlg J>'O~· decide Sh• be · · .~~-•-• ~ ~ ... ·-·' , Y ~·"W'l'M'~t1:..:;J>U 1 __ ... _. on drugs and sex•ofhrlla aud .be· . ::. •. ,_-:·"'-·::-·":""':... ).:.·; -• ', peop.1~,. "'~11W,· recogn.-i · ~ ~~ a solemn warning from a-SUlJreJOr Court Funm:fl Mr\'.~ .. f~-J~ea c~<;Lain. ra1JUf1cat1011' of:a too ~pu.IJ!~ worklJ_ judge last month ·oa .. wb'!l.t she'd .g't ~' of • 'TtmJil• .. Hilla J)rlVe, The only thing certain U\' ·J9'$, Juoge if she· showed up there 'agilh. , , Laalma.lieJcb, win . be lield ~ Sumner~ ls that "young ~lo Sally tossed her,,; -hoJr.and at 1 p~ He was 70.,: . _ will ~hnue to, press for chmlge and, happily commented ~'.Big . de3.1 ! ~k, ~r; ~. stva:I years • ~ will ~rally cot&form to Uft1r aWn noo-1 wanna smoke' ppl t'U 'amOie -pot. resJ~ut, ~ ~ at South -~ conf~lly. Drug <abust. · • • will get And I intend to do :fust· •tnat' tonight, Communif1 H~ . more ;and . f!lOre . attent10.n • · · bat baby,. so why not , nlD 'batk 'iti· t~ ~ ~Iµ be tpnducted by Rey.-I d~? t anuciplde a soluti~· next year and tell the judge'?'; · · · Doullu Stuart In the chapel of Laguna • . . · •·u . t ell orced She li o.... Fuaeraj.;Home· ln'*""'ent wtn 1«1.-11. -i-.:.· 1 1 one -t o{ >)<I Y .. s ,par~n s are ~ . Veil ~ . ......... uuv~iu.M: "''uui;:; 11 on Y .... .,...... . -or is su~sed lo live -with her be a:tP~V Mttn_drLal Part... , a maze of dilemmas that demand 1o1u-motlier·· and t'w 0 younger listers. She ser ... coinlntl to~ Mr.,Qmlon ttoo. ~lid&•. SUJlmer says,: in what . h• ~be<n f()lllld Occui<inl to be had i>Oeii a rt,al ~~er an4 btllld!l' ~I ."the l:rjtl4Al 19'11ls, Y\A'• which . li . "th what ' 00 • Beidi _,._ In A1tadtna. ~e wu an afu$n~ or 1 ~ ~t~ on an irrevenl.bfe course . officer '"pollte'ty cfe~ ai .,~ Corllell. Upiver~1t1, · . ~a/4".·!<U ~Uttucpoh O: ~ontiouc the the fillhy, tong·haired rilf'rall lhal mm Ao active •llljltour arilst -rho ha4 · J#elblllCY .of, l'!rllval. . . · , , . this job hard work." · . studied with , prom!nonl t',aguna Be•ch .''Altd lst!9 ·w•U. be the last year ol "My mom's pretcy well '1.v'I' up on artilp. Mr~ ~ wp a m¢.nber ' 1¥ · rroaf.tng. slxti.e!~". he Sai~. "Like an me," grlnned .Sally. 1:'lt) 1' drag thfrc, ofUleLagunaBeaCb~Assocla11on.. o; ltenit'.ifot'y ,, may pro~1de u1 with Ehe hu .• to .Work and rui,ptetty slc.k He w•s also a.member ot .the Southern .11:lOJ'P;rbe Mdtng. · · 1 · 1 · Jtid mten 1 CillfOrnia Gott MioaliUon · ind tbe :.'But't,ba.t;" ruefully noted Ju~e· ~sifizy~·ai:~~d~gatn bUt ~e Laguna Bea~ Country Club. Sumner, facing the . highest c~~eload In· are times, when he's h 8 d a drink or Survivors include. a daughter, Mrs: cr~~se in the Superior Court, IS unlike-two, that ii really isn't safe for me Donald Croxton Came of. Costa· Meaa, Jy . to stay around there if you know what a son, James V. Croxton of Santa SHOCK TREATMENT 1 mean,, ' Monica; a brother, Herbert P. Croxton · of Vtnlce, Fla.; and six grandchildren. District Attorney Hicks believes that FATHER WARNED a·..form of shook treatment would not A probation officet explained very DAILY PILO T OllAN4a COAST t>is11LllHIJrtG ccw,,A,N-, Robert H. Weed ,raldt11t 11111 ,utlll..,_ J1cli: R.. CYrley VICI Prnldenl 11111 Gft119rel MifllllN' ThoM•t KN.,if Ed!lo<' Th.M•t A. Mwrphi11e Ml!\Otolntl Editor Rich.-_rlll I'. Nill l'ewl Niu•~ LQUM kl<.11 A1Mr11tlne City f.d!!Gr OlrOC:IOI' &. ........ om. 222 Fo'''' A••· M•lll119 Mlllrou: P.O. lea "'· t2612 ...... __ C.te .,,_: ») Witt .. , ltl'Mt ~ -.edl: t111 Wat .. lbN .....,llwl"ll HWlllnf'tvrl IHd\1 ., 5111 ..... I ~t of the ••Y in dealing with the carefully Just what Sally-did mean. And ~ile offender. · ._,.., r the ·"i baVe 1 theory," he said, "tbat her records revealed that .->a-...,-'s a r had been given a nrm warning of what would happen lf he chose lo forget that the tall, buxom blondt wa s his dsughter. Fro1n Page 1 ·MIDEAST ... l11rael win defend itself against ag· gresslon "in the plate where it ls planned and carried out." "Stares which make it possible ror the terror organizations ta organize and perpetrate acl"I af terror bear the ruponsibillty for a& Ir 1!!11 s Ion, a mponslbUlty whlth they c I ti D 0 l d1solaim," he sald. 'lbe Middle Eet airlioe, chlel loser 1n the brief lsraell strike Saturday, reported in Frankfurt. Gtrmany, it was back in full operation after chartering planes from other comeaniea to mUe up . lot the loss of ellht j<t1 Uoyds of London announced lt would pay out $3.1 .mlllloa in damages -18 perttnt of the alrllne's $17.4 million clalm. Original estimates put tcmes from sse million to $100 milUon. --Preinltr Abduhah Yafl of Lebanon said loda1 the lsrHlt elleck had l1lled tb wakto Lebanon'• 1Upport of the P•lati- n.Lan Arab cuen111as suth as lho5e who attacked an IsratU El Al plane ln Athtnt Friday, killlni one peraon. ""'WI' cons1der Arab c::ommand~ action le1al and 11crod action," he told newsmen after a lhl'ff-bour meeting of Ibo National.l>cfONe and Fortlin Allain P11<llameotlz>J Committee. "Everyone who tw hf1 lalid !>ken away from him hu the right to regain it In any way." TQ Sally. 1969 is just another year. ll's a year when she may rome tG rourt agal!'l on drug tharges or a!!I an expectant mother or on some more serious offense. Either. way, she'll be one of many thousands of young perlOT1I whose names will appeer on what will be a record !isling in the annals of crlme in this nation. Judge Robert Gardner and Di!!trltt Atlorney Cecil Hicks had the aame thought: "The future Is bleak." Rugs, Furniture s\olen in Laguna Two rugii, $25 and 200 blant check1r were tattn from the Rubaiyat Oriental Rup sl!op In Laguna Belch during the \\'etktnd. Police Mid tht burglar tlimbed through a styUght In the building at 1117 s. Coast Highw'I)'. Officers said the thltl app1rently stepped onto the roo( from a room in the Del Camino Hotel. ln another burglary rtport, Elston Palmer of 995 Le MJr1d1 Sl reported the theft of 1 sofa bed, a desk, a swivel chair and t.elephoot. The lOll'I e.1Umate WU =· Policl said the thltl Bppa.ctl11ly used a key. ve ' . . ~ . . Laguna .Cf!uncil to Consider Precise Plart • . • ~ • ' I I. pndae pllli lo.-extension ol Canyon ~11 Drive to Top of the World will "'i !II for · LIJaql •Beach Clt7 •Council COJctderallon Tll,itnday night. 1!lr regular-Wl!dneeday meeting has been rescheduled for Thursday because ol the holiday. II will hegln at 7:30 P=lii? , , of c.M)on Acres Drive have ken agalnll lbe j)reciBe plail I will in_.. llllore b1111lc Ill ly and ~ portions ol JUda 1'!1 lost to roa~. Councl1men wlll-Wld two other public • hw1ngs, both. appeals from Board of AdjtJ!Unent denials ol property owner request!!. ~x-Lagun~ Beach Policeman Named Mesa Lieutenant Font>er Laguna Beach pallce officer John Moquin has been promoted from aerg~t to lieutenant abd y.'ij1 serve u a watch commander for the Costa , ' Mesa Police Del>IJ1meqt. The 34-year-old ts-Marine joined the Costa Mua force in 1953', subsequently Ol'laoiztng ils Tactical Squad, in· lllrumental lo keeping · order at last August'1 Newport Pop Festival. The ex-Marlne .is abo known for bis toughness .. Military llrill and Inspec. tioil Offictr at the Orange County Peate Offleen . Academy, running r o o k i e patrolmen through their. paces. Lt. Moquin, fonruirly • patrol sergeant, Is aJao an original member of the aack Costa Mesa Police Honor Guard, a con- slstent prite.wtnnu• lo Interdepartmental competlUon. ~ Lagtina, Youth, ., Friend Held On ,,Narco Count A Laguna Beach youth and a Long Be;;ch youlh were arrested by police Friday night on suspicion of marijuana possession. Police Lt. John Zelko said the boys, 16 and 17, were 11itting in a tar in the 200. block of , Woodland Drive when an officer approached to question them. He said the officer smelled marijuana fumes and recovered a plastic bag pf marijuana ahd' two unldentifted blue- green pills that had been thrown on the ground. Zelko said the. yooth& will be re.ferred to juvenile court. Wreck Victim's Funeral Tuesday Funeral services for Hamilton Craig Longwell Jr .. llilled when strutk by a car Friday on a freeway in San Diego, will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Pa· cific View Chapel, Corona de! ~far. Longwell, 19, of 1647 Hillcrest Drive, Laguna Beath, was standing near a car that had run out of gas when hit. wtth him was Russell Williams, 18, of 1325 Citcle Way, Laguna Beach. The youth, a June graduate of Laguna Beath High School and student at Sad· dleback College, is survived by his pi rents, Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Longwell Sr .. and a sister, Mrs. Jeanne Story of El Toro. Interment at Pacific View Memorial Park, Corona del Mar, will follow services. J. M. Gooley, 1140 La Mlrada St., will seek approval of reviled plana for • peck projecting into lhe 7ard setback ood for parking width. Mlclmet Yessls, 11111 i'ad< Av<., will seek approval of plans to convert a ~ garage lDtp addltional Uving quarterl'oo his ,M zoned property. City olllclala oald ~ of the work hu already been done. ~ In olbtr busloeu the council will : --O>ndder a recommendation lhit 11 street llchts be aui.borized for· Sk)'Une Drive. · -Likely authorize application to the county for state gas tax funds to purchase and improve the privately own· ed segment of Summit Drive for which Bruce Countryman has asked $$0,000. ~er 1 fin1l map for a Ji-Jot subdivision on Mystic HUI near Thurston Intermediate School. -Receive for action proposed amend- ment to the city zoning ordinance, ordinance 209. -Consider proposed cbangel l n building, plumbW,, electrical and liart codes. --Oxlaider adoption a! a re.solution ~ the fee charge& f o r permits from the building department. -Receive a report from the Leaiue of Cities committee on dissolution of the Orange County Harbor District. From Page 1 FRENCH STUDENT. • • and the trip each way waa ball an hour." There are no evening classes Thursday and Saturday, and there is no school on Sunday. FRENCH TV M I k e, like most Frenchmen, spent much ol his free time watching televlsion. ''There is a nalional orfice for television, with only two stations for the whole country. The programs are usually pretty good and there are no commerciab." French television is government con~ trolled, "which has too much influence.'' Mike said. '-'In America, when you hear one political apeaker, you hear the ether. That'll not true in France. ''But the programs are usually pretty good ; the films shown in France are better then those shown here. People eat dinner in front of their television 5et in Fran«:." MEAL DIFFERENCES T h e European meal differs from the 'American. "The main diffP.reDce i1 that here there are big breakfasts, small lunches and big dinners. In France we have small breakfasts, big lunches and dinners that are just a litue smaller than lunches," Mike explained. Does he miss wine with his meals? "In France I don't have wine at every meal, but only for big dinners wiUt relatives. or on SWJdays and holidays. Then \Ve bring up some wine from our small wine cellar." WINE COMPARISON · How does California wine compare to 'the European counterpart'? ';France is the first producer of wine In the world." Aft.er a pause, Mike added, "And the first consumer, too. I miss the wine a little, but I can do without it. My habit has not yet formed." One of the main contrasts between the French and American way of life is the school system. "We have no drama groups, or a band or even a library. 111 Paris studenls are very con- cerned about the way school11 are. They don't sit back and watch," Mike com- mented. He said that while there are few hippies populating Paris, youths belong tv groups similar to the Students for a Democratic Society . NOT A RIOTER "l haven't taken part in any riots a'nd I don't approve of them," Mike said, looking back to the student revol~ last summer. "But in fact there are problems in the educationaJ system that have to be solved. The teacher-pupil relationship is poor and has to be modernized . The system is behind. I would like better to have ·1ess lectures- and more participation by the students. MORE CONT ACT •·1n America. the relationship between teachers and students is m o r e permissive; there ill more personal con- tact. But they are more strict in hair and dress here. There are no dress regulations in France," he said. "Parents Jn France don't want to be more permissive," Mlke ea.id, ''b_Ut Americans have mon: control. In Pans. if you want to go some place, yotJ walk or take the subway or bus. In Ame~ica, you have to ask for the car.". . British music is most popular w1tll the younger set in France. "Tl:Je yourtji people like the BeaUes, the Rolling Stones and Petula Clark because of her accent. She sings in French with a British accent. People like that." Al\tERICA FRIENDLIER How does French hospitality rate with American? "The American people aro much more bo!lpitable than French. It'' bard to find a host family in France," Mike Eald, referring to the foreign ex• change program. "But in America, peo- ple just open their doors to you." Questioned about the American space program, Mike answertd. "Frenchmen admire it. And they like the idea of the rate to spate. It makes things more interesting." · Well, Mike, weltome to America; the land of California smog, California wines and moon shots. Things aren't too boring llere, either. · Airlines in U.S. Asked to Assist Crippled Lebanon WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Slate Department has approached several U.$. airlines asking them to provide transport assistance to the Lebanese gov~t following the Israeli attack on BdrQt lnternaUonal Airport, airline sources uid today. : , .. 11r1 One airline spokesman said his carrier had been approached this weekend. liy the State Department and asked to woi:k out an arrangement with the Lebane!f! go'-'.ernment to help restore that country\s crippled air services . Thirteen civil aircraft were de~ Jn a reprisal raid by helltopter-borne Israeli commandos Saturday night. Amerltan Airlines and Pan-Americp.n were approached by the deparlmenl Other sources said Aeronot, the Soviet airline, and Kuwait Airw8y11 had aljo offered to ~Ip lhe Mid East naUon. 1 U.S. airline! could offer four types of assistance ranging from leasing whole planes and crews to leasing carao apace on already booked flights. Most probable, t h e sour~ said, was an arrangement where U.S. airlines will lease planes without crew11 ti Lebanon and block passenger and cargo space to the airlines which suffered the brunt of the Israeli attack. 1-Io Greets Americans TOKYO (AP) -North Vietnamek President Ho Chi Minh broadca11t 1 NVw Year greeting to Americans today • n'CI said his forces will continue fighting in Vietnam as long as their countlj is subject to aggression. --' ',j.. ' I • . . . . ' • .o OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA 'AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE •• COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR e rings oized and repaired :e diamonds and precious stonu remounted e pearl• restrung WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE AL( rrPES OF. JEWELRY HAUOR SHontNG CINTIR 2300 HA HOR IL YO. ;oSTA MUA 545·!41!1 Opoo M .... non.. Fri. 'Ill t ,.... HUNTINGTON Clll'l1l MACH & IDINGR HUNTINGTON HACH HZ·5501 -------- ' t \ ? • which o. IS.lot U"slon nend- 1aoce, i ri' I siJrt .iutlo• ll'lnilS ••KU" on of "but Paris. • you JS. ln r." with younj Stonesi ,ccent. iccent. e wi_t.h le are h. It's a.nee," J!1 el· I, peG• space -... lea ot : more a; the wines borin.g • '· t lOll State al U.S. inspok 1lllleol .BdrDt ...... .. 11.~. ~arritt 2ld ~ , work = •troyf_d ---nlght. ~ Sovfot d aljo n. ' types : whole 'space d ..... tirlines WS .. cargo .lffered :ans 1am.k a Nffo rarli:f ighting :ountfy .. • ;, I - Packard Set ' . . .. For Deputj By Laird ·' , WASlllNGTON (UPI) -David Pack- ard, ,head of a · Palo Alto,· Calif., etec- ti'bnka: firm, today was named to be depOiy defense secretary in lhe Nixon adminiBtration. Defense Secretury-designate Melvin Laird announced the select.ion of Pack- ·ard to be his No. I deputy in U1e Pcnt.'I· .... Packard, 56, is head ol the llewlell- Packard Co., a defense' contractor. He told a news confei-erk.-e -that° he would place his 3.6 lDl1&n mares )~ the firm ;.... wart!\ rougbl,y S300 million -into a 'apecra1 trust wblch~ would turn, over all ~·-add prorlts from Lbe stocks to «lucitional and charitable organiZalions. Pickard also told a. news conference he ~ resign as an officer of the firm as well as Crom offices he holds in a lone 1llst of other corporations and or· 1miizaUoos. many of which do -business with the Defense Departrnent. Amoog h ta General Dynamics Corp., mak- ~ ot the controversial Fl 11 (TFX) ·flghter-bomber. Packard is a director of 1General Dynamics. ~ At th'e same news confcrenoe .. Laird predicted that the Jolmson ad1ninistra- ilon will have to ask Congress to ap- -prove a supplemental appropriaUon of about $3.8 billion for the current fiscal year to cover increased cosls of the Vietnam war. Blackburn Named New President Of Coast Group Newport Harbor area real estate cx- ttutive Cap Blackbum has been elected ~969 president of the Orange County _Coast Association at a recent board (if director!. meeting. His fellow officers for the coming ~ year are H. Les Rc1nmcrs of So uth La guna, first vice president: Edwin Finster of Corona del A1ar. se<.:ond vit'c president ~ and Dale L. Dunn of Hun- tington Beach, secre1ary-treasurer. Jn addition to electing the new s\ale ()f officers the board selected 25 business fnd community leaders to. serve two-year terms on the board of directors. New direct ors froin i\ewport Beach are Dr. Daniel G. Aldrich. Jr.. Jack Barnett, Urban Beh, John Ifopy,·ood, John 1)facnab, Frank G. ~tichalcna. Jack \V. 'Mullan, James F. Penney, and 0. \V. ""Dick" Richard : rro1n Huntington Beach Ted Bartlett and Ralph C. Kiser . Others elected a r e Alton A 11 en, Roy Bradt, Selim S. ''Bud" Franklin, Arthur MacKenzie, \Villiam D. !'Ytartin, lL I. "CO\a" Morris, Fred Nev;harl, Walter Schmid, il1avor nob e r t Schwerdtreger, Dr. NOrman \Vatson, Raymond L. \Vatson, Rqbcrt N. Weed and Nick Zicner. Former Mayor's Wife Succumbs v Funeral services for fo.trs . fo.largar{: E Talbert, 82 . v"idow of former Hu~· \ington Beach mayor Tom Talbert, will l>e conducted at 2:30 p.m .. Tuesday. 1n the chapel or Smiths l\.lortuyry, Hun- tington Beach. Burial will folio"' al \V o o d I a w n Cemetery in Compton . Mrs. Talbert of 108 6th St., <lied Dec. 'Z7 at the Garfield Con1·a!escent Honie. She was the 1vldow of lhe late Tom Talbert, former niayor and a £om1er Orange County supervisor. who died earlier thi s year. Mrs. Talbert was a resident of Hun· tington Beach for 56 years. Nose Pose DAILY mor hit'..,. Dlllt•IMIM.tr Rose Queen Pa111cla Anicich gets prelty "nosey" 11·ith Mickey !\'louse during recent vis it to Disneyland . Pa1nela "'iii reign over 79th An· nual Tournament of Roses in Pasadena Vi1ednesday. County Black Congress Sees Militant Stepup The leader o! Orange County's Black Congress Y.'hich met over the wcekcn'1 at VC Jrvinc says Negro mililanl3 \~·i!I ster up their activity :n the months to come. Thomas A. Crockett spoke <il a news conference Sunday ending a three-day conference on black unity frorn \1·hil'h white persons \Vere cxclude1!. He said black people will~ be nlllitant "to the point of annihi!Rliun" lo achie,·e their goals. "The bl .. C'k (·on1111unity is up tighl, and our people arc ready lo fight Rnd die, if necessar~." Pointing an accusing finger al Orangr County, he said, "l'\'Crylhing dctrinicntal lo black people in the \\"est has l1riginatcd here.·· lie cited local :.upport of conscr\ative political candidates and oppo:-:;;tion to fa ir housing legislation as exa1nples. The Friday night to Sunday conference attracted more than 500 N cg r o participants. Among the key speakt'rs. Crockett saitl, ''ere a Black Panther and a Black Apollo 8 Craft Undergoes Tests HONOLULU (AP) -The Apollo 8 spacecraft. back from its orbit of the n1oon. is t1ndergoing Na vy tests al Pearl llarbor before being flown to the North :\mrrican Rockwe ll Co, plant al Downey. Calif.. for closer exa1nination. The capsule carried astronauts Frank Borman. James A. Lovell Jr .. and \Villiam A. Anders lo a ~plashdown in the Pacific Friday. After the astronauts 1\·ere flown to Houston. Tex., for a reunion with their families. th e spacecra ft was brought here aboard the aircraft carrier Yorktown. Ron Simanlel, recove ry engineer for the National Aeronau tics and Space Administration, said the 12-foot-high, cone-shaped capsule was "in fine con- dition." ~1uslim. In attendance, bul not participating, were representatives of the more pacific NAACP and Southern Chris- tian Leadership Conference. Crockett sa id black mili tants and b!acks advocating more peaceful solu- tions would air their differences in private fron1 now o:i. Richard Baisden, director of University J·;xtcnsion. \\'as instru1nental· in making UCl's Science Lecture Hall available to !lie Black Congress for the conference. He said he tried to argue C'rockett into opening thr conference to white persons, but 11•as not successful. Baisden said he invited the Black Congress to use !he campus building anyway, because "I \\'as delighted a n1inorily group \\'Ould view the campus as a place they would like lo come." Dis11ey A 'vards Deadline Told By Committee Or;:;anizalions applying for i he Disneyland Community Service Awards have until midnighltTuemy t.o file thiir opplication, according to an award11 ·com- mittee spokesman. ri.rore than 200 Orange County orgardia- tions already bave filed applicallona for cash awards totaling ~.000. 11\e top a11·ar<l will be $5,000 to the most outstan- rling rommunity service group In the county.' \Yinners 1vill be announced in February .i.L the luncheon. Awards ctmmitlee memberii ·'I.re \Villiam H. Spurgeon Ill, of Newport Beach chairman, F.dgar F. Elfstrom of Fullerton, ~1rs .. John B. uiWson' ol Laguna Beach, l\irs. Jqseph A. , lpng of San la Ana, Mrs. Norman V, Sal,utl of Anaheim and Albert SolomOb of Garden Grove. Ha1·bor Etigineer lnjUred • ThonlflS Edgerley, 30, \Vhittier, an Orangt Counly Jlarbor Distri ct engineer. is lifted to stretcber after 5u£!ering head injuries early today when his south· bcJn:l car \vent out of control, jumped the center . divider and rolled over four times on Jamboree Road, just south of F'ord Road in Newport Beach. Acciden! occurred at 7:50 a.m. No other cars were Involved. Edgerley was reported In critical cond~ tion at Hoag Memorial Jtospital. .U,S. Conderii11s ·-Israel . ' • ~ l ; -·): ! -HQi<l·--Oii,B,eir~ .. Airpart Raises_ lnd~nation ~ WASlllUi'!'ON (uPll, -il'1leo Unlled In • cable ol IY!llP"lllY to wbuieoe puaengtt,-'· • • ' Stales, ..,.«lnel'• ··arcjaj pul>llc "'-Qiarlea Uelou, U.. Popo llrpl The h1cidont e.nbirram"d U.. J~ ~. llllol,.~ 111'1 ~ •*!• ~ le ·~ .-.int •Dd let admlnlot:atlon -.. tt occurHd ..ll!i ~t wijh •llrl')," •iicl ...,. .1W-. "bf',~ cm Iba 111 or a c1ay Wlei"coniplelion 111 a deaI 'r.i ~at !!1' tile ~·~ncto vlolellCO.'' tell !lrad' i!O Ft !>bani.,. jet ~ !rut's clvlllan'uryort:'· 'l' < • ~ "!'~U 10..,-.t c1a1ma lhll._,_ ror a!ioul $200 m111100. '1 l Joi)oloon f.I I\ be ~ • ,.Ja<k . wit' Juptlllld ..... Arab•-Israel has loeg !8f~ it need~ ~ • Uiroucb ·his spe6'1 ~·lot' .,.~mite tho!r ~\W1•N:I~ jeto for defl?!lllive purposes. noting that &ecQrtty affairs, · -W.aJt, ,W. 'Leha'*' c.tal. l•l ·~1t;l. QR ~d tt» Soviet UnJQn hil ,bten1 supply~ ~. that he regards Ille Sall!ti!IY ·:.t! .. "jillfr¥1ed_!!_~~ Jll'll!ecli.-.U Eal>\ and ·~ther Mab !l"il~ with· llJ<t Jl)gbl alll<:k at U.. IA~ 'l)Jplwl ... IJllm ........,.. llft iq, ,ooe .11!odel alroafllo iep!ace losses ~uffe'lfl u "lel'Joua and unwjae." , ~ , hi • .Atbm9 ' that ldlltd one -·.:tareeli in ·tbe 1167 war. ,. · ~. IJ>ltrvl•wed 00 tol~1"'-~ ' • 'L~~ ·:tJ·:iid ~~~~--~.; ed Pl · w· Id C . ·-~~~::E~~~.=::~o~ . ~-.®s or . rmse lltllc"" Hid lhe; retalia)<fy; tllld IW. ·, ., . ' .: • t1a ~v that "in Gbf.ijtlqment ~ •· .. . \I d,.. oot ~ us \1<>1er-.lo •· stablt On p . ..].,_ J: dr• B ~ ~~~n:ss;~~a)teei: . . en:UiuUni.· 1ven ' ()a., Ing of'tndlination In washli>gt®.-,Many U.S: officialt· wett said to; feel Israel'• destructlon •f. 13 Arab planOJ at the Beirut Airport was a heavyhanded aeUon that 1\·as far out of proportlo~ ·to ~ Arab provocation. That sentiment was reflected at lhe Onited Natior\s, where U.S. Ambassador J. RU5Sell Wiggins urged a special seS5ion . 'of the security council to coir demn, Israel's attack . "Thls council ii meeting now on a regreuable lsraell action which my coon· try 11trongly condemns." he said, adding that "it ii entirely disproportionate to the act which preceded it." Pope Paul VI today deplored the Is· raell attack and warned it "can only ag- gravate" tension in the Middle East. U.S. Giving Planes For Biafra Relief GENEVA (AP) -Eight I a r g e transports made available by the United States to t h e International relief airlifts: may make it possible to feed an ad- ditional one million people or more in famine-threatened Blafra, rtlief officlaia said today. "It Is a very big help," said a spokesman for the all.Swiss International Red Cross Committee wiJch will get four of the cargo planes. (UPI) Hans Dahlstroem, 37, 1 Swede, plana to "aail" 8louriil •t.pe ,world next March 1n a boat that will have neither iiails nor con· · ventlonal engine. The vessel will be powe'rtd by a' pendulum contraption he invented. ·When the waves rock the boat the pendulum iiwlngs. When the pendulum swings it turns the propellers and theorellc41ly the 24-fool. .Jlleboat will skim through I.he water. on a voyage he hopel will outdo Sir Francis Chichester wtio depencaed on sails .for his lone voyage around the world. "I will make use of the movement of the v.·ater," Dahlstroem said. ''The waves will wash me artJ4nd the &lobe." He call,, his contraption a pendulum engine and says the center piece is a Z,200 pound lead pendulum . built into a box. "The bottom of the waves ieepa the pendulum moving all the t i m e , ' ' Dahlstroem saJd. "The movement la thm transformed In a gearbox to power a nonnal propeller." Dahl.!troem claims he will get 18 horsepower out of hlii engine. "I have been testlng a smaller engine wlth a pendulum of only 440 pounds In the boat this tall and it gave me eight horsepowers and an average speed ., of four knots," Dahlstroem says. . · The engine need1 at least ': fiO..~ w~.;e ~=:~~r~i me tlie. waw! on the big oceana al,moit ~ver falli below two feet, ao I'm not worrlecl about that. I estimate I will make a1 ~" Oin:'tt!'n~' y"f-.sllr ~~ °'! Ii'.? ihinb, 'bis engtO:-mlgh1 ·-.. bo staiidard equ1)Jrnent in Jlfebofta. "MOit ~eboats hav~.fqel only 'for 24, ..... ,but lfiUt my engine qi.y could feicll.- Without any fuel 1t all." · ' Dllllslroe!JI IW planoed his trip !It treat detail,. a!J<I hl• 1rhale-dlaped - is equipped IJll' all em6genclea. ' sm· his :-ilcine -.. llUle ... nil noise, lie' 118' ·constlucted • llplldaJ vibrator In Jilt llottodl ol U.. - to keep whales :aw1y. . • ,._. ~ A fpqd ~ ~'will iupply; mm with " l,5 tons of ilpedally oel~ ~ fof' Ille. trip, which he expedl will tuo about one year. Dahlstroem. will Doal around qi. elrlli alone; but 110":.s~ be . might brine b1I J>ll!TOt lo keep hlin eompany. . "There 118!. .~ •. Jot of 1411< about rouhcJ:.t;Jle-earib · s, a 111 n g s , ' ' 1111 Da)ilWoem. "~Ill nobody hu ,et 1afled tbe proper route~ via the po1~,'' · ''Tbat ls wblit. I'm golni 'to do ilhd that ·win brell<' thl" record or Sir •Pnn-c1a·~chester·~ .. N1 the othen." .. ., •• ' ' ' NEW ... AT THE WORLD'S MOST UNIQUE BANK'! GOtO·EN Your new Goldlli Pmbook Savlnp,.Account will draw the hirhest bQ, ra~ of interest nailable anywhere ! • Now yo4 cen enjoy 5.13% kttere1t on 1 '.NaW90rt Nlltlonal Bar* Golden Pa1ebook AccQUnt ~ yotJr saving• and all dMdendt remeln 1 year.J'.hlt ,. now pontbfa when otr 9',{, current ennU1l Jntefwtt· rat• la oompounded daiJy and 0"9dtted quti:terfy ·to• your GokSen Pat1book Aocouht. Thia lpteltl ecoount "Ji avallabla to Jndhtduelt. corporations, partner.hlpt and non-profit orgaNzaHoN. You'll be pleeMd to know that your lntfiriat ~ymant1 ara . ftWbla aocon;lll"G to your own peraonal nHd1. Wtth • minimum depro91t of $S(X:> and aubt"equant depoeltl of$100 or~ there la no limit to the amount you can deposit ln )QK Gorden Paubook Sll'Vlnga Account. Your lnlef'Ht ttartl from the tfiite ~-d.,,011t and contJnuea to the date oft wtthdl"IWll. W• conalder thia a goldt",. oppor\rntty to makti 'f04/f' 11\1tng1 groW faster In a ple1tar\lend HCUre atmoaph,,re. Wa wduld like to ten you rnDf'e about tfllll unlqw '~ank rite" of lnternt Come fn,encf ... UI «NII the COUJ>Of' balbw and we'ndoth9rtlt. I . . 7 COIWEllltNT omen TO SERVE YOU IN ORAllGE COUNTY ·--. .. ... ' ' MIW'lht 540-2111 • ...... -s.,.lde It .&ll6otal '42·1141 • ..,.. .. ,..... It ....... llNlll ---.. -11%~111 ·--I • .,I c...,. "" .... ,...... • 0 7 •• 111-21D1 .• .., ..... """". -l1W2IO ... ,, ·--Dllc._..11 .. r...·l1Ml9 • • I ,I I I I • • ' I .. ·~~t•ar)Q,1961 ,.....,....., ... ..,. ......... , fpie tllll'llts licked up the wall• jJ ·hir,' .ho u a e, and Mra. Mary ~ scrM!nod out a window for feip. OUt o! the London nigh~ IAYIN freulng temperatures, pm• a man carrylnc a ladder. •• plaCed It next to the house, climbed to the window and helped the 4&-year~ld woman to safety. Without llvlng bis name, be sli!" 1'0d away Into th• darkness In bi• 'r·shlrt and undershorts. AstrotUlllt Welcomed ·uome UPITelff!Ml9 3 Copter.'• wt • · Allies Ignoring • Latest .... vc Truce ' ' 'SA!QOH (AP) -Tiio Viet C..,. tbot -lhree ...... Amert..-......,.... over tie weekend. ralllna to ·• the number ol cboppen reporlecl loot In combat In South Vlellllm. _,.. the Amertc111 h<ltcopter ....., Cnm· bed, thoo•Mnda ol U. S. and South Vlel- nam..,. trccpo pulbed ahead with IO offensive operatlool, J.anorina the start of a New Year's ceue-On proc~ by the Viet Cana. All three helicopters were ahot down before the cease-fire started. One was hU about 30 miles north o1 S 1 I 1 on Saturday, ld11lni two Americana and injuring two othen. Another was hJt Sunday in Tay Ninh Province, northwest of Saigon, and three men were injured. The third wu shot down in the northern sector of the coun- try, near Quang Ngai City, and one crewman wu killed. the meetll!I and lll1t there will bo "' other mJUlazy form within 11'-la!hl of a milt -one kilometer -ef tbe mMUng p1ace. Honry Hite, I, of Chicago, an oboeilt, cauiht everyme'1 at.ten- tion at O'Hare International Air- port. Hite. on his way to a con- cert in Dallu, is 8-foot-2. • Apollo 8 astronaut William Anders is welcomed home by Fr. Larry Camey following Sunday mass at Houston. Astronaut Anders attend'ld· services with bis wife and family after his early-morning arrival frOm Hawaii. Daughter Gayle, 7, seem s more interetted in the well.wishers who gathered than in li1tenil1g to Fr. Carney. The Viet Cong broadc11t an an- nouncement that its forct!I began observ· ing a 72-hour cease-fire at I a.m. Saigon ti me but warned they would strike back if attacked. South Vietnam and the United Statea said they would not obaene a New Year's cease-fire this yur because of alleged Viet Cong violations of the 24"hour Christma! truce. Police . Probing Gangland Haunts In Brink's Theft Trygve Lie, First U.N. "All operaUons are being conducted as nonnal," a spokeaman for the U. S. Command aatd . He said 11 Amer ican operations of battalion size ar larger were in progress; South Vietname3e spokesmen reported aavmunent forces had 44 such operat.iona under 15'ay. Secretfl,ry Ge!_!,eral, Dies ... ,.,...._ A PROUD MOTHER Sophi• Loren Hes Biby . "'Lil<i "'91,..,., JiM ~w'.the io¢ng go<s ..-a.114 the adif1r-li •~Y ap~ fJi t.lalr ca.te. 1'!11. R•z: Mccier· ch.tr;M lltr ion. Rob«t Mld beht· lor of Jii1. d<g«t~ '~ceitJ(l/1 ntm1th. M''· MtJCKtrchet. gr4duattd from We.ttern Mtchigan UniveriiQl...tn K olatnozoo tDhiLt Robert too~.«­ gree from Michigan State U·niveT°~ij,·1 Communiection.s School. It apears tha~idwutern ~iris just aren't interesteg.tri joining the boys-at least in ;die Boy Scouts, th't ia. An invitation for girls to join the Boy Scouts' Explorer Scout procram in Omaha, Neb., has been out for 5~ monlllnls "' resJl!t of stut!IH on bow to beat attract-illif· bold boyl ace 14 to 18. The invila· tion is yet to be· ~ccepted. • • Cul" of aov.p and tMH ,,rrkn, hod oA q/ect on an unldenH/icd h.Gbitut• of the Mot"Hillt Solva. timl A1"'V Hoipital m. France. The mari tDOn no,000 in the Na· dOftOI Lotter~ CITlci donated 1200 of it to the Salvation Armu. . r~ ..... H. O. Pirtle, , craduatecl fJ'GID I.ht PGllce ....tmiy in HOUflon lut w.U. On his tint day on the job, be ual4d three Dank burglars in th• lirrt three hours. Seid hi• suptrior, Lt •. W. ,C. Dota: "Here I've ~ on Ille force for 29 years and haven't ca.,iit a bank burglar yet." ..... _ ·-··" •. . . •w~ """" drivers m Bristol, EnCllllld flDally tired Of tapping politely on a telephone booth.where two young men were talldng - Interminably -to their iltlfriendl. Tbe lnlcters t1ihtJy bound a length o! rope round 8114 n>un4 the~. lrapln( the two youths Inside. They finally gm out by banging up on their girllriends -and dlalln( pol· ice assistance. BOSTON <AP) -The F81 eumined a key and police visited underworld hangauts today for a clue in the hijacking ot some '800,000 from. a Brink's armored car Saturday four blocks from the bne of the $1 .S million Brinks robbery in 1950. Two men used a key to open the door of the parked truck, surprising a guard, Richard E. Halnes, '3, of Tewksbury, who was atone In the vehicle while bis two teammates tock a ooffee · break. Police said the tobbera could not have ent.end the t r U c k tf h~lde bolts on the truck doors had been latched. None were in place, lnv~tigators said. A key was found later at ihe scene ol the rnbliery. Qimpany offlclals Aid it WU not lallJed by BrinkJ; Feliz _A.~1 Savage Jr., manager of 8rinb' .,..... olllee, a a I d ''u near aa~l. can Ucutaln the total 111keft will be in tl\6.ma «-llOO.OOO." An auditwu llar\ed Sunclaf. to detmnJne' bow much ol -Ille •foot . WU In cull. 'l1>e robbery was the 13111 ol &;.._,_money \e;rprell truck in taitern li!auacbUMOUI llnco 1950 .. · ~ --, 1 Halnea sali! the rnbbe..)""wliO·,,.,.; •ki mub and (loY.,, handcufled Ralpls' wrista and maN<led him In the lla<t of the truck, drove several blocb to a pa1'lnl Jot naar the ReglltrJ ol Mo'l« Vehicles, tr-errtd the -.Y 11\to a vehicle driven by a third man a?d _µed . Bob Hope Back From Vietnam LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bob Hope, bacl: from bis !Ith ~ wttb U.S. aervtoemon--, 11)'1, "I -10 to the moon neat yur -but they told me they don't W~t any fat utriuuta." !lope. al .. ... hlJ U!Ull bounoy' ir;~ lelf Sunday as he 1pranc off a plane from Viet.am, reeling off a <trll\c GI toplci1 comments. • Tben. aflar matins bis mooo trip com- men~ he beCame lerlous. _ "I juot hope that we don't ho!• to mate another trip," he told a crowd of about 100 friends. "l just hope something good comes out of these Paris peace tllka, and I just hope this ts the last Christmas trip.,. OSLO, Norway (UPI) -T:rygve Lie, first secretary general of the United Nallon.s and leader of the body tbrollgh the years of the cold war, died today while 6pending a Chriltmas and New Year'.a vacaUon in the Norweaian mO\IIl- t.ains. He was 72. Lie was having lunch with Mn. Sine! Bratz, one of his three daughters, when death came. She had left the table for a moment and when she returned ohe fOW\d hinl slumped forwal'<I , his head on the table. Re had not previously been reported ill. Lie is survived by two other daughters, Mrs. Guri Zeckendorff of Scarsdale, N. Y., who jnfonned the .current secretary general,. 1J -'!bani, of the death, and Mn., Mette Holst who . avrvlved World war 11. l!J occupied Nonray while Lie -fn 'the scvemmtn~hH!xDe In Lon-doo. • Cause of death wia not known lm- medU\telJ but !rlendl of th< family qld he had not been aerioosly Ill before bis vacallori trij1. ~ took place at the m01111tain resort of Geilo In central Norway. L I e served as secretary general at the height of .. ti;e cold war and his term in office probably was tbe l\ofmle11t ol any U.N. chief aecuUve. Ile w .. boycottod by the Soviet Union, presumably because of bil stand In Korea against the North Korean onalaulh~ thlt -' Oubhouse Fire.. Kills Five' _Boys WORCESTER, Mua. (UPI) ...., The bodie1 of five teen-eged boys were removed ·1oda)' from the rubble of a homemade" 'clubt¥>uae wbk:h bW'ned to the grOW1d afteT a portable lloV9 If>' . parontly exploded. Four other youtbs ware 'lnJurid In • the fire which destroym the two-story bullcllnl· In .. Jaolated wooded ITU •u Indian Hin mad about 10 p.m. Sonday. All Ove of the dead wttt · from Won:ater. AutlioritJ., &aid the hut had been built by neighborhood youths and was used as a hangoul Ten youths w~ ln~dde the hut when the. fire started, police said. Northwestern Cold Wave --.. . . Zero Temperatures Stretch From Micltigan. to Kansas Calli-la • c •••••• Cllet •Ml .. ., ~ ... aft9•· -..._., W .... ~.,.,If M II M.'-ll. T..,..1 Mtfl, J1 .. 6t. y ............. ..,,_...,,,. ,,,,, •• t-r111'1 11'1i,titfll "••lf 0 .1 ... 111111 ,.,.,_.,"" ,.... -" .. Jll. Tiii ........... "'" .... JJ.t 111-...... s ... , ......... TWu _ .. , .... tlltfl . 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"" ,... *fffll Cilndllkllls. TetnJteratwre• Mltll LIW Pree • Albllllutrov• • " Alllthor1 .. ' ·• ,A1i.1111 " • l!l•O!rf!Mlrf " •• ........ " "' ... '"" • ,. . .. ••tOll " " "-" " (.111(1111111! " " C.S.11eMl\4i • • " (lt•wt r " • o..~ Mol~n .. " • • .. ..,, • " Eurtl<.1 " • Fo<t WOrlh • • ·~ ,, • ....... ... .,. ...... " ., ._ ... " M K-C.llY ~ " l•• v ..... A " '" -" " 1.1i...1 '"°" .. " Mllw,>*11 • • ·-" • ·" Nirw Or ...... ., 0 ....... ~ " .. ,,_ • 0 ........ " • P110 ll:•ln • .. ·-· 0 " -· ~ • ·-n • • ....... " • "' 11: .. 111 '"" ., ·•· "" l!llllff " • ·-" " ~·""~lo " n St. loub " " .a .. ,_ • S.11 Litt (.ltt • -s.~ O+e9e " • S.n Fr•"tl•CD " ., S~M~ k•aer1 " ~ 5Htt .. " ' --' ·• --· " ~ W1tfll""fon " " brought the Urrltecl States and the U. N. Command into war against the Com· munists. Lie was appointed secretary general Feb. 1, l!M8, when the world body came into being and reidgned Apri 10, 1953, saying t h a t in view of the cease·fire in Korea a new secretary would be "more uaefvl than I." The rotund Lie was a lawyer and took part in the 'Norwegian labor move· ment from lrls yooth. He served as mlnlstet of juaUce and minister of supply in the labor government before the war came to Norway. Lie follo•ed the king and the govern- ment in exile in London in June. 1940, and later that year became foreig n minister in the Norwegian government·in- e:s:ile. He took over as secretary general in 1946 for a fi ve-year tenn and agreed to serve another three years. He resigned in 1952 and was succteded by Dag Ham· mankjold. This Meanwhile the U. S. Command an- nounced today it will send fi ve represen- tatives New Year's Day to a second meeting with the Viet Cong in an attempt to secure the release of three American prisoners of war prorniaed freedom by the enemy. In a broadcast over the Armed Forces Radio. U. S. headquarters said a cease- fire would bt oblerved around the meeting idle SO miles northweat of Saigon. ''To ensure the safely of the prisontrs and the participants from the opposing side," the U. S. announcement saJd, "a corridor to the meeting place, free of military action on t h e part of t h e allies from 6 a.m. until three hours after the meeting ends, will be esllbliah· ed. The corridor will be approximately two kilometers wide and will run southwest from t h e meeting site in a straight line." The U. S. Command said It a~umed the Viet Con1 would send an equal number of unarmed reprtstntativta to Gas Company emplqyee is a friend of the family-- yours He's ready to 1erv• you. He'• hichly trained. He'• cood •t hi• Job. That'• why h• worka for us • Baby Boy Born To Sophia Loren GENEVA (UPI ) -Actress Sophia Loren today proudly premiered for the world her first baby, a dark-haired blue· eyed boy named Carlo wh05e blrlh fuUill· ed his mother's dearest wish. "I am so happy," she said. "The boy iJ won- derful." MW Loren, 34, eave birth prematurely Sunday to the aeven pound 12 ounce b o y by Caesarean optration. He h a d been expected in January. Mother and child were in &ood health said Dr. Hubert de Wattevtllt, Uie world renowned gynecologist who has holped many a celebrity through difficult prflJ1lnCitS. And hi• job l1 b.comin1 more important all the time. We're e. in¥91tot•wwd compan)'. And thlt'• lib havinc two employen. You hi; .. to Mtidy,.... C\lltof'llent the people w~ buy your service, by beinc eftident. And 70\I hne te be .md•nt to utid"y your own.n. For they're th• people who ln•Hl in 10UI' bu1IMt1 and make th• Mrrice po1tibM. This !Mana we 'work hard to ci•• tha be•t pCN11ible 1.mc.1 at r•alOnab!e rates. Jnn•tor ownenhip i1 that ,.extra 1tep" -why w• h"• servictimn who .. extni cowt.ou1 end UiltCul, •• .,.u •• bein1 etndent. lt'a the reoon we look for economies in enry way pouible and hav. bed able to reduce 1a1 rate• 1iz tAne1 in the lad fwe yean. It'• &1110 one of the reasons our business is 1rowinc. And how! SOUTHERN COUNTIES onvutor-owntd Com~" flt Pttillt Uol'IUllf &,llwn} ( \• I 1, Ironside's Barbara Anderson She Came to Be Skir and Made It fDDP!olj! N_('t"•OAT l[ACH • 0111.)·1)50 SOUTHERN CALIF. \I,,,.,..... Top Twirlers 11 VERNON IOOrT HOll.YWOOD CUP!) -In IMI ~ 27,111 J>Nuillul bhmdM in tllelr - llMI -Wmblad of! ~. tnlm, -and bay ....... Ill Hollywood lo be- come movie and/or tellvtllon •tart. . ~. Ol lhll IJOllP 21,111; ~ become waltrtuu. birn.Wdt, rell utate aatesglrle, bouff. w i v e s, and supermarket che(Jr:en. The one wbo la on the roed lo ltardom iJ Barbara Ander# son. she is the delicious female cop on "Ironside." Good fortune and modicum o( talent have saved her from U1e fate of her SClrority sisters of 1964. Actually, Barbara came to Hollywood f r o m Memphis, Tenn., to appear in little theater in Los Angeles and to study acting. She chose to skip New York'• acting schools. cause I lo>te the weather here. But l didn't think I was pretty enough to become a movie Clr TV star.'' Barbara obviously sufftn from myopia. Her hair Is Ught blonde. Her eyes are a tawny mi.l:ture Clf green aod gold. Her figure ls better seen than deteribed, and she bas permanent dim· ples on each cheek. ..... la • -who 1' under tllo ... ol IO. lllop """ -about u. Tbs. ududM ••ll'YbodY ex· cepl 1k11et1 St. Jama <N11111e of tllo Gome), P1117 Upton (Mod Squad) 11111 Linda Evam ('11>e Blf Valloy). Btloro 1aDdlnc with "Jn». lldt" Blll1>ara --In ..... other lelevillon -.. lncludln• the pUol for the .... <.-essful r.Mannil" series. Johnny Canon returns to J\felodyland T h e a t e r in February as part cf the Anaheim lho:WPlace'a winter celebrity aene.. . The Iate-nlgbl TV penonall· ty will be 1een in five perform111ee1 only, beglnnlng Saturday, Feb. 1, and playing throulh Monday, Feb. 3. "I lol my aperlMxle II tile Frolll -'llle1ter Ill Mempbllt'' Barbati Aid. 0 lt's I wonderf\11 placo to I .... your craft." ,...,lrwfed that the 1ood old .,_ Streel n .. iu wun't as renowned .. , II)',· tJle Pua- dtna Playbouoe, Barbara'• e)'OI flllbed: "Well It will be some day.'' Yeah, well, who's going to argue wtlh a lady cop? !XCLUSIVE I 1ii--•leador-~most ... if...,1 pidatt Cf(f! IH. SMw St.m I P.M. c ......... Sat. o4 S111., We4. tr.. 12:10 Blollde Carol Rosenkranz, 16 (right), Ma1ns after being crowned mO!t beautiful majoJ,"ette at the yearend finals of the World Twirling Assoclallon in Atlantic City. Nancy Zabik, 13 (left), was award- ed the junior title. More than 140 girls competed in the three-<lay event. "The actors 1 knew who went to New York studied with Stella Ad1er and Lee Stras- berg. AH thelr proteges look- ed and behaved 11lte animals, scratching a n d controt.ing their fa~ and bodlet. I didn't want any part of Utat," Bar- bara said at Univenal's com- missary. Mol'i!OVer, Barbara won a "Mi!I Memphis'' contest. Jn her first year on the "Iron- side" series (1987.Q) she won the Emmy ror best supportillg actress ln a draroaUc Rl'les. At the moment ahe ll one cf those rare teln11lon creatures - a pretty girl with a rtauJar With him wlll be linger Phyllis McGulre, the dance team ol Bud and CICilr;:::::::::::::::::~ Roblnlon and trumpeter 11Doc" Severinlen. They will pmenl two .-. Feb. 1 at 7 llDd 10 p.m., two shows "I came to Hollywood be- Original Dramas Due For Caesar's Palace Feb. 2 at S and 11:30 and Texas Theater, College !t~~1Pi:.r•rmance Feb. 3 Tb1a will be Carsoo'• - C R • a] Dr ena11ement tor producer• reate eg1on ama ~t ~~~. i;: LAS VEGAS -Ctiesars Palace, which has presented fu11-lenath producUons o f "Sweet Charity," "The Odd Couple," "Fiddler on the Roof" an "Mame," is now plarmln1 to produce original avant-garde drama and to establish a resident staff of writers, directors, and actors toward that end. The hotel also will lmport off-Broadway hits such as '"I'1e Boya in the Band ," "Futz" and "Hair." To house these productions. Caesars wUI build an tnUmate off-Broadway-type t h e a t e r wtthln the hotel cClmplex. 'l'he project will be the flnt of this type ever operated In a major hotel ln the United States. Headlna: t he new venture will be Jerry Zarowitz, ex- ecuUve vice-president o f Caesars Palace, and Dave Vlctorson, the hotel'• director of entertainment. Zarowttz and Victonon have conducted a thorough study of recent developments In the off-Broadway theater and are convinced that interest In such fare is strong enough to war· rant expansion in Los Vegu, Zarowltz said he believes the revoluUonary changes lak- ing place In contemr,rary off. Broadway th e a e r will substantially influence a 11 entertainment m e d I a , In- cluding televislon, motion pic- tures, and nlght clubs. "The creative people work· ing in this theater of In· volvement, a1 some critics have described It, are proving New Title HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Paramount has lengthened the title of "Monte Carlo or Bu1t!" to "Monte Carlo or Bust! with those Halrpln Har· rys in their Jaunty Jalopies.'' LEGAL NOTICE IU,11101 COURT 0, TMI ITATI 0, CALll'OIUlllA 11'01 THI COUNTY 01' OIANOI Mt.MUU NOTICI 01' Hl!Al lNG 0" l'!TITION 1"01 'ROl ... TI! 01" WILL ANO l"OR LfTTl!RI TESTAMl!NTAllY E1!'tN of '••ft• Meroirl, 1>«'11N11. NOTICB IS HIRl!IY OIVl!N TH ... T S•"llM Mtrc..,rl hit lli.d Mrtl" t cittllkl" f'Oor problll• o1 "'Ill 1n11 fo• lnull'ICll of Ltfflfl Tnt-llf"I' N '"'ltlDner, ~· fo "'1'1ld1 I• rnlff fo.r hlf'IM• "'"'"''"' lfllll '"'' lllt ltrfte •rid •Li~ °" ""'''"' ,,,. "'"' 1111 blef'I Ml fir J .nu1rv 10, , ... , 11 t :Jll 1.rn.. '" ~ <ourtr_... of 0..r"""'1t No. J el H id C11Url, .i 100 W .. 1 1 .. 1\fl\ llT"I, I" IM (11'1 of S.ntll M1, Ctll!Vrftll OtlM Dtdrnbtt 13, 1Hol. W. I. ST JOHN, C-IY Clfr•. 11\cN ... t( ..... ,.. N-1'11 .....,. n" ..... 1....-tt NII ... C1l1'1'f111 Ttl1 (J11) 114-UU ,........, ... hftli..t' ''*"ll!Wld Or*"" co.it O•llY "''°'· Dtctin\Mr 21, JO. Tt6t t l'IG Jlfllllf"I' 4, u.. n1Ht LEGAL NOTICE ,_ NOTICI TO CllDITORI IU,1110• COURT 0, THI STolTI 0, CALll"OllNIA ,011 THI COUJITY OF C•AMel .... ,. ...... f1l1!9 of IVLVIA NliSSITT Fl!NNl!ll, ... _. NOTICll! II HElltlY GIVEN to lllt (1'11dttwrl ., !flt •bcl¥f nllMCI #[ ...... !Nit I ll ~ twlvlnt tlllmt "tlfta! tl'l4I MIO ~ ll't "'°"Ir" fo ftlt "*"' with tl'l4I llt(t'Hlf"I' yllll(Nn. lfl "" ef'k• " "" tlfn " "" '°"" 9fll1tllf Q!Yff, ., to .,_. "'*"· "'""' "" .__.., ~.. hi ,.... -""le"" It tM tffict of l-I . Tlfl, """"""'' t..U Wiit!\!,. ltuJIYlnl, 11111e M , ftMt Ntlnlc:t, Clllfol'fllt, .....,, Wllldl •• "" •!Kt " ""''*" " "" " ........ ".. '" Ill """"" -111111 .... .... esi•" ., tlld dK!Mtfll, "'""'" lb.If' -11\t lfttr 11'4 lff'll .vbh<tlltft " 11111 l'ltlflu. °""' ............. '· lt41. JoMI LHll 1"911,...., l1KV1w ., "" wrn " "-111eY• LlllO~'."r..rre-' iM4 WlltMrt ......... 111111 "' tMll Mo!lk1, C1llftnll1, t6tt1 T lh 11 J-tu·Utl Alt.""' tor l.I Mutll' ""l!fltlttd o ....... c ... , 0•11" ,,lot, Dlctrnkr t, it. n . JO, 1'6t 11'1 ... that the mild, innocuous treat· Lou Rawll and Duke E1l1ngtoft ment of important issues In By WILLIAM GLOVER for both DTC and Trinity, ex-and b1I orchertra appear Jan. our lives Is no longer enough," DALLAS, Tex. CAP) -A plains that emphasis on youth1r;M;;::;.;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;:;:;;;[\ said Zarowllz. new cross ~ country theater instruction with: I· partnership of pros and profs Vlctorson said the Caesars is 00 the way according to "The trouble with m~t Palace theater project would Paul Baker, a doughty Texas American people Is that they be authentic orf-Broadway In pioneer in such collaboration . don't know what the arts are. every respect. The theater But if a youngster startl golng Itself, he said, would most "I think what has happened to claue1, the famlly gets likely be named ' 1 0 I f • here," he aays of tandem work interested and becomes sold l ...... 'ii Broadway." at the Dallas Theater Center on the importance of such 67U260 IXCLUllVI ARIA "In addition to bringing in and at San Antonio'• Trinity things. 0 I I "-adway productions Unlverlity, 0 il the developing -u.1u1 "The heart of the problem," which have already won pattern for regional drama ac- cr!Ucat and public approval," tlvity." says Baker, 11 tbe creative continued Vlctorson, "we will The program combines pro· and professional jealouay that also produce new plays. To feulonal production with traditionally ni1ts between achieve that, we are going educational Currtculum aimed profeu1onal and unlvmtty to have a nsldent group ol at generating community in· theater endeavor. wrih!rs, directors, and pro-terest in showgoing u well "1be profeaors become lit- ducers, creaUng and preparing u training actors, authon and tie godl and don't nnt to new theater material. dlrecton, be disturbed. And profealon.al ''They will have the freedom The JG-year-old center theater tnocb that calm down to work on any subject they stages 400 performante1 an· because it bas to make end! feel can be translated. Into nually of about II &bows meet." sound theatre, and the ttut-budget: f4,50,000, llnkl up with "'Ibe colleges art emeratng ment of these play• will be the colle1e by prov1dinl Jn-from their Ivy towers and fln- at their discretion." structon from amonr Jta ~o ding that they must enrich Zarowltz admitted that pennanent staff members. the community around them," some of the more daring and A corollary activity at both he userta. "More and more esoteric off-Broadway pro-places is a juvenile tnstructlon they want good art -mU1ic ducUon1 might not be ap-program for the S.~17-age and drama -and are proved by the Las Vega.s bracket, with combined enroll-diacoverlng lhey cannot have censors, but he feell that ment of about too. it wtthln the usual four-year eventual acceptance is in-Baker, managing director academic training program." evttable, probably within a __ ....; __ ..::.....:;.. ________ _;;_:_.:;_ __ year or two, "Popular opinion to the con- trary ," amlled Zarowltz, "La• Vq:as ls far more purllanlcal than New York Clr Los Angeles." Mia Fa1TOW Buys Estate On Island MART HA'S VINEYARD, Mass. (AP) -Actress Mla Farrow h purchasing a lavish estate on this resort l!l1nd which she first visited three years ago during a much- publicized yachting trip with Frank Sinatra and other movie personalilies. Avery said the agreementa at upwards Clf $100,000, but real estste broker C. Stuart The price has been reported comment on Utat. Avery said today he cculd not are in the hands of the lawyers and "it'• be c n verbally agreed between her buBint11 m a n a g e r and myself." The eslat.e inYolved is that of the late Rt. Rev. Lewis Whlttemore, former bishop of the Eptscopal Diocese of West.em Michigan, and his widow, Helen. Avery said Miss Farrow II purchaalng 30 acres and the WbJLtemol'tl family is keeping 10 actt.1. He aaid the land being bought by MJ11 Fmow i1 adJacent to some owned by rum ltar James Ca1ney. Director Set HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Robert Mulligan wtn direct "The Mandarina:" at 20ttl Ct!> tury.Fox. Rickles Gueet HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Don Rl<:kleo wlll play hlm!eU In a cameo appearance on the nut D&My 1bo1na1 Special. Crossword Puzzle ENOAOIMINT Showln .. Nightly llATLn .. 71 • 111 MONUU mt 1110 .KATALJC WOOO llOW!DlmD IUl1-.l'll 'l'i'l'-..iio.Q(OllO(C*a11f_ e STAm WIDNUDAT e "DOCTOR ZHIVAGO" ST.lftS WIDNUDAT "THE YELLOW SUBMARINE" Fii'fsoUTH COAST l"LAZA TH-IW San Dieao F-. ot Bmtot • M6-2712 -NOW PLAYING - SHOWING TIMES 1 :30-4:15-7:00 -9:45 n. ...... ...... 500 """" -..... ....,. ... -1000! - STEREO SENSATION! The colorful sound of Orange County Music RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM .. 1mB From Fashion Island, Newport Beach DAllY l'ILDT 'United :"l1t l .'t,• I •' V 1 • .t •o' ••Or "• , ·~ , / LAST 5 DAYS , :v1r . WINNER .. "" ''Tit. ni.-er.-,.,..,,.. ' wi1k Sfht McQ111111_.f.ay D111w1••Y - MATINEE DAILY Now for the first lime al popular prices. Direct from ~r o£3 ~ -1aw•r1m11 '• ----- -Mt,IJITIJleTDM It ACM ip MJ'-MOI CONTINUOUS DAILY JOIN·IN THEDllNEY FUN-IN! .............. W.mnt•i.r-=-==:: .,,_..n •••=-.. ,......._a le11DINe,.~ llCLUllYI AllA IUN MATINEE DAILY \o\llnneroi 3Acacleoar A,_ .... , IJCKAID KAUii _. WA.NISSA llHU.WI, LOCAL No oth11• "'.'''''' tall• , .. 1 rnwrt, •••ry d.y, 1fMwt wll\f' 9 I I 11 t en I~ tfri• ttwf!h' Ore"j' Co11t tlllt11 tke DAllY ,_lO • I • • • • JI ~AILY PllOT (H) ~:·supervisors Okay . . -Cable TV Service A franchise to 18f'Vt two unlnwpor1ted county .,. .. with clblt TV bu been ap- proved by the Orange COUoty Exchange Blames Tax For Move PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Board ol Supervlaor1. Succeastul aDDlicant f11 Na- lloool Tr .... vldeo 1oc. o1 Da!W, Tex. 'l'bey pllD to of I er aer>ice in the Orang• COUoty ar<a adjoining Whittler and the area adjacent to Dlamood Bar. The firm currently serve! the two out-of-county areas. The franchise is ror ·a 2S. year period and ~ county will get 2 percent of the gross earnings. The cable company listed the following service charges: NEW PONTIAC MODEL-Pontiac Motor Division nex t n1onth will introdu~e a new car called The Judge. The model is specially designed . to offer a combination of added perfonnance, excellent han- In High Gear dllng ,.00 distinctive. appeerance. Standard equlj>-- ment on The Judge includes a 366-horsepower, V18 Ram Air engine and a ro.w:h floetin g deck air foil. • -Tb e Philadelphia·Baltimore- ~ Washington Stock Exchange, oldest in thr nation, will move out of this city where it was fowlded because of a n : emergency tax package pass· ed overwhelmingly by city council. Overhead installation, first outlet $12.50. each additional, $7.SO. Underground in· stallation, first, $25, each ad- ditional, $7.50. Monthly service charges win be $5.25 a month for the first ouUet and $1.50 for each ad· ditional. 'Here Come The · Judge' for Pontiac The eight-tax package In- cludes ·a 5--cent per share levy on stock transactions. Elkins Wetherill, president ot the exchange founded in : 1746, said the "only thing that "''ill keep us in the city is By CARL CARSTENSEN perfonnance, excellent handl· in111 Pllol Auto Edl!er ing ~haracteristics and ~ very Pontiac Molor Division has <lliltinctive appearance. announced that it will in· It will have as the standard Renovati.OD troduce a new car next monlh power train a,366-horsepower, that "goes on~ per{ormanee v.a Ram Air engine with 400 step further" m the popular c u b i c -i n c b displacement, · .if they repeal thetax." 0 W J muscle car field , a field and 10.75: I comp'resajon ratio and ll et Ct market Pontiac opened up five four-barrel Quad r a -jet years ago with the GTO. carburetion, coupled with a The new supercar, to be fully synchronized three-speed Held Up named The Judge, is specially heavy -duty man u a 1 The exchange has obtained a 60-day opUon on floor space -in an office building in . suburban Bala-Cynwyd, just : across the city line. designed to offer a unique transmission noor D}OUDted combination of added con trol with a Hurst T-handle. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ------------------Wetherill said it wou1d take , about four months to relocate : -the electronic equipment, "but Renovation is taking longer thari es:pected on the Japan Air Lines DC8 tliat belly-land· ed in San Francisco Bay Nov. 22. we won't wait that long. We _ hope to be operating there · within 60 days." _ Oppooeots of the stock tax , predicted the clty will not realite an. expected $3 million But officials say the jetliner may be in the air again by late next spring. -annually because people will deal wUh other exchanges which have no tu. The $9 million plane, which landed in 10 feet cf water just off Coyote Point. three miles south of the San Fran-- cisco International Airport, is under-going a $2 m i I I i o n rebuildng job at the United Air Lines maintenance hangar. • See our full-page ad in this week's TIME Magazine All 87 persons a b o a r d survived the accident in heavy fog. .: CALIFORNIA mFIRST COMPANY Where the in•eelor "All of our ' people were amazed at the small amount of damaae," a United Air Lines spokesman said. The plane's four engines, valued at $250,000 each, seem- ed undamaged by their salt water bath. " .. • - -· always comes first 3J5S YI• LW• Nnport Inc• Pkw: 615·1940 WllllCIN E. McCl•rtdP Y1ce ""'dfft The rebuilding had been scheduled for completion April l, but united 's technicians said "We can't get all of the necessary parts off the fa ctory shelves. We must wait two to sill: weeks for the builders to make some of the new ones." Gel $100 or more month after month after month! Winter Campaign Louis R. Benny, (left), U,niversity Sales and Serv- ice, Costa Mesa, discuses Oldsmobile winter mar· keting plans with Jim Schultz, Oldsmobile's Los Angeles zone manager at a dealer meeting in Los Angeles. Oldsmobile plans a special drive in Janu- ary and February. • INVUf STl,000.oo lmliol ••• HIVint I reavltr monthly chtck to look forward to! voo •mVf rou •n~"' 1HVtsr Mo,o00a M1ny of thOle who have a wonderful MONTHLY SECURITY '"~"::"nt ro•. A~ u1,.,n o,. :;.,~ ~~~ ,.... vou 11n"'~ •ccoUNJ S lOy,•>i S ll,675.00 S100'" "~ °'" UfAtl Of• " ••• oriainated ind Iona: tested by Newport Balboa , ~~:: 1s1·~.. s 1.ns.00 ,100.00 ~,o""" "4,n5.ao SntnJS; ••• atarted by simplJ openinr a divldtnd.eamlnr uvinfl iNvr::;;::a,~ ~.m.oo J1"0.oo 10=: ::;;~~:: 1o:aant Ottiers lnveshd • lump .... MAIL TltE COUl'Oll FOR "'" oo " '"""' .,. 1100 ,..,.,. J1'.Hono s~~oo ,0 ·•·• COllPlETE DEllR.S ON THE lllONTlflT SECURITY ACCOUNT suo·00 15Yt••i s1s •~5 00 s1sooo ,,Y"I" W,41Soo .oo lo YNrs $ 9'.sso.m $J'S 00 Y"rs !ll8.67S oo ftAIL INVflf SJ0,000.00 . 10ytt•I $2J.92SW . .._ ,,..,_.~lit~ ell«. 1104"' tilt Collforni. flr.1ntl11 Cod• s1so oo 111 Yt111 526 ~00 t~rn flot.ooa.• ....,. •ldl • ..,,._. '" *• ... 1111e~ .,,, "' -.. ... II• ,,1~i. " ,.,.uir• !!~ oo is ,...,, snioo 00 s ~.oo io Yt-. Sl6.sso.oo .. • .,.....,. ..tk.-" l•t-111: tt .,.,,., •. { .. ,., ••t~d-1 r"'"' h11 1111~ • 500 10Yf'" 1u .ll(IQO : SOO.oo ll)'t111 t 77 J'300 ... ,....., !. -SZ JMl'I,) •,1.11 1110Jtctl-..1 ,,. "'llCl1d aN '•~d· 7SO.OO 10 ~<i 111:.SO:oo l"'-9CIN d•ltr lilld d ... b1J1d ... ..,, tu We wtl .. ~ Qlttstll\1$ .,.., l)e(, '' ,,_ 1:• -llMI Ill <U'"~I d1'rl~ !Ito Oulrtt11,, (T!l!i h 1 fr ru nt ''!"U•I .. It of $.00~ .. , QrtltlMs Oft' at ..... YNt't ...... DfC. l l l1'9m l:M 1111 ..it\e, ht Will •=~M:~:.~.7i.'',~· •• '::'.° lo tl!!rr :i·~."~i!'~l"l·O·.IJ,...) Ji..f ... 111 -Ifft y_.. C11'. .~ ..... ~i"<~>Y' ...... ::=~-=·~·:"•:·------~=·:.:~·~ .. :l"":J :····································~······ • I ~ :· DOWPORT B8I.BOR SRVIDGS : • ,...,,,... lfl 1936 ANID \.Oo\lf •••OCIAT!Ott e : 2* Vl9 UM. N•...-t .. •ch, C.Hler"'• tHN • ""°"' 111.JlJO • 2161 t. Co111 Hwr .. ·Coron• dt! Mir, c ,nfornla 92'25 • Pfl-675-5150 ! • lhHurea I• (l!C.MOf Ono Hundrtcl Mllllot1 Doll•" • • f';. A. PAUrill~ Ch•""'•" oft.,. Jo•rd AGfol[S llOMQU15T, jl>roldtl'lt • • ,. • .. .• : •. ·.: : NAME.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.. ' . . £, ~OOAESS,___ ___ ~· : ,. " • • • • • CITY SlATt ZJP • • • • 0.,., ~ ....... , ..... , ..... ,, .... ! .... •-.e ~· •W:..•b< • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A 3.55: 1 axle ratio will be standard as will dual ex· hausts. Available as a hardtop coupe or a convertible, The Judge will be easily recognll- ed. The front will be distinguish- ed by a black grille, exposed headlamps a n d functional Ram ·Air hood scoops. A three- color slash stripe on the upper edge of the front fender run- ning back to the door, "The Judge" decals on the front i~nder and Ram Air decals on the sides of the hood scoops will provide side identification At the rear will be a 60-inch floating deck ajr foll with The JudQ:e emblem on the upper right hand surface. To complete its distinction, the first production units will No Fringe Benefits For Part-time Corps By SYLVIA PORTER Shortly after a colwnn of mine appeared tracing the dramatic growth of fringe benefits, a New York reader SCt'.l!ded me with this observa· ion: 1'We part-timers frequenlly receive no fringe benefits at all. Simply because I work part-time rather than full· time, I am denied hundreds if not thousands of dollars in health insurance. life in· surance, tuition allowances for our children, etc." .. ·A· \ 1 -····=·=· ., q •== c; • -------- Mondly, °""""" '°• 1168 (H) DAILY I'll.OT J;" Monday's Closing Prices -Complete New Yol'k S~k Exchange List · 1" Y.!IAO l)S I, I • • . •• ..... ~ .... . . . ... . .. g -11/JtV 1'11.0T M-. IJ•c•11lli<r '°-1168 • :;.=." .,_ !Bissians :l-Jfp" ;,~ ', dating ~,._ ti• .~ .. :Jim es ..... " -].! 0 SC 0 W (UPI ) ':!mebody forgot to tell the .o1fltissians ln the fall of 1930 ,tQ.. set. their clocks back an :Mur. ~:--:"'.For 38 years the people here ~ve been living on daylight .,livings time without realizing 1"*1 were getting up one hour ~tarlier year round. • Far long nobody bothered : lQ .correct the situation which placed Russia's time zones an ~ ahead of the world's llandard time zones. ·.Today a special commission ot the Soviet Bureau of Stan- dards and Measurements is pi'eparing lo revise the nations time zones and give the Rus- sians an additional hour of 5feep in the wintertime . . "According to the newspaper Ktimmunist Tadzitustan, the rerised system will go into effect June 1, 1969. .. The commission plans n only to correct lhe timekeep- ihg but also redraw boun- daries of the time zones. 'lbese were orlginally drawn Jn 1919 when rivers. lakes and coastal areas were used for Mparation of dilfereni time zones. ~ .... ":..· .. These boundaries.. t b · newspaper complained,.are SO-; jdadequate that "even porUorui '· ot railroad tracks" wei:e used a11J>oundaries ir. soViet Asia. : ·The daylight savlllp time idea was introduced~Jin the Slvlet Union in 192:0. For · several years the• RJ1mdana set , their clocks one hour. 'ahead in' the spring and reset them ... boor back· In lhe fall: llrWas in the , fall . of 1930 . thal· l!Jef rnistied. ;Jtea8ons for the ·omission are not tnown, but ever since Pie natlob baa been ll)'lng on dloy'ught savings time. : Aa -Ole nation .,.... lhe 19 · ~!es bepn to ~le • var10l7 of pro•Iems. ~ · A4:cording to the riews ageo-C! · Tass the boundaries are '°' .. obsolete" that the city ~ Novosibirsk, the natio11'1 11 a n k I n g intellectual com- ii!ODJty, ls UviDg on two stan- aard thnea. ' In 1919. Novosibirsk is a !Uge community spreading on lidh bank8 •of the . Ob but tnere is an hour's time dif. fi!reoce between the two ends Of.bridges spanning il. · fCommunist Tadzikistan says t~ move to update lhe ~ekeeping and the zones i1stem is being opposed by employes of the natlon~s com- niunications industries who cta,im they w<>uld face serious dilliculties if the reform is 1 a~opted. World War II :Vet to Speak ·-A World War II partlsan fl.ihter will speak lo membeni of-the Newport Irvine Rotary dub oo "Ctechostovakia after 18 years of SocjaUsm" at 12 :15 pJll., Jan. t. al Daniel'• Restaurant in Coata Mesa. Van Horn is a native of Cieclioelovatia. During World \l(Jr 11 he joined an un-derxroun<I resistance group 11blle still a teenager. When Oie war ended, he again went llj)dergroond to combat Com- b)unlam. In IMS be was forced I• ·nee .to America with a i!d':e on his head. • t,Jmtice Denies • ·:Captain's Plea • ~-W.ASHINGTON (UPI) - ~ Court Justice Byron ft1!111 bii denied Air Foree ~ Dole E. Noyd's requut l!*t he be pennitted freedom ~ ~ wbile appealing hia t, lpariJaJ conviction f o r " to .tralll llllldenl piloU "'""-iombat. ~ ....... , action came :.m"'" -Ille Justice ~-,.....i White no{ if. .;Ida lhe •normal ~Im" ol • ..... , • ., '• .. ' " . ' . ' u . I ' ' • ' . • CREST COTTON U·SHIRT 6/5.00 Reg. 3/3.00. U•shirt baa tile oomfirtablo 1 x 1 rib st,y!ing. Reinfcrced neckband. · S.~H.rXL. CREST COTTON T·SHIRT 6/5.00 Rea. 313.76. Our Own T·sbirt is bigb quality cott.oo. with a aylca reinforced neckband. 5-M-L-XL. CREST FINE COTTON BOXERS 6/6;00 Rei. 1.25. '!lie waistband ia gnmaOteed. Fully cut, sizes SQ-44. Select from white . . CREST QUALITY COTTON BRIEFS 6/5 .00 Reg. 3/3.00. 'Jliee ll!'s!-fittlng triers ~.... . have a guaranteed waistbend and double .. • . .. .. •. ' ' ., 1 \ 'J f, " l. i ~ : ' ' . LONG SLEEVE,DRESS'SHIRTS 4.89, 3/14.50 ileg. S.51).8.00. Famou1 make.,~ coll., ot;fllng. Thie qwif.y )JlnlllleDI Jn18 DlM!llin .. iiobeotar ud -· Wbilo, faabim C.!oro, 14lH6'J neck. DUR DIN LINK STITCH CARDlllAN 11.99 • Reg.17.00. 'Ihi• handlkllle sweater is in Orl«t acryliC". lt h .. double knit cvff1 and waillbmd. Select fro~ popo!ar faabim colora. 8-M-L-XL. ' or colors. FINE SILK NECKWEAR 1.7.9, 3/5.00 Reg. 4.00. Gresl pallans and colms 1iom onr mgul.r olock. ADd, we 1ia.., a group o! deaignOl'inspi:ed neclalear in 8"perb colon1; reg. 5.00..7.50, l.191 3/11.DD. BUFFUllS' LINK STITCH KNIT SHIRl' 5.99 Reg.11.00. Our f8'1bian knit ia In ()rloo. •acrylic. It has tradiliooal •i.Yling with a 3-1"iton plackeL A clusic knit in great fashim colas. 5-M-lrXL- Slaefor Mm seal'. Sizes 1~..f4. WOOL BLEND STRETCH ANKLET 1.19, 3/3:00 Reg.1.50, Wool and nyloo blend hoee macl!ine wash and dry. One aize fils llJ.13, Black, hown, charcoal. navy, olive. °"'1'-0le-<:all', reg. 2.00, l.H, 3/4.00. LINK STITCH MOCK TURTLE KNIT SHl~T 6 .99 Rea. 11.00. Our Orlon \aylic•ohirt in. the •hort .. Ieeved st,ie with cont?ut.in& bmd of color ai the neck. Current Cashion colors. &~l--TrXL. • , , ,,. ,, • ,. • .. I t • ,, I "I!· ~' • .. ~,, _,_ 11 canoaa Alt Force NEWPORT CENTER Bue, N.111. '#I FASHION ISLAND • 644-2200 • MON .. THURS ., FRI. 10:00 TILL 9:30 OTHER DAYS 10 :00 TILL 5:30 .. . . I I I I ' • :'.> -Newpol!(' ·narh ' E D'I r ·10 N' ' . . ORANGE COUNTY, CAlJJioRNIA . ' . -VOL 61. NO. 303, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES TEN CENTS MONDAY,. DECEMBER lO, 1968 -' . Cities Asked To Help Sink Har.bor Unit ' By JEROME F. COWNS ~ Of t1H1 DtllJ l'llet Stiff • The Orange County League ol Cities loday asked all 24 cities in' the county '9 join a plan aimed at dissolving the ~ounty Harbor District V1ithin eight months. : Newport Beach, which would bear the 1inmt of dissolution of the county-wide ~lstrict, is expected to step aside from t!>e League program. But ail other citles are expected to go along with it. ~·-'. - • •• Arab Reprisal ' Due Israel Raw on Beirut Draws ·Protests . Film Wire Suvlca Arab sut;1'.i'tllu today vowed a "rain" of reven'le raida for Iarael'• commando Btrlke at Beirut Airport. 1be Soviet Union called on the United NaUans to "use Jta autborib'" to 'make Israel accept the U. N. Mlddle Eut.molutioos. Fl.!btlng erupled SUnday aloi>g l!raell· Anb frantta'I and Jarael saJd one of Ill .~e (trl IOldJera was k!llod ln one ~ attlct. · The ll4)vlet goveimnenl. nempaper Izvestia_ denounced the lll"lell • attack u "international banditry" designed to further-increase tens.Jon in the· Middle East. It made.,~• threatening remW but Wied on thee I/' .N. to· ~ its deiDBD<b-lsrael·wih.ha, .. fil>ril . ..,. lured lerritory. The United States and the Soviet Union jolned.fortea lnllhe V. N. Securjty Coun- cil to.~----Ucnrof the alrj>ort"Blrite lllilcb'JsraaILDefenJO Minister Moshe Dayan defended as 1 Funeral Tuesday "®" dimension. In ,llr;lel'• deterrenl policy" against iier Arab foes. · Undeterrtld by mounting condemnltfOn from fll ll:det of its commando · raidi · l"!l'I\ \on ·Suilday ·~· ~ retllladon tor,..Arab attacb .... -.. ~ • Premier Levi Eshkol declared that Israel will defend itself qalnat ag~ gression·':in the pli,~ where U.11 planned and .~ed OUt.. I I • "Stat<s ·which JIU\ke· tt poialblJ }o' (See MIDEAST TURMOll., Pap 1) • "It's ineviti.ble," said Newport Vice Mayor Llodsley Parsons. "But it's 1Qmetbing we're going to have to stand uvay from until we have guarantees ~t our interests will be protected." . 'Newport officials are concerned about tbe city getting stuck with too large ' tab for assuming services now un-- dtrtaken -and financed -by the Harbor District. .. League of Cities President Dean E. Shull Jr., who is mayor of La Habra. has called for resolutions of endorsement f1om the county's cities by the end Qf February. NASA ..._.. Vie Ul"I T ...... THE EARTH AS FEW HAVE SEEN IT' . Apollo 8 View of Western Htmisphere I Dies, 2 Hurt In Gun· Battle; Police Nab 6 ' One man wu tilled and lwo wounded Ex-Newport Trustee,. Melwood ·A .. Berry, Dies . The League plan, recommended by &--five-member League cummlttee after fjve months of study, is keyed to a proposed timetable culminating in a fPe(!ial county election in August. _ All county voters would be eligible to cast ballots in the election, wbose aole purpose would be to confirm a «teclsion by the Board of Supervisors to dissolve the SS.year-old district. ,.Supervisors will be asked to make that decision in June, according lo the Uague timetable. Shull noted, however, that the first. county agency to Lake up the matter wW be the Local Agency Formation ~&Sioo (LAFC). .Resolutions from the county's cities ... lih{g clissoluUoo of the dlstrld Will be submlued' io 4FC ·an · Marih U. The first INbllc hetri!>g !!' lhe tssue Will be held before LAro' ~ ·tol!Owfnc · mbnth -il the Leogue timel&ble bold&. ~ming it does, and voters endorse ending the Harbor District in August, dWolulion proceedings would be im- plemented on Nov. 1, the League official ukl. Shull today sent out letters, copies of the proposed timetable, coples of pi'oposed resolutions and background !n- farmaUon on the isslle to every City Council in the county. The packet spells out the League's reasons for seeking dissoluUon of the dlstrict, whose "regional" -as opposed tO ''local" -functions would be absorbed and controlled by an enlarged County Parks Department, uocler the League plan. A resolution proposed for adoption by au countf clUes declares that the dlst.rtct was formed in 1933 to develop and main- tain NewpiOrt Harbor. ··Since 'then , the district's "purposes, Powers and philosophy" have been jVeatly altered. As a consequence, says (lie resolution : ··!...."There appears to be some overlap- ping of jurisdiction between the Harbor bistrict and certain cities relating to (See llARBOR, Page %) COAST'S FUTURE rl'OLD TUESDAY The DAILY PILOT takes a long look Jnto -1969 Tuesday with publication of itl aMual Futurama secLion. The apecial Httlon tells th e story_ -in word.1 and pittures -of industrial growth, freeway patlems and burgeonJng homes. From agriculwre to Apollo and beyond, It's the outlook for the Orange Coast's gl_owing future. Read it Tue.IQ' inside lli1 DAILY PILOT. ,Ora•ge Weadaer Look for Santa Ana winch lo 1 boost the coastal temperature to .. M degrees Tuesday, wbile lnland ' areas bask in balmy 70-degree weather. INSIDE TOD,\ 1' He mQU bt a Tesptcted world 1tatesma11, bwt, ~orqinQ to hia' tuife of 40 tlfll11, Japan'1 Pre· mier Sato is t'.I tMfe btater. Paga 5. ' ' . • • • Moon Photos Tell Story Sunday iilgbt u 'ii;lllmlMter police - Upped off by a worried alJltr -arrlTed on tbe aca>e f1l an alleged d1!pUte over atolen n'arcotic., too lale to Slllp r11111 1 Mellf'ood A. "Mel" Berry. 1M1stant finance dltector for the city of Huntlbf-o ton 'Bt.ch and a former trustee of 'the old Newport Beach elementafy idlool district, died Saturday at Hoag Memorial Hospital at the age of 53. Of 'Expanse of Nothing}. ; =- SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo 8 moonlight commander Frank Borman reported from lunar orbit t h a t the moon surface 69 miles below him was "a vast, lonely, forbidding .•. ex- panse of nothing." If the descriptive words he, James Lovell and William Anders radioed bad:: ,, - baUle. · · · Htmtlniton Belich ' and W~ deteclivea, jolntiy worthlg lhe· case overnllbl. bad boi>tld 'm 1D1D,on.1111p1. clon ot llllBdtr by Ibis mO/nmg and • -Oii aulpl-'of auto U>eft. Albert Sbirlef, ~ ol Huntlngton Beach, was fatally.wouoded In the chest 4ur!ng the shootout l.t lW Alta St . , shot down In the street ,Fwieral .UV"f.s 1are aet for ·':.~"f'. Tuesday at St. Andrew's Pl'4sb1"!'..U Church, Newpoft Beach, --w,lth ~t to follow ot Pacllic V~ ~Park. Corona de! Mar. to ~ ~ l!>fl{ epoch Christmas Eve DJibl . ~ lo convey t h e stark, itn~ Of the moon 's forbiddin.g. wutdand, the aUU and mOttdli pictures tbey '6hot. got.the message across. For the' l!!lst tim ~oar1,-11r. Berry had served a MaJ.I 'lillanOe direi.'lof In charge q/ . comfl!\'r '1l'"f'ltlim for tb.,9t1 of Hun\h>ll<'D ~.. • • All.~-eqaa, ry#u\ ali>co. ltlt, ho,,........,J .1"!f~ - ·the Lido Trad!nr Co., & Rowpat •lwh '' ~t fi,ii,,' Oil Boo* tt .,._,, f .' , T r-. , The space agency ffleased selected partl of the Apollo 8 crew's photographic handiwork Sunday night, houn after the first men to see the moon's backside arrived h o m e in Houston and r~ived a tumultuous pre-dawn welcome. '·";;f~., j;'~. bOO* r 'lntinl;f -j,, Weie" 11111 available due· to Ibo cootlnulng · statul of Ibo . lnvestlptloa, but police llltld •. Ha:!'1 ~· )1lnslC ~,,.and I ljiojb ')i:vans,lo ~ 11191' ~ ~.ilpn· J1rlor hi• family'• l"'l""I -to M06t of the world's major astronomical ob8,ervatorles were on a list to receive high-resolution prints from the Apollo 8 lunar photos, the best man has ever obtained from his nearest neighbor in space. These photographs, showing details as litUe as 100 feet across, were expected to in.prove maps of the moon's hidden back side 20-fold and tell astronomers three times more about the moon'! face than they know now. The astronauts themselves spent Sun- day morning with their families. Anders took his wife and five children to Catholic Mass. Il was their first day at home since the flight, which started Dec. 21 and ended Friday with a Pacific Ocean splashdown. The moonfliers planned to spend most of their free time at home during the next two weeks except for a trip to Houston's Astrodome Tuesday night to watch Oklahoma and Southern Methodist UnJversl.ty play in the Bluebonnet Bowl. Sunday afternoon all three men began the first of many "mind-picking" sessions they will hold during the coming 14 days with the men who planned their fligbl New Years Day will be their only day off from these important debriefing sessions. It was little wonder Borman, Lovell and Anders frequently referred to the "good earth," With the emphasis on g~. during tbelr six-day voyage which electrified the world. . One shot they brought back showed a spectacular "earthrise" with the pale gray-yellow lunar horlzi>n In t h e foreground . The earth hung like a blue jewel In t h e distance, its br~wnish land UP'IT ....... , WELCOME HOME, JAMES \?Olk,•,, Lovell, Wife Merilyn 1nasscs almost completely shrouded by fluffy white clouds. Compared to the bleak, monochromatic · lunar landscape, mothtr earth's varying colors loo~ed in.viUhg Indeed. It wu significant, too, that Borman· aud Lovell should be the dots lo bring this picture back. "Remember the shot from Gemini 7 (which Borman and Lovtll flew in earth orbit during 196&) wilh the earlh lfl the foreground and the moon in the background," said Paul Haney, chief Space Center spokesman. "Well, here'• the reverse." · The movies shot from Apollo a ~ on the ••Y to the moon, tn lunar orbit and com!ng home -~ the fD91t dramaUc1 apace filma since those sb6t of AmerlCa's first ·specewalter, tile la,te Ed White, as he floated outside \be (Set APOU.O, Pq• 11 . , Newport Harbor's Rhine . . Area Set fo1· 'Facelift' . ... Ute an old lady getUng ·a facelift, Hite the property. But It's economtcaUy Newport Harbor's Rhine area between unfeasible to do much elae with a 2&tb and 2ltb Streeta will · bave aome bll.ghted area lik~ that rJa.ht. now," Stnatr ---'-~1-· 1_ ....i:.A-said. t: Of 111 -w<u._ rtn)O .... ·~' a• .-..,up Singer aaid the cleelnip WIS oomclblng 1111 lan<llCl\pfng eflorl by developer Nod he should hove -"acme' Ume alo," s(uw. b'1l that he bad -,waiting to , ... '~"'IP'*• unbulkbeaded blf if aomethlng would breal<_ln· bis;~~/ , l!IO(ltrlf, the area will be i(e will use lhe property u 'lk·~~ ' 1,llo~1 llllli;.,apec1 '"!1 ~ apd Ala .IOl'Ully. ~~ I· --~-· 1Ups wW"te 'pul ln, ~ . ·Ille. ' • 1.-• • • · · "M· "n1111'~illol~wll.w . '.~' UJem •: 1 ...ll:V.,.U !. l'ttlmU, M, W~atminJier. -Gary M. ·1qram, II, Qraoge_ . -Ruuell E. MeGmr, 19, La Habra. -Richard A. LIDcobi, 21, La Habra. Boond OD suspldoo of grcmd theft auto as a result of the ln".~gati,on wu Gary D. Rudcllpb, It, Weslmln.!ter, but police "l&Ve ~no details of the stolen car angle. Worried ovel'> the.ufety of her• brother, · a woman ·not iQ:entlfled by lnvestigatora Ielepbolled Huntington Beach police Sun- day night and Upped !hem off to -ble at the Alma Street a'ddrts.S. ' 'Ibe new1 wu quickly rela3ed to Westminster poHce and five Huntington Beach detectives wore also di5patched on the futile race aplnst violence. At about the same Ume, a woman ldentllled u Lucy Pltiman telephoned the Huntington Beach police department wllh a frantic plea f0< help. "They just dragged my '°" out Of the house arid lhOjo'r< beating ·blml They have guns!," police quoted her .U saying. Pittman, ·invesUgatlon dlscfoeed , hlld already asked for ptatnclothes police of- ncers' protection aayln1 he wu in dan1er di.113 to narcotics involvement of 10111e kind. During current stages of the tragic: case, police saJd; nq narcotics have been recovered and D9t.l;llna: WU found at the Alma Street. address to prove the drug aq>ect. . · AcCordlng to detedlv., the confron· tau.n anc1 su1>uquei11 iiiiifighi· iie-ed . fi'otn tfle•tbeft bf • quantity bf ~Cl from a HunUngton Avenue apartuieht in H1111tlng\oo Beach.' , .. They .aid the Huntington Beach crow'd 'l'J>Brtll«Y bl~med µ,. Westminster lac- (See l!Botl'IUUT, Page I) ·DEAD 11'1\'ss' ,":' Melwood A. Berry· · Newport 'Hlishand S 'W' ' F' els . ·. Ig . Ire A .Newport Beach ;itjan -fuOled h,Y one brand of combuStible material, .fu.., vestigators said -was arrested by Costa Mesa police Saturday after allegedly se~~ ting his estranged wife1s brunette-wig afire. She was not wearing It at the time. A complalnt charglng Henry E. O'NeQ.1 II, 46, of 113 151h St., with the· burning ' of personal property was bein( sought today. from -the ,Orange .Couply , Distrlcl AttorneY's office. ' O'Neil wa.s still held at Costa Mesa City Jail, pending arraignment. Officer Dave Dye' was sent to 1765 Santa Ana Ave., Saturday afternoon and found the upper bedroom! filled with smoke aa a result of the fire. Battalion'Ctftef Bob Beauchamp of the Costa Mesa Fire Department, ellimated the damage at fllO. Plane Bodies Fo.und TIJuANA, Meilco . (UPI) -The ¥ bodies ol 13 peraor~ tlllO<I In the crash oC a 'Corpofat'e · OC3 were carried out ot.rugge<\ ~OU(lllln .COW!lrY Sunday by · Mexican sold,lers on hor~back. tlon..et .-t lrom..JO ld"W,.~ 5' " The d!"'-llJI I• only a len\pcnry 'l'he """" wu we)comed bY·i¥'.01 I measure, Slnjer Aid. Be has bigger Council.~ P1u1 ~ -~ 1 . r. .. 1 • • • • ~ • -.. 6 .: -... , 'fl• ' pbna for, Ute. ore.a, but for now he "Tbla area Is • dlsgr""' to~ ~ltt ~tN ;:·~=" · ' iitt~' ':"':. b .. ~ 1poclllc. Beath. Perhops this Is a ~: ~ 1, : ;1:s ., • , -I ~ • . · "We MA--tlil srea 'lfr1 much. We impnrYcment." -r~"i-:t; '·•1 '!'!.1-r'~ ..... ,.. · ! ~ , , , ~t.:tl4fj!' .•• I . ,,i,1 _ ·-. ..... w ... .J ·~· .. ·-• •• ~·ll,I. J ....... ........ -· ',._.,,~.., ... ----. ·.-~; .•• '... • .. ~. ... • ·~"";"" • • -..:i.... . . . -. t Hunlh>lllo• ~. "'·"Berry hf'I -acUve Jn a wmber of -eqnmuialtJ ac- ' tjviliea In Newport Beaol!. , .. . He'. served from 1955 to· 1914.1 u a tnutee of the Newport Beacb CIJ1•SCbool Diatrid, which •later wu. n.pi1 wllh two other ·Harbor. Are school' s)'ICems to form lhe Newporti-Mesa Uni6ea (School District. His 11 years on' 1be tlajeotary board included two terms as board~ dent. During his tencn:~ .,. lhe ~ lloard, he ~ served ·f<>r-eigbl ytiri l.S -a meinber and chairman of the Or$Dle Counti. Committee ... .5cbool :;Jllllrlol Reorganliatlon. • ' For the past five years, ..be bad. taucht eVening.college&ues in small bbs&111 management at Orange Coast Colllce. He also taught· Sunday IChool claaer at St. Andrew'• Preabyterlan Chuich. In addition, Mr. Berry wU a1JoaaUme meriiber of the Newport Harbor Com- munity Players. He served on the lf\:lap'• board of difecton for a mnnber of. years and served two terma 'u J1* presi- dent. · He also was secretary for 10 yean of Seafaring Masonic Lodge · 708 ol Newport Beach. . A native or Altai, Ill., Mr. lSeJTy aUended Shurtluf College In Alton ancl, later, Washington Unlventty, Sl lAlla, Mo. He wu graduated _ from 0r-.. Cbast College and Calliorni@ State 0.llege at ~; ' ·! Mr. Berry • Jea~ -liia wldqw\ LllU1n Bonnie, of the famllt bOnie, llOIJ ~gon Circle, HuntJniton Beach. 0 t .be r s6rvivors include \wo. sons, David m::I James; a daugbttt., · Diannt, all or the f4:milY home;' aMther son, "atJne Clpt. Thomas Berry ,ol Costa Mesa, aod two glandchlldren. ,Also survlvlng_ ar.e a brother, Otis (Sec BERRY, Page Zl - I:. • 19>-'""::;';;..;:..:·.--...;~~"'--'"":=..;."-· --.--· ------- --·---------.. -..c;;:--.,.,.c;.-=""""""""'"'"'""'""'""'~~--::-:------------------------------- I I I \ ••• "• t,t'. ... ;: -~··--\ . . • " ' fl . ' DA ·See s~aPe' is K , <to Juvehile Crime r ·~:. ··~H>:r,.~J.. ..,. .. ~ '.: ' .. "" f.'! ..;-:~. 'r·., i .~ .l ... ' '· "" ,. .. ; EdUor't Not1: This " the COKC!Ud- lng Clrlicfo f~ • ""°1JOrl -dfJ· dlufng the <rime pfotura In 0""'9e Counrv. ' 'llJ TOM· BAllLSY • Of .,.. .,., .. , .... """ ,''Whal.'s a:otng on · In the mind& of kldl lod•Y that motes·•thls pnlblem (juvenile crfme) ao mudl won• tllaD ever before Jn history?" DJstrlct Attorney C e c 11 Hlckl, no stranger to soaring juvenile crime statistics t h a t have shaken law eit foroemeqt : a[ld '. pro§eti~ :deaprtJpe~~ around the nation to the-core, doesn t· have the answer to his queation. But he has theories on the causta of the explosion In juvenile crime. "And l believe the key word. is escape," be Aid. ''LOok al it this way ,· "The grown man works at bil job, i....::. 'It•..,.. ... u~ ' ._ .:..._ ~ Ii.ii t=th 1 " ~,. ..;, 116 llllPJlO'lld by IJ'lphlc W faith 111 Y'lll!' 'own ~-. aod • ~ ......... ~ ~ = sit•= f;;.d"'' • . "" ~ ol what indulgence CID > dilplay your 0 .. D l!b!Uty Ml)lilit to -~ .. , ~ .,.__:_ ..... ~ ~ ~ '! • . .. • a changing world/l 1tetll said. .. ........ .-' JM Jo.lr• • ' -....., ' """ I ' ' .....: !Ille~ a '"' lb that ·~-ent, a•r<ed ''Mike no miltolle •liout I~ cllOCk· a m1larlt1 whlcfl~gnlzff tbat tnA=e .·,everybody 1:-a mIUionaJre -con~:d CciifaM:S. PonC:1Cb1eTR;g~ N~th. Ing of juvenile crhne at its Qe - is no escape from occlsloneJ or frequent •J)d · tnsplred _ at least as long as "l'm all for that," he said. "Look in lhe home -ll's a two-way ?!' ctt..appolntmenta Qld, thm!ore, · hu thl! '.c1rects or the drug or narcotic or lor'l!if cause q(l!il) Ullglc mulh<oontlni And I ijrml)' helieye thilj ll)iir. , learned to &djuat .htmstlf to sudden ,Umulant last. tn ju\'enl.le ctbniaod the traU inevitablf very few kid!: wt. won 't~ iavora changea In h1I forhanes.0 "And," Hicks went on, "where is the takea~yOu right"liitO the home. If parerita: to a set Of. slandarda:-to Wblch Hicks aat ba~k in his chair, in deep logic tn nol trying it again and again, choose \0 be lu 1n cootro1 and dilclpline parenta: Wllailln&JY COJ:lfonn." thought. "But the fuwre for youngslero," trying to cteate a permanent U<ape ol lhelr y_.w. then !Ml' mDll occept · 'llloni~I llUle lo 1&1· lo lbalt CDlll· ht murmured, J::F"''· in their own liatch rrom· the dreary realtues ol the the 1w.;! llfa\ lhero'• an Gcellenl chance mthled Laguna Beach Police qtllei Harry eyes, far mote ." • present? • . M • • tkat tJ#r_,cblldren wUl 'llCllM ~ ftpre LaBrow. 1 ::0. word "~" ctn 'be ..applied "Why are ao ma:iy JS-Aftd 'Il;-ye&r..(lld In tbe ~e crime stlUeticl. . 1'Tba1'a what it's all abouf," be said. as the l<e y to m8'Jl' of the separate girls and ho)'S plWIClng r.ckleuly Into "llut 11$1=· . · DOif' fot ll1' :kldJ "We can come up with . aU klndJ of yet related issues t ti at combine Into sexual experiments? 'Vhy do we ha;ve cl~f'l~~1-~" .~. J'".cJ· ~And fbesancty .!l-lutloole1olanaldl '°relustslioo.1,,!"tt ,tth the huge i.uven'}e jun~le that. confronts so many teenage boys declared bf our -~ .. ,.. ~,-..., ,. .. ~ profession toctay, Hicks beheves. c 0 u rt s to be fathers, with duties to IOuodilC ·pom~ I tblnt tbat the kids' parents. What they could do, "Look at the campus dlsienlers, the support their ilJegUimate offspring as we, can ' (IQ)y1 exped of .them what we if l.bey'd only take the time and trouble draft protesters and the drop outs from soon as they get out of higtl school! are ~ves. ~ . · to do it. js kill juvenile crime right Jlfe and ~ety," Hicks said .. "Rather "The answer," &aid fttcb, "ia escape. •'Tbefe~# not.ml&Ch point 1n enl~clng ln lta birthplace -the home wMre than think about the future, t'f'IMY youth.s 'Ve all share the burden of reversing dlsch~Uni and expecUng adherenee· ~ discipline and good order are most con. are seeking: to avqhj it by inqulgin& the current trend. It does no good t1> wha! mar weJI be a ·pertecUy aeiialble ~ )>y their ab.ence." in escape mechanisms. r tell a youngster 'Don't do this' unless set of rules U you can't ibspire ~Qle But tbo:se sol~~hm.s could come another "So we see the pattern o llquor use wr,, ........ Jmnllf Caurt Mp ... Sumner of Lapma Beach. They -"WtJ come only wt.en young people declcf& by themselves to put down drugs and people generally recognire all . the ramificaUon.s of a too populated world." 'Ille only thing c<rlain In 11161, ~~ Swnner predicts. ii lha& "young · will conUnue to press for chao1e Utt will generajb' corl;form to their own .non- conformity. Druf ab..e . • • wDl COi more and more attention . • . bllf I 'don't anticipate a solution inht year . . Juvenile crime ls only one aspect o( a maze of dllemmu that demand sohJ.i. tion, JUdge Sunµltl" says, in wbi.t he. calls "the critical tfros, years which may embark us on an irreversible coune towards self destruction or continue the possibility of &urvlval. · .. .. And 1969 wm be lhe Jaat year <if the soaring sixties,." be said. "Like-en 0. Henry story it may provide us with a surprise ending. Son of LidO'Man l(illed From Pqe 1 APOLLO •.. "But t bat," rueMly noted JudJd Sumner, facing the~.highe!t caseload m~ crease In the Superior Court, "is unlike-· Jy." I District Attorney Hicks believes th&f,· a form or shock treatment would not: be out of the way in dealing with the juvenile offender. · · In India C,ycle A.cement Peace O:irpsman William S. ltellyer Jr. 26, soil of a Lido Isle resident, was killed in a motorcycle accident Christmas Eve near Mudhole, India, it was learned today. · Mr. Hellyer w .. the son of w. s. Hellyer Sr. of 107 Via Koron, Lido Isle. The elder Hellyer is an attorney and civic leader in the San Bernardino area. Re"'"' Aid the Peace Corpsman WU delivering Christmas packages on a motorcycle when lie swerved to avoid a bullock cart aOd lhe cycle crash«!. Mr. lleUyer auller<d lntemal injuriea. Reporlo lald he ncdved ald three bour1 after the accldem, but died 'rh:lle un- dergoing surgery. '· · ii. Celebrated his 26th birthday. four . Newport chiltlfen . . To ·Collect Trees OA!I Y PJI OT OtlANGE C0~5l PUILISHING COMP~NY R•Mrf N. w,,,, I ,,....., •NI "lillllW. J•cill R. C.ttlty Ylot p,_ldtllf t1'ld c»tMrll Mt"'"' n•m•• r .... 11 .... 1li•'iil1' A, ·Jr.turphln• Mtrlffl,,. hllor J.,... f. C.lli111 Ptuf NhilM ---c;"'...... , Dlr9dW .... ,.,, .... Oflke 2211 -~~ ... ,.,..4 M•llll'lf U.,...,_.O.•• Jl71, tJW oi..;·-- C.• Mil.ii .-.... -..., 1""7 LI .... lffdl: tn ""'"'Ao-~ lottCfl: .. "" '"" days before the crash. He had two months to go ln the corps. Mr. Hellyer wu on duty in the state o( Mysore, India, where be bad served for two years. &ealdea his father, he leaves his mother, Mn. Opal Simmons Hellyer of San Bernardino; two brothers, Jeffrey, aervingin the Navy, and ' Robert, residing In s.n Bernardino; and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Hellyer of San Bernardino. ·Private graveside services will be con- ducted . Tuesday in Mountain View Cemetery ID S.. Bernardino. Friirids who ·wish may make contributions ·to the WUllam S. Hellyer Jr. MeDiorlpl F\lnd, -.599 Arrowhead Ave., S a11 Bernardino. DonatioM WUJ he forwarded lo the Peace Corps. l'rot1t f»qe l • MIDEAST ... Anaheim Youth Soug~t in T,.-y: .. To Ram Deputy Sheriff's officen today are ,hunUng •rt Aft.lbeim teen-ager who allegedly tried to run down a deputy Sunday night in an Incident outside the youtb's home.~ Officers said the '17-year-old youth elud- ed attesting oftlcen.wilo called al h1 • home. He·, ran ,to hia car. As ,J>eputy TbOmas Yates moved ,towards the aulq, ·the bQy deliberitely veered in his direc- tion and ran over the edge of one of his &hoes, the officer said. Yates, who wu unhurt, fired three shots at. the tirt& . of the 1peeding car. The aUto wu later found ·abandoned several blocks away with 'the gu lank punetured. The youth waa being picked up by sberilf'• officera for alle~ violation of pc'Ob&Uon. From Pllfle 1 SHOOTOUT. • • u .. ml went aller lbem to sellle \be maU..., one way cc the olher. W-offlcen arrtvod juot 11 lbll.tlloollM lllUted, hot guns ...... ~ !*I ll1d · U.. all so far charged - lwo burl -were quietly rounded up. Slllrle)', bcnniver, lly dead on the pav .. IDODI. Ne~pc>Ft Police Nab 20 on· Nsoo Charges A lclal ol I-Juftllllm and Ill adultl .................. Ille - OD cmaa . Ud martJuana ~Oil cllltp bJ Nlwporl lltach Pollet. The ~~ mests came u a result ot routine · patrol -cc nobe o:on> plalnll, police aald. Small amoonta of contraband wttt Involved, poUce said. l ' .j -~ ' l t \ rf ' #'irSt ~'Jf f~ _ :L~~e . 1 C H I : . Crack Ametican. ketch Ondlne, owned by Sumner A. ''Huey" Long, is first to finish ih Sydney·to Hobart, Australia yacht race whic_h end· ed. Sunday. Forty.ton yacht, which carried a 20-man crew,, was Jarg. est boat in ~ce. FirnU results· of race will not be knOwn until off~cials examine corrected times (see story Boating Page). From Page l HARBOR. • • law enforcement and firefighting . -"There appears to be some e:t- penditures by the district of funds for local benefit rather than regional recrea- tional benefit. . ·-"Therei exists a separate taxing }uri.sdictlon in the agency CJf the Harobr blatrict, which levies taxes to be ·used exclusively for b a r b o r purposes. (The distrlct's county-wide rate in 196M9 ls about eight cl!nts per e!lch $100 o1 uses· sed valuation.) , . ~"There e1i.st two -parallel adminls· ttattve •a1en·cies, the dt!j:rict and ttle county, ,for the a'dminlstratioo of the re. glona1 harbors, beaches and parks pro- gram in Orange County." All these deviations from the Harbor District's "original purpose," says the resolution, would be corrected by dis- solving the district and turning its rune· tions over to an expanded Parks Dejart- ment, which would be ~cerned with regional recreational need! generally. Newport Vice Mayor Parson' served on the five-member League committee that developed the dissolution program. There was, he explained, lnsutncient con· sideration given to the impact of the move on Newport. OTHER MEMBERS member Joy Neugebauer and La Habra Councilman Hal Sims, who served as chairman. "It's now up to us in Newport to work out what is equitable and fair for the city," said Parsons. "We'll haye to negotiate with the county to get sources of revenue sufficient to com· pensate us for maintaining the harbor." On Jan. 13, he said he would advise the Newport council to abstain from voling on the League program. Parsons suggested the HarboT Distriet is nearing lts end because other cities in the county are obviously hard·pressed for regional park sites. "l guess," he concluded, "that they want a better distribution of the wealth." Gemini 4 capsule in June of 1965. From their vantage point in lunar orbit the astronauts told of a celestial body that was anything but inviting to mankind. Their pictures ptesented it as a lumpy, pitted expanse that -when viewed a' an angle includinJ the horizon -looked like a misshapen golf ball. LOvell was atruct by ••the vast loneliness ·up here t:>n the moon. Jt't awe·inspiring." A shot with a long focal length lens, looking south at the large cratlr Goclenius and several smaller craters, looked like a snow scene devoid of any life. Thousands or smaller craters pitted the space between the larger lunar features . Spread across the bottom of the 40-mile diameter Goclenius were several ditch~ like depressions, like a child's aimless drawings on new·fallen mow. These are distinctive features of this-particular crater. Anders, chief photographer on the n1oon mission, said the arid lunar surface ''looks very whitish gray, like dirty beach sand with a lot of footprints." He was not far off. The pictures he brought back, hov:ever, had an additional yellow cast because of Apollo S's fogged win. do1vs. The most spectacular still "'Color photo of the lunar surface showed the 81J.mile diameter crater Langrenus at the eastern edge of the Sea of Fertility. This huge depression, with Jll()uktain 'peaks in its center, Ii es on the right-hand edge of the moon's face. "The v.·alls of the crater are terraced -abou! s i x or seven terraces on t h e way down ," Lo1·cJI described it from lunar orbit. This was one of the J:1ndmarks Apollo S's moon pilots tracked tow;;ir<I an im- aginary landing site. One movie sequence S\\'ept the entire globe of earth from top to bottom, the way it looked to the moon c r cw a few moments after they blasted out of earth orbit and started the long coast toward the lunar sphere. From J().15,000 miles a\vay, continents and oceans stood out sharply . "I'm surprised they had the m o v i c camera set up," Haney i-:airl. "They were pretty busy then, bul they're u lot more alert then most crews." From Page 1 BERRY ... Berry of Alton, lll., and two sisters, Mrs. Charles Mayhill of Alton and Mrs. Richard Reddick of Salem, Mo. The family bas suggested memorial r.ontribulions to the Hoag Memorial Hospital Building Fund, or to the Shriners' Crippled Cbildrens Hospital through Seafaring Masonic Lodge 708 of Newport Beach. ~ine Walck "I have a lheory," he said, "lha\ if young people tempted to exper~: w i t b marijuana or aJcohol could visit,. an lnstituUon where addicts of all sorti are being treated, it might just wake them up. "It might give them a picture ol. themselves in the future, induce thelll' -or lr!Bhten them! -into fal)inl' back Into the ranks of 'squares' who· have maturity enough to be afraid or this type of deviation." , Judges, police chiefs, the district atl tomey -all professionals with fingers. on the throbbing pulse of crime an!l. all sincerely dedicated to ' cutting thil cancer from the ailing body of American society. And, better still, all equally willing to push caseloads and crimd: dossiers to one side and talk quietly,' and frankly on applying the principle, of "l>revenU~n is better t b a n cure1», to this mountmg dilemma. But let an 18-year-old Corona del Mat. girl we'll call Sally have the last word. Sally knows all about juvenile crime.~ She's been in juvenile court three times/ on drugs and sex offenses and she got;.'. a solemn warning from a Supreior Court"' judge last month on what she'd get if she showed up there again. ' Sally tos.sed her 10ng, blonde hair ~ · happily commented "Blg deal! Look, I wanna smoke pot, I'll smoke pot. And I intend to do just that tonight, baby, so why not run back in ther:l, and tell the judge?" ~"'~ Sally's parents are divorced. She live~( -or is supposed to live -with h~;. mother and t w o younger sisters. Sh$. has been found, on occaaions, ·to be living with what a Newport Beach j>olice office~ politely described as "some ~ the filthy, long-haired riff.raff that make: this job hard work." .~ "My mom's pretly well given up o-N- me,'' grinned Sally. "It's a drag lbert.J:~ she has to work and I'm pretty sicK of playing nursemaid to kid sisters. \J visit my dad now and again but there are times, when he's had a drink or two, lhal it really isn't safe for mE: to stay around there, if you knoW wtul I n1can." A probation officer explained very carefully ju.st what 5ally did mean. Anft her records revealed that Sally's father had been given a firm warning of what would happen if he chose to forget that the tall, buxom blonde was ~. drughter. To Sally, 1969 is just another year.; It's a year when she may come ~ court again on drug charges or as an expectant mother or on some more; serious offense. F.ither way, she'll be one of many: thousands of young persons 1vhose namesr will appear on whal will be a record listing in the annals of crime in this nation. Judge Robert Gardner and Dislrict Attorney Cecil Hicks had the sa1ne thought: "The future is bleak ." Other committee members were Hun· tington Beach City Councllman Jack Green, Westminster Clly Administrator Robert Hunlley, Westminster Council Q OMEGA-ACCUTRON -BULOVA AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVlCE Funds for Signs, Brochures OK'd Funds for sJgns and brocburta for three new marine preserves have. been approved by Orange Cowlty aupervllor•. The hoard hal. at the roquea\ of Laguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder, authorized expenditure of not mort than $1)50 for ligns and not mort than $1500 for hrocburea to he diJlrlbuted to ICbooil. The brochures wiU ducrihe rqulallonl and boundaries of the prt.atrveS at Nawport Beach, Laguna Beach and SOulh Laguna. They were set up by state Jealalallon adopted this year. Ho Greets Americans TOKYO (AP) -North Vlebwn"' Ptesld .. 1 Ho Chi Minh broldcul a New Year grtttlng to Americans tad~ and aald his force& wtU continue flil'Ung In Vlelnam a11 long u their country J.s aubject to aggression. COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR e rings sized and repaired • diamonds and precious stones remounted e pearls restrung WE CUSTOM DESIGN & MANUFACTURE ALL TYPES OF JEWELRY HAUOl SHOPPlNIJ CINTll 2100 HAllOl ILYD. 1 • COSTA MDA 141-Hll Op" Moo,. Tlom., Jlrl. T1I 9 P.'"· I ~ HUNTINliTON CINTll llACH • IDINliER HUNTINliTON IEACH H2·H01 '•• I .• • • •. '1 •. \."• • : •• ...... ·~. ' :\. t" '. ' •' • ""· •.-•• 'i ' ( ·--·--------- iiJ----•'"'' ~,.,....,...,. . .,,7.;0''..,-~•-.>.,.,~_,'°"'.", .. '•ws""'."~'"'A?~44';''""!"'';''~*-""'' .... '"'' ___ ,,_, _,_.,,_,_, _____ "'.:'.'!¥ ___ , .,,~ ...... F..,.i '~"'-_,?~•~• ,,_,.~,.,.,.7•~---·:-•---:-..-,TO."'!":""~••-c-::c'.-,,='"'°'l'"!...,..,T=-:'.~'S"?!:!f!'"'"""-''-...-..,.--.~, ' . -.tosia ._ Me-sa -• • -· -~. . , ~Ot:. "61', NO. 301, 3 $_ECTIONS, ~~&ES-_ .. Man Killed- In County Gun Battle • -~·--. • • • . .. I ' -· ,. ~ .. ' ----. . --· •• , ... -..... -. . ·------MOND;.Y, DECEMBER 30, 1968 . :. ! ! • N ' --ORANGrOOUNTY, •eABFORNIN":= .. ---· -. . . -~ --' ~ -· .. ':; ·-·---. .. .. -· . . . . ---..... A~ab .Repri~~l IJri~ ·Israel Ram on-B-eirut Draws Protests '""' """ -Anb perrillu tO(lay vowed • "rain" -denounced the -' atlacii .. "tnternatlonal bandtlry" deslllled to "nei· dlmenalon In llratl'• deterrent PollcY"· agalnet her Ar•b foet. Undelerre1n,,. mounlfnl~ irom oil . Ilda of Ila . . . One man was killed apd two ,wounded 8unday nlgbt u Westminster police -'pped off by a worried sister -arrived oo the scene of an alleged dl.Spute over 1tolen narcotics, too late to stop a gun llattle. · Huntintton Beach and Westminster detectl.ve1, jointly working the case ovornigh~ had booked oh men on suapi· clon of murder by thiS , morning and of re-nldl for laraeJ'I O>llUIWldo slrlke al Belnit Airport. The Sovi<t Uoloti called on the United NaUou to ''use its outhQrlty'" to ~e hraeJ acoept the u, N. ~ Eut "'°"'utions. ' Fighting ..,ipted SundlQ' aioq lll'aeli· Ar•b 1roou,.. and · br•el ll&id one of Its toe:n-d< slf!cr141e" wa1 killed in further lnc:rtale -In the Mlddlo Ea.st. It made no tbreateniog remarb but called 'on· the U. cN. lo Ollforce lta. demaowl•. Israel wltbdnw lronl-..p.> tured terrltbry. . The United States one! llle·Sovlet Union Joined forces In the ·U, N. Seciirlly Colm-' cir iO le1d tnternauOlial oondein111t1on of tho airport all'iU wbfcll Israeli Del..,. Mlnbler Moohe I>ayon defended a.s • l.nel . ... SUnd111 •• p;omfold retallalfbn for Arab • attaeb ' ' Pmnler ' Levi Eshtol dOciared Iha~ Imel will defend iileU . qalnot • .,_ gresslon "In the plaee wbm It fJ plaJfned an<! ~alfled out." . ' a. seventh on suspicion of auto theft. Albi!rt Smrley, Z2, of i!uotlngton Beach, wa.s fatally wounded ID the chest during the shootout at 14202 Alta S t • , '!l'estmimter, shot down 1n the ru..t outside. Donald D. Lincoln, 22, of Whittler, also bit In the chest, and George G. J!rookins, 23, of Fullerton, struck by a blast in the buttockJ, were treated and booked into the Orange County Medi<al Center prisoo ward. Street addresses of the four additional bookr.d murder suspects were not available due to the continuing status Cl the investigation, but police listed them as : -Everett L. Pittman, 24, Westminster. ~ary M. Ingram, 19, Orange. -Ruuell E. McGrew, 19, La Habra. -Richard A. Uncoln, 21, La Habra. Booked on suspicion or grand theft auto all a result of the investigation WU Gary D. Rudolph, 19, Westminster, • ~~ _gave no details of the stolen ''fiver the safety of her brother, .41;· -'!llil ldenUfled by Investigators tt ;,:~=-~~:!:. f! ~Alma Street llddrm. ;,,.; new• was qukkly relayed to Weotmfmtet police arid fl>f' llwltliiton lleich deleclives ...,. Ibo ,~ .. tbltillllt ,_ qaiml -• At aboot the same time, a womlrt Identified .. Lucy Pillman Ide~ ..U.. Hunttngton Beach police department with a franUc plea for help. "'Illey just dragg<!d my son out of the house and they're beating him! They have guns!/' police quoted her as saying. Pittman, investigation disclosed, had olready asked for plainclothes police of. ficers' protection saying he wa.. ln danger · due to narcotics involvement of some ~ current stages of the tragic tu(..,'pollce said, no narcoUcs have been rficoVered and nothing was round at the Alma Street address to prove the clrua upect. According to detectives, the confron. •auon and subsequent gunfight itemmed from the theft of a quantity of narcotics from a Huntington Avenue apartment In Htmtingtoo Beach. They said the Huntington Beach crowd •pparenUy blamed the Westminster fac- ISee SHOOTOU)', Page!) COAST'S FUTURE il'OLD TUESDAY The DAILY PILOT takes a Jong look Into 19&9 Tuesday with publication of its annual Futurama section. The special aection tetb: the story -in wordS and pictures -of industria1 growth, freeway pattenls and burgtoning homes. FrOm agricuHure to Apollo and beyond, II'• thll outlook for the Orange Coast'• llowinl fulur<. Read tt Tuelday inside the DAILY PILOT. NASA ,_,.Via UP'I Te......,. THE EARTH AS FEW HAVE SEEN IT ApolJo 8 View of _W11tern Hemisphere Moon Photos Tell -Srory ' . . Of 'Expanse of N othi.ng!: SP~CE CJjNrER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo I mobnrught commander Frank Borman reported from lunar orbit t h a t the moon ~ace 69 miles below him was "a vast,: lonely, forbidding. , .ex· panse of " r:J-..: , words ~. James "'Anders radioed back , their epoch Christmas ID.~ 14.• sl'lf~ impact of moon's forblddln1 ... ~ lliil llPl-J!lj!liOll pictum they l:d a:~ mewge across. The lpace" agency released selected parts of the ,Apollo 8 crew's photographic handlwork Sunday night, hours after the first men tf see the moon's backside arrived h o J1I e in Houston and received a tumultuolll pre-dawn welcome. Most of ui world's major astronomical observato~es were on a list to receive hlgh-resolu\t<ln prints from the Apollo 8 lunar pbltos, the best man bas ever obtained ftom his nearest neighbor in ' space. These pl;)otographs, showing details as liUle u Ibo feet across, were erpected to lrr.proJe maps of the moon's hidden back sidt 20-fold and tell astronomers three limes more about the moon's face than they know now. The ~onauts themselves spent Sun~ day monilng with their families. Anders toot bis wife and five children to Catholic Mass. It was their first day at home since the fligb~ which started Dec. 21 and eDded Friday with a Pacific Octan splashdown. The moonfliers planned to spend most of their free tlmi! at home during the next two weeks except for a trip to Hou!totl's Astrodome Tuesday night to watch Oklahoma and Southern Methodist Unlvenlty play In the BlueboMet Bowl. Sunday afternoon all three men began the flnt of many "mind-picking" sessions they wW bald during the coming 14 days with the men who planned their Oi,gbt. New Yean Day will be their only day off from these important UPIT ......... WE~COME HOME, JAMES Apoll0't Lovell, Wife M•rllyn debriefing sessions. It was little wonder Bonnan, Levell and Anders frequently referred to the "good earth," with the emphasia on good, during their aix-day voyage whi.ch electrified the world. One shot they 'brought back showed a spectacular "earthrise" with the pale gray-yellow lunar horizon ln t be foreground. t1W! earth hung like a blue jewel in l h e distance. its br0\llli$b land ma!ses almoit completely shrouded,. bf fhlfly wll1te <louda,. " ! COmparel(to·the lileak, monoc:hromit&: lunar landlcape, molhtr eartb'• va.rylnJ colors · .looked il'lvittoa indeed, · PA Hicks' Theory ' one l\lllTilla at . fte Soviet eovernmeot newapaper Two Promoted As .Van · Cleve Leaves Force . Is Escape Key to . Juvenile Crime? Editar'• Nott: nw U the conelud· tno articll' in o two-part 1erlt1 dil· cunlng ,tht crime picturt in Orong1 count11• BJ TOM BARLEY °' .. _., ""' ""' "What 's eotni Oh tn the minds ol tldi today that mates <his problem (juvf/dle crime) to much worte than ever before Jn bl.ltory1" Dtatrlcl Attorney C e c i t Hieb, no llranger lo soaring juvenile crime 1tatiatla t h a t have shaken Jaw ~ lorcement and ~on desprtmeoll around the nation to the core, doean't ha .. the ...... lll hll quatlon. But he baa thoorlel on the causes of the explosloo la juftnile crtm<. "And I ' llelieve the key word ii ucape," ht llld. "!Mt ot It thlo woy: ··"The pown ftlan worn at b1I ~ """' -io -ids AiarJ to meet .. --- his family needs and otherwile avoid conlllcb with the law. He has reached ' a matutlty which reco&ni*s that there is no escape from occasional or frequent dl4a~bnenll and, therefore, has leamod : to adjiilt hlm>ell · to sudden .... _ In hll.J...-S." Hieb sat back In his chair, In deep thcJQ&ht.,"But the futuN for 7oungsters," be llllll1llUl'ed, '"oppun, In their own erat fir .mote ble&k:" 'IM !word "'llC.ape" em be applied u 111e· -bl ID many of Ille sopar~ .191 -lllueo' t b 11 C<l<ilblne into tlit;:.·J...,tle jung~ thal confronts his· f9n, lodl7, Htcb l>tiieva. " at the cmopua ~ter1, tbe droll~ llld lhe ,ou!J fmn life .t~," lllcU ''Rather llwl th!nt abou! Ille future, many yoothf are ~ to •void It by lnduiglna in QClpt-medwtlll'DI, "So .., ... the pattern of liquor ... by mlnan, experim<ntadoo With marl- j....,,ll)uo lllll!ln(, pl1ll, all alculated to clouil ~ brlln, drive out realltr, 1ubsUtute a faq.lasy world where everybbd~ Is a ml1Uonalre and contented and Wpired -at least as Ion& u the effects of the drug or narCotic or lttmUlant Jut. "And/' HiCU ·-:ent Ofl,_ "'whe(e ii t1ie IO&ic In not tryini It qain and 1plo, trying to create a permanent t$Clpe hatch from the dreary reallUee: of. the present! "Wby .,. "' 1111"1 15-8bd 111-1ei1Nlld girls and boyo Piancln8 nc:t1 ... 1y Into aa:ual experlmentl? Wh.J, do wt. hive oo many ._. b\'11 d<i:)ored by - court• to be fathers, w Ith duUea to support their Uleg1tlmate offspring u -as they get out of hisJI sci199Il ', "Tile amwer," said Hicks; "It••· We oil share the burden of revtn!1o1 the CW'l'tnl trend. U don no good lo tell • yoimpter 'Don'. d•' thll' ..... the advice .... be "'1llJOfl«I "" ma demonslrltlons of what tnc1u11.,._. lead to !' 'liiut} • lot. In that ll'll\IDWll, -Cool. M'.,. Poll& Chief koger Nelli. -~ "I'm aJl tor that" l'lc Aid. "Loot for the cause of this irqic niuibroomtng in juvenile.crime and the rtaO..tnevl~J t-, .. rflbt into t11e 11ome, u .-ta c-to be IH fn control lllCI discipline , of their 1"'!11&sler• then they mljl(. lCl'OPI the fll<I tbAUl1''9'1 on .... u..ii 'cllance thal .~ diildrtn will ~!~ fllun ' In the jUYeD!le crime llaU-.. "Bui 1a n.e .., .... Iba_\, the l<ldl dghl hlYe l()l1lethlng WIMll lllOy ....ae us· of ~.", Neth addod. "And wltbolCiOillldlnl Jkij!pooll, 1 -11111 'we con .Wf uped of theln . ollal .... oreounel,.._ · . '"I'herl'• iill!r inuch point In ..,....,. ditclpflne ···f~p•etln1 --10 what ... ,.....u ·1; • pem,iuroenoible Ml of ..i.. ii :IPI Clll\.~ lbt 1kiitl' faith in JOl:f own clDclbct and ,dlJploy your """ ·oblllt1 10 adjlll lo • dJtngiils nrld,'t llttJuald. : • , ''Matt no -1 ·1boul,I~ Ult-· Ina . ol JQnnlle crime •t Ill .... .., 1tn the' bomt -ll'• a tfttft:f., ltnlt. il!eo. "mSN 'ClllMB, '-""Jt j : .. ; ' •• ; .. .. ' ' Flu,~Lung:Ailmen( · ,:,. ' , , · I . 'f!t I r I Fatal to Me8an "States whlch make it pollible fOr (See MIDEAST 11JllMOIL, Pqt I) . ' ' Drug Overdose . ' Hinted· in Mesa . ' . Man's Death Motorist Unhappy At Station Clerk Hell hath ha· flll'J' Uta 1 .motorlat '!Ith a dJrty wlndlbield. =ust uk oerilce -1ttendut Allen;·l7, ol llOI Nudbus Ave,, na del Mar. · · A customer Sunday n11bt at ·VJc l\'U.On's TrillJ&le Station, 4125 W. Coast Highway was apparenUy dislfiUafi.ed witb the way Allen had wa!hed hil car "1.ncbhleld, even tbouMh t b e attendant bad cleUJed• It twice. ' ' :0r .. ,. ()oUC . ~ ' • '• • • • ----- \ ........ . .. DAil \f "L4T C M., 01ce• JO, 1• ~ ' - . -;:;. .t ~ .. -,. .... ;1' ~ , • -..,.... .. .... !J'~~:!l '"t.... .... --::. .~.:~ .. t ; . ..: . ~ ~.,.. .! ; : .. • t :: ,. t ·.:.:·-:- Newport CaJ"lf .:Leag~c_ot(·Cities .Pia~ ljtevitf!IJle _. By JEROME Y. COWNS Of ""' a.It, f'fllf '""' The orange County League of CiUes .today JIS~ed all 24 cities in' the county to join a plan almed at dissohrJni the County Harbor District within eight months .. ' Newport Jlelch. which would bear the brunt of dissolution of the count1·wide district, is expected to step aside from lhe League program. But ail other cities are expected to go along with it. "it's inevitable,'' said New~ Vi~ Mayor Lindsley Parsons. 'But it's something we're going to have to stand away from until we have guarantees that our interests will be protected." Newport ollicWI are concerned about the city getting stuck with too larae a tab fer assuming aervicu now un· dertaken -and fin111ctd -by the Harbar·Diltrict. League of CIUta President Deon E. Shull Jr.1 who ia mayor of La Habra, bu called for reaoluUorui d. endoraement from the countr's citie:s by the end of February. The League plan, recommended by a five-member League committee after five months of study, is keyed to a proposed timetable culmin.ating in a specW CIJl!lty ~OD in Augu~. From Page 1 MIDEAST ••• . ". .. · ... ' .$173 Loot Tak~n • In Carpet Caper . . ' ' A Cos~ Mesa noor covering company ' owner is · blue tod&Y over · the diup. pearahce of 34 .yanls ol mint green · carpeting, plus underpadding . Clarence A. Page disCovered the $173 JOfs from C. A. Page Floor Covering, 440 E. 17th St., over the Weekend, but · police found no evidence of forctd entry. Investigators said they eipect the case will be made to slick. Ala> taken in the carpet caper was a gallon of cement Ohll V PllOT OltANO!. CQAS, l'Ult.ISHING COMl"ANY loMrt N. w,,11 l',..ldfnl' 11"11 l'utllltflw J,,1c a. Curley VIC* l'roaldenl ond ~ Mfillol"t T"°'"'' x ..... a IE<llt.r' Tie'""• >,. Murphl111 MIMtJr\f ldltor , • .,1 NltlH Adllwtl""' 0.....,.. ---110 w ••• ,.., ,.,..., W.lll1t1 Ml .... : P.O. lox 1160. t2626 AU .counlv. voters would be eliajble lo cur •l>IUoi. 1n -~' ITedfm; ;iOll006 sole purpose would be to confino a dec1Jforr'1>y 'the' uom or ·supem.or, to' dJ.Ssolve the 35--~ld ClistrlCt. Super'V!f!>n wiO 'be ask<d to make that deClllorl in· June, according to the Leqve· ttmetable: . • • Sbldl noted, ~however. thit the • tint COW'liy .,ency to ' take up the matter will be the Local Agency FormatJon Commission (LAFC). Resolutions from the county's citie!I seeking dissolution of the district -will be submitted to LAFC on March 12. nie first public bearing on the il!Ue will be held be.fore LAFC the followina month -if the League timetable holds. Asawning it ~. N.ld voters endorse ending Ille Horbor DiJttict io AugUst, dissolution proceedinJ& would be im· plemented on Nov. 1, the League official sald. Shull today It.Qt out letter11 copies of Ille pro~ timetable, copiel ol proposed resolutlom and bacQroond in- formation m the iuue to every City Council in the C9Wt11. The packet 1pella out . the I,.eague's reasons tor seetina diuolution of the district, whose "regianal" -u oppoeed to ''lqcal11 -functions would be ablorbed and Controlled by an enlarged County Parka Deparlment, under lb• Loque , plan. -'A motution proposed for adopUOJl, bJ all county cities declans that the dlltttct was formed° hf1'33 to develop and main- tain Nriporf Harbor. • Sihce 'then,' the district's "p~es, pOwere-af\'il· philosophy" have· l»een greaily al~. As a -•net, J&YJ .the r"'"1\lllo!i : , ·· -"'Mlere fPpe&r•~:be tome overlap- ping of jutl~cUon tithvfinJ,lhe Harbor District and certain cities elating to law enforcement and flre'flglf ng. -"There appear1 ·to be some ex· pendilum by the dlatrlcl of fund! ror local benefit rather than regional recrea· tlonal benefit. · • - -"There exists a separate taxing jurisdiction in the a&ency of the Harobr l',)istricJ, Wh1ch levies t~es to !>e used exclualvely for h a r b or purposes. (The dlatrict's county-wide rate In 1-... la about eight cept8 per each $100 of Q&el~ sed va).uatidn.) ' -"'lb.,. exist two parallel admlnfs. tralive &1enclel. tbe dlstrlct and the county, ror tbe •dminlatnllon of the re- gional bart>or•. beachu and parks pro. gram in Orange County." All these deviations from the Harbor District's "original purpoae," says the resolution. would be corrected by dis.- solving the diitriq and tW'ning its func· tiOJ'IS over to an expanlftd Parka DeJart· Frqm r.,,e 1 ~. whi~ w~!d be conce~ U with l@iJ ~)l<edl """" ~· .~ Ylct: 141)'0! Pa"°"' &erv<d on llit nv .. m"lll!!r i..eq,,e committee that doftlopoil Iba 'dJotOlllllon irocram. 'l'tlm.1'u,.bo ~li>ed; IMuffldllll -~'cMn to uro ppact o1 tile ujpl/9' 111 llewport. ' .~ ~·~llllt1lll•o~ '!"'.Hun· -;llelch; ~. °""""1-Jack ~'w~'. OJl ·.ldinJoistralor Dobert HuiJllOy,. .W-COuncll ~-Joy ri~J>i~aiid ·IA ~bra CoimcJbna~ HiJ Sim;' WbO ltrV u ·•·•-in '.. ' ~,.... ' . •1~4·1 now up. to us in ~-to work out what is equitable . and !air for the citf," ia1d Panons. "We'll have 19 nea:ottate with the county to get SOW'cea of revenue sufficient to com- pensate 111 for maintaining the harbor." On Jan. 13, he said he would advise the Nfwport colU)cll to abstain from voUng on the League program. Persona suggeated the Harbor District ia nearing its end because other cities Jo the county are obvioualy hard-pressed for rqional park sites. "I guess," he concluded, "that they want a better diltributloa of the wealth." •• .TEEN CRIME: IS IT 'ESCAPE'? • • • YUJ\Ofll servlceo for Jame3 McLalh CroU'lJI. of 20IJi. Temple llllll 0r1.;, Laguna Beach, .wm be held 'lbundlQ'. at 1 p.m. ffe .wu 70. :Mr .. · croxion, ~".en years a LagunJ. · resident, died 'Friday at sOutb Coast ~unity HOJpltal. . , . · Ser.vlcea. Will be conduct<d • by Rev. JJooillu· S)uarl ln tbe cbapel of Laguna B<ach FUneral Home. lntenneilt will be at Pacific V~ew Memorial Park. Before coming lo Laguna, Mr. Crollon bAd been a real estate broker and bulldlll' in Altadepa. He.' wa:s an alwnnua or Comdl Ulliveralty. An acUve amateur arUsl who had ~udied with prominent Laguna Beach arUst.s, Mr. Cr0i:ton was a member of the Laguna Beach Art Association. Anah~im Youth Sought in. Try To Ram Deputy Sheriff's officers today art hunUng ti,n Anaheim teen·qer who alle;ed!y tried lo run down a deputy Slltlday night in an incident autlide the )'Olltb11 home. OllJcen said the 17·year-old youlll elud- ed arruUng ofllcers who called at h I s home. He ran to his car. Al Deputy Tbomu Yates moved towards the auto. tbe boy deltberataly -In hll direc-tion and ran ovu the edge of Oat of hll "-,Iba -uld. '\'•!al, who .... Ul)hort, fired tbree llholl at Ille tlrto of Iba opeedlng car. The auto wu later round abandoned several bloob away with the gu tank punc1Ured: 'lbe 'jOUtb ... bef!ll plckal up ·by lherifI's offlCtl'I for alle1ed violation of prob&Uoo. Mesa Yoµth Takes !'frlp,' ·Hospitalized ' A •1e'ar-old Cost.a Meg man auf· fcjng bllll ructions lo 1 d0tt of U.. dnlg L8!l wu treated at Hoag Memorial Hoopital Satutday night, then lnmlfemd 1o Or.nae Coun1y Medico! cem.r. -uld the bad-lilp -' ""' . mltlod 'Obtaining 1 · oapoult l>f lllO-lllipl hallucloot!en in Co.ta M.,., but rtllilocl all other mofrmaUon about Its source. ' ' ' He fl&& abo a'mimbti ol.tbe Soutllern California Golf Asaoclallon and · tbe Laguna Beach Country Club • Survivors incj,ude 'a $ughter,. Mrs. Donald · Croiton 'Caine of Costa Mesa; a son, Jami! V. Croxton of Sant.a Monica: a brother, Hei;bert P. Crolton ol Venice, ~la.; and Ill 1?andchlldren. Ex-Mesa Ba.nk Executive Dies Jack McCord,. a former United California Bank u:ecuUvt in the Costa Mesa area, died after a brief illnesa Friday, He was 45. Mr. McCord, who had served for severa1 )'tan aa .manaeer of UCB branches in Cost.a Mesa, Santi. Ana and Long Beach, moved with hll family to La Puente two weeks q:o after rtsidinl ln Orange for severa:l yean. He lea ve.s his widow, Mary, and two children. Services were held this afternoon at Waverly Chapel of Fairhaven Memorial Park in Orange. Burial followed in the memorial park. Mesa Planners Get New Year's Eve Eve Holiday :tor tllooe Who !91Jqtr m\lllldpal ~nallont ~tilt ca.ta M,.. Clly Council and . C'<bml- w 11 l celebr1te New e.ar'I E ' e Eve artd at thilr lelsure. ,'lbe cwilomary joint 11udy a n d dl"""'1on meelln( which falla on the riftb MlindlY or any liven moalh during the rest of lhe year will not be held tonlaht. A few random Items which it w11 l!lll1datory lo act upon prior ta the end of the llix year wert cleared up in a 1pe:cial pty council le.Sllon lalt ru.,.{oy. Virtually all Hema on Ille plannlnc commlltlon '• &1cncta of Jul Monday """ ·111o continued mUI '*· due Primarily to holl~oy actMlloa by ap- p!lcanls and vWtatlan ol tilt lion& Kon1 flu. torney -all professionals wil.h fingers on the throbbing pulse of crime and all sincerely dedicated to cutting this cancer from the ailing body of American society. And, better still, all equally willing to push caseloads and crime dossiers to one side and talk quietly and frankly on applying the principle of "prevention is better th a n cure" to this mounting dilemma . But Jet an IS.year-old Corona dcl Mar girl we'll call Sally ·have the last word. Sally .. knows all ;:iboat juvenile crime. She's Qe~n in juvenile court three times on druas and sex offenses and she got a solemn warntng·from a SupreJor Court · judge !Jl..st month' on What she·d get if she sMwed up.there again . &'1!Y WPed her Tang, blQDde hair and happ!Jy, 1:9mmen1ed "Big deal! Look, I wanna smote pot, I'll smoke pot. And' l"·lntend to do just that tonight, baWl~:JO , why ml run back in there an<f tell1:\he judat?" Sally's parents are divorced. She Uves -or Is supposed to Uve -with her mother ~ t w 0 '100lll~ aisterl: She haa ~'liq,4; fl,~ Jo . be living-W1th what a Newport Beach police offlc,er politely described as "some ~ the fillhy,long·liaired riff.raff that IDake this job llard wo'rk." "My mom's pretty well given up on me," grlnned SaUJ. 11Ir1,a drag there, she has to work and I'm pretty sick of playing nursemaid to k•d sisters. I visit my dad now and again but there are times, when he's h·a d a drink or two, uii't it really isn't safe for me to stay around ther~. if you know what I mean." A probation offi~ explained very carefully just what Sally did mean. And her records revealed that Sally's father had been given a firm warning of what would happen if he chose to forget that the tall, buxom blonde was his d;.ughter. To Sally, 1969 is just another year. It's a year when she may come to court again on drug charges or as an expectant mother or on some more serious offense. F.ither way, she'll be one of many thousands of young pers.ons whose names will appear on what will be a .recru:d listing in the annals of crime 1n this nation. Judge Robert Gardner and District Attorney Cecil Hicks had the same thought : "The future is bleak ." No Rock Festival Here· John Trueblood (on ladder), mainteruince mah at Oran&e County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. checks out new sign on Fairgrounds mar<juee whlJle son, John Jr .. helps out. Top line of •igri refen to controversial Christmas Festival and Freak Fair, called off Friday \vhen promoters of festival, tentatively scheduled fur Sunday, could not meet security requirements. From Page 1 POLICE PROMOTIONS • • • The former reserve olfice'r a·ssigned to full time duty in late 1963 just recently placed second in state competition \Vilh other karate experts during the 1968 California Police Olympics. BERSCH ELEVATED • / '+ • OUicer Dick Bersch, ®, a reserve man promoted to dispatcher in 1964 and later patrolman on \he graveyard shifi. wiTI take Shull's job on' the warrant detail. "1 Bersch -alert for even I.he sligl1test pry mark or sign of a door ajar Frain l'ngc I BERRY ... Newvport Beach. A native of Alton. 111.. fl1r. Bcrr~1 attended Shurlluf College in Alton and, later, Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. He was graduated froin Oran~c Coast College and California Stale College at Ful!erton. Mr. Berry leaves his widow . Lillian Bonnie, of the family honte. 19512 Aragon Circle, Huntington Beach. 0 t h c r survivors include two sons, David and James; a daughter, DiaMe. all of the family home; another son, Marine Capt. Thomas Berry of Costa Mesa, and l\\'O grandchildren. Also surviving are a brother, Otis Berry of Alton, Ill., and two sisters, Mrs. Charles Mayhill of Alton and Mrs. Richard Reddick of Salem, Mo. The family has suggested memorial contributions to the Hoag Memorial Hospital Building Fund, or to the Shriners' Crippled Childrens Hospital through. Seafaring Masonic Lodge 708 of Newport Beach. has made SOple notable burglary arrest:;· on his night beat. Only a few monlhs ago, he caught, two men jn a downtown drug Store with a quantity of pllb and money after spotting a rear door slighUy ajar. A more spectacular case ocairred v.·hen Bersch nabbed his broken ~ burglar -who was passed out druD1l -then discovered a penny ante eaf•' brea,\l:·in ~d re-booked the man ~ven before ~ awakened in jail. with a hangover. GLASS CLUES Bersch found a window broken at i do\vntown haniburger takeout and recall· ed tiny bits of glass in the drunk'~ hair and sweater, which later tied him to the burglary. A black hair found at the burglary scene was also matched with others on the arrestee's head. Teaching first aid and medical self.help to fellow officers and community groups, Bersch is also active as a Boy Scout leader Mid in the police department'l Search and Rescue Explorer Scout,POl!lt .. Currently, he is teachlng a medical aid and self·help course for area Girl Scouts and their leaders. Newport Police Nab 20 on Narco Charges A total of fourteen juveniles and si:( adults were arrested o\'cr the . \veekend; on drug and mari juana possession:; charges by Newport Beach Police. ·-· The scattered arrests came as a result of routine patrol stops or noise com· plaints, police said. Small amounts or contraband were involved, police said. ., . + '\! ' J " . i l l ' . , l I I .o OMEGA -ACCUTRON -BULOVA ·'.· lf11 _ AUTHORIZED FACTORY SERVICE {i) ' i' . COMPLETE JEWELRY REPAIR .• rings sized and repaired ·e diamonds end precious stones remounted e pearls restrung .. . WE CUSTOM DESIGN l MANUFACTURE ALC TYPES OF J~lRY HAllOl SHOrPING CINTH llOG HAHOl Jll. VD, COSTA MISA 141-Hll HUNTINCOTON CENTH Ill.CH a, fDINGll HUNTINGTON llACH HJ-5501 \·. o,_ Moe., n-, l'rf, Tll f p.m. '•· 1·, -....... • ..... ~_ .. ·.-· •••• .'lo '• '.' .... ,,,.. ,.,. -.1 ' • ! " • • j I ' • . J ! I l l • ! l i I I ' I • • 8Y ' WILLIAM REED ' ' Reed• ••• : 'In the Wind It may sound terrible to say this, but Holly Sue, the 7-year-old daughter who runs around my house, was not & bit impressed with the feats of lh• Apollo 8 spacecraft and its crew. The reason for ber lack.' ex-citement is ·simply that s has been to-the moon a cqlQ>l• of times herself and refuses to be impressed by a oner-time visit by Astronauts Frant Borman, James A. Lovell 'ijnd William A. Anders the [e&Ch- ...-~ of space. vi"'. He visit. much like th8t of the -~o of astronauts, was with the ~d of the McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Corp. of Huntington •ilJeach.~ The company, it seems. ",ls responsible for the fact, that /atany thousands of person!" have visited the mool} area alp!Bdy. ... * ~ · Holly Sue was along the ni_ght · that McDonnell Dmigfas officials dedicated ~~Flight to the Moon 'feature at ~eyland. That w a s ·the beglrutjng of Holly's. plight became -~ knows that a big com- pany 1'llke McDonnell D o u g 1 a s would not try to fool a little girl. She knows too, that the reputa- tion of Mickey Mouse and his big Jun shop in Anaheim are not to be trifled with, not even by the .television networks. , She saw the control room. met -~the stewardesses and sat in the !';&oft chairs in the passenger com- partment of the big rocket heading •for the moon. , * Like thousands of others she felt 'the vibrations as the rocket lifted 'from the pad and she saw the . f!arth fall away and the moon come .Joto sight just as it did on television 1 last week when the astronauts . were telecasting from space .. It only took her a few minutes to make the trek across the vastness of space thanks to the McDonnell Douglas Corp. and Mickey Mouse. How could she be Impressed with th~ slowness of the flight of Apollo 8 which took a week to do what 1be had ./ ac- complished in a few minutes? Obviously the McDonnell ~Douglas Co. has done ils~ job too well. The rockets they build are so successful that even the im- ttation ones work. * Man's great stride s in technology ' have caused me nothing but trouble ' In trying to convince . Holly Sue that she should be imvressed, leav- ing me impressed with the inability cf anyone to design anything as wondrous as a little girl. No-Court .Martial . "· For ··Pueblo; ·Crew WASHINGTON (UPI') -· Penta100 sources see Virw,.lly no chanct that any member ol: the U~ Pµe~o11 crew will face court marUal fOI' coaducl durin& l..'le U months the 12 men were .prilontn of the North Koreans. The Navy ls bending over backward to praise and uprea confldence ill the crewmen, aad lo empbulse· thll the Court of Inquiry to be convened iD San Diego within ~ next few . weeks merely follow rootlne procedure. · Observers believe it would b I! especialJy '1dlfflcull to brame crewmen for signing. s·purlous "Con!Usions" trumpeted by the Communists, 1m the release of the ·men was obtained with an apoloif whlch the U.S. govern· ment repudiated both befot'e' apd after signing il. . There is the addiUonal fact that the Unit~ States is not· at war "1\lt North KOita, ralslng a question as to ' wh&t extent the Articles of War could be applied. And lega1 ·proof that the North Koreans were aided by any or l~ prisoners is nowhere in e~idence. Nevertheless, a Court of Inquiry usually is a prelude lo a possible court n\arlial, aad the Navy Judiclll B<>anl presumably will be obliged to make some statement coocerning the conduct of the prisoners. Valley School Gets $15,000 In IDEA Gift Arevalos School in the Fountain Valley School District will have an additional $15,000 to purchase audio-visual materlaJs because of a grant by the Kettering Foundation's Institute for Development of Educational Activities !IDEA ). Filmstrips, movies and records will be a part of the collection. Some of the topics already selected are "Atomic and Molecular Models," "Man and his Fight for Freedom," "Organizing Your Writing," "Historical Reconstruction of Pompeii," "Safety Tales," a n d "Problems of Conservation." Selection of the school was made on the &sis of a proposal ·drawn up by the school's teaching staff under direction ¢ teacher Lynn Murray. The proposal was de!lgned by tbe teachers durilig their "modified teaclting day" in an effort to provide chlldrm with more materials with whlcb to learn, according to the school officials. The opportunity for the financial aid was originally presented to Dr. John Goodlod, dirtctor of IDEA, by the Encyclopedia Brlttanica Corp. Purpose of the project is to provide Encyclopedia Brittanica a working tltua- tion to see how these audio-visual materials are used by teacben and children, according to the IChool officials. Tile military "(:od.t.of Caodu<t" Whl<h WU cJrnn up· wlUl.~ueh fnare Jn 1165, after allibl!1;...n U..0'1wo .... prbooen hid .:GlflCfod lo\ tbe ' Qom· munl4ta ··-durblc· the " ~ •. :Wor; opedllcally fod>i41 ''onl·or'~.et!lt- feuions. ~ ~ talM • .., \. -.. ' ,_ Tile ...,. .. ~ tlllt !·-I bec:omt•~lom-tOllve only ~ "niik. Mrik!i· -inil datoo1~rwm~~ furtlltr qu;itlOM. to the'' best ot· ;,,,, abWty.11 • ' spetiflca1jy fo<'61dden alo.o a? • .. _. I<> (~) 9...tloonalm -at hlltOry itateminta, propqaad~ 'ttccrdlng aad ·~, appeaI, lo other prilclllen of war, slgnatum lo puce ..-~· ai>ljeals, aeff crittcl1m1, Qr· any other oral, ot, written cocnnlunlcaUons ee btb,11,Gf the enemy or harmful lo the Unllod States, lb allies, the armed fortts or 9ther prisoner!!'.." The document states in its foreword that "the Code of CcrKIUCt avpliea to all U.S. mllilary personnel al all times" -with tbe word "all'.' underlined in both cases. • "It is juat as applicable during peacetime or under O>kl War conditions u Jt ls dutjng a d~ war, .. · the foreword aay1. By military 'tradilioo, a oerioml 'flew would be taken of evidence that' a prisoner collaborated with his captDr1 for tbe purpose of obtaining favortd treatment for himseU. 'Ibis comes under the beadh14 ol "misconduct u a prisootr," but Could be punished with a long prison tmn. Providing tntetligencf: to an enemy, or aiding him in a material way, could be runished by death. Pentagon sourees consider it possible that the Court of Inquiry miJht crttlciie the 1955 code as beirig too_ rigid. The desire of the mllltary sen/ices is to approve a man's conduct if he exercised his be~ , Judgment without seeking personal adVantage and without aiding the enemy. Want w Be Cage Coach? FV Loop Has 30 Teams Do you think there might be a i>parl: ol Johnny Wooden l)olng hidaon inside you? Does the sound of a buketbill swishin;'. through a net IW1 st1r a few mU8Cles? Then why not come out and help coach one of tht 30 teams in the Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation • Department's 1969 JurU9r Basketball League? The league will begin play Jan. 25. Two clinics will be held Jan. 11 and 18 for the coache3 to meet their playtts. Leagues will be fonned on age levels for boy1 in grades U . Tbooe who would like lo be a coach or lend a hand, contact the Parks and Recreation l>ep<rlmell ar phone 912-2124. Swede Plans World Cruise Ocean View Pair Named to Join 'Change' Seminar On Pendulum-driven Boat STOCKHOLM (UPI) Hans Dahlstroem, 37, a Swede, p1aM to "sail" around the world next March Jn a boat that will have neither sails nor con- . ventlonal engine. The vessel will be powered by a pendulum contraption he invented. When the waves rock the boat the pendulum swings. When the pendulum swings it turns the propellers and theoretically the 24-foot lifeboat will skim through the water on a voyage he hopes \vill outdo Sir Francis Chichester who depended on sails for his lone voyage around the world. "J will make use of the movement Sophia and Carlo To Build Geneva Pregnancy Clinic GENEVA (AP) -Sophia Loren and her husband, Carlo Ponti, plan to build a clinic in Geneva that will specialize in the care of difficult pregnancies. an informed source reported today. Miss Loren, now 34, has had lour nliscarriage!. She finally gave birth to ;: boy over the weekend after being in {feneva for most of her pregnancy und. er the care ol Prof. Hubert de Watte- ville, one ot Switaerland'1 leading gy- necologists. The source 1aJd Ponti has paid $1.4 million for three adjacent apartment houses and will spend another $900,000 cooverting the apartmenll and installing the' mo.o;t modern medical equipment. The source said MJss Loren -.net her husband want to do something for Geneva to show their gratitude for the cart.Iha bu recelved here. ' ' of lhe water," Dahlstroem uid. "The waves will wash me aroand the globe." PENDULUM ENGINE , He calls hll contraption a pendulum engine and says the center piece ls a 2,%00 pound lead pendulum built tnto a box. "The bottom of the waves keeps the pendulum moving all the t i me , ' ' Oahl!troem said. "The movement ii then transformed in a gearbo1 te power a nonnal propeller." Dahlstroem claims he will cet ta horsepower out of his engine. "I have been testing a smaller ftlline with a pendulum of ooly 440· pounda in the boat this fall and tt pve me eight horsepowers and an avtr.ap ipeed of four knol-'I," Dahlstroem 11ys. The engine needs at leut two.foot waves to work properly. "The weathermen tell me the wavn on the big oceans almost never fall below two feet, so I'm not ~ about that J estimate I will make a speed of say five or si1 lnoW' out there," Dahlstroem says. He thinks hU engine mllht ....,. .be standard equipment In Jlfeboata. "Moat lifeboats have fuel only for 24 houn, but with my engine they could reach shore without any fuel at all ." GREAT DETAIL Dahlatroem has plaMed his trip ln great detail, and hi• whalHhaped boat IJ equlPJ>edfot all e.,..genclel. Since bi.I engine makes JUtle or no noise, be bu, -lnldod • lpecial vibrator ln the bollom ot the •""1 lO UOi> 'wnaJ.,j ... ., • A food star. chain will oupply him · -u tam "' apedally -food for the lrip, 1lblcb he eJlllC!I· will' lake about one year. . Dablolnenl wiD Doll •rour111lho w1ll aloi>e, but he 11j'a he ml"1I brlni lib parrol lo_kO<p hlin tomP'Jll'- "There hu been a lot ot Wk obou1 round-lhMarth s a i 11 n I 1 , ' ' 11y1 Dahlstroem. "814 nobody hu yet Nilecl the proper route, via the poles." "Thal II wltat I'm JJ'"'1I to do ood that wUI brtal< the record ot Sir Fnn- cb Cliichuter ind all the others." ' OCt.an View SdJool lliltrkl prlnclpoll WlJllam Gerhard! and WIDlam Leldlor have been selected lo represent the dllllrict ln Hunlinflon Beoch In the Jn. vttaUonaJ seminar "Plannlftl: f o r Change" now under way. The seminar is spcmorecl by the Onnp Co\lnly PACE Center (Projectl> to Advance Creativity In Edllcll!Ga); ParticlpaUon ii llmltecJ to 11 county school ~ton. Hope \'kw School Principal Gerhordt •"" llarb!>u< View School ,,,.,...,..I ~ _... ·-inatid i;;-~ CIM<Doe Rall. "PJarmtnc f« Cheat" ii under 1 the direction ot Dr. K.enndh 'IJ< ot UCl;A. His topic wu eeloc:lad because GI the relallon1blp ol ..id dlanp lo educalloa aad hecallll<, •ccordi!ll:·lo Tt•, "~ tlee 1111111 me.et tbe ,diall..,.-Of cllll!lt on a 4ally ~Is?' --~ In eJaht seaionl the oen\lnsr 11 clel!ID- ecl to ""'""rt tbe pirtldpanla into u... foe: c!hlnge." 1'Je SRQP' wtl1 lludy the Deed flJ< ,chqe, ..,....,.,! stta~lel lo Implement · It '111\f •lhe real!t.lnce lo It In the Internal «pnlu- Uon1 of achoo! ageftclel:. Gas Cost Boost Hearings ,Open ' . ·I,DS ANGl:LES <Vl'll - T h e ~·b~~ ~ · ti · ' 'California and _,,' -Gu 0.. ftr. Tito """"-\otallnl l!IU mIIUon-.. The nte lnqelf!! woWd alfect owr 1.1 )lllllJop <Ullomeil Jn is counU... , The ""'"Plnier ll1 the ...,,._ II needed for an .,,Ud,....., hlM In the Nalutal G11 C<>. aad the 10 - f-a1111r1as. Friday'1 holrinfl will be held al the S<rra,Bulldlng In downtwon Loa Anaela. Gaa. ~ amomen have bem ln- vitecl to tatlly. . MoodOY, -lO. 1!68 ($) _ Floating Track .Field· . t' ., . . Pfe.ident Johnson's decision to halt the ·born bing of North Vietnam brought a lot of spare time and on deck' foot races to fill it for Navy personnel on boord" die ·U.S. aircraft carrier :Intrepid. The ·.i>ip which was used as a oose for b0inl3ing mi!siofts, fl no\v in the Soiltb ~ine. See. -. High· Price . Pai~ for Cong • 8 Allies Die inDay-wng Hamlet Battle . ... ,1· ' ( DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) -The police had ·a tip that weapons were being cached In a home in Thanh Khe, a hamlet on the ouiskirts of Da Nang. guerrillas jumped out of a &helter un- derneath the floor, throWing hand grenades and firing assault rifles. A ~.s. Mlll1ne • cra.w)ed to within ·~ fiet· of 'the poich' or the 1iouie but iuerrilla bullets tilled him. The hamlet chief came out of his : After a day-long battle, ~o· Ci( the sevtn Viet COng had · been 'kiijed. four. were captlU'ed and the·other ~·esca~ But they had tilled. eight penoM' and wounded 11. Three U.S. Marines· were house as the three guerrillas ran down a street. They killed him. The boy's mother lay dead behind. A U.S. M'arioe pacification team sta- tioned nearby sent. several Leathernecks and some . militiamen they had trained to reinforce the police team that went out to. investigate. Near noorl, the· police questioned a boy near the hot ·under suspicion.· His mother acreamed from i1111ide, and three The Viet Cong· joined four others in another house 100 yards away to maie a it.and. A company from the South Vietnamese Army'• 15llt Reglment"wu cal§ed Jn. ·=ed~ dea_d, and t~o tnot'e ~ : :GOVenlment trOops conUnued' their ~h In Thanh Kbe today. ... NEW ... AT THE WORLD'S MOST UNIQUE BANK! GOLDEN PASSBDOI .. Your new Golden Passbook Savings Account will draw t!la hiplfst bank rate of il!terest avaHable 'anywhere! . Now )'OU can enjoy 5.13% lntereet an• Ne)vport Netlonal Bank Golden Pe1ebo0k AecoUrtt .whtlfl your saving• and all dtvidenda reina!n •-yMf'. This {e naw poeaib._ wMn OlW 6o/0 current annual , IRNAlt rate 11 compounded delly and "l!dlted"'q11"'"'1)1 to; your Oolden Puab9ok Acoouht Thi• ·~ a«:O\lnt la aY811fible to lndMC:lulls. COi por'allOh•, prutnenhlpe and non-p<t>At organ-. . . You'll be pitaaed'.to know thet yoor 1.ntilreft ~ments .,. ftexlbfe acoordfna· to your own !Ml'lonal needs. Wtth a minimum depoelt of $500 af!d au~nt depoelta of $t00or"1Ql"e, ~ 11 no1fmlt to th• amount you can depoait ln your Goldltn Pa~k Savings Aceouht Your Interest atarta fl1:Mn the.date of deposit &nd contlnuu to the date of wlthdrlwal. W• con•lder tbte 1 golden opportUnlty to1Mkt1yrour aaV1ngi grow faster In • plMaant and ff:CUl'l ,atmo•P"9r•. We ~le· 111'8 .. toll yoU ..... -till• ""~ ""111 .... o: 1nterett Com• Jn Ind ,IH u. onmtll the coupoft belbv "1 we'll do tM rett. I "\7'_ NEWPOl!T.NATIONAL .,,,.K-----, 1 1 ~ (~~ •d~ d yovr neerett·cfflc.) Geftti4irMR; .I. f!m Jntareatad In opelMg • ,.... -OolilOn p-""'°""'" I Q ~d.~myohook(monorordor),r.<$.--1 ($500.00 or llD'9). Pleue 099n the 90CCMlftt mil I eend M '"°" 1.nfonnetlon. I ~ ..,...tand thtlt ~cannot b9 madt untll pn:pr .to· I Mlful'i earch hew been nitumed .t' ri on fh , · "" the 8'hk. r I 0 ~H Mnd IM more infomiellon •boLC. 'f04ll nwf, I I " Go/don Pnoboo« """'""' Ac<ou"" . • . I· a-.. f'_ ... 7 CONVVUENT OFFICfS TO SERVE YOU IN OIWIGE COUNTY , ' .. ......, .... . orti. ~ • •a'tJIM ~11 • ~lflkll .,,.. It~ "2.J.141 • ..... omc. _....It ....... MN!Jt -.... OfllCll WMtlll' It DMr' Mz.3111 ·--C.--M • ..._. ttc .... m-m • ...,,.,.,..,..,...BM 111~ ...... -( ... ~ .... r..lltll 111"'840 ' ' "' I ' j • • The .today, to joir Counl) month N"'1 brunt dislric the Le are ,u "It's Mayor sometl away that OI ·NtWJ the ciJ a lab -Harbor ~ hucol !run I of Feb! Tbe a five-t five a propooo •peclal .f MI $11 In i A Co< owner I pear- carP,etinJ Claren ]OfS fro1 440 E. I pollce lo lnvesti will be~ A1lo I • gallon ..... , . .. • ' ' : ~,fl';m•• licked up the wall• ol bU. ·h • u s e, and Mrs. Mory :. ~ed out.a window for ~ heJPi .~; ol tbe Loodon nlibt, , bri\ilij:-treez1ng ·tempeiire1, · "8111&.. man . ..:areying adder. !He '.lllaiid It next to the use, cllmbed to the window and Jped lhe 45-Y.ar-old woman to · ety. Wltllout giVlng his ~ame, he •liJ>-~way into ti\• darkness in his T-shirt and undenhorts. Astronaut Wekomed Home • • 1 a .Copter• fA•t ... 14 Allies 1 Ignoring ' , tat~st · V:C Truce SAIGON (AP) -The Viet °"'I lhot clowft tbrOe more AP>erlcU bellc:opten over the w0eken4, ralafn& to 911 the nwilber of Chopper> reported loat In ' . combat In South Vietnam. • As th& Alnetjcan hell~ loues clim· •• y ~ ~. ,th.nd• o( U .. s. llJld South Viet· , ·namae ~ IJUlhed al!tad with IO <llfenaive · operaUon•, Ignoring the 9lart ·of a New Y~'a ceaae-f.lrt proclaimed by the VleJ Cong. . All thre.e . heµcop$ere lhot down 'before.the ...-rt rted. One wu hit a miles north of S.a i k on ~luj:day, klllllig two Alnerlc~ , 11"4 lnJurin& ~o others. Another was hit Sunday in tay Ninh Provin~, nJ>rtitw~, of Sai&on, ~' lhree men were .injui'ed. The third w shot down In the northern sector of the ltp· try, near Quang Ngai City, and on~, crewman wu killed. ' · ~ meeting · and thaf there will be no oilier ,,.wi.r, forceo wilhlll 111-lelllhs ' f of a ,.. m.11& -one kilometer ~ Of the mleting place. Henry Hiio. i. of Chicago, an oboelst, caught evezyone's atten- tion at O'Hara intern;itional Air- port.' llttA!, on his way to a con- cert in Dallas, is S.foot-2. • Apollo 8 astronaut William Anders is welcomed hc>me by Fr. Larry Carney following Sunday mass al Houston. Astronaut Anders attended services with his wife and family after his ·early-morning arrival lrCrn Hawaii. Daughter Gayle, 7, seems more interested in the well-wishers who gathered than in listening to Fr. Camey. The Viet Cong broadcast an an- nouncement that its forces began observ- ing a 72-hour cease-fire at 1 a.m. Saigon time but warned they would strike back if attacked. South Vietnam and the _United States said they would not observe a New Year's cease-fire this year because of alleged Viet Cong violations of the 24-hour Christmas truce. .Police Probing Gangland .Haunts In Brink's Theft Trygve Lie, First V.N. "All operations are being conducted as nonnal," a spokesman for the U. S. Command said. He said 14 American operatJons of' battalion size or larger were in progress: South Vietnamese spokesmen reported government forces had 44 such operations under way. Secretary General, Dies AP PMM· A PROUD MOTHER Sophie Loron Hu B•by BOSTON (AP) -The FBI e1:amined . , • .. . a key. and P.Glice visited underworld OSLO, Norway (UPI) -Trygve Lie, "Li&·iwtMr, like t s_Pn•t tht .sattiii . hango1.1l5 today: for' a ,clue in. the l)ijacking first secrelaf)' aene.ral of tl\e UDi~ g~:+, .. qd ,the-'Pd4oe ii upe~~ols()ft\e'800,00ofromaBrmk's ~ored Nations and leader of the body through 11,,t·.ta...·'"'·:_. -·•··Mr•. Rt:t MatlCM·· car Satm1fay four ~Jocks. from the sc~e the years of the cold war, died today _. · ..,... -of the $! J illl B ks bbe · whlle spending a Christ.mas and \ New c"'*·G1t4.~.aon. Robti't hold bpthei.1950 . · m on . rtn ro ry 10 Year's vacation int.he Norwegian moun- IM 01~~ -~'~' ~»'. recdpe~yur_.: · hro men used :·a key to open the taios. tie was 72. monOi.. 'Mr1. MacK_erMer . ~radupttt door of t.he parked truck, surprising Lie was having IunCh with Mrs. Sissel jrom Western ~ichigan Univerritu lzi. a guard, Rlchan:f..-E. Haines, 43, of Bratz, one of his three daughters, when Kalama.too whdt Robert too1'. .a.dl ··Tewbbury who wu alone in the vehicle death ~ame. She had left the table gr et Jrom Michigan State U·nitif~si~'S .-'f[ftile~ hts h,o teammates took a coffee for a moment and when she returned Communtcatiom School. . . ' .:7 break. . she fouail' :.him slumped forward, his • P II .... th b'" I h head on the-table. He had not pn!viously .. : · · o ce-..... e ro UO:rs cou d not ave .... ~ I ' apear lb t M'd • g· I entered the tfu ck· If inside bolti on ~e~ ~eJXli'te!J ill. . " ' s. a ' w~s~er!' ir s the truck doors had been latched. None .. Ue,.a_~!Yed by .twQ. other daughters, JUS! aren I inter.eslejllri joining the were.In place, lnvestiiators said. Mrs. llilrl'~1'4ckendo;fl of,f>caradale, N. boys-at lea~t m5llie Boy Scouts, A key was lound"liier at .the ocene Y., who •tnlormed &¥,.current~ !hal is. An mylta~on fur girls to of the robbery. €0mpany offlcla1' said eeneral:. ·u Thant, .of .the death, and )Oln the Boy Scouts Explorer Scout it was not iasuo.t'by Brlnq·· · · , jl(rs..Melte Holst who survived World pro1ram in Omaha, Neb. bas been Felix A javage Jr ··~er: !of . Wal ll' Jn..,.occupied Norway while Lie out for 5~ ..fiib~.,,a result of Brinks' ~ offlce, ~·;:r.~ u81 ~r '"":'~ ln)hil. tovernment-ln~zile in Lon- studies on bow to ~ attnfe.t..,..d •• ., I can,UcertoJn the total taken ivlU d{n~· hold boys age 14 to 18. The invi!a· be .ln"lhe-ar ... pl $800,000." -Ca~ of death w., noL known Im· lion is yet to bt accepted. Ail···a1idl<..wM.~.tarted...~U!ldll' to medl""1y but friends of the falllily said • determ~ bow rriuch of tile !ol>l''Wu _ be hid not been seriously Ill before In cash. The robbery was th'°'e 13th of -his vacation trip. . Cups of aou.p and thou sermons ~ hod 4', fjfeCt on an unidenUJied habi~.'Of the MaraeUle Salva- tion Amr Hoqrital in France. The man tD07l $20,000 in the Na- licma! LolttrJI '!Tld donated $200 of it to the Salvation A rm.11. H. 0. Pirtle, 23, graduated from the J>Olice academy in Houroon last week. On his first day on the job, he arested !brae bank burglars in the !int three hours. Said his superior, Lt. W. c. Doss: "Here I've been on the fnl'!'e for 29 years and haven't caughl. a~ burglar yet." :1 ' . ·-.: .. Three truck .drivers in Bristol, England flnally"tfred of tapping politely on a telepllo\te 11ootb where two young men wera talking - lntermlnably -to !heir girlfriends. The tJ'l!c(en tlgbUy bound a length of rope rliµnd and roljl!d the booth, traping the two youths inside. They finally got out by hanging up on their girlfriends -and dialing pol- ice assistance: a money express truck in eaStern Death took place at the moUtltain "Massachusetts slnce 1950. . resorf: of Geilo in central Norway. Hainea said Uie robbers _ ~M.:.;.e" L 11e served as secretary general at ski masks and gloves handddticlflalnee' the height of the cold war and his wriats and manacled him ~ig Ul!S~ back. term in office p~obably was the stormiest of the truck drove several blocts-·-to or any U.N. chief executive. a parklrig 1ot'p the Re~ .,j·Motar He was boycotted by the Soviet Union, Vehicles, 'traDirem.d the nioMy tnt6 a presmn.ably because of his stand In Korea vehicle driven by a third man and fleet against the North Korean onslaught that Bob Hope Back From Vietnam Clubhouse Fire Kills Five Boys LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bob Hope WORCESTER, Mass. (UPI) -The back from hla lath Chrimnaa with u:S: . bodies of five teen-aged boys were aerv:lcemen overaeas ·aay1 •'1 may 10 . removed today from ·the rubble of a to the moon ne%t 1W -but they told < homemade clubhouse which burned to me 1.bey don't want any fat astronauts." . the grouna after a portable stove ap- Hol>' .at 65, waa his usual bouncy, parenUy exploded. wlsecr~ktng self Sunday a111 he sprang Four other youths were 1njured In off a plane from Vietnam, reeling off a. !be fire which deatroYed• the iw..ttory strln& of topical commenli. buildiQg In an l!olated wi>oded erea off Then, alter making his moon irlp com-" Indian Hill road about 10 p.m, Sunday. ment, he became 11erlous. " All five of the'. dead wete from "t just hope that we don't have to Worcester. make another trip," he told a Crowd of Authorities said the hut had been built about 100 friends. "l just hope something by neighb0r"°"'1 youths and was used good comes (IUt or these Paris peace as a hangou t. Ten . youths were inside talks, and I just hope this is the last the hut when the fire started, police Christmas trip." said. Northwestern Cold Wave Zero Temperatures Stretch From Michigan to Kansas C•Hto.1tia I C...c.& C ... t aN1 ftlf' ~ h .n,r. --.. "Jndt, ~It'· lJ lo II ....... 11. T....,.. """'-f1 to '2. v" ........... .....,.,.,,_ r• "''" """" ' Miii'! .., • • • ... //II . .cl. 1 ... lelld ..,..,.....,. _.. -G " "· n. wttw ..,,..,.rw. -''·' elf. ..... S•n, lffoott, TUu _ ... ~ 111911 • -"l l;OI '·'"· ).! TUISOAY Fir.I low .......... lt:t2 1.11"1. 2.~ Flr1I Mt~ , ••••. f:l1 1,1!1. 1,1 $ttolld low '. ' .. l;Of '·"" f.1 ~ Nfll ............... , l;Q ''"'' 1.A M.-ltl-l:U Jl,lfl. Ith 2:U '·'"· Sn lllff ,,11 t.1'111. ""41Sl t.m. P'MM Uotl 0 , N-,.-1..,1 0. Jin. ~ '""· 11 J111. 11 J111. 2J () .S. S•mmory Most of "1t MllOll slllvwttl loOrf t1 • C'Otd -~ l<rott. ...... Norlll· "'"' ll!fO tM Cltfttr•I Hrt of tl!e COU,.. tr,, l«OmN lllt'd bY ¥1ldfloread MIOW. Tl!' ''"' de9rtt II"' t11rttd '""" ,,,. Hr Mldlll•1' fl) 111:• .... t fl) tllll PMtflC: Nor111-1, ~rktf iw r.c:01'11 low ruor,,., tor ltll! -"' " Ot<MitoH •I K•ll-11. Mont., ......, If w.11 :n ._ ereet bllow n ro, 11 ~•""• W1111 .. wn.rt rt ... n ""'"' "'"' ltro, 1rid •I SHl!lt, •l'oe•• tl>ll llmllt'rll~•e .... , -·~'-told .,.....,, "f rnll'lt• iwirt I~ tUt d lt>f' o""°" -""' "*' of lhfo Mi!f¥1"t tor •-er blOWll'll -· •1111 1>111~­.,..,, t~P«.l..i k> bf' l!t11r\'.llluS .,IC! lrttll,.. r11n ~r 11ffl 11ont tr.. Ml'.1111· tf'fl l'dte cl tfllP Mlclwnl "'°"" bell -odllle hi lllt -drlvl"" Wllll!"°"I· Temper•t-ure• "'911 Lirw Pree. Alb11•1111••u• "' " ·--• " Allilnt1 " ,. ••t~1ld " ., •ltri'lior(t. .. ·" "' .... " " "' BOllOll " " Cllke• " " (ln(!nntll " " Ctwtl11'1d " " ... ...,,_ " • Ott Mol..et " " •• Delroft " " e.,,,.,. " • For! Wottfl • " FrHM " • "'"'" ... ... -" " "~"' " • l(jt,,... (lty • " t.11 v ... , " " LC$ A11t•lfl " " Mt""I Bttcfl • " Mllwtllkft • • MlllMWOl!I " • ·" --M .. " N-Yerfl H " 0.ltltM • " ..... " ., "~ , .... " .. PNlldt:llWl141 " " ,_, " " Plttsb!.lttl'I " " .~ Portltncr " • ·" ll•Pld (l!v ·> ... lll'd I Mf " " ·~ .. " S•crt""1'11!t " " " LO<llt " " ... ~u ... , " St!! lt~e Citv • Sin Olt!!O .. .. kn P'r1 ... 11c11 " " 51nt~ ltrbl•• " • ~•tllt " , '°"''M • ·• fl-.rrMI H " Wttl!lnetofl • " brought the United Stales and the U. N. Command into war against the Com· munists. . Lie was appointed secretary general Feb. 1, 1946, when the world body came into being and res.igned Apri 10, 1953, saying t h at in view of the cease-fire in Korea a new secretary would be "more useful than 1." The rotund Lie was a lawyer and took part in the Norwegian labor move· ment from his youth. He served as minister of justice and minister of supply in lM: labor government before the war came to Norway. Lle followed the king and the govern· ment in . exile in IAndon in June, 1940, and tater that year became foreign minister in the Norwegian government-in· exile. , , He took over as secretary general in 1946 for a five-year tenn and agreed to serve another three years. He resigned In 1952 and wu succeeded by Dag Ham· marskjold. This Meanwhile the U. S. Command an· nounced today it will send five represen- tatives New Year's Day to a second meeUng with the Viet Cong In an attempt \ to secure the release of three American prisoners of war promised freedom by the enemy. In a broadcast over the Anned Forces RadiG, U. S. headquarters said a cease- fire would be observed around the meeting site 50 miles northwest of Saigon. "To ensure the safety of the prisoners and the participants from the opposing side," the U. S. announcement said, "a corridor tG the meeting place, free of military action on t h e part of t h e allies from 6 a.m. until three hours after the meeting ends, will be establish· ed. The corridor will be approximately two kilometers wide and will run southwest from th e meeting site in a straight line." The U. S. Command said It assumed the Viet Cong would send an equal number or unarmed representatives to · Gas Company employee is a friend of the , family-- ' yours He'a. ready to serve yOu. He'a. hi1hly trained. He'• aood et hf1 job. That's why he works for U,, And his job i! becomin,e more important all the time. We're an investot-owned company. And that'i lh1l\a:Tihg ~o employers. You have to .. tiafy your customers, the people who buy your service, by beina •ffident. And you have to be efficient to ••tisf'y your ownen. For they're the people who invest in )'OUt busine11 •nd mate tli• 1ervice po11ible. Baby Boy Born To Sophia Loren GENEVA (UPI) -Aclrtss Sophia Loren today proudly premiered for the world her first baby, a dark-haired blue. eyed boy named Carlo whose birth fulfill· ed his mother's dearest wish. "I am so happy," she said. "The boy is won· derful." Miss Loren, 34, gave birth prematurfly Sunday to the seven pound 12 ounce b o y by Caesarean operation. He h a d been expected in January. . Mother and child were ltt good · health said Dr. Hubert de Watteville;-theWorld renowned gynecologist who has helped many a celebrity through dHficult pregnancies. .. r , Thi1 means we work bard to cive the best po11ible 1.mee, •t reaaonable rate1. lnve1tor ownenhip (1 tJurt ''extra 1tep" -why w-. h.ne ..n;cetben who.,. extra courteou1 and alcillf'ul, •• well •• being em.dent. It'• the rea1on we look for economiea in every WQ po11ible and han been able to reduce t•• rates six timea in the last five yeU'I. It'• al10 one of the ra11ons our bo1ine11 i1 1rowin1. And how! ' :e be no -leolhs "' th< -- n en Sophia or the i blue- fulllll- 'I am 1 won· tlurrly ounce ~had beallh 'World helped lfflcull .. - ' I Air West Rejects Hugh~s SAN FRANCISCO CUPl) - 11Ullooalre Howard Hughes' t90 million offer for Air West '•fl -an offer approved by ~1 1tockbolder1 ..)>ut rejected by the afrllne'a board of directon -will not be txteodod beyond Tuesday's deadline, ae<:<>rdlng to rtpresentatives for lhe secluded financier. Riber\ A. !llaheu and oilier Hughes spokesmen ~ bitterr.ea over the directors' Jl-11 Vote Saturday rejecting the offer of the Las Ve1u ff tyeoon. The diffi:tors' action r followed announcement that 9# pen:ent of Air We 1 i 1~ atocibolders voted ln favor, }\ or the sale. Iii "It Ls d.ifricult to believi JI that these men would see (It. I' to Oout the l~gally expressed • will of the stockholders they Wt are supposed to repreJenl," said Maheu. Francis T. Fox, director ot aviation for Hughes Tool Co., ·II.Id 'the "traveling public and employes of Air West are amoiig the chief victims of His l ,ast Post .,s th1J unbelievable conduct." ~ 1be board, wttloh previously had been split 12·12 on the Nevadan's b i d , ae2&l'ently voted against it beCause of a last minute merger oU.er from Northwest Airlines. Pallbearers carry the casket bearing the body of USS Pueblo crewman Duane Hodges to gravesite at Creswell Cemetery, Ore. Full military honors were paid to the sailor who was killed while burning secret documents during the ship's seizure by the North Koreans. About 500 attended the weekend !!lervices. Air We st was fonned last April by merger of Bonama, Pacifi c and West Coast airlines -and has lost money and had service problems ever since. The regional carrier flies 9,000 miles of routes over the western states and ad· jacent sections of Canada and ?tfexico. Wife S a y s Japan's Premier Beats Her Scientists Assail Pope Over 'Pill' The northwest offer, which was made informally and will need approval by both the Civil Aeronautics Board ·and the Securities and Exchange Commission, came Jut Tues- day. The offer of one-fourth share or Northwest stock for each Air West share was about equal to Hughes' $22 a Share bid, but opponents of the Hughes proposal said the Northwest offe r was better for tax purposes, 2n d Capping Attempt Set GRANADA HILLS (AP) - Workmen prepared today !o make a second attempt at cap- ping a leaking gas well which burned out of control f o r fl ve days until Dec. 22. The oMginal cap was re· moved from the well last Th~day when the gas leak was discovered. ' TOKYO (UPI) -According to his wife, Premier Eisaku Sato beat her, went out with geisha girls and rarely talks to her. "I wu beaten by him many times. My sympathizers told him to stop his violence but because-he Is a reticent man, his hand moves too fast," Mrs. Sato said in an interview which waa published in the Shukan Asahi magazine and was hardly raising a Japanese eyebrow. Wife beating Is more readily accepted in Japan where couples such as the Salos, often were paired off by their parents In childhood. Mrs. Sato said her husband h; her cousin and was betroth- c~ to her by arr.an&emenl when she was an elementary school pupils. Asked if she lovOO her husband when they \Vere married 40 years ago. she said she had "no specia l liking for him . "That's why the marriage held little interest for me. Don't you think that if we love and suffer marriage will be more interesting?" Mrs. Sato, considered by Interest par year on $5,000 Full· Paid Investment Certificates ~d 1 5 ~%1 interest per year on Pasab k ~ Thrift Accounts of any amo t a Interest on $5.000 FulJ..Pakl Thrift Certiricales Is. paid tiy check at the end of each calendar quarter. Interest on lhe Passbook Accounts Is comput9d monthly, credlled and compounded quarttr1y. • Thtll lnveatmentt are available, to lndlvld· uart. U10Clatlon1 and corporations-In Callfor· nl1only. • Slnot Its founding In 1916, Morris Plan has promptly met every requ11t for wlthdrawat. AIMtl exceed one hundred mllllon dollars. ''und• pl•c•d lhrovghJ•"· 15 ttr/l /nlt rtst from Jan 1. • PERIONAL LOANS, TOO Bin ConloUdallon • Trawl. Tana. Any good ,..,,, Morris Plan Newport Beac1t..7-3700 Newport Boulevard r 67J -J 700 Othtr 011!ct1 ttiroughout C1 l1!ornlt observers an lmportant In· fluence on her husband 's political success, said their early marriage years were made difficult by beatings and by his "dissipations" with geisha girls. "He beat me probably because he was not an arguing sort of man. My eldest son was always sympathetic with me because he saw m~ beaten by his father so often." she said. She said her e\de.st son once saw Sato walking with · a geisha and "thought of throw· ing a stone at him." "Even in his (lhe prime minl!ter's) younger days; just after we were married, he often der;erted me and spent nights ouuide the home," she sa id. "I'm sure it was a sort of dissipation." Mr s. Sato said her husband no\Y comes home at night but rarely talks to her. "Eisaku ju11t likes to play cards by himself -all alone," the magazine quoted her as saying. "Indeed, he never stopped playing cards in the past 40 years. He uses them to tell his fortune.'' She said she dislikes belng a prime minister'• wile and will be glad when Sato retires but added that she doesn't look forward to spending time with him during his retire- ment years. ~--. .. DALLAS, Tex. (AP ) Three biologists called Pope Paul VI'• encycUc1l on birth control "misguided and Im· moral" In a statement ffieas- ed Sundey at the American AS80CiaUon ol the Advan- cement of ScJence annual meeting. The statement, which ,the three said bad been signed by 2,600 scltntl!ts, said: "We pledge that Vi:e will no longer be irnprused by pleas for world peace or com- passion for the poor from a · man whose deeds help to JJNl- mote w_ar and make poverty Inevi table. "The world muat quickly come to realize thlt Pope Paul VJ has sanctioned the deatha of countJeu numbers o f human bein1s with h J s misguJded and Immoral en· cyclical." The statement was luued by Dr. Jeffery J . W. Baker, professor of biology at the University of Puerto Rlco, Dr. Paul R. Ehrlich, professor of biology at Stanford University, and Dr. Emest Mayr, I p~ fe!.!Or of biology at Harvard Unlveraity. Tbe more than 2 , I O o signatures on the statemmt were obtained by mail and through distribution of it at the scientist meeUn1 I n Dallas, Dr. Baker uld. Our slylists ~ trim a:nd ahape- and pile Utcse cap. t ivatinl' curls hil'h on your head. Then crown the style 'vith our glO\\'ing Fanci.full col or that rinses in, shampoos Sl.ontpoo and "' out .... ·hcocYer you wish. Need& no J>eroxide, and color3 "·hile we 3.50 set your hair! Lustrous natural lookiuf colon to cover gny, delicate pastel loninl' colors for bleached hair. Bvdgel perm.--······································· 7.!IO "O AP'l>IHTllENT NECESSARY llULLIRTOH Ortl\ff ''",., Hl•bc!r 11 0!'11'1 .. lhre" HUNTINGTON al:ACH l-llHll!rriiloll Ctnft r fdl-r •I IMI Ol<!H F..,.. l'llWl"ORt llACl4 F11~1oft llltl\d Mf(Ar1'11111' 11 l"IC (II H.., I' 'I I • Mondi¥, Dlcimbtr 30, 1968 'dAJLV M if Cunard Rejects New Britis h Li ner ABOARD 'ftll!) QUE EN EIJJl"8B'IH (AP) -Brllan- nla'f' mwett ooun pride, the llnar •Queen Elizlbeth I, 1teamecf home....-.1 at ha)( 1peod today amid 1 growing v~ ovu her troublefWed ~crui... TM CUnanl Une announ<- ed ll had nfUled to ICC<pi de- llmy of lbe M,000-ion ship, which cost fl9,I million, until !be bulldm cleared up "th< ... mal explDl!on" problems lo the &hJp'1 two turbine englneei and compJeled their woik ln the pasanger and service mas. Jllaldq II knola, lbe llner .. WP e:rpected to rt1di South· amplon 'Ibursday. The repairs m expected. to take at least tb(ee wetb, and Sir Basil • SqlallJ!llce, Cllnar'd'a chair· matt..caDolled i .'Warmup !our· dl1 c:ru1le Jan. 10 and the new Qaeerr• maiden tranut· llllllc "1lP to N.., Y«k on Jan. 17 •• MonlllanJ,Ollll-had been -for llio 1 .. trlpa. In Brlllln, dammll IDcre,._ eel for · (OVtl'DIDllll lmoilrY lnto the QEl'• trout>lti. Abc>rt two Wrdl al 1111' coo- slnlc:llon coatai;:e paid from pammt11t . Nmpa. perCOllllllOl1tato~qreed the llhlp'• flulll .... 1 bt)lond the trouble1 •ll)'icted on any shakedown en.use. T h e liner Jett t h e Clyde. side 1blpyard In Scotland last Husband Killed DANVILLE, Calif. (UPI) - ~1rs, Jeannette Tompkim, 49, Martlnu, was reported recovering In good condltJon SWlday from injuries received in 1 plane crash that killed her husband. COSTA MESA 2200 Hlrtoor IMI. All Penn•y Stores Opeii li••ry Night Monclay Through sGtiinfay enne~t . -. ~LWAVB RRBT GUALITY THRU SAT~ ONLY!. ' REDUCED'l 1~ • SAVE 31.90 ON THE PAIR! Penncrest9 two 1peecl 14 lb. top load wa1herl All p0rcelalnl Reg.179.95 NOW$159 Pay as Httle as 7.50 per month -- • Two wosh and spin speeds • nw .. wmh/ri,.,,. tempwcrtur9 Mttings • 14 lb.~ capadty • Safaty r.d rwitch with tvb broke • Colon""""' Pennc1 wt• thl'N temperatvr. 9a1 clothes d..,... .In white· Reg.154.95 NOW$144 ' Pay as lilll• aa $7 per month • Poraolain flnlth lop ond dtum • Eaay -llftt liltw • Safaty atart IJWitch 3 tomponr!llN Pen-oloc!!lc clothoa dryer In whlto ..... 124,95 NOW $114 Save 21.95 Pennc,.....14' ncMrost .-.frlge; alor fNezer In white Reg. 239.9.5 .. NOW$218' Pay 111 llttlo 111 f,IO por-" ..... • 3 _, ....... -ldnc--2 slicing """" • 2 '-"loo lnl)'l-oldo -...d-3 door ..... • 101 ~ lb. r.-~ty-twin crbpan •.full widlll dolrr ...i .oClll •- • NO MONIY DOWN ••• USI PINNIY'S TIMI PAntlNr PLAH N E W P 0 RT BEACH (F1ahion Island) HU NTI N GT O N BEACti 1 (Huntington C.ntol) . I • ' • '' ... ' f .)'AIL Y 'PILOT . ' ' ' . ' . ':.I' . ·1 i •• ,; , . ' .. 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" j ~ ~.~.~~ ~ • t/.l ·-~~· .... .i.l' ' . -. - HUNTINGTON BEACH . 119,,, ls1dnd) (Huntington ·centet) • , " ' .. 1 ., ' I . . -- ' II -. ·-~ . ---- • jo AILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I Dwarfing W9rld's Best ln ~W1>rld of great advr.pture aod contrlhuUon to man's owled •, Magellan, the Vikings, !)clumbui and a tong lis ot._otter~urageous men who dlscove~ and fi rst mappedtne'rnew world" of the Americas iilade their mafk on world history. They were the world's best in their time. Their achievements in history no\v are d\varfed by the flight of Apollo 8 to and around the moon. Tbe three modesl ast ronauts -Frank Borman, .lames A. Lovell, Jr. and William A. Anders -\Vhose great couraae and skill manned as perfect a space !llgbt 11 it's possible to conceive, are not the egocentric type. driven to prove themselves to themselves and the 'vorld. They describe themselves simply as three mem- bers of a great team. Nevertheless, it was they who were out there. Dy· in g farther and faster than the mind of man could en· vision only a few short years ago. Every American alive today has been privileged to \v itness and to be enthralled by the greatest adventure in this century -and among the greatest of all history. Borman, LoveJJ and Anders -along with their teammates clustered in the Houston control center and scattered in monitoring stations around the world - richly earn the accolade of an admiring world. But the honoring won 't be just for the fan~tic success of the moon shot. It will also be for the un· counted benefits from the space program. Success of the moon shot will sho wer mankind with advances in fields ranging from health care to metal· lurgy to electronics to heavy industry. And, as usual , Orange County's Space Age industries contributed heavily to the effort. This wasn't an expenditure of billions to "climb a • mountain because it's there.'' Jt was an lnveatment ln lldeaWlc pr0gr•S1, ff!f man'• dally, earthly needs .. well 11 bis knowledge of lbe universe. CTA's Change of Policy The leadership ol the heretofore conservaUve Call· fornla Teachers Association ( CTA} has decided lo con- done teacher strikes. • Under a new policy adopted by the CTA Slate Council, teachers are told they may be justified in strlk· ing iI they can't in other ways win their point with lbe school board. CTA ollic!als defend their 'capitulation lo teacher miljlancy by contending Iba! school boards react only t\ power. They say the threat of strike gives teachers the clout ·they need lo negotiate eHecUvely. CT A leaders no doubt felt prHsure<I into taking such a stand by th~ growing tmpatierice of teachers and· the expanding infiuence of the rival American Federa- tion ~f Teachers, a militant teacllen union. Always before, CTA put the .welfare of students be- fore everything else. Now it is tu"!inf Ila back on thal policy. . But 11\e children sbould not become vlctlma. Bar- ga1rnqg procedures must be made to work without teaett'@rs going on strike. CTA leaders should not abandon their e8rlier rea· sonable position just because they might lose a few members to the militant AFT. Being on the side of the children is more important. ' Difference in IJ.S., Vie t Goals Emerges Remarks a Husband Gets -saigon Stalli~g on War? WASIUNGTON-In the holiday seaSO)I ~ ft would be gratifying to find that we. are moving steadily toward a stable peace in Asia. But the bitterness and recrimination which are Wing fro~ the efforts to settle the war bold little promise of a durable long.term poliUUf setUement or an atmosphere of tru~t between the governments in Saigon and \Yashlngton . We could conctivably emerge from this period with more confidence in lhe government in Hanoi than in Saigon. At least we would have more confideoce that v;e knew the intents and purposes of Hanoi than of Saigon. Those who have probed into Defense Sec. Clark M. Clifford's frame of mind as he acts as President Johnson's agent to end the war find dark forebodings that Saigon is merely trying to prolong the war. SECRETARY CLIFFORD, Ii k e an Iceberg, has shown only a tenth of his impatience to public view. Beneath the 1iurf1ce lies h i s apprehension that over a period of six months a sharp dlffere~ In goals has developed between the United Slates and the governing circles or South Vietnam. The United Stales is seeking an honorable and dignified exlrjcation from the war in the conviction that as much hll!I been done as can be done to save South Vietnam from external aggression and create conditions for self-determina· lion. But it has become increasingly clear to Clifford and those who share his views that this is not the goal of Saigon al all . Saigon, they think, wishes ,the .,... a r to go on for one yea r, two years, three years. without regard for 10,000, 20,000 or 30,000 more Americans killed, In the conviction that Haool will make a better setUement in one or two yean and in three years will become elhatisted and fade away. Then a poUtical set· tlement with the Viet Cong would never be necessary. lN nns VlE\Y Saigon will stall the Nixon administration the same way it ls stalling the Johnson administr1tion, one day seeming to agree on expeditious procedures, another day balking, all with the purpose of keeping American troops hacking away at the flagging North Viel· namesc, Clifford, as well as Ambassador Averell Harriman, is apparently convinced that the Hanoi government favors agreement now on a plan for mutual withdrawal and would enter into such a plan if Saigon were not continually upsetting any hope for a political settlement. The recent protestations of South Viet- namese Vice-President Nguyen Cao Ky that he will deal with the Viet Cong as a reality are not fouDd very reaasur- ing. His fuzzy commitment would be more reassuring if the Saigon govern. ment had not opposed the bombing halt, if it had not opposed the Paris negoUa· lions a nd if it had not found every reason for delaying them. IN THESE CIRCUMSTANCES t ho s c in the Johnson administration who want to make peace and begin to withdraw troops now think a heavy responsibility lies upon the incoming administration. The Nixon adminiatraUOn will be "suckered" (lhe word ii uaed lretly by Uto,,e who want a settlement DdW) juat u the Johnaon admlnlstr1Uon has been "suckered" into believing that vic- tory ls just around the comer. Thole who support the CliUord v!ew think that victory is not just around lhe cc:wner. They think now . as the d~ves h;lve long since argued. that every year *X!,000 more North Vietnamese come of mill~ age and they. can fight Indefinitely the . only kind of war the U.S. will wage in Vietnam. Whatever. may be thought by Sic. · of Stitt Rusk, or by Presidential Advlaer Walt Rosto1f, there can be no tetlous doubl lhat Cllflord ii carrying out hi! as'slgnment with the knowledge a11d>•p. proval of President Johnson. THE REMAINING DAYS of th< Johnson administration are fleeUng fast and with them is fleeting President Johnson's hope of getting a firm cOurse set for 1 military withdrawal from Viet· nam before he leaves office. It rankles with those close to the President that Saigon's leaders show so little concern for the sacrilice! the United Slates has made to preserve South Vietnam's independence, and have so llUle regard for Jobmon'a sacrlftce of his political ca reer. "They jWlt:.don't give a damn," said one of the Preaideat's close!! asMlciates. "Give him the helve ho, shove him overboard. That's their attitude." Peace on earth, the Clifford adherents believe, could be a step closer in th.is holiday season if President·Elect NlJ:on could find hil way to lmprus on lbe Saigon government that it can't get a better deal from him than from Prcat· dent JohniOll. LBJ elays on Tax Reform vi' If President John is going to fulfill his t\\·o-year-old promise to send the Congress firm recommendations on reform of the tax laws. .,.,.e should know soon. Af I east , that's the liming given out by the While House. The Treasury Department, which wou1d bt most directly arfected, sa~s it has no information so far . So does Com- merce. President Johnson in his Econornic Message of .Jan . 26. 1967, said he would stnd in proposals for rcstn1cturing the lntcrnal Revenue Code of 1934. The pro- gram has never been submitted. Tl'li!I was because, 3S the President made clear, he wanted tax reform separated from . his tax ·surcharge package. The latter did not get out of committee to 1117. It cleared only last June 21. SEN. JACOB K. J~VIT8 (R·N.Y.) had 1Ubmitted an amendment to the 1968 --·WWW- Monday. Dec. 30, J..968 TA< ..Utortal page o/ Ill< DaU~ Pilol aet:.U to ftt,form ind atim. Wal< r....Un ri, P"<""dll9 thu IUIDJPOP<r'• oplnlou and "' ... ""'""'11 "" f4J7lcr ol fnUrtsl ~ lig11l/l<atl«. by provldlog • "'"'"' for "'' e:rpru.don of .., r<ad•rs' oplnloftl. and bf! prtuntiJ\P tht dtwrit vie"" pofnu o1 lnformtd ob1tnitr1 ~ IJ)Okttmtn °'' topics of l ht d<rr. i Ro~rt N. IVood. 1'Ubll1h<r " tax package \\'hich required the ad- ministration to submit "comprehensive'' tax-reform proposals by the end of the year. The amendment is of dubious con· stitutionality. If President Johnson should renege, as appears possible, there is no practical recourse against a lame- duck Chief Executive. Treasury recom· mendations are reported to have been gathering dust at the White House for some time. Tu reform has been advocaled of late by memhe:rs of practically every political lfOOPlng In the United States. But the 1ubject is little understood by the general public and hence has litUe pollUcat pull. On th< ath<r hind. those who have most to gt1.in by maintaining loopholes In present tax laws ean afford &o hlre batteriei; of lobbyistJ and at· t.omeys lo · spread their Cite before Con&rMS-Lengthy hearings In 19$.S, as Tbe New R.epubllc noted. brought before the llouse Ways and '°1eans and lhe senate Finance comm1ttcts "w\tncssts from the oil and gas Industry. the stock exchanges, real estate, coal mininJt:, timber companies, and other lntertst.s." P&RflAPS THE most publicized loopbole \.s the. 27~1. percent oil deplellon allowan«. This tax ::il10"·11nce wss adopted In 1926. The allo"·aocc plu!I'. the hnmediate wri le·off of lntangiblt drilling C061J are estln1atcd to cost the Treasury $2 billion a year. The late Sen. Robert F'. Kennedy (0 N.Y.) last ftf ay 11 enumerated "°me other loopholes and the ir cosl to the government. Failure of the law to impose a tax on the. apprtclati<ln of property paS!fed ori to heirs l~s the government a boat $3 billion a year. Tax exemption on slate and local bonds reduces federal tax rev.enues S:bout $1.I billion a r!ll · Two.thirds of these securities are .held by persons with incomes in the top one percent of all taxpayers . S 0 l\t E CORPORATIONS subdivide themselves into tiny affiliated companle.\ in on;ler lo take advantage of an ex· emption or the firsl $25,000 of corporate Income. Companies will stll themselves to tax~xempt foundations s i m p I y because these can pay more for the purchase than a tax-paying firm can. 'l'he sol~peclllc recommendation for reform by tllident Johnson In January 1967 co ed "abuses by tax-eiempt private toundatiw." Dear Gloomy Gus: Think big. Why not invite Canada and ~lexico to merre with the United States to form the United Statts of North America".' Tired Hearing Remark• that the average husband and father gets tired of hearing: "You never hear a single word I say. I might as well bt talking to a stone fence." "You answer the phone, Daddy. If it'& a girl. I'll take the can. but if it'• a boy, hang up. I'm mid at all boyt." "Don't sit down on the sofa yet. First, you have to take out the garbage - and tl\e.n you'll have to go lo the store and pick up a few thlng:s J forgot." "When the football season is finally over, will you then tum off that television set and ju11t say a.{ew words to me ?" "YOU'Ll.. RA VE to make up your mind one way or the other. What do you want me to keep in t h e refrigerator-food or beer? There simply isn 't room for both." "Jim and Nell are celebrating their 20th wedding anniversary next week. They're going to Florida, and he is surprising her with a fur coat. What do you plan to give me on our an- nlveraary -the Hong Kong flu?" "You're so old·fasbioned, Daddy . Do you expect me to 'vear a skirt so long it hangs clear do1vn to 11\Y knees?" "Do you have to 1it around the house every Saturday smoking like a chimney? 1 know at least three hw:bands In this very block who have given up smoking. If they can act like men, why can't you?" "IF IT'S ALL rlehl wilh you, Daddy, l 'd like to get married when I'm 18. No girl w1nt! to stay an .old maid forever." "Ye gods and litlle fishes, what can a woman expect out of life.married to a man like you?" "I hate to have to ask you for n10ney all the time , Daddy. Since you and mother have a joint bank account, why don't you and I open one, too? "It \~ould be easier for all parties concerned if I could just write my own chects." "Are you a husband or a barnacle? It might interest you lo knou , ~Ir. Bigshot , that It has been three full weeks since you took me out or this house and all we did was go to a cocktail party where 1 had the pleasure of listening to you brag for lhree straight hours about how much you won betting on Nlion. And by the way, just \\'h8t did you do with what you say you ·won! I never saw a peMy o! it." "WHY SURE, MARGIE. You and Harry come ovt:r rf&ht now. Then, if I c1n manage to ICf'lpe my hU1band otf the tof1, we can 1lt •round the llble after dinner and play 1 lltUe bridge." •'Myrtle phoned and said her huaband aot another raise, his third ln two years. When ire you going to demand one? We've been llvtng on peanuts so long that I'm beginning to feel like an cle· p!lsnt tn th< zoo ... "I kmw It would <mt a lot of money lo have all my teeth cappM, Daddy . But, who knows, in the long run it might turn out. lo be a good investment. Maybe then l could aet a job u a model posm, In a toothpaste ad ... "OF COURSE, my eyes are rtd. I've bttn crying all aftcrnoon-tve:r since that daughter ol ours you spoil :50 mueh brought home her report eard. Wait until I shmv lt to you. And maybe you'll feel like erying, too." ''Why can't I go lo Europe this sum· mer, Daddy : Thrtc girls In my school are going. You don't expect me to kttp going to c11mp every aummer until my hair turns CTI>'· do you?" Santa Claus Not An Old Tradition The whole panoply or Chrlstma.s trees and decoraUons and presents and cards and Santa Claus figures surely mu!! seem to the uninstructed to be a "tradi- tion " almost as old as Christendom. But it is not. All the festive trappings we associate with the Christmas celebra. lion were unknown to us when Lincol n was a litUe boy. It is only in the last century or so that what we fondly call the ''Christmas atmosphere" has been enveloped In stockings and gift wrappings and sleighs and deer and all the rest of that delightful, if burdensome, nonsense. WE RE-CREATE . "traditions'' Jn our own minds, to make them seem older and deeper and more sy mbolic and significant than they re ally are -so much so, of course, that the symbolism eventually obscures the substance and becomes a goal In itself -as the physical trimming& of Christmas have turned Christ's Mass into a kiddies' holiday. Actually , the celebration centering arouad the Christmaa tree -decorated with candles and dripping with presents -arrived in America by way of England through Germany after 1840. Until that comparatively late date, Christmas here was nothing of' a .secular, much less a juvenlle, celebraUon. FOLLO\VlNG Queen Victoria's mar· riage to Prince Albert of Saxe-Cob\lrg- Gotba in that year, a mania for German customs overtook England . Until then, even the coacept of "Santa Claus'' and Ills reindeer were unknown in English· speaking countries, so little "Christian" was the whole idea. lndeed, the name Sanla Claus is a contraction of "Santa, Nikolaus." who is the patron saint of children in GErmany, and whose feast day was Dec. 6, not Christmas Day, when some- one would don the costume of a bishop and distribute little trinkets to "good children." AND TllE \\'ELL·KNO\\'N Christmas ~ard is of equally recent vintage, but 1s an English addition not i1nported from Germany. It is generally believed that lhe earliest Christmas cards were design. cd as late as 1844 by W. C. T. Dobson, a painter of the Royal Academy who specialized in pretty and innocuous il· lustrations of no particular merit. From a religious holy-day that was Car more reflective than f e s t i v e , Christmas has willy·ni lly been turned into a holiday in which "good will" means buying a child a present, and •·peace on earth" means buying a neighbor a drink. Originally celebrated lo mark the birth of the ''nevit man.0 il has more and more come to signify the emptying of pocket! for the old man, and the imperious domination of Things over Spirit. Exactly what Jesus was calling us away fro1n . Vp to V s to Vnderstand To the Editor: San Francisco State and Valley State College and Fremont High School are at rest for the Christmas holidays. \\'e can turn lo the King Family Christmas or the Rose Bowl without interruption, except for bulletins from within 61 miles o( the moon. This rest might give us time lo think of the ahame of placing social reform In the bandl: ol mere youth. Youth doesn 't always know the cause of its disease. It reads its symptoms as hysterically as any frightened patient. \'OUTJI ~tAY NOT know th at prac- tically every interest group in Amrrica expects the lax-supported schools to solve its needs : a new strain of cotton, meatier cattle, new plastic or technicians to man every industry in the vicinity (){ a tax·supported school. But where is the ghetto represented? What citizens committee from the ghetto expects the schools to research solution.<; lo its needs? When an airline needs hostesses, it doesn't a,;k for welfare. It nsks the property owner!! to educate a few young women ln their community \1·ho will wort for TWA ind bring part of their Income home in tues 1nd 1pendln1. THE PROPERTY o..mm, the 1thools agree. Maybt out of deference to a succusful industry they reput the slc>gan of the fifties. "What's good for (TWA or Pan Am) is good for the naUon." Why Is what b good for the ghr:t&o not good for the nallon? Youth acts 1ymbolica\ly. When you snw the young man from Fremont Hip;h walk out Of Or. Rlehard90T11S board mcetii.g dl~satlsC!cd thin the kids could· n't pick their own principal you didn't see the act of a mature man, inrormed by history and acting reasonably u·lthJn its bounds. "OU SAW YOUTll •• an artia1, not Lctttrs from readers art welcome. Normally writers should convey thtir 7ntssage in 300 word$ or ltss. Tht right to condense letttrs to fit spact: OT elin1i11ate libtl U rtserved. A.ti letters m1ut include signature andi n1?ili11g address, but names mau bt w1,hheld on requesS if sufficient rca· so11 is apparent. :t historian. dra1n3lizing not explaining lts nialaise. ' It is up to us. the mature, and the spectators lo understand what this drama means, to leave the thealre not childlshly insulted, not angry with the actors. but caught up in the ir mesuee. ROSLYN SNOW B 11 George ---· Dear George · My husband never gets homt oo Ume for dinner and alway1 comes in smelling of booze. Advice columns say nagging is very bad. hoy,·ever. Should I bawl him out or take the advice? WORRIED WIFE Dear \Vorried \Yifc : Advice columns a.re best, if uaed p~ope~ly. So don 't nag him. swat h1n: 111 the chops with rolled -up adr1cr columns. . ( Rus~1 yot1r prohlcins lo Georat 1n\med1ate.ly, lie c 011e ct1 postmarks. J I l • t l I • ' ' • l I I I • , I f ' r • • 11 it • I• g e • y II v ~ -. " ····-··~·· .-.... --.. MMdl1, -J0, 1968 • DAll.V I'll.fr I) L ---:? Silen~· Screen Ive. Star Woods Dies Skier Kept ~oving ·to • • . , Official ·Hits BSU HOLLYWOOD (AP) -SI- ient """'" odor Harry "L • TRUCKEE, Calif. CAP) -mull have traveDed a total hollow tree. but kept moving Slloday morninc. Woods ta dead •t II. Ta.Ct JC• S A !&.yur .. ld big)! sdlool boy of u miles." • beca""' he had lo keep "He aatd on three dilllrent Woods -Satlltdly I! alive today because, experta , , H e 1 a l d \ e ~ I d arnf funeral oervlcol 1l'tf9 oatd, .he kepi moving on hi! D • allie," 1ald Schl"artz, who -. .. he felt he coaldn't held tbil-. al a lf«lh .---;-skis through biller cold in ~res_lod_!n;..__lhe_&be_lter __ of __ • .....:'pot-led_hlm __ tro_m_1_hellco _ _;_Pl_er_kee.....;p;..;1:..oin&...;:.·_"_Sch_w_w ... _oat_cd_. _..:H::•:ollyw=ood::.:::M:::Ol'luar1:.::;:.::.;.· __ SAN ~CISCO (UPI) -the High Sierra unW found ActJac Bruldent $. I. Haya-20 hours after b e c o m l n & kawa> b(amln& the trcubla oepanlod !ram a~ ~y. , •--F Holien lldepekl, ... of a • 'f.'l ,rll\CllCO Stai<o Coller• ,.llred Air Force man who on .'CiNster tacticl," qys he · lives _.. at Catrn1chae1, a nevettbeleu bOpes tbe numb-Sacramento suborb, bad tome er ol ~ on campus can be frostbitten toes and wu cold, I I I I I I I I I I ' I . , ., ' • reduoM when clUsea t.alme tired and hungry -found Out treek. • , · Sunday. But doctora llld he Hayakawa ~~ wul'· WU in good condi~ .i.r~ bably ask lbr fewer than~ Robert got separaf<od fl'om ~ed policemen· who pa-a skiing group about 2:30 p.m. trolled the 11,000 atudt.nt cain-Saturday al I.he f ,000-foot level pua. before the holidays but in the Mt. Disney lfel.near added that more will be' call-the sugar Bowl ak1 raort at tel if needed to prevent dis· Soda Springs. ' order. . Don Schwartz. ~ Bowl 1be semanUcist • turned -manager said he believes the adminiltrator made his c~ boy got 'iost durin& a mow ments ~ore a statewide squall on 8 ridge and delcend- group which &•thered o v e r ed the wrong side of the the !"eekend to form a student moo tain 1 ~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~-roahtlon opposed to coercion .. ; · 15 mil ,. __ ·th 1 and campus abutdowna. . e was _ es uvw ~. 1 , . I I I I I I Pq1-lic Inspection Hayakawa described t.be po~nt when we .. fa.md him, group a.s ''to the right of El· . ,.,d Scbwartz, , and Ju4llng drtlfie Cleaver and . the .wi by hlJ lraCka I d esUmafO he of Rober! Welch." He refer.,;1iiiiiiii!!!~ red to the mtUtant Black Pan-1 !"Ii._ ••••••• ther leader and tbe fOU!ldeD of •••••• •• the John slreh Society, re-. SHOOTING · ... specllvely. · Hayakawa blamed the co1. COLOR PIX7 Jesse Unruh Asks · lege's troubles on "gangster S•v• A lwncll• on C.l•r Film tactics" by lhe Black Stu· Fi"i•h~t •t dents Union, organizer or a DAVE'S CAMBA campus strike which led to 474 1. 17tti St., C.... w-. w .. u or sporadic violence. 646·2136 'Open' Finances SACRAMENTO (AP) - Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh.-confronted f e 11 ow legislators today with a pro. posit that they -and all othei: major public officials -be required to open their private financial lives to public inspection. Unruh (D-Inglewood), also recommended adoption o f I tough new conflict-ol·interest 1 leglsla~on that would strictly limit a public official's business· interests. The same rules would apply to candidates for local and state olfice, Unruh said Sun- day in proposing the plan in a news release. Unruh said such new legisla- tion Is needed to guard against "illegality and impropriety" and to restore public con· r fidence In government." 1• "11ie sad fact of life today is that public faith in govern- ment is at an extremely low ebbin California," Unruh said. 'I' The Los Angeles Times ,, · reported on Dec. 16 that . Senate President pro tern Hugh M. Burns CD-Fresno). ~ was president and a major stockholder of an insurance '' company which was sold at a reported profit of more than $500,000. During that period, Burns acknowledged sponsoring a . bill in the legislature that could have benefltted two ma- :... jar flnance compapies with which Bums' firm d I d "Why ia it that outfits like business.. the Black Students Union de· Bums told reporters the cide to use gangster tactics on report. W'5 subatanlially ac-_:i~ls~fr~ie:;n~ds~?:::"~he~as~k~e~d:_. _.'..==========! curate but that the profit was,.. not as much as $500,000. Burns/r------------------....,--,1 added that he did not dire(:ily benefit from the legislation he sponsored and saw no CQn- ruct of interest. Unruh's statement did not refer to the Burns incident, but said present laws and codes of ethics in the field of conflict of intere.!lt have been of little use. The speaker's proposed' rule.!! would cover city, county and state elected officials, In· eluding the governor ; members or policy making boards a n d commissions, governrilent agency heads and their deputies, and high level civil servants. The officials would have to I make a full public disclosure of their financial interests periodically. Generally, his prop o s a I would limit an official to ownership of one-tenth of one percent of the stock in any firm which came within his jurisdiction. I For instance, Unruh sald, "a county assessor would be limited in acquiring stock in businesses whose property is assessed by his office." The legislature adopted a 1 code of ethics in 1966 when being a lawmaker was made virbJally a fulltime job and legislators' salaries were boosted to $16,000 a year. It's of 7891 Tolbert Avenue. The Auto Club's new "c:cstle" In Huntington Beech. Fully staffed. And fully eqt1lpped. Slotting Monday, Jcnuory 6, providing more them 100 services lo Au!o Club members end the community. Everything from weekend vocation to worldwide tra'lfll planning. Evetylhing lo help You gel out end follOw on the fun that's going on in Southern Cotifomio and beyond. Stop by and Jet Ed Sullivan, the new manager, show you around !he Auto Club's new"cc:slle" ln Huntington Beach. ~ THE AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF ~SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 101 talt>wt A,.., Huti111.,11 .. ~ ec.111 .. ~ 1a:.77n We've built a new off ice in f1 Huntington --Beach Berkeley Sclwol Head , ~ Picked on Integration ' " B~RKELEY (AP) -The new supe rl n ten dent of Berkeley schools Is p r . · Richard L. Foster, w h o resigned as head or a nearby school district afler civil rights controversies. Announcement of Foster's appointment to the $30,000·a- ycar post was made Sunday by Mrs. Carl Sibley, Berkeley board ol education president. Mn. Sibley said that, in selecling Foster, the board 's first criterion had been lo find ·.. a man "totally committed" .. to ln1eifatloo. • . Foster, 51, of San Rafael, .• will replace Dr . Neil V . -· Sullivan, who resigned to ·" become Massachuselte slate " commissioner of education. ... .~ • '• • Prior to Foster's resignation as superintendent of San Ramoa ValleY Unified School District, he had been criticized for sanctioning a Human Rights Convention at Monte Vista High School in the Dan· ville area. Speakers at the session In· eluded several members of the Mission Rebels of San FranciscO and three Black Panthers. Last September, u n d e r Sullivan's direction, Berkeley -' became the first community in the United States to com· plete total school integraUon by busing. The 16,000 pupils In the Berkeley school distrlct a re 42 pe=nt Negro and nln< [~~ •• ,... , , perti!nt Oriental. -· A Good Friend of the Family for Sixty-Eight Years. "\Vhat 's happening In Berkeley can be an example of America," he said. "It pro- vides quality education pro- \'lding dignity and justice for l'----------" .... --------......l each student." • ' ' • It pays to save where The Big Money is! NATION'S LARGES I fFEDERAL PAYS THE NATION'S HIGH ES I RATE S.13% annual yield on insured passbook accounts when savings and all divi- dends remain a year, if our 5% current annual rate is compounded daily and maintained ~year. 5.25% bonus accounts are also available-ask for details. ' ' ' J " The Big Money keeps moving to ... C~j.f2..Q!i,q .,~~~-~!~S ~ ' • • \ M•ll'lb«i Ftf'tl'H .... L•M .......... ,.... .._, LMll l ...... eo.a.r.110!'! .. '"1 ' r • >.LHAMBAA G.a"iold 6 S1ySl1te •ANAHEIM iAST 1717 e, LlncOln •ANAHEIM WEST 800 N, Euclid •COSTA MESA2700 HarbOr •EAGLE ROCK 5015 EID1t Rock • ECHO PARK t90$>W1 Suntt1 • G~ Hlt.1.4 .t&eocl OtwNhl,.• ~YWOOO 4705 SOnftl'• VJ<!WOOO.l.ONO HAC#.ao& Oil'IOfl LOS ANGELES (DOWNTOWN) W1lshlrt •I Gt•~. OXNARD 2IO(I S1vllrt. PAL.OS VE .. DEll ~NlNSlllA 27808 sn .. , 6pur. PASAOENA 575 s. Llkt II C1Htomlt . RANCHO PAAK JOllD w. Pico. "es~A 18280 sntrm•n w.,. CfltH&HAW/IMP!RIAl tMbW. l~I ·.\I.UT COV(NA 1400 'f'.. ltMc.e . • • 1 \ I ii ! I )f DAILY l'ILOT -·-J0,1968 For· The . Record Not Bedroom Area Cou~ty Shifting I ' , From Old linage By ALBERT 'II. MTl!B Gf "" Dtltr " ... ti.., Meeting• MOMMY Orange County's shift from !i0,000 per 'JfAl," the ceooomist said. "The hfih water mark in population 1'1n was reached in 1963 wbtn 93,000 persons were added to the t~fa!l growing total. The drop to about hall tblt Is accounted for partly ,. by the flat trend in births - about 23,000 a year despite population growth." "'l: .,. s~out1. ·~ e-r.c1r...1u a "bedroom •rea" for Los . , .,...., f'ost l ... l.SOI H1rbor 91\'d., i. 1Mu. 1:1J J.nl. Angeles to a regk>n of self-sus-~ ""l:tio:.•·= \"3r ::.Oi:i talntng employment is reveal-™·· c0111 Mua. 1:111 •·"'· ed in the current summary TUESDAY -=o=E==A.,..,r=n==-..,,..,.,,,,=-....,-ot bu . ndl" -ed COt"DN de! Mar E•chlntf' Cl1111. JOMf'l i110'I'ICES smess CG 1->00S ISSU ll•1111r1nr, 2111 E. CHI! Hl9/IW1v. --::-.o'"'.'::-".':"'-,..,-,-,..,-.,....,_ by Security PacU1c NatiOnal c~ 0.1 Ml•, 12 -· HtwllO"t H1rbw AcllVI »JO Cl11b, l"tclfk·VltW1-i-1 .. -....... Bank VIII-ln11. l!t M..rln., ··~ • ..,. •t1t1 ~rf.""-l!"~&..r Hlifi. • 111and, 11 -· ....,, cw-.-M.tr. "'·plainin' g the swnmary Cetll Mn• Exduo"" Cll/ll, Caril BELl.IClt' ~ ....._ ' llM llp1..,.;,1:· iMJ Herbor a1V'd., Arch 0. Hardyment, vice c.tt• ~. 12 -. L.uh ... -.. a E. 111t1 11~ A,pt •• c, and · 1 c .. 1. Mn• 1t11t1ry ci.._ Her1t1. ca111 ce1111 • ......_ IWYh-M _., -1,...,rs I!. president ecooomist or Me11 Gelf '"' eo.nt,., c• 1101 .,...., Jr.~ trcn1 ~,., ..,_,.,, ll'le bank, told Huntington Goll co,,,,. Orlvl, Cosfl MIH, s~ """'' L...c.I~ l:lpllv. Mr· 12~11 11.m. WriMll ..,.., irt. ~ IW11 Beach RotarianJ J'rtday that (01'11N del Mir K1w1nl1 Cklb. t'tlfO ""'"" ·lk._ Mmft1ref.~P11Nr, emp•--••t Within Qronae vlff1 Swedln.'JS36 E. c-r Hl9tlww, ·c•• ~ 11111i Mn. Mlol'Y w .. 1. .,J'llftOU ~ c...-oe1Mir.12:11 •.m. ,.,..~-~N~,. ~.fldlY. County .bis now mo\'ed' ap ltuntl111ton kid! llD'llrY CllAI. Norlll, 1 , .... __. tntll· ... ' .,..,, W1M11, 1ui1 Soll.I Chiu llotd, -, from 21 · perCe.nt to about 32 Huritlnv!M .. Kh 12:15 1.m. n'lllit WI-lie hlid ""'1lrY I Pldflc t1urittMton .. _ \ow1nlli c 1u11, H11~ Villw ~· ~in. Dlrwdlrll I! percent.,.aod atill .... w.1oo ... Hardyment reported ' Uiat deaths are now running aboot 71000 a year, leaving a mt 1gafh ol about 18,000 in births versus deaths. ti~*' ... <fl CllUntn Oub. 11'1 ~ •"""1W•1 ~· 11• Jn~ ~ 11111 SI~ Hlln11"9ton ••Kfl. 12:1S ......... ..c-.. Meu. CittM a ct;"Bmpn DESPITE CHANGES N:.:0.1 H1rbor OPllmllt c1u_ti, v1111 , ·WRITE \. m.isco.........,.'1 on that ~ under-"Despi'te these r e c e • t M¥1,.., 1o.s 81Y,lc!t ortw, ,._1 Ca:rotllll. ....,.... m .l.I · hrll:. '"""'· -~"Y!" l ~ c~~.~:,,J:.:·:rs c1ub1 eo.11 Meu ,c011.i. ,..., SumYld .,., llnlhfrl. *'· .ta.,.givup in the popu aU~~.i _is changes, Orange County sUll 111(1 covntrv c1w. 11111 t>Oll ~ ,,,,...,, CO.hi Melli ~~ oecom.lng more and more is growin• faster than 'all Drl¥e, COlll• MIM. lf;IS IQnl ~ ll"lorffjlJ/ .... • rt .... a-i he said the • ""'" . MeM. Dr.-. 1111 Ml, • al6.,, .. 1cant, OP-other countiei in California ~:;f1J1't...:~ 6~ fJ~ =~,,r.;-..,:.,-':'=Mi':: pOslte ia true. lt ·ia ln the except Los Angeles _ and G,.11tm, Hllfltlftttan ~ 11 """"· ~i!,r11~.::'i'.l'i;:S: .:",.!; r,=: 18 t., 29 years of age groop Los Angeles is only a~ DEATH NOTICES -Wiiy .~,,.,,. 110 er~W··~'· where lbe important shift 1s 65,000 a ye3r ahead of Or_~ oc~,. he reported. This County," he continued. • TALBERT V~I VOii .... 1!~,!.. ~ ... c.ta is signit.i~ it~ ' 'A er 0 SD.ace 1'nd"..:..., Mltlartl IE'. T1111u!. Ae. 12, ol IOI new 1-"y •"--.,i.... rI WRl"I ' "" St .• Hunu,.ron l•1c11. Dile 01 Meil. SllNlllM bV tlrot'Mr, Alltn ft.ob. • a1U¥; ,.~ • ~~ especially eletlronics,~ 4Mftl, OK 21. Sur1lwd by \Gn, Tim; •rt, al Cllltornl i . S.Nlcn, T......S.~. attefidant borne 1no Q- llNlcn. GGrdon; fOllr vr1ndchlldrtn ll;XI AM, II 1111 (ltvrCl'I al .... Ile. ~ ~· 1,-... helped Qran1e County e - an111 lflree orui .. rin«hlld••n s.r.... ceu1-1, F0tu1 l••"· Glttld1i.. ,,.. ~utomoblle .. buy"' anu a big .., .. 0t to kfep. abre"" ~of Fett. Tw!ld1v. 1:» PM. sm11111 mmen1. F-t ·L•wn. Dlrechd· br increase Jn customer lor .,,_ ~~ CllliNI. lntl!'fmen•. wao<11awn Cerri-1111 11ro.1dw1v Mort111ry, uo 9rc.M· .: S ' pj}pu!ation growth. Youhg PfJOt. •f'et'y, Compton. Dl•Kffll bv Smith• w1v. ca1t. Mau. recreational gOOds. ple are working in thes~Nllit Morlu•rv. PAROA "?'"'' ARCHER l!ow1rH·P1rc1e.•.st s.n11 ...... A..e.. STABLE GROUP ind~. even though,.~ CG1r1 Mtw. s11rvlwd 111" moiMr, viJJble t~tbose ha....4°~ Mn. Fr•nt11 ,,,,.1 i:-d-"''"" Hardyment said ~ &.>aO<t· .,, .. ,. · JHn 1"nd JMn P1rc1v. C0111 Mes.11 over age1groop.ts ·relatiYely the beach. .'recent: 17 ~ '-brotllen, St1nlrr P1rdv. Wll!lli'!r, stable. · . cent ~.th' ID retail = incl Al P1rd1, SYr•CUfe, New Y~. ""~·~· " • .,,. 111111.,,,, ~,, 1 PM: r,.._ · A drop iril.tbe · birth'. rate re~ee~, this increased em ..i.ii.m ~u, TwttlWi, ,. AM, 110111 " meat st. JDKlllmJ Cetbolk: Cllurth. 1ntv· is contracting tbe baby goods · •nt, s,r.wu,· · .._ vcn: 11111 market while ...... ,.._ Age· r Hardyrnenl cited lhe 'fact •l'GldMv Mwflllty, n•, araffwlv. 1.11C --C••• Mesi, d1..aon. and young adu1t market is that Orange County, with 10 LANNOJ"l ·' expanding rapidly, he has ~rcent of the state's popula-"~ 1.1mM. n ,Alrir9llo !'!Ila, found. bon, has only 7 percent of s11bol. 51Jrvfved Dv -· MIWrlte 1.1nnon, Narth Moltvwaoc1 1 c11rt11 L-. "Orange County 's popuJa. total sales. He said there is l'IOll, sim v111ev: iwo d•U9ht.n. Mn. tlori, now about 1 ~.ooo, 1-s room for growth here -MIMflfl L~ I/Id Thlll'rll ll:ldlttt.. ........ a11t1oe:. Ser11us. 1cid1v. Mo111Jiv. 11 growing at a rate of about meaning that the old hablt AM. Oltbr Chllrd'I °" "" Sae, Nt• pattern of residents gom' g' out POrl llftdl. l"temwnt, Forelt ~ Gt..nd1r., 1:» tod1v. DlrKted w a.u or the county, mainly to Los lroed'wtY Morluarv. lit a~. Cot.la Mell. ' Aliens· Get Angeles, to buy will have to ~ BERRY ·:~ • be broken by aggressive local ,,,..twtld Ar!Mr a.n-,. 1ts12 ,.,.._ merchandising. Cl~ Him!~ hid!. Olt. ., R de.Ill; ~OK. "' Aulstlllt Flnlnd tr-em1"nder In new home building, long I recto(:': ctt., "' tti.111t1111"" 9ffctl.-___ vital to the county's econo-. , SUM .. ay ,.111ffj, Lllf:!9111 fft• ..,._ . , .. ,J !f~=.....,/Jdlfl·l.1 11nY1 ..... ~. r but sluggish in the tllbt ... ·.lft.,;~~~U!fv: 9tf'>\'~·""'°' T -R • money market of recent ' LUCAS lllc:tllrtl L\ICll. Mel t.mlll'rl, Hunt· '"'9M .. l(h. $tNlctl "'1141"9. Sml!M -· SPENCER Adi ,,,.., Sofflc!!r. nt w. f11!bol 81¥11 .. •· .. lbol. Age ll. SuNIVlld bv d........,, M". een!l1 Korn, lndl~; two wP!Mhonl. Erwin L0¥1l1nd, ,,.. ""' lfld Dl¥1d C. L-land, llllroo'9. G,.,,.... Hn'lcn llllS tfle.-MMtn, Katy SeP\lkMr Clf'll9tef"'I', Orlft9t, wllll MansklllDt Dunn. al Dur '--"' " Ml. C.rmel Clll\ollc Chllr<h, lll'llCltfl!!ll. WH•cntt c111 ... 1 Mor'lutrv, .....-. Dlteclors. GOYE'M'E llo¥4 LM G~te. mt w. ]If\ 51., s~ ... S1nt1 °""· Date cf -II!. De<. •· S\lrvNtd bv wilt, Pllvm1; four dllldren, Lorrtine l!llcllO'I. t..e.w MllY Mulri Wa¥111! l••"" Gov· eti. Ind A 111 ., ' ' Govette. u 9ranclchlldrtn 1"<! 11 11re11.1r1ndt;llll- d....._ krvlces Wiii !l.e Mid TUl9Cl1Y. OK.. JI, 11 AM. Dlldav lroi.. Hun•· ln11m01 'V1ll9¥ en-I. ln"'rTt>ent, prl-....,,. Dlr9CIH bV Dlld11 1•01. M0t· -· TBOMAS ~~r'" ~''--~· ~, ,·o egISter years, the economist said that riloncl ., ..... r.._. Dfflc~~.i'f"P""' d • 'I I 1~•• ::;:e j.w1s111111 ie• --..·~· recor new-iami y ormations ::1;: ~ Sttr~-C.~ie:t~=-....: SANTA ANA An are putting pressure on for ~os1>1r11.1c111 s.111rlrlo Matllll(; LldltJ. estimated 50,000 Orange Coun-home building despite the ;-N•;.,Me<1w111 T.•11.t',,::t'liili ty aliens ~ atart ,,.,..,;.... present high Interest rates. t1~~S11~05~: -,,,•:. OMV~. • ~ :.1 now for the , D1t'egl.stritton THREE LEADING •· tt111 M. ;.!~~ ~v.-c.{I card! ~ ~ved when' lheyr ., 'He said that Hun tin~ Meu. c.11 "'deet11, otc. "·~ en ered:~. Uruled States. .' Beach, Tustin aixl A""'"'"';.. 11>¥-tiviblfllf, J1mu '· "••'*" .._.., AD notfellli.ens must ~" ~r. N•llCY 1e,..,.11 l'l'IGltler, Mn. Merv , . • com-presently account for aboUt co.11"""'· Gk!1111• F1111. New Verk1 pl~ a special address repoq.. the same proportion ofJtal ~;:iht~~r:-~~ 1i car~ at~\)ni~v·States ~ county home building ~ 3J T~. -11:• AM<. ,st, J• llN ' offll)! ~ Janiiry, u: s;. ., percent in all. UnliicorporaUk! ~~~1J~ ~ ._. l~ation and !'Jatur~~ areas add 21 percent. ltun- fWllY If" ('ii"~,....,, lion 1 Service ofncials Warn. Ungton Beach. the real home P111i w1111v ellrd:-,,,. c~ The.' forms ·will be available building "boom town " of the tteed, C•t1 Mftl, Dltt « ftllh. Die. 1 beg1nnin. g Jan.-%. county, state and nation since ,.. svQ1wd bY wlft1 .... ,1 :~ DJstr•-v·---Geor K 1er. -G•v SC11r.1Hr, of Ataie1111 6';.. u~r ge . about 1962, is leveling off from lflr":~· bfotti.r. Clrrtll T. Rosenberg further warns that 17 percent or the county total Bl1ncl;.•"1f 9eftttley, and 11s'91",11Nu.i, a]j c11''1:•''lol Anttlft. Pr1Y111'. ~ ens who are temporarily la.$t year to about II perCtnt :i:,. J::. ~~,.~ absent from the Urilled States in 1968. ~. "' 111e P.c:llk. P•lfk v1n *'"-'tl during January must report ijiiiiiijjijijiiiiji ~!~·. ~ br P.c:Hlc VJtw •· their address lo the service HA 1 DICKS 1 within IO days of their return. HEARING AIQS c11r111t1 Frtderldl 01c111, ,., w. G010o An alien's refusal to rem .. ter emor. C.11 Mnll, 01!1 I/If .. Ill. e.-C111tom A~t•I Amplifiettion DK. 2t. s..or111YH bv "'"9. · !'mta11 is a criminal o ff e n s e , No SA.L.l.SMIM three -. J10i: II., Jenws W. IOllll n~-ber ··•-••0t f CO"ST HWY '""rY t... Dldta, '" ., ce1111 1M1t1 i""K'A g rem1uu.:1 n o n -.-• "' • two •"""-,..,..._ .KllM.1. _ II.kw· cltiuns, and is punishable by c~ *f Mllr seMc... "TI:'"tM1Y."'l'M. Chltitl ,; a prison term and/or a fine . ..... --·---, .... -1;~~~~~~~~~~~!~ ... ~i·~·~·~··i·~-~·~·~·~7~·~ .. ~·~"~!I P1c.111t" View: lnttrYfttllt, P1efflc Vhw Memortll P1tll. Dlridltl liy PKlflc: View Mortuerv. Fire CaU• """"" ... •;17 11.m. $11u'111y, lttVka un. •lll't ~1111',_ Aft, t:U "·"'·· g~ Ort, Ml,_lt. 111d E•I C-t H"'-Y .__ t :lS •.m. l"ridn'. mellcleut mlldllfl, An'WY9 Olleo 11111 C111llrui ..... -. 6:2' 1.m. Sll11rdliy, ruait. 211• Chlb-""""'_. 1:4 p.rn., falM 1llrm. 2lSl 9r11lof SI. 1:57 1.m.i fllla •I-, 102I El C.. mlno OrlVe 1:1• •. m., l•loe 1llrm. 77 F1lr Drift ''" p.m~ l\oneft rnbll~•. 1101 P• ctfll11 "'""· 6:14 1.m., llot!HI rl\l'l•kt, Nt"""'1 Ind 9 tlllol l :21 1.rn. ,..... -•lmenl llr.. JM!I l'lllmDra, APt. U7 1:01 1.m.. NIM;UI!, :U0 cMt1 Mt11 SI. 3:• I.fl\. .wllNJ, "'""°'· SQ Pllt• ...,, BRING THE CHILDREN TO SEE THE PUPPET SHOW S aMwt dllty Flil:ll t;in the 1\l!!ll. l\'litchell Marionettes present ''CIRCUS"' on th ursday, friday, saturday, Jan. 2-3-4 at 11 em·l pm- J pm-4 pm·7:30 pm except saturdny only et 11 am·l·z.3-4 pm ,HUNTINGTON,_ CENTER Be•ch •n ~ Edin91r at S•n Oia90 Fr~•y .... TZ MORTU annH! ., ......... -· "" Sin Jiii~ ~"" ~ ~ t:» • .1111 .. NIWt, 2:11 E. "~ PIKll C.... de! Mor.ORS.HSI li_;=-::::c.:.::::::.=..::..:::;..:.=...!l::=================='I Costa Mesa Ml 1-Mlf BELLBROADWA~ MORTUARY llt Blwdw1y, Cotta Meu u 1-3'33 DILDAT BROTHERS lhultlll""" Vlllley M-..Y 17111-JIMI. 'j Rutiqfoa Bue• · so.mi • PACIFIC VIEW ' -M"'O!!HL PAllll Cnnetuy e Mortaary Otope1 1111 Paiolllc View Drive Newport -. Calllarala - -FREE . SAFE . DEPOSIT BOX FOR MAlftTAl,.ING $500 SAVINGS ACCOUNT. +IOurs: 9:30 •.m. to 9:30 p.m.; S•t •. 10 •.m. to 6 p.m. • ____ _...... __ _ • \ . GOOD SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY --l!ll'!~ll!!!ml~~ $?Q .U.P~..,. LIMIT 1 DOZ. JANET LEE EGGS PER FAMILY-With This Coupon EXPIRES 12/31 •••••• DOZ. LIMIT 2 POUNDS ALBERTSONS MARGARINE PER FAMILY With This Coupon-OFFER E~PIRES 12/ 31 ••••••••. lb. I LIMIT 6-10 oz. CAMPBELL'S .,. TOMATO SOUP PER FAMILY-With This C11upon EXPIRES 12/ 31 ••••••••• Ea. COUP-ON ...... ·-·--·-· ...... i LIMIT 4-SWANSON'S BEEF- CHICKEN OR TURKEY PIES PER FAMILY-With This Coupon EXPIRES 12 I 31 ••••••••• Ea. SWEET HONEY WHITE GRAPEFRUIT :~~u~E~ HOURLY' .... La 39c 8LB. BAG c WHOLE FRY~RS CUT-UP FRYERS GRAOE'A' ••• LJ.~~c GRADE 'A' ... LB.35c PRICES GOOD DEC. 29-30-31 31 LOCATIONS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA , I • I I t • ·I ' • ·1 I .. ~ I I I I I ' I I I ' ' i ' I l I l • • \ ' • ' I I • I • I I • I ! I I l i I I I I l I • I I 1 f • I .. ' • • • Russ F~aJ_-Egyptia ns LONDON (UPI) -The ~ c Ip Ible .; Egypt .. ~ ol lbe rweo~lng Soviet Union has put oil -" ol up lo 1,100 reorganhaUon of EgyptlJn dellvery (If lat.ut,-\ype MIG . , hour, u qatmt the armed forces. " ...... lo .£"""' , _ _... Phlotooi I 1,400 miles ... Mo.1C011; f\lrtber WU said lo '!"' • .,,,. •..-:1-·• hour. have been amlous lest one !Qr "'fr' they m)ght fa! Into One ioMM apparopUy WU of lbe MIG231 fall Into the laraell hand!, d I p I o m • II c lha1 .. J:apl!U pllOta would r.. hands of the Israelis to !UIY reporta said today. quire "1llCh more ltalnlng to air encouoter Ip Ille Mjd<ut. Under a recent ~ muter a highly complex plane Moscow 'il(U ~ and Moscow wu noporled· to bHe of the MI(a! type. worried wben ane • ol )II 1,,-eed to 111pply 200 M16'3 Egyptian pilots .,. bolng M!G2Is !ell li>lo Isr8ell lwldJ · all.,...tber flghten ~. ~ tralned l!Y lbe Soviets both alter the defection ol 111 Iriql mosl advanced Sovie! lf&l>tOr In the Soviet Union and In pilot. plane -faster tbaa u,e -----------=-~------.._­ American-made P'4 Phantoms. The MIG• "'"' to: hHe QUEENIE By Phil lnterl~i been part of a new majar l"" ___ ._ _______ .;_ ___ ...;.,;.;;;;,;,;,;~J Putting Past Bela¥ad Bet , ·' · Corazon Amurao, lone survivot oC ther~ 'mass'a~re•oi1~bt nu;se~ in ~ic~go, poses with .her finance, attorney Alberto Atienza, d~ pause )n.ber hospital chores. in Manila. Her le6tin\ony helped cohvlCt Ri~baql SJM,ck as the killer: . " . arms supply progr""' • 10< Caire wblch also ~ otber advanced weaponS, lb-- duding missiles. ST.\JITED SUPPLY , Reports from Morocco !alt month said the Sovlell already had started !iupply!ac tlie MIG23s to !lgypl. ' • Bl.d diPtomatic r e p ' r t a l'.O•chln( llondon said M08COIY • apparently has put off deliv~ indefinitely, • Russia has, so far ••. ls known. kopl back the MIGi! even from her closest al.lies J L µe P in East Europe. It WIS t • tt t surprising therefore w b •,n -·US · l .. ·ar ·y ~"~:::;;~th~p~=: to Arab nations. The agreement was ascribed I ' D 'ff · ' Ch le I H at the time to strong pressUre t s i erent n. ar s s ost frnm Cairo, wblch sought .Jo ~ ~~ strengthen itself withjlrie-mol~ LONDON (UPI) -The C~les fa no snob. But the trumpet and cello, Chirtes has advanced weapons, if. oqJy u future King of Britain is hav4 efyal wor:ld tn "'11ch he acted and sung 1n ~lie. He a deterrent against JJDSible · .. 11-t,,V(--17 , A 1 ing some ol the boys over circul_atel·b flgidly disClplln· ~ti)' pla¥ed .the · role of Israeli action and as I match ~iGos r-~l!'...iMLw..w"'i..-... ·· ~~ on New Y~ar's Eve but the ed. His ~ art the '4filght': , an EpilCOpfil mlniater in a for any Phantoma th& (araelb L::.;;::.;.;;=-==,;;;;;;.;;;;;;;_,;;;:;;:;o.;....;,_;,;..-..;.. ... neighbors won't have toz.-friends. The "proper" thin& Caibbrldge drama c I u b mfght cibtain. , ••Jt WU a gn;at Ciriatmu. N obOcly p ve ~Y· ' ry. is always.. ctalion and bad a pie FASTER PLANE :: &ZLYtlUD.gthath&dtobe .. :~od.", : It will all be very lite His sod.al '}ife ' has strict in his face. · While 'details of the Soiiet and very correct. No whooping "boundaries, dictated both by Charles is particular about -· h h' " d b I f dec ision were not · kno-, or yelhng or c a,mpagne 1msell an y ru es o his close friends. All are well "" glasses flung a~ins fireplace royalty. His personal safety known to the Queen and diplomatic reports lndic~ bricks. hilS re_cent!Y become a matter Prince Philip, being children .Moscow has been moUvated Read The Daily For Top Sports Pilot No ~ 'will rpplaln; fi>r of concern because of · WeJlh...-Of their friends ~ often by several consideritlons ln such are the riiles 1n extremist threa~ to kill him. relatives as well. dela1'lng delivery of t b e - the sOcial wo d Of Prince He is ~o be fonnaDy installed Charles lw known most of --::4iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Charles, the tq..yeai'~d heir as ~rlJJCe o.f Walts July I, them since cblldbood. It is lo the Britis)I' throne. despite the ! ··eats. one.of bil particular pleasures 1,, ~eo he ·ts Britain's Ch.arl es doe~ not reawne ~is to Pwff.e a few men Crleilds niost el · 1e bachelor. Jn studies at Cambrlcf&e'• Trlnlty into hil ·private sUting room reality~· es is one of the college until February. Leun· at Buckingham Palace for cof· most talnable yowig men ing the job of i'ullng by . fee ~.:ind conversat&on, or to any mother 'COUid covet for wat.ching his 1119tbei in action viii their homes in b1' sportl her daughter. around BuckinPlm Palicl ~ car As.sfsted by hill 1 I s t er , takes up milch of'hla vacation/ 'lite girls seen .lib Cbari9' · PriII<# Am)e, Charles will -time. ~· from tun· e •-"--aD give ;•· ~I f>"rlY. .(Ol" ., .. ..._ _& w ~ are friends on Dec. 31. The tliljib"· ''1141" """'1'I MOTHER • part of the court cfl<le, - will precede a New Year's , He a1sci~l ~ts frequently ~~n~ frleudi of Prlncea dance .Queen· Ellzabelb n ~flt· 1111 ~other, Queen giving a~ Sandringham ·House ~ ~. who adores NO FAVO~ in Norfolk. hlnf as the ~son she always Charles has lhown no Jean. w .. lt<f bu! :ii,ver had. llle~ iDp toward .a (Jlrli<ular rtrl NO SNOB s}we an inftrest in music!.~1 ·11\aJthough he ts known to prefer Tall and ralher handsome• Prof1cient~,pn the piano, blondea. available with acceptabll , down payment·· In Los Arjitfes County, BElLFLOWER1 15909 Bellnow. SOUl8Yilld lAKEWOOOi I '4916 Beltflaww 800ftmd , . The only mecllcaUon that gets to .a maJor cau• of hemorrhoid• I New coullliitND/11 I offers most complete 3 -way relief "this lmport&'nt devtJpment In Jn mlootes to the top of U. rec- 'ttemormold treatment comes to ta! area to soften the ltoot and you after fl~ of scitntlflc ease the bowel moYerMnt. and clinical testlna. ~ ontY does It .. ·thll .... ~ ht Counteroold work by ·ieasenfng does IO Mell to M9lit .,..... pain fest. lflfl by c:ootlntl, ....,,. """'"'"f Ill Wo. · Ina. and prOtectln& lritured tissue So, l )'OIJ ·11w with the e»ln •.. but unlike e'lltf'Y ether' htmor~ and fe« of~ n;nor ~ rhoid product Counttr~ld also orrhold troubles. pt ttm~ works a third wrJ. r•ll•f with DlJldfc ally·l••t•d Thanks to an exclushte tonnui. ~temold. with OSSi• r11 only Counternold ActueUy, used •s directed. gets to a m'aJor cault of hemot-Counttrnoid offers the most corn-rholds: PalnfulconsUDlltlon.Wlth-ptete 3-way rtlitf Y'O'I can pt out irritatina laxative efflet, without a prtsctlptk:Jn « witho-Jt J.lere's how: In hospltal X~ray surpry_. l_n stalnfnl crum « test& doctcn NYf den'IOnltrated supposlt0r1N. that the r~ COUnternold At •II drug counttrt. fQrrrr.11aUonwlthOSS..PfQltrltU •1,.~ ..... ..,~1 .. -.u-.~...., Hel!'" ......... -..... The .. women in his life" include Nicola B u x t on , daughter of a TV producer who is a close friend of Prince 'Pbllfp; Lady Cecll Kerr, .! daU&lltar of the Marq1IUI ol Lothlan; Angela N e v 111 , . ·daughter of another friend of <his parents, and S i be 11 a Dorman, daughter of Malta Gov. Sir Maurice Dorman. · Hi.s closest companion ls perhaps the Scolland Yard •df:!tective who is b1a dbcreet but unfailing shadow. "nle detective •its nwty i n ·theaters, at adjoining tables in restaurants, in the back seat of the car d uring journeys. Only Inside his well-guarded royal homea II Charles truly free in lhe real sense. Russ Plan On Birth C.Ontrols • MOSCOW (UPI) ~ The Soviet Union will eonCemrate on a birth control devke worn tntemally because~ the pffi h "negative side effects," public health mini.ate Bor•i Petrov· sty said today., . • 1 Petrovsky said the SOmc Union ""°ld mauafwt:ture a million Intrauterine loopo by the end of the year and open .. minan thnxlpout the .,.., ' lion to teacb1 1rommi bow to iue them. . Health ofllclais perlmentfng wlili bonnonaJ conlracepUvo clrDp, he said, but had fowid they had "negative side effects '' an !ODle women. Pttrowky WU quoted In the weekly Literary Gazette. Al>ortlon II ltpl In !be liQVlol .Un!Dn b!ll lbe. Llle'arJ (;isettt sai d abortlom m. valved medical rilb and anetirnel undesirable PIYcbolocloal eflecll, . · Tl)e newapaper eltlched Ille laclc of variety and ovalllbfllty of cootr•ceplln clevlca !n Ille SoYiet Union and lack of fami- ly plonnlnc lllitructlon. The Soviet Union bu a low birth nile which alanlll the 'nallon's leaders. Y o u n 1 couples tend to have one or al moll two chfldh!L ANOJHER SPECIAL SERVICE for CUSTOMERS and FRIENDS COME IN AND PICK UP YOUR COPY JAN. 2 lhru JAN. 10 t.J#ere l/Ptl 4tZ1/e ddtM mde a dilrer~ee 5% per annum compounded daily current rate on passbook savings 5. 25% pn minimum le;~ a~~ount~ • . In multlptes of $1 ,000. · .. ' ~~TLlJ~LA~f\'f ~.~~~§. A CORONA DEL MAR e. ,•' ·~, • 2117 EAST COAST HIGHWAY • CORONA DEL MAR, C.WFORifiA'l2dl TIUPllONE:17M010 HEADOFTICE 315 E. C<>fonido Blvd. Pasadena, Calif. 91109 telephone: 449·2345 ' ' ASSEISOV£R .. as.000.000.00 ~SATURDAV,JAN.4 -- . OTilEI! eRAHCJi OFFfC!!I 1 r Glendale, West Ar i;;ad 1a ' Cc;ona Del Mar .. DAIL 'I' fll,01 J J . , QUALITY DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES WILL BE . . * FOR ·YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE!* . . ' ' . . ' :r.:oovs j ... ,.~. ·-...... """" • .. I ' I I •• :1 I I • I I I • J! DAILY PILOT Monday, Dtctmbtt 30, 1961 Leng Beach Event Sea Festival Set 8 College Teams Vie Eight <!Ollegi ate s a 11 i n g teams welit into action in Newport Harbot today in quest of Die •Dick Sweet Perpetual Tropl\y. , 1be ef&hl-race roand robin series continues Tuesday on courses Inside l he bay. The regatta Is being sailed in Shields class sloops. The series will be followed OD Thunday with the All Comers Regatta, also sailed in Newport in Shields sloops. Ondhie II ~ds Race To Ho~ ' ·Top Racer Aids . ·Girl Water Skier ' 838-6211 SH 111 and cut ab Insurance as·in,c:ll .. 25°/o Bob _Paley ' ' \ \ and Auoclalot INSURANCE ' 474 E. 17!h St. COSTA MESA 642•6500 . .. • \ ~ ...... -..... ~ '....• t ' ' ·~ ... ' TOMORROW o ·N.~Y! SA VE 1/3 TO 1/2 OFF ... N~WPORT ONLY! ' .. never before , adver:fised by BUffums' at ) these low pric:es ••• an reduced\f!§ni regular stoc:k, on spec:ial purchases ••. quantities and sizes limited ••• no mail, phone C.o.d orders FUR SALON One-of-o-kind furs from our regular stock ...... I /3 off SUNCHARM SPORTSWEAR LADIES' SPORTSWEAR CLEARANCE 1 /3 off Reg. I 1.00 to 40.00 Famous name sports- wear in assorted styles including shirts, skirts, sweaters and jackets. Many colors; 8-18. >ne and two-piece dresses in novetty wool1, poly· aster, wool knits and other wa nted fabrics, reg. 20.00-70.00 -··· ... . .. ··-···-···-.......... I /3 off Long-sleeved nylon tops in a great selection of colors, reg . 8-00-11.00 .. . 5.99 ACCESSORY SHOP BEITER PANT TOPS S.99 Reg. 11.00 to 13.00 pent tops in e good selection of styles. Stripes or prints in ace· tale or nylon lnit, 10-16. YOUNG CALIFORNIA SHOP Great reductions on swimwear in cottons and knih. Many assorted colors. Pre·teen 6-14, reg . 8.00- 19.00 -·-······ -·-·-······················ .. -·-· ··-3.99 .Terrific reduction on large assortment of cotton dresses in assorted colors. 3-13 ··-..... -.............. ·-3.99 JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR 1 /2 off This group includes A-line or kiltie skirts in pl.id or solid colors. Sweaters in c1rdi91n, sli~. V-neck, turtleneck or fisherm1n knit styles; si1es 5 tc 13. Jumpers in • variety of styles. Fabrics Include solids, tweed• 0< plaids, reg. 23.00-36.00 ····--·-· 11 .99-11.99 JUNIOR ANO PETITE DRESSES REDUCED • 7.99 R99. 13.00. Thi• group of dresses in v1rious styles inclUdo our popular jumper style. F1b- rics Include bond ed Orlonll 1crylic ond rayon/ectyflc blends: many populor foshion_ BUDGET DRESSES FAMOUS-MAKER DR~SS CLEARANCE 10.99-12.99 R99 . 17.00.28.00. You con choose from shirtw1ists1 s~immers, shifts and pant.dresses in·faShiOn styles, fabrics, colors and patterns, so~ds included. 8-18. LINGERIE Nylon tricot stips, petticoats, gown, pajamas , pei9- noir set or pants. Al by famous makers and priced to clear .. ... .... . ......... ... ............ ..... I /3 lo I J? 'off· Long Robes, dusters, casual at-home wear in nylon or cotton quilted fabrics. Pretty prints or. solid colors. Many famous maker labels now I /3 tb ,I /2 off COSMETICS The great jogging suit of durable vinyl fo cbolh·"""l end women. S-M-L, reg. 6.95 ...... 2.00 eo. I O·minute quick setting hair rollers. So e1sy·tcruse! Combination set of 9 rollers , reg. 5.29 ... 2.00: set of 6 rollers, reg. 3.50 ... 1.00: set of 3 rollers (for travel), reg. 1.75 .... 1.00. Swedilh Sauna Exercise Suit for men and wotntn. Ac"ts like • steom beth! i;;'cludes two-piece iult of sturdy viny, and 84-pogo exercise book ind a 64- pege diet book. Reg. 6.95 ... . . _ ............. t oo S.ve on tho "Ton ... -L..tor," e simple appr.c.tion of isometrics and iaotomic exercise that helps trim you. Rog. 14.95 --···· ____ . ··--5.00 INFANT SHOP S.bygro® Stretch CovoraHs with "LA. Rams" om· l;lem. Soft stretch torrycloth in 1iz15 fn>m birth to 20 lbs. and 21 to 30 lbs., reg. 5.00 -····-··--·--······ 2.49 CHILDREN'S SHOES Girls' and infant1' dress shoes reduced! Gre1t styles in· block and white. Not an sias in an styles '° hurry! Infants' lo Growing Girls' 8, reg. to 15.00. Now reduced to ..... . ···--··· .. 4.99, 5.99, 6.99 GIRLS'. SHOP _ AU weather coats with: warm 1ip-out finingi. Pliid 'with cotton velvet trim, reg. 18.00-21.00 ......... 9.99 Kodel® polyester end cotton •lip• with loco trim, edjustable straps, reg. 2.00 .. .............. ... . ............... 99 Small group of dresses in many siz..es-hurry for those! "Reg. 7.00-12.00 . . ............... 3.49-5.49 Cotton jeans in derk fall colors with some fan b.cks, , reg . 5.50 . . ....................... 2.99 Cotton qu ilted robes in dainty prints. Many sites, reg. 9 ._00-1 1.00·. ..... . .. . ............. ... ..... . I /3 off ...... LITTLE SHAVER SHOP BOYS' PERMA.PRESS SPOR.T SHIRTS 1.49 Reg. 3.00. Famous mokor shirts in en excel-· lent assortment of colon end pottems. Perm- anent press !rooted febrics are completely washable: 4-7. STORE FOR BOYS COTTON KNIT TURTLENECK SHIRTS .88 Reg. 3.50. Short sloeved cotton knit •hirts in fine cotton. A good rang• .of solid ,colors. Shirts wosh like new: 8-14. Stock up now. TABLE LINENS AND Glm AND CHINA AU merc handise with Christmas motifs now ,. duced. This group includH t1bl1 linens, "Christmos Tree " dinnerwere and olher rolotod items __ I /2 off · STORE FOR MEN STORE FOR MEN Permenent press Dacron® polyester and cotto~ boxe; shorts. Wide elastic band is guaranteed. Fu~ ly· cut in solid colors or white: 31)..44, reg. 2.00 ___ ..:_ 1.39, 3/4.00 Permanent preu, famous maker dress shirts in white or fashion coJors. Most sizes, reg 7.50-8.00 .... -.... _: 4.89, 3/14.50 MEN'S PAJAMAS REDUCED 2.99 Rog. 5.00-6.00. Top moker pa jamas from our regular stock are wash 'n wear cotton in a Wide ronge of colors end pottern•. A-8-C.D sizes but not in every style, so hurrY! LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 2.99 Rog. 8.00-10.00. Quafity shirts from our regular ·stock in stripes •nd solids in 1 wide v1ri1ty of coftar styles. Some Oecron® poly- ..t ... ind cotton porm1n1nt press •h irts. Not •• sires in e_och •tyle so shop early! NEHRU SPORT COATS AND SUITS Su its 49.99 Coals 29 .99 Rog. 65.00.110.00. Quality woeve s in Oa- cron8 polyester end wool blends. An famous ' makers. Suits in bl.ck or beigo.-Sport coats in .. 1u11I, gold, beck,<blt.1 or white. VARSITY SHOP f .colots. Not uch style or color in ovwy siJo. : ... ----------~~------ Ployt11 Nurser kits complete with formula sacs, caps, nipples incl holders, rog. 8.95 _ 4.99 Permanent press Oacionll polyestor and cotton po- jemas from regular stock. Fuly cul coat style poj1111as eta longwHring with •• olostic waistbond guo ron teed for th1 lif1 of tho gerrnent. M1ny colors end patterns: S.C.O; re<Jlllor style, re<J· 8.00 , . • 6.89, 2/12.50: short style, reg. 6.00 ..... 4.69, 2/9.00 Tradition.I button-down fancy dress shirts in Oxford cloth incl pormonent press, reg. 8.00-9 .00 _. _ 2. 99 : NEWPORT tafl!R • fl FASHION ISUNO • 644-2200 • MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10.00 TILL 9:30 • OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL 5:30 Ill • " . ' • • • ''· . ' 1968 CHILDREN'S HOM!'IOCll!nfblil&OTANTES • -Making their bow to society Saturday evening were 20 ~uilgmarbor Area women selected by the Newport Harbor Auxiliary of Children's Home Society. They are (front 11>w, left to right) .the Misses Sally Holstein, Is~bel EiiZabeth Lawson, Alicia Stanley Turner, Anne ·Storch, Katheririe Louise Smith, Linda Chri.Stine Stabler: Christine Sue Callis, Judy Ann Hylton and Linda Kristine Nissen; (second row, left to right) the Misses ftox~ anne Elizabeth Ray, Carol Edith Carver, Susan Ann '\t'ernon, Kristine Boyd';~Katfileen AlliSon Kelley, Cathy Jo Clark.son,, Nancy E;vans Creamer and Georgeanne Hanna, and (back row, left' to .right) the Misses Deborah Porter, Georgene Lunde Smith and Patricia Ann Huddleston. FINAL PARTY -Mrs. Maurice McCray-and her daughter, Miss Ho!ly McCray honored dellutalile Miss Judy Ann Hylton at a tea today in their New-. port Beach home. Invited guests were longtime friends along "rith the other 19 debutantes wbo made their bow with the presentee last Saturday night. Also.honored "Was the honoree's mother, Mrs . Leon· ard Irving Hylton (center) who chats with her daughter (tight) and Miss Alicia Stanley Turner, a 1968 debutante. .• • -· I , , ' . ' l ~ , '• [)~,..,,uta .n,t.es P~artj~j_pants Share Treasured Memories ' · . \ I t A dream came true fqr 20 Y..oung Harbor Area women last Satur~ay evenlng when theY made ~eir formal bow to soc~ety before assembled families ond ;friellils in the-Balboa Bay Club. And, the tb.J:ill, o,f.pr,esenting. a daughter was shared by proud fathers at the memorable occasion -the 15th annual Children's Horne Society Debutante Ball, sponsored by tile Newport Harbor Auxiliary. These mem· ories will be treasured always by bdth the debutantes and their fathers.· · The setting was resplendent in regal red and white decorations . Mas· • sive ritrangements of white china chrysanthemums with a sprinkling of red carnations lined the aisle and ·were gracefully connected by swags of pine and cedar boughs. REGAL DECOR On each sid~ .of the stage were large bouquets of the sarqei fl.owers. Debutailtes Wore simple white .. balt gowns and earried bouqvets ·of long·stemmea red roses. Their onl.v jewelry were the traditional miniature Children's liome Sooity.gold medallions suspended on white velvet ribbons . The medallions, which have been given to debutantes since the first ball in 1954, were presented during' a preball party, also in the ba1 club. As ,Edgar R. Hill, master of ceremonies, introduced each presentee, she stepped forward on the arm iQf her father and then proceeded down the carpeted aisle io 11\e a~compantment of Joe Moshay's music . · After the pr·esenu\tion , each debut'ante was c1aitned by her father tcr .... dance the traditional tat~er-daughter waltz :snd then' \Vas relinquished to her escort for more dancin g. ·' DEBUT ANTES Debutantes,. their parents and escorts are Miss Kristine Boyd, Dr. and Mrs: Edw3rd Apgle Boyd , Andie\". Sewell Rose ; Miss Carol Edith <;ar- ver, Mr. and· Mrs . .loseph Logan carver, R1cllard Parke: Miss ·Cathy Jo Clarkson, Mr: and 'Mrs: J""oSeph Heb.derson Clarkson, John Charles Symes II ; Miss Georgeanne Hanna, Mr. and Mt11 t Paul ~anna, David JC?ttn·R~ bellow, aqd Mi•~Sal)y Holstein, Mr. and Mrs, George Meade Holstein Ill, Richard Mfchael Kent. . , , Others at'"e 1'MiSS Patricia Ann Huddleston, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Jnsl~y Huddleston .. Gordon Dale Becker ; Miss Judy Ann Hylton, Mr. and Mrs. Leon~d· lrving ,f;{ylton, David Paul Geof!roy; Miss Kathleen Allison Kelley, Mr. and Mrs .· Porter Allison Kelley, James Frederick Millai:; Miss Isabel Elizabeth Lawson, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Beasley Lawson, Mi.chael Guthrie Lonergan; Miss Linde Kristine Nissen, Mr. and Mrs . Paul Nissen, Harlapd Wainwright Koch Jr., and t.fiss. Deborah Porter, Mr. and Mrs. John Frederick Porter, Timothy Burt Hogl~. Others are MJss Roxanne1Elizabeth Ray, Mr. and , Mrs. James David Ray, Wllllam Kla ssen ; Miss Georgene.Lunde.Smith, .Mr. and. Mrs. Ira. \Varren Smith, John Treadwell Y,uJe ; Misa I.J.nda •Christine Stabler, Mr. and Mrs. William Laird Stabler;, Robert Gerald ?.fcCtaire; Miss Anne Storch, Mr. and Mrs. John Ar1hul' Storch,"" Char1es ·Thomas Forkner Jr.; Miss Alicia Stanley Turner, Mr.' end Mrs. Roger Ebert Turner, Craig Marshall Clark, and Miss Susan Ann Vernon, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Col· man Vernon , Samoel Alan Morphy. Miss Christine Sue Callls, d.ughter of Mrs. John Malcomson and the late M.r. Robert Louis Callis, was presented by her stepfather John Malcom- , son and her escort was Thomas 'Purcell ; Mi1s Nancy Evans Creamer 1 daughter of Mrs. Hatfield Creamer was ·preaented by .John Kllllifer and escorted by Clll"fY Welch Kirkpatrick II!, and.Miss Kathertlle Louise Smith, daughter of Mrs. Randall Felix Oedd .. and the late Mr. William Bowles- Smith, was presented by her stepfather Ranaan Felix Geddes and ~rted by Steven Donald Sampson. ~ " Host for the evening was Charles S. Wheeler who greeted guests and introduced Mrs. William C. Adams, auz.iliary president. She 1n turn wele<>med guests and lntrodu<;"'I Mrs. Gebrse W. Gurr Jr., ball.dlainnaQ, • .<' r -. .. .. . .·. . --..... .... . .. ... ' Newport ~each Tenn is Club Ready to: Make · a· 'Racker -;/ .W~wt , C~ ?--· ·:: '~ .. Hangover Chowder By NANCY Mcllm'RE DEAR NANCY, Every~ my hu&- band and I make a re.soluUoo aot to spend nesl New Ytar's day with Ice bap oo our heads. But ,..'re real dwn-dums. Every New Year's eve -sure as con- fetti -we forget our vows and irtan gui- 2.llng champagne like there was no tomor· . row. We never luck out Tomorrow al- ways comes. I Ordinarily we're sensible drinkers, but guess anybody that goes to New Year's Eve parties has to be prepared to have a bro~ head the next day. However, this year I mean to be prepared, not on- ly witll a family- sized bottle of asplr- ln, but with some- thing for breakfast that will taste appe- ti7.ing in our fragile condition. I suppose a hang- over affects your taste buds., but a platter of ham and eggs on New Year's morning looks almost as pad as I do. However, I'm still bungry and crave foods that are tangy or salty" Any dishes you can suggest to help Operation Big Head will be most appreci- ate</. I'LL CRY TOMORROW Be grateful, hoWever, that you suffer the mos& benevolent t1Qd of hangover, known as the bqngry bangover. There is a far worse fate called Cblcken Llckln' the sty is Falllng.In hangover in which lhe victim can't feel his own pulse Jct alooe an appetite. Experts lJl the care and ffF<!ing of hangovers differ on culinary cures. It'1 all a matter pl penonal taste -and stomach. Some claim you must fight fire with lire and a f1amlng bot bowl of chili will dcl1Se tbe flame within. others prc.- clalm the sotblng properti.s of Chinese die.,.-, whicb I for one can say is velly, velly good when firectacken go off In head.· However, r6r breakfast, I don 't think lhere'g any tastier tonic than a big bowl of New Engllnd Clam Q>owder you 'll love in good tlmes as well as bad. It's clam. ier than mosfchowders since it ha s whole Little Neck clarils in it as weU as the usual chopped clams. This recipe ls for four, but you 'll want to make enough for several servings. Cut Z oz. of Jean salt ·port into small cubes. Fry pork in sauce pan a few min· utes and add ! sliced and quartered white onions. and cook another few minutes un· ti! pork and onions are sllghily brown. Add 4 large potatoes, peeled and diced, 2 kz. caJU chopped clams, (with juices), and 2 8-oz. bottles of clam juice. Simmer until potatoes and onions are cooked, about 15 minutes . A New Year's Eve dinner~.e in the Newport Beach Temlis Club also wW celebrate the third anni.versa11 of the tennis facil- ity in East Bluff. Getting ready to ring in tlie new year are (left to rli!htl Mrs. Rod Laver aDd her husband, who is the club's tour- ing pro, and Mr. and Mrs. Graldon Young of the Bluffs. DEAR I'LL CRY, Any malady that's Powerful enough to give you a head as big as a weather balloon and eyes as red as Onassis rubies, is certainly going to affect your taste buds -if not corrode them. . Add 3 cu1>3 milk, 3 cups light cream, 1 crumbled bay leaf, I tbsp. Worcestershire sauce, 1 7-cz. can whole Little Neck clams (drained), 2 tbsp butler and salt and pepper to taste. Simmer another 10 minutes. Bethel Under ·New Leadership Duriog i n s tallation ceremonies in the Seafaring ~1asonic Temple, N e w p o r t Beach, Mi.ss Donna Kinier assumed duties of honored queen of Bethel IS7, Job's Daughters. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs, George Kinzer of Santi Ana selected as her theme. ' : Through Olrist, There Is Peace io Our Hearts. Other elected officers in- gtalled with her were the Misses Linda Weatherwax, . senior princess: D e b b i e Washko, junior princess: Teri Seiling, guide, and Kathy McMillan, marshal. Also seated for lhe next term were the Misses Kathy Knill and Mary Tichava, outer and inner guards; Kathleen ·Kelde r and Judy Paley, junior and senior custodians; Norma , Schm idt, Loma Voboril , Sue Currie, Gayle Short and Marti Houston, messe ngers : Debra Gracey , musician; Kath y Budd, librarian ; GI y n n a Lun ch eo n Da te '-' Beeler. recorder.; J a n e t Wilder, treasurer, and Cindy, Tuz, chaplain. Conducting ceremonies were past honored queens of various bethels. Included were the -._!(alhy . ,-'1111,, Paula Robel'Uon, Barbara C o o k , Barbara Lunden, Vickie Brad~ field, Kathy Woesner aod Judy Schock. Othen participating w.,. Sharon Oblesbee. Jerilyn Manchester, Kristy Robin!OO, Kathy Robinson, Les 11 e Pickrel, Paula Sprague and Mrs. Susan McKay. Us hers were Bob Cornuke and Rich Warner, past master counselor and m a s t e r counseloc of DeMolay ; Mrs. Florence MacGinitie was the organist, and Miss Melody Keller, soloist. Honored guests were Mrs. Kathleen Weatherwax. bethel guardian; Philip W 11 de r, associate guardian: P..f rs . James Common, deputy grand guardian of the state, and Gene Stiles, master o f ceremonies. HONORED QUEEN _Speaker Tops Agenda Donna Kinur ". AUTHOR Paul Pierce Soroptimish SoroptimisU C1ub of Hu r.· tington Beach gathers at 12: IS p.m. I.he second and fourth ··Tuesdays in Francois restaurant. • Paul ''Panther" Pierce will be guest speaker at Balboa Yacht Club's combined women's and men's luncheon in the clubhouse Thursday, Jan. 9. Festivities will begin with Royalty Is 'Cloaked' In Comeback Fashion an 11:30 a.m. social hour LONDON (UPI) -Cloaks f he 'f 'Lord u••• rollowed by a 12:30 p.m. o r urn onn as , • ..,... luncheon. The speaker's talk ha ve the royal approval in Admiral of the Un It e d iJ scheduled for 2:30 p.m. their comeback lo fashion. Kingdom.'' Pierce will be introduced by Queen Elizabeth J[ has Princess Anne, her 18-year· Almon Lockabey, DA l LY followed the style of young old daughter, has a sapphire PILOT boating editor, follow-Londoners swinging around blue velvet cloak to wear with ing a welcome by Mrs. David Smiley, official hostess. town in a shorter version of an ev ning dress, plull a warm pt er c e, who c 0 v e r s what great-grandmother used check tweed cloak in grlys everything from politics to to wear. But when the queen and yellow for chilly winter . da ys. voyages in outer space, is wears a cloak, il is with digni-p · known for his early repom rmcess Margaret has a on the freeway. He got his ty, more than swing. long cloak in pale cold aaUn nickname "Panther'' because She could not have looked with a matching evening h nt d more dignJfied when gown. e once spe two ays cover-photographer Cecil Beaton Princess Alexandra, I h e tng the story of an escaped took an ofrlclal photograph of queen's cousin, wears a short ~°!:Jdition, he is the author her recently in a cloak of cloak of vivid green facec.loth of a book on freeways, "Take deep blue cloth tined with over her tartan skirt when an Alternate." scarlet silk, secured al lhe she is visiting the ScotUsh Mrs. Edward Lelhen ill throat with two gold roses highland ancestral home of JWlC.beon chairman aad Mrs.,-='=nd=='=g=ol=d=cl='='P='='l=l=p'=a=rt==h=e=r=hu=s=ba=nd=.=A'=n;guJ:=,Ogll;::vy=. ~I Bob William.son is in chargelr of decorations. Mrs. Lociabey I! coanlinaUng the event. •Prtpar• for th• futur1 •.. Toda~t· e MMllc:al lnt11t11tca e la1Hca1pl119 e D1ntal Ani1tln9 BRING THE CHIL DREN TO SEE THE PUrPIT SHOW S •howl dally 'REE on the Mall, MtleheJI fllarlonl'!ttes present "CIRCUS" on thUI'llda,)o, rrlday, uturda.y, Jan. 2-3-i at 11 am-1 pm- 3 pm-4 pm-7 :30 pm ~xccpt saturdlly only at 11 am·1·2-J-4 pm HUNT INGTON CENTER B••c.h •nd Eding•r •'9•n Oi•go Fr••w•y Ho roscope Sagittarius: Play for Keeps TUESDAY DECEMBER 31 By Sydney Om.arr "The wise man controls ~is destiny . . . Astrology points the way." ARIES (March 21-April 19): Dynamic ideas feature day. Evening is conglomeration of movement, visits, promises. Listen to ideas but don't com- mit yourself. Opposite sex tonight convinced you are divine. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Holiday fun is great: but don't Jose track of money, wallet, pocketbook. You owe something lo family member. Know this ; have fun. Remember you have to face self in morning. GDUNI (P.tay 21-June 20): You delicately balance op- posing views. Tendency for brooding is overcome. Break loose. Be origiila.l, domineer- ing, pioneering. Means take charge. So many will be grateful. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Celebrate but don't reveal more than you shou1d. Be discreet. Some who claim you are indispensable also seek to bfP8Ss you. Know lhis; be mature. Protect yourself in clinches. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You can genuinely enjoy celebra- tion tonight. People who care express their views, opinions. Time to spread inrluencc. Come out of shell . You carry more impact than you im· agine. Get going. VIRGO (Aug. 23,Sepl. 22)' Obtain hint from L E 0 message. Don 't per1nit others to talk you into foolish action. Be moderate. Temptations tonight abound. Remember At last! A permanent shampoo-In hair color that gives you perfect color. .. The color you want And It's so easy I you have to fa ce yourself in morning. LIBRA iSepl. 23-0cl. 221' Be subtle. Some tonight tell tall tales. Don 't be 1 i e v e everything you hear. Realize only you can prepare and plan your future. Have a good time without creating embarrassing situation. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): One you admire su prises with financial confession. Realize no person is perfect. Romance is part of evening. But doii 't give up something for nothing. Be practical. SAGITARRIUS !Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Be close to one who means much to you. Permanent tie could result from meeling tonight. Nothing halfway. Don't play with basic emotions. Game is likely to be for keeps. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19): Messages, information received today apt to be prtc· tical, 0£ value. Don't nq:Ject basic Issues. Associate may be too filled with holiday splirt to comprehend. Be responsi· ble. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your appeal is great. People want to be around you. Young persons are fascinated with your views. You 1ct points across. Don't play with emotional fire. Many are serious. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Avoid excess. Some you want to impress are care f u l observers. Lel AQUARIUS be the showman al any party. Tonight be a good listener. observer. Don't veer to far from familiar route. GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle high !or GEMJNJ1 CANCER, LEO. Special wora to SAGITTARIUS : don't mate promises you can't keep. 1 • n.r. ..,oatDrt .......... • NMrer" • "'lHld" lode. v.r .. ---· • Pick bioM,...,.,. Qlll ...,_, ... .............. -. • Blonde ... loot tli:ASI .. -·· "°'"' llftY-lloll ... __ a. oolot'JOU ....... c:dot • JOU get. a..ieL BcMllCJ. I I *1 nnntlAndeo ..._1.- et,...oo....., be ,.. ... 'tllld •. .,..,... --'llllh .., Oolorl" TW111J--.-Clnd-I) ttomTeaJqaa' US WHEN IT'S IUU'TT YOU'RE sm1NG YOU'll FIND IT AT TltRIITT • ITIC· 1lect may plirt t>nsi· Feb. real. you. •led get with are 20): want !u I s be 1rty. :ntr, far IES; INI, rord 11ke ~ -"'-H1pp1 New Year! .. DAILY mar 15 · I I - ·Matr;itnonial Secrets 'Bottled'.~ J-~dith ·Gail Ji.I.es: Weds ··;;;;~·i~ • DEAR ANN LANDE~: -14' a woman wtote and as~ 1f you tbought blondes had more fun. You said you didn't know of any surveys but your own personal opinion wu "no." YoU are wrong and I proved it. I am a hairdresser. My natural cotOr ts dark brown. Last year, Just to &atisly my curiosity. I conducled a personal experiment. I dyed my hair every color on the cbaJ1 and checked the male reactions for two weeks. I started by g<?ing rave.o's wing black. Coal-black hair ls more · attentioo-gett.ing than brown, I discovered by walking th~·ah bole! lobbies and sitting in tbe~~'fuim·est cocttail lounges. T kept track of the wbisUes, propositions and requests for dates. (The last two are not the same.) From raven's wing black I went to chestnut. Then I tried the copper tones, next the true reds. From burnt auburn I eased into the blonde shades. I began to get a lot more propositions as well as dinner invitations when I hit honey blonde. By the time I got to platinum, I was so swamped I couldn't keep the names straight. I became engaged to a wonderful fellow as a platinum blonde. 'l'1le first lhing the £uy asked me to do was let my ANN LANDERS ~ hair go baclc to II! natural color. Funny, isn't lt, that men like to date platinum blondes but they want their wives natural? t'm going to be married next month u a brownette. . But facts are facts, Ann. Blondes do have more fun and I proved it. - LUCKY LUCILLE DEAR LUCILLE: You are lucky - lucky yeu Uve any hair left. A pl wbo dyes lier hair a different C!Olpr every two weeks could end up bald -not engaged. CongraiulaUons and belt ........ DEAR ANN LANDERS: I know you are busy with problems more important than mine but please give me an answer. Thousands of people in your rea<ting audience could benefit from the in- formation. What does a person do when he is eating out -particularly in the home of a friend -and runs into a bad shrimp, or .an oYller that doe.m't laste right, or an ovtnipe' stuffed olive1 Is it best to spit: It out in the napkin, spit it out on the plate, leave the table and dispose of I( in the bathroom, or swallow it. -BEEZE1' DEAR BEE: Ut'• nale oa& )IOW' last soggettloo: at once. 1 Under n o dreomltlates should a person swallow food .a.e; Atpeets Is talated. The best solution ls to dispose of It in Ute most locouplcu0ut manner. Use a fork or Spool '° traasport i& OD to your plate, tben place it under a lettuce leaf or a sbell -oai of sl1b&, tf possible. Trulb Is Stranger ... ," as readen will discover i.J1 Ann Landers' new book with that Ude. $4.95 at bookstores. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send thein to her in care of the DAlLY PILOT, enclosing a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Christmas Day Dinner Setting for Troth News Floral Headpieces .Unmasked for Bene/ it News of an engagement between Sallie Collrin and Lawrence M. Minne, both of Laguna Beach, was announced Christmas Day during a fami· ly dinner hosted by Mrs. Virginia Coltrin, the bride- elect's aunt of Claremont. Those attending the dinner included t h e bride-elect's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marion J . Coltrin of Wasbingtoo, D.C. The theme for the Feb. 8 Bal Masque spon.sored by Damas de Caridad will be Bal Masque Pour Reveurs (Masked Ball for Dreamers). The benefit for St. Jude Hospital will take place in the Anaheim Cor:vention Center. HJgblight of the eighth an- nual event will be the parade of mannequins who will model fresh floral headpieces which weigh 15 pounds and are wom with a back brace. Prizes are awarded to winning florists. Anaheim Florist. Mrs. Jae· quline Knott, La Habra ; Andrade-McKee, Los Angeles, Mrs. Charles Currier, Santa Ana : Flowers by Lorena, LaHabra, Mrs. J. L. Reed, Fullerton. Others will be Hacienda Hills, Mrs. Ralph Harrison~ Fulleqon; La Canada Flower Boutique, La Canada, Mrs. Edwin Ettinger, Santa Ana; La Mirada Florist, La Mirada, Mrs. William Moore; Pacific Florist, Long ae.,ch, Mrs. William Cummings, La Habra, and Tropical Gardens, Orange, Mrs. Carl O. Harvey, Brea. l.n San Diego N~ptials _ ·peeks:~ • -· Judith Gall JU.. ol San ., M..W,.. •.••••• full....... • • lli<co lelected I ._., ' ,,. '°"" ol dlk lllCl 'llerod·aler> As•the yeor lixly efllht 'li<fllns "*' lace when abo ucbanged to nin oot ol pqwer •& ~ tq • wedding pledges and rings alarl plans for ii<iardinl!. sprti, "1th her betrothed, Stanley new '!t·wheil It labt-.oll,«icne Arthur llAJP.in. w-..,. B1"ued -Ill ·Omrcb New Years Day ls ·a dat ol 1n San D!igo was the setlins Bowls and cups. Tb!l 'wlvff ire for the mornlog nuptl~. virtual looU..11 wldawl aa ·lbe Pm<ota· ol the net'1y mar· boys •!!II men gl11e>1n the foot· ried c:Ouple are Mr. and Mn. ball games. Many• QIP·wtli be c:i.r.nct Jiles .of Huntinglon used to dispel cobwebscultni~lo Beacb lllCl Mt. and Mrs. S. men nmnlng aroun<harlooo and M. Halpin of Auckland, New !W1dty heads. · , Zealand. Jan~ first wilt be a Ciuty Given In marriage by her day st Newport Udo. IUld· the . t~~· ~hr.Ide chose a head-fdesa •. Guys and . gals .will. be piece oC crysta.1 and ~busily, engaged ,11'l_~ng ',ready pearll to hold her full veiling for you film fan.s who · choose and , she carried a nosegay to Welcome the New. Y W ltom of white roses. a cozy, comfy movie· seat.•Let Attending as matron of lb~ big, wide, wond~td sereen honor and best man were Mr en~rtain you without any in· and Mrs. Joseph Glordano: terrupUons from used .car :lots eister and brother-in-Jaw of and toothpas.te tubes. Start t~e the bride .. Thf: honor attendant New Year right 1 with a, movie, donned a full length A-line at Lido or Mesa . green gown trimmed in beige Spanish lace. She held · a · nostgay of red roses and carnatfons. Assisting wilh usher duties were Rtcbard Scavia, David Maynard and Scot lArirner. Mission Valley Inn in San Diego was the reception set- ting. Special guest was Miss Ann Guglielmetti of Santa Clara .. Tbe newlyweds departed on a wedding trip to Mexico and , will make thtir first home JUNI llTCHll in San Diego. . The new Mrs. Halpin receiv-It ls just plain difficult to ed her BA fiom San Jose come by a motion picture that State College, her MA from -has n1ore to offer and is any Long Beach State and now better lhan the mighty movie is enrolled at San Diego State. Gone Wltb 'lbe Wind. H·· you Her husband has hls BA prefer fnU1'·letter words for des- from Auckland University and cription, take one,. ·G.0.0.D., will attend SOOC.-GOOD! When the novel was lntroduc. ed by Margaret Mitchell some The bridegroom-e1ect, son of Mt. and Mrs. Lewis Minne of Denver, currenily is in Africa where he is teaching for the International School of Tanganyika, Dar E s Salaam, Tanzania. The bride-elect is a graduate of the University cf Michigan and had done graduate work at the University of Colorado and UCI. Currently she is Mannequins and f I o r i s t s represented will be Party Plea-z.ers, Costa Mesa. Mrs. Walter J. Pray, Fullerton; Mannequins have been con-MRS. STANLEY ARTHUR HALPIN ditioning themselves at a Recitei Wedding Pledges . Waist Watchers 32 years ago, it became an in- stant success, selling an unheard- ,. I ~I · teaching sixth grade for the O"' Ocean Vjew School District. 0 Her Hance, an alumnus of ,1 , Nebraska Weslyn University, was a graduate student at the University of Nebraska SALLIE COLTRIN June Brld ... lect and California State College at Fullerton. A June wedding-is plmmed. Golf Fans Rewarded Irvine Coast Country Club W o m e n • s Associatioq members are invited to play Fullerton Health Spa and are ---------------'-----~~~ :'~~;:;~;.= routine 1 Give Your Fair Share lo the United Fund TOPS Waist Watchers of 50,000 copies in one, single assemble every Thursday at day. Then the film rights for. 7 p.m. in Circle View School, Gone With The Wlnd were pur- Huntington Be8ch. chased by David 0. Selznick and i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijlhe, in turn, had another instant success with the · m~ificent motion picture that was, award-- ed ten "Oscars", including the coveted "Best Picture." ' Beginning New Year in a Supers' Bowl which will t Qegin at 8 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. Now, in the sixty eight to six• ty nine era, this tremedous pt<>- duction is as good as ever, it not even greater. This is the sixth re-release and is the very first one to be showing in tba new Wide-Screen plus Metrocol°' splendor! ' ' " '· ' Sisterhood of Temple Beth Sholom will begin its new year with a free Juncbeon for all paid-up members in th e temple ball, Santa Ana, on Wednesday, Jan. 8, at 11:30 a.m. Mrs. Donald Siebert said nontemple members a r e welcome to attend and enjoy the entertainment provided by Cantor Robert Nadell o f LOCAL N• •tll•r n•w5p•p•r t.111 yo11 mor•, '"'TY d•y, t1bo11t wh1t'1 9oin9 on In th• 9r••f•r Or1n9• Co11f th•a tfi1 DAILY PILOT. Temple Isaiah, Los Angeles, accompanied by his wife. Nadell, who will present a program entitled, Broadway Comes to You for 1969, began his singing career with many noted cantors ln Chlcago. He performed as a soloist with the Illinois Symphony Orchestra when he was 15 and the following year won the coveted Grace Moore Scholarship. Since he became cantor of the Los Angeles Temple in 1948, bis singing voice has been heard in numerous films. His wife is the temple's organist. 7. The bowl is the inspiration of Gene Stoddard, golf course superintendent, to show ap- preciation to the women for their help in keeping the course in good condition. Players will be given two strokes to add to their ban· dicap and will play their gross score against their net score. Players who beat their scores will receive a prize, and low nets will receive the Supers' Bowl. Stoddard will play one hole with eacli. foursome. He will be assisted by Mrs. Robert Weed, daily events chairman. ~ ~"'° r= adto,u ~ JANUARY W! CLEARANCE W; UP TO 1 2 OFF ~# ''$ • ,/§1 DRESSES ••• SUITS •.. ,,,; COCKTAILS ... FOR~ALS ... If:~ COATS •.• SWEATERS . . . I' CAPRIS ••. BLOUSES . . . . If I CHARGB CA!OS WELCOME - ' 3424 VIA LIDO J NEWPORT BEACH • 673· I 970 DISNEYlAND HOTEL -ANAHEIM • 638-5142 RICHARD'S LiDO CENTER From Richard's THE "PEOPLE STORE" l't's been a most wonderful year, and tho nicest thing, is your continued support and precious Good Will. Your 1miJe is a vote or confidence, your loyalty reflects our 1uccess, for which w1 are humbly, •nd sincerely grateful. In 1969 we wm again dedice te ourselves to finding joy in serving You, our Community and our Country to the best of our ability. Richard 's. will continue to be • very speci•I center, one you will be proud of •nd find h•ppiness i11 supporting. Have • wondeMul year! God 81111 You everyone. Sincerely, 3433 VIA LIDO Dick & Jenni• Richard The Mana9em1nt1 ind Staff of the Center • NEWPORT BEACH 671-6360 ' --- ------·--· . Three generations are loving Gone With 'Ibo Wind. Not oiily are the millions who saw the original release returning for yet another enjoyable showing, but the newest and youngest guys and gals are thrilling to the hi!torical highlights and the wann, tender love story. That in- between generation a n d dad! and moms are joining the ol'd· ers and the youngers in wel- coming Gone With 'lbe Wind back to the Lido screen for an exclusive showing in southern Orange County. ·_ t. .- • 1•• Lootto 1969 to brinli: you sOme vify rme· fllms at-Ufe Mesa ind Llilo. Mesa ~ sclledule<f to give you a thrilling slatt with ~obn Wayne performing as a _ d8'ia1 oil fire fighter in the inovie Belt Fighters.. ·• MESA MA TI NEES give Har .. bor area film fam a chance tc> be oil and running with a bead start on each new movie open. Ing. See It first on Wednesdl,y afternoon at the Mesa. P.J'o. grams start promptly at r o'· clock opening with free refresh-- marts. FREE PASSES to the Lldt>-Oll Mesa wtll be mall!ll todaj, to Dulce Holloway, 200I Hi~ Dr .• Newport Beach, P. J. lftlo. and, lff IlToadway, Costa Misa. J. C. Ilasl!ord, IOI ~lit. Corooa del Mir lllCI' Kt°'1 Zlccagnlno, Ill)~ Agate. Balboa Wand. .: Tbe !o1ka 11 tho M-and.j.&. <lo all Join lllgelber -""' now to exlend sincere lhlnli:lo all of you for )'OQI' intm•(ln column and ' in tho . lM. '• ~·o1 !J'am ••ch " them ...... • ~-~ly wi.th fo< a v.., A~CIDENT -Man Keith, above, stan on "Fam- ily. Affair" tonight in color at 9:30 on Channel 2. Keith is bedridden after br<aking his leg in a aid- ing accident and Is cared for by his little niece who finds it fun to play nurse. TELEVISION VIEWS Moon Landing On Color TV? By EDWARD K. DELONG SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON (UPI) -Even as the Apollo a astronauts were preaenWig t!>eir last live telecast of their Christmas moonfligbt last week, engineers on the ground '!ere figuring out ways to lly a tiny color camera aboard future apollos. 'The camera used inside the moonship is an electronic marvel weighing less· than five pounds, b\1t it can transmit only black and white pictures. PICTURES FROM space, such as the view of eatth'fl globe which Frank Borman, James Lo~ell and William Anders feetured in the last Yuletide telecast, lose much of their impact without color. The shot of earth from 111,634 miles out, for Instance showed clouds covering mncb of Norlh and Souib America. But in blaa-811<1-whlte, the clouds and the land appeared as similar shades of gray deepite the sharp image transmitted by the camera. . . In color the land would have stood out m nch greens and browns surrounded by royal blue seas and topped by puffy white clouds. ENGINEER MAX Mesner of the Radio Corp- ori.tlon of America, the man who built the camera now used ln Apollo, said a color camera would be po~sible before men land on the moon next sum~ mer. "We think It could be ri!Bde a little bit larger," be 'said. '"Ibis is just an idea right now, but it's an idea based on some very sound principles." Weigbt is a big factqr In Apollo, and squeezing a television camera' down small enough to be car- ried In the mOQ11sbip and to operate off Its limited e!eCtrlcal current wu a triumph of the new techno- logy of miniaturtzatlon. -The Apollo camera ls small enough to fit into the glove compartment of a car. lt has both a wide angle and a telephoto lens. Built with miniaturized integrated circuits-speaks of crystals carrying en- tire arrays of electronic compooents -it requires only six watts of pawer, compared with 500 watts for a studio camera. ~OWER POWER means it uses a different scanning system from a regular TV camera, pro- ducing 31.0 horizontal scan lines per inch compared with 525 lines for broadcast television. Because of this, ground station converters are needed to convert Ute signal for home viewing. . For Apollo 7 there 'Wete two experimental scane cortve~rs, one at Cape Kennedy and the other at cilrp11& Cbrtsti, Tu. By the time ofll(pollo 8, how- ever, regular scan converters had been installed at stations at Cape Kennedy, Goldstone, Calif., and Madrid, Spain. THESE NEW converters resulted in a marked tn,,provement of Apollo S's television. There was Mtter shading, sharper contrast and much greater 4~tall than seen during Apollo 7 telecasts. · Mesner said the National Aeronautics and Space Admlnlstrallon (NASA) has no plans to put color cameras~future Apollos. but added it could be done. ,.,.." c DL KILDARI ' PERKINS JUDGE PARKER As .... "'"""" ........ """" FR:0M HIS PATe """' 6UlCIA, HE A:IES NOr NOTICE #. CAR PmEO NEM HI$ M'ARTV.ENT IRJILPING ! TUMBLEWEEDS • MUTI AND JEf'F GORDO MISS PEACH ---·-·· IF '!OIJ 'Rf! 50 CRA1:Y A80UT 'THI: NEW BOY, FRANCINf!, WHY NOT GIVE HIM A PICTURI' OF YOUR5EI'? By Charles M. Schulz ..... ~··----._,. ___ ... 11ll:XJGHT NEW YEARS EYE !MRKEl71tl~ PASSING Of lHE OLP '/EAR AND n!E ill:GINNINt; OF1\JE NEW! 12·]0 WiL.L·• CHEERS! By Ken Bald By John Miles NORMAL SE°RVJCE WtLLl><RE$UME>As SOONl$POSSIBL£ By Harold Le Daux ty Tom K. Ryan By Al Smltli By Gus Arriola • -«> ··~~~ Q~ 6ff, l OOllT HAVf! A PICTURE OF ME .ONl..Y ONEOFMY P06· IFHEUICeS YOUlt 006' HE'U. LOV& YOU ••• ly MeD MO NDAY Dt;C£Maat 30 r ,, r ~. , t, r, l:JO D w ~ II .. (C) (60) mv.,...",., •-",., SU (t) (60) m1u]<!M)""a.piaml" (C) (30) A ma en n11111d Rlpunzll ll tocklfl In I foWll' bJ' I wttdl, but I hind· IOlllt prfnct eoi.. ID the rac:ut. mmm-(Cl G wtm'• Ill) Une? CC> (30} w111y Bruner llld Mint fnit'ldl wflk:ome __ ,_ ....... 6a"JMoofl1DINa..-1lflow. ID-tel (30) -Ahl 1ndstlllllllllp11t. 111 ... -(30) ID Clm'1 """ G)TIWlllWC.1 II Ill (t) FD RIMbaW o--1 {flJ) Jlltl S.1" sinp sonp by Woody Gutllria. See· 1er 1bo al'lows photoo1phs ind film of GIJthrk. llil " """ ·-1:3011 am F••Dr AflM> <C> (30) Laid llP bJ 1 broken q. Urldt Bill Is 111 but ovtrWtltlmed 111 ttndtr loYinf t.llW a the children ln&lst on n11Nin1 him. 0""" (t) (30) Ttd lleytts.. 7;30 8 R (IJ t ala CC) (SO) The Em Rwlltl lllllikal 1111111 ... ud .. ..,_. ff 1 poor, hannt dirt ,_ ..,. tht help 10:00 0 a (I) en ...... ('C) (fll), "'llMlt .. ~their fl· 0 ~ m-"" y . k Ila truuble .... ltllJ atut an 1.W w lie .U., (C) •'"'lope f1dl cf _,. from thflr (EO)_ "Hunt.'1 Moan." Nldl b taken unda's btnt, CJllrlal Aldrn11n Erk c4pt1va b)' • Je•lol!S llusblnd wllllt Shat ,......,,. fenla aM wini.m c~ 1n amnltht trip. Lawrn::1 Doti· Schlii.t pat. kin •M Susan O'Connell pest 1111111 -.. -(C) (30) ''MMI' the G1111. • T0117 it blKll· n'lllllld .,, • -"-"*' 1111 finds Ollt lkut Jllfte'I wtqbl JIQWlrl. Hltarb; ThomP*>lt flJests 11 Suzie, Crn••I Sdiaeffe(s some· tim1 lllppi• dlustrter. 0 @ IIJ ql l1ol "°'"'' (C) (60) "Kifler.' Sited and lara aie 1ui1ned to 1ppr1htt1d a murderei l' who dry duns, m1nicUres and PKbl;t1 bis vidims in a plastic c:ui"C Utd irfttl pink ribbont.. (:) Twllipt ,_ (30) 0 Llten Wfl!HP (C) m-(C) (60) ED T1lt Crut War (30) "'Rapon- su." The time it Auaust 4, 1914- Septembu, 1915. The IXIW«I. flCld with 1 klnl war, st.rt to llC ttMill: tt1untrln on 1 war fwllni. FllrM shlJ'lt' ncruitinr. factnfJ munltlcm worl,. European llntlmtnb Ind Amtrica11 tttltuda. f!)Dlma.lobtd• 0 Miiiion $ Mwie: "'Tm hn Allty" (mu3ital) '40 -Alice flJe, John Pl)'IM, Betty CrUlt, Jacll ODIL 1G::20 0 Lita ·~ (C) mrrwUi • eu.q!llMI <C> (30) Enictinr a popular telsvlsion com· 10:30 0 News (C) (60) merclel brinp aborA: tht rwnlDJI al 0 Colo!tlntlln· (C) "'Womu If wrvlcernen An .. S. Brooma ct Mi· StrW' (11.11~) '64-Glna LAiio· am~ fltlrida, and his wlf1. bricldl. Sean Conn111, m hnJ Mmn (&Cl) Eii) Wafllll&tDt Ill R .... (C) (30) m CMdwl • .. 1m C30> m Detns .... 11,. 7:55 D liken W•rm·1111 (C) ll:IXllJCl,Olm-(C) m M111 fl'Olll UNa.E (C) li7l m ~ CIJ m -(Cl a:oonm-•...,, """"' OIHIJ m• ... CC) (JJ) Kitt Sfl1tb tuab IS Cua· llOVl'I IWllttl11rt, and Yil!C«I! Prtce (Uetb II Or. Fr11nkensteln. ll:IJ El .... .,.. a.tan If Mr. Mota" (m:yat1iy) ·~nlJ Silvt, U RICHFIELD PRESENTS s"""" L>,,d. * LOS ANGELES !AKERS D@ mm r ...... -(C) VS. S. D. ROCKETS ~u:::> '3~~ ~ r:_; finner. 0 Llktn 114etbaA (C) (2 hr 20 min) L A. vs. Sin Diego Rockets. o ll1l rn m '"' """' (C) m Haul (C) (30) 12:00 m n Sunut Strip fl!I llKt Jourul (C) (60) A rMtw IE) Action Th11tre: "H1!1"1 flw Of th1 7111'1 Mnts in lht dvH Houri" and "S1int's Girl Friday,• rlllltl struale. Guab 1t1 cMI rilhb letdm ind spoknmtn: An· drw Youna. BHI Sbtctland, Kith· 1e .. CIMver Robtrt JohMOn Ju111 U:40 0 Colorbrltlon: (C) "Rewlt tf MIJ'fltld. ~Roi Jonn. ind Dan M1ml1 51DYer," "Circus of f111; Witt&. "k>urney Beneath the DHtrt," 1rd "Revolt at Fort L1ramie," II) Comicot J CntdoMt l:!OIJ<l!l m ..,., ....., (Cl (JO) Ki111 andQ..11 find 1 rock conh in· 1n1 Fl' on durtn& 1 reo1ou f1dd tr\J, ,,.. the c.rtan wt out to st.kt thtlt dtlm to richts. (R• ldtad!Jlld hum lbwnbtr 4). TUESDAY l:GD D Morit: "f"wt" (sci·fl) ·s1 - W1U11m Phipps, Susan Ooull1s. D _,., '""' «> e C..•DftitJ l lllttln hlnf (t) 0-(Cl D IC) '1h1 Ok!1ho1111n" (westn) '~Jed Md:rn, Brad Out1r. IO:JO (:) (C) ........... '""" two•· 1rn) 'S2. -c;1ry Coc11tr, Ph)'!llt Th••I«. DAmME MOVIES IZ:30 m •sw11t 011, HuvaC Moon" ~ ~ -(rnltSlctl) ''4--0ennls Morain, An11 ,_ • Hntlr"' (westem) Sh1rtd1n. • ...... Scott. £.mat llorl· ,, .. l:SO D ,. ..... (CClfnldr) '45 -Alln Solllem, lll:lbeft YllUn&. t:IDD....., __ l .::ioo. ........ -"""' t:oo ID "'Malt hlnll" Cfd'mtura) •41 -J<lbtll'HI MU!M, Arttiur Fr111L • JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS PILOT PR INTING . 221 1 wm IAUOA ll.YD. NlWl'OIT IUCH Ul'I Tt1-Pholo j I"'. '·" • "t:' •• : '' ..... Ironside's Barbara Anderson , She Came to Be Star and Made It By V,EllNON SCOTI' HOLLYWOOD' (UPI) -In 1964· 1ppnJX!motely :rl,286 beaulllul blondel In their 1 .. 111 and twenties tumbled ott. plaua, trains, bu.sea and bay w...... Ill Hollywood to ~ coma movie and/or television stani. or that group :rl,215, hove become waltreues, barmaids, real estate sale!glrla, hous&- w i v e s, and supemutrket checken. The one who ii on the road to stardom is Barblra Ander- son. she is lhe delicious female cop on "Ironside." Good fortune and modicum o( Lalent have saved her from the fate of her sorority sisters of 1964. Actually, Barbara came to Hollywood f r o m Memphis, Tenn., lo appear in li ttle theater in Los Angeles and lo study acting. She chose to skip N'w York's acting schools. cause I Jove the ¥.'eather here. But l didn't think I was pretty enough to become a movle or TV star." ~arbara obviously suffers from myopla. role in a series who ls undu the .,. of lll. Stop and think about It. This excludes everybody u~ ctpt SUun St. James (Name of the Garno), Pew Upton (Mod Squad) and Linda Evan1 (The Big Volley). Delore landing with "In.•· side'" Dubon oppeared , In seven other television shows, lncludlng the pUot for the suc- cessful "Mannix" series. "I . got my experlence at the Front Street Theater in Mpnphls," Barbara said. "It's a wonderful place to learn your craft." Reminded that the aood old Front Street Theater wasn't u renowned as, say, the Pasa- dena Playhouse, Barbara's eyes flashed: "Well it will be some day." Yeah, well, who's going to argue with a lady cop? Carson Show~ .. ,. NctAC cw.sr ... "'. S'ftl "· Coming to Melody land Johnny Carson returns to Melodyland T h e a t e r in February as part of the Anaheim showplac,'s winter celebrity series. ~ c.tliNon hUy h• 11JO .. . . . ... . . . .. ... ' Xf9llD®X N[W"OIT BU.CH • Olt.l-IJ50 SOU'fHERN CALIF. EXCLUSIVE f laaewsatt11spbdor .• lbc most maicnif1tt11I picWleMr! DAILY ,!LOT J 1 ! 'U11ite.d rlitiJ t J 1)~~W 11•~.~ttlft 'lL HOili• PU.II -,1J • ' LAST 5 DAYS I f ACADEMY t AWARD 1 • !J!.'!~~-·-j JO$EPH E. LEVINIE --• Mlk£ NIC"OL8 l LAWRENCE T\JRMAH -THE&RADUAlE ' . "4.WCO~YfUI CClOR ---"·~ "" • I 'iM Tli•-,,.._ Afhlr'" with St••• McQu••11-f1y D11111w1y t •DWAllDS I l aARK~ tf.J·t;f a . 1VIVIENLEJGH -HSATll ... -·LESUE HOWARD 1 .. .@NilS. OOIT• *"',..,... l4.J10J IOUVIAdeHAVIUAND --·---·•-M· ,............,..,.,., MATINEE DAILY Mt"f"<)COl..Ofll ...... ....,.,,....... I 1 ... lllow ShHft t P.M. CoMl1tlMI SHw Sat. nt1 S• .. W-4. fnn11 12:30 !\low for Ibo first lime Top Twirlers "The actors I knew who went to New York studied with Stella Adler and Lee Stras- berg, All their proteges look- ed and behaved like animals, scratchlng a n d C011troting their faces and bod1es. l didn't want any part of that," Bar· bara said at Universal's C1>m- missary. Her hair is light blonde. Her eyes are a tawny mixture of green and gold. Her figure is better seen than described, and she has permanent dim· ples on each cheek. Moreover, Barbara won a "Miss Memphis" cont.est. Jn her first year on the "Iron- side" series (1967.U) Me won the Emmy for best 811pportlng actress in a dramatic aeries. The late-night TV personali· ty will be seen in five performances only, beg.Inning Saturday, Feb. I, and playing through Monday, Feb. 3. at popular prices. I ' With him will be singer Phyllli McGuire, the dance •"Mrs.Brown, you•vc got a lovely daughter' .; -~-.~·:!:·.:!:· Bl?nde Carol Rosenkranz, 16 (right), beams after being crowned most beautiful majorette at the yearend finals of the World Twirling Association in Atlantic City. Nancy Zabik, 13 (left) was award· ed the junior title. More than 140 girls' competed in the three-day event. At the moment she \s ooe of those rare television creatures - a pretty girl with a regular team of Bud aod CJCllr;::::::::::::::=~ Robinson and trumpeter "Doc" Severin!len. 'Ibey will present two shows Feb. 1 at 7 and 10 p.m., two shows "I came lo Hollywood be· Original Dramas Due For Caesar's Palace Feb. 2 at 5 and 9:30 a.:.~ Texas Theater, College :, ~~~1 P~'.1ormance Feb. 3 nu. will be Canon'• second C R • aJ D engagement f o r producers reate eg1on rama ~~t '=~=. ~~~ LAS VEGAS -Caesars Palace, which has presented full·length productions of "Sweet Charity," "The Odd Couple," "Fiddler on the Roof" an "Mame," is now planning to produce original avant·garde dran1a and to eslab!ish a resident staff of writers, directors, and actors to"'·ard that end. The hotel also will import off-Broadway hil s such as "The Boys in the Band." "Futz" and "Hair." To house these productions, Caesars will build an intimate off·Broadway·type theater wilhin the hotel complex. The project will be the first of this type ever operated in a major hotel in the United States. !leading the new venture will be Jerry Zarowitz, ex- ecutive vice-president o f Caesars Palace, and Dave Victorson, the hotel's dir.ector of entertainment. Zarowitz and Victorson have conducted a thorough study of recent developments in the o[f-Broadway theater and are convinced that interest in such fare is strong enough to war· rant expansion in Los Vegas. Zamwitz said he believes the revolutionary changes tak- ing place in contemporary off. Broadway t h e a t e r will suMtantially influence a 11 entertainment m e d i a , in- cluding television, motion pic- tures, and night clubs. "The creative people work- ing in this theater of in- volvement, as some critics have described It, are proving New Title HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Paramount has lengthened the tille of "Monte Carlo or Bust !" to "~1onle Carlo or Bust! with those Hairpin Har· rys in their Jaunty Jalopies," LEGAL NOTICE IUl'l!lllOll COUllT 0, THE 5TATI: 0, CALl,OllNIA FOii THE COUNTY 01' OllANOI: Nt. A .. 114J NOTICE OF HEARING OF PETl'TION FOR PROllATE OF Will AN O FOii: LETTERS TESTAMENTARY E1l1t. of Fr1nlt Mtrcurl, 0~1H"I. NOTICE IS HE REBY GIVEN THAT !~nl!111 Mor(url 1\11 II~ ,..,,111 I p•t•lk>n lo• probate o! woll tn<I for h•o.r•n<e of Lll!ors Te>l1mtn!1ry lo Polllklrlor. ,.,en!llct lo wllldl II m..it tor turrllt• p.artlcvl•"· ind th•I "" l<mt 1n!I PllCt ol llttrl119 IM Nml 11111 bf.en l•I for J1n111rY ID, 1H9. tr 9 lll 1.m.. In tl>e cour!•O<ll'll al O•n1r1mo111 No. 3 o! s1i!I court, 81 100 Wost El91>Jto ~!rett. In !l>e Cltv 01 s~M• •n~. c~!lt11rnl1 Oa!ed OtGem~• }J, !tM. W. E. ST JOHN1 CoOJnlv Cltr~­ llic~lnl llllln, )00 Hor'th lltlllt>nll Dr1"11, l lV .. lf H!ll1, C11fllr11)1 Tt!: f11Jl 114·UU A1tarn11 for l'tHlloMr Publl•M<l Orlntt Coi l! Diii¥ Piiot, Oocember 11, JO, lffl 111d J1n111rv '· 1%1 ,,,, ... LEGAL NOTICE . ""' NOTICE TO ClllOITOllS 5Ul'ElllOll COUllT OF THE lT.lTI OF CAL4F011Ht• FOii Tl-II! COUNTY O' 011.lHOI Ni.II"'°"' l:11~1t 01 ~Yl\11.l NESBITT FENNEii o..., ... ....i NOTICE IS H(REllY 01\l[N lo '"' ''""•lllrl of tl!t 1llove llllllf'<I ,,.~Hltnl l'htl 111 "'"°"'' 111vl"' clll"'' 1t1ln11 ""° ttld Ot«;IP'llMI t•• .....,1rH1 lo I ii. th...... •1111 "'' l!K••--"' --. It! tt.. ofhct ol' lf>t elf-rt of ,.,. •IMw• f'l!lllf'd cou•I. or lo 11r.,...1 -· wllll "'' "4'Cn.-·-~ l'O "'--Wr1l0Md ,., tM on1c1 ol l •rov I T•"· illlomn. 2u. wU•hlr• llou.,....r•, l ul t. 600. !Mini• ......,,..luo, C111!'0rflll, fOollll. ""'!ell '' tllt •lllCI ef Ml_, ol lllt: '"""'"'!OM<! !ft 111 "'ttllrl -!tlnlllf to ~ tt!~tt ol' 1t1ol llKl"Clflll, w!lll!n lovr ""'"'"' ,.f!.., ,,.,. ll•1l ..,11tlc1tlon OI' 1~1. n(>llt• Ot!f'd NG .. ,m~r 1. 1HI. Jolin L....,11 '"~"''· t••c~!or o! '"" wrn "' t~e .. l>llv• r•m•d 11tt111r~t LtllOY I . TA'T 14U Wlll{ll,.. IM .. 1~111 "" S.~I• M1111U, C1Nflnl1a, .... , , •• 111-G·41tl •!!~ ... .., "' .,.,,,., ""Mt111>t11 er ..... c..-tt 0.11¥ ,11tt, Cfrc""°"' t. It. JI. JI. I.. lllMI that the mild, innocuous treat· Loa Rawla: and Dute EllingtouJI ment of important issues in By WILUAM GLOVER £or both DTC and Trinity, ex· and h1I orchestra appear Jan. our lives is no longer enough,,, DALLAS, Tex. CAP) -A plains that emphasis on youthj :j=s.5:;;.~:=;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,i said Zarowil.z. new cross • Country theater instruction with: ~ partnership ot pros and profs • VictCtrson said the Caesars is on the way according to "The trouble with mmt f Palace theater project would Paul Baker, a doughty Texas American people lB that they i·- be authentic off-Broadway in pioneer in such collaboration. don't know what the arta are. •• , every respect. The theater But if a youngster start.s going EITD I itself, he said, would most "I think what has happened to classes, the family gets,1 L::;=-:;;?>-3~;?,!'!;":!:" ~-~-~~"::;•':;:"":'JJJ likely be named ' 'Of r -here," he says or tandem work interested and becomes sold I.! ................ .. B d ,. at the Dallas Theater Cent.er Ph-6-'260 I roa way. on the importance of such ' - "Jn addition to bringing in and at San Antonio's Trlnity things. EXCLUSIVE AREA off ·Broradway productions University, "is the developing "'The heart of the problem," ENGAGEMENT which have al•eady won pattern for regional drama ac· ' tivlty." says Baker, is the creative Showings Nightly critical and public approval ," and professional jealN•~ that continued Victorson, "we will The program combines pro-~~ IUTI.IS • 71 • 1 O: also produce new plays. To fessional production with traditionally exists between MONUIS • l:JO achieve that, we are going educational curriculum aimed professional and university to have a resident group of at generating community in· theater endeavor. writers, directors, and pro-terest in showgoi.ng as well "The prof~rs become Jit- ducers, creating and preparing as training actors, authors and tie gods and don't want to new theater material. directors. be disturbed. And professional 1 "They will have the freedom The 10-year-old c e n t e r theater knocks that calm down to work on any subject they stages 400 performances an· because it has to make ends feel can be translated into nually of about 18 shows meet." sound theatre, and \he treat· budget: $450,000, links up with "The colleges are emerging ment of these plays will be the college by providing in· from their ivy towers and fin- at their discretion.'' structors from among Its 30 ding that they must enrich Zarowitz admitted that permanent staff members. the community around them," some of the more daring and A corollary activity at both he asserts. "More and more esoteric off-Broadway pro-places is a juvenile instruction they want good .art -music ductions might not be ap-program ror the 8-to-17-age and drama -and are proved by the Las Vegas bracket, with combined enroll· discovering they cannot have censors, but he feels that ment of about 400. it within the wual four-year eventual acceptance Is in· Baker, managing director academic training program." evitable, probably within a. ___ _;,. __ ..::._..::_ _________ ..:..;:_:...._ year or two. "Popular opinion to the con- trary," smiled Zarowitz, "Las Vegas ls rar more puritanical than New York or Los Angeles." Mia .Farrow Buys Estate On Island MARTH A ' SVINEYARD, Mass. {AP) -Actress Mia Farrow ls purchasing a lavish eslate on thls resort island which she Urst visited three years ago during a much· publicized yachting trip with Frank Sinatra and olher movie personalitles. Avery said the agreements at upwards of $100,000, but real estate broker C. Stuart The price has been reported e<>mment on that. Avery said today he could not are in the hands of the lawyers and "it's be c n verbally agreed between her busltless m a n a g e r and myself." The estate involved is that of the late RI. Rev. Lewi s Whittemore, former bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Western Michigan. and his widow, Helen. Avery said Miss Farrow ts purchasing 30 acres and the Whittemore family is keeping 10 acres. He said the land being bought by Miss Farrow i-.; adjacoent to some owned by film star James C:lgney. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 49 f'1rt of S&twday's PUl:ll SoMd: th• body 1 Ell!vatlon 51 llad• a 6 Fly aloft confl!ss lon 10 Took lo of trror flight 53 Round of 14 Bird a~plause 15 -rnatl!r 57 C lnest: 16 Gi rl In a Cornb. form Broadway 58 Enunniratt song 59-guns\ 17 Drunk IS 61 Marin ers ·--65-blotlc 2. words b6 O!!ficltnc~ 1!1 Spoils 67 Harbor VI 19 Sacred lmagl! 68 -antlco: 12/30/61 2.0 Color Black 2.l Walk w1th marblt 9 Fumlture 31 ltarlng afftcted 69 City In making sntat1r1 dignity NE lbly m1terl1I 40 lnSWtf 22 Part of 70 Crucial 10 Manitoba 42. In aCCOI'• thl! hl!ld 71 Ending us'td COllllUnlty: danct with 23 Cut w1th lso 2 words th• law 2.5 Tht Ama t"ftlr and cyclo 11 Kind of •s Sm1JI llUS Cracks•an 72 GtnUI of r,lltks 47 See 20 27 Rhyth PI ~ckals u llft ... , Act05S lnsltvnltflt 73 drt•tlJ wllh a lovff 50 Young Jl Zero wictid n Falls off •l•al 32. Stat1: Alltlr. ...... 21~~ 52-boud 33 llomll'lg 53 lld.lltrlal .... DD'IN 24 ltat i.1111.-i11 JS"-n1yl" 2• lhltl flt 54 Contrc1d 39 Senile• l Snatch 27 "'1Hnt .1,,1 ... filtct•tnts, 2 Haw en 21Lndm: 55 -DOllt n 11nn ls ll'ldulltlnt s.m1 56 Foolish 41 Suitable to COl'ltouf 29 ltltht """".!: a king 3 -811t..... ol lndl• 60 DWI : 43 Blbllc•l ••n 4 ~Ifie 30 Zoo anhlal C•lt. tDnl 44 Dice ttlt WI)' )4 Those 62 lldal: Allftll '''d"'' 5 hoYlf nUltd 63 Rotary: 6 E•r,:n of after othm Cc.b. form .... Chit 36 Prtttctlvt 64-.. r ~6 For;lve 7 Swan 11nus dnlct •7 ••llf' "' 48 Fussy excitement !I Low affair J7 lnYlttd part • .. .NATAL.IE wooo-~ -.SS'-.1'1! "lif.{~.WlJU:OWUI&_ e STAm WIDNUDAY e "DOCTOR ZHIVA<iD" STAm WIDNISDAT "THE YELLOW SUBMARINE" FiixsOUTH COAST P'LAZA THa:MrllE San Dlqo ,,....,. It lrfstol • 546-2712 -NOW PLAYING - SHOWING TIMES Director Set HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Robert Mulligan will dlrtct "The Mand.Irina" at 20t.h Cen- lur)"Fox. J9 STEREO SENSATION! • The colorful sound of Orange County Music RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM .... From Fashion Island . Newport Beach Direct from i I '\Vlnner of3 Academy Awards! -. lllllllCGIOI",.._. fllll -llOl.-1!1111111 ti • ..,...,"',., ... O.IHll w ... ~..,.. .,..,.. . .... ~ .. ,_.,.,_ I • , I I • t I I 1' I I I I r ~--·· : Supervisors Okay • ¥. Cable T V Se rvice : I •I :. A lrand>IBe to ltl'YI two : ~ county uias •1 trith eable TV bu been ap- : I prVftd by the Orange COOJlty " .. " ;! Exchange ' ·' :1 ••• :1. Blames Tax j For Move Board of Supervisors. Suecesaful applleant ts Na- tional Trans-Video Inc. ot Dalla!, Tes. They plan to offe< service in the Orange County area adjoining Whittler and the area adjacent to Diamond Jl,ar. TbeJinn currently •rves the two out-of-eounty ....... The franchise is for a 2$- year period and the county will get 2 percent of the 'gross earnings. • '!be cable company listed the lollowing service charges: NEW PONTIAC MOD E L-Poritiac Motor Division next month will introduce a new car called The Judge. The model is specially designed to offer a combination of added performance, excellent ban· In High Gear . . --· ' • dling and ~ve appearance. Standard equip- ment oo 'The Judge includ .. a 366-boniepower V-8 Ram Air engine and a 6IHncb floating deck air !oil. :!>' PH!LADELPIDA (UPI) -l' T b e Pblladelphia-Bal~ .,t! Washington Stock Exchange, l~· oldest in the nation, will movl!: 1 out ol this city where it was ·~ founded because of a n ·~ emergency tax package pass- Overhead installaUon, first outlet $1150, each additional, fl.50. Underground m. stallatlon, flrst, $25, each ad· diUooal, $1.50. Monthly service charges will be $5.25 a month for the first outlet and $1.50 for each ad· ditionat 'Her e Come The Judge' for Pontiac 1., ~ ed overwhelmingly by city 1 council. :; 'Jbe eight-tax package ln- 1 ~ eludes a 5-cent per share levy : ; on stock transactions. .. · Elkins Wetherill, president :; of the exchange founded in • 1746, said the "on1y thing that • will keep us in the city is if they repeal thetax." • • The exchange has obtained Renovation On Wet Jet . Held Up a M-day option on floor space ~ in an office building in • suburban Bala-Cynwyd, just ,.., across the city line. SAii co j. Wetherill said it would take FRANCIS (AP) about four monthlJ to relocate Renovation is taking . longer . i the electronic equipment, "but ·. than expected on the Japan ' wt won't wait that long. We 1 Air lines DC8 that belfy-Iand- ' · hope to be operating there ed. iD San Francisco Bay Nov. within 60 days." 22~.say the jetliner , 1 Op.pooents of t~ st~k tax , ina:r*.·ln the air qain by : 1! pr~cted tbe city will ~ late::Mi't spring. , realize an upected 13 million .,..., M ·u· lane hi h '1 annuallY. because people 'Will •r:-...-. nu ion p , w c . : deal with otbe.r exchange& !anded m. IO feet ~f water ·,I which hive no tu Just off Coyole Point three !-------·----. miles soUlh of the San Fran-·'.· I cisco lnt(rnational Airport, is • ) ' • ' • • :I H ' : ) u : I • .. I .. :1 :.! H '.I : I , 1· •· ·• 1' ' • • .. ,. '· ' •• " ., under-'gtirlg a $2 mi ll Ion See re~~ job at the Un.ited oar Air~ mai n tenance full-page ad . hangar. in this Week's 1 All '1 persons aboard ' ~ the accident in heavy TIME !OJ)!· . ..., · ''All of our people were 1 amueil'-.at the small amount d damage," a United .Air- Magazine mFIRST t CALIFORNIA COMPANY Wherecbs ......... always eomes ~t JJIS VS. W. Nnpwt.._. ,._.I 67J.JMI Win.._ 1. Mcan40ti Yke ,. ... ~ •• , 'Lines~ said. . The':: ~pbne's four engines, .1 · vab;j.at #50,000 each, seem- ed ~18)11Sa1haged by their salt •.Wllatb. ,,,. .. building had """" scbedttled fGll'"eolBpleliOO April 1, buL'Ullited'.l lddmlciarus said ··~. can't -get . .n of the -j>al:tl olf•lhe hjcl<ley shelvell. we .. -must wait.. two, to siz: weeks Jor. the-~s . to make some or 'the new ones." Ill $1GD ar more month lftet' month after month! By CARL CARSTENSEN perfonnance, excellent handl- D•llr Piiot A11•0 Eonor ing characteristics and a very Pontiac Motor Division has distinctive appearance. announced that it 'will• in· It will have as the standard troduce a new car next .month .. power-train a, 366-horsepower, that "goes ODe -"'----V-1 Ram 'Air . with 400 t-"'~-~... ' t engine step further" in the~popillar j cu·b.i<_:~·n.ch<lisplacement, muscle car field, a "field~ · . 10.75: 1 .corqpr~ .• ratio and market Pontiac opened up five four~barrel Q u a d r a· i e t years ago with the GTO. . carbµretioo: i:oupled, with a The new supercar, to be fully synchronized .three-speed named The Judge, is specially 1 h e a v y • d u t y m a n.u a I designed to offer a unique • lransm.issiOn floor mounted c o m b J n a t 1 o,n of added control with a Hurst T-hancBe. Winter Campaign Louis R. Benny, (lei!), University S!IJ ... and Serv- ice, Costa Mesa, diocuses Oldsmobile winter mar- keting plans wlt.h Jim Schultz, Oldsmobile's Los Angeles zQD.e, manager at a dealler meeting in Los Angel.es. Oldsmobile plans a special drive in Janu- ary end February. • .. 1 IHVDT ST•.aoe.ot ...... ••• Havln1 I lli\IW" 11011thly chect to look forward to! YOU "1C'fM mu •nAiN INYDT .......... llllf If .... lttho have 1 wonderful MONTHLY SECURITY ~ so":rtl 'ot. .v.i nrAu or 1~ :=; fOll ,.'IQ.I .,"',. • " .. ,. •I '· a-ml' • . s 10~1rs s 1.m .oo »ao.on ISTArt or """""'"''••·on11nattd end loaa: tested hr Newport B1lbo1 s ~! 1s l'f•" s 1.rn.00 s100..oo 10,...,. "4.ns.oo ........ ~-~ by ' I • d:..:.laJ rrl a.!..i lOl'flll $ 4,11).(l(J 1Sl'Nfl SJ0.'50.oJ __. ....... """ simp y open1111 a 111111;11111.fl na: ...,.nrs INVBT , ..... 00 sxuoo 10,...,. ,,,,125.00 A 3.55:1 axle ratio will be standard as will dual ex- hausts. Available as a hardtop coupe or a convertible, The Judge will be easily recogniz- ed. The front will be distinguish- ed by a black grille, espoeed headlamps a n d ( functional Ram Air hgod scoops. A three- color slash stripe on the upper edge of~ the front fender run- ning back to the door, "The Judge" decals on the front fender and Ram Air decals on the sides of the hood scoops will provide side identification At the rear will be a 60-inch floating deck. air fall with The Judge emblem on the upper right blmd surface. To complete its cjis,tinction, 'the "first production units will be painted a bright red in· eluding the Endura energy- ab.sorbing front bumper. As a companion to Pontiac's GTO, The Judge will ride on a 112-inch wheelba!e and the Wide Track will be 60-incbes Blackwall G70-14 Fiberglas tires will be mounted on .Rally II wheels without chrome trim ring s. Morrokide bucket s e a t s , d·rt.ver·oriente-d in- strumentation, a sl\allow dish, vinyl-cushioned steering wheel and 311tupper level ventilation system wilJ highlight The Judge's Interior features. A complete list of options and accessories will also be made available for Tbe Judge w,hich will be available in Pon- tii].C dealerships late next month . No Fringe Benefits For Part-time Corps · By SYLVIA PORTER Shortly after a column or mine appeared tracing the dramatic growth of fringe benefils, a New York reader scolded me with this observa- lon : ·~we part-timers frequently receive no fringe benefits at all. Simply because I work part-time rather than. run- time, I am denied hundreds 1r not thousands ol dollars in he&.lth i~, life in- surance', tu1tiQn al~ces for our children, etc." WRY, ASKS this reader, isn't Jt feasible · to give part.- time workers partial fringe benefils. based on the number of hours and-or days they work? How. she asks, can employers a!ford to discriminate aginst part-Urne workers, male or female, in this era of skills shortages? These comment& raise ques· lions of considerable economic significance, not only to the natioo's · 10,000,000-plus part- lime workers but also to hun· dreds of CorporaUOM which might fmd in the tr&ined part- tinfe worker an im portant solution to shortages of full· time skilled workers. The comments and ques- tions are n.o less significant to rniWons of housewives desperately seeking household help. One key reason for the shortages in this area is the lack of recognition of the workers' need for status (which certainly would be shown in the provision of benefits which other workers take for granted ) . a full-time jdb while they have young· children at homt. These women should be encouraged to work part-time 3nd to maintain their skills, eilher because they must supplement the family income or because our economy needs their speclal tatenL-;. -It is conceivable, even probable, that many com· petent, trained women in areas of critical shortages, teaching, nursing, would be lured out or hiding and into the labor force if part-time jobs were sv.·.!f!tened at least a bit with partial fringe befleflts alOfli the lines of ttxise available to the vast ma'jority of full-time employes . -1£ some of today's jobs were re-tailored l o ac- commodate the par t -t Im e worker, a major dent could be made in worker shortages. For Instance, two hall·time workers might hold down a single full-time job ; or the hours of certain jobs could be geared to the hours children are in school. -FRINGE BENEFITS • certainly would help solve the problem or the disappearing household employe; the suc- cess of the big household cleaning c ompanie s demonstrates this. TODAY, %7 CENTS out ol • every $1 of the U.S. employer's labor C<lSt.s goes for frin&e benefits; today, a record proportion of each dollar a worker earns comes in the form of paid vacations and holidays, company profit,.. sharing plans. various kinds of insurance. Meanwhile, the typical part-time worker gets none of these fringes. In addition to the 10,000,000 Americans working part-lime, some 3,600,000 "moonlight" an average 13 hours a week outside of their regular fulJ. time jobs. More than hall of the part-time workers are women . Robert W. Long ) ..-. OU.rs lnvesttd a lump sum. lWI. THE COO"'* FOR s100.oo 1orw11 117.JSooo ffrMn ......_ ---~iu ON T1I w _, 111NVi s100.oo 1Sl'ffrs s15 ,15·00 sisooo 1o ~~ Kl" E MOllTHL1 <AWIRJTT '""""'NT 11so.1» 10)'ffff. s ,;s,o:llO 12so.oo is:'~ ~UIXl THE LACK of fr i nge JIM, 'IMn t>I.-ll 7S.oo 1oyu,. su.1~: benefits is just one of the Long Made Vice Prexy ,, l - • ' ......-....-. 1t • .......,, "s.:. 1Joc """ c.1a.r.11 r...w c. s1sooo '°""" ·~M i»o.oo lNVBT •tto-... disadvantages of .part·time ...,_.. •....,.., •• n-.i•IMI -• .-.. ttt r!Pts i. ..,..1,. 11sooo 1sl'ftt1. sJJ.:crioo s •.oo 10,_. S81i.tsooo work. Tile unemployment rate • • •...,. .... ., ltMt u "'"*'°"· c...., 9llMtlwl ,...t Mm -~ '11s 00 10 ~·" 11t'.iso oo : soooo is,..,. m.J75oo of this ty""' or workers is •......,hi -J2 "'11-l ·~11 ...;..:1;..,.,,. ,..~"" od 1lO.Oo 10,.. • ., s~1.asaiio ,... In a lop level promotion w .,., .. ...., ~ c""'-~"" "'1" '"" N •d , •• ~.,. "'~r~•Md" -•v"tf't '"ft111I "'"'" s around 7Yz percent. more than at Rank of America. Robert .. ; Cllthtlll~ Dll¥ .._.....; ~~!·, ... '*.:,.!'~,.1 1:.:"11:'~ !:';".":.~'-!~':,;'',;~v::!n:,7,,'~::1~'!.'~,;,.'';:..•;;.-~',::H:1s~3,.:(~ hi,·ice the ra te for full·time W. Long, a former Irvine Co. ...,. •11 '" ""' Y..,.. °"'· ~":OO'°';i'rn;y.,m~-:--~·=M:·_~:----~·~·=""'J workers . Usually, they are •. • • • • • • • • • • • •• ••• • • .;. ·••• •• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' •, laid off before I u I 1 • t 1 m e employe, has advanced to workers and they often find srnior vice president. ! fiOWPOBT B8.f ·1HOR SRVIDGS ! that they must have suprior ~"oc-eO:~~i~~ay,tt;;esid:~~ • ,....., ltft J.Jl' ,._ 1..0"" •••oc1.-.T10M • qualificationa to get a new Rudolph A. Peterson said : 1• ws. U.. .....,_ ~ 121A • .,._,QNUO • 21u L co.tt H..,.. eoi-d9I ,..... Cllltoml9 12625 • ~ 11s-11.so : job. Long will continue to dlrect • llt"°""Y9 fe lilns• of 01'19 Hulld.-.d l.!Hllon Doll1n • As for Soci11l Security. the th b • P,A.~a.iwtta. .. n1 ACNUl\.OMQUllT,rr..ldM!t • system awards the part-time e ank 's agricultural ~ • • • worker a minimal monthly tivities in California. : HAME • • : retirement pension based on A piolieer in the application his or her low part-time earn· of technology to farming, Long : ! ings. joined the: bank in San Fran· • ADllllDI ~· • A 1 bl 1 cisco in May. 1967. • t • ew reasona '-po nts are I • • In o~or ·. , He previou~ly worlced for • 1 •' -STAT£ ZIP 0 '" ""''· The Irvine Co, JOining the I I ..... Who Reads the Stars For the Star s? ' ' .~ ·r~ .. ,, ~ :;, I ... ~\...l.t"·~~ ', •• . $ f ~ I I .r. ... J,, 7 :· • ~- It's Sy~ney Omarr l And now th iJarticu!ote writer who hos been coiled the "astrologer's astrologer" reads the stars for you. Sydney Omorr\ longtime personal astrologer to many of Hollywood's and the literary world 's most famous stars, is o DAILY PILOT column ist. Omorr's record for accuracy of predictions based on astrological analysis is amazing. Whether you read astrological forecasts for fun or as 0 seriou s student of star-gazing, you'll enjoy Sydney Omorr's do ily column in the DAILY PILOT I '"-·-:EN,,~-·--"--.. ·-·... ~·.c.~•i .... , .•• ,, .... ~~i·,~··..,,c,.,~, .. ~.,...-:--· t'-1ANY A.Mf:IUCAN "7 "Orange COUllty agttCIJl tural ••••••••••••••tt ••••••••••••••••••••••••c•c..:.•~·~·~·~·~·~·~·-·~·~·~·~·-·-·~·-·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~..l_..,w~om...;;c•,._•~lm;;;:;pl~y...;';•n~n·o~l,...,;•~·di:..~~~·o~~~·~i~n.1~1M~9 ... a~nd::..;•;d;v•:nc;;;ln:sJl.., .. ,..,., .. ,..,.,,. .................. .::::..L. ..... .J • .. I NO MATIER WHAT they're in the market for, our readers find the DAILY PILOT is tne best place to put the bite on bargains. And they do it with the same gusto as the gourmet here showing how much he appreciates the wares of the famed Alkmaar Ctmmi Market in Tho Netherlands. You don't have to travel so far to find good things to eat, nice things to wear, new appliances at bargain prices, • real car buy-or even a chunk of cheese. Just shop the "armchair market," the one our advertisers deliver to your door every day. ' • DAILY PILOT I _1 • ' . • • • • : • I " ' ,, ,I " I, I I' I ' f G L ,, ' ' . • • . • ____________ .... __________________________________ ~ ______________________________ .....,, • I 0 .. 41 f ~ • • • • .. l l ' . --- Russians Updating Tunes MOSCOW (UPI) '"1 I ! ' Somebody forgot to tell the Russians in lhe fall of 1930 to set their clocks back an hour. For 38 years the people here have-beenJ living on dayhght savings time without realizing they were getting up one hour earlier year round. For long nobody bothered to correct the situation which ~aced Russia's time zones an hour ahead of the world's standard time zones. Today a special commission 1 of the Soviet Bureau of Stan- dards and l\.1easurements is preparing to revise the nations time zones and give the Rus- sians an additional hour of sleep in the wintertime. According to the newspaper Kummunist Tadzikistan, the revised system will go into effect June I, 1969. The commission plans not only to correct the titnekeep. Ing but also redraw boun- daries of the time zones. These were originally drawn in 1919 when rivers, lakes and coastal areas were wpl for i separation of dillerent Ume zones. These boundaries, lb e newSpaper complained, ari so inadequate tho.l ';even portions of railr.oad tracb" were used as boundaries in Soviet Asia. The daylight savings time idea was introduced in the Soviet Union in 1920. for several years the RnBfrians'aet illeir clocks one hour ahead in the spring and reSet tbeni one hour back in the fall. It was in the fall of 1930 lhat they miS6ed. · Reasons for the omission are not known. but ever since the nation has been living on daylight savings time. · As the nation gr'ew the 191 bou ndaries began to create a variety of problems. According to the news acen- cy Tass the boundarie.s are so "obsolet." lhal the city of Novosibirsk, the nalion.'1 r a n k J n g Intellectual com- munity, is Jiving on two &tan· dard times. In 1919, Novosibirsk ls a large community spreading on both banks of the Ob but there is an hour's time dlf. ference between lhe two ends of bridges spanning it. Kommunist Tadzikistan says the move to update the timekeeping and the zooea system is being opposed by employes of the nation 's com- n1unications industries who claim they would face serious difficulties if the reform la pdopted. \Vorld War II Vet to Speak . ' A \Yorld \Var II parUsan fighter will speak to members of lhe Newport Irvine Rotary Club on "Czechoslovakia after I 18 years of Socialism" at 11:15 I p.m., Jan. 9, at Daniel'• ' Restaurant in Costa Mesa. Van Hom is a native ol ' Cr.echoslovakJa. During World War II he joined an un· ijergroilnd ...mlan<:<! group , while stilt a teenager. When \he war ended, be again went •nderground lo combat Com· f muru.m. In 1911 he was foreed to flee to America with a l !'""' Oil his bead. ; :Justice Denies j ~Captain's Plea • WASHINGTON (UPI) 1 Supreme Court JurUoe While 1111 dedled Air F I t;apC. Dale E. No7<f'1i ~= ' ihat he be permitted "' on ball whlle appea11llg court matl1al coovlctlon<J or 1'efuslni lo train student pUoll I tor VlelnlJJ1 combat. ·w:01~1~J= !lepor1menl urpd WblU nol tai lnterf"" wlUJ lhe "normal . u um CREST COTTON U·SHIRT 6/6.00 R•i· 313.00. U-ohirt has the canhtable 1x1 rib ozyling. Reinfaced necliband. S-IHrXL. • • • • • STO-G.K U:P NOW! . . CREST conoM T·SHIRT 6/6.d'O Reg. 313.75. Our Own T-!hirt.ia bich' qualifi)' cot.tan with a eylm reinforced . . neckband. SM,Irlq., ·, CREST FINE ,COTTON IDXERS $/6.-00 Reg. 1.25. 'l\e wmstb6ncr 11 ~toed. · Fully cu~ •iua 3().44. Select from white or Colas. ·• ....... C!IEST llUALITY co:r~Gll"IRIEFS 6/5 .00 "1!eg. Y3.00. Ti,;;,.~at-filting briefs . have a guaranteed wai stband and doub\C' .&l!at. Sizes ~0-44 . • .~ it') :'ll:· -l>)tt,._ ...... ,. .... ( ... ~ • ' . . LONG 'SLEEVE'.DllESS 'SlllllTS,..:;4>89, 8114.60 Reg. 6.50-8.00. Fmoaa·mobr, .mi-OJIMd collar 11\ylinf, FiM qualit;, pnanent.Jrie·~--Polvesto<-aud -· Whits, !Mhioa::CO!ors, Hl!'islh"neck. OUR OWN LINK STITCH CARDIGAN 11.99 • .Reg.17.00. Thi• h111d&OD1e sweater is in Odon acrylic. ll bas double knit cuff1 and waiatbmd. Select. trot\ popular faohim ool.-a. 8-1.HrXL. I ••I ,· FINESILKKECDUll l.7.9, 3/6.00 ·, Reg. 4.00. <keat pattan• md mlas from our regular otock. And, 'lie, have a szooi> of deai_.lnapiied neckl!ear m superb m!ors; reg. 5.00.7.50, i,n, JIU.to. BUFFIJMS' LINK STITCH KNIT SHIRT 6.99 RoJ. 11.00. Our faohioo kni1 io in Qdm •iiciy!ic. ]l bu tramtiooal !!\YI inc wi lb a 3-buttcu plackeL A classic ~l in great /&!bioo. colcrs. &M-lrXL. St.ere for Mea I , ... WOOL BLEND STRETCH ANKLET°'l.lj), 3/3:00 Reg. Ji5(l. Wool and eyljn ble!ld hose 11111Chine wash and dry. One .ft.. fJls 1().13. Bl~, ll'own, eb,j.._J; navy, olive. Ovel".th&<:alf, reg. 2.00, 1.19, J/4.00. LINK STITCH MOCK TURTLE KNIT SHIRT 6 .99 Reg. lLOO. Oar Orlon ~aylic11shi,ri. in. tl1C sbort-s}ey!vcd ¥J11e with ~ntrast.iD( lud of color aL the ne ck. Currenl fashion colors. S-\l-t_,-XL. •• .J:llll)lil<lll!lt" JLLIJlM J-• r -..... atlSiillilD Ali Force NEWPORT CENTER 11"1 FASHION ISLAND • 6'4'4-2200 • ~:.x:;. __ ..... !!l!,.'..'.u~:i:!:i~:::::.·::-:.....::.:.:.~---~~--.... ~---~~------_J,'....!.':''""·~~.i_i-.:,!_'~·..:-=-MON ., THURS., FRI. 10:00 Tilt 9:30 OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL 5:30 -~!.,c4• ... ......i.J.~1 • ·-._.___ ---• ----------- l DAILY I'll.GT II Colts in Super Bowl f\lfter 34-0 Blit~~of ·B·rown • . Matte Tears Cleveland ApQrt CLEVBLANI>~~-Tom Matte lelil It lo JUU "l'n\ Jusl ID average bock,• llut the N~'football ~ dlatnpim Jlalllmare Colts say · that'• a Joi ol baloney. He wu ·lt.beduled for ezamlnaUoti t1n BaltJmore to detemllne wheth ... he Jiu a cracked, tlb ar another Injury lbat would keep blm nut of U,. !!lamI.I..,._ AllQtber Coll UllCOl'lalnly It' glgllllllc end llu~ Sinltll, w&ooe llnt-oerl!>d blOck · of ID • -ptOd Browos' · lli!d goaI ,•as~ b1 ~coach lllln- ton c.lllu tho by'play ol the -·· assisted by Jerry ~ Alltr LoU Micbaeb' 23-yard fleld goal at O:IJ of the secood period gave the yeolta a ,_. lead, M•tte ran one yard for • touchdown to make Jt 10-0 and &btn It for a.not.her ~ore halttlme to make it 17-0. Late in the third period, he bluted two mqre ·yards for another score to make it ~. So do the Cleveland l!mml,who have • . Matto dllefly to blame for the 34-0 . bWitlw ~. -In Sw!dll''• fdcld . batlle Jar lKe ~ crown ln ·Clmland Si.;llum ~··.-11rat llh,uloul handed CteYtland 11-oia pmes. Ul'IT ..... A MATTER OF MATTE -Baltimore's Tom Matte cuts through the Cleveland Browns for 11 yards on this play Sunday when the Colts ripped the Browns, 34--0, for the NFL crown. Defenders are Ben Pavis (28) lllld·Jack Gregory (81). I\ was ' Baltimore's first NFL c11smp;ooshlp In nine sea- sons. In Rose Bowl Showdown O.J. Chief Target for ~ncks . . . PASADENA (AP) -O...nbel James halfback in the 1811 decade who could Simpson ts a household word in Southern become a millionaire playing professional California and· the nation's best known football. et>llege foolbaD.pllytr. .• . 'l'be 11-yeakld•two-t.lme all·American Tho superlatlv.S• wH\le about O.J. anil lllis yur's -·• Trophy winner are colUlUess. Ills fabdo!ft Stretches from has one game Wtlia l -f11?Wous two-year coast to coast. ·l' career at So~ '"califomta. He ls the most ucitlng :<;j>,llege He'll be .the •• ~ target f<r a strong "'.;. ! i' ·jl~ • Bruins 'St. John's Duel· ' . , ' Santa Clara Tests .Lions By THE ASOOCIATED PRESS On courts 5,000 miles ape.rt. UCLA and Santa Clara, the hotshots, respectively of the Pactfic-8 and the West c.oast Atb1etic Conference, take unbeaten records into hqliday basketball tournament fin~Js to- night. UCLA, 7-0, opposes St. John's in the Holiday Festival fin al in New York. Lew Alcindor scored 40 in pacing tbe Bruins to an 83-67 victory over Prince- ton Saturday night when St. John whip- ped North Carollna 72--70 in the other semi-final. Santa Clara, WCAC's only unbeaten team, plays Columbia's LiOlll for the champiomhlp of the Rainbow Classic in Honolulu. fending champion, Or<gon State, 51-50 Saturday. Oregon needed overtime to OtJSt Brig· ham Young In the semifinal 112-74. Glenn Campbell scored the seven points which brought the Ducks from a ' 66-62 deficit to a 69-69 tie in the 1ast four· minutes of regu]atioo time, and Stan Love made .sll in the overtime. Tho W"'1fulglon State-Oregon State semlfi.nal a1'o weq_t ' into overtime. when the Beavers closed a six-point gap and kept WSU scoreless for an elght.-mlnute period of the aecOnd haH. Gary Elliott's jump llhot and two free throws late in the overtime enabled the Coogars to get back on top. Callf'ornia, 5-3 trimmed Y a1e 66--59 In The Ogden brothers accounted for a consolation contest at Portland Satur4 nearly haH the point. -Bud 2S and day and .-a' 'Arizona State \90lgbt In Ralph 16 -when the Broncos wtclasaed the COOJOlaUoo !lnal of the A'ar West Hawall 11.S Saturday for thetr ninth vie-Classic. Arizona State elinUhated Syra. tory. AJdher holiday toornament final ~ cuse 93-TI. night -the Far West ClaMic at Port.-Another Pac-I team, Stanford, now U, land, <n., sends two Pac-I rivals bowed out of the Rainbow Claaslc at against each other. . Hoooluhl Saturday after a 75-14 comola4 Oregon, 11-3, opposes Waahinglon State, " br··•et 1 ·~--5~. wblch eliminaled t.he tourney's de--Lion -ou to n1-11NL. Soutjlenl California, with the second best Pac-I team mark, 7-4, woo Jta: mth stralgbt game In the Loi Angeles Sports Arena, llllhdulng Tu!Ja -· lion Tay-lor grabbed IS rebounds and ocored :Ill flW the Tl'Ojans. The Navy 111nk Wubington 17.U, 1ea .. Ing that P-mtry wltll a f'4 """""' Ohio State defensive team when the Buckeyes "!Id Trojans collld< In the Rooe Bowl N..,..v..,., ~ .. ; , . ~~,11~~;euwn .1o lock up tbe naUonal champlOnsblp. In his last appearance, the g.Joot.J, 204 pound-Siml"Pll.had' a rough time. A monster N$, .Dame line keyed 1111C- ce8sfully on th,, Tl'OJan super star and limlteiflilin Io ·55 yards rushing'. "I WU .riot up for the game and did ~play up to my polential ·agajnsl Notre Dame," Simpson confMSeS. But be vows he'll. 'be emotiobally prepand for Ohio State Jan. 1. "I hate to lose," -said O.J, who ironically, started out like he never was going to i>taY for a wtrmer. In his tre.lnnan, · sophomore and junJor years at Galles !Ilgb School In San Francisal, bis team never woo a game. In bis last three 1aines·ln hlgb llCbool, 0. J . finally played with a 1rinne•'. And the winning habit continued at San Francisco City College where Simpson and his tnaiea won 17 games in two years. . In two,yeara ·ll Ttoy,.be bu played in only one losing game. . ~'l'll 'dO,lnythibb·to .wln"'l lt's'a ·ritatter of pride," 0. Jr. admits.. 1 , ."Playhlg Ohl•' St8te : ls lllio plaYlne anyone, else. U. we're euxitiona.Uy · up for the pme, we'll come oui on top!' SlmJ*oo, a veritabJe w o rt • hebe; averaged 36 carries a game thJs . year while r!J>elng enemy lines for l"/09 yanls andl2touclldolml, •• In SO 1f8lll!il as a• Trojan, O;;J. lw ga1nidl.25a 1irds and scored 35·1'lll. Soutben: A;al qoarterback Steve Sogge is qul<ll: tq · def-Slmpoon apiDit criUcism Jae ·rushini only 15 7anls against the lr!sb. "Sim-had -to go. He played u ·ha.rd u be · cpuld but we .. dld not execute," Sogge llJd. One Gl.'O.l/s adminn ls -OlllO'Slate football coach· Wood>' UllYes. "He's a tedmtable player wtUa.. great stamina, courqe 1 a d speed." Haye1 said lizlnl up SilllJ>IOO. "He is estru>ety· _.rul··and 'Iw a fablllous ...,.. of tfmlng, Put t'- thlnp together and rou really have llOfDelhlng. II Only time will tell whether O.J.'1 eiploils can CMf1 Southern Cal to Ylctory ln tbe Pasadena clualc. .\ad the '"";.'York Jet., who reign as American Football League championa and will -the Colis In the thin! aDllllll ~--I al wann Miami oo Jan. U. hod better uot take Matte at his ... II the.{;ant to have a •••- ol ......... ~ ltlmore ----; Al liie ~~ Matte, who equalled tho llFL tttie game record by ICOl'lng three toucbdjl""' 1n swicw:1 cla.sh, ls an uncertain starler for the Sliper Bowl He tonk a hanl knee In the b'.ack late in the game and wu woozy in the dre.WJlg room. Smith suffered a aprslned left ankle and, ~ be returned to the game after receMq medlcaUon, was on tbe doobUlil ¥ far Mlaml. But llLllil11t Stmday was Matt.e's day, aa ... lat-ran· lw two~ i;ra..!be- .......i period and ooe In the thin! to equal tba ,NFL UU. game record held by two B"""'" -J otto Graham In l!IM and Gary Q>Qlm In 1914. . A ltkle-temperature with 2$-mph winds mide It s tough day to throw. and Coll pa-Ear~ Morrall found bis receivera were befn·•·tfchU1 iuarded. So the Colli switched to a running game with Matte leading the way, I ' , llicbae!S' t~yard field gna1 and Tbn ~=·spu~outth!k!ngTDon ~ ~~· told, Matte carried 11 times for • yards, Hill 11 ~ for 60 yarda. In. coelrast, Browns' ace Luoy Kelly gaJDed _ oh!y ZB yards in 13 tries, a U 1,verage. Colts' coach Don Shula said Matte'• fir1l run of the day may have been his ' L It wu. •1 draw play, It g ed nine yard!. • establlshed Ollt running ...... ri&ht at start," said Shula. "I think Cleveland's line wu so ihteot ~ 8eWhl: to Morrall t h a t we caught • of I balance with our rw:inlng." 1, Nama~h's ljigh~'priced · TD's . - Pu,t Jets P~st Raiders, 27-23 NEW YORK (UPI) -It'll be old home w .. k for Weeb Ewbenk and the Balllmore Colli In the Super Bowl Jan. 12. , • ~ .patting bis paµoch In coo- tenlnfenl' u be sat In bis IWivel chair atteo: ·Ille• New :vn Jets rallied for a 2'141 Y1c1!w1 CIV8. U,. oakland llaldero In tba -Football l.e'ague - ptonshlp -· SIDlday, llald be Joobd forward to greetinc tbe Colla he eoacbed to NaUonal Football I.:eague Cham• plon!lllpa In 1168·and 1969. BalUmore be.at the Cleveland Browns 34-0 Sunday and will represent the NFL in the ultra-rich Inter-league UUe game · 1"11iami's Orange Bowl next month. • 'Ewbank was given tbe game ·bill, something ruerved for players 'this seuoq, In rec:ognl~oo of his bulJdlng thO~J~ Into cbamplolllhip calibre. "1e nurwno Joe N1matb trom a ricb rookie to a richer veteran during bis coacblng lenunt. Namath paid off with bis fln<st - as a leader. From a brash $toMoo bollwl quarlert>acl<, tba !<nner Alatiiiia .star turned Into the team ~ and wu offenatve captain. Udl year.·-.. Broadway Joe threw three touchdown passes. one Jeu than hll 11WOD's ~ and ~ one wu worth a'"""'1mal011 $3,000 as the Jeta hauled doWD a ...iz.oor, share Gl about 19.000 for 'beatlnf lh• defending champions. > Tha Jets lnsllt that they're pro6ably tbe only onu who can beat the ~ and collect another llS,000 as their ahares in the Super Bowl. Almost everyooe e1Je picks Baltimore~ espedaUy, after the Colts' rout In CleV<land. Namath completed 19 , of 49 ·..JJllllU for 2M yanls. Two ol his touchdown passes went to flanker Don MaJnardo' the all-lime pro leader In yanls gained n!C<ivlng, OU thro ... of 14 and lix yards. Pete Lammons llCOled the other New York touchdown on a ~yard pa.a and neat ballet step Iha\ beat defender Dave Grayson-to the comer ol the goal line. Jim Turner, the league's leading &COrer, kicked field goals of U and USC, Buckeyes Slaeken Tempo, Finish -COntaet: PASADENA (UPI) -With the - Bowl pnio only two ~ tbe Ulllvenlty ol Southern • and Oblo Slate laid off body -In their dtllll today. Coach Woody Hayes, the Bud:eye coach, gave his pla1en Sw1'\I)' off and scheduled only llgbt worlrotill for the remaining days befcn the Role -I club. In a pmHypa practice Salun1aJ at East Loi Angelea Cclleae, IIa,.o "drilled hJ1 oflenslve and dtftnilve tmlta apiml use formations. , At the USC pradlce field, caioch Jolm McKay faced the problem of famlllatls., Ing two players wUh new poc1f:1om because of lnjurlel. McKay has moved Al Cowllngs from defensive tackle to defensive end, lllll<e Berry from third strtnc tailback to -llr!ng fullback. Tha lbllll ..... JlrGIDpted by lnjuriet to and Jim Griamn and Humphrey C..- lncton- 26 yanls .. the Jets unllmbered their other point.making weapm to keep the Raiders in check. Daryle . Lamonica, alter Qrowlng five toucll:towns Jn the game that beat Kansas City for the Weotem Utle las\• week WM rgl.YM ·a massive rush by ~the ,Jet.I' defense which llmlkit hhn to Fitd Bile~ nitoft'1 •)'ll'd ICaring catch. N11111th't only Intercepted -WU returned 12 yards by defender George Atkinson to the Jet five, and Banaszak bulled over ·for -the TO that. put Oakland ' in front 23-20 midway In the Im.I period. Atkinson qulckly ~ into the pat of the game wbeQ be allowed Maynard to dodge him twice for key catcbtl alter the enJUing kickoff. Namath found Maynard with a 52- yarder and then the go-ahead lil47ard scoring strike which Maynard scooped up at nearly &urf-leveL "The last pass wasn't evtn supposed to go to Maynard," Atkinson aid bit- terly. "He jUBt came up and turned ~d made another great catcb." l Ul'IT ........ . YICroR:I' RIPE ,...,New York coach We~b Ewbank gets a wlnner'i rids off the field.Sunday after bis Jets bea\ 'Oakland for the AFL championship. Ewbank is the first coach to win a title In both tile M'L lllld N~L (Baltimore, 1958). His escorts: Bill Ra!lemaclier (23), 'J~n !J:ockery (~) and'Mlk~D'Amato (47). LSV, Seminoles Clash In Peach Bowl Tonight ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -[lllli•laM Stile. ji;xo1 Gl I ti bowl . """"' ~a d !ta rough and ready ...,,.tatloo, bs,llles fn!e.wbeellq Florida · Sllf\e ~t in the . firil . annual Peacb Bowl !Ootball -. Kickoff In l!O,tJOO.seat Grant Field wilt be at I. The game wlll be televised on Channel 1111 t p.m. FJorld.a State'• hopes ride on the Setnlnoles' puaing atlack, whlc!ffeab,Jr<I the throwlilg ol ·Bill Cappleman and the cslchlng ol All-American l1anker lion Sellers. • However, FSU coach Bill Pttenoa Aki late Sunday that Sellen looked like hi WU coming down with the flu aod lklp- ped church services on the .tvice ol a doctor. ' The string-bean receiver, koown as "old Jingle-Joint.a," grabbed 88 paue.t for 1,496 yards and U touchdown1 dlll'ina the season, leading the Seminoles to an 8-2 record whlch included a 40-IO thrulling oi Howton in the filla1 (l!De. Baltimore Fans Find Players Tough to Locate BALTIMORE -'l'bowandt of football fans tu.med out to welcome the BaJtimore Colt.. at Friendship lntemationaJ Airport Sunday night. but only a f e w members of the NaUonal Football League cham- pions were evtn spotted. Woody's 7 Backs. Equal One O.J. Florida State has been tabbed a toochdown lavorlte becau.!e of !ta ... ptoolve PISllni aitack, with Cappleman toating tar 2:1 lOuclidowns this fa!L Lwlslsna Sta~, "!blch built a 7~ record with a °""" of pusing and powei: rwmlng will use anuthpaw Mlkt llillman and llttle Freddie Haynes at Wary Gl a repeal performance of the near-riot which cttw1ed In 1951, when the Coils won their flnt NFL tiUe, elrport o!Ddals dl""'1ed the armtng plane to a s1oo abwl on< • h a I f mitt from the termlnal bnlldlng. Capt. Carl P:unanlec, head of airport police, esti mated the crowd at 1,000 or more. Kananiec said end Tom MJtchell and defense end Bubba Smith, who came lnlo the rennlnal building on personal buslne.55, weni attrrounded by well wlshen and llgned autographs. PASADENA (AP) -lndlYldually, Ohio Slalt -Doi have a nmninl becl< to malcb the Ulllvtnlly Gl Soulllem Cllifomia'1 All-American worthone, 0. J. Slmpom, In their N.., Year's Day pme lo the -Bowl. Buf~ely, the Big Ten champioo Buok.,.. have oe .. ral !Ina backs, good enough to p 11 e ap 1,751 yarM l.n n l n e games, seven agalnlt rtvall Jn the defensively tough conference. Tho leading ruoher for "'""h Woody Hayes was fullba:ck Jim OUs, 5-0, D- pound junJor. nie pen onable yoonr man from C.llna, Ohio, ii plelw'ed u fairly fut by Hayes, but -~ -Ad dqeroul Oil hll -ud thlnleflorta. Otis carried the ball Ill -for a net•.yaftlo. Be -11-.., at lf.ilt ... In'....,. guie --. 'Miit ·wu the IJ<I ojtclory .-""'1lue wlien the de!enJO IOI up the Jlucby"' two touchdowns. There 11 another tl\re1t, hoinYer, one Ohio State observer> oay is capable of breiklng a Ugh! game open. ' He Is Larry Zellna, 8-0, 195 poonde. Tho t•year .. ld CleV<land youth carried the ball aiI1 II llmel. Bui hll 18 ... _.~ .. _ ... u_v1,1,,,., 1,.1,\ ,11 •···-... .,,, ... .,,1 w '"°' .~111 ...... 1IVf,1 , •• ,-l•1.. yardl aained ttprt:StUtl m&.7 averqe. ZeJlna ii alao ID-----· He fielded 17 for m yardl. And for flllUN refmnce.be la Cllll1 ii...,...,,__ Coad> Jobe M<Kay'a SGolloem.Cal -' jans ln 10 prnestosbed • l ,IM 1udl, and -. ,.....,,., '11hulet II.I. Sllll(>DI -181 flJr -"' them; He paclled the ball as u...,. !or la net 1,7111andocored12 touchdownl. Fullbl<k Dan Scott, 'il<adl)I u a blocker, ~anied the baU, 1 me8ger a ""1lj)ll'ed to Slmpaon'1 Ila. SCOU picked op IC 1ards, Includh!c 13 IDd a quarterback . .....-n against UCLA, hfs ties! A cmrd Gl about 40,000 ls apectocl ruahfnC day. far the natloe'• newat majur bow~ Qu"'1trback Sic" Soot ,.. JU feared althoogb the blmoul could be ttlmmed optl0111 ran 71 times ·1or 1J7 yards, -by tempera-In the 11111 and a chanco In -u.. to -flW '),315 yanis ol sbowtn. and eight liaichdown·iirlkies> · • Louisiana State'• ollensl,. )lWld> p Sall! Ohio state't w~ee, "!Ml bab!f w1n ...,,. from runninc -1 Sogga is definitely a · Baao K""'J' Newfield, who gained t4I ywda doeln't nm mucb but tnowa: wMr. during the atMOO, and Tommy Au.a., to run, 1'11.ay that for hJm." who eollecteil 07. "We w ... very impmtell With Soat," Ha)'llell, hurl t11udl ol the -MIJ! llald Ohio State's -.r, Jobe Mllhlbacr. ed for 275 yanls and 1alned aDolhaf "We began watehlng Slmpoon In -e 497 yanls -Ing. Hillman wu Ille films but soon 110 ...,. turning OW' Ttatrs' top -· blttlnl oo M If attenllOll to Sopo." • Ill throwl,., m 7ardl. r' ·-"'~· -~ \' -- . .. . . ·~ .. .. . . ·"' . Westmin·ster's· Berg Gr·id Player of iaguna Duo ~llonored ron All-CIF l Laguna Beach Hl&h'• Steve Kloslenn1n $ and ~lm Kuhn were named to the Wrd string A1l.aJI' football 1tleotions for AAA and AA divbion ecbools. Jt was an· nouru:ed today. In all, 13 Orange Countlans were ae- torded honors. Klosterman wu a center for c o a c h Hal Akins' cr.stvi.., League champiOlll JYhl1e Kuhn was a standout back. The latter Wa.s tnocked out for the season with a broken hand in the eighth game t>C the. year -a 1"(Mlllne win over MluioD. '1ejo. .. Laguna managed to win its season finale with San Clemente and knock +rt La ~lnta in the flrrt round of lie playoffs. But Kahn's great speed 4nd running talents were missed in the fl-14 los.s to Rolling Hills ... the Artlsts' filly setback in 11 starts. • Orange County fared particularly wen lo the AAA·M selections. Triple-A chom· ffion Loara's RiCk DeLesk was tabbed ~ player of l.he year. Four of his '8Ion teammates were al&t placed 'mong the first three units chosen. ~ Mart. Walter wa the cn1y other Loara :ace to make the first team, however. The· Irvine League champs had Al Pekarcik a n d Ken Hickerson on the second team while Brant Light was on the Wrd group. Fullerton's ~ Haughn (an end) was the other Orange County represen- tative on t~ first string. Lowell High's Nonn Kepoer was on the second team, as was La Quinta's Ken Eppelheimer. * * FJi1sr TEAM Wt. Yr. t 180 Sr. 193 Sr. 190 Sr. 190 Sr. 175 Sr. 195 Sr. 1'0 Sr. 200 Sr.' DAAR'\'L BERG Wntmin1ter DON H~LLON Mater Del . /'. JOHN McLAUGHLIN Wfftmlnster STEVE KLOSTERMAN LagUna Beach National Exposure Due JIM KUHN Laguna -Beach . RON SHIPHlltD Weatmlniter 'Col. Sanders To Witness Wishbone-T DALLAS, T,.. (AP) -The .ru Lo!lghorns and their unique "Wlahbone- T'' oUense 1illl have a bearded iuppcrt.. er on the bench in the 3!rd annual Cot- ton Bowl. game against Tenn~ Wed- nesday -Col. Sanders of fried chicken fame. Texas Coach Darrell Royal said Sun- day "I guess a wishbone-T is good enough to call the offense. · "Since it's a wishbone-T we figured we might as well have an expert on wish- bones with us. Pot. Player School E-Phllllps, San Luis Obispo E-Haughn, Fullerton T-Angelo, Claremont T-Vaughn, Corooa G-Martin, San Luis Obispo ~.Rolling Hills C-Jacobson, Palos Verdes S--DeLesk. Loar• S--Hlll, Claremont B-;-Baca, St. John Bosco B-Walker, Loara S--McNelll, Baldwin Park B-Murray, Azasa S--Mc~, Hirt !~~~~Anteaters Heading East; "I know the people who are associated with the Kentucky Fried Chicken organ- izaUon and when I was in New York they suggested Col. Sanders. The found- er of the chain might like to come. So I extended an invitation. I guess he has seen about as matiy pulley bones as any- ()ne." The Texas fullback -Steve W()rster- lines up just two steps behind the quart- erback giving the T formation a "Y'" Jook. SECOND TEAM 170 Sr. 1~ Sr. E-Richanlsoo, El c..1ro Iii! Sr. E-Jor<lan, San Marino 111! Sr. T-Wi5eman, Beverlt.llllll ~ 200 Sr. T-Evlllll, ~.:.'.!l..' • .., 190 Sr. G-IWwood. San .,.,.u~ • 175 Sr. ~-. Callfornla 230 Sr. C-Hickenon. Loara 195 Sr. S--Paulln, Cantwell 1115 Sr. B-Pelwclk, Leora 180 Sr. S--11.0uafin. Bell Gardens 175 Sr. 11-Colllllli Bllbop Monljomery 180 Sr. u ,,_ Lowell 175 Sr. ~.La ~lnia 188 Jr. B-E\ram, Bantow 187 Jr. TlllRD TEAM E-Beluchman, Serra 205 Sr. ~ Lowell 180 Sr. T-Jacksoo, Rancho Al1mitos 200 Sr. T-Robldlal1d. Lompoc 230 Sr. G-Waten, Torrance 220 Sr. G-Mclnonls, Temple City 1115 Sr. C--Klol-Lapu 11eac• IU Sr. B--Uttlbr, Garden Grove 190 Sr. B-Watklns, Poly, Rivenlde 195 Sr, B-DeLonnlet, S8n Marino 16$ Sr. ~. Loara 175 Sr. S--P'Drman, Santa J\larla 155 Sr. B gm Llpu Beacb lM Sr. S--~eln, Rolling Hills 117 Sr. Pirates Qpen Circuit Play With Fullerton After two years of brilliant succeu, Orange Coast College enters Eastern Con!eren<:i! pla.y this weekend rated as just another team in the 11-team circuit. The Pirates, who won or lied for the Ea.stem tiUe the last two years while com.pilln1 a 3M record, open their 20-game confe~ schedule Friday nipt againlt title favorite Fullerton at occ. 1ben on Saturday, the Plrates I.ravel to RJvenide. Under 1 revised scbeduJe this seaaon, the freshmen-laden Pirates will be playing thne games a weelt. In addition to 1'Uetd81 and Friday night conte!ta, the Eulem Conferenc< lw added Salur· day "1gbt Ulll to Its slalt. Cooch Bob We!Ul's team, plagued by the usual lnslun<o mistakes In~ f.....,.. play, will bl .. to nutur< npldly to be I flld« In the Eutmt Conf.....,. _.., . .... In oinHIOl><OOferenco starts, the Plrllel blve bee! able to win jull lhree ID tbelr !alt llff. Welle1'1 char(el ~·--sat a tute or thinp to come Ille)' .-a 91HI defeli ol -alhlltrian. -Wetael pilDI to llarl Dv. !It~~ rtlda1 nlilt In the nm1tdl. llldielmal<r, the !all<ot mill en -1111""1 .... will be 11 ctnlar, t=~ by Piii! JGl'doa and Mite M ot f..,..,.... Mike Flaherty .ood Sieve Turley will be ot Ibo gu•n:ll. : WeUel'1 IU?lmmt of. hll club'• : -·-.... dlreel: : "'lU&hl oow w .-e anewbete ln the j middlo of the poet. ()r •--depends -how ow: f,,,_ -alarJI anJ .We clown." ' Lose to 'Long Beach, 61-60 Texas players assembled in Dallas Sun- day night and will hold their first work· ()Ut at 2:30 p.m. Monday on the prac· ti~ field of the Dallas Cowboys. Tennessee arrived Saturday and held a brief workout Sunday afternoon, most· ly for the benefit or photographers. By EARL GUSTKEY 0t flll Ciel~ ,lltt II.ti UC Irvhle'a basketbaJI team, a run- nerup in Jta own tournament for the second straight year, will console itself with &0me naUonal e.iposure thla week. The Anteaters fly out of Los Angeles International Airport at 8:30 Tuesday morning for games at Providence Thurs- day, Rhode laland Friday and Borton College on Jan. 7. It will be a long-awaited excunion for UCI -it.s rirst~ver m a j o r road trip. And If CaJ State (Long Beach) coach Jerry Tarkanian ts a judge of any merit, the Anteaters will fare well. "1.iCI is the best club we've faced Sports 1:8 Brief th.ii year," Tarkanian declared after the . 49ers squeaked through for a hair-raising 61~ win before 1,988 Saturday night at Campus Hall. The victory gave Long Beach the UCI tourney Utle and a 10-1 record. UCI is 8-2. The suspense was truly unbearable Saturday evening. Irvine had crept to 61-60 on two Nick Sanden free throws with exactly one minute left to play. LDng Beach tried to stall the game away but lost the ball out of bounds with 21 seconds left. Davis ordered the Anteaters to go for one shot but the 49ers tipped the ball out of bounds with four seconds left. Margo Godfrey Wins Makaha Surf Crown HONOLULU -Three events lashed by waves of two to four feet wound up the 16th annual Makaha International surfing championships Sunday. Margo Godfrey, of California's Win- dansea Surf Club, won the women'• event. She captured the women's world championship in Puerto ruco I n November. Defending champion Martha SUM of the Makaha Surfmg Association finished second followed by Sharron Weber of Ewa Beech, Hawau. tn the Junior men's event Kainoa Downing of Hawaii'• Outrigger Canoe Club toot t-Op honors, rouowed 1n order by Tomi Winkle r of the Kui.O.Hawali Surf Team and Stanley Saragosa or the Makaha Surfing Association. The Hawaii team or Leroy Achoy and Blanche Bemon turned in a graceful acrobatic performance to win the tandem event. Californians Steve Boehne and Barrie Algaw of the "lndansea Surf Club. took second. Tblrd place went t-0 Bob Moore and Patty Young, unattached from California. The aenlor men's defending champion. Joey Cabell. of the Outrigger Csnoe Chlb, .retained hls tiUe Friday in t to IO-loot waves. Kftff• Home LOS ,ANGELES -Tbe Loi AnCtJes KlnCI came home today to 1et nacly for their Jan. I 1ame qalnll SI. Looll alter IOlinl Sunday night. Tbe· Chicaao Black Hawk1, featuring the }lull brothers, Bobby and Dennis, plut.ered lhem 4-1 In the wlndy city. Dennis nmmed In two goals •nd Bob- by, plJying with a broken jaw, got another. The Klnp didn 'l score unUt the lllSt period when Howie Hughes i.llled on 1 power play. The Kings now have a 12-16 reeord. Their only win tn the list seven games was a 4-1 decision over Toronto Saturday night. They lost five straight before thaL Stars Trek DALLAS -The Los Angeles Stars face lbe Dallas Chaparrals tonight in American Buketball ASIOclalion action following their 9343 IOl3 at Houston. the Slara hit only 12 poinll i1\ the first period against the Mavericka Sun- day night, malting but three field goals In 18 tries. ~ Alie. Plrked LOS ANGEi.a' -George Allen, a football coach wlthou\ a team of his own, will mutermlnd lbe West all-star team in the Pro Bowl J1n. 19. Tbe East 11quad will bl coached by Tom Landry of the Dallas Cowboys. Rustlers By JOEL SCllW ARZ ot ... Delft' ,. .... ,... • ll was a laugher all the Wa:J as Cold- en West College brushed by a hapless Ohlooe College bukelball tum, 11™. Sallallay night et Or*"I• Coul CoUege in its final tuneup test befn opening Eastern Conference play thil weekend. 1be Jtustlen:, "'ho are enjoying their best sea.son ever with a 7.J record in non<onfertnce act.Jon, open Eutem cir- cuit play Friday night at Riverside and tntn return to Orange Cout Saturda.y for a came with Rio Hondo. Even the offici als couldn't k~ lrom laughing ln the Ohl90e 1arn~ when one Irvine's Mlke Heckman got off a shot at the top right side of the key but it caromed oU the rim. Moments later, Heekman was named the tournament's outstailding player. He scored 18 points against Long Beach. Davis held a lG-minute closed-door meeting with his club afterward and laler revealed: "I told them I was proud of them. They did everything we asked of them. 11 In the final analysis, UCI Jost lt at the foul stripe. Irvine made only 12 of 21 and missed on four chances at three-paint plays. Long Beach shot 56 percent from the floor acd UCI 53 per- cent. The Anteaters led most of the first hall. They riddled Long Beach's famed zone defense and at one time held a JO-point advantage, 21-11. But the 49ers went ahead for the first time at 28-27. Over the game's last 16 minutes, Long Beach led all the way but never by mare than five points. vc lrvlM '"' Clll sratt uo ,.t1,1t. flllt,rt. Cuml1191\em l s l 11 ll:ob!R1011 • 2 2 10 S•od911 4 4 4 12 Lynn 3 0 4 6 Hedlm11" t 2 J II N•llolt 2 3 l 1 l!lui• S I I 11 Grlttvn 4 2 I 10 S1bl115 J 0 l ' Joll111C111 I 2 0 11 F1rln> 1 0 0 2 Montgomery • 2 J 10 Tot1ls t4 12 U '4 T.r1i. U 11 U tl H11ttrme Kort: C•I Sl•l9 ,., VCI "· Bowl Roundup Royal said he was ~ about the illness of star defed!ftva. tackle Leo Brooks, who is sti ll in~ with the flu. "I don·t know when he will be all~- ed to come back," s&•JWyal. · Chris Young, a tese~e defenalve tackle who also had the flu , returned to the squad. EX-DON C6A.CH JOHN WA.RD DEAD John Ward, former football and track coach at Santa Ana College, died Sunday or a heart attack at St. Joeepb's Hospital in Orange. He was 61. He was associated with Santa Ana College from 1933 until hi.! retirement in 1965. As an athlete, he played on two USC Rose Bowl teams. He began his coaching career at Garden Grove High School 40 years ago. w &rd complained of chest pains Satur- day at Santa Ana Country Club. He was examined by a physician and remov- ed to St. Joseph's, where his condition worsened . He died at 3:30 p.m. SUnday. Bear Licking Wounds By At1ocJated Prtss The big ones are yet' to come, but what may be the biggest upaet of the post-season collegelootball bowll already is on the book1, leaving a badly mauled Bear licking his wounds. "They ran up and down tbe field like they were playing a barbers' co l- lege," muttered Alabama coach Paul "Bear" Bryant after fittd-up M!Mouri had humil iated the favored Crimson Tide 3$.10 in the Gator Bowl at Jacksonville, 1',18. The stunner -one of four games Saturday that ushered in the long, long weekend of bowl game1 -was the worst post-seuon licking ever ad- ministered Alabama, which wu making a record 22nd bow1 appearance. In the others, Auburn intercepted el&ht Aritona puses and whipped the Wlldcat.s 34-10 In the SUn Bowl at El Paso, Te'I.; the West beat the East 18-7 in the Shrine game at San Franci!ICO and the Gray defeated the Blue 21-7 in the Blue- Gray aame at Montgomery, Ala. Laugh to 112-56 of the Rustlers U'ied a dunt shot and missed. It wu just ihat klnd of nlght as Golden West dlsmanUed an lneiperienc· ed and overmatcbed opponenl Goklen Wesl shot an even 50 percent from lbe Ooor while Ohlone WU hJtdng s dlamal ~ perunt. In addition, Golden West forced the Renegades to commit • staggering ZS ball control errors. Even so, It wasntt a lola1ly l.rnprmlve performance by Rustlers, despite aeUlng a school !tCOl'ing rec<>ro with their 112 points. Golden Wm look raued. mlued many good sllols and cfldn't handle the baU smoothly . However, the poor caliber of the op- poalUon undoubtedly played a strong fac- tor In their performance. After ell It's pratty bird to bur down "'hen you cc:imldtr the foDowtna:: The Rwillera hid a M lead before Ohlone wu able to wort the ball Into front court. Jt was t-o before Ohlone wu able to lake a shot. And Golden West played moct of the secoad half wllh a lead that wu ere:ater than the number of potntl the vlaltors hsd .scored. Only once was the contd\ ever alight.. Lion Flash Tops All-CIF Hit Parade Dan'yl Berg of We.stmlnsler Hlgli became the t b I r d Orange Countlan In tbe lut four years to be named football player of the year for the CIF'• MM rated ·IChools. Berg, a amashing runner and outstan-dhll defenalve back, was tabbed for tho honor despite heavy pressure from El Rancho quarterback Randy Drake. The latter piloted the Dona to the CIF co-championship. And on the way be ran through and passed over · Westminlter'1 flu.rlddled forces, 'll-7. Four other Orange Coast area grid IWl"}oloed Berg on the All.cIF selec- tionii-Tackle John McLaughlin of Westmlnater wu on the first team while I.Jon msl<I Greg McCanU (center) and Ron Shepherd (back) made the secocd and thlnl units. Mal.tJ" t>el's Don Helfon was accorded an end spot on the third team by the specla:I peel of aports writers selecting the AU-CIF teams for the Helms Athletic Found1Uon. Berg averaged seven yards per carry, caugbt S4 puaet for 643 yards and was a clusy blocker. He wu the main reuon why coach Bil! Boswell's Lions were able to upend heavily favored AnabeJ.m (14-J) for the S11Met League championship and why they were rated 1eeond . In the CIF for much of the aeasoa. Last year Anahelm's Tom Fitzpatrick waa, accorded player of the year laurels while Pete Sanchez of Mater Del shared the honor with Centennial's Mickey Cureton in 1985. * * FIRST TEAM Pos. Player School Wt. Yr. E-Simpson, A~aheim 195 Sr. E-Kendrick, West Torrance 180 Sr. T-Fraisse, Blair 218 Sr. T-McLau,hlln, Westminster 215 Sr. G-Frankhn, St. Paul 195 Sr. G-Stroffe, \1lest Torrance 198 Sr. C-Brlck, Bishop Amat 205 Sr. B-Mercer, Chaffey 165 Sr. &-Mahoney, Anaheim 18.1 Sr. B-Cunningliam, Santa Barbara 210 Sr. B-Drake, El Rancho 172 Sr. B-Wise, St. Paul 175 Sr. B-Beri, Westmlutt:r 198 Sr. B-McAllater, Blair 215 Jr. Kicker-Herrera, La Puente 175 Jr. SECOND TEAM E-Matthews, El Rancho E-Vella, Notre Dame T-llortoo, Redlands T-Wells, El Rancho G-Morgan, Pasadena G-Knud.s'!! Lakewood C-McCaii.tr,_ Westmhuter B-O'Brien, Santa Monica B-Escalanle, Notre Dame B--Curtls, Santa Ana B-Zail, S~ Paul B-Nichols, Redlands B-Fraser, Anaheim B-Doore, Buena 11URD TEAM E-Keyworth, Chaffey &-HeUGn. Mater Del T-Monabao, Edgewood T-Herrlng, Santa Barbara G-Schep, Blair G-Selander, Arroyo C---Ogden, Pasadena B-Brewer, Warren S--Dral!e, South Hills B-Rae, Lakewood B-Youngblood, Pasadena B-8Jlef.berd, Westminster B-Hal , West Torrance B-Martinez, St. Paul West, 6-3, 189 Sr. 225 Sr. 225 Sr. 190 Sr. 180 Sr. 196 Sr. %18 Sr. 220 Sr. 210 Sr. 186 Sr. 175 Sr. 180 Sr. 172 Jr, 178 Sr. 200 190 20S 315 215 220 2ll5 190 20S 193 174 198 175 185 Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Goes to Pivot \ SAN DIEGO (AP) -Any baskelb~l team wllh two ?·footers like Wilt Chamberlain and Mel Counts shouldn 't have to worry too much about finding a pivot man, right? Wrong. Not when it's the Los Angeles Lakers, the National BasketbaU Associa- tion's Western Division leaders. Despite this lofty position. 41h game! ahead of Atlanta , and their fine 27·1 1 reeord, Lakers coach Bill van Breda Kolff put 6-foot-3 Jerry West ln the center spot for a while Sunday night. DIT•OtT LOS ANOlll.IJ Bell1my "M Dl1cr.11101r H&lr'Uan Miii's Wllk1r 0-KomlWI Mc Le mart Tcl1l1 Otlrc.11 Ol"T Ol'T 1 2·6 16 fllyl(M' ' "' ,. ll J., 2' Ch1mberl1l11 10 2·1 17 1 ~ ' H1W1<I"" l 0.2 • 11 w n E .. lct.>011 1 1.1 l l 2·l I Wftl 11 U-12 :>4 ' 1-2 10 Counl1 O o-t 0 0 1·1 1 Cr1WforO 1 l·J S J 1-S 1' EMii 11 2-2 I o 0.0 O H"'I!! ' 1·1 t .ti 11-17 lOI To111t 0 lJ-J7 Ill 33 ZI' 27 M -lot LOI All'l!'IH 21 14 J1 :it -Ill Foulf'd oo.or -~. Tot•I J<outs -Ot!ron l1. Los An•'-' n . Victory Jy In question. Alter racine to an 11-0 lead, the Rustlers saw that marlin tnelt lo 13-6. However, lt-1 scoring blltz, end- ed the outcome early. Leacflna llr Rustlers In double figures for ihe game were Dave Prather and Brian Ambroiich with 19 polnta each. Ollll>llt (kl ~ W•t (11U lttlpl ,_ flrt~ • Dwilfr I .I 1 1 t•""'*"11 I I J 11 H~br-rt I O 1 I hill\-1 J 2 ' HI 11S4M..-.111 'Jiii c-11 JOl•~·~i.r •1JlJ "'111ft l 1 1 • l(Ot1J)ll J t l • c11111 ... 1ra1 1 , J t p,,,,,.,. t J J 1• l~ 12J4011on ,,,, G.rtll , 0 J ' lt6bl-s ' 2 ,, MMftl J J J It H,,_1111 7 t j t G1t1011w•., l • 1 2 AIMtulc~ f S 1 It Tottlt 11 ,. M $6 f9'.,I G 1t tt !If H1!nlmt K01"11 O.llhll Wftt a. OlllOl'llt •· ---------------------------~--'--0-~ULA' ··• ._ . .,....,,.,,.+ •· • ··-. •• , •-oAM ..:.~--=-= .... ----=---------=-...~J , srl , I I I ' '. ·. r. r. r, r. r. r. r. r. r. r. r. r. r. r. r. r. r. r, r. r. r. r. r. ~· l\t t't 1g .. •· .. ll la ne T " " • ' ~ • , • • 111 Hl elt id. ·es nd ~ " • " " • " ' " • " "' ' ., 1 I ... • ....... ' .... -~--.~--:-.-::-:-:-:-:::::-:-:::-::-::::".".'--.::-::-:-:::::===:::-:-:::-::-.-:---:--:-.-:-.-.-::~-=--:o-:~:-.--:=·::::;;::::::=:-:-:::::-:==;;:::::::-::::::-::::::-::::= --· ---. -. -' . "' ····--·· . -······' .... ·---~~··· -..... -.. , ...... -~· .......... ,_... -·· .. --··· ........................................................... ·~ .. -... ., Don't Try to Run Estancia . .Staggers -FV, 5243 Oilers Edueate Rancho, 90~54 . ' .. ' .. ~later Dei Consolation Champion Mater Dei, the consolation champion of the Raiicho Alamitos tour ney, might well consider itstlf the second place finishe r after r'acldng up two wins in the eight.team event and coming closer• than anyone else to champion Hun· lington Beach. The ?\1onarchs, behind the shooting of Ralph Chandos and Warner Raes, turned in a~~ t:ffort over San Clemente for their second straight win Saturday night . And, after holding champion Huntington Beach to a ~25 lie at the half, the ~lonarchs fell by the least amounl or points (82-41) in opening round action Thursday. Coach Jerry Tardie's rive \Yitl gel its third shot al a Sant.a Ana school in lheir neil non-league tarigle whep they meet Saddleback High Friday. To dale the MOnarchs have beaten Santa Ana and Santa Ana VaUtiy, Three pfayers ended tip in double rigures for Mater Dei in the San Clemente test wtth Chandos (20 ), Raes (17) and Bob Gibert (13) leadin& the way, Char.dos was seh?ctcd on the a\1-toumamenl team for the l\Ionarchs. San Clemente got its usual scoring ,punch from its two guards. Eric Christensen (11) and Sal Lombardi (16) but it proved not enough. Christensen of the Tritons was also selected on the ,.U· tourney team. SC.. "r OHrt.n M1'9( C)tl • IJ '' 11 1,,_.. S1~ C""*"' · 1J lJ 1• '-~ MllW 0'4 16'1 Walk~• C~anllot M<Mtf\llT'•" Rt~• GIMrl tll llfl' Norton Tlttll •O t'T ,,. Tf' t 1 J ' 1 ' 1 1G 0 • • ~ I I 1 1J I l l U 0 l I l ' ' ' ' ,. 11 ' .. JI" CIMM•I fD) Feh f'f'Tf' .. ~ Mlteloell ltnllom"' L_..nl! Oi'11"""'" -·· .... ... -T,,i.1. ' ' J ' 1 I I I I 1 I I " 7 J " 7 I • 1• I I t I 1 t I 1 ~ 1 • • n 11 1t • Page 24 ·1$ that funn ttUnp.; ~ lllder the hood the generator? ' Maybe it is. 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ArH 8'lllflm ·~ "rul· °'ll>ed tbl!lr,jlolltlaO ~· Ot 1be cal Sllje (!.q Btacb) -u lhe1 captured "-<111\at<>pthneplaca;. what behind the bill. Tllo club hits the around ind either scuffs the shot or bounces upintolide of tho ball ind skulls it. Fountain V..UO, emerged at die kip al the ~ heap , . .ti~ h • 1fam polnl.s while ' 'Marina and Westmimter tied ·r,.. aecood~ with II' eacl!- FollA>1rlq the area squl4:' .... !Jomlniuu <Ill. L\1111 -MllliUn ($3). and l,aat ,_., Cll' clwnpe from Pocl!lc (II). To obtain heigh~ strikodown· ward into the ban (Uluatmion f2). This prod.,... mulmum backspin so thlt tllo ball will rise radily frnm tholoftladclub- tou. Aiu 'llftltlen nabbed five al --.. five-· and r .... thlrdL E I r a ID I cbamplCllllblpe ...,. O>ri1 Soael (IOI) and Glen Ande!al (U3) ill Foun- tain Valley, Q-alg Gephart (1311) and Andy Vorono (Heavywelgbl) o! MID'lna, and David Wommack (115) of Westmlmter. Llhermaa TrfoQaphs Glen Anderlon was voted the touinament's outstanding wrestler aa he collected tbrte pins and dispatched his OJ>' ponent In the finals with a 17-3 declslon. .. OCIR toH st . ,.. . 8econd-pl.sces went lo Paul LaBlanC (II) and llGa ·VIUll!m . (li5t·al """11alll~illcy wlille l'llJ!llmlnsftt copped •. polr of nmaer-ujll In the form of Glenn Aaamoto (123) and Chuck SUt.r (Heavy). ... .. Corvette r/iivd · over 200 Corvettes from throughout Southern California a r e erpected to be on hand at next Sunday's "Corvettes Only" day at Orange Count~ International Raceway. The Western States Corvette Council and ocm have invited eorv.u.s lo particlpat. in the second annual event. The rac- ing will bt hosted by the Corvettes of Southern c.Ji!<rnia and Ls open lo all Corvette drivers regardless of afllllati<lll. Pro Hockey Standings ..... _,ml '4• 'f"orll ,_,, "'-"""'' Cee Cage Summaries -Prep Mat Summaries 1 I Steve McDannold (141) of Competitloo will be coo-Marina lnok a aecood !or his duct<d .... __ ...... , djal-yopr· -.... own 1·~ balls.' A \rlklngi Mlke Garrllon (148) sped wollle<\~a bf and and S<ott Du1-y ( 115 J an e bition~ ' ·~~:"J::!ft"~_.. SharkJfa 1969 hUilif ~ ~ tblrds were • car, ,;ju hlghllgbi llhe ~ De Holli ... (1.U of Four> . actiVIt: • · . ~ ..... Vallq ,and Lion Sieve Ga will opej1 ll 9 .... lmU (Ult). • with · · uooi itartinc' • ·' nea..,..elilht n,.e G~ :s.m. \jm be IL ill c.ota Ill,.. wrestled hli Jim <l 1 _ ... _. way to a third for the ... -:~;im°'j; M-.p. .. a win Sunday ln the '32,000 1~ '"'"11 all ....,,, champlmshlp, lt('iel fl -1. C\lthblf1I COmllfllutl) '· r• • • Ulletlc: C'VI :t. ...,.... The attraction ... · ·allofat l• -1. ~ U'VJ 1. V1r1" 7 000 f.,.,. to OCii'L , ~ . ' "/.' · . (P'.c:llli:I )..;~ 4D11'nlf111Wl l I ' -""> ' •\IS -I ~ ·rwami1111,_ Libennan pu-f:·h-ed hb ' l. v-hft-cM>s:. o-t1111 ,,.111c1 • , supercharged Chevy ll to a ID(W~lnl~~~~l(t...~ ,.. ET ...... ,u ~=· 1• -1. ••llCO 1,~lfkt a..-.~ .--....~/\ · • · " IL9J) t. Kin;fl , ,., , Don ~ef go j» ·-I, QWMrt I I t; ... '-'(: , reccrded ... 'ala,:;t bes(._ speed . ·,~~\~ t. li.~;, -:~ . with l!ls:Jt i:n,b. · , CMlrlMI t. ._lllnden '' I T ~--'of r-•den 1• -· I, E-CL9Ml t. 9Ct11'f om ~ U111 IRIClonOol l. o.am-(MerlMI Grove dominated a fit)d of 151 -1. Bfm' IRam,.. H11111 t . 31 top elh ... hlf!~drivtn by r~wJ!:'rNUlll t. Altl~•M ..mm-... CM with • ~ 161 -I. Sf•rr (Torr..-1 2. •1w. ---•·-~ · .. .,......... ~II a. HM11M-IAntMlml d. ma mph. ,,, -1. a.II (Welt.ml l. ._.... L ow ET for the day w a 1 1,i°":'INS::Ji t.1t:=i' iU:I.., a , .. p:s&ed by Steve ..-.,.bane llAVl t. J~ 111:on1rw HlrtaJ ..z ..... -IU.I. · -Y .r tfV -I , V..--llMrWI t. ....._ .,. • ...-, vr.MI. fWed!nlntlW) :t:. G~ (CM) ' Pro Cage Standings '• -" • f ; _. ' I See by Today's Want Ads e Nttd Money'! ~ follow· inc jobs are ottered ln to- daY"• ~: An U • perienct'd coc1ctall watt· reu wanted by re1taurant In Huntircton Beach ••• Service Station attendant. rectlwt aaJ.ary + com- mla6on. and hat • aood ch&nbe' .fM advancement ••• Womu to wort in 00.. nut lhop. , ;start ~ tod.,. • Flft ~·•: 25 )'Hn ;;::1i:.:,r.'"= wm1c. pl ,frli' ettimatH stwn. Haw _l~~~ that "'°"' )'OO'W &IWQS want· ed ta dot-. e WOWEE!! A 1963 Ponche 1600 s. irttn with black Jntmor, AM·FM. chrome whec!b, and tn excdlent condition ••• a slrt catch-- •r. . , .. '. , . -· ,.., <j· . ,, I "• • ---" ' ~·,. · .... jl' •. __ .. .. • ,n&,. ... ·'&ill· . •"· '" .. ._~· ........ . . "' '· lC ' • \:·~ • Extra Book eontoiji)'ii.~~ ' : 7 ·" t?.r,... . ; • Extra Trad Dopth (~~~· ... e Extra Multiple Slpt11 f@'~tlle-llrlll."·' • • Pl1 .Nylon for Safer'~~~ .A!'·~ Durability .~ '' .... ' .. ' . ' ' • ·' ~·' : .'.t: • \ ' NO MONEY DOWN When You Buy Your Auto Needs at Sears on Credit! . Equal to New Car Originals ' O. E. R. · Shock . .£\~orbers . FREE Shock Inspection · at Sean SAVE $1.50 Reg1dar $4.99 34~ nta mO.t _,. o Built to outlaat and oat- perform original equipment shoe.kl • Yon get incroued~•COO· trol, improvod and.~· ride. E>;p6t iM!lllallnu ~e~:' J •Orjctm) "'pm~ ~~ ' . • • · Top Quality Higli Detergent Heavy Duty .Aqstate .. M01:or Oil ~.Kit • • • SA VE 93c on 6-Qt. Kit Regular $2.70 • ' ·~R,7" • Sinsle wel(lli molar oii ; ' : : ' : t.;; ' '( , . ... I "'' r > • Ccmt&inl addit1v11-~ fisht rUt. ; , ... ~.~ · ·,~ ·-:t I ·---·~-•·-. -' .. s uua~ ~ 9CIOI. ·' .~ ' , ~ ,,.. • · . ' ,'.,;. :-\·<f!·~..c.1 1 "' -... ..:, ;.-)' I:... .. .... ~-------------·-----------------------.;. _____ _, __ " ' .. , ..... ,_SA-M40ll,pt.4QO •--Gl~I ..,· Dtm1910! .. Ml21 PCOWIMiaU ......... .......t. . ·~~. ~~Hl&3""°'41 ", ... Of"'111b4,Q.'l-#t1 O..TWC&tOlO"'Nif:'i.»lf' • .._ ... "'f ... Ntfl ....... J.mt-...... ..-tt_"·" ~ 'b I u... .......... ,.,., MDll1'Jrlal.HO·NN1 OW«ll.637-2100 W«A-.•1.iin ' • ~-¥IA"°""" " ,..,.. . • ,«MU.'"41111 ~ ...... 1 ~ ,,...._MD14Vt(11..J.bil rs=::i O' • ,~ ...... "' '• ...... , t '\ 1"'-;----~--------------.!--.:•_'~ ----~-.,.~~ ..... --------,,.-·., "Sot1dodfoftO.D1Diil&ed otfourMon.yBotk" -...-.--.., ,.._......., ...... ,....,.,_UL .. UDPA ·~-~~-~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~- / ,, ', t i .• .. 't 7-···~ ,. . . ., ·~ -,.j .,~ ., "V •. ,' ~ (.; '~I <; ' • r' ~; I '' • 1 " ' . I ' ... ' : ; .. t ... I -,. . : .. " ; : I ': ·-:;· . . '• : . ', . ·.I . ·. : ' .'.•I ' . ; ',. ' - .,_ . ' '·' ' ... . -~ .. •. . I, , .. .-.. , ' .. .• . " •. ... .. .,. -. ' ' .. , •'. . :u.' ' . ; ,·. ':{ '.·. . '. -·'' . '. ' '. ... ' .. . ' 11 '·: • . -.. : ·' ; ~ ' . ' ' '. -~ . -•• 1. ' ' .... ·1·i ··-···', ~:. -;· ·,; , I i: , .. I •. '!t,;.;,rr--· · ··---- -:--.::; .. ·;-• • ,.,. .r .. - ' .. 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':, I ") •'!,·""~,' t .. , ·•· J 1 I '• '!••' . . .. .•. . . ....... . . . ··-. . .-fHCnth Conty. 54G-12zct;,t;ilf·m,i • ................. ... ... ·-··-... ..., . -' • l ) . • !iii-~··,~~ ........... -·...-···-·· ...... ~ ... ':·· . ... \' , ' f . ; ' , :' • ,·::r-.: -.;..... .. -,I ):~1· '. ';.-, ..... ·• . ~ , ... . ' 1 " ·-·-· ........ .. ! ' f . ' ' . .. .,. • ,. . .. , .. " -. \ L , .. '·, . ' ., '. ·""· .. • ' ,, ' ~ . . . .. ~' . ' ' . ,•1 "''· I • .. , • !' J -- · . ·.· IT'S ·t~SY :.TO PINCH I ' I ', " •' . . · .. _.. . . " ' ·PE·NNJESiEVEN. -DOLLARS 1 , I I\_ " . r • •\" •'""' . ' -. . ' . •' ' \ !.\ .. ''l'•I')' ... ,;,· ·: .. ~ ~. . .. W~, ... ~;:-... -:AN, .. "T· ·· ... ::·.·. ... .,, .,., '"' ' r . .. . . ' . ' ' . ,. . ' -' . ::·io .. ': .. ,.:' .. S'· '. ' ' ' . . ,, -' . ' : ' ' ' ·.--... .1...J.""'"'·""'-' ....... lll!~ .. ~~!1!1 .. ~l!!ll!!'lll•'lllllillfl ............... 111111'111i'lil'•··· .. ··········'•''~·· ' ·Nl·W~tow~RA.TE '· ... ~ ' . .. ' 31 LIN :E;S . 'I . . 2.:.· ·TIMES ; $2~00 IN THESE 'CLASSIFICATIONS!.· Fuml,.... Office Fvi'Nture 'Office Equipment Store Equipment Ctife, R .. t•ur1nt Bar Equipment 'HoUtoholdGooch Appll•- 4ntlq-- Sawing Machf- Muslf:ll 1,,1trum1nt1 IOOO . Pianos 'a Orpns •lio 8010 ··Radlq • •200: 1011 . Torovhlon u05 · BOl2 ··HI.fl·& Storoo 1210 • ::: . T•Po Recorders mo' 102Q C..,ffao & Equlpmon: 13op' ' " I 1100 =· Suppl!•.• .JCQO . 1110 OoOd ..... .....,,_ 8120 11..0CVlars, Scopos ' ' 1125 . ,,,. .... 11.-. ' ~ . ' ' . ' e EACH ITEM MU:SJ".· )E PAJCED. • • :.; e -NO ITEM OVER .$.so e NO COMMERCIAL PlllMS e e NO COPY CHAf«;IS • e , 1 Nil' AllRIVIA TIONs • ' '· ( .'. .... , YOU!., ' ' .. ~ ... r . -· ... ' .. '. • , I • I ,. .. '; ' . • l • \ ... '"I:-'\' .. ' ·- f- " . ' • • ' • • . . ( •• . .. .. , ' A ... ' ' ~~ ... I '~ -· ·~ 'v l ., " ··~ ' ·~ .... . •\\ ''!l ,,,. ~t " .. ... I '" .: . ·~ "" ,. ..... ' .• ' .-e; I '~' • ,. ' . "' .. •' ,, " '· J ' IAI wh hit 111• o11 WI f2 ... ·~ fie ..\ LI Of Ihm are at • Only Intel Tb Cow Con Seed Ing Con Calli ~ .... ...... -, ... ""'" "'"" ~I. I. O.kll Cm' !"till• "'"" Plni.t Mo ,. •• g:: ""' •• .. ... "" "" •• ... M> "" ""'" Md .. .... Wilk• "''"~ ,, .... .. 11. ' """ .. lllr -_ .. ~ ..... ,_ .'I "' .= _ .. -.... -'""' .. .:: ~ - .HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE GeMr•I IOCIOG.ntrel 1000 SHIPWATCHERS' SPECIALS $34,500 tw $39,500 61> % Interest no joan fees -lendfl'a re· possessions in, !IOOlllc San Clemente. a & 4 bedroom!, 2~ 'bath•, 2400 1q it al living area. master aalle you've $1meil about; 30' long & has It. own firepll<e, huie cloo- ets & dressing area. New .carpeta, drapes, completely redecorated & land>caped. Over· sized doubfe garage. (Directions: from San Diego Freeway take El Camino Real oft ramJ>-left 1 short block & turn left on Avenida San Juan direct to SEA.SPRAY Modola OPEN DAILY 10-5 Office: 518 Sin Juan Phono: 492-9288 or 545-3485 W. E. LACHENMYER RL TR. POCKET RANCHO h deaign home ideally placed on a wide 89 tt. a. tate. Enjoy this country at- lllOIJPhere. and breathe the fresh air. A refreshing re- treat mxn your busy world. RUmC SETI'ING. h u ,e 5hade trees, neat, park·likt grounds and two separate play yards PLUS boat and camper storage! Be com- fortable ln yoor CJwn except- ionally nice custom three bedroom, t w o bath home dea>rated with natural wood lending an unexpected rlch- neu and charm. IMMEDI· ATE POSSESSION -Prem- ium living for $38,500! ! Woat1ldo Brand new listing -immacu- late 3 bdrm freshly paintl'd. Uitl of extra.a, &uch u fire- place & BBQ on patio, d~ hie gate boat entry, etc. $22,500. NEAR THE BEACH AND NOTHING DOWN to Vets for this MODEL Jlke 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH CREAM PUFF In most de- sim:I area 11urrowxfed by expensive homes. Lavely custom d r a p e s. carpets. warm ua!!d brick tittpia«, Jui• famU, dlJrlag room and Queen • BJztd Jdtchen. Near shopping and pa~ ial ~hool $155 per month plus taxes. FHA Terms ll,400 DOWN. 2790 Harbor Blvd. 56.9491 Open till 9 PM 1ohn mac:nab " VIEW New cu&tom Spanish OOme "1th room for a pool. Spac--IOus Spanllb tile plle:ry epenlng to lup view living room. Jonnal dinire rm. "'""' panelled -"" with wet blr, 2 tireplace, and a wonder kitchen ln waJ.. DUL 4 bedroom.a. 3~ ballll. Call for appointment • HOUllS FOR SALi HOUSES POI SALi Colla ...... lltt llOUllS FOR -11 llMAU · ltllin'ALS GtneNI 1000 0...rel IOOO = ~Hngton _,, 1400 Ht • ·~ i)tew111 Unfurnl1hod RENTALS .. ~lo. Fuml1hod Coron• dtl Mar 4250 l11t1hlo RIPIJ ..... e!rt ~' 32ID \..!P'! lloach 370$ Real cute holM for coupl&i J'Gr Qu1ck Selle. SUI pa (JIINA COVE MIJHAJtQI .B4.Y AREA 2 BR I ~~ blths, furn or :.= ~ bta= mot)tb lncludM .U oD thlt On the bl)' with OCftn vitw. ~y OCEAN VIEW untum Dupl:ex, priv patio. Shr'lp.bo tmNcuiatt 3 + db-,llOr'ltOtll 3 bectl'OOm jewel. Vtr)' prl\'&te ln txclllltve 2 jldpDI. 6 IUDIOOJn Corona Hl&hlinds. $225/roo, Havasu lake Mo~, Mak .. .-Ntu Beada. ,.n1al ocean The nicest "incidel'ltal" that happened wbtn Parker Dam wU buUI. LOTS $3500 to $4200 er IM CaWorn1a ak1e al HAVASU LA.KE !or your "All Year'' vacation home. all lmprowmentl in. view, ' bomel. 2 bdnm each and iuest apl.a.. $34,500 "" room with dotlhle ..,.. Felturinr IDrmll dlnlltl ona. ""-bch. Elepnt 4 .111 Bab. $2Z lt!Gnth. 612-&55"' 64S-2290 qe on alley. Good terms at room! G~ lMJll' roca YI old 3 BR. 2 BA dream Multi -...UC bet;.-10-5 PM BACH So. of Highway. flri. So Eatt Costa Mn• $23 960 with bridl ftteplace. ~ b:ime ln lmmac. com. l..wc· AllOVE IUlh IChOol. 2 BR. Quiet, aean. lfot pla~/ ftancb PYie: home 2 bdrms, 1&j, . urloua ~and dnpel. VI')' featutta thruout incl. l1ilUe ~ $140. Leue, refrig. 673-6904 aft 5. """ , ..... + , bdnn ~~ w·"·ikll9·~· & L :::.-.. ~ • .:::.~ 2 ':; =-. = 1 ..... 82S La B•lboa 43p0 mfll wtll $36.111> , ~ a er ee ~ l'::'i!e e: := O<iANJiiONT. LU I•• =$6S=Ba:..oh-.-A-p_t._m_o_n_onl'-'y.:;... Eublda. I, l .. r Uni~ · • .. . 1812 ~ fnmiod. "°"'· i..ue. . dlNm."S BR. 3 BA. $350. 548-9STI Incom• $960 mo. Asld.iw CONDOMJNIUY..2 BR, 2 BA. IQ.4456 ~ EvN. ~ Pri\tate Party 675--&513 !Aue. Ownrr. ~7 132 \V. \Vil.son, Costa NI'$& r.T1 ~='&tnh:k1B;1,~ $5!1,!IOO. • . All e,1eo. tblt·~ ~town.' ---:;T:;:O;;;WN~MHOUN°iisi1•-.~1·----""'1111•-LHllnl'Ntau.I 3707 CL.EAN Bachelor Apts. dlahwthr', trplc, .w/w cpts. fU8 per mobth.' J,ncluclq I/I T ; . '"!;;" All utll incl $75 up * HAVASU * Monte Vl1l1 Atvanue drpo,. 2 car pr w/aub> taxeo. 2 BR, upended ""' TOWNHOqSE 4 BR. ,. ... now 1'65 Incl 315 E. Balboa Bl"'· N _ _.. c-.....5 6 rental.unltl, matnl;y.2 .bdr. dOof. Pool, rec lpunp, 3 .... cust .,. __ .. i-t.. ......t.. V. water 11 trub.. Principals BALBOA 67a.!1,l4j 'lliilfTn li>atVHI' Inocme $610 mo. $51,900. l'TS new u.tt,. expired. Pfl-om ... __... --vui,;r cm aeuq 1860 B Newport Blvd., C)t: Save uoOO ~ 548-0W 1tory. Encloled pa&. 2 car S Br, 2~ BA. 2 cv Carped onJ,y. lit A lut mo's rent NE\V 1 Br. dplx sep. :by 6C-BM 545-34&1 Bien. ' • prqe. Walk to the beac:b $250 mo. + clMnirc dtpoall. 962-6595 garage. Quiet, adult$, no "' . ,,Ci>~ N lkach 1211 A-ahopptng. Full Pr tt 'e Pool· Multi Ont, pets. 2-468 Elden, 548-1021 VIEW OF IAY .--. •wpot! 119,soo. 1aY &: hacli RENTALS A LT y OPE.II 'TILL SOLD ~ Realty I -Aph. Pumiahod Huntington BHch 44pO AND OCEAN . i:<•••:NB ~ oic. Oj6-Ul4 Mtt1I be ttOld! Tm'Hlc boy 901DoverDr . .'NB"',,;,,,.2'jl -... 4000 QUIET & BEAUTIFUL Much charm has ~n used In Baycrett area. 4 bedrm.· $6:ZOOO W'I-· _. In this dclighUul three level , it conwrtlble den • H111e -----~. _G_._ -,,_ RENT Adults only. 2 BH, P o·o I ··-·-famU ~... NO DOWN I 17676 Cameron. g,17-21.<!5 . hom•, whk h tak" adwnl-MAGNIRCENT ~~·or y room. v•~. Bluffo Condominium age of 8 magnllice nt 180 de-one of Its kirxl at amazlts Stwp Sol Vilt.a. larp cover-S ~ M ~th" with ...__._... ,3 Rooms Fumitur• 1 BR fum ?itOBILE t!O?il E. .,.. unobslruot"' v ; • w. IA YFRONT b>w price. Try 1'9.!Eo. "' patio, block lencl, --=:.'..~--~ -~-":' $25· Month Adw". no """· $120/mo. • "ring" '°"' ~-to-... ··-·-,..... -·~ -~ 5'6-1674 1-ligh beam ceilings, white Private dock for Iarae crui. ' ' · ~ ma-e1 blt.lna. pri patio. $250 FULL OPTJ.ON TO BUY -'='======== brW:k fireplace, side ya.rd er. Each Br has own bath .. SPRING. ~· shoppirJC. Just reduced b. PROPDt!U:.S WEST, (netrlsenton 1 Available) -4795 .. tlo. Very secluded. Fan-+ hoge fam rm _ powder to $24,500 tor quick aale. -...,... N d-' Laguna Be1ch •-.t>1>AT""' p IJ R lty ·~ o ~•o.a.c. tastlc home for only $42,000. room -,vet bar -lovely Wi .lw:&n.LIA ,1. •u °""' • , .., ... _.. Hf RC · 1 • ., ~ lAul I opUoa or • • • • MODERN View apt, nor! 1 Will lease for $300 -per patio .............. SU9.000 "anytime" .,..T.l266 Evti. 538-ru.t Se1L •BR. 2 BA Lulnuy ·Fumltvra Rent1l1 end, 2 story, 2 BR, ·1~~ month. Submit your smaller W. Ilaalie 2629 H bo Blvd CM home on our guaranttt W e • ._..._. _._ _ ar r ·• · 'BR-Repo•YK•nf ;:".,:a: e!:tr ~ i15:. 't. ~ ~ ~= :;p~i~:e::~.' J::; ;,i!~~ plan. -Excellent0r!"n~~rd.. Near 2 4 BR.•1 1dt. Sm down. BOUD.U P14ZA $260 mo . .f.94-99S2 '-"well, "-aklf & (o. ocean ? 2 BR.! each, la"" ,.; ..,,,nd< NewP.fJnl. Good Newport Hel9hll 3210 DELIJXE, -l·~. RENTALS 2043 \VESI'CLIFF DRIVE 646-1711 • Open Eves. $20,950 Sharp 3 BR 2 bath Condo- minium in choice location, near pool & club house. This Is the popular "Richmond" mOOel. Call no\v for appoint. ment to &ee. ~ ' PEl=ll=ION ·:-J • .............. , ... ....,. .,. ti & d k ,.,.. · 3 llOO 1 ' Funt. .apt $135 Plus util. ttM •. CMll """'"' CataiC. pa 0 ec · HAFFDAL REALTY BED M: 1 ,~ bathA, Heated pool. Ample parking Apts. Unfurnished ....,.., 1MC11. ca!lfWll• $40,000 furn. fireplace, F .A. heat, No' cblldren.No pets Kl WUI ,,.,_. R. C. GREER, Realty 8740 Wamer 842-4405 dilhwuher. dbl. garage, l98& Pmiianl. CM 60-5858 Generill 5000 FOUR BDRM$ •• $17,250 Move into th1a )Arp family home today. Cloee to shop- ping, schools and churdies. Just put on the market, ll!Js one won't last $135 per month includes taxes and Insu rance. O N L Y $500 OOWN. 2M3 'VtSTCi..1FF DRIVE 3416 Via Udo 673-9300 t e n c e d yard. Oean, no Loguna INch 1705 pets. $225. 673-9125 iuo. lFI'ILI'ItES Paid. 1 ·Bedroom. Col'peted. A DIH.renl Houool Set apart • dlst1nct from other houses In best Back Bay area. Exclusive list· ing. 646-4tlf lllo' .. -VEN DOME '. •3BR.2Ba.&e&2 Emerald lay Br. O<ean Vu •Pl Xlnt Joe. · nr. scbla &: trans. 548-1249 Costa MeU IID.tACU" .ATE APTS!, Vacant Lot 3 BDRM ,., yan1 ..,.. IMMED. OCCUPAN~ , 4100 Gnat View! New upper part drpll bit.ms xlnt ~iew of • SEA. w· K Clos• to Shopping Park, fi ~;~ J ol EM=-.. te-lo "· • ' ' ¥ B ' 2' ~. ;",.,,.,,.,'.......,, s .-uc:ac.., harbor $225, 64&-lm. • Spaclous 3 r s, ~ .Dtlte Jlft1 £st.ti -uuu MOTIL • 2 BR. widen er o[c. Mn. Rawston Nowport Shoroa 3220 WEEKLY RAT.ES e Swim Pool, Pt>l/.,..n lk n .• ~ ~ -23~ Newport Bl... CM • Frpl, Indivllndry fac'ls w. to ~ . LEASE OPTION $265 mo. \,II •My 1845 An•heim Av~. Newer ultra sharp 3 lkdrm 3 Bdrm. "A" Fra m e , -~e=6_46-~7~44_5_• __ COSTA t.1ESA 642-2824 2 baths • Cozy Uvin&' room unusual comer lot. Interior $25 Wk U with wood b""""' '"'""'ce C.Wwell.-lllllker & Co. patio .. ...,.,. • • '""bl• • • P wall • wall carpeting • twee· 2200 E. (out Hl•trw•w ca.raae •• boat port. 316 • Studio&: .... arh apl11 .. * 642·1771 Anytime* 516-ml Open Eve•. dble garage A patio. EZ ~Nlt"'(;•c=ni. cedar SI. StS-6729 e I~ Utils & Phone llfiv. terms at $26,950. • Maid Service • TV avail. $1!6 -2 BR. Deluxe Apt. Children's section. H dy S 'I · · e ·NewCafelt&r ·~ • ..IUMG.. , 1n man pec1e 1 University Park 3237 2376 Newport ffivd. 548-9755 • , lnoome Units ~SPRING · Loe. on Ooeanskle ol Hwy, SPACIOUS 3 br, 2 ba prl. NEWLY painted 2 BR.· w/ _.. n1'1 A. T mu l5ll yds tram Beach. 4 lie home on greenbelt Near w to w crpts, new furnltuft .... :.9. ~.l .L "Apt. unita,~ needs paint It UC!, Fam rm, lndry ~· & drapes, $140; 523 Bernard • .--AH't'TDa:'" gOod reoerat cleanup p(). patio, Comm pool, tennis SI. FOR HEA VBC SAKES Brkr. 534~ $140. 2 BR. S IOV!', crpts, drps. Bkr. 53ol·6980 re frig. SCl·SllO (near an-IMatlll LLEGE REALTY lSQ) Admls It Hartior,CM. Oceal!Ylew· tncome THIS 3 BR + family room 5 Units on 2 lW lots, walk· home on quie t cul-de-sac ing distance to Ocean, all litreet with 1 %. bath 1s to- wtth garage a. day's best buy at on 1 y !714> 642.e235 . CORBIN-MARTIN m.soo. """'m"" "-m Oowr Dr1w, Suite 101 quallt:y carpels I: drapes. .. ~ TENTIAL INCOME EK-$275 on Jeu e, A';'ail Feb. ========. 2629 HaJ·bor mVl.I., C.M. CEEDING n0,000 ANNUAJ, 2 kid! ok, no petS.~~Jj..2493 NE\V charming I Br. new Cotta Met• 5100 , Attention lnvutors LY. Price •"",950. !urn. lifust site tQ apprec. i -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. BAYCREST LOTS 80 ft. x 110 ft. fee lot in exclusive areL Priced to sell. $20,SOO. Call Kent Kinpley Res. 540-8812 2215 Irvine (Corner of Heather) Opon ll ·5 Unusml !!plit level 4 bdrm home with delightful pool. Vacant & ready for you. Jerry Freud Ch•IH Arnold 388 E. 17th $1., C.J\f. Rnltors 646-ns.5 4 Bed•--$23,750 Dellil(n far large family llv· ing. 2 bath&. Formal dining room. Sparkling coMibOO inside &; out. Excellent area. S40-17lD TARBELL 2955 Horbor Lease or Lease Option 3 Bed.mom. 2 bath home plus 2 Bed.mom view apt. $53,750 Gtorgo Wllllomson Realtor Eves: 673-1564 Macco "'ally eo. llldr. REAL TORS -· nice ..,., wilb pa-N= Beach 3036 E. Cont Hwy, CdM tio. OnJy $2250 d0\\11. -Adults cnly $150 mo. 2220 L' 3 rental unit.I $325 monthly MISSION REALTY 494-0731 Corona d•I Mar' 3250 i:lden, C.M. &15-12.il Ew:L Excdlent, park • like !Ur· ~unding11 for adults rtqwr· tb&. peace k quiet. m= 675-1662 Anytime - I' \ l 1 • \\ 111 I t ~· \H\ \II\\ income on Wp 66x3ffi ft 985 Sa. Coast, Laa:una CHINA coVE :t ';:!ren:.i4Zn:i:ku1:~ WESTERN AWARD On the bay with 0ttan view. e f~~R~~ e Year End Splci1I No down t.o nterans. Sl.73 mo PIQ'ment& 4 BR 2 ti.th family home with 1 a r g e f"d. $21,500 Newport ., Victoria 646-1111 For Real Estate licenmees during trainina: period in ac-. tive Harbor Area OUJce. For lllterview, !!'.end background A qualifications to: SALES TRAINEE BOX P 654 DAILY PILOT DAVIDSON Realty ldNI for Retir•ment Kut 2 BR home w/rrpl c on Quiet cul-de-sac street in Newport Hl!. $22,500. RJ.lr. 2'i50 Harbor lB, CM 546-5'60 E\'es. 642.-4951 2 &Ire LIDO LOTS BUILDER'S PRICES OPPORTUNITY NOW I Call for ln(onnalion 6ITT200 Pllf1 ~rratt Rallty DAILY PilDI' WANT ADS BRING amn:rs1,1 Duplex $24, 950 I t \ I I I ' L Country Oub. $39,950 C# 3 &: 4 Br. Semi CUstom Very private in exclusive 177 E. 22nd St. 642·3645 C • 105). PROPERTIES Hoines from $35,450,00 Naw area. Pvt bch. Elegant 4 $75 BACllELDR. Relrig, no 54&54«1 1,.,wur=,,·,_61>4130.,.,.. _ _,-c~-~o!'~ Ori~: ~d ~ ~! :-na.~t=. kitchen. Util. paid. woman wood fioors I: double car LARGE Liv rm " din nn. Tyrol Drive. ury features thnJollt ind bit-~·~"'~Y~· oo.5046~~~·-""-'-·-- prqe aeparaililc uni.ti (2 E•.O.ld S B frplc, crpts. drp9,ble!ec kltch. A.P.I. SALES AGENTS w, grand new lush cpt&:., 2 BR. Furnished. Stove A- Eutllde Costa Mesa. HaJd. 1093 Baker, C.M. bdrma e. ch). Extra 1arre CQIM I pee, uy 2 bdr, den. can d another Phone TI4-892-770l for cent. heatill&', 2 car pr. re.trig. SlOO mo. Near shop- kilchen area in 1 unll unit Lo>.v dn FHA or VA, further Wonnation Beaut ufrn or unfum. Only ping. Bkr. 546-5040 Wellt-McCerdle, Rltn. 1 block !rotn 1011 coune. l $23,500. <>wner 00444!. * LOT R·2 * for the very particular. Izn. 2 BR. Quirt Adultt, 1 No Di5Criminative TcnantS 1, 2 &: 3 BDRM. ,WJ'S, POOL. NO OiILDREN . MARTINl(j)UE GARDEN APTS. 1!th &: Santa Ana, C.~t Cll1 Mrs. Henderson £46-.;,:)12 tm Santa Ana, Apt 113. t;.r.r. 1810 Newport mvd., C.M. BR fixer upper on 7500 lq ft. BEAtmFUL " Custom built Cose t be Ch &: hops med poss. Lease. PETS. $140. 768 s C'O t t 548-7729 Eves. 6ff.OOU R-1 lot. Lg 2 r-A Fam rm, 2 Terms. ~ne~. 893-763~ · Private Party 6754583 Pl. C.r>if. 646-2323 ·:J "THE GABLES;, $12 500 ba Ii room for additlan $85 JNC • w/love.ly view. 2518 Via i BDRM, 3 bath. Top of DUPLEX 3 BR, 2 ba trplc, util. Near Harbor SJ>ac. 2 Br., 1~~ ba. w/prlv. HOLIDAY BONUS J07o dn or make oiler. ~larlna. Owner. GU-321!1 World. Oce&J! &: mountain crptJ, drapes, pr, patio Shop'g Center. gar. ad ul ts. cpts, drps, •blt- Take CM!r low interest 6% ,v~lew~. ~13~7·~""'~·:;540-~"'6~==l;';ml=:;mo.;"".=.':'7>6900=;;:::'. 673-"56:;:=';;:;;;; SCU881 or 838-1273 ns; priv. patios. $13.'i. FHA Jou. Pay only $187 Newport BY OWNER 3 BR 2 ba. ;: 1 BDR. bit-ins. crpts, drps, 2437 ORANGE per month lncludiiig tax & •t Excel.condhoo.2i.b~0~!cliU DupltxHforSale 1975 Huntington ... ch S400 carport, all util peid. $l20. e 636-4120 • . inl!llrance. Live in a big 3 shoPI & 11C • ~ -• 54~ + !amily Mesa Verde home Vlctorie NEWPORT Duplo: tor .. le. FREE RENTAL BOOK ===·======-1 BER?.fU DA VILLAGE on a free.lined cul-de-eac. Newport Shor•• 1220 200· to beach. Or wilt trldt Dror In & Bro~ae Newport Beach 4200 Spacious 2 &. 3 Br. Apts . Amlous owner says quick 646-1111 equity for Mood Laiwia 2 Bedroom home With Pool. -Crpts, drps, bltins. OOlie lo poaetllion. Ca 11 540.ll.51 •.Fish-Swim-Boat • residential lot. P. O. Box Great Party Ho~. Rent BAY Front Spac. 3 bdnn shp'i: & sch111, Children OK. (open t!Vff) H!rltage Real l1ZZZZZZZZ:l 2 story, 3 Br. in exclusive 1423, Huntingtoft B •aeb. at $150 per lnOllth. Good +den. $190. incl ulilcnall $110 up. ~-1, Newport Shores. Call aft 1-ti·on. boo! -•· W l ·~ -""""" (n4) 8-t0-«16. Owner ........ a11p intr se. V'W"01....i 2214 College Ave. Apt. 2, tlgr WRAP IT UP WEED IT 5 pm wkdy•. 642-<m Walker & Lee FOR tho NEW YEAR & REAP Wostcllff 1230 RENTALS 4 bdnn 3 ba, tam nn borne. POOL .:c:===----;.;;.;.;; Houiel Furnlthed 7682 Ed\ni:er Atr1um, pa.noramJc view. BY OWNER, 3 BR 2 b&, Cott• Met11 2100 842-4455 Open Eves. 540-Sl40 BulltbyIVANWELL.S·Dov-4 BRI, 2 baths, needs ietcel. cone!, 2 blks Wes:ctllft -'---"-----J.;EASE S bdr, tam ml, 2'ni er Shorel. HAPPY HAPPY. .ome TLC. But has a shoPI Ii schools. 54U28l 2 BR 1: den, Eastside. cl09e ha. din rm, gard .erv. Xlnl Roy J. Ward Co. last years pri ce of only to shoppini. UJO/mo com· cond. 347-8927 ··~ San"·-D• ·~1""" S26 $0. Can be purcltu-Unlvorslty Park 1237 .&O'U •-.v . ......,. .>oN eel' NO DOWN VA or pltlely turnlshed. Avail Jin l 3 BR, l~ be, 1 mi. from STORAGE GARAGE LOW DOWN FHA. H"" BRAND NEW Vill•go P<mm Rl!Y 642-lm beach, 1100/mo. Av at I ry! Hurry! II H•nov•r h'outt. 3 8~ 1 BDRM furn, adults onb'; 12/28. 536-7744 $20 MONTH • COATS 2 BA. Xlnt fln1nclng. wal<r paid. S9ll mo. 9eS 3 BR. Condo. Bl..,, crpll, 833-0300 A W. 11th. "'-"" """·. ,.frla. frplc. Pool 403# Newport 81"'1. G...... w··" -'-::=======I Priv.1165 mo. -i0peo1,..,...._ -LA ... -t••• Newport Bolch 2200THE~"-YOU ~"' F.d Riddle RMJ.tor 646-8811 R•·L-.. Corona dal Mar ~ -~ --.-~ '_,, -----·---OCEANFRONI' 2 BR. -· nlll: QIJJCKER YOU 8Etl. $110 Modem apt 1 bdnn betw Ocean&: Bay. No\v ·w lune. NEWLY DECORATED 673-93.'i7 2 BR. sep. home \v/carPort .. 1 li BEDROO?.f furn .. 1 blk. $105. Disp~; \vater paid. ~)· to ocean. Pool. $12:j mo. Blk:. from school. Call 548-2035 or 644--0637 219.f • ''B" Plnccn1ia e 636-4120 e OCEAN View, 1 Br. larie 1 "'==;-o--,.-~~~ Apt. fum. ~tio, S130. inc. SQUEAKY Clean Eastsidt utlll. Winter,·~ a~t. 2 BR, 1 bath, built-in kitchen, fully carpet!'<i & draped. Just paint!'d lnsidf' & out. $135/mo. Ed Riddle Rltr. 641Hl811 OCEANFRONT apt tit Jloor 2 lat: I: 2 sm bdml, J.nc:ky. to 6115 ms. &12.!131. · Pl.ACE your want •d wbere ~,0~rN~~lbe-,.-,.....---.,-lbe , tbly U. kickina: -D4D..T DAn..Y P1LOT W • ·-• ~' . PILOt' claoilied ..,._ ~ .. ~0 642·"'71 10 UNITS on 3 lotL Adjacent to Ocean- front. $155,000. _ ___, Bllboo Real Eat111 Co. 700 E. BaJIXll. Blvd., Balboa 546 4141-BY OWNER, 3 Br, So. of furn.. trplc. W 1 n t er '1'15 (Open lw•llftllJ hwy. Crpts, drps, frplc, blt· Util. pd. Adultl only. 6'73-8Cl8 Gentr1I 3000 0.ner•I im. R-2 room for additionr&l 3000 General 3000 ""'140 Wo hovo 17 Unlll on 1% acre downtml'fl Coif• Mou $152,000 unit. Xlnt Corona del Mar Bilbo• lsl•nd 2355 Location. GTh-2379 alt. S PM 1---------' Lido Isle 1351 AN 80' CORNER LOT wit h cu~lom-blt, 3 BR. 2 b& 3 BR House, $175 mo. winta. JSLANO REALTY. 673--lDJ days at eVH. Dupl1xo1 Furn. 2975 DUPLEX: 1~ Block to btach. PaHo. OH st:rttt ~· ltderencea requlftd. 121 S9tb St. NB. (213) PR ~11 at f213) LA 5-5248 R&NTALS Hou... Unfurnished huge patio, gard., 3 rar gar, Cotta Meu 3100 boa t SPftC9. Terrific ex. J ---..;.;"----"-'.:.;; panse pot.nHal. Jm macu· l&te, $19,000 R. C. GREl:R. Ralt> )416 Via Udo 6'f3.mJ S BR 2 ba. cpts/dz1>s, bU·lN. 1..taM $210/mo, Call Mr. NelJon '411..lm Haltall Rt'al Eltak. --~ -------Cl 2 BR G&nae. l"O. ml Hunfl"""" -1400 Palludea ltd. Nr. Alrpart. --~---'·--1 .,,,.. Ole. -LEASE Oil 3 BR-Olla pr; ltncod ,...._ LIASl/OPTION &ck a.;,. Multi ,..t. UUl C..tom built --. ....... s pd. 11111. - Bl\ 6 tam rm, 2 bl. .U elite LARG£ : BR. Gvap, patio. kitchen, epta/dtpL SUS rm. BRASHIAlt llEAl TY * 5l&m! * 347-8531 Evts. 1163-1178 S©~o\1~ -&'.f.~s· Solo•• Slmpl• Scrambltd Wcm! Puui< for a Chuckl• 0 lldrnlnot letter~ of th• four ttrom~led ,,'Grds k- low IO r.n. ........ ~ - rilCAl'IMUS 1 1_1111'1 _ I,.---,---, 1~1 Di Al 1• I ' SCRAM0 LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 9600 _/ I 4260 -"" "' pii.lio. 'Z;/mo. ;.Pri. plate/ 4300 only ;, "' ·d. J'lZ.!$45 ep. '.by !ts, no ·1021 - 'IFUL p o•o I l:KJ . HOME. lai/mo. ~ ' no".th R. 1~~ ·• 1 '.blk f plush. ?TS!> N~ I 1, P•rk1 , "" oft'. .,... , fac 'ls Ave. 642·2&24 -v crpts, <e Apt. -· -. 5100 · nant; .\PT'S. ·REN UE m. C.M. 646-,. 'i512 13, ~.fol. !S'j 'v/priv. rps, ·bit· 5. • - .AG?; •. Apls. Cote to ren OK. . 2. f\Jgr. ATED carport. .1 paid. ~)· !nlia • Easts Ide buill·ln >etrd & i in.!'irlr Rlcldl~ .. "" rr ADS! 3000 )0 1-----·-----------------r-----,-__,..._.~~·-·· RENTALS RIAL ISTATI l'lil--!1!1111-llJlllll-... --... -... ' ~ ' 114ndq,_..,».l'61 .. tCIJLV miff n l:Co:--:~7:te-:-.:::U'.:'.n:-fu_m_l11._'*'-::::lOO::: .. h ''-°":;;::.:.,.:::;'a::.l ___ _.11 "' fl!, * * ;i; :.:· l)IU~~;:.; !.!.~MlltT ::.:a=.~::: =~ii;a!$~0Y~NT :: Wl=~MINI' • Bual-ROfttel ·, 4040 Y D"=~ · IRQlmlG'""'". 111-. ,,__ ' · -7400 .WOmon $HS. Jmma~~·Br .. crpt.o. ~~~'e-,~ --~-__, ..T.c.J'ZIC!4i;rco. &rNll-llft , l-"--SECRE:l'-·--All-Y_._ '-bitm, petto, gv. Jn. Beach. :noo., ft, ~"';; · '* m.-* ' A"""""'.,.1 , ·WAITRESSES , llOO • fant ok. 224':.A State 642-7t12 without equipment. Must • J'ASRION JllANO ' • • '~ , , Yoi' iut ~~ ADUIJrS peat 60. Seo .,..,............ IJ-!:!!!:!!!!'!:!!!~~~IJ!ll~ .. !!·L-~ ~T BEAQt To wodr In Ca<) .-,tlal '11 TO 315. ruu. ma:. llffch ld-.W -· -· M"-......... ,. '91-1038,. -·s ·'t:l:D"" -· H11 full limo ~ ~w -NEAT APPEARANCE. NO Lllht "•0 1r•••h• "" ~~t..16th Pl. CM. Avail Cl 2 BR. Houae. Gar. RW ~.l, ~ ma!nt&ID. potftlon °"" PropoRtw ~ .= EXPEILIENCE ?jtt'£S. ~c.&u ~a ~t:z~· · :.::C""'"-~~---· 1 F.ltate ot '! 2192 Pallaadea f# have accoanti.QI dts;ree J)lUI SAR~. I ,,_,,.,...., ,.::, Lrg ~;_ v%.~" ...... 1-=""=·=,..=-==-=;;,;= Paporhaftti.. BUFFIRS & • ..,. ,,_ fllPOl'lenco lb coit Hou SfXD'PER JJw.to. No ... Off"• B-ntel ••70 Palllll.. ' 6ISCI JANITO,RIAL ............ -EDP APPL, !.., ~ PE!ISONP .. care tor 14 • mo olo -·~' I -dshwr, gar. ~drn. 110 no "9 vv , MAINTlu•NCE -· 'u Ji .m.. ----...L.-...... , I 64:1-2864 l... "" ~··-. , 1 . tor ...._ paTenu., . pets. LAGUNA BEACH Whatloya Wantt Whadtlyo Gott INT /EXT Polnllnr. • · .. -@Clll't ·oK. c.11 '. 1 BR. Ali electric ...... Prv Air Coodltlonod SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR SallllactlDn ...... ,,... .... n.ttnt, ....... M ... COLLI 11s BOB'S BIG BOY boll' 2 pm. 64$-11115' t patio. W/W crpb, <h'pa. ONFORES'/AVENUE NATURALBORNSWAl'PERS »m-IU-UOI, -mafl-D ~1i:J.o.Sl.· PliJt.,.T·ELEPHONE ., 1,.:.S110=·--=~.;--,----Desk spa.c" available 1r1 • Speclal Rat. 548-0«I preferred. CompetitJw. RADIO CO --...;;:=-"-=--ANSWERING SERVICE .. : , 2 BR, crpts. drps, prage, newest cmc. bulldllla at S Llnft -S thMI - 5 bvcb INTER 1• JCxt. PAJN1'JNG, wqu, outstandbw ~ • , SALES LADl kw Better Exper. pretemd but nof " private yard. 174 Monte pdme location tn downtown ltUlll -Ill> MUIT IMClUD• IMMED. SllR.VJCE. Local efitJ lncludiog P r Of I t woman'• wear, rub' er part a must ll PM • 7 AM. Vista. CM. Lquna Beach. Air condl-t=• ':'.';":~ ~ ~ ::. ';"' ..,"'~1:: ret. FREE at.-5Q.167t aharfn&:, time . Pennanent. Apply in Call 5D-2222 MrL Oliver ' J LE t liar• ·•-~J ~.-.o • -., .. "" I T DIS -•• O'Brien'• ~·'"' -";;;,iii:.:=::;;c;o=~:;.;;:_:-:".11J '} •• SING ap, neu ahoppino C'll, ....... l"".._., ----· ""It SAL. -ltA OHLYI p· .. -o ·--~-J ..--._,._...., .. ~ED· E·pert•••• .. ~;:~~~ m nth Pi. :""..= .. ';"":.T•; To Place ~:":,!:.2;!6~!radl• Ad ~..:~~:fi , (,Penney Co. 191r.;;:;o&:c~oac1 ~ .zz; & 0out ""'· ·~ ~ ~ ·~,.., ' Forest Ate., rear leads to 24 f--LI I I -• Whl ~ l))V l br ....... d,.., petio, Munet ..... ~ •• ~ ~ N--:lOll' to S...t .....io4 billtr lob, Ir. -on I a-l==:;;le=El=epban=;;":;:':.:==:.=an;;"''""":;;;,;:;..,;·:.:=:;;== • pool 11((; "'°· 11ti2 H Km-·---on ·--·~ ~-, -~ ~. Plo-lftll, R11>1ir 6180 Ntwport Beach, Calif. ,. ~ts -wood Pl &t6-400B. pef' montb for ~ DeU bNcb. wm trMle eciul~ .r ..... ....._ ·~-.. ~ .. _ An Equal Opporiwd~ on merit wttb no b1u ~ , ·~ ,, ~!::' b:r.allabl.::r~ : ':' ~Box~ ~ ~ ~ = ~T:w. ~=.: ~'l----Em~ptc,..-'--'---:.amSex. Race, O>lor, Creed , , : ~ ~ service available fir $10. Hunttnatml Beach. (n4} a1rpJa,ne Dando Ow'mL ~ NO MAnER' ::r ~ All ullllt!u plld ._ MO<lOl5 o..r. 1116' o;.,.,. Ave. CK. .::-======! SETUP OPERATOR . . • ~ "~.fily P!IDI' :~l!n"= =·de!...,., Ste .. "' Plumbllll 6l90 ROTARY SWAGING Mold Pnu "WHAT ,...~ Newport 811ch 5200 W1nted: Young Couple \Vho need year-round home. 2 bdr unfum apt close to 22'1 FOR!Sl" AV!NtT.C tor full or put payment beach. 3 BR 2 bl.. Vac 1SM Plumblna " bl'. ""'· Weft Seta 1 ' ~ LAGUNA BEAal on new carpet. drapes., equity. Want clear lot or l'fat, Lie .• inlllr.; remodel, Pl'o&n?Mlveaeroapace manu· p •1 a.M lahdscap!Jv, block fencirw .mall 2 BR ~ CM area. repair, rooter aev., 531-'1588 factare' bu • r~ent ' • ~ Deluxe Offices " "· ........ 642-4980 atter 5639ia."""'-,6GCl85 Blir. PLU!IBING REPAIR "'' • ,... .--.., te ':::.i be..,;~..! . , ct ~ , swimmine beaches. $175 on · •. lease. ·.' , BURR WHITE, Reeltor 2001 Newport Blvd., N.B. 675-4630 Evos. 642-2253 . · OCEAN front 2 BR apl, . ., , upsbdn, blt-inl. Adults on- ly. $250/mo. 673-0803 7 p.m. , Shp home· West O:mna. No job too mia1l allpbue9fllrotar)'nraainl hv ~ ii do!fll' t1 ~~~~~atroffiC::U': 29• Century Twin screw Ieaaedw/aoodtncome,3br, • &U-aJ.28 • Applicantmultbe~ ' 8 own 1 i in&'. ;;:;;..al ierv1ce, cruiser w/215 bpGreyV.S. fm rm, bit-Ina. crpf.I. drps, Sewi' 6960 ed In all s:ihuH o1 external ~1;,m-for ~=: IT" Is > central location. Clral:W'e Perl pond. Boat + cub for etc. Val 128. M. Trade eq. A I :::=!!!1.----..!!::::j and tnterDal twalinl of u. wm supemM 3-to t income prop. s fur 35-40 cab cnmer. ALTERATlONS A: Cultom llwahNu1. alley rteeh IDd people. Excelleat woridnr ,. • • ., , .. C.Ounty Bank mdf. DI E. (l) 82'l-0068 968-4257 m1 1e11 ateelJ. 17th St., CM. 642-1485 Dreamak1"11', Very f 1 De Thfl."11 d .__ condition. Small shop. Oceanfront lot for income work. App't. 54&-UM •new epartment 1""- l i".:~ ·.: .,Sqit It. e Appl> V1ly lot far TD, 'IBIS SPACE l!ISERVE!" AltetaHom::6i2..Sl45 :. -:"!. ':.~ e 646-2130 e :-1:; :::. =: FOR YOUR AD. PHONE Nett. acpurate, 20 >'"· exp. potential for the rl&ht tndi-~ • Doyle Co.,..., 615-1977 642-5673, 1'lDAY. Tl C I 6974 v!llall. llea!!ahle -·~ Industrial R1ntal 6090 * * * * * * LE, •ram c CDDCll!lon< and •"'ellent co. • * Verne, tb1 TUe Man * bet\eflt!. ON TEN ACRES 3000 SQ ft warehouse Ir: oHloe CUit. wan. Imtall ii Mail· compjete rewme ~J 5250 STACO, INC. 1139 ll1kor St. CottaMooa 549-3041 An equal ......... .,. empJoy.r t & 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn + 6000 "Ift .. ~A 1'°""" ANNQUNCEMENTS SERVICi DIRECTORY npaln. No Job too ....U. --and ...., •• I:' ' yard. 1855 Laguna Canyon d NOTICES Plaiter patch. Le a k In I ence to Frplcs I Prl I Patios / Rd. 714·494-80611 or ...:a::;n::..;:.:.:;.:.:.;::::;_ __ l8abyalHln9 6550 ahower r•palr. 847-1957/ WANTED'exper. male b:xlk- ·'•"'' Pools.Tenni!·Contnl'JBk· TI4-54G-7680 F ncl(F Ad) 6400 MS-0200 BoxM-'m'IbeDallyPUlot keeJIU'~pbarmacy . fst. 9 bole PutVGlffll. ----'-----OU ,.. 1 WIU.. t..b)'alt 1H YOUR Permanent posl.Uon., 5 dayl r-..~(Ma~~~ •. ~,,644-, H~l Lots 6100 FOUND •mall puppy, gold HOME any hour SUI br.; Uphollt•ry 6990 Mon thnl Fri. Rd.er. ap. CJYWUI" ... ....., ··.; with black noR & H.n. 24 hr. rates. S48-'3ll!t ·.t..--....;:.;.;.~1 BROllfR predated. Transport. re- ADJACENT 88 x ill' West-Vic Maple & Anaheim, C.M. BABYSl1TING my home CZTI«>SKl'S CmtDm Uphol· qutred. All information COD- $135 • 1 ~ de~.1 .wood cli1f lota So. Santiqo Pr. 546-8959 Meea. del.Mar any qe w& 11teey, European erartaman--fldential. Please reply to ~ ~~e 1 A~n g , N.B. ea. $35,00'.I. 646-3565 FOUND vie Springdale Tf1'/ come. 546-3003. 11hlp. 100% FlnanciJW, l\lrn. COOK Box 365 Corona del Mar. l'l fire.,_.., carpe ... , U1llpe8, mack Poodle. can 846-9Ci0 bo&tl • .uto'a. 60-1454.. 1831 • INSTRUCJ'ORS FuD !'·:: stove, refrlg. Adults, no Bric~ MllOftl'Y, -etc. Newport mvd., C.M. or/and part time. Neat ., pets. Brkr. 642-77T7, or Citrv1 Groves 6175 L-6401 · • .L~-"'-m.1490 ,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; :::;••:::_• ____ _::;;=. -JOBS & EMPLOYMENl Evening Shilt ~ M:!i bow1u.-u: DUPLEX 4 B<droom, '~ RIVERSIDE MIXED black Labrador BRICK. Ooocrote. ~ JoL W ~• "·n 7000 RESSTEAAFUOORADNT public, &OD<! flluft. -bath.s, fireplace, carpets. male with Boxer face. cu.tom cablneta. B m a 11 • •111-, ,,.. in petllOn, HolJday Health '. drape!!, garage, bui!t·ins. COUNTY Name Hansel,~ mo. old. jobs OK Free Elt. 90-69&5 DEPENDABLE executive Spa, 2300 Harbor Blvd., . $175mo.540-1234ext421. 15 Acre young navel citrus Missing: before ., WJ&nftr capa ble or nalDICY E LEE _c~.M~·~~-~-.---. •, <ODERN 2 BR, I.lit-ins, tock Christmas. I..k: No. l30L ~· 6590 KW~ ' • . .~ " grove oo approved roots Children's pet. 494-9986 maintenance, deslrel ~ ¥AINT. Man. live-in, apt. lrplc, cpta/drps, sundecl<. in the Lake Mathews area: LOsr Black Wallet, iden-RE;PA!RS, · ALTDU.TIONS ed rent dt1uxe untu:rn mdt 191 E. CO..t Hlghw1y lncluded. ·AJJply: ~2266 &.12-3542 all under permanent sprink· t.Wcation pepen etc. v1c. CABtNErS. A.rq abe ~ bnmediately far manqer Newport Beach 2378 Newport Blvd., CM LGE 2 bdr view So. Hwy. Iers s Y s t em, considered 25 yn exper 54B-6713 l~d~ulla.~~O.~vll~n~4-l~~-~~=h! ____ : __ ::.:.:=_·~ frost.free•, pn·~ at 0 M1 .. Ancient Mariner ReJt . · ·• * &-clM, Wllllln 7300 Frplc , blt-lM, e rpts/drps-... ~ ""3 n--~ .,_ "°"" -._,.,, -A 1 ..,...., 1190, 6--aft S $4.tm per aero . ..., f~ ~wu~. -· ••~-• J • W -~• ' .... 1-• '~ Menick Carponl!y, &DJ ... job! Ow an~, ~., V<U 'information. pl e a I e call Call Gordon M1.f'16 c AUER Huntington Beach 5400 Walter Frick with LOST Fri Ntte nr 28th I: BaJ.. HOUSE cle•niQc en dally "' Eckhoff & Anoe., Inc. boa Bl., small terrier type • • ':= bolla,Goodt.fl.uencu OPPORTUNITY! MISS EXEC AGBKY EXCLUSIVE lBIB w. Chapman Avo. '""· white ~ rcdd!d> "'°"" Camont, Concrete 6ICIO '!l4M383 •. 1oln ...,.,. fulelt........ FH Paid o~. Cali!. Una:ed tur, 2 coUars. No tail ---"'---M .... Funt! ·•-~,,~ ON-THE·BEACH 5.fl-2621, Evet-w.,.,,, SJS.5747 ·,li"'ard 516-1966. CEMENT wart<, no Job ·too -lie Halp 70JS .--••-•-Om. FD" Ok toplltl to S5'J?i · , • • · · small, rulONlble. Fr e • No experience neceuaey. Executive Secb' . •• . . • S563 .... 2 & 3 e·•room Apts -· ( ~rd pup, estlm. H. StuD1ck. 5CM615 CblDell liw.tnL Cbeerf'u1 We train· tun or part time Sec/Mktc er Salts, •••• S52Q 9111 • , JJJ:: -·le, b1n .. 1r w/tan :feet, Mui I F -• -.• Luxury Uvina: to please the Rt_IOrt p~r+y_. CWQ. _.;:-eeach1r: Yorktown, e BFSI' JN'a>NtRE'i'E PermanenL Experienced UI Vnu Advlsort, Secty/P.R. •••••••••••• ,SSOO • most discriminating. No1v , , ~-'Nill. 536-..sMl9 Reward Walka, pool~.~ Far Ea.at Apney 6tW70.1 Inc. Girl Frl (split) •••••• to S500 available at e FOR Rent Furn. Mam· · PatioL Pbxll litJ.&lf t;pt B. JSl3 Watclill ~ Salea/Oerical •••••••lo S500 · H nf' I moth Mtn. Coodp. pool & Grey;_,,_ poodlo hand.., Mon · 7100 SA. 1212 N. Broadway Secly/llte ah .. ,.:: .. : •• 1433 ". The U IRg On "''"""t .. po .8. 51().2730 ' io/rod cc1"'. lteward. NO job too W... or •mall. :;JO:: !541.ml Keypunch/2nd "1)llt .... !ill · · ·' 642-14?0 Llcthted & ~· Free · R«eptlonlsf' ........ :r: •. S350 Pacific~ Mount. & O...rt 6210 ...... c 89>-'900or52HIS6 DRAFTSMAN OXYG EN PLANT FH by applicant ,,_.nlll -CONCRETE work., all 11Pet· Arcbltectural. S yean uper. OPERATOR for Vietnam. E1erow Officer ...... to S500 CANYON CABIN !'::'!.~~ 4 ·~ ... Call , .. & '°'"'1. To S<-25 ~· 0>m-11on to m.tm c1r1 Friday • ......... "'l>OO l ,'.) . I GOOFED ;.rlO*.ltV'I can Andy 543-TJ98 Minimum ot • yean ex: Secty/Admtn Aut .... ssoa . , 7u Ocean Ave .. H.B. Hide-8.·WBY mountain cabin e CUSI'OM PATIOS e ARGUS AGENCIES perience in the 0 tlon Secty/Recpt ••••· • to S450 ~ ·' (n4> 536-1487 on 3 lots. The cabin ta roof. PriVate party boua;bt tome concrete aawtna I: removal 1869 c Newport Blvd., C.M. maintmance and ~ui Gen'I Office •••.•••• to $425 ]!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""I ed, plumbed & wired. but It name brand EXERCISE State Lie. • 80-lDlD o1 ~Plant EquJ ment. Credit Jnvestiptor •••• $403 1-,..· Sl25 & $150; 2 & 3 BR. oot completed. Plans go LOUNGES (Adv. on T.V.), Htlp W1nted, .ft\en 7200 Mu.t be willing top work Receptionllt ••••• ,: ••• S400 apts. Newly decor., cpts. with place. Fl.Ill price Sll.· ~.!tl the idea of beoominl a 'l"borlcyk C.oocrete, DO job 50 to 60 hour work week P.T. Oerk Typist •••• $2. hr &. drp!I. Bltns. Reftig. avail. 000. For further Information dealtr. I find I don't have to small.·Free ntlmates. ROUTE mt live In bachelor con- . 2 Children OK. Nr. Beach please call Gle11n Thoml*lll time to demonstrate. Must • 646-1234 • SALES"EN dltlona. Send ttaume to 410 W. Cout lllghway mvd. &. Main. close to with aell 1 or all at wholesale, M Dept m WOP. Phll~}"ord Newport Beach 646-3939 r ·"""'°;;;:::;";.;&:,:;•"°='c;•;;:t""::·,.-84-::7:;-elOS:;: Eckhoff & Asaoc., Inc. se ea. Rczularly .95. Contractoro 6620 Qlrporattoo, Education and il rt 2BR. Upstairs. Stove, retrtg. 1818 W. Chapman Ave. Osictnal cartonl. · e ROOMS ,AJ>DmONS e To operate eltahliahed route Tecbr1ka.I Sftvlees Dtviaion, nawpO . ·~ $125.Adultsonly.AvallJan. 0rangl!, Calif. 2314 No. Bonnie B 'S.A. LT. Ccmatrucdon wUh replar tradln1 P. 0, Box 2'19, Fort pBlSORR'I 1 * 816 Palm. 536-8523 5(1.2621, Eves-wlmds S3U727 ENGUSH Jnstructor de1ires J'amll7 rooms. ldtcbm or cuatomen. Guaranteed in-Waahlngton, Pa. 19034 An Ill • 1 l BDR -. Stove, retrtg. ~ ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..... to work u crew member tmlta. ShlaJ,e atOl'J or :I; come will averqe about Equal Opportunity Employ-BQ&OCV ~ BUSINES• and tor pusap to T -a h It l . ..i ...... cmtom deo1-...1 F-$7500. with no cei11.r:va. no er. month. Call 847.J!l55. ~ Please con I act: 930 -~ -lay offJ aalary plul com-1-~=-~~--- FINANCIAL mueblrd, La&:. Be a ch, esthn&tel•: llyoQt. pbcme mtmon.' Many company * Dlred &ilnmen See w u IOOO u poulblel L1guna Be1eh 5705 But. Opportunltin 6300 anytime, 7-1511 • bm!fitt including Blue I need 4 men Jmnwd. to lW We have several fine o~ '-IVE Altro-Iva E .. -.. AddlUons * Remode1bw Croa, Blue Shield, re~ new tales poattiOl'll in the portunltlet for F/C Bldcprs. ·:,, 100 CLIF~ DR " ..,..... ~· H. ~-• "· 1 Orona•"""~.,., -"'-•·· • Candy Supply Route YOUNG WOMAN .r R\l ,,_.,......., ..-:. ment P an, a company -·~ ' ..c.&&.W• AMllt. Bkkpn, Exec. ~· LUXURY FURN/UNFURN 613-600. * Sf.9..2170 financed credit plan. truck atereoe: I-.ewina: machlnee. reWiea a: Girt. .Frlda)o1. :; Yearl.1Lease.1 & 2 Bdrma. (Part or Full Time) daDcff wlll teach you all furnUhed aOO exp en• e • Three lead• II;(;: day. Our Some are fee paid some steP1 to Shore 6 Sbopll Excellent income for few , • ,latnt *Pl· Call ArdeD. C.rpet CtMnlng 6625 pa.kt. · C\tltomers call UL No pn.. are tee by ap~ but • -' . Qcee.nvlew from evf!l'Y Apt, hrs. weekly ,JIOl'k (days or %13: 591..e38 1-lD PM' mkb or stftl, Honetrt _.. )'OU may cbcolet trom $150 mo up. lcuo ...._l ""1lintr and . collect· PACIFIC SINGLES CARPET A ,_ dwntna; We °"" men who are .,... by bud -.., 1iltJhest 491-2449 Ing money from coin oper-Wbett the attractive for 1 day .erv: A quality ried, H1&h School education Pl.Y in 1bt bua1nen, 100% 833 Dover Dr., N.I • ~cd d.lli:;:ni In u!:ita pa.rt1cular ain&le• ~. work, call Stmlnc tot and a'>illty, lioodable and flnanclrw, med. Ina., etc. 642.3170 549 2743 , 'EAL ESTATE e' a aurro na '"'""-,t.•A Cotta Mesa. '-''"htneul 642-ISJJ _ .. , .... •-......i.. _...., •---Call moml.rWI I, to 12, after.. • " &reBL (Handles name bnm:I $100~MO_., __ _. ........ ._ ..... ~ ~;;"',"'""' ~ .. M .h:d noons 3 to 5, 526-6618. Hol wa~• General candy and snacks) S1350 tr> .; ....... , ... ~''""' or El--rlcot 6640 p n-tal cash reqUired. For per-artist to lb.are badanda. _, In pay and/or re1ponsibillty. FULL llme ge!ll!'rat main-Women 7400 R1nt1l1 W1nted 5990 sonal interview in Costa Sep. aptA.; in Rolartta FLAG Electric, pn'l elec> tenance A: lot man for new·1-.;.;.;.;;.;=----'-'.;..; --------1.-fcsa: Send nam11t, address Beach. MS-9756 ......,_,___ n...--•1 Call ear apncy. Man1ed man EMPLOYED lady wan ta 1 u-x;w..i,., "·'•"n".. r 9 1 • • '"ond 9 •"' t • PM -•-• m.., ha·~ llld BR Unturn Apt beach area .arv;I ptione number to: ALOOHOLIUi ~ Ma.Int. Sm jobl we Jc. 1"' ay ~ 0 .,. ,,.~1.Q"._. ... v to $1l0. Gar or carport nee. ''ROUTE DEPARTMENT'' Phone 542-T.n.T or wriht to ~1045 J~~~. Callt. ctrfver'• lie. APPiy in 6G-0086 aftt5 P.O. Box 3846 l:'=P:;.o;:·::-=:::==:::Colla:=::;M;:eoa.=: IE LE CTRlClAN Lloe'Wld. mtl 17'4330 =·o A y SALES " e LANDLORDS e _.:.A:::nabc=;:::m::.· c:!:a.::..:92003='--bonded. Smlll Jobo Malnt. .:.._.:.:.::::.;==--SERVICE FREE RENTAL SERVICE PLANNING on going into Funer1l1 6412 6 repair. 5t8-520:J 1969 Harbor Blvd Broker 5J4.&982 business for youneUT C.On-1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ;;::;::;:::=:;..,=~;; ri: ea.ta Mesa. ~; .. ~8~~:~: .WESTMINSTIR _o._"""...---1119-=---6680-ulETYPf ARCHITECTURAL Room• for Ront 5995 toroxpert coun .. 1ln1. MEMORIAL PARK JAPANESE Gardener OPERATOR DRAmMAN \ 1 BDR. kitchenette, TV, franchlae an a I)' 1 l 1 I: Complete Service. Exp. he cd I Ma.id Se:rv $25 QriantuUonal pl a. ll D 1 DI Mortv1ry & Cemetery Rellable. 642-W Exp'd need only apply. Min. wk"'up. :t2129 • ' 4M.e'101 or 54l-0050 Cemplete funefall CUt.A Edp Lawn Muat be available any abift, S 11'1 Residential I: Com-fr ..., .. 5 Prefer terVlce connect~ merdal. Ample O'lmimt. NICE, quiet C.M. home Geln~ Into Busltte1t? ... ~ ·~_:._. ·. ::mo~ experSience Salary $444.25 hr. Working pe~n pref• d. 90lden op~ty 1n beach -1=.•ry$ 30..,.. · WAL TER.S & SON Kitch. ptiv'a. 642-4'794 ' f~ Phillipa 66 SemCe ,_,. Sl Cl.Tr A edit lawn comp! (OlUllC' 54().3110 Station f • ..ue; nm. aq. IDdu4tt Endowment C.. .ervtce. Uc. 548-QSJ. eve1 N atde & Marine Dr,. Ne'lfporC £9'l!rYtblnl tn ane Wutiltl.I 4 wetkendt SU,000 JS NOT TOO MUCH llaoldcHpin9 Ma~lne Operator (PART TIMEI Variety ot work in accounts payable, receivable, COii fn. ventory. Experience on book· bepU. machine, prefer- ably on Burrou;ba EllOO er NCR. Staco, lni:. 1139 """' st. Colta· Me. am !149-3tlll An """' """""""'"' em-,G:.:":.:"":::..:.H::•::.:""=.'--.:.599=1 Beach. O:lrntact : place meant les cmt. ,;,=::;:::=====-RADIO CO fer' man on:r "1 with car, 1 · CHUCK CROWDER No traffic pobtema. 0.Mrel lenlttl 6612 , to tab lhort auto trfpl near -------- PRIVATE Room for e\df!rl;y 714: m.ruo n.4: 174-lOC3 1tl01 Beach, Weatmfnttfr Beach clties..Alr ~ F. E . ambuln""" I ad y. .....iy !131-1725 .,._ HEATING .l Air O>nd. Serv 19700 .Jambor• Rood Stan, Pros., AmerlCall Lu- c.ar!!, rood food. mce MOney to Lo.n Q20 a: repU, alto Wubtr • Newport le1eh · brteants Co., Box 678. Day-RN'S pn:ten a u r r o \l o d l 111 t dryer ftplir. ·'4 hr ierv. tan. Ohio. Available now. CaD """" RETIRED COUPLE SERVICE DIRECTORY afl-'1237 or Mi.-All appltcani. rvt.....i on Experienced OB ... 3 te·11130 M·S ••. 3to 11:30 ICU .•• 11to7:30 Hu money to lend on lit I: Babylittl 6JSO HAULING, Clea.riup merit with oo b1u toward DINNER COOi( Income Property 6000 200 ~~ --ng pna-.. odd ))hi' etc. Free Race. Color, Creed or Sex. APPLY 24 HOUR child caro, 7 days al >Im --SIS Sleepy Hollow Ln. Sale or Trade C.Ompletely rented· NCh wtth fenced patJos. double inlUlal· ed walla. • Top quality con- •truction throuabout • ~ er will accept prepaid tntft'- c1t, .. M at R__. kltl u trade. • F.P. $166,000 ·May consider W. or 8 untta wl1,ll lot spl It and t!ncinr ~~· TI IE REAL ESI' A TIBll 646--nn 546-2313 Reil Esfltt Lo.1n1 6340 Our -HOME LOAN TERMS Todoy 1st TOa ... ,. -so yun ANO &"-<.lo, cue i:.JiL Call tor dctallL ... TD< a 9' Int. FIVE yean and all othtt:r t;)'pet of rtt.I nta~ flnancl<W, acrVflot Oivc< Oount;y 18 )'tan. SattJer Mortpct Co .. Inc. 336 E. 17tll St, o.ta Mua a wk. 50c hr. per t.bad. Part Ume mu to do J..cuna Blltadl 2 adult "'-one 1l>el'O Haulln9 •no StoN Room DutlM DOORIWI • l'wldl>I A> E""911ent """""' -- at all limn. All mta!a In-CL&\N Lott. lll'IPI .tc. 6 am to ll am. Ap no bu-tmSant Sta.rt,,at ODCt tun in ntw bolpltal. Comtact: duded. fenoed t.dr)tard, Trat nmoval. dump tktp Nr lteliftd s Semi Retnd ot pt. time. Own tr'rM. • .. 1&. ~= ~ ~ t.ck11ot, AU, 1 r ~ d •, = .:-:.e ~ Pboa1 """1700. Ed 6H Director of Nllf'MI 54().J.911) ::itt!Wl=:::ii6'=:=====-APPLY ASSEMBLY TRAINEES MOTHER ""' core .., ,... H..-IMnl"' 6735 Ontra Cafeteria MacG,.... Yacht ODro inlaDt in nl,)' homt. Exp, 166S Babcock, C.M. c .. ta Mooa Momorlal Hospllel 6'2-2734 _.,., w..-c.M. pi JACX'S lwQ'a. Fir butf1-., Foololon hlaod SERV. Sta. Attndnt. O>mm. wlL 64U450 ..,.. dwn'I · ,,_ etc. Newport Cantor and ..iar,.. Qt. chanoe tor 1,,..===..,...--r.,.,. MATURE wodn .,UI Iii }: OlmJ llM dftn'r., 541-1243 PacWc C.t Rwy al McArthur advancttne111.. OR J..\1Z BABY~ to eve t; P, cblld lull .... k. pj ~ llYoarAdlDwrda......, 644-140! 11 1'0Ull ~ IN a..Aal!· font""' of Wprlt!ni lhO!bir. I · • t YOU CAN SELL IT' WITH 'Ii. DAILY .:PILOT I ' ' ' " .... . . •· .1: 1 'WANT AD.! DIAl. "DIRECT 642-5678 ' CHAR GI' IT! . i • •' I • • . .. " .. ., ' . •• ' ,. ' •. •• .. .. .. ' .~ .... • ". ,., , \• -. .. .. .. 1 ,, oauy PUot wain Mt11 Hf'tda~l PW H W'IU, a wut tell ,IG-2ltl. 50QI ~ fl).11111, IG.u$1.. J.4t •. looc'• ,a,t, --wlli !fo 'looldOI tor ror lloll7 Pilot '!at -rmn • .... wm bt R.ra. --=• · · .' -' It. Diii -Diii -:~==~~Jl;:.".!lll~lll!_!~~~::awto~:::-:.:~:.!l""'~c:"::~::.:-t~~:::d.::-::::·!.J!====·;:t::::::·=· ~•.,'==='====~·..-· . • •· .. : ~ ..... ,n.. ~ I • .IOU a ~OY~j '"" I FOi ~Ii ·"°' i ~~~~-Pm•"" LIVESt~~ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIO'!._ I TRANSPORTATION • Htlii;W ..... ~~ ;• .J e ,,,.... ~ ~ !Mr" , T1tADI , . IALI -I Dcipi. .-U ·Ttucb 9Soo lmportod A-9600 Utod Cara 9'00 Id-.::.:::;:::..-_._' 7':i(OO'"i' W1 ,.; -• 1• ~!'!!*' . ··~ " !!!! .IJ Modl\q. ~IH , .AKO~ *SPORTSMENS VAN* TRAJIJPORTATJOlt --, •. :. , ' . --~ lltf'lll«;ll;R,>•'fl;ol •111lli lllo\.loliot........,, ~ TltUOKS * 'PORSCHE I I ' ' ' ---· ·-'-~\ . ''. -' -~-"°' $•'i*l=-llliyA.,,AllHM.At w SAlf .I .ET SUIT" ·stl aBl~Nliiflr __ ; _. .. __ • ,, '!.!'...~"::: iliM __ ....,_,:tg• ....,i.tlcDUcounh 1968 PORSCHE Cndltproblem1~ ... 1or ' '"-""'t I -··· 'I• ~~ -~ ~""'"· - -911T ...... , dell"'''" .... -AKO .. ' -'· > ·• •• •• ' ;:;....,,~ u;;;;: iuHsPolh: -trlimaoalal< ... , terms. We 4eclde an M -•. ·;'oNCE li-flAl ""·'' -.iw ...... ·.,..., .ATICIN _, ~::='.;.:::',:~c11t:'"'~tcauor- SIQETAtf. .. , " STORi ·ca•·••"!NC£ ,-cau 11111-W' or ..... ! y..,.. ._ . BEACH Clfi -AM·niradlo.is,.., 54o.cm , · .:. :.,; -\ • ~~1 ~ i. Fr,.'-..... DODGE . ~-or n> 892o$1 111.UE CHIP f'oilr .~ ........... 1 •·: (Sled<..,," _ .,.,.,, -..._,Ji I.¥, · , 1,... ~ -.., ..... IE--· atwy. 3"l 62 wmt Onl1 u,ooo ml '-UTO 5AUS 80 ..,.i.. ·~ IO AT TERRIRC' JAVllllliS' 1 = · + , ... ~ • boOt-._, -· oo -.,., -· -2145 Harbor, ea.ta ,.._ ...,. ~ I,. • • ,ti.,_~.. · , e "i:urr~ • ••ht•d. N,. while Hun~~ .....,.., -pa1'>1, ex-WE PAY CASH FOR ,... •. . :~O'llff': .. oo·'·,.,.._ ""rqili!S,E1e<t$4o . •••1•b1de ,-...' !!' ~M""~:~~ YOUR CAR PAID , ' " . . '' ---per · ;tcWl!o --::: '1'llrwl 11'4 .. ~ c./nq;ol'i 9520 ,,......_ l'rlw.I< """-FOR OR NOT! _ IOlilJllot,c: ··.-'"''"''!·~si.r:-o':'°""''"" ~mroNAinj,.w·a:&Od -~· ... 11• ,..... 1968 PORSCHE e "'Old c.. .. do vw. . ~' S,,11111.it ~ . · _.lion JU5. , ,' ::"!.i:... "':!:. ::-= CAM•U CL\AW<CI 911 F 22.000 ml $45!0. --" • Bedrooms • Living' Rooms • Gome Sets•· • ~ .. • Lalo>otle. Ji-.~ •' "" ~ """'"' '°" Fetia brown. .,,.. 1n1er1or. • 'rl °"""" XR 1 -;JWJillJl.l"91. \.: I:: "'"'"" --~-1000 •-1 otbet F •• ~· ::::nc Wb1d .. Sc•fl.'4•11•M .. \cl· ~ ll,(D)·mt. $275) !.., t ....... ;."j ~··ID. i. . .Pl .................. ·vv~.:.-~... -~ . Pl1eiol,&":.urpftl. atao vat\' ~ 13~ ft. ,, ... ,,....,, •t . . 11.m • Exer.Cycle, new. Cost , MIJ:Jkum •"'1!'.Jf' ..,.,·I , ., .\l>.11~· .,.;,~~· ,;,,t .. I " , •·• · , ·· -, , , • · , , 11w1o1Joot. • ,~ ¥,!• .,!rBJG DISCOUNTS* 514-2284 °' m 892-al!ll 15>1, .. n 1325. 54IM5!IO ,.,_nol 'Offlco . · I u.s. Diven . I ' Company I 3323 W. Waniet ! ·Santa Ana'. , ' ~~~:: f!},~~~61)~,!'!;~'=pt ' flHmlti SJlel' :'_~~;::. ~~~ ... ~1'!~·=1~::;: SUBARU CADILLAC .. , , _ ~ .. : · .. w: 1 ..... 1..i.a.; ... u .ot•tc_ , ' . 11111 --1. --t-XJnt :Ame.rle9D Tr a le r c.~,., '"''" • -----·-,; --·: ·! •• & IP" UUU6"J!" "" · • ~ · ~ ~ -contlmmt w'fllt,titl. 'Aaldar $&. See 1.9.11 ft. hf.dell. 01Ml• PBiY ·ftlllf1tirMll ·, .~ ·. --~Don't let1this bi the A ~""'ftlcir:.of lftlldll. On Baba lalan4 <Nffl a 1 Moffit, Hlf Ca11t1l11ff fA·Ul'UCAIUll ~ . .. .-~Cftiib 'JO\ar:.friends;-_, ~tl .... 4'PD1 ramalql end or aft. ePM ft~ U11ltt. All C.1111fH1r Ace• .. 1969 SUBARU from $1297; 66 MPG Complete foreign car ~ 1S68 CAD. 4 DR, IIT. TI pwr It aJr, ouutanding oond. Wh. w/dark int. $2,~. PH: 64!>-2182 9 am to 5 pm Moo. Fri. or aft 5 pm 6: wt ends, 839-5691 " ' M.;;. ... -:~~ 1or l teityoqW!ia~y ... ·~-~ ~:.:=-.. ~~ ~ · -"''" ''c'A'"'M· PER -llhlft. .. · -. " APPROVED FURNITURE .... '"...., 111 -...,.. Bml. wia, 14' ,,... ·iiT * !':"' .... "=t.= '1. 21i9.~~;c05TA' MESA .:"Zm·s'IWDWJN srtrD10 ;:1,A . .!,:"w.'!'.""-...1= RENTALS * Kostc, Kustom Kars IS80 l1a"!or Blvd. . - 1 ' b'Ptll and/or ~ '1 12 Yeaw-.me loCatio~ owners llOlNewp:irt.CM..642-Mt <~ ~>. SJdl.·3 tud 1 y,,, Fifl111cl11t OJI TOYOTA ···---·.:,' ____ _ ~ . ·'. • , Da~fy f.9 Qpen Sunda,y afhim..,.. = (llb~). :n.;:u Appro"4 Cntllt TOYOTA' '68 f1..EE:J'WOOD, priv. Pfll"' ty, lw. mi Xlnt ·c:orxt. dark blue, - ... MaCh1nt 119 ' . Operator-· . . SJACO, tNt 1139 B1kor St. COii•,,,...; s.9-3041 .,. . ·""""'·'" " $~"1:y 10-S • . Y~bo , 17 IT. ~. -THEODORE ' . , CO .. LLINS'" .. 54 .·~.. 'I:°:! Or"":' D•h•• mo~•l (all Rob"1ns Ford WoHno'EmAlll . ,,·. . . ) ~· ·.: COaS '~/,. llber1l•••> outboar SEE us 1S1' OR LAST RA. aift-M·~ ~ J0856 Ell\P'L~YMEN , JQaS .i:Mf!LOY NT 1at ~t ~~CM ~":...'""J:1 =..~ 2060 HARIOR ILVD. BU'T SEE US!! UlV.VY• --· "4 0271' ---Tpm. COSTAMISA fd""•LA...:1 ". ·: ... ·-! H1lp Wa""" Jobo · -· 1(iom. 7500 .. " .• .. 642''°" ·54o·l2ll tan UUIO 19700.Jomboroo ROid : W•1n . . . . . 7400 '* DRIYEllS *.. 114 s. E.1 c.1111,.,. llaal S.11 ... h 9010 lmpo~, A-9600 IMPORTS N11•port ·-h · \ ' . . San Chlmonto SNO\VBIRD No. m ~ No ··lbperienCe · 492.(642 1295 SCRAM-LETS ·-· "-~~o.vco.MTA. -v~~v.,.,o !!:~ ~-SKRflARY ,Necesiaryl .-PIA&os & ORGANS -~ ~ ~ JW:e,O>kr,!~"'-. :;: .. ha~~~ "Tamo2.~"--p=.~.w~k~"· ANSWERS TOYOTA Lid ...... 24 jlll!S. 'An...,...., and ............. YELLOW CAB co. c;!idu=l=.:::y . ~--Unmuk ---Honor llF.\r""'",.,."' CltEVROLET llOiEO. op.iNJl.ics · ,. """"""'" _,.. ""• w E.,... St. ~.N ....... ·-·-.... Pawor·c"'"'"' 9020 -S1loma -HAS SOM>; ELMORE '65 CHEV 1mpa1a 2 "' ll'I', roa·JVrliaE totJNTAIN ' """ """' ............ "'-· 1>111a .._ -......, ----. _ oFnCE .pcttment mamiser. . SO. Of FreeW13 5474181 25• TOlLYCRAFT Most girls would be willing air-cond, pwr sr, V-8, RIH. t ~~ty ':t~=· = 1be ~pU~t ~ wm ,~!:.;Men & 7550 ball)' ~::t ~w 15:30 ~~.~~ .. ~~ ~~~so~ u tall, 153)1 ~e~stnmstr -~-,;,_·•_."""'_,,.__;,,,_":"_'_"'_""-_-"'<_ * NEWPORTERETTE ~--· •-•aptitude-have above averaae lhart-HA!JMOND. SteinwQ'. Ya-f:lndef, eltc ~l. auto battery • Spol Cash for Imports '56 CHEV. 2 dr. 1ta wag, 1 .,.,a.a ma ucu . • mm· and twins ..W.. lft-... nov ahcft We pay more for any import TRIUMPH witll. India r u r. Curtainl. Er-& -ta Include •. 11c:1eni:t on U1e 111M .....,_ •. -·. Wai-~.:.=..A:~ :::-lank, ...... ste:::":i ...-.,. o1 )'<ar, make '"'"'° tape. """""' HOSTESS e ~ .... i Medk:al the ·bJO*wrlt¥f, and nperi. . CocD. DlnDer Waiter A ~ caut rilht here. 1: df'J*, tun om!n, etc. or condidon. 1ry m betatt '67 TRIUMPH e ~UM Jiliar-· ' Rhee preparing techmcal re-Xitche!I. Mldum. Call Dem-. SOIMJDT. MUSIC co.. Stiarp Ai bl mint cond. Dock-you ldl. ELM 0 RE Black Beauty. 4A-I..R.S. Dir. lntervlewille now tt-""lt e Ptaftf ... -nitz,. • ports and proposW. ii!, 548-7796 · ' 1907 N. Main. ~ ~ Newport. $6,750. MOl'ORS, 15300 Beach Wvd. Wire whls, AM·FM raC:~o. tncllw. ,..... ladlt.O ..ia -trult . -.~RGUS AGENCIES s.noa ·--· w-or. ""'3322. Owood by litt!o. old, "'""'' CORVAIR thorough Jmowledge oC lie. e ~[Ml'fli""-plan A mtnlmlUn Of_ t )'Uri ft-l86b C 1'ie"1J)Ol"t Blvd., C..M. ORIGlNAL mn; . Knabe , 9030 teacl:;?r. Lo mileage. $185 part Beach llld -e Pnill illortJW bonus ::::""' .. "':.'~~-~ . . . . . . -grand piano, -Sp•d Sid Bolts -CITROEN cash o< old0< trade. Will fu>. NEWCASTl.E MOTORS areu. -~ ...;.:,;;, __..uw; ....-SChoOIN~ 7600 ·~ excel cond. Mmt 14" SKI Boat. Needs wtn ance pvt. pty. $1785 Bala.nee Ne.•portaette rtatf ·d. MM--..ri ltED> ~ .. ~ ~ &1tt.' . ~ . .aJ... &'B--2896 Al: .A.ncban&e $9.'I. Call aft ll noon. 1960 CITROEN BS 19. No 494-9Til or S45-0034 '63 Corvf'ir Spider $59!J 2186 Hubor Blvd. Costa Mau ,:=:l'".,":::'.;.~ ~· _ ~ ~"'~back-= ~~ ~ ~.:-m-4llf ....... Excelleot """" VOLKSWAGEN 642-4666 Al'Pb' Iii ....... !Jnb', ,,._ · , · ~· '. 111 Id ·~1'1D .._ tiP!iw .....Wte -. ~ ""' 11Mt Main~ 903' "'-.,..""" -------I ========I =~!~~ ~--~t1on~t~ t:¥=..;;'I!,·~ ~'.,'~ l!Sll-.~ .. ' • EXPERIENCED DATSUN S~E DODGE ...,. ;~ ·~· , . ''·' · · --=-llld , , . . .. TOlftloj.., . . 12115 · SKIPPER B & c '61 Charger $2800. NEWrQRTER INN • ........... . . &a11:fOtANDISI POI W· .. •· WOfk. M8-356l '67 DATSUN Rm.dster 1600. us •mpers 962-12ll eves A: wkenda. uD1 Jamboo...11<>&4 ' _ .. .niry _ .. ,_ ..... _ ...,, .. . · > . ·. ·RINT ·'Pl $10. """' X1nt co00. 21,000 mi's. , ' .w. • p,,..,.s,.. --. s~ A,•--· ,. ' merit • LI .4ND .• TRAlll . No"Dop••ll -........ ~ . . t1res. $1995. 530-"100 "' '65 v.w.""' :' «1r LYN; .·• N!ED~D FULL TIME No•port H1"'°r Com1'-:'*'1lt1I ' 646-7764 • COSMErOLOGIST IJ&>L_wl .. -. bot not -.,.. Aj.p!y ID ....... SHERATON BEACH I INN C\lol>'l""'flf:'.'!;'Hlt in. . Pohl~ ' ·, IOOO 53Mfll , •. --Boalt Wanttd· 9050 ~ """ 1or Bobby '&1 v.w. s .. Suru'Ool FORQ dtnlWl loodlattlc•ect1ndivlltmll~ · .~ · RCA~'-~ • c::::£i Pinn '67V.W.Dlx9PassBus &·~· dicta-sPlf:r ill penlll( or.end re-SPANI!HIWtanretmfted .....,_ ~-~, ~ ~ .--~far ~:tilxr! on '64 V.W. Camper 1960 fORD ·)~!'!1111!1'-W:-..... '°' lioot mod•H1oib<. ~ ~~~. ,, ... ,!O, u. 1 -~ FERRARI .,. v.w. Dix 9 Pas:i Bus * GALAXIE * . ~ ,i;ioPtij!. "' lp'lo_1''J& Sponlsb qull~ iiiEDTV;:;A~~ l:";: ,=--. ''° 'rl V.W.~Camp0< Nol l'Ullll!I><, will ..a u ~· · ... ·''fl· ·u GH. fS ... -"-•· ~ .... • '"" ................. ·"= s. -. Dr. -.. FERRARI partJ .. a11,,,, ... , ...... . Sf~co; iNc: ., ' : · · · · =~~ !M"' Ill. CK.~ 1111J-. Co;l!L !IP N.:-1 ,,,.:,~,,"!.ti! "~ d Call ~ ~.,..* • - "~ ..... si ... Cf" ;~lt'l"IEACH ' bailo!-l\lllte. '""·"""' ft\.Fl.& s-. 11210 Alrcroft 9)00 ~~.;fu.Vl -PARTS ~ s0" 1956 FORD " Sff~I . , ''*' .............. ,..,._. . ..,._ & mlnar, ~ STElt1'0 -1!169 Solld 81M> Pr!. Piiot Couno 3100 w. Coe~wy 'II -·: 9 P""""""'' Stalioo w....,. An ~~~'""''l .. · ....... ·-.·.·,,,;,,'Frt"" ·'"'.·.-·~, ·-~-m.· .. , .. 11w1&ro;~ ... ---~ -· fl5 ..... $00.11 ...... ...., N...-Beach ' " .. " "' Good -car, PIO or ~,,_ '· .:. ... ~ ,..., . .,.. DMCn .,_. I: bal: spriap.) ~ &crl.fice! '85. 535-7280 A1rctaft Sile&. F M Pardo 642-9405 MG-l'let "\ best offer. call anytime be· OCHWLY-;-p;;~;;;;il ~~.ttt!~ Orup County Airport AuthorUedMGDealer fore3p.m·***54&637tl =ARY 1o Pu-Equal ~ly iet ()illy ·ltST, $Z dOn ~-1500 -or 51C-1810 14f .. OJ-i71-11t0 ltl67 4-0R, H·T m cobl, emplayv-M 'lT' a.$00,;..;i.i,. Eu,~-suerijo'Aeo,oEWEY .. M_lobl __ !!_u_. ______ 9200='-:;:-;:;;:;:-f-;:JA:;;:T:;:-:=·J:,,.1t;-;7~o~H~AUO~~·~·~·n-::. :::i' power ""''· & -,M ·w~ Ave •• \VEBER •. ~ ,, COSTA MUA R&H. Perfect mnd, $2,500. w~. Blf...H3t daily a• g•• ),~ ·· $60 • Skyline ,69 $6999 '67 FIAT, fastback, aretn. 1967 vw, blue, xlnt cond. Call 64&-1481 ., 10 AM IO 9 PM. Sat. 10 6f6..f72I New double wide 2 bdrm., Xlnt int new brakes. xlnt Low ml., n@W bralce lining FORD 1966 Fl·XL 500 H.T., S AM .. ' PM SWL. ll PM .......... __ p I mech. lDw miles, &ll-1049 Ii carb overhauled, $1550. ....,. ~s eng Pi• P/b = 0ceu A_. PROCE S .. •PM. ·• • Mlscell•-8600 ;:_ ..1:.·-~I=======,,;:: .,, eoeta M•sa st, c.M. R/H. Lo.. •. ,w;, ....,: SCHOOL Secretary -8eacli ....., ..,.. _.,, b-MELPER Fiiniiiiiro .......... 1rom .ii.--1nc1•" an kitch. ""' KAr.MANN GHIA a11 '""· 546-IB<1 !--'=====--"""" ......................... GOOD Kenmore Lal< Model drps 20% ·",.,..,vw=-.-AM=·°"FM,'7"-,7hro=me SECRETARY r::.~.s.du'. ~-~-.baa ~-"'-"•-· Sil~~ TV.., ,"••1•,· ~~"'C:..":d. or;...,.,. 1963KarmannG~ia """· '"""' '" whl, b;g '57 FOfU) Wag_on, needs work. Top appearance, xlnt paint & interior. $ 7 5 • 548--0879 ~.... ·-·~· -.._ U-a...--·-etc ~-.....,.. ,ma P e C tires, sunroot Xlnt cond. , $400 to $550 -r.r ~ --on -ti ...-1 ~·=NITU~-RE a-t) Wo<b. o.in,.,.. ITT·mo.ckO.A,;,~ldl • Convertible I --Xlnt ....,.'"""" call KMISJ, · · 'tor an.....-wl'".,..... RD. FUR -.. ,........, -. .,,.u RI -no a ..:544--0Tl6.:.:...::.::.:Alt:::.:6c_ __ ...., ~ ~~~00: ~ ~ , ·= ·~ ci:~~ ,1~ !r.""°~8:'!., CM :::;:m _ . M::Ua: 19m=~ .. ~~-1~1.W Ni:..~~=·~-new ·~ VW~AM/F~ ~fj ~::ia_r~i~ ~. "llln2)'l"l'officeexp.1'uD "aNlllrtftiwmel 'iandtheueem~of.eemi-.Wed. ~t.ASWL.'WC 1lrl'1 clotbt•s,·"8.S.aart>orm.,SAs.n-8110 534-22S4 or fl)~ 673-3465 • • or67J.n76 . . 1benefltL Call 540-2911). Mr. e SECRET.AJtt' ·e .oindudor devlelli:. BLi.cK' Oak madlL ~ m 11ce11 a ii e o u S boy's SEJE. the Dual W1de Road-'63 GHIA 42,000 m.lles, red. 1967 VW Immaculate. Org '65 FORD LTD, 4 door !Siii wster. Jm:d1lpnt. 'lut 'wttb ~ --·--..1 .. In ..... & ~ t.Ha. ~of dolhlnc. 'Dl!hes. k a I ck 1mer Pan American, Para-$950631 :0 best offer CASH. owner. Am-Fm radio. Rm lied.an. 32.cm miles. Good WORK IN C4M meal ~tract · ~m;.. ·~-• .,....., penon .....: • ftt 136-39i · knacks, 'heiter {dedric) mount. Elite I.Eld General -•-'W offer. 642-0010 Del Montell. ccnd! 56-2126 llml!ETARY IM ,_ ID-Good _..... ,.._. H u G H .. Es· . . ---Good -a............. '63 vw ..... New -· • ., FO -& Mulual ...... Apply RADIATRONICS. ............. eon --ndm,cartaln Dual Wide Sales MERCEDES BENZ -palot, now tlres. $100. Ori&.':;",.,!"."!."'=. :~ Require ahxthand 1' 1l8G 'hll!r· Ave., Npt Bda. · ~ .,. rod&. Lute slabs ~ Phone 53&-2731 :lint cond. 546-64611 ••take l't;lplnibOlty. Sal. 133--' THE ~GE: KJ...3526 Qi1pman Mobile HomN Inc. ========I ~ ..,.. write P.O. Bax ' 2 HOllSftffO..:...: NEWPORT BEACH -"""' ....... -., I GOORD 520 N. Horbor, S.A. ·~ vw.,.;.;~~~,",,:;; II. em-de! ""· Calli. . ~,'.',;:-•·-~--A ...-. • -· Lo" Sll.G71 •-~·-84T-IOIJ. ~ · , . Fun-.o.y ....... , .JOO.-,....,.,.. w. ~ •-n......,. (oil Prlvat.....,. -· ..... Hollclay S-'-' ~~~· ,,---. ·.·. ~tn·PeNOn .. N rt BMch C.Uf. ~..ww:;.aY>·,t CM nunt brand EXERaSE r---• '64 vw BUS $1400. w/tree f:tN · Part Tl1ne Huntil:wton ee.dl , ~ ' 6t5-a1.8S LOUNGES {Adv. on T.V.). ,,-wide $159'J down:._ $91!:.89 16' sld boat ,, trailer. Jl.IDS:S>.=-t_..Tua.eftS... ~.Hom;dtal f. ·~UWUita!i4' .. wllhU.ideaofbecomiJW:a mo. tncL tu, le., de1. and 673-5'\56 : ~t Center -11711-~a. Hats lkh . emJioYt!. M. F 1100 deller. [ bl I don't have' at.up -'y.J. ins. '67 vw Sundial Camper. Xlnt ' ="=" ·-In, ' ~ll•ticot -.. _.._ ..... BAY HARBOR cond. Low ml. ~ or ..... . a l1qaihlp t'UUlllAN~·1· • u"' · RD 1 or ..U at wholesale, · _., ~-' flUOM = ":":,.':.~, OFFICE CLERK ~~~!...,8'.;: 1<5. ... 1teguLv1y 111t.95. Mobll1 H-Show ollor. ,.._., .. llEPUTABLE doai*w ,,_.,, .._ irwrerrlDr. tor _.... poe!t1on. Some ..,. .,,.., law """"' l6S. Ori&IMI -. :sc.-. 1'25 ,,..., ·si .. °""' .,.,. VOLVO 1 dq 1 -. pnlor 'J'ri. ,...... Pl 22. Day 11 -o< -p"C 5l6'"6M. All 5:lll P)I 131' No. -.ie 8-S.A. (&t -) <lay, Cdlea< Pl<k areo,. 54Wlll ""'° A ... endr. ........... -5.... . eRIDAY IS S<O<M10 MG !""" M-. -TBIT ---, .~ b!c1. -· 1'3(1. ~ 1110 ~ . 20 > '5,MOBILE "°""' 1 ~p.m. •·•ii"'".""""' . l&:!OP.M.-.Sal&n'= vAir""""' ~ •""' YA~= ~AY... er. A-.""'.,.,...., ___ M_G __ _ . want Uft ID ~OW,~ .• ;n»plmbe~ts. bn • clldl:a. Larry N...,lleleeuoo,fan:UO-..... d:rapts.W&Shhlgfacil.Have WeH1veTh1mAlll ~~I ~keeper. . Fvlf,flme. ,RldMrd'1'Lldo ·C.ntar M'orp.JJ ~ 2f21 •Mf7~10AM:i:-toa'fltoapprectate. SEEUSlSJ'ORLASI' ~ ria. TV • Ph. $UO. . ApplJ la<~ •I sm via Udo. N.B. Ne-...:-llht... c M. mTERHATlOMAL S3S-Ql9'J RB. S1ln, Servlc., P1rts BUT SEf' USI VOLVO? MUSTANG '6S MUSI'ANG 2+2. HI performance 271 hp., 4 lpd, disc brakes. 548-1004 '65 CONV v.a, yellow w/blk int. New trans A: tires. Best offer. 642-5040 OLDSMOBILE ~ · a!l"1"'::::::-maJ>l<k-. YARDAGE MotorcydO. 9300 "-""-!>Kl'"""""' ef"'•L~•..:1 ;DonErp'd.~R ..... _"'-... , 11111 ~IL, lllif&' llcll IWIYsnTER ... -FREE . TO YOU :mo n.mr BMI. SH lhe .... Auatia --~ UUIO AVAIL, .. ~ 1966 Toronado , _....,. mciei-. B.L aia. cu Mm C.osta Mesa '61 HODAKA. exp ans Ion Here Now' $2475. Well maintained Co. '&I OLDS F -85 Cutlaa new trans rear end bn.kes fad air map ex clean. See kl apprec, malre otter. 6f6...81'3 1957 OLDS V-8. Blue~ wttHe. R/H. New trans. xlnt lnl $250,""""' ,. 90ll E. Adamo, UJI. MUST BE GOOD TYPIST ..._OR sar. ~ ORGANIC -· -* AUCTION * chombu ·-tank ~ • IHl'ORTS air. su.JUS WOMAN IO work JD dealt wttb ?BX CIPll'•. -~ • • . . ,._ OWlY:"8 ~ fender, rake bar & fork TOYOTA VOLVO l========:J i:.."°"'*-_..._ ~.!lf,'.bldqi(i,1 ·, "", .... lilll• Wom. 7500 ., .. '"""'•-GaOd u,..w1n..n"'""" ...,.,The.,..,Ures.Make -PLYMOUTH ~Bltbcra:hd., CJ(. .....a.uia.ttaap •--. · mllldl. m43S2 Cir 5t6-4l1 stve Wlndy a 11)' offer. 546-1'176 1968 Ha.ibor, C.M. 646-9303 I==~~~-=°"~·~·:!:"' -•••• r. ......... -·' • .1 -,.... Fri. A•-,.,_ y,30 p.m. '67 1RIUMPH -.80-PIYmoU---.. -,,-,....--._.,--1 ' • Ooalact.llllL--bin Windy' ·-·-"--8 ·-w.-97CO ' tar Uli lnlillt • _. A loft. a 1llrlm-Jlttd, · I II a -I I ~.wn ltn T-100 C ro:> C.C. Xlnt cond.. llOO W. t.oalt ffwf. tionaily sharp. Sn to belltw old. W. "*P'I· --C1L -' e _, e llOYSDUIENIY p I ant'' Behind T°""'' Btdo Mat1 1-mlleogo $825. Pvt. Pl> Newpon """' NEED A CARt IL 1491. -truL gc.cn m== AW & Yoa die. Redwood -u ,.r... ~ -. ~--e ·~· -e ' ......., ·-1-· -llEWPOR1fR MOTORS W.u~ 1'4M?IJ> .. ) .• , IJ&Minl l"lxbra ~ also. XllO P!:ltrtobl. ___ ,.;W'pGtl.--------· .,..,,. IM CAN'T BE FINAN---· W~ e •1~4.. e P'oall •'Oid!tall lhowr.--_.._ .... OJI. 10-m5 U/30 e REGJsrm ljow1 n.e YAMAHA Ol Dirt-· Good Aothtirite« MG Deala ·-· e_n' .. ! -• ......, .._ Y11tS e EQ"d..... Mc, 1!a1u7 .... ......... c1mn alt<r ,,. h 11 -$UD. MB '52 TD !led w/ -eBad o..111? e 0t.......i1 2036 -Blvd .. ~ Nt•IOlt,Bbd. .AJIPl.,Y tSon. lMALEPQPPJ'.baHBeaP C1yko1hl' "u1tom * 6"-1548 * fiberslu top, intnior a-eMIUtary •Nn tn AnaT 54&-5294 ~ .B. mMJT ~ & ~ ~ A Ttrrter, wry cut~ Upbola:tery Sehl Dnpean '6T rrwo 50 CC. MY cellent. engine reblt, $lD Mab Pa)'dQ Pl.)'IN'ntl ll!iDllaiido-e 547.6151 . e ..,.3= ~ Cratt1maublp. 1311 ,..._hie olkr. Call """· 541.QIQI.,.. ""-McCARTHY MOTORS PO.,..AC lliltllcWlladl BEArn Shep. miked, Newport Bl\fd. O.ta ...._ 53&-31193 Stt-veftMln lGI So. Main" EdiDac l----"-"---·I N\liSES AIDES ' . . male s -"""""' -· IC-145' BSA Vidor --...... 1962 MG -N ... clutd>, (2 -N ... ....,., -. ' '1111 TIN ..,._ 11/lll KIRBY VACUUM W/trlde tor ....n.r tiiJie. RllL Good """'--Sanla Am Ph """"11 4 le 12 Slllfl a-Clol1< ADORABLE Shep, -C1EAN1N 'lip.,,, --ll6'MOl8 1515. 531-3491 Will 8uy .&""1 ID --&ltp'i ..... """'""" -med. Ind """' _, .. CaJIJ I .a.. -1 "" -~ 1963 "" <Xl BSA Tw1n. l500 ========I 1liii~iii;:"iii~ii!i. --. .... Am .. -No -·--U/30 Uoor model• .. PORSCHE STUDEBAKER j 1 ph•-. OIN:: 'i 1th1•;.t ~cda. SLUIESE•t.alt•&rown d&ntxa&WI-Somit u. or llelilil: olhr. Prtv PIU't)'. fosVollllwt&ft•Pcncl!tl--------I .... -. 8*M H;;:;;;: 11111 .,., .... IL,_lldl ~!IACK~N kmai•, -tn -home. Wmmw.Callm-na> 1:17""'1 lll63 PORSCHE 1600 s. cm, ! ':,~~Paid for '63 '""""bater 1..n, t cyt -alt I... RD'1NED ~~ , Latvno llolcft f1J..29ll 12/11 DftY P:I Wood, -Troliot' Trovol 9425 blk Int AM.f'M. Oum"""" 6'' ~-11 oo 4 "'· -"""'· $250. ar qD:it,,,_OI-can rtD --uft -·~ Qpeil:cad tu SP1.JPPt!Sfwbold,tla"t oru.re am! mbed.. FrM ' Xlnt c ond . $2700 . ' 'J bestolttt.'4MlC8 .. Aia:fita•f .. anoOllr 'Tr t":~ Call Ntm'D ,n,...; .tar~ Labrador raothtr. cWl\CJ. 5fl.~ cx:»iaPLETE '114/SlS-1981 '1-...,00'0ll==,,.=--=w"'AHl'ED==-l========I IM 71,...... :-ll,11, JoU!ll.-...... tu -StalO -12/30 EIJCALYPTUSFluwood 'mAVEL TRAILER '62 PORSCHE Coup•. 0ronp ,,,.,.... T•BIRD iiiiPlfAoi .... t 0 fr ...;,., ~ ......... -... ,.p1y, lloz WHITE Rabbit, -pet ~-$22, COii! ~ * _, * Oriolnal. lnunaculal< S2SXl TOP I BUYER -~ ...... l>IT . .,,. Dill1 Pilot To rood home. SU mJ &ll<t' DAILY PllDT Dl?a)oA-m.3.160, -.... BILL MAXEY TOYOTA "" T-DIRD. LI"' -· n. : =Clll ·-·-;-i ~~~t:: b'jacltorlal ~ 12/30 MUSKRAT STOLE. LINISYa.eMi-hm DIALdlttdl066il.cblJ'ltH.Bei::.&.d!.~~--pwr.lOWMr.&16-6233.ZU!I ; "i'Wo·:t::::--~~"'..;.,..,Bl ... --.::.r-~e:: .. ~ ~ =~..:'"-~··-.::=-·""1· Dial ::. -:-:..:.~and DAILYPILOTW':"'ADSI '~7;.~~~ .. .. j