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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-11-18 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 . '-. llr.'. -.-·-~----~-·-.-~..._.....,...__-..... -.---------- ~· . - .. : .. -) DAILY PILOT * * * 1o c * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON.'·NOVEMBER' le, :1969 ' • I ' ' ' ,, ... .. ' • ' .. _.-, . ' . . ' . -. -...--. . ·- ' ~-- .... . . . ..... .. ... .;. ·~ Ei· VOL. '2, NO. l7,, I SICTIONS, JI PAGl!S -~-:Kenned:Ws _i».19.Gb ·senators Now Divide·d· I .,;· ,.... "-11:"1 I ~ -~ -.. . ~ ·• .. . . . . . \.' ' " Joe .Kennedy Finally Loses Fight for · Life ' . ' . ., HY ANNIS POR/l', "'Mi,., (TIP!) JO!:eph · P: Kerfu~,t multlmHlionairf • I • • •. father, of a President and two U.S. -' '. I' ' . . senators·ln a:iragedy-stalked ·ramuy,.dled. today.•He waS 81.· · · , The patriarcb of the fabulous Kennedy clan who lost two sons -one a President and uie other a senator _:.to assassins• bulle~ was an jnvalid since fellid by a stroke nearly :tight years ago. Death came• at 1:05 a.rn .. (PST) after Kennedy, .who was U.S., ambassador · to Great Britain 8t the siart of 'World War 11, suffered the latest in a string of heart ottacks Saturday·. · A family spokesman f§ued the follow· ing statement: . "Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy died peacefully today at his home in Hyannis · · . , r ... • • Port. He ~as 81 years old.· · f . . ..i • 4 • i'Ul"I~~--.:.. "Mr ... Kennedy was p,ronouneed dead ·•t · , , · '-.· • 1·~~"", · l!i05 a.m. '(EST)" by iir1 pliplcian' Dr. NIN~ YE'ARS A'GO -Joseph 'P. Kennedy andlhis wife, ·ttose,;paa::ehts ' Robert ID: watt: With blm atithe tlrne of of a President and two U.S. Senators ·in a tragedy:stalked ftimUY, ·&s: · : his death were hia wife 8nd the membei's they appeared in Palm Jleach, Fla., sbqrtly belo!e C~l'istm~s .. l~. . . of hls_fll!l'ilY:". : . • ·• -~-~-----~-----~~~-~~=~"'-... ..__. · . Sen. Eaward M .. Kennedy, (D-Mass.),,, • · :. . -r · • , ~1, ... • ••• • •• · 0bis..lo~surviVing.son.wbo.sp:enttbepiaJ;ll Ap.oll. 0 A' s! t'rona·u·ts .. s' e. t. . . ~;: ~JIYl~gi;e~l~~!=· w1l:iij~ . . died. The senator's mother, Mrs. Rose. ' ... · Kennedy,.his wife Joan and R. Sargent ' · • : • • Shriver~ U.S. all}bass.ador to Fr~, also F111r Moon Tri"'p·· i TOlJ.l··g· ht w~~~ .. ~~"'' said the Jastrltes o!, u · ' · · the Roman 'Catholic Church were act. ... t · • • ministered ,tp.JCtnnedy two or three Umes ... ' ·" wiihln·ibe list month: (· SPACE ·CENTER, Houston (UPI) ...:. .... As 1h11.1.condJtlon . deteriorated, al Apo Uo ti's ·astronauts looped th<f mbon' ; ' STORIES ON. LAMDING, memb•p, 9f.,the . gl8J!!Orou,s, Kennedy , • -WA.L "'-.P:.'~E: 4 famliy >gathertd: at. I~ ICehr.dy coin-with unerring precision today, inspected , • '""""""" I\ """ pound! W.looklng Nantucket Sound th!!ir landihg ship a fina l time and said l. where' tie;'0nCe ' sailed •with; lib family .. "we'll: ready lo go" for a pinpoliit '.JolU'ad, Be~n .and~~ F.• Goi'don Jacquell°'11Kennedy Ona!lllS, wJdow ';t touchdown on the lunar Ocean of Slorllli ·sJept through the day.' Gonion will re-President 'ohn F. Kennedy, new in from tonight. main Jn lunar orbit aboard the-command her island home fl.l Skorp4os, Greece. "We've checked all the things we're ship Yankee• Clipper tonight whUe his Mrs. Ethel Kennedy, widow of Sen. supposed to and they're all shipshape," _cre_w.maW unlatch the !aD4inc era.It, Robert F. KeMj!dy, came . f ~ 0 m · Alan L. Bean radioed earth4rom:iflside"-·I"* lbi ~~1 and ;-.... lo• u.. 'Wi'n' -~~; .. ,.;1~ · · ·. · .; ' the lander lrltrepid's cabin. surface,._ · • . A mm •-equt.ed money with power So perfect was every as~ of Sbortly. after' noon, the SPIC' agency and poftr "*money. Kennedy·molded America's second lunar landing mission • 'announced that a SOiar flare had been 8 political fanillr of flak and , im- lhat flight director M. Pele Frank· told ob8erved on the IWl, but that ••bQed on aginatlon. • . . newsmen "it's at least 100 percent ef· the previous iaformaUon we ball from KeD11ed7, 1 1aloonkeepert son. amus- fL'CtJve. I'm just amaz.ed ,1' .thiJ flare We wwJd 'not U:pect it 1o be a td a tortUM estimated a,t UP. to a half- Jte said nothing, including a minor skin p-Oblern" um would endanger the bithon dollan. He admittedly wu one of irri~lion reported by flight commander-astronauts. It ,was the same flare nm Amerk:a.'1 • wealthlelt zntn., Charles "Pete" Conrad, stood between :teen Nov. 1, and the-aun had st;mply · ' But for an hll wealth, his lift wss ICI,.. I.he crew and their landing at lO :S31p.m. rotated until It was In 'iiew again from red witli tragedy. FOllr of his nine d'Jl· tPST) today. (See APOUO,.Pqe I) (See UN!Q;DY, P ... I) ' ,. y . ' t . . ' ., ' ) .... ..... ' . < , Uiijt),O~ . 'l'~Jlli Chaim Parents Don~t Do Job ln .Telling About S·ex By, THOMAS FOR'.I'QN.E sex With them. One said hfs mother had · °' "" o.ir(l"I• ''"' talkfd . with' hi in ,about it. One did not say. They·Slid mOllt patents dOn't do Pie job "Most Of .,iiy1 tdiJ~ation : was · acquJred teachinl'.about~sex eduCaUon tlif')'~SfloUltl. from -slumber parties," volunteered ·one That· is one' pot.1t five high school of 'the students. students made Monday when they tal~d . "It's an embarraslng subject for par· to, a committee of Newport Hartior ents,'' aald another. "It Is very difficult Chamber.of·Commerce lookmg Into the for a kid to picture his own parents hav- feaaiblllty Of sel education in the schools,,_ · ing sexual relations. There are a Jot of A ,couple.o( thelt other polnts: . ' ha~ps there." , -Newpott:.Meaa-Unified . s ch o or A l:ioY brought up the double-standard. District's JeaderSh!p ls afraid of sex "My•father l0oks at my sistc. different, 'l educlton. · · · he Said. "My father thinks : 'My boy. It's ·-Clusroom sex education is not all tjg~t for him to go out and ge~ ·sex. going .. to have the eflect of making I'm. proud·_of hJm. But my daughter. I'll students want to go out and sex ex-string up her boyfriend by lWi thumbs.' " perlnie.1t. "How should sex be taught by 1'he fiVe youths, all s~dent offJc(rs, parents?" asked Dr. N.olau. Frlzzelle, were ·from Corona del Mar and Newpo~ chairman of the Chamber committee. Harbor: high schools. Students· from "The first thing I would say is ·ob- Eltancla and Costa Mesa hlgtl sChoofs jectlvely and that's awfully · hard for will be,heard by. the.Chamber committee · parenl'.s -to sit down with you and tell later. . ·. · you~all \hey know sex to be and their ex· Three of the studen~ ·Uk! ~ir parenia -..:;eritflce .... But-kids-hew· to ~1 !' .. ·&aid . had ·""\ ·tlioufl!l lt n<c.aicy to dll!CUBI . • (See sm:x· CLABllI!S, Pase II' , • • ,~t~,Oaiv,. City ,;Manag6r. -. · I t 'I • '~ • 'lleach Agreement in Mesa 1 ;Cou~man·}'lllliam St. Clair and City ment, ''to ~nform with the needs ·or '' Maiiltir Arqlur 11..l'tlcgetuie ••I qul_etly growing city." 1 '•4 Cit)': A!!MntY Roy June read a peace S ~ Mmmertd out by: the three men t. c;.Jair and McKenzie recogunended ~to M0n4ay '#t'a 'eosta Mesa City { m~. de~ll't!. accounting of revenue and C~' ...... ·" ' exJiei!dlturel with-regard lo tile !;late Gas $t1iCililr aii4.~· ~ked that, lhe Tox1"fwld •lllCI "the Arterial lllghway 'Jo~ 1~:1',l!\'1 ·.l<i a yote of !tie J'lnance ITii!"am Fund .ID the budget ·COOld! • Councll mtm.&m endorse$! tt re.venue sDlhmary. ~11Jl!~1: ~ · , .They called !or fUll dlaclooure In the ci-'P.>9 " ~tnlstradve,Policy Statement" ty budget ol.iti)e Coit of any new program r~-anolher statement that St. Clair for the city that ~Ires the ex~lture )lijt P~ lo dell~. ·~i· · "· . ,., · .' ol ; •llf. lundl; 8lld 'l11<luslon ol,'a llat,, I Ill. Clilili• "Oillll>&t ',.. !in!!lt ~..._..l!I fu"'t ol lb~. Pnil)ibTe.: dlect uP.,n the ihave criticized city handlfng of financial balance of the budget. matteU, •e1abbrallng on charges he has Other budget chang~ reco)llfnended i11· leveled at members _ of ,t1'e city ad-eluded : · ~ .. , ministration· In a feud .\hat bu grown Jn -'lfhe new budget format will lncfude proporijona in rtctnt.w'!lks. . for_eomparali¥e ~rpases ap estimate of Inatead1 lbe joint statement of St. Clair the CllnJ!ll year's expenditure for and ,MCKtJI* agreed "that no problmi departmepta and actual expenses of U\c hss .~led. with. rt;9'etd: to any. mlsap-,atCOnd previous yea r by departnients." , prOpriaUons or ~e QI (Qndl.'11 -An Indexed accounting coding system Tl(e .budfel format' uMcl by 1be oily !a ln all bjldgets and re~. I? develop 'bel .. illtdlecl and updated, said lbe 1i.1.. tSee MES.( TR~CE. Pase I) . Alaska Solon ' Says He'll Vote Yes on Jurist , From Wire ·Servlea WASHINGTON -Sen. M1ke Gravel (0. AlaSkil.)'1 s8id ·t6day fie is' going{tO· vote to c0nflrm the Supreme COUrt nomination of Jadge ·c1ernent F: Haynsworth, Jr: ·"There .is no question 'about It," he·told a ~ee9rtet.,, . . , r ''. ,. •• : ~ ·His statell\enl prod.uced a 4040 tie in an AssoclaleQ Press survey bf se nators who ' have taken' a public 'stani:I 0.1 the noiniria- ti bn. subrilitted' by.·Presiderit Nixop. three mqnlhi ago. · Grave1 S<iid '.he ·h~d Stated liis position rec·e,ntly irl Alaska; b\Jt he had'been listed hi the' .,.P. survey anrong senators whO were· uncommitted. ~en. Roman.I.. llruska (R-Neb.), leader of adrni(listratlon forces i'.1 t h e H~y.nsworth . nom'lnati9n (jght,. proposed tQday that the showdo\fn vote o~ con· fi~matlon be put orr until M-onday. Hruska said.sevei'al senators who want to vote on wh~her Haynesworth · should J. serve on th~ ~Su~.m~ Coutt, llad .. in· dic!ated they_could •.1ot be present if the vote were i.ken <l'hursc!an>r.Fi1day. . He su~ested that tJie' floor debate On lhe -oomlf)81ion-lle · conclucled-Wedne.da~· aqd that Jh~ 5eqat~ Jhen ta)\e. up a dtaft re(orm measure for the regialndel'i.of the wefek. The' confirm'ato.-vote c0u1i'be set (See HA ~WO~Tlf;f,•B! .. 1) • .; . ..-. \ .. , #. 1 f .J-J i ' ) Orange• · · ·'' ·"·«:oan f 1 \ I ~ I ' ~ ' ' ' •' ' ~ ,. . I . "More the •same" ii the cryptic , 1comment from , t)\e > weat~erman for Wedneaday11 wKh·irrilaUna air stirred.-by Santa Ana winds 1and temperatures . In • the1 1upper 1 ?O's aJOng the coast. i INsm TODi\li It's t1te l:ifogea week o} !lie.. livF'. theater season on, . the , fOrange Coast ...-mt 1lcw J?l,iius j opf1dng a tut ~ ·otJkrS ~u;'Oi·' • " · thf boards. See Tllea!et Notes,, Page 18. , : . ~ .... ~ ' C•Ultr11I• . • ? ,Cll.Hlflf'll ' •U C•111k.. 11 C!'Mt .. rf 11 Deftll Nttkn It • Ol\le''" u l ......... t ,... • l!nltrMlllW!eftt • ,. P:l~•!Kt .. , -" .... ~ 11 Mlttfllt• ,. ,_.,..., ,. . ' I ------------~-----_..-~-----------· --> N-ewport Council Ordel!s Barricades Built 011 Streets . By JD0ME l'. COLLINS 0t IM MllY ,Ult l!•fl Newport BHch cit:)r cOtjncilmen Mon- day nlilhl 'l!rdifed :bair!Cades up to kJ,. sand h~ng rip i>(f ~ ... ·~~and OD the beach ir! West Newpof4 The action came ··after CdU.ncilm~ Donald A. Mcinnis bitterly criticiled pro-jfct contfa<;tot Chadwick.~ Bucbanl.n fot violating --iri!ll lll• clfy. • He charged the.Long Belch !inn wllh: -Hauling tons of sand along publJe streets without city permission. -Spreading huge boulders -~ .the Wa~r}ine betw~n-40t~ and 41~ st~ts In a1 D)anp~·~mrdous" to mm.mer•. ~ ' 'TNoisliY ;1<1rvlcilig vtlilCles' OI\ the beach in tr'ont 'or hoinCs on weekends and al n~ht. ·:...1p.r1n1 promioet to 'the city to give advance notice whenever the sand haul • , .• .._ • • • UPI, ........ "J-re•ideitt Jtle~t• Ttlrkeys ,, . 'l,l~~h Mother . • I . • . ' ' . I President N\lC<lll cot relJlln11-er':today lliai.Tii&iksiiving is not iat o.ri., ' He received a pair of llvl!, AO,pOUlld,• ~cl-breasted while turkeys " raised in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. Birds were gills of the Na-.; llor\a) Turkey F~ehtllon. , ( · ! I .. , , -• llela·~as Home I < ' Frem Page '1 SEX CLASSES '. • • .. Said ··Pigsty l'.eslll:,.I9'ehan. HMbOr fligh's :~irla League president. "The school is better equipped to ~­ die a '111>Jectlve qUIStiOn objectively;• sald Arnold Clark. ·student body tice president' at Corona de! Mar High. E:augested there ls Jess personal ~· ulrntnt that !NIY Ind a bet~ for communtcauon. But be a:dded, "1 have no 'objectlon if a parent !eels he dan do a better job." · .,, Dr. Friizellle gave:bis thooghts on whf pents don't get into f ~ a n k aex Qiscussions with their children. "You ~ave a tendency to r~I a child is y0unger 1'..0...P~ I > !"ESA TRUCE •• lhiformity. -A biaMual fiscal rntetii1g betw~n die City Council iind its staU, with Rrtlphuif on buda:eted :verSU-s aC!ual ex· ~~~'in oft the.• fef~r,of ,.. Cent '!:_eeq_~.._M_cKWle; aild ~t: ~ also called for Jfew . staff aoo--aa.~ mlnistraUv~ procedpres and :Protocol: ; ' i The new policy outline• the aceep,tablt:: <:hanhels councilmen should ·go throug)l to ~ infon:itatlon or BClion: '~·through the Office of. the cl!Y mwgei:. If th! clly lnanager or assistant city manager Js not l,vailable, the councilman js_free tO· con, Sult the appropriate department head.." . It •)lo called for a tishtenlng arid UpgradJng of 3ceounl:ing and manage~ inent at the Costa Mesa MUnlcipal Goll Course, tang a sore palnt With St. Clair', a:id asked the council to coruider the ap- pointment of a city representative to be responsible for -the entire goU coutse operation. - McKenile said the Administrative Policy Statement "Js of great benefit (o the city," while St. Clair said, "It may be the beginning of a new relationship_., .I think it's all right." Said Councilman Will!rd T. Jordan, "Personally, I'm delighted this action took place. Maybe now instead of bicker- ing among ourselves, we can go ~rward.'' · .. , Councilman George C. Tucker was a bit mre restralned in hi .. enthusiasm. "The proof 0£ tM pudding Is tn the eating," he said. But he added, "l 1eel this step has merit." · . "Disagreement is good,'' said Tucker. ''I don't think anyone on this council should feel he's been out or pl19ce in voic· ing his opinion. I think that dlscusslon of these financlal subjects Is golng b> Show us mcrtt." DAIL" f'i lOl ....,... ...... 'lhilla..,. .... --· --C...•"-• . CU.IPl•llA , OAMU ceiul' """'.....,.. COMflM'f •..:.rt H.. Wff4 .......... _ J.U I;. C.tey ........... ...,,. ..... -·~ -· n .. ,, A. M.-,.,htitt ----c.e. ..... , ..... _ ......... .._.,. 9-cll: nu*"' •••• ._.._. u.w. ........ ,...... ... _ -17 ll al ~--- ' . than lie feels htmse1£,'' be' Said. ""You · don't teer he·1;·yet Capable ·wit}\ wisdom of rhaklitJ j~dgments. A':ld you are not willing 'to trust th.ls responsibility to an outside person 1ike 'a 'teacher."· · • . . Greg flfeeks," Key Club president al Corona del Mar Hi~b, said he bas had audio-v~aJ .~la.5'ts for four. years· and f!ad the tBea of taking a camera and Video tape into another school district'! classroom where sex education is being taught •. : . Meeks said, ''I wanted lo record it as it really is ·and bring It back to show to grotij>s that .say 'no' on sex ed~cation. But our superintendent (William Cun- ningham) .said, 'No1 We aren't ready for il now.'" U.N Disarmament . .. Deb_ate Begins On Genial Nole ' . A Huntington Beach mother was ar· rested Moiiday afternoon on felony child neglect cha~&es after officers ~lleged they found her home unfit for human habitation. Arrested was Mrs. Lilyann Payne, 42, a draftsman for a Santa Ana computer firm, who wu lving alone with her 13-- year-old son and J&-ye~r-0ld daughter at 72{114th St., Huntington Beach. Officers first went to her home on a routine mattef when they entered and found, according to their report : -Trash three to six inches thick spread over the living room floor. -Two -to four inches of animal defeca- tion throughout the house. -Rotten newspapers stacked on the floors,.de.ad mice, two inches of rot inside the refrigeritor, dangerous knives and &harp tin cans laying about the kitchen. -No hot water and stagnant water in Ule toilet. Qoth children were turned ovtt to juvenile authorities, while Mrs. Payne was freed on $1,250 bail. She is expected to be arraigned on the felony child neglect charges this week in West Orange Cqunty Municipal Court in Westminiter. UNM~NA'rY6Ns. ·rr.v.(1'tti------>;;F""r_o_m_ Page I Plainlr c~~cerped a~t the s~ess · of their ·alTfls limitaUon talks in Helsinki, the 1..J.nited. States 'and the Soviet Union JaUtJched the-annual dlsa nnament debate il.t the ·United Nations Monday on an Wrilstially conciliatory note. Omission of. the usual invective made delegate~ h\)PF.ful that this year's U.N. disarmament talks will be more fruiUul than .such disQJsslons in the past. U.S. Ambassador ·Charles W. Yost and Ambassador A. A. Roschin of the Soviet Union both expressed hope that the Helsinki talks would bring an end to the nuclear anna race. Both al90 called for qilick approval of the U.S.-Sovlet draft tre~ty to keep the seabed free o! nuclear weapons. , Despite reservations by some smlfll"ha· tiQos. it seemed certain that the 3$sembly wOuld approve the U.S.-Soviet draft , Sltqp Talk APOLLO .... Earth.· Bean WQke up in the middle of the Mon· day sleep period and askeCI ground con·· trollers to keep an eye on the guidance rockets on the spacecraft because "we seem to be firing a little more ... around the moon than we had imagined." He also asked how often to take decongestant tablets to counteract a stu!· fy nose he said had been bothering him since launch. . "I don't know whether I have a cold or anything," he said. "t..fy ears are sometimes clear and sometimes are not." Doclors told him to take a tablet every eight hours and Bean said he was going to try to go back to sleep. "'' Ttie.Mte Th~ ll!cDonnell Douglas a irlock for the Sa,turn V orbital workshop was the topic of convenation today as Dr. Wernher von Braun was brief- ed al airlock moekup in St. Louis, Mo .. by )'red J. Douglas (lert ), dlt'e<:lor or airlock program for space firm . Dr. Von Braun directs NASA'• Marshall Space Fli&hl Cenlcr, which has awarded McDonnell Dobglas conlract,lor work on space .workshop and its airlock module. \ project work area is extended. t Mcinnis was especially Irate over the contractor's use o! Seashore Drive ·and Orange Avenue as pathways for the i;-ucks cartl., sand l!Oln U.. S.... Ana River to the beach. The contractor chose that route ~C::~ r:~t ~~~ h:. w~~: ~~ directly to the beach.' .. Mcinnis said school children boarding buses at Orange Avenue were ''ter· f1>rized" by the huge rigs using the street for access to the beach. He also said one parked car had already been struck by the trucks, which beg'an using the public .streets during the weekend. The angry couricilman atsci said l:iilldozers had shoved rocks left over ~m groin construction to the edge oHhe surf to get them out of the path of the sand hauling equipment. He said this movement ol the boulders was another "broken promiJe." Oo Melonis' motion, the council unanlmoualy directed the pollce deplrt- ritent to erect barricades at the Orange Avenue beach street end. The motion was approved at 8:30 p.m A hall-hour later; the directive bad been carried out, and city T id e I a n d s Administrator Georg~ Dllwe1 reported to councl1men that Buchanan &: Chadwick spokesmen bad agreed to observe the street hauling ban. Also at Mcinnis' ln$tence, the coon--ell : · -Au~otlzed Mayor Doreen Marshal1 to send a letter protesting the enUre oper8tlon to the U.S. Army Corps of • Engineers. The letter will request a "ccrni;nhensive phm.1• on the project from the Corps at the council's Nov. 24: • meeting. --Ordered the contractor to remove I.hf boulders shoved into the water im· mediaie\Y. -Demanded an end to alter·houn maintenance of sandhaullng.equipment lJI front of beach homes. -DiAiCted the city staff to prepare an ord4ta.n(e establishing load limits 01 public streets. "We don't want to be run ovei rougbshpd anymore ," declared CoUJ)- cilroan Paul J . Gruber. "This city is faced with an emergen· cy,'' said Mcinnis. "And tllaJ. emregency was created by the job coo tractor." · Vice .Mayor ·Lindsley Parsons con· duded ' "OUr beach in West Newport may need restoration, but it doesn't need it this fast. Those trucks are wrecking ·our streets." ·Diplomat Says Rackets ·Imperil Viet War Effort WASHINGTON (UPI) - A U.S. deiplomat stationed In Saigon testified to- day that the Vietnam war eUort is undermiiied by a $150 million a year cur- rency bla ck market run by Muslim money manipulaton from India. · Robert R. Parker told the Senate permanent invesUgaUng subcommJltee that U.S. banks, Americans in Vietnam and GI deserten hiding out. in Saigon participate in the racket which has been described by some aa a billion dollar operatiOn. Parker was an embassy attache and assistant director of the U.S. aid program in Vietnam until last month. He also ~·orked under U.S. Am bas s ad o,r EllsYlorth Bunker on a special in- vestigalion 0£ black market• currency manipulation. "Black marketeers aod llllclt mooey changers have built a racket which has been estimated overall as rwmlng over $150 mllllon a year in Vietnam/' Parker lestified. " .•. They create an atmosphere of n. legality and fraud, immorality and cynicism ... give aid and comfort to the enemy. They undermine what we are trying to achieve In Vietnam." · Parker said Indian M'uslims run the racket and are so well organlied they have a "legal services" department which promptly pays the fine or any Hanoi to Allow Captives To Receive Holiday Gifts TOKYO (UPI) -U.S. airmen being held priaonfr1 in North Vietnam will be permitted to receive Cbristmal packages from their families, the Hanoi govern- ment announced Tuesday. The brief announcement broadcast by the Vietnam News Agency (VNA) and monitored here said : "On the occasiID of the 1969 Christmas, Pre-packaged Lunches Topi« Details of a pre-packaged school lunch program that could lop one-third off elementary school cafeteria labor costs will be presented to Laguna Beach school trustees Tuesday night. Superintendent Dr. Wltllaqi Ullom, business manager Ed Hind and board member Mrs. Jane Boyd are scheduled to report on a demonstration of the lunch distribution which they viewed last week. Now in use ln 50 California school districts including Huntington Beach and San Joaquin in Orange County, the pro- gram provides for preparation of hot lunches in a central kitchen and distribu- tion of individually packed hot and cold portions to serving areas in satellite schools. Installation of the system could cut up to 10 cents off the present 45-cent school lunch cost to students, trustees will be told. the D.R.V.N. (DemocraUc Republic of Vletnam) general department of posta · and-tel!COfllDlUilications--agrea-t-o transfer gifts to ~aptured American almren In North Vietnam from 1!Je.ir families. "The period or transfer of these gilts will last from Dec. t to Dec. 31, 1969." The broadcast said the gifts should be sent according to "the procedures already stipulated on previous OC· caslons." Several ·groups of wives of American se rvicemen missing in Vietnam have travelled to Paris to ask North Viet- namese delegates to the peace talk! whether their hl:Sbands were captured and being held prisoner. North Vietnam repeatedly has refused to make available a full list of prlso,ners. Russ Rocket Explodes; May Cripple Program WASHINGTON (AP) -'!be explosion of a huge Soviet rocket on its launch pad may have set Russian elforts to land a· man on the moon back two years and crippled its manned space program. Aviation Week & Space Technology 1'-1agazlne reported Monday the explosion last swnmer at Tyuratam destroyed the rocket the Soviets had intended to carry the main portion of a manned orbiting plaUonn into space last month. See the largest selection of Spanish and Mediterranean Dining Room groups . AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY for the HOLIDAYS I money changer caught, and sets him back up in business. Parker was the first witness at the hearinl which climaxes a five-month Subcommittee investigation. Aecordng to Parker, the Vietnam cur· rency black market uses code-named bank accounts in the United States. ac· counts in Hong Kong and money swaps in Sajgon to reap profits from the diUereN:e between the oflclri and black market rates oC exchange for U.S. dollars and Vietnamese piasters. ''The government's official rate ls 11~ plasters to a dollar," Parker said. "Bui on Ule black market, a dollar Is worth at least 200 piasters." From Page I HAYNSWORTH for Monday, Hruska said. There were indications that a White House.backed mail campaign was gainbg votes. Sen. William B. Saxbe (R-Ohio), one ol nine GOP senators who says he sUll has not made up his mind, said the pressure he is .£!.lting to vote for Ha~rth is "pretty ne:&yYllanded~' sen. Gordon Allott (R-Oolo.), reported his mail had shifted from anti-Haynsworth to pro Haynsworth within a week. The voter se,1timent may have resu11ed from a grass roots campaign revealed recently by Clark Mollenhoff. deputy counsel to the President. Mollenhof! said the White House was trying to elicit sup- port from chambers of commerce, trade associations and local bar associations as well as other groups in an e!ort to offse! anti-Haynsworth pressure from labor organizations and other factions. Wallace Calls V C Backers Traitors BANGKOK (UPI) -Former Gov. George Wallace of Alabama said 1f.onday night American antiwar demonstratort who call for a Communist victory in Viet· nam are traitors to their country. "People have a right lo express things about the war,'' Wallace said on his ar- rival for a three-day fact.finding visit to Thailand. "But when they run t11at Viel Cong fiag up and call for a Communisf victory, why that's treason. "There ought to be a law against thal activity and if I had the power. I'd have one passed," said Wallace, unsuccessfu.1 presidential candidate of his American Independence party last year. ' ' 7 I .I .. ,... . .. ..... ~---• -. ' _,,, -.. .._ I! ~ 't ' J ' N.Y. Stoelu, ! _. . ' .. Beach Schools Succ eed :ifi .i\Mwe r.ing ,Queri~s . . .. What are the kids.doing la school these days? ROw is our tax money being spent ? How can~ we be sure that the teachers hired ue qualified? What· is the. board of trUstees doing . about k~ping our high sch.QOls-~ lhe vanguard of moderil educa· tion? When· yo11 have a high school district that covers 52-square·mile1, l\as, more than flOO tiachers and· 14,500 students, such as the HuntingtOn. Be3ch 'Union High ScboorDtstric~ there are boilnd'to be a .. •" . , -·oe Mission Perteet lot of q1,1~tions a'Qottt itS operation. Deluged by quesUons -some simple and others of a highly technical nature - administrators· of the ,district this Year decided to nm an experiinent in .answer· ing all the queries in one fell swoop. They instituted a month-1.ong evening course in dilU'ict .oper*.UO:n .Ulat covered everything fi-Om i:listrkt hlstory·,to driver traininC wtth . a ~-of. ot.Per. topics in i>Otweefl. · "A lot of ~pie were ask~ us.qu~s· Astronauts Set To Land Tonight SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo l2's astronauts looped the moon wlth unerring preCision today, inspected tho:!ir landing ship a final time and said STORIES ON LANDING, MOON WALK-PAGE 4 "we're ready to go" for a pinpoint trollers to keep an eye on the guidance touchdown on the lunar Ocean of Storms rockets on the spacecraft because "we . · seem·to ,be firing a little ipore .•. around lorught. . . the mocin than we.bad imagined." "We'ye checked all Uje thJJli' we re . He: allO . ..ua ... 1iow otte&r I<> take J ; tlons-that we assumed they knew the answers to," said Oistricl Director of 1 Curriculum John Veriable, one ok the course organizers~ .. .. \ "Thc ,idea. for it came,from our dis'trld superintendent, Dr, M~ Forney, who suggest~ that we might develop a course which 1would cover aU··areas of diatrk:t ,OJ!eration.i · -.: . ,, ' of service eluhl, the League of Womeri Voters, students ·•nd ·other organir.a· tions," Ven~bl.e ~aid. • , , ! "This was the first l've'.lever 'beitd·oI sueh ·a · program : and It was ..-cfulte sue. :::.~:We'll ~~~.b~ ha~e' !t. a~~~ '11\e". ~d Qf" .trustees gave lts ia)>l proval to the project-at one of their meetings. and we invll!d representatives The cour.se,.btoten down into-four1twoo hour sessions, was tciugbt irom 'ocl. 6 throogh Nov. 3 on a wee!JY. ~is by t<f· · ministra!OrS. incl_Jldipg1wo· prtqci~. Between: 2i Mill 33 •-"' all<~ .. . ... . . ' ~aeti of the meetings, Venab1' r.eporb. They represented pr.acttcally a J I segmenti of Ille acbool ..dety, iDcludlng parent;, studentl, m:I employe1. 'Ten.at. tended an· tour sessions and were iward· edl a certillcalo of. 'l'mi>J<!ion 'l>Y,.tbe board.of· -· . . •• AinOni Ille toplcs·covtt.d ...,.. dilttlcl servicet, finaDCe,, tu: tate.s and boncf· issues, budget · .m a k I n·g , cerUftcated personnel, ·salary schedules, classified personnel, civil defenflle~,iannmJt .~il Patriarch · Loses Lo,ng Life Fight ·HYANNIS "PORT, Mass. (UPI) - Joseph ·P. l K!nnedy; ·mulOlnillionalre f{l~r .. of .a Pr¢dent · aild two U.S. senators in a traledy-stalked family, died· ~il:Y· He-was~': · The patriarch of the fabulous Kennedy. cl&n who losrtwo sons.!... one a·Presidi?nt attd the ·of.t!er a senator' .... to assasSJns>i bllllets was an invalid since felltd :by &! ,,,...,.Qearly~eight years ago.r. I 1 • ' ·~8', ll'~ ...,,._ • tt the start of World War:i ., teatlnc and guidance, c u•f"'r I cu I u .i:P dev,e~pment. ltul;lent '"government. Md coll~ .... ~.......... .. EvaluaU0111 tm'ned .In at the end of the course by lhooe who at-indll!atql lbat tbey wve JJUl!e ~ wl~ ~ pre>entalion :bllt wereC lillftestOd iii further am~ ol'iome q-. confronting the cmipuee1. Some, for_ ixamplt.~anted to know more about what is ;:_~ing: done with .. • (sOe "DimU fqir I) , " . -' supposed to and they're .all shipshape," decimgeitantia~·to.counter8cl-a stur-' ----'Aliiii LO 11ean;,adioed-.arth-lt0m-in&de-fy,...._~i<H1ad-bee~-him the ,\ __ ... __ · 1ntrepid's cabin, since launch. - come·at :1:06 ·LIQ.i'(PST}:;Jf~ · -·11;--su(lerait-lbe-1atut1n-.-11r1n1-o111te!ll·- a)taaks Saturday.. · .. · 7 'lilll!Ri'" pect of "I don't know whether I ha~ a cold or So perfect was every . as . . atlythini.'' he said. "My' eirs are America's second lunar lancbng nussion sometimes clear and sometimes are that flight director M. Pete Frank told no(.,. newsmen 1'it's at least 100 per~nt ef· Doctors told him to tak.e a tablet ev~ry r t' -I'm just amazed." eight hours and Bean said he was going ecH~v~id nothing, including a minor skin to try to go back to sleep. irritation reported by flight commander Charles "Pete" Conrad, stood between the crew and their landing at IO:f>3 p.m. (PST) today. Conrad Bean and Richard F. Gordon slept th~ugh the day. Gordon will re- main in lunar orbit aboard the co~ma~d shi Yankee Clipper tonight .while his cre~mates unlatch the lspd1ng craft from the Clipper and descend to the &urface. Shortly after noon , the space agency announced that a solar Oare had been observed on the sun, ~ut that "based on the previous information we ~ad from this flare we would not expect it to be a oble.m" that would endanger the :tronauts. It was the same flare. first seen Nov. 2, and the s.un had . simply rotated until it was in view again from Ea~~~n woke up in the middle of the Mon- day sleep period and asked ground con· Council Star ts Reshaping of Cit y Down town The 1'op of the Pier' Plan was f~i:_mally ll<:.,r;epted Monday ~ight by the. Huntington Beach City Council. . . In a routine motlOn, WJlhout comment, all seven councilmen agr~d. to the com· lete reshN>ing of the city s downtown p . and beach area. Top of the Pier Plan calls for extension of the city parking authority to include downtown between &th and Wke·Slree.ts, one block inland from Pacific ·Coast Highway. and a five acre parcel east of Lake Street. . That land will become a large. parking lot wlth commercial and apartment de~elopment surroundinC it, specialty shops on the pier and perhap s restaurants, shops and otber'development bullt above the parking area. The city staff is already working on a procedure list to get the downtown renovation away. The City CouncU meets as the parking authority at 5:80 p.m., next Monday, and is eipected to ask.City Administrator Doyle Miller to begin ap- praisal of the downtown land which must be condemned to make waj tor the parking. OJ' Schools Bond Vote Turnout Loiv Ocean -View School District officials to. da y reported a light turnou t of voters during the morning hours in today's $7.5 million school bond election. At 10 a.m. only 443 ()f the dis_trid.'.! 21,398 registered voters had cast their ballots, representing a tutnoul of 2.t per· cent. A spot check of five representative precincts, out of a total of 19, revealed the following voting picture: -At Circle \View School, 23 or 1,653 registered voters (1.6 percent) had cast ballots this morning. · -At College View. the figures were 40 of 1.58.1 registered voters (1.5 percent). -Crest View, 12 of 1,li6 registered voters (1.3 percent).' -Harbour View, 52 of t,336 registered voters (1.3 percent). -Haven View, 17 9£ 1·,415 registered voters (1.4 percent). The polls will remain apen until 8 p.m. District administrators expect balloting to increase significantly during the eve n- ing hours. • ' A two-thirds majority is required for passage of the bond, which would quali fy the dl!lt.rict for enough sta\e-aid funds to carry oot its building program through 1&75. . Passage of the bonds would provide 200 . additional classrooms for an expected in- crease of it Jealt 6,000 children during the next six years. School offi~iah: predict that some -children wou~ 'be placed on double sessions at every school Utls year if the bond Wue fails to pass. There ha.s 'been no orga{lized opposition to•the measure. Stock' Market NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market beJan firming late this afternoon aUt:r a alnklni" speD 'dUrln& early tri'dlng. volwne was talrl7 adive. (See· qlllJtl>. Uona, Paga M). . ''~ '.. '. ' 1· ... S .... p ·Tal~ ' ,;'' ' ' ' ; The McDonnel110ouglas airlock for the Sat1,1rn1V.'o.rbital :wQrkshop1was· th ~ ~opic o~·convefs~tion today aS Dr. Wemh~_r.:vpn Braun .was ·.bri..~!· ed at airlock mdckup in ,St. Louis, Mo .. by Fred J. Douglas (left)., drrector of airlock Program 'for space· firm:·Dr~· Von ·B.raun 'directs . NASA''s1Marshall'$pace Flight Center:,. which, has aw.arded McDonnell Douglas contract !or work on space wotkshop arid: its. airlock ·module. Another Location Offered As Site for · Civic ·Center · . -__ ,_._ __ -.... ' . -. . ~ . Consideration or a site ·!or Huntington j ' the ~un~il .~ln~lud~ Doy!~ Miller, city ad· Be:Ch'.s future Civic ctnter was 'tiirown ; mi fl!slrj;tor ; K~n: Rey~lds,. pl~n~ing into conrusion . Monday night by a staff ; 1 ~/reel~; T~1pa~Severns. devi:J~pi:'lent report reeommendino study of a lhi d' coordinator, Vince Moorhouse, ~~ector ·1e , e • r • 1 f'f hab<?rs. and ~aches, a.nd Ray P1c&f(J, !I · · Ui't chief. City co'un cilmen agreed lo hold a study ' · Co'unCllmen looking'.oVer· 'tbe new pro· session on the subject Monday at 8 a .. m. • posal were Georke Mt'Cracken and Jerry at the Sheraton Beach Inn. 1 Matney. . · ' , A .family spokesman Issued the follow· ing statement: · "'Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy· died ·pCacEirully today at his home in Hyannis. ~ort. He was 81 years old. "Mr .. Kennedy was pronounced dead' at 11':o5 a.rTI. (EST) by his physician. Dr., Robert ·D: Watt: With him at the time·of -his d&ath were his wife and the members, or his family. 11 Sen~ Ed.ward M. Kennedy (0.Mass.), his lone surviving son wha spent tile night in a lonely vigil at his father 's bedside, was with the senior Kennedy when he died. 'fhe senator's matbei:, Mrs. ROse Kennedy, his wife Joan and R. Sargent Shriver. U.S. ambassador to France, also were present. · · .FilJlllY source_& sai,d. the last rites _0( the Roman Catholic Church were ad· ministered to ,KennE!dy two or three llmes wilhin the last month. • As his condition deteriorated, all members or · the glamorous Kennedy family gathered at the Kennedy com· pound ov'erlooking Nantucket -Sound where he once sailed with his family. J.acqllellne Kennedy Onassis, widow. of President John F. Kennedy, flew in from her iSland home at Skorpi6s, Greece. Mrs. Ethel Kennedy, widow of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, came from Washington . A man who eqUated money with, power and power with money , Kennedy mo~~ a. political family of flair aM tm· aginatlon. Kennedy a saloonkeeper's son, amass- ed a 'rortu~e estimated .at up to a half· billion dollars. He admittedly wall one of America's' 20 wealthiest meb.' • But for all his wealth, his Iii~ v.:as scar· red with tragedy. Four of 'hli1 n1ne.cltiJ• (See KENNEDY, Page I) Studies Planned' Up for study \Vi ii be a proposed site at The tentative plan' for use oft.he Lake .. Lake Street and Atla~ta Avenue, Atl anta site would include the high rise On Land, Ti·a.££1'c property owned by the Huntington ~ach stir~ture and parking space to be lea&ed ~mpany a~ ~yed ~s part of the inland from the-Parking AUlhorlty.. .. park.log proJect recently approved by lhe . 'A ~ilee to stu:dy. tridustrlat 'land council. and one to inSpeCi traffic prot)tenis' Will A city staff committee and two coun· s r D . . p . cilmen surveyed the Lake·Atlanta slle U e l'lVl~g r ogr aill be formed by lbe Fountain Valley City Monday and precipl~ated the study Counctf at is a o'clotk ·meturig tonight. session. Slated in Huntington ·considerouon ivm a1so· be given to It was pointed out that civic ~nter formation of a spetjal committee to studies by consultants hired by the city, ·A progr~ on ' safe ariving will be study youth problems 'in' the ~ity 'as re-. Space l/tlliz.aUon Analysts, offered as one presented by the. Huntington ~ach, sare- alterilative· an 11-stbty high rise building. ty Council '!'l}ursday ln the council cbam. (jUested by Mayor Edward, Just. Ofricially, the <'ity is now committed to ber ot cit• half · Resident! have• been asked to $Ubmit a civic center on 12 acres ~f properi?.·tn 1 ,:rrie·trelpU~fic PrOfjltn.begjns ,ac'f:tl· api)Uca.Uons T~~icfy and ' dtirlng the ; upper Main Street oppostle !he. ~ 1 ·) p..m •• ahd~lt.idel a Olrni bn ~... week ff or Ute industrial ·and traffic com· tington Beach High School~ · 1· d\"fv!N ~ues' tO be siiowU bf StaiiJ1 , rillttei;s. . , 1 Jlq!.iJI ;:ecen\;w~ a_Slody ~ 1 w111t1\iii.i; iar.t)' tonoultant for ' iM : · • ~ol a,.,.w. llte O<t :I& acrtt ·r/J. , · 1 , Alltoni\ll>ll~ ~lub ,0r Southern ,cauroml~.' ! The only P!'~llc heating ll;Ch<duled 011 a : arid" Beach . .Boulevard. • • a.,ct:0rdlJli to Ed Sullivan presldenl al'lbe r9liti!]! agenda i~ for weed fbalem4.nt . Staff mefnbers making · the reM,rt lo ~safety coitncil. · .., , p~ing.s. · Election Date ' ' Set for Feb. 10 February· 10· has been selected a! the probable date , !Or a special election lo chanle the interest rate·on, '4·75 million r.1 school bonds. held by the Huntinpm Beach' City· (elementary) School District. !J'rus~ ,of ·tbe district will )lold 'a specl~I meeting_ at J :~ p.m., 'l'uesd:!IY tn the D\\:yer SchoOI library to consider ihc eleCtioil. ROOtkifi matters will 18lso· be ~lea Tuesiiay; eljiniilating the' regular meeting 60 NOV. 25. · Adinit\lstr.liitors 'of the di strict ' hitve r'eco,mmen'cle(i . Fe,b. ro. as the' efectl~ date af)d 1said the change in interest fate (•,10w· flVe· perCentf should not ' exceed seven percent Feb. ·10 is . the . same 'date the high .school district ·will hold a $9.5 million bond election. District &fficials-ha ve not been able to sell the Blready voter-approved bonds, at five percent · and fiope an increased in- terest Tate will bring the needed funds.in- to district coffers. The Clty·school district Is not aski•:ig•for !'lore bond·money as yet, only a change Jn the .current interest'rate. · Oranife Coast .. "M,ore ~e ·samen is the ,cpptic comment from 1 the wealherman I for 'Wednesday~· With iriitating ·air stirred by Santa Ana wiods and temperatUres In ·the '"upper 70'1 1 along the cpast. .It's . ti~ biggest week of tilt. live theater sei:J:son O'll tht 1 Oru11ge Coost -si: 1tew plays 01'en i11g ond six oiher1 siilt 01' the boards. See 1'/u~ater NOte1, 1 Page 18. ' .. u " •• " " '. "· ... ,., .. " " .. . ,. • , , I . , I Don't Forget to ·V Ote.~~tfay; PQlls Opell Till Si . . d''• ' f ' ,...> - ·t:Qurt Weiglis B,ea,cliitfc,ess . . . , ' I President Meeis Tarke9s President Nixon got reminder t~ay that Thank.Sgivlng is !lot far off. He received a pair of live, 40-pound, bro~d-breasted .white turkeys raised in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley! ~1rds were gifts of the Na· tiooal Turkey Federatioo. .Land Involved ·in· Bribe Awaits Planner Action The 20 OCl'M of land which last w~t sparted an alleged bribe attempt o! Hun- tington Beach Mayor Jack Green ~a before the planning commission at 7:30 Beach Hunting Correct Zoning At Intersection Huntington Beach city councihnen n:· pressed a fear Monday night that too much commen:lal land around Adams A venue and Brookhunt Street mlgl]t result in spotty development. - Of particular concern 1o Ille COUDCllJ• 20 acres of land alo.ig the southwest tdge of Brookhurst and Adams, of 1,hich two acres on Ille corner are OWn.,i tiy the dlJ pf Newport Beach. • • '· Councilmen have asked tHe city plan· ning comrrusslon to study the entire ~~e!l and report to the council on the posslb!h· ty of eliminating some of the commercial zoni'.ig. The alann to spotty develOl)ment was raised by Meredith Garden tiome owners, t;outh of the commercial land. ~n Particular they noted Newport Beach plans to allow a service station, a cat \\'ash, a Jack-in-the.Box and a fourth business on Its two acres. Ed Kearns, speaking for t b e homeowneni, called for a moratorium on building permits to avoid a "hodge podge of commercial developme.1l." City planning ct;rector Ken Reynolds agreed that perhaps "there was too much ·commercial land there," which was leadi ng to piecemeal developmenL Homeowners and councilmen agreed that a unifled. development would · be beneficial, but not :separate developme-.it on small parcels. Reynolds, however, pointed out that the city could do little about the type of development except to change the zoning. Russ Rocket Explodes WASHINGTON (AP) -'Ille e1pl06.ion ol a huge Soviet rocket on ll! .launch pad may have set RusSlan efforts to land a man on' the moon back two years and ~lppled its manned space program. DAILY PILOT Roli11f N. Ylttl rrn!Ot11t M PubUNlfr J1c• II:. Curl:T Vici ,,nklf11t .and G""'r Ml""°" th111111 K11vil Edi Kit lhlt'l'll f A. Murphl111 M11111lnt EOlltit .Allt1rt W. 10+11 Auod .,• IEd!!or H1fltl11tff11 h ecll Offke Jot 511. Str11 t o'clock tonight in the city council chamb&rs. LoCated on the south side of Slater Avenue. approximately 660 feet east of Gothard Street, the property is preiently .zoned for light industrial uses. The develOpers, Cactiflor Inc. Of Para· mount, however wouJd like to establish a mobile home ·park.ai that location, whJch requires a zone change to office-pt'I> resstonal ·uses. · Green allegedly was offered $4,000 by William New, 66, o{ Phoenix, Ariz. to use his influence jn allowing construction or the trailer park. · No eohnedlon between New and the CaclifKr · firm has been reported by pobc~ fuvesligatlng the case. · When the. alleged bribe attempt was detectives and cl;iarged witb hfo count.a ,di~ 19 police, New was arrested by ol atleniptlng to bribe a public olflC!al. In placing their requed: for a !one chanJe before the planning oonuni11Jon, the devetopei'1 sald the property baa been dormant· for several years with· no pt'I> spiels Of anY near future industrial development. If zoned to the new use, the developers claim ,. the, property would be lrn- .mediately put to good use. At Tuesday's meeting, plaMing com· mission members will also consider ap- t>rovlil ol an addi tion to a day care nursery and pre-:sc:bool and a temporary banking facility. Freeivay Route W ouM Wipe Out School Facility Mike Brick, superintendent of the Fruntain V"alley School District, today in· dicated that the future Huntington Beach Freeway may be on A direct col- llsion course with the district ad· ministration's headquarters unless a new rou te ls found. The administration facility . built In 1968 at a oost of '27~.000. is located at 1 Lighthouse Lane, near the intersection of Talbert Aveiiue and NeWlancl Street. It houses offices. maintenance facilities and the district's film and curriculum library. Brick said con~uctlon of the frteway is about nine years away. Trustees are still hopefQI the route·might be changed, he added. If it is not. the free\\·ay, which roughly parallels Belch .Boulevard , will take out the entire complelt", since a cloverleaf has been planned for that locaUou, Brick said. School ·officials said they had no idea that .the freeway would pose any pro- blems to the !ad.Uty when they plaMcd it. . No Deal • ~~l~ G r~k. ~~t":r~, ~the~ lJo":_fl·~~-B_eac~ ~n:?ol~~.5!1 1y Jlll:IWU).,, N~ ,tri-..., •an AmlCus CUriae, a frlend ·the public. Rulinp ~ tht cases thus far • In qi.on veraua i/,,-;::Jty of ~nti. Gruz • . ' ..... ..., ""' lflJt flt the court ~ • appear to have *" coalradlctory. the city clahned t.hat Jhere was 'In lmpJled The quesUon ot'"' ;ublic access . to· 'Iht:"a}.lorney gelieraJ aclually wilJ be ' In Dietz versUs "King In Mendocli>o 'pubUc ldediQBtion by use for mqre •lilwt California tidelands _ such as thost at rePresentlhg the peoplf) or Callromia in County, a dlvislon of the District Court of five yfrl•otjst~ps leadiJlg dc>wn 'cUl.t lo . • fl&hling.for acceu to bu.ndre<k-of-milu Appeal reversed--the Superior Court, and the ~h; • - --· Salt 'CieeY and'-the i'tst of Orange County of state Udelands for a population that ruled that a long history .of public usage Thisjwas further complicated by ~n old -will be ·Weighed by the St.ate sUpreme sn,>ws greater daJly. . of a road. across private property It.gal Joughie-the whereabouts ff-the Court next year. · · Appearin'g before the commission, Ja'y established public right to keep using the mean hJgh tide line. ~:""• Tht .. ~IO Lan d 11 Commissl"!' llas L. Sf/ave~n,, asslstanl aUomey g-al, road c "' · The tlcy said the Ude u.e )yis at· !he autharilid lht aUoniey general to Fricftiy• said ·the cues befoi'e the ®rt The Navarro Beach Rciad bad proVided ba6e. ot the cliff 'Jbe ,~ainUU Ii.Iii &t wu rtJl~resenl .. · L it • befor.e ~ .state's . ~ ••are of sta.tewide\~ignWcaoce and wUJ ,access foe more than JOO yeaxa arid was w1terwai-d o1 the clif hue .and ~ the uu 'set very 'Jmportant precedentS.'' ' the only way to the beach in that vicinity. beach was privately owned ' - The attorney general's omce ·will enter The appealed cases t~ be considered b;'.. The . landowner had it blocked to ~ The frial court ruled ~t there: was the important proceeding -the court the court both involve Udeland access for pubhc. The pppellate court unblock~ ~L . dedlc~~on. by impllcauo11. It divls~ or Beach M-0t}ter Held as Home ' Said Pigsty A Huntftl8ton Beach mother was ar- rested Monday afternoon' on felony child neglect chatge:s after officen alleged Ult)" fOiibd ~btr ·borne unfit for human lulblt.llol!. ' i\rreatiid was Mrs. Lilyann Payne, 42. a draftsman fh Santa Ana computer finn, who was lving alone with her 13- y,ear~ld 8CX1 and 16-year-old daughter at 720 14th St., Huntington Beach. · Offtctrs · first went to her home on a routine matter when they entered and found, acarding 1o their report: · -Trash three to slJ:-inches thick spttld OVft the living room floor. -Two to foUr inches of animal defeca-. lion throughout the house. . -Rotten newspal>'r• stacked on the noan;d,ad mice, two inches of rot inside the refrigerator, dangerous knives and sharp tln cans laying about the ldtchen. -No hot. water and stagnant water in u; .. to11er. · Both children were turned. over to juvinlle authorities, while Mn. Payne WU f;eed Oil $1,250 bail. t 1 She iJ expected to be arraigned on the felony chikt neglect chargea this week in w~ Orange County Muni<ipal Cool\ lo Westminster. Se1·vice Station P«;lrmit Use Plan O~'d-.~y Beach • ~ clcy code amendment requiring uae pennJta for. tienice stations in com~ munlty ,bw:iriess districts ~as appro.ved Monday nigh! by Ille Hunlinglon Beach City C:ouncll. Councilmen queried Planning DireCtor Ken Reynolds on progreu toward architectural control of gaaollne stations and were told that the Plaru:Ung Com- miaslon was "leaning that way and would a_.epreciate an expression from the coUn- cU." Reynolds said most oil companies were plaru1lng suburban type staUons with roof lines in contrast to the former square boi: type of configuration. Councilmen also approved a zone change from industrial use to com- mercial for eight acres of properly at the northwest corner of F.dinger Avenue and Gothard Street adjoining Golden West College. John A. Murdy, represetlting Freeway Industrial Park told councilman a la rge chain retail firm was planning to build on the property. Councilmen were concerned about traf. fie flow in the area which now includes a massive retail fumiture store. adjoining Huntington Cent~r. They were assured·~y Murdy that his finn would cooperate in any street realignments found necessary. Traffic Signals OK'd For Beach Inter sec tion Traffic light! for Indianapolis and Yorktown avenues \\'here they Intersect Brookhurst Street "'·ere approved Monday night by the Huntington Beach City Council. City Clerk Paul Jones was authorized by the council to seek bids !rom com- panies for the work to begin as soon as possible. Estimated cost Is $50,000. on Pay Repair Work Scheduled · On High SchoolBuildins Pasadena architects Neptune and When his fellow board members balked Thomas have been hired by the Hun· at spending, the $3 mllllon req':lir~ to , llngton Union High School District board construct a new bullding, Riha! said if ot trustees to plan structural rehabillta. any work is to be undertaken on the lion of an old building for earthquake building .it s;tlould at least make it com· safely. • parable to ~r l>Wld1ngs on o~~ cam- 'fhe building, which includes the puses. ' • auditorium and llQDle classrooms on the ~ "If we're , going to do an>:tJting over Huntington Beach li!gb School camplli, ls . there at all, we .should do it 111 a~ once," · one of the oldest tn the district and has · he said. been declared. unsaf2 by state sctool of· Joe Thomas. one of the architectural ficlals in the event an earthquake should firm representatives, explained that such occur. complete rehabilitation "would cost more Trustees have S.pporlioneil ·$r million money than tearing down the old building from a $9.5 million bond election schedu l-and building a new one." ed for February to the building 's renova-Ribal later made a motion to the effect lion. that the building be used for ad- Doubts: about the whole project were ministrative purposes and that the railed Thursday by Tntslee Joseph JUbal, million dollars be applied toward con· who said that the buUding only appeals to slruction or a new school. people nostalgically and that it should be Administrative cami)us buildings a~ tom down. parently do not come under jurisdiction He suggested that a new building be of th'! Field Act, which requires certain constructed in Jts place which would be earthquake safety standards of classroom more Jlexible for modem educational buildings, Riha! indicated . purpo:ses. His mOtlon died for lack or a second. Newport Yacht Concerto Winner of La Paz Race By NORMAN R. ANDERSON Of tlll Dl>ltt l'llff St•tl Two · Newport Harbor boats, both Columbia 57s, have captured top laurels in lhe 3rd annual Lopg Bach to La Pu yacht rve. -:. John J Hall's Concerto from Newport Harbot•Yacht Club ii overall corrected time wtnner and flrst tn Class A, with Dorothy 0, akJppered by R o b e r t Beauchamp from NHYC, secoOd overall and second in Clail ·A. 1 It's the second~ Pa'z·race victory for Hall. He was firs\ in Claaa ·A in 1967 when ~ skli!Pered Slmooo. , . . Third overall ls Class D boat, Aquarius, an Erlcaon 35, Sklp~· by John Holiday of LOn1. Beach Yacht e tub, which was rirst ln 11' class. • CIUs A and aau-9 boats took most or the bOOOrs. Wlndwttrd Pus.age, 73-foot ketch was first to flnlsh Saturday morn- ing, but wound up, because of lime it had to 1ive away, as only fourth in class and ninth overall. BJ8Ckfin, another 73-foof ketth which folk>wed Passage across the line about an hou.r later, took third in class and seventh overall. Fourth and fi(th places overall were taken by two clasS D boats, Dona J., from CYC, second in class and L'Allegro1 Richmond Yacht Club, 3rd in class. Three boats, all Class D, v.•ere unreported this morning, according to Carroll Hudson of Newport Beach "'ho is 1noniloring radio reports frnm Vector 'at La Paz. They were l\falobi, Posada Manana 11 and Al Viento. Trophy presentations will take place tonight at the Los Arcos Hotel in La Paz. The race up the Baja California coast, according to reports, was a rough one, with winds forcing a 'taeking duel Today in the La Paz harbor, wind! were reported blowing at 30 knots and most boats were putting out extra anchors.., Resufii in class and overall: ' CLASS A Conc;erto, I·I ; Dorothy 0, 2-2 ; Blacldin, 3-7; Windwar~ Passage, 4-9; Rascal, 5·22. CLASS B Bohemii, 1·10; Charisma, 2·12 ; Ariana, 3:13: Pantera. 4-14 ; Irish Mist, 5-16; Serapis, 6·17; Vector, 7·19; Robon Ill, 8- 21. CLASS C Tanqueray, l~; Pericus, U ; Isobar, 3- 11 ; Alerion, 4·15; Deblnda JV, S-18; Severn, 6-20; La Prensa. 7. CLASS.O Aquarius; 1-3: Dona J., 2-4 ; L'Allegro, 3-S. From P .. e 1 DISTRICT ... regard to sex education. Others Indicated a need for discuss.ion about ·use of drugs on campus,. free speech, new approaches to instruction and implications o( the Education Code. Said one parent. •·r encourage you to establish aod maintain communication with voters, students and parents and non-parents. Th ere are many classes of citizens, lhere are many views or educa· tion. All of them need to know, eaCh class in its own context. I deem il a wise ex· penditure or district funds to keep ~ citizens informed." the DiJttict Court of App..a ieVii'Mll: !he superlorj court. · : ·: .~ The J*isliions of the appellate 'COUrt jw;Uces :a1 ppear to have been tat ·Odds a!~ . the c a s es had Hniwrtant dissimll:•f1Ues. . - ' The State Supreme Court decision to bear the 'two matters in effect-removes tbe appellate court finclings:·from the book. The ~tate Supreme Court DOW will set the ire«dent, if the matter ends !here •n<I pol iii.~ .Q.S. SllllffiD< Court. Jmplicallona could 'be vast to surfer~. to corporate land owners, to publlc agen· cies, to people in general. , .... The legal proceedings, attorney11 cbn· cede, might range to broader' lSsues. These ~&1\1 be property ·rights l\><och ownership) :\<e:r~ the ~lie ~ to pereh on pdvale bejcb. , ·I In oUter· ;,ords . if -the property ctw9er has been a 'good guy and Jet pedpJe \lie his beach has. he now Jost any 'IUture right tO deny them the beach. There is the practical matter too ol this ls.sue forcing owners of beach to rus.h into the task of fencing it or guarding it to prevent losing easement to the public. This has probably already happened to some extent 'because of the Deitz vs. JOng case. · The State Supreme Court procedure will doubtless have a bearing on Orange County's own Salt Creek Road case. William Wilcoxen, Laguna Beach at- torney, is fighting to overturn aban- donment of the road by county supervisors (March 1968) to the Laguna Niguel Corporation which owns the · sur· rouildlng property and plans · pr!Vate development. A spokesman for the state attorney general said that 'Wilcoxen has been I~ vited to make suggestions to that office in the matter pencllng before. the State Supreme Court. • : . The matter wilt probably be argued 111 January but a decision Is probably several months away -well into 1970. Durin11: the Friday meeting of the State Lands Commission, Houston I. Flournoy, state controller and chairman or the com• mission, said it ~ould be represented b)' the attorney geoeral's ofDce "to prqtect the public interest." . Shavelson said the attorney general\11 office intends "to preserve as mwh. public beach area as possible and tel: avoid fencing off of beaches." .. The abandonment of Salt Creek Road touched off an uproar that began as a rumble. · The road abandonment wa,, brought In- to sharp public focus in December ·during a hearing in Newport Beach of the Assembly Subcommittee on Beaches and Conservation. Mrs. Helen Keeley. former Laguna Beach vice mayor, testified at the time: "With this piecemeal abandonment of Salt Creek Road, it appears to me .. that the Orange County Board of Supervisors and lhe Orange County Road Department have totally disregarded the needs of th.I; public by totally disregarding the coun· ty's own Master Plan for Shoreline Development." Wilcoxen later took the county and the Laguna Niguel Corporation to court in an attempt -slill going on -to overturn the abandonment or the road loop, once part of Coast Highway. Supervisor• since have apprnved a $1 million allocation of tax funds for the purpose of beach acquisition. Negotia- tions are under way by the county to gain some type of access in the Salt Creek area. Also, William Penn Mott, stale director of beaches and parks, has held preliminary discussions .,.:ith another 1arge landowner. the Irvine Company. about some type publle access and use of the corporation's beaches between Lagu. na Beach and Corona del Mar. M1l'fi11t Adlr1111 P.O. 111 7t0, tl4~1 Ottlitt Offfttt titwllff Sl1c11 . ~111 \V.11 .. 1w sou1 ... u • (Ollt Mew: .UO Wet! Sty llrttl L.llllN 111(.fll 22J .. ~ ..... ,_ Extra Meetings Fr ee Service See tlie largest selection of Spanish and Mediterranean Dini ng Room groups. DAU,.'P ,ILOr, Wllfl "ftlefil h tomb ..... "" Hll'llll·l"l'Ufo. II ..,Dll..,,.G e.11• t•trM Sufi. llitr Ill 1"3'tr1l1 Mllkoftl fer """rlllf'-:t l ffdl. F-lffft Vflltt. (._1t Mtw. NI• WI StHfl ..0 L ........ INC.fl. '*"' """" .... •et*"! rdl!lom. Or•• (a.II 1"11,111,11-'~ Qfnfltllf ..,1t11i,,. '"Ill• •• , ., 2111 Wftl ll11CN S/Yt , "''"'l'r•1 Bff<ll. -.. \'ttt.I Aft' Mrfff, Co.t• Mflf, ''"'"',.. 1nc1 .c2.c121 "-• w..,...,...c..1 140.1220 Ctenffld .,..,,.., '42·S67a C-ft.111, 1 .... °'""" ~"" ,. .... lo"'"" C:Ol'l'H~\o Ne "''" • 1 et •t •· u111••••- .,.,.,111 IMl!f;t • ....... tll1-11!' ""'''" -1 till •PIOllillcff ,,,_ ~WI Ptl"''tlltoll et , .. ,,.tlll ..... ,,. """' (ltH lllCIJ' ... M <lli II ,,j,.,.,..,,, 111.-dl t lld Ct•l.t Ni,,,_, ('.1llll•~I• ~•tllf'~' t• L' l t,.ltr U OO IO'IOMl\fY1ltVtTllll1f)4 l'IW.fl!~>yj ltllll'-'f MiOM I-. 12.Clt ,...,.r11J¥, '"' ' ~ ~1 to pay extra moo+!y to tnthibtrs' Or \he West Orange"' County \\'ater Board for attendance at llpttlal meetings was rtjected Monday nlght by tbe Huntlngt<r.1 Beach City Council. The Water Board wa.& asking $50 p@f member for attendance a~ meetings of other bodie1 U dttmtd necessary by the board. Board members are m1de up of two City councilmen each from Hun- tin1ton Beach. Garden G r o v e , Westminster and Stal Beach. City Clerk Paul Jones also serves as secretary to the "'atcr board, but would not have been inrJudtd In th• proposal. CoUncllman l{enry Kaufman asked the ~·attt board lo explore other'mcthodl - such 11$ adjourning 11 reiu111r meeting to a specific place -to rotnpensalc. 1Jones sald Ilic. proposal was pro1npted by ,a request that Water Board members attend a crucial meeting or the Orange County l\1uniclpal Water District. "\\'e simply though! they ought 1o be paid foe attending such a meeting," said Ja.1es. l\tayor Jack Green opposed the measure. requesting a tighter resolution, not allowing an open number of meeUne1, be: formed. Councilmen Ted Bartlett and George l\1cCracken, the ci1y·s representati ves on the \\'&ter board. abstaf.1ed from vollng. All five of the other councilmen rejetted the request. After the ltnglhy discussion Coun- cil n:i•n Donald Shipley wryly commen ted, "My colleagues on tl1ls board can vote us ir.10 $10 mll lllln tn deb t In ten minute& and \\'C spend a·.1 hour nn $50." "I have the s31nc problcr.: 11.I home," chlp~d in Bartlett. ' AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY fo r th e HOLIDAYS ·1 I , ' ' • • . • . • .. ., ,. " ~ " -- • . TutsdO'f, N"r-·11, i%9, H DAil'/ PllOT -i ... ' .• . ' . ,.. .· .... ' • • i • , u• " •I .. -s~n ate <fliv1aeil· :. · ... ~ 7 • .. . -• ' ,,. • ' • \ • • ~~Tri~ 1e Fa1.111Iy ;~. H s p )Uer .. T111 je$' UPI, .. .., .... 'I ' ! ; ., • • ' ~ • c • ,.,. ..J *• , • , , ~ • I 4 t .,. _ () e~.'t . f. ,;;~~;I ····· :n····· ····ou lrma. .,,1u .1i ......... . ., • ~ "• • i ~ ~ • "} • • l.. *. . . ... ~ .. ' ,~ l t ., ·For H~ynsw~,.th . .. , f • '"" .... ., ~; ' ... '• .' 1.1 ' '.' .. • ~"~ From Wl!'f. ~ · " , _alcatea !f!OY CCUJd:'!"l'be ~;(! t\J< WASHINGTO!j-1Sei/;Mliie'GraVtl (D-vOle w"°"laken 'l1lilild"1 at·~y, , '1Q)uj), saJd today hlfll ....,••to .... to .,j!e Ill~·-~-. W·•O ;,;nllrm the Supr0me eoail~t1m'o1 'li;o.~~'cooc ' ~ Jud&oClementF llaYi!lwOrtli.Jr ' ··'-'.tbif.tlll'sr-"~'' · • ·:a 4i4it ... fllete~noq~abo\!l,l~"·l!e .told ·~~~~·111e~.1'f;';;f;,i.e I repor\er', ...: ' ~ · ' -;.;r,· :-~".'r;"":: ·'~ 1' Jjls•tate~~J..-lieman · -t;~;~lon'~~·~d be t Aiaociated Pt$ ~.of~ ... ...1.. who for M Y1 ~-~~. ,, · • , • 11a .. ·~:apub~ ·~ . 'l'befe :weie \¥1i:.i :tllil'll wiilte ·uoq, ~ bt ~-"" lllrff .H,_......_, .. t.u ~ljp)'.\lra'.gliinllg ...Nofhw ~ ~ '~ .,.~ilo • ,,:;:::--r-. • I .... I •Ji. j ,[ < ~ ·~""Ml 1,-llliJ. ~ .wed -'J'. . .;..Uon ;!"$;;' wn1.:i.,.~·~a:.!'_ ..f_· ft.Otlo~;)oiie of !Of~la<~ bGl'lie lilcl ...:"' ~ • nine GoP .-.:.":~lit ~8tl11 has in Ibo~ ~ ....... ~r ,wtiq -not~ up blllnWd.'sald.Jh&.pressure wi!!O ~lied.·. • • .. . , he, i. i<!Ung-to '1iOIO' f<ir liaynallorth is Sen.llomUL.Hruska(R·Neb.),Jeader "prtlty he&vy 1>4Pded." Sen. Gordon of ~Uon I~ .. b . lbe All~. (~o.), reported_~i!;mfl~ had Haynsworth nomlnollon fllbt,· ~ ihlfted, from onU'llaynswono ·to p~ tod8¥ 11111 1he ,llbowdown ~ oo con-Haynsworth within a >Jee~. . .•• firmaUon \'I }lut off until Mohday. 'J'11e·voter senUment may haV;e+res1:1lled Hruska aald iteV,J'.aJ'senato;ra who want rtom. •~Br.8". toolS cam~gn revealed to. vole on' whtlb<r lla)'llelWOrlb shoilld l'<CenUy , !iY Clark M0Uenhofl; ;deputy serve .,on , q»e SUpreme Court 1.bipd ln· counsel to the Pre!Jident. MoUenhoff•said • · • • •• · -• .. thi!'\Yhile Houie w.S liying to·euc11 •ul" , . port from chambers of commerce, trade R k t . D ' "l asaoclaUCllS. and local bar assoelallon& as .ac ·e s~ r...eri . well aa oll>v __ .... efort.lo offset •• _ ... . ·' .: ~tt_Haynsworth .. eressqre from la~r war Effort, orpnlzaUons and other facUons. · -· · -Reag·an· Cb.ides - T.HE KENNEDY CLAN ..:. Joseph P. Kennedy, patria;ch o! one of America's most influential families posed, surrounded by his family, for this Nov. 9, 1960, photo taken shorUy after his sOn, John, was elect- Ed 1F.'sident. Standing froin left are Mrs. Robert Keooedy ; Stephe"n Smith_ and· Jean Smith, a daughter; the late President; .the late Robert Kenn~y; Mrs. Patricia Lawford, a daughter (the Lawfords have since been divorced•);.Sargent Sl!river; Mrs. Edward Kenn,edy, and Peter . Lawford~ .Seated from left are Eunice Shriver, ·& daughter: Mr. and Mrs. ·Joseph P. Kennedy; Mrs. Jacqueliiie Kennedy, and · Edward ... SaysDiplo~t Sta te Coverage WASHINGTON (UPI) -· ·A ·U.S. , deiplomat stationed to Saigon tesUIJed to-By News Medi& t Kennedy. ' day that the Vietnam -w.l dfort bl ~ ' . Charges Pending On 'Vegas Night' In.County 'Church . . c...t:len Grove police today continued l~gation into an alleged "Las Veg~~ ~~~ g3mbling party at St. Callistus Citlf>lj:tCliw-ch and indicated both felony and,.nliid~or charges will be filed "Jatlr;tOdaY or early· tomorrow." .fiWe'f! . into the fina( spg.es of our ~-~.:· sAid Sgt. Wayne Wilson, the seniOroinftsUgat'll' who led eighf offi cers in °tbei.S!Diday niiht raid. on St. Callistus I• • ' Catholic Church. "We'll soon have a list of naines for the press from among those we)e trlterviewed." ' 1 tf..nveiled for t.Qe p~ess Monday wa~ a rjcbly ~varied assortm~nt of gaming devices: au alleg&l\y in full swing when W.illOD.'s,.force burst into. lhe cQurch hall ' . ' andt~ult.:1-purpose room .. .Wl1aoo said nearly SOO persons were p1iyiDg black jack. poker, ,chuck-a·Juck arid'! bingQ. "Quite a number of parishioners were involved in two or thne.cra'p games," Wilson said. Charges being review~ by th~ in- vestJt:aters ·tqclur:le· gambl~ng, eonsp1:acy to,Cooduct.gambling gnd liquor .law viola~ tioits. ·'l;'wo· large bars had been· set up near 1t&e ~gll!lllng tables and were in o~ation at the time of the raid . Jiivestigators today alleged that pr()o feni.OM.l ga!f!b)ers organized the churc~ galherlrig "'1111s was no church bazaar, said .s~ Wnson,. "a}I 'this needed was a few·8frls in mini-skirts and you had a Las Vegas -operation." .. officers sa id church ofhc1als were warned a year ago to refrain f~om ootdlli«' 1,fund raising event on the ltnes or Sdnday night's even~. omCers said they were alerted to ~he gam~g by a tip from an anonymous 1n- tomlant. ' . : HQmeowneril Eye MORE SADNESS -After attending mass early today, Mrs. Rose Kennedy descends steps of St. Francis Xavie'r ChurCh in Hyannis, Mass., with.aid of her driver, .Frank.~unders •. A few hpurs la~r. h~r husband, Joseph P. Kennedy, died. . . . Ap:'irtmeµi J. a. µs From Page 1 KENNEDY.Dias Ar 81 l n ~.a :ye. ~b. dren -lncluding·lhree of'his foUMOnS... W.ar If. H~ wl:h :a: transferred lo his PiansJ~,~~roposed·~-rqui!9~ apart· di~ violently. s~cond son, Jack. rneot'OOID•. ~r tile ~ M~ €oun· Assassins killed sons President 'John F. He opened his purse to Jack, who· won~ a ITY; Club ~Wttl ··bct ex·pJor~t Vte ne.xt Kennedy and Sen. Robert F, Kennedy' <D· race for the U.S. House and later for the ~pf tjie M~sa Ye.nle ~ne:s N.Y.), who Was running for the PrEJSlden· Senate before becoming President. A~atton· at 7:30 p.m. tsflY in cy in 1968. A 'third son, Joseph Jr., was Kennedy was used to having his own D~lilgh School'&.f ~. 'j~ killed in World :War II. way. He was a loner in. the world of n~ .. ~.....-..ta'uves .. .rr:,:; l l.~T la·n.d Sc . Ed '~ M K edy ([).M ) b d ni hi If 'th • ...,..~ of ta Cl 1 . n. W9''" • enn , ass. • nance, never. ur e ng mse w1 C<¥"• [)(welopmi!l\t·COIP!JI'• · , ar ,' his ·Jooe su~iving son, is considered a porate ties. the' firm ·tha.t. ,wUl ~ .the auxury potential candidate . for · the presidency. He never could quJte live down rumors apaftments, Will ~--.P"fent .. xl•t · f1!e. However. his political tuture was dimmed a tilg ·hunk of his vaSt foi1une came from ~·~,;W~·meni¥. .ol · , .city after .. Mary "' l(op<chne, 28-year,old illegal liquor traUic toward the end of ~· • t ' ~ • ~ n for' 'Washlniton secretary 'and former cam· prohlbitlori. !J'be'pia1\'for.,Vfsta del • ge . ' '.patgo .,worker ·for Ro\Jerl Kennedy, died Actually, he made a hefty profit in .a ~&of twO:and·~ ~ . Y residen-when a car driven by the senator went off . quick In-and-out inve'sbnent in Lfbby-~cts to .a mWti le residential a.. 'btld&C: on· •Chaj)pl'quiddlck ISland in Owfiris·Ford . Glass Co. stock duiing a 1IMI Ol)mples would be built on 40 acres mid.Juiy · 198$. pel rteiod IWheff! lhe publickin~a~yhi ~.lle~~d · Id · I d I ( ··The eldest Kennedy al·so leaves h1·s P a & ass 1rm was ma 5 W 511. Y IN\" o£14nd,,whichwoo lf!C\l .e e~~acreso u 1 ctaU fth alofpro-t..i-and-lagoons. widow. Rose, 79, itnd fQ.W' daught.er!!, es n expe on o e repe -.J~bets' of the Mesa , Verd c Mrs. Sargent Shriver, (Eunice)o:,wlfe of hiblUon. ~Wften Association 11.ave not yet the ambassador to France. Mrs. Patricia But his reaJly big proOts came after ~ a stand on the Vista <!ti Lago Lawlor~, iormer 'Wile of aqar "'ter rtpOal , because he 1'S~ been l/:tlP'ted ~'. The assoeJaUon includes ap-La-a, Mn. Si.ph<D Sntlth (Jean) lild <nOliili to get~~· · '!lslrlbli ip,lor ely one'Slxth of the 3,000 homes Rosemary ,Kepnedy w"" Is mtntally jbree ol J!ritain ,• biggest dis~llers.,Jle .•. . -"~•·n_ : im1>9rted their liquor legally under ~..,.,..Verde area. ~and in~ Mld.'Y~tem <.'OnV"1!· I •fmecticlnal" ucenses and had wareh~s • ' .~~with···~ al •his :w\nttt· -full of gin and S<04ch ready tO go .wlien : D , hlllll<1in Palm )Jellch; fljl .. J n 11611 ~ PJ<>lliblllon ended. · • T.tuek plocks Ttaff1c )'«If.' '1lblei!ile,M1T··ruf<Mf a braln Kenn<d.Y w" al devotid to hli' riife pOll ', t;i .> . d · . .h • ilJ8S"). .. v9'aJ heart ~!jaclls Ind, Oil ~f!ghlers IS ~e WU to htJ -One f~/ 4:4111. ()II')· -:; IA••ti.cic. ' .'Maren S, 1111'1,. a llellrt~ 'block' .f.or which · ~tti, Kaill1-., ,widow .-c!l~· .. ,R. trlfler'lOlilfd with apltll!liv~ 1'Cik:nifed be twice. WU given: o~gtn. Cavendish, a British nobleman, was m !be Clrqulnez Bridge Tueoday, block· Kennedy, Born S.pt. 6, 1818,ln East kll>eiI In a private plane crash near Pri· tng an 10Uthbound traffic on lnter&tate 80 Boston, had willed a p!:!llticatfcareer fQr vu,· France, while Dying tO join her for\nearly an hour. his eldest son, Joe Jr.1 ioho died in World father on the Riviera. ' ' ' . Prisoners to Get Chl'istmas Gifts, '-. Hanoi Promises TOKYO (UPI) -U.S. ai nnen being held prisone~s in North Vietnam will tie permitted to ,recei ve Ch'rlstmas1 pa'ckages from their faniilies, the-H86oi goverjl. ment announcer:! Tuesday. ' TP,e brie~ annpuncement ~op.dfast .ft)r the ' Vietnam Ne\tia Agenct 1 C"M') ahtl rnonitored here saii:!: · · "On the ~i\111 o(Jhe J~·ChrlllJUo, ihe D.R'.V.N. (De'llOC'lllC 111ii!ublle'of Vietnam) general departmeiit io£',PQJts and 'telecommunications 'aW:tea: to transfer gifts to captured· AmerlCan aimren In ·North Vietna'm Jro'r;n' their familles. · '' "The period of transfer ·of theSe gifts will .last from ·Dec. I· to 'r>ec.;3t,•19,69." Ttie broadcast said the ~· sbOUld be sent , accori:ling · ·to "the "'procedUres already stlpUlated on previous . OC· casions." .; Several groups or wlves or Arriertcan servicemen , missing in Vietnam" have travelled to Paria 10 S:sk Nort)i Vl!,t· namese . del2gates ,.to the peac" talks whether their hl!sbands were captured and being held prisoner. North Vietnam ri!peatedly has r~!used'to make,av~ilable a full list of prisoners. , The women whO visited the ·NOrth Viet- namese in Paris were told queries would be made abo\lt tl:eir husj>ands and replies to their quest!Ons · m·aue·a to them at home. ( Israeli Bombers Strike Milita1·y Targets in Egypt By Ublted Pre•• InternaUonal underml.qed by a $150 mllliOn :a ·year cut· sACRAMENro (AP)·_ G~v. Reagan rency black market run ~f .· M_~lim said today Cali!ornJa television editors money manipulators from India., and ~per writers had allowed their Robert R. Parker told the Sehate per-.:ina.l'"' optnlona to iqfluence their pennailent investigating, ~1*ee coverage of tfirn. ~ . ' h b nks rt 1-At a news coftference, Reagan told t at U.S. a • Ame cans in ". .. tum Capitol reporiers·that·he bad no criticism and GI deserters hiding out Jn saleon, "of you at· the working Jev.el." participate tn the racket'which ,has ~ ~l,!t .be addec!. "l don't th~ any or you described by some as a billion l:Jolllr wouJd want to deny.'' .that what appears operation. · on. the air is sometimes ''not as you ....... It." • . .. Parker was an embassy attache and "i;".t~ · assistant director of the U.S. aid program. :M .for newspapers, 'Reagan said, ") think in the whole field of wbat Is n01y in Vietnam until last. mor:i~. He _ 8,1.0 referrt.d to is obJectlte r~rtfi:lg, the worked under U.S. A m.b a·s a a do r writer's atutude:~ -~~ · the Ells,-:ortli Bunker ; tq ·a ' s~I~-ui;-rewriter's at1ltude1 feflfteied· in the artl- vesUgatlon of , black htatket· currency 'e~~,(o~1l~ ~·~ ~·~e the manlpulaUon. -· .. · .. .1~.ll bli nnt,n~ws eo••erencc.in "'Black marketeers arid 'lllldi rd~ nMrl~~tb'retWff~r 1'' · ~f""··i• chirigerl have built a rackeC .i>hidi ·Jia. A newmnan ukecl Whal he 11\ought of ~ e§t1"1ated overall as nmpin& ·o'Ver VJ~ Presld~t~ SPlrO T. Ai-new' s , $150 million a year in Vletnam, .. Parker crjticlsm of coVerqe ~·President Nix-on's Vietnam ~ ·~f the television testified. networks. Agnew . sltld oom·mentators " ... They 'create an atm\)Sphere or U~ crlUclzed the Pres,ide!lt·~ ~~ch inl'· legality and fraud, lmmoraU(y. ' ind meijiately· after he' aavf: it. cynlcl~ ... give aid and comfort to'tbt "'Reagan said 'that television fietworlt chief!: themselves had "discoverCd newi enemy. They . undermine wfiat we aie cOyer:age was bi'ased and "they were 'geC. trying to achieve· in Vietnam." 't{Qg ; fl!fs impression from -_ the vieWcr~ Parker said Indlaq .Y.usll{ns run . tbe thetnseJves." He s"aid he had dis~ov~red racke$ and are so well org'an1zed they this in an article in the magazine T'l have a "legal services" 'department Guide. · 1 ... L thiDk the "vi~ Pf!aident made a. very wliich promptly pays the One of any valid polnt in ~is request for rairness," hJ money changer caught, and sets him aakl. · ,. back up in buslne85. · · · Asktd about· California coverage cf P8!ket wa! the Brit wltneas at ·ttte hin)sel(, Reagap .-aid, "I woulct ~pve t' hearing which climaxes a five-month say._thill .. You~ iJt·the worki~ level. Np subcommittee investigation. Cfltlclsm. You get your slOry ·ai)d facts 8'Jd !Om and senil it in. But I doubt U any Accor'dng t0 -PBiker, the· Vietnmµ 'cllr· ~ 'oJ, y'Qu' here wants to derty that Once it rency black market uses ~tiamed ll~~f'the .news ·lfurea~. certairl thingi bank accounts in the Untied States, ac:-taH place· In-the editing and many times · counts in Hong Kong and m!M)f!Y ll)Vaps u,, what appears ' on the air is not the wai Saigon to reap profits from ~·dlfier~ you reparted It." - between the official and black ,market He singled out an incident that oc~ rates of exchange for U.S. dollar~ and curred duting his inaugural ceremony in Vietnamese piasters. '. , 11167 when he remarked to Sen. Geord "The government's offlcUll~rat,.is tJS Murphy,. (~f.), Ji, fellow former aC. piasters to a dollar,'1 Parker j/ld. "But tor, ''Well, here we are on the late show th bl k " t d 11· · -'h t agaiil .. George." . , J:1ast ~a;~~~.~' a 0 ar wr"~' •r . ""'(ou ~t ~film of the senator kind q} d<iubl'!I ~ver b~ the laughing ' at llf,I reinark. He enjoyta it. Now helw do yop explain a network that deliberately edited Israeli bombers late today •lr\I•~ R El ted' out the shot of him' lautihlng anl Egyptian "military objecJ.tves'' .. In lil\e . ogerS , ec . substituting a,sho~.of ... him with a scowl o' central sector of the Suei: Canal for more his face IP\d' tlien , (oJd" ~ audienc' than an hour, an anny spokesman re-GOP· Cha~~an blunUy thaf.1Jte *".Jatgf ?~'t, amusel parted .in Tel Avlv.rtsraeli and JM'danian ~ u..u.a 6y my remarks and lmphed ·natlonwid• artillery also fought duels acrOSB "the , ·• .-that he and l ;were · at ockb with eac ll Jordan Rtver. ' , ' ' ' .Thom's c. J:«>gers of Nevqiort ~h. ~ Other." · ' 1 The spokesman said all Israeli planes 1itld developer and San Juan ranchel-, ~Asked the· name Of · the network, returned safely to base but gave. no other was elected chairman of the Republican Reagan said, 11CBS." , I details. There was no Indication the rald Central Committee of Orange County As for the newspapers, Reagan sail was part of the expected 1srl\,eli retal~-MOnday night at the ,~gulJt..riieetlna of ~ef still lnslst,h~ .on~e said, "lf you'~ lion for the F.gyptlan fr~an attack on tbe 25-member board. . , • -a one re'dwOOd, you~ve seen them all.' two Israeli ships in Ettat HarbOr Sundat , Rogers, 4.5, a member ur the Central Reagan said he never said It. • and a senior Israeli military official Ind!·· Committee for the past four years, u:-The governor said tha~ when he sa* cated Israel would hold,Jordap re5P,1?n-;ceeds David L. James, transferred to the rum of the ln,WIW'al he felt "thi sible for that Los Angeles by his firm, ~-·~, Same way 1. felt when I was back The ihellJng was reported ~n .th,rJU?.k· ~ James WtU'ftmAfn on &.· """"'· 1 Hollywood when what t th,...• .. ht ·was manlvah area of the nortHem "Vaftiy. "'"&"' It foilowed an exchange Mbnday' nigbt A.native of California, Rogert, his wife' pretty good piece of country acting on m in the same area and.three major Js1'11ell and five children make their~home at 7S1 pert turned , up on the cutUng roo air strikes Monday agaimt lraqj, ~yfiJin . v~ Lido,Soud on Llc;IO:laleil' ;' \ I floor." . • and Jordanian artillery bases and '" Egyptlan-maMed radar· station In Jordan. Isarel's Ire was directed it the frogman attack on Eilat, and the tsraell official said such actions "will have to be dealt wllh." Egypt sald the. frocmen Were flown In by helicopter but "Israel con- t.ends they came from the twin Jordani4o city of Aqaba and that J01'dan therefore wa& responsible. . No P.rogre~~ Signs From Red~-Rogers WASHINGTON (AP) ...: Semtary of State WUIJam P. Rogers said todat 0 numerous diplomatic con\acte" with North Vietnam. Including some linca tho death.of Ho Chi Minh, have failed to in-. duce any sign ot progress In set~fug the Vietnam war. ' I No Q~i-Jing ~an i I Ap-pcals Court Lifts Restraint I I I I SAN_.F'RANCISCO (AP) -A federal court or apPeals has refused to ils)Je: in Injunction 1galnli.new oll wellf inil drlJI· :i. pliUonns in the ~nta Barbar~~ In an order made public today the U.S. Ninth , Circuit Court of Ai>Peals l>(ted ' lemROt•fY .m tralnlng Order IQl!ed Nov. 10 aplNI new driltlng. ~ The dty and Cl\Wlty ol Senta Bubara, whole beaehes were blackened 6y a leak· Ing offshore well lul January; bacl 80011\t the ln)Unction pending appeal• ol· a lowe·r court ruling. · .. '\ The U.S. Dislricl Court in Los·.Angele' ruled Not. I that the g<,1vernment cart b1ue new drllllng pennits. wllhoul publi~ llearings. ' · Sanla · Bar~ra o '111 and 1 i "sldenls . represented ~y • ~erlcali CMI !Jberttes Union claim 1 .,. l titled to a pubDc hearing before· . .. permits are blued' . • The order did oot me;ntton another pe~· Uon filed Nov. 12 by Sanlll Barbara - Ing for amuln)ent of permlta granled three oil companies two wetks qo fo drilliJli in the channel! ~ l •• I -~~~,,.. •. • .r --...... ~ •• • • • .-.· ·~·~· ............. -. • ~}!~~19 !~; ~~()()!ing .. for a J1u!l~ey~ SPACE CllNTE.i. HOUSTON (UPI)~~ IJ fa beln('bWed u llit·l!lnl moon landl!lf. lllahl whoH primary objecllv::r:fa to mukind'a total ldlllflfflc knowledge. t ,~ .................. ~Marlo PalombO, 20, lib• Jovt .enes. WJien, one was cut short at a Rome movie bouae Friday' nlcht, Pafomba fired a p!Jt'ol at the screen and demanded hls m0ney· back.. "I paid to see this ·love scene," he said. 0 1 dQ not want to see acen94 cut up by the censof1.'' CUrtome:r fled and police arrested Palomba on charges of dlsturblBg the peace. ' ll Laboratory men in a Ph&rmaceu· tical factory at Moreton, England look like astronauts, but the real aim of their spac&-age--suits is to prevent them from changing sex. The suits protect them against fumes from birth pills In the granu- lating stage. The female hormone in the drugs, when inhaled, could give them smooth chiM and other feminine characteristics, a spokes-man of the.Jinn explained. • Edwanl G. Robin-, who often portrayed the tough-talking hood· lum of clasaic copf.and·robbers movies, hal ·been cited by \ Uie Screen Actors Guild for 0 fostering the finest ideals Of .the acting .pro- fession. n Robinson, 75, an art con- noisseur and collector in private life, was given two art objectHhe Greek masks of tragedy and com· edy in black onyx and antique bronze. APOLLO ASTRONAUTS TO ATTIMPT PINPOINT MOON LANOING TONIGHT ~onrad ancl'llean Wiil Try to Land Within 1111 FHt of Surveyor Ill lil,ITt ...... • Diane Gord-On. B, crouche.i and cov- ers her face With Mr handi aa ihe tries to hide jrom photographers a.t she waiti for a school bus at Ncusau Bay, Tex. Camtra ahy Diane ii tht daughter of Apollo 12 astronaut Rich- ard Gordon. • ROMld M. Schl1el, 26, of Jack· son, Wyo., asked for probation on charges be had shot at a state pa. trolman. The prosecution asked that Schisel be sentenced to a year in prison. Dl1trlct Judge C. Stu.rt Brown ignored both requests and handed out a sentence of four to five years in prison. 111 take an aw .. ful dim view of shooting at law en .. forcement officer~r anybody, for that matter," the judge explained. • Elmer H1rry Lucero, 24, walked Into the police station in La Junt.a, Colo. and admitted committing four burglaries since being released from the state reformatory last month, police said. Officers said Lucero told them he really did not prefer life behind bars, but thought it was better than being unemploy· ed on the outside. •Miserable Years~ LBJ's Brother Recalls VP Era NEW YORK <UPI) -Lyndon B. Johnloo's term 1s John F. Kennedy's vic:e prt1ldent was "lhe mO!t miserable three yelfl of his Jife,'' his brother said Moo<lay. Sam Houston Johnson, in an article pul>Uahed by Look magazine, said Ken- nedy'• "new frontiersmen" subjected Johnton to repeated snubs and humllJa!- tlon even though the Southern vott1 he drew to the Democratic ticket in 1960 were essential to Kennedy's hairbreadth victory. "They made his stay ln the vice presidency lhe most miserable three yur1 of hla life," Johnson wrote. "He wun't the No. 2 min in lhat 1d- ministratlon, be was the lowest man on the totem pole .•. "He was openly snubbed by second· echelon White. Hoµse staffers who snickered at him behind his back and -·caUed·htnrUncte-compone:" Sam Johnson said his brother remained 1oyal to KeMedy, thoogh he did say at tlme1 that "some of the people around him are bastards." He aald lhe vice pruldent "e.xploded" when Mrs. Sam JohnJon told a bannleos joke about Ken- nedy In his pre&ence. Joh1110n said Kennedy kept his vice president lraveling on endless foreign junkets. "Lynda and Luci would stay at home •.. resenting their parents' frequent · absences,'' he said. "Luci has said she remembers screaming and stomping her feet because her mother would be taken away by Lyndon for some political rally." Sam Johnson recalled one incident lhortly after President Kennedy was assassinated which "reflected how my brother must have felt about all those ug- ly IJ>Slnuations that were made about Kennedy being killed In Texas." He said the President called him shortly before the Johnsooa moved into the Whl~ House to say1 "l' ~late all you've done for me.11 " '1 wouldn't be here if it hadn 't been for you,' " Johnson quoted the President as-aaytng, and said he replied, "Lyndon, 1 had nothing to do with Oswald." ''He gasped, sputtered, then exploded,'' Johnson recalls. "My God! what an ex~ plo.slon! I have never beard him SCJ angry .•. He shouted ... 'You make your .lousy sick j!Jkes about eve~!'" U.S. Jets Ambush Reds, l(ill 58 in Viet Battle SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. jell, artillery and helicopt<r gunships cauaht Com· munlat troos-u they were burying their dead and killed 51 of them in an attack northealt of Saip, military 1pokesmen aald today . Allied opol<-en '8id II g h t I n g throughout Vietnam had kllled more than 530 Viet Cong and North VletnameM! troopi in the put two da,... SouUt Vletoimelo IJ)Olt0'1!len said 243 of the Communlm -. killed in fighting with government forces two miles ea.1t Of the U.S. Green Bereta camp at Bll Prang, 12'l miles nortbeaat of Saigon. The jets, belitoptn and guns attacked the CommUnlll unli IS it WU croulna a gra90y hilltop 90 miles nonheast of Saigon Monday. The attack came after the Communists opened fire on a helicopter scout craft. The Communist troops were working to bury bodies of comrades killed in earlier air strikes, spokesmen said. In rou rother battles In the area. Mon~ day American forces lost 11 killed and 22 wounded. Communist troops early 1o<fay fired is Mrnm mortar rounds into Bu Prang, the beleaguered camp near the Cambodian border. The camp has been under pressure by ~ Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese for weeks. Sunny South Plenty Cold · Below Freezing Marks Recorded in Carolina Temperat11re• "l~llfl Allrl\0•1H A!11111, •11k ... fl•hll 11111'!\tf'tlt ... ~ .... •-wni. ClllttM Cl11cll'll'lttf """'"' o.. Mol ..... c.irott l'"tl"btnll;1 ·-~ Ht!l llf Htflelulu Kf""'t CHY L11 V1111• LM A"Hln Mlt'"I M11t~•~ll1 Htw 0r111111t Ntw YOl'k 01~t1nd 0-11"°""1 Cltr Om•ll• f"tlWI Sj>r("'j P1to llOCltt ,...,.,,r, Pll!tbur~ll .. ,,...!."(t ll:~t!t (fly ll:td l !ull 11:,no Stcramff!ltl Siii Ll~I City S111 Olett SI" ,ft ll(IKo ~•!tit Sooi<t"f Tll1rm11 .a. W11ll!11tllfff' Hllll 1.tw ,rte. .. " " . " ~ •t 31 H ' . " ~' ~1 .. " M H ... SS IJ _., ,,. 1 • .DI '2 ,, •7 ~' .u .,, .Jl " .. .. ~ .. .. 1S n Tr .. " " ~ ,, '' " ,, .lt ,. .. .... .... K 7t '° " .Of " .. " ~ " .... .. " » • .01 .. ,. 41 10 .... ,.. ,. • .11 " .. .. " ... " " ,, 4 ~t ,._ AF Chief Says Aide's Firing Not Personal WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of the Air Force Robert C. Seamans Jr. to- day denied that 2:'1 Air Force cost expert was fired because he disclosed to Congress that the OA aircraft program was ruMing billions more than projected. He said that the job held by A. Ernest Fitzgerald had been abolished in an overall economy p r o g r a m and reorganization of the Air Force ma:Jage- n1ent team. Sen. William Proxmire ( D -W l s . ) • chairman of a joint congressional economic committee looking into the Fitz-erald case, told Seamans at Ule: con. clu11on of his prepared testimony "It is hard for me to accept your testimony on its face." One iSsue was whetheT' Fitzgerald had ever disclosed ca.ifldential material to congressional committees. Proxmire told Seamans, • ' M r , Fitigerald has never .made any con- fidential documents available to this committee or staff. 1 flatly deny he ever violated security." Seamans responded thlt he agreed the Fitzgerald "had never vtola.ted national security." Seamans outlined-for the commJtt.ee new cost control proceduiea he uJd have beeJ Installed and Sen •. Charles H. Percy (R-111.), commended what he called "two innovations" which call for a qulrterly review of overall costs and ~ ability to focus detection on cost overruns. In reorganizing the office, Seamans slid, "Mr. Fitzgerald's job has been abolJshed and we have not found a suitable new position t1 which he could make a contribution." Seamans noted that Fitzgerald's job was of such a classitlcatlon that "he was given that job with the initial un- derstanding that it was ror a Umited term." New Car Prices Boosted by $107, Government Says WASHINGTON (AP) -The govern- ment said today manufacturers' sug· gested relail prices of 1970 pa1senger cars average $107 more than a year ago, including $46 worth of quality Im· pro\'ements and $61 of just plain higher prices. The Labor Department'• Burtau of Labor Statistics said the $46 in quality improvements included fl.50 for .changes required by higher federal safety stan. dards, $5.50 for improved eshaust control of air pollutants, $19 for safety im- provements introduced by manufacturers themselves, and $14 for nonaafety im· provements. Safety standards required by federal regulations include unproved signal lights, slde..:marker llghll Ind rear llgbta, anti-theft locka 1nd glove compartment locks, lhe report said. Safety improvements Introduced by manufacturers themselves i n c I u d e fiberglass belted tin:s on m01St m!Jdels and miscellaneous b<>dy changes, It satd. The nonsafety quality improvement& Include more reliable and durable engines., improved insulation, better water pumps, improved shock absorber1 and lmprovtd e1tertor body protection, the report said. Arms Talks Opening HELSINKI (UPl)-Amorlcan and So- viet arms neg0Uator1 met In secret session today to work out procedures and an agtnda !or talks to try to freeze and possi bly even reduce their nuclear ormo&s. t But It baa .,,Glhet fmporl mlsalon. ' , The National Alll'OIWllica and Space po (NASA) wants toractftt high accuracy landlngo - a -o1 apoce aprlpc tr&inln& for future U .• -~~ . _I ' . . · For Ute preclalon ol lhe landing made =· loollght by utronauta Cborleo "Pete" Conrad and Alan L. lltan wlU tell ' · 'a apace plannm what ad)ua- menta, If any, need to be made !dr o!)COOllni b~oa billy, mountalnoue anu ol the lunar iur1ce .-toucbdownl that Will require ti. Apollo IJ fl shootloa for a bulllayt, too. The aiming poinl lor Conrad and Bean fa l.IJO feet from whare SurYt)'<ll' S landed In 19'7, and.H the utroaaufl land wtUtln ranie.,Utey will wallt to 'lhe robol spacecrlfl and brln( back oelec:ted parta. I · . Bean, dlacuulng the mission, said lhe plnpolnl landing attempt "hu - lllOtber one of the more interestln( th1np on the lllJht, even !hou1h not the moil lm- porlanl by any stretch of the Imagination.'' Gene Gurley, mloalon deaign mlnqer for ~pollo !2, says the current mis- sion fl on of a oerles called Apollo lunar ·exploration mlsalooa. Thert .,, tbne typel of mlasiODI. The first WU the "G" "Seriel-ApoQCJ,ll. ; On Apollo 11 the ''.primary objective wu· to land and return safely," Gwlty said. "We had an extra bonus with thlt one becau&e everythinc worked ao wtD IDd: we got eome surface experience." But with APoilo U the "H" 1erlei beginl and "the J)rlmary objectives are lunar surface scienWlc exploration, to develop point landJng tec:hnlqijea and pbolo- graph future landing ottes. Apollo IJ mlulon director Chetler Lee oayo the ablUty lo land In preclNIY tht apot aelected will become more and more importanL ' "Later minions: wUl take us to tpOta that require * pinpoint accuracy," Lee said. •'We hope Utey develop our landing techofqu" on this mission that will lead us to perhapa: further development on the next miuion leadin1 us to.cettlng the eape- blUty of landing in oome very tlaht spots." , Apollo ll mlased 113 landing site by about four mlles; the result of -al minor errors in predicting the spa:ctcraft poelUon. * * * * * * Step-by-Step Schedule For Moon Walk Listed SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Ex· ctpt for sbc minutes to erect an American flag and eight minutes to posi- tion a color ti!levision camera, the Apollo 12 moon explorers plan to devote all their time to science on their first moon walk Wednesday. Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr. plans tCJ be outside three hours and 14 minutes during Ute lnitial stroll, while Alan L. Bean is expected tCJ be outside two hours, ~minutes. Wednesday's excursion will begin with Conrad backing out of the hatch of the moonlander Intrepid at 3:02 a.m. PST. A second stroll begins at 9:32 a.m. Thurs- day, when Conrad and Bean visit the now dead Surveyor 3 spacecraft. Fir.it color television should begin at 3:03 a.m. Wednesday aCter Conrad, st.an- ding on a ladder, opens a compartment In which the camera is moonted. Bean wlll turn the television on to show Conrad's descent to tbe moon's surface. While Bean films Conrad with a 70 millimeter movie camera, the Apollo 12 crunmander will spend six minutes get- ting used to the low gravity, jumpln& up <ind down and teating his balance. Using a scoop with an extension handle, Conrad will pick up a sample of rock and soll, put It in a bag and send lhe bundle in a conlalneT' up a clothesline-like conveyor belt to Bean. Conrad then will snap atill photos as Bean starts down the ladder at 3:32 a.m. After Bean famlllariz.es hl!llself with the one-sixth gravity, Conrad will aprlng open an antenna wblch looks llke an up~id~own umbrella. Officials hope the antenna, to be actlv~ted for the second moon walk, will improve communications with earth. Bean will mount the TV camera on a. tripod 20 feet· from the lander. Then he and Conrad Push a starf into the ground and attach a nylon American Dag to it. Bean will point the TV camera at a compartment on the back aide of Intrepid. where other experiment ln· struments are stowed. M Conrad continues to align the Ill· tenna, Bean is to erect an alumfnum foil "window shade" atlached to a ataff. Scientista hope the device will capture atomic particles streaming from the sun. Conrad then will pick up the TV camera and give earthlings a panoramic view of the moon's surface while Bein photographs the landing craft's four foot- "p:ids. At the experiment comparbnent, both astronauts then will take out the sclen- tltlc instruments contalned In twCJ aub- packages. Using a long-hand.led tool, Bean will open a cask containing plutonium 238, an atomic ruel element, and insert it into a nuclear eleetrtc generator thal pciwers the instruments. Bean, carrying the experiment in- struments and generator, and Conrad wUl walk to a site about 1,000 reet west of the lander craft. There, they will distribute the lnstrumenls:. After photographing the experiment site, the astronauts will return to the Ian· ding craft and collect rock samples with long-handled, tongt en route. stowing; them In saddle bags attached to their waists. Back at the Intrepid, Conrad and Bun will put the saddle bags in a box, then Bean will drive a core tube several in- ches into the moon's surface to collect I vertical profile of the lunar soil. It will be placed in the rock box. then Bean will re-tnt.er the landln& craft. Using the conveyor belt, Conrad will transfer the rock hos and cameru Into Intrepid, and ·Conrad will re.enter the landing craft to reit and relu for 15 hours. Protests 'l{ill U.S. Boys,' Postmaster General Says WASHINGTON (AP) -Pootmtsler General Winton M. Blount emerged from a meeting wilh President Nixon today and said he believes home rront antiwar demonstrations are "killing American boys.'; Blount, back from a trip l.Q South Viet- nam and other parts of Southeast Asia, told a newa conference at lhe White House that he believes demonstraton are inspiring Hanoi to prolong the war and thus bring about more U.S. co~t death.I . The latest in a growing proces11lon of administration ofrtclals to publicly take a dlm vieW of anUw1r protests, Bloont said he found that American troops in Vietnam don't underst1nd the de?Ronstra· tions and do not approve of them. The Postmaster General 1uued a for· ma! s\atement in which he 111d U.S. troops in the combat ione expreued a "tremendous amount of understanding and support for the President's Vlttnlm policies exprttsed In his Nov. S epeech." He said he was repeatedly told by fiah~ Ing men : "We're kicking lhe hell out of Charley and now is not the Ume to qu.lt." JUDGE SAYS NUDIE SHOW 'N OT MUCW SAN DIEGO (AP) -~ watdlfnc a backstage play in wblch young _,,.,. Iii naked, Sup«lor Court Judp Hugo Pllbet ob««ved .. any-Poxinc " to ... tllla show and expoctlllf to ,.. IOmething obscent Is goin& to be tortly dlsap- polnted." ' The judge ,.Id today he wlU la.!ut • pr<llmlnary lnjuncllon enjolnlni police from interfering with the performance Jn Les Gi[ls Thea tor, pending 1 formal hearlnj~~ Blount said he believed Nixon II m- titled to full public support for his poli- cies on Vietnam. Asked if that meant be believed that opponents of the war 8hould rem1ln totally silent, the cabinet Gffteer said he hod no quarl'l!I with thett J1&ht to expreu their opiniOD! but feel tbey have "lone too far." Ge'!. Hershey At .Peace Rally WASHINGTON (AP) -Drlfl dlncl<ir Lew11 •B. 1 Hershey attended i'a 1 I Slturdly'1 mustve peace rally at the Washington Monumtnl wtUt hil ll-l'W' Old lflndda""1ter, a spoltesman said fO. day. The spolteaman said Henhcy and hil 1r~u1hter wanted lo .. the n"1 and they llP'ftl about one hour nt• Ibo west aide of lhe Monumenl whorl demonttraton gathered after ....._ up Pennsylvarila Avenue In prdell 11ainsl admlnlllrltim policy In Vletnlm. Hershey w11 quoted 11 aa)'lna bl thouaht '""' dem0111tr•tlont ..Uld !ho 111111 lhe OihUng In Vietnam 11 Ute -viewed them u an e1pmslon of .upport. But Httaltey added that the de.....- tlan u be aaw It wa1 a puceful G pres1lon of · opinion and that poaalbl4 misintel')Jf"taUon was "one of tht prb of democracy," lhe •pokesman rtport& Rome Workers Strike ROME (AP) -Nntpeper employfti 1uollno station attendants and telepllono workers walked off their Jobi t.xtlg!tl 1Ignalllng the start of a ma8'iVt !......, ·~ strike. -~ l ; .. I \ (' I • I • ., I I, .. I '' ; ·----·--- ---- • • • ' . " • - • • •• • .. . ....... ,._ -···-. ---' I ' ' • ' J OO EAIHO:STINOS, 642-4311 ni..r. ~ ... 1Mf M ,_ II Fa shion s on Parade ' " ' ' . ~ci ntif lat:ing · Sty.I es Yiewe:d , AS their kickoU to the appro~ching_ holiday ,season, membefs. of the Fountain Valley Woman's Club are sponsoring a champagne fashion ex· lravaganza between 1 a:nd 3 p.m. Saturday,.,Nov. 22, in the community cen· ter. Serving as general chairman. of. Hol.iday K~ckdff is-~rs. Eli:ner Mai.sio 1nd commenting on the latest sc1n'till~ting . hohday. f~sh1ops-will· :t>e Mrs. • ' rom Keevil. : .. ! I • J • • • ' ' ' • Stores represented will be from JtuntingtQn C~t:er ·aod \Viii include \Iarris a nd Frank, El!a-Nor's, The Sho.\v1)((. '1'{1:n's, Bon4's, Lerner's, Mdd~ O'Day, The Wet Seal, Trend O'Fashi911, l(.inney:s, :P.e~y.'s, Chic ~s· . ·~ sories Gene's and Thom McAn. ~ , . 1 '· • • ' • • • r-1 Assisting Mrs. Maisio will be the Mmes. ·chester·Veilniilg and Michael Provhov, tickets: Bob Weaver, programs and posters ; Robert ~urley, dee· :>rations · Dave Heffner, refreshments, and Gerald \Vessler, priz~s.· Cl~b members who will be modeling include the Mmes. Jack Runge, rho1na s Humphrey, Clarence Stewmon, Joseph Giesing, Robert Sullivan,. E:dWin Booth and Hugh l\llagill, and Miss 1'ene Payne and Miss Chad Duhe crl the junior auxiliary. . · . The public is invited to attend the holiday previe\v. 8.nd tickets, al $3 per person, will include the. s~ow. champagn~ punch and ~ors d'oeuvres. • • • ' ' Jn keeping with;.the festive .theme. the c~vic center will be resplend~nt with traditional autumn and hohday decorations. · · \Vorking on the fa shion show committee .are the J\.1mes. Frank Amato, C. E. Stansfield . Giesing, Frank Zerbo, Emilio Chavez, Richard Gillum, Donald Borchardt, Jack Yamambto and stewmon. HOL IDAY SHOW BUBB LI NG ~ Toasting the suc· of the extra.vaganzB.: The 'tUnd:raising affair is open •o the public and meinbers will model the latest styles from representative shops in Huntington Cen· ter with Mrs. Tom Keevil serving ·as commentator. . ~· [: ' cess of their Holiday Kickoff, a champagne fashion show taking place Saturday, Nov. 22,·arc Mrs. Ed· win Booth (left) and Mrs. Elmer Maisio, .chairman • '' One-stop Shopp ing Corks Pepping For · Boutique A cbampagn_e boqliqu~ which ~ill provide orle- &t .. ~ng for area. residents will take place ~ tween 1 m. and 2:30 p.m. Sat.urday, Nov. 22, in the Peek Family Colonial Terrace Room, West- minster. Preparing {Or the major furiding event of the year are members of the Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club. and serving as chairman for the ben'. efit is Mrs. Ted Reddick. Jn addition to the large se lection of gift and dec- orator items which will be available for sale there will be an informal display of holiday fashions from \Vest End Boutique which will be modeled by club members. Serviilg as models will be the Mmes. John Cout- lee, Cody Evans, Larry Johnson and Ro,y Johnson. .4..dmission \Vill be $2, and serving as ticket chair- man is Mrs. John Flanagan. Others assisting in- clude Mrs. Jack Miller, food , and Mrs. John Kno x, prizes. Given away during the afternoon \viii be an in- stant ca1nera. Also contributing their efforts to the ba~ar are members of the junior auxiliary, 'vho will staff 'their o\v.n table. and there will be a sweet corn·er which \Yill feature homemade baked goods. · Another feature of the bazaar will b~ voting on dolls which have been submitted for a doll dfe9rat- ing cont~st span.sored by the Junior~ 'in. connection with National Fine Arts month continumg through November . First and second prizes for the dolls, w~ will include any size, type and costume, will be awarded Tuesday, Nov. 251 in the clubhouse. Mrs. William Lokken is fine arts chairman and Mrs. Larry John- son is in charge of the doll decorating contest. Dolls contributed for the contest will be contributed to a worthy cause. ln observance of American Art Week, the jun- jors also sponsored a children's art display in the Huntington Center Mall. Assisting Mrs. ·Lokken was Mrs. Robert Evans, c~hairman, and the Mmes. Johnson, \\7illiarn Biss, Cody Taylor, James Shep- ard, John Culler and Erwin Zuehls. ' " • OIFTS 'UNOER GLASS - A major ways and means project for the Huntington Beach Juilior Woman's Club 'Will take place Saturdayt _Nov. 22, when the group• sponsors a champagne ooutique ~tween 11 ' a.m. and 2:30 ,p.m. ih tfle Peek Family Colonia l 'f.er· race Ropm . .Filling their' glass with uh usual ~ifis 'to be sold are (left to right) the ,Mmes. Ted R¢ddick, · Wllliam.Biss.and.John,Knox. · 1 ' . ' . Su rf Sounds Gala . Reception Fetes Co~p~e By JODEAN HASTINGS NEWLYWEDS Mr. and Mrs. Bruce P. Crosby were honored during a reception in the Hun· ~inglon Beach home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs . Leland J. Valentine. Mrs. Crosby is the former Patricia Wolfe. The couple exchanged their vows in the Little White Chapel, Las Vegas, and at- tendi.1g them we.re M r s . Norman JohnsOn, the bride's sister from Medford, Ore., and Ivan Umphenour. Qut..()f-town guests at the reception were Mrs. h1artha McLaughlin and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Tharp. the bride's mother and aunt and uncle from Tucson, Ariz .; Mrs. Johnson and the Messrs. and Mmes. James Sayer, Thomas D. Parnell, Hugh Stock. Victor Nitzkowski, Ross Bolinger, James A. Parnell, Jack Schmitt and E. O. Kleinsasser, and Miss Marion Parn!!ll. , Also among the guests were the Messrs. and Mmes. Victor Terry, Jack Robertson, Philip Naylor. Ted Ba11lett, Charles Crozier, Umphenour, Jack Miller, Tom Douglas, J oe Irvine, Lee Mosteller, Wayne Pickering, Charles Manley 3'.ld Richard Renna ; Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Mason, and the t.ti:nes. Margaret Kettler. Lois LeBard and Pally Burris. "IT HAS 'TO BE the most expcn~te place-f-q 'the world," said Penny Winter.tialter dur- 1ing-a telephone call . from Helena,_Mo., Where husband Do.1 wys transferred and the family now is li ving. Allhough Penny can't find a pound of bacon Under $1, she does admit it ;i.lso is beauUful ·country. "With a huge, pine-- covered mountain r i g b t outside my kitchen window. / "Don and lbe children love It," she co.itinued, "but o! course it Is a man's country - nothing but hunting a n d fishing." · The form er first vice presi· dent ol the .Hunt.j.nglon Beach Junior Woman's Club said she has to bite her ton'gue to keep from constantly saying, "t1 California. . ." because the Montana natives don:t care a bit! .JOE AND BET,1'\' Karbo, co-starring in "What Did We Do Wrong," the play about parents and their hippie child 1n the Long Beach Playhouse, were guests of honor during an after-theater party hosted by 25 League of Wome.1 Voters ' members and their husbands in . the Huntington Harbour Beach Club. The entire group first at· tended the play before return· ing to H"untirigton Beath. The Karbos are active In many little theater groups in the area. and have been ap- peari'.1g in 'their' second pro- duction in Long Beach . MEMBERS OF. U1e Seal Beach Junior Woman's Club -are aglow over a COO· gratulatory meSsage from Se9cy01 Crajg 1 !Ro·s m e r. · • • t Oh Db·.esn't M ~f.t Men Agree Ice Cube Will Last Longer If. She ' ' ' DEAR READERS : Remember the let- ter from Wyoming Ice CUbe -the 18- year..())d Casper cutie with the high dale 'turnover? She had been called everything from a tease to a mental case. A premed student told her she'd probably haVe a nervous breakdown because of her pent up e1notions. In desperation, the girl \I performed an analysis on her sqclaJ life. 1 lier findings were as follows : Invariably the felklw was mannerly· and respect.ful on the first date. On the second date he mad~ it clear he wasn't about to waste 1 any nlOl'e time. His quesUon wai to· the • point: "How about it?" On the third date 1 If she wasn't wllllng to lie down and bill: 1 things over he \\'ould ·fced her telephone ., nun1ber to the nearest goal. Cube asked me, "ls virginity out· ANN LANDERS ~ rrioded? Do men REALLY wa nt everything ~y asi for, or are they merely _testing? I told her I'd ask the fellows. And I did. Here 11a11mpll~g of the-replies : YALE et.Ass OF 'U: Tbi1 probably win come 11 a dlsaptMtiabnent tt ~t coltece 1'9detlb, Mt yoa didn't Invent sex, my lltUe cldckadtu. Tbere was 1 good bit of It ti ••tM olden day1." I got, my 1h1re, probably ml)f't, Bat the girl I married wa1 tbe ottt who 1ald, "Nolhin.; doing uodl we 1et nianitd." We had some knock-down, drag.out atpmeats but I WBI KCredy IMIPPJ tlllt site WOii Utem all. We ctiebrMe _. all ••C month. UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA ' I wish Tee Cube could listen lo the.conversation In the men'• dorm. ll wou1d settle the question once and for all. The nicknames -··Mattress Mary," .,Horizontal Helen" and "Round·heeled Ruthie" ire Just a (c~-. Of course it's rotten, bot most. guys ' figure if a girl doesn't havC any mhect 1 for herselt, she doesn't dese-rve any rrom them. ~ ~LORADO U.: If I Kore oa the se- tond or tlttrd date, I put CP next lo the babe'• phone aumber. Jt 1tand 11 for "Com· munUy Propeny." I've never deled a CP mort Lll•n three times. They are .... a, aapmlantb •Del craUlng bort1. FROM OHJO STATE UNIVERSITY ' H Joe Cube II lert sitting hon1e on her highly prized assets because she refuses to go to bed on the third date, she shou)d ask herself, "What's wrong with my ba ll? Why do 1 attract such scum?" f'ROM ORLANDO: f\fen h11ve ~tn making }okts about chasllly for 1 lnni; Ume. -Uurlng World War 11 tbt Gl's In London .•aid, "If a virgin walked down Trafalgar Squire the stat111: ~.of Lord Nelson would raise 1111 bat to her." Funny bow a guy wlU bed down wllh anyone wbo · 1 'flllllof but he'll kUI a guy who takes advantage of his sister, or, be1ven forbkl, his daughter. U OF KANSAS: Cube is lucky to learn on the third date what the jerk is after. She can dump him·rae:t instead Of wasting ~her veluablc time. ' WATERLC>p. , ONTAJUO: At o psyc:blatrl1l I can u1uu Ice Cube that v111lly fewrr peopte become dl1twrbed becaU11e of abstention cOmpared with · thn1e wlto are wracked wl\b gullt caused by sexual promisc uity. -W.F.W. (ftfO) ~·1tOM O~tAllA: T married al age 30. ~ty bride was 25. Neither my bride nor I ' , had sexual intercourse until tt>e night we were married. Please· print my name. I am proud of it. -C.H.W. DEAR C.H.W.: Con&ra1ulad011, Lever. but I'm not 1ure your wife would care for the publicity. ·If It's all tJte atme to you, 1111 Just uH your t.Jt1al1. Christmas can be a problem. What can y0\1 gi ve the person who has everythlnc! Ann Landers' new book, "Truth 11 Stranl!:er," Is available In book stores. tt also can be obtained by wri~ng Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. Prloe, fl.Ill. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your prob\ems. Stnc1 thep11o her la care or the DAILY PtLOT new~Sl*Ulf". enclosing 1 aclf-ltddresHd, ltunpld envelope. ' ' -· Libra: Don't Be Wallflower WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 19 By SYDNEY OMARR In groomlai, COGCtntrale OB Wt, facial makMlp -a.ad M9d area la general. 1'fooa ta Arla, opposlle Uruus, hldJ.. ntes some may be lteadstroec " polat wltere diplomacy rues .. af -· Al u h1dlvld· u.I, kttp your ltead. Don't c:et:npolllld ez:ror by actlq oa lmpelte ud fcqeUlq: Ioele. LIBRA (Sept. 33-0ct. 22): Where previously you were quiet J there Js action. Sur. prises occur. You galn favor- able aUenUon. Publlclty aea compaJ,lles your efforts. No day to be a wallflower. SCORPIO (Oct. :IS-Nov. ti): Recognition received. Your steady efforts of past come to attention of those who can aid. Obtain hint from Ubn. mes- sage. Accent on relations with workers, associates. SAGmARIUs (N 0 v. 22· Dec. 21}: Romantic interest ARIES (March 2l·April 19): highlighled. U sln'le, you One you trust could act in ec--could encounter exciting indi· centric manner. Your person-tidual who grows close. If al cycle is high; take initia· married, child or mate coo.Id tive. Don't permit persons who do something which 'eapecially thrash for answers to use you pleases yOu. as scapegoat CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. TAVRUS (April 2G-May 20): 19): Changes occur in what You break Ioase from some was a steady routine. Main- e on ten t I on s, restrictions. '" tain poise. You can cope with Leave details to olhera. This iodiVidual who acts in ecceno is your day for self-expression. tric manner. Sense of humor Imprint your own style. Hear is definite asset. Substitute your own voice. Be yourself. laughter for tears. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb, Some previous beliefs may be 18): U journ~y Js not. neces. shattered. Be a creative think-sary, bypass 1t. Confusion ex- er. Means don't be afraid· to ists. Plenty of laughs indicated change your mind. Filse pride tonight. • MRS. WILLIAM BYRNE Sin9 l1 Rini Nuptii1 ls Officer Delivers Verdict in Line of 'Duty 11 your chief adversary. Re-PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):' vlew ~a.cts. Baff decisions on Obtain hint from Virgo meg.. actualities. sage. Be ·careful with money, CANCER (June 21.July %2): personal possessions. You can Persons who have much to do gain il you are thorough. Not with what you do act in un· wise to delegate duties. One usual manner. Key is to move who is sincere could lack con- with the tide. By cooperating, fidence. Acapulco Picked For Honeymoon Motor officer Tony Villa samples old-fashioned southern fruit cake offered by Mrs. Jim Spears of Newport Beach Police \Vives Auxiliary while Mrs. Craig Johnson awaits verdicl The sale, which runs Peering ORANGE COAST pledges from National Panhellenlc so- rorities at California State College at Long. Beach have been named. Alpha Epsilon Phi pledge is Cheryl Langner of Westmin· ster: Tri Dells, Joan Benson of Newport Beach and Patti Pfister. Huntington Beach; DeJta Gamma, Jennifer Faulk, Seal Beach; Delta Zeta, c.- c e 11 a Spears, Huntington Beach, and Sigma Kappa, Su· s a D Mennich, Hwitinglon Decorations For Holidays Suggested Suggestioru for h o l i d a y decorations will be given members of South Orange Coast Chapter of Zeta Tau AJpha Thursday, Nov. 20, at 7:30 p.n1. in the Corona de! 1'-1ar home of Mrs. Robert ?itcLean. Christmas handcraft pro- jects will be discussed by ?i1rs. Bruce Peterson. Assisling will be f.trs. Patrick ~tcDonald, president and l\1rs. Leslie Pelerson. Further questirJ.1s will be ans"'ered by :r.m. McLean at 644·1723. Writer Speaks In Long Beach Newspaper columnist fiirs . Ted Krec will address members or the Woman's Auxiliary of A m e r i c a n Inst itute of A1ining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers al a luncheon meeting Thursday, Nov. 20, at noon. A business meeting at 10 :30 a.m. in Victor Hugo's, Long Beach, will precede luncheon. Around Beach. l\IR. AND MRS. J o h n Benson of Newport Beach vacationed in Puerto Rico as guests of the Ford 1ifotor Company. Benson was one of 900 winners in a sales contest sponsored by the Autolite·Ford Parts Division. !\IRS. THOMAS F. Rafael of Corona del Mar is serving on the arrangements committee for the Cardinal's Christmas Party for Children, to be given in the Hollywood Palladium Sunday, Dec. 6. KAY NELSON Engaged Apr il Date Selected The engagement of Kay Teresa Nelson and Joe I Charles \Vagner of Sanla Ana has been announced by Mr. and 1t1rs. Maurice F. Nelson of Huntington Beach, parents of the bride·to-be. through Christmas, will finance auxiliary projects. To order cakes, those interested may phone Mrs. John Richard, 642-9989. Sole Searching Good Business your presUge is enhanced. Know this and don't fight city ball. · LEO_ (July 23-Aug,, 22): Traveling today could present some problems. Be sure of itinerary. Know in which di· recUon you are going. Some who give directions may be confused. Double check. VIRGO (Aug . .ZS.Sept. 22): IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamlc, original, possess a unique way of expressing yourself. Many claim you are a born leader. These qualities have been much in evidence in recent months. Now you should put together puzzle .pieces. Find out where yoli stand. Draw line between being .kind and being foolish. AcapulcD was the hroey- moon desUnation of William Alexander Rustl Byrne of Balboa Island and his bride, the former 'Cheryl J e an Bogenrief. Smith, another foster brother. The Irvine Coast County Club was the reception setttig where Miss Cheryl Singer: circulated the guest book. Among the 200 friends and relatives congratulating the couple was ~lrs. W. R. Fouts of Whittier, the bride's maternal grandmother. By JUDY HURST OI llM 01111 f'llel 511tf Bert Geller docs a lot of sole searching in his business. He should since he's a "sole" brother. Not really a brother, GelJer is the nephew of the late Andrew Geller who started a family shoe business in 1903. Today the plant, has blossomed into a I a r g e manufacturing industry l n BrookJyn. Geller shoes run the gamut In styles, evel'Jthing rrom pa1e blue Joafen to evening pwnps to high-laced bools. All are high quality and regal in styl· ing. The price tag matches their rich appearance. ·~women purchase o u r shoes, not kids in high school and college. The youngsters can't a!lord them," he stated simply. His footwear starts at around $30. And those soft, comfortable, chunky loafers were $32 retail. Blue has been a popular col· City Attorney Discusses Land Tully Seymour, Newport Beach city attorney, will discuss the Upper Bay Land Exchange before members of the Newport Harbor Business and Professional Women's Club. The dinner meeting I s ~cheduled for next Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in the Cost.a Mesa Country Club. Mrs. H. R. Hope, legislation chairman, is planning the evening. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Helen Cole, presi· deni at 673-2110. or in fashion. Geller forecasb: for spring, ~!.·in fed, red with white trim, navy with white trim and generous com- binations of color. The holiday and spring •70· collection features b I a c k Patent. dark tans, silver and gold sJippers, warm fabrics, blunt and circular toes, high chunky heels along s i de tapered heels. · ''One of the belt sellers In a Beverly Hills store was a Jeather pump with slender heel and toe in white and one· half inch stripes in blue, tan and bone. "The boot Took Will continue selling. More heel Is indicated and the crushed leather or wet look will be in," he foretold . The current trend with Ttalian shoes doesn't 15eem to bother the Geller industry, "There has been a big in- crease in imports during the last five years. But it's not disturbing us," he smiled. Continuing to look into the future Geller considers that heels will not rise or become thicker. Sandles and open toes are coming into the picture but it is not a throwback from the 40s. He called it an in- terpretative look. Realizing that dress styles are up and may be coming down, he predicted that any immediate change in clothes won't affect the shoe styles. ''I don 't believe In the longevity of the maxi look." Do shoe manufacturers have a direct pipeline into the gar· ment industry? Leave financial area to others. You ten.ct today to Call for schemes. Key is to be patient and analytical. Otherwise, you could lose somelhing or value. No time to be a money plune- er. Easy. To find oul mor1 lboiJI YOU•••lf Ind 1'trol09y, order SY!!,,..,. Qmaorr'• !11- P•g• bookie!, Thi Trulh AbOul #lllTOI• OllY. s.nd lllrlhdlt. Ind $11 «nla le Om•rr 9oolll9t, file DAILY fl'ILOT, llox lU), Gr•nd Cenrr1I Sllllon, N1w Yort, N.Y. 10017, Newlywed Fred Ryans Reside in S~n Diego The Rev. Lionel Dorais performed the single ring nuptials in Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Bogenrief of Cora.1a de! f\far and the benedict is lhe foster soo of lo.tr. and Mrs. C. R. F. Smith of Pacific Beach. The new Mrs. Byrne selected an original gown of candlelight peau de soie with alencon lace aod seed pearls and a cathedral length veil enhanced with pearl clusters Making their home in San Ryan was his brother's best aid lace. She carried a Diego fonowing a wedding Uip man aod ushers were Ralph cascading bouquet of white to HawaU are Mr. ·and Mn. Griffin, the bride's brother, roses aod stephanotls. Fred Blngiman Ryan II who Charles Bernat and Dale Miss DeeDee Smith, fos ter were man-led in St. Andrew 's Lenk. Steven Griffin, a.1other sister of the bridegroom was Presbyteri&l Church. , . · brother, was ring be<µ"er and maid of honor in a gold crepe The ReV, Dr. Charles Ji. Pam Dooley was flower girl. empire style gown. Dressed Dlerenfleld perfonned t h e A recepUon for 150 guests identically and carrying a double ring rites for the: took place in the church's cascade of autumn flowers ~ughter of the ~lie M. Grif. Fireside Room with Mrs. was Miss Candee Parkhill, fins of Newport Beach and the Milton F. Lorenz, the bride's bridesmaid . son of the Fud B. Ryans of great-aunt circulating t h e Jerry Smilh was his foster Santa Anl Heights. guest book. brother's best man. Ushers The: former Sandra Lee Special guests were Mrs. were Paul Bogenrief. the The former l\tiss Bogenrief attended Ohio Slate University where she affiliated wilh Delta Gamma sorority. Her hus· band is assista.t1t golf pro at Irvine Coast. Following their wedding trip the couple will reside on Balboa Island. Service Group Forms in NB Newport Beach Police Guild, a new service organization, will gather tonight at 8 in Ensign Junior High School. Memberih.ip will consist ol regular and reserve police of· ficers in Newport Beach. Further inlormaUon may be obtained by calling Mrs. Reed Gloshen, 962-8420 or Mrs. William Speirs, 546-3932. Griffin _selected a candlelight Zetta Anita Griffin of Boron bride's brother and Dwight crepe empire sheath and a full and Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Brim-11.=:==================::::; ca~dral length veil. She car-mer of Costa Mesa, the bride's L E y ried white rosebuds, yellow grandparents a1d Mrs. Rose ID Q ~UL roses and baby's breath. Wrinkle of Sacramento, the · Attending her were Miss benedict's godmother. Joanne Paul, maid of hootor: The bride and her husband z . d Mrs. Robert Ryan, matron of are graduates of Newport - honor; Miss Jenni SchachUli, Harbor High School and at· STRICTLY JUNIORS cousin of the bridegroom, and tended Orange Coast College. NOW OPEN .• •• In The Alley Of Mrs . Beverly Gavel, Currentlyheisstalionedwith bridesmaids. the U.S. Navy in San Diego and has served one year in Vietnam. Panel Set By Ju.niors Uncle Lon Olfers Prize• Every S1turd1y OJMn Fri. Eves. 'Ill 9 3424 ~IA LIDO ALL CklDIT NEWPOllT IEACH CAll:DS WILCOMI ''No," he said emphatically. A federation panel com·:Ji=~~~~~~i~~~~~;;;~~~;;;=:::;;:;~~;;;;~~~~~~, "The timing is different. \Ve pn'sed f Ml Ge aid! o S.!!I r ne _'"1.f'.'J';'1 show our early fall line in Robinette and Mrs. K a y ·-' • January when Seventh Avenue Pastay will present the pro-., 1s s h o w i n g its summer gram when the South Coast styles. We, of course, do this Junior Woman's Club of Foun- because of the length 0£ time tain Valley hosts Federation required in manufacturing. Night at 7:30 p.m. today In the • "However, the company civic center. ., Reservations may be made by phoning t.1rs. Thomas G. , Petrulas, 897-4288. The couple plan to marry next April. Miss Nelson ls attending t.farina High School where she is active in the school band. Vertical Stripes line Fashions does have a lie wilh the fabric Following the program there lndustry. We discuss color will be a showing of plastic The David Crystal fall col· trends ,vith designers," he ware to raise funds for district lection includes a Dacron knit pointed out. ca.1venlion cos.ts for club with a tomato, gold and navy The Geller line is ~ members, The Los Cerritos stripe used vertically for front featured in Robinson s; District convention wiU take • 0 I Her fiance, ~n and step-son 'Our Home' or Mr. and Mrs. George M. and side panels and horizon· Fashion Island. place next April. Jferr of Santa Ana, is a graduate of Marina High ·. Programmed School and attends Santa Ana 1 Junior College. lally for the rest. This is ali" ___________________ __ slimmin~ trick the firm says never fail s. HOTPOINT BUILT·IN 1970 DISH\VASHERS • A cultural program on Ourl----------------------11 Own Home wlll be presented by Mrs. Kenneth Sorensen during the meeting of Gamma Alpha Nu chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, at I p.m. tomorrow. ~1rs. Gary Emery will open her home for the mee1i'.1g and 1'1rs. Robert Ross will assist with refreshments. Harbor TOPS Harper School in Costa Afesa ls the l~aUon where membe:n or TOPS Harbor Ltchten gather ead1 Monday evenlne •t 7:)0. UMml NATIONI ASSOCIATION ••'1' IHOP MAMI IT A HAWAIIAN CHIUSTMAS "•HAT r1N•S TO GO NA TIVI IN" HAWAIIAN SHO~S ,_., .. .,._ e Hew,.rt lffch e 644·0f21 HOU1ll1 Dlltr , ... ' -..... , .. MMhr 11 ,. t r• BrD;»' 1 P~:~~:~E $138 ~~ S11f.cl11nh19 1cllon •AST T•llMI AVAIL.I.ILi Rin•1·1wav drain ind 1oft.f...I di1po•1r p11lw1ri1e 11\d fll!IOVI food p•rlicl1• et 1¥1fT drtlft p1rl· .... R•ndom•lo•din9 r1c•• hold 17 t1• bl1 ttllin91. A11lom1tic dw1I d1t1r91nt dl1p1111t· ... -~ e All porc1!1in·llnl•h Interior, 0,.. M .... WM.•Tllen. ...... Tll t fl•• lmpe/114 Wifh-Unl,1f Ctrd• I IMPORTS OF IMPORT Silverpfated jewel box, comb and mirror set. Jewel box, S6. Comb & Mirror. SS. Fnlnch folding scissors. S7.50. SIA.VICK'S Jeweler• Since 1917 NEWPORT !EACH -644-1380 II FASHION ISLAND Yovr Chl'llt Accovnl WtlCCfl'C -llf'lkilto'""•li:•nl. tM•ftl' CMrtl•· fOO • 0,.. MHffy, lrllley •11tll t iJI P••• • "" N. M.1,, s., .. ~.. 1177 HAUO• IOULIY.ARD 548 7808 I M1114•v tltt11 S1t11rcl1v-11 .• COSTA MESA • "---~..;.;.--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·'-~~~~~~~~~~~...i ·....._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I • ' 1 I -~ . ' 7 ·' • 7 ' I " ~ . : .. • • • • .A._. .. ~~· ..,, . ..... , r ... -· • ~ " .. ~ ., •.. • ·~ Fo ta ••· ~· -.. y,;y • .... • TEN CINl: ' • ' .. J1'::"' ' . -· • I' Beach ·Schools ' .. . .,. . d 81:. '.· >r' .• •• necee .. . . • c • I :i:ti AtiS Wering Queries ; What are the kidl doilll In school these days? How ii our ll.X money being spent? 11ow can we be sure that the teachers hired are qualified! WhlA' ls the board of trllllees doiDg about keeping our · high schools in the vanguard of model:n educa- tion ? t ·_ When you have a hllh· school district that covers 52-&1uarHniles, baa more than IOO teachers and' 14,500 students, such a!-the Huntington Beach Unton High School District, there 1re bound to be a· . ' •• oe Mission Perfect lot or questions about Its operation. lions that we assumed they knew the Deluged by questions -some SiQlple answers to," said District Director ot and others of a tuply technical nat.ure -.. CUrriculum· Jehn Venable , one oL tbc administratots 1af Ute ·.diatrict lhii year • couree o'1:anti.er&-... . .... decided ta.runM ~lment in answt:r· "The idea. '9r it came from our district ing all lhe queries in.one fell swoop. . syperintenden\, Or. ,._1ax Fomey, who They instituted a month-kin& evening suggested I.ha{ we might develop a course COW'le in di&trict ...-Uoe.&hat,covered 1ihlch woukf cover all· areas of di,Jtril;t everytbblg.from 6iUid ~ to driver -operatJon. • traini!w .wtlli a' Wt d -topics in !"Tl\t boar<! qi tnWees govo .II! ap- between. proval to the project at one of their "A Jot of people wert asking us ques-meetings •and we invited representatives enne-· Astronauts Set ' . ' or sei'vice clubs, the League of Women Voters, stude'nt.s 11nd other otganiza· tlons,". Venabll! said. · "This WU Uie-first I've ever heird of such ·a ~program and it was qutte sue.· cessful. We'll probably have it again this spring." · • · • · T1* c;ourae, broken down into four two. hour sessions, wis taught from ·oet: ·5' through Nov. 3 on a weekly basis by ad- mli'Ustratorti. lhcludJnc•two 'princiitals.t~ Between 2$ ii.Ml 33 pefSOft!I• atten®d , I :! ,ea each of, the. meetings. Venable report.a. They repno .. nted · pnctlcatly a I I si!&""!'la ol the school eoctety, ir>;IUdJnc panioli, studeot!, ll1d ·~· Ten ·~ tended all ~r .esstoM' and wwe award· ed r certllia&e ol complttloa by lbe boolll.ol -• -~ the topla covered wtre dlltrlct w (1 "' flnmce, tu ,::rat• and bohd laslies, lllMIAft m a k I n g , 'cettlllcated pmonbel, salary achedules, claa!Ulied persoilnel, civil defeDM planning: :Wpil Patriarch Lo s.es Long Life Fight : _. l ' • • • . . . '' • ~-and auldance. currlculu~ denJopment. ~ IO•eltuueut mid collea• JIHllOl1llllrY ......... • · Evalualioow lined tn-at lbe end ol ihe «aine by lhooe who lltended Indicated that ...., .... qulle ......... •Ith u. ~. '*' . ... lnleresled iJ1 ~ampUIJCaUan ol -·~ Some, for -=-~;..,ted to knoif more abool """! Is belnJ done wllll ·' (Sii~,Pqalj '' . . ..._ ' ) ' r ·- To Land To~ight ' SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) - Apollo 12's astronauts ~ped t.he moon with unerring precision today, inspected tt)!!lr titnding ·shlp a ·final time and said STORI ES ON LAND ING, MOON WALK-PAG E 4 :FIY~NNIS 1i<lRT0: ·Mau: (Ui>l), ..! mop11 • H. ul<<Medy> .. · mult!MyuanaU; • f~t~, Pi .~ .P.r,eaj~e/'l .. (11'f l~~;~ ~~ fn,a lr11e<ty:~~IJl'\l.Y• , • ~ip,';;~~~)•t, 'u~ : • 1 r;!t:.1r i::.' r " ., .... ....,...,,. iii !he fabu~·llennedf oole;l'a• wbO·loet t~ sons ....... ·one 'a.Presktcnt and the other a senator 1 to a&susins' b01Je£s was an invalid since felled by a stroke. nearly, eight .years ago. "we're ready to go" (or a pinpoint trollers to keep an eye on the guidance touchdown on the lunar Oc;:ean of Slorms rockets on the spacecraft because "we seem to be firing a liUle more ... around tonight. . , the moon than we had imagined." "We've checked all the things we re He also asked h9'f often to take oujlpoSed to and they're 'It sbipel)ape." decqogestant tablelj (9~1Cl a !llµl-1 AID L. Bean rodioed .arth.lrom-mside .. Jy noao he<OllLllat,blio~~ I d I tr ·d's cabin since launCh. the an er n epi · r "I don't know whether I have a cold or So perfect was every . as~t 0 anything,'' he said. "My ca~ a_re . America's second lunar landing mission sometimes clear and sometimes are that flighl director M. Pele Frank told not." ' newsmen "it's al least 100 percent ef· Doctors told him to tak.e a lablet ev~ry · I ' · t mazed " eipt hours and Bean said he was going fect1ve. m JUS a · t t t back to sleep He said nothing, including a minor skin o ry o go . irritation reported by flight commander Charles "Pete" Conrad, stood between the crew and their landing at IO :fl.l p.m. (P5Tl today. Conrad , Bean and Richard F. ~rdon slept through the day. Gordon will re- main in lunar orbit aboard the co~man.d ship ·vankee Clipper tonight •. while his crewmates unlatch the landing craft from lhe Clipper and descel¥i to the surlace. Shortly after noon. the space agency nounced that a solar Oare had been ~~erved on the sun. but that "based on the previous in(ormation we ~ad from this Oare we would not expect it to be a roblem" that would endanger .the ~stronauts. It was the same Oare. flI'ft seen Nov. 2, and the sun had . s1mp Y rotated until it was in view again from OJ! Sc hools Bond V ote Turnout Lotv Oeean View School District officials lo.. Qav reported a light turnout of voters during the moming hour1 in today's $7.5 million school bond election. At 10 a.m. only 443 of the district's 21.398 registered voters had cast their ballots, representing a turnout o( 2.1 per· cent. " ' : ~ l ~ I I VPI Tt'-""'~ ; I . · l •' l I • J t \ ! . ' . • • 1 • ' Thl:'!. Mc·oonOell Douglas airlock for the Saturn v. :;rbital workshop was · the :topic of conv~rs ation toda'y as Dr. \Vernher1von Braun \Vas.brief- ed al airlock m0<;Jrnp in .St LOqis, Mo .. by Frea J. Douglas (l~ll ). 1director of airlock program for space firrr). Dr. Von B:raun ·directs NASA's Marshalf Space Flight Center. which has a\varded McDonnell Douglas co ntract for work on space workshop and its airlock module. Ea~~·n woke up in the middle or the Mon- day sleep period and asked ground con· A spot check of five representative precincts. ou t of a total of 19, revealed the following voting picture: -At Circle View School, 2.1 of .653 registered voters (1.6 percent) had Cast ballots th is morning. Anotl1er Location Offered Council Sta rts Res haping of City Dow1itoivF1-• The Top of the Pier Plan was formally accepted ?tlonday ~lght by the Huntington Beach City Council. . In a rouLine motion. wtlhoul comment, all seven councilmen agreed to the com· plete reshaping or the city's down~wn and bCach area. . Top of the Pler Plan calls for extension nf the city parking authority to include dov.·ntown between 6th and Like slreets. one block inland from Pacific Coast llighway, and a five 11cre parcel east of Lake street. , . That land will become a large parking lot with convnercial and, apartmeot de~elopment swTounding jt, spec ialty shops on the pier and p e r h a p s restaurants, shops and other deve lopment blJj\t above the parking area. The city staff is already working on a procedure list to get the downtown renovation away. The City Council meets as the parking au'lhority at 5:30 p.m .• nelt Monday, and 11 expected to ask City Administrator Doyle ,._1iller fo begin ap- praisal or the downtown land which must be condemned to make way for the porkfng. -At College View, the figures we re 40 of 1.583 registered voters (1.5 percent). -Crest View, 12 of 1,326 registered voters (1.3 percent). As Site for Ci vic Ce11ter -Harbour View, 52 of.1,336 registered coni:idetation of a site (or Huntington voters (1.3 percent). -Haven View. 17 or 1,415 registered Beach.'s future civic center was thrown voters (1.4 percent). lnto confusion. Monday night by a .star£ The polls will remaln open until I p.m. report reconunending .study of a third District administrators expect balloting site. to increase significantly durina t)le even· City-councilmen agreed to hold a study Ing hours. · A two-thirds majority Is required for 5e$ion on the subject r.tonday at 8 a.m. al the Sheraton Beach Inn. passage of tilt bond , which would qualify d the distri ct for enough state-aid funds lo Up for study \Viii be a propose site sl Lake St r eet and '.tlanta Avenue. carry out its building program through property owned by th e Huntington Beach 1975. Company and eyed as part of the inland p~~sage of the bo~s wou ld provide~ parking project recently approved by the addJt1onal classr1)0011 for an expectetl .•n· council. crease of .at least &,000 children during ~~ . A city stafr coinmittce and two coun- t[ir next six years. . cilmen surveyed t~e Lake-Atlanta site School officials predict that. some fllonday an d precipitated the study children would be placed on double ~ 1 seSaions.at every school this year If the sci~ ~~s pointed out that ci vic c"nter bol_KI issue falls to pass. l d' r b It ts hi cd b the ~city There hu been no organized opposition s u 1es ~. ~su an r Y • ' Sllace Ullhzat1on Analysts, of(ered as one to the meamre. alternative an ll·story high rise building. S t9"k Market NE\V YORK (AP)-The ·stock market began firlJlinl. Ill< tblo afternoon after-• ainkinl 1peJf dllring early trailing. Volume WU f.afrly fftivt. (See quota• tiom, P-H}. • Officially. the <'!ty is now committed to a civic center on 12 acres or property on upper Main Street oppos ite the Hun· tington Beach High School. But ilw:ece.nt weeks -a. study has been made of a new site on a acres al Atlanta end Beach Boulevard. • Staff members making the report to ' . . the ct1uncil Include Doyle J\.1iller, city ad- ministrator; Ken Reyn9lds, planniQg directDr;. Thomas Severns. development coordinator; Vince Moorhouse. dlrector (If habors and beaches, and Ray Picard, t1rr chief. ' CounCllmen looking over lhe new pro· posa l were George McCracken and Jerry Motney. The tentative plan for use of the Lake· AUanla slle would include the high rise structure and parkin1.space to be leased from the Parkin& Authoritx. Safe Driving Progra1u • Slated in llunlingtou A program on safe dri ving will be presented by the Huntington Beach Safe- ty Council, Thursday in the council cham- ber of city hall. The free public program begins at 7:~ p.m. and includc.s a film on proressional driving tcehniq ue.s lo be shown by Stuart Wilkinson, sarety consultant for the Aut:orMbUe Club of Southern Callfomla. accordl'ng to Ed Sullivan president of the safely council. · Death,.came at 8:05 a..m. {PST) alt.et; itennedy~_Wflo ~as U.S. am~, to GrW 111rijiJa •Ill!<~¢ War1'1 l\'l!l II, aufltrid ihe l•te51 lo a llfrinl al heir\ -: attacks · ~turday. ·A.famJly spokesman lasued tht follow- ~ lllalelnent o . ~ 'Aliiba.ssador Joseph P. Kennedy dled peacefully today at his 'horhe In Hyannla Port. lie wa's 81 years old. ·, "Mr. Kennedy was pronounced d~ad at 11 :05 a.m. (EST) by his physic ian, Dr. Robert D. Wall. With hlm al the time of his death were h.ls wile and the members or his family ." Sen. Edward M. Kennedy CD-Mass.), hiS lone surviving son whq spent the night tn a lonely vigil al his father's bedside, was with the senior Kennedy when he died. The senator's mother, Mrs. Rose Kennedy, his \Vife .Jo'an and R. Sar&ent Shriver, U.S. ambassador to France. also were present. · 'ramlly sources said the last rites (of the Roman Catholic' Church were ad. ministered lo Ken nedy two or three.times wit hin the last month. As his condition deteriorated, a11 members of. the glamoroU.6 Kt;nnedy family gathered at the Kennedy com· JlCIUnd overlooking Nantucket Sound where he once sailed with his fatnily. J acqueline Kennedy Onassis, wi~ow of President John F. Kennedy, flew 1n from her island home at Skorpios, Greece. Mrs. Ethel Kennedy, \VidO\V of :>en. Robert F. Kenned y, ca1ne ( r om W2shington. A maA who equated money with power and power with money , Ken~edy mol~ed a political family or na1r and tm· agination. Kennedy, a sa loonkeeper's son, amass- ed a fortune estimated at up to a half· bilhon dollars. He admittedly was one or America's 20 wealthiest men. But for all his wealth, his life was scar· red with tragedy. Foor of his nine chil· (See KENNEDY, Pa1e 3) St udies Planned On Land, Traf fie A committee to study lodustrlaJ land and one to inspect traffic problems ·will be formed by the Fountain Valley City Council at is 8 o'c lock meeting. tonight. Cohsideratlon will also be given to formation of a special comn1ittee ,to study youth problems Jn the city as re· qu~ted by Mayor Edward JuSt . · ·Residents have been asked t6 submit applications Tuesday and during the week for th'! indmtrial and trafnc com· mil tees. The only public hearing scheduled on a routine agenda Is ror weed abatement Proceedings. .. .P ... TRI ARCH' l'ASS!I Jo..,,, P.' KOnnody Ele ctio1i Daie · Set for Feb. 10 February JO has been sel~ed is the probabl~ date fi>r a special -elecilon lo change the interest rate on $ol. 75 mlllioa i'.1 school bonds held by the Huntington Beach City (elementlry) School-District. .Trustees or 'the district will hold a speClal meeting 'at 7:301p.m., Tuesday In the Dwyer Scttool library to consider the elecllan. Rbut.ine matters will also be ba~!ed 'fUesday, e'.Umlnating tM A!gular meeting on• Nov. 25: , Adminls'trators of Ule dislrlct · have recomm~ndt!d Feb, 10 as t.fie electl9n date and said the change in ilttere!t rate (now rnve percent) should rlot e1cted seven percent. Feb. 10 ls the same date th~ ,high school district will hold~ •. '9.S m1l11on bond election. Disjrict official~ have.not been able to sell the already voter·approved bonlla at five percent and hope an increa.sed ln- terest·rate,wtll bring the needed fonds in· to dist rict coffers. The city school distrJct is not ask.i.1g for more bond money as yet, only a .change in the. current interest rate. ' ·We ather "More the ·same'' is the cryptic comment ·· frOm the weatherltuln for Wed!leada)', with in1tatlng-a'ir stirred by Santa· Ana· winds. and temperatures lri "the upper 70's a1ong the coast. ' INSW E TODA,'\' . . . It's tlte biggest week oJ t11e live "teater · 11easo11 • on ah~ Ora11ge Coast -lil: new plays opt1ti11g aiid six oth11rs ltJU otl tlic boards. See T111!!<1ter Notes, Page 18. • .... " " • " • " •• " .. .. " :Don't ;FOrget to Vote T~day; Polls Open Till 3 . . . ' , ;. '\) ----- • • --___.,._ --·---~ .. -·~---,,,. .... ~..., .... .,.. .... -~-.... ---... -..... -........ --....... -... ----.... --... --.......... -.... ._,....7....,-:-:~--~~"T' -- DAii.)' PILOT H .. President Meei.s 'JJarke11s President Nixon got remindertciday that Thanksgiving I~ pot, far off. He received a pair of live, 40-pound, bro~d-breasted :wn1te turkeys raised in Virginia'.s .Shenandoah Valley. Buds were gifts of the Na· tional Turkey Federation. ' · · Land Involved in -Bribe Awaits ·Planne.r 4ction 'lbe ·21) acres oi. land which" last Weet &parked an alleged bribe attempt of J:I~ tington Beach Mayor Jack Green conie;s before the planning commission at 7:_30 J Beach Hunting Correct Zoning 1 At Intersection . Huntlngtpn Beach city cooncilmen ~t· tressed a fear MOnday nj&,ht tha~ _top much commercial land around Adams Avenue and Brookhur1t _ Street inight result In spotty development or particular concern to the cooncit ·la IO acres of land ala:ig the aoUthwest'edge of BrOoihurst and A·dams, of which two acrta on lhe comer are owne<I by .the city of Newport Beach. .. . -. Councilmen have ask~. the city plan- ning commlsskln to study the entire.~~~ and report to the copncil on the poss1b!h• ty of eliminating some of the commercial wni'.1g. . The alarm to spotty deyelopment w•~ raised by Meredith Garden home owners. 10uth o{ the commercial . land. In particular they noted Newport Beach plans to allow a service station, a car. wash, a Jack·in-the:Box and a fourth business on its two acres. Ed Kearris. speaking for the bomeov.1ners, called for a mora torium on building perm.Hs to avoid a "hodge podge of commercial developme.1t.'' City planning dir:ector Ken Reynolds agreed that perhaps ''lhere v.·as.too n1uch wmmerclal land there," which was leading to piecemeal development. Homeowners and councilmen aereed that a unified develOpment would be beneficial, but not separate developme.1l On small parcels. Reynolds. however, ~inted out that the city could do little about the type of development except to ~nge the zoning. ' ltuss Rocket Explodes ,, WASHINGTON (AP) -The explosion M a huge Soviet l'<ldtet on its launch pad may have set Russian efforts to land a man on the moon back t\\'O years and Crippled its manned ·space program. • DAllY PILOT ' OIAHG! COAST fl\la\.1$HING C.OMl'AN'W 11.ob•tf N. W11d r rr)idtnl 11r>d Pu1Hi111tr J1clt 11.. CY1lt'f Vic• f'rts.acnl Mid Ge"'1itl ~nttft' lhOll'lll Ktt vil E.:lilOf Thom11 A. Muqlhint M1111tlf\1 Eclo!or o'clock tonight in the city council chambers. · : . Locat~ on the sbuth side of Slater Arenue, approximalely ft60 feel east of Gothard &tteet, ijle prqperty is presently ZOiied for JiR:ht industrl81 uses. The developers, Cactlflor Inc. of Para· moun~: however would like to establish a i:nobile bO{Tle par)i: at that location. which. req9ires .i zone change to ~fi~pro­ lessi.on~ lJse&.. · Green·aJlegedly was offered $4,000 by Willlam-.:New, 66, of-Phoenix, Ariz. to wie his influence in allowing construction or the tr:ailer.par.k, No · cOnnection t>etween New and the Cactif!~ finn .. has . Deen reported by police investigating the case. When' the alleged bribe attempt was detectives and charged with tWo counts disclosed to pOUce, New was arrested by of attempting to bribe a publif; offici,al In placing their request for a zone change briwe 'the plannlng commission, lb< divo!opers said <hi! prop<My lia!Jfeen dormant· for .several )'ears with';no pro- spectJ of any near future ~~trial de'vi!lopment. · · .•. I~ zoned to the .new use, the developers claim, thlr property would · be Un· mediat,ely put·to.godd use. ·· At Tuesdays· meeting, planning com· missioo members_ will also COO$lder:.ap- proval or an addition to a day ··care ~~rsery a~ pre-school and a temparary banldrig facility. · · .. Freeway Route Would Wipe Out Scliool Facility ' Mike .Brick, superintendent of lhe Fountain Valley SChool Olstrict, today In· dicated lh'at the future Huntington Beach Freeway may be on a · direet col· llsion course with lhe district ad· ministration 's headquarters unless a ne"' route is found. The administratlol), faciljty, built in 1968 al a cost or $274,000, ls located at I Lighthouse Lane, near the intersection of Talbert Avenue and Newland Street. It hou ses offices. maintenance facilities and lhe dist.ricl's lilm and curriculum library. Brick said construction of the freeway Is about nine·years "away. Trustees are still hopeful the route ·might be changed. he added. If it is not, the freeway. which roughly parallels Beach Boulevard, will take out the entire complex,. since a cloverleaf has ·beei1 plarined fqr · that locatiou, Brick :iaid. . School of(icials said they had no idea that the freeyray would pose any prcr blems to the facility when they plaMed il. • -- CQurt Weighs :Bea~h Stili Cr~k Future, Other Cou~ty Beac~ l"yolved ~."' . • l I • I • I ' The qUesUon .of publlc acce.u to' Call!ornla Udelands -such as those at Salt Creek Md the risl'of Orange CoUnty ' -t • -will be weighed by: the State Supreme Court next year. • The St&Se~ La n d 1 Commiasi9n bas llt.ltboriztd the attorney gueral to rep~ Jt before the .state'• top tribunal: . The attorney general's oUice will enter the lmpor1ant proceeding -the court Beach Mother Held as Home Said Pigsty A l:luntlngtcm Beach motller was ar· rested Monday afternoon on felony child ntglect charges alter olficers alleged the'y rouDd 'her home unfit for human hlbitaUQJl. Arrealed "as Mrs. Lilyann Payne, 42, a dr'insman for a Santa Ana computer firm, who W8l!I lving alone with her I~ year-0ld sOn and 16-year-0ld daughter at 720 14th St .. Huntington Beach. Offlcei-s rtrst went to her home on a routine matter when they entered and found, according to their report: -Trash three to six inches thJck spr!ad over the living room floor. -Two to four inches of animal defeca· tion throughout the house. -Rotten newspapers stacked on the nm:oead· mice, two inch ts of rot inside the refrigerator, dangerous knJves and sharp tln cans laying about the kitchen .• -No hoe. water and stagnant water in lbe toilet. Doth children were ·turned over to juvenile authorities, while Mrs. Payne was freed oo $1,250 bail. • . She is expected to be arraigned on the felony child ~glect charges. this.week in West Orange County Municipal Court in West.minster. Service Station Permit Use Plan OK'd liy Beach . . . · A City code amendment requiring use pennija: for senr:ice staUons in com. rnunity busJness districts was approYed Monday night by U!e Huntington Beach CUy Council •. Councllmeri queried Planning Director Ken Reynolds on progress toward architectural control of gasoline stations and wire told that the Planning Com- mission wu "leaning that way and would appreciate an p;pre.ssion from the coun-- cil." ·Reynolds said most oil CMlpanies were planning suburban type slaUons with roof liries In contrast to the fonner square box tyi)e of conriguration. Councilmen also approved a zon:! change front industrial use to coin· mercial ror eight acres or property at the northwest corner of Edinger Avenue and 1 Gothard Street adjoining Golden We.st College. John A. 1'.lunty, representing Freeway Industrial Park told councilman a large chain retail finn was planninis to build on lhe property. Councilmen were concerned about traf· fie flow in the area which now includes a massive retail furniture store adjoining Huntington Center. They were assured ~y 1'.furdy that his firm v•ou\d cooperate in any street realign1nents found necessary. Traffic Signals OK'd Fo1· Beach Intersec tion Traffic llghls for Indianapolis and Yorktown avenues where they intersect Brookhurst Street were approved Monday night by the Huntinglon Beach City Council. City Clerk Paul Jones v.·as authorized by the council to seek bids from com- panies for the v.·ork to be~in as soon as possible. Estimated cost ts $50,000. · wlllllc" -11 an Ami~ CUriae, a friend _the public. Rullnp 14, the cues thus f.ar • JJ Gion ¥!'SUI the CUy of Senta Cruz, ol tbe'court. appear to have 'been contr1dlct.ory. , tbe"\:ity clatined that &here was an Jmplied 'nip attOmey gentrat actually will be , In Dietz veru KiJUr: in Meodaclno ·public ~t19n' by• ule tor mere 1han representlng the people of Callrornla in County, a division of the bistrict Court ot five1teai's , teps Jeadll!g dowb a1 cliff ·to fighting for acce11 to hundreds . .of miles Appeal reversed &he Superior Court, and the ):»each. ~ - of state tidelands for a population that ruled that a long history o1 public uaage Tffis was flll'ther complicated l)y an old ~ws greater dally. of a road across private property lega toughif~tthe whereabouls ol• ... lbe Appearing before the commission, Jay established public right to keep usin1 lbe me high Ude line. , ~ , L. Sbavelson, usistanl attorney general. • road~ .. clty said the tlde:line WI!! at-·the Friday sald the cases before the :court , ™ Nivarro Beach Rood bid tiroYlded of the ~Jiff. Tbe'flainU!I aaid Jt was 1'are of statewide slgnil'.lcance and WW · accel5 for D)Oft: than tot Y.eatf &pd '!•S wa ltd ot tae clil baSe and tJiM the 'set very important precedenti.'• the only way to the beach in that vicinity. bea was privately owned. The appealed cases to be considered by The landowner .had it blocked to the The trial oourt ruled that there wa11 the court both involve tideland access for public. The appellate court unblocked Jt. dedJcation by implication. A division of Repair Work Scheduled On High School Building Pasadena architects Neptune and Thomas have been hired by the Hun- tington Union High School District board of trustees to plan structural rehabilita· tion o! an old llulldlng for earthquake safety. The bulkling, which Includes the auditorium and some classrooms on the lluntington Beach High School campus, is one of t~ oldest in the district and has been declared unsafe by state school of· ficials in the event an earthquake should occur. Trustees have apportioned $1 million from a $9.S million bond election schedul· ed for February to the building's renova- tion. Doubts about the whole project were raiseji Thursday by Trustee Joseph Ribal, who Said that the building only appeals to people nostalgically and that lt should be torn down. He suggested that a new building be constructed jn its place which would be more flexible for modem educational purposes. , When his fellow board members balked al spending the $3 million required to construct a new building, :R.lbal said if · any work is to be undertaken on the building it should at.least make it com- parable tG other buildings on other cam- puses. "U we're _going to 00' anything over there at all, we should do it all at.once," he said. Joe Thomas, one or the arch1tecturli1 finn representatives, explained that such complete rehabilitation "would cost more money than tearing down the pld building and building a new one." Rlbal later made a motion to the effect that the building be used for ad· ministratlve purposes and that the million dollars be applied toward con- struction of a new school. Administrative campus buildings ap- parently do not come under juriadiction of th~ Field Act, which requires certain earthquake safety standard:; of classroom buildings, Ribal indicated. His motion died for lack of a second. Newport Yacht Concerto Win11er of La Paz Race By NORMAN R. ANDERSON Of I•• Da!IJ Pli.t Stiff Two Newport Harbor boats, both Columbia 57s, have captured top laurels in the 3rd aMual Lon& Bach to La Pai yacht race. John Hall's Concerto from Newport Harbor Yacht Club is overall corretted time winner· and flrst in Class A, with Dorothy 0, skippered by R o b e r t Beauchamp from-NHYC, second O\'erall and second in Class.A-. It's the second t:a Paz race victory for Hall. He was first In Class .~ in 1967 when he skippered Slmoon. Third overall is Class D boat, Aquarius, an Ericson 35, skippered by John Holiday of Long Beach Yachl Club, which was first in its class. Class A and Class D boats took most of the honors. Windward Passage, 73-foot ketch -Was ilrst to liolsh Saturday morn- ing, but \11ound up. because of time it had to give away, as only four t.h in class and ninth overall. Blackfin, another 73-foot ketch which followed Passage across the line about an hour later, took third In class and seventh overall. Fourth and fifth places overall were taken by two class D boats, Dona J., from CYC, second in class and L'Allegro, Richmond Yacht Club, 3rd in class. Three boats, all Class D, were unreported th is 1norning. accord ing to Carroll Hudson of Ne"•port Beach who is n1onitoring radio reports froin Vector at La Paz. They were Malobi, Posada !\tanana lI and Al Viento. Trophy presentations \\'ill take place tonight at the Los Arcos Hotel in La Paz. The race up the Baja California coast, according to reports, was a rough one, with winds rorcing a tacking duel. TOOay in lhe La Paz harbor, winds were reported blowing at 30 knots and most boalJ were P.JtUng out e1.tra anchors. Re'"1tsJin class and overall: ,-Cl.ABS A .Concerfo, 1·1; Dorothy o. Z-2; Blackfin, 3-7; Windward Passage, 4·9; Rascal, 5·22. CLASS B Bohemia. 1·10; Charisma, Z-12: Ariana, 3-13; Pantera. 4·14; Irish Mist, S-16; Serapis, 6-17; Vector, 7-19; Robon 111, 8- 21. CLASS C Tanqueray, 1-6{· Pericus, U ; Isobar, 3. 11; Alerion, 4. 5; Debinda lV, 5-'18; Se"ern, 6-20; La Prensil, 7. CLASS D Aquarius, 1-3; Dorta J., z-.4 ; L·Auegro, 3'S. Fro~ Pag~ 1 DISTRICT ... regard to sex-education. others Indicated a need ror discUSS.ion about uae of drugs op campus, free speech, new approaches to Instruction and implications of the Edu~ation Code. Said one parent. "t encourage you to establish and maintain communicalion with voters, students and parents and non-parents. There are many classes of citizens, there are many views of educa - tion . All of them need to kno"'• each class in its own context. r· deem it a wise ex- penditure of district funds to keep all citizens informed.'' · • the 'iStrict Court oI Appeal teversect·the supetlor court. • ' ; • 'l'.'.\t positions ol the appellate court justices appear to have been ..at. Odds although the c a s es had important disslmilaritles. Tbe State Supreme Court deeis.ion to hear the lwo matters in effect removes the · appellate court findings (tom the boo). The S!o_ate Supreme ~ now will set the · grecedent, if the maUer ends. ~ere and. pot fn ~ U1S.;Supreme Court. Implications could be vast to surfers, to corporate land owners, to public agen- cies, to people in ~general. , The legal proctpUngs, attm:neys COO· cede, might ran~ to broader .issues. These might be property -rldits (beach ownership) ver~ the. publlc right to perch on p"rivate llfa.ch. : Jn other words ·Jf the property owner has been a good guy aDd let people Qse his beach llas he now lost any fUture right to deny theni the beach. There is the practical matter too (lf this issue forcing owners of beach to rush intG the task o( fencing it or gua rding it ·tG prevent losing easen1ent to the public. This has probably alr~ady happened to some extent because of the Deitz vs. King case. The State Supreme Cou rt procedure will doubtless have a bearing on Orange County's own Salt Creek Road case. William Wilcoxen, Laguna Beach at· torney. is fighting to overturn aban- donment of the road by c o u n I y supervisors (March 1968) lo the Laguna Niguel Corporation which owns the sur· rounding property and plans private deve lopment. A spokesman ror the state attorney general said that Wilcoxen has been in- vited tG make suggestions to that office in the matter Pfnding before the State Supreme Court. The matter will probably be argued in January but a decision Is probably several months away -well into 1970. Durio~ the Friday meeting of thi!: State Lands Co1nmission, Houston J. Flournoy, state controller and chairman of the com. mission, said it should be represented by the attorney general's ortice "to proteet the ·public interest." Shavelson said the .attorney gene~al's office intends "to preserve as mt.tdi~ public beach area as possible and-ltt avoid fenci ng off of beaches." The abandonment of Salt Creek Road touched off an uproar that began as a rumble. ' The road abandonment was brought in· to sharp public focu.s in December during a hearing in Newport Beach of the Assembly Subcommittee on Beaches and Conservation. Mrs. Helen Keeley. former Laguna Beach vice mayor, testified at the ti.me: "With this pieeemeal abandonment or Salt Creek Road. it appears to me that the Orange County Board of Supervisors and lhe Orange County Road Department have totally disregarded the needs of. the public by totall.v disregarding the coun-- ty's own ?\.taster Plan for Shoreline Development." \\'ilcoxen later look the county and the t..aguna Niguel Corporation to court in an attempt -still going on -to overturn the abandonment or the road loop, once part or Coast Highway. Supervisors since have approved a $1 million allocation of lax funds for the purpose of beach acquisition . Negotia· tions are under way by the county to gain some type of access in the Salt Creek area . Also, Ylilliam Penn Mott, st.ate director of beaches and parks, has held preliminary discussions \\1ith another large landowner, the Irvine Company. about some type public access and use of tlie corporation's beaches between Lagu- na Beach and Corona del h1ar. >.lbo1t W. 11••1 ""°'Ille 1Edll0t Htlttl""9fl lffc• Office l09 Stir. Str••f No Deal on Pay Molli~ Acldr•11i P.O. 111 190, 92641 Ott.et OtRcn Nt-11 a..<11, ~Jtl wu1 81lb<!l lk!l.l1tv1r• '°''' Mcu: llll WC•I ••v 51tffl ~ 1"'11: W Fot~ll Avt- Extra Meetings Free Service See t~• largest sel ection of Spanish and Mediterranean Dining Room groups. ~-­ DAILY'" P1L.or .... i ... •111<11 11 comt •lltil "'' ,,, ..... ,.,CH, II •••• 111>llwt Cl••l• t •crP• Swn• tll'I' In ffNrlll tcrllioilll ,.,.,. Hunllnt !Oft Sc.ell, f-'•ln l/llll Y• (°'ti Meu , Ne- .. ,, l!ttcll •M ~VM le<icl\, t lonf *(11\ I• '"*"I ffil1-. °'"'" CH~' r w1t1i111-illt Comp111y ,....,,,"" ,,.Mt '" II '211 W9tl L ll1lt11 111.-cl , Jrftwlll"I flMCll, 11111 lJI WtM l't• $111NI, CO.II /NW, r ... ,.._ 17141 oMa .. JJ:I "•• Wt1t ........ C.-141·1JJ:O 't Clnlff!H .W111rh ... "1·h11 COl"Hlt~I. !flt. or-( ... I P'littll ....... (-n• ,... -1111 \tt.. 1111.1 ... •I-.. t"IG1~1 "'-"•• f/t tctW:t1'-"fllll lwrtlfl .... , .. '""edlK" ..... ...., NtCi.I ,., ......... ti ,..i .. tlll ... , .... t "''"' ells. nu·~t 0tt4 11 Nt-' at.c.11 1 allCI (c1t1 M•t•· c1111t.t~·• ~.t1<•.f.l1Cn t.t' t•ult• 11.0t "'°"lll!r 1 tv1!\111 111'11 -lftll'I mllO•tt dutfllel!tf>S. IVlt '"°"lft!y. ' A proposal to pay extra money to members of the West Orange Cwnty ~'aler Board lor aUendance at special meeliag~ was rejected ~1onday nighl by lhe HunUngto.i Bead1 City council. The Water Board was asking $50 per member for attcnda~ al meetings of other bodies If deemed necessary by the board. Board memben; are made up of t14·0 city councilmen each from lJun- lington Beach, Garden G r o v e , \Vestminster and Sea l Beach. _ City Clerk Paul Jones also serves as secretary to the v.·attr board, but would oot have betn included In the pr-opo.ul. Cour>eilman Henry Kaufman a&ked the water board lo eiplore other methods - such as adjourning a regular meeting to a spe<"iflc place -to Cflmpensate. Jones said the propo.saf was prompted ' , by a request that Water Board members attend a crucial meeting ol Ille Orange County !\1unlcipal Water District. ''\1.11!1 simply thought they ought to be paid (or attending such a meeting," said Ja.1es. 1'.1ayor Jack Green opposed the. n1easure , requesting a tighter reso lution, not allowing an open number of meellngs, be formed . Councilmen Ted Bartlett and George f\lcCracken , the city's representatives on lhe water board. abstat.1ed from voting. All five of Ille other cooncllmen rejected the request After the lengthy dlscuBsion Coun- cilman Donald Shipley "T)'ly commented, ''My colleagues on this board can vote us tnto $10 mil lion In dtbt. In ltn minutes and \\'e spend a:1 hollr on $50." •·1 have the some probl'rr. at home," chipped in Bartlett. I AVAILABlE FOR IMMEDIATE i;>ELIVERY for the HOLIDAYS ' ·- -.. r --------·-- . -.. -'--~--~-- ---.,..--. Sa aareliaek vor. iz, NO. 276, 3 S~TIOJllS, 30 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, C>,,CIFORNIA • • • •, - ' , TUESDAY, NOV&MIER JS, 1969 • .J • -' -' \. • , TEN ·CENTS Viejo ~aster Plan . Befo:re COllriti . ~ . J .~. By PAMELA HALLAN Of tflt Dall)i' f"UH Slaff The fourth revision of Mission Viejo's · master plan comes before the 'Orange County Board of Supervisors Wednesday. AJlboogl\ approved by the planning commission, the plan has been the target of _an organized protest in the com- munity. Opponents ·of the plan c.l\ed · the Mission Viejo Citizens Assoeiltlon fear that zoning changing and land acqulsltk>n will bring apartments to their community -apartments they believed will be a detriment to the arep;. The MfsSion Viejo Co. argues that apartments are part of a complete com- munity and woUld not be a bad.thing with. careful' planning, design · and manage. ment. 1bey are prestntly building 144 uni ls. J.ust what exacUy Is the fourth revision. and what does it call £or? Roy 'Gobara, OrOll&• County piaMer working on the revision, said that when Mission Viejo's mas ter plan ~vas adopted in 1965, the entire 1'1,000 acres was not zoned although he knew there would be areas for industrial, commercial, single family dwellings, multijll~ fartl.lly dwell· ings·, recreation ilnd other. uses. The first zoning included 3,520 acres a~' repreSented the siilgle family dWell· irigs in the first housing units bu.ilt, the high school and the golf course.· tbe fiist revision added l,t'!Za acres near the Burfoughs 1nq.~trial facility. The seoond,_,revlsion also was an , ex. pansion of area adding 699 acres . near Crown Valley Parkway. , The •third revision added 657 acres for Saddlebaek.CoUege:, Coronado h·omes and the new auto center. It alao permitted zone<fland for the undeveloped·land south of , La Pai Ro;id, west ol Marguerite ~arkway, nort)l ' oJ Oso ·Parkway ~ aod al19wed apartments to be constructcll. on 3.0 acres northeast or the. intersection. of enne ea Mission Perteet Astronauts Set To Land Tonight SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Apollo 12's astronauts looped the moon with unerring precision today, inspected their landing ship a final time and said "we're ready lo go" for a pinpoint touchdown on the lunar Ocean of Storms tonight. "We've checked all the thini1' we're suppc.-<I to all<( !htYlre oll shi~pe,'; Alan L. Bean radioed. earth from inslde the lander lntrepid's cabin. So perfect was every • aai*:t of America's second lunar landing· Dussion that flight director M. Pete Frill told newsmen "it's at least 100 pe!Unt ef~ fective. I'm just amazed." Youth Nabbed After Battle With Officer A nervous young man who, police said, punched a big Laguna Beach officer in the chest and attempted unsuccessfully to flee was arrested Monday night on charges of possessing both marijuana and dangerous drugs for sale. Police booked Donald A 1 ex a n d e r Vallese, 19, oo fixed address. He was with two marines, said police, who turned the young man over to the shore patrol. Sgt. Dave Brown said. the Uiree were in a car stopped by Officer Bob Remillard in the 600 block of South Coast Highway. While Remillard was searching Valese, said Brown, the man turned and struck the officer in the chest and bolted. The chase was "about two giant steps", said Brown. He said pills, marijuana, hashish and apparently LSD· were recovered in small quantities. Jn another Monday ll,(l'est, Sgt. Norm Babcock and agents 'of 'the State Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement arrested .James Robert Ambler, 20, of the Casa Laguna Motel, 2510 South Coast Highway, on a warrant. : ~ Re was booked on -suspiclOn or mari- juana possession and heroin Possession. Brown said officers recovered a small quantity of each. Stock ,tJarke t NEW YORK (AJ\)-The stock market beJan _firming lat~ .,thit afternoon a~ a sinkmg spell dunng early tradin" Volume was fairly .aCdve. (See ciuota-Uons, Pages 3-11). · STORIES ON LAND ING, ,MOON WALK-PAGE ·4 He said nothing, including a minOr sif11l irritation reported by flight commander Charles "Pete" ~ad, stoOO betweea the ctew and their landing-at.Jll>53,p.m. (l'ff·•W· •. , .;· , . ,, Coitrad, Bean and Richard F. Go On •l•pt'tli!iiiill\ the day. Gordbb"WJll,,... maip in funar orbit aboard the.command !llip Y ank!e Clipper toru,ht while his cre~tea unlatch the. lat:idin&:, cra{t from the Clipper and descend to the surface. Shof!IY after noon, the space agency announced that a solar flare had been observed on the sun, but that "based on the previous information we had from this flare . we would qot expect Jt to be a problem'' that would· endanger the astronauts. It was the same Oare first seen Nov. 2, and the sun had simply rotated until it was in view again from Earth. Bean woke up in the middle of the Mon· day sleep period and asked ground \on· trollers to keep an eye on the guidance rockets on the spacecraft because "we seem to be firing a little more ... around the moon than we had imagi ned." He also asked how often t.o take decongestant tablets to counteract a 'stuf~. fy nose he said had been bothering him since launch. "I don't know whether 1 have a cold or anything,'' he said. "My ears Bre so metimes clear and sometimes are not." Doctor& told him to take a tablet every eight hourS and Bean said he was going to try to go back to sleep. Arch Beach Set For Laguna Study At the request of 1City Planner Al Autry, Laguna Beach plaMing com· missioners Monday . night agreed to qevote an entire study session, ten· tatlvely Dec. 22, to the review of pro- posed improvement plans in Assessment District &6-1, the Arch Beach Heights district finally apprOved by 'the City Council Nov: S. "A study session," said Autry, "would enable the commissioners to become aware or some or the many problems lhat may arise in this area and to estab1ish some. policy in advance. 0 1 feel It is very impqrtant for the commission to be familiar wilh what is planned up there before any work begins.'' "':~ . ,. . •.• ····(h ' ..• I. , i " • •• ,. • • • r.li.tilL'=' •1to11si.~'•11ttt SHOWOFF -You can't blame ·~op ·of, i~e :w~tid ,Y;;:.t g,;.a~rs bavid , Threadgold. and Gillian Newton · for' gigglin~, llaguna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder had just signed a proc1amatu>ii j)ltlggipg the sctfool's Pet and Hobby'Show. when "Girl/' their tW~y.ear.-01.a frj.end~ snatched the official document and ate it. Well, anyway, the-show will be held this Saturday at the school. '-\'. Pets on Parade Laguna Sc hool Staging Show Rats, cats. puppy dogs and butterfly coJlections .will · be earning ribbons for their proud owners Satu,rday'as.Laguna's Top of the World Elem~ntary School presents its second annual P TA ~ sponsored Pet and Ho~bY Show from 10 ~.m. to· 1 p.m.: · f. distinguished panel of judges wlll t.1- clude Mayor. Glenn Vedder, who will rule on Canine enl ries1 Fire Chief HOrper Mann, judging the feline depa rtment for the second year and recreation director George Fowler who will view miscellane- ous pe ts, including rat.s, iguanas and et ceteras and also judge entries in the assorted hobbies and c o 11 e c ti o n s category. Greeter Eller Larsen will· be on hand to 1velcome children and their parents and a highlight of the affair will be performances by Rene and His Puppets of :i'estival of A!U .fame., sponsored by the Festival of ·Arts board. Clow:ls and a pany ride will round out the entertainment offerings and there will be ample supplies of popcorn, cotton candy, hot dogs, coffee, cold· drinks and doughnuts. While Mayor Vedder sc lecls the big• gest, fatteSt, smartest'. and barkingest i:1 • tor ribbon awards, Cl)ief' Mann will chOose the sweetest, ha11piest. longest· hai red cats and Fowler will si'Jgle out the Cutest and most unusual of the miscellaneous pets. Youngsters wishing to enter their pets or collections may call Mrs. Robert Loomis, 494·1748 or Mrs. Clayton Claxton, 494-3402. Entry fee is 10 cents per animal. Pets should be on hand for the judging parade at 10 a.m., with dogs leashed and cals and otlier w.1lmals in esc&pe-proor cages, says chairman Mrs. Karel de SmlL . ' Laguna Hills'ides Periled by Rai~s By JOHN VALTERZA Of llM Dlllr 1'11H Slaff Rain can spell death ind damage for the poorly planned hillside home and last winter's heavy storms proved a graphic reminder. _ But people -including the owners or hillside ~ houses -can llave Jhort memorUs. A Newport Beach aoilll enginffr this week tried to jog their memories a bit. Jerry Ni<oil, soi" mgtneer and specialist on charting and correcting sl ide problems warned all Orange Coast . . hillside dwellers to take another hard look at their parUcular conditions before winter's rains coipe again. ''A lot of people seem secure In the 1belief that last winter's rains won't hap. pen again, he 111d, .. But I've beard from. expe11a ollerHh~ year thot studies show last wtnt.r. lo be tbe first of another wet. cycle.'' Alld 11 the experts (-..Ven of the · growth rlhl sequence on certain types of trees are among them) are correct, Nicoll said, I.ht problems have just begun, Laguna Beach's hillsi~e areas JU'e Nature could iake much of the blame, among the big trouble spots, Nicoll. said. Nicoll said. Er.o&iO·n and 'slides are a "There is a neighborhood on a hilltop iialtO'aJ function o1 the earth. ' area in Laguna Beach that makes me shudder wheii I look at It. "'Jt need11 help ''But the builder who puts up a..Jiillside fast," Ile sakl. home assuming that all 1·s stable UI)· Casting a prognosis for an earth sllde derneath is just as much at fault," hC Isn't a job for am,ateurs, Nicoll said, yet said. he's not drummlog.up bu&iness for sol l9 .... So many of these holl8es sllde off hflls engineering. 1 , or .. wind up with tons of mud in the living 111e prof>lem is so widespread,. N1o;>ll l room because no one took the time 'and said, that buslness Is bootnlng withOut ] money to understand what's underneath. publicity. Too many developers build under the WhaLcaus~ the slides? (Sff tflLLSIDES, P11e S) Mar~rite Parkway and La Paz. Road and around Crown .Vaiiex Shopping Center: .. · · The fourth revision is a.further refine.. ment of the mJSter plan, thla Ume 1adding 3,950 acres •eaat o( Marguerite. Partway, With· this addiUon, tbe totf!, .,... of twtission Viejo will be 9,851 acres. , · _Unde:r Ute· fourth· revision, two areaS were. tO be rezoned. One area in the vicinity of Margueri\e ·Parkway ani:I ·La Paz Road would have inc,r~ its den&i· . . . a Patriarch LosesL9ng Life Fight HYANNIS PORT. Mass. (UPI) - Jo~eph P. Kennedy, multimillionaire fathe r of a President and · two U.S. sena..tors., in a t.i:agedy-sla.lked family , died today.' He was 81. • Tl\e •pa(riarch or the fabulous Kennedy clan Who lost two sons -one a President and the other 11. senator -to assassins' bullets was ·an idvalid sioce ft?lled by a alroke nearly eight years ago. ty becau~ optlmu111 uoe of ~1nslty a11ow: · ed had not been rnade~ , : Bui-' Jame! ·Toepfer, vice "president tn' charge of planni'.1g !or the Mission Viejo. Com~y; ·hu ·requested that UU. a"re•'~ ...density remain the samt as. in thi tbird'. revision . , •. . , · '" ·The other,arta'to be,rezoned wW be n'. acres neai; I!>•· Burrooghs facll(ly l"hich will• I>'\ chanie<I from industrial to muIU· plefamlly. If the cqmpany ,so wlihed, W. (See ~ J'L\N! Pa1e J) ·~~ • Death came at 8':'05 a.m: (PST) after ~J1!!0<iy; 'li~o Wlp 1/.S. !ami>IJIMor,to Qmt° lrltala at tbo start el :ftoilil· w1r )lt!suffeied the lateetlu a strtog of hearl alt1eks Satllfd.ay. ....-----, ' A'famlI,·.,.kesman lisued the follqw-tt.; Uf"IT ........ lng alatldtel'lt ; • ' ' . ' "Amllleaador Joseph. P:ltennedy died ~ today ati his home In ·HY&Mll Port. He was 81 years old. "Mr. Kennedy was pronounced dead at 1J :05 a.m. CESTI by his physician, Dr. Robert O. Watt. With him al the time of his death were his wile and the me mbers of his family." Sen. EdWlfrd' M. Kennedy CD-Mass.), his \one surviving son who spent the night in a lonely vigil at his rat.her's bedside, was with the senior Kennedy when he died. The senator's mother, Mrs. Rose Kt nnedy, his \Yife Joan and R. Sargent Shrjver, U.S. ambassador to France, also Wt>re present. , 1 Family sources said the last rites of the Roman Catholic Church were ad. ministered to Kennedy two or three times within the last month. As his con~ition deteriorated, all members of the glamorous Kennedy family gathered at the Kennedy com-pou~ overlooking Nantucket Sound Where he ' once sailed with his family. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, widow of President John F. Kennedy, new in from her island home at Skorpios, Greece. Mrs. Ethel Kennedy, widow of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, came from Washington. A man who equated money with power and power with money, Kennedy molded a Political family of flair and Im~ agination. , Kennedy, a saloonkeeper's son, amass- ed a fortune estimated at up to a hal{· billion dollars. He admittedly was one of Amerjca's 20 wealthiest men . ' But for all his wealth, ·s life was scar· red With tragedy. FoUr·Of his nine chiJ- 1See KENNEDY, Page 3) Motel Manager's Cupboard Bare Talk about finding the cupboai'd bare. A Laguna ·Beach motel · manager returned to his apartment Monday even-- ing and found a greedy burglar had carted1off 12 steaks and SlS w<irth of can- ned tuna. Police Sgt. Dave Brown satd George E. King, 2607 Solano Way,, apt. 1, al80 f~ that IZ In change vi~ m!Mlng. , . ~oltliv~ter ltap,s TV . For ·,Pola~i~mg'' U.S. WICHITA, Kan. (UP I) -,. .5eQ. Barry Goldwater, CR-Ariz.), Monday night ac· cuted "some" of the newr. media of polariiing \he nation. · •. • • He said he did not ~llev~ Vice Presl· den·t Spiio Agrtew1 went.far enough In his crtllciam of· television nttworks. The networks '1bette r a~rt po 11 c I n g themselves," said the 11164 GOP preolden- tial oorr1lnee, who said "Problbly I rcce'lvt*I more-abuM than ·anyone: ln America." ; 'PAfRIAR~Ht~ASi l$ , Joooph P. ,l(itnnldy .Court Lifts Ban ~ On Oil Drilling In Santa ]Ja~bara S4N FRANCISCO (APl - A .federal court or appeals has refused to issue an lnjonCtion against new·oi! wells•and drill· ·1ng platforms in the Santa Barbara Chan. nej,., ' . I ; ln:ao order mac1.e ,puPlic today the U.S. Ninth Cltcuit ·Court of Appeals Jlfted a temPoi:ar.y restra'Jning order issued Nov. JO against' neW drilling. ' The 'city and county-of Santa Barbara, :whose· beacheS were· blackened by a leak- ing offshore W¢1l last January, had sought the injunction pending appeal of a lower court rqllng. 'The U.S. District c:Ourt in Los Angele1 ruled Nov .. 3 that the government caii issue new drilling pennits without public · hearings. . Santa Barbara officials and 1 7 residents represented by the America~ Civil Llbertles Unlbn claim they are en- titled to a public hearing before any new permits are issuect. ~ The ordettdld not mention another ~tt­ tlon., filed Jiov. 12 by·Santa Barbar81 ask· Ing for annulment r>f permits · granted to three oil ~mp~nies two weeks ago for ~rilling_ in the Channel., ' Orange Weather . . l "More the same'' is the cryptic comm.mil ,from .·""' wea&herman for Wednes\lay,,with irritaling air stirred by Santa Ana winds aod ftmRUaiur;es in the: upper '10'1 along the Coait. INS.IDE '.J'ODi\Y It's the 'biQge1t' to11k of the .Live tlleate1 seaio1~ on ihe Orange Coast -Bit new pla118 .optning and six other8 still on t4e boards. Set Theater Noks, ,~e IS. ' .. " " " " .. .: •• .. " " " • '!·. --~J.-. -} --~ • .:. .. . ..,,,. • -' t DAit. V PMT L ::mpo ~fruStee~,-. €lash -on P ortable-€la$s17ooms· . . . A ~l'IJMIV« whether or not the Cl(M*"Uilllld .... Dlltrlcl.~ ...-...... pariiblo .-.. ... at Monday night's metllng of trust.es. They finally agreed to buy them. Trustee Tom Winget argued thit the $150,000 U!( achoo! district )s receMng under public law 115 ehould be spenl for pennanent school buildings. Superintendent Trwnan Benedict .ex· plaihed tO Winael lbat the money mual lit She'!)II Get Leave Teacher's Visit to GI Hubby OK'd Mn. Pally Nugen! will be able to visit t... husband on te&ve from Vietnam In Hawali without losing her teaching pay. ' Setting precedeot !or fuWre action. the Board of Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District agreed to allow Ml"!I. Nugent to use the penonal necessity clause cl 'ber sick leave agreement to make. the trip. An original motion to approve her leave without pay died because of a tie vote. A later motion made by Trustee Tom Winget to approve the leave with pay was approved 4 to 2 .• In previous discussion. Trustee Robert Beasley said "My feelina: is that in spite of the taxes i pay, I do very little to fight the Vie't Cong. What little we can do to help, we SiouJd. "Mn. Nugent's husband is a major. He Is probably U-of his own volition. Perbaps there will be other• whole husbands art privates on tbe front line abo<><hlng shrapnel Whal can we do I!> help tbeae people! . 1 "On the other band, we are ch~ I cur policy. How far can we go? No nuit. i.r...mal·oct1011 'we take I feel we ohoUld JOok l•to Changlna this policy i.r the future." Tnistee Fred Newhart Jr. ta.id, "It's not a quesUon of money With Mrs. Nu· geni, but principle, because she think! !t's rtght. lt might be 1MDe)' lo another situation." Trustee Bob Hurst stated that the policy listed situations where pay can· be granted and Rand R leave wasn't one of them. Su~endenl Truman Benedict said that the county counsel's opinion wu that the personal nect&ity clause was for situatk>ns for .which one cannot plan ahead. "This intent of the law is an unforeseen kind of thing that one couldn't plan for but the law also says that the board can oooaider situations not listed in the clause." Mn. Nugent will be using three days of her sick leave and the re.st will be ber ThanksgivlDg holiday. !New Arrivals ·Given Rude 1W elcome-Rohbed of $450 •.I • • ' TWo .... arrivall to the Orin(• C.Ut -Ontorto, Canada got II\ UlllllUil wtlcome to Co&ta Mesa Monday nlibt when they foond themailwl tooting dOwn Ille barrel of a .:io caliber uwed.off·ri!le, ·as fCJJr men relieved them cl $450 in cl\asb. • John Patrick Playford, :IO.llMI Kevln·L. .Mc:Derm911. l7, to111 •pollce1iliat ~ ~· ed rQbbery loll.Wed . a lllli:bllikJni jaUnl 1.....,:JluollngtGn Beach lo Lquna Beach. The Canadians thwnbed a ride with. an . ....,.,,,,.., ll!rt ..tin !!!Ilk them to e;;;~,, ·~'1".i\e. ,..Uld help ·ihem find a place' to apOnct tl!tinight. • In Laglina Beadi. the three were JohJed by four men. all described as being abOut ' lJ yean old. The car headed north again to Costa eMsa. After a stop at an unknown address, said Playford and McDermott. the pair were driven to a field -behind Fairview State Ho6pital at Estancia Drive in Costa Mesa. Poking the shotgmt in the Canadians' faces, one ol. the meo said, "This is a rip. Give 111 yoor bread." Plawford and McDermott turned .c;i:ver lhelr,'t;uit,",tlltn;,_,,fdrced i. Ue'fl<!e down oo the grounCI o: the five drove out of sight. · - :11>9• Canallll04,' apt¥.°IOd pollce, who Pve tflmi a frte Pl~e to speftd 1'1• nllht ~·tiil c.oota Mesa City Jall. 'Police aald the caae la uniter in- ve~g~U?n. From Pqe J HILISIDES . ENDANGERED ••• • 8J51lmption that everythin1 is fine.'' But in many cases it isn't. one common coriditlon beneath houses on slopes "is topsoil covering hard bedrock. w at.er can seep through the toil and pond up along the be<lrock race weaken- ing the whole arrangeme1.t. If the condition gets too bad, Nicoll ei· plained, the soil can slide right off the rock and the house can go with it. Correcting a flaw such as Ulat -it ex· ists along Irvine Terrace in Newport Beach overlooking Bayside Drive -is possible, but it's expensive. One way. Nicoll said, which is being us· ed along Bayside Drive, is to carve away much of the porous, unstabie'tirt alo~g the bluffside, install Jong pipes to dra.J.n the water from the bedrock (shale) face, then replace the soil and compact it. "Certainly it's an expensive job. but If nothjng is done, sometimes the only solu· tion is to move the house off the lot," he said .. • • • UAI( '( Pi!Ql OUlfOI CC1ASt """ dMINa CCMMNY ....... N. w ... .,...... ........... J•clt I . C.rlty VQ~ ... o.r .. -... TN1111•t K.....tl ·-n. .. " A. M••11hl1M ........... "" ll .. •r4 P. N•ll ---"' ----2!! hr•tt A•-. Mina. A.Mr ... P.O. a.. 6'lr. t2UJ .,,..._ C.-... I -........ """' ........... ="11·._. ........ ..... '!Wliu••l11c:1u••- Another cla1&ic slide ts of the type Which killed six persons last winter at the Silv'erido Canyon Fire Station. Its type killed several other persons in Southern California during the &ame ltorms. It goes like this : A fault or weakened area on a slope generally takes tile shape or a dip in the bedrock and on a slope, if h's visible, looks like a gully. But many times these crevices fill with topsoil and no dip is apparent. Jf a house gets built on it, above it, or below it -and the "heavy rains come - the soil can give way . '•The dirt turns to mud and slides right off the rock underneath and you can get a r iver of mud shooting straight down a hill" the engineer warned. Like many other awesome problems plaguing Southern California, the earth slide has many manifestations and the problems are easily apparent. What about the solutions? One solid one, Nicoll Pid, hlnges on government plaMing. He suggests a master plan of sorts of the entire county with one thing in mind -erosion and slide danger . The Idea involves a lonp: period of study and data gathering along with ex· amination qt the county's entire topography. With expand ing knowledge a b o u t causes of slides and geological factors, a r.oning document of sorts could be developed as a guide to development. Nico\l's firm, W. A. Wahler and Associates already .PreP8fi!s such reports for private developers. The Irvine Com· pany recently re<:eived the service in· cluiilng a $~ge document with ex· tensive maps .and diagrams outlining the S9il SllbllitJ_of each or the firm's 12,000 acm. The r.a.rtb slide plan. coupled with more. percepUve development of housing, could solve some of the problems. "Once the slide starts, it seems. •U the victims acrample for help. But by then trs too la,.," he concluded. No Progress Signs From Reds-Rogers W ASHfNGTON CAP! -Sccrttary of State William P. Rogerg said today "numerous diplomatic contacts·• with North Vietnam, including some since the detith of Ho Chi Minh, have failed to pro- duct 1i1ny sign· of progress In setlling the Vietnam war, far rNcblnc sirQiranla.-' five to sevtn percent sin~ the sale of •'.What wwld ,you do ii-you didn't i.... bondl ...id aO\ve • -rmany"1lf-1l)t Winget asked U the sixth graders could had been thinkipg l_n long terms they hr put back in thdr•own, ele!neqtatt woold haye bulk·"-~ hicll·~iAOO tbo $1111,111» to speiid .... portables?" ' dlolfict'• problom1. • . ' 'j!llml ¥¥11·• "~tl.'.! ,., . ,.;: .Benedlcl .alcl. thit thl• Idea had be<!( . 1n{ittl tid, N~ Jr. pointed OU\ conaWertct but aucb, measures in othci lbatllncttbol"'1!lbllaari-.Yllli ' dliuictli.ve10 far JaJted. · , acllqOli It porlibleo w«e NI up al eacb il!Rlld °' 1,000. Newllltl """"left\il lj>at of thoae school•. · ' Jtii!JOl'hlllt llChooll, lboutd not'h,ve more money wOilld confe" out~ ol the genetal-'• Benedict explained that the purchased • Benedict answered that there would QOC. .tha.n --t,oi,. students .. Winget then sug· be enough portab&es to do so because siested that ~h'ps the new Del Obispo there are over· 80e sixth graders In 1 Elementary Schbol ·could be Used for Capistrano School. The purpose o( having~ some of~ junior hl&:h -overflow sinct·it fund and other programs would then ¥ve portablet would be . placed at . the tO suffer.· · · Capistrano· &hoot so that In ·additioh to Uiem in a separate school was to prov~~ · will b6 "nflarby'. ' · · · Trustee' ~ft'"'Kefley asked if the board I.he stxth-graden there now ane seventh · roOm for expamion in the· elementary 11>e boird voted to go ahead with the could consider holding a bond election to graders -could go there to relieve taise the interest rates. on bonds from overcrowding at Forster Ju.nior Hig'b. schools. purchase of the portables and tJ1eir use Pl~ers Okay \l'ater J)istrict Land Transfer Lagtina Beach planning com.m!ssionen Monday night agreed to go along with a plan to transfer the Great Lakes Carbon holdings in._ Laguna Canyon from the Moulton-Niguel Water District to the Laguna Beech County Water District - but only alter taking steps to assure the ' move would not disrupt local water service. City Pl~r.Al Autry said ·tbe Local Agency Formation Commisson (LAFCl is conridering, a request for inter-distri ct transrer or the· 500-acre property, which was annexed to the city of Laguna Beach at the time an estate developmeTit, to be known as Sycamore Hills:, was in plan· ning &tages. The LAFC, which rules on all such moves, bad requested city reaction to the req""51, Autry aald, and the planning staff had no objectloo to offer. Co;mmia:ak>ner Charles Johnson wanted to know what It might do to Laguna's w1ter supplies. "Every now and then we hear of a shortage In our reservoirs," s a i d John90l'I. "What if somebody decided to go ahead and develop out there?" Autry said the parties involved' had agreed the district transfer would be the most effective way to provide the pro- perty with_ water. ' "Laguna will be receiving new water service from the Metropolitan Water Di>trict by a pipeline down the Canyon and new reservoirs," &aid Autry. "The property can receive • lateral serxice direct from this pipeline if it Js in the Laguna County Water District, whereas senice from the Moulton-Niguel district would involve laying a lot of new line." Johnson suggesled that the LAFC be advised that the city has no objection to the transfer, but thit a secood com· mtlnication to tbe Laguna water board recommend-tbat-no-servJc• be--granted- un~ it cart be tied into the ~ Melropo!llllt plpelil1f, Fel!Ow )JlaMers •11'14· Fro• Page J VIEJO PLAN •• area also could be used for moblle home parks. The bichest density according to Gohara .,ill be 20 units per acre in some areas. Gohara explained that there are three tyPeS of iont.1g for multiple family use - medi~m high, six units per acre: high, JS units per acre and heavy, 20 units per acre. In all of Mission Viejo under the fourth revision there can be only 902 units medium high density, 4,296 of high densi4 ty,and 2,566 uniL'1i of heavy density. This br~ngs a total of 7,764 mulliple family units. The zoned density is the maximum allowed .. Ir the developer wanted to put fewer tr.11t.s they cou ld and according to the Mi~si?n \Mejo Company, they have done Uus 1n several areas. Area zoned for 350 units has been used for Coronado homes, 336 units south of the g1>1f course and 216 units south of Monterey homes will be used for eilher single family homes, condominiums town hou ses or patio homes but ' n o t apartments. 0.1 the other hand, if the company wanted to Increase its density they would merely have to revise the plan and bring it to the planning commission, said Gohara . tn other planned communities in . Orange County there are in some areas as mw.1y as 60 units per acre ioned. Whether good or bad, the decision on the approval of the fourth revision of Mission Viejo's master plan lies with the Board of Supervisors. Accordini to th e revision opponents, the supervisors ha ve received peUlions \Vil~ , I ,000 signatures · protesting the rev1s1on. As of Monday, Supervisor Allon E. Allen, whose district includes Mission \'lejo, had \lot yet made up hi s mind but is choosing to wait until all the facts ore brought out in Wednesday's hearing. Wallace Calls VC Backers Traitors BANGKOK (UPI) -Former Gov. George Wallace of Alabama said V.onday ni&ht American antiwar demonstrators who call for a Communist victory in Vlet· nam are lr3ltors to their country. "PeoplP have a right to express things about the war," Wallace s11id on his ar· rival for a three-day fact-finding visit to · Thplland. "But when they run that Viet Cong flag up and c11ll for a Commu nist victory, why that's treason. "There ought to be a law against that activity Oind If I had the power, I'd have one pasJ;ed," said \Vallace. unsuccessful presidential candidate of his American Independence party last year . L Win¢ then a,aued tlu\t il lhe board would be detennined later. ~ . ' No Ten.ni·s f.or An y·one? . I Racket Group Faults Lack of City.'Courts a6'reement. Laguna Beach ls"markedly short of ten· nis courts to serve a'J estimated ·ooo ten- nis buffs. Councilmen Wednesday are to consider a study by the Laguna Beach Tennis Association. It states in part: -Laguna t1hould have at least silt public tennis courts now. -The city should immediately acquire about three ac res of £lat land suitable for construction of at least to teo.1nis courts. -The new courts should be placed together ig one location as a public tennis center. The report states there are two public lertiis courts at Irvine Park, two . ade.- quate and two su~standard courts at the. high scbool arid two'' courts at Thurston Elementary School. 'Tbe ' school. court&, are available to adults Only about 43 percent of the time because Of school use. High school students sometimes use the• Irvine ·Bowl courts causing adults to be turned away. Tourists also compete with the resident tennis set· to~ .use of facilities. have sevJ, pbblio courts. 'llle te"11s cenler theory, the report states, wil lower construction costs {up to $2500 Per court); lower ma intenance costs; f8C{Utate cli'.1ics anlt tournaments; provide aa arejl where tennis opponents can be folind ; and provide the, means to· obtain a ttnnis professional to tend needs of both cwrts and players. -Serious conslderalion should be given to providing a pro-shop l9 be operated by a responsible lessee via a concession The· report st,.tes that the National Recreati.on l~ Park Association recoiTI4 mends one public tennis court per each 2,000 residents,· meaning Laguna should The report not~ that the Laguna Can· yon areal probably contains several ex· ce llent si es. It airs lbe J>095ibility or>·attracting a tennis professional by a concession agreement with one 'building-for a ahop and use of one court for tennis io· strucUon. Cit y to Study Parking Lot Plan on Forest Council to Study Teen V se for Barefoot Bar City Manager James Wheaton Wed· nesday night will present the city councU with a plan for the purchase of parking lot property on Forest Avenue that would lop about $5,000 off the price originally considered by the council Two weeks ago the council instructed Wheaton to continue negotiations on an offer originating with an anonymous group of Lagunans who proposed: to purchase property directly behind the Ocean Avenue Playhouse, with a 00.foot frontage on Forest Avenue, and turn it over to the city on a lease-option basis. Figures prepared at the time indicated that the $60,000 purchase price would be Lagima Buch clty councilmen Wednes- day wlll consider a proposal that Ute old Barefoot Bar building serve on a trial basis as a winter center for teenage ac· ti vi ties. The city now owns the prerriises, which it once bJ,ttled to close as an alleged Cocal point of homosexual activity. The business at 111 Ocean Ave. is a more modest. operation now, with a beer- wine license, but no liquor license. Under a proposal by City ?f.anager James 0. Wheaton, the lessee would sur· render the beer-wine license between Labor Day and Memorial Day. allowing teenage use of the building. Rental fees would be waived to offset Joss of bar revenue. Wheaton estimates it would cost the city about $2,500 annually. The bar operation would be worth a try to see how it works. He said the city could J"Obably open. the teen center by the middle of next month and operate un- til Memorial Day. If the council does not go along with the proposal , Wheaton said, he will recom· mend that the city concentrate on the old Boys Club building as a teen center. It is also part of the city-owned main beach that is one day to become a park. increased to about $75,000 by addition of El . A zz· C . interest over a five.year purchase period. ano.. to ow t This amount, however, could be ral!«I . . 11: · ••... • • • ap .. ives from parking lot revenues lf the two pro-• pertles, from" Ocean \through to For were c:9111bined!Jnto • municipal lot. . 'J..'t ... R . z · . . w&eaton'said Monday he now is dealing ~ · ~~ • H ida G ft directly with the present 01'/ner of the o·· eceive 0 " y .,, s property, trustees for the huge Lindberg estate, who have agreed to make the same five-Year lease-:purchase ar· TOKYO. (UPI) -U.S. airmen being a full list of prisoners. rangemenl with the city. h Id · 1 N ·• v· •-·u be Th h · · · He will recommend, Wheaton said, that e ~r1soriers . n. oru1 1ew1am w1 e women w o v1s1ted the North Viet. a first opUon pa~'t of $12,000 be made permitted '1:0 receive Christmu packages namese in Paris were told queries would at the Ume ~ property is delivered, ~ their farnUies, the Hanoi govern-be made about tr.eir husbands and replies together with a one.year lµmp sum In· ment ilnn0uncelf 1'uesc;18y. to their questions mailed to them at ter~ payment on the baJance of $4a,OOO. . The brief anno:uncenlent broadcast by home. This procedure, ht said, would· reduce the · total cost to abotit rro,ooo if the purhcase the .vietnalJl Ne~~ .Aaency {VNA) and were extended over five years. monitored here said:. City Attorney·Jack Rimel l.s preparing · "On th~·.occ"asi )n o(the 1969 Christmas, a draft 8:greement along .these lines for !he D.R.V.N. (~~r4l1c Republic of presentation to the council. \'letnam) general .department of posts Russ Rocket Explodes; 1'iay Cripple Progra111 WASHINGTON (APl -The explosion of a huge Soviet rocket on its launch pad may have set Russian efforts to land a man on the moon back h1•0 years and crippled Its manned space program. Aviation \Veek & Space Technology Magazine reported Monday the explosion last summer at Tyuratarn de stroyed the rocket the Soviets had intended to carry the main portion of a manned orbiting platform into space last month. and tel~mrqunic,tions agrees t o transfer gifts to :captured American alrilren 'In North Vietnam Crom their families . •"The period of tr.ansfer of these gifts wil! last from Dec. J to Dec. 31 , 1969." The broadcast said the gifts should be sent according · to "the pfocedures already stipulated on previous OC· casions.'' Several groups of wives of '.American servicemen missing in Vietnam have travelled to Paris lo ask North· Viet· namese delegates to the peace talks \\'h~ther their ht:sbands were captured and being held prisoner. North Vietnam r<!peatedly has refused to make available See t~e largest selection of Spanish and Mediterranean Dining Room groups. AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY for the HOLIDAYS Roge1·s Elected GOP Cl1airman I Thomas C. Rogers of Newport Beach, a J:r.1d developer and San Juan rancher. was elected chairman of the Republican Central Committee of Orange County Monday night at the regular meeting of the 25-member board. Rogers, 45, a member o( the Central Committ ee for the past four years, suc· ceeds David L. James, transferred to Los Angeles by his firm . James will remain on the board. A native of California, Rogers. his wife and five children make their home at 731 via Lido Soud on L'ido Isle. I ..-..... Ko1<11' l • ! • , ... '• ~ ~ I I I • I .; • . ... • • --•• • I .. lag VOt:. li2, NO. f!6,1l SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALOORNIA -_--::-TUESDAY, NOVEMBER '11, .,,,, TEN CENT! ~~....-~~~~....-~~~~~~~~~--~....-~~~....-~~~~~~~~~~.....:..·~~';....~~~·;....."-..,....~~~...;.;..~~~..,,.~~~~~-:-~~~~~-·~~~~~ ...... ~.~~~~~ '· . • • • D.ispute~ Vi~jo Ma~ter ~la_n __ .Bef ore C_oimty . . ' By PAMELA HALLAN Of .... Deltr ,lilt ... " The fourth revision of Mis&i.on Viejo'• master plan cornea before the Orarige County Board oC Supervisor& Wednesday. Although approved by ~ plannin.1 commlasion, the pion has been the target ol an oi:Pnized pnllest In the cun- munily. Opponents of the plan called the Mission '{iejo Citizens A.ssdciation fear that zoolng changing and land acquisiUon .J... ~ wlll'bring apartments to their community -apartments they believed will be a detriment to tht area. . • The Mission .vlejo eo:· ·~ that apartments are part of a complete com- munity and would not be a bad thing with cattlul planning, ~ and manage. nM>n~ lbey. an pmenUy building ltt uruts. Just 't1i!hat exactly Is the 'fourth revision and what does it call for ? ·lloy Goha{a, Orange c.,miy planner . working on the revision. said that when Misilori Viejo's master plan waa adopted- ifl 1915, the entire tl;mo acres was not UNled allhOOgb l\e knew there would be Meas for ·industrial, roinm~rdal, single IMf!lib' <lwell!nga, mu!Uple family dwell· inp .. recreation and. other uses. 1 • The first· zoning included 3,520 IC'l't'I and represented the single family d.well- igga in the first housing. units built, the high school and the golf.cour~.-. The fU:st revision added 1,025-acrea oe enne Mission P~fect Astronauts Set . To Land Tonight SPACE CENTER, Houston .(UPI) - ApoUo 12's astronauts: looped ~he moon with unerring precision today, inspected tMir landing ·ship a final Ume and said "we're .ready to go" for a. pinpoint touchdown on the lunar Ocean of Stonns tonight. STORIES ON LANDING, MOON WALK-PAGE 4 He·said nothing, inrluding a minor skin irritation reported by f11gbt commander Cb;u'!es "Pete" Conrad, stood "be~tweep the crew and their l~ng a\ 10 :53 p.m. (~) today. . near1!>0'Burro\ltlll lndustrlal'faclltty. ' The Mcond revilioo 411o wai an ex- panskm or area"""adding • acre& near Crown Valley Parkw~y • Thi third revi&ion 8Med '57 acres for Saddleba<k ColloP .. Cor:onado ~tf!ld the new auto center. It also permitted zoned·land for the,undeveloped land ll!'lllh of La Paz Road, west of Marguerite Parkway, north of Oso" Parkway and allowed apllr(n'lents to be conStr'ucted on 30 acres north~.of··lbe int:er~ioo of . , . ea Marguerite Parkway and La Paz Road and around Crown van.ex SbOpplng Center. · .:. ' The fourth revisiOn Is a further refine- ment cl.the master plan, this,Ume.adding 3,tSO acres east of Marprite Parkway. With. ~thl! ad~tlon,. tbe total aru of Mission Viejo will be t,151 acres, U11der the fourth revisloo, two 'areas were :t.o be rezoned. One area in the 'viclnltt or Marguerite-Park¥{ay aftd La Paz ~d woold havt Iner~ ltu\•nsi· ' .. a Patriarch Loses tong· Life Fight . HYANNIS PORT. M•ss. (UPI) Joseph P. Kennedy, mulllmlllionalre father of a President .and . two U.S. senators In a tragedy-stalked family , died today. He was Bl. The palrlarch of the fabulow Kennedy clan who lost two sons -one a President and the other a senator -to auassirls• bullets was an Invalid since felled by a . etrqke .nearly eight years ajo. ty because optimum use o( density allow- ed had nOt "been mlde. ' ~ •Bu\ James Toepfer, vice president In charge of planntig for the Mission Vlefg Con)pany,.~'!S·requested that this area'1 dens.lty relP.1n the same as in the 'third revision. ' .. _ .. The other aria f,o be rezoned will be " acres near the. Bu,rroughs facility which will be changed frbm h\dustrial to multi• pie family .)f the comPany so Wished, Olis (Stt· VIBJO PLAN; Page lj ,._ "We've _checked all the tfiiQgs _ ""'e're suppcised ID ;ind tbey 'ft all shipshape." Alan L. Bean radioed earth from inside 1be lander Intrepid'•· cabin. So j>erfect was ev~ as~ of Apierica's aecond lunar labi!ing mission that ' llight director M. Pete Frank told newsmen "it's at least 100 percent ef- fective. I'm just amazed." Conrad, Bean and Rlcliard 1'. Gordon slept through tho day •. _..,._ Jhain in lunar orbit-aboard the COmmand iblp Yankee Clipper ~ while his de~m8Jes unlatch the l&ndlng t'l'a ft from the Clipper and descepd to Ure surface. Death came at 8:05 a.m. (PST) al1" ~ennedy, who was U.S. amblwador to ~ !kl\lln at tlie atart ti. \Vacl•U\''1' Jl;,lllilued Ibo ~t IA iutdec ol. io04 .. attacks saturd1y. --· - - A, f~ spokeaman .bsued the follow'- Youth Nabbed After Battle With Officer · A nervous young man who, police said, punched a big Laguna Beach officer in the chest and au.empted unsuccessfully to flee was arrested Monday night on charges of possessing both marijuana and dangerous drugs for sale. PoliCf: booked Donald A 1 e x a n d e r Vallese, 19, no fixed address. He was with two marines, said police, who turned the young man over to the shore patrol. Sgt. Dave Brown said the three were in a car stopped by Officer Bob Remillard in the 600 block of South Coast Highway. While Remillard was searching Valese, said Brown, the man turned and struck the officer in the ch¢ and bolted. The chase was "about two giant steps", said Brown. He said pills, marijuana, hashish aod apparenUy LSD were re."'Overed In smaU quantities. In another Monday arrest, Sgt. Norm Babcock and agents of the State Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement a r r e st e d James Robert Amliler, 20, of the Casa Laguna Motel, 1$10 Soulh Coast Highway, on a warrant. · · He was booked on suspicion of mari- juana possession and heroin possession. Brown said officers recovered a small quantity of each. ·-NEW YORK (AP)-Tbe stock market began rfinning late this afternoon after a sinking spelt di.Iring early lrading. Volume was fairly active. (~ quota- Uons, Pages 8-9). S;ho,Uy after noqn, the spt1ce age~y announced that a solar flare had been obServed dn the sun, bul that "based on the previous information we had from this flare we would not expect Jt to be a problem" that would endanger the astronauts:. It was the same flare first seen Nov, 2, and the sun had simply rotated until jt was in view agalo from Earth. Bean woke up in the middle of the Mm. day sleep period and asked ground con- trollers to keep an eye on the guidance rockets on the spacecraft because "we seem to be firing a UUle more ... around the moon than we had imigined." He also asked how ofteil to take decongestant tablels to counteract a stuf· fy nose be said had been bothering him since launch. . "I don't know whether J have a cold r>r anyUting," he said. "My ears are sometimes clear and someUmes are not." Doctors told him lo lake a tablet every eight hours and Bean said he was going to try to go back to sleep. Arch Beach Set. For Laguna Study At the request ol City Planner Al Autry, Laguna Beach plaruUng com· missioners Monday • night agreed to devote an entire study sesiioo, ten- tatively Dec. 22, jo lhe n:vlew of pro- posed improvement plans in Assessment District 11-1, the Arch Beach He.lghts district finally approved by .the City Council Nov, S. "A study session,'' said Autry, "would enable the commissioners to become aware of some of the many probl ems that may arise In this area and to establish some policy in advance. ••I feel It ·ls very Important for' the commission to be familiar with what is ,planned ·up there: Defore any work beetns." : . • E>All Y •ll01' l!lff·,_ .. SHOWOFF -You can't blame Top otihe World ·!\fst gradeFS.David . Threadgold and Gillian ... NeWton. for· giggling. Laguna Beach Mayer -Glenn Vedder bad juSt -signed a proclamation.plugging the school's Pet and Hobby Show, w.hen "Girl," tbetr two:-year.o01d friend t·snatched the offici31 docwnent and ·ate it. WeU, anyw~y, the· show will be held this Saturday at the school. • Pets on ·Parade Laguna Scliool Staging Show Rats , cats, puppy dogs and butterfly · collections will be earning ribbons-for their proud owners Saturday u Laguna's Top of the World Elementary School presents its second annual P T A • spol'IJ!ared Pel and HobbyJSbow from 10 a.m, 'to 1 p.m: . A dlaUngulsli<d panel·of judges will b- clude Mayor Glenn Vedder, who will, rule on . canioe entries, Fire Chief Homer Mann, judging the feline department for the second year and recreation director George Fowler who will view mlscellane· ous pets, including rats, Iguanas and •et ceteras and also judge entries in the asso rted hobbles and co 11 e c ti O·A 11 category. 1 • 'Greeter EUef La rSen·w:lll be on hand lo 'velcome c~Hdr.en and .their parents &lid a highlight-of the affair wUI be perfonnances. bY Rene and His Puppets or :i'estival of Arts fam1e, sponsored by · the Festival of Arts board. · Clow.11 and a pony ride will round otit the entertainment offerings and there will be·ample supplies of popcorn, cotton candy, hot dogs, coffee, cold drinks and doughnuts. While Mayor Vedder selects the big- gest, £attest, &mutest and barkingest d .,.; for ribbon awards , Chier ·Mann will choose the sweetest, haJ.ipiest, lonjest- haired cats and Fowler will si:lgle out the cutest and most unusual of the miscellaneous pets. Youngsters wishing to er\.ter thi!ir pets .or collections may call Mrs. Robert Loomis, '494.1749 or Mrs. ctayton Claxton, 494·840Z. Entry fc!e is 10 cents per animal. Pets s])oiJld be on hand for the judging parade at JO a.m., with dogs leashed and cats and other .8'.ilmals In escape-proof cages, says chairman Mrs . Karel de Smit. R'Laguna Hillsides Peri.led by Rains _!_. By JOHN VALTERU hillside dwellers to take another hard °' "" INl7f ,, ... ll•ff look at their particul1r conditions· before Rain calf spell death aJtd damage for wtnter'1 rains come apin. the poorly planned hlllslde home and last j · '4A kit of people aeem l!C'Uf'e in the wlnteri1 heavy storms proved a grapblc be:Htf. tba\ hast nrter;1 rUui wiit't hap-• reminder. pen again, he aald, 0 But l'•• heard from But people -including the o¥tners of operU often this )'Mt that ltudlel show hlllaide houses -can have short Jut wintlr to be lht Ont o( another-wet memories. cycle." A Newport Beach trOib engineer thla Arid If lhe ellptrb (obaerven of thO ~eek tried to jog their rotmOria a bit. growth nnc stqu""" on certain types of Jorry Nlmll, aolla enrt-l\Jl(I· 1.... 1rt among them) an correct, apeclallst on cllarting and correcting •lido Nicoll aaicl, Ibo problt1111 have just 9roblcms warned all Orans:e Coast begt11. Laguna Beach*s hillside areas •e among the big trouble spots, Nicoll uid. "There Is • ntlgbbcHflOod '"' • hilltop arta in Laprla Beach •that makes 'lie shuddtr when I look at it. It needs h<lp fast," he said. Casting a prognosis for an earth sUde tsn't a job for ama&Oln'I, Nlooll Mld, yet he's not drumnUng up b!W 111' for llDlls ,engineering. The problem la '° wlclesprtld, Nicoll aald, that bllsl-· Is boomlna wlthoot publlclty. What causes-Ole .UtlesT N~ture could lake much of the blame, Nlcon· said. Ei-oslon and · slides are a natural. ·1uncuon .ol ·the earth '. _ "But the builder 1fho puts up a hillside home assuming that all Is st.able un· demeath is just as mu Ch al' fault," he said. · 0So many of these houles slide ort )lllls or wind up with tons or mud in the Jiving , room bttouse no one took the lime and money to undersland what's underneath • ' Too many dev~opers bulld under the )/"" llJLLSlDES, Page I)' . .... .. !nl ·~ect: . "AmbwadOr ~oseph P. Kenl)Olfy di.~ ~1111~ ~ay at, his home Jn iJyaoois Port. He was 81 years old. -• . "Mr. Kennedy was pronounCed dead i t \ 11:0$ a.m, (EST) by his physician, Dr. Robert D. Walt. With him at ·the tlme of his death were his wile and·the meffibers or his family." Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (0.Mas5'), his lone surviving son who spent the night in a lonely vigil at his father 's bedside, was with the senior Kennedy when he died. The senator's mother, Mrs . Rose Kennedy, hla wife Joan and R. Sargent Shriver., U.S. ambassador to France, also were present. Famlly sources said tbe last rites of the Roman Catholic Church were ad- ministered to Kennedy two or three times within the last month. As his condlt1on deteriorated, all members or the glamorous Kennedy family gathered at the Kennedy com· pound ove rlooking Nantucket Sound where he once sailed with his family. Jacqueline Kenned)' Onassis, widow of President John F. KeMedy, flew In from her island home at Skorplos, Greece. Mrs. Ethel Kennedy, widow of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, Came fr <i m Washington . A man who equated money with po\Yer and power with money, Kennedy molded a political family ot. Dair a;id Jm.. agination. . Kennedy, a saloonkeeper's son, amass. ed a fortune estimated at up to a halr- bilhon dollars. He admittedly wu one of America's 20 weallhlest men. But for all his wealth, hl9 Ufe was scar· red with lragedy. Foor of' his nine chit~ (Stt UNNED.Y, Pop I) Motel Manager's Cupboard Bare . ' Talk about finding the cupboard bare. A Laguna Beach motel manager returned to IUs apartment Monday even- ing and found a greedy burglar had carted' off 12 steaks and $15 worth of can· ned tuna. Pollco Sgt. Davt Brown nld George E. King, 260'1 Solano Way, apt. I, alaJ> reported tbat ti In chance ·was mlulng. Goldwater Raps TV • For· 'Polarizing' U.S . WICHITA: Kin,. (UPI) -Sen. Bar1'Y Goldwater. (R·Arlz.). Monday nigh! ac- cused "some" of tbe news media of polarizing the natton. • . lie said he did not believe Vice Preal· deril Spiro Agnew. went far enough in hl.1 crltlclsm of te~vlalon net.works. The networks "helter start po I I c I n g UlC!mae.lves," said the ltM GOP pl'ftkM:n· tlal nominee, who said 11Pr0bably t received more abuse· than anyone In America." '· UPIT.....,_ r '.f!Al RIAIJCH:P.ASSES . · ·Joseph P. ,K.oftnody · . ' .. l;qurt Lifts Bari • 01'-Oil Drillil~g· In Santa Barbara SAN FRANc;rsco (AP) .:. A federa l court or appea)s has Tefused to issue. an injuriction against new oU wells and drill· 1ng · platformg bl the Santa Barbara Cl\an. nel.. . .. In ap order made public today the U.S. Ninth <;iircuit Court of Appeals· lifted a . temporary rest.reining order issued Nov. 10 against new drilling. The city and county of Santa Barbara', whose beaches were blackened by a leak- ing oftshofe well last January, had sought the injunction pending appeal of a lower court ruling. '111e U.S. District Court in Lo"s Angeles rule"d Nov. 3 that the government can i'.ssue neW drilling permits without public b~arlngs. 1 Santa Barbara officials and 1 7 residents represented by the Ame"rlcan Civil Liberties Union claim thty are en· titled to a· public hear inc before any new perinits: are Issued. The order did not menUon •nother peti- tion. filed Nov. 12 by ~--Barbar&i ask· ing for annulment of permits granted to three Gil' cotilpariies two week.! ago for drilling in the channel. • Orange Cou& . .-Weatller ''More the -same" I~ the cryptic COmJnenf from the weatherman for Wednesday, with irritating air stirred " by Santa Ana wh¥ls and -tempera~ in the Upp,!r 70'1 aloog th< ~. ' • INSIDE TODAY I&'s tlie 'biggest week oJ the Jioo theater .sea.soil Ofl the Orange Coast -1U iaet0 plaus 'ope:111Mg and J~ olhcra 1UU °'' ~the boards. See 'T111atcrt/No&e1, Pag e 18. \ ,..J " " .. .. ' M •• " " i1 • 11 ~ ::.-f>' • ~ Tr~ TT~C~C~V~-~-~····'·~·~·~·~~----------------------------------------~---- .t DAll.Y PllOT Tutldlj, Nilo .... 11. lM Capo Trµst ee!t €las~ on Portahle-Classrqoms A ClODlroversy over whetber or. nol the Cq'-Uiilllod llCllool Dillrldobould ,...'1:!11..-i.,....111tci.-- 1i Monday nl&ht'• meotlng ol IM!etS. 'Ibey finally qrt<d to buy them. Trustee Tom Wingtt argued thal the $150,000 tM school <flstrict is receiving under public Jaw 115 aj>ould be spent for pennarlent school buildings. superintendent Truman Benedld. e1- ~ to Wlnaet that themooey mUBt ~ '. " Ulllf lmmodlltoly for a construction lit"' Joct at tlllt Ill the ~ tlle '""'11" _ ... ....,.._. .... 11111- He '"* ... ~ 111a1 um u .., ""Ille dlllriClto-1'1 ~. f1lodl to be Uoecl w1111 -f\mdo .• u th""' were, the mqney !'"!Id be u'!<'I (or the .addition to Richard Henry Dana Elemeqtary School. ~ Winget accused the board o! short term rather than long term thinking, using money for atop gap measurt1 rather thao . She!lll Get Leave :.Teacher's Visit to GI Hubby OK'd Mrs. Patty Nugent will be able to visit !tr husband on leave from Vietnam IQ HawaU without lo6ing ber teaching pay. -g precedent for fulllre aclloo, the BOard o( Trustees o( the Caplstrioo Unified School District agreed to allow Mn. Nugent to use the personal neceulty ~lause of her sick leave agreement to make the trip. 1An original motion to approve her leave without pay died becauae of a tit vote. A iater motion made by Trustee Tom WinCet to approve the leave with pay waa oppn>Ved • to I. In previous diacussion, TruJtee Robert Beasley said, "My !eeltnf is t!lat In spite of the-laxes I poy, I do very UUle to fight the Viet Cong. What liUle we can do to betp. we shou1d. , "Mrs. Nugent's husband is a major. He Is pnil>ably there " his own vollUon. Per!laps there will be elben whole hust.nd! are. privates on the front line abeorbing shrapnel. What can we do to help theoe people? • • ii0o the other band, we are changing f our .policy. How far can we go? No mat· ter what action we take I feel we should look into changing 'this policy for the future." Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. said, "It's not a question oC money wUh Mrs. Nu· gen~ but Rf)nclple, beca.,.. she thinks H's rlg!it.,lt might be money In apother sltuaUon." Trustee Bob Hurst stated that the policy listed situations where pay can be granted and Rand R leave wasn't one of them: Superintendent Truman Benedict said that~ county counsel'sopink>n wu that the .penona.J. necessity clause wa1 for situations for which one cannot plan ahead. "This intent of the Jaw Is an unforeseen kind of thing that one couldn't plan for but the law also says that the board can cormider situMiool not 1i1t«1 in the clause." Mrs. Nugent will be using three days of ber sick leave and the rest will be her '11\anksglvlllg holiday. New Arrivals Given Rude -,Welcome-Robbed of $450 Two new arrivals to the Otani• c-t J,... Onllrio. Canada got an UllUIUAl wekome to Colla Mesa Monday nl&ht Whet! tllOy fOw1d lllemlelv .. Joolilng down the blml ol a .IO caliber -ed.o(f rllle, as fcur men relieved them o1. $450 in chuh. I -Jctin Patrick Playfml. IO arid Kevin !. Mc:Dermotl, 11. told poUc< that the arm· eel robbery followed a hitchblking jaunt !""" Hondngton Beach to Laguna Beach. 1be CanMlians thumbed a ride with an ..,_Ulled &irl. who took them to Lquoa, telling them she would help • l>em find a place to spend the nlghl In taluna Beach, the three were joined by four men, all described as being about t9 yean old. Tbe. car headed north again to eMta eMsa. After a ·stop at an unknown address, said Playford and McDennott. the pair were driven to a field belllnd P'aJr'iew State Hospital at Esta!k:fa 'Drive in Costa Mesa. Poking the shotgun in the Canadians' faces, one of.the men said, "This is a rip. Give WI your bread.'' Playford and McDermott turned over their ~$h. th!!n were f~ to Ue face down ·m"1h. grOtmlt'as theJive drove out ol ~ght. · Tile Canadians notified police, wlio ga" them a free place to spend tit< night -the Costa.Mesa Ctty Jail . Police said the case is under in- vei'tigation. F rom Pap I · HILLSIDES END A-NGERED .. • . &11umption that everything is fine.'' But in many cases it isn't. One common condition beneath houaes on slopes is topsoil covering hard bedrock. Wat.er ean seep through the soil and pood. up along the bedrock face weaken- ing the whole arrangement. If the ccadltion gets too bad, NIC<lH ex· plained. the soil can slide right off the rock and the house can go with it. CorTecting a flaw such as that -It ex· \sl5 along Irvine Terrace in Newport Beach overlooking Bayside Drive -is possible, but it's expensive. Ooe way, Nicoll said, which is being us- ed along Bayside Drive, is to carve away much of the porous, unstable dirt along the bluffside, insta11 long pipes to drain ihe water from the bedrock (shale) face, ~en replace the soil and compact il "Certainly it's an expensive job, but if nothing is dqne, sometimes the only soJu. tion is to move the house off the lot," he oald. [;/\l!Y P11QT ~cour ..,.,•••~ ·a.Mt"" w ... ---J.d: L c.rt.., Vlee,,..... ............ -...... ·-,......A. M•t• -·-..... ,. P. NtU ,___ ... _ ---222 hred A• .. .,...._ •. o.a-...,•uu --c:.. .... -.... .., ''""' .._... .... , ............. ..... ... P1CIU 11111111 ••-- Another classic sUde Is of the type wtiich killed s1x persons last winter at the Silverado Canyon Fire St.atk>n. Its type killed aeveral other persons in Southern Ca!Uornia during the same storms. It goes like this : A /al.Ill or weakened area on a slope generally takes the shape of a dip in the bedrock and on a slope, if it's visible, looks like a gully. But many times these crevices fill with topsoil and no dip is apparenL If a house gets built on it. above it, or below tt -and the heavy rains come - the soil can give way. "The dirt turns to mud and slides right off the rock underneath and you can get a Ti ver of mild shooting straight down a bill" the engineer warned. Like many other awesome problems plaguing Southern California, the earth· slide has many manifestations and the problems aI'il easily apparent. What about the solutions? . One solid one, Nicoll said, hin ges on gC>vemment planning. He suggests a master plan of sorts of the E!ltin county with Ol)e thing In mind -erosion and slide danger. The idea involves a long period of stud y and data gathering along with ex· amlilaUOn of Uie county's e n t i r e topograp'1y,. With expa nding knowledge a b o u t ca uses oC slides and geological factors. a !Onlng documenl of sorb could be developed as a gulde to development. Nicoll's f\rm, W; A. Wahler and As.wciates already prepares such reports for private developers. The Irvine com. pany. recently received the servke in· eluding a 59-page document with ex- tensive maps and diagrams outlining the · . soil stabllfty of each o! the firm's 12,(KJO acres . The earth slide plan, coupled with more perceptive development of housing, could aolve some of the problems. "Once the slide starts, Jt setms, an the vlcUms scrample for help. But by t!lfn lt11 too late," he concluded. No Progress Signs Fro111 Reels-Rogers " WASHINGTON (AP! -Secretary of -, • llr rtlCblnf program.a. ,1 five lo seven ~nt =Ince the sale or ' "Wbal WOOl4 ,.., do'lf ,.., did•' ""'"''* .. --a -t· ~ "' Ille ~ ··--lo ·spend "!. ponabloll " •• ~·· fl"1blllDI. • -'111!1!1 .-; • · f' • 1 a...lnci said that this Idea had been "'11WO' mil l'!mart Jr. poinl<d out ......._ but such meosures In otlld that line< Iii ~ble. ~ lbt ~ 114,. '° far Jailed . money Would coriie oUt of the general Benedict explained' that the purchas\!d fund and other programs would then flave pcilcabJes -would be placed at the to surfer. CaplslranO School so thot In addition to lf'fustee Stan Kelfey askiCfU"ibe bOard the Sixth graders there now ~e seventh· could consider holding a bond election to graders couJd (lo there to relleve raise the interest raid oo bonds-from overcrowdi,ng at Forst.er Junior High. Winget asked U the sixth gradero could • be pu\. blCi in tbelr ""' ilemeaWy tdKIOll 11 poitabJa wll'I Mt up at.. each' ·of those acbools. · - • Benedict answered that there would DOt be enough portableo to do so beca~ there are over 300 sixth graders In Capistrano School. The purpose of haying them in a separate school was to provide room for expinsion Jh the elementary &ehoob. Wlngel then argued !bat U the board had bffn Lh;n ing In long tf!tlril th ey woold 111 .. bu! the'junior l!llb111r1;fi00 iDsleld !I N.,m.rt --that ]untor hf IC should not-have mbre than J, st .-Winget then -,ug- iested I.hat pe;•PI the new Del Obispo Elementary 'oot 'could be used for , oome 91 llie' j . ~' hlgl)•o.,!rf/O" ~IJlce· H will be nearbyM The' bOftrd ~ed to go ahead wllh the purchsae ol tl1" portables and their use wou)(j ,be detetpilned later. -Plaithers Okay Waier District Land · Transfer No Tennis for Anyone? Laguna Beach planning comm.1smners Monday night agreed to go along wllh a plan to transfer the Great Lakes Carbon holdinp In Laguna Canyon from the Moulton·Nlguet Water District to the Laguna Beach County Water District - but only after taking steps to assure the move would not disrupt local water service .. . City Plannor Al Autty said the I.oc>I Agency F~ation:Commlsson (LAFC) is considering a request · for inter-district transfer of the 500-acre property, which was annexed to the city of Laguna Beach at the tim e an est.ate development, to be known as Sycamore Hills, was in plan· ntng stages~ The LAFC, which rules on all such movee, had requested city reaction to the nquest, Autry said, and the planning staff had no objection to offer. C.Ommlssloner Charles John.son wanted t.o know what it might do to Laguna's water supplies. "Every now and then we bear (){ a shortage in out reservoln1," 1 aid Johnson. "What if som·ebody decided to go ahead and d~velop out there?" Autry said the parties involved had agreed the district transfer would be the most eftectlve way to provJde the pro- perty with water. "Laguna will be receiving new water senrice from the Metropolitan Water [)L,tfid by a pipeline down the Canyon and new reae:rvoirs," said Autry. "The property can receive a lateral service direct from this pipeline U it Is in the Laguna County Water Dilltrlct, whe/'ta! service from the Moulton-Niguel di>trlct would involve laying a lot of new line." Johnson suggested that the LAFC be advised that the city haa no objection to the_ transfer, but that a second com- munication to the Lagunl water OOard recommend that no service be granted until it can be Ued Into the proposed Melropolltan pipeline. Fellow planner& agreed. From Page 1 • VIEJO PLAN •• area al.so could be used tor mobile home parks. • The highest density according to Gohara 'Ifill be 20 units per acre In some areas. . Gohara explained that there are three types of zoni'.1g for multiple family use -_ medium high, six units per acre: high, 15 units per acre and heavy , 20 units per acre. Jn all of Mission Viejo under the fourth revision there can be.only 902 units medium high density, 4,296 of high densi· ty and 2,566 units of heavy density. This b~gs a total of 7,764 multiple family uruts. The zoned density is the maximum allowed. If the developer wanted to put fewer u.iits they could and according to the l\lission Viejo Company, they have do{le this in several areas. Area zoned for 350 units has been used for Coron.ado homes. 336 units south of the gC>lf course and 216 units south of 1>1onterey homes will be used for either single family homes, condominiums town houses or patio homes but ' n o t apartments. . 0.1 the other hand, If the company wanted to Increase its density they woold !flerely have to revise the plan and bring it to the planning commission, said GC>hara. Jn other planned ct1mmunitles in Orange County there are in some areas as mw.1y as 60 units per acre zoned. Whether good or bad, the decision on the approval of the fourth revision of Mission Viejo's master plan lies with the Board or SupervisC>rs. According to the revision opponents, the supcrvisC>rs have received petition s wit~ . 1,000 signatures protesting the rtv1s1on. As of l\.1onc:.lay, Supervisor Alton E. Allen, whose district includes Mission Viejo, had :lOt yet made up his mind but is choosing to wait until all the facts are brought out in Wednesday's hearing. Wa llace Calls VC Backers T1·aitors BANGKOK (UPI) -f ormer Gov. George Wallace of Alab<lma said V.onday night American antiwar demonstrators who call for a Communist victory in Viet~ nam ar' traitors to their country. "People have a right to exprtss things about the war.'' Wallace said on his ar· tl\•DI for a three-day fact.finding visit to Thailand ... But when they run that Viet Cong n01g up and call for a Co1nmunist victory, why that's treason. ''There ought to be a law og:dnsl that actlvlty and If I ht1d tM power, I'd have one paS!ed,'1 ~Id Wallace. un successrul presldenllul candidate of his Amcrtcan R acket Groitp Faults Lack of City Co urts Laguna Beach Is markedly short of ten4 nis courts to serve 8'.1 estlmated 900·ten· nls Duffs. CounclJmen Wednesday are to consider a sludy by the Laguna Beach Tennis Assocl<\_lion. It states In part: -Laguna should have at least six ·public tennis col}rts now. -The city should immediately acquire about three acres of flat land suit.able for construction of at least 10 te:inls. courts. -The new courts should be placed together ia one IocaUon as a public teMis center. --Serious consideralion should be giwn to providing a pro-shop to be operated by a responsible lessee via a conceSsion a~reement. . The report states tl\ere are two public' ten.1is courts at Irvine 'Park, two ade- quat~ and tWo. sub-st;mdard CQUrls at the high school -and two courb at Thurston Eleme.ntary S<:hool. The ..school courts are available to adults only abou·t 43 percent of the time because of school use. High school students sometimes use the Irvine ·BOwl ' courts causing adults to be turned away. Tourists also compete with the resident tennis set 'for uSe ol lacilities. The report states that the ·National Recreation and ~ark Associatloa recom- me~s ~o~e pbbllc tepnil c:;ourt pf!r each , 2,000 residents, meaning Laguna should have seven ~blic court~. The tennis center theory, the report States, will lower construction costS (up to $2500 per court); lower maintenance COlls; facilitate clbics and toi.irn!ments; provide an irea where tennis opponents can be fOund; and provide the mean.. to obtain a tennis professional to tend need> of both courts and players. The report notes that the Lakuna Can· yon area probably contains severill ex· cellent sites. It airs tJfe possibility o{ attrlcUng a tennis p~essional , by a concession aireement IWlth one. building for a shop and use Of one court I.or tennla in- struction. City to Study P a rking Lot Plan on F oresl Council to Study Teen Use for Barefoot Bar City Manager James Wheaton Wed- nesday night will present the city council with a plan for the: purchase of parking ·IC>t property on Forest Avenue that would lop about $5,000 off the price originally considered by the council. . Two weeks ago the council instructed Wheaton to continue negotiations on an offer originating with an anonymous group o! Lagunans who proposed · to purchase property directly behind the Ocean Avenue Playhouse, with a 60-foot frontage on Forest Avenue , and tum it over to the city on a lease-option basis. Laguna Beach city councilmen We~nes. day will ct1nsider a proposal that the old Barefoot Bar building serve on a trial bas is as a winter. center for teenage ac· tivlties. . . The city now owns the premises, which ft once battled to cl09e as an alleged focal point of homosexual activity. The business at 111 Ocean Ave. is a more modest operation now, with a beer· wine license, but no liquor license. Under a proposal by City N.'anager James D. Wheaton, the lessee would sur- render the beer.wine license between Labor D~y and Memorial Day, allowing teenage use of the building. Rental fees would be waived to offset loss or bar revenue. Wheaton estimates it would cost the city about $2,500 annually. The bar operation would be worth a try to see how it works. He said the city could probably open the teen center by the middle of next month and operate wt· ti1 Memorial Day. If the council does not go along with the proposal, Wheaton said, he will recom· mend thaf the city concentrate on the old Boys Cluti building as a teen center. It is also part of the city-owned main beach that is one day to become a park. Figures prepared at the time indicated that the $60,000 purchase price would be increased to about '15,000 by addition of interest over a five.year purchase period. This amount, however, could be raised from parking lot revenues U the two prcr perttes, from Ocean through to Forest. were combined into a municipal lot . Wheaton said Monday he now ls dealing directly with £be present owner of the 'property, trustees for the huge Lindberg estate, who have agreed to make the same five-year lea~p u r ch a s e ar- rangement will! the city . Hanoi to Allow Captives To Receive Holiday Gifts He will recommel'ld, Wheaton said, that a first optJon pa~t of $12,000 be made at the Ume the property is delivered, . together with a one-year lump sum in- terest payment on the balance of $48,000. This 'procedure, he said, would redUce the total con to about $70,000 if the purlllcase were e1teTided over five years. City Attorney Jack Rimel Is preparing a draft agreement along these lines for presentation to the council. Russ Rocket Explodes; May C1·ipple Progrant WASHINGTON (AP) -The explMion of a huge Soviet rocket on its launch pad may have set Russian efrorts to land a man on the moon back lwo years and crippled its manned space program. Aviation Week & Space Technology l\tagailne reported Monday the explosion last summer at Tyuratam destroyed the rocket the Soviets had intended to carry U1e main portion of a manned orbiting platform into space last month . TOKYO . (UPI) -U.S. airmen being held prisoners in North Vletnam will be pennitted to receive Christmas packages from .their families, the HanOi govern· ment .announced Tuesday. The brief apnouncement broadcast by the Vietnam News Agency (VNA) and monitor~d here said: "On the occasi:in of the 1969 Christmas, the D.R.V.N. (Dempcratic Republic of Vietnam) general department of posts and telecommunications agrees t o tran~(er gnt! to captured American almren in North Vietnam from their families. "The period of transfer of these gifts wll! last from Dec. 1 to Dec. 31, 1969." The broad~ast said the gifts should be sent accord ing to "the procedures al ready stipulated on ptevious OC· casions." Sevetal groups of wives of American servicemen missing in Vietnam have travelled to Paris to ·ask North Viet· namese delegates to the peace talks 'vhether Lheir hcsbands were captured and being held prisoner. North Vietnam r~peatedly has refused to make available See Ifie largest soloclion of Sponish ond Mediterranean Dining Room groups . a full list of prisoners. The women who visited the North Viet- namese in Paris were told queries would be made about their husbands and replies to their questions mailed to them at home. Roger s Elected GOP Chairma n Thomas C. Rogers or Newport Beach, 1 la.id developer and San Juan rancher, was elected chairman of the Republican Central Committee of Orange County Monday night at the regular meeUng of the 25-member board. Rogers, 45, a member of the Central Com mittee for the past four years. suc- ceeds David L. James, transferred to Los Angeles by his firm . James will remain on the board. A nati ve of California, Rogers. his wife and five children make their home at 731 via Lido Soud on Lido Isle. ' • AV AILABlE ' FOR IMMEDIATE DELI VERY for lho HOLIDAYS State Wllllam P. Rogers gaid lod1y "numerous dlplom allt contacts'' wilh Nort.h Vletnan1, lntluding some since the death of Ho Chi ftfln h, h&ve failed lo pro· duet any sign of progress in settling 01~ Vietnam war. _Independence party last year. •• j ' ( 11 I ·--~·----------------------' -. -- ' ' " ?Traigie ... FiJ:n1ily :j.~: Dappi~r T. .. ( 1111es THE KENNEDY CLAN' -Joseph P. Kennedy, patriarch of one of America's most influential families posed, surrounded by his family, for this Nov. 9, 1960, photo t4J1cen shortly after his son, -John, was elect· ed president. Standing fro.m.left are Mrs. Robert Kerin«ly;.Stephen ,Smith and Jean. Smith, a daughter; the late President; the late Robert Kennedy ; Mrs. Patricia Lawford, a daughter {the Lawfords have since been divorced)'; Sargent Shriver; Mrs. Edward Kennedy, and Peter Lawford. Seated from left are Eunice Shriver, a daugbtet; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedyj Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, and Edward Kennedy. I • Down the I Mission· ' Trail OltlTime Comedy ' _, , I At, ·Saddleback 11\!SSION VIEJO -Old time comie creats-~tbat helped launch American mOvfes wtll come to life again Thursday Dikht at Saddleback College. ' · - The school's second showing-in a her- itage fihn series will be "When Comedy Wis King." It will begin at 7::M> p.m. The film takes the audience1 to Maclc Sennett's old Keystone Studio where Anl'1'ican screen comedy began. It will feature Charlie Chaplin, Mabel Normand, Fattt Arbuckle, Wallace Beery, Gloria SwlMOll, Buster Keaton and Laurel and Hardy. An additional short will be shown, "An Oscar for Mr. Rose," a satire on f'bstract films. I Adm.Isslon to the public is 25 cents. As5oclated Student Body memirs will be adJpiUed Cree. , 9 ' Slope Work Slated . . . CAPISTRANO BEACH-The State DI· vision of Highways will open bids in Los Angeles Dec. 11 for reconstructing slo~s where eci>sion has occurred near Cap~ trano Beach. The condition has been caused by water seeping through the cut slope ab!We the southbound lanes of Route 1, just north of the San Diego Freeway. 'lbe eroded slope is endangerin·g c.~1 .. no capistrano, the adjacent county road. A tetal of '22,500 is 11vailable ·for the projeeL ' e .S.,hoob GOP Topic ... SADDLEBACK VALLEY-"The Crisis tn ltigber 'Education" wJll be the topic diaclwed at the Thursday·meeUng of the Sa&lleback Republican Assembly. MORE SADNESS -Mer attending mass early today, Mrs. Rose Kennedy descendS'steps of St. ·Francis Xavier ChurCh' in Hyannis, Mass., with aid of her driver, Frank Saunders. A few hours later, her husband, Joseph•I!. Kennedy,. died. . ·, State 8eno John ·G. Schmitz will ad· dress the group at the s~r.m. meeting fn Mimioq Viejo High Schoo LltUe Theater. KENNEDY , D JES A'[. 81 • • • •-Wor,..liop Scfae~li!d , . . • • dren -'including'three ,ol his. four sons -War II; His wish was transferred to bis MISSJON\>IEJO -A special workshop died violently. · . ·· nd. J k Ill I ··-"·-F ·d t then,..._. seco son, ac . :Jon ~~·way ri ay a iK\-1...,,. AsSassins ~lied sonS PreSident John ·F. r.He opened his purse to Jac;k who won a Malting gUttering 8f,ars for the com· Kennedy and Sl!n .. Robert'F. Ken~y CD· i;ace for the U.S. House and later for the ml.plity's annqal_<Jbrisµn~ dJnce, the N.Y.), Who was runnin'g for the presiden· Senate befote becoming President. snciw ·Ball,·the woi'ksbop will be under f!Y in 1968. A third'sori, Joseph Jr., was · Kenned.Y was used .to having his own the. direction Of~ NicOle 4 Caille'. killed in World War II. way. He was a loner in the world of ii· ?be Stan Will. be uied COi-deborations •. 1 Sen.,...EdWai-d M. Kennedy, (D-Mass.), nance, neyer burdening himsell vlilh cor· 'J'he)r wtll~bie 1~constructt!.d. froin 9 to 11 his Jone .surviving son, ls considered a porate ties . 11.ip. F~ further · tl\formaUon on the potential ce.ndidate for the presidency. . ·He .never could quite Jive down rumors \t'(C',k.shop and· materials needed contact · However,.his political future was dimmed a big hunk of his vast fortune came from; tbe,reeftiuOn'center al 837~ after .M'1')' JO KOpecbne, 28-year-old illegal liquor traffic toward the end. of : ... ~ · \ waming&On aecretary' aod former cam· prohibition. ., Te111ple Bosill• Bl'ICnefa paign. w6rket for Robert Kennedy, oied Actually, he made a hefty profit In a · fi:. ""DLEBACK y ~ T •• ~~ • _:. Temple when a ca,! driven by the senator went 'O,ff quick) In-and-out investment in Llbby- ;,,l'lll IWW-I 1 bridj Cha qwddi k I land Owens-Ford Cll8ss Co. ' stock during a EJfit ·sisterhood of Mission Viejo is 8·• e, on !" c s 1~ period when the public falselfu believ~d ~·-~ a membership brunch in the Sad· m\!l.July J.1811. . kl · k bot ~~'" Va"ey Thu-•< ... _ I The eldest Kennedy aJeo Jeav_e.s , hts plate glass-firm was ma ng w s ey • ~· ... •~cv , t1eS in 'expect.ation of lhe repeal of pro. .... Carole Blake of Holiday .Magic widow, Rose, 79, ,and four daughters, hiblUon. · •e0cs will speak on the CQITect way Mrs. 5argent. Shrt,vet.' (Eunice). wU~ ~f But his really' big profits came after to apply cosmetics at the 9:15 a.m. event the ambassador to France, Mrs. Patr1c1a repeal because he had' bee.n .foreslgh~ in Manning's Restaurant, Laguna Hills. Lawrord, funner wqe of actor Peter eaoogh to .get tbe.U.S. distributorship for ~atlons can be made by Calling: Lawford, Mrs .. Stepben ~m.ith (~an) ,aJld' tafue of '.Brilaln'1 ·~biQest distillers. ,,Jfe Mrs. Irtnt Cohen at 837-7775. ~ma!')'· Kenaedy,. :.tr., Is mentally IQlpOrled ·u.e1i liquor · legally under ' . tC~hJed and In a'r,lidw convent.' ' "mtcllcfnal " lice'nses and Dad warehoU!'s e, Sc""lcrsfalp Set lip s1r)cken wltli . a ·irtroire -at his wtntc.i·. lull or gtn and scotch ready to go wtien CAPISTRANO. VALLEY -The San i;q... In Pain)_ Beach, Fla., in !981.'l<e;-prohibition ended. CJ-..C.plstrano Bay ~rl\llch ol tho Mcly, suboequf;\>Uy_ apllered , ~ brl"" . l\'lfllJedY was aa ~ewted to his wile and Ania1aii' ~tton, ·ct Unlvenlty" psm, several beart "ltaj:l<s and, 'Oil d•ughtel1 as he was to his sons. One w.-~lmv~ abft>Ushtd i ~holatslitp·~ Marc~ S,.1961!'~ heart ''bklck" for'whi~ ~ dau~ter, Kathleen, wld?W ot J. R. for\,Webact<-C.leel>-I I be twi<'\' wu 'iyen ,O"l'8"1-, 1 , c;.v<ndisli. a British nOO!eman, 'Was A if)erit' syitem wtlf determine wMch Kennedy, Born S.pt. I, 18111 In East · ~l!led in a private plane cra.h near Pri· ~ ol the college will r<celve the Boston, had wllled a political caretr !or v ... France, while llJ'lng to join her uDliaJ .Upend. his eldest son, Joe Jr., who died in World father 'on the !Uvlera. .. :.·J--~-"' Lawn Bowlers Criticized for Raising Roof "Get that roof line down," w'8s .the Planning Commission's . advice to members or the Laguna Beach Lawn Bowling Club Monday night, as a revise~ site plan for the bowlers' propoeed clubhouse in Heisler Park was presented for approval. · The matter. in hand pertained chiefly to reloea'tion or the structure frQm the originally approved site on a steep slope al fhe north end of the bowling gree~ to a less costly building location . on the ocean side of the greens. Planners·did not.object .to the new &!le• but noted that preliminary plans in- dicated a roof line higher than the center line of Cliff Drive, ft• limitation set in original discussions to avoid disturbing the view across the park. · ' Club spokesman Richard Davies noted that the proposed roofline would be ap. • proximately the same height as 'that of the adjacent Shuffleboard Club and was considered desirable for a e s t h e t i c reasons. "A building four feet six JncqeS from the ground does not lend itself to' much good design," he explain~. ' A Oat roof, Davies sa1d, would.get ~he structure down two feet below the Shuf· fie board Club roof. line, but · wquJd ' P.TO- duce "an ugly building.'' "We want somethirig that will blend with the landscape and also look at.. tractive when viewed froin th e apartments across lho street," he said~ Two architects on the coi:nmlsSlon, Charles Johnson and chat.r:n1an: Fred Briggs , .expressed the view that even a very low building could be designed at- tractive ly. "It Would present a challenge to ·your architect," said Briggs, "but n could be done -It C<luld be a sort of garden. w:all llesiijn.'1 "I feel very strongly about Heisler Park," said Johnson. "ll anyQii-Og at all projects above street level it will ci,rt off part of the hor1zon. I want to see the bowlers have their clubhouse, but we should respect Heisler Park." r Conunissioner Dr. Robert French was concerne<t 3bout possible disturbfnce of publlc walkways. "Won't one be blocked off by the building?" he asked. City Planner Al AUtry said the new design would Involve only minor rtloca~ lion Of two walkwa)'.S, involvil)g a change of "two to· three feet" and noted that the Parks Department felt this could be managed easily. , Cor.mllssloner Joseph T'o m ch a k wondered if the building , could be de(>ressed deeper into Ute giound. This would be possible, Davies said, but would involve additional steps up the greens. Moving the building back on the slope toward the ocean also would be effe<:tlve• in lowering the roof fine, It was noted', bt.it this Would encroach upon planting. 1'l'd rather move it back Into the nower beds than have.. that root to Joo~ ·at," said Johnson. NoUng that the bowlera' agreement with the city council ·for construction of their original design Includes a htlgbt limitation, planners voted t.o •pprove the site change only, but reserved the rlahi to review final atchltectural plans before issuance of a building perm!L 'I ···------------ 0.&tti.~ILllT ~ Pla~ire..S 'iWeig·h ,, Change D~ll!y for Study . . Lot .. ·~ ·•'-· By BARBA.RA KlltmlCli ot .... Dtllr ,. ....... A pl4nt to develop '11x virtually 11un- bulldable", hllla1de tot. by resubdlvkUng them into four··~·~ and i"tm. proving each wUh •'a litUe home on sUlts" WU mulled by t1l' ~ Beach PlinnlllflCOmmlsslottMD\1day night, 1beo ,.1 ahead !or further study Nov.14. City Planner · Al Autry told com· missioners be h8d aone over pW. sub- mitted by doouriy• ~ foe the pri>p- er\y"' on Foatana, DuCte and Enctna Way1, at the top of AJtA Vista Way, and ~greed ~ WU ''.abo!il Ole. only way to create fow uaabJe hnJICl"'I illea11 • ConuJllal_. Fl'ed ·BrJip and Chatlei _j~-...,.. ~ by the ·faol ·that ~men! of the propoeed houlel 'Oil" tli$ neW"1Ues would .involve reduclllfl •Ide and ·rear yard aetbocill to u UtUe u · rooi and ·11ve feet. • "OUr aim," aakl,Rlker, "is to arrange tbe ualts . b\ take belt advantage of, the view, wbicb Uthe main feature up t.bert. It is necessary to sacrtliee the lllza • of &de yards· to attain an arranaement. that permits this openness. Abo we want to avoid blocking the views of those Wbo have alre~y built· uphill from us." The ow~ of a neighboring property stepp~cr forward to say be would like io see the development. "It's a very pretty property," he said, "and J.feel this-is the oqly.way It can evel" be·developed ao Uie city will benefit from aa iDcreued !a.1 base." · ·• •· Commissioner Joseph Tomehak said that alter looking at the steep, hillside Proi>ertr he wondered ii it obou1d be developed at all. · · ' · Autry pointed out, ''The applicant has the inherent right to develop his property, He· m11y have to make seven! propoea1s. but so...tar this Is the best."' · · · ! •:1 \lave no quarre1·w1th an innovative concept," said Briggs, "but I just wonder- what will happen to the land around lhe four li.ttl~ houses «1 sUltJ. WllLit Juat grow weeds? I'd like to , see · this: ap. Traffic Hazard Curb at Morro PUin Presented l'rocl!clures agreed upon by state tral· fie englheers to reduce hal8nls for· sCboot buses entering and leaving El Morro Elementary SChool will be presented' to Laguna Beach school board members tonight. State Trarrtc Engineer G. L. Russell has sent the school district an outline of steps that will be taken as the result of hls, Inspection of I.he site with 'District 7 engineer A. K. Goldin Nov. 7. "We sincerely reel that these proce· dures,'1when completed, wUI pi!aUy Jm. prove the capability of our buses in Jeav- !ng the Et Morro schoolgrounds,'' Supel'· Jntendent William Ullom said Monday. Recommendatio111 of the st a t e engineers Included Installation o0f YellOW "bouncing ball'' warning signs on Coalt Highway; pto\tision of a specially inarkea acceleration lane for buses enterlng the highway; raising the grade where the bUa sioPs berore enterlbg the hlgttWay to' Jm· prove vlslblllty and posalble lurlher s]ieed limit reduction. · Demos to Hear Vietnam Talk p-Md • •Planned dm!Clpment;. ~ could C'?l)t.r?,l landsc~plog and Ingress and egress •• , Riker wd he planned to Ja;idscape with ~all .treee ) to.. avoid ,,~ ·others' Views yd "°"1<( be, ~ ~.".ibn\~' pfans on this. H.e,' safd abOut eijbt different plans hacf bet!'.1 considtteCI for the pro- perty belore.decldina Oii lhia•ll!e. Dl'.".Roberl Frencli &ild ·~·•greed on the owners'• right to ,...lop.• but woold have.tq defer. to..,yi~WI of the .architects on lbe ~on .i..orar aa. the d~j)I were ,-"""' Tomehak ethoed l!l!J Vf~w: ... .,.....~.. • • Briggs "l)d ·be .definitely would wagi mote llnie f01sWdf the pro~J, • ·Johnson 14! •eC:htl\t-YleW' tbati sucti1 ndlcal contll!ISlqn cpl8'de)'arcli would~ ly g•nerole• similar 1'1!11it>ta friim olhOr. ow:_ners. 1 , l · •,. "I aJll'reclate! the f!tl·thet ,Geoff wants t1> develoP, q>e property P."o(itably,': ·• said, ,0 but I ~t think.we 6b9u1d gram thil. just.so he 4n ~·;money, qiil<!al we're~ sure there's -DO other appro~ poll!llbli!." ; ', • . eomnusst~· agreed to Clefef acUoo until after the study aesSion. •• -. .. L~naRevie~ Back_ t~ City ~a~gBoar~ •• Scheduled "report· and revl~ of Utt revised economic forecast for Laguna Beach, prepared in "'nnectlon \!)lb tlj• ·......i plan llindy, falled to mliterlallie at.Monday, olgbt's ·PlannJnc bornmisipon •eulon... .- lnst.eld, commlsslonera, at ,the request ol c!lY P1-r Al. AutJY; !"'nlined their action to agretlllfl to a teptall~. Dee. J date "tor a Cult-dress ~atatloh of tbl rePori .to a joint "*"11 ol the·l'14rinirilf Commission, CllY Ooondl "Ud1Cttlzen1 AdvilOry Commfttee.'. A 0 ' < • Autry sal~ the ecoiOa)IC.n"port, col\i- pleted alter J,000 man-hours of wort, has! been reviewed by .ll!e Plamilot< 81111 aliil retuni<.t to the ·aener.i p!aii.-lea'1JI with. co~· a!Kf ~.m@ Wi:tMr pollabing ~J!'l.ato.rY Jo .ol/lQll ~ tatic>n1to the.cit)'~.... ~· .,. .. ~ , •Tile llrst att.m]ll.to lorec:ut Lquoa'J e,ccmomle future, pmenied by ,..,._'1- taUves ol the planning -firm ol Danie~ l\!ann, Jollnson .and M~ last January, eazqe !!!.(~ .l)lro> crj~ilam by members ot the bu sin~ community, who ques~o~· the v8lidlty of ·some ot its statistics· and conclusions-: . The 'neW' report, scheduled for ex· •mination• '.Dec.1 a. represents an ad- diUonDl •nlne inbnthl'of study.·. Israeli Bombers Strike· Milita1:y . ' • -..,.. ' ., I Targets'irfEg)ipt ; ~ ~ ' ., By llllltecf.i'r"' IDlernaUeal , · Israeli bom"bers late today struc~ Egyp~ ' .. m.ilJtary objectives'' In the Central itector l1f the Sufi' Canal for more th~ an hour, an army spokesman re:. portf1f Jn Tel Aviv. Israeli ancj JQrdanian artl!leri' ·also -(ought duds aiross th<! Jordan River. ' ~.spOke,!lman1 aaJd &tl fsraeil planei re~_safely to ·base but gave.no olhe~ Dr. Ray c. Gery will speak to the details. There was no 'lndicaUOrr ·tM raid Laguna Beach Democratic G!ub ·Nov. 24 was part of the expected Israell·fetalla· on "Oh, Vietnam -Oh, • Vietnam _ tion ftr'the.·Egyptian frogman attack oq Why?" , . two liriell ships in 'EJ?at·Harbor.Sunday~ Dr. Gery Is the ·minister · of L~ and a 1enlor Israeli military official lndl• Beach UnJted Methodist Church. cated brae! would )Jotd -Jori;lon respon· alble-ror that. The Monday meeting is to be,tn at I The shelling J(as reported Jn the Turk· p.m. Jn the community room oI the n1 h r th L Fed I bulldl """'n..... ... _ . ma va area · o e northern valley. aguna era ng; _.,.,...__,,Ave. ~t 'fOlloWf:d '11 , e.1-;hang~ Mqrtday. ltght Patrick L. BlrkeU, club pratdentr urg<; •In the same area and three major·!sraell ed Interested · persons lo attend1 ·the &Jr' strikes Mondajr ,qilnst Iraqi, sYrJan meeting and ·hler the talk: · .;:.... and Jorda~ artiDery bases and an Dr. Gery has been in the ~ for ' EmUan-maltne,:t radar station tn Jordan. 12 years pastoring churches ·1n San learel's lre.W1'§ directed ,at the fro,rman Bernardino, Whittier and~~~ attack on Ellatt and the Israeli offlcili.I He re<:elved hia bJlcbelor'1 dip.from ' Said tuch actions ~·w111 have to be dealt Eastern College, did graduate 'work 'it w1th." Egypt ea id the frogmen were Boston University, received his batbelor Oown 1!1 by heijco~: but Jar~el Con~ of divinity degree-fromi lt&Mll'-Clt.Y tends the>: came from the.t*ln JOrdanlan Seminary and earned his doctorate,from city of Aqaba ind that Jor'dan therefore Claremont 'SChool of l'beO~. / · ', f, ' was rtsponsible. · ,, · . . I , i . . wall ,.r€alne : "'\. -w' • . .. .. C~men"1 "0ne Not Meant To . . .-~ \ ' ' I\ ' ' \\'ho sounded the Clemente? born at Saa oald beavr r'alne !isl weet IO{tened ti» base material Wliier the wan· Wblcb, hsi It wasn't exacUy the BatUe of Jm:fcbo but the wall did come tumbllni down. . -Employes ol lVoard<o Collll(uetlon Company P,robably didJ>'t ~ any h~m<r In lhe event. They spent· the weekend broak!lla up and removlng·the §.ton wall that w,. about 20-reor btpt' and .IO-f..t long~ . , ·-, It was to have betn ~ e"t wall of a M!CODdary sedirnent•l\00 bujn for lhli cl· ty sewer plant beJn1 Cllllltrll<:ted;:w aboot $2.1 million. Ray Sweote.11, onslneer le<' tlie 'cJlt, no ton -an4 ~ lootJNs .. · , , · · ~ three wor~ "form itrlppen", ~·tP.i'!i !he in•tal lom\o;OCI the.ie-lri- loroed conaete wall •• ~-~k ~. jt lmied "°'/I of plumb" and Will drl!IOil ~by Its owh weigh~ The-workers Jum· ~'clear '1ta:ttn but unhurt. ... · .Tbe.J)lan~ locaf¥d nor 1n.e1!01111lon o.f A venlda Pico iii the inc!O!ti!al 111'!1" of ooulb $an Clemen~, ls to be in operotion in -l a ytat. Swentalc Mid tbt --ttruetJon company 1 wW ablcrb thl wan replaeemtnt, and cleanup whlcll· bf estimated ,.,lild be about 11o;OGO. • ' ,- .. ... .. ~ ••• .. ~ ... . Tutldoy, N"""btr 18, 1969 Apollo 12: Shooting for a Bullseye rle P11otnba, 20, like• Jove #Ines. Wbeh one waa cut abort at tlRom, movie house Friday night, Valomba llred 1 pistol at the screen and demanded bit mooey bock. "I paid to aee this love scene," he said. "I do not want to see acene1 cut up by the censors." Cuttomer Oed and police arrested Palomba on charges of di!turbing the peace. II Laboratory men in a pharmaceu· tical factory at Moretoo, J!:n11and look like aruooauts, but the real aim of their sr,ace-age-suita is to prevent them rom changing sex. Tbe suits protect them against fumes from birth pills In the granu- lating stage. The female hormone In the drugs, when inhaled, could give them smooth chins and_ other feminine characteristics, a spokes.. man .ol. the firm explained . • ' Edw1rd G. Robinson, who often portrayed the tough-talking hood· lum of classic cop~•nci·robbers movies, has been cited by the Screen Actors Guild for 11fostertng the finest Ideals of the acting pro- fession." Robioson, 75, an art con· noisseur and collector in private life, was given two art objects-the Greek masks of tragedy and com· edy in bleck onyx and antique bronze. APOLLO ASTRONAUTS TO ATTEMPT PINPOINT MOON LANDING TONIGHT Conr•d •nd Boan Wiii Try lo L•nd Within 1111 ~HI of Surveyor Ill • DiaM Gordon, B, croucM1 and cov- tr1 her face with htr handa GI 1ht tries to hide frcmt plwtographers GI '~ wait.I for a 1chool but at NQsau Bay, Te%. Camera 1hr Diane ii the daughter of Apollo 12 astronaut Rich- ard Gordon. • Ronold M. Schlsel, 26, of Jack· son, Wyo., asked for probation on charges he had shot at a state pa· trolman. The prosecution asked that Scbisel be sentenced to a year in prison. District Judge C. Stuart Brown ignored both requests and handed out a sentence of four to five years in prison. ''I take an aw· ful dim view of shooting at law en· forcement officers-or anybody, for that matter," the judge explained. • Elmer Ha r ry Lucero, 24, walked into the police station in La Junta, Colo. and admitted committing four burglaries since being released from the state reformatory last month, police said. Officers said Lucero told lhem he really did not prefer life behind ban, but thought it was better than being unemploy· ed on the outside. •Miserable Years!' LBJ's Brother Recalls VP Era NEW YORK (UPI) - Lyndon ~. John.m's 1en?J 11 John F. Kennedy's vlce pre11ldent wu "the most ml.!ierable three years of hh life," his brother said Monday. Sam Houston JohMon,. 1n an article publlabed by Look magazine, 11aid Ken- nedy's "new frontiersmen" subjected Johnson lo repeated snubs and humilia. tion even though the Southern votes he drew to the Democratic Ucket in 1960 were essential to Kennedy 's halrbfeadth \lictory. "They m~de his 11.8.y ln the vice presidehey Uie most miserable three years of his life," Johnson wrote. "He wasn't the No. 2 man in that ad· ministraUon, he was the lowest man on lhe totem pole .. _ ·~He was openly snubbed by second· echelon White Houe sta.Uers who anickered at him behind his back. and called hJm Uncle Compone." sam John.son said his brother remained loyal to KeMedy, though he did say at Umes that "some ot the people around him are bastards." He said the vice president "ezploded" when Mn. Sam Jobn.9oa lold a harmless joke about Keir nedy in his presence. Johnson said Kennedy kept his vice president traveling on endles.!1 foreign junkets. ''Lynda and Luci would stay at home ••• resenting their parents' frequ ent absences," he said. "Luci has said she remembers screaming and stomping her feet because her mot.her would be taken away by Lyndon for some political rally ." Sam Johnson recalled one incident shortly after President Kennedy was assassinated which "reflected how my brother mu.st have felt about all thost ug- ly l1111inuatlons that were made about Kennedy belng killed In Texas." He said the President called him shortly before the Johnson.Ii moved into the White House to say "I lpPftciate all :you've done for me." " 'I wouldn't be here if It hadn't been for "you,' " Johnson quoted the President as &aying, and sald be replied, "Lyndon, I had nothing to do with Oswald." "He gasped, sputtered, then exploded,11 Johnson recalls. "My God! what an ex- plosion! I have never heard him so angry.· .. He shouted .•. 'You make your lousy sick jokes about everything!'" U.S. Jets Ambush Reds, l(ill 58 in Viet Battle SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. jet., artillery end hellcopt<r gunahips cauaht Com· munist troops as they were burying their dead and killed 58 or them in an attack northeast of Saigon, military spOkesmen said today • Allied spokesmen said f I g h t I n g throughout Vietnam had killed more than 530 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops in the past two days. South. Vietnamese spokesmen said 243 ol lhe Communbts -e killed In ftghUng with government fortes two miles east of the U.S. Green Beret& camp at Bu Prang, 122 miles northeast of Saigon. The jell. he!kopUn and gum attacked the Communist unit u h was crossing a grassy hilltop 90 miles nmtheast of Saigon Monday, Tbe attack came after the Communists opened fire on a helicopter scout craft. The Communist troops were working to bury bodies of comrades killed in earlier air strikes, spokesmen said. In fou rother battles In the area Mon· day American forces lost 11 killed and 22 wounded. Communist troops early today fired 25 60mm mortar rounds into Bu Prang, the beleaguered camp near the Csmbod.ian border. The camp has been under pre"""' by the Viet Cong and the North Vletnamete for weeks. Sunny South Plenty Cold Below Freezing Marks Recorded in Carolina '.l'entiter•tnre• Hllfl L.w Prte, Alb\rqU1r1w• " " Al\dlor1" " • Att111!1 " • l.t11!'1f1.id .. " ''""•rdl " ' '"H • " ·~ ... " " llrow111vn1t .. " C~l<•to • H "' Clft(lft"-tl " H ... ,,...... • " ... 0.S Mol-.. " ...... n .. ·" "'''~"-· .,. .n •m ... " .. H1I-" • -· " ,. kfflMI "' " n " L-1• ....... ll u LH Atlhl" n " c ... , •• Ml•~I " .. Mln!'lff!IOlll n " ·" luf'll'l'f' "91Y, Llflll ,,.,llltle •1MI J Ni IS -llOfl !flt-.~ Wl'llntmr 11111 llK .. ~It WIMI It Ni U krml1 tollltM. """' ....,. ,., V.S. Summary SMW •!If Cehl 1lr •~•• ~ tht et11lr•I ll:llCt.~ 1M P111<11 M..cl1r. ll:1h1 •lld • ,_ tl'lulldorlllllwtf'I .,,..,.. -'" ,._ !lit """'°"' l'ltlM 10 ""-O!'ttl '--"'"· P<ftw Ori"'"' N-York 011';1411111 Ct""""' crry .... ,. " .. n •• .. .. " " • " .N ee..1.1 .......,."""' ....... """' " to n. llll•lld Nmwttvl'tl r•"" from 41 •• n. W•rtr ._r.111r1 Q, 81111, M-... '.l'We1 TUlso.t.Y lfCOllf 1119'1 ••• ,_ ....... 111! J.11'1. •.i k coM IM' II 11• J.1'11. t.O WlDNl504Y ft lt tl ~"h •.•• ,. ..... J:f.11.rn, J,1 tt1,,t 11w .............. n 1u "·"'· 1.1 St<Ol'lf fl tttl ............. 1111 IJI'! .. .. loC*ICI ............................. . 11\0lt,., wnnv •11llltl'" Piii"" tht Att•nflc-CHll. SOvllllrlr WMltt wtlf!'Mlf "' !tit .. tltfll MtbMrll •fttt 1 (tllllr ~""'4. litfcwe ""' w1"""'°' r.corll lr#f for !hi d111 -1 HI It ColulMlt, l .C .• wllll 2S. Ind Plotttlc1, $ C.. l't, A 'ffClln• of 22 llfd 1 •-1emH1'1tur1 milt. lo• N~. ,, 1t Colvmti\11, 01. Ll!IM lflOW rfll bl'oullll llM l t <ll"" ul4110f1 .., 1111 trotlflf 11 IMrk1111, wvo .... 1 111(1\tt.. JI•-· w.oo ........ IMhH of MO,. f!'I Mio •~. T~r" l111M1 of •llO• ltlt lfl 111 ,..,,., 11 SrO'~Y, Nib, ) "•"" S..•fll'tl ll .... , lilOllh .. " .. ,,.,.,,1. • ., P'm111u~~ " .. P«t!111d " " lt .. kl C"ttr • • ,, ll:td l tuff " " Jh110 •• " S1cr1mfl'llo u .. &111 L~i.;, en-, • " "' 5111 OltH " .. .... ilr1MIKI .. ... H1tllo • " -· ... ~ " '"'""'' " .. Wllfllrlt!Mt• • • ' I AF Chief Says Aide's Firing Not Personal WASIDNGTON (AP) -Secretary of the Air Force Robert C. Seamans Jr. to- day denied that r.i Air Force cost expert was fired because he disclosed to Congress that the CSA aircraft program was running billions more than projected. He said that the job held by A. Ernest Fitzgerald had been abolished in an overall economy p r o g r a m and reorganlzation of the Air Force ma:.iage- ment team. Sen. William Proxmire { D-WI 1 .) • chairman of a joint congressional economic commlUee looking Into the Fitzgerald case, toki Seamans at the con- clusion of hls prepared testimony "it 11 hard for me to accept your te1timony on its face." One issue was whether Fitzgerald had ever disclosed C<T.lfldentlal material to congressional committees. Proxmire told Seamans, 1 • M r • Fitzgerald has never made any con- fidential documents available to this committee or staff. I flatly deny he ever \'iolated security." Seamans re1ponded that he' agreed the Fitzgerald "had never violated national security.'' Sea.mant ouillned for the committee new cost control procedures he aa!d have bee.i Installed and Sen. Charles H. Percy (R·Ill.), commended what be called "two innovations" which call for a quarterly review of overall costa and the ability to focus detection on cost overruns. Jn reorganlzlng the office, Seamans said, "Mr. Fitzgerald's job has been abolished and we have not found a suitable new position b which he could make a contribution." Seamans noted that Fitzgerald's job was of such a classltlcatlon that "he was given that job with the Initial un- derstanding that it was for a limited term." New Car Prices Boosted by $107, Government Says \VASHlNGTON (AP) -The govtrn- ment said today manufacturers' sug. gested retail prices of 1970 passenger cars average $107 more than a year ago, including $46 worth of quality im· provements and $61 of just plain higher prices. ' The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said the $48 in quality improvements Included f7 .50 for changes requlffi! by higher federal safety 9tan· dards, $S.50 for lmproved exhaust control of air pollutants, $19 for 1afety Im· provements introduced by manufacturers themselves, and $14 for nonsafety im· provemenls. Safely standards requlrtd by federal regulations include improved signal lights, side-marker light.I and uar lights, antl·thefl locks and 1love compartment locks, the report said . Safety lmprovement.s Introduced by manufacturer1· them1tlve1 I n c I u d e fiberglass belted tires on most model• and miscellaneous body changes, It said. The nonaafety quality lmprovementa include more reliable and durable en1lnes, improved insulation, better water pump11, Jmprovtd shock absorbers tnd Improved exterior body protect.Ion, the report 11ld. Anus Talks Opening HELSINKI (UPl)-Amerlcan and So- viet arms ne1otlators met In secret session today to work out proctduref and an agenda for talks to try to freeu aod possibly even reduce their nuclear armories. SPACE CENTER. HOUSTON (UPI) ~ Apollo II la beinf bUled 11 tho llrsi mocm londljtC Ollhl whole prlmory objectlv~ la lddlq lo DWlklnd'• total IClanltlflc kDowledce. ' Dul It hos ojlCICllor Import mlulon. The National A..-ullcl and Spaco AdmWlfl.UO. (NASA) wanla lor.ldlct hl.llh •c:curaey lanclJnp -a llOl1 ol 11Pff1 apt1l!c lralnini for future U .• mooa walkers. For the preclllon of the loodlnl made IO:U p.m. tonlllhl by utronsuil ~la "Pote" Conrad and Alen L. -will IOI! -·· 11*4 plllllttra whot ad)Ult-menta, Jf anr. ueed to .• lll made tor UDCOm1nl land.lfll• on bllly, m,,ount.ainous areu ol tbs tuner auroce --tbol will nqulro bullaeyu. · Apollo U la llhoollnl fer a ballloye, IAIO. • Tiie aJmJq poinl !or Caarl\d and -·la 1,118 feet from where Surveyor 3 landad lo 1117, and If the -land wtlhlD ronce, Ibey will walk lo the l'Obol -all and brio& bock -partl. . Bean, dlacllliln& the m1alon, lald lhe pinpoint landJng aUempt "hao bemne -one ol tb6 more lotereatlnli lhlap .. die fll&ht> e~en thou1h not the moll Im· porW>t by any -al the lmqltlalJon. .. Gone Gurley, -ctOlilJI......., fer Apollo ill, ssya the current mJ&. olon la on al a seriel caDed Apollo lunar upforailon milolons, There are lbree typea or mllllona. The lint WU the "G" Serl•-Apollo (I. On Apollo 11 the "prlmary.obJecUve wu·to land and return safely," Gurley aa.Stf. "We bad an extra bonu wtlh tbllt One becluae everything worked so wtll and we aot tome surface experience." But with Apollo 11 the "H" serl• belinl and "lhe primary objectives are lunar IW'face scientific nplor1Uon, to develop point landing techniques and photo- grapll luture landlnl altos. Apollo U milolon.dlrector Cbeoler Lee 111'1 the ability lo land en precisely the apol Nlected wlll bec:ome more and more lmporllnl "Later mJsstona WW take us to ll)Otl that nquire a pinpoint accuracy," Lee aid. "We hope they develop our landin& techniques on thl11 mJ.sslon that will !tad us to perhapa further development on the nut mission leading u.s to getting the capa- blllly ol landiq en some vary dght lpoll." Apollo It milled Its landlnl olle by about lour miles. the rmtll of IOVlral minor errora en predlcteng the opacecrlft po&IUon. * * * * * * Step-by-Step Schedule For Moon Walk Listed SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -Ex· cept for six minutes to erect an American nag. and eight minutes to posi· tion a color television camera, the Apollo 12 moon explorers plan to devote all their time to 1cience on t.helr first moon walk Wednelday. Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr. plans to be outside three hours and 14 minutes during the init.tal stroll, while Alan L. Bean is ezpected to be outside two hours, 23 minutes. Wednesday's excursion will begin with Conrad backing out of the hatch of the moonlander Intrtpld at 3:02 a.m. PST. A second stroll begins al 9:32 a.m. Thufs· day, when Conrad and Bean visit the now dead Survty<ir 3 spacecraft. Flnt color television should begin at 3:03 a.m. Wedoeaday after Conrad, stan. ding on a ladder, opens a compart.mtnt In which the camera is mounttd. Bean will tum the televlalon on to show Conrad's d~nt to the moon's surface. While Bean films Conrad with a 70 millimeter mov.ie camera, the Apollo 12 commander will apend she minutes get- ting used to the }ow gravity, jumping up and down and teaUn1 his balance. Using a scoop with an extension handle, Conrad will pick up a sample of rock a.nd soil put It In 1 beg. and send the bundle In a ~talner up a clothesline-like conveyor belt to Bean. Conrad then will snap 1Ull photos as Bean starts down the ladder al 3:32 a.m. After Bean famWarl:r.es himself with the one-sixth. gravity, Conrad wUI 1pring optn an antenna whlcb looks like an upside-down umbrella. Of!iclals hope the antenna, to be activated for the aec_ond moon walk, will· improve communlcallon.s with earth. Bean will mount the TV camera on a tripod 20 feet from the lander. Then he ~and Conrad puah a staff into the ground and attach a nylon Ametican fla1 to It. Bean will point the TV camera at a compartment on the back .!ild1 of Intrepid, where other experiment ln· struments are stowed. As Conrad continues to align the an- tenna, Bean is to erect an aluminum foil "window shade" attached to a staff. Scientists hope the device will capture atomic particles streaming from the sun. Conrad then will pick up the TV camera and give earthlings.a panoramic view of the moon 's surface while Bean photographs the landing craft's four foot· pads. At the experiment compartment, both &9tronauts then will take out the scie~ llflc in struments contained in two sub-- packages. Using a long-handled tool, Bean will open a cask containing plutonium 238, an atomic fuel element, and insert it into a nuclea r electric generator that powen the instruments. Bean, carrylng the experiment in- struments and generator, and Conrad will walk to a site about 1,000 feet west of the lander craft. There, they will distribute the instruments. After photographing the experiment site, the astronauts will retum to the lan- dln1 craft and collect rock samples with long-handled tongs en route, stowing them In saddle bags altached to their waists. Back at the Intrepid, Conrad and Bean will put the saddle bags in a box, then Bean will drive a core tube several in· ches into the moon's surface lo collect a vertical profile of the lunar soil. It will be plactd In the rock box. Then Bean will re-enter the landing craft. Using the con veyor belt, Conrad will transfer the rock box and cameras into Intrepid, and Conrad will re-enter the landinl craft to rest and relax tot 15 hours. Protests 'Kill U.S. Boys,' Postmaster General Says WASHINGTON (AP) -Poolmuter General Winton M. Blount emerged from a meeting with President Nixon today ancl said he believes home front antiwar demonstrations are ''kllilng American boys." Blount, back from a trip to South Viet- nam and other parts of Southeast Asia, told a news conference It the White House that he believea demomtrators are Inspiring Hanoi to prolong the war and thus bring about more U.§., combat deaths . The latest in a growing procession ot administration officials to publicly take a dim view or antiwar pNJtealll, Blount said he found that American troopa in Vietnam don't undtrstarid the demonstra· lions and do not approve of them. The Poatmu\eT General l111ued a ror· mal statement in wldch he said U.S. troops In the combat ZOflt expressed a ''tremendoua amount of understandinl and support for the President's Vietnam policies exprested ln his Nov. S speech." He said he w.,. repeotedly told by ficht- ing men : "We're kiclcJnC the hell OIJt ol Cltorley and now ls not the Ume to quit." JVDG~ SAYS NVDIE SHOW 'NOT MUCH' SAN DIEGO (AP) -MB watdtlng a backsta1e play en which y"""' "'!"'"' Ill naked, Superior Court Jud.re Huf> Fisher obse<Vtd "'"yone PlYinl II lo ,.. t!>Io allow and expectlnc lo ,.. llOIDOlhlni obscene Is goJni lo be -ly dlsap- polJ\ttd." Th• judge ,.Id today he will Issue a preliminary injunction enjolnlnt ·police from lnU:rfering with the performance in LH Girls Thtattr, pending a fonnal hear1!li. Blount said he believed Nixon ls en- titled to full public support for his poll .. cles on Vietnam. Asked If that meant he believed that opponent.! of the war 9hould remain totally silent, the cabinet officer said he had no quarrel with their right to expre111 their opinions but feel they have "gone too far." Gen. Hershey At Peace Rally WASHINGTON (AP) -Draft director Lewis B. Hershey attended I a 1 t Saturday's mwlve peace rally at the Washington Monument with his 19-ytar· old granddaughter, a spokesman s•id to- day. The apol<mnan said Hershey snd his granddaUJhter wanted to see the ratty and they spent about one hour near the west aide of the 1.fonument where demonstrators gathered after marchtag up PeMsylvanla AvenUe In protest a1ainst administration policy in Vietnam. Herahey was quoted as saying IMI thought ruch demonstradona r<Nld pro. Ione tile Olhting en Vietnam u the enemy viewed ~ an expression of support. But Hei'iliey added that the demonttra. Uon aa he aaw it wa11 a peaceful ~ pression ol opinion and that poulble mlsinterpretatim was "one ol the prlca of democracy," the spokeaman rC!portt4. Rome Workers Strike ROME (AP) -N...,paper employe~ 1aao11ne muon alt<ndanls and tei•phon• workers walktd olf their joba 1oo1g1i1 slgnallin& the start ci a massive 14-h:NI ~wllte. ' I I ' • I • • ~ ~ • • Plans Chi lled .. . .. .... , ' Spe~r Sees Chaos on BtilJ,dt in Propo s'als school costs and at le8'\ .IQ TutsdaJ, Jlowmbtf 18, 1%9 ' ' ' QUllNIE F~ClhOps Muslim 0-urses Slimmer inWp, 1 ' • SACRAMENTO (UPI) -think this would be' mo>\ con· P'npouts which could crowd ,fusing to the v o t i r s , • 1 ' ~',.nest electson 'ballot 111ith Monagan told a news <X!Q· ta'I' .refonn measures all ference .. rece!ving a ·COOi r;ecepUon • "Obviously, there would be fT0i9 Assembly' S p· e a t e r utter chaos ·ll more than one Rd:iert T. Monagan. or them wei:e to pass,". be ad· percent o( welfare. ' Ttte 'sponsors said counties now pay ·65 percent of scbooJ casts and 15· ~cent ' of welfare -1not /ncludlng FRESNO (AP)--Three blact studies · ~· taught by controver:sJi.1 Bt•ct-MuaUm poet Marvin Jackmon at Fremo State Couece have been cancefled. • • But Bu~ts Same 'l'he California Te a. c.h er s ded. 11le proposals ,_ b.Y Assoj:laUon •j<>lnod with the Gonsalves and th< C TA • ~ supervbors UllOCiation supervisort will appear on. the Monday in backing one R,.. June 2 primary e 1 e ·c t l on p o 11 ..,1. D em o c rat I c ballots if enough signatures Assemblyman Joe CfonlalveS are gathered to qualify the in- oUered his own sepata'.te plan ltlatives. federal contribu iol)s. , • Put the CTA and supervlson. ~ld no' say bow the state should r8ise th e -m1llioA the tax shlff w®J(I cost. By L. M. BOYD MEASUREMENTS -The hipg of young ladies In Ulelr 20s now are slimmer thaa ~ hips of sue~ YOUlll ladies '?Q years ago. Not much s~r; but slimmer. In 193_!~ .... 'f. ' average hip measureme.nl (o{ g1rls in said age bracket was 37.S lnches, Today, tts's 36~9 t.1ches. Waists ol lhest women have slimmed down , \00. By;-a little less than an inch. But the average bust i:neasurement ~ mains unchanted. It was arid is 34 inches. All this comes ~ because a client asks if thie young ladies of today aren'l ~ litUe buslier'than were thtir mothers at the same age. N~ sir, they're not . They just seem so ·because their other measurements have changed Tpmorrow , diagram!, possibly, MIGHTY PURE STUFF, • \ coconut ~ Did you lclow . some doctors during World War ti in the South Pacific dripped coconut milk instead of sterile glucose solution direcUy into the veins of wounded patients? .•• COME ON, TlDS is impossible. A i mpltin weighing 197 pounds, mean. One Chester Whitenack o( Check, Va., reportedly grew same this. year. Some pumpkU4 NUDE -Note a youthful San Frziciscan contends be will not be. satisfied until The Establishment prints a naked lady on our postage stamps. Too bad, 'Ibe young fellow may stay unsatisfied for some Ume. still, such a thing would not be unique. Spain printed a nude on a postage stamp years ago. Goya's "a Maja des Nuda" Raised quite a stir: About hall Jhe hon-Wed post· men in the world refused to accept ·Spanish mail, so that . ' government withdrew lhe ls-- sut. r ... C\JSTOMD llEJ\VJCE' Q: "I claim the term 'O,f.' (or a '°kll" orlgjpal'1 came from lhl1e WW<&· 'gl\IY>nlzOd i"'!'.' Wliot \lo you aay!" A, N .... s to me. Thougb•t "G.l" came from "Government I 11 u e." , , , Q. "WHA'l:'S the cocpmon- est-111.1mame in R~ian?" A. Ivanov. • WAGER -Say you get ' logether this Thanksglvhlg with 12 people in a room. H it'1 DQt· too personal, ask all fZ to COltlt the change in their poc~ts or }Qrses. Oddl are two will come up with preclse-- ly the same amount of. money. That's not absolutely in· evitable, but it's an ex· ceedlngly good·bet, DOCIVRS WHO ...no with convicts will tell you. tbe murderer generally ls I. Jn· telUgent th8Jl any o th e r criminal . . . THE FLIGHT SCJIOOI.S .are now taming out pifOl! at t1Je rate of four a minute .... AN EXECU'tJVE in the foreig;l exchange department of a bank says the signatures of the Siamese are the most dlfficult to decipher. MUSIC Among roungstem wbo take up mUSic in school orchestras, the violin Is more popular than the ac- cordioo, the clarinet is prefer· red over the trumpet. and the flute is · dlosen more fre· , quently than the saxophone. Trombcmes and drums come oot abotlt eve'il. You.1' questiom and com· ments are wel.comed· aftd will be tLSed wherever poiii- sible in "Checking Up." Ad· dress your mail to L. M. Boyd, fn care of DAILY Pl· LOT, Box 1875, Newpori Beack, Calif, 92663. to lawmakers. Trle CTA-supervlsors plan -J•u now appears that ~ would incree.se the $ 7 5 o might be three ·or four or five homf9wnerS1 property tax ex· dlftereiit measures .on the emption to $1,000 and require liaDot. ·rt1aUng to taxQ and I the state to pay 50 percent oC Jod y.'s ' Mother Crie s HefJ ring 'I Like Mom ' B.i.K.ERsrlELD (UPI)." -, LltUe Jody FOOtjue~ 5, j>Ointed to tier' ~her as the woman was brought into th e ~ "That's my morh. · I like mom," Jody said. .• ACl'CliU the coortioi:m, Mrs. Betb' Lansdown Fouquet, 26, burst into tears and waved at her daughter at.the opening or a preliminary hearing in municipal court Mooday. Mrs. Fouquet.and her com- mon-law husband, Ronald F. are accused of abandoning Jody beside a freeway south of here last month. · Poll Shows Alioto Now W ell Known . At the end· of the day·long session, the Fouquets' court· appointed attorneys asked for dismissal of a felony count ·agaiMt the couple which charged they placed the child und~~ circumstances likely to prodUce great ~ily harm. . Judge Doyle Miller set Dec. 4. as the i;tate for a ruling on the motion. The Fouquets also are charged with willful child abandonment. They were arrested Oct. 29 Jn Bell "'Gardens, five · 'days after a highway patrolman foupd Jody clinging to a fence be!\de U.S. Highway 99. Jody told authorities her parents let her out of tbe car aurtng the night and told her to wait by the fence : Jody was · Jllade a· ward ot the· court ' last week pending placement in a foster home. BUI ~1 Camas Valley, Ore., who says he is Jody's real father, requested custody of the child at the hearing. Tbe request was turned down pending further investigation into the Lansdowns ' background. Jackmoo1 wbo Pl'<lffs his ·"I doo't believe," Monagan said, "J can ~pport any ~ of J>n>posal,.whetber It 18 ooe by £he ·erA-u t.be supervisors or any other · groop that doesn't at the same Ume spell out what tax.es <lheJ are goq to raise to accomplish this."~· . . Y.lW1.m name , Mi\rviD X, has been meeting lofonnally with his cluae! alnce • court order WU lSIUfld baning birn . from teaching cl&JleS at the-college. College cillcJalS aJlllOUllC<d the cancellations MMday and said ethnic studies department chairman Rlcharcj Keyes wUI determlne · ·whether the 70 studentl enrolled In I he course wru receive credit for. Ha yakawa .. · .. ~~' ·-Wo~'t Talk·'.--,.,--:-. '"""' -----=------ With· Har~ Savings in -~edi~Cal Dr~IF:.~.;.~~~~.n: s, Oll_.ght by ' c.··. om.p-uter cisco State College's president. has refused to debate wltli Dh• : ~GllAMENTo (UPI!' -A high rat·e ot near1y one per Nathan Hare whom he fired dl?ctors' group says tbe state . patient visit. 'J'be committee as chairinan .of ·the schoors could··sAve. p .s million a year admonished the doctor' whose ethnic studies department · · · edl "-' "I can see no U.!leful puri>ose lll its expel\S.ive M "\.ta.I,~ . "shot prQfile''-;dropped to one served by debdting with an gram; by programmlng, into a ,for each 7.5 Visits. acknowledged advocate of rev. ccmpu\er .. the records of doc· Dr. Donald C. Harrington, olution and Black Pant.her ide-tors a!ld paUents. · · San Joaquin foundaUon presi· olrigy," Haya:Jmwa-said Moo-· 'The United ·Foundations for-dent, and Dr. John Kenney, day in reply to a challenge Medical Care.s propo&ed Mon-Santa Rosa, president of unit· lrom Hare. day t~ system be Installed ed foundations, composed of Hare, a Negro, Was a lead et· stetewide. It was te1ted this 28 ·local foundations, urged ex· in a four-month strike at the -past year ·by Ute s.,. Joaquin tension of the system state· college last fall during which Foundation for ¥~1 .Care. wide. the Black St~~nts . Union under contract with ~ state Harrington said the San sought an ethnic studies de--<ifjce ot health care aervices. Joaquin program cost $140,000 partment and the. admission 1'he foundation's peer review to install and p),000 a month of all Negroes regardless Of commlttee-doctora who ques. to operate. academic qualifications. lion clainu submitted by other Hare,. w~· _ c~ls him~elf ·doctors before they are for· "chairman In exile'' of the de-Warded for pa~ment -Kept partment, decla~ed. tbs~. w~ . careful computerited 1'.pro- he came to the coflege I was. 1·nteS" of the physicians' ser· not .looking for 8 j<X:i ..• and 'vlces ana the treatment re- lam not looking for one now." · celved by· the patients. On Nov. 12 he filed suit iii Misuse of the proeram could Superior Court asking ror r~ be detected quickly -for e'.x-insta~ent to the position and ~mp le : $10,000 m lost wages. ~-A Medi.Cal recipient who W"ent to foor dlffertnt'doctors, Given Medal SAN LEANDRO (AP) , - Highway patrolman Michael D. !llDlap, 28, wbo dashed Into flaming wreckage to save nve persons in a freeway pileup in San Leandro May t , has eam· ed California's Medal of Valor. work alreldy done. J1C!kmon and Xeyes de- clhled comment on the devel..._ Oprnenl, • Jackmon was hired by Ke,. at the beginning' ci the semester, but was later told by then President i'l'lderic Neis that he <ould not toad>. , -noted that J--not have e· degne, Iha! he bu Ol10UllC<d bis U.S. dlllellllllp and Iha! he iJ ...., ,Indictment for _, to r<port (oc lnductioo into the 3{1De:d f~. Court Starts For Escapee COMPl'ON (UP}) Leo,lOfd n.omu Fri8loe, .,,, goes to COW1 today to begtn • crcle of ~eedinp rumed 1t b1m to Nevada for I p.tr ol murders commit~ e yan ago. ''.I '9.M CQl'Qf.four ~. and I gueu ( was a little wild," Fristoe said. " Fr)stoe, ""'aped l'rool the Nevada State Prison in Cll'IOll / City Dec. 15, 1923. HiJ l'" daughter-lo-law turned him in tl' Saturday on a diaturbfug the rm peace charge after a famlly: m squabble. · JV Fired Blind W el.fare · Worker Gets Hearing SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The California Poll reported today that lhe Look magazine article linking San Francisco Mayor Joseph L. Alioto to a hall-dozen Mafia figures ap- parently has made him a bet- ter known figure to California voters. But It also reported tllat this' bas been c:oopl<d with ~ ()( ao unfavocable image of . him. Alioto bas denied the arUcle repOaiocny and bas brwgjl\ suit against ,the .magazine rot $12.5 million. Lansdown, Mrs. Fouquet's former husband, told in. vestigators the woman also had ~ of another child the COUP.le had -Jeffrey, 8. An investigation has tevealed that Jeffrey has been .missing at least.eight months .. The Fouquets, upon advice of their attorneys, so far have refused to talk about the whereabouts of Jeffrey. SD aridge Traffic Up SAN DIEGO (AP) -Traffic across the new San Diego- Corooado Bay Brldge 'lriglit,be enough to justify a muctlon in toll rates next year, says the chief engineer for f.he California Toll ~idge Au~· ty. . received four Jl"'SCriptlons and ..nued tlfem ~t ·four" different . ~nnacles-all io OM tday. · -'-A doctor who wu ·&lvlng Injections at ·an exceptionally 'lbe citation said t w o persons died In the · f~e and the olber flve-w.ould have1 it !\Unlap hl.d not pulled lheiii· from their car, ·wedged underr a burning ruck. · · "It was quite a life,~' .Ftist.oe said ·in hll: celL ~·1 ucaped r. from Canon City l>ecaule I '<!° WR;tted to be ftee.l lilnoe lhen,.n: I've really burnl tho condle Ill both end&. II w1em.,u1.1aMr 10U1m 11111SCJ11 PIOGf. t111llUI • tom.II If flll fAllDll eu CtOI OllTlUll'!ot, PUSP11r, 1r. ' . . :!> SACIWl.ENTO (UPI) -A blind welfare worker, fired because she took one of her welfare clients to a San Fran· clsco clinic at her own ex- pense, has won a, hearing before the county m e r l t system bureau. El Dorado County Depart· meat of Social Welfare ftred Mrs. Cecil Wolfe of Placerville last AugusL It said Mrs. Wolfe, who is provided a driver by the county because she is blind, violated a depart- ment regulation against travel outside the county. And attorney Robert Hom, Sa'cramento, who cans the dismissal of Mrs. Wolfe "a travesty,'' says he "won't hesitate to take it to the courts ii that's where our relie.f lies." Mrs. Wolf twice had the .same welfare recipient driven in her car to the San Fran· cisco clinic for surgery when other trave1 arrangements fell through. She was given a warning after the fll'St trip. "Mrs. W o I f e completely footed the bill, on her own time, at her own expense," said Hom. "She perfonned a humanitarian act and should be rewarded for it and not dismissed." Paul Bennan, administrator of the El Dorado County Welfare Deparbnent, decllned comment on the reason for 1'.frs. Wolfe's dismissal. But he said, "she had not conducted herself In any man- ' ner that would jUJtify her 1 termination before that µme (August trip)." In airveys taken from a random sample of voters between Nov. 1 and Nov. 9, pollster Mervin D. Field found a shift from just over 50 per· cent ci Republicans said they ''knew something a b o u t Alioto.'' By November, the comparable percentages were 74 and 75 percent respectively, Travel · Groups Faciiig Cha rges · Mrs. Wolfe has been with 'the department since 1964. 1 Besid~ her blindness, she iS partially paralyzed fiom in. juries received in a n automobile accident. She holds degrees from the University of California at Davis and the state college aystem. Mrs. Wolfe said if the coun· ty had not' given her a d~ve't so she could ·work, she would be on relief-hefself. · Field streMed that it is not possible to say how much of this Mease was due to the Look article and how much is a re54Jt of other factors,. such as the rraayor's f re q u e ri t appearances around the state. ·LOS ANGELES (AP) - Three Los A:.1geles travel clubs are accused by the state of failing to provide .ad- vertising airline transport&· lion. The suit filed in Superior Court Monday, names as defendants Sea and S k y Travel, Inc.; Tran.aworld Medical C 1 u b ; 'I'ranSworld Professional Club and the directors of each 1irm. Mike Foley told the San Diego Highway Dev~lopment Association Monday t h a t "traffic use has been very good, better than we eJi· peeled." But he stressed that a toll mluct.ion was only a possibill· ty. He said more than 2 million vehicles have used the brklge at 60 cents each way since it opened AUg. 3. ' College Enroll111e111 Rises 23,218 Mor e on Campus es in State Than Year Ago BERKELEY (AP) -There 10,987 last fall to lZ,873 this students ror bu d g 'e t I n g S.055, and San1a Cruz is up are 23,218 more students on year. purposes, shows the San Fr3n· 21.3 percent, from 2,602 to the nine camyuses o( the Other big increases were al cisco campu s down 4.3 per 3,157. , cent The gia.1t Los Angeles cam. University of callfornia and San Luis Obispo, up 16.9 per· S~.1 Francisco has 13,551 pus was up 6.7 percent, from the 18 campuses of the cent' from 9,711 to 11,350; fulllime equivalent students 28,997 students last year to CaUfomia State Colleges than Fullerton up 16.6 percent from this year, 599 fewer than last 30,930 this y~ar and the second there were last fall, enroll· 11,020 to 12,850 ; and Hayward year 's 14,150. largest Berkeley campus was ment reports reveal. up 16.4 percent from 8,290 to Statewide, the 18 state col· down .2 of I percent from At the U n i v e r s i t y of 9,650. lege campuses ha ve lll0,96tl 28, 132 to 26,~. CallfOl'.nla, the totals are San Frcricisco State College fulltime equivalent students, The next two largest cam-IOl,27~ this year and 98,725 was the only major campus 8.2 percent above last year's pu~es, Santa Barbara and last year for an over-all t.1-with a smallei" enrollment total of. 167,208. Davis,"were up 8.8 and 9.9 per- crease.of 7.6 percent. than last year -18,256 this Biggest increases In the cent respecti vely. Total enrollment in the state year, .4 of 1 percent off last university system were at the Enrollrilent· at the Santa collegeS is Z27,f37 this year, up year's 18,307. newest campu!les. The San Barbara university campus ii\" 6JI per'cent from 211,518 last However, San Francisco Diego campu s is up 26.S per· creased from J2,6UI last year year. ' State's fulltime equivalent stu-cent, from 3,825 last year to to 13,17?4 this year. At Davis Berdoo Council Biggest Increase was 17.I dent Iola!, the weigbted total 4,838 this year. Irvine is up the totals were 11,453 last year ;;::::pe:;n:e=nl:::!:a:;t=Fr:;esno=:;'="=P:;fro=m=:;a:;v:;erqln:;::::==:'=""=t;;::,pa:;rt=:;t:;l:;m;;:;e · 22.8 percent from 4,123 to and 12,583 lhis year. Censures Mayor ;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;i;;==~I SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) -The city cou;lCU voted 4-3 Monday to censure Mayor Al Ballard for public remarks ha made during last week's street disturbance in the predominantly Negro West side. LET'S BE fRIEllDl Y It >""1 have n"' rwl&:hbotl or knaW or IJU'One movina to our UM. pleaM tdl UI .., that we may utmd • frtendl1 welcome and help lli@m to become acqiainted lb their t)l!W t\ln"'OUftdlnp. So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 49ol.9361 lflrbor Yisilor I' ""9y wltM.t cffll .. ". I Tht11. Sri 7, Lu, 1111 , Prty r•9•rdln; "twttythi119", Phil, 4:6. Ptty TO aMI, THROUGH Chri1t, J", 1411 4, J11. 16:2J-21, I Tim. 2;1.s. '••Y htllt•1"t• Mi tt. 21 :22. Pr1y un1tlfi1hly, Jt1. 4~]. Pr1y bb.yin9, Pr, 21:9, Jn. 15 :1, TWO. •ittl thi11t1 i11 pr1y1r, OIEOtENCE ertd Ut{SELFISHNESS, 1r1 Oft111 .,., •• loo~1d. SOfl'lt pr1y u11111fi1hly, confi11uil'l9 cli1ob.dit11f fo God; y1t t 1tp1ctl119 f1•or1hl1 1111w1r t1 pr1y1r. •· ••• why c1ll Y• m1, L.rcl, lorcl 1N clo !'lot H11 thl1191 I •IV7", Lt. 6:46. Pr. 21:9 ••rt+ "H• ff.it t11r11•th 1w1y hi• ••r from h11tll'lg th1 l1'fl', 1v111 h11 pr1y1r 1h1ll bt 1bomi111tio11". J11. 413 11yt, "Y1 11k incl r1c1lv1 11ot, b1e:1u11 yo11 11k 1111!11, th1t y1 m1y e:o11111rnt It upo11 your lu1h", A f'1ilhf11I Chri1tl111, AFTEA HE HAS DONE HIS IEST, h11 th1 h1lp of tfl• Holy Spirit 111 Pt•v•ri ltom. 1126, "-·th1 Spirit 1110 htlF"th 011r lnlinniti11: for WI •!'low 11of ... hit <wt should pr1y fir 11 w1 oittht: hi.rt ff.1 Spirit m1k1th il'lftre:t11io11 fo• ••···", ).ll:E YOU A, CHRISTIAN? "·•·fto 11'1111 toll'l1th 1111to fht F1thtr, hut 8y ,.., .. , J11111 11y1. Jo. 1416. T1 pr•v •~e:•pf1bly to •oc1, o~ rnwt OIEY J11111 hy IELIEVINQ,, ll:EPENTINW incl h1in 9 IAPTIZED, Mk. 16116, Ah 2iJI, Ach l iJ2, Gil. )121. Thl1 puh o"' INTO ChiJt't IOOY, whle:li h ,Hl1 CHUll:CH, Eph. l !2Z·2l. Tho11 ht Chritf't bocly will bt ll•td, for ht 11 "···fht 11•lor of th1 hMy", Eph , S1ZJ. . VISrT th1 Ohurch of Chri1t, 217 W, Wi11111 St .. Co1f1 M111. PHONl.111 if y11 h1•1 4t1Nfi1111 '' 1u1111.fio11u 541-5711, 545. I 24411 646.IJM. ' " i SEE BY TODAY'S . WANT ADS e \Viped out ih" a tunnel or whalevtr'! Get yoUr surf· board re-atawd for the ne:<t biah ones. Complete rep1Llr or surl'boards, or small boets plua fiber- glassing. •Baby.sit a pt-t ? \'/anted, dog lover, ,prefer, it<tU!t, tor occask>nal day or ove."" nlte care Of tin'lkl but gcnUe smaU tetTier. • Had cnoua;h 9f thal pool hassle for the year! Thia p;IOI service gUata11tee1 satiltacnon, complete pool ma\ntcnaflC(', frte etti- malea, Call today and re- tax toinorrow. '' . ' "' ~-~ Save.sl.40 .! Now the • ., 'I O' .. CroW t/2 gallon is easier ~ . to gethold '.of.-i; • ' ' now$11.49 (was 51lS9) Now California's mos t popular half gallon comes to you at an easy·to-pick~up price. Same smooth, modern Crow. • Grlp.ju1 bindle. Perfect grip for balanced pouring !tom first pour to last. • Comp1ct1ize. No taller than a filth, but holds a full 64 ounces. • Built.in pourer. Perfect ' pouringcontrol ..• smooth,driplcss flow every time. • ·.OJd:Crow ' . ' ,, '.l • I l I J J ~ '" I I -I ,. • • I I • 18ste made it Ille Mrld's most popular Bourboa. ----- 8 Dlll Y I'll OT L -·Yoar Moaey's Wort.Ii What SS ·Test Changes Do ' By SYLVIA PORTER \\'llal would be the: effttt on •. yoo, todJy's Jtilrtd worker, if the amOlltlts of money you could eam without losing any Social Security benefits were increased, as President Nixon has suggested to' eon,ress, rrom $1 ,680 to Sl,800! And if - as be also has suggested - reUrees who art still working had to give up only SI of benents for every S2 they earned (as they now do for earnings between $1,680 and l'urn in. Fora sharp offer,, ·29~ Sla;oloss sleefsteat lmift.s-}"OUrs 1or only 29t• eocli --.. pardw at par· tldpafing T--.o Retailers. Han-,,......i -Moak Ed;•" blad• ...,,si..d sharpenil'g'. Simulated stag: handlu. DiHIW'mh• «de. \Jncat. dilionallfgucacmlwed by ,_.,fcc:twet b5J'*9'. ., .................... ... $2.,880 I ytlr. About 1.100100G re t Ire es undtt Social Security would benefit from the ~ boost in tbe 1'retire:uint'. tat. .. Of these. about JOOJOOll are workers who, becw ol tblir earnings levels, wookt hrrii collected no bentflta ill llf1 <the year the new naa.. wciakl RO into died). 'l1ieJ -'d now collect partlal•bmeftta. TllE OTllllR D,GIO . are retirees with part-time )obi who are now coUecUnc partial benefits. 'lbty would 'colle<I hlRhtr beoellla and In -· cases, full benefttl. • The cbaftie w ould atomallcally · 11ve an elderly beneCiciary who tvDow W1)o ing subatanUall~ thtn ll,!80 exlr• . ••ch year: for some, tbe added irr come permW.lble would come Ul thousands of dollars. I won't even attempt to ea:plain the COlllPlicated , fDnDllla, but J ha"< prepmd • table 1o ....... you the maximum amounts you, the retired worker at v arloul moothly benefit lettls, can earn under tbe pruent law, without losing ALL your Social Security be'1'fill -and the new maxlmutn earnings proposed. 50 UJUJ.J.'!.Ll.LlL!-LLLLL!'UJCl.J~0,l.l.Ll.lf,LLl.l..L!;JUJ.1.1.,,.Ll.U. .. '''" 1968 t,69 Tetnporary fJ pswi1i9 1--or Daily PDot \Vant Ads OVER. THE COUNTER NASO Ll1tl ... IOt' Mondoy, N ... rnbOr 17, IMt Dial 642-5678 Deficit Down But U.S. OPTOMETRIST J. P. Connole O.D. e EYES EXAMINED e CONTACT LENSES e PRESCRIPTIONS FILLID e BROADWAY CHARGE AVAILABLE OFFICES In Tha BROAbWAY, FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER, NIWPORT BEACH 6«-l212 EXT. 301 IAIW, Rfoi• & Co. ha been COllllOlldaied Into Still Havi11g Bad Year l\'ASHI NGTON (AP) -The b 1 lance-of·peyments deficit r 0 r t h e J u ly.September quarter was considerably less than in the second quarter, the Commerce Dep-artmenl reported Monday. But It slill kept the United States headed Hornblower & W11b Hec11phiD, NQYM Now twenty offices to nrve yoo in Southern ~lllornia OUR NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE RobertV.Hodges811dR°'*1E.M-r eou • ....., 550 NewportCenlllrDri.,. Newport Fl......i.I Cenlllr 82660 (7l 4l 844 2290 I;. HCIRNaLrJWER • Wli'BKB "HEMPHILL. NCIYE11 IOllllSIEW'llRSllllllllt I IE llRBim:rllaJll ... ••:=---L.09~ ...,..,, eo --lnlllt.'f'..., --a!tC*r LOHG llllAQt ....... mM:m (WllllM Ni.M,.-,........, '°"°"A ~ ·-----..m.....:A. -··-...... ruct()t<I ' ~ .. . .. Complete-New. York s,ock L~ ' .r~-... ~~'~x=·"~::"'"". .:; ..... *':: ·! ' ' l • ' ::::~~~Id '.: M11ckf Co .JO • M11cv RH 1 • MllCV Pl •2.S Mad Fd ) 11t Mad Sa C.11r ; X.:f:-~ .. 118()10 Min Ind 56.t> M11n1>C>Wr n ~ t<11nH~n 1 SO ' MAPCO 10 • MAPC 1111 12 • M1r.rr.n 1 60 Mo11rccr tl'IC I Mare~ f"' M11remn 17f _. Mllr Mid 1 6(1 • Marlonlb 1( Marler!Mn l Mara Cm 60 Mllrflotl a.ii " ll11r~M'<1 I 111 .. Marll~M i 10 ~ :~i~~uCo ~ .., IAllOn\111 I XI ~Ma••oY FI .. 1"11tte1 20 .. MayOS!r I 60 MllYI JW 50 Mllv!aa If • MCA Inc 60 , McCorCI l 2<1b McCrotV 1 20 J, Mccra 011 so Mc~rmon I .,, Mcllor!1ld Co •Mc~nO .q , Mc(!~~d I «I "--~~G~111D'1~; McGr<1DA 40 .,.Mclnrtrll 2 ' ~~~:: .. 1 ~. • Mclouth 1 60 MC~e!I 70 ( Mead Carr;o 1 ,_Mt-Id afAj" rt.ead .,,B eo M""-'~11C 1 20 .,,,MtlvSllo I :ill ' Mlev Sii DI ' Mt mo<tl Co Merck I 8G11 Merck all.SO Meredl!h 1 lO Me111blT 12<1 M'''" M~h 2 • MGM l>lln Metrom .SCI> M•!Ed atJ.to , MGIC Inv 20 M chG•iUI l Mlcll Tu~ I • M1ccodo! .<11\Q • M!dl:nT•I ., , MldSOU•ll el Mldld R 1 40 Mldwst 011 l • Mlltl•ll 1 20 < MUI Brfd ltCI 1 Minn Enle•o Ml,,nMM 1 to Ml,,nPLI l 20 MlnnCo 2 ll • MIU i!lv I 20 .MoP•c AS MP Ctm l 60 'MoPubS 80b Mobil ? 20a Moh•1co 110 t MOMfCll l '20 M""l><lfl'I Ind MMIRil 1~ M011r0Ea o!O ' MOl'sen 110 MontDUt 1 &t Mon!Pw l&t Moo• McCor MOfQ•nJ '~I) MorotSl!o 611 Mor NOi' to M010fo1• I Motorola rt ' M!FutlS l lt(I MISITT 12• MSL IM 40 Muns llQW• 1 AA~;::;r,, 1 il,, • M11•PIDll 611 M11rp() Pl5 20 . . Prices-CO mp I~~ New Co1n11lete Closing Prices - T'"!dq, N"'mbtr U. 1'69 L DAllV PMT 9 Stock Exchange List ' A1nerican Sto~k Exchange List Tho Or1n91 Co11t'1 Most Complot. PRINTING SERVICE • I f DI.Tl V PILOT L ' .. • By. SVLVIA PORTER \Vhat would be the effect on YOU. today's retirtd worker, ii lhe amounts of money you could earn without losing any Social Security benefits were increased, as President Nixon hu su.ggested to' Congress, from St,680 to $1 ,800? And if - as be also has suggested - reUrets who are slill working had to g'ive up only $1 of benefits for every SJ they ea rned (JS they now do for earnings between $1,680 and ~urn in. Fora sharp offer. $2,&80 I Ytlr, About J,100,009 r e t Ire t s undtt Social Set!urity would benefit from the . p~ boost in the ''retirwnelll lelt." or these. about 308,oaa are workers who, became ai tbelr earnings levelt, wou1d .ha.ti collected no benefttl la. 1171 (the yeat the new nalll wOuld go Into •fled). Tlily wooJd now collect partllJ t.Mftte. TUE OTH&R lll01000 \ are retirees with pl~ job1 who are now coUtcUn1 parUal beneHts. They w1111ld collecl higher benefits llld in aome cases, full beoefttl. • The cbanie ·w,out d ...... uca11y 111-.· .. elderly beneficiary who 11-'.oow earn- ing substanUaUy 11nore than IUIO "'1<• lni:ome each year; for some. the 1dded ~ come permlaslble would come to thousands of dollan. I won't even attempt to eapla.in the """pllcated .lwmula, but J haV< prepmd I table to ahoi you the maximum amounts you. the reUred worker at various monthly benelit Jew:Ls, can earn under I.be JX'Htnt law, without looing ALL YOllt Social Se<:urily beoeflla -Ind the new maximuin eamiop propo>ed. "" "' . """"' MOVING AV[UGf'. 100 ·29~ 7 5 I ./ 50 1'168 Sloiolots •feel steak Jtnifts --yours fotonly291" •""" _ _..,. Te1nporar11 llpswi1i9 -al par· ticlpafing T .xoco RetailM. HolT.....,'°'""d "Magic Eda•" Mad .. 1MWif' Deed ~nirig. Simulated slag handles.. Dishwaih•...afe. \Jncon.o di!ionaDy gLHiiualwl bt --.ifactw...far5y.n. .,.w .............. Jo'oc Dail)' Pilot \Vant Ads Dial &42-5678 OPTOMETRIST J. P. Connole O.D. e EYES EXAMINED e CONTACT LENSES e PRESCRIPTIONS f lLLED e BROADWAY .CHARGE AVAILABLE OFFICES In Tho BROAbWAY, FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER, Nl!WPORT BEACH 644-1212 EXT. 301 .....,,Ryoi•ACo. has been -itdaled Into Deficit Down But U.S. Now twenty offices to nrve you In South«n Calllomia • OUR NEWp0RT BEACH OFFICE Robert V. Hodo-111111 Rob9rt E.lllflCtr ca Msnagitlt 550 Newport c.nts Drive Newport FlnlllClal Cents 82660 (7H) 844 2280 k HDRNBLawER • WliBKB H HEMPHILL, NDYEB l&ll!llSIEW'llfl[SD1 E1111 11E 111111m1nocu..- ,. • -. -..... . . ' . . ~. ' • • • L•i; Gel I :JG <1 Llm$11 SH$ l l.11118ry I :10 Lerw 1t111 6CI LllrObe51 60 Leer S!to SO LtarS<i go U Leaoco 811 '. Leaso pn 7t t.e11ewv 50b ~ LffChNor Jili teoon• «I Ltl'IPCl'fl'I • Lei\ VII Ind Lt11m11 l 61' Leon1rdR • teverFd c.., evFl1>e 1s. l.FC Fl111nC1 LFE Corp LlbOFrd 2• l.lbOF pl• 15 Llbb Mc'! L LlbertyCp ~ LlblvLn 1 l.fbYLfl Pl1 ~ ti::::: 2 05t1 LlnclnNI I 1111 Linc: Nat pl 1 , Lln;Tv 1 n LlngAA f 11f Ll~TI/ pl $ LIOr>tl Corp Litton 1 It! Ll!ton Pie "' Lltfon cvpr Lll!on Pf 8' lockhdA 1 20 LMWSTht lJ LOlldnlwn JO t ones cem 1 Lone~Ge 1 ll •'Lon11t1LI 1 lO •LIL pl l S7S Loral Corp laLallcfl llCI LwlsGE I 41 • Lou N••ll •1 • LCWC!llS1n 9(1 Lvbrlro! 60 Luckv Sir BO "' Lll<llOW 1 OI • t.uken1 sn 1 • Lums Inc ~ LVO Corp ..,-Lyk Yn; '.IOlt f. LvkYlil 1'11.5t • Mlt,.nF 10b '" MKOonld 1" M11ckt Co 30 <l Macv RH I MICY pf • 1S M;t11 Fd :J 11• Mid So G1r 'M•jn~o• 1 10 •MalOl'v180 • M-111 Ind S61> , M&npnwr 72 ManH•11 2 ~ ~ MAPCO 70 • MAPC pf1 l f • Merel,,,., I 60 MM(Or Inc I Mercor pf J.2 Maremn! 111 .-Mar Mid 1 60 -.. Merl&nLb 24 Mer~nan l Marq Cm 60 Marrlo!I Ml ~ M1rshFd 1 10 ,...MtrHnM 1 10 .. MrvlC.up CH) Mf•CO CP ,,, "''..l•tontle 1 20 ~ Mts~ev F 1 >1lo\1tte1 ?O 1, MayOStr I 60 MIVS JW S0 MIVlla \f MCA lr.c 60 > McCOO'd 1.2ttJ J McCrorv f.20 • McCro ol4 so McOennon 1 .. •McDonald Co 1 McOonllO •0 • McGrEd I ol(J ' MCGHIU 60a McGH oll.19 McGraOA olO _.Mcln!Yrt 1 0 MCl<ft 1 SO Met.ea" IOI f MCLOVth 1 60 McNen 10 1 Mead Corp 1 Mead PIA2 80 • Mead o!B1 tO Me<ltl51C l 20 •MtlvSf'.O 1 30 • M\ev Sh of 4 Mtmorlll Co <' Mtrtk 1 ~­~ Merck oil SO _ Mertdl1h I 30 • MetatJIT 120 • Mt•11 Mell 2 , MGM 60o t>lt !rom SOb MetEd outo , MGIC Inv 20 , MlchG11UI 1 . ~l~~cl.1be ~ • Mldf:nTt! I' , MldSoU!ll et Mldld II 1 ... Mldw11 011 l • Mlltlllb 1 20 , Mi!I Br~d 60 • Minn Enier11 M!nnMM 1 to MlnnPl.I l 'ZO Mltinco 135 ,Mls.s lllv 120 MoP1cAS MP Cern 1 60 'MoPubS 80b Mobil 120f MOhli(O 110 Mcna•ch 1 20 Monoam Ind Mon Rlt 1$1) MonroEo M 1 Mon!.ln I to MOfllOUI 11>8 Mani Pw 1 6' Moor McCor MorqenJ ~AO MorwSho 60 MOf Nor 80 Mc~orola 1 Morcrola rl MIF11elS 1 &Cl MI S!TT 124 MSL lnd 44 Munslnqwr 1 Mur~v 1 'o Murill\ln 210 •'Murfll>Oll 6(1 Muri)() PIS 20 ... ~ L DAILY l'ILDT Tuesday's tloshig Prices -Gompl~te New York Stock Exchange, Lis t Con1plete Closing Prices -American Sto~k Exchange Li ~t ' ' It DAll.V PILOT Tuttday, No'ltmbtt 18, le:'_, Creation, Evolution to Share BiUi,ig • '"· Textbooks '1 THOMAS FORTIJNE Of ._ Dellr P'li.t Slaff SANTA ANA -After seve'l years d trying, three Orange County w men have seen the state d of Education decide to ve the biblical ven1oo of 's creation equal allenUon wl the theory of evohdJon tn-chool texl· books. Mr& Jean Sumrall of Costa ?.fesa. along with M r s • Barbara Taylor or Santa Ana and Mn. Nell Segraves of Ormge, finally, with the slate board decision last week, won a victory in their long cam· palgn. The dual approach to the leachlnc of man's ortgin was adopted aa a guideline for the writing of new first through eighth grade social science texthoolol. Mrs. Sumrall said today stie and the other two women couldn't take credit. "We !eel we started this controversy by !lrst bringing DEA'l'B NOTICES Bl!ClrrOW LoulM Mari. Btclltold. ..,_. n "' 117 C.I• ~ II,, COllf Melt. 0.11' ol' llHltl. NOYtmbef" 17. SWVlvH bv tllf'M 111r11t Htnry, Of 81¥111t1 John. lalcewood1 t nd JM, N-1 8utl'11 !'we 1bi.rt. M". Jffn Mn<irn. N""' Yorlll Mn. Mlldrtod $_,.., lalltl>Orl'. Ctllf. Prlvt~ ...,..lotl wUI bit held Tllu...,., 11 AM.. Sell llro.dwtl' CllllNI. lnttrmenr. H1rbor Rn! ,,,. .. mGl"l&t P1rll. llttl llroNw1r Mortvt rr. """""-CHRISrlANSON (lrdt Chrl1ll•-· 1U 24th Pl•ct, Coal• M111. S\ll'\llwd bY wfft, Htrrlelf. ,_kn pendl119 ti ltll 11.-o.dWtJ' Nlfl.rtwrY, eo.111 "'""· FRITZ M.9,...nt Wyll• F ritz. 211n Paclfk C:Dftl HlOl!wtJ', Hunll119ton llt•Ch. Su,....,,,., by ci.u1hter, Vlr1l.,lt Fr11l ...... S."'lc.1, Wtdnntt11v, ' PM. Snt1fh1 ai.11. lnte....,.nt. Wttlmln1ter M-1•1 Ptrk. Smflhl Mortu1rv. ·Olr«'°"' JOHNSON Chtr1H S. Johni.on. t5'1·C Albecort, H"""lnvton llnch. Survived bJ' w!fe, lntzs two son .. Chum •NI Tom John-"°'" fh•M d1111nt1r1, JUM Mvrl(I(. JtO:lt S11t1d tlld Ellztbelh Tuc~eti bro11'1tr'. llOJ' Joh.,tonl thrM 1l1!1ra, Veno GunHrlOI\, Mtmle Pnil", 1...i H1ttltl. Stnll~ WtdnndtV. 10 AM, Smllhs Clll111I. lnfe....,.nl, W111m1.,. sttf' Mamorltl Ptrtl. Stn!lh1 MltrlYt.-Y. •. .-.. LEONARD Alfred9 M. L-.nl. Att '7, of 50lVo Ntrcluus. Cor1INI dtl M1r. Dllt of dMrtt. ~ 11. su .... n.td b'f .....,,. bitnd. Harold fl. L'°"trdl ftllltf'. TroJ' T1,..1tll', Coront dtl Mtr. Strvkn tftd lnl.........m 1rlvtlt . T"-wlllllM kl nvkt ~I coritrltoulloM mtl' ~"""""""' to IM PIJ'IMUlh C-•1'11 .. tloMI Olurdt of N--' kfdt, Stitt Mort\l;lry, UXI E. COllll H[9hwtJ', C.-1111 !AA•· Dl•"Ctor1, MINDER J1nl1 ,,.,.,,. MJlldtr. 11111 T111>mt1, Huntl1111ton llMdl. Su,.,.lvtd bl' l'lul· btflll, Dtvld1 fwo 1«11, O.vld '"" lll:andolph/ two da111thttr1. ChtrltM tlld Dtr1-111 of ,... "°"'" broltlef'. Thtmes llrtcllt'I. St,...lcn. Wtd.,... dtJ'. 1 PM. Smllhs Ch1111t. lntennftll, Wnlml1111tr Mtm11rltl Ptrk, Dlrtcltd bY Smllht Morfulll'Y. NIELSEN OIYld I. NltlHf!, M.D. ,t,ge ff, c1 2SIS Tu1!1n Avt .. NIWPOrt lle1ch. $\J""lvtd bv wife, EiyHI lhrff -·· Dtvld. St-..,, t rld Ptuh ll1ret 1111119httt1, Cllrl1l1M, Lls11nM. '"" Ttrh fhree 1l1ten, Mrt. E1th1r Ftlr, Mll.,•ull.•1 Mrs. JOJ' a1rnt1 1nd Mr1. Ruth LH- dDm, both of Co.I• MINI Ont ortlld· clllld. SorrVlces, WldM.UY. 11 AM, SI, Arodr9w'• Pre1b'fterl1n Cll\lrch, NNIOrt letdl. Ml11!1ry 9•1VUldt rltn F1lrtitven MtmOrltl P1rt;. Thote wl1hlftt to mike mtm0rltl conlrlbu· tlont m1v contrlbul1 to fht Or. Dtvld I. Nlelll!I M-111 Fulld, O•ln<>t °""""' Mtdktl Auod ttlon, DI S. F'-• °''""' Ctlll, lltlt llrot,,...tr Mor1\JltY, Dlrtc!ors. WHEELER WFt'M 11. Whffltr. W W. 11th St., Colli Mnt. Dtlt DI dft!h, Nov. l], S'llrvlwd bl' wllt, JGan M. Wll"ler/ dtvvht.r', (hrltllM, both crl Columbu1, Ohio. Friefld• mtY cell ti 111111 Mor· t.Nl'Y Chtpel, Co111 Mt1t, \lf\!11 I PM todtoY. lntermtn!, WldneidtY, Good sn.hlrd Ctl'IHllrv. 81111 Mortu1rv. Cot!I Mnt, OlrKIOrl. WILUAl\.1SON 1111'1ond.1 t.. WlllltmlDfl. lnl1nl dtuth· '"of Mr. •rid Mra. llOVll WlllltmSOf'. ol 2307 Eldon Avt .• COlll Mtit. AllO aurvlv.d bv ""'"'I 1r1P'ldPtr1n!1, Mr. tnd Mrl. RaYll Wlll!1m11011, Cati MHll mt!trn1I er1llCll1!htr, Mr, (htrlu F. Hollord, Hunllnvt<m llltclll m1t1rNI 1r1ndmotl\er, Mr.. Vlr1lnl1 O'Donl!llt. DI Or1n11. ::; ...... Jen.. T~tv. 1 PM, 111!1 ll~t,,...IY en.Pt!. a.11 .,,.,,...,., Mortuuv. Coa- .. fl MHI. OlACtors. ARBUCKLE & SON WeoldHf Morluary en E. 17~ St., Costa r.tesa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Conu de! Mar ... OR :1-IM!t Colla Mesa an ww • BEIL BROADWAY MORTUARY UI &Mdway; Costa l\teaa LI J.3133 • DILDAY BROTHERS Hlllltlngion Valley a1ortuary J7t11 Beach Blvd. llwlUaglon Beacb au.mi • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemelet1 e Momwy Cbptl 3IM P.elflc View Drive Newport -· Calllonia llf.!lll • PEEK FAMILY COWNIAL FUNERAL ROME 7"1 lol&a Ave. W_I_. lfl.a!J •• SBUPER MORTUARY Ll(90 -IH-1531 .. Clemale llHlll ... lllllftlS' MORnJARY 117 Malo 6&. B ...... -llMAI ' it to public atte:itlon." she said, "but we want to give full credit to Governor Reagan for appointing men to t.be· board who are open minded on lhls subject." . Mrs. Sumrall said 'the trio of housewives hadfi't asked for the replacement of evidence for evolution with the Genesls account from the Bible. She said what the state Board of Education agreed to is to have the scenWlc · argumens pro· a.ld COR for evolution presented and the arguments pro 111d con for special creation presented so students can have a basis for their own judgment. "Most people find it im- possible to believe that there is scientific objection to evol~ tion,11 she said.' "MO!t people assume it hp bee~ provt':!. Actually there are many miss- ing links." Among the tesUliers before the state board w e r e spoksmen for the Creation Research Society, limited to peraon1 with a masters dtfree or PhD Jn science', wbo believe · the kl)o""' facts dD no! support evolution. · Th~ boar'd-app.ro-ve d gu~.etlne will be wed' by publlshrs as they ,prepare textsJ tOr new 89clal scletlCfl a.dos>\lon! for Callfor.i.ia public schools. The, new books for grades Oftt through four wilt be ltittooiiced Jn September, 1971, •nd the tem for grades five · throurh eight in Sep- tember, 19'12. 1n encompassing the duat approach tO man's origin, the stale Board of Edue1Uon altered 'the guideline recom-me~tl9ns of the staU ·eur. ric:ulwD Commission. The board added a section a.1 special creation Proposed by Dr. Vernon Gross, vice president of Santa Barbara's 'ruitfn l,ijS!l\ute of Technology, and:d~llt.ed::the stat~t ~e oldtst ezplanaUon , of .ihe ev0)Ution8.ry ; deve!Qpment' of plants· and aniinals is a I~=~···· that ~ ~p;edal Mts. SUtnrall .?tad al Slate- me,1t' to the board for the thre, woolen. She ·asked for rtjection of the plopoltd aocta1 l!Cience, ·framework Jn its entJtety wtth a committee r of scl~ists~ rathet' t ban educatori • to write the · ,new ..... "We ' consider 'thii 'a partial victory," sbe ,said. "We had ~\!er al ~· objedioo& to the ,c o•n t tint · o£ tbe · frimework. n '~ · . " She a1so clalmedttllat ,PUblic scbo01s are .&eachlOJ. "setular butnanLsm'':<-:, a belief that man WU re.teated through evolution~at he controll: his Ol\-".1 di:slhiy and UJat there Is QO God '.-.in violation of the Comlitution whlcll forbids the teaching of religion. There is a single in- terpretation • in · an atheistic tnanner of man'• origin In the ~xtboo~ RC\"• she nld. The .i'..istructlon· m the, .teachers' manual is 'tbat .there ls·nothing $UJ)emattir81 involved.· . Van Okayed To Move Prisoners . "' . ' ~ , ..... LAGUNA: .lN'I G U1E L Pre~ng' ·fo<: U... •projected mu:.iltipal o6ui't moye to the new ;ioou, c;ounty Clvlc Center at ·Laguna Nl;rue1 aoon after the first of the year, the Laguna Beach' City Council has approved' purchase of a utility v~n to t r·a .Ji s po r ~ prisooers frQm the.city Jail to cwrt heartngs • Claire Trevor New' Dimes March Leader ,., :· Coa.st .Man Now Aide •To Badham At present, prisoners 1 are simply escorted down a hallway fro"! jalkell,s behind the Police Department to the dual • duty courtroom ·council chamber in tbe same buUdtlg. Purchase of the van was ap-. proved in the 1989-70 Police Department budget. SANTA ANA Claire Trevor, star or motion pic- tures and television and the newly appointed H o n o r a r y Chairman of the March of Dimes Mothers' March on Birth Defects for Orange Col1.1ty, will greet volunteers at the annual Mardi ol Dimes dinner Wednesday at the Elks' Club in Santa Ana. Miss Trevor, the mother of three grown sons, now lives \vi th her husband, Milton · Bren, in Newport Beach. The 6:30 p.m. meeting will dramatize the treatment and preve:iUon of birth defecU:. Dr. Robert Casey, prominent Orange County p 1 a st i c surgeon, and member of the Orange County Cb a pt er' s Medical Advisory Committee, will be I.be dinner speaker. His slide presentation will il- lustrate new teclutiques in the trealment of birth defects. Amo.1g the outstanding volunteers Miss Trevor will greet will be the Gira rd family of Santa Ana, the 1970 March of Dimes poster family. Mr. and Mrs. Gwinn Girard, parents of four children, have taken into their· home ten children -all victim! of rubella-caused birth defects. With the rubella (German measles) vaccine now available ln time to prevent a recurrence of such tragedy, these childre.1 are concrete evidence or the import.a.nee of DlMES·CHAIRMAN Cl•lre Trevor this .vaccine, as well as olher scientlfiC" advances, in the prevention of• birth defect.s. · Arth\tr . R,. M'cKeiizie of CoSta , Mesa,· •Cha pter chairman, 1"will preside, and will iDtrodl.lce Mrs. ·Stanley Kegel, Santa Ana. chairman of the · 19'10 . county Mothers' March. ; The meeting Is ope.1 lo anyone ·Interested in the light to prevent birth defects. Reservafions may be made by calling Jhe chapter office at 547-6124. The councll approved pay- A Corooa del Mar imurance ment of $2,118:40 to South man has been appointed ad-Coast Motors for a Ford ministrative assistant t 0 Econollne &200 panel type Assemblyman Robert E. van with a wheelbase of 123 B~. (ft.Newport Beach) inches 'and d~ble rear doors. the legiS]ator bu announced. Santa Ana and Huntington He is Edward F. Ward Jr., Beach Dodge daalets declbed ol 12.4 Malabar Drive, an invitations to bid.because lbeir I f vans did nOt meet size re-emp oye 0 .Jay and Renfro in· qulremeiits, the council was surance brokers, New P 0 r t advised.' A $2,715.51 bid from Beach. Tommy Ayres Chevrolet was Ward has been a Corona del rejecte:d because it, y;as felt Mar resident since 1955 and the 103-incft wheelbase van of- became active in pollti.cs in fered would ht too sport to ac- 1960, helping in campaigns for commodate prisoners a n d Jtadham. President Nixon and escorting dfficf.r.s. former ·senator -Barr y1---...;:.---'---'---I · Goldwater. The new Badham aide was a U.S. Air Foi'ce ah: Police operations officer and provost marshal· before making hil· home in Corona del Mar,1 whert he has been active in a variety of civic afflirs. Only One Ftnal stocks ln all home rdltlons. That's ;a big deaf?' It is' In Orange County. The D~llY PILOT' ls the only dally MWSpaper th;at dtllw· ers the package. He is a past presklent ofl~========='I Sert.Qma In~Uonal and a member of the Kiwanis Club,1-----------1 the Irvine Cost Country Club, Balboa .Yaclit Club and has .--------~! Republican .state c e· n t r a 1 =~~iee~ ember 'of the Turn in. Offshore Airport Study May Beco111eLOcal Guide OC Etnploye Group Wins Recognition SANTA ANA -The. Orange County Employes AsSoclatJon h~s been Officially recogniud as the representative of more than 7fi employes in the Fora ·sharp offer. LOS ANGELES -A two- volume report on offshore . airport planning and con· struction methods has been published by a Los Angeles firm for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA ). The report, published by the Ralph M. Parson Company, Is intended to serve as a guide to local. state and re g I o n a I airport authorities and plan- ners interested in th e possibilities of offshore airport sites. The FAA PUthorized the study earlier this year because of the iriterest in such airports as a means of overcoming high land costs, the scarcity of close·in land sites for airports and the· mounting op- position to aircraft noise by airport neighbors. -FID:-· An embankmfnt placed directly on an un· der"·aler fciundation , t h e n brought up to a height suf. Orange County SanltatJon ficiently above the water District. surface to prevent wave Approval was given Wednes- damage. day night by the sevr:i sanlta- -Dlke and Polder : A dike lion districts that make up the completely encloses an area in Orange County body. Most of which the water is later the employes work at the pumped out. The landing area sanitation district's two is .,below the surrounding sewage treatment pla~ In water:lird the water side is Fountain Valley and Hun- , protected from erosion by lington Beach. stone. Employes had been seeking -Pile: A deck is built, recogniUo.1 of the employes' associaUon for more than a which. is' supported by pile!. month as . thelr bania.inlng -F1ottlng: The deck is sup.. agent in wages and Working ported by flotation. Tb.is conditions .• 'lbe' · d 1·s \ r i c'l method mmt include-a.. moor· emplO)'s·about 115 "Wor)[ers. ing system to keep the deck,--'~--------1 from mov~g . According to the report. a true ofllhore airpor\ has. never been built, pimarily because of the high cost. ·Howew~v.er, the report says. at least a part of thls hlgher cost nfl.Y"bt due to the cost of lnnov_atlng -new methods of conSti'Uclion . . . Help·t.~-tlie~efior oul of . . - YOU HAVE JUST FOUND THE PLACE TO CALL FOR HONEST, PROFESSIONAL ·TELEVISION SERVICl,.G ·. . i' Httlorrllold sul.,., '" ,...,, kllMI tht ., • cNCl•tlfll fflctiol 111\t Pllll ti •tlnilllfjlOI, co1utipatl• ua k wcn1! COUNJEMtO~~!!~'!!!"f dli!J' irrltltlofl,"'4lW!lr11 umulD CM ,ISi t!l' pM •d ltelllal II .-..Ol'fllOld 1ftftMlnlti..di '*' -· CQU~TllNOID·1ott .. 1t"• lltt4 •tool• to ·""" 1W ..., ~'511•; d1tlfl fl a1 1!1Ktl" Mtiof)llR drq 11 NM SOR, .... Jiti'lt tlJlllll fot 1r1111'19 It t!ll UIN timl prtttlet$ .. IOOtlln illlMIOd .,..,,, Stoinleu ateelb.ak lnivn-yours for oa1t 29t • -.. ;;i..- 275 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 642-9746 RCA.ZENITH SALIS (OVER 11 YEAR$ OF DEPENDAILI SE.IVICEI eoUIOUNo10, e1illlpllr, tntM "' •tin. I~ luPP°'lltlrJ ..... w11n1 • CIMM for .. Al& Jlfll Jiiii.Kiit. !liiiiilll ~·atP.M"· tkl~Tooco ••i~ . Hoftow'11,...d "Mooic Edger" bkrd .. .. ..... neec1~~ s1...-.... ho'•dlel, Di1hwmhlMOfe. lhtton- dlf!OftGny gvcmi!'*d try 11N1nufacfta•fot' )'MrS. ' -.... , ........ ..._ ....... • eoun-Awardir--S31-2,87-5- T«mbl,e Brings"Danui8es SANTA ANA - A man who r.eceived crippling i n j u r le s when he fell 40 feet from a water tower on a South Laguna construction. site has been awarded $312,875.23 in damages by an. Orange County , Superior Court jury. Leonard· Stibon, 56, Long. Beach, successfully ar(Ued th.at negligence by the Moulton Niguel Water District led to his fall on Jqly 8, 1964. He wu r ( on.e of several ~can Bridge Co. workm!'n, building two wat'er towers on the site. SWson wu working on .steel' columns inside: .the 'la£ger of the two towers ".When parl of the structure coUapsed, hurl· ing him Ui· the. Ooor of the partly completed tank. He suf- fered 17 fractures:in the tall, including both · arm!, jaw, pelvis, collarbone,· ribs, spine and vertebrae. BUison tes!Uied that he ~ii! UNION BANK ' w A Unlow~ C:ome~ i' . undergOne nll'ilerous oper .. tions and , m'any 1 hours ot physical. Uierapy. Bor.b arms are slrengthened by sl<d pins and he is unable to strafebten the left arm. Actual damages awarded were $3691000. Judge Raymond Vincent ordered that $58,000 recdved by . SUilon. from workman's cornpen.saUon in· surance should · be deducted from the jury's award. 7 • 7 • . ' . - -.. -...... --.-,_, lVe"i.JC.rt --Qarhor < . -. -. ·,; -. -.~ -~ . .'I •• .. voe. 62, NO. 276, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' . -TUESDAY,; NdVEMBER 18, 1969 TEN CENTS ~ . -• . -. - Stu~ent~ Critici.ze H~tb.o~ on Sex Edit ca ti.on ' By THOMAS FORTUNE Of Ille Delly' ,lltt Iliff They said most parents don't do' the job teaching about sex education they sh91Jld. That is one poio.1t five high school studenl.lf made Monday when they t(llked to a committee or Newport Hatbor Chamber of Commerce loolung into the feasibility ol $1!X education in the schools. A couple of their other points: -Newport-Mesa · Unified s c h o o 1 District's Jeadership is afraid of sex educltoo. La Paz Race Captured By Co.ncerto By NORMAN R. ANDERSON Ot tM Dll"i. ,lltt Stiff Two Newport Harbor boat!, both Columbia 57s. have captured top la~ls In the 3rd annual Long Bach to La Pai yacht race . . John Hall's Concerto from Newport Harbor Yacht Club is overall corrected time winner and first in Class A, with Dorothy 0, skippered by -Ro be r t Beauchamp from NHYC, second Gverall and second in Class A. It's the second La Paz race victory for Hall. He was first in Class A in 1967 when he skippered Simoon. Third overall is Class D boat. Aquarius, an Ericson 35, skippered by John Holiday of Long Beach Yacht Club, whlch was first in its class. Class A and Class D boats took most or the honors. Windward Passage, 73-foot ' ketch was first. to finish Saturday morn~ ing, but wound up, becausl of•time K' had to give1 away, il.s only fourth in eta.SI and ninth overall. BJackfini another ~toot ketch which followed Pilssage acro,B the line about an hour later, took thltd in class and seventh overall. Fourth and fifth places overall were tak!'!n by two class D boal:S, ·Dona J ., from CYC, second in class and L'Allegro. Richmond Yacht Ciub, 3rd in class. Three boats, all Class D, were unreported this morning, according to Garroll Hudson ol Newport Beach Who is monitoring radio reports from Vector at La Paz. They were Malobi, Posada Manana II and Al Vlento. Trophy presentations will take place tonight at the Los Arcos Hotet in La,Paz. The race up the Baja California coaot, aCC1lrding to reports, was a rough one, with winds forcing a tacking duel. Today in the La Paz harbor. winds were reported blowing at 30 koots and most boats were putting out extra· anchors. Results in class and overall : CLASS A Concerto, 1-1 : DorothY 0 ,2-2; Blackfin, 3-7 ; Wind~ard Passage, 4-9; Rascal, 5-22. CLASS B Bohemia, 1-10; Cha1isma, 2-12 ; Ariana, 3-13; Pantera , 4-14; Irish Mist,· 5-16; Serapis, 6-17; Vector, 7-19 ; Robon Ill, 8- 21. CLASS C Tanqueray, 1-6; Pericus, 2-8; Isobar. J. 11 ; Alerion, 4-15; Debinda JV, a-18; Severn, 6·20; La Prensa, 7. CLASS D Aquarius, 1-3; Dona J ., 2-4; L'Allegro, i-s. Apollo Spacemen Ready _t~. Land _ Tonight on Moon SPACE CENTER, Houston IUPll - Apollo 12's-utronauts looped the moon with unerring precision tOday, inspected th~ir landing ship a final time and -said. ~TORIES 0"! LANDING, MOON WALK-PAGE 4 "We're ready 1o go" fOr a pinpdint touchdown On the lunar Ocean of Storms tonight. "We've checked all the things we're supposed to and they're all shipshape." Alan L. Bean radioed earth from inside the lander tntrepid 's cabin. So perfect was every aspect of America 's second lunar landing mission that flight director ~f. Pete Frank told newsmen "it's at least 100 percent ef- fective. t'm just amazed. t• He said nothing, including a minol-skin trritation reported by flight commander Charles "Pete '' Conrad, stood between •the crew and their landing at 10:53 p.m. (PST) today. Conrad, Bean and Richard F. "Gordon 1lept .thrOugh tllt day. Gordon will re- main in lunar orbit aboard the. command ahlp Yankee .cu.,,,., tooight while his crewmates unltitch the landing craft IS.. APOLLO. Pagt II .. I .. -Classroom sex educalion Is not gcing to hilve the effect of making ,studeots want -to JO ~t and sex ex-·perlme.1t: .. -... The five. youtN, all student officers, lwere from C9rona del Mar and Newport. Harbor high schools. Students from Estancia.arid C~ta Me.SA high schools will be beard by the Chamber committee later. Three of the students·said their parents had~ not · ihought J it · nfcesSary to disCuS,, sex with them. One satd·'hll lnother had .. ' '. . - talked !l'itb him about H. One di~ not say. "Most of my education. was acqulred from ·slumber parUes,t' vblunteered one of the students. . "It's ah emb&rrasing 'subject for par· en ts," said another. "It is very difficult for a kid to plctu~ his own parents·flav-in& &ejl:ual re.t8tiooi, Tb,ere . are • lot .of hangups there."" -• A boy brought .up the double standard. "My fJa\l)er-1~ .at. n:iY sist.t. different-:" he said. "Tdy father thinks:"''My\bcty,. Jt's all right for hini to gO out · and get se!:. . . . ,. ' ·u;IT•......_. Pre.ideli~ Meets '.fMr.h#J• . .-· ·. · · ~-: President·Nixon"·got reminder today~Uiiat ':?hanksgiving is not far off. He r,ceivif a:pair of,.,.live', 40-pou~broad-breasl'ed ,white turffiys · raised in Virginia's Shenandoah Vall~. Blnls. were gills of .the Na· tional Turkey Federation. • -~ Newport Slates Election . -~-· ' -. -· ,-,' : ' For Renewal of BBC ·Lease An estimated 25,000 Newport Beach registered voters will haye a·chatlce Jan. 13 to decide whether the Balboa Bay Clu b's· lease of city-0wned bayfront land should expire in 1998 ~r in 2024. City councilmen, in a unanimous vote, sel the election date Monday night. It will t>e a simple "yes" or ''no" bal- loting.. . But the actual vote will be preceded by a huge mailing, required by the City Charter and to be financed by the Bay ·club. Ever.y voter will receive a copy of the 30-page legal document amending the ex isting lease, first draWp. in 1948. CouncUmen appro\'.ed the Bay Club's offer lo. pay for all costs -oL the election, incl uding the mailing. The cost, estimated at first to be abol!t $20,00\); is'now Qpecl- ed-to run to aboUt '$10,000, ai::cording to City __Manag!;!r tt\lrvey L. Hu_rlburt: Councilmen Monday night paved the way for the electi~_by approying a com· mittee recomendaUon endorsing the ex· tended lease. "In approving· this am·end· ment." said CouncUman Robert Shelton, "we are acting as slewards· for the true . landlords of the property _. tt¥s city's voters." Shell-On went on to say flt!. feel! 11this document is the btst. that cah be arrived at, in terms· of meetJng the rea9Qnable _ interests of the twO partjes involved. It does credit' to all tho.!e who ·worked . on it." The proposed new lease was negotiated willi the Bay Club by a commitlee com· prising Ma)1)r Doreen flfarshall, Vice . Mayor Lindsley Parsons and Councilman Paul J . ·Gruber. The.fifth draft was· the ' one finally voted upon, cul~inaling ne- ·gotiations that began more than a year ago. ' Under the proposal. the m1rum.um rental paid the city under the lease Would 'increase to $150,000 a year. 1t is now $<!,000. ' Also. a percentage .rental ·would be charged agaihst gross receipts ·whenever the percentage formula exceeds the min· imum rental. The percentage reqtal would range from three to-1i1h ~~nt, depending on the amount of gross reecipts, unUI 1990. In that year, a flat 6~~ percent rent.al would be charged against all receipts. Bay Clul> Vice President Richard Ste- vens asked councilmen Monday night-to change the 61h percent flat rental start to 1998, but the council wouldn't budge. "It either stays at 1990. or this goes back to committee,"_said Gr.uber. _ "It's not a make or break point with us," S_!&ven.s q)Ji_ckly resP.Qllded--., Councilmen made clear , their belief that the final deeisio'n on the lease exten· sion rests righlfu lly wlth,_the V~e,t'S. "Our . feeling," said Mayor MarshaU, "Is that ~he city regards Itself. a1 · the agent l::e- tween the lessee. the Bay C1ub •. :ind the lessor, the el~rate." .. , City Cleril< l:.aura J.aa;jos said the elec- tion schedule requires that all pro and con arguments be sUbmitled for indu· sion wllh I.he ballot malling material by Nov. 28. Length of arguments will 'be limited to 300 words, she said. Councilmen agreed that the council it- self would supply no apgumenl, but. in· dividual cou ncilmen may do so, if they wish. ' ' Rain Slide Threat Cited · I'm proud of him, But mi daughter. I'll string up her boyfrie.nd by h:.S thumbs.' " "How should sex be taught by parents?"· isked Dr. Nolau Frizzelle, chairman of the Charhber commit(ee. • 1JThe first . thing 1: would say ·a: ob- jectively and tbat-'s awfully hard for parentS -ti> slf dOwn with' you •and tell you all Uiey know.sex.to· be and their ex- perifhce. But-:kids ·have to know," said Le~lle .. Forfb8n; Harbor ltigh'a 'Girls Leakue·preliidf:nt: , • "~e-s;c~t ~better equipped 'to ·han- die a sub/eCtlve queSUon objectively.'• said Arno d · Clark, student body vice president at•Corona del M'r High. He suggested there·is lesa personal em- barraasment that way and a better cha.lee for communication. But he added, 'fl have no obj~tion. if a parent feela be can do a bet~r job." · . Dr .. Fr1ntlll• 1••• hla thooghts on why pwenta don't get into frank sex ' dlscusaions with tbeir ._chlldren. "YOu. nave a tenc;tencY·to fl!el a chlld ls yoo nger than he feels hlimelf," he said. ":You doll't feel be ls·yet capable witti w1ac1o1p of makJn1 judgmel'Jts. A~1d you are ~ willing to trult this responaiblli(y Jo·ap out.sJde person like a teacher." .., Greg Meets, Key Club pr~ •it Corona de! Mir Hljh, said he bu-ha&. aUdlO.vlsul.l Claases for four yean and hid the idea or: taking I 8 Cart)el'a and vlilto tape lnlo another' ·school dislrlct 'a clauroonl where aex education is~ ..... ~~ taU ~-. • --· :S said, "I wanted to record it as It ' . (See SEX CLABUI, Pip II Joe Kennedy_,_ l)i~s Family Patriarc~ Follows Three Sons . . HYANNIS PpRT, Mass. (UPI) - Joseph P. Kennedy, mu!Umillionaire father 'of_ a President and two U.S. aenf,'O" in a; tragedy-stalked family, died today. He was.at. ' Tl! patriarch of the fabulous Kenne<fy cl~. Who Jost twl? ,ans -one a Preoident and the other a ·senator -to assassins' bullets was an Invalid since felled by a .stroke nearly elght years ago. Death came at 8:05 a.m. (PST) after Kennedy, who was U.S. ambassador to Great Britain at the slart of World War JI. ·suffered the latest in a string of heart attacks Saturday. A family spokesman issued Ole follow- ing statement: "Ambassador JOseRh P. Kennedy died peacef~lly' today at his .home in Hyannis Port. He was 81 years old. · · "Mr. Kennedy Was pronounced dead al 11 ;91,,,,m. (EST) by hia ·""11...,°"'' h', IWl>O.l\')! Witt~ Wllh hJm l flii;'iiri,t:'l;i his ,death"wert his wile and the ;;...,,.,.,. of hll fimlIT~ .. ~: ' ,~ ,, 1 •1 sen. Edward M. Kennedy (!>.Mu~!. ' . ' . ~ ' his JOoe surviving son who rpent the nl&ht in .a lonely vigil at his f¥-ther'11 bedskte, was .with the senior Keti~y when· he di'ed .. The senator's mother,. Mrs. Rose Dover Shores Wi1ining Fight Against . Beach. ~: oppblitlon by Dover Shores reSJ'deiifj against city plans to develop North Star Beach on Upper Ne.,port Bay is workin·g. ' Petitions signed by 200 residents of the bayside colony have swayed the Joint Hsl'bor Committee to recommend against -u\e application by the city to develop the area into a neighborhood swlmmi'.1g beach. The committee will recommend that county supervisors formally deny the re- quest posed by the Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department. The residents complained -and the commµlittee agreed -that the beach was not a good idea because the only park.in~ for Its users would be . on neighborhood streets. 'lbe prOposal would also confil~t with state law, oppone'.i'ts argued, because a sw:mmlng beach must be 200 re.et or more away from any boallni; 11re1r:-- The Upper Bay's speed zone is closer than 200 feet from North 'Star Beach . Dover Shores dwellers also complained - that the city's plan ":as for minimal Im· prove ment, of· tl)e small, crescent-shaped beach ahd 'no provisions had 'been made for rest rooms Qr other conveniences. . The idea Was posed primarily by the city's , Par.ks, Beaches a:.1d RecreaOon Commission. The formal opposition had been brew· Ing for some time, but petitions against lhe plan were never submitted to the commission. The' opponents ·reserved their fight for lhe county groups instead. Kennedy, his wife Joan and R. Sargent Shriver; u.s: ambassador to France, also wt're present. Famny· sources said the last rites of the Rom~n Catholic Church were ~d­ ministered, to Kennedy two or three Umes within the last month. As his condition deteriorated, all members of the glamorous Kennedy family gathered at the Kennedy com- poiind overlooking ' Nantucket Sound Y.'here he once sailed with his family . Jacquellne ·Kennedy Onassis, widow of President John F. Kennedy, flew in from her island home at Skorpios, Greece. Mrs. Ethel Kennedy, widow or Sen. ' Robert F. Kennedy, came from Washington. · · . A ·man w~o equated money. with power a,nd ~-,ver wJQl money, K~onedy molded, •i , •P,Dlljlffl • famllr •.ol lllljl .ud'''.1111- iglnatlilli. · I Ktnnedy,, a sallo!fl:~'s ·son, a"'au--- ed a fortune ..udtitoCI al up lo a half• blllioil tilllafi. He ailmlttedly W'4 one of• ~· ·20 Wealthlest men: · Bat for all hts wealth, his lUe,.wai sc~' red with traf!dy. E'our of his nine cbil-. · · (See ·KENNEDY, P11e I) · , UPIT ....... PATRIARCH PASSES Joioph P. Konnedy · . Newport Orders Barrie~· . . . . ' ' Again~t Sand IJauling Rigs . ' -' By JEROME F. COLLINS • • . ~ .. Diiiy l'llit 11111 ,. ·Newport Beach city, councilmen Mon- day .nJght ordered barricade! up ~ keep sand hauling rigs ofLthe-streets and on. the beach in West Newport. The action came after Councilman Donald A. Mcinnis bitterly criticized pro-, jel"t contractor Chadwick & Buchanan for vlolattn'g agieements with the city. J{e charged the Long Beach firm with : -Hauling tons of sand along public slreets without city permission. -'Spreading huge boulders along the waterline between 40th and 4Jst streets in a manner "hazardoµs" to swimmers. -Noisily servicing vehicles on. the beach in front of homes on weekends and at night. -tgrloring p,romlses to the city to give advance-notice .whenever· the sand haul project w9rk area is extended. Mclnni.s was. es~lally irate pver the contractor's use of Seashore Drive and Orange Avenue as pathways for the trucks carting sand from the Sanla Ana River to the beach. The contractor chose that route bei:ause · recent rains had .wiped ·out a roadWay built -along the river livee directly to the beach. . Mcinnis said l1Cboo1 children boarding buses at . Orange Avenue were· "ter- rorized" by ihe huge rigs' using the street for access lo the beach. ·He also said one parked car 'had already been struck by, the trucks, whlch began using the public . . streets during the weekend. • ~ 1 anefY .. councilman .•. also . ta.id bUlldozers had shoved rockt left .over froni grOin· coilstiuctton tO \he edge tof the surf tO_'get them out of the Path. of the sand~ bauling . equipment. He Silid this movemen~ of the boulders was another ".broken promise." ·On' Mclilnis' motion, the couflcll ·unanimously directed the police depart- ment to erect b8rriccides at the Oraoge Avenue beach str~t·end. · The motion was approv~ .at 8:30 p.m A half:hour later, the directive had been carr'led out, , and City T i d e 1 a n d a Adminlstrator' .. George Dawe& reported to councilmen that Buchanan & Chadwick spokesmen had agreed to observe. the street hauling t:ian. ' ' Also ar MC!MIS'-ifiSiStenee, tti~e~ciillii~~. cit': -, ' _ !...Authorized Mafor "Doreen Marshall to ' send a le~ter proteatlng the entire operation to the U.S. Army Corps of Engirieers. The letter will 1rtquest a "comprehensive plan" on the project (See SANO, Pa1• t) . Oraa1e . '.°IC•o•t Weatloer Hillside Dwellers Given Warni~g "More 'Or the same'' tS the·cryp. tic. comment from the weatherman. for Wednestlay, W'lth Jrrltallilg: aft stirred by Santa..-Ani Winds and tempefatul"es In the upper ·. 10's along the coast. INSmE TODA 'l' By JOHN VALTERZA or 111• 011tt '1'" si.tt. JUin oan spell death and damage for the poorly planned hlll•ide horn• and lut winter'• heavy sl«ml proved ·a graphic rtmlnder. · But people -Including the 0¥mer11 of hillside houses -cm have short .......-les. ' A Newport Beach IOib •O&inetr this week tried to jog their memories 1 bit Jerry Nkioll, soila engineer and !pecialist on charting and correcting sllttt problems warned all Orange Coast -' hillside dwe\let'i ,to take another hard look at their particular conditions be.lore winter's rains Come again. •• +' ·'A lol <I ~e seem secure in the belief that 'Jiit. w1riter'1 rains won't hap- pen agait.1 ~ said, ••But I've heard from experts oftin this ye,t Ulat ~tudies sl'iow last winier to be the first of another wet cyde." , •Ancf Ir tllt-<xpe~.(obKl')'tB of the growth""' IOClutnee.on ceilain types of trees art ~ ~) are correct, Nicoll -~M. • 1he prob!""' hav• Just begun. ·'' Laguna ~ Beach's hlllslde areas are ain~g the big trouble spots, Nicoll said . "Theu ls a neighborhood' on a hllllcp area in Laguna -Beach · that makes· me ihuddef' when I look at It. It needs help fast,"·he Said. Casting a prbgnosl11 for an earth slide lsn'.t a job for ·amateurs, Nicoll said, yet he's not drumming up bueineSI fdr toils englneerlng, The problem Is so widespread, Nicoll said, that businell1 is booming without P,Ubllcl\y. What causes the slide s? • Nature could take much'Of ·the blame, Nicoll said. Eros.ion and slides are a· natural function' rOf th¢..-eirth: "But the builder who puta up a hll!sl<ic' home asaumlng thaf all is stable un · demeath is just a! much at fault," he said . - "So many of thes.e houses Slide oil hills , or wind Up w\Ul lOns of mud ih the llVlhg room becautte no one took the Ume 1nd · money to understand what11J undeme1th. Too many developers build under the (Ste HllJ.SIDt;S, P111 ll . .-- It's the biggest week of the \ live ~lteatfr sea1<m on the Orallfle 0008t -si.t new' pfays ' optning a1ld six others still on &he boards, 'See Theater Notti, P6g~ 18. ,_ ~. - c.i11tt .... 11 ""'' MlllMI I'"'* • Cltnlfie.I , ·--•• ClllllU " .. _._ " (\"Mt-· .. .. ... -• Pffll'I NtOCff " :::: ,...,.. 1J.t~ Dl""lff " •• •fll9'1•1 ..... • Tllt'flllM 'I, ........ "'"""' " --" ""'"'' •• ·-· ' --.. .... -n Allll '--" .. ......... _..., " . """-'t ,..... ,,.,. ..... " • .~ • • • Slaop Talk The McDonnell Douglas airlock for the Saturn V orbital work&hop was the topic of conversation today as Dr. Wernher von Braun was brief· ed at ai rlock mockup in St. Louis, Mo., by Fred J. Douglas (left), director o( airlock program for space firm. Dr. Von Braun directs NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, which has awarded McDonnell Douglas contract for work on space worK:sbop and it! airlock module. f'ro111 Page 1 HILLSIDES ENDANGERED ••• assumption that everytJiing Is fine." But in many cases it isn't. One common condition beneath houses on slopes is topsoil covering hard bedrock. Wat.er can seep through the soil and eond up along the bedrock race weaken· ing the whole arrangement. U the condiUon gets too bad, Nicbll ex- ~lained, the soil can slide right all the ri>ck and the house can go with il ., CorTecting a naw such as that -it ex- ists along Irvine Terrace in NewJ)q!t i;teacJt . overlooking Baysld,e Drive :;-Js pouible, but it's ex~ve. • ... · One way, Nicoll said, which is beina us-m along Bayside Drive1 is to carve awl)'· much of th< poroU!, unlllible dht~'ilol.c the bluff side. Install long 'pi]>es to'· dlllJf f'rona r-.e · 1 APOLLO •.. from the Clipper and dtsctnd to the surface. .Shoftly after noon. the space agency announced that a solar fl are had been observed on the sun, but that "based on the previous information we had from this ft3re we would not expect it to be a problem" that would endanger the astronauts. It was the same flare first . 5ten Nov. 2, and the sun had simply rotated until it was in view again from Earth. Be.an woke up in the middle of the Mon· d&y sleep period and asked ground ~n­ ttollers to keep an eye on the guidance rockets on the spacecraft because "we seem to be firing a little more ... around the moon than we had imagined." He also asked how often to take d~ogestant tablets to counteract a stuf- fy nose he said had been bothering him since launch . "I don't know whether J have a cold or anything," he said. "l\ty ears are sometimes clear and someUmes are nOL" 'Doctors told him to take a tablet eveO'. elght hours and Bean said he was goiile td try to go back to sleep. ' llAllY PllOl CMAMOI <OU'I t!UllllHI ... COl#IM'f •Otrt N. W•N ---J•cl •. e.,,.,. vie.,,. .. , -(,f!lftfl -...,.. Th ... 11 K1tTll ·-n-.. A M1r,Jit~ IMMIMI f"\lller • Jt-'• C.lllM --'"' '""" ---1Zll Wnt a.IM• .. ,,..,,,, ..... M4rtt11 P.O.lu 1171,t Z'6J, --c.t• ....... -..... '"'""" "'"""' IMdl: "'.,.,.., ·-HW•lll•lw• llilctt: -,_ "'911 the water from the bedrock (shale) face, then replace the soil_and compact it. "Certainly it:S an expensive job, but if nothing is done, sometimes tbe only solu· non i! to move the. house off the lot," ht said. Another classic sli<te is of the type which kllled six per&ons last winter at the Silverado Canyon Fire Station. · Its type 'killed several other persons In Southern Californla during the same storms •. Jt goes like this: A fault or weakened area. on a slope geniei:ally takes tbe shape or a dip in the bedrock and on a slope, if it's visible, 1.091c;~ Jike a gullf.. • · But many iJmkthese crevlc~ rm with top$mJ ·and nii•dlp iS ipParerit · .: ·'·.,' ··If a house aets bililt on it. a~if,+'or be}ow it -·and the heavy rainr;Oixne- the soil can give way. - "'f.he dlrt turM to mud and slides right off the r~k underneatp and you can get a river of mud shooting straight doy.i11 a hill'' the engineer warned. Like many other aweaome pf.':)~lems plaguing Southern California, the earth ~Jide . has many manifestatiooS and the problems are easily appare11t. What .about the solutions? .. . One solid one, Nicoll said, hi~ge.f. on government planning. He suggests a maSter plan of sorts of the entire county with one lhing in mind -erosion and slide dani:er. The idea involves a Jona period of study and data gathering along with ex· am ination o! the county's ent ire topography. \Vith expa~ing knowledge. about causes 0£ slides and geological factors, a zoni ng document or sorts coold be de\•eloped as a guide to development Nicoll"s flnn. W. A. Wahler and Associates already Prepares such reports for priva te developers. The Irvine Com- pariy recently received the service in- cludiJlg a SS.page dOcument with ex· tensive maps and diagrams outlining the soil stability or each of the firm's 12,000 acres. The earth sllde'plan. coupled with more perceptive developinenl of housi11g, could solve some Of tht!:-problem~. "Once the 11li«te starts, It seems. all the · vlcUms scrample for help. But by then It'• too late," he concluded. Annual Ne·wport Tribuie to Suds Plann~d Dec. 7 ,, Newport .Beach'! spirited, maritime tribute to the gods of suds and squeezings (not to mention the ·legislators who ended prohibition)' will hit the harl>or again this )'ear on ·0ec. 7. Joyous revelers celebrating the first day of-the Volstead Act v.·111 parade lheir boats along the. harbor waterways then g'ather-later tor their traditional baoc:ha· nalia ti the Balboa Pavilion. The entire day's merriment It &Pofl- sored by the Orange County Ski Club.·· The boat parade "ill weav'e along the harbor st arling at 1:30 p.m. The la~t boat:i in the proctsslon sl1ould 11taage:r in at 3:40 p.m. Baet:hanal!a time starts at 4 in UM: a(. lem®t1. Spokesmen for the e\'fnl said taeh par· ade. boat should -have a spomor. InfonnaUon and regislraUon blanks are a\'aJlt1bte lhroogh parade chair.man Shtl· don Liss t71 4) 645-1~1. S!)C)ke1men said the group would supply 1n lhe lnform1llon necr!'Jary. but raw ejgs, tom<llo juice, \force:stershlre sauoo 11nd.bl~ck t ortee must be 5uppllcd by Ur 1 divldual partlclpanu. . . " ..... .. . . .. -it c. . 41 '.>k. =-~ ,•.. . -. .. -,...., ..... ~~· ,..,_ ' . ~~u~t .. -w e·ig4s ~~!lc4 A~cess \ Salt Cre~k Ff:'-ture, Other l;ounty 8eaches lnvolv~ , • ,._ M 1J lllCIWID1'. NALL .............. ... wi1llnc'-11 an AmiCus CUriae, a triend -the public. Rulinp in the cases thus Ur · 0( Jht ~ ' · , \ appear to have, been cootradictory. \ In Glon versus the-City of sant.a~Crui the city cl1lmed jllal. there was 111116plle< pul>lic _d~lqtlQn by ..,...1o,r . .-,ljia1 five years of~teps leadina down 1:6litt t1 T¥. qur.sUon or pubUc acces.!I • to Caulcknia tide.lands -such as ·those at Sa~ Creet·and the rest-of-Otani-Cwnty -wil~ be we11hed by the State Supreme Court next year. r ™-. State L a n d s Commission ha1 outl!oi'liea ~ attorney · (enerar to rept'f.'lent it before lhi ·1tate•s lop tri builal. ~ . \ The attorney general's office· will enter the important proceedina: -the courl Ji1rorn Page J S.EX CLASSES ••• really la and bring It back to show to irOu~ that say 'no' on sex education. 'But OUT superintendent (William CUrr ningham) 'said, 'No, we artn't ready for Jt now.'" Randy Whitesides, Harbor High's stu- i:tent body president, said he has been interested in developing sex education classes for about two years and has discl.llled the situation wilb Dr. Cun· nlnghani. Miss Forehan said there's been a rumor going around· Harbor }ligh that the w.iJJ no longer be sex education for sophomore girls. Principal_c;harles Godshall said today no decision has been marte yet on whether a three-week unit' on sex educa· tlon will be given this year in toth grade girls' P.E. "It doesn't come up until the third quarter and we'll gC!t a feeling from the board and superintendent before then," he said. Randy Newton, Corona del Mar .Hlgh's senior clau president. differed from the other· students and said he doem't think the schools should teach sex education. He said IWdents would be subjected lo the teacher's biases and fears. "I wouldn't want ta go through it or have my children go through It. "Perhap.!1 the role of the schools should be to make the facts available to par- ents," he said. "U the schools can ex- plain to -parents this Is necessary for their child's wowth maybe they will take on the responsib!Uty.0 Clark didn't see much danger that sex knowledee could be damaginq lo youn,I!'· sters. "If you hit a child ~Ith too much information does he become . preoccu- pied with It? Or does he ignore it?" "This involves the emotional structure nf the individual which ts much more damaldng ll you tread upon," said Dr. Frtzzelle. '· . "One ariument aga~ ,stl education ls, that by the veey di~ion of it you \fill "jgn,ite the blood o{. the young and they wUl rush out and experiment,••· said Thomas Garver of the chamber com· mtttee. "In my own personal opinion high 'school kids already are thinking about sex," Said Miss Forehan. "They always say it 'is not the girl who knows wh,qt iS going on that is the unwed mother." F rom Pnge J SAND ... from the Corp& at the council's Nov. 24 meeting. -Ordered the contractor to re.move the boulders shoved lnto the water im· mediately. . -Demanded an end to after-~rs maintenance of sandhauling equipm nt in front of beach homes. -Directed the cily staff to prepare n ordinance establishing load limits on public st reets. "We don't wanl to be run over roughshod anymore," declared Coun- cilman Paul J . Gruber. "This city is faced with An emergen· cy," said Mcinnis. "And that emregency was created by the job contractor." Vice lofayor Lindsley Parsons con· eluded : · "Our beach In West Newport. may need restoration. but it doesn't need it this fast . Those trucks are v.•recking our streets." Coordinating Cotu1cil Meets -QiScusslon on "Where Are We G(!ing?'' \\'ill be held Thursday, Nov. 20. at a luncheon of the Harbor Area Coordinat· ing Cooncjl. i Discussion leaders will be Jim Wood' of Costa li1esa CHART and Bill Martin or Nev.· port Tomorrow. Every Harbor Area service club and e-0mmunil y organization·has been Invited to send a representative to the luncheon al wh.ich information cards wlll be turned in for ~n1pilatlon of a master cross in- dex of area clubs and organizations and their functions. Persons wishing to attend the Coordl· nalink Council luncheon, sched uled ror 12: 15 p.m. at Costa 11-fesa Golf and Coun· try Club, should telephone &42-0474 to make reservations by Wednesday . Russ Rocket Explodes \VASHINGTON <AP) -The explosion of a huge Soviet rocket on its launch pad m.iy have set Russian effortl to land a ma11 on the moon back t""O years and crippled lts m11nned space program. Aviation Week & Space Technology Magazine reported ~fonday the explosion IAst summer 1t Tyuratam destroyed the rocket the SOvlets had Intended to tArry the main portion of 1 manned orbiting platform into /pace last month. • • I The attoroey general actually will be In Dietz versus 'Ki.nf !n M~ociiio rtPrttentinj the · ;ie:9Ple iK Cl!lfornla in County, a divls,on of the DiitriCt OOUrt of tlahting ror access io hundreds of miles Appeal reversed the Superlor~~iirf: .. and of •state Udelands tor · a 'populaUOn that ruled that a long history of publii:. Usage grG'fS greater dally. .of a road across private priiperty Appear!n1 belott the comm!Qlon. Jay estabJis!>ed public rlJbt to keep usuw the L. Shavelson. aiaistant attorney general, road, . ,,l .. _FtidJy laid the cases before the 'Court The Navarro Beach Road had pl"."Wided "ire of statewkle significance and will. access for more than 100 years aM"WU Mt ·wry impart:ant. prece<iftrtl!" the only way to the beach in that viCU!ty. The appealed Ca5!!1 to be considered by The landowner had it blocked to "the lhe court both involve tideland acctss for public. The appellate court wiblock~ it. " Birthday Due Vic Andr~ws Plans America's By JEROME· F. COWNS Of IM hltr PllM S!tft ' Victor C. Andrews has a 200lh birthday coming up. IL isn't bl5. It's hi.s country's. Andrews, 56-year~ld Orange Coast civic lead~r rrom Laguna Beach, is hel~ ing the Nixru Administration prepare for the United States' bicentennial celebra· lion in 1976. It is the second big lob he has been asked to do by the Pres dent. The first is to serve a.s U.S. represen- tative -with rank of ambassador -to the 1970 Japanese World's Fair in Osaka. · When he is finished with that assign~ ment (Expo '70 opeo.11 in March and runs through September), he will start c<>n· centratin~ on his responsibiliUes as blcenteMial special assistant t o Secietary of Commerce Maurice Stans. Andrews, ti resident of Emerald Bay, said today preliminary d i 11 c u s s I o n s already have been held by the President's Blcente:mial Commission, of which he is a member. "We've cranked out a lot o ( possibilities, but have · arrived at no definite program as yet, and it will be a long time before we do." he said. "Bult witi say that some of the ideas proposed by commissioners so far are pretty spec- tacular." He said the Ideas range from having an "ordinary" world's fair to the creation o! a "new city o! the future." "The new city," be said, "would in. elude all the technological and en· vironmental advances man has been able to C<lnceive. "We're also talking about pro- gramming for the entire year, and we want to make the celebration a: tla· tion)'ide: ·thine." It is possible, he said, that monlQJy television specials will be included In the total program. "They'd start at the na· Uon~ ..founding In 1776, and wind uP in 1976, showing us where we began and where we're going." But, he emphasized, all such ideas are ten!alive. And they'll remain so until he and other commissioners are able to give their lull attention to lhe blg birth<lay celebraUon. For Andrews, that lime might not come until next Oct I. By then Expo '70 will be concluded and his responsibilities as the U.S .'s chi ef Liaison with Japanese World 's Fair of- ficials will be ended. "I'll be spending the next several n1ont~ flying between here and Osaka, tlelng down a11 the details," he said. 11And J couldn't be more pleased." Andrews, who heads Andrews Brothers, a large agricultural firm with farmlanct in Kern and Riverside counties, always has Hked to keep busy -In public causes. • _ He is a prime mover. In the anti-oil Coastal Area Protective League (CAPL), Is a member of the South Coast Com· munity Hospital board and a fonner president, and helped lilil hometown shove the Paclllc Coast Freeway rout.e behind Laguna's hills.' His salary for all these efforts has been nil. The same, however, can't be said about bi.s Expo '70 and U.S. Bicentennial jobs. For them, he gets SI a year. But millionaire public servant Victor C. Andrews couldn't care less. New Arriva:Js<.Given Rude Welcome-Robbed of $450 Two new arrivals 1.o the Orange Coast from Ontario. Canada aot an un\lill.81 welcome to Costa 'Meaa Monday nlgbt when lbey found themselves looKing dOwn the barrel of a .20 caliber sawed-off rine, as four men relieved them of $450 ·m chash. JQhn Patrick Pla)'ford, 20 and Kevin L. McDermott, 17. told police that the arm- ed rObbery followed a hitehhikiag jaunt from Huntington Beach to Laguna Beach. The Canadians Ulumbed a ride with an unidentified girl. who took them to Laguna, telling them she would help them find a place to spend the night. In Laguna Beach, the three were joined by four mE:n. all described as being about 18 yeaMi old. The car headed north again to Costa Mesa. Aller a stop at an unknown address, said Playford and fl.1c0ermott, the pair were driven to a field behind Fairview State Hospital at Estancia Drive in Costa Mesa. Poking' the shotgun in the Canadians' faces, one of the men said, "This is a rip. Gi ve us your bread." Playford and McDennott turned over . . their cash. then were forced to lie face down on the ground as the five drove out of &ight. The Canadians notified police, who gave them a free place to spend the night -the Costa Mesa City Jail. Police said . the case is under in- vestigation. G9ldwa ter Raps TV For 'Polarizing' U.S. WICHITA, Kan. (UPI) -Sen. Barry C.oldwater, (R·Arlz.). Monday night ac- cused "some" of the news mtdia of polarizing the nation. He said he did no'i believe Vice Presi· dent Spiro Agnew went far enough in his crlticis.rn of television netWorks. The "networks ''better start po I I c i n g themselves," said the 1964 GOP presiden- tial norr.!11ee, who said "Probably I received more abuse th..ri anyone in America." re"'' See the la rgest selection a l Spa nish and Mediterranean Dining Room groups. AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY for th e HOLI DAYS ,. - the .b<acb. -.: This was further complicated by an olc legaJ toughle,. .the whereabout$ Qf• °'4 mean high tii:le line. -, . -'":\ • Th& city said the tide line wu, at th4 base of the c!Uf. ~ plainl!Jr ~ ~ W8' watet)'a,,i of lh• curt bas• an~ ,ll!Jl'.th• beach was privately owned. · The trial court ruled tha:t thtre .w;i! dedication by implication. A divtii~ o; the District Court of AppeaJ·revened. tht superior court. -• J T~e positions of the appe~t~ .cour: justices appear to have been ~t Qdd1 altholurh the cases k•" · j...........,."nl dlssmiharities. •-1" '"l~' '° The State &lpreme Court decision t< hear ·the two matters in 'effect TerDove~ the appellate court . fmdlng1 · ,fi:oni Jh• book. The State Supreme CoLDi w~ wil: set tPe prectdent. if the malier tnd~ there and not In !lie U.S. Supnme ~t. ImplicaUons could be vas( to.aUif~ to corporate land owners, ito pUb'fiC. :aien- cies, to people in generil. . ·' The le~al proceedings, attcrneys -con- cede, might range to .1 bc'Oader is'4J'es. These n:iigbt be · propeitJ' ri~~(b!jlch ownership) versus the~ puBlie rigfti-to perch on private beach, In other words it the propertf 'GWJler has been a good guy and Jet peol)ll!')tlse his beach has he now lost any fuQlre riji!ht to deny them t'.he beach. · _ J There is the practical matter too of. this Issue forcing owners of beach to rush into the task of fencing it or guarding it to prevent lo&ing easement to the public. This has probably already happened to some extent because of the Deitz vs. King case. The State Supreme Court procedure will do_ubtleq_ have a bearing on Orange County's own Sall Creek Road ' case. William Wilcoxen, Laguna Beach at- torney, is fighting to overturn aban· donment of the road by c o u n t y supervisors (March 1968) to the LagUna Nlguel Corporation which lowns the· sur· rounding property and plans private development. A spokesman for the state attorney general said that Wilco1en has been in- vited to make suggestions to that office Jn the matter pending before the St~te Stit>reme Court. The matter \viii probably be argued In January but a decision is probably several months away -well Into 1!i7o. During the Friday meeting of the State Lands Commission, Houston I. Flournoy, state controller and chairman of the com· mission. said it should be represented by the attorney ge neral's office '1to protect the public interest." . Shavelson . said the attorney. genei;aJ's office intends "to Preserve as .mile~ pub1ic beach area 'as possible ·and to avoid fencing off of bea ches." The abandonment of Salt Creek Road touched oU an uproar that began as a rumble. The road abandonment was br9ught in- to sharp public focus in December during a hearing In Newport Beach of the Assembly Subcommittee on Beaches and Conservation. Mrs. Helen Keeley, fonner Lagun1 Beach vice mayor. testified at the time: "With this piecemeal abandonment or Salt Creek Road, it appears to me that the Oranae County Board or Superv150fs and the Ofan11e County Road .Department have totally disregarded the needs of the public by totally disregarding the Coun· ty's own Master Plan for Shoreli!le Development.'' Wilcoxen later took the county and the Laguna Niguel Corporation to court in an attempt -11lll going on -to overturn the abandonment of the road loop, once part or Coast Highway. Supervisors since have approved a SJ million allocation of tax funds for the purpose of beach acquisition. Negotia· tlons are under \\'BY by the couoty .to gain some type or acceu in the Salt Creek area. Also, William Penn Mott . state director of beaches and parks, has fi eld prelim inary discussions with another large landowner, the Irvine Company. about some type public access and· use ot the corporation's beaches between Lagu· na Beach and Corona de! Mar. I I ·---------~· -·----~~---~·----- ' • • • • ... \ ' 1.·~~~;~J;!}I '·,., . ,!; . . • ·'·~ *'J. • ')o' .. , . . " ' HPLlbAY HARBINGER -E;nV.!oped iri "the spirit of Christmas. -giving to others-~ewpprt ~eaeh Ebells aild JUniors Will pre- sent a holiday tea to raise fll£lds ·w1hi~h .\.'(ill ~n~fit youths· pf lhe • • Spinsters Welcome Harborifes Into Ranks • . - Mlss Le'slie Ne\\•quist and Miss Susan Frost (left to right), daughters of J\1r. and Mrs. John Fro5i and Mr. and J\1rs. James \V. Ne\vquist of Newport Beach, \Vere an1ong 25 young wc111t:!n introduced \o membership In the Spinsters. This group of 60 un· married women was founded as a social organiza- tion. \ . I· • ;> •• . ; --~----=~ --- ·. • , ' BEA ANDERSON, Editor l....,w,,........1a.1Nf N '""''' • Glitter Appliei;I . ' ·Hall · D'ecked. With Holly Decking the balls with holly and other glittering decor for Uleir annual Christmas tea and sale &re mem- bers ·of•NewpOrt Beach Ebells and Junior Ebells. , T-Qe }toliday harbinger will be· presented frqm 1 lo 3 p.m. Tb\irsday, Dec. 4, in the Ne,vport Beach Ameri- Cari LegiQO Hall. :Proc~s. will benefit the YOuth· Employment Ser· vice, a project started by the Juniors who with the sen- ior membership stiU co-sponsor the endeavor. On sale during the afternoon gala will be jeweled miniature trees which Will center tables. The arrange- mepts have been created by the Mmes. Edward A. Ro g- ers, James W. Hines. John Jacosky, F. E. FinS'~er, Stanley §tatia, Herbert Ford and Lois Kielsmeier. An cv-ray or boutique articles also will bring in rev- enue as Mrs. Vernace Morgan, ways and mean chair- man, anQ her staff ring up sales. ij,efreshmenls are being prepared by lhe. Mmes . 11. 0 . McGregor, Harry Goetz, Dorothy Stanwood . Louis Vautrot, Neil Williams and C. R. Forbes. Enter- tail)ing will be popular organist, Eddie Paddock. Lidoites. E~phasile Ploy's · th e Th in g ' • First Nighters ar\ticij>ate a gala evening tonight as they gather for cocktails and dinner at Karam's prior to opening of tido Isle Players' "PooiS Piira- dise'' at the Lido Jsle Clubhouse. \.Vorking out de-- tai ls ror th.e· 'l)v-ent are (left to right) Mr. and Mrs. Stuar"t · S\vidlef and "Pools" director Peter Church. Men Agree Ice Cube W'ill Last lon~ger If. ~he o·oesn't Melt . . ' DEAR READERS ' Remember the Jet· • ler 1....., Wyoming IC< Cube -Ille 18- year-old Casper culic with the high date ' turnover? She had been called everything from a tease to a mental case. A_prerbed .. student told her she'd probably have a nervous breakdown becau.54! of her pent up emotions. 'In desperation, Jhe girl performed an analysis on ·her social life. Her findings were as follows: Invariably the fellow was mannerly and rcspccirul or. the fir.st dale. On the second date he mad! it clear he wasn't about1 lo waste any more time. His question was to the .point: "How about it?'' On the. third date l if !he wasn't willing to lie down and talk thlngs over he would feed her telephone number to the nearcsl J!:O~t. Cube asl\c:I n1c, "Is vlrgl nlty out- "°ANN 'L ANDE RS ,~ ' moded? Do men REALLY w 11 n t everything they ask for, or are they merely testing? I ,lold her J'tt ask the renow1;. And I did. Here liri sa'mpllng of the replies'. VALE a.1\SS OF '4%: nis probably .,.·111 oome 11 a disappointment to moil college students, but you didn't invent liex, my little chickadees. There was a good bit o( It In "Che old en days. 0 J got my •hare, probnbly more. But the girl I mnrried "'as tbe one who said, "Nothing • doln1 antd we gtt marritd." We llad 101ne ~knock~own, drag-out ar1umeal1 but I Wll tetrelly ~appy &bat 1he WOD them all. We cdetn&e otr %IC.II 1tt1t mot1lb . UN IVERSITY OF NEBRASKA ' I wish lee Cube coukl listen '° the conversation in the men's dorm. It would eetUe the question once and for all. The nicknames · -"fl.1t1 tlress Mary,'• ''Horlzonllll Hefen" and "Round-heeled Ruthle'' are jUst a r~w. or course It's rollen, but most guys • ' figure if a girl doean't ha'lt any respect for herlelr, she·doeln't,deserve any lrom them. COLOftADO U.:·U I acore o. tM ae--. ctttd or \Mrd da&e, I pit CP HXl to Ute blbe'1 ,-.e amber. I• 1&1111C11 for ''Com- mualty Property." I've never dated a CP more daa1 three times. Tltey are .... ay 111perdam~ ad cna1U11 bom. FROM OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY ' 1£ tee Cube It lefl sittin1 home on her highly prized assels because she refuses to go lo bed on the third date, she shotdd ask herself, 4 'What~s wrong with my bail? Why do I at.tract such acu~?" FROM ORLANDO : Men llave been ·'makltag Jollu about c::ha1Uty for a looc lime. -Dar1D& Workt War 11 the GI't In Lo9doe. Aki, 0 1f a virgin walked dO'*'D Trafalgar Sttaare tbe 1tahle of Lord Nel1011 nakt ralH kb lult &G btr." Funy 'hw a py wUI bet! dowa wtUi aRywe who J1 wWlq bat be'li kill a py w.bo takes ad\'aatace of ld11l1ter, or, lleaYea forbkl, •11 daqbter. · U OF KANSAS : Cube Is lucky to learn on the third dale what tile jerk Is after. She can dump him fast Instead of wasting her vgluable time. WATERLOO, O~ARIO: AA I psychiatrist .[ can 131ure Ice Ct1be that vastly fewer peop~ become dl1t1rbed J>e(aqe of 1b1teaUoa compared wltb thote wllo are wracked wl&ll -Jflll c::a111td by sex11al proml1tu.lty. -W.f'.W. (MD) FROM OMAHA: I married at age 30. ~fy bride was 25. Neither my bride oor I had sexual intercourse until the night we were married . Please prinl my name. I am proud of it. -C.H.W:. DEAR C.H.W.: Coalf'ltuladou; Lov.,, bu.I· I'm not 111tt yOGr frlfe would care ftr ibe pabUclty. lf ll'I all Ute same-It JOI, I'll just 1se yow laUJala. Christma• can be a problem. Whal can YO:U give the person who has everythiftlf Arin Landers' new book~ "Truth. ls Stran~er," 'is available In book •lores, It also can be obtained by wrlt:ng Prenlke Hall, Englewood Cillis, N.J, Price, $4.16. Ann Landers will be glad to· help yoa with your problems: Send them lo har in care of the DAILY PILOT newapape.r, .enclosing a self-addreued, stamped envelopr • . I • -. -........ ·•-~'t"•"• ·•-.................. . • DAii. V I'll.OT ' Officer Delivers Verdict in Line of Duty l\totor officer Tony Villa samples old-fashioned southern fruit cake offered by Mrs. Jim Spears 0£ 11"/ewport Beach Police Wives Auxiliary while Mrs. Craig Johnson awaits verdicL The sale; which runs Peering ORANGE COAST pledges from National Panhellenlc s<r rorities at Cali!ornia State College at Long. Beach have been named. Alpha Epsilon Phi pledge is Cheryl Langner of Westmin- ster; Tri Dells, Joan Benson of Newport Beach and Patti P!ister, Hunlington Beach; Delta Gamma, Jennifer Faulk, Seal Beach; Della Zeta, Ce- c e I i a Spears, Huntington Beach, and Sigma Kappa. Su- 1 a D Mennich, Huntington Decorations For Holidays Suggested Suggestions for h o l i d a y decorations will be given members of South Orange Coast Chapter of Zeta Tau AJpha Thursday, Nov. 20, at 7:30 p.m. in the Corotl!I del Mar home of Mrs. Robert McLean. Christmas handcraft pro- jects will be discussed by Mrs. Bruce Peterson. Assisting will be P.trs. Patrick McDonald, president and P.trs. Leslie Peterson. Further queslio.1s will be answered by fttrs. 1ttcLean at 6«-1723. Writer Speaks In Long Beach Newspaper columnist Mrs. Ted Krec will address members of the Wo1nan's Auir.:iliary or American In s titu te of Mining, ?.fetallurgical and Petroleum Engineers al a luncheon meeUng Thursday, Nov. 20, at noon. A business meeting at 10:30 a.m. in Vlctor Hugo's , Leng Beach, will precede luncheon. Reservations may be made by phoning ~trs. Thomas G. PetruJas, 897-4288 . Around .• ··? .. l j Beach, MR. AND J\.1RS. J o h n Benson of Newport Beach vacationed in Puerto Rico as guests of the Ford Motor Company. Benson was one of 900 winners in a sales contest sponsored by the Autolite-Ford Parts Division. J\IRS. THOJ\fAS F. Rafael oC Corona dE>I Mar is serving on th e arrangements committee for the Cardii.1al's Christmas Party for Children, to be given in the Hollywood Palladium Sunday, Dec. 6, KAY NELSON Eng ogod April Date Selected through Christmas, will finance auxiliary projects. To order cakes, those interested may phone Mrs. John Richard, 642-9989. Sole Searching Good Business By JUDY JIURST Of tN 01Ur PJlll 51111 Bert Geller does a Jot of sole searching in his business. He should since he·s a "sole" brother. Not really a brother, Geller is the nephew of the late Andrew Geller who starred a family shoe business in 1903. Today the plant. has blossomed into a I a r g e manufacturing industry i n Brooklyn. Gellpr s~ run the gamut in sty., I~ from pale blue · Ing pumps to · high;lliiil • bools. All are high qU.iobd regal in sty!. Ing. The price tag matches their rich appearance. "Women purchase o u r shoes, not kiQs in high sci1ool and col~r. The youngsters can't afford them," he stated simply. HiJ [ootwear starts at around $30. And those soft, comfortable, chunky loafers were $32 retail. Blue has been a popular col· City Attorney Discusses Lo nd HAWAIIAN SHOP'S UNmD NATIONS AUOCIATION •1n SHOP .... ~ &ifl.-U11lcef c.1111 hM1911 bl-4 e New,.rt lffch e 64 4·0GJZ l>IOUlllS1 Dtllf 1e 19 6 -l'r ... r a M .... r II M t1)1 •• -· ·--· ··-·-·-· -4' .Horoscope Libra: Don't .Be Wallflower WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 19 By SYDNEY OMARR Ia srooml•s, eoacentrate oe lair, facial make-up -ud a.ead .,_ bl ltDenl. Moom la Ariel, .,,o.he Urua1, ilMU- catel Nml IDIY be lteautroeg to .... """' di plomacy Illes aa1 GI -· Al aa llldMd· ual, keep your Mad. Dol't compoud error by adla1 H lmpulle aad fOflelUq lo1lc. ARIES (Matth 21-Aprll 19): One you trust could act 1n ec- cenlr.lc manner. Your pefso& al cycle is higti; taU· inltla- Uve. Don't permit persons who thruh for amwera to use you. aa: scapegoat TAUllUS (April :IQ.May :IO): YOU break IOOSe from some • co n t e.n t I o n 1, restrictions. Leave detaill to others. Thie is your day for self-expfesslon. Imprint your own style. Hear your own voice. Be yourself. GEMINI (May 2l.June 20): UBRA (Sepl Zl-Ocl 22):, Where) previousl,Y you were quiet there is action. Sur .. prises occur. You gaJn favor .. able attention. Publicity "°' companies your efforts. No day to be a wallflower. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Recognition re.celv~. Your steady efforts of past come to att.enUon of those who can aid. Obtain hint from Llbra mes. sage. Accent on relaliOM with workers, associates. SAG!TrARIUS (Nov. :ti- Dec. 21): Romantic interest highlighted. If single, you coo kl · encounter e1clth1g indi- vidual who growa close. u· married, child or mate could do somethi~ which especially pleases you. CAPRICORN. (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Changes occur in what was a steady routine. Main- tain ~ise. You can cope with individual who acts in eccen- tric manner. Sense of humor is definite asset Substitute laughter for tears. Some previous beliefs may be shattered. Be a creative think· er. Means don't be afraid to change your mind. False pride is your chief adversary. Re- view facts. Base decisions on actUalltie.s. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): If journey is not ~s­ sary, bypass it. Confusion ex- ists. Plenty of laughs indicated tonight. PISCD (Feb. 19-March 20 ): MRS. WILLIAM BYRNE Single Ring Nuptials CANCER (June 21.July 22): Persons who have much to do with what you do act in UD· usual manner. Key ls to move with the Ude. By cooperaUng, your prestige is enhanced. Know this and don't fight city hall .• LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Obtain hint from Vlrio mes-- sage. Be careful with money, personal possess.ions. You can gain if you are thorough. Not wise to delegale duties. One who is sincere could lack con- fidence. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you are dynamic, original, pos.se8" a unique way of expressing yourself. Many claim you are a born leader. These qualities have been much in evidence in recent months. Now you should put together puzzle pieces. Find out where you stand. Draw line between being kind and being foolish. Acapulco Picked For Honeymoon Traveling today could present some problems. Be sure of itinerary. Know in which di. rectlon you are going. Some who give directions may be confused. Double check. . VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22): Leave financial area to others. You tend today to fall for schemes. Key is to be patient and analytjcal. Otherwise, you could lose something of value. No time to be a money plung· er. Easy. To find out Pl'IO(f 1bolil VOU•Mtl 11\d 11lrotoey, O<der SYdllW OtMrr'1 »- 1>1" bookl ... The Trull! AbOul A1trt1I· °''' Sirrw:I blrtr1C11!e 1fld » (tnt1 to Omit( 8oolclet, Ille DAILY PILOT. ftDJI' l2C, Grind Ctnlrll $11Uon, HI" Yort;, H.Y. 10017, Acapulco was the ha.1ey- moon destination of William Alexander Rusu Byrne of Balboa Island and his bride, the former ·Cheryl J e a n Bogenrlef. The Rev. Lionel Dorois performed the single ring nuptials in Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church. The bride Is the daughler of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Bogenrief of Cora..1a del Mar and the benedict is the foster Newlywed Fred Ryans ~~~~;:,~1~:;~~~:~ selected an original gown of R d · candlelight peau de soie with esi e in San Diego :~;~n ~=~e:::i f.~~~~i~ ~,· . enhanced with pearl clusters Making their home in San.~ .t'.:'ftyan was his brother's best a.id lace. She carried a Diego following a wedding ~p , ~ tnan and ushers were Ralph cascading bouquet of white to Hawall are Mr. and Mn. Griffin the bride's brother roses and stephanotis. Smith, another foster brother. The Irvine Coast County Club was the reception setti·.1g where Miss Cheryl Singer circulated the guest ·book. Among the 200 friendll and relatives congratulating the couple was Mrs. W. R. Fout.<> of Whittier, the bride's maternal grandmother. The former Miss Bogenrief attended Ohio State University where she affiliated with Delta Gamma sorority. Her hus· band is assistant golf pro at Irvine Coast. FoJlov.·ing their wedding trip the couple will reside oo Balboa Island. Service Group Forms in NB Fred Bl.nglman Ryan U who Charie; Bernat and Dal~ Miss DeeDee Smith, foster were married in St. Andrew's Lenk. Steven Griffin, a.'1other sister of the bridegroom was Newport Beach Police Guild, Preabyterim Church. brother, was ring bearer and maid of honor in a gold crepe a new service organiza~lon, The Rev. Di. Charles .H. Pan;t Dooley was flower girl. empire style gawn. Dressed will gather tonight at 8 hi Dierenfield performed t h e A reception for 150 guests idenUcally and carrying a Ensign Junior High School. dou.ble ring rites for the took place in the church's cascade of · autumn flowers Membership will consist of daughter of the Leslie M. Grif· Fireside Room with Mrs. was Miss Candee Parkhill, regular and reserve police of· fins of Newport Beach and the Milton F. Lorenz, the bride's bridesmaid. ficers in Newport Beach. son of the Fred B. Ryans of great.aunt clrculaUng t h e Jerry Smith was his foster Further infonnaUon may be Santa Ana, Heights. guest book. brother's best man. Ushers obtained by calling Mrs. Reed ~ former Sandra :i-ee Special guests were 111rs. were Paul Bogenrter, the Gloshen , 962-3420 or Mrs. Griffin selected a candlelight Zetta Anita Griffin of Boron, -=b=r=id=e'='=br=o=th=e=r=an=d=Owi==· g'=h=t =W=i=ll=ia=m=Spe'=irs=:::, =546-=3=932=. == crepe empire sheath and a full and Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Brim·J1.-~::~::i!e~e~~S.Sh;en:,; ~~~s: M~,~~~r~;~. LIDQ ~ULE y I roses and baby's breath. Wrinkle of Sacramento the · Attending her were Miss benedict's godmother. ' Joanne Paul, maid of ho:ior: The bride and her husband W z . _ I Mrs. Robert Ryan, matron of are graduates of Newport • honor; Mlss Jenni Schachttli, Harbor High School and at-STRICTLY JUNIORS cousin ol the bri®groom, and tended Orange Coast College. NOW OPEN .•. In The Alle y Of Mrs . B.everly Gavel, Currently he is stationed with bridesmaids. the U.S. Navy in San Diego and has served one year in Vietnam. l 424 'flA LIDO ALL ClllDIT Panel Set By Juniors Uncle Len O ffers Pri1es Every S1turd1y Open Fri. Eves, 'Ill 9 NIW'°llT l lACH CAllDS WILCOMI • IMPORTS OF IMPORT Si)vorplated jewel box. comb and mirror set. Jewel box, S6. Comb & Mirror. SS. French folding scissors. $7 .SO. SIA.VICK'S Jtwtltr' Sine• 1917 NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 II FASHION ISLAND ' )t04 N. M•l11, $e11I• A11e ' Meilld•v't~n1 S1lurd1v-l !...C 1177 HAllOI IOULIVAID COSTA MISA Vour c11 ..... AtC1!Ulll Wei(--a.nkAmlflCIN. M••Mr Cll•rot· ... 548·7808 o,.. Met4ey, M;.r, 1•rtl .f:)t P·""' • I • I .. • -·-c;osia Mesa -. -· . .. -, T~ESDAY£f'IOvpMBER 18, 196 ;:::: VO!ff..'2, NO. 276, 3, SECTIONS, lQ;fAGES . ':-QR;t.NGE COlJ!ffi', CALIFORNIA • -oe ' DIJL Y PILOl ll•H ,,_ .. Deck the Poles· Light standards near 1vlesa North Shopping Center at Fair- view Road and Baker Street are a bit more colorful today. Let's see, if Christmas decora- tions are goiog up, \ h e n Thanksgiving ~n't be far off. 2 Newcome1·s Get Rude W eJcome- ;Robhed of $450 " Two new arrivals to lhe Orange Coast !rom Ontario, Canada• got an unusual Welcome to Costa Mesa Monday night when they foond themselves looking down the barrel or a .20 caliber sawed-off rifle. as four men relieved them of $450 in ctiash. John Patrick Playford , 2Q and Kevin L. _McDennott, 17, told police that the arm- ed robbery followed a hitchhiking jaunt from HWltin~n Beach to Laguna Beach. 1 The Cinadians thumbed a ride with an unidentified girl, who J took them to Laguna, telling them she would help them find a place to spend the night. Jn Laguna Beach, the three were joined .by four men, all described. as being about 18 years old. The car headed north again to Costa Mesa. Arter a stop at an unknown address, said Playford and J\1c0ermotl, the pair were drive n to a field behind Fairview Slate Hospital at Estancla Drive in Costa Me sa. Poking the shotgun in $he Canadians' faces., one Of the men sald.1 "Th·is is a rip. 'Give us yOur bread." ' Playford afld J\fcOer~t turned over their cash, then were foried to lie face °down on the ground as the 'five drove out of sight. ~ The CanadJans notified police, who gave them i free place to spend the night ._the Costa Mm City Jail. ' Police sakl the case 'is under in· vesligation . enne .. C-ouncil ·• Ill Accord ' ' / Mesa Peace Pact Trotted Out for -a Bit By JANICE BERMAN Of ,,. Deify ,11 .... ,... Councilman William St. Clair and City Manager Arthur R. McKeniie sat quietly as City Attorney Roy June read a peace pact hammered out by the three men prior to Monday night's Costa Mesa City Council session. • St. Clair and ~!cKenzie asked that the joint statement be put to a vote of the council. Council members endorsed it unanimously. The "Administrative Policy Statement" replaced another statement that St. Clair had planned to deliver. St. Clair's original statement would have criticized city handling or financial matters, elaborating an charges he has leveled at members• of the city ad· ministration in a feud that' has grown in proportions in receat weeks. Instead, the joint statement of SI. Clair ' I t ,......w ., ..... Buried. Hat~het .Strikes Again Less than an .hour after Councilman William St. Clair and City Manager A. R. MCKenzie buried 1he hatchet, Councilman George ,Tucker anc! Vice Mayor Robert. M. Wllson unearthed it. again sending charges and countercharges f l y i n g through Costa Mesa Cijy Coondl chapibers. It all started when Councilman William St. Clair requested reimbursement for $19.50 spent at a dinner meeting. It wiUI Couni;Uman George Tucker trading finished· _with Goimcllman Oeoret Tucker tr.ldlng ~ words with Vice Mayor Robert M. Wit.son. St. Clair told the Council that Mayor Pinkley had "redlined" hi& expense state.. ment for the dinner. Mayor Pinkley told the council that he had redllned the voucher because St. Clair had failed to reveal who his dinner companions .were. St. Clair said the dinner was to discuss Costa Mesa's finances , and that he did not want his dinner guests subjected to "political.pressures," which might occur had the Mayor known who they were. "\Ve couldn't eat in Costa Mesa because (St. Clair's guests) didn't want to be seen wilh 'me. on matters of city business," said St. Claif. Tucker noted that be, too, had had an expense account redlined by the mayor. who reviews all expenses incurred by members-of-the City Council. Tucker said he felt that he shoUld also be reimbursed for his dinner bill, wh.ich was about $7.00. Like St. Clair, Tucker w,oukl not reveal wt. his diMlt oam· panions w.mi becauso, "I don'.t.~"nt to put people on the spot ror political pressu~. t think the city should p.y It. I'll stand behind it now and IO years (rom now." But Tucker said he would not make a formal request to be ~imbursed. Wilson spoke up, siding with the Mayor in saying that councilmen should be will- ing to name their guests paid for out or city fwkis. Tucker lashed out at Wilson. "You have the record of spending more (See HATCHET, i'age 11 A polio Astronauts Set For Moon Trip Tonight SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPl l - Apollo J2's astronauts looped the moon with unerring precision today, inspected tht:!ir landing ship a final lime and sa id "we're ready to go" fo r a pinpoint touchdown on the lunar Ocean or Storms tonight. "We've checked all the things we're supposed lo and they're all shipshape:" Alan L. Bean radioed earth from inside the lander Intrepid's cabin. So perfect was every aspect of America's ·second lunar landing mission that flighf director M. Pete Frank told newsmen "it's at least 100 percent ef· fective. I'm just amazed ." He said nothing, including a minor skin irritation reported by flight commander Charles "Pete" Conrad, stood between Ulf crew and their landing at 10:53 p.m. (PST) today. Conrad. Bean and Ri chard F. Gordon :slept through the day. Gordon will re- main in lunar orbit aboard the command ship Yankee Clipper tonight while his STORIES ON LANDING, MOON WALK-PAGE 4 crewmates unlatch the landlng craft from the Clipper and descend to the surface. Shortly after noon, the space agency announced that a solar flare had been observed on the sun, but that "based on the previous information we had from this Oare we would ..not_expec:t it to be a problem" that would endanger the astronauts. It was the same flare first seen Nov. 2, and the sun had simply rolated until It was in view again from Earth. Bean woke up in the middle of the Mon- day sleep period and ·asked ground con- trollers to keep an eye on the guidance rockets on the spacecraft because "we seem to be firing a little more ... around the.moon than we had imagined." He also asked how often to take (See APOLLO, Page 21 a11d McKenzie agreed "that no problem has ti.isled with respect lo any misap- propriations or shortage of funds." The budget fonnat used b)l-ths--tity :s beinlJ studied and updated, said the stale- ment, "to confonn with the needs of a grow inc city." SI. Clair and ~tcKenzie recommended more detailed accounting of revenue and expenditures.with regard to the State Gas T'ax Jo'und and the Arterial Highway Finance. Program Fund in the budget revenue summary. They called for full disclo!ure in the ci· ty budget of the cest Or any new program for the city that requires the expenditure of city funds, and inclusion of a stale· ment or the probable effect upon lbe balance of the budget. Olher budget changes recommended in· eluded : -"The new budget format will Include for comparative purposes an estimate of the current year's expenditure for departments and actual expenses of the second· previous year by departments." -An indexed accounting coding system in all· budgets and report.s. to develop unifonnity. • -A biannual· fiscal meeting between 1he City Council and iU staff, with emphasis on budgeled versus actual ex· pendilures. 1 , 1.trointiP.on l8e ,um~.~· of te· cent weeks P3=l~~~i afid St dalr (lee ....,,.., ... hp I ) -" Coordinating Council Meets Discussion on "Where Are '.We Going?" will be held Thursday, Nov. 20, ~t a luncheon of the Harbor Area Coordinat- inil CouncU. Discussion leaders will be Jim \Vood of Costa ~tcsa CHART and Bil,! Martin of Newport Tomorrow. Every Harbor Area service cl~b and community organization has bef:o invited to send a representative to the luncheon al which information car~ will be tu~ in for compilation of a master cross tn· dex of area Clubs and organizations and their functions. Persons wishing to attend the Coordi· nating Council luncheon, scheduled for 12: 15 p.m. at Costa Mesa Golf and Coun- try Club, should telephone 642-0474 to make reservations by Wednesday. Ordi11ance Set On Swap Meets An ordinance on permits for the week· end swap meets at the Orange County Fairgrounds will be discussed at the Dec. I meeting of the Cosla Meu City Council, after the council members have a chance to study the weekend sales. Councilman William Sl. Clair suggest- ed the delay Monday night, saying it would give the swappers a chance lo "police it themselves.'' Noting that such swap meets carry no city sales lax, St. Clair said, "1 don'& want to set up a place out here where people compete with local merchants on the weekend." "Let's gel over there and see what's going on and report back on it," he said. ·studettt• Abo Cluina School• 'A Ira id' :Kids ~Give Folks Low Marks on Sex By THOMAS FORTUNE Of IM .. .., l"lllt Jt.tff Ttiey said most parents don't do the job teachlnl about sex educalion they should. That ii; one pot.it rive high school stuJenls made !\fonday when they talked to a committee of Ncwpcrt Harbor Chamber of Commerct looking into the feasibUlty of RIC education in the schools. A couple or their other patnts: -Nowpqrt·M"' Unified Schoo I 6ist.rld'1 leadership is artald or ser edtJClton. -Cl111room aex education 11 not i t.Ing to have the ettect of making •tudenla want to go out and seic eic· Perlma1t. The flv., youths, all student officers. were from Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor high schools. Students from Estancia and Costa l\.lesa hi&h schools will be heard by the Chamber committee later. ·Three of the student! said their parents had not lhou&ht It necessary to dlsctlss sex -.ith them. One said his' mother had ta'lked with hlm about Jt. One did not say. "Most of my . education wu acquired rrom slumber partles," volunteered one ot the students. "It's an embarraslng subject for par· . enta," said another. "It Is very difficult for a ldd to picture his own parents hs.Y· ing sexual relallons. 'Ibere are a lot of hangups there." A boy broughl up !he double standard. 1 ''!\ty father looks at my sisk. different,'' he said. "!\fy father thinks: 'My boy. It's an right for him to go out and get st1. J'm proud of him. But my daughter. I'll string up her boyfriend by bJ. lhumbl.' " "How should sex be taught by parenll?" asked Dr. NoJJ,1 Frl:u.e:lle, chairman of the Chamber committee. "The first thing I would~ say la. ob- jectively and thaJ'li 'a'lffully -hard for parents -to sit dOwn with )'otl and tell you all '\hey know sex to b.e and their ex- perience. But kids have to know," uid Lei'lie Forehan, Har~r High11 Girls League presldC)'ll. "The school is. better equipped to han- dle a subjective question ob_Jectlvely. •• said Arnold .Clark. litudent body vice ' ._, pr"ldenl at Cti(ona d~l Mar Hfgh. ·He suggested .thue Is less persotu1l em· barra1.1ment that way and a better chir.lCe: for communication. But he added, '11 have no objection if a parent feels he cc:n do a better job." • • 1 Dr. Frlzzellle 1ave his thoughU on why' parents don't aet Into frank sex discussions "Ith their children. "You hdve a tendency to feel a child is younger than he feel1 hlmself,0 ' he said. '"You don'l feel he is yet capable with wisdom of making judgments. A'.1d ycy 41re not wllllng Jo trust thla responsibility W an (!Slts\de peraon like a teacher.'' Oft& Meeks, Key Club president at CoroQa del Mar High, said he has had . !See SEX CLASSllS. P ... II ,_ ' ' -· ---- -' ' -----· ' . l • ~ U.'.I T.._.... PATRIARCH PASSES -Joaeph P. Kenn~y . 3~·2 Decision . . Gives Ontqn,.' . . ' ' . ' Trettsurer .}ob Costa Mesa.city councilm~n voted 3 to z Mofi1:1ay night to accot..#le GriUen- hagen-K~ report, with11tl recommen- .iiiiiii'ililt ely FJiiOnce ilf,.Mt"lloi>ert Oman be . appointed Costa rlesa City TreaW . 1 '~ no vole! were eoW.c/imM Wll· llam st. Clair. who h" long ~ the findings and methods or the rePQrt and ~11cllman George A. Tucker, wb'o said, "T,-o' h~ads are better than one, even if one Is ·a sheep's head." Discusslon ot the report came hard on the heels 'or the "Administrative Policy S.lateqie:11t". issued jointly by · Cl~y Man- ager Arthur R. McKenzie and St. Clair. 'And St. Clair voiced his objections genUy, while delivering the same mes- sage he has bet!n iiving fellow council members sin~ the report was made publlc. .. "f think you're mak1'1g a 1mlstake," -said. st. CJ.air. "These fund~ 1 ~ oot handled in a businessll,ke a'nber; r don't think we should place the ai:qalalUon aq<t accotintfng or ftinds in the hlnilS of one man who I don't feel it qUlilled." · : Tucker said, "I'll try tb be very tact- rul ." Blit later. he changed his mind. "I've tried tact and diplomacy,"· he said,. "I'd hate to L!ee the council make a decision that could hurt this city. It's not enough to say the prollt ls six per· cenL when the treasury bl Us . are paying eiglit percent." • ' He · 11aid the acceptance of the report "woukl limit uS to one position instead of two. If you arc detcrllliQe<j to ellm· inate one position, I don't think you gentlemen are proper.'' Tucker urged the council to "open the door to applications." Que11tlonlng ·oman's ability to assume the treasurer's duties, Tucker.said, ''.'Ibis Is not character assa1slnatlon. I'm talking about fact!!. You can't understand calCu· Jus if you h.av~n·t had soi:qe Jearnlng in school. Vbu don't team 'Jt by wllk.lng the sfreets and playing hockey." "You need success in the acatlemic field," said Tucker, telllnlJ the council • to "open it up and let's &et what's available." "Oman doesn't have to lose his job. Someone rould be over him," Tucker concludOO. Councilman Willard T. Jordan spoke in fs.vor of accepting the report. "We've been fighting the battle of the treasury for some Ume. I think we had a report. from a reputabl.e firm. Thef. did it in all good faith and 'fairness, 1 he said. • , "I see nothing wrong wilh placing the tr,easury under the wing of t~e finance director. I can't see much poiul in appdh:i.~tna: a treasurer.'' " Moving !or acceptance, of the re~ and appolntment of Oman, Jordan_ lad- ed, "I'm not about lo ask Oman to resiRJ1 ., fioance director just to accept the treasurer position,'' • · ' Ml\)i>r A. L. Pln~ley and Vice Mlydr Rober{ M. wnson •greed wltb Jons.ii: . . Stock M.trket - NEW YORK (AP l-The •lock markot began firming late thls aITerno6r11Rtr a sinking &Pell during ea'rly ttadl:nl: Volume was falrly active. (See quota- tions, Pages 8-i). The market whittled Its I015eS afler1 the Dow Jones average of ~ JnduaitiAls drifted near the 840-level, Which mark'et chartists fetl Is a vltal level. ~-. ' r .. -,_ , TEN CiNTS . • -- . •. --' . - • . . . P ' . h __ atnarc __ . · l -' . --... _ ~Se.sLong _ t • ' • tife-~Fight HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (UPI) - .i~eph. P. · ~e~y. multimUUOOitre fa~ of a .Pr-.ident~•n4 't'tQ 'U.S. senators in a tragedy-stalked family, died today. He was 81. Ttfe ~iar_ch of the fabulous Kennedy clon who lDSt two tons -one a President and the other a senator -to asSasslns' bt11Jets was an invalid since felled by a stroke_ne_arly eigh~ years,ago. -. · Death came at 1:05 a.m. (PST) after Kennedy, w!lo was ·u.s. ambUudor ttl Great Bi'italn at the start of World'Wlr II. tuftt~the latest in a il.ri1i1 of bnrt attacks'Saturday. · A family spokesman issued the follow- ing statement: · • "Ambassador ·Joseph P. Kennedy died peacefully•today at his home in liyaMis Port. He Was 81 years old. ''Mr. Kennedy. was, pronou~ ~eed ·al: 11 ,05 a.m.,(ES~), by _hJs:J!hyslc!Blf, 0.. Robtt( D. Watt. With hlm at the tline o! his-death were bis .wife and the membert ol bis' family'." . · • , • ·. · S.o. Edward M. Kenne'dy ID-l\l"'· l, his lonf surviving son who •eent tot night. in a lonely vigil a( hii'Jflttie:t's' bedside, was fillh. the sehlor · Keimecb'.) 1".hen be died. ·Tiie, '""'"''.'·~· -~ =-Kenn<\d)\jll> ·w)le,J,o(l:""')I, ~ Shriver, u.S. 1mbft , 111-"" {It.franc~ ,also were 'present., . . · , , ''!!i1IY "°""" ,.lei t)le 'lul t'itp of the Rdman ca:thotic ClJurch Wfl;.e -f~· mjnijl<,ild to Ke'...Wtwo or thrio ,-.. wlllilii ilie-la!t IU-.ntJi. ·Al,'~ ~s .CoJtd\~. ,deierlora~ed, . 111 n:i.em.bei's . or the &1~orous I Kennedy family gathered at ~ Kennedy eotn· pound ov~rlooking: Nantucket ·Sound where he once .sailed with his family. JacCtuellne' Kennedy Onassis, Widow or President John F .. Kennedy,, flew Jn from her illand home ' at .Skorpios, Greece. Mrs; Ethel Kennedy, w.ldow of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, came rrom Washington. t.. _ A man who eqvated rrioney wlt)l power and power with money, Kenriedy_molded a, political family of flair and ~­ aglnaUon. Kennedy, a saloonkeeper's son, amass· ed~a· fortune-estimated at up to a half· bUh.on dollarst ~e admittedly was one of America 's 20 wealthiest men. But for all his wealth, his life was ~ar· red with · tragedy. Four ol l;lis nine chil · . (See KENNEDY.,Pe1e I) Hungry Burglars ~t Food, Dl'.ink Thieves with a.1ly one Uilng In ~ind - food -robbed lhe larder or a j\'e~t Newport man Tuesday and passed up the nomal type of loot bur1lars like, police reported. Martin Zaldo, 30t {old police someone broke into bis-apartment "l ~ Sea¥tor.e Drive and cleaned out the freeµ?r and li- quor cabinet. .. 'I'he thieves bypuied . exp ens Iv c household items and made off with froz- en melts and shrimp. • · 1 Then to wash It ·all down they took • jug ol Scotcll ·anc1 ooe ol .gin, officers s81d. Oraage Cean ........ ''More of 'the same" Is the cryp- tic comment~rmntlb:e-we..1.t~rman for Wedfte.aday,. wtth-lnitaUn& air 1Urred by 'SaJtttt Alll" winds and femperature& lrl the upper 70'1 aioftt: the coast...:-~ ·.. .Nsme::too" ~ It's 1he bi9~1t week o/ ~the li~t U1earer· .. sec1ou OPl iht Orange CIAt' -ri% new pla~s a?ening 0-ud )jz otliera .tlUl on ""' boardl...Stt Theater Notes, P0oe lB: · . :l ' .. u " " " M • • .. " .. • " . ,_, ....... ,_. ' .......... ,.... ... --. ..., ........ ...... • .. ,4 , .... .._... ... ==-;: -.. ........... ,. ...,. ..... ... ............. ,. 1 DAil V PILOT C ' PreJident Jtleeu Tut;~• President Nixon got reminder today that Thanksgiving Is not fer off. He receiv,td a 'pa!f. of IiVe,~*-pound, broad-breasted white turkeys raised in Virginia's Shenandoab Valley. Birds were giftl of the Na-tiona!"Turkey Feder,uon. · · . . . Ne"Tort Y ncht· Concerto Winner of La Pai Race By NORMAN II. ANDERSOll Of .... Dellr .. !Irr lllff Two N!wport · Harbor boats, bolh Columbia 57ll;have caplund top laurel! Jn the 3rd annual Long Bach to La Paz )'acht race. f1oom Page 1 HATCHET •.. J.nO!l"Y than anybody on this council. and I have the ·1"""1 of spending the least ' . tried to·reply •. • cut lilm off brusquely. "l'm ukiJ>i questions. Do Y'i" liot all these drinks when you're on junkets to other part& of the country?'" " Said Wilson, "You don't want to··htar answm. You want to talk:It's not'Wtlih ii~:taJktOfoU,-George." .! . , CoimclJznan Willard·,:f, .. Jordan, ,~g to re.More calm, sald,:to. t'1ie Ma""''' •:i couJd 1care less who you're with. You,un PJ)lllntand that on a cootr9versiaJ sub- ject, ii ·might be subject ·to polllical ~::·~:~7·~~pa~·~ money." Tucker returned to the attack. "1 ·don'.t think it's necessary, Bob, to list the names of your guests when you're riding in a cab at a convention in New York," he said to Wilson. ., Mayor Pinkley said, "If this council (just) would change the policy 110 some.. one else can be th.e judge and . jury. It's no fun. Give it a whirl some day," he told Tucker. He a~ded that as long as he was cheek-: ing expense accounts, "I don't Uilnk it's proper aceountlng procedure to jult go. where you want to." Replied Tucker, "I think It's my responsibility to talk to the voters to justify whoever I choose to talk to." Tucker moved that all expenses be revealed by councilmen to one anothtr. and that questionable ex~nses be ap. proved by the council in a regular war- rant. while Mayor Pinkley would still have the right to approve or deny ex- pense vouchers. 1be motion was approved 3·2, with Pinkley and Wilson castin& the dissenting vote1i. And Councilman SI. Clair's warrant for $19.$0 was unanimously approved. OAll i PllOT OUNGI Ct»M" PUIL tlMINO C::CWAN't lt•Mrl N. 'W ... .,. .................. Jtck It. C111lty v.. ,,....,.. .,.. ._ .. ,......, n....., kH'til ..... Tiii•""" A, M,r,llli~• _.., .. ----llO Wnt a., St-I M•"'• Acl*••u r.o. a.,11 ... t2Ult --...,.,.1"ell: '1111 WWt ..... ....,. "'"""""'9"tfl: m ,.._, ,,_ ............. !"'*'~ -"" """ John Hall'• Concerto Jrom Newport Hlrbor Yacht Club Is Overall corr6:ted time winner ·and Iii'!( Jn CJasa A, with Ilonlthy 0, skippef'd by R o b er t Beauchainp from NHYC, se«1nd overall and second in Class A. lt's .lhe secO~d Li Paz race victory for Hall. He was first in Class A in 1967 when he skippertd Simoon. Third overall is Class D boat. Aqwarius, an-Ericson 35, skippered by John Holiday of Long Beach Yacht Club, which wat first 1n ltk:clas!. ·: -· Class A and Class D boats took most or the · ~nofs .. \'finctw'!d PWiie. 73-foot ~ ~waa fir~t to . finish Satllrday morn- ing, but wound up; t>ecause of time it had tO'gjv't away. u ·on1y fourth.in clus and mfith·:·OveraJI. ~B1lckfh\~ anOther 73-!0ot lctfc:ti which' f6tl0wed 'Passage 16-0ss "the line about an hour later, tooli 'ihitd m- clasa and 1eventh overall. . EoUtth ,80d "fifth. pt,:ces overall :were Uken' 'b)' tWo CJaSs ·o boalS, Q9n'i · J., from CYG,· second-in~ c~aa aii'd L' Anegro, Rlehmond Yacht Club1 3rd in class. Three boats, all Cl111 0, .were unr~. thia, morning, accordln& to Carron Huj)son of Newport Beach who iJ n;iorutortng·radlo ref>cma frorrl VectOr at La Piz. They · were Malobl, Posada Manana II-and Al Vlento. Trophy pmentauons will take place tonl1ht at the l.os Arcos Hotel Jn La piµ. .'f!Je i:~ce _up)the Baja Calllornia coast, according to ~ports, was a rough One, ~th winds forcing a tacking duel. Today in· the La· Paz harbor, winds were r~ported blowing at 30 knots and most boats were putUng out extra anchors. Re&\llts in clas.s and overall: CLASS A ConcertO, t-1 ; Dorothy O, 2--2; Blackfin, 3-7; Windward Pasaage, 4-9; Rascal, 5·22~ CLASS B Bohemia, ·1-10: Charisma, 2-12; Ariana, 3-lS; Pantera, 4-14i lrish Mist ~16· Serapis, S.17; Vector, 7-19; Robon' III, 3. 21. CLASS C Tanqueray, 1-6; Perlcus, 2·8; tsobar, 3- IJ ; Alerion, 4-15 ; Debinda IV, ~18; Severn, 6-20; La Prensa, 7. CLASS D Aquarius, 1-3; Dona J,, 2-4; L'Allegro, 3.5, ' f'rqna Page 1 COUNCIL ••• also catied for new staff And ad· mlniatraUve procedures and protocol. The new pollcy oulflnes the acceptable channels councilmen should go through tG get information or action: "lhrough the office ol the city manager. If the city managei or aSs!Stant city manager is not available, the rouncllman is free to con- Sult U,e ~ppr~prjate departmept head." tt also called for a tightening and upgrading of accounting and manage. ment at the Costa· Mesa Mu"nlcipal Golt Course. lon&··• so:e point with St. Clair, s,::id asked ·l~e cou.n"il to consider the ap- pointment of a city representativt to be respoT1sible for the entire golf course operation. · f\t_cKenzie aaid the Admlnistt11iive ' :POllcy· 5Uitement !'ls of greal b!P•lit to · '1he"tUJ;" while St Clair said, "It may be the beginning of a new relaUonship. 1 think it's aU right.'' • : • Sikl· ICou.ncllr'nln · Willard· T·.' Jordan, 11~tri;orii11Y. t'fn. aen&ht'ed: tHJi action took pl1et. Maybe now instead or bicker· ing amon1 our1elves, we can go forward." · · Counclbnan George C. Tuck·1r was a bit mre restrtW In hl.s enthusiasm. "The proof of tht pudding Is In t~ e1ti11g1•: he said. But he added, "t feel this step has merit." "Disagreement is good," said Tucker. "I don't think anyone on this council should feelJle's been out Of place in VO)('o Ing his oplnlon. I think thnt dlscu11ion or these fln11ncial su6ject.s I! golng lo show us mtrtt." • ' -• ~court Weighs JJ.ea~h . Access • .. • 0 --• !r r .,. -'"---••"• • ' "'-1 • ' ... :·~~!:,~~e~~.-f-~ture~ p(~~~-Co~~t! ~e~~~ lnvpl1'~ ·;{~· By JUC!l.'RD P. NALL''•-'· ;.. --becauae.of the Deitz vs. Kill( •state controller and chairman ofthe com-have totally dlhcb.Jed the needs of the r !fl•....,'?.~ ... .-· .. case. .... _ • ~ , . \ mission, said 1t ~d be represented by public by totaly disregarding the coun· .. The -on of pli6tic acCess . iO The State Supreme Court procedure the attorney generals office ''to protect ' ty's own Marter 1>1an for S~line · California iJdetands _ such as th<iee &t wiU'"doubtleS$ have· a beJring on Orange the public interest." · -r • Devetopmenb'" . ,-. , ,. • • l Salt.Cr.eek and tbe rest9f.9tweJ;gmN Coiinty's owrl. Salt Creek Road ca&e. ~ltavelson 1la:ld the attorney genetal's. WJIC<>xen t&tW took'the county W \he ~JVtll be weighed by the ~tale sujrime Willlam ·w~coxen, · Laguna . Beach· at-· office intends · "to pres~ as !'luch Laguna Niguel-Corporation to court~ln an QQrt nextfea,r. torney, ls fighting to overturn aban· pub~c .beach area u posst0~le and to altempt -still going on -w overturn 'l'be .State Lan d s ~on . has donme~t of thf . road by c o u n t Y avo1tl fencing off of beaches.. . ~ the. abandonmer,it of the road Jqop~ autllorbld.. tbe attol'YIMr ~ geoen.l ·_to Sl.!pervts0rs (M~~ l~) lo the Laguna The abandonment of Salt Creek fto4d part of Coast lJighway. . ~ r,epreMAt . -U." 'before fiie. '"s:tltt'• top N1gue! Corpora Om whlth owns the. sur· tou~Jied ¥f an uproar that begin-as a ~per visors since have approVecl \ '$1 trlbiiklC' . ...._, .~ -~=-.,..-t ... "":,. round111g •Pf'Ope[l.Y and pl~. pr1va\e rumble. ~1 • ~ ... • million allocaPori . of t.u funds t'<1tJ the Ttii"attorneJ~~ce lrtltenter ~evelo)fment. . , . • The road atiandonmenl was brought.in· purpose of beacli acquisili,an. Noti>tia· u;e iifi-uint · ~ ~ court ~ spO~~ for t~ state atJOrney ' -to ~arp pub!la focus in ~erii• 4tir1ng tions are under way by tne ~ to WilJina~=~an,PAmiclit a~,'I. frie!ld g~~era~ said tha.t· ~ilC?xen has ~· .1""' a;. hearing ·in Ne~port Bea~ or the gain some· type of ac!cess -· tbr,ISaJt of~tne.·fiiurt. · . · . • •· y1ted to make sug~Uons to -that Q(µce Assembly._Subcomm1ttee on .Beacttes.and , Creek area. • ~. 'i . TMMattorney generil -actually will be in the matter pending before the State Conservatlt>~. Alsn, William Penn Mott, slate,dirtdnr re~ri,.iing the people-ol C81ifornia in Supreme Court.. . Mrs. _Helen Keel~y,_ .former ~guna of· . ~aches anct: parks,,• }w helcl fiihting for access to hundreds of miles The matter will pro~~bly 1?f argue~ in B~~c~ vice_ maror, tcshf1ed at the Ume : preliminary di scussions with another of. slate tidelands for ·8· population. that .January but ~ deCJSJOO IS probi;tbly With lhJS piecemeal abandonment or Jarge landowner, the Irvine . Com)Nlny. gl'OW! greater daily. sever~! months ~way -~ell irtto 1970. Salt ·creek Road, it appears to me . that about some type public access71nd 'U!e-or :Appearing before the ct>mmission, Jay During the ·~ryday meetlng 9f thf S_tate the Orange County Board of Supervisors the corporation's beaches between ·Lagu- L. Shavelson, assistant attorney general. Lands CommlSSlon, HOU&ton I. Flournoy, and Jbe Orange County Road Department na Beach and Corona de! ¥af. . <. Friday· said the caaes before the court , .. .. are ot statewide sJgnificance and w.ill \ set very important precedeots." Tt!e appealed cases to be considered by the court both invqlve tideland access for the public. Rulings in the Cases thus far •PIM*' ,to have been contradictory. In , Dietz versus King in Mendocino County, a division of the Diltrict Court of Appeal revetsed the Superior Court, and ruled that a long history of public usage of a road across private property e5t8bli!hed Public right to keep using the roa~. ' The Navarro Beach Road' had proylded ac-cess for lnore than 100 years and was the only waY to the beach in that vicinity. 'Mle landowner had it blocked to the public. The appe llate court unblocked it. In Gion versus the City of Santa Cruz, the city claimed that there was an implied public dedicjl.ion by use for more than five yean of steps leading down a cliff to the beach. This was further complicated by an old legal toughie, the whereabouts of the mean high tide line. . . . The city said the tide line was at the base of the cliff. The plaintiff said it wai; waterward of the cliff base and that the beach was privately owned. The trial court ruled that there ·was dedicalinn by implication. A division of the District C-Ourt of Appeal reversed the superior court. The positions of the appellate court justices appear to have been at odds although the c a s er had important dissimilarities. The State Supreme Court decision to hear the two matters in effect removes the appellate court findings from the book. The State Supreme Court now will set the precedent, if the ,matter ends there and not in the U.S. Supreme Court. Implications could be vast to surfers, to C-Ofporate Jand owners. to public. agen- DAILY .. n.OT Shff ...... Buildiiag llp ita Mesa cl~s, to peoJ)le in general.. . . ·The legal procetdi(llS~ attorneys con· cede, might range to broader issues . Ttiese might be property rljihts (beach ownership) versus the public right to Crane is being used in construction of seveh-sto'rY women's dormitory at Southe·rn CalifOrnia ·college which will be as tall as men'i:do'nnil.ory i'!lt.back· gro~d· when completed in March. ·The high, rise d6hnitory at the college, Newport Boulevard and Fair Drive, will cost $875,000 and is being paid for by the federal government plus a $25,000 grant from the Irvine Foundation for furnishings. · perch on private ·beach. . In other words if the ·property owner has been a good guy and let people use his beach has he now Jost any future right to deny them the beach. · There is the practical matter too of this tssue forcing owners of beach to ru sh into the tas~ of fencing it or guarding it to prevent losing easement to the public. This has probably already happened to f'rom PQfle 1 SEX CLASSES • •• San Fernando Takeover Ends in 20 Convictions LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Twenty of 21 today of felcr.1y charges including kid· defendants on trial on coiinection with the naping. false imprisonment and con. takeover of the buildlngs,.at San F~rnan· tipiracy. · audio-visual classes for four years and do Valley St.ate College wete convicted Sueerior Court Judge Mark Brandler. had the idea of taking a camera and \Vho tried the c0se without a jury, told video tape into another school district's I the defendants ·cam puses were nnt classroom where sex education is being RttSS Rocket Exploc CS-sanctµaries from violence. ta~~ks said,"~ wanted lo record It as it 'VASHJNGTON (AP) -'I'he explosion "The campus is not a privileged real'ly is and bring it back ta show to (lf a huge Soviet rockcl on its launch pad sanctuary or haven of refuge where groups that say 'no' on sex education. di srupti ve and violent acts can go 1.1'.1· d 111. Cu may have set Russian efforts to land a But ou·r superlnten ent (W 1am n· punished," the judge said. "We dare not · h \ 1'd 'No ·1 ead f r man on the moon back twu years and n1ng am sa , , we aren r Y o and will not sanction force and violence it now.'" crippled its manned space program. and other' illegal acts." Randy Whitesides, Harbor High's stu· Aviation Week & Space Technology dent body president, said he has been Thirteen of the defenanls were found interested in developing se); edu cation Magazine reported ~tonday the explosinn guilty of conspiracy and other fela:iies. last summer at Tyuratam destroyed the classes for about two years and has rocket the Soviets had intended lo carry One defendant. La Frida Jamison. 22, discussed the situation with Dr. C1in· · 1 d b" · \\'as acquitted ()fall charges against her. nineham. th e main portion o a manne or 1ung f'ro1n Pnge 1 APOLLO ... decongestant tablets to counteract a stuf. fy no:oe be said had been bothering him since launch. "I don't know whether I have a cold·or anything," he said. "My ears are sometimes ·clear and sometimes are not." Doctors told him to take a tablet ~very eight hours and Bean said he wa s' going to try to gn back to sleep. Goldwater Raps TV \VJCHITA,· Kan. {UPI) -Sen. B.arry Goldwater, (R·Ariz.). Monday night ac· cused "some" of the news media of polarizing lhe nation. He said he did not believe Vice Presi- dent Spiro Agnew went far enough in his criticism of television networks. The. netw~rks "better start po Ii c I ng themselves,·• said the 1964 GOP presiden- tial norr.ince, who said ';Probably I received more abuse Ulan anyone. in America.·• Miss Fnrehan sa id there's been a p\alform into spaCe lasl month. Brandler s·et Jan. 29 for sentencing. rumor going around Harbor High that I .caiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiimmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm;;;;;;;;;;;;;mmmmmmmmmmmi!lj' there will nt> longer be sex education for sophomore girls. Principal Charles Gndshall said tcxlay no decision has been mane yet on whether a three-week unit on sex educa- tion will be given this year in 10th grade girls' P.E. "ft doesn't come up until the third quarter and we'll get a feeling from the board and superintendent before then ," he said. Randy Newton, Corona del Mar High'g senior class president. differed from the otber students and said he doesn't think the schools should teach sex educalinn. He said students would be subjected In lhe teacher's biases and fears. "I wouldn't want lo J!O throu~h it or have m\' children go through it. "Perhaps the role of the sc hools should be lo make the facts available to par· ents," he said. "If the school s can ex· plain to parents this is necessary for their child'! growth maybe they will take on the responsibility." Clark didn't see mOch danger lhal sex knowledire could be damagin~ to younJ{· sters. "If you bit a child with too much information does he become preoccu· pied with it? Or does he ignore jt?" "This involves the emotional structure nf the individual which is much more <'~maping if you tread upon,'' said Or. Fr'1ielle. "One .arg1111lent ag:iinst sex education Is lhit by· tl'>e \'ery dis-=ui:sion of it you v.•iJI ignite the blood of the younir and· l'-!!V will rush out and exper iment." said 'r.-nmas Garver of the chamber com· ml11ee. "Tn my own pe rsonal opinion high ~rho!'\! ll!ds already art. thinking abciut stx." said Miss Forehan. ''Thty always say It is not the girl who knows what is going on that ts the unwed mothtt." ' See the lorgest selection of Sponish and Mediterranean Dining Room g roups. • AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY for the HOLIDAYS t I I I - ----~ --------· i------~~--..------------ ---~ - - ---------• T....,, ·-11, l.M . I. -· -· ,..,_ - UPIT ....... THE KENNEDY CLAN -Joseph P. Kennedy, patriarch of one of America's most influential families posed, surrounded by bis family, for this Nov. 9, 1960, photo taken shortly after his son , Jobn, was elect- ed president. Standing from left are Mrs; Robert Kennedy; Stephen ·Smith and Jean Smith, a qaughter; the 1ate Presiden'lj the late' Robert Kennedy ; Mrs. Patricia Lawford, a d!iughter (the Lawfords have since been divorced); Sargent Shriver; Mrs. Edward Ki"nil~y, 8nd Peter Law ford. Seated from left are Eunice Shriver, a 41·ugbter;· Mr. and' Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy; Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, and Edward Kennedy. ~aR~~e~ Baek. to City Dra . ~ . D.:.--d . wmg .~-. • Dowta the · Mission Trail Old Time Comedy . At Saddlehack ,\!IJ,lh l • !Y'i"l.,. ......... ! 11MISSION VIEJO -Old 1'tlme 1 .comiC greats that helped launch Amerlcan movies will come to life again Thursday night at Saddleback College. The school's second showing In a her- itage ·film series will be ·~When Comed,Y--- Was King." It will begin at 7:30 p.m. The film takes the audience to Mack Sennett's old Keystone Studio where American screen comedy began. It will feature Charlie Chaplin, Mabel Normand, Fatty Arbuckle, Wallace Beery, G1oria Swanson, Busler Keaton and Laurel and Hardy. An additional short will be shown , "An Osear for Mr. Rose," a satire on abstract films. I Admission to the public Is 25 cents. Associated Student Body members will be ildmltted Cree. 9 Slope lt'ork Slated CAPISTRANO BEACH-The State Di· vision of Highways will open bids in Los Angeles Dec. 11 for reconstructing slopes where erosion has occurred near Capis- trano Beach. The condition hits been caused by water seeping through the cut slope above the southbound lanes of Route I, just north of the San Diego Freeway. The eroded slope is endangering Cami· nc> Capistrano, the adjacent county road. A total of $22,500 is available for the project. 8 Srhoofs ~OP Toplr --5AODLEBACK YALLEY-"Th.e Crisis fn tHigher EducaUon" will be the topic dill:ussed at the Thursday meeting of the Saddleback Republican Assembly. i tate Sen. J ohn G. Schmitz :will ad· drtss the group at the 8 p.m. meetfng in ri.llision Viejo High School Little jl'heater. G WorkfNop Srhe•llled MISSION VJE.lO-A special torkshop · · get under way Frid@-y at tbl Recrea- ti · Center. ' ' aking gli ttering stars for j the com· ·ty's amual· Christmas dance, the s' BaJI, lhe workshop will be Uhdtr W .direction of Mrs. Nicole i,t.c'aille. ' e stars will be used for 4'corations. T y will be .conStructCd from 9 to ll a .. For lur.ther' informaticil on the \v kohop and,mat~rialr nee.i:i?d contact lh\recreation Cehter·et 83'l~. • 41C Tetnpie Rosu •rlinrh MODLEBACK VALLEY -Temple Eilt Sisterhood of Mission Viejo is hQl:tng a membership brunch in the Sad~ di ack Valley Thursday. s. Carole Blake of Holiday Magic etics will speak on the correct way pply coSmeUcs: at the 9:1S1a.m. event anning's Restaurant, Laguna HUis. ations can be made by calling M4 Irene ?hen at 837-777$. Srholarshlp Set Vp Q\PISTRANO VALLEY -The San C,.,nte-Capist111no Bay branch "°r the .... i~ 1 Associafion of' unlveralty wAR have established' ·a s~larshlp lo~ddlcbacll.c.llege. ' A meri t system Will determine which graduate a( the college will receive tM annual sUpend. . - U'I T•lflollole MORE SADNESS -After ·attending mass early today, Mrs. Rose Kennedy descends steps of St. Francis xavier Church in Hyannis, Mass., with aid of her driver, Frank SaUnders. A few hours later, her husband, Joseph P. Kennedy; died. Fron• .Page 1 KENNEDY DIES AT"81. •• dren ..J. including three of his four sons - d(ed violently. Assassins killed sons President John F. Kennedy and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (0- N.Y.), who was running for the presid en- cy in 1968. A third son, Joseph Jr., was killed in World War II. Sen: F.dward M. Kennedy, {0.Mass.). his lone surviving sop, is considered a potential candidate fur ·the presidency. However, his J!01llical future was dimmed after Mary Jo Kopectine, 28-year-old Washingt011 secretary and former cam· paign worker for Robert Kennedy, died when a car striv~n by t,he senator went off a bridge, on 1Cb:l~qulddick Island in mid.July 19811. ' . 1be 'eldest Kennedy also leaves his \Vidow, Rose, 79, and four dalJihters, Mrs. Sargerit Shriver, (Eunice) wife o( the ambassador to France, Mrs. Patricia Lawford, former wife Qf actor Pe~r Lawford, Mti. Stephen· Sinith lJean) and ll<>semary .xtrmo:dy 1 w~o · Is· ~Uy retarded and in a.MidweStern convent. Strl~o with a sh;,Oke at his winter llome in Palm )leach, F1a., In 1oe1 .. Ken; nedy, aobsequenlly sullered . a brain $pasqa, several heart attacks and,' on 11-fatth 5, 1967, a·heart "block" for'whicb ~be tifke-was given oxygen. . Kennedy. Born ~t. 6, 1818 In Easl Boston, had willed a poUti~al career ·for his eldest son, Joe Jr., who died In World r War II.' His wish was transferred to his second son, Jack. He opened his purse to Jeck who won a race for the U.S. House and later for the Senate before becoming President. Kennedy Was used to having his own way. He was a loner in the world of fi. nance, never burdening himsell with cor~ porate ties. He never cauld quite live down romcrs a big hunk of his vast fortune came from illegal liquor traffic toward the end of prohibition. Actually, he made a hefty; profit in a qWck In-and-out investment in Libby· Owens-Ford Glass. Co.~ stock during a period when the pubUc falsely believed plate glass finn was making wbJilkey bot.· ties in expectation of the repeat of pro- hibition. But his really big profits came after repeal because he had been foresighted enough to ·gel lhe U.S. dhtribulorshlp4or three ef,Brlta.ia's ·biggest disUllers. He lmJ>orted their. liquor legally under "madicinal" licenses and had warehouses full of gin and !eotcll ready lo go when prohi~ition ended. · Ke~1was as ,devoted to his wile aild daughters as he was to his sons. One dau~ler. Kalhleen, w~ ">I J. R. Cavendish," a British rioble'inan, was killed in a private plane crash near Prl· v11s, France, while flying lo JOin bet father on the Rlvltra •. r Lawn Bowlers Criticized for ... Raising Roof Traffic Hazard Curb at Morro Plan · Presented • • "'J ' .. 11Get that roof Jine down," was the Planning Commission's advlce to members of the Laguna BeaCb lo'wn Bowling Club Monday night, aa a reviled site plan for the bowlers'-propoied clubhouse In Heisler Park was jJreiented for approval." · ... ~.. · i._ , 'rhe,maller Jn ·hanoj peilahJed cblefly lo '·~.,.. a8"ed apo011Y .~'t.:if. Ile engineers to reduce bQards Ior lldlooi relocaUon of lbe •llucbfl'e · !torn \hO buses ,.1er1ng. llJld• leaVJnc El . ~ originally approved site' on-a steep slope Elementary School wDJ be piuesited. to al lhe norlh end ol thO bowllni ,'greMI. to Laguna Stach IChoi>l bo.vd. J1l'"lbera a less costly building location on : the tonight ·' · · · ocean side of lhe· -ns. Slate Traff!c Engineer G. L. 11usoen· Ir -has sent the school dlatrlct an outline of Planners did ool objecl·lo 1he new lite, stepe Iha! wtU be lakm as ·lhe noull o1 bul noled lhal preliminary plBM In-hi! Inspection ol lhe 1Jti wtl!l Dlllrld 7 dlcated a roof line higher than the ·center engineer A. K. GokUn Nov. 7. line of Cllif· Drive, a llmif.4tlon ~ tn "W" sincerely feel .tbit theae .prooe- 1 I old' in dures, when completed, w11r p'eaUy Jm. origina d SCUlllions lo av • dlllurb g prove lhe eapabWIJ''of 91ir bmea·ln ..._. the view across the park. ' ing the El Morro'IChoollJ'(IUnds ••·Su~~ Club spakesman Richard Davies noted intendent William Ullom1 Aid Monday_' that the proposed roofiine would . be ap-Rec;ommendations of the t 1 tat e proximately the same ' height u that~ of engfneera included tns\anaUon d \ rillow ''bounclng ball" warning aignl''11D-o.ut lhe adjacent Shuffleboard Club and was lfigbway; pi'ovlllion of a specl'11f mom.t considered desirable for a e s t.h e t l c acceleraUon Jane for bu:les, ente:rillr the reasons. , highway; ralllni 1he lflde 'l'.ban·llle bua "A building four feel six Inches from •lopo before enterlnjflhe blilrilli' to tm- lhe ground does not lend itsell lo much prove vblbWty and poul~le 1urtbOr sPeeci , J limit red~ I I_<'.• , good design·," 'be explained~ . A.0.l 1"1l0f, Davies said; wO,Jld'_gel lhe · ·' 'lfuc!\"e down i..:. ieet be~ Uie'.shuf. ·Demos to . Hear fleboai'd Club· roof line, but w~ •pro-. . . . duoe· •:an ugly bUtiding.11 • • , ' ~ •·w· wan1 somelhlng t1ia1 ..m blend Vietnam Talk, with the · 1indscape and also look at4 '· • ,··" , 1 •• i. lrai:live when viewed hom ·1 he . Or. 'Ray C. Gery Wtn IJ>lli ~.Ille . ~-·-1he ..__.. " lie __ ,. Laguna Beach Oemoeralle Club:'""' ~ apa1ww;n~across ow~, IHUU. on "Ob, Vietnam _·,~·~r: TWo. 'archltect.s on the ' c:oriunl8;alon, Wby?" .,... .. ·• • . '' ~ Charles Johnson and chalrnwi ~ Or. Gery Js lhe-mlnllf•L<11~1....._ Briggs, expressed the view that even ,a Beach United MetbodtR: •aiu:n:ti;f~r very low building could be deligned al-The Monday meedn( 11 to belin at I lr~vely. pLa.m. in.!1:"_~~: l1!o "'II Id l ~-"""-lo Your guna •-u ~ •Ave. wou prese~ a ---..-, .• ,.., • .(•lrlet L. Birkett, dQb ~·ati- archltect,11 l&ld B_rlggs;..,"bm It couldfbe, fut.ert.sted penom •to',.... \ ... done-;,11 could be.a .art of'llfl!en W.U mee11n1·'11\l beir lbO la~. · ·.·. , l • d•slgn. • . Or. Gery hat been In Uie•mlnllfr7·f<ir "I feel very strongly· about Heliler IZ )'ean pastoring ehurdla ' ID• San Park," said Johnson.·"U anything at11ll ·· Bemardlno, Wblttltrlilld~l.appa.B.ealb: projecls above street level 11,will ciil of! lie received hll bach01or'1.ii.,..O ·!nm par! of lbe hortwn. I wan! lo see lhe Eutern College, did' .,-. -II bowlers have their clubhouse, but we Boston UnlversftY, ~~ ~ should r.spec1 Helller Park." · . , of divinity -degree INiii" ~· 'City Commissioner Or. ll<>berl French·'!U Seminary IUld earned 1111 do!:.f«lll.fnm concerned about poulble dlllurbOnee ·of ClattlllOlll SCbool o(TbeolQIY. ' " public walkways. "Won't one be b&ocbd l -'t--. ' ';. · ' Israeli .·Bombers -• . . Strike Military Ta.rgets in EgYPt . By·U.U... Piao- lmleU bombers !ala today stracl· Egypllan "mllffary ~jeeUves• In Ibo centnl tecfor of !he Suez Canal'lor-. than an hour, an army apokesman re-. pofled In Tel A vlv. llraell and ·JordiJiian arUJJery, also !Olllht dUell .,.,... l!le• Jordan River, · The, spotesma said all Israeli planes ~ safeli la.Jlase bU!.g&V. no oilier dellllt.· 'lllere was no IJiillcallon lbe nld WU ·port of the ~ InCU relalla- Uon 1..-•lbe'ESYPUAll ·ftoonnOn 'allact oil tWo laraelr!lllJ9s Ill Elliot~ Sundo. · and a -10r'J1raeU mlllliry ofllclal J..h: ealed·!iri'el rillil bold Jeodan slble for lhal. ._. Tbe: l1lel1iDf WU reporied fn lbe Tur~ manMh· alea·.'1f the norihern •alley. II lollowed.,au· es:d!anp 11-y nJihl Jn lbe 111111 area llid -.major llraeU ·-· ~ ip!nst.lnq~·SJrlan and JonlUlan · arlll1ery bases and •• Em>tlan-mannecl radar llatJon in Jordan. 'larel'.11"' WU dJ1"lcled at lhe ~ atlaet. oo Elli~ and 1he ·lJraUJ ci!Odal safd --'''wilt -lo be dealt wttll... Egypt lllld •Jhe fropnen ,..,.. !Ion In by heUeoptor .11a1 Imel con- -ttiey CIJIMI !Jom.lhe hrin JOfdanlan ctll' .or Aqallo and M Jotdan lherefore -~e.:''' off by tl)I! building?" be 8$ed. '1 ! • ..r \ Clly Planner Al A~lry IAid 1he ·l'"" c · · • design would Involve on1y mi-.rol(IOI-Wall-. . (a " .. , D . '11111T . Uon of'tt>o walkways, involving a ehlilie " . ...... e 0 yyft of "\wo to'tbfee feet" and noted that tbe· 1 _ i • .,.. ' ,. Parka Dl:partmea& fe!t UU. could . be 1 ,, • ~ • • • • managect easily • Cle --'--Ill ' l\T M '1' . COimnllslone.: . Jooeplt 'io m ch a k . m~~ (IJW. l "'ot eant .I. 0 Won:Sered :• i[ the bull!Uhct could be •I <J' ~ ' dei>fWed ~ lnlo ,lhe IJUUl!d. Thi» "· • wOllJd..be pOsstbJe. Da"1d lllld, bul wOuld • ~ aounded Ibo. , lloru I! l5an involve addlUonal steps, up tbe greens. CWmtnte? , M6vlng !he buildinc•baet on lbe '!<>Pt ll.wun'l exacll)llhe llaWe ql,Jort!M IOward lhe ~an a1io would· be efte<ttve bul 1hi wan did come tomb11nc"""" . in lowering the roof llne, It wu nqted, but E ploy of W" .. _._ ,.__.~-this would enCJ'()ach upon planting. 41J'd m ea ..... -.. ~ ralher move il back Into. !be /kTftr beda Company probabll' ~l .,. ai!'I ll!mw than have that roof to look al," aaJd Jn the evenl ~ lplnt tba "'*od Johnson. broailng up and remmng lhe-wall Noting thal !he bowlers' agreement dial Wll about »feel llijb •and ~· wllh'lhe elly eouneU-Jor COt!llruc:Uon, of Jong. · -· , , . · their oMginal design lncludOs •• betglll II "" lo have been the elll WllI•GI a limijallon, plannen voled lo approye Ibo secondary sedlmlnlaUon bu1a lilt tlie..d· slle change only, bul ....,.ed 1he Mghl ly IOWer plant being COllllr1ldod .. fer lo ·revie~ flllal ard\lleclural plant bolcn about '2·5 mllllon. _ _._c.:... . • Issuance OI a bull<!Jng perml~r Ray -lek, .....,.... !er the dl!', ' ,.. J ti . t I ~4 Dmv PILOT Apollo 12: Shooti,ng for a Bullseye I ~"' .. 0.-1"11111.,..,. i. ·Merlo P•lomH, 20, Ii.Ji.is love ~enes; When one was cu~ short at ' Rome movie house Friday night, alomba fired a t>islol at the screen and demanded bis money back. "I paid to see this love scene." he said. •lJ do not want to see scenes "i:Ut up by the cepsors." Customer fled and police arrested Palomba on charges of disturbing the peace. II Laboratory men in a pharmaceu- tical factory at Mor.e.ton, England look like astronauts, but the real aim of their space-age-suits is to prevent them from changing sex. The suits protect them against fumes from birth pills in the granu· 1ating stage. The lemale hormone in the drugs, when inhaled, could give them smooth chins and other feminine characteristics, a spokes- man of the firm explained. • Ul"IT ......... Edward G. Robinson, who often portrayed the tou~h-talking . boOa- lum of classic cops-an~-robbers movies, has been cited by the Screen Actor~ Guild for :•fostering the finest ide&Js of the·aCting· Pro- fession." Robins6n, 75; ~an art' coh· noisseur and collector in private life, was given two art objects ....... tbe Greek masks o!-traged)\ and tcom- edy in black onyx and antique bronze. APOLLO AST RONAUTS TO ATIEMPT PINPOINT MOON LANDING TON IGHT Con rad and Boan Will Try ta Land Within 1111 FHI of Surveyor Ill Diane Gordon, 8, cro1tches and cov- tr!l her f ace with her hand.1 as ~he tries to hide from photographers a!l she wait.1 for a school bus 4t Na.1sau Bay, Tex. Camera shy Diane is the daughter of Apollo 12 astronaut Rich· ard Gordon. • Ronald M. Schlsel, 26, of Jack- son, \.Vyo., asked for probation on charges he bad shot at a state pa- trolman.· The prosecution asked that Schisel be sentenced to a year in prison. District Judge C. Stu•rt Bro~n ignored both requests and handed out a sentence of four to five years in prison. "I take an aw· ful dim view of shooting at law en- forcement officers-or anybody, lor that matter," the judge explained. • Elmer Harry Lucero, 24, walked into the police station in La Junta, Colo. and admitted committing four burglaries since being released from the state reformatory iast month, p;olice said. Officers said Lucero told them he really did not prefer life behind bars, but thought it was better thac being unemploy- ed OD the ootside. •Jlliserahle Years ~ LBJ's Brother Recalls VP Era NEW YORK (UP!) -Lyndon B. Johnson's term as John F. Kennedy 's vice president was "the most miserable three. yearJ of hla life," his brother said /o!ooday. Sam Houston Johmon, in an article published by Look magazine, said Ken- nedy's "new frontiersmen" subjected Johnson to repeated snubs and humilia- tion even though the Southern votes he drew to the Democratic Ucket in 1960 were esseJIUal to Kennedy's hairbreadth victory. "They made his stay In the vice presidency the most miserable three years of his life," Johnson wrote. ''He wasn't th~ No. 2 man in that ad- ministratioo, he was the lowest man on the toiem pole ... "He was openly snubbed by seeond- echelon White House staffers who sn.fcftred at blm behind his back and called him Uncle Cornpone." Sam Johnson said h1s brother remained loyal to Kennedy, though he did say at times that "some of the people around him are bastards." He said the vice president "exploded." when Mrs. Sam Johnson told a harmless Joke about Ken- nedy in his presence. Johnson said Kennedy kept his vice president traveling on endless foreign junkets. "Lyoda and Luci would stay at home • , . resenting their parents' frequent absences," he said. "Luci has said she remembers screaming and stomping her feet beciluse her mother would be taken a\vay by Lyndon for some political rally.'• Sam Johnson recalled one Incident shortly after President Kennedy was assassinated which "reflected how my brother must have felt about all those ug- ly Insinuation! that Were made about Kennedy being killed in Texas." He said the President called him shortly before the Johnsons moved into the White House to sii "I appreciate all you've done for me." . · " 'I wouldn't be here lf it hadn't been for you,' " Johnson quoted the President as saying, aod said he.replied, "Lyndon, l had nothing to do with Oswald." "He gasped, sputtered, thqi exploded," Johnson recalls. "My God! what an ex- plosion! I have never heard him so angry ... He shouted .. .'You make your lousy sick jokes about everything!'" U.S. Jets Ambush Reds, f(ill 58 in Viet Battle SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. jets, artillery and helicopter gwuhlps caught Com· munlst troops as they were burying their dead and killed 53 of them in an attack northeast of Saigon, military spokesmen said today . Allied spokesmen said f I g ht Ing throughout Vietnam had killed more than 5.10 Viet Cong a11d North Vietnamese troops in the Jl8!l two days. South Vietnamese spokesmen said 243 of the Communiat.s were killed in tightlng with government forces two mlles east of the U.S. Green Berets camp at B:u Prang, 122 miles northeast of Saigon. The je\S, liel.icopters and guns attacked the C-Ommunist unit as it was crossin& a gra5')7 hilltop 90 miles n<rlheast of Saigon ?o.tonday. The attack came after the Communists opened fire on a helicopter scout craft. The Cmnmunist troops were working to bury bodies of comrades killed In earlier air strikes, spokesmen said. In fou rot.her battles in the area Mon- day American forctS lo6t 11 killed and 22 wounded. Communist troops early today fired 25 60mm mortar l'OUnd,, into Bu Prang, the beleaguered camp near the Cambodian border. The camp has been under pressure by the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese for weeks, Sunn y South Plenty Cold_ • Beloiv Freezing Mar kS R ecorded in Carolina Coa•tal illNl'f llCll'f, Lllllt ........... wtr.ci• I t. If kftef1 lllrwtJt Wt4MMt\' krt i.tll Mirll\ftlt ""'1cfi lJ '9 U kMN l'Ol'llthl, Hltf'm toclt\' 1'. COlt !t l Nnl"tlfllr'tt r1Mt """" _,. ,. '" lllltllf Jllllfllftlllf'it '"'" """ ;7 hi 1'. Wtfft 1...._.,11'Urt 6a.. Sun, ltloo•. 'l'ldet TU•IOAY ''""" tir.it , • , ...... , . '''' ,,111, '·) Steorlf IOw 11111 ··"'· ... WIDNllOAY 'Int t1l1h ............. Ji54 1.f!I, I.I Fl,._t W. ........ ,,.,.,It;'' it.Ill. I.I Stto/ld 1111#1 ............. •:n 1.111. 1.J S--.cll IO" ••• ,.,.,..,,,, ,,,0,. "'"" •· ... " 11.S. S11mmnr11 SMW 11111 cet.11 11f .... Nd tcl'OU t1W ctntrtl lloCl'.ltt trod P1~1111 ,,....,...,, lltl~ •lld t I~ ltlundetlf'I0"""1 wtrt rtPOrlH '-, ... IOll!lltrn PLtln1 10 1119 ONt l """"· Mo11ty _, ........... '""'" tlll At11nt1t <0111, Stvltllrlf lltttitt wttl'l'!M 1111 IM H1t1n1 -~td tll ... • clllllY ~. ltllR Ille ••rmuit. ~ lcwt tor 11\t dart wttt Mt 11 CtlllrMl1, ·l'..c., Wllll 15. lllf ,.,_.,,,,, S.C., lt. A Nld)lll ot » !ltd I row lflnHfll\lt• fl'll rt fOt" Naw. 11 •I coru"'b\11, 01. lltM -w 1111 Woutlll ltlt 1et,_ lll•llotl .., "" tttu!W ., lhtfkU.11, W\19., ,. ' lllC'""1, ~··-· ""'°" ""'. Im"" I/If -"" !111 trwlld. Tlftt llldlet llf •~aw Nill 111 111 Mvrt ti. ~ld111r. Ntb. Teneperat11rl!1 --~ A"dl'lr•tt .1111•111' a1kMl1tld l t1mtrdl &o111 '"'°"' l...wft5"111• (Ille• .. CF11d1tr>atl ......, Des Moh'lft '?!'"'" lll1111i'ellb ·-··--· '™"'' (tty Lat v .... la Al!ttln Ml1tr1I 111111,..~llOllt ,,.,.. Orl••nt ...... 't'Ofk 01kltnd Olll•l\oflll (1ty °"''"' Ptltft Stlf'll'lfl P1t0 lhlOlft PP1M11!• PllhbvrWI Pw!lt!lf ll•Pkl {llY llfll Slun .. M S1crt tr1tlftlo 1•11 l.f!lt Cllr S.11 OIN& S..11 ,rtllCIKO S.tlllt SM .. M Tl'"'"'*' -Wttlllfltloll tlltfl .... l"nc. . " " . " ~ •2 l1 .. ' ... ,, 11 M 7' u ~ ,. ll ~ ... ,. '' "' ,, ,, ,, ~ .11 .,, 4J 11 i 1 ll " '' ,, 11 11 Tr ll H n ., " .. q ,, .1t " .. ... M " " " . " .. ll M " " " ll .. ... JO • .01 " .. 4$ 10 .. ll )l ll .11 " .. .. ., .. ,. n ~:-. ... AF Chief Says Aide's Firing Not Personal WASIDNGTON (AP) -Secretary of the Air Force Robert C. Seamans Jr. to- day denied that Z"1 Air Force cost expert was fired because he disclosed to Congress that the CSA aircraft program was ruMlng blllions more than projected. He said that the job held by A. Ernest Fitzgerald had been aboli!hed in an overall economy p r o g r a m and reorganization of the Air Forte ml'.1age- nlent team. Sen. William Proxmire ( D • W 1 s . ) , chainnan of a joint congressional economic committee looking into the Fitzgerald case, toki Seamans at.the con- clwion of his prepared tesUfn(lny "it is hard for me to accept your tesllmoiiy on its face." One Issue was whether Fitzgerald had ever disclosed co:lfidential material to congressional committees. Proxmire told Seamans, 1 1 M r. Fitzgerald has never made any con· fidential documents available to this e<1mmittee or stiff. I flatly deny he ever violated security.'' Seamans responded that he agreed the Fitz1erald "bad never violated naUonal security." Seamans outlined for the committee new cost control procedures he said have bee,, Installed and Sen. Charles H. Percy (R·lll.), commended what he called "two innovaUons" "Which call for a quarterly review of overall costs and the ability to focus detecUon on cost ovuruns. In reorganizln1 the office, Seam8M said, "Mr. Fitzgerald's job has been a~Ushed and we have not found a Sllltable new position b which. he couJd make a contribution." Seamans noted that Fitzgerald's job was of such a classification that "he was given that job with the Initial un-- derstandlng that it was for a limited term." New Car P rices . Boosted by $107, Government Says WASHINGTON (AP) -The govern· ment said today manufacturers' sug- gested retail prices of 1970 passenger cars average $107 more than a year ago, lncludini $46 \\'orth of quali ty im· provements and $61 of just plain higher prices. The Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said the $48 in quality improvements included $7.50 for changes required by higher federal safety stan- dard!, $5.50 for improved· exhaust control of air pollutants, $19 for safety Im· provements introduced by manulacturers themselves, and $14 for nonsafety im- provements. Safety standards required by federal regulatio11s include improved signal lights, siqe-marker l!ghls and rear llghis, anU·theft locks and glove compartment Jocks, the report said. Safety improvement1 Introduced by manufacturers themselves inc I u de fiberglass belted tires on most models and mlsce:llaneouii body changes, it said. The: nonsafety quality lmprovementa Include more reliable and durable engines, improved insulation, betLtr water pumps, Improved ahoct Absorbers and Improved e1terior body protection, the report said. Arms Talks Opening HELSINKI (UPI)-Amerlcan and So- viet arm' ncg0Uator1 met in secret session today to work out procedures and an agenda for talks to try to ftteze and possibly even reduce their nuclear armorle.s. ' SPACl!: Cl!:NTiiR. HOUSTON (UPO -Aeol1o II Is belnl billed u tho llnl moon WldJnf nipt wbme primary objective b llildtnr to mankind'• total ac:lmltl!Jc kllowled1e. Bui It lw onother Import milllon. -The NaUon.11 AeranauUCI IJlCf Space AdmlnlltraUon (NASA) Wlllta to l>rlClice high accuracy laqdlnp -a sort ol -spring training for future U.S. ,,_, walkers, -· For the prtclolon ofthelandlq'111lde 10:51 p.m. tonllght by utronauta Chari.. "Pete" Conrad and AIM L. Bean wW tell America's space planners what, adjlJSt. menta, ll lJ1Y, neod to be made tar upcomlog,l&ndu\gs on hilly, mountainoua.,.. o1 the lunar surace -toochdown1 that will require b;ullseyes. Apollo 12 ll shooUna for a bullleye, too. The ahnina' point lor Conrld and Bean ii 1,120 feet from where Survey<r I landed in 19'7, and if the utronautl land within range, they will walk to the robot apac«rafl IJlCf bring baet selec1od plrta. • Bean, dilcllSliag the mlaloa, Biid the pinpoint llJICflng attempt "hu bec<lme another one ol the -• lntereltlni thlnp Clll tbe fllgh~ even though not the -Im-portant by any atretdl ol the lmqlnatloo. • Gene Gurley, mlsalon deslp manaeer for Apollo ll, says the current mJl. slon la on of a ler'iel called Apollo lunar erploraUon missions. There are Una type1 ol mlalona. The lint'"' the "G" s.rtea -Apollo 11. On APollo 11 the "primary objective wu to land and return safely," Gurfey said. "We had an extra bonua with that one becauae everything worked ao well IDd we got aome surface eiperience." But with Apollo 12 the "H" series begins and "the primary objectives are lunar surl.ce scienUfic ezJ»<ralion, to develop point landing techniques and photo- graph future landing alt... Apollo II mJaalon director Che9ter Lee aays the ability to land In preclaoly the 1pot sel~ will become more and more important. "Liter mlsalona will take" us to spots that require a pinpoint accuracy." Lee aaid. "We hope they develop our landing techniques on Olli miaslon that will lead 111 to perhapa further deve10pment on the .next mission leading us to getting the capa- bility of landing in aome very UIJht apob." Apollo II m1ued Ila landing slle by about lour miles, the reault o( several minor errors in predlctln1 the aptcecraft position. * * * * * * Step-by-Step Schedule For Moon Walk Li,sted SPACE CENTER, Hou.slon (AP ) -Ex- cept for six minutea to erect an American nag and eight minutes to posi- tion a color television camera, the: Apollo 12 moon explorers plan to devote all their time to sc ience on their first moon walk Wednesday. Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr. plans to be outside three hours and 14 minutes during the Initial stroll, while Alan L. Btan is expected to be outside two hours, 23 minutes. Wednesday's excursion will begin with Conrad backing out of the hatch of the moonlander lnlrepkl at 3:02 a.m. PST. A second stroll begl111 at l :lZ a.m. Thurs- day, when Conrad and Bean vi.sit the now dead Surveyor 3 spacecraft. First color television should begin at 3:03 a.m. Wednesday after Conrad, stan. ding on a ladder, opens a compartment in which the camera ls mounttd. Bean will turn the television on to show Conrad's descent to the mOQn's surface. While Bean films Conrad with • 70 millimeter movie camera, the Apollo 12 commander will spend sii: minutes get- ting used to the low gravity, jumpln1 up and down and testing his balance. Using a scoop with an extension handle, Conrad will pick up a sample of rock and soil, put It in a bag and send the bundle In a container up a clothesline-like conveyor belt to Btan. 1 Conrad then will snap still photos as Bean starts down the ladder at 3:32 a.m. After Bean familiarizes hi~lf "'.ith the one-sixth gravity, Conrad will spring optn an antenna which looks like an upsk:le-down umbrella. Officials hope the antenna, to be aetlvatect for the second moon walk, will improve commwtlcaUOM with earth. Bean wilJ mount the TV camera on a tripod 2:0 feet from the lander. Then he and Conrad push a staff into the ground and attach a nylon American fiag to it. Bean will point the TV camera at a compartment on the back ski• of Intrepid, where other ei:perimeot ln- struments are stowed. As Conrad continues to align the an- tenna, Bean is to erect an aluminum foil "window shade" attached to a staff. Scientists hope the device will capture atomic particles streaming from the aun. Conrad then will pick up the TV camera and give earthlings a panoramlc view of the moon's surfa"ce while Bean photographs the landing craft's four foot- pads. At the experiment compartment. both astronauU then will take out the Iden. tific instruments contained In two 1ubo packages. Using a long-handled tool. Bean will open a cask contalnlnc plutonium 238, an atomic fuel element, and insert it into a nuclear electric generator that powers the instruments. Bean, carrying the experiment tn- struments and generator, and Conrad will walk: to a site about 1,000 feet west M' the lander craft. '11lere , they will distribute the instruments. After photographing the experiment site, the astronauts will return to the Jan.. ding craft and collect rock samples wtUt Jong-handled tongs en route, stowint them in saddle bags attached to thtlr waists. Back at the Intrepid, Conrad and Bun will put the saddle bags in a boi:, then Bean will drive a core tube several fn. ches into the moon's surface to collect • vertical profile of the lunar soil. It will be placed in the rock box. Then Bean will re-enter the landing craft. Using the conveyor belt, Conrad will transfer the rock boi: and cameras into Intrepid, and Conrad will re-enter the landing craft to rest and relax for 15 hours. Protests 'Kill U.S. Boys,' Postmaster General Says WASHINGTON (AP) -Postmaster General Winton M. Blount emerged from a meeting with President Nixon today and said he believes home front antiwar demonstrati ons are "killing American boys.'' Blount. back from a trip to South Viet- nam and other parts of Southeast Asia. told a news conference at the White House that he believes demonstrators are inspiring Hanoi to prolong the war and thus bring about more U.S. combat deaths . The late!t In a growing proce1slon of administration officials to publicly take a dim view ol. anUwar protests, Blount said he found that American troop1 in Vietnam don't understand the demonstra. tiOfls and do not approve of them . The Postmas~ General inued a for- mal statement ln which he sakt U.S. troops in the combat zone expressed a "tremendous amount of understandlng and support for lhe President'• Vle~ policies expressed In his Nov. 3 speech." He said he wa& repeatedly told by fight· ing men: "We're kicking tht hoO out of Charity and now is not the Ume t.o quit." JUDGE SAYS NU DIE SHOW 'NOT 'A1UCW SAN DIEGO (AP) -Alltt w1lchln1 a backst•I' play In wtik:h youns ""'""' alt naked, Superior Court Judp Hugo Floh<r observed "lJ1Yone J>1YlJi1 II lo aee WI show and espectln( to ,.. -bing obscene la aolng to . be IOtely diaap- polnted." , The judge said today .he will is!Ue a preliminary lnjunct.lon enjolnln1 police !roll) lntcrf<rln1 wttll the perlormanc. In Les G~ls Th<a\tr, pendln1 a fonnal heat lit):. Blount said he believed Nixon b en- titled to full public support for his Poll· cies on Vietnam. Asked if that meani he believed that opponents of the war !bould remain totally silent, the cabinet otOcer said he had no quarrel wtth their r1gllt to expreat their opinions but feel they have "gone too far ." • Gen. Hershey ' At Peace R ally WASHING TON (AP) -Draft dlrectGr Lewis. B. Herlhey attended la I I Saturday's massive peace rally at tbt Washington Monument with his 19-~ old granddaughter, a spokesman said to- day. ' 'The spokesman said Hershey and hll 1randdauahtar wanted to see the rally and they spent about one hour near tbe west side of the Monument where demomlraiors gathered after man:hiaC up Pennsylvania A venue · In prote.t •&•inst admlni.strJtion policy in Vletnmn. Hershey was quoted as saying bl th""'1t such demonstratlona could proo long the flgbUng In Vietnam if the enl"!1 viewed them as an es:prtllion or suppoit. But. Hershey added that the demonstn- Uan as he aaw It Was a peacehll .. presslon of opinion and that possSblt mi3interpretatlon was "one or the pnea of democraC)' ,'' the spokesman report..&. Rome Workers Strik,e ' ROME (AP) -Newspaper tmployu, guollne staUon attendants and teleptloM workers walk:td off_ their jobs tonlgt:il .1,lgnalllnJ th< start of a masalvo ™""' 'ieneral strike. • ._ ' ... Tuesdll', Nov.mbtf 18, 1969 DAil v l'llGl IS , •. • Bampbrey Makes Charge Nixon Stifling.:Dissent? '· WASHINGTON (AP) Oemoc:r1Uc l<aders, keynoted by Hubert H. Humpbrt)'. have · a~ the N it:oo. ad· mln!straUon ol. seellq ·to stl· fle crl~ and ~ppress dissenL In the Unitecj SLat... Humphrey aimed lhe'cblrge aL Vice PresldenL s'pfu, T. Agnew, his successor° in tbat job -and beyond, at Preai· dent Nixon. "This isn't as if the vice i;resident just bad a ~ lost wee~," Hwnptrey • aald appeal to our people's lesser or baser inlt1ncts,'" Humphrey said. · • ", • • I, for one, want to make it very clear that I disagree with thoH who would create an atmosphere of aup. pressJon and call It patriotism.·" 'I1le DemocraUc P o·l.l c y Council, a n issue-shaping panel of party leaden headed by Hwnphrey, adopLed a rtsolutioo decJarlnC: "We cannot tokrate In sl· Jenee any au.mpt Lo aileoce debate in I free society." ... network news coverag~ specifically t ho s e Com· mentartes that followed Nii· 00'1 report to the na.Uon ·on the Vietnam war. Humphrey said· the Democrats may ask t tie television networks lor equal time lo answer Agnew's speech, wllich was broiy!cut live from a Republican con. ference In Des Y.oioes, Iowa. The Humphrey charges and Monday. "I Utink the evidence the cooncll resolutioo. were ls very clear lhat tbls ts not prompted by Agnew's Nov. 13 just the vice president speak· ' 1peech criticizing television The Wbite .House declined comment on the Humphrey accusaUon. But earlier, Press Seerela'Y Ronald L. Zieg!~. said neither Agnew nor Kleip. had any Intention of aug· gestlng cen.90rshlp, govern- ment intervention, or an effort to end criticism. UPI T .......... UP'I T .......... STUDENT STARTED ARMY INVESTIGATION Ex-GI Ron.Id Ridenhour Wrote to sOlons GI's Letters Triggered Viet 'Massacre' Probe CLAREMONT (UPI) -An "Then, the last week o! ex-GI whose JeUer apparenUy November, 1968, I ran into a triggC!'ed an investigatioo into kid 1 know fairly well. He had the alleged slaughter of hun· been there, and he had refused dreds of Vietnamese civilians orders to participate. He by U.S. soldiers says he wrote shared my feelings of the letters because he wa s revulsion about what llap- "revolted by what happened.'' pened." Ronald Ridenhour, 23, a Ridenhour, a patrol leader sophomore at C I a r e mo n t who was discharged Dec. 4, ?.fen's College here, said he 1968, and returned to his home mailed letters last April to in Phoenix, Ariz., said he President Nixon, Secretary of mailed the letters April 2. State William P. Rogers, "On April 4 I got a telephone Secretary of Defense Melvin call from the ornce oC Rep. Laird and other officials Morris Udall. He is the only describing what he had heard. one I contacted, other than the "I did not witness the kill· Army, who seemed to show lngs, but I knew a lot of people any interest in following up who had been there and they what I had told them," tie told me about it," Ridenhour "d sa~~i is supposed to have hap-sat~ April 29, Ridenhour said pened in March. 1968, and I an A:n1Y. colonel flew to first learned about it a month · Phoe~Jx with a ~ report.er later. ~ listened to. his st<ry. ~e "I didn't do anything about off!~ _told him a full m· it at first, for a couple or vest.igahon would ~ made, ru.sons. For one thing, I was and ~ .~rso~s ~denhour still in the Anny. For another, had tdm~if1ed .1n hlS letter as far as l was concerned it would be interviewed. was all hearsay. U.S. spokesmen said the Army ts holding U . William ilr• !~.~~p~~.~ Calley Jr., 28, of Miami, Fla ., at Ft. Benning, Ga., in con· nectlon with the slaying of 109 lng." "I believe the Nixon ad- ministration ls really not tryLog to bring us together, but Is engaged, knowingly or unknowingly, in a polarlza· tion process,'' said Humphrey, 0 polarizatlon with the in- tended result of the sup. presslon of dissenl" 111 doubt that our COW1try has seen in lhe past 20 years such an obvious and calculated Nixon Asks Tariff Cut WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon a s k e d Congress today for authority t.o make "modest" tariff ad· 'justrnents and measures to protect American industry llurt by foreign imports. Ni xon said he favored more liberal world trade and pJa.ns to appoint a special corn- m.iSfoion to develop more far- reachlng policies for dealing with trade problems of the 1970s which ''di f fer signllicanUy from those of the past." But in a special message to Congress, he objected among other things to the 80-CSlled American selling p r i c e system, a device by whlch the value of imports for tarUf purposes Is set by the price of competitive American pro- ducts instead of the actual price of the fcreign product. ·Patient Dies at 4 7 11! or-cj\lilians in the T!vong An l area on March. 11, 1968. A squad leader in Calley's pla---------.. 1 tooo, Stall Sgt. David Ml~ PITI'SBURGH (AP -Box- ing Promoter Ben Anolik, the world's second longest-living heart trasplant patient, died today at the age or 47. Anolik had Jived It monlhs and six days with the heart of a man killed in a traffic crash. Aug. 31 , 1968. A spokesman for Presbyterian Hospital said he died from an "overwhelming infeclion caused by drugs in- jected to prevent rejection of the heart." He had returned to the .hospital July I because of complications from the drugs. But just last Aug. 6 he celebrated the r i r s t an.- niversary of the transplant with a party in his hospital room. He wisecracked with newsmen and said, "I !eel fine today." Before being hospitalized In July he said he had been walk- ing up ta three miles a day. "Then shooting started. I was wounded in the leg. I was covered by dead bodies but I dared not move. I stayed there --for about one hour until the ~ soldiers walked away towards , the sea. When it was quiet, th e survivors, maybe 80 of us, ran to the Son Thanh market place one kilometer away for help.'.' chell, 29, St. Francisville, La., is being investigated at Ft. Hood, Te:<., £or allegedly com- mitting assault with intent to murder in the same incident. Speaking through an in· terpreter, some of Truong An's 1,500 residents: today told what had happened during - what they call the "breakfast massacre" in mid-March, 1968. ''\Ye were eating breakfast that morning.'' Do t'huc, 48, said. Suddenly a r t i I I e r y rounds, many of them, started exploding aJI around . It lasted maybe 30 minutes. We bid in bunkers. Then eight helicopters 1 a n d e d and American troops came into the village. "They ordered us out of our homes. Everyone -old men, children, women with babies. They marched us a rew hun- dred meters and told us to squat down. Still we had no reason to be afraid. Everyone was calm." "All the Americans had rifles. They set up one gun with le~ that I had never seen before. Now the people were crying and begging. One monk showed a soldier his iden- tification papers, but the American just said, 'sorry.'" ~~c;'~~··~~~~·~~i,4';················1 You want t9 •II -Item l ? that yw no 1-r need but « tomM1W el.. Cln UM for NOT OYER $50 , , , , • • • • , • YOUI ANSWER: • • , ' You coll THE DA1L Y PILOT, •ok for Clfttlfied Adw011111 .. , •nd pl-• PILOT PENNY- PINCHER CLASSIFIED NJ AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RA'lli 3. ~Mn 2 TIMIS 2 DOlWS 'ANO YOUR CltlQJT IS GOOD I DIAL NOW Dl"ECT! 642 °5678 ""''"" ___ l ntl Tum in. Fora sharp offer. SW.11• ..... -.__,_ for'"'1y29t • -wfthg •P I )llidlaw al- ldp alll)Q Taca:o -..._...a•d ·M111c Ed9o"-........ ...,., .... SkuUed stag '-cllM. DlalrwuslMNcrf .. u.a.. dJtlonoly ifUGIGd&l d.,. ----~,.... ..... ............... ... • • DEMOS ACCUSE ADMINISTRATION OF ATTACK ON 'RIGHT TO DISSENT' W. Averell Harrima n, Hubert Humphrey and Sen. Freel Harri• Level Ch•ree kesurerour Chridrnas Club Account doesn't come up short. Just say the word and Security Pacific Bank will make your deposits for you. We call it Automatic Transfer Service. We'll transfer the money from your checking account to your Christmas Club Acci:>unt. Monthly. Automatically. You can make it easy on you rself. By cutting out the chances of miss- ing a Christmas Club deposit. And by saving the hassle of mak- ing a deposit every other week or every month. When Christmas time comes around your Christmas Club Account won't come up short. You'll get every dollar you planned on getting. With interest. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK • • ' • .. ' • • - • • • . . .· •• • l- D.UIS PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE -. A clivlded Board Of Supervisors !las p0sll>Oned un'. W ne:rt week any dectllon on going ~ead wlfli' the gee.. oad pbase ?f lllat stonp center, lb~ ~··~,P,!an of air transportation. ., '· (•. . A\ Issue i• a $111,000 study by ~ P~ra -an\\ Asaociat .. of tbe _possible developlllemt .ol 18'1iroobisU-cated system of iltrports within o~,. Ccajjf, Th• system would feature regional ~~··m~ an,d air park1 throughout Ibo county_.,. ~b11f'li'ould ;.,.. · volve enlargement or replacement If. eijSUng.~IUUe~ This dilemma's horns are espec~1jsllalp1!or ~ gupervlsors. Failure to provitte eveJ illle ·most basic air transportation needs of Ille copilltl'' busine88, In- • j • • (feejurlnJ Ibo Berlin PbiJ!iarmonlc Octet) baa a lineup qi talent equal •to tbal pres•ted in such ciU.rels of chamber mualc aa Puadena Ind Loo Angeleo-lnclud·. Ing ar1lsta crlllcally acclaimed as "bell In the world." The llOCii!Y ·lir seeking Iii present the "precloumeH · of the fln.e...arts" without being. a •oclal club-.and Iii ,_ )'OWIC alldl-11 well aa the olde<.faltbf\ll. · -A'<'Cu!Ulial thrust of Ibis 'quallly dose"'.~ the patron-•&~ wbo enjoy the thrill of gre·at music greeUy "' . •• . Oo I t Straightforwardly dustry and public at large JlOll]d,~ a tragic back· , . wanlness in Ibo air and space, a2""""•ll,r .\o. tbe eco-'-'-• ,,, . Vll;e.Presldent Spiro Agnew's verbal blagt& at clis- nomic base needed to support an ever;grow\llg 'j>opula-sentera lind at radlo-1'V commentaton' Jack of.ob~Uv- tlon. -.. c. lty 'iri assouinf l'relldent.Nixon'1 appeal for unity and On the other hand, factors of noise;. al!;poUution arid · sul>POrt of bll Vietnam policy have more than 'the safel)r make airport development a poli\ical cli ... ter lot obvJou.s disturbing ...-!. . officeholders advocating it. .1 . . .Wllile the polls sni>w-that both Nixnn and Agnew Nevertheless, prompt action on ordeFly planning·· bave struck an understandably responJive ·chord. in the is Imperative. Continuing to drift will be disastrous. "great silent majority/• Agnew's contention that he is Top Quality MU$ic Nearby Its name is Laguna Beach Chamber Music Society. The title is accurate as lo locatiop but mfsleading as to membership, participation and audience. Audiences converge on the Laguna Beach High School Auditorium in the society's four-concert season from commuriities up and doWJl the Orange Coast from the San Diego County to the Los Angeles County lines, and beyond. Once given mostly by local Laguna amateur must· cians, the concerts today are entirely professional en .. aembles. . .q'be new (tenth) season's opening tomorrow evening speaking on hia own and for himself alone. is pure bald· erdash. The American people are too smart to swallow thi5. \v Agnew's put-downs have advance clearance at the bile House and a~e likely inspired there In the first instance. Both the President and Vice President have every right to rebut their critico-end should do so. Bui it sboold be done strai(btforwardly, not with the President •ending bis Vice Pr .. ldent to tbe'bustlngs to do the dirty verbal work "independenUy. •• Another credibility gap at the presidential level Is Ille last lhinlflbe nation should have if lbere ls to be unity. The President should be more a&'lute politically than to tblnk he can hoodwink the American people into believmg Agnew Is not speaking for bim. , • . . . ~ . . .. . ; . . 'New Mohe' Was Person to ·Person ls Only Answer Diffi cult, De licate, Deli berate A Radical Front Helsinki: Historic Meeting WASHING TON -A sell-appointed "steering committee'' of Conununisl.!I, Tro~ites, socialists, radical pacifl!ts and otner extmnists mastennlnded and manipulated last w~k'a series of anti· Vietnan: actlviUes. This inner clique of Marxists and revolutionaries is the real power behind the so-called New Mobilization Com· miUee to End -Ole War in Vietnam. "New Mobe" was set up by the leftists as a front to enable them to exercise con· trol and domination of lar&e numbers Of well-meaning and respectable -V·ietnam · dissetiters. Actually, 'New Mobe" is a new facade for the National MobiJiza. tion Committee for Peace in Vietnam ("Mobe"), which had a three-year his- lory of violence and civil disobedience. These operations include repeated al· tempts to storm and close down the Pen- tagon, the riots at the 1968 Democratic convention and the Washington demonstraUons during President Nixon 's inaugw"atlon. · "NEW l\tOBE'' AND the self. de-signaled steering committee grew out of a "national anU·war conference" In Cleveland last July. Other people, in other countries, always ,. ~ : r~·-:i.\ seem more "monolithlc" than our own ! ' ~ people s'eerit to us . Living ln the U.S., we i ·'~ A'U ''• fd · ~· ~ti.:. ~~ can easUy see the vast diversity of I . . en..,o 8Dl~ /:". ! citizens, In their habits, altitudes, ideas \;I "''';.._,_,....'""-_..,_,.;...,.;:"-""' and bellers. It would be hard, if not lm-·-possible, to define "the American.,. Yet we a.scribe to olher peoples a uniformity we know doea not exist among our own. We 1peat ol. the "British" or the "French" or the "Russians" as if they were some· huge robot with in- terchangeable parts. Party, USA; Sidney Len!, leader of the nov:-defunct Revolutionary W or k e r s League; DaY1d Dellinger, head or "!\Jobe'' and one of the Chicago seven now on trial for distw-bances at the Democratic convention. ALSO ISHMAEL FLORY, Afro. This is one ol the gnat dangers in what the social Pl)'cbologiab call 11bloct-think· . Difl!c:ulL deUcste, and deliberate are the ,adjectives to describe the ta1D we are getting into with the Ruutans. The aim of the dlsciwiona is to bring under control -even to freeu -the build-up · of ~presalvily cosUy nuclear weapons. These would include both Jong-range of. fensive milalles and antlballistic missile defenae systeliilr: - The United Stales and tbe Soviet Union send their nego&latof3 to the conference table after almost 1wo years of deekllng just when· and where to talk. The preylous benchmarks of cooperation between the two powers of any real nuclear strength are the 1963 limited tes\.- ban treaty an'f. the 19111 nonproliferation pacL American Heritage Association; Phil Bart, chalnnan of lhe Ohio Communist Party, USA; Jay Schaffner, W.E.B. DuBois Clubs of America: Gene Tournow-, national secretary of the \V.E.B. DuBois Club.s; Sylvia Kushner, lt>ader of the Chicago Peace Council. ~ Sen. Byrd charges flatly that the underly!11g J:Erpose of the curn:nt seriea of demoMt.raUOns "is to "advance the in- sidious goals of communism and anarchy." THE lllS'roRY OF those everltual agreementa argues against any early fonnal undemanding at Helstniri On the ot1Jer hand, for the first time since World War II the two nations parley on a Uirly Ing." There ls no such enUty U "Rmsia" even basis. U.S. News and World Repbrt in I.he abstract: there are Russian leld. asserts: "The RussJans are approachlng ers, and factlons. and buftlucrats, and rough parity with the U.S. in nuclear workers, and youtl], and lntellec~ .and"·-strength after lagging far behind far 20 tanners, and scientists. years." And it would be to the advantaie of the USSR to decelerate the nuclear competition. The U.S. gros,, national pro. duct of well over $800 billion is easily more than double Ulat of the Sov~t f"fi'l""',""'1--"""" "· -.· ' :,-'\ . , ~' F.difurial " ballistic missiles In place or going Into 1 .Place. The total is r o u g h J y 300 · more land·based unit s than the United States has in place. The estimate comes to 150 more missiles than American of. Jicials had calculated last spring. r:~~ . J;lCl~~h. -J ~'~""·'·· __ ._ ... ::: .............. _,., Union, still under Ht>o ~Ulion. 'Ille artn.1 race must hit the Russian economy hard· tt than ours. Thewor.ld's major nations sought· vain- ly in the 1921 Washington Naval Con· ference· to bring naval power under con- trol. The United States in I!M6 offered to give·up itS nuclear IJlOOOpoly in fa vor of inte~tional control. The geslure was as Ineffective as e'arlier nltemplf. , at disannanent had been.. 'lbe quest ffiir dlsarnwnent has been :a series of !>old appr6acbes, mioor successes, and 1J1&j<)r disa:ppoinbnents. Tbe talks of Helsinki will represent the ln6st direct attempt yet made to control the means of waging thermonuclear war. INTELlJ:GENCE reports issued by government sources in late October show a Russian build-up of many types of strategic weapons. The e v J d e n c e , gathered mostly by s urveillance satellites, shows that Russia has, for ex· ample, about I , 3 5 O ititerconUnental President Nixon told a news conference on March 14 that his decision to deploy a modified anUmi.ssile system, far from being -provocative, would provide "an in· centlve for ... avoidance of spiraling U.S. and Soviet strategic arms budgel5.'' The ABM systems and multiple independently targeted re-entry vehicles (MIRVs) will be tops! on the Helsinki agenda. Mutual mistrust can be e1~ed on both sides. Both the test-ban and nonproliferation agreements took years to work out. atrt' Till!:• ALKs . could' hlve f ' ~ndary effect. Henry Owen, director o[ f0reign policy for the Brookings InstiµI· tion, suggests that informal agreements parallel with the Strategic Arms Limita· lions Talks (SALT) could lead to mutual nu clear restraint. At the same tirne the hold-Off might be extended to other weapons systems. And : ''The result could be a pattern of reciprocal action and counteraction which de-escalated the arms· race, even before any formal agreement had been signed." This kind of informal agreement to hold punches ls neither unique nor improbable, It was convened at the call of a group of 30 Pttarxlst and radical leaders. Most or then: are now members of the backStage steering committee. Some 900 represen· tatives of revolutionary and pacifist organiiatlons attended the meeting Prominent among them we.re: !\fany of those particJpaUng un· doubtedJy are well·lntentioned. Byrd riadily aclmow~es that there'is milch disenchaotment with the Vietnam war. But he polnta out that tnose who engineered Jast week's mua manifeiita- lionJ in Washington "include members of the'lUQalic fringe of the New Len as well If 'C1Jmlng,,.dedicatal ·enem1a ol tbe United States Whose Ultimate goals afe to subvert our citizenry, overthrow our govt:mment and establish a totalitarian society." AND THERE IS emy reuoo . to believe that, despite c o v e r nm en t repnssion, they are 11 divenlfied u we are. Some fear ua. some bate u, and some -Ire us. Some are belilgerenL and some are pacifistic. Moreover, the Establishment figures In Russia ore going to have as hard a time keeping their youn1 peos»e in line 11 we are bav· Jng -no matter how much "Party discipline" fl eu«lsed 11 tbe top. Th~ Light ·Side of Popery • Th:!: Communist Party, USA; Stuitents for a Democratic Society; W.E.8. DuBois Clubs of America ; Socialist Workers Par· ty (Trotskyite Communists): Yoong Soclali!t Alliance (associated "1'ith SWP}; Youth Against War and Fascism: Southern California Peace ActiOt'I Coun· cil; Veterans for Peace in Vietnam: Fifth Avenue Vietnam Peace Parade Com· mittee; Chicago Peace Co u n c i 1 ; Cleveland Area Peace Action COUllcilj Women's Strike for Peace. The great tragedy, he warns, Js that 11lhousand1 of well-meaning Americans may allow themselves unwillingly to be manipulated Into furthering these sinlsler goals." THE SENATE Democratic leader con· tends that PrtsWeut·Nlxon is well aware ol. the -g dlaapprovil of tbe Vietnam · conflict, 'lltld is~ anci determined; ly seeking Ways lo brlng It lo an end. ALSO PRESENT were Individuals who "11le ~ent hes 1 po t e n claim to be connected with ''GI uri.. oqurageously," aaya Byrd: "He bu derground newspapers" ":""" devoted to 1artiicQlated i posjtive plan for peace, and diSRminating anti-war propaganda and .\i bellete It can work if ~ American peo. derumciatlons of U.S. armed forces. plt"wiJI. \Qte behind hlm. Partisan poll- ln a detailed report, Sen. Robert Byrd, tJcs~ aot be a cona1deration. March- W.Va., deputy Democratic ·"'.blp and .~;anit;~lp&; placards In the streets chairman of an Appropriatioils Sub-.• .. WlU .~*:the President 1n bis di~l!lt . committee, !Isis tbe backstage leaden taR:\iilna~ demonstrations ol disaenl who controlled and mallipulated the WllfllOt'_,-:o peace. cieveland pow-wow, AU are Communistl· ~~ationa can only HrVe to en- and revoluUonartes, and include ·' \be . ·~·~~enemy, feed the propaganda foUowlnir ' · .-aild 1urtber weakon tbe bargaining Arnold Johnaon, public relations dlrec-poslt!Ot> of the United Slstes at tbe Paris tor and legislative representative a( lhe pe~.~·" Conuinlillst Pirty, USA : Irving•Satnoff, ........-Byrd polnfl out !hit tbe Vi.t member or the district council of • Cana and North Vietnam ha v e $outhem Ci11f0Qtla Communist Party "repeatedly used the anti-war movement USA; Sidne'y "Peck, fonncr state -com: In Uris. country to •trtngtben· Plett mllleeman of Wbconsln Conunllnist demoncfs." . ..---.... George --1 Dear George: , No government. or &ystem, has ever been able to clamp a cast·tron conf9fmltf on its people in the face of changing times and need&. · IN POINT OF FACf, tbe more UghUy any regime trlel to apply such a clamp, the more le't'tre and pi'oton&ed becomes the reeetion. Hitler indoctrinated a whole gener1Uoa of German youlh 1 n to tnllilarilm and chauvinism -1iu\ young people In Germany today ore 111100I tbe most tnternaUonal-rnlnded and war· hating in the work!. nus ii because Germany Jost the war, you mlcht say, but we won the war, and our youth are repudialing all the old shib- boleths just U vehemenUy. Tbere fl I new splrtt abroad, and while It may manliest ltoeU diffemrtly In tbe U.S., Germany; and ~' whit lt hu in common fl ·a hard refusl1 to lie manipulated 117 the people In power. ONE OF THE MAIN reuons !hat en- mities are perpetualed b7 governments is Uttlr way of wantlna us to loot at other natloM in temu of t0lld blocks -10 that we nacl to the "french" or the "Russians" u if they wll!f'e some Wlified piece of machinery, lmlelld ol 1 coi- lecUon of lndividulll ol vlr)'lng ollitudes, 'ideaa, and belief1, with tbe oame vque - good wtll and tbe same naqlng lean that we hive. DUBLIN -A man in London is engag· eri in rather an odd enterprise. He is put· ting together an anthology ol "best Catholic humor.'' He writes to people and says, u1 woukl be most grateful if your readers would tend me their favorit.t? Catholic jokes, with a particular emphasis on epigrams, wittlcisma and pithy sayings which have any coonection to the doctrines, practices and penonalltles of the Church." J had not thought that the somber celebrations of the one, holy, Catholic and apostolic church were much of a subject for levity; Then I remembered my chUdbood, which was lilied with biller lrisb jibes agalmt Holy Mother Church. some of It really funny and some of it of tit!! gallows humor variety. 1'EING IN THE capilsl ol Ireland (llOUlhern branch) and of Irish wit and humor, I thought I would put a few o( my sources to work on the light aide ol papery. Here are some of the results: -The Countess ol Fingal!, In ber book Seventy Year1 Young, caught llODle ol the ttllgious billerness of Northern Ireland when she related how a visitor admired an the churches In the area-Catholic, Presbyterian, Methodist, P I y m o u th Brethrtn, Quaker Meeting Plaoe, and the rest. "They bulkl them for the . sake or . j religion," the friend said, with ad· mitatloo. "No,'.' replied the Countess, "tlley build them for spite." -A CLASSIC IRISH joJ<t concerns two fannen wOO,.Were walt!!ig '-for the local Protestant landlord lo pass by so 1hal they could ventilate his hide with buckshot. It took him a Tong time to ar- rive. A ten1ble thought occurred to Mick. ''Paddy," he said, ~·say a prayer that nothing'• happened to the poor niat\ ... -1be Wi cked Protestant Landlord robb9d the poor farmer's daughter or her virtue but he wilnted to be just. ue sent for the gtrl'.s mother. · "Mn. Sullivan, you must know I can't marry your daughter but I wish to com· · pensate her. I'll setUe $,000 pounds on the chlld and give a further 2,000 pounds to your daughter. For yourself, 1 have 500 pounda." SHE STARTED to leave, a bit out of breath. "The bltlSing of the revol vhig Indian saint of Jnlshbonn be Oil yoo, the bi"8ing .or ·the Holy Hennits of Clonmacnoise fall on you and all who belong to you .•. " She paused. An awful thought struck her. "Oh, heavens, milord .. ·.If she has a miscarriage will you give h'"er another . chance?" -Over the old gate of Bandon, Co. Cork, the following slogan was carved in olden times: "Turk, Jew' or Atheist may enter . here;, bul oot a P<fpist." And beneath it had been carved a rejoinder: "Who wrote it, wrote ii well, for the same is written on the gates of Hell." -THE PRIEST WAS inslructing the, class in religious knowledge. "Like the fat and lean in bacon," he said, "some people are good and some are bcid. Now. Moira, if you were bacon, \li'hat would you be?" :" "Streaky, Father." . -The litUe boy had been sitting closo lo the confession box door for a long time before Father Kelly ooticed him. "Have you been listening lo coniessions all evening?" the fu rious prie s S demanded. "Oh, no, Father. I'm only here SiTICCl the woman who slept with the sailor came out" -And there was, or course, the Irishman who said he would rather die than be bw1ed in a Protestant cemetery. ---..,___ ' • J· dkl the blpftducing exercises In your puopl>le~ then I lost ,tbe pomfh!el bdcre I got to my thighs. I W!ikliiflliltidticlng tbe lJU10I' ~ wblr.e I .e:tand with anns aklinbo ..ith -leg oulsttetched while ....... , lbe muscles or the other Jes: 'trblt do I do now! "THE DEMONSTRA110NS will mike the Cooununisls turn som<rsaulis ol joy In Paris, Peking, M~w and Huoi," he declares. ''Some Americana may have rationalized that marching on the na- tion's capital is an ad of patrioUsm. Quite lo the contrary. Jt Catt ooly en-. ~age the Communists and prolong the war which we all want to. &et .brought to an honorable end," When E-.-er.wu Prafdent be ' started some klatl ol -to-pmen movement, which wu at the time ftifrely abortive and Matlaien\al ; but the pbraae is a good and necellll'J' one, for H wt are ever to relOIYe aailonai dUiereocel without annt>I' confllcl, tt w!ll boft to Come about on 1 penoa-to-ptl'llll bull. not --l-lo-pYmunen~ Dear Gloomy Gus: Viewpoin~-· --~iilil--. ~ _,_ -- MISS DOS. Dear Mia D.S.: Doa~ do I IJilnr, you'll spoll lblJ golden moment! Stand there, dear -I .... lo .--mbu you jllSI u you are. • • CONFIDENTIAL TO BARBY GOLDWATER JR.: lloa' "°'1-y - -y people 11on·1 ho~ any -·-PP. .. Rep. Eligio de la Garza, 0.Ter., stroqgly ~hoed Byrd's views. He characterized the dtmonstrallolu as ;,an exercile tn futlllty." "Such orgulsed allllrs -•n ln<ult lo our terVioemen and their families," said the World War U vet.ran, who enllaled In tbeNooy ll<lhe .,. ol 17. ':'J'beY show an "appdtla !act ol lelth Ip tbe clomocr1UC ..--. '11111 .. port end porcel ol lhe continulnJ elf orb to wreck the American government ·and.lo brln, rovolutlon end llllf"'1 lo·OUl'·"""'iry." llJ 11Mnt S._Aile1 ud j ... A. Goldlml~ Quotes G-~ hdllel -"Gr<al men tell us Cb.at trt, too. no matur how little we llfltrD to be. can It.ave some foot· prints 00 tbe und " time. Tile footprints !hit ........ -be i.,.,. lot anotber." ~ Roydea, Bemle7, .. lfllC< Klilleftmeall -:"" t•Now academia will be • expoeed In emt>lricol finds from more than · ooe localJty of God'• dynamic untvene. 'J'rulY,.11111 fl ,....is." .. __ ,_ Pmldenl Nllon has accuHd tbe Congress o1 belnc • "do nolhtnc Collgn!sa." p!dn1 Congrfll vote llaell a subllonlial salary m-1 -L.G.IL , '"'" '""'" mltctl ..._.. .-...: ... -nwMIY HllM .. ""' """'",..,., '-"' ,..,. .... ....... • ...... , .... Mltr ....... "• 'l'rary City, Tea., Her11W: "Wbat ls an edll.orial! In a word, It ls fhe viewpoint of a newrpaper. Why are editorials publiabed! They are published . . • becaa.se .. ~ evfr! newspaper has a duty lo sllmullle public concern ol Important probltms by expressin& at lean one point of View. The newspaper which decllnts tG • be a p4rt or dlscU.'fSIOn 11bo~m!I or major Importance in Its community is not Uvln& up to ill duty." ' Tuesday, November 18, 1969 The editorial page of the Dail!J Pilot setk& to inforn1 and stlm- tdale reodtra by presenting' th;, ttew.rpaper'1 OJ)i1Uom and com- mentary on topk:s of inteT'est and rignifl.canca, bu pro uidtno a foni.m for the expression of our rtoders, opinioni, tmd b11 prtsentlng the dfvtrsc view- pofnb of informed observers and 1pokiime11 on topfc1 of tht <Jay. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • " .. • . -- • J , .. ,. ' • • • • -• - • • • • .. • • • • QUWllE ~-· · • · Speiilier:Sees t1!-aos on BallOt ·in.1 Proposal;. ' I ty. Ph(l1nierlandl • DAIL~ nun z ~C .. Drops Muslim -t • ~ .. Courses - Sliritmer µt~p~ SA~f:~ (.U~!l '-think this wou ld be mosl con·. , !cllool . CP'l! and al least ,IO Pr,opo5f1s i whtc!J, •· ~d fusing to lhe voters; '1 percent or welfare. . , the'.~ efecUorr ~Uot .with Monagap told . a news 'con-nae ·sPonsor! said counues W reform · rbeasut'Cs • ere ferenct. now pay 65 percent of ICbool reoelvl.ng a ~ reqp\ion "ObvloUsfy, there would be d:l6ts . and . S5 percent ~ . FRESNO (AP) -'lbree blaek llUdle:I ...._ llqbl by -mrmlal"Black Musllm poet M~n JJe,tn>on at Fresno Slot• CO!lep have 'been ....,.Jjed, ' But Busts, Same .. rrom AsRm~IJ 'Pei"t..et 1 utter chaos if more :than ·one welfare ·-not l:nclu·dln1 Robert T. Mbugan.~. ·. ~~ •·O! them were to pass,"-he ad·· f¢eral contr~butjons. . . 'Ibe Califomla Te a:c h~~r: · ded1 The pro~ls by But the CTA and $Upervisors ABOclation ' joined ~with._., Gonsalves and the c, TA • did . not say b(lw the state c:Olmty supervlsars ~ 8ssOCiaU6A. supervisors will" appear on the should raise the $898 mll)ion By L. M. BOYD MEASUREMENTS -The hips of young ladies In their 20s now are slimmer than the ~fa9rs0!g~~~J:;~ 1:1::01:,. but slimmer. In 1939, .1. the average hip measurement or girls in said age bracket was 37.5 inches, Today, lts's 36.9 i'.iches. Waists of these v.'Omen have sllmmed down, too. By a little less than an inch. But the average bust measurement re-. mains unchanged. It was and is 34 iocbes. All this comes up because a client asks if the young ladies of today. aren't a little bustier than were their mothers at the same age. No; sir, they're not. Th~y just. seem so because their other;. measurtments have changed., Tomorrow, diagrams, possibly, ' MIGHTY PURE STUFF, .\ coconut milk. Did you k.10W' some doctors during World War 11 in the South Pacific dripped coconut milk instead of sterile glurose solution· directly into the veins of wounded patients? ••. COME ON, nus is impossible. A pumpkin weighing 197 pounds, J mean. One Chester Whitenack of Check, Va., reportedly grew same this year. Some pumpkin. Ml?oday in bact:l.ng, coe .. June 2 primary elect Io rt the'tai shllt would cmt; government withdre~r·lhe ls· po s.~ I. Demo C·'r.a tt;c;. ballots it emugh signatures "I don't believe," Monagan sue. 1 , Assemblyman Joe· Gonsakts. are, gathered to qualify the in· &aid, "I can supPort· any kind • J11<-. who pr<{en bls r.:usllm name Marvin /C. bas been moet1n1 Wcinnally wt11t , his cl1JMS..11Dce 1 court ordeio WU baJOd barrina bJm flan luchinf -al lbe.eollep. ' CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. offered·his own aep&rat.e '-"" itialives. -or .proposal,. w~ther. it 1,s.ooe ''I claim tbe term •Q'.f."Jor a lo lawmakers. ·..: ;, · 1be CTA-supe.rvisors plan by -the GTA-Ol'tbe ·supervllors soldier. origiilaUy came from · "ll .!»Ow appears:-.,t!iat ~ woOld increase the $ 7 5 O or any other ·· group th.It thhe words·'galvaniZed iron.' migh~ be three or four O!',Ji;li homeowners' property tax ~X· d(>esn't at the sa!tfe.µme .spell What d·o you say'" A News to• different measures. O\I' :1.be empUon to $1,000 and reqult'e oot what I.a.Jes ·they are goin& "' me. Th 0 u g h t' "G.i." came ·ballot relating to ta1ea aftd 1' the state to pay 50 pereent or lo raise to .ac®mpllsh th~."-, 'lf.'t& , from "Government J • s u e~:. Coll<ge ollklals ,...........i lhe cancellations "!odday and said elhnlc atudlea -cleporlment ehalnnao Richard Keyes wtll determine whether the 70 atudeall "'"'lied In I b 1 coune wflJ receive credit for , , . Q. '"WHAT'S thO.comm°"' est surname in Russian?"' A. Ivanov. WAGER ~ Say you get together this Thanksgiving with 12 ·J>e9ple in a room. If it's not too Personal, ask all 12 to cou.1t the change in their pockets or purses. Odds are two will come qp ~ith precise- ly the same amount of money. That's not llbsoluteJy in- evitable, but lt's an ex· ceedingly good bet. DOCTORS WHO work with convicts will .tell you the murderer ge.nerally is less in- telligent than any o th e. r criminal . . • TUE FWGHT SCHOOLS are DOW tu.mµig out pilots at the rate-of four a • minute •••• AN EXECU1'IvE in the foreig., exchange department of a bank says the -signatures 9( the Siamese are the most difficult to decipher. MUSIC -Among Joungsters who take up muSic In school orcbestras,·tbe violin i more popular than . the'. ac. cordion, the clarinet is prefer· red ove r the trumpet, and the flute is chosen more fre- quently than the saxophone. Trombones and drums come out about evea. Jody~s M{)ther Cries Heari_ng '~,Like Mom' BAJ{ERSFIELD (UPI) ;... Ll~e Jody Fouquet, 5, pointed ' to 'her mother as the woman was brought into t h e courtroom. "~t's my mom. I like mom," Jod,y said. _ Across the courtroom, Mrs. Betty Lansdown Fouquet, 26, burst into tears and waved at her daughter at the opening or a preliminary hearing in mtm.icipal court Monday. .Mrs. Fouquet and her com- mon-law husband, Ronald F. are aceused of abandoning Jody beside a freeway south of here last month. Poll Shows Alioto Now . . Well Known At Ute end of the da)'·long session, the Fouquets'. court- appoin ted attorneys asked for dismissal of a felony couflt against the couple which charged they placed the child under circumstances likely to. produce ,great bodily harm. Judge Doyle Miller set .Dec. 4 as the date for a ruling on the motion. The Fooquets also are charged with willful child abandonment. They were arrested Oct. 29 In Bell Gardens, five days after a highway patrolman found Jody clinging to a fence : beside U.S. Highway 99. Jody told authorities her parenls let her out ·of the ~r during the night" and told lier to wait by the fence. Jody was made a ward~ the c-OUrt last week pending placement in a foster home. Bill ·Lansdown, Camas V_alley, Ore., who says he Is Jody's real father , requested custody of the child al the hearing. · Ha.yl\k,awa Won't Talk With Hare - Savings in Medi-Cal ·Sought by Computer SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A high rate of nearly one per Nathan !are :w~ he tit~. d~rs'. gioup says the st~te patient visit. 'I1ie committee as ~.hair an ff the school s. could SS:Ye $$.5 million a year admonished the doctor whose ethnic studies department. In its expen!!ive Medi.Cal ~ "shot profile" d--d to orie "l can see no useful purpose · . . . ·~rr- .SAN FRANPSCO (AP) -1 Dr. s: 1. Hay_akawa, San'Fran- cisco State College's president,.. has refu!ied lo debate with J;>t. Servecl by debating with an gram by p~ming into a for each 7 .5 visit!. acknowledged advocate O{ rev. computer lhe records or doc-Pf. DonaJd c. Hanington, olutlon and Black Panther Ide-tors a!ld patients. San Joaquin. ,foundation presi· worlc already -· Jackrn<n ·ind Ke~ de- clined COlllll"'1I on the deve~ oprnenl, Jackmoo was hll'ed by Keys at the begU\nlni of the semester, but was later told by then Preafdenl Frederio Ness that he.could· not teach. N ... noted that Jacloooo does not have a degree, that he bas rellOUllCed . bis u .& citlsenshlj> and that be ill under indictment for refuaia& to report fqr inducllon Into the armed forces. Court Starts-ology," Hayakawa · said Mon· The Urllted ·Foundatlorts for dent, and Dr: John Kenney, day in reply to a challenge Medical CareS propot;ed Mon-Santa Rosa, president of unit· from Hare. day the system be Installed ed foundations-, compmed or For FMcapee Hare, a Negrol waS a leader statewkle. It was tested this a local foundations, ufled ex· · in a four-month strike at the · past· year by the-Sin.Joaquin tt1111lon of the system state· college last fail during which Found&tlon for Medical Care . wide. , COMPTON (UP I) the Black Students Union under .contract with 'th.i state Harrington said the San Leonard Thomas F~ 11, sought an ethnic studies de-· offl~ of health care services. Joaquin program CO!t $140,000 goes to court today·to begin a partmerit and the ·admission The foundation's peer review to imtall and .$30,000 a month cycle of legal prooeedhtp of all Negroes regardles! Of commlttee--docton who ques.. to operate. aimed at returning him to academic. qualifications. Uon clatms submitted by other Nevada for • pair ol. murders Hare, who calls · himse\C · docton before they are for-committed 4t years ago. "chairman in exile'' Of~ de-. warded for payment -kept ·Given Med·aI· "I was one of lour chDClren, partment. declared that when carefUI computerized "pro-and I guess -1 wu a little he came to the college ''I was files" of the phy1icl1n11' ser-wild," Fristoe said. k. I ·00 00 SAN LEANDRO CAP) Fristoe escaped from 1be NUDE -Note a youthful San Frlt\ciscan contends he will not be satisfied unUl The Establishment prints a naked lady on our postage stamps. Too bad. The young fellow may stay unsatisfied for some time. Still, such a thing would not be unique. Spain printed a nude on a postage stamp years ago. Goya's "a Maja des Nuda." Raised quite a stir. Abool half the horrif1ed post- men in the world refused to accept Spanish mail, so that Your questimis and com- ments are welcomed and toi!l be used wherever possi.· sible in "Checking Up." ,Ad- dress your mait to L. M. Soyd, in care of DAILY PI- LOT, Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif. 92663. ~ request was turned down SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -pending further investigation The California Poll reported into · the L a n s d o w n s ' today thai the Look magazine background. not roo ing or a J · • • a vices a"nd the treatment re-Highway patrolman MJcbael Nevada State Prison in Canon I am not looking for one now. 1' ceived by the patients. .D. Oll.ilap, ze, who dashed into Cit Dee 15 1923 Hls' ' On Nov. 12 he filed suit In Misuse of the program could flaming wreckage to save fiye daJghter-i~law 'turned him ilt~T afticle linking San Franci~ Lansdown, Mrs. Fouquefs Mayor Joseph L. Alioto to a former husband, told in· hall-Oozen Mafia figures ap-vestigators the woman also parently has made him a be~ had custody of another child ter known figure to California the couple had -Jeffrey, 3. voters. An investigatio n has revealed Superior Court ask.in~ .for re-be detected qUickly -for tX· persons In a freeway pileup In Saturday on a disturbing the"il instatement to the position and ample: · San Leandro May 9, bas earn-pe ce barge alte f ..... n .. 'TJ $10,000 in lost wages. -A ·Medi.Cal recipient who ed California's Medal of Valor. aq~abbfe. r a ""'>uv:.' went to four different doctors, The citation sakl two "It was quite a life," Frbtoe Fired Blind Welfare received four prescrlpUons and perlOn!L dled in the fire and said In his cell. "I escaJlfJ&1, tilled them at four. differtnt . the other five would hive . if from Carson City because l flJ pharmacies-all in one day. Dunlap had not pulled them waited to be free. Slace then,111 -A doctor who was giving from their car, wedged under I've really burnt the candle al W orJoor .Gets .Hearing. But it also reported that this that Jeffrey has been missing has been cooplf!P with growth at least eight months. of an unfavorapie imag~ or The FouQuets, upon 'advice . l)im. . . · • ~ ·ar their 'ittorntys. so. fat ha Ye SD Bridge Traffic Up Injections at an exceptiona.lly a burning ruck. both ends." ;->-..:....~~~~....:....c......:....c...::.:;:::::::.:.:::c::..~~~~-=::.:::=:~~~~~" .I SACRAN.ENTO (UPI) -A blind welfare v.•orker, fired because she took one of her ' conducted"hei'self in any man-' . ner that would justify her ..termination before that time welfare clients to a San Fran· (August trip)." cisco clinic al her own ex-Mrs. Wolfe has been wittl pense, has won a hearing the department since t~: · before the county m e r I t Besides her blindness, she Is partially paralyied from in· system bureau. juries received in a n El Dorado County Depart--automobil= accident. ment of Social Welfare fired She holds degrees from the Mrs. Cecil \Volle of Placerville University of California at last August. lt said Mrs. Davis and the state college \Yolfe, who is provided a s.ystem. driver by the county because _ 1 Mrs. Wolfe said If the ~ she is blind, violated a depart-ty had not given her a driver ment regulation against travel ¥> she could wor-k, she would outside the county. be on relief herself. ·And attorney Robert Horn, . ..\!kM ~ derii.ed the article refused to talk about the .r<peal<dly and has brouglil whereabouts of Jeffrey. auit against the magazine for - $12.5 millioo. In surveys taken from a random sample of voters between Nov. I and Nov, 9. pollster Mervin D. Field found a ~ft from just ovec SO per· cent of Republicans said they "knew something a b o u t Alioto." By November, the compar8ble percentages wez:e 7J and 75 percent respectively. Field stressed that it is not J!OSSible to say how much of this increase was due to the Look article and how much is a result of other factors, such as the mayor's f:r e q u·e n t appearances around the 'fitate.- Travel Groups Facing Charges LOS ANGELES fAPI - Three Los A:.1geles travel clubs are accused by the state ·of failing to · provide ad- voo.ising airline transporta- tion. · The suit filed in Superior Court :P.fonday, names . as defendants Sea· and Sky Travel, Inc.; Tran 11 w-or fd :P.1edical CI u b ; ·i'.l'tansWorld Professional Club ' and the directors o( each linn. · SAN DIEGO (AP) -Tnlllc across the new san Dtep. corOOado Bay Bridge:mtght be enough. to ~ a reduetlon in tOll rates next year, says the chief engineer for the California T9ll ~idge Authori- ty. Mike Foley told the San Diego Highway Deveh;.ipment Association Monday t h a t •·traffic use has been very good, better than we q.7 pected.'' But he stressed that 1 toll reduction was only a possiblli· \y . He said more than 2 million vehic les have u~ the bridge at 60 cent.s· each .. way since il' opened Aug. 3. Sacramento, who calls the dismissal of Mrs. Wolfe ''a travesty," says he "won't hesitate to take it to the courts 1t that's where our relief lies." : College Enrollment-Rises Mrs. Wolf twice had the same welfare recipient driven in her car to the San Fran- cisco clinic for surgery when other travel arrangements fell through . She was given a \varning after the first trip. 23,218 More on Campuses • in State Tlian Year Ago I . . ' BERKELEY (AP) -There 10,987 last fall to 12,873 lhi~ students for budget 1 n g S,055, and Santa Cruz Is up are 23.~18 more students on year. purposes, shows the San Fran-21 .3 percent, from 2,602 to the nine campuses of the Other bi g increases were at clsco ~ampuJ down 4.3 per 3,15.7. . . cent. The gia1t Los Angeles cam:- University _ of California and San Lu is .Obispo. up ll!.9 per· s:r.1 Fr.ariclsco has 13,551 pus was up 6.7 percent, from ·. Save sl.40·! Now.the " • "" .. ' ., " 1J .... · Cr0w1h ·gallon :is easier ,~ to get hold of. ' ., . " ' nowsll.49 JMrs. W o I f e completely r ted the bill, on her own time, at her own expense,'' said Horn. "She performed a humanitarian act and should be rewarded for it and not dismissed.'' the 18 campuses of the' cent from 9,711 to 11,350; fulltime equfvalent students 28,997 students last year to · C81ifornia State Colleges. than Fullerton up 16.6 percent from this year, 599 fewer ttlan last 30,930 this ~ar alld the seconi:J there were last fall, enr 11· 11,020 to 12,850;· and Hayw~rd year's f4,f50. ~ ~ latje&r.Berkete.Y t!arppus wis -- ment reports reveal. up 16.4 percent from 8,290 lo Statewide, the 18 state col· down .~ of l percent from (was. 5Ji.89) Paul Bennan, administrator of the El Dorado County \Yel!are Department, decline comment on the rea or Mrs. Wolfe's dismi . But he said, "she had not At the U n i v e r a I t y of 9,650. Jege campuses have J«l ,960 28, 132 to 23,083. . California, the totals re San Fra1cisco State College ·f\JUllme equivalent -stu~tnts, The .next two largest cam- 106 274 ear and was the anly major campus 8.2 percent above last year's puses, Santa B1r68ra ·and s ye r for an i:.1-wlth a smaller enrollment total of 167,208. O(lyis~ .were up 8.8 aild 9.9 per-~rcase of 7.6 percent. than last year -18,256 this ·Biggest Increases in Uk cent respectively. · · Total enrol.lment in the·stat.e year, .4 of I percent off last university system were at the Enrolfmei1t at the Sanl.I . colleges is '/Zl,'),jl this year, up year's 18,307. . newest campuies. The ·San Barbar:a univ~slty.campus in- 6.9 percent from 211,561 last However, San Francisco-Diego campus IS up 26.5 per~ creased trom 12.811 last year year. _ Stite'sfuUtimeequivalentst~ cent, from 3,126 last year to. to 13,734 'this year. At' Davis Berdoo Council' Bigl!"I Inc...,. waa 17.l dent total, the weighted total j ,838 this year, lrv!ne Is up the·lotab.were 11,453 laat year . percent at Fresno, up from avereging out part time 22.6 .percent from 4,1Z3 to and lZ,$83 lhls yea:r .. Censures.Mayor';::::;;;::;;:;;;::;;:;;;::;;:;;;::;;:==:::;;;::;;:;;;::;;:::=:::::::::;:;;;::;;:;;;::;;:==i;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. <¥1> -The city coo.1cil voted 44 Monday to censure Mayor Al Ballard ror public remarks he made during last week's street disturbance in the predominantly Negro West side. 'Ltt'S BE FRIENDLY .. ..,., wftttMt .......... I Thtu. 5d7, Lu. 1111. 'r•v r•~J"•rdl119 "•"•rythln9", "-:I• •:6. Pr•y TO &ocf, THR.OUGH Chri1t, J11. 1'4it•, Jn. 16:21-21, I Tl111. 211-5. Pr•v Nlitwing, M•tl-21 :22 . Pr•Y u111•lfi1hly, J,,, 41). Pr•v obtyi119. Pr. 211t , J11. 15:1. TWO •it•I th i1191 i11 priiytr, OIEDIENC!' •nd UNSELFISHNESS, ,,, oft111 ovtr• loolrtd. Somt f.''' vr11tlfi1hly, c9ntl11uin9 di1obtdient to 6od1 v•I t•ptctlr19 ••ortblt 1111wtr to pr•v•r~ •· ••• whv -c•ll Y• ""'· .Loni, Lor.I tlld do r1of th. f~i1t91 f lt'(1", llr. 6:46. Pr. 21 :t 1ty1, "Ht thtt hlr11tfh t wty his ttt from ht1ri119 tht l1w, '"''" hi1 pf•v•r 1h1ll M 1beml111fio11". J11. 4:J 11y1, ''Yt 11lr 111d tt(tl'lt not, btc:•u•• yo• tllr t111l11, th•t v• ""'" c:o111u111• it upo11 your lu1t1". I SEE-BY: TODArs WANT"ADS Now C&lifornia'1 most popular haH gallon comes to you at an easy-to,pict .. p price. Same amooth, modem Ctow. • Grlp.Juihudle. Pcdeot grip !or balanced j>ouringfrom flnt pour tOlast. • Colapoct ibe. No taller lh1t1 a filth, but holds~ lull 64 ....... • Built.In poarer. Pede<:! pouring conlrot,. ,smooth. driplq;s Oow every time • ' I .. l) DAILY PILOT ·s By SVL\1A PORTEil •• \\'hat "''ould be the eflecl on •you, today's retired worker. If ·Ult! amounts of money you cOuld earn withoul losing any Social Security benefits were ~Increased, as President Nixon ·has suggested to Congress, lrorn Sl .61Kl to $1 ,800? And if - • as be a!So has suggested - re tirees who are still working • h:id to give up only $1 of benefits for every $2 they • earned (as they oow do for , earnings between $1,680 and ·Turn in. .. :.Fora -sharp offer. " ·29~ sraw. .. stedsteok ltn~ycs .. yours 1oronly29 t• -'°"'h gaoollno purdto1e at pol'• 2icipoting T e:itoco Retailers.. Holfaw.grouod "Magic Edge" blades l'levN need sharpening. Simulated slag bandies. Dishwasher-safe. Unc:arto ditional1yguar11nteed by manufacturer for 5 years.. $2,880 a yea r. About 1.100;000 retiree 1 und er Social 5ecurlty would benent from the pro~ boost in the "retlrement wa.'~ Of these, about 300,000 ail. worker s who, b6cause Ol their earnings levels, would haff collected no benefits tn lfll (the ye ar the new ru les .,oUJd go into effect). They fiOUld· now collect partial ~its;· THE OTHER 800,1111!1 a.re retiree~ with pa.rt-tJ.me jobs who are now collecting partial benefits. They would collect higher benefits and• in some coses, full benefits. T he change wou ld alomatically give an elderly beneficiary who is now earn- ing substantialfy more ~an $1,680 extra inanne each year; for some, the added in- come pj!rmissible would com,e to thousands of dollars. I won t even a item pt _. t.o explain the coriiplicated formula, but I tfave' prepaffiJ a table lo show you the maximwn amounts you , the retired worker at various monthly benefit Jevels, • can earnJ uncti!r ·the present Jaw, without losing Al.J.., your Social Security benefits -and the new muimwn eamings proposo?d. OPTOMETRIST J . P. Connole O.D •. e EYES EXAMINED e CONTACT LENS&S e PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED e BROADWAY CHARGE AVAILABLE OFFICES In Tho' BROADWAY, FASHION ISLAND' NEWPORT CENTER NEWPOR'T BEACH ' • 644·1212 EXT. 301 L.Mter, RJOlll & Co. WASHINGTON (AP) -The b a la~f..payments deficit f o r t h e J u ly-September quarter was considerably less than in the second quarter, the Commerce Department reported Monday, But it sti ll ke pt the United States headed has been conaolldaled Into Hornblower & WeeDHimphlll, Noyes ' Now twenty offices to serve you in Southern California OUR NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE Robert V. Hodges encl Robert E. M-r 1:.......,. 550 Ne"l'Ort Canlet Ditto Newport Financial Centet 82eeo (714) 644-2.260 ~ HDs:INBLDWER a WEEKB l1l HEMPHILL, NCYEB -MEMB!llS NEW YrflK STID flDllla Dill& CQtSI ID~ wtsttltlll Ml ... OWIC91 _ l ot A.NOELQ ..... IAAHCl900 IAlll rMOO ...,.., lllllt.a ""*°' OUMDM.I lON.Q l!IEACH frl"""°'"' ll!ACH OftAlfll: PM.11,MlllNOI ,,.,.,.~ POMOHA. l!LDVJ!IOS .l'IMMIOI CAH'fA ,,.,, .. IMTA WONtC4 WMrTTlbi ~ T\ICIOlf ( ' -• -·---·---------~ ---·---.--~~---~--~-------------------· ----- - - - - - - ------ --- --...,.. - ------- - ---- -- - ---~ ---- - • Monday's CIOsing I' =-"9C*lllJ::' _______ _ Prices-C.O lete mp ' New ·, York . s• Exch~ List DAii. 'f PlOT ii -, --I ··1 I 1 ·-u:: ·--· - ' , Jf DAILY PILOT God to G~t .. ,~,.q~-.. ~i~·~~ ,7'': _CQ.tW_t_Awards $312,875 • • t ' . (' Creatw1i, Evolutwn to Share .Billing Textbooks • lnJ Tumble Brings· Damages • 111 moMAS'FORTUNE .-CM fM DAJl)' ,/lit Slife SANTA ANA -After seve.i .,..,.. of trying, three Orange .~ women have seen the Jrtate Board ~ Education ctecide to give the biblical venlon of man's creation equal attention with the theory of· evolutibn in school text· boob. Mts. Jean Sumrall of Costa Mesa, along with M r s . Barbara Taylor of Santa Ana and Mrs. Nell Segraves or Orqe, fmally, with the state board decision last week, won a \llctoey in their long cam· patgn. The dual approach to the teaching of man's origin was adopted as a guideline for the writing of new first through eighth grade social science textbooks. Mrs. Sumrall said today §he and the other two women couldn't take credit. ''We feel we started this cootroversy by first bringing DEATH NO·TICES BECHTOLD loulM Marl• 8echlold. Ate 13, of 177 Cosl1 MtH .St., Colho M-. 0.11 Df duth, Novemllill" 17. Survived ~f th..-. IOllS, H'!'nry, of 81Ylhel John, Ukt'WOOCl1 Ind J~. Newl'Ort lle~c~f two 1lsfers, Ml'l. Jean Mtvers. New Yortu Mrs. MltOri!'d s-~. L•ktPOrl'. C•llf. Pr!v.ie i;ervlcu wUI bt llOfld Thund1y, 11 AM, Bell tlrD1d•1v Ch11>1I, 1nler,..,,nl, H1rbOI' A•ll M~ "'°'Ill Part;, 8tll llroedw•Y Morlu1,-y, Dlr«IOI'$. CHRISTIANSON CIY$ Chrl1t1111i.on. ns 7l!h Pl1C't. Co.It Mta&, Survived tw wlft, H1rr!111. Servk" pendlno 11 Bell llro1d••l' Mort\lllJ'f, Co1ta Mt111. FRITZ Ml'11U'ft Wyllfl F•lll. 21751 Pac11le C111t1 Hl•IM1l', Hun!l119lo11 811tll. Survl-...d bl' daU11hler, Vlrv1n11 Frtlnht. Servle6. Wedntod~v. ' PM. Smltttl ChllOll. lnl&rmlfll, WHlmfn1te~ ,..,_1.1 Pirie, Smlll\1 Morluerv, "'"""" JOHNSON CllVltt S. JollntOI\. JSJl·C -'lb&ccre, HUl'ltli'8'1ori 8ud1. Survived bl' wlfe, 1 ... 11 two .,,,,, Chuck end Tom Joh,,. '°"' ttirM d1uuh!trs. June Myrl(:k, J&dlle S..ead Ind Elltabelll Tuc~•ri bf"f>ihu', ROI' Jollni.on; 11\l"M tlslen, Vtrl GuncMrson, Mamlt Prul!I, 1"'9 Hittle. Serv!C9S. Wedne1d1l'. lt t>.M. Smllht: Ctiape1. !n!er,..,,nt. Wt1!ml"' tie!" M-rlll Parlt. Smllhl Mortuary, DO""'"' LEONARD AltrW M. Leon•nl. A~e •1. of 503\.'/ N1rduu1, Coro.,. del Mar. 0.11 of dNltl, NO'll'l'l'lbtr 1 5. !.urvlved by hus-tiencf, H1'1>1d F. Leonard' fl1Mr, Troy ,._.,.,, Corona del Mar. Servlcl!'S •nd llllennfl!I prlvale, TllOH wl5ti1"9 te tnakt memorlll eontribullonl m1Y coiltl'ibl.itf to tt1t Ptymcutll CMerna· tlonet Churd'I ol N""'l'Orl Bead!. B•llt Morfwn', 3$20 E. CGISf HlthWIY, C-1 def Ma~. Olrl'C"fOl"l. l\llNDER hf1!1 ,.,_.,... Minder. 16131 T~s, Huntlritton BHch, Sfrvlvtd W hut- ti.fld, Devkl' ~ -1$, Dlvld tlld ti:1ndollltl1 ""° dli1111httn. c:Mrlene 11\d 1)111-. 111 ef nie llomtl bf"othtr, T11orn11 Br.otll'I'. S.rvlcts, WtdllCIS- lfljY, 1 PM, $mllhl CheNI. lllterml!f'f, W.tm,.,slet Memorl1I Park. O!rtcted bY $m1ti. M~rv. NIELSEN Dtvld I. Jlltli.en, M.O. Agl If, ol 251! TUltln .-.ve .. Ntwl'Ort ·e11ch. Survlvtd bY wlte, Elvser fllret '°"'' Dlvld, Sleohen ind P1uh lhre1 daughtefi. Cbrlsllnt. Ll.anne, Ind T.,I: thrM slllt9rl, Mrt, Either F•lr, Mll••ultet: Mn. Jar B1rne1 ind Mrs. Ruin Lee- dom, boll! ol Cosla Me\,'11 one tr•nd- chlld. $trvlcel, WednesdfY, 11 AM, $f -'ndrtw'• Piesbvlerlln Churc:h, N""°'1 BMch. MHl!•rv 1r1ve1ld• rlilH F1lrti1ven Mtmorl1I Pirie. ThoK whl'llnt lo mlk1 memorl•I conlrlbll- tlcinl m1Y CO<llr!bolt to tht Or. 01v!d I .. Nl91i.en Memorl1I Fund, OrlftPt C011nt't' Medkll -'$1Ctl1tlon, m s. F'°"""• Or1nte, Callf. BtH Br"Ol(lwey Mof1UlrY. Directors. WHEELER W1v11t 11. Wt>Hl1r. u.c w, 19111 s1., Ca.11 Mesa. Otlt of clealh, Nov. 13. Survlwd bY wife, Joen M. Wlla<elert crellthter, Cl'lrlstln., boll\ ol Columbo" Ohio. Frlend1 rnav c1!t If Btlll Mor· tuarv Ctiapel, Cosla Mtta, unlll t PM toffY. ln!IH"mtnt, WednHdav, Good SMPl'ief'd Cemeterv. B1lll MorluarY, COf,!1 Ml!'SI, Olr&etors. WILUAMSON Rhonda L. Wlllltmson. 1n!ant d1u;h• lllr of Mr. Ind M"· RoV•I WllH1mson, ftf mr Eldon -'""·• Coste Mesa. "''° survived bl' peter,,.1 11r1ndP1ren1s, Mr. t"'9 Mr1. RCl'fll Wllll1mson, COiie MIU/ m1ternal 11rM1dlall">ar. Mr. Cllfrlts F. Hofford, Hunllngloll tlHChl maternal 1r1ndmother, Mrs. Vlrt1lnll O'QonM11, of Orfnge. SeN· kes, Thursdlr. 2 PM, Bell BrottdWIY ctiaPtl. Bell Bro.dw1y Mortu•l"I'. Cos- te M91.1. OlrKlorll.. ARBUCKLE & SON W-Ulf Mortuary C't E. 170. SL, COsia Me11 -• BALTZ MORTUARIES C.-0 dd Mar OR 3-tlSI COiia M.,. AU 6-%UI .... , . BELL BROADWAY ' MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Costa &leaa u l:JU3 • DILDAY BROTHERS Jlmlthl&foo Valley M-UJ 1'1111 Beocll Blvd. -. .... Bt1cb IC-1'171 • • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ctmeterl' • Mortoary llli P~ Drive Newport -· Cllllorila ,,~· PEEK FAMILY cOLoNuL'f'tmll.W . ·HOME *1 ... Avr .. Westm' It IN·S5ZS • llliif..,,..,.,.EHFMORTUARY '-..... ltl-1111 .. (Jemeale llMlll • SMmlll' MORTUARY 117 Mila 81. BwAtM lecll -' it to public i!lte.ition," sbe said, "but we want to give full credit to Governor Reagan for apPointing men to the board who are open minded on this subject." · l\frs. Sumrall said the· triD of -housewives hadn't asked for the replacement of evidence for evolution with the Genesis account from the Bible. She said what the State Board of Education agreed tD is to hav.e the sCentific argumens pra 2.1d con for ~volution presented and the arguments pro and con fo~ special creation presented so students can have a basis for their own judgment. "Most people find it im· possible to believe that there is scientific objection to evolu· tion ," she said. ''Most people assume it has been prove.i. Actually there are many miss· ing links.,, Among the testifiers before the state board w e r e spoksmen for the Creation Research Society, limited to per'°"'~"lth ••mas\efi'.clel/"' or PhD Ip sc1e..,,, who beiii:ve• . the kJ\own lacts dci nO! aupport cvoluUoit. ·, me.it to the board fw tbe ~ -. three~men. si... asked for The 'uoard·approytd re~ t ot" .. th~ ~ guideline will be pted 'by ~ ~·lr~1 11 publishrs as they prepare ' its en ett with a ~tlee. texts. for new social· science o(' scientists rather th a n· adoptions for Calilor.lia pubUc ectucators. to write tlie , new schools. The new books for: o~W~ consider· tlila a IM~lal grades one -through four will _. • be introduced in Sepiember, victory," &lle &aid. "We had 1971, and.the text! fof igtade& , several atparate.<Objections to five through eight in Se"" tM ·~··,,tent ... o(~ the r fram~k. • ~ tember, 1972. She a1so claimed 'that public ,_ .Van Oliayed To Move In encompassing the dl!al sChopls. are ~g "secular approach to man's origin, the hUMan:4Sm"•)-... •a belief that state Board of Education man wai . cttated thfough' altered the guideli13.e recofu.. e,volullon, thatrbe controls his - mendations 'Of the state Cur· ow.1 destiny and •that there fs riculum Cotnm.issiOn. no God _ in violation of the LAGUNA ;. N 1 GU E t; The board added a section Coll&UtuUon whleh; fortilda the PreParing ·for the Projected • a.1 special creation proposed teaChing of religion.. nur.1icipal court.( move to the by Dr. Vernon Gross, vice There is ·a single in-newSouthColtnty."CivicCenter pres~Qent ,of SantJ: Bip-bara's terpreiauon jn an l atheistic at Laguna NigOel soon after 'l\tstln·In!!itut~ of Technology, Jn4nner: of man's OJlgin in the the first of ·~ .year, the and deleted the statement the textbooks .now, sbe ..said. The Laguna Beach City Council oldest explanaUon "of. the i'.istruction in uie te8chers' has. approved ~·of' a evolutionary <teveloplnent of manqal is. th~t there b Dothing \ utility v~. to t fans p o r t plants and animals' is a·· ·supernatural lnvolVed.1 prisoners from ·the city jail to court hearings. Claire Trevor New Dimes March Lepder Coast Man ' Now Aide At pnsent, ptj,soners are simply elCQrted down a hallway from jail cells behind the Police De~ot to the dual-duty· courtroom · council chamber in.the same bulldbg. '· SA!!TA ANA-A'man who received crippling 1 n•j u r'I es wb~n· be. fell 40 .feet from a water tower on 'a South Laguna construction slte has: been awarded $3u',875.23 in damages by ·an Orange County Superior COIU'I Jury. . '.Leonard SUlson, 58, Long Beach. successfully argued thal negUgence by the Moulton Nigqel . Water· District led to bls fall on Jilly 1.1964. )le, was • one of~ several American B~idge Cp. w'Orkmen building two water towers on the site. Stilson was working on steel colutnn.s inside the larger of the two towers· when part or the structure collapsed, burl· tng him to. Ule · floor of the partly completed tank. He sur- fered 17 fractures in the fall. ilicluding both arms, ja\V, pelvts, collarbone, ribs, spine and vertebrae. Stilson testified that he has undergone numerous opera- tions and many hours of physical therapy. Both arms are strengthened by steel pins and be is unable to straighten the left arm. Actual damages awarded \Vere S369,000. JUdge RaYf!;lond Vincent ordered that $56,000 received by Stilson from workman 's compensation in· surilnce should be deducted from the 'jury's award. SANTA <\NA -, Clair.e Trevor, star of .motion pjc- tures and televis'iori and fhe newly apPointed H o n or a r y Chairman of the March or Dimes Mothers' March on Birth Defects for Orange Coo.1ty, will greet volunteers at the annual March of Dimes dinner Wednesday at the Elks' Club in Santa Ana. . To Badh.aw I / A Corona ~I ii,;J;l.;,kanee Purchase' of the·van was ap- proved in the 1969-70 Police IjePar\ment Ret. , •• l'\.llf -a awro~! ~l" ' ' ment "of n,W;40 to Sotlth • 1 man has been appointed ad· coast Motors for a Ford Miss Trevor, the mother of three grown sons, now Jives with her husband, Milton Bren, in Newport Beach. The 6:30 p.m. meeti ng will dramatize the treatment and preve.1tion of birth defects. Dr. Robert Casey, promlnent Orange County p 1 as tic surgeon, and member of the Orange County Chapter's Medical Advisory Committee, will be the dinner speaker. His slide presentation will il- lustrate new techniques jn the treatment of birth defects. Ama.1g t he outstanding volunteers Miss Trevor will greet will be the Girard family of Santa Ana, the 1970 Mareh of Dimes poster family. Mr. and Mrs. Gwinn Girard, parents of four children, have taken into their home ten children -all victims of rubella-caused birth defects. With the rubella (German measles) vaccine now avallable In time to prevent a recurrence of such tragedy, these childre.1 are cOncrete evidence of the importance af DIMES CHAIRMAN Claire Trevor this vaccine, as well as other scientific advances, in the prevention of birth defects. . Arthur · R, McKenzie of Costa ~esa, c~a,pter· chairman, will, pl'.eslde. and will introduce Mrs. Stanley Kegel, Santa Ana, chairman of the 1970 county Mothers' March. · The meeting ls ope;i to anyone interested in the fight to prevent birth defects. Reservations may be.made by calling the chapter office at 547-6124. . Offshore Airport Study May Becon1eLocal Guide LOS ANGELES - A lw<>- volume report on offshore airport planning and con· struction methods has been published by a Los Angeles firm for the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). 'The report, published by the Ralph M. Parson Company, is intended to serve as a guide to local, state and reg Ion a I airport authorities and plan· ners interesled in th e possibilities of offshore airport sites. The FAA -mithorized the study earlier this year because of the interest in such airports as a means of overcoming high land costs, the scarcity ()f close-in land sites for airvorts and the mounting op- position to aircraft noise by airport neighbors. -Fill: An embankment placed directly on an un· derwater foundation, th e n brought up to a height suf· ficiently above the water surface to prevent wave damage. -Dike and Polder: A dike completely encloses an area in which the water is later pumped out. The landing area is below the surrounding water, and the water side is protected rrom erosion by stone. -Pile: A deck is built, whlch is supported by piles. -Floating: The deck is sup- ported· by flotation. This method ·must include ·a mOOl"-- ing system to keep the deckl from moving . According to the report, a true offshore airport has never been built, jlimarlly becallse of the high cost. Howewever, the report sayS, at least a part of this hlgbei'. cost may'· be-due to the cost of innovating new methods of construction . YOU HAVE JUST FOUND THE PLACE TO CALL FOil HONEST, PROFESSIONA.L TELEVISION SERVICING 275 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 642-9746 RCA-ZENITH SALIS COVER 12 YEARS OF DEPENDABlE SERVICll .. ministratiVe assistant . t 0 Ecoooline. ~200'' panel type Assemblyman Robert E. van with a. wheelb<i"Se o1 -w Badham (fl.Newport BeadJ) inches and double rear doon. the legislator bas announced. Santa Anit 1 a!ld · Huntington , He is Edward F. winf Jr., Beach Dodge·dea1ers1declbed of 724 Ma11'bar Drive, an •invitations to bid because their I vans did not meet size re-emp oye of Jay and Renfro in· quiremt ntS, tlie •council was surp.nce brokers, New"port advised. A $2,715.51 bid from Beach. Tommy Ayres Chevrolet was ·Ward his been 'a Corona del rejected because it .was felt Mat seSid~t since 19$$ and the 103--inch wheelbase ·van of. became ' active in pOUtics in fered would be too shOrt to ac- 1960, helping in campap for commodate prisoners a n d Badham, President Nix.on and escorting officers •. fonner Senator Bai' r yl----"--------1 Goldwater. The new Badham aide was a U.S. Air Force air poUce operations o{ficer' and provost marshal be:fore making his· home in Corona del Mar,! where he bu been active in a variety .of, civic affairs. Only One Ffnal SiocU,ln all home editions. That's a big dtal"! It.is in Ora119t County. The DAILY PtlOT Is tht only dairy nrwspaper that d1llv- 1rs the pxkagt. He is a past president olj'========:::;:::!I sertoma lnteniatlmal and a ~~ ~.~r:; g~~:l----------1 Balboa YadJt. Club and bl! Republiean State. c .e n tr a 11.--------...... been a member of the Commitlee. ' OCEmploye Group · Wins Recognitwn. SANTA ANA -The Orange County Employes Association has been officially recognized as the representative of more than 70 employes in the Orange C o u n t y Sanitation District. Approval was given Wednts- day night by the seve.1.sanita- tlon districts that make up the Orange County body. M06t of tbe employes work at the sanitation district's two seWage treatment plants In Fountain Valley and Hun- tington Beach. Employes had been seeking recognitia.1 af the employes' association for more than a month as their bargaining agent in wages and working ci:>ndition!'.. ni.e·· -d Is tr i ct ·emplo'ys about·t25 workers. fllnlO!TWd ...... 'lfN~ rtlllJ ~ VII U• enicl&tl111 frlctiol mid ptll ti •l~llltlOll, Constipali• uit be -...1 COllNTWtOIO'-"· lltlps 1911 ... dlllJ trrltatloll, Md COUft'fOINOIO ca. .... tlll """ Md ltdtl111 ef ~rtlllid ilft...,..diitt~. cou11n1111010 iette111"1"• ""'' ltoofl ti alfolt for Mil# !11'8•St1 ftlllfifl Ill ttftclf" IJ!tf.ptlt chi to MM SOfl, .... 1lthl tiUUt fot !loin: •l ttll ...,. "'"' ll'OllCll lld aootllta ldlmtd lrtll. COUllTflf«llD. •lllfcll!J tftftll '7 ,..,,, kl ,.,, .. a,,, •fHI Whitt ,.... W.. AU,... ,UrMCht. ' ·• l Fora S~irp offer. Slalnl4a --t ~-­foroolyljl~· -... 1h_... ,...._.,... tlclpalin• r- . ·-Holl....-"Maotc E .. " lilad• --lharponlng. SlnNlatod l"'9 -llltlnmh..m.U- dlltonanygvo'""'-' i., 1nanvfocturerfor 5 ,_.. .............. ,..., .... ~ 1 I " .... ' ) '. UNION BANK ' : . " ~ f11C1>1•l11 r lO•llAI. ocrO•lt '"''ll N1>NCI COJl,.O~ATICH. •lOlllA\. 111.Ll.Vl •Ytl(lf ' • • ~-•All!j;I r • 'Long live WUNDA WEVE luxui-ycarPets! Gf'ortrel· makes beautiful sense! Step lively on WUNDA WEVE carpets! • • NOW TW·O WEEKS ONLY! Three c•rpet specials! We've oot three bl9 c1rpet 1pecl1l1 rncly for you nowl They .,,. qu1llty, color0rlch Wund1 W1v1 c1rpet1 crafted of enduring Fortrel® poly11t1r from CelantH1 Thtrt'& 1 texture f11r1 for every t11t1 - any decor! An 1l191nt r1ndom 1h11rl .1~ CASTLE MEADOW '"" $6.95 ·~· y4. •"1ul1rly 11.95 · A dHp dur1ble pluth. 2. NEVILlil """ $8. 9 s:.!'I. y4 • .... lotly $10.,1 A feolw•rmlng, f11hlo,,.rlch lll•J! 3 •. OCEAN CRE~ T: '"" $7 .95 ~· ~. •"1ul1rly 19.95 ThtM ••• top o' tho lino corpet1 from Wun<f1 Wevo, corpet1 croftod to IHI, beoutlfullyl They 1r1 1pecl1I c1rp1t1 •t '"Y prlHI Come and HI th• 1ndlH1 choice of coktr1. P:lnd eut how worry· frn and nay to cl11n tMy ire. You'll find out just how 1p1cl1I 1 '''"' value can be. 3 ROOM SPECIAL 100°/o C:ELANISE FORTRIL Wund1 ~ev1'1 "C11tl1 Meedow" COMPLETE FOR ONLY ... ,. .. YllA ... 0""1·1-Nl .. TA·UA-Tl_O_N .. Price lncludH 2'7 IQ. PT. e C:arptt DININO e Paddl"" ~OOM .... "" LIVINO • Deluxe ~~~. Tackleu • lnatalla· tlon HALL 4'xl' 100% FOIHREL POl.YE!TER PILE Cl.ef:ANESE0 IPaRTREt' . J~ Jested name in fibers . , ~O ~~OP,AT HOME __ .OW s~~-s~Tce ,,_ .,.,_,..lvXur,.,Wunr/a '5u ,W<ll'lt:Mlpflfnt.oft,..., own /Toor1 · )iii~ 1°" lwii.91U now for Ir•• 11trmof1 tlurino • tlt'i11pecial two wtik.perioc/. BANK TERMS AVAILABLE ' SANTA ANA · 240'6 SOUTH MAIN ,...•,549.3349 . A"4HllM . 1144 WPT UNCOLN • ,.... 778··190' . •• NEVILLE -o .,...P of beauty for contemporory IChemeo. N..W. lo o deep pllllh -. corpet that Im your lmqlllotlon 11<>1 CASTLE ~ADOW -W1111d1 Weve'o 1eulptured, color-bri1ht carpet 1dda the modem touch to Colonial ide11. TA#V MOWN NAIL WHm •• ,.IUllWA' OllllN A1.M1W1 Wiii OCEAN CREST - a deli1htful sha1 for your bri&htest idea. Cuddlesome Ocean Crest make1 it intimate. • . [ . • --.. f j , I J, .. ·, . • • ". • _, , . ,. :·: • ;'.NEW ·+ORK · JEts <;>u~T.£Ra:i.cK j oE NAMATH;·fu\ro.s· THi·g,iN~.ii&tisH ·~6~ Afil.D'.t.;d[~·'(86t.toM» IN isliNDA rs'-ll·i·~ •ibs's 'ro ·THE KANSAS ctrY cH1EFs. • • -· • '" ''.":~·-~ ..• ' • ~,;'JI'':;,•• 0 • •. /" •' "\;),v.,"J ; •f'' J'.-f ••-~' 'I~ ;,,,11 '· ..... <, • • • •• '• ., '· .... . ~.:· ·-~~-~·~·;, ...... · .. ,:.''.· ~ . . .. . "' . ,• ·. . . ~ : ' ; -· t.1:1r ? \_:-1·. J ·. ~~ ~1;··!1 } , ftiS.hVerdict \ •1 • • ....... . . ' 1111•, • M:~y .Not .Be . . . . Peimanent '· SporJ.s 'lipped ShQri •) .. '• ·JCoach Cafi·s Refs G titless . . ·SrANFO!io; CllU. (APl -San. JoS< sttie ' Coach Joe fl.fcMullen blfterly crlitCiz~ ~fonday the officiating in th~ '. . 5~' football game 1ast Saturday at ~ornia; ~f~\fullen said his quarterback , Iva n ytipi.. hid . ~"-hit ·by• Cllifornia dflinder& .alter the· u•histle three limes a.di; ~.1i. _result , Was doubtful . for the S~s iiz1al game Saturday against UDi•enitY, of tne Pacific. t·i~ 1he refe~~s \\1ere. gutle.5s not td;c1U it~ l',n going to say 1t because I :fbi.9k<i tfie oUiciatlng has b!!en sloppy Uijir~ nOt only in games we 've play•d fr!!'.~', ID· &IJ!!es I',·e &ee.n On film." ~t"'l'll"'J IP'1J'Nled. ' i_~stars came back to beat San Jos!. 3~7 'ilf!Or ·the undtrdog"Sparlans had ~-a: Uprising 7~ le.ad at balltime. ,'.1..;U... t" 0fflcJals' No. I job IS t'l ~ the .. players on 1be Held1" silld J.tolltilltn·:1and they're not doing it " ... . . ' r • ~ • :tiw>UA!O, ~!oxi<O -One de1d anrl 2.1 tn;ui:td •JS the toll qf an amateul,' all!o.rfbe SUnrlay in lhi,.clty. ;J'V'it c,ra eras~ on the" circuit, which r.•thtfl&h tf)e downtoWl1' 1rea, and a ril~ynr~Jd •boy "'11 Jatally injured \l~ i.ont 'of Ui! vehicles 1\·ent lnto the ,, '· ' -. • l i , . ""-' I .... " J.. ~ cro1'1J. The o!hers !nJurM, mi>5t1y childre'n and l;OOtbs . "·ere. hospitalized. • CHICAGO •-·T·he Clucago Cubs, ;\'Jio~e. 'fol11 ·cbJlipse lfEt sea.soil was pa r ~ally attrib\ft~ tO a 1lack of oullitild ~trengtl1 l\.fonda y acqu ired \"0 t€ran nutfi~Jder John. ny· tallison1lrom the Philadelphia· Phil · he~ .:· i , 1 ••• • Tl\e.4lfJce ~\·a~ high a;; the Cubs gave·up starting· pitdler ·Dirk Selina 11nrl teeq,·aF:e outfielder· Oscar Gamble, a brlgpt. 13· yfar·o'ld pt~pect. • . C-311~001 ,.$(1, batted 265 In 131 ga1nes for Pfiiladelphia' including Iii h1me .runs aild f3:l jruns bat.Jed in . A lefl·handeii s\u g. ge.r, Callison ~ice made the. National League All~tar learn aw:! ha s lfi9 cjfeer home rung, • \VEt.16LEY . .England -RiJd LaVfr, the Corona def rifar pro ''ho rule~ a~·klnt; (If the' ''nhis '"orltt . lfeleifl'!fi U !' Da• is Cuppef f\.1arl,y .R.ie.~Y-n of Evanst'IQ• Ill . 6-4. 6-'" ~\6nday n1~hl 1n a first·round match pf the 'British Indoor Tei1h1s Ch"!'pion&hlp . ' • CHEYENNE, \\'yo -r..1 attorni;y f.,r 14 6lack 0:11Hle,tes dismissed front !IJe Unh:ersilY pf: \V ·01ning lootb;ill t•Rn1 i.ays' h$ wjll .vipeal a Jntigi:i's r11hng de· nylng a niotif'D to 1tin st<1.te the playrrs. . ' • • · William . '\"atermm, · ·an NAACP at- torney, said ?ttonday he i:Mannelil th~ ap. real ·to the 10th U.S. Ctitutt Court or Ap- reals 1n Den)·ei-. . · . ' .' . Dist. Judge E1''1fl.g T. Kerr rttomtiy turned do'"'" fhe iDollbn fQf.feiristiterh~t anrl ~atd hf "serlouSly dOubts" ttis" Court hail JUrisd1chou oi·er) thi \1er-bal·direCU\·E or ·a coach.·. ~IELSOliRNE. ,A•istr~lla Nelllle Fraser, a former 'Vunble.don champion has been appoirrtM captain-coa~ of A~lralia 's 1910 Davis Cup team, sutjjecl to hi!> ava1labUily. • LC~1DON -Rom"arua anii R11sm hal-·e J<'IJned lO" IJther te!lms ·tor 'the \Vorld &«:.· r0 r ~11p hnals. 1n. r.lexico oext ti.fay Ind June -. ;i .chaf}lp1on!iltip that adds up Ip a 1-.Jt.(\P for ::O"cer supremacy from E11ro~, €entrel and South. America. Ru~sia won' a• trip to ~lex1co with a 3· t ''·ictory• in·er .. Turkey and Romania aliO clinched· Its tioket·by holding Gi:.eece to ·a l·I draw . . Team& now through ·to the show pitct • cif worid·l\'lde soccer ·"~re Enalan4's defending champions,: MexiCo hoet coon. try, \Vest Ger1n:au.y, Belgium, Peru, Sraul. Uru~f· E1 Salvador, R!lSsia. Si~e.lfr.n. Ro1nan1a and f\1orocco. " • I t ' . ~ . . , M'' . ..,... '&"' .. ;.,;,_, -. '. ·ip -, jjl'' ·an· ~1 V.· :J.g: . t·; -'1 -~ .. :!~-('' ·.• •. ,,,, :· . . . i , • r· , . , . . OMO St~te Weakness ' .. .. ~-ARBOR, Micli. (!U')·-The way fl.1}chlpn_ co~c.h Bo Schemb'echltr sees it. ONO State only· Jias ope wea'kness -all itS_"'ioQd rciotball,players·Can't'fit into the tra"~ling ~u~. "Ohio, State can only•bring·44 players. That riie"ans they'll 'fuaVe 10 ·1e&ve. smile of thQse good '.plJ!Yer!' it~h,onie,'' "Sche~· be(bler smiled Monday~at a press Jun. cheon. • . · · His· Wolve~11 finJ~ the regul~r sea.son Saturday by ho6tlng OSU, the na- tioi?ls No.~.,l:~"and · )ijijled by its follo~·ers·~ ,,UJ.e• gl~~ti!;. Colle):l~Je teain· ewr assemb~~ . 'fhtre is ·~-~wfµJ IQt":af. stake in the .. ·-· ' .·. game : 1. Th~ Nalional championship, 2. the Big Ten champion.i;hlp, 3. the con· ference-Rose. Bowl representative, 4. and a lot or pride., Virtually no one will predict h-tichigan will Upset . the Buckeyes'. But Schem· bechler lielleveS the \Vrilves have a better Chance than anyone has had all year. '!I think we have a hetter .chance. thail people-give us credit for having," Schenibechler said. "t..tichJgan has· a better chance ·qf beating ..Ohio· Slate .tb!Il Purdue :lliti betl.aU5e . ~,ha.Ve a bE:t~r b;flanced of- fense and , defe~se.'' he a(id!;d. • "But t \\·6n't try to pred!Ct anything. . . . ' Pr_o~hro, Mc.Kay . ' N oneo1nmittal ' . .. . ' . .. ...-. . . . . . LOS ANGELES ' fAP>-Co'ach . Tol)lllly Pr$hro, wlio.bu ,an · tindefj!'!ted UCLA foo.tball .teal)l.;·this ··season, P.Iays· things cagey_ in · dis~wsing P?SSIDte strategy agail'l~t· a.'SOuthern :caltfOrnia· squ,ad· \vlth an identlcat·a:.o,1 record. A6ked ·if he ·pianned surprises 'for the game-similar to switches the Uclans pulled a year ago v;hen they went inJo the ·aame ~Prothro· told the SoUthe~ California football Writers: "A good team slays with what Jt has been doing. ·A .poor t'eam tries different thin15. But I won't commit m,Ysell tQ any Greg Jones, the UCL.A tailback, was voted ·player.of.·the-week. He gained 103 yards in la!t Situtday's 13·10 victory ot1er~Oregon and· needs only 63 more to become the schoors No. 1 all.tJme rusher. To date, ·Greg's Iota! stands at 1,817 compare'd with lCeMy 'VaEh1ngton·s ca· reer record of 1,913 in 1937-39. USC watches its o"Wn Jones, first n;;ime Jimmy. who'll diree~ the Trojan attack He has moved into the No. 7 position on tht! single passing list with 73 com· pletions in his first nine games .. It'll be ?i-lichigan vs. O!Uo St3te , that's about all I can say.'' Purdue' Jost to OSU 42·14 Saturday. The \Volverines ha\·e a 7·2 overall record and a 5·1 confere.n~ mark, ""lllle OSU is 9-0 overall and 6-0 in the Big Ten. The Buckeyes went to the Rose Bo11-·J last year and because of the lea'gue'11 no repe8t rule, they cari't go this )'ear. If f\-fichigan loses and Purdue beats ln · dia11a Saturday bcilh Ur.I and the Boilermakers "'ould tie for second in the .conference. • • Ari inimediate vote by·Bii ten athletic direc tors "·ould come Saturday night , but the \\'olrerine.s appear lo have the upper band. U.J.1 beat Purdue Jl-2fl earlier this ~easof1 •.ind. that should have some in- lluence on the se lect!on. In case of a fie ·Vote, 1tt~chigart epuld be chosetl ~use al Ure univritten rule· that a team that h3d not !;One. to !he Rose Bowl for the longest ttme-m:ually gets the nod. An qpset win by t.1ichigan 1vould .gi\·e ijle JyoJ,·es the conference c:Q;<:ham· pionsh1p witfl OSU and surely ·kn6clf.'the BU~h"'E:yes oul of the nations' lopipot.. Stiitistically the. \Volverines a.re quite impressiv€, having scored 325 polnQ;to 1.~1 fgr all opponents. Jh the Ja6:t~1f6ur games: alone Michigan has out.sCor'ed op- popents 178 to 22, including, a 51.6 iorii'p ooer Iowa I.1st · S;iturday arrd a .. 57-0 "s{lueaker" over llllnoif. Sophot;nore tailback Billy Taylor .In those last four games sained 673 yards. Overall in 100 carries , he has gained 721 yar~ for a phenomenal 7 Z.yard a carry average Glenn Doughty, fonner starter amf f!O'\I.' Taylor's backup man, has amas'sed 633 yards in 144 tries for a 4 8 average. po&ltlon." . . Prothro's 1968 team threw .a scare into the Trojans, with .i;trategy planned' fof just that game, be.fore· losing ?8·16. Inside Information - USC Coach John McKay proved just as evasive as his crossrov.·n ·rival. "'lien asked if either team might ;ichieve a domination of ·saturCay•s· battle, he replied : "If it dO!s, It ·v;on 't \>e·US." ~ , The Rose Bowl bid .and the Pacifi c.a CQflfere~ .cbJITQP.iPn!WP go .. to the win· ner, with UCLA:·a Slight favorite to block the road t'l 'Pasadena <vhich the .Trojans have tri!veled the past three years. "We!re :eerta.inly not looking -pa~t USC." Prothro dtclared, but he iw.llcated he directs an ~outstanding club ~ilen h~ said. . "WeJ.11 pYCtict lus\ this week th.an 1n previous weeks."· Bv n<>w, he feels. hi s chargtis should knoW what ~hey are suppo~e to d?· Physica.11~ :tibth te·3!11s.·.appea.r. m ;good shaP,t ,"for their· ~gular--season finale be· fOre ' nlore than 00.ooo in Memorial Coli· seurg and a 11ationa.I tele,•ision audience. ·~J 'Will be . snrpfised if Steve Preston playS, but ht· m~y/'.. said TomJ.ll)'. of the nlan w.ho .. w8S a Ftart!ng 0Hen.s1ve tackle until ~uiferlni .an·. a"ri~e injw-y. "Mickey Cureton, f\tike I!al}o~ arid Gwen Cooper ... I'll be surpr1s:ed 1f they don't play, but thf:y might not.'~ ~e added \\·hen asked .about hls fulrb.ack, Uneback· er· and olfensi\·e. end W.ho nurse va rious injuries. · .. ;J ! . . ' · . · · As for .U;::,i.., M~y· s81d t!Ckle Sid Smilh has "l~oot no cll8nce" of pl~~·­ ing because .oJ lnjUries, :·~t =otherwise ,ve're in pretty good shape. He described the foe by saying, "UCLA has ii. well·balahced p;iSSinl attack. Well· balanced runnfi'ig. llni:I g®d "defense that gets the ball back.:',' Before ·ihe Coiches '5poie; the v.Titers predicted by a ZS..12 ''ote that . UCLA v.·w.Jd win, with tv;o expecting a tie. F oothall Odds~- i' Easiest Pick of 'em All . ~East to Def eat West ' The f)arliest line on all bo~·I and all-star foolball games can now ~ esJabUshed. \\'ithout knowing the name of a single pl!Yer 1Jn either roster, this column is establishing the East as · a prohibitive Fhoice over the West in the annual EaEt· \\'est gan'le played In San Frencisco. One tidbit of inside. information makes this pos~ible. John Ralstoo o[ Stanfofd wu1 .coa0h· the \Ve~t: Thus he returns to the game-v.:he.re. he -········--WHITE WASH ---· -· -·-~· o¥r•~·-... made a na-nie for himself ln 1~6. 'r"ou,'11" t~all hi:s ·66 all·slar team set a game reCord which may never be broken. J( lost, 4&-22 ... the most points eVer run up by·eJthcr-taam since the i;erles began int~: Furth!t,'·tbe -score could have been much' worse. hlemory says the East once led, '15--7, against It! favored counterpart. {talstoo got the post for · the Dec. 27 . renewal of the Sf:u'ine classic when John ~tcKay of tJSC asked lo be relieV!:d of t~ \\'est coaching chore •-perhaps 1n an· ticipat!on of working with his Trojans lor the. Rose Bowl game Jqddentally. th.ls ye.11i:'s. ~hr.int": game )s at Stanfotd beanse 'Candlestick Park is being rerhodeled and Kearii.St8dlum· has 1><;0 ni>ed' for the q\asqJlliank sOOd' ness). L ' ' * * R•b1Sl of 1961 footbOll bl1bll1bls about the mange· Coa!t area: • · • · ·. Upset of the )'ear? lb ja):tee rank1 '.. . . . .. Orange Coa~t bad 'em both -26'-19 avtr Fullerton and 21-20 over' LA Harbor. Leading prep shocker -~·es _prnbably Foutitain· Valley's 21·21 tie 1\"lth i.oar1. !\lost. i.mprored jaycee ·1eam --Sad. die.back College, from 4.5 re cord in 1965 to 7·1 this year wllb one game to p11y1. l\fosl lmpro~·ed prep . teaJD r-Hun· t,tnjt~n )je_ach,_frem 4-5 last 5e8soa fo ·7·! this campaign. Disappointment of 106' -. Geltttal disrespect for Natimial Antheai: by stude.litfi, aud "li:r one case b'.Y a · fotmer t'oaCh's wife. Al50 when NeWportllaibor, HUotfngto~ Beach .and wii1tinlnsier all· bo"·ed ~t of the Sunset League title race the final tn·o l\·e~ks of the season.· · * * * Goodies fOr th~ future . 1. Notre Dame vs Texas tn the Cqttao Bo,vl. 2. The. ~ams i~ lhe Su~ tBoWl. .. 1~ 3'.. Mlcltig~n upsetting Ohio State'<I.~~ Saturday morning. · · . . ! tltonte. Vista. getting manhandled . the CIF football playofls. 3 A ·tartan track for the tollseuiii. :" 6. Sunday horse. racing. 7. ~lax Forney becoming w . n: tendent of the Ana~1m .School Dlstr: * * * . ·' . " . ' For UCLA ra.llbird~ "Who· may 'Bue.ftdl; read ~qnday11 column Item alMklt ucL.t having Mel Michigan State three Hnies fl the Rose-88"'1 gfnce lbe.' Wet1t °''*Ill Ten pact was orighi3ted, v.·e didn't" me111i to 01--erlook tbe New 1·ea.r'1-.gimei wltb Ulln!>ls <1111.7\ and ~1lnne1iol11 .(1162), l\·blcll \JCLA lest. iS.t• ai1d 21 ·~. ·• ---------::-.,.--...,-----:·--::----::---.,., .. =-.,--=~-..,, ~~\"'"--:-·~---::--:-·-·=--·:--· ~-~---.... -~~-~--::-~~---.., == • f, • 0 a a :a *I I ' BILL VAIL Co.1ch of Year LOara, FV .Dominate All-league Champion L-Oara and 1·unner- up :Fountain Valley· HJgh dom- inated the official All-lrvii1c League football squad as se· lcc(.ed by the~ 0~4.ILY PILOT. The Saxons garner~ six· places on the first team :init Fountain Valley 11abbed seven. Coach of the Year honors v.'ent to Edison High'-s Bill Vail, who .guided the-Chargers to a rema,rtCabie third place in the AAAA league. Loara's Mark Hanna and Ray Spagnuolo captured the lineman and back of the year .;iwards. Costa t-.1esa. Corona de! l\1ar and Edison placed l\vo players .on the first team and Estancia ·nabbed one position. ALL-IRVINE LEAGUE .. . First Team Ofreose ----.. ·"t. -•• :::::-_ r ' . Basketball now looms b!g 111111 ""8t<m U..l )lllnfiillton for hip school! and Otaoge b ramous &or will be ta -·· Coast area teams begin scrim-tlon. ·· ' ' ma,ging outside f o r c e s • The Oilers were. lmpreut~ W~esday with TusUn a~ In summer workouts poaiol llluntin,gton Beacn and 'l.ag\tla an w record Jn the · tough _Bea£_h -at Cartsb~-Huntington basketball tequ6 • JljgliJii!itOftlie scru~mage against 'such rivals as'Rancboi ,Je~n ls the ,Westminster. A I 8 m 1t0 s, M a.r l"n, 'Mu1t work.out Fnday.. Westmin!ter and New}) q Regular season beglnS Dec. H bor I with the opening round of the ar • ... Westminster-Marina tourna· •fowever, one definite prob- ment. lem for-Combs is that five ot Here's a·rundown on each of his ~st-candidates for the the Ora1ge Coast area's IS varsity haye been ln the root- high schools: ball 'camp and we f e unavailable for the star( ol SaH Cle-ntl!' basketball practice tl)'o weob San Clemente is without ill high-scoring Eric Christia~ this year after tbe nashy guard was graduated but coach John Baker says •his team stands -to be stronger anyway. _ · "I think we~ll have much better balance and with the added depth we now ha ve, we'll be much more effective on our full-court press. "Rebounding is the big ques- tion mark fQr us,',' says Baker. .. Four starters from last season form the nucleus of Baker's oulfit. Leading the way is Sal Lom- bardi , a f>-10 senior guard and forwards Greg Oomenchini and Dan fl.filchell. Domenchlni is a -6-2 senior and Mitchell a six-rooter. Tom Gaulden is the tallest candidate at 6-5 and is a center. ago .•• . .. Included In Iha~ list are •Mii<e McCorJl,.•(i>-7 senior), Garth Wise'('S:JO•j!mior), Paul Moro (5-10 senior), Tony Cates '(6-S senior) and Walters. Others , In the Qller• ~lcture­ are Curt Carlson. (6-f, senior), Bob DeBritton \(.5-11 seni~) Jim Harr111l (6-3 senior) and guard John Churchwell. The Oilers picked up two Marina lranslers, junior'S"'\vl!S Thomas (6-1) and Lee Ordway (6-2). ''Costa Me•a • • There appears to be a new look at Costa Mesa }{lgh where coach Emil Neemc: is installing a rapid transit of. fense keyed on the fast break. Neeme says he's got ~-.: right kind of pla)'ers for hls offense and theiqnly real prob- lem at hand is Coming -vp with the right combination lo make it go. ·-· ·- Up from the junior varsity are guards Craig Anderson (5- 11, junior). Rick Mason (f>.10 senior ) and Dom Lombardi {5- 9, senior). However, the Mustangs are . hurting with injuries sustained · • ~ during roolhall. "":"-' x Two of the three returning -..: • ""'' . ;f'. ·-;_~ . ,.. The Trilons have Lo s Alamitos transfer Jeff Scott in camp. He's a 5-11 senior forward . squad members from last \k;.;: ._..,~.,.;;.,:~ year's unit aren't due to begin ~. ,.. practice until mid-December. ~ ,..·'\··. <!:' • ,. 1ft.. ~ suffered a broken arm and 6-0 ~I~' , ~ ... -, .i .., ..,. ' TUeldar, ""'mbtr .18, 1969 " DAILY "1LOT 12· Teanis ball handlort. Vallere, the sbctb man on last year's team, wUI be, counted on (or a lion'• share or the work load in ' t1tt· e 1 i backcourt. Others who could help~ the Estancia express are Steve jBuUer (6--2), Curi Kersten (6- 1), Tommy Tt)ompSon ~5-11), Rick Wykoff (S-1) and U!s Hester (g..a). All of the above are up from the junlcir varsity fln4 the lat~. ter was named most valuable player. Only two juniors dot tbe predominately senior squad. lllater D~l ... Coach Jerry Tardie of Mater Dei High School has brougllt the Monar~ along in rapid fashion in the two years he's been at the helm and lhis: year's team appears to be the. best of the lot. Tardfe Ms six refuriling lef.. termen and a strong front line to challenge lhe likes of Pius X, Bishop Amat and St. Anthony in the race for the 1-Angelus League crown. It won1t be an easy task. Plus has 11 1«>! 12 players back from last seaSon's,Utle team, Ainat Went • 'to the CIF semifinals last year with two sophomores and St'. Anthony lost only three of its top JO players off the 1966-69 con- lingeot. But Tardie isn't so bad off 1 either. He h a s dnter-forward J(aJph Chanil.os, a' 6-4lh senior along with Tom McMenamin atid his M frarhe to control the boards a long w I t h forwards Tom Walker (s.-0), . Steve Kemper (6-2), Steve Fritz {&<I) and one of the brightest pl'O$peCti of al\, Rick Kniffin, a 6-3 sop.homore. Hl1h'• l<inlor varslly lo a %2-% mark Lut )'ur, .says be -·1 coasldf.. lhla , rebuJldin& year. ,. The. Laguna mentor says his club will probably be a balJ.. .. control O!l~ij 19' )ho moat pai! becaose lie douc'I -feet1 U.14 year1s . contt1genL wUI ._ ·bj especlolly -sll'<log 4o' · 1 h·o boards. f 11 •• ,\ 1; .' 1 Perhaps a key to Lagun111 future lies tn the feet that the Aftlst ,..JiJit.teain's 'will all bo runnJng according lo Fair. , Denny· Schmitz and Mike McMurray' are the o n I y playen Mth.junlor1 v....tty ex· perien¢e . ~d , they_'ye bea buSy .with football '. the flr~ CQµple of weeks of basbtbal practice. . Fair. says some 1of :NI canilldate8 .Ire ChiJI lj' or, sonMmnre1Vtw:e {6<1); ":red-. NichOls, ( forwar~ 1nd1 ctiuck Corwin,, sophomo« guf,fd caQdldott:·- And ·~'s high. on the ablllty of Norm Bedell, a 6-4, 210 pound freshma n. Fa1r pr_ed!ctt-_ big things Jn the future for Bedell. Foup1~aJi1 I' a1ie,/ . . ' ' ' ·' CoaCh Dave BroWri's been working with a skeleton crew with four potential 1tarter1, ~IT the FouJtain. Va lley .vars~ still busy with football wa'rs. !.. Brown's contingent Will 'be · made up mostly of last year's junior varsity with only Garf. . Valbuen._ (6-3) rt~µrnirig {~ the 196U9 varsjfy. . Valbuena, along with Rie't Power {8-1), Dan Shaw (~10) and Bill Kristlnat (S-1) a)!t still involved in the Baro~·" _ highly successful football p~ gram. -~· ' ' Another pla'yer who m8y. help the Barons that is 5till ' • playing football is Bill Chir1'-~ '": pion. a 6-3 forward candidate. · E-Bohanan, J.1agnolia, 176, Sr. £-Valbuena, Fountain Valley, .' _ 180, Sr. Baker's crew finished 8-6 in league action last year and 15- 10 overall. U'estmh1s1er Dave Dllv is', a 5-10 guard, ·•-t.fr "'.' 1"-···:i!~ :,.~. ..-_ .. , .. Dave Dies. anotller guard. was KEY PLAYER -One of."t he tbp playe'rs it'l Sur1set League action this year fig- set back with a knee opera-ures to be Lee Haven of Newport Harbor. Jiaven (55), a senior who earned sec· tion. ond team All-Orang· e County 'honofs iast year . is· seen here dominating the ac· He 's not hurting In the gu_ard department e.ither with Werner Raes (5-10), Bob Haupe rt. (5-IO J. Dave Kiley {6- t) and Brad Harniteaux '(5-7) in camp. B_r.own figures to have sif; seniors and six juniors on thii · year's team. ~ J. Other players that coli1d help the Barons' cause 8'i't • Dave Lynch, a 6-1 forward.· ... Mark Reider. (6-5) and guard· 1 George Gerber (~7). ·; · T-Eukovich. Loar<1, 205, Jr. :T-North, Corona del Mar, .. 191 ,. Sr. Bob Austin, a 6-1 senior, is Be h t Never has the basketball the other Mustang from the tion in last year's \Yin over Whittier High in the Huntington ac ournament. . G-Raupp, Fountain Valley, 180. Sr. ·G-Hanna, Lo~ra. 205. Sr. -C--Champion, F®ntain Val- . Jey. 198, Sr. B-Paniquc, l\1agnolia, 170, Sr. ~B-Johnson, Estancia. 170, Sr. B-Moxley, Edison, 165, Jr. B-Spagnuolo, Loara. 170. Sr. First Team Defense -&-~one, fQWJtain Valley, 1:68,· Sr. E-Sweetlind, Cos1.a Mesa, 205. Jr. T-McGuire, Loara, 195, Jr. .T-Hemandez, Fountain J" Valley, 170. Sr. MG-Hanna, Loara, 205. Sr. ·l.B-Petros, Corona de! Mar, 170, Sr. . LB-Ferryman. Cos la Mesa, 180, Sr. .LB-Helms, Loara , 180, Sr. B-fl.foore, Fountain Valley, 140, Sr. B-Raymond, Edison, 155, ,Jr. B-Milchell, Fountain Valley, 165, Sr. Second Team E-Rimell, Loara, 160, Sr. E-Carter, Edison. 155, Jr. T-Cheney, SA Va lley, 238. Sr. T-Goelitz, Corona del Mar, 188. Sr. G-Edwards, Costa Mesa , 180. Sr. G-DeHurf. Edison, 170. Jr. C-\Vendt, Loara. 205, Sr. B-Stand!cy, Loara. 165, St. B-Shaw, FQUntain Valley, 155, Sc. B-Manix. Co.s ta Mesa, 185, Sr. .B-Hartsfield, Founta1n Val. · ley, 170, Jr, ouUook at Weshninster High 1968-69 varsity. School appeared brighter as But Neeme ls optimistic new coach Don Le ave y about Mesa's fortunes and all reported Mond ay from the prepares his candidates for a banks his appraisals o n grid squad. solid shot at a Sunset League several excellent cand idates. Dan Wilson ( 6 . 1 ) a championship. Ken Deaton, a s.-0 senior, sophomort for.ward and senlof Leavy has only one rcty.m-and center candidate Rick Jeff Bowman (5-10) are ek- ing member or last ~a.son's Desmet, a 6-Z sot1homore, peeled to see considerable aC- varsity, but he's a good one have shown pfomise with good tion fcir the Chargers this and he has several outstanding moves. season. Bowman is sidelined players up from the junior Others that figure I n at the present time with a varsi ty. Neeme's plans are Scott knee operation aad will be 9Crt'" Dan Broderick (6-5 senior) i. Fric:slee.d (6-o), Al Moor'\!:"(~ .for fou~to,six weeks. -· is the Jone returnee. He was 2l, Jim Casillas {~21, SCott · Edi&0n woh three glmis In named to the all-Sunset Neville (5'11). Tim -Solios ($-summer league play; largely League second team last II). Chuck Bridges (5-11), Bob against Sunset League teams. · season along with making all-Morris {6-3) and Bruce Nesbitt While he hasn't been in com- toumamenl at the Huntington (6-IJ. petition with any Ir.vine Beach tourney. And he was ~lios Is a transfer from League foes in the past, Mohs selected second team on the Clncago. tabs Loara and Estancia as all-Orange Coast area elite. 'fhrec oilier football players tile teams to· beat for the Teaming with him in the could help the Mustang\ league title. · front court are Steve Mel.en-They're Pat SweeUand {6-2 don (6-6 senior) and junior Kim Wolf {6-0) and Jo COt"ona def. Mar transfer Eric Southwick (6-7)o Marchiorlalti (6-0). -All three Will be required to Coach Tandy Gillis aod . his play either fonvard or center Edison l. Corona del Mar Sea Kings giving the Lions height and . . . \ have a tough act to follow . tremendous board strength. Starting ?~t m the_ first y~ar The Sea Kings, who open up Coupled wilh that trio are of compet:llon, Edison High their scrimmage schedule with guards Richard Mann (5-6 ) School basketball forces hope Long Beach Jordan next Tues- and Phil Newhouse (5-9). The to follow the pattern set.by t.he day, will be going wilhoul a latter is"lefthanded, giving the Charger football squad in win-single squad member of last Lions a . balanced set of nlng . more than the experts season's Irvine League co- guards. Both are excellent ball predict. . champions. handlers. . ~~h David Mohs ls op· Gillis moved up to assu me Others figuring in the Lions' tiirusti~ about the ful_u re of the the role of head coach from plans are l\1ark Pearson (6-1 Chltahrgerh hqulntdmel ltslh•hs skeason his junior varsity post and he · · I d T fl I 16-2 a oug e a e nows b · ·1h h. h. 1· JU n1_or an erry . aw ey little about the Irvine League r1ngi; w1 1m 1s en ire senior) along with Glenn . . Jayvee roster. Stevens?n (5-1 f sen~or), Rich-co~:!1~o;! ~~w~~a~ah~t Hun-Leading. t_he Sea Kings :Will f;lrd ~e1d (6-2 s~ior), Kurt tington Beaeh last season and be Don Kil\lan .. ~ 6-S forward, Dedrick (6-2 s~ior ) and Ed plans lo use a fast break of-w~o. "/'as .leading scorer for Bane (5_-10 se!"-). fensc with a full-court press Gilhs oulftl last season. The Lions picked up another defense ''We will have to wait Others figured to play key tran!tter -Mark Kova, a 5-10 d · h t d 1 Ith roles in the ball-control guard candidate from Illinois. an see, fwtba 11 evle ops who pressure defense style of play' seve ra oo a p ayers w ll1111ti11gtut1 Be.ach just came out ror the team this t~at Coron,a dcl Mar seems to week," he says. ficl? year tn and year out a.re: AP Ratings -1. Ohio S11t1 Cll) 2. Triaa en ~. AtkllMll~ ~. Prnn $1, !Ill S. SOutherrt C1I • 6. ocu. •• .. •• .. .... ..... Despite the presence of only 116 one returning pla yer from last : year's Sunset League cham- "' pionship t e a m , Huntington '" k I )Ml Beach High'& ba s etbal The Charger quintet is Tim Conroy, a S.11 senior : being built a round un-Stev~ Hollander, a _5.a guard derclassmen. for the most part ca~dt~ate; Merk Gr1_gsby. a 6- although Mike Driller (6--t) at 1 Juruor; Jeff Goel!tz. a 6-3 center figures to see con-center candidate who's been slderablc action. Alike is a busy with football ; and Mike 1. M~to11rl I. Hotri O.m1 •. Trnn11~ 1 10. Loultl•n. ~!ale 11. ',Auburn :t~ :::~1::... . !4 St•nforlll IS. "lorlcll •· •·• ••·1 ,., •·• ,., ,., .. "'·1 1·1-1 m fortunes for 1969-70 would ap- : pear to be on solid ground. '«1 Coach Elmer Combs will be '" 11• molding his team around 6-3 no center Lee Walters and. the ~ fast break end run a n d senior. Sevier, a 6-3 oophomore. Ken Funke (5-10), a junior The Sea Kings participated guard, Mark Harmon (6-3), a in the Huntington Beach sum- sophomore forward and John mer _llasketball league and Fisher (6-5), a junlor center, posted a 4-7 re co rd, ,, . .,.LJ • ..,....,._.~----­ ;1 'l .. highlighted by a victory over Newport Harbor. The junior varsity wa~ 16-S for the year and second in the Irvine loop. J~ Week itlarhu• A new coach and an oulstan · ding summer league record make J\o1arina High School a dark horse candidate for ·Suns-et Le a g u e basketball honors. Jim Ste~ns takes over at ,?.farina after a successful so- journ at Garden Grove High ·and when he called the roll for cage wt>rkouts, had three let- termen on hand along with some -top stars from last year's jayvee m.inte&. forward who was the leading scorer on the tc1un last He averaged almost 15 points per_ game. Ray Stratfon.I, S.10. rcluros at guar"d and junior Kipp Balrd is back al c·enter. Bai.rd stands '6-5 and has done well duri(Jg the,summer months. Bob Beol (6-9) will probably be fhe team p\aymaker fron\,-a guard· posl" with· juniors BUI McGuire (&<I) and Torn Mullally (6·2) vying for the other starting po6ition. Slfphens tabs Westminster as the team ~o beat for Hie Sunset J,eague. ·crown with Newport HarbOr and Hun- tington Beach close behiad · along wilh hls own team. The Vikings have two scrim· mages sc:hcduled. On Nov. 21 they travel lo Garden Grove at 3:15 and on Nov. 28. play Villa Park at home at 6:30. ltll#slon l'iejo With three starters return- ing along wit)i two partHme ·starters and an outstanding transfer 'from Ar i"z on a , Mission 'Viejo High School basketball fortunes could take a turn for the best thi.s year. Coach Pat Robert.s feels hi s team w1)1 have a shot at the Crestview League title this Sl!ason and picks Foothill, Orange. Villa Park and San Clemente as the chief op- ponents. The most pleasant surprise in Lhe Dlablo camp wa.~ Rick Wadsley, a 5-11 guard transfer from . Arizona. He averaged 16 points a game last season with a state runnerup quintet. Rudy Holmes (5-10) guard, Steve West (5-10) guard and Dan Kratz (6-5) center, return from last season as starters. Thes~ -three along with 'Vadsley are listed · in the starting lineup at the prseent time with Jeff Masterson (6-3) forward who started part time last season. Bobby O'Brien (5-9) at j!uard and Jim Shafer (f>.11) at forward, were part time starters last season and are first line reserves this year. Doug Citro (S.10) and Steve 11lllard (6-3) are both late comers from the football team. Citro is a junior and J.Jllliard a sophomore. Eric Sims (5-10) and Kirk Myers (5-9) are up Crom the jayvces while Jlril Gordon (6- 1) Is with the varsity after playing with the Bee~ last ""'""'-The Diablos have scrim- mages with Pacifica {Nov. 21) ' and Fountain Valley (Nov. 25). Both are Sway and each will begln at 3:15. l\'e1Dport Barbor " I , :, J OM ALLA!'ISON Golden . WtJJt GEORGE BER6 Orange Coast RAY TYLER Saddle: back Durlng'the summer months, Stephens entered the team In two leagues and they wound tip with a 23·2 r-ecord. At Hun· · Sunset Lf!:ague title ho°pes at tlngton Beach Where m~t of Newport ll'arbor Jn basketball the Sunset teams competed. seem lo center around just Marina was 9-Z~ losing to ·..f'low well coa~h Dave wax- . Newport Harbor and Rancho man's corps of good players Alamitos. can i::Ombinc wllh perhapir a Leading the relumees Is first-team All-Orange Counly senior Rick Moaler, e 6-1 candidate. ' Leading the Bluejackets Is center-forward Lee Haven, a 11--t senior who can do it all y,·ell. Haven was a secood-team choice last season for Orange County Honors. Others who could help are John Gonnan '(6-4) and Pete Roberts ( 5-ti) . Tardie says his main con- cern this early in the year is in fmding leade rship from his seniors. La9u11a Be8"h Coach Jerry Fair has hls basketball candidates working out twice a day ·in ir.1 all-out Brown s"ays be does.1't e"fll" pect the Barons lo come up to their potential until at le• the start of Jrvine League pla,.,_ because of the lack oJ- work'outs by his root balJ :~ players. "·' Last year's junior vanity · posted a 1$-9 mark. · n1'i:. To go with him are 1968-69 members Jeff Malinoft, Net, 'Tabtl .and Dave Eccles. Malinoff · is a 1:4 ·senior . guard while Eccles, at 6-3, is a primary candidate for a forward spot. cHort to flel~ a vastly supe.rlor , -. team to last year's Laguna r----------Beach outfit.. , ! 0Tahli, 5-9, is ano,ther th·r~at for guard consideration. on1ers· who . figlire lo' help Newport ·considerably are Bill Becket, a 6-5 center; Deruiy Bean, a r:2 forward; John Casmer, a 6-1 guard-forward: Steve Kent, a 6·2 forward; and 6-3 Steve Saxon. Chuck Taylor (6-0), Bob Vogel {6-1) and Taras Young (S.10) rouod out the squad. Waxman says the thing most required of his squad is to come together as a working unit. Esttuacla Judging from the talent at hand, It would appear fhat Estancia High School will be fielding its best-ever basket- ball team this year. Coach Bill Wetzel has a solid nucleus'of sta_rters back from last year's 10-12 contingent and a prospective player of the year in the Irvine League. Leading the Eagles will be center Skip Wjlllams, a 6-6 senior with good moves and excellent board strength. 0th~ back from last year's team are Gary Orgill, Mike Hays, Mike Shaughnessy and Steve Valiere . Orgill. at 5-11 , will probably man a forw ard post for Wetzel and has been looking ex- cepUonally good in practice. C o -captaim Shaughnessy and H4ys, both 5-9, are slick Fa!r, who came to Laguna alter guiding Villa P ark McCaughey Raps ·Ref In 1-1 Tie Coast Rangers coach Brian McCaughey blasted the game oUlcial for missing at least three penalty infr&cUon.s Sun- day at Riverside where the Rangers tied the' host city, 1-1, in Pacific Soccer League bat· tie. The Rangers were nursing a 1-0 lead, thanks ·to Norm Pre71- dergasl's goal two minutes before halftime.' l-loweveri Riverside equalled the count In the game's last· three minutes when goalie Joe Feola m1s·klclted a ball and a defensive man slammed Ii into the unguarded goal. Still, with a minute to play the invaders had a shot at vic- tory as Hans Reuther took a free kick but blew the chance by heading the ball over the goal. · . In the preliminary game Rr.1ger ·reserves ~ e d g e d Riverside, 1-0, on Andre Cousin's goal. This Sunday the Rangers meet La Puente at lndependencia Park in the lat- ter's community •. Kickolf is 2o30, Blair 1969CIFChamp 1 -On Paper, That ls Fora sh~rp offer .. ·29~ Blair High of Pasadena hosts Monte Vista Friday finished £irSt among the pref. night. s._._,~ football teams in the .final ed. ,__.. ti on or the 1969 CIF Top 10 poll Foothill High retained its ""' tteok after wrappt.ig up Its regular third spot in the AM rati'.1gs Smi\w-yows season undefeated . behind likewise undefeated -,.: l: forot:ly2~· The Angelus League's one-South Pasadena and Rolllng · · eadf two punch of Bishop Amat and !Ulls. with gotonne S.t. P11ul fini shed second and ·: pu.-cha .. at,_.· thlrd and the third parochial AAA.A l power in the elite list .-. Place Ttam Points Jiclpatfn:eto~ Loyola -finished fourth . I. Blair (9-0) 119 Ora,nge County's represeflo 2. Bishop Amat (8-1) IOI KoUow-grouwtd. talion In the poll is credited to 3. St. Paul ( .. I) 80 ''Mogic Edge" blod• Loara and A".1aheiq). 4. Loyola ( .. I) 79 nWW"trnMd 9"°f1*tfng. . Loar&i Irvine League chnm· 5. Santa fl.fonlca (9~) 71 Slmulated stag handlet.. pion. finished in sixt h and 6. Loara (8-0-1 ) 54 Dlshwather-1at.. Un'°"'" Anahci , the Sunset League 7. Arroyo (l-0-1) 31 dilional/yg110twmteed"r titlist, is eighth. -8. Anaheim (7-2) 28 '"Onufaehlrerfor $ywca. • r •• ,. '-, '· '· l " •· l It's significant that every 9: Compton (7·1·1) 21 · f team in the CIF AMA · 10. (tic) •hiencme (8-l ) 19 •1vne,~..._.,_,,._..,. '- playofrs rectlved votes except El Rancho (7-2) 19 '--------....,-!! Whitmont co-champion Monte Othcrt: Lakewood, Wilson !• Vista. 14 e1ch, Pasadena 11 , No. S scedM-Bishop Amat Redlands 8, Whitlier 2. ..... --,,_ .... - ·~ •O: l • )4 DAil Y Pl lOT Tutsday, Novtmbff 18, 1969 Pilot Pigskin PICKEROO Co-Sponsored by DAILY PILOT IE A PROPHET FOR PROFIT s10 10 In Cash 1For Each WMk's First Place Winner I Volt Footballs (or other Sports Equipment I each wffk I• a pigskin prophet. Pl1y th• DAILY PI LOT Pickeroo game for weekly pri2es. Winner• each week receives $10 c.esh end e Voit C~ll eg iate football (suggested retail price , $10.95 1 or prize pic ked \rom list of other Voit quality sporting goods I no prii.e under $I 0 re. tail value ). Watch for this pla.yer's form each week ITuesdeys end Wednesdays) in the DAILY PILOT Sports Sec· tion. C ircle the teams you think will win in the list of 20 games end send in the player's form or re11on· able fee.simile. Then watch the DAILY PILOT sports P.•ges for each week's list of 10 winners. RULES 1. Subrnlt 11111 1•11ry blink or • rNS011111:!.l1 t~!mlt1 1o entl'I' the con!"'· 2. Send to: PILOT PIGSKIN P ICkEROO CONTEST, Sports Otiwirtmen!, P. 0. SOX U60. (Gllf Mffil, C~. '2616. 1. Only 01\e ~•rv per per50n NCI WIK. • · 4. En1rl" muH bt Otllvered (by mill or ln perlOll) to 0A1LY PILOT office by .S p.m. T~urtd•V. S. W. J. Voll Rutbtt Corp. and DAILY PILOT fmploye1 tnd lti.lr I"'" meai.11 11mni.1 not e!lglbltl lo ~:er. I. TIE BR EAKER ind CHOICE OF PRIZE bl:llnkl musl be tilled In or t<llry Ii llOlcl . ••••••••••••••••••••• • ENTRY BL.4NK • • Clule r•ams yo• thh1• will wht ttir. wffli's 9am11 • • fhome ffflll is wc:oltd ON nsted) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Dallas vs Rams Denver vs San Diego Oakland vs Kansas City USC vs UCLA Col vs Stanford Oregon State vs Oregon Purdae vs· Indiana Ohio State n Michigan Nebraska vs Oklahoma SMU vs Baylor Wyoming vs ' Houston Harvard vs Yale • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • : Fullerton JC vs San Diego Mesa : • • Saddleback vs Mt. SAC • • • • • • • • • • Cypress vs Golden West Long Beach Wilson vs .Anahelin Neff vs FoothiH • • • • • • • • •• • Loara vs ReCllands_ Glendora vs Ra~ Alamitos Damien vs · Fullerton • • • TIE BREAKER -My oue., on 11 .. tot.I numllcr Of p;;11!!1 1<ort11 • • • • In aH 2D eama hileCI 1tiov1 Is ..................... ,~········--• W NAME • • .&DDIESS • W CITY W PHONE • ... • •• • •• • • • W CHOICE Of PRIZE !Check oM, ~irci.swl"' flit II•> • W O Swh• Ra D ExerclM llUt O FeotMU • W SM ML L XL O TetMr.... O l 1l11HH W I• w w w • • •-• • • • • w •·• w • • •i : GarsonHeadsF1~eeway's All-l~aue Se~ections Troy High's Glenn Garson was named Back or lhe Year ; in the Freeway League in the 1 o£ficiaJ relea.se or the all- ' Jcague1 selections. Fullttton Ulgh's Joe Her· nandez garnered Lineman oC the Year credentials and the coaching award was split be- tween Fullerton's Gil Tucker • and George Van Vliet. Second ploc< Kennedy led the first team honors with six players. WI, Cliff 111 Sr, t50 Sr 105 Jr 1911 Jr ltS 5r UCI Sr US Jr 1111 ,, ltG $r 160 Sr 1IO Sr ltO $r "' " 115 ,,. 17) j' ni ~ .L 110 Jr ?OS Sr 160 Sr HS Sr 18S Sr 160 Sr 160 Sr 110 Sr 17$ Sr 190 Sr 170 Sr 16' Sr 1911 Sr 1811 Sr 160 Sr 150 " llO Sr 11S Sr "' " 110 J• ,,, ,, JM Sr 191 Sr ll'O Sr 1111 Sr 160 Jr 165 Sr 1'0 Sr 145 Sr Frosh Football £1t1nc11 • • • O-• C:Ol"Onf dtl Mir • I O 1-1• Tau(ftdown1: !El Prlnc.1•lo1 ((OM) Ltvderti.1"'911, S.vlH PAT: ll'•tm•r (PIH lrorn l lVlff), Pllllv l~IM lrorn S1v-1 Cella ,.,,_.. ... Foun••lft )l.tJ!fl' .. l Prep . HUGH L'EATHE R . ~issioa Vi~jo 16 Pick·16 -Winners lri Pickero,o Contest A log-jam of 16 entrants before deadline than in any picked 16 correct winners in olher week of the contest • the ninth week of the DAILY Total points played a big PILOT Pigskin Pickeroo foot· part in detennining winners ball contest with Steve Ryan this week with the 40 teams or Costa Mesa the overall win· involved scoring a total or 792 ner as he guessed within fi ve points. ,Other winners included: J im points the ·total n\lniber to be George {Costa Mesa), G. E. .scored in all games. Stoddard (Santa Ana), Steve For the second time in the Speer (Costa Mesa), Clyde history, of the contes~. 11 win-Shintaku (Huntington Beach), 11ers, wi~I . ,t~!V~e·. Ve.it Jim West {Newport Beach). ~-~-' ~·,:s.epi.n Ill. llDice (~ del because-U,a 3-Wiy ninth DI.ace· Mar). Jim Rubino (ijµntington •lie! •, • ~I .-.;"),.~~-• ~ch)' Jot. -...... -.AJWJ. ~ . . • ' • " ... "{TY \•• ----------This•15 the flria],•week oftbe tington Beach), Mike Blair Soph Football ~an11 Ant •Vallev ' t a 6-:tO C~lt M•~ 11 1~ O G-14 Touclldowftl: Warrcr., Brown PAT: Artflu.r (~'5 from Darnell) rcontest ·w1UJ' en\ry blanis <Huntington Beach) and Sid printed in ·the'. Tiiesday and Cav1µ1augh (Laguna Niguel) . Wednesday ed:ilions. Tti~ of those placing in the In addition~ the large num-top 10 'h~ve been winners in ber ·of p11:rl;icipanls• picking 16 previous weeks although 'therc . winnt;irs, ll!e ftinJh week of th~ bav~ been 110 repeaters for the . contest:S!lw .more-entries fileil top prize . i J From Oct.1 through Nov.30, 1969 _you pay only $11.39 for each YJ-gallon of 7 Crowll instead of $12.49. Don't misa thie big saving on America'e favorite whi1key, ................... ""' ...... " Say Seagram's and Bo 1Suro, -. of Week j ! --~ • JERRY REILLY Co1la J\1esa . , DOUG HILLIARD Coron8 del !\far DAVE NANRY. DAVE JACKSON ' Marina ROLAND 'McELHANY" Laguna Beach Ma ter•Del ~LS $ • 4-PLY NYLON CORD .e DEEP DURAGEN • RUBBER.TREAD · • FAMOUS DUAL TREAD DESIGN size 6.50 x 13 tubeless, plus ~1.79 Fed. Ex. Tax • LARGER SIZES AVAILABLE SIZE PR ICE FED. EX. Tl.I 7.75 x 14 119.95 !1.10 7.75xl5 119.95 11.11 8.25 x 14 !10.95 11.36 8.25 )( 15 110.95 11.46 8.55 )( 14 111.95 11.57 Prices as shown at General Tire stores. Competitively priced at General Tire dealer~ displayin11 the General si11n . INTRODUCING: New, High -Quality General JET·AIRm e Dual design Ourageni- rubber lread • 4-ply nylon cord, tubeless Whitewalls SIZE PRICE FED. EX. TAX for the 7.75 )( 14 $33.95 !2.20 NBig 4 " 8.25 )( 14 $36.95 $2.36 and Larger 8.25' 15 13&95 $2.46 Cars ·8.55x14 !40.95 !2.57 8.55x 15 !40.95 !1.63 9.00' 15 $46.95 !1.83 FIBERGLASS J~~~a° no • 2.Ply polyester cord bodJ • Fiberglass cord belt >~<H.U TWINSTRIPE WHITEWALL •Tire rotation a11ure1 even !read wear and longer mileage. • Experts check all 5 Urea !or cuts, etc. $ 4 7~.Q,, " '"' $1 90 F•d £1 T1~. L••it• 11:~1 •! 1J<lt1 co11. Tu•ld•r. WedMMi•r. or Thuradar ontr by •ppolnlmtnt Only sac·',, GENERAL TIRE D•il 'swelll1111d AVERY GENERAL TIRE . SEllViCE GENERAL • TIRE .SERVICE COAST GENERAL TIRE 515 W, 1,tfl 16f41 .. Kh 11111, 12221. 4tlt Cosl• M"• H1111ti119to11 hoch So•ito AllO 54 0·5710-646·50Jl •147·St50 S4l·IJ26 " .. '' ' ·11' "111 "" 11~, ' ,. j '------MtMIER AUTO INOUiTAIES HIGHWAY SAFETY COMMITTEE.---....., ...... . -. ·~ ~ --~ ------.--~----·----------,---,----------------·-----------::----.-·..,..,..-, .. • • • • ' ' J EAN COX, -- T_..,, He\ltllllltr IL IHt I ..... 11 , -• Rep~blic~ns Name Leaders ! • -· .. Mrs. Fred .Briggs1 of Monarch'Bay became the second president of' Laguna Niguel Rep_ub1ican Women's Club during an installation ceremony last Thursday morning. Mrs. Katherine Wright, a past Republican Woman-of-the-year and representative from N~tional F~eration of Republican Women, came from Glendale to con~uct the installation ceremony in Monarch Bay'Beacb Club. -_ M'rs. Briggs, wife of an architec t and rilother of one preSchooler, ts a docent for Laguna Beach' Art Association Gallery and an associate member of the Republican State Central Committee. She served the.club during its initial year as first vice president. Mrs. Robert Tliomas WaS charter president of the group w.hicb \Vas formed September, 1968. · Other new officers assisting Mrs. Briggs are the Mmes. Neil Barbour of Three Arch Bay and G. \V. Luck of Laguna Niguel, vice presidents; William A. Beck of Monarch Bay, secretary, and Daniel Boyle, treasur~r. · • • The new pre~ident has many plans foe the club, and the possi- bility of op_ening a Republican Headquarters in Laguna Niguel 1s be. ing examine<!. . Upcoming activities include a desset1. bridge Thursday, Dec. 4, to take place at noon in Gordon's restaurant, Laguna Niguel. " EVER ONWARD -Leading Laguna Niguel Repub- lican Women.,s .Club members. on 'an upward. climb is the new president, Mrs. Fred.'Brl~_gs. She -is joined by (left) Mrs. Neil Bar'bollr; first:v1ce president. and Mrs.· Wi~iam A: Beck. secretary. They :tOQlr th~~ - poats,_durmg an mstallation ceremony last Thursday, The public is invited to this event, and tickets are"$2.50 per per- son. Reservations may "be obtained by calling Mrs. J ack Webb, 495- 5589 or Mrs. Luck, 496-3475. All Republican women are· invited to join the•group which meets Thursd83 in Mpnarch Bay Beach Club. Child care is -provided to chil- dren of preschool age. Further information may•be obtained by calling · .monung. Mrs. Beck, 4911-2830. . , • The Lag una Line -:::;.::;~:---::-;z::~. -::;-;:.::--::----;-_-,• -.. ~ ~,., ·-,, -... ·~ ' -' Las Damas ·Prepare . For Ch 'ristmas Ball By JEAN CO X 01 The 0.1/y "°'" f11+t ' The HOlfDAY SEASON rilust be here. Capi-straQO VaUey residents already have received bright yellow invitations to the annual Baile de Navi- Jlad, a colorful formal affair hosted by Las Damas del· Mar·Auxillary, Children's Home Society. . . ~rrs . Thomas Peden is general chairman of the Mexican, Christmas party which will take place this year in San Clemente Inn., Dec. 6. . Committee chairmen include the Mmes. Larey Peltier, Robert Dns- coll, Fred Greenberg, Harvey Riggs, Samuel Besse, Dane ·Wilhite and Ralph Grassi. A LOT OF SMART buyers did their Christmas shopping. welL.ahead of time at the annual Christmas Bazaar sponsc>red by St. Mary's Episcopal Churchwomen of Laguna Beach. · , ' · · ' . 1 0 The bazaar was a great success." reported ¥rs. An,dre~ ~orthla~ of Laguna Beach, ·chairman, adding, "The thing th?t please4 pe.ople T?,Ore . than anything was the reasonable prices and the one-of-a-kind items: Mrs. Morthland said a1though final , figures bave nQt yet been· de- tennined, lhe wo men made more than last year, which brou·gp.t $2®!l ta' .., church coffers. -, .· •' She saia about 50 'vomen combined efforts for the aMual · two-d;ay AJ;1 baZaar., . MRS. ALFRED KRE SS. of Emerald Bay hosted a luncheon !Or Ebetl Club of Laglllla Beach's PotpoUrri Section and with.the help of her c~hos· tess, M,ts.· Raymond Schirm of Laguna Beach, pioduced a Lobster QUiche ~ that won rave notices from her guests: l\o'I Among the happy lun cheon participants were the Mmes. J un Chine> ,..~ of South La~una ; Aldon E. Clark, William Hinwood, Robert McCarter, R ichard Rac1ch and Arn K. Youngman of. Three Areh Bay; Milton Fryer Jr. oi Laguna Beach; Tristan Krogius and James Townsend of Laguna Ni- '"' guel; Jay Stone of Monarch Bay, and William McCready of Emerald Bay. ' "\ MISSION VIEJO Women's. Club, also known 8s Deane Homes Worn· l en's Club, desperately needs volunteers to help initiate a ~Jock parent pr~ \\ gram and is asking all interested residents to can Mrs. 'John Kezele, 830-0128 or Mrs. Pal Getchell, 837-4793. . \ D\jRt NG A MEETING OF Tres Osos Guild, Ben Deane of Deane Brothers was presented a distinguished service award by Williilm A. Spur- " geon, executive vice president of the board of triistees,· Cl\ildreh's Hos· • ' pital of Orange County, He was recognized by the guilds for bis support f · to the hospital cause. <\-• I .. .... ~ " LAUNCHING BENEFIT-e Mmes:"Jame& Lyons, Laurence Campbell and · G_eorge -W. Woll (left to right), show how easy it is. to -l~uncb the 11th annual Valentlne Ball. The benefit, which is sponsored. by sOutti Coast Community HosPital Auxiliary, is plan· ned and organized well in advance of its Feb. 14 date~ Hearts Put In Efforts For Benefit It's all systems go for South Coast Community Hospital's Jllh annual Valentine Ball which got off the ground last week during a meeting hosted by Mrs; George W. Wolf of Laguna Beatjl, b e n e f i t chairman and auxiliary vice president. During the gathering in Mrs. Wolf's Temple Hills Drive home, committee members made progress reports on their efforts for the black-Ue optional affair which will take place in the Newparter Inn Feb. 14. Festivities, beginning with a 7 p.m. cocktail hour, will in-, ~elude dinner and dancing ·lo Ray Noval's orchestra. , , Assisting the vice president with plans for the gala inc lude the Mmes. Mont E. McMillen, patrons: Harold Ekman, in- vitations; Violet Ad ams, treasurer; Gertrude Carroll, _ ltostesses; E. M. Johnston, secretary, and William Im- hoff. Others are the M m e·s • Robert K. de Ford, decora. lions; Bertrand Kampert, door prizes; Ray Marsh Fox, pro- grams: Thomas..J. Fletcher, publicity, and Miss Fem Ran· dolph, liaison chalr:rnan • Still to be named are hosteseses and others assist· ing in the prespr.ing party. They will be dbclosed at a later date.· Men Agree Ice C.ube Will Last Longer If She Doesn't Melt ! ' '. 't .. DEAR READERS : Remember the let· ter from Wyoming Ice Cube -the 18- year-old Casper cutic with the high dale turnover? She had been called e~hing from a tease to a mental case.fA premed student told her she'd probably have a n-ervous breakdown because of her pent up cmotions .. -Jn desperation, the girl perfonned an a·nalysls on her. sOcial life. Jlc.r findings were 1lA follows: Invariably the fellow was mannerly and respectful on the first date. on-uie seeond date he mad~ it clear he wasn't about to waste any more time. His question was to the point: "How about It?" On the third date If she wasn't willing to lie down and talk things over he w·ou ld feed her telephone --tmmber' fo t~ ncares~ goat. • CllbC · asked rne. "ts virginity out· -,. ·- " . r , flgur.<! If a girl doesn'l have any respect ror herself, she dOtln't deserve any fron\ them. ANN LANDERS [il COLOllAIJQ U.: U I KOrt .. Ille ,.. toad tr tldrd Ute, I pit CP 1Ut t.o Ute babe'• pllOH emnber. I& ltald• for UCom- doia1 •nUI we get marrtttt.'I We had ·niulty Property." Pve never dated a some kDock~Wn dng-o1t"'°aigu'Sae1111 1 CP 1llOl't 1bu tllne dmn. Tbey are but I wu ~;, U,,,. tat lbe ftl ....., •P ..... l8d c:ruldng botts. moded? Do men REALLY want everything they ask for, or are they merely tesUna:? · . 1 told her rd aak the fellows1 And I did. Here is a sampling of the repties: YALE CLA.sll OF 'IZ: 'l'lli1 probably will come u a cHuppolatmelll &e mos& · collt1~ 1twdeat11 bat yoa didn't Invent ax, my lltUe cblck1dee1. Titere w11 a goed bft el It la "dte, Gldea day1 ... I 10& m.y 1hare, probably mlN'e. Bat tbe &lrl I marrltd wa1 tbe oae wbo utd, "Noddol lbem all. We ·--le w 11111 IC'll P'ROMlllDO STATE UNIVERSITY: II mootll. • ' Ice Cube ii JOI\ .Bitting home on h<r UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA : I wi!h btgllly prized lsoeil because. she refuses Tee Cube could listen to lhe conversalion to Co·lo bed on the third date, she should in the men's dorm. lt "'oukl tetUe the ask hrr1elf, "Whit'• wrong with mY «S'ilt? question once and for all. 1'w: nicknames Why do I attract such scum?" -"Mattress Mary /' "HorlzontAI Helen " PRO~ ORLANDO: Men have betn ' and "Rou,nd·heeled Ruthie" are just a makl•c jokel abolt cllas11ty for a lon g few. Of course il's ten, but most:guys dme. -Dmi11 Wortd War D Ute Gt '1 In • • I .- London said, 0 1r a virgin walked down Trafalgar Square tbe statue of Lord Nelsoo wollkl ralte bJ1 hit to ber." Fuaay hoW a guy will bed down wllh aayone who :.. willing bvt he'll kil l a guy who tlike1 advantage of bl1 &ister, or, btavea forbid, 11111 daugbter. U OF KANSAS: CUbe is luckfto learn on the thi rd d~te whet the jerk is after. She can dump hin1 fast instead of westing her valuable time. WATE.RLQO, ONTAitlO: A1 a. ps)'cbi1tr:lat 1 can aasu~ Ice 'Cube lhal Ya.tlly fe•·er people "'bttome dlsh1rbed. because or ab1leld01 compartd wl"9 those who are wracked.with p ill cau!led by sexual promi scuity. -W.F.W. l~tD) FROM 01\fAHA : I married at age 30. Pity bride was 25. Ncit11er mf bride nor I t · had sexual intercourse wm.1 the night we were married. Please.print my name. 1 am proud or It. -e.H.W. DEAR C.H.W.: C.01J11"'1a-. Lover, bat I'm M& sure )'Gm' wtft-W..W cmre ler Ille pUIJdty. If 11'1 Ill tile aame 10 JIO, 1'11 juat u1e yaar lllUlal&: Christmas can be a problem . What .can YQU give the person who has evcrythina? Ann Landers' new boot, "Truth ls Slranger," is avallable in book stors. tt also can be obtained by writing Prent~ Hall, Englewood Cilll1, N.J. Pricf·, M.16. Ann nders wlll be glad to help you with y prOblems. Send them to her In care of he DAIL] PILOT nri"spaptr, enc~os· g a sc.'ftddressed, stamped enve pe. • ' i ... \ I I l I ! 1' I .... , ... ~•••• • • •·••• lh•I• ~...--..-~-·....-------------·-----------------------• II••• l • '"" • ·•>••• • ',. ' l • '" ....... ,. '',. -•••·•• • •• • • -.. , ---~ •• .._., ._ 1, • -·~ • ••" Horoscope Libra: ·oon 't ' , ~-Be-w-~1ffiower WEDNESDAY 'NOVEMBER 19 By~OMARa . ' , la,,...,,.,, ee111ataue • 11111', llldll -.... -.... --·~1t1•• 'Arlu,\ eppotlte Unw, ~· ..... ..., .... ilfhM \ ........ -illplom..,;..fllli• ' Gel"-· At .. - '.... -... """ --Dool "~ enw by acu., Oii larpoloi .... , ..... w.i loaf<. • Alt1E8 ~March 21-April 19): One yOu trust could aci in ec-centric manner. YoUr ~ al .!'YCle ll high; take initia- tive, Don't perpllt peraona.wbo ·thraab fer answers to ·USe you ... sdlpegoat. TAURUS (April :ZO.May JO): You break loose from some c on t en t i on s, restrictions. Leeve· <letalls to others. 1bis is your day for self-expreslion. _ Imprint your own style. Hear your own voice. Be youne:U. GEMINI (May 21-June JO): ' ~ ' . UBRA (Sept: 23-0cl U): Where prtvlaua1y you were· ~ , there la adloac Sur. ilrf,.. occur. You gal,I favor- •· ·-· Publlclly .... confpapl.. your efforts. No day to be a ,waUflower. SCORPIO (Ocl 23-Nov. 21): 1 ~tlon, received' · Yi>ur l\eady eUorts of past come. to -uon. o( thole wbo can aid. , Ohtaio hinl from IJln ,.... sate: Accent on relations wilh wOrkers, ~Woclates. • .. , SAGl'ITAJ!IUll (N o Y. ,22-. Dec. 21): Romantic interest highllghted. If sing!<; y 0. could encounter exciti'ng ln<ti.· Yid~al wtto llOWI close: If married, child or mate could do lolD<thing which .. peclally p!Wes you. · CAPRl!X>llN (Dec. 21.Jan . 19l: Cbanges·occur in . what . wu a steady rootln'e. Main·· taln poise. You can cope with individual who acts in eeCen- bic manner. Sense of humor is definlte asset. Subatitute laughte' for tears. . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): If journey is not neces- sary, bypass It. Confusjon ex- isll. Pknly of laughs indicated tonlghl -------~-----. ~ ......... "• ......... .--•• -t •t <mo ,_. • ...... • ... ·---- MRS. WI LLIAM BYRNE Singlt Ring Nuptia ls Officer Delivers Verdict in Line ·of Duty Some previous beller. may be shattered. Be a creallve think· er. Means don't be afraid to ~e your mlndcFalle pride is your chief advvaary. Re- view facts. Base decisions on · actualiUea. CANCER (June 21.JulY 21): PJBCEs (Feb. 19-March zil)' Obtain hint from VJrgo mel" sage. Be carelul with money 1 personal pouesaloni. YOU Cari gain ii you are !borough, Not wise to delegate duUes. One who-il:Blncere couJd Jack con- fidence. · Acapulco Picked For Honeymoon Motor officer Tony Villa samples old-fashioned southern fruit cake offered by Mrs. ~im Spears of Ne,vport Beach Police Wives Auxiliary while Mrs. Craig Johnson awaits verdict. The sale, which runs thro~gh Cl)ristmas .. will finance auxiliary projects. To order cakes, those interested may phone Mrs. John Richard, 642-9989. Persons who have much to do wltb what you do act in ~ usual manner. Key is to. move Jl'llh the' tide. By cooperating, YOU! prestige Is. enbanctd. Peering ORANGE COAST pledges trom National Panhellenic so- rorities at California State College aL Long Beach have been named. Alpha Epsilon Phi pledge is Cheryl Langner of Westmin- ster: Tri Dells, Joan Benson of Newport Beach a~ Patti Pfister, Huntington Beach; Delta Gamma, Jennifer Faulk, Seal Beach: Delta Zeta, Ce· c e I i a Spears, Huntington Beach, and Sigma Kappa, Su- s a o · Mennich, Huntington Decorations For Holidays Suggested Suggestions tor ho 1 i d a y decorations will be given members of South Orange Coast Chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha Thursday, Nov. 20, at 7:30 p.m. in the Corona de! Mar home of Mrs. Robert McLean. Christmas handcraft pro- jects will be discussed by Mrs. Bruce Peterson. Assisting will be Mrs. Patrick ~lcDonald, , president and Mrs. Leslie Peterson, Further questio.1s will be answered by ~trs. McLean at 644·1723. Wri te r Spea ks In Long Beach r~ewspaper columnist Mrs. Ted Krec will addre ss members of the Woman's Auxiliary of American In s titute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum Engineers at a luncheon meeling Thursday. Nov. 20. at noon. · A busi~ss meeting at 10 :30 a.m. in Vic tor Hugo's, Long Beach1 will precede l~beon . Reservations·mhy be 'm ade by phoni ng ltlrs. Thomas G. . Petrulas, 897-4288. Around Sol~ Searching . .,,, Beach. Know this and don't fight city hall. . L,£0 (July 23-Al!J. 21): Tra¥eling today could present some problems. Be sure of jtinerary. Know in which di· rection you are goJng. Some who give direcUons may be confused. Double check:. IF TOD AY II YOUR Acapulco was the ha.1ey-Smith, another foster brother. moon destination of William The Irvine Coast County Alexander Rusu ·Byrne of Club was the reception setlbg Balboa Island and hiS bride, where Miss Cheryl Singer MR. AND lt1RS. J oh n Benson of Newport Beach vacaUoned in Puerto Rico as guests of the Ford Motor Company. Benson was one of 900 wirmers in a sales1contest . sponsored by the Autohte-Ford Parts Division. Good Business VIRG-0 (Aug. 23-Sept. 21): or in fa shion. Geller forecasts Leave financial area to others. You tend today to fall for for spring, shoes in red, red . schemes. Key is to be ·patient Bert Geller does a lot of sole with white trim, navy with and analytical. Otherwise, you By JUDY RURST Of Ille OfilY l'llol $1ttl . BIRTHDAY you are dynainic, original, poqest a unique· way of npressing . youneU. Many >claim you are a born leader. These qualities have !>een much in evidence in recent , months. Now you should put together puzzle pieces. Find -out where , you stand. Draw line between beinj: kind and being foolish. ·the former Cheryl Jean circulated the guest book. Bogenrief. Among the 200 friends and The Rev. Lionel Dorois relatives congratulating the performed the single ring couple was Mrs. W. R. Fouts nuptials in Our Lady Queen of bf Whittier, the bride 1 s searching in ~ business. white trim ;ind generous com· could lose something of value. He should since he's a binations of color. No time to be a money plung· Angels Catholic Church. maternal grandmother. The bride is the daughter of The former Miss Bogenrief "sole" brother. Not really a The holiday and spring '70 er. Easy. brother,.Geller-is the nephew .... ~QlJ.«:tion ... Je.atures. ... b.l .a .c..k ... Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. attended Oh io State University Bogenrief of Corroa del Mar where she affiliated with Delta . .. and. the..benedict. is .the.ioster .... G."mma .. .5P.!'Pr.i.t.Y. •. _ l;l,e_r . l;n~·: .. son of Mr. and Mrs. c. R. F. band is assistanl golf pro at MRS. THOMAS F. Ralael or of tbe late Andrew Geller who Patent, dark tans, silver and Corona del Mar is serving on started a. family shoe business gold slippers, wal'Pl fabrics, the arrangements eommittee in 1903. Today the plant, has blunt and circular toes, high for the Cardi',ial's Christmas blossomed into a I a r g e chunky heels along s i d e Party for Children, to be given manufacturing industry i n ta~red heels. . in the Hollywood P.illladium ,Brooklyn. .._ · '"i:>ot of the best sellers in a Sunday, Dec. 6. 1 Geller shoes run tbe gamut BeVertY Hills· pfire Was a ·-~ 1 In styles,fi.....rt,M .. a _from pale ·1eaiber puinp wiµi ili?nder KAY NELSON Engaged April Date S~lected blue loafen~i:~ng pwnps lleel and toe in white and one. to higb-laced boOts. All are half inch stripes in tilue, fun high quality and regal in sty!-and bone. ing. The "price tag matches "The boot look Will continue their rich ·appearance. selling. More heel ls indicated "Women purchase our and the crushed leather or shoes, not'kids 'in high school wet look wilJ ~ in," ~ · and college. The youngsters foretold. . , can't afford them," he stated The current trend with simply. His footwear starts at 1talian shoes doesn't seem to around $30. And those soft, bother the Geller industry. ~ comfortable, chunky loafers "There has be~ a big in- f were $32' retail. crease in imports during the f Blue has been a popular col-last .five years. But it's not City Attorney Discusses land disturbing us," he smiled. Continuing to look into the future Geller considers that heels will not rise or become thicker, Sandles and open toe~ are coming into the picture but it is not a throwback from Tully SeymOur, Newport the 40s. He called ·iL an in· Beach ¢ty, 'attorney, will terpretative look. discuss .the Upl_>eI' Bay Land Realizing that dress styles Exchange before members of are up and may be coming the Newport Hartior Business d h -J1· ~ .... u th t and ~Professional Women's own, e, p~cl.<:\l a any immediate ollange in clothes Club. won't affect the shoe styles. "I The dinner meeting i·s don't believe in the longevity scheduled for next Thursday of the maxi look." , .at 6:30 p.m. in the Costa Mesa Do shoe manufacturers have Country Club. ?\Us. H. R, a direct pipeline into the gar· Newlywed Fred Ryans Reside in ·.San Diego . , . . . -<r. . ~.their home in Sftn Ryan was his brother's best Diego following a wedding b1p man and ushers were Ralph to Hawaii are Mr. and Mrs. Griffin, the bride's brother, Fr~ Blqlman Ry~ II who Charles Bernat and Dale were inarried in St. Andrew's Lenk. Steven Griffin, aiother Presbytertaa Church. . brother, was ring bearyr and The ·~v. Dr. Charles H. Pam Dooley was flower girl. DleremieJ~ J>ef!onned t h e A reception for 150 guests double rmg rites for the took place in the church's daughter of the Lea1ie M. Grif· Fireside Room with Mrs. fins of Newport Beach and the Milton F. Lorenz, the bride's son of the Fred B. Ryans of great-aunt circulating t he ~nta Ana HelgblS. guest book, ~~ former Sandra Lee Special guests were Mrs. Smith:of Pacific Beach. Irvine Coast. The new Mrs. Byrne Following their wedding trip selected an original gown of the couple will reside on candlelight peau de soie with Balboa Island. alencon lace an.st seed pearls and a catfledfal, length . veil enhanced with pearl clusters aid lace. She carried a cascading· bouquet of white roses and stephanotl~. Miss DeeOcc Smith, foster sister of the bridegroom was maid of honor in a go}d crepe empire style gown. Dressed identically and carrying a cascade or autumn flowers was Miss Candee Parkhill, bridesmaid. Jerry Smith was bis foster brother's best man. Ushers were Paul Bogenrief, the bride's brother and Dwight Service Groiip forms in NB Newport Beach Police Gulld, a new service organization, will gather tonight at 8 irr Ensign Junior High School. Membership will consist cf. regular and reserve police of· ficers in Newport Beach. Further infonnation may be obtained by calling Mrs. Reed Gloshen , 962-8420 or Mrs. William Speirs, 546·3932. Griffin selected a candlellaht Zetta Anita Griffin of Boron crepe empire sheath and a full and Mr. and Mrs, L. W. Brim·JL======================~ ,cathedral length veil. She car-mer of Costa Mesa the bride's L' E. y I rled white rosebuds, yellow grandparents a.."Ki' Mrs. Rose IDQ ~UL 1 roses and baby's breath. Wrinkle of Sacramento the · I Attending her were Ml.ss benedlct's godmother. , Joanne Paul, maid of ho:ior; The bride and her husband Ill 5 . _ • Mrs. R~ Ryan, matron of are graduates of Newj>ort -honor; Miss Jenni Schaohuu. Ha,bor High School and at-STRICTLY J UNIORS cou~n of the bridegroom, and tended Orange Coasi Ccllege. NOW OPEN , • , In Th e All ey Of M .r s . B. e v e r I y G a v·e l , Currtntly he is stationed' ~ith br1desma1ds. · the µ.s. Navy in San Diego and •has served one year in Panel Set By Juniors Vietnam. Uncle Len Offers Prizes Every Sa turday Open Fri. Ev es. 'til 9 Hope, legislation chainnan, is ment industry? The engagement of Kay plangW,g tire evening. "No," he said emphatically. A federation panel com-I'=;:::::;§========~~==============:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~ Teresa Ne1son and , J 0 e I Reservations inay tie made "The timing is different. We prised of Miss Geraldine Ir Charles Wagner of _Sailta Ana with Mrs. Helen Cole, presi· show our early fall line in Robinette and Mrs. 'Kay 'f"""""-r-~~":("J-:i-·~ 3424 'tlA LIDO NEWPORT l lACH ALL CREDIT CARDS WILCOMI hap been announc~ by Mr. de~~ at 67:t;;~ll0. -: January-when Seventh Avenue"· Pastay will preaent the pro- and Mrs. Maurice F, NeJ,son of ,., 1s s h ow i n g its summer gram when the South Coast Hun~ington Beach, parents of styles. We, of course;' do this Junior Womall's Club of Foun- the bride-to-be. Ve rt'ical Str'ipes because of the length of time tain Valley hcets Federation required in manU!actun1lg. Night at 7:30 p.m. today in the The couple plan to marry "However, the company civic center.· next Apfil. ~ Line Fash ions does have a tie·with the fabric Following the program there Miss 'Nelson is ··attending industry. We diScuss color will be a showing of plastic Marina High School .whqe she The David Crystal fall col· trends with designers," he ware to raise funds for district · is' active ih the school band. 1ection includes a Dacron knit pointed out. ca;1vention costs for club Her fianc,, son and step-son \vi.th a tomato, gold and navy The Geller lioe is being members. The Los Cerritos : 'Our Hom e' of Mr. and MrS: George M. stripe used vertically for ·front featured~in Rob Ins on:' s • District convention will take Herr ·of ~nta Ana, is ~ and side panels and Horizon-Fashioh lsland. place nest April.' ,, graduate of ft.farina lligh tally for the rest. This ts a!p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; l,P.tog·rammed ' Sch.ool and attends Santa Ana slimmin~ trick the firm says 1 Junior Coll~e. never £alls. · ' A Cllltufal program on Ouri-----~----------------11 Own Home will be presented M"!<•E " A HAWAIIAN CHRIST MAS by Mrs. Kenneth SQrensen during the meeting or Gamma Alpha Nu chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Mrs-. Gary Emery will open }ler home foj' the mecti'.1g and fdrs. Robert ltoss will assist wftll refteshn)en1.1. • 1-la~r TQ PS I Harper $Cb001 in Q>sta ~fesa Js the location where u:iemben of TOPS Jiarbor Ughters gather each 'Monday evening at 7:JJ. _ . UNmD MATIONI J.SSOCIATION •tPT SHO' lmpetf9' Glft.....Ufltc.1f Cer4t.' 2l 04 N. "4•111, $11tf1 "n1 .Moft..11v thru S1t1nil1v--11·4 • HAWAIIAN SHOfltS. hdllot1 htMd e N..,.11 IMdl • 644·0022 HOUllS: Olllr .. "' -Ptlll•r. M"*f ,. "t1• • HOTPOINT BUILT-IN 1970 DISH\YASHE•S ~ SPECIAL $138 ~~PURCHASE ~~~ii= EASY Tl•Mi _....:] AVAIL.AILI S11f·cl1tnl11g 1cfion Rin1e01w1y dr1l1t 111• 11ft.foe4 di1po1tr pulv1rit1 •nd' ttl'l'I0¥1 food p•rticl11 11 •very 4rtift p1rl• ••• R•ndom0!01di119 r1ck1 hol4 17 fl• bl1 11tt;n91. -1 Auto111ttic dvtl d1l1r9111I di1p11M· ... e Alt po.-c.1l1h1·fh1i1h h1t1rlor. o,.. M-..w .... ~. n• t , ... . 1177, HAllOI IOULIYAID COSTA MISA 548-7808 • IMPORTS OF IMPORT Sijverplaled jewel .box. __ comb and mirror set • J ewel box, $6. Comb & Mirror. $5. French folding scisSors. $7.50. SLA..VICK'S Jeweler5 Sinc.e 1917 NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 18 FASHION ISLAND • ,. .. • ' •• O:GI 8 .. -(CJ.(OI) lo<!y Dunphy. &'M==~~' ~I m ... °" USA·USS~ Arin' I•ll!s I~ • ,~tlslnlli,• finl•lld. a --Alln !how (C) (90) Jonlttl•n ·Winter,, lernt"' Vm Orllf, Jim Moran., ·c.C. Ru_,~11 11.113'. fJ "GYPSY" -•rt II * ROSALIND RUSSELL NATALIE WOOD-'COLOR! 0"'°""'"""'(C) ....... Conclusion (drama) '63 -N1t1lie Wood, Rosalind Ruuet~ Karl Mal· den .. A st•ae mother pushn hei .c!111cht• into burtnque. 81.r oa lilt memoir1 of Gypq Rost let. 0"'* ....... (30) tD ""°" PIWI' (JO) ID"" T"' ·(C),(60) @ CI) MIU °""" (Cl (90) ·m Whit's ...., (30) Ja(i)CIS-(C) (30) m-.......... <3-0l (!)II• (t) (60) Jack HiW,, Af'OUO XU MllSIOll .. .,... .. in, .. Mlllecf .. thnp fw Cll'flf ... ., a. ,,,.ii. Ill moon mission. ' ""•• ........ (Q1'(30! ltijo ._. Ml IDiy Dtniel& llllll 0 @ (l) f!IUK -ol "° w-. (C) ""' ..... .. .. ' er..-( .. ma) '119;-l.11 M11of1. Jo1f Heethtrton, Jimmy Dan, Bob: br Hatfield, M1rvi" Girt. A(ntl Mtorlhlld, Pat Hhtp, J111· HIWOrth. /I fUhi"( pol'trlit tf I rtlurniftl aolditr ,who flftd:s lllmulf disilhl· siOMd with dvi111a llf1. m ""II""" (C) (10> ,...,,,,. tvtits h1clude 1drm Mia Fwrow, comPos,r.coftduttor Andre Plwin, •c:tms ·Ruth Gordall, lSO aperi· f!llnlet Dr. TiMOtlry lellry llld tit• sinaint t .. 111' Btll1M · Ind Somer· vi111. ID n. IC ,..., (t) (60) &1-•-(0J)' fl!),_ (C) (30) 9:00 D ~ s <Cl <60) "'Th• flllHI)'. Wolid of .lick Clrter." Abo featultd .,, Glael1 MacKenzie, Richard O.Ci:Mt end BobbJ RusstlL II!) NIT '"'"" (C) (60) Ill ... (30) 9:30 U GOVERNOR & J. J. * HIT OF THE SEASON 11 Cit Ci)'nll ......... , .. '11 (q (30) A pl"Cliftl 10111 recorded b1 S.11't srtnddlllfl\ter, Mlrcy, prom t111barr...in1 tD tlll lfltirt Orinkwellf household. 0 ,._ (C) (30) Baxter W11(. ID Ho S.W. a. s.w (C) (30) &1--(0I) el"'-........ (C) (30) l .. DOQQ!l(i)-XII -(C) (75) Liwi cowr111 ol the IUMr 1andinl on ltte rnotlfl't Ocun oC Stonns.. Touchdowlt et 10:57, PM. ''"'D'"'"-<CJ <601 om-·(C) <Oil 0 DI lia .. Ii•• (C) (30) 0 (fl) I.I)@ .,... Ill 1ij1111Ciat m ft Tll till Trwll (C) (301 (C) (90) Lunar Lalldilll- fB Offke If tM Pnsi6tnt (30) 0 8'1 .. ! (C) (60) Rich Little, fess '@" @' H11...,...tlnklly· '(C)' '(30) · · · ·· · · · · .. hrbt;· ·Rtlt--Reed ·fUISl:· .... ·~-· fD Cti&is of Modlnl Mu (30) ID I ldC!AL l'lljl .M ... ..... ~(I) Tiii M•nstlrs (30). (C) (60) Julius Wectim" 11141 The Bljl Mfrimbl Balld flltvra select eJ Notlcin 34 (C) (60) hits and ads It the I.II Vtps In· iD Nm (C) (30) tematiollll Hotel. Doti ,Mlma end Jadl Benny cuesl. 7;00 fl CIS Evenlnl Ntn (C) (30~ O WMt's Mr Llne? (C) (30) (D I U. LllCJ (30) Qla..t"' '""!Cl !301 Q)ColllllOdity/stodl lttptrl (30 @ @ Branded (C) (30) tm M1a1111f (C) (fKI)' . m """' !f ~-<30l l .. IOD ll!11J I!,)-XII ...... (Cj (&<>> Cowrt&• of Apollc:t XII hm•r 11,lldlna. m Allon! (Jo> • QI CJ) Trutll • c.uec-(C) 11:00 D Tiit Wldlr11111 m lllandl • ·Ille ,... (C) (30) ,., CrtllN ,_ (30) Ql lllot ·~ (C) (30) 0 --(C) """' Fox, 7:30 B e ()) Lane.-. (C) ~ Mur- doch takes en unlicenllid doclof from Jall at 1unpnint , to perform SUrJefY on criticllly lnjurtd Jilly. m-"""' IDIEl-(C)' fE)ltl(ll,.._C.11fltla PtrneH Roberts cuuts. tl:lS 1J IS (f) ..... (C) 0 WOLVES! SEE WHAT * IS MYSTERY, MYTH, FACT OR FICTION ON THE WOLF MEN. ll:lOfJQICIJ-..... (C) .D@@ ID-(C) u Mowf« .......... 11 ...... (Wesftrn) '43-flod C.nllrOn. -· 0 @@ er;, I SflC!!h I liE M,11. 0 IUl CIJ Ql -(C) Q Miwil: wo.w Ind Lill" (drl· m1) 'iZ-klr ounu. Olfllll Sirin (C) (60) ''The Wolf M!r!." James Collum namtn tllis $pecia\ abovt the habits ind be· havior of wtil'les, lnmed throuati ID Mowir. ... llCi Wtlip" (drama) studies by scientists ind naturalists. '5}-ffuih Marlowe, eo.n Gf'I)'. 0 SWmp Ult Stm (C) (30) Rick Jason, Will Hutc hins and Rlltl LH. o @rn ai•" ""'<CJ <Oil 12,00".@oo m,...., ...., <Cl "WiHie Poor Boy.~ Pet• befriends Tnn1 Lopez, Dell•. Rent,-loUIS Nye, 1 youni men ·who is caught in 1 Red Buttons... Otz1e arid H1rrl1t Nel· robbf:ry atttmpl .1o1 Do• B•klf ~· ind l11C1l1t a.u '," JClledulM and Den Trrianty ruest 1uerta. • e Milliol'I $ M0¥11: ''Tiii Htllnt· fJ @ m GD ...., lllNp ( c) in(' (dr1m1) '6l -Julie H1nb, ScMdulJ' &l.llStl lnclllde flllr1i1 Claire Bloom. M1nt11. ' 1 m ,,.,.,. °' eollllfl--<t> (30) m 111n: "T1lt b.Mfl. .......,. II) Judd for 1111 Deft1111 {C) (60) (myltMY-~) '31 ·-Willia111 fE:Technlcal ~ (30f Powell, Jt1n Arttnn. !Ii) Tht ti'1 W""*' (C) (OJ) m Chmcllt al .... (30) 1:00 O Jacll hnnr (30) Mary I.Mn&· stone 1uests. fD Q ..... fer I DIJ (C) (30) EE It's 1 lrnt: Lill (JO) llD ·-" ..... (C) (60) l:Oalllatl Slllw m .......... TI .. (CI l :ISD-: .......... -· (ICl·fl) '43-Joh1 CtrrldiM. m Alt·flllflt SIMr. "Girls' TOlll'fl. • ''fhe Dir' Min," "Ritmtlllber hid H1Jbor." 1~0 D ® m lod -(C) <Oil 2.0 D lffl ill f!ll -111 . -Georp Gobel ind Lou Rawls 11H1st. ('C) '0;.11r tlreetsts until 7:00 AM. • COm11t of the flrlt EVA (moon 0 9 00 m We rid l"r•lll•r.. Wtlk) is chedutld tor 3:0Z to 6:32: Mrwlt: (C) ,._ I Cttollld MNt AM. (myste!Y) '69 -Louis Jourdan, Mary T7ler MOOR. Alex1nder Knox, Wi!flid Hyde-Wh ite, I.lure nee ~11· 2;30 8 9 ([l """9 XII lfKW {C), smith, Terenet Alrx1n_dM, Sttnler LIVI ccmr•t• of tta first 1111111' Holloway. Norrntn 81,..S. Rlchsrd lltlk fOJ th• .,bliol'I, Stuart (Jo1ndan) ~ the vk- tim of top British authorities atttr D ID 00 tm.... XII Sptdll he witntssu their M!Cfll rneetinr (C) SpeCf11 color COY1r111 of flrd to manipul1tt lhl told ltlndlrd. EVA-ti 31,l·IMM lllOOO wtlk. _ W EONESDA~ ' 10:00 O "Ult a,.w. ...,.. (dram•) '65-Chsrles Oelllllf, Miii Gl1!«. ,,..-9~"LodY ,,,. l-<,.. mince) '41 -John Wa:;nt, Ona 2:I08 .,.....,.,.. • w.tr (lfft• Mun11:1n. ntl) '45 -Frt«fe M1rch, Ski' l:JO g "f-M•" (acfimltun) '47 - Denni• O'Ketfe, June L~rt. m "$1f1Pin1 C. It TrillW' (mJ'I; ,..,,-c-·llt!!I, ..... ~ UG 8 (C) "l1o I-lt- (comtdY) '49-0anny Kart, Will« S(trl~ Dot ,u-. ~!;It.•~' PLAJN JANE . JUDGE PARKER . IS '!!IE.RE Allm<I N6 'ICll W-IE~ I llETlRE FOR TME N16HT, M\$ SfENCER? ,_ ..... .........,, . ...._._..,_ GORDO . . •\ .. .. ' -I . ·---- SALLY BANANAS • ... ... ' . ly &ank~llllll· '. iy Johii· Mites . ' . . .. . ' ,, ly Harold Le Doux NO! !•I~ ITS (ll(AY•l llWITTO PARK THE "CAT" OIOOURlOT•AHO . DAiYE MY OLD WHE'EL'S -Fal· .. UH··· -~ .A FEW PAYS./ . ;,.. ~ 1 M'~P • l'Ulll!>IT CRIMJ &II GIVI~~/ . 11 AW/W • ••• .. ... ~· .............. ·-· ......... ..,..,.--. ... - Tllf!dar, N"'mbtfo 18, 1'169 OAIL Y PllOT JZ PEANUTS . ' ly ~lllll'le• ......... T-·~-,t,4.ifijul J../: .. .J,;.t;. ~~ .. ~""""· ' ' ly Cllarlmt 'M. s=+ .. '· . ... ~ . TELEVISION VIEWS Ratings Have Some Value By CYNTHIA· LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -The Nielsen ratings, that yardstick of television popularity and, of longevity, may have shortcomings, but often reveals the pub- lic's reaction to network programming: For instance, when Bob Hope iurns up in one of his NBC sp~ials, the kind that starts with a topical monologue by the . star and slides into an assortment ol sketches, it invariably lands on top of the next ratings chart or close to it. YET THE durable Hope and company turned up Nov. 6 in an awkward hybridized version of the stage musical "Roberta•• -and its 90 minutes of song and comedy missed even the top· third of the Nielsen list. The ratings, based on an audience sample which rev~a1s only when the famlly set is turned on can call the popularity shots but It Is any- body's guess why the audience tuned in or turned off . The same Nielsens , for the week of Nov. 2--9, in- dicated that CBS's ~'Mission: Impossible" shot up suddenly in popularity. The show.Ms been worrying network ~l~!because of its lower ratings which they tended-to blame·on what is called "a weak lead-in'.'-i.e. It 'foll'ows ''The Leslie Uggams Show,'' DO}Y canceled. ' · ' . . ' IS THE. bloom· off "Laugh-In"? That senior ci~zen at. CBS, ''.Glµismoke," once again took •toil honor's for the week. It was followed by ABC's new- comer, 0 Marcus Welby, M.D." The NBC comedy romp starring Rowan and Martin was third. ·CBS bas a mystery to worry over, too. Fiank Sinatra's tuneful special was 45th on a list of 86 s~owS,,a fraction of a pOint ahead Of Leslie Uggams' show.· Another mystery: Debbie Reynolds' weekly series, not exactly a smash, did better than her hour special. CBS WON the weeklr race with an average of 20.1, followed by.NBC with 18.4 and ABC, 16.8. At this point, ABC's "Marcus Welby, M.D.'' 11Movie of the Week" and "Room 222" can be count- ed as ·freshman hits assured of a second season So can NBC's "Bill Cosby Show" and CBS' "Jim Na- bors Show'' -five out of 22 new series, about par Ior any season. . Plans for next· September's offerings indicate all three networks have concluded that there are enough variety hours around and the trend is toward Some sharp and sophi.sticated situation. comedy, doctor and lawyer senes and westerns -nonviolent of course. · ' RECOMMENCED tonight: "The Wolf Men ," -NBC, 7:3()..8:30 PST, first in a new nature-series this a defense of an animal laced with extinction bY man. .... . Dennis tlae M~ace ~-· ''"' 4 4 • llEHMIS, YtQJU>'«lll MfA9R Ml? ANMaTCN''Olt6Alll#'/r . ~· . ,. • 1 • I Jf DAA.Y l'ILOT 'l'laMter Notes Biggest Week· on ·Coast ·Stages: Si~ Shows Open STOPPING WORLO -Thor Nielsen and Jayne Hamil take the starring roles in "Stop the World - I Want U> Get Oil,". opening Friday at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse. Overture Chamber Society Starts 10th Year. A the1trlctl tidal wive· wuhel over the Orangl Cout, this week as a half doMn new producti«lt bun! onto lhe 1Ctne, jotn1ng ~ otber abowa alnoadylnpracreu. In lhll, the blJgnl -k GI the live' theater year, you can't tell the newcomers wllhoul a --.ml. Ip chronol<>elctl order, they are: -"'Pools P......ue," ID Engllsb comeily by Ille Lido Isle Players, opeoln( tonlllht lot five daya. directed by Ron ,,,,.._, Flna1 ptrfonnanctt a r e Thursday through SalW'day at the Third Step Theater, 1127 Newport Blvd., Cotta Meaa, with rt.ervaUona available at 1111-llla. -"Tbe ftfarrla1e G 1 Reud,0 •comedy from the RanCho CommmUty Playen at Mission Viejo· High School, with Ede · Sabo dlr<dlng. Performance• are scheduled Friday and Saturday with Ucbla helng reserved al 837· 1753. -•'flle Roar II IM. Gftae. -'-a.e .. , ctrtk," a farce from France at Orange Coast College, o p e n in a Wednesday for four days. features Gordon Harris 11 the -lbJl'd member GI the lri&ngle. -"Lav," Murray Schilgll's saUrical romantic triangle, opening Thurlday for three weekends at the Sin Clemente CommuD!ly Theater. Richard Andtraen d1recla the"' Sthlsgal comedy 0 f romaollc aalln ll the Cabrtllo Playmute, IOl Ave al d a Cabtillo. Reaervatlons a r e being taken at 492-0M5. * Thor Nielsen directs -•nd Stan In "Stop the World"' for Costa Mesa. Jayne Hamil has -"Slop tlie World-I Wu! to Get Oft," a BriUsh.flavored mu!lcal satire at-the Costa Mesa Civic Pl1yhou1t, opening Friday for three weekends. -'•Jnvtt.tlotl .. •Murder,. replaced Francesca L'holr as a suspense thriller at the Hun_ · the female lead In the Newley· tington B e a c h Playhouse, Bricuue musical. . opening Friday for f i v e Marlon Trainer and Rlta weekends. · 81.rnmms: pl1y the daughter1 -•AIJ· t1ie 1-iy People· and Jimmy Macy the young Tbt Prlv11e WerN of Te.: boy. The chorus is compoled nessee WUllaJm" an an-of Naocy Juler, kb on d a lhology on the n 0 t e d Chiesa, Schlrley Lou T)'ler, playwri&ht at the Open End Mary Macy,. Pat Warner, NO o:~Lu~:r~1~~1mD I Theater In Newport Beach. Vicky Mayberry, Pat r I c i ai\'~·~~~~~~~~I opening Friday for f o u r Pruitt and Dena Brown. weekend&. Anita Groamu is musical * . Peltr Church, a pro!esslooal stage and screen actor from Corona del Mar, ii staging Ph i I i p King's "Pool's Paradise" for the Lido Isle Players. The play is a rarclal comedy 1el In an En&lilh vicarage. Stanley Btll and Sheila Dunkle portr1y the vicar and his wife , with Sally Hayton cast as the Cockney maid. Peg Reday and Dennis Lambert will be seen in other major dlrector for the produellon, which will play Fridays and Saturdays through Dec. I al the Community C e n t e r aui:litorlum on the Orange County Fairground•. RUerva· lions may be called to 134· 5303. * "Invitation to a Murder" at the Huntington Be1ch Playhouse is directed by Pbll DeBarros and fe1tutts Cheri Sumrow, Annabelle Quigley and Ron Lambert In the prtn. t roles, while other wearers of the clerical cloth will he Lad· dle Reday and Jack Wilcox. clpal roles. Others In the cast are Ted Grand, Richard Wood, Bill Moreland, John Phillips, Pat McLemore, Miriam Kaiser arid Bill Dmtham. · P a u 1 Sullivan LI handling production and ael de5lp, wUb Les Hart In charge GI sound and By TOJ\I BARLEY 0t n.. oaiw l'Lllt si.n "Pooll · Paradjse" p 11 y s Thi! column 's hat came off to the Laugna Beach Cham-tonight throuah Saturday at ber Music Society at the first moment of impact some two the Udo IsJe Players Club, 701 years ago and has remained elevated through two seasons Via Udo Soud, Ne w po r t in which this struggling and dedicated group has success· Beach. Reservations may be made by calling 87U112. fully baWed to bring some o{ the world 's finest chamber * groups before Art Colony audiences. "Chemmy CJrcle," opening It launches its Ioth season Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. in Wedntlday at Orange Coast ' the Laguila Beach Higli .. School wilh the ·presentiU•n•f"'1---oiUeie;-ll'OCC'nntry1irthe ensemble that is, for many savants, the high spot of a de-American Collete Theate.r cadt'• endeavors: the Berlin Philhannooic.Octet. Fe1Uval. Jack Holland 11 You can't aim much higher and the group's appearance di=~· Christman, Gregg -Its eight members are all drawn from the celebrated Ber· Carron, Walt Douglas and lin Philharmonic Orchestra -is the opening shot Jn a 1069-Steve Scott take the major '19 campaign that h83 astonished this critc by the very role1 in the 18-member cut. stature of Its four-concert program -a roster that wouJCI Perfonnance1 will be given d than In· .. ~·-to f the liberally funded chamber through Saturday, with an us O more · J,,... .... ,c:: any 0 p.m. curWn, m the college gm.ips in any of the world's capUals. auditorium. This is no e1aggeration. We speak from long e1peri ence of the chamber music fie1d both here and in Europe and we have nothing but praise for this "reach lor the stars" policy of a group th1l richly deserves a lot more support than it gel& * AND THAT COJ\lMENT brings us to the nub of this par· licular "Overture"; the lack of response in terms of sub- scription sales alone to a season that will give chamber gourmets a groaning table of delicacies. It's a glittering sea· son that should have, long ago, practically ensured the post· ing of "standing room only" signs for at least two of lhose coocerls. * A husband and wife team, Bob and Karen Moe, play a mismatched couple in San Clemente's "Luv," which alJo lighllng. .•.. ..,.. ... CINIMA ICIUN METROCOLOR Ten perlonnancet will be given Fridays and Slturd1y1 tbronp _I>tc..._20_JL1be. playhoufe, 2110 Main SI., Hun-1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::=:::=;:~::=::;:;;,m tlnCfon. Beach. Tickets may be reaerved by dialing 536-8111, * The Jong career of Ten· nessee WIW1m1 will be ex· a.mined ln the Open End pro- duction o1 "All the Lonely!~-----'= People," conceived and directed by Warren Deacon. Mmbers of the cast are David and Belly Paul, Carole Arnone, Gennieve Murray, Robert Howslty and Walter Pbelp1.Multi·medla bacqrounds are being design. ed by Ken Shearer. "I, A Woman" PAIT I -ALSO ''Seduce A fl'loyboy" e St1rt1 Wtdnnd1y • WINNER I ar.:u-:r •.1Lonely People" run 1 Fridays and S1turday1 through Dee. 13 at the Open Eod, 2815 Villa Way, Newport Beach. Re9erv1UOm are belng taken al 175-1120. =•=-u, * P'EreR K.\THARINE While 1lx shows are opening 0100!.€ HEPBURN aJong the coatt, five others .~POU. I , are preparing their closing ~ -[ Take a look at it: the Trio di Trieste on Jan. 26; harpsi· chord.1st Ralph Kirkpatrick in his only West Coast engage- ment on Feb. 23 and what a feather this is for the Laguna group's cap; and the Amadeus Quartet, marking its 20th annlverSary with an all-Beethoven program on April 20. And the cost of this dazzling bill of fare? Just '10 for a season ticket. Critics Hit Lack of TV Creativity performances for th1s I J weekend. Theae are: I By GENE HANDSAKER -"A Funny Tilla& Hap. 1HE LION IN WINTER_ I peaed 11 tlie Way lo lhe -- Frankly, we would have given up the very unequal struggle long ago. To our mind , a public that can not sup- port an organlzation which has mounted ILs efforts on such a magnill~nt scale simply does nol deserve to have . S1'1:ch programs made available in its area. ~ Far from be.Ing inadequ ate. the Laguna Beach High School auditorium has been far from full for concerls that wwld have drawn a capacity audience at Covent Garden. * HERE WE ARE, beset on all sides with protestations that bur&eoning Orange County now is capable of supporting cul· ture -the "you line up the talent and we'll provide the pocket book" approach that so enlivens the cocktail party crowd and which has become the stock answer to the com· plaints of a music critlo. - We were discussing the issue the other day with a par· ticularly bitter Dick Lewis and the chamber society's vice prea:ident made no secret about his disappointment at Juke- wann mponse lo the pre-.eason drive. Knowing of hls long bargaining table battles with agen· cles that have finally cut their fees in return for local con- cessi<111 -.transportation provided. lunch here and dinner there for the artlllts, cheaper hotel rates and all that wt of Udng -we had nothing but sympathy. Dick Is deeply indebted to the city of Laguna Beach for Its flntnclal support but the fact rema.iqs that he's had prec- ious little balance sheet ballast from ant other sources. And l1 burtl, chamber music lovers. it hurts. * . DONORS, SPONSORS and patron,, have provided 70 per. cat ol the organiulion's floanclal support and lhert is room for a kit more. Not all the haulln& in the world Is going to enable the aoclety to adhere to-Ill present hJgh level if more tubltanUal support i$ not immediately forthcoming . "We're working on lhe polllbility ol getting grants rrom ot.bet culture-oriented orpnlr.ations but we just can't depend WI Jt," Lelrl1 said. "The fact ttmains that if we're gojng to keep up our pttStnl level ol quality we must attract more 111pport from county mu!ic lovers." HOLLYWOOD (AP) F • r • m ' , I South Coast & DIO MOITn Ttlevlsion Is desperately abort Repertory's version or the an· ''The Producers•• the we!tern program chief for I of first-rate creative people, il:,;c~le;nt~Ro~m;e~m~us;l~ca~l;co~med;;;y~, ;;~;;;;;;;;;;;:;~~ CBS te1evlsion says. -F-~ Perry Lafferty made the ~ a 90UTH COAST comme.lt at a meeun, of the PLAZA THUi H• Hollywood Radio and tlnDllll',....,ltlrflW • 546-271) Televillon ' Society Tu<sday HELD OVER IOI O"'CI omo1 '"' night, during which he and bis IHOW ITAm 1 ,, ... coontttpart at NBC and ABC I ....., -·-ud II O'I•"' were grilled by TV critics. -v __ , I eap ... c Appearing with L a f I e rt y were Herbert S. Schlouer of NBC and Steve Mills of ABC. Some of the qutsUons fi_tlded by the three TV e1ecuUves and their answers : "With the supply or old mo- tion pictures dwindllng, 11 U possible that some day movies now in theaters, with 111 and Oesh the.mes, will be an TV." Schlosser -"Meny films In theaters today wlll never play on TV. If 'the overall theme ii unacceptable, no amount of editing will save such· I )>I~ ture." "Largely on tht producers' track record. aren't we in cre1tlve trouble." Lafferty -.. We a re de!perately short of first-rate cre1Uve J)e9ple." 1·niere ire a limited number ot~ Ideas that v.111 "'ork. A .aeries bas to be 1s l~tf~· .. i: .• ~anl'!l:11l~p; ll°( ~ l!lle A Dtllli UU911Analll pablt, the lmtD of a.e -11 Macbet•,'' the Crowd," • mUllcaJ, aatlre by Shakespearean tragecty beinc ' the authors of '1Stop the ' 1..a.-World" at UC Irvine Wed· . prmoted by the GollKU Welt nMday through Solurday. Tf>e ColJOge drllllll department. allow plays at UCJ's Studto Final pertormances are Fri· Theater with ticteu avaUable day and Saturday bt the by •a!IJA& ~17. • J\ctor'a Playbos wltlt Ucllets -•ine Odd Co.pie," the available at the G WC sea&Oft ' <ipener for t h e boobtore .• Westmlniter Commun l t Y i_;~~~~=====;;:;;;;;;;;~ Theater, One final performance will be given Satw-day at Finley School at Trask and F.d"ards avenues, witll tickets being reserved at 197-11114, • "Me -' '\. ••. /' Natali~"~ t:mGll C.-llrDUll. • ·-·~ ..... " ...... 2l'MI OUl~TANDING_til.T W TOP l'IATUR! N•T•'1'<•l <·l.,tW~ ~ "~'' ~ ,,..~. ~<'~\C .. ~~. l V' 1' .. 'DP:nllY S Go1\lc P:-HUl\lii l\li; JND HOLDOYD WHI • , EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING 'Oneof tlic best pictins of 19691 '>liu 1 -1or,ct tliisoncr-::=....- medhlTI cool aie.tforSl!r/vem.s bban/pe121 IXttiZ ' rMimlhl /h.oid~®-·'"-1 ·now yH can SD uylhllll you Willi J\iicrs RESTM1RAMT" •~.,'ARID flUTHRIE COLOR by Deluxe Urt1t1d "l'fll11 . [!lll> INDS TONIAHT ''THE LION IN WINTER" AND "POPI" ZM 9t HUNTIN•TON I JM .. HAllOl ~,. Y• trtr• J.tL U.... & W"'* M..,.._ "SOME KINO OF NUT" ''THE 000 COUPLI" WEST COAST PREMIERE RUN NOW AT BOTH THEATRES It would be a tragedy If lhla ambitious. ded icated oraan- fuUoa were to be lotted to cut back Its superb programs and U the lntertst of those who provide thiJ:1 annual feast of nwtlc "9l'e to he blunted b)t a Itek or public res:ponse. ''It hM to have a basic, fn Iheme like Beethoven's FJflh Symphony that can take all kinds of v1rlaUon over 10 or lS years." Schlosser, Lafferty a" d 1 STARTS WEDNESOAY J11i111 W9JM -lMt H•dlOlt ''THE UNOIFEATEO" Do you l~e ~IUlber music? Would you like It to stay around at Its prtSent Incredibly high Jevel ? Wen. then, you know ~·hat to do, don 't you ? Or do you! I I St.tve ~fills of ABC •crted no HI Kida! ley • .,... .. -.... , ..,,_ .,_,... I lncreue Of movie pr.. "'" -..,_ .... 11-11;1t ,.., grammlng b likely. ll==;::==============-1 ---------- "I" .. ~~--•·--••••.,.••m-r,.,.~..,.--~--,,~~.~~ , .. _ .. ,, , ....... '•'"'')-'"• ...--... ... ~ ' Tut~)'. Novt.mbtr 18, 196~ __ ::_LE:::G::AL:..:N::o:.:r~1c::E'...2" __ 1, .. .,,;;c.,;;;,.;i,~ii~'i.'o.~ • .z;~ .. iiOTI'.i •• ii~~.~r.. .. ;;;,-;,.;;;;, LEGAL N\mCE LEGAL NOT1CE I ·Millions, .Mede SUPERIOR COURT 0 , THIE TRAMlAC'ftON OP eUllNJSI-...ala 1 STATE 0111 CA\.ll'ORNIA FOil \/NOi,, ,1cr111ous NAM• • # CtlTllllCAT• 01' COAfl'OaATION .... ''"' TH& COUNTY OF ORANGe-THE" UN?•RllGNEO (OJll'OltATION Tit&ttSACTIO.M Of!' IUllN•ll UfllOlll lllOT1CI OP IAl.l OI" lll.•A.L PllOP•llT'I' c Ct1e N~mlltr NIOM CIOK h•tetw' c.,tlty Intl lt II ~ne I PICTITIOUS NA""l AT PIUVATI! SAi.• urrency $UMMONS ~l!f::t:~I• ~~r'111e'~tet~fi/;.':11 C= THI" UNOERSIONEO CORPOJIAllOM Ni. A tttW of s IPftElt-ETTE IJEAUTY u""LY 00. i,.,tb)< certify ll;lfl It I• eonotudlflt. SUPllUOll COUllT o .. ,. ... £LIZA.SETH ANN (;ALA Pl1lntllf, v1, "nd I al Mid fir"' t.: of illl 111.1.itllM toaled .. nu loylfl °""'Id STATI o• CAL<•Ol•>A •OI JOSEPH JAMES CAV.. ot1eno1n1. follow 11:9 ~111 ... whole. Prkw;IHI A-. 1111!9 All•· C•lllornll IH!dfr lilt ' l'EOP_LE Of' THf &TATE OF 1).CI Q:lMln•ss 11 U lotlDwl: ! fldll~ firm llf!l'lt of DIAGNOSTIC TM& COUNTY Ofl, OllAHOli CALIFORNIA lo !!It I boy • nlm.d 0 Sk!IJl)f:E""' 'BMi;IV ,,....... Inc •• &YlllMS OIVISlON •Ml 11'111 .. Id llffft It In tM ~tt... 01' lllt £1l•loe of Offend111t: w'i\'f:~ssl)ljP~·111n11 ... , ,.. ~ "' Ille ~!lowll'lil t-llOfl, IOWARI> Y, l"OllTE•. OectttM. Yw ''' ""ttbY ctlrtcl~ 10 l!lt • w,11. Noveml)er, lt<6t. "'' ~·II dtv of W'hosf 11rll\C!D1I 1111e1 Of IM.l•I""' I• 11 Notlct b htf'tl»' tlVM !Nil lht u11> ltn io lHd!nt In r1\0omt lo tM v~rllled !COllPORATe SEAL! !9llownl: Ot ... ltl>OKI WUI 1tll tt !N'lv111 Mlt, on or (OIN't1lnt Of tM 1bpv1 Nl'\('(I Pltlnl!ll ~Skh>lll,,.effl B•llll k) 1..,. BARlllEll INDl,,ISTRlES. ttM loull! 1nlf 9"' 2tlh Olly Of NO"'T\ll•Jt', Ifft, 11 wl't h IM clffk ot !ht t bOYI t111ltltd Jol\ll~, llrGlllf y ons '"" Gr11'1d AYlnvt, S1nt1 Ana, C11lfon1l1 IM Off!«"' Gllfl ~. 01,111,, 401 N, lr•nd <O:Urt In flW • ti 0 v • l/llltltd . KllOn • ,., .. , .... ' .. -WITNIU lh htnd lh11 21" dlY ot 81\'d . ,,.,,,. ,,,, Olff!INlf, e1111on111. bl'OUtht I N I,,,. YOU In Nld ~t. within !T~itt-?F ~l.,.tf'OllNIA, , Octoblr, "'9 ' cwom-ol Lo.-AfttllK. Ste~ al TEN din 1tter tilt Mtvkl on , Pu 01 t, 1111 ont~:NG.ff '4 ,,_ '1'llll1ER INDUSTRIES " C.llf6rylle, to IN lllot.ttt '"° '*' ~r. , WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. " Racket In Vietnam Told million over the last !Ive 111~ C'Olll'ltv, or w1t11111 THI RTY 01rs w-· •1fd counlY "'-cr.lf."'I, .. ~ .. ,"'"•'"•' ,, """'1or cwtt, 111lhtr1tt11.111111111111... Abraham Rlbicott ll)'S bbick years. lh~"ll'llmoN~"MrVtd Wltllln !tlf 1boW 1fij btl~ ~ 11"$.~~fn AD. 0."111 Dt H1v1t11, Ille! •Ubltd to (IO!llltlMlllrl tl'I' Mid 11 .. ,~ 1h1w111f1. tMrti". 0111v ee;;.r.; n ,·11111 '"'"' • ... • 1'~'• • ttt.11 °' NJC. 0~1ed 11• ttw 1rm. of The hear ings are Ute second vw ,,, Mrtti'f notified "''' un~• You "notititv •-i'H .Joll~•·t:M,~ V1CI 1"m111en1 , Niii •M •H lilt rlthl, 11111 •nd 11<1ttrett marketeers have made more pha r ensJ ••· M 1111. Wtlttfn "11110mlv1 Pll•Olll'.9. Mid fO ~ lo Df lht fir~ t Of too'"· STATE OF CAl.l ll'ORN!A "'" , ....... ,, of Nld dleft-.4 1111 IC• ha I se 0 an ext ve on·u~ plelnlltt will 11~1 Judoment for tnf mOl'tfY' :?/:J,g::, ~t ..!Mt"'" 1• w n 1 ... COUNTY o,s OllANGE. ss. •~lf'td tl'I' -.r111on of llw or 11t1«Wl1e. I n $1 billiog.~, by 141egal Sctne probe by staff in-- .,, d,,,,.1... llefr\indl!CI 1~ the v.t"tlltd tl!t'li" ~amtci."i;;"d .t:; t11~11:: On thl• Jht di'( 01 O<tow. -'.O. 1Nt, olhtl' 1111<'1 or m ff4"1on lo ltllt Of ••10 an! latlo f ti S and con'\Dllll'lt 111r1s1118 u"°" con•rKI or wu1 111111 .. ~ co•.,..•111.,.. .. =.., "'' "'"" '*-m1 lll1et>otro A arow"' Jr. • dll(.laled, ,1 IN 11,,,.,.,, d..,111, 111 1nd lo m pu n o " • • ve!ltigators over the last year. •Pl'IV lo ttie cwrt tor eny ot1w.'r rilllt In Wllfllll• W!!ttW.J,..biil:tJMrlli!Mo Mt Hollf'/' ,S11aflc In '"" 11)1" uld Cou111v end 111 1111 Cfrf1l11 rNI pr:o11<1r1Y 11111.i• In the South Vi tn -·-··' ~" Jl t """ d al' in._ c1em1ndtd 111 111t verlfl..t C01T111t1!n1 ..,,,---fiiiiid •"!':•Hr.ff ...., 'lllf!~••I r.•I 111~ lltllr,_)CltM. lhtretn. dut...-commJukioiM City ot--C:.11 Miff, Coo;ntv O' Or111t1. e &me8e \o"\11 l~Elt. u1e rs p.....,e_ e ~ ma YOIJ miv ..eek 1111 •dvltt QI •n 11iorf'lv• d•r •lie! YNt 111 lloft' C1<1ff1'1, trr11 •nd •""'°'11• Mn01Mll'I' '""'''eo Din111 Dt 5111•.of c11110rr111, 11•rt1C:u1trb> ""'""° The situation in\tolves a ly with a small g roup of senlot~ (Ill llW ,,,.&lier oat1nKled with IJ\I eotn• '8o¥1 wrllloffl. · ''' H.l'l'tll ll'ld Ron•kl R. Cl•rke k-n lo mt IS fclllowl. 1-111 •.l. P1•1111 or 11111 wmmoni sut1i et1<1rnev tSEAL.l-• ·II) bl"" ,. ... 1c1en1 •nd vi« Prts1c1t111 of TM itllll11tr1r 11,5"' of 111t1 nor1111rtv criminal syndlca~, Is In· noncommissioned officers ac-- •h04lkt bl conwnec1 w11111~ 1he 11 .... 11.,.11 ""'-,..,. ~"''f ' ' 111e eorPOr111"" t1i1t exe<11teo lhl within •16' °' tt>s-ttr1v :>M. AS' of"" lot te.maUonal in ............ ,ind has c used of raking hundreds Of 1tiled 1n 11111 """'fl'IOf\I !or 1u1ne • wrlttfll ~01'•'r !"Mt -; 't'1ll!ornf1 IMll'Vf!lfnl on beflllf Df Ille corDOr1tlon nine OJ FelrvlN Fermi, r~ •ooic .... _.... 11111d;"' 10 111t eomo1t1nt, l'l~.~C..:' oi.Jntv' " 111er11n n1mecr, 1nc1 ,,11now1e.:11M to me 1, "" 11 et °''"'' COllJITY mi-. hurt seriously the.· ~lean thous ands of dollars from NCO 011tic1 Oct. i1. 1'69 Mv c-11•loioo E••lrtt 11111 such eo,_-illon •~Kul>tcl tt>e 1.1rne. l'ftortll. -1v known •• 21,. a ttem•• to ·•··e up"'· •···th clubs 1·n Germany, the Uru"ted Nt1v ,~, 1J72 In Wltnes$ W119re<lf, I hive hertvnto,NI Ht,,,.,.. Blvd., COlll Mftl, (llllOl'l'lll, I"' OJlJUI" •• u~ ,;Jl,IU w, e, ST JOHN, Pub1~i..a·o,.,,., c~11,D•ltv ,.!lot. my h•l'HS ,,,. 1Hll<ld rnv o111cr11 se11 1t1t Tem1s Of .. 1e ce1~ In 11wru1 monw of Vietnamese money, the Con· Slates and South Vietnam. Clerk f"vem r II, 25, Ind Otctmbtr '· t, 0.Y Ind Y••r In 11\ls certlllc;.&11 !lrlil 1bovl lt\1 Unll.O $111" on coritlrm1tlon ot ulfl, I I By fh•th Hothelns 1 /19 -112'.ff wrnt..,, 'or D1r1 (•Ill .1r111 twot111« wld1t11Ced tl'I' necticut Democrat said prior Large profits are possib e n DePuty Cltrk KeNHETH S. LAWSON 11612 lt<Kh IUvd., Suite U Hijftll11tlon Btuh, CIMI, t'UU T1I: (114) &47·H21 AltorlltV 191' Pllln!!ll LEGAL NOTICE ISeiu "°1' •iKvl'H .,., Mort9-or 1""1 DleO to his m· vestigations su< 1'llegal money operat1'ons m· • RIC1i1,d "· Brown Jr, Ol'I tile pr-rtY w M>ld! Ttn Hr¢1nt of u- Not1N Pu1111c • camorn11 amount tild 1e ii. llKPollMd "Ith bid. committee opening pub l·i c Viet nam, s ubcommittee aides Prlnclpal Ollk1 In Skis or off•• te ii. hi writing end wtll o r-e Collfttv tie rectlvtd ,, 1t11 •foo'tukl 0111c1 11 l<flY hear:;1gs Into· the i 11 e g,a I said . because of the substllll- 111c11r1ou1 NAME ,. Mv Commbstf)ll E~Plr~ urni 1fl1r JM ttrst Pub11c111ot1 ._ ... 1ild racket tia l difference in legal and il• The u!lffrslerted Clo c.,tlly they ire , JulY 7', nri b9fort Olfe Oii 1111. tomtuc1i111 • bu1lne" ,, 16U s ... ,, 1toe .. f10H, HOwsEll • GAtt~-'ND D•fld October :io. ,,., Ribieoff sa\d the illegal legal exchange rates. ... UH! CEllTll"ICJTI" OF lUS\HESS, Avtnue. H1111ll111t•on 8••ch. c11uorn11,. CMt c-11111 Drlw svtvli c. Porltr ~ money market I n v o I v e s The orr1·c1'a l exchange rate '" •·-r ~ llcTlflou1 llrm n•"'~ of SMITH Htw-9 .. Kit, C1IH11tnll Ex9CUtrbl "" LEGAL NOTICE FIBERGLASS •nd th•• ,.rd u,m 11 Cl)rrl. A"'"""' of t11e wm federal employes, members of 118 South Vielnamese piaSters • __ _::=;;;=:,.:.;.;::::_::= ____ 1DOll!<I of 1111 k!Uowlno ..erS<>.._, Wl'IO$t Pttbllsfled Ott nt' C~•I D1llv l"Uot, Of Mid CllC..:lflll t11m11 111 1u11 1r1t1 Pltce. o1 ,ealde"""e •r• oetober 21 1rid N11Yemt1or "-11, 11. tu .. •N "·DUK• the U.S. armed force s to the dollar • Pul1t!1ht<I Ora1111e Cots! D1ilr Pllor, 0<:1otier :it and · Navemoer '· 11. 11, 196' 1014·69 ... JJJ1! 1$ {Oll<IWS: . Ifft '°°"" 4'1 N •• ,... ll'Y.. t aff'll ted Th bl k k t t I Cl!RTIFICATE OF 8U~l NESS, Don LN H1r1,,,.n, lilt W, ,.~. hi .. tll g 0 v e rnmen . I a con· e ac m ar e ra e s N-1 ee1ch, c1111orn11 LEGAL NOTICE G11nH11, c11111rn11 tractors , Amer I c an usually 170 piasters to the Pet Has Bi•rt hday G•rv 1.ee smnh •• , F111mo,,, A•t. "'""'"v ter •ncvtrl• bu · South Viet dollar and has reached 200, 1·n-• Tiii ul'lde•,!Ol!ecl <loell ce,urv he Is con· ff, Co,11 Me••· C1llfGrnl1 NCITIC•'op: THE '\'IME ANO l"LACI OP: Putllllllld Or11191 CO.II D1HY Piiot, StneSsmen. • FICTITIOUS NAME duc:t1no ' bu1IMs1 11 1240.0 LD{IOn Ave-oa""' October 2J. 1m 0 ,,0 oF '"' LOC-'L AGENCY NOWl'llbltl' 11, it,"· Ifft nit.At namese citiz-0 and nationals vestigators reported. ,,ue. CO•'• Me11 <92626) c1tiforn11, unc1e• D<m Lee H1rt,,,.an :::MATION c 0 MM 1 ss 1 0 N o.. LEGAL NOTICE 1 th ·tr·-. Ribl~r 'd th Pert s ing er Petula Clark cuts a hug e , elaborately ·~ flctit'°'-'• firm n1me o! AL TEN BERG GIN Lee 5rnllh Oll4 NO• COUNTY, c .. LI "Cl." I"'"·---=::::::~,,;;;::.::::...--! 0 0 er coun le&. I.VI Sa l e currency f ENTERPRISES Ind l~•I 51id tlr"' Is STATE OF CALIFORNIA, wH•N ·p:10P05EO ORANGE COU NTY I "41lM He said witnesses will give m a nipulation racket bas done decorated birthday cake at ,the Waldor A storia C<lll!DOMd GI the follOwln~ ""'"on Whol~ ORANGE COUNTY; R•OIGANllATION NO. 11. INCi O•· Hot I h M da f II . h o pen'nt n ight a , .. me 111 full •nd Pl~ta 111 r111aenu is 1s On o~totMor 23, n6t. bt~r• me, • JICTIONI 01 PllOTESTS THl!lllTO, c11tT1,s1CATE oP: •us1HESS evidence on specific illegal serious d am age to the South e ere on Y O owing er I P- tollow•' Nora,.,. P11D11c in ind tor 111d jlfle. wiLL •• l"RESENTEo Folll "'-'•· .. 1cT1T1ovs NAAW money dealings th r 0 ugh Vietnamese econom y, has pea.ranee at the E mpire Room of the w·a dorf. Mi ss LH; Paul Allenbl!rg, lW~' Cnel-l!peake Per.ontlly •ootari!'d Oon Le~ ~IJrlm•n INO. The 11f\denl1nl!CI certlf11S lie 11 con-C l k h h Id d th th Lane, HYn11ng1on B~•ct>, ca111orn11 •nd G••1 Lee 5"'1111 kll<IWn 1o mt 10 be NOTICE ts HERESY G•VEN 11111 • dllllnv , buslne!S 11 10ll Mir!.,. Ave., American and Hong; Kong m ade m ore difficult the fight ar • W O as s o more r e<:or s a n a ny O ·er Oaled O<tober 71, 1969 tne ""''nnJ wllose neme• ''' •ubscrlbed P!'ll11on nas bffn Hied "ltll the Loc:ml Btlboil hltnd, !Newport) C1tltornl1, b k I bo t "" · t · fl t ' d h femaJe Sin ger in h istory, is making he!' first appear· Li!O p Allenberg to ll>t> within lnstrvment •!'>d •cknowlf<io· AglncV Fcm'lllion co,,,.ml$Slon of !he under 1111! tlcllllous firm n&"'I OI T:-!E an S tola ing a U """" agaJnS In a IOn an aS ' .,,, oi: CALtFORNIA e<I !l>ev ••ecutecl !he sa,,,.e. CounlY QI Or1noe, Stele of CallfOl'nll , •e-FOXY LADY Ind 11111 .. kl llrrn Is com----"uced the effect o f the ance at the E1npire Room. . ' ' (Dtiic1•1 Sein '·-LEGAL NOTICE ·~ ·--------.:..------------------Los ANGELES COVNT'I : Allen l<ll110ensmlth 1~11"" th1t w10 Comm<1l ... • -r<IVt PIHed "'~ 1119 101iow1n1 oerllll'I, whole · · American AlD program. on Oc1ober 21 , 1969, Deto,t mt, 1 NO!&N Public Callfornli !ht Pl'CIPOSecl deUchment of cer1•ln lff'· n•rnt In fl;ll Ind Pllce ot l'tll0111Ce Is tl•l--------------1 Ncllrv Public In 11'111 1or said State. Prlnc!i:t<tl Olf!c~ in r1too ""'" MoullC11·Nl11~t1 W1t.=r Dlttrlct lol~i •A• nu In earlier hearln~s, wit· persof\lllY &Pi>e•'e<I Lf'O Paul A!!e-nbero Ortll!le Co~n!V l.iM 1nnex1t10fl QI lhe same lenltorv to 01vld Mldlltl T1!11, 102• lltll:IOa, NOTtCI TO CRIOITOlll known lo me Tu be lllt otrson _wt>o_u My Commhilon ExPlieJ Iii. L11un1 llffdt COUlltv W11tr Olstrkl Blvd, NO. A, NtwPOl'"I Be1Cli, C1llt. s u,.l•tO• COUllT OF THI nesses pointed to W' liam 0, 11ame ls suDl<:rlbed to 1~, wllh•n ,,.. F"'ru•rv 1,, itn dff.li;mtted "'-Oringe c 0 ., 11 1., D1ttd Nov. 10, "'' STATI o,s C-'Lll'O.NIA ,.01 Wooldridge, former sergeant t l'U"'l:l'I' Ind ackno~lfldlted lhll llG U• WILLIAM w. WATSON. R-••nlllllon No. ll (If or ... 11e County, DtvlO Mld'ieel T1IUI THI CO\IMTY o .. O•ANOI e<:uleG Ille"''"'· 1m1 •••ch •1v•.. C1llfornl1, ™ prOP<15al encomNUll the STATE OF CALIFORNIA, NI . ....-11 major of the Army, as 11 (Offltlll Se•I) Hun1111111n lMt~. Cllif followll\t 11tnerally d&K,lbed ''" wtllcll ORANGE COUNTY : E1!1!1 ol' SYLVIA LUTHElll, Oece1111d. }eadf-r 0£ 3 small band of Rol>erl s. Blaclt Attll"lllV • I• ,.,... ... rt1c~l1rtv dtSCrlbed bv • lfMI On Nov, ID, ,...,, bfiorr me. I Not1rv NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo '"' Holarv Publle Publlslll!d oran11e c...,51 o any P!lct, deac:riotron on Ille wllll the Commluler: l"ullHc In •nd tor "kl Stet.=, ...,tontllv u.ittori or tM 1Dove """*' dectdfnl Sfrgeanls that profited from a MY c.,.,.,rnJ11l11n Jan~•rv 28. 1971 AUSTIN H. ELLIS, Octol>er 21 i nd· Noveml>e' •• 11 11 S1ld ,eorvanlutlan COl\1&111$ • IP' ....-re11 Otvld Michael Tiii.ii, known lo lh•I 111 HOOl\l 11ivl11t1 clelm1 111lnsl !be Id ( 'II I ct' .. EJplres 1969 • , .. rw:1,,,.11e1~ 519 1cres 1M ls lotlhd on me 10 bl 1111 1>er111n wtio" 111"'' 11 uld OKed.,,, ire r..wlrl!d 1o lll•' ~. W e r ange 0 I ega a 1v1ttes I·------------=_•..,_., • 1111 11stt•lr slOe of l•1111n1 C111Y011 sulltc.rlbed to 1111 wlll!ln ll\ltrumen1 •!'>II wllll Ille nKfU.lrv vouchtra. In lhtt otfltt at the clubs they ran. Little Clani Fou ling State W ater P roject LEG AL OT! R~d 1nd on Ille n<>l'ltlweslfr\v side of 1ct.110Wltdoecl llt fl!1<ul9d 11141 Mtnfl. of ll'lt cterk of tt>e lbllve i ntllled court, or N CE El Toro Iii.Old. north QI th e lundton af COP:FICIAI. SEl.LI ,.. Pl"fttnt lhil'lt, with 111e necffllrv Among other allegations was El Toro llotcl ln<I Laouna Canyon ROiif, MIN 8111! Morton vouchers lo 1111 u-.!lll!IO 11 lhl Giiiet t . th t w Id 'd SACRAMENTO (AP) H' ed b . b r· h HOTtCE TO C1t•OITOlllS I~ Ille no•lh L1t11un1 Beach.,~,. HO!•rv f'utlltc. CtMfOf'nl• ,,, ROLAND s •-'RCUME Ahornw ,, est1mony a 00 Tl ge, -IS as !lit y IS ennen. 52J Wiii .ih Slretl LOS Atlfflel, Cl lF1or11J• """ 4f!Orl"llY Publlditcl Octobel' u 1969 SUPERIOR cou•T OF TME "' 111e 11me ot the ~e••l1111 no11ctc1 rierel~ Pr1ncroe1 Of!ICI tn Le "° ,.~ c ... m-· Orlv• E111 other sergants and a retired na m e is Corbicula. He's a Within four years, say s ta te STATll OP: C-'LIFClllNIA FOil. 1tld 110und11l1s rn11 l>e modi!!«! br 1111 Or1rt1e County · w, Pil rt • di C.lllorfll ' I THE couNTY OF OlllANGI tctdltlon o1 oilier 1err1to,1 111 111e vlclnlfY Mv c-1111on Expires au11• 302. -" • 1 major gener a l met secretly at clam about a half inch in size. engineers. the clams wil . Esti ie c• cN~AR"L1:4:51 J, HARl<•HS. °' ~~.Crn'1FvR'l'HElt GIVEN, 11161 Publlslll!d All0~~!p1meo.,1 D•ltv .. ~. ::6°.;,,,:".!.~:..!d ~ .r.1'.:~ .. w.!~':~1,:: Ft. Benning, Ga., to invest the And he's got the potential of make their v:ay from the two LEGAL NOTICE oec:ee.ed. 1110 commlukln h•$ t1KKI w..:ine•d•Y Ille November 11, 11, 2s 1nd oec.emblf 2, to lhl "'111 ot ulcl OKtdlfll, wlmln tour tUegal proceeds. Army tn· stopping up the biggest stale w ater storage areas into th~ • __ _:=_:...,.,:C"c:''CCc:':C':::'.'::I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IO 11\l! ~6111 div al Nov'"'~'' 1969. •I Ille hot.or of \tot ~9 monllle lfftr' lhl l!rsl JUbllulltn of 1111, Id . creditor• ot 1ru, all<lve "'""" deceOtM 1:oo o'clodl; P.M .. of seld daY or 11 won no11ee, v estigators said these plans wa te r project in history. aqueduct and this cou 10, NOTICE OF THE TtME ANO PL-'CE OF 11111111 Peri.ons 111v1ng c111m! 11111n1t ttie 11 ukl miner con be t>e•'d In Room .503 LEGAL NOTICE Olltcl Noytmb91' s. 1"'· 1'ncluded partic1·pat1'00 In the "We've had some facetious te rfere with the southwar"' •''°' 0 d In lhe Oran11e Counlv Aomlnl1trlllon 1 Wtt.oll Euvene L11•her ~ Hl!-'lllNG OF THE LOC AL-A ia d «tc1ent ere •e<1u!red to file Ille...,, Bu!ldlng. su North sve1mcro s1rH1, S.11-ExKU!or of ttte Wiii black-money r acket. remarks about clam chowder flow of water. fOllMATION c 0 MM I s s' 0 N OF :t~"i1e":.:c::·,~~y ,b:.;":~~,::., ~~~I~~ II Ant. C1!1fo,nl1, IS !he time •rid 011Cf ... HJM of Ille ltlovl nemed decectenl ORANGE c 0 u NT v, c1.L1Fo1tN1A, 10 P•fffllt them, wJlll the nee~,.,. for '"' heer1.,. ot SfllO P•OPGWI 1001111er Cl!1tT1111CATI! OP: •us11i1Ess. llOL&ND s. •A•cuMr Other witnesses alleged that being a s ide p roduct of the "They cause a friction fao- ,0 "' "ATIOM -~ ·-,~ -~·-• _ .... , , •• "' with 111 Pt111es11 1nd a111ec11oM 111ere1o 11 •cT1TtOVS NAMl AttorMY " lew M · r. Carl c Turner water pro1'ect, but we're not to· r. the w ate r can't slide b·1 WHEN A PIOPCIS AN " YO\l..,,el'f., •u "e II'"""'"'".., I ,,. a Ce which mlY be filed and 11 Wille~ time Incl TM ul!dersl11ned Clo «flltv lhlv l 'I ut f1119-ft C1111W Drlvt lnl, a). V";:0. · • li ,0 THE cosTA MESA couHTY ot 1111 A11orM'Vs. Fr•nklln end Fr1nkt1n, the 1 CON1uct1111 • bu•I""' 11 31e Mein l"' 111111 1lt while provost marshal general planning to go into that them," said Ronald Bachman! 101 E. lllh St,, cc.11 Mni, Callfomle ol1ce 111 Ptl'M>n' !nteresled re n llllV Se•I Be1ch .Of.IQ. CllJHornl1. uFlder h1 11111111 ,,... wAtE• DISTRICT oF ORANGE '1627, whlcll 11 ""pl1c1 o1 11v11nn1 o1 1-•r ind bf: 11ear<1, f1ct1t1ou1 "'"' 111/fll 111 THE P£T ....,.... •ffffl, ci ' of the Army, s h i et de d business yet," commented an associate waler qualill( COUNTY, AND OlJECTIDNS OR ,.RO· tht undtrsl111'1td In 111 l!\ltttrt '"rtlllllftll Dated: Novtmber 6, 196'. SHOPPE 11'1111 !ht! .. to """' II cam-Tlh 17l41 M..-U ,.f I Ille I I ot JO dectd I WJllll tou BY ORDER Of' THE LOCAL AGE NCY --or "" followlllll llltl'..on. WhoM Attlr'lllt'f .... ••tcutor Wooldridge from bis own in· Alfred Golze, deputy director biologist in lhe D epartm ent "'\ '\'EST$1'HE•e:TO,WILLlEPRESEN· o tsae II . in , n r , ..... TIONCOMMISStONOFOl.-'NGE ··-· '" •oo , •• ''''''of,,·,, .... , Published Or1"11e Co11t DlllV Piiot, ( "' ••• 'G ""'""'• el!er !he llrJI PllDllcttlal'I of tttls ..... _,,. ·~ nv ....... 1 • t" tor of water r esources 0 r Water Resources. TEO FOR notlc1. • COUNTY. CALIFORNIA ....... fOllOWI' ~ Nllvtmtllr 11, ZS Ind 0.C•mbtr • ' ves 1ga s. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lh•T I Oaled OC-l~r 1~. '"' RICH-'RD T. TURNER Slllrlw Loll· .... l17 H•rv••O Ln .. Siii ltff 11u..9 The Army has stripped California. Bachman said lhe clams Re!<llU!lan ot ApPll(1tlon ha5 been flli!'d Homtr H•r~!~s. E•KVl!ve Offlc~ · tletch. Gorlkln R, L<1111~. 3U HINlrO d f th M1'll1'ons Of the t I " y alS-O secrete a ffiUCUS. "This ""1111 ·~~ Local Agfncy Fo•metia~ Com· E~Kuto• °' th• w in (l'f Loc11 -'11encv F<1•m•ha1> Ln., s,1t Bea,h, LEGAL NOTICE Wooldridge an Turner O e ml•tlan ot lh• counrv .,, Ora"ge,1ds1a~e o1 ~ Ll r11: ;:f.,"~~named clecec!~nt ~!m::'~lf.1on Dt Dranoe Cwntv, Ottedb~];.l;t.' L<111in Dis tinguished Service Medals Corbicula, Or Asiatic, clams collect slit and forms a silt ~~~~.;.,"1~·0P:;:;e:~~nuP,.,:!'0".'eot •:""exa:fo'~ .~!':vs ~. Liw LIH N:.,~~~11 o~:,.,;.9 coast on11r ,:,~ Sli !e ot r.Hfo'r~ii.Lcrr:::.ie CG\l"h : ci•r,.trc'~i\~:u~F "'~U,:~H&ss previously awarded them. And have moved into two storage bed on the botlonl. Over the <IC$luni11!d as "'"""xation No. '2! •o tlle Atl9t111Y• tor EJ<IQ!Jor • • o.. Nove,,,.ber 13, '"'' belo•e me', • Tri• underslgl'ltd uo certllv thtv ire Wooldridge. s Ull on active du· areas of the California Wa ter years. this would have lo be Cost• Me$1 County w1ter OistrlCI al 107 E. 111~ SI. LEGAL NOTICE ~·-"J.,,',"','!i...,!~ .. •l!d5.,,'," •,11;!,,'",te~ tonducll~ 1 bu1lneu ti 21 " F1!rvlew p · 13 bill' I d •• I j C ' ., ' , •• •·-" <•• ..,. ,,,,,,_, "''' ......... ,... --'"" " ~· ""' "" ,.. t · N M · o was slr•·cken roiect. a • ion un-c e•ne out. uccausc 1 r Or•not COllnlv. o 1 orn •· "" • • "' • Gordon R. Ll>911!1 known 10 me kl iw Ille Rd .• Co.II Mtt•, C1lllON1!1, und!r Ille Y In ew eXJC °"ncomPll"e' Ille 1<111""'1~9 gf!lerallV T•I: (71 C) 5¥'!Ul l>ef"SCl"S wt>o!;t lllfl'ff 1re 1ubsc:rlbect lo tldl!I0411 firm n1mt Of SEW·ICNITS ln<I ( th ]' t ( d dertak.ing designed {O move aqueduct WOU!d beCOO\e m(lre ~rl.becl are1 wti!Cli b.rnor~ p11rt.i,c~.l1rlv_ . P.\IDll•he<I Or11.,ge Coll! 01i!v Plllll, SUll'ilRIOlt COUil OF THE t~e within lnJlrllmtnl 111\c! 1cknowltdlltd "''' •lld fir"' Is COITUIOSed Df Ille lolkrw· rom (' LS 0 comman de•C1ibed bv • 1e11a1 de~rl11tio11 an fll' Ocliibtr n •rid No~ember •, 11. 11, STA.Te OP: C-'LIP:OllNIA FOil ll>tY e~ecu1td 1he sam•. l"ll orr-110nt, w11o1e n1mtt In lull 1nd sergeant majors. water from the rivers of and more shallow .'' """11~ the comm>s1lon: 19'9 ?Ol!Mt THE ·couNTY OF Olll-'HOll isEALl MARILYN ~AllTY 011,e o1 rttidtnee •rt-• 1o11ow1: Northern California 10 dry Bachman said he is s ure Slid •nM•a!IOM ca1>U1"f ePo•o•lma,lf· Ne, A-621441 ' HolltY PuDll a11fGl'nlt ~ Wiiiia"' W!nn Miiiar. J,, Ind Btllv l'f bod ·11 'th 1y 211 acres and co11s1111 a1 P•""l!"f'" ~~-.'if.'. .• NOTICE •OTICIE" OP: HIAIUHG OF f":f.111101i1 Prlnc:lNt 01 c. In P•et> Mllltr, 1n1 sw111 o r .. C0t11 Me11, Southern Ca ornia. some Y WJ come up WI a IOC:l !tO oe1ween Rod Hill .a.venue and 1 J..£.IU'llla..-P:OR "1110.ATE OF A0Dn"ION4\. Orllln!!lt Cou CtlllG!'nla, "Rhed led "· I \ed lo th I I • I I J '"' Ort~ countv A!rDOrt GUthf'rlv HOlOORA,.K1C WILL MY comm!Hlal'I eulrn. Cl•ttd Movtmbtr 17, lf6t. s d E .;io.; U t o uc comp e way remove C <: ams _ ----oL.lht-.5.11n_,QlC5'.9 .• freewav, 1n the _·__ nJPY1 .-~."' ooRCAS o•v1s oe JONG, e.1i~n~i1 ~r.~~"11 oiuv Plktl. w11111"' w1nn Mm1r, Jr, lUQY yes b y 1972, the project w ill carry before they stop up the ~~:1'm~:'~h::!!r1~;e~011ce herein , c~mt:uf ,.1::r:1~~ss HOT ICE 1s HERE8V GIVEN T~•t f,;em te:--n-1 ···Otcl!rnt1e1 21t;ZJ St••• ot.Jl~~'(-,,f,::~~·coU"....,-"=, --1-..co:.c:c::: -----~water---south-.in..-t.he_aciueduct.____ . ~--"-~ ••Id boun<lar lti '""~_be moc1111ed llY. 1111 Tiit' uncllr'sLl~ed dOli Mr"'>Y ctrtl!Y Secvrlf\' fl:Klfte N1llon11 Bank "'' flied o" Novamtier 17, Ifft. 11t1ore me. 1 £ £ California AquedOct, which B ul so far, he sarcr.tiOOOJy :iddi::!'";.~~~tr lerrttorv In l~e vlcinltv ~rl~I~ ':.~,::· •• ~ "1U:~~hi~el'I~ :::.n,.•p:i1~~1.10~;;~: ~o "'::~! LEGAL NOTICE ' :!!~1ll~u::..~~ ~ .. :: w'i'~= J,',~!~: Ef ects 0 stretches 44:4 miles, almost h as thought of an idea. NOTICE is FUP:THER GIVEN, 11>11 "'""-· Montc111r, County of un "''°' IG!' fUrthtr P•rlll;ultr!. and thet lllt Jr .• •"" lll!!IY P1c1 M11t1r kncrwn to me .half the length of the state. A scientist a t the University sal<l Commh>l<1n htl filed Wl!'dnff<llY Ille Bemardfno, Sllll of Clllfor"I•, lllCI '' llme ind Pl1ee GI !>earlno Ille same his ..uur let be the penoni whoH n1,,,.,1 1r~ ,6111 d•v cl No~...,ber. ~WI"'"" hour of ??09 L•"~ llolllev1r<1. CllV of L-bllll -~ tor Novemblr ,., 1t6t, ,, ·~)O • •A• ,,.. 1ubo~rlbect ,., the wllhln lntlrlJ!N!nl Ind The clams have been found of California at Davis, he said. 1:00 o'clock P.M. al ~a•d uav "' 11 socn Be1cto. C011nlY ot 1..m Anot les. '""' ot '·'"·•hi lhe courtroom of Owartm•"' No. ClRTtll'ICAt ioK Of c o1tl"Oll.ATtON •ckMWle<lll!d thn t11KUttd 111' same. J et T1•3ye} In two storage areas, O'Ne1·1 1·s worKing on pesticides, b ut &f )tkl mill" can tie heilrd !n ROM'I S03 Celtlorn!e. and et 7957 l!l'IPt:rlll Hftllway, 3 of llfd cour1, ti 7(11) Civic Ctnle.-Drive (OFFICIAL SEALl In ll'le Oren9e County Ad"'lnl5traHon (llV of Downer, County Of Lot Aflltles, Wftl, In Ille C!IY ot Stnt• -'nt. Cllllornl•. l)OIHO IUSIN•SS UNOlll J<118Ph E. 01vh forebay in the Central Valley With t ighte!led federal a nd Bwlldlng, SlS Ncrth Svcamore Street, Sin-$!Ill of Ctlllomle •nd al lJl.tl Mlrllll D1ltc1 November •, lt6t ,SICTITIOUS HAMii Hol1rv Pullllc-C1llfornl1 I 'd I · I It Ant, C1lllornla, &•the time 1nd Dl•ce Vt•i• Orlve, CllY ()! D1n1 Point, Counf\' ot w. E. ST JOHN. THE UNDEllSIGH,0 CORPORATION Prll\ChJll Offi(t In PALO ALTO (UPI) -A and Bethany Forebay east of s tate pest Cl e regu allon II '"' the ~ .. r11111 ot s•lO prQ9<1HI ~1iw °"1nee, s111e 01 c.i110rn11, u..01r 11'11 tic-county cierk. 0 doe• h•rebv «rtll~ ""''" 11 con11uc11119 , or1,,..e C011ntv San Francisco B ay. the offing, Bachman doubl~ ;,r: ·~:~E1~~ ~~~~i!~i~r.~~e'~~ '1'~;~::~~~~comoinY ~.,_:;Ef iL~~:~::•E~ GAILAH ' ~:::nes~1~\:~~!1~~1r: ! ~~~~ Publlar~ c~1~1:o::P1::uv Pl~. ra::::glo~:gu~:::=i~O:S:! g:~~:~s~:~ds!'1:leypr:~a~~ :!~~her the chemicals ~an be ll>Pff• and be heard. ~achcomber .. , • 1 rn 1 llltl!MH II 1•tfl Gcttfltrd, Sulll E, P, O. November 11, 75 ll'ld December '· '· 1--"---------.'...----------------- 0•ted• Novemtler,<.,19690.0AL AOENOY al "'' addre1sea 1bove l!'>dlc11td, 1!\d lhal Teti (11tl •MOO o-w 1~n. "•oll-""' 8Mch, Ctllklrnll, lf6f ?ISWt medical tests to find OUt Why BY OROER OF H L s•id firm' 1,1 COlllPQMd al tlle to!lcwllll A"°""'1: IW l"tllll-r -" ,,..,,..., FORMATION COMMISSION OF OR-'NGE i>ersOfl, Wh<lse nerne •nd edll,.., " •1 Putilllhed Ora111t1 Coe•t oar1., Piiot, undtt' Ille trc111tou1 firm n11T1e ot G " G LEGAL NOTICE the human bioJNrical clocks 'Ou"-, CALIFORNIA. ''''•u-· HllVember n. 12. 1e, 1969 10""' COMPANY •nd lhll the neme or llld ve• '' T ER ... corllOl'-11on Ind llf p,lnclpal pltte or't--~--------~--1 h . RICHARD T. ~RN Huii h R. G••~· 32U7 M1rt111 v1a11 LEGAL NOTICE buslneH IJ as ro11owt: .!'lll'l'll'ICAT• 0 11 •ustN•ss. goes awry w en me.n JUffip Euu1llV"-Office Drive. Oana Point, (1lllornll. Toohlll Cornotnv, Int., 1111'1 Gothard. ,SICTITIOUS MAMI Lotti Agel!<;Y Form.Ilion f\' WITNESS m~ hlfllf 11'111 21rd clQI' of P·lllfl Suite E, tt.O, 90• 101, Hunlll'l91M T~e unoe.-.t1~ed dolf ctrllfr lie Ft tOf'lo time zones . Commission ot 0••f>ll• coun • October, 191!19. • c •ITIFICATE OF aus•HlliSS ee1cll. Cou~IV Ill Or1nte, s1111 Cl! ducUnt , but1nes1 11 307 MtrFne Avt., They are volunteers for Pro-cemornla c I 0 ll Piiot H1111h R. Gt11r F\CTITtOUS HU.IE C1llfoml•. ll•lbol 1l1nd, C111torn1t. under Ille fie· Pubtlsh Oranoe 0~s ~ ., 2on"'9 STATE OF CALIFORNIA The llftdtr1ltned do certltv tlleY lfl! l>ated: NOvtmbtr" lfft. llllOU'l l!•m ,,. ... , Of VIVE LA HAI• WIG ject Pegasus -named after November l1. 18• 1969 COU NTY OF ORANGE. SS. conoui:tlnv 1 bus!M•f at 11100 M1ln St,, (COR,., SEAL) . STUDIO ind 11111 tlld llrm k COl'TlltOllMI On Oclabtr 13. !Ht, Dtto,t me. 1111 Hunnnoton lletch, Californl1, under 'he TOOHILL COMPANY, tnc:. o1 1111 >Gl!owll!ll Pe...on. wh<m nll.ITll In the w inged horse o{ Greek unde,.lgMd, a ~o!a•1< P\ltlllc Jn 1nd tor flctl!IC1111 flrtn n1me o I CAll:STAN Georvt G. T(IOl\111, l"ra lclenl fl;U •nd piece of rt11d911Clt ll a1 lollowft --------------I ••Id (au11ty '"d 1t1te, .,,,,..,.,,uy •Pllfl~ LAtoRATORY anc1 that ~aid firm 11 com-COroltlv e. Toohlll, ' Kf!'IM"lh Hlr11, Jilt Pruitt Or~ Rtd. mythology -which hopes to P·UISI Hu11fl R. G•ay. known to me to be the llOH<I of !fie fo!!awlno perrons, whotl Vlee Prnldenl ee•ch d h i I Pt!'l"IOI! whose nemt 11 11/b$Crlbttl kt lllt n1mt1 In full 1nd Pllcn 111 reildeflte •r• STATE OF CALIFORNIA l Ditecr Novi,,,.ber 11, 1ftf. iscover what P Y S Ca LEGAL NOTICE Bl.R·?1't Wllh!n ln1l1'\/rntl!t al!CI ttknowledge(I !hit II follow': COVNTY OF OR-'NGE ) II Kennelll Hl,11 cha.iges occur w h e n in· CERTIF ICATE OF DUCONTINUANCE he exec11llMI the Sfl"'•· c. G. YuoDt, 1998] Weyrn<>Ulh. N-· On 11111 lrd day ot November, lff•, St•te ol C.IUorl'lfl, Or1nge Counfv1 OP: USE AND/OR t.BANDOHMEHT OF Htrokl E, ttelnlY 11ct1I &e1ch. C•Ht, tietore m1, • Not1rv Pvbllc rn •nd '°' o n Nov. 11, 1fft, before m1, 1 t.iot1rv ternational travelers Jet FICTIT IOUS HI.M E NoleN Publ_I, f~ Ike Sien E, Siiverman, Mt2 VII Arlellnl, 111d Cov"IV end Stile. pel'\OrutllY I~ Public !n 1nd for-l'lld $!tit, Jllf'\ON!IV aCrOSS the ocean. Slete ol C1!olorn11 HuMlntlDn Be1tl\, C!'l!I. oe1red Gf'OrDe G, T<11thlll, Prttldent 11111 IPOe!1'1!11 K ... "9!h Hirai known kl -~ "Qur i'nlent I'S tO see how a TAE UNOERS!GNED do h~rebv cettlly lliY Commlnion Eu!re• 01led November 10, 1969 Dorothy E, Tooll!!t, Vice Prttldt<JI known 119 The ,......., wtlOle "•"" 11 1VblCl'lbed ft,a!, erf~ctive NllY~"'ber S. 1969 _ t~ey Augu1! 10, 1971 C. G. YuPOt to mt IO be "'e Pretldent Ind Vice Prnl· to !!'f wll!l ln l .. 11'11"'11111 end ICknowlt* man's ability tO m 3 k e ceased 1c do bu,lneu under the llct•llaus lfEINLY a EDDENS s1111 E. snve,ma~ d.ni of Tooll1U comoany, Inc, QI the co,. i!'d he •~tcutecl !ht 11rne. llfm name o! G & G COMP.&.NV at 16111 A!hrnevs II LIW STATE OF CALIFORNI.&., DO ... llon thll l~ttull!<d the wlll'lln 1 ... !OFFICIAL SE-'Ll decisions is affected , and what G<l!hard, Sul!e E. P .O, Box 1471, Hun· 611 Wtsl 1111 S!rMI ORANGE COUNTY: -1tni,,,.~I on behalf (II the corPOrlllllll Merv I( Hll'l!N h de hr • d t ing1on Beach, C~ll!ornla, which bt,11IMU Slftll An1, C1!1f, t27't On Novtmber 10, 196', belort me, I lllereln n1med, Ind 1ck1'0Wll!l5lltd Ill IM Nollrv Publlt·CalTlor111t C8USeS t e sync Oruze "'~· !orrnerlv c.omPO .. !d ol th~ !o!lawlnt;t '1''4n 11 Nolarv Public fl! 11\d lo• 1tld $!11'e, ""' WCh corpor1!lon •~ttUll!'d !ht 11m1. rr1rn:to11 Olfl« lfl biological clock," said Dr. pe.,ons, wiK>SI ntmes In lull AMI Plltt Publlihed Orange Coart Otllf Plllll, H!"IOl!I HV 1011t1red C. G. Yu111>1, Sltn E. WITNESS mv Nnd tnd )II(, Ortnoe Cau"h llf •~-•ldence are ••follows. io·wlt~ Oc!ober 71 elld November ._ ll, 1•. s1tvem1n kncwn ,., me to he !he 11eroan• (OFFICIAL SEAL! Mv C0<11rnh$IOl'I £J1-olrt' George Christie. Gt'Orge G. ,,~d Do•oTllv E. ToohHI, 1969 ?Oil.ff wh<Ke n•-1 .,.e 5111»crlbi!'d to 1~e wlthl" eerbare e . PMll\1>1 Novel"IM!• 1c, 1tn "It's a serious scientific ~611 .!.ulte Orive. Huntu111Ton Seacn, lnJlrull"ll!flt &Fld tcknowli!'dOt<l they e•· Noltrv Publlc.Calltornlt p,.l)llshed o,ange Coa•I Otl1Y Pl!(ll. ca1uornll, LEGAL NOTICE ~cl(lfd Ille s1rne. Prfll(lpal Oll!CI! I" Nnvember ,. 2s t nd Otce,,,.ber ?. '· s tudy. Every d ay, thousands ' ceru11ca1r '<tr 1r1n11c11on of bu1inen 10FFICl-'L SEAL! 0••111t• countv 1w ' 2ut..ft of people cross the Atlantic. nder "'" allow• fictitious n~m~. and •I· l"·U1lf Jet11 L. JoDsl My CommlHlon Expltn lldtvll ol oubl!ctflon !hereof. are on flit Not1ry Publie. C•lllornl• Sept, l. 1t71 EGAL NOTICE Bus inessm e-.1 n y from London " 1t1e <1!llce ot '"e Covntv Clerk of CEllTl,S~A'\'E 01' •USINl!SS Prlnclpa! O!tlce In Pub!l•l>ed Orl"llt Cold OtllY PllQf, L Or•nve couniY, under The D•o~i,ion1 QI FIC ITIOUS H-'MI! or1nve CG\lntv NOV$1!tler' 11, 11. 2s •nd oecemblr 2.1·-------------1 to New York for important ~ectlon 1466 ol !he Ci~ll Cod• T!\e ul'ldt•Sltned do certlfY lfltr 1r1 M'f Comml!Slon ExPir• ,... !OtWt NOTIC• OP: IN'\'aNTtOH TO l!NG-'G• conferences." r WITNESS ovr hands 1~1,' 3rd dlY Oii cond..c!l"ll I bullntts If 1tll L-'•Y-''1• • Mlrch 1 1973 IN Tl-le IALI Oil AL c 0 .. 0 L I c ~ovem~r. 196,. New111r1 fle•c~. c1mor"11, u~r,tllf fie· ,.,bntlled o,1119~ c .... 11 D•llY l"t1ot, LEGAL NOTICE 11v••A011 Christle is medical director Gtorge G. Tooh i!! lltlous fir"' 111me Of SHEPARD 5Ind1j'1t Novm1t1tr JI, 1f 2S and Oe<,,,,.bttr 2. Novtrnber 17. 1H9 for the Bri't•'sh SUbSidary O( Oorolhv E. TOQ!>lll stlcl l!rm 11 comPOsed of !ht lolloW M JJ;I ' 20ll.otl--------------I 'TO Wl-IJ M 11' M-'Y CONCERN: Publls~i!'d 0r~nu• coast l'l1ilv 1>1101. J11rwn1. whose nernts ln 11111 •!If 11l1ce l"·nnt Sllblect 1o 11111111Ct of thl 11t:1me •~ Syntex Pharmaceuticals, a ~ovember 11, 18, 15 end Oect,,,.be• 1. or ~lclence ••• IS lo!IGWI: LEGAL NOTICE CllillTIP:ICATI! 0 , aUSIMISS Oiied for, notlcr II MrebY t lvtn lhll Ille h I 1969 ~"' Loli R. end Leon A. Sh1"'9•d, sm ,1CT1T1ou1 MAMll underilllntc1 prOPQSel 11 1e11 11c01t011c Palo Allo firm whJc s ~ Donlvn Or,. Hu1111neton I•• c 11 • P·t7U. Thi undll,..lgned doel «rlltr ht! h COfto blVef'HOo 11 1111 11reml1es. dettr!l:ltcl 11 · p · t Pegasus C1llfornl1. NOT1Ce O• 0 I S S 0 LU TI 0 If 011' duc1!"9 1 llltllneu 11 :lffO lll1r'llllolph, Cost1 SpollSOfJng tOJl;!C · Oiled October JI, 1'6'. ,. ... TNlllSMll" ANO OP: OISCOM· Nitti, c11lforn11, under tM llctlliou. fir"' fol~~ Ad11'1'1t. Cosll Mffl With Trans World Airlines. Loi• R. Shtlll•d TIH UANCI °" USE OF Fl•M MA.Ml. Nlmt of PACIFIC YACHTS Ml=G. co.. l"Ufl\llnl lo •udl lnlt'"tl<!f\. JM I.Ill-Christie pointed out the Lt<111 -'· 5he111rd Purwent 10 Ille D'l'llY1tlon• .,, St(llOfl end 11111 1110 fir"' ff cOll!l>OIM of mt derl!ened 11 ·ipptrl"I to fM OtJ11rtmtnt LEGAL NOTICE Slate OI C1lll<1rnl1, 01•nte Coun!V: 1503j.S of lllf (<1,PWlllOfll Code end Oii lollowlng pe,.on, wltOMt nl"'e !n fl;ll Incl of Al«ihollt: l<!Ytrl(le COfllrol for IMUlllCt Significance µie S\Udy might On O<lober 31, lfff, "-!Ott me. 1 5ec1 On ~41, of Ille CIVIi COIH ot 1111 pl1ce of rt1ld111ce 11 It lollowt•• --••'''' 0-1•··11111 of 1n 1~Fle I I" l. on oec11mtier 1, 1969. a• ,,ao c'dod! No1~rv Putinc In 1n<1 1or 11ld s111e. state of 1ht11rot1, nof!ee 1, Mreb'I 11vtn Robllr'I J, wllltlf, 1n2• HIWPGrl Ave,. ;:;.,~••• 11.....=.; (or It«-) ter th... have on internatia.1a po UICS, P.M .. 11 t~e oauth franl tnlt•nC~ ol l~t OttS<lfltt!v IODearHI L<1ls R. SM11rd Ind ~=I ~fio..l:r~ect ..:~:!:'.""'~':..ci'°~:..C °! T .......... Callfo.mo..,1, ~r9mlm ,,~;o~l W){h d j p 1 0 m 8 t S CODStantly f HOTICE OF TJIUITEE'S Sile HO, 0 ll)Jt Ora net CQl!ntv CourtlM'll!M, IOC•1e0 an Ll!On -'· $ht1>1r<l known lo "'' fo bt fllt • .,. ... ..; 1,. bi"'""•• •ind•r t~t '"~~"' 1 llY. I , ON S-'LE, OEN!llAL !Boni FMt lN! 200 tllOCk of We~! Sl•!h Slfttt, In Plflal'll wt1111e ~ime1 •rt suf!KrlllHI !o 11 -'WAID MOTOR5. YAMAHA, 11 l•f Robfrl J. Wllkll llutllle Elfl"I 11111«1 flying froin one Side' Of the S111t1 ""'' C1!IH1rn!1, 5KUO'lh< P1clllt lhe wl!hln ln1lrumtnl ind I CktlOWltdll-.1 EHl 11th Sll'ffl, Cctf,11 Mesa, C1llfwnl~, Siii• of C•lllorn11, Ofl"lf CouP!tv: AnYGl'll dtairlne lo pn1tt1t 1111 lllllll!Ct WOr\d to the other to make Nttlonlll Btnk. as d~!Y 1c11X>lMed tr11•tee thtV txtcu!ed Ill• wme. w~• d!•1e1t'Hd e•""" mld~lght, Jul't 21, On Nov""ber '' 1Nf, bl!Ort me, I crl t\ICll UCt!!M(ll _., tlll 1 "''"ltd ,,._ 'nller 11>1 dfi!'d <II trinl daleO M•V 8, 1961 (OFFICIAL SEAL! ""' tll11t thtte!lfter s1ld firm di~ Note,., Putlllc In Ind for Wld $11!1, tMI with ll!'I' offk1 of lllfl Diii""""' of Vital decisions. ml<lt ti¥ Leo L. l(Of>M• an<I BartlM• J. Jttn L. Jobi! ll~ut<l ~ Ui1j :{ ~Id M"''' •rid 1111~ ~!IY IPIN!ll°H Robert J, Wiik• AlcOl'lol1C 91¥1¥ltl Confl'el, within :10 The abrnpt "me Chang' es tcoriner, ri•cnrdrd on Mlv 2', lhl, Jn Delo~ Nol•rv PubUC>Ctlllornl1 •II~• WI o,.,nouton no HBOll h Mown to""' 1o bf tl!t HrtOt1 wlloll "'''" -, '''' .. Pl'Ollilld 11remlm w .. '' •• -•• of 011;c111 Rrco,dJ In th• Prlncl1111 Olllct In •11rhtlr1"' In cur to1>rt11ll'O'l!t '°' " 111m1 hi llll>K.ribtd 10 ttte wtlh1n 1... · "' that result (rom jet travel • --0 , _ 0 Or•nt• CCllllllY lorm1r fir"'' the 11o&mf1 ol Ille 01rtf!ll"l ,.· xlClltld Wirt' n,..1 11G11a: d•ll"I •roundl tor tfllce al Ille C<111ntv e<ordar n ..,,en t Mv Com,,,.ltllofl Ell;•!•~ ~lld lllllf ,tflltcilve •"°''111'11rt : AWll'd tltltll'ltnl •nd l(knowledtlll • dtltlll If •0¥1dtd tlY lflW. 1"111 e~11ft d' t th bod!J f nclionS Coi.J~tv, C•llfo•n!a. bY re11e1n of dtl1un M•rcll J, 1'7l Motort;, inc.. lUO N-rt Boulev1rt1 IM 1.11rnt. ,,. noW ll(lf!ltd tor lhtl 1111 of 1lc0h<llle ISlllp e Y U . II\ "'e pevrnenr 9< J11dorm1nce ot atillOO• Publlshi!'d Ortnte COlll Oel1Y P!IOI, .-~,,~ Mtt1. r'•ll!nml~. •~" J, Fd'wffci (Ol'FICIAI. SEAll lltYlf'-.n. "The fOrm al vtrllltlllon "'IV and sometimes Cause trratJc .. "1 wcurl!d !1>ereov. 1 Nollet ct 01> ,,,,--,, 11, n . 25, lf6f 206>69 E11eelh1'11I, lJlf C1mden Df'lv•, COfVl'\I J0$111f1 IE. Otvl' bt Gb+llllld frOll'I ionv ofllel of lht Ch I tned tiull al'ld Ete<llon 1v s.eu un<1er o-i o1 ''""'' cMI Mer. c111foo'11l1, Gtllfrtl •nd L~ Not1r y Publl<•Cal"orn11 Oilllrtmlllt behavior, ristieexp1a , T•1<st h•vlnt been recol"dtd •• Pl'ovlded LEGAL NOTICE Jlef' "•rlPlll'•· rttpectlvtlv, Pr1nclflll Office 1" 1 Oli'iitSUN ASSOCl-'TEs, INC, He said a theory• had -been ~ IW l•w ll'<I more lhln 1nr1e mont~s 0..ted 1~11 11th d~v rA Nn~~'"btr, 19ff, Orlntt CGlllllY SllllloY~ln Cl\ln. p,n, tivlnO tl•Pstd since IU(h rl(Ol'<llilon, -',WARD M.,T<1FIS. INC. Mr C-'hlcl'I E•olre v'1rnt H, un. V.P. & Tteli. advanced that former S0Viet IOl'll I Ji10T1ce To c111101To1111 v JW:'' 8 · 8"'.... 'u"' '1' 1"' EdW1rd tt. ''°"'' v.P.' S•c. Prerru'er N1'kita Khrns"·hev's 111 ~II II 0111>llc 1ucllo!I lo !ht ~ • ' C'.E~ FIAL P,\FITNF!t: Putlllsl'lfd Orl"ll (;(NllSI 01!1y Pl~. P11bll.llld 0r.,,.. CCIII! 01t1Y Piiot, II\; blddi• ior c••~ o•Y~Dlt 1n 11w1u1 ,,,,_f su,.lli•1011 cou11 o P: TMI J. E:ctw~rd En11tlh1ii:tt November 4. 11, 11. ''· ltff *11' ··--11, 1,.. 1u,.-shoe-~•ndi.lg outburst a t ••· •I !he liniltd Slate1 of """'rice '' llrnt · 0, c• o•o•N>A •OR ~IT&O PARTNFR " ""' I""' "'°" STATE \. ..-UbU 0r ..... C1111t O&llV ~""· L•"GAL NOTICE u 't d N . x ., .. ie. wltl'IOUI coven~nt or w8,,.entv t~ THli couNTT OF OllANGE Npvtm !l. ltff till.ff .,.. LEGAL NOTIC"' n1 e at1ons was an e • ••tOtl<l .... 1mfl l!t<l &I !O l•l!e, -~ttslotl -. ... I r h ' rr t .. tl'l(:Umb••nte,, "" ln!tr('0.1 converl!ll ND, ..... 1u LEGAL NOTICE ...., amp e 0 t IS e ec • lo Ind -held bv II Ulldlr t1!d deed "' E1•1!e of WllLIAM JASON CA.LL!$, . ClllTIP:ICATI! o,s •USIHUS :11t'l'IPICAT• OP: •UllNll5 The 14 Pegas us volunteers S'Ull, In end lo !he prvoerh 1n Or1nte C LLIS l'ld NOTIC• Opt INTl!NTIOK TO INOAQ P:ICTITIOUI HAMS .. ICTiTIOUS NAMI d I ' . ount¥ s•iie °' cerllornie, ~l>ttl 11: 1110 l(l!CWt"I 11 w. J. ~ • IM ,.,., s1.1.e: op: ALCOHOLIC , Thi uridtnltnt<I .toet certify she I• tt11to TM 11n01,.111ne0 <1oe1 e«tllV lhl 1s ton--eight m e n an S x somen - L., •> " Trtt• A~ '" tl'lt c11v "' wtLLIAM J. c1.~~~sia~~~1ve'N to the ••v•llA•ll, . I d1Kt1.,. i bu11neu •' 112 Hunllneron Av.i .. !klcl!111 • 11v11ne11 ~' ,,,, ''""°"'"'' "'""' have already .......... seven days _ 0 NOTICE t5 N...,..,..,., 11 1Mf Hu11Untlot'I Btlch, C1llton111, u'lller IM II-BHCll C1llfornll UllOlf 11\t fie· "~" I COJll Mt"' ., o~· ,,,. ... ,teord.,,. n t•l!dltorl ot 1111 1bove n1mf!d o,""', .!' ' TO WHOM IT M-'Y CONr.ER14 ! • Hdl!IOUS """ f\lmt Cl! OIUGINAl.S av '''""• ,_ -~~ .. THE !"OST MART in London under going tests to DO<lk 1ri. P&~"" c7 te SO lnclualv• "' "'"' 111 1111r.cll'll haYl"ll e111,,,.1 ~·"' .. ,1 sul)J'"tf In iswr,nre nf IM 11«~•~ ••· CAIN Ind 11111 ,11u """ '' comll>O\ICI Of ""' "" ·-"'""· -""', ,. Mllfello~tOU' Mii>' +n tnt ottlce OI Ille s,tld deeldtlll 11'"1 rM~lred lo flit lllem, ell"" for. FIQ!kt! 1 lle•tl'rv jilv•n '"'"' 11\t Ille ko!lowlftll ptru.n, w-nllTll In tull Ind !hit llld ""' ll com O e stablish \heir ROrmal p,&t· Rtt<lr<lM ol t.1!0 CO\lnlY. wll!I !ht ntetOllrY YO\!(!lert., II! lhf office 11ndolnkl!Wd I>•-IO tfll ll<Gt!ollC Intl tllCt QI rnldfnCt If If tollewt.: lowlnt perwfl, ~ nllml I~ IUll •nd (e",'S Of fUnCtiOnl'ng . • S&ld t.1tf w!ll 1:141 m~df te """ lllt 01 IM cl•rl( o1 Ille 1boW-f!'llllltd court, or -rlfft 11 Ille ll'"tmlU., ""'I bed •• L1111tn C~lll 712 l'lunlf"llofl Ave .. •1e1 ot ruldllnCf" 11 n fot!Owl1 '·" .-,11,1!11!1'11 •Ku••d JIV u la .,,.o"' lrult to Prne~I "'-"'· WI'" "'' nKffUN ~11o;;;:E 11th,,," Hunllntton e..:dt. c1111. ' 'Dorolllr i;r1mP,, tU1 F11mOUth Oi.. Now lhey are spending 10 ifl.Cluc:Un• ell co111, t~,, 1n0 tl'ltt'n1e1 ot ~o11c.ntn, lo !M-11ndtt11o""' 11 IM otncu e 0111 ·Mn• 8 D•ltd New 10. f'6'' H11ntlnpltll'I ilt"ch· d d i 1rv~1" •M ct lhr 1rus1 C''"'"O e. ""it! al HAllWOOO. &ODEN • AOKINION. sso Purw.i<1! lo 11111:1'1 lntt<ttio... 111~ ""' 1,)rnin ci1n D111t1 NllYM!lblr 17, 1fff ays in Palo Alto un tr go ng iktO or ,, ... ,1; '1il "'"'' t•Hl!Cltd lllld<t• Nll'WllCOrl Cini•• Ol11•e" Nf'lllPOrt .... di. o,,,,r.n111 " I MIVltltl I~ ll!t Dtll•rffMnf STATE OF CALlf'OltNtA. '""of C1lltor11l1 more tests to find out how !tit term• OI 11\d rte«<I of lflAf, not 11\Pn Ctllf<lrn;1, w~lcll It the pl.cit of bullnel• Dt Alr.Mllllc e-r11~ CIWl!ftl for i,,.., • .,... QltAN!SIE" COUNTY• Or1119e (Oun!¥ ' tH•ld1 ano u .J30 °' reme1n11tt1 r111ncro,1 0, IM ul'ltltrsll!lld 111 111 -"•,.. .. ,. en er1e1n1lc.=1~111on of •r •1toM•1~ °" Nov 1o. 1,_ • btfo.rl m~ 1 Not•" °" New. 11, 19#. "9tctr• me. • Not1ry 'cng it takes· for their nonna l d tM "Qlft lleuffll llV ••ld ~.ltd °' •ru•t, 11lnlftt to Ill•-"''"' ,,. .. Id dK@t!enl, == ~. ie,r~"! lie ....... for "'"' ,.utinc In. e.;.t ff)(' 11ld '""·' t1r11t1111llV "1,ibllc : .. .,,. llr .. Id Stllft , Ht'IMlllV .. patte-· to -sum• In a time J!lll lnltrtsl trom MIY J, ,,,.. 11 In II"' V>l"'ln tour 11\111'111'11 1ft1t ll\e lff'tl PlltlllC.· "N'rW ON $ALF.'GFN~ftAI •llMl!"'ld Lllll1n Ctln ~no"" IO IM la bl ~Hiii 00f'Gthr C•llTIP •r.own le"" lo tit ••Q 1 ~ r/• prov\dtd. Tlc:ln Of lhb notic.. !II-Fldf> Publlc l';~tffl<'I p,,~,, 11\t ""°" Wl\llt l\flll" i.-$~~crlblel IO Ill• ptrlllft wllott 11111'\f II 111t11cr!bi!'d lo zone nlne hours behind LOn· Otttcl Nov~tiey •p 1•~·· H TION l Otltd Ntyll'l\bf,r .,, , ... , An~ de"'ll'l<I ft! '""'"' IM .,,,...,, th• wlthlt'I JMll'\lmll'lt Ind 1tknowlt0ttd Ille wtlllln tnalf\ll'l'llnl Ind ldlnowlldttd don I SECVFllT A IP:IC: .. A MtrlOl'I• El1l1111 Ctlll•-t" .. :~ ... ic:.,eJ,1.-:'~ :~ ;,z~!~"~'!; t)ie tll•CUltd "" .. ,,,.. \h~ ••f(lllM 1),e .. ml. • ~.~ •• sr:cu••TY f'lll:ST Elle<Ulrl!_~ 1tlt w,,", ........... ·~1 "lcohollc ee~r•lie (Ofllrol, wlflllft '° IOf'FtCIAI. SEAL) tOFfKl-'I. $1!.-'L} I H. took the subjects several .-won• of the ~u....• nl>t'n. ,,,, .. ..,... fl•v1 el tllt U•ft tht o•-t>d 11r•ml•""' J"'n L. Jobtt • Jein L. Jobi d be! th •• -to !eel NA"T IOHAL BANK. MAlltWOOO. 100•111 ...... AOKINSOH -'"' flm "°''"'' ·'~""' ~'OU""• '~· NOii,., P11bllC. C:•lllOt"I' Noflr'\' "lll>llC•CllllOl"l'llt ays ore. ey u.:g .... •t ''"''IM "°'' Ofll<• ... !M1 lltnr•I "' etovlllt<I tl'I' ~w. Tht ...... 1... • PflllCIOtl Ol!Jn '" l'rll\C~I Olllce 111 comfortable In tbe changed ,• llv L•wl1 W, MtM~llln HrwH" BMcll. Cit#. f'liM) ·~ -llc~"lld "" l~ll ,~ .. M ~It;°""'!!• 011,... C041nty Orll'll'I: C01tn1V h Ault1•111 Tru1t lllftl Eat1" Tiii !'1•1 M .. 1l1S • "-w,._..._ Yllf" ..,,IT\ .ot ve•'''••lloo> ,...,, Mv Cornrnlnlon ll)11ra Mv (;Qr'llmlUIOfl Enlrn lime zone. They reported t tit o'"'" Altll"MY• Nit ••tci"frl• t11 ob••1'* • ....,. •n, office ff f!lt! M•l't" 2. 1tn ~,di'· 1•n when they arrived lhey were ~...,, 1111111111>et1 0.11191 eo.11 0.Uy 1111o1, Oeoo•rt"','o"s·•• ... , Pllfllf1l'IH Dr•"flf Coe•I Oellv l !IOI, Puttllll'ltlll Or•no• COit! Dtlly ,Siii>!, d Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 .Statt 5 Surrounded ,, 9 Coup d'etat planners 14 Fatal 15 Latcra! 16 Oestroy slowl y 17 "Ta ke.··· !rem nre "; 2 words 18 Hitch !<!Soph ia····· 20 Symbols of aulhor ity 22 Kind o! mairla De 24 British adm•rally VIP : 2 wo1ds 26 •••· Majo1: T he Cr eal Beat · 27 Henry Louis Gehri g 28 Young herring , 29 Controverslal drug l2 Pottland ••••• JS Kingship 37 Norse god 38 Morose J9 Wo1d indicaling •11eemtn l •o K nd of mlnd: 2 ..... OfdS 4) POW 's principa l thoughl l .. • .. 45 lttm or cooking ware Al & Woodwi nd 47Golfer Trevino 48 Male anlmat 49 Northcr Soull1 SJ Oulr1 bou11d~ry of~ li 9ll't 57 Fr1nales 58 Grou1i i:.! Ille lie~! ~q ····China bl Having a Ctll ai11 flavo1 bl P1~sby tcr t l Kir1d or Ye ss el b4 R1ve1 to the Elbe b5 C+ty of Eny!aod b6 Command to a do!! 67 Med iocre DOWN I U.S. pres ident 2 Lignum····· J Heatli genus 4 Caus ing dista ste 5 ln11uire b La id explosi ve devices 7 Mucl1 adm ired person • 7 .. " " .. Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: " 8 Took a side road ~ ML151c.it 1n~tn1 111 ~11 \ 10 Fr agrant(! l t iiresonie person 12 Port 111 Southern Y!'men . 13 Made a !oan 21 Not long heuce 23 Precise pe1son 2S Dirt ro&d feature 28 Auto mechan!sm 29 S. Anie1 icau capital 30 Kind of son or t1;111ghter 31 Physics un it 32 F11rme1s' business gtoup: lnformlll • " .. .. 11 /18/69 33 Ftmini111 na'lle ~4 Bea ring J &Tea1s 38 or C al~doni a 1i 1 Landlady'• customers d2 Vlell Qua!ilied ~3 iree 44 Do a farm• ing job 48 Quoted 4q Passlol'I SO Adult insect 51 Roman qoddrss 5Z Preli~ used with dome Of naut S] Pare S4 She: Fr. 55 Se home 56 Noun suffix 60 Se beholde11 " " .. " • i~ Or•t!O• COid 1:1.11., ~1!<11, "'-""' n, lit -» _. o.1fllbei> " ,.ubn,...ci 0_;,:.;e c"'' D•ltv ••It->. ~ov..,...titr u, 1t. 2s •rid OICtftltllt• ,, Nnvtrnbt~ 11. 21 1""· ~btr '· •· "tired and bad temptrc " or ~ 11. ,., ». 1™ x.J.,, lNI .. ~ t.111Yeni11trlt. l'*' 111'""' 1"' ..... '"' lliHI Just "very, very Urtd." L------------------------- I . ' I I ) • • .. ' ..... M I 4 ••""--'lo " ' ' . We created and delivered another fresh · edition of The DAILY Plb OT I . ' . . ~ . . . ' ' ' TEAMWORK produces each day'! ail-ne~ DAILY Pnm: orien specia!- , ists like Thomas Fortune (lefl), whose beat is education, work with a staff photographer like Patrick O'Donnell to get the story both in words and pictures. The staff shot 70,000 pictures . last year to illustrate the varied .story of Orange Coast life. Nobody knows how many local slofies we wrote. Not even us. CREATIVITY helps advertisers tell their stories 'and sell their goods in the affluent market served by the DAILY PILOT. Gordon Crawford (center) of display advertising department discusses with layout . artist Suzie Gunderson and DAILY PILOT Staff Artist Bob Noyes an ad which will be ready to appear in the newspaper only hours after Npyes puts final touches on artwork and it is approved by the advertiser, a local re- tail merchant. QUICK HANDS place lines or type, ads and cUts (the met.al plates used to reproduce pictures) into page forms as the day's product begins to take shape. Compositor Arden Malsbury is only one of a platoon of printers who "build" the ne"'s pages under pressure of deadlines. work- ing against the clock to bring readers the latest available information in each edition during the day .. DELIVERY of the newsaper is a ·speed event, too~ Conveyor belts carry lhe papers through the mailroom ~bere they are automatically · tied in bUndies of '50 and tossed to waiting circulation district managers (like Blaine Robetts, shown here, right) who speed them via a 40-vehicle Oeet to carriers for delivery. Mailroom foreman George Arauz (left) and his crew can move 20,000 n~wspapers an hour. VOLUME · is the word at the Copy Desk. DAILY PrLO't' Copy Desk ·Ctiief Norman Anderson (right) aided by Tom Titus (background) and other CQpyreaders evei-y day. sifts, checks and edits more wire reports from \Vorldwide news services lhan th~ aveeage weekly news maga~ine pub- lishes. Editors scan enough telephotos to wallpaper a living room every 24 hours. Speed, born of exper ience, helps them keep it. all fresh, too, THE WORDS are ready. Marjorie Jackson feeds them into a $25,008 computer. a·DAILY PILOT investment in speed and accuracy, which uses a logic system to hyphenate words as it reads characters at the rate of 1,000 a second and punches a new tape which will activate another machine for automatically setting type at high speed. The machines can set type at the rate of 6,000 lines per hour . . MAClllNES hasten the processes of preparing plates for printing the pages of the newspaper. Here, Charles Haubrick (foreground ) and. Ed· ward Quinn operate a casting machine which molds curved pl~tes to fit onto high speed presses. The DAILY PILOT keeps in stock more than 40 tons of type metal which is used , melted down and used again in the continuous job of printing 100,000 words a day. J\tODERN equipment helps the accounting department keep up with the "today" pace at the DAil.Y PILOT. Even as the day's newspaper is being sped to its readers, Bonnie Chauvin begins feeding figures'1f1to ·a computronic bookkeeping machine that helps keep track ·or billings for ads and subscriptions. The rilachine. forerunner of a brace of computers recently added, handJes 5,000 accounts a month. ' ' . ,, • • 1.' l -;-_1 ·,\(f -· RAPID C<lnununication is the name of the. game. Supervisor Juanita Frey and her crew of 1'ad"visors " handle 1,000 transactions a week by phone, resulting in publication of 5,000 classified ads -words which help people buy, sell, rent or I ea s e • ~ • even find lost dogs. Many of the DAILY PILOT'S 150 phone lines are plugged in here, the classified advertising' de- partment, home of "Want Ads" and Dime·A·Lines. • ~- " ' PICTURES, too, get the benefit of skilled, efficient handling by master craftsmen who re-photograph them and then transfer the images to a sensitized metal plates wliich are used to reproduce the photos as read~ ers will see them in ·the newspaper. Here, Chuck Ryan Jakes a really close look at. a negative which will be used to etch the image on the metal plate. · FINISHED PRODUCT is checked by Elwood Anderson, press crew chief, even as high-speed presses continue to roa r at 60,000 impressions per hour completing the day's run on press units which represent an investment of $3.5 million. Eleven·man press crew will feed into these machines the equivaJent of a roll of paper one page wide and 110,000 miles long in printing the D~IL Y PILOT this year. ALMOST before the ink is dry, the product of our busy day is tossed defUy on your lawn or porch by one of our 700 new spaperboys who are important links in the chain o,f people it takes to bring you today's news and features today in the DAILY PILOT. And as our young independent merchants, like John Mellon: here, make their deliveries, ~·e·re gearing up for another busy day -all 1,000 or us. The •Now' Newspaper f~r All The C~romnnities Of The Growing· Orange Co~st · , · I DAILY PILOT ·1~ • I • i " --·-·--.. -. ' ..... ·-· .. ' Tuesday, Novtmbtr 18, 1%9 DAllY PILOT • ... ·' . . HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE--HOUSES FOil SALi HOUSES FOR 'SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSl!S FOR SALE HOUS !iS POR SALE Gener1I 1000 G•n•rJI '. 10091 GenHil ·-:..... . 1000 G.n.rlil , 1000 G-e .. -,,-.-1----l-OOO-IB--iy_c_fo~,-t-. ----1-2-23 Huntington _Be1Ch 1400 Huntington Be•ch 1400 RENTALS Houses Furnished v~ oi.b HOMESTEAD MESA' DEL MAR , · ·~2!".lio;f;NI. L;LO~T~::l~EX1~Q~uSI~r~r&;--;, 11id;,;'.m."'%1glfiiiiiiiiiiii:mmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii WITH BASEMENT . • . Just , Beautiful · , $23,500 ~~" :"· :;::· ~·:':' NEW HOME Newport Beech 2200 BE:AlrrlFULLY Remodeled · Newport lala.nd' rtsidence. Large rooms, 'two baths, w n deck, tireplaCi!, furn,lshftd, ·adults.~ References. $250, llo~ath Really 6T>1972 tor &torlng .au )'(>Ur goodies & keepsakes! <I fantaStically BJG BEDROOMS & ~. yes THREE BATHS! This older custom h0n1e ol HARD- WOOD FLOORS and genu- ine LATH & PLASTER is in PRIME BEACH AREA! ~ps & &hools handy. Very quirt street of \o\vcring knarled shade trees! Bil;", Big, low maintenance yard \vith room for roaming kids and delached doubje garagc. · GET THIS. , .NO DO\VN VETS or $1,700 Down lo other qualiiicd buycrs at FULL PRICE OF $24.\'IOO. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 545-0465 Open 'ti! 9 Pt.I COMFY COZY PRIVATE Enjoy counrry seclusion Jn tfiis beautiful 3 bedrin. 2 bath home in eastside Costa 1\tesa, mountain cabin effect \vith knolly pine kitchen ca· binets walnut paneled liv. ing r1~., cozy fireplace and private (.'QUrtyard entry - no do1vn to vets -exeC\ltlve neighhorhood -call today. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546-8640 OPEN EVES TILL 8:30 BAYFRONT Ready for imme-diaic occu- pancy_ Large 2-s1ory bay- Iront honlC \l'ith 4 spacious bedroon1s, large living room. formal dining room; panel· ed den \\'ith wet bar, t.·Iast. er suite with sitting roorn, firepl11CI' & cx!ra large d ressing room. P iC'r & float ror large power or sailboat. See this cxci l ing buy, $175,000, Open daily. 515 ~~~'~ ,:~~~:,~~ = ~m~~'i!~nJo.:,;_;"~~ • * • * EASTSIDE ~ "" ' IMMEDIATE MOVE !N '"" b"ilt-in kitchc~ M""'" , den, I,ormal, clinin~ J<lQm and $22,SOO. Name your term~. 3 .COSTA MESA Dover ShorH 1227 4 BDRMS 1112 ' BATHS bedroom 91' lo ltsol! wl\h family romp wHh lin:pla"' -bd•·m, 2 ,,.,._Now vac<Jilt. WITH 1/4 MILE FROM BEACH, its own private bafh. Re-and Y.'Ot Mr. Just 3 years 1nove ln tomorrow. -A-Irreplaceable' Vie\v* centlr professionally repai.lit-ne\v, CuSt.Ont draPes ahd * *" * * TW9 (2) SEPARATE, 2 Bed-Bay & Moutitains l ed inside ' ilrtd out. Fully whll coverings. No caru $27.500. 5% 70 loan available. room homes on a CHOICE Regal "Old World" Conte1n· carpeted and draped. cOv. lan~ping. Fantastic pool LOT with alley access_ 'IWO pora.ry pictufesqJe borne w/ 'th k '-U $62 000 Immaculate 3 bdrm, ·2 b!l.lh, el'ed pal.io and feoced yard. WI roe waterUll · • for the price of one a t just UD01ls.tr4cted ·view • mos1 ASSUME LARGE LOW JN-invested ., , , Sale priced family rqom, new carpels & $23,SOD !or both. $235() Down rooms, 4 Br's, 4~;. e a · + TERESI' W1\N. P1·i(.'Cd to $57,500. quiet street. Will handle! maids qtrs. Ideal for enter- sl.'11 at· only .$29,500. * * * * WE SELL A HOME taining\ EasY n;ialnt. i"mmed 520,990 " , HUNTINGTON HAC.H <:all Now 1942·1353 Balboa Island 2355 &ytron~.J Bdrms. ISLAND REAL TY 498 Park Ave. 673--1200 Kt:::NTALS • Houset Unfurnished $32,500, Newport Helghta. 4 EVERY 31 MINUTES occ~p .. Furnishe!:I. ,S178.000.l"!'!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! W lk & L Assume 6~% loan 548-72491:: bdom, 2 bath + dining, 8 er ee ' Huntington Beach 11,00 · · · General 3000 Hun"tin~ton Beach 1400 ,~--:----1 Evenings Call 642-2'~ COLLEGE PARK $26,950 Choi'ct:' 3 Bd1·m., 2 bath. Adult occuplcd. corner Joe . comp!. surrounded by pink block "'all, with boat entry and rm. also for trailer. Near llC\V cptg. th1·uout plus l'UlllpUs !'Ill. -gUr., (.'OllYe!"" siOJl. Call now to sec. EXCLUSIVE WITH Newport at Victoria 646-8811 Anytime Yes, a fanlastic home on a /1i:! 1vi1h the utmost seclu- sion in the rear yard. A beautiful 4 bedroom, 3 bath, home 1vith a lait;c formal dining room. Jn the most peaceful neighborhood in the area. There's parking for youi· boat or camper, your youngstct· can walk down to school. Beautiful carpets & d1·apes, all clcclric kitchen, and a r reat stone lil'ep!acc that udds beauly & warmlh to your living roon1, All this & n1ul·h niorc, only sit4.500. 646-7171 • 546-2313 Colesworthy & Co. "Agent" "For A \Vise Buy" &u-7777 MESA VERO'E BIG FAMILY ROOMI plus 5 BEDROOMS & 3 IUX· urious baths. Com-plctely AlR CONDITIONED and in Mesa Ven:le prime location on quiet street of towering trees! Specious FAMILY R001\'1 & PRIVATE DEN if you Y.'ish. JolJRMAL DINING ROOJ\.f! Fabulous Carpets & custom drapes! So imn1acu- late and tasteful it's hard to believe! Extra. large 8000 ft, lot of unique lush land- scaping with low mainten- an~. Owner lransferred and anxious at ONLY $48,500. For the particuJar e'Ceeutive. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES' Walker & Lee 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 5'15-9'191 Open ,'tit 9 PM BAYCREST $46,500 Ll.C\'UriOUs 3 Bedroom, family roon1. 2 fireplaces, 2 baths. &auti!ul landscaping, cou11- yard entrance. A roa.I plea- sure to show. Mary Lou Marion Needs \\'Ork • priced for bii-OPEN.Sat & Sun 12:-6 --+-- mcdiate".Sale. 200 Westclift DI', 1536 Galaxle Drive SPLl1'. LE:VEL BY Owner. 4 bdr .. 2 ba., crptis., drps., bean1cd ceil· ings, Landscaped, fenced. Boat gate. Near' Ocenn. Priced bclo1v FHA. 10 mos. old. 9511 Landfall Drive .. ll.B. 1i * * * 646.Till ~BR, (BA, Paneled fam-rn1 4 lrg Bedrooms, ·3 Baths + $47,950, Gorgeous Republic 3 ,BR 2 baU1 home, cor11er w/ !rplc, 2. lge patios w/ 15xl9 fam n:n. H1vd floors home • like new condition. lot lJOxlSO • add 5 more pool, ·lge view lot, crp1s, thru-oul, shake roof + e!ec- units. ~Drive by l.M~ Scuita drps. Owner. · oic kitchen Aaswne S*-% 4 bd1m, 3 balh &: formal Ana Ave. then call 675-7203 or 548-0273 F'HA Joan. ' dining • only Ol)C like it m ovoilablc. , ania iltafty Unl_;;rsity p,-;k 1237 O ___ I, r ... ..,_ , cau 545-84:!4 . 642-6500 I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;· ;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I Mlt llUll.t Fountain Valley 1410 Sooth C""t Rool &lote MESA VERDE·$25,000 Nestled ,In TKe Sky ~ l1t Vi ELEGANT MANSION * * * * N~eds a llttle yard wo1•k & Hello! world, silting pretty e L1lj 4 bd1ms 3 baths. High VA paint & YQU save S5S$'s? Ov· on a sun-kissed-hill-top with loan. Payablo $23~ per ersized bedrooms, delightful unobstructed view, is · this n1outh. New ca('JX'ts, drap... * FHA * BELlEVE IT OR N.OTI $1 ,600 Down Payment! Fantastic ·2.500 sq. feet of 4 huge BEDROOMS ' and FOUR baths NEAR THE BEACH! Old world charm with new world convenienc. es in farn1 sized kitchen with b11ilt-in FREEZER aod RE- FRIGERATOR! Formal 14 x 12 dlnirig room! Gleaming 1-IARDWOOD F L 0 0 R S! Very private & secluded area of towering shade trees. Big, Big lot with DOUBLE DETACHED GAR AGE! Your dream ho1.1e at a FULL PRICE of $24,!YJO. WE SELL A HOME EVE RY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams ~9491 Open' 'tff'".9 P?.t fanilly l'OOm, built in kitch· almost new 4 br with sep. 17001 Magnolia, FV rs, h1ntastic indoor/outdoor en, firep)ace .. 540-1720 lam rm. in Turtle Rock ki!chen 1\'ith alt !J.pgraded TARB~.L L 2955 Harbor Hills. Loaded with extras. '""""""5"4"5";"0"4"5"8"""" .. I built-in appliances, L a r g e I loo Beautifully land~ped and 1-n1as1er bedroorils, fot·1nal Costa M~ta VACANT! Ip $47,500 and WHO SAi 07 dining room, 5';!p&l'ate fan1- INTERESTED IN WOl'G th ii. ed h II . . ;~ ;:,;;, ·~:~,:'~·~;;,~~; SlV. · • Tight money &. high inter-sll•immini:r pool, block \ ... au. ' 4 °/o ? . r I est? Fantastic fi';j, Joan Good sire<J 3 beitroom 2 bath . with ~asonable down on Q' ll!ijt4;:1;emr1 family room home with a REAL"TY custom bu~t 3 bdrm, fatnily 962-447J ( ;::J .546-alOJ ~al,5%% assumable loan. Univ. Park C.enter, I!"l.·lne roon1, spacious covered pa- W1th $6,800 down ~ur pay-Call Anytime 833-0820 tio, desired built-Ins, all on ments are $146 per mooth large corner lot in Lake TOTAL, Or let us help you ------' Park area. Faidy pl'iccd at with the fin:anclng, $23,950. WEIGHING VALUES? $33,000. OPEN HOUSE Sun- SU-2313 Looking fol' your money's day, ~-Springf.ie.ld. '-0 THE REAL '·'."I.. ESTATERS worth'!' Then takC a peek at Pacific Shores Real!y this 2 Br., tile roofed bung. 536-~ or 8·17-&>86 alow. FP $34,200. • red h·.11 ~~; .. ~~ii ~l~:!~~trst~1; Sac 'fie Sal d~sn't ·mattl.'r • T h Is n • • unbelievabll.' lot will hold · FUii PrlCe $21 ,500 REALTY them all. Heavy duty gate Beautjlul 3 bdnn 2 bath wlth Univ. Park· Centtr, Irvine patio. Great 3 BR Seahaven. new <:Jrpefs thhiout. Large Cail Anytime 8.13-0820 \v/roncretc storage slab, yard complete with cover-1.,.,....,,....,..,..,..,..,,1 patio. Great 3 BR Sea.haven. ropaHo&·f"1ittrees.Roo1nl· V ONLY 122·~ R L E tbl ff 1242 ac. ,-N<J. ex ' ' Laguna Hiiis 1700 ----L£1SUIU: \\IORLD 2 BR, 1 ~~ BA. Lge Lil' Rn1. Estale sale. View of ~lnls & valley, Cull aft 5. 673-8914 ** Laguna Beach 1705 BEAUTIFUL BEACH HOME In lovely Laguna ·condo, com- munitY: fronting On magni!- icent heated pool, 100 ste11S f1'0m priv. bch., tennis els. etc. Comp. attractive Jurn. include 1v/w carpl'g, drps., FREE RENTAL . SERVICE , FOR p<AMPLE: BenutifuJ 3 bedm1. 2 balh hon1e with heated and fil~ tercd pool in Mesa Verde. lt has built-ins, fireplace/ fore~ air heating. We have more! ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546-"40 . OPEN EVES, TILL 8:30 SlllCI. 2 Br. & fm m1. 2 Ba, f1i>lc, RIO, w/w, drps. Children &. pet welcome. Bkr. 534..{)98() Ii\Ii\1ACULATE 3 bedroom, 1% ~th home on the water. Lease. 6'12-7777 or 646--3129 Bkr. $180. 3 Br duplex. Crpts, drps, patio, gar. Avail 12/1. Blue Beacon 645-0111 ~150. 2 Br. frplc. Children & pe1s 1.,.clcomc. Blue Beacon 645--0lll $15S. 2 Br. duplex. w/w, drps, patio. 5C'l'lr. porch. Childrt!n 0 .K. Bkr. 534-6980 Sl9J. 2" Bt'. hse. yard, frplc, RIO. Cttjlrlren & pets O.h": .. Bkr 53·1-(;980 Costa Mesa 3100 BEAUTIFUL BAYFRONT HOME fo1· boat or trailer. O ose to _as U !·lodges, Rlt~. 847-2525 ~·Uk s,clloolsh.,ghLow .... ~dt?wn,%& O\VNER•Single story condo. TRAGEDY STRIKES-'"" e over 1 e11"'1ng 3BR 2 BA d · •1 M 3 " loan $148 th · , en unit.•• any ust sell large BR 1"" ba, ' th" ""c'ALLmonLARRpayys extras. $42. maint. ?.lust dining roo1n, Adult occupied every Ing_ · red _.. 1~ ' , 54(}-ll51 Heritage Real Es-mov:·· pnce U1.-.:u _,,.,, o_nly, Low dow~ lo present kgsz maStC'r bed: location COND0;\1INIUl\1, 3 BR, 2 decor. 2 BRs, 2 BAs, sep. BA, 2 cal' gar, swln1ming Iv., din. nns; laun. with w/d, pool & rec. facilities. SZIO stor., 2-ear gar, lower lev-mo. MG-1667 or a57-6829 afl el. See to appreciate. Shown 6. "'j~l;;'inacnab ~ (714) 642.il235 On Bayside Drive Close to harbor entrance, wilh pier & slip 3 Bedrooms & den, including spacious baysidc master bedfoom suite on the 2nd floor · Truly a lovely home Immaculately kept ~198,00) tale (open-.,vesl lo $~7.900. 644-2·167 hnanclng. $2.J,950. "'llifi"~:'ll"T'::;:"';;;;:,1 ~c~o~(Q~n•_;d~e~I !' M~·!,!•~, 1250 BRA~HEAR REAL TY CUTE Small 2 Br vacant -1~2 Beach. Blvd., 1-1.B. · home, redec. Easy walk to Home + Income 847-8507 Eves .. 431-3769 b:· O\l'ne1·, call for app't. $250 4-5 Bedrm, 2 Ba, fine 499-2152, a .m. or wkends, N E c d . · . area. rpts, rps, HANDYMAN'S bltns. Nr. S.D. Frwy. Special? 4 Income units 120 Declst. 5-19-0844 901 Dove• o,;vo, SoHo 120 =lITT;iiii:i'VU::i>ija>=.~Coldwell, Ba'nker & Co. -~--~BC8eh-:-~---ti,~:f-t~r.·. · 55CrN9wport Center Dr. --------Slick 2 bedroom With room Newport Beach, Calif. $18,500 That's All '""'"'•"homo. Ym" 1~ 933.0IOO 644.7430 ta! payments are $144 per N H b H• month tot this 15 year young 2 FOR 1 ear ar or I CustomHomeclOlietoschool WHAT!t $14,750 Listed Exclusively with For this adorable dream cot. &. shopping. Range & Oven It's no mistake! 2 complete tage with 4 rooms con1pletl'-included and drap.."'"Ci through homes on 1 R-2 lot. Lot ly done over, New bath, ne1Y out! How about $1 ,800 down alone wo1·th Sl0,00'.l, Live in kit<'he.n, new panelling, new payn1cnt! one. rent the other and have RE·AL TORS carpets, new paint, new roof WE SELL A HOME total payments of $100 a 673-4400 17th SL ohopping, 115,500. I' -' 2 ••• GI RESALE 241 0 le St. 5 4 8-8 6 4 2 m an e ... u ... nice U<:Ul'OOm Own/ St . J-lOME with a 2 bedroom 4 bdrms 2 ha.on corner lot. ag MONEY MAKER out back. Walk to elem & St. Franch; OLDER 2 BR l'louM?, 2 car Both units aro owner occu-Parochial School, No quail. gar. Lrg lot -suitable for pied and flawless. Situated fying . subn1if on cru;h down building. 545-6001 on a quiet street lined Col'· to low interest GI loan. Full S21.500. 3 BR 1~~ ba. $148/ ona def Mar street. Once price only $24,000. ino at 6%. Avail. immed. ~u've seen the rest-Come Paul Jones Realty Rltr. 642-9730 Eve 548-07'20 see the best. A Real Estat-847-1266 Eve. 536-6358 ers Exc111Sive. 1110 67J.8550 ~~~~~~~~~1 PRICED TO SELL Mesa Verde yds. to beach. Palioe decks 02'a"Rc-;::ho:coc:-,.,,-,.&-,g"arag.,-,-,-,. F"'l"'-- w/ocean vie1v. Nds.' paint, ro yard. No chilcfren $135 etc. Should gross $9,000 yr, mo. 176 E. Wilsoh. 642~ Pr. $69.900. Ccinsidel' trad~s. * COTTAGE l Bdr. Stove, MISSION REALTY 49-1-0731 rc!rig. UHi pd. $140. No e DISTRESS SALE e Pets. 545-0294, 557-&tOO. Oceanview home. Low' d0\\111 <I BR, large fenced yard to assume xlnt loan. 5 yr. Crpls & drps. $l85. old 3 BR. 1;4 ha. home. "lt 839---0547* Reduced to $41,500 PL;\CE REAL TY 494-9704 2 BR $150. 1st & last rent. Dana Point 1730 Pets. Child OK No garage, 20051 Cypress.· ~5044 , .. ·- • & Jo1v maintainance Jot. EVERY 31 MINUTES month or investors :rent, Where '!' Ea.stside Costa l\.Iesa w 1 k & L bo!h for monthly income of !!!!!!!!~"!"!~~"'!'"""'"' near 17th Street shopping, a er ee $178. Owner \Viii Cal'ry the WANT. A $17,950~ Small, clean· 3 Br, 1 ba, no gar. Nr Harbor. $3900 dn. ·34032 Coppe1· Lantern. &1"4905 Mesa Verde 3110 ' 1'860 Newport Blvd.,· CM CALL &16-39'28 Eves. 64-1-0345 UP FOR GRABS 2 HOUSES ON A LOT E,"cellcn1 Eastsidc Co s I a Mesa! Alley in rear for Boal or !railer access! Home P LUS In come? FULL PRICE $23,500. , .lo1v do11·n~ .How dOt's that grab you??? WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee ASSUME 2790 1-farbor Blvd. at Adams 54~65 opCn ·iii 9 r r.1 HAPPY FUTURE is prl'dicted ·for you in thls ve1·v aHrac income rpropcr- ly, ·This is1 a jiroper1y for an investment minddl 9urchas- cr. Buy laundromat inclucl. fixturcis and equip, Get rent fron1 1 other units to pay bills on loan. Good leases. To1al pt'iec $75,000. 1093 B<Lk<'r, C.M. loan, no loan fees. and low % rates. lfard lo beat! Dial WORKSHOP? no1v, 645-0303. 64S-0303 at 1-farbor Center 2299 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Big 5114o/o GI Loan to take ovl.'r. No increase in intel'l's!! Neat 4 BR on cor- ner w/fully equipped An- thony Pool. Extra bonus • just about 4 hicks to Pacific Ocean! Asking $3-l,950 but whnt's "your"' pri~! 'f'li+ll said! Tremendous Newport Heighll 3 bedroom, 2 bath with giant size family room, patio - clean as a pin throughout. Double garage with 10 x 20 woJ'ksbop spe.tt, Just 2 blocks from schools & shop- ping. $35,000. 646-7171 \-0 THE REAU \'."I.. Ep'.fATE~S ,, RENTALS ·Hoi.ises Furnished Renta ls to Share '2005 RESPONSIBLE Adult Io share l'C'nt or babysit for room & board. Must ha~ refs. 642-9797 or 642-9!131 EJ\IPLOYED Jady sh a re duplex near shopping Cdi\ol. 673-1862 , COTTAGE. nr Cleo St. Sch, 1..a·gunn, with e nl p Io ye d nial<'. S90 mo. 49~-9.131 Costa Mesa 2100 3 BR, 2 BA, family , rm, frplcs, bltns. $236 mo/be. No pets 673-8213 ' · Newport Beaih 3200 ---WATERFRONT Lux,,Apt. on the Penin, Ne1v 2· bdr .. 2 ba., pool. Lse. adults. Boat slips avail. Caribe Balboa, 310 Fer nando Rd., (Il4) 673-3003. Bayfront 3 & den. Pier, float. lmmac. $1200 month. MagnlfiC!!iit 4 Bdrm .. 4 bath vic1v hon1e. $1,000 mo. J ohn Macnab 642-8235 BLUFFS: Loveiy 3 BR & den. Crpts, drps, pools. Wlk to sto1x>.~. school, club, park. 1 BEDROOM house fumif:h· $315 mo. G75--4497 or ed witti garage._$145. month. 6-14--0449. 545-1657. CHARMING 3 BR, pool. ========= Bluffs, $325 .. 2 ·BR, patio, Newport Beach 2200 t rees, CO M $25 0 . FIREPLACE, Pool, 2 heir., 2 ha .. patio, adults.· BaytUde Village. Until July lsJ. $200. Call 642-&210 or 673-541!1, 6Ta-&»•1 -I YR Old 2 story home,NJi 3 BR, OR, den, frplc, 2 gar, $3%> .un-'365 furn. 64:i-2910 - C) U~SCllAMBti FOfll ANSWEfl . I I I I E 1· 'I I I ........ """""""'" ......... ~ SCRAM· LETS ANSW~RS IN CLASSIFICATION ~ 9000 ' • ' ' ' I l ) I ' . I ' I I I l • I • l • • I l ' • ' I I I • ·I ' I I I .,.,....._ ···-'·~· .• , •.. ,, 1•t•'"''' ,,,, • 11-"AllY P)LOT •U:NTA[I -Unt..mlsbod Tut$daf, .~ovtmbet 18, 19691 _) KENTALS RENTAlS • RENTALS llll!l--11!111-.. --l!li·-----l-------;;;,:;;;:::::;-:;-;:::-;;,:;:-:;.-;;;,:;:;;=-----1 Apt&. Fumlshod Apt&. uni..rnlllled -_A.:..•.;;•.;;a._u.;;.:..nlu;.;.:."'.:..lsl;;;L.;;'"";;;..-1"'" * ~ * * * ,_-~-· ... , ·-"'"' .... ., t•i.,lloM Nowport leach 4100'1--~.----Cotto -. 5100 • l'liilw AN Open 8:00 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. $30.00 Wk. Up Gonarol 5000 B/8 -e ...studlo & l Br Ap!i;. I ;:i;iii ... ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, • Kitchen & 'IV Incl h 'IOWNHOUSE I Bdnns., 2Wi baths. Adults only, F"at"f:s PoOI. im Mo. lay & Beoc:h Realty, Inc . !M)1 Dove r Dr .• NB Suite l.."ti saa.m Eves. ~8-6966 • Phone ~ice" Pool VEN DOME • Maid ,.,.,,,. av&il • e Day, ·v.:eek & Month lMMACUL,ATE APTSJ 2376 Newport Blvd, 548-9~ ADULT le FAMILY DARUNG 2 bdr. Upper. SECTIONS AVAD..ABLE Spacious newly Pa I n 1 ed. Close to 1hopplns, Perk New crpt & drps. \Valk to * Spacious S Br'• 2 8& _ Harbor ShOpng. Center. *Z Bedroom.I • u. H . h 3•10 Adults. No pets. $129.50. ~wport •19 ta • Phone 646--1571 or 646-5961 * Swim Pool, PuVcreen 3 BR, 2 BA, 1"edecomted. New bid pool. Nr schools & mkts. $280. (213) 421-1634 CHATEAU LA POJNTE * FrpJ. lndtv/lndry rac'la: Lo\·ely 2 Br furn apt, pool 1145 Anehelm Ave. • carport, adults no petli, Jl50 COSTA MESA 6'12-2824 2 BR apt. ctptl, drpt. blUna. rS135 Mo. •MS-1657• 2 BR, $L». Crpa, drpo, bltns. Pvt patio, encl pr, Adult1. Aft 6: 30. 54~11 E-S!de 2 BR ·duplex. gar, AduJtJ-no pets., $1 3 0. 548-9632 aft 3 pm. M1sa Verde 5110 2 BR. Cpls, drps. elec. bllnl. Garage. Adults, rm pell. A\'all 12/l. 84(j..of260 ~+~u~ill~.21w~1iPo;.,;;;m~Ma~.::_::_::1""'ii:i'i\'iiiiii"'liii~ii'iC"''I N_... •:...w.:..j>o...;.rt_S;.;.ho..:..'..:.."c...-.;..32"'-'20 1 BDR. '""' $125. M.,.. Apt. HARBOR GREENS Newport Beach "A" &11 Shalimar Dr. CM Arter 4 PM. 5200 3 Bdtm 2 Bath ttreplc, dbl garg. Walk to beach, $225. 66..anl after 6 PM -""' ' Wl...rdy1 Wann Whtoldyo_oorr St>ECIAl CWSIFICATIOlf'FOR HATURAl BORN SWAPPERS Spocltl Rote 5u--s11--s bucn • , --IU\.11 -f.I> MUIT fNCLUOI --... Myt .. '"*· A-Wllet 1IMI _. Ill .,.., ._YOUR ....... efl/f/., ........ ..... ·-of ........ ~1119. ......aTHINO f'Oa U.LI -TRAOEI OHi.Yi PHONE 642.5671 To Pl1ce Your Trlcfer'a P1recllM Ad Dover Shores •NASSAU PAL.VIS* 1 & 2 BR. Pool 3227 '17t E . 2'lnd St. 642--364~ 2 BR 2 bath. cpts, drpa, BACHEL01t unfurn 1 to m bit-Ins, D/W $16 5 /mo . SUO. Aho avall 1 -2 & 3 Neu Hoag Hospital-Mgr. &inn, Heated PQOls, child 4150.A Patrice Rd, NB care center, adJ to shopping. &12-1387 25' Owens cndRr A·l. new Level view lot. t...quna Nlaucl. Trade up for 1pts. ln Orange County. No pets. 3 BR 2 Ba SP motor. Radio, galley, bead. OOVER Shores VIE\V Home.1 _N_e_w~p_o_r_t_Bo_o_c_h __ 4_2_00_ 7700 P eterson \Vay '' ., ACIOUS, be.JI tank. ~value Will 9 to Noon S.turd•Y. -Closed Sunday DIAL DIRECT ••• 642-5678 WESTMINSTER le NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540:1220 Huntington llMch: 54G-1220 Loguno leach: 494-9-466 Hours-Re9uletion1-Deedline1 11iaoa11 ~ .. ,,._, tMuld chick fhllr .,.., Olly •IMI ,.,.rt lmm"9lattil1 orren ..._MllC~ THI DAILY PILOT ....... llablllty for ... ,., .... ,,. tG _ ~ ..,_, tf ,uWhhlftl the_Ml~t cornctly on• tlmo. . --~ DU.OLIN.I roa COPY AND kl LU1 S:M P.M. "" 11.,. w .... pRllc•fllf'I, •• ,.,, hf' w.-..... lllltlln ..... MeM•J MCtlON ....... cl01ln1 tlmo " S:M r.M. ,,....,, YOU MUIT HAVI KILL NUMllRI Wilen klllln9 an H becallM of ll\lkk results. M sure .. tnok• a r.coN of tftl klll num.W 9lve11 Jou 111 JOUr 14 t•k•r u verfflc.ttlft ., your all. Ivory offort la mMI• te klll er cerroct • new ad that hat Men orderld, bvt w. c•n- n9f 1Wr.,,,_ te 111 to Mntll the ad ha• •ppM!'M In tho ,.,.,., DIMl•A-L:INI M1 are ttnctly cash In llilllftfte• Illy mall •r 1t any °'" of aur offlc ... NO--TM DAILY PILOT NMrv• the rlgt.t to cleulfy, elllt, cenHr er refuN enr. od•or- tl........t, on.I t• ch1ng1 lh rahs oncl ...,v11tlon11 without prior not ce. I 3 Bd 750 Costa Mesa 546-0070 Crpts, drpg .. firepl., bit-Ins. trade 1ot Tn111t need. or ""-·1 conv. den, S · NeWJ)Ort Beach • l blk. to beach. ~-, , 6~ ,~, mo. Yeary ll'ue. locluding GRAND OPENING RENT • 640-4391. · · ,,..........., • Mr. Conrad R iviera Realty 499-2800 494-1330 Eve&. Mall Addnu: lox 1175, N9Wport loach, C.llfornlo 1' gardener. 642-7777 or IMMEDIATE 3 BR 2 ba WW trade. 1968 Yti.maba 67;>.4847 Bkr. OCCUPANCY 3sl9!,'5Fu&rniUtupre bit-Ins. i~r~~·Ntr;>!~ 3lfi motorcycle ln absolute- 2 BR. den townhouse $285 Luxury garden apartments lloag J-lospltal. Mgr. 4l50A ly .top shape FOR AH, Laguna, love:ly Crescent Ba.y, grf!at ocean vit;ws; 2 st)'. Meditt. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Va1. Jll2-M. Want Pacific Hghts. bOme San Fran. Bkr 494-3568 CLASSIPllD COUNTIRI .... lec•tld 11 tollew1: :? Br. hou5e brand ne19 $Z75 ottering complete privacy, l'Ionth-To.~tonlh Rentals Patrice Read NB W-4387 Spnle or other &mall car. 3 & Family nn., fumlshed, beautiful landscaping & un-WIDE SEl.£CTION ' Will incl l thn A helmet. avail. Dec. 10th $425 paralleled recreational facil· NO DEPOSIT 0 .A.C. 2 BR unfum apt. Jl5(). Patio 645-2660. Deily Pilot Classified Red Hill Rca!t..• 833-0820 HFRC F"rn,·1 R t I & pool. Crpt&, drps & bllnl.l :B~A"Y'"""VIEW== .. =-~,_.~ '·--o.. Palm Sp . ho '3 ilies In a coWltry club at· urc en as 1525 Placentia. -BluU&" ele-......,,,.,...., nngs me mosphcre, Nov' leasing in 517 W. 19th, 0.1 548-3481 1 ~==:==::=::::::====lg ant 3 BR, 3 BA, split level + pool + 2 inoome unlts. CLlSSIFIED INDEX Coron• dtl Mir 3250 CORONA JllGHLANDS. 2 BR. l1ti Ba Duplex. Avail Dec 1st. S235. 646-2290 or 1213) 944-1818 3 BR, fam rm, din. $450 mo 3 BR. 2 BA, 2 story $275 2 BR, den, ltplc $200 3 BR, 3 BA Luxul')' apt $325. University Realty. ~10 4 BR. 21,i Ba. duplex. T.W Sq. !t. Bltn&, dishwasher, lI'pi. $300 Mo. lease. 5'11}-7573 DELUXE 2 Br. 2 b\ks to beach, blt-ins. frpl. Unfurn. $265, turn J290. 67rr7488 2 BR. Drps. new epts, F.A. heat. Frpl. $3XI mo. Scenic Properties fii"a-5726 Bal bot 3300 _____ ,;_.;.;c 3 BDRP.f yrly $300 month Frank MRTShall Re a It y. 67>-4600 Lido Isl• 3351 \VRITER'S hKlea1>laY 2 Br for lease or sale. 213: 845-6628 or 8"45-9173 Newpc11 Beach. $185. 3 BR studio. Gar. frplc, East Bluff 5242 SIJ,<XX> eq, FOR 4. BR SQ :rANTCdMlneo. Callme.,.A~5859ts 1~ .. o.,r HOUS"$ FOR SALE RENTALS Furnished or unfurnished patio, R/O. Crpta. Children vtew. CdM Hlgh area or TD, O'rt-.... , Ii Models open 10 am to 8 pm &: jl<'ts 11·elcome. Bkr . e NEW DELUXE e income or ? 644-4265. 6:30 p.m. ••N•llAL •• Apts. Furnished Rents !rom $155 to S310. 534-6980 ' Br. 21,i ha apt. tor Jeue Trade Palm Sprlnat 2 -R-1 '60 Rambler Sta Wgn, A·l Cort.A ...... U• ~=H•llAL OAKWOOD $90. l BR, stove, nfrig, Iocl. spac. mastr. suite, din lots -$4.Q,000 cleat-. Pre-.. e shape. ~fetal office desk w/ MM•, .. ,. !!!,' ... , " 11• Ml~? ::i".S:. • dbl ID ·~ •• Ult MaW~AT t•ACH GARDEN "'/w, drps. Avail 11/18. rm. · garage, au · area near Riviera For in-4 chn, like new. Trade tor COLL••• l'AAIC 1111 H9Wl"OllT ff•IONTJ Bkr. 5.14-6980 door opener avail. Pool i come _ L.A. or ~nge Co carpeting or submit. H.Wl'OllT llN:M 1Ht NIWl'OllT IH,,1111 APARTMENTS $00. 1 Br, s tove & relrig, rec. atta. Nr. Catholic The neaI &taters 64&-nri 847-TI76 ::~:0°,..·~~~~·llTI ~:~: ::m~~~:Y ,. ..... Co I I Church. AduJts, no pets. H NIWl'O•T SHOlll tm BACK IAY 17~ 16th Slrect UPt' on y. Blue Beacon • ONLY $245 • AVE: Duplex in Corona 18 vending machinea, soups IAYClllST 1tu IAIT ILUl'I' ----71~'~' ~642,=.,-8=1~70'=--I 645--0111 865 Amigos Way, N.B. del Mar. WANT: S. ! ! unlts It bot drinks. Cost $1800. ::~~o:::.u :: ~:~::.: DlL MAR * BA YCLIFF $135. 2 Br duplex. Stove & NEW 7700 sq ft 3 BR & fam in N~eJCounM,J..:. Bia oom•Po/Un loca~~ Trade for lftlTCLll'I' ltM IAY tsl..&HOI .. frig Child-" 0 K m·... __., ........ ' car, or UU11t. HAIBO• HIOHLllNDI IUll LIOO !Ill MOT . '" . ' .. ~ rm, 3 BA. Owner's IWC apt " oo.7t0) '..1 ' 5'l8-Jl97 UNIVIAIITT PAllC 1:117 IAL.SOA 111..&ND El * Beacon 645-0111 752 Amip Way. 67"':>-50.33. • lllVINI 1n1 NUNTINGTOH 1aACH COMMERCIAL RATES ===;=~=====-1}lAVE: Commttdal lo t, '67 EL DORADO Cadillac, ::~~.~~;,. ~= ::~~T:~~c~AUIY $30 week & up. Kitchencttcs, 1 ;c;°';;;;';;";M;;;;•;;•;;•;;;;;:;;;;;;5;1;00;; Corona del Mir 5250 clear, Sl5,IMXI. Lake Arro,v-all extrQ +, low miles, 11 Ter. 1144 LONI tlACN TV's, maid service, heated head Sl0,000 clear. WANT xlnt cond. Trade down for 11tv1H1 TlllllACI ne OllAHO• couNTV al.-! COllONA Oll MAR 1111 OAlllO•N OllOVIE pool. 455 N. Newport Blvd. MERRIMAC WOODS _,,!"a.ne or income proper-tranlportation car or ??. tALIOA l'•NIN,UU '* Wl"STMINIT•• ""'"""" ..... Broker (II -0-. * .,. ,_, * ••ACOH IAY 1• M>DW•T ''" ......... ~ J ust completed, 1 or 2 BR. 2 ~. ~ ~.l ~ LINDA ISLI IJN SANTA ANA SINGLE Adults L u x u r y garden apts 11·lth country club atmosphere and com· plete privacy. SOUTH BA 'i a.us APTS. Irvine at 16lh. Newpol1 Beach. !TI4l &15-0550 BA with air cond, com· .,~ 75 Acres. Make a nice APPARE4 Ladies dress lllY ISL.ANOS 1UI SANVA AMA N•IONTI I -t -·---' i·' U ....,. ___ .._ "'-·"'---! 1 blk. .~ •·•~ k --..i LIOO ISi.a USI TUST IN p e..., y ,,.,,,... .... proo ....... se •rt• '""""'· DO:IUUllUll • ''""ii• CO·-·~ stoc ' 6""" •ALIOA nuNO ,.. COASTH. cleaning ovens. \l.'OOd ceil· aub. lots, Cit)' ot Elsinore, leue -l5hopping center. NUNTINITotl llACM ,.. UGUMA ••AC" ings. dish'washcr:s, I us h ON TEN ACRES trade for units or ? Box 695, Trade tor car, camper or 7 =~~~~~o:,..~:Taoull ;:. UGUNA H1ou1t. landscaping with !!'lteams & 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unfum Riverside, Calli 6J6.0042, 83().2945 11.t.L UACN 1• s"::~'~r,Mv~:?: watei'falls, elevators, BBQs, Fireplaces I priv. patios I 2 Rented homes, Mt. Wub-Lady's diamond cluster ~~~·::,. ·~~~. 11~s ::,~te~·~~ clubhouse, saunas, jacuzzi & Pools. Tennis • Contnt1 Bkfst. lngton L.A uo 000 -tr .. uity LONO llACH ,. COHOOMtNIUM swim pools, priv, gar. w/ 900 Sea La.ne, CdM 644-2611 ( cl• . ' ""'C ring, Large stones. Value utcewooo ',',." R"NTALS E IMacArthur·nr. ~.,. H-) IDnor .~~-Ca!WlU. or~W •• 8'hlnac •• ,.· $500. Trade for auto, trailer OllAHGI COUNTY ,. storage. verything new. ........ -J l&1IU ,... .. ~ -'1,? OUT Oil' COUNTY IMI A t u fu • L-..1 -••• .,, -.,, ... "" "" ~-"" ... --••• .... -_,. -· "" ... .... _,, _ .. -· ..,, .... "" .... .... ... 4111 ... .... -WATERFRONT Duplex· -downstairs, 2 hr. 1 ba. fireplace, gar. Side lie, no pets or inn. child. 6 mos or yrly. Avail 12/L Appl. Only -3601 Finley. !TI4) 833-11.34. Starting al "40. Adults A """~-v• OUT Oil' ITATI UM p .. " rnll"9'1111 •• SSIOC ur........,.., .,..,_.. ......,., """ ..,.,. O•M•llAL '* please. Just East ol 2600 COROLIDO APTS. 2 Br. • ~ or .._. .. ;rt;> STANTOlt U11 COSTA M•SA H• Harbor Blvd, next to Nabers Lower levels, studios, pent. Cruiit'r 31' w/,. Balboa Is-12 units clese to Harbor & :rJ~~~Nri;: ;!~! rt:.:"~v:,m~~lt:N :: cadillac at 425 Merrimac house, Frplcs., pool, dbl. land offshore moorilla. twin Newport, 01i Value $95,000, SANTA AHA 1,• ... • HIWflOltT HllOHn 1111 \Vay. 545-6300 carports, patios . .$180 . $220. screw, a uto plJot, fully Want home. Owner will car-~~~~~:NA MITI. "" NIWl'OaT IHOlll.•I 1ttt Huntin;ton Beach 3400 OCEAN Jo'RONT 1 BR. Spac1.,.,;,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,., I 673-3378 equlp'd, Trade for lot, Tn1't ry "--e'-. • -n V•''·rt rusTIN 1u1 WISTCLI,, n:11 J' .WI ''60 ..,_., ut: IMS UNIVallSITY PAlllC 1111 3 Bedl"OO!n5. 2 Baths. Fenc. kit & Hv r m. Nicely furn. GRAND OPENING LARGE, nr everything, 2 Br Deeds or ? ? 673-2431. Rltr. 548-ai88 a'nytime. :~:!:,:uSTIN 16H :!~:-:tJ,,. ~= ed, Built ins. Sl&l.00 l'Cnt, Shag crpt.. Bachcl_or only. THE VICTORIAN upper, carpets, draJ>C!5, re-i * s1Lva11Aoo CMf'l'OM l~ COllONA o•l MA• tut Sharp House. ~~0· incl util. l213) New, large 2 BR. l~ BA. SlSO j'~,;~--~·i"~"""!'!·~·~-~~·~-iN~l~CE~·11~~'1"'11~~~!!!!*!!!!!!!!~!*!!'!!!!':!~*~!"!!!!!!*!!l ~:~~ ~LKL~ ,',.* ::;•:taNol :: WALKER & LEE Adults only. Crpts-drps-bltns. Adults. lease $180. 673·2755 uouNA !'IACN LIOO l5L• mt 842-4455 BACHELOR apt.. employed Sound proofed, pri gar w/ BEAUTlfULLY appointed 2 REAL ESTATE ..._ RIAL ESTATE ';.:1~~1~~ ':,.'1~~:L im HUNTINOTOtl IIACN J4M adult only. $75. 1216 w. stot'8.ge. Fenced yd w/pa.tio. BR, 2 BA view apt ........... __ Go_ .. _,_._1_____ Gener11 SAN cL•MENTIE ~~ l'OUNTAIN VALLIY J•ll HOUSE .~or lse. 3 BR, 2 BA. Balboa Blvd. t!.7 5-7 8 76, Water pd. Gardener 1nain· ... JU 1· S,1,H JUAN CAPISTRANO Int llUOA ·~UNO JS!t Nice location. Walk to beach 494-9'171 2511 Ocean. 544-3606 -CAl'llTRAMO llACM tns t~~~ ~-.~t.. = •')')ft 1a11led. 667 Victoria St. R 1 1 W 5990 Bu1lneu Rent1I 6060 oANA l'OINT ,,,. oaAHOI couMn • .__ &. schools .......... mo. 962-7864 APTS: 1 BR furn &. 2 BR un-, _ ..... __ ,,.________ SMALL 1 BR. View s . of •n I I anted <.AlllLSl'D I , ....... OAllO•H 01.0VI ;a or 54&-7llZ1 •. Jiwy. New ............ ts &•----------OC•ANSIOI WUTMl•ST• furn. No children or pets. ASK A~OUT OUR ....... ,.,.. • BEAUTIFUL Studio f o r SAN DllOO tm • "11 BRAND new channing 3 BR. .,.,.,.,,, l£th St. N.B . .,A., A~A g drapes. $100. 6~. •ivaa,ioa COUWT"t t• MIDWAY crrr u 11 ~ '7W""t<JU'I ..----Voice, Guitar, Piano. Reas. • •• TO •• MOVSO INilTA AHA NM 2 BA. New crpts & dtps 1 BR large. Near ocean. DISCOUNT PLAN LARGE New 2 BR, 2 BA ~ RenL ~=OOMINIUM ;: SANTA AM NllOHTS M• thru~t. Walk 10 beach. Upctairs. S150 Yr:!y. UW pd. Spac .. 2 Br, 2 Ba apt_ New plus den. Crpls,,drps, bltns. ~ RENTAL FINDERS Call--541)...346() DUl'Ll:Xt!' '•• IALI "" .. ~l1~~L :: $?15. n10. 8424466-0 r View. 112-m67 . Al'AllTMINTI PO• IAUI UGUMA ti.ACM ,,. 962-2017 Sundeck. 673-8088 drapes, new r;hag crptingl==='========'I ""T• L ••••* STORE for leue UOO sq. fl. U.CJUNA H10UIL SJtJ L·==co-...--,~~--=c--1 WATERFRONT 2 BR, patio, thruout. 1 1 ~ mi N. of So. 1 "d I I :=i---• •· '""' CMt• ._ in shop ctr on 17th st. Co•la RENTA'S M11s10N v11Jo J1011 3 BDRM 2 bath home Glen Coa t Pl $1'" 2101 " i...I 0 • • 5351 ·-~ '4M111 ... S,1,H CLaMlNTI 1711 boat dock . Ye a r J y ~.. az.a, ""· ""' ... 1--~uu1•1m "'"''"'"" 1\1esa. Call da.y 494-9615 nlte Housn Fuml1L-.. SAN JUAN CAl'llYllANO sns ~far area. Family with 2 p ...---- 0 lease. * 673-!KIGO aCJ ic. LARGE 2 Br, r;tudy, 1%. Ba., ' --..._ •-11 mfltta 962-3883 oaH1aAL nM DANA l'OINT n• children .K J2Zl/mo. Rltr. WANTED ffidg UNTAU TO SMAll:I _, REAL ESTATE, 546-4141 $150 1 BR furn apt. Crpt.s, frplc, crpts, drps, annual, . ; • in C.ltf. ·~ COITA MISA 11M 4 LARGE BR. 2 BA. frplc, drps, bltns. Pool. 1525 fairway Villa AptS adults, no pets. OR J..7502. * H=ALS WANTED ~ ~~·ftWri. ~~ah!Dalle !or :::: ::~o~" ::: nu~'!.·~ '"' new cpts & drps, dbl gar, P lacentla. Huntington Baoch 5400 * DUPLEXES -e ~"'ii• "" Y coLL•o• l'AlllC 1111 CONDOMINIUM "" f ~ ba k yd •= 962 -YRLY bd N Q Co · & PUot Box •M-690 NIWl'OlllT llACN tMI aaNTALS WAHTIED J"' en....... c . ....... ........... l rm furn apt. % ear range Airport "-"-'-"'"-'"'-..::;:.:.;::.:...:.;.:.:1 • GUEST HOUSES NIWl'OllY MOTS. till ROOMS l'Gll 111.lHT "9J blk from heh .;. pier. 1 UCI. Adc..!ts only. 20122 2 BDRMS 2 BATH * APARTMENTS ROOM Suitable for gift shop, NIW,OllT SNOllll nM aooM a 10A11D ,... Fountain V1lley 3410 adulL 20061A Court Ave. NB Santa Ana Ave, 540.2i96 • • FREE SERVICE men's shop or ladJes shop. IAYSHM.1:1 nu MOTILI, TRAIL•• COURTS ....., Call J im BerkShire. 673-. 9405 oov•• Sl'Ol•S mJ GUEST NOM•S JM C d GOLDEN WEST RENTALS w•tTCLll'I' m1 M15C. atNTALJ "" 3 BR. 2¥.: Ba. FIR, bltns, oron1 •I Mir 4250 NEW APTS. Slao/Mo. HEATED POOL SJG..6600 SJ'ORE tor lease, 1500 sq. ft. uN1v.•srn ,Aaic nrr 1HC0M• ,.._o,.aaTT ... CID. Xtras. Family & pet• •150 & fncd, cpVdf'P!, Kids OK Oceanfront at N-~ p· 1•v1H1 n. 1u11N•st P•oP111TT .. I W • h pd~ cozy Ground floor 2 Br with • $175 YOUNG w~" .. c oupl e ........... ser. IACK •AY ., ... Tlll!JL•ll l'AAKI HD we come. tr tras . . Delaware Studio Apls. Ul.>U • .., ~7566 •MT ILUllfl '"' IUSIN•SS ••NTAL , ... Lse $2511. 17961 Bay St (oH 1.1replace. close lo shop'g. 1 ': 2 bdr., 2 swim. pools. All 2620 Dela H B Caoon to be three!} wish lo I~~--------11 T•,.. n 44 Ol',ICI a•HTAL ftll Talbert) Adulh1 onJy. no p e t s, util. pd. Adlts, only, no pets. ,,A,,,_,., anytlm"'."",• ~,,,·1816 rent 2 BR unfurnished house 600 sq. fl. at 828 W. 19th St., 111v1NE T11111Ace t1u tHousT111AL '"ol'llTY "" St.,, •• k $170 Furn il d .~ 0•• 3535 _u.. -c .. A·-" Dee 1 .... CORONA OIL MAil nH COMM•llCIAL ... . uuc-n.., 0 mo. . er; ......... U"U -with yard. Up to $140: mo. ....... V<U> • .a.:n. IALIOA ,,. INOVJTlllAL •INTAL .... 3 BDR. 2 &. 1'~enced yd. deck, fireplace, carpet, drapes, bit-Ins. \Vate.r, garbage & gardener paid. $23.5. $8-7356 Hal Pinchin Real!or 675-4392 301 Avocado St.. CM l BEDROOM 2 BATH. newly ~g..7949 * 548-1768 * IAT ISU.NOI Uff LDn .,., decorated, cpls, drape s .I-""~==~=~~-LIOO llL• 2151 llAHCNll •IM 2 BR, furnisher, f1·plc, Util DELUXE 1 heir. Range & Bullt~ins. 1 blk to 5 Point e LANDLORDS e Olflco Rtnltl 6070 tALIOA 11UMD 1m CITllUS 01tov11 4111 pd $210 mo, oven, dishwasher, crpl & """""E RENTAL SERVICE HUNTINGTON IIAC" , ... ACll•AGI '2°' stores. $140 per, mo. 7681 .l'n.c,. l'OUNTAIN VAU•T ,.1. I.MCI •UINOlll! ,,., University Realty drps. Elec. pd. S\\1m. pool Ellis. ApL A o-o lor ,-•. ,._,o-,~B~ro~"",c.~!134-6982c;.:.,=::.___ LAGUNA BEACH l l:AL tlACN '"' ••so•T ,.O,lllT"I' •ttS 4 BR SPANISH TO\VNHSE, PClOL & REC. S~. LONG TER~f DISC. 962-71l6 673-6510 & gar. Adll. living. $140 8 .,.. •r,. LONG taACH UM Oil.ANO• CO. PllOl'lllTl' •2111 241 w w·1so :H8--0745 spection daily, 642-2835 or • ~"'ree Renl&l SPrvice • Air ConditionMI OllANoe COUNTY 2t11 OUT o, ITAT• l'llOI'. '* LARGE r..tOD BACHELOR mo. . I n. 8'12-8303 Broken; I Mgrs, I Owne1'1!i ON FORES? AVENUE IANTA ANA Ull MOUNTAIN & D•StllT •111 Beautifully furn. all ulil pd. '_o_r_67'--5.555 __ -_______ Pro rti w t ...... W'•STMIHSTl"lll MU SUIOIVISION UNO •212 •· LOVELY unfurn 1 BR, l BA pe es es ~1642 u.::sk space available In M10WA'+' crTT '"' lll!AL etTATI se1tvica ''" :==S=l=OO=m=0=-=,,,..==2266====1GARAGE Apt: new 1 BR. v.pt.. Crpts " drps, w/bltn neweat office building at SANTA ANA HllONTS UM ..... EXCHANOI '™ Be h 3705 Drps, crpts, stove & reft'ig, Condomlnlu 5950 ··-· locatloo in downtown COASTAL ,,. R. L WANTED flM L1gun1 IC dshwhr, ga& stove & oven, m ~1111 UOUNA •IEACN UIS -.c:.;. ___ .:.;.c_ _ _;_.;_ Balboa 4300 Quiet & private. fllature '·-· "'-h Ai di , "" -···~"-"-----.:.:..:.:1 garbage displ. call eves aft MOVING • Mu•! ,,,,. Ma.5 .. na e<!8C . r con . LAGUNA NIOU L LARGE, newly redec. 1-Br. --adult. no children or pets. . tioned ........... _.. L -tl"·' MISSION v1aJo 2111 CLEAN Ba he! A ( "" 6, 842-Sm. •--wn• •. FHA loan on , -...... ~. ut:au •w ''' <'lMEHTI in• dupl.x-n-,n .,·,w. Aduil•, i c or P s. st~v, ·water pd. 1&15 Tustin ~ JJJ t F tag • BUSINESS ind FINANCIAl ....... .,, JI "I . f!n ranees: ton e on .,.,,. JUAN CAl'tSTllANO rm no pets. $175 mo. yearly. A uu 111<:! S85 up Ave., Cfll. 548-1618 MODERN 2 BR. elegant 4 heir. 3 be. condo. Forest Ave., rear leads to CAl'ISTllANO 11AcN tnt IUStMfSI WANTaO INVl lTMaNT °""whlnlt1n IUSIN8SS Ofll'OATUNITtlt IHVISTMINT WANTaO MONIY TO LOllll flllllOHAL LOANS JaWILllY LOANS COLUT•AAL LOAltS "'' "" .... PLACE REALTY <IM-9704 B~AE. Balboa Blvd. VILLA MESA APTS No pets. St35 Mon1h. Swim pool, tennis crt. \Valk tiotuDCipal parking lots, S50 ~f.:.A._:.:~ouNTT :: ________ 673-_9'_15"2 BR unrum, pri patios, htd 2616 England St. 968-3089 to schools & shopg. 5 min to per month for space. Desk VACATION lllNTAU "" •Ill Lagunl Nlgu1I 3707 YEARLY I BR furn apt. pool 2 car encl·d gar Chil-2 Bclnn Townhouse, 1"' bath, freeway & bch. SZl7 a mo. and ehain available for ss. CONOOM1NIUM :nff I""-""-''--'"-''----Patio, pri heh. Util pd. $125 dre~ welcome, no ·pe 11 w/d, refr. crpts. drps, $165. for everything. 968-6164 Business hours answering OUPLl:Xll 'vaM. StJt "" •IU ... ... ;mi.{ Century living! Cmwn 928 E Balboa Bl d 96'2784 I U bl mo. • v . please• Sl60 Also furn $185 mo, ~ serv ce ava a e for $10. RENTALS ~~e:le~.g~and.,!.ac~ :RPoo~ 673-6700 ng w.' wn~. 646-l2Sl · 2 & 3 BDKMS, 2 BA, pvt Rooms for R1nt 5995 All utilities paid except HoUHt Unfumlihed privg. $250. 495-0124 Huntington Beach 4400 LA PALMAS APTS. patio, heated J>OOl. washer PRN. nn w/ba & entr. t!.lep~~iLY PILOT GIMIUL lllAL alTATa LOANS MOllTGliGIS, Tm! Dwfl MOHIT WANT•O "" .... , .... Mission Viojo 3708 3 BEDROOM, 2 littplace. Ira: !ncd·ln yrrj. Air/Cond. $300 mo. 837·5676 i<~Nl AL:t Apts. Furnished G.ner1I 4000 The GORGEOUS New VAL D'ISERE ---New 2 Br .. 1\.ii baths: cpts.. hook up. 96U9!H Oceanside of Hwy, CdM. 222 FORFSI' AVENUE ~W,.A :;,~·~ .. HEY SURFERS! drapes, dishwasher. Enclos-CLEAN 2 BR studio. Adults. fllature male only $21 wk. LAGUNA BEAQI MESA vellDI Bachelor apt!; across Jrom ed garage. Sl50-S155. &e at $150. mo. No pets. 673--5799 49+9466 coLL•oe l'AllC I~~=~------NIWPOllT llACN beach. Util pd. St.art $12.i. 760 \V. \Vilson ~S-6731 * 842-4004 • J15 WK " up W/ kitchen. N•Wl'OllT NOTS. per mo. Call Mon, U1ru F ri. BRAND N e w 1 & 2 BR. =========:=I U). wk studio apt. 2376 1600 NEWHaT SHOllll "~,,-s I A 56"0 •AVlt401llS ....,.,... '" W/\V cpti::, all bltns incl. an• na £ Newport mvd. StS-.9756. oovll!• '"oa•J. OCEANFRONT View self cleaning oven. Patios. FURNISHED 51 Ing Square Fe.f, wasTCL1'" CAN'T BE BEAT' "P rm., LUXURY OFFICE """'"" •••• sundt"Ck, beach, new spec. garages. Adults. &15-2108. • rest rm. !acllilies, close--ln, t•T•W• dlx 2 BR, elegant fum. 377 \V. Wilson. PRIVATE-QUIET C.ltt. $61). mo/ 646-8t64 tACIC IAY mtn llo ind ho APr GARDEN LIVING ======'=='::i:=o I •MT tLUl'll' •. pa ·• ry, nr s P5 NEW 2 bdr. upt. I-Ast ,;,,, ····-'lh IEI T-& S2l Ad It bah NI 2 BR 2 BA all T I .._,.uvnt WI wet bar, 111:v1HI Tl•IACI pier. ::>. u s, y crpt5, drps, b It-ins . ce area, • Motels. r r. cm. 5997 Riddl1 & Rosi Rltrs. COACMllA DA\. MAR • OK. 53&-2131 Dishwasher, encl. gnr. l)nv elec. Fully insulated, eound AL•OA Proofed, iody',.d r,,, I• g WEEKLY rates Sea Lark * ~122$ * : ... Y 111..&NOS BACHELOR & t BR furn. patio. Ca.II -&12--02;>7. u =:=' Sf.~, I h~2 b>" Fum-unf JWtn. 1~ ,q " fimr ·--. tl1otel, 2301 Nll'"""'"l IDvd., . LIDO ftL8 ''6' • " • $140 up, Adult!!, nn pets. SPUT-level 2 Bn. Crpl!i, uw " ""' •'~'"· Co.s M -....-' IALIOA Ill.IMO Sauna, Act'y Rm, Billiards 17301 Kee.l.'Jon Ln . 8·12-7848 d-RIO I" B' Siu. 72 sq ft cl09et space. Crpll, ..,,,..''==-'-= .. ==~===1 1000 Sq r.--· NIWl"OllT WIST 4100 ..... _ " ·-· ....... 1 son.. ...... • • I\ ........ dr-ns, air cond. Forced air SAN"c o~s TRAILER COURT uare r99'I' M·•NTINOTON tlACN ltJC:"r:lPY J , ....... , .......,. (Wei;;t of Beach nr Slater). Adults, no pets. 2385 ?-len· •. " Offic s ' "UNTtNOTON MAAIOU• 2IXX> Parsons Rd. 642~ 2 BR. l um. lrplc. 2 DR, doza Dr. 5.15--5421 ~r::'.n~S::!i:S~~~ & rec ~~ avail now, Call e pace Avail ,~;~':~~c~ALLIY J1&i. 3 Br, 1~ Ba TO\l."llhse. bltlns, crpt.s, drpa. 222 3rd LGE. 2 k 3 Br. Cp13., dl"ps. HIDDEN VILLAGE ~:::',Hu.~"i.8¥8 \V/W, drpg_. pool. Many SL 5.16-6321. early AJ\1. pool, Kids & sn1all pets GARDEN APTS. Misc. Rent1l1 5999 :e 175'~~s~~lt, ~l.B. OUM•• cou•T"Y xtra.s, avail now. Bkr. r·uRNtSHEO 2 BR. O.K. 1998 Maple A11t. 3 ~ SANTA AMA 534-6911> 2500 E. Salta, Santa Ana WllTMINITll downtown Hnlg Bch 526 f>.tS-2808 -546-1525 GARAGE $20 mo. MIOWAY crrt $125. 1 Br. Crpts, drps, Y..faln SI., 536-7396-• ,__________ 2317 Elden, CM. DELUXE 200 ""' rt, office IANTA ANA NlllHTI 1028 El Con1ino Drh·e ,,~..,......... suite tn COl"Ol'll del J\tar CO.UTAL bltins. Near town, adults. Del 3 BR 2 DA 1 S A H • ht S630 *'"~* u.OWNA at:.t.CN Blue Deacon 645-0lll Oran-County 4600 ux~ ' ;1p · :~·_:n:•:.;:•:1~V!:'.~'-...:'.:'.~I;':':::':"'';:':':'."::"'=:'::': I prestige Joe. New carpels &: LAGUNA tt1ou1L •· ()rps, w/w cpts. MS-3481 or I p rty 6000 drapes -prlv. puiUng M1UIC* 1111JO J135. J Br pool W/W drps 5'1()...(1154 SPACIOUS 2 BR duplox, _ncomt rope Re MN CLIMllllTI ' ' · · SINGLE adulllS. I u x u r y · · · aloni>mk::s Corp, 675-6700 CAPISTllANO Singlet Wl!:lcomc. Broker garden ;ipts, ,v/full rcctt•· A'l'TftACTIVE·rlr.an 2 BR. bltns, crpts, fenced. COSTA P.1eaa home I-9 units OOSl'A ?.Ina offices. A/C, cArllT"-'"'o ••ArA 534-6980 _ lion facilit;e;'· & coml)lt!lf' rrpts. dT))I!, bltns, carport. $l2S * 5"5-l506 p1us room to bid. St25,{XX), crpta. drps. Patklne. '\rery ~:::O::~~M priv11ry. Soulh BIU' Cub Adults. no JK'ls. $13 5. 571\1 20% dn, Owner 5-48-i007 nice offices. 1555 Baker, oUPLIXll UH'"''"- Ap11. -m So. 1Jrook11url11, 54H769 L1_gun1 81ac~ "'"' -... T. • ~ = ANNOUNCEMENTS ::: ind NOTICES Jlll l'OUND ,,,_ IMhJ ... ,.., l'llf 1'1111.SGMAU )ltl AMHOUNCIMINTI JIH 11111.TNI 1131 llUtt•llALS tut l'AIO OllTUAAY m1 flUN•••t. DlllaCTOllJ lnl flLOlllSTI ti* CAltO Ofll THAlllKI tM1 1111 MmMOlllAlrl JI CIMI TallY LOTS n:: CaMITlllT CATl'n mt ClllMATOllll:S JM MIMOAIAL ltAlllCS l)M A~TIONI »11 AVIATION llllVICI TllAVeL ::. AIR TAANll'OATITION Mfl AUTO TAANl~llTATIOl'I' Ml LIGAl HOTIC•I "41t Hiii.MAN & TWTOlllHO -.... -"" "" .... .... .... .... ... ''" _,, "" ... .... ... •<» MU ---... -MN SERVICE DIRECTO~Y -"" MM ... ... •• "" "" "" '"' "" .,, "" ... -•• At;COUNTINO UM AHSW•Jll Ne llAYte• •H& Al'l'Llllllll'I llaPAlllS. ''"' I'll AflPll:All lNG ffll ASl'K•l f 01'1 •Ill /,llCKIY•CTUAAL llllVICB •us AUfO llll'Allll ISM AUTO. 1111 Ian .. T-•k. .s .. IAIYSITTINO "M I OAT MAINTl"NlltCa "" IJllClt. MAJOHllY, .tc. 1J.U •u11111s1 llAVtclS 011 I UILDlllJ 'J7t CATllllHI •1n CAllH ITMAlrtNe '611 CAl,I NTIAINO aJM CaM•NT• c-rttt Ull CHILO CAlll, LktltMf UU CONTllACTOAS "1t Cl.lll~IT CLIEANINe "" C.tlll'IT UVINO a •• ,Al8 Mfo ORA,lllllES ..ai O•MOLITION ~ ORAl'TINO Jl!:llVICI 6'>1 lLl!:CTlllCAL ..... lOUIPMEHT AaMTALI Ult ... NCING H4f flL.OORS "'9 l'UlllNACI ll•~AlllS, lie., "11 'UAHITUllE lll:STOAIN"e & lll,IHllNINO Mn GA.l:OaHINO a. O•NlllAL SlllYICll 4'ct GllAOINca,, OISCINO "8 OU.SI UM OR••N TNUMI 1ne OUN IHOP •lit H•.tlTH CLUll '"' NAULIHG •7M HOUlaCLIANOIO •7U IHTaltlOll OlCOllATIH• •JJ7 IHCOM• TAX ""' iao•, Ol'llll....-.. l'tl. ,,,. lllOHIHO '"" IM~LIUTINI "" INSUAAM<l fTl't IHVISTIGATIN .. ~ ,,. JANITOlllAL ,,,. J•W•LAT lllil'Alll. ltc. "'9 LANOSCA,INO '"' LOCKSMITH '«2t M.tSONllY, llllClr UH MOVINO & STOllAO• ~ PAINTING, 1'1~11111 UM l'AINTINO. Slpt Md l'ATIOI 4144 l'HOTOOllA'lfT U)t PU.STlllllNO. Plldl, R•lr , .. l'LUMllHO ''" flST GllOOMIHO ,,.. l'OOL llllVICE ltll l"OWll IWlll'INI '9U PUMI' S•RVICI ffH •OOl'ING •tJf RADIO, A•palrs. •1<. •tM lt•MOOl:LINO & All'Alll ffOO At:MOOlLING, ICITC"l:HI 'td l$Mr1 ,..,... "" l •WIHG ,, .. llWINQ MACNIMI! •lPAlllS 6K! 1al'TIC Tl!HKS. S..... lie. 6"'-! TAILOll1HG '"' TallMITI!: CONTIOL "" TILl, C....mlc 4'14 TILi , Ll11ol.urn & Martt. '"' TAil St:RVICl •FM TaL•VISION, 11.,.11 .. ltc. •m U,Kt>LITl.AY '"' WIELDING 6nt WINDOW CLIANINO -• m 1 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Jo• WANno, Mfll Joa WANTl D. ·-JOI WllllTlO, MlN & WOMlN ICHOOU & INSTRUCTION JOI 'ltlPAllAT ION T"EATIUCAL "" "" "" "" •M .... MERCHANDISE ,OR SAlE AND TRADE l'UllNITUlll -Ol"fllC• l'UllHITUlla •ll Ol'fllCI l"QUll'MENT •11 ITOll• IOUlflMENT •12 CA,1, ll•5TAUANi!T MH IAA l!OIJll'M•NT lfll HOU,liHOLO OOCIOS ltH OAllAGl SALi IOtt flUllNITUlll: AUCTION 1tU it,PPLIAH CaS 1111 ANTIQUIS 1111 S•WIHG MACtflNIS 11211 MUSICAL INSTlllUMINT llH l'IANOS & Oll:GANI llMr, llADIO tM1 T•LIVlllOlll 12" lfl·il'I & ITllllO hll TAI'• lll!COltDlllS 1211 CAMl:llAS & IOU1,MINT UH HO•IT SUl'l'LllS Mii fl'OllTINO GOOOI ISIO 11NOCUl..&llS. SCOl'IJ ISSt MllCILU.NaOUI 1'0f MISC.. WANTIO "" MACHIHlllY, ltc. 11!JI LUMllA llM ' JTOllAGI tri; IUtLOIMG MATlllllAU l'H IWAl'I Im PETS and LIVESTOCK PITS, GENEllAL .... CATI ttJI DOGS 11H HOll:Jl:J llM LIV8JT0CI( .. CALIFORNIA LIVING NUllSllllES "11 SWIMMING POOLS lt!JI l'ATIOI nu AWNIHOS • 1tttt VACATIONS tttf TRANSPORTATION IGATI I YACHTS ... SAILIOATS tt11 l'OWIA ClllUISaas ... S~•lO-JKI IOATI tt)I 90AT TllAILl!llS _,, IGllT MAINTlHANCa ttU IOAT UUHCl11HG ttl4 , Mll.llllH• IQUll'. HU IOAT SLll', M001l1N0 tOJt 10-T IEAVICIS tdl ' I OAT ttaNTALS ~· IOAT CHAllTEA tut ' l'llHUIG 10.•TJ tMf ' IOAT MOVING KO IGAT STOl.AGa K41 IOITS WANTED fOSI AlllCllA'T tlM l'L YIHO L•SSON.S t!S• MOAILIE MCIM~S ,,.. , MOTOR HOMIS ft\J l tCYCLll "11 \ •LICTlltC CAAi ftjf 1 MINI ltllES ----n• MOTOllCTC1.as ... ~ MOTOt JCOOT,llS "" AUTO SlllVtCES a l'A llTI t• AUTO TOOLS I lQloltl'. t•ll I tAA ILlll, TllAVEL HU TltAtLl:llS. u11111y tu• I 1"11UCICS tSOI 1 1a1Ps ''" I CAMP•RS Hft CAM,811 llENTALS •111 I ' DUH• auoo1es '"' IMl'OllTIO IUTOS Mot Sl'OllT CAll:S ' "'II ! ANT IOU•S. CUSllC.S fl1J ll:ACa CAllS, 11001 Htttn11 , AUTO IYIENTS ,......_ AUTOS W&NTIO "'If NEW CAllS .... A.UTO LIAllNe tflt Ull!D UlJ .... S15S ~ ATrRACTIVE.1 bd"r,. pobl. utU paid, p.rden ltv· Inc, adull1 no ptta. 1800 Wall&ee Ave .. C.M. Anahc!<iDl (714) 772-4500 $250. NEW dellL'<e l Br, nr J BDR~t. Nr, town & bc:h. Busin"s Property 6050 BAY LIDO BU>G F'rwy & a/-.op'1. frp l c., SlSO 1no. tnq. 1020 So.. Crlcow.t. Comtr. Pcrlcct for 3700NewportN.B. HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR G1rdtn Grove 4610 dishwhr, lrst pnl io. locked 1£wy. or 4~ shop~ ttn!tt. l?iOxnl. All O!fiees available. ltrn :l'.11. · ., ,, FURN 1 a.· duplu: S98 mo. Utll pd.. 1 car pr. D:> Siorltl: ~ LARC E blu:!hr.lor w / 1 e p titchc4. NlctlY turn. fl3:>. !8Bi Mendom Dr. S45-6l21 SJNGLE Ad~ll Lu x ury gar. Adults. 546-<I0\6 LARG.E 1 llr apl w/w util. in. SigMI •t corner. 61'S-2t64 or 5-t1..sc:J32 iartk'n nprs with countni 1 BR duplex, earage. 1\dult&. crptlng, util pd Sl95 mo, Isl VletorvUlc area. Box... 18, 750 SQ ft dowfttGwrt--C.M. -T!LJE HIDDEN DOLLARS elub t1tmosphcrl' and com· No ,,eta. $100. n10. I last mo'1, ttnL "9!J-4017 OntariO, Calif. frontage. Plentiful parktna:. n plllt~ pr1v1u·y. SOUTH DA'( -•54~1 • \Vhlle el~phantsl Dime-a-line TIIE SUN N',EV=E=R-s"i:r=s~o-n 1834 Newport Blvd. CLUB APTS 13100 Cls.pman IM~IAC. 2 br. crrl!I. Jrpii. White l:'.lcph11nt1! 1J1mc-a-011ulf1ed·s Action poWt'r. 2 .. ~.~~slu-"?At.!1 .... a~!,w•,..n,"",,_ IN y· _ OUR HOME LATELY?. A\.'I!., Gank'n Crovt (714) b.lt·ltts. beamal rcll. Adult$. line DAILY PiLOT WANT For an ad to &ell uwnd the , .. ..,.. "_..._..., .., 6J6.3030 No pet•'. $140. ~ ADI'=' ('kick. dlaJ 642-5678. ~ Cftntf!r St. fupstr!I> G.M. i i!IJ~~.~~ ' ' ) -.,.-:..--:=----·---;-~ -----~----~~~-~ UAL mATI -· IUS1NllS ..... F'"'NANCIAL Office -I· 4070 ..... °"'"!"'!"* .. sroRE. attic. .• dt•Jc 1pm.ce ~. Pirnr ua Nnport Blvd.,'-°' -lndu111'11I Rent1I 6090 NEW BUILDING 1260 Loran Ave., O>tt& Mia Each unit 1~ 1q ft, 2 off· icer, 2 rest rooms, 110/220 electric. Ample parklna:. C. Robert Nattreet Ree.lklr Ont& Mesa 642-148:5 AUT~OTIVI DIALER When You Wont it done right ..... Coll one of the experts listed below/I_ PALMISTRY &. REG. Nune avail ln home where prof. 1ervice I• ~-CARD READINGS e.i Broli;l!!n hrl. u nectu. Bring Your 'roblems f9 Rel'•· Own trans. 645-17911 !!RVICE DIRECTORY SERVICI DIRECTORY SIRYICI DIRECTORY Mo _ t W!ll H1lp y.., .a...i.1tt 011 "20 11....0. I I .... u. B I k 6i30 Solve Thim. --.-~----".;;::.r;:..:: I I -...,,, .. --mmMft!J, r c ... l give advice on an ma~tlfJ'S Job w.n, .... BUfFUM'S NEWPORT Now lnterv5ewl.,. * COOK Full 111.,.1 * Excellent compaey benetltJ. Apply In pet'IOll only #1 Fashion Island betv;een 2 • 5 P .M. OITICE &: factory space, available for aub-lea1e . Rede(a'a.ted offit"e le-2000 &q ft laciDrJ space. Good loca· Hon. 905 w. 16th St., Newport Beach, rent negotiable. Call 66-1221 or 645-1222 Active with $25,(D) to invt1t. Oranae C.ounty exclusive. TOP in tleld, 25 yrs Nation- ~. Extremely high return, plus exedlent salary. Prin- cipal aelected must have managerial bacllirnund. Au. tomotlve experience not necessary. Will train. Your !nve1d&adon welcomtd. Call fol' appt, for this oftce in a liletin1e, exceptional OJ>PCIT'" tunlty. Ken Cittord (114' '7Tl-1U50. SEALING & PATCHING ELECTRICAL ....ice & RICHARD ALLEN of Hft, .ueh u 10,., court. -R w-7030 ~sldent.lal -Indus. Comc'l repair, " bra. 1 da,}-a. No ship, maITlage, divon:e. bus. CHINESE live-In Domntlcs. !---------E XCEPT!ONAL EARN· Compl ttu 1erv. Currently job too mWI. Re-model & Custom A Spenlih lncu tranaactionl of all Pennanent. Experienced. COOKS 2'iOO Sq. ft. U:iO per mo. Incl. f office&. Immediate Q> cupancy. 16th St, N.8. 64U210 or 613-5419 INGS. Part • time snack engaged by City 01 c.M. IDr additiona, u It'• eltctrlcal, Masonry A Speclaltyl klnd1. Reunite the separ. Far East AJency routes. Av~ in many areu. 1treet re1toraHon. we nx IU 6'6-4m Block, Brfek, Concrete ated, ca~ 1peedy and hap. (2l3) 381'-5l9& Dinner House. Elcp'd. Lunch Men or women to ttJtoclc: NATO CORP. Frff E1t, 63~2M3 py ma.mages, overcome rl.l~=O:="===== &r dinner lhlfta. lntrrview.1 &naek machinK &: collect Gen'l ContradDr11 ~ Floors 6665 vals, lovers quarrel.a, evU lG-5, ltartirig Nov. 19th. money (days or eves). NO Paperh1ngln9, habils. stumbllns blocQ oI Jobi-Men, Wqm. 7100 PRJME RIB lNN SELLlNG .... WE FURNISH Blbpittlftf 6S50 CARPET VllaL TILE Palntln9 6850 all kinds. There is no beart . 428 t:. 17th St., CM WANTED: 500 11q. ft., one LOCATIONS. $9xl !'eq'd tor FM eat. lJc..c:ontr. ,540i-'121; 50 bad or home so dreary AIDES, Nursin1. Ex Per . 1--..:'::fo:::t'="':::"':!...::A:;m:;,lgo.~)- man maeh-shop. Vic Hntg part-time route, full tJme BABYSITI'ING A ~ aC-5t6-4f7* * PAINTING, lnt &. ext. that I cannot bririg sunshine Pref d. Apply in person via Bch or 15 min travel. 213: routes alto avail. ACT NOW fend REASONABLE. Back from Vietnam. Back Into ft. Jn fact, no matter PK: TI4 -'94-8075 COUNTERGIRL. Over 25, 477-86Jl FOR CHOICE LOCATIONS *646-194,]* Gi"'enina ~ • '6JO in bualneu a.pin. Free what may be )'OIU' hope, App . in per90n, Expert SMALL warehouse er ahop 'in Orange County. VeOOing Babyalttlng, In my home, ' tlmat WW bco tract fear or amb!Uon. Advertislng Agency Cleanen 3.l3 E. 17th Sl, •pa.Ci! Irvine Industrial Div. 1fm Avenue of the $3)Week.615PoppyAve, NEW lawna re-aeedln1 . ea es. i:u n · SEETHE Sharp SKretary for C.M. Area, near ab'port stars, SUlle 585. Century * Corona del Mar * Complete llW11. C&l9. Clean 1 64&-l089 PALMISTRY READER fe1t • pKed Newport l'ORNEY Broker 540-3862 City, Cal. 90067. In Orange up l:!y job or month. Fn!e SUBURBAN Palnling/Dec r will tell you juat what you k•ch Agency. Ty,,. C'M. JM.MED. "°'""Ion Co. call tn4> ~2493 · UCN'D Day Care. AM-5:30 e1tlmate1. Fer info, call Expert Guaranteed Work "'ant 10 know. 1 6,..70• Shorthand 100, wee kly, hot me als, 846-0932 Free eat. No job too large A II 1 --I & f 11 5400 aq ft mod. tilt-up ahop' High Profit Potentl1I Harbor-Baker, 546--1539 or 100 small. 494-3190 va · or ,,... .. es or1an n o o W <ltllce. Rent $S25 or lease. Franchise Opportunity with AL'S Gal'Oenlng A Lawn With Thia Card and $3.00 t h r U • U n d e f 35. 54S--34S4 Goodway, 8 40 year old na. BABYSITrlNG, My home, l\Wntenance. Commerclal, HOLIDAY SPECIAL. Int. & Recelve $5.00 Reading Phone: 642·'910. 415 tional printing company. $15 week.968-1156 . industrial a residentlal. Ext painting. Lie & insurd. Open DFullallyylOLl~-:o .. 10 PM N. Newport Blvd. Loh 6100 Proven concePt. experience * 646-J629 * Free esta. Weal resf. C&ll '""'~ ---------not ~-yoQ may JIM'S Gardenina: A lawn Chuck 645.<lm Off, <2131 697.9272 BUUJ> 43 UNITS wol'k in Center or be an a~ Brick, Mliaonry, etc. maintenance. Res. j; Com· E>.."T/lnt. pnlg. Aver nn. $20 210 W. \Vhlttler Blvd., City 'Of Ontario: Corner lot. 1entee investor. Prime ~ 6560 mercta.I. * 5f0..4837. + good paint , neat work, La Habra ~=in~le~~~~n:j cation now available in thll BUil.D, Remodel, repair. Japanese Gardener loc. refs. ROY, 847-1358 area at $29,~. financin& Brick, block, concrete, C.Omplete Yard Service INTERIOR. Exterior Int. Airport 5 minute• aw~ available. Reply to: Robert carpentery, no jcb too !11\&ll, Free Estimate M&al30 averqe 3 BR home $98.50 New Motor Speedway 10 • --o.....;,.naJ Direc•-670 · $36nr"lft cub .......,.,,., '""Ii."' "''• Llc. Contr. 962-6M5 CLEAN.UP SPECIAl...lrn labor only. 548-1546 minutes. ,,..... Ol' South Vennont Avenue, Los h!owtna". edgin&, odd jobs. PALVI'ING ATI"ENTION BOYS! Guaranteed sl.M hi'. Door to Door sales after school. 3 hn., Mon • F.rl, 4 hl'I Sat. Call 546-5754 btwn 3 pm· .f:30 pm, ONLY. Attractive Womon COUPLE. Apartment hotlle manazen for new, medium 1ized, deluxe apartments, Huntington Beac!i are a . Plea&e .forward b r l e I resume ot experience C/0 Daily Pilot Box M 358 COASTAL AGENCY Profe11lon11I Employment A11l1tance A member of Snelling A Snelling Inc. 2790 Hubor Bl, CM 540-6005 Harbor Blvd. at Adams ~:!,~ cJi ~ ~i; Angeles, Calilornia, or call Bullden 6570 Reasonable. 54S-6955 EXTERIOR-INTERIOR needed for makeup inltruc- 982-l509 213. 383-1391.. • 646-31.85 • tor. Will train for bU1ineu COSMETIC Sates, your own ASSOCIATE WANTliD TURNER Rlty Invest. Co. TREE SERVICE, gen·1 yard ------'----of your own. hnl & neighborhood for LOSE WEIGHT OCEAN-HIU.. view lot, R-L Lquna Beach. 80x102. Pav- ed al Util in. Only $8000 cuh. Owner. 642-0138 builds Bronze Medallkln cleanup. SPRINKLER RENTAL READIER I want lo women who are 10 cau coUocet (213) 182-3.110 Holiday M•"'c. 536-4909 No Sriling • keep :your reg-Homea. Call office 645-1260 REPAIRS. 646-6848 540-3924 pounds or more overweight or write: -o· JN a>M. Level R·2 lot wlih OW"ndzed double garage Btres8ed for apt. By Owner $26,000. m-3084 R-4 LOT, Costa Mesa. 40 units. OYmer, Phil Sullivan 548-<i761 BA YCREST TR. 3763, lot 74. Sacritice. Make offer. (213) 78().9112 ular job • work part time I k "" ~ •. · h ~ N.B. EXPEJ\. Japanese Gardener. *PAINTING Interior/Exler. 0 ts e .,..__.,..,group weig 1 VIVIANE WOODARD refilling attra1.: .. ve-new ========= Complete Yd. Servi~. Free loss program o( specialized candy & snack machines. Carpentering 6590 Efilimates. Call ~i:m klr. Local references. Im-reducing. All inquiries con-COSMETICS Can expect VERY HIGH z;;.,::;;;:;;;.:;;.,c..._...;:.;;.;..; cm::ed=·.::"::""=":::'·c.:.......,==''--I fidenUal. Ask for Mr. Ken-Dept 7t:r200, 14671 Titus St. EARNINGS on modest in· CARPENTRY Generil Servlc.. 6682 FOR Better Painting, inter-ncdy 5.17-5412. Panorama City, Calif. S14U ::~me;~po~~n~~r ~":; ~o~~p~t N,:;::. FIBERGLASSING oomplete ~~s~ :~~~~~1"&a~~~celJ. .::*=:..:::.:.A==,-o-n_e_"-.-I 2 AUTO SALESMEN phone number to ROUTE qes & o t be r cabinet.I. or repair of surfboards, r DEPT., P.O. Box 21307, Con-545-8175, U no answer le1ve small boats. 67J..0819 aft 5 Plastering, Repair 6810 $800 • S1200 cord, Calif. 94521 mae at 646-'31'J. 1L o. Ex rl ced BARTENDERS YES IT'S YOUR potenHaleamln1spermcnth. Andel'IOD pe en •PATCH PLASl'ERlNG No experience necessacy, $100,000 PER YEAR ==~-=~~-~~ 1 serving all Orange County. All types. Free estimate FAULT Paid vacation, paid holidays. Minimum income for good REPAIR, Partitlom. Small GJS-2233 • CaJI 540--6825 For recorded message tbal Many other' fringe benefits. man to partlcipate in highly Remodel, etc. Nlte or day. ========= "'ill change your We call Applications now being ac- 05 profitable realty investment Reaa! Call KEN 540-4679 H1ulln1 = 6730 Plumbing 6890 ORANGE CO. 547-6667 cepted. Ask for Mr. Roberts .R,.=;-=rt.o..;Pc;l'Of>Oc;:.c=rty'-'--'6"2-'-' operation. Plush red c~t REPAIRS, ALTERATJONS I G 1 . 24 hour recording Atlas Chryaler • Plymouth, I AC. Lake Mohave Ranchos, Arll:. NR. Lakes ~fohave It. Mead. Sl,000. 962.-89(!; offices on Newport Bay! Ae-CABINET. Any site job. y A RD &.I ' c e a n u p PLUMBING Repa1nng & SINGLES D Wed tiv, or inact!Vf'! Investment S 1 O / lo ad . Salvsgeables a.nee every · 2929 Harbor Blvd., Costa 25 yrs. exper. 548-6713 n--._.._ · Remodeling. Ele<:trlC sewer 8:30 to 12. Fax Trot, Waltz, Mesa. required! Will train quali. free! n<:i,..,ve ... =:s, n'Y, · · All k '----------1574 d rrr<>de 96l-874S c . ea n I n I;. · wor Swing & Latin. ?o.teadowlark BABYS~R • 11 gh1 tied party! 645-81 Cl' Ce-nt, Conc~e 6600 o·-guaranteed 642.-65113 Cn•-· Cl b HB 3 ml I" I "•~ .,_ '"' Cl U nd H I · '"'" u • • ·Y. 0 howe'l\-ork, 2 children 5 & 4, "'-·nt. & ft ••• rt 6210 .;'.-,,"'~·--~~---ean Pa au "rotLET Ink t -? Beach off \Varner -...,_ ' s so ·up Ad I . lo $7 . own -"-. Ma•·-"--··. COIN tau-.. ...:-r-..cm.1-:..... CEMENT \V0°u no job 1-110 a load. 646-"""" .. --.. ''"'"' .. _._., PAI...~ DESERT SANDPIPER 2 BR 2 bath widen $23,950. 894-5313 Farrow Realty E.•ch1nge1, R. E. 6230 NOTICE If you have a 3 or 4 bed· room home for sale or rent, call us todaY. We represent the employees of a large firm moving tu the harbor area and they mu!t have housing! All cash If desired. Call FaITOW 54G-8640 .. ...,_,l'C;r-.r•<a....,..... • .. ,.. ...... _., Router serv. No extra chg mss n . 968-l620 From $6,500 to $42,500. small, reuonable. Free CLEAN UP & Hauling Sat. sun or travel. 497-1457 LICENSED 1--------- Anaheirn, Costa ht es a, estim. H. Stufllck 5@.8615 Trees & lhrub~· trim.med BEAUTY SALON SP ACE 11 .,,,_," PLUMBING REPAIR Spiritual Readings, advice Buena Park, Fu erton, * CONCRETE FLOGRS, or removed. ~1359 avallablelntinesthotelcom· H No job too small on all marten. 312 N. El BeGanlac~n SanGmveta ._un!!_~ patios, etc. Reasonable, Call HAVE TRUCK WILL • 642-3128 • Camino Real, San Clemente pleX", I..sguna Beach. Boolh ... .. -.-.. Don 642-8514 r e n t a l or commission. La Mll'ada. =====''=====· I 536-6126TRA VEL moving-hauling. 492·9136, 492-0076 494-0064 Pool SI-I-6910 10 AM • 10 PM Call O>arll• 525-7833 Contr1cton 6620 =========I:...::::....:=' '='":__....:;c;.: 1,=="=~.:.;;..,-~-BOYS 10 -14 PARTNER NEEDED Mfg. ----------1 Houncleanln• 6735 FRED l.t Al's Pool Serv. NEWPORT . Beach Tennil Carrier Roulea Open attractive new line plastic FRED H. GER\VICK • • Compl pool maintenance. Club family membership. for photo frame1. Pref Building Contractor * HOLIDAY Satisfaction guaranteed. For Make oner. 494-21B3 J..aauna Be h So Lquna "".,,.e~e-nted incliv. $10 M ~~~-~-~~:U:atl~ SPECIAL * free info & e s t i mates ALCOHOLICS AnonymoUI Dd~ Pn.i:Yr ·~ '' -C I t LI~ & L-846-0932 eKt 4. Phone 542-7217 oa· write ID .,..., ...,... • 673-rotl & 549-2170 omp e e •• nwevy ,,,_..,_ .. ESl'ABLlSHED gilt shop on cleaning. M.ld service. -P.O. Bo.x 1223 Costa Mesa. !----'--'-"-"'--- Balboa Iotand for""'· II.,. C1rp1t CIHnlng 6625 All work 9u1rontHd. 5 R1model, Ropo!r, 6940 * HARBOR CKU!SE * * BUSBOYS tettsted call 673-4651 for ap-yrs. in area. ROOM-Additions & Remodel· Daily 2 PM, Fun Zone Boat pointment. * Diamonds are measured Call Cleanco 642-5164. ing. Xlnt Financing. Ham· Co .. Balboa * 673-0240 by quality, so are v•e! APPLY IN PERSON Sales-Computer Equip. lo $17,000 Career oppcir. Local territary Send resume or call Arman, 546-MIO. JASON BEST Employment Agency 2120 So. Main. Santa Ana COUNTER.GIRL, full time. Apply tn person to: KENTUCKY FRIED CJ-lICKEN 693 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna CREDIT CHECKER Trainee: Advancement opportunity, Xlnt for the right penon. Stan $335. Call Jean Brown. -COASTAL AGENCY Snelling " Snelling 2790 Harbor Blvd, Cl\t DAY Care w live-in, 1rvint area. Have 2 tots 4 j; 1. Call eves 833-3439 Dept. Store - HOUSEWIVES COLLEGE STUDENTS CAREER GIRLS $ Earn Xtra Money for CHRISTMAS Investment Oppor: 6310 FANTASTIC DIAl\fOND CARPET BAY & Beach Janitorial mer Constructkln. 543-7363. Announcements 6410 Enjoy an exciting season In a beautiful store. lmmedi· ate liberal discount. Full and part Ume 1chedules, CLEANERS 645.1317 anytime Serv. CJ>ts, windows, noon, etc. Res & Commc'l. COCO'S """'""' ,. ... S.Wlnp • LADIES • #18 Fashion I1land APPLY PERSONNEL 6960 ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 262t HARBOR BLVD. 511 1640 REAL TY PROJECT $500.1'.ro profit retum within 00 days. $25,ro:J cash need- ed. 645-1572 day er eve. • ~~::'t~~~~t!::ions For Health and Beauty Newport Csnter, N.B. J. W ~ RO.t·N·SON 646-6446 ha.Ve J\1asaage & Sauna l:J&th,l~---~---- C.ARPET SPECIAL.! We 646-1401 vacuum, shampoo, I: lift ---------p 11 e. Include& soil e \VINOOWS DIRTY? retardant! 645--0298 Free est. 15 years exp. CARPET &: Furn. cleaning: Johnny Dunn ~2.164 __ _.::*...:::.:..:=..;*~~-1 • 6-16-6170 • Busboys & Dishwashers Fuhion Island Alteritions-646-5845 I"========~ Exp'd • Lunch & dinner __ _:N.::•:.:wo:'°::"::...:Be::::":;h;___ OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 Neat, accurate, 20 yrs_ exp. shltts. Inl~ew1 1~. start· Draftsman ing Nov, 19th. lnterest to men for l ·day servl~ & quality * APT CLEANING * Money te Loan "''Ork, Call Sterling for Fast It thorough 642-81&1 6320 R. I. W1ntld 6240 2 d TD L brightness! ~ WlLLIAMS Cleaning Serv. 697, n Oan TILE, Cer1mlc "" CARPET ~ uphn1'tery , • ..,,, CARPETS. Window•, fi<>, -'-'-=-'----- tta! cleaned' al.. ---t •~ etc. Rea Ol' Comc'l. Xlnt NOTICE Prompt, confiden setvke ~..... "'" .,.o • 642-2171 545-0611 mllation. Results guar. For "'-orlt Reu! Refa • .,..,.......111. Serving: Harbol' are.a 20 yn. tree est call 646-5971. RENTAL READIER n you have a 3 or 4 bedroom Sattler Mort9a .. Co. RENTAL READIER 540-3924 home for sale or for rent, 336 E. 17th Street 540-3924 Complete llousecleanlng call u11 todsy. We represent I~========= Days BJS.3033 the employees of a large C t L I & 4 to 8 PM * Verne, The Tile l\tsn* CUsL "'wk. Install &: repairs. No job too small. Plaster patch. Leaking show c r repair. 847-1957/846--0206 Tree Service 6980 flnn moving to the Harbor Re•I Estate Loans 6340 arpe •Y ng ~===""==== R1p1lr 6.'126 ---TREES runed t d Ar"etl and they must have ......... ENT ha J1nltorlal 6790 P , o PP e • bou1tngl AU cash if desired. JNVE.,,, .. ~ group ' FOR CARPETING ---·---removed. 26 Yl'll exper. can Fa1TOW 546-8640 "U'• for trUst deeds. We OR CARP ET LAY I NG SPARKLE Janitorial & win. A e r i a I t o w er e q u I p . make 1st & 2nd It buy ex-494-4505, 638-7234 TIME FOR isling TDs. Bkr. 5'.H381 C. A. Page 642-2070 dow cleaning .Serv. Win-_;;;_.....;.;..:. ____ _ CK CASH day or eves, .::=======::I dows, resid., comcl, const Upho!stery 6990 QUI Draperlff 6630 Cleanup. Free est. 968-~ -'----'------11 THROUGH A CALI.For F~:'.:'~ DUTCH Malnt S.rv, crpt CZYKOSKl"S Cu•tm. Uphol. ·-~~ ATI'ENTION New Home I •· ·-•-··•·•···· Eu-·" ~•t•man•hlp DAILY PILOT * 615-2866 * c ng. ~ w-~· ••-··~-· c•-Owners! Draperle1 by Ellie. wuhlng. Harry van Beynen lOO'i::O fin! 642-1454 WANT AD For D~~ Pi=t ~d& REASONABLE (1) 526-6667 537-1508 If no ana call aft 3 1831 Newport Blv, 0-t. E_lectr __ 1 .. _1 ____ 6_640_ L1ndsc1pl"I Bvs. Opportunltl11 6300 llus. Opportunllln 6300 - 6110 W~l_t!i.~g. ____ 6c.99_5 ELECTRICIAN' LIC<nsed. bonded. Small Jobs, malnt- LIC'D Japanese landscape contractor. Lawns, sprkln, patios, etc. 830-3037 WELOUJG shop & portable. Ornamental iron. CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE .M.an or woman to restock new type coin . dispensers with h I g h quality candy pr<r ducts. WE ARE LOOKING FOR THE INDI- VIDUAL WHO WILL WORK THIS BUSINESS LIKE IT WAS MEANT TO BE-ONE WHO WANTS TO BE FIN· ANCIALLY INDEPENDENT-A PER- SON ASPIRING TO EARNINGS WELL OVER ,1,000 PER MONTH. We have a limited nu m be r of positions available In lhls area. Both part time and full time. We require exchange of refer- ence s before an interview is granted. You nied at least Sl,950 to $3,750 cash, which is only for suppUe1 and equipment. Write, giving phone number, to: Dl5Tfi18UTOR DIRECTOR, DEPT. 19 53$ South 2nd WHI Slit Leko City, Ut1h 14111 enance l repairs. 548-S20J IT'S Betch bJuse time. Blg- g1!St se.lecilon evtt! See the DAILY PILOT WANT ADSI lJC'D Jap&ne8e landlcape contn.ctar, Lawns. ap:kln, patios. ete. 836-3031 646-1815 liNITED F1JND-Communlly Chest They get the job done best ---------------·---- BUSINESS ond FINANCIAL ----- ANNOUNCEMENTS ind NOTICIS Brown c ocker 2452 .Eldon. CM ANNOUNCEMENTS 1nd NOTICES YOUNG Female Slame11e cat, Baycrest aM!a. 642-"'3 S1LVER TOY , Vlctoda-Meaa 64~ ~--~-~---1---~J'-~~-~- Pocxlle, vlc. GOl..J)EN Sllpg center 1panlel, !>~1092 !, f l ., I -/ .. ' , . ' .. PRJ?o.fE RIB INN 428 E. 17th St., Ott (fonnerly Amigo&) CHILD care 2:30 to 6 p.m. wkday1. J\ly home ol' vie. 40th SI., N.B. 675-593) CHRISTMAS HELP Wrappers & Sales, Jn... quire in person only KINGS for MEN 2300 Harbor Blvd., CM. COCKTAIL waitre11, eKp nee. Fri & Sat nlte, Omar's A 11 e y Discotheque, &n Clemente. Will pay top wages. 4~2096 & 492-3692 C.O.D. MESSENGERS Young men. Must be neat, l'e'llpons:lble &: have rood n.tn· ning car. Make itp to $l5 per dty. Apply Z30 W, War· ner, Suite mi, S.A. COMPANION- • very Utht hou.elceeplng for htalthy m1ture lady. Live in • Alary. Call be- tween 6 6-8 PM. 673-7365 COMPANION for elderly lady w/Parklnsons Diaeaae. Pr\v. hom~. lv·ln. 8SJ..1320. DRAFTSMAN DESIGN A/C Disneyland Minimum three years drafting and design- ing. Able to dislgn, plan, and detail heat- ing, ventilation, and 1lr conditioning proj· ects. C1ll Tuesdays & Wednesday 10 a .m . to 5 p .m, (7141 533-4456, Ext. 671 Fiqua1 opportunity employer ••••••••• NOW'S THE TIME FOR ' QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT fJArJT AD S42-f378 ' DAILY"1.0l' JAYli £ASH! c L A 5 5 F I E D IBST llYS! ' ' I I I I I i ' ' j \ ' ' ' ' : ) ' ' l I j l • J .,. ...... :C't 1 ' • ll#'J;-~ • DA11.Y PILOT Tuedoy, N-18, 1969 ll llMPLOYMINT Joas 1 ~~LoYMINt• I~ & EMPLOYMENT Joas & IMPLO¥MINT Jou & EMPLOYMENT MIRCMANDISI POI • MIRCHANblSI l'OR MERCHANDISi POR -MEllCrlANDISI fQR ' Jt'I Mir;, Wom. 71• J. '"'"' WeM. 7* Jobe ·Men. Wom. 7100 Jobi Men. Weta. 1100 ,,.. M11L W--. 7100 SALi AND TllADI SALi AND TR.ADI SALE AND T~· SALE AND TRADI CJ'llu .......... .. 'fvmltwr IOOOFurn!tvre * * ..-HousewiVes and Mothen Eam extra money for * CHRISTMAS * J. C. Penney Compa!Jy F•lhlon Island -Newport Booch Hu po1ltion1 open In · *Sales * Santa's Helpet * Credit interviews * Gift wrapping ScbedUles including afternoons, evenings and combination of both. Finest conditiOn.s -Top supervision -Ex· cellent benefits including discount privilege. * Apply Now * 10 A.M. lo 9 P.M., Monday thru Friday J. C. Penney Company #24 Fashion Island · Newport Beach, Calffomla ~I " "II " "'~ Jobo-Mon, Wom. 7100 I Jobs-Men, Wom, 7100 HOSTESSES MOT£L Houa;ekteper, exp'd, ft.ea! Estate ' . SALES; $300 week tn wig inature.News)ortTraveiodle C°"'f&JolnOurTuml tuhlon ~ Need 5 642,8252 Are )'OU an-~rltnced Rea1 ~ p •tent I a l MOTEL MAIDS -Eltate lrl.lesptr90n! If to we unltmlJ,d r Call .-~· Part Or l"ull, Ume. l961 would like to talk tO: )'OU. Roblnimon au tte ~ mvd., CM. ~~ .. ~ join Paul•~-~ SECRETARY: Ablllty to -·--· ,.,.. .., ~ meet -vtP'1 *"'-will NEED Child CUe 4 llte ~ boc~ed up by one ol the not ..,. ,.._fllcbt job. ai. SPANISH MEDITEllRANEAN hlkpg,. noon to 6 PM, moat reputable real ~late ~ tee Stut $50& Other .i Mon/Fri &linger & Bolsa finnl in CalUomia. You U; free .l 1e. jobs av.:O Call~ Room "!. Fleer Sampln • fKtoey Clo..,ts Chica ~a. H.B. Own JOClat.e with ~ ,..... Sally Hart 540«m • , 1 triosp, Alt 1 p.m, 846-0082 men A broken & are ·iup. COASTAL A8ENCY 3 ROOMS OF FURN111JRE $389, RN ported -..ill> a """"'ndoul sneu._ " !!hawoo J e 5 pe. outhontlc Sponllh Bdrm. Ml, .e 96 A 't DI · tor ad,e~ 4 dired D)all 2790 -B>d, Ol In. gul~ toli'-with 56 In. molchl"tl love u • rec =BU~~ygJ· SECRETARIES .. ,, or choir.,, pc. S,111nllh Dinette, Olk l· 11 Eamlrlg a • unru;,lledl , • !oble top,9 3 i.,.vy Mochl0tton .. n matchlnt Jnvolvement tn: 1 r U )'OU are • ~ « teblet, top duraW. ~h for Fl•rMnef •·Nursing 4-product Pleue-call Dc>U& Whilinli ~ aec, call I..ora!ne, Dancing. Wiii Mii ple«1-lncilvidually. l-esea.rch. ~ M~: ~l ~:-Shop Fir1tl Then See Our Unbelievtblt 8uy1I • Queat for qwtllly nursing •tau~ _ cy, e ve, · ' 1001' other Items with terrific savlngsl care. Ancient Mariner 64!>2Tro Store Charge Bank Terms BofA, Masterc:harge Con ROYALE1 now ~ appliealioN for S.Cret•r'-.1 No Down o~c. no paym•nt1 'til Mtrch 1•10 CONVALEsc:ENT HOSP. = ~ time, d8J' I Interim ••••• So buy the., wife's Christma19ift1 now!! 54S-6l50 9 lUTCHEN HELP Portonnel S.rvlco RN's, LVN'1, & 9 'DISHWASHER 443 E, 11th St., CM Nursoo Aldos 9 BUSBOYS 642·7523 · On PM and night sb.lfts. Full Apply in person and part time. Apply per.. 2607 w. Coast Hwy. sonnel oUice, St. Joseph Newport Beach liospitaJ. weekdays 8 to 3. Restaurant 6J3.9lll e DISHWASHER NURSES Regiltered ( eve~ e KITCHEN HELP ing & night Bhltta. Ex. l . .Apply benefits. Apply Per.>nnel Reuben E. Lff Oire~tor,H So. Coas1872t ~~-151 E. Coast Hwy, mun1ty osp., 3 1o..0<U>t NewPort Beach Hwy., So. Lapna, 499-1311, ext. 356 Sale ... Pattern Grading m l N 9 1700 ..i • ew pc. corfK'r arrang. PBX Answering_ Service. G--~.. "'--~us comm. ~ .Xl!C choice of ch"S. reg. $230, now See Betty Brue.a at Furniture 8000 Siesta SALE! School .. ln1trvctl•tt· 7600 .. PUBLIC NOTICE DKORATOI Gm CANCWATION OF 11 WXURY APARTMam Spoailh & Medltwnno111 fumiturt AU BRAND NEW 9-pc. Mffl•erranean Bedroom Suite in Pec.sn IR09. ,149.001 -··-···-·-·NOW $161.0G Gor9eous Spanish Custom luilt Sofa with m•+ching love Seet.-Choice of beeutiful fabrics. IR09. $-419.951 ___ ,NOW $2J5.0G Spanish Dining Seti ·-.. ----···· .............. _ ... $75.00 Solid Oelc End T .. ble1 and Coffe• Tablts .. $19.SO Tall Decorator Table ltmps IRog. "49.951 ················--·····NOW $18.00 S~nlsh Hanging Sw•9 i..tmps IR09. $49.951 -························NOW $22.50 A decorator dream house on display -3 · rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture · (was reg. $1295. SACRl~ICE •••••• $398 CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN \ hfPAYMl!NT NOT DUE 'TIL 1970 ( II ID FURNITURE . l 1844 Newport Blvd.Horbo~0~1.d.l ; Costa Mesa Only t Evofy l>!l~hl 'Til 9 -Wod., Sot. & Sun. 'Til 6 \ DRAPERY Workroom various openings days &: eves, Exper. le-tralnee. Beach Drapery, 900 w. 17th SL CM ~rienced ""'!erred. •uw ... • UIJUl-oppor, Exper, Ag f Ca $159 50 Ne bed ~•- Exp'd · Dinner House. Attrac. ..>.lQ"000.1 410 w Coast. H NB $99.50, Queens $89.50, Full ' " ·ve ov-21 •'-s " to 12 ==-~-----t 546-54IO, B · wy,, · • •O>A 95 Twin $" 95 f"" ' •• ' ~ P . PERSON O..r l8 (no I°"" JASON BEST y •P-'. 646-3939 ~· ' ' '" ' ~Y G r S I 8022 Pl • 0 1130 : H.B-. Are~a. .-~ c.,,, .._.. send tt9UJne or call Bob' i~~~e~ncy;:°'::"":!G:trls~~llM~~~~ · ' w s; ._ .... .,. ' Interviews 10 • s; starting hair) , r e t tr e d 0 r guarn. King sz spreads $13.95 1 •SI• 1 • a nos • rgans OfRAPalERhelY WMorkrooel Momm . ~ NO\I. 19th. " semi-retired ,ag attendant in 2•!,mSoJ>lm<>Maln"'ts.nAgencyt An . ' ·.'.• .!, i·'. '.'. ',!, ·,! .l. :.~ .. : ' Headbrds: Kings, $15.95,U --00--.-•• ~nd-G----, ---------11 cm oe P· 80 PRIME RIB INN apartment complex. Apply: ......, • • a a SERVICE Station need g ,.... _ _. Queens $12.95, Full $10.95, u.aa arage Sae PIANOS & "RGANS Draperies. 548-2035 L?S E.17th St., CM 31423 Coast Hwy .• S o. Sales exp'd man for days. Good :••:i i:!;· Twins $4.~. Trundle i;ela Pool Table • solid slate, NEW & USED * DRIVERS * =~'='orm=="='ly=Am~l.:;p,.;c.I ~·I Laguna. DRAPERY working conditions. Union!J.;;;.:.~~= (duo riser) w/ inner spring $400. 4 dining chairs $20 ca., • Yamaha Pianos & Organ1 1 N E • HOUSEKEEPER & Cook for ~.~.~.~~P-l~E-MA~-K~E=R SA'ESWOMEN Oil, 39.l E.17th St. C.M. rnatL reg. $1116, now $79.S<l. 1 Brigp-Stratton power •. ThoKl, mmasball ~~ • 0 xper1ence F ••· & t Liv w s:-. Bednn Group s135.so: trl01lier, $60. 673-3611 ..--...,,.,,. a .. n:r eenagc .50n. e Responsible, ;young man to ,... e Kohler & Campbell Nec-saryl ln. Fine Catholic home In , __ the p'· makin busl E SERVICE Station Employees, Canopy beds reg. $119.50, MOVING. Garage Sa le Must have ;:an OOornia Dover Shores, New p ort ;~,'6 days:'4Shrw~,work xperlenced preferred 2 full time, day:a. Apply at MEN & WOMEN! .nmv $89.50. Full sz. sleep. household furn, fishing ~V~~~ ~~R ~ driving record. Apply Bendac.h.t. Ple~th Sat t .. &,ldnS. g into good future !'1th gnr'!'· Excellent benefits. Full time. BW Rash Standard, 24081 COMPUTER PROGRA~f· ~aog~ps.50S2'zooo50w $1:: equip & m i ~ c . 415 Costa Mesa * 642-2851 l YELLOW CAB CO. co 1 wns wi un. ing company, Apply 111 per-Apply 1n person, El Toro Rd., Laa. Hills, MING IS THE KEY TO ot colQrs. !i0% ~ti ~ oil -N=""='="""='=C=dM===== Open 11).6 Fri 10-9 Sun 12·5 ~ oU, Excellent salary, Must BOn, Vi 's Pies <&-12 noon) Pcnonnel office SERVICE ~~tion Attendant, • 186 E. 16th SL have top references. Call .,...., YOUR PROFITABLE paintings? Christmas lay· HAMMOND. Stelnwa)'. Ya-• l====-"°""--c-M-•".'.'.sa==ccl 642--0582 bet~-een 8 & 9 A.M. 191 E, 161h St-. C.M. J. W. ROBINSON part.time. Student or retired FUTURE! aways now. SIESTA SLEEP Applfancn 1100 maba ·new & used pla.oos DRIVER for commercial OU --~---~----[ F··•io •·•·-d, NB man. Apply L aguna SHOP, 1927 Harbor Bivd., or all makCJ Best "'"~sin 1 H SE KEEPER, FUii newpOft · ual_, n ~ · · Chevron Station, 4i04 S. Classes start soon. · · ·' "'Y ~ blue print shop In Harbor charge, must cook. not el• F.q opportun1ly employer Coast Hwy Pilot program offering the CM 6-15-7760 daiJy 10-9 Sa.!· ReCrlgeratora •••• from, $38. So~,;ii.~~~bt here. 1 area. Ask for Ron 540-9373. Jive-in. $40 wk to &tart. personn s ALES MAN: &:panslon-S . h finest equipment and facil-Sun lo.ti. GE ·Portable Color TV, .,.,,....,.,......,, AfUSIC CO., I EARN while you learn. 675-6291 minded c.o. will train, but ewin~ Mac • Ocer•tor~ !tics available! Real-time 20 .PC. ''MAl>RID'' like nu.: .............. $148 ~~~ -~:.!n, Traning provided. Any age. llousekl!l'per &: child care, agency prefer sales exper. to $7200 Good pay, bonua p ecework, computer programming. 3 R G Frigidaire elec dryer $59.9j L High hourly earnings. Work S" d k, $50 k + , p ~ I I S. I + car allow + comm Call steady work, ale factory. La \ OOm roup GE 2 Dr. Retrig ........ $98 HAMr.10ND Chord Organ in 1 full or part time fo.r Fran-,:a a w w · rm "'" r111r•IS ona rv ce Gerry Whit~· 54().600,5 • Fiesta • Top Drawer, 4(pl The A -demy FROM MODEL }IOi\IES Whirlpool auto washer S50 good condition $175. .i ciscan Fathers. Pleasant board. Pd. vae. 540-92l2 for the employer COASTAL AGENCY Birch. N.B. (Near OC Afr. tv.;C:I fncludes: Quil ted gofa and GE washer/dryer ••• , $100 Call fF.>.1445 dignified wtrk. Bonus. HOUSEKEEPER. live In. and the •ppllcant Snelling &: Snelling port & ~.D. F\vy.) cJf ~ === ch.air -'2 end tables &: col· DUNLAP'S PRIVATE PARTY \VANTS t pension, insurance. Call !'-r~i~ ~rk~hoolagers. 133 Dover Dr., N.B. 2700 Harbor Blvd, CM O ,SUPERVISORS e Techriologym fee table-2lamps-dress. 1815 Newport Blvd., C.M. TO BUY PIANO FOR r 847-3481 for appoint. 642-3870 549-2743 S I E • Experlen~; to supervise er -mirror -headboard -541-7711 CASH. 542-rotS 11 Foreign Car Mecha nics INSURANCE -Commercial a ••man-xecut1ve telepbOne sollcltof5 working · quilted box spring & matt· C'OPPERTONE Frigidaire & .., Good co. benefits, incl paid Fire Rate Clerk -exp'd. PORTERS to $20,000. Plastics. Terrific from ·hom e. No selling. , re.!ll -5 pc_ dining room; washer deluxe, Xlnl cond. i . . Salary open. Empire opport, Head up program. Write· PO Box 60'10 LA Union B.snk Squ.sre table & 4 hi-back chairs. SIOO Call _A" Televi1lon 8205 ,. vacation, group uis, uni. Insurance c.o.. 1502 N. Call Bob, 546-5410 · · • ' · · South Tower 00?.fPARE AT $749.9.) · 536-'°'" days, lo_,..~ furnished Cree. Good S TELLER Note & Collec 962-34"" eves. -----------1 I co·~;,, schedule. Ask for Broadway, Santa Ana JA ON BEST lo Call~ N • Sult• 40 $399 "' U>asc Color TV or Blade 547-7005 EXPERIENCED Employment Agency t n. """~r. -ewport Oronge, Calif., '2666 KENMORE auto washer, &: \Vh.t Optlo b , '.:'::°':,.::M;:°'::"'"='Ph-"'-.:540-""'1776~•· --,ANITO--R---ru=LL-T~lME= 2120 So Main Santa Ana NaUonal Bank, Mr. Carter. No down-hnts only $16 mo. L!lte model, xlnt cond. 8 I e. n to uy. ~ 'FREE BEAUTY . , 6'i.:llll Coll 547.9471 wnw•s WAREHOUSE ,.... oervke. No''"""" ! Flve days a"'week Excellent Employn SALESGlRLS Needed. Fulli=~~-=~~-~1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! D.t.LR cycles, $65. 546-86l2, S47-8US A-Active TV Rental Co. . ~~:~s~:= ~~ Benefits Ume pennanent sales post. TRAINEE ACCNT: Outstand· 600 W. 4th St., Santa AD• Beautiful white almost new (1) 522-1153 ',( tanL No investment • ex-APPLY tions. 11ust have solid exp, ~ ~po~~ty, · hig:-gcar; tr The FIRST ·Open DaUy g,9 ~E ra,"""•' 2il ove.~ ~ ~~~ RCA Home Entertainment I ceptional earnings • will e DESMOND'S e APPLY selling appareL U you dig ·. n m_iss 11 one . Sat. 9:6 Sun ll..fi ...,rge. ro ~ "4 '·""· ;,...,. Center. 251• Color TV. ~ train. Call ?ofiss Hodge for #3 Fashion lslarw:I. Personnel Office &elling eroovy clothes to Sta.rt s;;oo. cau Blnie Beck, & ONLY' DON'T 0948 A1'f-l>~M-sterro radio &: ( interview. 714: 5'15-4088 11).6 Newport Beach Third Floor B?'ClO\.'Y girls, ipply in person 5tO..fiaJ5 • • ~IVE UP_J , KEN~fORE Aul&. washer, record Player. Ne1v in April. ~ Pm. Fashion Mirror Corp. at Hubbub, So. Coast Plaza, COAST.Ab AGENC-¥---franchlM!d You. may-lind-lt-al Amenca s -3=«peed cycle;-like"lleW;-eall· -$695 646-5935·atr5·PM ,,. LT. metal fabrication, age no C.?-.1. Sllelling & Snelling · Iary:est, mo~t unusual un. 673-l760 or 673-8032 aft S::ll -l FRY cook. exper, relief shift. :;:: inio;~~~ A~~; The Broadway SALES LADY 2790 Harbor ~vd, CM S-·T·R·E·T-C-H finished furniture store. Cor. pm . . Cameras & Equip. 8300 t 5 days $2.30 hr, 562 W. 19th over 30 for Toy Shop. TRAINEES, Male. Pt. time. &-SEW (T.M.) Redhill & Santa Ana Fwy, . r St. CM S.A. 47 Courts of F•1hion Permailent-full time. Call c 00 K, FO u NT Al N. of Orange County Tustin. 1 mi So. of Newport WASHER ~ dryer, avocaOo, WILL BUY 16 mm proj. ! GENTLEMEN-LADIES-or MAINTENANCE MAN FASHION ISLAND 673--3880 aft s. BUSBOYS. The Zoo, E. Fwy. Open 362 days per yr. $l25. Rftlrig-frost free $lOO, silent or sound. Must be in ~ COLLEGE sruDENT .••• Must have some imowledge Newport Buch Coast Hwy at McArthur, a~RJ~S SHOP 544-6470 Freezers, $65. ~l09S good cond., reas. priced. ~ FullerBrush,thcperfectpt of plumbing, electric, etc: Sales N.B. ·THEEAsYWAY!! MOVING:ALLGOES.Broy-FRIGIDAIRE Electri c WILL SELL Feder al r time job, has a choice loc but mostly gardening. Xlnt An F.qual Opportunity HOUS~ARE-1 Are yo u1---~~----hill Premier bednn set, df1"er, 4 yrs ol.d, xlnt cond. Enlarger for 35mm, f avail no;-v. 642-1403 salary to right person. Employer prcsen Y< earn ng what you Jypis· tS Learn to sew 00 "knit fa~ Sears pan stereo/Pon TV $65. 54&-8672 or 847-811S 2~"x214 ·•, etc., in foldaway r 673-8414 need to reach ycur goal ln rics". Make stretch panl.s M case 2/masklng easel. Will i' General o[flce clerk, goodl --,.,.====~=~ Ufe! If ·not, just faith In In 1 hr, a bathing sui t for &atch sewing desk, end tbl trade on prn~cto,. Call on , w/fim.•,.....s. Apply McGregor MAINTENANCE MAN RECEPI' /.GlRL FRIDA Y: If & ·u b I .. lnlerim $500 ·~1 J Chr. New 11.·ash mach A ti 8110 ~ ,,___ yourse me W1 r ng ·Personnel Service . -even a g1.-u c! m· 673-6874 ....!!... ques wknds, Fri eve. thni Sun., ; Yacht Corp., 1631 Placentia, Neat, clean & mature. Salary 1Yl>e. Interesting diversified prosperity Immediately in atinc -T-shirts for th.! 1 ;;;==,...,,.,..,...,~~~ P Ml h 1 A . Laguna Beach, 4~2152 / C.M. + meals. Apply in peson. pos. Sha11> boss. Start $350. an unlimited field. Call 445 E. 17th St .. C.M. whole famiJ MOVING Sale! tiouse(ul of at c ae nt1que1. ' Girl Friday McDonald's 635 W. 19th SL Hurry! cau Jean Bro11.·n 4944425 9 A.1'1-6 PM 642-7523 y. maple furniture. Also 15• GRANO OPENING I HASSELBLAD 500C 11 ke ~ Excellent typl!il, bookkeep-0.f ~ TO $650 00 TYPIST recepUonltt_ min 60 LESSONS: Morn, afternoon, boat hull _ trailer $lOO. Ap-Fine selection of European new, quick wirx:ling crank r ing background. Must be Material Handler COASTAL AGENCY Sales and Se~ce, prefer words; can Mr. Young & eves. pliances, Everything goes! & American Victorian furn.. 7agn~fi~:l00d, 1 quick {. tops in.all oltice procedures, An """nin<> n"'" ex'.'" on Snelling & Snelling Mill'""" complete, beach 642·7352 7:2t E. Katella, Qran"'e 920 Arbor. C.l\I. iture. See at 468 E. 17th St, OCWWlg · e, po ari.z.ing · •ho v,,.. ''*' "" 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM _, ·~ ,·.RENCH Pro·'ncial Bdr, in C.M. &15-2TI6, 10 to j. filter. G filter $650. 675-2271 ' able to work w11 ut super. our graveyard shift. No area, call Ann, Merchants WAITRESS wanted • exp'd. ~· -~ vision. Salary $550, Employ-experience nee, Must be RECEPTIONIST-Per30nnel Agency, 2043 West-Part time days. Llltle 633-2842 Set. dual beds, hdbrd, Sealy BEAUTIFUL A R!\-10 I ~ E , Sporti_ng Good_ 1 er will spilt lee. neat and dependable. PUBLIC RELATIONS cliU Dr., N.B. 645-2770 Windmill. Mon 5-9 pm matlres.ses, dbl dresser Louis XV, l'OBl!wood Inlay, Exec Secty Apply 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Attractive, ~·ell groomed STENO/Receptionist, par 1 968-1630 MEN -WOMEN Xlnl eond. $150 Complete. with matching bed $950. Heavy dietadon. Excellent Orange Coast Plastics lady, Age 21-45 for beautiful lime. Mature, neat, depen-* Waitttss * Expd'd * BECOME AN Call 675-279-1after 5:30. ~548-===""'"======== typing. lo S675. 'APF 8.SO W. 18th St., C.M. oHice on Newport Bay. Ex· dable. Growing company in Night Shilts •• , Union House PRIV. Pty, must sacrifice General Office i\tATURE woman ceptional opportunity. airport area. 540-7434 Hosp., surgical, Medical, & ANNOUNCER complete houseful of line Light bookk('(!ping 'vith bank housekeeper-sitter. Boys 9 &: 645-1574 Sales Dent., Plans. Apply in decorator furn. at a traction recoociliati<J!'ls. $425. •EPF 11 ....... , 1-5:30 pm Mon-Fri. RECEPT: Creative boss LOOK• MORCOMFORT B person HOWARD RESI'AU· of original p>st. 642-9006. Full Charge .,.~ wants person for front off. · ra. RANf, 4001. w. Coast High.. "LEARN'' '1412 Antigua \Vay, NB Sal n . I I~ f .1. 0\vn transp, refs. 346 E. We are looking for presently N port Be h. Ca!U On professional eq,;pmenl ln ety ....... post g n, am1 1ar 19th c M s~-1.181 ""·-· lee. This is a fun job for .. -'"'"I"• with ··'eo *~~ way, ew ac . 42" ROUND, .. -,,•ht ·,-n, wlth savings & loan pn>eed· ' · · ,.,_ ....., .. , w""'" . ..,, . _. ...,. ... --.:. S S a local raolo station from 1 ... .,..,, •u ure. $3'15. •APF 64&-8346 eves person w/ lots of moxy. Start No tranchu;e ftt. Unlimited WAIT RE SE working broajle-asters. g ass top, yellow dining MEDICAL ollice he 1 p , $350. Call Sally Hart, 540-6ai5 potential. For job or fitting C.OSta Mesa's smart new Din· For wmplete voice analysis room table $60., 5' Antique •ePF employer pays female, Front office in-COASTAL AGENCY call Mrs. Conway, ~9 ner House. Over 21, sizes up CALL white & orange coUtt table fee surance forms. Experienced Snelling & Snelling aft 6 &: Sat. 'O<' wnte Box to 12. Lunch & dlnner shills THE INSTITUTE OF $25. Ph: 83.1-2737 • APF appllc•nt pays only, GQod. pay for right 2100 l~arbor Blvd, Cl\I 486, Hntg Bch, Cal. avail, Intetvlcws 10-5, start. BROADCAST ARTS EXPANDING Duncan Phyfe 8120 Sewing Machin~ -----1969 SINGER w/beaut \Val console & zig-zag. Makes buttoo hol~. overcasts. 5 Year guar. Full price $38.24 or $5.26 mo. 526-6616 Mu1ic1I ln1t. 8125 GIBSON ES 335 TDC Semi· solid, Humbachers hardshell casP. 66-2'146 aft 5. 8500 1 .30 CARBlEN $60 Ihm. .45 ·~ Colt auto. $70 firm. Cash , Only. Call . 646-4100, 6-8 PM, ·~ Skis. superglas racing slalom. 200 cm, compl GP ~ binding. $150. 640-9'264 ~ 1 Ml1cellaneau1 I --.! -'====--=o;:;:1 .. BEAUTIFUL hand painted ~ oil portrait of you or your 1· children irom a photograph .• • A 11.·ordcrful idea for that • 11pecial Christmas g 1 ( l . ' 646-3629. , ! fee person. 540-4573, 10 A.M. RECEPTIONIST Savings & Loan ing NPoRv.1ME19th,RIB INN 1601 N. Bristol, S.A. din room se t w/6 chairs, Niguel Pc~nnel Agency MEN: 2 Over 30, Service BRANCH 7n ..-.. like new $150 • .jj! Narcissus, 27635 Forbes Rood Interim 428 E. 17th St, CM -~vv . CdM. 1 ....... n .. Ni<>ucl 831_1411 Station. Exper or will train ~'AN AGER ti-"·· Am '-•> Placemen. t service ...._.., ... '"' for nite shf. Full or p/lime. Personnel Service JY1 , ......... OJ '*'v educaUon loan COUCH, chair, coc kt ail GIRL FRIDAY : Sec &-·o;. Report to C&rl's Shell 46 E. 17th St., 01 Exp'd •Savings & Loan WAITRESS JOIN THE FIELD table, end table $100. Call ordinator. Sky's the limit Service, Rancho Viejo, 642-7523 Eandnjoyjola .-chwardlg"'i.~g c.aret=hilr E xperienced WITH A FUTURE! 968-1284afler6p.m. for pef"!On w/inlllatlve. Start Interstate 5. 28662 Camlno Receptioniit/Tyf;iit n a •UJ sUCttss Age /education 00 hl>rrler! TRUMPET • Olds "Studkl" \.\1th case & aeceAAOries. Like new $145. 640-1287 Pia"" & Organs 8130 FIREWOOD for !!Ale-cut tO "> your specificatlons; well , seasoned. Deliv & 11tck'd , free. m.so ~• c, $47.so c. ~. Call collect (71<1) 688-0846. ·' :.a $400. a:.. paya fee. Call Bil. Capistrano. San Juan. Savings & Loan Associatlon lie Beck 54().6();i5. Other free to $400. F" 1P it. In the Newport Beach area. Apply In perMn Let us help you quality. &t fee 1·obs avaU. Men ABILITIES This _.._i tlon entails chal· SURF & $1RLOIN INNKEEPERS WSTITUTE *OVERSEAS * UNLIMITED AGENCY ...,... 5930 p C H INTERNATIONAL COASTAL AGENCY Let u1'job hunt for YoU· 488 E. 17th St, Suite 224 Jenglng duti~s and is adapt· •C. at. wy. l\IoteVHotel/Apt Mgmt Sehl Snelling 1: Snelllhg Call Smitty, 714:114-2610. Costa Mesa 642_1470 ed for an Individual with Newport Be•ch A DIVISION OF 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM MGMT. TRAINEE. Fa It. Imaginative and c~ative WA~ I l\I at u r e ANTI-IONY SCHOOlS liIGH 5dKlOI girl \.\'8.nted for growing Co. Xlnt Co. benl!-NEED 2 REAL abilities. Excellent fringe ladies. Experienced, Day &: ln7 S. BROOKHURST occasional babysitting. Vic fill. Start $;..tOO + aumma-ESTATE SALESMEN bendts, Call Mr. Hansley night shifts open, Apply in ANAH!!IM, CALIFORNIA Bro o khunt/ Adams. HB tic raises, Call Gerry White Modem office, training pro-(n3) 869-051.2. pereon"'to Mr. Trudo, Van de Claues form every "'-eek 968-8129 544).6005. gramnd'eCalltial >11'1• Llch1 ter for PLANNING to move? You'll Kamp"s CoUee Shop. 3099 PHONE TOR ~PT. COASTAL AGENCY con n n erv ew, find an amazing number of Bristol, C.M., 2 to 5 P11. Ask tor Bet~ 776-5800 HOU SEKEEPER, full lime. Th R I E I Ma No exp. nee. Park Lido Con-Snelllna & Snelling • ea ' ete rt homes in today's Classified Mon thru Frt. SAUCERMAN SCHOOL vaJcsccnt H011pltal 6'2-8D44 2'r9o Harbor Blvd, CM 147-153l Ads. Check ttM!m now. WANTED Mature woman ID Co. l'airtrounds, gr. 1.S y Ad · MOTEL Mald tim care for 6 mo!! baby. Hours Where the Program ts our '111 out • part e. Job.-Men, Wom. 7100Jobt Men. Wom. 7100 a AM to 3:30 PM. l\1y home Fils the~"" d••'iedsT Someone will be Peninsula atta. ..... ....... 1"'1~~-==f<r"=l'=t.='Dlal==-==;..!.:::==*:;m,oo:;.:::;;*=== * PERSONNEL * =r~~u!~~. ~ \Villard ~.~~cennan, J .. 1 Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobi Mon, Wom. 7100 WOMEN & GIRLS S40-4060 Enmll """ Evet;, 5''3-1758 I * EXEC. SECIETARY * )fust be able to lake shorthand at 100-110 1 wpm. Experience at the executive level in a sales or marketing actlvlty prele""'1. Will aloo hanclle phones & travel arrange· meats. Excellent opportunity. Salary com· -.1e -.Ith bockgrountl. Ple=J In .,erson or call Mt. Kuechler for tmeat, 835-4804. BEIEIAL AUTOMATION 1402 I. CHISTNUT STv SANTA ANA An Iqua! Opportunity Emp1oyer M/F WW be moving lo li'tfoe.complex 1970 G!NERAL• AUTOMATION has nn opening In Its Personnel Depart- ment, reporting dlrecUy lo the Employment Supervisor. .t lniUal duties will involve screening appll· cants, typing corre.spondence, handling tele- phone inquiries and making travel arrange- menls. Secrelarial skills,. Including short· hand would be helpful. This Is an excellent opportunity with a growing compaqy, Apply in person or call D. L. Kuechler. 835-4804 GENERAL AUTOMATION 1402 !. CHESTNUT, SANTA ANA An _Equal Opportunlly Employer ·-r . • . . . Pleasant tel_epbone wo r k MERCHANDISi FOR from OW' offiet, no exp. nee. Full or part time. $2 to $5 SAL! AND TRAD! per hr. 2'JO W. Warner, Suite 2nl. S.A. Fumltvre - WOMEN, full or pa.rt time ·---,--- needed tmmed. for: Child GREAT Buy. C?mfort.1ble care-, Aides or Companions. ~S!zt'd. nie-lin1ng chAlr. A~ 20 to 66 642-3274 Tin. hb ,ne.w, used for only Sllll"tl Pr~lty A .. nc:y •ho".! time !75·. 5'&-!Jl"l Member We Sit Belter Inc Quality Jung bed~ullted. YAoiT PERSONN~L ' Complete-unulfd $Ul5, worth Require following capable, $250. Aft 5 It wknds 84U536 ttllable JK'-r.>nnel f 0 r SOFA. coffee, end tables & modem 200 Ton \'acht: lamp&. Xlnt condition. Licensed 11:klpper; enr,lncer, Ca.ll • 6'1·~ cook, "eek hand. Send GREEN Hkie-a-bocl S35. 226 background rrsume to Daily Jumlnc, Corona dcl l\lar Piiot A>x M·ll, ~'13,1971 " Office Equipment 8011 TYPEWRITER, Royal OOJ, elec., carbon rtbbon, ltcrald ellle typeface. Also Gland & steno d1air. Orig cost $550. Bare!Y used. $295. 642-3867 METAL Filing cab., S Alma walnut "decks, swiYel chairs, sile chairs: IBM Seleetric typewriter 6 m06, old, cost ~0-sell ;350. 67~ or TYPl.\VRITER, add mach., calculator, Very reaaonable. Xlnl coDd. 89'l-2421 ROYAL Standard manual typewriter wltti 1::;·• car· riage $90_.:,.. 962-9824 '---- FACTORY CLEARANCE! Factory orden clearance nf all O\f(tl'ai;:e, demonstraton, floor models, studio &: re· turned Pianos & Organs. Real saVtngt up· lo 30%. Everything guaranteed like new. Sale limited to speclllc SW1~1MING Pool slide. Set , ol World Book s. 1Ii>-~' torblcyclc. G I r I 's ski : boots, size 5. Girl's Schwinn ' bike. 548-57-18 -I FOR Sa.le: GE Portable Colo!' , 'IV. Imperial re(rigeratDr '. with auto ice maker . f 67H061 ~ stock • so hurry! No moneY * * * * ! down OAC 5 years 1o pay, FAMILY J\.1err.bcl"shlp I n 1 This great' sa1e only at: Irvine Coast Country Club • WARD'S BALDWIN SJ'UDID for sale. Pvt. pty. 673-9131 ·~ "'°""""""'""-'-';--~--1 • 1819 Newport. C.l\!, 642-848~ CARPET lnslaller has 000 l Open Every Nitc rnll, av()(.'ado nylon carpet, , & SUnd!l)' Afternoon double jute-backed. Will sell all or part $3/yard. 540-7245 J Carpet 11\)'Elr has Hi Lo t nylons $1.9!1 yd. Shagl'I J Pr°'rammtd Gara~o Sal.c• ___ 8022=._ 1 Rhythm UNIT with every new or used OR· GAN !Klld between ncr.v & O;tlstm1ts. from $3.50 up + my labor, f OOc per yard . 968-'910 J 11ANO PAINTED r CAR.AGE SALE. ·Twin mat- ~ il box sprtnp $3) po.ir. Dinette set $.50. Rattan din, rm set $50. Wall clock SlO. Ironing board. & iron $5. l~ Rcdland11 Pt.. C.M. 548-Gl.23 SMALL English I t e ms . GlllBSWatt, 11Uver. brus. \.\'atches. C'lc. Sal il sun 12-4. 675-0070, 716 Jasmine Ave, Cdi\1. G~"'GE SALE 278 Flower St., C.M. Auto supplie1, clothlnt, cascades, toys, 6':!--0807 • DON'T WAIT!! No p&,)1nenl! 'til 1910 Choose from: • Conn • WurU1%er e Allen • Hammond • Baldwin • Others GOULD MUSIC 2IH5 N, Main, SA M7.Q)81 FREE ORGAN a.ASSES r.tonda.y nlte1 7:~ -8:30 pm GOULD MUSIC CO. 2l>4S N. P.tttfn, S.;\. 5f74SS! "Lamp Shades , '"Call 673-4Ul \\'ANTED: free ·planls for yard. Will dig, &IZ-1724 aft. 6 ' }~or Sale, f'irc\.\·ood. ~ Orange & EucalyplUI 838-Gll!O TYPE\\'RITER $35. Addi"8 \ mncWnc S35. 2!~ hp J ot1M011 1 $45. : 1842 Newport Dlv11 .. Of ~ Quality kll'IK bed-quilted _; icomplate-tmused $105, \\o'Or1h ( $ZIG. Aft 5 &. wknds 142~ 1 . ~ MIRCHANDISI POR SALi AND TRADE ' - . T"my, No..,.btr 18, 1969 DULV PILDf PITS~ LIVISTOCIC TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION . TRANSPORTATION -..:T.::RA=N.:::SP:...:O:;R::;T.:;A:.:.T;.:l~~::..,~~~~~~~:r'f]rR~A~N~S~PO~RltASJr~N~- Oop 8125 lloctrlc Cirs -9250 Im,...,... A-HOO l"lf'!<hd -NOD A-W••IM 97o'o 1.1...,r Coro f900 UNd Corw ' M ~nlOnoou. l600 .SllAtL -mixed -Dlclloh•nds ,. ..... AMC DATSUN -....;;;;:.;..._ .... _;.;:~::..· :-11-------.......i.. '1~-~-·~;:'..__~~lir;;;;~;;;;;;;, II,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; • 1"rrt.r •"-ii;·,,.. ~ wui bold 'til Xmu. uu:cpllc cart. aood""" TOYOTA w~Y ... ''OUGAR DUNTON· FREE TO YOU i. ' old -·~-with Cafl-~H.B. d111onJlOO,TAU.AN7,l9'(). ORANOl'COUNTY'S--------CASH .., . ! * Aaction * · i.nCeoi back ,..ro. Ex"'1 RMIJi4ifAT10i!i 8 -·c.Jll. DArsu':.o.D~ALER TOYDfA ·57 eo.aor XRT. Loedet!! 1 with ~n. ~lM aft 6 Mi ~-F to ' WEDNESDAY PM '. -11/>l looh a Yochh -•I 111111 -9275 DOT DATSUf'I v .. own<r. .. ry W&r• FORD I NOVEMBER itth OWNER lll. need gd ,,..... SCRAM LETS' HONDA 6', 19G, -·-1883$ BelCll 81\>d. S~ICTACUi.AR :Ji~.::::!' =J:"' ranty. 30,000 ml, 61!>5.142 * 10 AM * tor DalmalW!!AusL Shep. • clltloo $WO. Huntinaton Beacb Y I AR IND SALi DODGI .a oH -•-~·• ALL MODELS 6R01H Qll'lmQlfJ --t.elaf Sales by Virtue oJ tbe female ' 8 ,..., o Id • N . -1.ie -.. ~ "' ~~ YOUR BES7 DEALS 'I II W.atthou9tllWl'1 U.n~Law bouaebrkn.. id watchdog A SWER·S '69 0.tsu.n 3XIO Rdltv Lo ARE SI'IlL AT Eleetronlcs, Manu.tacturlna: na '"'liUrittt.Chlfilren Moforc.lcln 9300 ml S2700. Phl:linc US.:1186 DEAN LE·w s "*U:=~ 'Plant eqUipmenl for Space !M!'r 10 yn. 11 n e • Banish -Cn>ek -AUd it -1968 Triumph TR &-4. lmmac far further in.fo, • I Huotlalton Beads '85 DODGE Dart. pl con. dition. $300 ,&: continue paymenhl. 545--0239 2240 s. Main 546-7076 travel It development. ~93 11.J20 Melody -MISERABLE oond-enatne jtat rebUilt ---KI t.33 * z PM * DALMATIAN/Aust Shep, A He,U,, Yo.._. OM-· 549-2588 ENGUSM FORD 1966 Hubor, C.M. 646,~ II, '64 CHIV. ~ $ffl female, white W/blk spot., liner: "My wife has a nice, -;::,;:=:;;.-:,• ===~~ I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I BIU M XE WE PA'Y WH I 12 Elerctrlc Archery Lanes all lbotJ, 9 mog, Oilldren eyen dispos:itlo11 She's MJS. 61 BS.<\(LIGHTtfflG QI) cc.1• A y kl w St•tla• w ... 111. • •• •11 ... WINDY'S AUCTION 0/10 yn, rd watcbdoe, ERABLE all~ tlme." LJke new, Sell or ORANGE COUNTY'S tat n &g!)n. m•t1c tr•an11[11lo11, f•ctory CX>ME ,BROWSE AROUND 201'5'ii NeWport· mvd. Behind Tony'a Bldg Mat'l1 Chia Mesa * 646-8686 OPEN DAlLY 9 to 4 natural hunter, gd. ,home ZS' BERTRAM BAHIA MAR trade. * 5'6--0309 VOLUME ENGLISH· IT~T IA I fQU11JI W ~ve~~ k:'~t!r~wJ;. ~il'1;14 ,.~u., w/trw:e )Td. M6-19t6 lll18 CRUISER. TWIN JSO• H.P. YAMAHA TRAif. MAS"l'ER, FORD DEALER Q2UX' Q mecbanical NEED ~homo w/lenced 2· RADIO. TELEPHONES. 1"' CC. Uk• new $2[>0, SALES• SERVICE 11111 llACH BLVD. CONNRL ·-'l _ut>de-, r Bl .. '6' PAllLANI $24'5 ........ Cllll 548-3144 . v.1, •11to11"1•tlc trt111mi11ion, 'yrd, Burnt copper ooloted APELCO AUTO. DIR. FIN· -· '89 MOO~ Hunt. Bea.ch M7MSS CHEYROLE1 · 642-3963 fictorv •Ir, power 1t••rlnt, Sha&gy poodle mix, DER. FUU.Y EQUIPPED '69 HONDA Trail 00, 200 Immediate dellVM)I' 3mJN,otCoutlbey •. onBcb ht•for, 4 deot 1M•11.o Uc. "Coeo", fern. 8 moa.,mtd, FOR FISHING AND miles $300. LAROE SELECI'ION 2828 Harbor Blvd. 1968 'FORD LTD 4 dr. hnltp, YCU 20 1 '°""' ohildren. 530-6856 CRUISING. IU.500. CALL 962-3584 n...dore TRIUMPH Ooaia M-""'1'00 >l,000 ml. X'Jra clean. 390 '°·6'°'ec-:c°"H~IYY=-...,$~1"6'""1 CLOSE OUT/ aftel S p.m. lj/lO JOCK AT 675-&41 f3s0 ROBINS FORD Wanled 1969 CadUlac, from "V, •ir cond. PIS, vaouwn N .... 4• "'" ' •vi. ,,. •. 1969 box G~tinc Cards. 3 LOVABLE kittena, 4 mos. 14. Boat, 35 hp Evinrude: & Metorkootwl 2060 Harbor Blvd. • '65 SPITFIRE private party. Call aft 6 ~~~. k. a:tereo,,$2515. Call 111•tic h •R1fl'llt1lo11, rMlo, Christmas, B1rt¥aya, Get old. 2 gm eyed, 1 yelloVi trailer. $300 or best offer., 1961 Lambtetta MOt Costa Mesa M2-0010 p.m. 546-8757 ' ~ h••t•r, etc. Lie. VM l l6t We 11, All Occasion, etc. eyes, 1 fry, 1 rusty, l 962-5144 . acooter, IOOd Nftirig ~., l"'!!!~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~d l!Kl9 Ford q.untty Sedan, '66 FOIO $HI .. ,IY 1 ~t regular price -get charcoal. Need good homu. Uli6 CHRIS Qaft • 2'1%; $125or bell\ Off~. &f6-IU!l 1 •• ------~:· :W :ve job,Mnew Auto Ll .. l!'f 9810 station wagon, loaded. Pric-Co1111trv S1G111. V.f, 1wto- another at le! 836-4493 11/18 Spong Fisherman. Twl 185 FERRARI ~ w · e&ge. Wit 1;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;::;;;;;; ed for qukk Ale. $2800 m1tlc tr11uml11iol'I, f1clory MINNIE'S.~rHtlng HELP! Need good home. 2. HP e,.me.. Fly -· AutO 5Wvlc:e1 ill .fine.I ;:t' price $785. 534-5290 1ir, powtt tl11riftt, r1dlo, Cards & Gift Shop matched pair calico ki~ns -=nn Call 641)..'lm. &"P ......._ ••-FERRA.Rt~ !'1,,,, •. .,, can' Phllv. IJ!'!?'•9173NRZ-LEASE .. RENT .::'-=:::.------11 h11t1r, • htth milt•t • car 850 Heil Ave .• Westminster 4 rno old. Heelthy, Wlll help _.,,,.., 1 .~.·~~~---·~ ••. 1 Newport lmporbi Ltd. Or-~ ·..,... or ORDER YOUR '66 Fakon future at • 1t1al. Lie. VIS 572 (1 blk E. of Beach Blvd.) with &payed A shot 1• S.ilboah 9010 anre CountY• onJ.7 1uthor-1970 TODAY Fully fact~ equlpP,e:Cf. Dlr. '67 OLDS $21·91 847-3131 54S-J566 11120 _;;;;;;.... __ ....;= 8.EAOI lud dealer. VOLKSWAGE FOR EARLIEST Pho,::-2-61Yl3 D•l"'ont II 2-dr. H.T. v.1, POOL TABLES DARLING GIFT: male kit· VENTURE 21' Xlnt oond., 3 SALES-SERVIC'l!:-PARTS N DELIVERY •uto, radio, ;h ttar, po-r Secard Pool • -~ sails head 2 outboards AUIO Supply 3100 w. Cout Hwy. All popular makes. Ford '63 FALCON c.s. wag. Red . '''''• pwr br•k••· f•ctorv ten 8~ wkl!, cute but l'U£· ' ' ' Newport S...ch vw BUGS A T 6 I c 1 a IP cand, •hilt ••II tir••· BRUNSWICK-AMF ged. Able to take the et1n. sip! ~· .extraa. Offer 642•9405 540-l'164 autho11zed leufn& sy1t.em. ~sPerate ~0• sell ea;~ •invl fop, tlnttcl t fttt,, CUstom Slate Table stant attention of little 548-395.5. Wholesale Authorized Femui Dealer Get Our Competitive Rates 6~7CW!9 · · From $2a!I children. 61S--0477 ll/~ n-· P_A_C_!Fl_C_. -~---.-.-u-•• -d-,' FROM . TheodOre '66 FORD $1291 100% Finand "" ·~-·••• ~· ~~ trailer, hinged kttl, Prl""' to All JAG' UAR $399 ROBINS FORD BEAUT. 'Ill Counlry Squ~. wol, 500 XL 2 "" H.T. * •• r .. n POOLS .. UV\'~ .--.. ....... ~ ''"".......... "'"-pie•-Machine Shop All -'-I ml FM/" ... v.1. 111toin•tic, r•tlio, ~1.,..... " • '*"'--cat,' male, 8 mos. old, * ~-* .....,.,. "" 2060 Harbor Rlvd. -pwr, .,..., 0 · """~ h11t1r, powt r tf11rift1, ....,_~ ...,.,,. SPEED EQUIPMENT Btereo. Alake olr 673--3823 323 S. Main St. Orange: looks like a squitTel, will be 17" Catamaran sallboat, car REBUILT ENGINES '63 Jag XKE. Rare r.o.ta Mesa 6'2-0010 pwr. brtktf, f•cf.ory t lr large, 530-6856 alter 5 totable, with sails. beauty.Must.sell. FORD .6 .cylA:trans,just conJ., •hit• ••II tlr••• HOMEMADE Fndtcaket for p.m. 11/20 Reasonable. 830-U?M 1125 Victoria, CM 548-UiO * 675-4331 LEAS& ANY MAKE rebuilt new carb, clutch, P . •lnyl top, fi nt14 ti•••· bu the Holidhayks.fullMideol ~~rea}_ 3 Furey kittens. 8 weeks old. 18361 Beach Blvd, HB 847-0091 FOR Sale -Jaquar Classic OR MODEL P. $100 644--2576, ~2381,L ~•;,PM""l"S"l"',,_ __ == tter, c uc ...... ta• 2 all white, 1 black & white. Power Cruisers 9020 * OPEN 7 DAYS * 1955 XK-140. $95o. • Let our Jea1e experts lhow '63 Ford Country Squire; full '65 FOID $795 nuts. Flavored It aged in 5f6...T850 20121 Spru SA Call_ fi73..QM7. )'OU the best plan for yoor power, air cond., low 61l1•i• 100 Con .. rtlble. Rum, Brandy or Sherry. ' ce, · ·MUST Sell! 17%' Fiberglas FINEST -·~!\TED r-£n penional needs without obli-mileage $625, excellent v.1, 111to, r••lo, h11 t.,, Order now, call 846-4953 for Hgts. 11(18 Inboard. Very Seaworthy. .wwv ~ · nd 96J..$78 536-8296 p•r 1t11r, wftlto will fir ... ,;,., & prlcu. 2 ADORABLE Tern« & Ex. cnnd. $I8ll or 8'51.0f, Sen<co hi Costa M... KARMANN GHIA ••UonU.NIVERSITY "' · ' OYR 272. ~._ t al 7 ks I , .,.... "'>ti c.-.-..1 .. 1ut1 in Mercedes '64 Ford· 4 dr hardtop, =""-"°'=----:= 5 PC wrought iron patio yuuu>t: em es, wee er. 0 '<J"'"""".L "t""....... 1.u• OLDSMOBILE white w/~ lnte~or. '66 CHEV. $195 · 1 old Ap r icot color Benz, Jaguar, Volvo, MG, 79.;11 K•rmann Ghl• '""' n furruture w/ ye low vinyl .,.,.., ~ 11/>l. S--' Ski Bo~ -30 Flot, Trhnnph & VW'1. 2-door Coun.o.., Xlnt (Jo-... """ 3031 Ext. 96 or 67 2850 Harb>r Blvd. $550. call M&--1973. Cont Htnl T9p. 4 iptff. upholstery $100. GE ..,,........,"" ..,_... •1• TV "" nu. ..,.,. Cos M r•dlo, h11t1r. Lie. ns 636 · il tll CHRISTMAS Sno bl kl DAN'S AUTOMOTIVE Immaculate inside and out! l970 HARBOR BLVD. ta e" rou..ene bro " • • cart w w te t-GULF STREAM SERVICE can -64"6170 Ono owner, Soo at 480 B"""'-COS7A MESA 540-9640 MERCURY '66 FOID $1491 $45. Elec Jloor polisher $10. tens, good house manners -c M 1--..:::::::.::..:::::::::.__ "" LEASE "" Country t1:-11ir1 Wtgon v.1, --18 •-'-tt also !her -•-• " ~~ e-~·-1800 CC "'-r way, · · . ~ ........ -,.,en 1wui: ae er o l»lvn:u ca.... .v'"'""''"' ,,.. .. .., -r-'65 VW Sunroot tan Drl 62 •11fomet!c, r1dio, he·1w, $12.50. 613-0594 536--7119 W18 17 ft. Ski loat all new $600. · PRICED for Quick Sale! 65 less than 30,ooci mi.·by li:: 1969 Mustang. 2.dr, HT, V-8, '0wJ~= co:::~ .. i: p-•r 1t11ri"f· power KIRBY VACUUM Cleaner "CALICO Girl" lovely fillfly 120 H.P . Mere. CruiMr After 5, 673-9'l03 !•!.?'ta~~-'?nalh.la. Im· school teacher! 5 neW . alr, Pi. auto. trans, wsw. '!WS-8933 or all day wknds. brtktt. •hit• ••II tlrM, with attachments & kitten. I know bow to Porache -Mere. -V.W. ~ ~ ...... ae. ""'161 owner. Dunlapdoa:boneradialtires. $79.00 mo. ti"t•d t i•••, 11191•1• rttk. polisher. Take over small behave in a house. lnboard -Outbo.rd Buggiea.New&~parts, Seeat@'.!Broad~,C.M. Have complete aervice SOUTH COAST MUSTANG VTI 7'5• payments or pay oH balance sa&-:.1'1'19, 11/18 Ready for the water right Wholesale to all &t2-0350. · records from Chick Iverson. ' CAR LEASING --~-----'66 PONTIAC $1491 now~ All the equip. incl. MERCEDES BENZ W -N "'2182 -_, of $36.40.. Credit Dept. COLLIE' Labrador puppies, 8 compass, life preservers $1.300. 545--0663 d aya, 300 • ~t Hwy, B ........, NEW .• 69 Mustang Grande, 6 .T.0 .'2 Door H1ralop v.1, 535-7289. wks. 414'% Emerwon, N.B. &: full cover. Trailer, Travel 9425 ~03 eve1 BUICK V..S, PS, air cond .. dbe int, =~"t;im::~~· ti;:~0·~1.~~·~1J GE Refrigerator, good cond. (oft TUstln, betw, 2)th &: PRIVATE PARTY -... AIR Stream 'G9, 29' VW '63 Semi-camper, mint 5 new Michelin radlala, 2500 024. $65. 25 Gallon a how 21st) 11118 673-3144 543-9311 Ambassador. Internat'l. CGnd. Only 12,475 mt. Fae miles. Make oiler.~ '67 MUST•N~ $1695 aquarium S25. Drafting 2 CUTE Baby long·haired Xlnt cond. Better than new! re-bit eng. Stereo/radio, '57 BUICK. Good runntna .67 MUsrANG 4 IPd 289 "" ,. machine $25. 6f6...5987 pri. pty. Betit oUer. (213) cond., Xlnt transportation, Fulback. Xlnt -nd. ' , PwlL•clc guinea pigs. 1 whL male, 1 Marine Equip. 9035 can (ntl 644-5073 Sl25 536-6958 ...... v.1, r11Uo, ht •t1r, pow•r 842-8141. ll/~ 1956 31• SILVER streak':Xiiit 59Z-l932 01' <7l4l 846-lOl'T . 493-3378 1t11rift9 whit• w•ll tir11, Misc. Wanted 1610 842-8141. ll/20 6 ~l diesel eng. 3to1 reduc-/CAMPER'S DREAM 196S RIVIERA, fully loaded, tinttd tl•11. UOD 27! _ •----------Uon unit. Fresh water cond. l~' vw .... _.....,r Big en · lea., • x pl r l n g. Must OLDSMOBILE $WE Buy$ FRIENDLY loveable pOOdle, cooled. Brand new, still inl ==::*=:"":;:';633:=:*==== ;>U.l l...cllu.,... g1ne. sacrltlce.Call67J..7155 '68 FORD $2295 9 mos. old, male 646-8418 crate. Factory cost. ~2910 • $945 or BESf OFFER. •111. IOI 4 Dr. H.1. aft 3:30. 11/20 aft 4. Trucks ~ 9SOOl;,67;:;:;ME;;R;::r;E;D;::ES;;:;;.=_:230;:::;:::: ~842-58&1.::..:='-------l '63 WUdcat 4 dr, orig, owner, BANK v.1, 1utom•tic:, r•dio, h•••· $ FURNITURE $ APPLIANCES Color TV-Piano-St1rao1 I P*9erHo ..... ll CASH IN 30 MINU'Tn -• _Ml .... 531 • cx:nz SL '55 VW BUS, new 1"1!-blt eng. dependable, power strg/ REPOSSESSION , tr, powtr ••••ring ftclory GOOD Pets lor child.re~ RAY'IHEON RDF Ranger 0 GMC TRUCKS Cpe, PS,. AM/FM, 4 spd, Needs work on trans. Make brks: $695. 494--3954 1969 OldtmobUe, 40, 2 door •ir concl., fi11tt4 91111. family of tame rats, dofl t like new port 12-trans Oranee County Sales and 4t,OOJ m1, li-11nt cond. 1 Offer. 494-5419 eves. Days hardtop. power steering, WTE 116 b;i., -6 11/>l p/o 3 .,.;,.,,, ~""' lllD: Servlco Heldquarten. owner l<OOO (1) ""-8976; 54!;-3343. CADILLAC "'6'"J-c"'o=1v"A"'1"'1-"'s1"'9"'5 FEMALE c.ock-a-;xxi, adult. 675.{1589 NEW -USED Y,'Ork 871-3232 Ex 55.52 power brakes, a ir cond., M , " , '66 VW BUG, like new Good ------'---I auto trans. Excellent condi-on11. t utom•l•c: .,,,,.,,,,,. • • I ! I l I l •! 1 I • ' I • ' l I .. ' I _, ~ ~ to~~~ •-· SI M • 903"" UNIVERSITY '68 MERCEDES 300-SEL; rubber. $950. 602 Acacia, '68 F'I'WD BRGltf. All ac-tlon. Low mUeage. 642-3ll.l lion, rtdio, ht•tif.~Ui:" -t Ip oor1ng_u OLDSMOBILE air, lthr. AM/FM, stereo Corona de! Mar. cessories. Black. Cost $9'Dl Ext 237 or Ul. GHR 1·15 LOol~!:~· ~'! &oolymo. ** 80' SLIP available for ~~ta Mr,!lvd. ~7,00J mL 615-4422; '56 vw -Good Cond. $325 or ne,,wooo, oowu $5250tull/best offer. '66 CuUass Convertible. Pis. ~'6"c6,..,.~"-1"1"c,."u,"'1",r"'.,-,..$l"'H4",t'"S \ftc_n. ' -boalg...for_gale__(2) 30' to 35' --=;~~~~~~;;;::-I_,;=°"'~~~=== best offer. Call 642-51157 or ' mes, warranty. P/b, P/w, AfAKE OFF£:R. re-· · ' · • IJll" WANTED S48-0452. -ID2' or (1) fiO' to 80'. Call Chuck 51().9&40 MG MS-4354 aft 6. -~ (n'4) 63!M663 Low book $1350. High Book :;~·-:a'::~·.~;~~:!'.0·P~'.;~; WE PAY CASH 1 _.,___., Good used furniture, appll-PETS •nd Ll~ESTOCk Avery 613-52.52 or eves '66 ECONQLINE .61 VW Bus CAD 1968 convert 20,000 acc. $1850, Mr. Gorman ~1%Jl. br•kei, ftclory air ·cortdl- ances, antiqu.,, color TV's, 494-3916 with r-ebll en...ine, •=. miles like new. Full power '~"'='=-' .;'%-~3:;:1":.:..;';;"";';...~~· 11 tio"in9, tinttd 91111. TSA Peh, General 8800 _,,:,.,,:=-~-~--MG "' ..,_,,, •~ In s•--Ph ~ .,.,,, refrig'a, stove's, washers &. WANTED: Slip or buoy to van, automatic, dlr, runs Sales, Service, Parta Call 673-8709 au c. LQ."'1· • .,.,.,.....,... 1966 OLDS . -F-85 Station ~'~"~==~-== d,.,. 24 rs, etc. I piece or house· WOT'S NU?' moor 26' sailboat, N~wport like a top! Locally owned Immediate Delivery,• -68-vw=,=w~hl;,,,te;,,,, ,;_xln~t-cn~nd. CAMARO Wqon pwr atr, pwr brakes, '6' ,COMn $1191 ful, hr service. 5-nta Claus Specials at area. Priv prty, Please call tn Laguna Beach. Must sac. All ldodels xtras SUiSO pvt ply.-431 lugaqe rack, low book Vov•t•r. t p•••· 1tt fl•11 842-3921 or 892-3596 "I1S-:i"ROPICAL F1SH days 545-6857 Eves. 83S-2645 rifiee today? Low blue book Rl nide NB 642-8099 $1150, blab $1570. Be.st oiler wa9011, rtdio, httft r, v.1, Wanted-Rolltop desk !KISO>Edingei Cat Magnolia). * WANTED * Sl.OCiO •. Full price $950. Hu.r-ve ' ' ' '68 4 SPEED, grey w/ vlll)'I by Nov. 17 taket. 497-1.0;H 1utom1tic "trtnNni1•lo11, !Ml· Needed before Olrlstmas F.V. * * ~ .MU530 SLIP FOR SB' BOAT ry! PS5281. Call Ken, 494-9713 ~66 VW Sunroof. Very good top. Excellent condition. ST~ WAG STEAL I ••r 1t~1rln9. Uc. Rrr tl6 549-0449 YOUNG Red fox, t,me pi,l===™='=SJ9.02'18====°' ·c::".;.-"""""='==-=.,.-=I "'""11175• 4~~es, new eng, S2000. 646-50&8 '65 F-85 Wht°Wq. SaCritite. '69 COITINA $16'5 ==-------1 Racoon, tame $50. Cqea -~ · '-----Orig oWner, Exceptional; 1600 dth1a•, tutornttlc NEED bricks one to 1000, u.~Llle Homos 9200 % ,T '82 CHEVY Pick Up '61 vw bus, n1echanically CHEVROLET tr1 n.rnl11lo1t, r•dle, h11f1r, ..... nabl' pn·-•. ••• ••-l~125-1=;:50".=54&-=2"'9=='=== '"~z;;:;;:~:::::=--= w/•teel camnor shell, ·I' 3100 W. Coast HW)'. N.B. SJ.(60, * 673-1232 ~ 11 SlOO 1 """ vrl'"""JOO• : '--", 6 cyl ,,.;-, Immaculate 642-94M . ~0..l'164 perfect, rebuUt engine. •nit••• , · actu• ...___ ~ BAY -HARBOR ._. ·• $700. * * '* 496-2878 '65 Nova S.S. bkt seats, auto '66 TORNADO Dix. Beaut. miltt. lie. YWT 11 1 Storage 8775 1 ~.....,,..="------""--' Mobil H S Jes thru-out. New rear tires. Authorized MG DeaJer tra I lh 6 cond $1 750 For quck Ill.le '65 PORD $HI /--~------WANTED: "'-lover "-·-1..o" !l!lftO •A Paint like new. Must see to '5.5 MG Roadster, TF 1500. '63 VW BUS. A-1 cond. R&H, new"''Jre~. r~~=u~ ,en=·v.,:"party;·~·.;67>-0~=';"~=· 6 I 100 4 0 VI • vt SPACE: Boats & Campers, U"6 ......_ ma kOll -WBY • believe! Reuonable a s Old classic made new 3:1,00J ml on new eng: ' .. • • • '· • • • 0• 110 a mo. 526 Center St., w/lncd Yd. no chldrn for Sheraton M&ncr·. Homette 1• • • ' * 673-3244 * xlnt oond. By owner $995. rtdlo, ht•hr, po••r •fa•r, oc caslonal da,y/overntte Kit • Presdp • Sahara 0~!'1ust sell. Best offer. C.On:ipb.rakreblt. cleng, rear end, -~-~-'~~-~ 837-5202 days; 67 3-4 566 PLYMOUTH •hlta ••II tlr••· SYI 203. C.M. 642-7990 or 546-6400. care of timid, genUe sml ALL SIZES ~...,,..., ocw es, utch, etc. Lo '68 VW. Beige, blk. Int. New eves. ---------'61 MUSTANCi $1HI FREE TO YOU Terrier. 673-7447 early am NOW ON DISPLAY '60 roRD P/U, % ton, reblt mil. Call days (1) 532-6534; tires, Xln't cond., $1600 =r: CH i965 BARRACUDA. $135 uo. v I , d · --·, b'ig •-•, rum good. pm 642-5239 ask for Mr. J. Dennis. 6#4020. ]""" EVROLET Sta . ._· ,1 1utotn tt1c, ·,. ''. ie, 1425 Baker SL, Cost.a Meaa U<1'"' _,,. Wn ... on, 4 dr. Chevelle 283. der wh1se. Total price $790. n•• tr, po•tr ••t•ltl· 1.ARGE Dog house &U-1724, Eves. 11/>l or eves. SILKY TERRIER-MALE Pups. 2 roos • shots • adOl'able &: healthy. SAN· TA 'S SP~CIAL PRICE $100. 3 Puppies to good home, 6444806 C o cke r & Terr I e r . I==-,--,--,.,--...,..,...,.,-645--0279 11/20 THE best pet YoU could ever tiANDSO r.1E German want. 15 mo. old male Bed· Shepherd/Husky puppies, 6 lington Terrier. Had all \\'eeks old. 6'12-4323. W 3J shots, obed. trained, adores children $50. 5-19-3957 ••• -.• .. -·. ••• 1488 eves Jones VW BUG $1600 ~ Good od can ~0 - 00 1 vs in block East ot Harbor Blvd. ~~·~;:'Mttc'b$4oo. '61 P/S, P/B. auto trans. $895. co • ....,.,....-,.. or •hilt .•• I tir1•.. K 610 Co.ta Mesa • (714) 540-9470 • .,..-MGA can .. u pm 642.8244 __ Cal;;,; I -"'2-5890. ~64&.fil=""==· =====II '66 FOID $14'5 'SPACES I _ l~'"'FOd~ .• !:°r ~~!;'™~ '62 VW CAMPER '57 ChcvY-Behlire, HT, ps, PONTIAC Ftirltnt 500 2 dr, H•"'fop Move in today ·-"l.'" 'I •Y.,.. ..... H * $850. &1:>0815 * pb. Built up 283 w/3 spd. V-1, •ufo, r•dio, ht tltr, New 5 *Parle W, 17th St .. CM. 549-3343 '65 MGB -Fast traru;ption. $400 1969 FlREBIRD Pontiac. pwr. itt•r, f •cl o r y •ir Choice of models or custom 8 AM • 5 PM. VOLVO 83J...lS54 c:ond, whit• wt11 tlr11, finf· built-In smog free Cost.a ..1965 c;tievy 6 cyl. in ton, P. c Spd, wire whit, dlr idnt 15,000 actual m ileage t d 91•11. STY 105 Jl.1esa.-Newport Harbor, U. 43,000 ~I. $1~. 642-3812 cond. Top·~BI~ book YQLYQ ·~~~.m~c~oe~~e:!,tl~~~.· Lipstick orange w/ white '66 MERCURY $2195 Adult·Moblle Home Park after 6 PM. $1700. Must sacrtfioe $985. Cordova lop. $2950. Helen Cou9tr. V.I, tufo, r•dlo, Can &I run pwr, AM/FM, pr!. ply. o .. an owner. 546--6514. · 1. 1 , 1 Greenleaf Mobile Home Sales .unc pl".iv prly. PDM-•v "'' ''• pow• 1 '''· po•t r FREE Firewood. 642-18211 Cam-rs 9520 450. Can Keil. 494-977J or CLEARANCE NO\.YI Maire offer. 6'13-6424 1968 BONNEVILLE, fully br•k••· ftc:tory •1r c:tncl, SKYE TERRIER, AK C, 1150 Whittier, CM 64'1·13:i0 :::::::J~t::.:~---....;.;c;.. 545-142 • 144 _ 145 • l'4 '61 CheVy impala~' v., tqu!p. Small down & Take •hlt1 ••II tir11, vh1yl fop, ll/l8 champ sired female pup. '88 MOBILE HOME 20x43, 1988 15 toot Northwestl:i::i0634=:·======= THE LOWEST PRICES $295. Good Trans Uoa. over payments. Xlnt tenm. tl ~teJ 9lui. UJA 17J. ·-==~~~1 ~~.-Hsbrkn, rare, calm, fiu!fy extras, nice, adult1, pet Coach camping trail e r. OPEL YOURBES7DEALS ·Call642-0!ll4. 6#-1387 '65 PLYMOUTH $195 2 KITI'ENS 8 wks o d. Tiger pet. 5-19-254.1 ..... Co Sp •-cd 3 id I ... -• 6 'ped nd hl p&1A. r. . u::n s es. sleeps 8 peop e, uao:u ___ ::_:_:::.,_~-.<\RE Sl'lLL AT '66 CHEVY Impala, 2 Or. '6<1 BONNEVILLE, pwr strg, Btl¥1d1r1. 4 door, V-1, tV• male strl ' gt'Cy a w BOXER Puppies -Pet &: 642-326-1 anytime Wed &: Fri. times, like bra~ ~w! ! 1969'1.r OPEL GT. ...,.. DEAN LEWIS ,_"_OT_._B_E_S7_o_F_FE_R_.__ pwr brks, pwr windows, R & fol!'l•tlc tr1n1., po•t r ,,,,,.. female. 642-8643 11/20 ShoW Qual. Will bald fDJ: other dys bef 5 PM Cost "".-, 5ILCl'llice $1100. $3!95 can .• *••• '~'* ln9, r1dlo, ht•ttr. Li• RRY · Id • .....,.. Mr Gorm U'fl>'".<M.>'t l:l, auto trani, looks & runs 706 · The Ugliest Cat in the Wor . XmaL • ,_,,.AVA" ·~LE !or -ch can be seen Sat &: Sun at · · an A"• s= ... , .. "1124 aft 6 11/>l ~·· ~ --F 644-1230 days. 49&--314t eves 1956 H bo CM -6"9303 '62 CHEVY II 6 W•""'n, '64 great! ..... fli ....... .rrv-v765 '63 PONn•c $1691 -· p.m. Call -962-8031 \ of your choice , lN· 15953 Mt. Matterborn, • · · ar r, . . ...,. ...,v ""' 2 TIGERS to a Special LOVING & in'esistable girls, FORA1ATJON AT SPACE Valley. call -531~ Pl!KXI '65 air, 4 spd, red engine, new tires. $315. Call '64 BONNEVILLE oonv. Xlnt .,_.Prix person -675-3558. ll/20 7 weeks, A.KC. Dachlund, 26, brutwood Beach Club, 1968 36" lCamper Shell tor 8' ROLLS ROYCE w / blk Int. r / h, w. o / d. I ~673.JIS::.::::::.:74c:aft:::_4"·----cond. New. Urea, paint. Autotnt tic ~ fr•n•mi•tion, FREE kittens. ~ Siamese, 7 Standard red $45. 842-2897 21462 Pacific Cat Hwy HB bed Removable back door, RO , Pvt. ply. Very clean $1995. '63 CHEVY II Nova 1~ 61'-l*>O; 875-3923 f•cl•rv •Ir, P0••r •fttring, \lks 795 11118 cost $365. Sacrifice $250. lLS 39, side m~unts, new Ei4>ll5f eves or 646--llOO Good cond. $550. .65 LE MANS, &port coupe. r1dio, h1af1r. Uc. JN.N 244 , . 893-l Pedigreed * IO x 40 TRAil.ER. F.P. 531--0380 pa~nt, new WSW trres, $4.950. :•::;·~';'=======di965C.;e;;:;"'im';;'l94~ss:v:i Sec to bdlevt:I $100 over '67 PONTIAC $1nl • : 3 DARLING little kittens. St .. Bernard Puppy $2850. 7»1 COAST HIWAY, Priv. prty 846-50il. 644--0501 Blue Book. 968-4038 ~ ..... , cal. ... -·2 11/18 ••• "'65 •· h •-n ... NB 1965 Chevy Impala SS. V~, c;:;;:.,;;=::..;;~""',-=,-11 ~ One a ico. ~ .....,......,, ..... ac .,. .-;y, · · 9525 A I Cl Al 96.15 • 2 do•r h•rdfe,, autom•ttc:. !===='======~=====--====~======== Dune Buni• SUNBEAM nt qu11, • a R&H. PIS, auto. Ori& '67 Gr•n Prlx..Sh11rpl fr•R•ml •Uon, ft ck/ry air, l ... NEW Dune Bum' El Lobo,1----,:_~,:_,:__ 1957 MORGAN + 4, ne\\' top, owner. Sl,OSO. S37·962S. -:::Loa:=d=ed=!=$1=995=·=84&.==ll;65=,ll ''cUo, ~•tftr. TUL 042 bOdy at;yle, 1966 eng. Sincro '66 Sunbeam Alpine, R&H, brakes. Excellent coniltlon. 15) l968 CHEVY Impalas, .. '67 aAMUl ' $1tl trans., radio, top, fully W/S/W, conv. Mual sell. nsoo. 64Z..1724 after 6 P .M. )OAded. Priced for quick __ c_RA;;, __ M_l_LE_R ___ 11 •·b·.r 5ttfi• ... W•goft. It'• equip. r.1etal flake creen. Blu Book whlsle $915. Retail sale! $1850. 534--5290 tht crot1 ~•untry modtl, $220Cl. ~16 ;1425. Your price $1000. Call Race Clri, Rods 9620 'it. • '58 Rambler. 2 dr, r/h, good •ith •uto mtt1c trt"•ml1• :65 VW Eng. l Chassis, glau .c:.673-3465;,:,,;=:.:'=';,,t ;_6 ____ US1 CHEVY. tube front end. CONTINENTAL ~;:~~lion car. 545-6062 ~/;;• rtdfo, h••t•r. Lie. RRY bdy, Licensed. Good cond.19&4 ~NBEAM Alpine GT. Pontlac rearend.327Cheuu 191i6 CONTI N ENTAL ,..., Good '67 CHITSLll $1HS ri.tust Sell • 83(h3448 Good lop, tires. Runs Kood ... 'o;u Ambassador Wap. · .,,.,~ $575. 531 1433 l='=""=·=$800==· =-fW6..322t-===== SEDAN oond. Asking $325. Nt wport. 4 door h1rcltep, vw Erctne. «I' HP, ~· -Loaded! Xln't Cond. 494--4922 v.1, •Ut• ... •tic frt1111n!11len, Runs good. $?.00. TOYOTA Autos Wanted 9700 $1950. Call • a.6-1843 ========~11 ,0••'•'-•tl119, rtdlo, h •••. * 646-98S2 * ·,;:;.;,;;W_:E;;,,~P:;;Ac:;Y"--T-0-P_;.,;,,;;: ========== T·BIRD ~S 127. low 1r1rl••9•· lie. DOLLAR CORVAIR ------·II '65 l'OID $10'5 AUSTIN HEALEY '69 RED Toyota. Xlnt con. hfust sell. moving Ea.at. AUSTIN AMERICA :?;;.,,,.011"· 495-5325• Sales, Service, Parts /,.;":.:...o:'l'O::_Y_OT~A--C~o-r_o_l_I a lmmtdlate Delivery Fastback, perfect condition. All 1tfodela 673-5041 J1nui1L1r1 31111 )L)l' ! ~' Tl.ME FOR QUICK CASH ~w. eout uw,.:;o_~:,., THROUGH A Authorized t.fG Dealer D~A,,,IL;;;Y"°'P"'r""LOT~o;;..1,;.,M,;.,E:o:·:...A-.1 --DAILY PILOT lJNES. You can u&e \hem !or Juat peMlu a day, Dial WANT AD &12-5671 ' ' for good, clean used cars, '62 CORVAIR, needs minor '66 T.,BIRD F1irl t 11• 100. 2 J • .r htrd· aD make& See George Ray work . 'NOuld make good 2 Or. HT, l\lll pwr, air, dlr, fop. V.1, •11tol'!l•tic *''"'·• 'Jbeodore. Robins FWd Dunc Buggy Chassis, $100. pwr acatJ, brskes, windows. po••r •t•1ri119, r•dle, h•••· 2060 Harbor Blvd. 5.16-6958 Blue Book $2S()O • SACRl· ''· Uc. NHU 269 C.M. 642-0010 FJCE $1685, or foretin car '6S CORVAIR 1.lonza coupe. Cal • Will Buy Your Volkswagen or Porsche & pay top dolltrs. Paid for or DOI, Call ~h IMPORTS \\'ANTID Oronp """""" TOP I BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Buell Blvd. H. Beach. Pb. M'l--8555 Immac. cond: 46.000 actual in tl'tld<'. NPV132. 1 Phu 49'1·m3 Ot' S.t>-06.14. mi. 4-flpd. $750. & 8 ..:::.:;.;.::_:::...::;,:,,:=:,__-a..m, to 5 p.m. Eves, _19&1 T·BIRD, P/a, Plb, •s:r-eticv. eorvah· Van. d. °l'lw, clean-:, Prlv J!ty •. $850 Htr. Automatic. Extra win--or .Take over J)l¥ftlen~ .. dc\\'I. 8.17-5548 au 4 PAI cS«-6719:.:::::::c_ ____ _ '51 PORntOLE 'f~lftrd. xt.nt cond • .NU lnttt. l pe.lnt. Rcblt engine,, Call ~7615 'ss T·BIRO, loadtdt ·xint cond. dk blue. J16()0; By CORVETTE UNTON • FORD 224~ S. Main 546-7076 '66. FASTBACK. white, 327. C 11pd, m11ny :clras, xlnt c1u't $.1150. 644-0425 . ~ow~nc=~~6e,:'15-32;.::c:;JO;_:---''-...... "'!' ......... - ' i I l I I r I I .f . , l I l I ' " ·---·-= ' . H DAR.Y P!LOT-lllfl!llp, ,..,,_ 18, 1969 --"--= " BJ J08EPH,E. DYNAN Seethe 2nd Histo.ry-Making ApollQ Moon Flight on a Sylvania 11 w TVl .,,,0 ,.. ' .• iV RECEPTION SIM ULATED ELt'<iANT SY.LVANIA COLOR TV with gliding lam- bour cloott. ·Cabinet of Walnut veneers <1nd select .wood solids. Tod•y's .largest screen size (29-5 sq. in.). The utmost in reliability is yours · with the Sylvania 6ib~alter che,,is. Push button AFC perfectly tunes ydur set ~very time you turn it on or chenge chennel1. The SyJv..-nie tolor bright 85® pi ctur.e tube proviCles the .iharpest picture aveilable. · Moael CFHOW. . ' . EARLY AMERICAN STYLING ELEGANCE ·-Model CF 541 K YOUI . CHOICE $59995 Aloo. 1v1ll1blo with -le Cont.roll OTHER :svLVANIA COLOR TV MODELS AS (OW AS $259.95 411· E. 17th St.-C:osta Meta 646-1614 -.Dally 9.9, Sat. 9·6 -· • • 1 ·'' '' c • •, • • , T ' " on. . . . . ~ cllfOUT , •. . ~- Bu~ shquld the Industry fall to scrutinize itself, s a i .d Herbert G. Klein, "You do in· vite Ure govenunent to come in. I'd like not to see .Ulat·hap- pe.1." . Kie.in, a fonner newsp~r editor aiicl· ~"Nixoii;s dltec> tor ! Of.iCOfnn!amcaUori.s, said Su~ay <Of.-'.Al!f*W's .~oa .... ' . 'o• . ' ,,, IOR ···---. ~, -' ' 1snow ' I . ' ' . '' ~-SI • It's important t.o you-and t.o us. Direct.ory Ass~ce ' . is a better description of the service we provide: helping you find a number that's not in your telephone direct.ory. Like the number of ·S?meoae who has new telephone service. Or a friend who' lives m another t.owa. Chanees are you can find ~t of ·the. load · numbers you're looking for in your phone oook. But, if you can't, call Direct.ory Assistance. '. ~- @Pacific relephone Wfire here to help. ,.. ... • ' ' lj 'I that a "small and welected elite" in the national television networks is abusing its-power over public opinion: "I think there's a legitimate question to be debated within the industry. I would be op- posed to gove rnment participation in it. But In the industry, whether we're doing a good enough job, whether we're being-objective epough and whether we might not spe;id more time in self.Ex# amination." Ki.in appeaf«l on the CBS rad1o-television pro 4 ram 4'Face the Nation." · • ~ • i . I • ,, , .. " 17