HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-12-08 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17
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Soldi~r ·~t My Lai
•neinsed-to Shoot~ . . -
s.~rean1ing Civilians
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DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER. 8, 1970
VOL. u,'No. tta. I llC'TION5, d f'Ae ll
Shootout Trio
• • 'Uf'I T91ffll ...
DIES', AT HOSPITAL
Sheriff's Deputy Wallace
Glider .Crash
Kills Mes an;
Ohio Buddy
A frail sailplane towed aloft over Lake
Elsinore glid into a sicb?ning spin Mon·
day afternoon, carrying a Costa Mesa
man and his visiting Oh lo buddy 3.000
feet to instant dea th on th'e dry lake bed.
. Raymond J. Bouchard.,:24. of 207 E.
16th Place, and David W. Jefflrs, 26, o£
Nashport , Ohio, were dead an atrival at a
local hospital. , No im"mediate cause could!be determin-
ed for the crash. which occurred
mOments after th e glider ~s released
from a tow plane that pulled ft; aloft from
Sk}~ark Airport in Elsinore. I .
''The cable was dropped and shortly
thereafter they wenl into a ~ghl·ha~d
1pin and never recovered .. _ 1 a l d
(Su GLIDER. Page %)\
or .. ge
'
Coat
ll'eathl)r
You'll ha ve to . drive by lnstru. ~'
ments tonight when the first big
fog of the winter season rolls in.
Wednesday will be haiy with .
temperature11 in the 68 lo 72
bracket.
INSmE TODAY
Have 11ou el)tr· wondered
wha t it would be like to wear
a nightgown tnstead of a formal
to a ball~ Reaction i! told bll
Bea Anderson, Page 13.
Ootr 17 ~
CHRISTMAS
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Sheriff'• 'Daput•( C..,,pbell
Suspect Moreno
Cuba Cuts Back
Sugar Quotas
For Next Year
MIAMI , Fla. (AP) -Facing mounting
economic difficulties, Premier Fktel
Castro has scaled dowp Cuba's 1971 augar
production quota to seven million tons
'\. and rearranged the cilendlr to achieve
it.
· The bearded prime mini$ler announced
Monday niglit that neit Jt•r'a -iuiarCane
harvest would start this month. As a con· 1 sequence, CUbans will Ce I e b r a t e
·. Christmas and New Year'11 holidays in
\ July. Also put off until next summer ls
1 the observance of the 12th annlversary of
\Castro's assumption of power.
This would normally have been
TraffiCStop
Brings Shots
In Compton
A pair or young Los Angeles County
11heriff's deputies were shot.--on.e fatally
-early today in Compton , by a La
Habra man who was killed by the dying
lawman.
The shooting erupted after a rouUne
traffic stop.
Dead are Deputy Lou Wallace, 28, who
succumbed at St Francis Hospital 1n
Lynwood and Manuel R. Moreno, 22, La
Habra, who 'A'as pronounced dead at the
shooting scene.
Deputy Al Campbell. 28, was listed 1n
fair condition at St. Francis Hospital,
with .bullet wounds in the knee and hand,
suffered in a scuffle with the armed
suspect.
Coroner's deputies said sec on a I
capsule.a and s whitish powder believed to
be heroin were found on th! slain
suspect's body.
The incident was touched off when the
deputies began to search Moreno and Ile
whipped out a pistol, Wounding Campbell
in the knee,-then the hand.
Moving to aid his partner, Deputy
Wallace took a slug in the abdomen -
emP,tying his own gun at Moreno -then
collapsed as he crawled to the patrol car
to radio for help. ,.
Deputy Campbell crawled to the vehl·
cle and successfully summoned aid.
His partner nf!ver regained con-
11elousness.
Coast Man Died
Of Heart Attack
Orange C.ounty coroner'11 invettigators
toda.y said · a heart / condition . wu
responsible for the death Nov. 14 of
Newport Beach resider\t Nicholas A.
Miller.
Miller,-28, was rOund~ dea<r abOard ... the
boat on which he lived in Newport Beach.
Investigators said no immediate cause
.of death was apparent, and subsequent
tests showed tht young man died of a
heart coodiUon.
Celebrated Jan. 2. .
c..tro had ataked the pr ... tige of ~ .Quake Ripples Japan
revolution on an oyer-opUmiattc pro-' But No Dama"e Found duction of 10 million tons for Ulla year'a • e
harvest and failed. TOKYO (UPI) -A weak earthquake
¥We have a large Imbalance In lrade under the Pacific Ocean was felt ln Tok·
wltti the Soviet Union.'' Castro told a yo but ltO damage was reported.
wor:ker11' conference. "The nea!Slltles of .~ The earthquake took place at 4:38 p.m.
the L\COuntry call for seven mlllkm tona if · Monday. The Central Meteorok>Qlcal
we 'f&nt to Illuminate our housu, proVlde Agency said the epicenter was n e a r
the fteceasiUes, our food . Tori Island, about (375 miles) south of
"~n with aeven million, our favor-Tokyo, Wider the open sea. Weak ahoCks
able bialance of payments ll larce . . ... were ·felt In Tckyo, Yokohama and areas
" ' to Lht north.
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• • f ~s-
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• Hogties S.~ra1nhle .
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Sho.wtlown Nearing . .
In Nevada Court
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Slaill--Mesan Gives-Life
W>oman Living Nornially After Pancre~ 'Transplant
81 Al\tJruR R. VINSEL
Of "'' Cllll't f'llll '""
A young woman sufferiag from a
di11ea11e that would have been fatal is now
looking forward to a normal life, follow-
ing a rare surgical transplant in which
she received the pancreas of a Costa
MeM murder vi ctim.
The patient Is now listed in good con·
dition at Orange County Medical Center
13 days later, but officials decline to idea·
For mer Sol.dier
'Ref used to Kill'
My Lai Civilians
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) - A soldier
who was under lit Lt. William L. Calley's
command at My Lal testified today he
refused to obey Calley's order to shoot
screaming clvlllana in a ditch where
mothers piled atop their children to save
them from automatic rifle fire.
The witness, Jamel! Joseph Dursi,
employe of an electrical manufacturing
firm in Brooklyn, N.Y., was the 35th pro-
duced' by the government in its attempt
to convict the diminutive C8lley of the
premeditated mur~er of 102 civilians in
the Vietnamese village March 115, 1968.
His testimony followed that of another
former soldier who aald he watched
Calley act as the lone executioner of fi~e
to 10 separate groups brought to the ditch
during a 90-mlnute perlld.
Oursi, a huge man with black hair,
aldeburns and mustache, said he waa a
private first class in the platoon Calely
commanded.
After his testimony, Capt. Aubrey M.
Da11iel tn. the prosecutor, told the court
Dur11l probably was the last prosecution
•w1thess, bUl lhlt 'he would 'not rest the
government cqe without .Ina.king an ef· '
fort to find twl more witneues .he ha.a
been tryln& to loc.ate.
ours! 11ld at Calley's order, he, Pfc
Paul D. 0Meadlo, 'arSd Calley ·put their
rifles In the port anns posiUon am· puabo
ed people Into_. ditch at My. Lai. ·
"Sarni! Nr\ed to' <!r)I and they w.,..
yelling," he ,11fd. "Meadlo wu, crying
and pushing !ht people. We WeNO ordered
to ahoot by Ll' Calley. .
"l don't remember his exact words, but
he said aomethlng like: 'Start firing.•
"Calley and Meadlo 1tarted tiring into
the dltCh down at the people. Mead.lo
turned to me and told me : 'Shoot! Why
don't you shoOt?'
"He' 'jif'AI crying and yelling to me.
"l just aald: 'I can't! 1 won't!' and J
(Set CAU.EY, P•ae t) .
t
Wy her at this 1tag~ or convale~nce.
TransplanUng of the delicate. com·
plicated· metabolic organ is done only as
a last resort.
Parents of Kenneth S. Woodruff, 19. of
2U3 Pacific Ave., Costa Mesa , agreed to
the procedure when be auceumbed
Thank.!giving Eve of hopeless head rn.
juries.
A medical team from UC Irvine suc-
cessfully transplanted a pancreas i.nd
kidney 16 !DOntha ago into a HunUngton
Beach 'Woman's bodyf when fewer than 20
had been performed In surgical h.i.!Jtory.
Mrs. Cara Ramey r es p on.ded
dramatically. only to be killed in an
ironic car-truck collision last summer.
The unidentified recipient bl Woodruff'•
healthy pancreas has been moved out of
the inte~sive care unit where be, died 1J
da ys ago, nurses confirmed Monday .
Woidruff suffered multiple skull frac-
tures and extensive brain damage Nov.
(See TRANSPLANT, Pace I)
Hughes' Empire Scramhl.:
Nears Neyada .Sh.owdown
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -The scramble
that developed when Howard Hughes left
on vacation for the Bahamas and fired
the chief of hill $300 million Nevada em-
pire headed for a showdown today.
A court hearing was S&Jleduled to
render a legal decision on a temporary
restraining order barTing a takeover of
the Nevada holding by Hughes' corporate
leaders. It was to be followed by a joint
meeting of both sides in the• dispute in a
sesson mediated by ,the governor.
A Hughes spokesman said these two
developments, "should end the whole
thing by nightfall ." ·
At stake was control' of the lucrative
chain of hotels and casinos in the gambl·
Ing capital which made the mlllipnalre
recluse the state's single I a r I est
employer.
Wh'tn 'Hughes ordered the firing of his
top Nevada aide from his remote
hideaway In the Bahamas a power strug-
gle developed between the gambling
operators and Hughes' corporate ex·
ecutlves.
Gov . Paul La1alt, his Interest 11purred
by the disUDity that tl!reatened the tax-
yielding riches lo his state, stepped In.
Laxalt 111id he entered the strange case
lo determine If there would be any effect
. upon continued operations of the hotels
and caslnos.
La1alt aaid he ta.lked with · the
mysterious bi!Uonalre Monday and that
Hughel told him he Wl\I on a plea1ure
and businea trip "In &ood condltion.:' He
, told the governor he approved of , the
change In leadership of his Nevada
operations.
The 1ovemor said he took over the rote
as conciliator In an attempt to briq I.he
two feudin& factions toeethtr.
The g~Vernor said H~hes told him by
telephone that he authorized the firing, of
his top aide in the $500 millloo-a-year
Nevada operation, However. that aide,
Robert Maheu, a former FBI agent who
has been Huahes' rliht hand man durlng
(
the four years the 64-year-old reclUM
spent in this gambling ca pit.al, ·resisted
his ouster by an outside &rouP represu-
ting the parent Huglles Tool Corilpany of_
Houston.-r
Laxalt met with the 11 members Ol the
Hughes Tool board of directors Jn the
after~ and 11ald be was goin1 to au
Maheu to voluntarily rellnqul!h control cil
the Nevada operations.
La.lalt met later with Maheu but coa.ld
. not 'convince rum to abandon the fight. 4
Security guards hir.ed by Maheu still
were patrolling the casinos of the "strip"
gambling Spas rand Ptfaheu Still WU
physically in control of lhe hotels.
LaxaU said he was telephoned by
Hughes from the Bahamas early Monday
morning and that Hughes "told him he ap.'.
proved the ouster or Maheu by a 1roup
headed by William Frank Gay, a vice
presid,nt of Hughes Tool Company, an:!'
Chaster ,Dav:ls, a New York lawyer,
The governor said Hughes told him be
was In good condition and takinc a
"vacation" he had planned for 14 months.
Asked how he could be certain It wu
Hughes, Laxalt said he recognized hll
voice and that they alsO spoke of matters
only they -could know aboul.
Clark County District Attorney Geor11
Franklin Yid he also •Alke to HQChel
during' the thfee-wa_y 'cOnvenatton and
that Hughe! sakf he waa in "good
spll'ils;" Ninklln' said the financier told
• him he pla"1f!d to return to IM Ve1u ln
two weekl to a month..
Di vorce Suit Filed
PARIS (AP) -Former Pnmler c....
stantine Catamanlls of Greece and ·his
wife Amalia have filed. for divorce Jn the
French courta, a spokesman said todQ'.
The 1pokesm1n 11ld !be suit, !lied I
few days ago, la "completely frieadf)t ."
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~ DAILY PILOT 5
Pair Held
Iii Banker's
Son Kidnap
.: , LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two men who
:beld a banker's son in • car truok for
!several hours in demand for ransom were
'ibeing held today for Investigation of kid·
'hi:ping, police reported.
;. Lei; Spath, 20-ye>Mld IOl1 of William
Spath. wu found in good condition ln the
Cfr Monday night after the two men
were stopped on a freeway , police said. J .. Young Sp14th. officers said, had apeo\,
' veral hours Lr\ lhe trunk.
• PollCe said Geora:e Forrens, 35, and
omas LeRoy C.Oleman. :al, were booked..
or invesUgalion of kidnaping for the
of ransom. Officus said they
~ere armed, but dldnot resist arresL j TWo men armed with sawed-off
•b.otguns Sund~y night went to the
1suburban Granada Hills home of Spath, ~ manager of the Glendale branch of
~~Bank of Ami!rlcl, police said.
t f·Off\cera, iald the men ·demanded the a weekend deposits J-estimated at
than tJ00,000 ~ and ransacked the t. after b\ndlril s~. his: wife and i.=-·Spath said •he couldn't gel the 'beca.Ule he didn't bave a key, the
en .tbo)Gtbe iaon and told Ow! father to
the ' rnoney without ,telling police, of·
cers said.
Spath foUowed their directions, officers
\aid. taking a bus to Las Vegas, Nev .•
an<t· returning to Los Angeles. where he
was to deliver to the kidnapers a key to a
bus terminal. ~1on<tay night. the kidnapers drove to
the Spath home in two cars -~ of
them with the younger Spath Inside.
One of the men picked up the key from
Spath. and then they drove away, police
~id. •
Officers followed the cars and then
made the arrests.
Court Schedules
' ;\nti-ohsenity
Measure Hearing
• . An Orange County Superior Court hear·
Ina Will be held Dec. 14 Into a Santa Ana
ta vern owner's allegatiou that a city
ordinance which has been used as the
basis for arrests or his entertainers is
unlawful and unconstitutional.
Judge Harmon G. Scoville schedul!d
the inquiry aft.er refusing to issue a tern·
porary restraini1'g order whicb woul~
ha ve barred· police from -arrestln& per-
formers at the Chee Chee's and Semay·
gro Inc. bars. .
PoUce booked several entertainers for
allegedly obscene conduct ora the strength
of a newly enacted ordinance w h i c h
Provides for ba~ entertainers to be clothed
in at least tilkini attire for tavern per·
formances.
Gardena attorney Berrien Moore ar·
gues for tavern owner Erwin A. Rohm
that lbe ordinance is a violation of ihe
First and Fourteenth amendments to tbe
f.onstitulion. _.
'Amahl' Closing
This Weekend
The well known.christmas op e r 1
•·Amahl and the Night Visitors" will be
presented at the Laguna ~1oulton
Playhouse in Laguna Beach SatUrday at .2
p.m. and 8 p.m. and again Sunday at 2
p.m.
Directed by Irvin Kimber, the hour·
Jong apera stars several Laguna Beach
residelits wllh IO-year-o1d D a v J d Ruiz
playing the part of Amahl.
Tickets fo r the performances are $1 for
children and students, $2.50 for ·adults
and $2 for playhouse members. Tickets
may be reserved by calling the bor office
at 494-1743.
DAILY PILOT
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Talking Policr
Jo!dan's-King Hussein and President Nixon pose for p~otographers
prior to their closed-door talks, today on the gituation in' the Middle
East. ~sraeli Defense Minister Moshe Dyan 'is expected to meet with
Mr: Nixon in. w.ashington next w·eek. President is attempting .to get
senous n~got1at1ons between Arabs and Israelis started again.
Coast Guard Off ict:r Wept
~
Over Defector-Witness
WASHiNGTON (UPI) -The capta in or
a U.S. Coast Guard cutter wept after
being .ordered to return a Lithuanian
defector to Soviet custody Nov. 23, but
afterward tried to hush up the incident, a
m~ abo.y'd the cutter testified today.
Robert M. Brieze. a Latvlau refugee
who is president of the New 13edrord
Seafood Producers Association, told a
House foreign affairs. subco~ittee that
Capt. Ralph W. Eustis told hlfu he bad no
choice but to return the defector, Simas
Kudirka.
"At this time Capt. Eustis was cryin1,"
Brieze said. "He said that the orders had
come from the Boston office (of the
Coast Guard)."
Later, as the cutter was returning to
New Bedford, Mass., after fishing talks
with Soviet officials .at sea, Eustis asked
the five civilians aboard "to keep the
matter guiet," Briez.e said.
He said U.S. sailors who helped return
Kudirka to the Soviet shi p from which ·he
defected told him Kudirka "was either
unconscious or dead " when taken back
aboard the Russian ship. and had been
kicked repeatedly in a U.S. launch taking
him there.
Previously he said he hwd Kudlrka
screaming for help and then saw him
with his-face bleeding and a shirt torn off
after SovTet seamen hunted him down on
the U.S. cutter and beat him .
The Coast Guard has suspended Eustis
and two olhe; officers involved in the fn.
cldent pending an investigatiora due to be
completed thss week. '
Briete. who said he fled his country in
1944 ~ter the .~ssi~! occupied it. said.
he tried twice to get Eustis to contact the
State Department before r e I u r n I n g
Kudlrka to the Sovtet111 but Eustill did not
"respond. However, he said Eustis did try
to 'contact the Soviet Embassy in
Washington al the request of Soviet of·
ficers and "I think they got through."
"This .is about as sickening a story as
I've ever" heanli" subc".ommittee
chairman Wayne L. Hays (O.Ohio ) told
Brieie. "The man responsible for order·
Jl)g the return al -thi~-befeetor should be
couM marUaled, d1snUssed from the
servic'e and preferably sent to Siberia.''
Earlier, an official report showed that
the Coast Guard admiral who ordered the
Lithuanian handed back to ihe Soviets did
so in part because he did not want to
jeopardize t.he fishing talks.
Nationwide Tieup
Union Leader Predicting
Railroad Tieup Thursday
WASHINGTON (AP) -A union leader
&aid flatl y today a national railway strike
will start at 12:01 a.m. (EST) Thursday.
The statement came from C. L. DeMis,
president of the Brotherhood of Railway
Clerks, in addressing 150 representatives
of fo,ur unions as they prepared to go to
Capitol Hill to persuade Congress not to
accept President Nixon's proposal to
postpone a strike for 45 more days.
Dennis' union is the largest of the four
AFVCIO wiions representing about
500,000 workers in the wage dispute.
Dennis and other speakers at the rally
bargaining seasion failed to produce an
courage the railroads J.o stall in negotla·
tions until th~ unibns are crippled and
forced to meet management's terms .
Earlier, l>ennis said the walkout will be
called eVen if Con&ress grants Nilon 's re·
quest for the' 45-<lay delay.
ln asserting his union ''must strike,"
Dennis said the Railway Clerkl, with a
membership of about 200,000, are ready
to risk jail terms, fines and public
pressure to win their de'mands.
Dennis spoke after a J a t e • n i g h t
bragaining session failed to produce an
agreement or a voluntary postponement.
Senate Majority Leade r Mike Mansfield
of Monlana suggested, meantime, that
Nixon summon negotiators In the dispute.
put them In' a rootn, and "lock the door
Jnd throw the key away."
He told newsmen that was the way
President Lyndon B. Johnson acted In a
similar situation.
At the same lime. Senate Republican
Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania said
Republicans had prepartd legislation to
ball the threatened strike for 45 days as
requested by Ni.xon.
But Mansfield said he could see no
point In such legislation unless Mxon was
prepared to take action now.
"The President has to take the ln-
IUallve in doing now what -If l read his
statement correctly -he would propose
45 days frpm now," Mansfie.ld said.
O!alnnan Ralph W. Yorboroqgh (J).
'f'u.), of the Senate Labor and Public
Welfare Committee was said by an aide
to be disturbed by the Idea of congress
•cting before all other attempts at .aet·
tlemenl were exhausted.
'l'he aide said Yarborough appeared to
be sympathetic to Mansfield·s suggestion
that negotiators be called by Nixon to try
and solve the dispute.
Nixon, in asking Congress to require a
postponement. said a strike would impose
a hardship on the American people.
"I urge that Congress act quickly on
my proposal," Nixon said. "so .that a
crippling stoppage can be averted. and so
that the nation's travelers and shii)pera
can depend on uninterrupted service."
From Page 1
TRANSPLANT ..
21. when thrown oul of a speeding car on
the San Dieeo Freeway near Fairview
Road.
Witnesses said one of several occupants
could be seen holding the door open while
his companions ejected ihe victim head-
first.
Detective Jim Blaylock. who Is heading
the homicide investigation, said Monday
thal no new leads have developed in the
two weeks since the fatal incident.
No one was able to get a license
· number of th~ car, due to the swiftness of
events and darkness. combined with
speed of the car involved.
Blaylock said Mr. and Mrs. Everett
. Woodruff, of 351 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa.
Rgreed t.o the pancreas tra.n.splant when it
became apparent their son could not
survive. ·.
The earlier pancreas transplant -In
an ironic twist -also.involved donation
of ~n organ from a man who died under
violent and mysterious circumstances.
f.tn. !tamty received the kidney and
pancre1s of a young husband who suf·
fer«! hear injuries when ht felJ from the
roof o( a Garden Grove industrial firm.
Ills car stalled, the victim had called
his wife to pl<k him up al 1 log-shr911ded
lntcrSC!ctlon but no trace was found wbcri
she arrived, sn she left.
lie was discovered later, minus his
shoes, ir}er· apparenlly climbing atop the
building lnnd slipping on the fog-drenched
edge of the roof.
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J~tpor~
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Foe·s Protes,t
'
Hazard, Noise , Pollution Problems Cited
Br JORN VALTERZA
01 ltlrl DelfJ "lltt llllt
More than 200 foes of proJ>osals to use
Bell Canyon or ,El Toro MCAS as jet
airports gave a scwnd thrashing to the
plans and members of the county airport
commission Monday in hearings at a
Mission Viejo school.
Complalning lhat the idea of consultant
Ralph M. Pal'IOna ~ safety, noise and
pollution problem•. the Saddleback area
residents vented their wrath at members
of the county advisory board for more
than an hour until someone on the panel
c6mplaJned that it had gorae far enough.
Commissioners then replied, defending
their role as unpaid advisors to county
supervisors. adding that the commission
members were not the consultants who
proposed the plans.
Commlssiooer Robert A. Clark remind·
ed the audience that "we are five men
just like the people sitting next to you.
We are willing lo hear your comments,
but not your animosity, disgust and
tirldes. We are here to•serve you."
With that admonishment the tenor of
the m~lifll was tempered sdmewhat, but
the opposition to the jetport idea con·
tinued .'
Official representatives from El Toro
MGAS, Leisure World. Mission Viejo
homeowners, Aegean HUis homeowners.
Sen Clemente High School students and
other groups all marched to the
microphone to complain.
At one poinl Clark asked for a show of
hands to determine if a proponent existed
Jn the audience.
No one raised a hand.
"Frankly. I'm in favor of throwing the
entire Parsons report out, myseU," Clark
said.
He said the commission would gather
information from the Mission Viejo hear·
ing along with nearly . 400 hours of other
study and testimony and submit a recom·
mendation Dec. 15 to county supervisors.
Commissioners agreed that despite the
common objections heard Monday, they
did learn new information on the issue .
Among the new knowledge, they agreed,
was that the take off pattern of jets from
Bell Canyon would take the aircraft ov er
the San Onofre nuclear generating com·
plex . San Clemente State Park and ihe
Western White House.
Qppcwents said each facility. would be
vulnerable to aircraft accidents.
Other points of objection .inc luded:
-That the noise Renerated by jet
aircraft at ~lher the ~1arint.r facility or
Bell Canyon would destroy the serenity,
monetary value and life: style of the Sad·
dleback Valley which lies five miles from
Bell Canyon and even closer to the
M1rjne Corps base.,
.l That Orange County residents have
never been officially polled In an election
to determine if they even want airport
From Pagel
CALLEY ...
looked 'down al the ground.
''The people were screaming and yell·
Ing. Jt was moslly automatic and some
sem\aulomatic fire. and the weapons
were pointed down into the ditch. · I
remember Meadlo changing magazines
al one lime. They fired three to four
minutes.
"The people were diving on top of each
other -some or the mothers trying to
protect their children .
"LI. Calley came to me right after the
firing and told me to get across the ditch
before I got sick .. ,
Oursl said he saw "a lot of blood on t.he
che sts and arms and some head wounds"
in the bodies .
expansion in the: county.
-That the Persons consullanlS did not
poll Saddle back • are• resldents or their
public officials on the controver1ial
aspects or the airport titudy.
·-That the county tihould examine ether
alternatives to jetport location. Including
the San Joaquin Hills on the Irvine
Ranch, the Prado Dam area near
Riversi~e .COunty,_ an offshore Joc11tion
and -especially -Camp Pendleton. The
Marine base location has recently been
cited as a prime site for a major regional
airport in a masler plan drafted by the
Southern California Assoc iation o f
Governments (SCAG).
*** *** Score s of Citizens Voice
Objections to, Jet Airport
Foes by the score trooped t o
microphones Monday to register anger at
proposals to convert either Bell Canyon
or ihe El Toro Marine Corps Air Station
into major jetports.
Comments ranged from the derisive to
helpful hints on a possible localion for a
new ait terminal in Orange County.
Among the foes were:
-Mike Shearer, president of the
fl.1ission Viejo Homeowners Association,
who cited 1,000 signltures on his group's
petition opposing the site locations. The
names were obtained after only a week's
work, he said. "We will have many more
to hand to the supervisors Dec. 15. Do
people want an airport, or the preserva·
Lion Of their environment?"
Shearer cited the beauty and orderly
growth of the Missio n Viejo commu~ity,
lamenting that planners zone every inch
of the area's soil, "but none zoned our air
space, which is just as Important." He
urged swift planning for a regional
airport at Camp Pendleton before any
fuMher work on smaller jetports.
-Laguna Hills resident Harry Nash, a
retired airline executive, who described
himself as a veteran of the industry. He
cited a Ra lph M. Parsons 1uggestion that
El Toro MCAS could be converted to
joint, military-civilian use under a
"limited well disciplined program.
"Well, I submit that such an operation
is just like pregnancy : it would not re-
main small in size.'' he quipped .
-Art Speedlove, chairman of the
Aegean HiUs Homeowners Association,
From Pagel
GLIDER ...
Riverside County Deputy Coroner Deru\ls
Ely.
Actual site of the crash was ln the dry
south end of the lake bed, according to
Sheriff's Deputy Michael Jordan.
Federal Aviation Agency officials will
probe th e crash to determine whether
mechanical failure or other factors call!·
ed it.
The bodies were taken to Evans-Brown
r..1ortuary in Elsinore. where a
~pokesman said today no arrangemenls
had been made for services or shipment
elsewhere.
Bouchard was a junior mathematics
major at UC Irvine, where the new cam~
pus directory listed his fainily home at
24215 Las Naranjas Drive, Laguna
Niguel.
Deputy Coroner Ely said Jeffers was
apparently a longtime acquaintance and
he believed he was In Southern California
visiting a Los Angeles aircraft engineer·
ing comaany.
Costa Mesa Police Officer John Be.ale
delivered word of Bouchard's death to his
who praised airport rommi55loners for
their pa tience in enduring long protests
on airport matters. "They are long suf~
fering and have heard nothing but
negalive comments. If you want to hear a
real tirade sometime, listen to Newport
Beach residents.'' he said.
Speedlove asked commis.sklners if they
had reviewed his group's suggestion to
use a section of the San Joaquin Hills as
a jetport site . Members of the panel said
they had not yet received an oplnion from
tht Parsons cinsulting firm in Lo!
Angeles.
-San Juan C8pistrano Mayor Tony,
Forster, who relayed the city's cbagriJt
because the Ct'.lnsultants recommended
San Juan's sewage treatment system to
serve a proposed Bell Canyon term inal.
"But they never asked us for our opinion
and that was presumptive," he said.
-San Clemente High School student
president Jay Wentz, the leader of a peti~
lion campaign which has gathered 2,600
signatures of opponents. His eloquent
plea for conservation won the longest ap-
plause of the evening.
"I honestly believe that the residents of
thi s county and their children woul<]
rather sit, waiting for an extra 51)
minutes in an airplane ... waiting to takr.
off into air which is fit to breathe." J
Dr. Slocum Fil~
For Dissolution '
Of Marriage I
Dr. Wesley Garner Slocum, Uie Costa
Mesa physician cleared last rnontb of
charges that he murdered his infant
daughter, petitioned M:onda¥ for a
dissolution of his.marriage.
He cites "irreconcilable d8(ferences''
between himself and Mrs. Ma·rian Rosalie
Slocum in the Orange Cou11ty Superior
Court complaint. Mrs. Slol.!um testified
against her husba nd as I.he chief pr~
sccution witness in his jurY; trial.
Dr. Slocum, 45, asks for; custody of th e
couple's two children , Tiiane, 9, and
Marian, 8. The lawsuit indicates that both
girls are presently re '.iiding with their
father.
The surgeon also a:;'ks for court con-
firmation that funds :~nd securities held
in a Santa Ana bank be labeled for his ex·
elusive use.
The Slocums we1.<e married in New
York on Oct. 21 . 195.,. The date of separa~
tion is given as last. March, the time that
Dr. Slocum was arrested and charged
with the murder of this three-month-<1ld
daughter, Cynthia.
Earlier. the mil itary judge at Calley's
trial denied a motion to prevent the
testimony of the first witness of the da y.
He also refused to strike out an account
of a 90-minute execution given by the wil·
ncss on direct examination Monday.
· j.!irlfriend . Mary Root, Monday night at
the request of friends in Elsinore.
Those charges were filed after the
dismembered re mains of the child were
found in an unused freezer after the ap-
pliance was shipped from the couple's
Costa Mesa horue to a Santa Ana depot.
He said she became so distraught she
had lo be left in the care of friends in
Huntington Beach.
A Superior Court jury found nothing ht
support the ch111rges and quickly cleared
the accused physician.
YOUR MONEY'S WORTH!
Many people don't realize that carpetin9 is one item that can be pur·
chand for less money today than 30 yean a90.
Here are a few eye openen CJ I e a n e d from a newspaper of 1940,
courtesy of the Santa Ana Library. Compare these with to:day's prices:
1940 1970 INCREASE 1940 ' 1970 INCREASE
1940 C1dllltc $1700.00 + $7600.00 + 447•4 Peanut Butter .09c lb. .43c lb. 477°/.
1940 Chevrolet $659.00 + $2395.00 + 363•1. Bananas .04c lb. .lOc lb. 240°/e
600·16Tires $6.45 $18.95 292% Cracker• .07c lb. .29c 414•;.
Chuck Roa1t .141/2< lb. .49c lb. 339•;. Mov ie Theater .25c $2.00 aoo-;.
log.().l1mb .19'hc lb. . 99c lb . 509•;. Rest. Sl11k Dinn°'! .35c $2.95 842-J.
T·Bone Steak .16 \.'.i c lb. $1.29 lb. 111 •;. Good Carpeting $8 sq. yd, A up $8 1q. yd. & up 0•1.
'
started
Perhaps another time w•
In the carpet busineas.
can compare today's prlc11 with pricta In 1894 when our family
~~~~~~~~
SANTA A.NA, OIAN•I
TUSTIN C .. I •••
ALDIN'S
llD HILL CA.INTI
• DUP1a1a
11174 lrYt"'° T1•tl11. Calif,
111·2244
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646·4838
HOURS: /Mn. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5!30 -Fr i., 9 to 9 -S.t,. 9:30 to S
Tllf<day, Dtum"" 8, 1970 S DAILY PILOT J
'Gay' ·Goal~ ___ __, _Greenbelt ·_Get~_ Gift
Outlined
In Laguna
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of -~Uy ,llet Sltll
Two members of the lA>.! Angeles Gay
Ll.beration Front (GLF) in Laguna Beach
Sund,ay called for an end to OP[lression of
homo~uals and for sup!!Ort of the
movement to establish an ••au-gay" 1overnme~t ln Alpine County.
Speaking be.fore members of the local
Unitarian-Universalist Fellowship, June
Herrle and Penny Wilkin told of the
'.'seriousness" of the Alpine County pro-
Ject.
''The Alpine project is a way of getting
our basic rights," explained Miss Henle.
"We want to get a majority of the voters
in the county who are gay, so that we can
send a gay person to lhe body of state
representatives.
"We are trying to work through the
system to change the laws that deny us
our civil rights."
Rugged Alpint: County, nesUed below
Lake Tahoe on the California-Nevada
border has only 384 registered voters.
Heterosexual residents of Alpine oppose a
gay government 0£ their county.
h-1iss Wilkin said it is "not realistic for
!!mployers to fire persons found to be
homosexual."
"It's just another form of oppression,''
she declared. Miss Wilkin also con·
demned police practices of entrapment.
where undercover police agents "lure"
homosexuals to make an arrest.
··1t is unfair for homosexual behavior
to be subject to police harassment,
\1•hereas any deviant h e t e r o s e :r. u a l
behavior is not." Miss Wilkin said.
"Gay Liberation is trying to change the
laws forbidding homosexual acts, offer
draft counseling to homosexuals, and to
help bring out 'closet cases,"' Miss Herr-
le added.
She described a "closet case'' as a
homosexual who hides his form of sex-
uality from the heterosexual or
".straight" world.
Miss Herrle said the GLF "is at-
tempting to set up some type of social en·
vironmenl for gay people."
"In the past, the only place gay people
could meet was at the bars, which are
almost like undercover ghettos," she
said.
The GLF is holding t\vice monthly
dances and is soon to open a coffee house
for social interact.ion among the gay
community, Miss Herrle said. She did not
1ay where.
Miss Wilkin mentioned that while GLF
ls trying to bring the gay and straight
worlds closer, plans have been somewhat
miffed due to internal conflicts within the
homo.sexual organization.
"Women's Gay Liberation has almost
split with the men's group, because "'e
have different goals than they do.
\\'omen's Gay Liberation is like gay
liberation and women's liberation all roll·
cd into one," she said.
Noting that the homosexual is usually a
strong person, Miss Herrle said that the
GLF is "trying to bring those strengths
out into the open."
"\lle're trying to help people, gay and
slraights, to Jive together," she con·
eluded.
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Sf,i Trails i11 Laguna
A portion of Riddle Field in Laguna Beach looked as if Jack Frost
had been at work Monday nighf. It was actually the work or the
Laguna Beach Recreation Department. \\lorkers Spread 124 baS?;s of
snow \veighing-from 50 to 75 pound s each to form a 9Cl-foot ski run
for classes. They continue tonight and Wednesday and climax later
on sno'"'Y mountain slopes.
UAW C~uncil Considering
Tentative Ford Approval
DETROIT (UPI) -The Ford Council
of the United Auto \Vorkers today ex-
amined a tentative contract agreement
with Ford Motor Co. which almost cer-
tainly averts a second crippling strike
this year in the auto industry. •
Once the 200-member council has
finished examining the agreement, which
will cost Ford an additiona1 $1.2 billion,
at least, in wages alone over three years,
it will decide whether to recommend ac-
ceptaoce by the union's 1116,000 member1
at Ford's U.S. plants.
Traditionally, the council recommends
that the workers accept -and the
workers always have accepted -the
agreement their bargainers worked out.
The council is expected to recommend
acceptance in this case.
The tentative pact is virtually idenlical
lo the contract the W'lion's General Motor
members ratified Nov. 20 after a 67-day
strike.
Like the GJ\f workers, Ford's UAW
members will get an average 51 cents per
hour pay increase in the first year and 3
percent boosts in each of the second and
third years of the three-year pact,
assuming they ratify it.
But the company and union tentatively
agreed to pay 26 cents of the first-year
increase retroactively to Sept. 15, when
the old contract expired. The remaining
25 cents would be paid retroactively to
Nov. 15.
One Mt>re Chance
For Pet Goat
A pet goat owned by a Laguna Beach
teenager has been placed on probation by
the City Council.
Reviewing an animal permit issued one
year ago to Rachel Anne Morton , 717
Summit Drive, the council was advi sed
bv Police Chief Kenneth Hu ck that only
one complaint about the resident goat
had been received and a check had
revealed ttie animal to be fenced in as re-
quired.
However, councilman Edward Lorr
said he had noticed the goat roaming the
street on at lea~t four occasions when he
drove by.
Ex-planner Whittlesey Donates Two Acres
. . . .
'llte flrst Jand gUt to the Llguna Grttn-
belt, a scenic, two-acre property off
Temple Hills Drive, has been donated by
Miss Bea Whittlesey, longtime Laguna
Beach reSidtnt and former member of
the Planni"e Commission.
1be property, presented to t h e
Greenbelt '°ard Saturday, com_mands a
panoritnlc view of the Rimroci: CavtS
area, accordi~ to Greenbelt president
James Dll1'!Y. who said, "Though not In
the greenbelt as erpllcitly defined by the
corporation, this land is vital because of
its environmental quality and because it
represents' a• pilot project in land
preservation by donation." .
The land will become the Greeabelt's
first ecolo8:1cal preserve, he said. Miss
WhitUesey Is se<:retary of the Laguna
Greenbelt Inc.
More than 50 persons attended a
Greenbelt meeting Saturday, ta discuss
Coast Pair
Given Posts
By Board
Two Orange C,oast residents have been
named to the Mental Health Advisory
Board by the Board of Supervisors.
They are Mrs. Lucille Kuehn, Corona
del Mar and Paul Marx, Costa Mesa at·
~ney. Others named were James
Anderson, Santa Ana pyschologist and
Dr. Milton Borenstein, Anaheim physi·
cian.
Retiring members include ~· r s •
Rosemay Saylor, Laguna Beach: Judge
Bruce Sumner. Laguna Beach: Dr.
Sidney Adler, Anaheim and Dr. Maurice
A. Riseling, Mission Viejo.
Mr.s. Saylor had served as chairman of
the advisory board since ii! inception in
1964.
Supervisor William Hirstein, who has
also served on the board since it ·began
will serve until Jan .• when be retires
!rom the Board of Supervisors.
Military Rites
Held on Coast
For Mr. Griffitli
Funeral services wllh full military
ho:nore were "?OO<!Octed Monday for re·
tired Anny officer Loui.!1 H. Griffith, 49,
who died late last week in La~na H!lls.
Mr. Griffith, of 33821 Zarz1to Drive,
Dilna Point, was budget director for the
Leisure World Foundation.
The rites included a rosary recited Su~
day evenlng at St. Edward's Cathollc
Church, Capistrano Beach, followed by
Mass this morning at the same cllapel.
Mr. Griffith leaves his widow, Villa , of
the home; daughters Carol L o u
Goldsmith of Montclair and Carla Jo
Griffith or Dana Point; sister! Dorothy
Fishburn, Dora Sanders and ~farguerite
Smiley, all of Lawrence, Kan., and Irene
Moeller of Richland, Kan., and 1we
grandchildren.
efforts ot the corporation to ·acquire
s e v e r a I thou.sand acr'es .surrounding
Laguna for open space preservation.
Ci!Jng Miss ,Whilllesey,'1 Jand grant as
evidence of the public's growing concern
over the'"specter of urban blight," Dilley
caHed upon civic grou?tl throughout the
coun~ and state to direct more attention
to open space preservation.
Attending the meeting, In~ addiUon lo
the Greenbelt trustees, were city coun-
cilman Roy Holm, planning com·
missioner Carl Johnson, Paul Colburn of
the Laguna Hills Klwanb: Club, Dr. Ray
Moose of the Laguna Hills Naturalist
Club, Roland Hom, or the Saddleback
Jaycees and Laguna Beach High School
students Indy Brewtr and Dan Tomehak,
representing the Allocla.ted Student Body
and the Conservation Club.
DAILY PILOT t• ""'9
ADORNS CITY HALL -Constanc.e Kimble, Laguna Beach city
treasurer, shows new City Mgr. Lawrence Rose future city ball site
in 19~ painting. Donated to the city by the artist's surviving chil-
dren, it is the work of William A. Griffith, one of the art colony'•
most famous early day painters.
Laguna City Hall Adorned
With Griffith Painting
Laguna'• city hall Is newly adorned
with a large painting by William A. Grif·
fith, one of the Art Colony 's most famous
early day pain~rs.
Depicting rolling green hills in the area
near the present site of the city hall , the
painting was presented to the City Council.
by the artist's four surviving chidlren,
Mrs. Gates W. Burrows, Mrs. Richard B.
Stevens, Mrs. Charles C. Hawley and
George S. Griffith, in memory of their
brother, James Nelson GriUith, who died
Sept. l in Laguna Beach.
Mission Viejo
Infant Drowns
A Mission Viejo infant drowned Satur-
day after falling into a backyard pool at
the family home.
Travis J. Dennis, 14 months, son of Mr.
arid Mrs. Basil Dennis, or 24371
Encorvado Lane, was found In the pool
by his mother.
A county fire department rescue team
tried in vain to revive the child but he
was dead on arrival at Tustin ~mmunily
Ho.spital.
The painting, titled "Canyon Hills,"
dates from about 1935, Mn. Burrows told
the council .
Her father, who first visited Laguna
Beach in 1918, became a year-round resi.
dent in 1923 and lived here until his deatb
in l!HO, beeoming known as one of
Callfomia's outstanding ·Jan d 1 capt
artists.
Civic League
At New High
The Laguna Beach Civic League now
has 305 dues-paying members, highest
number since its formation in 1960, presi-
dent Anthony Demetrlades announced to-
day.
Two vacancies on the League's board or directors have been filled by a former~
member of the Laguna Beach Plannin&
Commission and a retired civil engineer,
Demetriades said.
Joining the board are Miss Bea Whit·
, tlesey, a Laguna resident lince 1908 and
planning commissioner from 1985 to 19111.
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The Big M is big enough (over $434,000,000) to pay the nation's highest interest on insured
savings ... $% to 6%. But.equally import~nt-cares enough to give you very personal service.
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Highest interest at utual ~i!iogs
Coron1 del Mir oftlce: 28157 Eul Coaat Hlghwl)' / 175-5010 Other offices In Covina, West Arcadia, Pasadena and Gltnd1!1
I
<( DAILY Pll~,
Cl oor aci_
Sign of the time&
--F-ight-Due ,
For 1-!yphen
By ·DfCK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Conserva·
tionlsta: across the land are concerned,
and justifiably so,. about the vanishing
hyphen.
They point out lhat hyphens have been
disappearing at an alarming rate during
the past two decade. and are in im·
minent danger of becoming extinct.
Sever8.l national "Save the Hyphen"
committees have · been formed , but
private groups are llmlted in the
measures they can take, their efforts
being mainly in the nature of educational
campaigns.
• •
The '·.
lLlt<IP IHJ'll'IEllli •
}r Si.de • •
It is gcneraJly agreed the most ef-
fectiv e action would be fqr congress t()
forn1ally classify the hyphen as an
"imperiled punctuation mark," t h u s
bringing it under the protection of the
federal government.
Hyphens once abounded in this country.
I personally am old enough to remember
wben you would see two or three hyphens
on nearly every page of almost any
magazine·you picked up.
NOW YOU can browse through an en·
tire issue without encountering a single
hyphen, except those dividing words al
the end of lines. Many children are grow·
ing up with6ut ever having seen a hyphen
in its natural state.
Just the other day my young son spot-
ted a hyphen io a back issue of
"'Playboy" that I had been saving for
archaeological purposes. He didn't even
reeogl)ize it.
I had to explain what it was. Along
with several olher things ·in the
magazine.
Hyphens once were particularly abun-
dant in negative terminology where the
"anti" and "non," and to a lesser extend
the "un," prefixes were employed.
BUT NOW when a hyphen shows up
following in "anti" or a "non," It likely
will be quickly obliterated by some
predatory copyreadcr.
(Note: It even is doubtful that the
hyphen l put in copy-reader will survive.)
Several factors are responsible for the
trend toward dehyphenation, but primari-
ly it reflects the Volkswagen influence.
Along with German cars, we are im-
porting the German habit of running ~· words together. Example: an "off the
shoulder gown" would in German become
an ''aufgangdasclaviclegedressen."
It would be a great tragedy if the
hyphen is allowed to atrophy and even-
tually go the way of the bison. As Bill
Gold. a friend of the hyphen, recently
wrote in the Washington Post:
"Hyphens are cheap, odorless, in-
offensive, biodegradable, nonfattening,
nonpartisan, nondenominational and non·
·carcinogenic."
That alone makes· them well worth
preserving.
-UPI
Viet Boy Slai•a
Anti-American
Rioting Rages
QUI NHON, Vietnam (AP) -Antt-
American rioting raged Monday and to-
day in this central coastal city following
the fatal shooting of a Vietnamese hlg ti
school student by an American soldier.
A 24-hour curfew was ordert!d but
demonstrations. window-smashing and
the burning of U.S. military vehicles con-
tinued. Some American troops have been
irljured by flying rocks, informants said.
Qui Nhon was placed oU limits to all
Amerlcanso-·
Informed U.S. sources said the
demonstrators, possibly numbering 4,000
today, were demanding that t be
American soldier who killed lhe youth be
turned • ov'er to South Vietnamese
authorities for immediate trial.
The soldier was not identified. He was
in custody, and military officials v•ere in-
vestigating the $ooting.
"We're not about to turn him over'' to
the South Vietnamese, said one U.S. of·
ficial. The United States has no status of
forces agreement with the Vietname se
giving them jurisdiction over American
military personnel under s o m e
circumstances as it has with South
Korea , for example.
Informed sources said the student was
killed Monday afternoon when a group of
Vietnamese youths climbetl aboard an
American Army truck carrying boxes of
C-rations and tried to steal some or lhem.
One of the two soldiers riding in the
truck fired a shot in warning, the sources
said. The shot killed a high school student
standing nearby who was not involved in
the looling attempt.
The dead st udent was from a Buddhist
high school which has a politically con·
scious student body made up largel y of
An Quang Buddhists, the militant an·
tigovernment laclfun, the sources said.
Several stt,1dents paraded the deud
boy's body through the streets, chanting
"Yankee Go Home" and attracting
followers as they marthed.
The demonstrations subsided A-1onday
night but resumed th is morning as
students from other high schools in Qui
1'rooi1, Solith Vietnam's fourth largest ci-
ty, joined in.
Red Mine Kills
Two Americans;
Cambodians Hit
SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. command
said today a U.S. Army armored person·
nel carrier ran over a Communist mine
on Sout h Vietnam's northern coast, kill-
ing 11~·0 Americans and Y:ounding 22
others.
The mine t'Xplosion occurred Monday
afternoon west of Tam Ky, 340 miles
north-northeast of Saigon.
Field reports from Phnom Penh said
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong units
launched simultaneous attacks f\.1onday
night against Cambodian positions in
Svay Rieng Province near the South Viet-
namese border.
Viet Cong and l\'orth Viet namese
artillerymen ~1onday night shelled a posi·
lion of a unit of tilt> America! Division.
resulting in '"hat the U.S. comn1and
described as lighl casualties. The al1ack
V!aS carried out against an outpost II
miles we st-southv•esl of Tani Ky.
Lt. Col. Am Rong, the official Cam·
bodian military :>pokesman. said I h c
latest Commun ist al\acks in Cambodia
were against Kompong Chak and 0 San·
day. about 70 n1iles southeast of Phnon1
Penh and 10 miles from the South Viet·
namese border.
Cambodian intcl!igcnce rec l' n l 1 y
reported a Communist buildup in Svay
Rieng and the neighboring provin ce or
Prey Veng. Both areas were briefly oc·
cupied by U.S. troops in the Cambodian
operation last spring.
Some adult opponents of the Soulh Viet-
namese government also jobted the
demonstration. Police tried to disperse
the demonstrators with riot gas. and
some students were if1jured by police
clubs.
The national police in the city were re-
inforced by militia and Vietnamese
military police, but by this evening no
regular army forces had been brought in.
American officers met v.ith the pro-
vince chief and leaders of at least three
student groups. Tbe Americans assured
lhem that parents of the dead youth.
would be compensated, but they made no
promises concerning the soldier who shot
him.
No charges have been filed against the
soldier. sources said.
Several thousand Americans are sla·
tioned in and around Qui Nhon. which is
275 miles northeast of Saigon. There are
no America n combat units in the im·
1nediatc vicinity.
No Advisers
For Carribodia
Says Rogers
WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of
State William P. Rogers told a Senate ap-
propriations subcommittee today the
linitcd States intends to help Cambodia
with ··air interdiction of supply and com·
municatlons lines and aid, not military
advisers or ground troops."
Rogers and Secretary of Defense
~telvin R. Laird emphasized in seeking
approval of $155 million in economic and
military aid for Cambodia that the
assistance would be used to enable the
Cambodians to defend themselves and
prevent North Vietnam from reoccupying
ports and border sanctuaries which could
be used to threaten U.S. forces in South
Vietnam.
Rogers said 70 percent of the military
aid for Cambodia will go for ammunition
with the rest ''principally for small arms.
trucks, communications equipment. a
small number o f propeller-driven
aircraft. river patrol boats and similar
items." •
"These are all Items whieh the Cam-
bodian are capable or absorbing
themselves and which are adapted to the
type of warfare the Cambodians con-
front," Rogers said. He added that U.S.
aid so far has been used well, the Cam.
bodian forces are rapidly gaining
n1ililary experience and ''the government
has widespread support in all segments
of the poJ)ulation."
··Our basic objective in Cambodia is to
protect Vietnamization and o u r
\vithdrawal program by denying lo North
Vietnam the use of the sea coast and
ports and the border sanctuaries," the
secretary of state said.
POW Raid Praised
By Vo te in llousc
WASHINGTON <AP) -The 1\rn1y
<'ommando raid on a prisoner-of·w<lr
can1p 20 n11les from Hanoi \'la s commend-
ed by the House J\1onday In a rcsolu11on
opponents said might encourage I he
Pentagon to try other raid s.
Opponents lied up the Hou!>e for 21;i
hours will1 parlian1entary stalls to pro·
\i_•i;t lhe resolution before it was passed
J47 lo 15. The House commendation was
s1mil;i r lo one blocked i11 the Senate
shortly after the Nov. 21 Son Tay raid by
Sen. J.\V. Fu lbright (0-Ark.). lfe ~aid it
1night be interpreted as su pport for ~·hat
he called escalation of lhe war.
Pleasant Weather Prevails
' . Lowlands Tlireatened by Floo£ls as Snow MeltS
California "['lllW Of' JtOAA JtATIOJtAL WlATMEI S(llV!C[ TO l: DD P.M. EST 12 • a • 10 Temperature•
••
' . '
. '
' ~ -,"" .-,
•
UPI Ttlel~Dlt
POLICE AND NEWSMEN STAND AT SCENE OF SWISS AMBASSADOR 'S KIDNAP
Envoy's Cer (L) Intercepted by Kidnepert' Cer1, Center and Foreground
Power Slowdown Cripples
Britisl1 Industry, Life
LONDON (UP I) -Strike s and slow-
downs by key workers blacked oul wide
areas of Britain today , shut down fac-
tories and docks and left the counlry
without newspape rs for 24 hours.
P-rime ~1i11ister Edward Heath to Id
power workers they are causing "grave
hardship to the nation, disrupting indus·
try and endangering health."
Bul the government said it would not
be "practicable" for troops to take over
and run the ·slowed-clown -electric power
stations.
In Northern Ireland , the provincial gov-
ernment proclaimed a local state of emer-
gency, making it illegal to waste electri-
city.
The trouble did not compare with the
total shutdown of Britain's 1926 general
strike.
But a slowdown by 125.000 workers in
slate-run power stations caused wide-
rspread elect ric ity cuts. ft was launched
f\.!onday to back a 30 percent pay hiklt
demand .
Another movement spurred by dissi-
dent labor union leaders, many of them
communists. closed all the country:s na·
tiooallv circulated newspapers, most or
its doCks and many automotive plants.
schools and markets for 24 hours.
Union leaders said about 500.000 work·
crs took part. Employer's groups esti·
mated 200.000 participated . The 24-hour
l'.'a!kout was called against advice of the
country's top labor un ion leadership to
protest government legislation designed
to curb union powers and crimp wildcat
strikes.
Health, lntemipted by shouts of angry
Tabor opposition members, lold Par!ia·
1nent. "the country realizes that the ac-
tion being taken today is not 011ly caus-
ing inconvenience bul grave hardship to
individuals and disruption to industry and
is liable to cause danger lo health not
only in hospitals but al so in the homes."
.John Davies. secretary for trade and
industry. said electricity workers are go-
Ing well beyo11.d the overtime ban ordered
by their unions. He urged the unions to
call off the slowdown and return to the
negotiating table.
He said he has set up a 24-hour-a-day
operations room iJt his ministry to keep
industry and the public informed by radio
about the strike situation.
But he said it is "not practicable" for
troops to lake over and run power sta·
tions.
Mounties Get
Their Wonian?
OITA WA (UPI) -Women in the
Royal Canadian Mounties?
Yes , said Canada's four-year-old
Royal C.Ommission on the Status of
Women Monday when it called for
an end to discrimination against
fem ales in employment, Ule right
lO abortion on demand for pregnan-
cies up to three months. and rais-
ing the marriage age to 18 "wilh no
exceptions at all.''
In a 50().page report presented to
the House 0£ Commons by Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau,
the commission r e I e a s e «.., its
formula for promoting women's
equality in a society "unjustly con-
ceived and controlled by men."
Que st ioned about the
government's plans for action on
the proposals Trudeau was non-
committa l.
"\\'e wi ll consider the report ,
then v•e will announce to the House
what course v.·e will follow," he
said.
Soviet Union Presents
'Peaceful' 1971 Budget
~IOSCO\V (UPI ) -Soviel leaders t~
day presented a •·peaceful" national
budget thal included one of the more
modes t military outlays of recent years.
The defense appropr1at1on placed
before the Supreme Soviet (parliament)
of the Soviet Union "'as still the largest
since \Vorld War IT -but just barfjy.
Expressed as a percentage of the total
budget, the defense outlay was con-
siderably decreased.
more lhan $1.11 billion and the yea r
before the increase v.·as twice that.
Still, \Vestem military experts view the
Soviet defense figures with considerable
caution. hiany large m i I I ta r y ap-
propriation s are hidden in the budgets for
space, education and scientific research.
'The Soviets rould easily hide a major
defense increase in other budgetary
figures.
Release of 70
Demanded
By Kidnapers
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -As 20,000
troops and police searched today for the
kidnapcd Swiss ambassador to Brazil, an
unconfirmed report circulated ·that bis
captors were demanding the release of 68
to 70 political prisoners.
The report came from a. source who
said the demand was made in one of two
documents purporting to come from the
kidnapers. The documents were in the
hands of the police, and they refused to
make public what they said.
Ambassador Giovanni Enrico Bucher,
57, \1'hose wealthy family owns a chain of
resorts in Switzerland and Italy. was
seized Monday in the Rio suburb or
Laranjeiras. His police bodyguard wa!
shot three times; one bullet hit his spine
and paralyzed his arms and legs.
Witnesses said seven men and a woma n
blocked off the ambassador's limousine
v:ith two cars, ordered the driver to the
floorboard and shot the guard . Helio
Carvalho de Araujo, when he resisted.
Abandoning the two blocking cars, they
hustled the ambassador into another car
and drove off. a fourth car trailing
behind. One of the two getaway cars was
later abandoned at a beach.
The operation took about lwo minutes
to carry out.
A terrorist group ca[]ed the National
Liberation Alliance claimed responsibility
in pamphlets scattered about the scene.
This is the document reportedly con-
taini ng the ransom demand.
r-.1onday night a v.·oman telephoned the
city editor of the ne"·spaper Ulti ma
Hora. saying a letter from the kidnapers
had been deposited in a downtown bar.
\\'hen reporters arrived, police -called
by the bar owner -had confiscated thal
paper. too. Some sources described ~ . .:
document as a manifesto.
.3 U.N. Nations Seek
Portugal R esolution
UNITED NATIOi'JS. N.Y. (AP) -F'ive
African and Asian meznbcrs or the U.N.
Security Council called on the council
J\1onday lo condemn Portugal for the rC!-
cent invasion of Guioca and to in1post
sanctions against Portugal if the West
African state is attacked again .
Ambassador Nsanz.e Terence of Burundi
Introduced lhe resolution Y:hich a Is o
demanded that Portugal' pay full com-
pensation for the loss or life and damage
to property caused by lhe armed thru st
into Guinea last month. The resolution
was sponsored by Burundi Sierra Leone
Zambia, Nepal and Syria.' '
'The Do's a1ad Don'ts'
~ Hlthc• of 111!1 and to,. CIOlldl
molffit ov•r S<lulfltfll C•lltornl• •od•~·
c•1>1l11111 IM p~d•"'" <101urt ol Los
A"1ittlts 1ntern.Hon•I Al'"°'' •nd In·
t~t1!ne fllt tMncn of •tin In me ., ..
"'' '1191111 1tellonl.
Albu<tue•ovt
/lncl>O'•;•
Hlth Ltw ''''· " .
Finance Minister \1asily Garbuzov
preSented the budflcl. lisling projected
expenditures or $188.2 billion. including a
defense outlay of $19.9 billion. <
Tire,Glue,FahricBuying
Tt>t t1111 tl••red romrw-M! bY naon
kt lfl(rN\IM IDt •rid low tloudl Ill
ru1ected thf'OlllllloYI ,.,. •111lon loro1tM
ef!d WtdntWllJ mo<nlno,
MOl!led 1ut1tl!lf'l4 ~11ted In lot
,.,...,.. il'ld ¥klll!ly "!Tl! rttu,rktll '°' '"" law C10llO .. "'" mtvlftf "' .... f1>1 MJlll In the Ill• 111 ... -. Mutfl
the .,..,. 11 lorKlll Joi' Wed"''4er
MIWlllnt wltll t "'tit! (le••'"-b1
,,_.. PreGkttd flltll !oder W,\l II
wnn •" a.o"dM oYtt'fti9tit !OW ot P A~ !ht" tltKMI ,._. W9A ""'"'
111ttMJ el lot, ti ....... ,,,.,_ "'"'
""'"' w••"'ro ""' cot1t " t .i-1 10 -rtn. 11 "''' f!IKfl !!It ,..,... •ffl"'
•' ""' -n111n r-'t. Tll!Plwr1h;rt1
''""" !"1>m U ... J •nd ~ t ... flllflll
loW Ill '"' tOt-. In Ille lltM<h h 1'01 ..,....... wtl!I ""
crt••lt'lll cl-'"" fllllU from to I" lllt ~ltlltr .. 1-11er, 1t ft'll 10t In ll)t
,.,_ l'llit'l't .
Tl!ir ,\Ir POll~llOo> (Ol'lfnl 0h"lc1
IQ(Kolll tkilll tvt 1"1ttll0n fr'"' tmot *"'" In rno11 J>Ortlon1 vi l&f Litt ,,,,._
M l .. ••t.111. TM Mtllul•llf ...... -· IJltntlr hlthtt '" 111t s.n O.llrltl V1•· Irr.
"l11h1 MOtWUY •'lf IOrtUll INllfo fl'I"""' l!ttd•r tnclu0t01
LOl'lf 8••dl n "' S.nt• MOl'l!C• "" M, l\rfbfl\k 1'-1• Mt Wu..., 6l"'5. Pt1m<1t1t ,,_.,, itl .. t•t-.0. 1f·I•. P•lm
Sol'l"'t It.It. lfttnllt!lf ''"" '1111
01 .... 111.70, '""' ....... 10-10. '°'° .\~ W Sl~lt o\111 IJ.11.
c ..... t.al.
P•.-flY <JOll(lv •1111 ll•lf IM•Y l ~"I
11.i .. oie ...irnn 111,...., .. 114 .-tuM IKlllr•
be<omint w.slf'rl' t 10 11 io.r.oa Ill
•f!frtlOQl\I IOCl•Y e/111 WtdMWl•w. Hlfll
Nlffy 6J.
COOi\'" ttm11t•••u•n ••llft /tilf'\ j(J .. ~ t~l~NI l""Dtf'•,.,,... r•1'191: ltom ~
to n
W•ttr t-••fli•f" 61,
S1111, ltlooi1, Tide•
TOttOo\T tKO"~ ~ .. ~ ' ,, , .. ,...
~G LO" , 11 JO •,m.
WIONl$0AY " " ,.II'.. hro~ • CO ,...,, 6.l
l'INI 10" I !1 • '"· .tJ ~
'" ..... hl•ll 1:.11:1 ··"'· '. bull lll1tl'*'"' $t1J4'41"' ~ '""' ,.,. ..... idt t.,, .....
11.S. S111nn1ar!I
Hlq~ ••nds. •t in •nG '"""' H•~td t~•Ollil~ W•111,n9•0<1 1t1te Into ,,.. ~D<'·
In ~\Dl'ldt•, ........... "" ........ , '"" 1'111~ lf",..lll'l'flUtt\ lft t,.,.W W•k•. Tht
t+ll ol 1111 .,.!IOl'I V.1•'4 ttllt ol""'~'
(OftdohO'll 1111 11'\11<1 ,_,.iur•• ..,,lttd ,....,~.
t11n "'°'"' In !Ni l'Klllc Horthwt,i
w/llcll '"tllt4 tlvtn ~NI J1•t•m1.
Qvtrf!ow lhtt"tltntd IO flOOcl IO'IO'•t .. 1ne •0•<1' •nd "'"' ltllf. fill ~Ood w-tlll\fr w11 n11rrtc1 In •
,_ •poll t¥ 1«11• 1¥,kl \ INlOtl•!
"'t•!nttr l.!1111 r•!n 6•"'"""" iht ~tn•
""' ,ac:1tlc CNJI .. hilt ...... itn ift llOf'l~f'~ Mltlll~I"·
T11, 141111\tll" wl1w11. """'ICll ~·"· broug~I mllO IOf!'lft~••!ulff 10 I~ ["l!
(11'101 er.d MIO,.l\t, Ul(t~•tM •llfor
ION• O'ltt l•k• Mtc11i.tn '"" •••lttft
LIO.t ,11,,..1tor t••!• IQCU•, Gt•t "tin·
1,,.t w•11 ll!ltlH,
!'t11n1a
B•-e'>litld
Bl1m4"1o,
Pol~•
60•'tl'I
Brc..,n1~1llf (lll(A'IO
C•Monn•ll
Dtl~vtr
Oto• Mo•nt \
Oel•o••
1<1irb•n>•
~I>'! WorH•
FrnftO
Ht lfnt
Hotl(ll!Jlu
-.:1nu• Cllv
l•• \I~·· lO• A"•tlll 1o11.,,,1
MlnnHPO!!J
Hf"ll 0'1••nt
Ht,. Yort
notth P11t1t 0.-1·"" Oll l.W-Clh .... ~
P•!m Sfl•lh•I '•.o llloolt\ --1~ ftll!10..•th
Po•!l•nd, Or•
l'hDICt (11\t
llltd t1u11 ••• SICttmtnlO
iell l•k.• (riv $en Olt110
$111 F•~"CiK<t
s~n1~ An•
Sf•tttt ,.,. .....
T<te•..,•I
W1>111no•~11
11 " . " ,, 4) . " ~I )I .U
"The state budget of the USSH. is a
budget of peaceful economic and cultural
development," Garbuzov told the joint
session of the Supreme Soviet. . " ~ M J, JI " . 6S 14 ...
21 11
·1 4 21 .. .. . "
" ll ~ " " ,,
" " " ,.
~
~
" ..
" " ..
" " • " • " ~ .. • " " " " .. •
.. ,,
" • " " " " ll .. • .. •• .. .. a
" ..
" " " " • " " " " ••
...
The defense total was only slightl y
higher lhnn $19.81 billion appropriated
lasl )'e/lr for 1970.
The total budget was considerabl y
hlghC!r than la.!l year's figure of $160.56
bllllon.
The !lm::ill military incre ase wa!
mininlal \Yhen compa red \\'ilh the big
boosts of recent years. Last year, for ex·
a1nplc, milllary erpenditures went up by
King tlussein in U.S.
To Talk \Vith Nixon
\VASlflNGTON (UP I) -King Hussrln
of Jordan arrived with little fanfllJ'e H1 .. \Vashtngton today but "'ilh heavy securl·
"'
~ ty precautions In tvidence.
fluwln made no arriva l statement at
c• Andrc"'S Air Force Base prior to a Yi'hitc
.11 House n1eclini; "'ith Prcsldenl Nl~on
.o. where the t-.1iddl£' Ea~t situ::ition was the
1naln topic uf ~CUS$lon.
Outlined i.t1 U.S. Booklet
WASHINGTON (AP) -Don't trust lhe
readings on service station air pumps. Do
allow woolen garments to ''rest'' for 24
hours before wearing Lhcm again. Don't
use hard-selling adhesives tp.. bond t~·o
dissimilar substances.
The "Do's" and "Doo"l's'' ire ex·
amples of !ht governments advice on how
lo buy and use fabrics, tires and
adhesives. The three booklets. rele•sed
J\tonday by the Commerce [)(!partment,
are the first b11sed on 3 review of govern-
ment product lnformtitlon by Lhe Nixon
administration.
The booklets lack any brand·name: in-
rormnlion frorn govemn1ent tesrs. But
they do contain !'IUch specific Information
as the tire booklet'.! admonition to always
ust a ~ct 1auae when lnflaUn& Ures.
A government sun·ev or service station
air towers showed 62 percent of th e
readings on the: to"·ers "·ere oH by at
ltast two pounds per square inch -an
error ~·hich could advtrsely affect tire
v.·ear and car handling.
The booklet explains also the differenc~
betv.·een bias, belled-bias, and radial
tirrs; warns aga inst using different lypes
of tires on the same ax.le -or mixing
radials at all -and explains th11l th•
thump caused by nylon tlrl!:s after the1
have stood overnight Is nothing to worry
about. n\C booklet on 11dhtsivts exph1ins that
adhering two dlsslnlllnr substances
!ogether n1eans thC! substances "'ill ex-
pnnd or contract al different rntcs la
response lo teniperature changes. putUnf
a SfI&in oo the adheslvc.
I
I
1·
i I
7
J •
T •
. * -.-:-*_ ...,, ·~ * ~ . ' ~
YOL. 63,· NO. 293, 3 SECTIONS, 2S. PA'GES '' .
·-..l-.·-..... --· -•'
r
Today'• Fl•al
N.Y. Steeb
.TU~SDAY, DECEMIEl 8, J970 TEN C~NTS
•
Hunting.to)! Ol{s . C9ndominium of 1,404 Units.
By ALAN DuuaN
OI lflt 0.llY l'l)lf Steff
,.. An adult community with 1,404 con·
dominium units spread over 140 ac~ is
to be built in southeast Huntington Beach.
' After a lengthy hearing punctuated by
..applause as sj>eakers' maae points for. and
against the proposal, the city council
.Monday-night approved tbe complex op a
S-1 vote with Councilman Jerry Matney
.dissenting.
The community, which . will have a
minimum age requirement in the low
40's, will cost about '35 million and.will
be built by Signal Landmark Corporation
on a parcel at the northwest corner of
\ . Atlanta Avenue .and Mlll'Olla street.
The OOllllCil ltanted a \Jae permit for
the planned reaid<nti.tl development lift.
ing the .maximum density requirement
fJ:om.7.».Wlit.s.per ac;n to·lO.~ units per
acre. : .
OpPOsition lo the project centered on
the increase in dtnsity and whether the
119."(hildren , ~ for ·t&e community
could;be I01ally enforced.' ·
.. Matney aaid ··be WOlild back the pro-
posal if it..Wf:re .awnded ta' lbt required
7.25 units P" acre. .
"What if a ·family bu oae child?" ask··
ed ·Jerry Vaniman. a 'homeowner and
camera shop proprieter. "Wtie will ask
e ·
Missing for Week
Search Pressed
For B·each Pilo.t
Civil Air Patrol authorities are ·still
searching for a Huntington Beach pt.lot
who disappeared last week in central
California after taking off from the Paso
Jlobl .. Alrport.
Darryl Bandy, M, of 1111 sterlinc Ave.,
told airport officials in Paso Robles that
be pla!JMd to folli>w:·U.S. ldl IOUtb to Van
Nuys Airport. But 8'ndy never landed in
Van Nuya •and w.u not beard from after
!"vine. P• R<ibl,. at 'l :IO:J.m., '"" Tuetdty. . .... ~ ( :· ~
them to. leave. and won't that let a
precedent?" _ ·
HomeoWMJ"S asked City .Attorney Don
Barlfa wbetber. It wu leaaJ for a UM
permit to be U!ed for a ·change in dellslty
and _wbttber .bardalript mu1l be sbOwn,
sucll u in-eondJtiooal exceptions and \lie
variance cases. ·
Bonfa deelined. tg-&iYe an "off the cuff"
opinion on. thes:e 1'RJes,;cJaimi~ tb1t ·bi•
offict would_bave researebed them lf the
que!tions .hid been ~tted in• writinJ
in advance of the ~·
In anawer to a q~ by Councilman
Jack Green,· Plart."lin1 Director KeMelh
Reynalda said that 1'-plannin& com-
--~E SAT HosPltAC-
Sh1rtff'1 Deputy Wallace
mission could vary the density under the afraid of the future. You can't stop 1
... permit. ReynoldS said that the com-'· good thing."
millk>n. whtcb approved the project on a Another point made by Signal was that
6-1 vote, wu more conouoed with quail-the dena.lty ln tern\I of the numbtr of
ty atandards of Uie develoPmmL people would be less than with the
William Shattuck, representing Signal normal 7.25 ynlts per acre development
Landmark, pointed out. thlt the coc-because ol tbe ban on children .
poration would have the right to Al the planning commission hearing , a
repurthue 1 •property If a facnily had spokesman for the Huntincton Beach City
children, School District saicl that the Pl.'Oiect
. In ·answer to quesUons on what Signal would obviate the need for an elementary
planped lot slmilar parcels In the same achoo! planned for the area.
neighborhood., Shattuck commented. "U After the hearing had closed and the
thil 11 a proper ·thin& and worka out well vOte had been ~ken, a housewife, Mrs.
in five years. I see no rea&Oll not to con-Nancy Allen, speaking under oral com-
Unue it. I bel~eve· ~ city 1hould not be munlcatlons, asked why lhe matter wu
WOUNDED IN-.tAND,KNEE
Shorlff's DoRUIY Campboll
•
'
Beach Suing
Downtown
Homeowners
He hid 1n -'unidentified f e ~ 1 ft pa-.wtlli lllm piui w "" dog. ~~biPuo fidi1., llld
Bandy had Do~fn>m Van Nuya to the
San 'Franeilco Bay" are1 t.o pick up the
woman. He wat retw,ling llOUth with her
when be ttopped at Paso Robld to au
up.
"It was foggy and Bandy said he ptan.
ned · to fly low over hl&hwsy 101," an
airport spokesman uld.
GI Refused Death Order Hughes Empire
Power . Struggle
Nears Showdown More than 600 property owners are
being sued by the Huntington Beach
Parking Authority in eminent domain ac-
tions launching the city's plans to
revitalize its decaying downtown area.
City Attorney Don Bonfa filed nine
more of the bulky lawsuits Monday, ad-
ding to the 19 actions he filed last Friday.
Each of the 28 suits as.ks for court ap-
proval of parking authority plan1 to ac·
quire a ftve-block downtown area.
Huntington Beach city councilmen dou·
ble as the city's Parking Authority.
The area involved stretches from Fifth
to First Streets a block deep along
Pacific Coast Highway. It also includes a
five-acre parcel southeast of Lake Street.
The parking authority lawsuits are
aimed at acquiring the land for a 1,878-
epace parking lot, first phase of a city ef·
iort to revitalize the old, downtown sec-
tion of Huntington Beach. Estimated cost
of the acquisition program is $4.% million.
City officials said the parking lot would
provide additional spaces for visitors t11
the city's beaches and would provide In·
centive for development of speciaJty
6hopping areas nearb)IJrt
Despite the filing of the emirient do-
main suits, City ALtorney 89,a.fa said the
city remains willing to acquTfe property
through negotiated settlements.
City plans for the area have been op-
posed by the Downtown Property Owners
Committee. -
The committee contends that downtown
HuntingtOn Beach's development could be
best handled by private enterprise.
In a related development Monday
night. city councllmen •ithheld any
decisive action on an S8 mlllion·claim fU·
td against the city by Mrs . Elmyra Terry
«in behalf of 133 downtown property
owners.
The damage Claim charge!' that the Cl·
ty prevented the owners from developing
their properties by instltutina: "op-
pressive" land use regulations.
Councilmen, acting on the advice of Ci·
ty Attorney Bonfa, uld the claim doet
not meet the requirements of the law
governing such matters and ordered it
returned to Mr1. Terry.
Dorn Heads LA Board
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -County
1upervlsor1 today unarumeolly elected
Supervisor Warren M. Dorn as tb'eir
chairman for the comlna year. Dern ~
ceeded Ero"t E. Debs.
•
Bandy, a bachelor, was Uyln1 a
Cherokee 140. ffJs ~ brother. G11ry, 1
Garden Grove resident, new to P•IO
Robles to retrace the flight pattern, but
found no sign ol the light ,plane.
From Calley at My Lai
A number .o( utiivktu.ails · rtportedly
heard 1 plant alone highway 101 about
the lime Bandy, w•t .repOrt.ed milling,
but CAP inveJtia:aloN hlve not found any
substantial. infortnaUon.
Fountain Valley
To Get Request
For Apartments
Green Valley developers will ask
permission W~y nl&bl from the
Fountain Valley Planiiing Comzniujon to
build 170 apartment units.
The "new apartment! are planl)ed for a
9.8 acre site at the southwest corner of
SJater Avenue and Ward Street. Green
Valley ls submJttm, 1 precl• plan «if the
apartments 10-tbe commJaskln.
Before commissioners approve or deny'
the plan they will open a public beaing ao
speakers from the audience can aim·
rnent. , ·
Planning Director Clinton Sherrod Is
recommending denial of the Green Valley
plan because it featares m o r e
apartment! than the city'• new lawa
•!low for the area.
City leaders ti1htmed the laws .on
apartment.I last year after many rtsl·
de11t.s aimplalned about the number of
apartment.a beln1 built in Fountain
Valley; • 1 •
rr. BENNING,, Ga. (UPI! -A soldier
whb "'s under 1st Lt. William L. Calley's ' command at My Lal testified today he
refused to obey Callef'1 order . to 1boot
screaming civilians in a ·ditch where
rriotbenr piled atop their children to· aave
them from automati c rifle fire.
The witness. James Joseph Dursl,
eMPtoye of an electrical manufacturing
fiim in Brooklyn, N.Y .• WIS the 35th pro-
duced by the government in Its attempt
to. convict the diminutive Calley of the
premeditated murder of 102 civilians in
the Vietnamese village March 16, 1968.
His testimony followed that of another
former soldier who said he watched
Judge to Rule
On Recall Move
A Superior Court ruling In favor of
workers seeking the recall of Seal Beach
d"ty COlinctlril.an Conway Fuhrman seem·
ed Inevitable tod1y as Judge Leiter Van
Tatenhove called a noon recess in hear·
lngs Ofll the bitterly aintested dispute.
Judge Van Tatenhove will not rule un-
til late this afternoon, he said. But he
made it clear in comments from the
bench that the city cooncil's only means
of rejecting recall worker• araumenta la
to prove that the petitions submitted to
his court are invalid.
Jubilant recall worke,rs said they .have
more tho-enough 1lgnature1 needed.
Calley act as the lone executioner ol five
to 10 aeparate groups broutbt to the ditch
dW'in&; a 90-mlnute perlid.
Dursi, a huge man with black hair,
1idtbunu and mustache, said he was a
pr ivate first class in the platoon Calely
commanded.
After hl1 testimony, Capt. Aubrey M.
Daniel Ill, the prosecutor, told the cow1
Dursi probably was the last prosecution
witness, but that he would not rest the
government case without making an ef-
fort to find twi more witneaaes he has
been trying to locate.
Dursi said at Calley's order, he. Pfc
Paul D. Meadlo, and Calley put their
rifles in the port arms posiUon and pu&h·
ed people Into a ditch at.My Lai.
"Some atarted to cry and they 'l'l'ere
y~lqig," he said. "Mead1o waa crying
and pushing the people. We were ordered
to ohool by LI.' C4lley:
1•1 don't remember tu1 exact words, but
he said aomething ljke : 'Start firing.'
''Calley and Meadlo started firing into
the ditch ,down 1t the people. MeadJo
turned· to me snd told me: 'Shoot! Why
don't )'OU shoot T'
"Ke was crying and yelling to me.
''l Just 11ld: •t can't! I won't!' and I
looked down at the ground.
''The people wert screaming and yell·
tng. lt was mo&tly automlitic and &0me
aemtautomatie fire, and the weapons
were ,pointed down into the ditch. I
remember Meadlo changing magazines
at one time. They fired three to four
mlnutel.
• • I
LAS VEGAS <UPI) -The scramble
that developed when Howard Hughes left
on vacation for the Bahamas and fired
the chief of his $300 million Nevada em·
pi re headed for a sho\l(down today.
A court hear ing was scheduled to
render a legal decision on a temporary
restraining order barring a takeover of
the Nevada holdlng by Hughes' corporate
leaders. It "'as to be followed by a joint
meeting or both sides in the dispute in a
sesson mediated by the governor.
A Hughes spokesman said these two
developments, "should end the whole
thing by nightfall."
Al stake was co'ntrol of the lucrativ~
chain of hotels and casinos in the gambl·
Ing capital which made the millionaire
recluse the state's single I a r g est
employer. ·
When Hughes ordered the firing of hi.9
top Nevada aide from his remote
hideaway in the Bahamas a power strug·
gle developed between the gamblfng
operators and Hughes' corporate e1-
ecutlves.
Gov. Paul Laxalt, his Interest spurred
by the disunity that threatened the ta1-
yieldlng riahes to his state, stepped In.
Laxalt aaid he entered the sttange ~e
to determine lf there would be any e.ffect
upon COl'lllnued operations of the hotels
and casinos.
Laxalt said he talked with the
m)'&terlous billionaire Monday and that
Hughes told tilm he was on a pleasure
and business trip "in good condition." He
told th«! governor he approved of the
change tn leadership of 'his Nevada
operation!.
The governor said he took over the role
as, conciliator in an. attempt• to bring the
two feud.Ing facllona.together.
Resident Ma y Attempt Referendum for <;ity Pa y Cut
The 1overnor· said Hughes-told him by
telephone that be autho~ir.ed the firlng of ,
tu1, top aide In the f500 mllUon-a·year
Nevada operaUon. However. that a.Ide,
Robert Maheu, a former FBI agent· who
ha"i been Hughes' right hand man during
the four y~ars· the 64--year~kl recluse
apent in this gamblln1 capital, resi!itd
bis ou1ter by an ou~lde ifOUP represen. High rankiq members of the city staff mendaUon of the Grand Jury for an an.
ill HuntingtoO Beach may be<ome the Dual silaty o1 '17 MO. -
ff• douillod ~ "11 ,llal( mombtrs target of a citlm> pretest a1a1Mt worked -r lliu tht sapenhon, but
nlarie&. iaid. "tbeTe m 1$ lllary ruc11 In Hun-
A l'Olldent -nollet st Mond1y t1llll'"' --......i 117,lllO." Dilbt'a city coondl mffting that a public "I -Id like to know my,........ 11 a.
reltrtndum may be 1Ulmpted to cut the Uxpayer," Mortenson addttl. "How
"e.xoeAlv1'' 11lartel .t department m1ny al&natum do 1needlo';.tCti1sw1
btada. • vGte." ·
Clllf Meri.,_, a Nlmnan, of Jlllft City Clerk Paul J..,.. in!...,... blm • -Ide -1-, pointed out ·111at~cean1y-th1t aipatum of 10 pei'Ctot II 9-
supervillr1 t""111l7 1ccopted a recom· t'llNred vottn II Ille Umt I( lllt Jul
electloa would bt !'!quired for a reftrm--ting the parent Hughes TOQI CO~pany of
diun.a\ lht ne1t regular election in 1m Houaton.
and IS ptrcent for a special election. Laxalt met with the l l members of the
A check with the office of tbe. county Hughes Tool board of directors tn. the.
rtglstrar of vote fl lh~ morning fc:>Wld afternoon and aald he was, going to ask
that there lflm 48,tl7 regi8teredt VOter• Maheu to voluntarily relinquish control of
·ID HunllD&foo Beich It the lost • octlon. the Nevada oJieratlonJ.
Ttn percel'lt 'If Uill1 would be 4,865 nd' 15 Lua It met la I.er witb. Ma~u but ~Id
percent 7,Jil. ' not convince hl/11 ,lo abindb~ lhj!. llgl\t.
IJl_mJJ01\111! to a q""'!ioo. Mortono611 8eQ\(llY' ftW'dl' hlted ,by Maheu. atUI
111#, !If .. # :'1li>I )llft . • .. ·~ • wtre p1!rolfin( ll)e ~l110ll of u;, 'la!flp" eri'liiliilotloft ...... Wliild llllJL. ' 1alllbllng spU a.a Mall<u 1Ull ' .wu •' ;;io1;)<."i;:Akl"'' ' ' physically ln'control of UM! hololi. .
I
not continued for a legal opln1ooi to be
given on the use Of a pe.rmJt for a deluity:
change. -·
Bonfa replied that he thouiht he-bad
suggested this course to the CO\lPdJ
earlier.
Green responded that the councilmen
relied on the advice of the 1taU .and tt
was "totally ridiculous to a.l l o w
something to come this far and now quy..
lion w.hether it was a legal prooedure."
He said he had voted ln favor because be
was told lt was legal.
The councilmen took no further action
ilfter City Administrator Doyle Millet ad·
vised them to stick to their decision.
ea
Traffic. StQp
Brings Shots
In Compton
A pair of young Les Angel,. County
iheriff's depuUes were shot -one fatally
-early today in Compton, by a La
Habra man who wu killed by the dytnc
lawman.
The sbootin& erupted after a rouliDI
trafllo atop.
Dead are Deputy Lou Wallaoa. a, -
sUccumbed at SI. Francis Hoopt~ In
LynwOod and Manuel !I. MOrtlio, 21, La
Habra, who was pronounced deld at the
ahooling scene.
Deputy Al Campbell, 28, was liJted in
fair condition at St. Francis Hospltal,
with bullet wounds In the knee and hind,
suffered in a scuffle with the armed
suspect.
Coroner's deputies said I Icon a I
capsules and a whitish powder believed to
be heroln were found on the alaiD
auspecfs body.
The incident was touched off when the
deputies began to search Moreno and be
""hipped out a pistol, wounding Campbell
in the knee, then the i1and.
Moving to aid his partner, Deputy
Wallace took a slug in the 1bdomea -
emptying his own gun at. Moreno -then
collapsed as he crawled to the rtro1 car
to radio for help. .
Deputy Campbell crawled to tbe vehi-
cle and succeufully summoned aid.
His partner never rea:ained con-
sciousness.
Quake Ripples Japan
TOKYO (UPI) - A weak earthquake
under the Pacilic C>c1!an was felt in Tok·
yo but no damage wa1 reported.
The ear~uake took ·place·at 4:311 p.m.
Monday. The Central Meteorololieal
Agency said the epicenter was n e a t
Tori Island, about (375 miles) IOlrth fl.
Tokyo. under the open sea. W11k sbockl
were felt in Tokyo, Yokohaml and areu
to Lhe north.
Weadler
You'll have to drive by lnJtru.
ment.a tonigbt wtie:R the first b1I
foe of the wlnter teUOn rolls in.
Wedoesday will bt hazy with
temperaturea {n , Ule 61 to · 72: ·
bracket. ·
INSWE TODA 'Y,
Have vou. ever wondlred
what it would be Uke to wea'
a nightgo!Dtl instead of a formal
to a ball ? Reaction i.s told by
Bea AndeT.son, ~G{}t JJ.
o.~ 17 f:'
CHRISTMAS
~l
\\.
f DAILY PILOT H .. Councilmen -• -. • ..
Delay Beacli ··
. .
Parking Bid
A proP.Qsal to Increase .. the parking rate
for beach. visitors from 75 cents to $1 a
day his been delayed by the Huntington
Beach city council .
The council first wants to see a
bree)tdo~ on the revenue and costs of
the J,D>-space beach parkin1 lot.
The · delay wu aought by Councilman
Oeorge McCracken who said that reports
h~ had seen indicated that income was
••$81J,IOO behind projections."
"l•wouid like to see a study on how the
ParNne~ .. Aulhorlty i.1 doing before
decid.ln& oo this motion." he said.
McCracken had requested such a study
at the last council meeting but it was_ not
prepared because Finance Director Ben
Areuello had been out of the city due to a
famlly illness.
The-proposal to boost the levy would
take effect Jan. 1, If approved.
Harbors and Beaches Director Vince
Moorhouse said that a two-week delay on
the decision . until th e next council
meeting would make no difference.
Councilman Ted Bartlet askll!d whether
the state wa!" planning to Increase ii!
beach parking rates from 75 cents to $1.
Moorhouse replied ... "We don 't know,
but if tbey, do not, tt would not make that
much difference because we have so
much .more to offer." •
~ij~ Cl\y Adminislrator Doyle
Mill tr )lad rf.commended ihat a plan to in-
crease"the annual parking pass from $10
to $15 be dropped'stnce the purpose of the
pasll· is to offer a break to local residents.
Councilmen OK
" Central Park
Grant. Attempt DAU.Y PIL.OT Sltff Pi,tfl
Tuning lfp
Sigll Stance Affirmed
Hun~ington Council to Continµe Crackdown
HuntlngtDo Beacl>lOWilaln Valley Board
of Realtor1, who uked th.l\•lhe ordinance
be suQCrU.tted • to the city '• outdoor
Advert~ Comrriltltt 90 a Comproml.e
was part. of a state law. HunUn1ton "Bttdl.c~ coundlmen real·
ffnned. .. ~ ~h atan~e against tract
dlrecllOoal. •ltiio '1,looday night despite a
. w~na~ Ola~ ..::J· •!znilar crackdown is
hurtiOI rountahrY•lley. ··
"F<llllllaln•V1iley t00ay11As the highest
vacancy.ratio ol any city ii\ orange Coun·
tyJ' William Lange, representative-of a
company that puts up · tempo{ary tract
1l&n1 for developers, told. co~ilmen. '~Thls ratio is in dli'ect coirelation with
a. li&n ordinance .adopted by thit i:ltY. t
sincerely hope you don't put Huntington
B~ch In the same position."
Lange's plea for ~ 6Cktay IJlOratorium
on enforcement of the ordinance against
the temporary signs failed. The city Staff
waa instructed to cont1nue removing the
oullawed signs from public rights of way.
The moratorium request wa:s also sup-
ported by Phil McNamee,Jl~~idtnt of the
Cy~le rar~
r ' • '! • • ·•. ,...
May Be Open
By January
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of 1111 O.ltr "Ii.I Sr.II
Those shiny new motorcycles some
Huntington Beach youngsters will receive
this Christmas will not be gathering
garage d1151. very long. •
The city.sponsored motorcycle park -
a long awaited dream of the two-wheeled
set -should be in full operatioii by }ate
January or early Febniary, according to
Recreation and Parks , Director Norm
Worthy.
could be:1.,.9rked,out. ' -·
. ![ht ....,.U •lll'eed to lei JM.committee
study it;' bu\ decUned to' IHt .its six y.reeks
old _poliQ' of femovlng the ·111eall aigns
from ~ublR: property. The~eatty.boMd had ~ll0.t0ugbt relief
from ·the· crackdori' .on· lllri;al' "Optn
Jiouse" sla:n• as •ell U tMJr~cl 1i1m.
McNamee argued tl)at if the ordloance
was not restudied the· cltty wOl}ld have a
pi'oblem from ''bootleg signs ~a eut up
"anyway."
The discussion sparked •n&rY -ex·
changes between Lan&e and Councilman
Jack Green who uld that the city bad no
alternative but to enlorce..the ordinance
aince the ban on signs on ~blic proPfrty . . '
"Get this thl'Ougb foW" heads -we art
only talking about signs on public prO-
perty," Green told Lange.
·., This was In response to a char1e by
"Lange tJtat the council had favored a lob-
by by billboard companies by agreein& to
a moratorium on prosecution of billboard
violations. The billboards were not on
public property, Green said.
Lange. said that hlJJ company had co~·
tacted every developer to get them to
cooperate on a compromise.
The temporary signs covered In tht
ordinance are the small structure! thJ.t
are put out over weekends to guide
tracts.
City crews have removed more than
1.000 of the si(n! since the cr1ckdown
homebuyers leaving freeways to new
was initiated ail wetb ••o·
T~q-Susp~ts Arrested
In LA K,idnaping Case
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two men who
... held a banker 's son in 1 car trunk for
several hours in demand for ranJOm were
being held today for invesUgaUon of kid·
naping, police reported.
Lee Spatr'i, 20--year~ld son of William
Sp3th, was found in good condltion in the
car ?-.tonday night after the two me n
were stopped on a freeway. p01ice said.
Young Spath, officers said, had spent
several hours in the trunk.
Police said George Forrens, 35, and
Thomas LeRoy Coleman, 20, were booked
for invesllgation of kidnaping for the
purposes of ransom . Officers said they
Were armed, but didnot resist arrest.
Two men armed wltb $awed.off
ahotguns Sunday night went tG the
suburban Granada, Hills home of Spath1 48, manager of the Glendale branch ot
the Bank of America, police said.
Officers said the men demanded the
bank's weekend deposits -estimated at
more than $100,(IOO -and ransacked the
home after binding Spath, his wife and .. •.
When Spath said he couldn't get the
money because he didn't have a key, the
men took the son and told the father to'
get the money without telling polict, of·
ricers said.
Spath follo'wed their ~lions, officers
said, taking 1 bus to Las Vegas, Nev.,
and returning to Los Angeles, where he
was to deliver to the kidnapers a key to a,
bus terminal.
Federal grant ttunter Floyd "Bud''
Belsito ·tias been given the go-ahead by
the Huntington Beach City Council to
seek ·iif-add.!tional $607,898 for the pro-
posed Huntington ·eenlral Park.
The council, at its Monday night
session, unanimously approved the Hous-
ing and Urban Oe'1elopment (HUD) ai>'
plicaUOi'i · whlcli would add another 40
acfe! to the ·park, lf ipproved.
Members of the Marlin Swim Club SynchroniZed Swimniing , Team
prepare for team's performances Friday and Saturday al the Hunt·
mgton..Beach....High School_pool. The show is _sponsore~by the city
Recreation Department. Admission will cost 50 cents for adults and
25 cents for children. Show starts at 7:30" o'clock each night.
"We're right now in the process of get.-
ling a lease drawn up for. the Bruce
Brothers gravel pit on Gothard Street
and Talbert Avenue," he said. "Neither
the city nor the Bruce · Brothers have
agreed on a price. but we're seeing eye to
eye on what can be don e with the prDo
perty." _
The eight-acre pit was developed as a
potential site last summer after the city
invoked an emergency ordinance banning
molorcycles from undeveloped property.
Council of Arts
Being Sought
For Huntington
Monday night , the kidnapers drove to·
the Spath home in two cars -one of
them with the younger Spath inside .
One of the men picked up the key from
Spath, and then they drove away, police
!aid.
Officers followed the cars and then~
made the arrests.
To be p4,ii~sed with that money is the
Bruce · Brothers gravel quarry, a hUf.$ g~ping plt near Gothard Street. ;:I)
Talbf:rt • Ayenue, an~ tht! nearb~ $µ.lly
Pancreas of Costa Mesa
• l ..... , ... ~,
Mille!-qtiar,Y. ·
City "aldes haVe eyed the twn digging •
•ites .•"°"'ljc¥is ror .. 1-oerta o111t111nr
pond51•!• ehUdren '.s: :animll fann, ptcnic 1
areas, an arboretum, botanical gardtns.
"Victim Donated.to1Woman
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 lh1 Dllllr Plr.t 11111
"We're very optiml!ltlc about this
grant," said Belsito an administrative
assistant. ··;tf it is approved in San Fran· cisco, it will be our last land ecqui!ition A young woman suffering from R
request on the park for a pretty long disease that would have been fatal is now
while ." looking forward to a normal life, follow·
To :.date, $1,2.87,22.8 in federal funds ing a rare surgical transplant in which
have bee~ placed in the city 's park fl.ind she received the pancreas of 1 Costa .
throuih ~efforts of Belsi\o, • Mesa murder victim. The gririts, he sald, would have to be matched oo a dollar for dollar basis by The patient is now listed In good con-
the city until lbe Al>acre development i.s dilion at Orange 'eounty Medical Center
com'pletei:f. It iii expected that its total 13 days later, but officials decline to Iden·
cost "Will be &orilewhere near $20 million. tify her at·this stage of convalescence.
PIW call ·for a groundbreaking on the Transplanting of the delicate, com·
park -the largest anywhere in Orange plicated metabolic organ is done only as
County -next April. a last resort.
There are six major stumbling blocks, Parents of Kenneth S. Woodruff, 19. of
however. They are property owners CW"-22.83 Pacific Ave., Costa Mesa, agreed to
rently contesting city appraisals fot ·thiilr· the procedure when he succumbed
land in the courts. .. -;. . '.J11anksgiving Eve of hopeless head in·
They claim the city b~.1JOt appmsed:· JiftiieS·
their land on the basis eHU;highest and ::
best use and are asking; about twice a! ·
much ror ii., •h• city 1s ~uung 1. pay: Fountain valley
·•
Personnel Meet Set
' The persoMel commission of the Foun·
lain Valley Schoo\ District will meet at
'1 :30 p.m., 'Illursday in the board room
of the curriculum ce:pter.
DAILY PILOT
ClltANG!: 'O"}f PUll.1»11~() CCJMPANY
Ro\.Mt H. W114
Pfesklffll and l"llbl~ilw
J1ck R." Curlty '
Vk• Pmld111t •r.4 o.r.:r11 Mwo•r
lkom•• K•••il
l!lllDr
Thom•• A. Murphin•
Mlflt;tn~ E11;or
A111t Dirl:i11
Wei Or1n;1 COll!lty Edlltt
Albt tl w. l1lit
A'IOCll!t lClllot
Mntl111to1 IHcll Office
17175 l11ch 1111!1.,ercl
M•llin1 Addr111: P.O. lox 7,0, tJMI
Otller Offkel
Prepares to Don
Christmas Wraps
;rs time to dress Fountain Valley
homes, trailers .and. commercial shops in
their best Christmas clothes.
All,lhree cate~ories fi!e eligible lo com·
pete this year 1n the Chamber of Com·
merce-sponsored · Christmas decoration
contest.
Seven dilfertlll prizes arei available for
homes u best Christmas theme. most
religious. most1 humorous, best effect
with Ughts,.most unusual , Santa special
and sweepstakes. ·
J'he sweepstakes . winner will represent
Fountain Valley In ,this yearts "Forty
Miles of Christmas Smiles" co-sponsored
by: the Orange County Coast Association
and the DAILY PILOT. .
Three titles. be'st Christmas theme,
most religious and Santa Special, wiil be
awarded in the mobile borne categorf.
Commercial' shops can enter the best
decorated (indoor or outdoor) and the
best decorated wlndOw.
A medicai ti!am from Uc lrvine suc-
cessfully transplanted a pancreas and
kidney I& months ago Into a Huntington
Beach woman 's body. when fewer than 20
had been performed in surgical history.
Mrs. Cara Ramey respo nd ed
dramatically, only to be killed in an
ironio ca r-truck collision last summer.
The unidentified recipient of Woodruff's
healthy pancreas has been moved out of
the intensive care unit where he died 13
days ago, nurses confirmed Monday .
Woidruff suffered multiple skull frac-
tur~ and extensive brain damage Nov.
21. when thrown out or a speeding car on
the San Diego Freeway near Fairview
Road. '
Witnesses said one of several occupants
could be seen holding the door open while
his companions ejected the victim head·
first.
Detective Jim Blaylock, who is heading
the homicide investigation, said Monday
that no new leads have developed in the
two weeks since the fatal incident.
No one was able to get a license
number of the car. due to the swiftness of
events and darkness, ceimbined y;ith
speed or the car involved ..
Blaylock said Mr. and ·Mrs. Everett
\Vooclruff, of 351 W. Bay-St .. Costa 'Mesa,
agreed to the pancreu transplant when it
became apparent their · son cOpld not
survive.
The earlier pancreas transplant -in
an ironic twist -also. involved donation
of an organ from a man wbo died under
\'iolent and mysterious circumstances.
Mrs. Ramey received the kidney and
pancreas of a young h.usband "Who suf·
fe red hear tnjurtes when he fel\ from the
roof of a Carden Grove industrial firm . 1
His car stalled. the victim· had called '
his wife to pick him up at a fag-11hrouded •
interseclion bilt·ho trace.was found when ·:
she arrived, so she left.
He was diSC{)vered later, minus his
shoes, after apparently climbing atop the
building and slipping on the fog-drenched
edge. of the roof.
LllVltl 9-11: 2U ...,_, Avwit
CO.M M-; )JI W•t ltY ilr_. """"°"' le1C11: 1211 Wet .. n.11 •111ltll9,.
"" QmwlllJ aG$ HclrVI El CM'llrlo AMI Deadline for entry in the demraUon
contest Is midnight. Dee. IS. Entry b11nb
are available at city hall. 10200 Slater ~
Ave.: Crocker Cltlzens NaUonal 'Bank:
Hearing Slated
On Utility Lines
A pub)ic hearing has been set for 7:30
p.rn . Jan. 4 by the Huntington Beach City
Council to consider the undergroundin& of
utility lines in the Central Park.
\
Barik of America, or Security Paclfic
National Bank.
Send enb')' blanks to Mrs. RJchard
Gillum. 171Jl Santa Rita St., Fountain
Valley, Of Jea\te them It the Chamber O(•
rice in city hall.
Will Try It Again
SYDNEY (UPI) -The crew of U>c
EA:uadorian raft, La Bals1, int.ends to
mtkt another drift across th! Pacllic,
~ea~I\ Vtcalc A11ar .. 11ld today.1 Alsar led tht recent B,560-ml i fi\le-
month drift from Ecuador ta Mooloolaba,
on the e1st cerut of Australia.
The dale for the hearing on the crea·
tion of an underground utility dlstrl~t was
fixed by city council Monday night. \
The district would stretch from he
east i;ide of Golden West Street from
Slater Avenue to 20S feet south of Taylor
Street.
The cost or undergrounatng the power
and telephone lines has be•ri estimated
by Public'Wcrks Director James Wheeler
• at $145,000...._Th~ money ~Id co,nt from
·-funds -,.r elde-by ·Solllltlf1l , Callfwnl•
""'3on Company, under a requirement of
state law, for such civic projects.
Rather than riilcing a heaVy fine for
wheeling their machines around in illegal
are.a .. , yOungsters wUI be able to 'use a
trails· system in the--plt fer a small fee.
"We're thinking about ·Umitinj · the
rickrs . ,to HuutiJl&tpn · 8eacb..1ru.lden.i....
through a registration system, but the
price for riding will be kept as low as
PoSSible." said Wort.by.
The trials, he said. would circumvent a
deep lake at the bottom portion of the pit
and' provide a riding pattern complete
with a hill climbing area.
"We 're thinking a~ut having a .Price
break between the younger kids and
those 16 and older · who could afford to
pay more," the recreation director ad·
ded. Since the area Is somewhat confined,
city officials are pondering an engine
limit of tOOcc to ensure the safety of
those using the trails. Person! with
larger bikes will have to look elsewhere.
The lease . now being drawn-up by City
Attorney Don Bonfa. would be limited to
one year with a month to month can·
cellation option, said \Vorthy.
Some gravel mining operations will
continue in the pit but will not disturb the
motorcyclists.
Eventually, however, the bike riders
will have to yield their trails &ince the
Bruce Brothers quarry is destined for in·
clusion in the proposed Huntington Cen-
tral Park.
If you are a lover of the arts, Hun·
tington Beach needs you.
The city is anlious to form an art CQUn·
cil to select and acquire objects for the
new civic center and Ceil tr II library.
The city plans to contact various
semice clubl•to set if they wish lo hive a.
delegate on the council. Mayor Donald
Shipley and Councilman Norma Gibbs
were appointed Monday night as the city
council's representatives to the group.
Mayor Shipley emphaslied tha t in·
divldual citizens will be welcome On the
committee.
In a related matter, the council Mon·
day night appointed the Bank of Atnerica,
the city 's present depository, as trustee
for the non-profit corporation that will be
formed to float bonds for the center and
library.
Officer Installation
Slated for Realtors
Members of lhe Huntington B e 1 c h •
Fountain Valley Board of Realtors will
install new ofricers this Wednesday at an
8 a.m. breakfast session at the Mile
Square Golf Club.
The meeting. whi ch will also Include an
awards presentation to top llsters and top
salesman, is scheduled for the clubhouse,
104-01 Warner Ave., Fountain Valley.
National College
Group in _Yisit ·
• To Golden West
Golden West College Is one of twa
California community colleges to be •
visited this month as part of the n1·
tionwide study by the American Associa•
lion of Junior Colleges.
The association, based in Wa shington •
D.C., Is designing gu idelines to the rapid '
expansion of the community college
movement in the ne1t decade.
Dr. Edmund J. Gleazer Jr., study
director and executive director of the
Association, will spend Dec. 1~17 at
Golden West to conduct interviews and·
gather information.
The study will focus on establi.shing
Jong-range goals, identifying social and
economic trends and is to recommend
strategies tll bring better harmony
between thi! goals and practices of col·
leg es.
The other two-year institution to be
visited by Dr. Gleazer is Laney College,
Oakland.
YOUR MONEY'S WORTH!
Many people don't reaf11e that carpeting ls -Item !fiat can IM P•·
chawd fOf' less money today ltian 30 y.ars ago.
• • , Here are a few . eye ape"9'5 CJ 1 e a n e d fnlm a newspaper of 1940,
courtesy of the Santa A• u.&rary. Compare ttiese with f9day's prices:
1940 1970 INCREASE 1940 1970 INCREASE
f,40 C•dm•c 1$1700.00 f $7600.oo +[ 441·1~ fw•"nut lutter .09c lb. .43c lb. 477•;.
1"40 Chov•olot $659.00 + $2395.~ + 3.63 ¥.' 81n1n11 .04c lb.• .!Oc lb. 240•;.
~16'rlr•• $6.45 sra.95 ·m% Cr1clcers .07c n.. .29c 414 1/.
c'huck Rot1t .14'hc lb. .49c lb. 33i% ' Mo.11 TM1ter .25c $2.00 IOO%
Lev.o'.Lomb .191/:i c lb. .99c lb. 509'/o R"t. StNk Dinner .3Sc $2.95 142% ,.....,.s, .. k • .l61/2c lb. $1 .29 lb. 711 % Good Corpotlnt $1 "I· yd. & "'i" "I· yd. & : 0%
Ptthaps 1nother time w. c1n comp1r11 today's prlCM: with pric" in 1194 wMn our family
started In tM c1 rpet businHs.
.-------~ SANTA ANA. OU.N•l
• TUSTIN Cd •••
ALDIN'I
110 HIU. CA•"'1
& DU.PlllD
11174 1m..,. ,...._, C.nf.
) 1JlolJl44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia AYt.
COSTA MISA
646-4138
HOURS: Mon. Thrv Thurs.. t to 5:30 -·Fri. t to t -S.t. t :IO ,,; S
1 l
-·---
J{a:il tS trike
Date Slated.
·By Union s
... WASHINGTON (AP} -A union leader
fllaid flatlr today a national railway strike
rwill start at 12:01 a.m. (EST) Thursday.
" The statement came from c. L. Dennis,
president of the Brotherhood or Railway
.Clerks, in ~ddressing JSO representatives
of four unions as they prepared to go to
Capitol Hill to persuade Congress Mt to
accept President Nixon's proposal to
postpone a strike for 45 more days.
, Dennis' union is the largest of the fout
AFL-ClO unions representing about
600,000 workers in the wage dispute.
Dennis and other speakers at the rally
bargaining session failed to produce an
courage the railroads to stall in negotia·
tions until the unions are crippled and
forced to meet management's terms.
Earlier, Dennis said the walkout will be
called even if Congress grants Nixon's re-
quest for the 45-<lay delay.
In asserting his union "must strike,''
Dennis said the Rau.Way Clerks', with a
n1embership or about 200,000, are ready
to ri sk jail terms, fines and public
pressure to win their demands.
Talking Policy
' Jordan's King Hussei n and President Nixon pose for photographers
prior to their closed-door talks today on the situation in the Middl e
East. Jsraeli Defense Minister Moshe Dyan is .expected to meet with
Mr. Nixon in \Vashington next week. President is atte1n pting to ~et
T11rw!a)', Decembtr 8, 1~70 H DAILY'l'ILOT ,J
Soviets Beat Defector
Captain Wept, Asked H~h on lnckknt
WASHING TON (UPI) -'fbe capiaift ol
a U.S. Coast Guard ,cutter wept after
being ordered · to return a Lithuanian
defector to Soviet custody Nov. 23, but
arterward tried to hush up the incident, a
~n1an aboard the cutter testified today.
Robert M:. Brleze, a Latvian refugee
who is president of the New Bedford
Seafood Producers Association, told a
House foreign affairs subcommittee tl\at
Capt. Ralph W. Eustis told him he had no.
choice but to return the defector. Simas
Kudlrka.
"At this tlrne Capt. Eustis was crying,"
Brleie aald. l'I He aaid that the orders had
come from the Boston office (of the
Coast Guard)."
Later, as the cutter was returning to
New Bedford, Mass., after fishing talk!
with Soviei official! at sea, Eustis asked
Judge Signs
Talent Agenc~·
lnjunctio_11
the five civilians· aboard "to keep the
matter qu iet," Brleze said.
He said U.S. sailors wh.;i helped return
Kudirka to the Soviet ship from which he
"defected told him Kudirka "was either
unconscious oc dead" when taken back
aboard the Russian ship, and had bee n
kicked repeatedly In a U.S. launch taking
him there.
Previously he said he heard Kudirka
screaming for help and then saw him
with his face bleeding and a shirt torn off
after Soviet seamen hunted him down on
the U.S. cutter and beat him.
The r.oast Guard has suspended Eustis
and two other officers involved ln the in·
cident pending an investigation due to be
completed Ow: week.
Briez.e. who said he ned his counlry In
1M4 after the Russians occupied it, said
he tried' twice to get.Eultla to contact the
Stale Department tierore r e t u r n l n 1
KUdirka to the Soviets, but Eustis did not
r~spond. However, he said Eustis did try
to· contact the Soviet Embassy in
\Vashington al the request of Soviet or·
ricers and "J th ink they got through."
"This ii about as sickening• a 1tory as
J"ve ever heard," 1U,bcommittee
chairman Wayne L. H~s (o.ohlo) told
Brieze. "The man responsible for order·
Jng the r.etum of this defector should be
Court martialed, dismls.sed from the
service and preferably sent to SI~."
Earlier, ~ official report &bowed that
!he Coast Guard 1dmlr1! who ordered iJ>e
Lithuanian handed back to the §ovieLI did
so in part because he did not want to
jeopar<liU! !he lishlng JalU.
Union Weighs
' Ford Motor
Agreement
DETROIT (UPI ) -The Ford Cow!cll Dennis spoke after a I ate-night
bragaining session failed to produce an
agreement or a voluntary po:Stponement.
Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield
of h-1oittana suggested, meantime. that
Nixon summon negotiators in the dispute ,
put them in a room, and "lock the door
and throw the key away."
· serious negotiations between Arabs and Israelis started again.
Operations of a child talent agency ac-
cused of bilking hundreds of contract~
hungry parents out of enrollment rees
were balled Monday with the signing of a
preliminary injunction by Orange COunty
Superior Court Judie Harmon G.
of the United Auto Workers today n -~ ,
amined a tentative contract agreement
He told newsmen that was the way
President Lyndon B. Johnson acted in a
liimilar situation.
At the same lime, Senate Republican
Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania said
Republicans had prepared legislation to
hal t the threatened strike for 45 days as
requested by Nixon.
'.But Mansfield said he could see . no
point in such legislation unless Nixon was
prepared to take action now.
"The President has to take the in-
itiative in doing now what -if.I read his
statement correctly -he would propose
45 days from now ," Mansrield said.
Chairman Ralph W. Yarborough (D·
Tex.), or the Senate Liebor and Public
\Yelfare Committee was said by an aide
to be disturbed by the idea of Congress
acting before all other attempts at set-
tlement were exhausted.
•
Fulle }ton Youth
Ge.J~ ).ajl ; '!.'!r.'n ... 1
From Wire Serv~s
OMAHA - A judge who remarked 200
pounds of marijuana is a bit much for
one man's personal use has sentenced a
Fullerton youth to up to two years in the
Nel:iraska State Penitentiary.
Richard Rodgers, 22, of Fullerton. had
pleaded guilty to the charge but asked
that Dis lrict Court Judge Donald J.
Hamilton place him on simple probation.
Judge Hamilto n noted in pa55ing
sentence that Rodgers admitted using
LSD and other drug s.
.. He was probably helping others to get
started," JudJe Hamilton observed con·
cerning the large amount of pot the
defendant had in his possession.
i
I • i
I
~etport Opponents Blast
Airport Commissioners
•
'By JOHN VALTERZA
Of thf. Dt!lit l'llot SllH
More than 200 foes of propo~als to use
Bell Canyon or El Toro ~1CAS as jct
airports gave a sound thrashing to the
plans and members of lhe county airport
commission Monday in hearings at a
Mission Viejo school.
Complaining that the idea of consultant
Ralph M. Parsons posed safety, noise and
pollution problems, the Saddle.back area
residents vented their wrath at members
of the county advisory board for more
than an hour until someone on the panel
complained that it had gone rar enough.
Commiss1oners then replied, defending
their rol~ as, unp!l-td advisors to county
supervisors, adding that the commission
members were not the. consuJtanls Who·
proposed U,. plans.
Commissioner Robert A. Clark remind·
ed the audience that "we are five men
just like the people sitting next to you.
We are willing to hear your comments,
but not your animoslty, disgust and
tirades. We are here to servt. you."
With that admonishment the tenor of
the meeling was tempered somewhat, but
the opposition to the jetport idea con-
tinued.
Official representatives from El Toro
~1CAS, Leisure World, Mission Viejo
homeowners, Aegean Hills homeowners.
San Clemente High School students and
other groups" all marched to lht
microphone to complain.
•
At one point Clark asked for a show o{
hands to aetermine if a proponent existed
.in the audience.
No one rais~d a hand.
"Frankly, I'm in favor of throwing the
entire Parsons report out, myself," Clark
said,
He said the commission would gather
information from the Mission Viejo hear-
ing along with nearly tOO hours of olher
study and testilrumy and sybmit a recom·
mendation Dec. 15 to county supervisors.
Commissioners agreed that despite the
common objections beard Monday, they
did learn new information on the issue.
Among the new knowledge, they agreed,
was that the take cff paftem of jets from
Bell Canyon would take the aircraft O"f°"ir
the San Onorre nuclear generating com·
• plex, San Clemente State Park and the
Western White House.
Opponents said each facility would be
vulnerable to aircraft accidents.
Other points of objection included:
-That the noise generated by jet
aircraft at either the Marine facility or
Bell Canyon would destroy the serenity,
monetary value and life style of the Sad-,
dlebaclc Valley which lies five miles from
Bell Canyon and even closer to the
Marine Corps·base.
-That Orange C-Ounty residents have
never been officially polled in an eledion
to determine if they even want airport
expansion in the county.
\ Scoville.
Judge Scovitle took the action after
h"8!ing the statements of witnesses who
testified that they paid fees to Take One
Productions Inc. and National Video
C-Orporation representatives with the
assurance that every effort v.·ould be
made to place their children in movie and
television spots.
Their earlier complaints led District
Attorney Cecil IUcks to file a lawsuit
charging the defendants with defrauding
hundreds of parents who V.'ere never
again contacted by the agency after ini-
tial "screen tests" of their children.
Hicks said the agency advertised tor
children three to 18 years or age, gave
them brier videotape screen test! ana
then advised parents that they would be
contacted on the possibility or Placing the
child with a major Hollywood studio.
Hicks has also stated thal be may add
criminal fraud charges to the allegallons
contained in his civil action against the
defendants.
County Cyclist
Dies in Accident
A Buena Park rider was killed Monday
at Saddleback Motorcycle Park on San-
tiago Canyon Road when hls vehicle
overturned on a steep htll.
The Orange County Coroner's Office
said Eugene H. Ficker Sr., fa, died
shortly after arrival at Tustin Memorial
Jlospltal.
Ficker's son, Eugene Jr.. who wij·
nessed the accident, said his father's cy.
cl e failed to climb th e hill and the ac-
cident occurred as be attempted to return
to level ground.
Familiar Fncc
A six-cent sta1np honoring
General Douglas AfacArthur
will be issued next Jan. 26, in
Norfolk, Va. The stamp is
printed in red, blue and black.
The portrait is based on a
photo taken early in 1944 dur-
ing ari inspection flight by
A-1acArthur over New Guinea.
Court Schedules
~easure ,H~aring
An Orange County Superior Court hear.
Ing will be held Dec. 14 into a Santa Ana
tavern owner's a\lcgallons that a cily
ordinance which has been used as the
basis for arrests of his entertainers is
unlawful and unconstitutional.
Judge Harmon G. Scovl\le sche<!uled
the Inquiry after refusing to Issue a tem-
porary restraining order whlch would
have barred police from arresting per-
formers at the Chee Chee's and Semay-
gro Inc. bars.
Police booked se veral entertainers for
allegedly obscene conduct on the strength
of a new ly enacted ordinance w h I c h
provides for bar entertainers to be clothed
in at least bikini attire for ta vern per·
formances.
·witli Ford Motor Co. wbkb almolt ctr·
tainly averts a second cr1ppllOI strike
this year in the auto induslry.
Once the 200-member • council has
finished examining the agreement, which
will cost Ford an additional ,1.1 bUUOn,
at least, in wages alone over three years_
it will decide whether to recommend ac-
ceptance by the un1on'1 16',000 memben •
at Ford's U.S. plants.
Traditionally, the council recommendl
that the \\'Orkers accept -and the
'\'Orkers always have accepted -the
agreement their bargainers worked out.
'The cOuncil is e1pected to recool.rbend
acceptance In this case. ~
The tentative pact is vittually ldentkal
to the contract the union's General Motor
members ratified Nov. 20 ii.fter a 67-day
strike.
Uke the GM workers, Ford's UAW
members will get an average 51 cents per
hour pay increase in lhe first year and S
percent boosa in each of the aecond and
third years of the three-year pact,
assuming they ratify ll
But !he co~ny and union tenll~y<ly
agreed to pay 26 «rill of lhe llrat-ytll'
inc;_rease retroactively to ~pt. 1s,. ..,,_
the aid contract expired. Tbe re:nWnln1
15 cents would be paid -11 to
Nov. 15.
He said if Congress orders an e1tenslon
of bargaining time and no settlement 11
reached by Jan. 23, he will make new
recommendations to the lawmakers.
Body of AEC leader
Found in Lake Mead
. LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI) -The bodlea
of Atomic Energy Commiasion Chairman
Theos J. Thompson, S:, and his special
assistant, Jack Rosen, were recovered
from the wreckage cf their plane in IAk•
Mead near here Monday,
The Big M is big enough (over $434,000,000) to pay the nation's highest interest on insured
savings ... 5% to 6%. But equally important-cares enough to give you very personal service.
Highest interest at ~ r , '~ ~ iii THE BIG M utual ~~!~ngs
Corona d•I Mar office: 2167 Ent Coast Highway/ 175-5010 Other offices In Covina, West Arcadia. Pasadena e'nd Gltnd8"
1 1 '
I ' ;
)
; -,
)
; •
•
•
4 OAllV PILO,
Cl oor ac:i
Sign of the timu ·
Fight Due
For Hyphen
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Conse rva·
lionlsts across the land are concerned,
and justifiably so, abou t the vanishing
hyphen.
They point out that byphens have been
disappearing at an alarming rate during
the past two decades and are in im·
minent danger of becoming extinct.
Several national "Save the Hyphen"
committees have been fanned, but
private groups are limited in lhe
measures they can take, their efforts
being mainly in the nature of educational
campaigns.
,
Jt is generally agreed the most et·
fective action would be for congress to
formally. classify the hyphen as an
"imperiled poncluation mark," thus
bringing it under the protecUon of the
federal government.
Hyphens once abounded in this country.
l personally am old enough to rem ember
when you would see two or three hyphens
on nearly every page of almost any
maguine you picked up.
NOW YOU can browse through an en -
tire issue without encountering a single
hyphen, except. those dividing words al
the end of lines. Many children are grow·
ing up without ever having seen a hyphen
in its natural state.
Just the other day my young son spot·
led a hyphen in a back isiue of
''Playboy" that I had been saving for
archaeological purposes. He didn't even
recognize it.
I bad to explain what it was. Along
with several other things in the
magazine.
Hyphens once were particularly abun·
clant in negative terminology where the
"anti" and "non," and to a lesser eliend
the "un," prefixes were employtd.
BUT NOW when a hyphen shows up
following an "anti" or a "non," it likely
\Yill be quickly obliterated by some
predatory copyreader.
!Nole: It even is doubtful that the
hyphen I put in copy-reader will survive.)
Several factors are responsible rot the
trend toward dehyphenation, but primari·
ly it reOects the Volkswagen infl ue nce.
Along with Germ an cars, we are im·
porting the Germ an habit of running
\1·ords together. Exam ple: an "off the
shoulder gown" would in German becOme
an ··aufgangdasclaviclegedressen."
It y,·ould be a great tragedy if the
hyphen is allowed to atrophy and even-
luall y go the way of the bison. As Bill
Gold, a friend of lht hyphen, recently
wrote in the Washington Post:
.. Hyphens are cheap, odorless, in·
offensive, biodegradable, nonfattening,
nonpartisan, nondenominational and non·
carcinogenic."
That alone makes them well wurth
preserving. -UPI
. .
Viet BOJ Slaita
Anti-American
•
Rioting Rages
QUI NHON, Vietnam (AP) -Anti•
American rioting raged Monday and to.
day in this centraJ coastal city following
the fatal shooting of a Vietnamese high
school student by an American :soldier.
A 24-hoor curfew was ordered but
demonstrations, window·smashing and
the burning or U.S. military vehicles con-
tinued. Some American troops have been
injured by fiylng rocks, Wormanta u id.
Qui Nhon was placed off limits lo all
Americans.
Informed U.S. sources said the
demonstrators, J>O.'Sibly numberJng 4,000
today, were demanding that th e
American soldier who killed the youth be
turned over to South Vietnamese
authorities for Immediate trial.
The 50Jdier was not identified. He was
In custody, and military officials were in·
vestigating the shooting.
.. We're not about to turn him over" to
the South Vietnamese, said one U.S. of·
ficial. The United States has no status of
forces agreement with the Vietnamese
giving them jurisdiction over American
military per90nnel under s o m e
circumstances as it has with South
Korea , for example.
Informed sources said the student was
killed Monday afternoon when a group of
Vietnamese youths climbed aboard an
American Army tnick-carrying boxes of
C-ration.s and tried to steal some of them.
One of the two soldiers riding in the
truck flred a &hot in warning, the sources
said. The shot killed a high school student
standing nearby who was not involved in
the looting attempt.
The dead student was from a Buddhist
I high school which bas a politically con-
scious student body made, up largely of
An Quang Buddhists, the militant an·
tigovernment faction, the aources said.
Several students paraded the dead
boy's body through the streets, chanting.
"Yankee Go Home" and attracting
followers as the y marched.
The demonstrations subsided lllonday
nigh t but resumed thi5 momine as
st udents from ot her high schools in Qui
!\"hon, South Vietnam·s fourth largest ci·
ty, ·joined in. ·
Red Mine Kills
Two Americans;
Cambodians Hit
SAIGON (UPI ) -The U.S. command
said today a U.S. Army armored person-
nel carrier ran over a Communist mine
on South Vietnam "s northern coast, kill·
ing two Americans and wounding 22
others.
The mine explosion occurred Monday
afternoon west of Tam Ky, 340 miles
north·n011heast of Saigon.
Field reports from Phnom .Penh said
North Vietnamese and Viet COng units
launched slmllltaneous attacks Monday
night against Cambodian positions in
Svay Rieng Province near the South Viet.
namese border.
Vlel Cong and North Vietnamese
8rtillerymen r.1onday nigbt shelled a posi·
lion of a unit of the America! Division .
resulting in what the U.S. command
described as light casualties. The attack
was carried out against an outpost 1 t
miles west-southwest or Tam Ky.
Lt. Col. Am Rong, the official Cam·
bodian. military spokesman. said t he
latest Communi st attacks in Cambodia
were against Kompong Chak and 0 San-
day. about 70 miles southeast or Phnom
Penh and 10 miles from !he South Viet-
namese border .
Cambodian intelligence r ece n t 1 y
reported a Communist buildup in Svay
Rieng and the neighboring province of
Prey Veng. Both areas were briefly oc·
cupied by U.S. troops in the Cambodian
operation last spring.
Some adult opponents of the South Vlet·
namese government also joined the
demonstration. Police tried to disperse
the demonstrators with riot ·gas, and
some 5tudents were injured by police
clubs.
The national police in the city wert re..
inforced by militia and Vitt.namese
military police, but by this evening no
regular army forces had been brought in,
American officers met with the pro-
vince chief and leaders of at least three
student groups. The Americans assured
them that parents of the dead youth
would be compensated. but they made no
promises concerning the soldier who shot
him.
No charges have been filed against the
soldier, sources said.
Several thousand Americans are sla·
tioned in and around Qui Nhon, which is
275 miles northeast of Saigon. There are
no American combat units in the im-
mediate vicinity.
No Advisers
For Cambodia
Says Rogers
WASHINGTON (AP) -S<eretary of
State William P. Rogers told a Senate ap-
propriations subcomm1ttee today the
United States intend! to help Cambodia
with "air interdiction or supply and com·
munications lines and aid. not military
advisers or ground troops.''
Rogers and Secretary of Defense
Melvin R. Laird emphasized in seeking
approv al or $155 million in economic and
military aid for cambodJa that the
assistance would be used to enable the
Cambodians to defend themselves and
prevent North Vietnam from reoccupying
ports and border sanctuaries which could
be used to threaten U.S. forces in Soutb
Vietnam.
Rogers said 70 percent of the military
aid for Cambodia will go for ammunition
with the rest "princi pally for small arms,
trucks, communications equipment, a
small number o f propeller-dri ven
a ircraft, river patrol boals and slmilar
ilems."
.. These are all Items which the Cam·
bodian are capable of a b 1 o r b I n g
themselves and which are adapted to the
type or warfare the Cambodians con·
front," Rogers said. He added that U.S.
aid so far has been Used well, the Cam-
bodian forces are rapidly gaining
military experience and "the government
has widespread support in all segments
of the population."
"Our basic objective in Cambodia is to
protect Vietnamiz.ation and o u r
withdrawal program by denying to North
VieJ,nam the use ol the sea coast and
poris and the border sanctuaries,'' the
secretary of state said.
POW Raid Praised
By Vote in House
WASH INGTON (AP) -The Army
commando raid on a prisoner-of-war
camp 20 miles from Hanoi was commerid-
ed by the House ti.1onday in a resolution
opponents said might encourage I he
Pentagon to try oth er raids.
Opponents lied up the House for 21.1
hours wilh parliamentary sta l!s to pro-
test the resolution before It was passed
347 to 15. The House commend.at.ion was
similar to one blocked iR the St nate
shortly after the Nov. 21 Son Tay raid by
Sen. J.W. Fulbright lD-Ark.). He said it
might be interpreted as support for what
he Ci l\ed esca lation of the war.
Pleasant Weather Prevails
Loivlands Threatened by Floods cis Snow Melts
Callfor11ia
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POLICE AND NEWSMEN STAND AT SCENE OF SWISS AMBASSADOR'S KIDNAP
Envoy's Car (L) Intercepted by Kidnapers' Cars. Center •nd Foreground
Power Slowdow11 Cripples
British Industry, Life
LONOON tUPil -Strikes and slow-
downs by key workers blacked out wide
areas of Britain today, shut down fac-
tories and docks and Jert the country
without newspapers for 24 hours.
Prime Minister Edward Heath t o I d
pov.·er workers they are causing "grave
hardship lo the nation. disrupting indus·
try and endangering health."
But the government said il would not
be "pra~ctlcable" fo r troops to take over
and run the slowed-down electric power
stations. -
'"Northern Ireland. the provincial gov-
ernment proclaimed a local state of emer-
gency, makin1t: i~ illegal to was te electri·
city.
The trouble did not compare with the
total shutdown o{ Britain's 1926 general
strike.
But a slowdown by 125,000 workers in
state-run power stations caused wide-
spread electricity cuts. It was launched
Monday to back a 30 percent pay hik•I
demand.
Another movement spurred by dissi·
dent labor union leaders. many of them
communists. cl03Cd all the country's na·
tionally circulated newspapers, most of
iii; docks and many automoti ve plants.
schools and markels for 24 hours.
Union leaders said about 500,000 work·
ers took part. Employer's groups esti-
mated 200.000 partici pated. The 24·hour
walkout was called against advice of the
country's top labor union leadership to
protest government legislation designed
to curb union powers and crimp wildcat
strikes.
Health. Interrupted by shouts of angr y
labor opposition members. told Parlia-
ment. "the country realizes that lhe ac-
tion bei ng take n today is not only caus·
in,I'.! inconvenience but grave hardship lo
individuals and disruption to indust rv and
is liable to cause danger lo health not
onl.v in hospitals but also in the homes.''
John Davies. secretary ror trade and
Industry, said electricity workers are go-
Ing well beyond the overtime ba n ord ered
by their unions. He urged the unions to
call off the slowdown and relum to the
negotiating table.
He said he has set up a 24-hour-a-day
operations room in his ministry to keep
industry and !he public informed by radio
about the strike situation.
But h~ said it is "not practicable" for
troops to take over and run power sta.
lions.
Mounties Get
Their Woman?
O'IT A WA (UPI ) -Women in the
Royal Canadian Mounties?
Yes. said Canad a's four.year-old
Royal Commission on the Status or
Women Monday when it called for
an end to discrimination against
females in employment, the right
to abortion on de mand for pregnan·
cies up to three months. and rais-
ing the marriage age to 18 "with no
exceptions at all."
In a 500-page report presented to
the House of Commons by Prime
P.1iniste r Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
the commission re I ea s e d its
formula for promoting women's
equality in a society "unjustly con-
ceived and co nlrolled by men."
Qu e s t io ned about t he
gove rnme nfs plans for action on
the proposals Trudeau was non-
com1nittal.
"•\Ve v.·ill consider lhe report,
!hen \re 1vill announce to the House
v.'hat course v.·e will follO\\','' he
said.
Soviet Union Presents
'Peaceful' 1971 Budget
MOSCOW .lUPI ) -Soviet lea de.rs to-
day presented :a •·peaceful.. national
budget !hat incl uded one of !he more
modest military outlays of recent years.
The defense app ropriation placed
before the Supreme Soviet !pa rli ament )
of the Soviet Union was still the largest
sinct World War JI -but just barcly.
Expressed as a percentagt of the total
budget, the defense ou!lay was con·
siderably decreased.
more tha n $1.11 billion and th t yea r
before the increase was twice that.
Sti ll, Western milita ry experts view the
Soviet defense figu res with co nsiderable
caution. ~lany large m 11 i la r y AP·
propriat.ions are hidden in !he budgets for
space, education and scientific research.
'J'he Soviets could easily hide a major
defense increase in othe r budgetary
figures.
Release of. 70
Demanded
By Kidnapers
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -As 20,000
troops and police searched today for the
kidnaped Swiss ambassador to Brazil, an
unconfirmed report circulated that hi!
captors v.·ere demanding the release ol 68
to 70 political prisone rs.
The report came from a source who
said the demand was made in one of two
documents purporting to come from ~
kidnapers. The documents were in the
hands of the police. and they refused to
mak e public what they said .
Ambassador Giovanni Enrico Bucher,
57. whose wealthy family owns a chain of
resorts in Switzerland and Italy, was
seized Monday in the Rio suburb of
Laranjei ras. His police bodyguard was
shot three limes; one bullet hit his spine
and paralyzed his arms and legs.
Witnesses said seven men and a woman
blocked off the ambassador's limousine
v:it.h two cars, ordered the driver lo the
floorboard and shot the guard , Helio
Carvalho de Araujo, when he resisted.
Abandoning the two blocking cars, they
hustled the ambassador into another car
and drove off, a fourth car trailing
behind. One of the two g"etaway cars was
la ter abandoned at a beach.
The operation took about two minute.!
to carry out.
A terrorist group call ed the National
Liberation Alliance claimed responsibil ity
in pam phlets scat tered about the scene.
This is the document reportedly con·
tai ning the ransom demand,
l\1onday night a woman telephoned the
city editor of the newspaper Ul tima
Hora. saying a letter from the kidnapers
had been deposited in a do wn town bar.
\Vhen re.porters arrived, police -called
by the bar owne r -had confiscated that
paper, too. Some sources described •.. ~
document as a manifesto.
;; U.N. Na tions Seek
Portugal Resolution
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) -Five
African and Asian men1bers of the U.N.
Security Counci l called on the council
fllonday to condemn Portugal for the re-
<:ent invasion of Guinea and to im pose
sanction5 against Portu gal if the West
African state is attacked again.
Ambassador Nsanze Terence of Burundi
Introduced the resolution, which a I a o
demanded that Portugal pay full com.
pensalion for the loss of life and damage
to property caused by the armed thrust
into Qujnea last month . The resolution
was sponsored by Burundi, Sierra Leone, Zam~ia, Nepal and Syria.
Finance Minister Va sily Garbuzov
presented the budget. listing projected
expenditures of $188.2 billion. including a
defense outlay of $19.9 billion.
'Tlw Do's and Don'ts'
''The state budget of the USSR Is a
budget of peaceful economic and cultural
development ," Oarbuzov told th e joint
session of the Supreme Sov iet.
The defense total was only slightly
higher tllan $19.81 billion appropriated
last year for 1970.
The tolal budget w•s considerably
higher than last year's figure of $160.56
billion.
The smatl military Increase was
minimal whtn con1pared with the big
boosts of recen t yeArs. Last year, for ex·
ample. military erpenditures V.'tnt up by
King Hu ssein in U.S.
To Talk With Nixo u
WASHINGTON (UPll -King Hussein
of Jordan arrived Y.-ilh liltle fanfare in
W11shtngton today but y,·lth h<':avy stcurl·
ty precautions in evidence.
Tire, Glue;FaJ>ric Buying ..,
Outlined n1 U.S. Booklet
WASHINGTON !AP) -Don't trust lhe
readings on service station air pumps. Do
allow v.·oolen earmcnts to "rest" for 2.f
hours before wtaring them again. Don't
use hard·sett ing adhesives to bond twu
dlsslmilar substances.
The "Do·s·• and "'Don'l's'' arc ex-
amples or the govern1ncnls advice on huw
to buy and use fabrics. tires and
adhesives. The three booklets. rele.asl'd
fi londay by the Commcrde Department .
llrt lhe first based on a review of govem·
1ncnt product lnformotlon by the Nixon
:idmlnlstration.
A gw ernment survey of service station
air towers showed 62 percent of the
rea dings on lhe lO\\'eTS ~·ert off by at
least lwo pcund! per square inch -an
error which could adversely affect lire
v.·ear and car handling.
The bookie! explains also the difreren ce
be!lveen bias. belted-bias. and radial
fires; \\'arns against using different type'
of tires on the same axle -or mlxin1
r11dials at all -a1td txplains th:at thti
thump caused by nylon tires afler they
havt stood overnight l:s nothing to worry
al>o\Jt.
H!ll'tt MOlldtY tlld ltrkltf !Nlfl·
WI""" Kldty IMlltfHlt
l°"" 9ucll n °11. l.tfll• Monte.. .,_ _,, t..lrNM; 1t-I~ lf.l, WJflOfl ,,..,,
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01"1 "°""' S.l\tt h•Nrt l'0·1t. t lld AIWll'ltitl'l ~ Wit Ant U.1 ..
StcO!IC llitll •:ICI '·"'· Stc;O(llt '°w 11:a1,,... WIONllDAT
Tiit HOC! wtl!Nr Wtl 1¥\ttrfd In I
'"" IPOll ..... -1"1-.iuol lt.tfflllll
--.11,,.r. 1.llM rein ""'"'""'" 11\t ct<\o J 1 t••I l'1ctrtc (N\I wftltl lr>O• It!! ,,.
I ' lllltllltr ~ Mlcll1Hn.
.. .,., llltft •. •rlO 1 "'· 11
Tftt tohthtrlw w!ft1ll, wllocll ~Vt b'1ll0..,, ... 111 MmOtruu•t• 19 !tit E111
(NII 1"'11 Mld.,.tll, Jnc;r111H IM•f
'fon:t ..... L ... • Ml<Jllt•n '"° H tltf'11
l•'t """'lor tffl¥ t0dt1,. Gtlt w1rn·
,t .. 11 ~ 1:111.'" • .OI
I« .... fl'-i 11af I 11'1, I I
,.,... ltllotl 6 ... ,,, fth I II •"'·
.. M
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" . . " " ~• .o•
Husse.in made no arrlval state'fnent at
Andn:iv.·s Air F'orce BRse prior to a White
.11 !louse n1celing with President Nixon '°' where ihe t\iiddle Easl situation v.·as the
" . JJ lS
•S IJ u ., . :•
The booklets leek 11ny brand·name. In·
rorm:itlon from gov rnmcnt tests. But
lhey do con1ain such specific information
as the tire booklet's admonition 10 always
u:ie a pocket eauec when inflating Ures.
The booklet on adhesives expla l11s tha t
adhering -two disslmil•r substances
together means the substances will t x·
pand or contracl ;it different rates la
response to temperature chana:e:i:. pultlni
a strain oa the adhesive.
r
.~ .. , wt•• .Itel. l m11in topic or discllsslon.
I
~OOIO •IHt 1.>t I·'"-Ifft 1.22 t "'' •
7
I
•
7
I •
' •
• ----
• ·-Fo ' •
VOL ~3,NO. 293, 3 SECTIONS, 28' PASES TUESDAY, DECEMB!ll 8, '1970 TEI'! CERTS ...
' ..
'
Hunting~on: Ol(s _.Condominium of 1,404 Units
By ALAN DQl_lqN
OI ... o.!IY Pll9t Stiff
,An adult community with 1,404 can-
4'miniu.m units spread over 140 ac;res ·is
&o be built In aoutheast Huntington Beach.
•1After a lens;thy bearing punctuated by
applause as speakers made points for and
against the proposal, the city council
Monday night approved the complex on a
S.1 vote witb Councilman "Jerry Matney
dissenting.
The community, which wUI have a
minimum age requirement in the low
40's, will cost about ~ million and· will
be built by Signal Lind.mark Corpor~tion
on a parcel at the nortbweat corner of
Atlanta ·A•enue-·and Magnolia Street.
· . The COWICil' pied a -pOrmlt for
tho Plannec! ttaidejllial dev.lopment lift.
ing the ma.rfmwn ·.density req\ifrrment
from 7.25,unita per acrt to 10.53 units per
acr~
·Opposition to thr: -proj~t centered en
the increase in density and wbf:ther the
no-children concept • for the community
could be legally enfon:ed.
Matney saMI h& woUld back the pro-
posal if it· were apiendea to the required
7.25 unita per acre.
"What·if a family has one child?" ask·
ed Jerry Vaniman, a bopieowner and
camefa .abep propt:letlr. "Wbo-Will ask
tbtm to Juve, and won't that aet a
precedent!" . ~ .
Homeowners uked City Attorney Dozt
Bonfa whether tt waa legal for a use
permlt to be used for a change ln density
and whether hardships must be sbown,
such as in conditional exceptions and use
variance cases.
Bonfa declined to give an "off lhe cuff"
opinion on these issues, claimlng that his
affice would have researched them U the
questions had been submitted in writing
in advance of the bearing.
In answer to a questian by C.Cuncllman
Jack Green, Planning Director Kenneth
Reynoldl said that the planning com·
•
million could vory the clenslly under the
U10 permiL Ref1lll)ds &lid that the com·
mtsslon,,whJch •pProved the projec;:t on•
6-1 ·•ote, waa more concerned with quall·
ty standards of the develOpment. '
William Shattuck, repn!senting Signal
Landmark, pointed out that the cor·
poraUon would have the right to
repurchase a-property if a family bad
children.
ln answer to questions oli what Signal
p\anne<I: for similar parcels ln the same
nei;tiborhood, Shattuck commented, "If
thla is a proper I.bing and works out y.iell
ln five years, J SH nQ reaaon not to con·
tfnue It .. !· believe the dty should i>ot be
.e u -1es 0 ---
Missing for Week
'
Search Pressed
For Beach Pi·lot
Civil Air Patrol authorities art still
searching for a HunUn.gt.ozt Beach pilot
who disappeared last week in ce.ntral
California after taking off from the Paso
Robles Airport.
Darryl Bandy, 36, of WI Slerlinl Avf..,
Beach Suitig
Downtown
Homeowners
More than 800 property owners a"'
being sued by the Huntington Beach .
Parking Authority in eminent domain .lo-
tions launching the cily'S: plans t.e
revitalize Its decaying downtown area.
City Attarney Don Bonfa filed nine
more of the bulky tawsuiti Mcinday, ad-
ding to the 19 actions he filed last Friday.
Each of the 28 suits asks for court ap-
proval of parking authority plans to ac•
quire a five -block downtown area.
Huntington Beach city cauncilmen dou·
ble as the city 's Parking Authority.
,The area involved stretch~ from Fifth
to First Streel.!I a block deep . along
Pacific Coast Highway. It also includes a
five-acre parcel southeast of Lake Street.
The parking authority lawsuits , are
aimed at acquiring the land for a 1,878-
space parking l~l, first phase of a city el·
fort to revitalize the old, downtown sec·
lion ef Huntington Beach. Estimated cJr
ef the acquisition program is $4.2 million."
City official!: said the parking lot would
provide additional spaces for visitors to.
the city 's beaches and would provide in·
centive for development of specialty
&?topping areas nearby.
Despite the filing of the eminent do-
maln sults, City Attorney Bonfa said the
city re.mains willing to acquire property
through negotiated settlements.
City plans for the 1rea have been op-
posed by the Downtown Property Owners
Committee.
The committee contends·that downtown•
Huhtington Beach's development could be
best handled by private enterprise.
told airport officials In Paso Robles that
ht planned to follOw U.S. 1~1 IOUth to Van
Nuys Airport. But Ba)ldy never landed in
Van Nuys and was. not heard from after
lea¥ing Puo Rol:iler at 1:30 p.m., !1st
Tutlday~' . ·'
Re had an unidentHied f e m a I e
pasaen~er with him ,;us bet pet dog.
AirpQrt' a!llC:ia11 Ii Puo Roliles uld 4onat 111a fto'"! rrom vu Nuyi to th•
Sin tP'randsto-Bly area to pick up the
wontan •. He wi.' retuminl ~th with her
wheo. ht 1topPed at Pa.50 Robli!s to gar
up.
"It ·was fow an4· Ban.dY said he plan-
ned to Oy low ·over hi&bway 101," an
airport spokesman aaid.
Bandy, a bachelor. war Oying a
Cherokee 140. His 1 brolbtr, Gary, i
Garden Grove · rt!ldent, flew to . Paso
Robles to retrtct :the flight pattern, but
found nti s~ of the light plMe.
A number or individuals· reportedl7
heard a plane alq highway 101 about
the time Bandy wu reported miaslng,
but CAP lnvestlgitors hive ntit found any
substantial inlormation.
Fountain Valley .
To Get Request
For ~partments
Green Valley developers . wlll uk
permission Wednesday night from I.he
Fountain Valley Plannini Commiulon 'to
build 170 apertment units.:
The new apartments afe planned for a·
9.8 acre site at the southwest corner of
Slater Avenue and· Ward St~L Grten
Valley is iubmitting a precise: plan 9' the
apartments-to the corrurii3sion.
Before commissioners approve or deny ·
the plan they will open a public heaing 50
rpeakers from the audience can com·
ment.
Planning Director Clinton Sherrod is
recommendina denial of the Gl'ffn Valley
plan because it Jeatur~ m o r e
apartments than the city's new laws
allow for the area. ·
City leaders . tightened the laws on
apartll'!ents last year after many resl·
cle.U complained about the number ol
apartments beln1 buUI In FoqnWn
Valley,
Dll!S AT HOSPITAL ·
Sherllf'o D,eputy Wall•«
WOUNDED IN HAND, KNI! I!
Sheriff' a Daputy . Campbell
Gl"Refused Dea(h Order
Frqm Call~y at, My Lai
FT. BENNING. Ga. (UPI) -A "ldier
who was under l5t Lt. William L. Calley's
command at My Lai testified today he
refused to obey Calley's order to shoot
screaming ci.vilian.!1 in a ditch where
molht!rs piled atop their children to save
them Crom automatic rifle fire .
The witness, James Joseph Dursl ,
employe of an el~rical mllllufacturing
firm in Brooklyn, N.Y., was the 35th pro-
dubed· by the government in its attempt
to convict the diminutive Cilley of the
premeditated' murder of 102 civilians in
the Vietnamese-village March 16, 1968.
Hl1 testimony followed that of-another
former soldier who said he watched
Judge to Rule ·
On Recall Move
A Superior C.Curt ruling in favor of
workers seeking the recall of Seal Beach
city couocilman Conway Fuhrman seem·
ed inevitable today as Judge Wter Van
Taterthove called a noon recess in hear·
ings on the bitterly contested dispute.
Judge Vin Tatenhcwe will not rule un·
tit late this afternoon , he nid. But he
made it clear in comments from the
~h that the city council'• only means
of njectinl recall workers argumenti i!l
to prove tliat the petitions s~bmitted to
his court are invalid.
Jubilant iecall workers a&id they bav1
more tho enough sipaturea needed.
Calley act as the lone executioner tif five
to 10 separate groups brought to the ditch
during a QG.minute periid.
Dursi, a huge man with black hair,
sideburns and mustache, said he was a
private first class in the platoon Calely
commanded.
After his testimony. Capt. Aubrey M.
Daniel JU, the prosecutor, told the court
Dursj probably was the last prosecution
witness, but lhat he would not rest the
government case without making an ef.
fort to find twi more witnesses he has
been trying to locate.
Dursi said at Calley's order, he, Pfc
Paul D. Meadlo, and Calley put their
ri0e1 in the port arms position and push·
ed people into a ditch at My Lal.
"SOme started to cry and they were
yelli(tg,'' he said. "Meadlo was crying
and pushing the people. We were ordered
to ·shoot by Lt. Calley.
"l don't remember his exact words , but
he said somethlng like : 'Start firing .'
"c31ley and Mead.lo started firing into
the ditch down at the people. Meadlo
turned to me and told me: 'Shoot ! Why
don't you shoot?'
"He was crying and yelling to me.
"I just said : ·r can't! I won'I!' and t
looked down at the ground.
"The people were screaming and yell·
Ing: It was mostly automatic and aome
semiautomatic fire, and the weapons
were pointed down into the ditch. 1
remember Meadlo changing magazines
at one Ume. Tbey fired three to four
minutes.
Ip a related develop19enl Monday
night, city councilmen withheld any
decisive action on an S8 million claim fiJ-
ed ,against the city by Mrs. Elmyra Terry
an, behalf of 133 downtown property
owners. -
the Clamage claim charges that the cl·
ty ,prevented the owners from developing
their properties by instituting "op-
SaJ.ary Fignt L . ? oom1ng.
pressive" Ian(! use regulallons. .. .
Councilmen. acting on the advice-Of Cl·
ly Attorney Bonfa, &aid the claim doe!
not meet the requirements of the law
goterning such m1tW1 and ardered it
retbmed t1 Mn. Terry.
Dorn Head8 LA Board
LOS ANGELES lUPI) -County
aupervison today unanlmausly eJeded
Supervisor Warren M. Dom 11 tbetr
chatrm·an ftir the ctimln& year. Dwo..-c>
ceeded Erneat E. Debs.
J ...
Resi.dent May Attempt Referern!-um for City Pay Cut
High rankin& mtmbers ol the city staff
ln HunUncton Be1ch m1y become tbt
target of a citizen prole.!lt -1ga.inst
aalaries.
A resident "l".ed notict at Mooday
·night'• clly1<0WICU mt<lfn( that• public
rtftrencbri mar be atternPtld to cut the .. ,xceam,, 111artes et department
beads.
CUii M•-· • nlesm•n. ol 111191 leulda· ~ ••. (lllnled· ool tllat CCMllY
9UPIMHn· rt<Onlly· acctplld . a recom,
mendation of the Grand Jury for 1n an-
nual salary of Sl7 ,500.
He doubted whether any ataff members
wtirked harder than tbe aupervlsor1, but
uld, "lhere are 15 Mlary rancts ln Hun-
tfn(ton Beach which uCHd 111.soo."
"l would lib to know mycrecoune as a
tupaiye:r, 0 Morteiilon ~· "How
many 1lanaluru do t netd1o 1et lhla to a
vtte •. " ,
Cliy Clerk Paul J,... lnlormed him
1h1t· al,lftltures ~ 10' percent of the
re1il1<red 'vator1 at lht time ti lht lut
elect.I.on would be required f9r a refertn·
dum at the next r~lar. electio~ in 1m
and 1~ pereent ro·r a special election.
A check' wllh1 the office of the county
registrar ·Of votel'1 this morninC found
thJ1t t~re .were.48,~7 registered \!oterl
in: Hunting\OrJ ,Buch 1t the l~st 'election.
T1n pe~Of th!J "°"lid be.•,11111114 tl
perct11t T.":I"· · . In ~ .i. a ~ue.stion, Morten..,,
&lid he did nol have a parlicular
erganlzallon oi sroup behind him.
. "Not yet," •be uld.
•
~ afraid of ·the future. You can't atop a
iood lhlni·" .
not continued for • leial oplnlon to Iii
given on the UM ol a permit for a dtmitJ.
change. Another polnt made by Signal was that
the density In terms of the number of
people. would be lee than with Ute
normal ·1.25 unit.I per acre development
because of the ban on children.
Donia replied that he tbou&ht be had
suggested tliis course-to the councU
earlier.
At the. planning commi.!ISion bearing, a
spokesman for the Huntington Beach City
School District said that the project
would obviate the need for an elementary
school planned for the area. •
After the hearing had closed and the
vote had been taken, a housewife, Mrs.
Nancy Allen, speaking under oral com·
munications, asW:ed why the matter was
•
'
!ii'• DEAD AT SCENI!
Su1pect .Moreno
Hughes Empire ..
Power Struggle
,
\
Nears Sholt-down
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -The scramble
that developed when Howard Hughes left
on vacation for the Bahamas and fired
the chief of his $300 million Nevada em-
pire headed for a showdown today.
A court hearing was scheduled to
render a legal decision on a temporary
restraining order barring a takeover of
the Nevada holding by Hughes' corporate
leaders. It was to be followed by a joint
mee ting of both sides in the dispute in a
sesson mediated by the gr;ivernor.
A ·Hughes spokesman said these two
developments, "should end the whole
thing by nightfall."
At stake was control of the lucrative
chain of hotels and casinos in the ~ambl·
ing capital whi ch made the millionaire
recluse the slate's single large 1 t
employer.·
When Hughes or dered the firing of his
top Nevada aide from his remote
hideaway in the Bahamas a power strug.
11g\e devel oped between the gambling
operators and Hughes' corporate ex·
ecutlves. Gov . Paul Laxalt, his Interest spurred
by the disunity that threatened the tax·
yielding riches to his state. stepped in.
Laxalt said he entered the strange case
to determine If there would be arty effect
upon continued operations Of the hotels
and casinos.
Laxalt said he talked with the
mysteriaus billionaire Monday and thaJ."
Hughes told him he wa! on a pleasure
and business trip "In good condition." He
told the govern9r h.e approved of the
change ln leadership of his Nevada
operations.
'The governor said he took over the role
as conciliator ln an attetr1pt lo bring the
two feuding factions together.
Tbe governor aald Hugh~. told hiln. bY ·
telephone that he aulhorit.ed the firing ol
his top aide in the $500 mUlioN·year
Nevada operation. However, that aide,
Robert .Maheu, a fotmer FBI agent who
ha8 been Hughes' fight hand man durina:
the four year&• the 64-year-old recluse
spent ln this gambling capital, resisted
his ouster by an outside group represen-
ting the parent Hughes Tool C.Cmpany of.
Houston. ·
Laxalt met with the 11 member1 of the
Hughes Tool board of directort in the
afternoon and aald he waa going to uk
Maheu.to volunt.arilr relinquJsh control or
the Nevada operaUOns:
Laxalt met later with Maheu hut could
not convince him to •b•ndon the flght .
Security guard• hired hy' Mah<u 11!11
were pattblllna the caslnoa: of t.bt ''1trlp''
aambllnJ sp11 and Maheu still f WU
phy1lcall,Y In control of the holels.
• I
Green responded that the councllmen
relied on the advice of U'le staff and it
was "tot.ally ridiculous to a I l ow
something lo come tbls far and now queg.
tion whether it was a legal procedwe."
He said he had voted in favor because be was told It was legal.
The i;ouncilmen took no further action
after City Administrator Doyle Mlller ad-
vised them to stick to their decillon.
ea
Traf fie Sto_B
Brings Shots
In Compton
A pair of young Los Angeles County,
sheriff's deputies were shot -one fatallY,
-early today in C.Ompton, by a La
H~bra man who was killed by the dytnc
lawman.
The •hooting erupted after a routine
traffic JOOp.
l!ead -1'e ~pu!y 161.l.l WAlJace_, •· who
IUCCWnbed. at St. Frarid's Hospital Ill
Lynwood and Manuel R. M ..... , II, La
H1bra, who w•a pronounced dead at the
shooting scene.
Deputy Al Campbell, 21. was listed ln
fair condition at St. Francis Hospital,
with bullet wounds in the knee and band,
suffered in a scu!fle with the armed
suspect.
Coroner's deputies uld s e con a I
capsuJes and a whitish powder believed to
be heroin we.re found on the 11ala
suspect's body. ·
The incident was tauched all wben the
depuUes began to' search Moreno and bt
whipped out a pistol, woundin1 Campbell
in the knee, then the iWJd.
Moving to aid bis partner, Deputy
Wallace took a slug in tht abdomen -
emptying bis own gun at More:oo -thea
collap_sed as he crawled to the patrol car
to radio for help.
Deputy Gampbell crawled to the vthl~
cle and successfully summoned aid.
His partner neyer reaained con-
sciousness.
Quake Ripples Japan
TOKYO (UPI) -A weak earthquake
under the Pacific Ocean was felt in Tok-
yo but 110 damage was reported.
The earthquake took place at 4:38 p.m.
Monday. The Central Meteorololical
Agency said the epi~nter was n e a r
Tori Island, about (375 miles) eouth al
Tokyo. under the. open sea. Weak shocU
were felt in Tokyo, Yokohama IJld area•
to the .north .
Oruge Cout
l1'eadaer
You'll have .to drive by lnstnJ..
menta tonight. When the first hie
fog of ·I.he winter season rolls in.
Wednesday will be hazy wtth
temperatures in~ the SI tO 72
bracket.
INSmE TODAY
Ha ve 11ou ever toondtrtd
what it would be like to wto:r
o nightgown in.stead of o formal
to o ball? Reaction is told b11
Beo Ander&on, Page 13.
0.tr 17 ~
CHRISTMAS
-•
• " ,,.,,
" " • • • .. .. ,, ... .. •
I
t DAILY fliLOI H
Councilmen •• r.. •
~ .. -•• />o ... . .. ..
Delay ~each
't •t... ' • P~kiiig Bid
A.. gn>po11l to increase the parking rate
for beach Yisltors from 75 cents to $1 a
day hn been dolayed by the Huntington
Beach city council.
The council 'first Waflls to see · a
b " reUdown on the revenue and costs of
the ~space beach par~g lot. ' Thi -delay was sought by Councilman
George. Mc<Zacken who said that reports
he h!t seen indicated that income was ··~.IMI· behind prpjeclioits."
"I 1ifoiild lite to see a study on bow the
Parklilg Authorllt · Is doing '1efQr' •
deciding on this motion,_" he said.
Mc:Q<acken llad reQ!ieste<! such a atudy
at the last council meeting but it was not
prepared because Finance Director Ben
Arguello had been out of the city due to a
fam11y1WneJ,. , .
The· proposal to boost the levy would
lake effect Jan. 1, if apprOved.
Harbors and Beaches Dlrector Vince
Moorhouse said that.a tW"week delay on
the decision until "Uie next council
meeting would make no difference.
Councilman TeQ .JlarUei asked wh~ther
the slate was plannlng to increase its
beach parking rates from 75 cents to 'i1:
Moorl;Jouse . replied, "We don't know,
but if~ do ,not, it wOuld not make that
much difference because we have ao
mucfi more to offer.'' '
Earlier City Admtnl<tral<lr Doylo
Miller bad reeornrnendecl'that a plan to in-
crease the annual P,llk.ing pass from $10
to $15 be dropped s.1nce the purpose of the
pass is to ofrer a breat to local resident3.
Councilmen OK
Central Park
Grant Attempt
Federal. grant hunter Floyd "Bud''
Belsito has been given the go-ahead by
the , HWllinflOn Beach Cily Council w
aeet an additiopal ·'607,8518 for the pro-
~-HJm.tington Central Park.
The council, at its Monday night
1ess.ion, unanimously approved the Hous-
ing and \]rban Development (HUD) IP"'
plicaUon whJch would add another 40
acres to the park, if approved.
To be purchased with that money is the
Bruce Brothers gravel quarry, a huge,
l gaping pit near Gothard Street and
Talbert Avenue, and the nearby Sully
Miller' ttuarry. . ...
City aides have eyed the two digging
lites as locations for a aerie! ot fishing
ponds, •a cltildren'1 ablmal farm, picnic
areas, an arboretum. bo~jll gardens.
"We're very opUmfstlc ' about this
grant," said Belsito an atlmlnistrative
asaJstant. "If It is approvtd in San Fran·
clsco, it will be our last land acqu1!1ltlon
request on the part for a pretty long
while.." ,
To dite, $1,287,228 In federal funds
have been placed in the city's park: fund
througlf:the l!fforts of BelsitO.' ·
The grants, he aaid, would have to be
matched on a dollar for dollar basis by
the city until th~ 4151-acre development i5
completed. It ii expected that its total
cost wiD be somewhere near S20 million.
Plans call for a gayundbreaking on the
park -the largest anywhere in Orange
County -next April.
There are sit major stumbling blocks,
however. They are property owners cur~
rently contesting city appraiaala for their
land in the courts. ,_, ·.:
They claim the city hi.I "DOt appraiseil
their land on the basis of iU' hla:hest and
best use and are aski~"'ilbOut twice as
much for it as the city lS ~illing to pay.
P ersonnel Meet· Set
'Ibe pe·rsonne1 commlssion of the Foun-
tain Valley School District will meet at
7,30 p.m .• Thursday In the board """1'
of the curriculum cente. 1
DAILY PILOT
Oki.HG! "2A5T PUAL.ISKING CQMPAJCY
Robtl"l '~·Wwl
'1'uldant ,.r·NIMi9111c'
J•ek R, Cvrl.y
Vkt Pr1Hlcl9!11 •r.4 Gtn~r•I M.ltn1,.r
Tho"'•• Ktt't'il
l!dller Th•"'•• A.. Msrphlite
MtPllltnt 1111:.r
Al111 Dir.i11
W.t °'' .... c:oi,.,ty l!dlttl'
Albor+ W. 11!11
Alloc!IN fdlMr Hntl __ _
17175 lo.tell lovln1r4
M11l!nt Adclr111t P.O. lo1t 7t0, t2MI
.otMr Offlc•
Li..-a.di: m ,etllt AV911111 c .... M-l Ja Wt.It ..... ll'l'tlt
.......... .. Jdl: ft11 Well 9•1110t l~ .1M ~:a£ Noni! El Wnlnt «Ml
·-·
DAILY PILOT llt!f l"Mllf
Tuning Vp
Members of the Marlin Swim Club Synchronized Swimming Team
prepare for team's performances Friday and Saturday at'the Hunt·
mgton Beach High School pool. The show is sponsored · by the city
Recreation Department. Admission will cost 50 cents for adults and
25 cents !Or children. Show starts at 7:30 o'clock each night.
Pancreas of Costa Mesa
Sigp. . Stance , Affirme~
~un~frgt(>n Council to Conti~~e CrackJou?~;
llwlllnafoo lleacb dly cooncllmen rear. Huntlng1!>n llt1cb-F-ln Valley Board WH part of l 1111! law. '
flnDld tbeir t.odah atance against tract of RealtQfl, who &lked J.h1t the ordinance "Get this throug,!l your heads -wt le ~ ilafta MOO'diy night despite ~ be subrrlltted tO the city's OUtdoot only talking about signs on public pro-
kd Advertising Committee ao a oom. promise perty," ·Green told Lange. wamjng 1th at.-a. -1aimllar crac own is This was In response to a charge by
hurting Fo1111la\n 1Valley . .:. • cot~ ="::r:!i t.o let the·eiommillee Lange that lhe c9uncU had favored a 1~ "Fou:ntaln ~VaiJey, today has the highest study it, but declined to lift its Iii: weeks by by billboard companies by agreeing lo
vacancy raUo of any city in Or~e Coun· old policy of removing the illegal signs a moratorium on prosecution of billboard
ty," WllUam Lange, representative of a frofl P,UbllC property. / ":. violations. The billboards were net M
company that puts up;:-tem~a.ry tract The realty ·board had i.Jilo: aoucbt relief public property, Green said. ~ 1
e:ignt for developen,_ told ~Cilmen. 1 fr th c1t•---~Jll I ""-'" Lange said that bis company had -~. •U•"-1-atJ 'b · d'-· lati with om e era ...,, .... , on:-ep 1 v.-• •~• 111,. r o. in •'"'l corrt on ••-·--ll ~ ·~ I !acted every de .. eloper to get them to ,, ••---c1op0..1 1.... that cit J . ~" algns as we II .. .., w•ct,1 p. . • .... gn 1°r~ho ' 1 d ~t "'t· 11-11n!;,;. McNamee ariued th1t If the ordin&nce cooperate on a comprom ise. . rnncere Y pe you on pu un ..... n -··'" ha The temporary signs cn"er·• In "•
Be h · th ·t· " was not restudied the city w~ Vf"I • o,:u ui!r ac in e same J>OSI ion. I u &i be'-I ordinance are the small structures thil Lange 's plea for a 6(klay mpratorium. prob em from "boo eg gns ~g pu !JP
on enforcement of tht Ordinance agilnst &JJyway." ' are put out over weekends to guide
the temporary signs failed. Tiie city stiff 'Ille discussion s~rked lingry ex· tracts,
was tnatructed to Continue removing the changes between Lance and qouncllman City crews have removed more thu
outlawed signs &om public rights Of way. Jack Green who uld that the city had.no 1,000 of the · &igns since the crackdown
'lbe moratorium Hqllest wu ~ sup-alternative but to enforce the crdinance ~ebuyers leaving freeways to new
ported by Phil McNamee, president of th•· since the ban on s!.pu on pub_Uc property wu initiated iii week! aao. . ..
Cycle Park
May Be Open
By January
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of tl'lt Dlll't' Pll91 Slt ff
Those shiny new motorcycles some
Huntington Beach youngsters will receive
thi! Christmas will not be gathering
garage dust very long.
The city-sponsored motorcycle park -
a long awaited dream of the two-wheeled
set -should be in full operation by late
January or early February, according to
Recreation and Parks Director Norm
Worthy.
"We're right now in the process of get·
ting a lease drawn up for the Bruce
Brothers gravel pit on Gothard Street
and Talbert Avenue," he said. "Neither
the city nor the Bruce Brothers have
agreed on a price, but we're seeing eye ta
eye on what can be done with the pro-
perty ."
The eight-acre pit was developed as a
potential site last summer after the city
invoked an erner&ency ordinance banning
motorcycles from undeveloped property.
Rather than risking a heavy fine !or
wheeling their machines around in illegal
areas, youngsters will be able to use a
·Two /Suspects Arrested
In LA l(idnaping Case
••
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two men who •
held a banker's son in a car trunk for
several hours in demand for rallJOM were
being held today for invesU1ation of kid·
naping, police reported.
Lee Spatli: 21>-year-Old son ol Willlam
Spath, was found in good condition in the
car Monday night after the two men
were stopped on a freeway, police said.
Young Spath, offjcers saJd , had spent
several hours in the trunk.
Police said George Forrens, 35, and
Thomas LeRoy Coleman, 2(1, were booked
for inves tigation of kidnaping for the
purposes or ransom. Officers said they
were armed, but didnot resist arrest.
Two men armed with aaweck>U
Council of Arts
Being Sought
For Huntington
If you are a lover of the arts, Hun·
tington Beach needs you.
shotguns Sunday night wf!nt to the
suburban Granada Hills home of Spath,
48, manager of the Glendale branch ol
the Sank of America, police said.
Officers said the men demanded the
bank's weekend deposits: -estimated at
more than $100,000 -and ransacked the
home afler binding Spath, his wife and
son.
When Spath said he couldn't get the
money because he didn't have a key, the
men took the son and told the father to
get the money without telling police, of·
firers said.
Spath followed their directions. officers
said, taking a bus to Las Vf!gas, Nev.,
and returning, to Los Angeles, where he
was to deliver to the kidnapers a key to a
bus terminal.
Monday night, the kidnapers drove to
the Spath home in two cars -ont of
them with the younger Spath inside.
One of the men picked up the key from
Spath, and then they drove away, police
1aid.
Officers followed the earl and then
made the arrests.
. trails system in the pit for a small fee.
VII ctrm' ' I D'onat' ed t"o• 'wTo' m', 'an'' .. ' "We're thlnklng about limiling the
The city is anxious to form an art coun·
cil lo select and acquire objects for the
new.civic center and central library.
National College
Group in Visit
To Golden West
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of !ht Dl llf Pllol 51111
A young woman suffering from a
disease that would have been fatal is now
looking forward to .a normal life, follow·
Ing a rare surgical transplant in which
she received the pancreas of a Costa
· Mesa murder victim.
The patient is now listed In good con-
dition at Orange County Medical Center
13 days later. but 9fficials decline to iden·
tify her at this sta&e of corivalescence.
Transplanting of the delicate, com·
plicated metabolic organ ls done only as
a last resort
Parents of Kenneth S. Woodruff, 19, of
2283 Pacific Ave., Costa Mesa, agreed to
the procedure when he succumbed
'Jbanksgiving Eve of hopeless head in·
jutles.
' Fountain Valley
Prepares to Don
Christmas Wraps
It's time to dress Fountain Valley
homes, trailers and commercial shops in
th~ best Christmas clothes.
All three cate90ries are eligible to com-
pete this yeir in the Chamber of Com·
merce-sponsored Christmas decoration
contest .
Seven different prir.es ar?: available for
homes aJ best Christmas theme . most
religious, most humorous, best effect
with lights, most unusual,. Santa special
and sweepstakes.
The sweepstakes winner will represent
Fountain Valley in this year·a "Forty
Miles of Christmas SnUles'' ~sponsored
by. the Orange County Coast Association
and the DAILY PILOT.
Three titles, bfsl Christmas theme,
mo.st religious and Santa Special, wlll be
awarded in the mobile home Category.
Commercial sbgps:can enter !he best .
decorated (indoOr or outdoor) and the
best deCGrated wlndOw,
Deadline for entri In the decoranon
.contest ls midnight, Dec. is. Entry blink!
are available at city hall, 10200 Slater
Ave.; Crocker Citizens National Bank;
Bank of America, or . Seeurlty Pacific
National Bank.
Send entry blankl to Mrs. Rlch1rd
Gillum. 17111 Santa Rita St .. Fountain
Valley, or leave them at the Chamber of·
fice in city hall.
Will Try It Again
SYDNEY (UPI) -The cr•w or the ~adorlan ra.fl. La Balsa, lnlends to
make anotbei drift across the PacUk:,
Ca:otaiD Vicale Alsar said today.
Al&ar led the recent' 8,560-mUe five·
month drift from Ecuador to Mooloolaba,
on the east coart of Australia.
W Tiders to Huntington Beach residents
'f through a registration system, but the -• • J-price for riding wlll be kept as low as
The city plans to contact various
service clubs to see if they wish to have a
delegate on the council. Mayor Donald
Shipley and Councilman Norma Gibbs
were appointed Monday night as the city
council's representatives to the group.
Golden West College Is one ot-tW6 -
California community colleges to bt
visited this month as part of the n•
tlonwide study by the American Asaocia·
tion of Junior Colleges.
A medical team from UC Irvine suc-
cessfully transplanted a pancreas and
kidney 16 months ago into a Huntington
Beach woman 's body. when fewer than 20
had been performed in surgical history.
Mrs. Cara Ramey res.ponded
dramatically, only to be kilrt;d in an
ironic car-truck collision last summer.
The unidenWied recipient of Woodruff's
healthy pancreas has been moved out of
lhc intensive care unit where he died 11
days ago, nurses confirmed Monday .
Woidruff suffered multiple skull frac-
tures and extensive brain damage Nov.
21. when thrown out of a speeding car on
the San Diego Freeway near Fairview
Road.
\Vitnesses said one or several occupant!
could be seen holding the door open while
his companions ejected the victim head-
first.
Detective Jim Blaylock, who is heading
the homicide investigation, said Monday
that no new leads have developed in the
lwo weeks since the fatal incident.
No onf! was able to get a license
number of the car, due to the swiftness of
evf!nts and darkness, combined with
speed of the car involved.
Blaylock said Mr. and Mr·s: Everett
Woodruff, of 351 W. Bay St.. Costa: Mesa,
agreed to the pancr·eas lransplant'when It'
became apparent their ·son cOuld not
survive.
The earlier pancreas transplant -in
an ironic twist -also involved donation
of an organ from a man who died under
violent and mysterious circumstances.
Mrs. Ramey received the kidney and
pancreas or a young husband who suf·
fered hear Injuries when he fell from the
roof of a Garden Grove industrial firm.
His car stalled. the vtctim had called
his wife to pick hinl up at a fog-shrouded
intersection but no trace was found when
she arrived. so she left.
He was dis~ered later, minus his
shoes, after apparently climbing atop the
building and slipping on the fog.-drenched
edge of the roof.
Hearing Slated
On Utility J4nes
A public hear\ng has been set for 7:30
p.m. Jan . 4 by the Huntington Beach City
Council to consider the undergrounding of
utility lines in the Central Park.
The date for the hearing on the crea·
tion of an underground utility district was
fixed by city council ~Ionday night.
Tbe dlstrltt would stretch from the
east side of Golden West Street from
Slater Avenue to 205 feet south of Taylor
Street. ·
The coat of undergroundlng the power
and telephone lines bas been estimated
bY Public Works Director James Wheeler
al.$145,000. the money "fOUld 'come from
fuflds set aside by Southem (;allfornla
Edison Company, under a requirement cf
stale law, for such civic projects.
possible," said Worthy,
The trials. he said, would cireumvent a
deep lake at the bottom portion of the pit
and provide a riding pattern complete
with a hill 1::1imblng area.
"We're thinking about }\avlng a price
break between the younger kids and
those 16 and older who could afford to
pay more," the recreation director ad·
ded.
Since the area is somewhat confined,
city officials are pondering an engine
limit of lOOcc to ensure the safety of
those using the trails. Persons with
larger bikes will have to look elsewhere,
The lease, now being drawn-up by City
Attorney Don Bonfa, would be limited to
one year with a month to month can·
cellation option, said Worthy.
Some gravel mining operations will
continue in the pit but will not disturb the
n1otorcyclists.
Eventually, howevf!r, the bike riders
y,·ill have fo yield their trails since the
Bruce Brothers quarry is destined for in·
clusion In the proposed Huntington Cen-
tral Park.
Mayor Shipley emphasized that in·
dividual citizens will be welcome on the
committee. 1
In a related matter, the council Mon·
day night appointed the Bank of America,
the city's present depo!ltory, as trustee
for the non·p rofit corporation that will be
formed to float bonds for the center aDd
library.
Officer Installation
Sla ted for Realtors
Members of the Huntington 8 e a c h •
Fountain Valley Board of Realtors will
install new officers this Wednesday at an
8 a.m. breakfast sf!ssion at the Mile
Square Golf Club.
The meeting, which will also Include an
awards presentation to top listers and top
salesman, Is scheduled for the clubhouse,
10401 Warner Ave., Fountain Valley.
The association , based in Washlngton
D.C., is designing guidelines to the rapid
expansion of the community colle1e
movement ln the next decade.
Dr. Edmund J, Gle<1:ier Jr., study
dlrector and executive director of the
Association, will spend Dec. 13-17 at ,
Golden West to conduct interviews and ,
gather information. ..
The study will focus on establishlnl
long-range goals, identifying social and
economic trends and is to recommend
strategies to bring better harmony
between the goals and practices of col·
leges.
The other two-year institution to be
visited by Dr. Glf!azer is Laney CoUe1e,
Oakland .
YOUR MONEY'S WORTH!
Many people don't realize that carpeting 11 -Item ttiat can lie par·
chased for less money today than 30 'PG" Cl'JOo
Here are a few eye opeH" 4J 1 e a n e d from a Hwspaper of 1940,
coulffly of Ille Santa Ana Ubrary. Compare these with today's prices:
1940 1970 INCREAS! 1940 1970 INCREASE
1940 C1dl111e 1$1700.00 + $7600.00 , 447•;. PNnut lvtter .G9c lb. .43c lb. 477% ' 1940 Chovrol•t $659.00 +· $2395.oO + 363% Bl nana1 .04< lb. .lo< lb. 240%
' ' 600-16 Tires $6.45 $11.95 292•/. Cracken .07c lb. .29< 414%
Chuck RHtl ' .
.14V.c lb. .49c lb. 3311!. Movl9 Theater .25c f 2.00 IOO%
t oV-O-Lamb . 191/Jc lb. .99c lb • 509 •;. RMt. Steak Dinn11 .3Sc f 2.f j 142%
T'-llono St11k .161/2C lb. $1~ lb. 781 %~ Good Carpetl"I $1 llq. yd. & up p -oq: yil. & llj I . 0%
1tarttd
Perh·1ps anothtr time we can
in the carpet bu1in111.
comfNrt today's prices with pric" In 1194 When 1Ur f1mily
(
..--------~ IANTA •NA. 01.AM•I
TUSTIN C ... ,,
ALDI N'S
l l D HILL CAIPITI . '1un11a llJ7• ...... , ...... c.lf,
UWJ44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
-COSTA MISA
646-4131
lfOURS' lllon. Thru Thura., 9 to 5:30 -Fri, I . le 9 -S.t., 9:30 le 5
17
,
•
..
Ne rt. Beaeh Totlay'i .Fhud . ' . . . ~. -
N.Y. Steeb ..
-·
..XOL. 63, NO. 293, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES . . ORANGE COU NTY, CAllFORNIA
. -. TU~OAY,' DECE"4BER I, 19711 TEN emrs
__ .__ -·-
Newport Urged to Ann ex Air.port Immediately
Newport Beach baa been urged to move a:. rapidly as possible to annex Orange
County AirporL . 1 The r;uggestion came from the Orange
County Pilots Association. which, ac·
.~rding to its president, is thoroughly fed
uP with the management ot the ·airport
.bY the county Board of Supervisors.
'The group of 1,000 general aviation
pilots feels the airport should be geared
for just that -general aviation , not.com-
mercial airlines -and the city of
Civ ilians Slain
Newport would more effectively maintain
and promote that Ust.
In a resolution forwarct,ed to the
Newport Beach City Council, the OCPA
formally based its recommendations on
three. reasons:
-''Newport Beach bu a long history of
erficient management at low Ct1St.''
-"NeWJ><>rt Beach has declared itself
in 11,1pport of general aviation and bad
urged tl)at Orange County Airport be re-
tained as a general aviation facility.''
e
Calley Command
Refused Ex-GI ,
FT. BENMNG, Ga. (UPI) - A soldier tf1o was under 1st Lt. William L. Calley's
command at My Lai testified today ·he
refused to obey Calley's order to shoot
1.creaming civilians in a ditch where
mothers piled atop their children to save
them from automatic rifle lire.
The witness, James Joseph Dursl,
employe of an electrical manufacturing
firm in Brooklyn, N.Y., was the 35th pro-
duced by tht government in ita attempt
to convict the diminutive calley of lhe
prtmedltated murder of 10! clvilianl in
the Vietnamese village March 16, 1188.
Ilia leltimonY· folio-that of ..,.,l!)q
former soldier who Nid he watched
Calley act as the lone executioner of five
to 10 separate groups brought to.the ditch
during a 90-minute periid.
Dursl, a huge man with black hair,
11idebums and mustache, said he was a
private first class in the platoon Calely
commanded.
After his testimony, Capt. Aubrey M.
Dariiel Ill, the prosecutor, told the court
Dursi probably was the lut prosecution
witness, but lhat be would not rest the
government case wit.bout malting an ef-
fort to. find twi more.. witnesses he bas
·been trying to locate.
Dursl said at Calley'11 order, he, Pfc
Paul 0 . Mead.lo, and Calley put their
rifles in the port arms position and push-
ed people into a ditch at My Lail
"Some started to cry and they were
yelling," he · aald. "Meadlo was crying
apd puahln& the -!•. Wt were ~ le·-"' u. Clllty. ~ "I don't remember his exact words, but
be aajd ....,thJnC1lke: 'Stor\ ljriq.'
"calley ind Mlad)o ot.vtod flr\nl Into
the ditcb !!!Jwn It ~ pec>plt. Meadlo
turned to me and told me: 'Shoot! Wby
don't you 1hoot?' ·
"He was crying and yelling to mt. .
·"I just aald: 'I can't! 1 won't!' and I
looked down at the ground.
"The people were ,,cream.in& and yell·
lng. It was m011Uy automatic and tome
aemiautomatlc fire, and the "upons
wer! pointed down into the ditch. I
n!member Mead.lo changing magazines
at one time. They fired three to four
minutes.
Judge Orders Land Swap,
Arguments Continued
By T0~1 BARLEY
Of 1111 0.11'1" ~lie! 11•11
Hopes that a. verdict on the Upper
Newport Bay land swap trial would be
made public this week were shattered to-
day when Orange County Superior Court
Judge Claude M. Owens ordered the five
lawyers involved in the litigation back to
bis courtroom for further arguments.
·-Judge Owens set Friday for the ap-
pearance of Irvine Company attorney
Rebert Warren. Santa Ana attorney Ouf·
fttn H'elsing for County Auditor Vic
Heim, Deputy Attomey General Jay
Shavelson for the state of California,
.,
,Oruge <:oa1t
l\'eaCher
You 'll have to drive by lnstru·
meotll tonight when the first big
fog of the winter sea~on rolls in.
Wedn_esday wiJI bP. hazy with
temperatures in the 68 to 72
bracket.
INSIDE TODAY ' Have you ever wondered
1Dhai it would be like to weor
a nightgown truttad of a formal
to a ball? Reaction is told bu
Bea Anderson, Page 13.
Ooly 17 Doy1 • TIU
CHRISTMAS
C•llltrtll• • =~., ..... ..
Cf*lllltl u, " • CM1u11i. n-tt .. ._ -..
(Miki " Or-c-tY • c .... ~ 1J ·-, .. ,. °""" Nftlctt • 1*11 Mnfh »11
~-" • lM-INM .. ••11.m1 ,_ • ·-~ ..
•11t1rtt1!1111tllt .. WM-' l'loltftCI .... Wt1H1 w• ..
MtN$ttH .. W1-'t MIWI 1>11
·Aft~ LMll'" .. WHlf H-•• M1llMI •
J
Deputy County Counsel Robert Nuttman
for the county of Orange and San Frljln-
cisro lawyer. Philip Berry for the
Newport Beach homeowners contesting
the land swap.
Judge qwcns refused to comment on
the reasons behind the revival or
courtroom action on an issue that has
already produced six weeks .of trial and
22 separate court hearings over the last
two years.
But a source close to the issue sug·
gested that the judge wants clarificati<ln
from the lawyera involved · on issues
relating to value of and access to Upper
Bay land transferred to the Irvine Com·
pany by Orange County.
Appraisals of the relatl\te·properties by
&tale appointed official:i and acce55 to
Upper Bay acreage before and after
dredging operations a~ known to concern
I.he Judge at this late 1tage of his
deliberations
Berry argued throughout the trial that
the Irvine Company was ,ruilty of fruad
in hearings before the State Lands Com·
mission when It allegedly overvalued the
acreage transferred to Orang.e County
and undervalued the tidelands taken In
exchange.
Jude Owens commented Monday that ~
he was "very near" a declsicm on the Up-
per Bay dispute.
Judge Owens' n.illng will up ho 1 d er
declare as Ulegal the trading of 450 acres
of Irvine Company uplands for 157 acres
of county owned tidelands.
The Irvine COmpany has epproval or
the trade from the State tands com-
mission. It intends to develop the
tidelands and adjacent areas into ex-
panded boating facilities , marinas and
related commercial developmeo\s and a
chain of public parka and recreational
facilities.
Btrry areues for the homeownen that
the swap Is unlawful 1lnct tidelands can·
not by state law be transfured to private
ownership. He a1lf) conlendl that
development contemplated by the Irvine
Compl!>y would deatroy the ecololY o1
Upper 1111·
-"NewporLBeach Is 1eocrapblcally
situated to provide the best ad-
mini!ltrati111 of the airpcrt."
Mayor Ed Hirtb today acreed .. thil Is
lhe logical eventual aolutiJ>n" but held lit-
tle hope it would be ·accomplbbed ln the
near future .
"We appreciate the.ir 11.and," Hirth
!laid, "but the.re is virtuaUy no possibility
of it happening at thia Ume."
Hirth noted the state of flui: ln airport
planni.D1 and said . nauy, "The idu
Wouldn't eet to Unt but wltb tbe Board
of Supervbon."
Tbe airPort, 111 idilition tO being on
county, land, is owned by the county and
tbe, · l.4>cal Acency Formation Com-
' mission. wbich must act on all proposed
anneutJonr.;wouJd not approve the move
without the 1Upervt.:>rs' okay.
At the present time, the supervisors
art in the mid&t ·of reviewing a $140,000
coo.sultant'1 r!port, prepared, by the
Ralph M. Parsons C.mp&l!.y, on the
0
future of all aviation 111 the cciunty.
Noting this, Hirtti. Mid, ·"the cOuDty
almpiy would not. aive it •up now and it
would not .accomplish anything to pur1ue
the maUer, unW c.ircvmstances change.''
The mayor pointed out . that Newport
Beach does eventually want .and plan to
annex the air facility.
"It has ~n talked about for some
lime," he said, "the airplanes fly ever
our city, it's almost surrounded by eur ci·
ly.
•
' ,
•
"It wa1 included in the ericfnaJ:beun--
daries filed for lhe city of lrvi.oe, :' ft
noted, "but wa5 subsequenUy etchlded
becaUse they know wt wantJt." . ~ .
Gay Hamilton, president of tbe pdot.a'
a§Oclation, urged the city move lbead
now regardless.
81.tstlng lhe supervisors fol their
bandlirlg of lhe facility. Hamil too Wei tbe
pilots agree "the noise. Is illtolerable."
He charged the boird •errt back·en· It.!
ISet ANNEX, Pap I)
ea
r 4 .• <-;•r,
~· . Traffic StoPi
Brings Shots
·! In Compion
'o t1S A1'1'0ll'ITAL
$horlff'• Deputy w.11 ...
WOUNDnt•llll HAND, ICNEI
Shorlff'a Deputy '-PM!I
"
o!#.ii AT ·se:•"• _Su1poct Mer-
Hughes Empire
Power Struggle
Nears Showdown
Two Suspects Arrested
In LA f(idnaping CU$e
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -Th< ocramble
that developed when Howard Hughe1 left
on vacation for the Bahamas and fired•
the chief of his $lX> million Nevada trn·
pire headed for a showdown today.
A court hearing was scheduled lo
render a legal decision on a temporary
restraining order barring a takeover of
the Nevada holding by Hughes' corporate
leader•. It was to be followed by a joint
meeting of both sides in the dispute In a
1esson ~ediated by the governor.
A Hughes ·spokesman said these two
developments. "should end the whole
thing by nightfall." ·
At stake was control of the lucrative
chain of hotels and casinN in the gambl-
ing capital which made the millionaire
recluse the state's aingle large• t
employer.
When Hughes ordered the firing of his
lop Nevada aide from his remote
hideaway in the Bahamu a power strug-
gle developed between the gambling
operators and Hughes' corporate ez:.
ecutives.
Gov. Paul Laxalt, his interest spurred
by the disunity that threatened the taz:-
yielding riches lo his state, stepped ln.
Laxalt said he entered the strange case
lo determine if there wouJd be any effect
upon continued operations of the bote!J
ISet HUGHES, Pase Ii
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two men who
held a banker 's son in a car trunk for
several hours in demand for ransom were
being tield today for investigation of kid-
naping, police reported.
Le~ ,Spath, 20-year-old son or William
Spath, wa1 found in good condition in the
car Monday night after the two men
were stopped on a freeway, police said. ,
Young Spath, officers said, had spent
several hours in the trunk .
Police said George Forrens, 35, and
Thomas LeRoy Coleman,·20, were booked
for lttvestigation of kidnapinl for the
Coast Man Died
Of Heart Attack
Orange County coroner's investigators
today sajd 1 heart condition was
respomible for the death Nov. 14 of
Newport Beach resident Nicholas A.
Miller.
Miller, 28, was found dead aboard the
boat on which he lived in Newport Beach.
ln veJtigatOrs· said no lmrnedlate cause
of death ·was apparent, and gubsequent
tests 1howed the young man died of a
heart condition.
purposes of ransom. Offlcer11 11ald they
were armed, but didnot resist ari-est.
Two men armed with aawed-off
1hotguns Sunday night went to the
suburban Granada Hills home of Spath,
411, manager of the Glendale branch of
the Bank of America, police 1aid.
Office.rs said the men demanded the
bank's weekend deposits -estimated at
more than $100,000 -and ransacked the
home after binding Spath, his wife and
iQn.
When Spath said he couldn't get the
money because be qidn 't have a key, the
men took the son and told the father to
get the money without telling police, of-
ficers said.
Spath followed their directions, officers
said , taking a bus to Las Vl!"gU, Nev.,
and re turning to Los Angeles, where he
was to deliver to the kldna~ a key to a
bus terminal.
Monday nigbt, the kidnapers drove to
the Spath home in two cars -ooe of
them wit.h the younger Spath inside.
One of the men pic~d up the key from
Spath, and then they drove away, police 11id. .
Officers foll owed the cars and then
made the arrest&.
Slain Mesan Gil1es Life
Woman Living Normally A fte r Pancreas Transplant
· By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
GI tltl DlllJ l'lltf llt ft
A young womP. suffering from a
dh1ea11e that would have been fatal bl now
• Beach woman's body, when fewer than 20
bad ~ performed In 111rgl~ history.
Mrs. Cara Ramey r.esponded
dromaUcally. only to be killed In 111
looking forward to a normal life, follow· ilonic car~truck collision last swnmer.
Ing a rare surgical transplant In which The w'LidenUfied leciplent al Woodruff's healthy pl!IQ"eas hu been moved O:Ut of 1he received the pancreas of • Costa thf: Intensive cart unJt 'where be died 13
Mesa murder victim. days ago, wrsea confirmed Monday.
The patient Is now listed In good con-Woodruff suffered multiple skull frac·
dltion at Orange County Medical Center tures and e:1ten11lve brain damage Nov.
13,dafl! later, but officials decline to Iden-21, when thrown out of a 1pee:ding car on.
tlfy her at this stage of coovaJesce:nce. the San Diego Freeway near Fa.lrview
TransplanUng of the delicate, com· Road.
pllcaited metal>ollc ocaan ls dorie only u Witnesses Ald one of several OCC'Upanll
a last ttaiOrt. could be seen mkl1n1 the door open while
Parenti al Kenneth S. Woodruff. 11, of his companions ejected tht vtctlDi bead-
2213 Pacific Ave., Costa Mesa. •greed to fint.
lhe procedure ·when he succumbed D<tectlvt Jim Bl•flock, who la beadinl
Tllankqivlng Eve of hopelea head to-the boriik!de lriv'91l1atloo, Nid-Mondty
Jurlfll. that no new I-Ids hilVe developed in UMi
A medlca.I team from uc· Irvine ~C: · two ...-ainot the fatal lnctdent'. ,
etssfully trwph1nttd 1 pancre111 and ,No Me w11 1bl1 •to 1et .1 ltce:ue
kidney ti months "' into a Hunllnlton ' ...,... aMlll car, due to tho twU-al , .
events and darkneaa, combined with
speed of the car involved.
Blaylock said Mr. And Mrs. Everett
Woodruff, of 351 w. J;lay st .. Costa Mesa,
agrffd to the. pancreas transplant when it
became apparent their son could .not
11t1rvlve.
The tarUtr' pancreas tranlJllant -ln
an tronic twist -alJO involVed donation
of an organ from a man who died under
violent ani! myrterious circumstanct1.
Mrs. Ramey received .the, ll:ldtiey ind
pancreas of a young hmband who suf-
fmd he•r·injurie:s when he' fell trom the
~f ol a Garden Grove lnduolrlal ftrm •
' Hill car at.ailed, the victim· had called
hit wife to pick him. up at a fot-lhrouded
lnterstction bul no trace wu fO\IMI when
Ille arrived_. so she le!l
He 'UI dilcovtred bter, minUI hls~
lhoot..aft<r appmnUy.cllmblng atop Iha
buUd)ng and ~lt>Plnf OD Iha fal><lrtl><hed.
«Ip ol fbe roof.
A pair of young Los Angeles County
sheriff's deput.ie.s were shot -one fatally
-early today in Compton, by a La
Habra man who was killed by the dyin1
lawman . f-
The shooting erupted after a routine
tr.a.Ifie stop.
Dead are Deputy Lou Wallace, 21, who
sucCum~e'cl at St. Francis Hospltil tn
Lynw()9d and Manuel R. Moreoo,, 22, La
Habif, .Ilia wp p-unctd duel-al tho
ahootl.ng scene.
Deputy Al Cimpbell, 11, wu ijat.ed ta
lolr eonditlon it St. Fr~ !l<>!Pl!o1.
'*111) bullet ......it In the lill'9 iod'lll6d.
suffered In o llCUIOe wltb tho armed
suspect.
Coroner's deputies said s t co n a l
capsules and a whitish powder believed to
be heroin were found on the a1&1n
1uspect's body.
The Incide nt was touched off when the
deputies began to search Moreno and be
whipped out a pistol, wounding Campbell
ln the knee, then the uand.
Moving to aid his partner ... Deputy
Wallace took a. •lug in the abdolllJMe -
emptying his own gun at Moreno ~tM.
collapsed as he crawled torthe palntear
to radio for help.
Deputy Campbell crawled to the vebt·
cle and.successfully summoned &Jd.
His partner never regained eon-
aciousness.
Ne wport Trying
To Save Paper
Salvage Project
Newport Beach 11 doing all It can .to
salvage its newspaper salvage· prcgramt
~ra1 ServiCe• Director Jacob · F.
Mynderse said today the collection of
bundled 11ewspaper1 iJJ being u;pended
into several new-areas of the city in the
bopel! of bringing colledion collt1 dewn.
Earlier, the pro;ram:had been cut bact
from one-a-week pickup! to every .other
week. ·
Mynderse said I.he participating amt
h9W include We!lcllff, Blycrest, Dover
Shores, Harbor Highlands, Lake Park
Lane, Private Road, Heather Lane and
the Vista Bahia and AMlver1ary tracts.
Also. Lido I1land, Irvine Terrace,
Shorecliffs, Camtl'I Shoes, Cameo Hilh-
lands, Corona Highlands, Centerview,
Harbor View Hills, Broedmoor HiUs. the
area north of Coast Highway and iouth
of ~ Ave(lue from the east side of Mat·
guerlte east to Hazel.
Alao, the arei from Z!nd·to 23rd St.reetfl
between Tuitin and ,Irvine Avenues.
M)"Dder11e 1aid the new fJ'lf!r'Y «her
week' colleclio• schedule will take· effect
beginning next week.
Residents In lhe -desflnaled areas· are
~uested to place: their bundled papen
at the curb their flrrt colliectfon daJ ol
those weeks.
Under the trio! prOf'am. the Men-Cal
Corporauon· of S.nta Ana uaa Its. men
and eqlllpmenl to collect the bundled pa-
pers and p.ays lh~ city 12 per ton for tht
amount picked up.
· Tile progrim Is enterl111 lt1 loqrtb
month.
Dorn Heads LA Board
LOS ANO!Ll!:S (UPI) -Coan\7
IUpOrvi.son locfoy unanlmoolly tloctod
Supervisor Wan<& M. Dorn ao ti>*
chairman for fbe coming year. Dern•
<ftded Erneal E. ll<ba. •
1.
)
I
! .DAlLY Pl~OT N Tut$dty1 Dtumbtr 8, 1970
F~M P_,e l
H1!.,l~ES ... l
•
and casinos.
Lau1l aaid he talked with the
IT\llsler~ .bUllallalrt .Monclay 11\d lhat '
Huahes told tum he wu on a pleasure
and "'•sir.a trip ''in Cood coodJUon." He
told tilt ·.......,.. ho 1pproved•ol the
change IA leadership of his Nevada operauOns.
1be covernor said he took over the role
a& conciliator in an attempt to bring the · t~ feuding facU003 together.
The ~overnor said Hugh es told him by
telephone that he authorized the firing or
fiis top aide in the $500 million-a-year
Nevada · operation. However, that aide,
Robei1 Maheu, a ·former FBI agent who
bu been ·Hughes'_ right hand man durihg
the four years ·t1ie 64-year-0ld recluse
tpent-in this gambling capital. resisted
his euster by an outside vnup represen.
ting the parent Hughes Tool Company of
Hou,ston. , ,
La.lilt me.t with the 11 members of the
H~ 1'J>ol board of dlrectors in the
afternoon and s.ld be was going to ask
Maheu to volwitarlly relinquish 0>ntrol of
the Nevada operations.
Laxalt met later with Maheu but could
not ~pvJ.nce him to .abandon the fighL . .
" I
•
Elsinore Tragedu
•• ' Sailp.lane Crash
Kills Mesa Man ·
A frail sailplane lowed a,lof.l over Lake
Elsinore slid int.o a sickenlns spin Mon·
cia'y af~noon, carrying ·a ,Costa" Mesa
. J\nti-%eeway
Petition
Count 'Begun
Newport Beach City Clerk Laura Lellos
sa id this . morning Ule anti-freeway peti·
lions will be forwarded to the city co.uncil
Dec. 21. ·
man and his visiting Ohio buddy 3,000
feet to instant death on the dry lake bed.
Raymond J. Bouchard. 24. of 207 F;.
16th Place, and Da\•id \V. Jefftrs, 26, of
Nashport. Ohio, were dead on arrival at a
local hospital .
No immediate cause could be determin-
ed Jar the crash. v.·hich oceurrM
moments after the glider was released
from a tow plane th at pulled it aloft from
Sk.vlark Airport ~n Elsinore.
"The cable v.·as dropped and shortly
thereafter they went Into a right-hand
spin and never recovered," s a l.d
Riverside County Deputy Coroner Oenq~
Ely.
Actual site of the crash was in the~
south end of the lake bed, according to
Sheriff's Deputy Michael Jordan. "
Dr .. Slocum Files
For Dissolution
Qf M~rriage
I
REACHING PARENTS -University Park School
folks rehearse television math lesson that will be
beamed to parents. From left are sixth grade'
DAIL'I' PILOT Sl1ff Pl)Oi.
teacher Gary Eppright, math specialist Eleanor
Valenti, .second grade teacher Mary Myers and
school Principal Stu Cunningham. ~~--=-~~~~~~~-
The pelittons, circulated by the Citizens
Coordinating Committee, seek to force
initiative elections on two issues.
The first would re scind an ezisting
agreement with the State Division of
Highways on a sec:lion of the Pac ific
Coast Freeway !hrough Newport Beach.
Federal Aviation Agency officials wlU
probe the crash to determine \~hether
mechanical failure or other factors caus--
ed it.
Dr. Wesley .Garner Slocum, the Cost.a
Mesi. physician cleared jast month of
charges that he murdered bis infant
daughter, ~titioned Monday for a
dissolution or his marriage.
He cites "irTeconcilable differences''
be~'!~~" bim'Seif ~d Mrs. Marian Rosalie
Slocuuf in the Orange County Superior
C.oUrt · corDptaint. Mt!. Slocum testified
ag~inst her husband as the chief pro-
6ecution wltnes5·1n his jury trial. ·
Dr. ~lOC'.llm. -ts. a.sk.s for custody of the
couple's twO children, Diane, 9, and
Marian, 8. The lawsWt indicates that both
girls are presently residing with their
fatl)er.
The surgeon also asks for court con-
firmation that funds and securities held
in a Scinta Ana bank be labeled for his ex-
clusive Ilse.
The SJocum.s were married in New
York on Oct. 21, 1953. The date of separa-
tio6 is given as la.st March, the time that 0r: Slocum was arristed and charged
With the murder of this three-month-old
daughter, Cynthia.
Those charges were filed after the
dismembered remains of the child were
fouhd:ln an Unused freezer after the ap-
p~e -was ~shipped from the i;ouple'1
CcfSta· Mesa &ome to a Santa Ana aepot.
, ~ Superior Court j4ry found nothing ta
support the Chalges and qWckly cleared
the ac;cused physician.
' '••I . ' . • • ' '
Ne-wport Probing
'f wo Burglaries
Over Weekend •
Newix>rt Beach · pollct · today are in-
veetipttng two weekend 'burglarle! that
~~ in the loss of an estimated $3,600 ~ of buslnesS machines and $3,000 in
jewelry.
The business machines -three electric
typewriters and two calculators -were
taken from the offices cf contractor
Frank H. Ayres and Sons, 6000' -W-est
Coast Highway.
Investigators said the suspects ent~~
the oil.ices by prying open a .sliding glass
door. Ayres reported a'!lm.ilar burglary
two months ago ib wlilch calculators
were al so taken. , .. ·
The jewelry theft occurred at the home
of John Altnow, 4510 Seashore Drive. The
burglar entered the home by cltlling out
a window &ereen while Altnow and his ~
wife were away. Among the missing
pieces are a diamond necklace and 11
rings, poliet: sai~.
DAILY PILOT
CllAHGI C~ PiJ8llSHING COM,A/'IY
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Editor
T1iorn11 A. Murphi11t
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Tele-vised PT A?
School Meetings on Cablevision
If University Park Elementary School
has anything to say about it, Parent·
Teacher Association meetings of the
future will be almost as involving as a
Rams game mi televi!ion.
U Wednesday night's P·TA of the Air
on Community Cablevision is a success.
future P·TA meetings could be beamed
into Irvine homes on a ngular basis,
meaning parenta can settle down in front
of the living room television and even sip
beer Instead of trundling to the school on
a week night for punch and cookies.
The television premiere program ls a
panel discussion on "The New Math."
Parents tuning in al 8 o'clock will hear
an introduction by principal Stu Cun·
ningham, lncluWng a discussion on text
selection,
Then , San Joaquin elementary district
math specialist Eleanor Valenti, will ex-
pound on curriculum developments Jn
mathematics and "Philosophy a n d
Number Theory."
Two University Park teachers will ex-
plain techniques they use to teach new
math. Mrs. Mary Myers, Second grade
teacher, will discuss primary new math
and sixth grade teacher Gary Eppright
will explain set theory and statiati~al pro-
bability. The latter advanced math co11-
cepts are introduced in the third grade at
University Park school, Epprlght said.
Following the presentations, viewers
may call in questions to 644-4471 to be
answered by members of the panel.
The length cf the program is open end·
ed . Tom Baron, news director for the
cablevision channel said.
The P· TA Meeting of the Air Is the
brainchild of attorney Glen Woodmansee ,
first vice president of the University
Park parent organization.
Wayne Clark, president, said the
cablevislon program is an attempt to in·
volve more parents· than crdinarily would
tum out to hear such a presentation.
Co!~ge frp,fessp,{ Na.~d
To Head Research··'Feam
A new slate of officers for the Citziens
Harbor Area Research Team for J;'ll has
been announced, with Orange Coast C-01·
lcge philosophy professor Dr. Albert
Painter as president.
He recently spearheaded a series or
CHART forums on culture in the Harbor
Area. culminating in ideas on how to
organize and finance a community
auditorium for the various arts.
Directors wlU include jeweler J. C.
Newport Harbor
Man of Year
Choices Sought
Nominations for the annual Newport
Barbor Chamber of C-Ommerce "Man of
the Year" award are now being received.
Jack Barnett, chamber executive direc-
tor, said that whil e formal nominations
may on1y be made by chamber members.
suggestions from the public are encourag·
td.
He said persons knowling anycne quali-
fied' should forward the name,
together with a brief biography and any
other pertinent Information, to the
chamber office. The deadline Is Dec. 31.
Barnett Said nominees may be male or
female, pointing out that two women,
Mrs. Harvey Pease and Mrs. Joseph
Beek. . have received th.e award in
previous years.
Last year's winner was Vin Jorgenson,
owner of the Balboa ?o.1aririe Hardware.
';'ho has been active in numerous civic
affairs.
Health Planner
Resigns Post
' John Ttaband of NewporL Beach. tx·
ecullve direct.Or' of lhe Comprehensive
Health Planning Association of Orange
County has resigned. .'
Traband, t2, of 215 Via Ravenna, Lido
Isle, has headed the staff of the con·
troversial organization since lt.s incepUon
early last' year. He leaves to t.ake a
si milar position with the CRPA in San
Bernardino C-Ounty.
Prior to his connection with CHPA.
Traband was on the teaching faculty of
Gallfornia State C.ollege. Fullerton and
had served as 8 systems design and
marketing analyst.
He formerly taught at the University of
SOUthem caJilornia and wa1 employed '
for lt years.at North American Rockwell.
_ Traband'a resignation · has been · ac-
cepted by the health ph1nning group's
board of directon but no replace.ment
b., been named.
Humphries, attorney Jack Hall. Realtor
and past presiden&. Jim Wood, OCC
history instructor Hank Panian and civil
engineer Carl Moseley .
. Comprised Of both Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach leaders. CHART meets
the third Thursday of each month for
breakfast forums at the C-Osta Mesa Golf
and CoWltry Cuub.
Prior forwns have Involved the
notorious Back Bay land swap, Orange
residents, who are encouraged to attend
Counlv Airport problems. freeways and
other issues of interest to Harbor Area
and participate.
Couple Claim
Land Auctioned
A Tustin couple has filed a claim with
the city of Newport Beach for their pro-
perty which they allege was sold at auc-
tion by the Newport police.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reinhardt, 1362
Olwyn Drive. said an antique watch,
valued at $250. an antique ring, worth
$125, three pair3 of earrings worUi $1 arid
$3 in cash, were among items recovered
by Newporl detectives during a burglary
investigation. The jewelry had been
stolen from their home in January of this
year.
Mrs. Reinhardt said the pieces -the
antiques .were family heirlooms -were.
apparenUy sold at Newport's last auction
after being used as evidence in the trial
of the suspe·cts.
A dcij8rtmf!nt spokesman said standard
procedute in this type of case ls to reim:~
burse the victims, pending the outcome ·
of an investigation of the matter.
l'rom Page l
ANNEX ...
word in allowing jet traffic at the airport.
"They didn't come right out and say
so,·• he 11aid, "but they Implied they
would hever allow jets at the fleld."
Hamilton noted that the first jets were
the quiet Electras but sth.ee then the com·
mercial airlines have bee.n usina 737's,
which are full-fledged jet aircraft.
He al50 reJterated the general aviation
pilots' displeasure with recent increases
in lie-down fees.
"County Av iation Director Robert
Bresnahan told the superv isors that S20
per month would cover Costs." he u id,
"but they listened lo I.he real properties
adminiattator <Stanley Krause) •ho said
the charge for the use should be based on
the highest uSe or the lilnd, ..
· The tie'-dowo fet has been lnc:re•sed
from $1~27. Lhe last hike from $20-27 ef-
fective in August, in the last three years,
Hamilton said.
Newport Police
Auction Slated
The date for the ~·ewport Beach police
auction has been set fo r 10 a.m. Saturday
at the city yard, 592 Superior Ave.
Among items to be sold are 67 bicycles,
two surfboards, nine small boats and a
pair of crutches.
All items must be paid for in cash and
all purchases must be removed from the
yard at the conclusion or the auction .
Purchases are made 011 an as-is b a s i s
with no guarant.ee of the physical con·
dition of the items.
The second seeks a vote to establish a
charte r amendment that would require
future elections before the city council
could adopt any new freeway route
through the city.
Uixtn recei pt o( · the documents,
through a certificate of sufficiency, which
~1rs. Lagios said she expects to attach
Tuesday. the council must schedule the
electioo no less than 74 nor no more than
89 days from Dec. 21.
The first Tuesday in that period. the
date likely to be selec ted, is March 9,
i\1rs. Lagi0s said.
She reported this morning that 1200
sig natures of the approximately 10.000
the CCC said are on the pet itions ha ve
been verified.
Only 4,200 valid names, reprcsenti11g IS
percent of the electorate, are needed .
Soviets i11 Saia Pedro
School Employes·
Elect Officers
Members of the Newport-Mesa School
District chapter of the California School
Employes Association have elected their
officers for 1971 .
Serving the 400-membcr association in
the coming year will be :
Joyce Wood, president. Ba I ear J e
Ele mentary School : Dick Hay, ,,ice pres!•
dent, opeflitions; Mary Rote, recording
secretary, Harbor View School; Mary
Farrell, corresponding secretary, Adam!
Elementary School ; Bobby Bennett;
treasurer, Kaiser Intermediate School
and Gen Batty, reporter, Wilson ElemeJh
tary School.
Ul'I Ttfffhllt9
The 12,000-ton Soviet freighter Gavriil Derchavin
tied up at San Pedro !vfonday. becomin_g the firs t
Russian freighter to dock at the harbor since the
mid-1940s. The ship carried a load of steel and
other cargo from Japan to the U.S., but will return
empty.
YOUR MONEY'S WORTH!
chased
Many people don't realize that carpeting Is one item that can i;. pur.
for less money today than 30 years ago.
Here are o few eye openers g I e a n e d from o n,wspaper of 1940,
courtesy of the Santa Ana Ubrary, Compare these j,,ith today's prices:
' 1940 1970 INCREASE I 1940 1970 INCREASE . I I I • 1940 Cadillac _ $1700.00 + $7600.00 + 447•;. Peanut Butter • 09c lb, .43c lb . 477•;.
1940 Chev.olet $659.00 + $2395.00 +1363"(• •
81n1na1 . 04c lb1 .,lOc lb . 240°/.
600-16 Tir11 $6.45 $18.95 292% ~r1ckers '.07c lb. .29. 414o/o
Chuck Ro11t .14V2c lb. . 49c lb. 338°/ • Movie Theater .25c 52,00 soo-;. ' . Loa-().Lamb .191hc lb. .99c lb. 509'1. 'RMI. Steik Dinnt1 .JSc $2.95 842'/o
T·Bont Steak .l6V2c lb. $1.29 lb. 781 •;. Good Carpeting $1 sq. yd. & up1$1 aq. yd· & up 091.
started
Perhaps another time we can compare tod1y'1
in the carpet business. prlc•s with pricts In 1894 wh•n our family
ALDEN'S .--.. -.-,.-•• -.-.a-.. -•• -,~ CARPETS e DRAPES
TUSTIN C•ll •••
ALDIN'S
110 ""' c .. ms 1663 Placentia Ave , & D•APlllllS 11J74 1m .... T"t111, C.rtf. COSTA MESA
........ 646,.4831
HOURS: Mon. Thru ThurJ., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -Sat., 9:30 to 5
' •
1 ,I
•
1 7
I
~osta Mesa •
• N.V. Steeb
·' -
JilOL. 63, NO. 2~l. l SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 8, '19J O TEN CENTS
•
• Outdoor X Movies Bring Vig~lantes Ill Mesa
~-'vigilantes are at work in · northeast
OQsta Mesa, capturing tte.spa.!.Sers trek·
ktlg throligh a tract to ·watch aeiy, x.
_rated movies at ibt nearby Paulo Dr1v~
• ·~Theater.
. The situation faced by the Del Cerro
ar,a community action croup was outlin·
ed: ~ a 58-signature petition de!IVered to
tbe Cost.a Mesa City Council Monday
night.
Voting unanimously, the three coun-
" • •
cilmen prisent ordeffi! prompt action in
what appears a threat to the property,
safety and mora!Ji of residents.
NighUy incidents involving trampling of
shrubs. threats of violence and occasional
fistk:uffs by sneak-viewers placed under
citizenJ' arrest are mentioned.
So Is the problem of curious
adolescents learning about the birds and
bees right in their own bedrooms. with
demonstration.s in superbwnaa-iiz.e and
liv ing color.
"We feel that it X..rated pkturu are to
be viewed only by penons over the ap of
18, then they should be shown on a acreen
where only those persons over that age
can see them," the peUUon begins.
Fayette Circle residents Mr. and MrS.
Russell Fineman and Mr. and Mrs. Ray ·
Huntzinger are leaders of the campaign .
City Attorney Roy June was instructed
to investiaate le1al acUOM open. 'lbe
Costa ?,!eu Crime ptevenUon C:Oni.mtttee
also will study I.be l&sue of X and ft.rated
filmll.
~ Incident occurred a month ago, ac-
cordlng to the petition. when Huntzlnaer
surprised a man crouched in a ditch
behind his back fence, drinking beer and
having a snea~ view of the racy movies.
"When Mr.'Huntzinger announced that
he was under.arrest, the man.1larted to
fight and Mr:~ Hunlllna:er hid to stt oo
•
him until help arrived, 11 tbe. petition ez-
ptaina:.
He was atiudy wanted bY police for
aomethlng,..more·aerklus,' bowever;-80" the
trespassing count was dropped, the paper
continues.
"We have had time! when ·we have had
no trouble for weeks at a time. and
others when we had two or three carlOads
-every night," the petition adds.
-The Huntzingen aaJd they counted 17
people Soinl over their rear fence one
night.
:'Some nights Jt was IO bad we would
sit in a darkened front room. wa~
out the·windows •. !•llin1 for. the next car
to stop ... some would threaten violellce,
some kicked or hit and ran. Many would
swear."
nie homeowners say the.at.er mu.q:e-
JSO. VIGILANrl3, P ... I)
I er ras I s ,es·an
.. .. -·
Civilians Slain
Calley Command
Refused ·Ex-GI
. fT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI) -A ooldier
who was under 1st Lt. William L. Calley'•
command at _My Lai testilied today he
tefpsed to obey Calley's order to shoot
1cceaming civilians in a ditch where
Mesa Taxi
Fare System
Questioned
A young Costa Mesa observer of
mbnlcipal affairs Is curious about why a
cab company (Yellow) is allowed to use a
fare system he believes is unfair.
Tom Manu s. 24, of 2758 Portola Drive,
who ran for city council last April, went
before the panel Monday night to ques-
tion the policy after ·surveying cab
1ervice in eight other cities. ·
He clearly caught the three councilmen
present unprepared for his questions, in-
dicating pas.5engers pay more for Yellow
Cab Company servi~ in Costa Mesa
where it has no competition.
·Manllll said taximeters turned out to
have four settings which can be used to
measure mileage, time spent waiting,
both together or just a straight fare
a;chedule. l'he most costly to the passenger is
called the hot meter. said Manus, charg-
ing; the local co mpany uses this setting
and:system with the city council's per-
mission.
"l call on the city council to correct
this situation," said the ex-Marine who
wOorks and attends college too.
"Thank you. Tom. I move we refer this
to the staff. !rs a new one on me," sai d
V1ce Mayor Willard T. Jordan.
H~ was presiding because Mayor
Robert M. Wilson and Councilman
William L. SL Clair are in Atlanta, Ga.,
atteacling a National League of Cities
convention .
Councilman Jack Hammett agreed wit h
Jordan's assessment of the cab fare con-
! . . ......
<'lll'his is the first time I've heard of It,"
betttmarked.
.
mothers piled atop their children to save
them from automatic riDe fire .
The witne'.ss, Jamea Joseph Dursl,
employe of an electrical manufacturing
nfm in Brooklyn, N.V., was the 35th pro-
duCed by the government in its attempt
to convict the diminutive calley of the
premeditated mlD'der of 102 civilians in
the Vietnam~ villag~ March 16, l~.
lllJ t.sti"""'y Joll9ftl!' 11111 el,IJ!Olhe!'
fOMMr aoldier who .. Ml H watched
catley act as tht lOfNI es:eeuuoner of five
to 10 separate groupa brOUJbt to the dltc.b
during a W.minute periid.
Dursl, a huge min with black hair.
!ideburns and mustache, said he was a
private first class in the platoon Calely
commanded.
After his testimony, Capt. Aubrey M.
Daniel ID, the prosecutor, "told the court
Dursi probably was lhe last prosecution
witness, but that he would not rest the
government case without makina an ef-
fort to find twi more witnes.ses he has
been trying to locate.
Dursi said at Calley's order, he. Pfc
Paul D. Meadlo, and Galley put their
rifl es in tfie port arms position and push·
ed people into a ditch at My Lai.
"Some started to cry and they were
yelling," he said. "MeadJo wu crying
and pu shing the people. We were ordered
to shoot by Lt. Calley.
"1 don 't remember his exact W-Ords, but
he said something like : 'Start firing.'
"Calley and Meadlo started firing into
the / ditch down at the people. Meadlo
turned to me and told me : 'Shoot! Why
don't you shoot?'
"He was crying and yelling to me .
''I just said : 'l can't! 1 won't!' and 1
looked down at the ground.
"The people were screaming and yell-
ing. It was mostly automatic ind ·some
semiautomatic fire , and the weapoM
were pointed down into the ditch. I
remember Meadlo changing magazines
at one time. They fired three to four
minutes.
"'The people were diving on top of each
other -some of the mothers trying to
protect their children~
"Lt. Calley came to me right after the
firing and tOld me to 1et across the ditch
(See CALLEY, Pop I)
"
DllS AT HOSPITAL
Sheriff's Deputy Wallace
•
Hughes Empire
Power Struggle
Nears Showdown
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -The scramble
that developed When Howard Hughes left
on vacation for the: Bahamas and fired
the chief of hi! $300 million Nevada em-
pire headed for a showdown today .
A court hearing was scheduled to
render 11 legal decision on a tempor&ry
rel!training order barring a takeover o{
the Nevada holding by Hugh~' corporate
leaders. It was to be fol~ by a joint
meeting of both sidl?! in tl\e dispute in a
sesson mediated by the governor.
A Hughes spokesman said these two
developmints , "should end the whole
thing by nig htfall."
At stake was control of the lucrative
chain of-hotels and casinos in the gambl-
ing capital which made the millionaire
recluse the state's single I a r g eat
employer.
When Hughes ordered the firing of his
top Nevada aide from bis remote
hideaway in the Bahamas a power strug-
gle developed between the gambling
operators and Hughes' corporate ex·
ecutives.
Gov. Paul Laxalt, his interest spurred
by·the disunlty"that threatened the tax-·
yielding riches to his stati. stepped in .
.La.tall said he entered the strange ca!e to determine if there would be any effect
upon continued ope-ations of the bot.els
(See HtJGHES, Pare Z)
•• WOUNDE IMN HAND, KNl!I! DEAD ~T SCl!MI!
Shorlff'• 0......., Complloll Su1~t Morene
LA Sheriff's Deputies
S1wt, 1 Dies in Fight
A pair of young Los Angeles County
iheriff's deputies were shot -one fatally
-early today in Compton, 6y a La
Habra man who was killed by the dying
lawman.
The shooting erupted after a rouUne
traffic stop.
Dead are Deputy Lou Wallace, 28, who
succumbed at St. Francis Hospital in
Lynwood and Manuel R. Moreno, 22, LA
Habra, who was pronoWlCed dead at the
shooting scene,
Deputy Al campbell, 211, was listed in
fair condition at St. Francis Hospital;
with bullet wounds In the knee a.nd hand,
suffered in a scuffle wlth the armed
IU!pect.
Coroner'! deputies said see on a I
capsules and a whitish powder believed to
be heroin were found on the slain
suspect's body.
The incident was touched off when the
deputies began to search Moreno and he
whipped out 1 pistol, wounding Gampbell
ln the knee, then the nand.
Moving to aid his partner, Deputy
Wallace look a slug in the abdomen -
emptying his own gun at Moreno -then
collapsed u he crawled to the patrol car
to radio for help.
Deputy.Campbell crawled to the vehl·
cle and success.fully summoned aid.
HiJ partner never regained con-
sciowness.
Tavern Fig ure
Held by Police
In Assault Try
An oft-arrested ')associate at ~
Firehouse tavern wound up in Costa
Pl.fesa City Jail again early today. after a
complaint by an irate would-be patron.
Norman W, Drey Jr., 2.1. of 12744
Newport Ave .. Tustin, wa.s booked on
charges of assault and batLery, with $.115
bail set.
James P. Harper called police to 177 E.
17th St .. to complain he was refustd ad-
mission to the all-nude dan~ tluh 1nd
treated discourteously when he demanded
to know why .
"I asked the doorman out to find out
why I couldn't enter his fine establish-
ment," charged Harper, adding Drey'•
alleged reply was a brutal headlock and a
fist in the face. City Attorney Roy June said he could
offer a partial explanation by citin& aec-
tiort! of the municipal code.
June explained cab company officials
need only present a fee schedule when
ap~yini to go into buslnesi, adding that
the.Code doesn't hold lhem to it.
Slain Mes an Gives . Life Drey. Firehouse owner Ray Rohm, two
nude dancers and two operators of the
agency supplying the girls were arrested
in the past two week! on new felony tlate
charges of cor11piracy to permit live
obscene entertainment But another section requires them to
get~city approval before tnc:reasing their
rate11 he added. .
-l1'be questk>n will be discussed further
after a report by city manageme~ and
aJlllklered with a fuJI council present.
......
HO US E DELAYS ,,_ .. ~ '
SS T 'DEATH'
'" WASHINGTON !UPI ) -The Home
sa\ted the supersonic transpor::t !SST)
ff&rit an lmmecliJte death sentence. today,
but left tu ultimate fat.e 1Ull uncertain.
Members refused on a roll call to 1c-
ctpt outright a Senate decision to cut off
in~ more federal funds for developmen t
work on the controveralal 1,900-mlle-an-
bour jet plane.
That decision bucked tbe issue te a
llOWl&Senate conference c e m m I t t e e
where all side! uld the cards were
ttded apln!t an outright everturn 1f
th!. Sena..te decision.
--
Woman Living Normall y After Pancreas TranspW.nt
By AllTll\JJI II. VINSEL or·-. o.ttJ ..,. ••ft
A youna woman suffering from a
disease that would have been fatal is now
looking forward to a normal life , follow-
ing a rare surgical lransplant In which
she received the pana~s of 1 Costa
Mesa murder victim.
The patient is now listed in good con-
dition at Orange . County Medical Center
t3 day• later, but officials decline to Iden·
tify her at thi! st.age of con"alesce.nce.
Transplanting of the delicate, mm·
plicated metabolic or1an ls done1only as
a last resort. •
Parents ol. Kenneth ·s. Woodruff, 11, of
2283 Pacific Ave., Cotta· Mt.la; agreed to
lht procedure whca be suocumb<d
Thanuglvlng Eve ol hoptl•" bead In·
jurlea.
A medical tum from UC Irvine suc-
ctufully lr~ptanted a panere11s and
ldclney II t'llO!ltha ... Into • Hunllniton
Beach woman's body, when fewer than 20
had been performed in surgical history.
Mrs. Cara Ra,mey responded
dramatically, only to bt killed in an
ironic car-truck collision last summer.
The unklenlified recipient of Woodruff's
healthy pancreas has been moved out of
the intensive care unit where he died 13 •
days ago. nurses confirmed Monday.
Woodrufl suffertd multiple, skull frac-
tures and extensive brain damage Nov.
21, when thrown out Of a apeeding Car on
the ·San Diego Free••1 neat Fairvie w
Road. •
WI..._, qJd one ot.oev!i:al oc.:upanll
could bl! ,... holdfng the door open whUe
hl1 companjons tjected the v:lctttn head-
first.
Detective Jim Bla.ylock,•who la headlnc
the homicide lnvestigaUon, uid Monday
lhat no new leads have. developed in tht
two weeb since tht fatal Incident.
No one was able to get a llotnse
number or lhe car, due. to the swUtneu of
'
events and darknesa, combined with
•Jieed of the car fuvclved .
• ~laylock said Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Wo00ruff1 of 351. W. Bay St., Cost• Mesa,
agreed to the pancreas transplant whe.n It
beca,me appa~nt their aon could ~
lllrVIVe,
The etrJler panCreas transpla nt -in
an ironic twist -al90 involved donaUon
of an ·organ from a man who died ·under
v101enr and m~er!Ou1"ctrcUmstance9-.
Mrs. Ram•f received the kldoey and .
pancreu ol 1 yo~ husband who 'auf.
fered hear lrtlllries 1When he ftll from the '
roof of 1 Garden Grove b1dustrial firm . '
Hia car ttalled. the victim had callell
hill·wife 1o pick hJm U,p It I fog:1hrouatd 1
iiifeiiecUon tMI\ DO trace WU found1"bla
she 1rr1...r. .. elert.
H! wu dilcofered later, mima rh{B
ahoea, aner apparently cllmblnC otop the
building and &lippln1 Oii lbe fog-chocl
eds• of lbe roof.
'
. r
Salesman Guilty
In Swiss Murder . .
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A jury <on·
vlcted Thomas DeVlns, ·30, of first degree
murder today ln the death . of a wealthy ·
widow whose body never hu been found .
1be prosecuUon contended that Qevlns,
a real '8tate • man, killed Norma Carty
Wilson, 57, In November 1"7 on a lonely
road io Swftierland becauae 1 h e
suspected him of swinCOJng bu .. _
DevinJ waa dekribed as Mrs . WUson'•
flnaoclal adviser. The prosecution claim-
ed Devina lured her to Swlbtrland on a
pretext of finding backers for a propoeed
medical center In Los Anll!lt•. .
Prosecutor Stephen S. Trott said he will
seei the death penllly" it tbe peaalt)'
phase or Devins' trial.
The jury aloo <ollvlcttd Deonll o( nrot
degree robbery aDd two count. o( 1rand
theft lnvolvln& Mn. WUson'a property.
Sailplane ..
Takes .Pair . .
To Deaths
A frail sailplane towed aloft ovet Lake
E!Jinore slid into a 1lckening spin Moa-
day· afternoon, earrying a Costa. Mesa
man and his visiting Ohio buddy .J,000
feet to insta nt death on the dry lake bed.
Raymond J. Bouchard, 24. of 2f11 E.
16th Place, and David W. Jefftrs, 28, llf
Nashporl, Ohio, were dead on mival at a
local hospital.
No immediate cause could be determin·
td ror the crash, which oCCl.llTid
moments after the glid.er was releQed
from • tow plan• that pullecl ll llOft from
Skylark Airport In ElJlnore.
"The cable was dropped and shortly
the~eafter they went Into l r.ight-band
spill and oever recovered," 1 a Id
Rivtrside County Deputy Coroner Dennil
Ely.
Actual .!lite of the crash was in the dry
south eqd of the lake bed, according to
Sheriffs Deputy Micha!.I Jordan.
Federal Aviation Agency officials will
probe the crash. to determine whether
mechanical fallure or" other factors cai.w-
ed it.
The bodies were taken to Evans-Brown
Plfo.rtuary In Elsinore. where 1
spokesman said today no arranaementt
had been made for servicea or shipment
elsew here.
Bouchard was a junior mathematics
majo( .at UC Irvine, wltere the new cam-
pll.! directory listed his family borite at
24.215 Lu Naranjas Drive, Laguna
Niguel.
'Deputy Coroner ·Ely-said J"effm .. wu
apparently a longtime acquaintance and
he believed he was in Southern Cllifomla
visiting a Los Angeles aircraft engineer·
Ing coma any, · · .: .
· ~ Mesa Police Officer· John BN!e
dellvered word of Bouchard'• death to hil
girlfriend. Mary Root, Monday nigbt ol
the request of friends in Elstqore.
He said she became .0 distraught she
had to be left in the care of friendJ · in.
Huntington Beach.
You'll hive to · drive by instru-
ments V>nlght when the om bi& roe ol the winter· aeuon rolls ill.·
Wednesday will be hazy with
temperatures in the 68 to 7S
brlcket:·
. JNSmE TODAY ,.
' .
•
)
2 · DAA. V PILOT C
,,,..,.. r,..e I
HUGHES. 4.
ud casinos.
Lualt 11ld he talktd wltll tlle
my'1lrloul bllllooah Monday Biid tllat
Hughes tok1 him he was on a pleasure
a.nd bu._ trip "in 1ood coodltloo." He
tolo1 the · ,....,.... 'he approvod cf. Ula
change In leadcnhlp of his Nevada
operations.
The governor said he took over the role
as conciliator in an attempt to bring the
iwo feuding (actions together.
The go~ernor said Hughes told him by
telephone that he authorized the firing ol
his top aide in the $SCIO million-a-year
Nevada operation. However, that aide.
RQbert Maheu. a former FBI agent who
has been Hughes• right hand man during
the four years the 64--year-old recluse
spent •ln this gambling apital, resisted
his ouster by an outside group represen·
ting the parent Hughts Tool Company of
Houston.
Laxalt met with lbe 11 members of the
Hughes Tool board of directors in the
afternoon and said he was going to ask
Maheu to voluntarily relinquish control of
the Nevada operatio?ui. Lax< metlaler with Maheu bu_t could
not convince him to abandon the fight.
Laxalt said he wia teleph!>ned 'ciy
Hughes from the .Bah11mas ear Ir Monday
morning and that Hughes told him he ap-
proved the ouster of Maheu by a gro_up
headed by \Villiam Frank Gay, a vtce
president of Hughes .Tool Company, and
Chester Davis, a New York lawyer.
Dr. Slooum Files
For Dissolution
Of Marriage
Dr. Wesley Gamer Slocum, the Costa
?-.1esa physician cleared last month of
charges that he murdered his infant
daughter, petitioned Monday for a
dissolution of bis marriage. ae· cites "irreconcilable differenc~··
between himself and Mrs. Marlan Rosalie
Slocum in the Orange County Superior
Court cdmplalnt. Mrs. SIOCU:m testified
agiiinst her husband as the chief pro-
secution witness in his jury trial .
Or. Slocum, 4.S, asks for custody of the
toUple's t"·o children, Diane, 9, and
Marian, 8. Tht lawsuit Indicates that both
girls are presently residing with their
father. •
The surgeon also asks for court con·
firmatiO:n that funds and securities held
in a Santa Ana barik be labeled for hl.s ex·
elusive use. ·
The Slocums were married in Ne•
York on Oct. 21. 1953. The date of atpara-
tion is given as last March, the time that
Dr'. Slocum wu arrested and charged
wtrh the inttrder or thlf three-month-old
daughter, Cynthia.
Those charges were filed after the
dismembered rtmains· ol the child were
found iii an unused freezer after the ap-
pliance ·was. shipped from the couple ·1
Costa Mesa home to a Sant.a Ana depot.
A Superior Court jury found nothing to
support the charges and quickly cleared
the accused physician.·
Wallace Debord
Sel-vices Held
Services were held Monday al B e 1 I
Bro.adway Chapel for long time Cost.a
Mesa resident Wallace Dee Debord who
died Wednesday .
Mr. Debord was 82 years old when }le
passed away al Costa M~ Mem~riil
Hospital.
He hid lived in C.Osta Mesa foM7 years
and owned several businesses Including
the product department of the former .
Grand Central Market on South Main
Street. Santa Ana. Al the tinte o~ ·his
death he was retired.
He leaves his wife, Myrtle, of the f1mi.
Jy home at 227 24th Place, Costa M~sa ; a
son, Leonard Debord of Newport Beach,
and a da ughter, Ethyl, also of Newport
Beach. Other survivors ioclude a
grandson, Lt. Col. Leonard A. Debord,
and four great grandchildren.
'
DAILY PILOT
ClllANC'OE CCI.UT PL!ILISMING C'OMPA!n'
l!:obttt ·H. W1td
Prnld111t Ind PublUMr
J,,k R. C111l1y
Vlu Prt11'tnl t rHI C0-11 M1"'g1r
ltriom•• Kee'ril
ldltw
'tliorn11 A. M11r11hi111
MtllfllflD Edl1DI"
c.t. MIN .OfflN
2JO W11f ley Str11t
M1 llh11 AJJrtt•: ,.O. lo-c IS60, tl6!'
o .... °""" NfWl'Orl l•(h: 2211 W•I l 1lile1 I CIUffMrf
ll~ lltlC~t 2U ,trlll AVMv.
H11nt111t1• l 9'Cl'l1 1'171 l wdl IDll~nl
$HI Ci.m.ntt: .. Nortll al C.)TllM aMI
..
U~I TtllP~Olt
Sqviets i11 San Pedro
By P'lot• Group
•
Annex Airport,
Newport Urged
Newport Beach bas been urged to move
as rapi dly as possible to annex Or1nge
County Airport.
The suggestion came from e Orange
County' Pilot.I Associatioo, ~l\lch, ac·
#f cording to its president, is lborOughly fed
up with the management of the airport
by the county Bollrd of Suj)ervisOrs.
The group of 1.000 general aviation
pilots feels the airport should be geared
for just that -general 1viation,·no~ 1!9m·
mercial airllnes -and . the city of
Newport v.·ould more effectively maintain
aod promote that U6e.
In a resolution forwarded lo the
Newport Beach City Council, the OCPA
formall y based lta reeommendations on
three reasons : '
-"Newport Beach has I long history or
efficient management at low cost."
-''Newport Beach has declared ltselr
in support of 1eneral aviation and hid
urged that Orange County Airport be re-
lained as a general aviation facility."
-"Newport Beach is geographically
situated to provide the best ad·
ministration of the airport."
,
"County Aviation Director Robert
Bresnahan told the supervisors that UO
per month would cover costs,'" he said,
"but they listened lo the real properties
administrator lSlanley Krause ) who sa14
the charge for the use shquld be bued OQ
the highest use of the land." ,
The tie-down fee has been Increase<!
rrom $10.,27, the last hike from ·~27 ef!
reclive in August, in the last three years,
Hamilton said. / ,,
. The 12 OOO:.(on Soviet freighter GJvriil Derchavin
tied up' at San Pedro Moriday. becoming ~e first
Russian freighter to dock at the harbor Slnce th.e
mid·1940s. The ship carried a load of steel and
other cargo from Japan to the U.S., but will return
empty.
Mayor Ed Hirth today agreed "thi1 Is
the logical eventual solution'' but h~ld'lit
tle hope it would be accompli1hed in the
near future .
Two
. r Suspects Arrested
In LA Kldnaping Case
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two men who
held a banker's son In a car tnlrlk for
several hoW's in demand for ransom were
being held today for investigation of kid-
naping, police reported.
Lee Spath, 2().year-old son of William
Spath, was found In good condition 1n the
car Monday night after the two men
were atopped on a freeway, police said.
Young Spath. o!licera said, had spent
several hour1 in the trunk.
Police said George Farrens, 35, and
Thoma! LeRoy Coleman, 20, were booked
for investigation of kidnaplng for ·the
purposea of_ raNOm. Officers aald they
were armed, but didnot resist arrest.
Two men armed with saweck>ff
shotguns Sunday night went to the
suburban Granada Hills home of Spath,
411, manager of the Gle.fl4ale branch of
the Bah1t" of America, police aaid.
Officers said the men d_emanded the
bank's weekend deposlta -estimated at
more than $100,000 -and ransacked the
home after binding Spath, his wife and
son.
When Spath said he couldn't get the
money becauae he didn't have a key, the
men took the son and told the f1ther to
get the money without telling police, of-
ficers said. •
Spath followed their directions, officers
said, taking a bus to Las Vegas, Nev.,
and returning to Loa Angeles, where he
was to deliver to the ltidnapers a key to a
bus tt:Mninal.
Monday night, the ~pers drove to
the Spath home in two cars -OM of
them with the younger Spath inside.
One of the mtn picked up the key lrom
Spath, and then they drove away, police
said. •
Officers fo1!owtd the cars 111d then
made the arres t.a.
• I • l I ~
Judge Orders Land Swar,
Arguments Continued
By TOM BARLEY
01 lh1 D1flY Plitt 11111
Hopes that a verdict on the Upper
Newport Bay land swap trial would be
made public this wetk were shattered to--
day when Orange County Superior Court
Judge Claude M. Owens ordered the five
Jawyers involved in the litigation back to
his courtroom for further arguments.
Judge Owens set Friday for the ap-
pearance <11 Irvine Company attorney
Robert Warren. Santa Ana attorney Ouf·
fern Heising for County Auditor Vic
Heim. Deputy Attorney General Jay
Shavelson for the state of Califomia,
Deputy County Counsel Robert Nuttman
for the county of Orange and San Fraii-
cisco lawyer Philip Berry for the
Newport Beach homeowners contesting
the land swap.
Judge Owens refused to comf!lent on
the reasons behind the revival of
cOurtrooin ~ctlon on an issue that has
already produced six weeks of trial and
22 separate coUrt hearings over the last
two yean:
But a source close to the iasue sug·
gested that the judge wants clarification
from the lawyers involved on issues
rel ating to value of and access to Upper
Bay land transferred to lhe lrvlne Com-
pany by Orauee County. .
Appraisals of the relal\ve properties by
stat.e appointed officials and access to
Upper Bay acreage before af\d 1fter
dredgin& operations are knov.·n to concern
the judge at thls late stage of . his
deliberations .
Berry argu'ed throughout the lrial that
Robert I..ockwood
Services Slated· · ·
Fune"I services will be held Thursday
for Robert A. Lockwood. 41, the Coa:t•
Mesa resident wbo drowned SUnday whlle
sk1n divlfll off Catalina.
He had lived in Callfomla 22 years and
was employed 1s a computer analyst for
the llollywood Turf Club. He was • me.m·
her of tbe Hollywood MllOn\c Lod&t-
Mr. Lockwood leaves bis wife. Janet
ind daughter, Linda. both of the f1mily
home. 2700 Peterton way, Coata Mesa;
rnother Doria Eichorn, Santa Susanaa ;
brother's. John, of Van Nuya, and 8lU of
Santa ~susanna.
Servlcts·w!U be 1t 11 a.m. 1t P~lflo
View Olapel with tht Orange County
t.f110nlc Board orfici1t1na. Pacific View
Mortuary is directinj tbe. arrangements.
the Irvine Company w&J ~ilty of fruad
in hearings before the St.ate Lands Com·
mlssion when il allegedly overvalued the
acreage transferred to Orange County
and undervalued the tidelands taken in
exchange.
Jude Owens commented Monday that
he was "very near" a decision on the Up-
per Bay dispute.
Judge Owens' ruling will up ho 1 d or
declare as illegal the trading of 450 acres
of Irvine C.Ompany uplands for 1~7 acres
of county owned tidelands.
The Irvine Company has approval of
the trade from the State Lands Com-
mission. It intends to develop the
tidelands and adjacent areas into ex-
panded boating facilities, marinas and
related commercial development! and a
chain of public parb and recrealional
facilities.
Berry argues for t,he ho meowners that
the swap is unhiw:ful slnce tidellllldS can-
not by state Jaw be transferr.ed to private
ownership. He also contends that
development contemplated by the Irvin~
Company would destroy the ecology of
Upper Bay.
From Page 1
VIGILANTES •••
ment has ainLacted !hem about lhr pri>-
blem, discussing the po!Bibility of
buUding a high fence or additions to
backyard barriers behind the home s.
The homeowners suggest a ban on
open-air X and R movies.
Petitioners made it clear they bought
homes knowlng the drive-in could be a
problem, but said the problem hu grown
with the advent of su on lhe 1Uver
screen.
Counc;ilman Jack Hammell. a resident
or' norttleast Costa Mesa, delivered the
petition. noting It was a logical . unemo-
Uonal 1ppeal for attention to 1 continuing
problem .
He said he set$ two distinctly different
aspects.
''If you show X or R·raled mt>vles al a
drive-in you ire violating the 1pirlt of the
ratina: code.'' be eiplained regardlna the
cintm1 industry's a.elf· imposed
ctnsorahlp method.
Hammett said tbt second pro~m con-
cern& pollcJn& tht neJibbotbood IO en-
force. laWM:apablt·of belng used aaalnst
y1rd.:\rampling trespassera. ·
The Flnem8J11 charge they onct even
found 1 dbcarded marijuana-pipe stuffed
into their aarage door.
Drug Registrant
Ends Up in Jail
On Pot Charges
A pair of Costa Mesa narcotics detec-
tives delivering papers to a newspaper
deliveryman -his registration cards as
a convicted drug offender -ended up
putting hi m back In jail Mo nday.
The suspect and his roommate were
booked after a sea rch of the apartment,
allowed by his registration, turned up
about slx ounces of alleged marijuana
and some hashish, its poteilt derivative .
Thomas L. Finley, 24, of 220 Monte
Vista Ave., was booked on SU5picion of
possession of marijuana and pMsession
of marijuana ror sale.
Scott A. Seaman, 20, was questioned at
hls place of employment in Santa Ana
and subsequently booked on identical
charges.
Detectives Don Casey and Bob Lennert
said they were invited into the residence
while delivering Finley's permane nt
registration papers lllld noticed mari-
juana-like seeds on a table.
No search warrant is required lo con·
duct further examination of the premises
in cases of this type.
Dad Names Son
In Fil'lll Lawsuit
A rather and son dispute that led to the
breaking up of a Costa f.1esa law firm
has reached Orange County Superior
Court with the filing or a $100,000 lawsuit
by the elder Selim franklin.
Selim Herring Franklin, 107 E. 17th St.,
Costa Mesa, alleges Jn his complaint that
his son Selim s. Franklin. 419 E. 17th St ..
Costa Mesa, •·adv ised various clients and
prospective clients'' that his father was
no longer practicing law.
The plainliff notes in his action that his
son "CQnstructivel v evicted'' him in 1969
from a law businCss which they ran as
partners. He sa ys in the aclion that he is
still engaged in the practice of Jaw.
"We appreciate their stand," Hirth
said, "but there is virtually no possibility
of it happening at this time."
Hirth noted the stale of flux In airport
planning and said flatly, "Tbe idea
wouldn't get to first base with the Board
of Superv isors ."
The airport, In addition to being on
county land, is owned by the county and
the Local Agency Formation Com·
mission, which must act on all proposed
annexations, would not approve the move
without the supervisors' ok ay.
Al the present time , the supervisor!!
are in tfie midst of reviewing a $140.000
consultant's report, prepared by the
Ralph M. Parsons Company, on the
future of all aviation in the county.
Noting this, Hirth aaid. "the county
simply would not give It up now and it
would not accomplish anything to pursue
the matter until circumstances change."
The mayor pointed out that Newport
Beach does eventually want and plan to
annex the air facility.
"'It has been talked about for some
time," he said, "the airplanes fly over
our city, it's almost surrounded by our ci·
ly.
"It was Included Jn the original boon-
dar ies filed for tbe city of Irvine,'' he
noted, "but wu subsequently excluded
because they know we want it."
Gay Hamilton. president of the pilot!'
association. urged the city move ahead
now regardless.
Blasting the supervisors for their
handling of the fac.lllty, Hamilton said the
pilots agree "the noise is intolerable."
He charged the board went back on Its
·word in allowin·g jet traffic at the airport.
"They didn't come right out and say
so."' he said, ''but they implied they
~·ould never allow jets a~ the field."
Hamilton noted that the first jets were
!he quiet Electi-as but since then the com-
mercial airlines have been using 737"s,
which are full-nedged jet aircraft.
He also reiterated the general aviation
pilots' displeasure with recent increases
in lie-down fees.
Another Drift Set
SYDNEY (U PI ) -The crew of the
Ecuadorian raft. La Balsa , intends to
make another drift across the Pacific,
Captain Vicale A!sar said !oday.
Alsar led the recent 8.560-mile five--
month drift from Ecuador to Mooloolaba,
on the east coast of Australia .
· Jmprollitt!J Life
Lt. Gen. Robert J. Dixon. the
Air Force's chief personnel of-
ficer, has issued a series of
directives "to improve the ev·
eryday fife of our people" in
order"to attract and hold more
men as the en d of the draft
nea rs. He said the Air Force
may repl ace traditional ''GI
parties" with professional jan-
itors.
School Employes
Elect Officers • •
1'1embers or the Newport-Mesa School
District chapter of the Ca lifornia Schoo'
Empkiyes Association have elected their
officers for 1971.
Serving the 400-member a~iation ln
the coming year will be : . -
Joyce Wood, president, Ba 1 ear l1c·.
Elementary School: Dick Hay, vice presi--•
dent. operations ; Mary Rote, recordi ng
secretary, Harbor View School ; Mai:y
Farrell, corresponding secretary, Adami·
Elementary School: Bobby Bennet~.
treasurer. Kaiser Intermediate Schoql,
and Gen Batty, reporte r, Wilson Elemen-
tary School.
From Pa9e I
CALLEY • • •
before I got sick."
Dursi said he saw "a lot of blOOd on the
chest.sand arms and some head wound1"
in the bodies.
Earlier. the military judge at Calley'a
trial denied a motion to prevent tht
testimony of the first witness of the day,
He also refused lo strike oul an scaiunt
of a 90·minute execution given by the wit·
ness on direct examination f\.1onday.
YOUR MONEY'S WORTH!
Many people don't reaHze that carpetln9
chawd for leu money today than 30 years 090.
is one item that can be pur·
Htr• are o few eye openers CJ I 1 a n e d from a newspaper of
courtesy of the Santa Ana Ubrary. Compare these with today's prices:
1940,
1940 1970 INCREASE 1940 1970 INCREASE
1Y40'Cadlllac 1$1700.00 +1$7600.00 +\«7% , .. nut lutter .09c lb. . .43c lb. 47~·;.
1940 Chev.olal $659 .00 + 1$2395.00 + 363°/, B•n•n•• .04c lb. .10c lb. 240'/,
600-f6 Tires $6.45 $18.95 292% Crackers .07c lb. • 29c 414'! •
Chuck Roast .14V2 c lb. .49c lb. 331•1o MeVla The1ter .25c $:Z.OO 800'/.
Leg-0 -Lamb .19 1/2c lb. . 99c lb. 509'! • Rnt. Staak Dlnne1 .35c $2.95 842'/, • T-&ona Steak .161/2c lb. $1.29 lb. 781 •;. Ooocl Carpellng $1 .... yd . & upl$1 "I· yd . & UJ 0•1.
Perhaps another time w. c•n compar1 today's
In the c1rptt butlntu.
prices with prices in 1994 when our f1ml1y
started
SANTA ANA. OU.N•I TUSTIN Celt •• ,
ALDIN'I
l l D HILL c.AlNTS
6 OIAP'lllD
11174 ,,,.. ... , ....... c.m.
11-.1144
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MISA
646-4831
HOURS: Mon. Th ru Thur.., 9 ta S:30 -Fri., 9 ta 9 -Sat., 9:30 ta 5
"
I
l
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Saddlehaek. TOday'• FluJ '
ED l'TI ON
' "* ... * ...
~ ·-~·--·-·"' .
YOL. 63, NO. 293, 3 SECTIONS, 21· P~GES . '
ORANGE COUNTY, CA(IFbllNIA . . '' . . . ' :TUESDAY, DEC&MIER I , '1-970
•
Resid.ent.s Jetport ~ Plan
By JORN V ALTERZA
Of ,,.. O.ltr "1191 ,, ...
?tiore than 200 foes of proposals to use
Bell Canyon or El Toro MCAS as jet
airports gave a sound thrashing to the
pl11m and members of the county airport
cOmmisslon Monday in hearings at a
)1ission Viejo gchool.
Complaining that the idea of consultant
Ralph M. PaniOM posed safety, noise and
pqllution problems, the Saddleback area
residents vented their wrath at members
* * * Scores Give
~uggestions
On Airport
Foes by the 1COre trooped t o
microphones Monday to register anger at
proPJtSals-to convert either Bell Canyon
or the El Toro Marine Corp!l Air Station
Into major jetporl..!I. ·
Comments ranged from Lhe derisive to
helpful hints on a possible location for a
new air' terminal in Orange County.
Amo rig the foes were :
-Mike Shearer, president of the
Mission Viejo Homeowners Association,
who cited 1,000 signatures on his group's
petition opposi ng the site locations. The
names were obtained after only a week'K
work, he said. ''We will have many more
to hand to the !upervisors Dec. lS. Do
people want an airport, or the preserva-
tion of their environment?"
Shearer cited the t>eauty and orderly
growth of the Mission Viejo community,
lamenting that planners zone every inch
of the area's 90ll, "but none zoned our air
apace, which is just as important." He
urged swift . planning for a. regional
airPort at camp Pendleton before any
turther work on smaller jetport.t.
-Laguna Hills resident Harry Nash. a
retired airline e.xecutive, who described
himself as a veteran of the industry. He
cited a Ralph M. Parsons suggestion that
El Toro MCAS could be converted to
joint, military-civilian ust under a
1'limited well disciplined program .
"Well. I submit that such an operation
Is just like pregnancy: it would not re-
main small in size," he quipped.
-Art Speedlove, chainnan of the
Aegean Hills Homeowners Association,
who praised airport commi11sionen; for
their patience in enduMng long protests
on airport matters. "They are long suf-
ftring and have heard nothing but
negative comments. If you want to hear a
real tirade sometime. listen to Newport
Beach residents,'' he said.
Speedlove asked commissioners if they
had reviewed ·his gsvup's suggestion to
use a section of the San Joaquin Hills as
a jetport site. Members of the panel said
they had not yet received an opinion from
the Parsons consulting firm in Los
Angeles.
-San Juan Capistrano Mayor Tony
Forster, who relayed the city's chagri•
because the consultants recommended
San Juan's sewage treatment system to
serve a proposed Bell Canyon tenninal.
".But they never asked us for our opinion
and that was presumptive." he said.
-San Clemente High School student
president Jay Wentz, the leader of a peti-
tion campaign which has gathered 2,600
signatures of opponenl..!I. His eloquent
plea for conservation won the longest ap-
_plause of the evening.
Orange Cout
• 'Wee tiler
You'll ha ve to 'drive by lnstru·
ments tonight when the first big
fog of the winter season rolls in.
Wednesday will be hazy with
temperature! In the 68 to 72
bracket.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Rave 11ou ever wondered ~ wlwt it would be like t.o wear
a nightgown tnsiead of a formal
to a ball? Rea ction i.! told bJI
Bea A.nde-r.ton, Page 13.
O•IJ 17 ~
·cHRISTMAS
CtHf9nll1 I -" Cllldl1!11 U' " MWNll ,. ...... ..
C:ttnllltll ..... Nt !llMI l'tlWt ..
(-It• " ... tl!M """" • CNUMf'f " -1&.11
Dutll Mtlk .. ' IMdl Mtrhb· •11 .. _ •
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" R~llWlll , ... ' """" " '"""'"'-' " ·-• ,111•11« .... ........ " --" W_.t NIWl'l).14
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-~ -
ol the county advisory board !or more
than an 1tour. unW someone on the panel
coms"aiMd that it bad 1one far enough.
Commisaiooers then replied, defending
their role u unpaid advisors t.o county
supervisors, adding that the commission
member's Were not the consultants who
proposed the•plans.
Commissioner l\Oberl•A.,. Clark·remi.nd·
ed• the audience that ' "We;are five men
just like the People •lllioil 'nm to you.
We are w~ling to hear your ,CQmments, ' . .
buJ. not your . animosity, disgust and
tirades. We are here to serve you."
With that admonisliment the tenor of
the meeting was temper'!i somewhat, b\!t ·
the opposition ta the jetpOrt idta · ctin·
tinued. ·
Official representatives· from El Toro '
MCAS, Leisure World. MiMion Viejo '
homeowners, Aegean Hills hoineowners.
S.n Clemente 'High SChool studenta and '
other groups all. marched tG \.be
microphone • ta• cctmplaln.
At one point Oart asked for a abow of
bands to determloe U a propment existed
in the audience .
No.one raised a band.
"Frankly, I'm in, favor ar. Uu·&wihg the
entire Paraons report out, myge!f,"·Gl&rk
said .
He said the commi:uion would gather
Information from lbe Mission Viejo hear·
ing along· witft ,nearly 400 houra of other
atudy~d testil!ldr!Y and subpllt f r-ecam-
mendaUon ·Dec. 15 lo county supervisors .
C.inmWtoneu 1greed I.bit despit. the
common objectlona beard Monday, they
did learn new information on Ute ~.
Among the ('leW know1eq,, ~ agreed,
was that the take off pattern of Jel..!I from
Bell Canyon would take the aircraft over
the San Onofre nuc~ar generating com-
ple1, San Clemente State Park and the
Western White House.
Opponenta slid each facility would be
vulnerable to aircraft accidents.
Other points ef objectien included:
-T!iat I.be ooiH ,.aerited 117 jet
aircraft al either the Marine f~cillly ..
Bell Canyon woul~ destroy the lefWIY,
monetary value and life style of tbe Sad-
d1eback Valley which Ues fivt miles from
Bell Canyon and even cloler ta tbe
Marine Corps base.
-'.That Orance County residenta h.nt
never been officially polled in an electiaa
to determine if lbey even want airplrt
e:r:pansion in U?e county.
.... _.
' GI 'Ref u-se ·d to Shoot'
t.
r
l Ex-soklier Tells of DMobeying Calley's Orders
'
'
FT. BENNING. Ga, (UPI)·--A-sofd1e°r
who was under 1st LL William L. Calley's
command at My Lai testified today he
refused to obey Calley'! order to shoot
screaming civilians in a ditch where
mothers piled atop their children to save
them from automatic rifle fire.
The witness, James Joseph Dursi,
employe of an electrical manufacturing
firm in Brooklyn, N.Y., was the 35th p~o
duced by tbe government In its attempt
to convict the diminutive Calley of. the
---·-·---·-· __ ...___
premeditated murder of 102 civilians in
the Vietnamese village March 16, 1968.
His testimony followed that of another
former ,IOldier who said he watched
Ciiley act as the lone eteCutioner of five
hJ 10 separate groups: broughl to the ditch
duri ng a !IQ.minute perlid.
Dursl, a huge man with black hair,
sideburns and mustache, &aid he was a
private first class in the platoon Calely
commanded. ,
After his testimony, Capt. Aubrey M.
Daniel Ill, the prO!f.cutor, told thf court
Oursi probably was the last prosecution
witness. but that he would not rest the
government case .,1lhout making an ef·
fort to find twi more witnesses he ha1
been trying to locate.
Dur!! said at Calley's order, he, Pfc
Paul D. Meadlo, and· Calley put thm
rifles in the port arms positlon and push-
ed people into a ditch at My Lal.
"Some started to cry and they were
yellin1.'' ht old. "Mefid10 was C!'Yin&
Ul'I T•lfflltlt ShowdoWJl Due
In Courts on
Hughe$ .Sehtp ·
Unfair <;ompetltlon
Familiar Face
A six-cent stamp honoring
General Douglas MacArthur
will be issued next Jan. 26, in
Norfolk, Va. Tlie stamp is
printed in .Fed~ blue and black.
The pp.n:~a1t is bllsed on a . .,,i.eio,_fA111· early in 1944 .dur-
ing an inspection flight ~y
Mac.Ar:tbur over New.Guin••·
Grocer Protest,s Plan ..
LAS VEGAS (UPI) ·.,. 'The IOl'lmble
that developed when HoWard Hughes Wt
Oft vacation for the Bahama!! and fired
the chief oI his $300' million Nevada em-
pire headed for a showdowri today. •
Eo.r ·J;Jusi~ss at Par~
Students' Sale
I
Of Yul,e Album
Proves Succcess
San Clemente High School. student.a:
chalked up aales of 1,425 copies of 1 long·
play Christmas music album which they
&Oki to raise funds for rrlore recording
equipment to be donated to the school.
The totai sales of the second long-play
record produced by ttie stud ent! were
logged Monday as the campa ign officially
ended. Profits have not yet been
tabulated.
Contest chainnan Debbie Sheets· saiid
she has extended the sale three more
days, but the late purc;hases will nol
change the .scores made by &tUd'ents in
the competition.
-
A court hearing was scheduled to
render a legal decisio,n on a ti:mporary .
restraining order barring a, takeover of
the Nevada holding by Hughe!!' corporate
leaders. It was to be followed· by a joint
meeting of 'both 11ide1 in the dispute in a
aesson mediated by the governor.
A Hughes spokesman said these two
developments, "should end the whole
thing by nightfall."
At stake was control of the lucrative
chain ot hotels and casinos in the gambl·
ing capital which made the millionaire
recluse· the state's single I a r g es t
employer.
When Hughes ordered the firing of his
top Nevada aide frcim his remote
hideaway in the Bahamas 11 power strug-
gle developed between t.he gambling
operatnrs and Hughes' corporate ex-
ecutives.
Gov. Paul Laxalt, his interest spurred
by the disunity that thre'atened the tax-
yielding rie~es to his ·state, ste(!ped in.
Laxalt said he entered the strange case
to determine If there would be any effect
upon cootinued operations of the hotels
and casinos.
By LYN HA!U\!S RICKS
( j ., ... ..,, ,.. "'"
Protelt · ol pMj,Osea ';o.iemmeht . com·
p0~114!1 • local merch"!lla near I.be
San ~ State 1Park was. raised to-
d~ by fl lf?Cal grocer w.ho &ays. he might
be fofced Out of busineu.
Plans for a major facelift of San
Clemente State Park Include construction
of.a market and laundromat in the park
near. the San Luis Rey bridge pedestrian
entrance.
BUt on the Inland slde of the bridge in-
ler~t~ ties the .El Camino Market,
al' wn a's State · Pai'k Market.
beca of the 1ign which owner Tony
oUyiistet put up.'tt ·reads, ''State1Park"
and· on.another liM ''Picnic SupplieS:"
Ouynstee said he · does not like his lax
mOney u&ed to put him out of busineM,
"but there isn't much I can do about it, I
gueS!I."'
San Clemente Chamber of Commerce
MaD;Bger Bob .Ev-.ns i!n't so sure .. He
said he would bring the matter befOre the
ctiamber tO see whether the gro~p ,-ouJd
oppmi:e tthe market cnnstructlo~·plan.
Savi.et• in San Pedro
• The 12,000-lon Soviet freighter Gavrill Dercbavln
tied up al San Pedro Monday, becomin11 lhe fir11
Ru55ian freighter te dock at the harbor since lhe
mid'1940s. Th~ shlp·carr)ed i .load of ·steel and,
other car10olrom J•elll·to .llle U.S .. ·bul wUI return
empty. ,
:) ~
~m!Tkot ts about I lislh the
size of local 1upermarkele, anct bl> tiia
pllnned to expand "aome, diy." He is
buying the lots 'between his market' and
the corner. and hopes to !Mtall • ·pirkfni
area there next-spring.
"Maybe the park market won't come in
for many years." he.said. clinglni to that
hope. But park officials 'plan to place tht
project in next year's ·budget.
During the six years Duynstee has oWn--
ed the market, he has operated through
the lean winter months, keeping his
services open for his neighbors between
the freeway and golf course.
However, the bus I~ which makes the
market pay ls the summer stite-park
camper purchases. 1"I'here's always a chance another
market will locate nearby." s 1 Id
Duynstee, who added, "I just didr\',t et·
pect my government to do that to me."
Ad<litional Room
Available Soon
At State Park
Relocation of the state parks depart.
ment area office in San Clemente will
create 15 acres of extra campground -
an' Increase of 50~perttnt of ualble acres
-to San Clemente State Park, depart.
ment officials nid.
Orange C.Oast Area administrative of.
fices, an equipment yard and staff hous-
ing will be removed ln the huge, $6.2·
million facellfting set for completion by
aummer or 1973.
Re-de!ign of the facility will provide
double the camping sites -seven group
campgrounds and 3 o o · 1in1le-family
camptitea.
Food and laundry concession building!
would M built on the 'rTelWay froqlage
road at the edge .of the park near. the
Avenida San Luis Rey 'bridge~
Six rutrooms will'be tluilt on the btach
and SI million will be apent in · landscap-
ing of the redesigned park. ·
George Rackelmann, pro}ect director,
said only trees and shrubs in the path o(
projected roadways would be ~moved.
and "ever'} effort wtll be made to
presttVe trees alrfady on the site."
Racke.lmann said no major earthmov·
Ing ill anticipated, that the canyon. and
bluff• wclold be preserved. ·
The. 1 to.acre' park will Undergo rrias!ive
improvements to prov'iiJe for expecttd at·
teridnce of ~.OGO perlOl'lac ptr'year,,
Park offici1ls.rePort conttant overflow
use of the exlsllng park durkl&· i:ecent
8\1.mmer aeasona. Advance1 reeerYa.tlOM
of every campsite were. noted durin1 ·tbt
manlhl ol July Ind AuaUst In 111119,
The first pht&e or improvement.,
teheduled for the 1971·'72 budget as a •op
priority project will coat P,.1751000, ln-
cludlo& jleo,OllO In 1tructurn.
ind pushlng the people. we.were ordeftd
ta shoot by Lt. Calley.
''I don't remember his esact words, but
h'e said ROmething like : 'Start firinl.1
"Calley and Meadlo 1tarted flrloi Into
the d.iteh down at the people. Me;adlo
turned to me and laid me: 'Shoot! Wh1
doh't you shOQt?' ·
"He was ayin1 and yeJlllla: to me.
"1 just said: 'I can't! I won•tr ud I
looked down at the l?'OW1d.
Planners Eye
Golf Course
Rezone Plan
Tht lat.eat plans t.o replace Harber HUii
Gall Course with re1idential unit.I will re...,.... 'N-y· llilOte "pllllnllJ
commtsaloners tn San .a ementt after; a
two-week postponement.·
,Reg ":~· the agent for the· go!I links
o~ by the Forster Tru!t, will ruwn1
hi.s request for tither a UJe pennlt,or a
icining amendment to allow constructJon
of at lea!t 400 ctindominium unit.I on the
foundering golf course.
Commissioners delayed action on the
request two weeks fg(> because of.
absentees on the pan~I' and the lack ,of
more precise plans for the patt6I:
1ituated below Harbor Estates.
If condominium use were permitted 'on
the land. density would .be about doable
that of the mobile homes first. propoltd
for the acreage.
In the face of strong neJ1hborhood PrO-
tuts. the city refused to allow the mQliile
home park land use; .
The only remnants of the golf links to
remain under the latest plan would be a
pitch-and-put course which would be used
for recreation by the condomin.llJlft
dweller!. ,
Wood initially opposed the commiaaion.
postponement, citlni the $1SO.a-day u -
penses dur~g such a delay, plus several
thousands of dollars in · coeta for prec114j
pl~ns ..
Countian Slain
During . Sh~tou~
Officer Killed
A pair of young ·Leia . Anaetos Coullty
sheriff's deputie! were s'lot-one fatally .
-early today in Compton, . by a La
H~bra man who wu killed'.by the dyiftl
lawman.
The shooting erupted after a routine
tr~Uic stop.
Dead are Deputy Lou Wallace; 21. who
succumbed at St. Fl'a.ncis ,Hospital in
Lynwood and Manuel R. Moreno, 22, La
Hlbra, whO was proootmeed dtad at·tbt
!hooting scene. 1
Deputy Al Campliell, 28", was ll!ted In
fair condition at st. Francis Hospl~
with bullet wounds in the knee and band,
suffered in a scufOe with the armed auspect. • .
Co~ner's depulieJ said 1 e c.o nail
capaul'" and a whitish powdir belieYed to
be ~in were found •on the a1atn
IUJlpeci'a body.
The Incident WIS touche<f ofI -·I.be
depullts •began•to 1e1rdl Morepo IJld lje whipped out 1 p~tol,' woonJlinl Campbell
tn ,the kl!«· !)lei! iht li1nd.
Movin( to 1ld hil Jllrlner~°'l>UIJ
• Wallact 'toot a !lug 1n the a en -
empt~ing bis own pari 1t.Mortna -then
collafiled H be cr1wled to \ho l?'trot car
to rodlo for help.
Deputy Campbell ·cr1wled to t.be'Vtld·
Clo and~ceaafully summoned aid.
IJJ•'. P1rtner never replnod -..~ ...
•! ..
e
-
Z DAILY PJLOT >C
lWIStrike . '
Date Slated
By Unions
I
-~
WASHINGTON (APl - A union leader
aald flatly today a national rail way strike
Will start at 12:01 a.m. (EST) Thursday.
The statement came from C. L. DeMi.3,
president of thi Brotherhood of Railway
Cierks, in addressin1 150 representatives
ol rfour unions aa they prepared to f.O to
Capitol Hill to persuade Congress not to
accept President Nixon's proposal to
J><?Slpope .a strike for 4S more days.
Oehnis' unlon ii· the largelt of the roUr
AFI,CIO unions repruent!ng about I001~ WPr~s !~ the wage dispute.
Dennis and other sj>eakers at the rally
baJ:gaining· ses~ion failed . to produce an
courage the railroads to stall in negotia·
tlons until the unions are crippled and f~ to meet maiiagement''s terms.
Ear:lier, Dennis siid the walkout Will be
called even if Cong'reu grants Nixon's re-
quest for the 4>day delaf.
In asserting his union "must strike, 1•
Dennis said the Railway Clerks, with a
membersbtp of about 20ll,OOO, are ready
to risk 1 jail terms, fines and public
pressure to win their demands. ;.
~is spoke after .a late-night
bragaining seMion failed to prod~ an
agreement or a voluntary postponement.
Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield
cf Montana suggested, meantime, that
Nixon summon negctiators in the dispute,
put them fn a room, and "lock the door
t----end throw -the-key away.~
l
He told newsmen that was the way
Presi dent Lyndon B. Johnson acted in a
similar-situation.
At the sa me time, Senate Republican
Leader Hugh ScoU of Pennsylvania said
Republicans had prepared legislation to
halt the threatened slrike for 45 days as
requested by Nb:on.
But Mansfield said be could see no
point in such legislation unless Nixon wu
prepared to take action now.
"The President has to take the in-
itiative in doiilg now what -if I read his
statement correctly -he would propose
45 days from now," Mansfield said,
Chairman Ralph W. Yarborough (I).
Tei.), of the Senate Labor and Public
Welfare Committee was said by an aide
to be disturbed by the idea of Congress
acting before all other attempts al &et-
llement were elhausted.
Cable Splicer
Electrocuted
A San Diego Gas &: Electric Co. splicer
was e.Jectrocuted in San Juan Capistrano
Thursday while worki.na en a
transformer.
O!ficia1s said William R. Davi.son, 26, of
Oceanside, was dead on arrival at South
Coast·Communlty Hospital. Davison was
married and the father of three
youngsters.
Davison came in contact with a high-
voltage wire while working on an un·
dergrouM utility system at Avenida
MaripMa and Calle Miguel. The accident
occurred at 9:16 a.m. No one else was in·
jured.
A spokesman for the utility said
Davison worked out of the Orange County
Operating District
Coast Border Patrol
Official Stricken
Border patrol Capt. Gene Harris, head
of the Immigration Enforcement Division
covering parts of the San Clemente
coastal area, was in a coma early today,
suffering from a major heart attack.
C.apt. Harris, head of the Oceanl.lde of.
fice of the patrol, was stricken with the
heart attack Monday night. He was term·
ed in critical condition and under in-
tensive care at an Oceanside hospital.
DAILY PILOT
Newport••• a..,. ..... t.
C•t• M"e
Clll:ANOE COAST PUlllS"11NG COM,AN't
R111D1rt N. W114
Pr•ld.nl 1r.• ,11111!11\11"
J1cl: It C11rl1y
Vici ,.,_111.,1 •r:f 0.'1oef•I M1Mttr
Tltom11 K11•il
Ect!ltr
1bofl'l11 A. ~urplii111
M1M111n' Editor
Ricll1rd P. Hill
Jtulll °''"" COl.rlly 1111•
O!fl-
C1d1 M_,: JlO Wttl..,. 51,.t N""'1 IMdl: 2211 W•t lllllOt l°"ltwf'lll • Lii-1etc11: m f1rnt A-Hlllllll!f!Otl l11cti: 1717J l..c:fl lolilltvt ... &111 ~fl; at Httlll El CMnn ll:MI
T11rsdiy, 0tumW 8~ 1970
OAIL PILOf lflN P"'M
SAN CLEMENTE STUDENTS WIN DECATHLON HONORS
Mike Peduni, Dale Evans, Jon Llmebrook
3 San Clemente Students
Take Decathlon Honors
Three San Oemenf.t High Schiol
sb.ldents have honors 0in tbe 1970 Orange
CoWlty Academic Decathlon awards pro-
gram -becoming the first Trltona to
enter the competition.
First-place wio in social studies and
eurrent -events categories-helped Dave
Evans take third in his varsity division.
Mike Peduzzi plactd in the English sec-
tion of the Scholastic ("B'' student) com·
petition, and Jon Llmebrook placed In
esthetics in the Honors division ("A"
gtudents ).
Of the 36 schools compeUng, San
Clemente was ninth in the team scoring,
but did not place in the first 10 in the
combined feam and lndividu.aJ tally,
Each school -selected a team of two
competitors for each of the "A", "B" and
"C" division• of the "brainpower" test.
Otl\er members of the Triton teams
were Grace Tool, honors: Sue Ekstein,
scholastic, and Vicky Woodard, varsity.
.In.an eill.!r~day of testing, the young
scholars answered b8tleries O f(fues:tions
in 10 academic subject fields. They were
selected by their school.s on the basis of
versatility in academic ach.ievement.
San Clemente High S c b o o I ad·
rniniJtraton had not entered tearrui in
previous years because the contesta were
based on IQ scores rather than grade
achievements.
Two Suspects Arrested
In LA KU111:'1ping Case
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two men who
held a banker's son in a car trunk for
several houn in demand for ransom were
being held today for investigation of kid·
naping, police-reported.
Lff Spath, 20-year-old son of William
Spath. was found In good condition in the
car Monday night after the two men
were stopped oo a freeway, poliCe said.
Young Spath, officers said, had spent
several houn in .the trunk.
Police said George Forrens, 35, and
Thomas LeRoy Coleman, 20, were booked
for investigation of kidnaping for the
purposes of ransom. Officers said they
were armed, but didnot resist arrest.
Two men armed with sawed..ofr
shotguns Sunday night went to the
suburban Granada Hills home of Spath .
48, manager of the Glendale branch of
the Bank of Amerlci. police said.
Officers said the men demanded the
bank·s weekend deposits -estimated at
more than $100,000 -and ransacked the
home after binding Speth, his wife and
son. When Spath said he couldn't get, the
money because he didn't have a key, the
Art, Crafts Club
Sets Yule Party
The annual Christmas party for
members and guests of the San Clemente
Arts and Crafta Club will be held Thurs·
day evening at the Elk's Lodge.
The Laguna Beach Festival Choral
Group will provide holiday music for the
7:45 p.m. event.
Each member ls requested to bring an
adult gift which will be dispensed by a
live Suta Claui during the evenin&'s ac·
tivilies.
National Chainnan
To Add.ress DAR Meet
~
men took the son and told the father to
get the money without telling police, of-
ficers said.
SpaUt followed their direc~ons, officers
said, takillg a bus ._to Las Vegas, Nev.,
and returning to Los Angeles. where he
was to deliver tO the kidnapers a key to a
bus, terminal. .. . .
Monday night, the kiduapers drove to
the Spath home in two cars -one of
them with the younger Spath Inside.
One of the men picked up the key from
Spath, and then they dr-ove away , police
said.
Officers followed the cars and then
made the arrests.
.
Building Activity
Drops in Laguna
Construction activity continued to
decline ill Laguna Beach during the
month cf November when the clty
Building Department issued only 20
building pennlts valued at $100,765.
This figure compared with an October
figure of $2.80,752 for 42 permits. Building
permits issued for a comparable period
in November, 1969, totaled 36 valued at
1270,928.
Total construction value for 1970 also
continued to lag far behind the total for
1969. The 1970 total to dale is 440 permits
valued at $2.3 million. Although the total
permits for the same period in 1969 was
only 476, the value of these 1111 i$.7
million, more than double the 1969 figure.
Of tbe · permits issued d u r i n g
November, 1970, only tWo were for single·
family home eonWuct(on, toa:ether
were for swimming pools, fenees a.nd
valued at $84,950. The remainina pennlt.I
alterations to uistln1 structures.
Fireplace Ashes
Touch Off Fire.
Day:Old fireplace ashes stored in a Sao
Clemente garage na red anew Sunday
e\•ening, sparking a blaze which ca\15ed •
substanUal damage to a garage wall and
·Defector
'Coverup'
. try Told
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The caplaln or
1 U.S. CoaSt Guard cutter wept after
being ordered lo return a Lithuanian
defector to Soviet custody Nov. 23, but
afterward tried to hush up the in cident, a
man aboard the cutter testified today.
Robert M. Brieze, a Lelvian refugee
who is president of the New Bedford
Seafood Producers Association, told · a
House foreign affain subcommittee that
Capt. Ralph W. Eustl1 told him he had no
clK>ice but to return the defector, Simas
Kudirka.
"At µtis time Capt. Eustis was crying,"
Brleze said . "He said that the orders had
come from the Boston office (of the
Coast Guard)."
Later, as the cutter was returning to
New Bedford, Mass., after fishing talks
with Soviet officials at sea, Eustis asked
the five ci vilians aboard "to keep the
matter qu iet," Brieze said.
He uid U.S. sailors who helped retum
Kudirka to the Soviet ship from which he
dtfected told him Kudirka "was either
unconscious or dead" when taken back
aboard the Russian ship, and had been
kicked repeatedly in a U.S. launch taking
him the~.
Previously he said he heard Kudirka
screaming for help and then saw him
with his face bleeding a11d a shirt torn off
after Soviet seamen hunted him down on
the U.S.' cutler and beat him.
The Coast Guard has suspended Eustis
1_nd two other orricers in.Jolved in the in·
cident pending an-invest1gatio1Tliue to be-
compleled lhu week.
Brier.e, who said he fled his country in
1944 after the Russians occupied it, said
he tried twice to get Eustis to contact the
St.ate Department before r e t u r n i n g
Kudlrka to the Soviets, but Eustis did not
respond. However, he said Eustis did lry
to contact the Soviet Embassy i~
Washington at the request of Soviet of·
ficers and "l think they got through."
"This Is about as sickening a story as
I've ever heard," subcommittee
chairman Wayne L. Hays (D-Ohio) told
Brieze. "The man responsible for order-
ing the return of this defectcr should be
court martialed, dismissed from the
service and preferably sent to Siberia."
Earlier, an official report, showed that
the Coast Guard admiral who ordered the
Lithuanian handed back to the·Soviets did
so in ,part beeause he did not want 11>
jeopardiz.e the fishing talks.
Clemente School
Madrigals Plan
15 Appearances
lf South Coast residents hear the
strains of Christmas carols this season ,
more than likely il will be music from
San Clemente High School's choral
students who plan at least 15 appearances
this month.
Wednesday the school's madrigals will
sing at the Balboa Bay Club, then al an
event at the school later in the day. The
madrigals also will sing at a large con·
cert at the high School Dec. 15.
Other madrigal singing events include
St. Andrew's Church on Dec. 17 and lhe
San Clemente Elk's Lodge Dec. 18. The
school quartet will sing at the lodge Dec.
20; and the a cappella choir will sing Dec.
26.
Sandwiched In between the concerts is
a recording session to cut new long-play
albums sold by the choir members with
proceeds going toward purchase of new
sound equipment for the music depart·
ment.
.,,.,, .......
Talking Policy
Jordan's King Hussein and President Nixon pose for photo~raphers
prior to their closed-<loor talks today on the situation in the Middle
East. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dyan is expected to meet Viith
Mr. Nixon in · Washington next week. President is attemptin~ to get
serious negotiations between Arabs and Israelis started a,gain.
Home Occupation Dispute
Faces Study -by Planners
The recent controversy over allowable
home occupations in San Clemente will
be met by city planning crilnmissioners
Wednesday . when they receive a staff
report and consider setting a commillee
to examine the matter.
Tickets on Sale
For Junior Miss ,
Pageant Friday
Ti ckets lo Friday evening's Junior Miss
Pageant at San Clemente High School
went on sale this week by members of
the sponsoring San Clemente Jaycees.
Friday nlghrs event in. Triton center
will mark lhe lirsl time ever that a local
J unior Miss competition has been hel d.
The $1 donation for the tickets will help
defray costs for !he pageant in which a
dozen area girls will vie for the chance to
represent the city in the state pageant in
Santa Rosa early next year.
The High School madrigal singers will
be included in the evening's en-
tertainment. A headline attraction also is
expected to be announced later this week .
Ticketa will be available through
Jaycee members or at the door the even-
ing of the 7:Ja p.m. pageant. They also
can be purchased through project
chairman Barrett Reeve at 492-8360.
Body of AEC Leader
Found in Lake Mead
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (U PI) -The bodies
of Atomic Energy Commi11sion Chairman
Theos J. Thompson, 52, and his special
assista nt , Jack Rosen. were recovered
from the wreckage of their plane in Lake
!\1ea d near here Monday.
Complaints by a San CI em en t e.
architect and the city·s former city
engineer brought the simmering issue tci
th~ surface recently. . ..
Architect Leon Hyzen sent a formal let-
ler of complaint to the city on the pra er.i
lice of build ing desig ner Eric Boucher,.
who works from his private re sidence:
Boucher currently is designing the new
community clubhouse for the city.
Eugene Ayer, now a private civil
engineer (once the city·s part-time
engineer) cited similar matters in his r~
cent scathing criticism of City Engineer'
Phil Peter. who obtained a business '
license for practice as a consultant fron4'
his own home.
On commissioners' agenda tonight is
submission of a staff report on the mat-
ter.
The speclllc sections g o v e r n I n &
permissible hon:ie occupations are in the.,
city's zoning ordinance. •
Commissioners may also form a corn·
mittee to examine the section -and the •
staff report -in deplh. ·
Clemente High
Hits Milestone
A San Clemente High School milestone
was recorded recently wh en five adult
delegates of the school's Parent-Teacher·
Student Association implemented the "S',' ·
in their new PTSA title by taking four
st udent delegates with them to an Orange-
County conference.
The student participation In the PT A
ronference in Garden Grove represented
all four classes of the school: Dana Ged-
des, seniors: Gary Shaner, juniors; Lyssa
Black , sophomore, and Jory Olson,
freshman.
Adult delegates were Dr. 11nd Mrs. J.
Emory Ackerman, and Mrs. Eugene
Koster, Mrs. Vernon Leif and Mrs. David
Robbins .
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
YOUR MONEY'S WORTH!
Many people don't rearize that carpetlllCJ Is one item that can be pur.
chaMd f« lffs money today than 30 years ilC)o.
H.,. are a few •ye opetien CJ I • a n • d from a .newspaper of
courtesy of the Santa Ana Ubrary. Compare these with today's prices:
1940,
194G 1970 INCREAS! 1940 1970 INCREASE
194G Cadllla< 51700.00 + $7600.00., "47% Pe•nl.lt Butter . 09c lb. .43c lb . •nv.·
• lHO ChoYTOlet $6.59.00 + $2395 .00 + 363•t. IS•n1n11 • 04c lb. .10< lb . :2401/1
San Clemente'!' ch8pt.er of the Daugh·
ters or the American Revolution will hear
the national chairman of the DAR's stand·
in& committee for ciUz.enshlp in a Wed·
nesday afternoon meeting.
Mrs. Robert Gallager of 'I\lsUn, the
national chainnan of the committee, wlll
address the local grolJ'P at 11:30 p.m. at
the home er Mn. Frank Osborne at 903
Avtn.ida Presidio.
window. , .
Fireman said the damage w~ set at
Stsb to the garage at 2S3 Calle VJCtOria: , 1
600-16 Tires
Chuck Rust
$6.45 $11.95
.14V2c lb. .49c lb.
292•;. (reciters .07c lb. .29c 414•;.
331% Movie Tht1ter .25c $2.00 8001/.
The fire Ignited the gnage wall at
about a p.m. an hour after Kathy Wells
placed the fireplace ashes in a'cardboard
boz th~ left them in the aarale..
Couple Enter Rest Home
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Koffman of San
Clemente -who became trapped for
day1 in their bathroom several weeks •go
until they wcr11 saved by police and
firemen -have entered a rest home
alter bospltll treatment.
The elderly couple entered Beverly
Manor Convalescent Hoapltal I n
Capistrano Beach this week .. nd plated
thtlt borne 1t 229 Trtfal11r Lane up for
aale. f
The biurre ordeal oceurred when Mr. Kollman,~. was ahowerlng Jn the lub
and slipped and fell beneath the running
water.
H'is leas lodged against th! d o o r ,
preventing Its opening from inside. His
wife Marie. wa1 in the room at the time,
but was too feeble to render aid.
The couple remained trapped In the
room for at least two days btfore friends
became wo·rrled and called the police.
Firemen removed the door from tts
hinges to frtt the couple. Koffman was
trea t~ for dehydr1llon, bruises and
other injuries at South Coast community
Hospital.
Leg.0.L•ml» .19Y,c lb. .99<1b. 509'.4 R. .. t. Steak Dlnne1 .3lc U .95 8421/.
T·lont Ste•k .161/tc lb. $1 .29 lb. 781'.4 Good C•rpetlng $8 oq. yd. & up $8 oq. yd. & up I 01/.
Perhaps another t ime we can compare tod1y't pricn with pri ces In 1194 when our family
ttarted In the carpet bu1lneu.
ALDEN'S .---,-•• -,.-•• -.-. o-,.-.G-,-. CARPETS e DRAPES
fUSTIN Call •••
ALDIN'I
110 ""' c.um> 1663 Placentia Ave.
1tl74 ~~!:',~~: c .. ,._ COSTA MESA
........ 646·4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -S.I., 9:30 to 5
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Llg••••a •&eh
tDIJ.ION
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:Vdl. 63, NO. 293, 3 SECTIONS, 21 'AGES. . . .
·)-~ ---· .
$15.3 . Million :
-~ 835-acro -par<:<l ol beachlrodt pro-
perty, including the controversial Salt
Creek beach are1,.Jw been pur<:bue<! by
AJco Community Devel~n Inc. from
il)4 Prudential Insurance Company ol-
America for $15.3 mHUon.
1be property has been !eyed from
Prudential for the pul two yean by the
Laguna Niguel Corporation, w b 1 c b
reeenUy w11 acquired by ACDI.
Civilians Slain
' '· .
"Adj1C<l!I to LiCuM Nlfuei•1 other ~ C4lat boldlllp,,u..;:.. to liove been
developed;by•tluol"'°"""lioll 11 Ni&uel
Shores.
A lt«m ,..,. -k•becniie known
pi.t development pl... woold cul oH
piblic a-. to ,tbe popwu Salt ·o:.a
•Wlmminl 111d IUl'flnl beocb u tbe .... llllt ol COUlllj/ lbl~l!UMl!t: oi the . lld
e
Calley Command
Refuse·d Ex-GI •
FT. BENNING. Ga. !UPI) -A aoldier
-who was under 1st Lt. William i:;:caUey'a
command at My Lai ·testilied .today he
refused to obey Calley 's order to shoot
screaming civilians in a ditCh where
mothers piled atop their childrm to save
them from automatic rifle fire.
The. witness, James JoSeph ~.
omploye or an elec1rical nwwf~
firm-in Brooklyn, N.Y., was the 35th pro-
1
• ...... duced by the gov•Mlent in ita attemp! to convict the dhnlnuttve Calley of thi'
premeditated murder of 102 civilians in
the Vietnamese village March 18, lMI. 1 Hi! testimony followed that of another
r
former soldier who sald he watched
Calley act as the Jone executioner of five
I
to 10 separate groups brought to the ditch
during a 00.mlnute periid.
Ours!, a huge man with black hair,
1ideburns and mustache, said he was a ·
private first class in the platoon ca!ely
commanded.
After his testimony, Capt. Aubrey M.
Danie1 Ill, the prosecutor. told the court
Dursi probably was ~ last prosecution
witness,. but U;iat be lt'ould not rest ffie
government cue without maldq an ef·
fort to find twi more witnessea be has
been trying to locate.
Durst said at Calley's order, he, Pfc
Paul D. Meadlo, and C&lley P,Jt their riftef' .. !ho ,.ri .,p 1'0lit!oo ......
ed people Into I ditch 1[ My !Al.
''Some started to cry -and they we.re
yelltnc:• he &lld. "Mei41• .... crylnl
llld ~ thO -1•· Wt wm order<d
to shoot by· Ll. Calloy.
"I dori:'t ?tmember ·hfs exact words, but
he said something like : 'Start firing.'
''Calley and Mudlo started f~ing into
the ditCb · down at the people. Meadlo
turned to me and told me : 'Shoot! Wby
don't you shoot?' '
"He waa crying and yellinC to me.
"I just II.id : 'I can'rl I .won't!' and I
looked down at the srowid-
Laguna Planners O~y
Village Variance Plans
Laguna Beach Planning Commissioners
JQOked ahead to the yeiir 2019 in granting
a Variance to add units to The Seas-Vaca·
lion Village Monday night .
Putting aside a suggestion by city al·
torney George Logan that an off·site
parking Jot lease be permanently tied to
the development, commissioners agreed
to 1accept a •~year lease, provided
developer Loren Haneline secures oH-site
parking by dedication or otherwise com·
plies with staff requirements.
Jri granting Haneline'• bid to add 13
unlta to his split-zoned property In Sleepy
Hollbw, plaMers also asked that spaces
Oruge Coast
Wea Cher
You 'll have to drive by lnstru·
, ments tonight whf!n Ute first big ~foi of the winter season rolls In.
Wednesday will be hazy with
temperatures in the 68 to 72
bracket.
INSWE TODAY
Have 11ou ever wondered
1Dhat U would bt llkt to toear
'4 nightgown huttad of a formal
to a ball? Reaction U told bt1
Bea Anderson, Page 13. •
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Ooly 11· lll!ys
Tll
CHRISTMAS
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for each C-Omple1 be designated on I plot
pla:n.
Plannlhg Commissioner James Schmill
cast the sole no vote citing a list of 10
previous, vu:~a,nc~s .1Tanted to the motel
complex.
"l think when we have to justify a
variance with legal advice .. it's aoul
searching," Schmi~ said. "We jeopa~dizl
our positiOl'I with one more variance.''
Sclmlltz Ibo took e:1ceptioo • t o
Haneline's plot plan showing 169 partine
spaces for the develoPmeht u opposed to
155 spaces listed by the City staff plua
five: "unusual" MN!cq. . ·
Citing the ·mott!r c)peraior's lncliuion of .
undersized spaces for compact CAn,
Schmitz said neYf unlta should be geared .
to today's standards.
•rA >toot by 7.foot space was standard
20 years ago for horses, but we don 't
drive horses dowfliowii anymore,·~ he
d·eclared. ·
Under terms of the variance, Haneline
will add eight units to the R-3 (multiple
residential) portion of hi.a property and
five unlta to the 01 (commercial) sec·
lion. .
Provision for five additional par~nl .
spaces will be made on a·tealtd 1lte with
300 fett of the de\felopmentrTht varlanct
· ali!o 1llow1 bdlldiJ\i"helibl·-lool ln·H·
ceso ol that ·111onc1. · ·
'A:mahl' ClOsing
This Wee~nd
I 'Ow well tnown.airtstma1 • p e r 1
"Amahl and tne Nllhl Vlllton" WW he
presented 'al tbe La~• Mou1ton
Playhouse in Laguna Beach Satufday at 2
p.m. anil-1 p.m: and again ~Y at 2
_p.m. ~ ,_
Directed by lmn Kimber, thO hour·
Iona opera 1tars aever1I Llpna Beach
re1iden\I with 10.ye11r-01d 1D-. v I d Rull
playing.the·p1rt ol Amilll:
Tickets for'tbt ptrformlnct1 are •t.for
~-and atudeotl,.11.IO I« ldultl
1nil 11 I« pl1yt,ouie members. TlcWo
m.fY he ,_... brea!UofJ .. iloa'tlllct It ffl.1741. . ,
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ORANGE C:<;lUNTY,"CALIFoRNIA ..
.
P·aid for .Sal·t ..
Salt CM!k llA).d·to'th.-Niiu<I r~r•· u-.
C.owt action to force rest.oratiOn of
pubUe access w11 looming ~n ·the cor--
pcirafien• was tikeif Over' by ACDI.'
The lctklil wu de:lerred ·when 'ACDI
stepped. in with an· (Jffer· to provkie two·
aCttSS routes to the beach and to convey1
to tbe ·county ita: interest in 11'.4 acre! Cf
beach, on which Prudential held a deed or
011!1-AT -lllTA . Sherfff's .. D•p•tf•Weffece
bill!, lkma with U.I 1cru ol land for
two.puhllc J>ltktnc lots, lo be llOld 1t [air maiket vllue. -~
Cost· ,ol acquiring . the . Prudential trust
deedJ was placed at 1341,000, or f/J.25 a
front foot, considtred· e:1tremely low for
belch properlY,.
1be .accus road! ll!d mgineering and
1radini woald be donated by ACDL
Since the C<lllllly bu II.I million set
0
Creek
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aside [6r belch 1cqulsiUoe. !lnlllcin& the
ACDI offer would not be i problem, ao-
cording to John Kill~, yecuUye. uols-
tant to P'l!th District' Supervisor' Alton E.
Allen.
Killefer said today the offer bas been
"approved in principle" by the Board of
Supervisors and detalls are being worked
out by CQUDty ~d department.a.
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• DEAD AT ·SCl!NI ·
Suspecr MoreM
L&guna ·Council,
Planners Meet
On City Issues
Hughes·· E1npire Scramhlf
Nears Nevada Showdown
Th< Laguna Beach City Council and
Planning Commission have scheduled a
joint meeting at 7j~ p.m. Wednesday in
eity council chambers, to discuss study
prior!Uea.
Wlth Main Beach development,
establi*ment ol a beachfront hotel' zone,
hillside development standards, Pat;km&.
the general plan and an array o:l other
major planning matters crowding the
commission's agendas, it was agreed tha t
a. priority list should be established:
The planners will report on the pro-
gress of their studies at the Wednesday
session, and councilmen will etpreu
their views regarding the relative Im·
portance of time elements Involved.
The meeting waa set up following a re-
cent exc~8nge between councilman
Edward Lorr, who felt the council had
been relP!Ja in f_ailing t9 set up~ m0r1
specific prloritie1, and Planning Com·
mlasion chairman William Lamhaurne,
who poiJ:lted out the long Usl of "priority"
projectl already being tackled by the
pla~ •
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -The scramble
that developed when Howard Hughes left
on V'acatlon for the Bahamas and fired
~ chief of his ~ million Nevada em·
plre. headed for a showdown today.
A court bearing was scheduled to
render a legal decision on a temporary
restraining order barring a takeover of
the Ntv&d1 boldin~ by Hughes' corporate
leaders.. It was to be fOllowed by a joint
meeting of 'both skies in the dispu(e in a
se550n mediated' by the governor.
A Hughes spokesman said these two
developmenta. "should end the whole
thing by nightfall.'' ,
At stake was control of the lucrative
chain of ·hotels and casinos in the gambl·
ing capital which made the millionaire
recluse the 1tate's single I a r g est
employer.
When Hughes ordered the tiring of his
top Nevada aide . {rom · his remote
hideaway In the Bahamas a power strug·
gle developed ~tween the gambling
operator• ,and Hughes' corporate e:1·
ecuUves.
Gov. Paul ·Lault, his intere1t aputred
by Iii• diaunlly that lbreat.ned the t.u-
yieldinc rtchea to:hll .Ute, ltepped m.
By Phil lnterlandl •
I
"• • , ..... fer My '•lk1 •nd •ll'lht Olhtr 'olk1, How Alloul a l'l1e1
te l'ork-whon ·n..y 0. le tlie ,..,t-o!llee?.... · · ·
-
Laxalt aald he entered the strange cate
lo deU!tmine U there would be any. effect
upon continued operaUona o'f the hotel!
and casinos.
Laxalt said he talked with the
mysterious bUllonaire Monday and that
Hughes told him he was on a pleasure
and business trip "in good condition." He
told the govtrnor . he approved of the
change in leadership of his Nevada
operatiom.
The governor said he took over the role
as conciliator in an attempt to bring the
two feuding factions together.
The governor said Hughes to.Id him by
telephone that he authorized the firing of
his top aide in the $500 million-a.year
Nevada operation. However. that ai~e.
Robert Maheu, a former FBI agent who
has been Hughes' right hand man during
the four years the 64-year-old recluse
spent in this gambling capital. resisted
his owler by an out..lde group represen.
ting the parent Hughes Tool Company-of
Howton. ' ·
Laxalt met with the 11 members of the
Hughes Tool board of directors In ·the
afternoop an4 said he was going to Ilk
Maheu to voluntarily relinquish control of
the Nevada operations.
Laxalt met later with Maheu but could
not convince him to abandon the fight.
Seeurity guards hired by Maheu still
were patrolling the casinos of the "strip"
gambling 1pa1 and Maheu stlll was
physically In control of the hotels.
Coed Launching
Christmas Tree
Saving Drive
Mtirta Jorgensen, 17·y~ar-old. Laguna
Beach High School junior and member of
the school's Conservation Club' ls con-
ductinl, a one-woman drive lo wipe out .
Christmu' tred:. .
Marti'• paiUctilar target Is the tyt>t of
tree that Is cut in the forest and t<>ssed
out into the trash after It bas playrd its
brltf Cllri1tmal !'Ole. • .
"Don1t let them kid you,'' s•ys Marta.
''All thote Christmas trees don 't come
from tree f1rms1 Our 'forests need all
their trees. 'ni.i1 destrucUve trade lw:
gone on long enough."
Residenta who want to "savt lreea for
Christma.-," Mid tbe )'Olllhful .con-
1erv11tionlltl, should con1idtr buying and
de<or1tlnf a Uvt tree In . 1 tub II they
cloe't Ill<• artl!lcl1l tr.ts. • .
"You can hJve It Indoors, then plant I\
out.side, or maybe Jutt feeor.ate a sraw·
In& out4oor tree," lhe otue1ll. • j
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Today's Flnal
...
TEN aNlS
Parcel
Avc0 Community Developera Inc., ..,.
owner of the entire Lacuna N)fQel
C.0QJOration_SollJlLCowliy .lloldlq,.la' a
builder of master planned commllddea,
The corporaton already has JtarUrd" '
Laguna Niguel project wl>ch will ~
development·of approxbnately 15,080 ll9'
Ing unib plus recreatioa&J facllJtiel ovet
the nett 10 yeara. •
ea
Traffic Stop
Brings Shots.
In Compton
I
A pair of young Los Angeles County
sheriff's depuUes were !hot -one fataUY,
-early today ln Compton, by a La
Habra man who was killed by the dying
lawman.
The Shooting erupted after a roulinl
traffic stop.
Dead are Deputy Lou Wallace, 21, who
auccumbed . 11 SL FranclJ jlolp1tll in
Lyowood and Manuel It Moreno, Z2, Lo
Habra, who wu pronounced dud ai U.
shooting scene.
Deputy Al Campbell, 28, Wal l~tli! In
fair condition at St Francia Hospital,
with bullet wounds In the ·knee and hand,
suffered in a scuffle with the armed
suspect.
Coroner's deputies said s e co n a J
capsules and a \;Yhltiah powder believed to
be heroin .,.,'f!re found on the 1la!n
suspect's body.
.The incident. was touched off wben the
dep1.1ties begart to 1earch Moreno ail be
whipped out a pistol, wounding Campbell
in. the knee, then the hand.
Moving to aid his partner, Deputy
Wallace took a slug in the abdomen -
emptying bis own gun at Moreno -tbtn
collapsed as be crawled to the patrol car
to radio for help.
Deputy Campbell crawled to the vehl·
cle and successfully summoned lid.
His partner never rea:ained eon·
sciousness.
Resurface Job
lnterrupt.s
City Parking
baguna Beach city officials and visit.on
to city hall are having to plrk their cara
elsewhere today as Forest Avenue ta
front of the city offlcea is resurfaced.
The Laguna Beach Fire Dep.artme.nt
even parked the city's fire engine at a
parking meter so the paving wort
wouldn't be interrupted in .case of an
emergency.
Oifector of Public Works Joseph
Sweany said the entlre section of Forest
Avenue between Third Street aod Laguna
Canyon Road is receiving a new blacktop
and lhe city is saving about •1,000 in the
process.
The saving comes because half of the
cost is being paid jpintly by the Laauna
Beach County .Water District and 'Thi
South Coa~t County Water Dlstrict. ·•
The two districts have been laylna new
water pipe through Laguna Beach and
had to tear up part of Forest Avenu. ddr.
Ing the project. Under their agreement
wlth the city, the distrlcls hive to poy te
re11urface any 1treet they Jay pipe under.
Sweany said the water companies were
going to pave only hal! of Forest Avenue,
so tht clly decided to el'lter an aireement
with ~ to resurface the entire street.
Thf: cost of the project to· the city wUl
not exceed $1,000, accordJn& to s....,,y.
,,,. dir<Ctot said portions of the otn;t
may tie.closed durina Q1e week.Jons pro.
ject, but the workers will N>t Interfere
with the morning and evtnina nab hour
traf!ic tbroulh Lal[lllla GlllyOA.
· Dorn Heads LA Board
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -~ supervlso~ lodliYi· unanimously ' e
Supenlsor Warren M. Dorn u
chllhftin for the comln1 year. t!lnl -• cffded Ernest E. Dehl. ,
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Ra il Strike • • • •
Date Slated
+ ; I ' By Unions
• WASIID!GTON (AP) -A W1ion leader
aald OaUy today a national rallw1y strike
will start at 12:01 a.m. (EST) ·Thursday.
The statement came from C. L. DeMis,
president of the Brotherhood of Railway
Qtr~ in addressing 150 representaUves
of four unions as they prepared to go to
Capitol Hill to persuetae Congress not to
accept President Nixon's proposal to
: postpcine a s~e for 4S .more d•rs· ~Demu.' ilnlon Is .the. largest o/ the lour
: :U-U!O unions· repre9entmg about
! q,000 workeri in the Wage dispute. ~ ·"Dlinnis and Other spe'akers at the r1Uy
t •i'lainintf session failed to produce an
: QOUrage the railroads tQ atall in negoUa· ~ ~ until the unions are , crippled and
~ to meet management's ttnnsi
• Eai;lier. ~is said the waJkout will be
: cal~ even it c.Gngress grants Nixon's re·
• quest for the 45-day delay.
: rn asserting his union "must strike,"
Deltnls 'said the RaJlway Clerks, wiUi a
1 memb;.ership of about 200,000, are reidy
' to 1~k, jail term&, fines and public
preuure to win their demands.
. Denpis apcite afLer a'Jate·nl,a:ht
braj:alning. ~ failed lo produce ' an
agreement or a voluntary poetponement.
. Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield
«if .Montana suggested, meantime. that
Nixon summon negotiators in the dispute,
put them in a room, and "lock the door
and throw the key away."
He told newsmen that wu the way
President Lyndon B. Johnson acted in a
similar situation.
At the same time, Senate Republican
Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania said
Republicans had prepared Jegiala'Uon to
. halt tbe threatened slrlke for 45 day·s as
requested by Nixon.
But Mansfield said be could see no
point in such legislation unless Nixon was
prepared to take action now.
"The President has to take the iJJ..
ltiative in doing now what -if I read his
statement correctly -he wou.ld propose
.CS days from now," Mansfield said.
Chairman Ralph W. Yarborough (D-
Tex.). of the Senate Labor and Public
Wellare Co~ttee was said by an aide
to be disturbed by the iCfea of Congress
acting before all other attempts at aet.-
tlemmt were exhausted.
Cable Splicer
Electrocuted . '
A San Diego Gas & Electric C.O. splicer
was electrocuted in San Jua.a Capistrano
Thursday while workit11 on a
transfonner.
Officials said William R. Davison, 26, of
Oceanside, was dead on arrival at South
Coast C.Ommunity Hospital. Davison was
married and the father of three
youngsters.
Davison came in contact with a high-
vol~ wire while working on . an wi-
dergniijnd utility system at Avenida
Mariposa and Calle Miguel. The accident
occurred at 9:16 a.m. No one else was in·
jured.
A spokesman for the utility said
Davison worked out of the Orange County
Operating District.
Coast Border P atrol ·
Official Stricken
Border patrol Capt. Gene Harris. head
()f the Immigration Enforcement Division
covering parLs of the San Clemente
coastal area, was in a coma early today,
suffering from a major heart attack.
Capt. Harris, head of the Oceanside of.
fice of the patrol, was stricken with the
heart attack Monday night. He was term·
ed in critical condition and under in-
tensive care at an Oceanside hospital.
DAILY PILOT
Newpert lea&li
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Prnid'"t MA PWUthw
Jeck R. C11rl1v
Viet Pra.!tlll'll er,. ~fl Ml111t•r
Thom•• K,,,.a
Editor
Jftom•• A. M11?hln1
Mtl\l:llllSI E•ltor
Rldier4 P. Htl
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•
LY ILOT Sii " P'llttot
SAN CLEMENTE STUDENTS WIN DECATHLON HONORS
Mike Peduul, D•le Event, Jon Llmebrook
3 San Clemente Students
Take Decathlon Honors
'Ibree San Clemente High Schiol
·students have honors In the 1970 Orange
Ciounty Academic Decathlon awards pro-
gram -becoming the first Tritons to
enter the competition.
First-place win in social studies and
CW"rent events categories helped Dave
Evans take third fn bis vatsity division.
Mllle Peduzzi placed In tlie English sec-
tion of the Scholastic ("Bl' student) com-
petition, and Jon Limebrook placed in
esthettcs in the Honors divlalon ("A"
student.) .
Of the 36 schools competing, San
aemente was ninth ln the tum scoring,
but did not place in the first 10 in the
combined team and l'nd ividual tally.
Ei.ch school selected a team of two
competitors for each of the "A", "B" and
"C" divisions of the "brainpower" test.
Other members of the Triton teams
were Grace Tool , honors; Sue Ekstein,
scholastic, and Vicky Woodard, varsity.
In an entire day of testing, the young
scholars ansv.:ered batteries of questions
in 10 academic subject fields. They were
selected by their schools on lhe basis of
versatility in academic acltievement.
San aemente Hlgh SC boo I ad-
ministrators had not entered teams In
previous years because the contests were
based on IQ scores rather than grade
achievements.
Twb Suspects Arrested
In LA Kidnaping Cf¥e
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two men wbo
held a banker's son in 1 car trunk for
ieveral hours in demand for ransom were
being held today for lnvesUgaUon o( kid·
naping. police reported.
1.ee Spath, 20-year-oid m of William
Spath, was found in good condition in the
car Monday night after the two men
were stopped on a freeway, police said.
Young Spath, officers said, had spent
several hours in the trunk.
Police said George Forrens, 35. and
Thomas LtRoy Coleman, 20, were booked
for investigation of kldnaping for the
purposes of ransom. Officers said they
were armed, but didnot resist arrest.
Two men armed with sa.,..eck>ff
shotguns Sunday night · went to the
suburban Granada Hills ht'>me of Spath,
48, manager of the Glendale branch or
the Bank of America, police said.
Officers said the men demanded the
bank's weekend deposits -estimated at
more than $100,000 -and ransacked the
home after binding SpaUl, his wife and
son.
When Spath said he couldn·t get the
money because he didn't have a key, the
A rt, Crafts Club
Sets Yule Party
Toe annual Christmas party for
members and guests of the San Clemente
Arts and Crafts Club will be held Thurs•
day evening at the Elk's Lodge.
'The Laguna Beach Festival Choral
Group will provide holiday music for the
7:45 p.m. evtnt.
Each member ls requested to bring an
adult gift which will be dispensed by a
live Suta Claus during lhe evening's ac·
ti vi ties.
National Chairman
To Address DAR Meet
San Clemente's chapter of ~ Daugh·
ters of the American Revolution will hear
the national chairman of the DAR'• stand·
Ing commltt.ee for ci tizenship in a Wed·
nesday afternoon meeting.
Mrs. Robert Gallager of Tustin, the
national chairman of the committee, will
addre&\ the local group at 12:30 p.m. at
the home of Mn. Frank Osborne at 90l
A •enlda Presidio.
Mr. and Mrs. Olarles Koffman of San
Clemente -who became trapped for
days in their bathroom aever1l weeks ago
untlJ they were saved by pollce and
firemen -have e.ntertd 1 rest home
after hospital trt1tment.
'lbe eklerly couple tnttred Beverly
Manor Convaleteent Hoapltal I n
1 ClplJltano tBeach lhls week and pl~ed
tbelr borne at 229 Tr1f1tcar Lane up for
aala.
The bizarre-ordeal occurnd when Mr.
Koffman, 861 wu abow1rtna 1n the tub
men took the son and told the father to
get the money without telling police, of·
ficers said.
Spa&h followed1their dite,:Uons, officers
said; takfng a bus to Laa Vegas, Nev.,
and returnlng to Los Angeles, where he
was to deliver to the kidn1pers a key to a
bus terminal.
Monday night. the kidnapers drove to
the Spath home in two cars -one of
them With the younger Spath ins1de.
One of the men picked up the key from
Spath, and then they drove away, police
said.
Officers followed the cars and then
made the arrests.
Building Acti,ity
Drops in Laguna
Construction activity continued to
decline in Laguna Beach during the
month of November when the city
Building Department issued only 20
building permits valued at $100,765.
This figu re compared with an October
figure of $280,752 for 42 permits. Building
perm.its Issued for a comparable period
in November, 1969, totaled 36 valued at
$270,928.
Tot.al construction value for 1970 also
continued to lag far behind the total for
1969. The 1970 total to date is 44Q pennits
valued at S2.3 million. Although the total
permits for the same period in 1969 was
only 476, the value of these was $5.7
milllon, more than double the 1969 figure.
Of the pe nnit.! issued d u r i ·n g
November. 1970; oilly two were for single
family home construction, together
wert for swimming pools, fences and
valued at $64,950. The remaining permits
alterations to existing structures.
Fireplace A slies
Touch, Off Fire
Day<Cld firtpla~e ash es stored in a San
Clemente garage flared anew Sunday
evening, &parking a blaze which caused
substanlial damage to a garage wall and
window.
Fireman said tbe damage was set al
$150 to the garage at 233 Calle Victoria.
The fire ignited the g'arage wall at
aOOu• 8 p.m. an hour after Kathy Wells
placed the fireplace ashes in a cardboard'
bo1 then left them Jn the 1arage.
and slipped and fell beneslh the running
water.
His legs-kxiged-egainM--the---d o o r ,
preventing Its opening from inside. His
wife Marie. w1s in the room al the tlme1
but was too feeble to render aid.
The couple remained tr1ppea in the
room for at least two days before h'lends
became worried and called tlw: -police.
Firemtn removed the door rrom Its
hlf18CS to free the couple. Koffm1n w11
treated for dehydraUon, bruises and
other Injuries at Soolh Coast CoOll!lunill'
H01pital.
•
=Defector ·
'Coverup'
' 'fry Told .·
WASHINGTON IUPI) -Thecaptaln of
a U.S. Coast Guard cutler wept after
being ordered to return s Lithuanian
dt;fector to Soviet .custody Nov. 23, but
aftenvard tried to hush up the incii!ent, 1
mao aboard the cutter testified today.
Ro~rt M. Brieze, a Latvian re(ugee
who ls president of the New Bedrord
Seafood Producers Association, told a
House foreign affairs subcommittee that
capt. Ralph w. Eustis told him he had no
choice but to return the defector, Simas
Kudirka.
"At this time Capt. Eustis was crying,''
Brieze said. "He said lhat the Orders had
rome from the Boston office (of the
Coast Guard)."
Later, as the cutter was returning to
New Bedford, Mass., after fishing talks
with Soviet of(lcials at sea, Eu stis asked
the five civilians aboard "lo keep the
matter quiet," Brieze said.
He said U.S. sailors who helped return
Kud irka to the Soviet ship from which he
defected told him Kudlrka ''was either
unconscious or dead" when taken baclt
aboard the Russian ship, and had been
kicked repeatedly io a U.S. launch taking
bim there.
Previously he said he heard Kud irka
screaming for help and then saw him
with his face bleeding ud a shirt tom of f
after Soviet seamen hunted him down on
the U.S. cutter and beat him.
The Coast Guard has suspended Eustis
and two other: officers involved in the In-
cident pending an investigation due to be
completed thss week.
Brieze, who said he fied his country In
1944 after the Russians occupied it, said
he tried twice to get Eustis to contact the
State Department before r e t u r n i n g
Kudirka to the Soviets, but Eustis did not
respond. Howe ver, he said Eustis did try
to contact the Soviet Embassy in
Washington at the request of Soviet of-
ficers and "1 think they got through."
"This Ls abc>ut as sickening a story as
I've ever heard,'' subcommittee
chainnan Wayne L. Hays (0-0hio) told
Brieze. "The man responsible for order·
ing the return of this defector should be
court martialed, dismissed from the
aervice and preferably sent to_Siberia."
Earlier, an official report showed that
the Cout Guird admiral who ordered the
Lithuanian handed back to the Soviets did
so in part because he did not want to
je-dl%e the fl.<hlng talks.
Clemente School -Madrig als Plan
15 Appearances
If South Coasl residents hear the
strains or Christmas carols this season,
more than likely it will be music from
San Clemente High School's choral
students who plan at least 15 appearances
this month.
Wednesday the school's madrigals will
sing at the Balboa Bay Club. then at an
event at the school later in the day. The
madflgals also will sing1 at a large con·
cert at the high School Dec. 15.
other rn adrigaJ singing evenls include
St. Andrew's Church on Dec. 17 and the
San Clemente Elk's l..odge Dec. 18. The
school quartet will sing at the lodge Dec.
20, and the a cappclla choir will sing Dec.
26.
Sandwiched In between the concerts is
a rerording session to cul new long·play
albums sold by the 1'.hoir members with
proceeds going toward purchase of new
sound equipment for the music depart·
men!.
\
Tall~ing Policy
Jordan's Ki· g Hussein and President Nixon pose for photographers
prior to. th closed-door talks today on the situation in the Middle
East. Israel Defense Minister Moshe Dyan is expected to meet with
Mr. Ni xon ~ Washington next week. President is attempting to get
serious negotiations bet\veen Arabs and Israelis started again.
Home Occupation Di spu_te
Face s Study by Planners
The recent controversy over allowable
home occupations in San Clemente Will
be met by city planning commissioners
\\'ednesday when the y receive a staff
report and consider setting a committee
to examine the ma tter.
Tickets on Sale
For Junior Miss
Pageant Friday
Tickets to Friday eve!UJ1g's Junior Miss
Pageant at San Clemente High School
went on sale· tlilil week by members of
the~ponsoring San Clemente Jaycees.
Friday nighl's event in Triton 6mter
v.'ill mark the first ti me ever thal a local
Junior ~1iss competition has been held.
The St donation for the tickets will help
defray costs for the pageant in which a
dozen area girls will vie for the chance to
represent the city in the state pageant in
Santa Rosa early next ye.3.r.
The High School madrigal singers will
be included in the evening's en·
tertainment. A headline attraction also is
expected to be announced later this week.
Tickets will be available through
Jaycee members or at the door the even·
ing of lhe 7:30 p.m. pageant. They also
ca n be purchased through project
chairman Barrett Reeve at 492·83!50.
Bo dy of AEC Leader
Found in Lake Mead
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPll -The bodies
of Atom ic Energy Commission Chairman
Theos· J. Thomp5"n, 52, and his specia l
assistant, Jack Rosen, were recovered
from the-wreckage of their plane In Lake
Mead near here Monday,
Complaints by a San C I e m e n t e
architect and the city's former city
engineer brought the simmering issue to
the surface recently.
Architec t Leon Hyzen sent a formal let-
ter of complaint to the city.on the prac·
lice of building designer Eric Boucher,
who works from his private residence .
Boucher currentl y is designing the new
community clubhouse for the city.
Eugene Ayer, now a private civil
engineer (once the city's part-time
erigineer) cited-similar matters in his re-
cent scathing criticism of City Engineer
Phil Peter, who obtained a business
Hcense for practice as a ronsultant from
his own home.
On commissioners' agenda tonight is
submission of a i;taff report on the mat·
ter.
The specific ~ions go" er n Ing
pe.rmWib~ home occupations are in the
city·s. zoning ord inance.
Commissioners may also form a com·
mittee to examine the section -and the
staff report -in deplh.
Clemente High
Hits Miles tone
A San Clemente High School milestone
was recorded recently when five adult
delegates of the sch90l's Parent·Teacher·
Student Associat ion Implemented the "S''
in their new PTSA title by taking four
stude nt delegates with them to an Orange
County conference.
The student participalion In the PT A
conference in Garden Grove represented
all four classes of the school: Dana Ged-
des. seniors; Gary Shaner, juniors; Lyssa
Black, sophomore, and Jory Olson,
freshman.
Adult delegates were Dr. and ?>.1rs. J.
Emory Ackerman. and Mrs. Eugene
Koster. Mrs. Vernon Leif and ?>.1rs. David
Robbins.
YOUR MONEY'S ~ORTH!
Many people don't reali1e that carpeting 11 -item ttiat can be par.
chaMd for less money today than 30 years ago.
Here are a few eye openers 1J 1 e a n • d · from a newspaper of 1940,
courtesy of ffte Santa Ana Ubrary. Compare these with today's ,prices:
1940 1970 INCREASE 1940 1970 INCREASE
1940 Cad illac: $1700.00 + $7600.00 + 447'/, ,._anut Butter .09c lb. .43c lb. 477'/.
1940 Chevrolet $659.00 + $239S.OO + 363'{. 81n.1n11 .04c lb. .10c lb. 240'/, •
600-16 TlrH $6.45 $18.95 292% Cr1cker1 .07c lb. • ·29c 414'/ •
Chuck R .. 1t . 14'hc lb. ,49c lb • 331% Movie Thuter .25c ' $2.00 MIO,-.
L.,-0.Lomb .19'hc lb. .99< lb. 509% Re1t. StHk Dinnei .3Sc $2.9S 842•/,
'
T-.s1oak .16'hc lb. $1 .29 lb. 781% Good C1rpetlng $8 sq. yd. & up1$1•.q. yd. & VJ o•;.
• .
Perh1pt 1nother time we c1n compai re today's
1tarteil In tM c1rptt bu1ine11.
prices with "r1c" In 1894 wht~ our f1mlly
-' ALDEN'S
.--,-•• -,.-.-•• -. o-.. -.-~.~ CARPETS e DRAPES
JUSTIN Cell •••
ALDIN'S uo ""' c•-ms 1663 Placentia Ave.
11374 ~=·T= c.m: COSTA MESA
......... 646-4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 lo
0
5:30 -Fri.; 9 to 9 -Sat. 9:30 lo S
-
I
17
17
/ • . . •
Sa• Clemente
Capis•rano EDITION N.Y. Steeb
YOL 63, NO. 293, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ' '
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, 'OECEMJER I, 1970
Saddlehack Residents Jetport· Plan
By JOHN VAL TERZA
01 tllt Dflthl l'lltl "'"
More than 200 foes of proposals to use
Bell Canyon or El Toro MCAS as jet
airports gave a sound thrashing to the
plans and members ol the county airport
commission Monday in hearings at a
Mission Viejo school.
Complaining that the idea of consultant
Ralph M. Parsons posed safety, noise and
pollution problems, the Saddleback area
resident.s vented their wrath at members
-ti -ti -ti
Scores Give
Suggestions
On 'Airport
Foes by the score trooped t o
microphones ?o.tonday to register anger at
proposals to convert either Bell Canyon
or the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station
into major jetports.
Comments ranged from the derisive to
helpful hints on a possible location for a
new air terminal in Orange County.
Among the foes were :
-Mike Shearer, president of the
Mission Viejo Homeowners Association,
Who cited 1,000 signatures on his group's
petition opposing the site locations. The
names were obtained after only a week's
work, he said. "We will have many more
to hand to the superviso rs Dec. 15. Do
people want an airport, or the preserva·
tion of thei r environment?"
Shearer cited the beauty and orderly
growth of the Mission Viejo community,
lamenting that planners zone every inch
of the area's soil, "but none zoned our air
space, which is just as important." He
urged swift planning for a regional
airport at ·camp .Pendleton before any
further work on Bmaller jetport.B.
-Laguna Hills resident Harry Nash, 1
retired airline executive, who described
himself as a veteran of the industry. He
cited a Ralph M. Parsons suggestion that
El Toro MCAS could be converted to
joint, military-civilian use under a
"limited well disciplined program.
"Well. 1 submit that such an operation
Is just like pregnancy: it would not re·
main small in size," he quipped.
-Art Speedlove, chairman of the
Aegean Hills Homeowners Association,
who praised airpo rt commissioners for
their patience in enduring Jong protests
on airport matters. "They are long liUf·
fering and have heard nothing but
negative comments. If you want to hear a
real tirade sometime. listen to Newport
Beach residents," he said.
Speedlove asked commissioners if they
had reviewed his group's suggestion lo
use a section of the San Joaquin Hills as
a jetport site. Members of the panel said
they had not yet received an opinion from
the Parsons consulting firm in Los
Angeles.
-San Juan Capistrano Mayor Tony
Forster, who relayed the city's chagri1t
because the consultants recommended
San Juan's sewage treatment system to
gerve a proposed Bell Canyon terminal.
"But they never asked us for our opinion
and that was presumptive," he said.
-San Clemente High School student
president Jay Wentz, the leader of a peti-
tion campaign which has gathered 2,600
signatures of opponents. His eloquent
plea for conservation won the longest ap-
plause of the evening.
Orange Coast
Weather
You'll have to drive bY Jnstru·
ments tonight when the first big
fog of the winter season rolls in.
\Vednesday will be hazy with
temperatures in the 68 to n
bracket
JNSmE TODAY
Have you ever wondered
what it would be like to wear
a niglttgown instead of a formal
to a ball~ Reaction is told by
Bea Anderson. Page 13.
Ooly 17 Days
TIA
CHRISTMAS
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(NII_.. II
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of the county advisory board for more
than an hour until som.eone on the panel
complained that it had gone far enOUJh.
Commissioners then replied, defending
their rnle as qppaid advi.son to county
supervisors, adding that lhe comm.l.sslon
members were not tbe consultanta who
proposed the plans. ~
Commissioner Robtrf A. Clark remind·
ed the audience that. "we are •five men
just like the people •ltting next to you.
We are willing to bear your comments,
,.,..... ·--·~ .......
1·
t I
A six-cent stamp honoring
General Douglas. MacArthur
will be issued next Jan. 26, in
Norfolk. Va. The stamp is
printed in red, blue and black.
The portrait is based on a
photo taken early in 1944 dur-
ing an Inspection flight by
MacArthur over New Guinea.
StUdents' Sale
Of Yule Album
Pro ves Succcess
•
l
San Clemente High School students
chalked up saJes of 1,425 copies of a Jong-
play ChTistmas music album which they
sold to raise funds for more recording
equipment to be donated to the school.
The total sales of the second Jong·play
record produced by the students were
Jogged Monday as the campaign officially
ended. Profits have not yet been
tabulated.
Contest chairman Debbie Sheets said
she has extended the sale three more
days, but the late purchases will not
change the scores made by students in
the competition.
but not your animosily. disguft and
tirades. We are here to serve you. '
With ·that admonishment the tenor of
the meeting was temper~ somewhat, ~t
the opposition to the je1port idea coo·
tinued .
Official representatives . from El Toro
MCAS, Leisure World, Mission Viejo
homeowners, Aegean HUis homeowners.
San Clemente Hiih ·School students and
other groups llJ marcl;ied tD the
micr&pbene te complain.
At one point Clark asked for a show of
hands to determine if a proponent existed
. in the audience.
No one raised a hand.
"Frankly, I'm in favor of throwina·the
entire Parsons repon out, myself," Oark
said.
He said lhe commission wouJd gather
Information from the Mission· Viejo bear·
ing alonl wll.h nearly ·too hours of other
study and testimony and 1ubmit a recom·
mendation Dec. 15 te county lUpervisors.
Commissioners qreed that cl<splte the
commoa objections beard Monday, they
did learn newinformauon on the iuue. · Amonf lhe new knowledge, ,the)'.agreed,
was tha the take off pattern of jeta from
Bell Canyon would take the aireraft over
the San Onof~ nuclear aeneraling cem·
plex, San Clemente State Park and the
Western White House.
Opponent.s aaid each facility would be
vulner1ble to aircraft accidenll.
Other points of abjection lncluded:
-That the tlOise ltDUated by 1Jel
aircraft at ell.bet the ~-fadl!IY. oe
Bell Canyon would destroy the screnltJ.
monetary value and life style of the SU.
dleback Valley which lies five milea frol9
Beu Canyon and even cioeer lo tbt
Marine Corps base. • ·
-That Orana:e County residents hi:•
never been oUiclally polled iD ID'elecdel
to detennlne if they even wut a!rpltC
expao.&ion iD the county.
GI 'Refused to Shoot'
I
Ex-soldier Tells of DM obeying Calley's Orders
In Courts on
Hughes Set11p
LAS VEGAS (UPI ) -The scrJl"!>lt
that developed when mwilrd 1111~ left
on vacation for the Bahamas and fited
the chief ·of hi• $300 mWlon.Nevada-em=-
pire headed for a showdown today.
A court heaiing w1s scheduled to
render a legal decision on a temporary
restraining order barring a takeover of
the Nevada holding by Hughes' corporate
leaders. It was to be followed by a joint
meeting of both sides iii the dispute In a
sesson mediated by the governor.
A Hughes spokesman said these two
developments, "should end the whole
thing by nightfall."
At stake was control of the lucrative
chain of hotels and casinos in the gambl·
ing capital which made the millionaire
recluse the state's single I a r g est
employer.
When Hughes ordered the firing of his
top Nevada aide frOm his remote
hideav.·ay in the Bahamas a power strug~
gle developed between the gambling
operators and Hughes' corporate ex·
ecutives.
Gov. Paul Lax alt. his interest spurred
by the disunity that threatened the tax·
yielding riches to his state, stepped In.
Laxalt said he entered the strange case
to determine if there would be any effect
upon continued operations of the hotels
and casinos.
premeditated murder or 102 civilian.!! in
the Vietnamese village March 16, 1968.
His testimony followed that of another
former soldier who said he watched
Calley act as the Jone executioner of five
to 10 separate groups brought to the ditch
during a 90-minute periid,
Dursl, a huge man with black hair,
sideburns and mustache, said he was a
private first class In the platoon Calely
commanded. ·
After his testimony, Capt. Aubrey M.
Daniel lil, the prosecutor, told the court
Dursi probably was the last prosecullon
witness. but that he woul.d not rest the
government case without making an ef-
fort to fiod twl more witnesses he has
been trying to locate.
Dursl said at Calley's order, he , Pfc
Paul D. Meadlo, 11nd Calley put their
rifles in the port arms position and push-
ed people Into a ditch at My Lai .
"Some started to cry and they wert
yelling," be Bald. "Meadlo was crylne
and pushing the people. We ftt't orderM
to shoot by Lt. Calley. ,
''J don 't remembef bis exact words, but"
be said something like: ·start firtnt.'
"Calley and Meadlo started firinl Intel
the dltch down at the people. Meadll
turned to me and told me: 'Shoot! Wb:z
don't you shoot?'
"He waa crying and Ytllln& to me.
"I just said : 'I can't! I won't!' and I
looked down at the sround.
Unfair Competition Planners Eye
Golf Course Grocer Protests Plan
Eor .BUrs.iriess at Pq,rk ' .
Rezone Plan
The latest pt1n1 to rtpl1ce Harbor Hilll
Goll Cow:se with residential llJllll 'Ot11
riapjiear Wednelcf8t ba!Ore ~
CO!nmllslonen in Saa··ClenMlil6-lltc ;
two-wtek postponement
.. ,
By LYN .RAllRlll RJCQ
Of lfl• OIUW l"lllt ·-~""~~~
Prote.!lt of proposed 1overnment com-
petition with local merchants near the
San C1emente State Park was raised to-
day by a local grocer wlio sayB he might
be forced out of business.
Plans for a major facelift of San
Clemente State Park include construction
of a market and laundromat In the park
near the San Luis Rey bridge pedestrian
entrance.
But on the inland Bide of the bridge In-
tersection lies the El Camino Market.
also known aB State Park Market,
because of the sign which owner Tony
Duynstee put up. ,ft read!, "State .Park"
and on another line "Plcnlc Supplfes."
Duynstee said he does not like his tax
money used to put him out of business,
"but there isn·t much I can do about it, I
guess."
,San Clemente Chamber of Commerce
Manager Bob Evans Isn't so sure. He
said he would bring the matter before the
chamber to see whether the group wouJd
oppose lfie market construction plan.
' __ _.
t IU•I T....._
l)Qyntlff't m1r11.tt ii fbodl a *'11 IM
atzuf•locAl.su~eli. llld M lla4 plltmed to expand "sonie dl'Y.'' He, fl
buyinJ lhe lots between his market and
the corner, ind hopt> to lnitall a parkfn(
area there next spring.
"Maybe the park market won't come ln
for many years'," he saJd,,clinglng to that
hope. But Park officials plan to place the
project in next year's budget.
During the 1i1 years Duynstee has own-
ed the market, he has operated through
the lean winter months, keeping ,his
services open for his neighbora between
the free.Way and golf course.
However, the b!'hlf'.ss which makes the
market pay is tM Bummer llate-pirk
camper purchases~
."There's always a chance another
market will locate nearby," s a i d
Duynstee, who added, "I just didn't ex·
peel my 1overnment to do that to me."
Additional Room
Available Soon
At. State Park
Relocation of the state parks depart·
ment area office In San Clemente will
create 15 acres of extra campground -
en increase of 50 percent of usable acres
-to San Clemente State Park, depirt·
ment officials 1aid.
Orange Coast Area administrative of.
fices, an equipment yard and staf~hous
lng will 'be removed in the huge, $6.2·
million' lacellfting set for completion by
. Reg Wood, the agent for the 1011 linkl
owned by the Forster Truat, will resume
his request for tither a use permit or •
zoning amendment to allow comtrucliod
of .at least 400 rondominiwn Wtils cia tbf
IOunderlng golf course.
Commissioners delayed action on tbl
request twe> weeks ago because °'
absentees on the panel and the lack ot
more precise plans for the p&rcelf
situated below Harbor Eat.ates.
If condominium 111e were permitted .flli.
the land , density would be about doubl"
that of the mobile homes first pr.,_.
for the acreage.
In the face of Btrong neighborhoOd proo
telits, the city refuaed to allow the mobilt.
home park land use.
The only remnants of the goU links to
remain under th~ latest plan wouJd ·be II
pitch·an~put course which would be·med
for recreation by the condomtnlunt
dwellers. , ·wooc1 initially opposed lhe ·commillfall
postponement, citing the SI50-a-day a;.
penses, durlna Bucb a delay, pllll several
thousand! of dollars in coats for precise plan!. .
Countian Slain
During Shootout;
Officer Killed
summor of 1973. A pair of ·younr·t«-AnplerCounty,
Re-design of the facility will provide sheriff's deputies were Bbot. -one fatally
-early today lb Compton, by a La double the camping sites -seven group Habra man who wu killed by the dyine
campgrounds and 3 0 0 single-family la~"!an. .
campsites. The shooting erupteQ after 1 ruutlnt
Food and laundry concession buildings traffic stop.
would be built on the freeway front.age Dead are Deputy Lou Wallace. 211 who
succumbed at St. Prancls Hospital in road at the edge of the park near the Lynwood and Manuel R. Moreno, 22, La
Avenlda San Luis Rey bridge. Habra, who was pronoW\Ced dead at the
Six restrooms will be built on the beach abootlng scene.
and Sl million will be 11pent in landJCap-Deputy Al campbell, 211, was U..'"ted in
ing of the redesigned park. fair condiUon at St. Francis Hospital,
George R.ackelmann, project director. with bullet wounds in the kntoe and hand,
1ald only tree11 and shrubs in the path o( 11uf£ered in a 11CuiOe with the. armed
projected roadways would be removed, 1W1pect.
and "every effort will be made to · Qoroner's deputies aald 1 econ a·I
preaerve trees already on the site." capSU!ea and 1 whJtish PQwdet believed to
R.ackelmann said no major earthmov-be heroin were found on the lllin
· Ing it Utlcfplted, that the .canyons and. B~'• body.
. bluilB wottkt, ~ p~r~ed. · . . L =--r~· incldenf "as touchtd off when the 1-'he llO«:re Pltk ,will underao-maNlve , epuUe1 began to search MOreoo arid hi ·
• lmJ>r<lvemeiltl to !>fOV~ !qr~~ il· .,blpped <Mii 1 pblol, """1ldlllc.cllnpboll
tend111ce of 113$,1(\0 "'"""'per ye1F. : ln.U>e kite. th<in U>e·lllnd, · '
Park officlalt· report cbnitant O\lei-now "Moving: to aid bis partner, Deputy
.u.se of the existing park dUrlng recent WaUact took a alug In the 1bdomen ~
• iummer 1e11DM. Advanct reaerv1t\001 emptylna bis own cun at Moreno -then
of every campsite were noted durlnc' the collapitd 11 he crawlf'd to the plitl'ol car
months of Ju~ .end AU(UJt In 1161. to rodlo for help. . '
The flnt . pbue of lmprovenlenll:, Doputy Campbell crawled to U>e nhl· Soviets in San Pedro
The 12,000.ton Soviet freighter Gavrtil Derchavtn
tied up at San Pedro Monday, becomint the first
Russian freighter to dock at the harbor since the
mid-1940s. The ship carried a load ol steel and
otlter carao f1'1>tn Jaiian to the U<i., but wlli-teturn
empty.
ICh<dujed for tl>e1971·'72 budloCa a lop cit llld IUCCOA!ully llUlll1llOllOd aid.
priority project will cool. t1.1n,ooo, i.. His' partner novtr nralnod -
clucliJli $,000 In 11ructum. , • 1eio11111Hs.
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Rail Strike .
"
Date Slated
By Unions
-~ •• 0.._ WASH!ljGTQN (AP) -A union leader
-.. :llald flatly today a national railway strike
.... ...-·ill·start at 12:01 a.m. (EST) Thursday.
J ... The statement came from C. L. De.Mis, ;._.,. ' . ""r:ires1dent of the Bt()therhood of Rall way
"';.._ CJerb, in addressing 150 representaUves
-ol four unions as they prepared to go to
-Capitol Hiii to persuade Congress not to
accept President Ni.1on's proposal tG
tpone a strike for 45 more dars.
"t>enitls' unJon U the Jatiest of the four
Ft,C'JO '\mions represeilting about
,rxxT workera in tbe' .. wage dl..sputi
Dennis and olher·s'Peikers at the rally
rgaining session failed tG produce an
urage the railroads 'to ital.I 1n negotia·
ons until the unions art crippled and
reed to meet management's terms.
_ Earller,.Dennis sahi the walkout will be
_11.!ed:even if Congrea grantl Nl%on'1 re-
uest for the 451:ify delay .
'Jn asserting his union ''must slrike,"
nnis said the Railway Clerks, with a
embership. of about 200,000, are ready
risk j\:il ierms, fines and public
· ressure to .win. .their demands.
;Dennis spoke after a late-nJgbt
. againing ,sessiOll failed to produce an
reement or a voluntary pottponement.
Senate MajOrity Leader Mike Mansfield
· Montana suggested, meantime, that
.. xon summon negotiators in the dl.spute,
put them in a room, and "lock the door
and throw the key away."
He told newsmen that was the way
President Lyndon B. Johnson acted in a
&imilar situation.
At the same time, Senate Republican
Leader Hugh Scott of-Pennsylvania sali!
lf.epubUcans had prepared legislation tG
'°'It the threatened strike for 45 days aa
•q\lcsted by Nixon. ·
-But Mansfield said be could see no
point in such legislation unless Ni.J:on was
prepared to take action now.
"The President has to take the in-
itiative In doing now what -111 read his
statement correctJy -he would propose
45 days from now," Mansfield said.
·· Chairman Ralph \V. Yarborough (0.
.;.~ex.), of the Senate Labor and Public
Welfare Committee was said by an aide
~ be disturbed by the idea of Congress
ll:Ctlng before all other attempts at set·
,"'1ement were e.lhausted. •..
·cable Splicer
Electrocuted
A San-Diego Gu-'-Electric Co. spli~er
was electtocuted \nrSan Juan~Capialrano
Thursday while working on a
transformer.
·,•Officials said WUUam R. Davison, 28, of
Oceanside, was dead on arrival at South
toast Community Hospital. Davison was
married and the father of three
)'Oungsters.
-1·Davison came in contact with a high·
flilltage wire while workJng on an un-
•rgroWld utility system at Avenida
'Mariposa and Calle Miguel. The accident
~urred at 9:16 a.m. No one else was in· ~-spokesman ~r the utility &1id
·Oivison worked out or the Orange County
Operating District.
Coast Border Patrol
Official Stricken
Border patrol Capt. Gelne Harris, 'head
of the Immigration Enforcement Division
covering parts of the San Clemente
coastal area. was in a coma early today,
suffering from a major be'art attack.
Clpt. Harris. head of the! Oceanside of.
fice of the patrol, was stricken with the
heart attack Monda y night. He waa te.rm·
ed in critical condition and under in·
tensive care at an Oceanside hospital.
DAILY PILOT
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SAN CLl!MINTI STUDENTS WIN DECATHLON HONORS
Mllce Pedu:u.J, D•I• Ev•n•, Jon Llmebrook
3 San Clemente Students
Take Decathlon Honors
Three San Clemente. High Schiol
students have honon in the 1970 Orange
County Academic Decathlon awards pr<r
gram -becoming the first Tritons to
enter the competition.
Firat·place win in social studies and
current events categories helped Dave
Evans take third Jn his varsity division.
Mike Peduzii placed in the English sec-
tion of the Scholastic ("B" student) com-
petition. and Jon Limebrook placed in
estheUcs in the Hooors divls100 ("A"
atudents).
Of ·the 36 schools "'1llpetlng, San
Clemente waa ninth in the team scoring,
but did not place in the first 10 in tht
ctlmblned team and individual tally.
Each school Rlttted a team of two
cumpetitors for each of the "A", ''B" and
"C" division! of UJ.e "brainpower" test.
other members of the Triton teams
were Grace Tool, honors; Sue Ekstein,
scholastic. and Vicky Woodard, varsity.
In an entire day of testing, the young
scholars answered batteries of questions
in 10 academic subject fields. They were
selected by their schools on the basis of
veraaWity in academic achievement.
San Clemente. High S c h o o I ad-
minilitrators had not entered te.arns in
previous years because the contests were
based on IQ score.s rather than grade
achievements.
Two Suspe~ts Arrested
In LA J(idnaping Case
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two men who
held a banker's son in a car trunk for
several hours in demand for ransom were
being held today for investigation of k1d·
naping, police· reported.
Lee Spath, 20-year-old son of William
Spath, was found in good condiUon in the
car Monday 'm&hf af~ th• two 1ntn
were stopped on a freeway, police said.
Young Spath, officers said, had spent
several hours in the trunk. .
Police said George Farrens, 35, and
Thomas LeRoy Coleman, 20, were booked
for investigation of kldnaping for the
purposes of ransom. Officers 1ald they
were armed, but dldnot resist arrest.
Two men armed with sawed-off
shotguns Sunday night went to the
suburban Granada Hills home of Spath.
48. manager of the Glendale branch of
the Bank of America, police said.
Officers said the men demanded the
bank's weekend deposits -estimated at
more than $100,000 -and ransacked the
home after binding Spath, his wife and
son. When Spath said he couldn't get the
money because he didn 't have a key, the
Art, Crafts Club
Sets Yule Party
The annual Christmas party far
members and guests of the San Clemente
Afts and Crafts Club will be held '[hurs·
day tvening at the Elk's Lodge. \
The Laguna Beach Festival Choral
Group will provide holiday music for the
7:45 p.nl . event.
Each 'member ta requested lo bring an
adult gift which will be dispensed by a
live Suta Claus durln& lhe evening's ac·
tiVltles.
National Chairman
To Address DAR Meet
San Clemente's chapter of the Dau&h·
ters of \he Amttlcan Revolution will hear
the national chainnM of the.OAR's stand.
Ing committee for clUzenship in a Wed·
nesday aftemoon meetlng.
f\.trs . RoberL Gallager of Tustin, the
national chairman of the committee. will
addreM; the IOcil group at 12:30 p.m. a\
the home of Mrs. Frink Osborne at 903
Avenida PrelldJo.
men took the son and told the father lo
get the money without telling police, Of·
ficers said.
SpaUt followed their directions, officers
said, taking a bus to Las Vegas, Nev.,
and returning to Los Angeles, where he
was to deliver to the kidnapers a key to a
bus tenninal. ,
Monday nigh~ .the-lddnapen drov• In
the Spath home in two cars -one of
them wHh the younger Spath Inside.
One of the men picked up the key lrom
Spath, and th~ they drove away, police
said.
Officers followed the cars and then
made the arrests.
Building Acti,ity
Drops in Laguna
Construction activity continued to
decline In Laguna Beach dw-ing the
month of November when the city
Building Department issued only 20
building permits valued at $100,'765.
This figure compared with an October
figure of $280,752 for 42 permits. Building
permits issued for a comparable period
in November, 1969, totaled 36 valued at
$270,928.
Total construction value for 1970 also
continued to lag far behind the total for
1969. The 1970 total to date Is 440 permits
valued at $2.3 million. Although the total
permits for the same period in 1969 was
only 476, the value of these was $6.7
million, more than double the 1969 fijl.IJ'e.
Of the permits iuued d u r I n a:
November, 1970, only two we rt for single
family borne e<1nstructlon, together
wert for swimming pools, fences and
valued at $&4,9$0. The rtmalninR pernULs
alteratlons to ulstin& structufes,
Fir~place Ashes -Touch Off Fire
01y~ld fireplace ashes store4 In a S.n
Clemente aarage flared . anew Sunday
e\'enlng, sparking a blaze which caused
substanual damaae to a gart&e wall and
window.
Fireman uld the damaae wu set at
$160 to the aarage at 233 cane Victoria.
The flrl!! l&nited the aaraa• wall at
about a p.m. 111 hour after Kathy Wells
pla~ the fireplace asht• In a cardboard
bor then left them In the 11ra1e.
Couple Enter Rest Home
Mr, and Mtt. Clarles Koffman of San
Clemente -who became trapped for
days in their bathroom several wee.ks aao
until they wtre saved by police and
firemen -have entered a rest home
and •lipped and fell bon"th the ruonln1
water.
Kia leaa lodaed •&•Inst the d o o r •
prevenUna lta openln1 from Inside. Hla
wife Marie, was in the room at the Ume,
but we1 too feeble to rendtr •Id.
-after hospital treatment. •
Tbt elderly couple entered Beverl,y
Manor Conv1letctnt Hospital i n
Capistrano Beach Ulla week and pl1ced
their home 1t m Trafalaar Lane up for
1ale.
The couple remained trapped In the
room for at least two days befort friends
became worried and calltd the police.
The bizarre Ordc1l occurred when Mr.
Koffman, 86, was abowerlna 1n lhe tub
Firemen removed the door lrom Its
hinges to free the couple. Koffm•n was
treated for de hydration, bruises and
nlher Injuries pt South Coaat community
H"pltal.
Defector
1
'Cov.erup'
':fry T()ld
WASllINGTON CUP!) -The captain of
' ' a U.S. Coast Guard cult.fr wept alter
&eilig ordered to return a Lithuanian
defector to Soviet c4st9(1y Nov, 23, but
after.ward tried to hush up lhe Incident, a
man aboard the cuuer testified today,
Robert M. Brleze, a Lat vian refugee
who is president of the New Bedford
Seafood Producers Association, told a
House foreign affairs su bcommittee that
Capt. Ralpb W. Eustis told him he had no
choice but to return the defector, Simas
Kudirka.
J:At thia.tlmt.Cap.t Eufti:f wa!l ,cryjna;,''
Brieze said. "He said that the orders had
come from the Boston office (of the
Coast Guard)."
Later, as the cutter was returning to
New Bedford. 1.1ass., after fishing talk s
with Soviet officials at sea, Eustis asked
the five civilians aboard "to keep the
matter quiet," Brieze said.
He said U.S. sailors who helped return
Kudirka to the Soviet ship from which he
defected told him Kudirka "was either
unconsc ious or dead" when taken back
aboard the Russian ship, and had been
kicked repeatedly in a U.S. launch taking
him the ....
Previously he said he heard Kudirka
screaming (or help and then saw him
with his face bleeding asid a shirt tom off
after Soviet seamen hunted him down on
the U.S. cutter and beat hlm.
The Coast Guard has suspended Eustis
and two other orficers involved in the in·
cident pending an investigation due to be
completed thss week.
Brieze, who aald he fled his country In
1944 after the Russiam occupied it, said
he tried twice to get Eustis to contact the
State Department before r e t u r n I n g
Kudtrka to the Soviets, bj!t Eustis did not
respond. However, he sa1d Eustis did try
to contact the Soviet Embassy in
Washington at the request of Soviet of.
flcers and "I think they got through."
"This Is about as sickening a story as
I've ever heard," subcommittee
chairman Wayne L. Hays ([).Ohio) told
Brieze. "The man responsible for orPer·
ing the return of this defector should be
court martialed, dismissed from the
&ervice and preferably sent to Siberia."
Earlier, an orricial report showed that
the Coast Guard admiral who ordered the
Lithuanian handed back to the Soviets did
so in part because he did not want to
jeopardize tht fishing talks.
Clemente School
. '
Mallrigals Plan
15 Appearances
Jf South Coast resldents hear the
strains or Christmas carols this season,
more than likely It will be music from
San Clemente High School's choral
students who plan at least 15 appearan ces
this month.
Wednesday the school's madr igals will
sing at the Balboa Bay Club. then at an
event at the school later in the day. The
madrigals also will sing at a large con-
cert at the high School Dec. JS.
Other madrigal slnelng events include
St. Andrew's Church on Dec. 17 and the
San Clemente Elk's Lodge Dec. 18. The
school quartet will sing at the lodge Dec.
20, and the a cappella cholr will sing Dec.
211.
Sandwiched In between the concerts is
11 recording session to cut new Jong·play
albums sold by the choir members with
proceeds going toward purchase of new
sound equipment for the music depart..
ment.
Talkitag Policy
Jordan's King Hussein and President Nixon pose for photo~raphers
prior to their closed.door talks today on the situation in the Middle
East. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dyan is expected to meet lvith
Mr. Nixon in Washington next week. President is attemptin,g to get
serious negotjations between Arabs and Israelis sta rted again.
Home Occupation Di spute
Faces Study by Plan11ers
The recent controversy over allowable
home occupations in San Clemente will
be met by city planning commissioners
Wednesday when they receive a staff
report and consider setting a cOmmlttee
to examine the matter.
Tickets on Sale
For Junior Miss
Pageant Friday
Tickets to Friday eventng's Junior Miss
Pageant at San Clemente High School
went on sale this week by members of
the sponsoring San Clemente Jaycees.
Fripay night's event in Triton Ce_nter
v>'ill mark the first time ever that a local
Junior J\,fiss competition has been held.
Th e $1 donalion for the tickets will help
defray costs for the pageant in which a
dozen area girls will vi e for the chance to
represent the city in the state pageant In
Santa Rosa early next year.
The High School madr igal singers will
be included in the eveni ng:s en·
tertainment. A headline attraction also is
ex pected lo be announced later this week.
Tickets will be available through
Jaycee members or at I.be door the even.
in g of the 7:30 p.m. pageant. They also
can be purchased through project
chairman Barrett Reeve at 492-8360.
Body of AEC Leader
Found in Lake Medel
LAS VEG£ Nev. (UPI ) -The bodies
of Atomic Energy Commission Chairman
Theos J. Thom pso n. 52, and his special
assistant. Jack Rosen. were recovered
from the wreckage of their plane In Lake
11 .. read nea r here Monday,
Complaints by a San C I e m e n t e
architect and 1he city's former city
engineer brought the simmering issue to
!he surface recently.
Architect Leon Hyzen sent a formal let·
ter of complaint to the city on the prac·
I.ice of build ing desig ner Eric Boucher,
who works from his priva te residence.
Boucher currently is designing the new
commu nity clubhouse for the city .
Eugene Ayer, now a private civil
eng ineer (once the city's par·t-time
engineer) cited similar matters in his re-
cent scathing criticism of City Engi neer
Phil. Peter, ·who obtained a business
license (or practice as a consultant from
his own home.
On commissioners' agenda tonight la
submission of a staff report on the mat·
ter.
The specific &ections g o v e r n i n g
permissible home occupations are in the
city's zoning ordinanct.
Commissioners may also form a com·
mittee to examine the section -and the
staff report -in dept h.
Clemente High
Hits Milestone
A San Clemen te lligh School milestone
\vas recorded recently when five adult
delegates of the school's Parent·Teacher·
Student Association implemented the "S"
in their new PTSA title by taking four
student delegates with them to an Orange
County conference.
The student participat ion In the PTA
e<>nference in Garden Grov e represented
all four classes of the school: Dana Ged·
des. seniors: Gary Shaner, juniors; Lyssa
Blac k. sophomore, and Jory Olson,
freshm an.
Adult delegates were Dr. and J\,irs. J.
Emory Ackerman. and l'\lrs. Eugene
Koster. Mrs. Verno n Leif and ~-lrs. David
Robbins.
YOUR MONEY'S WORTH!
Many people don't realize that corpetlnCJ ls one item that can be pur.
~d for Ins money today than 30 years aCJO.
Hel'9 ore a few eye openers CJ 1 e a n • d from a newspaper of 1940,
CMrteSy of tilt Santa Ano Ubrary. Compare lt!tst wtrh today's prices:
1940 1970 INCRIAS! 1940 1970 INCREASE
1"40 Codlll•< 1$1700.00 + $7600.00 -1 44791, P .. nut Butter .09c lb. .43c lb. 477°/.
1940 Cho•rolat $659.00 + $2395.00 + 36.1'!. l1nana1 .04c lb. .lOc lb. 240o/.
600-16 TlrH $6.45 $11.95 292•;. Creckers .07c lb. .29c 414'/o
' Chuck Ro11t .14'h• lb. .49c lb. 331% Movie Th11t1r .2Sc $2.00 aoo•;.
L..-0-L...,b .19'hc lb. .99c lb. 509% Rest. Steak Dlnne1 .35c j $2.95 842e/o
T-.. n• StNk .1 6'hc lb. $1.29 lb. 711% Good Carpeting ~I 1q. yd. & up1$8 1q. yd. & up1 0%
'•rftieps 1nother tlme we can comp1re tocl1y'1 prices with pricts In 1194 whtn our family
1t1rted In the carpet bu&lnesa.
--------IANTA ANA, OU.N•l
TUSTIN C.U ••••
ALDIN'S
llD HILL CA'IPm
& HAPlllU
11174 I"!"', T1,tf111, Collf.
tll·JJ44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS 8 DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA ,MISA
646•4838
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -Sit., 9:30 to S
•
:-=---------------------------------------
TV DAILY LOG
TUESDAY
DECEMlllt I
l:OO B lit,._ (C) (30) Jtrry Dunphy, hu! Udell.
Ct QllC ~ (t) (60) n Th Alttn SMw (C) (55) Con·
cTuslon of the •ho• wm be '"" •tier tilt l1keri B1skttb1U 11rne.
Guests lrt J1mti Dru!)', [. J. Pt•k·
er, Ed McM1hon, Hink HIUins
Rlch11d Annour. '
U "DAYS OF WINE AND * ROSES"·Part I-JACK
LEMMON, LEE REMICK
D Six O'Clock MMM: "'Dl)'S ti
Wfne and Rola" P11t I (dra1111) '63
-Jack temmon, lff Remick
Ch1rlu Sickfo1d. A public rt11tloni
min lin1tly perw1du: hla wift to
become 1 "sod1I" drinker and •In
lime bOth becom1 conflrmtd alco·
tlolics.
D Diel ¥11 D1'e (30) flt Thi n111tstonu (C) (30)
m l!JJ®"" '"' cCJ (!O> EE Pater Q11r11 (30)
!l!l Ho<-.. """ (Cl (30) Im™• r .. n, (30)
Ill ........ 31 ICJ (30)
El3 lslllldl hi 1111 S.1 (C) (30) EI!> I.Ii Hori ,,.,,.. .. htridl
QJ lfnl 11 tlls R91111d (C) (30)
l :JO 0 Candid C:.11tr1 (30)
•
"" • 1111 (I) "" ... (Cl (!O) CilA 1rt Ktnrlf Price llld Ulldl
Martel.
D llll hllo ICJ C!Ol 'boJ c.. YoU S.." eor., ..ta 111 _,
contnt ill llOi* ol willlilll I
color TY, W Ills "'*Y h too '"*·
D !HHIJmMC -<I ., 'li""lllli: (C) ,..._.. • ., r.,,...
(dram•) '70-ltoDttt Corlfld, Carol
LJl'lllJ, l" lllajoll, Lob Ntttltton. J1111 Wy1tt. TlttM 111.1nt find their
111111 put to !ti 1rt•ltat tat whtn:
they 111 ti.Id llostlll bJ two kid·
n1pera.
m ""' ""' -ICJ c90l Gut,ts: Henry Glbton, Don RGbtrt· '°"· .fhl CIJ1 Btothtrs, Klirtn w,.
""'·
·-(C) (ID) Em! l85W1u .. I D1t (C) (30)
An •••r -wlnnin1 procr1m about Cllic.ao p.,chlltrist Dr. El111bttll
Kubler-Ross 11111 lltt comp1alo111ti.
but· mllstic 1pproech to tM car•
of the 1trrnl111Ur m. cm httlr1' •• Lmn1 (30)
ii) .. """ ... ....... ICJ (!OJ
''°' D llll film w.w -*• -ii: (?) "INiioft" (drtm•l 70 -
Jtmu Drury, Klthl')'ll Hays, WoodJ
Strodl, SNn Gtrrl10n, RM Buttons.
A convict plob to 11t1pe from 1
mulmu111 aecurtly prison.
m•--ICJ 1301
fD,., -ICJ (!O) """"" Utt U.S. 111'11 to I coalition ID'f'lll•
mtftt In sa1ionr•
IE.._,, CCJ C!Ol
&I~ • Al .. (30)
Ill)-(!O)
m 1" FIJln1 Nan (C) (30) t :l5 U UUn Wnp-U, (C) m HNvr E4flp!Dtnt ADct111 C90> m r mew; I"' £11111111 °" <JO> M ecoloa 11 m br A. Scott Miller 1:30 8 eit CIJ T• ..... Wltll lM
which Ii berth 1 celebrllion or th! (C) (30) Pennr and Pobr ni1
n1tur1! world and •n indietmenl ot '"'' fram homt when they bt-
man·s perversion of tilt envilOfl· lint thl't '" kffpin( thtir fttlltf
men!. f '· lo ..-. ,.. (ll) Sodlf StatritJ (t IOlll flllrt,.11 I l"wu.p .. ,,11'11
""n. Destrt 11__} (CJ sltw1rdtu (Undt fosttr).
-~· C301 nn. --cCJ C3Dl ..... m fu(ltiws iW AllOf (30) cius!on of 6 Piii show.
CD AIC Ewuil1 fltn CC) (30) G Min. (C) (30) Baxter Wd.
{#'ove Program
' Choirs Combined
ht Fine 'Messiah'
By TOM BARLEY
ot ttM O.llY Plllt 11111
nus is the time of year
wbeo musicians and . mu!lic .
Jovet'!I tum with one accord to
Handel's "Messiah" for what
bas always been and always
will be the clearest musical
statement of faith and fel'V<lr
that our ChriJUan discipline
bas produced.
The annual outpouring of
this inspiring oratorio has
always been the particular
province of church choirs and
choral ensembles and the
tradition has never been
neglected in Orange County.
Hence. the mustering of choirs
from 29 county churches Sun-
day for a "Messiah" that was
fittingly celebrated in Garden
Grove's lovely Community
Church.
· Choirs from three Orange
Coast churches -Costa
Mesa's St. Andrew's
Presbyterian and First United
Methodist and Laguna Hills
Geneva Presbyterian -were
there to give us in terms of
the human voice a memorable
if somewhat edited oratorio.
Instrumentation, alas will
be omitted from this ~view.
This critic bas rarely, if ever,
beard such a disgraceful a~
companiment as that provided
on lhis occasion and it is
regrettable that such a sterl·
'Something
lng choral effort should be
diluted in thla manner.
That comment is not ez.
tended to organist Ron Hun·
tington a n d harpsichordist
James Pearson, each of whom
made a considerable con-
tribution to a splendid
performance.
Soloists Barbara Griffin,
contralto, G. Willard Bassett,
tenor and bass Bruce Foote
were in fine _ voice for an
oratorio that always seems to
bring that little extra from its
participants but they will
quickly agree that special
rerognltion is due Laguna
soprano Darellyn Melilli.
She wa& !n superb form and
we dwell with particular
pleasure on her very lovely
"Rejoice G~atly," it classic
example of how to deliver this
haunting air and quite the best
delivery of the afternoon. Her
work in "He Shall Feed His
Flock" was little short of that
high standard.
And all four soloists will
readily testify that they had
magnificent s1:1pport from a
choir that made the rafters
ring with as sp irited a
"Messiah" as any Handel
devotee could wish for. It is
this critic's very great regret
that he cannot list the name of
each contributor to this mov·
ing offering.
Different'
Yo11ths Set
In 'Messiah'
Merle Valdez Studio of
Music of Costa Mesa will
present Handel's ''Messiah"
on Sunday, Dec. 13, at 3 p.m.
Students will accompany
·chorus and soloists from Costa
Mesa. Estancia, Corona del
Mar and Newport Harbor High
Schools. Singers and soloists
from UC Irvine, Orange Coast
and Golden West colleges will
join the bigb school singers.
The program, to be held at
the Costa Mesa High School
Lyceum. will be free of charge
and no offering will be taken.
Merle Valdez will direct.
'Disgusting'
JERUSALEM (AP) -A
religious court edict expelled
Haim Shlomo Tulkatzov from
an ultr~--0rthodox synagogue
for having a "defiling and
disgusting object" in his
home. The object -a
television set.
TLHsdty, Dtcembtr 8, 1970 DAILY PILOT .!8 . • ..
Frank~s Hand Hurts
' Sinatra Forced Out of Action Movie
By GENE HANDSAKER "His litUe and ring fltlgtrs to the Ungers , of unknown
HOLLYWOOD (AP) _ The were pulled down quite a way. natlJJ't, the doctor said .
h a n d that b o l d s hi$ "The surgery involved ea-I;===========
microphone 111d e: s c o rt s cision of thickened tissue, lben
beautifUI women by the arm Is a procedure on the skin to
hurtlng Frank Sinatra. allow the band and fingers to
Persistent pain following a open. This is known as 1 Z.
June operation on his right plasty, a rearran·gementof the
hand bu forced the sing,r-ac-skin so it is no longer. No skin
tor to wilhdraw from a star-grafts: were used,"
ring role in an upcoming Surgery was complicated by
movie, Warner B r o th er s the presence of bone spurs in
Studio announced Wednesday. the two outer joints of the lit-
With a meuure of irony, the tie finger and the middle joint
film ls titled "Dead Right." ln of the ring finger.
INDS TONl•HT
Story tf • ,,...,
"PIECES OF DREAMS"
also"UNDERGROUND"
STA ITS WIDNISDA Y
''FEMALE ANIMAL''
"MAN FROMO.R.G.Y." it Sinatra would have played The bone spurs were the
"a tough cop on the trail of a result of old, separate injuries
mad sniper terrorizing a city,"',-==:;:__=:__::~::::'..::".'.'.:::.'.!::=========~
requiring great physical ac-
tivity involving, the band, the
studio said.
The actor's surgeon, askmg
not to be identified, gave this
medical history of Sinatra's
hand:
Sinatra', 54, underwent
surgery last Jwie at a Los
Angeles hospital for a con·
ditlon known as Dupuytren's ·~
contracture, a shortening or
distortion of muscular tissue
in the palm and fingers.
The disease has been
known since Biblical times but
is named for a Swiss professor
of surgery at the University of
Paris who described it in 1832.
Jt is more common In men
than in women. Its: cause is
wiknown. Sinatra's affliction
was "rather severe," the sur·
geon said.
Court Play
Cast Listed
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
SHOWING NOW!
CO.HIT • ,t.MA>iUM OML Y
'''SINWMrfJ Shll•t ..... I
"YOU MUST SEE THIS FILMI"
COUJMll/A PICTI./AfS Pft ...,I• 1 llBS~
1:45 m 1111S1ca1.
l:U 8 LIUrt Wn.U, (C)
Ill..., -(!O) mw .....
IE •-' ,_ CCI 1301
t-AS 111) h1W'1 DM (C)
Marviu Cleans Up for TV
Agatha Christie's courtroom
drama "Witness fOr t he
Prosecution" will be the next
production at the Long Beach
Community Playhouse, open-
ing Jan. 8 for six weekends.
JACK NICHOLSON
T/VE
ERS!I
7:00 II CBS Enlint ..... (C) (30) By VERNON SCO'rl' 0 .m ~IC "tptly " ... (C) (30) lt;OO 1J 9 (() 10 Mintll CC) (Ill)
Otvid Bnnk1er, funk McGee, John ''!Wd, Whitt, ind Blu1 •• , ind Chancellor. e1ttt.• A report on rbini Bltclt HOU.YWOOD (UPI) -Let
B Ltk1t1 Blli6lll (C) (21h ht) milil1ncr tnd Bltck·Whitt tensions Marvin, a paragon of the
l1ke11 vs. Phoenix Suns fl Photnilt. , and vkllenct In the U.S. Mnr in disreputable wastrel in motion
0Wbt's Mr UM? (C) (30) Germany. pictures will shave don clean m ~CIJI Love LtCJ (30) lilllt S flltwS (CJ (60) 'clothes, 'comb his h;ur and ap-
0) l ett ttit Cltd (C) (30) ~ ~ (f} a> Mseu Wtlbf, M.D. pear stone sober on the
EJi.1 I ltlC1iL I l.11'1 F1t1 n (C) ( t_, ( ) 01.? !:_•rrt tht Sun in 1 television s.....,.ial. "Chanaina M11tin-Milnu·11osts-,ifOl!'•nrtm --Go .... 1n tup. "'· Welby IUSJ)feb • I"-... e.~'O the servlcts of United c de youn1_ nur11. Is suff1rln1 lrom a Scene" Wednesday. . . ruse · h1r11ht1ry d111111, but no on1 hi I • EE Cfnlll: tbt Lirin& Wonl (t) (30) her ltmltr his mr hid It Jo Ann t s as if some misanthrope
@El Romit (30) I Pftua. M•rllttt tl•rtler and Bill assassinated Santa Claus.
Ciii) Sll!pll-.ntt Maria (55) Wllll•ms 111111. For years Marvin ha 1
(E n.t l irl (C) (30) a Tiii Saihd. (SJ) depicted the dregs or mankind m hqt ....... (C) (60) building up a follow ing amoni em n. s.. ff'lfldlct .. (Q (60) the dissolute, the alcoholic and 1,. fJ ljjl (I)"""' ' .,..;,.. (<)
(30) Granny, still tryin1 to· sarttle
0lht romuw:t of EllJ. MIJ 1nd NWJ
frop1n Mii'« Tt111plrton, ...,.
the sailor somt.of Elly Ml'fs cook· inc. -~
D Quaker Oats Presents * "THE WORLD OF
THE BEAVER"
WITH HENRY FllHDA
!I) u •-130) th I o! dirty CJ:) flllllll Maha. (60) e eague nld men.
D:30.QI l il__1'11111 ~ (C) (30)
Ill "" (JO) -
ll<IO fJ Ill! (I) 111-(CJ
U !UCIJ m-(Cl 8 C.1 YH Top 1'lt1 {C)
um-cCJ B,,.,..,,....., _ _,,,.
(1dvtnt11rt) '5&-T1b Hor. m-.-.-.... {dr1m1) '6ft-:-Gary Mltrill; £111
Anderson.
triiow, treacherously, he has
turned song and dance man.
He hoofs with ·Gene -K:elly· in-
the ABC clambake and croaks
along in his sourrn asb
baritone. HE'S SPRUCING UP
Lff Me rvln on TV
"If there were any men left
on earth like the characters I
play," he said wistfully,
"they'd be in jail or the
madhouse. My roles are all in-
dividualists. nonconformists.
"Today the so-called non-
conformists hide out l n
political movements or in
groups or communes.
"Everyone t r I es to be a
nonconfonnist but they don't
quite make it. The only real
confonnist 1 can imagine is
President Nixon's valel.
James Brittain is directing
the show, with Robert Ren-
rrow, Clara Grich and Noble
Shropshire heading the cast.
Principal supporting roles will
be taken by Glenn Sterling,
Jack Lackman , Ed Chris-
tiansen, Rita Donohue. Arthur
Perkins. Frank Gutierrez and
Ken Moore.
The play will be presenled
on Fridays and Saturdays at
the playhouse, 5021 E •
Anaheim St., Long Beach.
Ticket information may be olr
lained by calling (213} 438-"But if Ben Rumsen were
arou nd he 'd be in a strait
jacket. He was a gift to thel"';'.=========11 women _and__l.he community." I_,
0536.
He was also a boon to
distillers, manufacturers of
crooked dice, marked decks,
bordellos and lovers of street
fights.
o ...
6:45 ,., .. _ ................
PIE~f..~
bdldi .. ~,_, ·-_, .. "00.-.10.00
M• :r.00. -,-QO.t ·OO, llOO. 10.00
~ ~.00,lotl. !lolO. )o:i(l,t.)O
v..,1--•
"LOVERS ANO OTHER STRANGERS"' (R) ••••••.lft s!."'•'••••• "THEY SIKIOT HORSES. DOtl'T mEY? Gfl)
O.o olYoofoWli...,Oi•'-~
":f...,lll lO•tU~ Ill . ·····t..~·····.
'
nm n. Worid ., tMi ....,.
(C'j (60) (R) A study flf the
lif• ol tile bea'o'lr lrom inf1ncy
th1ou111 parenthood. The sllow wu
fHmed by photocra.ph!!t Dts B•rt·
Jett, 1~sttd by hii wilt, Jtn, in
th1 Rody Mount1lns ne11 J1tbon
Holt, Wyomiflf. Hen!)' Fond• ii off.
eamer1 n1rr1tor.
IB Mowil: ~I S.11 n.
ScoCll!ld Yd' (mysttry') '52 -
Rich.rd Ctrlson, Greta Gynl.
One suspects the white
hatted Academy Award win·
ner oC letting success go to his
head. His rendition o f
"Wand ering Slar." the ditty
he warbled in "Paint Your
Wagon" is a huge hit in
England, Australia and Ja')>an.
There are no complete reports
from Tierra del Fuego.
In a burst of rectitude,
milk of kindness so much as Marvin concluded : ''The
Lee in the character of Kid farther a character Is from
Sheleen in "Cat Ballou" -for my own personality and
which he wori the <>star. Nor character, the easier it Is for
did parents: point at Ben me to play him."
HELD
OYER
ENDS DEC. 15 "tMIClllTOfflllO.WMD"Cll -•
m ... llClts fC> <Rl u ii1l mm"" "'"' 1CJ 1'°1 '11!1 Jud1s Tup." The squad tries
to help an emotion illy rlllrded boy 11:30 IJ 9 · Cl) llltn l rltlin (C) Gutsts;
who is discovered with the rifle Jtclc: Vtltnti, prnidenl Mollon Pit·
that killed his father. Guests ire tures Prvduc111 Allot. of America.
Don Porter, B1ny Brown, Marj Ou· CJ 19 (j) Ci) .tellnny C... (C)
SIJ ind Richard Webb. Johnny IM1ol\ ntums. Hlrw, Hines
0 Million $ Movie: (C) '1'.tJ· & Dtd; .»In RMn, John 8)'1111'
El&flt·Hour Milt" (drtma) '70 -cutsl
D1rr1n McGtvln, William Windom. D Morie .... (C)
Ktllly B1t1wn. Priwtlt lnvatlptor ft\
1tt1mpts to solv• 1 tr1rtc tritn(le D w Dlc:t CIVltf: ~ MIMI and ill'«llvin1 two womtl'L fV wrlltr Buck Henry 1t_ 1111!t·host.
QI I ~ •· ICJ (30 Guests: Mtrcello M11trDi1nnl. Allud
"''" tr -1111q11111cn ) Lowensttin.
0) It Ttkn 1 Tllltl (Ci (60)
fl!! f1nf1rt (C) (&or (R) "8111 Fr•n· 12:00 a MoM: "Siflpport" (myttll')')
ciseo: Go Rldt tht Miiiie." The ~ -Avt Gtrdntr, fftd MtcMur·
Jelftrson Airplane is hatured. rar.
EE 811¥111111111t f1l11 CC> (30)
el "o Cr• an Ill Hombrn (30)
7:55 CJ:) Cuestioll 6t Slflllldot
l.'00 IJ ,... Aull (C) (30) The
Dou1l1s fllnt· 1 beca1'11't!S • s1J1e
wl!tn tht 1cti111 but bites hirtd·
hind Eb. m Tt Ttll lilt Tt.U. (C) (30)
(ll) f11d Cotplf llJlinaa.. CC)
el LI ConatituciOll (30)
w £ 0 ~~ [ <; 1] :, l
I
DAYTIME MOVIES
l:Clll II Ml'rit: "Tiie ......... (td·
•111tu11) '41 -l.J"1 Puts, Elltn ..... au• .. !CJ·'.
l!XI. C......n, l6tin w (CJ
%:.JO II rkwt/ lift lh n i1 a., CC)
t-JOllJ-..... (""""1 ~!-""' ·-· ... -· m •ubtm IC a.rm ,_..
(iattm) '58-Scott Brady.
1:90 m .,.. IW' (mutictl) '35 -
ffld Alttlta, Gin1• Roprs.
9:00 0 "tljp, .... Md • ..,. (dtfm•J 'l7-lttM Oun111, Rind· 2:0D D.,.. ...... ~ (com"1)
olph Scott. "lrwtt ftrct" •Mft. ·~oanny Kaye, Cort J!Jfll'IL
ture) '47-Burt L1net1t1r. 0 (C) "Th Oppnltt Sn" (oorn· 4:311 ID ~ •Jtt lllllrftr" (c:omedy)
td1) ·~JUM All)'IOn. AM Shtrl· ·!1....:.Audle Murphy, l11rsm ....
din. Leslie Nitlaen. •ith, Kwr•n Wynn. ..
e JOB PRll'jTING e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Qu1ilty Printing end 0 1p1nd1bl1 S1rvic1
fol nrore-th-.n 11-qutrf1r-of-a e1ntury
PIL OT PRINT ING
U11 WIST IALIOA I LYD,. tflWPOtr .UCH -'42-4321
Why, Lee Mervin, have you
turned traitor to your out·
caste?
"Aw, hell,'' he said, bis
voice the timbre of thunder
"It's something different. '
"In this show I just get up
there and take it. The worse
you are the better they like
it."
Of Marvin this is true.
Hardly
Rumse11, his role in "Paint ---'--'-------II
Your Wagon.'' and urge their
sons to follow Ben's benders.
In "Hell in the Pacific,"
•·Point Blank", "The Dirty
Dozen" and Marvin's current
"Monte Walsh," the actor
brings to the screen a swag-
geri,rig, roughneck who is
absolutely beyond redemption.
He will be seen on tel evision
In a white shirt and necktie for
the first time since his ap-
pearance on the Oscar show
almost six years ago.
"'ONI Of THIE YU.I'S PUNNIUT COMIDln.• Rich1rd Htl'llltl-LA. fr•t Pren
.., ""fc,*-*'lf.>-IT'S ALL SO FUNNY!" ' J ·~-:'IMI l-:H••!"IDl/IJ ,,_
• ..... • _! -•:cmm-ll'lllMIGmJ letM"I"
PLUS -To11y Mu111'1t-Su1y Ktndt11 ln''THl lllD WITH THI CIYITAL PLUMA•I" (GP)
CAl:L 546·3 l.02
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT
' ' W U S A ' c!r1 PAUL NEWMAN and JOANNE WOOWARD
ANTHONY PERKINS
... TOP HIT-• ·-· "ZIG ZAG" IH w.it.i. & A-JedMtl I• l•PI
17th RECORD WEIK -EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
llllott
Gould
Donald
Sutherland
... ••• ill1\Sll
RATED "G" -IT'S FOR IVIRYONE -Exclusive Wilk-in Run
1111 THI WIJTMOllTlrt (llfTlrt
~
HELD OVER!
•
.. ttOSS "'-"'ti ""'*"'*'
AIRPORT -BURT LANCASTER • DWI MARTIN •-.....
HELEN HAYES
FNCI Mo<Murray
Nancy Olian In
BEST FOREIGN
FILM OF '69
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INDS TONl•HT
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Bergeln Matinff
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at 1:00 P.M.
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~,......~------------------------------·-·--·-·-·
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HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE ' HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSI S FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOU,SES FOR SALE , ;.;.;;.;=:;.;;..;..;~;;;.;;;.;:;._1==-=~-=-~--:-1
Oener•I 1000Ge ntir•I 1000 General 10000....ril 1000 Generel 1000 Gentrol 1000 Newport Beoch 1200 Coron• del Mar 1250 Huntington ~1ch 1400
' •
1 ~*~*-;---~*==*~~*~*~1;;;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
TAYLOR Co oflnJa !JIJ/e BUILDERS
CLOSEOUT
<lLU -..•.•• MOVE IN FOR
Homo Plus Units CHRISTMAS WITH
In a private tun.I. setting • 1r;. DOWN
HONEYMOON
COTTAGE
A ce>iy 1 bedroom home with
flreplact' on a well situated
R-2 lot. south -of -the -high..
way, An ideal investn1ent for
the "buy now -bulld later"
enlhu.siast and the owner
will carry a 90% 1st trust
deed with orlly 10% down.
Only $36.500. Call 67J...8550.
VACATION AT HOM~ :'
• PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
CORONA .. DEL MAR JEWEL
Sparkling, tuXurlous home. Architect design~
ed. Adjacent to Ll!Ue Corona Bcb. IDEAL
FOR COUPLE. MainU.nance free. Turn the
key and travel anytime! ............ $81,500
SPACIOUS FAMILY HOME
4 Bedrooms, country kitchen, bonus room for
sewing hobbies oMJ.pstairs family rm. Only
I year ).oung. Nr schools & shopping. $39,000.
52 Linde Isle Dr.
Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/4 frplcs.,
circular stairway, decorator selected carp.
& drapes. Sho"'.n by appt .......... $210,000
For Complete inform1tlon on ell hom•t &
lots, ple1se c•ll:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
833 Dover Dr., Suilo 3, N.B. 642-4620
''Our 25th YNr'' Gtn11r•l 1000 General 1000
Unbelievable ~t true. Brighi
and sparkling new, 4 &: 5
bednn, 2 story homes, many
fantastic options • almost
Immediate possession may
be arranged. All to be sold
in 30 days • $35.500 • FliA/
VA • NO DOWN. Tenns
available. Call 568424:
apace and lott ol shade Near entrance to Ba,yere11. 4
trees, Homty, n e a t three ctaMy bl!droona (muter
bdrms. two bath home with bedroom 1eparatM on other
Jireplace & picture view side of home), full size for.
windows, mal dining room, family
WITH THREE CH 0 I C E room "ith built in dtsk unlt,
WElL KEPT UNITS to pay lovely acrilan carpets, vinyl
upenses. WHAT A .BONUS! wall covering -$42,950 -
Both home and units show owner will help finance with
pride of ownership and are JOo/. down, ·Phone 646-TITI
in immacu1ate condition. to view.
Priced to sell at only $58,500
'o THEREAL
"'\.. ESTATERS
' .
• wlth financing available. WOULD YOU UKE A \0 THE PEAL
"'\.. E:STA'l'ERS M. M. LABORDE, Rltr. SPLIT-LEVEL TWO
646.()555 Eves: 64~7438 BEDROOM HOUSE 1 o
This unusual artliUo home
is completely customized ,
1or gro.clous livinz. Swim IJJ
your own heated pool, Love-
ly pool atta sporls 2 patiol!:.
Deluxe blln all elec kitchl'n
& family room lanai. Price
includes w/w crpts, drps,
shutters, water softener;
wa&her, dryer, retrlg + '
much more! Assume 6%
Fl-IA loan. Tota l mon
paymentonJy $159. UNDER!
UNDER! PRICED! I $26,
Hurry!!
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ATTENTION 1-~L-ux-u-,~lou-,~L~l-vl~ng~I-roomy that your grand
HOMESEEKERSI JUST LISTED! Fabulous piano Ui no problem? 'I
2111 San Jooquln Hills Road FLEXIBLE & FINE A FABULOUS MESA "Bluffs" Angelita, 2 BR. WOULD YOU LIKE A BIG,
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 Macnab-Irvine * "* * .* * * R~~~~~~
BEAlITJFUL SIDE YARD VERDE PACESETTER model on one level. Custom, that your neighbor does all
l..ofli' or abort EKTOw, choi~ 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, f.am!Jy profess. decorated. move Jn the work on ? REAL ESTATE 1 n f
-of NEW CARPETS, your Great for In-laws room home on a huge pool cond. sumptuous mstr. suite. WOULD YOU LIKE AN EX-
Gener•I 1000 Gen•r•I 1;;;;;;;;===
1000 IN YOUR LIFE
Enjoy PEANUTS and BEER
onSATIJRDAYS!! No lawns
tO cut or weeds to pull! Own
this beautiful largt' 3 bed·
room. ~ bath, almost new
condominium, delux carpet
and drapes, too, Great loca-
tion, schools, t'tc. 0 n l y
choice of financing. 4 br or size 101. All electric kitcQ· Ideally situated on corner. TR.A INCOME UNIT to help
3+ den, ·we offer this Sharp 4 bednn, 3 bath with en, built-in wet bar. Beaut!-Every extra, CAU. NOW for make your payments!
% ACRE
EASTSIDE
16 Unit potential hert' with
a "SPANISH HACIENDA"
as a bonus on front of lot.
Full price
$34,950
Newport . ,
Fairview
646-8111
(onytlmo)
2615 Bamboo
Eastbluff, N.B.
5 BEDROOMS
PROUDLY KEPI' 1st owner tonne.I dining room. One fuJ carpets and drapes. This app't. Askin& $42,500-Won't Drive by 602 Iris.
home w/its 9 yrs of yard huge room convertible into home is perfect for the ex-last. REDUCED $4,0001
l I od · I ecutive Who can make an Ask for Etta Freeman improvements, Large alum. n-aw acc:omrn anons n-Sacrifice! Sickness torccs
covered patio, frUit trtts, eluding living room. bedrm immediate dec:Won, Call sale of this 4 BR. fam. rm. -~ " .. ·1..11.. •-· t bath M · _ _. 54&231J Now rose ...... en, ""' auth.....,. ""' pnva e . an1cu,..,.. & pool home. 21Ai Baths, 2%
sculptured low ma l n t. yard, excellent landscaping, Car gar, 100xl05 Ft. loL
gl"OUnds. It's OW' best at sprinklers front & rear. MUil sell now • $49,500.
$29.950. Adult occupied. VA or FHA 315 MARINE AVE. 673-6900 Call Patrick Wood 545-2300
Havt' a f..IERRY CHRIST· ~ COi.AT$ lerms. $35,900. BALBOA ISLAND e Bill Haven, Rltr.
MAS in a ... a1 hom• '"the • COA,,TS Owner Desperate S-0·0·0 2ll1 E. co .. t, CdM 673-3211 large family, 2* Balhs, 2500 GRE T IEWI
sq. ft. of """'°''' Jiving, 642-8235 675-3210 · WALLACE Mu" ,.u like ""w 4 bedm UNUSUAL A V
I·-• 11·v1··g -m w/•tone' "''"'!!!!!!"""'"''"''"'""'""'-REALTORS WALLACE 1 ·1 & d" "" 750 F'llA or harbor & ()C(!an_ Attr. split
$46.500.
(-:-•,. +"' ·-il l ,~ EASTBLUFF _.,, '141-REALTORS am1y •rung . .,...,, Interesting floor plan with level home on R-J 5100 sq. irepiace fam · 1 rm, e ec ,,....... or submit low down ~Y-rooms galore in the heart ft lot. Ideal lor 4 apt units.
bltns, FA heat, lots or stor. BIG' S (Optn Evenings) Open Evenings menL Super sharp Wlth ofNe\\-portHeights-SBed-~ 250 Dee Bl d
age space, Covered patio .,.~'"''"'"'!'"'"'!"'!~ e 962-4454 e many extras. Now vacant -rooms family roo m with Cd'M.~· 1• an v ·• v.ith view, double garage, Room for Jots of kids. We ..::o: ~~~~~""'."!~~~ inspect today! Call 540-llSl lirepla··· and barb<-·e·. De-· Y app t. only. h s bedroo and ,.,.. Santa Special °" -'" Bill Grundy, RH llor PriCe $55,000. CC.Orrected ad) ave PlS Newport Heights Are• "Tht' Only \Vay To Buy•• lUXl' kitchen with built-in Call: 642-467.0
baths. Want to swim'!' We Move In by Xmas A freezer, refrigerator and --~,,,-===---
havo a beautiful -1. Want Enjoy one of "CO ST I ·~· -nAGI I BY OWNER to !Ny a boat? We have FHA· YA-OK J\lESA'S FINEST" located ='ll1'•• blender. Let us show this ON THE BLUFF •oar WEST CLIFF SHOP -most interes"""' home --m to p·~· ott the ,--t. F " -... -& btw Biu & Little Corona bch ....... """ '"'""" ast J>085l'S!ion • Decorate PING CENTER. A 1 $39,500 with 10% down. ... Want a swing set? \Ve have Xmas 1rl'e in your own Uv-m P e 2500 sq. ft. luxury home. 68 Locheninyer
Re .l ltor room for that too. Want a ing room. Cook that turkey room for your large furni-2 BR. 21,i ba. C.Ondo. Phone 546-TITI. ft . Ocean Blvd. frontage.
PAY YOURSELF 1860 Newport Blvd., C.M. fine school district? New-In your own bu ilt in gas ture. Three GIGANTIC Clubhouse, pool, sauna. PrincipaJs only. For a~
HU NTINGTON BEAOl'OFC.
894-5311
Open 7 days • 8:30 to 8:30
"Up For Grabs"
Hurry, Hurry, Hurry!
Proba~ court sale. A chance
for your bid. Large 4 Bed. ,
room corner lot. Near beach.
Sunken fonnaJ living rm.
Step-up Dining for formal oc.
casions. Separate massive
family rm. with cozy fire.
place. Furnishings also for
sale. Vacant and ready to
go. Huny and be tint! Call
(TI4) 962-5585 •
FOREST E. OLSON
Inc. Realtors
19131 Brookhurst Avt.
Huntington Beach
BUY OR RENT $1,000 Call 646-3928 or 545-3483 port-Costa Mesa. \Vanta fair oven. This coxy 3 BR 2 bath BEDROOMS, new golden Wa1k to 11hops, $3000 down. pointment call 675-3497
The most outstanding value I '!'!'!!!~111111111111111111111~1111111~!!1 price'!' $52,000. Phone 646-TI7l home Is vacant and can bl' harvest shag carpet, Double Owner will finance. * PANORAMIC VIEW Thi11 immaculate 3 bedroom,
od • k t · t ] : LOG SIZE fireplace in the .,,._ .... CM 3 B 2 ba -·-• on t ay s mar e Ul a ux-ENCHANTED financed to fit )00%' needs. LAU11 · . r. . •=S Luxury Ocean Blvd. Duplex. 2:bath, all elec bltn kitchen { I ·-lt l 3 family room. ,.....h •pari<· k VA do " 1~~===~=-ury , near Y -..... SQ, • Don't wait, see It today. some wor · · · no w .. , OCEAN FRONT Overlooking Jetty & Harbor. with a dishwasher, dble gar. bedroom home. Consider COTT AGE DIAL 645-0303 Jing white decor inside and FHA $1650 down. By Ov"ner: 673-8866 * age (opens automatically)
these features: large separ. FOREST, E. OLSON out. Bright, cheerful kitchen Fortin Co. 642-5000 Beach front 2 BR home 01·er =========I and enjoy all the carefree '·-U Ith 1 Sharp 2 bedroom 2 bath home with --icn view! $2900. ;.,_ -="=='======:I tn'plo -·. R-J lot with --ate ........ " Y room "'' we · ,,.._ d 1 M p led 675 3000 '""'"" -.,_ 0 .,...... Linda Isle 1306 fun of Condo living. Rent
bar, formal dining, 2~ 1~ _....,rona e . har. ane,. • REAL TORS il.ia.I FHA Investment • OUR l IOO to expand or add ocean tront -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I or assume this loan. Total baths, nearly new shag car. hVUlg room Wit C02Y ire. N be T Call Whether 2299 Harbor, C.l\f. BEST VALUE! At 0 n I y Cott• Mtlll rental units. Asking $59,500, •
-t. heavy shake roof. PLUS place. Dining room with slid-~~yi~,!" s:iu: .. or Leasina I---. "L:-oo="K,;1,.----I Sll,500. 1----------1 CA LL '-!\.• t 4t·l41 4 Ex • •t B yf nt ~~lhly• S:>;:n~!f. ~ ~ Ing glaM do<" to patio and ·~. ·~ ·~ M. M· LABORDE, Rlt•. ~"!.~ qu1s1 e a ro a bu~ 40 X ~ we~I land· garden. 2'Ai car gange plus IRVINE TERR. •2 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths 64&-0555 Eves: 646-4S?9 $1 ,200 MUllfc., price $23,000. ~=c= And 0~~ 1~~ room for boat or trailer. All 1501 Bay.adere Terr•c• $148.00 mo. incl. taxes ''YOU GOT TO SEE IT J~A~~t~i: 3 r,:;::r;~ «r.\\LTY Open Dai"ly 1 ta 4
down to the new redu~ this on a 40 ft. lot and only Open daily l-5. Tree shaded Take over subject to existing Ntir Nt,..porl P••I Office
2blockstothebl'ach.$46,950 3BR.3 Ba.hOm~PLUShol>-FHAloanannual %rsteof TO BELIEVE ITI'' cha.le -dose to heart 01 58 Linda Isle . ' price of pl.,500, Call 6'1l-M50 c
1
h · by rm. & 2 Car gar. Lge. 5"% and you'll aet 3 large A 20x40 indoor pool tor the downtown -Large R2 lot NEWPORT ISLAND Bill Bents REAL ESTATE
0 eswort Y 'o~y t<t~to•.,,;.·strcet Jot. Price bedrooms 2 baths, rock fire-ULTIMATE IN SWIMMING -OR -Income renlai, for 2 BR, Ftplc. Sep. garage, PETE BARRm HUNTINGTON BEACH OFC. •u .,.,. "'IV place, built-in kitchen, fore. ··:l's fantastic." There's a that tax shelter -possible bedroom, rec rm. $32,500. &94-Sll l
~air heat, double garage. 3 bedroom, 2 bath home Commercl&I or multiple un-R·2 lol 20% dn, By Owner. Realty * 642·~ Open 7 days. 8:30 to fl:!O ,.,
& 'C cul dJ! sac street. bl~k wall with an added family room its. ONLY $22,500. -eai1 1,=~;2256~·='""""""'==: I !~~~~~~~~~ li ~~~~~~~~~I
D. fenee and an excellent Costa or boilus r0om that go's with 646-7t71 . MUST SELL-BY OWNR Huntington Beach 1400 BEHIND-IN
REALTY l\tesa address Call now • the pool. Corner Jot with ac. Brand new, fee simple, 1 blk, ----------,'· Newport Beach Ollice Open Eves. 546-864o cess for a boat or trailer. beach, 3 br, 2 ha, 2 trplc, 1 · PAYMENTS
$100 Down
3 Bedroom 2 Bath
$19,950
1028 Bayside Dr. It's a must see and let beam ceil'g, w/w crpt, .,,., NO NEED TO WAIT Must sacrifice. Assume .
675-4930 j a.ti tio wild $18,60() VA Loan subject to your m na n run · dbl gar, 642-Ta23 . 6%. annual percentaa:e rate ,:,
pl111 closing costs and you
can move into this unbeliev-
able va1ue bt'fore Xmas. It's
only 5 yrs. old, has a fire-
place, built-in kitchen, fore.
ed air heat, all newly red~
orated. • HURRY on this
one! 546-8640
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I NOW IS • • • • • • • • Only $3I,950. Call now "o"WN=E=R~W~a-n7J.s~to-,-,~ll-no-w7! l'o"u"P"L°"E"'x:-.-,,..,.b,-,,-,"'2"b-,-d:-n", I Sensational 2 story holnt' that .
CORONA DEL MAR THE TIME T~ BUY l ---"='"~".:":.,ho""'''=c,._.M-'", --I 546-23.l3. First UJ,000 takes this :kar, neal &: clean, nicely has everything! Only 2 ~.oo :~ m:a~:~ yo~ 1 R-2 BuyBahead of sppn~g mharket SALESMEN bt'autiful l\tesa North home. furn. 200' to bch. Sacrilice. years new_ 4 Bedroom, 2 down payment on this clt'an
3 Blocks to beach in ayshores. e •• ect ome 21 Year old Corona del Mar s BR plus dining room, Owner. 714/ 542-1946. bath, panelled family room, 3 bedroom with 2 lwrurious
c.ozy 2 BR. home lf~r the dids~n_'ina,tin~.I Lrg, firm has opentnp for 2 6· bit-ins 1%. BA. Sprinklers DELUXE Bayfront apt -2 antique brick fireplace, for-baths, Carpets and drapes.
On 40 ft. lot ~v. 1;'5~.!?mingd ove&y pa.d. perienced real estate sales-front & ~ck. Red\\'ood Br, 2 Ba, $49,500. Terms. ma.I dining rm, elec bltn Hua:e rooms. Double garage-
Well maintained uo, <tA9500.,,.,., & en in men Please call: Leonard FOREVER VIEW fence on 3 sides. Nr. slxlps, Immed poss McKenzie kit, dishwasher, w/w crpts, with fenced yard, GOOD ,
Excellent rental rn1 . .,.. ' . Srnilti or Walter Ha&St' for &: pool side pleasure. Ne\v walking di..slance to all 646--0732 · ' ~~s andd m1any exi.:ckas.1:'~~e SHAPE. Call •
Only $43,500 --, custon1 home by Ivan \VeUs schools lnc. OCC. Cpts, . $4000 • '""uce or qu1 ""'-'e w lk & L
'
app t. in Dover Shores. 4 BR, 3 drps. Small 4%. '7a lst, 10% REDUCED ; Park Lido $28,500. Call now!! a er ee , 675-3000 BA + p.,.,·dr rin .• family 2nd. FHA appraisal $26,000 Twnhse. 3 Br, 3 Ba, Immed. Coklvvefl,Banker rm., dining l'Il'l., 2nd frplc at 8~S%. 1169 Dorset Lane, poss. Realtor 646-0732.
2629 Harbor, C.M. ~"-.. ~ • r-sts1'de 5-Plex • & walk '" Wot bar. Roy J . CM, S41h1634 Now l't Hol hts 1210 --..--U \Vard Rltr., lOll Mariners Sell, lease/opt or rent po g BALBOA Dr .• 646-1550 Open Daily. BR 2\1 ba •-J 2 °--
Real--833-0700 644-2430 $88,000 4 ·• ., ~, c. ~ BY OWNER· 4 B 2 b •v... gar. 3 Yrs. old. 2200 Sq_ Ft. · r, ll,
REAL ESTATE
HUNTINClUN BEACH OFC.
894.5311 ISLAND ''Our 25th Year 356 E. 20th Str Ht BEST BUY LIDO A-lCond. Vacant .quickpos. frplc, bltns. 11any xtras,
In The Harbor Are•'' Cost• Mes• sess. Call tOOay! \~dalk 1to 3 s~1,!10s.5306Woulcl con. Open 7 days. 8:30 to 8:30
VACANT 673 A400 LIDO WATERFRONT 642-4905 Cali P•U1ck Wood 545-2300 I ''~'~e~• ~·""'~·~~~~'== l "~n~~~tf'~" -. APTS.-320 LIDO NORD 4 B•droom hom•. Patio,"'"· B'll RI i= 4 BEDROOM l ~~~~~~~~~~I deck, fonnal dining. 1'1odern • 1 H•ven, tr. University P•rk 1237 fln,ooo Full price. Elec bltn LOT 1; $150,00J Price v.ilh 75'0 ht WATERFRONT PATIO 2Ill E. Coast, CdM 673-3711 .,,._..
Sl 00 Down TD 6 Be.'"t ,...... ""ii•· ki tchen. range &: oven, family nn., · · .. · "'"· .... • One o1 the best in The Coves. RL TR S $2 500 6 car garages & util. room, Room for a large boat JEAN SMITH, • £. IDE-3, large Jiving rm., 2 baths,
S37 500 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths so Ft. on s\\'imming beach, 4 Bedroon'\s 646-3255 '400 E. 17th St., Ct-.t Xl nt E·side location quiet OLE'I carpets, drapes, FA heat,
., lf this home hasn't sold by \Vilt consider tradt' for boat $l25,000 st~et 3 bdnns hrwd floors Authentic Spanish style w/ dble garage, completely
WILLIAM W INTON thetimeyoureadlhis,you'd or maximum $85,000 lge. 4 LIDO REALTY INC. e Steps To Ocean e ex1ra'2.car ga'r., huge lot: tlle roof, cathed~ ceiling, frnced and landscaped,
Rea ltor · bettt'r get with it, It only BR. house. lln Via Lido 673-7300 En1pty & like new! Only No down or small 3 BR. 2 ba., 2 patios. Wide sprinklers, close to shopping
229 Marine. BalbOa Island takes $100 down & costs of Bill Gru ndy, R ltr. $32.500. 3 BR, fam . nn., 2 Costa Mesa In.Vestm ent lot. Owner's nduced to and schools. 60 x 100_ ~t.
675-llll about $600 lo move ln by 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-462ll REPOSSESSIONS ba. 2 car gar., bltns. 548-nl l $39,500. Make offer! One il"rxler, assume existing
Rea ltors
2790 f-larbOr Blvd at Adams
545-9491 Open •tit 9: 00 Pl'tf
lust Reduced $3,600
Spanish-35' Pool
Prime beach area. Enter
thru lovely arched veranda. .,
Unique fam. room . Fonnal
dining, Floor to celling stone
fireplace. Deluxe kitchen. 4
huge bedrooms. 3 baths. All
this plus a secluded priva~
pooJ. Too much more, to •.
say here. Ca11 (714) 962-5585.
FOREST E. OLSON l~===~==-==.-I Xrna!!. See lhis one toclay.l~~~~~~~~~~ISparkllng clean homes, some CAYWOOD REALTY i eel h.11 fina~cing payable $182 per
h 3 4 & 5 bd So with ocean view home. 2 br, den, Vlew & pool & you own l e fan\ nn., near Back Bay , rms. me e 541-1290 e Inc. RcaJtors
M • I =A VA t ' ~~'-cc'-'-;-"--'~'7-~-2 ba. $39,500. Considl'r
CORONA HIGHLANDS 546-8640 ]LARGE. immac. 3 BR + ne\\•ly painted & carpeted, 2, 6306 w. Coasl H\1o'Y .. NB LOVELY. quiet, secluded, r I Imo' UlCI ta.xes.
land, in Corona del ar. area. 2 brick '-lcs. hrdwd poo s. "n · conv. erms, 1 • 19131 Brookhurst Ave.
2 ba 0 I "' •-117000 --o~ Purc:ha51"nCJ C'-rk lease/option. Owner MS-8007 B<tnn1.. ths. n Y floors, bltns, w a 11 e d u ... m · to .,.. •"""· "' Realty Huntington Besch ! ..
$69,500. park-like yard, co ve red Collins & Watts Inc. Xlnt. co. Good typing, Call •• COl..LEGEPRK-$24,900 .• U . p k C t 1 . 1 '::':::2::-"~7~1~(~:::"~.'d)~54~M:=_l~O'.:J~1 ==========1
CORBIN 2629 Harbor, C.l\1. patio, tre<!!'i. Quality house 8843 Adams Ave. 962-552.1 Loraine, 645-2770, \Vestclilf 3 BR.-FllA 71,S,%-LO DN ~~ ::i ~n ~ne BUILDERS
. • , A FEEL OF LUXURY on a beautiful street. 10% DAILY Pll.OT DIME -A Person1ll"l Agl'ncy, 2043 *BYOWNER:645--0927 * 1 y e CLOSEOUT
MARY IN From the lush carpets to the Down, $33,000. Kingaard -LINES coSt you just pen-\VC"Stcl\U Dr., New por I Credltrejeetlons place7h0m.1 ----------I
exciting,_ decoratin&: in this ,_=R=.E=·='=n='·=""=·====-="='"='=""'=·=====:O:=B='='='h======= Mei• Verde 1110 E•stbluff 1242 es on choice lots on the mar· Private Courtyard lovely Cliff Dri\'t' borne _1· kct again!! 3.7 Bednns, 3 & 3 Bednn, fam ilf rm, Jarre
REALTORS 644-7662 Everything sparkle• "'ith Gene r•I 1000 Gen•r•I .,_ lOOOGenerel 1000 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 8LUFFS 4 BEDROOM .f baths, bltns, crptg, shake dl"n, Jow in!erest VA loan!!
$25 450-p I neWl'X'Ss _ 3 Bedrooms, J:WW H"dd 2 S A f d 4 bed 3 roof etc. from $33,940. $4550 Down . also low VA/
. I 00 baths and a perfect kilC'hl"n I en tory ~~e .. 1~ .. • ;tan 1::°°~h e RANCHO LA CUESTA FHA terms, Owner musi 4 Bdrm. + F•mily rm. for l't1other plus a new t8x22 C..li'\l-OJt}~-"-CffaC.S Owner leaving ares, m\Ult "Blufi.s" .,.,,ith open bl'ams Brookhurst & Atlanta, H.B. movr.
Assumt' eXiatlng apr. Joan of family room -$49,900. \:)\!;;:> I." p V sell channlng 4 bedrm wllh and a balcony for your Ju· 968-1338 Open 10 am~ pm HAFFDAL REAL TV ~%. Elegant entry hall. <I Phone &16-TI7l dining & family rooms, quaJ-llet and patio for Romeo and CHRISTMAS SPECIAL 842-4405
Bedrooms. h"'e family The Puzzle with fhe Bui/f .. /n Cliuclcle ~. c;hr:'ri!~·:~hlfn~:~ nearby pool for everybody. Take over GI Joan, no qua!-lob Forces Salel. ,
room, .1>4tural brick fire-Make younielf part of the ityln.g_ Be&t location. 3 Bed. P~. swim pool, park like 0 f:'r~~~mb~erswcrd'. :!:' ~5~' Ste today -call carefree life in the Blulli. rm, 2 ba, frplc, bltru:, crpl.s,
,..,,s. 54M7'0 '°" •o tom '°'" """''' -•• "The Only w"' to Buy" $46,800. .,... Submit. 847-8507 Price Slash $3,000 ~~: ~·.~~ ;:~:~~ 2~P!1~ •• °:J!'& ~~~ I 1N1 Ale ul Hlf I' I .. ,-~...,..~..,,.·~-~ ..... -0111,..·A-~~I Call 6m"4 fn:h¢ili.*,.;.ttl ·::~'." :~~~~·;,::,-,i
ftrs, crpts, drps, dbl gar-Custom built, fonnal dininr • • • • • . . ~-i.~~~~~i:i=~· •I:!~!!!!!!! 1-• • ...... • • room with hrick flrepla~· age, acces.s to re'!!' ~!~dCMfor room, 3 bedl'Il'l, 2 -ha , sep I Cheery kitch<'n v.·ith all de.
boats,. trlrl, etc. """'11'-'C • living rm., fireplace, family V U E A S I J Mesa Verde Ett•tes 3 BEDROOM, family/dining luxe built·lns. 2 baths_ 11111'
$24,i50. • rm., t'Jec bltns, FA heat, P8· I; I IS I I j Now avail~ J choice building Coron• del Mir 1250 nn, STARDUST, w/w crpts. lot with room ror boat -&
Wells-McC1rdle, R lt rs, Uo w/ga.s !ired BBQ pit, _ . • _ •Iles adjacent to plctun>eque, ---------hrwd, bltns, 11,S ba, db le traUer. Shake roof. Much
1S10 Nt\!lport Blvd., C.M, dbl(' gar., 11pace for boat & I od I h I r , • garag~. extra dean, n l' w more. Sellers loas!' yo u r uo7729 ~uer. m e omes comp ex· su · 1L BLK TO BEACH .. int. fuoe<d, frpk, vacant, I B -"" I T I S U E I it rounded by luxury hOmes In 3 BR 2 • Be '--Assume GI. ga n! l!st Xma1 bllriain
MAR Lachenmyer Rlty . . • area of beauty A pride of · ba. aut. ma.ovr;. p 1 R L. 1 R 11 1:ver! Dial Now! (714) ,
CORONA DEL I I I' I • ex......-nfboyhood: "f~ry ownership \Valk to Mesa paneling, Newly redecorat. a ouer son e1 y 962.5545
Lovdy homt' +income unllJ, Call 646-3928 Eves: MS-43769 mornlnO'iha boy would ge;""up Verde k imta Meaa Coun-ed. A dream home in a 147..a553 Eves: 193-4152 FOREST [. OLSON ,',',
On huge lot. near buch.ohd count his __ .. try Club.. S15,COJ • $16,500. dream location. $5ot.9()J. ASSUl-tE 5" FllA mortaaa:e
1135.000 FORCED SALE I M 0 T H A F I . 1•·11 B"'. Call 54$.1077. • Delancy RHI Esl•I• of s:><.OOO. CHh out '"
G eorge W illl•mfOf'I s·~~-•. '"-e s-·'1h home, A Com 1.-t .. _ ch Id ted B 2 Bath ~-2000 2828 E Coast Hwy. OdM $15,900. Healed pool, two IM. Realtors
R I "~"' ""• ""'" I I I' I' I' V P • '"" uc •quo 3 OR~f, , vvi;:r . 644-1270 ' ....... !bed 2\!ba'"a 19131 Brookhunt Av, •• tor near-new, 2800 s<f. ft. Own-by t1U1no In , ... mtsslngi wotd Ml:. fl. Came rm,~ frplc.i-~=,...;.===~-s" .. _,• rooms, t.... 11 1 67MlSO 64$-.1564 Eves en forced to transfer Eaal you d•v•!op from 11'P No. 3 b.low" fenced yard. l~Y biles hum DELIGHTFUL fonnal dining room, famtJ,y i <.;o,-,;:"";;';;""';;.',."7Be;=;;'"'T--=-I As:~~-~~;o:··· ~~~~w~:.:.· e r:~l.~~BfRfO l1 12 15 I' 11 I' l' I' I' I rc;~~R~n;cS-3~ dn .l~~: :~~ehl's:.·. ~~~i ::7:e:1~~~fi;·e=:! $~!~~~~i~:~!o~1
lmmed, Popeq, No_tth Cost.I 6 ANY Day is the BEST day to kllch. Carp. A some dra.J>('f. & l.ndlanapoli.!. By owntr L•rgt P •nelltd Den'
Ml'I& nr. ahoppinl c:enta. &US.Slit w ~~~~MBtE fORj I I I j I I I I f run a.n ad! 0 0 n • 1 .Dbl. range. Owner rNdy after 6:00 PM 962-7635, + 3 Bcdrm, 2 ll•, ram rm,
New H int thniout. New ,_.,.V.-.. · dela_y .. call today, 642--5618 to stll! B~Y~o:..w~,..,.:..,~2~B=R~.-co-.,,"'~-,°'1o"t.·I hick \1o'all , sprlnkl('ra
FHA-VA 0.1<. maxi ~=~ SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 Uem • with eaH, "" Dolly MORGAN REAL TY Ex«pflonol mi. Income, HAFF DAL REA'L TY Pynmkt £x<:11.,,..,... Pilot o ... uitd. 64~78 673-6642 675-6459 1229 Dcla••re St. U 2-440S
Fountain V•lley 141D
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-------·~----------------------------------~---------------------------~. ----~------~----
•
Tut$day, 'Dfcember 8, 1970 1DAlLY PILOT &
Rube Gold berg Dies Farme1· Resigns HE~ Post,
Declines to l{nock Nixon
Dirty Films
'Fade Out'
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Cartoonist Sketched Zany Inve ntions Jack Valenti, president of the;
?.lotion Picture Association of
WASHINGTON (UPI) -dl!Ot Nixon 11-tonday, he said : Nlion, ln ac...-.ting the long· America. says dirty movies
NEW YORK CAP) -Rube
Goldberg, the ca rtoonist who
gained fame with his drawings
of zany "ifiventions'' designed
to accomplish shnple tasks in
co1nplex ways, died Manday of
cancer at his home be.re. He
v.·a.s 87 and had been ill tor
some time.
Creator of successful comic
strips and winner of the
Pulitzer Prize., for editorial
cartooning, Goldberg achieved
much fame for the intricate
chain-reaction contraptions be
dreamed up.
One of these, a typical exam-
ple, purportedly allowed a
sleeping father to give a
crying baby its bott le without
getting out of bed. It involved
pulling a string. to shoot off a
gWl, which switched on a
stove, which wanned 50me
milk and tipped over a pot,
v.'hich spilled the milk Into a
can and activated a lever Utat
pulled a string to bring a nUMI·
ing nipple to the baby's mouth.
A "rube goldberg" became a tlictionary entry for describ-
ing something done by roWl·
dabout means that actually or
•
FAMED ARTIST
Rub• Goldberg
)
seemingly could be done simp-
ly.
Though he wu ill, Goldberg
Snspe~t Free
'Didn't Scare Victims'
NEW YORK (UPI) -A
man who admitted he tried lo
rob a BrookJyn bank was ac-
quitted of attempted holdup
charges Monday because he
did not frighten his intended
victim.
Federal Judge Ja'ck B.
Weinstein, in a decision in U.S .
district court in Brooklyn, said
intimidation was "a crucial
element" the government did
•
Fuel Oil
Haulers'
Pact Seen
not prove In its case against
Robert Brown Jr., 25. The
testimony vf Catherine G.
11urphy, the bank teller from
~·horn Brown demanded
money. "indicates a singular
lack of fear or ntimidation on
her part," the jurist said.
Brown walked into the bank,
a branch of the Manufacturers
Hanover Trust Co., on June 11
and passed" a note 'to Mrs.
11urphy that said: "Give me
all your money."
She looked up at Brown and
said, ''You have gol to be kid·
ding."
"No.'' he answered.
''Look v•hat l've got," Mrs.
Murphy then said, ignoring
Brown and shO\\'ing the note to
a teller at an adjacent posi·
CHICAGO (UPI) A tion. She also tripped an alarm
d · h J F h ~~,, are on the way out. atten ed a dinner in his onor ames armer as resigned "I'm not repudiating the rumored resignation, praised
in Washington on Nov. 24 to after 22: monlM as the Nixon machlnery of government. I Farmer's 1 •many con· ;'My judgment is lhe ltl·
celebrate the opening of an ex· AdmlnistraUon's top black of4 am not repudiating the tribuUona" ln government, ad· ploitaUon film, mostly im-
hibltion of his work, lncludlng flelal, declining to criticize the establishment." But he said he ding : ported from abroad or made
models of the inventions, at system within which he work-longed to regain his "old role w h It e H 0 use pre 11 cheaply and quickly in this,
the Smithsonian Institution's ed but conceding he longed for as advocate, critic and ao-country, is fading," Valenti
?.1_useum of History and Ute days when he "''as a critic tivist." Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Monday. "The young and
Technology. and a civil rights activist. "I came to Washingtan said Fanner was leaving "on educated find this tr as b
Reuben Lucius Goldberg FDA F • d His immed.iat-e p 1 ans, believing 1 could at that polnt a very, very good basis" as unenlJghtening, and v.·hat is
was born In San Francisco on I.Tl S F.armer said, are for six serve my people better inslde•1--rar_•_•_N_lx_o_n_w_a_s_co_nce_r~n<~d-. __ m~or_e_t_o_th_•_,P<>__..ln_:l,._bo__..ri--ng:_·_"_
July 4, 1883. After graduation T p months of lecturing and the new administration. plan-A4-..rt..._,
from Ute University 0 f Ul'll er:z writing an autobiography and ni g programs and influencing No callfornia ·in 1904. he worked " ., n , Pl st• C book and, magazine articles. actions -especially as they W a IC ream as an engineer as his falhtr WASltINGTON (AP) -A Fanner once headed the affect blacks and o t he r • • •
wished. finding by the Food and Drug Congress of Racial Equality minorities. I nti F Artifi" • I J th Bui hill boyhood inlerest in Adminislrallon that a brand of (CORE) and was outspoken in "I h h' · I I nve on or c1a ee drawing led the young man to canned tuna contained more ave soug ~ quiet y, n· the civil rights movement of side to pu-ue the elu•lve o sports cartooning for the San than the safe level of mercury. · '" --Francisco Chronicle, the San raises the pvssibility there the last decade before black jective of lasting change ' for Artfflclll Teetll Never felt So Natural Before
Francisco Bulletin, then . --may be greater 0 c ea n power and militant black na~ my people. There have been For the tint time, ICieDtt (lffttt Frxoonnholdsdenturafinner
starting In 1907, for the New mercury pollution than tionallsm began playing a ma· lintited successes. In short :~!~~ ~ ~ ~d ... al'lll MOftttm1/01"'bly. You may
York Mail . previously suspected. jor role in the struggle. In his range they have be'=. n before-form• an elattic mem-~~~I~' chew better.eat more
Goldberg began drawing The FDA said Tuesday it post as an assistant secretary minimal; in 1° n g range, brant that 1Mlp1 liold )'C'Mr dhf-FncootHT Juts for hourw. Re-
modest little items called found the high mercury level in the Health. Education and possibly sigTiificant. btfu 1o tM MlMrol tiuwu of 1fM1 lilts moiiture. Denturt1 that fit
"Foolish Questions." in Grand Union Brand tuna. It \Yelfare Department, Farmer "The achievements are not '"ft!!·. rnol~tiorwy ~ are '*"tial to he.Ith. See your
The first tucked into a cor· also said Grand Union had was not much in the spotlight, sufficient or fit.st enough to called F1s:oo~ for daily home :!::'~x=&;,t~t A~':
ner of his regular cartoon, agreed to remove cans from and even eschewed publicity. satisfy by appetite for pro-. u.e. (US. Plittnt 13.003,988) Cram at all dtui counttn.
showed a man who'd fallen off ,,,.;•~u".''P"'.""~le'.'.d_'l"'o"~·:__ _____ ~A~r:'.1e:r~m~•:•'.'.tin~g~w~i".'.th~P:'.r:".es~i:_· __!lr~•:ss'.:•.:."~h~e..':s~a•Ll].d:_. ____ --':===================== the Flatiron Building being
asked if he was hurt. 1'No, l
jump off this building every
day to limber up t o r
business," he replied.
Teacher, 25
Suspended
Over Pledge
FORT LAUDEROALE, Fla.
(AP) - A black civics teacher
who refused to pledge
allegiance to the American
flag because "there isn't liber-
ty and justice for all" has
been suspended.
"I don't consider myself
anti-American," Leroy Bates
said Monday. 'The words in
the pledge are just untrue .
Since I was in the ninth grade
I've seen very little justice,
very little equality."
"There isn't liberly and
justice for all ," Bates, 25,
said. 11As far as J can see
they are not even goals peo.
pie are subsc ribing to."
Broward County S c h o o 1
Supt. Benjamin C. Willis
ordered Bates suspended from
his post at Henry D. Middle
School.
be a friend-finder
and receive a
tentative agreement was re-to the police department and
ported.reached early_t oJlJ! y called for a bank guard .
v.·hich would give striking:-------'---------------have your friend open an account
at Newport National Ban k gasoli ne and fuel oil t a n k
truck drivers in 13 midwest
states a $1.65 an hour pay hike
over a three-year period.L..
About 5,000 drivers went on
strike Monday whi l e
bargaining agents from 40
carriers and Teamster locals
met with Sam P. Alau.a . a
federal mediator, at the
Ambassador East Hotel here.
Details of the agreement
\vere not revealed. However, a
union spokesman said striking
dri\'ers would be back on the
roa d soon. pending ratification
by membership locals -pro-
bably by '-1onday.
l FASHION ISLAND
Ntwport C.11ter
Newport S.oelt-644°0041
and do both of you
a favo r ...
(OFFER FOR LI MITED TIME ONLY)
IT'S REWARDING ANO FUN
TO BEA FINDER.,,
Find your friend (a relative will do*)
and bring them to Newport National Bank!
Atter you have introduced your friend
to our New Accounts girl and your friend
opens a new 5* % Time Certificate of
Deposit Account for $10,000 for 60 months
or longer, we 'Will give you, as the
"Friend·Finder," a FREE SONY COLOR TV
SET. Your friend wil l receive a FREE SONY
AM DESK RADIO for opening his new
account, which pays a big Sl/4 Ofo interest
compounded daily, paid quarterly or
longer at you r option (the highest bank
interest allowed by law for commercia l banks),
Certificate may be used as collateral for loans.
Your SONY color television set and your
fr iend's SONY AM desk radio will be
given imm ediately when the new account is
opened with cash, cashiers check, tellers
check, or certified check. Other passbooks
broUght in or sent in will be transferred free.
(Please allow other checks and passbooks
t ime to clear before claiming gifts.)
Accounts "WY be opened jointly, In trust
for different individuals, or as
custodian for minors. Prior to maturity
no principal may be drawn.
•Not • member (I, your hOt1$ehold .
3
4
fJt. ffER ANNUM
10 ~~~~~E~~~D
5.91 7%
PER ANNUM
FREE TO FINDER:
SONY "trinitron" 12" diagonal screen. Automatic color
control, greater brightness. sh1rper focus 1nd
many other speclal features. fully moved
from room to room.
FREE
TO FRIEND-DEPOSITOR:
SONY AM Des.k Radio With unique
slide tunln1 '"d volume con~ farerwttr
precision and brilliant perf(lrmanoe. Bnutifuff1
finished in rich walnut. Lays flat or tlrts up. ..................
SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS IF OPENED BY-MAIL.
NEWPORT NATIONAi. BANK
P1e1• open mr Time Certificate of Deposit Ac.count . (Accounts m., be
011tned jointly, In trust lor different lttdivldu111. or • mtodtan lor 111!111n.
All •u.ounts Oll•ntd br m1il must hn1 ptta plclltd tlP 1t the oftloe _..,.
•«:OUnt Is 011•11td, bf lht Friend·Flndtr whole sl1rwture 1pP1111 below,l Sony,
we can1 sllip It. We wUI t1oUI)' Frttl'Kl·flndet wtten to pick 111 &Itta.
Dtposltor'1 F11ll Ntml'-----=-~~----(r!M" prinO
Md""'----,'""°-----..:,,.-----...,--Clt.:t SI.It. Zip
SOdal Stcmtb' "Llnbtc Etldosecf b 1----
FREE SONY COLOR TV SETS AT ALL 9 CONVENIENT OFFICES
Air,.rt Otl'IOI Mlcheboft •1M1cMJl11r133"3111 • ..,...,. Office 8'ysld1 •I Junbor•• 6t2·1141 C.0.C. Pll'i Otllc:e N11twood ti Commamrtaltll 171·2900 • Slfuy Hllll Olb H11bor 11 Br11 t71 ·7190
~ Ofltt S11perior 11 PlaurCia '42·1511 • UMtrWl:r Dfflee East CMPllllll at State Colltl' 179-4140
WntdlH Dfkt Wntditf al °"""AZ~IJI
0 $10,000 for 60 ~or lon&er. D PUSbook al!doMd
Sipttm of DlpcJIJtot'=====---------(M'"t ff 1nc1uc1ec1 tor "di -.couno
n~...,"""''-----...,,,,,,.,,,..,,,,,,...----, __
s-.1 littdl omc. LtisunWarW,SuJ kldl5K-2711 • UpM Hllb Offk:t Leisut1 World, Llauu HlftslJ0.3200
j
•
'
DARY PILOT EDITORIAL P A GE
Meeting· Health Ne-eds
Had California. vqters approved Proposition 1 on
the ballot last Jun~. Jong-tenn financing for university
faciHties to train badly-needed doctors. dentists. nurses
and other health science s~~alists would have. been
provided, ,wilh Cuture benef1ci~ries sharing in ttle. Cost.
But they turned it down-undoub.tedly more out or
rrusiration over mounting tax bills than any evaluation
oC present and future health manpower needs of the
&late.
Since defeat of Proposition 1. the university· ha$
reviewed programs previously proposfd. UC President
Charles J. Hitch has nO\V submitted a 10-year health
. sciences plan to the UC 'Board of Regents to meet the
serious shortage of medical personnel at all levels.
Under the plan, UC \VOuld :
-Double the output of~ dental professionals at or
above the doctoral level. ·
-Admit 1.000 M.D. -students annually by 1980, a
133 percent incre.ase over the pfesent Jtvel.
-Double the present enrollment of interns and resi·
dents for a total of nearly 4,000 by 1980.
-Continue to strengthen training programs for
teacher-investigators. ·
-Increase the graduate nursing enrollment 110 per-
cent as part of a plan·to make nursing progr8ms an in-
tegral pa'rl of ttte ·unjversity health · sCieilces campus
having a medical school. (UC, Irvine would·be included
in this.)
. -Expand the total enrollment in optometry from
198 to nearly 300.
-Increase the nwbber of Doctor of Pharmacy
graduates to abou.t 120 per year by 1980.
developing new use& .of .health workers below the doc-
toral level and educf)ltiOn, ol health personnel below the
baccalaurea,te level at commut\lty . and \state colleges,
represent a major effort to close the very large gap be-
tween the supply of trained personnel and facilities and
the demand in the health field.
President Hitch, in his report, said, "Changin~ pat-
terns of health care. rapidly rising health expectations
of the public. and increasing emphasis on health maln-
tenance .are requiring a lar~er nwnber and a s;:reater
variety o[ health professionals and ancillary personnel."
It will cost money, a great deal of money. But if
Californians value good health next to life itself. ways
will be found to foot the bill. It will be·a matter of order~
ing priorities.
Its Cro Wi.tlng Glory
Tomorrow. Dec. 9, marks the beginnin2 of the ob-
servance of Bitt of Ri2hts \Veek/ It isn't just another
ot the countless "weeks" used to promote everything
from pickles to pork: sausage. No, Dec. lS:-1791 deserves
· to rank alongside July 4. 1776 as a cherished moment
in American history.
Fol.lowing ratification of the Constitution itself the
First Congress made the first 10 amendments, kiiown
as the Bill of Rights, its first order of business. These
bestowed no rights, such as freedom of speech. press.
assembly and religion. Rather. they made certain that
the new government should never take away those
fundamental. inherent American rights.
•
'
-Double e.fforts to educate and train ·students in
health care ad.ministration. environmental health plan·
Ding, and other public health fields.
These, plus expansion of veterinary training and
Great as is the Constitution in its 1nain body its
first 10 amendments are· its crowning glory in the Pr<r
tectlon of hmnan freedom.
'Pf.ease continue. What were you say111g·about ethics, integrity
and /Ugh purpose?'
An Inner
Contradiction •
In Thinking
"l suppose you might call -me a
member of the Silent Majority," the man
said. "What frustrates me is that I have
strong convictions, but I la~ tt1e ability
to express them well. They don't come
out sounding like the way I mean them,
when I run into someone who opposes my
views."
Dear
Gloomv •
Gus:
When a militant Women's Lib-type
needs the pickle jar opened, she'll
go to a Male Chauvinist Pig every
time.
-A. R. V.
""" fffhlr. nftktt .......,... ¥iewt,. ....
-•Mrll'I' ttlfM .. n. --· ""' -Ht _.,, t. Ollltnlf Gus. DllHr '""·
lst in separate, air-tight compartments.
But, in reality. they are related. Why does
a person have a right to buy a gun that
can kiU someone, but not a right to buy a
prvOOgraphic book or picture that can-'This, I suppose ls
wbaL ~lllADY pegple
honestly think abool
themselves -that
they simply lack the
adequate tools of
communication. Jn
most cases. 1 don 't
believe it's true :
anybody of average
ability \Vho can think
-not be de.momtrated-to-even injure any·
one in a moral or intellectual sense?
a clear thought can
also express it clearly.
AS HE AND I talked, 1 drew him ouL
Th're w1s nothing wrong with the way he
put things, but there was an inner con·
tradiction in bis th,inkiog which he was
unawai:e of, and which was responsible
for muddying Up the free flow of his ex·
press ion.
Let me give you an example of what I
mean. This man is extremely active in an
organization that is fighting the gun
laws: he doesn't want any government
impinging on his right to "bear arms."
At the same time, u we talked, he ex·
pressed disgust at the r e c e n t
··pornography report" or the President'&
Commission, and insisted that we ought
to have "toughtr laws" to prevent smut
from getting into people'• hands.
IN ms MIND, THESE two subjects ex·
How can we maintain a consistent
framework or values by asserting that
guns do less harm than dirty magazines,
or supporting the police in their raids on
pornography while at the same time we
~ppose the stand of every police depart-
ment in desiring stricter gun regulation
for crime control?
OBVIOUSLY, SUCH a man is simply
picki ng and choosing among "rights" em-
bracing those that suit his preferences,
and rejecting those that are offensive to
him. He has no overall philosophy of
what "rights'' really are ; he has not
thought out the matte r carefully; he has
merely elevated his tastes and prejudices
into "principles" without rational con·
&istency.
And this is why he finds ii hard to ex-
press his ''strong coovictions." They are
a mishmash of contradictory and con·
!licting attitudes that ultimately can be
defended only by stubbornness and silenc-
ing the voices or his opponents. It is not
the man with the finest command of
u·ords \Yho makes the most compelling
statements, but the man who possesses
his ideas more securely than they possess
him.
The John Wayne Special
To the Editor :
I believe the John Wayne Special
reached the people It was Inte nded for-
1he evl!ryday American citiien -and
was appreciated and enjoyed by them all
despite the comments o( the Associated
Press' tophislicated and no doubt cynical,
jaded columnisL Who did It miss, the Jet
Set?
TV needs much more "lofty sen-
timent," "ideals,'1 and to remind us o(
our heritage and much less sophistication
end horror. There Ls too litUe respect for our coun·
try and nag these days .
I work In a supe"rmarket and there was
much comment passed on the special by
everyone and all of It fa vorable . I don't
bellevt -many people missed It.
MRS. SEBASTIAN VALDIVIA
Reader Valdivia rtftr1 to a reu~
by Cvnthio Lovrr/. A11ociottd Prtu
TV comm~ntator, of tl•t 90·mhu'it
John Wayne uorlttv 1~dal Nov. 29,
••Swf119 Out, Su;ttt I..011d .1' ~fi1i Low-
ry 1a1d, "It wru: tDtll i11tentlo11ed.
hopeful a11d frwtklv patriotic. But
dt1pitc the lrigoe1t turnout of 1tar1
shtce tM £mmv ar.oordl~ broodtalt,
Quotes
•
......
' .
Mailbox .•
l~rs '""" ... .., • ., t r• Wfct~. Norm•!IV wrltert
ll'IOulCI a>nwY 1"-lt mu1"" In lOO -1111 tr 1•1., T~ tlthl 1111 Conclen .. l•IMrs I'll Ill U>flCt ot ellm"-
1\tte 11091 11 rtq•~ttl. AU ltll•rt tnusl lncluck •It·
"'"'U"' 1"41 .... lllnt lddrtH. bvl n•tnl'I ..... y Ill
wllh"-ld on .......... , " IUlll<!tnl "'""" II -··"''· Poetrv will l'IOI br ..viii!.,,_.
;t jusl didn 't work V('ry 1or.ll." Al.so.
"Dtspitt tht lofty .~e11tirnettt, o.11rl
idea./.,. 11otltlng that was dout toucl1e.f
t.l1e viewers' emotions, tnort fs 111«
pity."
-Editor
JHlaaed l he Polnl
To ttle Editor :
It's a sorry day when someone can 't
appr~iate and feel encouraged by
anolher's errort. to promote and stir up
patriotism in a lethargic nation.
Columnist Cynlhia Lowry obviously
missed the whole point of John \Vaync'1
ihow, "Swln&.,.Low , Sweet Land." The na·
lion need• to 'hear and fiet more and
more of good old fashioned nagwavinit
and chettin1 for -I mun for -Ameri·
Cl.
I sptak for many people who wrre
thrilled and very appr~ialivt of the
marvelous production. Miss Lowry could
do us •II • fa vor -U she can't say
. anythlnl nice, she should say nothing at
all.
PENNY JAMESON
Far Different Conditions With 204 Million Population
Past Attitudes Are No Longer Valid
WASHINGTON -tt Is rather sobering
to realize that "'hen one was born the
population of the Uni ted States was
about 80 million and now it is more than
• 204 million. The sobering part is that fun·
damentals learned in youth in a much
smaller country have less meaning under
l970's far different conditions.
• • Ric ha rd Wilson -i ,.
difference. C.Oncenlrations of people in·
crease crime and ra cial friction. At·
titudes ac:tepted In the past are no longer
valid. For exampl!', a depression as
severe as that in the 1930s, let us say 20
or 30 million men oul of work in today's
numbers, could lead lo a violent overturn
Perhaps it is even
more arresting that
in its hour of great·
est glory, victory in
World War II, there
were 60 million few·
er of ui than now.
In fact, the vast
majority now ali ve
hav~ no~ firstiian.!_
memory of hours of
glory, but only of a
.,_ or the system comparable to the Russian
revolution.
horrid succession of unpopular wan and
interventions, traumatic assassinations,
riots, violent con[rontations. and an ever
present consciousness of man 's ability to
destroy himself an d his world.
The older among us suffer from a con·
dltioped pessimism. There was a better
day and it might come again. But the
younger among us are afflicted by a
pessimism unconditioned by past events,
unaffected by and unconcerned \1·ith old
glori_es. Thus they may see affairs in a
clearer light.
INCREASED NUPifBERS make a vast
The potential for disorder is in m:tny
other respects greater than in the 1930s i('
only because generally increased and
concentrated numbers also increase the
weight and number of dissenting or disal·
fected elements. Increased numbers
create more causes for dissent and disaf-
fection , more friction and more
awareness of inequality.
Take one fa ct alone. The final cens}IS
figures submitted to !?resident Nixon
sho~· that farm population has declined to
10 million persons. about 5 percent of the
national total. ln the 1920s and 30s farm
population ranged fr om nearly one·third
to one·fourth of the national total.
SO IT IS NOT GROWTH alone u·hich
attends our troubles, but the con·
Cef!tration or that growth In urbanized
areas. The trend ()f the future is toward
more urbanization , in fact the creation of
entire new cities.
Under the pressure of demographic
events of such magnitude it is not
r;urprising that so many older people
despair of the future. The world they
knew. or imagined to be. when they were
demands or many modern public schools
with exacting curric1,1la in spite of their
sociological frills~ On the college level, a
.student body or 5,000 or 10.000. in hia day
may have swelled to 50,000 for his
children and grandchildren, plus multiple
campuses. weak administration, and a
disembodied faculty.
young will never exist again. The scale of IN A NATION or 80 million. with more
values has changed. Problems which than 30 million on farms . the fuming fac·
could go unsolved in lhe earlier part of Lory smokestack. the contamin<1ted
the century must now be faced. creek, the exhaust puff of the novel
For example: When most Negroes lived automobile, could be accepted as exciting
In a .socially controlled rural economy in and welcome signs of growth and pro-
lhe Ameiican South the nation could gress. In a 'nati;on of 204 million, going on "
deplore and ignore the problem. Not to-250 million &:fore U°)t century is over, tlle
day with millioM-of blacks coocentrated~ v.·aming siren-shrieks of_t.be..Jmmintnt.
in the inner cores of northern cities. danger that advancing tedlriology is
making breathing itself hazardous.
THE SO.CALLED generation gap may
be more a product of our increased
numbers than of any sudden escalation of
misunderstanding between young an~ o!d.
How can an older adult draw on his own
experience of a half century ago in a
public high school with 300 pupils und
without social tensions, motor cars or
television, in judging the pressures upon
today 's teen·agers crowded into overused
facilities and exposed to unsettling social
conditions?
How, in fact. can he relate In his own
experience to the far greater educational
The census figures presented by Com-
merce Secretary Stans to President Nix-
on were a message from the young to th e
old - or, if it sounds better, the mature
elements of the population. The world
they knew as youngsters will never exist
again so there is no point in harking back
to it and la menting its difference from to-
day or helplw;ly deploring il3 more
sordid and senseless manifestations. 1'he
solutions. when they come.· cannot be the
old ones because this is a much bigger.
much younger, and much harder t.o
govern America.
Buckley Replies to Jack Anderson
Be cause the Jack A ndr rsou colum n
concerning action.~ at t~nke Okeec!t<r
bee , Fla. of Coasta l Caribbenn. I nc.,
founded by the /other of Senator·
elect James 8 1ickley (Co11servativc,
N .Y.) and autl1or·edilor·columnist
\Villiam B uckley. was carried on tlu.,
Pagt Nov. 1.9, tllt DAILY PILOT nb·
tai1ted pennissio11 to publi.~h \Vil/in111
Buckley's rebuttal to A·nderso11. It
follows.
-Editor
One must assume that the activities of
Coastal Caribbean, tnc. insofar as thev
re£1ect on the judgment nr Sen.-EleCt
Jan1cs Buckley of New York. are of na-
tiona l interest. else "'hy should .Jack
Anderson devote his v.·idely circulated
column to a desc ription of same ? Tiicre
is more to learn from an exa1nlnation of
Anderson's charges than the particular
bcarinG of them on my brother James.
You see. AnderS(ln, havi ng no doubt lit
a candle to the memory of Dre\Y
Pearson. suggests that the interest Qf the
senator·elect in conservation and in
membership in the Senale Interior Com·
mittee reflects his anxiety to further the
Bu Ge orge ---·
Dear George:
P.1y girl drinks brrr and smokes
cigars. What can I tell her'.' ,
SllOCKEl!
Dear Shocked:
Tell her not in do
simultaneously; nolhlng 1s
unladylike than dropping
ashc5 in beer.
Dear George :
1hcm
1norc
cigar
I am ·II gttat believer in eti·
quette. When dlntng out. \vh11t lwo
fingen should be plactd ln the
mouth when whistling ror 1 vn1iler?
AMY
Dear Amy :
Please! Whlstling Is blllld man •
ocrs! P.lerely btat on the table with
a fork.
•
'
Guc8tReport
material interests or Coastal Caribbean,
Inc ., a publicly O'A'ned company, which lo
be sure 'A'as founded by my father.
THE BACKGROUND. Coastal ou·n!
mine ral rights in the state of Florida, in·
cli1ding Lake Okeechobee. Anderson ex-
plains that if Coastal is permitted to take
limestone from lhe bed of Okeechobee,
disaster will follow. Here. exactly, is how
he put it, lh the column published all over
America : "The fact that dredging out the
valuable limestone bottom would ruin
Florida drinking waler. kill off wildlife,
and turn a unique vacation spot into a
gra\'el pit apparently didn"t 'bo\he;
Buckley ... he has put profits ahead of
antipollution ." Anderson goes on to sug.
rest that Coasta l was reprimanded by the
district court \\•hich, speaking through
Judge Clyde Alkins. reminded Coastal
that one should not try lo •·balance the
public interest with profit." Okay?
I-COASTAL ACQUIRED its leas~ in
Florida 20-0dd years ago. Since lhat time
lhe company has spent, or caused to be
spc:nt, $20 million in oil and mineral ex·
ploration. Not a single complaint haii
been \'oiced over lhose years against
Coaslat'ii npcralional procedures. Dur ing
lhHI prriod . the profils of the co rporation
ha~·e amounted to: 1.cro.
:?-Co11iit11I nppHcd for pcrmlsslon to
brin~ linll'l!tnnc oul of the lake bed or
Okeechobee. Hiie to ""'hich limestone tht"
<'ourts have unanimously agreed Coastal
owns. Now, Lake Okeechobee is ap-
pro:<imately the slu or Rhode lsland.
Coastal asked (or P<'rmission (routinely
granled where no navig111tional hazard is
invol\'cd) 10 mine six acrts.
Previous to Coastal'• appJlc111tlon. \ll'n
or,:::aniz11ti<ins had been busily eng~gcd in
lnkins: limestone out ol the san\e Arca.
One is the U.S, Army Corps of Engineers.
Anolher is lhl': Centr11.I and Soulhem
Florida f lood Control District. Ovtr the
past period. these l"A'O public a-gencie~
have ta ken tens ol millions or tons of
limestone out or Okeechobee. Nobody has
complained that their doing so has
polluted the water, discouraged the fish
or traumatized a single aij.igator.
3-THE JUDGE BEFORE whom
Coastal brought the suit ruled in
Coastal's favor unequ ivocally. Judge
Alkins did, hoOA·eve r. say this, that there
\\·as so much conflicting scientific
lestimony as to what might be the result
if further dredging took place. that he
declined to rule that Coastal should be
permitted instantly to proceed to bring
How to Address
Our La,vrnakers
U. I. SENATOll.S
~l1n Critf!JltH! 40), )IJ N. Sflrk>t St , 1..0t A~ttlt~ '°°21 Incl Geor.1 M11~v (Ill, ll01 N. ROCleO
O• ' ar~tflY Hllll. During Cont ttHlont! HHkM111
~1111t Ottlu Skit., W111\l11110t1. 0.C. ~1 ,
U. I. fllPllllaSINTATIVll
40.-1n" CtYnl'I' Ol'll"fl
Rlcf\1rd T. I-Ianni Uftl Olnrf<cf-0). lfff W.
C,..!!«nl Avt., $ulhl J16, A•11lttln'1 Jolln G. SCl\rfllt•
ClS!f\ Olttrlct-11), O«t Ct"1P111 Otlve. SIJ!k fl•,
NrNHrt BtKI\. Oi.orlflt C-rtfllonll MMioflll
Hotfln1, u1a 1..--"' HevH Offlc• a 1,,.., .sdlll'lltr,
111111 l.tnO-tfl HtMe Otlkl l1d9 .. WllfUnQIOI\, 0.C. JCIJU,
ST.I.Tl: llNATO•I FIOM Oii.ANGE COUNTY
Otnnl1 C1roenter IU!fl 0 11trlct-ll), lee CC,
'"''"' •~M4. Commlnee1: "'••lalltu•t, 1..tctl GOw•f\.
""""•· S•l@oef COmn'llllM "' En¥!ronmfftllt Control,
$elect Commfltff on S.tlnflY lnlni1kln In Atrlcull\<••I
Soll, Jain! Commllll• Of'I !dw1tfall Ev1h11tlon 1rd
Joint C:om..,ltlff on l"ltl1tlv1 1l1tltemtnt. Ju1'e1
Ii W!ltitmor•, '"'"' Olllrk:t-ll l, lllll.J 8•0Dl<fl11rll. Glrll•n Grove f'16.o1. CommlH"tl: lh11ln1H • ...., Pl'llltl<IOl'f, H11tttl tl'ld Wtl!lrt Incl TllflWIOr!ttlort.
t>urlnt '"l11tUYf •ftl.IOll1 Sttlt C1J1ll0!, S..ert"'9ni..
t tlll. '*'·
up the limestone. lfo'>l·ever, said the
judge, if the slate of Florida. or tht
Anny Corps q.f Engineers. "·ere to suc-
ceed in demonstrating that for Coasta l lo
proceed to do exactly what they
themselves have been doing over the
years, would endanger the ecological
situation -then Coastal should be reim-
bursed its forfeited profit.
This is an extension of the principle of
eminent domain. In other \\'Ords. if
Coastal Is to be deprived -as say a
house owner would be deprived -of its
property. because of a transcendent in·
terest oI the state (whether water or a
new superhighway) the depri ved party
must, by common law , be compensated.
4-:-THROUGll OUT the proceedings,
Coastal 'has declared that it will abide by the adjudication or the courts, pure and
simple.
$-So? So, Anderson and lhe fr!lternity
who fall to pieces with worry about the
hygiene of the Everglades, even as th«!y
contribute lo the pollution of democratic
intercourse, deserve that special con-
tempt that attaches lo lhose who know.
ing the cireumstances, nevertheless try
to delude their readers.
-----
Tuesday, December 8. 1970
The editorial page of the Dailu
Pilot &eeks to info"n. and itim-·
ulate reader1 by prestnting t11il
newspaper'a opiniom and com·
tntntoru on topica of i11terut
CJnd aignificance, bt1 providing a
torum for the-t.;prt&.tion of
our rtad~r1' opini911$, and bu
prtstnfh1u tl11 dLveru view-
roh1r1 of infonntd ubitrverq
cmd 1pokct1uen on toplCi of th•
dau.
R9hcrt N . ..Weed, Publisher I •
Is
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nd
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USDA CHOICE • OVEN TENDER
Total .
Discounts
EVERYDAY!
FAD SELL ONLY
USDA CHOICE BEEF
USDA CHOICE • LEAN&. MEATY
_ BONILllS 89' c DOULDIR -
CLOD ROAIT i"'°
SHORTRIBI
ofBllF
LEAN • DEPENDABLE QUALITY
-
DR. ROSS • 1 LB. CA!"
MfAT OR CHICKEN
. DOG FOOD
USDA CHOICE
FIRST CUT
CHUCK
ROAST
c
•
78:
FREIN
GROUND
BEEF
USOACHOICE •BONE.IN
ROUND
STEAK
FAJ.:MER JOHN FAMll Y PAC ICED
SLICED
PORK
LOIN CHOPS
USDA CHOICE e TAILS REMOVED
T ·Bone or Club 133
STEAKS lb.
FARMER JOHN • 8 OZ. PKG • SKINLESS
PORK~INK
SAUSAGE
USDA CHOICE • BONE-IN
RUMP
ROAIT
25c
891b.
FARMER JOHN e FR ESH e PICNIC STYLE
PORK
ROAST
FRESH
FILLET of
•edlnapper
'
381b.
891b.
PRICES EFFECTIVE WED;Thnl TUES;
DlClMBlR-f'Thru DECEMIERl r.
STORE HOURS: Daily 10 "·"'·lo 9 '·"'·
SAT. & SUN. 10 a,.,; to 7 P·"'·
O~CAI! MA.YER e 12 oi.P1CG
SMOKIE
LINK
SAUSAGE 79c • 41TAR
.a1tlCIALI
ARE EXTRA SAVINGS MADE POSSIBlE
BY SPECIAL PURCHASES FROM THE
MANUFACTURER & PASSED ON TO
YOUI
~ A6 0UNCECAN .-ROSARITA •120Z.PKG .•FROZEN ._,.PINK PIN EA PPtE G•FT. 32c · MEXICAN
DOLE DRINK . 45c
•
Tuuda)', Dtcembtl' 8, 1970
. . -
•
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. .
DAICV PICOT f
··. JUICE ORANGES ~ LOADED WITH JUICE 1 oc
.. _, THIN-SKIN
. · LB.
'I
fl-'PLASTIC WRAPxru•m 2 7c •
OSC ... MAVER . 120Z. PKG DINNERS
e SLICED 65C ,
BOLOGNA
"
. TOTIN0 5•160Z.OFROZEN
. . SAUSAGE Iii "
,.Ai) MANHATTA N• ~!.~,z.PKG.45 c PIZ~A 73c Ill!: • TANG •SAVl1 2c
• clilu" • 155 oz PLAIN
93c g-·WIENERS """
•
-~ COLOGNEorAFTERSHAVE
51 C CPlt01s
0
suKRVIE•Sl6 ~!.:~; 47c .13 1/2 oz. BOTTlES FOR MEN
'"''""' BRAVADO
' 6 FRAGRANCES• SAVE 1.00
-
• NALLEYS •400Z.CAN•SAVE16c6 •.. SU PERIOR •S OZ.PKG. 20 LASAGNE 9c Tamale c •. SP•AvsontE • •o•woMEN
. ~ NALLEYS. •DO Z.CAN. CHICKE N69 , , .. PACKAGE 40c LIKE COLOGNE
· • RAVIOLI :::• ~ .• Hollywood Margarine
"
!
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MRS. CUBBISONS • 40 OZ. BOX . ' 1e FROZEN
-
. ' -· ORE IDA•2 lB.PKG.
·DRESSING i:::: 44c . TATER TOTS fl. iri>LiaiiN's· SAVE•· 39c flcoFFiE. RicH"
. •
'
5 LB.
BAG •
45c
22c--
c
-OCEAN SPRAY
Cranberry
Sauce
300CAN •
STRAINED OR
WHOLE
SAVE
9c
SUNKIST
TANGERINES e 3~:~29c.
EVERYDAY LOW DISCOUNT PRICES
ARTICHOKIS
PINIAltPLI
11AltAYA ...
PIRllMMONI
19~ .. ·
49~ •..
3 ; ';.00
BUNCH YIGITABLES: ~~;;:,•,:·:;.~:'"
o: •.
10· ...
L.TTUCE e 5ALA080Wle l!EOlt~~
• 8U nE" ENDIVE
RADllH & ONIONS ~~~~~
IN .HILL NUT. o WAlNUT$U CMONO•
• •MIXED • fllllEllTS e 811.4.ZILS
MARIANI DATES WIT"'"" I LI . PICG.
10·
IOt..
3911..
39;..
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' DAILY PILOT fursday, Orctmbtr 8. 11J7t>
New Defense
Judge Postpones
Tate Proceedn1gs
ANIMAloglc-.,....,., At 1972 Convention
P·'
Reagan to Support Nixon
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Gov. Ronald Reagan says be
intends to go to the 1972
Republican convention as a
Nixon backer and not as a
favorite-son -presidential can-
didate as in 1968.
that Is se> and 1 will be acUYely primary ·as a favorite soii, he
supporting him." said.
On that basis, Rt1ian would ·"You're a favorite son when
I it's a wide Gpen race and gG on the June l!r(I ba lot in you're hoping, as we did the
California as the bead dr a last Umef to stave off a bloody
convention delegation pledged primary."
to President Nixon. · That doesn't mean no one
DOWN T OWN
ol COI TA XII.A.
r
Farm Union
Holds Vigil
For Chavez
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -defense team, said he visited
The Sharon Tate murder trial the area during the weekend
has beeJi -l)OStponed unUJ Dec. and because or I.he rugged te r-
J& to allow ,the "associate rain he thought it "proba ble"
counsel" of missing defense Hughes had died in flood-
lawye:r Ronald Hughes to stu-waters.
dy lhe massive 18,000.page "He may well be dead -it
traMCript of more than live seems probable at this point,"
months of court proceedings. F itzgerald said, adding t h a t
•110W DO' 'fA~1'€ ,MOM?"
"I am certain In my mind
he will be running as an in-
C'Umbent President," th e
Republican governor said in
an interview Monday, "I hope
Reagan, going on 60, said he could challenge Nixe>n in
would reruse to engage in any California, the governor ad-
speculat ion that he might ded. I~~~~
become a candidate for presi-"They can come in here, gol;
dent Jn 1972 should Nixon on the ballot and run on that Read Graffi ti
relire arter one term. basis, but I would be running B B'll L superior Court -J udge Char-Hughes' disappearance was
les H. Older granted the con-"no ploy lo bring ,ibout a mis-tinuance Monday after Mu -trial." Screening Some ·Aliens
On WeHare Rolls Urgecl
Reagan. about to start his as pledged to tile President," Y 1 eary
~ond term after a 500,000-be said.
well Keith told him he needs The jury of seven men and
more time to bone up on the five women has been locked
lruscript. If Kellb is ready up in the Ambassador Hotel
by that date, closing argu-ror two weeks because of
vote re-election victory, said Reaga~ has sai~ his second ,,.----i~;::S ~~~ he hasn't discussed 1972 With tenn will be his last as F.C:Mi _. .. .-..-...-.
SALINAS, Calif. (UPI) -ments will begin. Hughes' disappearance. Prose-
Farm labor leader Cesar Older denied a motion by cutor Vincent Bugliosi s a id SACRAMENTO (UPI ) _
Chavez was reported Jiving on other defense attorneys for Older may a llow the jurors to Gov. Rona !ll J~cagan has been
fyix=:.d~p~g~~b!~m~~ ~~~-Re~~bl~~~ ~~ J~~~ SALE will be the nominee. Ed Reinecke Is the tYJ>e or
There would_ be _no point in man who would do well in-the
counlry illegally. running in the Ca lifornia top job.
"We believe that public as-r~~,.~~!i!!!~~~"!~~~!!~~--~I CLOSE OUT s;stance is intended for citi-• DA.NISH fUl NITUlE SWIDISH ClYSTA.l
· d. t •1 d · Charles Manson and two fe-go home ii there is a recess a vegetarian 1e non ay in male code!endants that he de-1 the Chr. h 1.d "'ged to screen out welfare II t hi h h or istmas o 1 ays. the jail ce o w c e was cla-a mis· 1ria· I i·n ••-case applicants who are temporary te d for refus'"g to call .... u-.:: In other developments relat-sen ~ ... of •_.,,·Van Houten, wh o or illegal aliens. zens or immigrants who have llllAL ••ltTIT CHINA • smL
fl I 'tu bo COt' ag•'nst ~ in• to the Manson "Family," o a e <:e Y ... w•• represented by Hughes, R Bud Anti .... cul t member Bruce Da vis, 27, eagan was advised Monday
declared their intent to resldf!
in this state." boa rd chair-
man Robert E. Mitchell wrote
Jn a letter to the governor ac-
companying a board resolu.
grower e. ud that she be tried separate--I ed Mond Outside the Monterey Coun-ly from the other three defen~ P ead innocent ay to by the State Social Welfare ' murder charges in the 1969 Bo d 1 t k th ti ty Jail, groups or Mexican-danls. of G ar o a e e ac on. death musician ary Hin-Americans belonging lo his Hughes disappeared 11 days man. A spokesman for the State
AFL-CJO United Far m ago in the Sespe Hot Springs Social Welfare Departmenl
Worke rs Organizing Com· mountain wilderness ar e a Manson and Tate lria t code-said such a move would af-
tion.
''We believe that aliens who
hold temporary immigration
permits or those who are here
with.out authorization do n o t
meet this test."
mittee maintained a vigil tlley north ef Los Angeles during a fendanl Susan Atkins also are rect primarily Mexica n ra'rm
say they will keep until he is weekend deluge. charged in the slayingh Davis' workers on tem porary pe r.
freed. Paul Fitzgerald, head or the trial was set for Feb. 16. mits, as well as those in this
Those keeping the vigil have j;:================::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=====, a shrine on a flatbed truck
which they light with hundreds
ol candl_..
Judge Gordon C am pbe l I
found Chavez in contempt or
rourt and sent him lo jail Fri-
day.
Chavez is boycotting Antle
in an effort to become
bargaining ag ent for , field
hands in the Salinas Valley.
Judge Campbell ordered the
boycott ended, saying Antle is
bound to a contract he has
maintained fOIJ' nine years with
theTeamsters Union.
The judge held Chavf!2 was
engaged in a jurisdictional
dispute to which Antle was not
a party.
Professors'
Firing Said
'Distorted'
FRESNO (UPI) -Freaoo
State-Colle'ge's president -as~
serts his demotioa. of a depart..
ment cha1nnan "has been
overdramaUzed by some d.
those involved."
Dr. Nonnan Baxter, the
president , told newsmen Mo;:.
day, "I sincerely regret t h e
exaggeration and resulting ru-
mors and the unnecessary an-
xiety which this distortion has
caused."
Baxter demoted both Dr. Eu-
gene Zumwalt as English De-
P.artment chairman • and Dr.
Roger Chittick as Zumwalt's
ass}stant.
While refusing to explain the
demotiOOI or Ule f.lriq; I a 1 t
WHk of nine faculty membu•,
Ba-declared ho had n ot
taken poHUcal vltwa Into eon.
sideratlon.
Chittick IJld Zwnnlt, w ho
will both rtma1n on campu1 11
pro!eaor1, objected to the way
they were demoted.
Gen. Po"'ers,
Former SAC
Chief, Dies
PALM SPRINGS (AP)
Gen. Tbomu S. Power, who
ptt30nally led low level bom-
bing raids over Japan in the
final days of World War II and
later became comma nder of
the Strategic Air Com mand, is
de.ad of an apparent heart at-
tack at 65.
Power, who commande\i
SAC from 1957 until his relire-
ment from the Air Force In
1"4, was strlken at his home
in nearby Cathedral City Sun-
day night and succumbed
before he could be taken to a
hospital.
Funeral se r v i ce s are
scheduled al 9:45 a.m. Thurs-
day in the Ft. Myer, Va ..
chapel wli!I b U r I I I lm-
medialely afterwards In Arl-
ington National Cemetery.
Benjamin Franklin:
''A man may, if he knows not how to
save as he gets, keep his nose all his life
to the grindstone .. ': ·
Be!\jemin Franklin could .
have been telling ;you to start a
CalifOrnia&leral Savillll8 hJib.
interest Moneymaker accotint.
I
$20,000 invested in a
California ~era! 6% Money-
maker account earns annual
interest of $1,236.63 (6.18 %
annual yield.) Simply leave
your principal and interest
with ID for two yean or mo re.
Mlnlmum dellOllt la $5,000.
Withclrawls on certifi-' cate eccounte may · be made
C.alifomia Federal
Nation's Largest Federal
any time before maturity with
some loss of interest.
There are other Mon-
. eymaker accounts that pay in-
terest from 5% all the way up
to 7.5%.
One of the world's
safest investments.
IAMPEX J
MICRO 14
CASSETTE
PLAYER/RECORDER
RECHARGES ITS OWN
BATTERIES
Ni·Cad batteries rech1r1• on AC
current. Also adapts to car cur-
rent Ne ar1y twice the poWer of
most portables. Big 3~K4" speak·
e r gives you big fu ll sound.
Unique ''floating'' mikt.
With p!Oi·in mike,
••rphone, ca~e and cass•tt•
Discontinued Lines
MICRO 32
CASSETTE
PLAYER/RECORDER
WITH FM/AM RADIO
Over twice t he p~wer of most
other portables. Record directly
off the air! EnJoy bit playback
sound for 5'"' 1peak1r. Ni.Cad bat·
terles r.oh•rs• 11rtomatically on
AC CUrrtnt.
With mlk•, ''"" ••r;flont atw:I c•ttett•
SAVE 20°/p
MICRO 95
AUTOMATIC
CASSETTE CHANGER
IN COM PLETE
· STEREO SYSTEM
Pl ay six cassette tapes auto·
matically. Or record your ow"
cassette tapes. Handsome wal-
nut cabinet matches walnut
speaker systems.
With slereo mikes
~nd 1t1"d
SAVINGS FOR XM AS
MICRO 88
PORTABLE
STEREO SYSTEM
Here's a comprete playe r!
recorder system In a handwme
Samsonite case. Speakers St'pa•
rate up lo 20 fcot and there's
plenty of power lor big. room·
filllna :i.oundsl
Wllh 1111c,opho11e1
•l'ld •lfr<d
HURRY! SAVE!
~ D~VIS -BROWN_
1
t
r
(
•
'
i
l
-~-
Fo1· The
Record
Deatl1 1\'otil"es
I EEG LE
8••b•r• ll~le. u~ e Ba• sr . co1tA
Mr••· Ot!e ot deolh, ~ 6. :s.11,.lved b•
•-~1. Oa", ot NeWP<"t B•aCh: ll11ber1 ,
DI US. N1vv; molllt!" Mrs, Ne!llp P1r~\.
("'!1 Mew; lwn •1•1••$, Ch1r1011e Fr•.
Of (°'11 Mew; M;ir11ar!t IH1c1, OreltOn,
S1•vit•1. TP>url<llY, OKembf!r 10, J:lll
o m , Y/e\tclllf (""~I. ln!er,,,ent, Pacltlc
View Memo•i"I Pad<. Wfflcllll (h1lll!I
Mo•hllrY. "6-41Al1. 0 1r..-1ou.
I ENNETT
Dorothea F. Bonnett. Aoe ,S, of '17~ 6th
51, H11n1ln9!"" BNch. 0111 of <Mllh.
0Kember 7. Survivt'<I bv nephews, Ed·
"'"'d E., Claire, (hd\!Ooher ind Cad
Mo•rlto 11r1nd·nffih•w•, Wiiiiam and Ml·
Chool Morris; orand-n'K fl, K••hleen
Morris ond Mary F , B1rl11<1. s ... v1c11,
Tllurldl Y, 1 p.m., Sml!n1 (h1ptl. 1n!e•·
mont, We1 tmln1ter Memorl1I P1r~
Smitht Mortu1rv, l'l•ect<>••.
JOHNSON
r r@<I• Johns.on. A'Jlt S9. or 8011 Mermf ld
Cl•ck , Hunlinf!Oft Buch. O.!e ot dt flh,
O.cember '· Sunri'n!I bv hu•b11\d. HllO· !~1; sioler, Mo•i• Dit tdrt, Albu<llltrqut;
•SI n11me<t111• nltces ""' ""°"'""' s .. -vJctt. W@<lnesd1•1» I 1>.m., Smllh• Clli!Ptl.
l'l111l ruling oloce, P1dfic VO-MtmOt·
lftl P1rk. Smltti• Mor!111rY. Dlrtclo'I.
LOCKWOOD
l!Ql>erl A. Loc•woocl. ?XIO Peieroon Pl ,
"'"'· n ·C, C0t!1 MHI. D41Tt ol dtllll,
0.(.,,,l:>H 6. SurYIYfll br wlt<t. J111t'IJ
rl1111h!er. Linda; mo!llt•, Oorh Eichorn.
Stn!1 Sut•nne; t>rotlltrs, John, of Von
Nu•t: and 8111 LDCkwood, S1nt1 S111ann1
Strvlcn, Th1irid1Y. Dec. 10, 11 1.m., P1-
d lk View Ch1~1. wilh "'" Or1n't Coun·
TY M1i.onk Bc>lrd olfi<:llo!ln1. ln!e•m•lll,
P1cl!J< View M9fnOrl1! P1rk. P1cltlc View
Morh,.nr, Dlrtc!ors
IODIA
V1v1 "odl1. l1'S.A Via Putrta, L•~un1
t<IUJ, 0.1e of Offtti, Dt!c•ml>u I il>r·
\llvfll t>r 1i1t••• Mrs. Le!!• Cuuon, L1-
<J111n1 Hl!h. Prl\llle senokes '"" en!oml>-mt nr. GrttnWOO<I M111i.ol@llm. San Oi...,o,
Mc(ormic-L11una Btltll Mori"''"' 01-
'""'I>'•.
ARBUCKLE &. SON
\Vestcliff Mortuary
427 E-17th St .. Costa l\lesa
64'-4888 • BALTZ l\IORTUARIES
Corona del l\lar ... OR 3-!.tSO
Costa l\1esa . . . . . . mi S.%tu • BELL BROAD\VA Y
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Cos ta Mesa
LI 1-3133 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Laguna CMyoa Rod.
494-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW
J\!Ei\IORIA L PARt'
Cemetery l\lortuary,
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Dri,·e
Newport Beach, CulilorniA
i44-%i00 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
DOME
7111 Bolu Avt.
We1lmla1kr • . lt3-3U5 • SMITHS' MORTUARY
627 t.taia St.
Huntington 'Beaclt
l "-'539
'Te11tpo' Bau
Sunday Mail Suit
Aha11donment Told
SAN FRANCISCO -01-
f!cials of the Ninth Circuit
U.S. Court of Appeals here
have confirmed that attorneys
for the now defunct Sunday
l\tail have abandoned a lavo'suit
which challenged · the con-
stitutionality of Fullerton's
ban of the weekly publication
'·Tem po."
gra,nd lheft and IS counts of
corpo rate security violations.
The arrest follo\'•ed scores of
complaints that his paper has
discontinued publication after
the protesters had bbught
dealerships in the organiza-
tlon . ·
Russel and his wire also
have been named defendants
in Orange County Superior
Court lawsuits which charge
him with failure to honor pro-
missory notes.
Depa'rt~ent
Receives
Drug Grant
Business
•
Statements
Due July 1
SANTA ANA -All Orange
County firms operating under
a fictitious flrn1 name must
refile their Fictitious Business
Nan1e Statement in the first
half of 1971, acrording to
County Clerk William E. St • John. He explained that a fic-
titious name is one that does
not include the suma1ne of the
operator or one that implies
the existence of· other owne rs.
or, if a corporation if a name
other than that inc luded in the
articles or incorporation is
SANTA ANA -'the Orahge Use~.
C:OUnty Deparln1ent of Educa-Under a new state law. a $10
lion hes received a $30.900 riling fee will be charged.
Tutsd.ay, Dtttmbtr 8, 1970 DAILY PILOI f
~------------~
CaliforniaColle9e / ... ' 50 ;· ...
" X_ONG lfACH
CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT
TELEPHONE, 436-9767 or 435.5367
"DAY OR EVENING CLASSES"
I TWO-YEAR COUllES
l wlllt1" A,111illi1l11I0.1
Hith11 Acc1w11t~
Acceu•li"t -O.te P1~•11illf
1'iKwlf¥1 S.Crehtritl
SHORT-TERM COUISES
si...., •• ,~ic
Cl1roc1I
111,u•c~
a..;.,111 MMhif>K
D.1111 A11i1tl119
Me,ic1J lr1ft"riptilini1I
f wlJ.(h1r9e IHk~l.,int
l rwlh·llf (l1u11
SMrtlo1"4 114 t.,,w.,
(G1999 •• &IC Sh1r1h1n'l
Somebody Fights Back
ONE-YEAI COURSES I
l991I S1u1t1riol
MHlic1I SKr1t1rill
S1<r1!1ritl
((i199t er AIC ~~).
J;,1;,,1 AcctH!iftt ~
Who fights city hall? The DAILY PILOT dots. That's who. And l'ihere rlsr can you find
cogrnt commentary on your comm11nlty? Chrct the rditorial pagt or YOUR community's
daily newspaper. the DAILY P-ILOT, of coutlr-I
Publisher \V. Robert Russel
challenged the city ordinance
in federal court a yea r ago,
some four months before
publication of "Tempo" was
halted_ He ha s since filed for
bankruptcy listing debt s of
more than $500,000 in the.
short-lived operations of the
paper.
Operatio11
Dru1nstick
Under Way
federal grant to establish a1·----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,ii
drug abuse i nf o r m ation
Earlier this month Russel
was arrested on 14 counts of
Housel1old
Goods
Needed
SANTA ANA -The Sal va.
tion Army Men's Social Ser-
vice department of Orange
County needs repairable rur-
nlture. household appllancts
and clothing of all kinds, Brig.
John Allen said.
Orange Coast residents \\'ho
"·ould like to host a
serviceman in their homes for
Christmas have been urged lo
contact the Servicemen's Cen-
te r o( Oran ge County. ,
A spokes man for the center
said anyone interested in
hosting a serviceman during
''Operation Drumstick" should
s end a se lr -addressed .
stamped envelope to the
cent er, 300 E. Katella Ave.,
Anaheim, 92802.
Families will pick up thei r
serviceman-guest al I h e
center at 9 a.m. and return
him al 9 p.m., the spokesman
explained.
cent er.
Dr. Robert Peterson. county
school superintendent. said the
Cali fornia Council of Criminal
Justice informed hin1 the
money will be made available
next January.
The one-year allocation "'iill
provide a program lo upg rade
drug abuse instru ction. "The
emphasis will be on prevent ion1
through instr.Jcli on.·' Petersonl
said. • I
Dr. Peterson said the grant'
was an example or ··something!
the county sc hools office can
do that local districts cannot . •
_ . because such grants arel
available tlnly-to a regional I
agency."
That ,_-emark was I a
response ·to a Grand Jury
report this week which called
for abolition of the county
school board and starr.
Fall housecleaning is hoped
tu be abl e to prndu ce
ma terials to busy more than
90 men in the rehabililation
program ir housewives "'ill l,.;.~=:==:;;'-----=~~~~=~=:==::::----:-=~l:I
call the Army. II ~ ·•
"Our trucks are ready to
roll throughout the county for
donations from homes and
stores," Allen said.
Persons w it h repai rable I
discards should call 547-0831
for pick-up by~ a Red Shield
truck.
Workers Get
Se1-vice Pins
SANT A ANA -Five Orange
Coast residents were among 22
county employes awarded 10-
):'.ear service pins reci:_ntly by
the county B o a r d of
Supervisors.
Honored were Grant R.
. .
I
)
STORE HOUR$1
DAILY
t :)O-t ,.m.
SUNDAY
11 -S
•
formerly Gentry Ltd Phone 540-1500
HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER ON THI MALL
HARIOR ILVD. AT WILSON ST., COSTA MHA
5'0·1 soo
MEN'S
SUITS
Yoiun to $145
Bertolet. district attorney,
Co s ta Mes a : Edgar A.
Freeman, district attorney.
Fountain Valley ; Robert A.
Gray. north municipal court.
Huntington Beach; Barbara F.
Walkup, probation. San
Clemente. and Donald E.
Williams, sheriff, Huntington
Beach.
I THE IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT!
SPORT
COATS
•
GOPWornen
Installed
l n New Posts
ANA HEl l\T -Four Orange
FOR YOUR PIN UP GIRL
Pins in 14 karat yeUow gold. Cultured
pe~r1s. $125. Six-diamo~d pin, $250.
CMr1• Atttu111t lnvl!fd Amerlc111 l•,,.•H
8•11kA,,,.rlc1rt1 •ntl M11ttr Cb1r91, lff
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH-b<<-1380
Open Mon. thru Sat. 10 o.m. to 9:30 p.m.
IANKAMEalC.t.aD
2
PANTS
SUITS
VALUE $125
•69
-MASTIR CH.t.aGI
DOUBLE
IRU.STED
SUITS
VALUE $140
Values to $70
Coast women "'ere installed in l'=========================="'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ their 1970-71 posts in the
Ora nge County Federation of
Republican Women Thursday
al the group 's annual con·
vention in Anaheim.
Confirmed in their posts by
Mrs. Elsa Sandstrom, pr esi·
dent of California Federated
Republica n Women, were:
l\1mes. David Steiner. Seal
Beach. second vice president:
l\·letvi n L. Ross. San Juan
Capistrano, fifth vice presi-
dent : Dean l\1 ycrs. Irvi ne.
recording secretary and noss
Dorsett. Hunt ington Beach,
treasurer.
The eig ht women elec ted to
key posts in the Orange Coun-
ty organizat ion will be headed
by l\1rs. James ll Hamilton of
Anahein1 as president. l\1ore
than 250 delegates partic ipated
in the day.Jong Disneyla nd
Hotel convention. •
Niven Buscl1
Due at UCI
JRV INE -Novelist Niven
Busch. "'ho has a d a p t e d
several of his own novels for
films and v"riiten more than
20 screenphiys, will be a
Regents' Professor nt UC
Irvine during the "'inter
quarte r beginn ing January 4.
lie will teach a graduate;,
course. ..Lite rature a nd
t~ilms," in whic h he wlll
c:llscuM the sources from
which _ screenplay• w e r e
adapted, the screenplay• ind
the films lhemselves .
His novels include "Duel In
the Sun," '"l'be Actor," "The
Hate Merchant." "The San
Franciscans'' and "California
Street."
SALLY YOUNGER
WORLD'S FASTEST WOMAN WATERSKI ER
TALKS ABOUT LONG DISTANCE
TELEPHONE CALLS:
•.
-
•
"' When I want to pt
somewhere in a harry
I dial direct. It's f.aster.•
@Pacific 'lll•phonl
'
'
I
•
·: ·: . "
(
\
... . ...... --... ~ • • .....
ff D•ILV PILOT Tuesday, December e. iq;~
MacGregor .. Q.=U.:.E;;;;E_N1_e _____ a:..v _Ph_.;1_1n_1_e,_1a_nd_1.., 'Can't Fitad Niche'
GI J·oe Victim of Unemployme:Qt After GOP
Victories
WASHINGTON (AP)
Tall. soft-spoken Rep. Clark
MacGregor, taking over as
President Nixon 's chier lob-
byist \Vilh !he Denlocratic.con·
trolled Congress, says he has
no illusions his new job will be
easy.
.. Without overstepping any
CQnstitutional bounds, the
President wanlJ and needs
legislative \'ictories. n o t
defeats,·• the fl.1.irmesolan 58id
In an inlerview.
'·I 'll be trying to get him
lhose victories."
MacGregor is quite aware
that when the new Congress
convenes "ith -a presidential
election on the 1972 horizon,
Democrats, including White
. . ,
House aspirants and other "I'm not firing people at random. Just tall, handsome
consistent critics of the ad· bachelor types. And then, only until after the
ministration, will be just as in· Christmas party."
terested in making the Presi· ---------------------dent look bad.
~ . ' ' \YASIUNGTON (AP) cent of whom have seen Viet· tion," Cranston said. years or more to adjust to \Vitnesses from the Defe'5e
When GI JOe comes home nam service -are being James F. Oates, chairman civlllan life. Department, Labor Depali·
fron1 Vietnam, chances are he discharaed into the civilian of the President's national M d' II ki h 'd t V le Adm ' ·st "-will find himself without a 1·ob " e 1ca Y spea · ng, e sai , men , e rans 101 r..,-
-a victim o( unemployment economy," said Sen. Alan Jobs For Veterans Committee, they may ·well suffer such lion and other agencies de--
Cranston, who is chairing . and o th e r administration symptoms as jo.J> instability, scribed wbal they ca lled a ~~at~arj~n~~ce~u=~~~ite: hearings or the veterans sub· witnesses dis::rgreed w i t h anger, resentm ent, alienalion , broad range of services makJ
has bten told. commlltee. Cranston's esUmate that the poor control over aggression, ing a soldier's transition eas~
"But these men enter an government's efforts ha ve alcoholism and drug, addiction . ier and helping him land a j;
In addition, w i In es s es economy that isn't ·providing been "scant, diffused and un· The veteran's problems may Oates said plans are und
testified, the stress of guer· enough jobs for the people eo;ordinated." range, the doctor said, from 8 way ror a national adver'tisl g
~~':ier:iart:;e sol~i:~ ar ~e:s~ alrtady there, and there is no Dr. Gerald Caplan, a pro-combat.frozen inability to campaign ''to promote .Jla·
evidence that th e ad-lessor of psychiatry at the emphasize with the sufferings tional awareness of t'h e
temporarily Incapable of fin· ministration is doing very Harvard Medical School and of other human beings to a veteran and the skills and
ding his niche as a civilian. muc h to provide the special senior psychiatric consu1tant discovery that "his favorite knowledge he brings to the
Malcolm R. Lovell Jr., individualized h e Ip our for the Pea~ Corps, said seat in the local bar may have civilian labor market as well
assistan t secretary of labor veterans require and are en· veterans ex:posed to combat in bec<ime someone e l s e ' s as the severe problems he
told senators Wednesday the titled to in this tryi!Jg situa-Vietnam may require two favorite seat in his absenei!." faces as a· job candidate."
unemployment rate for return·1 ,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;i ing veterans ha s leaped to at!~
least 7 percent, signilicanUy
higher than the-jobless rate
for the population as a whole.
And, be said, factors which
lead to this situation "could
tend to rtsult in e x •
serviei!men being among those
last to be hired and first to be
unemployed.''
''40 Miles 01 Ebristmas Smiles''
can begin at your door l .
"I" de a J with them In-
dividually with all the tact,
good will and good humor I
have," MacGregor said. f:;ente1· Lauded "Each morith some 80,000
servicemen -about 60 per·
\ . ' Clip this coupon and send it in as a promise to
~ brings to his ne\v post,
announced by M•on this week,
10 years of experience in
Congress, where he won a
reputation of a moderate con·
servative, a hard scrapper (or
his legislative point of view
and a _likeable colleague.
25 Years of U.S. Service Beethoven
'Drank Self
MacGregor was n a m e d
counsel for congressional rela·
lions without repla c in g
\Villiam Timmons, the Ten·
nessean who had headed the
\Vhite House lobbying effort.
"I think I can add
something that was lacking .
Seru;ilivity to the individual
member o( Congress is the
best word for ii, 1 think,"·
MacGregor said.
Suspended
Licenses'
' ;sAN DIEGO (AP) -The
funny looking radio antennas
sit atop the slip of land called
Point Loma on the western
edge of San Diego Bay.
That's about all the public
knows . about what soes on
below at the Naval Electronics
Laboratory Center.
For 25 years, it has kept lhe
Navy abreast of advancing
science technology.
The Navy's top research qnd
development officers plan 10
get together Friday night to
celebrate the center's silver
anniversary. It occ upies 400
acres managed by I , 5 o o
persons with an annual budget
exceeding $50 million.
A radio slation on the site
served as communications link
for the entire Pacific Fleeet
tor 60 hours afte r the attack al
Pearl Har bor. To Deatl1'
The center deals w·i t h
microelectronics the science . LONDON (UPI) -Ludwig
of reducing el~tronic arrays Va~ Beethove~ died ol ~J~o-
down to Inches in size, pro--holtsm, according to a Bnttsh
vides information about the doctor. " . ocean for use by civilian scien-The ~mposer had a brain
lists an d fisbennen alike and and mmd capable ?f many
has developed a radar system mo~ _years of. ~us1cal pro-
that spots a housefly IO,OIXI duct.1v1ty had his life ~ot been
f et h" h shortened by alcohol, Dr. J.
e Spo~;s~en say its com-~· h-1adden said i~ the latest
munications system will ht issue . of the JOU~nal of
lh f. 1 1 d . 1 alcohohsm. e irs 0 reco r . signa s Beethoven died in 18l7 at the
from the . Echo satellites and age of 57, having produced
to help guide Apollo astronauts nine symph · 32 · safe! b ck to th on1es, piano Y a ear · sonatas, seven concertos. two
masses, 16 string quartets and
Toll Ri ses Divorce Italian Style
Means Going to Court
a collection of trios. quartets.
quintets. sexlets and octets
tor various instruments.
l\1adden said reports "of
repeated incidents of drunken·
ness occurring in a 57-year-0ld
person In the company of
social inferiors confirms the
ROME (UPI) -"Divorce -
Italian Style" is going to be a
k>t du ller and slower from no1v ....
Until today, "Divorce -
Italian Style" meant killing an
unwanted male, Now il means
going to court like unha ppy
spo uses almost everywhere
else.
BIBLE THOUGHTS
"Sfftl 'I• first th• kh1gdom of God-". Do
lhi1 •nd Gcd 9u•r:.ntoe1 your ordinory
11•od1 of lif• !M,tt. ll :ll. Rom. 1:28 !. II
PAYS to '''"' God ~
Som• '''"' God in;1;01lv bec••Jlt •I DOES
p•v !her1 •nd here•ller). Bui l•I••. thev
grow lo lowe h;m tnd 11rw1 be,tu1t of
1h;1 hiqhe• motive, lo•t. One 1hould gro ,...
in Chr;d\011 9•t ct1 !Gtl. 5:22 -25. 1 Pet. 1:2-10), be,om;n9 more
God·l<•e -"God i1 low1" II Jn. 4;1111
Bui HOW do11 on• .. S1elt firit the ~;n9dom of God"? Re•d, ;,
the 1;bl1. the •ecor4 of Ch•i1t'1 life. H., "'"' GOD mt 11if11ted
in the fl11h (Jn. l :t, 14, Jn, 14:7-1 t , H1b. 1 :1-'~l . Thi four
GOSPELS, Mitt., Mk .. l~ .. J n .. !ell of Chri1~. Ro1d !hem to gel
FAITH !Rom. l0:17 l. Thon tetd ••AClS" lo put th ;, ft;th ;nto
ACT ION. It btpli11d into Chri1t, btcomin9 • Chri1li1n, Then,
r1•d the rem11inde• of lhe New T1.tomenl to l11rn ho ... to liv1
+tie Chritiie11 tile. VISIT Chu1ch of Chri1t el 287 W . Wil1on St.,
Coil• M111 r C •. end wt wilt 011i1I you in you• 1e•r,h for God.
Th i1 life oflet1 but TWO CHOICES, 1erwe God or SATAN,
!Motl, 11:24, J11. 4:4, I J,.. 2:15 1. A sinner. bofo11 h1 becom11
• Chri1tie~. ;, in s.1111'1 •in9dom. but ;, tr1111l.ted into Chri1!'1
•i119dom •1 ht becomot t Chri1t;on !Col. l ·I)). YOU m•J1i
,hoo1e GOD or SATAN! Church of Chri~t. 287 W, Wil10" St.,
Co1t1 M11•, C11. 9211 27. Phon1 541·571 !, 545-244 1, ~46 .§711J.
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"I suspect by Christmas, diagnosis of alcoholism."
·we'll be filing a Jot or suits," Beethoven's liver. according
one Rome lawyer said. "There lo Madden, was found in an
is_ nothing io keep us _from_~utopsy ~ i;iave shrunk to ha.U
going to work with clients 1ts-p:ope:r size. was lea~-m
now." ~ns1stency and greenish-blue
1n color.
Experts said more than one .~==========;;II million Italians are waiting
lhe go ahead to file divorce
suits. Many will rush to the
courts out of fear of a referen·
dum reversing the law or a
successful legal challenge of
il
ON Ti:IE TUBE
For 4 le b11f 9uld1 to "'h•I'•
h1pp111 jn1 on TV, rotd TV
WEEK -ditfributed will! Hie
Soturdoy edition of tho DAil Y
rlLOT.
, .. bl!caint wt 11i.nntc1 II rtwtl _.,, lly ..,.lftd only lrtsll hims r•om 111 ... 1•1 corn lfO 1•>r~tr1 -_. •-4" curlnt melllod, reel wi..c-1 ... nlc~orv and aw11WQOG •mo1<lno • .JI.hour °""' Wkk'l9. 111111ey 'o\ 1plq oi.11 So dellcio<n end 1p.pell.llng Wt t111t wouldn't know ho"' lo lmpro.,. 11111 ·-.
duct w1•ve bttn ...a~lfllll IOf !he 1>111 3" Vffrt. s111r11 1lkod loll, from ~ IO bO!lom !or tll'f re..-1 !If 1llcts, ytt relalfts 1Wl\Olt nom· 1ppe1r1Me
for •ervl1111. Every 1!lct 11'11 1•me delKtlDlt ttll<knts1. C11mplt11ly bfkld 1n0
ready to '''"°· Order VOii• HOl'IOV 8•ked Ham IOOly, '" •d•.,.ture 111 '"~ IOY~nt you'll nrv1r l11rvot.
WHOLI 01 HALF HAMS
CONl"lll'MATIOM I ·•It.DOING I SPECIAL
COMMUNION ll'liCl,TIONS OATHllltNGS I .. ARTY
'!CHIC
RnAIL
1222 S. BROOKHURST
ANAHEIM
t111 l•ll In VIMltt Cenltfl tH-Uil
STORES
3700 E. COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR
11 Ill W. ''"° c,...,,1 "~'*
help your local sponsor, the Orange County· 1
Coast Association and the DAILY PILOT in this
year's effort to light up the Orange Coast for
I
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a happy holiday season.
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CHRISTMAS DECORATING CONTEST ENTRY I
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City Zip
Day Phone ........................... Eve. Phone ..................... .
Local Sponsor .................................................... " .............................. _
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I SH 1111 below ltr n1mn II tPOnser1 II c•ntnb In letll •••II. t.i'll 1111 1ne
,,, ., .. IR Wiiien your dKlrlfld '"''"''' Ii IKlted, IUT llE SUll'f TO MAIL THIS COU .. ON TO: Publk Str.,.kt Dl,I., DAILY ,ILOT .... 0. kll
•• lJtO, Clltl MHO, CA t'.H~t.. ..I
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Seven "'inners "'Ill be ~lected tn the 1970 judging of "40 1'-liles ot Christmas Smiles" -the three best residences,
the three best commercial establishments and the one ci ty, community or area whose deC<lrations C<lnvey to the judges
the most holiday spirit (they'll designate that area •·chrlsti:nasville 1970"1. \Vatch the DAILY PlWT for lists of local
"•inners and for a page full of pictures of \Vinncrs in the "40 l\lilc:i1 of ·Christmas Smiles'• judging. The Orange County
Coast Association \viii a\\·ard a plaque to each of the sevc n "40 r.liles" \\:inners.
For Information, Rules and Judging Dates for
Local Contests, Contad These Local Sponsors:
Capistrano Beach
Chamber af Commerce
Contact President -
Jim Elliott, 493-4561
Corona del Mar
Chamber of Commerce
Contact President -
Carl S. Kegley, 673·4050
Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce
Contact Exec. Mgr. -
Nicholas Ziener, 646-0536
Dana Point
Chamber af Commerce
Contest Chai rman -
Fountain Valley
Chamber of Commerce
Contest Chairman -
B•rbai'a Gillum, 847-1475
Huntin9ton Beach
Chamber of Commerce
Contact Exec. Mgr. -
Rillph Kiser, 962-6661
La9una Beach Junior
Chamber of Commerce
Contest Chairman -
Steve Denton, 494--3995
La9una Ni9uel
Homeowners Assoc.
Contact President -
Pat Mancini, 495-4310
• Saddleback Valley
Chamber of Commerce
Contact Exec. Director -
Al Blois, 837-1753
San Clemente
Chamber of Commerce
Contact Exec. Mgr. -
R. W. Evans, 492·1131
San Juan Beautiful
I SJC Chamber of
Commerce)
Contest Chairman -
Ell ie D1rnold, 493·3133
Seal Beach
Chamber of Commerce
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Lana Bannister, 496-5420 Newport Harbor
Chamber af Commerce
Contact Exec. Mgr. -
Proctor Weir, 596-6491 -
Contact Exec. Mgr. -
Jack Barnett, 675.6300
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MILES OF CHRISTMAS SMILES" far 1979"' JOIN THE ORANGE COAST'S "40
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stereo103FM . -• ' -,
• • • • music music music mus1c . " . ~
good • music .... ·
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FAMILY ClRC!l!S bu Bil Keane
''
Tests Reveal
Destiny Control
Cited in Success
ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Two the outcome al events. would
psycholotists say the person amwtr yes to the first and
mosi likely to succeed in life thk'd , no to the second.
believes he has a measure of The external p e r 11 • n • s
coolrai over bis own destiny. answers would indk:ate \bat he
Life's losers, on thfl other (tels be bas no control over
hand, lend to feel that luck is bis athletic ability, scholuUc
the compelling factor and that success t1r future.
they can do nothing aboot it, Nowicki sajd t be ex-
say the psychologists, Dr. periments geDerall)' s h o w
Bonnie Strickland and Steve black pupils to be more ex-
Nowicki. ternally oriented than their
They based thei r C'Onclusions white classmates and that the
'.,
T11tsd.iy, Dtctmber 8, 1970 DAILY PILOT JI
~~~ ~~~~8~~
gi~.s that say... ~
for many years • • •. ~
you'I finol a wondeoiul ••leclion at Da•:;::IA I
.,.., _ _,.., ... ~~"'::~'_~~:_ __ ,on • year-long study of public gap widens with qe and ex· .school-pupils-in-the -Atlanta --penence.
metropolitan area. 1ba_t _finding, he ta.id, ls not U
'Ibey submlteed a list of 40 surprisme. W.
C~~OD~A~!~~~E ~
$775 ~ ',Oooh I I learned that w!lfd in school I We
better tell th"a police!"
-+-------------------~-~
I
t f"l('I l1•reasure Hunt
I
lCaptain Searches for Sh~p
' I LOS ANGELES fUPI) -
1Jt's just about every man's
!dream to go on a treasure ~unt and Capl. Eric Schiff is
irealizing his. The goal is an
,stimated $200 million in gold
)"ind silver bullion al the bot·
;tom or the Caribtr.an Sea .
I Schiff. Holland·bom with 30
~ears experience on the high
eas. said he and h i s
>ssociates have pinpointed the
pot in the no rth Caribbean
.where 14 Spanish ships, laden
;wit~ gold and .silver, were
· iaunk in a hurricane in 1643.
Schiff, ~9. located the
<iwreckage, he says. in 1963 in
'10 fathoms, a depth or about
·60 f-eet. He displayed some
,artifacts recovered at the
iscene including an earthen
"olive oil jar.
, The Spanish ships were en
•route from ~1exico to S p a i n
'v.·hen tM'y sank. Only the
·flagship of the IS.vessel fleet.
>traveling together for prtl·
it.ection from pirates. wcatht>r·
ied the hurricane and made it
liome, according to Spanish
tarchives and British admiralty
:records.
; Schiff has gotten a couple of
c ponsors and his salvage ex-
!pediuon will start from Los
..Ang'eles Jan. 13, 1971. He and
~apt . Roy B. Dunlop, former
?Jritish Royal Navy skipper,
fWill fly to Miami. Fla., and
iOOard their rlagship. the Paul
,Langevin, a 136-foot U.S. Navy
jfnineswecper, converted lo
Rrea5ure hunting with sonic
ilnetal detection gear.
l "\Ve are well finan~d." ~aid Schiff, •·a nd that 1neans
i
$200.000 to $250,000. One of the
advantages we have is that
the site is not claimed by any
government and it ls 100 miles
from land so it is not easily
accessible to persons on shore.
History records that a Bosto-
nian named Phipps n:ached
the wreckage 40 years after
lhe ships sank and came away
with a million and a half
pounds sterling in treasure.
That would be about nine
times that amoW'lt by present
day standards."
Thirty persons have signed
aboard, paying their own ex-
penses. and will share in the
profits, Shiff sa id .
The major financia l
spnnsors are Marine Indislries
Inc., and Universal Divers
Ltd., California corporations.
Those who signed aboard
will be tra ined as divers if
they wish and If they qualify
physically.
Chief diver for the e1·
pedition is Allen Netbitl, a
former U.S. Navy diver and
reco very expert.
In addition to the Paul
Langevin, the u:pedilion has
four auxiliary vessels from
which scuba divers will locate
each separate wreck, and set
o(f dynamite charges Lo loosen
crusted corals 'ii> the larger
ship with its de r rick.
clamshell afillCtfagline can
bring materials into sluice
boxes on deck for separation
and identifi cation .
Schiff said It. will be possible
to explore four to five sunken
ships a month. The sa lvage
will be comp!-eled in about
three months, he said.
i Rapid Output Said ·~
1 Cure to Employment
taken by the While Hawte on
excessive wage and price
booslS, in the second inflation
alert of the President's Coun-
cil of Economic Advisers.
checked the answers ag ainst ~lasses don l hav.e. the money
qu estions to the _pupils an4 "'J!ie _ l~v.:er socio-economic ~
e d u cational achievements. and the oppo~tun1t1es lo n1ake
They called the disaster-of-c h a n g e s 1n I.he events af·
my-fate types "internals" and fecting them," he said.
the luck·is·all believers ''ex· ~
ternals" ~ wh• indkat<:d they Near-blind we re internals, said D r .
Strickland. almost invariably C Ui F, _ .J. ~ were the belier sludents and 0 . e inus
most likely to be class
president. to belong t o ~holastic and social organiza-Way Home
lions and to be regarded as '.I
popular. . CINCINNATI CUP!),-Fhd-}.1f
!he ~ss1ve .externals. she fy, a 13-year~ld part-collie N sa1~, ~dted aunlessly along, blind in one e~ and nearty
be:hev1ng th.at lu~k ~Jayed a sightless in the ()th er, made 8 . large part !fl their lives and 110 .1 1 . b k 1 c· N that they had no contrm over . ~1 e rip ac o tn·
their fate c1nnat1. apparently because 1
· she missed the neighborhood ~ Rcsu\ls of the study, the kids.
psychologists said. may have Fluffy belongs to Mr. and M
implications for those trying Mrs. \Vallace Heatherly, wbo
to devise. methods of leaching moved (tom suburban SbaroD-
ch ildren who resist the learn-ville to Muncie, lod. siJ: weeb ~
ing process.
Nt1wicki said methods of ago.
peared and Tbvsday she •• reorienting children toward an Eight days qo Fluffy di.sap-~
internal approach might some k t. a.er .w a-w.
day be used at the preschool bee e4 •-••• N lnst•nt pu1h-b11tton electronic tuo•
level. Mod. in9 let1 you elec:tronic•lly select
Dr. Strickland said the test. Mrs .. Harrte.tt Cooovtr ~f •ny on• of eleven pre-selected
called the Nowicki-Strickland Sh~ronville said she couldn t ~ 1tetion1 from 2 to 8l in th e blink
Personal Reaction Survey, behev.e t~e dog bad made the. ff of en eye. Automatically fine
might be ~ed to he Ip 11()..mile Journey ak>ne, but a ~ tuned • perfect picture every
determine which students are few telephone calls confirmed t 'mel' that the Healherlys still were 1
• more suitable for colege. in Indiana. ~ Some of the questions Dr. Strickland and Nowicki asked Mrs. C'.onover said Fluffy
the pupils: will stay here. *
-Do you believe that if
somebody studies hard enoogb DOWJC T•W•
be or she can pass any sub-
ject!
-Do you beline that most
kHj:s are just bom good al
sports!
-Mmt of the lime do you
feel that you can change-wh~al
might happen tomorrow by
what you do today?
The internal person, with his
belief in his ability to change
The DAILY PILOT-
T ops in Local Sports
el
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What a wonderful wey to s•y Merry M•
Christmas to -the whole fem ily ••• i\'
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This Frigidaire Built-In
sanitizes dishes,
' WASHINGTON (AP) - A
:\pectacularly rapid grow!h of
}e<tl output -to an annual
5-ate of eight percent in some
J:IUartcrs -v.·ill be needed to
restore full employment hy
mid-1972, some administration
r:conomisls estimate.
' This would require strongly
expansionist govern m en t
}iolicies, as wel I as a con·
Council member Herbert
Slein discussed the difficu1ties
or reducing joblessness by tml'l~~~~~~~~~!!!!~!~~r~-~~~~1 to four percent -or to some
ol.her level that "would no
longer be a serious aggregate
problem."
~ pots and pans. ~
~·dcrably faster increase in the
oney su pply than the 5~
ercent rate which t h e
cde ral Reserve Board has
permitted so far this year.
' \ The push for production -
..,hich President Nixon has set
4as his goal -would intensify
the risk of inflation . This,
Jome officials said, accounts
In pa·rt for the tougher line
iSEAFOOD
PECIALS
There are differences of opi-
nion within the &dmlnislration
on whether economic activity
could or should be so rapidly
accelerated. Stein s i m p I y
presented the figures and gave
his judgment that such an ex-
pansion would be possible. The
nation has achieved that rate
several times, he said.
Sole Effectln
D.c:ember t
Through Jaouery J
I DELANEY . BROS. SEAFOOD'
28th St.-0. '(l.e lloy-NEWPOlJ KACH
Phone: 673-3450 Pho .. : 549-HJl
EL PllESIDENTE
SHRIMP SALE $125 '"'· IACI)
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GNkhe. G,.n -l.ste•reat Go1""9t T,,e Hon 4'°"'¥'"" ~0L9 OAllAPES ·-. " """" '1 5!, .. ,
F•IUO S,ICIAL
s210 L•. ,.,,.OX. "a~ LL P'lll" •
IRRESISTIBLE !RISH BELLEEK
Owl spill, $10. Nickel pot. 87.50.
Sugar end creom set, $11 .
Cheese house, $25. I
We're in Show Business.
Ch1rv• Account• lnvft«f.
C:llltt• Acl.wh '"vlliM
'""""""''" lltl>rllt •·"-AIMfkll'tl •Ml M•iMtr (IJ,lr,., ,,..
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Jewcle.n Since 1917
18 FASHION IS LAND
NEWPORT-BEACH-644-1380
'
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PRE·RINllNQ
thank• to powerful Frlgld1 lr•
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the l•rge scrape,, then lo•d.
I-LEVEL SUPER·IURQE
WASHING ACTION
washe1 up, down i nd all·
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ln~grlt11 a11d Depe11dnbUl111 Sh1ce 1947
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N 411 E. 17th ST. LAGtJNA HILLS PLAZA
tNett ts S-·O•I
AILAILI -OllSH IASTIRN OTSlllS, CU.MS -646-1614 DAILY 9.9, SAT. f., 837-3130 DAILY 10-6, M~~ ......,......,......,....,"o-•~•••-•~w-r~"'-'~"-c1~•u~~~~.,..1 L:~~==::=:::::::,:=:=::=:;;::::i~~,':;J~~·~::;1~!!,~':;J~f,':;J~f,':il~~':j.J!/,':;Jl!f,~,':;Jl!t.~~
)
Optn Mo11. thru Sat. 10 o.m. to 9:30 p.rn.
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CHECKING •UP .•
Fat Old Walru s
Nee ds Love Too
'
Boy Named .in Will ~See by Today's
' Want Ads
e CALl\.ING ALL "DIS.
CRThlUNA'l'ING COLI.EC
TOR&.\!" H~'1 tht: r"l!al
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) meal a day for the aid man.· "d, ldh "OUN~':AN PHYFE" tak· .All b h .1.._ sa1 . 'He sa e waa lflinklng ina: orr,~rs NO\Y! Buy for
Aging Man Remembered Y oung Friend
-Allpl Polak, 12, never ex-en. fOUi t . wic , meals ,to. about makin1 out a wlll and Ouistm.•\s ... & you'U be
pected aoylhini for helping hlm,1._ along with frequent leaving it to me. I was kind of loved "i'i'OREVER", , •
E II A Schn "d snac,..,. surp,lsed." 811 m . e1 er. Really! S.~ 0.
Schneider Wal a lonely, ag-"I used to Cut hls grass.'' Mn. Polak said she had e Do you J ;~ "SCOOTEN
ing man who ran a conceMion· Allen aald, '.'He had a pretty never seen Schneider have a OOWN MA lN'r" Well Now!
stand .at an amusement park old mower that wouldn't visitor, outside of membera of Look -Se.t -& Listen
and Jived rrugaUy in a two;. . .always work .. Sometimes I had her family, in the eight years •• ,Cause .... U ya don't
room cooverted garage. But to use ours." they knew bim. • .. You'll .'Oe missin &
as• small as the place was, The boy and the old man Mrs. Polak, whcte husband really Wiah'il1'. ·.Yoo had
By L. M, BOYD T ff I S F I NE 0 L D --~~--"----Schneider needed he lp to keep would spend en(Uess summer · Is a school custoliian, faid 'the listened. • ,So Stt 9350• GENTL~ .. ~ t 1 It up bee h had hours talking. about dogs 0, money would ' "-used r0, •Now whUe yot.1 !east. , 1 JUST READ the walrus .,.~ .. was no peas-ause e em-uc on Yorkahire P,uddlng, , '
ed as he pal.d off his traffic col~ec£ four , you get • bicy-physema. He found rriends in Schneider's novelty business. Allen 's education. -The Polaks · all ttnds to be highly romantic. -1~" You can hi.ve.o' "Re Y ticket that was clear. When the \;ll:. ·the neighboring Manf red Schneider died Oct. 28 at 67. have five other children. Groovy" Compar.\y ... Just
And exceedingly fo nd of Your qucstloni and· com-Polak 'limUy -espfcially in· lfe had no' relatives, but In a ;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;II in time for "CtJ..~iltmas''
humans. Piiost particularly, of young lady down at City Hall mcnU ore welcomed and young .Allen, who regularly will filed in pi-obate couit left · Would You t'4!:lieve! ~'omen. Put in a ca JI , handed him the receipt, he will be used in CHECKING brought Schnejder water arid · his estate •. estiinated at $2;000, Andy's Fun · A 'c~te ... Adorablf'I York·
therefore, to a marine-life muttered. "What do you sug-UP wherever possible. Ad· oil. Schneider had no indoor to Allen. Ask any kid. "Ask Andi." I! shire Puppy! 1 woul.d! Get
specialist out arlhe university gest I do with this,miss?"-dres.t· letter1-to~L.-M,Bot1d-p!umbirtg ..... and_only_a .apace "I asked him-once wha'.t he fun. See-tt-Saturday1..io4he: together, SOON. "'.PUD-
to ask why nobody keeps Smiling brightly, she said, P.O. Bo:i: 1815 Ne~ heater for wafmth. "'as going to do with aJI his DAILY PILOT. -------'D'IH-&-PUP-~~-t-~ll
"'alruses as pets. Said he :• 1 __ "~Sa~v'.'.:e_.:'.it:._, ~·i~';.· ~and~~w~he~n~you~~~B~t~ac~h:_.~Cal~i~f·:._• ~9266~·~0~. =:--:::,,,;A~llen~~·stlJIOlhtt~~~m~ade~o~n~e~hot~~·t~uf~f~w~h~en~he~~d~ied~,'~' ~Al~le~n~=========:::'.[b===========,,,;-~~t~a~pa~i'~':::;:=~'~:d "Q uite so, a walrus can get·soJ ---
Jovey..dovey it will try to crawl --- - ' '\
all over )'OU. But bear In mind ,
a big fa t walrus weighs 3,000
pounds. It will smother you
with love." l cite the foregoing
to back up the recent medical
contention that ob es l t y
signifies a craving for aJ.
fection.
NOW IT'S CLAIMED oue '
man in eve ry five nationwide
is a hea vy drinker, and one
\!'Oman in every 20 .•. THE
RECORD ALSO shows one out
of every 100 shipboard
stowaways is a girl .. , AND
THE STATISTICIANS ~rt
approximately 5,000 persons
are injured every year in
school bus smashups, a signifi·
cant bossing figure.
WAITERS just about always
treat rich people in a dandy
manner. What's peculiar about
this is most all ricb people tip
poorly. if at all. But there's
something Shangri-Ja about
big mooey. Have seen the
phenomenon fairly of1en. No.
<ton't mean to imply J hobnob
"ovennuch with the wealthy,
but there ha ve been occasions,
enough occasions. And while
these loaded folk do not
necessarily treat the hired
help like sawdust sweepings,
neither do they break the
crystal spelt of superiority,
nor bend their brittl e
armistice wilh salaried souls,
nor leave a lot of charming
currency lying around like
empty cigarelte pa c k s .
Mostly, they just Ignore. And
yet they are not ignored, hard·
ly ever. Find that odd.
ftAPID -REPLY Yes, zit~ -
the Mason-Dixon Line does in·
deed n111 through tho State of
New Jersey.
San Diego
Air Crisis
Fears Told
SAN DIEGO (AP ) -F'ank
W. Seifert, known as the
father of Lindbergh Field,
says he's unhappy with what
he started in 1928.
"\Ve've been lucky, so lucky,
that a plane hasn't crashed in
to the city," said the 74-year
old retired Air Force colonel.
"All it would take woUld be
a miscalculation with the wing
flaps or a loss 9f power."
The city needs to push for a
new international a I r p or t
located at Miramar Naval Air
Station north of downtown San
Diego, Seifert said. The Navy
has opposed such a move.
Airl ine rs zoom over the
downtown buildings from lhe
east. landing' at Lindbergh
within minutes of each other .
.An early Army aviation
pioneer, Seifert was a fUght
instructor .in World War I. He
took part in the first sue·
cessful air-to-air refueling at·
tempt in 1923. As a city eoun·
cilman, he campaigned to
create Lindbergh Field from
fill being dredged up in a
harbor-deepening project .
He was the first pilot to land
a plane al the rteld. His
passenger was the mayor,
Harry Clark.
··rve watched San Diego
and avlaUon grow up
together," Seifert said. "No"·
I think the crisis point has
been reached."
UlN ur TO '60 CASH
A DAY Af'ID MOll
WITH NO INt'UTMINT
It 1111ty -f9!TIP'..,: -Id INICll
.,.. ...... ~ '"'· ... _.,. flf'Nt Mlle YflW Mill ""1 le ,...,...,,,
...,,., l"ll"' dll7l(e llf ,, tlft'tllN.
We wfl ~ l:l9c:l l\.lrlll--1t·
trlti 11 ........... -""" -· "" cklll1"t l"-C .. lly 111 • Ill.II~ llf """ °""' , .. :;.:: ......... ,.. ""''"' ~,i.tlw!I ~1"~ own leul ,,,.. • ...,.Itel 11'1 •
ffW l'l&J'1 I Wffk ..,.... ttmfo tt !VII
I!-1na 1:1111111 1 ""'1 Mr•ll"11 C-19'1
bulln•n.
MO llC'lfllll:lllCI Jfl:CISIAIY -TltAllUJfG OIVIJf
II ¥011 t•• •Ille-, _, Ml mt!<• ll'tlti type 01 """"" ..,.., dfr ~ wm ~ """'· call UI IO!l•Y lor '"'°°"''° _, •I -oltk•, IMY et" '"""""· W• t rt Olleri , Nn " "'""' C1U M• JOMNM>frt, nu1 ., 1.ffn, Otnr Prlot. looc •JO.
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• • Oldsdeolersare9<?1.ng all ' out to catch !Jpon lost selling time! With lotsof;7;1scoming in, they're
making the kind df deals It takes to step you up to an Olds. Come In and pick out yours today!
CUTLASS SUPREME
All the luxury of a "little limousine" -at a price within your reach. Formal roofllne.
Elegant appointmalits. Dual·lavel v.entilation eystem.
Great Olds performance al'\d ride. They're just part
of what m•kes this Cull us truly Supreme!
NINETY-EIGHT
l uxury on a grand scale!
New elegance, deeper comfort
In a roomier Body by Fisher. Advanced ride
system on a 127-lnch wheelbase. The finest
in craltsmanship and appointments
make it a beautiful inv.estment.
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' DELTA 88
Beautltul Wirf to move into tfle
big-ear world otOlde. All·new etyllno .-•.• new "G·Ride" System with exclusive Superahocb.
SOUd comfort lrom a new full-foam molded
front seat. Power steering and
front disc brakes, standard.
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TORONAOO
The Unmlslakat>le One, Amerrca'a
original front-drive luxury ear now tlkn
elegance where it'a never been before-In looks •••
ride ••. p_erformance. All·new In •II ways.
with ftat·lloored comfort for alx.
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flflllfllll ls)a great time to buy! See your Olds dealer now
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,...,..,..,.,.,. .... .,...,...,,. ......... ..., .... ----.... -... -----........ .,.., .... ..,. ........... ----..... .,.., ........................................... ...,,.......,..,.....,_~~~~~·~~~~.~.__.,......,..........-~ ....... -..-r-.. ,..._ ........... _..___,.....,.. ..-.... _____ ,., ~-,-·~
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. In en inexpensive
Americon beouty ro1e
nightgown, Beo Anderso"
i• ;r_e d •. f.2Jeoy.~. fo i:... ,,
+he Ce"d'f Gene Ball -·
end won erlis any--,
one will suspect
whet her gown ·
really is.
Niece
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Puc.cl cloth•• are wom by ldenM Pucci,
but a.he won't 1111 them.
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By BEA ANDERIJON
SMllW .......
1 dreamt l atteucSecl the ball In my
nightiown. ·
But It wasn 't 1 dream. I ldually did.
Thert I was mlnglin& among hundreds
of women dressed in their finery, Jt could
have been 1 nightmare. ll wasn't theu&h
because no one guessed my secret.
Why this costume!
Well, it seems fashion has 1one topsy
turvy ... wild., .way out.
Taboos have been lifted. Unlined aee-
lhrough f.a brics take sheer daring te •
war. Ditto for decolldage. A decade agd
a woman would have been arrested for
appearing in public In such things.
1---J. got...the...idea.....w.hile..oppin1-lor-1-ne•-----
outfit for the ball.
I discovered some of the sheer
pantsdresse! looked more like sleepwear
than sleepwear. On the other hand. &0me
of the negligees looked very much like
formals .• And lhe negligees had one ad·
vantage -the price tag.
"Why not?'' I thoughl. Keeping In.mind
what is considered acceptable fa1hion to..
da y. I wondered if anyone would tven
notice. There was only .one way lo ' find out. , .
So there I was. at the Candy Cane Ball
la st Friday night in my ine.tpensive
American beauty rMe 1own with chiffon
cape·like drape.
I had camouflaged It a bit by adding a
coop le or rows of ·rhinestones. and I wore
several layers ·of underpinnings so tha
gown would at least be modestly epaque.
My entrance wa1 a nervou1 one.
Instantly I spotted an array of jj'.own1,
traditionally designed in ere~_ uth!,
velvet-and ctfiffOfi. ,IJ.l wert laVhhly
-ado~ned with. bugle..budin1, rhinest.nes,
ostrich feathtts or fur.
A number wore avant 11rde tnidi.s -
some with pants, others designed In the
granny lobk.
I was ready to him around and 11
home. After all what would they thlnk?
After a few minutes of coovivial CM·
versation and some compUmenta, I be1an
ttJ rela1, confident ne one suspected.
Then, I bad I ball .
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Resists Selling ·"
By MARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -When ldanna Pucci
came to the United States her first job
was at Saks Fifth Avenue. where she sold
clothes by her world·famous designer-
uncle, Emilio Pucci -a member of
Italian Parliament.
But 24-year-old ldanna, really a film
maker at heart, wanted to observe
firsthand fashion-oriented A m e r i c a
with:mt being observed. So she wore what
·she calls t}er "disguise" -namely a
black unifonn -and absorbed the retail-
ing f a.shion scene Incognito. .
The experience, more bitter than
sweet, shattered any thoug.hts of follow·
ing in Uncle Emilio's footsteps.
Cambridge University~ducated ldanna
-now the Comtesse Hugues de Mon-
talembert, wife of one of Paris's most in·
fluen tial Establishment families -
re<"alls the eye-opening experience with
mock horror:
"When personalities \I ke Greta Garbo
came by, there was no hysteria . She was
polite and pleasant. But when spoiled
wives entered , so did trouble. 1
discovere4 that .wo171cn who s~nd big
money on fashion have superiority com-
plexes, especially .around 1 u p p 0 s e d
'nobodies.'
One day a shrill-voiced woman march-
ed into the sal~ and, for almOst t,,..o
hours, tried on -Pucci clothes whkh were-
cast aside becaus~ they were too-this,
t~lhat. Finally, in desperation, I said,
'This suit! you. I hflVe one like it.' "
She continues, rapidly getting to the
punch line :
"You have this.dress," the c45tomer
said. spitting controlled contempt into the
word "you," and reprimanding a
member of llallan aristocracy for
foolishly spending her pay on clothes.
After the put-down the customer bought
the.dress.
tdaMa contained her lllier, inwardly
seething-while packa.gtng the dress which
she politely delivered to the customer
with her business card. The gesture bad
Instant Impact. 'It Carried tier name.
"Immediate!)' the woman's lofty at.
titude changed from-nuty to sweet. Tht
switch was nauseating. I learned
America. Is a name-conscious, title-Im·
pressed country where cla.u distinction i1
very .obvious~"
To .get a.way temporarily from the
rigors of f1shion; ldanna went to a
cocktail party at the studio of paln~r
Alfio Rapisardl, and was taken 1b.ck
when the gc.,ueman who is now her bys.
band and was then a stranger saJd .
.. hello" and could he have her telephone
number?
"I had noticed him, too," says ldanna
who it attractive but not gorgeous. "And ~ approached me after leaving severll
pretty women. I said no."
Two weeks later. after a. whlrlwinc:t
rourbhlp, the two strangers became man
and wife.
The marriage ·ceremony was perform-
ed In Florence, in the famous Pucci .
chapel, with Uncle Emilio designing the
white jersey cul.lotte weddJn1 sown and
Daddy a,kJng her If sht was 1ure as they
floated toward the altar.
She said "yes''· all around.
Now lhe couple divide their time
between New York and Par!!! where they
live In the ,fa.mo.us Avenue Victor Hugo
ap1rtmenl of tht Dolly_Sisters, top Lido
dancers of the 205.
ldanna hat built up ·a •tron&· rtpulation
11 a. producer of filmed documentaries
that e1amJoe .the controvertial iAilea-ol.
lhe ft'l()Jntnt.' Her latMl.lilm. "Dtvoree, ·•
now being ahOwn in tea<Hn& llallan
clriem11 examines every angle or.
dlvor<!t, A:merlcan style.
Uncle l!:m.ilio is very sorry th~t his
nlece won't carry on the Pucd name
!~:~;t·~~!C:i~o~:::.'°,~ :~
parties la London. New York or Baris.
And when sht swims. which is usually off
the Island of· Mykonos, ahe weltl"'f>uccl
biktnt.s. Dayt!mt clothea are. U1U1Uy Y~
Saini La11ttnL . .
Mrs. Clinton Hoose
(tbove, left) selects
• steel blue 9own with
· ...._ wl.i+. mink trimmed jacket,
-while Mrr.-Shields--
Richardson {above, right)
we1r1 pink chiffon with
ostrich fe~ther trim.
Mrs. Hall Seely {rightj
9oes Indian stlye in
1 purple pantsdress .
Her hooddren is a gold
band, complete with
leather.
Dilly Piiot
Photo1 by
Pi1trlck O'Donnell
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Mrs. William Manning's gown 11 d11lgntd In hot pink 'f'el'(tt with tapestry entl
velvet ,.,,.1, forming the skirt.
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I l4 OAllY OILOT Tut>:lay, Dtc:ulber 8, lt;7.:>
Husbands Won't Be Collared Christmas City 1970
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Every trade Deadline Nears he ib problems -especially since
women are becoming IO brassy and •I·
gresslve.1 have read letters ln your col·
'\unn Crom physlclw' wives who were
ANN LANDERS Gather your tinsel, colored lights and
Imagination for the annual Christmas deco-
rating contest sponsored by the Huntington edgy because women patients have a ten-
dency to fall for their doctors. But
wouldn't you thlnk a veterinarian's wire would be safe? (Arter all, dogs and cats the shop II an e:a:ercl1e la lutWty.
can't make passes.) Well, that's what I thought until f married a vet. ', DEAR ANN LANDERS : Our daughter
You'd be surprised how many healthy bas a pretty good job. Ella's take-home
dogs my husband sees every week. A few pay is $71 a week. Her meals are
days ago I was working in the supply prepared and served to her like In a
room "'hen a woman brought In a toy restaurant. I do her laundry by hand and
poodle. I glanced up just in time to see there's plenty of it. If J use too much
her open her rainooat and reveal a starch in her blouses she Jets me know .
Playboy centerfold. My husband told her Ella does not give me a dime toward
it once that the dog was in perfect health household expenses. She doesn't even buy
and he quickly ushered her to the door. her own shampoo or toothpaste. My hus-
Beach Chamber of Commerce, Women's Di-
1lloald lie tlvfll )119 1boat f1S • . week vision. ptu1 1 larae &Makyou. Sbe eould not acL Registration deadline for the contest.
room ••d board, 1111.Ddry ••d maid Christmas City 1970 is Friday, Dec. 11, En-
aervlce uywlta'e for twice Utt amouat. tries will be accepted in 10 categories with
two trophies each going to the winners of the
DEAR ANN LANDERS: t just learned best Christmas, ·religious and children's
something I would like to share with yoµr theme. +
readers. It i.s my way of saying thank you Awards also will be given to best mer·
for the many thihg! 1 have learned from chant's display, commercial, civic or school, r~ading your column. Christmas window, neighborhood {group)
I grew up, bating my older sister. No outdoor tree, indoor tree (visible from
matter what I wanted, my mother of· street) and mobile home.
fered it to Beverly fnt. If abe wanted it More than 38 trophies will be awarded
Performing
Performing for the Todas
Lu C I u d • d e 1 Committee,
Orange County PhUhannonic
Society will be the C:.0,La Mesa
High School ChOl'UJ-
The group will en~in
durtq: an annual muaicale ind
Chri.ttmu brunch at 10: J) a.m. Thuroday. Dec. 10, ID tile
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DIAMONDS
AND
ESTATE JEWELRY
PURCHASED
Newpmi Beach home of Mr•·llr---------.1
J . R. Betson. GUests will Jn.
c:lude the Upper B a y
Associates and the Mesa
Verde Committee of the
OCPS.
Soutfii Co••f Pl•1•
lri•fol 1t S•i. Ol•t• fwy.
Co1f1 Mott 1'40-9046
she got It. lt wu alW1y1 tbe same story includin« a sweepstakes, 12 grand awards "11etlfertr"wa.-tbe-ID!i>lece-on:ake-·l--~,ond-ia~peeial1;;;-;~;::::::::-;-;::-:;;-::-----;;---;-~~fl~~~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~l--~~~~I
or the seat by_lbe 1!.ind!'m in the car. 1 Judging will be from 6 to 11 p.m., Sunday
1 trust him completely, but I can't help band earns a modesl salary. A few
but won er w a rs reattton-wwld-have-dollars...a..w:eek from Ella would come in
been if I hadn 'l been present. _Musl a very handy but she seems to think there
woman work with her husband these days is somethfug grubby about parents who
to protect her marriage a g a i n s t would ask a child to pay room and board.
predators? I'd like to stay home next If you agree with her I will not mention It
year and start a family. Do I dare? -again. What is your opinion? -SHORT
THE EVE OF FUNDS IN HOUSTON
DEAR EVE : The husband who wants DEAR SHORT: There'1 aomethlnl
to slip his collar lJUI find a way. Keeping «J"Uhby about a girl who earn1 a 1alary,
aa eye en him wW almply make him li ves at borne and doesn't offer llnanclal
Ingenious. U yoa work with your help to parents who need It. It'• not HER
uaband because Y09 btUeve It will keep fauli, however -It's your1.
Im faithful , you cu quit now. The best The day EUa lined up her flrat Joh you
protection agalmt female predator1 ii should ,have discuased this subject with
ht work done at Mme. Policing him at her. According to my slide rule Ella
despised my sister without rU!izing that and Monday, Dec. 2()..21, and the winners-
1he was not to blame.' \\•ill receive their honors durint an awards
I hope every parent whole: children banquet Tuesday, Dec. 29, in the Whistling
fight constanUy will take noll!. Sibling Oyster restaurant. According to chairman
rivalry is natural, Naked hatred is not. Mrs. Robert Wall . interested persons should
Too often a parent unwittingly creates contact the Chamber of Commerce office to
the monster. Tell them, Ann. -WISER register.
NOW
DEAR WISER: And now If you can
forgive yoW' mother for Iler Ignorance
you wUI' have opHtd aootlter dt11r to
anderataodlag: and peace· of mind. Horoscope l.1n••"'''ic1,I e '"••'•r ch•rt•
7 f1thi•A ial1nJ, 111wport c1nl1r 4'4'4·5070
ONLY
Santa Lucia Pageant
Lights Up Yule Party
Aries: Forces Scatter
rather than begin projecl.!.J~;==================:=i WEDNESDAY
DECEMBER 9 One who has been !sting ad-
vantage of you makes vital
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cunom DRAPDUfS
SHAG ~= .. .... -............... 12.••-1•.••·21·''
1438 South M.in StrHt, Santa An•
Oally 9 to 5:30
fr;, 9 'Ill 9 547.3993
END of -YEAR SALE!
n--• of
orltloal oil
palotl•I' 50% off
Warehouse open to P.ublic. Buy at dealer prices.
Custom frames . a vailable. Buy early for Christ·
mas. Lay-Away on Master Charge and BankAmer·
leant /
"An Oil P1intin9 11 A L1stin9 G ift"
Hoan -f o.m. to 6 f·"'·• MOL tin Sat. s..My, I e.oo. to 5 ......
ORIGINAL 011;5,--L-TD.
/ 161' I. 141tot1r, S.01<1 A.. l'llooe 135-4601
DEALER SHOWROOM
N~WPORT • FASHION ISLAND
I
A Christmas party will light
up the Three Arch ' Bay
Clubhouse as members and
guests of the women's aS10Cia-
Uon arrive at 7:30 p.m. on Fri·
day, Dec. 11.
Four Three Arch B a y
teenagers, the Misse.a Marilee
Wilson, Teri Anderson, Lisa
Shlpkey and Karen Clark, will
present a Sa nta Lu c I a
pageant. Dressed In white
gowns and bearing crowns
with radiant lights, the girls
will enter the darkened
clubhouse while 1 i n g I n g
pageant songs.
Narrator Mrs. Norm an
And erson will describe the
pageant with Mrs. How;f d
Wilson providing musi c a I
leadership. G e o r g e Cun-
ningham will lead community
caroling while Mrs. Paul
Birnbaum will play the piano.
Christmas cookJea and oof·
fee will be seryed by Mrs. G.
P. Kri stensen and committee
members, the M6srs . ani!
Mmes. Richard Olson, Rebert
Crowell, Gilbert Young, Ross
McC lure, and the Mmes. Roy
• 6~~-2800
ThorouiIDnan, L a u r e n c e
Wil1on, Cunningham,
Margaret Miller, Mary MaI·
well and Miss Jean Atkinson.
Kappas Greet
Yule Season
Meet.inc at 11 •.m. Thurs-
day, Dec. 10, will be the Kap-
pa Kappa Gamm.a Alumnae
AssoclaUon ol So uthern
Orqe County.
Mrs. Gerald Doan will open
her Costa Mesa hom e for the
luncheon meeting and annual
White Elephant Christmas
Party.
New Kappas in the area may
call Mrs. Glen Boat of Santa
Ana for information.
Balboa Porty,
By SYDNEY OMARR 1lip.
~ (March 21-April 19): SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 }:
Hold on to money. Avoid acts Headstrong action c: 0 u Id
based on impulse. You may be defeat purpose. Seek new
scattering your forces . One avenues of e1.presskin. Stop
close to you presses in com· trying to oppose one who
peUtive manner. welcomes a battle.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22-
You may feel put upon, taken Dec. 21): Work with material
adv a ri t ag e of • eve n at band. Obtain hint from
persecuted; this Is but tern· Scorplt message. Some at.
porary. Key is to act in tentlon is directed to health.
mature, steady manner. Remember recent resolutions. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): A COnflne activities to routine void excess. Stick to plan.
which helps promote long· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
range interests. Put ideas to 19): You could lose a friend If
work. Improve relations with filppant about affair of heart.
those who perform basic Means be considerate. What
services. appears funny on surface
CANCER (June 2l.July 22): could have serious undertones.
Events move swiftly. Best to AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
st.ick to familiar ground. Don't 18 ): Some in authority may
fall prey to some who want to put you to test. Expect
disparage your family. some pressure. Avoid panic.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): One Deal with facts, not specula·
who jolts you into action may tion. Delay final settlement on
be ill-informed. It would be property affairs.
unwise to irritate one in PISCES (Feb. 19--March 20 ):
authority. This is not the time Some idtas need furth!r
~·Yuri Put some atmosphere In your gitt&I
Select our lntematlonally famous olives In the
very place where they Mve been processed and
canned 1ince 1894. You'll find them packed with
other gourmet dtlighta In our Cua de/ Olivo and La
Caalta gift ahopt. Open Mon. thru Sat. 8:30 to 5:30!
Sun. 10 to 5:30. From the San Bernardino Freeway
take the Euclid Avenue offramp to Fourth Street,
then uat one block.
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The Expresso Club Wiii to press your luck. Best-to-de.velopment. Steer clear of
stage Lhe annual holiday party , wait and observe.. argumenLative re I a t i v e . ~t II a.m. on Friday, Dec. 11, ~IRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Change of scenery would be
m the Balboa home of Mrs. Thmk through situation which ~be~n~e~f1~ci~al!:_· --~---~I ~=================~~ Frank Marshall. Members are has created dilemma. RUMingt~
reminded to bring a small away will not provide solution.
salad and wrapped gift. Fulfill obligations. Keep com-
munication lines Clear.
The DAILY PILOT-
The One Thot Core•
UlIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22),
Aggressive actions now couJ d
be costly. Check fact s.
Protect valuables. F i n i sh
.-Fullerton Open Sun., 12·5 p.rn .... ~:
(hristmas ~
@)weaters
Sey "Mt'ry
Ch,ilt_,.
-""'' with
e luK'-ul
IWHl9t frlrn
HALP-.SIZI
SHOt.
Ch101• .. ..,. ~ .. ,. •rl1n1
"" ., .... ., ,,
tell•~ ..,,.._
Si11~ 42-S:Z.
·~"' $14.00
R Othtr Gffr lu11"'1ont ~ .
. T suns • Dlll•SU. • IOllS
!I'S e CAl'lllS e llOUHS
GOWNS • rAHTl' HOM
\ LAYAWAY • 01n 1oxn • 01" CllTIACATIS
"' Ella M ... """ "'-·-"' ' .... · Nor'sHALF-SJZE SHOF
1805 NEWPORl·Bl YD.
COSTA MIU IV1 • N. lllttl St.I
84 HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTINlt ON IUCH 1 ... ,, ................. ,
I
35 FASHION SQUARE
SANTAANA
llEYlE go-1of1tlt1rs
washable polyesters
do your own thing
match or contrast
solid or stripes
JACKET top-stitched trim, gold buttons
navy, apple green, yellow, blue,
white,as(a) 10 tol 8 59.95
PANTS to match above colors
as (cl 8 to 18 30.95
SKI RTS pull-on to match Jackets
as(e) 10to18 28.00
SHELLS Helanca nylon9 in solid colors
,(. to match orcontrast 12 to 16
(b) mock turtle cap sleeve
multi stripe 20.00
(d) jewel neck short sleeve 21 .00
on white ground (only) with blue, -·
apple green, red or navy stripes ~
and in sol id colors 1
mock turtle cap sleeve
(not shown) 15.00
' mock turtle long sleeve -~
(not shown) 16.00 !_j
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35 FASHION SQUARE, SANTA ANA
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• ' I DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
Mun AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
J.10\~ TO SEE IF I CAN
GET OUT WITHOttf MIS
SEEING ME-~ 17."
PLAIN JANE
1HeY'RE MME! 1\tf"t"'R! HEJIE! AT I.AST! M'( WE17171NG
INVITATIONS ARE! Hl'RE!
J'Ef"F, ANSWER 1>.1NG
~HE PHONE!
t;.AY,
+IELL.0.
o;·Ti.IPIDI
By Tom K. Ryon
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V,;,,., J!l .. lct.
By Al Smith
+!ELLO,
STUPID!
?
By Frank B0 ginski
Ll'L ABNER
\
·SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
M.OON MULLINS
·•
ANIMAL CRACKERS -
.. ~QOr; MOTH£!? ~<'>
TO 6E 1l4f.. MOST
IDIOl"IC, 1He
MO:>T llZ«IT~Tl~G
:5l'OIJ6f:. lij ~
51JTIU llJOl''D !
•
.... '-e-
(1 ........... -.... . ~·--
_ A~D II''"""' THINKS FOf!.
OME "''"l)!l;' THAT St'£.,
'----------=-==-::-:_'.":'._=-==------------
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER I
ACROSS
l Jewish
cerrmo11y
b Error
10 Wrnt undrr
14 Chili con···· 1 S Jipanrsr
lbOfi)iri!
l !i Romul us
or Rrm us
17 Customary
18 N. Amrrican
coin
19 Nrtwcrk
20 Onr wllo
brlongs
21 Parl of
the bodr' lnrorma
24 Pra lsr
2!i fol!owrd
27 Hrlprd
31 Onr who
does : Suffix
32 Oan irl ···-)} In -···-:
Hurr ird :
2 words
JS Mora I
Rearmament:
Abbr.
JS Yraru 39 Flowrr part
40 Cook in
crrta1n way
•l Language:
Abbr.
4Z Systr m or
moral va ll.lf's •J Vacitrd
1 chair
' ' •
I ,.
' " ·-
"' '
,.
"
" " ..
l2
JI
44 Pirc e of
rollin9 stock
45 Stale
47 Splits
5l ''N011se11s~'"
52 Of ancient Gree ce
5~ Olymp!C Gamrs event
58 Grand·
parrntitl
5'i 81\1119
111sect
bl Gav t forth a
bri9i1l l19hl 62 Fe stive
celebralion
b3 Rootstock
&4 Silent
b5 We n!
quickly
bb One who
qoes qu ick ly
b7 Era, RB I
rte.: Colloq.
oow r~
l Rrluse
1 M od~rale
J Band
i11s!111menl
' Kind of
le91slat1011
S Ku1d ·ot
T1eYiS s1ory
Ii S!ack 11itk
7 Wa~
1mtr olhh1I
8 S'llall map
wi!hln a
hu;ige1 ont
' !~I'
"
"
" l '· "
" ll
.~ J9
"
JO
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" .. .. ~ "
~ ..
" " "· "" ' ..
9 Credit
manager's
concrr11:
2 words
10 Not lrnie11t
11 Sunday thru'
Saturday:
2 words
11 F!fr works
1ngred1era:
Var.
13 Fo11ltd , in
Wll'S111ng
2llna -··
2J Ca1rlrss
25 Taxrs'
t ompanion
27 E11din9 used
w 1th not
and trn
28 In the nrar
fulUlf'
29 ComPos1tion
JO Plumbing itrm
34 Serr
• • a "
" 19
2l
•
"
i2 ,a 10
35 aarnyard
sounds
3& Dangrr
37 Athena
39 Power •11 A1mrd
!orc rs VIP:
2 words
42 Roel pall
4J GillPll ptoph
44 Summ onrd
41. Evil 47 Wor thlr ss
1hing
48 Carpenlrr's
impltmtnl
49 lnsp1r!' ..
5CI Atab1a11
pt111nsula
5) Anx1tty
55 lmogrnt •••• 5!i S1n9lr thing
57 Puts down,
in bridg!'
fill High hill
" " u
I ,, ~i•
" Fa l5 ,. l1
rw&1-
P'• " ..
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-
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
'~NING-, AltTHLJg.
A FUN>JV THING
HAPPENED 10 ME
ON THE lVAY iO
SCl-IOOL 61..AH,
~,BLAH -
' STEVE ROPER
PEANUTS
-AND THE.N
l SJiJO TO HIA I
YAKETY YAK
&LA.4
3 _4,1./
SW'-
WE'RE
NUMBER
ONE!
WE'RE
NUMBER
ONE!
I !'? ~ ' " ... ..
WEL.1... I ,,---.J HEl?C COME5
Tl-/£ ~esr "n-o'ANKS
OF iHC FOIZ.
CL.~55, TALKING
-SO TO ME,
LO~! I«!
t.IOTHING ro DO BUT SHIP
T..+Ef.1.' l="INl5M 'ICU~ DfNt-.'E.ll ,
W'HILE I 60 SEE WHEN I
CAN GET US Pl.AUE SPAc:E .'
~E'.Jf!lli1
WE'RE
NU"&ER
ONE !
l ,
" c ,
By John Miles
Oi./, ! \\'4SN'T
AlTUAU...Y
'fAL.ICING
TO YOU-
By Mell
-I WAS
R~eA~5NG
MATERIAL-
FC/f{ AIY
R&l;ULAR
Fill~NOS
By Charles M. Schulz
HOLO rr, DOC!!
11-IAT'S'MV
TMAOAT!!
DAILY l'tLDT JS
By Al Capp
6"61'!-7Hrf"lfll
OAJN/11' ON US l! "
WE CIOTTA HIDE. .#' TH' 5'UFF.'.'. 7
----"~ -~· · .. ' -.
---.--.-...
arc. c:;~· ......... __ ... ............ _
By Charles Banotti
11·1
'
•• 1· '. !'(
li o;
MR.MUM
By Gus Arriola
... L,AUNDRY
LEFT TH'
WIC'ONG
BUNDLf;' ...
By Roger BoUen !
'. fOt 'IC)()e ol)f()o(!JATIOll •.•
1'1-ECl'tE
TA~l~E> ~U.
""~'" '" J
..
'.
DENNIS THE MENACE
'DENNIS ISNT HE~E . THIS IS A LOT
<XOE'R KIO •..• Wl1M A A11/STAC11e/'
l
•
He's the Toughest Cat I -Ever Fought--Clay
. , -
NEW YORK (UPI) -Lona afte' ol
the poel·(ighl ...... llod ckd doon ...
the crowd had IMlll _. of •hat •• nw an empty, dl!llN: a •• Madil09 s.uut
GarOen. MuhMnmlll Ali or C.u• Qay.
whichever you prets, was lat SI hil
back en a woadem table in b11 ••Inc
r001n, th..._.
He was naked. neept fM a t • w • l
thrown around his mid-section, 1M, M
claaped both his band! behind hia bm 11
a pillow.
Molt of the visitors had Wt. They had
a*etl him every eoneei•&Me qutstion
j>c!rtaintrtl kl td1 hllterlea TKO of
courllflllUS, llit.ll).liM Olar' "Ringo''
Bonavua in tM ll&h r~ Md he had
patiently answen.1.all the .-a:tiona.
Now CUsJus Clay plll!ed hia lowtr U,
down trying to see how badly it wu alll
He wun't used to bei.q cut.
"'-YOU-weren't tM. greatnLout tbtr:e
-toeigltl nre you!" aoenebody Uid to
hirn.
Clay didn'I bl11118.
"'I -·t u llod u 1 wllied to M, ..
h laid.
n.t'a the c:Mttt anybody bu ever
-Coolilll Q,.y -to ~ U.. may M IOIMbody W\'llmd belier
..._ WM. _. alUlll~ Oscar Bonavena _, -1 lllChl, U.. mop.haittd
A111eN• -'* .,.. as big -.s oaks and
a .._.. • -*:It eertainly made him klok' w
Clay knew it.
He tried glossing over the fact he had
mitlei COIDbiMti«m aDll Nn a.al of 1a1
. ......, -el the lato ..... by
recitint..Jliiw aobld.1 bad ever Mopped
Bonavin. bifore, not even J oe Frazier,·
and M he Md put O.CW-away evM
thoug~ M ww't •lfPWCI lO have a
punch .
Bui h didn't lool ev~.
... "l've teYU beat tbil ll:rt," he 1akl,
_[,.,. ........ tbe.Jlble_ wll.il<~ •( bi&
--llio 1,.. with ililbol. "lly _11_ ... my (fto ill llft,"
Clay said. "He 's Jougher than Ill the call
I fouljlt "
"Wert you humbled a bit ton1Jbt?" a
IU'1 who knew bim uUd him.
''W'Ut do you meaa by UiatT" Qly
wante4 to know.
"Humbled. You know . taken doW1I
IC)Ole."
C.ssius Clay took a mom,nt to eon.
aider thlt one.
··For all the wrong I did 1 feel the
knockout made up for it," he II.id.
''Bonavena was better than J t~t he
was. You know. thett tn the ntftth rnund,
!he rrond I pttdi<l<d I'd lmcJck him out.
Both ol us got shook up. He hurt TM. I
tbou.&ht-I was predicting on myself."
The uppet" part of Clay's left eye was
swol~n aod, although there were no cuta
on his fa«, bis fea tures were puffier than tbef bad ever been followinl any of bis
previous 39 fights.
"He's eithtr the best 1 fOU,lht or l 'm
1liPJllD , "-Cliy said withoat: c:rKtmi a
1mlle.
Player Raps Team, Coach;
I •
Cops Nab Gillman; Suit Filed
SAN DIEGO fAPl -Sid Gillilan,
guenl ma-al h Slo llioct Cl1¥-
gon -.n Joua, hu heoo dlarged
wllll tlrmk dr!viac. tile Cily AU-y'1 ·---,. GJl!!l!an, 51, •M anw.d .... S..doy
ati.rP.lko -lie -apiml tra!lle on a _.way areet and rao a atop lipt
before he wu stopped by olftcers.
The CbMJen k>lt to Cim::ilnati Sunday,
17-14.
wide receiver, is suinc the San Diego Cbar1f!rs for alltted breach Of contract
whilit ehalJen&inc the st.ructun ol pro-
feuional football in a second la..Ut.
A Superior Court suit fUed Monday C'OD-
tends the a.arten Yk!ilated stale II).
titnm laws and seeks to void his coo-
tract. stated as a three-year pact at
$35.000 a"nuany signed In l!IS7.
\Vith a voided contract, Alworth \\'OUld
not be bound to the Charcers for 1971 u.roup u option clause, thereby freeinc
himldf te negotiate with any team .
(..'bargers. He rejoined the twn but
maintained that the issue wu unaeltlecl
In his Superior c.ourt auit, Alwortli
claims he signed I.he cootrlCt with I
Yttb&! understa.nding with Chargu owner
Eugene V. KH!in that the club would
tinanct for him a $1.~millioo apartment
complex in Arkansas.
Klein said he was not surpriaed by. the
suits.
OSCAR BONAVENA GOES OOWN FOR SECOND TIME IN lSTH ROUND.
Ht was booked ID county )ail and
ttteued an bia own rtcepi:zarltt.
GiUrun'1 a~t wu aet for Dec.
11 in Municipal Court, offtciats WO.
•ef..e•r llnl....i.
11le •yur.okl Alworth followed up the
suit acainsl the Charcers by filing suit in
federal court aiaiMt tbe NFL. Com-
mitaioMr Pete RoaeUe and all 2fi team.!
In tile Jeque. II char&« violati<lo of
federal ulitnm laws.
"I ha\•e been threatened by hl.t at-
torneys for quite .9()fJle time," Klein aajd
from his Beverly Hills home. He 11id·h1
was disappointed. ·
'
Dempsey's Field Goals
It's Like Tl1ey'1·e Coming
Out of Ground-Allen
Rims coach Geo rge Allen w 11 asked
wb•t he thought about New Orleans place
kkk.e r Tom Demptey-lhe guy with part Qf a fool who recently bocited 1 record IJ...
-yard Held goal.
After watching Dempsty toe rield goals
of $4, 50 and Z4 yard.I against the Rams
Sunday, Allen said: "It looks li ke the)"re
~ming out of the around at you, don't
tpey."
·And Allen label11 Ram punt-kickoff
return apeci11!1t Alvin Hay mond as lhe q.st return m1.n he's ever seen. •·we let
him use his own judiment on whether or
..
--·--WHITE
WASH
------'-=-
not to try and make a return ,'' Allen
iaays.
"AfteraU, we don't want I robot out
therf. H1ymond never 1tops twisti ng,
wiacUnt and gquirmlng -even after he's
been hit Th1t'1 what make• him 10
dangerous.''
Jn and out wllh tht ~porl.11 tide:
Corona de! Mar's Rod Laver is in shnt
of surpassing lhe $200 ,000 mark in pro
tenn is \\·innings this yea r. He's already
made $19!,000.
John Yule. ex-Corona del r-.1ar J.liRk
whiz. "'as one. or the h<'roes for the
University of Oklahon1a 's basketball
team over lhe \l.'eekend . He pulled down a
defensive rebound Ydth two seconds left iii tke game to ket'p Illinois from possibly
lying the score.
Oklahoma, a Nalional I n vi I at i o n
Tournam~nt ent ry la st season, edged the
IUini, 74-71. Yule ii ou·s starting center.
'Plfark Sode rhf:rc tanked It po ints for
tt.e University •f Ke•tucky In lhti
Wildcal!i' lOD-93 verdict O\'ct 1\1ichlga11.
Soderberg prepl'f:d •I ~farina Hi1ll al
llunli•!tqn Beacb.
USC will start Saturday night foo1ball
games at 7:30 Instead of 8 p.m, hence-"
(orth.
Seems like the high schools and jaycees
should follow suit and 111·hy couldn't the
preps start Friday night games at 7:30,
too, tince little travel is required thtM
day1.
A coupJe of e1-Hunlin1te1 Beacll HIP
atllle1es dt aerve special to111rahllat»••·
Jim Stan1eland has coadted Cal Strite
11..an1 Beacbl '° • btrth a1al•1t
Louisville 11 the Dec. lt Pa1adeaa Bowl
football cla1ll.
And, ClOa<"h Monte Nltzkaw5111'1 LH&
Beach CUy Colle1t water pelo team ••
lite 1tate cham.ploulllp.
Speaking of the Pasadena Bowl. game
officials are donating their day ·s pay to
the fund for families of lhe Wlchila State
players who died in an October plane
crash.
One of the generous men is Dave
l\amanski, the referee, \\'ho resides in
Orange County.
For those 111·bo like ta lool 111·ith nurobtr
combos: Co1ta !\1e1a Higi player 111·earhta
jersey No. 3a was shooting a free throw
wllh 1:11 left in the third qua rter and Ille
scort was Ued 44-44 in Friday's came
with Mission Viejo.
Jim Barsuk (forme r OCC playerl was
named hitter of the week by the Univer-
iiitY of Hawaii for his exploits in a reeenl
victory over Fresno State.
Jim !\fcNauJ(hton, form erly of
\Vrstminster HI,!!\. is a membtr or I Ii e
UCLA va rsity Wrestling Learn. He 's In
die ll,l·pound class.
La ndon Exley nf New port Beach.
c1ught marlin weighting 132 and l~I
.pounds during a recent Baja CalUorn1a
ftshJng sortee.
And. \\'illiam Holmes of Ne'l'port
ca ugh t marlin weighing 142 and 77
pounds on a Bajl journey. He also caught
a pair of dolphin and a roosterfish-all in
the 30-pou nd class.
Sa• Clenteete High Is 2-t 11al•sl Suasel
Lear;11t baskt tball foe s while NewpOrt
Harbor of th e. Sun1el circuit 1!1 ~Z
ai alnst a pai r of Irvhw: basllM.ball riY1'9.
Huntington Beach Hi~'• basketball
te1m has temporarily \cm one o.f Its most
loyal i;upportcrs. Carolyn Comb!, wife of
the team 's coach, is re«1verlnc from ma-
jor surgery. She expccta to bt released
from the hospital in the near future .
Laver Upset;
Colorado QB
To Miss Bowl
TOKYO -C.orona del Mar's Rod Laver
was stunned by Pasadena'& Stan Smith,
4-11, W , M , in Monday'& round of the
Mutt:r1 tennis tournament, here.
And , Atlhur Ashe_ outlasted Yuaoalav
Tito FranulOvic, 6-S, M , '-2.
Cliff Richey had l.O drop from the
cla11ic becauae oI illness.
•
MEMPHIS , Tenn. -Colorado'• Liberty
Bowl hopes Wert jolt.ed ahortly after the
team's arrival here Monday when
atarting quarterback Jim Brau.en auf·
fered a sprained knee In a practice
scrimmage.
Bratten, former Magnolia High player,
Is reported on crutches and a "vtfy
doubtful" starter fo r the 12th annual foot·
ball classic here Saturday.
Colorado, defending champion in the
bow l. meets Tulane in this year 's le!!l.
Last year. Bratten led the Buffaloes to
• 47-J,1 rout or Alabama.
Should Bralten be una ble to play, Paul
Arndt will start for the Buffaloes.
•
MONTICELLO. N.Y. -Joe Frazier.
the world heavyweight champion, said
Muhammad Ali was "right on targel''
with the left hook Iha! started him on !he
way to his knockout over Oscar Bo navena
in the 15th round Monday night.
"That lJ6th I was a good round ror
Clay," J"razler said. "But until the l~th I
had 1iven Oscar every round. I thou1ht
Clay fought dirt y. pushing.Oscar arou nd
and evcryUling like lhat.
"I'll be ready for him," Frazier com-
menltd. rererring to his tig ht with Ali for
the undisputed world heavyweight ch•m·
pionshlp which virtually everyone expects
will be arranged soon.
"Tell him to put on his dancin t shoe.~.
He's 11oing to need them," was Fra1ier'1
cl06int co mment.
•
BANGKOK -A'•ery B run d a g e.
International Olympic C o m m i t t e e
Chairman. 1ays he would not object If
Communist China applied fOC' mem·
ber1hip lr1 the Olymp ics.
Brunda,:e 11id as long.as· Cornmuni1t
China followed Olympic rules he would
hfl\'e oothJn& aaalnst China·, entry.
Defensive llteman S'"-Dt:lAlllC 1ay1
the San Ditc• Charaen MYI a 44-1 Na-
tional Foothill lM.1• record becl\lst ...,,. or bis leaml'Dltel io.f Oii lack
disdpllM.
/Jworth, whose business pursuits failed
\o bloaom, quit rootba.11 last summer
while disputinc his cootract with the
"It always is disappoint.in&: whet! ~
one you hive tried to help and hat
shouted to the world how wtll he hu
been treated likes action like this," hll
utd. "Sul I l\Je$S it's everybody'•
privilege to initilte lawsuUs."
"Whal our le.Im neetk." DtLon& loW
ao inte rviewer after ~·1 IT-14 )osa:
10 Cincinnati, "is a IUY wtUi • ltflll beet.
a dildpliaarian."
"Well." Chara<r ....., Cbarlit Waller
Aaid Monday, "you'd have l.O say Steve is
imputial. He ii critical of both coaches
and his te.mmatn:." -
Waner would say nothing more on the
BUbjed.
"\Ve ha ve no cemmenl on this -Mitt
wha1soever," 1aMI Skl Gillman, Ow-aer
head coach aad -lftl'!rel maNfel' until-
he gave Waller lht head caachinl job
last season.
"It's toua9 lo see 1uys wilh ability who
don 't put forth the effort to win." De-l.on&, a 11ix-year veteran from TennesSM •
said. "I have to work my tail o(f. Guy1
with more ability don't wort.
"I'd say there are at least 10 on lhis
team who 1et away wilh it. Ifs due to
coaching. They let guys get aw1y with
not working hard in pradke. Tlwy don't
lift wtlghts when they•rt supposed to.
They don 't run their sprints,
"This is the way it's been the whole
tlme I've been with the Chargers."
DeLong, who was his team's leading
pass rusher as a deferuJi\'e end last
season, was switched to defens.i\le tackle
on Sunday's game and drew \\'alle~··
prai.!C for hi! play.
.. \Ye cAn't seem to t\'er put it
together ," Del.on& said. "Every year
we're bu lldln1."
Waller, aft.er watching film s of Su n-
day 's defeat. said:
"No co ntest. We just didn't win. I still
lhink we almost have wha t ii talte1 to be
a real conlendtr. J reall y think we can do
it."
Ahcorlh Suing
Lal'ltil Alworth , the Charaen' all-pro
College Cage,
Grid. Rankings
"" l•llllllll91t 1'•11 Y .. 111 W·I 1'1" ,... •I P'tl.
I UCL 4 /Jll 1-0 oji 11. (119) 11-• M "
'· touth c ••• 11 .... 1.e -o• 1n1111.... w a5 l. J•ck1onvi1te 1.0 Ut ll_ W. ICe-nrudJ M II
._ Mtr~..,.nt (IJ 1·1 JJ• I•. A""'Y » 61 J ICentvc.~f Ill 1-0 tt• II. N-lr!Uf;.1.1, J-0 Jf
I, NoW. c..... 1·1 I• K U.,, l'9M 2·1 JO 1. Ot ... , t.e IU 11, ,_,_ J·I 41
I , I'-St, J.t Ill II. l)r"91ln M •
t . USC 2·0 111 1t . $1 kMv'nl',.. 1-0 :I'
10 VIII•"""' 1-0 100 :It, Ltui1wll'9 t-0 J1
Al' fl .. lllMI ... It
Tum w·f.I l'h. t .. ..,
1. Tu•~ UO! IM ua 1\. Air ft<tt t. °" .. 11. 1101 ... m n. ,......,.
I N-. 111 IMI 1!• ll. Gt. Tee~ •. , ... _ 1•1 Jl4 11. O.mtMMll
I. LIU .._, '9f U. t.i.
I Notrt o. ..... •·1 •11 I,, UIC
1 Mld'llta" t·I 4:1 U. Miii~*' I Arlt. II. II) 1M l)f II. I'-l!t!t
f , Ar--11 W 141 lf, T•t 1 ltd!
,,, f.lltlwol •1 .. •• OlrllloerM
W•l-1 I'll.
t.l Z\I ... '" .. ~ ... '' ".. " .... , .
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ClEVElANO'S Bill NELSEN HIT WHILE TRY ING TO LATERAL. .,
l{ey Victor y f 01· B1·ow11s .·
•
Cleveland Bounces Bnck, 21-10 ...
Ban Will Be Hardship for UCI
HOUSTON I AP \ -Coach Blanton
Collltr SJYI his Clt\•cland Browns hav•
been lat!ltlng a Hllle somethin1 "up to
now ."
He refcn'td to their 21·10 \'lctory over
the Houston Oilers Monday 'nlght which
boos\ed the Browna back Into a tie fur tht
lead ln the Amcrlc~n Football C.on-
ftrtt'ICt't Central OMslon .
Bill Ne.lse-n and the slashing runs )f
Leroy Kelly lo we" do"'" the Oilers. IJlil
Browns also employtd a stubborn def~
"'hen they needed It.
"We needed lhis one \·trv badly," aaid
Co\lic.r. who llas annouDCtd ht l1 rtlirtnl
al the end of the season.
"It's been a series of things thl!Lt caft
only be taken ca~ of by a team effm.1•
Collier said. "You need loughness and
delcrminalion to pl1,y a &ood aame.'?, /·
By CRAIG SHEPP
Of ll>t °'"' l'li.t 11111
Tbt California Collegiate Alhltlie
Aslocl1llon (CCAA) executive eommlltet
..YQ.l~bao_ l!le from .,, and
m--.ua1"'1 1cUvltlu with membus o t con·
fer enct, belliMlng with the t97J-72 1Chool i.
ytar.
The boycott was taken •fttr the C(:AA
receiied a leltt!r from UCI atll letlc d1rec·
!or JUy Thornton last week saying th1t
the Antealers 11.·ou\d not seek. mem·
ber1hlp in lhe c1rcu1t.
"The t'tlnrerence has been under the
imprmlon for tome time that UC1 pl•n-
ned to join the CCAA in the immedi1te
futurt." said conference comm i&lioner
Ed Wagner.
Wagner said th1l all eilitln1 contracts
between conference mt:mbers end UCI
will be hooored but that th• CCAA wlll
nGt enter into any new ag Mmtntl with
UC!.
Tbomton l"Ould not be retcMd, bot
aul~tant athletic director Al Jrwln staled
that he was disappofnted with the actk>n.
"Why should we be put on 11ny kind or 1
Jitt, just bet11use we 're not · ready 10 ao
Into ~ conference~ \Ve can 'I commll
ours<'lves until our progr1m jilrow1 so we
can be' representative In 111 ph11ses or lh1
confer1nc1.
hThlt (the bao) will ha vt I rtll
hardship on us, -Jally lo baHl>aU and
btsketblll where •e pla1 everyone In the
• conference.
"ln add ition to this Cal State
!Full4rloo ) and Cal Poly IPl>OIOlll) llav1 ;l"'IY' been in ou r annu al Klwan\1
bitketball tour n1mcnt.
"M far 11 the rest of tht sports ire
conctrned, I don't Wnk it will affect us
that much. We play limited achedule1
anyway. But In basketbJU and b1eeball l\
"'Ill vtry derinitely hurt us."
Irwin opined that UCI w'ill prdblbly
have to do more travelin& ln the ruture ln
ordt:r to fulfill lt1 1ehedul11 ln batebtU
and bultetball.
"Th\1 Is a surprise to ua. Wt had no
word whatJoever. We ha d n't heard
anylhlng official, just rumors to .that fl·
feet," 11id IMll'in.
Contracts have been signed for eight
basketball games bretWttn UCI and CCAA
1eam1 this se:1son and the Anleater1 ha\lt
also reached agreement wilh conlerenc•
te:1 m1 for baseblll 1amt1 In '71.
UCI competes in 1i1 ol the 11 11pnrts
sanctioned by the CCA A, ill('.\udin&
basketball, baseball, ,olf. 1wimmin1.
lll'ater polo and tennis.
A llllndlq room only Attrodome crnwd
of S0.582 at the nationally televised 1ame
saw 1he Oilers n1ath e m11 t I c a I I y
tlimln11ed from lhe Central Dl\lls1on titlt:
chase.
The Olien no• are U.t for tht year
and 212 gamtl'I behind ae~land and Ci n-
cinnati. wh6 are Ued for lht top at M .
tar.ti club has tw., 1an1es re rnalnini;.
The 13rowns spotted the Olten a ~o
nrst quarter le1d and lMn rame b"ck 10
U1ke a 21-3 lead before Houston n1an11~cd
to score its only to•J:hdown wilh less tha_n
two minutes rtmAinlng.
Cleveland used lht timely passing of
'
Nelsen completed 1$ or f7 passes f«
111 yards and one touchdown. 1 HAs
touchdo••n wq 1 one.yarder to Q.ary
Colllnl'I.
Kelly, one of the National F~
Lea,-ue'11 1\1.timt nishln1 greats. caq~
20 times ror 11'18 yards and teored Alh,,
one-yard swce1> around right end,t• 80
Scott add('d 11'1e olhtr CI 111veI •1; d
touchdown on a IW().)'l rd r11n. "'
Houston 's poinl! came on a 4~·Y'Wiit
field ao•l by RO)' G1rtla and a nine ~~d
pass rrom ~ubstitute quarterback ·,tr'l'J
Rhome to Jim Be irne. ' "'
In Influence Case
Sunset Principals
•
Resolve Nothing
By ROGER CARUON
01 flll 0.llY f'Utl SU.H
TesUmony from various witnesses and
verbal exchanges across the Oak Room
of Garden Grove's Greenbrier Inn went
Ana High given a wrist slap (a censure
by league members) for Reed's conduct
in the undue influence rap while at Santa
Ana.
Nothing was proved against Anaheim on for seven and one-half hours Monday . High but the Colony received a 7.1 vote
;rhe smoke-filled room was lhe site of (Anaheim the lone dissenter) from tho the penalty hearing pertaining lo the Sunset League's special meeting Nov. 30 circuit to accept the following motion:
with the purpose to determine a punish-"It is recommended to the Anaheim
ment for Anaheim basketball -coach High S c h o o I administration that Neil
(formerly of Santa Ana) Nell Reed and to Reed be re.li~ved of any athletic
what extent Santa Ana and/or Anaheim re~nsi.bility ~t Anaheim High School ef-
High School was involved. fectiv~ urunedialely and fOf, the balance
•
Reed was ruled guilty earlier of undue of the school year 1910-71. .
tnOuerlce regarding A1i1ilieiffla tmet-e -Anaheim was asked for response to-the-
Howard Carson, whlle attending Lathrop motio.n within one week for rejection or
Junior High School in the Saddleback acceptance of the proposal.
High attendance area. Earlier, a motion to relieve Reed 's
It ended in a near standoff with Santa coaching position 'without Anaheim's say
's() was· defeated by a lack of majority in
Edison Rival
Lacking Size
LOMPOC --Edison High School's foot·
ball team, unbeaten after I? oUlings, is
slated to meet Lompoc High Friday night
at UC Santa Barbara in the ClF AAA
finals.
And if you consider Lompoc High's size
and speed factors, one wonders how the
Braves have managed 11 wins in 12
starts.
'The scaJes fail to produce any player
ever 196 and the Braves sport halfbacks
toting 132 and 155 pounds.
What's mort. their coach, Jim Spnilll,
1ays his team isn't the fastest around.
· What then, makes the Braves tick?
"I don't think people have counted us.
When we've played real good people they
1eemed to have talc.en us too lightly.
"We've been bruiaed up a bit but we've
managed to hold on. Maybe Edison won't
take us too seriously either, because you
know we beat Bonita without Allen
Carter playing," says the Lompoc men·
IA>T.
The offensive attack has been geared
around 'the running machine OLLompoc's
full house and slot T -formation.
In 12 games the Braves have passed
only 69 times, completing 37 for 53.6 per-
cent<8Dd three touchdowns.
The rushing game has netted 36
touchdowns while the defense has allowed
the opponents an average of 162 yards
net per \u.llle. •t
the voling ( 4-4).
The key n1easure was voted agaimt by
Anaheim, Western, L@ara and Huntington
Beach.
The latter pair of schOols indicated
they voted agains' the proposal because
of the wording, which directed (rather
than requested) Anaheim to take steps to
relieve Reed as basketball coach.
A suggestion was brought up to deal
Santa Ana a one-year probati.oo with loss
of league titles and CJF consideration
which brought forth a heated reply from
Santa Ana.
"I don't care if we have to go to court.
We can conclusively prove undue in-
fluence. lf my reward Is as you state,
we 'II continue the march," voiced Santa
Ana principa l Fred Pasquale.
The proposed amendment was by
Loaras seconded by Western, then drop..
ped. "There's no question about It, we're
being asked to punish someone (ReedJ
who is innoctnt," said Anaheim principal
Avon CBrlson followlng the meeting.
Charles Godshall, Newport Harbor
principal and chairman of the meeting,
declared., afterward, "If Anaheim doesn 't
relieve the coach we'll have to meet
again.
"The only thing that was proved in our
minds was that there was undue in-
fluence by Reed while he was at Santa
Ana.'' -Pasquale commented. "we Y.'ent in to
this knowing we mig ht bt Involved
ourselves. But the Intent was to IOlve
problems.
"\Ve're going to look into the matter
deeper before any further conside ration.
"And if we do it will be done a little
dilferent1y.''· ., ~
Marina Cagers Explode
To Bury Bosco, 8~3
By RON EVANS
Of lfle .-.1tr f'ti.t '""
Marina High School's talented basket-
ball contingent swept to its fourth con-
secutive victory Monday night with a
convincing 86-43 rout of St. John Bosco in
the opening round of the 6th annual
Westmlrulter-Marina Invitational basket-
ball tournament.
Victory propels the Vikings of r.-lach
Jim Stepht?ns -into the quarterfinals
against Cen~nnial Wednesday night.
8:30, at Marina.
Centennial whipped Garden Grove in
the Monday companion game at Marina,
7MO.
Tonight's action has defending cham-
pion Los Alamitos meeting Rubidoux at 1
killowed by the Warren-Magnolia fra~s
at 8:30 in the Viking gym.
The Vikes' ripper over St. John Bosco
wu highlighted by a phenomenal 32-point
explosion that began with three minutes
remail\ing In the Utird period.
.
collapsed.and attacked the baD.
In the 32-point spurt for Marina the op..
ponents managed to gel off five shot.s
from the field -all misses.
Brian Sanders sparked Marina out of a
24-all standoff in the second period by
canning six of bis 13 points.
Later, in the opening moments or the
third period it was Andy Thurm's two
outside jumpers. and a free throw that
put the hosts up by 12 (41--39), setting the
winners up for their big spurt moments
later.
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TWS<11y, Otcembft 8, 1970 DAILY PILOT J7
Irvine League Cha111pions
Costa 1'-1esa High's Mustangs won their second
~Irvine League cross country title in three ye·ars·
\•iith an undefeated loop season. Kneeling (from
left) Phil Carpenter, Jeff ffaight. Nick Priest. Mike
Hollida}'. Standing Tom Ol swang, Bob Gollnick,
Ddug ?vlacLean, John Olswan~.
Rustler Duo
Waging Area
Scoring Battle
Golden West College's Brian Ambrozich
and Chris Thompson are waging a lwo.
man battle for the a~a C basketball
scoring title, accordin tistics com-
piled by the DAILY P .
Ambroz:icb has scored 136 points in the
Rustlers six games for a 22.7 average.
.Thomps<nJ.s~three...points back-and ha& a
22.2 mark per outing.
Saddleback's Eric Christensen has the
best average (23.8), scoring 95 points in
the Gauchos' four games.
The top Orange Coast College scorer is
Steve McLendon wi th 81 points (16.2).
Golden West has averaged 99.7 points
In winning five of six games,
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Tritons Nearly Do It;
Bow to Dons, 48-46
By GLENN WHITE
01 1111 Dallr f'lllt Sti ll
l~AKEWOOO -Don't look now but
John Baker may be sitting on a baskel-
ball power at San Clemente lfigh School
this year.
In the Trilons' first tv.·o games
Anahe im and Santa Ana were pounded
without mercy. But they were debatable
victims as far as team strength goes.
However1 there was.nothlng debatable
about the strength or th e Dominguez
team Baker sent his forces against Pt1on·
day afternoon in the firsl round of the
Lakewood tournament
The Dons were undefeated and top
seeded in the classic. They boasted re-
bound strength, team speed and depth.
They were substantial favorites.
Yet they were indeed fortunate to
escape with a 48--46 victory, It took twG
last minute clutch baskets by senior
Muriel Bowser to take a deser\'ed victory
away from· San Clemente.
His first shot -a one-hand five-footer
with I :40 to play tied the-game at 46 .
Then he canned a six-footer with seven
seconds showing on the clock to win the
game.
II was obvious Dominguez would go to
Bowser -its 6-7Y.t man who was working
so well Wide. Baker said one of his
forwardJ was supposed to sag off on the
big Don -but didn't get there ahead of
the pass and ensuing shot.
Bowser also plotted two other buckel.s
In that last period as the desperate Dons
overcame a 43-37 deficit
San Clemente had shot 50 percent from
the floor for thr ee periods. But the
Trit.ons went sour that last slalll.fl , mak-
ing one or eight shots from the floor and
adding a field goal for just three points in
eight minutes.-
Meanwhile, costly turnovers gave Dom-
fnguez its chance to overhaul the spunky
Orange Countians.
And a pair of nne blocks. on Triton at.
tempts at the bucket In the final frantic
100 seconds further destroyed Baker's
cause. T)ie first was on Howard Valore's
shot -the second in a Jay-in effort by
Pete Sellers.
Those two plays were the coup .de
grace after San Clemente had weathered
4:36 without a point.
San Clemente returns to hostilities
Wednesday at 3 p.m. to face Mt. Carmel,
which lost to St. Anthony, 58-57, Monday.
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T.o Collide
Afte1· Wins . I
By ·PHIL ROSS
Ot illl o.lly ~llfl Sl11f
FoW'ltain ' Vall~y's Be,i-ons (3-0) re-
mained undefeate<t Mooday nigh t in' an
opening · round i;o:.55 bask~ll victory
over Riverside North in fhe first hair or a
doublehiader in the siJUl Westmlnster-
1.farina tournament at W~tmlnster High.
The host We1tn1inster Lions, mean-
while, chalkedi up their first vfctory in
three tries in the nightcap with an Im-
pressive· 81-48 verdict over the haples,,
Santa Fe Chiefs.
Coach Dave Brown·s Barons and the
LiOnSOf COich DOn U:avey meel iiltHe -
second round of the tourney Wednesdaf,
8:30 p.m., at Westminster.
In afternoon junio r varsity tourney con-
tests played in lhe Lions ' gym wCd.
nesday, Westminster stoPped Santa Fe,
18-44 and Fountain 'Valley 'bumped 'off
Laguna ~ach, 56-26.
Fountain V•lley'!J, varsity fast-break~
to a 56-45 edge tits widest in the game)
with just 3:45 left in the match wit)i
Riverside North. Bµt ~rown's talentetl
crew had to hold on in the finaJ ·minutes
for the decision. ·.
The Barorui actuaj,ly were out-6hot rrorii
the field , 42.4 percent to 35.6 percent,
however they sank one more bucket than
the invaders from the Jnlaod Empire and
enjoyed an 8-5 edge from the charity
stripe.
In fact. despite the presentt of a pair
of fast break ing. pressing quintets, just
17 fouls were whistled down in the affair.
Fountain Valley was on top at the half
by 28-24.
Forward Dave Lynch led the winners
with 20 points wh.ile his mate in the other
corner -6-1 Ken Shibata -added J(
markers and pulled down i;iine rebound.I
to lead the squad there.
A 26-poinL Westminster outburst in ihe
third period enabled the Lions to blast'
from a 33-26 halftime lead into a 59-34
bulJJ:e at the end of the third stanza. San-
• ta Fe added to ill miseries by posting on-
ly eight points in the same quarter.
The tilt was so one.sided at that time
that Leavey yanked all his starters to get
a long look at some reserves who
normally wouldn't see as much action as
they did in the roul of the Chiefs.
A whopping total of 25 different players
scored points in lhe game ( 13 for Santa
Fe and l2 for the Lions).
Westminster, which shot an even 50'.
percent on field goa,ls, wes paced ln scor:
ing by reserve Jeff Pt1orrow . (14), Terri.
i1eisepheimer illJ and Jay Johnson (12)_:
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l By the tlme Stephens' wrecking crew
We finished , it bad a 7$-33 leRd with 3;27
to go in the game after holding a modest
43-33 margin.
"We let them (St. John Boscol move
around and take their shots in the first
half. Il was a matter of getting out there
and dogging them to take them out of
their patterns," said Stephens following
the lopsided triumph.
Anteater Suffers Eye Injury
The Viking offensive attack worked
around the perimeter with deadly outside
Jhooling while lhe defensive 1-2-2 zone
Tom Box. a 6-5 starter for coach Jerry
Hulbert's UC Irvine freshman basketball
team this season, suffered a serious eye
injury Tuesday night in opening game ac-
tion with the Azusa-Pacific JV squad in
Crawford Hall.
Box suffered tom tissue inside or the
left eye when an opposing player's elbow
made contact with the freshman star
from Redondo Beach High.
According to Dr. Arthur Strick. oph· thalmo\ogist, he y.·i!J be sidelined for at
leesl three or four weeks.
Box Y.'t:ars contact lenses but in·
dicalions are this had nothing 10 do wilh
the seriousness of the injury.
·sea Kings Upended, 38-31
~ LAKEWOOD -Corona dei Mar put on
a searing fourth quarter rally but fell ~horl. when the final buzzer had sounded,
absorbing a 38.JI defeat at the hands of
Anaheim High Monday afternoon in the
fi rst game of the Lakewood basketball
t.oUmament
Coach Tandy Gillis' losers had fallen
behind, 32-ZO, when the last stanza
'b~d. But they fought back to trim the gap to 33-29 with J: 14 still be to con-
"lested.
1 However, Anaheim pulled away again
and dropped the Sea Kings Into con·
solaUon roun'd action. They'll durt
~~ney Wednesday afternoon at 4:45 In
J:he ,Lakewood lllgh gym. ~fonday'1 debacle was something lo
behold.
The winners made four field goals the
last half and shot a frigid 27.6 percent
from the Ooor.
But If you think that was bad, Gill is'
outfit suffered through 24. turnovers, 15
for 30 from the free throw line and ended
the frustrating afternoon by, hitting 20
percent of their field goal tries.
Blown shots from Wldemeath, missed
lay-ins, poor paues and erratic rrtt
throw shooti ng was Corona del Mar's
main difficulty.
Gravely wounded by the absence of
starteti Mike Sevier cnu), Don KUllan
(twisted knee l, and Casey Jones (ankle
sprain), the Sea Kings 5'ldom looked like
the same group that had romped to a
pair of opening season victor ies.
Corona dcl Mar had led in the contest.
4..0, but fell behind al the quarter <1<1d
never was abfe to ptlll even arter that. lt
wail the second straight Joss for the Sea
Kings and they've averaged Jl point.s per
game in those last two efJorts.
Anaheim collected its first victory io
three starts as fonner Colonist be:&
Brant Cowser returned to his spot as
COlony tutor for a 'day.
Jofwl Sumner Jed Corona del Mar scor-inl with eight
IUll!lim un
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S11nset Leag11e Chanapions
~1arlna High's Vikings swe1,>t to seven dual meet
triumphs and a first place 1n the league fi nals to
cop the circuit's cross country championship.
Kneeling !from left) Bob Phillips, Dave Lockman1 Gary Blume. Standing Preston Campbell, Robe~
Brickner, Ken Martyn, John NeillfOn; Jay Rod~ers.
'
'
I
JI Olll V PILOT
Rustlers
Place Trio
OnAll-SCC
Golden West Collegt has
placed three players on the
AJl-SOUthern Ca I I I or n I a
COnterel'ICt rlrst football learn,
selected by circuit coaches.
Halfback Charlie Buckland
was named to the first of.
tensive unit and linebacker
Tom Allanson and safety Tony
Bonwell were selected to the
d efensive 1eam.
Rusller guard Andy Vorono
earned second team offens ive
honors and teammate Dave
Edwards was named to one of
the four line ~pots on the se-
cond defensive unit.
Confere nce cha mpion R io
Hondo dominated the first
team select.ions w ith seven
Roadrunners named lo the of·
fense and three on the
d efense.
JV, Bee,
Cee Cage
Summaries
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k:orlft9 '"°':Miter Del -MurPllV ), Htlffl"'f' M•lfr Ol"i, 71.n .
"'"'' An• uu Sin c .. menlt '"' Tl\Oll'let CJJ F Slttltnton !UJ
ltl!ntlflbtr• Ul F Jll1llt !()
llfllwn tltl C Rld<ll1 17)
McFtrrln IOI G Corn!Ot"lll 001
Wool..., (121 G DcrWllnt !10
S(orlflf 1uti.: S.nlt #1111 -So•ll!v 1, Huitt 1. S•n Cl1mt,.I• -Ntll t, ICln•
"" 1, D""'l\tl"' 1. W11r.1rt11 $, Gunn!·
""1', IClnt '· Htl!llmt' Sin Cl-It 2'·70,'
M11nl. aHCfl UO IUI kr•lll .A1~rcl ((I F tJI Mur-h1
AllthOll (lJ) F 111 Brelldt
BoucMt 10) C Ul llurn1
Clll'll: 111 G OJI Brunet Qfff11*r' CO, C. IOI McDontlcl
Scorlne llUll,, Hunlllltl9n llHc~ -
G1r11nd 17, Wl'tllt Jt. S.rvt!f -HIM
J, ICfftloft 7, H.,.tr t, O'Cenntr 1.
HtlffltN! Hlll'tl ... len Bffch .... ~.
UWM •Md! un Lii Alllltll Cltl
NIIMI! Cltl F Mor•n Cl\I H'-IOP 0 1) I' Portllle COi
S--t 111 C TIMllNI UI
M<:C1t11 UGI G ttoullr Ill ~ 111 G c111 ... ntl sc.rlM 1\otl6: Ll lllllll l'9dl! 11111~
s. 01rl1tlln'°"' 1. Htlftttl'ol: L19""11 Stl Cll ;xi, L• ...,._ ..
~~A~'"~~
CHECKPOINTS FOR Pl'IOPER POSTURE
Your posture at addrus will
expressly d1t1rmine th& direc.
tion that you'r body, arms ind
club move when You s'l(lng.
Check my posittonin1 in illus·
tration I 1 and then t:ampare
your own posture-(k>ok at you r·
self in a mirror)-withth9draw.
in g. Is your back straia:ht and · -
with the kn HS Sli&hlfr bent? If so,
your buttocks should protrude.
You should feel tfl1t your upper
body is separated from your
lowe r body. If your arms are·
hanging normally, you· shouid
be able to k>ok strai&ht down
or slightly back to see your
hands.
By over-reaching for the· ball
you will be forced to "look
out'' to see your hands (illustra·
tion #2). 8x_bend_incyour back
too far or sta ndinc too stiff·
kneed (illustratio·n #3) you will
not feel sufficiently''sep1rated''
1t the waist. ·
Area Roundup
Prep Wrestling
Ar~P.r~p ...... · ___ L_E_G_AL~.~-=N~an,-_CE___ , •• :;~:.,. Cllt:::: ::n;:.u $TAtE Of~L~~:~CE I
--C:lll:Tll"KATI IW llNIMIU fltnll'IOU& ,-lltM MM.a PfCTIT.._ M.Ma.. COUNTY-OP LO& MtGAll--I~
B ,tCtlTllln MAMI 11lf \lllftf11t/Mlll ......... c.ntfY nt """"11.,.i ... Cltftl!'y I'll k ~ Of! lfllt ~ J,. lfJI_..,. Mt, 1!11 anquet ,.ht llflffltltnttl ... artll\' ,....., .,.. 11111 ht .. cMlluctlnt M tlfcltlllk Qll'1o Mtllll • ~ 11 •11 ()(cl'IW A~~ ~llMf. I ""'"' .. ~In •NI f(it cend\i'Cf~ I M1-et lot) llltl't $!" _. _.Htvrlfll _,.._ H M Ill-C-194 Mir, Cellf, ... U. wAw ttoe the Cwnty llWI 1111t ... ., ... 111, rnllll"' (1111 IMM. CIUftl'l\lt. ""*' ..... flG. •IYIMI .. nw l'ifllff ..... 11111111 ..... flctl'"""1 tlrm -., •LAINE tt.-re\11, Owly cenwolUICIMd ll'ICI 1 ..... , ...
!'I"-flt1t1 ,.._ " llCl!tTM'$ <All:l'IT LMUfWI Nlewl. C1Ulornl1, uMtt 'M ftC. l!Nllll:J>ll:l.SI S i nd !hit .. Id tlrrn 11 Plf'MlllllY ilN11'9d . MK G,.._,. C.
lllt\llC• atlCI tMI u kl "'"'It~ lff*" fllll' '111M" ICAl. Filil IY$1'.MI WI\ ..... If tfll IOlltWl"' Pt•-· w110M DIWIOll. k,_11 l& mt '-" ll'le ,.,..., R · ' d. 11 1111 "'"...,.,,. ...,_ Whll• -111 1M ""1 .. kl fir.I P _....,. ., "" ,...,,. Ill tuM 1l'tlll JllCtl 91 r111•nc:• b ,...... ...,.... 11 •ubK•lbtll It 111111 ~ U:• 'Oun up full •lllll "llUlll ., ~· -•• ,.. .... ..,. .....-. ............. ,,,. \11 f\IN lflllll .. flil'-..1 KUI" ll'lt IOl' .. Olnt In~. •lid
• r.uowu 91Mt 91 m~• .,. •• •1ew1, It wltl •lllM A. Mlllt;, Ill Ortlll4 Ave .. 1<11,,_.,.,.., lo l'M tll., fHI •-•llftlll lllt
l(Wlftlttl L. "~ n41 ·-'"'"" SIMI.., c. #In.ii Jr. ... tfl\tdll c-mi Ml; C1IH ...,.. .. ,,,.. Or.~ ~lftllftll ltt(ll. A-. Ltt~M Nl11,1tl, c.111, Ot*I t ~ 1fJt WtTNlSS "'v 11.,w t lllll lffklll -I.
Uni .. • -'t•. "'"' $Cb O O) a 11'1' Ktllll Wllllt, 1f'21 Wtr• St,, Dtltd NovtmMr 1', 1'10 SffilM•A. Miiier (Of'FICIAL Sl!All '°' ~-._ .... , GerNll o......... 111n1n c. Allttl. Jr. Sl•tto of Ctllltorftle. Or•nt• C111t1ty: D"''"' 1tn111n1111
honored its first ever footbaU Deltocl ll•2]·lt I ITAl• 01" CAL,ll'OltNIA , On OK 1 ""· ii.for• ..,., • Noltrv No••N •wl»k.C:t ll,.,.1111 llnY ke!tlt Wll•t COON1Y OF 011:.ANGE )11. l'ubllc In' 1N! 1or 1tld 1111,, .. ,.0111llv LOI Aftftl._ County
team Mon{la,y night With In l(fl\Mfll I.. •1nltn • Diii Nt\'MTlkr It, 1'1t, lllftrt m1, I l llf'll'" 1111111 A, Miii., known to rn1 to MV Comml11lon £~11•11
•• J. ··~uet $!tit fl/I ('1lltornl1, Oraftft Cflj11ty. MOll!l' l'u'-llC kl tMIX••kl COlllllY 1n~ ... 1111...,.. ......... """" II tUDK•IDtil Al.it. H. 1tn W ,.,.. -"I • Oii Nov. t7. lfnt. Mffrt ll'tt, I NtllfY $f9ll, Mitot11l1Y ,,_, .. $ltnl11 (, 19 tlll wltllln lllitt\l!nlfrt I ncl 1tttnowltdt• COUNT•IPAIT Coppln:iii the major 1wards l"\lbllet In .,,., fir Mid Si.ti, ..._,"" Al*'-Jt known ,., mt '9 • 111t """' " 111 ••Klv" 111t Mme T1111 11.,,.1ur1 •••• wlltll 1n1chttl te
W.r. Om W.lk.r (mo l IPHtrld ICtllllllh L. ""'ton• 11111 l(tltll whltt ,,.;,.,. 11 t ulllcflWt 19 ... wltlll11 tOl'flCIAL &•Al.I ' 1t111 cen1ll'I Ctrtllk1t1 'ot l'lc'tll!M l'lrm s Wlldl. known I• 11'11 ,., ... ""' ,.,..,,. 1 .. !NMfll, ,,,. .ckMWlllM4i .. 11\t ttlll Ml"' I(, "_., N•""-ti JllANCHO IAUTllTA .n.n I'll••
valuable back) and Do m """"' "''"" •tt ,.,.ICl'lllM '° 1111 wftht11 hi tlf.cultd ll'lt wme. Not•,., ,uMlc.C:•llr.trn11 fflt wmt lort1 •l'ICI •Htct 11 H "'"
I Llltl•Umlfll 1M •cltllOWltdfff """ U • wn-"'' hind ,,,. ...... l'rl11<l111 Offk• In tlfllllU•• ~ ...... 1lllJlll .. !tit .,,,,,,.1 De.Rado (most • a I u a b e Kut .. ""' um1. 10,,,1c iAL .tEALI ~ Gill!llY 11 '"d deeumtnt.
Jineman). IDl"flCIAL Sl!AL.I °"'" ••. atrl1Cll M• COlllMlll'-i 1:11.il't!t Dtt.11~11. lf70 Ml"I IC. HlllfV Notlrl' l'ubllr-C.lllltlllt ....... ,., 1tn Jttk o. '"'II Cees -MV Bact:. Murry N•!•"' P111>ik.C:111tttni1 0,1111, """"' .. • •u11111111" Or•-Cet.t D•llY l'llot naTI! 0# CALtfllQll:NIA >
Graham•• MV "--mon·, J im ~l11tlP4~= IA "'' (OfMllHlttl lbtlrU o.:emw L 11. n. :tt 2'f0.18 COUMTV DF L.D$ ANGIEL.1!1 I M.
UU1C -• -" ,...-u 21 . "" o,, 11111 11t1t " N.........,r 1m "'1wt Given; Co-captains: •~ J·i m :;., c;rr~;,11tt1 E 111 Piiiot!"*' or1nt1 Cetlf DlllY l'ltlf LEGAL NOTICE nw. 1111 "'*"'1e11 ... • Mt11rv l'uMlc In
"-·er and Randy Del.a~. PultUMM • °''"" CMlt OtllY l'lltl H.....,,,ltlr u .,.,. DtctmMt 1• ,~n-1~ .,,., ..,_ 1111 C°""'ty .,,., s111t •,.,._loll, ......, , Oiumltilf' 1 1 u. n. 1m m7·10 1m rttllf1"" t111rt1n. ~ ~ll•leilt4! •Ml Bees -MV Offens v e '' • ..,,.. ~ --'"" •-•f'tjj Jldt o. · ' 1 •,.__,,r NOTICI CllTl•ICAT• Of' PICTITl'IVI PlltM kotb, k_,, It nw to N lllt Ml'IOl'I Player: Marx: Olaen: MV LEGAL NonCE ..:.uau t1AM1 -...... ,.._ 11aunc,11ttc119 .,,., Wiii .,.
Def · Pl Do HI"'. cw '°""' !tit fw'ftolftll I"''"""""· t nd eOS\Vt ayer: n . .. '"""' ••llCMO UUTllTl t dll'IOWltdffod It ftW fl'lll M IUC:llW ....
Co<aptains: Charles Walker To61111 MOTK• TO ca•ortou Wt C9rtlf'r tt.11 wt 1rt coridvc-11"' • -.
and Don "'-, , JIOTtC• TO C•IDITOal IUl'•alOJll ·COUit 0111 T0•.• .-..I •tti. lllwllTMflt 1tu1J-•I 1127 Wl1Nl'$S..,., ~ •nitl ttll<Jtl Mtl,
n.L\ SIH'lllOI couaT °"' 1NI SU.Tl GI' C.A\.IH• ... "' ... • T~ Lt .... N--1 I Ndl,. c;Mtt1n1t1, tOFFICIAL SE.AL) Varsit MY-Back: Tom •:::•,::~:~~=~A ~Ml coun.Y-Of'. -"""tM ..,,_..._rum 11 _,..._t{ __ JIJ"l':I A. l~r
Walk.r •• MV L'---···. Do OA.AJIHll ..... ,......... JOHHtOtl 111t•'"'111t ..... ,.,,. ...... "'""'""' ... Not.,., P11t11<<1 lf9(11l1 UK:uu•u m e.d1lt of L ,. • ' lfrtllM trt ; Prlncl,11 Offkt hi
DeRad M I U -Al ltO. ~r Dluil..... llNlkAL PAITllll Lot AneelH County 0: OSt nspifa . Ou ... : l •lll1 II Gll:ACI! H. OlllEEN, DKll.. N011CE IS Hl'tU<IY GIVIN '9 .... Ctmll A, GtM!'tUll, 1H7 Tirvon Line, M1 Commlttlon l!J11lre1
Ed Call· Co<aptalnt· Tom tel. cf1odltor. et ""' 11tOYt "'""" Mc:ecllftl tffwMrt a11dl c1111orn11 nwe. Mi r.,,, 11n · • ' NOTICI!' II NIE!\EIV. CIYl!N ti Ille llwl l tl ,.,_ htwllll ci.1m1 lfflflll flll LIMITiD •Alt1taa1 l'ilbll .... ld Or-• Co.ti C.llY Piia' Walker and Ed Ca 11 ; crldltor1 of 111t t~• .'1'" .. ~ ••loll ~ ,,. r~ul,... "i "" ftltn'I, H, N. D•Mlltn, "" wtot11111rr Drl Ye. Dec:•ml>lr •·is. :12. l't, lt10 ttM-10
H •• dhunler Award D. lhel 111 "''°"' lllW 1111 C IM Ill Wlfll fiw lll(tUlfY .,..ww .. , II if'9 oflkt ... ~___. Cllw.rtlll tOCm· I P•ll--------------
: ft Mid OKfflnt trt r-l•ld '9 Ille lllt!tlr of lllt cltl't. of !ht Noot1 11\tltl .. c1111rf, t' Or;:ua. lt~lew Orlw: G!~lt,
Tague. with lfll llKffM,., Y01M;htt" 111 llll lfflc. 19 11_, ti\.,.., w1111 1111 nteHMlrv ceuwnli i Jofln w. y11111111, 1505'1 Alltlt
ol 111t d 1•t ol 1111 •boY• tt1lltllcl aurt, .,. ~ .. 10 1111 l/llffr'llfMd 11 lf\I elllct DrlY•. llicHlc f'ellud11. c1111ornl•1
LEGAL NOTICE
C Ill 111 1rlMlll lllem. with tl'lt nlC-fY of 11tr itllrn..,., t1INll:Y M. TUll:ICI(, 7U 11.._,, A. f:P'lkl11t. ~ IColoM!e.I~"'.,,'°'""'"'"""""°"".,,"""""°" O•t• e•• voud'ltr1, 1t tl'lt u,,.,.,..1,,... tf 1111 off1u Norttl Gtrfltl• .Aw11111, .Alll1t111trt! Henolulu tliwill ... 16i JI P1rli:tr MOULTON•IUllUlL WATll ellT•ICr ol IMr 1tfomlv, JOHN P. HOllfMAN, )07 Ct lthtrllll Jltcl, wlllcl'I 11 tlM 1tllt1 !If SulllYin.' ISll MOlll!;'9 OrlYi, Ptrlflc NOT1Ca INVITING laAl.•D IJDS
Joh Ols _ ..... Lek• .. (olottdo auuc11111, ••Udllw. butlMll of, .... ulldtnl•llld tn •II M•lllrt • I) d CtUtornl11 MIC Gt"O' c l"Otl Tftl n wang was nauK\I, c1111orn11 r1101 , whtdl 11 1111 _i.,, 11 w111111rie 111 1t1t 111111 el ._.141 Mc.td•nt. 0:.,,:.~· 60 L.tttmt• R~cl. sint•' 1111.0C&TIOH OI' ustlllH
most valuable on Coata Mesa b!.11!11111of1111urld•"'',...In 111 '"*""1 w1111111 ftur 111ot1W11•fflt""11n.1 """91<•· Mtlll<•· ciuiornll; Jidt G. Booth, 200 TRANJMlfllON MAIN AT "'ttlnlllf Ito 1111 t1t1ll tf Mid ....,_t, !111111 fll tltlt l!OtlCI. W Holl A....,,llt, l'Ol'lllll•• Cillfornl1. OIO l'AltlCWAY lllTllCMAMO• Hlgb's l"ine League cbam-wllllln four m0ftlh1 1ntr "'' ""' ,W!~ Pt,.. Novtrnltlf 21. ltJt • COUMTlltPAIT Tiii •Nr-41 of DlrldOtl II 1111 MIUltM·
Pionsbip c ross coun'try team c1tloll of 11111 llofke, COJllA iDLl.ADAV Tllll ~oc~ n'llY M .. oculM 111 twt Nlt<ll!I W1!rr Olslrtct of Drlftft Cou11ty, , De!tod Novtmlttr ll. lt10 Elt<vl•I• el 1111 wrn fl/I .,. mfl'I counlwMrtl. tt<.11 of whldt 1ti.1tt C•lllornl1. lllrtll\llttr 111 llOfl'lt ln111...:11 :~.Monday flilbt at the schools J••-G'"" #lrn1t1111 fllt 111w1 111mld .,.....111 .,. ..._.. ,,. wt.lMI. 111it 111 ., wllkl'I ,.,.,,.,. tt 11 "Olttrld ," lko h41r"1 l11Ylt• sports awards banntYt. E!atoeulrl• 111111 MINIT ... f UIKIC ............ 11\tU -llMI -111111 "" .. -n•I .. bid• .... 1111 folNWll\t dftcrlbld ,-~ Wiii of 1111 tblft lllll'IM ffefllt11t, J'll Mftll awfllll A'l't. lllfll'Y!l'lllll •ubllc -•: Thi J11loc1llen flf l tlltl'll
Varsity _ • Captain: Bob JON• •· MOf'•MA• .........,.. ,,..,.._ ""' • ctuNTaa•A•T ,. .. nsm1111ori M•l~ 11 ow .,,,..."
Gollni" k MV John Ols ., LtH • CllwHt lllflWll"' T•oh lfOI _.,.. T~I• •l9tllfv,,, ..,. 'lllt!tn ett•dlltoll t. 1111t•d\lftt9, t.,..it11r wtlll 111 """"r11111n1 c ; : wana:: ......... Olffilrtlle tUll A'*-Y.., lnairb: "' I Gtttel CtflHL(llt,,, •ldllllul l'll'Tll _. llllrtle ••• ll'llwll I" lkoltll ....
Moot lmpro~: Bob Gollnick · Tlfl UUI m.w• PulMW* °''""' '"" Dlllt 21:1.':: N ."" " a".ANC~ tAUTl.STA 111111 ~ ..... dll(l'lbelf 1 .. "'• p11111, tr9flltt. •r1wlnt .. AllWMY fir ·-lltr.. OOClf!lbtr I, •• IS. 22. 1t1t ~ .. ,.,. IOl'OI •nd lf!KI II II n'l1 MdMtnt .,.., IHCfllcllloM Oii Ille I" ,.... Alost Inspirational: To m PllltlloMoll °''"'' CN1t Dell¥ Piie! ltnelurt l\ld ken iltl~M 1o 1111 tr1111111 Diii<• cl Bovie E1111111ttrl1111, ~n ~
O!Jwan• l'MWr!INr If. J• -' Dlctll'IDtr 1. 1, LEGAL NOTICE !. Mid ~ l.rot1 l lrttt, Slnl• 1.111, C.Jlloml1, wllkll .... 1m 2117·11 DIMlll· Octlbw· 1, 1,11 -.......nt. 1r1 1w t1111 rirltrflllCI 1,,.
Junior varsity -Captain : • ...., Cir111t A. Gt...r1ua -..ltd 11er11n. for turt11tr .. "t(Ul•r"
•ti'ke Yamell.· MV·. Mike LEGAL N011CE c11T1ll1CATI oP 0011• au11NHI 1t.ATI! OF cA1JFOINIA i rt1ttt11<• I• 11..-• lnld• "' 111d •,1~~· ro UMCllll: PICTITtDUS NAM• COUNTY 01" Dll:ANGE I 11. orofllM, drlWfllfl, tlcllons 111111 1Ht .....
Stutsman; 1'1ost Improved: un0 '"* .... ,,.. ...... ctr111Y °" 111111'"' Ill•" ()clober 1t11 bef$1't 11on., tor "" 1Nv1 Hl(rlltld l11t-
• ca1111•1cAf"' IUllMllS, ...!!"ht \~1
eondixillll • rfr\l(l\lfl l me. Ille Ulldtr•llntd. I "°'';.., ... Pubtlc .~" :: .... c~•= "i::~~i!: 1'1ike Sena : Atost lnspir • . lllCTITIOUS MAMI .... 1-IM bu111\t» II :tm I!••' Clllf ~ for lllt ,_ty .,,.. Sl11t ,...N, c d 11on Pll for .... ill11tU.... ,
ho nal: Fred Ensign. Thi und••• .. 11111 dol1cttlHVht 1• co,,. HltllW••· COt9111 dtf M1r, Clllfltr et rHldlnt1 t11tr11n, fUIY c.,..n.ru !tntd IN EtJJn tvC 1 ,,. Jon M 1t 0:,
C I IU(llt19 I lllllfn111 11 \!" HIWPOrl 11¥11 . O<llllt, $lllto ef C1llttrnle, uMtr tM lk• -11, .. ..-llY l"°ffrl!d ~lllt A .. :~~~ l~:=~f S.l: ~ 911",!. ~
osta Mesa High's annua firr,::, ~T~ ~~\:'"Of .rJH8"1U~ 11tetus 111'11'1 11..,.. et•·"· •Dll'I' ANO ~t.,., •-n t• ~t.90bt1~ ,:.r: Slttclflc•I'-..,., tN N •tl'letMI 11 1111
awards b?anquet honoring the WOll:LD VA(ATIDNS l llCI 11111 wl/J firm ASSQ.C:IATES, ..... It!!! w~ 11"" It .... : WM;: 11;: 1:.=f.... kl'tt11mtt1I, Ind olllct., ...,,, E1191-1 .... for tll.ot lltf
M t • J I ,A It Un'IPKtcl If ""' foltowl119 "'""' l'Ollld ol !ht tollOwml Hr'6ftl, ICU 11111 111 tll'K1Jllcl lfll Ml. C/\kk 1'1111111 Ill mid• ••v1bll lo 1111 us angs ~·a er po 0 u::am Wl'loll nlmt Ill filll Ind 11&c1 .. rttidlll(I 111mH 111d tddt-• 1r1 •• felloWI: ' •clml'ffl"' .. II "'. M~l-Nl9\ltl W•ttr Cltlrld .
wiJI be held in the SChOOI 11 11 follewt: ll:ICH#IJllO L. FOL EY. 5'I lltWlf .. mi. M 11111 If I I all l'1>rsu1nl flt the Lallor Cocloi If 111t Slllt Ntchoms w 1i.1r. :w• St;&llln•• RN d. CerOlll 4tl Mir. C11lforl'lll. WllNESS,,,.,. M • 0 •C. I . ol Ct lllotnlt, 11\t Moull111-Nlf11tl W•l•r
cafeteria at 6:30 Wednesday •1~t1.. e, UI , LO$ "11••1•1• (•hi. WtTNES$ ... ., Mlllll 1111• ,,,, •• ., -' tOl'lllCIAL SIA\.l Dltlrld h11 IK1rl1lnld l\'lt •rtYllllM 011111 ov. 1'. io11 • ,,111 c •. MeCl1,.,, Jr. nigh\ Nlc11ot11 w11•er Novtn'lbtt, lt10 1 Htlt"I ,ubll~illllrnl• rllt ef Mr dltm waM If lht loctllty llit . "~·~ ~~::::g~~111,?rr,'11~ i..°'io":' ..,,, • S1ATI!: ~ir·c1,_~,~~: ... ) PrlMl'lt Olllc-'" :1c:.,~~ .. ~ ~"' ::ir:.~'::11':r.::
JJllJttf·JlfltOll ~oll•y Publlc In 111111 lor 11111 SIJl1, COUNTY OF Dll:ANOI! ) OrMI~':"'~ l lll llet M111tr L1bor At•..,.,.lit 11111 I" tht 11· Ptr1on1llv ..... ,.. Nl.thtlll W•lk•r Oii 11\lt "rd d•Y ., Ntv•mltlt. 1t7G. ., . II lie• ., !tit Alsoc:l•IM G-r•I CM!r•ctfl'1 know,. to mt II bt .,.,. Ml'10ll wllolt _,, nN 1 Nt11rv OCf, If, trn: .. ~--*' s 1 n1mf 1, 1~bKrlbtd t1 ll'lt wlth l" Ir.. fM!otl mt , Tiit u I ' It CtUMTll,Al1' •• ...,,..,,u, t11 mn C11lfornl1 Clllo"tr. Bench ,.,11,.,.,,, •nd 1o;11nowltc1•" h• ••tcu11c1 Public 111 '"" •• 11141 Ctvn~ T;:..8'!M T~I• i!t1t•fv•• "" w111n 1tt•t~ld " Cott•• If !hf •-•ti 1r1v1rn,,. ••I•°' 111~ umt rnkllne thlr1l11 duh' Cini"' H L tlllt ,, 1 Ctrflllc•lt ti f ldl!I-fir'" Mr dlltl'I w"" •• "1..-mllllcl b't' tile (Ol'FICIAL Sl!:ALl 1worn. HrtontllY 11H1rlcl Jllld'll tf · Cl i! 11 ll:A HCHO tAU11ITA .ii11t Dlttrl(! 1rt 1111 IUt 11 Ill frlncl1ll Ille.
Huntington Beach HI g h MAllY ~· HINIV """"' kriown •• Mt " "' !flt HrMn N•,,.. ,.. f'lf , 11 11 nw ., ltnl,,.11, to Wit 1 M11111'1:~ l•Y P1111 ,
School will honor its athletes ~~7,.,u~~1 -.c~~f1r1111 '*""" 111me 11 tubttt1ltld " !h1 ·w1t,~ ~·.,. ~ ':.':' .,:ic~~1 ... to~i.t trl1ll'lll Sl/ltt '°'· Ll9tln• Nl9uel, ~1111111111. A1 0~1,,.1 cw nti Jr11ttumt11,I 1nd 1ttM'fl'l•ld,. IM ~'""1o11-.: 1 •t<111Jrte bv 5'd1on 1n1 Of Ill• Ulolr
Wedne-•·y nt'ght al the ""hool M c , •·· , ,,,_ 11e 1xK111iic1 1tw """· ... 11 Un'ltn · -Coctt. "'' Contr1dorl 1e whem 1111 ~ :tWll "'" N:.. ;-:''j9J;-· 11 -" IH WllNfU WHE•IOF. I h1W C•"" Novtm'!"r 'I, lt ,. 1r1d hlrtfar 11•w1r11CJ111111-1 11 (llt•
cafeteria with the a nnual fall Publli1ot11' o;."" Cotst 0 •111 Piiot, 111r .... nio 11et '"' 11111111 '"" 11111•""' ... H. tit· D11111t1•11 1 lhetfff 11 ••di 1o1t lift. rt d b t N""tmtllr 17, 14 tM Okllnltlr 1._1, llt11l_...L 1M daY end ..'l'flf In l!'llf SlA.TE 0#-CAL.IPOJIHIA Provklllll 111•1 -,,.. (ll'llool'l1H """" spo s awar anque · 1tn 1u•11 t•rflfluit fl ttt 11>ori wrl"'"' c&uNTY 01" LOS AN4if:LES _ ~ t11t ul• ertvt lll"" r1111 11 w•N .,.,.11 bt The football, c ross country <OfFICIAL SE#ILI On -.11 ,... ,.., of ""°'·• 1.,v ..... ~.~ .. 11:1 tor ,,,.,. -.tr."" """ """ 111t11 LEGAL NOTICE ''' Lynnt A. Witte,. me. lllt ""'""ltnld. t NM•rY ll'ull!lc 111 t lt ht hour• Of.N'lne 111Y -ulltNlr ,.., and water polo teams will be Not•,., Pu1t11c<111fe,nt• 1,.. l•r 111t c;_,., '"" s11tt 1fel't!Sll!i wMrt •lldl wwti 1, rHutr1c1 kl c•sn ,1 featu~ with most valuable Prlnc:l~11 Of1kl 1n Or&llfl C-"' rn1.i,.. tllt••I", dulY (em,,.lnlll'IH •., eirt''°"u"'"' ..... ,,...cltl e111...,"' ''''· P·JIMJ MY commlulOll Eultfl sworn. 1H-'!l11 •1Htretl "· "· fllOd, er dlntltr 11 tlft ti """"" •>Id' and captain awards to be (lll:TIPICA11 OP OISCONT!NUANCI! Otc. u. ltn 01ne1!111, ·-" .... ,., ltt !I'll! ~rteft c1o11•r1 11 .... on Su""' t ....... ~
Preseated. 01 USI ••01011 A.ANOOlolMIHT 0/1 •un ... •••N•• wholt l\lme ii IUbtel'RIN '• ..... Wiii ••. 1 ... 1 l'toJitl•¥t ... wth N""' y •• ,... DIY· PICTtTIOUI NIMI AHtr....,. 11 1,,IW ltUtM 1111 ,.,._;111 lllsll'\l-I, .... M .... trlll DaY, J ul't' Mii, Lit.of Cloy,
Fes tiYilies gel under Y.'I)' at THE UHOl!llSIGNEO 00.. htr•lw .... c....-Dtt'l't Kk-l"'" II..,. '11111 M rxKllltd lht Vtltr•lll D1y, Tht ftb91vlnt 01'1' •ff
7 30 ,,,,,,., "'''· lffKll ... NllV. :M, 1'10 Ille lllttt ,.,. ta"lt. C~tl1tm1s 0•1; lt1V10ICI, lurlhtr, 11111 : • ct111d to do bu1lllftl uncltr 111• tictlll1111$ ......... llfc•, W11HESS ,,..,. Jttlld ..... ofllt lll 1.111. l\'lt "" fo~ ,....,...,, f4r .. t11 111111>'*1~
Ur..,"'"" flf IUll!l tOJll SECll:IETAll lAL Ctlllwll+t f2UI (OFFICIAL llEA\.I dtY 11'1111 bt 110t JIN tlltfl,..,.. o.n.r. SE aVICE II 1112 e•1-Avt .. lvll• l1f, TIL 1n11 ........ Ev•1Yn J1v1 .. , • fU.00) ft'ICre "'-n leur,..... .... n ,,,. fllir 1111 Hunllntlon a .. dl. Ct lllt111l1, ' w~I~ Publltllld Otlllft c ... t DtllY f'llol Ntttrv P1.1btl('.('1tllVfhl (riff Of -kmln lnvotvtd.
1>,11l11t-11 WI' lormttlv ·um-Id llf ""'Cltclll'lltlr '· •• 1!. 22 .. 1t18 :12l7·10 PrlnclMI Otfk t '" ~ _Jf __ WJ.L~lat:Y --•11'1 c-l t~.lkN!lnt_Jlll'IOn, ~ 111mt __ )ft_JUJI •M ""A-""·< fridOi -tt WflOm • (OtllrlCI ff 1w1rdH
1t1c1 ottuldHKt 11 1T feltM.',..ll: LEGAL NOTICE MY Comm!11l1111 E•1lrn •rid -'"" lvk.,,lrKttf' ~hlf'n It l'IOl'entt L. $l1r•1, 1d 2 lloftCIUttnl M.lrdl ,,, lf7' 111 llOl ltu W..11.1111 MN IH( . rtltl Clrclt , Hunll,..lon lffdl, C1llf, CO\IMtllll'•llT to I ll l1bor,r1, _,,...,, tlld nltl cerrlllc1i. for trtn1tdlon ., ~1l11t11 N011Cl 10 ClllDITOll Thls 111n1tu•• 111e wM11 1tt1chtcl to emPIOl'e-d 1>y 1111111 111 Ille lllKUtl.,. el,,..
UllCI•• 11\t •bov• t1dlllou1 n1mt, 1nd .tf· 'u•1•1oa cout,T ofll ~M• "'•' c1rt1ln Ctfllllc1tr el Fldillout Firm con1r•d . Tilt HlllllY tor fillurt " com. lld•~tl t i oubt!ClllOll !Mttef, ... Oii flit tTAfa 01" CAL.I ..... ,• .. Olt N•l'llt., IANCHO 1-.uTlltA 111111 lllW• -IY l'ltr~"' Is •• Uttlllld 111 SICll•n l n J Jn 11'11 cflkt ot lh1 Counl't' Clerk 11 tH• COUMlY t• a 1• 1111 Mlllt fOl'(I 1rld lllKt I J if f!I~ II ll'le L1"8r Cldl.
0•11•11 Countv, uncltr Ille ,,.vl1I0111 ol N1. 1,.l'llf G COC " 11t111tur1 h•d ._ tfll•M ti !tit or1fh·111 The Ce11lrtctot $11111 ••• 1r1v11 '"" Bob \Vitt and S j e Ve SKtton 24" ol !ht Clvll CMt. E11t!t ol FJIANl C. EWI • E "5 ft., If 111• ~lll'\'ltlll. 1u'Hl•l1ntt p1vmlftl1 lo etcll WCfkn'lln WITNESS m1 l'lelld !his 4th d•1 of NOTICE 1$ HIEllEl'I' GIV N to ~ CtlN Novtmber 1', 1•1D. nttdt• fo llotc:uk !ht wort, 11 llKll
Hernande2 head the list of D.-c:ernbtr, 1'10. crecltto~ ol t~t •bove ~•r.td dK!dell I . Ill. Groam lr1Yel I ncl 11obsltlenai ~•~menl1 '" l'lorlm:r l . Sflrk1 11111 •II H rlO!lt lltVlllO cl•lm• •OllMI llM STATE OF CALt,ORNlA } ftflne<I In Ille 1"'pllc1bll ct lltd1ve
Marina Viking varsity footbaJI Pubtl111td 0 •1"ot (0•1t 01llv Pllo! 111cl OIUdtftl -"' teoulrl'd ~flit 1'f:1m, COUNTY DF LOS ANGELES l i.s. blrt1l"lllll 11fffmtnll 111111 "'Ith fl\1
OK•mlM!r I, 15. 17, 2f, ltlG 2HJ·'IO "'1111 lht Mct•ll rl' VOU(hers, In 1111 :i Ct 0" tltls NOWtt'lbt• U, 191' btf.,. "''· DIPlrl"'tnl If l ... 111trl1! lltll f10ftl In IC· players who picked u p al tht (le•t of tht •ll<tri e111111 .. cw ·er Ill• undln!tntlf, 1 NII•,.., PubUt 111 111d cord111tt w1111 Stttltn 111;1.t fl/I t11e L1116r
LEGAi NOTICE to '''''"' 111em. wnh 111t _,.,., i.r tt11 (lllfllY ,,,. 11•'-11or ... 1•, coc1e. trophiesj.t the Vikings' recent • v1111cl'lf:•s. 10 1ttt 11nc11rs1antd " H-r'I ,..181111 t11er1111. dUl't' (ori'i111!111eMd 1nc1 A!llftllM r1•d'trtctect t11111 .,...111011s '" l------~~~-~~--IN1tllll1I !ltnJ., ... 0. !lo• lMlt, N....,..orf .-n lln.Olll ll't' •••••rfll B. P, GI.,.,... Stc.llOllt 1m.s ..... 11n,t of 11\t LIN•
awards anquet. ca1111PIC#ITIE Of" I UUNlll 111c11. C•llfol'nl• "'"· wll1<h 11 Ille •II~ t~ 19 ,..1 to 11t -Hl'&on wlloW Codt canct •11lnt1 th1 lll'lll0'1'ml!n1 of 1,. l'ICTITIOUS NAME of bu1IM11 el lllt underiltneof 111 •II rtttl> -11 iubtcrlbed II> 1n• wht rxKUte<I Prtntlq s l>v the Contr1c1tr or ,111 suit.
Wilt and Hernandez shared Th• ""°'"''"" dol>t ctrtlh Ill! Is cOlt-"" -er•1!n1nv to !tit .,i111 ., 111• •.c .. 1111 ltrl9tlne 111 1 I• um• 111 , 111d «H1lr1der Ul'ICltr ~Im, duellnt I bullMH •I ltto WM!lltf, c., •• Hnt, wltt.!n fwr "'°"'Ills l lllf lllt tint tdl:MWIN9 .. ,, -ltlll ... t •kull!d 1111 !.IClltoll 1m.s. I S '"''"""' fftulrH lllt Jhe special coaches' award for Me ... c11uer1111. ur.d~r 111e 11ctltio<.1s lf•m 1u1>u~"1"" of 11111 11e11ee. ..,.., conrrtc1or •• sut>contr•d .;,. ....,,1..,11111 n•m1 of MllCIE'S l"RAME CO. •nll l~1r Dll .. ~· '' lt1'1 WltNtSS ll'IV he.W tl'ICI offklll U l 1. t•HH""n In 1ny llH1nllce.tr1 oc 0 u ls t anding contributions ••Id llrm 11 CQmPOIM Df tllf to!ttWil'l!t N~ N1t!0111I l•l'lk. iO""'CIAL SIEALI c11111!10to lo ..... 1, It lfll 111111 ... ottlon, whct1t n•mt Jn lull •ncl 1!1t t er A N•!lon•t l1nli;lnt ·-f:, .,......,. -r'tftll{ff/111 ,_,..lfftt ""41rert ftllt iltt ti
while Hemandez got a team rrslcltnct 11 11 11111ow1: Auoc••lle,. b1: ""',., llultllc In •Piii ,., 1111 1111 •ubJk wort• .,..1ec1 1t1C1 'clfllk:tl .._
c apta in's award a1ono y,•tlh Ml,h1t1 w. lbtY, 7054 Fl111'1ln10. co,1• P1trlcll FHl•r .(lllflh'., Lii A"ltlt s ,,.111!Jftf'1 1111 '"'""'"<••~!• ,, .. ,1.,, 1,. • .., Mt ... C•tll. fJ.wtlr Sllft" C111ftfnl1 11'111 lrfd.f lltr I ctrl!flc1111 ol ,.,.....,, ..
Rich Schaere r and Witt was 011 .. Otc. 1. 1110 01 the wm ., "'' c-1s11trt 1a1iro TIM c111C11c111 will 11.0 fl• ""' 11111 fl/I
.. A Mlc~•tl w. lbt1 '"" 1Mvt fllmetl ftt .. 61\t Cd. IJ. 1m ••rtMICQ lo lovr!lllV'T'tfft thll wltl ... ..... nored as the best offensive ST#ITE OF-c-.LIFOJINIA, LIOO'I'. LEbO'f tDUNTlltl't.IT Uttcl Ill lllt ",...,"'."''II lllt tolllflCI.
lineman. ORANGE CGU NT'I': tn·• 011_,,. -l~ll •lf!lll'llrl .... wl'M!n •lltd'IH l• TIM rttlo ti l"renllctl lo IOU,.,,..,l'(lfn Ill
On Ofot . 1. lt lt. btlo.-. ...... .., ........ Llfltll• ••• ,~. <•llllnil• ""' !hit. cer1.i11 Cer1Lllc4t1 II FIUllllUI l"lrf'n :uc~ ( .... 11'1111 IWI ... lttt tit•" -.. Other laurels were passed PuDllc In 111C1 la• ••Id Sl•!t, t fftlll'llllY Ttl; 1114) 4H·l14' N•me " IANCHO IAUTISTA Shilt hlV'! Ive lllCfP!: IPPf•r•d MICl'llfl W. lbtv known I'll ml to &fftrfttl'I !tr IEJl(llllf IM U!'llf ftrtl tlld lfftCI •1 If "'W #1. Whl" un1,,,Pll"ln\fnl 11111\t t 1'111 11
out lo Bryan Kerns (best 11t !ht 01r1lll'I who•• ndlN 11 su•1t•lt••d P~bllt"" 0••"'• c .. 11 D1n1 Pl':,! 111,,.tur• !'led """t ftl•M to tM 1r1tl1>11 cover•!' b't' !It• 1t1111 • ..,.,..ntleftll!e
dcrensi\'e lineman ), D a .., 1c !he within 1nt rr11men1 •nd t cilnowiecto· Dt<1111M• 1, is. n, "· lr1'1 1'213-,. ti 111, <fl(v"""' (lf'ltll'll '" ~., e•ctldld •n ..... , •• , ., e ell he ••fCUted IM 11mt. LEGAL NO'l1CE Ptft<ll NIVl !tl!Nr s. 1t10. lJ~~ In "" '° ••••• , • ., Ill lllt '"llllt
J ac kson (best blocker.) Tom <OU1c111 St•ll Jel'ln w. YIMl"I •or c11111ie111, or
S •• k Miry II;. Hen,., •A•'"' . STA1E Of CALIFOJllN IA I I . w~ lht llUn'll>tr of •••rtntlcet In taCuuWS Y (best ltCkier), N1t1rv Public • Cllitor11l1 NOTICl TO CJlll'DltOI! COUN1Y OF OllANCE l \I. lr1lntne In l~t 1r•1 t~Ctttll 1 rll141 flf
Steve Mon ah an (best Prl11c1011 Ofllu In SL'Pl!•101 caUll:T •• TNI On thl• Jth ct1v of llovetMtr. 1170 -le n,,, or Or1net (OUlllY STAll! ol' CALll' .. NI• ,.. lltflrl me. ·~' 11flder~l•~, • Ntt•rv c . Wllan"" l!'ldf c•n llllW 111•1" 11 defensive back) and Bob Mer· M1 Comm111!Pft l!M•lr•1 lHI! COUNTY t• oJllANOI l'u•nc 1~ tnl tor 1111 coun!Y 111d s1111 relloKlftCI 11 11111 ll:JO 11 lb /Mm· JU (b t ff · b k) Nev. 1•. 1''1 Mt. A•'"* •""Ultl. r11l•T~t l\'ltrt!11, dU!Y com· bt1'1hll Thrw1~ t 1t1trtntlct1hl1t tr1lnln1 r es 0 ens1ve ac • l'~b1l1he<1 O••"Ot Ccui1t DlllY Pl!tl E•l•ll I sAIAH l'll:ANCES JOHNSON, mt1tl1nlcl .... ·-•n. , ..... 11111¥ llDll•tcl on Ill t l'lnv111t11., •l•ltWld1 Of t..:1nv, Oactmblr 1. 1$, 11, 7', 1t10 211t·70 Doc tedo John w. '(Ouno. •-",,.t t. bt""' "
Nt\1cf IS HEJllEIV GIVE N It !hi 1tr-wl!He nltt'lt 11 tubsu lbed to ll'ld 0. Whtn thl Centr1dtr 91'11Y"" LEGAL NOTICE f;f'tdllori of 11"e 1MY1 111mld dec:••tnt wt'le t•tcul~ 1ht 1«"1!n1 ln1trun'llllt. tYIOtn<t th1t ht ln'llleY11 1'1911t1rld
------'OC=cc-------1111•1 111 .. ~ h1vl"' ct•lm1 Htlntl ttlt •11111 1cknowlld9 .. flt "" 1!111 hi eoec:utld 111rentlt11 en 111., hit (lftlr1cl1 ..., '" p.nwe Hid Oe<Utnt er• rflulrtd to fll1 """'· lllt '''"'· •nnu111 1vfl1te ti 1111 lt11 th111 1111 ...
CIJllTIPICAT• OP I USIHl'SS ~1111 ttie ".cet,il'V veudll"' In IM tlflct WITNISS my hi .... llMll Ofllcl•l lfll l. ~.: l~t ~ 11fl'tl :eur11tvn'lln,
.M. ' el 1M cltrt; of Hit 1lt0vl t11lttlld C'tl.fr1, 1r COF,ICl.Al SEALI Oii r1cr.r I rttulrect to l'lll~t C1•rU1 Ull (I) o ..... C1ul PICTITIOUI N I I 111-. wit~ , ... necf••~"' '•HI 0 ,McClt rY Jr c111tri.u1111111 fo .fullCll l lllltll""" tw-fl'l1
Ill -Jdlnllll'I !Cl dK. Moort ti) Th• ulldt"lt...,, let• Ctrtlfy ~ b con-o ~-1190 Ille vMl!nlt.,.. 111111 ttllct Notti;Pu•Q(.(iiuoi1111 ldmlnltlrtt1M of •Hrt!nll(t1hr1 •r"r1m1
11'-Mltlkt (C! dtc. P1t .. 1 01 duct\nt • bu•lntH II 11'11 Fetbes lcl. -..... •llOl'lllYI' c 0 ti IC I I y . Prll'lcllll Otnct In II ht tmllovl r19l1tt r .. •••rtnlkll er
114--1"!• (C) dtC. Mllltr IOI No. J , L~tunt Nt1utl, Ctll!or,.lt. und'r ~HU';:,.CHF.lt, COLIMAfrl, MlNYAl.tl I. O!'l ftfl Cll!lnlv !our111vm1n In l l'IY "1rtnllc1tblt lrl ..
111-Motrl'on COi df(. M•loll• !CJ ll<t llCTll""" firm n1mc ot J El.VICE HOWAll O l°sS Town a. (t\ll'ltr'I' ftetd. Mv Com"'1•1tll E•llltl Ol'I 111,h ctntr1ct. 1...t If lllllr C1nlr1ct..-,
lSG-Oonl! ... n CC) d-oc. Mon Cf) C#ILll'DllN1A 1...r 1111! llld llrll't II «Im• fin· (: Ill It t2'6t ,..,,1th I• !flt Del II 1•n en llw •""lk -kl l ilt t rt ml -1"9 11Kft 15a--HlrPtr t(I won b't' forfeit PO\tcl ol tht toll-Intl "'~· wllose 0 •ni t. 11 orn ot !ht uftd.er111!"H t" t it ' cOUNTEl.PAllT COttlrlbut\en1,
1•1-S!oc-loft 10! doe(, Mo••bllt CC I 111mt 1." lull l "d DllCt of rr~ldenc:t It IJ ~=~~~: ~~:1:ine flt -.. ,,~ el .. I. Tiiis i\tllll\lr~ 0 .. 1 W~e<I ltf1{11td IO 1!1t C111tre(fv 10\d '"" IUbt:tf\trlcflf ln~wtnlOll IC! OK. F•lt lO) IOllOWi. n1 H '" 0 ~nt wil~ln teur mtnfl'lt efttr "" lh•I ttrl•\l'I Ctrtlflc•lt .. Flttlll!Nil '"'--r hltn 1111 11 (°""'Iv "''"' ""' ..... l~PK~ \CJ _, 11'1' IOt"ltll Ht•IM!rf W. Ntwm0i n, I "" II~ Milci tlon If 111;, nollCI. "•"" et aANCHO 8AIJ1tS1A d!t H htvt tufrM>tnll ot SKllOll1 1171.S 1...t 1n7.t 111 H"'r'-8111 (() -bf fort1lt Pl1<• Ne.•, G1rdtn .,..... Dl lM Dtc..mlttr •• U1t tt.t Mll'tt I-riM lllKI 1, If "'' fllt '""fllOY"'t n! ol 1•,,tllflttl.
Di•N l+ovtmbe-1 :IO, lt1'1 A"-L. SIMel slenitul'll k .. 1trff1 1lflatt1 19th! orlr1111I lnl1r1Mtlon rt11tlv1 lo '"'etttlctlf!t1
H. W, Niwmi n . t':atc~trlx ti Ille V(ill cf ol Mii OOll;UIM'ftl. lllrldlr<b. W-K~"ulul In~ tllltr r,.
¥ik-e-Aces-
Honored
JC W1·estling
College Cage Score8
Slit. ti C1lltornl1, Or•l'lflt Ctuntv. ~ t bovt nlfl"ld ""Ct'tl•~I btlH H..,...,Dff' 1, lll'll ~lll"'"'tftll m11 be obll l'ltd lrMt t111
On Nov1,..ber 30, ll1'1, ltlftrt "''' 1 IY KMUMACMll tOLIM.Al'I ltebtll A E'*IM Oll'ldor of lrldu1lrl1I lltltll-. •• lfflcle
Nolt ,.., Pul>Uc Ill .,,. .. !tr W''~ Sl•ht, ~':~! .. o. NOW•lll• • ' STATE DP HAWAtt 1 Ill• .... "'t"lttr11or •I """""'''Ml". St11 •lt'tOftl !!Y 100ffrtd Htt rt • twm1n -.... OUMTY OI' H..u.O'UlU l t. Frt ncllCO. C1Utornt1 er from 1111 ~-It ,..~ It be 1111 11r..,. wl'lov 1U T-I Ct C "" .. 1 Dlvl1lto11 ti Atllfffttl(1ifilp Sl1M11rn ll'ICI
ftl f'nt .. IUbKrlbtt tll lht wlt~111 '"' er-. C11MtrM• ""' °" tlt t• ~"""' '· 1t10 IN!fOft! me. 11\t-'" .... ll(ll °'"''' ~1'1H'!lnl tnd 1CkNWl111tld ~t 11tcut .. Ttlr IQ.Siii ___ .r... \11'1 .. ,.1tntd. I Nlfll'T Pub!k 111 lrld for N01ICE IS HflltEIY GIVEN ttllt ~
Free Bowl
Tilt f 01· Kids
Voulh or ganliations in lhe
Orange Coast area wlll have
an opportunity to take in •
bowl game frtt or charge
when the Cal State (Long
Beach) Utrs-tangle with
Louisville In the P.asaden1
Boll'I. saturdly, Dec. It.
Youth groups will be the
gut!ts or the sponsor In I
P a sadena Jr. Cha mber of
Commerce.
All group:i; interCJlcd In the
program are urged to contact
the Jr, Cha m be.r Immediately
at 181 S. Los Robles Ave ••
Pasadena or to cill 1213) 792·
Sl46.
Far \\'e1t
Air Force 91 , Valparaiso, Ind.
80
Oregon State 91, Utah 75
St. M ary's, Calif. 73, Portland
70
Rockhursl. Kan. 94, Regis 93
Whitman 77, Eastern Oregon
52
Sacramento State 78, East~rn
Washlilgton 72
Colorado 71, Texas·El Piso ·68
Ne w Mexiro'16, Denver 78
Utah State 66, Cal.&nla
Barbira 64
Adams Suite. Colo. 9S, New
Mexico Hl&}llands 61
Bri&ham Youna. 16. New ~1ex·
ico State 75
I.as Allg•lts S.ptisl 16. Cal
Ted> tJ
Florida Stile 117, Southern
Mls&ls&lppl 8'
J1c"'°""llle JIO,
Wuhlnjl<>n I.I
SouUtwe1t
Purdue·oo. Tuas Christian 74
Tex11--Arllngton 77, Texas A Ii
ftl 75
Ea~t
SI. Vincent 89, G rove City 83,
overtime
So .. rne ••f'nt AltWllln flt l•lllTI".. !flt Ctunf'J' t lld II ... tf'ltn •I•. rnl•1ftf Moulton-Nlflltl W Cl k • u (Sl!ALI . ,ubtl.tlld Or•l'll• [Mil D1lh' Piiat tlllf'•ln, •ulY cornml111'nttl 1M SWlrll, I .,.. .,, 'Wlll rtAl't'I
KentuCk )', 106, West Virginia MAIV SI TH MCI.TON Ot(l"'ber 1, is. 22. ,., lf1'1 ~ ~•111' ,._,'° lt11er1 "· EnlllM, ~1,:.r!.,,~:.!'. 11~' SIU~ .. ~~i.!i. !.~,! N~1rv PUO!lc • C1tlf.,,.nl1 1 k,..wll ti n'lt It bt ll'lf lt'IOll ,wlltll An1, CIHll•1111 u• to ~ lltur ti ll•tt 100 Prlnc1111 Offlct '" LEGAL NOTICE ll1m1 11 •ll•1ulbH 11 •nf wM uecutW .A M. on Clec:tmM• 11 ltnl 11 wtllch If·
G l D C 18 Wiiii 0!'111" C1111111Y 1111 totMOlfl'I ! n s t f u "'•" t ' •NI ,.;, fl•ct llllY wltl bi •ublktv offllld :,,: eorge own, . ' ' am Mv Co"'mtHlon E••lrei C,lllTIPICAtE OP OiSC:ONTINUAHC• ld!"°"11Mffd ,. IM '"'' Flt ·~1(111«[ Thi rtt4. Slid •••ltd bldl lhlll " lllf ,~. & Mary 71 April t, lf1\ O' USl!/01 ii rne. &l11t ti ll'le 1ublk wer' ~tttln'tlJ(t llouston 61, Florida 60 ,~bllthld Or•n•r CN~I C.llv p,tf!t AIANbONMlNT 01" PICTITIOVI NAMI!: W~TNESI ''"' ht .W •nl ol!kl•I , •• 1. •••tfllltd Ind er•trtd In 1111 ••111 rut11 ... 1 Dec: .... ber l, •. U, ,l. "10 7'»-10 THt UNOl!l.llGNEO tlO htrrbw COF ICIAL $EALI tton, f
North Carolln1 State 7 8, ,1r11,., ,,,.t 1111('1tw• •• 11 Mlld•H Y. Ft11t l•d'I blct or "~11t'•' shin be"'"' tu•
Georai• 87. • LEGAL NOTICE U 00 e'cloi;k Mld"!lht, 0.CH!lber JI, 1t111. Ntltrv Pub!lc, Flril Judl<lt l lfld •u-llmlll'td •n • k>rrn te bt .trt11111111.-
"" 11\ty tltlll Cltlt.IO clo butfl'ltll Ullfft l~I ~:r~"., H II lllt efll<• ti Bovie IEntltlltrlnt, 411 ~ East Carolina 119 Baplill 92 1-------------1 11 .. 111"" nr'" 111,,,. 11 :tftE a1;Autv • •w• Ll"Oll sirttt, 111111 A111, c1111•n111. EMii
• •Al. IMt PA'llL.OUll: loc•ttd •' 4lS w.t ,"" M1 C1fttn1u1tt1 E•11r.. '"".,. ,,_11 muit "'•«lll'l''"i.i.,, • Duke 95. Michigan 74 NOTICI 1'D ClllOITOltl Strfff. Cell• M•••· C1Hftmlt , wh ldl Nl~o r~i~'.n.,. Cttfller"t d'llck fir d\tt;IC (l rllllld ~ "
Duq""one II American U 70 suP11101 cou11T o' 1MI 11u1ine11 ,_.,111 "'"• tortnt•I• l>tf11 cllll't· r-11•1• btn~ or • Medi•'•"°""',.,. 1n ""' • • 1T-.TI OP CALl,OllNIA eotf'tl or !M tollOWl!ltl 1N•un1, wllolt Thlt 11.~turt Nit wlltn f tlltl'ltll II 1"""'"1 flCll 1et1 thtn 1001. of lllt ~ Mississippi 89, Texas 84 ••• THI COUNTY o• OIAN•t ,,,..,., 111 lull llld pll (H .. rn lden<l_,ll't fhll Cttl•t Ctrfl!lt•'• ot 1"1(11111111 Plrn'I ol 11\t bkl or ti lllt IOl•I '°"°""" "°"
Tulane loo. ·-"th Dakota 77 ... A4U•t •• fol!ewf, ,. wll· Nt<nt ol ANCMO l.tVT11Tl 1htH lllyt 'l'Pllefl lhtv Wiii ·~( .. ! • C1'1'tlrKI .,,. ~ E1111t el WALT,11 'OWAl.D (l.1.11:1(, L,11'1!11 IE C14JllltlNSIN, 2>• tl!t It"" fettl lt\11 tl!KI II If n'l'f' 11'1 .. MYlblt II t1tt tl'dlf' 1tr 111 ltlt tfv.r Mississippi State 102. Sewanee 511: •• 1k1 W#IL Tl• tOwAIO CL.All:I(, ••• w111, for''' tilwd. <1111 '""'"· c111-11t1111111 .. "" ....., 11tt1 .. tt "" 11'1911111 " f!l1 M1u1to,,.Nl•1.1t• w111r n ittttei. WALTEll IE. CU.llC, tkl 'WAL1ll. ftrnle tf 11• ..,,,_,, E1Cfl II/di bl• or trtll>Olll 111111 ltl ...... 73 Cl.Al.IC. ·-· w. IE. CL.A.JlllC , Dlc:Nllll. MAll:IAN \,, CHl.ISTENllH. '14 Dlltdll:~r ~ 1"' IH nltd It lllt ctllkl"""' Ollfr!(! 11.,.
Louisiana T-h 96 Or•I N0 11Cl rs Hl!ll'I Y GIVEH ,. !ht w·~· l"o-rr" ..... c .. 1. MHI. ,,.,,,:.. ,· •• ·r,SuUNvl~" I bf.fort 1111 "'""'In 11111 llflk• .,... ..... "'"' • crtdltor1 OI 111t lboYt l'llft\td H<tclt"' Ctllferllll '" ~ " ~ Tht tll0¥t !lltlltleftN CllH:k W lte!W RobtrtJ 95 11<1t t tl HrlO'll 111'1"' cltl"" 111IM1 1111 Ctrtlllctte lot lrl"llUlen ol bUllMtl COUNTY 01" Lot AIOIGl!LltS l H. tilt~ bl t 1Wll It IUl'l"ftt ll\tlt 111111*-
111• dKIOtnl .,. l'tlulrtll hi lllt ll\tnl, vnllltr t111 1tiow lldlt111111 ,..,.,... atlCI ••· °" IM• llfl , H J II Ntvtt'fl .. r, 10t, Oft wrn tnltlr 11111 t c•~lrlct If •wtr4'H
Duquesne 11. Amtrlcan U. 70 w1t11 "" 11KtM1,.., woucMr-i: 1n '1111 tlfltt nc11v11 o1 JOUbUn11en lllUMI •• ,. .,. 1u1 ......,. ""· "" 11,,.HtlfMCt, • Nottrv 111t _,. .,.,. wi• 11t cltln'lft •• 11w......._.._
1 Midwest 01 ,.... c11r11; e1 tt>t •b9v9 111tlll" c111rt, er ln !ht 1mc1 °' lllt County Cltfll of l'llllllc 11'1 ,,,,. "" "" c-iv •"" 111111 ••nw•tt II the 111tc1uflll lllHtr rtfltlff It 1•1•1t1f ll'll<ft, wllll ""Mttl tl,., YCU<lt-0,1,... counlY. C1l11ontll,......,. ,,,. ..,. .,.,...,., , .. lollll'lf llllr-1"' •u;l!_,c~ lo It'll.,. I~!• Ill• conrrect. Ohio State 74, Alabama SI ,.,. tto "" .......,111t1tc1 ,, 1111 1111(1 11 .. 111_ " s.c11t11 14" " "" c~n c•. ~ ,,,. _.,,, ,.._ny •-•i'td lht tu«••""' tilfdtr w111 111 ,,_,.,..
Xavier, Ohio••. Thomas M""'"' hi••"......,.'· CIUl.YEA. CAl•1Nrr;11: a. w1TNl1s 111r l'l•fllh thl• 11~ m "' 11:. ••rt:•• 1u11tw1"" "-i. ~"""" ""1r111111 • 11t11r •!If "'"""•I W119 111 1n V'I "'~ •AllN•I llw l!'•HIST J, SCHAG, Jlt,I, o.ttmbtr, 1t1' PU ADO •-I -I It lao<N. fl flit certtrtd SO dll MteAllllur lollltvtrcl, POii Olli¢t Lt1i.r E. (Plt11I_.., "'"" Wllell 111-It 111lttctlMcl It ""' llliel 1111 I t11fl'lllJI Mff1ttn1nc1 lltl'ltl 11'1
8o'I IJ''N. ~ lttclt. C1thlr?i11 fMM" .... Cl'll'l•"""'n -"-••tulld "" t.""9lne lrwtr~I • .,. ltneufll ""'I ... ,'"" • ""' COllll'ICI JIUOO!S Wesleyan 79, Chkll O f1MS. wlll(fl h tM •lett o1 butl111n 11 STATIE O_, CAL t,0111•11.A I ""ld:lllW ....... M -llltl"" 6olC\I"" .,-let, Mid llMft '9 bl MCUf'tjj ffMI I
Lo I 74 lfll ullder11tllftl 111 111 n'ltlltrs "'111111nt COUNTY 01' Oll:ANOIE I SI: llitl ll lllf, t1JtlfY lttn'IHfl'f' Mlllftcttrr '9 ttlt yo 8 te !tit 111fll of Ml~ ff'fHtnt, wltlt ln f111>f ()II Ot(tmbtr I, lt1t, """' Mt, !flt WITN l11 """ llllld _. eflltltl MtL Mtul .... -Nlllltl W•ttf Dt1"1cf.
Kansai 95, South Dakota Stile """"" 1•1tt !flt Hnt ''*lcltlel'I fl t1t11 ""'""'",,.._ • Nll•'T f'utrlc II! '"" tw ICW,tctAL. lt•L, All t+rn'I• .,_, Wlll!llot\I °""41,,.. la 110Hu . • ,11• SllM. "4'r9'11111Y _,_.. LHlll' I . Vlf1olnt1 Mlr1t1 ""' lfllorf'ntflell fer ~"'-t llllCMI '9 St D•ltod Novtmtttr 70. ,.,... C~rltl ............. .IM!1•" I.. c~,.I~ • Hlf•N Pu•llt<tlltlrnlt •11111 • •rl fl/I tM bMI "'"" 111111 ...........
B d i Y 102 Alhl l 1 A"-W•llt• f , (11111.-Jr ' ~-tt fl'lf i. M 1111 l'll'tllll WMM PrWr:i.tl Office Iii tlttllt~ 1\1111 ftter'lllcl hfftlll 111111 11111 r11 e • e es n ... -l 11C111or f//l IPll wui • ,.1,,.u •r• WOterllllf t. !tit wllfl!n 11'1· L" A,...., ttunf't 11t111tcl!'IY 1 ""et IM cttltrett.
Uoo 74 Ol lltl lbltw ~ ...... ltt.tdtnl tlrvmtnl 111'11 AtlMWilHM tllll ""' ... "'' COfl'lll'lh•len l q,1r•• flit Miul!M<Nlti/ll Wtlfl' Dl•lrld
Oki ho ao T T h DU.TIA, C IP«11tt•a & a1•Ml1 ecul ........ ,,,,, . J-11, 117' ,.......... !Ht fleM ll flltd 111'1' lnl 111
31 ma , t X-8$ K' 71 1•1 lll:llllT J, tCllAt. Jll:, wltNl$S ll'lr Mn.I IM "'11t l11 lMI. C0\111Tll;4•T . fl! .. tr ""1'9rl1 of t f!Y Inf 11! •1e1 It It
Oklahoma State 67, Arkansas •IU MICA"'-' lhllllvwi 10-=l'ICIAL I EALi T~I• 111n1tur1 f'" 'tlofltl! •t!•c:llH "••l<H 111'1' 111r.m11nTY '" • bl• .-, tf• j' '., '"' OlllCt ··-11• ' Evtl•11 M, c11.1mbt•lel~ llltl t"11L11 Ctrt1 ktll' .. "dllllUt 'lrl!t ft( .... .., "w· 65 Jtt...._1 Stlc~, CtlM f*I Nt!•,., F'ul>llt.-C1Hr.tlll1 H1""t et JllANeH I •AUTl~lA 1~111 htv1 ~OVL l0N•1Ct0VIL
N b k. 9. N rth l 71 ,, ... ...,.., 1'111 Nl>fMi Or•ntt COlll'\1¥ ll'lt Mm• ltrct •NII . llfffi •• If 11'1'1 WATl!:ll: Dl$TlllllCT
e ras ii, O em ow• au-.,1 flf I Jll:C"'!: MJ· com,,.1111111'1 1u1"" 1!1111t11r• hff""" •"Iii" i. "'' or1t1nt1 llY Alu 1MH l ewl• •
LSU•New O r I e a n 1 99 l'l.lbllll'IM °"'"'' c ... , Dell• l'llct Mt• J, 1111 et u l• otcUMt""· $ttr1111v ' Nowmlttr 14 tll'f ~r 1, I, 15. PUMh n.. Ori,,.. Cot51 C.!IY Piii! Ot!ttl t/ovembtt S, ltll l'</&ILll\lll Ort,,.1 Ctt\1 01lly """ •
W iscohs in-Milwaukct 88 ,,10 z1r1-n1 0tctmtttt 1. u. n. n. 1t1t ""'"'' ,...cGr...,. c . c.w-• °""""""' 1, a. 1t1G tt•ni '
'•
' . ' ,.---------------...... -....... -........ -.,., .................. ,...,..,.7'..,,....,.,,..,..,...,...,,,,...,...,.,..,,.~ .. ,.,,.,,."."••' ':I f j • ,. 0¥ , I t1>(pi ,....,-""""""";--.-.~~pr,,-
TV DAILY LOG
Gt;-ove Program . -
Choirs Combined
' .""5 l!!l"" ... (551
DAILY PILOT ,!9
Frank"s Hand Duris
Sinatra Forced Out of Action Movie
to the fingers . or unknown
nature, the doctor s•id.
TUE S DAY '''°!Ill C1J Net ... ttt (IO) lltsb •rt KtM1 Priol -llfldl Martel.
In Fine 'Messiah'
By GENE HANDSAKER "His little and ring fingers
HOLLYWOOD (AP) _ The wert pulled down qulte a way.
hand that h 0 Id a his "The surgery involved ex-I,::;::;:=========;
Dl:CEMICR I
D m Jllil (Q (30) "&Mt' CM By TOM BARLEY Ing choral effort shou1d bfi
'foil Sit." ow., lllln M _, 01 "'-0.111 ,. ... s•11 diluted ln this manner.
COlll.. ill boptf Clf ... ,.,.. I t ' t
co1qr TY .. bllf 1111 '*7 i,: too pd. 1bls ts the Ume ot year That commeo tJ no ex·
1:008111,.._ (t) (30) ""' ou111111y, D ~{1) IDAIC """' 11 tllt when musician! and music tended to organist Ron Hun·
hul>Udtll · '!Ten: (Cj ,,_...., ti ,.,,... lovers tum with one accord to tington a n d harpslcbordl1t
II MIC MlneMa (C) (60) (d,.m1) '70-Robert Con1ad, Ctrol Handel's "Messiah" for what James Pearson, each of whom
n n. Alltt1 Slttw (C} (SS) Con· JLYll"1w., LH._ •,.•'°" '°",. ::::1111:_~ hu always been and always made a considerable con-Jiislon of tht show win IM sun 11" "'' r• RU ., triOOtion to a s p I e n d l d 1tter th1 takers llilketbitl 11m1, l1ith put to lit 1111ttt1 Wt wllu will be the clea~st musical
buuts ue J1mu Drury, [. J. f'e•k· they 111 held llolt•p by t'MI kid· statement of faith ttnd fervor performll{lce.
er. Ed McM1hon, Hink Hlulns. ;D:ww frtlll ....,. (C) (91!) that our Christian discipline Soloists Barbara Griffin,
Rldi1rd Armour. Gutsl:s: Htn!J Glllton, O&n Robert· bas produced. contralto, G .. Willard Bassett,
Youths Set
In 'Messiah'
microphone and e s c o r t s cislon of thickened tissue, then
beautiful women by the arm Is a procedure on the skin to
hurting Frank Sinatra. allow the hand and fingers to
Persistent pain following a open. This is known as a Z.
June operatioo on his right plasty, a rearrangement of the
hand has forced the slnger-ac-sk1n so It ls no longer. No skin
tor to withdraw from a star· grafts were used."
ring role in an upcoming Surgery was complicated by
movie, Warner Brother a the presence of bone spurs in
Studio announced Wednesday. the two outer joints of the lit·
With a measure of Irony. the tie finger and the middle joint
film is titled "Dead Right." In of the ring finger.
W~.!!~~-=];;71. COit.ONA D•I. MAil
INDS tONlaHT , .. ,, ., e ,, ... ,
"PIECES OF DREAMS"
also"UNDEROROUND"
STAITI WIDNISDAY
"FEMALE ANIMAL"
"MAN ·FROM O.R.G. Y." O "DAYS OF WINE AND IO!I, Tiit Clift ~ Kim Wy. The annual outpouring of ttoor and bass Bruce Foote
"""· this inspiring oratorio bas were in fine VQice for an * ROSES"·Part I-JACK e ._... (C) (JO) always been the particular eratorio that always seems to
it Sinatra would have played The bone !purs were the
•'a tough cop on the trail of a resull of old, separate injuries Merle Valdez Studie of mad sniper terrorizing a city,"_'..'.:::::'.::::~!::..:::...:::'.:'..:::!:::==========:
t.1usic of Costa Mesa will requiring great physical ac-_yr!se~t Handel's ~·Pttessiab'' tivit)'.Jnvolving,--1he_band, the
on SUi1dar,Dee:13, ar-rp-;m:--studio said. LEMMON, LEE REMICK ti~ I•_ <C> ~-province-of-church cbobs·and-brin('that1Jttle-ertra from1til --'n~s::C•0:::...,...?-=-=.","-::'-""-.,+-~1 'trctlrtrilt~~ chora1 ensembles and the participants but they will
•• nd .._. Put I (dr1m1) '63 Kub~~.!. ind '* ~lollltt. tradition bas never been quickly agree that special Students will accompany The actor's surgeon asking
chorus and scloists fr om Costa not to be Identified g~ve this
Mesa..!.-EsJ~ncia,_ QoJ:9nL ~el-medical history of Sinatra's Mar and"Newport Harbor High hand .
-Jack Lemmon, LM Remick. blll: turlStic •PPfD'dl to tt'1t c.tr1 neglected in Orange Count}'_. _r~gnJ_t_ion is_ ~ Laguna
Cbu1u_Bicklord. A public m. · d tht ttmt\Mllf'·ill. -rtenct. Uie muitei-lnfof CbOirs soprano Darellyn Melilli.
min finilly Pt1tu•de1 llil wif• t im> htt!n I• UM& _(30) from 29 county churches Sun-She was in superb form and betome 1 "toci1I" drinktt •lld In c..-. -(30)
time botll bttome conllrmtd 1lco. t11 LI CrilM lill '"' da y for a "Messiah" that was we dwell with particular
holla. fittingly celebrated in Garden pleasure on her very lovely
0 Diet V11 Dyb (301 t:GO 8 ID (I) II hW l"r•ien ..... Grove 's lovely C!'.>mmunity "Rejoice Greatly," a classic • M: (lj ~ (drtrMJ 'JO -I f ho .. d 1· th! mlb1 fllntslont1 (C) (30) .Jlmn Dru1J, KllhlJll Htys, WoodJ Church. examp e O w e 1ver s
Schools. Singers and soloists Sin3tra. M, u n d e r w e n t
from UC Irvine, Orange Coa~t surgery last June at a Los ~~d Gold~ West col~eges will Angeles hospital for a con·
Joi n the high school singers. dilion known as Oupuytren's
Tbe program. to .be held at conlracture, a shortening or
the Costa Mesa High School distortion of muscular tissue
Lyceum , will be f~e of charge in the palm and fingers.
ID @(I) S1lr Trt• (C) (60J SttDd1, SNn G1rrll0n, Rid Butto111. Choirs from three Orange haunting air and quite lhe best
1.8 Plllr Cu1111 (30) A convict plob too 1tt1p1 froni 1 Coast churches -Cosla delivery ol the afternoon. Her tm ~ Lodtl (C) (30} m1llmuf!1 tta1ritJ' Ptiaon. Mesa's St. Andrew• s work in "He Sball Feed His
119 A.hr; fl.tr (30) ID,.., 111111C1 (C) (30) Presbyterian and First United Flock" was litUe short of ·that G itotidn 34 fC) (30) ! DI AMcltll (C) CIO) "'Should Methodist and Laguna Hills bigb standard.
and no offering will be taken. The d i 1 ea 1 e has been
Merle Valdez will direct. known since Biblical times but
lli' bl411Cb II ltte Son (C) (30) t U.S. ati;~'°r·' to1llUan lllM'll· Geneva Presbvterlan -were And all four soloiats will mll'lt ins._. /
Gil) LI Hor. f1alllw • Pltrlell c.:.> (C) (30) there to g!Ve us in terms cf readll y testify that they had
ED,.... ii a. hllMI CC) (30) 8) = • Al.-(30) the human voice a mell)orable magnificent support from a
a:i "ltlCU (IO) if somewhat edited oratorio. choir that made the rafters
'Disgusting'
l:lD D Cnclld C.•n (lOJ m TM f)Jin1 Jh111 (Cl (JOJ t :15 g L1kM W...,.U. (C}
f.l) KllVy (qill,111111t Allcti. (90) . ' m 11sc141n. Eati111 n., <JOJ t:JOe isw T• ...., m LM
An ecoloa fi m 111 A.. ~ Nllltr IC) (30) p111~ illd M1f 11111 wllic:ll II both I C1llbr1llOft of the bl n1tur1I world ind 111 indictment of •WIY ffOlll borrll wllln flllJ' •
1711n'1 p11'YWJion of the envilon· ~M lfll1 .,. blpin1 ttlllr tlthtf
mllll flOl'lf n11nil11 to 1 prlttf 111f1111
19 lotW s-itJ (C) sttw1nl• (IJl'ld1 F111ter).
Bl"" --... (30) .... - -... (30) ""' Cl!> fuptfN1 tNI bot (30) .clulion Of 6 PM Mow.
EE AIC E'l'lllllll ftlWI ('C) (30) O ..... (C) (30) Ballf Wirf.
1:45 El Mlllble
1:55 0 llktis w-.up (Cl
7:'5 cm> CIMJtiol d• Sll'Ulld61
l:«I 11 lrMI ACfK (C) (30) Tht
Dou(l11 ltrm becomts • s!11t
. wt.el. lh1 Ktinl bul bilu ll!t"td·
.' lltlld (II. m T1 Tiff ttlt TMll (C) (30)
. Ill> fd ~ 11111,....... (t)
, IE 1.a c.o.tltHfoll ClO>
WfONfSOA\
• • DAYTIME MOVIES
Ill ""' -(IO) ' €1!)Mllicllt m•..,.' -tc> t30>
1:00 fJ Morit: "nit ,..,....... (•d·
Yll'ltlltl) '41 -l•rrt P11il. []ltR
o~. ao• ... .., ''"·---(Q '"° D _, '"' a. "" .., !Cl
•
t :JO m,.... &hf' cmvs1ctl) 'St-
lfitll '-•rnor, Dllt Robmloll. m ... _. 11 a..rt. ,_..
(wfttlll!) '58--Scatt Bredy.
i:1111m.,., ~ tmua!Cll) '35 -
Fred Mtlltt.· CihllS ltotn. ................... -. ;nr.m•) '31-1NM °*'"'· R•lld· HI Cl ........ c..... (COIMllr) ~ ·etph Scott. ...,.... rortll" •Mn· ~nny Klyl, Curt Jar.-.
"ldre) '47-8urt L•nuster. •· ~~ .... i-~ (~ ""' °"°site Sd' conl• ~.• _ .. , --· .:~)~June Allyson. Anti ~rt-'5 dill MllrphJ, IUfl'lf Mn·
• den, l.11111 JrtillSlfl. 4IUI, Ke.<!•• Wyftll.
.. .
. ..
., ..
e JOB PRINTING
e PUBLICATIONS
e NEWSPAPERS
Qu•ilty Print ing ind D•p•nd1bl• Service
for mor• _thin • quart.tr of • <•ntury
PIL O T PRI N l INC;
121 t WUT IA.LIO.A ILYD.. NIWPOIT llAC·H -Ml-4121
"
Instrumentation. alas, will ring with as spirited a
be omitted from this review. "Pttessiah" as any ijandel
This critic has rarely, if ever, devotee could wish for. It is
heard such a disgraceful ac-this critic's very great regret
companiment as that provided that be cannot list tbe name of
on this occasion and it is each contributor to this mov·
regrettable that sucti a aterl· ing offering,
'Something Different'
JERUSALEM (AP) -A
religious court edict e:rpelled
Halm Shlomo Tulkaltov from
an ultra--0rthodox synagogue
for having a "defiling and
disgusting object'' in his
home. The object -a
television set.
MarvinC"leans Up for TV
.... f""' •• .,,,,, .... \. . ' .
NEWPORT . <·--- .
.... ~.,,. "t'
11fc-/(*'li,' 1T'S ALL SO FUNNY!" l.....,.llA,_I \-NtwY .. Otl,,#ftfl ___ Ollm,,_J .........
'LUS -To"y Mw1•11t-SwlV k•n-1111 in''THI lllD WITH THI CITITAL PLUMA•I'' fePI
CALL 546-3102
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT
' ' W U S A ' 1!,, PAUL NIWMAN ••d JOANNE WOOWARD
ANTHONY PERKINS
"' '
0
' "" ...... ·-''ZIG ZAG" IN w.-.. I AIM~ hi lePI
17th RICORD WEIK -IXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
'EtllOtt
GOuld
Dono Id
Sothorlond
... ••• I
ill1\S II
RATED "G" -IT'S fOI IVIRYONE -bdutln Wolk·ln Run
,,. TMI •1n1111ttn1• ClrfTlll
AIRPORT -BURT WICASTER • DUN MA'1JN
29"1 F••tvr•~ "THI OUT-0..TOWMIU., ••• HELIN HAYES
-rm2
HELD OVER!
,,
'Nd MacMvrny
N.1ncy Ol1111n In
2nd HIT
Jecai WHtl ll
..... .. ...
is named for a Swiss professor
of surgery at the University of
Paris who described It in 1832.
ll is more common in men
than in W<>men. Its cause is
unknown . Sinatra's affliction
was "rather severe,'' the sur-
geon said.
Court Play
Cast Listed
HELD
OYER
ENOS DEC. 15
BEST FORE ION
FILM OF '61
"THE
GRASSHOPPER"
"'" ''HOMER''
(i] 'Trsrg1SM e!§l ............ _
L.cllho ....
''YOURS, MINE,
AND OURS"
Btr91ln Mtllnff
Every Wednttd•y
•I 1:00 P.M.
Piii llPIUHMINTS
AOULT1 St.to
-EXCCUSll/£ENGTGIMENT-
SHOWING NQWI
AT TWO-TNIATllS--!!11!111'1!
11!17-
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"YOU MUST SEE THIS FILM!"
-lf;u..n l~Mc•..t.LJ'9
CQl.UlollllA PICTUNS P,e1-. • 81$ ~
JACK NICHOLSON
TJVE
ERS!I
PIE~!~
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•
ADIDAS
NtlM11Ra.,., e ffl-M.., .. ,,..
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"Your Real Estate Prublems Can Be Solved"
ly A Specialist in Exchanges
i.t~lllO lt't ~111"$, I YOlf • C:t t!IAI •• .., ,... rt11vct !fl .... ,. -t or l"dtb1Mntil, ~KlllllM IN'obltmt, ~ffflt IM-, 1v01d
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'A Certified R11f E.l1le Bro~er
For Appointment Coll !11 41 67J.ll01
NANCY J. MOORE
IMf ...... llsWWh
3471 Vi1 Lldt • Suitt 200 • N1ncy J. Moo<o R11lly
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1970 DAILY PILDT ! . -
American Stock Exchange List
"'" .. .. (llclt.I Mltll Lft Ci.N C ... 1 •
•
HOUSIS FOii SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUSES FOR SALE, HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE·
Gonor1I IOOOGener•I 1000 Gen•r•I 1000 General 1000 Genoral 1000 Nowport0 Booch 1200 ,;;Co.•"'"="•.;;d;;;•;.,I ;,oM;;;•.;..r _..;.1250= Huntlntton Booch 1.,a
* * * * * TAYLOR CO. *
CORONA .. DEL MAR JEWEL
Sparkling, luxurious home. Architect design·
ed. Adjacent I<> Little Corona Bch. IDEAL
FOR COUPLE. Maintenance free. Tum the
key and travel anytime! .......... , . $81,500
SPACIOUS FAMILY HOME
4 Bedroom&, country kitchen, bonus room for
sewing bobbies or upstairs family rm. OnJy
I year young. Nr schools & shopping. $39,000.
clinJa !J6£
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
52 Lindo lslo Dr.
BUILDERS
CLOSEOUT
Cust 6 BR., study, 5 bath home w/4 frplcs., Unbelievable but true. Bright
circular stairway, decorator selecte4 carp. and sparkUng new, 4 &: 5
& drapes. Shown by appt ....... -... $210,000 bedrm, 2 story homes, many
C I I I ti II h & fantastic options • almost For omp et• n orm• on on a omes immediate possession may
lots, pl••H cell: be ammged. All 10 be aold
·BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR '" 30 days. $35.500 . FHA!
833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642""4620 VA • NO DOWN. Terma I~!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~ I available. Call 545-84.24;
lllA!! lOOO ..... , MOVE IN FOR
Homo Plus Units CHRISTMAS WITH
Jn a private rural getting • 10-/. DOWN
space a n d Iott ot shade N'ear entrance to ~crnt. 4
trees. Homey, n ea t three dandy bedrooms (matter
bdrms. two bath home with bedroom separated on othf:r
fireplace It picture view aide or home). full aile tor.
window1. ma1 dining room, famUy
\VITH THREE CH 0 IC E room with built in df'sk: unit.,
WELL KEPT UNITS to pay lowly acrUan carpett, vln;yl
expenses. WHAT A BONUS! wall covering -$42,950 -
Both home and units sbOw owner will help finance with
pride oI ownership and a.re 10% down. Phone 646.nn
tn immaculate eondition. to view.
Priced to sell at only $58.500
HONEYMOON
COTTAGE
A rozy 1 bedroom hDme with
fireplace on a well situated
R-2 Jot, aouth • of. the -high-
way, An ideal investment for
the "buy now -build later"
enthualast and the owner
will CIJ"T)' a 90% 1st trust
deed with only 10% down.
Only $36.500. Call 6"7J.8500.
O THf. REAL
"'\,, ESTATERS
• wfth financing available. WOULD YOU LIKE A 'O TH E REAL
":" ESTATl:RS M. M. LABORDE, Rltr. S PLIT-L E VE L TWO
646-0555 Eves: 642-7438 BEDROOM HOUSE so
ATTENTION •-~L-ux_u_r7iou-s~L~l-v~lnt~l-·I roomy that your grand "Our 25th Year'' Gener•I 1000 Gener•I
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1000 \o~h Co ast 2111 San Jo.1quln Hiiis Ro•d
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 Macnab-Irvine
* * * * * * Realty Company
PUT FUN
Genoral 1000 Gonorol 1000 IN YOUR LIFE 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;; liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimlEnjoy PEANUTS a.nd BEER 1• on SATURDAYS!! No lawns 31. ACRE to cut or weeds to pull! Own 14 2615 Bamboo ""' be'"tlfu' ...... 3 bed· room ~2 bath, almost new
EASTSIDE Eastbluff, N.B. :;dt:~~;,."'~~~~
5 BEDROOMS tion, school!, etc. on I y
16 Unit potential hf're with
a "SPANISH HACIENDA"
N a bonus on front of lot
Full price
$34,950
Newport ••
Fairview
646-1811
(anytime)
PAY YOURSELF
$46,500,
Macnab"lrvine Have a 1.fERRY CHRIST-
f\1AS in a real home for the
large family. 2% Baths, 2SOO 675-3210 sq. ft of gni.cious living, 642-8235
large Jiving room w/stonel.!!!!!!!~~~~~::""""
llttplaoe + ''"""'rm, etee EASRWFF
bltna, FA beat, lots of stor-BIG 5 age space. Covered patio ·
with view, double garage. Room for lots o( kids. We
PriCe $55,000. (Corrected ad) have 5 bedrooms: and three
baths. Want to swim? We
Lochenmyer
Realtor
have a beautiful pool. \\'ant
to buy a boat? We have
room to park oU the street.
Want a swing set? We have
room for that too. \Vant a
1860 Newpon Blvd., C.M. · fine school district? New.
FLEXIBU & FINE
Long or short Escro"w. choice
of NEW CARPETS, your
choice of financing. 4 br or 3+ den, we olfer lhls
PROUDLY KEPT ls! owner
home wi lts 9 yrs of yard
improvements, Large alum.
covered patio, fruit ~s.
rose garden, & beautif'Ully
&CUlptured low main I.
grounds_ It's our best at
$29.95tl.
COATS ..
' WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pen Evenings)
Santa Special
Move In by Xmas
FHA-VA-OK
Great for In-laws
HOMESEEKERSf JUST LISTED! Fabulou11 piano ls no problem?
A FABULOUS MESA "Bluffs" Angelita, 2 BR. WOULD YOU LlKE A BIG. BEAUTIFUL SIDE YARD VERDE PACESETTER model on one level. Custom, that your neighboi-does all
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family profess. decorated • move in the work on?
room homr on a huge pool cond.·sumptuous mstr. suite, WOULD YOU LIKE AN EX-
size Jot. AU electric kitch-Ideally situated on corner, TR.A INCOME UNIT to help
Sharp 4 bednn, 3 bath with en, built-In wet bar, Beaufi. Every extra , CALL NOW for make your payments?
formal din~ room. One JUI carpets and drapes. This app't. Askin& $42,500 ·Won't Drive by 602 Iris.
huge room convertible into borne Is perfect for the ex· last. I 1-~R='E'°"D~U~c==E~0"-=$4~.~000=1~
iJ't.law accommodaUona in-ecutive who can make an Ask for Etta F'fteman immediate decision, Call Sacrllice! Sickness forces eluding living room, bedrm 546-2313 Now sale of this 4 BR. tam. rm.
& private bath. Manicured & pool home. 2\.2 Baths. 2%
yard, exc:ellent landscaping, Car pr, lOOxlOS Ft. lot.
sprinkleni front & rear. Must B!!U now • $49,500.
Adult occupied. VA or FHA 315 MARINE AVE . 673-6900 Call Patrick Wood 54>2300
terms. $3.S.900. BALBOA ISLAND e Bill Haven, Rltr.
COATS Owner Desperate S-0·0·0 2111 E. Coast. CdM 6""'211
.. UNUSUAL' GREAT VIEWI WALLACE Must sell like new 4 bedrm Of harbor & ocean. Attr. split
REAL TORS family & dining. $36.750 FHA Interesting Door pl11.n with level home on R-3 5100 sq.
or submit low down pay. rooms galore in the heart ft 1ck, Ideal for 4 apt units.
O•po
9
n
62
E : .. •
54
nlnt•' ment Super N sharp with of Ne"l'J>Clrt Helghb _ 5 Bed. SDJ.OOO. 2501 Ocean Blvd ..
.._ many extras. ow vacant • rooms family room with Cd1t1. By app't, only. 1 ~~~~~~~~~~11nspect today! Call 540-llil firepl;ce and barbecue. De-Biii Grundy, Re•ltor
Newport Heights Are• "The Only Way To Buy" luxe kitchen with built-in Call: 64Z-46al
MESA'S FINEST" located m HElfTAGE blender. Let us show this ON THE BLUFF
Enjoy one of "C o s T A
1
!j!•
1
freezer, refrigerator and BY OWNER
near WEST CLIFF SHOP-• ~ ' IOI. m•n _ most interesting 'home -btw Big & Little Corona heh
Fu t PQlse!Sion • Decorate PING CENTER. A m p I e 1 ~;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 $39,500 with 10% down.
XI mu b-..Cooin yok urh ownturkuv. room for your large l\trnl-Phone 646-nn. ~ ~-e!~ J:i~ ~";.~~~ "< -m t •t ey 2 BR. 2!h ha. Condo. ~,. " • ......, • ture. Three GIGANTIC n-,...,..;pals ()nly. For ap-in your own built in gas Clubhouse, pool, sauna . "'''""'
VACATION AT HOMt
This: unusual artiltlc homft
is completely customi%ed ,
for gracious JiyJng. Swim In
your ov.71 heated pool_ Lovf'...
ly pool area sports 2 patio1.
Deluxe bltn all elec kitchen
& family room lanai. Price
includes w/w crptl, dl'PI,
shutters, water softenei:~
wuher, dryer, refria +
much more! Assume 6,.1 IBA loan. Total monthlY
payment only $159. UNDER!
UNDER! PRICED!! $26,500
Hurry!!
REAL ESTATE
HUNTINGTON BEACH ore.
194-5311
Open 7 days. 8:30 to 3:30
"Up For Grabs"
Hurry, Hurry, Hurry!
Probate court sal~. A chance 1
for your bid. Large 4 Bed-
room comer lot. Near beach.
Sunken formal Jiving nn,
Step-up Dining for tonnal oc..
casions. Separate massive
family rm. with cozy• fin--
place, Furnishings also for
sale. Vacant and ready to
go. HWTy and be finl! Call
(U4.> 96l-55SS, .
FOREST E. OLSON
Inc. Realtors
19131 Brookhurst Ave,
Huntington Beach
BUY OR RENT $1,000
The most outstanding value
on today's market In a li&K·
ury (nearly 1900 &11. ft.) 3
bedroom home. Consider
thete feature': larie separ-
ate Wnlly room with wet
bar, formal dining, 21ii
baths, nearly new shag car-
pet, heavy shake rool. PLUS
a huge 40 X 62 well land·
scaped rear yard ~1th loll
of concrete. And only 1090
down to the new reduced
price of $31.500. Call 673-8550
Call 646-3928 or 545-3483 pon-Co!ta Mesa. Wanta fair ~~!!!I price? $52.000. Pho~646-n7J
oven, This cozy 3 BR 2 bath BEDROOMS, n e w gOlden Walk to shOps, $3000 doY:n. poinbnent call 675-3497
be harvest shag carpet, Double Owner will finance. * PANORAMIC VIEW ~·-I -·' t 3 •-• home Is vacant and can LOG SIZE fireplace in the • •Wll mrna"wa e ·ucuroom, 1
financed to fit your needs. family room. Fresh spark-~mt ... c.woM·-~.Bv'.·,'. b00a. done:'. I-~=~=~~=~ Luxury Oce~ Blvd. Duplex. 2 bath, aU elee bltn kitchen ENCHANTED
COTIAGE
1o ·THEREAL I'"\.. ESTATERS
~"'I "-It ••• ,·t today -• " OCEAN FRONT Overlooking Jetty & Harbor. with a dishwasher, dble ..... ........ , -a • -.... ' ling white! decor inside and do •-DIAL 645--0303 IBA $1650 wn. By Owner: 673-8866 * age (opens autolil.atically) RESr·~. OLSON out. Bright, cheerful kitchen Fonin Co. 642-5000 Beach front 2 Bl'l home over ==========! and enjoy all the cmtree
y,•ith garden view! $2900. in.. I=::=::::::======! triple gar. R-3 lot with space Linda Isle 1306 fun of Condo Jiving. Rent ' ' " . Sharp 2 bedroom 2 bath home l-'==;o=:o~~~=-
t? Corona de! Mu . Pan".'ed 675-3000
hVlng room with cozy fire. The N be T Call Wbe••-
REAL TORS itiaJ FHA Investment • OUR 10 expand or add ~an tront or assume tlds loan. Tota.I
2299 Harbor, C.M. BE.5T VALUE! At 0 n I Y Costa Mesa 1100 rental units, Asking $59.SOO. monthly payments of $175.
la Di · 'th I'd um r o un<r p ce. rung room WI s 1 • . · Le in ing glass door to patio and Bllyl.llg, Selling or as g
garden. 2~ car garage plus fRVINE TERR. •2
room for boat or trailer. All 1501 Bayadere Terrace
this on a 40 ft. lot and only Open daily 1.S. Tree shaded
2 blocks to the beach. $46,950 3 BR. 3 Ba. hOme PLUS hob-
~ 1 h · by rm. & 2 oar gar. Lie.
LOOKI S33,500. CALL (!) '46·2414 [X • 't B yf t Come &ee this now. FUll
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths M. M · LABORDE, Rltr. $1,200 ~,. ~.-qUISI e a ron prtoe 123.ooo.
$148.00 mo. Incl. taxes 646-0555 Eves: 646-4579 Just the d0\\.'11 payment 119. -..
"YOU GOT TO SEE IT <FHAJ E""'d•' bdrm"'· ••AL•v ' Open Da1'ly 1 to 4 Take over subject to existing Nt•t Ntwpor1 Potl orrict
FHA loan annual % rate of TO BELIEVE I Tl'' chaic -dose to heart of SI Linda Isle
"o eswort y--='isl~.;i_·-Uot. Prt~ 514 ?O and you'll get 3 large A 2.0x40 indoor poo1 tor the downtown -Large R2 Jot NEWPORT ISLAND Bill Bents REAL FSI'ATE
bedrooms 2 baths, rock fire. ULTIMATE IN SWThfMING -OR -Income rental, for 2 BR. fiplc. Sep. prqe, PETE BARRm HUNTINGTONBEAOJ-OFC.. CO' THE REAL
1,.1....._ E§TATER~ place, blii1t:inJUtChen;-ttirc:---<•Jt's fantasti&" Thc.te'a a \hat tax shelter -p:>ssible bedroom, rec rm. $32,500. IH-5311
ed air htat, double garage. 3 bedroom, 2 bath home CommetCia.tOF'"muftfple tin--R-2'101. 201' Cfii.:-By OWner. Realty * oo:szxr-Open 7 days. 8:30 to i:30 "' . . & Co.
REALTY ·
Newport Beach Office
1028 Bayside Dr.
675-4930
mn.U ,\ llE\fll'
llE.U:I'\' I :\f.
cu.I de sac street block v.·aJI \\'ith an addl"!d family room its. ONLY $22,500, -Call1~=~~"6~·:,_,,, _____ J ~~~~~~~~~· I
fenee and an excPuent Costa OT bonus room that ao's with 646-7ln. MUST SELL BY OWNR Huntington Be•ch 1400 l ~~~B~E~H~IN~D~l~N~=~I
Meaa address Call now • the pool. Comer Jot with ac. Brand new, fl"!!"! slmplr, 1 blk, ----------PAYMENTS
Open Eves. 546-8640 cess tor a boat or trailer. beach, 3 br, 1 "'· 2 frplc, 1 •
$100 Down
3 Bedroom 2 Bath , £!.T 111q i1~ 1000 j
$19,950
nd I No NEED To WAIT ?11ust u criflce. A• 11 um e I<'.< a m"" ,.. • ot b"m .,.;rg, w/w crpt, h"g' your imagination run \vild. dbl gar. 64z_7523. , Sl8,600 VA Loan subject to
plus closlna= costs and you ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I NOW IS • • • • • • • • 0 I 131 951) Call '~===---~-cl;=;;-;,,,-..,-.,,-,--;;-;:::-;::-1 ·6~ annual. perC!entap rate n Y ' ' now 1 OWNER Wants to seU no1v! QUPLEX • 4 br up, 2 br dn, Sensational 2 s!Ory home that with total payments of can move In to this unbellev. CORONA DEL MAR THE TIME TO BUY 2629 Harbor. C.M.
able value before Xmas: It's R·2 Buy ahead ol spring market 1 ---S~A~L~E~S~M"E=N~--54&2.1la, First $30.0CO takes this 3-car, IK!at & clean, nicely has everything! Only 2 $156.00 per mo. Submit )'OW'
beautiful Mesa North home. tum. 200' to heh. Sacrillc:e. years new. 4 Bedroom, 2 dov.·n payment on this clean
5 BR plus dining room, Owner. 714/ MZ-1946. bath, panelled family room, 3 bedroom with 2 luxurious'
bit-ins 1% BA. Sprinklers DELUXE Bayfront apt ~ 2 antique brick fireplace, for-baths. Carpets and drapes.
lront & b_ack. Redwood Br, 2 Ba, $49,500. Tenns. mal dining rm, elec bltn Huge rooms. Double prage
fence on 3 skies. Nr. shops, Immed. poss. McKenzie, kit., dishwasher, w/w crpts, with fenced Yard. GOOD
~O 'THEREAL
\'"\.. ESTATERS only 5 yrs, old, has a lire-3 Blocks to beach in Bayshores. Perfect home
place, built-in kitchen, fore-Cozy 2 BR. home for the discriminating. Lrg. 21 Year old Corona del Mar
firm has openings for 2 ex-ed air heat. all ne wly redec.-On 40 ft. Jot liv. nn. adjolnine lovely pa.
orated. • HURRY on this Well maintained tio, 2 Bdrm. & den & din perienced real esta!e sales-l -'°'F°'O°'R~E=v~E°'R""v'°1E=w,-
' '•.),•I '•
one! 54&.8640 Excellent rental rm, $49,500. men Please call: Leonard Smiib or Walter Haase for &: pool side pleasure. N~\v
(>#fjfr-1i7 Only $43,500
2629 Harbor, C.M.
~ custom home by Ivan WeU11
.......--___,,,,,,... app't.675-3000 '" Dove' Shott•. 4 BR, 3 BA + pwdr rm., family Coldwell,Banla l'ii&i;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ... ;;;;;;iii rm., dining rm .. 2nd trplc ........._M•--...:.....till • EaStSl0de 5-PIBX e & walk 1" wet ""· Roy J . ~ \\'anf Rltr., 1033 J\fariners BALBOA Dr., 646-1550 Open Daily.
Rea!h"" 833-0700 644-2430 $88,000
ISLAND "Our 25th Yoar 356 E . 20th Street
In The Harbor Area'' Cosi o Masa LIOO WATERFRONT
VACANT 1 ~~~6~7~3~-4~4~0~0~~~1 APTS.-320 LIDO NORD 642-4905 4 Bedroom homo. P"io, '""-
LOT I • $150,000 Price with 1?0 ]st ~W~A~T~E~R~F~R~O~N':!T!"!P'!A~T:'!l~O! I dt>ck, formal dining. J\lodern
$100 Down T.D. 6 Beaut. furn, units; One of the best in The Coves. Jk~~1Nn. SMITH, RL TR.
6 car garages & util. room. Room for 11. large boat
$37 500 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths so Ft. on swimming: beach. 4 Bedrooms 646·3255 400 E. J71h St., CM
' II this home hasn"t sOld by Will coru;ider trade for boat $125,000
WILLIAM WINTON the time you read this, you'd or maximum iss,ooo lge. 4 LIDO REAL TY INC. e Steps To Ocean e
Realtor better ,et with it, It only BR. house. 3377 Via L ldo 673-7300 Empty & like new! Only
229 Marine, Balboa Island takes $100 down & costs of 8111 Grundy, Rltr. · S32,500. 3 BR, fain. rm., 2
675--3331 about $600 to move in by 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620 REPOSSESSIONS ba. 2 car gar., bltns.
l=c===-..====• 1 Xmas. See thi$ one today, I~~~~~~~~~ Spark.line clran homes, some CAYWOOD REAL TY
CORONA HIGHLANDS 5f6-8640 LA.RGE, immac. 3 BR + newly painted & carpet~. 2, 6."'.06 \V. Coast H .... 'Y., NB
View & pool & ~ own the tam rm .. near Back Bay 3, 4 & 5 bdrms. Some \vilh e 54&.1290 e
land, in Corona de! Mar. 4 area, 2 brick trplcl!, hrd.,,..d pools. FHA-VA conv. terms, I ~~c-,~~-~~~-
&lrms., 2 baths. Only floors, bltns, walled from $17,(00 to $40,CXK.. Purchasing Clerk
$69,500. park-llke yard, covere d Collina 4r: Watts Inc. Xlnt. co. Good l)'Tllng, Call
CORBIN 2629Harbor,C.J\f. p11.tlo, trees. Quality howe 8843 Adams Ave. 962.5523 Loraill(', 645-2770. \Vestcllff
• ~A~F~E~E~L~O=F-o-L~U~X~U7R=y1 on a beautiful street. l0% DAILY PILOT DIME • A Pt>rsonnel Agen cy, 2043
MA RT IN From the Ju sh carpets to the OoY.'n, $33,000. Klna:aard -LINES COit you just pen-\\'estcliU Dr., N e w p o r t
exciting decorating in this R.E. ?\fl 2-2272. nles a day, B<'ach.
BEST BUY LIDO
walkinr; distance to all 646--0732 drp& and many extras. Price SHAPE. Call •
schools inc. OCC. Cpts, l=-o=~c='°""ooo""""'P,..,k-Li=d ~uced. for quick sale w I k & L d"''· Sm"11 4%% 1'1. 10% REDU ED $4 ; u o $28,500. Call oow!! a er ee 2nd. FHA appraisal $26,0CKl Twnhse. 3 Br, 3 Ba, Immed.
at 8!2%. ll69 Dorset Lane, J>OU. Realtor 646--0732.
CM. 546-3634 New rt Hel hts 1210 Sell, lease/opt or rent po 11
4 BR., 2111 ba., tn>lc. 2 Car BY OWNER: 4 Br, 2 ba,
gar. 3 Yn:. old. 220o Sq_ Ft. f I bl M -A-1 Cond. Vacant. quick pos.. 7 c, tns. any Xu as.
Call t _ _, , '\ alk to 3 schls. Would con-
i;ess. uuay · "d I 543-5306 Call Patrick Wood 54S.2300 51 er ease. ·
• Bill Haven, Rltr. University Park 1237 2111 E. Coast, CdM 673-3211
REAL ESTATE
HUNTINGTON BEAOI OFC.
894-5311
Open 7 days . 8:30 to 8:30
4 BEDROOM
$19.000 Full price. Elec bltn
range & oven, family rm.,
E-SIDE-$23,500 t.,.., 11v1ng rm., 2 b•lh•.
Xlnt E-side location quiet OLE'I carpets, drapes, FA heat,
st.reel, 3 bdrms, ruwd floors, A~lhentic Spanish .!tylr . w/ dble garage, completely
l'Xlra 2-car gat., huge Jot. tile root, cathedr&! celling. fenced and landscaped,
No down or small 3 BR. 2 ha., 2 patios. Wide sprinklers, close lo shopping
Costa Mes• lnYettment lot. Owner's reduced to and achools. SO x 100 Lot. su.7711 $39.500, ?.lake oHer! One lender, assume existing
Realtors
znQ Harbor BIYd at Ada.nu
545-9491 Open 'til 9:00 Prt1 .
Just Reduced $3,600
Spanish-35' Pool
Prime beach area. Enter
thru lovely arched veranda.
Unique IAm. room. Formal
dining. Floor to celling stone
fireplace. Deluxe kitchen. 4
huge bedrooms. J baths, All
this plus a secluded private
pool. Too much m~. to.
say here. Call (714) 962-~.
FOREST E. OLSON i d h•11 lina'."l"g payable 11" pe•
ocean Yiew home. 2 hr, den. Inc. Realtors LOVELY. quiet, secluded, re I Imo' mcl IL'l.es.
2 ba. $39,500. Consider 19131 B kh t A lease/option. Owner 548-8007 roo urs ve. ~ 900 Realty 962-4471 ( =. J 54W103 ==="="=""'lin:•;"="=8='='=ch=="=I •• COLLEGE PRK -~4.. · • U · p k C t Irv! 3 BR-FHA 7~i%-LO DN niv. ar . en er, ne BUILDERS * BY OWNER: 64.5--0927 * Call Anytime 833-0820 CLOSEOUT Fount•in V•ll•Y 14JD
Credit rejections place 7 horn.
Mesa Verde 1110 Eostbluff Private Courtyard
lovely Cliff Drive hOme _l:o========:....;==='======.:.O:=========
REAL TORS 644-7662 """rythlng Si••""" with Gonorol 1000 Gonorol 1000 General 1000 ! ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; BLUFFS 4 BEOROOM
$25 450-I' -I newness -3 Bedrooms, nt'W • 00 botha and a perleot kitch<"
4 Bdrm. + Family rm. for Mother plus a l!C\Y 18x22
Aasume existing apr. loan of famUy room -$·19,900.
61ii%. Elegant entry hall, 4 Phone 646-nn.
1242 es on choice Jots on the mar-
ket again!! 3-7 Bedrms, 3 &
4 baths, bltns, crptg, shake
roof etc. from $33.940.
RANCHO LA CUESTA
Brookhurst & Atlanta, H.B.
~1338 Open 10 atn-6 pm
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
Take over GI loan, no qual-
ifying. Best location. 3 Bed-
rm, 2 ha, frplc, bltns, crpts,
dJ1111. Submit. 847-8507
3 Bed.rm, family rm, la.rte
den, low interest VA loan!!
$4550 Down • a1sn low VA/
FHA lt>nTUI. Owner must
MOYr.
~rooms, huge family
room, natural brick fire-
place. awtm pool, park like
)'ard, 540J720
2955 Horbor TARBELL
3 BR + den, 2 BA. hrdwd
lln, ..,,... divs. dbl ""'
age, ~ to rear yard for
boata, bin, etc, E-&Sde CM.
$24.1'0.
WeU,..McCardle , Rltrs.
1810 Newport ·mvd., C.?i.t.
549-7729
CORONA DEL MAR
Lovtly home + income unlta,
On huge Jot, oear beach.
$135,000 Go«v• Wllllomoon
Re•ltor
fn-4350 645-15'1 Evos
ASSUME sv.% G .I.
5 BR.• $26,000
Jmmed. P<>llCM. North Costa
Mc.. nr. a.hoPPinl center.
New pa.int tluvout. New
FHA-VA O.K. mllOO
Pynmld El<chancm
\0 THE REAL
"""' CSTATERS ' ' '' I'.'
Open 0al1Y 1.5
2001 Aliso Avo & 20th
Oatorn built. form11 dlnlnr
room, 3 hf'drm, 2 ba, s.e p
living nn., fireplace, ramUy
rm., elee bltnR, f'A heat. pa.
tio y,·/gas f.ir«I BBQ pft,
dble gar., spaee for boat &
trailer.
Lac:henmyer Rlty
Cat! 646-3928 !:.:ves: :;43-6769
FORCED SALE
Strlkinr, 1.arie Spanish hOmt,
near-new, 2!IOO Sil. fl, ()wn.
en forced to tta.nSfer East
5 ~. fam A din mu.
Best oUer! Lltted $6.1.500.
141·5111 , __ _
~~=~u
S@~~~-.!G£2rS"
The Puule with th@ Buift./n Chuckle
0 lloorronge letten cf the ~.......,
four xrombled worcb be·
low to fonn fOVt &lrnple word1
I NACUNE I _ 11 I I 11 I'
I· r U'f is, I 1
I TISUE ,~
I I Ii I E.poctanl boyhood, "Every
-ning rho boy would gel up
I M 0 T H A F lchd count his~-· f1.•6
I I I' I' I' 8 ~:r.:: •~ho":~~ 0::.1 • • • -• • • Yolf develop from Rep No. 3 btilow ...
e r:~:.t""'f"0 I' I' I' I' I' I' I' Is I' I
llllllllf
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000
.,..
Hidden 2 Story A "'" find, a • bedroom. 3 bath "C" plan in t h e Oy,11er leavi"" area, must 81 , wi h be ·-. " uf!.!' t open ams
sell charming 4 bedrm with and a balcony for your J u. dining & famlly rooms, qual-ity carpeting, freshly paint-liet snd patlo for Romeo and
ed . Sharpest home In town nearby pool ror evt>rybody.
;it S•l<t950. See today _ call !\fake yourself Pllrt of the
5'1(>.ll51. carefree life In the Bl1.1Us.
"The Only \Vay to Buy" $4G,800. Call 67>8551) I Y ='.:~I IO THE RSAL
•"'\,, ESTATl:IlS , .. .
m;4§otw
Mesa Verde Estates 3 BEDROOM, family/dining
U ··" rm. SfAROUST w/w crpts, Now ava • 3 choice bw.1dlng Corona del Mar 1150 hrY.'d, bl.t.ns, l\' ba, dble ai!es adjal"!C!nt to pictul't'sque, ________ _
od ho 1 1 -garagl', extra dean, new
m el ml!!! comp ex· su.r--1/J BLK TO BEACH paint, fenced, "1>!c, vacant. rounded by luxury tiomes in • area of beauty I: pride of 3 BR. 2 ha. Bctut. matm. Assume GI,
ownership Walk to Mesa panellna:. Newly rtderorat. Pat Robertson Realty
Verde & Costa Mesa coun.. ed. A dttam hOme In a 8474553 Eves:_ 19M152
try Clubs. $15,000 • $16,500. dream location. $54.!Q>. ASSUME 5% FHA mortiaae
HAFFDAL REALTY
842-4405
Job Forces Sale!·.
Price Slash $3,00.0
Move In before Xmas, 3 BM.
room, t>Xtra Jarae famll,y
room with brick tircpla:ce,
ChP.ery kitchen with an de-
luxe bullt·ins. 2 bath!I. Hore
lot \11th room for boat' A
tralltr. Shake roof. Mueh
more. Sellers lOl!il! Y o'Q r
gain! Best Xmas btra:tln
e\'er! Dial Now! ctl4)
962-3."J85 ""l• ..
FOREST E. OLSON •
Bkr. Cal i 546-1077. DeL•ncy Re•I E1t•te of $24,000. Cuh out for
2828 E, Coast Hwy C.dM n s,900. Heat-' -•, t w 0 Inc. Realtors ... ., ... 3 BDR.t\1, 2 Bath. O\.'t'r .XOO ,,~~mo ·· ... ~ .,..... 9
II G •-1 ~ Ito"", 3 bedrooms, 2u '--•""·, 1 131 BrookhlD'lt Aw, IQ, . ame rm, ...i"C·I--,=,....,.===,--.,, nvt1u,. H 1_ •·
fenced yard. l~ blkl from DELIGHTFUL formal dining room, la.mil)' u;;;-"""n"'l;i.•;;·0-;".;:.~;;•;;';.:h,,,;,..I
golf ooune. SS,,00 d n , 3 BR. home So, of Hwy. room w/tireplace. Carpt.ta & $995 DOWN/VACA:Nit
!OWNER~ 545-3182. Frpl., F'.A., _heat, Compact draJ)('s. Vlclnlfi Brookhurtt Formal Dining Ro0m I
ANY Da,y 11 the BEST day to kitch . Carp, & some dn.pcs. & Indianapolis. By o~m Large P•nelled O.n
run 11n ad? 0 0 n' I Dbl. 1aragc, O\ilner ready after 6~00 P?tf 962-7633. +-·' fj"rh·1n, 2 bll , famrrmi 1
tlclay .. call loday, $42-5678 lo ~11! e"''",-o-,u·"...,",..-, °'2"'B"R."""co-,,1,--o,°"10"1.· I blck wall, ~prlnklrrt1; .,. , ! item~ 1vHh eut, use DaUy MORGA.N REAL TY Exceptional $290. lncom1. HAFFDAL REA.LTV" .
1
,
PUot Classified. 64:Z.-5678 673-6642 675--6459 1229 Dela\\'11..re St. 842A405 l -1 ·--------
•
--------------------------'----------------------------------~
•
.,
---·-·-.
TuHd1y, Dtclmbtt 8. 1970 DAllV '1LDT U
USES FOR SALi ' RI NTALS • ltlNTALS ltl!NTALS RENTALS RINTALS RENTAL' Ri!N TALS .RENTALS .
Or•"t• c...iy • J6'0 Houus Unl!lrnt.t!Jd Hov.u •Jlnlumlllhad Aph. ~urc..n_luc;'>Jd.;.;.. ___ Al>h.='-'-F-.•m=l"""'>Jd~--l-"Ap=ts."'-'U"'nlu=m;;;l;;th.;.;ad;;;..-_...;AI>.,. ;.:.h.;;;...;U:..!lfll="'=''"'ltod"'--I . Apt•. Unfyr~l.•had ~. Unlumlshad
SELF-CLEANING ~G·~n~o~ro~l !Mi;;;;~~,~·~ll!~N~·w_,'po;;;;rtc,Bo;;.·;-·;.h:u;,_320l;;1=H=unt=J"""'=="='"="""=:::-=H=un==tl:::"'::t:::""=Bo=·=dt==-=il ic~ .. iiii··.Moiiiiii·~·--~·1·00~c~ .. ~·~·.M~ ... ~~·--··~1~ooi; ~--h 5200 !!!!~ a..ch •• ~=.:n::r1~~:'°'.;.:: * l II HOIM $150 ~c:a~,;:· ~,b':i. ;';
PLUS 4 large bedroom.i and EASTSIOE. Cart.ae, fenced month. Realtor 54~.
14 17' x 33' lanilly room. )'&rd. Childrt:11 & Pots we:!· Ri NTALS .:;::n.~ner lot with boat Bi.~~A~tti'JN HOVMI Unfu"'lah M
SACRIFICE PRICE ONLY * 645..0111 *University Parle 3'1'7 $26,lm TO CI OR FHA -
BUYER * DOLL HOUSE * 4 BR Fam Rm & din rm L•rwin Realty, Inc. 1 Bedroomt w/ fenced yard, 21,.;'ba . Turtle Rock .: s.165
962-4911 Anytime aaraa~. bltn1, crpts, dt'P~-3 BR, D.R. ~ ba .•••••• $325
1620 Sl5CI, Ch\ldren, Piil.i, aln&le11 3 BR, Fam 'Rm, 2\.1 ba ••• $300
ok. CALL TODAY! 4 BR family rm 2~ ba
BLUE BEACON 2;l()Q SQ Ft •• :: ....... sm
Santa Ana Hgh. I610 * 645-0111 * WE HAvE OTHERS! l-'----..:...---'-
2--STOR'{ So!Jlhern COionial. l BDR.i"·· Family rm., park
5 brf3 ba, d In' 1 1 rm , like yard. Costa l\ftsa. Kids
fam/rm. Located in Beaut. OK, brk., S:l>O a month. NO
&ection ot S.A. HghtJ. Ex· FEE, M0-1120,
( I ' I · 11 11 I If I I I 1 I ' I
· · 1 ' I -- -11·11 l11 r
''""' GI Mo"'"'· "" .. * Frplc & Pool * aMumed \V /Lo On pymt. ~ "SINCE 19t6"
1.,:137;:.500:=·,:,.,_o;:.;""=:·;· ====ISl65 • 2 Bedroom honle ""1 lst Western Bank BJd&:, I· b~ilt·lns, crpta, drps. Slnaits, Un.lversity Parle .
L•guna 8e•ch 1705 km, peb ck, HVRRY ON D•ys i3:S.Ot01 NJnht1 ,--llflS ONE! •·
FOR FAMILIES! BLUE BEACON * 645-0111 . * 4 Bedrooms, 3 batha en Cul
De Sao, Built-In kitchen with
dishwasher. ~ious view
dining room. Fireplace, 1a.m-
ily room, brick fire pit in
patio. $38,950, Call •
~ -.
..:/Olan
REAL ESTATE
Cost• M••• 2100
llalboa 2300
W 0 NDERFUL Vlty,·-Pt:n.
Pl 4 Br, ~ Ba. Beach. Av&il
12115. $225, 675-5660.
L•gun• B••ch 2705
Va~otlon Rental•
ARTISf'S COTI'AGE
----=--
I
ofa Quinta .)/er1no,ia Co"ta m ""a ; ~ine"t
Spar kling New Apartments
2 BodNOm-$175 * 3 Bodroom-$215
Including decorator colors, bltns., fire-
places, shag carpets, drapes, private pa·
tios & garages.
356 E. 20th St., Co1t1 Mt ..
C1ll 642-4905
-----·--------------5100
5200
PARK NEWPORT -care
free 11v&: overlk& lhe v.•ate r.
7 pools, 7 1enn11 eta .$750.000
Spa. From $175 to $4:i0.
Ilach. 1 er 2 Br. AJIO 2 1ty
TownhoU1e1. Elec. kt. pri.
pat or bal Subtrn prkg, cpl
maid Hr cpts, drp11 Just N.
ol Fashion Jal at Jamboree
lit. San Joaquln HIU1 Rd .
644-1900 for leulng Info.
3 BR., 2~ ba. O'look!ng
pool. Cpts, drps, •. .$250 Mo.
3 BR. Ouumelfront
YEARLY •••••.•• $400 Mo.
Call: 673-JMJ
associated
DROKlRS-REAL TOR~
:Z02S W Bolboo 1>7] 1661
PRESTIGE LOCA THfN
MARINER SQUARE APARTMENTS
immediotely odjocent Westclilf shop-
ping center -· hes e Townhouse eve ii·
eble featuring private residential et.
mosphere. 2 Bedroom. Weter, ges &
coble TV included in re n t. Kitchen
built-ins include dishwesh o,' & disposal,
woll lo woll cerpets, full length linen
dropes. Also eveiloble I ·2 & 3 Bed-
room, $185 to $255. Coll Bob Buckley
et 645-0252 '?' come by MARINE R
SQUARE Apertment s. 1244 Irvine
Ave., N.B.
5250
o.°'1 .. v
("IV~
ON TEN ACR£S
1 A 2 BR. 1'um 6 Untunl
FlreplaOH I prlv. pa.tics I
Pools. Ttmlls • Contnt1 Bld.r,.
lllO S.1 LW, CdM 6"-2till
(MacArthur nr. Coloat H'#J')
--. --------NEW DUPLl!X"
Prlv. patio. Encl011ed aarage,
Carpeted k. drape.I, Comp.
built·ins, lmmac, landscap.
ln&"! 3 BR. 3 ha. Price re-
duced to $300 ;>er mcnth.
675°6050
-•M'llll'IT Cl.,a
CORONA DEL MAR
ON BEACH!
e 2 .BR unf. Fram $225 e 2 BR Furn. From $285
Carpet&-drapes-diahwuhu
heated. pool-sa.unu-tenni.
rtt room-ocean vitwa
Pf,tios..ample parking.
Security cuard•·
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN AVE., H.B.
(714) 536-1417
Ofc. open 10 am-6 pu DaQy
Manag<d by
\VJLLIAM WALTERS CO,
Sublease On Beach
Ll'g 1 BR. Ooly $lOO
2 Br, 2 Ba, Only $225
2 Br w/ocean view A:
a4 sq' prlv deck. Only $300
Fl.Jrniture avallable
Huntington Pacific
1112 Bodrooms -% Ballts
.ltlalt Uvtu&
""111&hed II DDlvltbbed . , ...
e Dlftl•t~ ·-c.. .... ......... , ...
·~c-.·-""'"" W581alerAftDUO
l::..:.!J • 1-!~J tl:t'tr~~
......... _ ... __ .................................................. ~ ................... ~ ..... -~_ .................................... ~-"'.--'."." .. :'."'Ill~~:-~~~~~~:"""~~-~-·~-~-~ -
JtlNTAU • RENTALS RENTALS RIA&: ESTATE AHNOUNCIMINTS
:Z4 .DAILV PiLOT TUHd,y_, DKembtt 8, 1970
'·
.. -=
·-Unfurwhhod Apts..Unfunlllhed ,_ Apll. Unlvrnl-0-ral and NOTICES l-l'---11--.!:!1::~:. • .:191::•:.:laaclo:.::::::.,.-1 ·-~"'~:;:;w'i':;,;;.;-=='-'5'20;;:: "R_,,, 1or Roni ms OIRia Riiilil~---~·
r:·~:::~:::--::=:;::-/;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;1;,;;:;;.-CI'IVE bedroom in l'laO NEWPORT BLVD. N.B.
ANNOUNCIMINTS
and NOTICIS
AllAi1111tma11wil1
......... _, ........ .,. lir ... ,, •••
Pb111 An 0,.. -t:Oo ..... ~S!JO , ..... ' .
I 1
I
••
l
.
I
' -
•
.
1111. ,lllilClll--linlaa ·VILLA MAIU!ILLES beauOM bon1e ... ,...nc ON TH!: BAY
BRAND NEW emplo"" """""'-Man, ·-m-2464. 5<l.l!031 • to-Na. ~ -CWecl Soinday
1 Bii. nom 1135 SPACIOUS prlvilegeo. f75, ". B. 1610 SANTA ANA AVE. CM
2 BR. 2 bA. nonl l1lS I & 2 Bdrm. Apts. ....,.,. 3Sc aq, 11. WANTED
OVERWEIGHT
LADIES
• DIAL DIRECT ••• 642-5678 •
WESTMINSTER & ,NORTf! COUNfY DIAL FREE 540-1221 Stp •FAMJJ.Y 'SrerION tor Adult Ltvlnt * $15 PER week·up 615-2t6f or 54.1-5032
·dll)dreri ur.de:r 5.· Furn. It Unfum. w/kitchens. $21.50 per 300-Q».U» IP. ft.
Just Soutit of Wame.Br Dblbwuber .. coloJ' .;oordfnat. week.up ApU. MC1l'EL. 5'&8-OFFICES, ~.
on Golden WHt. H • ed a,wllanees • pluM shag 9755 Colta M~. 6£2µ0 'Hvnll"""'° _.., 540-lnl ......,.._,4'4-"'6
(714) 147 .. 1055 carpet • choice of 2 color WORKING or college alrls, FOR rent • Store or oUice.
'l'lrl deJ SOL acbemtt .. 2 be.tha ·stall single, room for rent C&rpeted, Top lqca.t ion,
• s.nc1-'*~ ·
WWft showers .. nirro~ ward-w/kitchen prlyil. 546--5793 Newport Blvd, '·N.B. 673-:-5763
robe dootl • indirect light· FURNISHED room tor rent. ./ ~ OFFICES
Hours-R1.gulations-Deadline1
Channing, ·casual, new apts
at ·lhe beach.
1 BR. From $135
2 BR. Fl"Om $215
21661 Brookhunt St, JIB
(714) '62-665)
2 Bdnns. · 2 Bath
$150 MOl'ttH • POOL
lncl cpt/drps, kids OK
DELAWARE snJDIO apls
2620 Delaware, ll.B.
&1.2-2221; after 3 p.m. 53&1816 * HERITAGE APTS
AVAIL NOW ·from $139
17401 Apt C Keel.son Ln, HB
lrg attrac 2 Br, FUrn. avl.
Kids ok, All extnu. Pool.
·Pvt. patio area, Rec bid&:.
847..s335 or 968-7510
in& ln kitchen • breakfast Costa Mesa. $18 week. Call 4 Offices * Lido Isle
bar .. huge private fenced ~um * 675-6.184 * :: Ba1:.~·!~!:1e~~ YNG College or wor'klrtC girl, NICE Small air-oond oftlce
eel pool.a a: lanai. Bal. Isl. Kit It 1V nn, te.le. under $100. 1555 Baker,
3101 So. Bristol St. $80/mo. 675-3613· Suite C, C.M. 541).2Sn.
(1t .... 1 N -•So ,.. ___ plaza) NICE Room, priv, home, -
u • ...., • "" ' ............ · kitch. privU , + Near shop'&
Slnl1 Ano "'" · ~ lndu1trl1I Rental -PHONE: 557-8200 & ....,.p. C.M. -1-
Misc. Rent1ls 5999 NEW Bldg. 1728 to RO sq.
CAN, BE BEAT 1 CAR --.. for "'"'· 128 t t. Nr. Balm aod F.;rn,.., ' ·-~ 1 yr lease, SullJvan,
SINGLE STORY E. Bay,*C~l* =5fil.44=="=· =====•I South Sea Atmosphe~
>BR .• 2 BAnI RF.Al ESTATE
Carpeb & drpa Gener1I
Lots 6100
AJJ' Conditioned • lneom• Property 6000 Att•ntlon Bulld•rs
Private Patios Ooe acre with existing 3 Bed-
For w1i9ht reducing progr1m ta·°""
tablish 1tatislics for rapid parmontnr
woight lo .. , conducted by qu1tofitd
physical culturish. Musi ba a mini-
mum of. 20 pounds overweight, have
transportation and not currently un.
der doctor's care. An inquiries com-
pletaly confidenli1I. •
ASK FOR MISS POWELL
HEATED POOL CUSTOM FOURPLEX rm home. Room for 12 more
Plenty of lawl1 ChOice Newport area, l BR uni!s. Possible subordlna. -537 • 5414 -
. . .
UAOllt Mt•llow1 - - -.... ftlly M4 --lltolf.,... • ............... .;:a MILT PILOT orrr'r1 u.MHty ht .,.,. ....,.,.
......... el o t!a•+~• M11•tt1~n•. ~ ... !_ilM-. DiUu•• ---Kii.ut .............. -.... lea ..... -',.,,_,,.,..._,..._~.~-hi ........ ,,·12 ......
rou lliltT HAV11 1111.1.,..,_1 -"""'°' .. "' .... _ ., .,..k -.. _ .. -.,-., .... ""' ----... .., ,.... .. --............. ,...cilL • .
l"'Y...., II_. ...... .;. C.....e -· tMt hM .._ ......... M .. .._ Mt ............. ·...u-. ......... ,,,,,. ...... ,.,...,. '' ' . . DIMl~IU ...... ~cm. ........ ., iun w It...,. -" ....... NO ..... ...._, •. • .
T1ol DAILY PILOT •-:i::-llil rlllot to clooslflo, Nit, •-.ar - -Mi~li• , .... ..,., ....... ~.-. .................... wlllwt,,.... .......
-----·~· ............... ~ . 1 • ' • .. f CU.111,llD~couNTIU ............. ..,..,,.t l, • . -i,
I· Carport & Slorage & 2 BR units. Ideal 014'ncr lion, 7!A % financing, $45.001 COSTA MESA · 1NEWPORT "llACH * FRESH AIR HIDDEN VILLAGE occupied & t" sl~l"r prop. PERRON 642-1771 • 330 w. BAY . 221r. w. "llJ\LIOA GARDEN AP'l'S. "" I $12 000 ,
Walk 3 blks to Beach! 2500 South Salta eny. $9.l..., ncome. , AUention Horse Uivers -c;;;;;:;:::;:;;-:::::;----::========:::;I HUNTINGTON BEA.C';:H ,LAOUMA IEAck
Beaut. big 3 BR apt. w/w Santa Ana e 546-1525 Oo\.\·n, $7S,OOO. 70 x 198 R-1 on Old Pirate BUSINESS •nd los·t 17175 llACH BLVD. 222 FOREST AVE. crpts, drp1, bltns except PERRON 642-1771 Une. Only $18,500 Agt. IAL '401
refrig.$225.Nopo1,,536-111l 10010 DOWN ......m FINANC SAN CLEMENTE-305 N. EL CAMINO REAL 5640 /t CAT; Young, adll'd male Si.
2 BR. Dbl bath, pvt patio, Tustin 19 Units. eastslde, beautlfuJ Acrti•te 6200 B~::,~unitiH 6300 a.mHe, declawed. Missing l . Deily Pilot Classified
dshwshr. Pool. Adultl;,Ql.liet DOWNING APTS apts. Gross $.13,000 year. I :::-:::--::::::-~~-:--:-::/;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; mo. Reward. Please ITturn.
& beautiful. $185 incl s utll. CORNER of $250,000. Agent 67>4930. 675 1B7l CLASS f
17676 Camero" H · B • WllLIAMS ""' l-"-""PR'-'1"'CE~RED=u~c"'ED=-'--I SAC! llO.OOO, 3 P1"' level HAVE YOUR LOsr' Black female lcioten. 3 , I IED INDEX Mz.<12L CE Acra, Lake M at hews AU.JAN EastbluH Cus 6 units, <>.mrs OWN BUSINESS mo., w/whi"1! paws le: che~t WANT Older couple to $175. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Frplc, Pvt 4 Br, 3,Ba hm + 5 studk>I. ii::iuJ"~. m~ve~:; Vic. Franciscofl"Wltin area, HOUSES FOi SALE .. RENTALS =t~:9c'!:.. =
manage 6 units. {2 bdr). $50 patio. PoOl, AduJtS over 18. $196,500, Owner 675-5033. mount & lakes. 548-6419 aft N.B. ~llMS or 5tG-Ml.O ••Nltw. -.. ~ Fumishtd cMn.o ua1. uc... ..,. 1 all°"'ance on n30 rental. Mgr-16507 Alliance 1=:=:2======= I \Vith A Minimum MOM,: -COllTIUCfOU ,._ 'I "·-M 12 1 5. FEM. longhairea gray cat. COITA MQA , .. COIT.t........ -·-...... ,. ct•aNJtt• -I l\'rite Dally Pi ot DUA -• or call owner, 646-550 BuslrMll Rtnt1I 6060 Investment! 4 wh1te feet green eyes, MIA OIL. MAii 1MI •'-' \'tao• •-· 11 cuitn u:rr. • lltit•lll: fii 1 330 W. Bay St, Costa Mesa. -READY TO RENT! -Dix 2 The NEWPORT SCHOOL OF ' • MaSA \'lllH UM .. ..,..., 1uc:" oflAl'11•1l1 · ...
ch 5705 .l: B 2 Ba CID bltns encl . -· 3 I • Lacuna Niguel 495--5227 , .......... It Ull NSWPOll'f ..... '"' .,. o•"'°'-"'°" ... ' 2 BR. Patio. Pool. Chlldttn L11guna h• LARGE stuulo f or rent, r, • · • BUSINESS i:ulcr yrs O e... * l.05r b mal •nHltT ••..::" t• Nlw.ot:'f l*»lllt O D•An~• llllYKI ..,. I · I~==""-'------good spaL'I! for mus I c gar. $175. 548-37M, 673-2310 fcclive & reputable serviL'I! * · · rown e .... ,..., ... 19NTS Utt Wltn:~ • N.YWALL ... ~~ $1::on:· ~~~ ~ ~~ OCEAN VIEW • Lrg 2 BR. ll'SSOl\I or art clu:ses. 2280 -to the community is selling ~l4k:i~ San~:: AVe ::=.~.. ::: ="':.:V' PMllt = ~~=:.::-•••TAU = If
Garfield, 1,~ blk E. of apta. ·untum. Crpts, drps, Newport Blvd., or ' call R. E. W11nlecl 6240 the following for a surpris-· · w · UTC•11r~--11111 IAIT ILUit' OD l'llK .. • ,_ I
hit-ins, patios, walk ing 64~!H25 a fter 6 pm. · ingly low fi&Utt: SHAGGY. black ·wfbrown 1&Y11101t11 mt COllOMA ML MU ·._ AH1t1 ..
Beach. 962-8994. dlatance to town. 100 Clill ,L.,. "Ti ..... r" lost vie Hoq ~·· .... 191 •ALMA .... l'V•NACI ltll'Ailllo .... "°' \ • ·-·-· Be h 494-5498 STORE -826 W. 19th St., CM. Private buyer wants apt units ""'"• . ..~ ..-1nCUl'I' 1m IAY 'tsl.UOI ._ ttUINl'fVlll •nTOl.IH New l br·l blk to bch $130 Dr., ..._ ... _ ac · 9 ""~writers tables black Hospital. 66-3107 HAllaN M'l•NU.NDS tm LIOO nu ao '·• llfflNISN.,.._ • I kl 1 Avail. 12/ · good location any condition. '""" · ' · 1=============1.uNtvlllfn ,Alli 1• U.LtoA llt..t.ND ,• etU.O.NIN• l ·\•1eek free, pri dee pat 2 BR, 2 BA, ~pts, drps, b 1-$U5/mo. * MS-1768 GlS.a5ll · board, teaching tools, sup. 11v,.1 1• MUfl'f,lftlYOtl auat ..... ntt.U. ltllYllCll .. l
Quiet singles & cpls only ins, 1 yr old, view. $235 piles, name of the school,. UCK UY IM HUNT.t.fM vAu.av 4'1t NADIM .. 01sc1t1• ~
204-A .]4th. 673-1784, 536-1319 leue. 494-5073 CORONA Del Mar. 660 Sq. BUSINESS end 1 .. ~•-•ction & advice for a P•rson1l1 6405 IASTILUl'it 1111 DAL llACM . ,..., '~ ..,.
'
"t E-Z Parld•g prlmo I"" ""u" II '"" 11114 ,,.,..,,.,. .. ...... TMUMa .,.::: I " ' ....... FINANCIAL successful set up. For furth-11t'ltMI Tlllutl IM 011.4N•1 COVNT'r ,... 4UN sMOP * Small Children OKI Dano Polnl 5740 ,.Re:;:;"::;":::"";::m;'::;"~C.=crp" . ..,,:615"i>-'7""'00= er info., contact Nona Hort *Palm & Cards* coaou DIL MAa ,,.. u.1to1N •JIOYI· w ..... L'fN CLu11 NEW! 2 Br/2 ba, patio l ~STORE . ou•-i Bid Busln••• YUllTLI IOCIC ................ , .... -,-MIMn•• •;1 ·"AULIN• .,. ~ .._,.. • n ce g. man, 642-3870. AU you will "'"°" .... UdULA ·--· MOUSICU ,... ..,. or balcony t)'pe, Agt: $55 -$225. Eve11 67~1784, Opporfl<Jnities 6300 pay for is the equipment & SPIRITUALIST READER llACON UY '* ::r:ll.!" :.: umir•• :cou,.... .,. ) * 645-1010 or 637..(1514. * DELUXE Duplex new in "~"1319 ~ "th St HB Help in all problems low t.l•DA ISLI --""'-' AllA M9lfMJI .... IMCOMI TAX ., .. ! ' ,,.,,,,. · '"" " " · suppli"•. For the r 'i· ht b11v. ' ' •~Y ISL.ANOS ''°" -,.., .,. -April -Dohe""' State " ..,, marriage, buslnes.<J, All read-LIOO "'' 1111 'fUS'flH _,. • ~• --WALK TO OCEAN! n.....1.' •':'.:.w-L _ _.:;. 2 Br, Post Office, 532 Sq. Ft. *Candy Supply Distr.* er, the rest Is iree. COASTH. 41'1 ••ON•• ,. l ·& 2 BR NEW apts, Frplc's. r11.1·11. '"" ...... ..,.., Good ki $120 lngs private. Special $1 read-IALNA ISLAND l• u.•UN• IUCN -IMIULATIM• "* . l~~ ba. Fenced yard, newly par ng. mo. (PART OR FULL TJMEJ ings. Open 7 days, 9. am-=~=~:==~= ::.:u. = u.au•a .... UIL. ..,., IMSU•Mlca t"' I
Patio. Adu1tl. Liodbora: Co. lndscpd. Garage w/extra Graham Rily. &16-Ml.t VERY HlGHrli'llCGME , 6320 1· lO pm, 7421 \Vestminliter HUNT•"' VAU..T 14" =sfl:M~~· ::: =~~~:l1• °"""" = i
536-2579 ent directly into kitchen. Now available in many Mone'( to Loin Ave. 89.1-9854, \Vestminster. ',""',, • .!"',,.',, !!! SAN JUAN CAitlSflAHO .ms 11w1LIT ••,Ara. ..., .. j
* BE•CHBLUFF Apt• Bit·""" incl. d'••hw•·"·r & Office R•ntal 6070 Orange Coun ... • towns. AU -· ..-uit1n•.t.J10 •llACM ..,,. u.NDSC.t.f'IH ,...
"" ...... ....,,,,.,. '3 1 TD L FULLY LICENSED * GA•Dlfll OllOVI '°' °"""" 1'01111' .,. LDCICSMl'fN -2 & 3 Br, 2 Ba, dishwuhl'rs, garb. disposaJ. Carp. & ' locatl0111 are commercial or st . oan Renowned. Hindu Spiritualist LON• llACtf , .. 'fllll'l.IJt.'.... .... MAID s1avtca ······-······ tlB I dra""'S thruout. 2-Storles. SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY faCtory furnished by us. U.KllWOOD ... _ COMDOMllllUM .._ MASONltT, a•tClll -pool, patio. 8231 Ellis. .... Advice on all matttt!I, OUNOI COVNn llOTILI 4'7S MOVt•• • n'OltMI .. o~" run or 847~. $200 ?t!o. Avail. to show, 1-2-3 room, up 10 3,000 sq. Qualified person will become 7*<;0 INTEREST Love Mn-'•-Business DUT Of' cou•1"Y Ull ........ -............. itAllfTI,.._ .......,, T'Pf -I
O'lM"O'I rentlnc Dec. ls!, No pets. ft. office suites. Immed. oc-dJ stributor for OW' candy 2 d TD Loan Readtnia ~"·1 days .m..:.nATI = ReNTALS ::~:;-.... =I
$150-2 BR, bltns, crpts, drps, Drive by 33901 Copper l~Jpancy. Orange c n I y. <Nestles. Planters. Tootsie n week, 10 am -10 pin, Wln'MINmll '"' Antt.· Unfumi1hecf l"ttOTOMAPM'f ...
p!!.tto, 2718 · Florida, off Lantern, Dana Pt. or call Airport Irvine Commerc. Rolls, Milk Duds, elc.). You 312 N El,. __ ,_,.. __ , MIOWAY c1n • ''" eiMHAi--l'U.ITI• ... • .. ..., ._. ,.. Be h • •~ -d 4""791 ha 8 hr •···• t • -...unu1U n.c;u, SANTA AU 1M . .._..... ..... ... ........ • -Yorktown, nr ac .,.,-_., ays, ;H-1 eves Complex, adj. A.lrporter must ve 2 to s per ~rms .......,.. on eqU ty. San Oemente .....,.,, AM .. ..,._ , .. MUA YlllH rut .,.,. ••OOM.,.. ,...
Adams. 6-46-ml. or 49')..1397 Lingo Real Jlotel & Restaurant. banks, week spare time (days or 642-2171 545-0611 49Z-9,~ 492-007& OllAMH wa NsWllOn UACM .,. "°°" s1•vte1 #tt
Eatata..lnvestmen•.;-Sen DU.-.-.ft..N'-pt 1Lwy11 es): --Sc-rvlMtlg arbcir area 21 """· ......,. IVITJN "" ~"''..,rs ms P.OWU ... .,..... .. hRG Attrac 2'"Br liOm $139. ~,.v J •-* MASSAGE * MOttfll TVn1 ... MIWNltf SNOlllS ·hlf ll'UW-ll•YICI .,. All extras. Pool. Kids & • I UNCROWDED PARKING SlT<IO CASH REQUIRED Sattler Mortsiasie Co, ANA"ltM ... WllTCLltrl' !'Al 1t00f'IK ..
Condominium 5950 LOWEST RATES For more Information write: 336 z 17th Street SAUNA * WHIRLPOOL 11LVl•ADO CMYOM ,., UNN'lltllfT ....... sm llADIO, ....... ... -¢ts ok. rum. avl. 847-8335, ""·"""r/mgr, 2172 DuPo"t OT., "DISTRIBUTOR DIVISION . LO\-ely Girls Plush facllitiea ltAVASU Ulla • lllVrHI . SUI lll!MODllLIN• .. ........ .... 968-7510. V"'"" ' . ' U.CIUNA MILLS 1* UCI IAY fMf •.'lMOOILIMe. ltl'TCMI.. .. Rm 8 Newport Beach #23 p O Box 1739 Covina M W i-• 6350 Open 6 days, noon-mklnight. u.•uNA llACM '"' •Alf ILUI', na s.._ ..,._ . • • NEW 2 BR ap,ts, BEAUTIFUL Country Club . ' . • . . . ' oney an -2930-W eoUtHwy NewpOrt U•UNA .,.UIL ,.,. CIMtONA Oii. MA• 1211 SIWIN• ...
f-m n" ~, dr-bl ... -Villa, C.M. 2 br, l"' ba, pvt 833-3223 Courte!I)' to Brokers Calif. 9lm. Include phone 2 Be h• «Ao......., ' MISltOfl VllUO 1M ULNA U. 11WIH MM:M•t •litAllll Ma
"' ""· "'tn ' .-0
' ui;o, · bl SP CE number. NEED 2nd money on pro-ac . ......,....,...,., JAN CLIMl!N'lf 1nt IAV SSU.NDS '* s1,TM: YANKS...--.,""' • Family section. 846-7m. patio, crpts, drps, J tns, etc. DESK A Active norttes. One private home p• A"'NING t Tra v e I., SAN JUAM U,ISTllAND 1121 Lloci nu hit TAILOl:I.,. ..,. $260 mo. Call ea n n e .. ~ u:tWI ...,... 0 . CAl"ISTllAfHI llACM . ·.~ MUln'IM•l'Olf 11.t.C" .. , •• MITI CONTIOL "" 2 BR crpts, di"ps, bltns. Edwards, 968-6323 222 Forest Avenue NATIONAL CO. equity is $15,000. Want.,.,......,.. Responsible Newport Beach DAHA l'OINY ·-,.. VAL.UY "'' TILL c..1c ,.,.
CIC>Ae' to beach. Baby ok. • or morr. 10% Int. pd. 1169 CilUple will baby.sit your oc,.,u0•,•,• .. D• :' :~1~U.No '* Y,.•LL1, .. u•.•.i•oc••, • Mllflla · .,._
$135. 5J6..17fi6 R•nt1l1 W•nttd 5990 Loguno Beech Needs reliable person ""'ho Dorset Lane, CM. 2od piece home to June n . Call •1V1a1101 COUNTY , .. Sl.t.L it.t.CN = TIL.1Vt110N,1....... .... ...
<f.94-9466 requires $15,000 to $40,IXXI of real estate is on 67!'>-4206 ltOUSll 'fO •• MOYI• _. l.Otll• llACN ,.. U..MOLSnllY .,.
$160 2 B.R., pool, pvt patio, per year inCilme, to take Paularino. Land v a I u e <:ONDOMIMIUM ·· ::r: :::::: ~ "'' wnDI... .,.
gar, cpl, drapes, stove, nr. MATURE woman, 2 boys 8 & DESK SPACE advantage of the most un-$60,IXXI plus older house & * DESPERATELY need ~:'";~~~CNl.-C:'i:u "" w1STM1Nm.. 1i11 WIMOOW CLIWUM.• -•..,,
new, 78ll Glencoe, 8'2-2834. 9, \.\'OUld like to share your 305 No. El Cimino R••I usual oiler made in the dis. sheds, \Vant SU.000 second ride to Yorba Linda by 7:30 • . MIDWAY en =
home, preferably Whittler San Cleminte tribulion of food products. (In this one. 54~3634. Al\f from C.M., l way only. RENTALS :".J:1:= "'*"" ,.
Fountain Vall•y 5410 sch!. area. Will rontribute 492-4al No selling l'el9 Co. will es· ;ro 000 SECURED wf2nd Eves 646-38l4· Housn Fuml1htcl :n:,L = JOBS &·EMPLOY, JHWdftD.-'°' w.-.n:a. -S75fmo. + help w/ food. tabllsh acco~nts. 1-lay start ~ of trust. Pay l0'7a + 10 ALCOHOLICS Anonymowi. LA.MINA llA<N .,.
Good cook. Share w/ mar· OFFJCE-Ganees i; fenced part or fUll time. . ·a1 """""' Phone 542-7217 or write to ••NSllAL -LAMIJU. •tMtllL ""
_ .......
..... .. WOMll• ... ... ALL NEW r'ied cpl or w'Oman only. Yrd space 14•/gu pumps, In CASH REQUIRED points commerc1 pro..,. •. J. p 0 Box 1223 Costa J\1e.sa. lllN'f.t.U TO 111.1.11 -MISftoN YiaJO IM
Call 5-18-2516 i\tr Neu . . COSTA MllA 11• SNrl CUMIN'ft Int VALLEY PARK 642-1125 HB. Avail for rent from $3Cro-~ '' . CHRISTMAS CARDS MllA DIL MA• n• SAN JUAM uittSTaAH = KMOOU A HCITll:ucnotl JOanlPAaA1'1N
TMU111JCAI. = ISRAELI E"-. bachelor 27. 12/1. Call 54~3373. I-·••tm•"' ""'""' by fn. ANNOUNCEMENTS ,..,, o•~" flllllA Vl•DI "" U.l'tn'U'IO IUCN For F AMILlES with pre. ...,. .::.~=~=..;o;;7,=.,,,7 I ... Hand addressed. ,,.......,..... tou1•1 'Alli ttlt DAlfa "°'"' "41 MERCHANDISE FOR
l!Chool children (Inly. wants to rent sml hse in * NE\VPORT BEACH Civic ventory, Guaranteed sale of ind NOTICES MSWl'OllT 1UCN nt1 T•ttrLIX. .tt. ""
2 I N¥.'Pt Bdl or Of. Please Center 300 fl to 1000 ft. product or refund. For in-111w..o•i ".,.L m1 cOHOOM1•1uM -SALE AHD TRADI I
2
&
3 B~~ sifsR Stud
0
call £2131 451-1920 aft 7 pm. Amw & seeretarlal &Th-1601. terviev.', give your name, Found (fr•e Ads) 6400 Announcements '410 :m':.~".ro-11 : :=:':o~".r.:: =
17256 Sout:· Euclkl, FV GARAGE SPACE for Antique • XLNT Office Space Now address & phone number to INJURED on Coast 1-fwy nr ----------l::t~·L~::-11 :: =J. ~--·:.. COUltTI :;;
l'UIM1TU1t• -I Ol'l'ICI f'VllNmnt• "'' Of'l'ICt 1..iWMllT "'' STINll •••M•HT -
<Just South of Warner) .Automobiles. Avail. LIOO BLDG. 3355 Dealerahip Division.50, P.O. 10\h, So. Laguna, O<!c. 5, CHRISTMAS CARD UNIVlllllTY rA1tK tm •u•n llOMU -
f ==~(7~1~4~)~540-4~~715~=='"===,,,;';'~;;:23~28;,,===bV;,:l•:;,;:L;ld~o=, N;:";:·:6'13-4=::50;:1.==1,,eo'=='="=B5='!'=, L=·=·=· :,C"=''=· "'°"=o-·J adult male cat, solid gray RETURN ADDRESS ~~~:'a.t.T :: MIK. ••tnAU ~
Ul'I, llf'fAUllMT .... I IAll l.Ull'MINT tm I
...vtlllOC.D MOM -
1: ' w/white Cilllar. Taken to STICKERS IAIT ILUl'it tKt REAL ESTATE,
Santa Ana SPCA. 499-ll51 $1 FOR 1000 ~v~':natAta :: 0.nenl
.............. -1 l'UllMtnllll AUCTIMI -
Al'PUAACll '*
' TINIS • TIMES
$4.50 $6.10
$5.10 $1.28
---1---1----1----1----1-$6:-:--::.00;--l-$9.76
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND Bill 0
PM1tn.11 ""'· ............ , •• M1J1111111, ••••••••••••••••• •• •• •• •• •• •• • • •
Cl111iflc.1tkl• .....................................................
..........................................................
iYdrtu ·············•··••······································
Cffy • •• •' •• •• ,, •• •• •• •• •• •' •• •' • rh111t •, •,, '•,., •, •,' ', •• •••• •
' TIMU
$10.65
$13.10
$15.55
12
TIMES -
$15.90
$20.10
$24.30
TO flGUll con
P11t •11ly 111t wortl \11 ••ch
1p1c• 1b.v1. l11c.lwd1 yowr
1dtlr111 ., phon• nwrnb•r.
Th• co1t 1f your 1d it 1t tht
111d •f th1 lin• 111 whkh tk1
l1it word 1f your 1d I• wrlt•
ten. Adtl $%.00 1rlr1 if yo•
d•1ir1 "'' 1f DAILY PILOT
l o• t•tvlc1 wilh rn1 ;1td '"'
plrt1.
-----------CUT HIU -PASTI ON YOUI IN'llLON -----------
IUSINESS REPLY MAIL
Orantt Coost DAILY PILOi'
P'. O. lox 1560
l
Costa Meso, Calif. 92626
•• ........ ,.., ·-HMLIW la"" Ualte4 Stata
Nl'fMtUIS • 1111
LARGE reddish male dog, Send your dollar and tOltONA DIL MAil .. INCOMI ........ " a.t.LIOA .. IUSntlP ,l .. ll'f'Y SIWI ... MAC"IND •• MUllCAL lllS'flUMINT l'I• --possibly Coll ie I Retriever your copy to: IAY ISU.NDI mt fllAAlll trAllK1
mix, about 3 yrs old, vie. Pilot Printing, Label Div. LIDO 11LI nit IUlnttll• lllNTAL -trlANOS A OlttiNI ti• -ll.t.DIO ...
Bo -lALIOo\ Ill.MD 1• otr1'1CI •tNTAL Capistrano Highlands, Sat. x 187::. "UN'fl"•'fott 11ACN .,. 1tn1un1t1AL it~ffllf'f
night. 830-6816 Ne"'POrt Beach, Ca, 92663 l'OUNTAIN VALL.IY tilt COMMl•CU.L
TILIVMIC* -MMl'l'A lfltlO •ti ---TA" •KCNtDl•I -
Your label•. wiU be sent by •,•,•,•, ',",,.'"• • --•..,.•ousY1t1AL 1tht'l'.U.. 2 l\1ALE puppies white w/ _
black m a r k i n g '· vie 1 ,~";;;'"="';;,;ms~il~·======lo•AN•• cou11n • l.t.MCMU
CAMSUI A l•Ul~MIMf -
""9Y "'"'""''' --... ... ll"CMlTlll• ~ -IMTA AHA tilt emus •llO'tl• Primrose Dr & Jacaranda, .t•'llr nnM•ttsT•• NII ac1t1a•1
Mesa Verde. Call 557-7297 Tr1v•I -MIDWAY CrTY ... LAICI IUlflOlll "" --afffOCU\.UI. 1COl'U ...
MllCIU.utlOUS -MISC. WAlllTtD -IANTA ANA MlteNTI MW tllOl:'f ltltOl'llln FOUND ll-20, sm fem. blk.1----------· l•cOASTAL 11# OltAN•• co. 'ltOf'tl""
dog has "-'hl on chest & N•w Y•1rs in P1rlsl t::=: :~~=\ = :r,.::.::':.::.O:·
MACMIMlll'to.... .. LUM911 1111 -...
STOU•I -
neck. Very 10 v ab I e . 2 ticket. avail, L.A. to Lon-MISllM VllUO 1111 IUlOIVSS• LI.ft
545-5771. 12/10 don, return London to L.A.:: ~~·:.i.n.n.A,.. :;: :~L.1~SJ:,,":..ruvn
-... ... .... ... IUILOtN• MATlllllAU ...... ... " -I
YOUNG female calico cat Leave Dec. 22, return Jan, "''llTllANO •PCM .. llt. .. WAMTllD
6 Round · • ....," 64f-4n7 DANA l'OfWf ' .,.
PETS and LIVESTOC~
...n.HNlllA.. --\\'fcollar. Vic. Sant i ago · tnP, ........-. 1trvt11tSIMCOUlfTY -
Drive, N~·port Be a ch. SERVICE DIRECTORY ~:'°~:ld'au = CATI -IUSINEH ond -=
6-12-1563 .... ... • "bY11ttl-USO tUf'UXU "
FINANCIAL =~ -
IUllflut WAMTllD -A f'nNG '"""~'"' -..,. CALIFORNI~ L ., FOUND-~tale black & · v.1\ite m;,. ,,. tVltMISS °""'*"'Nnlft .-Jtut .. lllll -kitten 14·fUra. collar. Nttds 1----------· I
WOULD love to babysit )'OOI' RENTALS .. S£':Fl:..""'" = :::'" HOU :: new home. 8·16-9213.
FOUND-Girls bike near
Balearic School.
>16-2'3<1
MEN'S presc r iption
sung!aMC!I, Vie: Horizon
Ln, HB. 962--0816.
FOUND 2 small dogs 1 tan
aod 1 gray Vic Hall of fame
track 5$-5967.
Found-Puppy, P.talc, tpprox,
12 wks old, Terrier, An white
w/black spot on ear. 546-0239
kids, full or pl•time, Big ~· Unfurnishetl-,~., .. =.."? : ~=;-io',. =
yard, hot lunches. Please 1 (04.Uflll:AL. L.OAHI .,. I
call & ask tor details "MlltAL -11.t.L. hf Aft UMt ,.. TRANSPORTATION "~" ......, (OITA MIM IMl ...,.,.I&, Trwt 0Me ,,. llOAT1 A 'TltClfTS ,_
........-o;ro} MllA DIL MUI IMI -IY WAM'nD .. IAl ..... TI ""
LlC'D day care, toddler. 7 ~:..-t.::•::.. :: ANNoUNCEMINTS ::::'..J:~~=:.. =
&m-5:30 pm wkJy, Hot MIWHl:T ••ACM = •nd NOTICIS IOAf Tu.ft.tilt = f
me el 1, Harbot/Baket, •":::::,' =•• -""9 wr. Mii ,. IO.t.."r MAINTINUC• I · • -1411 IOAY U.UMCNI... .. ~15,39. =ltOllU -.......... LI -MMOfl ••UIP. ..
BABYSJT'PER, all ages, 24 w1J:J..i:-• = ~~•llDTI :;: ::_; ~--....,... i j
hoUrs. Warm meals, bi&" ~Ml,.111tlT'f ..... • nfillAU '411 ao.t.'f •IN1ALS ,·
back yard. ~1592, CM. 1." ... ~a IAt -itA• _.,.,..,. ..is MHIT al.t.•Tllll --.. lt\lllHAL' ••••ems .... , ........ IOATS I , ... CHILD or infant tri clean U.S'f IL"'1t l'\.Olttnt "" ao.t.r MOVtW •
Beaut tonise cat.
eat. Very lovlnc,
CM.
' II Y-... -••n .. --... IQlT t'f'OllA•I ... home, exp'd, reasonable. 11tY1•1 n••Ac• -.. , to1n .,,.,.0 "" ~= ~Re~l~e~re~""';::'~· ~646-S>:lc;,;;.:';_,,=;-I ~ DIL MAI = r .. ~l~n Hlf :t='rlltoflts = :
BABYSIT -ANY HOUR. IAY MLAllOI -ctllllft•Y ca.,,.,, !: MOa1t1 NOM•s ,. I
C0«11 lofesa. ~~......... = ~=i:!u. = ~.r-s :: '
FOUND * 548.o766 * •IWP'OlT nsT --:~ tnYICll t11t ILIC'flllC cAat ~ ,_ Boy's green blke. IUNTIN•"* •IACll TIIAY& ........ illt~\,. .. ~ -' 646-8380 llUNT ... TW ........... .. ... A••~, .... ,... ... MO'f01t(,Cr..w1 ,.. I Bric~ Mmsonry, •Nta111 vALL•Y .-•'"9 lltMllf'OllTAT'MMI ... •OT~&:'.::: -
FOUND Large gray • ¥.'hitc etc '560 :1t'e.'~ -~=nca = :::: TOOi.i' • ~IP. = :
ca! Vic Orange A\•e " 81¥ 1---------~~ = SERVICE DIRECTOlY' ~:;, T=L = :
St. 646-5244 . BUILD, Rtmodel, ttpalr. U.NTA AMA •lf .ccotlWf... -rt.UCQ '
BLJC a: tan pup, C.M. Brick, block, concrete :'ic:T:T:: · ::: !~"::-':::::::,...,.:,: ;::~., f -~1236 alt 5 pm, carpentry, llO Job loo sm.U IANTA AM JtllMTI -•WttAIMM .. CIMPlll •••TAU a
Lie. Contr. ' 962"'45 c.,,,,.... .,.. AS,.NALI, Oii ..... DUHi ·~···
L 6401 ....-.UNA llAC" ... AllCNITIC'fUltM. llllVICI -'"""°t1 ID A•TOI ost BR t CK •BLOCK•STONE. Utitu•a ... Ull '"' AUlO •11'.t.t•• -WOll'f CA•I ... •
REWARD Offel'l':d for
rn.'OYrl')' (I( Yr old Ruddy
Abys~lnlan, Altered, m11le
cat. D!sappc&N'd .fr!., on
Udo l.sle. 644-0080.
B "· bo ·'t • 3tJ MISllDM Vl&IO ml AVTD. ....... """" ....... AllflOUll, CU.SSIU H11 ' y u"' ur ... er .. ~ -1AN (LIM•'ll'• ll'lt .,,.,,.,,... .... •AC• UltS. •oo• "11 66-lMS * 645--0758 WI JUAN u .. 1n1tMtO ins HA'f MAIMftllHfCI ... o\UTO IVIM'JS ... BR!~ n•··k, p ''A• (Al 11111.NIO ll&Ar:lll I,. l•M:K. flilAMltflY, g .... AUTOS WAMTIIO .... '
....... DUA: &tone. ll.IUIO, ')o\NA Hlfll'T '"' 1u•1••n H•VICU "" "•• CA•• ~--. ·, entrance waya. No '3b too -"OOM1't1UM ..,.. •u1LM111 ... a AUTO "'A''" small 646-7825, Ref tum. ,.,,.LIXU UN..U•.. C.t.lllll•'fMU.11119 .. vsao U••
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· ,. Hou-IMlll 1135 ..... Mon. w-. 7100 Jobo Mou, w-7100 J1~1 .-. -. 7100 --c...;;.;;i;;;::.;;.;...1 , .... 1..... -DAY Work wanlf!'d I AM to 3
PM UT per da.Y. Good & t:X•
pe.rlenced own tr a 0 1 p. -~-'
Acco1ntant Sup. Ec~u~~~~f=tc ~s ;:.~ ;;:':'1:": TRIPLE '"-wim'"""
taicaf. .... pOI by CO. Call ...,-. -o~antalll>n In Iii< ~'. =a m&plo • '•1 Id•• """'acs.mo, -tcllll J>tr. TECHnlCIAl'I ·• -~' -• " aonttl Aaency 2043 West-INSTALLER A5k IDr E1.rl.c.11 ~ ~act. .... 21' aft. 2.
HOUSECLEANINC . clUf Or., NewPort Bea.eh. Good 1nechanlc. Self reliant. Am tar appt. KINGSIZE W ffl. Dre5Mtr'·
By di.>'. °!,!' ~tit:ln ASSlir ~GR (couple) Lra ~s.8$71 +SALDWOMEN, cxptr'd, $a}, Staek' t&bial $3, '*'339111
_._ CC*.pitX. bllltr.ud ~ FD..M Co. ne9dl EXTR.AS lmm.t. JM)litions evUI. Set bdan l pJft,
ttnuet. wile ... othc.. im-no1M1ninll wort J.A.G. !lofn . Edwa.rd&. C 8 1\ 1S1 'A'°"N"T"r"Q"u'=i;,-.,.-,~~T,-.-.-.-,1
Good aalary, + apt. Call Inc. ~1. FAsmONS, So. Coa1t &e(T'etary '1!0. l30-tl.U.
Coll\(lr. Rettin& at MS--3214 * GENEFW. HF.LP * Plllza. 2650J •LaQu~ Ln, Mifaioq
Meu Cleulac Service
~ts, wtndowt, floors e.tc.
Res & Commc'l. f>iMlll
SALESGllU. lar ..... -VII.ID lronl"I 67ll AYt. a .. ntnr. Wo m.an $3.75 'HR. '"°'· A~pty bl"" 1-li ,.,,,1,LO=VEL""'Y""'se"'1"°a,"""'oovtr=-....i=•,I
1.c.='-"'-----'-'-' nPl!ded, exp!r. Own tran11p. 1-~uu or put tl.a:le DANTES Home Otttn-, 2.t82 quiltM flora, 1CGtchgu~ W!Nddy• WOftl? wh•cldy• Golf •
• SPECIAL CLAS$1FICATION l'OR
NATUltAL IO~N SWAPPERS
Spotl11 Rat.
tRONING Jn my ho m ~ PersoMI re!'1, 642-1224 Oependable, Uve bl arta. Ne1vport Blvd, C.M. Sl2S. Matdli.nc ~at fl5,
a.Jboa.area. Sl.9'.l an hour. AUTO SALESMAN Mr. Power1 ,.S.9863 S!X:RETARY-R-.nt colleie 53Q..83ST •
gn...1916 \\11.nted put dale. Studentl'iii0ii0i..,•••.,•• I ll9Chaatt wl.th A'I in 1,M~o"v~~=~--~8,.,-.-.~1-,~.1
))f'rferftrd. No ~perience G irl 'rW.y Dwllah to take ahortband. CO\J~ JU-I\ leather c1'!4lr
1,L;;"'=•=cc:•,:;P;:;ln;.,9:_ __ 61;.;;.;lc:I ~C"eUU)'. I Girt Ofc, Arc:Ntectural, e&. Ve'(J aeeun-att typini . Walhtr, Jtlfris a miJc. ~ S LI--S tlmH -S bucks
ltVL.11 -AD MUIT INCLUD• ,___ .,.. ............. -1-Wltal .,.., .... , Ill ,,.,, ..
,_.,..,. .... ....,. ..,_, , 4--1 llHI el "Wtrfl&lllt-....... TtlMe ,._ IM.• -TUDU OMl..,.I
Tti PIKe Y.ut Trader's P•rediM Ad
• · PHONE 6'2·5'71
LA\VN Mainr. ,rr; Cleanup. ""'• • *'::lz-A &inttrini or art studio bcJ<. 80Mt: backart>und In .mat~&. !at at 218 Jumlnfl CdM.
0e--'&blt, _,._ • ._ • ,.u '"'4 WL ~ grnd ~pful, Creativt; at-) yn of QPtrienct in 0U1ce ~ ,,.....,. ·~.. .. v.-ork:, :ftrply to Bo:< M 23, ME'DITJ:~ Thomas. rates. MT~ 2100 Hatbor Blvd. &I~ ~~~in;, SH ' ad Daily Pilot. DI w. 811• .tlJe bedrm, set, I pc. $465.
EUROPEAN Landscaper BABYSl'ITER, my home. MISS E)CEC AGENCY C.1;1 . Gte1t cond. c.all"atxt wk.
_ o~~ de:sij:n & ,.'OrkmaN.hip. C.M. lJ pm to 9 pm. ~ 410 w. Cont Hwy, NB C-..A-. ="',.,.---l>l40===-..,,.,..,.-=-,,,,.-I
Six lotJ 1 2 AcrPs free. I c f95-J3S3 flW!I. wknd&. Own transportatlOn. 646-3939 --••-J BY OWNER, Hieb Quality
rlc11r. i1u~til1&ion' 1-larbor Call Mn. Yeager 646-81lQ Ptub omc.. 1'YPtl1I llJ, S.H. Jl.l iller oi led walnut desk
at·ea, Want l;1C0me pro""'"· MAID SERVICE 6115 ... ..__ 12 L··-1 -80 Call Lornlnt WestcllU ;~ 6 d J.•t .... ~ ~· · ,._" w.,. * HEY GALS * . . ~~. '"""· --· IY. S~bmit a!I offers. Bkr. LOCAL Girl wants to clean aidtttd. Penonnll A I• n c y, 2043 6-12-2393 .
536.4.55!1 anytime. apls & priv. homes. Gd ref's BAB~R: For 2 yr old ':s ~:i:;~'."J.uu ~ W•tdttf Dr., N.B. H~o=u~s=E=ru=L-cf~IUnli-~1>=-~in"
PINCH: ·YOUR
Tndt: "Mobile Home, by Iha
. ..,, ·1'0R "°"" o< duplex,
Jn ·irtta. ,Adulta only,
l!O,DIW! ... . m"'2<
_ 1969 :~aro Z/2i. kpd.
neaders. mq1, oranae ~·
t&lllake, vinyl t'Op, nt:w Iii'·
'J. ~aciJ. for car w/aut~
matic or '! 494.J034
7 acre'.s nev tonma, future • l'f:as n~ IC2-12'l4. boy. LM-1n, ht<' hSfl11o-rll. time. U\•e In area. Security Gu.rd& very pKI cond. 19'1 Omrcll
freeway onramp, $&'), Good PQ. 644-5249 $3..ZS HR. ''oun.r, aurtu.lve. Full St., CM. 64i-0121
lclr.arl. \VANTS depreciable Masonry, Brick 6130 Babyailler lor l, Ile hskJc, Mr. Oaric st6-9M3 ttrnt, perm, poeltion. ReL. GLASS top Wftlltllbt iron
properly Roy J. Amfllon, , U ,,__ tabJe + 4 chatrl Ja
49-1.7?6() • COMPLETE Cement It Live In phi,; J>a.Y. Shld@nl tfSKPRS Ernplyr fl&YI fe4 l!l'll\Cel a must. nuwu1 * sn.oat5 *'
· . NUOllJ"7. JI yrs exper. Free OK. Reff'fti'ICf:~. Ph: 646-Me Geoq-e Allen Byland AJ<t,;. not rtp.ld Apply in JlenCI" "====_,,,,.-,-..,,.~I
Hav .. vacant & improved esr. Anytime. 8 4 6-4 91 7 , UT1,.. ..... , J(l5..B E 16th S.A betwn. 3-6 pm . Aak tor t'O?orPLETE Map. Hvtar:
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Ana. 7X :Grms. $3).ID) Eq.
Trade for ~.CXKI to $60.<0I
&ome, dlipiex or triplt'!x. .
, Owner/Broktt 673-3430
H&ve LOT !Ake Elsinore,
las, hclu.le, d1.1piex, etc. Abo
Blide &..,. 4 6: lam, pocN
home tor trip~ thls area.
Collqe ~l~ ~5380.
1\11 income, \VANT: R1 lot 842-2483. BEA '-AN' for bu If. ey ~ . • . nn Ml. XlnL oond. S1t5 ....
or honi". coastal area, New. ~pular C.1\.1. ~ No 54l.Ql9:). Gr•nts Surplus all. IM--"751 aft.I pm.. I
port Beach thru DA"· Pcint p I chenlele MC. Paid vac. Hou•r~r-R 1 Mike Grant. -... • ntt,._ Grads w • t come , pti. -........;.~ • exp. re ' 1150 Newport &iflCl9 PurnliUN 811
fi?3-6800. Paperhanging 6850 Managtir, 5*7186 lM.ywork or 5 days. &46--Sl84 Cotta !\1esa ~."li w -=>='
HIGH DESERT for Health. , * HOSTISS * IWDllG --..;r -. WANTCalit-Nev.2-J MclevDOltyoursdI.Youdotrim. * BEAUTICIANS for SERVICE STA SAL.ESMAN •. SDeReel'dwooduw•
HAVE Cl cor 90:tll7 l bid.Ks Avz. 3 Br. hotue. Deter Intern11 t'ional Belluty SalM, ~~::;~:ti~ exper'd., Mat tn ~-rotaey dll1n. aaJI e Wtl
$6R,OOO ~-142.rm inc. 1445 51.llCt"O S150. Incl mat'I & N.B. With w without toUow. Oceanfront Ne•pt.' 8dL Full and part time. JS10 ba¥9 .. lupmt. v' ttce
ITH) Oii·ner CM 646-1558. bibor. All work I u a r . l r\i. 64l--1850. -•n• ' Newport Blvd. C.M. °'-.--' di:. b9 a till
ii;;;;· :-;;,.~·-;;;-v,;;:i;;-c;;;:l.~"~.,_~1•~·~1.~,,....~~~~~I ··~ * BEAUTY OPERATOR *' . SERVICE Sta. btlp. fW1 tt1M llave $15.000 ~ Yorba Lin-HOLIDAY Spedal IDIU A Female. Apply in penon via lube man. hay po&ition tor Ne Nallln Dllll
da double 11ort bide. C&f Exler Pa.llltUW. Frei ll!St. Ph: S45-4la». richt man. ~fUllt be nper'd. la Newport Blvd.
VaJue l far beach area store, Local Rf'&. Uc'd 6 ins. ALSO: part time graveyd. 642-M5o
borne or u.nlts. Free window WI.shins Wldt: 101'·5 & wk end night.I. Richfield. Office Equlpm. •.Rt iitf j
646-2290 & out. Call Chuck, 645--0809 "HOM£ OF THE BIG BOY" 19th & Newport, C.M . 3 ,11Nts Nwpt .i or 3 l«rib
C.-Mu.a for 8-12 unit! ares·.
;',' of C.J\tesa, Garden Gr at
·, · A~im . All ipt, Al Kine
, Jone1 Rlty Inc, NB. 613.62111
CAPISTRANO C ZONED, No WutiJW I C h• SERVJCE: STATION AT-A. B. Dick Mtni«i: i215'. jJ!fl
4+ •cres. Free & Clear, * WALLPAPER * Wa tresses-as 1er TENDANT. all shifts llpen. overht:ad projt:clm" s90.
$130.000. TRADE for incomt: When )QI call "Mac" .Apoly in person, 4678 Cam-~'~96-'-'-54"-91-·-=-.,..---.-.,,
or ? stll-144.4 646-lnl Neat apPff,f'inr, rood chat, pus Dr., Nt:wpt . Bch. _G•r•t• Sale iffil
REALTOR ;...nu NO EXPERIENCE NEC. :R.VlNE PER.SONNa SERV h ull -,. ~ 20 Level acres. ~ent\al · Trade $3800 eCI. in 2 BR, 2 ~'!i.~~~~~ g:;:n~ !lotany f~ be~lita S<Dt.V-ES•M'"''" v-y rte, s~1Ts" ~-toer•I., allo Gl•.kf-21:. n~;__ 'ill. ~.-ID ... · . · mob ile horn" park, HetrH"I. '' Waht multiplf; unit lot Hunt-. ·
Ba. mobil hOm~ ln lowly t~ Du s c n war 11 lntf'rvie.wr; 2-4 Daily U'\11\.. '""-..ILi '(\.. pt tima. ~TG _.. -.,__.. ......,
Bayside Village, for late mo-547-5s46. ' 154 E. l?th. C.M. USE. l7Ui {at Iivinel C.l\t. Mua. X.tiu bowHnl bac. d Equal oppb' em~y"r SUPERVISOR ·. DmECT ball .... rolt dub Jikt
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1ncton Bcti. area.· Pyram)d
~chan&:ora f7~. ·
t'' twin die!er HOUS&
BoAT, clew.
, 1~1=t.: Inconie ~riy. •'7:1-.111C •"!Ml UOI
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el ca;:~v~~r~r, JN"I_"ER &: Extu. Att?UI· ~BOO~KKE~~EP~E~R~fl~STE~~N~o:.1 .,, • ..;"::2~-1~C~70:.,,...,.,., 'SALES-you may be one of new to)'I clothn, odds & =""~==~~=~I ce1llna1 &prQed, k>w prices ~ the 3 key prople we want to elld~ of lu~iturt. You name
\Vhat do you have to trade! gd work. 557-7453, 548-2759 lor Newpt. Bch. bu\ldtr, LVN S-11 11hift mftfications develop & train. Hi&b in-lt 6: we'vt probably tot it!
List it hel"e -in Oranae. parl lime lo stan. Write Park LI do 'Convalescent come pot' n t I a I for
County's largest read trad: PAJNTING • E~t-ln~. 18 yrs. aivlna v.·orlt history & Hospital, 50-2410. management _ minded pe~ * Lido ltle *
Ing post642-S67S exper. Ins. Uc. free est. aal11ry d~lred to Bt1x &.•AtNTENANCE "•N pie Contact Mr John ,..r. GARAGI SALE
· Accoust. Ceiling!!. 968-9126 M·• Dally Pilot 3.10 W. """' ~ win at San Cl~m•ntt fnn, Wed • 'nlvrs. Call 675-585.5
* p INTING: Honest .,..,aran-Bay, Co~la Mesa. Corona del J\.1ar Apt com· "-JO 1 IO 5 • I · •---~===-~~=~I plox, 51.1 day week. Must ....,c, • pm pm cs; to .&..r 1100'• * re~ \\'Ork. Lic'd. Local ref's, ** BROILER &: PREP. have R:t:neral knewJedae of 9:30 Pm, Ca lif. rm. :frllllOM
SERVIC. DllllCTOlly SERVICE DIRECTOR Call 67!">-5740 aH 5. MAN J T • I _I ~:..:.;.::~~~~~~y~l·m-miUCiRl:'ExTI'illiiR 0 " yrs. exppr. on Y janitorial, plum~ 6 elf'C· TEXAS REP1NERY CORP. LAJ\GE atlection of recondL
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. · . 1• INTERIOR & EXTERlOR rif'f!d apply. 494--2100 Lai-trical. Plea!ant worktna: con-offers opportunily for hilh fioned appliances, repos, ap.
C.Wnetm.klfti· '5IO Dra~_r_i_., _____ 66_30;.;;1 Je1Ty'1 Paintinc ServiC'9 ~"-'~'·===--,.-..,,--I ditklrui w/paid ins, & vaca. income PLUS reiUla.r cash pllancea from model homes.
Cl-fft!STMAS Cl'limplption Gf DRAPERY-• 49S--1864 • e BUSBOY • La CavP lion. Ptrmanent. Specify and vacation bonuses, abun-We dellwr, 1ervl~ & iuat'·
Im.all Custom Quality work. MANUFACTURER I-========== Restaurant, 1695 IrvlM Ave., llge, •xperience. I ttlettnc-dant fringe hlnetits lo afltt.. •
0ey hiU'S, atM'IYei, mix. ..., Plaaterlng, Petch, c .M. Apply In ............ , 10 am e~. \Vrite box M10iii Dally maturt Reman ~I Bearti
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Cities DUNLAP
££ Yrs in Area! 5-19--02:\6 R t -...,.._. are a,"'' o e APPLIANCE Ken 645-00<14, 646-2042 INTERIOR T EXTILES epa r to 11 11n1. PiloL a. I ss X• -cu=sro=="'====~· l we·ve Dont: All The !\1odels-* MAID • CUSTODIAN perienc::e. air mail. D. '" 1115 N1wport Blvd., C.M. M WOODWORK · * PATCH PLASTERING CARRIER Pat1, Pn11., Tt:Xa.1 Jhfinery e uo ~ e
I J'umlture A: C-abineta Lei Us Desia;n For You! Alt ty~ll. J'rtt Nfimates &yview Convalt:i\Cent Hosp. Co Bo 1ll F t w·-· _.,_
S . I ~Hol'" Sal r · _, Th · S C 'I rp., x ' or ..,. . .,., I ~=,--,,---,,--::;;:-I 543-4235 or "3-0044 pecta .-.~ L"ay e, Call ~ BOYS #loM-J ur1n t. .1• . -r.x11.,; 76l01. LADY Kenmore auto
I ==C~•~l~I ~54~!Hl~"'6~·='~4~H~r~<~. =I;;;:::;:;::;""===;;~ Jl.fAN whn know~ boat pro-walher, aopperto111, lai. C:~rpont1rlnp _. : : ~~ I' Plumbint 6l90 WANTED ""'"' • ""'i"' '"'""'""' THE DAILY PILOT model, '90. Hotpoinl ,.. ---------·!Furniture Reatoring 1o sell advt Df'c .-Feb. huanQPenlPl:toranaxperi-dryer Sf-4. Both ~t cand.
--.. CARPENTRY ~ ' & fttfini1hint &675 PL~:i,.~1:~00 ~~~~R for the 5:>7-7572. e~. journallat in ita wo. Guar & dtilv. *4812. •'-~R REP IRS No ·~ '" D "'ILY PILOT MEDICAL SEC men's department. Annlicant &IT-111!. -~ A . • --YURnlTURE Sffi!PPING • 64~3128 • .. -· -,-m"'I be ,!iii'.,~. bR.~E"°T"'R=I G""f"'tu"TO=R=-'=w,'-'·lh'I
TOP Small. CabbW in pr. G~D OPENING SPF:& DRAINS P:luned:' Draini~g Dana Point, San Juan I yr. nctn! ex;perwnce. Call write clearly, understand ~top fNezw $ZS. Abo
"fl! It. other c:ahinflts. IAL. Any .avl!rap:e chllr or slow! Expertly cleant:d $9. CapiftnnD and Ann, ~-Westcli!f Per· '-asent!als ot photoarapby • laJP frost-fret: dbl dr
$lS.8175 lt no answer kaye rocker stripped s:'i. 642..3445. lS hr aerv SJ0-3854 Capis tn.no Be1ch. JOnnel Al;:ency, 2043 \Vest-ii.YOU!. Top company bene. n:tr'-ntttr, Oetp! 163 i:.
mac at ~23'11 H. 0 . ' Conta.:":t Mr. Se1y •I 11 ~· Anderwnn .. . . Garde.ning "'°· Rooflnt c ff Dr., Ne1~·J'IOr! Beach. fits, good aalary, atlractt;v. 18th St. CM
LET .., 8,,.... do i!. R•P'~. --"'-----"-50 DAILY PILOT MEDICAi. SecroW,.. well new l!•t.trl"1. Apply ln writ· "'rRl;=;,G;,ICMJ"°"RE,;,,..-... ~ .. ---,.--,I rem~I 6 patios. AL'S GARDENING BEl'"ORE You buy, call T. S.11 Oemente ottkll t'x~rienced, Send resume : lnr only, dtlns upu:ilact, xlnt oond $15,, Wbirp)ol-*
, fi?l-5-ll?, <l!M-?~ .for Gardeninc" small land-Guy Roolina Qi. Jtemyer 305 N. El Camino J\Ml salary requlremnt .l photo ba.ckcroUnd A edUQtUan \o dryer, fl'3d eond "1. Guar
~-.. \ \ • ••! .. , . ~ ..... ~1;=;;:=:;;;:;:,,:::;,,;::::= 11eaplnc servlcea call ~Sl.98 11pec !a1 1 it, 64 ~-~Ill. 492-4Q) to P.O. Box 21.ll, Newport Naraa.rtt Gre.nman, Plf.. "dllllv. ~. "1'-1115.
c.oi,..nt, . c ...... -..... Met , Servin( N1wport. CdM, c... ,...9590. "'*--,C~H""'R"'IS"'TM="'A"'S,-*"' I la•eh· 9'660 -M1n1...-•. Boll 1llD. WUl'INGHOUSE "°"""'" ~·· •• .. --. , -.. . ' . tr-~-· ·, , ..
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YOUR CRIOIT IS GQOD
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..
"
~ ta Mesa, Dover Shoru.''LE=E~ROO=~F~IN-G~CO~: ~--~· -MEN kl ~I 1uita ' Colt-. NIU, Calif. 98. rerrir. Wtute w/aquan: cm--~--Westclitt 1 11 1 JOIS _ ....... ,.,.,.,.r, ....... tlm• .... ,. WANTED Girf1 " Women, ntn. A v a J I U/19, "'M. -Cl:MENTWORK,no.c-i..•-· o a ype1. recover. --...... _., --~ . I ,. .._ • lAG 11\C . MS-3.501 . model WGrll 1hop now lo"'1· Q).SlM, small, n:aaanabli. Free sroru.t REPAIR t'('patr&, roo coa tngs. 4ol<; I! you~' a vailable for full1"'="°",_,...-,--~,,.--1,;""'""'="°"'.-""''"""'"-I
Eltiln .. H •. ~ick, MM&lS TrM y,wk, surpry, hrac\nc, bonded alnce l!Ml. SU-Tm. time employment durinE Of:. ~tlDDL.E A;ed ""-'tnall, 30 or !~tvii:u~:h A u:o Uo~l n r-;1~ SdU•~ .~~ eJ.', '-~,
, . CEMENT Wol'¥:. Reas. City prune. Landscp ma l nl , WENEDA Raoling Co. Cf'mber · plt:a~ apply im· ovrr, near ·apriearanc::t:, far R Photo Te roo .... _......a-•· ,__.,,.,
& ala I• Uc'd. Side walkl, el~a_nup job.I:. Time open. Repairs Rec<>ver or New mtd. 10,. the lol.lowlng po-~IAN AGER. TRAIN Er::. (a~~~~ mo.-lf'iing, ~· uaed , mo. Steri8ct S1A
Profrss Gardrner. Georie Roo ls, '1100 SUpt>rior Ave. 1tihons: Starlinr N.IA.ry $.U5 mo. In· --"'ivwmffi"a--1 ;,;490-~-~~or~llMl~~tl.~=-"""" tV'ves, patiol. 6t~l-t'. 646-MS.1. Cl\.1. ~l&.!l 24 HRS. • f'loor Man quire in perllln, PAY·LESS a WANTED e HIGH oven pl ranae, :w>h
MORE Concrt1 e • patio lor UARDENING • Sales • \Vomf'n's read.y-SHOE STORE, %221 Harbor (:.!ramie Tile Layu wkifl. Very clMll. U.. nitw. le~ JT\OJ\(')'. A.rti1tiC i;etting. By Experienced Japane"9 Sewing 6MO to-wear Blvd., Coata MrSA. And ~ ~ Uic .. '"•Ii '-"~v at'" -L•'-''.""' La-· '-'=· .;......;. ______ ! .... ,....... ....,_, * 54&.4228 * 1----------• Men'1 Furnishings ~IODEl.S Wanted-w/aven.re """ :r.,, 1 •
··rREE Eat. Sawina;, break· CLEAN UP SPECIALIST "TOPLSSS'' • Caahlers 11. WrapJ!f'?'3 or 11bov• a ver a1e in-tac' am..U~.~r;.F\illtrton. Antf,uet 1111
ing, baullnl: I: 1JcijlJ01id i11&". New ftnce & reI>&ir. Mow. 21~ yds. Guys Muslin Shirts DESMOND'S tellice~. Full tim• pol,i-.,...., l'Ollt THI! DISClltlMI•
Service I-qualil;)I:. ~ inc I-: ed&inc-Reas . $5. 2 yds. Ponchos 15, Ta~ FASHION ISLAND lion. S4l-46t. Scheo ... IMtrvttten 7.00 NATI NO COLLICTOll ~-C!stry 4 yds. l.Alnir Gypsy PA•T TIMI Cirantracton '620 ~ues 18. 3~ yds. Maxi-NEWPORT BEACH " I-pc DUNCAN PflY1'E di.if&/
-
-"---.,....,---AL'S Landscapin,c. Tree skirtll ST. :l'ii ydi. Peuant ~C~OA=S~T=A~L-A~G=l~N~C~Y,-IGirl. minimum BR:' 24. 9 to 4 COSTA MISA. rm lfO'ilP: Incl; 9Mu.t but.
removal. Yard rem<ldeUnt. d ' ••-.. -A -mhe• ol pm daily. Moo U1ni Fri. In-PRli SCHOO' f•t dbl ~., •• , ---~ MY WAY. quality · homfl l'el.!lf:J 16. \i Ydl. -• '"" • • " • _. ~, ~·..--
. ~lr. Walls, ceil.lo.r .. noon :;;::ir ~~~~~r~t 6f~~:~· $4. Bt:lls SS. Di& tM new Snelllng k SneUing lnc. tere1•tinc 9f•tem :r-1rwear l!th I MIMU'Oviri. \i tlay +-pineap~e de•lcn, all~-. de. No job ffl(I 1mall. gypay look • Beat inflation Tht W•rld'• Lertt•• deA er1 II~· Sta . tfl ~ ruu day 1eu)on1. Plan-Not a r.prod\K:tlon. MU<e ~\.1494, 2~. l\r ans. tll:l'Y. · Expt:r.'"Japanese Ga.rdener, let me do YGW' ar.winc . Just Profesa&onal tn11. f 'illni: e11pe rlence. Will ned Jll'Olfam, ttot hine*· ()fr: Ml-4151 Aft 6 Jim.
• ..,.0 ,._ ___ .. __ __.. •• ,_, Complete yd service. NeAl hrlna: your tapestrlea or ma-I hi S. I train. ~T'!llJl'lality 1Uitablt1 Ages 2-6, hra 6:30 am..S pm, TRUCk ~ ol Oiic. I'tt tbne """"' ......,u . ....,...,,.,..... ..... & Relia. F~ est, 642--089 1 I I 1 ·~ w 8&1'---mp ym.nt rv ce fM 1ood CU!ltomer relatiMs. Ill wk Com .... -1 .1U11-.. o...w --'-"-c•t add~ns. roofinc. -palnlliir It tr• o: ~1 • .,_ 2T9o Harbm-81, CM MO-MM · ,,_ ... -"". ,,__,u. a •• ,.pain . 540_1158 er t.fONT,llLY Lawn main!. Blvd., Nev.·port Bt:ach, att, Harbor Blvd. at Ariami S2.tltl/hr staM . Adva.n~ or Ml-S2JT. Cabt"'ti. ro1.u1<1 tables • ~7664. Lawn A Jprink~ iMtallM. 5:30. mrnl.!i. Pollllion l~ated in JAPAN KARA fl 11115. 'tchool clotkl,. tbtll et 1-,=--'-,~---'·.,-.,;---Ro1~1illi'1c. Tr'ffe, ihnll!tl''•~D~,.,-.,-.,-.. -ln-.---Al~t-on_tlo_nl_ C"O&'\fETIC SALES: NEW Cos~ i\1csa. Apply 1:30 \'RI Black Belt Jnatrueto.'. drt.wera A. &te. f0tt lat Stl ll>KAJU."1Mell~lt'. :..!.D"!llA.LLtloftl •rtmovcd. "5.3Cl. ..._,,.1 __ , to ,.,,.1 you. fan t a sti c Pf"duct. to 1::10 pm , \Vfld , Dfic I, ,.._.., u.u ........ -i.. \l:ihaadtnaA" ... lJlllS •
.-.. l\.Lf'I u-: •1n1 Guara.nleed cl I• 11 t •I•. She.raton 8Mch Inn, H.a. u..:r ,.....,1._,"
Ucenaed·Bonded 6'1-l5!17 EXPF.R. Hawatl•n Gardener Call Jo + 84&-&«6 ~ Alk for R.ulh ~-No &42-131l, ~ m'Olt!: WIDE SA.LE -'
Addition• • R$nodelinr
Gerwlck A Son, !.ic
fl'l-6011 ·• . S49-11m
C'O m PI et e Ga rd t: n i n S Alterations -'42-SMS COCKTAlL W1lttt11 youn&". phone call~ pleasr.. IC W. 19th, CN ~YTHING. ,," Oft,
Servl<!f'. Kamalanl, 646-4676. Noot, accur•t•. -_,, e•p. Hrs. 6-9. No C.ontracf? Our W&)' o( .ayln& ~ w ,,--" altractlve. App. In ~non. PART T1m11 nl1ht Mer. tGr Chri tm fG Qur Cu tmn
Complete Y1rd C•rtl T19 \V. 19lh St. C.M. •m•ll N.B. motel, 2 or .3 PIANO Lesson1 your homt: • a• , 1 N'S JJ~1 540-4&17 Tiie, Ceramic · 6974 Certlfitd t11eti.n. Mu1lc MARY LYNN S ANnQUU
6'U Gener1I S.Nic••
COOK-hol.laeke1:per, c.M. 11 nile• per wk .+ lite main!. ~~tems. Mr. tlathcock, 2432 NewPQrt Blvd, CM.
to 5. Elctt'!rly oouple, tan in-:'> h1·1 per wk, Retired man 6612 * Verne, Th11 Tilt1 ••an * I f 'd C II 67~ t••t 646-1368 20" Black bUop wall c~ j" va kt, 646--0041. pn: , . a ,,..W'I ri lnlalcl. bef UOO.
Oean-Cleaner.ckant1!? CARPENTRY, Cab.a., Pain-'i:al. ~rkk!,nsta~. ;ri,n. l-cD"E~w""'v~E=R~Y-. -.-.·ri~..,,-· -.-.-l·-;P"L"U"M"•"•"R"S."R"•:: .. :-,c:,-..-T::IT~~~h~'!: ~= :'mn-llOO .•• rw::.
Kurt Wa,zner Carpet A ting }"ormlea Plbt ~Piii' G ,...., 1 ' u er '710 W. 19th, Costa Mesa heaUr11. Top wart• ------1
r.------~-
Uphol111ery O ewr1. SI concn..11, iPpJtances I, plltc~lfll'. 7 Le_aklna: shower 645-m90 plus oomm. M3-7fi02 64&-2012 after 3 Pfl.f, hw&nl MlilhlMI lllO ~. •nn. S34-530S. ~11~~~~ t~a~~r,nt~c~:'.~r~ -~~:1~~ D~~!ly~:r=:nt rt,u:=::.ST.;,.~.~ •. r_A_.L_\_'_'r_N_1_D_~_·_:_"°' .. '-Ol---111TGmS-AC~~~~-•11~ =r'°"'•""'M~~Cl~~l--.~--.~--1 7· eJt. No :lob too am.all. with lnaura-. Afternoon to PlY· 64)-3472 1 · ......... .._. .,.
c • ean na · ... rv-ftAtN G ut • 1r1 Installed. 536-2UI!. • ... .., liu~W:-------1: !'~""'~'!!'""~t....--..!IO~IOO!!_ I lluttonbo&M. blind hims_..._ tfoBday Spe<:ial. Clll'ti-J'Ntm-ev. hra, 11-1 or 9 pm), aom•1Nunin&: ercait. 1~ e~, wlout
f't , drtt'1 In 2 hn •. ).16-3508, Quality ~-ork. RN.llGN.ble. T 11 ,,77 Sal'•. Salary open, tri~ FUR.NITUIU'.:. Couchl PO. attachmtl'lta, W/'fqlftll( con-5.~7. · • FNe e11t. 96&-2208. ---~'-·-·-------·I benefils. Ph: anytlnlt: !H.S. SUPERVJSOJt . LVN, 3-11:30 ctia!rs SlO, End table1 n.so, liOle. $qtl MJ prietl. 9f
CRPTS/Wlndow1 .. J ""' k H ,. •1-Top Soil. Sindy LQam an!A) It lll m·I pm, 14fi-J.";40. p.m. C..'oUM table• ST.Ml. Lamps am&.11 Jilynlent1. l4S-Dll.
hall fOAm sham.~·. + eu 1"1 -LYMAN l.ANDSC.lPING DENTAL RECEPT10NIST • L V N SU P ER VJ SO J\ ST • SlS, Olnlns 1Uttr tables 10-7 dll~.
rompl v.·lndow wa1hi111 btllk y AR o JG 1 r . c I e.nup. 63.1-TG:tli OC!ak only Must haw Mntal REUF.~' 3-1 1: 30 pm. A 4 ct\alra S~, Twtn l!t1$41----• .;P;;..l"'C"l"A"'F---·I
. LVN REWEY Med i 'nt J. <met~ frame , box':.J.rinD, • 'for S37.50. UJ-31A2 att 4:30. Remo\11 trteJ, t••·, trt.sh. Uphel -ofc. f'XPf!r. lnl\U'&nce, actll · Cl 1 •-1.. .... --.,, "~ ..__ 11·30 pm mattft:u l head 11 $311, """fil4" •"1 lfl-•, ef\l .,._..,. ·olamond Carpel CINninc Grade, btckhofl, !16J-3745. ~,,.ry re(, ofc. meml. Snme Sal'11, " , "-'•bl• ·~· s•l.!O, ia -··own bo"'"' ,...___ . ~ . " Sal•..., ....... ·•. tri-benetitl, L.•VmN SUPtnVISOR ll·T:30 ...,,.. 11'<'\1<1 • ,,v_ .. _ -... Pl'lii·Mllda.y ~IAI J UNK Wanted. Fret: mellll C 1 "1 k 0 a k \ ! 1 IC•Y·lml·hY) -J v .. -u•" Dre&Nra w/mlrrora W!O. oU A adMt, •al 1 ~
F't'M Minor "'P'I'" W/f';ln1. pick up & 1ar..,:11 rll"11nup.'I. CvflOm Upholstel')', 1131 Ph: anytUl\f, (~.&. are.} l..VN R£UEf SUPE.RVJSOR NiftU1tand1 11.!WI. 7 Aptl, -"-~·--------!
YIO' $1).. We alto•fn1t.i,ll. lfaullng. Ert Slone, 54:4913. Newporl Blvd, CM 54i-J.4)1. "am-9 pm, 146-J:WO. ll-T:JO am. full . Bffn atnnd l.J :ti"'· Mt bf
Trtt "-~t. 645-1317. TR.ASJI "Garrti::-e clt'a.n-up, 1 JOIS I IMi'LOYMllNT DENTAL ASSISTANT, cht.ir-Park 1.ldo Convaleaeent ~ ~
STEAM J1t carpet d9anillJ{. lfa.y,. S10 A lnrtd. rm ('111---------~1 1ldc, Afternoon to t:Vt ~1'1. Ce.nter f-t»OM liA1C1D TO llCLI , ............
. lty O.rKan;, l'AtloMidt Anythne, UA-SOS:t Job Wentetl, ti.a. or t pm) Soma Sat's. 'AlltTTTMI !:lee ranJe, b'Oat·tre. nfl11,1 Dl\UM: SET, eomPktt,
.·MrYiee. J;r. est. f4-40.\\.. JUNK Wafltod. ;·rco. roetal Womtn 7020 S&IPh•fY ... u"· lrintoH 8hlMHlt. 1~ min~·-.,. -,.30 btd divan, rocq, '°V• ... t. Jfte1, hl·bat" n-mtl\ -'-L. ' '"' m1 f •-•) I '• ""-" ••• • i..-..,,, .. pick up A 11rar• d~anupa. 1 .:,,..,..am.~.' --toll:» am dall~. Mon t.hN ru11, •to. AU Xlnt oond. lNVM, al aect11. Xbtt Car,.t Layln1 & · ' Haullna. Ed Stone, MW913 AIDES ~Tor conv•l•sctnee.1,,,=,.,,_...,....,...._,--'--.,,•I r r 1. Cuatamer rtlAtlons MJ.19", c:iond, .. 1dttJ tot ~
lttpllr ' -HAULJNG' It Cleanup. Trtt1 elder!)' Cati or. •am\b' cart. DENTAL chair alliltant wtth 1reeter in MW<&r dNlt'r Cdl\.NE.tl CiROUI'. a couchta St\Mhftf, Ml4i• att'"'.
le •hnibl. n.moWC:. Fne Hom11maken1, ~T~l. front otflcr: cepabll1U.1. Mrvlct dept, l'i.llt\r •lQleri-•nd walnut formlca to(> wtttnd ,
EXPERT' t:tdlmate. 66-34ll. 61MIOt •nee, \YUi train. 1J.l:Vhr. table, foam 1>4dl &. bollttn.. I lCQlj"""'NM<COi1$ffo.1'""_.,-:,.= .. =-.,"""ii"'.I
CA.ft.PET INSTAIJ..ATiON JoltW1"ttcf, ELECTl\ONtC. Cou e te r start. Advancemtnt. Posi-Sltpc:ioyaM In Wue•trtt" OMll.~ ........
A-REPAIR. &46-<tlll. HovMcle1"l"I 67U Men & Women 7030 uleism1n, tl(p'd. Uan located ~ neach Bl\'d. print * tam aU. ~ takiH -...11..
lt't rte.UY not Wt Mrd 1---------1---------ll. \V. Wl\ICHT co. In •ttr. lcll, APfll.1 Wed.. * NICE • a "°"" rattln • .., ..... a n...... 11 ...
'to replac-. Juat Wilch Ult HOUSI 0, CllAN EXPERIENCED m.1na1tn 1no Newport IU\ld., C.rd. Dee. t, 1:30 pm-2:30 pm, odd chain, lamp•, tnd t 1 -"'.""~-·~-"-"";....,;:.;.;""~I
tumlture ·a,· "'°llielllan91M.!s Complele lfOllse CltaniD,f for mntel, husband .l wift. EXPEJUOiCED, 1inil1 l'lffo Shl!l'alon Reacti Titn. ff .I . corr.. tabl••. lwlll 4 dbl + aALDWIN °'81.ft _..I
(!l'lltttnl'll ll tM O&u\titd 64J.,IJ4 08pe11dabl11 local "'!dents. dle ~~tnrs. Apoly 125 W • .A!Ut for l\uth Onn~. No bedtoe0mpt rl•ntt.n. fll'• 4T., LiJ11 ,..., NJ •---------~"-a._1•_11;__ ______ 1.;.11.;.h..;;S_1.-'c-'.1_t. _____ .. P.h_o•_•_co_111-..•I_••_,._. __ _. dtn f\lrfl. 56321t kt)'l!ioard, SJ.IOO.
1111
-
'r ........ , ............................. ~, ...... ~.a ..... 221111511112""''!2'1511aa .. 111:aa .. a•2"".'•aa~~,2a•a .. ~~· .. ,~a~2a•• .. = ................. ,~~~2511•:::;::::::::::-~~~~~--~·-·-~~· ••
•.., 0.,1.Y FiLO'I' T11tsd11, Dt«mbft' 8, 1970
............................................................. !!!S 1nd LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION
This variety of fine schools Dot• nu s.111ioe1s • 9020 Mobll• Homes
TRANSl'ORTATIOl+>T
-!
Schools an
Instructions
-c~d-. tr=.:i *-oROOMINO * CHRISTMAS GIFT 3'd TRAILER
COW m UUUCC Exper croomer v.·IJt do lge e NE\V SABO'tS • $269. $800. 646-4191
you to a new tomoJTow.
For further infonn•tion re9•rclin9 the D•ily Pilot
Schools •ncf lnstructioa Diredory
CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325
dos•. Very reuonaWe. Allio complete
complete eroomlnc _,rv1ce:1 YACHTS lt.OYALE INC. Mini Bikes 9275
on sm or lie poOd!et At· 2912 W O:N&st llWy 6G-0810 -1
ehl.n& de. matted, S ho w \'lQU~ You like ~se of 4-0 2 MINI bikes, 3~' HP. approx
if'OOmlnl avail. 557.9608 l-Ketch! ln exchange for :c~ :~nt cond, $110
tillllUAHUAS • Reserw sm/loan, lully secured .I========='!
)'Ol.lr puppy now in time for Before you. buy a sailboat, Motoicycl.. tlOO
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;:"~~';;:~_r';;dl50;,~~l~:A~,;~::r~"~~~~t<m-"'~'!!l~::_:~.:~2'00~"1~~i"'ptc.l-1:1-::8:'.:•:-':i :•-i:-2-,-11
av~llable for you.ng la~y Xlnt sailing cond. Eves • -
·Y
CALIFORNIA'S FINEST
PRESCHOOL CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAMS
"WE CARE MORE FOR YOUR CHILD"
ALTON
OPEN 6:30 TO 6:30 7 OAYS A WEEK
• AVE. FOR INFOAMATlON
CAll. (714) ~750
EARLY ACHIEVEMENT
CENTER
25t5 W. SLJnllower Avenue
Santa Ana, CaHfomla 92704
•PRESCHOOL
• KINDERGARTEN
• AmR SCHOOL
•WEEKENDS
'• ~""• ~' '~.·
' SEW-,NITS
SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNIT FABRICS
ood LINGERIE
Newport Air Associates
Flile School & Flying Club
LEARN TO FLY
$500.
lflHMlllf A"11•S.J
Com pl•I• Coun • l ncl11~•-=
40 Hours f1i9ht t ime in Cessna 1 SO's with
20 hrs. du•I instruction. Club membership.
2 Month's free dues. Individual inst ruction,
tailored to YOUR o1bility.
10 OTHER AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE
11 LOWEST RATES IN ORANGE COUNTY
Learn to fly now - -. o1nd ho1ve fun ! * Fly Mexico & Canada * Special Rates for Commercial
lnitrument Student1.
Foe Complete Details Call NOW
673. 0313
WE HAVE THE FINEST SI LICTION
OF KNIT ,AIRICS ON THE ORANG~ COAST.
2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD
COSTA MESA 540·3268
S-T-R-E-T-C-H
& SEW (T.M.)
CLASSES
8 2 lir. $1500
Lesson'
Morning -Afternoon
and Evenint
LINGERIE CLASSES
3 2 hr. $600 ,
L"'°"'
AIRLINE & TRAVEL CAREERS
For Mea and Women
e Tr•vel Agent
e Ticket S•let • Air freight Cargo
e Communic•tions • Oper•tiont Agent
D•y •nd night cl•••••
AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC
S•nt• An• 543-659'
610 E11t 17th Str11t
Accredited:.
National Association Trade &: Technical
Schools
Approved for Veterans
Eligible institution under the Federally in·
sured Student Loan Program
Chihuahuas for choice of lit· af!er 6 anytinie wkcnds THINI
ter. 541)....3634 644-4177'. '
SHERRY'S POODL-ES 16\S' 505, E.~tren1ely fast. HONDA _
9 yn experl~nce good cond. Full race. J ib & Al~ breed ~nune. F~ spinnaker & trlr. $1750. Call
ptck up A: Jehvery. Christ· Hart Reynolds, 713/28.'l-il.33.
mas pupa :.:s colors. LIDO 14. Xlnt cond. No. 1278,
I =~--..,.---,--,,,=-I trlr., cover & sails. New TWO yr old male Golden tiller, rodder &: boom. $900.
..
"FRIEDLANDER'f
Retriever "Champ," gold Ph: 846-3444
color. Cooke cbaln & fieaJ ;=:'.;°'"';;:;-;::-;:-;;;;;;;;I·~~~~~~~ col. Family grieving • Spetd-Skl Boats IJ030
REWARD. 54s-3957 16' Ski Boar: 100 hp Johnson * CHRISfMAS PUPPIES motor, trlr. Cstm tarp.
Cockapoos, 6 ·wks. o Id . Xtras.
Really cute & cuddly. Only S19j0 • ,_.
J,!~:·del f\1ar 644-1708 14' ~.LEASURE-ski, 1.lust 1-"'"-'""~""'~"'""""'~-,-1 UCl"lliee to pay taxes. Xlnt DA~\tATIANS Ch/bred. cond & buy, $495. 646-5.531
Take home Christmas or wkl"''='='=='"='=====I
before. Top cond. Pvt Pty: M•rine Equip 9035 &12-193'1 •
e GERMAN Shorthair Christn1a.s "Give A11·ay" sale
Pointer, 6 mo, ready for 8' flipper sail boats $16:i.
·training, ARC reg. Line of 14' & 15' runabouts 545.
lield champions. 644-5194 13' canoe/12' skiff $140.
SCHNAUZER Pups tor Phone 64fr.9000 I 645-0885
Christmas. Best Chap/Ped B I SI" ·M I 9036 Bolton; DY!!: 5 47-9561. Oii •P oor ng
=E=v='="~4=91-35~=·7_3~---,,l 15 TO 30 ft slips avail. fDr T\VO l9i0 Honda
POODLE Puppies, small po\\-er boa.ts. Also dry bikrs. Jikt' ne\\'. Io w
toy-apricot AKC. Beaut. storage for boats & trailers mileagr, i280 f"a. Tu'O bell
show qUal. Perm i;.hols. \Vill Bayside Village. 300 E. helmt'ts. SIO e11. Also auto
hold for Christmas 846-5096. Coast Hwy, N'pt Beach. bikt' ca1Ti£'r $10. :>18--0551
AFGHAN AKC Fem. White * 25' SLIP. Choice location, * '69 Harley Davidson
~fblk mask. Champ blood-ample park~ng. 74 Chopper. Mu s! see to A]> "llli:llli:llllli:llli:llli:llli:llli:llli:llli:llli:llli:llli:llli:llli:llli:llli:ll~l line, Hsebrkn. Show ~r pet . &l:>-l404 pi·eciutr. Sacii!ir.e. Call
ii Will hold for Chr!Stmas. BOAT Slips available 2ti 10 40 635-8116 or 63.J..9264 aJtr 6.
NEWPORT -MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
140 E. 22nd ST., COSTA MESA
64$-2323
6:15 A.M.-5:30 P.M.
Kindergarten Readiness
Arts &: Crafts
Music & Rhythm
Phys ical Fitness
Phonics
Colors & Numbers
Educational Field Trips
Hot Lunches
Basic Bible Stories
TOTAL CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
&16-16=>8. fl, Ne~'J)Orl Beach. 500 TRI TT 1'1AG $500
AIREDALE Puppies: AKC 613-6600 · · ·
Born 9/11/70. $1.Z ea. reg Porche mags_ New tires
litter/champ pedigree . Boat Services 9037 $110 Two Bell helmets $15 5;36-6220 Pa<"h. All $650 call 548-6113
DAL~tATIAN puppies male Fer r o e em en I , fa s l DIRT Biki'S: -Sacrifice New •·
AK(: Oiamp peel., '7 wks: p_ne~matic s~pling &. h.?g Harley Davidson 100cc .Ba-
shot;, $100. ti 15-5 5 71 , 1:1ng1ng. ~eld1111!_, by hr or ja. 80cc Yamaha. 645-7140
8TI-242'7 JOb. Call 5-10-7985. or s.15--0807
GER:O.IAN Shepherds, for 8011t Ch•rter 9039 '69 TRfUMPH 650, reblt.
sale or trade, AKC, Cham-~ Good cond \lion S19i
pion zhow stock. 6 wka old. Christmas boat parade • 549-4205 *
894-4991. yachts available 1970 YAMAHA 12;1 Endure.
NE\\.'FOUNDLAND pups, 6 pm Lil '?/Dec l&-23 1600 miles. \\'i!h helmet,
Cha.mp dame &.-sire. Pet & call &16-9000 I 64:>-0885 $435 firm. 830-5190 · ,
show quality. 642-5473 Christmas \Veek Charter _HONDA CL70 motorcycle. a '
~IINIA. Poodle Pups, 7 wks. 32' Tu·ill-8Crew Chris New cond. $195. C a I I
Clloc. & Silver. \Vill bold 'til avail. ** S.t&-2434 &12-1232 aft :i or 1vknds.
Christmu. 962-1687. * '70 HONDA 750 * ** LOVE FOR SALE. AKC Mobile Homes 9200 Xlnr Cond. Call ; 646-7244 or
fa11•n. Gl'C'at Danes, 1 wks. ~'lG-6000. 1
,.._5348. lljf?IU{?f.:J •l•)l,ll;J HONDA 1970 CB <JO. lik•
YORKSHI RE puppies.
Ready for Christmas, AKC
reg. 673-784 3.
SILKY Terrier Pups, A.KC
reg. Will hold 'ti I
Christmas. 83CN169 all 5.
Horus
ne ... 1. $69.5 Southern California's 831·2111 0• 499-""
FINEST
ADULT PAR!{
:'11INI Bik(' 400X cal. xlnt
cond. 4 hp JOO. 548--0341
after 3.
'70 Hondo Trail 90. Good con-
dition. ~ BroaID\'a.Yo--Of !
$250 or Best Offer SURROUNDED BY
Q UART EH. Thoroughbred ORANGE GROVES AND * * 1966 llONDA 160
mare. Sweet disposition l AGRJCUL TURE &rambler. Xlnt cone!, spirit~. $425. Call 67:Hl887 ~2.'lll. .'>48-9697
af!er 3 Pi\1. S.".00.000 '61 .YA:\1AHA 90cc. Auto-lube
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
Registered Quar1er Horse RECREATION Ct;NTER !v.•111 cycle. streec. Lo ml,
2 yr old, Must sen good cond . $215. 646-6.<}.18. j
644-8407 * 675-3710 DUfs Sl.00/i\lo. Per Couple HONDA miru trail 50, boned :
8 !\10 old Chestnul colt. . out twice, straight pipe. J
Parentage. ~~ Qtr &
1
1,$ •• P-NO ENTREE FEE-PET O.K. -495-5377 •
1
FREE TO YOU FREE TO YOU
Pianos &. Organs 1130 Television 1205 Miscell•neous 8600 Miscellaneous
!!! NOTICE !~!
\\'e have put every Pia.no &
Organ on Christmas Sale Jor
a clean s11,·eep sellout! New,
used, &hoJ>l\'Orn & discon-
linued rrnxlels. Some at or
near dealer's COlit • ~me at
cost.plus. For a. rnoney 11av-
ing deal on quali ty
merchandise. shop or call
us. Open Thur & Fri eves &
sun aft.
\VHT fem. cat, copper eyes. 121 12 \Veek T!'rri-Poo pup-paloosa. \Veil tempered. ·67 HONDA JO:> Scrambler
RCA 21" color TV C Farbel'\\"are blender, Akai 1 long·ha.ir blk kitten pie.11, pure black, need lov-*Alt S: 64!'>-l'llJi* 14 MODELS Xlnl cond, Lots of dlromt.',
1 Ustom Draper2"es w/copper eyes, 6 mo. ing home1 dezperately. ON DISPLAY \\'ork1 good. $125 or best o(-, . tape recorder stereo, mod 534-5705 l2/8 Shots. Would like 10 find TRAfrt'SPORTATION $325. 842-7~1 . -
fer. 557-7456 Decorator drapery workroom J\f.8, Sears '¥hr. dryr, elect home together. 29651;i Terry ---------t\\'ANT TO J\i10VE IN NO\V? .,,1
--------
19.. , S L I l\f L 1 NE B&\V closi ng out 2500 yard.~ of con1b, a voe. color. Maint. W V ABLE Sm breed beige Rd., Laguna Beach. 1218 Boats & Yachts 9000 Motorscooters 9350
p011ablc, UHF / VHF, $3S. dra(l('ry fabric and made.up aggr'1n! gd 'til 7/15/n, terrier mix dog 5 nio. hsbl'k I---------Double Wides Set Up •---------~• 1
rlrrpcrics /'.Jalerials from &ar 21 ' hp canist nds gd home fncd yard. 1 6 Adorable kittens 4 mo. 3 C I W" h SCOOTER \v/sidc Clll' _ 1967 Ph: 5-18-6579 · · , !I '~ er vac. 63.:'r7975: 836-4493 12/10 blk I v.'hl . 3 -•y tigc". SCRAM LETS omp e lt 11 ========== 1 1.ic ll yard and draperies cll'anPr &. all's .• Sony B&i\1 ~· • Vespa 18lcc. Good cond. frorn S:i pair. Sale starls po11 TV 11 " scrn, beige '69 L 0 VA BL E 6 mo. C. Adults altered/spayM cats Awnings, Skirting, Tax $32j/best ofr. Lv town .
l\1ondeyforonc\veek0NLY. V\V, auto, slk shft, Ai\1/ra. She ph e rd -To y Collit', 1111 need gd honles836-4493: ANSWERS & Lie. 968-3391.
3853 Birch SI .. Newport dio, 6800 n1i's. 644-4716 frm11le .. free to good homr. ;}18--08l3 12/lO. From $9999 (Ser. 71691 1-=========~I ,; -R-CA_l_V-,1-,-,1-,,-,~-.-w-,-,,-,-t l Beach. 54&.1431, adj_ to Or. 1911 Magnova.~ coJ 1V_ gift 531-6812. 12/10 ADORABLI::; black kittens Nuance _ Sua,·e _ Suite_ l''INANCING AVAit.lrBLE Auto Service ;
Hi-Fi & Stereo 8210
ARD'S BALDWIN SI'UDIO
819 Newport, C.i\I. 642-8484
i~O\V IN ONE LOCATION
Conn * Yamaha * Thom•• Organs.
Also complete seleclion
-"l•m-•a-•ab•·--•. Xlnt , ~"-""-'=C-'"-"-'Y_•_''-"'-rt~. __ item. total auto. color & tun. BLACK & gray slriped ii·ant new homes f 0 r o DLR. TR 193 & Parts 940o ', """ ,... •3 .. "" ,-Christmas. Will pay spaying Fathom -1\1 USTACHE co nd ition. $11;1. 897-S539 CARPET La-r Has C ......... 1, Ing, all chanel11, Spanish cab-!emalt' kitten, l mo's. Exp" c I a n 1 boyhood p 396 ·
ol pllltlOs & organs
Open Sundays lZ..>
Dally Iii 6 -Fri til 9
COAST MUSIC
NEWPORT & HARBOR.
Cmta l\1esa * 642-2851
3 " ~..-. Deserted. ~~81 all 1 fee. 2373 Notre Dame Rd, : [Y RO HI-erf . s1gerson, alun1 Polyesten;, 50\'s, Hi-Io's, lnet, 3 mo'11 old. Absolutely c.~t. ~8--0-150 12110 "Every morning the boy 14851 J(ffR . ny wheel extra $300, mun-
shags. Sell for 1 ab o r. n<:'11• COnd. Cos! $429 + tax/ pm. 12/10 woold get up and count bis cle 4 sp'. & linkage ;1$o. 1500 J39.-32'l3. Price S325 firm Must see LO FREE Fuzzy faced medium ;>.JOUSTACHE." l ==~~--~-~~1 t . l "li; . VABLE Freiendly pt sz puppy. :.ov,, kids h" -~~-~~=---I ;; MI. SOUTII or TUSTIN, '-,;St&--0;;;-:-:7280:.-:c:-c--.--==--I ---------POODLES _ Standard. AKC o !\pprecia e ,,. scelJ items Siamese female br tabby ~ f SOUTH OF " I Call · · 67" .,23 shoti;, 6 mo old paper 16' Convertible 1970 Ouchita \~ M . F'OR sale or trade', 283 Chevy SKIS -2lj Head competition Champ. sired, sho1v quality, a so. anytime. """ 312 n'IO, short haired. 1 1 rained, 5 4 0-6 0 29; glass boat, 40 hp Evinrude, SANTA ANA FR\VY, & 4-spd Hydro & 7!12 Fo
11'/bindings $50. Boots, sz black. 2 mo. Christmas. \VET suit, lg john, sm. $11: 538-1228: 336-4493 12/10 G46-70J2 12110 Van110n ll'lr & all txtras. (\~• J'\IL NO. 01-· ?..spd !rans. Wa nl 6 cyli
~~~i~astic s:io. lthr S25. 497-8364 BB gun $1: Boy Scout suit. !'"REE To gd honies 2 lovable Found, 3 cats: i\loma Calico Absolu!C'ly n£'\V cond. \Viii SAN DIEGO F'\VY .) Chevy & ll""Rns. 642-.3848. ·
0 ~~--------J/3 CARAT -35 pts. total sm S5: !\-tan's Spalding golf blk terrier mixed pups 3 & 4 sell for balance O\\'ed, $1235. VW Cl tch · b $20 SURFBOARD 7' Russel Like \\·A·'dio>g ••t. Never bef?n us-club11 w/bag. new S40: New mo. f"~ yonf,. l ~•ot""'" w/gray, )'t'l & ~·h., 2 kitlens, Call 642-1232 aft 5 or 1•.'knds. (714) IJ:Z.1585 l " JO,· · ~,.,
L'\.I "" " "L-u -.r '"" 1 gray \\•/long: hair. I tiger -.;;;;yc;;:illi;;;;;;;;;;;;:-n;;;;;;;l~=-cc-c~=-~-..,..-1 p u s par ll . i>i. , Ne"'. $50 or Best OUer. ed. Cost 1375. Best offer. 1·ad io, 2-spkrs $7;): \Vom. ice afl 5 or 836-1493. 12/10 SABOT il' d' h B _, A l " 'j" ~•o •· striPf'. 1\-lom has plasic flea sa ing ing y. ra111.1 Triple Wide Cornell u omo .. ve. ~~ r Call: 61j-;,s.18 ~.44-0617 sk11tes sz. 9 $10. 548-1290 -'la•. 0 ,0 0~6 1219 ne\\'. Sacrifict. Al!O 18' 548-8667 (!vt'. ' f'REE lo grod home. Cute '-VI .n<M>V'I Hillcrest e Flamingo
KOF'LACH Buckle bool'I", CA RPET layer has hi-Jo's. FOR SALE mixed up puppy frmale 1 1 YR old bla ck & ""hite !iherglass canoe, used once. Paramount • Universal \\'ANTED: Rochester fuel in-
Sporting Goods
ORGAN By °"'Jl('r; Conn
Serenadt>, 2-61 note
manuals, 2:> note pedal.
percussion, !!!ell <.'Ontained
spe.aken;, Like ne1v. Less
than ~~ cos!, only $12.10.
\Vhat a Christmas gi lt :
sizes 81i & 91
;. \Vorn t11,ice. shags at fantastic savings. BRUNS\VJCK BILLIARD \\'t'eks old &12-5m all 4 call Labrador/German Pinscher 968-8873 eves & \\'knds Barrington e Broadmoor jeclion for 327 c.i. Che~
Xlnt cond. !>l&-4784 alt 3. Jo"rce est. will please . Table • 6 pocket -41h.X9'. &12-32:i9 12/10 ml:.;. Comes \\•/lovely MUST i1ell pract. new 12' Contiuental e Star engine. Call 842-l<ljl. ·'
871-"")j "ood <.'Ondition 1100. table '-'-t oto• & _.,,,., Co'l II '"" " homemade do• houllE". Good """' • m a.... · General e Hi crest ooly $62.i CAii Les Joorden BLACK Kitten hall .iohots. $4'" / s ·1·c 111· Ph· AN 1-IOUSEl''UL Of furniture. .~.•~ ,.239 d 1 w/childcco . 83()..5164 <-1 acn 1 £' ;), · CHAPM w......, A u Ill only ~s-3839 afl 7 2-1 Jlcasonablc. 17391 Queenio;, P~I 12110 64 2778 n ghlll. MOBILE HOMES
----------1 Apt. No, 7 H.B. Call FURNITURE 8 PRECIOUS puppieii of 14' Pleasure Ski, ell'C slarl 3.'t 12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. 1--~=~~--~-* AUCTION * 8-17-7493. FACTORY GREEN Early American small mixed breed. Ready 1-1.P. Sunlop. Trailer. $49aor * 11·1'530-2930 * CHRIST:\-TAS Suggestions -==--""7,--,,.--.,-, 01 1805 o A for Ch r i 11 m as . Hammond, S t e; n way , 1'~ine Furniture POOL Tables. Bl'unswick LIQUIDATION! hfisc 1ools. s a. range ve. &1~81. l2/lO best. &16-5531. Want To Live In
8600
642-2393.
Miscell•neous
16' LAYTON, self cont'rl. '67
n1odel. Sleeps 6. $1200.
:131-1391.
CHEVY V-8 motor with
Muncie 4 11~/ trans. S225.
or trade. 64~>-1609 aft 6 p~
Yamaha. New & used pianos & Appliances $269.9.i .~. up . Chuck'i; Bo\\·). furn. pan11, ~"ork 'tablt>s, See In alley 2llO ALL NEW OYSTER: 8' Fold. COSTA MESA
o! most makes. Best buys in Auctions f'riday. 7:3<1 p.m. ing & Billiards, 2i50 Harbor etc. 1618 Ohm11 \\'ay, C.l\f. :ii size box spring & mattress LOOK'G for gd hm. Charm-ing-fiberglass Catamaran Local lpl~s a.vallable-now! Trailer, Travel 9425
So. Calif. at Schmidt i\1u11ic Windy 's Auction Barn Bll'd .• C.i\I. 51~7340. 64;.-099.J, 6i3-G809 eves. in xlnl cond. 2421 Apt D. ing. kl\•ing male grey & dinghy $250. 673-4923 If you are serious about buy.f----------1-
Co 1907 N 'f . Sa t • S'"I I 01· • 11511 0110 BTU ~ .. • N' h Eld• A C '1 12/10 "'hite cat, 2 ....... old . ., • -"a.Jn, n a 20151~ Nc"1>0rt. Ci\! &IS-8686 " arn 1es reserve no"1. - . . .. '-"Y • Ii t n ve, ·" · ~l!M3 ~·· 1218 iny a mot>ile home .•. Now's 2 TRAVEL trailers fo.r sale.
Ana. Behind Tony's Bldg. l\fat'l, Cabin at i\1ammoth ;>.Int. furnace, e-xlerlor mounting BLACK \\'/white marking11, Sailb4Nt1 9010 the time to 5ee One Is 17' Shasta with gas
Spl-t Piano $295 Sips 1. Fll'C'pl, etc SlS-$20 $100, Contact f.-1r, Laney or cock-a-poo/ terrier puppies. XI..i.'l/T Christmas puppy • BAY HARBOR r e-fr ig, stove, oven. ·-TENT lor sale. 10'x14' t<'-nt d 5313374 d M G hit /bl k t s ---------·! Thomas Organ $195 \Vlth floor. All stake• •"d JX'r ay. . ayii;, rs. reC"nman at th<! 642-0357. 12/10 w e w ac s po . CHRISTMAS SALE MOBILE HOMES bathroom, sleeps fl, ex·
--·• " H ER i\I Es po r tab I c DAILY P IWT, 330 W. Bay, Female. H 0 u ae bro k en · FOR A 141i Baker st (at l larbor) cellent condition, $1500, Also 100 New & U!!t:U poleJ included, $35.00, Call C , SHELTIE cockalXlO 11,i wka, 64:z-.IS7;1 lJ/8 · 1 •. N tl "--Piano& on Sale 847.~0• type\\'riter $75: l...o\\•ry elee. o.~ta i>lesa, ( d / hid BOATING NEW YEAR Costa :r.1esa 54().-9470 :i. or 1west '-"llCh. stove, 0 ""° o.....,an S49;1, Bol h like ne1v. --""°'===---·I ,.•m,__:..,_8 "' c 1'21"10' PETS ancl LIVESTOCK , gas ttfrlg, oven sleeps 8, Beach Music Center i\ ovr 1 .,~"2_9766. ACTION ,......, e COLUM.BIA 22 Triple Wide Cornell !l200. 5'19-2&75 •
H"•tl·-· Sch. 3-1·, 0~~" 'r NG • p a)'cr piano & o-t MAINT·""ANCE CO'lPANY • LAP\\'ORTif °' " "6'~" . ........,., stool -refnsh, 60 rolls incld . CM~ " 2 TeJTier mix., 3 & 4 mo, 1 Pets Gener•I aoo ""' Continental • Paramount =-~----· ~" • \\'E Loan-Buy-Sell anylhing Olllce-&: llousecleaning •··xi• m'• ,. mo. H•b~-. • e YANKEE 24 "'--' .. glon • U·•··--·• t6• MERC. A-I cond. $695. PIA.!\10-llke ne,,,·-pvt pty. J<J
0 .~lisc furn piect!i, Ra nch uu; .... -'"'' gt!'''" "~"'"""' "' 5 8 t 1 ·
Kohl -r---~11 Coast Pa\\·n &. Auction. 2426 Guar, Sa1i11facHon. }'fee: est. "~" no13 or ~ """ l'/8 C!tINCHJLLAS: Em-"""" e CORONAOO :?:i >1am•'ngo • Ge-ral .,.p · u ane ng I:. stove. 88 ke:y e1~11rn-· Oak Sri!!, Chrlstmu roof il'tO"\IO ...,........,J,) • v••~'"'3 ... _ ·1c. .•~--~ c ,1 ,. ~-•! Ne11port Blvd. 642-8400 531·3375 lllneu forces sacrifice of •CORONADO 77 h d •St :i-,,..........,,, ·• · r.cep trying. Pro\indal style. i:... lone lop scene -;; tt·ain cars, FE~tALE Gennan Shepherd, roa moor ar
for professional or child. ch-es ttc, 614-26TI CllRTST~1 ,\S s p ec i a 1 • FOR Mle: Used 4· nuores-sllwr. 9 mo, to good h:lme. ZU prime animals A equipt. YAOITS ROY ALE INC. 1-fillmst e Cambridge TRAVEL Trtlil('t, slre-ps 4,
S4Ii0 cash, fi73-j8()6. INBOARD&: outboard props, Ne1l'por1 Beach Tt>nni11 Club cent flxture8, $.>each. vi is. &12.-lJ&S 12110 _C=o1=1=536-=="'=' =====-!2912 \V. Coa.J;t 1-hvy, 64.~IO CHAPMAN rompletl:'ly f'(luipped, Very
EBONY Fisher Baby Grand. lanks, controls, cab I es. tne-mbcrship. $200 + trans. Contact i\fr. l.Aney or i\1rs. rE'lALE mix~ Lab-dor. 7 -;._, RENEGADE MOBILE HOMES f't'aso1111bl('. 49-1-1·!80. Ch~., fer f!'e, 962-6549 arrer 6. Gret"nnlan. Dally Pilot. 330 " ""' ... ..,.._ UlS I ·~ N 11 bo s A. \Vhat a beaut , .. mas sea I li. "''in d s h i c Id s, nio old. Housebroken, Good o ~ . ar r, . Trucks pre~nt! Sll95 Ow ner. transmission {l to 11 In-BIC'l'CLES good cond , \Vest 811.y, Costa ;>.fesa. \\'/children. 540-4187 12/R NEWPORT • 7141531-8105 *
6n.2259. &U-.W72 11tnunents. All for $715. S1lngra.ys 20", J sprL 26", DESK And drafting table * SCHNAUZER pup.ct, male Famou 2'i' 't1op!l'I culle-r COSTA MESA GERMAN Shepherd Collie al stoo, _......ming. Hold tll • ' HA',,~·OND mod•I >£ .3 0\'er $1000 "'orlh, ALL ele. Mini-Bike 4 HP Cal , mmb!natlon, all metal, with ... ~ die-£ A p 1 bagoor ,.11, "·· 1 •1 bU E L" • •~u" pupplet to aood home only. Chrlstm &46-0839 = • · " • YU1Ua "o e slale 1v g
9500
'66 FORD Yi·TDN Splnt't <>ra:an. $6001 Ph: NE\V. 549--0jJ(). xlnt, $93, Call: 64~1272 cha!r, lfOO(f condition. Lock-642-455& l2:/8 l-'~=~'=''"==~·=,,--I every poulble equipment to Ni.: 12, ~ & 24 Wide f\lodels M~TI CARPET la.yl'l"5, ha,.-e shag CANOPY Be<!. in a lo~ly 541~ ,.~1!w. ·ers both sides $93. TOY POODLE PUPS go anywhe1e 1., the "'Ol'ld. Now on dlsplny In 5 Star Cus1om cab bucket 8<'al$
ORGA.--1 150. Don't buy htr erpls d!'al direct, t'XP in· antique while, ~. r.1a1ching ~ FAT ~ &: whltt male Gd. Quality-Reas pr1ced, Call: Asking $9500. 646--1914 Eve, GREENLEAF PARK ranger package. dtr. C.am~
11 r S.39-8327 sidl'-tbls. SlO ea. 646-3-Wt cat fT'ff to good home. 528-8188 a toy lar Chrltlmaa, bU)I htr l lf. , can 1n. , Misc, W•nted t6IO 830-3164. 12/10 COCK-A-POOS 6 '"k _old CORONAOO %1 No. 596. By Ji:)() \\'hlltlu Avenue &12-l]j(l er equip~, fl'51&44) WUI
a Thomas. 536-9614 827~~ • * E.\11\-IONS JEWELRY · ---------. .. owner. Like new, many ex-'63 SKlLJNE 10x55 1''/bl! on take car In 1rade or financt hE"M~E;oRSO='°N°"G.,_n1-od'°"'S""&"'··-. ""xi"o"tlJ'°AK=E"'"°'S-,U"'°•-,.-:--;E'°v"'"eryo'"""h"'lo°'g·I Colletto~ l!t>ms. J..piect • \VANTED • CCCK ... •poo, 3 mo old male. puppies. Had shots. 4 tru. $6SOO. TI4/.1~"6t room . Establistw-d Adult .Private p&rty, ~ or
mahofany finish, $950, Pvt e u y. Sr I I-Trade. Color sel5• 847-7798 ~\\'heel Cushman &W-479l. ll/lO apricot, 2 block. S2.i. 67>2804 e\·es. Park. 2 Storage 11heds, 49'1·6811.
ply 968-~13. 968--1-111. Conll. 21" TV S1 2S. Po11 1V PIN Pool Tablt>. used 1 wk . Ca.II 96M861 FREE tv.·o mulli-color kll· LONG--H11.lred OaCh!5h11nds, * RED LldO 1.f' sallboat. lndi.cp. lmn1cd oceupancy!l;.,o.1<a,.-=,:c .. <p•.u".'"'•',°'r:-,.,-,°"Cood,-'"°'8I
T.1
-lslon -~ S2l. U7 E. 18th, Cl\!. Coit! Sl:':il'J.Sell far $?5. Nict lt>nll. ~2-6930 1218 /\KC, bl!!.Ck Ir t&n. ldtal for Good rti clng cond. No. 160. St)OO. Ca.11 8111 519-0961 af1 6. ply tire!. :O.IUST SELL 1llJS
... •A~ .,,. MI Nt\ STOLE-!2 .!ikin fully hrl~hn1111 Glf1 . R:lS-3233 FREE TO YOU FREE Biby Ducks, 4 \\'ttka , ~°'~"~"-m_•~•·_:_,16_·_31_<"_•·~--•-1-700~. ~-='-"'~I~. ~==~·•8' x 2r TRi\VELO & ~lora~e _\\'EF.KEND ~9--0674.
REMOTE conirol Ze-n1th TV,
16"", "'" C1'1il 116-1131
lel oUt Emh.-Tnumutllnr, SLIM-GV~I: Sllahtly l)scd. old. !14g...98J2 1218 S~IALL Yorkghirt 1't rrif'r CHR!m.1AS !l:ABO'l'S roo1n, ii;pace No . 26, S1:;o, '63 1-'0RD \~'lNDO\V VAN
Xlnl 11u•llly, Xlnt rond j\TUST SEl.L. fRE1': !Ubhllit l'O goe>d-Puppies for l"rtt 916 Almond puppie!. AKC. \YUi hold til Flnt!lll Qu•llty It Rt>al\stlc 618 Adam~ 1i blk. \Vl"sl Of R&l-f , l!Uiulated & )'aneltd.
$400. 646-8272. • a46-309l 11.rt 4: 30 * ho1nts 545--iSW 12/10 Place, Ntwport ~Ach, li/9 Chrlslmas. M7~72 alt 6, Prlei!t. 645--lz,67. Beach, Jluntlnglon BC'h. SS75. MT-4SIO tlr &IG-269& --------
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TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ' TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION .:.:;:.;::..=;:..=~~"""'--.:..;;::;,;:.:;;:..;;.:..:..;.;.:.:.=.;_11 ..;.;.:;~"""';.;.;.;.._;...~
,.
9HOT-9511 lmporlod Aulol -Im~ ~• -Imported -9600
G. M. C.
TRUCK CENTER·
C ALL 546-6750
24 hr. Phono
SALE S e SERVICE
UNIYIRSITY OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
'
DATSUN
FIAT -. 0
PORSCHli VOLJ<SWAGIN
-'66 ·PORSCHE • VW .LiAllNG n rir.mu •Tax & !Jc, Down WJ CotJPe 912. 5 ,s~. bt'Qwn • $SO.BT per month ,
_ _ with black ~nterwr. 8rand • 36 month ,0I>M end lease I MW PelTt'fil tires. XYJf74 1971 vw Bue
fh ' $3299 AT 11 7·1 CHICK IVl;RSON CHICK IVERSON .1 vw vw mo HARBOR BLVD.
CX>STA MESA Now ON DISPLAY 54!>.303l Ext, 56 .. " 1910 HARBOR 'BLVD, auto •port ltd COS'l'A·MESA
Authorized 1963 Porsehe Suptr 00, new WANTED
SALES e SERVICE paint & interior. Xlnt run-I'U pay top dolla"' tor )'OU!'
e PARTS ning con<!. $2400 or best l)f. VOLKSWAGEN today. Call
9625 Glll"den Gro ve Blvd. . fer. Work 833-1234 ext 304; and ask tor Ron Pinchot,
531.1m Call Collect home, 830-64Bl. 549-30.U Ext. 66.6':. 673·0900.
Tuesday, Otctmbff' 8, 1970
Tl\ANSPORTAllON 'TRANSPORTATION TJ!ANSPO AT!
_1,,,~~~--A_u .. tot __ M00 __
1
_u_Nd __ c_.,_, ____ 9900_
1
Usod Cara 9'00 Used Cars
VOLK~W.AGIN--5PECl~L-----coME'f
Lcii'ge 'Selection · DISCOUNT '" COMET _
Of VW C SALE AulolnaUo, radio, heater. ampen, <Jm-1m
, V~ Kontbls,. MONTH OF DEC. '2" B-, New &1Jnd (Granclkid• ne.<t new 1ho.,l ~ .....
lmmodlat. Dollvory !iO CARS
CHICK IVERSON To cboooe from. No down on 2100 Horbor ~lvd, 645-0466
approved credit, """°"' ~ 1111 "' n 'Nctelt4 ~ CONTINENTAL
1970 HARBOR BLVD, 2100 HArbor Blvd, 645-0466 '69 Cont'!, lo mi's, Lots of
COOTA MESA 1-;========1 extru, Landau lop,, Extra .~=~=-~-..,.,-1 BUICK clean. 968-7881. * 1966 VW -Xlnt eond Inside
& out. Engine & tires veryl·.--------CORVAIR
good, 1 Owne•. 19!10 or be" 61. l!.lviera. E><cellent <00· ___ . -----
-MERCURY -
1970 Mercury
Cyclone
Competition orance wttr. con.
tl'Ntbf.1°black interior, only
drtwn 1000 m11t1, atiU ln
factoey warranty. :run tao-
..., -pped in<JUdlna '
speed tzc.,"· Ltc. 12SASJ,
$2399
CHICK IYERSON vw
54.»031 Ext 66 Ql' 6T
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
olfer. 64S-3297 *tf3!i0".· .,Y,.~.!v top Is extra. _. .....,...,_,.,. '6.5 CORVAIR Monza, ICOOd ---,-------1 FALL CAMPER
CLEARANCE REPOSSESSION
'69 2000 ROADSTER
'68 FIAT 124 Sport. Very '61 PORSCHE ''D'' ·
good .,.nd, R&H, lo ml. Conv, neu ,.,. ev~lng. 1960 YW BUG VQLVO
t.tusl sell. $1950 or best of· 11.ust sell! Make oifer. The Red with mag wheels wide ---------I CADILLAC
rondition. Coll 642-4217 MUSTANG
weekdays alter 7 pm.
fer. 675-8872 eves. cle~t '61 ln town: ~1914 oveJ tires, new en,ine' guar~ '65 MUSTANG
a,.. a dozen brand new 8
1'. to 11 ft. campers now
'!hed to $49 A~~L PACTOIY
' INVOICI
·vely no added dealer
rges! Every unit ready
unmediate installation on
'65 FIAT 1500 Roadster new Evemnp:. anteed fO!"' 90 days. IFT174 ~J-".'1:".9:".64:-:Cc:A-:DC:l".'L"':L":A:".C:--
:;; Speed trans., pre • spec paint, battery, brka, beued "BEAUTIFUL" ~7 912 T~ $799 ~ THINK ~. DeVtlle. r,ctory air, ----------6 cyl., automatic, radio heat..
chrome wheels, red exter-' ..:"::c"'::·:...'":.:..:M.:;l'(';c:·:c·..:548-c;c__94:...35:c.-· _ New motor, paint, Kplr.:.!h1
1' CHICK IVERSON 'VOLVO' full power, all leather inter. '57 CORVE'CTE er. dlr. Extra clean. [YEU.
1 • Mags 5 spd. on fi GOOD COND * s:.oo 935} Will ta,ke trade or fin. ior., pl ush black interior. AM/FM/SW Blk leath int. YW ior, loaded with extras. . ., • ., ......,.
Cost $3400. ~1ust sacrifice! • (QTY 900) White exterior, ="*"":Al:':t :'6:' ";546-:':253=1=*= I ..'.a~n~""~pr~<v~a::te=parcy==·=~=='~j ~* fo~~ a~=~~.: ~:~~:~ 640-"64 ~A-A-B -19~=~vo"'.-t--."":!=R~.~"'.~"'~"" .. "'"w"'~=EJ." -ti1&ck :1:RS -_· __ D_o_D_G_E ___ 1 ·:UMustang
troCk or a new 19Il!
THEOOORE
OBINS FORD
"'0.3100 " 494.1506. HEAD"'UARTERS --Au-th-~----·ee_al_e_r--1---------893-1566 • 537-'64 DODGE STATION WGN. Hardtop, Owned~ llllle old
...
0
'-'6~ vw BUG NEW-USEO.SERV. CADILLAC Air. Ju>t Hke new. $475. school !•><her. 29.000 actuol
DOT DATSUN Th• only autborlud JAGUAR Sal" • Servioe • Pam ~ ~ 2000 Hubor Blod. .64&-·;;:..;2698:::,::.::o:..,r <'5.10:7-4,;;54-0~. == mn ... (U0F612) MUOI sell! 1
OPEN DAILY dealer 1a the entire Harb<>! Sonet Coupe1 tn Stock R di he <TUR124 .. ,_ _._...._....._.Costa Mesa M0-9100 ~7 Dod .... CUst Sport!man, Call Sid dlr. 5f0.3l.OO orl AND Area. Orange County's Ne~:;t Dlr, a o, ater, ) nil'. I ~'-';;~""i~~'i'i':i;;:-11-=i;i.;-'iii=;:,,-;-:.,,_""== .~ 4~7506 aft 10 am'.
'61 FORD P.U~~~ SUNDAYS i°At~~ COAST 1"'9QRTS ~:~r51r~~ ~~r:sld: e VOLVO 1~sE~f~~~~TS VS, au1! ~~607 * *'69 MUSTANG Mach I. 351,
.in eng, auto trans, 'Clean. 18835 Beach Blvd. SERVICE 494-6811. AR 71'1 Are Here Transmission '71 DODGE Vari Trana. in-, air, 4-spd, full pw, atereo.
S350 takes it! Dan • Hunfuvton Beach ol Orange County Inc. '66 vw panel _ Nev: pa.int , Savings. Up To' Air O:inditioner trrior paneled; Xlnt cond. _Re_u_._642-_'886 __ . ____ 1 6, PhilliPI 66 at __ "2-_7781 __ .,_--·-=~f PARTS 12.00 w. Pacific Coast Hwy. i........... . 11095 C $756 Radl.ator $3000. 6'14-1604 BAUER 642-0406 • 546-4529 exc ..... '6" engme. . .
angle on Cout Hwy, '71 DATSUN PICKUP BUICK I ~======:1;B::;:loc;:;,k;..;, '3S-~m;;;;,<.__.== 1 •n remainlnr 70's <•6263) Rad<p '66 DODGE Pnlara Conv. OLDSMOBILE Coast & Balboa. I -e 1970 VW BUS . Good con-Over Seas Del. Spec. HubPricaps f , k Sac. $575 T.O.P. Will trade. -----~---I
P U C IN TOYOTA II ced or <1u1c sale !! ~~7_9359• '67 Ford · · am Per Used _ Radio heater step A diUon. $2695. 542-3120 c~;;::..,;;:;:e::-..,-=-,,::--;;;;-I e '62 OLDS Station Wagon s1peeial , vs, •.!' "'nd. dbl bomper, dlr. 'Pin •trlP.tng, COSTA MES -.U-T-A------1 Call pvt ply, 645-1207 ""A" L•ut!1 CAOILlACS•70'S is Polara < dr, air. PB. Gd. -rran.. Pvt. Ply, $295. an ks, lo mi s, S 2 2 5 0 · Will take car in trade or will 234 E. 11th Street "" '65 vw BUG UUL Ull&O X-HWy patrol. xlnt coM. 549-3807 Aft 3: 30
546-7607. finance pr l v a t e party. SU-7'165 TOY Good Cond. $600 Cash IM PORTS $1050 must &ell 962--0842.
1968 CHEVY half ton P.U. 6 546-8736 or 494-6811 . ' -642-012fl af1. 6 PM 1966 Harbor C.M 646-9303 Larg!•f Stock of Qualtty 1967 DODGE Dart • GT. PLYMOUTH ~ii, '~';;'~eardll:'.L ~:;: '68 DATSUN PICKUP _K_A_R_M_A_N_N--G-H-IA-I OTA '63 vw a,,.-Oean. newly ' · C•dtllocs In Orongo Buckel seat" $600. ~1-1391. 1n You. Stocki•< !or Xmas reblt engine. $600. 546-0.180, 1--------· County Call 64""812 '69 ROADRUNNER
Rad I 4 ~ From Dean • -.. n.. 9am-5pm, Mon-Fri. Autos W11nhtd 9700 'QI DODGE Monaco sta wgn.-DATSUN Pick-up. $595. io, heater, cir., 1.,...,.... KARMANN Ghia '69. Xlnt .LA:..... Cpe DeVllle1, Sed, DeVllle1 Fu.Uy equipped. Xlnt cond.
Good body, good eng. See at (WPP 762) Will take car in cond, lo mi's, blk w/wh int. " L • '66 VW Sunroof WE PAY CASH and El Dorados Pvt pty. 6"2-Jlj9. 3$3 V8, automatic, power
Au to 695, 2026 Harbor Blvd, trade or finance private par-Priced to sell 837-4498. ll111t1 nrdi.I Immaculate condition. Yellow 1963 through 197{1 steering, 'dlr. Excdlent con-
C.M. 64&-9547 or 673-7499. ty. 546-8736 or 494-6811. • -~.66c.--.K'o_r_m_o_n"n-G=h"i•-I UUI. UllMi "69 Charger-.Auto. 383, P/ti, dition. Low miles. (UEDl4J) IM PORTS with P!n itrippinz, new tire11 FOR YOUR CAR· Plus Many Other Fine Cars. XJnt cond. Must sell, $1895. Will take car in trade or • U WAGON Good cond, $1050. 673-3305 , & engine gUaranteed for 90 ALL SALE PRICED 646--0652 or 545-7231.
Compors 9520 '67 OATS H 1966 Harbo,, CM. -646-9303 dlY•. Lie. YPT905, NABERS CAOILlAC ====""===! finance prioate p&rty.
••••••••• I MERCEDES BENZ '69 TO 0 A $l099 CONNELL FIREBIRD 546-87l6 or 494SSU,
'70 OPEN-ROAD Ae~~o~~~d dl~he1:io,c~~~ ----===== Corolla StiTiO: Wagon CHICK IVERSON CHEVROLET 2600 HARBOR BLVD., ,69 PONTIAC Firebird, Like ·~:o~~D~:.::i ~
Avalon Deluxe, 9 ft., monG-951). Will trade or finance White w/black interiur, Like VW 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA ,..,, cond. Going in service. matie, butane stove & oven, 36 L' xwz~ ~-ia M ,...,. ........ 54~9100 OPEN SUNDAY new, only 16.CXXI ml . .......,. ........... .
b bo private party. 546-87 ot new, IC. .,..., 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1-.:~;;;;.:;;::; ... :;:,_:;-;;:;-;::..-JJ,.,-,;;:::;;::::;..-;;;:;:;;;;;:=-: btwn 10·.30 & 7 pm, 64• om ----------! ·1mper ext., unce-aways, $1299 I ood Bro •-~-494-6811. 1910 HARBOR BLVD. WE PAY TOP '67 F eetw ugllilm -'69 Roadrunner. Showroom elec & hand water pwnp, --~--~==~ 0 F bl k
oo"ide oonneotio.,, '70 2000 ROADSTER CHICK IVERS N COSTA MESA lmmac! "" pwr. " FORD '°nd. T&Pe & many oxtru. ** Make Offer** YW '66 VW-Xlnt reblt engine; CASH leather, black 1 top, black ----------BEST OFFER. <194-7039
·-d• little body work. body telephone, etc. Pvt TOP DOLLAR 213: 645-5864 L<'k• -·w Mu•t ••11 (WPI-o:An ""~I E-•• 67 ••• ply -• ••73 aft 6 &: wknds I • • • • I • • • • lMI 'dlr.' Will ta""'ke· car in 19~70.~HA"B•o'· "" orVD Flared fenden. Xlnt cond. . . ~ -. -. , PONTIAC '64 f d C y ... ~ R BL · Header system. $000 or best tor ued can A trucka just 1968 CADILLAC or amper an trade or finance private par-,---------C9STA MESA oiler. Call alter 5 : 30 , call Us for free ·estimate. Cpe. De Ville. Factory air. for
ty, 5'6-'736 0 ' 494..,11 · ' '71 TOYOTA'S "18-6789. GROTH CHEVROLET <ull po-.r, tilt & tole"op;c CLEAN USED CARS '70 GTO Compl etely equipped v.ith
pop top, ice box, stCJ\le, dlr.
RadlaJ tires. 1 owner. CUED-
'68 1600 ROADSTER MG vw c I 1 I 1 ~.. ""riog wh eel, etc. (VCL. See Andy Brown 4'6 cu. In, Ram Air, In stock. Immediate delivery~ omp e e w ou ..,..,.,q. 742) Beautiful flawless White THEODORE' dose ratio 4-apeed, ~ ~ 1l • Rtins, +trans axle & 36 HP ABk for Sale. Manapr finish with black doth & ROBINS' FORD hood tach, Ride & Handl"r l04 ) \Vill take car in trade Ready to go! dlr. CWEZ TIO)
or finan~. 546-8736 or Will take trade or finance
494-681.1. private part,y, 546-8736 or
494-6811.
New '71 Datsun 1910 DATSUN 240 z. air &
lOOC OHC, Pickup with camp. mags. 2.~ mi., JtSOQ firm,
er. Sale price $2099 dlr. 53&-9620 or 846-5947 C• 459454) Will take ear in _:;::__:c;:,;_.,:._c _____ _
•
THIN., .,.... ~', ~e~~ sr:m6 ~°'~BeBlv_~ leather interior. pkg, PIS, PIO/B, .ftadio
" · 6' • .. Wl...,...... •""" $3299 DiO Harbor Blvd. &: heater, New Fire1tone ' "MG" m.,.n pm. '66 vw 847o6087IMPORTS w -~~ NABERS Co•ta M... Wide oval•. "ALL BLACK" Al~ • ......., 6G:OOlO Make offer or trade for
ID Laguna Beach Green with contrasting inter. Orllli1! Countie1 CADILLAC '67 Fairlane vs convrt. Xlnt late model Ford truck. ''FRIEDLANDER''' 900 So. Cit. Highway ior, tuned exhaust, runs like TOP S BUYER 2600 Harbor Blvd cond. Lo 42,000 ml. Inside 64&4665
494-7503 * 540-3100 new, STI..l84 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Costa Mesa 5'10...9100 lmmae. red vinyl w/good ""'"!!!~~~~!!!!!!~""I
J
frodO.-Wlll finance private ---FE=R~RA=""'·R--1-
R&rly Cali 546-8736 or
1»'5' laACM {HWY. •>
-893-7566 •-537-6824
NEW-USEO.SERV.
'71 CQROll I $999 18881 Beach Blvd, '70 CAil Co d VW. white tl?P·_ ~i!!l_buy for $p!. '6:4 PONTIAC Le .Mans.
--• -1;11 CHICK-IYER50N-H,Bea<h-. -Pb,8414555 ---· upe_ e -· Pvt ply. 646-1165. White w/ """uolle 'lii!.rlOr, -
VW """w"E""P"A"Y"°""T"O"P"'oo=LLAR.,..,.,,.-'~ mi. Like new. 644--0328 c,6J=r"°oro~6--pa-,-,.,C~try~Sd7n-. '°3Sz."° bucket &el.ta, auto., power ~..SSll.
ECQNOLINE CA~fPER Van. FERRARI ~fust sacrifice! Compl Newport Imports Ltd. Qr.
Cquipped for trouble free ange County's only author.
camping. Michelin X tires, 17.ed dealer.
r)ew short block. Qn1y $895. SALES-SERVICE-PARTS
I}fr 6, 673-0064 or alt 6 3100 W. Coast Hwy.
~~1100. · Newport Beach
64Z.9405 540-1764 e '70 Ford Van Camper Authorized Fen-arl Dealer Vcry Nice!
, Aft 2: 30 968-5075
FIAT
Dune Buggies 9525
~
MG
Sales, Service, Parts
Immediate Delivery,
All Models
J1rlll1.J Ol'l
31111µort ···
} BODIES $75 *
2084 So. Anaheim Blvd.
3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. ~ 642-9405 540-1764
Anaheim
6.19-1151
Imported Autos 9600
AUSTIN AMERICA
AUST IN AMERICA
Sales, Service, Parta
Immediate Delivery
All Modelo
J1rluµort
Jli 111.l 0 l't ~'
!l~ W. OMl.at Hwy., N.B.
"THINK'' '6.1 MG Midget, super cond $895 or Best Oiler.
Dmfi Call "'"3182
• '63 MG Midget. Looks & nins
great. New paint, clutch,
NEW 124 CPE. DEMO etc. $650. For appt ~1917.
$2795 '65 MG Sport Sedan, reblt
See motor, Above average, $550 •
"FRIEDLANDER'~ I =962-81168=. ===
13750 IUCH ILYD.
IHwy. 39 )
893-7566 • 537-6824
NEW·USEO.SE RV.
~
MGB
* * 1969 1'-1GB-Cnvrt
All Xtr.u Bes! offer
Call 673-6994
PORSCHE
BRG.
1968 911 TANGERINE. black
Radio, heater, disc brakes, FOR TOP USED CARS ,~,=;·======o= V8, pwr str, air, radio, stl'Jf, Xlnt mechanical con.
factory air, IO\\', low miles! 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 It your ~al' is exlra clean, CHEVROL.ET aulo: xlnt rubber, pa int, dltlon, Very clean Inside &
Take older car or small 1970 HARBOR BLVD. see us first. body & eng. $5."LI. 962--7236 out! $750. 16985 ~gewater
down. Under fact, wamtnty, COSTi. MESA BAUER BUICK Lane, Huntil'leton Harbour,
Call M dlr 1 lO $100 '62 FORD, 2-dr, auto, R/H, 846--4285 aury . a t am Looking Jor e car? 234 ,E. 17th SL 1954 Chevrolet Nu tires, exc ed. $350, =c..:::~=~~=-.cl 540-3100 or 494-7506. 037327. E.(SV Cost.a M8aa 54J..T765 646--0l29, 1961 Cheater St, '69 CATALINA, 24,000 ml;
Call A Ref _, •--· f Station Wagon, runs IQOd, dark metallic brwn, vinyl BIIL MAXEY uto "•~ u= o e 54~8778 e CM b
charp. we hav~ sellen Auto Li111n.~g'-..-C:9;:.8l~O;l'i'T7'ITT'i1H.;;;i;;;JO.::iru. * ·s'.. GALAXIE 500. 2-Dr. top&: int., air corwt., pe, P • r:::r.:..,~=r.:,,..,,...I walting. A1J type1 & prices. '.57 CHEV. Hayden ProUitt $25fi0. 644-0308 after 6:30 PM
ITIOIYIOIT.IAI Sell al I LEASE blueprint 327. Amer mags, alr, PIS, $525. 673-6542 or '62 TEMPESI' Pont. Sta.
en !'!.,~31come, A NEW i~ -'="=-3=209=. ======I w•-n. New pelnt. ~--' .,._.... .,,.. nu paint, bkt. seats, trans. _ -~ ~
1118J BEACH BL VD. . Auto Rererral Service PINTO by Art Carr. 842-8569 aft 4 LINCOLN tires. $200 Or beat oiler.
Hunt. Buch 147-1555; 1968 vw BUG $50.00 mo. '61 CHEVY •-<fr. Bel Al• ~-~'°'='·=-=,_--=-,,I
I mj N', at Qut RwY. CID Bdl n,150 * * * 837-8140 (36 mo.) RIH. PIS, fa ir body.' Gd -,--·-1-C_O_L_N_ '63 PONTIAC Bonneville, all , O A open '"" mech $200. Call ' 49+1182. 62 L N powu, ru"' good. $300. °' 69 C RON '63 V\V Bus, new clutch, RENT CONTINENTAL best offer. 536-6795
Hardtop. Vinyl roof 4 speed, brakes. & earb. Needs eng. A NEW 1971 COMET Full power & air. (JRH559) '70 TRANS.AM
immaculate, Sky Biue. Sac. wk. $650. 64~3863 PINTO 1---------1 $299 Aft 5 wkdye 549-3829
rifice, Will take trade or * 1954 VW, very iood cond . $4 DAY '61 COMET: Rum Very Good. ANCHOR MOTORS
finance pvt. pty, can Sid, Reblt eng. Runs good, body Great Trans. 2150 Harbor Blvd.
d1r. 540-3100 or 494-7500 &fl good. $250. 675-0.WI ANO S250 ** 675-3493 546-3050 C.M •
10 a.m. XTS 343. *'69 VW BUG, XL NT 4¢ MILE NOW'S THE
. 69 Toyota Corolla. New COND, $950, 163 DEL MAR PUT A IJ'M'LE TIME FOR
paint, complete eng i ne ST, C.M. KICK IN YOUR
overhaul. Speakers, clean. *'68 VW SEDAN* LIFE! QUICK CASH $1300. 546-6380, 9&m-5pm, Good cone!. S1275 or make of. THEODORE
Moo-Fri. 213/43'-09'7 for. 891-7524. ROBINS FORD THROUGH A
wknd s. '65 vw Bug sunrr. New 2060 HARBOR BLVD., WANT AD * '69 TOYOTA Corona 241', pnt/radio/ brks. Like new COSTA MESA DAILY PILOT
Vinyl lop, lo mi. Xlnt cond. $795. 521-2849: 644-8803 eves. 642-0010
$1150. 5;46-2380
MERCURY
OWNER Mu!t Sell like new
'69 Marauder. Air, stereo,
many xtras. 832,.7120.
1962 MERCEDES l90C
4 dr Sedan, xlnt condition
$900. <193-1018
RAMBLER
'$2 RAMBLER. New brakes.
shocka, reblt eng. Xll'lt
meeh cond. Sha11> fiol.>.3463
T·BIRD
'64 T-Blrd. Outstanding
cond. Premium tires. White,
Orig owner. $799. 67l-674L
Used Cara 9900 UMCI Can '9900 Used C•rs
TRIUMPH
9900 Used Cara 9900UNd Gort. 9900
o.12-9i~ Mn-1764
AOSTIN HEALEY
'68 FIAT 850
SPY DER
RDSTR. Red with black In-
terior. Like new. YQY834
interior, AM / FM, Pirelli 1---------
radials, transistor Ignition. * * '67 SPJTFIRE MARK
Xl nt cond, 642-5727 11. Xlnt cond.
l~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
UNDER INVOICE ON·E DOLLAR . OVER! $,1199
AUSTIN He!UoY-A cl""' "CHICK IYERSON
1~9~W~91~1-.,E~.~Fu~lly-e-qo~lp_pe_d7.'l ·l~ll=00=,=====::=::=962-=253=·7
Lo m i. Minl eond. Orig
owner. 714/521·2642 aft 6. cit in beautiful cond. Pvt YW
pty. $995. 545-8992. VOLKSWAGEN
54!}.3()31 Ext. 66 or 67 '64 PORSCHE-GD. COND I ---A-u_tborl_>ed--D-lr-. --
__ ._,B ·_;M.-'W____ 1970 HARBOR BLVD. * * BEST OFFER • * Sales e Service e l'artl
--=~-CO~ST.,A_MES~A=-;;,.,--~c_._,,_A_f_t -''-'-96-4~502__ All Models' to Choose From
'69 BMW 1600. Header, fog
lm~§.·-"Stereo. Sac. Pvt pty.
67~ altr 3 pm.
..
'•
IT'S Beach house time. Big-'67 9ll, 5 • spd, Webers. nu Service Monday 'Ull 1:00 PM
gest selection eve.ti See the ti~a. 48,000 ml's. $3950. Sat 'till Noon
""'!ton '""'' 543->IO; day,, 4'k (or c.... COAST IMPORTS
I
Of Orange County lac.
1200 W. Pacifte Cout Hwy
64UH06 • 54MS29
' '65. vw
Metallic green, new Interior.
Lie. RTU128
$199 .
CHICK iYERSON vw
549-3031 Ext, 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
·oo VW Super Bug:, 180 HP,
frbgls components, all new
eq uip. 54&-6841 aft. 7 ;i.m.
1968 VW Bug. ~~lo. re11.r
seat speakers. S1375. pri. pt;y,
6444687 after 6 ptn.
'68 vw. good cond, orli
owner, $1300 firm. * 842-6430 *
1969 vw Bus. blue, xlnt ccn-
dlllon, only 27,000 ml. $2000.
49:l.-8288 after T PM
-,64-VW'~S""Q~B~CK"'. -
64i.354S * '67 VW BUS w I bed or
seats, Good cond. $1395. See
at 16' Mlrarn•r. S.C.
We have several
new 1970 Cougars,
Marquis.
near
Mon·
Mer· +egos &
cury House Cars at con·
slderable less than invoice.
Come
over
buys.
In today & look.
these tremendous
You'll want one!
Johnson & son
.
LINCOLN CONTININTAL e MAlK Ill e
MllCUlY e COU•Al
540°5630 2626 ..............
COSTA MW 642-0981
• I
BRAND NEW 1970'5
WE HAYE SEVERAL BRAND NEW 1970
COUGARS & MONTEGOS LEFT
AT $1 OVER INVOICE!
.·~
COME IN AND LOOK OVER THESE
OUTSTANDING BARGAINS TODAY AND
TAKE ONE HOME
•
Johnson & son
11 Miia Saultl of Sao Dltt0 Pr-I
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR
540•5630 26~~~t:;.:-i· 642•0981
I I
..... ·-
--••• •• • Better Way lo Go
-. Jtl~ ....
•
l
·-A . ' o -.. -·-·-,.? . ,____.,
WHILE THEY LAST !
Br•nd N•w 1970 • CHEVY TRUCKS
S0,000 MILE GUARANTEE
~-TOH · FLEETSIDE n CAMIN!I
8 foot box, h~avy duty Automatic transmission,
rear springs, puges, 7.50 tinted class. (196918)
x16x8 ply tires. <12961)
' 52579 52695
ALSO HUGE DISCOUNTS ON ALL
1971 MODELS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
. 2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
~::: 546-1230 ~:~ 546-1200
NOW IN COSTA MESA
'71 HONDA :..
.
e Alt ~ID ,_.OMT ..... ,.,
e ,ftCWllT WHllL Dllllfl!
e l'OWll AlllSTID SI Ljl.
.. MAXIMUM IPllO 1J MPH ·mr.r·· ·-· •!~ s 1 ·.·39-5 e UP TO 4'MILll Pl•
1--1·-------: INt IOL
..,_ flll lllew CM,.,..,.,,, ... ""'-' Tre-. T• 6 I.kW
UNIVERSITY
o ·LDSMollLI
2151 HARIOR ILVD. COITA MISA 540-fMO •
F.R·E.E GAS
With The Purchase Of
A NEW 1971 PINTO •••
IMAGINE I
WHIN YOU IUY A NIW 1t70 PINTO
W! WILL PAY fOR
ALL --THI GAS IT USIS FOR TWO l'ULL MONTHS
THIS OFFIR GOOD ONLY AT IUNllT l'ORD
HURRY!
THIS Oll'P'IR IXPIRIS SOONI ALL. GASOLINI
MUST II DISIURS.ID AT IUNSIT P'ORD
SUNSn FORD
5440 0.nNln Gr9" llvd .. We1tmlnfter (21S) Stl·SSU
T•k• v.1,., vn Off R•mp 1714) m-4011
. BILL JONES' ..
B.J. SPORTSCAR CENTER
IS
AutlaorJS4111 Sele• & Senilee
: 2833 Harbor -ltn., Con Mesa . .. ' 540-4491
CHRISrMAS
GIFT IDEAS!
UICK,IN
COSTA
MESA
"Specializing in Quality"
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS
ON ALL REMAINING
1970 BUICK DEMOS.
234 E. 17th ST.
COSTA MUA
548-7765
HSNrDA
THE RUGGE~
HONDA "CT·90"
"TRAIL BIKE"
At A 'rice YDU Wouldn't lellne
•*******************'
..Jlerb :J.ried!ander
137SO HACH ILVD. IHWY. 39)
893•7566 '* 2 ILICS. SO. OP:
••rde• Gro" Fwy. * 537-6824
' '
NEW
1971 .B·UGS
ON DISPLAY & READY TO GO
CHICK IVERSON
Home of ihe Love BUR
Harbor AJ:eas Only Authorized vw. Dealer
TWO LOCATIONI TO SIRVI YOU
445 lost Coest Hwy . ., llY'lde Drl,., N .. ,.rt IMch
& 1971 Horltor llvd., Cost• M ...
549-JDll
'70 MONTE CARLO .
'66 THUNDERBIRD
s.s. 454 . 2 DOOR LANDAU Only 11,600 MllN
HY11rt'""111;, "e w • r '"'..-""" -5'111111 C•tsl wlllll WI"' bile~ lafl.
lflK brl~H -wlrida.,.., AM·FM dlU root ... """~lrtt custom
"""1!111!0, &1r1to bucket 1Ht•, full ~•11;1hyd1 l11ttrior, Ful! 010wer.
fec111rv •I•, till Wllftl, AM rld!o 11~•. till Wllftl. t1 e 1ory 1lr ~1111 1ect11ry ft-ltllfl, fll>Wtr cand., d•ro..,. ioorl whftll, "'kl•
trKll betlM llrM, 1u11 !Nd levrl-VIII! "'""'OW. .. •nirnlll , 1 0 ......
tr. tie, 1tc. 1111nct Of fac.tery tt '""' \11'111'1 ""Y low mlltlte
w1rr1My. r111i It •n tbtoll.l!tll' o..t ll'lls c1Mn ft •lrllmr lmpgo.
!IOl't-t utomobllt , Vov11 htvt 11blt ta tin•. 11'1 lmmKllMlt.
te I" IO 1pprac.l11t. (fo1.jl£MI lllM60J).
$3999 $1799
NABERS
2600 HARBOR BLVD. 540-9100
COSTA MESA
\
-
IEGIN YOUR HOLIDAY BY SHOPPING Tl:llS ·
GUIDE OF. NEW & USED· AUTOS & ACCESSORIES. • I
:;::.;;Q •
I
SANTA HAS MARKED PRICES DOWN! • •
• I I
1970 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM
Condor blue exUrlor with blue padded ,11\11dau. top anj:I
matching Qardanelle Interior, Full power. factory air,
tilt.-telescoJilc wh~L power door locks, tWillght sentinel,
dual comfort front seau with lndlvldual power.control.a.
sten!o AM-FM, power trunk lock. Thi one owner auto.
moblle is so imnulculate that we have/it on our main
showroom. This one's for thl!' most discriminating buyer.
(7184)
1967 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE
Grun mist with black padded landau roof and match-in& full genuine leather Interior. Full power. factory
air, tilt-telesc:oplc wheel, AM-FM radio, new white wall
tlr6, local one owner car. This pne looks brand new
with only 39,330 carefully driven mUes. (YPX270)
$3599
NABERS
---------------: Dot Sing Says ..
• "Wa mc::ke better
dee::! on new car.
• "W1 pc:yvery high
prito for !rode.
* "How we stay Jn
'b usiness? "Boy
we lucky!"
"Ha ve A Velltt N ice Daj;
\\-f3UH
0 18835 Beach Boulevard
HUNTINGTON BEACH
I
• • I
! . "
" ". . . -' . ' ' ~· ..
? '. I . I
'. . -• I
I
I
j
' I
I • I
' j
I
2600 HARBOR BLVD. 540-9100 f
COSTA MESA
======================:=:====================::::::!
I I _842-7781 • 540-0442
Jree
"Christmas
Tree"
With th• purc.hUI fJf 1ny of
our fin• now er UM\111 •vto-
mobllu.
REl"EAT PIRFORMANCI
M% .t IMW OWMn ...,..t th9 jtUrch1M. MlylN )'tlU
shoultl flM out why. Set U1 fw thl frll Moklet.-u -R-.:--
.. n• Why IMW It 1ett9r.• Or ••k for tho key ,_,.11 tltt
th• m .... , ..
· · --.roe Beri&itt••
-y&M-MOTORS
IOll GARDEN GROVE BLVD.
SALES OPIN,SUNDAY
Perts, l•"lce Tues., Thurs., tlll 1::00 SM-2214 (% Ilk'. I . ef IMch) lf2·SSS1
BILL YATES
AUTHORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
BILL. YATES
VOLKSWAGEN
32852 VALLE ROAD
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
837-4800/493-4S11 /499·2261
IS BACK
AT
.__-.CONNELL _ ___.
CHEVROLET
2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
~:=~ 546-1230 ~:~ 546-1200
•
' It's E•sy lo Buy The All New
1911
FORD
$2034
IUO ff ft" lettl Hw11 ,_.V,,,...I lllCI 1'3 I• tht hlltl monthly tNYmMlf
l11ci11cll111 tu., 71 lk 111n •Ml 111 flR•nct c111rwwt on '''"'" ... trMll
"' M IMRlilt. Dftt•rltf "''""'' price 11 1u11.• lll<lllCllnt 111 11111111:.e
rll1rwn. llJ:91. '11 lk lilse tr If ,.... erefltl' ,. ,..., c11i1. !tit 11,tll c• ..
..,tc:t It 111ly S21.U.71 IMlllMilnt Mia IU. '71 lk lfl ... AMMI l"tn:W-
l tt Rf!• 11,,.,. 11 R1o w1•u1.
$250 TOTAL
DOWN
PYMT. $63 .TOTAL
MONTHLY
PYMT •
DUNTON FORr.
2241 SO. MAIN-SANTA ANA
Wh•r• lrO.dw1y M•t• M1fn St. •t W1rn1r
NI W CAR Oll"T, 1.._7011' e UllO CAR Dl!PT. ""°7a16
SEE
·PINTO -
-.
MUSTANG
MAVERICK
PLUS THE ENTIRE BRAND NEW
FORD LINE FOR '71
AT
SOUTH COAST
' FORD -MERCURY
)OJ lrMdw1y, Lagun• Inch 4f4 .. S1S/S4t4UI
• I
•
'
l
I
l
Suzuki MT~SOR Trailhopper
A kid's mini.bike 1hat ev'1
dod ·c on ride. 3 hor'i. ·~;iliil _wu power, 50cc e ngine.
.,. ~'-speed outomo!lc clut .
Fron! end reor full sospe•·
sion end brakes. Swing.fn
handlebars and eosily
removeoble front whe\il
makes it easy to corry n
ony size car.
14 NEW 'MODELS FOR '71
SOCC TO SOOCC
EVERYTHING
FOR
MOTOR SPORTS
Only 1 tlDpplni: place for
mnton:yclts Ir: riders: tflOrU
cars A drivers.
i
1mnew,_,._...,,,.
cnt• ,,....., callf. f'Ul1 ttl-(714) .. ._
I I